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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

UNIVIItln'Y AI.UfMLO
State University ofNew Yorlt

One Hundred Fifty Year.s
March 28. 1996 Volume 27 . No. 23

Bartlett sees budget cuts
forcing critical choices
Actions on state support could llffect SUite University's character
By C-nNE VIDAL
Reporter Editor

T

HE STEADY EROSION of state support over the past
eight years has placed the State University of New York
at a crossroads that could alter the institution's identity.
according to SUNY Chancellor Thomas Bartlen.

'The transi tion from state supported to state assisted has gone
better than expected, given the
mag nitude and rate. The State Uni vers ity has managed well. •· said
Ban lett at a March 14 press conference at UB's Center for Tomorrow . But ''the process has gone as
fa r as it can go without changing
I SUNY's) character."
The impact of the 1996-97 budget is expected to go beyo nd mon-

etary effects. Bartlett said. Budget
reductions raise the specter of an-

othertu ition increase, which, when
combined with a proposed red uc-

tion in the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP), could prevent some
st udents from enrolling.

"If we raise tuition. we can expect it to have an impact on access," Bartlett said. And raising
tuition will not completely close
the budget gap, possibly forcing
the State University to deal with
the deficit through a managed re duction of faculry and staff.
"Either way we deal with (the
budget cut), it will have an impact
on access and the mi ssion of the
State University," Banlett said.
'"My concern is tha t in these circumstances people understand the
choices that are going to be made."
Cuts to the SUNY and TAP budgets could ..wring out of the system
lO,OOOto 15,000students." Bartlett
said. But students should apply to

the State University system "without regard to the dangers to TAP
and with the assumption that there
will be restoration." he said.
"They lose very. very little if
they apply and (TAP restoration )
doesn't materialize. They lose a lot
if they don ' t apply and TAP is
restored." Bartlett said.
The 1995-96 tuition increase of
$750 forced 8.500 students out of
the system , Bartlett said. "That' s a
shot across the bow."

B

ut when last year's increase is
combined with the possibility
of another increase this year as
well as uncertainty about the fi nancial fate of the State University
system. "is it any wonder that the
rate of applications has slowed
down?" Bartlett said.
The actions we take in response
to the budget will have an effect on
people' s lives. on where they attend college and whether they attend full time, part time or don ' t

attend at all , the Chancellor said.
SUNY is co mmitted to continu ing to offer a strong. balanced aca demic program for pan-time. full time. returning profess ional and
technical s tudents-" the full
range .·· Bartlett said. "Our core programs are not going to go away .
We are not going to let them be
weakened. We will get sma ll er be·
fore we let that happen ...
Over the past eight years, state
suppon for the SUNY system has
been cut nearly in half. In 1988.
state suppon accounted for 85 percent of SUNY's budget. Today,

that number is in the 47-48 percent
range. Banleu said.

T

hat's a 45 percent drop in money
from 1988tothisyear. We have
managed by shifti ng the burden to
students." Bartlett said.
But thi s year there is a sense of
crisis. he added. ··we ' ve been coasting downhill and suddenly the
weight of history has hit us.··
New York is no longer a "low
tuition" state, and raising tuition to
offset budget reductions "is not a
strategy that is open to us," Banlen
said.
Continued on page 2

UB Academic Community database: vital
information on faculty, research grants
Tile ..... till k 111 II tbe.ea-ia oftbe March lZmeeting of
the I!Jtl;u1ty Seaale.
Provost 'lbomu He.drict.eoppl seoaton ina dialogue on tbe
adminlstradOn wbile paper, ~g our Pulure." Senior Vice
Preoidcnt Roben Wapertben briefed tbe body oo UB 'a sbort-le~
fiscal~inligbtoflbelalesteventsiliAlbany.Finally, seuators

considered a committee teport oo lbeir own.bculty and university
govcmaocc future and postponed action on that report unlil sometime in tbe future.
UB wUI remain, first and foremost, a top-notch ae.demic institution, pledged Headrick. "Clcarly we must respood 10 tbe economic impcmi- ~g ~ upoo us," be said, "but !be way we
respond will shape our illllilutioo and our future. We have an
immense amount of talent 011 this campua. and if we put our bc8ds
togcdlcr. we can ~)sun~ out bbw 10 do our jobs better."
•
However, that talcat pool is dwindling. Headrick poinlcd out
thallellwe-lrtlek faculty positions at UB have beellcut by acarly 10
percent over the pat decade. "We have probably lostmilre facul ty
than coune offeriDp," said He.drict; adding that tuition and
altemative .evcoue aoun:ea, IUdl .. Clldowment and fee income,
will play iocreuioaiY important roles in funclina !be universi!Y.
Headrick lll8iDiained. "tbere Is still muc:jl mnn: bope than.
despair lbc8d." He warned lgainst a "Chicken Ulllc" mindlet.
explainina that "maybe tbc aky will descend on 11111111 portions of
what we do, but it will allo open up for 111811)' tbillp we do."
Headrick DOled that. ingraduatcedilclltion, "we~~~eaotdoingall we
do now welL" andcxplainedthatgnuluateprognmawiObccoming
under scrutiny during tberest oflhisycarwitb an eye toward quality,
and increased ~on.
Headrick discounted re&lt;:ent ranlr.ings ofUB graduate progmms
by tbeNationalRaeardiCouncil,andsaidthatlbeadministration's ·
goals are to " I) maintain those prppams that are strong, 2) pick.
other programs where we can buildl lowly, 3) CIICIJIIr88e areas with
small departments 10 pwsue greater coliabpration and 4) perhaps
. drop some programs."

Continued on page 3 ·

W

ISH YOU COULD
moreeasilyfmdcolleagues with similar academic in terests? Are you looking for new
sources of information on federal
grant opportunities? Would you
like an easier way to get the word
out on your research?
The solution could be literally
at the tips of your fingers .
The UB Academic COmmunity
is a database of information by and
about UB faculty. Its name reflects
a desire to encourage faculty in all
discipli nes to participate. The UB
Academic Communiry is "critically
imponant to UB's prese nt and future," said Provost Thomas E.
Headrick.
It's crucialintermsofthelongterm development of the universi ty," he said. "It's important for
faculty here to know about their
colleagues. their work and their
scholarly interests, and m have a
basis for developing intellectual
and academic connections, collaborations and friendships . It's also
imponant to display to the world
the quality and strength we have at
the university. as well as the range
of research and scholarship that
exists here." Mole than 650 faculty
from across the university are currently listed on the UB Academic
Community database, and the goal

is to ultimately have every faculty
member participate.
The UB Academic Community
contains biographical information
on faculty. such as academic degrees, previous positions, scholarly interests and expertise. academic honors and awards. professional memberships. foreign
language proficiency, publications.
grants and patents.
new component of the UB
Academic Community concerns facu lty members' public service activities-those that help generate creative yet practical solutions to a wide range of societal
needs. Looking at its uses in terms
of promoting public service, Acting Vice President for Public Service and Urban Affairs John B.
Sheffer n noted, "The potential for
identifying new areas for collaborative ventures and in terdisciplinary projects in public service is
expanded tremendously . It is hoped
that. by reporting our own service
activities and interests. others will
not only become aware of UB · s
commitment to service, but also
become interested in pannering
with us."
The system is searchable by selecting keywords that describe areas of scholarly interest or by using
other search stratagems such as
individual names, past and present

A

insit utional affiliations. or recent
publications. Dean Fredrick W.
Seidl of the School of Social Work
receunts his first experience searching the UB Academic Community . "I was preparing a talk on the
topic of ' self-help' and performed
a search usi ng that as the keyword .
I found seven other people at UB .
Of the seven. I knew three of these
individuals but didn ' t realize that
any of them shared my interest in
the topic ."

O

nce an individual matching
the search criteria is identified . there is the potential (via
hyperlinks) to immediately send a
communication to a faculty
member's e-mail address or to ac cess a faculty member's homepage
where entire publications. a complete cv--or whatever other electronic infonnation that may have
been posted-may be found .
Getting on the database is
straightforward (see sidebar). Fac·
ulty can input their information
directly on-line. or by using questionnaires available on a Mac or
DOS-fonnaueddiskene or in print.
The UB Academic Community
is part of the Community of Science database which. at present.
has information about 55.000 faculty from throughout the U.S. and
Continued on page 5

�2

PRING IS ON THE wing and
nowhere does the fragrance of

the new blow stronger than
through the hall s of the UB Department of Media Study.
The department will continue its " Mag-

nifiCent Media" series of screenings, leelures and discussions on film and video art in
April with new and unusual offerings from
so me o f the best independent filmmakers in
the U.S .
All e vents are free and open to the public
and will take pl ace in the Screening Room in
the Center for the Arts on the North Campus .
Ever heard of " X-Film Chicago"? It ' s a
group o f young film enthusiasts dedicated to
sho wing experimental films, principally by
art ists in and around Chicago. An intriguing
se lection of sho rt films from the group ' s last

two seasons of screenings will be shown
hereon April I at7 :30 p.m., co-sponsored by
the Department of Media Study and Hall walls
Contemporary Arts Center. Look for such
titl es as " DJUNEIIDEXA" and "Joe Was
Not So Happy."
On April 5, a one-&lt;lay inte rdisciplinary
conference beginning at 8:45 a.m . will e x-

Poetry

amine the relationships between poetry and
moving images (see box below). The conference is sponsored by the UB Departments of
Media Study and English; UB Conferences
in the Disciplines, and the Nickel City PoetryNideo Association. For more confer-

ence information call Tony Conrad at
885-3868 or Mac Hammond at882-l642.
And what about "bawdy ,lurid" filmmaker
George Kuchar? Having repeatedly smacked

a VIdeo Conference

Keynote _...,.for the Poetry &amp; Video Conference to be held April 5 in the Center
for the Arts Screening Room include William C. Wee.s, Kurt Heintz and Chris Funkhouser.
Wees, professor of English at McGill Univetllity, is a leading theorist on poetry and

media who wiU speak on "Poetry-Films as lmagetex:ts of Memory and Desire." Heintz. a
Chicago writer and media artist !mown for his poetry video work on screen and stage. will
1alk on " Hacking Poetry- Tales from the inner Coast"- a discussion of poetry, video,
stage ~d e-media and stories of "hacking poc:tty videos together with no big gants, no
reputations in Chicago." Funkhouser, wbo has spearheaded CD-ROM poetry publication,
is fini shing his Ph.D. in English at State Unjversity at Albany. He will speak on " Present
Effects: Poetry and Digital Media." looking to the future of poetry and video.
Afternoon sessions wiJJ offer a panel discussion and screenings of works by area poets
and video artists, including Mike Basinski, Bob Borgatti, GaiJ Brisson, Tim Clinton, Alicia
Cohen, Bryan Dominick. Mac Hammond, John Harrigan, Alexander Kort. Jody LaFond
and Kristin Prevallel.

UB, ·1900-1.920: The Main
-street purchase
·
Attorney Chat1es P. Norton, a naUve Bulfalcnlan who helped found the law echool,
became UB's acting chancellor In 19051111d chancellor In 1908. During Norton's
tenure, UB bought the 150-acte Bullalo Plakls site on north Main Slreet.lalar to
become the un~lty's home.
Norton bequeillhed his entir!! estate to the ~nlversity, providing IUnds
for a student union building and for
the endowment of UB's highest
award, the Chancellor's MiKial, presented annually since 1925 to an outstanding citizen ol Buftalo.
The university's first liberal arts curriculum was developed when the
American Medical Association r&amp;qulred at least one preliminary year ol
liberal-arts w011&lt; as part ol physician
education. The courses were insti- •
tuted In 1913 and were awarded de- ID . _ ._.. .....
partmentaJ status in 1915.
That same YNf, the Women's Educallonallll1d lncllllrtlllJrbl ol Bullllo offered Its building on Niagara Square as 1he home forlhe ,_, lukoale .-ta eellege, the unlwf8lty ooUd ra1ae a $100,000 endowinent wllhln a year. lhll Chal-

n

lenge was met~ a

$250,000 conll'llullcn tail t.h. ~H. Knox lll1d

her lanily in honor ol her . . husbar1d. lhe COllege ol Alta and Sclencel. Uhorized by the Slate 0apartmen1 o1 EclJolllan in 1919, had
llludanl81111d 31 Mand part-lime faculty wllhln one year. --1:'.0.

eoo

Hollywood affectation to lhe
flooc and ground
it into lhe linoleum with his
heel , Kuchar
will lecture here
on
Monday ,
April 8 at 7:30
p.m ., co-sponsored by lhe Department
of
Media Study
llnd Hallwalls
Contemporary
Arts Center.
And on April
17 at 7 :30 p.m.,
it' s real life, not
just " reel life," when UB presents excerpts
from award -winni ng filmmaker Anne
Robertson' s exceptional40-houropus, "Five
Year Diary," a filmed "collection" of ordi-

nary and extraonlinary life events, u OJ&gt;posed to a picture of a life molded by lheatrical and cinematic lrtifice.
" Five Year Diary" is on lhe program with
twoofRobeJUon' ubortfilms. "Apologies,"
which exp~ lhe phenomenon of guilt.
and "Suicide," a work that arooe out of a
three-year eKperience in which an internal
voice urged Robenson to end her life.
The cbeny on top of lhe month's series of
events is an April 26 pro8xam 01 7 :30p.m.
titled " Experimental Videos by Queen of
Color from Mix ' 96," lhe acclaimed lesbian
and gay experimental film festival.
The show will feature hoi new penpectives by hot, new gay filmmakeR who happen to not be Caucasians. 1be event is
co-sponsored by lhe UB Department of
Media Study and Hallwalls Contemporary
Arts Center and lhe Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
Alliance of UB.
For more infonnation on lhe April events,
0
call 645-6902.

Service honors for faculty, staff
SERVICE RECOGNmON reception was held March 27 honoring faculty and staff who have
completed 30 and 40 Yeat1l of
service to UB.
President and Mtll. Greiner hosted the
reception, at which service recognition pins
were presented to lhe 1995 honorees.

A

..._.... fw 40 , _
of ..vice
w...: John Cunat, Orthodontics and Laurie
Garbutt of Print and Mail Services.
lloMred tc.
of ..v~ee
Gloria Aniebo-Williarns, Psychology; Martin Bartel, Animal Facilities; Frank
Bartscheck_ Computing &amp; lnfonnation Technology ; John Boland, Public Safety; Irwin
Burstein, Periodontology; Parker Callr.in,
Geology; Margaret Cannizzaro, Lockwood
Library; Martin Carruha, University Facilities ; Mary Cassata. Communication ;
Sebastian Ciancio, Periodontology; Lorraine
Convey, University Libraries; Norman
Corah, Oral Health Services&amp;: lnfonnatics;
Stanley Cramer, Counseling &amp;: Educational
Psychology; Elaine Cwiclr., Operational Support Services; Helen Davidson, Food Service; Robert DeFranco, Restorative
Dentistry; Manavla Desu, Statistics.
AIM: Patricia Doeing, Engineering &amp;
Applied Sciences; Leo Fedor, Pharmacy;
Anna France, Theatre &amp; Dance ; LanyGreen,
Orthodontics; Mary Gun:ynski, Purchasing;
Willard Harris, Art; John Honeyman, Admini strative Computing Services: Gary

•-=

ao , _

Hoskin, Political Science; Georg lggen,
History; Donna Juenlr.er, Nuraing; Milton
Kaplan. Law; Marcus Klein. English; O!ades
Lambros, Philosophy; Mary Anne Lang,
Anthropology; Dennis Malone, Electtical &amp;
Computer Engineering; Joseph Margarone,
Oral &amp; Maxillofacial Surgery; Diane
Marlinslci, Arts&amp;: Letters; Jerome Mazzara,
Modem Languages &amp; Litentures; Albert
Michaels, History; Mary Moore, Special
Services; GeorgeNancollas, Cbemistry;John
Neal, Civil Engineering; Carolyn Noel, Computing &amp; lnfonnation Technology.
AIM: Cam! Norris, Educational Organization, Administration &amp; Policy; Shinpei
Obki, Biophysical Sciences; Henry Popkin,
English; Martin POps, Engliah; Ailtboily .
Ralston, Computer Science; Ronald Raven,
Learning &amp; Instruction; Pamela Rose, Health
Sciences Library; Shirley Schnettler, Psychiatry; Ronald Schunlr.e, Academic Services; Marvel Schmiefslr.y, English; John
Shrauger, Psychology; Leonard Snyder,
Controller; Charles Sonntag, Custodial Services; Louis Swartz, Law; Sandra Lee
Sztukowslr.i, Undergraduate Education;
Judith Thurston, Operational Support Services; Conrad Toepfer, Learning &amp;: Instruction ; Beverly Vander Kooy,
University Libraries; Judith Wagner, Philosophy; Marlene Werner, NUt1ling; Marie
White, Food Service; Edward Yadzinski,
Music; LawrenceZabaldo,RestorativeDentistry.
0

BARTLETT
Conlinued from page 1

Instead, hard decisions about SUNY' s
future will have to be made. ''The magnitude
(of the 1996-97 budget) is great enough that
it can't be dealt witb by devices or fiddling,"
he said. "Cutting the fat, being more efficient-those don't work any more."
Some of the proposed cost-saving solutions will require investment in technology
as well as legislation that would enable SUNY
to manage itself with fewer restraints . But
the savings achieved that way would be small
in the grand scheme, Bartlett said. " So you
have to talk about substance---&lt;:utting faculty, cutting staff, cutting students," he said.
" It gets down to how many people there are.
Eighty percent of our budget is people."
Fund-raising is going to be important in a
way it never has before, the chancellor said.
The State Univetllity of New Yorl:: is in the
early stages of fund-rttising. None of our campuses, including this one (UB), has matured in
fund-rttising. The system rttised $65 million
last year. Any number of large public universities will raise that amount by lhemselves. At

one time, SUNY institutions were not allowed
to rttise funds. Those days are gone."
Perhaps one of the greatest problems
SUNY faces is the uncertainty, not over its
own budget, but over when tbe federal budget will pass and what it will contain for New
York State. "I can't remember a time when
there 's been such a sense of uocenainty
about time," Bartlett said Some state legislat0t1l want to pass a budget, albeit a tentative one,
before the federal figures are known. Othet1l
want to wait until the federal budget is passed.
"That' s areal problem. to say lhe least." be said
While the outlook appeat1l gloomy, Banlen
said. there is a bright spot: "The attnosphere is
better this year than last. Last year lhe feeling
was. lhe state is in bad shape· and lhe State
University has got to take its licks. This year
it's differenL I don' t know if it matters, if we' ll
get the management authority we need or the
money. But there is lhe =gnition that lhe
State University has been hit p&lt;etty hard over
lhe yeat1l... .Ptople are liatening and not simply
dismissing SUNY' s needs."
0

�3

John L. Hettrick Sr.
MEMORIAL SERVICE was
beld March 23 in St. Paul ' s
Episcopal Cathedral for John
Lord Hettrick Sr., an indusbialist and former bank president
who served as chair of the Board of Trustees
of the UB Foundation and was one of the
primary architects of the foundation's highly
successful Pathways to Greatness Campaign.
Hettrick, 61, died March 18 in Buffalo General Hospital after a brief illness.
Chairman and chief executive officer of
WSF lndusbies Inc., and of Buxton Machine
&amp; Tool Co. Inc., he had served earlier as
presidentofMarineMidlandBankWestem. In
1970, at 36, be became the bank's youngest
president When Marine became a statewide
banking institution in 1974, he was named a

A

group executive vice president and a director.

Sunrise series hears researcher
for Women's Health Initiative
llyC-IYIDAL
Reporter Editor

A

LTHOUGH WOMEN comprise
more than half the population,
their health needs have never
been adequately studied and addressed. So to many it is a swprise to learn

that one in seven women in the U.S. ages45-

1

65,:,:~one in three over age 65 has bean

Heart disease overall is the major killer of
men in the U.S.
1
"8ut most women will tell you they think

it's cancer.... We think of (heart disease) as a
man's disease, but that 's not really the case at
all." according to Jean Wactawski-Wende.
Wactawski-Wende, clinical assistant professor of gynecology and obstebics in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences,
spoke March 14 at UB at Sunrise, the
university's community breakfast series.
Sheisco-prineipal investigatorforthe Buffalo portion of the Women's Health Initiative,
an effort funded by the National Institutes of
Health to investigate the causes of, as well as
the effectiveness of various treannents for,
coronary heart disease, breast and colorectal

cancers, and osteoporosis in older women.
UB is one of 45 centers throughout the
nation participating in the study, which aims
to enroll 160,000 women ages 50-79. It is
the largest bial ever conducted in the U.S.,
and has an overall buttget of $625 million
from the NIH.

T

he Women's Hea1lh Initiative is looking
at the major causes of disease in women,"

and how those diseases can be prevented or
de layed, said Wactawski-Wende. Up to age
60, there is little bean disease among women,
probably because of the production of estrogen, " but within 10 years of menopause, you

can see an increase in many diseases. These
diseases have not been studied adequately,"
she said.
Three courses of treatment are offered

through the study, which will track partici-

pants over nine years. Researchers will look
at the effects ofhonnone replacement therapy

on heart disease. dietary modification on
breast and colorectal cancer, and calcium
and vitamin D supplements on osteoporosis
and bone fractures .
While hormone replacement therapy has
been used for more than 30 years, there are

had less heart disease, she said. And while there
are suspicions that hormones may increase the
incidenceofbreastcancer, Wactawski-Wende

said that issue remains unclear. '
While chronic heart disease occurs I 0

years later in women than in men, women
experience more angina and cardiac failure,
and their prognosis is worse. But among
women taking hormones, the risk of bean
attack is 40-50 percent less than that of the
general population, Wactawski-Wende said.
Researchers hope to find the answers to a

number of questions concerning how estrogens act to prevent coronary bean disease.
she said.

W

omen's Health Initiative participants

also can join a dietary study that will
look at the relationship between dietary fat

and breast and colorect.a.J cancer. WactawskiWende said. Participants in that study re-

ceive extensive dietary modification
instruction, and are encouraged to consume
no more than 20 percent of their calories
- : - - - - - , from fat, reduce

their saturated fat
consumption to
seven percent and
eat at least five
servings of fruit
and vegetables a
day .
Women's Health
Initiative researchers also hope to
learn more about
the effects of cal-

cium and vitamin
D on bone loss.
"Ninety-nine percent ofthe calcium in the body
is in the bones. If you don't get enough orally,
the body takes skeletal calcium," said
Wactawski-Wende. "We' relookingatcalcium

intake to see if we can improve calcium in the
bones." Women do not get enough caJcium.
she said. The median intake of calcium is 600
milligrams a day, but women age 65 and older
should be taking in 1,500 milligrams. Participants in the calcium and vitamin D trial will
receive daily supplements of I ,000 milligrams
of calcium combined with 400 milligrams of
vitamin D to aid absorption of the mineral.
Participants are still being accepted into the
Women' s Healthlnitiative_ Wactawski-Wende

said. Researchers will be accepting women into
the diet portion of the study through the sum-

ques tions about its risks and benefits,

mer of '96 and to the hormone replacement

Wactawski-Wende noted. Wben the therapy

therapy program through February of '97. Some
participants in those two studies also may be
asked to join the calcium and vitamin D trial.
Wactawski-Wende said the Buffalo portion of
the Women ' s Health Initiative hnpes to recruit
4,000 Buffal&lt;&gt;-area women for the study. C:::

was begun in the 1960s to help menopausal
women with hot flashes and ather symp-toms. there was the recognition that there
may be other benefits to be gained.

Among the benefits: women on hormones

Hettrickhad served on the Board ofTrustees of the UB Foundation since 1971. As
chairman of the board from 1988 to 1992, he
provided outstanding leadership for the
Foundation's five-year, $52 million Path-

ways to Greatness campaign, 1he largest
campaign in SUNY hi story and in UB ' s 30

years as a pubHc university.

H

ettrick's effons during this campaign
typified his more than 20 years of
service to the university. In 1988, he
received the UB Alumni Association' s Walter
P. Cooke Award for outstanding service by a
non-alumnus. He long promoted UB as one of
Western New York's major assets and helped
build invaluable partnerships between UB and
the regional business community .
"John was a dear friend of UB for many
years. He led and helped to shape the Pathways
toGreatnesscapitaJcampaignofthe late 1980s."
said UB President William R Greiner. "All of us
who had the privilege of working with him and
enjoying his company will miss him very much"
In 1993 UB honored Hettrick by naming
him recipient of the President's Medal. Given
in recognition of signal and exttaordinary service to UB, the President's Medal is presented
for outstanding schnlarly or artistic achievements, humanitarian acts, contributions of time
or treasure, exemplary leadership and other
major contributions to the development of the
university and quality of life in the UB community. He was named Businessman of the Year
by the UB School of Management in 1970.
Hettrick served the community for many
years in a variety of leadership roles and in
1974 was presented with the Brotherhood
Award by the Buffalo Chapter of the National
Conference of Christians and Jews. He was a
pastpresidentandadirectorofJunior Achieve -

JOHN LORD HETTRICK SR.

ment of the Niagara Frontier from 1967- 1987.
A member of Junior Achievement's national
board for many years. he served as national
chairman of Project Business. Jun ior
Achievement ' s ftrst nationwide school program. Inconjunction with Project Business, he
taught aoourseatSt Mary's School for the Deaf,
aided by his sons, John Lord Jr. and James-P.
Hettrick was a former chainnan of the National AllianceofBusinessmen, a former chairman of the Buffalo United Fund. a director of
Buffalo Fme Arts Academy and a member
since 1968 of the board of managers of the
Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society.
All"mleeoftheformerWestmtSavingsBankand
the former Buffalo Savings Bank and its successor, the former Goldome Bank, be was a dinlctor
of the Buffalo Oub and the Saturn Oub.

A

n active member of St Paul's Episcopal Cathedral parish, he served on
the vestry and headed the drive to build

the cathedral' s columbarium. A longtime

member and former chairman of the corporate
gifts comntittee of Episcopal Charities. he was
chairman of the major gifts committee for
the$4 million Forward in Faith Fund drive and

served on the campus ministry committee.
An Army veteran. Hettrick. was
commisssioned a second lieutenant in 1955
through the Reserve Officers Training Program upon graduation from Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa. He served two years

of acti ve duty and then continued in the
Army Reserve, attaining the rank of captain.
His wife , Marcia Allard Hettrick. died in

September. Surviving, in addition 10 his sons.
are a brother, George H. of Richmond, Va.
and five grandchildren.

SENATE
Continued from page 1

He also responded to concerns of Arts &amp;
Sciences faculty members about UB ·s com mitment to them. "We are not going to ignore the arts and sciences and just become a
professional school collection."' Headrick.
said. " We don' t look upon the arts and sci-

ences as mere service courses to get into
professional schools and if we have drifted
in that direction, we should reverse it."
The proposed executive budget called for
a $250 tuition increase and a cut of $80
million in state support 10 SUNY. Wagner
told the Senate that SUNY ' s central admin -

is tration had backed away from an earlier
posture that it would not seek restoration of
funds from the state legislature. "'The advocacy has now evolved toward asking for
some restoration." he said.
Fees for students and faculty are likely to
rise or new feesappearnextyear. Wagner said,
adding that some fees could be implemented
merely by a change in SUNY Trustee policy

"as to sruffwe now can't charge fees for, such
as science lab fees ." He said theadministtation
is developing a "fee plan that we will want your

input on soon."' Last year, the university implemented a S 120 per year technology fee that
raises about $2 million annually.

Wagner expressed frustration over diffi culty the universi ty is experiencing. in light
of the unsenled budget, notifying prospec-

tive freshmen of tuition and financial aid
levels for the coming year. "Our aid letters
are clearly hedged. We are talking in terms

of a $250 tuition increase when that could
easily be more like $750.'' said Wagner,

''and we have to account foradramaticcut1n
TAP." This, explained Wagner, was placing
UB at a disadvantage to other institutions
which have "more cenainty."
The Faculty Senate did not act on the
university governance committee repon recommending establishment of ··articles of
governance" for each academic unit, a process by which the Senate can intervene when
an academic unit"s governance structure
··breaks down." and a pay raise for the chair
and secretary of the Senate. Senate Parliamentarian Dennis Malone advocated that
the body " receive and file" the report .

�4

Beyond postmoden1
Writers to dlsc:uM '•v.m pop' Hathetlcs Aprtl 3
BJ r ATIIICIA -

News Services Staff

YAH

AVANT.POP?
IS THAT UKE A NEW

son DRINK OR WHAT?
UST WHEN YOU thought you'd
figured out postmoderoism or "po
mo" to the "po mos," there's a new
and noisy, gen-x kid on the block.
lt 's"avant-IXJp,"amovementwhose
. stated purpose is to snarl the psychological apparati of the "vast network of control
freaks who manipulate the media-generated
addictions that they' ve created for us."
On Wednesday . April3, the Wednesdays
at 4 Plus literary series at UB will feature
noted writer and critic Larry McCaffery and
novelist Doug Rice in a discussion of avantpop aesthetics. It will take place at4 p.m. in
th e Downstairs Gallery in the Center for the
Art s on the North Campus.
Free o f charge and open to the public, it is
an opportunity to sample the work of some
of avant -pop's underground morph arti sts.
Avant-pop will do what postmodemism
did n' t do, the popsters cl ai m. They say that
like all vanguard ideas in our soc ial system.
r o mo was weakened. neutrali zed, petrified
and devolved through constant pressure from
ca pitalist urge to co mmodifi cati on. Finall y.
lik e all meaningful critique s. it was coopted-sucked sc reaming into the prevail ing cultural currenl.
Mc&lt;;:affery and Ri ce are just two of the
notabl e avant-pop observers in the field .
McCaffer)' (w ho coi ned the phrase) is the
edi tor of two recent ficti on anthologies.
.. A vam -Pop: Fiction for A Daydream Na tiOn " ( Blac k Ice Boo ks) and " After
Yesterday 's Crash: The Avant-Pop Anthol ogy" (Penguin ). He is professor of English
and comparative literature at San Diego State

J

University and co-editor of three literary
journal s specializing in postmodem literature: Critiqu~. Fiction fnlerJUJtional and
Am~rican Book Review. Hjs many critical
books include 'The Metafictional Muse:
The Works of Coover, Gass and Barthelme."
and "Postmodem Fiction, a Bio-Bibliographical Guide."
Rice, assistant professor of English and
film at Kent State Univenity, is the author
of the novel " Blood of Mugwump: A
Tiresian Tale of Incest" He also has published a number of shon stories and performance pieces, one of which is "Life at the
Parasite Cafe."
According to writer/theorist and a-p celebrant Mark Amerika, avaut-popsters can
be seen as a fresh wave of cultural shocktroop s of the Warhol, Vonnegut,
Rauschenberg and Velvet Underground variety .
" Our collective mission ," read s
Amerika 's "A&amp;P Manifesto," "is to radi call y alter Pop Culture's focus by channeling a more popularized kind of dark, sexy.
surreal and subtly ironic gesture that grows
o ut of the work of...artists like Marcel
Duchamp, John Cage. Lenny Bruce. the two
Davids (Cronenberg and· Lynch) ... situalion.ism, letterism and neo-hoodooism,
and scores of rock bands incl uding the Sex
Pistols. Pere Ubu , Bongwater, Slint, L7.
Pavement, Stereolab. Meccanormal.. .. "

A

lthough popsters auend to many of the
manifestations of pop culture, they are
especially interested in its electronic reali tie s. They use television, telephones.
databanks. computers, CDs, hypenext. CDROM and video recorders to examine the
positive and negativeconsequencesofthese
very technologies on our communications.
our thought processes. our values.
Adhering to the Roben Creeley-Charles

Handshakes, smiles
as med sbldents get
Match Day news

March 20 was the big day. Match Day.
when students graduating from UB med
school learned where they'll spend the
next three years. Dennis Nadler. right , associate dean for curricular and academic
affairs. hands out envelopes at Lord
Amherst Motor Hotel. Top, Chris Jayne.
sporting a big cigar. accepts congratulations from Thomas Mead. Above, an excited Tiffany Genewick shows match envelope to Kristen Robillard

Olson dictum that form is never more than

an ex: tension of content, avant-pop features
artistic forms shaped of the detritus of cootemporary culture. It employs the language
and imagery of technology to describe our
addiction to its associated objects and ideas.
They say that if the Uber-lcu/tur tries to
absorb thi s cultural provocateur, it will be
eating its own garbage, digesting its own
production, choking on its own vomit.
s popsters, McCaffery and Rice are
among those born and raised in wbat
Amerika calls "our tele-visual, compucorder, auto-digitized" world. They sbare a
state of mind, rather than a style and number
among their ltind literary edge-runners like
noveUsts Kathy Acker("Empireofthe Senseless,""Biood and Guts in High School") and
Mark Leyner ("Et Tu, Babe"), artists like
Cindy Sherman and Jenny Holzer and
Amerika himself, who like other popsters,
has given invited lectures and readings at
UB over the past several years.

A

If avant-pop has a vehicle, it is the Internet,
which it is all over like ants on a Snickers. In
addition to a wealth of small-press poblicatioos, the movement cultivates its own frontier in privately published 'zincs such as
"256 Shades of Gray," pot out by folks at the
University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire.

I ike the Beats, the Black Mountaineers,
. .he New American Poets, and
postmodem theorists galore, avant-popsters
know they'll receive a warm welcome at
UB. They come bore in droves, bave been
for years, because even before lh&lt;iy had laid
down a name, the English Department's
wildcat poesis-mavens knew wbo they were
and why.
If you' d like to bone up on the subject
before the conference, you can. Just call up
"avant-pop" on the Net for more information than you can gobble up in a month, or try
these URLs: bttp:f,..........aJtx.comJmemorWu/ or bttp://market place.com /ah-rl
black.k:e.books.btml
D

Nonllnatlons open for P.SS
Outstandl..,
Service Awlli'd
11...., . _ has opened its annual call for nominalioas for its
Outstanding Service Award. This award is given eacb ~ to memben of UB's
professional staff who make outstanding community service contriburiooa. UDiike lbe
ChanceUor's Award for Professional Service, which em~ on-the-job excellence, tbe PSS Outstanding Service Award goes to professiOiw •tafT I11CIIIben; who
have ffiade signal contributions to the larger community. While service 8(CCOIIIJilisbments may be associated with university initiatives, they must exceed the normal acope
of the recipient's university responsibilities.
Eligible individuals are employees ofUB, UBF, RF, or FSA who have completed
at least two years of continuous fuU-time professional lilaff service- Previous winners
of tbc Outstanding Service Awaril are ineligible for five year. after receiving the
award. Award recipients during the last five yean bave been Jiy Friedman, Charles
BrunsltiU, John Bis, James Oerland, Elsie Pacbeco, Nelson Townsend, DarleiiC
Pickering-Hurnmert, and Charles Soontag. In addition to performing demonstrably
notewQrthy community service, nominees must exceed average expectatiooa on the
job. Clear, specific evidence of leadership, commitment. creativity, and initiative. is
important in building a persuasive and competitive dossier. The awanls, to be
presented at a luncbeoo oo May IS, carry with them a cash award and a catificateof
recognition. AnymemberoftheUBcommunitymaysubmitnominatiooa.Appropriate
fonns and detailed instructions for4ubmiaaioo are available from OlrilliDe Sauciunac,
Chair of the Professional Staff Seute Awards Committce, in core of lbeProf-ional
Staff Senate Office (543 Capen Hall, 645-2003). All nominations must be submitted
_by 4:30p.m. Monday, April22, 1996.
Tile ......,111'

Women's Club to note gift aiding
programs in Center for the Arts

A

CHECKPRESENTATIONtothe
Center for the Arts followed by a ·
·
seat plaque unveiling in.honor of
the UB Women's Club will be
held April 12 at 3:30 p.m. in Mainsiage
Theater, Center for the Arts. The seat plaque
will serve as a permanent reminder of the
Women's Club contribution of $10,000 in
proceeds from the Celebrate 50! Gala, to be
used for continuing outstanding programs in
the Center for the Arts.
Roben Chumbley, director of the Center
for the Arts, and Arts &amp; Letters Dean Kerry
Grant will attend the presentation, along
with UB Women 's Club President Janet
Fedor, Celebrate 50! Chair Marilyn Ciancio
and Gala Co-chair Carla Goldberg.
The club's Celebrate 50! Spring Luncheon will take place April 13 at II :30 a.m.
in Slee Hall. A Student Showcase of organ
and dance will be presented by the UB Department of Music and Dance.
Following the luncheon, the following
officers will· be installed for 1996-97: President, Ninfa Straubinger, Vice President,
Dawn Halvorsen : Treasurer. Lynn
McFadden; Recording Secretary, Geraldine
Ryder; Corresponding Secretary, Cannella
Hanley; Members-at-Large, Peg Callahan,
Jean Jain, Norma Rubin .
Twenty-five year members will be honored at the luncheon and 50-year founding
members will be recognized.

Final plans tue proceeding for the final
event of the Celebrate 50! Year, the Family
Fun Walk and SK Race, to take place on
secured roadways of the North Campus on
Sunday, May 5. The walk begins at 10 am.
and the run at 10:30 a.m. at Alumni Arena
The UB Sesquicentennial and Women's
Health Initiative are underwriters for the event,
which wiD benefit the Grace Capen Scbolarship Fund and Exertise Science Majors Club.
Purchase of a commemorativet-sbin for $15
is the entry fee for the event Awards will be
given to age group winners and all finishers
will receive ribbons. For more information
call Leila Baker, 691-5972.

-p-..

lnclude:
vening Gourme~ April 18, 7:30 p.m. ,
home of Cannella Hanley, sampling of
unusual vegetables; Antiques, April 3, I0
a.m. , Fisher-Price Museum, East Aurora.
lunch at Roycroft Inn; Books. April8, 12:30
p.m., Maud Good leads discussion of "My
Antonia;" Bowling. Mondays. 10 a.m.,
Sheridan Lanes; Bridge, April 2. April 16.
I 0 a.m.-2 p.m. at Dandelions; International.
Aprill8, 10a.m .. Room210.StudentUnion,
North Campus; Money and Investing. April
17. 7:30p.m., Audubon Public Library, lnvestment Broker Elaine Regan. speaker;
Needlework, April 18, noon , home of Marie
Schillo; Tennis. Wednesdays, I :30-3 p.m.,
Amherst Hills Tennis Club.
-

E

�........IHIIIIII.......
~

Leners
How you can help
an individual in
emotional distress
TO ALL MEMIIDS OF 'i'HE CAIIIIPVI
COMMUNITY:

Students typically encounter a great deal
of stress (academic, living arrangement,

family, work, financial) during the course
of an academic year. For some. the pressures become overwhelming and feel unmanageable. The purpose of this letter is

to help you identify both the less obvious
and the more dramatic signs of emotional

distress and to suggest how you might be
of assistance to students.
Among the algna of more Hrl·

oua dlatreaa •re:
• Actual self-harming (cutting; taking
an overdose of medication. drug or toxic

chemical).
• Attempting to harm oneself (climb•ng
out onto a window ledge or the roof) .
• Talking to others about killing one-

sell.
• Leaving a suicide note.
• Aggressiveness 1n dealing with the
environment (slamming doors violently ,
using one's fist to break a window or hit
walls , throwing and/or break1ng of furni ture) .

• Aggressiveness toward others
(screaming, threatening . msulting , ac!Ual

physical attack).
These signs of senous distress should
be re ported to Public Safety (ext. 2222)
without delay in order to ensure the
Individual's safety. If the student resides 1n
the residence halls, his/her hall director or
the Office ol Residence Life (645-2171 )
also should be notified
Some less obvious behav1ors that may
function as signals that a student may be
feeling more anxious or depressed than
usual are the patterns of coping described
below:
• Social participation (person either
becomes significantly more dependent on
your time and attention or withdraws from
usual participation and becomes relatively
socially isolated).
• Appearance {a usually neat person
becomes careless in terms of hygiene
and/or dress).
• Class attendance {person either becomes significantly inconsistent or stops
attending c lasses).
• Energy {unusual fatigue or inexplicable bursts of activity which may or may
not be productive).
• Moods (unusually irritable , restless.
sad).
• Alcohol/substance use {occasional
drinker/user engages in the activity with
significantly greater frequency and/or the
amount consumed per usage increases
significantly).
• Extreme weight loss/gain.
You can be of assistance by encouraging the person to contact one of the followIng services:
CounHIII\g Center, 120 Rich·
monel QuadJoangle, Ellicott Complex (845-2720). To schedule an appointment, phone or walk in weekdays
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m. Services are free , volun tary and confidential.
Crlala S.rvlcea Inc. (834-3131 }.
An off-campus, daily, 24-hour telephone
hotline: if necessary and appropriate, Cn·
s1s Services' Emergency Outreach Unit
can come to campus for evaluation of risk
to self or others.
·
The Office of Student Advlae·
ment. Academic deans and other offices
provide assistance for academically related problems. Their names and numbers
can be found in the University Directory.
If you have any questions or concerns
about someone, call the Counseling Center (645-2720) and consult with the counselor on duty. Remember: It is better to
obtain assurance that a perceived problem is not serious than not to call at all
Yours truly,
THE STAF'F OF THE COUNSEUNG CENtER

Passages

the same show-they

are probably the same

enopause still occurs on time physically, Sheehy said, but does not carry
th e emotio nal sig ni ficance it once did .
Sheehy recalled being booked on the Oprah
Winfrey Show to discuss her book Silem
Passage , which is about menopause ...They
told me they had a harder time booking
guests to talk about menopause than they had
booking women who had killed their husbands. I suggested, ' Why not have th em on

people.'"'
Sheehy calls today's
budding seniors, born
between 1935 and
1945, "the silents." A
group to which sbe concedes to being a mem·
ber, they generally
have the most difficulty
adjusting to today's
changes. And, she explained, pan of the
problem is that they
were "just born too
soon.
The sudden loss of
their career by men in
their fifties is another
area which Sheehy has examined, including
interviews with successful corporate executives laid off at Kodak in Rochester just a few
years before a nonnal retirement. Many of
these men go through a period of crisis. but
emerge to direct their energies into new
pursuits. "One in I 0 now works for nonprofit companies: many discover an. music
or gounnet cooking at thi s point." she explained. ··sut. the single most imponant fac tor in getting through such a cri sis is the
comfort of nurturing love.
"The secret is to search for meaning ... fin d
your passion and pursue it strenuously ...
Sheehy advi sed those entering their "second
ad ulthood." Pointing oUt that one in three
girls born today will live to be 100, Sheehy
explained that people need to plan to "manage an extra 30 years."

departmen tal admin istrators.
Technology changed all that
Once it was posted on the World Wide
Web. the Comm un ity of Science allowed
personnel at UB and other institutions of
higher education to be both provide rs and
consumers of the information.
And the system has tak.en ofr. receiving
more than a million "hits" each month from
inquirers in the private and public sectors a.~
well as from within academe.
That's important to UB fo r two reasons,
Landi said. It gives outside sponsors. "mainly
industrial spo nsors," comprehensive and
readable access to infonnation regarding UB
faculty, UB 's researc h cente rs. and the

university's inventions th at are available for
licensing.
"II also plays an important role internall y
in helping UB facuhy understand who else at
the university has the expertise to help them ...
Land i said.
For example, he said. a complex grant
proposal may require the expertise of faculty
from six or seven research areas. "We can
use the database quickly and join facult y
together in collaborative efforts." Landi said.
Three provostal areas contribute financial
sup~ rt to maintain the system: The Office of
the Vice President for Resean:h.the Graduate
School and the Office of the Vice President
for Public Service and Urban Affairs.

from...,..... .., ........

Gllll Sheehy tr.cks the fallout
IIJ S1EYE cox
Reporter Staff
f you've ever felt like you're putting
things off longer than you used to, Gail
Sheehy would tell you you're right
We are living longer and each stage
oflife seems to last longer, according to
Sheehy, the best-selling author of II books
including Passages, Sil~nt Passag~ and, most
recently, N~w Passages: Mapping Your Uf~
Across Time .
"Today, adolescence goes on into your
twenties; 30-ycar-old men often still Jive
with mom; baby boomers tell me they don't
feel 'growii up' until well into their forties:·
Sheehy explained during a recent Center for
the Arts appearance. Sheehy, who appeared
at Mainstage on Thursday, March 14, was
the thi.rd speaker in the 1995-96 Distinguished
Speaker Series.
''No one ever prepared us to Jive long
enough to forget the name of our fi rst hus·
band. No one ever prepared us for the possi·
bility of seeing our grandch ildre n go bald,"
Sheehy mu sed of the lengthening lifespans .
Sheehy, a contributing editor of Vanity
Fair where she has penned noted portraits of
political leaders, and a frequent contributor
to New York magazine, calls the later years a
··second adulthood." Earlier retirements, as
well as late-career unemployment, have made
··second ad ul thood" a lengthy and signifi-

5

~.,.,

I

cant period of time in one ' s life.
Sometime during your late fortjes, you
enter "the infancy of your second ad ulthood," says Sheehy. "Middle age" is apparently out. The early fifties have become a
sort of"M iddlescence, when a 'little death '
occurs. Many people report a need 10 find
wholeness then," she expJajned.

M

ACADEMIC
Continued from page 1
Canada. Built in co llaboration with more
than I 25 institutions of higher education. its
purpose is to provide a comprehensive di ·
rectory of scholarship via the Web.
The Community of Science also comains
access to information of potential value to
faculty : grants that have been awarded by
federal agencies like the National Institutes
of Health and the National Science Foundation, and funding opportuniti es from federal
agencies and sources such as the Federal
Regis te r and th e Commerce Busi ne ss
Daily-all searchable using the "keyword"
approach. Currently in process is an effort to
directly link faculty's scholarly interests with
federal funding opportunil·ies so that a new
fu nding opport uni ty is sent via e-mail to a
faculty member whose fields of interest correspond with those des ignated in the request
for proposal.
"It 's the most advanced and powerful
database of its kind ," said Dale M. Landi,
UB vice president for research. "It 's very
inexpe nsive to UB and provides UB with
high visibility to external funding sources.
Internally. it provides us with a more comprehensive understanding of the diversi ty
and wealth of expertise at UB ."
The Community of Science database initi ally was created as a means to facilitate
uni versity-industry interactions. and an early
effort to collect information from UB fac·
ulty was made in 1990 by the Office of the
Vice President for Research, but the system
proved to have limi ted effectiveness. Better
information was available centrall y, but it
was not directly accessib le to faculty or

How to access the database
The UB Academic Community daU!base may be accessed on UB Wings under
"Faculty &amp; Staff-Research," "Directories" and the "'Libraries' homepage." The UB
Academic Community's address on the World Wide Web is http://wings.buffalo.eduf
faculty/cos. Once in UB Academic Community. there are three choices: to search the
database. add yourself to the list or update you r record.
UB Academic Community has several discrete components that are searched
independently. In addition to information about faculty expertise. there are separate
hyper! inks to information about un iversity facilities {research centers and instrumentation). grants awarded to UB by the National Institutes of Health and the National
Science Foundation, and UB inventions (under development).
Faculty members may add thei r profiles at any time using Netscape. The on·line
questionnaire incl udes several pick lists {such as UB schools and departmen ts) to
expedite the process. Once entries have been completed and reviewed, they are
submitted electronically. Submissions are reviewed by the uni versity and the Community of Science before being added to the database. a process that takes about two
week.s.
To protect the integrity of a faculty member's entry. two pass word s are needed
before an existing profile can be accessed and revised . Passwords may be obtained. if
needed. from the Office of the Vice President for Research by sending a message via
the e-mail address hyperlink provided on the UB Academic Community main page.
Faculty members receive a reminder e-mail message if they have not updated their
profiles in a year.
The Community of Science homepage is found at http://cos.gdb.org. Links to th1 s
homepage from UB Wings are fo und at "Facult y &amp; Staff-Research" and from the UB
Academic Community. Resources accessible on the Community of Science include
information comparable to that in the UB Academic Commu ni ty for more than I00
participating universities and research centers. In additjon. the Community of Science
publishes searchable World Wide Web versions of federal grants and grant opportu nities, the Commerce Business Daily. the Federal Register and the U.S. Patents
Citation database.

�6

Faculb&amp;SiaHBillboard
ARCHIIECTUIIE II'LANS EVENTS

IIOUHOIIIAIUT 1E11SDUU

FOR A'IUJIEII, OPEN HOUSE

AT CUITD ,_TilE AIITS

Ateher and Open House . 1996 will be
observed April12 and 13 by the UB
School of Architecture and Planning .
A lecture by Philip Lengclon on
·Reshaping the American Suburb"
Apnl 12 at 5:30p .m in 301 Crosby
Hall opens a series to continue
through April Langdon has been an
ed•tor and writer for national publlcat•ons on arch•tecture , planning, real
estate. house design and construct•on lor more than 20 years. The lecture w1ll be followed by a recepUon
and opentng ol student and alumnt
exhib•ts sponsored by the Alumni Association and the Friends ol the
School o f Arc hitecture and Planning .
Open House activities include an
Architecture Department presentation
'" 20 Knox Hall at 11 a.m. and an envtronmental design presentation at noon
'" 14 Knox From noon -3 p .m. a tour of
the school will be g tven. Buses leave
the North Campus at noon and 1 p .m
The lecture series tncludes talks
Apnl 17 by Guose Hariri of Hariri and
Hann. New York. speaking on recent
WOII&lt;. and April 24 by Roben T. C&lt;&gt;es.
FAIA, of Roben Q:;es and Assoc .. Buf.
lalo. oo "Bucky Fuller and !he Design of
US's Phys1C81 Education Complex.·
Exhibits in !he James Dyen Gallery,
335 Hayes Hall, include "Negotiated
Construction" April 22-May 3. a
school-w1de collaborative design
protect done 10 COOJUOCiion with the
Jumor Studio cumculum. From May 13
to June 14,-graduate thes1s Pf&amp;senta·
lions will .be on view

The UB Center for the Arts w ill
present the Bolshoi Ballet Ensemble
March 28 at 8 p .m . in the Center for
the Arts Mainstaoe. North Campus.
The ensemble, under the artistic
direction of Yuri Grigorovich. features
the stars of lhe Bolshoi Ballet. The
company of 50 p&lt;lncipal dancers will
make only one WNY appearance during its first tour of the U.S . since 1993.
The ensemble will perform pieces
adapted or choreographed by
Grigorovich . who became anistic di·
rector of the Bqlshoi in 1964.
The Bolshoi is named '"' !he
• Bolshoi Petrovsky Theatre built in
1856. in which the 250-member oompany resides. Mosc:oN's renowned
dance troupe began in 1776 when !he
first dancers made debuts. Moscow
blossomod m a ballet poMllf'oose as i
~with Sl Peletsblrg. early"""

ter lor Russian ballet
Tic ket prices are $40. $34, and
$28. available through the Center for
the Arts Box Office (645-ARTS) and
all Ticketmaster locations.

KEYIN HANLEY TO HEAD
UB DeNTAL ALUMNI
Kevin .1. Manier has been elected
president of the 1.300-member UB
Dental Alumni Association lor a oneyear term ending in December.
A specialist in orthodontics .
Hanley is a 1978 graduate of the UB
SchOOl of Dental Medicine , with a
practice in North BUffalo. He serves

Boob
IIIWIIOrWelt'1
fiDADClal.-dl.
Wbeo 111011 iDdi.vidualllllb lbcir iallial pluDp iaiD Jbe llllC:k
marka. lbey -.By Ia- dllauab III1IIDal lilldl. 10 II II 11Dt
sutpriliDJ' tbat aevenJ IIIIIIDa1 fwlda lilel biYO ...,..S OD Jbe
Web. Ooe of lbe most popullr liteS Ia ~ 1'111......_
In-.estorNet'!IWk (ldtp-.f~. ~pro­
v i d q - (I) lbe well.-pec:ted Mqmlaai(lr dllabuo' wbicb
suJIP.IIes profiles on 11101e !ban 5,000 lllllllll1 fuadL '1b8 w I!Jo
features the "Fund 1\llu,~ a c:ustiliDi1JOd oean:b IUaction tbat leis
you define and organiz!: the mutual funds tbat are oflaterest Ill you.
NETwortb can be sean:hcd for flee, but regislralion is roquired.Once registered, you'll be assigned 'a user name and password.
These should be written down because you 'II need them for future
searching sessions.
Serious investors will be happy to learn that a number of Internet
sites offer free 15-minule delayed stock quotes. A very PoPular ·
quo1e si1e (it doesn't require you to regis1er) is tbe Security APL
Quote Server (hltp:/fwww.secapLcom/cgi-bln/qs/). Access is by
1icker symbol. and a ticker symbol look-up fearure is supponed.
lnfonnation provided includes the usual stock quole data, but Beta,
price/earnings ratio. and annual dividend data an: supplied for most
companies as well.
For assistance in connecting to tM World Wide Web via UB
computer accounts, contact the Computing Center's Help Desk at
645-3542. For more information on Internet investment resourcu,
contact Micha.J Lavin, MRLA VIN@ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU.
Lockwood Ubrary, 645-6211 .
-Gemma DeVinney and Don Ha rtman. Univ'ersity Ubra ries

as UB clinical assistant professor of
orthodontics.
Other newty elected officers are.
Raymond G. Miller. presidentelect A 1965 UB dental school graduhe is a US clinical instructO&lt; ol O&lt;al

diagnostic &amp;Ciences
and Is '" practice in
Lancaster: Michael
D. Ehleno, secretary.
A 1965 US dental
school graduate. he
is a us ctinical instrucror of restor.

HANL£Y
:~e::~nS:S.
ton: Richard J. Lynch, trOOSU'..-. A 1963
US dental school graduate, he is in
practice in Buffalo.

-.oiOPIIY-E

-------~

The U S Department of Philosophy Is
the sponSOI' of a conference.
·Averroes and His Influence : Remembering George Hourani ,· to be
held Aprll 12 and 13 in the Center tor
Inquiry , 1310 Sweet Home Road.
The conference oo 12th century
philosopher Averroes honors !he tate

-,.-...., alongtime mem-

ber' of US's Ptiilooophy Depanment.
Mourad Wahba, Departmen1 of Education, University of Ain Shams. Gairo.
Egypt, will give !he opening address
April 12 oo •Averroes Here and Now.·
Leading a symposium on · The
Harmony Between Relig ion and Ph._
losophy" will be Charles Butterworth .
Department of Government and Politics , University of Maryland, College
Park; Therese Anne Oruart. Department of Philosophy. The Catholic
University of America and Richard C .
Taylor. Department of Philosophy,
Marquette University. Paul Kurtz, UB
Department of Philosophy. will speak
on "Free Inquiry and Islamic Studies:
The Significance of George Hourani. •
April 13 speakers are Timothy J .
Madigan . Free Inquiry magazine:
loanna Kuc uradi, Oepanment of Philosophy, Hacettepe University , Turkey: Ghazala lrlan, Department of
Philosophy, University of the Punjab .
Pakistan: Rob Tielman . University of
Utrecht. The Netherlands.
Also: Michael E. Marmura. Depanment of Philosophy, University of
Toronto; Parviz Morewedge, senior research fellow. The lnstilute of Global
Cultural Studies . State University at
Binghamton: Mona Abousenna. Qe..
partment of Education. Ain Shams University, Cairo: Alfred lvry, Department
of Middle Eastern Studies, New York
University and Jorge Gracia, US Department of Philosophy. For more lnfor.
mation, call
Madigan, 636-7571 .

Thirty environmentally focused cartoons by Buffalo News adilorial cartoonis1
Tom Tolea are on display in the Buffalo Museum of Scktnce. The exhlbtt representing Toles' work over the past six years, was organized by UB Energy OffiCer Walter Simpson and is being SponSOI'ed by the university's Environmental

Task Force.
Toles is a UB alumnus whose WOf1c. appears In more than 200 newspapers in
!he U .S. and Ganado, as well as The New Republic and U.S. News and World
Report . The Pulitzer Prizewinning cartoonist is well known for his insight and hu-

mor in addressing such environmental concerns as population, our love affajr
with the car. suburban sprawt, the fate of old growth forests, state patt&lt;s, global
wanning and efforts in Washington to play havoc with envtronmental taws and
p rotections.

Stud ent Union , North Campus.

Among highlights Match 30 wil be a
dinner, cutwra1 shc7N and I'M&gt; speal&lt;s&lt;o:
Jeffrey Chow, presideot of !he international Yan Xin Qigong lnstiUe wil discuss his age regression experience on
learning Oigong a few yeatS ago: Hao
Wang, general secretary of !he International Oigong Association. wiK 181&lt;
about !he renowned Chinese qigong
master Yan Xin . On Match 31 , group
practice will be held a! Niagata Falls

from 10 a.m.-noon. Registration lee .
which includes the diMer, is: students,
$10: T'IOI"l-Students, $15. For more lnformatloncall~7 .

IIIVEitA IIECEIYU ICC'S
~AND

IVORY AWAIID

lllclwel Rivera, senk&gt;r associate

Lula llollne Lopez, director of the
Latin American Center for Theatre
Research and Creation. will present
a lecture on lbero-American Theatre ,
"The Last Decade: A Global Perspective· at 3 p .m. Friday , April l2,
In the Screening Room in the Center
for the Arts on the North Campus.
The lecture. which will be enhanced with visual material, is one of
those offered at 3 p .m. on the second
Friday of each month as part ol the International Theatre Lecture Series.
The series . sponsored by the In·
ternational Artistic and Cultural Exchange Program of the UB Department of Theatre and Dance, is
directed by ....... Horne, assistant
professor of theatre and dance .

in career planning and placement at
UB. was one of 13 recip ients of Erie
Community College's Ebony and
Ivory Awards recognizing community
work that typifies Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr.'s ·dream.·
A co-founder of !he WNY Hispanic
Herilage Festival, Rivera has been a
leader in community organizations for
more than 30 years. A strong link betweeo !he Hispanic community and Of·
ganizations in pubt;c and private sectors. he has been honorad by PODER/
Latinos Unidos, !he US Professional
SloH Senate. 1he Pueno Ric:arH;hicano
Committee and US's Educational Opportunity Program.
He has held leadership positions in
many organizations, including Father
Belle Commuoity Center, Unttad Way
of WNY, Comnunity Action Organiza·
lion of WNY . Boys and Girls Clubs of
Buffalo Inc .. Los T101100 Senior Citizens
Inc., and !he Developmeotal Disabili·
ties Planning Council of Erie County.
Also. Erie Coooty Mental Hygiene
Comnunity Service Advisory Board.
Buffalo Urban League Economic Development/Emptoymen1 Council Advi·
sory Board. ECC Athletic Advisory
Board . Ch. 17. Erie County Guttural
Resoorces Advisory Board and !he fo.
cal American Aad Cross chapter.
A member of the UB professional
staff since 1973, Rivera earned a
bache+or's degree from Buffalo State
College and a master's from UB.

The UB Oigong Institute will present

The UB chapter of the Society of Au·

two days of programs March 30 and

tomotlve Engineers (SAE) drove
away with first prize In a student
competition at the Yt'Oftd's largest en·
gineering congress held last month
in Detroit. The win at the International

run

31 .on Olgong. an ancient Chinese
form of meditation that heals and deve)Ops the body as well as the mind .
Activities will be held in Room 210,

Congress and Exhib Uion of the Society ol Automotive Engineers, was a
"birthday gift" fO&lt; 1he US chapter.
celebrating its 10th year on campus.
LIB defeatad 14 teams with projects
00 !he theme, "Technical Cooperation

and Global~ · Contribu1k1g
to US's win ~ !he hybrid engine in
its 1995 prizewinning super-mileage
car: !he club's WEB page oo !he
Internet and its approach to the design
of an e1ec1ron1c suspension
a
feature in its 1996 fotmu&amp;a car. The car
wiH compete at !he Pontiac, Mich.. Silver Dome In May. A mini-8aja car will
compete in Mitwaukee kl June and the
hlgl&gt;mileage car wit! compete In

system.

Michigan in June.
Faculty advisor of the SAE student chapt8f is Andres Soom, prcr
fessor of mechanical and aerospace
engineering. Chapter members attending the congress were Stephanie
Cornelius, Jeff Luker. John LeRoy.
Kirtt Stalis, Bill Verwys, Shawn
Campbell . Josh Dooay, Cart Moll .
Luke Parker and Nolan Rabinowitz.

Polish art historian _ _ . . , _ . . , professor

of art history at KrakOw's Jagiellontan
University. will present a slide lecture,
"Images of women in TUfTHII-the-Cenwry Polish M" at noon April 3 in 608

Clemens Hall. North campus. The tee·
ture, co-sponsorad by !he US Department of M History and !he Polish Arts
Club of Buffalo as pan of !he
Jaglellontan Leclu'e Series. is free and
open to !he public. Lectures are given
by Jagielfontan facully In residence at
US under an exchange agreement.
Hussakowska-Szys will discuss
&lt;&gt;terpretatlons of !he Images of women
produced by Polish male painters at
!he tum of !he 19th century. us Profes·
sor ...._ o....n.r, representing the
Polish Arts Club, says that was an histo&lt;lc period in which Polish artists
sought fresh Iconography to express
their national$m after the failure of
Polish insurrections against European
powers that hod partitioned !he nation
earlier in the century.
In residence in UB's An History Department for 1he spring semester.
Hussakowska-Szy is preparing ,
"Polish Art: New Directions.· an exhibition olrecent Polish paintings April 12·
May 31 In University.Gallery, Center lor
!he Arts. She will co-curate !he show
US professor of
an histoty.

with -

_ ,,

�7

F001UU.: BULlS 10 HOIJ) SPIIINGI PRAC11CE
IN RAIJOII C. WILSON INDOOR FACIUJY
Spring practice for the Bulls' 1996 season gets under way this
week In a,_ venue . Through an agr8Mlent with the Buffalo
Bills, UB will hold spring practice sessions at the Ralph C. Wilson Indoor Football Facility in Orchard Park. The facility Is uti·
lized by the Bills during their regular season. UB's spring football
schedule runs from March 30 until the Blue-Wh~e game April 27
at 4 p.m. at UB Stadium.
Nelson Townsend, UB Director of Athelics,says the ongoing
relationship with the Buffalo Bills has been a very positive Interaction for both the university and the Bills over the years. "We
have enjoyed hosting the Buffalo Bills in the past with some of
their open mini-camp practices and now feel fortunate to benefrt
lrorn their gracious agreement As the only Div. I football program in the area allowed to have spring praclice, we feel Craig
and the team will be in a posillon to eliminate the weather as one
of their concerns in preparation for next season . ~
Head Coach Craig Cirbus seld, "I remain so imprassed with
the front office staff of the Bills. A coaching staff like tihelrs
complemented by such fantastic management personnel are
classic reasons why the Bills are such a successful franchise
and commandeer so much pride in our corrmunfty. We thank
Mr. Wilson , John Butier and Coach Levy lor helping to faciltiete
this arrangement.· UB's spring practices are closed to the public. The Bulls open the ragular season at UB Stadium Aug . 29 at

7:30p.m. \IS. Illinois State To obtain IK:kets call645-6666
WRES1UNQ
Junior 118-pounder Jason Wartinger and senior 167-pc&gt;.xlder
Marcus Hutchins both suffered losses in the second consolation
round of the 1996 NCAA Wrestling Championships Friday, elim.nating them from the tournament in Minneapolis.
Alter deleating Rider's John Carvalheira 12-2 Thursday night,
Wartinger advanced to face Shawn Conyers of Ohio State in the
third session Friday. Mer giving up an early takedoWn. Wartinger
was unable to make up the defrcit in losing 5-3.
Hutchins advanced to the second round of the consolations by
defeating Virginia's HoMe Miller 7-6, to lace Jason Wedgbury of
Northern Iowa Down 2.0 aner a near-fall scored by Wedgbury.
Hutchins scored a reversal to tie the score at 2-2 going Into the
third period. However, in the final period, Wedgbury scored a
one-point escape to take the lead lor good 3-2.
Wartinger's and Hutchins· wins on Thursday nighl were the
first ever for UB wrestlers at the NCAA Tournament on lhe Oiv. I
level. The Bulls' two victories scored 2.50 team points lor UB.
placing them in 38th place entering Friday's competition . The
University of Iowa won the team competillon lor the second
strelght season and frfth time in the last six years.
Wartinger finishes the season with a 35-6 overall record and
1-2 mark at the toumarnent. He lost in the first round to No. 4
seed Sheldon Thomas of Clarion University, ranked No. 2 in the
country at 118 pounds lor most of the season. Thomas won the
118-pound titie at the meet Wartinger's career record stands at
68-21 . Hutchins finishes the season with a 26-8 overall record
and a 1-2 mark at the tournament. He bst in the first round to
Michigan State's Joel Morrisette, the No. 10 seed. Hutchins
ends his career at UB with .a 66-20 record and the distinction of
being the only athlete in school history to appear in three nationaltoumarnents at the Div. I level.

OUIDOOR TRACK AND FIEU)
The outdoor track and field season begen with a pan of meets
in North carolina over Spring Break. A! the seaSO&lt;Hlpefling
Seahewk Invitational in Wilmington. the Royals picked up three
second place finishes. Usa Kragbe placed second in the 400
hurdles in 1:03.56. Shelly Hamiltoo cleared 5-4 lor second in the
high jump and the 4 x 100 reley team of Kragbe, Hamihon,
Magan Sanford and Kim Shaw took second in 50.72 in the 26tearn meet. On the men's side, Fumu Gakodi was the top finisher lor the Bulls taking third in the 400 meters in 48.69.
From there , the teams traveled to Winston-Salem for the
Wake Forest Invitational with close to 30 teams entered. Gakodi
placed second in the 400 dash in 48.94: Kevin Winkler flflished
lhird in 49.06. Neil Murray was second in the po6e vauh at 14-3
1/4. Gretchen Welch finished second in the 5CXXl meters in
18:42.9 to lead the Royals. Harnihon placed third in the high
jump at 5-6. The teams will be at the Raleigh RelayS at Nonh
Carolina State on Saturday

MEN'S TENNIS
The Bulls made the trek to Hilton Head. S.C lor Spring Break
matches during the week. UB went 2-4 for the week with VICtories over Mid-Continent Conference foes Youngstown State (61) and Valparaiso (4-3). UB dropped matches to Mid-Gon member Eastern Illinois (5-2). Connecticut (5-2). Eastern Kentucky
(5-2) and Oral Roberts (5-1). Coach Russ Crispell's team is 3-4
on the spring schedule and 13-6 tncluding last fall's matches
Wadle Kawar. playing number one singles. led the Bulls with
an impressive 5-1 mark during the week. The 5-9 senMJr from
Amman, Jordan lost the first match to his Oral Roberts opponent then rattled off five wins, defeating top competition. UB Is
off until April 4 when they travel to Pittsburgh to face Duquesne
-Ted Wasko, Sports Information Offtee

OBI TUARIES

James H. Cosgriff Jr., 70, clinical assistant
professor of surgery
A Mass of Christian Burial was held March 16 in St. Rose of Lima
Church . Buffalo, lor James H. Cosgriff Jr ., 70, an Internationally
known surgeon and trauma specialist who served as an assistant
clinical professor of surgery at UB. Cosgriff. immediate past president of the Medical Society of the State of New Yor1&lt;, died March 13
1n Millard Fillmore Hospital after a brief Illness.
A former governor of the American College of Surgeons. he was
the founder of the New York State Society of Surgeons and its
director from 1965-70. He was vice chair of the Council on Ethical
and Judicial Affairs of the American Medical Society. The author of
three medical textbooks. he gave more than 100 papers at local ,
national and international medical meetings and conferences.
A diplomate of the National Board of Medical Examiners and the
American Board of Surgery. he held offices in the American College
of Surgeons. American College of Emergency Physicians and the
Buffalo Surgical Society . He also heiCf offices in the New York
Medical Political Action Committee. Professional Standards Review
OrganizaUon , Empire State Peer Review Organization and Empire
State Medical, Scientific and Educational Foundation .
Former chairman of the New Yor1&lt;. State Emergency Medical
Services Council. he was also past chairman of the Western New
York Trauma Council and past director of the Wyoming-Erie County
Regional Emergency Medical Services Council . He was also former
director of the Emergency Med ical Services Project and Lakes Area
Regional Medical Program and a former member of the National

Advisory Board of the Emergency Department Nurses Association .
In 1991 he was honored at a benefit for Mercy Flight with a
tribute from the Erie County Medical Society lor his d edication and
service to the community . He was also c ited for h1s numerous
papers on emergency care operations and for his teaching of
trauma c are at UB. That same year. then-Gov. Mario Cuomo named
him to the Medical Advisory Committee of the New York State
Department of Social Services.
Cosgriff was former chair of the state Health Department's
Advisory Committee on Emergency Health Services. first chairman
of the Erie County Emergency Medical Care Committee and former
medical director and chief of trauma at Sisters Hospital Until1992.
he was an attending surgeon at Sisters Hospital Breast Care
Center.
A graduate of Canisius College, he received his medical degree
cum laude from the Georgetown School of Medicine
Cosgriff retired from the active practice of surgery last July

Scott A. Tulman, 44, clinical assistant
professor of surgery
Services were held March 17 tn Delaware Park Memonal Chapel for
Scott A. Tulman. UB clintcal asststant professor of surgery and a
pioneering surgeon at Buffalo General Hospital Tulman . 44 . dted
March 14 in Buffalo General . where he had undergone heart
transplant surgery last May. He was admitted to the hospllal
suffering complications following the transplant.
In 1994 , Tulman served as pres•dent of the Buffalo General

medicaVdentat staff He was honored by the hospital's board of
trustees at its recent annual mee11ng lor his leadership and teach Ing of residents and medical school students Among his awaras
were the C .P. Chandra Award for outstanding teachtng from the UB
Surgery Department in 1985 and 1995.
Recognized worldwide as an expert tn taparoscop1c surgery .
Turman in 1991 became the first surgeon in the world to remove a
spleen laparoscopically. The procedure. which allows a surgeon to
operate without a major incision. was performed on a 24-year-old
woman who teh the hospital after two days and returned to work 1n
one week
Tulman traveled extens•vely and cha1red conferences on h1s
specialty worldwide Among h1s many pulllicatJons was a bOOk on
minimal Invasive surgery which he co-authored in 1993. He was
also an Inventor. developing Instruments to pertorm laparoscoptC
procedures.
Tulman earned h1s bachelor and medical degrees atlhe UmverStly of Mtnnesola

Ray C. Van Allen, 76, former director
of techn ical services
Memonal serv1ces were held March 15 lor Ray C Van Allen. 76.
reured dtrector of techn1cal serv1ces at UB. Van Allen d1ed March
t 2 1n DeGraff Memorial Hospital. North Tonawanda
Van Allen . who had worked at UB lor 18 years. ret~red tn 198t
He was a Navy veteran ol World War ll

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8

Lo...,bCol._
•••
Tbtory!

__

W hat Set
Eugene
Kleinberg, Mathematics. 684
Baldy. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

.....,_,.

O utrom es R~rch, Edward
Wang. 248 Cooke . North Campus. 4 :30p.m.

ut. Worbllop
Bqinnina Sip Lancuage Semina r , Diane Cunhoys. Direct Experience Method (OEM).
Wednesdays through April 17.
S:30-6:4S p.m. To regisler, call
•
645-6125.

Movies
Klb (1994). In Spanish, subrirled. Student Unio n Theater.
Nonh Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2 stu dents; $3.50 general public.
UUAB film series.

ut. Worbllop
lntroducdoa to Hom e Brtwlog.
7-9 p.m . To register, caii64S6125.

Uvl... Well Worbllop
Kk:kin&amp; ButtJ: Bow to Q u it

c-

Smokloa. 145A Student Union.
North Campus. 7-8 p.m. Sponsored by Living Well Center. To
register, call 645-2837.

Uv•
Opooo:
Nicola Melville. p1aao. Allen.
So uth Campus. 7 p.m. Free.
Taped by WBFO 88.7 FM for
broadcast the rollowing Sunday
at4p.m.

ut. Worbllop
lntermec:l.latt Sip Lan1uage
Semlaar, OiiDC Curthoys. Direct
Experience Method (OEM).
Wednesdays through April 17.
7-8 : IS p.m. To register, call 645~
6125.

Pror.

Muolc

Canttr,
Hani A. Nabi.
Nuclear Medicine. SOS Cooke.
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

UB Wind Ensemble, Sllnlh
McKoin. conductor. Slec. North
Campus . 8 p.m. S3 .

ut. Worbllop

Mov...
From Dusk TW Dawn (1995) .
Student Union Theater. Nonh
Campus. 9 p.m. $2 students;
S3.SO general public. UUAB film
series.
Thu rscl.l\

--

!

~- ce~l aloloCY

Kissina ·a nd TeUin&amp; witb Gap
JuDCtions: Structural and
Functio na l RdaUonsblps, Dr.
Bruce Nicholson, Biological Sciences. 306 Farber. South Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free.

Tbes.ls/DI.ssertation Support
Group, Ba.rban Umiker. Thun ·
days lhrough April II . 4:30-5:30
p.m. To regi ster, call 645-6 12S .

ut. Worbllop
T'at Cbi for Beginaen, Ron
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays and Thursrbys, through May 2. B0-6,30
p.m. To register, call 645·6125

Movies
Klka (1994). In ~panish. subtitled. Student Union Theater.
f'o{o rth Campus. 6:30 p.m. S2 stu·
denu; S3 .SO general public.
UUAB fi lm series.

Mov...
From Dusk T ill Dawn (1995).

--·--·

Student Union 'Theater. North
Campus. 9 p.m. S2 students; $3 .50
general public. UUAB film series

Ployolce

CONTINUIN8
EXHiaiTS
.._,1
__
.___

Col._•••

-

""""· North c.mpus. 3,45 p.m.

IIJolaCic8l - -

l toproaoids aDd Tomato Devel·
opmcat: A Different 'l"wBt on
tbe AniJDal Story, 0!-. Jonathon
Nuita. Univ. of Illinois, Chicago.
12 1 Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

...... c• .uc. ........
R..dktlabeled MooodoaaJ Aoli·
body Imaain&amp; ud Therapy or

The IMt U,a of nature
"Perfect World," a group show ,
feaiUreS work or Vincent Shrine.
Laura Stein. Gregory Crewdson.
David Naz.io, and Ronald Jones,
closes March 3 1 in the Univeniry
Art Gallery locared in the Center
for the Arts. North Campus. Gal lery houn are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m ..
Wednesday through Saturday.
and Noon-S p.m. Sunday . Admission is rree.
U~el l

lnataflllllon

Ltonardo Drew's site-specific insllllhation "No. 45-A" was designed for the Lightwell Gallery
in the Center for tht Arts. North
Campus. and now is lodged there
through October.

Dutch bulldlnc

Excc:ulivt Committe-e. Jeannette
Martin Room, S67 Capen. North
· Campus . 3-S p.m.
Proloa - . . . . Deep lodastic:
Scalt&lt;riq .... Lf&amp;bl Froat Dyaroaaia, Prof. Hans J. Weber-,
Univ. or Virginia. 220Natural Sci-

dates continues through April 9
in the University Gallery. Center
for the Arts, No rth Campus. Gal lery houn ~Wednesday
through Saturday, 10:30 a.m.- 8
p.m., and Sunday Noon-S p.m.

A show or work. by 199S Rumsey
winners Rudolr Baltera and
Cornelia Dohse-Peck continues
through April 9 in lhe Art Depart·
ment Gal lery located in the Center for the Arts, No nh Campus.
Gallery hours are Tuesday, 10
a.m.-S p.m.; Wednesday through
Friday. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.: and Saturday, II a.m.-8 p.m.

-

...-.._,1_

Work by lhe 1996 Rumsey cand i-

"Dutch Modem Architecture" is
on view through April 12 in the
James Dyeu Gallery located in
33S Hayes Hall, South Campus.
Houn are Monday-Friday. 9
a.m.-S p.m.

Prl-ln C An exhibit of work by prinl ·
make!'l Susan Budash and Ben
Dunkle is on view through July 8
in the C.pen Hall Gallery located
on the fifth floor of Capen on the
Nonh Campus.

. . _ . exlllblt
"UB Remcmbcn," a un.iversity
sesquicentennial exhibit organized
by Univenity Archives, continues
through Sept. 10 in 420 Capen
HaJJ on the North Campus. A

bright item in the exhibit. organiz.ed by chief archivist Shonnie
Finnegan, is the state charter incorporating the Univenity of Bl.lrfalo on April 22. 1846. An exhibit
he« celebnting the centennial had
to settle for a ph01ographic copy
of the document-now we can see
the real McCoy (which up to now
has not been allowed to leave AI ~
bany). Groups may arnnge a visit
by calli ng 645-2916. Exhibil
hours are Monday through Friday.
9 a.m. 10 S p.m.

T.......,_._
_,
The Graduate School and the
Graduate Student Association are
hosting lhe Graduate Studenl fu .
cellence in Teaching Awards
Cert:mony. Friday. Mart:h 29 a1 3
p.m. in lhe University Gallery.
Center for the Arts, North C.mpus.

_,__..._.

Health Science undergraduates
who are enrolled rull time and
have filed a Free Application ror
Federal Student Aid are eligible
for the Abc Halbreich Memorial
Fund scholarships and low interest loans for the 1996-97 academic yeat. UDdergraduates in
lhe field of journalism may be
eligible for t:he Buffalo News
Scholarship for 1996-97. Applications for these scholarships arc
available from the Financial Aid
Orfice. and arc being accepted
through May 24

Procn"mmer/Analyst (Sir2)School of Engineering and Ap.
plied Sciences, Computer Services
Group, Posting IP-5021 . Staff Assistaot (SL-2)-Center ror the Arts.
Postjng IP-600S. Resklen« BaU
Dirutor(s) (SL-2)-Residential
Life. Posting liP-6006. Assistanl
Dirtdor of Counsc.Unc (SL-5) Counseling Center, Posting MP6007. Senior Staff Assistant (SL3) Archives. Posting MP-6010.
Instructional S u pport Technician (SL-3; Internal Promotional Opportunity) ~ Univt:n;i l )'
Faci lities, Posting MP-6011 . Fa~
cilitles Program Coordinator
(MP-4)-University Facilities.
Posting NP-601 2.

FacuftJ
Anistant/Assodat~ Prorrs."WJrMedicint. Posting MF-6010. A.ssis~
tant/Assoc.iate Prores:sor-Pedialrics. Posting Mf.-60 II . Asslstanl/
A.uociate Proressor-Pcdiatrics,
Posting IF-6012. AssistantJA.uocl.ate Profeuor-Prdiatrics. Posting MF-6013 .

R...Project Starr Auociat~Develop­
ment. Posting MR-95090. Research
t...b Worb:r-Biochemical Ptwmacology. Posting MR-96011.
Postdoctoral Assoc.Uate-Oral Btol ogy, Posting MR-96014.

To obtain morr informtJlion on
jobs lisltd abol't:, conlact Pusonnel &amp;rvices, 104 Crofts Hall. To
obtain infonnlltion Dlf Rest:arch
j obs, contact Sponsort:d Program.J
Personnd, 4 16 Crofts.

�8

........... ..
--..................
-----__.. _··--.......
....................
__
_
.. _
---· --Lao-

..... -.~ v......n, .... aa

,___ .,

utn1oo. 7-10 p.m. To,..;....-.
coll64S-6125.

_

......
..-.-.:

M~­
Rq:ulaUoa
of the BM.Uiu
111bli/U trp operon by u llNA·
bindin1 preMia. Prof. Plul D.
Gollnick. Bioloaical Sciences. 2.44
Cary . Sooth Campus. I I :45 a.m.

=-

X-n. CWeop. Scroaolac
Rooa1, c.- for tho Aru. Norlh
c.__ 7:30p.m. PRo.
Lau hrtt (IJ92).- with

ue~

c:.ll •loloO
Rlbolom.al DoiD~ .n Identi-

EllctiJbJUbUlla. IC77 -

.....

120ClcmeoJ.

(p:zll
.........).
O.MX....._ ..

_._

fied By Pe,...Axoplulak Pblqua
in Ibe' P.·t.atban- CtU Axon. Dr.
Edwud Koeni&amp;. Physiology . 306
Farber South Campus. 12:30 p.m.
Free .

........,_._.

-

Nonh Campus. 3:45 p.m.

Nllroaea Dynamks ln Diverse
Environ meats. Dr. Wayne
Gardner, Grt:al Lake:; EnvironNonh Campus. 4 p.m.

M - - c o Col'-lu•
Prof. Andrus Blas.!l, Univ. of
Michigan. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

---·-

Introduction to PET Sc::anning

in Orua Development, Prof. Edward M. Bednarczyk. Nuclear
Med•c•ne. 508 Cooke Nonh Ca.mpu!o 4 p.m

Statlotlco Col'-lum
A Short-Tum Foi"'KUI By 11
Loc:al Linear Efllmator, Prof
Xuux:hun L1 , Umv. of British Columbi a 24b C3ry South Campus

' pm

\

Ufe Workohop
The-sill/DiSSertation Support
Group, Bai-barn Umiker. Thursdays through April II. 4·)0-S )0
r m To register, call b4S -b i 2S

, Book Party
Clairf: Kah.ane's" Paulons or
the Yoke."' Talking Leaves. 3158
Main St . S-7 p.m. Free. Sponsored
by the Graduate Group for Femimst Studies.

ut.Workobop
T 'al C bl tor BqiD..Mn, Ron
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays and Thursd3ys. through May 2. S:J0-6:30

--

p.m. To register. call 64S-612S .

mation. c;all 836-6148.

MovMo
Snrcb and Dtstroy (1995). Stu·
dent Union 'Theater. North Cam·
pus. 6:30p.m. S2 studenu; $3 .50
[!tne"l public. UUAB film series.

UvllwWeiiW-...op
How to Quit Smoklna- 14SD Stu·
dent Union. North Campus. 7-8

p.m. Sponsored by LivinJ Well
Center. To register. oall 645-2837 .

ut.Workobop
lntroducUoo to Meditation.
7:30-9 p.m. To register, call 64S6125.
Art IActoiN
Art at tbe End of the Century,
Ronald Jones. Albright-Knoz An
Gallery Auditorium. 8 p.m. $3.
S4: UB faculty , staff. students. ..
Albri&amp;ht members, free. Co-sponsored by University at Buffalo An

-

....

,_.... .,_
~----

..ylotloo . . . . . . . . . deoolop-

-Prof. Munay J. EaiJIF&lt;,

... ........

-t

Culture.

S tan or the Boi.Jhol BallcL SOmember company. Mainscage ,
Center for lhe Ans. Nonh Campus . 8 p.m. $28. $34, $40.

Mov...
Braveheart (1995). Student
Union Theater. North Campus.
9 p.m. $2 students: S3 ..SO gc.neraJ
public; . UUAB .film series.

Bioebemisuy. 306 hrtcr. South
Campus .• p.m.

Ninth Annual Rq.lonal Coaltr·
enc.e on Curreot J.uuu ln Ge;rlatric Psychiatry. Univenity Inn
and Conference Center, 2401 N.
Forest Rd. 8:30 a.m.-4:30p.m.
For infonnation. call 829-2917 .

ror.......,.,

T'oi Cbl
Roo
U.pbl&gt;e. Tuesdays aad Th.....
days, throup Moy 2. S:JG.6:30
p.m. To reJisler. c;all64S-612!1i.

---

............

Eav_..........,.

--

-rorc......,6:J6.l1:l0
p.m. To re&amp;iJicr, call64S-6125.

Eft'ecu or Particle Slu Distribution and Zeta Potnti.al on Membrane Proc:e:s.ses, Prof. Brian
Dc:mpsc)'. Pennsylvania State
Univ 140 Ketter. Nonh Campus.
II a.m.

~-

BloioCJ-

ur.w~
~M)'IIories.S I&lt;Xies.

not rat life.. 7-9 p.m. To reJisltr,

call 645-6125.

--·Probl~m/Service

Matcblnr; and

Substance Abuse Treatment, A.
Thomas McLellan, Ph.D., Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical
Ccmer. 1021 Main Sc . 1:30 p.m.
Free. Sponsored by the Rc.Karch
Institute on Addictions.
ASCITW...........
lntroductioo to UNIX. 1-3:30
p.m. To register, c;a.ll Acadc:mic
Services. Computing and lnfonnation Technology User Liaison,
64S-3S40.

_
-

.

Dalpb&gt;c iatecnted Cin:ults
that Tat Tbautlvts, John P.
Hayes. Univ. of Michigan. 14
Knox. North Campus. 3 p.m.

__,

CrixtVau-""', a Potent RtV Proteat lnhlbltor, Dr. Paul J.
Reider, Merck Research Labs,
Rahway, N.J . 114 Hochstener.
North Campus. 3 p.m.
-.......,Col._•••

-

3
~­

Applkolloesol-

.....,,., ... _ , ._ _ Y o r t &lt; _ . . . . . , ...

....,..__

Nonb Campus. 3:30 p.m.
Phoa Sepanotloa ..... Stripe
Fonaatiollla a Dilute: Mapdk
Prof. Raben J. Gooding,
Queen' s Univ. 220 Natun..l Sciences. North Campus. 3:45p.m.

s,.....,

_...,.~.

Mu1tieloctn&gt;a ~ry
of Quad.rvply~Boaded MctaiMda.l Dilllua, Prof. Colleen
Panigianoni, Ithaca College. 21S
Natun.J Sciences. North Campus.
4p.m.

·........../-- ...
"'Taste, Food and Philnopby,•
Wort in Progress. Carolyn
Korsmeyer, University at Buffalo.
280 Pari:. 3 p.m.

....
-~

Nonllatt:nld AppHcaUoDS to
Structural ED&amp;iaftrlac: C...
Studla ID ADoJ,.a IUid Hoolth

Moaitorin&amp;o Cluistopher Ballard,
Civil Engi.neering. 140 K.euer.

pose:r-iD-Residcnce. Program indudes premiere of David Felder's
Three Pieces for Orehesua, the
sccood movement of whic.b is
dedicated to lhe memory of Yvar
Mikhashoff. Kleinhans Music
IWl. 8 p.m. Sl7, S23 , S30, S36.

Mo-

Anay or Dan- (1993). S••-

dent Union Theater. Nortb Campus. 11 :59 p.m. S2studc.nts: $3 .50
1encral public . UUAB film series.

.........

Bravebea.rt (1995). Student
Union Theater. North Campus. 6
and 9 p.m. Slstudenu; S3..SO general public. UUAB film series.

,....

..... ......

Free.

_u.._ __ _

a.m.

Art.._.
~otw-~a-rw-or.­
c - , . - Art, Prof. Moria

--.........

~Japllnaiao

l!ni•· ~). 608 Clcmcos.
North Campus. llooG. !'me.

G-'"II&lt;al-- ......

-

Web. 223 Lcckwoocl. North Campus. Noaa. ~requind;

_. _._
~

Juliet Kana. viollo. Slee. North
Campus. 7 p.m. $7. SO, SIS; free
for friends of QRS. QRS ~tries.
Monfln

ASCITW~

~. I

...,.
St.-__.,

coll Gemma DeVinney, 64!1-2817.

Nooo-1

p.m. To reaislt:r, ca11645-612S.

W llllus c......, M.D, Roowell
Puk. Kirchhofer Room. RPCI.
I 2:30p.m.

Art.._.

T1loosu llenllac ..... AJlso
Heariq- Yioltiac poimen,

__
----BA-w
.. -...-...--..........
_
_
-.......
_..,

AaiiDotioa EaJiy u.......
Screening Room. Center for tbc
Arts. North Campus. 7:30 p.m.

AJJ ....... 2
Diefendorf. South
Campus. 8-11
p.m. Free. Sponsocod by GSA .

l lulfalo Pbllbar...ikOn:bestro,

Mu.imiano
VaJdes.musicdi ·
rector, with
Joshua Bell, violin, aod David

-OF

rative Re;laUoas..IJI' Hc:tb Klar.
Cen1er for Tomorrow. North Cam·
pu5. $60; students $30. Sponsored
b)' Social Wort Continuing Educotion. For information, c;aii64Shl-IO.

Drop .. CWcol.......,,
Dobra fooa. 248 Coob. North

_ _ IIAUIIY _ _ _ _ _ _ ,_ _ _ _ _ ...._alltl

Felder, BPO Com-

Social wort&lt; w-...op
Worldna Wltb J&gt;il'lkult ClicntJ:
A Bri&lt;f, Solutloct-Focuood Approach to Dtvelopina Collabo-

......

Web. 223 Lcckwood. North c.mpus.. 1 p.m. Prereaistratioft rcquitod: call Gemma DoViDDey,
64S-2817.

Gco~lk Approachrs for Studyin&amp; the Vindence Factors of the
Oral Splroc.bdc Trf:poacma
dc.nUcola, Prof. Howard K.
Kur.unitsu. Oral Biology. 21S
Foster. South Campus. Noon.

~-'-til

G raduatt: Gay and Lesbian AJ.
soclatloD. 362 Student Union.
Nonh Campus. 6 p.m. For infor-

Gallery!Research Center in Art

~
A.-..rwlool5-

Oral

7:30

Modem
oad Liolntures. Ruuiaa Club, aad Uaiver-

,_
-.......

New Imm.uDOIIIpp~ for
Tnuuplaat, Bruce Kaistt, M .D.,
St. Ouiltopher's Children's Hospital . 12th annual MitcheU Rubin
Lc:ctun:. Kinch Auditorium,
Children's Hospital. 8 a.m.

-p·~

mental Research Lab. I 21 Cooke .

·

oiryUbnria.

l'ltyalc8Col.......
SbaJ&amp;ow.Dftp Co.petiUoa of
Impurity Statts la StmkoachM:·
ton: TM Capitalism of Local·
lzaUoo, Prof. Bernard Weinstein,
Physics. 220 Na!wal Science5.

North~.

p.m. Pnoe. SJIOIIICll&lt;d by Dopo. or

-~~~
--.urr:
·-.·lit
-.

-

a z,uu.

IJitrodudioD to Suo X·
WIDdowial Systud. 10 a.m.Noon.. To reJisltr, caU Academic
Services, Computing and Informa-

._,.,..,

tion Techoology User Liaison.
64S-3S40.

BarriiDao.. South Campus. 10

a.m.-4p.m.

-w....-..

QicoDI Dey 'M, Qigong Institute. Afternoon lectun:s and work-

shops. dinner 6-8 p.m., cultural
sbow 8- 11 p.m., group Qigong
practic;e II p.m.-1 a.m. Group
practic;e March 31, 10 a.m.-Noon.
a1 Niagara Falls. Qigong is an ancien! Chinese form of meditation
that beals Lbe miDd u well u the
body. 210 Srudent Union. North
Campus. 12:30 p.m.
For information, c;all 689-3947 .

me.

Jambo Africa. Dinner ac S p.m.
Dinner $6; dinner aod show $10.

Studenl Union Tbeater. North
c.mpu.s. 7 p.m. $7.

B ullolo 1'IIJI1Ia.-.oal On:beotra, Mu.imiaoo Valdes, music director. with Joshua Be.U. violin.
aod David Felder. BPO Composer· in-Residenc:e. ProJn.m in·
elude~ premiere of David Felder's
1'hree Pieces for Orchestra, the

~­

Mk:hi&amp;aa State Univ. Sc:reenin&amp;

U omnity otllulfalo Groduo,.

Room. Cc:nter for tbc: Arts.. North
Campus. 2:30 p.m.

..... (UBGCCS 'M). 146 Studc:nl
Union. North Campus. 9 a.m..-6
p.m. For information, contact:
ubg-cc;s(lcs. buffalo. edu.

.,.._..

a.-SeooJac••Tectoalc:-oflbeSouth-

MOUN Modell for ADc:mia, Dr.

c--..-,. aloloCJ

c . . - 1a eo.patorSd-

Jane E. Buter. Jackson Laboracories. Butler Auditorium, FaJbet.

South Campus. 4 p.m.
~w.........,

Enrdsla&amp; lor Spiritual FltDas.
5:30-6:45 p.m. To regi.sler, call

64S-6125.

~w~

Pupt~y Kbode&lt;prtea: no. AI&gt;IOI"but CulM: MlDd., Marilynn
Krcpl. Four ownen aod their
puppies per time slot. S:30-6:4!1i
p.m., aod 7-8: 15 p.m. To register,
call 645-6125.

M-ys -Jib April I . 6:3().
8:30 p.m. ru cJq&gt;os;&lt;: sw ...
funded upoo salisfactor)' completion of the program. For
information. call the Office of
Sludent Ufe. ISO SIUdent Union.
64S-6125 .

_...,. 1Actlll'a
UoJac VIsible N...,_lahred

~Or.

K.a1hi Beratan. Univ. of
Pinsbuflh. 228 Nuutal Sc;enca.
North Campus. 3:30p.m.

PbyslolocicoiOJ&gt;d Molocular

AdoptoU.. Ia Cbrvak MJ-ocardlol bchealo, Dr. Jolon M. Can1y
Jr., Me&lt;ti&lt;lDcll'bysK&gt;!ozy. 301
Biomedical Rcsean:h Building.

South Campus. 4 p.m.

_,~

o.__.,q Colobzed Pn&gt;-

_

.. C-.Jcol Ud...,, Dr.

DuaDe Dombek, Uaioa Carbide
Corporarioo. 21S NaNtal Sciences. North Campus. 4 p.m.

law.,

t '' •

n.,

Cooln&gt;lofZel&gt;ra ~ Vtiaa

Noo-Tado:Coollop: "-Ywn
-!lola, Dr. Robcrlllu.., 11&gt;Wsuy/Uoiwnity c.- f« a;.,.

surr-. m SOence BJda.. uurfllo

s.... Collep. 4 p.m.

Continued on page 7

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFA LO

UNIVIItiiTY AIIIUFMLO
State University ofNew Yori

01u Hundred Fifly Yea~
Milrch 14 1996

Volum e 27. No. 22

New MFC image links college's
future to distance learning concept

-on

w-.

P......_lll wotlcallop _...ud by , _ _,sTeak
11om left: GloN ~ - Rolli , Bonn i e - ·
BeYSIIJ lllahop,· Elmira Mueurn-Oanlel.

Career workshop
UB PI'OI(r8m -..ts .........,..,, rol. . ffH women
IIJ C-YIDAL

Reponer EditOf

N

EARLY 250 WOMEN representing a broad spectrum of professional capacities, disciplines and
interests gathered here last week to highlight the
accomplishments of women leaders at UB.

"Women's Voices: Insights for a Successful Career.'' a workshop
presented by the President's Task For&lt;:e on Women at UB and the
Affirmative Action Committee of the Professional Staff Senate, was held
March 7 in the Center for Tomorrow.
The workshop highlighted the accomplishments of five women from
throughout the university commu nity: Beverly Bishop, Distinguished
Teaching Professor of Physiology; Bonnie Butkas, editor-in-chief of The
Spectrum; Elmira Mangum~Daniel , assistant provost for resource management; Gloria Paveljack. a staff assistant in the School of Law; and
Jennifer Roth, general manager of WBFO.
But more than emphasizing the accomplishments of a few, the workshop broughc women together 10 encourage them to take leadership roles
at the university and to provide a sense of solidarity.
'There is room at the top. ll's up to us to push ...so that in 10 years we
can see some improvement," said Judith Miller, director of purchasing,
who welcomed participants.
While panel participants represented women ranging from a professor
with nearly 40 years of experience to a 22-year-&lt;&gt;ld student leader, their
message was consistent: know yourself and have the courage to be yourself
in the wOfkplace. "We wanted this workshop to take a proactive position,
n01 just be a list of grievances and complaints," said Bernice Noble, co-chair
of the President's Task For&lt;:e on Women at UB, who provided introductory
comments. "We're here to see what should be done for women. what could
be done for women and what women should do for themselves."

ll.LARD Fillmore
College is out :
MFC@UB is in.
Dean
George
Lopos told mem·
bers of the Faculty Senate Execu·
tive Committee last week.
Lopos announced the college' s
new image while speaking with
FSEC members at their March 6
meeting. Lopos outlined changes
he has made at MFC since becom·
ing dean late last year as well as his
vision for MFC' s fucure , centered
on distance learning.
Introducing Lopos, Acting Vice
President for Public Service and
Urban Affairs John Sheffer explained that "MFC serves a critical
role in our public service and uni~
versity mission s" and praised
Lopos' efforts toward "reinvent~

fortsasmajorimpedimentstoMFC.
Lopos also said that increased ru ·
ilion had affected non-traditiooal
enrollment. "l raised the question
of charging different tuition rates
at MFC, but people broke out in
hi ves," he joked .

I opos explained that the college
l.onas begun some '1udicious mar·
keting'' aimed at boosting recognition and o verall image . The
marketing campaign is a "soft" not
a "hard" sell, according to Lopos,
and seeks totl.istinguisb MFC from
its competitors as being the only
continuing education source affiliated with "a nationally-known university." He told FSEC members
to expect 10 begin receiving MFC
literature in the mail and bearing
more about MFC on cable TV in
the near future.
Continued on page 2

A furry friend is best for easing stress
IIJ
LOllServices
·News
Staff

B

Nervous 8bout that big presen·
tation for the boss, or the speech
you have to give before hundreds
of strangers'? Better to have your
dog at your side for comfort than
your spouse. it turns out.
That is the finding of a study on
moderators of cardiovascular reaction to stress conducted by Karen
Allen, research scientist in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and Millard Fillmore
Hospital. Results of the study were
presented for the fir&amp;t time at the
annual meeting of the American
Psychosomatic Society . held
March 7-10 in Williamsburg, Va.
The research was designed 10
assess the effectiveness of different
types of social support in helping
people cope with stressful situations. Allen also set out to test the
hypothesis that persons with high
levels of hostility (the so-called
''Type A" personality) did nol respond to normal social support.

Continued on page 3

"'Ibis study lncllcn- that in
investigating the role of sociaJ support in helping to conlrOI reactions
to stress. the nature of the support
must be considered," Allen said.
"In this study, one type of support.
a pet dog , was clearly more effec·
tive in controlling physiological
reactions in stressful situations than
other conventionaJ approaches.
"In addition. this study showed
that individuals previously thought
to be resistant to the possible benefits of social support (those high
in cynical hostility), can benefit
from the presence of a non judgmental friend. i.e .. a pet dog."
The investigation involved 240

everly Bishop noted her surpri se at the number of women gathered
for the workshop. "I expected to speak to 10 or so of you this
morning-in fac~ there are 250. I can't remember speaking to an
all-female audience since I was a Girl Scou~" said Bishop. Noting that
while she has spent her career in a male-dominated environment, Bishop
said she has never been at a disadvantage as a woman. " I have never felt
discriminated against, so when I was invited to speak I wrote back that
while honored, I didn't feel that I had anything to contribute. The only
time I fell di scriminated against was in the eighth grade, when I wasn ' t
allowed to take shop and had to take home economics."
While that may have been the only time she wasn't allowed to do
something because of her gender, ber career path has not been easy. she
admitted. ''To get to this stage in your professional life takes an awful lot
of hard work," Bishop said. But the numbers show that women have more
opportunities than in the pas~ Bishop said. "When I studied physiology
there were two women in my class." Today. in the medical school, 50
per&lt;:ent of the students are women.
It is important for a woman pursuing a career in the sciences or any
other profession to take advantages of opportunity when it comes and to
be herself, she said. It also is important to complement rather than

ing MFC."
Lopos explained that MFC ,
which offers pan-time. evening
undergraduate instruction to generally non-traditional students, has
suffered from a steady decline in
enrollment. Since 1971 . enrollment
has dropped from 6 ,000 to around
2,000. "Market surveys we recently
conducted confirmed what we suspected: the college has an identifi·
cation problem.'' Lopos said. In
fact, name recognition for the col ~
lege is so low that Lopos, who
came to UB from the University of
Iowa, said. "l've been told several
times I work for the hospital."
Many factors. Lopos said. have
contributed to MFC's decline over
the past two decades. He cited in creased tuition , increased local
competition, the depressed local
economy. decreased program avail·
ability and limited marketing ef-

A new •tudJ by KliNn Allen Ilea fou nd that your doC Ia - •r than
your opouae lor "ooclal s upport• In otreulul oltullllona.

couples. half of whom owned dogs
and half who didn't. All persons
performed three tasks used routinely by researchers to simulate
stressful situations-mental arithmetic. giving a speech and placing
a hand in ice water, a situation
considered analogous to undergoing a painful medical procedure.
Each participanl performed the
tasks under one of four conditions:
alone; with dog or friend (non-dog
owners); with spouse and dog or
friend , and with spouse only.
To -retllelr physiological
reactions to stress. participants'
heart rate and blood pressure. both
systolic and diastolic, were recorded as they performed the tasks.
Participants also completed stan·
dardized tests designed to determine the levels of hostility in their
personalities. closeness of their
marital relationship and altitude
toward pets.
Results showed that under

stressful conditions calling for the
subject to perform a task, i.e .. mental arithmetic or speech-giving, participants received the least benefit
from having only their spouse
presenr and the most benefit when
just their dog was present.

11MI next.fll~ reactivity oc·
curred when panicipants were
alone, followed by the condition
that included a spouse and either a
dog or a friend .
During the cold pressor test. be ing alone was the most stressful for
participants. while having a dog as
a companion was least stressful.
Under thi s condition. having a
spouse or friend presenl helped
moderate increases in pulse and
blood pressure somewhat.
The results also showed that persons with high levels of hostility.
thought to be unable to benefit from
social support from other people.
responded pos itively to the pres·
ence of a dog .

�2

UB takes two-pronged approach to state budget cuts

I

n the past month, President Greiner an.d Provost Headrick have
shared with the university their views on efforts to manage UB 's
future in light of continuing cuts in state tax support. The
essential point they make is that UB intends to manage change
and not be managed by it.
To that end. we are currently engaged in

two processes: advocacy effons to minimize
the overall budget reductions and contingeocy
planning to deal with the lump-sum reduction
that will be UB 'sshareofcuts instate funding
for the State University of New York.
Since the 1991-92 fiscal year. SUNY' s
budget has been reduced by $217.2 million.
As the system 's largest and most compre-

hensive campus, UB has absorbed a large
pan of that total reduction. For the current

fiscal year alone. UB 's reduction totaled
more than S 10 million.

S

UNY and UB would be hard hit in the
next fi scal year by three major budget
reductions being proposed in Albany:
• $98 million in the SUNY operating
budget
• sl6million in the SUNY capital equipment budget for technology and suppon for

the Graduate Research Initiative
• $45 million in TAP funding for SUNY
students
While the SUNY Board of Trustees has
proposed way s to ameliorate approximately
$67 million of the $98 million reduction
through a combination of more income
(largely from a $250 tuition increase) and
reducing state costs, these savings or some
ponion of them will be generated only if
SUNY's
legislative package is enacted.
\
Even with a successful advocacy effort,
, we expect SUNY and UB 10 be hit with a

lump-sum reduction which, at this stage in

the budget process, we estimate will range
from 4 percent to 7 percent This translates
into an $8 million to$14 million reduction to
UB for 1996-97.

• Extending decentralization of Research
Foundation activities to allow the campus to
both improve service and to reduce administrative costs.
• Securing approval for more campus
management of srudent fees and charges
from System Administration.
• Retaining current July-June fiscal year.
• Retaining Educational Opponunily
Centers (EOC) in SUNY, rather than moving them to the Labor Department

H

dations made in "Rethinking SUNY."
• Increasing funding for technology to

ow will UB deal with another large
reduction in state funding that is
likely to occur, despite our advocacy
efforts? At this time, indications are that:
• Reductions will be allocaled to all areas.
including academic programs. It DO loogerwill
be possible to bave a disproportiooatc share of
reductions assigned to support areas. Further
reductions will require a proportiooale reduction being assigned to academic areas.
• We will have to integrate enrollment
management Both the structure for managing enroUmenl (Senior Enrollment Mimagement Group) and the integration and input
into enrollment planning are now in place.
What needs to be dnne is now clearly identified, and steps to improve recruitment and
retention are underway.
• Students will continue to pay for selected services. Tomeeta portion of technology needs forsrudents, a fee was initiated for
Fall 1995. Other fees were modifted based

meet educational and administrative require-

on increased costs of services.

ments. Technology has been. is and will
continue to be a high priority and vital to the
university's ability to function.

• lbere will be more emphasis on staff
development and training, both necessary to
our future success. More time, attention and
resources will be paid to this activity.
• Despite seven consecutive years of

U

B' s advocacy effons are focused on
a number of crucial areas:
• Restoring TAP to its 1995-96
funding level and funding formula. a "must"
if we are to provide access to the most needy
SUNY srudents.
'
• Passing SUNY's legislative package.
including the Management Effectiveness
Bill, Health Care Management Bill and Retirement and Severance Incentive Bill.
• Supporting a $250 IU.ition increase for
1996-97. That general ruition increase would
translate into $26 million in revenue, and is
essential given the proposed $98 miltion
reduction in SUNY's operating budget
• Approving legislation permitting dif-

ferential tuition. which is necessary to meet
UB's unique program needs.
• Reducing the size of SUNY System

Administration consistent with recommen-

• Extending excess tuition revenues in
1995-96 (SUTRA) for meeting UB program
needs, and insuring that the SUTRA mechanism is in place for 1996-97.

reduction, we will continue to avoid re-

trenchment this year, although there is con-

cern over the growing lack of resource
flexibility to manage this in the future.
•we will aggressively take advantage of
entrepreneurial opponunities to increase rev-

enues from non-state sources. Policies and
regulations will need to be revised to allow
for an improved "entrepreneurial atmosphere" on campus, and overhead costs will
need to be examined.
• Technology is a strategic resource. Like
many large organizations, UB is beginning to
see technology as not just a tool or set of tools,
but a transforming resouroe. Because technology will be essential to our future and will

TABLE 1

Tho-.gtallleaummartzsolhatmmtd
legislllive restoralicn rNflllha past Iiiio yen
and lh8 final remaining budge! raduclion lor
SlM'
Y8111
OYontiSUNY OYontl Logilllllvo
Flrel Rocldon
1995-96 $60.0M
S1oo.OM
.().
1994-95 .().
.().
t993-94 S1t1!M
.().
1992-93 $60.31.4
1991-92 85.1M
$19.51.4

-

fundamentally change bow we work, Computing and lnfonnalion Technology will DOl
be expected to make the same budget reduction as other areas of the university.
• We will continue to emphasize improved service to students in all suppon
areas. Theteisgmwingrecognitionthatquality services are essential to siudent recntitment and retention.
• UB •s investment priorities will focus
on academic programs (e.g., Center for StnJcrural Biology); technology; Public Service
and Urban Affairs; Development; and lntercoUegiate Athletics.
bottom line is that change will oc
ur; for some, the rate of change will be
seen as too rapid.
·
Technology will be absolutely essential to
our future and will fundamentally change bow
we work. Competition for students will be
intense. and we will need all the incentives and
tools we can identify to compete effectively.
1be skills that staff need will change
dramatically, and nearly all staff will require
more development and training. Units will
manage more of the instirution •s overall resources, and administration will be re-engineered and downsized.
Over the next several months you will be
hearing more about the university's push for
more flexibility and resources, and our review of plans to implement the necessary
reductions that will result from the ftnal
1996-97 budget process.
I welcome your feedback on our contingency planning and advocacy efforts.

T:

Senior Vice President
-~-·­
520 Gapen Hall
Phone #: 645-2922
FAX#: 645-2933

E-Mail: USVRJWOUBVMS.CC.BUFFALO.EDU

MFC IMAGE
Continued from page 1
Internally. the college is conducting a
thorough evaluation of its offerings, Lopos
said. "We have not been offering the kinds of
programs that attract non-traditional students," he explained. Lopos expects this will
mean dropping some offerings, adding others and expanding into graduate course wot!&lt;.
Currenlly. MFC offers only undergraduate
courses.
"Distance Learning" will play a key role
in the new MFC·. said Lopos. "I consider that
everything from guided self-study to computer-based remote classwork," be said. UB
musl"play catch up" in the distance learning
field, he observed. Recently,the college applied for a Sloan Foundation grant to bring
faculty up to speed on distance learning
techniques. "'The hardware is the easiest part."
Lopos said. "Working with the faculty, to

energize courses for distance learning, is
where you have to make a real investmenL''
In other business, the FSEC beard that the
administration hopes to bave dormitories
wired for the campus c:Omputing network
and Internet access by fall and that the srudenltechnology fee will likely rise next year,
according to Associate Vice President for
Computing &amp; Information Technology
Hinricb Martens.

Martens explained that even under a best
case scenario, the university will fall short of
meeting its full computing demands over the
next several years. Despite a new technology
fee that ntises $2 million a year and an additiorutl "considerable investmen(' by the university, Martens estimates then: wiU still be an
unfunded demand of about $5 million worth of
computing power five years from now.

Mancos also announced that a new "authentication system" would go on-line this

fall. The new ..sign-on" system would offer
greater security against useofthe university's
computing power by non-university personnel. Martens also indicted that his office was
examining the distribution of computing
powernow .to decide wbelherlhe university' s
8,000 personal computers are being put to
their best use.
0

�3

Council hears reports on
budget, nursing school issues
IIJ~VIDAL

greater priority, in his mind. "If tuition goes

Reporter Ednor

T

HE STATUS OF New York
State's budget negotiations, and
lbe implications !bose negotiations
hold for lbe university, again fig-

ured prominently into the discus·

sioo when lbe UB Council met March 7 .
Legislators "were very cordial and noncommittal" to a group of UB supporters who
recently traveled to Albany to voice concerns over lbc budget and speak on behalf of
the university and its needs, according to
President William R. Greiner, who traveled
wilb lbc group.

"It's a very peculiar time. I've never seen
one like Ibis," he said.
He noted lbat lbc state usually is further
along in lbebudgct process at Ibis point in lbc
fiscal year. "By now you should be at the

point where heavy negotiations are going
on." Instead, the process is at a standstill, at

least in pan because of uncenainty over how
much funding the federal government will

provide to New York State.
Greiner added that the state is even considering passage of a three-month budget,
which would allow New York State to make
adjustments after the impact of the federal
budget on New York State is known.

The Tuition Assistance Program appears
to have a good chance of being substantially
restored, and indications arc that lbe SUNY
Trustees are in favor of aJiowing campuses to
keep the luition they generate.
But the flexibility legislation that many feel

is vital if SUNY is to remain viable, may not
pass. "We keep hearing that all this fl exibility
legislation is premature," Greiner said. ''If it's

not timely now. when is it timely? The answer
is, after the election (in November) ......
As much as he would like to see a restora

up, and it probably will, you'd better have
excellent financial aid packages."

While various tuition increase figures have
been suggested, there's "no way of knowing.. how much tuition could rise for the
1996-97 academic year, Greiner said.
"My fear is we'll get lbc tools we need to
manage, but (that flexibility) will come too
late. The money will come out (of UB ·s
budget) and we'll have a lot of wreckage

next year," Greiner said.
In other business, the council beard a report
on the School of Nursing by Dean Mecca
Cranley. While the School of Nursing enrolls
more than 600 students, "we have a lot of
competition in the arca. .. which forces us to
define our niche,'' Cranley said. One of UB ·s

strengths isthatit'sa university, withexteru;ive
library facilities, an active faculty engaged in
scholarship and research and opportunities for
interdisciplinary study and research.

T

hese benefits are not confined to students
living in the Buffalo area. she noted . The

School of Nursing' s distance learning program allows the university to reach students
on campuses that include the Olean campus
of Jamestown Community College.
1be health care system revolution will im
pact the university in a number of ways, Cranley
noted. Changes tobealthcare will mean changes
to the job market for both students and alumni .
4

These changes also will a/feet what she called
the "human laboratory" in which students learn.
Students traditionally have learned basic care
skills in hospitals caring for moderately ill patients. ''It will not be possible to find such a

(learning experience) in a hospital any
more .... HospitaJs are essentially in!ensive care
units these days," Cranley said

tion of funds to SUNY. Greiner said, "I think

While allowing students to care for critically ill patien!s raises a number of ethical

we have to be realistic ." Financial aid has

Continued on page 6

4

CAREER WORKSHOP
Continued from page 1

compete, and to "develop emotional strength
through self-discipline, complete objectivity and dauntless persistence,'' Bishop sai d.

D

isregard your sensitivity to criticism
and concentrate on doing the best
possible job, she said, and "most

important of all, be assertive, not aggres·

sive," and "marry an understanding man
who suppons and encourages you."
It is important that young women be encouraged · ~o go and do what they want to do,

and to not let anyone stand in their way,'' said
Bonnie Butkas, a UB student and editor-inchief ofTbe Spec1rum. "Every woman I know
has found herself apologizing more than she'd
like. Every woman I know has been called
(unflaneriog)names. Every woman I know has
wanted the opportunity to fight the good fight/'
Butkas herself is no stranger to those
struggles. As editorofU.B · s student newspaper. she has found herself embroiled in a

number of them this year over articles and
viewpoints The Speclrum has published .
"I knew it would be hard work and there
would be long days, but I didn' t expect to be the
subjectofsomuchcontroversy,"shesaid. "I'm
disillusioned with controversy and the way it
arises and takes on a life of its own," she said.
Sbe also is disillusioned wilb the way sbe
has been treated on campus. "I have yet to be in
(administrators') offices and been able to finish a sentence ....! was surprised to be treated
like I didn' t know what I was doing," she said.
Tbe workshop was "tbe perfect antidote" to
her feeliogs of disillusionment about UB in
general, she said. "I have the feeling lbat UB
wiD be OK after I leave."
The program is "one of lbe most significant set of workshops assemblad to celebrate

and share experiences, and to engage in
dialogue," said Elmira Mangum-Daniel.

"Our voices are a testimony that in spite
of odds, obstacles, inequities and irregularities, women continue to raise their voices
high and arc being heard," she said.
Tracing her 18-year career path. Mangum-

Daniel noted the imponance of having a personal long-range plan. as well as the ability to
be flexible when things don't work out as
anticipated. "I had written down a plan for the
10 Y""{S of my life immediately foDowing
graduate school. Some of you might think that
this is boring. some of you might even think it
impossible. What it is, is challenging,'' sbe
said. 'The point is, you need to have a plan."
Whether you stick to those objectives is less
important, she said. " Plans help you focus."

D

on't be afraid to take on something
oew, Mangum-Daniel said, but "always be prepared to do the job, no
l)l8l1er bow challenging. Sometimes getting
the job done may n:quirc you to tool up in new
areas, to learn new things," sbe said.
"It is important to use the strenglb, wisdom
and experiences from each position to build for

the next one." Depend on your own resources
and form alliances, she advised. "Network
with otherwomeo tocomba1 the psychological
and institutional barriers to your potential for
achievement." She rccalled the words of Cali-

fornia Congresswoman Maxine Waters:
"Power is what makes the difference in lives
andcommunities,and the fll'St thing wehaveto

understand about power and how you get i!
is ... you don't ask someone how to get it You
take it and once you've taken it. you use it''
There is power in an education , Gloria
Paveljack told participants. "Opportunities
arc made available when you get your degree." After Paveljack joined the university
as a stenographer in 1986, a co-worker encouraged her to return to school evenings to

"I wasn't going to live the
life my rrwther did.... That
was not for me. "
JENNIFER ROTH

wasn't going to live the life my mother
did .... That was not for me ."

I

nstead, she moved around. working
a1 eight radio stations in eight
states since 1972. which gave her a sense of

opportunity. "When you remove geographical

barriers, there· s a lot more available to you."
she said. Roth offered workshop participants
what she called "sloganesque kinds of things
that help me Jive my work life and my real life."

get her degree. "I already had an associate's
degree, so how long could getting a baccalaureate degree take?" she said. She took two
courses a semester for the next six years.
five years before she received her degree.

At the top of the list is to rry to do the best
job you can, and to see how to do it differ
ently and better. "Look at things in terms of
how you can refresh your job," Roth said.
l! 's important to care about people, she
said. "Women have natural gifts- intuition

Pavcljack transferred to a PACE (Program

and empathy. Usc them," Roth said. It ' s also

in Accelerated College Education) program.
She received her baccalaureate degree 15
months later. Four months later, she was
promoted to a professional position at UB.

important to listen as well as to communicate. Share the credit and give others the
opponunity to shine, she said. And remem-

But faced with the prospect of another

"Where did the time go and what did I
miss? I missed a lot," Pavcljack said. Faced

with the choice between school and one of her
chi ldren's plays, school often had to take precedence. But it showed ber children that some-

4

ber to thank people for a job well done . Head
off trouble at lbe pass by anticipating prob-

lems and trying to solve them before they
become problems. Have a "plan B" ready .
Prioritize and rcprioritize, Roth said. "I!

times you have to work for what you want. she

is so important to rethink the day and whar' s
most important to get done that day .

said. And on graduation day. "all the sacrifices
I'd made were worth it. I'd taught them how

in their Jives: What's the worst that can hap-

imponant it was to have a degree,'' she said.
"You never know what the future holds or
what opponunilies wiU present themselves. A

your mistakes and Jearn from them, to be

degree allows you to be prepared ...

Success to Jennifer Roth is a scary word
"because I feel I'm only as good as my last

blunder or my last missed opportunity ."
Noting that she's never had a 10-year
plan, or even a six-month plan, Roth said.
"it's innate in me to want to be of use."
"At a very early age I felt I was not
destined for an average life," Roth said. "I

She urged participants to engrave six words
pen? "Write that one down. It'D be really
useful." she said. It's also important to admit
willing to be accountable. and to be solution
oriented. "Instead of concentrating on prob-

lems, concentrate on solutions," Roth said.
"Toughen up. Learn to take criticism. Women
tend to be a linle extra defensive. It's great to
be objective," she said Take care of yourself.
"Your beallb is rcally important and energy is
important," Roth said. And pcrllaps the most
essential words to ~ve by: "have fun."

�4

_SA,.._ -n.-aa

Research&amp;Technology
Major crossroad in
cognitive science
UB center takes new direction In study of the mind
11J IEI.UN -.o.AUM

News Services StaH

W

henfaculrymembers from
other schools come to UB
to speak in program s

sponsored by its Center
forCognitiveScience, UB
faculty gently remind them to leave their

academic jargon at the door. That may surprise some visitors who are used to lecturing
to their peers. But to the 38 researchers from
I 0 academic departments who make up UB' s
Center for Cognitive Science, the idea of
making themselves understandable to people
outside their fields is rudimentary.
Cognitive science, the study of the nature
o f the human mind and cognition, is by
definition ,interdisciplinary. This emerging
field has enerally been a cooperative effon
of com ter scientists, linguists. psychologists, p losophers, anthropologists and neuroscien ts. UB's approach is even broader.
including rofessors from geography, industrial en . eering, biophysics, physiology. commun cation sciences and education.
"We're at ~ unique point in history," said
Leonard Tal my , director of the center and
associate professor of linguistics at lffi .
"After decades of science moving in ever
more specialized, differentiated directions,
the emergence of cognitive science signals a
return in the other direction."
That directional change intensified in
1994, when UB hosted the First lntemationaJ Summer Institute in Cognitive Science, the first major international forum
held exclusively for cognitive science. During the month of July, some 500 professors.
researchers, students and industrial and gov·
emment scientists from 32 countries attended
intensive classes, workshops and lectures.
" In part because of that conference, Buffalo is now regarded as a major crossroads in
the world for cognitive science," Talmy said.
Tal my cautioned that the number of uni vers ities with centers or groups approaching
the study of the ntind this way is still small.
UB is one of only about 20 in the U.S .. and
only about30 in the world, that has a formalized cognitive-science graduate track.
In recent trips to other universities that
have an interest in studying cognition, Talmy
has noticed how far ahead of other schools
the UB effort has com.e . "At many schools 1
visit. the researchers ask very traditional
kinds of questions," he. said. "I don't hear
ech'o es in them of all the additional understanding you can gain from disciplines outside your own ."

The epoken word
ecause language is a trait unique to
humans, and therefore an ideal windowon the human ntind.several groups
working within the Center for Cognitive Science are attempting to decipher its secrets.
The Spoken Language Group includes

B

researchers from linguistics, communicative disorders, neurology and psychology.
Operating with annual funding of $100,000
under a National Institutes of Health training grant, the gro~p does research ranging

from how infants recognize their names to
what parts of the brain are responsible for
producing and understanding speech.
"'The problems we deal with are so large, no
one individual could hope to tackle them."
explained James Sawusch, associate professor
of psychology and a member of the group.

Studies performed by group member
Peter W. Jusczyk, UB psycbologist, have

shown that infants as young as six mC::ntb.s
become attuned to the cbaracteri&gt;tic sound
patterns of words in their native languages.
Other projects of the Spoken Language
Group are designed to explore the perceptual
processes of adults.
"I deal with the sounds of

words," explained
Sawusch .
"We want to

find out what

in
these
sounds is most
eye-catching,
or rather, 'earcatching.'
"lf we can
develop a normal model for

how we perceive

ian-

of-for~

guage , then ·
we can begin
to study disorders and the development of

new treatments for them," he said.

T

he

PETprojecb
Cognitive Neurosciences/

Neurolinguistics Research Group is
using one of medicine's most advanced imaging technologies, the PET
(positron emission tomography) scanner,
combined with electrophysiological data, to
pinpoint the parts pf the brain involved in
language processing.
One of a handful in the U.S. that has both
a clinical and research capacity, the $12
million PET facility at UB and the Buffalo
VA Medical Center is being used to study
which areas of the brain are active while
subjects perform language-processing tasks.
Project investigators are itohert D. Van
Valin Jr. , professor and chair of linguistics;
Jeri Jaeger, assistant professoroflinguistics;
Alan Lockwood, professor of neurology and

nuclear medicine and director of operations
at the PET center, and doctoral candidate
David Kemmerer. The research is funded by
a UB multidisciplinary pilot project grant.
In these experiments, subjects are first
asked to read aloud real verbs and nonsense
words, such as " wug" or"spalk." Then they're
asked to view lists of verbs with regular pasttense forms (such as '1ump") and inegular
past-tense forms (such as ''ran"). For the nonsense verbs, the subjects convert them into past
tenses, such as ''wugged" or "spalked."
"When brain regions take on an addi-

tional workload, an increase in the amount of
fuel is needed," explained Lockwood. 'This
leads.to an increase in blood flow that we
measure with PET."
While subjects perform these tasks, the
PET scan records the rate of blood flow to
various parts of the brain, compared to the
rate of blood flow to the brain in the resting

rules that allows them to produce past-tense
forms of both regular and irregular verbs. A
third group of researchers assumes that all
forms, both present and past tense, are·memoriz.ed and stored in the mental lexicon.
Linguists wbo believe in the dual-systems
tboory say that while past-tense forms of regular verbs are generat&lt;d by the rule, inegular
verbs are memorized and stored individually.
The UB study's findings clearly bear this ou~
said Van Valin, demonstrating strong evidence for two distinct eognitive processes.
"It's not that past tenses are in themselves
such an interesting pbenomeoon," said Jaeger.
'The underlying argument here is over just
whal the brain is good at How does the brain
prefer to organize and process information'!'
AI; linguists, Van Valin and Jaeger are
interested in how humans process language
in order to illuminate bow the mind works.
But as a neurologis~ Lockwood is interested in this research because of what it will
reveal about disorders, such as strokes, that
affect a patient's ability to process language.
"What allows some stroke patients to
recover language processing and others not?"
he asked. "What causes conditions where
patients experience very subtle language
impairments, such as in Parkinson's disease? The work that is being done here leads
very naturally to these kinds of questions."

CASSIE: A C0111P11ter tMt "epNks"
lllllural ........
e learning and processing oflanguage
s also being explored by computer
scientists in several research groups
affiliated with the Center for Cognitive Science, who are developing computers that
will be able to cOmmunicate more the way
humans do. Stuart C. Shapiro, professor of
computer science, and William J. Rapaport.

associate professor of computer science. and
their colleagues have developed a computerized knowledge representation and reasoning system, cal led SNePS, the Semantic
Network Processing System.
CASSIE, (Cognitive Agent of the SNePS
System an Intelligent Entity) is a computerized cognitive agent they designed that com-

municates in natural language, the way

Shu card, research assistant professor of neurology, and David W. Shu card, professor of
neurology, have shown that differences in
the ways male and female brains process

information are present early in life and are
not laid down during the hormonal surges of
puberty, as was previously thougbL
• Discover how humans pen:eive im-

humans do. TI)e researchers key in questions
Continued on page 7
and statements and CASSIE re- , - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
sponds by flashing responses on

the computer screen.
At a recent conference on artificial intelligence, Shapiro and
CASSIE had a conversation that
demonstrated CASSIE's ability to
distinguish between talking about

sentences and talking about beliefs . During the exchange,
CASSIE seemed to understand that

state. The result is a map of areas of the brain

a person it was discussing believed

that are activated during specific language
processes, such as forming the past tense.
'The past tense of English verbs is a hot

one thing, but said another. SNePS
has endowed CASSIE with an intelligence, an ability to reason

topic in cognitive science," explained Van

about what it lrnows or does not
~t

Valin.
1be controversy bas been over whether

know based on

oor or two systems allow the brain to process

are propositions, or beliefs,"
Shapiro said, "and we, as well as

past tenses. Proponents of a single system
say that people use either a single system of

of them."
A related focus of the SNePS Research
Group is to discover bow humans and cognitive agents can understand narrative.
"We are trying to understand how readers
develop a 'story world' wheo they are reading narrative, bow they k«p tracl&lt;ofwhal's
happening and where," said Rapaport. "How
do readers understand who is talking wben
they read an indirect quote?"
SNePS was recently incorporated into an
intelligent electronic system that translates
Chinese1Cxt into English and actually "understands" whal it is translating.
The system utilizes SNePS as whal' s
known as an interlingua, an intennediate,
language-neutral representation.
"Because the system uses SNePS, it
doesn't translate one sentence at a time,"
explained Rapaport. Instead, it translates all
of the material into this interlingua. understands it and then translates it from the
interlingua into Englisb. "Since it understands everything it has translated, the system can be asked questions about it and it
wiU respond," said Rapaport.
According to UB graduate student MinHung Liao, who developed the system,
SNePS is much more powerful than other
knowledge-representation systems.
"With SNePS, we can represent propositions or beliefs," said Liao. "Other systems
cannot do that." Future applications for the
SNePS-equipped translator ntigbt include a
multilingual system that could instantly translate information on the World Wide Web
into any one of several languages.
Additional projects being conducted by researchers with the UB Center fot Cognitive
Science include studies designed to:
• Discover bow brains of boys and
girls may develop dllfel'totly. Janet L.

discourse.

'"There are sentences and there

L-----------

u..-.....,..... Aim..__ Mil Jolt....,-

computers, need to talk about both k•-IICMIIIC- the -

-

-

·

�5

Service .Excellence honors for University Services staff
T AFF FROM throughout
University Services were
honored this week for their
contributions to projects
that have benefitted the university.
Service Excellence Awards were pre·
sented March 12 in tbe Center forTomonow
for projects that made registnltion and grade
reporting easier, simplified the student loan
process, streamlioed the processing of student time sheets and paycheclcs, improved
WBFO's radiosignalandreducedUB'selectricbill.
F'tnt·place honors went to the Billing,
lnquiry,Records,Drop/Add(BIRD)projec~

which enables students to register and receive their grades anywhere a toucb·tone
telephone is available. In addition to eUmi-

nating lines and making access more flexible. BIRD also provides service to students
by allowing them more time to register and
change their schedules. The system also significantly reduces workload and costs involved in registnltion and grade reporting.
Hinrich Martens. associate vice presidenr

for Computing and lnfonnation Technology, accepted tbe award for tbe cross-functional team that included members from
Administrative Computing, Campus Ser·
vices, Millard Fillmore College, Office of
Graduate School, Operational Suppon Services, Records and Registnltion, School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences, School
of Management, Student Life, Technical
Services and Undergraduate Education.

'W"be William D. Ford Federal Direct Loon
I Program received second place for its
role in providiog a new and simpler way for
students to obtAin loans. Loon funds are received direcUy from the U.S. Depanrnent of
Education, and disbursed direcUy II' eligible
students, wbicb makes loan processing more
effie leo~ improves customer service and ere·
ates a new revenue source and marketing tool
for recruiting students. John Karrer, director
of Student F'mances and Records, accepted
the award for the project team that included
representatives of Accounting and Payroll
Services, AdminiStnltiveComputing Services.
the Office of F'maocial Aid and the Office of
Studeot Accounts.

Third place was awarded to the Student
Time Sheet Paperless Processing project,
which has enabled depanments to process
student assistant time sheets electronically.
The payroll system accepts entries and transmits data without paper documents, which
allows single data entry, greater accuracy,
enhanced availability of information and
elimination of paper files. Joseph Kerr, acting director of payroll services, accepted the
award for the project team composed of
representatives of Computing and Information Technology, Payroll Services and University Facilities.
Third place also was awarded to WBFO
for improvements to its signal and expansion
of its coverage area. UB's radio station sig-

nificantly boosted the quality and range of
its signal by replacing its directional antenna
with one that transmits the signal in all
directions, improving technical service to
current and potential listeners and providing

increased fund-raising potential without incuning additional operational costs other

than a one-time inveslment of $23,000 for
equipment and labor. Carole Smith Petro,

............. _

fans were treated to three
pressur&amp;-paeked basket·

days of
ball that
In an emotional champion·
snip contest.
Balore the tournament tipped oH, the league
announced ns Afi.Q)nlerence and All-Newcomer selectioos. Junior guard Brenna Doty
earned first team All-Mid-Continent recognition
lor the second straight season while freshman
point guard Catherine Jacob was selected to
the All-Newcomer squad. Northeastern Illinois'
Radiance Clarke earned Player of the Year
honors while Troy State's Dyneshia Bankston
picked up the Newcomer of the Year award.
Valparaiso head coach Kenh Freeman was selected as the Coach of the Year.
In the quarterfinals, Jacob had 12 of hdr career-high t6 points in the first hall and sparked
an 1S{) run as the Royals defeated Missouri·
Kansas cny, 7944.
Jacob had three of her three-pointers and
lour assists in the run that closed the first haft
lor the Royals, stretching their lead to 38-15 at
intermission. She linislled 5-&lt;ll-71rorn the floor
while Anne Gallagher added 12 points and 11
rebounds. Brenna Doty (11 points) and
Charissa Gardner (tO points) ~re also in
double ligures lor the Royals.
'I knew Jacob was capable of making those
shots,· said UMKC coach David Glass, ' but
she usually doesn't take on such a scoring
load. We were trying to double (Brenna) Doty
and help in the post and thet left her open.
That was definitely a major factor In the game.·
'I'm very proud of the way our ladies played
tonight,· said BuHalo coach Sal Buscaglia.
·we hoped that we would come out excited
and not nervous and I felt we really responded
well. We hit on ail cylinders tonight."
UB held UMKC to just 27.7 percent field
goal shooting on the night while connecting on
50.9 percent of their own including 52.9 percent from behind the three-point line.
The Royals advanced to the finals as
Gallagher scored a career-high 22 points and
Jacob added 14 In an 80-64 semifinal win over
Northeastern Illinois.
Jacob aiso added lour assists to b&lt;eak the
school record far assists in a season as Buffalo
tk!d their schcx:.lf record fa( wins in a season with
23. Gallagher also set a career-high wllh five

steals in the contest Brenna Doty (11 points)
and Nicole Blakeslee (10) were also in double
figures lor the Royals. Alicia Kollmorgen came
oft the BuHalo bench to contribute nine points
and aight rebounds In the win.
Northeastern Illinois got 24 points and nine
rebounds from Delores Jones. Mid-Con Player

of the Year Radiance Clarke was llmtted to 12
points on 4-ol-15 shooting and was hampered
by foul trouble throughout.
Ar\ 11 -2 run early in the second hall keyed
the Royals who led by double digns almost the
entire second haft. Thd host Royals limited the
Golden Eagles to 35 percent shooting In the

vices, accepted tbe award for the project
team that included staff from WBFO and
S&amp;B Communications.

H

onorable mention went to the College

Work Study Re-Engineering Initiative.

a system that allows appointments and time

sheets to be accepted until the time checlcs
are drawn~ reducing the amount of data entry

needed and increasing internal control. Kerr
also accepted the award for this project team,
which included representatives of Accounting and Payroll Services and the Office of
Financial Aid.
A special award was presented for the
Niagara Mohawk SC-11 Electric Rate, a
project that redefines the electric rate structure for UB · s Nonh Campus. The rate negotiated for the duration of the three-year
contract is expected co save UB $3.5 million.
and also encourages energy conservation.
Ronald Nayler, associate vice president for
University Facilities, accepted the award for
the team made up of rcpresentatiw of Accounting and Payroll Services and University Services.

S8Jd I was ll"ICMng:

11RLL OF VICTORY AND.~

hosted the 1996 Mid·
Women's Basketball

associate vice president for University Ser-

........ ...,... wilt! caeclls.l

The Royals now await word on a National
Women's Invitational Tournament bid although

Nartllrrrtrm _ . . . . _

the chances are slim. Berths in the eight team
tournament held in Amarillo. Texas will be announced on Sunday

~to

-..con ct

1p'olllhlp

............ c- .... .
rhotln .................... c-

•WR£S1UNG

The Bulls stellar season continued over the
weekend with their third place finish at the East
Coast Wrestling Association meet in
Lawrenceville, N.J. UB earned 66.5 points to

YO.Crla....,. uhb el&gt;M ct rzplanrlllp.
bowa ._....., •

finish behind 23rd ranked Rider (125.5) and
Boston University (75).
Two wrestlers qualified IOJ the NCAA National Wrestling Tournament In Minneapotis

March 2 t -23 Junior t 11!-pounder Jason
Wartinger won his weight class defeating
Rider's John Carvalheira on a takedown in the
finals Carvalheira was ranked 16th in the
country in the weight class. Wartinger, who
had wrestled all season at 126 pounds, earned
his second ECWA Champimship and appearance in the national tournament. Prior to arriv-

Ing at UB this season. Wartinger had prEM·
ousty wrestled at Hofstra. He is 34-4 overall
with a 17 -match winning streak and has not
lost a bout since December 30.
Senior 167-pounder Marcus Hutchtns
earned his third tnp to the nationals fimshing
second in his weight class k&gt;sing a close 3-2
deciSIOn to Rider's Chad Uon. Hutch1ns became the first wrestler in UB htstory to quahfy
for three national tournament appearances
Hutchins is 27-6 overall this season.
Four other Bulls also advanced in the meet

with Rob Pavis (142). John Stutzman (150) and
Todd SchaHer (heavyweighl) eam1ng third
place finishes while 126-jX&gt;Under Bnan

Dowdall placed fourth.

game, including 27 percent in the first hall.
'We're ecstatic about our victory, that's two
bul we need three of them.· said Buscaglia.
"We were more aggressive around the basket

in the second hall and we were getting the
second chance opportunities."
Saturday's championsllip game balore a
raucous crowd of 1.211 saw Youngstown State
break UB's 17 -game horne winning streak with
a 53-43 decision at Alumni Arena. The win pro-

pelled the Lady Penguins into the NCAA Tour·
nament with an automatic bid. the first in
schc::x&gt;' history. Youngstown also won the regular season title with a 76-72 win over Buffalo
two weeks ago.
Tournament MVP Shannon Beach hit a
three-pointer with :56 left to clinch it lor the
lady Penguins, putting them up 49-43. Beach
had tied the game at 43-43 on a layup with

2:51 remaining. Thd game was a defensive
struggle as BuHalo shot just 29 percent lor the
game while Youngstown hit 36 percent
All-Tournament selection Anne Gallagher had

nine points and eight rebounds lor BuHalo (23while Brenna Doty led the Royals with 12 Ali·
cia Kollmorgen added eight points and seven
rebounds. Buffalo thought they had taken a twopoint lead when Doty M a three-pointer With
8)

2:12 rema1ning but Gallagher was whistled fOJ
an illegal screen and Shelley Allen hn both free
thrO'wVS to put Youngstown up 46-43.
M
We always talk about poise and patience
when the pressure is on.· said Youngstown

coach Ed DiGregorio "That's when you have
to perform. We've been there before and we
came through.·
•Of course. I'm very. very d1sappotnted fOJ
my players,' said Buscaglia. ' But we went 238. To win 20 games three years in a row as we
have done is realty a remarkable feat, and I'm

proud of my players.·
Gallagher c;orrvnented on the illegal screen
call. 'We were doing nall game, all game.
Then it comes doNn to a crit)Cal point in the
game, and they called a lout. It could have
been. it might not have been. He (the referee)

I

Head coach Jim Beichner was tabbed as
the ECWA's Coach of the Year for his tremen·
dous season. The first-yeSI coach gUided the
Bulls to a 10-4 dual meet record and a third ·
place f1nish 1n the conference. US's 10 dual
meet wins Sie four mOJe than the previous lour
seasons combined and the 10-4 mar1&lt;. 1s the

best since 1986-87

• OUTDOOR 1RACK AND FIELD
Thd Bulls and Royals squads will open their
outdoor track and field seasons on Saturday.

March 16 in Wilmington. N.C.. lor the Saahawk
Invitational. 8oth teams will try to cap1taltZe on
the strong showings at the Mid-Cont1nent Conference Indoor meet held last month The
league's outdoor championships are sched-

uled lor May t2-t41n Kansas C1ty

• MEN'S AND WOMEN'S TENNIS
Both squads htt the road lor Hilton Head. S.C .
for their spring break matches. Coach Russ
Crispell's Bulls will face Oral Roberts. Wnght
State, Youngstown State, Eastern Illinois and

Eastern Kentucky. Thd Royals. led by coach
Joe Davis. wilt meet Valpar81S0, Connecticut.
Youngstown State. Eastern Kentucky and West
Gaorgia
-Ted

Wasko, ~

lnlormatl(}(1 Office

�6

Faculb&amp;SiaHBillboard
IliACI(--EOC I'I.ANS ·~ CM1

~-··la11JIIY~

A sympos•um and panel d iscussiOns

on

~Where

We've Come From,

Where We're Go1ng,• celebrating
Women's HIStory Month are planned

March 21 lrom 11 am to 2 p .m at
the Educational Opportunl!y Center .
465 Wash1ngton St The sympos•um
wtll examine the contributiOns ol fe male educators of Alrlcan descent
The program •ncludes a sympos•um and panel from 11 a m - 12 30
p m . "ProgressiVe Ptoneers Black

Women Educators· w1th Nad1ne
Lockwood . IIana A Lew1s and V•r g•n•a Batc helor as presenters. They
are doctoral c and•dates m the Edu-

cat•onal Organtzatlon . Admtn1strat10n
and Pohcy program of the UB Graduate School of Educat•on
Lockwood w1ll d•scuss Anna Julia
Cooper's wrt!lng s and essays . "A
Votce from the South by a Black
WomAn of the South" ( 1692) examtntng posstble conflict between Cooper
as a femtn1s1 and a race woman
Lew1s will exam•ne the lifespan ol
Fanny Jackson Copp1n. stuay1ng her
accomplishments as a formal and m
lomml educator
Batchelor Will locus on the ltle hiStory of Mary Mcleod Bethune a 191t1
century educator and 1nterna
J ftgure who behaved that rac.al equality
would not be erad1cated unt I black
g1rls obtained the same ed
tooal
opporlunll~es available to wtlit
.rls
From 1230- 1 30pm , thep gram wt ll •nc tude an Ethntc Worn n
panel dtsc uss1on. e)lam•ntng our 1
mullt -cu ltural presence . w1th Jewt9h .
Htspamc and Nahve Arnencan
women as presenters
Refreshments wrll be served from
1 30-2 p m There w1ll be voter reg lstratton and a book dtsplay by women
wnters on v1ew from 11 a m -2 p m

FELDER TO PRESENT
NEW WORK WITH

BUFFALO PHILIIARMCMIIC
David Felder, B•rge-C ary chair 1n
Mus1c at UB and Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra Composer •n Aes•dence. w ill premtere h is most recent
work. Three Pteces for Orchestra . Frtday. March 29 and Saturday . March
30 wtlh the Buflalo Phi!harmonic Or-

·•

c hestra (BPO) at Kleinhans Music
Hall. Both perfOfmances begin at 8
p .m . with a pre-concen talk by Felder
at 7 p .m . Music Director Maximiano
Valdes will conduct the orchestra
Felder completed his composition,
represent1ng the culmination of his
work as resident composer, in February. dedicating the second movement
to the rnerT'IOf)l of Yvar MikhashoH .
Mikhashotf. UB professor of music
and a p ianist and composer of international reputation , died in 1993
One of six composers who
launched the "New Aestdencles" program tn 1993, Felder has been In residence under its auspiCes with the
BPO . the Greater Buffalo Opera. Company and WSFO 88.7 FM . UB's public
radiO Slatton . The program is d&amp;-stgned tor orchestras. choruses. opera . dance and theater c ompanles to
worll. tn partnership with local c•vic organtzattOns Felder d irects the UB
Mustc Department program in composition and serves as artistic director
of US's annual June 1n Buffalo festival
dedicated to emerging composers of
new mustc Currently he IS working
on an orchestral p iece commisstoned by the Amencan Composer's
Orchestra to be premiered Nov. 26
1996 at Carneg1e Hall

RECEIVE
HONORARY DOCTORATE

QIERIIARD LEVY TO

The Board of Trustees of Hoshi UniverSity . Tokyo, Japan wilt confer an honorary doctorate on o.rt.rd Levy, UB
D•sungu1Shed Professor Emeritus in
the Oepanment of Pharmaceutics. VB
School of Pharmacy The ceremony
Will take place April 26 1n Tokyo. Th 1s
ts only the s1xth hOnorary doctorate
lha/ Hosh' UniversJIY has awarded
Levy JOtned the untversity as an
ass1stant professor tn 1958 and formalty rettred last year . but rema1ns
on active status. Th1s will be h1s filth
honorary doctorate. The author of
more than 500 scholarly publications,
he IS internationally known for his research in phannacokinetics. kinetics ol
drug action and b iopharmaceutics.

MATH COMP£TITION SET
FOR MARCH 11, 20
More than 100 students tn grades 38 representing 56 WNY schools, will
come to the North Campus Marc h 19

and 20 to take part in a ·Math Is Everywhere" competition in the Natural
Sciences and Mathematics build ing.
In advance of lhe competition, Siu-

dents WOf1&lt; on lnletdisciplinary problems focusing on lhe connection between maih and its use in daily lffe.
When they arrive at UB they will
be involved in team and individua1
competitions. Awards and certifi..
cates of participation will be given.
Volunteers are needed to act as
hosts when the students are on campus. To votunteer, call Bonnie Bokta.

689-5241 "'Tom Schroeder, 645-2455

PSS_..,_OF'
NUC:LIEAII MIDICINE CEN'ID
Tours of the Center for Positron Emission Tomography (PET Center) will be
given April 8 and April 22 und er the
sponsorship of the UB Professional
StaH Senate. The one-hour tours wiH
take place at 3 p.m. in 105 Parl&lt;e&lt; Hall,

Souih Campus. Capacily

is limned: 1o

make reservaUons. call 838-5889 by
April 1.
Established in 1987 as a joint activity of the UB School of Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences and the
Buflato VA Medical Center, the
multidisciplinary center is one of the
most advanced in the country. PET
1maging enables phys1cians and research scientists to visualize and
quantify complex physiological processes in the human body.
The PET Center is managed under the supervision of the UB Department of Nuclear Medicine.

MEmNOS TRADE FAIR
AT COHVENTIOH

CENTER

UB's Office ol Conlerences and Special Events and the Greater Buffalo
Convention and Visit()(S Bureau will
sponsor the Fourth Annual Meetings
Trad e Fair March 27 from 2-6 p .m . in
the B uffalo Convention Center.
The Trad e Fair. free to ind ividuals
who p lan meetings, will p ut p lanners
in touch with members of the hosp itality, industry, hotels. meeting facilities . anractions , cultural ()(g anizations and service provid ers.
New this year is The Learning
Center , where representatives of
US's Conferences and Special
Events and the Convention &amp; Visitors
Bureau wilt answer questions on

~esqni Tim~ [apsul~

Throughout US's ~ _ , . , , 11w Ropa~Wwlll ott.fa,.. dlllmlfolll- delctlbltlg
!he people a n d - tlvJt -~!he ltllttlnlly.utlg lla· t5D~

.

.

.....

.....,, 1aa -

• lilt fll
...,_ ... lbld....... ...aable
...._ ... ~~l"''l-

....

....-a-ma~.-l'or·
lllllo.
Ire~ wid! I Jilt ofllllbjecll
lbe aoft-l:fil'IJVIdltd.

you

unaer "B.w-a," 111eoe iacludc •A~Uoaomy,"

1'1101 ODd TCPIIP Software," ODd "Y(....,.,.. FIX Softwa~e,• _ ,
Olben. Prom Ibis JiJt ollllbjecll you can proc:eed 10 a Jilt at llle
available ooftw""' programL
The best qualities of Jlllllbo include bow logically it Is orpDlzecl
(given the wide mix of possible soflw~re) ODd bow~ they make it
10 get wbat you - ' . Once you""' praellltJd with the lilt of available
soflware,1fOU can eitberclickoo the name of the program you wontODd·download immcdialdy-&lt;&gt;rclick on a deacriptive phruetbat leads
you 10 a several-paragraph description of the program. When you
decide 10 download, Jumbo p.esents you with a simple, clickable list
of available FTP sites. Once you select from these, your softwme
begins downloadiog.
• -·
Because of sites like Jumbo, the days of trying to decipher uoiolel·
ligible screeos of FTP si1es are gone! And the choices at Jumbo,
though not "Death-Defying," an: truly rich. varied. and easy lo access.
There an: thousands of prognuos here that are youn to own or 1o try,
available through a single URL. ·
'l1u! URL for Jumbo is hltp:llwww,jumbo.com. You can access the sit~
through your electronic cornpuJer accownt by typing wings al the syskm
prompt, thonG for Go to. In tho box provithd, simply typ&lt; tho URL giwm
above. Those ofyou with access to a graphical browser such as Netscape
would. of course, use the sa.rne URL For help with Jogging on to 1he
lnt&lt;""'r· call th&lt; CIT H.tp Desk ar 645-3542.
-Loss Pequeiio Glazier and Nancy Schiller, University Libraries

planning meetings and conventions
Registration deadline is March
22. For more infOrmation. call Kathy
Benzel at852-2765. ext 221

FLEISCHMANN TO MOIIEIIATE
I'ROCIIIAM CMI DEATH PENALTY
The morality. effectiveness and cost
of the d eath penalty will be the subject of the pub lic a ffairs TV program .
Mind Over Myth, to be broadcast

March 16 oo WKBW-Ch. 7.

Ilene Flei8Chmann, assistant
d ean of the UB School of Law , is Pro-

ducer and moderator. Guests will be :
Kevin Dillon, Erie County district anorney and an adjunct profesS()( in the law school. Dillon is responsible for implementing the
state's new death penalty law fOf
cases arising in this jurisdiction.
llaftlua Dubber, associa te prolessor ol law, teaches criminal law.
Earlier this month. he organized a na·
tiona! conlerence of legal scholars on
the New York d eath penalty.
a-tee~ a master's candidata who spent 27 years in prison, including 33 months on death roN .

COUNCIL
Continued from page 3

issues, some of the educatio n al is·
sues can be resolved through the
growing sophi stication of simulation lechnology. which allows students to "treat,, patients without
posing any risk to people through
their inexperience. H o w ever , these
treatment-simulation technologies
are e x pensive, she said.
While as recently as two years
ago 80 percent of nurses practiced
in hospital settings, that number
has declined to 50 percent today.
with lhe remainder employed in
home care and .ambulatory care
settings, and preparing students for
these new employment areas will
present a leaching challenge.

The School of Nursing·s most
pressing needs are faculty recruit·

mcnl faculty de&gt;elopmenl funds and

lechnology, Cntnley told the COW1Cil.
"'We are recruiting faculty in a
seller.;marlcel There'sasbonageof
nursing fac ulty nationwide.... When
w ego outtorec ruit, we are com pet-

ing with every school in the cou ntry." she said.
Another problem the school
faces is the possiblility of rapid
f aculty turnover over the next few
years. According to Cranley, Nursing tenure-trac k f aculty are an average age of59.5 years and have 22
years on the UB fac ul ty.
0

�1111111111
.._....14,~

7

v ..... n , No.22

RESEARCH

Leners

Continued from page 4

Open Letter from the
Environmental
Institute Task Force

The purpose of this le.tter is to solicit input
from the university community regarding
the concept and functions of a universitywide environmental institute. Such an environmental Institute would facilitate interdisciplinary collaboration in teaching , research, and outreach and enhance the
visibility of the university's environmental
programs, both Internally and externally,
by providing a coherent and comprehensive picture of the full range of educational
opportunities and research programs
available at the University at Buffalo.
As background information, in t994,
the Council of Deans (in concan with the
Provost) approved the formation of a university-wide task force . The task force was
asked to prepare a vision and need statement and to draft a plan of action that
cou ld guide the university in its quest to
improve its efforts related to environmental
education. research, and outreach . The
repon of that committee , dated May t7 .
t995, proposed the establishment of a
University at Buffalo Institute for the Environment. (The full text of that repon can be
accessed through the UB Wings
Homepage at address: [http://
wings.buffalo.edu/eirtl].) This academic
year, the Provost appointed a smaller task
force and requested that it focus on the
recommendations contained in the first ren.

~

The report envisioned that an environntal institute could mobilize and cataty~e faculty , staff, and students sharing a

common interest in the environment. It
stated that. In so doing, the institute would
encourage and facilitate the development
of high-quality, multi-disciplinary, crossdecanal environmental education. research, and outreach programs. Funher, it
was felt that an institute could give greater
coherence to the various educational. research, and outreach programs already
underway, thus placing the university in a
more favorable and visible position tor addressing existing and emerging environmental problems and issues.
The task force Is actively deliberating
the possible form and functions of an environmental institute. Input Ia desired
•nd encouraged. We went JOUr
....-stlona. In particular. input is requested on the following :

tions. findings, and recommendations will
be submi.tted to the Provost at the end of
the academic year.

-·Y-OFTME

IN-ALIIISimiiETASIIFORc:E
Joseph V. DePinto, Great Lakes Program

Dennis Hodge, Department of Geology
Howard Lasker. Department of Biological
Sciences
David Mark. National Center for Geographic
Information and Analysis
Errol Meidinger (Vice Chair). School of Law and
Department of Sociology
H. Lorraine Oak, Office of the Provost
James R. Olson, Oepanment of Pharmacology
and Toxicology
Ralph R. Rumer (Chair and Interim Dlfector).
Department of CMI Engineering
John Sheffer, Office of the Vice President for
Public Service and Urban Affairs
John J. Spagnoli. New York State Depanment
of Environmental ConservatiOn

1) the concept of an environmental institute, as briefly described above (outlined
more fully in the repon available on UB
Wings) :

UB community can help
Russian emigres learn
English conversation

2) the way in which affiliation with such an
institute might be made most attractive to
members of the university community ;

DEAR EDITOR:

3) how the environmental institute should
interface with the existing organizational
structure of the university (i.e .. schools.
faculties , and depanments); and
4) funher elaboration on the possible func tions of the institute.

Please send your written comments to:
Ralph A. Rumer, Depanment of Civil Engineering, 207 Jarvis, or e-mail to
&lt;rumer@acsu.buffalo.edu&gt; . Questions or
requests for additional information may be
directed to any member of the task force .
A report summarizing this year's delibera-

ages in order to upodite the electroni&lt;: interprdatloo of images. Debon!h WalterS, associate professor of computer science, wbo is
conducting experiments involving human subjects and computer-science techniques to understand visual processing, says "Weare trying
to fmd out what goes on in the human visual
system and use that as inspiration in designing
algorithms for improving computer vision."
• Eumine the interactions betweeo
technology and bwnans. V a! erie L. Shalin,
assistant professor of industrial engineering,
is interested in how people's performance in
the workplace is influenced by information
available to them while they are working.
• Investigate bow people perceive and
communicate spatial relationships. David
Marl&lt;. professor of geography and director of
UB·s National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis, is looking at how drivers
in Los Angeles have changed their commuting
behavior since the 1995 earthquake. "We're
looking at how people's mental maps of Los
Angeles have changed and allowed them to
decide on alternate routes," he said.
• Examine bowcultureinOuencesbealthcare systems. "According to our culture. illness is something located in the body or the
brain;' said Donald K. Pollock. assistant professor of anthropology. •This perception
ignores ... social, cultural and political issues
that shape whether or not you are considered
ill." He has shown how a diagnosis of"reactive
depression·· in hospitalized patients may be
more reflective of the hospila..l as a social
environment than anything happening to the
patient

I would once again like to invite members
of \he UB community to volunteer as
English-language tutors for new emigres
from the former Soviet Union.
Emigres continue to arrive and are in
great need of one-on-one conversation
with Americans . You don't need to know
any foreign languages. just have a
friendly manner and an interest in people.
Please call Julie Lewitzky al883-19t4 .
MWF 9-2. Your help will be greatly
appreciated.
Sincerely yours.

The Cognitive Science Center at VB has
a home page on the World Wide Web. The
address is htrp:l/www.cs.buffalo.edu/pub/
WWW/cogscilindex.html

EMILY TAU.
Associate professor of Russtsn

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
Experieoce Method (OEM).
Wednesdays throush April17 . 78: 1!5 p.m. To register. call 64!5-

.....
6125 .

Waldea. Born Trio. Raben
Routcb, hom, Ani Kavafiao. violin, and Anne-Marie McDennon.
piano. Sloe. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m.
S4. $5, $8.$10.

MoviM
Bravebeart (1995). Studcnl
Union lbeater. Nonh Campus. 9
p.m. $2 students; $3.50 geoenl
public. UUAB film series.

ur.w--.,

Graduate Gay and Lablan AsIOCdtioa.. 362 Student Union.
North Campus. 6 p.m. For information. caJJ 836-6 148.

-

pus. 6:30p.m. $2 student5; $3 .!50
~nera..l public . UUAB film se-

Bow to Quit Smoklac- 1450
Studenl Union . North Campus. 1·
8 p.m. Sponsored by Living Well
Center. To ~sister, caJI 6452837 .

R lboeomal Dom:ain. are ldratinect By Per-Axoplasmk Plaques

latroduction to Meditation.
7:J0...9 p.m. To register, call 6456125.

~­

Nltroaeo Dyu.mk:s ln Diverse

Eavlrollllleai.J, Dr. Wayne
Gardner, Great l..&amp;kes Environmental Research Lab. 121 Cooke.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

.....,_•c•wtlca.......,

lntroducUoa to PET Sca.aai..q
ia Drua ~vdopmea~ Prof. Ed ward M. Bednarczyk, Nuclear
Medicine. S08 Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

·-Col._...

A Sbort-TU'IIl forecut By a
Local LlDear F..ltbU.tor, Prof.
Xi .ex:bun Li, Univ. of British Columbia. 246 Cary. South Campus.
4 p.m.

ur.w--.,
Art Lecture
Ar1 at the Erad of tbt Century,
"Ronald Jones. Albright-Knox Art
Gallery Auditorium. 8 p.m . $3,
$4; UB faculty, staff, studenlS,
Albright memben, free. Co-spon~
sored by Univenity at Buffalo
Art Gallery/Research Center in
Art+ Culture.

-

S tan of tbt Bol5bol Ballet. 50member company. Mains!Age,
Center for the Arts. North Cam-

pw . 8 p.m. S28, $34, $41).
MoviM
Bravebt.art (1995). Studenl
Union lbeater. North Campus. 9
p.m. $2 students; $3 .50 general
public. UUAB ftlm series.

ur.w--.p
Tbesii/Diao,.,.Uoa Support
Group, Barbara Umilr:er. Thurs-

dayslhrougl&gt; April ll. 00-5:30
p.m. ToRgister. ca1164S-612S .

-hltr

Claire J(ahaac'J •PuaioiUI of
the Vok:e.. • Ta.l.ki.na Leaves. l 158
Main St S-1 p.m. Free. Sponsored
by lhc: Gnduate Group for FeminiJt Studies.

--IXIIIIIIYI

~UN- ..
A abow of wort by 199!5 Rumsey
winDen: Rudolf Baltera and
Cornelia Dobso-Pcct opens
Man:h 271a the An Depanment
Gallery located in the Center for
the Arts, North Campus. There is

.._,.,..,,bit

_

_::

··us Remembers," a univenity

.~~ '

-~

•

S eordlaDd Desln&gt;y(l.995). Student Union Theater. North Cam-

A - - , - Celli"""-'

lo the Mautb.Du Cell Axoa. Dr.
Edward Koenig, Physiology. 306
Farber. South Campus. 12:30 p.m.

.......

-..

LIYIIIC w.. t w--.,

-

located on the firth floor of
Capen on the North Campus.

T'al ChJ for Jle&amp;lnnen, Ron
ln&amp;aJsbe. Tuesdays and Thursdays, lhrough May 2 . 5:30-6:30
p.m. To register, ca11 64S~ I 25 .

·-·
·-·-

-..
":ffti;
~-:r

._

;

'--·

•

~

..t

:j

'~

:":t

HEU£NIC DANCERS- a &amp;ala e-*C Man:h 16 at 7
p.m. In~ lor the Arts, beneftttlng UB GJMk procrarn.
a reception from S-7 p.m. The
show continues tbrougb April 9 .
Hours aue Tuesday, 10 a.m.-S
p.m.; Wednesday lhrough Friday,
10 a.m.-8 p.m.; and Saturday, II
a.m.- 8p.m.

-

.. - l b s - J 1. . .
W ort by the 1996 Rumsey candi dates opens March 27 in the Uni·
versity Gallery, Center ror the
Arts, Nonh Campus. There is a
reception from 5-7 p.m. 1be
show continues through Apri l II
Gallery boun are Wednesday
lhrough Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-8
p.m., and Sunday. Noon-S p.m.

-

...... ..

CONTINUING EXHIBITS

" Perfect Wortd," a group show,
features wort of Vincent Shrine.
Laura Stein. Gregory Crewdson.
David Nazio, and Ronald Jones.
throuah March 31 in the Univers ity Art Gallery located in the
Center for the Arts, North Campus. Gallery hour1 are 10:30
a.m.-8 p.m., Wednesday through
Saturday, and Noon-S p.m. Sunday. Admission is free .

DICit8l art

''Digital Measqes: Vision, Revision. and Precision,.. a &amp;bow by
(Jvnmunicaricru

Design and Com-

pula' A n -...... loculty, con-

tinues through Man:b 14 in tbe An
Departmcol Gallery, Center for the

sesquicentennial exhibil organized by University Archives.
conlinues through Sept. 10 in 420
Capen Hall on the Nonh Campus.
A brighl item in the e~t hib il. organized by chief archivist Shonnie
Finnegllll, is !he state charter incorporaling !he University or
Buffalo on April 22. 1846. An
exhibil here: celebrating the centennial had to settle for a photographic copy of the documenlnow we can see the real McCoy
(which up to now has not been
allowed to leave Albany). Groups
may arrange a visit by calling
64!5-29 16 . Exhibit hours are
Monday through Friday. 9 a.m. to
Sp.m.

exhibit

Aru. North CunJ"'S.

lll8ck Hlotorr

Topped bJ "oil - .
Sa1oru Takahashi's exhibit,
"Dumping Sight: Landscape/
Landscope," continues through
March 22 in the University Art
Gallery, Center for the Arts,
Nonh Campus. The exhibit is "a
complex archileclural-scuJplural
work consisting of two separate
rrvolving dooni made of reflective glass with fish lanks as ceil ·
ings." Takahashi is a Japanese
anistliving in New York City .
Gallery hours arr Wednesday
through Saturday, 10:30 a .m.-8
p.m., and Sunday, Noon-5 p.m.
Admission is free .

'The Legacy of Arthur A.
Schomburg .. is on display
through March 1S in Lockwood
Memorial Library, Nonh Cam·
pus . "The traveling exhibition of
photographs and reproductions or
manuscripts explores !he global
history and cuJ rure or black
people. whose heritage
Schomburg dedicated his h fc to
preserving. The exhibit also
tnaces the evolution of !he
Harlem-based research center
that bears his name.

Dutofl bulldiiC
"Dutch Modem Architecture" 1s
on view through April 12 in the
James Dyet1 Gallery located in
)3!5 Hayes Hall. South Campus.
H ours~ Monday-Friday, 9
a.m.-Sp.m.

- --...

An exhibit of work by

prinunaktn Susan Dudash and
Ben Dunkle is oo view through
July 8 in the Capen Hall Gal lery

Prof•••loaal
Starr Alsistant (SJ....l)-Center for
the Ans, Posting IIIP-6005 . RHId~ ne~ HaU DlrKtor(s) (SJ....l)Residenlia1 Life. Posting
IIIP-6006. Assistant Director o r
Counselinc (SJ....S)-Counseling
Center, Posting IP-6007 . Senior

Sa.lr Assiruutl (SL-3; Internal
Promotional Opportunlty) -Athletics, Posting fiiP-6009. Senior
Starr Assistant (SJ....J; Internal
Promotional Opportunity)-Archives, Posting JP-6010.

FIICUitJ
Assistant Professor-Computer
Science, Posting IFF-6009. Assi!bl.nf/Assoc:iatt Prole:uor-Medi ·
~ine. Posting ;;F-6010

Craftw--.,e

R-

The Creative Craft Center' s
spring workshop schedule stans
Monday , March 2.S in 120
Fillmore Cen!er. Ellicou Complex. Nonh Campus. lbese workshops are held once a week (mosl
swting the week or March lS)
for six weeks, from 7 - 10 p.m .:
weaving, knittin&amp; and crocheting.
and intermediate photography
(Mondays); textile design, quilling, basic photogrtphy (staning
April 9). advanced color phoco.
and basic pottery (Tuesdays); basic pottery, Bratilian embroidery,
color photography, creative pho-

To obtain nwrt mformation on
jobs lislrd above, conlact Pusonnd Suvicts, 104 Crofts Hall. To
ob1ain informlltion on RestGr"Ch
jobs, COIIIOCI SpoiUOrtd Pro·
grams Pusonnrl, 416 Crofts.

u,Mw.. ll-latlon
Leonardo Drew's site-specific installation ··No. 4!5-A" was designed for the Lightwell Gallery
in !he Cen1er for the Arts. North
Campus, and now is lodged there
through October.

tography (staning April 10). and
advanced stained glass (Wednesdays); intermediate pottery, jewelry casting. darlc:room techniques
(starting April II ), and beginning
s!Ained glass (Thursdays); and
grcecing card design (Fridays
starting April 12). Other workshops aue aerial photography, and
nalure photography, and Saturday
workshops for children in pottery
and multi-media. Fees ~ from
$20-$50; membership fees per
semester are $2S-S6S . For information. call Julie Smith mornings, 64!5-612!5. or the Craft Center af1emoons and evenings.
645-2434.

Projt.ct Statr Auodat~-Dc vel opment, Posting ;;R-95090. Secretary Ul-Development. Posting
fiiR-96009 . Sf..crda.r"y lli -Oevelo pment... Posting fiiR-96010. Re-searcb Lab Workt.r-Biochemi ·
cal Pharmacology_ Posting
;;R-96011. Research Support
S pecialist-Idea Cen!erJArchitecture. Posting fiiR -96012. Project
Staff Assoc:iak--Development
Postina ;;R-9601 3.

�8

...

-- ,,....,...

~

ldesolllleollo. tl c - Ez-

...- J&gt;ou-t.aT........ r.r,tllr o e y t e - u-.Dif-

Evelyn Glennie. one of
Europe's most brilliant
young musicians. perloons March 26 at 8 p.m.
on Mainstage, Center fOI'
the Arts. Glennie, a~
though profoundly deal
since age 12, is able to
play through a heightened sansitivity !01' touch
and vibrations. The
Grarrrny-winnlng artist is
committed to popularizing percussion music
and to establishing timpani and marimba as
solo Instruments.

f....llol Dloplay &amp;T-PCR, Prof.
Steve Koury. 12SCPS Additioa.
Soulh Campus. 8:30 Lm.

c~ .......... Proc:oedo benefit Gmce Capen Sdlolanhip
Puod. [)yDuty D Ralouront,

Soulhptc Plaza.

w... Seooco.

6:30 p.m. SJO. Pot laformotioo.
coli Normo Shott Rubia. t&gt;ls2488.

~

....._.,.. iuod tloo
-.....ofB._IIeproduetioe, Dr. Hillard Koploo. Uruv. or
New Me.Uc:o: 158 Sp.uldinJ.
Ellicott. North Campus. 2 p.m.

,,, ,,,...,._

-

A Cbltopnctlc: Protpe&lt;tlve. 6-7
p.m. To resister. cai164S-61 25.

u••-

womea'• Reattb laltiative. Jean
Wac'--wiki-Wende, Ph.D., School
of Medicine and Biomedical Sci-

ences. Buffalo MarriOit. 7:30a.m.
SIO; Alumni Association $9. For
reservations, call 829-2608 .

AKrrw-...op
lntrodPdioc to Sun XWindowinc Systc.s. 10 a.m.-

Noon. To regisu:r, call Academic
Services, Computing and Information Technology User Liaison.
64S-lS40.

·~­

Posttraa.Jaiptioul Control or
CMoroplut Gate Es:pnSoD,
Margaret Hollingsworth, Ph.D..
UB Assoc. Prof. Biolosical Sciences. 244 Cary . South Campus.

AKrrw-.....

NOCDriow (lll06). Alf...t
Hitchcock, director, with Caty
Grant, Ingrid Bergman. Stude:DI
Union Theater. North Campus.

-

6:30p.m. $2 students; SJ.SO general public. UUAB ftlm series.

.,......,......

~

G all SbedlJ. Mainstage. Center
ror the Ans. North Campus. 8
p.m. $6-$11. For group discount
ca1164S-6147 ; for single ticket
call 8S2-SOOO.

Mo-

To Dk.For (1995). Student Union
Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2
s~nu ; SJ.SO general public.
UUAB film series.

---·---....

Computing -'Information Teehnolo&amp;Y User Uaism. 64s-JS40.

~-­
~~­
Ea:qwlolle Tnullloa Sla...

aDd lDIUbitor Delip for NRlboloydtola-, Prof. Vern L.
Schramm, Albcrt·Einstei.D CoUegc

of Medicine, Yeshiva Univ. 21!ii
Narura.l Scicoccs. North Campus.
4p.m.
AU Indo. 2 Diefendo&lt;f. Soutll
Campus. I - ll p.m. Fmc. Sponsored by GSA.

11 :45 a.m.

,_,__

'

Tbe EvoluUoa ola Nuclear Re•cdoo. Prof. Herman Feshbacb,
Massachusetts lnstitute of Technology. 220 Natural Scierx:es.
North Campus. 3:45 p.m.

-

........,_._

P rotda-RNA llllt.radioDJ: An
NMR. View, Prof. James
Williamson, Massachusetu institute ofTechOOioJY. 121 Cooke.
North Campus. 4 p.m.
_ C o l l o q o o. . .
Alaobrok Varieties Wll.b Bla
FuDdamutal Group, Prof. OoriU
Arapura. Purdue Univ. 103
Diefendorf. South Campus. 4 p.m.
......... GIIItloe . . . . . . . .

st.,_..,_,.,. 1a Drua Devdop~~~eat: Tbt: Sttrlpetttol Story,
Thomas A. Bailie, Pb.D .• Merck.
SOli Cook&lt;. North Campus. 4 p.m.

A Bayesiaa
~lit tor
·
-Collo9llol•

latmt..to-Treat ADalys61 wttb

Ml!osla&amp; Data, Kenoe1h

K.Jeinman, Harvard School or
Public Hca.J.th. 246 Cary . South
Campus. 4 p.m.

ur.w-...op
Th&lt;sit/J)"--alina Support

Moolc
Butr1&amp;o Pbilharmonk Orcbestn-CANCELLED. Center ror
the Ans. North Campus. April 12,
and April 28 BPO coocens also

--·...,....., __

to-

- . - .......

Newton Wellesley Hospiral, Bos-

A Tribalo
Beritaao.
G=k Am&lt;rican Folldot&lt; Society.
Golo •venin&amp; or tnditionoiHeUcmc
dance ODd lOIIi- Sotutday,16. Mainstqe. Ccnlet for lbe Arts.
North Campus. 7 p.m. $8, SIS. Benefits U8 program in modem Gn:ek

ton, Mass. Kinch Auditorium,

laoguoae.

cancelled.

· sun~a&amp;

U.....la Gut.......,..-

oa&lt;al Rdlu, Alex Floros, M.D ..

Children's Hospital. 8 a.m.

GabrieUe Carlson, M.D .• State
Univ. or New York, Stony Brook.
Auditorium, Rehabilitation Buildi.DJ, Buffalo Psychiatric Center.
10:30Lm.

Pinkham. Rbci.DberJer, Marchand.

.._,,_

Slee. North Campus. Noon. Free.
Tbc Pod u Cultural Alobuudor, Anne Waldman and Andrew
SchellinJ. S40 Clemens. North

Campus. 12:30 p.m.

G roup, Barbara Umiktt. Thursdays throop April II. 4:l0-S:30
p.m. To register, ca1164S-612S.

• • 11atae L.Mtllre

1."-W..........
T'al Clsl for lle&amp;iuen, Roo
lnaalsbe. Tueldaya and Thursdays, throu&amp;h May 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m. To regisccr, caU 645-612!5.

1a a ..... BeUvlonoiJiiolas1,
Pror. Irvca Devore. Hlrt'ard Univ .
2-61 Millard Fillmore Academic
Center, E.lUcon Complex. North
Campus. 1:15 p.m. Co-sponsored

~~~~

...

Thomas

Jefferson Univ., Pbiladel -

pbiL Kitc:hhorer Room, RPCI.

12:30 p.m.

~_,

llloloe&lt;

c-

Opooo:
Uv•
Vktoria IWblacblk, pW&gt;o.
Wocti or Chopin, Racb.maninorr.
Allen. South Campus. 7 p.m.
Toped by WBFO 88.7 FM fmbroadcut the following Sunday at
4p.m.

280 Pvt. North Campus. 2 p.m.

4111-'-~ .......

Fair. Buffalo

Ceolor.

2-6 p.m. Spoasored by UB Offoee
or
ODd Speeiol

Cool=....,

Evenu ud Greater Buffalo Coa-

ventioa a: Visitors Bureau. RcJis.., by Mon:b 22. Cali8S2-276S

-

eXl. 221.

c.•·

0

.,.....,

Flow Anluad Iatntvuculor

~Dr. Batudt B. Ueber, Mcclwlial &amp; ,.....,... Eoalaeer:
301 Biomc:d.ical Rtlearcb
Buildin&amp;- South Campus. 4 p.m.

--m,.

Updole OGI.be llalo ~~~ bolydcl ud ... _ _ . ol
DetUse
Komorowski. 2.41 Coote. North
Campus. 4:30 p.m.

Aeule--.

Arta.-IIC

---

Modern Languages and Ute.n-

Arta.-IIC

English subcillcs. 190 minutes.
120Ciemoos. NOitbCompus. 7:30
p.m. Fn:e. Spoosorod by Dept. of

turea, Russian Club, and Univerl ityUbrarics.

--IActlore

Maklq Sua Out ol Nout:Ut:
RNA Edilla&amp;la ""Allicott
Paruite, Prof. Lourie K. Reod.
Mjcrobiology. 21!ii Natural Sciences. North Campus. 7:30p.m.

Sbear Replatloo of C-typo
Nalriu.rd.k Faetor, Dr. Scon.
DiiD100&gt;CI. Chemical EnaU&gt;ecrin8.
301 Biomed.ica.l Reseatcb Buildi.Dg. South Campus. 4 p.m.

s-

' " ' . . . . , . Coadido.... lwt·
ion i..a tbe departmellt compete ror

prestiJious RWD.lCy awards. Univenity An Gallery, Center ror the
Arts. North Campus. S-7 p.m.
Fn:e. Gollery boun: Wednadoy-

--.

Satutday. 10:30 un.-8 p.m.; Suaday. Noon -S p.m. Throuah April
II.

..-

SitlftlAa GtvUDds, LUe .....,
Couture. Asympcote An:ltitoctute.

New York. 301 Crosby . South
Compus. S:30 p.m.

ur.w-...op

c-

AsUuaa-U
Be: Controlleci.
Noon- I p.m. To register, call64!ii612S.

ur.w-...op
T'al Cbl for BeaiODCn, Roo
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays and Thursdays, tltrouah Moy 2. S:l0-6:30
p.m. To register, call 645---612!5.

ur.w-...op

ur.w-...op
BeaJsutla&amp; Sip ........... Semlur, Diane Curthoyl. Dine~~­
perience Method (OEM). Wednesdays throop Apri117. S:l0-6:4S
p.m. To resister, call645-612!5.

ur.w-.....
You ODd Yoar C...ut Cord:
Usia&amp; Credit Wbdy. S:l0-7 p.m.
To rep.ter, call 64!ii-612!5 .

--- ·-- .....-.------Tbc AsWDalo' Aaatdo. 7-9 p.m.
To register, cali64S--612!ii.

Cblld .... ODd TV Vlolost«: Tbc
Role of l.be ........., Cllt'C Pbyoldaa., Robert Sege, M.D.. Tuft.s
Univ. School or Medicine. Kinch
Ba.m.

~....SAduiU,

L wH:btlme with lbe C .B. FUir.
Orp.a.. Op. 9S. Student recital;
worts by Vieme, Bach, Frock.

Cydla Dopeadmt ~ODd
CIUICtr, Antonio Giordano, M.D.,

Auditorium. Childreo't Hospital.

Bipolar Dloonkr Ia Clilldr.,.,

-

-Faally....S

Cooke. North Campus. 8 LID.

Gnat-..a.- tile Welt. To
n:~. coli Oemttto DcVimley.
t&gt;IS-2817. 223 LockwoocL North

1995&amp;-Wiuen: Radolf
llall&lt;nudC........._ Sculpture and poinlina. An
Oeponment Gollay, ee.... for
!he Arts. North Campus. 7 p.m.
Fn:e. Oollery boun: Tueoday, 10
Lm.-S p.m..; Wcdnc:.d.ay-Priday,
10 Lm.-8 p.m.; Satw"dly, II Lm.·
8 p.m. Throuab April9.

SiberiiNie (tm). Russian with

Maple for W1DdowL J-3:30 p.m.
To regis;er, call A.c.denUc Scrvicc:s.

A Tute ol Java. DaviD Milun,
Computer Sc:ieoce. 14 Knox .
North Campus. l p.m.

~----

Glial Cello ot N..,_.....wJ&amp;lDCllou Beb.n lJb Aaro-C}ta, Prof. Milu&gt;a O&gt;oriiOD,
Univ. of Toronto. 108 Sbenna.n.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

Moodays throop April 8. 6:308:30 p.m. S2S deposit; S20 ,._
rundcd upoo Nl.i.afactory completioo of the prosram. For
infomwiOd, call the Offtee or
Student Urc, ISO Student Union.
t&gt;IS-612.!5.

by Depl. or Antbropolo&amp;Y and lbe
Graduate Group ill Evolutionary
Biology and EcoloJY.

.

J-rlesTe~ l..inpistics.

( --1·..._........,._

ur.w-...op

n.&lt;:-.U..tl-

- . s........ Kbolilich. 2.41

.,_,..,
..... .._..
E....,_,.
Coo-

MAodootla.plolloe of
Col+ -ColoooclaliD-Dopeadmt
1'rolda &amp;-,Prof. Arthur
Edelmon. 1348 Fubet. Soutll
Campu.t. 4 p.m.

-.au.

Cader f« the Arta.

~­
c-.-.

~~~

O.MX_..II

North Campus: I p.m. Sl4, Sl7,

S20. l'rooeoll-ed by QRS -'!he

Campus. Nooo.

--....
...
---................
--..__
__ _
--_.._._
.......
-111CiiNIIIilt•---

J t-..lyaG ....... , . . - .

MaiJ1suF. Ceolot for !he Arts.

-··-- --c-•-·--~··
no
c-pedllft lAbor Morbi

......,
_......

t&gt;IS-28 17. 223 Lockwood. North

Campus. 7 p.m.

Gn.at Reeourca on tb~ W~b. To
register, calJ Gemma DeVinney,

--.-..;- - . ...
WAUIUI-'IWIO:

271118_ ..

ur.w-...op
Blob uc1 11ewan1o of o,nwta
Your Owto-...... 6:30-9:30
p.m. To rqister. call 64S-612!ii.

S arcb ODd Dostroy (I'"J. Student Union Tbealer. North Cam·
pus. 6:30p.m. $2 students: Sl.SO
JCDUa1 public. UUAB film series.

ur.w-...op
lD.troductloD to HOlM B~win&amp;7-9 p.m. To register, call 64S-

612.S .

LJYIICW... W ..........

KldWt&amp; Batts: Bow to Quit

s-._ Four WednadoyL

__

145A Student Unioa. North Campul. 7-8 p.m. SpoDIOftld by Uving
WeU Center. To regitter, call64S·
2837.

....,.._

150 YeusofUB, Shonnie
Finnegan, An:b.ives. Center ror
Tomorrow. North Campus. Noon.
To reJilter, call Alwnni Relations..
829-2608.

Eric-

Opooe: c - uv.
a - . Ldlous, vlolla, Toay
IOta!, edln, ODd
p1uo. Trios by Sebuben (B-nu)
and Ravel. AUca. South Campus.
7 p.m. Toped by WBFO 88.7 FM
for broadcasllbe roUowi.Dg Sunday ... 4 p.m.

ur.w....-.
. -.. Sip ...........
Seoolatot, Dime Clutboys. Direct

~..-.
~:Co.-....S'l'bcro­

peolleA_...,Eioine

Continued on page 7

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

March 7 . 1996

UNIVIItSITY AT BUFFALO
State University ofNew Yorlt

Volume 27. No 21

'UB Remembers' exhibit
for Sesqui opens today
EMORABILIA OF the 150-year
history of the University at Buffalo-ranging from the original
·
in 1846todocuments
of student protests of the 1960s,
from convocation speeches to dance invitationswill be featured in "UB Remembers," a six-month
panoramic sesquicentennial exhibition that opens
today on the North Campus.

··us Remembers" opens with a reception sponsored by
lhe UB Council from 5-7 p.m.
II will be available for public viewing in lhe UB Libraries'
Special Collection Reading Room. 420 Capen Hall, Mondays through Fridays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. from March 8
through Sept. tO.
-Developed by UB areltivist Shonnie Finnegan, !he exhibit
traces the history of the university from its I 846 founding as
a medical school to its present incarnation as a two-campu s.
nationally distinguished research university with 15 schools
and faculties.
Finnegan said the exhibition has been designed "to honor
and celebrate the vision and dedication of the many univer-

sity and community leaders who worked
lhroughout UB's history-&lt;&gt;ften in the face
of seemingly insuperable obstacles-toestablish and sustain a great institution of
higher learning in Western New York.
"It also pays tribute," she added, "to the
many friends and alumni whose gifts of
photographs, documents and memorabilia
have enriched the archival collec ti ons of
the university over the past three decades
and made it possible to present. in vivid.
human tenns. the proud heritage UB enjoys
as it celebrates its first 150 years."

F:

nnegan said the exhibit will showcase hundreds of
original documents. vintage photogr.tphs. drawings
and unique items of memorabilia. Many illustrate the
grow1h and accomplishments of the university and its faculty; others offer a livel y evocation of the academic, social.
athletic and political life of UB students over time.
The exhibit includes campus souvenirs of the Big Band
Era; songs. cheers and chants from athletic competi ti ons of
bygone days; a colorful array of student publications from
1900 onward, and relics of traditions so lemn and lightheaned~onvocati on speeches, early faculty papers. original stock certificates. lettermen· s sweaters. dance invi tati ons

and photographs. many of which have never before been
placed on exhib ition.
The exhibit illuminates the grow ing diversity of the student
body overtime and its response to national events. from World
War I involvement to the 1960s anti-war protests and beyond.
Among the significant historical materials to be exhibited
is the original university chilTter. contained in a handwritten
volume of the Jaws of New York State for 1846. II will make
this. its first campus visi t. counesy of the New York State
Archives and Records Administration.
A subscription book bearing the signature of Mi1lard
Fillmore. US' s first chancellor and later President of the
United State . also will be shown.

Quake protection system based on human biomechanics
UB ENGINEERING
professor's lifelong
fascination with the
biomechanical abilitiesofhumans has led
to his developme nt of lhe first energy~diss i Qation system for man made structures that is based on
the biomechanics of the human
body.
UB has licensed the "smart"
newtechnology,called Real-Time
Structuml-Parameter Modification
(RSPM), to Enidine. Inc. of Orchard Park, N.Y. •
Enidine manufactures and markets industrial shock absorbers,
seismic dampers and"vibration isolators with applications in robotics, materials handling, packaging,
defense, aerospace and seismic systems.
'"This marriage of the research
capabilities o f UB and the commerc ialization capabilities· of
Enidine provides us with an excit~..
ing opportunity to develop leading-edge tech nology into a
successfu l, commercial product,"
said Malcolm Gibbins. executive
vice president ofEnidine. "RSPM
wilt open up design options and
expand the seismic-energy mitiga~
tion potential for earthquake-protection markets in the future."
In addition to se i smic~m itiga­
tion products for new and ex ist ing

structures, the new technol ogy may
be useful for other systems. such as
those in electronics applications
and offshore structures, where protection from impacts and/or vibrations is essential.
RSPM requires considerably
less power to operate than some
other earthquake-protection technologies, its developers said, in
some cases necessitating only a car
battery to provide enough energy
to protect a I 0-story bui lding.
Because it can significantl y reduce seismic responses in a s truc ~
lUre over a broad frequency range ,
it also may lead to savi ngs in construction and installation.

G

eorge C. Lee, Samuel P. Capen
Professor of Engineering at
UB and director of the National
Center for Earthquake Engineering Research (NCEER), developed
the system with Zhong Liang. re~
search assistant professor of mechanical engineering at UB. and
Mai To ng. a UB mathem atician
and NCEER research scie nri st.
RSPM is the first system for
structures that mimics the human
muscle 's unmatched capacity for
instantaneous ly con tractin g and
releasing energy.
'The human muscle has the most
efficient mec han ism that we know
of for absorbing energy," said Lee.
"For example. if you make your
way across a boat in choppy waters, you keep your balance by sh ift-

"The human
muscle has the most
efficient mechanism
that we know offor
absorbing energy. "
GEORG£ LEE

ing your body back and forth and
by bending your knees . You are
modifying your physical parameters in real-time. adjusting your
mass by tensing and relaxing your
muscles at different times in order
to prevent yourself from falling .
Our system works the same w:~y ...
Based on a new approach rooted

in the mechani cs of living systems,
RSPM cannol be stric tl y calegorized as an example of a passive
device. an aclive control system. a
hybrid control system or any of the
o th er c urrently accep te d approaches to earthquake-protection
technologies.
Instead of isolating :t structure
from ground motions (passive de ~
vices) or exerting a cou nterforce to
minimize the impact of ground
motion s (ac tive devices). RSPM
allows a structure to adjust itse lf in
real-time in response to an earthquake.
RSPM consists of three componen ts: sensors. placed at certain
locati ons in the structure; a dcci sion~making unit consisting of a
dedicated computer chip, and actuators. made of hydraulic cylinders, installed at str.ll egic points
within the walls and elsewhere.
The "brains" of the system de ·
teet the signal from th e sensors and
issue an order to the actuators.
which then lengthen or contract to
reduce the impact of vibrations o n
the struclUre .
The whole process takes hun dredths of a second. said Lee .
"We have designed a system
that modifies mass. damping and
stiffness. the very same parameters
people modify whenever the y
move." he said.
Just likethehumanbody. RSPM
c;:m respond on seve ral different

levels. depending on the severit y
o r the vibration.
·•Jfyou are reading a book and a
mosquito lands on your ann. you
just brush it off. without even looking up." he sai d. "That' s a local
stimulus and you respond locall y.
~imilarly. we have developed a
system that is able to respond on
that level while being nexibl e
enough to also re spond to a major
stimulus."

B

y building into it four levels of
algorithms. the resea rchers
have developed a system capable
of responding to multi ~direc tional.
strong seismic ground motions.
"The technolog y's ·in te ll igence ' allows it to respond to VIbrations by ac hieving the best
possible co nfiguratio n for the entire structure. even when confronted with a potential!}
cmastrophic earthquake .·· Lee sa1d.
" If you feel like you are goi ng to
fall. you tense up your body and
you may put your arms in front of
your fuce:· exp lained Lee. "You
automatically assume the best po, .
lUre 10 order to mm1m1£t: damage
to your body."
In the same: way . he contin uc:d.
the decision -making umt of the
RSPM responds to severe ground
motions by sending to the ac tu ators a signal that says. in a sen,c: .
.. tense up .··
Contmued on page 2

�2

....... .,. ~v.....u, ... a.

Council chair Philip B. Wels:
60-year history of service to UB
HonorM')' chair of Sesquicentennial I• -

Reporter Conlribulot

T

News Services Director

T

HE LIVES OF the University at
Buffalo and Philip B. Wels, M.D.,
have been so closely entwined for
more than 60 years that it's difficult to think of the life of the

university without Wels, or of that of the

w• •

help '.Take Stock
in our Future'
IIJI'AIAA~

who -ver MY• 'no' to ..... m.ter

BY ARTIIUR I'AGE

surgeon without hi s alma mater.
As the uni versity celebrates its sesquicentennial. the chair of the UB Council is
serving as honorary chair of the 18-mootb
o bservance, attending every meeting of the
planning committee, reminding the planners
that the I 50th birthday should be celebrated
with a .. big bang ...
Wel s has lent more than hi s name and
suppon to UB' s sesq uice ntennial.
Among the memorabilia to be di splayed
for the next six months in the " UB Remembers" sesquicentenniaJ exhibit is Phil Wels'
blue leuennan 's sweater with its prominent
white block-B with three stripes-&lt;&gt;ne each
for the two years he was captain of UB's
fencing team and one for representing the
U.S. o n the 1936 Olympic fencing squad.
" I was up in my attic rummaging through
some boxes one day, .. he recalls. "I pulled
something out of one of them and on the
bottom of the carton I saw my block-B
sweater. I was able to get into it. but I had to
have rriy wife help me get out of it."
Word of his discovery spread on
campus-and to the
ears of university archivist
Shonnie
Finnegan-after
Wets
wore the
sweater to a UB Bulls
football game. It will
come as no surprise
to those who know the
two that Finnegan
Philip a.
asked Wels to donate
he appearad In his
hi s s weater to the
1941 UB medical
University Archives.
school yealtlook.
and that the ·varsity
sweater of the man who never says "no" to
UB, is now part of the exhibit.
.. Phil loves UB ... notes President William
R. Greiner ... He always has. We hope he
always will. He' s really part of the heart of
the pl:tl::e." Greiner adds: "We cou ldn't ask
for a better friend and leader than Phil Wels.
"He is an immensely dedicated, deeply
co mmitted Council chair. He takes the role
very seriously and brings to it a genuine
passion for the university and its people. He
is also one of our most loyal and distinguished medical alumni. And he is one of my
most valued mentors and friends."
Born in New York City, educated in
Brooklyn. Phil Wels first set foot on UB soil
in the early 1930s. Wels' immersion in the
life of the campus dates back to his undergraduate days. He was vice president of the
student union and president of the Bisonhead
Men ' s Honorary Society. He was founder of
the UB fenci ng team, a member of the sq uad
for two years and later its $=Oach from 193840. His accomplishment's in the sport earned
him inclusion in the inauguralgroupofformer
UB athletes and coaches inducted into the
UB Athletic Hall of Fame in 1965.
Wels earned a bachelor's degree in biology
in 1937 and a master's degree in parasitology
and his medical degree from UB' s medical
school in 1939 and 1941, respectively.
He looks back to his days as a medical
student as the most significant in his devel -

UB family can

Phil

w•• UB ~··~.till lib: It'• now.., view In ua ~ e Jihlblt_

opment as a doctor and educator.
"When I fmt started medical school, the
teachers were very involved in many aspects
of my life," he recalls. ''Those people were
immensely interested in my well-being as a
person. The imP.,rtance of that in my life
cannot be stressed enough."

W

els completed his medical studies
and internship shortly before the
United States entered World War
U and then served with distinction for nearly
four years in the Pacific Theater as a member
of the U.S. Army Medical Corps.
When he returned to Buffalo to serve his
residency in surgery, UB was observing its
centennial. While there were celebrations and
parties, he recalls, ''It was just post-war; there
was a lot of solemnity ... Wels completed his
residency in surgery at the old Meyer Memorial Hospital in 1948. Two years later, he was
appointed to UB's medical faculty.
A hoard-certified surgeon and clinical professor of surgery, Wels has held several administrative positions in the School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, including assistant dean. A founding member of the
school's continuing medical-education comminee, he chaired the medical school's admissions committee from 1965-70, and serves
as amemberofthedean 's advisory council. In
1984, hereceivedtheWilliamHalsteadAward
as outstanding teacher in surgery.
Wels twice served as chair of the Department of Surgery at Mill ard Fillmore Hospi tal. He chaired the hospital ' s research
committee, and was a member of its executive, special projects and long-range planning committees.
Wels has been affiliated with the University at Buffalo Foundation since 1972. He is a
trustee and serves on its executive committee.
He was named to the UB Council, the
university's local governing group, in 1980.
He was named vice chair in 199 1 and head of
the council a year later. As chair, Wets says
he attempts to carry on the tradition that
helped shape his own young life, that of
being a mentor to today' s students.
" I get many req uests from undergraduate
and graduate students, wanting to talk to me
about getting into various schools 81]d about
their future lives," he notes.
He tells the story of encountering a recent
UB biology graduate who was waitressing at
a local restaurant and being moved by her
terror at not knowing what to do with her

professional life after four years at the university. ''I know many young people in the
sciences who go through four years at the
university and don ' t know what tbey want.
So I decided to 1ry and help them."
Wels said that after much deliberation
and some consultation with President
Greiner, he decided to teach an undergraduate course through Millard Fillmore College
on career.; in the health-related professions.
His goal is to offer students a sense of reassurance and guidance.
''The course· will bC rather basic and I'll
bring in quite a few people who work in the
health-related Pfl&gt;fession.s," he expll!ins.
' 'That should help ground the course in the
rea1 world. Being a mentor to students is
important work for any faculty member."
UB has recognized Wels with a Distinguished Alumni Award, the Dean's Award
in the School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences and the Chancellot Capen Award. In
1993, he was recipient of the Medical Alumni
Associatioo Achievement Award for conspicuous and outstanding career achievement.

I

n his tradition of never saying "no" to his
alma mater, Wels recently assumed chair
manship of the Family Phase of the UB
Fund's Annual Appeal, ''Take Stock in Our
Future."
He sees it as yet another opportunity to
repay UB. The appeal, which runs through
April , offer.; those whose professional lives
revolve around UB an opportunity to give
something back. according to Wels.
" It's important that we, as the UB community, try to help our institution," he explains. "The allocation of state money bas
eroded to such an extent that it is incumbent
upon us to do what we can to offset the
shortfall. It's like the old (John F.) Kennedy
quote,' Ask not what yourcounlry can do for
you, bui what you can do for your counlry.'
I feel obligated to help this university.
"I've been around for a long time," Wels
adds. ''This university has been good to me
since the days when I was an undergraduate.
The traini ng I received, from teacher.; who
were truly interested in my weU-be.ing, was
outstanding. They gave my life opportunity
and focus." He credits UB with giving his
life a professional richness that would have
been unact:ti.evable in a private practice alone.
"I was fortu nate to be able to combine a
private practice with being a full time academician. My life has been the bener for it." 0

HEUNTVERSITYatBulfaloisconducting its first faculty and staff
fund-raising effort. "Taking Stock in
Our l'utuJe," from Marcil I to April
15. as part of the university's annual appeal.
University Council chainnan Philip Wels
is leading the six-week appeal, which is
directed to more than 4,500 full-time faculty
and staff. lt wiU become an established part
of UB's annual appeal.
"UB faculty and staff have a special understanding of how essential private support
is to the university's vision for lbe future,
particularly as we face the challenge of continued cuts in state funding," said Ronald H.
Stein, vice president for university advancement and development. uReceiving support
from our faculty and staff shows their dedication to UB 's mission of education~ resean:h and public service. It also shows
alumni and friends outside the university
that we are willing to invest in our vision.
and that their support is needed as well.
Faculty and staff suppo!1ers have the opportunity to make their gills through payroll
deductions and may designate these gills to
their area of choice, including undergraduate scholarships, graduate fellowships, the
university' s libraries, WBFO, the Center for
the Arts, a particular faculty/school, athletics or unrestricted use.
The appeal wiU not only provide muchneeded assistance for UB, it also will increase awareness among faculty and staff of
the importance of private gills.

Information on the appeal, including
pledge cards and payroll-deduction fomlS,
was distributed in early March to all fulltime state, Resean:h Foundation, UB Foundation and Faculty Student Association
faculty and staff members. For additional
information, contact the Office of University Development at 645-3312.
0

LEE
Continued from page 1
"It is ll()(economical to design a structure to
resist the gm~test earthquake thai might occur
in thousands of years," said Lee, "but the failsafe mode of RSPM allows the structure to
minimize damage and avoid total collapse."
Lee emphasized the multidiscipliJW)I approacb of the research. He credited Liang
with developing a.key element in the system,
the fuoctional switcbes and a multi-function
testing table, which bas been used to conduct
experiments with theRSPM. Tong conducted
analysis of the dynamic systems in RSPM
and develo~ the critical algorithms.
RSPM was developed out of Lee's decades-old fascinatioo With biomechanics. In
1969, he spent a year at Harvard Medical School
where he studied respiratory physiology and
mechanicsofmusclecootrol, andbeganstudying research developments in human physiology. He was clearly aheadofhistime. "Altha!
time, people did not believe in the idea," he said.
"But recent developments in smart materials
and intelligent struclUleS have proven thai my
idea was 11()( just wishful thinldo.g."
0

Tho Reporter is a campus cormuVty newspaper
A.CTINGOIRECTOAOf PV8LICATIOHS U ..,.A.

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ASSOCVoTEEOOOA· ...,. .,.._ •

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�3

Expect new record for budget lateness, Greiner tells FSEC
Effort to upgrade academic quality will proceed
regardless ofbudget outcome, President says
RESIDENT William Greiner,
from a day of lobbying at
the state capitol, told members
of the Faculty Senate Executive
Cominittee to prepare for more
for SUNY and expect a new budgetary
record for lateness to be set this year.
The extended delay in adoption of a federal budget bas made a murky budget situation in Albany even more uncertain,

Regardless of the outcome of this year's
sUite budge~ Greiner told FSEC members
that his long-term push for upgrading academic quality at UB, as outlined in a white
paper published recently in the R•poner,
would go forward. Provost Thomas Headrick
explained that dearts had already received a
request from him to provide a detailed inventory of "programs and contributions"
which his office would assemble for wider
distribution shortly. Greiner called this

according to Greiner...We had one legislator

analysis an important step in the process.
'"The first thing that has to happen is that

predict August and a high level staffer said
' Don't be surprised if it's November," he
told FSEC members during their Feb. 28
meeting. The slate' s fiscal year begins on
April I , but no budget has met that deadline
in more than a decade. SUNY's fiscal year
begins July L
Greiner said that SUNY could expect a cut
of "live percent," but that the prognosis for
relief through innovative fleltibility legislation was nor good. Greiner also complimented
the contingent of alumni and students who
traveled to Albany with him last week for a
gallant effort. •"They were good, particularly
the students," Greiner said, "but I think they
came away fairly discouraged."

professionals in every discipline and at every
level have to feel engaged in the process,"
Greiner explained. "U we all put our heads
together, we can probably lind ways to work
better without relying on slate dollars."
Responding to a report that Gov. George
Patak.i had been invited to speak at commencement, published in the student newspaper, Th~ Spectrum , last week , Greiner
announced, '' Yes, I invited him." Greiner
explained tha~ other than the president of
the United States or the governor, UB does
not invite speakers to its commencement.
The policy, instituted by former president
Steven Sample, has been to make commencement a student·oricnted event

Greiner told members of the FSEC that he
is trying 10 "get the governor to treat SUNY
as a more positi ve item." During his first
year in office. Pataki has delivered two ex ecutive budgets which, together. proposed
cutting the state ' s commitment to SUNY
nearly in half.
In other busi ness, the FSEC heard a repon
from one of the leaders of t he Women 's T ask
Force and revisi ted. once again , the
university•s policy on academic good stand ·
in g.

B

ernice Noble. a microbio logy professor
who co-chairs the Task Force on Women

at UB, told FSEC members that the 1ask
force had produced a subslanti ve rcpon.
which was on President Greiner· s desk. She
dec lined to discuss detai ls o r findings of th e
task force. since Greiner had not had an
opportunity to review the document.
Noble called the tas k force "globally representative" of women at the university and
said that their work was timely. "Women are
entering academic life in increasi ngly large
numbers across the country ." Noble ex·
plained. 'The task force examined where
women arc at UB and where we should be
going."
Concerned by the consi derable attention
that the un iversit y ' s new policy on "aca·
demic good standing" has drawn in campus
and local media recently, the FSEC voted to
reco mmit the policy to its Grading commit·

tee. That committee was charged with " fast
tracking" possible revisions so that action
can be taken by the full Senatequicldy, so as
to meet publication deadlines for the fall.

T

he policy, which put more than 28 per
ce nt of the undergraduate student body

on academic probation this semester. was

passed by the Senate last spring and ir_nplemented over the summer. Student-athletes.
student government leaders and cl ub or fra·
temal o ffi cers have the most to lose. Probation usually means the loss of these types of
extra·curricular activi ties.

FSEC members si ngled out one requirement , which places any st udent who fails to
obtain a 2.0 grade-poim average in any given
semeste r on probation . as particularly bur·
denso me . That requi re ment accounts for
roughl y one- third of the students who were
pl aced on probation th1s se mester. according
to Engineering Professor Den nis MaJo ne.
Ma lone proposed relie vi ng those students of
the burdens of actual probation. instead se ndin g a ·• Jetter o f warning" 10 them.
Vi ce Provost for Undergraduate Ed uca·
tion Nicolas Good ma n defended the good
standin g rule s. "These are not new rules.
They have been around for some time . Onl y
the stric t enforcement is new:· Goodman
explai ned. He contended that the problem
was not with the standirds themselves. but in
the consequences imposed by the Office of
Student Life.

Habitat lnunches drive to buiki home for Buffalo family
lly SllEVE COX

Reporter Staff
LTHOUGH MANY activities
are being sponsored by the university during its year-long Sesquicentennial Celebration, one
special project is likely to still be around for
the university's Bicentennial and beyond.
The Buffalo and UB Chapters of Habilal
for Humanity recently launched a year-long
effort to raise $50,000. The money, as well
as student, faculty and staff person-power,
will go toward building a new home for a
needy Buffalo family.
The campus chapter of Habitat, together
wi th the Student Association, the Golden
Key Society and other student groups, will
be conducting a variety of fund-raising activities during the coming year and recruiting hurd-working UB students and staff 10
construct the home for a yet unnamed Buffalo family, according to Director of Student
Life Barbara Ricoua.
The highlight of the fund-rai sing effons
should come next October. over Parents
Weekend ' 96, according to Ricotta, when
comedian Paula Poundstone will entertain
and donate the proceeds of the concert to the
Habitat project. Project construction should
begin later thi s year, with a ribbon cutting
ceremony p,anned for Commencement '97.
Habilat for Humanity is a 20-year-old
philanthropic organization that is dedicated
to helping poor families realize the dream of
home ownership. Habitat rai.es money, gathers supplies and organizes volunteer labor
for home construclion or renovation . The
homeowner must qualify financially and
contribute "sweat equity" of at least 500
hours toward their own home. Among the
more noted Habitat volunteers is fonner
President Jimmy Carter.
The Buffalo chapter of Habilal has constructed !Ohomesand rehabilitated another25
since 1985. Students and staffhaveconlributed
10 these projects through the UB student chapter, now co-&lt;:haired by Charles Drumstra.
"Habitat gives people a means to learn new
skillsandhelpthecommunity,"saidDrurnstra.
"but the best part is meeting new people and
helpingyourneighbors."Thechapterhasabout
20 active members, explained Drumstra, but
draws from more than 200 volunteers for various projects during the year.

A

This winfer. during the semester break.
eight UB students. including Orumstra. traY·

eled to Robbins, Tenn. to spend a week
working a l a Habitat site. The trip was part of
Habitat's national Collegiate Challenge, explained Drumstra. College students are "challenged" 10 pass up a winter or spring trip to
a sunny Aorida beach, instead going to work
on a Habilat project somewhere. "Habitat
finds places for you to stay and takes care of
your food. and you put in a good hard week
of work. It 's a great feeling," said Drumstra .

Members of the campus Habitat chapter

Bike' con test." he explained. Students will
be abl e to be timed to see how fast they can
drive a nail into wood. with a " nail-off '
planned for the fastest qualifiers.
Members o f the campus community are
invited to contribute financially or person~

are now selling raffle tickets, according to
Drumstra. with prizes that include a Sabres

Those interested can contact Amy Krak.owiak

jersey au tographed by Pat Lafonlaine and a
football autographed by Jim Kell y. " Also.
we will be taking qualifiers soon in the
Student Union for a 'Drive a Nail . Win a

at 645-6125 or stop by the Habitat office at
370 Student Union. Donations to the project
are tax deductible and may be made payable
to the UB Foundation.

Also. students are traveling from the Nonh
Campus to a downto wn Habitat warehouse
every Saturday . "We are helping inventory
things and gel the warehouse organized. "
Drumstra explained.

UB Day in Albany: lobbying for
TAP, flexibility legislation
!lynnE COX

Reporter Staff

~

......, .... a.pue administrators made their annual trip to Albany
last week for a fuU day of lobbying on behalf of the university.
Twenty-one alumni, aiJ members of the AJurimi Association's Legislative Actio_n
CommiUee, and three students arose early TUesday, Feb. 27 to take a chartered bus to
thC state capitol for "UB Day in Albany." The trlp traditionally is scheduled a week
before the statewide "SUNY Day," which took place March 5.
President Greiner and Molly McKeown, assistant to the president fpr government
relations, met the travelers for the day of visits with Western )'lew York legislators and
legislative leaders, IC&lt;:OCding to William Evius, executive director of Alumni Relations. The group divided up for 22 appointments with legislators and staff, including
the chain of the Senate and Assembly Higher Education. Committees and a highllllllting advisor to tbe sow:mor on higher edUcation, explained Evius.
Jude Schwendler, uoiiiiUII dinx:tor of Alumni Relations, said the alums spoke to
lqislllors. advOCIIiJJc ~ of TUition Assistance ProgJun funding to last year's
lcvel,passageofiOIIIIIFDI"Dlflexjbllitylegislationproposedbythegovomorandapproval
of a$250 tuition increase. no..e-,legislators told the alumni that "this is not going to be
as simple as we would lilce it to be," accotlling to Schwendler. "They also specifically told
us that they hadn't seen or beard mucb from students," she added, "and that they want to
liCar from &amp;tudOots and ptUm1S in much larger numbers during this process_"
-we....,. '-N t i e - what impact you have," Evius said. "We bad a very
eDthuaiastic turnout and received warm receptions wherever we went You just have
to take it on faith that, in time, the effects of our visits begin to pile up." Trip
participan15' assessment of the message they received from legislators, according to
Eviaa, was: "We don't wanttopayforyou, we don't want you tocJiarse.moreto make
up for it and we don't want tO quit managing you u cl05ely u we did wheo we paid
for everylbina." Eviua added that the very fact SUNY had survived previous cuts is
COIIIidered "evideooe that flu1ber cuts are permiuible" in Albany.
The lobbyilll abo mod&amp; a side trip to the nearby New Yorlt State Library and
An:hi-. where lheycbeckedouta !50-year-old bootoflegialativeenactments- The
handwrlaea record of leglslalive actioo contains UB's original charter, paased by the
legislalurc in 1846.11 Will be oo display at the univenity this year, as part ofUB's
Sesquicentennial celebration.

ally to the Habitat Sesquice ntennial Project.

Researchers study
touch receptors
By ELUN GOUIIIAUM

News Serv1ces Staff

0

UR TACfiLEcapabilitiesarecenlr.lltoalmost all that we do. "Touch
is the fi rst sensory system that
goes on-li ne when you're born.
and it's probably the last one to go.'' says
Jonathon Bell. mathematics professor at UB.
Along with Bell. Mark Holmes. professor
and ch air of mathematics at Rensselaer Poly·
techni c Institute, and Stan ley Bo lonowski,
of the Institute for Sensory Research at Syracuse University. are exploring the se nsati on
by modeling phenomena that occ ur a t the
level of the sk in 's touch receptors.
One such receptor. called the Pacinian
corpuscle. transduces the se nsation from the
surface of the skin to a nerve. which then
se nds electrical signals to the brain.
·This is a very complicated bullrlike struc·
ture composed of a nerve ending surrounded
by many flu id and elastic membrane layers.··
said Bell. 'The question is. ' Why does th1s
receptor need so much structure?'"
To find o ut. the researchers are trying to
differentiate which behaviors o f the Pacin·
ian corpusc le arc caused by properti es of the
nerve and which are caused by mechanical
processes.
So far. they have developed a three -di mensiona l mathematical model of the cor·
puscle and its corresponding nerve.
Their work has been published in Math ·

emmical Biosci~nces, Progress in Neurobi·
ology and the Journal of Mathematical
Biology.

�4

Designing Buffalo
of the future
Architecture ..,__. SlmCity computer,.,_ contest
. , PATRICIA -VAN

News Services Staff

H

UNDREDSOFUBundergraduatc students, like thousands of
computer-lovers ages I 0-80,
spend study breaks playing
"SimCity," one or the world's
most popular computer simul ation games.
Playel'!i design. con strue~ lcnock down
and reconstruct cities from the sewer lines
uj&gt;-housing and office space, highways and
airports, parkways, schools, police and fire

stations. recreation areas. hotels and parking
lots. cathedrals and county-coun buildingsand all along the way, the com puter program
assesses the impact of various planning ac·
tivities on empl oyment, municipal-bond rating. population demographics, ed ucation
level. crime, housing stock, etc.
Tear down slums? Where do residents ·
move? Build a marina? Raise taxes? (The
populist co mput er cries "Boo!") Lower
taxes ? (It ye lls. "Yea!") How about a mall on
Delaware A venue or ANOTHER stadiumon Lincoln Parkway?
Graduate planning students in the UB
Sc hool of Architecture and Planning. work -

ing under the di...,.,tion of G . William Page,
professor and chair or the Department or
Planning, have designed an animated
SimCity 2000 computer model of the City or
Buffalo as it looks in 1996.
Using that model, the school will sponsor
a univel'!iity-wide SimCity computer game
contest on Friday, March 8, in which play=

:~~~o~~~~~~tu:l~~~=~
8 p.m. in 238 Hayes Hall on the UB South
Campus.
The SimCity 2000 software then will
create the computer simulation or what Buffalo will become, based on the decisions
made by each player. The software will
project not only how the city will look, but
what changes will cos~ its pollution level, its
credit rating and how the "new" ci ty will be
able to satisfy demand for safe streets, high
employment and good education.
Each contestant's SimCity 2000 version
of future Buffalo will be judged by Kevin
Greiner, City of Buffalo director or planning, based on the following criteria:
I. Highest education rating
2. Lowest pollution rating

for,....._

Above: computer..-. of city of Butr8lo to

be-

3. Lowest crime rate
4. Lowest unemployment rate
5. Best loan rating for municipal bonowing
The games will take place from 1-8 p.m.
on March 8 in 238 Hayes Hall. The competition is open to all UB undergraduate students, reg ardless or major, individual
competitol'!i only (no teams). Each contestant will have 45 minutes of play usinz
single-entrance only. standard SimCity 2000

rules-no shoncut keys allowed. Advanced
regisiiBlion is recommended in person in
116 Hayes Hall. Wallc-in registration will be
pennined on the next available computer,
space permitting. Demonstrations and brier
classroom instruction will be provided for
beginnel'!i. An actual game-in-progress wiD
be continuously projected onfoa large screen
so that viewel'!icanseebowit's beingplayed.
Winne" will receive prizes or gift certificates valued from $25 to $100.
0

Contemporary poet, essayist give readings at UB March 13
BJ PATRICIA -OVAN
News Services Staff

A

LONG WITH Allen Ginsberg.
Anne Waldman is one of the
dinectOI'!i or the Naropa Institute, the prestigious Buddhistoriented alternative literary
institution in Boulder, Colo. The New York
Times called her "one or the fastest, wisest
women to run with the wolves in some time"
and she has an international reputation as a
performerofherown poetry in experimental
combination with music, dance and video.
Andrew Schelling is an essayis~ translator
or poetry. world traveler. amateur naturalist
and cultural bridge-builder, who teaChes po-

Rn

etry, Sanskrit and wilderness writing at the
Nampa Institute while devoting a good deal or
time and energy to environmental issues.
These two arresting figures in the world
or contemporary poetry have been referred
by Mexican poet-translator David Huena as
among "the eyes or the imagination and
memory or the United States."
Waldman and Schelling will be at UB as
guests of the English Department Poetics
Program on Wednesday, Marcb 13, topresent
their work in public performance.
They will give a joint poetry reading at 4
p.m. in the Screening Room (Room. 114) or
the Center for the Arts on the North Campus.
The event is free of charge and open to the

I ........ -U.ScilrMIIIf ........ a!BiomedlcUsm.o.wiDbepl

two major Sludics in March daiped ID pnwide peater iFIII&amp;hliiiiD wiry -people
get lung cancer or heart diaue IIIII Olben doD'L
The studies, whidl will IIIII forfive:r-s, orefuaded fora talalof~llliJiiq,bytbe
Nationallnstitflles of Health.
The investigators will conllct a random sample ofbcalthy reaidenb
Brie IIIII
Niagara counties to create a 3,800-persoo control croup to bod! ltUdics.
lnformationgathercd from the control croup wiD be compared in a varieeyofways wilb
data collecled from I ,200 people with newly ~ lung cancer 111111,000 people
with newly diagnosed cardiovascular disease.
The comparisons could yield imponant information on bow interrolllilllllhips
between diet. alcohol consumption. smolting, exercise, occupation and Olber fa&lt;:tors
could increase the risk of developing these two chronic diseases, or protect against
them.
"We will be loolcing at bow the different pieces fit together," saidJo Freudeohcim,
UB associate professor of social and preventive medicine and project director of tbe
lung cancer study. Maurizio Trevisan, professor and cbair oftbeDcpanmcot of Social
and Preventive Medicine, is project director of tho cardiovucular study.
Freudcohcim said researchers SliD have a lot to learn about lung cancer. "There is oo
question thatcigareue smoking is the biggest rislc r.ctor-. But there ore people wbodOO't
smolcewbostillgetlungcancer,andtbcreorepeoplewbob&amp;vesmolcedollthoirliveswbo
doo' L We're boi&gt;in8 to find out why.
" We also will be looking closely at women and African AmericaDI, JIIOU!lllhll
haven't been otudicd closely." abe swcd. "There is some evidellce lhll African
Americans develop cancer with lower rileS of smoldq t1w1 Olbcr aroup~."
Trevisan said tho cardiovuculardioeaseltudy will IIICIIIIJIIID dcdllletbeciUIInacea
in lifestyle tilctors between those who get hcart diaue IIIII tboee wbo doD'I.IIIIIto
detl!nnine fac10n lhll might predict a socond epiiOde.

rrom

"I'm a witch woman/l'm a beggar woman!l'm a shade woman/l'm
a shadow woman!l'm a leaf woman/l'm a leaping wonuJ11. .. "
ANMWAUMAM, "FAn _ _ •

public. It is sponsored by the James H.
adjunct faculty or the Institute or American
McNulty Chair in the Department of English
Indian Arts in Santa Fe. She also teaches for
(Dennis Tedloclc).
the Schute fllr Dictung in Vienna.
Provocative, high-spiriled Anne Waldman
A student of Buddhism, she bas been travis one of the great poetic voices of this era. A
eling to Jodia and Nepal since 1970 and this
publishing poet for nearly 30yetUS, her richly
spring she will be teaching poetry in Bali.
humorous work has been acclaimed for its
translator and essayist of rigorous seninnovation, musical language and "splensuality, Andrew Schelling grew up in
didly uninhibiled aesthetic opportunism."
New England, his sensibilities informed by the
The open-form or projective ver&gt;e style
region's resurgent conifer forests, anthropolused by Waldman is by definition grounded
ogy museums and Asian art colloctioos. He
in a belief in the correspondence between the
later moved to northern California, where he
poet's inner and outer worlds.
studied Sanskrit language and literature at the
" ...One must go back to Whitman," wrote
Univ=ity or California at Berkeley while
critic John Hinchey, "to find precedent for ·
cooducting investigations into cthnopoetics,
Waldman's astonishingly unstudied practiwildcmcss studies and Asian cultures.
cal faith that discoveries or self are revelaHis volumes of translation include "For
tions of a world and vice versa."
Love or the Dark One: Songs or Mirabai" and
er best-known work is "Fast Speaking
"Dropping the Bow: l'llcms from Ancieot InWoman," a 600-line chant-poem pubdia,"wbicb woo tho 1992Acadcmyor Amerilished in 1974 that holds the reader's attencan PociS prize ror translatioo. He bas been
tion with what one criti c called its desperate
celebrated for his "profoundly inquisitive naand pla:Yful creative recklessness-a poem
turc.fearlessandtendcr...(revealcd)in. ..shining
.. whose imaginative power inheres in the
journal fragments, poems, essays and translaimmediacy of its language .... "
tions." (Rildci Ducomet)
Waldman is also the author or "Skin Meat
Schelling, chair or the Department of WritBones" and "Helping the Dreamer," and
ing and Poetics at the Nampa Institute. has
many other works, most recently, ..lovis," an
taught and given readings and lectures in Euepic mytho-poem that explores and describes
rope, Canada and Mexico, as well as througha female univer&gt;e. Gary Snyder called it "a
out the U.S., and bas traveled widely in Asia.
net or language and spirit that opens out the
His II booksincludc "Mooo isa PicceorTea."
possibilities of writing and our enactment of "The India Book: Essays from Indian Asia"
archetypes in one long breath."
and most recently, "Old Growth: Poems and
Another recent collection is titled " Kill or
Notebooks, 1986-1994," forsys into the pasL
Care," and offel'!i a bold prescriptive for our
pncscnt and future of the world's continents.
apocalyptic times. It is a book, writes the San
He bas collaborated with Anne Waldman
Francisco Chronicle, in which "life hamon three boolcs: "Disembodied Poetics: Annals
mers away in the present-time psyche of one
of The Jack Kcrouac School." "The Quenchgifted woman." Forthcomi ng titles include
ing ofthel.amp" and the soon-to-be published.
"The Beat Book." an anthology or Beat
"Sons and Daughton or the Buddha."
writings; " lovis U" and a 20th anniversary
Schelling's recent work appeBI'!i in Sulreprint edition or "Fast Speaking Woman."
fur, Talisman. "The WhOle Earth Milleonial
aidman, co-rounder and director or the
Catalogue," "The Poetics ofCriticisni." " PrimaryTrouble,"Tricycle:TheBuddbistJourJack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at the Naropa Institute, is a member or the
nal and The Journal of Vaishnava Studies. 0

A

H

w

�5

........., .._ v.-..n, .... u

And'?"

all you cybe(-fans, the latest news and scores from the Mid-Continent
Women s Basl&lt;etball Tournament are available online. Check out the Web site (http://
Wlngs.bulfalo.edtisports/midconbasketball). lnfonnatlon on the 1996 Mid-Continent
Women's Basketball Tournament will be updated dai!Y during the tourney.

FOR AU1'0MATIC BID
HOST MIDoCON TOURNEY
sity ar Buffalo Royals will face !he
of Missouri-Kansas City In the first
Mid-Continent Conference
women's sketball tournament to be held at
US's Alumn ena Thursday through Saturday.
UB enters
tournament as the No. 2 seed
with a 13-5 CO!jllerence record and a 21-7
overall mark. UMKC is seeded seventh with a
9-9 Mid-Con record and 11 - 15 overall record .
The game will tipoff al 7:30p.m. bn Thursday
night.

Other pairings includa lop seeded Youngstown Slate (17-8 011etall, 14-4 Mid-Con) meerrng No. 8 Western Illinois (10-16, 8-10) ar 1
p.m. Thursday, No. 4 Valparaiso (16-10, 12-6)
vs. No. 5 Troy Slate (13-13, 11-7) at 3 p .m. and
No.3 Northeastern Illinois ( 15-1 1, 12-6) vs. No.
6 Eastern Illinois (12-14, 9-9) al5:30 p .m.
Semilinals are Friday ar 5 p .m. and 7 p.m. wilh
!he championship game on Saturday a! 3 p.m.
telecast live by !he Empire Sports Network.
Tickets are S5 for adulls per day, $2 for
!hose 18-and-undar and $1 for aM Mid-Continent instiMion students with proper identifiC8Iron. Alllicf&lt;els are general admission. The UB
ticker office is open 11 a.m.-3:30p.m. or tickers can be charged by calling 645-6666.
The winner of the tournament receives the
league's aulornalic bid to !he NCAA Touma~t. Western Illinois is the defending champron.

• U8 ANNOUNCES

'98 F001BALL SCHEDULE
A Thursday nigh! season-opener ar UB Sra-

d•um against Illinois State and rematches with
three Yankee Conference powers highlight !he
11-game University al Buffalo 1996 football
schedule.
The Bulls, under second-year head coach
Craig Cirbus, will play six home games and •
hve away during !he '96 season. The highlights
rncludelhe opener on Thursday, Aug. 29
against Illinois Slate, rematches wilh Yankee

THE 1996 UB FOOTBALL
SCHEDULE

~

...........

29 ILLINOIS STATE

?p.m.

7
14
21
28

?p.m.
1p.m.
1p.m.
?p.m.

CONNECTICUT
ar Colgate
ar Lehigh
EDINBORO

.

October
CORNELL (Homecoming) 1:30 p.m.
5
12 YOUNGSTOWN STATE
1:30p.m.
111 at Massact}usens
1p.m.

~••llu
2
11

at Hofstra
NEW HAVEN
HI a! Maine

1p.m.
1:30p.m.
1p.m.

Conference powers Maine. Massachusetts
and Connecticut and a home game against
national power Youngstown Stale, wllo has
won three of !he las! tive Division 1-AA national
lilies. In addition, !he Bulls wrll play host ro
Cornell on Oct 5 for Homecoming
·u is obvklus that we as a university are
COOYTlitted to arranging one of the more challenging schedules in the country at the 1-AA
level," said Cirbus. ·u certainly will be exciting
for the team and also to this community to host
so many football programs that reflect the
p&lt;ide and long-standing lrBditions in college
football. We look forward 10 all of our
rematches from the Yankee Conference as
-11 as !he two learns from !he Pa!riol League
rn Colgate and Lehigh. Playing Cornell as our
homecoming game should be especially exculng to college football fans here in Western
New York," said Cirbus.
The Bulls' opener against Illinois State. the
Thursday before labor Day weekend, is the
first weekday game in !he history of the school
wilh kickoff sal for 7 p.m. ar UB Stadium. UB
will play six learns !hal were also on !he 1995
schedule: Illinois Stale (19-6 win), Connecticut
(26-251oss), Youngstown Stare (9-6 win), Massachusetts (33-91oss). Holslra (17-141oss)
and Maine (19-61oss).

• WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
The Royals concluded their regular season
with a dramatic 76-721oss a! Youngstown
Stare on Feb. 28 in front of 1,743 fans In
Youngstown, Ohio. The loss gave UB !he No. 2
seed in !he upcoming Mid-Continent Conference tournament at AJurmi Arena. The Lady
~~~~~~ured the top spot 1n the toomey
Although !he Royals missed our on becoming !he No. 1 seed, UB still holds horne-c&lt;Xm
advantage in the tourney. "This game will help
us tremendously,· said Royals coach Sal
Buscaglia. "We played a great ballgame 1n
fr~t of a very vocal crowd and in no way is
thiS game a downer for us. The prize that we're
looking for occurs next week, and that's to w1n
the tournament (and an automatic NCAA Tour.
narnenr berth)."
Juniof guard Brenna Doty lit up the second
hall, scoring 24 of her game-high 27 po1nts •n
the final 20 minutes. Doty scored 14 consecutive points, including tour of her six three-po•nters. for the Royals midway through the hall and
gave UB a four-point cushion . 60-56, with 6·35
to go ·The onty thing I tell her 1s to keep shootIng because a shooter shoots,· said
Buscaglia ·And she was JUSt marvelous 1n the
second half. That was an MVP performance •
Nicole Blakeslee scored a career-high 23
points while grabbing eight rebounds and
blocking lour shots for the Royals. Blakeslee
returned to the starting lineup after m1ss1ng the
Central Connecticut Stale game on Feb 24
with a sprained ankle. The sophomore connected on 9-of-12 field goals and was 5-ol-7
from the free throw line.
Anne Gallagher and Chanssa Gardner each
pulled down nine rebounds lor !he Royals.

• MEN'S BASKETBALL
The Bulls 1995-96 season carne to a dramatic

end Sunday evening at the Mid-Gontinent Confer~nce Tournament in Mohne, Ill. UB dropped
a ftrsl round matchup to Eastern IllinoiS 59-55
to end the year with a 13-14 record .
UB jumped out ro a 30-14 half1ime edge
thanks to 44 percent field goal shoot1ng while
holding the Panthers to just 23 percent from
the field . The Bulls went on a 15-1 run to lake
coomand early. Mike Martinho scored 10 of
his game-high 18 points during the stretch including a pair of three-pointers . his only two ot
the evening.
In the second half, UB increased the lead to
18. 38-20, before the Panthers made the1r
comeback. Free throws became the story of
the second half as UB connected on just SIX of
!heir 17 anernprs (35.3 percent) while EIU was
15-ol-20 (75.0 percent) from !he charity slnpe
EIU made 12-of-16 free throws in the final 14
minutes to ratty and took the lead with 1:37 remaining when Rick Kaye hit a layup giving the
Panthers a 57-55 edge. UB was held scoreless
in !he final 2:58 of !he game as EIU scored the
final seven points.
Matt Clemens. starting in place of Jamie
Anderson, was the only other double figure
scorer for the Bulls with 11 points. Anderson
added seven points in just 10 minutes of work.
Tati Hadavi led the rebounders with a careerhigh nine boards including five offensive rebounds while adding six points.
The Bulls placed Mike Martinho on the MidContinent's second-team A/1-Gonlerence
squad. Valparaiso"s Anthony Allison was selected as the league's Player of the Year Roben Harris and Bernard Wheeler earned AllNewcomer team recognition as Northeastern
Illinois' Andrei! Hoard earned Newcomer of the
Year honors. Homer Drew of Valparaiso was
sefected as the Coach of the Year for the th1rd
straight year .

• MEN'S SWIMMING
Korry Miller set a school recad for the Bulls at
the ECAC Championships 1n Gloucester.
Mass. Miller placed second 1n the 200 backstroke finishing 1n 1:51 11 AII·Amencan
Scooter Blanchard set the prevK&gt;US mark at
1:51 20 1n 1992 M1lfer also f1n1shed second 1n
!he 100 backstroke
The Bulls f1n1shed 11th at the meet sconng
t 34 pomts. ConnectiCUt took the top spot with
450 points.
Justin Mon1n placed second 1n the 3-meter
d1v1ng compehtiOO and seventh 1n the 1-meter
event Kev1n Jessop was n1nth 1n the 400 1nd1vrdual medley

• INDOOR TRACK • FIELD
Royals freshman Shelly Hamilton placed s1xth
1n the women·s long 1ump at last weekend's
ECAC Champoosh1p meet 1n Boston
Hamilton's Jump of 5-5 3/4 earned her aii·East
honors at the meet

. WRESTUNG

• VOI.I.a'BAU
The UB women's volleyball team added then
th~rd recJult this week by signu)Q 5-7 setter
Somer Deschambaull (Midland. Onlano/SI
Theresa's) Deschambautt IS the first CanadiBn
to JOin the Royals' program and comes to UB
with a wealth of talent and experience. A
three-year staner at St Theresa's Secondary
School. she led hertearn ro the Ontario "AA"
Champtonship Tournament in the 1994-95 season . S\ Theresa's is one ol the laVOfites to advance to th1s season's tournament March 6-7
1n Foothill, Ont. Unlike U.S. volleyball that is
played In !he fall, !he volleyball season In
Canada runs from November through March
Descharnbaull rs also a lop junior player
c~ wi1tl one of !he lOP Jlrior CIW teams
in Ontario, "The Toronto Solars" and has trained
with the Ontario Provincial Junior team during
her summers. Citing UB's strong academtc atmosphere as her reason for signing with the
Royals. Descharnbaull decided on UB over
Olher Div. I schools including Austin Peay, Southeastern Louisiana and East Temessee Slate.
Head coach Bob Maxwell expects UB ro recruit heavity from Canada in the future. ·lhere
are a lot of fine programs and players in
Canada,· he sa1d. ·The Juniof Programs are
very strong and the coaching is excellent.·
"Somer will bnng a wealth of volleyball expenence to our program.· he said. ·Her expenences with the Provincial program and competing with one of the top Juniof Programs in
Canada make her a very expedenCed
setter .. and the things that she may be able to
do with our oHense are unlimited.·
Deschambautt ts third signee for the Royals.
along with Christina Gianino (Dix Hills, N.YJ
Han Hollow Hrlls East) and Courtney Lugert
(Hillen. N.Y./Hillen).
The Royals were 22-13 last season and 3-3
1n the M1d-Cont1nent Conference's Eastem 0•VISIOI'l . In h1s 15 seasons at UB. Maxwell has
posted a career record of 364-229-8 lor a 612
Winning percentage. UB ptnS the ~d-Amen ­
can Conference lor the 1998-99 school year
- Ted Wasko. Spans Information Office

UPCOMING UB HOME
ATHLETIC EVENTS
ThursMy-Saturday, Mart:h 7-9

llid-Contlnent ConfeNnc• Women'•
BaaketbaU TOU'ftalftent at AIUrMI Arena
Thursday, Mart:h 7
# 1 Youngstown State vs M8 Western

lllioos. 1 p .m
M4 ValparaiSO vs #5 Troy State, 3 p m
lf3 Northeastern IllinoiS vs #6 Eastern
Illinois. 5:30 p m
12 Buffalo vs ##7 M•ssour1-Kansas C1ty,
7:30p.m.

The Bulls wrestlers were off last week preparIng for th_
IS weekend's East Coast Wrestling
Assoc~tiOO meet at R1der Untversity 1n
Lawrenc~lle . N.J Winners and runners·up

of
each W8fght class earn benhs 1n this month's
NCAA National Tournarnenrro be held at the
Target Center in Minneapolis, Minn.

Friday, March 8
Sem•finals 5 p.m and 7 p.m

Saturday, Mart:h 9
Finals3p m

�6

....,..,,~,....._n, ..._u

Faculb&amp;slaHBillboard
za

APRIL
II "TAKE OUR
DAUGHTEIU TD WOIIK DAY"
The US Task Force on Women will
hold a campus-w•de celebration
Thursday , Apul 25 . of the nat10na1
orogram ~Take Our Daught8rs to
Work Day
UB lacutty stall and students are
urged to bnng (or borrow and bnng)
a daughter to work and have her
spend the day expeflencmg the
workplace tearmng about the tabs
that women hold at UB and be•ng acknowledged as valuable future adults
'" the workmg world
A luU day o l achvllleS •s t&gt;e1ng
planned . •nctud•ng workshops , v•s•ts
to a var •e ty o f •meres!lng UB s•tes.
and lunch The locus ot the program
•s !Of g•rls ages 8 to 14 Arrangements can t&gt;e made lor a proxy par·
ent tor pan or allot the day •I you are
unable to be w1th your daughte•
The commLitee IS seekmg spon sow1g organ•zallons Interested 1n
contributing frnanc1a1 support 1n-krnd
assrstance a st le 10 vtSII or volun leers Curren! sponsors tnclude UB
1 ask Force on w omen Unued UntverSIIy Prolesstonals ano Olltce of
Stuaenl Lrle If your group IS rnterested rn becom.ng a sponsor contac l Bern1ce Noble Oepanment of
Mrcrobrotogy 829-2439
For more 1nlorma11on about the
rogr am catl Cathy Cteesattel 645646 Ext 127

S
P

L OF NURSING

I OPEN ilouSE

The S hoot of Nurs1ng wtll hold an
open tiluse for students !rom 1·30
p m 10 4 30 p m Fnda'i . March 8 1n
825 Ktmball Tower on ue·s South
Campus
lnlormauon wttl be available about
the school's baccalaureate, master 's

and doctoral degree programs, as
well as about the AN-to-baccalaureate and AN-to-master's programs.
For more tnformation. call 829-2533.

LECTURE TG FOCUS ON

DISCOVERY 1HAT CIIAHCIED
KNOWLEDIIE DF GENETICS

ANA ed1t1ng-one of the most Important d1scovenes 1n molecular biok&gt;gy
dunng the past 10 years-will be the
subJect of " Mak~ng Sense out of Nonsense . RNA Ed1!1ng 1n an African
Parasne • a talk that will be hekj at
7 30 p.m on Monday. March 25, 1n
Room 215 of the Natural Sciences
Budd1ng on the UB North Campus
~uri• K. R•ad, assistant professor 1n the UB Department of Mtcrobiology and a member of the
Center lor M•crob1al Pathogenesis.
Will diSCUSS how the diSCOvery Of
RNA edttlng has fundamentally
changed what sc1entists know about
how genes are regulated
The discovery involves the lnfor mahon tn ANA , ribonucleic ac1d ,
whach IS a copy of the 1nformatton in
DNA and WhiCh IS Ultimately deCoded to make c ellular prote1ns
For years. 11 was believed that
DNA conta1ned a permanenl bluepnnt delan•ng tile structure of cells
and orgamsms. the sequence of
whiCh always d arectly defined protean
structure
However , scaenttsts have dascovered that1n Alncan parasites- and 1n
other orgamsms, includ1ng humansRNA somet1mes first undergoes a
process called ANA edillng that dramatically alters the ANA
~ In these cases. the sequence ol
RNA •s changed and only afler these
cl1anges rake place does the ANA
code for prote1ns. • said Read .
She w111 d iscuss how th•s dtscovery has allowed scientists to under-

:elf~- renter

.-..... ... .,..._,•• Counlclioa CeDter provides free
confideolial couuelill&amp; to~ UB tlllldents only, anyone can
peruse its "self-help" bomcpage

I I I &lt;

HIGH

I IH )N I&lt;

bJ

\\~]S

on UB"Wings. In addition to providing basic information abOut
!he Counseling Center" s services;
this Web.site provides a wealth of
information on diver.;e topics such

as: "stress and anxiety," "self·
defeating behaviors,'","time management," and "ending relation·
ships."
The Counseling Center via UB Wings also bas a sean:h engine
where you can enter keywords su ch as usuicide," '"drugs," and
"body image" to find information of interest within its pages. Tile
site also provides miscellaneous "words 10 ponder'" from such
diverse observers or the human condition as "Aldous Huxley,
dyi ng" and "adult children of alfOholicldysfunctional families" are
listed as well. Links to resources on the Internet such as the "SelfHelp Book Index"' from the University of Missouri and the APA's
"self-help'" l;&gt;rochures are also available.
Those interested in "self-help" will find a wealih of materials on
the Net. T wo "self-help" sites are particularly noteworthy: Psych
Web's "Psychology Self-Help Resources on the Intemef' &amp; Psy·

chology Ma gal in e. (bttp:J/www.well.comfuser/sellbelp/
artindex.bfm). You name tbe "self-help" topic and you will find il
on o n e of these sites: ..aging," "domestic violence," ..eating di sorde~." ''pain," "parenting," "sexual disorders," "sleep disorders,"
"work and fi n ances ," among many, manf others.
To help yourself 10 "se/f·help" on campus, rype wings at your
campus e-mail systtm prompt, u lut "Services," then "Campus, "
then "Services Specifically for Students,'' thtm "Counseling Cen·
ter. " For access to the Psych Web and The Well "self-help" sites,
type their URLs at the "Go" commtJnd. Naturally those who search
the Web via a graphical browser such as Netscape can use the
above URLs as well. For assistance in connecting to UB Wings,
contact the Computing homepage or "self-help " situ on the Web,
contact Do•id Gilles-Thomas, dgthomtJS @ub•ms.cc.buffalo.•du ,
Counseling Center. 645·2720.
-Gemma DeVinney and Don Hartman, University U braries

stand a fundamental genetic process
and how this process may impact

soma human diseases .
Free and open to the pubhc, the
talk is sponsored by the UB Sciences
Alumni Association of the Faculty of
Natural Sciences and Mathematics.
The Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics comprises the depan·
ments of Biological Sciences, Chemistry, Computer Science, Geology,
Mathematics and Physics
For more informatK&gt;n, contact

Cindy Nydahl at 645-253 t .
HAUPTMAH TO SPEAK

AT-.XJSESSNobel Laureate Herbert
Hauptman, research professor of
biophysical sciences and adjunct
professor of computer science at UB.
will be the speaker April 23 for the
US Chapter of Sigma Xi. the scientillc research society. Hauptman will
r--;...--.,.-, speak on "The Rote
Which Mathematics Pmys in the
Natural Sciences·
at the group's dinner meeting, to be
held in the Center
for Tomor-row on
the North Campus.
The event will
feature the annual
student research poster competition.
with two prizes of $100 to be
awarded to the best graduate and
undergraduate posters.
The competition. with an April 1
deadlin8. will be judged by a panel
of scientists. Appltcation forms are
available from department chairs , directors ol graduate and undergraduate programs and from David
Triggle. UB vice provost for graduate
education and dean of the graduate
schc:»o'. Following the dinner. which is
complimentary for any student who
presents a poster. w1nners will make
a brief presentatoo.
For more informatiOn, call David
Triggle at 645-7315. Send dinner reservat)on and check for S20 to Rosemary Elliot , Sigma Xi treasurer . Molecular and Cell B i~y. Roswell
Park Cancer Institute. Elm &amp; Carlton
Sts ., Buffalo. N.Y. 14263

GIIEATEII BUFFALO OP£IIA
HAS VOCAL COMPIETITION

AT UB MAIICH I AND 9
The Greater Buffalo Opera Company
will present its International Vocal
Competition Fnday, March 8 and Saturday, March 9 in Slee Concert Hall
on the UB North Campus. The publiC
IS invited to watch the 62 young artists from around the world taktng pan
in the competition. which is scheduled from tO a.m to 6 p m both
days.
A hnal concert. also open to the
pubhc. will be g iven m Slee Halt Saturday evening at 8 p.m . Tickets lor
the closing concert at SS. general
admission; $4, students; and $25.
patrons, will be available at the door.
Competition judges are t.ois
McDonald of Toronto: Thor Ecken of
New York and Gary Burgess. UB associate professor of music . Awards
include: First place , the Erwin
Johnson Award of $2.500; second
place. the OperabuHs Award of
$1 ,000: third place. the Richard
Miller Award of $500; fourth place .
the Dr. Judith Wolf Award of $200
and Honorable Mention First and
second prize winners w1fl be offered
roles in a future opera
Members of the lnternalional Vocal Competition commlltee are: J
Warren Perry, chair: Gary Burgess.
GBOC general director: Janiece
Epke· Baldwin , James Browning , Thomas Aanigan, Kerry S. Grant ,
Anastasla K. Johnson, Marguerite
KllO'Mes , Genie Las. Rev. Jacob
Ledwon . Laura Martin, Richard Miller.
Josephine 0 Wise. and Judith Wall .

c...,.. ..... c.

• ......

01-

This II CorrmMr ..._.,_ WN1&lt; wiltl opoc:lei8CIIvftioo plaWd 1D ..,_
cou,_ commuter_.~ on~ CorrmMr oollee
bnlol&lt;s have been hold dally In tho Sluden! Union Lobby on tt. North
C4mpuo from 8:» 10:30 a.m.. hool8d by S1udenl Ule oncfSA Com"mute&lt; Afloinl with a dlflerant oompus c11ice. facully
u
co-host aech clay. ToclaY's
UB Dining Selviceo; V'ICI
·· Oflice·~ EdUCIIIon; t.e.ning Cenler; Health Center; Patldng and T._udfon. Friday's co-llcJol* . . Engl,_ri(lg; Oflice of &amp;&amp;--..
and Porldng Tranoportallon.
eomrr.- coflw fnal&lt; Will be hold ln·Harrtman Stuclanl Cenler
Lobby on the South Campus F~ from 11 a.m.·2 p.m.
Events continuing this- inctJde:
• Relaxallon Slallon, ..,.,....., by Living Wei Cerle&lt;, from 10 a.m••
2 p.m. today in Sludenl Union Lobby. North C8ot1puo.
• Free plog pong ~ Friday a1 Sludont Union, Naill
pus, 9 a.m..a p.m.; Harriman Sludont Caroler, SIUh Campus~
only), 9 a.m..a p.m.. o.is. North~&lt;- only) 1~ p.m..

co-_..,.

Ute

c.m.

Ute--·- -.. . . .

The Olficeol
Stuclanl the-- of.,.,.,...,lftd ~year-round
to help,_
dents. Among the-.... ... a Clllmlufe( ~ Bolrd on.,.
IIJOI.&lt;Id lloor ol the Sludont Union - _
... UGI.in ~ Hall.
Sludonbl can "'*k 1111re lor inlormallon, ~ lftd ...
oourceo. The Cccrmulw Comer. Roam 1121n lhe S1udonl. Union
h U - mape pootod along -..llh current NFTA lottMro

--in-.
where-

ridenl-

buo..,.....

T)lo Corrmdtlf- It I '*!lldng

can find

MOCK 11IIAL IEAII TAKES

FlltST PLACE UIIIE-.u
A team ol US law students recently
took first place in the Region 11 contest of the t996 National Trial Advocacy Competition. besting teams
from 10 other law schools.
Team members are Craig Brown,
Jim Grab~ and Jennifer Runfola.
Coaches are Diane La Vallee. UB law
school Class of '63, and Thomas P.
Franczyk. both Erie County assistant
district attorneys, and Buffalo attorney Robert M . Murphy. Class of '56.
The team will compete in the national competition. to be held March
21·23 in Houston
The reg1onals . held Feb. 8-1 t 1n
Albany. involved 22 teams from law
schools at Syracuse. Brooklyn,
Hofstra. Albany, Cardozo, St. John·s.
Fordham. Pace. Ouinnipiac and
Rutgers.
The UB victory was quite a coup ,
notes La Vallee, an Erie County assistant distnct attorney.
The compelition in\IOived all
teams conducting a full trial case-a
civil defamation case-with two witnesses for each side. The UB team
won five tnals to capture the championship , defeating Brooktyn in the fl.
nat trial . Brown also won the ·eest
Advocate" award fOf overall performance in the competition.
Although u e ·s second team-Lori
Giordano, Da\19 Hastings and Robert

dri\lera from their erea.

-d

s100 in an existing or proposed
course or a module for Inclusion In
PSC/GEO 229: East Asian ~itical

Economy.
Applications must be received by
March 15. For full gukielines and application instructions, contact Asian
Studies at 645-3474 :
&lt;burkmanOacsu.butfalo.edu&gt; .

Environmental research and lesting

ing two $2.000 surnmef' grants to full-

conducted by the UB School of Engi·
nearing and Applied Sciences has
been botslered, thar1&lt;5 to an equip.
ment donation !rom Niagara Moha'Nk
Power Corp. The company has donated an atomic-ebsorption spectrophotometer, which will enable researeberS in UB's EnvirOf'VTlefltal
Engineering and Science Program to
better analyza - . I coocentratioos "'
erMrormental sarnpkls, including
wastewater and soits.
The spectrophotometer, used at
Niagara Mohawk's Huntley Steam
Station 1n Tonawanda to analyze
boller water and wastewater from the
plant. equipment replaces UB's
older. outdated instrument.
basic technology is the
same, but the software in newer instruments makes research and testIng much easter to conduct,.. said
.lohn Van -.n.choten, UB associate professor of civil engineering.
·This donation from Niagara Mohawk
will enatHe us to upgrade our research capabilities significantly . ~
Van Benschoten said that the ll'lstrument will increase the number of
samples that can be analyzed and
improve accuracy of the results. The
instrument will be- used by graduate
students ln a variSft of protects.
"We're pleased to be able to further
t h e - pannership be_ , Niaglw&amp; t.1ohw.4&lt; and UB." said

time US faculty for undergraduate
course development focusing on
East Asia.
Recipients need not be Asianarea specialists, and may use the
grant to create a new Asia-centered
course; an Asian module for inclu-

Joseph Dillman. l-tnley .,.... manager.
"Operational dlanges here taw""
&lt;lJced the . - !
....rysis. so
wa're glad the! UB can PI' !tis equip.
mont to good use." Dill'nan said remaining analysis requh'ements will be
done by UB as part of the~·

Fogg "did not enjoy the same success
as thetr counterpartS. they, too, worked

119ry hard and did a great job.· says
Franczyl&lt;. Emily Leach. attemate for
boCh teams, -was extremety effective in
helping the others prepare lor the
compet~ioo . • he

ASIAN

notes.

.-a..--

8ltAHTB Rill
-STUDY
The Asian Studies program is offer-

·rne

for"'"'"""'

�7

....... .,. ~v..... n t Mo. 21

Haing Ngor: witness for
Cambodia, champion for peace
The expatriate Cambodian actor, Dr. Halng S. Ngor, was
killed violently on February 26, near his Los Angeles
home. Through his art, Dr. Haing S. Ngor fulfilled an old
Buddhist vow, to enlighten for the sake of all living things .
Dr. Ngor believed he had been chosen by fate or "the
gods· as an historical witness . He realized this mission tn
his first and defining role as Dith Pran, a Cambodian assistant to an American journalist Sydney Schanberg in
"The Killing Fields" (1984}, which will remain his legacy.
Through this film , Haing Ngor eloquently gave eyes to a
stghtless world to see and know about the horrifying
genocidal destruction of Cambodia during the 1970s.
Dr. Ngor won the 1985 Academy Award for best supporting actor in "The Killing Fields," but to call him a "sup- ,
porting" actor is misleading. He was a powerful influence
on the filmmakers to elevate the film higher than its warttme buddies context and turn it Into a searing indictment
of American foreign policy from t969 to 1975 and the brutality of the Khmer Rouge that followed . Through his stunning performance, Haing Ngor completely overshadowed
Sam Waterston. the nominal lead actor. One could even
argue that the filmmakers deliberately understated
Waterston's role . In a 1985 article that came out in Sight
and Sound, director Roland Joffee said he deliberately
c hose Waterston over stronger lead aCtors like AI Pacino
or Dustin Hoffman to "allow the limelight to shift ... to a non·
professional Cambodian actor: i.e .. Haing Ngor.
The tragedy of Dr. Ngor's death is compounded because he was so much more than himself. In his memoir,
Haing Ngor related his discovery, while studying the
sc ript of The Killing Fields that "I was Dith Pran. • Indeed
though the real Dith Pran now works successfully as a
photojournalist for the New York Times, he is stamped on
our consciousness by the persona of Haing Ngor. As Oith
Pran. Haing Ngor was unique. No amateur actor ever had
such a god·given role. or ever made so much of it. Never
was there an actor who was also so consummate a critic
and shaper of a film 's dramatic and factual content. No
actor ever brought such empathy to a role . Or Ngor had

actually lived the role . Dith Pran and Dr Ngor shared the
same historical experiences and memories. Both had survived the genocidal village pest holes of terror , disease,
starvation and death where millions of Cambodians died
in the hands of the Khmer Rouge. Thus. Dr. Ngor made
the movie about two relatively insignificant men into a
powerful historical testament.
Such a meffiOfable first success rendered all of Hatng
Ngor's subsequent film work anticlimactic. Who now re·
members his marginal roles in "Vietnam Texas," "Iron Tn angle," "My Ute" or even his dignified support role Phung
Thi Le Ly's father in Oliver Stone's "Heaven and Earth "?
One could argue that Halng Ngor continued to accept
these small acting parts not because he aspired to grea1
acting but because they supplied the money and leisure
to continue his primary life mission as a witness for Cam bodia. In the dozen years left 10 him alter "The Killing
Fields." Haing Ngor did what he could for individual Cam·
bodians in the United States and for peace in Cambodia
as it wrenched itsalf from the "hell on earth " the Vtetnamese described when they invaded Cambodia late tn 1978.
through the despised Vietnamese occupatton to the frag ile and insecure truce of the past few years
Or. Ngor was a gentle, humorous and generous man
In 1990. he agreed to join Dith Pran in Buffalo for a conference called "Children of Crisis" that was co-sponsored
by UB and the Buffalo Public Schools. For no more than
his food and lodging, he stayed three days, lecturing at
UB and in Buffalo and counseling individual Cambodian
Americans . In private he was a delightful screwball wit
When he spoke about Cambodia's recent past. however ,
his warmth and gentleness dissolved into a furious .
barely controlled rage . As with all his countrymen who
lived through the Killing Fields, the pain of overwhelmtng
personal loss and suffering was deeply etched 10 his face
and was a poignant rem inder to us all . how lucky we are
to be alive.
Haing Ngor's death is truly heartbreaking Hatng Ngor.
the people of Cambodia, the people of the world . deserve
better than this.
CKAJIUS L IIUND

Four na1ed wi•rs ol
Milton Plesur Awards
Four UB faculty members were honored Feb. 29 with
the 16th annual Milton Plesur Excellence in Teaching
Awards.
The ceremony, held in the Student Union, recognized teachers who display excellence in higher education through commitment to students. The award is
the only university-wide teaching award_presented by
students.
The 1996 recipients are David Lesmond, Accounling; James Holmes, Economics; Frank Pellicone, Modern Languages and Literatures; and Carrie Tirado
Braman, English.
Plesur. who died in 1987, was a popular teacher in
the Department of History and a recognized scholar of
popular culture and U.S. presidents.

University Advising Off1ce

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
Services. ComputinJ and information Technology User Liaison.

645-3540.
lnt.-tCIIIIIc
Uslna the Wtb for Your Aadem.k ae.:..rm. 223 l.oc:kwood.
NO&lt;th Campus. Noon. Coruact
t.Ot.GEMMAIIIUBVM.CC.
BUFFALO.EDU to register.

UfeWMbloop
Time Man.qflDcoL Noon-I p.m.
To rea;Wer, call645-6125.

-·-

Roewell"-kSI8ff

Ute Wocbloop
llegjnnjn&amp; SigD Languago s.ro;.
nar, Diane Curthoys. Diruc Experience Method (OEM). Wednesdays th100gh April 11. 5:30-6:45
p.m.. To register. caJI 645-6125
Movleo
Nocorious 09461. Alfml
H.itchcock, director. with Cary
Grant, Ingrid BerJman. Studem
Union Theater. North Campus.
6:30p.m. $2 srudems: Sl.SO general public. UUAB film series

J ohn Subjeck. PhD. Kirchhorer
Room, RPCI. 12:30 p.m.

Ute Wocbloop
Introduction to Ho~ Brewing.
AJso March 27, and April). 7·9
p.m. To register, call645-612.5.

Col&amp;llfUVe SCience

Opuo: Claooko Uve

Col'-lu•
Doug Medln.. Northwestern Univ.
280 Part. North Campos.
2 p.m. \
ASCIT Wolt&lt;llhop
CraUnr: a Homcpagt/HTMLI

Sun. 24:30 p.m. To register. call
Academic Services. Computing

---

and Information Technology User

Liaison. 645-3540.
Blopllylllclll SC:Ienc:eo

,..Yin and Yang.,! Pro&lt;rin
Synthesis and the CytosUittoo.
Dr. BrianT. Edmonds. Yeshiva
Univ. 106 Cary. South Campus.
4p.m.

~~__,

Blolo&amp;J

Cyclic GMP in Pumtent Pulmonary Hypertension, Dr. Robin

Steinhom. Pediatrics. 301 Biomedical Research Building. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

Poetry R -...
Anne Waklmu and And~
Schellin&amp;o Screening Room. Center
(Of the Arts. North Campus.
4 ('1 .m. Free.

-Party
Brrnda M~ '• '"To ~n·~ My
Country, To Serw My Raa."
T:llking Leaves, 3158 Main St.
5-7 p.m. Free. Sponsored by the

MarylouJse Nanna. violin. and
Pusb Vehar, piano- Allen. Sooth
Campus.. 7 p.m. Taped by WBFO
88.7 FM for broadcast the following Sunday at 4 p.m.

Ute Wocbloop
lntumedlatt Sign Langua~
Seminar, Diane Curthoys. Direct
Experience Method (OEM).
Wednesdays through April 17.
7-8:15 p.m. To register. call
645.{;125.
Life Wo-p
Drlvln&amp; To the: Back or Beyond,
Paul Grt:enwald. Geologyfocused tnvelogues. laSl session.
7-8:30 p.m. To register. call
645.{;125.

Mulllc
Gala Scl»olanhip Prism Concert.
S\ee. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5.
Uvlllll Well Wocbloop
Tho Ar1 of Healthy Dialn&amp; 0uL
1450 Student Union. North Campus. 8:3!)-9:30 p.m. Sponso«d by
Li\•ing Well Center. To register.
call 645-2837.

Movlee
To Die For (1995). Studem Umon
Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2
students: $3.50 gene"! public
UUABfilms.eries.

.UCIT Wocbloop
lntroduetion to Sun XWindowinc Systems. 10 a.m.Noon. To register. call Academ1c
Services, Computing and lnform.a·
tion Technology U5Cr Liwson.
645-3540.
Mlc..-olo&amp;J Seminar
PosnJ1liiSCriptional Control of
Chloroplasa Gene EAp!USion, Mar·
garet HoUingswonh. Ph.D., UB
Assoc. Prof.. Biological Sciences.
244 Cary Hall South Campus.
l\ '45a.m.

ICS.

Womea's Health lnitla tiv~
Jean Wactawski-Wende. Ph.D..

-·

Dlotl.....l - ..........
Call Sheehy. MwnstAge. Centtt
for the Atts. North Campus. 8 p.m
$6-$18. For group dtscount call
645--6147; for smgle ttcket call
852-5000

Movie•

--

Protein--RNA lntendkms:
An NMR View, Prof. James
Williamson. M~~.SS«husctu lnsututeofTechnology. 121 Coolo;e
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

M-MMlco Col'-lum
Algobnk Varid;., Wkh 801
F\Jnda.mmtal Group. Prof Dorm
Arapwa. Pwdue Univ. 103
Diefendorf. South Campo.~ 4 p.m
~cehniiMir

SteftocllnniVy In Drug 0..~
ment: 1bt Strripeotol Story, Tho-mas A. Bailie, Ph.D., Merck. 508
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m

Statletlca Colloquium
A Bayesian framrwork for
lntent--to-Treat Analysis with
Missing Data. Kenneth Kleinman.
Harvard School of Pubhc Health
246 Cary. Sooth Campus 4 p.m

Ute Wocbloop

Ute Wocbloop
T'ai Chi for Becinners. Roo
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays and Thursdays.
through May 2. 5:30-6:30 p.m. To
register. call645--6125.

hibit hen: had to !ie!Die for a phocographic ropy of thr document. Th•s
time we can sec the real McCoy
(which up to now has not been aJ.
lowed to leave Albany). Groups
wishing to visit the exhlbi1 may arrange 10 do so by calling 645 ·2916.
Exhibil hours art Monday through
Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

._.... """'

DI'ENING EXHIBITS
Prtnta on the ftftll ft~r
An exhibit of wort by print ·
makers Susan Budash and Ben
Dunk.lc is on view March 8
throtJgh July 8 in the Capen l-lall
Callery locat~ on thr fifth floor of
Capen on thr: North C.mpu.!i. TheAn Department's Pnnt·
mak.mg Progr.un is directed by
Professors Adck Henderson and
Harvey Breverman. 'Therr 1s
an opc:nmg rettption Man:h 8 from
~-6 p.m.

Dutch bulldlllll
"Dutch Modem An:hll«t~" has
opened in the James Dyen Gal·
lery and is on view through April
12. The gallery as located m 335
Hayes Hall, South Campus Hours
~Monday-Friday. 9a.m ·S p.m

JUst

S.oqulelllllblt
"U B Remembers," a uruvc::rstcy
scsquK:cntennial exhibit orpn1ud
by Umvc:rsity Archive • opens to
the public March 8 in 420 Capen
Hall on the Noeth Campus. and
contin~ there through Sc:pc. 10. A
bright item in the exhibit. organittd by ch;er an:hivist Shonnk
Finnegan. is the state charter incorpomting the Univmity of Buffalo
on April 22. 1846. A centennial ex-

lure of black people. whose henLage Schomburg dedicated his hfe
10 ~rving .

n.e exhibia also

traces the evolution of the Harlembased research center that bean his

.

CONTINUING EXHIBITS
"Perfect World.'' a group show.
features wort of Vi~ru Shnne.
Lau" Stem. Gregory Crtwd§on,

David N:wo. and Ronald Joocs.
through March 31 m the Univers1ty
An Gallery located in lhc Cent~r
for the An.s.. North Campus. Gallery hours llll.' 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m..
Wednesday through Saturday. and
oon·5 p.m Sunday Admfssu&gt;n 1.,

,,.,

Bloao,lcal Selene••

p.m. To register. cal\645-6125

u••-

Movleo
Nocorious (1946). Atfn:d
Hitchcock. dirtttor. with Cary
Grant. Ingrid Bergman. Student
Unioo Theater. North Campus.
6:30 p.m. $2 !&gt;tudents; S3.50 gener.a.l pubhc. UUAB film srnes.

sachusetts Institute of Technology.
220 Natura.! Scie~. Nonh Campus. 3:45 p.m.

Group, Barbara Umil:er. Thurs·
days through April 11 . 4:30-5:30

An:hltectll,. Lec:tu,.

Ute Wocbloop
A Chiropnctk Prospective. 6-7
p.m. To register, call 645-6125.

Phyelce SelDin.
The E"-olution of a Nudcar Reaction, Prof. Herman Fcshbach.. Mas-

Thesls/l)isomatloo Suppo&lt;1

Graduate Group for Feminist Stud-

Tht: lmplld or Eoriron.mtotal
Ckenup Policy oa R~in&amp;
Our Cities. G. William Page.
~anning. 301 Crosby. South Cam·
pus. 5:30p.m.

School of Medicine and Biomedl·
cal Sctences. Buffalo Marriott
7:30a.m. $10; AJumni Association
S9. For reservations. call 829-2608.

DIII!UIIIrl
..Digilnl Messages: V..as10n, Revision. and ~1s1on.'' 11 show by
Commumc.ltions Design and Computer An students and faculty. ron·
unues through MtuT:h I.J tn the An
Department GaJ\ery. Ccnlcr for the
Arts, North Campus
Topped by ftoh tanko
"Oumpmg Sight: Landscape/
Landscopc,'' an exhibit by Satoru
Takaha.s.tu. IS the exhibtt1hmugh
March 22 in the Unh·erstty An
Gallery. Center for the Arb. North
Campus The exhibil tS ~~~ rornplek
tuT:hitmural-sculp!untl worl. conSisting of two sepamte rem\vmg
doors made of n.:Oect1V~ gta.~ w1th
fish l:lJ\b: as ceilings." Tnl:ahashttJo
a Japanest lll\Js! hving tn New
Yor\ Ctty. Gallery hours llll.'
Wednesday through Sa!urtb) .
!0:30a.m -8 p.m.. and Sunda) ,
Nooo·5 p.m. Admtssion IS r~

UllhtWell IMtalllltlon
Leonardo Dn:,.··s site-spec11il· mstalhuion "No -15·A" wns des1gned
for the Llghtwell Gallery tn !he
Center for the Aru, Nooh Campu!o.
and now is kxtged ~ through
October.

Blec:k HlotCHJ Month
'il\e Legacy of Arthur A
Schomburg" is on display through
March 15 in l.oc:l:wood Memonal
library. North Campus. The ttav·
ehng e.r.hibit100 of pholognphs and
reproductions of manuscripts e.~t. ­
pl~ the global history and CUI ·

Electlllll•-lbe Women's Club of the: umvcrlltty hokts tU annual ekcoon March
t2 at 7:30 p.m. in the Ementus
Center localed in Goodyear Hall on
the Sooth Campus. After the ballocmg.
Buffalo NeM-·s colummst Paula
Voell will speak on "My Life m
Lifes1yles."

Profeoolonel
Uad Prognunmer AnalystUn1vmny Lltnnes. Dtrtttor'!&gt;Of·
lice. Postmg iP-6003
Faculty
Assoc.iale/Full Professor •nd
Chair-Orthodonhcs. Poslmg
fi'F-6008 Assistant Professor
Computer Sc1~nc~. Postmg
•F.{i(X)'J

ReMarch
Project St.aff Associat~£:k ,~lop
ment. Postmg ;R-95090 S«n-ta ry Ill -School of Soc1sl WOO...
~tmg •R-96005 Engi~rinR
Ot'sign A8sistant ·Occupauon.:sl
Therapy. Posung
•R -96007 Research Sdtnlist · St"~·
n:li &amp; Prevcnti\'(' Med1l'lllC, Plhl
mg •R-96008

C0111petHive Ctaaa.lfled
Clvtl S.rvk:e
SKrdary I (SG-11)-0fflcC' t.&gt;f thtVicc Pm"ost for Fruit)
Development. Lu'lt' •2671&lt;)

To obrum morr mfomvmtm on
jObs IJJtt•d ohm~. NHIIMI Prr:stm
Ml SrmcrJ. 104 Crofts Hall To
oblam mfomvJifon on Rn~a rrlt
JObs. NJIIIacl Sporuorrd Progmrru

PrnonNI. 4/6 Crofts.

�_
__
-----........__--_
..----_
,._
--···'*' "'-----· __

8

...

F-,Jobn Soolye. ~
Prof. of EoaiJtb .... , . _

--

... ._.
_.....

-~-·
EpldemioJo&amp;y of TMD aod

~~=;:,v~:,::r~~~~hts

T,_.,....

ud La,. C...
Eloeptloe_.T_

,....................

for •

O.PAX ........ Ia

lauli

-·-

c-.......__,

Williams at 645 -2663.

c:-ter

Dr. Georce Hajduaok, UB
Dept. of Physiology. 301 Biomedical Research Building.

South Campus. 8:30a.m.

Com•ut•r Aw.,.neu

w-

c ommutcr Cofftt Break. Stu·
dem Union Lobby . Nonh Cam ·
pus 8:30- 10:30 a.m.

w-

Commuter Awareneu
Hclautkm Station. S tucknt
U nion Lobby Norch Campus
10n.m.- 2p.m

-·-

Anatomy and Cell Bloloay

M olttular Dynam k.s o r N~u ronal Growlh, Dr Paul
1--o rschcr, Yale Un 1.,. 306 Farber
South Campus 12:30 p.m

Internet Wo,kahop

\

nlemel 105: Creating a
fom epage.:Undcrgraduate L• hrnry. Capen. Nonh Campus. 1"t p.m To register. call 64S-294S

WonMn'• lallketball
Mi.d ..Contlne.nt Tournament.
Alumm Arena. Nonh Campus. I
p m .. 3 p.m., 5:30p.m., and 7:JO

p m $5, S2. S I. Royals host top
c1gh1 S«ds m conference . Win·
ncr of three-day event gain.s auto·
matic bid for NCAA Touma·

FoteefB,..,.... Oopok
~-Aihct­

m

Comparison demonsll'lltion presented by IBM. 110 Jacobs. North
Campus. 5:30 p.m.

utew--.,
T 'al Ctli for Bqinnen. Ron
Ingalsbe:. Tuesdays and Thursdays, throogh May 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m. To register. caJI 645-6125.

utew--.,

tlnentw-·a
ment In Alumni

n...t...
Tbe Shoemaker' s Prodi&amp;ious
\Yife, play by Lorca. with song
and dance: MariaS. Home, director; Linda Swiniuch, choreogra·
pher. Drama Theatre, Center fo r
the Ans . Nonh Campus . 8 p.m.
S2.50. $5.

Movleo
Colden Eye (1995). Student
Union Theater. North Campus. 9
p.m. S2 studenu: S3.50 general
public. UUAB film series.

:3

p--·--

__

PoJcholoiCY
- · -The
Or. Isaac: Prilkltensky.
Ki'o'a, 101 Baldy. Nonh Campus.
1-Jp.m.

~

... ..,.

UfeWDII&lt;oloop

C:O..uter Aw.,......

llallan Theater. A.lber1o
Savin5o-OraliUI a nd Mu.sk.
Maria Elena Gutittrez. Scruning
Room, Center for the Arts. Nonh
Campus. 3 p.m. Frft.

Phyalcaa.mlur

Commuter A.wareneu

Observing Color at 10 • (-17Im ,
llrof Dieter Zcppcnfeld. Univ.
ur Wisconsin. Madison. 220
Natural Sciences. Nonh Campus
.h15p. m.

Ping-Pong a nd Billiards. Student
Union. Nonh Campus. 9 a.m.-8
p.m.

w-

.UCITWDII&lt;oloop
Advanced UNIX. 10 a.m.- 1 p.m.
To register. call Academic Ser·
vices. Computing and lnfonnation
Technology User Liaison. 645·
3540.

St.tlatlc.a Colloquium

VocaiC~

Semi-Parametric Regression
Models for Recurrent Eve.nt
Data with Random EfTKts and
Measu~menl Errors. Prof.
Wenxin Juwg. Cornell Univ. 246
Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m.

Greater Buffalo Opera Company-lnterMtional Vocal
CompeUtlon. Public invited. Slee.
Nonh Campus. 10 a.m.·6 p.m.

Thesis/Disser1ation Support
G roup, Barbara Umiker. Thursdays throogh April II . 4:30-S:30
p.m. To register. ca ll 645 ·6 125

Seoqul Exhibit
lJB Remembe..,. Monday- Fri ·
duy , 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Through Sept.
Ill 420 C.:~pc:n. Nonh Campus.
S.-7 p.m.

C~uter

w-

A.WaNMU

Commuter CoffH Break.
Harriman Student Center Lobby .
South Campus. II a.m.-2 p.m.

--Eavl-1

Eaal_rl..,

Models for Managin&amp;lhe lmpac'-' of Urban Water Pollution,
Prof. Bill James, Uni v. of Guelph .
140 Kcner. Nonh Campus.
II a.m. '

Uvlflll Well W'!'kohoP

COMpUter GaMe Conteat

The Po wer of Positive Thinking
ror Self-Esteem. 250 Student
Union. Non h Ca mpus. 5-6: IS
p m Sponsored by L1.,.ing Well
Center To register. call 645 2H37

SimCity. 238 Hayes. South Campus, 1-8 p.m. Register in advance.
116 Hayes.

Alumni Tour
Tour of Market A~ade. Cocktru l receptiOn rollowed at 6:30 by
a talk on the history or the buildmg . 5:30p.m. S9. Sll . To make a
reservation. call Alumni Relatlnns. 829-2608.

Lecture DeMon•tratlon
OS(l Warp vs. Windows 95.

ASCITWDII&lt;oloop

Ph)'101ca_l_

-....

Gnwluate Gay aDd Lesbia.a .utodadoa.. 362 Student Union.
North Campus. 7 p.m. For information. call 836.6148.

---

...... S........ Party (tn7). R"'sian with EntHsh robcitJes. lOS

the Arts. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m.
$5, $10.

n...ter
Tbe Sbotmaker's Prodi&amp;iou.~
Wife, play by l...orca, with song
and dance; MariaS. Home, direc·
tor: Linda Swiniuch, chorMgra·
pher. Drama Thea.ue, Ce-nter for
the Arts. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m .
$5,$10.
Blade Runner (1982). Student
Union Tileater. Nonh Campus.
I I :30 p.m. S2 studenu: $3.50 genentl public. UUAB film series.

C-'liJon

Vocal

Two Graduate PrintmakenSusan Budub and Ben Dunkle.
Capen Hall Gallery. Sth Ooor.
No rth Campus. 4-6 p.m. Through
July 8.

Greater Butralo Opera Company-International Vocal
Compdilion. Public invited Slec.
Nonh Campus. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

Half-Jnteraer Flux Quantum Errm and Pairing Sym..matry in
Hlgb-Temperaturt Supercondutlors, Or. C.C. Tsuei , IBM Re·
search Division, TJ . Watson-Re·
search Center. 2 15 Natural
Sciences. Nonb Campus. 4 p.m.

WOIIIN'a.llaalcett.ll
Mid-Continent Tournament.
Alumni Arena. North Campus . S
p.m .. 7 p.m. $5 , S2, $1. Royals
host top eighl seeds in conference .
Winner of three-day event gains
automatic bid for NCAA Toumament.

Movlea
Golden Eye ( 1995). Studem
Union Theater. North Campus.
6:30p.m. and 9 p.m. S2 students;
S3 .~0 general public . UUAB film

-·

Dancers' Workshop. Presented
by Dept. of Theatre &amp;:. Dance.

Tickets o n sale at the door, or in
advan« at the Center for the Am
box o rfice. Katharine Cornell Theater. Ellicott Complex . North
Campus. 8 p.m.

AICITWDII&lt;oloop

lntei"'IWrllotllol Folk Danclflll
All levels. 2 Diefendotf. South
Campus. 8- 11 p.m. Free . Sponsored by GSA.

Muatc
Epic Bru . Rockwell Hall , Bur-

ASCITWDII&lt;oloop
lntroduetkm to UNIX. Noon2:30p.m. To resister. call Academic Services, Computing and
Information Technology User
Liaison. 645-3540.

Muolc
Epk: Brus. Rockwell Hall. Buf·
falo Slate College. 2 p.m. $6.75.
$7. $7 ..SO. Co-sponsore"d by

WBFO.
The Shoemaker's Prodi&amp;lous
Wife, play by Lorca. with song
and dance; MariaS. Home, director: linda Swiniuch, choreogra·
pher. Drama1bc:atrt:, Center for
the Ans. North Campus. 2 p.m.
$2.50, $5 .

pus. 8 p.m. S4. S6. ru.

(1]
Second Thou&amp;bl&gt;-'l'homu
Halpin, vlolill, and Sbirtey trek.
plano. Mu.sic (somewha.t tn.nscribed) by Brahms. Copland,
Stravinsky, Komgold. Slee. North
Campus . 3 p.m. $2, SS. $6, $8.
Jerry Hadley, tenor. Fresh from
the Met's Cosl fan tune.
Mainstage, Center for the Arts.
North Campus. 7 p.m. SIS. $20.
$25. QRS series.

-

D anttrT Workshop. Presented
by Dept. of Theatre&amp;: Dance.
Tickeu on sale at tbe door. or in
advance at fhe .Center for the Arts
box offlCC. Katharine Cornell Theater. Ellicott Complex. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.
The Shoemaker's Prodigtous
Wile, play by Lorca. with song
and dance; MariaS. Home. directo r; linda Swiniuch, chorMSrapher. Drama 11\ealre, Center ror
the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m.
$5.$ 10.

Mid..Continent Tournament.
Alumni Arena. Nonh Campus.

ASCITWDII&lt;oloop
Su~aaput.iq

n...ter
The Shoemaker's Prodi&amp;IOUJ
Wife; play by Lon:a. with song
and dance; MariaS. Home, direc·
tor: Linda Swiniuch, choreoara·
phe:r. Drama Theatre:, Center for

Aslu-~ricu

.... Alrba-

Amerie:a.b WCMMD Ia the Mi&amp;.
tary, Brenda MOOR:. S45 O ' Brian.

~.~-....

Plans for ua•s Se.qal, Shonnie
Finnegan, Archives. Goodyear.

South Campus. 2 p.m. Board
meeting at I p.m.

utew--.,
Uvina OtrCampus: What You
Sboukl Kaow (II). 3:30-4:30 p.m.
To z:cister, cali645-612S.

l'llyolcoRecent Proa:ret~ on Dec:tron
DftrracUon Study of Free-Stand·
in&amp; Liquid Cl")''taa 1b.lllli'iliDJ.
Chiafu Chou. 220 Natural Sciences. North Campus. 3:45 p.m.

·-eouo.-

Varian« Redudloa Ia Gibbs
Saonplor UIIIDa Quulltandom

Numbers. Prof. Jason Wao. Uaiv.
of South Aorida. 246 Cary. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

utew--.,
F\-esb Star1: How To Qu1t
Smolc.in&amp;. 5:30-6:30 p.m. To register. call 645-6 125.
uteWDII&lt;oloop
T'•l Chi for Beclnners, Ron
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays and Thurs·
days. through May 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m. To register. call 645-6 125.
w- ·o ctu~

J p.m. $5, $2, $1.

-

ut.r.ry-

Nonh Campus. 12:30 p.on. F=.

..ole

Wo.e.'aaaMetball

D anftn' Worlu:bop. Presented
by'Dcpt. of Theatre:&amp;: Dance.
Tickets on sale at the door. or in
advance at the Center for the Ans
box off~ct . Katharine Cornell Theater, Ellicott Complex. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m

minutes. 120 Clemens. Nonh
Campus. 7:30 p.m. Free. SponIO«d by Dept. ol Modem Lanauaacs and Liaerauares, Ruqjan
Club, and Univcnity Ubraries.

CompditioD. Slee. North Cam·

VolceReciUI

'Art Openlflll

C-otry C..UO.Iu•

VOC8I Ca ... ltttkNI Recital
Graler Buffalo Opera Compaay-lntemaUoaal Vocal

Movleo

Na tu~ of Non Fermi Liquid
Stales, Prof. G. Bask.aran, lnst. for
Advanced Studies. Princeton. and
Ins!. for Mathematical Sciences.
Madras {Indi a). 220 Natural Sci ences. Nonh Campus. 3:45p.m.

Creating a Homepace{HTMLJ
Sun. 1-3 :30 p.m. To register. call
Academic Services. Computing
and lnformalion Technology User
L1aison. 645-3540.
Maple for Windows. Also March
15. 1·3: 30 p.m. To rt:gister. call
Academic Services. Computing
and Information Technology User
L1aison, 645-3540.

ur.w-.-.,

Applylaatioe Priacipla ot s..c....rul Peoplt, losepb Araenio.
7-9 p.m. To reJister, call 645"6125.

ment.

T'tNNrter Lecture

Billianb. Harriman Student Cen·
ter. South' Campus. 9 a.m.-8 p.m.;
Oasis. Nonh Campus. I ·3 p.m.

UJioclloe Wdl for Your Aao-

-.c .....,.... 223 Lockwood.

....... Campus. 1 p.m. Coolocl
LOLOEMMA.UBVM.CC.
BUFFALO.EDU to reais&amp;er.

Sporta Network, at
3 p.m. March 9.
Winner of the tournament receives an
automatic bid to
the NCAA Touma-

commuter Cotrtt Brak. Stu·
dent Union Lobby. Nonh Campus
8:30-10:30 a.m.

w-

--

llllaketbllll Tou,...

eo..uterAw. . . . . .

Lasting Memories: Cultivating
Long-Term Retention for Aca demic Excellence:. 3-4 p.m To
register. ca ll645-6 125 .

8:30 p.m. ru depooit; S20 ....
fimded upon ..u.r....., completion or the propam.. For
infCJrmatioa, call tbe"Off.oe of
Studcnl Ufe, I .SO Studeoa Union.
64$-6125.

A...... SemHinela
are at 6 p.m. 7
p.m. March 8 , with
the champlonahlp,
which also can be
aeen live on Empjre

Sun. 2-4 p.m. To register. call
Academic Services, Computing
and Information Technology
User Uaison, 645-3540.

w-

Mooda}'O ......... ApriiB. 6:J6.

Ctty at 7:30 p.m.
March 7•UB
'-ta the Mlcl-eon-

Movleo
Corridor: A Documentary in
Three Parts (1995). Student
Union lbcater. North Campus.
6:30p.m. S2 studcnlS; $3 ..SO general public. UUAB film series.

Shcrmoa. Sootb ~ 4 p.m.

M'-"""-

Wben, Wby aad How or Bru.st
Self-Eumirultion. 6-7 p.m. To
register, call645-612.S .

4 p.111.

......... c - . . ..
~~"""·
Albe Albert. Bioc:beaUslr)'. 108

GAU..AQHER wiN
IHd the RCIYMa
when theY t.ke on
the UnlveNity of

ASCITW-Mot&gt;
Crutlng a Homepace/HTMl.f

UfeWorllohop

..._....,..__

CAPTAIN ANNE

Algorithm• Lock+ Control Revisited, Bhanlt Jaya.n.man, Computer Science. 14 Knox. North
Campus. 3 p.m.

Applie-d Ph11rmacoldnetics of
Anti-Relro"·irals, Prof. Gene D
Morse. 508 Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

Co11cJo.
...,_.._
Swe

Patbopbysioloc,y of Nec.roliz.ing
Enterocolitis. Mkhat:l Caty.
M.D. Kinch Auditorium,
Chi ldren's Hospital. 8 a.m.

Pharmaceutic• Seminar

,II' _.._._INriiiiiCC

... UptoU 111 V.......... rrot.
K.:ri Honlbuckle, Oril ea,;...er.
ina.
Sdeoce Blda-- Butralo

~­

Berchou at 645-2600. or Belly

......,

Aorida. Oai-ville. 1348 Pubtt.
South c:..mpu.. 4 p.on.

81shop, Bonnie Butkas, Elmira

se nted by President's Task Force
on Women at UB, and the Affir·
mat1ve Action Committee of the
ProfessionaJ Staff Senate. ~nter
for To morrow. North Campus. 8
a.m.-Noon. Free. bu1 registration
requested. To n:gi.ster, call Kathy

Prof. IUchatd Coodit. UDiv. of

UIC~Nftitw . . . .

~

Mi ller, Bernice Noble. Beverly
Mangum -Daniel, Gloria
Paveljack, Jennifer Roth.

c:..mpu.. 3:30 p.IIL

-v_...v~rw
E-rwCeMrol
..- . or

Orofaclal PaJA, Dr Yoly
Gonzalez. 355 Squi~ . South
Campus . 8 a.m.

Task F~ 011 WOMen
WDII&lt;oloop

U~Uaiv. oiFiorida.

Poetry Room. 420 Capen. .......

~

Ovenriew.
1:30-4 p.m. To register. call Academic Services. Computing and
Information Tcc:hnology User
Uaison. 645-3540.

W.-en'l Club oftbe Uaivenity
al Butralo. Ekx=tton followed by
ta.lk: by Paula Vocll of the Buffalo
News, " My Life in Ufestyles."
Emeritus Center, Goodyear. South
Campus. 7:30p.m. For information. call Norma Shalz Rubin,

645-2488.

uteWDII&lt;oloop
How to Crate Your Own
Ho~ oo the Workl Wide
Web. J im Gerland, A~mic
Computing. Must have accive
UNIX or VMS account. 2·3:30
p.m. To resister, caii64S-612S.

....._

... a..mo..

Lines of Thought: Readings of
Amerkaa Paintings and Poetic

AICITW--.,
lnlroduttion 10 UNIX. 9:30a.m.·
Noon. To register, call Academic

Continued on page 7

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1404113">
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1404101">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1404102">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="116">
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

UNIVIItiiTY AT IIUFMLO
State University ofNew Yorlt

One Hundred Fifty Yea~
February 29, 1996

Volume 27. No 20

UB gets high marks, new ideas
from students' environmental audit
Energy-saving efforts given semester-long evaluation
lly ELUEN - . A UM

News Services Staff

T
Unveiling plaqUes al dsdlcallon ol ~$54 million Blome&lt;fiC81

Research BuRdlng Feb. 22 are, from left: John P. Naughton,
roecfical school dean, President G reiner and Philip B. Wels, UB
Council chair. Wels presided 81 Qedica!ion ceremonies officially
opening1B-mon1h sesquicentennial celebralion fOr 1he School ol
Medicm and Biomedical Sciences. Former CFS addition was
designated Bicrnedcel Education Buiking dUring program.

HEY WERE the most
unusual band of auditors ever to visit UB.
They hitched rides on
campus garbage andrecycling trucks in the pre-dawn
hours . They inspected the insides
of campus kitchens . They got to
know campus recycling bins up
close and personal. And they spent
hours interviewing maintenance
and grounds staff.
The auditors were environmental studi es sruden ts who spent a
semester taking stock of all of the
ways that UB's two campuses affect the envi ronment.

Lectures by feminist ·scholars, discussion
and film to note Women's History Month
IJ P'ATIIICIA - V AN
News Services Staff

T

HE WOMEN'S Studies Program of
the UB Department of American
Studies will celebrate Women's History Month with lectures in March by
two outstanding feminist scholars; screenings
of the 1995 PBS documentary fi lm, "One
Woman, One Vote," and a cross-generational
discussion of feminism among UB professors.
The guest lecturers will be Elaine Kim of the Uni versity of California at Berkeley, noted scholar of the
Asian-America\l experience, and Ellen DuBois of the
U niversity of California at Los Ange les, a former
longtime UB faculty member who has earned distinclion for her study of the history of the American
women's suffrage movement.
'"One Woman , One Vote," the film on .women 's
suffrage produced by the Educational Film Center. will
be screened on March 6 , 12 and 13. The discussion of
feminism among several UB women scholars will take
place on Friday, March 8.
All events are open to the public and free of charge.
Writer and fi lm producer Elaine Kim, professor of
Asian·American studies and chair of lhe Ethnic Studies Program at UC-Berkeley, will present UB ' s annual
Gail Paradise Kelly Memoriall..ecture at 3:30p.m. on
Monday, March II. in 104 O'Brian Hall on the UB
North Campus.
Her talk. titled " Pojagi (The Wrapping Cloth): Writing Korean-American Life Stories," will include a
discussion of her oral hi story research on the Los
Angeles riots. The lecture is presented by the Graduate
School of Education and the Department of American
Studies, with co-sponsorship by the UB Faculty of Arts
and Letters and the Asian Studies Program.
A distinguished scholar in the fie ld of Asian -Ameri can studies, Kim is noted in particular for her analysis

of the experiences of Asian Americans and their representation in the American media.
She is widely published and has been the recipient
of a number of awards, grants and fellowships , including an ~onorary doctorate from the University of

Massachusetts and a 1992 fe ll owship to the Asian/
American Rockefeller Center at Queens College.
Among her noted books are "East to America:
Korean American Life Stories," published this year. It
is an important collection of oral hi stories in which 40
life stories fonn what one cri tic called ··a linked
memory that bursts any notion of"Korean American"
as something containabl e or definable.''
Kim is also the co-producer of the 1992 documentary, "Sa-i-gu: From Korean Women's Perspectives''
and was associate producer of the 1988 film "Slaying
t~ Dragon: Asian Women in U.S . Television and
Film."
The Kim lecture is supported by an e ndowment
fund in me mory of Gail Paradise Kell y. a UB professor
of comparative education who died in 199 1. h was
established by the Graduate School of Education to
fund a lecture series on feminism and education. with
particular reference to their international context

K

elly was chair of the UB Depanme nl of Educa
tion al Organization, Admini strati on and Policy
in the UB Graduate School of Education and held an
adjunct professorship in the Department of Hi story.
She was one of few female department c hairs at UB
during her tenure and during a 29-year career achieved
international distinction for her pioneering work on
the role of women in education and the impact of
colonialism on education in developing countries .
She authored several tex ts that are among the most
widely used books in· the field of comparative education, as well as volumes on the educat ion of women in
the th ird world and a stud y of women in higher ed ucation.
Historian Ellen DuBois. a member of the UB
history and American Studies faculties from 1972 10
1988 and now a professor of hi story a1 UCLA. will
present a lecture at 7 p.m. on Monday, March 25. in
106 O ' Bria n Hall foc usi ng on women 's suffrage, her
principal field of investigation a nd research. A public
reception will follow the talk.
Her lecture. titled "What Difference Did Women · s
Suffrage Make Anyway?," wi ll reconsider the first 15
years following the passage of the suffrage amend·
Continued on page 3

The 24.000-word "Environmental Audit" they prod uced. coneluded that while UB has taken
innovative steps toward reducing
its impact on the environment. there

areas to focus on. such as ancreas·
ing recycling of food-service rnaterial s. further reductions in the
use of hazardous material s and
improving safety training.•·

is more that can be done
s
tudents at UB are workang
They gave the un1 vers11y htgh
on Independent s tu dy
pomts f~r the more tha n 300 enproJectsdestgnedtosuppleergy-sav mg prOJects that have pr~ - ment lhe work of the ETf 1n trymg
duced an a nnual savmgs of more
to achieve some of the audit's reclhan $3.5 million. campus-wideefommendations.
fans that increased five-fold the
'The audit should be used as a
percentage of paper recycled an benchmark," said Jul ie Barrett. a
1995 graduate who edited the audit
nually between 1993 and 1995 and
and who plans to pursue a master's
effon s by students living in residence halls that result in some
degree in urban and regional plan121.000 pounds of paper. g lass.
ning . "Until now . nothing had been
metal and plastic being recycled
done to document the impact of
each year.
this university on its e nvironment."
Addressing areas needing imStudents took a
provement . the auprncticaJ approach
dit recommended
and divided their
that IOOpercenLuntask into specific
bleached recycled
areas , including
paper be used for
solid a nd hazardous
all uni versity busiwas te . energy.
ness and in library
food. water. camcopy machines,
pu s design and
naturalizing US's
growth, transponaNonh Campus to
tion,environmental
reduce grass-cu tliteracy, e nviron ting, and imposing
mental education.
a moratorium on
career developconstruction of new
ment. research.
parking lots.
"
Until
now,
nothing
~~~e
~~0::;~;:~:
The audit has
had been done to policies.
bee n presented to
President William document the Impact
The audi t is the
R. Greiner and Pro- of this university on culminationof"Lovost Thomas E .
lts en vironment .~
cal Environmental
Headrick.
JULIE BARRETI Problems:· an upper-level environGreiner has rl!mental studies course the students
ferred it to the UB Envi ronmental
initiated and developed to address
Task Force (ETF). composed of
what they saw as a lack of handsfaculty. staff and students interon opponunities in the curricu lu m.
ested in environme ntal issue s at
"We proposed our idea to the
the university. and charged the
depanment and they opened the
group with using the audit to concourse within a day.'' said Barre tt.
vene a campus-wide di scussion of
It was taught without compenUS's environmental and co nsersation by Claude E. Welch Jr.. DISvation goa ls.
tinguished
Service Professor in the
"The ta'i:k force is very excited
Depanment of Political Science.
abo ut the resuhs of the audit and
and Walter Simpson . th e
intends to try to implement as many
university's energy officer.
of its recommendations as pos"This audit has a strong potensib le." said Joseph A. Garddla. Jr ..
tial
policy role on campus." exa professor of chemistry who serves
plained
Welch. "The stude nts have
as its chair.
categorized their reco mmendati on~
ardella praised the students
as shan -. middle- and long-term
and their work .
and thai will be very helpful to
"The audit highlight s sucsenior administrators."
cess stories like UB ' s energy conAn imponant finding. accord servation program, its recycling
mg to Barrett. was that addi11on&lt;1l
program and its reduction of so lid
recycling effons could res ult 10
waste." he noted. "At the same
savings to the university.
time. it iden tifies areas we're al"Being an environmentall't
ready working on, like therideshare
doosn't mean being extravagant."
program in w hich we are collaboshe noted . " In fact. it can mean
rating with the Niagara Frontier
Transportation Authority, and new
Continued on page 2

G

�2

__,

....... -'"·--

Senate resolutions deal with undergraduate teaching,
'fresh start' for students with poor academic records
lly-.niiEVIDAL

the position and tie increases into union-negotiated pay raises.
Lockwood Library Director Judith Adams called il "highly inappropriate" for the university to have the Senate support salary stipends
of as much as $20,000 or $25,000. " II makes the Senate appear quite
insensitive"to the university's budgel concerns, sbe said.
Philosophy Professor William Baumer suggested that the easiest
way to set the stipend would be to use a percentage of the average of
UB ' s academic salaries. "If it ' s 20 percent, you're looking at a
$15,000 stipend. If you think that's too high, then pick a smaller
percentage," he said.
In his report to the Faculty Senate, President William R. Greiner
updated members on the impact the state budget cut could have on the
univer.;ity and on the status of legislative proposals now before
legislator.; in Albany.

Reporter Editor

T

HE FACULTY SENATE passed a resolution
governing !he role undergraduates may take in
teaching classes as well as one that would allow
a second chance to students with poor academic
records, at its Feb. 20 meeting.

Sheehy to give
Distinguished
Speaker lecture
By MARY BEnt SPINA

News Serv•ces Staff

AUTHOR GAIL SHEEHY . who fo rged new
landmark perspectives on adult life as a
serie s of predic table stages, will speak at 8
p m . on Thursday. March 14 , in th e
M•unStage Theatre in th e Center for the Ans
o n the U B Nonh Campus.
Sheehy will be the third speaker in the
995-96 DiSiinguished Speaker Series. The
.. c ries i!!l presented by UB and the Don Davis
uta World Lectureship Fund. Key Bank is
e seri essponsor. The Amherst Chamber of

Co merte is the affiliate sponsor.
n'tributing sponsors are the Buffalo
M:.1rr ott, UB Center for the Ans. Makin '
lopids. UB A lumni Assoc iation and the

Jamc :o Fenton Lecture=; Foundation.
Sheehy is the best -se lling authorof''Pas '\ages." ''The Silent Passage"- which was
on The New York Times bestsellers list for
more than two years-and the recent
bestse ller. .. New Passages: Mapping Your
Life Across Time."
A survey by the Library of Congress
placed "Passages" among the top I 0 books
that have most influenced peoples' lives.
He r new book is based on her ongcing study
of t he seco nd adullhood for men and women.
Sheehy frequently appear.; on ''The Today Show." "N ightline," "The MacNeiV
Lehrer Re port .. a nd "This Week With Davi d
Brinkley ."
An original contributor to New YorkmagaLi nc and a contributing editor of Vanity Fair
&lt;ince 1984. Sheehy has been credited with
establi shing a new genredfpo litical writing.
Her in -depth character portraits o f world
leader.;-she has profiled the likeso fMikhail
Gorbachev , Dan Quayle, Hillary Rodham
C linton and Saddam Hu sse in-wo n her the
1991 Washingtoll Journalism Review Award
for Best Magazine Writer in America.
She is a member of the Women:s Forum
of New York,lhe board of Poets and Writers
and th e board of advi sors to the Women's
Health Initiative for lhe National Institutes
of Health.
Sheehy 's lecture will be sponsored by
University Bookstores.
Tic ket prices range from $15-2 1. Discounts are $3 for UB faculty, staff. alumni
and se ni or citizens; $6 for students.
A I Opercentdiscount is available for groups
of I0 or more. Discounts on purcha."&gt;eS can be
obtained only by mail order or in person at the
Center for the Arts ticket office.
Fu ll -price ticket s may be purchased with
cas h o nl y at any Ticket master location. Subject to availability, tickets may be purchased
ut the door.
Further ticket information may be obtained from the UB Office of Conferences
and Special Events al645-6 147 .

The Undergraduate Teaching Resolution would allow undergraduates to assist a facuhy member in teaching courses. trr As must
have atleasljunior status and hold overall QPAs of3.0 or higher. In
addilion, UTAs musl have received a grade of alleast A- in the course
in which they are to assist or in an equivalent course taken elsewhere.
Students may earn no more than six credits as lfTAs.
The Senate also passed the Rresh Start policy, which would allow
.. forgiveness" for past academic shortcomings to students who have
received poor grades at one time in their academic career because of
immaturity or faclors beyond their eonlrol. Students petitioning for
the " fresh start" must be atleasl 25 years old and have laken at least
a two-year break between the time when the initial poor grades were
earned and their admission or readmjssion to UB. All grades will
remain on the student' s transcript as earned, but the average reponed
on the transcript will be a "recalculated average."
In other business, the Senate held a fir.;l reading of its Univer.;ity
Governance Report, a measure intended to foster integration between faculty governance and administration as well as to provide
input on what circumstances and in what way the Faculty Senate
should intervene when an academic unit's structure breaks down .
Eng lish Professor Victor o0yno, chair of the university governance com miltee, briefed the Faculty Senate on specific reforms
co nt ained in the repon. Proposed reform that generated the most
discuss ion was a measure that would change lhe way the Faculty
Senate chair is compensated, from the c urre nt flat stipend of$3,000
per year loa percentage of his or her salary.
" I'm not sure why the stipend should hinge on professional attainments and salary," noted Mathematics Professor Samuel Schack, who
suggested the Senate determine whal would be a reasonable stipeod for

I

f it goes into effect, the $92 million SUNY budget cui could
translate into ''SIG-14 million worth of problems for UB unless
something happens between now and July," Greiner said.
Senior Vice President Roben Wagner bas been putting together a
hislory of recenl budgel restorations, "and it's quite depre~g,"
Greiner said. Last year the university received a budget restoration,
but then lost some of the funds mid-year, he added.
The state Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) also stands 10 lose
$260-270 million, with students at SUNY and CUNY institutions
suffering the majority of the cuL UB students alone could lose $2.53 million in TAP suppon. Greiner said he bas been pushing legislator.; lo restore funding for TAP, and "chances for restoration an:
fairly good" because of the program's universal appeal.
But restorntion of funds to SUNY ~ less encouraging, be said.
''Olances for much beyond that (restoration of TAP funding) are very,·
very small. That doesn't mean it's uro, but il's probably very low,"
Greiner said. "We'd be delighted if there was significant restoration of
money to SUNY. but if that is not likely, Greiner said. UB oflicials will
focus tbeireffonson what be called ''Plan 8," legislativeref&lt;XTil. Without
tbelegislativerefonnsthathavebeenproposedinAibany,bowwiliSUNY
and UB deal with a $92 million budget cut'! Greiner aslted rhetorically.
"Very badly," he said, adding that the federal budget. which could contain
"a$2 billion bole in aid to health care." adds to UB' s budget anxiety.

Therapeutic Engineering symposium set for March 5

•rNews Serv•ces Staff

Eu.EN IIOI.DIIAUM

T

HE SCHOOL of Engineering and
Applied Sciences and the School
of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB wi ll honor their 50th
and 150th anniversaries. respectively, March 5, wi th a symposium on "50
Years of Therapeutic Engineering in Westem New York: A Celebration."
Free and open to the public, the sy mposi um will take place in the Embassy Room of
the Statler Tower.;, 107 Delaware Ave. The
day -long program is sponsored by the Health
Care Indu stries Association, the UB Center
for Biomedical Engineering and the UB In dustry/University Cooperative Research
Cen ter for Biosurfaces .
The forum also will highlight the 50th
anniversary of the creation of the Depart·
ment of Therapeutic Engineering at Buffalo
General Hospital, where many UB researchers have held joint appointments.
The program will focus on Buffalo's
bioengineering legacy, as well as on regional
prospects for the health-care indusuy.
..Some of the most important advances in
biomedical engineering have happened right
here in Western New York," said Roben E.
Baier, direc10r of the UB lnduslry/Univers ity Cooperati ve Research Center for
Biosurfaces. Together, the UB Center for
Biomedical Engineering, the lndusuy/Uni versity Cooperative Researc h Center for
Biosurfaces and the Department of Therapeutic Engineering have become '"an enclave for the application of engineering
principles to medical problems ... Baier said.

F

rom one of the area's most famous
inventions-the pacemaker-to those
just as important but less well-known, Weslem New York' s unique history as a leader in
innovations in biomedical engineering will
be the theme of the March 5 program.

ACHNGDIAECTORQrPUBliCATIONS U.-nt&amp;.U . . . . • EOilOR

C....~

Advances to be discussed include the
heart-lung machine aod blood pumps, as
well as pioneering work in kidney-dialysis
technology. Other biomedical engineering
innovations from Western New York to be
highlighted include the fir.;t pacemaker battery, now manufactured by Wilson
G reat batch Ltd., and a new melhod of freezing blood that allows it to be stored for longer
periods, developed by Praxair.

Speaker.; will include researcher.; who
first worked on the newest bioengineering
technologies, such as Wilson Greatbatch;
Roland and Sidney Anthone of the UB medical school; Arthur E. MacNeill, founder of
the Depanment of Therapeutic Engineering
at Buffalo General; Roben Mates, director
of the Center for Biomedical Engineering,
and Baier. For more iofonnation, contact
Mary Ellen Rashman at 856-8111.

ENVIRONMENTAL AUDIT
Continued from page 1
major sav ings. It's becoming more and more
expensive to throw things away ." The repon
states that recycling 50 percent of waste stream
materials by 2000 would result in projected
savings of $75.000 a year. It describes the
environmental impact for each area and recommends ways to recycle and reduce.
Additional recommendations:
0 Worlcing with Computing Information and
Technology to 100ve closer to paperless offices
0 Hosting a "Green Olympics" competition between dormitories
0 Banning or restricting commercial
postings in university buildings
0 Developinga campusoompostingprogram
0 Increasing use of microscale operations in science labs
0 Phasing out chlorine-based solvents
0 Constructing a new cogeneration plant
to replace the MacKay facilily
0 Continuing conversion of Nonh Campus heaLing systems to natural gas
0 Exploring use of solar energy devices
on new buildings
0 Signing on to the Talloires Declaration,
drafted by an international group of college
and uni versity presidents who have committed their institutions to work togelher to promote "an environmentally sustainable future"
Other UB achievements .....,ognized:
0 The Environmental Task Force, demonstrating a strong institutional commitment

VIDAL • A.SSOCIATEEOI10R

.U~ •ART DIAECTOR

. . . CUMma •

lO dealing with environmental issues
0 The Building Conservation Contacts
network of 170 volunu;er.; who distribute
environmental information to individual offices. recogni&gt;;ed as possibly the only one of
its kind by the Natio)lal Wildlife Federation's
Campus Ecology program
0 A recycling program in food services
that has reduced by 40 percenlthe amount of
waste generated since 1990
0 Development of UB !Odeshare program
ln addition to recommendjng changes in
campus operations and policies, the repon
also suggests ways to increase students' environmental literacy by requiring a survey
eour.;e on ecological problems, developing
an in-house facuhy training program on environmental literacy and working with other
local institu ti ons to share progress in environmental research and education.
Other recommendations include ways to
improve job prospects for environmental
studies majors.The report notes that the number of environmental studies majors at UB
jumped from 69 in 1990 to 181 in 1994.
"II should be possible for all srudents to
learn to bring environmental responsibility to
theirjobs, regrudlessofthecareertheychoose,"
Barren said. "If you're a banker, you can start
arecyclingprogram.lfyou'reanengineer,you
can look at an environmental impact statement
not as a hurdle, but as a tool."
~

htll) l/lbt!IOI)ut)~edu/1«'01'1.. /

�3

Sparkle Furnas dies at
94; UB 'first lady'
Widow of C.C. Furnas, UB c:hancellor and first president
MEMORIAL SERVICE will
be held in Forest Lawn Cemetery for Sparkle Furnas, the
widow of Clifford C. Furnas,
a former chancellor and the
first president of UB. Mrs. Furnas died Feb.
21 in Four Comers Health Care Center in
Durango, Colo. She was 94.
The former Sparkle Moore was a native
ofZionville,lnd. Sbegraduated from Purdue
University in 1924 with a B.S. degree and
received her M.S. from the University of
Minnesota in 1930. She married Clifford
Cook Furnas on April 12, 1925.
Furnas served as ninth chancellor of the
University nf Buffalo from 1954 until 1962.
when UB was incorporated into the State
University system. He then served as the
firs(presidentofthe State University of New

York at Buffalo until his retirement in 1966.
As UB' s first lady. Mrs. Furnas demon strated enormous dedication to the promotion of the unjversity and to her husband 's

career. She followed a schedule that allowed
her to stay home at most J.}uee or four eve-

nings a month, ranking h r among the most
active president's wives nUS 's history.
Mrs . Furnas. who rved as honorary
president of the UB
omen's Club from
1954- 1966. was called "a nifying force" for
that organization, accord in o the Women · s
Club Celebrate 50! comme orati ve book.
"Among the other qualiti es
. Furnas had
was a unique ability to remerilber not only

everyone she met, but something about them
and their families. It was said that she read
the CV and looked at the picture of each new
faculty member."
She was a tireless advocate of the university and the Women 's Club, encouraging the
wives of UB faculty members to become
involved in the organization and its auxiliary
groups.
"Of course your family aod your home
duties do come first, but do try to find time to
become active in the Women 's Club and in
some of its interest groups," Mrs. Furnas
said in an address as honorary president to
members. 'The purpose of the organization
shall be to promote the interests of the uni versity in any way possible, to further sociability, and to develop common interests
among its members."
The 1965-66 Women 's Club yearbook
was dedicated to Mrs. Furnas for her efforts.
and a tribute to her at UB 's I 25th anniversary noted the importance of her role as the
wifeofthe university president. In her honor,
the Women 's Club contributed $500 to the
Sparkle Furnas Loan Fund admi nistered by
UB .
The Furnases' life together took them all
over the world. including a stay in Washington. D.C.. in 1956-57. where Clifford Furnas
served the Eisenhower administration as the
assistant secretary of defense for research
and de velopment for 14 months durin g the
Korean War.

Harrington lecturer dl&amp;cusses
effeCts of 'move to ·managed care

T

HESTAMPEDEtomanngedcare
may improve health care, but it
may also leave some doctors and
patients out in the cold, according
to Stephen A. Schroeder.
Schroeder gave the Harringlon Lecture in
the A int Reading Room on Thursday, Feb.
22, as part of the ceremonies opening the
sesquicentennial celebnltion for the School
of ¥edicine and Biomedical Sciences.
Schroeder is president of the Robert Wood
1oboaon Foundation, the COIIIIb)''s largest
~philanthropic organizatioo.

[n ~ lecture titled "The Triumph of the
Market: What Does It Mean For Medicine?" Schroeder showed how the cost of health care has far outpaced measurable
improvements in health.
·
Managed care can control costs in several ways, including encouraging patients to
be savvy shoppe111 and Jivin&amp; docton incentives to cut out IIIIDOCeOSII}' tests and
procedures, Schroeder said. Maoaged care may also help coordinale IICtVices for the
chronically ill and encOUJ1lge preventive care.
However, it's also possible that as health care becomes a for-profit industry, it will
try to drop unprofitabl~ public services such as care for the uninsured, graduate
medical education and clinical research. Increasing efficiency is also leading 10
hospital closings and a gl ut in the job market for doctors, Schroeder said.
"Wbat'sgoingtohappenoverthencxt!hmotofourycarsisreallygoiogtotestourvalues
as a profession and, more imponantly,as
a society," Schroeder concluded. He offered no solution, but told the audience, "l
think you all can make a difference."
Thursday' s ceremonies included the
awarding of an honorary doctorate of
science degree to Saxon Graham, UB
professor emeritus of social and preventive medicine. Graham pioneered research on the relationship between diet
and disease. Earlier Thunday, medical
school officials dedicated the new Biomedical Research Building.

r urnas came to the Buffalo area in 1943
r and worked as director of research for
the Curtiss-Wright Corp. until he was inaugurated as chancellor of the University of
Buffalo and later as president of the State
University of New York at Buffalo. He was
named president emeritus upon his retirement in 1966, a title he held until hi s death
in 1969 in Amsterdam. Holland. where he
and Mrs. Furnas were on a trade mission
with the Buffalo Area Chamber of Commerce. His ashes reside in Buffalo's Forest
Lawn Chapel.
Within weeks of her husband' s death ,
Mrs. Furnas began to .collect and organi ze
his papers and mementos, compiling a three·

volume biography on her late husband. ·-r m
really quite proud of.the biography." Mrs.
Furnas told the R~porur in a 1988 interview.
She also gathered and o rganized a collection
of his addresses. articles and messages and
compiled a genealogy of the Furnas and
Moore families. Much o f her work resides in
the Furnas Memorial Conference Room. located in 531 Capen Hall on UB's North
Campus. Among th e memorabilia in th at
co llectio n are the track shoes used by her late
husband at the 1920 Olympics in Antwerp.
Belgium. where he competed in trac k and
field events. Other reminders of the past also
include Furnas' eyeglasses and hi s baby ring.
a Christmas card from the Eise nhowers. hi s
pipes and a collectj on of lighters , and the
medals he won as an athlete.
There is also a lasting testimo ny to Furnas ·
vision of the future .
In her biography o f her late husband. Mrs.
Furnas wrote, " He was constantly looking at
the world through a wide-angled telescopic
lens and forecasting the future. He said. ' It is
dangerous to spec ulate too far. but it is foo lish not to speculate at all. "'
That three-volume biography was not her
only literary work. She also co·authored two
books with her husband- ''The Next Hun dred Years" and "Man. Bread and Destiny"
while they were at Yale University from
1932- 1943.
In 1992. Mrs. Furnas dona ted a grand
piano in her husband's memory to the UB
Emeritus Center.
Mrs. Furnas has li ved with family mem bers in Colorado for the past ten years.
Surviving are her daughter. Beatri ce F.
Thu rsron of Du rango: a sister, Wilma M.
Groom of Wes tfo rd . Texas: five grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

WOMEN'S HISTORY
Continued from page 1

ment in light of changes it precipitated in the
fabric of American society. politics. economics and labor. It wi ll be followed by shon
responses from two UB professors: Terry
Miller. professoro flaw. and Laune Rhodebock.
assistant professor of polirical science.
The lecture is prese nted by the UB
\Vo men 's Studies Program. Depanment of
History and Graduate Group in Feminist
Studies. Co-sponsors are the UB Fac ult y of
Ans and Letters, the Baldy Center. the Ameri ·
can Studies Grnduate C lub. the Graduate
Student Association and the Erie County
Commission on the Status of Women Women 's Action Coalition.
DuBois, one of the most n01ed sc holars of
the American women 's suffrage movement,
has been the recipient of distingui shed award!..
grants and fell owships in recognition of th ~
quality of her research and publications.
For her highly regarded research into the
groundbreaking political activities of Harr101
Stanton Blatch. daughter of Elizabeth Cady
Stanton. DuBois received the prestig ious
Hinkley-Stephenso n Award from the Organization of Ameri can Histo rians. Her research on thi s subject was supponed by
fellowships from the National Endowment
for the Humanities. the Fulbright Fo undation and the American Council of Learned
Societies. among other sources.
Her book on Blatch' s wo rk. ''H er Mother's
Daughter: Harriot Stanton Blatch and th e
Winning of Woman Suffrage," wi ll be published in 1997 by Yale University Press.
DuBois is the author of se veral other boob..
including "Fem inist Scho larship: Kindlin g
in the Groves o f Acade me," wi th UB co llea g u e~ E li za bet h Ken nedy . Ca ro ly n
Korsmeyer. Lillian Robi nson and Ga il Paradi se Kelly.
In conjunctio n wnh th e Du Bo is k"Cturc.
the Women's Studies Program and E.S. Express- Residenti al Life will sponsor screenings of "One Woman. One Vote." a I 995
film by the Educatio nal Film Ce nter that
aired on PBS stations as pan of the se ries
"The American Experience... Screenings
are at the following times and sites on the UB
North Ca mpus:
• March 6. 3-5 p.m.. 3 1 Capen Hall

• March 12. 7-9 p.m.. 31 Capen Hall
• March / 3. Noon-2 p.m .. 3 / Capen Hal/
• March 13 . 7-9 p.m .. Red Jackel Lounge.

Ellicott Compl ex .
"Generatio ns of Fe min1 sm: A Dialogue
Across UB Ge nerations," will take place
March 8 from 2-4 p.m. rn 330 Student Union.
Panelists include Bernice Noble. professor
of microbiology: Margarita Vargas. assistant professor of modem languages and literatures: Susa n Cahn. assistant pro fessor of
hi story : Carrie Tirado Bremen. professor of
English: Darcy Wake fi eld and Sayra Pinto,
graduate students in the Program in Women · s
Studi e~. and undergradu ate studen t Shan nie
Easterby.

OBITUARIES

Dorothy Gogel, BEAM
executive director
Dorothy Gogel execut1ve d1rector of the Buffaloarea Eng tneer1ng Awareness lor Mmor1t1es
(BEAM). dted suddenly Feb 19 tn her West Seneca Home BEAM . a cooperative educatiOflal
program for mtnonty youths tS sponsored by
Buffalo-area compames colleges and schools
and housed at the UB School of Engtneenng and
Applied Sctences
Dunng her tenure at SEAM. dozens of stu·
dems assoctated with the program have gone on
to study eng1neeflng . bus1ness. poh!lcal sctence
dent1stry Ctlffitnal JuStiCe and other mators at
colleges and umverstl!es throughout the coun1ry
Gogel came to the BEAM program 1n 1991
after re!lnng Irom General Motors · Sag1naw Plant
where sne was superv1sor ol education and traln tng A devoted BEAM member s1nce tts foundtng
she worked t•relessty on a completely volumary
oas1s to educate area mtnortty children and 81( ·
pose them early on to careers tn the SCiences
She was BEAMs hatson w1th Bullate's HISpan•c and Na11ve Amencan commun111es as \\811
as tndtvtduat BEAM sponsor at Herman Bad1llo
School (School No 76) 1n Bullate_ ~nere she
prov1ded personal experhStl as well as mateFial
support to clubs at the school
BefOI'e becom1ng BEAM's executtve dnector
she served two terms as pres•dent and two terms
as secretary She had served also lor more !han
15 years as a member and secretary to the Butlalo
Schools Supettntendent's AdviSOry Counctl on
Occupahonal Educa t1on

�4

Music Department series to
present faculty, visiting artists
ay PATRICIA DONOVAN

News Serv1ces StaH

T

HREE OF THE UB Department

of Music's principal concert series will continue in March. AU
concerts are open to the public,
with discounts for all students.
senior citizens and UB faculty and staff.
Tickets are available from noon to 6 p.m.,
Tuesdays through Fridays, in the UB Center
for the Arts box office on the North Campus.
Cali645- ARTS for infonnation. Tickets also
may be purchased at all Ticketmasteroutlets,
including Kaufmann's and Movies Plus. Call
852-5000 for infonnation.
Concert V, 1HIHHI .... 0...,. R•
dtaiSerlea,CralgCramer, Sunday, March
3. 5 p.m .. Slee Concert Hall. UB North Campus $8, S6. S5 , $2.
Progl'1lm: Pr&lt;lude and Fugue in D-ShtJrp
minor. op. 56 by Otto Olsson; Pan ita divers~
sopra: Sei gegrUsser, Jesugiitig by J .S . Bach;
Toccata by American composer/organist Leo
Sowe rby, and lweiu Sonau, op. 60 by Max

Reger.
Organis t Craig Cramer is an associate
professor of music at the University of Notre
Dame. where he teaches organ and organ
literature. He has performed in 35 states and
10 Belgium, Canada and Germany.
Cramer graduated from We stmin ster
Choi r College in Princeton. NJ .. and holds
both a doctorate in organ perfonnance and a
prestigious performer' s certificate in organ
from the Eastman School of Mu sic.

·--~-~­

Kribe their own work; Faculty Recital
Selles; Thomas Halpin, violin; Shirley lrek,
plano; Sunday, March 10, 3 p.m., Slee Concert Hall. UB North Campus; $8, $6, $5, $2

Prognlm: Performances of composers'
transcriptions of their own work-a second
arrangement by thecomposerfoi instrument
or voice other than the original. Selections
are Brahms' Sonata for Violin and Piano
(from his Clarinet Sonata, op. 20. no. I);
selections from Copland's Billy the Kid and
Rodeo; Stravinsl&lt;y' sDivertimento (from The
Fairy's Kiss), and Erich Komgold's Suite,
op. II (from his Much Ado About Nothing).
Described by 1M London Times as an
''undemonstratively exceUent violinist," Thomas Halpin has been a violin soloist with
orchestras throughout the U.S. and Canada,
and has recorded works by Lou Harrison, Ned
Rorem, Virgil Thomson and Christian Wolff.
He also has collaborated with Harrison,
Lukas Foss, Philip Glass and Henry Brant in

performances of their worts. A graduate of
Yale College, Halpin lives and teaches in
Ambers~ where he has been a member of the
UB violin faculty since 1982.
Shirley Irek is a solo and collaborative
pianist who has perfonned throughout the
U.S. with noted vocal and instrumental performers . As a member of the Broyhill Chamber Ensemble, she has appeared throughout
the U.S. and in Portugal and France.
She appears regularly as a duo-piartist
with Robert Chumbley. Tbe two have toured
the U.S. many times, as well as Africa and
Europe, an'd premiered Memento for Two
Pianos and Orchestra by Pulitzer Prizewinning composer Michael Colgrass.
The formerchairofthe Piano Department
at the University of Nebraska, Irek is now a
visiting professor of music at UB . She holds
bachelor's and master's degrees from the
Juilliard School.

Concert V, 1HIHHIS._ VI81UIIC Art·
let Series; Walden Hom Trio: Robert
Routch, hom; Ani Kavllflan, violin; AnneMerle McDennott, plano; Wednesday,
March 27, 8 p.m. , Sloe Concert Hall, UB
North Campus; SIO, $8, S5, $4.
Progl'1lm: The deeply melodic trio of
Twilight Music by contemporary composer
John Harbison, Robert Schumann' s Adagio
and Allegro for Horn and Piano, and
Debussy's Sonata for Violin and Piano, as
well as their signature piece, Brahms' Trio
in E nat for Pii!JlO, Violin and Hom, op. 40.
The members of the Walden Hom Trio
have enjoyed diversified careers and are individually well-known for their chamber-music
perfonnances. Tbey founded the trio in 1990to
give their own special life to the haunting
rhythmsandbeart-tuggingmelodiesofBrahms'
Hom Trio and to explore other repertoire,
including transcribing classic works such as
Schubert's Trio and commissioning Henri
LazBrofs 1994 Trio for Hom, VwlinandPiano.
Robert Routch and Ani Kavafian are artist members of the Chamber Music Society
of the Lincoln Center, with whom Routch
performs and records. He has performed as a
soloist with more than 50 orchestras throughout the world. Kavafian JlCfforms at many
festivals and bas appeared with virtually all
of America' s leading orchestras. She has
been awarded the Avery Fisher Priz.e.
Anne-Marie McDennon regularly api&gt;ears at the Mostly Mozart Festival in New
York and has been guest artist 'with the
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center
and the Festival Casals in Puerto Rico. 0

Black History Month Exhibit in Lockwood
Maria Rosa is shown in Lockwood Libtary. where "The Legacy of Arthur A.
Schomburg" exhibit, exploring the life and times of !his unique collector of books.
manuscripts and art on black history and ~ulture, is on view through March 15.
Rosa is curator of a s ide by-side-exhib~ on Schomburg's leadership tole in New
York City's working class Puerto Rican community during the late 19th century.

iJ ~esqui Time fupsule
a1hroughou1 US's 5Bsqu/cent11111N/c:elllbration, the~ will oiler
ol,__
attlcles deseriblnQ the pBOpiB and
;._a the unNwol!y during ill ISO ,..s.

-thai,_.

Students to peiform in two concerts:
Gala Scholarship P~ Symphony
ay PATRICIA -VAN
News Seivice Staff

T

HE UB DEPARTMENT of Music

will present two concerts by students in March, including the annua!GalaScholarshipPrismConcert
featuring nine US-based orchestras, vocal
groups and instrumental ensembles perfonning a specially choreographed program.
Tickets are available from noon to 6 p.m.
on Tuesdays through Fridays in the UB Center for the Arts box office on the Nonh
Campus. Call 645-ARTS for infonnation.
Tickets also may be purchased at all
Ticketmaster outlets, including Kaufmanns
and Movies Plus. Call 852-5000 for information.
Tile concerts include:
• Friday, March 1, UBuffalo Syinpbony conducted by Charles Peltz, 8 p.m.,
Sloe Concert Hall, UB North Campus. $3.
This coocert, one of the 1995-96 UB
Ensemble Series, will feature the following
student performers:
Alex Kort is pursuing a master' s degree
in the humanities in music and media study.
Also on the program will be percussionist
Christopher Swist and mezzo-soprano Barbara Cooper, winners of this year's Baird
Concerto Competition.
Kort will presentMindstream. an arrangement of a song by the techno group Meat
Beat Manifesto, later remixed by The Orb.
This version by Kort, written for orchestra
and film, is a low-tech marriage of sound and
image employing projections of cameraless
animation accompanied by unamplifi ed
acoustic instruments.
Swist, now in the fourth year of his UB
music-perfoRDance program, studied for
three years under Jan Williams and is now
studying under Tony Miraoda. He has perfanned with UB 's Percussion Ensemble,
Wind Ensemble, Contemporary Ensemble
and Jazz Combo, and has been the timpanist
in the UBuffalo Symphony for two years.
Although Swist is a performer, he also
composes for marimba and recently finished
a piece for solo marimba that he will premier

at .a ~t recital. later his year. Here, .he
will perfonn contemporary composer Ney
Rosauro's Marimba Conarto.
cOoper is an experienced and seasoned
professional vocalist wbo has performed with
many distinguished orchestras and ensembles, iocluding the Boston Symphony's
Tanglewood Festival Chorus, the Boston
Pops Orchestra, ChoJUS Pro. Musica, the
Russian Chamber Chorus of Boston and the
Boston Symphony's regular and summer
season programs. She also has performed at
Carnegie Hall and Uncolo Center. Sbe is
pursuing a master's degree iD v'Oc:al performance at UB under Sylvia Dimlziani.
Cooper will present Mahler'.s four rornaiJtic Songs of a Wayfanr, wbicb record
the young composes's experiences with an
unhappy love affair while working at the
Kassel court theater in Germany in the mid·
1880s. Here, Mahler evokes the rejected
lover wandering through town and countty
in helpless sonow, resigned to a quie~ lonely
death.
• Wednesday, Man:b 13, Gala Scholarship Prism Concert, 8 p.m. , Slee Concert
Hall, UB North Campus, $5. The program
will highlight various large and chamber
ensembles in a specially choreographed presentation. All proceeds will benefit the UB
music scholarship fund.
Tbe perfonnance groups will include the
UB Wind Ensemble; UBuffalo Symphony;
UB Symphonic Band; Buffalo CHIPS, the
UB men's a cappe/la swing group; UB Gui tar Ensemble: UB Choir; UB Aute Choir;
UB Piano Trio, and the UB Aute and Violin
Chamber Ensemble.
The ensembles will be placed throughout
Sloe Concert Hall, and will perfonn one
immediately after the other and without applause. The choreography will be reinforced
by special lighting that focuses the audience 's
attention on the perfonning ensemble and
changes as the perfonning groups change.
Tbe complete program will be announced
at a later date. Call Sloe concert manager Phil
Rehard at 645-2921 after March I for details.
0

�5

~-. ~ ¥ ......_27, NO. 20

4 UB grads

on SUNY

Honor Roll
Career achievements noted

•r

IIAIIY llant SI'INA
News Services Staff

F

our UB graduates are among 151
SUNY alumni named to the 199596 SUNY Honor Roll for career

achievements and/or services to

SUNY and their communities.

Now in it's second year, the Honor Roll is
sponsored by SUNY's Confederation of

Alumni Associations in conjunction with
the SUNY Office of University Relations.
Nominations to the list are made by indi-

vid ual campuses.
UB alumni included in this year's roster
are:
Wolf Blitzer, White House corresponden t for CNN and host of a
CNN public affairs program.
He formerly was Washing-

ton correspondent for The
Jeru salem Post.
A 1970 UB graduate,
Blitzer in 1985 received the

UB Alumni Association's
BUTZER
George W . Thorn Award,
presented to UB graduates under the age of 40

in recognition of their outstanding nati ona1 or
i ntemalional contributions to their career field

nr academic area_ He has authored "Between
Jerusalem: A Reporter' s Notebook" and "TerritoryofLies:TheExclusiveStoryofJonathan
Jay Pollard." He lives in Bethesda, Md.
Harley Flack is president ofWrightState
University (Oh io ) and
founding dean of the
Howard Uni.versit)' College.
of Allied Health Sciences.
A 1971 UB graduate, he
began his career in higher

education as an adminis.tnttor for the UB School of
Health Related Professions lUCK

and also served as academic vice president at
SUNY College at Old Westbury.
Former president of the National Society
of Allied Health, Aack has composed more

lhan two dozen works for piano and voice.
Winner of UB 's D istinguished Al umnus
Award in 1995, he'salsoauthor of"AfricanA rnerican Perspec ti ves on Biomedical Ethics." Flaclvli ves .in D ayton, Ohio.
Wilson Greatbatch, whose work co-developing the first human
i mplantable heart pacemaker has saved thousands
of lives around the world,
graduated from UB in 1956.
H ol der of 150 patents,
Greatbatch is

in the l nven-

GREATIIATCH

tors H all of Fame and was
.recipient of the Holley
Medal from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
Greatbatch has received several honor31)1
doctorates, including one from UB in 1984.
In 1981 , he received t he UB A lum ni

Association' s Distinguished Alumni Award.
A r esident of C larence, he is

an

adju nct

professor of electrical engineering at UB.
Linda W achner, the highest paid woman
in corporate America, i.s

CEO of Wamaco, the fashion conglomera te, which
includes Warner 's Olga,

Frui t of the L oom, Christian
Dior Men 's and other companies . She l ives in New

York City.
A 1966 UB graduate, WACHNER
Wachner is former president of M ax Factor
and the on ly woman to head a major public
company that she neither inherited nor

founded . Wac hner won the UB Alumni
Association 's Thorn Award in 1980. 0

• ROYALS COMPI.a'E COMEBACK,
TAKE MID-CON SW. Tm.E
After trailing by 16 points on Thursday and five
on Friday, the UB women's swim team completed their comeback Saturday night winning
five ol six events in the final evening to capture
lhelr second straight Mid-Continent Conference crown at Ah.mni Arena Natatorium. It was
the Royals' third consecutive conference lille.
UB won the East Coast Conference Championship in 1994, the final year olthe league.
UB finished with 797 points to Western Illinois' m .50. Eastern Illinois was third with 582
followed by Valparaiso (475.50), Central Conneclicul Stale (347) and Northeastern Illinois
(253). last season. the Royals defeated the
Westerwinds by 15 points.
In the men's meet, Western Illinois won the
meet with 861 Points 10 fonisll ahead of second
place Eastern Illinois' 638. UB was third with
609 snapping their consecutive conference
win streak of six seasons. Central Connecticut
Stale (585), Valparaiso (291) and Northeastern
Illinois ( 1n) rounded out the scoring.
For the second consecutive year, us·s Sue
Bohnet was selected as Speedo Women's
Swimmer of the Year. Bohnet won the 200
breaststroke Saturday in 2:26.7 4 and combined with Lieselle Trinidad, Carrie Grant and
Kristen Krenitsky 10 take the 400 freestyle relay
in 3:35.86. Bohnet won the 100 breaststroke on
Friday and ftnished second to Valparaiso's
Kristy Kunard by one-hundredth of a second on
Saturday's 100 freestyle . Kunard won the race
in 53.79 while Bohnet placed in 53.80
Kunard earned the league's Speedo
Women's Newcomer of the Year award
Buffalo's Andrea Skillman won the Speedo
Women's Diver of the Year and Royals' coach
Dorsi Raynolds won the Conference's
Women's Coach of the Year award.
Other event winners fOf the Royals on Saturday included Martie Duffett's 1650 freestyle
VICIQO' in 17:47.13, Alexandra Barrera

•n the

200 backstroke in 2:06.36 and"l.ii!selle
Trinidad's win in the 200 butterfty in 2:07 71
On the men's side. Western Illinois' Ryan
Shanahan won Speedo Men's Swimmer of the
Year award after taking three first·place finishes. Shanahan won the 1G5o freestYI&lt;,.Salur- ·
day in 15:56.22. Buffalo's Mark Horgan was
second in 16:06.56.
.
UB's Justin Monin won the Speedo Men's
Diver of the Year award after finishing first1n
the 3-meler championship Saturday. Monon
collected 540.50 points in his 11 dives to capture the title. Monin won the 1-meter championship on Thursday. Korry Miller took the 200
backstroke for the Bulls in 1:53.34.
Western Illinois freslvnan Matt Hudson won
the Speedo Men's Newcomer of the Year
award and Leathernecks' Jerry Champer was
selected Speedo Men's Coach olthe Year.
Raynolds remarl&lt;ed on her Royals' victory.
"It's tough coming in as defending champions.
We only have 16 participants and were outnumbered. I'm ecstatic with the quality of our
races. Our goal was to win four of the five re·
lays and set two school records and we did."
The Royals also qualified nine members lor
next week's ECAC meet in Sewell, N.J.
On Friday, the Royals 200 medley relay
team broke a seven-year school record. UB's
Carrie Grant, Sue Bohne!, Lieselle Trinidad and
Kristen Krenltsky combined to win the event in
1:49.20 and establish a new mark, breaking
the old one of 1:49.58.
Martie Duffett, Megan Connolly and
Alexandra Barrera look the top three spots tor
the Royals in the 400 Individual Medley. Duffett
took the event in 4:34.02. Ueselle Trinidad won
the 100 butterfly for UB in 58.80. Krenitsky
earned a win in the 200 freestyle in 1:55.77;
Bohne! look the 100 breaststroke in 1:07.40
Bohne!, Duffett, Barrera and Krenilsky combined
to...., the eoo free relay in 7:50.19. Kin May and
Andrea Skilman look the top two awards on lhe
ore-meter diving. May tallied 373.85 points.
Skillman was second with 361 .65.
Mark Horgan. Korry Miller. Carl Carlson and
Kevin Jessop teamed up to win the 800
freestyle relay in 7:00.24 finishing rust ahead of
Western Illinois' 7:00.66. Miller was also victorious individually. wmning the 100 backstroke 1n

51 .88.
Western llh1101s' Ryan Shanahan won the 400
Individual Medley 1n a Mid-Continent Confer.
ence record lime of 3 :58.82. besting the old
mark ol 4:02.31 set by the Leathernecks· Matt
Dixon 1n 1993. Buttak&gt;"s Kev1n Jessop fln1shed
second to Shanahan in the race tn 4:06.65

On Thursday, the Royals were led by theor
record selling 400 medley relay squad. The
team of Carrie Grant, Sue Bohne!. l.Jeselle
Trinidad and Kristen Krenitsky touched first 1n

3:56.48, breaking lhe old mark of 4:00.84·sel on
1989. UB also took the top three spots in the
5CXl freestyle with Krenitsky winning the event

EXCEDRIN
HEADACHE:
Coach Tim

ccm- expreues hlt

fnmntlon u

Bulla ere defe-Feb . 19
by Valparaiso.
in 5:07.79. She was followed by Alexandra
Barrera (5:09.88) and Martie Duffett (5:11 .27).
Andrea Skilman won the 3-rreler diVing ~
lion for the Royals with a marl&lt; ol468.65 points.
Justin tv1onin was lone winner for the Bulls 1n
the first day of the men's champoonship.
Monin. this week's M id-Continent Conference
Diver of lhe Week. look first place in the ! meter competition With 458.10 pomts. Mark
Horgan finished second in the 500 freestyle 1n
4:35.92 behind Western Jllino1s· Ryan

Shanahan's 4:35.19.

• WOMEN'S BASKEniAU
The Royals split their road trip over the week-

end falling at Troy Stale 95-85 and bouncong
Central Connecticut State 88-68 Chartssa
Gardner scored 24 points and Brenna Doty

added 23 on the loss at Troy Stale.
UB held a 42-35 halftime edge but Tika
Freeman's free throw with 1:20 rema1n1ng and
a put back of her O'Nn miss sealed the Royals'
fate and dropped them into a tie w1th Youngs·
town State head1ng 1nto their showdown
Wednesday. The Winner of the UB·Young·
stown State contest will be the top seed lor the
Mid-Continent Conference Tournament to be
held at Alumni Arena March 7-9
The Royals rebounded at Central Connecticut as Alicia KoUmorgen. playtng 1n place of
the inJured N1cole Blakeslee. scored 23 potnts
and grabbed eight rebounds to lead UB ~ Alt·
c1a is capable of playing like that. and we hope
she can take a game like th1s and conhnue 1t
through the rest of the season.· said head
coach Sal Buscaglia. Four other Royals were
1n double figures as Ooty added 12 and Usette
Prinzing and Kim Coon had 11 Melan1e Vogel

also tailied 10 off the bench. Doty also had
seven assists and Catherine Jacob added s1x

• MEN'S BASKETBALL
Mike Martinho set a school record with 10

three-pointers bullhe Bull s fell at Troy Slate
86-86. Martinho also led the team with 37
points-the most ever by a Bull on the road
and fourth best output ever. Jamie Anderson
added 23 points. Including

seven threes as UB

broke the school mark for treys with 18 on the
contest. The old mark had been 14 set agaonst
Chicago State last season.
UB"s road woes continued as they fell at
Central Connecticut State 7~ . The outs1de
shooting of Martinho and Anderson contmued

as they combined for an IH&gt;f-20 output behind
the

arc. Anderson had SIX three·pointers and a

team-high 25 points. Martinho was the only
other player in doubles with 14. Bernard
'Nheeler added eight of the Bulls' 12 assists.
After hosting Cornell in the makeup game
from December, the Bulls are off to Moline, Ill ..
for the M id-Continent Conference Tournament

Sunday through Tuesday. The champion of the
tourney earns the league's automatic berth 1n

the NCAA Tournamenl

• WRESTUNG
The UB wrestling team completed 1ts dual
meet season under first·year head coach J1m
Beichner by defeating Duquesne UniVersity
32·1 0 1n front of 550 boisterous fans at Alumn•

Arena The Bulls ( 10-4/5-2) have now won
seven straight matches dating back to Feb 6
Desp1te 1ump1ng out to a qu1ck 3-0 lead With
a w1n at 118 pounds, the Dukes never regained the lead as the Bulls won the next four
bouts to take a 11·31ead.
Jumor 126-pounder Jason Wart1nger conlln·
ued hiS 1mpress1ve season by notching hiS
32nd v1ctory of the year With the dual meet
VICtory. Wartlnger became onty the fifth wres·
tier 1n UB history to wrestle at least 10 dual
meet bouts 1n a season and rema1n unde·
teated Wart1nger extended h1s personal w1nn1ng streak to 14 w1th the v1ctory
UB w11l next ~ 1n action March 9- 10 when
they partiCipate 1n the East Coast Wrestling As·
soc1ahon Tournament (ECWA) at R1der UnrverSIIy The Bulls will be chasing not only the team
champooshlp, but also the opportunity to
qualify indiVIdual wrestlers for the NCAA OM·
s10n I Nat100al Champoosh1ps 1n M1nneapohs.
M1nn., March 21·23. The lop two wrestlers 1n
each weight class will earn the right to partiCI·
pate in the national tournament

a

• INDOOR TRACK FIELD
The Bulls and Royals indoor lraek squads were
on Charleston. IU. lex the Mid-Conbrent Conference Champoonshop Meet ove&lt; the weekend.
The Royals finoshed second to Youngstown
State 104-97 woth Westem lllinotS third at 96 The
Suits were th1rd With 61 beh1nd Eastern llhflOis
(190) and Youngstown State (88)
Royals' distance spec1ahst Stacey Strothmann earned the Mid-Continent women's Athlete of the Year honor Strothman took three
f1rst-place hn1shes 1n the meet. w1nmng the

3000 (t0·04 16). the 5000 (18·43 23) and mole
run (5 1 1 09) Her WJnn1ng 3000 run was a
meet record . besting Jud1th NovaK 's 1995 mark

ol 10·04 34 Shelly

Hamo~on

won the women·s

h1gh JUmp tor the Royals wrth a mark of 5-7
Rachel Refermat set a school record With a
shot put of 39-4 I /2 to place stxth overall
The Bulls' 4 x 400 meter team of Kns
W•nkter . Kev1n W1nkler , Ryan Cand1a and Fumu
Gakod1 won the1r race 1n 3·24 04 and Chns
Keenan flnrshed th1rd 1n the m1le 1n a schoolrecot"d 4:22.3 to lead the men

• MEN'S TENNIS
Brll Parks scored a three--set vrctory at number
four Singles to lead the Bulls to the dual-meet
season-openrng 4-3 deciSIOn over St
Bonaventure

• VOLLEYBALL

The UB women's volleyball team stgned rwo
top·notch h1gh schooters thts wee!&lt;. to bolster
thetr 1996 hneup Chnstina Gtanino (01x H1lls.
NY/Half Hollow Hills East), a 5- 10 setter and

Counney Lugert (Hilton, NY/Hilton). a 5-tO outstde hitter. w111 pn the Royals next season as
freshmen. G1an1no has been starting setter on
the Long Island Empire State Games team for
the past three years. winning silver medals in

1994 and 1995. She chose UB over Syracuse.
Boston College and Delaware and follows her
sister Danielle as a member o1 the Royals
Oanielle was team captain in 1993 and seventh on UB's all-time kill percentage hsl at .288
Christina carries a 95 high school avetage
Head coach Bob Maxwell said Gian1no
"brings to UB a wealth of experience to the set·
ler position. Her Empire State Games and Junior Club experiences have given her a taste of
lop level competition. She has the ability to run
a~ offense. and now with the caliber of young
hitters we have on our rostet. she will only
make them better with her abilities •
Lug&lt;trt has been a member of the gold
medal winn1ng Western Region Emptre State

Games teams in 1994 and 1995 and commotled to UB in the fall after turning cbNn elfers fran
several e.g East sctoo1s l.ugert has a 92 hgl
school average She pins high scllool. J\nor
Club and Erll&gt;ire State Games tearrmate Aprile
Sweetng on the UB roster Sweeung will be a
sophomore 1n 1996 Maxwell said Lugert ~will
compete With the other young guns that we
have on our roster for playtng time next season
She 1S a very alhlellc defensive standout and
Will contnbute 1mmechatety to our team's sue·
cess wrth her strong defens1ve play ~
The Royals were 22·13 last season and 3-3
tn the Mtd-Conllnent Conference's Eastern OIVI·
s1on In h1s 15 seasons at the Umverstty at Bul·
falo. Maxwell has posted a career recOI'd at
364-229--Bior a 612wtnnlng percentage UB
JOins the Mld-Amencan Conference 1n 1998
- Ted Wasko. Sports InformatiOn Offtce

-- - - UPCOMING UBHOME- - ----,
ATHLETIC EVENTS
March 7-9 Mid-Continent Conference
Women's Basketball Tournament at
Alumni Arena

Thursday, March 7
Ouarterf•nals

1 p m . 3 p m 5 30

pm .7 30pm

Fliclay 1 March 8
Sem1hnals

5pm .7pm

Saturday, March 9
Champoonshop

3 p.m

�6

HBillboard·

Facui
REITAN NAMED TO
NORWEIIIAN SOCIETY OF
SCIENCU AND LETTEIIS

P• ut H. Reitan, professor of geology at UB. has been elected to the
Royal Norwegtan
Soctety of Sctences
and Letters In the
natura! sctences
sec lion.
Aettan, who •s a
U S nauve of Nor-

':-::=:::-......__

weg•an ancestry. •s
be1ng honOred lor

n•s research
ach•evemems . whtch are concentrated 1n petrology , the study of
rocks H•s research on northern Norway constituted some of the earliest
geotog•cal work ever done In that
area
In tiS natural SCtences member Ship , the soc•ety permtts a total of 50
tore•gn sc•enusts. most of whom
nave some connectton wtth the Nor ·
wegtan SCientific communlly
Rattan graduated from the UntverS•ty of Chtcago and rece•ved a doctorate from the Umverslty of Oslo.
where he conducted research supported by a Fulbnght FeUowshtp He
worked as a state geolOgist for the
Geotog1cal Survey ol Norway wh1le
work1ng on h1s doctorate
A UB faculty member s1nce 1966.
Rattan served as provost and dean
o f the Faculty ol Natural Scrences
and Mathematics !rom 1976-79
He has held numeroos letlowshtps.
•ncludrnQ a NATO SeniQr FellowShip tn
Scrence rn Norway. rwo Norwegtan
Marshall Fund Research FeliooNshrps
and guest SC190ltst poSitiOI'\S tn Poland.
tndta and Czechoslovakia
Last summer. he ted a group of UB
students on a geok&gt;QIC81 expecii!IOt'lln
Entrea . an East Alncan country that
won rts Independence tn 1990, to assess tiS ecooom1c m1neral potenl!al.
Renan has developed numerous
geology courses designed to provrde
an apprec1a!ion for . and understand·
tng of. the mutuat 1nteract10ns and Interdependence of the physrcal envrronment and soc•ety

BROWN TO IIIVE LECTURE
FOR GSE AWMNI UNIT
The Graduate School of Educatton
Alumm AssoctattOn w1ll present a
lecture by Stttphe n I. Brown, prolessor . Department of Learn1ng and
Instruction and Educational Organ•lallon. Adm1nrstrat•on and Polrcy,
Feb 29,at4 15pm tn280ParkHall .
North Campus
Brown's toptC will be . "The Talmud as Secular Text · Resurrecttng a
Two-Thousand-Year-Old Educatronal
Trad111on .· The Talmud prov1des one
of the earltest models of cooperattve
learmng Brown wtll dtscuss a curncutum project lor teachers whtch
appltes that fOfmcft to the secular
context of mathematiCS
The lecture 1s free and open to
the publfc

UB SPONSORS CONFERENCE
ON GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY
Current concepts of nsk fac tor s and
Alzheimer's dtsease. depresston 1n
1he elderly and evaluating dementta
are among the top1cs to b e presented at !he ntnth annual Regional
Conference on Current Issues 1n Genatnc Psychtatry, to be held on Frtday , March 29. 10 the Un1versity Inn
and Conference Center . 240 1 Nonh
Forest Road. Amherst
The program. to be held from
8 30 a m to 4 30 p .m . 1argets physic tans. psych1atnsts and all ted-health
personnel and admtntstrators who
are tnvolved wtlh genatric patients
and cltents
Sponsors are UB's Department of
f'!¥;hjally, llMslon of GerllllnC Psychlatr;, School of Medlcm and Biomedical
Sciences. and the Western NeN Vorl&lt;
Genatnc Center Educational Sl.,:&gt;p01115

pr&lt;Mded by Janssen Pharmaoeut.ca,
Inc.: Wyelh f'ham1ace&lt;Jica and a tJy
f'halmaceW::a.
Among program topics: ·cross
Guttural Studies and the Search for
Rtsk Factors for Alzhetmer's Disease,·
of the NeN Anudeprossanls,·
"Impact of Psychologk:al Trauma in
later Ute." "Recognition and Treatment of Menopause-Associated Mood
and Anxiety Syndromes,· and 'Roles
of Different Disctpltnes in the Evalua·
lion of Dementia.Small·group diSCUSSionS Will be
led by UB faculty members Marion Z.
Goldstein. clinical associate professor of psychiatry: Yogesh'O . Bakhai,
cltntcal assistant professor of psychtatry: June I. Chang , clinical assoc.ate profeSSOf of medfcine; Kenneth
A. Garbarino, clinical associate professor of family medicine, and Kye Y.
Kim . clinical assistant prolessof of
psychiatry
For more tn!Ofmation, call Patncia
M. Krupp at 829-2917 .

·use

OKTAKE, NOCIIAJSKI
JOIN HRP FACULTY

Plttrlcla Ohtake and au-n
Noctuljald have toined the faculty
of the SchoeN of Health Related Professions . Ohtake. who received a
M.Sc in the Department of Phystcal
and Health Education and a Ph.D. in
the Oepanment of Physiology at
Queen's University in K ingston. Ont. .
1s an assistant professor in the De·
panment of Phys1ca1 Therapy and
Exerctse Sc1ence
Nochatskt , who recetved her 8 S
and M S 1n the Department of Occupational Therapy at UB and her Ph.D
tn spec1al education at UB . IS an asSIStant professor in the Department
of Occupatronal Therapy

TALK OF THE NATION'S
RAY SUAREZ TO HOST
SHOW ON WBFO
Ray

au.,.z, host of the Nauonal

Public Radio program "Talk of the
Nation ." will moder·
ate "Tatk of Buffalo," a diSCUSSIOn
of Issues affecttng
Bullak&gt;, to be
heard on WBFO
88.7 FM. the NPR
affiliate operated
by UB.
The hve broadcast will take place at 7 p .m . on Fnday . March 1 The broadcast also
can be heard on the station's repeater stat1ons. WOLN 91 .3 Olean
and WUBJ 88. 1 Jamestown.
Suarez will moderate a panel that
1ncludes James Pitts , president, Buffalo Common Council ; Henry Louis
Taylor Jr .. d1rector. UB Center for Urban Studies . and Kevin Collison. re·
poner. The Buffalo News.
Suarez ,o.ned "Talk of the Nation ."
a natiOnwide call-tn program broadcast live weekdays, in 1993 after
working for seven years as a oen
assignment reponer with NBC affili·
ate WMAO-TV in Chicago. He also
has worked as a correspondent for
CNN , the ABC RadiO Network. CBS
Radro, Independent Rad1o News 1n
the United Kingdom and AP Radto 1n
London Hts writing has appeared 1n
publications around the world . tn·
cludmg the Chicago Tribune. The
New York Times. Hispamc Image
and New African 1n London
He earned a bachelor's degree tn
Afncan hiStory from New York UniVerSity and a master's in SOCial sctences
from the Untverstty of Chtcago.
\WFO,
of i'I'R. celebrates !Is 37th yeat on the BK'" 1996.

charter,.,...-

THREE TO RECEI VE
JAMU AND NANCY
MCLERNON SCHOLAHHIPS
Three undergraduates in the UB
School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences have been selected as the

ftrst rec1ptents of the annual James
and Nancy Mclernon Student Sctloiarship, funded ty a g1tt to the schoo!
from a 1950 alumnus.
Engineering students O.vkl
. , _, - l y G -ld, and
Scott 11. lllybwczJk have each
received a $1,000 scholarship
through the support of .ljlmes W.
Mclernon , chairman of American
Axle and Manufacturing , Inc. in
Farmington Hills. Mich .• whtch has
plants in the Buffalo and Detroit areas. The scholarships are earmarked
fOf u p per-class engineering stu·
dents. Selectk&gt;n Is based on academk: record, panicipation in professionalty related and community
activities, as well as fanancial need.
•1 would n't be where I am today
Without the education I received at
UB ,"' said McLemon. a US industrUII·
engineering graduate. "We need to
continue improving and developing
our technok&gt;gy in the United States
and one way alumni can accomplish
this Is by sup porting students who
are studying engineering or other
technok&gt;gy-r.ted fields.·
Mclemon's career In the automotive induslly has spanned more than
45 years, slarting at the General Motors Chevrofel engine plant in
Tonawanda. He later hek:t several posi1Joos with GM. In 1976, Mc:Lemon, a
Kervnore native, joined Volkswagen of
Amenca, Inc. as Pfesldent of its then

new u.s. manufacturing operations
before forming American Axle and
Manufacturing through the purchase of
the ptants from GM in 1994.
Active in several professiOnal and
community organizations, Mclernon
lives in Bloomfield. Mich , with his
wife. Nancy. who also attended UB

U8 NAND SURIIEON
EDITOit OF MEDICAL TEXT

Cl•rton A. Pelmer, UB associate
professor of orthopaedic surgery. IS
editor of a new. two-volume medical
reference. ~Surgery of the Hand and
Upper Extremity," published this
month by McGraw-Htll.
The set. which conta1ns 115
chapters written by more than 190 1n·
ternationally recognized experts and
3,000 illustrations. is the first stngiesource reference devoted to the di·
agnosfs and management of problems of the upper limb .
While the set is primartty a surgt·
cal reference, it also 1ncludes sections on chronic pain . rehabili tation.
pedl8tnc upper-hmb disorders, ge·
neltcs. psychiatric disorders manifested 1n the upper limb, medicolegal
issues, work-s1te design . repetitivemotiOn injuries, b iomechanics , HIV
and A105-related problems of the
upper limb, infectious diseases and
arthritic conditions that affect hand
and arm function .
Peimer , c hief of the Division of
Hand and Microsurgery for the
Millard Fillmore Health System. and
director of the Upper Umb Disorder
Clinic in the Warner Rehabilitation
Center of Children's Hospilal of Buffalo. IS also a UB climcal assistant
professor of anatomy and ceil b iology. He IS an internauonally recogmzed expert on problems resulting
from sihcone-JOtnt 1mptants in the upper limb . tulllOfs of the hand and upper extremity and carpal tunnel syndrome . and has pubhshed
extenstvely' on these issues . He has
been a leader 1n developing new
treatments lor hand and wr1s1 anhnttc
disorders and in selllng standards
lor ustng a new method of
endoscoptc surgery lor carpal tunnel
release. called hmited lnctsoo
A member of the UB faculty since
1977, Peimer holds degrees from the
University of Pennsylvania and SUNY
Health Science Center at Syracuse.
He Is a member of the American
Society for Surgery of the Hand,
American Academy of Orlhopaedic
Surgeons, the American College of

Iflllelbooeim'to..tiOp.
~

you'll be illtlnollllr., . . .

thai you cu DOW ~ R,.,_ (lllld

'P•Ilion

inde1 .

Jltltll.

tlllfa·

~

MalitetiUIIIt:a/ 1'11bHecltt111U)
online lbroup MaiiiSciNd, •
W"Jde Web~ ..tUcb caiUip and

fully .-duble
review• -.:11 Uten~~u~e in llllllhemalic:a and ill~ in a
Wide range of diJciptinel includina swisticl, compalletiiCieace,
engineering, operalioDs researdl, physic&amp;, and biology.
Produced by the American Mathematical Society, M8lloSciNet
provides citaliollllo journal anielea, boob, and coofereace .-pen
for the yean 1940 1o the presenL Reviews are availab~ from l980
on. The da!abase can be searched j&gt;y author, title, journal name,
series name, mathematics subject classification number, reViewer,
publication year, and keyword, or any conlbinaiion !hereof. World
Wide Web access to the database is free of charge to all membeR
of the University at Buffalo community witb a UB computer
accouiu and is made possible through an electronic subscription by
the Science and Engineering Ubrary.
You can link to Malh SciNet via rhe Science tUIII Enf{hnring
LibNU] 's Home l'age at h#p://willgJ.buffallJ.edu!WtrtuieshllliW
••V or dirt!ctly through the MathSciNet Homt! Page al h#p:/1
www.IUIU.org/tnlllhsciMtl. For more information about searching
MalhSciNel, conUJct Maiken Naylor in the Science and Enginltr·
ing Ubra ry(645-2946 x223, s[cmailrn@ubvm.cc.bulfalo.edu). For
help with connecting to the World Wide Web or gening a computer
account, contact the CIT Help Desk a/645·3542.
-Loss Pequeiio Glazier and Nancy Schiller, University libraries

Surgeons. and the Acadermc
OrthopaediC Society. He has been an
invited guest and klctur8f at many International societi8S and universrties.

WOMEN' S HEALTH INITIATIVE
S U N R I S E - TOPIC
The Women's Health Initiative, the
largest clintcal health study ever undertaken in the U.S., will be the topic
of a
at SUNRISE' program to be
held at 7:30a.m. on Thursday, March
14. in the Buffalo Marriott. 1340
Mtllersport Highway, Amherst.

·us

,..,. Wactawald·Wende,
clinical assistant professor of gynecology and obstetrics at UB-which is
16 lead research centers In the
natiOnal study-will speak.
Wactawski·Wende also is a co-principal investigatOf lor the Buffalo portion of
the study, which will receive $11 million
a.~er the life of the 12-year project.
The Women's Health lnitiauve.
funded at 5625 million by the Natooar
Institutes of Health . aims to enroll
160,0Cl0 women between the ages of
50 and 79 at 45 centers across the
U.S. The women will take phft in identical studies designed to investigate
the causes of , as well as the er.ective·
ness of vartous treatments I~ coronary hear1 disease. breast and
colorectal cancers. and osteoporOSIS
1n older women
'UB at SUNRISE' Is produced by

one of

the UB Alumni Association and US's
OffiCe of Conferences and Special
Events. News Services and Olfce of
Publications. It also is supported by the
Office or Unf\lersity Development and
OffiCe lor Public Service and Urban Affairs. The Buffalo Marriott is corporate
sponsor of "UB at SUNRISE.•
Pr«;e of the program. wh1ch includes a full breakfast. 1s $9 lor UB
Alumnt Assoc~hon members and S 10
lor all others. For more information.
contact the alumni assoc1a1ton at 8292608. Ticket orders must be received
by Friday . March 8

WOMEN 'S CW8 PlANS
~IIEETINII,

uour ACl1VIT1U

The UB Women's Club will hold its an-

nual election meeting March 12 at
7:30p.m . at the Emeritus Center .
Goodyear Hall, South Campus. A new
state of officers as well as three members-at-large will be elected.

The following slate will be presented: President, Ninla Straubinger;
vice president. Dawn Halvorsen: treasurer. Lynn McFadden; recording sec·
rotary. Geraldine Ryder: corresponding
secretary. C8rmella Hanley.

The-vilbe-byatal&lt;
by PatJa Voel. 8ullalo NoMs reooner. on
'My Life in Lifestyles.. Desser1. fruit and
oollee .... be...-. with amrogemencs
by~ ctWs Kairina WObochall
end~ Hiney. Ninla~IS

..-r.g c:hairrT&amp;l.
The Ce~brate 501 annual Chinese
Banquet will be held March 24 at 6:30
p .m. at the Dynasty II restaurant.
Southgate Plaza, West Seneca. A 12course Chinese banquet including Peking duck will be served. Complete
cost is S30 per person. Proceeds from
the dinner will benefit the Grace
Capen Scholarship Fund. Guests are
tnvited to attend. Arrangements were
made by Dorothy Soong and Anne
Brody For information, call Dorothy

Soong. 834-5596.

Plans are proceeding i&lt;Jr the fiNII
event of the UB Women's Club Celebrate 501-the "1-Mile Fun Walk/Run
and 4-K Race.· Purchase of a ccmmemorative t·shir1 for $15 is the entry
fee for the event. For fT'IOte infamation
and to enter, call Lalla Baker at 69 1-

5972 The """"' marks the completion
of the club"s Ceiebrale 501 year, and the
stan of the UB Sesquicentennial year
UB Women's Club will participate
tn Federatoo Day at BonTon Galleria
Mall March 9. Other activities:
Antiques. March 6 . 10 a.m . at
Fisher-Price Museum. East Aurora. foi·
lowed by lunch at Roycroft Inn: Judy
Baumer , arrangements.
Book group. March 4, 12:30 p .m .
home of Barbara Paganelli: Dorothy
Soong leads dtscussion of AutobtOQ·
raphy of a Face. by Lucy Grealy
Bowhng. Mondays. 10 e.m .
Sheridan Lanes.
Bridge . March 4 and 18. Oandeh·
ons Restaurant. 10 a.m .-2 p m , Mane
Schillo, coordinator
French ConversatiOn, March t5
12:30 p .m .. home of Manse Mihich .
lunch, diSCUSSIOO of shoft stones
Gourmet TechntQues. March 14,
home of Marisa Mih1ch: program on
pasta and sauces .
Needlework. March 29. 12·30 p m .
home of Marte' Schillo.
Tennis, Wednesdays. 1:30-3 p .m ..
Amherst Hills Tennis Club; Marie
Schillo, Ann Shub. chairs.

�7

The Road Aheadfor
Graduate Education

W

hen you come to a fork in the road-take
it," Yogi Berra is reported to have said.
Unfonunately, the choices are not clear cut
when the future of graduate education in the
sciences is discussed. Few, however, would disagree that
graduate education is being challenged quantitatively and
qualitatively, and that change will come in both the siz.e of
the graduate enterprise and in its focus. lbese changes are
being precipitated by pressures on internal university resources, by changes in the academic employment market,
by diminishing stability in industrial employmenf and by
changing basic and applied research priorities. These
issues are shared 10 varying degrees in most developed
countries. 1be issues seem clear, but what In do about
them is qutte unclear, given the uncertainty of the magnitude of the problem.
Some idea of the uncenainty of the solutions may be

derived from the recent National Research Council (USA)
repon, "Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists
and Engineers." 1be repon did not recommend any limits
to siz.e or gniwth, but it did recommend changes that
would decrease the length of the time of Ph.D. programs.
would reduce their specialization, would better prepare
students for careers outside academe and would beller
inform students about the outside employment market.
The report also commented on changes in support mechanisms with a shift away from funding of research assistantships from grants and contracts to departmental- or
school-awarded training grants.
These are modest and probably sensible proposals,
although it is not clear how broader education is easily
reconcilable with shorter graduation times. However.
many would argue that the recommendations simply do
DOl go far enough. Their arguments run along the following lines: graduate education must be more than faculty
cloning themselves for future academic positions that do
not exist; it should be more than the labor needed to execute the principal investigator's research and thus enable
more grants to be oblained with which to hire more research assistants; it must be more than a source of cheap
teaching; and it must be more than a path that leads to a
career as a post-doctoral fellow . That those argumenlS
may be a prelude to significant quantitative and qualitative
changes in graduate education is indicated by the just·

published Rand Corporation-Stanford University study
which indicates systematic overproduction of Pb.D.s in
engineering and some sciences by approximately 25 percent. This conclusion is broadly consistent with much
anecdotal material and accords with the conclusions of an
American Chemical Society Task Force. which examined
doctoral education in chemistry. Additionally, the continuing changes in the pharmaceutical industry, as exemplified
by the recent Glaxo-Wellcome merger. add to the siz.e of
the avai-lable Ph.D. pool. There is no indication yet that
these consolidations are at an end.
niversities are not institutions that change readily at
the macro level. Some have likened universities to
supenankers-massive. impressive, slow to tum around
and emba.rrassing when run aground. However, the triple
witching hour for scientific research that is now upon
universities. with diminishing ta.x·based and private suppon. with changing employment demands and opportunities, and with increased expectations for productivity, is
likely to bring change more rapidly than previously anticipated. The next decade for university-based research and
graduate education promises to be both interesting and
uncomfortable.

U

DAVID J. TRIGGL£
lkon. School of Pharmacy
State University of Ne'tl+• York at Buffalo
A.rticll! nprinled from Plaarmt~ctMiktll News

Leadership conference set for women in higher education

B

A!!.BARA MOSSBERG, director, Mary R. Smith
Council of Scholars and Senior Fellow, Office of
Women. American Council on Education, will be
ihe keynote speaker for a leadership conference for
women in higher education to be held at UB April 26.
The conference, on the theme, "Embracing Chaos: Para·
dox or Paradigm?" is presented by the Western New York
Regional Committee of the American Council on Education/
National Identification Program (ACE/NIP). It will beheld at
the Center for Tomorrow on the Nonh Campus.
Mossberg, who has lectured and written on chaos ·theory
worldwide, has worked in more than 30 countries as educational
leader, admi nistrator. consultant, scholar and academic advo-cate. She has held facu lty positions from the University of
Oregon 10 Hoban and William Smith to the University of
Helsinki. as well as several administrative posts. A poet and
essayis~ she received a B.A. in English and history from UCLA
and a master's and Ph.D. in literature from Indiana Unive~ity .
On the program. which includes a continental breakfast and
a luncheon. will be presentation of the seventh annual Bernice
Poss Award to an outstanding woman in higher education.

Discussions are planned on creating community.lcadership
from the center, conflict resolution. downsizing and diversity ,
with conference fa cilit.3tors . Ellen Ahearn, president of Professional Dynamics. and adj unc t faculty member at Cornell
University's School of Industrial and Labor Relations. is guest
facilitator. Abeam has 25 years of administrative, leachi ng.
personnel and human resources management experience.

C

onference facilitators include Sarah Anderson , ass istant
dean . undergraduate st udi es (i nterim ), Buffalo State
College; Marlene Amo, director. institutional research. Erie
Community College North Campus; Sharon Ba iocco. associate professor. English. chair, liberal arts di vision, D' Youville
College; Mary Claire Bauer, associate director. admissions.
Canisius College: Darlene Benton, ass istant dean. Orleans
Campus, Genesee Community CoJJege; Jami e DeWaters.
professor of education. o·Youville College.
Also: Susan D. Edwards. director of institutional advance ·
ment. Daemen College; Donna Elgie. chair. sociaJ sciences.
Hilbert College; Ellen Errigo, director, institutional advancement, Medaille College; Larene Hoelcle. dean of human
resources &amp; planning. Genesee Community College; Carol

Jamieson, professor t&gt;f English. chair. humanities division.
Niagara County Community College; Janina Kaars. director.
Academic Advising Center. UB ; Katharina Kovach·AIIen.
associate dean for human communications &amp; behavior. Genesee
Community College: Kaaren Metcalf. EOAP. UB: Natalie
Moudgil. vice president for academic affairs. Villa Man a
College; Mary Jo O'Sullivan. institutional planning officer.
Trocaire College; Eleanor Patterson. director. bilingual pro·
gram. Erie Community College. City Campus; Nancy Poling.
learning specialist. Roberts Wesleyan College; Judith Willard.
ass istant to the president. Niagara University.
Conference planning commiuee members inc lude: Donna
Domino, Denise Hood. Susan Major, Elmira Mangum·Daniel.
Lesli e J. McCain. Karen Noonan. Kim Pachettio. Christine
Sauciunac. Lynn Sr:achewicz. UB: Donie Bellanti. SaJiy Treanor.
o·You ville College: Cassandra Burney. Trocaire College; June
Crawford. Judith Willard. Niagara University: JoAnn S. Smith.
Villa Mana College; Karen Wheeler. Daemen College.
To register. send check for $40 ( made our to ACE/NIP) by
April 16 to Donie Bellanti. o·vouville College. 320 Porter
Ave .. Buffalo. N.Y. 14201. Luncheon cost is included.

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
ut.WoobMp
FlDdiD&amp; Iororm• t lon or l nterut
to You on lbt In ternet, Anne
Perrault and Ted Sherman.
Lod:wood Library. 7-8:30 p.m.
To register. ca1164S·612S.

~
Taek Force 01t Wo.en
w--..
W omtn'l Voku: l ml&amp;hls ror a
Sucassful Career, Judith Miller.
Bernice Noble, Beverly Bishop.
Donnie Bulbs. Elmira Mangum·
Daniel, Gloria PIVeljack, Jennifer
Roth. Presented by President's
Task,f'orce on Women at UB.
and the Affirmative Actio n Commiuec: of lhe Professional Staff
Senate. Center for Tomorrow.
Nonh Campus. 8 a.m.-Noon.
Free, but resistt8tion requested.
To register. call Kathy Ben::hou at
645-2600. or Betty Williams at

-645-2663.

c.nllopulniOftiWJ'

c.....,

Prof. G&lt;O&lt;J&lt; Hlliduaoll. Phys;ol·

ogy. 301 Biomedical R~h
Building. Sooth c.mpus. 8:30 a.m.

-

- y - Cell BloloC)&lt;
M o~ l8 r Dy n. .dcs or Neu·

ro n.1l Growth, Dr. Paul
Forschcr. Yale Univ. 306 Farber
South C.mpus. 12:30 p.m.

_..--..

eight seeds in conference. Winner
of lhru-day event gains au10matic bid for NCAA Tournament.

ut.WoobMp

Lutine Memories: Cultivating
Lone·Term ReteoUoo ror Academ k ExeeUe nce. 3 ·4 p.m. To
register. cai164S-612S.

~COI'-I•m
ObHrvln&amp; C olor a 110· l- 17)m,
Prof. DieterZeppenfeld, Univ. of
Wisconsin. Madison. 220 N11ural
Sciences Building. North Cam·
pus . 3:4S p.m.

--

Applitd Pharmacoldodks or
An ti·Rd:rovirals, Prof. Gene D.
MarK. 508 Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

S_Col._lu•
Stm l-Paramet ric: Rcgrasion
M od~ls

ror RK uneot Event
Data with Rudom Effeds a nd
Meuu~meat

Erron, Prof.

Wenxin Jiang. Cornell Univ. 246
Cary. Sooth Campus. 4 p.m.

ur.w--.,
T bHis/l)issertation S upport
G roup, Darba.ra Umiker. Thundays throu&amp;h April I I . 4 :30-S:JO
p.m. To register, caii64S-6125 .

u"""Wellw--..
Tbt Powu of Po5ittve Thin kine
ror Selr·F.steem. 250 Student
Union. North Campus. S-6: IS
p.m. Sponsored by Uving Well
Center. To register. caii64S·2837 .

Alu-.I Tour

l o ta"Dd 105: Creatine •
UOMEPAGE. Undcraraduate Li brary. Capen. Nonh Campus. 1-2
p.m. To register. call 645-294S.

Tour or Martttt Arcade.. Cod: ·
tail ru-.eptton foll owed at 6:30 by
a talk on the history of the bui ld·
in g. S:30 p.m. $9, S II . To make 1
reservation, call Alumni Relations. 829-2608.

w....'aaaak~l

ut.WoobMp

MMI..Contlnt ol Toum • ment.
Alumni Arena. North Campus. t
p.m.. 3 p.m., S:JO p.m.. and 7:30
p.m. $5, $2. $1 . Royals host top

T••i Chi ror Bql.n oeN, Ron
lngl lsbe. Tuesdays and Thun·
days, through May 2. S:J0..6:30
p.m. To register. caii64S-6125.

UfeWCNbMp
Wben, Wby and How of Dreut
Selr·Examln•lion. 6·1 p.m To
register, call 645-612S.

l'loNtM
The Shoemaker 's Prodigious
Wire, play by Loren. with song
and dance; MariaS. Ho me. du-ec·
tor; Linda Swiniuch. choreogra·
phc:r. Drama.Thtatre . Center for
the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m.

$2.50. $5.

-11141 EXHI.!TS

DICIUI..t
" Digital Messages: Vis1on. Re v1sian. and Precision." a show by
Communications Design and
Computer An students and rae·
ulty, opens Feb. 29 with a rece~
tion from S-7 p.m. in the An Department Gallery , Cemer for the
Arts. North Campus. The show.
which is Up through March 14.
presents "inuges and words of
wit, canniness and folly m van·
oos digital media."

S.. . . l exhibit haa re•l

McCoy

" UB Remembers," a university
sesquicentennial exhibit orga·
nized by University Archives.
opens to the public March 8 m
420 Capen Hall on the North
Campos, and continues there
through Sept. 10. A bright item 1n
the exhibit .. organiz.ed by chief
archivist ShoMie fiRMgan , is 1he
state chaner incorporating the
University of BuffaJo on April
22, 1846. A centennial exhibit
here had to settle for a photographic ~;opy of the documenl.
This time we can see the real
McCoy (which up to now has not
been allowed lo leave Albany).
Groups wishing to visit the ex ·
hibit may 1mnge to do so by

culhng 64S · 2916 Exh1b11 hours
arc Monday through Fnday. 9
a.m. to S p.m.

CONTINUING EXHIBITS
natu..

Seal"'

"'Perfect World," a group s ho~o~..
features work of Vincent Shmc.
Lauro Stein. Gregory Crcwdson.
David Nazio. and Ronald Jo nes,
through March IS in the: Univer·
sity An Gallery loca1ed in 1he
Center for the Arts. North Cam·
pus. Gallery hours are 10:30
a.m.-8 p.m.. Wednesday through
Salurday, and Noon-S p.m. Sun·
day. Admission is free .

,.....,... by ,. ...

tank•

.. Dumping Sight: Landscape/
Landscape." an exhibit by Satoru
Takaha.sha. is the exhibit through
March 11 in the University Ar1
Gallery . Center for the Arts.
North Campus. The exhibit is "3
complelt architcctural ·sculpturul
work consisting o f two sc:panue
revolving doors made o f reneeti ve glass with fi sh tanks as ceil ·
mgs." Takahashi is a Japanese
:1ni s1living in New York Ci1y
Gallery hours lltr Wednesday
through Szuurday. 10:30 a.m.-8
p.m.• and Sunday, Noon -S p.m.
Admission is free .

Ten 11t0re lltOftttM In
u,Mwell
Ltonardo Drew's sice-spcc1fic m·
slallauon "No. 4S-A" was de·
signed for the Lightwell Gallery
m the: Center for the Arts, North
Campus. and now is lodged 1hcre
through Dec. 20.

-ofchurcheo
" Building and Landscape: 8y7.lln·
tine Church Buildings in
Greece," a show of photographic
works by Jonas Lehrman. is on
view through March 8 in the
James Dyeu Gallery. BS Hayes
Hall. South Campus.

-Hlotooy1llc Legacy o f Arthur A

Schomburg" is on d1spl uy
through March IS in Lockwood
Mtmorial Libi1U)' . North Campus The traveling exhibitio n of
photographs and reproductions o f
manuscripts explores the: g lobal
history and culture o f black
people. whose heritage
Schomburg dcdicaled h1s life 10
preserving . "(he ex hibit abo
1races the e\·ol ution of the
Harlem-b3scd rest!arch cemer
that bears his name . Thcrt IS a
recep11!ln Feb. 29 from 3·5 p.m.
m Lockwood.

-Talk of the town on WBFO

National Public Radio's Ray
Suarez, wh~ program "'TalL of
1hc allon" IS C3rried o ver
WBFO 88 7 FM . wall hosr a li\e
·Jalk of Buffa lo" broadcas1
March I at 1 p.m from the
WBFO studio m Allen Hall on
I he South Campus. Guests arc
James Pills. presu:knl of 1he Buf·
falu Cummon Council ; Henry
LoUIS Taylor Jr .. director of UB',
Cemcr for Urban Studies: and
Buffa lo N~ws reporter Ke van
Collison. P1an to be ncar lll rndto
1f you're not one of the ones who
already have rcscrved 1he1r seals
in Allen auditorium

ElectlnC WOIIMn
1be Women' s Club of the unt \er·
stty holds its annual e lect10n
March t 2 at 1 :30 p.m. in the
Emeritus Cenler localed m
Goodyear Hall on the So uth
Campus. After the ballot1ng. BM/falu Nt!!-...•s columnist Paula Vocll
will speuk on " My Life in
Lifestyles." The club plans us
501:h anniversary banquet March
24 at 6:30p.m. at the Dynasty II
Re.~o~auranr in West Senec::a, pro-

c«:ds 10 bcnefitlhc Grace Capen
Schollmh1p Fund.

Profeulonal
Programmer/Analyst (SL·2; Inte-rnal Promotional Opportu·
nity) ·School or Engineering ::and
Applied Sc1cnces. Computer Scr·
\ ' ICC' S Group. Posting NP-SOll
Lnd Programmer Analyst -Um ·
vcrsity Libntries. Dim:tor's Of·
flee. Pos:ung lfP-6003. Lead Pnr
grammt:r An•lyS1 (SL-J;
Internal Promotion•! Opportu·
nity).Compuung &amp; lnfomution
Technology . Posting •P-6008.

Faculty
St:nlor Assistant/Associate
Librarian-Loc kwood Mcmonal
Libr.ll)'. Posling fF· 6007 . ~
dale/Full ProftsSOr and Chair·
Orlhodonucs. Posti ng lfF-6008 .
Auho1ant ProftsSOr-CompUicr
SCience. Pusung lfF-6009
Re. . .rcl'l
ProjKI Starr Asso&lt;-iate· Oc\·el·
upmc nt. Posung IR -95090 SKrt'Uiry Ill -School of Soc1al
WorL. Posung lfR-96005 Engi·
nrcring l&gt;e'lign Assislant-Ottu·
pat1o nal Therapy . Post1ng lfR ·
96007 Resea rch Sc:icntist SocJal &amp;: Prc\cnti\'C Medtnnc.
Post1ng •R -96008
~tltlve Clualfled
Clvi! SerYice
SKretary I (SC· II )-School ul
Engmccnng and Applied ~· 1
cncc:., Lmc •28771

Ta obtmn mort' mformatwn ml
ab01-e. contact Pt'rson
nt'l Sl'n'lCC'S. 104 Crofts Hull Ta
ohtum mformatum (m Rae-arch
jobs, conwc·t Sponsared Pro·
grunu P~rsonnl'l. 416 Crvjtl

jobS lut~d

�8

, ,. ,. . _
. .,. . . ..
3-··C.
...... -."-k

--

~"-r.Tioa-­

wr*J • 3

a.pU..

I

I

.......

120

a.-.-~lp.m.

.

w..,.......

Free. To,..;-. eall 645-2!192.

lltd&amp;laPWI-~

In-CANCELLED. Cealc&gt; foe
the Am. Nonb Campus. Man:b
IS. April l2. aad April 28 aPO
CODCCIU also cancelled.

c .... c ............... s....

Y.. 'reN............. 3:.J6...4:JO

p.m. To rep.&amp;er,c:aii 64S-61n.

c-.._...,..__._,.

Sormal......,..

sa.

Nonll Campus. s p.m. S2. S5. $6,

Moclela IB
Prof. Joo&amp;·H..- Jeoo&amp;. Uolv. ol
Rodtealu. 2A6 Cary. Soaolh Campus.. p.m.

--··~

'*
........
BIIQ-U'o

Wilt. play by Lon:a. ..;111 aona
a a d - Marias. Home. direcIDr, L.iada S..Wucb. .,.,.,._..
pber. Drama TheaiTc. ~- foe
.... Arts. Nonll Campus. 8 p.m.
S5.SIO.

Noc J . . r.r lUI All,._..t T'"" bopllo. S.
1 p.m.. S3. To reciJter, call 64S6125.

'*
........
,_Start:
a-

! '*-· ........

To Qta11

- - . _ 5:30-6:30 p.a. To,...
cali64S-6125.

••

,

I

. . . . . . .

- - - of
........... Dop-adolloa aad lle~ bo llltlaalllod O..ter
~ U. Prof. David

_
__
--...............
--... ....__ _
_
._
-----·

World Famous trumpeter M•YMnl f'erCIIMn and Ills IIIC Bop N - Band wHI peofonn at 8 p.m. s.turday,
March 2 on the Center lor the Arts M•lnstaee on US's North c....,....

...

.....................
_ .......... _
..-...

,....................
UICI!NIIa,• ......

}.

O.fAX . . . . . II
~

Univ. of Wisconsin, Mad ison . 246
Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m.

......etlo_.......,

EmploJ'ftS' Re.tl.reme:nt System
!ERS). I 02 Crofts. North Cam·

........

pus. To register, caU PeBOnnel

Services, 645· 2646, xiOI or 102.

ECAC C hampionthlps. Alumni
Arena Natatorium. North Campus.
All day.

--

Canllopu-.y C-or
Neural C~rdlac Stu n nina, Prof.

David Guuennan. Univ. or Iowa.

:nag'. ~~~~d;~~=~h.~~~ld-

ut.Wotbloop

8SEAA LKtlonl
Tbe Ta.llllud u Secular Text:
llaurTOctlaa A Two-Tbousaod-

Ut.WCNtcollop
Tbesls/I)iJRrtation Support
G roup, Barbara Umiter. Thursdays through April II . 4:30-5:30
p.m. To register, call645-6125.
Art~

DiJital Meuqes: Vl.don, R~vl ­

Employee AaistaoU Proanm
Tninln&amp;- Noon- I p.m. To registe r, call645-6125.

.tioa u d Precision. Opening reception. 5-1 p.m. Communication
design and computer an show;
throush Mart'h 14.

UbnrJ Rec&lt;opllooo
TM Lqacy of Arthur A.

Ut.Wotbloop
T'al Chi for Bqlnnen., Ron

Sc:homburJ. Exhibil continues
through March..IS. Lockwood.
Nonh C.mpus. 3-5 p.m.

-

·~--·

Fluropolyme.r Surfau Cbcmlstry a nd Cell Adbesloa for Tluuc
En&amp;iDH:rine, Pro(. Joseph

Gardella. 12 1 Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

M-Col'-lu•
Sc:alar C urvature RJ&amp;kllty, Pror.
Maun3 Min-oo. McMasten Univ.
103 Dierendorf. South Campus.
4 p.m.
'

~­

Rtplatory Alpec.. of Plaarma«.utkal ReRa.rCb and Drvtlopmc~ Mario L Roc:ci Jr., Ph.D.
508 Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

-·--...

l'o,clolabyNturobiolop
ofO- - Compulstve Oborden, Prakash
Muand. M.D., Swe Univ. of
New York Health Science Center.
Syracuse. Auditorium, Rehabilitation Building, Buff•lo Psychiatric
Center. 10:30 a.m.

---

-

Tbe New York Datb Pmalty in
CoatuL O'Brian. North Campus.
S.SO; UB fKUity. students S25 (includes breakfast, lunch. coffee,
conference materials. AU-day conference. For information, c•ll 64S2101.

..._...

ECAC C bampionshlps. Alumni
Arena Natatorium. Nonb Campus.
All day.

lavlfa••••••.......,._. ,_.,.
1"M Shouaaku's Procl.la,kKu

s,...... ..

Mocldlal Ma&lt;ury Ia Natunl
Lake O.tario, Prof.
Miriam Diamond, Univ. •t

Toronto. 140 Ketter. North Campus. II a.m.

-llloloO-

W il~ play by Lorn, with soog
and dance; Maria S. Home. director. Unda Swhliuch. chorc:loppher. Drama 'Jbeatre, Center for
the Arts. N - Campus. 2 p.m.
S2.SO. SS.

Oral Penpec:tiva oa B UJD.aD

Juz

lDUIUlaodefldelte)' Vlrut Traumlslioa, James Bergey. Pb.D..
Ua Dcp&lt;. of Oral aiolo&amp;y. 21S
Foster. South Campus. Noon.

Mayunl FUJUIOD ud Ilia Bop
Nouve~~u. Mainstqe, Center for
the: Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m.
SIO. $14 , Sl 6.

UCITWOibloop

--...,.~-

n.e.t..

Introduction to UNIX. 6-8:30
~gi sler, call Academic

Tbe Doable LICe ofMualc aad
MualclaaJ Ia Exlk. Ly&lt;fia Goeh•.
Cohunbi• Univ. 6s:4 Baldy. North
Campus. 3 p.m.

lngalsbe. TUesdays and Thursdays, through May 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m. To resister, call 645-6125.

p.m. To

~rvices,

Computing and Jnforma·
tion Technology User Li aison.
64S-354().

Art Lootu..
Art a t t be End of the Century,
Adrian Piper. Albri&amp;ht-Knox An
Gallery Auditorium. 8 p.m. $),
$4 : UB facult y, staff, students,
Albright members. free. Co-spon ·
sored by University at Buffalo Art
GalleryiR.esearch Center in An +
Culture.

Muolc
huliM Oliveros. composu,

Statl- c.Hoqoo.. •

-

Ana lyli.t of Hkldt:a Markov
Models Uslna Markov Cblin
Monte Carlo, Prof. Bruce Craia.

suo.ss.

Sod.al S«:urity Aclmla lstnt ion-Bene:OtJ Ownl~w. Butler
Auditorium, Farber. Sooth Cam·
pus. 4-6 p.m. Group information
ses.s ion. To resister, call Personnel
Services. 645 -2646, xiOI or 102.

.....

Yur-Oid Educatloaal Tndltion. Prof. Stephen I. Brown,
Dcpts. of Lc:aming and Instruction
and Educational Qraaniution,
Administration and Policy. 280
Part Hall. North Campus. Sponsored by the Graduate School of
Education Alumni Association.

witb ADdrew Dt.utscb aad Don
MdZ.. Allen. South Campus.
8 p.m. $6, $8.
T be Shoemaker's Prodi&amp;iou.t
Wife, pl•y by Lorca. with song
and dance ; MariaS. Home:, dirct·
tor: Linda Swiniuch. choreognpher. Druna 'Theltn:, Center for
the Ans. North Campus. 8 p.m.

C-.try c.Hoqoo..•
Prof. Mary K. CarTOU, Union
College. 215 Natunl Sciences.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

- F o l k -...
AU leve-ls. 2 Oiefeodorf. South
Campus. 8-11 p.m. Free. Spon·

so~d

by GSA.

U Bulfalo Sy•pbooy and Baird
Coapdllloa Soloist~, Clwles
~111. conductor. Feat~ winnen
of the annual Baird Conceno
Competition. Slec. North Campus.
8 p.m. $3.

-

T be Slaoemak~• Procllaiou.s
Wife, pl•y by Lorca. with song
and dloce: Maria S. H~. director. Linda Swioiuc.h, choreographer. Drama Theatre. Center ror
the Arts. Nonb Campus. 8 p.m.
SS. SIO.

Tbe Sboi-...U.r:r's Prodiakml
Wife, play by Lon:a, with IOnJ
and dance; Mari• S. Home, director. Unda Swiniuch. choreographer. Drama. Thutrc. Center for
the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m.
SS. SIO.

Pt:ppe:rbera. Univ. of Illinois, Chicaao. 134a Fari&gt;cr. Soolh Campu.s. 4p.m.

-w--.

Lot..-.ot 100: &amp;.Malllloslco. UodcrpwluaiO Libfwy. Capea. North
Campus. 4-5 p.m. To reJistcr, caJI
64S-294S.

.....,_.._

T'al Clll!ar .......... Roo
lapbbe. l\oadayo aad n.ur.dayo. lhroual&gt; May :Z. S:JG.6:30
p.m. To ..,;-. caii64S-6125.

'* ........

l atnMI-totlteW..Wof
WIMa, Vieuxia James. 6:J0.&amp;:30
p.m. To rc:aister. call64s-612-'.

LMIIIIW.. _..,..
51-r.r-:-..
w.,..,.~-. 318
Shldeot Unioo. North Campos.
6:30-7:30 p.m. SpoootJO&lt;d by Uvina WeU Ceruu. To rqistcr. call
645-2837.
•

Bof Diolia-Uko
c-.....,a, Prof. Jamea R.
Olson, Pharmacology and Toxi-

coi&lt;&gt;&amp;Y. 108 Sl&gt;ennao. Soolh Cam·
pus. 4 p.m.

ur.w--.

EUfdaia1 ror Spiritual Fit-.

5 : ~:45

p.m. To regiSicr, call

••sc

..._.........,._
a.....

-M_
........._
Paul Mudd. 248 Cooke. North

Campus. 8 a.m.

645-6125.

UYIIIIIW.UWCNtcollop

_,_

Sdf-Examlaatioa.
Student Union. North Campus. 67 p.m. Sponsored by Uvin&amp; Well
Cenler. To register, c•U 64S-2837.

Mondayo lhroual&gt; April 8. 6:308:30 p.m. S25 deposit; S20
rtfunded upoa wisfiiCIOry
complctioo of the prosram. For
information. call the: omce of
Student Life, I .SO Student Unioft,
645-6125.

ur.w--.
AJIIII)'ID&amp; tlte PriDdplu of S..:ceaful People, Joseph ...,...Uo.
Also March II . 1·9 p.m. To regis-

. __

ter, call 64S-612S.

ur.w--.

Tbe u.- ud Dowas of Roller
Couters. 7-10 p.m. To reaister.
ca11645-6125.

Tbe C...,..,.. Flylq (19S7, 94
min.). ln Russsian with English
subtitles. 120Ciemens.· NCampus. 7:30p.m. I'm:. SpoaSO&lt;ed by tho Dcp&lt;. af Moclent Languages ud'Uitnb.lra, Russian
Qub ux1 Uoiverairy Ubraries.

P roi. I'Jbabeth Rqu.ky, Univ.

or Vermoat Col)eae or Medicine .
Kitthbofer Room, RPCl.
I 2:30p.m.

-w-..

u......,.......

1- - 102: WINGS/Worid
Wille Web.
Libfwy. Capen. Norllt Campus. 12 p.m. To ~&amp;ister. caiJ 64S-2945.

ur.w--.,
Car Cart 101. Howud Hutke. 13:30 p.m. To rqil1er, caJJ 64S6125 .

ur.w--..

AS...ef H-MaltsSeme,
Ed Brodta.l:l0-5 p.m. To ~JiJ..
.... caii64S-6125.

_l.oCic c:-..o-p,_...,
lobo Co&lt;tcna. 684 Baldy. Nonb
Campus. 4 p.m.

uod...,....,...... .

_,_

_

'l1ot l!lllcoq

of

--I.Ktlonl

- . Clwiao&gt;pbcrbiJim. 248
Coob. -~4:30p.m.

M al&lt;lq Fabric Ardoit_,..,
TbeDeawrLo....-Alr

Tonoiaal, Martia a.,_ ainlaU
Inc., Buffalo. 301 Crolby. South
Campus. 3:30p.m.

.,__
~-­
Eop.

SO Yean of Tbenpeulic:
aeeriaa Ia Walen N"" Yon:
A CriebraUoD. Embassy Room of

Statler Towers.. 101 Delaware:
Ave. 8:45 a.m. Free. Sponsored by
Health Care Industries Associ•
lion, UB Center for Biomedical
Engineering, •nd UB Industry!
Univenity Cooperalive Researt'h
Center for Biosurfaces..

-w....-..

ltu...,.. IOI: Lotroduc:tloa to
UNIX. Unde&gt;Jnld..te Libfwy,

CaperL North Campus. 1-2 p.m.
To register. cali 64S-294S.

Ufe . . . . . . . .

llqlrualq Sip~ SemiDar, Diane Outboys. Dil'fiCt Experience Method (OEM). Wednesdayolhrough Aprill7. S:J0.6:4S
p.m . To rc:&amp;ister. eaii64S-612.s.

ur.w--..

lat roduclloa to Home Brewt.aa.
Also Mart'h I) , Man:h 27-, and
April). 7-9 p.m. To rc:giltcr, call
645-6125.
~o:~Uve

Matt.btw Raydta, baritODe. aDd
Tim Socha. pluo. AUea. Soolh
Campus. 7 p.m. Taped by WBFO
88.7 FM fOf broadcast the following Sunclay 11 4 p.m.

Ut.WCNtcollop
lat...-..diate Sip l.aai'U'I"
Sr:mia..ar, Diane Cwthoys. Ditce1

HOME BREWING:

Lum-ltat •

ur. Wocbllop

March 8, . . , March
13, Men:h 27 and
Aprll3.

E.&lt;pcriena: Method (OEM).
Wednetdaytlhroual&gt; Aprill7. 78: 15 p.m. To rqister, call 6456125.

Ut.WCNtcollop
Drivlq To t1te Bock of Beyoad,
PlluiOreenwald. GeoloaY-focuscd
tnvelogues. Wednesdays throu&amp;h
Mardi 13. 7-8:30 p.m. To rc:aistcr.
cali64S.6 125.

Continued on page 7

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

UNIVIUII'Y AI BUFFALO
State University ofNew Yen*

One Hundred Fifty Year.5
Fe bruary 22. 1996 Volume 27 . No. 19

Greiner urges restoration of TAP funding at Feb.l6 hearing
Campus-based tui tion sho uld
re flect a president' s kno wledge of
his own institution, Greiner said.
" I' m expected to know more about
my carnpus ... than anyone in A lbany . If I don' t, the n there' s something wrong." he said. ''What we
would like is the abi lity to recomme nd what tuition should be."

UB president calls for reform·in central

administration, use of campus resources
.,~VIDAL

Reporter

Ed~or

I

F THE SUNY sys"'m is to
continue to provide quality
higher education to a broad
cross-section of students. the
Slatel..egislature must pass legislati on that would restore fundin g
for the Tuition Assistance Program.
enable more effective campus use
of resources andrcorganizeSUNY ' s
central administration.
Th is was the message President
William R. Greiner brought before
State Assemblymembers Edward
C. Sull ivan and Paul Tokasz at a
Rethinking SUNY hearing held
Feb. 16 at Buffalo State College.
"Restore every sin gle do ll ar to
TAP... and strengthen it if you can,"
Greiner stressed. '1llat' s the unanimous position of every president in
the SUNY system.-rfil isn't, those
who aren ' t o n board should be
ashamed."
Greiner also to ld the assemblymembers that SUNY needs "an

effectivea&lt;:cOunlability structure."
He noted that the Universily of
Minnesola sys"'m, a model made
up of 62 institutions and 150,000
students, recently decentralized and
cut its central office in half, from a
staff of 200 to I 00.
"Wecan ' taffordtohavea 1.000person office processing transactions and so inappropriately staffed.
We have to have th at re form . There
are large savi ngs to be made. "
Grei ner said.
"T he chancellor himself will tell
you it 's an organi zati on that's bottom-heavy .... lt needs to be stood
on its head."

T

he role of SUNY 's central admini stration should not be to process paper, cut checks or spend enormous amounts of time performing
Iasks the campuses could do. Greiner
said. The application process. in partic ular, should be handled by the
indi vidual campuses rather than having the papers sent first to Albany.

.,....,.cox
Re porter Staff

Willie -rh•J'ziiiCu.t ' 'theF'tr5t Ameodment is alive and well
at UB," President William Greiner and Vice President for Student
Affairs Robert Palmer have put a hold on plans for a return
engagernentoftbecontroversial "Cemetery of Innocents" !bat was
construcuod on the North Campus last year by Pro-Life activists.
Greiner and Palmer told the Faculty Sena"' Executive CommittCC: at their Feb. 14 meeting, that !bey had not closed the door on
such a display, buttbat significantly more advance planning would
be required.
·
A written request had been submitted to Palmer by Matthew
Boyle, representing UB Students for Life , a group opposed 10
abortion. to use 90,000 square feet of open spaee for the display.
The spaee would be used to place small whi"' crosses in the grouod,
representingoaboned fetuses.
Greiner vociferously defended tbe right of groups like UB
Students for Life to use the university as a forum for expressing their
ideas. "W~ are not in any way, shape or form forbidding the
display," be emphasized. "Groups surely can obtain license to
express their ideas on this campus. It's just that that license is not
unlimiuod." Greiner' s cltiefconcems involved the scale and timing
of the display. "Last year, itjustappeared-&lt;&gt;n Parents' Weekendand that wasn' t appropriate," be said. Last year's display was
vandalized shortly after it appeared.
"The display itself, frankl y, was a ~ery effectiveexen:iseofFirst
Amendment rights," said Greiner. He warned thai those wbo
· oppose tbe di splay because of tbe content of its message, are
"putting their own First Amendment rights at rislc."
Palmer explained that Boyle' s request was incomple"' and
would not be approved as submitted. He said the written protocol
for student groups to follow in matters of this son is contained in the
univers ity ' s SJMcia/ Evtnts Planning Guidt. Bonding, which ensures repayment if any damage is caused; liability insurance coverage and security for the display are all issues that have not yet been
adequately addressed. Palmer explained.
Continued

~n

page 2

I

-

Gnolner . . . '*,....to~ Edwald Sullivan,

left, 1ft! Pall T - a t - . : held at lklllalo ~ Coleeo·
··We're pay ing way too much for
will use th is as a solution 10 fi nan processi ng applications."
cia I prob lems now ... Tokasz said.
Shared infonnati on still contin"Can you answer me how the uni ues to be vi tal. however. and ··we
versi ty system has thought about
have to dobetter wilh technology."
d ifferen ti al tui tion and how the
Greiner said. "We're not tili ng
campuses have thought about difadvantage of technology" such as
fe renti al tuiti on."
electronic applica ti ons.
'"It can' t be a blank check.''
Grei ner also did his best to allay
Grei ner responded. ''No ne of us in
concerns Tokasz expressed ove r
the State Universi ty syste m have
differential tuition.
arg ued fo r co m plete indepen "Some of us th ink preside nts
dence ."

I' s not a uniq ue way of setting
tuition. Grei ner noted. ''Other
campuses do it thi s way. They don' t
have a one-size-ti ts-all tuiti on."
And wi th the budget concerns a ll
SUNY campu ses face . ''in the shon
term . frankl y. we ' re goin g to need
tuit ion revenue to balance the budgets." The State Universit y Colleges also suppon the plan. Greiner
said.
Pooling SUNY tuition mo ney 1s
"counterprod uctive," Greiner said.
because campus budgets are revenue dri ven. ''Whateverthe tax do llars are , where is the money going
to come fromto run our campuses?"
He warned tha t without adopt ing legis lation rhat would aJiow
greater management flexibili ry . the
quali ty of ed ucation at S UNY
schools wi ll suffer.

SUNY, Cal State leaders near agreement
on faculty productivity statement
. , STEVE COX

Reporter Stall

L

EADERS OF the facul·
ties of the nation· s two
largest public uni versi ty
sys te ms , SUN Y a nd
Californi a· s CaJ State sys tem, are
near agreement on a significant
statement of princi ples o n f aculty
prOOucti vity, members of the Fac·
ulty Senate Executi ve Co mm ittee
learned last week.
UB Professor of Higher Education and former SUNY Chancellor
D. Bruce Johnstone told FSEC members, duri ng their Feb. 14 meeting.
that he and other leaders of SUN Y
and Cal Sta"', meeting in Los Angeles and New York City. have nearly
completed work on a statement on
principles of productivity.
The statement will ca ll fo r enhanced shared governance between
admini stration and fac ult y. greater
academic freedom and a continued
emph asis o n seniority and tenure.
but with in uni versa ll y recog ni zed
fi scal constrai nt s that public instituti ons are li kely to face for some
ti me to come . ac cord ing to
Johnstone. If adopted large ly as it
now reads in draft fo rm. Joh nstone
ex plained, "thi s wi ll be a document
that will surpri se a lot of people.
outsidepeoplewhofee l fac ultyaren ' t
heldaccountableorsubjected tomerit
review as other professions."
Interest in developing th is statement grew o ut of "watching dec i-

sion makers in both states gather
around tables and say. 'The faculty
are the problem· and realizing there
were no fac ult y at those tables."
said John stone, who was recru ited
fo r the project by Vi ncent Aceto.
presid ent of SUNY' s sta tewide.
University Faculty Senate.
Once a fi nal draft is agreed upon.
Johnstone expects the statement to
be "circulated widely" among faculty in each state for input. He
stressed that this was nn area where
fac ulties, and unions would have to

"This will be a
document that will
surprise a lot of
people."
D. BRUCE JOHNSTONE

work closely together to succeed.
FSEC members heard an update
from Jean Dickson. president ofUB · s
chapter of the United University Professions. on the union's lobbying
activities in Albany. Dickson distributed a list o f the union' s legislative prioriti es and spoke abou t
fX&gt;sitions the un ion had taken that
differed from SU NY' s. including
opposition to hospitaJ spinofTs and
differential tuition.
Provost Tho mas Headrick ap-

plauded the uni on· s effo rts generall y. but took exception to the1r
position o n differential tuition. " I
th ink thi s noti on of co mpeti tio n
be tween co lleges and un ive~i t y
centers is q uite o verstated." said
Headrick. "We wou ld be a better
and stronger university if we had
differential tu ition." Under the proposed diffe rent ial tu ition legislati on. campuses would sti ll have to
"make their case" to the Board of
Trustees before they could charge
any incremental difference in tuition rates. Headrick noted.
Johnstone advised FSEC members that the time for "intellec tual
di scussion" ofSUNY· s budget has
passed. "Simpl y put. the legislature needs to hear a whole lot of
angry words" fro m SUNY supporters. he sa1d. "There is absolu te ly nothin g Impo rt an t abo ut
S UNY to Go \ . Pa ta k1 ... sa 1d
Johnstone. " I don·t think he di Slikes SUNY . but he loves tax cub ...
The legislatu re. which IS normall y
supportive of SUNY . is now tn a
quandary. The dee p c ut~ propos!!d
to SUNY g1ve legislators an "out: ·
accordmg to Johnstone. '"They ma)
no t like it. but if the y let th1 ~ JU ' t
happen. lool. at the budgetary prob·
!ems it will solve for them 10 oth er
area s:· he satd . Acc o rdin g to
Dickson. uni on representatives are
heari ng from state legislators that
there will be restoration: " It' s just a
matter of how much."

�1811111111 ..... u

2

~-....-~n

Graham honored for
contributions to research
Confemal ceremony to be held In Hellltta S c i - Ubrary
Br LOIS·News Services Stall

S

AXON GRAHAM . UB profes·
sor emeritus of social and preventive
medicine
and
internati onall y known epidemiologisL, will receive an honorary doctor of science degree today in a ceremony at 3:30 p.m. in !he Aint Reading
Room of the Health Sciences Library on
UB 's South Campus.
Graham waschairofUB 's Department of
Social and Preve ntive Medicine from 1981 9 1 and a member of !hat department for 35
years. The honorary doctorate recognizes
hi s contributions to the uni vers ity's research
mi ss ion and to the body of knowledge on the
relationship o f diet and disease.
The conferral ceremony is part of the
ope ning day festi viti es for the sesquicentennial celebration of UB 's School of Medkine
and Biomedical Sciences.
Graham earned a bachelor's degree from
Amherst College in 1943 and began studies
in anthropology at the Universi ty of Californi a at Berkeley. His studies were interrupted
by a sti nt in the U.S. Army Counter Intellige nce Corps. in which he served fo r three
years as a special agent.
He returned to academ ics in 1946, thi s
time at the University at Buffalo, and went
o n to receive master 's and doctoral degrees
fro m Yale University.
While hi s field was sociology. he became
interested early on in public health issues.
During hi s first teaching job, a three-year
position as instructor of sociology at the
Pennsylvania College for Women in Pittsburgh- now Chatham College-he spent a
summer lecturing on the sociology of medi ci ne at Penn State.
While in Pittsburgh, he served as a consultant to !he University ofPiusburgh School
of Public Health, and commenced a life-long
career stuc1ying the interrelationships of human lifestyles and di sease.
His first position in Buffalo was as director of communit y epidemiological studies at
Roswell Park Cance r Lnstitute , which he

DISPLAY
Continued from page 1

' Greiner cautioned that a non-authorized
display, or an act of civil disobedience, would
not be to lerated. ' That's a bedrock for me.
You will observe the laws ofthisstateon this
campus." said Greiner, explaining that campus security will arrest any violators.
Anatomi cal Sciences Professor Herbert
Sc hue! called last year's display an "inyo ur- face provocation." He urged Greiner
to use the campus to "sponsor a dialogue" on
the iss ue of abortion, rather than serve as a
si te for such a di splay. Greiner. however.
disagreed, saying if "provocative" were the
standard , "half the artwork on campus would
have to come down."
Greiner called recent Buffalo Ntws reports
announcing that the display would return.
"ill-informed." Friday editions of the Ntws.
however, quoted event organi zer Matthew
Boyle ns being likely to look for an alternate
site rather then provide insurance and security
for !he UB display. The campus display was
to be a prelude, according 10 Boyle, to a
"National Cemeleryoflhe Innocents" di splay
of 1.6 milli on crosses. representing the numberof abortions in the country each year, to be
erected somewhere in the Buffalo area the
weekend of April 19.

held from 195~. He served simultaneously
as assistant professor in !he UB Department
of Preventi ve Medicine and Public Health,
now !he Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, and as a lecturer in UB 's
Department of Sociology and director of its
doctoral program in medical sociology.
He was named an associate research sci·
entist at Roswell Park in 1960, and was
promo~ to principal scientist in 1965.

C

ontinuing his work in the epidemiology
of disease, primarily cancer, he was
promo~ to full professor in 1966 in !he UB
departments of sociology and social and
preventive medicine. He became chair of !he
Department of Social and Preventive Medici ne in 1981 and served untill991, when he
was named professor emeritus.
Graham's publications in refereed journals
dealing with public-health issues date back 10
1956, when !he journal SocUlJ Problems publisbed his repon oo ethnic background and
illness in a Pennsylvania county. Since !hen, be
has published 144 journal anicles resulting
from his numerous research studies oo soci&lt;&gt;economic and dietary factors and !heir relationship 10 various typeS of cancer.

He remains involved in
epidemiologic studies in
!he Department of Social
and Preventive Medicine
!hal are based on data collected during his longterm investigations of !he
social epidemiology of
cancer. Graham ' s work
was funded by !he National Cancer Institute,
and continues to yield important information on
how diet and lifestyle factors affect !he health of
populations.
In 199l,lheSocietyfor
Epidemiologic Research,
of which Graham is pas!
president, sponsored a SAXON GRAHAM
symposium in his hooor titled " Diet and !he
Epidemiology of Cancer." Additional honors
and awanls !hal he has received include !he
Sloclaon Kimball Award from !he UB School
ofMedicine and Biomedical Sciences in 1989
and !he Distinguished Achievement Award
from !he American Society for Preventive

Oncology in 1990
Graham bas served on !he editorial boards
of several professional journals, including
Nutrition and Canctl"and.Amt!ricanJoumaJ
of Epidemiology, and on numerous national
advisory hoards, committees and study sections.
0

UB's 1846 charter coming 'home' for sesqui exhibit
Br AIITHUR I'AIIE
News Services Director

T

HEUNIVERSITYatBuffalo'scbarter is coming .. home" for a visit in
conjunction with the celebration of
!he university 's I 50th birthday.
The charter. !he Act to Incorporate !he
University of Buffalo that constitutes Chapter 193 of !he Laws of New York 1846, is
contained in one of several vol umes of laws
passed during !hat year and bas a permanent

home in !he New York State Archives and
Records Administration in Albany.
The volume containing !he chaner is beingloanedtoUBfordisplayin " UBRemembers," a sesquicentennial exhibit being
organized by !he University Archives. The
six-monlh exhibit will open on March 7.
It will be transfe!Ted to representatives of
!he university Feb. 27, in a ceremony at3: 15
p.m. outside !he state Senate chambers in
Albany. Accepting it on behalf of !he univer-

sity, and hand-carrying it back to Buffalo.
will be UB President William R. Greiner and
!..eon Hendetsoo, president of !he UB Alumni
Associatioo. They will be in Albany, along
with membersoflheassociation's Legislati~e
ActionCommittee.tomeetwithstaielawmaken; as pan of !he annual UB Day in Albany.

ShoooieFiooegan.UBardlivistwhoiiiTIIllged

forlheloon.saidthattbeNewY&lt;ri:SillleArchives
and Rcoords Adminislralion agreed 10 lend the
volume for !he exhibit after caieful review of
' !he security, environmental controls and pro.------------------------------,
fessional can: available in University Archives.
Finnegan said Ibis is !he first time that !he
volwne will beoutsideoflhestatecapitol. During
UB's centennial celebrntion in 1946, she llOied.
tbevolwnewasunavailableforloanandorganizers of that event had to settle for displaying a
photographic copy. The charter consists of six
News Servlcea Staff
foli&lt;&gt;-size pages that.lilcelheolherc:haptersof
Ia .._.. ...... • tiiiiiC as liuanet oddictioo? If 10, what is it? How cxtelllivc is it?
-thel..awsofNew Y&lt;ri: 1846, arehand-wrineo.
While people ue t&amp;Jting aboUt lllopbellomenon, to date it's not beeo .wll-doc:umented.
The Act to Incorporate the University of
A UB docloraJ student is answering thai challeit'p with lbo-fint 011-Ime ourvey_of
Buffalo was passed by !he stale Assembly
lhe~effeclloflillaneluseomdlbuseinbopelofidenlifyiq whatitDICIIIS _
on April 22, 1846, by the state Senate on
to be "addkled lo lbo Net."
May 9 and was signed into law by Governor
"PPyCbologilla IIDd coallldon ue otarting to see cues of wbat c:ould be callod
Silas Wright on May II, 1846.
Intanet addiction, battbere is no teal reseudl oolbo pbeoomeooo." ~laiaed V'lklor
While colleges and universities often have
Brenner, doctoral llllden! in lbo UB DepMtment of Plycbology.
a sponsoring pa~enl body, the movers be"Wiih this ourvey, I am leyiDg to researcb wbal constitutes lnlallet oddi&lt;:lioiLaod
hind !he chartering of !he University of Bufwbal ita parlllldCn ue."
falo were a group of citizens, among !hem
Mlcbl!el Raulln, UB profeuorofpsycboloay, wbo is supervisina Brenner's disserMillard Fillmore, who became its first chantation. said tbe survey rtpreoe1111 "one of lllo fint opponunitiea we will 'me to get a
cellor and president of !he United States.
broader sampling of tballebavlor and to fiadoot bow severe it is. It may give us an idea
'These were citizens representing not
of some of !he factors tbat.may be responsible for inclusing or decreasing !he riaks of
themselves, butlhedesire of Buffalonians to
this kind of compulsive behavior." ·
have a university," Finnegan explained.
The survey includes questions aboutthe-respondent's bacqround IIIII then asks
While their immediate goal was to open a
how much time be or she speods on different pans of the Net
medical school, !hey had !he foresight to
The majority of !he survey features "tnno" or "faase" quosti.OOJ, such as:
propose a charter for a full university.
• More tb8n once, have goaen less !hen 4 hours o{ sleep in a night because I was
The law establishing the university actuusing !he Net
ally createdajoint·stock: corporation to raise
• r have used the Net 10 make myself feel better when I was down.
capital, not to exceed S I 00,000, to get !he
university off !he ground. Individual shares
• I have shared a deep, dark secret with a penon on !he Net.
were offered for $20. Finnegan explained
• 1 have gotten a biU for {on-Ime) services that wu twi!'C what I expected.
lhatlhe co!pOrlllion was viewed by those who
Brenner, whose eclectic background includes won: with anxiety disorden and
invested in it as a philanthropy, that no divimanaged~ issues, designed the survey based on his clinical knowledge of alcohol
dends were paid, nor were !hey expected to be
and drug oddiclioo. He is employed at the Marquette University Counseling Center.
paid. In 1909, 0\apter 193ofNew York Laws
Brenner's Internet usage survey may be accessed by pointing any graphics-based
1846 was amended to call in !he stock of !he
World Wide Web browser to http://www.mu.edu/deptlccenter/intro_srv.btml
university. With cancellation of !he stock. !he
univmity ceasedbeinga stock corporntion. C..

Addicted to the Internet? Study
to look at psychological effects

.,.IUDI ___

i

�3

Legislative measures vital to UB 's future, Greiner tells PSS
ly~VIDAL

Reporter Editor

U

BCOULDBEfacing afinancial
"train wn:clc:" if Gov. Patalc:i's
proposed 1996-97 budget is
adopted, UB President William
R . Greiner told the Professional
Staff Senate at its Feb. 14 meeting.
The $92 million SUNY reduction proposed in the executive budget "would translate to a $14 million reduction to UB," a
shortfall that the university will find virtoally
impossible to absorb without measures that
could include retrenchment.
Calling the proposed cuts "a non-partisan
withdrawal of support," Greiner noted that
Patalc:i is not solely responsible for the financial problems SUNY faces. "Cuomo started
us down this track." be said.
"We've always had this funny game that
we played in the past," Greiner said, where
the governor set the budge~ the legislators
gnashed their teeth and the chancellor and
trustees criticized the governor.
And in the past "essentially the legislators
haven't done anything (to restore the budget). The executive budget was 'what you
see is what you get,'" Greiner said.
This year is different, though. The trust-

ees aren' t going to battle the governor.
They ' re going to work real hard with what
they've got. " My point is. I think the ball is
really in the legislators ' court thi s year:·
Greiner said.
If UB receives a $14 million budget cut .
"we've got a real disaster on our hands,"
Greiner said. "I'll tell you, I think the SUNY
system is broke. We've taken the tax money
out of the system and backfilled it with tuition."
The State legislature currently has before
it four measures that, if passed, would help
alleviate the severe cuts contained in lhe
executive budget proposal. They include
management effectiveness, which would allow campus flexibility ; health care management ; retirement and· severance nexjbility;

Workshop to focus
on leadership skills
By STEVE COX

Reporter Staff

Developlnl!l leaderalllp ski ll s among
women in the campus community will be the
topic of an upcoming workshop sponsored
jointly by the Task Force on Women at UB
and the Affirmative Action Committee of
the Professional Staff Senate.
" Women's Voices: Insights for a S uccessfu l Career" will be held at the Cen ter for
Tomorrow Thursday, March 7. Registration
begins at 8 a.m. The workshop is free, but
advance registration is requested . Those interested in attending may contact Kathy
Berchou at 645-2600.
The workshop will feature a panel discussion· and break-out sessions on topics ranging from networking to commu nications.
Featured speakers include Physiology Professor Beverly Bishop, Spectrum Editor-inChief Bonnie But.kas, Assistant Provost
Elmira Mangum-Daniel, Law School Staff
Assistant Gloria Paveljack and WBFO General Manager Jennifer Roth .
''The workshop is to honor leadership
from different p3rts of our work co mmu nity," explained workshop organizer Judy
Miller. It will also provide an opponuni ty for
women to network and "focus on a variety of
workplace skills," added Miller.
The Task Force on Women was devel oped by Presi dent Greiner two years ago and
charged with eva luating the status of women
in all walks of campus life. The task force is
due to produce a major report on its findings
next month , and wi ll take part in "Take Our
Daughters to Work Day" on April 25. an
international event sponsored by the Ms.
Foundation.
0

and SUNY Cap, a program that would provide a bridge from high school to college.
Noting that "we run the best and most cost
effective medical school in the SUNY system and we don ' t get enough credit for it,"
Greiner explained that the health care management bill would move the SUNY teaching hospitals toward "the Buffalo model" of
affiliated not-for-profit agencies rather than
their current role as state agencies.
SUNY's statutory colleges are a financial
drain on the State University system and the
funding they receive needs to change dramatically, Greiner said.
"One-sixth of the tax dollars in the SUNY
system this year go to Cornell," he said. "The
undergraduate kids are pumping (tuition
dollars) in to see to it lhat they don't have to
take too big a cut at Cornell or the School of
Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF)
or AlfredortheHealthScienceCenters .... And
changing that is going to be bard."
Although the executive budget proposes
reducing the allocation to the statutory colleges, "$8 million is what they' re projecting
to take out of the statutories, which means S1
million (in additional funding to UB ). It 's
too little," Greiner said.
" I understand how hard it will be for
Cornell to change their ways but if they 're
not willing to change, they shouldn't be in
the SUNY system."

"My point is, I think the
ball is really in the
legislators' court this
year."
WIWAII R. QIIEIIIER

SUNY' s central office also needs to be
pared down by two-thirds , Greiner told PSS
members. ••J don't think we can afford to
carry a thousand-person central office. We
don't need it," he said.
What SUNY does need is restoration of
funding for the Tuition Assistance Program, Greiner said. New York State's legislators need to be told to put more money
into TAP and to allow for a more reali stic
tuition policy. He called it "perverse policy"
to cut TAP while at the same Lime raising
tuition.
He added that hi s first priority is to
restore TAP funding, even though that will
make it more difficult to convince the governor to restore funding to SUNY .
Legislation must be passed that would
allow campuses to charge their own ruiti on
rates and keep their own tuition revenues.
"Cornell and the community colleges ail

keep their own tuition ... and I don ' t know one
community college that has been driven out
of business by the predatory practices of
another community col lege," Greiner said .
•• J don't think the current system is good
for UB . If it works for the community colleges it can work for us, too:·
The costs of educating students varies
from campus to campus and shou ld be renected in tuition rates. Greiner said. ••1don 't
know why kids at ESF have S 18,00o (per
student) in state appropriations backing them
up." versus $5,500 per student at the state
colleges and $7,800 at UB. He added that the
average state appropriation per student at the
Health Science Centers is $25,000 at UB and
$40,000 at Syracuse and Stony Brook. and
state appropriations are $67,000 per student
at the College of Optometry.
'T m as hamed that the primary reason
students give for coming here is money .... It
should be quality. UB should be a bargain
because we· re so good, not because we're so
c heap."
It is vital that the four measures in the
legislative package be passed, Greiner said.
'The legi slative package has no cost to the
taxpayer. It's a no-brainer.
"If they want to do something for us this
year. pass the legislation. restore TAP and
then see what you can do about .the $92
million."

History of American taste, status found in study of
bedroom, Architecture professor tells Sunrise series
cated on the fin;t floor off or-------------------,,....,
either the dining room or
parlor, a person's soc ial
DROOMS tell a lot about a perstatus was confirmed by
on. More than just a place to rest
placing
his bed in a promiweary head at the end of the day.
nent, not private, settin g.
the bedroom reflects who and what
we are, our taste, position within the family,
Less importa nt mem even our social status.
bers of the bou se hold
shared beds, often with
"It's the focal point that seems to gather the
strangers and regardless of
concerns of the culture," according Elizabeth
gender, although " the eti·
Cromley. a noted architectural historian and
chair of Architecture at UB . Cromley traced
queue of sleeping in borrowed beds was not always
the history of our sleeping quarters in her
agreed on." Often there
discussion ," American Bedrooms and the Construction of Culture," presented Feb. 13 as part
were multiple beds to a
room and bedfellows might
of the UB at Sunrise breakfast lecrure series.
The earliest American bedrooms were furchange nightly .
nished according to social rank, a tendency
ln the early 18th century
that began to change in the 18th century to
one in I 0 beds had hangreflect the rqom·s function. By the 19th cenings. and by the 1760s that
number had risen to one in Elizabeth Cromley speaks at San rise seaalon.
tury, that emphasis on function began to affect
house design, she said. And by the 20th cenfour. Bed hangings were not
began to arise, especially in cities," Cromley
tury, the bedroom· s functional purpose "takes
only a display of wealth. but also a function of
sai d. The Civil War era saw the rise of
over and concern for expression of rank was
comfort and privacy. creating a room within a
"dustless bedrooms," devoid of c urtains. rugs
less important," Cromley said.
room. CromJey said. A bedroom's location in
or bed ha ngings that might harbor dusL or
..Sleeping in the earliest American colothe house also re flected rank and social standbedbugs. Wood frames were replaced by
ing. The bead of the household occupied the
nial houses must have been pretty uncomiron bedsteads for the same reason.
room on the fin;t floor. those of lesser rank
fortable ," according to Cromley , whose
1be spread ofiUnesses such as·tuberculosis
would sleep in the garret or a separate building.
lecture traced the evolution of the bedroom
also were a concern. and "sleeping porches"
from the 16th century to the present. For
The shift toward defining the bedroom by
became popular. "Sleeping outdoors all year
its function continu ed to proceed slow ly.
some, sleep came on a mattress with a log for
a pillow. For others it was a pile of deerskins. Cromley described a house where the master round was common." Cromley said. and special
clothing. tents and other apparatus were
bedroom was located on the ground noor.
"Although we tend to think of the beddesigned for the nocturnal fresh air.
the chi ldren's bedrooms on the second floor
room as private space, it was used as a social
By the 20th century . bedroom locatio n
and the servant's room over the kitc he n.
area in colonial America." Cromley said. In
ceJsed to be an indication o f rank. but thethe 18th century, the"bestcharnber'' as it was
Eventua ll y. the second n oorwas established
increasing popu lari ty of one-floor h o u se~
known, was a room in which births, d ea th ~
as the family 's sleeping quaners.
presented a problem : "'Now everyone had
·· tn the mid-19th century health cares
and other important events were shared . Lo·
decided sleeping is private 3nd separate from
soc iability." Cromley said. The 20th century
UGL Announces Poetry Contests
bedroom. therefore . was separa ted by a hall nae ..........
t Llltrwy announces the 1996 poetry contests sponsored in cooperalion
way from soc ial areas.
wUh the Oepanment ol English and the Friends of the University Ubraries. Two prizes of
The early 20th century also saw bedroom!'~
$100 each are oH·ered for the best poems submitted by University at Buffalo students. The
emerge as an expression of personal 1denuty
Academy of American Poets contest Is open to. both graduate and undergra(:luate students.
For
the fir.:ott ime, they were indi vidualized for
The Friends of the !Jniversity libraries prize Is for undergraduates only.
ch ildren as an expression of gender role ~ a....,
Entrtea should consist of one or more typewritten , double-spaced poems, not to exceed a
total or six pages. The writer 's name should not appear on the poems. but on a cover sheet
well as individuali ry. The evolution contin u e~
with the name of the prize and the writer's name, class, address and phone number. Entries
astoday ' s bedrooms blend masculine and fcnnshould be aent to Margaret A. Wells, Director. Undergraduate Library, 107 Capen Hall, North
nine aspects. And regardless of what shape the
Campus. Buffalo, N.Y .• 14260-2200. The deadline is Friday. March t5. Winners will be notibedroom of tomorrow takes. one fact remains
fied by Apill t5 and Will be Invited to read from their works at a poetry reading to be held on
constant,
Cromley said. "Culture is more imThursday, ~i125at Noon In the Poetry/Rare BoOks Room of the Libraries (420 Capen Hall.
ponant than function in how something is
North Campuo).
accepted and integrated into the house.
I)' CHRISniiE VIOAL
Reporter Editor

B

�4

~aa.~

Criteria set for
student speaker
The UIIIYenlty Commencement Committee bas announced criteria for selection of a student "'P"'sentative to address
graduates at the I 50th Uni venity Comrne·n cement, scheduled for 10 a.m. Sunday, May 19 in Alumni Mna.
The competition for a commeocement
speaker is open to all gr.oduating seniors in
the faculties of Arts and Lette:s, Natural
Sciences and Mathematics, Social Scieoces
and Special and Individualized majors.
Seniors who wish to becoosi~ must
submit ·a writteo version of their speech to
Nicolas D. Goodman. vice provost for uodergr.oduat.c education, who will chair the
selection committee comprised of faculty,
staff and student representatives. Three fi.
nalists will be selected; each
P"'SCCt an
address bef~thecommittee. The winning
speech will be P"'5e"ted by the student at
University Commencemeot
Spccchcs should be 110 longer than six
minuteS. Seledion will be based on tdevant:y,
appropriateness of content, and delivery.
Entries must be submitted by Thursday,
April 4 to the Student Speaker Selection
Committee, c/o Dr. Nicolas D. Goodman.
Vice Provost for Uod&lt;tgraduat.c Bducatioo,

will

255 Capen HBIJ, North Campus (645-2991 ).

v.e...rr, Ne.s.e

Linda Hall receives
ACS Scholars Award
arELUII~M

News Services Staff

L

INDA M . HALL, professorofbiochemical pharmacology in the UB
School of Pharmacy, has been
awarded a prestigious Scholars
Award from the American Cancer Society.
The $38.000 grant allows Hall to continue her researc~ on biological proteins,
called voltage-sensitive ion channels, that
may be useful targets for treating seve"' pain

in cancer patients.
Hall has used the fruit fly as a model
genetic system to identify a new type of
protein, called tipE. She has preliminary

evidence that homologues of this protein
exist in higher organisms and she will use the
grant todetennine whether this protein regulates the sodium channels of higher organisms. Hall is spending this year as a visiting
professor at the University of CaliforniaIrvine, where she is using electrophysiology
to mo"' closely study the protein's regulalOry properties.

Hall ' s research also has applications to
other potential products, including production of novel biotechnology-based insecti-

cides and cardiovascular drugs.
A UB faculty member since 1989 and
forrnerchairof the Department of Biochemical Pharmacology, Hall previously held faculty positions at Albert Einstein College of

Medicine in New York and at Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
She is a recipient of a Method to Extend
Research in Time (MERIT) Award from the
National Hcan, Lung and Blood Institute of
the National Institutes of Health.
A McKnight Scholar in Neuroscience,
she was also the recipient of the Jacob Javits

Neuroscience Investigator Award and the
Monique Weiii-Caulier Career Scientist
Award.
Hall graduated from Bucknell University

and earned her doctorate at the University of
Wisconsin at Madison.
lo addition to serving on the editorial
hoard of the Jouf7Ull ofNeurogenerics aod as
executive editor of ln~uttbrau Neurobiol-

UNDAHAU.

ogy, she has authored numerous scientific
papers and has presented many invited symposia_Her professional memberships include

the Society for Neuroscience, the American
Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, Rho
Chi and the New York Academy of Science.
She directs the Oligonucleotide Synthesis
and DNA Sequencing Facitity run by UB's
Center for Advanced Molecular Biology and
Immunology.
0

VB prof's film is centerpiece in major exhibition on cinemolvisual arts
Br PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Services Staff

cinema as a method of examining the filmatic

The Flicker,• a revo lu tionary 1966 film
by Tony Conrad, professor of media study at
UB . wilt serve as a centerpiece in the first
major American exhibition to focu s on the
dynamic postwar relationship between cinema and the visual arts .

known and most widely exhibited of his
three dozen works of film and video art and
scores of community video productions.
He points out that, until recently. there

The exhibit. "Hall of Mirrors: Art and
Film since 1945," is being mounted by the
Museum of Contemporary An (MOCA) in
Los Angeles, where it will run from March
17-July 28 before touring the country.
The show is a highlight of the Motion

have never been available for viewing on an
ongoing basis. Lately, however, major museums and galleries have begun to attend to
the media arts , exhibiting them through their
institution's core programming.

Picture Centennial. a nationwide celebration
of the history of the motion picture. It will
encompass works by many of the postwar
period 's most remarkab le filmmakers and
visual artists. Conrad was one of che first
media artists to reduce the film experience to
its most fundamental elements, employing

that this exhibit will present the development of film in the postwar era as a progressive concentration and contraction of ftlm

61

apparatus itself. ''Tile Flicker" is the best-

has been very little opportunity for the publi c to sec this body of se minal films, and they

MOCA curator Kerry Brougher explains

"language"-which, in these terms, reached

an extreme value in "The Aicker"-and its
subsequently re-expansion to fill the larger
arena occupied by contemporary cinema.

Because of its significance in the history
of cinematic art and ils relationship to the
show's central conceit, "The Aicker'' will be
exhibited continuously as an art installation.
It will serve as a centerpiece in an exhibition/
screening program featuring 160 art objects.
60 films and film excerpts, 15 installations
and a film series organized by MOCA and
the UCLA Film and Television Archive.
The...._ will find Conrad' s work

in the show's second of three sections, ''Cinema Degree Zero," which "'presents the
period between 1960 and 197 5. when artists
helped pushed cinema into an expanded ..,Wm

of visual art. ln addition to Conrad's work,
the audience will find in this section the
work of pioneering French filmmaker Stan
Brakhage, the late UB media study faculty
members Paul Sharits and Hollis Frampton,
plus Peter Kubelka. Chris Marker, Stanley

Kubrick. Michelangelo Antonini and others.

TlleM Cl'ellton of an and feature films
often emphasized, as Colll1!d did in ''The
Flicker," the materiality ofthe celluloid, frame.
light and flicker. Theirtendency was to under-

cut the cinematic experience by illuminating
the interplay betwU:n stasis and movement~
thus returning cinema to its scientific and
mechanical origins in phantasmagoria,
chronophotography and optical devices.
An illustrated catalogue, the first major

publication to compre'hensively explore the
reciprocal interactions between film and visual art in the postwar period, will accompany the exhibition . It will feature
commissioned essays by prominent film
scholars and ar1 historians.
"Hall of Mirrors" will tour the Wexner
Center for the Arts at Ohio State University
in Columbus from Sept. 13-Jan. 5. 1997. and
the Museum of Modem An in Chicago from
Oct. 5. 1997-Jan. 4, 1998.
-

Wellness program: physical fitness and tun
Bethel Head Stan staffers spent a
day testing their physical fitness
and learn ing new skills in a special wellness program held Feb.
16 in AluJMi Arena. Top lett: Mary
Randolph, head of Bethel Head
Stan and organizer of the program. IS shown in the gym where
Bethel staff does step aerobics. Among other a c tivities the group
enjoyed: line dancing. at lett and volle yball. below lett. They also
performed physical endurance tests. top right . and stretching exercises during a flex worl&lt;shop. bottom right. Planning and cOOidinating the health screening for the 90 staffers as pan of this UB community outreach program were Athletics. Exercise Science and
Physical Therapy, Spans Medicine and the Living Well Center .

�IHIKildlll
F.-u.y

zz. ~ v...... 27, No.J.tt

5

Wl:lat's retirement like? Former UB employees say it's a time to help others
II)'S'RVECOX

Reporter Staff

ess Feldman seemed to sum it

up best: " If you are thinking
about retirement, just do it. Life
is short." She is one of several
recent retirees from the uni versity who agree that retirement can be much
more than rocking chairs and bingo games.
Feldman. who left UB's Office of Student
Life in 1991 after24 yearsofservice, basspent
much of her time as a volunteer...My mom
always said, 'You have to pUt something back.'
so that's what I've tried to do." Feldman has
been a server and occasional acting director, of
a Meals on Wheels program during the pas!
five ye= and works occasionally for UB's
public radio station, WBFO-FM.
"The Mealson Wheels work is so rewarding," says Feldman. " It' s a c hance to make
contact with peo ple, some of whom are quite
lonely. and bring them a good meal and a few
minutes of pleasant conversation. In my reli gion. we call that a Mitzvah-a blessing."
Perhaps most interesting, however, is
Feldman's work through Jewish Famil y Services. She's a o ne -woma n " Wel co me
Wagon" for newl y arrived Russians ...I like
to help ' Americanize' them," says Feldman.
··r help with some of the nuances of our
language and teach them basic things like
what 911 is and how you shop at Wegmans."
Feldman has al so taken advantage of her
time to travel . ··r·vebeen out west, and I love
to go to Cape Cod," where she enjoys walk-

ing the streets of her favorite town~ C::hatham.
peeking jn the shops and enjoying the seafood, and flying kiteson the Brewster beach.
To Feldman, the hardest part of retirement is mi ss ing her coworkers, most of
whom have become great friends after so
many years together. So, she organizes luncheons where they can all get together.

O

ne of Feldman's former bosses in Student Affairs, Robert Henderson, also

retired several years ago. However, according to his wife Nanna, who still works at the
university, ..now, he gets up for work earlier
than when he was working ." Henderson puts

in virtually full-time hours as a volunteer and
local board member of Habitat for Humanity.
And he isn't satisfied just driving a few nails.
Currently, he is in Hampton. Va., for six
weeks where he is a construction supervi sor
for a bouse being built through Habitat's CollegiateChallenge,an"altemati vespringbreak"
program for college students who will forego
beer blasts in Daytona to spend a week building a home for a needy family.
This i s at least the sixth challenge
Henderson has attended and the fourth spring
since retiring he has spent rebuilding in the
south. " In 1993 and 1994, he worked on
Habitat projects in Homestead, Fla .. following Hurricane Andrew," his wife said.
Henderson held a number of positi ons in
Student Affairs before retiring in 1993. However. explains Na nna, ..he really ne ver had
muc h to do with construction before becom-

ing involved in Habitat."' Hi s interest in
Habitat has made his re tireme nt very fulfill ing, says Nonna. And, they have made time
to travel to some of his Habitat sites together .

E

dward Dudek retired last April afte; 39
years at UB. Re tireme nt has been "just
great" for him. " For anyone who has hobbies.
outside interests ora Jove ofl ife. you can ' t beat
it." says Dudek. How has the former lab technician from UB ·s engineering school kept busy?
Until recently. he served as adistrict deputy with
the Masonic Order. helping oversee 16 area
lodges. In January, he and his wife traveled to
Hawaii. courtesy of Buffalo Bills star Steve
Tasker. to atteod the Pro Bowl. And Dudek is
active in his hometown, Elma. Last year. he was
a candidate for T own Supervisor.
A Maso n for20 years. Dudek has derived
a great deal of enjoy ment from bei ng able to
give even more of himse lf to the group's
charitable ac tiviti es. As di stric t deput y.
Dudek traveled through out the region representing the Grand Master, the highesl rank ing offi cer of the order, at various function s.
"All around the world, Masons raiseS 1.5
million a day toward their chari table work
and medical research," Dude k explained.
Masons operate a large medica l research
facility, rek.nowned for its work in geriatric
heart and other di seases. near Utica. 'The
Medical Cen ter does so much for handicapped kids; people don' t realize. It's really
a thrill to be a part of that." said Dudek.
In retirement. Dude k explains. " You fi-

m~esqui Iime [apsnffi

Throughout US 's 5Bsqulcentennlsl celsbration, the Re-

porter will offer a series of
hfstorfcal articles describing
the people and events that
have Shaped the university
during its 150 years.

Women's Club~· 50-year history of
service to UB and the WNY community
May 1, 1946: The place was Norton Hall, and it was the site of
the first official meeting of a new group, The Women's Club of
the University of Buffalo. Dues were set at $1 and Mrs. Heriry
TenEyck Perry was elected its first president with Mrs. Samuel
P. Capen, wife of the Chancellor, as honoiary president. At the
close of the first year, the club had 301 paid members.
One of ns first major service efforts was a Relief Project to
aid needy faculty bVerseas; during the next three years, 736
boxes of food and clothing were sent from Buffalo. (A col) eague from Japan wrole Io ask that a pair of s11o!3s be divided
and mailed separately because there was fear that a whole
pair would be stolen).
When a UB faculty member attended the first European conference following World War II, one of the European delegates
heard thai someone was there from the University of Buffalo.
He reported that if h weren't for the women's clut?. he would
not hav&amp;been able to anend ... the club had sent the very suit
he was wearing , the only one he had.
"He was tall and slender so we knew who had given II to
us." wrote Jessie Puffer, honorary president, 1956-57, wife of
Claude Puffer, acting Chancellor. "The chairman of the English
Dept .. TenEyck Perry, was also very tall and slender."
The club continued to expand its community service activities, and in its fourth year, established a student loan fund to
honor Mrs. Samuel P. Capen. With her gift of $100 and proceeds from other club activnies, the Grace W. Capen Loan
Fund reached $700 in 1950, evolving into the current Grace
Capen Award Fund.
Anne Brody, a member since 1954, writes, "Starting with a
$100 conlribution by Grace Capen, we now have endowed
funds and fund-raising the! have provided awards and assisIance for more than 2,CXXl students and support .. .funding for
50 Grace Capen and financial awards yearly."
Whal else has the club done? ll's played an important role in
myriad community organizations and projects as well as its
own. UB Women's Club members have: Worked for public
television; for the Buffalo VA hosphal; World Hospitality (now
the Council of International Visitors); held fashion shows, craft
showS, flower sales, elegant balls and produced cookbooks
for scholarships and educational projects; assisted at World

Profesaor Mel Mrs. Claude Puffer, left, wfth· Chartcellof end Mrs. Cllflord Fumas. Mrs. Puffer wae
honorary president from 1956-57. Mrs. Fumas was
honorary ldent from 1954-66.
Games and Empire State Games; volunteered as guides for
Junior League Showhouse; celebraled international friendship
with m!JSical performances, exhibits, gounnet cooking activities; located host families for foreign studenls; planted trees;
published a guidebook to Eluffalo; tutored reading; as well as
fostering friendships enriching the university community and
their own lives.
Janet Fedor, president during the Celebrate 50! observance, issues a personal invitation to members of the UB community to take part in the activities of the club: "I have the
honor and the privilege of serving as president and I intend Io
enjoy it. I invite all our members and their guests to join the celebralion. Do you know anyone who may like to join or rejoin
ourclubf"
.
Carol Greiner, wife of UB Presidenl William R. Greiner and
the honorary president. says: "For me. The Women's Club was
first and foremost , the key to bringing the university family and
the Greiner family together. We learned a lot, we made many.
many friends who are still important to us today. Bill and I have
always been proud to be a part of the service to the community allarge that The Women's Club provides."

Source: Celebrate 50! Commemorative booklet

nally have all the time you want to do the
things you want to do . The whole secret is:

simply go ahead and do them."
He recommends planning so you can maximize the time you spend doing things you
enjoy. And he strongly suggests factoring in
time for physical fitness. "I work out at the
Bally Fitness Center three or four times a
week." he says. " II helps me feel better to do
everythi ng else I do, and I even run into-other
retin:es from UB there. I.t's a pleasant way to
see fanner colleagues or meel new friends...
UB ' s Emeritus Center in Goodyear Hall is
another venue Dudek uses to socialize with
fonner colleagues. One Emeritus Center program. " Rev Up," coordinates vol unteer retirees with needs ofcampusevents. " Through the
Emeritus Ce nter. you can usher at home football games. evenLS at Slee Hall or get in volved
in other community projects," says Dudek.

Electronic forum
speeds access
to research
The people who made the information superhighway a reality for everybody else now
have a user-friendly , electronic method for
accessing research in their own discipline.
Ironically. while computer scienti sts developed the technologies ihat made the information superhighway possible, they have not had
an efficient. electronic method for exchanging
technical reports. These reports. submitted at
the discipline's many oonferences. often are the
soun:e of the holtesl research findings in the field
But it can take as long as two years before papers
are published. Previous efforts to make the
reports available electronically were unwieldy.
The new forum is called NCSTRL. the
Networked Computer Science T echnical
Repon Library. prono unced ·Ancestra l,· so
na med in the hope that it will help to in spire
fuwre generati ons of digital libraries.
With NCSTRL. au thors are able to post
their repons and co lleagues all o ver the
world will have immed iate access to them
by connecting to hup://www .ncstrl.org.
"NCSTRL will provide the widest possibl e exposure for research res ults. whil e
compute r sc ientists in government a nd industry labs as well as graduate students and
even undergraduates will be able to call up
research resu lts not yet avai lable in printed
fonn ... said Alan Sel man. professor and chair
o f computer sc ience at UB and a member of
the team that c reated NCSTRL.
The NCSTRL projec t has grown rapidly
from the experimental digi tal library e ffo n s
undenaken duri ng the past few years. which
are the re sult of projects fuoded by the Advanced Research Projects Agency !ARPA)
and the National Science Foundation.
NCSTRL was developed by a team from UB.
Cornell UQiversity. Xerox Corp.. the Univer.;ityof
Southern California. Stanford Uni versity. Old
Dommion Uni versity. Universil)• of Virginia.
Virgi nia Tech and government ageocies.
"NCSTRL is not prim aril y about tec hnology." said Barry Le iner. associate director of ARPA ·s Informat ion Technology
Office . " It 's abo ut creating a new ca pabilit y
in th is cou ntry and bui ldin g the organizational and po licy framework to support iL"
Selman poin ted out that for computer SC Ience researc hers. particularly those at colleges
that do not have a strong researr h tr.ldlti on. or
who work in indusli)'. such a --ei"\' JCe will be
in vaJuable . Users can search b) author. title or
keyword, bringing up wel l-fonna ned. read ableabstract'i ;md paper.-.. whu:hcan be v1ewed
one page a1 a t1me or all the pages at once . The
reports may then be downloaded .
To conlributc to NCSTRL. ~.:omputer Sl:l ·
ence de partmen ts and research labs may down load software over the network at no cost. Once
software is installed. it takes minutes for author.-.
to post fonnaned papers to the libr.ll)'. UB
computer scientists who wish to post computer
science technical repons to NCSTRL can con·
tact Alan Selman at645-3180ext. 10·1.

�11111111

6

........-yaz. ~ v..... u. -- u

·rhe Country's Best Heart Doctors .·
published in the March 1ssue of
Good Housekeeptng magazine.
L Nel.on Hopldna, professor and
chair of the Department of
Neurosurgery, was listed under
neurosurgeons . .lohn Ricotta, professor of surgery, was listed under
vascular surgeons.

UB Women~ Club Honored
Janet Fedor. ten. and Marilyn Ciancio are shown with certificates
they received on behalf of the UB Women's Club. The awards
were presented Feb. 19 in Alumni Arena, honoring the group for
1ts contributions of scoreboards, equipment and bleachers for
the Tennis Center renovation . The funds were raised during the
World University Games Extravaganza.
WOODS, -IGHT NAMED
ASSISTANT DIRECTORS
OF UB PUBLIC SAFETY

• 12/8." a roving African-Caribbean
path band founded and led by
ethnomusicologist Charlie Ketl. assoctate professor of Amencan Studtes

John Wood• and Dougl••
Wright have been named ass•stam

a1UB

d•rectors •n the UB Department of
Pubhc Salf:\IY
A 22-year veteran ol the department. Woods w1U be 1n charge of patrol serv1ce He had been servmg as
act1ng ass•stant d•rector Woods
holds a master 's degree tn soc•al sctences !rom UB and a bachelor's degree •n sociology from Northeast
lOUISIBOB UmvetSIIy He jOIOBd the
department as a patrol oll•cer and
most recenlly had been 1nvotved •n
develop•ng the commun•ty pollctng
and spec1al programs He served as
1ntenm director of pubhc safety at the
State Untverslty of New York at New

BURDICK PRESID£HT.£U:CT

Paltz'" 1989
Wnght. a former pollee ch•el of
Gary. Ind., and forest Hill. Texas.
JOins the US department. where he
will be tn charge of spectal events
ptanntng and coordtnatmg , tnctudmg
cnme prevention and other spectal
asstgnments
Wnght •s a former Chief deputy
wtth the Tarrant County Poltce De·
panment tn Ft Worth and a pohce
sergeant wtth Texas Chnshan Untver Stty H~ holds an assoc•ate's degree
tn crtmtnaljusttce from Tarrant
County Jumor College and a
bachelor's degree from the Catilorn•a
Graduate School of Technology

UB PROFESSOR WINNER

OF CHIU COOKOFF
Members of the US laculty. stall, student bOdy and alumnt helped
Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center
celebrate tiS zany annual Chdt
Cookoll on Sunday. Feb 11
Ftrst pnze 1n the cookoll's ·conceptual Chtli" category went to
Luclnd• Finley, UB professor of
law. who won for her "Patakt Chllt • 11
conststed of an empty bowl, whtch
she described as "ftlled " wah the
governor's support lor the atts Fmley
beat ou t several other contenders tn
her category tncludtng a gfowtng
bowl of tafktng chtll and a fnghtentng
chocolate tee cream chth
Four otthe 12 fudges were from
UB Mtke Bnll . protessor ol Arcn•tec
ture and Ptann•ng. Masam Atexts
DeVeaux ass•stant professor ot
Ameocan Studies . Pat Donovan semor edt tor . News Serv•ces. and Law
School alumna Barbara Kavanagh,
newly elec ted at-large member of the
Buffalo Common Counctl
The cookoll took on a carntval atr
courtesy of the hOI. brassy beat of

OF ANESTHESIOLOGY SOCIETY
J•mea P. Burdick, clintcal asses·
tant professor at the US School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sctences.
has been tnstalled as presidentelect of the New York State Soccety of
Anesthesiologists
Otrector of anesthes•a servtces at
Mtltard Ftltmore Suburban Hosprtal,
Burdtck ts chair of the quality assur·
ance committee lor anesthesta at the
US medtcal school
A diplomate of the Amencan
Board of AnesthesiOlogy . he also
serves on the board of the New York
State Department ol Health's Of! ice
of Professional Medtcal Conduct.
Burdtck. a graduate of the US
medical school, tS a member of many
·proless•onat organizations tncluding
the Amencan Soctety of Anesthesiologists. the International Anesthes•a
Research Soctely and the Amencan
Soc•ety of Reg tonal Anesthesia
MUSIC FROM CHINA
PERFORMS AT UB FEB. 21
Music From China. a virtuoso traditional Chinese Instrumental ensemble
which played at UB two years ago. •s
returning to Buffalo and will per101'"m
Monday, Feb. 26 at 8 p .m In Batrd Recital Han on the North Gampus. The
concert is free and open to the public
The ensemble . which played to
acclaim at the opening of the Cht·
nese painting exhibtlton at the UB
Center for the Arts. now returns at
the tnvttation of the Arts in Educatton
lnstttute of Western New York lor a
week-long tour of local schools The
lnstttute and the UB Music Depart·
ment are co-sponsoring Music From
Chtna's appearance at UB to celebrate the Chtnese New Year and to
show appreciatton for the large number of Chtnese students and scholars
at UB
Established performers tram
ma•nland Chtna and from the U S
are part ot the ensemble whtCh wtll
present a repertotre of tradtttonal and
contemporary Chtnese mus•c

MEO SCHOOL FACULTY
USTED AMONG COUNTRY"$

BUT HEART DOCTORS
Two faculty members otthe School
of Medtcine and Biomedtcal Set·
ences have been named to a ltst of

A slide tour of the 150-year history of
UB. truth-telling and deception in ev·
eryday life. an investigation of the
paranormal and a tour of East
Aurora's Roycroft Inn will be top+cs
lor lhe UB Senior Alumni Programs
set for this spring.
The schedule:
• 8honnle Fl....,...., UB archfv\st for 28 years. wilt present 150
years of UB's development and traditions at noon on Tuesday, March 19.
in the Center for Tomorrow on the UB
Nonh Campus.
• ·Mysteries· including the socalled ·alien autopsies· in the tate
1940s, the Shroud of Turin and the
giant Nazca drawings in Peru wilt be
explored by .loe Nickell, during a
presentation to be given at noon on
Thursday, April 18, in The Center for
Inquiry, t310 Sweet Home Road.
Amherst Nickell is a senior research
fellow of the Committee for the Scientific lnvesttgation of Clatms of the
Paranormal {C ISICOP) . The Ol'"ganlzauon investigates, from a scientific
vtewpoint. claims of ghosts and other
mysterious phenomena.
• Truth-telling and deception in
ordinary life will be the topic of UB
Professor O.vld A.. Nyberg, lor the
noon luncheon to be held on Tuesday , May 14, in the Center for Tomot'row. Author of a book on deception.
Nyberg teaches philosophy in the
Graduate Schoof of Education. He
will discuss his fascinating and complex theory that telling the truth is
morally overrated and that deceptton
IS human nature.
• A tour of East Aurora's Roycroft
Inn, buill in 1897 by the late writerphilosopher Elbert Hubbard. and the
Roycroft Museum will be held at
noon on Wednesday, June 19 Lunch
wilt be served in the Roycroft Library ,
followed by a speech and slide pre·
sentalion by Donald H. Dllyer, a
1977 UB graduate and Town of Aurora historian After the program . a
walking tour will begin .
FOf more informauon and regtstration. call the UB Office of Alumn• Relations at 829-2608

St{ftl

"'m" -.loa
pdalltlfml41"• lbird tleCiioo,
u4
lavestiJI&amp;:"For the preeent time all of ~be"'! elecuonk: ~
ore available to Web surnn at no ciwF, but 11011e of tbcm plamise
to do 10 illdcfiDilely.
Perbapl the most exciting onliDeDCwspaperofferingtodaleis The
New York Time• electronic edition. Available at '*ltp:l/
www~ or via NewsLiDk, The New Yort '1'ilw.r offen
you many ooliDeoptioos. Fer example, rrocNew Yort 'l'illle.rjunkics
can. view the IICIIIaiiiCaiiDCd front poae of the print version:to select
stories to Jead or can select from a listing of the beadlioea from the
front page. 1be following sections ore offered electronically:
Cybea"'unes, Politics, Editorials/Leuers, Op-Bd, Arts and Leisiue,
Travel. Real Eswe, Job Marlcet. and Diversions (crossword puzzles
and other games). Popular features such as "The Science Tunes"" ore
promised in the near future, perhaps by the time this column goes to

press. Each of these sections ~ts anicles from the present day's
edition as well as selected articles from the previous six days. "The
Real Estate and Job Market sections provide a search engine to assiSI
users in identifying classified listings of interest.
The New Yort Times electronic edition takes full advantage of
Internet functionality. Links to other Internet sites are featured in
context of selected articles and e-mailing capability is exploited to
its fullest by offering readers the ability to post comments and
questions to topical forums. There are two types of forums: general
and feature. General forums allow readers to interact via e-mail on
a wide range of topics from the Arts to the Whitewater controversy.
Feature forums are moderated by hosts who frame questions and
encourage discussion. The forum on ·The Press and Politics.. is
hosted by longtime televis ion correspondent Marvin Kalb who is
presently the director of the Shorenstein Center on the Press at
Harvard University, for example.
Electronic newspapers are fun to read (and interact with) but
they are oflimited value to the scholarly researcher. Members of the
university communi ty are reminded that NEXIS/LEXIS. the larg·
est full text database of newspapers and other periodicals in the
world with text goi ng back years (rather than days). is available for
curricular use in Lockwood Library and the Undergraduate Library. Although lacking the convenience of being available via the
Web. the richness of NEXIS/LEXIS makes it well wonh the trip
into the library !
For information on connecting to Newslin/c. and The New York
Times at the above listed URL.s via your UB e-mail account, contact

O BITUARIES

Hamid Basiri, graduate
student, Pathology
Services were held Feb 19 lor Hamtd
Basiri , a graduate student in the Pathology Department. School of MediCtne and Biomedtcal Sciences Bastri
dted Feb t31rom cancer He was 35.
A nahve of Iran, Bastrt recetved hts
B.S degree tn medtcat technology at
UB. and the M S degree 1n natura!
sc1ences !rom US 's Roswell Park
Graduate 01v1Ston He was pursutng a
Ph D degree at the ume of his death
Bastn's thes1s work was focused on
tdenhlytng and characterizing the natu·
ral ktller cell subset that was responSible for specchc transplantation restslance •n m1ce In Apnl. 1994. he was e,
speaker •n a sympostum at the Federa·
tton of Amencan Soc1et•es lor Expeu·
mental BtoJogy 1n Anahe•m. Calif
Hts work was published in 1995 1n the
Journal of Immunology. a teadtng J(&gt;Urnat
tn the held. Wl!h Bas•ri as first author. He
tS survtved by his wife , Christine
Ambrosone . a postdoctoral research
associate in the Department of Social
and Preventive Medtcine at UB.

rhe Computing Center Help Desk ar 645-3542. For information on
using
NEX/SILEXIS,
conracr
Don
Harrman,
unldon@acsu.buffauudu, Lockwood Library. 645-2817.

-Gemma DeVinney and Don Hartman , University libraries

Call for Honorary Degree Nominations
The University-wide Honorary Degree Committee is soliciting normnations
of exemplary person' tn the fields of pubhc affairs. the sc1ences. humanities and arts. scholarshtp and educa!lon. business and philanthropy and
soctal services to be constdered for an honorary degree from the State Um·
varsity of New YOfk.
The honorary doctorate cs the highest honor the State Un•versity can be·
stow lor meritonous and outstanding servtce to humanity at large
Eltgibility for nomination is restricted to persons of state. natiOflat or tnternational stature. Nominees who have made extraordinary contnbuuons to
UB also will be considered if they also have made s1gntltcant comrtbutton to
areas beyond US and the Western New York reg1on
Nomtnahon forms may be obta•ned from Un1vers11y Advancement and
Development , 503 Capen Hall , or by calling 645-2925 NormnatK&gt;nS must
be submilted to the Honorary Degree Committee .. 503 Capen Hall. Buffalo
NY t4260 on or be!OI'"e the March 16, 1996 deadhne
Nomination forms also are avatlable at the followtng campus locat1ons
Faculty Senate Office. 543 Capen Hall
Health Science Library (administrative area). South Campus
lockwood Library (information kiosk near the circulation desk)
Office of Student Life . 150 Student U01on.
Office of the Provost. 562 Capen Hall.

�7

SportsView

~

r
I

• ROYALS TO HOST MIDCONI1NENT TOURNEY
TICket prices, dates and limes have been set for the 1996 Mi&lt;H:oolinent Women's Basl&lt;etban Tournament to be hosted by UB. The
tournament, which cames with Han automatic berth In the NCAA
Tournament to the winner, will ba held March 7-!lat UB's Akrnnl
Arana. The UB Royals wera chosen as the host taam by vi~ue o1
thetr 10-3 first-ptace record as of Feb. 13.
The tournamet1tlips olf March 7 with games at 1 p .m .. 3 p .m ..
5 :~ p.m. and 7:30p.m . Semiflll8Js are March 8 with games at 5
and 7 p .m . The charnpoonship game wiU ba at 3 p .m . March 9 .
Ttckats for all games are $5, aduns: $2, children 12-and-rnder
and $1 for
Mid-Continent institution students with prope&lt; 1.0. All
ltckelil1g will ba general admission. The UB licl&lt;el office is open 11
a.m.-3:30 p .m . Monday lhroogh Friday or licl&lt;eiS can be charged by
calling 645-6666.
Pamgs for the 10&lt;.mamant will be relaased March 3.the day the
men's ~ IOUTllrnenl begins In Moline. 11. Allhougllthe Roy·
afs have horne C01M1 advar1age lhroughotA the.,..,..,_, seedlngs
wi1 be delerrrW1ed on fiAt conference play. The AcJyals seek to become
the fYst UB wanan's- ,_,In school t1s1ory 10 advMce 10 the
NCAA Tcunamart. which begins March 15 81 carJllUS sites.

• U8 OFFICIAlLY JOINS MBIQ FOUR~
The UB men's basketball program became full-fledged members ol
the "Big Fou..- last week in a Pf9SS conference announcing their inclusion along with Canisius. Niagara and St. Bonaventure In WNY

new Marine Midland Arena

next season. Nelson TO'NflSend , US's 01rector of Ath~ics. was on
hand fOf the signing ot a fiVe--year deal among the four WNV OM·
sion I schools. &amp;nee returning to ON l play in the 1991·92 season.
the BuHs have played Niagara seven tiiTI8S, wmning four games,
and Cantsius ttvee times (0-3), tnc:ludtng an 82-751oss at Koesslef
Center this year . The Bulls have played St. Bonaventure once stnce
returning to Otv. I play, a 74-641oss tn Olean Dec. 12

• UB TO PLAY SYRACUSE NEXT YEAR
The UB Bulls basketball team will host national powerhouse Syracuse Unrversity al Manne Midland Arena next December . Nelson
Town
has announced. UB will take on the Orangemen as pan
ol a
adef Dec. 10 at Marine Midland Arena. The Bulls will
be a
of three doubleheaders tn the new downtown arena next
. Including games against local rivals Canisius and Nl8gara.
re very excited about the opportumty to host a team the canacuse University." said Townsend -we feel this game tS
another
pie of the growth of our program. in pan1cular. and
WNY bas
ball•n general. These are the types of games that can
bnng the ex itement ol college basketball back to our area •
Sa1d US
h nm Cohane. "For us to play Syracuse away !rom
the Carrier
is a b1g thing lor us I th•nk that game will help
contribute greatly to the resurgence of basketball in WNY •
The Bulls have not played Syracuse "nee the 1975-76 season
The UB women's basketball team will alSO play Syracuse next

Alunvu Alena Natatorium wfll be the site of the Md-Conttnent Conference Men's and Women's SWNTl Champtonshtps th.s week. Prehmonary C00'4l&lt;!lition begons at 11 a_m Thursday lhro.Jflh Saturday
With finais each even1ng at 7 p .m.
Bah the Bulls and AcJyals tool&lt; 10 repeat as teague champoJns The

Bulls ..,_heed coach Budd Terrrw1 have v.m SIX consecutM1 conference crowns as rnerrtlets the Upper New Vorl&lt;. East Coast and ModCononent Conferences The Royals will be 1n searc h d !her ttwd
for heed coach 0orso Rayrolds

a

suave"""""

• WR£STUNG

an

college basketball doubleheaders at the

rellculders Wl1h eogl'd.

~ • MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWIMMING

season. The Royals play at Syracuse Dac. 22: the Orangewomen
will return toAknvll Arena dunng the 1997-96 season. 'We're very
exerted about the opportunity to play another Big East school,· saJd
UB coach Sal Buscaglia. "We've had success this season by baatIOQ teams from the Big Easl. the Big Wast and Atlantic 10 and
would like to see a yearly rivalry evolve with Syracuse •

• WOMEN'S BASKEI'BAU
The Royals roUed to their t 4th consecutiVe Win at Alumn1 Arena with
a 70-43 pasU&gt;g o1 EaSlsm Illinois Saturday night. Brema Ooty led

in-

the way for UB with 15 points,

an in the first han. Ooty pulled down rove

retx:ulds and had a pair a SWats. Claissa Garcrer was the &lt;:rli Olher
Royal
figLfes. scoring 11 pohs and leading lhe _,with """"
rebclrds. Nicola- and Mel!rie Vagal added nroe points.
The 43 points allowed by the Royals were the fewestlhos season
as UB held the Panthers to 25.5 percent r181d goal shootmg. The Roy·
aJs lead the Mid-Continent Conference and are ranked etghth natiOnally In r181d goal defense at 35.6 percent.
Ear1ier in the week. UB locked up the host Site for the Mld.{:onttnent Conference Tocxnament wrth a 84-45 Win at ChiCago State. Four
Royals scored in double figu'es B - and Megan McCray led
with 13 points aach. 0oty and AJocoa Kollmorgen had 11

The &amp;Jis scored an East Coast Wrestl.ng ~lion vctory With
their 37-3 win at Hotstra Saturday Fot.w Bults scored mapr vctcnes
QMOQ UB their SIXth dual , _ Wlr1 olthe season. equatong the number ol dual meet victones ., the previcl.Js frve seasons
UB was led by Bnan Oowdall(118 pounds). Jeremy McVoge (134)
Rob Pavis (142) and John Stutzman ( 150) to grab an early 2().{) edge
CNer lhe FlyiOg Outctvneo and secure the match 'llhouglll wr guys
cane out and wreslled a very good ,__ • said rorst year coach Jm
8eichner The Bulls sweptltYae matches Sunday. downing Boston
College (35-6). Massachusetts-Lowell (26.£) and Cenvat Connecucut State (24- 10) to up thetr record to 9-4 The Bulls are now 5-2 1n
ECWA dual matches Jason Wartonge&lt; ( 126) scored ...., map- dec&gt;
SIOflS crt the weekend Md IS 31-4 CMWaJ thes season He has noc lost
snceDac. 30andhasOUISCOI'adhoslasl13opponentS 152-47 The
Buls. llldefeated i"t !her' 1asl so: CUll meets. have cuscored their opp&gt;
nents 166-49 They host ~ at AJurrn Arana Saturday a1 3 p.m

• INDOOR TRACK • FJELD
Thorn Kaye qualifiecl for the tndoor and outooor IC4A Champtonshlps with a school record long Jump of 23-5 5 at the Kane InvitatiOnal at Cornell UmvefSity Mtke Sp1tz hn1shed second tn the pole
vault competition at 14-9 Both squads are 1n acoon th•s weekend tn
the MK1-Cont1nent Conference Champ10nstnps al Eastern lllti"''IOS.
Thursday through Saturday The Royals. defendtng conference
champions. have not k&gt;st a Mid-Con champ!OI'lSh•p stnce pn•ng the
league 1n 1994. They haw won two CfOSS country champtOOShlps as
well as last season's indoor and outdoot crowns
- Ted Wasko. Sports lnformatiCJ() Office

• MEN'S BASKEI'BAU
Eastern Illinois shot a blistering 10-ol· 191rom beyond the threepoint line and rallied from a second..flall deficit to defeat UB 64-61 .
in a Mid-Continent Conference game Saturday mght at Alumnt
Arena. The Butts (13-9. lQ-5) were led by M1ke MartJnho's 17 potnts
while Bernard Wheeler added 14 and Stx steals Buffalo feU beh1nd
20-9 in the first seven minutes but rallied to Uatl at halfume. 31-29
The Bulls hekj a 57-521ead With 4 18\eh after a pa1r of free mrows
by Maninho but they managed only lour more potnts the rest of the
way Rick Kaye hit a pair of thr.ee-potnlers to put Eastern llh001s up
58-57 before UB tied it on a free throw by Leonard Tangishaka Eastam lllirois took the lead tor good on a layup by Enc Frankford and
Jol'my Hemandez'ltYae-poonte&lt; Wl1h 1
teh was the WUV110Q basket
for the Panthers Martinho lied hiS careef high w.lh 35 points to teed the
Butts past Oucago State 7!HX! earlier " t h e - Aoben Harns was
lhe orYy other Bull n double figures wnn 15 porus. Tangoshaka led lhe

UPCOMING UB HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS

nwadlij; S&amp;lu..,, Feb. D-24
Men's &amp; Women's Mid-Continent
Conference Swunm1ng ChampiOf\stup

11 a .m &amp; 7 p m
at Alumn1Alena
Natatonum

Slllurdlly, Feb. 24
Wrestling vs. Duquesne

-oo

3 p m at Alumn•
Arana

T'ueedlly, Feb. 27
Men ·s BaSketball vs Cornell

730pm at
AlummArena

CALENDAR
CONTI NUED

FR OM

PAGE 8

Taped by WB FO 88.7 FM for broadcast
the following Sunday al 4 p.m.

lockwood. Nonh Campu5. 3-5 p.m.

South Campus. 8 p.m. $6. $8 .

ur.w-....,.

·~ ---~­

n...ter

F1uropolymcr Surface Cbe:mistry a nd
Ce:U Adhesion ror Tilsut: Eagintt:rlne.
Prof. Joseph Gardella. 12 1 Cooke. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

l nte:rmed&amp;.te Sien Lanpage: Sem inar,
Diane Curthoys. Dirccl Experience
Melhod (OEM). Wednesdays through
April 17. 7-8 : 1S p . . m. To n:gisler. call
64S-6 125 .

ur.w-...op
Drlvin &amp;To the Back or Beyond, Paul
Geology-focused lravelogue5..
Wednesdays through March 13. 7-8 :30
p.m. To register, call 645 ·6 125.

G~nwa l d .

- C o l . _ l um
Scalar C urvatu~ Ri&amp;idity. Prof Maung
Mi n-oo, McMasten Univ. 103
Diefendorf. South Campus. 4 p.m

Tbt Re:suraen~ or F u ndame ntalism,
Pastor Roger Ruff. 7:30-9:30 p.m. To regisler. call 645-6 12S.

ntnu

No Mo~ Sweets For You- nioe:
an d videos •bout be:ioc • lone. Wo rk by
Nancy Andrews, Kristen Stroltmo nn,
Laura Nix, Jeani ne Oleson, Leah Gilliam,
Hellen Mirn, Elisabeth Subri n, Sadie
Bennin g, Ceci li a Dougherty. Screening
Room, Cen1er for lhe Aru. North Campos. 7:30p.m. Free.

___

Mulllc

UB Wind E nxmbte:, Sarah McKain. con·
dUCior. Slec. North Campus. 8 p.m. $3.

..,

Employees• Reli~me nt System (ERS).
I02 Crorts. North Campus. To regis1er,
ca ll Penonnel Services. 645-2646,1.101
or 102

... . ...

Sbltlatlca Col._lu,.
Noo parame:tric Two-Sample T ests ror
Survival Data lncorporallng Longit udinal Covariatu, Prof. Bruce Craig,
Univ. of Wisconsi n. Madison. 246 Cary .
Sodth Campus. 4 p.m.

ur.w--.o
~ Support G roup, Bar·
ban U..Ukc&lt;. Thundays lhrough April II .
4:)0..5:30 p.m. To register. call64S-6125.

Art Opeoo....
Digital Mtssagu: ViJion, Revisio n a nd
Precision. O pening receplion. 5-7 p.m.
Communication design and computer an
show: throug h Man::h 14.

ur.w-...op
T ' ai Chi ror Bcginne::n, Ron Ingalsbe.
Tuesdays and Thursda.ytl., through May 2
5:30-6:30 p.m. To register. caii64S-612.~

.UCITWoft.ollop

ECAC C hamp io nships. Alu mm Arena
Nata10rium. North Campus. All day.

c-opul--.y

SociaJ SKurity Adminislration-Be:nt:fils Overv~w. Butler Auditorium,
Farber. South Campus. 4-6 p.m. Group
infonnation seSJiion. To register, call Personnel Services. 645-2646, a lO t or 102.

c-... a...l _

Ne ural Cardiae Stunning, Prof. Oav1d
Guuerman, Umv. of Iowa. 301 Biome&lt;h·
cui Research Building South Campus
tUOa.m.

Introdu ction to UN IX. 6 -8 :30 p.m. To
register , cal l Academic Services. Computing and Information Technology User
Liaison. 645-3540
Art~ ..

Noon- I p.m. To register. call 645-6t25

Art at the End of tiw Century, Adnan
P1per. Albright-Knoll Af1 Gallery Auduorium. 8 p.m. S3. $4 ; UB facu lry. slllff. students, Albnght memben. free . Co-sponsored by University at Buffalo An
Gallery/Resurch Center in An • C'ullui"C'

Ubrwy Reception

Mulllc

The: Ua£cy or Arth ur A. Schombu rg.
Eahibit cominues through March 15

d~w

ur. w-...op
Em pioyH Al!bUin~ ProEram T nlnin g.

Paulint: Oliveros. ro mpose:r , with AnIHut.sch and Don M e:u.. Allen

10 a.m.· 5 p.m. . Wednesday lhrough Fn d.ay, 10 a.m.- 8 p m.; and Saturday: II
a.m.-8 p.m. Admiss1on tli fn:t-

A J - In U .,.._ell
Leonardo Drew · s site-spec1f1c mslall alion " No. 45-A ·· was designed for the
L1ghtwell Gallery m 1he Cen1er for the
Arts. Nonh Campus. and no w 1s lodged
there through Dec: 20

Photo• of churchea

--~­

Re:aulltory AspecU or Pharmaceutical
Rnearc:b and Development, Mario L.
Rocci Jr., Ph .D. 508 Cooke:. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

.._._--· --- -...
ur.w-...op

The: Sbot.m• k e:r 's Prodigious Wire:,
Play by Lon:a, with song and danee;
MariaS . Home, director, Linda
Swiniuch, choreographer. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. Nonh Campus
8 p.m. $2.50. $5.

OPENING EXHIBITS

DICJt8l ert

MDigital Messages: VISion. ReviSion, and
Prt:cision ... a show by Conunun.catJons
Design and Computer An smdents and
faculty, opens Feb. 29 with a reccpt•on
from 5-7 p.m. in the Art Oepartmenl Gal ·
lery, Center for the Arts, North Campus.
The dlow, which is up through March 14 ,
presents "images and words of wit, canmness and folly in various digital media ~

-....-....

CONT1NUINQ EXHIBITS

"Perfect World," a group show, feaiUre s
wort of Vincent Shine. Laurn S1em. Grt·
gory Crewdson, David Naz.10. and
Ronald Jones. through March 15m the!
University An Gallery loca1ed m 1ht
Center for the Aru, Nonh Campus Gal ·
lery houn are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m .
Wednesday through Sa1urday. and NoonS p.m . Su nday Adm•ssion IS frte!

T.._.tbyftalltanb
"Dumping Sight: Umdscape/l.Andscopc .··
an exhibil by Saloru Takahashi , ~ ~ t~ ex hibil through March 17 10 the Uni\Cr511)
At\ Gallery, Cenrer for the Ans, N!Xlh
Campus. The exhibit I!&gt; "a comple!x ILl'(' hi
leciUral -sculp!untl work cons1sung of
1wo separate! revolving doors made o f re ·
fleclive glass w1th fish tank:. liS c c1hnil ~ ··
Takahashi is a Japanese an1s1 ln·mg 111
New York Cuy Gallery houn; art"
Wednesday through Saturday . 10 J O
a.m -8 p m., and Sunday. Noun-5 r 111
AdnmiSion ll&gt; fr«

"Buildmg and Landscape : Byzantme
Church Bui ldings m Greece," a show of
pho1ograph1c works by Jonas Lehrman.
IS on v1ew thro ugh March 8 m the James
Dyen Gallery, 33S Ha yes Hall , South
Campus

Black Hlato oy M oatlt
·1lJe: Legacy of Arthur A . Scho mburg"
1s on display through March 15 in
Lockwood Memorial Library. Nonh
Campus . The travding exhibilion of
photognaphs and reproductions of manuscripts uplores the g lobal his1ory and
culture or black people, whose heritage
Schomburg ded•caled his life 10 pre~rv ·
mg . lbe uhibit also traces tht evoluuon
of the Harlem -based resean:h center thst
bean h1 s name. lbe~ is a recep11on Feb
29 from 3 · 5 p,m 1n Lo d:wood

ArteiMWIMN
Tyrone Georg10u and James Pappas are
represented 10 the show "Wori:s by Afn .
can-Amencan ArtiSts from 1he Collecuon" through Apnl 13 m the Up-From
Gallery of lhe Burchfield-Penney An
Cen1er located •n Rockwell Hall on the
Buffalo State Co llege campus, I 300
Elmwood A\•e 1M exhib11io n has been
organ1zed to recogmu the achievement s
of Wcstem New York :~ni sts dunng
Blad. H1s1ory Month. Georg1ou has
thrct' small-scale photogr:tph and sculpture d1orama.s m the show; the co mpos•·
110n b) Pappas IS a Jazzy grnphite draw·
10g Burchfield hours are 10 a .m to 5
p.m .. Tuesduy through Saturday, and 1· 5
p.m .. Sunday Volumary a(lnuss1on 1s $3

--

ProgramrMr/Anlyst (SL-2; lnle:mal
Promolional Opportunity)-Schoo\ of
Engineering and Applied Sc1encd. Compu ter Serv•ccs Group. Postmg lfP-5021.
l nstruetion.l S upport Assislant (SL- 1\ Unlvenlly Libraries, Posting IP-6002
Lead Pro&amp;ra.mme r AnaJyst-Universuy
Libraries, Director's Office:. Posting
fP-6003. Star!' Assistant (SL-2; Interna l
Promo tional Opportunity) -Center for
the An s. Posting IP-6005 . Re:sld e:neC'
Ha ll DirHtor (SL-2; Internal Promotional O pportunity)·Residential L1fe .
Pos1ing IP-6006. Assistant Direc:t or or
Cou nseling (SL-5 ; lnltl'ldl Promotiona l O pportunity)-Coons.eling Center.
Post1ng *P-6007 . LHd Prognunmn
Anlyst (S L-3; Interna l P romo tional
O pportunity) ·Co mputing &amp;. lnfomuuion
Technology . Posting lfP -6008

Faculty
Assisla nt P rofe:s.&lt;OOr -Orai and MaJ.Jllofa.
c1al Surgery. Postmg lfF-6006 Senio r
A55 iSta nl fA~iate Libra r ianLockwood Memorial Library, Pos1mg
lfF-6007 Auoc:iate:fFull Prore:uor a nd
C h air -OrthodontiCS. Po stmg IF-6008
AMista nt Proressor-Compucer Sc•c:nce ,
Posung tF-6009

Re. . Proj e:c:t Sta ff Assoclate:· lkvelopment.
Posting •R ·95090 Rrse:art"h Trchn idan
11 -0phthalmology. Polillng fR -96004
Med ical TC'C'h nician II ·Soc•al &amp; Pre vcn ·
nve MediCine. Post•ng lfR ·9600b

Competitive c a. . .tfted Civil
a...vtce

FNall pelnt
Ncw painu ngs and draw1ngs by Waller
Prochownik are on v1ew through FC!b 23
m 1he An Dc:panment Gallery located m
t~ Center for the Arts. North Campus
The show is presen1cd on 1he occas1on of
Prochow nik ' s rt:lin:mcnt from the UB
Dept. of An Gallery houn; are Tuesda y.

on rape and sexual violence and how 10
end n " The best submissions. with photographs or the winnen. will be used for
a poster showing that "real men care
about endmg seaual violence "For informatiOn. contacl the Anti-Rape Task
Force. 405 Michael Hall. Sooth Campus.

... on,........_. conteat -.d •
-'•
The Ant1-Rape

Ta.~r.k

Force 11&gt; sporuonng
a contC'SI. "U8 Real Men," and InVI tes
men on campus co subm•t the1r · ·though~!&gt;

S«rt'tary I (SG - 11) Schnol o f Engl net.·r·
mg and Applied Sc n=nce!&gt;. Ln\e •~ 8777

To obtmn mo r~ mfo rmallon o:m j(•bs lulr'J
abf11·r. runtart Prnonnrl 5~n·" rx. ltJ.J
Cmfu flail To ohtmn mfonnouon on Rt'·
Ullrch ;obs. etmWrt !iponsort'd Pmgram.J
Pusonnd. 4 /6 Cmfu

�n.........,.......,........ ,......_......_... _......... ,_....._.....,......_.w....,... ,..._.

..,_...._. .......... ____ . ........,,....... .................................c......
~. UIIer.lla.,•.,.-(

spale

..........).O.FAX......,III.......U..

.S:30 p.m. To register, call 64.S:· ,
6125.

pus. 8-11 p.m. Free. Sponsored by

GSA.

Ufe Wocbllop
T'al C hi for Bql.a.Den, Ron

-·-

c:.rd._l__, c-...
Organi:utional MHiing. Tour of
labs 8·30. 10 a.m Oedicarion of
B1omedical Research Building
~~~ former CFS Addi110n), 10
am 301 810me(hcal Research
Bu1ldmg Sourh Campus. 8 30

Ingalsbe . Tuesdays and Thursdays, throogh May 2. 5:3()..6:30
p.m. To register, ca1164.S:.6 125.

-VHC)'cleiV
Manhattan Stria&amp; Quartet. Slee.
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. S4 , S.S, $8,

SID.

W...Uitoll
Su:tion VI WrestUn&amp;. Alumni
Arenl. Nonh Campus. 8 a.m.IOp.m.

ASCIT WCHUIIop
Introduction to Map~ 10 a.m.12:30 p.m. To register. call Academic Services, Computing and
lnfonnation Technology User Li·
aison. 64.5-3540.

ASCIT WCHUIIop
lntemel Rrsourus- PLACES
for UN IX Users. 10 a m.- Noon
To reg1 s1er, ca ll Acadcm1c SerVICe!!., Compulmg and lnformarum
Techno logy User L1a1son, 645 354{).

Med Scboo1 S...l
BiomedkallteRare.b Buildin&amp;Dedkatlon, Philip B. Wels. M.D .
C'hair. UB Council Alnum. B1omed1co l Eductuion Buddtng (lhe
o ld CFS -'\dd1110n). Sourh Cam rus 10 a.m. School of Medicme
and B10 mtd1CB I Sc1ences offi .
nalty o~ns us SesqUicenrennmJ
Celebral10n

............

MCC Swim Champioo.ships.
Alumm Arena Natato rium Nonh
Clllllpus . II a.m. and 7 p.m

MlcrollloloCJ
- _l_
B
l_otry

AdcktlonsStudleo
Wocbllop

ASCIT WCHUIIop

CannablJ Dependency, Donald
Rain. O~temen College. $60.
Sponsored by lnslilulC. for Ackhc·
lions Srudies and Training. For in·
rormation. call645· 6140.

- • - P I M n l...
Sodal Security Adminlstn·
lion-Benefits Overview. Confen:.nce Room. 'The Commons.
Nonh Campus. 7:30--9:30 a.m.
Group mfonnarion session. To
register. call Personnel Services,
645-2646. xlOI or 102.

lntrodudion to UNIX. 10 a.m. ·
12:30 p.m. To regiscer. call Academic Services. Compu1ing and
lnfonnarion Technology User Li aison. 645-3540.

...........

MCC Swim Championships.
Alumni Arena NaLatorium. Nonh
Campus. II a.m. anc:l7 p.m.

w...u...,
UB vs. Duquune. Alumni Arena .
Nonh Campus. 3 p.m .

TBA. Kinch Audirorium.
Children's Hospital. 8 a.m.

W...UI...

The Haemopbilus innueDD Initia tive: Sequendn&amp;, Assembly &amp;
Annotation of a 1.1Mb Genome. Prof. Joseph Merrick. 244
Cary . South Campus. 11 :4S a.m

-kbooiS...I
The Triumph of the Market :
What Does II Mean for Medicine? Step~n Schroeder. M.D ..
Robe:n Wood Johnson Found:srion. Also, ho norary doc:10ra1e of
K'ience degree awarded 10 Saxon
Graham, Ph.D., Prof. Emerilus .
Fhm Reading Room. Health Sci ences Library . South Cam pus.
) :30 p.m. School of Mc:dicine and
Bto medical Sciences orricially
opens irs Se.squicenlennial Cc:l-

-

cbrali o ~ ­

Section VJ Wrestling. Alumm
Arena. Nonh Campus. g a.m •
IOp.m.

FlbleM Fair
Health Screening. UB AT.
Alumni Arena. Nonh Campus .
10 a.m.- 3 p.m. $25 . To regisrer .
call R&amp;l Services, 645-2286

..........

MCC Swim Cham pionships.
Alumni Arena Natatorium. Nonh
Campus. II a.m. and 1 p.m.

Pbyk'Jgenies a nd the Evoludon
o r Geograpbkal Range in the
Old World Warblers. Prof.
Trevor Price, Univ. ofCaliromia,
San Diego. 121 Cooke. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m. Co-sponsored by
1he Gr.tduare Group in Evolutionary Otology and &amp;ology .

M-...UC. Col._lu•
Algebra of Time, Prof. F. WillIBm Lawvere. 103 Diefendorf.
Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.
~eutlc.as..IMr

Pho todynamk Therapy Wilb
Cationic: Dyes, Michae l lXny,
Ph.D. 508 Cooke. Nonh Campus.
4 p.m

-•11,.-m PI_,...

W...ultoll
NY Super Six Wnst.Una MeeL
Alumni Arena. Nonh Campus.
Sa.m.-4 p.m.

PoetryR-...
Prof. Carl Dennis, English.
Burchfield· Penney An Center,
Rockwell Hall , Buffalo Slale Col lege. 1300 Elmwood Ave. 2 p.m.
Free.

Oral BloiOCJ ...,.,_.
Dental Educalion: Through tbe
Students• Eyes-A Quantltalive
Analysis. Alan Gross. D.D.S. 21S
Foster. South Campus. Noon .

~

B~ISclenc••

at..,__.,

IMAGES AND WORDS of wit,.,...._-...,.~ a ......
Feb. 291n the Art~ Gallery.~ DeeiOI- Computao
Art -faculty ... . . _ t a d In ....... which 111111 thnMCtl Marcll14.

P-.utc-Roundo

...

-

........

VLS I CAD Resurcb a t UB: An
Overview, Prof. Srecjit
Chaknavarty. 14 Knox . No nh
Campus. 3 p.m.
C-otry Col._l••

Stermc:ontrol in Cydoaddltion
and Hydrometallation Reactions. Prof. Mark Lautens. Univ.
of Toronto. 215 Narural Sc1ences .
North Campus. 4 p.m.

--

~k-

Stability and Flu.ibility i.n Brain
Maps. Dr. Beverly Bishop. 2 10
Natural Sciences. Nonh Campus.
5 p.m.

lnle....uo..J Folk - •...
Dorotby Lewis, g uest teacher. All
lc:vels. 2 Diefendorf. South Cam -

ASCIT WCHUIIop
Data Convenion to UNIX via
Tape from other Platforms.
1:30-4:30 p.m. To register, call
Academic Services. Computing
and Information Technology U~r
Liaison, 64.S:-3S40.

-otry-Mltochoodriallmport and DegradaUon of Cytoc:h rome C in
Yeut, Prof. Fred Sherman. Univ.
of Rochester. 134B Farber. Soulh
Campus. 4 p.m.

-..-tP-..

Social Security Administratlon-Beoenu OverVIew. Conference Room, The Commons.
North Campus. 4-6 p.m .. and 7-9
p.m. Group infonna1ion session.
To register. call Personnel Ser·
vices, 64S-2646, xiOI or 102.

ASCIT WCHUIIop
lntroducUoato Sun XWlndowiDI Systems. 6-g p.m. To
regiscu. call Academic Services.
Computing and Information Technology User Liaison, 645-3540.

1'117*--

Ufe Wocbllop
Vqetariu Cooking, L1sa

-tlr-~

DeFrancc:sco. c~sponsored by
Gloria J_ Parks Community Cen·
ter. orr campus. ().7:30p.m. $3
m.:uerials fee . To regisrer. call

Retirtmnt lnfonuUon-Saflont.. K.PMG Peat Marwict. Center for Tomorrow. Nonh Campus.
4--6 p.m., and 7-9 p.m. To regisler.
call KPMG Peat Marwick, 854-

645-6125.
Public......,...........

Ufe WCHUIIop

Mondayslhrouab April 8. 6:3()..
8:30p.m. S2S deposir; $20 re·
funded upon satisfiCIOry comple·
lion of the program. For
informa1ion. call the Office of
Srudent Life. 150 Student Union,

645-6125 .
Ufe Wocbllop
ApplyiD&amp; tbe Principles of Sue:·
tusful People, Joseph Argenio.
Also March 4 and 11. 7-9 p.m. To
n:gister, can 645· 612.5.

Ufe Wocbllop
Latin Rhythm Dandn&amp; ror
Si.n&amp;te:s and Couples of AU Ages.
NiniLa_and Bjom Bogue. 8-9 p.m.
To register. eall645-6125.

1830.
Coffee Talk &amp; Tulia&amp;- .S·6:30
p.m. To register, cali645-612S .

Ufe WCHUIIop
Frab Start: How To Qull
Smokin1. 5:30-6:30 p.m. To register, cal l645-=6 125.

Ufe Wocbllop
T •ai Cbl for~ Ron
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays and Thurs·

-·

days. through M•y 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m. To register. tall 645oo612S .

Bulk vs.. CornelL Alumn1 Aren1.
Nonh Campus. 7:30p.m.

Ufe Wocbllop
BaUroom DaiKIDI: Polkas,
Rhel.nlanckrs, ObeRkJ &amp;
Wales, Ninita and Bjorn Bogue.
9- 10 p.m. To register. call 645-

6125 .

Retiremenl lnrormartoo
Sessions. KPMG Pear
Mllr\lo•ick . 104 Parker.
S()Uih Campus . 4·6 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m To regi ster,
ca ll KPMG Peat Marw•ck,

.....,_,._
lloperidooe--A Potential Ntw
Antipsyc.botk. Christine
Topolski . 248 Cooke. Nonh Cam·
pus. 8 a.m.

Ufe WCHUIIop
Penon.al Acbkvement. Noon·
l p.m. To register, call 645-6125 .

ASCIT Wocbllop

8S4- 1830
StatlaUca Colloquium
Extended Genualiud
Estimating Equations ror
C lustered Data. Prof
Damel Hall , Univ of Iowa.
246 Cary Soulh Campus

ASCIT Wocbllop
Introduction lo Matlab. I :304 p.m. To n:gislcr, call Aca&lt;kmic
Services, Computing and lnformarion Technology User Uaison.

~p. m .

645-3540.

Ufe Worttahop
Thesis{Dissertal ion Sup·
port Group, Barbara
Umikcr. Thursdays
rhrough April 11. 4:30-

Probla&amp; the Sbon-Raap()nler

StnctW"tS Ia Low·DiiHDSioaal
SntkoDdudon, Prof. Vi-Han
Kao. 220 Narural Sciences. North
Campus. 3:45 p.m.

AWMNI ARENA NATATORIUM Is home to M~l*rt
Conference Swtnvnlnc Chernplonahl.- Feb. 22-24.

Ufe WCHUIIop
Grouptblak: How To Avoid It,
Ed Brodka. 3:30-4:30 p.m. To
regisrer, cai164.S--6125

ta ud l•plic:atioaa for lluard
Evaluotloo, Dr. Ted U.t&gt;oaciL
Engineering SeismoiO&amp;Y Group
Canada Inc. 228 Narural Sciences.
North Campw. 3:30p.m.

utew--.
Ltvia&amp; Ot'fC. . puJ: What You

--·-..-.ocr
Ne&lt;d To Kaow. 3:30-4:30 p.m.
To register, caii645--612S.

D aeuitization la luuUn Secretion. Suzanne G . Laychock..
307 Hochstetler. North Campus.
4p.m.

~c:ono.lu•
Buffalo Lock DklloDary
Projcd, Ky HcrrWI. Bany Smith.
Jo hn Corcon.n . 684 Baldy. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

.........

-~~~-~
So&lt;lal Security Aulaloln-

tioa-lk-otftt.r Ovrrvtew. Con·
ferencc: Room. The Commons.
North Campus. 4-6 p.m .. and 7-9
p.m. Group information session.
To n:gister. call Personnel Services. 64.5· 2646. IIOI or 102..

Arcllltecbrre Lectllre
The PoliUcs of Rqion.al
Chance: blues ol GovtJ"'D.a~Kt
in Erie Cou.nty, Kathryn A. Fosler, David C. Petty, Alfred D.
Price. John B. Sheffer II, Henry L
Taylor. 301 Crosby. South Cam·
pus. 5:30 p.m .

Ufe Wocbllop
Bqhmlaa Sian Lan&amp;uate Semi·
oar. Diane Cunboys. Direct Experience Method (OEM). Wednesdays throug.h April 17. 5:30-6:45
p.m. To register, cali645.612S.

Ufe Wocbllop
Cboosinc a CarHr. tnsicbu To

Overview XUR6 and Open
Windows. 2--4 p.m . To regisrer,
call Academic Services. Compul ·
mg and Information Technology
User Uaison, 645-3540.

Be Gained From lhe MBTI,
Joyce Anderson. Second and final
workshop on the Me ye~· Bnggs
Type lndicalor 7.9 p.m To regJS·
rer. call645.6125.

ASCIT WCHUIIop

Ufe WCHUIIop

Piae Mail for tbe runCiuster
(UNIX). 2--4 p.m. To regisler, call
Academic Services, Computing
and Information Technology User
Liaison, 64.5· 3540.

Uve
Opoto:
Chlroa New Music En.wmble.
Allen. South Campus. 1 p.m.

-...o~.ect~o

..

Induced Sdsmicity: Cue Slud·

Eatiuc Disorden. 7-9 p.m. To
register, call 645· 6125

c.-

Cominued on page 7

�181Kil911N
~22,JJM

Y...._.27, No. U

Managing_ DB's
Academic 'fUture:
A Report for the UB Community (Part JJ)

Professors William R. Greiner
and Thomas E. Headrick
UDGET SEASON _1996 BRI NGS MORE THAN THE

B

SUAL

UNCERTAIN1Y FOR UB. 1HE SHIFf'S IN NEW YORK POimCS AND THE
STATE'S ECONOMIC FORTUNES, 1HE CHANGES IN 1HE SUNY BOARD OF
TRUSTEES, 1HE PRESSURES TO REDUCE STATE SPENDING AND TAXES,
1HE LEGISLATIVE MANDATE TO STIJDY SUNY PRODUCilVITY AND TO

ACADEMIC GOALS THAT GUIDE
THE STRATEGY OF MANAGING
UB'S ACADEM IC FlrruRE
The reccnlly developed Umn•r.;;ily MIS.Sio n St:ucmem
and 1h1s Managing Ou r A.C:ldemJc Furure paper contain
bolh 1mphci1 and e-xplicll :aCldcmic go:~ls (or the
Unwersil)' .u Buffalo wh1ch

rru&amp;)'

tx sumtTUm:ed as

fo llo ws
Wrlbrn a dt&gt; cadt&gt; l ' B sbo 11 ld br

DEVELOP A MULTI-YEAR PLAN AND 1HE RESULTING RFlHINKINC SUNY

+ Known :u the prem1er pubhc um\·crsuy m tht'
Nonhe35lem Umted Sbtes,

+ Recognized as one of tht' top m1d·s•u:d.
public AA U umverslfi~in :a le-.ague wtth
Colo rado. Io wa, North Carolin:a, UC/Sa nu
B.:arbara and Virgini:a.

REPO RT- ALL OF THESE FACTO RS CONVERGE TO PRODUCE A

+ Regarded highly for u.s doctoral·le\·d progr.ams
and research in bol:h a rt.s :and saences and
professional disciplines by having :It le-.1.s1
o ne quarter of 1hesc- prop;r.uns r:ndi in the cop
quartile and almost all in 1he 10 p half of
programs in the nalio n,

CHALLENGING TIME FOR UB AND SUNY. THROUGH TillS CLOUDED SKY,
+

HOWEVER, A FEW RAYS OF UGHT APPEAR:
The

Trustet.~ ·

strong interest in flexibility and

tuition nex.ibiliry restrained Moreover, numerous

increased campus responsibility and accountability;

external faoors condition our situation and the New

serious consideration given to having SUNY fcx:us on

York political landscape. The federal budget changes

managing state tax support and to leaving tuition and

are going to squeeze research and other financial

other revenues at the campus; a growing reality that

supJX&gt;n for higher education and impose significam

high-cost SUNY units will come under closer scrutiny

cuts on federal support for New York St:Jte programs.

than in the past. These hopeful signs do not remove

which will make the New York State government pie

lhe clear fad that state tax supJX&gt;rt for the operating

even sm::tller. There is also a widespread concern

budget declined by 20% in 1995/ 96, and a further

aiX&gt;ut the apparent oversupply of Ph.O.s in a

12.5% drop for 1996/97 is in the offing, and only a

number of disciplines and a general public ang.~tthat

portion of these curs in state

public research universitie, in panicular d u too

laX

support have been

o r are likely to be o ffset by increased tuition.

+ Acknowledged wtcklr for 1nsurtng lh:u its
undergnduates :trt" ch:allenged imellecrually
by 5lrong undergr.~.duale progr.~.ms u.sing
wtSely the- strengths of a n:se~rc h unlversily
and pn:panng them e xcea:hngly weU fo r hfe
:and Clreer;

+

H er.~lded in New York a nd uros.s 1he tU11on
for a successful I(JUldcr or research (and
~ holarshlp in general) 10 the- proviSion of
quahty public .sc:n·icc:;

+ Rc..·spected for

its de&lt;houo n 10 quahty and
commitment to innovatio n

Tho ma!- E Hc..·adm:k
Proi'OSI

much resetrch :11 the expense o f educa tmg their

In the short run, it is possible that after accouming

undergraduates. ThL'se attitudes h..·we a dL'pn.--ssmg

fo r a general ruition increase and curs absorbed at

etft'(.1 on our public stature and thus on o ur peR"eiVL"Ci

system levels, the campuses may stiU experience a

worth in the JX&gt;litic."3l ;treru . ln shan, the time has

~

come to do sorne senous relhmking al:x&gt;ut UB

reduction in 1996/97. Unless. therefore. UB

works out a coherent long·teml StrdtCb'Y and plan, it

Few people would argue with the proposition 1hat

will n()( fare well in the shan term or the long tem1.

UB has ~n trying to do too much with too liule UB
mu~1 .

UB's clpaCity to press for and work out shon-term

should. in fal.1 it

relief will depend upon a dearly articulated longer-

that clarification should bt: guided by three

term strategy.

pri n cipl~lty,

There is one emphatic message in Rethinking
SUJ\'l~

Ex1olled for 11s forward -looking otabhs hmr:m
or master's level e-ducalion as I he- stancbrd
srudem credenli21 for meecing lhe needs of
socielio and economies in 1he 21sl century ,

each University Center must defme its mission

clarify itc; priorities. We think

lnnoVIItlon Mil focus.

Over th&lt;.~ p;.tst rwo mo nths the Provost and De·J ns
tuve discussed and exchanged memorJnda on the

The framewo rk for this strategy and plan
pr()C(.-eds aga inst

:.1

few background condiuons

which shape our o ptions and c ho 1cc:s·

+ UB

lS

first a n &gt;Jt::.Jdemtc mstitutto n . thu:-. ou r

responses to ~.·co n unm: nL'cessil)• must he .;haped

hy a thoughtful co nsideral!on o f :tGtdem tc
dtrt.•cttons

and goals. :md shaJx·J mort· hy our

expectations o f the future than our

e xperi~.·nl..'t.'

of

in cle-Jr tenns, focus its resources on program~ of

ISSUt-':'i

unmistakable and documemablequality. and de livt:r

are o n the s.1.mt.· page with respet.1 to the need fo r a

the programs in a (0St-efficient v.'dy CampuSt:S th:lt

str.llcgy :md plan for UB's furure . the n(.-ed to make

+ lJB is and will be the brgt: ·t SUNY campu.., lb

fr.trnt: the ir missio ns in gener.tlities, that ;~nemp~

som e hard choi cL~. the:: nectl to

protet1 and bu ild

lhstingu tshmg fea.turt":-. wuhm ~l INY mdu&lt;.k .1

cover declining attradiveness and qualiry \vith

quality, and the need to focus the use of UB '!)

suhstanti:tl cuncentr3tio n o f resourl"t:'!) upon

mission creep, that fail to appraise CJ.rcfully the

rtSOun.-es and m.1.kc them more pn:xluctive

dcx.1oral and

10

('X'lSed

111

thL&lt;; paper. Tht' Provost and Dean.-;

the past

grt~duate pmfc:.'lSIOn ~d L-'·thu..J tton ~tnd

research . a broad arrJy of undergr;1duatc: prognm....

quality o ftheirprogrJ.ms and that persist in prolt:&lt;ling

Tius paper outlines our views as to how the liB

we-Jk , lo w-enrollment programs will have thdr

commu nity should go about est.:.iblishing its pnontio

imheddL.xf within a

c l&lt;tims on sene tax resources reduced and the1r

a nd developing a str.lttb'Y \Vith a ten-year jX1":"pective

growing invo lvement in publ1c scrvin:'

re~rch

university. and

J

�WHAT IS VB'
The MISSion Statemcmldentiflcs four prinury missions: undergr2dwnecduation, gradw.te education, R"SCarch and public service.
Some fa culty would want to assign a primacy lO research over the others. SUte officials and lhe public oft~ focus on undergraduate
educat1on and to a l~r extent publk service and lgno~ the rut. Within SUNY we arc: dislinguished by our siz.e and r.ange of
~radu :ue and undergraduate programs, a broad liber.ll ans and sciences core, and a large comp~t of professional programs,
tncluding a ma;or health sciena: center, all of which smoothed our admission to the AAU in 1989.
To expend energy trying to claim prinucy for one or more mission over another, or professional cducuion over Ubera1 aru and
sciences, o r vier versa, is unproductive. Our student populations dicute a mixture of rel.a tiVC" proportions (see Table) which we can
dl:&amp;nge o nly slowly.
UB musti(X)k to lmpnw«= i~lf by extr.&amp;aing the bendltS of coUabor-ation amongsc these strrngths ratMr than by chasing the phantom
o( ·one mw.loo or sector having prinucy over another. It ls our whole that makes us strong.

-

-

......

•

u,4U
8,818
2,504

Uber.tJ Ans &amp; Sciences
Health Science Professtonal
Non-He2.lth Sdencr Professk&gt;nal

-

35
10

.,_

14

2,101
1.929
4,«2

9
8
18

5,089

Ubenl Arts &amp; Sciences
Heallh Sdentt ProCessiOnal
Non-Health Science ProCessional

20

.......

a.u•

a,s..

-

1,MS
378

Uber.tl A1U &amp; Sciences
Health Sdenct' Professiona l
Non-He2.llh Science= Professio nal

'

Fall 1994 heackoum swdents
199-1!199'&gt; Annu.al Awrage rn: students enrolling in
1994 199'i figurt."'

....

7
12

•

I. Identify a number of well-reputed progrnns with
adequately sized faculties wh.ich we will malnl2in by
assuring replacements to make key appointments.

7
9
18

2. Identify a small number of ttighly promising research
areas and gr-..duate fields in which we can make a
development2l investment th2t will make a large
difference in the quality, reputation and success of the
program. Criteria for investments would include:

7
17

+ fields like ly to have significant researdl importance
over the next 10-20 years. 'Illat is, they will anrnct the
best minds. ample external funds (where appropriate)
and considerable academic acclaim;

u

~37

ro~

~7

3'1

904

Uberal Ans &amp; Scie nces
He:i~llh Sci~ Professional
Non-Heallh Science= Professional

•

9.373
1,301
2,372
11,811
1,4ll2
1,783
3,666

.

NUMBER

DI!.USAW-

f"Tl

H£ADCOUNT

~17

8
8

1 .~33

26

offered. Does noc

lnclu~

These goals are reachable, but they will require
subowulal rethinking. redesigning. reorganlzins. and
realloating in a joint effort involving the Presidcru,
PIOY05l, v-u Presidents, Deans, Olairs. Directors and,
"""" important of all. the Faculty.
8o&lt;h UB's hislory and future prospea.s strongly
i.ndk:ate an inability to maintain our current breaddl and
size of graduate progrnns, including bcxh aru and
sciences and professional doaor.ues. We must make
choices, in many cases tough choices. Our touchstone
principles will be ......, and Graduate
education wherein these attributes can be nurtured,
sustained and improved, s hould be continued ;
programs that do not rell&lt;ct these attributes· should be
phased out. It is hatd to argue that UB gains by
maintaining weak programs.
We suggest the following approach to making
choices:

+ a sufficiently large group or existing faculty with
congruent and complementary capabilities related to the
fie ld of .stUdy, usually from a number of departments and
decanal unitS;

Millard Fillmort' College
Tho~NS

+ fields in which UB can eslablish leadership through
modest incremental investment;

E. He3drick

Provost

+ fields likely to attract high quality students who will
h2ve significant career opportunities.

3. Identify some programs curreruly of modest quality
+ US as o ne of 30 U.S public universities in the AA U, the
o nl y SUNY unLve rsLt y with membership in this
p rest igiou~ o rganization o f ou tsta nding researc h
universities m North America. Amo ng these public
universities, UB is well below the median e nrollment
more akin to the small public AA U 's than the large Big
Tt:n and other compar:~bly sized schools. Given the
cum!nl constr.unts on st:ue funding for o perating COSlS
and particu larly for capita l construction. UB is n01 likely
to grow 1010 the size of a Michigan, Wisconsin o r Penn
State in the fo reseeable future. We shou ld therefore take
as peer Institutions th e mid-sized public AAU
universities and equal the best of them, such as Virginia ,
North Ca ro lina. Iowa, Colorad o and UC/Santa Barbara .
+ US's ca padty to expa nd its current size m enroUme m
and faculty is constrained, thus additional enrollment·
driven resources cannot be a solution to its problems. As
we arc called upon to show increased effidency and
productivity. our faa.J ity and suppon staff is likely to
decrease in size over the next several years, unless new
sources of revenue are developed quickly.
+ The withdrawa l of state taX support will require 1hat
UB find alternative revenue sources, and because some
un it5 will have easier access to new reve nues than
olhers. a new set of resource distribution issues will
arise, which we will need to deal with directly and
o penly.
+ The increasing reliance on tuitio n will enhance the
role of student expectations in our deployment of
n:.'"SOurces As students pay more, they will expect UB to
deliver more in quality education and student services.
The predominance of undergraduate students in our
e nrollment mix must make us look carefully fo r ways to
improve undergraduate education and include such
LmfJrovements in our lo ng-term strategy.

+ As a result of state demographic trends, our students
are like ly to become more racially and ethnicall y diverse
in the next decade. These changes will heighten our
sensitivity to the needs of a mu lticultural academic
community.
+ The increased financia l stringency, coupled wiLh the
small size of o ur facu l()• fo r the bre-.ddth of our programs.
should encourage ou r units to find ways to build
programs in collaboration with ot her units. We must
avoid dupliC3tion of courses. hiring to fill areas that may
be covered by a colleague in an01her unit . unnecessary
administrative efforts, and other ineffidencies that flow
from o ur cmrent structure The Provost's office will
Strongly support collaboration and the sharing of
n:sourccs across unit boundaries.
+ The path to a ~1.ro ngc r University will abo require
some focus and selectivity in UB's graduate program.&lt;;;,
wh1ch can in pan be generated from within the Schools
and Faculties, and in pa n structured by a consultatio n
process catalyzed by the Graduate School and overseen
by the Provost. Ultimately the President will weigh this
ad,•ice and make the strategic cho ices m consultatio n
with the- Ch3nrellor and SUNY Tmstees.

+ Change is rarely universally welcome and almost
never easy to manage . It is sometimes easier for
institutions and people to accept their fate than to
manage it. One clear pre-condition to managing our fate
is that every unit must be invo lved. Deans have
indicated their willingness to push for change, to find
savin~ , and to get their faculties to redirect their effons ,
but this must be an effon in which every unit participates.
No unit can be held hannJess o r singled out fo r special
protection.

The development of a strategy and pl;on involves three
key building blocks. Two concern wbat UB intends to
do : a docto ral/ resear c h plan and a linked
undergraduate/master's level education plan. The third
concerns bow UB intends to accomplish itS plan through
the development, contribution and assignment of its
faculty. All three blocks must fit together to create a
coherent structu re.
PLANNING FOR DOCTORAL·
LEVEL GRADUATE PROGRAMS
AND RESEARCH

Presently UB has 74 active Ph.D. programs(and a few
more approved). In addition, we have doctoral-level
education with the professional degrees D.D.S., J.D.,
M.D., Pharm.D., D.N.S., Ed.D. and probably an Au .D. in
the future.
Whether UB is seen as pursuing the aspiration to be
a top ten public research univCJSity o r the goal, stated in
the current Mission Statement, to be the premier public
university in the Northeast as the SUNY Oagship
probably has littJe pract.icaJ consequence. Both point to
a major rese::arch University that belongs among the best,
mid-sized public AAU peers and has a number of
excelle•t graduate / research prog ra ms and
........... breadth. In our rurrent condition th:n
means more foc:ua, more
and
somewhat .... ~ o r comprehensiveness.
Where shou ld UB stand among universities in
graduate education within a decade? By what criteria
should we judge success and progress?

MlecttYe............,

______

,.._.,_Ita
....,_..-.. -top....---.u
..- - - top -·
H would be - " for

~at• piece -

u• to l8y -

to

. . - ._... llatl-1

It would also be most
desirable to have a few programs among the top ftfteen
in the country. In addition, UB will noc justify a SUNY
flagship role if programs at other SUNY universities
consistentl)' rank higher.

and small size that could be improved by building
linkages, amnging merger.; or fasttioning new forms of
cross-disciplinaty collaboration so that their f.lculty
could expand program breadth and devel op
opportUnities for new fonns of specialization. This
strategy would seek to enhance quality through stronger
connections among faculty from different deparunents
and different decanal units, and through combinations
of resources and innovative program design.
4 Phase out progr.tms with low enrollment. which are
not artrnctive to excellent students, and whose faculty
demo nstrat e modest resea rc h and sc h o larl y
accomplishment ...t then work with those faculry to
find other appropriate ways for them to contribute to the
1
missions of the University •

The net result wiU be fewer programs. but more,
higher quality programs with widely recognized
exceJience, some of which will be innovative :md
creative prograrn.s having the potential to provide
leadership in newly developing fields.
PLANNINII FOR
UNDERIIRADUATE/MASTER"S
EDUCATION

-.....,..._.----"'Ita-............ _
-of.
The undergnduate cat&gt;.log lists 69 undergraduate
degree programs offered in ten of our fifteen schools or
faculties.
In addition we list 94 master's degrees.

_.,,.,.

- t_y
_ _ _ ......
......,.to _ _ ,.... _ _ _ _ _ , .
__......
_fllltllll
_. .to-

........,.2111t_,-

A great strength of this
UnivetSity is its capadty to meet this need. We must
develop this capadty more fully and trumpet it to our
potential students.
In addition, significant issues affecti ng o ur
undergraduate/master's mission need to be addressed.
How d o we improve o ur undergraduate/ master's
education and make it attractive to able students? What
identity and what emphases and strengths should the UB
undergraduate/master's programs have? Can we begin
to conceive of a curricular conti nuum between
undergraduate ma;ors and master's programs? How do
we build th ose strengths th at appeal to th e
undergraduate market? How do we delh•er o ur
undergraduate/master's programs so that students can
move steadily and expeditiously to their degrees and
beyond?
Here are some suggested guiding principlo for
undergraduate/ master's programs.

1. UB should define and produce an outat.8ndlnC
.............. .-c.t1o11, that dr.l\\'S upon the
strengths of a research university and upon an ac:~demic
culture in which stude nts can .._. far . . , .
effectively than at present. The goal fOr US's students
should be to enable them to learn more. leam better and
tea m faster.

�2. We should consider an appropriate mix of lower
division and upper division srudenls, entering freshman
and transfer srudeniS, that UB can educate effeaively
with its programs and resources. This could mean
reducing f=hm2n enrollment and expanding junio&lt;
transfer studeniS, but the precise mix for planning
purposes should now from analysis, and not be imposed
upon it .

3. The cu lture of a research university is built around
investigation, discovery and c rea t ivity .
Our
undergraduate education shou ld reflea and be part of
this cuhure, and every undergradw.te should be drawn
10to the culture.

4 UB should move aggressively in adapting the
burgeoning options in learning and infonnation
technology to undergraduate education. With this
development, the conception of teaching as primarily a
classroom aaivity (which it isn't now. even though we
don 't acknowledge it) will evenl\lally die. Teachers will
be organizers of srudentleaming, and as we improve our
methods or arulyzing and assessing student learning,
our curriculum will undergo change as well. If it ~true
to its mission, UB will be more or a leader than a follower
in these developments.

S TI1e availability of an ample range or undergraduate,
master's and doctoral programs offers the attractiveness
or choice and the opportunity of integrating a university
educ:~tion so students can experience higher education
as a continuum rather than as a series of discrete steps.

6

Every UBstudentshould have a homewhereheorshe
i.s known as an individual and can participate in a
collective intellectua l life. We must break down the
anificlal boundaries which now often separ.ue faculty,
graduate stlJdents, and undergraduate srudents and
encourage social interacrions between faculty and
Sludents that enrich fonnal inslruction.
Usmg these pnnciples. we need to take a serious look
at our undergraduate and master's programs and
de\•elop ways to build on their strengths and enhance
their quality

PLANNING FOR CAMPUS NEEDS
UB will press forward with new buildings and mater
rehabilitation plans for both the North and South
campuses, and gradually we w ill move toward the
completion of OUT physical plant . But from the
perspcc1.ive or academic programs, the crucial need over
the n e xt decade will be technology--(o serve education
and research, and 10 give access to and to distribute
knowledge and infonnation-dlat is technology in the
broadest sense or the word ranging from large Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance Spccrrometers to individual PC.s,
from large data warehouses m CO-ROMs, from highl)'

trained speciahzed engUleers and saentists to experts 10
communications, infonnation transfer and learning.
To remain viable as a major university an even larger
proportion of our budget will have to be devOled to
tec hnology, and the managerial dilemma 1.5 that
technology will probably add more to our costs in the
early years than it saves. But it will also add quality ,
flexibility and depth to our educational and research
capacities. Managing the lt3de~fT between expense
and marginal additions to quality will be an everincreasing challenge.
No planning for technology in this broad sense can
completely foresee the magnitude or its furure fin2nctal
demands; at the same time, however, we have to factor
some rough pro;ections into our future plans o r we wtll

inevitably be left behind.
THE ROLE OF THE FACULTY
AND IMPLEMENTATION
The President and ProvOSI a~ pro;ecting less state tax
support and asking for greater accomplishment
Governors Cuomo and Patak:i and the legislarure have
reduced the state tax allocation to UB by almost SO% tn
the last decade. The predictable faculty readio n lS an
increasingly hardened disbelief.
1llat reaction has some grounding 10 our recem
history. The evidence shows that UB is remarkabl)'
efficient, pa rticularly given its lac k of economic scale
when measured against major il15l"itutions in other publiC
university sySlems. That point can and will be made an
integral pan of the debate surroundmg the future o r
SUNY and UB, and it may resonate with some sectors or
the political spectrum: it may forestall future
deterioration in support; it should resu lt m more
flexibility and campus-based deosion-makmg. But it
will noc change the political landscape tn New York , nor
the trends Ul national opinion on universities, nor the
federal squeezt- on the states and research Alm~1 a ll
universities will be faced with hard c ho1ces in the li.uurc
and some combination or doing less with less and more
with less. We believe that UB should be nimble enough
co set the pace and provide leader.;hip in hagher
education. But to d o so will require some shifts in the
ways and habits of our faculty and our admini.str.uion.
some restructuring of our orga nization . and some
c hanges in our culture

+ Our an.s and sciences depanmenLot tend to be sma ll for
a university of UB's st:uure which in some instanCc!t
limits programs and hinders the advancemenl or ou r
reputation. Size also restricts our a bility to meet
cha nging enrollmem panems. surges in some areas and
comract.ions in others. (Since enrollments overall have
been decreasing, it is clearthe expans1ons in one p;~rt of
the University have been matched or overm:Hc hed by
rontr.Ictions elsewhere .)

ELEMEI'ITS OF QUALin'
UNDERGRADUATEIMASTER"S EDUCATION

Oelivenng a h1gh ·qualny undergraduate/
master's education 10 this culture will reqUire at
least these elements and possably mo re
+ early connecrio n of each cntenng student (at
whatever level) wnh o ne or more facuhy
members 10 the intended field o r
fields or study. and appropnate adv1.s10g all
along the way,
+ solid, well-delivered hbt.-ml a ru core w1th
emphasiS o n the deve lopment of broad
Inte ll ectual lntereslS ::~nd cunosuy and
thc:- IOCUJcat10 n of thc:- l:'d flaCi t)' 10 '&gt;t.· lf-chrc:-C1
o nc:'!t !t.-arn10g.
+ well ·d("\'d o pcd compt·lt'ncc m the.: u:.es of
compute r!t 3nd anfo nnatiQn lt"c hno lob'Y mall
dtsctplines .

+ hagh-qualtt)' . al't"CSSihk undergradu:J ic: ma,on.
1n a w1d(" v::~nel y of fidd~ 10 the an.s and
SCiences and m tht· profc: ~" 1 on ~.
+ o pportun1t1c::s t o m1.x o r bro:Jdc::n cduc;at1on.ll
program!) through mmor .md l't"rttf1ca1t·
OptiOns,
+ emphaSIS On Cre3ll\'e' tnVCSI 1~3 tiVc:" dl!~ot.'O\'t"l)
modt" of educatiOn thro ughOUI the
u nde rgraduate program .
+ Simplified trans 1t1o n to master's lt.•vd
educa tion through comb10cd and blcndt.-d
graduate/ undergraduate courses and
research o ptions:
+ well--orgamzed cu m cula so that student!~ can
mow towa rd the 1r educational goals With
a minimum of admimstr:ltJ\'e obstacles and
delars . which means suffioent offerings or
IOtrodudOI)' general education courses. easy
access to undergraduate ma;ors, and seamless
movement ro m:aster's le\'el educ.H10n
TI1o mas E Headrick
Provost

EVALUATING OUR GRADUATE PROGRAMS
Severn] points are tmplicil in the diSCUSSion of grndu:ue t:d.ucation and research Fore most
L'i the reozlity that the staturt" of UB in the world of research umversities, bol:h in the U.S and
abroad, is dependent upon the rebtive strength or o ur progm ms and the research
accomplishment.s of our facu lty . Second is the imperative that UB wants to improve Its stature
Third, :md In many ways most crucial , Is the need for UB 10 have a system of eva luating the
quality of ill progr.ams. monitoring them and measuring them ag:unst comparable programs
at peer universities.
The Gradu:ne School Is beginning dna collection on a muhi·d•mensional group of
measures of quality, performance and accomplishmem for our gr.~duatt! progr""Jms. wh1ch
Include both ans and sciences and professional doctor.~! degrees In time our own data w1U
be complemented by similar data from pttr programs so th:at we can conduct an on-going
evaluation of progr.;~ms. When put in place. this system will enable us to gain a much mo re
complex understanding of the stature of our progr:a.ms. This dat.a system 9.-ill certainly
incorporate data from ruatlonal r.;~ting systems, such as the National Research Counctl (NRC),
US. News and World Repon. and others, but will not rely upon them as lll3 jor determinants
of o ur place In the University firmament.
For now. however, these external r-.1ting systems, panicularly d-Ie NRC ratings. loom large
because we have linle else to guide the comparison of our progr.uru with our peers Overall
it is difficult to hide some disappointment in o ur perform.:mce as renected in hoth 1he RC
reputational mnkings and the data the NRC collected on measures of quality The
disappointment Is underlined by the fact that more of our programs slipped than gained In
the r.mk.ings over the period 1982·1993. a dc.-c:ade in which gr:~duate eduC'.1Uon and research
at UB were given primary emphasis and Infused with substantial new resources The
resources were. however, diffused when they might have ~n concentr.ued 'll'e tril"d 1o
maintain and upgrade more programs than may have been possible

II b 1emp1ing to cxplam away the NH.C ra1ings and data on mcthodu log•cal ground!t, reportmg
miStakes. the lack of coverage of some proft"SSIOnal disctplines , the exclusio n o f some progr-.1ms.
01 hcr inacrur.tcies, o r the bias 1n fa vor of large programs. but such explanauo ns tuve an
meluctablr hollow ring The NRC r-.tnkings of part1cular UB program.!&gt; mar not fairl )' re("ogmze
then strengths and qualily llut when looked at in aggrega1e. they giVe u.:. a sense of where UB
stands amo ngst AAU publics o f about our size These relative- Slandmgs can help u.!o establish
goals for the futurt',targets fo r moving up The-y c:.n guide us m fr.tming a str-J.tegy for tht' future
8)• examining the char.lcteristics of highly ranked p·rograms a1 the Sll\311 AA U's we should gain
ms ighll about tht' w:.1ys In which 9-•e could build su~ngth and h1gher rl!Cognmon The
:u:companying Table of NRC ra.nking:. st-Jows lh:at among ten AA U peers, (1) UR ~~L~ w1th the
bottom third; ( 2) it had more progr.1ms rated (35 in all) than :an)' o f 1he to p rated schools and
(3) the goal of having a qua rter o f our programs 10 the 1o p quartile and :&amp;lmo.st allm the.· top half
t:. re:&amp;chablc:" . but not without focus :and effort Finally because: most analy-K".s suggest a high
correbuon between size and r.tnking. :a successful str.ttegy might be b.ased upon a.s..'ltmbling
fa culty m particular disciplines. now scattered m several departmenLS and schools, mto smglt'
programs while m:untaming separate degrt:e programs, where thai is desirable
Allhe sa me ume , good coun.'ld should offer C".&amp;ut•on abou1 ovn-focusmg on the rt"put.:ltlonal
r.1nkmg:. They ri.'nc::ct tht: pas! . not the futurt" They measure with the standard" of established
d1SC1phnes :and do n01 full )' crechl new progn.m configur.u.~oru. n:achmg for ne"\\ systems o(
knowledge :and lnnov-.1tn•e S)'t'ltheses o f disaphnal)' perspectl\'1:!5 To the c.'XIt'nt UB makC'!o
umov:atJOn a key value , these ratings ,..'ill underesumate our stft."ngllb. and ~A'e wtll h:Jve to find
()( her way~ of pro!t."Cting and gaining cn·dit fo r our qualu r

Tiwnu:- E He:adnck
Prot 'OS I

...

1993 NRC RESEARCH DOCTORATE PROGRAMS STUDY FACULTY QUALITY AND PROG RAM EFFECTIVENESS SUl'o·l(\lARY
INS1111JllON
SUNY at Buffalo
U of North Carolina-Chapd Hill
U of Califomi.:a-Santa B.arbar.t
University of Colorado
University of lowa.a
Univcr.;lty of Kansas
University o f Missoun-Columb1a
University o f Oregon
UnlvtrSity of Pitt.Sbur&amp;h
University of Virginia

,_

..

..

NUMBER OF
PROGRAMS

NUMBER IN
TOP 15

PERCEf\.'TAG E
IN TOP 25%

PERCEI'ITAGE
IN TO P SO%

35

I

3'

2B
2B
.lO

4

3
61

I

29

j

20

7}

.I

29
.lO

I
I

t4
tO

72

r

·'
I

tj

3.1

24

0
0
2

0
17

39

"

0
0

0
22

H

11

6-1

36

;6
!18

21

57

16

36
25
283

'

11

86
79

NUMBER IN
TOP 15
2
6

'

36

92

2
4

11

10

23

PERCENTAGE
IN TOP.?')~

PF:RCENTAGF
IN TOP 50%

6
61

82

29

"'
21

11

;{I

.,'"'
-.,

II

�nus UniVersity IS also distinguished by its range of
proresslona l schools, many of which have raculry
eduated in arts and sciences disciplines, capable of
contributing rrom time to time to undergraduate and
gradu.:Ht:" 1nstruaio n m arts and sciences programs. By
the same token many raculty in aru and sciences
d 1 ~dplines have cxpe n ise that is importa nt to
p rorcss1onal programs We need more fl exibility in the
exchange or raculty !.alents bctwer:n these areas and
Ingenuity in finding the mechanisms that e n courage it

+ Concern has

been expressed tha t the comparatively
against
ovcr.1ll academ1c cfTt:ctivt!n ess a nd thus higher ratings in
thc nauon:~ l ev:~ luations or the Ph.D. programs. Size is
3 fum.1ton or the close alignment of deparunents with
da!'&gt;Ctplinary p rograms a nd degrees in our o rganization
and o ur thinking. As noted above, many raculty with
stmilar diSCiplinary tr.~inlng have different departmental
ho mes
1r tht!y wt.-re brought together as graduate
bcuhy, tht· resu lling doctor.. ! prograrns would acquire
tlw strength or additaonal size. provide a platform ror
new sc holar! ~· connectiOns, and enhance the richness of
prt )grams ror students. The sentiment that because "we
d1dn 't appomt the m , thcrerore they're not us" should n01
he pcnmned to obstruct a dear institulional need and
benefit And the sam e argument can be made ror some
s mall depa rtme n ts with undergraduau~ programs;
hnkagt:S with raculty in Ol:her departments or even
merger or cwo o r more departments might strengthen
thc 1r progr.uns a nd lead to innovation .
~ma ll SIZC or ou r departments has militated

+ We nt:.-cd to think seriously aOOut how faculty effort is
directed and distributed across our mu ltiple missionsundcrgrJduatc teaching, graduate teaching, research
a nd pubhc servacc and about the incentives and rewards
that affoo that effort and distribution. We need to adjust
our o wn perceptions and attitudes that elevate research
ove r te ac hing , and tea c hing g raduat es over
undergr-Jduares and all or the above over service to the
pubhc . Academ1c lire is no1: that simple. Teaching,
research a nd public service are part of an integrated
scho larly lire and need to be seen and appreciated in that
way l11e University cannot meet a ll or its obligations
and serve all o r its purposes with quality a nd excellence
ar lo ng-held :nmudes obstrua or inhibit our facu lty from
us10g their lalents to the fullest.

+ All of these adjUSlme nts point to the need to account
bt:n er ror r:.tculry effort . Po litidans and the press assault
fa cu lry ror light workloads. Hretime e m p loyment and
hmated accountability In general. faculry put in long
wo rk weeks and respond fO both internal drives and
external standards and expectations that rew people
understand. First, thererore, it is our task to create that
understanding. Second, it is o u r res ponsibility to
csubli..c;h a sophisticated system or accountabiliry that
accurately measures an d credits raculty effon. Third, to
meet o ur multiple m issions as a university, we will have
to account ro r trade-offs among raculty responsibilities.
The Sbndard teaching lood at a research university IS
roughly 213 o r the standard load at a st:ue college. The
remaining roughly 1/ 3 time is llll."ant to be devoted to
resc..:.arc h and/or public service. In some programs, the

umversaty may benefit rrom more tame devoc.ed to
research, and ochers rrom more time to teaching and/or
public service and less 10 .-..earch by some faculcy,
particula rly those who would prerer to structure their
workload responsibilities and efforts in Uut way. We
mUSl therefore invent a system that encour.tges those

&lt;ndividu:d facul1y and !he collaborative work lha&lt; setVeS
insliluliona.J needs. Bu! up 10 now !he culrure has tilled
heavily IOWlltd individual :1&lt;1vat=meru. In !he furure
!he till will be back 1oward instiru&lt;ion21 responsibilities.

workload allocations and provides promotion
opportunities and cxher incentives a nd rew:~rds ror high
quality teaching and tugh quality public service as well
as ror high quality research. And we must do this in a
w.~y that does llO( encour.1ge the perception that
schobrship is separable from teaching and service. A
better conception is that scholarsh ip is wh2t engages a ll
faculty, a nd it fmds its expression in research, teaching

' Phuina ouc Pf'OIJ2ml nua lhc sptCiet d ~. 11 tw
brcn Univeniry poUcy rlvoush alJ the cua In fundina Iince the late

and publ tc service.

+

+

+

1980110avoidrc::tJa~Chmenl. Beau.:dthr~of
iUOUf'C'Q 10 t1empe1n1y and lhon-unn appoimnrnu, il woukl rake
siiJUf"arllly mon:: llan 11nocher ,.. C\11 before lhr Uniwrs.iry wu
bcrd wtlh having 1o.brelk faculry ICftln: 01 nwwno c.ommkmenU
10 mttt Its I:Judsc'l. Avok»not of retrenchmmt b • IC:nSible and
humanr polky lla ~ ln !he funue is llkdy 10 depend
upon .tarnr facuky IC:adlinB councs In needed an:u. or Olbt:rwitc
ptOridins u:tduJ CXJnlribudons 10 lht u~ lhon. 1n
offrrinJ ~in the ute olrhdr t*nu..

CU.~ a substanllal ponion of our .uWy ~Cot fulkimr
a~ rcdtemenl. By recrnc
calculariOf\5 1~ c:J the Alary budfJC1 for fulklme fxulry Is paid 10
rhotlc ~ 65 years d 2,9e and abcwe and 2Mft to lho&amp;c over 60
1

&amp;cu-, Is pad 10 bcuJty
'LANNINIII AND FINANCE
Finance shouJd not drive our planning, but it provides
the reality. ln the short run, UB can either cut back or
eliminate programs, raise and reuin tuition and fees , or
both. In the lo ng run, the investment in development
and fund-raising, expanded connections with industry,
expansive use of our prime real estate as an endowment,
technology and know-how transfer, service to public
and priv:lle entities and individuals-will aU expand
UB's revenue base and capadties. This will also change
!he way UB budge&lt;s and alloc:nes funds be&lt;:ause a
proper incentive sysrem re'\Vards raising revenue with
the opportunity to spend it.
Our planning wi ll be g rounded in realistic
assessments or these possibilities for enhanced revenue
in !he shon lenn and long &lt;erm. I&lt; will also be done

agains! a background of expected narural mmover. In
the next ten years, a s ubstantial portionorUB'sresou rces
is likely to be available ror changes in direction and
nourishment and enhancement of strengths.1 Our test is
whether we will use it wisely.

A CONCLUDINIII COI!II!IENT
Let there be no mistake. Many o r our present ways or
operating must change. The current prerogatives or
decision-make rs will shift to more collabor2tive fonns of
decision-making. At the same time, collaborative
decision-making will have to be more responsive and
decisive ror the fast -changing world around us.
Leisurely committee reflection or issues will nOI ohen
serve the institution.
ln addition, the times will challenge one of the
dominant creeds of post-war research universities: that
!he advancemeru of !he schol2rly repulation of a facull)'
member ipso raao enhancc:s the reputation or the
university. That creed has merit, but it also has limits. A
great university is n Ol just a collection of great scholars.
It is more, and the more has to do with institutional
responsibilities which engage teaching a nd service
&lt;a IenlS, which requin: collegi21 collaboration, and which
involve research and educational programs that meld
separately conceived pieces into a coherent whole.
Clearty, universities have prospered by being able to
develop a mix involving both the advancement or

+ Staee 1 :

lnfo rm.2t1o n Gathering, Program lnvenrories, Facuhy ProfLies and Ideas For thr Furure (April. 1996)
The P rovo~ will shortl)' d istnbule to thC' Deans compilations of cenrnll)' he ld cbu on program suuctu~ and f:lcuhy
nmuibuunn.s and requcst more detailed info nn:uio n from them. These requests will cover unit program inventories, resource
n:qum:menb, facu hy profil es and visions for the future , De2ns will in most instances nerd tO involve Chairs and faculry in thi.s
proces~ o f preparing responses. Beausc:: of the differences In prognms and Intern:. I structures, each units response will have
tu he tallo rt'li tO Its spttific silu:&amp;llon .
A key pan of the p~ss Involves thoughtfu l discussions aboltl possible directions for academk programs in the futu~ . a~s
for devl'lnping joint programs. consolidation and 01her fonru o f collaboration. The faculty or Arts and Lt'uers and 1he Graduate
Sc:-hool o f Education are engaged In such d lscussioM; the l..:lw Schoolls implementing a new curriculum, other units have done
p lanntng in 1he potsl o r are beginning such d iscussions . lnvolvemem o f all units in some think.ing aboua new directions Is
L"S.'Ic!'lJial
The inventories. pront~ and thinking aboulthe future shO\IId guide an .analysis of possible program changes, Improvements
and re,• lsio ns, and help asscs.s the :wailabllily o f f:aculty to deliver these prognms.
St:age One will rely mainly o n c.bt:l and info rmation th.al alre21dy cdst in ou r rttard.s or are easily orga nized, but have rarely
been puill-d togethe r .and an:alyzed In th is fashio n or shared widely amo ng Deans, C ha ir.~: and F.acul()' .

+sue- 2 :

Analysts and Comment (April · June, 1996)
TI1e Provosrs Office will assemble these data In forr1101ts thou will assist analysis of the CU I'ft'nl and po~enllal quality or prugr.mts
aha; now exist o rthaa might be developed through combinatio ns o f faculty and then engagt: appropriate groups of administrators
and fa cul()' in comment and analysl.s. This pan of the process will involve a wider circulatio n of extensive cbta and info rmation
ahan is n1sto mary II will pc:tSe queslions that willtesl ou r C':lpar:ity fo r cando r while ~ cognizing the- serul t iviti~of our colleagues.
The prtK:"t:!!&lt;S o f analystS will not be easy.

+ Stac• 3 :

!&lt;I

2. The same surngths and fngmentat ion occur in the
biological sdences. Why noc uy 10 accomplish the same
budable aims by developing rnot"C lmegration ln thai
dlsclpliM?

3. Within our society. some sensible people are beginning to
queslion lhe fngmenutkm of publk expenditure on public
eduotion, on socb.l and hnlth services and on a legal system
which are all devoced to the same ob;ectivf:--&lt;he successful
SleWardship o( our deprived child=&gt; 1o ~aduhhood.
Why then do we offer sepanned progr.um In the schools o(
Education, Soda! Work, Medicine, Nur.~:ing and Law r2ther
than educating teams of prof~ionals to work In cooper.1.tlve
senings? Why aren't we as a University providing 1hc: kicas,
research and analysls th:at wUI help tnn.sform lhe l.nsdrutlons
ln our sodety that many fttl .are falling to meet sodefy's
needs?

-4. ~ University Is rich in Its diversity o( programs, schools
and departments and less rich in their recognition and
~puutlon in many areas. In the SOCial sdcncc disciplines
such as economics, polltictl ~ . sociology, hisr:ory and
psychology, the pro(essforu.l schoob have faculry wtt.h
doctoral degre&lt;s In lhooe foelds, bcul!y who oould add
dimensions 10 gr:adu.ate programs, who could teach rrom
1ii:M to time n~ undergraduate courses, and who could
provide avenues for collaborative rese:uch, extend publJc
service ~ch of the Untverslry and bl~ o( 5Cholal'$hlp and
pubUc Service. Why don't wr find appropriate ~ys to
accomplish such cooperation and integration that ~ld add
SU"ength without adding racuhy?
5. The world ls moving tOW:Iird technologically driven
lntcgr:ation at a breathuldng pace, and UB separates lh1s neld
among Engineering, Sll.S, and Computer Science and ln
addition has relev.int u~rtise in mathematics, education,
mana~t . thclibr2ry , OTandmanycxherareas.

Wouldn't

UB have a suonger presence In thili field and be bcner able
to provi~ academk and scholarly leadership as well as
stronger educatlona.l prognms if these dl.sparate parts h2d
w.ays o( working togethe-r and an organl.zatio nal StruCture
1hat encourage-d cooperation?

MANAGING US'S ACADEMIC FUTURE:
PROCESS AND TIMETABLE

Prdiminary Repon (Summer/Fa ll. 1996)
The Provost \lice Provosts and Deans will contribute to a preliminary repon and
he d istnbutt.-d wtdely fo r comment

SOME QUESTIONS ON THE PROVOITS MIND
1. The University h.as diveBC' and impressive strengths In rhe
cMmk:a l sdenc~ ( in Natun.J Sciences and Ma.thcmalks,
several departments in Pharmacy, In Engineering. in the
5C'Ver.&amp;l depa.nments In the Biomedical Sciences). Why don't
we bring ~ ~gths 1ogether in W2ys that ~nee
research oppom..mJUes, imprtJVe graduate and undergr.aduate
education in those ne.lds, and in~ our tmpaa and
reputation in lhe scknce rommunlry?

of ret-ommrndations that will

+SU,e 4 : Rcpon and Recommendatio n (Nove mber · 0t"&lt;:ember . 1996)
After g:u ht•ring commenl!. and consultang widely . 1hc Pro\·osf's om..-e wtll prt·pare a Anal repon 10 the Pres1dent
TI1omas E He;adrick
""'UOSI

6. The ch-anging world ls also obliterating the d.istina.ions
among wriuen, vi5ual and auditory !.mages, between fixed
.and moving images, such that academic suucrures built on
those distinctions Stem less and !ess apr to the world we livr
i.n. TilOugh teaming rrom the forms separalely will continue
10 serve lmpoit::lnt purposes, Ignoring thcirgro""lng tntqr.adon
m:&amp;)' pur our SIU~nts at future risk . literature, Philosophy,
An History. Art, Media Study, linguisiK's, Communications,
Music, Theatre and Dance all in some measure offer windows
on a world of klca.s and modes of expression that cross
convenlional academk d ilitlnc1ions. Shouldn't we find a way
to do .scholarship and education that integrates the view rrom
those windows?
7 With the growing prcssu~ for c051 effectiveness in health

care, and a OlO\'ement toward int~graaed delivery systems
whk:h depend upon effective cooperation among teams of
health care professi002ls. shouldn't UB with its impressive
group or high qualiry health science schools. be aggressively
refonnlng the conception or health C":J. re -and bringing the
schools toget:ht&gt;r for the educaliOn of he-:&amp;hh care team.'i,
wo rklng groups and nefWorks?
I hav~ many slmilar rhetorical questions, and we can'l
begin to pursue them all at ontt But it 1.5 cle:ar 10 me thou
we mUSI st.an . l..c'{ us ~membe-r thaa if the SlaiUs quo IS
unmaintainable, .as It surely Is, then the burden o f proof shifts
to those who ~l.st change.

I will sc:oek QC'(':lSions 10 bring appropri::llt' groups offarulty
together fo r discus,slon.s. As we undenake solutiOns 10 our
lmmedi:nt: flsc.ll problems, we mUSI also tu'•e senous
academic thinking about the long-tenn

Thoma:. E Headrick
l'rol.m t

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFA LO

February 15 1996

UNIVIIISITY AI IIUFFALO
State University' ofNew Yom

Volume 27. No 18

WLitooffer
'Summer
in Vietnam'
11J PAT'IIICIA - VAN
News Services Staff

~F•

..,_, owner of a
New Y orlcCity-bued financial

T

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo World Languages Institute
( WLI )
ha s
announced plans to offer
.. Summer in Vietnam," a pioneer·
ing six-week language and culture
program that is the only one of its
kind available in Vietnam through
an American university .
The program will run from June
I to July 13attheDongDoUniversity of Sci en e and Technology. a
private uni

rs ity founded by a

group of em nent Vietnamese educators and s ·enlists in Hanoi. It is
located in H
i's ancient, roman-

tic and architect
ly elegant Hoan
Kiem sector. wh re students will
live in a guest holfe while attending school.
The five-credit undergraduate
program i s one of onl y three study-

abroad programs in Vietnam offered by U.S. universities, and is
the only summer program in a
northern city. h is sponsored in
cooperation with the UB Office of
International Education.
The program is unique in that it
includes a homestay and participants will be paired with Vietnamese students who are interested in
learning more about America and
in getting to know Americans on a
one-to--pne bas is.

M

ark Ashwill, director of the
institute, which is a unit of
the UB Department of Modem
Languages and Literatures. said the
recent normalization of relations
between Vietnam and the United
States paved the way for the development of the program.
It is grounded. however. in a
history of cooperative ventures between UB and Vietnam that date to
the 1970s. when the university's
world-renowned English Language
Institute (ELl) began to offer regu lar English language training to
Vietnamese students in Buffalo.
Ashwi ll said the program will
give students an opportunity to
st udy the Vietnamese language and
culture. as well as interact with the
country' s people.
Students will have daily classroom instruction in language and
an ongoing cuhural seminar that
will introduce them to Vietnamese
history. geography. economy. education. common reli gions, philosophies and general world view. The
program also will include a series
of field trips and tours, including
an excursion to a nonhem Vietname se village and a two-day
sightseeing tri,P to Ho Chi Minh
Continued on page 2

rum. has been named
chair of tbe SUNY Boanl of
Trustees by Gov. George 1!.
Pataki_l!gan succeeds Frederic
V. Salerno, who resigned due to
tile increased time commitments
of his job as vice chairman of

NYNEXIn addi -

Research building dedication opens
medical school's sesqui celebration
lly

LOIS IIAIIER

News Services Staff

T

HE UB SCHOOL OF MEDICINE and
Biomedical Sciences officially opens its
18-month-long sesquice ntenniaJ celebration on Thursday, Feb. 22, with events on
the South Campus designed to look to the
medical school's future, as much as its past.
Philip B. Wels, chair of the UB Council, will preside
at a 10 a.m. program dedicating the medical school's new
$54 million Biomedical Research Building, and officially designating the foonerCary-Farller-Sherman (CFS)
addition as the Biomedical Education Building. The
program will take place in the atrium of that building.
Tours of both buildings will follow the program.
At 3:30p.m., Saxon Graham. UB professor emeritus of social and preventive medicine, will receive an
honorary doctorate of science degree in the Aint
Reading Room of the Health Sciences Library. Recogpiz.ed internationally for hi s pioneering research on
the relationship between diet and di sease, particularly
cancer, Graham was chair of the UB Department of
Social and Preventive Medicine from 198 1-91.
Stephen Schroeder, president of the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation , will present the Harrington Lecture in conjunction with the conferral ceremony. His
lecture title is 'The Triumph of the Market: What Does
it Mean f~r Medicine?" Schroeder represe nts the largest private medical research foundation in the U.S.
The UB medical school has received a total of$750.000
from the foundation since 1992 to help fund efforts to
increase the number
of graduates entering
primary-care fields.
A reception in
Harriman Hall will
follow the lecture.
The final event of
the day will be a private dinner in honor
of Graham hosted by
UB President Will iam R. Greiner.
The opening o f

the Biomedical Research Building marks the begin-

ning of a new era in research at the medicaJ school . The
new building. modeled after the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. is equipped
with the most sophisticated biomedical re search facilities available, including:
• A level-3 biohazard suite for research involving
the AIDS and Hanta viruses and other highly contagious or potentially lethal pathogens
• A specific-pathogen-free facility for researc h
involving gene transfer
• 18 environmental chambers. which can be main tained at from 2-40 degrees F.
The building was designed to facilitate multidisciplinary
research groups of basic and clinical scientists. coosidered
the most hereficial mileu for advanced scientific work

I

nitially, the faciHty will house the Cenu;r for Microbial Pathogenesis, the Center for Cardiopulmonary
Biology and the Center for Molecular Mechanisms of
Disease and Aging. Researchers began moving into
offices and labs in November. Other groups are forming.
The Center for Microbial Pathogenesis conducts research into viral. bacterial and parasitic diseases. and works
on developing infectious disease vaccines. The group includes researchers from deparunents of microbiology.
medicine and pediatrics. and the School of Dental Medicine.
The Center for Card iopu lmonary Biology . composed of cardiology. pulmonary and perinatology subgroups. involves researchers from departments of
medicine. pediatrics. gyneco logy/obstetri cs. physiol ogy. pharmacology and surgery. and th e School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences. In vestigati ons in clude molecular mechani sms of cardiac ischemia;
heart and lung transp lantation: surfactant therapy for
newborn and adu lt lung inju ry: nitri c-oxide therapy
for pulmonary hypertension of the newborn. and coronary and cerebraJ circu lation control.
Researchers affiliated with the Center for Molecular Mechanisms of Disease and Aging will focus on
understanding how actions o f key proteins regulate
ce llular processes and/or metabolic pathways. This
group involves faculty from biochemistry. phannacology. pathology. neurology and pediatrics.
Complementing the new research building is lhe
Biomedical Education Building. which is being re named to more clearly renect its purpose. Completed
in 1982. it houses the Departmenl of Medical Education. classrooms, labs, computer and study rooms. and
administrative offices. in add ition to the Museum of
Neuroanatomy.

tion, Pataki
named banking executive
Erland
I!_
Kailbourne
as vice chair
of the Board.
In acceptingSalemo'srmSnation,l'ataki
said. "I am particularly grateful
to Mr_Salerno for his efforts at
keeping a steady band on tbe
university during his lemm• as
chairman and for his role in the
unanimously adopted rec:ommeodatioos contained in Rethinking SUNY-"
The governor added. "I am
pleased that Mr. Egan and Mr_
Kailbouroe, who have
instrumental as new board members, have agreed to take on this
challenge. They will belp irnple&gt;ment my vision to transfonn
New York's public higher education system into one that is
more accessible and cost-efficient...
SUNY Ch:mcellor Thomas
A. Bartlett noted that news of
Salerno's resignation from the
Board ofTrustees was received
"with great regreL"
" Frederic V. Salerno has
brought to the Board of Trustees a depth of experience in the
management of large complex
organizations_ an understanding
and appreciation of public education and a rock solid commitment to providing access to
quality in public higher education," Bartlett said. "He will be
missed as both a leader and
friend."
He praised the appointments
of Egan and Kailbouroe. 'They
wiU provide committed leadership for the board through the
critical phase of implementing
the goals enunciated in the planning document Rethinking
SUNY," Bartlett said.
Egan, an attorney, formerly
served as vice chair of the boani
In that capacity, he was a member of the Rethinlcing SUNY

been

Continued on

2

�2

-UB, ECC expand
dual admission pact
Program to smooth transition to university
Br SUE WUE'TCHER
News Serv1ces Staff

dents and training ECC faculty and staff
advi sors.
Signing the agreement for UB were President William R. Greiner; Provost Thomas
Headrick; Mark H. Karwan , interim dean of
the UB School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences; Frederick W. Winter, dean of the
UB School of Management ; Joseph
Tufariello, dean of the UB Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, and Ross D.
MacKinnon, dean of the UB Faculty of
SociaJ Sciences.
ECC President Louis Ricci; Eugenia
Proulx, vice president for academic affairs,
and Bruno Pistrin. vice president for student
affairs. signed on behalf of Erie Community
College.
"We are very. very pleased to be able to
formalize this affiliation with ECC," said
Greiner. "We have had good success with
similar partnerships with other SUNY community co lleges in Western New York. We
are proud now to bring that success home to
Erie County students.
'The intent is to make UB more accessible to students who start out at ECC," he
continued. "ECC helps its students go on to
their planned next steps. UB gets well-pre-

0

FFICIALS OF the University
at Buffalo and Erie Community College have signed an
e~pan s i o n of a dual -admission
program agreement designed
to increase the number o f students transferring with assoc iate's degrees from the college to the UB School of Enginee ring and
Applied Sciences. the UB Schoo l of Man ageme nt , the UB Facuhy of Natural Sciences and Mathematics and the UB Faculty
o f Social Sciences.
The institutions' previous agree ment only
covered ECC st udents intending to enroll in
the UB Faculty o f Social Sciences.
Under the expanded agree ment. ECC stu dents apply for the program through ECC.
SIUdcnts will co mplete only one application
and be accepted by both ECC and UB . They
will be guaranteed transfer to their UB majors at the junior level following graduation
from ECC and completion of required course
work with a specified grade -point average.
The document also calls for regular communication between ECC d UB facull y.
and the participation of UB n advisi ng stu -

Faculty/

pared transfer students. And the students
themselves get beller prepanttion, better advice and a smoother transition to their junior
year. It worl&lt;s for everybody."
"I am delighted that President Greiner
and I and our staff have come together to
craft this agreement. which will ensure a
smooth transition for our students to the
university," Ricci said. " I think this demonstrates the cooperative nature of our relationship. I look forward to other arrangements
of mutual benefit."
The agreement addresses the access goals
outlined for the SUNY system in "SUNY
2000: A Vision for the New Century," which

call for facilitating the transfer of students
among campuses, particularly from SUNY
two-yearcollegestootberSUNY campuses.
ECC students participating in the dual admission program will reeeive informatioo
about UB •s programs and be contBCted by
UB while at ECC. Special programs wiU be
developed-at UB and ECC--to involve
them while they are enrolled at the college.
The rationale for the agreement is to guarantee that students participating in the program will be prepared to transfer as juniors
into the UB major after completing their
degree at ECC.
C

inventors to be honored at reception Feb. 26

Br EUEN GOLDBAUM

News Serv1ces Staff

I

ll8nclell8lut -rs ....--t: ECC "--dem Louis Ricci, left, 8lld "--dem GN!ner.

NVENTORS ON the faculty and staff
of UB will be honored during a reception to be held at 4 p.m. on Monday.
Feb. 26, in the Center for Tomorrow on
the North Campus.
UB faculty and staff inven1ors who are
named on 13 U.S . patents issued to the State
Unive rsity of New York Research Foundation in 1995 will receive awards. which recog nize their achievements as inventors of
patented devices, materials or drugs.
For the first time, video and CD-ROM
demonstnnions of inventions will be shown.
Kathleen R. Terry. directoroftectinology
transfer at UB. explained that some o f the
inventors are being honored this year for
patents involving improvements and modifi cati o ns on inventions for which they have
pre vio usly received patents. "For very valuable inventions, it can be imponantto file not
on ly on an original invention. but also on
improvements to th at in ventio n," said Terry.
'lhis strengthens our patent posit ion."
T he UB fac ulty members are:
• Deborah D.L. Chung. professor of mechanical and ae rospace engineering. and Vi Han Kao. professo r of ph ysics , inventors of
a fullerene that is supercond uctive at much
higher temperatures than has been previ ously shown. Kevin T. Fredette and Liwei
Song were co-i nventors.
• Wayne A. Anderson, professor o f electrical and co mputer engi neerin g, inve ntor of
a novel thin -fi lm capaci tor with unique electrical propenies that will be o f significant
Int eres t to semi co nductor manufacturers.
Ro bertS. Hamilton. Quanxi JiaandZhiquin g
Shi were co- inventors.
• Jerome J . Schen tag. professo r of
ph annaceutics. and David T. D' Andrea, coinventors of a computer-controlled "smart
pi 11" that can be electronically tracked and
mstructed to deliver a drug to a predetermined location in the gastrointestinal tract.
• Donald D. Hi ckey. research assistant
professor of physiology, inventor of the
Hickey catheter. a non -invasive method and

new apparatus for measuring blood pressure
inside the left atrium of the heart.
• Joseph Mollendorf. professor of mechan ica] and aerospace engineering, inventor of an elegant, comfortable replacement
for the Philadelphia collar for support of the
neck. Robert M. Catipovic and Lillian A.
Pascale were co-inventors.
• Robert J. Genco, SUNY Distinguished
Professor of Oral Biology; Mary J. Evans
and Steven J. Greenberg, both from Roswell
Park Cancer Insti tute; Richard T. Evans,
assoc iate professor of microbiology and oral
biology. and Howard K. Kuramitsu, professor of oral biology, inventors of a sensitive
new mode of detecting P. gingiva/is. a causative organism of periodontal disease. Genco
also is being honored for inventing a method

of inducing regeneration of periodontal
tissue and bone. Moon-11 Cho, associate professor of oral biology, was co-inventor.
• Ralph T. Yang, former chair of the
Department of Chemical Engineering, inventor of two new methods of scrubbing
nitrogen oxide from smokestacks. J. Edward
Cichanowicz was co-inventor on one patent;
Ning Chen was co-inventor on the second.
• Robert Straubinger, associate professor of
pharmaceutics, inventor of a new formulation
oftheanticanceraga&gt;ttaxolthatseernstobestabk:
and noo-toxic, which may make it applicable to
many different kinds of cancers. Amamath
Sharma and Eric Mayhew, co-inventors.
• Abir Mullick, ass istant professor of
architecture, inventor of a wheel chairaccessible drinking fountain . Mi chael

VIETNAM
Continued from page t
City (the former Saigon).
Ashwill said it has been his experience
that students in si milar UB programs have
come to serve as "c ultural bridges" between
their host nations and the United States in the
arts. business. education, politics and the
sc iences.
The "Sumni'er in Vietnam" program. for
instance, will be directed by Hoang Vu Cuong,
a Vietnamese citize n and alumn us of the ELI
who has served the WLI as an instructor in
Vietnamese language. After completing his
ELl program at UB, Hoang received a
Harvard- Yenching Fellowship and is currently enrolled in UB 's doctoral program in
international trade.
Since initiating English-language services
to the Vietnamese studeitts in Buffalo. UB
has promoted cooperation with Vie tnam in a
variety of educational venues:
• In the 1980s the un iversity's ELl wel comed the first Vietnamese national to study
in the United States after the end of the
Vietnamese Wax.
• The ELl recently hosted the first group
of Vietnamese Fulbright scholars to come to
the U.S. since 1975 for intensive language

AC TING OIR(C TOA OF PU8l.ICATIOI'4S

U~ A.

u . . . • EDI TOR

~--IIWAL

training in preparation for their graduate
programs in Ameri can uni versities.
• UB is cwrently one of only 20 institutions of higher education in the U.S. that
o ffers courses in Vietnamese language and
culture.
Stephen Dunnett. vice provost for international education and founder and djrector
of the ELI •.said he is delighted to join the
WLI in developing this venture.
"The program opens the door for a broader
co llaboration with Dong Do University." he
said. "including a future exchange of stu dents and faculty ."
He added that , if past experience is a
gauge, US 's presence in Vietnam will benefit Western New York compan ies interested in doing busi ness in Vietnam' s booming
economy.
The cost to participants in the "Summer
in Vietnam" program will be approximately
$3,500 for New York State residents (higher
for out-of-state residents), which includes
international airfare , housing. tuition and
books. For furtherinfonnation , contact Mark
Ash will , at 716-645-2292.
0

• ASSOCIATt EDITOR JOAiill

~

• ART OIR£CTOA JOM

C~

Osadciew, Michael F. LaMoni ca and
Matthew C. Guthrie were co-inventors.
• Bradley P. Fuhnnan, professorofpedi1llrics
and anesthesiology, inventor of anti-inflammatory agents for lung and other tissue made
from flunroautxxts. Lynn J. H&lt;man, Michele C.
Papo, David M. Steinhom, aD assistant professors
of pediatrics and anesthesiology; Stephen F.
Aaim and Frana:s D. Nesti. co-invenun.
• John H. Zaharkin, senior lab equipment designer in the Department of Physiology, and Michae l S. Zaharkin, father-son
inventors of a device that measures the motion characteri stics of a human joint. 0

EGAN
Continued lrom page t
sleering committee and chair of the Rethink ing SUNY structure committee.
"I am grateful to Gov. Pataki for the confidence he has shown me by appointing me to
chair of the Board of Trustees of the Sta~
University ofNew York," said Egan. "Today.
with nearly 400.000 students pursuing an
education at the State Universities. we owe it
to them, to their parents and to the taxpayers
of our state 10 make certain that the education
we provide is of the highest quality."
Egan is on the board of the United Hospital Medical Center. an affiliate of The New
York Hospital-Cornell Medica! Center. From
1985 to 1992 he served as a member of the
board of the Metropolitan Transportation
Authority. including the New York City
Transit Authority , Long Island Railroad and
Metro North . He was a trustee of Marymount
College from 1983 to 1988.
Kailboume, a 1961 graduate o f SUNY at
Alfred. is chairandchief executive officer of
Fleet Bank in Albany. He is on the board of
the Univer,;;ity at Albany Foundation and is
director of the New York Business Development Corporation.
"'As a State .University graduate, it is an
honor for me to serve as vice chainnan of the
board and to help ensure that the students
today and those in the future get the best
education New York has to offer,"
Kailboume said.

• hCtpJ/Ibttti.O pub

bull.m.au~t"f)0"141rl

�3

Greiner, Sheffer uJXlate Council on Governance, budget
REPORT ON THE recent
Governance conference, dis-

cussion of the ramifications of
the proposed state budget and

" When I was mayor (of Williamsville),
we didn't fully appreciate the network of
formal and informal agreements in the area."
he said. Those agreements now need to he
expanded. Sheffer told the council that a
number of action steps have been proposed

consideration of issuing stand-

as a result of the Governance conference,

ing invi~tions to Council meetings to mem-

including the establishment of a regional
computer information network , possibly
modeled on one in Philadelphia.
It also was proposed that the current net·
work of agreements that already exist among
municipalities and levels of government be
expanded.

ber.; of the SUNY Board ofTiustees, all were
on the table when the UB Council met Feb. 8.
Acting Vice President for Public Service
and Urban Affair.; John Sheffer presented the
council with an overview of and update on
the Feb. 2 conference. which drew political
leader.; from throughout Western New York.
'The premise in pursuing thi s is the area is
facing tremendous challenges," Sheffer told
the council. Regional, collaborative effo rts
are needed if Western New York is to overcome those challenges.
or the 250 attending th e conference, he
said. more than 100 already have responded
that they are eager to be pan of the collaboralion effons.

C

alling the Governance Project "a con·
crete contribution of the university to
the region," Sheffer told the council that "if
it stops with the report and forum, it will not
have been worth doing ....This can be a big
step forward as we face the huge challenges
of the 21st centlll)l."
In his report to the Council, President William R. Greiner gave an analysis of SUNY

tu ition and budgets in an effort to put in context

UB prof develops
'Stnart COffiJ?OSites'
They detect, monitor fatigue damage

•s art composite•" that not onl y
''kno " when they have experienced fatigue
mage and can communicate that
fact, but hich also all ow continuo us moni·
taring
deformation and damage. have
been developed by a UB professor.
The new method to detect deformation

ot

and damage has application to aircraft, automobiles. bridges, machinery and other
carbon-fiber composite products.
The researc h will be presented o n Feb.
27 in San Diego at a meeting on "Smart
Structures and Materials" sponsored by the
Society of Photo-optical Instrument Engineers.
According to Deborah D. L. Chun g, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at UB and principal investigator,
thi s new method of fatigue detection is

much less expensive and more efficient
than the one now used. The current method
involves using optical fibers e mbedded in
composite components as sensors. But it is
not optimal because of the added cost the
optical fibe rs represe nt and- because the fibers can degmde the composite 's mechanical
prope rties.
"We are not adding anything to the comJX&gt;site," explai ned Ch ung, "so it is less expensive
than using optical fibers. In stead, we are exploiting the intrinsic behavior of the composi te
itself."
The "smart compos ites" exploit the fact that carbon fibe rs are much more electrically
conduc tive than the polymer matrix into whic h they are placed. When a tensile stress is
applied to a composite compone nt . such as a n airplane wing or the hull of a ship, the carbon
fibers in the composite reversibly straighten, causing electrical resistivity along the fibers to
reversibly decrease. That decrease is easi ly and continuously detectable by small, electrical
probes placed on or near areas of stress. Upon damage, some fibers break, thereby causing
electrical resistivity to increase irrevers ibly .
'11te most cri tical aspect of the smart composi tes is that they are capable of real ·time
sens ing of both damage and reversible defonnations. whi ch is particularly diffic ult to
monitor." explained Chung .
By sensing both phenomena. the composites allow for control of defonnation, recording
of defonnation and damage histories and lifetime prediction all in realtime.
Fati gue monitoring is important , she said, because many disastrous breakages of engineer·
ing parts, suc h as ai rc raft components, result not from stati c loading. but from the weakening
assoc iated wi th cycl ic loading, which can cause fatigue failure eve n when the stress is no t
very large.
Chung noted that beginning with the point at which a composi te's fatigue life has been
reduced by 50 percent, its electrical resistance keeps increasing, provi ding a contin uous
indication of the severity of the damage.
According to the tests the researchers cond ucted, resistivity started to increase in sp un s
when the composite had reac hed 55 percent of its fa ti gue life. At 89 percent of its fatigue life.
resistivity began to increase gradually but continuously. At99.9 percent. resistivity increased
mpidly. both continuously and in spurts.
'This last figure shows that it will still be possible to avoid a disaster even when a pan is
so close to failing," said Chung.
C hung conduct.ed the research with UB master' s·degree ca ndidate Xiaojun Wang .

"A lot ofpeople have
romanticized SUNY as a
system I think of SUNY
as a federation. "
l'ltDtD£NT!IIIEJNER

how money for state operations is allocated
among institutions in SUNY. " A lot of people
have romanticized SUNY as a system. I think
of SUNY as a federation," Greiner said.
New York 's state·supported campuses
offer vastly different programs and receive
vastly different operating budgets, Greiner
told the councii."To argue about SUNY as a
system is to not be sensitive to the facts. The
basic operating principles have been radically altered in the last five years," he said .
The only hope for survival of this campus is
to secure the refonns that are part of the
legislative package," Greiner said.
Asked by student representati ve Michael
Pierce about tuitinn rates next year, and the
possibility of differential tuition. Greiner
responded that campus-based tuiti on is pan
of the refonn paL.~a ge being consi dered by
the legi slature, but it' s too earl y to know
whether tuit.ion will increase or by how much.
When Pierce added that students' biggest
fear is that decisions about tuition will not be
made until sum mer. Greiner responded.
'They're probably right."

It also is uncertai n how or whether aca·
demi c programs will be affected by this
year's budget. Noting that UB could see
state funding decrease by as much as S I 0
million or more. Greiner said, "If we go to a
SIO million or Sl2 million shon fa ll . there
will be retrenchment. And it probably will be
over the su mmer. I wish it weren't. but that ' s
the way it is."

A suggestion that the Council invite mem·
ftbe rs of the SUNY Board of Trustees to
attend the next meeting to bring the group up
to date on tuition and the restrucruring of the
SUNY system brought strong words of caution from Roger Blackwell.
" If you don ' t think it through." the re can
be great peril in extending such an invitation.
'"Take a real strong look at it and understand
all the ramifications of it." Blackwell said. A
better strategy might be to take a UB delegation to Albany and attend a Board of Trust ees meeting, he added .
" If we were to do anything that would
embarrass the trustees or exacerbate the si tu ·
ation it would not be in the best interests of
the university; · Greiner said .
Chair Philip Wel s asked the cou ncil to
consi der inviting members of the SUNY
Board of Trustees and SUNY Central " to
attend any and all (U B Council) meetings as
guests," a suggestion the council agreed to
consider.
" We want to make sure we are putting our
best foot forward" to a new group of trustees.
said councilmember John Walsh. ·•r think
there is a timing issue here."

Health screening paints a picture
ofWNY health---and it isn't pretty
II)'LOI.BAII£JI

News Services Stall

I

T IS N' T A PRETTY sight-lots of cholesterol and blood sugar and many thyroid problems. Discovered during an
informal health screening of 1.500 area
residents, conducted by the UB professor
who heads the Diabetes-Endocrinology Center
ofWestemNewYork.they provide aglimpse of
the health of Western New Yorker.;.
The center. headquartered at Mil1 ard
Fillmore Hospital at Gates Circle. conducted
the screenings last fall at Wegmans Supermarkets in Hamburg, Cheektowaga and
Am herst . Center staff co llec ted blood
~mples from volunteers and had them tested
at the hospital's lab for leve ls of cholesterol.
thyroid stimulating honnone (TS H )-an indicator of thyroid activity-and glucose. an
indicator of potential diabetes.
Paresh Dandona. UB professor of medicine and director of the center and the screen·
ing project. compi led results of the tests to
develop a health profile of the group. The
analysis showed that :
• 63 perce nt of panicipants had abnormally high cholesterol levels (more than 200
mg/dL). and nearly one-fou nh had levels
above 240 mg/dL.
• More than 10 perce nt had an underac·
ti ve thyroid
• Nearly 9 percent showed glucose le vels higher than 140 mg/dL. an indicator of
possible diabetes: 3 percent had levels greater
than 200. which indicates active diabete s.
Dandona acknowledged that because par·
ticipants were volunteers. the screening re ·
suits can't be app lied to the Western New
York popu lation at large. But. he said. they
can serve as an alen to potential public·
heahh problems ahead. Some readings were
especially high , even for a non · random
sample . A specialist in diabetes research.
Dandona took particular note of the inci dence of high blood glucose.
" About 14 million people in the U.S . have
glucose levels higher than 140. whic h is
about5.6 percent of the population.'' Dandona
said. "Among o ur participant's we got more

than 8 percent. which is phenomenally high.
even compared to my expectations."
One piece of data from the screening that
is scientifically valid, as well as eye-open·
ing. Dandona stated. is evidence of a possible connection between thyroid function
and high cholesterol. "We found in this popu lation that as cholesterol rises, so does the
leve l of TSH. People with very high TSH
also had very high cholesterol. We're now
investigating this further."
The screeni ng project began as little more
than an interesting exercise. Dandona now is
excited about its potential " A fun thing has
turned out to be important and usefu l." he
said. Results of the blood tests were sent to
al l panicipants and their physicians. Several
participants now are being treated for condj.
tions revealed by the screening. Dandcna·s
own blood test showed a previously·undiag·
nosed underactive thyroid and he has been
on medication since.

T

he health picture painted by the screening captured the attention of the County
Health Department . which co ntacted
Dandona to find out how the cou nt y can
support the project and help it expand. Dis·
cuss ions are under way with the county.
which may become involved in the second
screening. set for May.
Dandona said he wou ld like to see the
screening take pl ace annually. in col labora·
tion wi th the county . He hopes to expand hb
survey to include the African·American and
Hispanic communities in future screenings.
" High cholesterol and diabetes are risk
fac tors forcar(fiovasculardisease ," Dandona
said. "Medicaid bi ll s are paid by the county.
so they have a definite interest in the ht!a lth
of their constituents."
The Diabetes·Endocrinology Center of
Western New Yo rk IS the only nationally listed atherosclerosis prevention clini~ 10
Western New York.. and it isone ofonly four
such centers in New York State. In operation
for nine months. the center also is involved
in diabetes preventi on. treatment and research and conducts studies of other diseases
of the endocri ne system.

�4

-_,...,.___:11',-U

Jones Inade history
as UB football player
1941 game In the South wu ,_.........,....,
By STEVE COX

Reponer Staff

F

OR LEELAND N. Jones Jr., a

lifetime ofcomm unity service and

activism on behalf of his race likely
began on the football field at UB.
When Jones took the field for a
1941 game at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore. he didn ' t realize he was leaving
his imprint o n collegiate athletic hi story .
Jones became the first African American on
an integrated UB football team to set foot on
a field sou th of the Mason -Dixon line. acco rding to UB Archivist Chr is topher
Densmore What' s more , Jones may have
been the first black in the country to do so.
Researchers at the National Collegiate Athle tic Associa tion report they find no record
of a black football playe r competing in the
o;outh prior to the US -Johns Hopki ns game.
It was November, 1941 : America was not
yet involved in World War U, but had just
shocked the world with the performance of
Black American Jesse Owens in lhe 1940
Summe r Olympics in Nazi Gennany. Nev ertheless. barriers 10 black athl etes in America
were still very high: Jackie Robinson would
not break lhe color barrier in baseball for
another six years and no other professional
spon was yet integrated.
Jo nes allended UB between 1940 and
1948. wi th his studies interrupted for several
years by his service in the Anny during
World War II . He had been a standout high

school player at Buffalo's Technical High,
and a solid student as well. In fac~ UB
actually landed him on their football squad
because of racial di scri mination elsewhere.
Accepted at West Point and nominated to the
Naval Academy at Annapolis by an Dlinois
congressman who personally begged Jones'
father to let him play for the middies, Jones
was turned away by Navy officials because
of his race. He then accepted a Niagara
Frontier scholarship to play at UB.
Recalling the game, and what football at
UB has meant to him and his family over the
years, still dampens Jones' eyes. As proud as
he is of hi s own football career, Jones conside"' his son, Leeland A. Jones, to be his
greatest contribution to UB football . The
younger Jones, now a psychiatri st and UB
Medical School faculty member, once led
the nation in touchdowns scored as a running
back with the Bulls.
Iones explained tbat the coaches had ar
. . ranged the game with Johns Hopkins Univel'1iity and heard no objections, realizing full
well that Jones was a black rarity in white
co11egiate athletics. However, he recalls.
"When we arrived in Baltimore, I wasn't
al lowed in either of the two white hotels
where the rest of the team was staying. It was
not until membe1'1i of the team had their 50th
reunion a few years ago that any oftheothets
eve n realized I was not allowed in the hotels,"
said Jones. "Since we were split up, everyone

just figured I was in the other hotel."
The retired assistant vice president at Erie
Community College, former Univel'1iity of
Buffalo Trustee and Buffalo City Councilman tells how he was transported, alone, to
a " black" hotel in another part of town. But
Jones never spent the night there.
·
He contacted southern black journalists
who had written stories about his acceptance
into, and later rejection by, the Naval Academy. "They told me, 'You aren't going to
stay there; it just wouldn't be right' and they
se nt someone for me." Jones was taken to be
a guest in the home of Dr. Carl Murphy, a
prominent black citizen who lived near the
campus of Morgan State University, now a
UB football rival .
II was a beautiful place and he had these
UB'o 1941 football team llnet1 up for
photo with Coach Jim Peelle In back
row at tar left. Leelancl Jonao Jr. Ia In
front row, sixth from left.

lovely daughtel'1i," recalled Jonis fondly .
Several years later, Jones married one of
those daughtel'1i.
Jones was active in student government
while at UB, serving as student body president
his junior year, and was named to Who's Who
Amoog American College Students as a senior. Racism, though p&lt;esen~ wasn't oftm a
problem at UB, be said. However, Jones did
recall once, during the first practice of a new
season, wben bigotry tried to rear its bead.
A new star recruit had arrived named Ray
' Dixie' Whalen, on scholarship after playing
the previous season at a southern university.
Jones explained. Whalen walked into the
locker room and~ seeing Jones, tu rned and
said, "Wbo is that? I can't play with him,"
using a mcial epithet. But the rest of the team
si mply laughed, and Whalen 's prejudice was
crushed by his embarrassment. Jones and
Whalen. who went on to become the president of a southern university, became and
have remained lifelong frie nd s.

FSEC will send faculty governance reform package to full Senate
BySRVECOX

Reponer Staff

M

embe1'1i of the Faculty Senate
Executive Com mittee voted
Feb. 7 to send to the full Senate
a package of faculty governance
reforms that boosts the pay for the chai r of
the Faculty Senate more than seven-fold.
English Professor Victor Doyno, chair of
the universi ty governance committee, briefed
FSEC members o n his com mittee's findings
and advanced eight specific refonns, including requiring eac h decanal unit to develop
faculty governance struct ures. aJiowing Faculty Senate interve ntion into depart ments
whose governance sys tem s ''break down, "
and the pay plan change. The proposals were
slated for a fi 1'1il readi ng and debate by the
fu ll Senate at thei r Feb. 20 meeting.
"The co mmittee sensed incre3sing pressures on the uni versity to make it resemble
simp ly another state age ncy." said Doy no.
noti ng that not acti ng now to strengthen
fac ulty governance at UB could have serious
consequences. ··we cou ld change status. to
become more like, say. an Ind iana State at
Terre Hau te : th at is a school where there is
not a lot of faculty governance at all ." Doyno
did caution. however. that any change of
gove rn ance struct ure runs the risk of encountering "lhe law of unexpected consequences."
The recommendation that received the
most discuss io n by FSEC members involved

a new pay plan for the chair of the Faculty
Senate. Currentl y, the chair receives a flat
stipend of $3,000 per year for hi s or her
services. The new proposal calls for "a temporary sa lary override equal to the amount
that would be paid if the incumbent were to
change from a 10-month to a 12-month obligation." Most university faculty members
are paid on I 0-month contracts, although
they may arrange to collect that sum in equal
ins tallme nts over the co urse of twelve
months.
This, explained Doyno, would put the
Faculty Senate chair on a parity with department chairs, most of whom earn a si milar
pay override for their admi nistrati ve duti es.
" It also means that there would be an automatic cost-of-li ving increment bu ilt into the
stipe nd," explained Powhaten Wooldridge,
speaking in su pport of the change.
Several other FS EC members commented
that a raise may well be in order for the chai r;
they also expressed reservations about the
proposed change. "Perh aps a hi gher stipend
would be in orde r, but il should not be based
on a percentage of the incumbe nt 's current
salary," commented Management Professor
John Boot.
Li brarian Judith Adams agreed. explaining that, "in some cases, that could be $20,000
to $25,000 per year. That's a lot of money.
We don't want someone to run for the Facuhy Senate chair for money reasons ."
In addition, the Governance committee

urged conformance with a rece ntly approved
by-laws change that would enable the chair
of the Faculty Senate to serve a second,
consec uti ve two-year tenn.
Other proposals include amending the

Bylaws of tho Voting Facul!y to specifically
authorize .. artic les of governance for academic units" which would include, minimally. meetings of the faculty unit at least
........
o nce per semester

Hellenic dance program planned
ly PATIIICIA -VAN

News Services Staff
"Tribute to.the Hellenic Heritage," a gala
evening of traditional Hellenic dance and
song, will be presented by the celebrated
dance troupe of New York 's Greek Ameri can Folklore Society on Saturday, March 16,
at US .
The event. to benefit the UB program in
modem Greek language, is co-sponsored by
the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Lelle1'1i.
the UB Center for the Arts and the Hellenic
Cul!uml Comminee of Buffalo. Funding also
was provided by the Demakos Fou ndation.
The performance wi ll take place at 7 p.m. on
the Mainstage in the Center for the Ans on
the UB Nonh Campus.'
Tickets are avai lable for S 15 for adults
and $8 for students and children through the
Center fo r the Arts box office (645-ARTS)
and through all Ticketmaster o utlets.
The program will include traditionaland often rare-dances and songs by 35
dancers in authentic costumes accompanied
by folk musicians on traditional instruments.
Each program segment will be introduced by

a shon hi story of the dance, its costumes,
songs and music. One of the highlights of the
production is a re-enactment of a traditional
Greek wedding featuring the entire company. In connection with the perfonnance, a
historical and cultural exhibition on Helle nism from antiquity to the present will be
presented in the UB Art Department Gallery
in theCenterforthe Arts from March 15-23.
The Greek American Folklore Society is
an organization dedicated to the preservation and presentation of traditional Greek
folklore from every region of Greece and
Cyprus, including Greek communities of the
Diaspora. The society anempts to present
these "engraved'' folk traditions in a manner
that reflects the history. spirituality and world
view of the Greek people.
As part of its work, the society supports a
widely applauded, professional dance troupe
that teaches traditional dance and perfonns
at events sponsored by the society and other
organizations. The troupe has perfonned at
Lincoln Center. on FOX relevision, on the
soap opera "All My Children" and in commer'Cials for AT&amp;T.

�IHIDRIIN
....._,.sa,~

Theatre and Dance to present Lorca comedy,
'The Shoemaker's Prodigious Wife"
PRODUCTION OF "The
Shoemaker's Prodigiou s
Wife," a I 930 poetic comedy
by Frederico Garcia Lorca that
features the playwright's ad of Spanish folk song and dance,
will be presented by the UB Department of
Theatre and Dance from Feb. 29 through
March 10.
Performances will lake place at 8 p.m. on
Thursdays through Sundays and at2 p.m. on
Saturdays in the Drama Theatre of the Center for the Arts on the North Campus. Tickets are $10 (general admission), $5 (students
and seniors) and may be obtained through
the Center for the Arts box office, 645ARTS. Group rates are available.
The production, directed by Maria S.
Home, assistant professor of theatre and
dance, has been invited to represent the U.S.
in the International Festival of the Arts '96, to
be held March 15-30 in San Jose, Costa Rica.
The fifth biennial festival will be presented
this year under the auspices of President Jose
Maria Figueres Olsen of Costa Rica.
The UB production will be choreographed
by Linda Swiniuch. with set and costume
designs by Leandro Soto. Lighting is by
Gary Casarella and sound design is by Bryan
Sidorowicz.
Featured players will include Joshua
Stem li ch~ Stephanie Bakowslci, and Elizabeth M. Poli to alternating in the role of the
shoemaker's wife; Leonard Ziolkowslci as
the shoemaker; Jason Hare and Chelsea
Leigh Home as the boy and girl. Joy Sci me
plays the sacristan's wife, Jacob Mirer plays
the mayor and Meron Langsner plays Don
Mirlo . The cast also includes Brian
Hemedinger, Rachel Venokur , Jill
McGuinness, and Rebecca Simon.
Frederico Garcia Lorca is the most significant figure in modem Spanish literature
and, as a poet. must be ranked among the
greatest of the 20th century.

News Services Staff

HEGRADUATEGROUPforFemini st Studies at UB will present several events hi ghlighting the work of
UB faculty members Brenda Moore
and Claire Kahane.
A book pany honori ng Brenda Moore,
UB ass istant professor of sociology, will
take place from 5-7 p.m. on Wednesday,
March 13, at Talking Leaves bookstore, 3158
Main St., Buffalo. The pany, sponsored by
the Graduate Group for Feminist Studies,
celebrates ihe publication thi s month of
Moore's latest book, "To Serve My Country.
to Serve My Race: The Story of the Only
African Ameri can WACS to Serve Overseas
in World War II" (New York University
Press). The party is free of charge and open
to the public.
Moore also will give a work -in-progress
se minar on her research for an upcoming
book o n Asian·American and African American women in tli.e military. The semi narwi ll take place at 12:30p.m. onTuesday,
March 12, in 545 0' Brian Hall on the North
Campus. The semi nar is co-sponsored by the
Baldy Ce nter at UB . A light lunch will be
se rved . It is open to the public and free of
charge.
The Graduate Group for Feminist S tu dies
and Talking Leaves bookstore wi ll co-sponsor a book party for Claire Kahane , UB
professor of English, from 5-7 p.m. on Tuesday, March 28. at Talking Leaves bookstore.
Her latest book, "Passions of the Voice:
Hysteria. Narrative and the Figure of the

T

IRIS Program
awards first
fellowships
. , . . ....... and ll.rcPMI.- . both UB students, have been
selected u the lim recipients of doctorate-level fellowabips preaenJed by
the university's new iDcreased Representation in Scieoce (IIUS) Program.
' EltablisbedbyUB'sOIJiceofPublli: Service and Urban Affain to expand participation in the lcicocco by
women and ~ties, IRIS is lOpported by a ~.000 gift from the
Coca-Cola Foundation.
The Office of Public Service and
Urban Affain and UB' s Faculty of
Natural Sciences and Mathematics are
coordinating, selection of the fellowship recipients, which is based on academic performance and departmental

playMs In "111e
Procii&amp;Joua Wife, • from left: Stephanie
Bakowakl, Ellzabetlt Polito, Laonanl Zlolko-kl.

~

A master of voluptuous, sulfurous, vibrating language, he is known principally
for intense poetic tragedies in which be treated
such themes as frustrnted womanhood and
the conflict between love and honor, motifs
reflected in hi s magnificent dramatic trilogy
comprised of "Blood Wedding," "Verma"
and "'The House of Bernardo Alba."

H

is evocative portrayals of Andalusian
peasant life haunted by premonitions of
violent death ~arned him his reputation. but
he also has written lighter fare, including
farces for stage and puppet theater. These,
too, however, are often clouded by a somber
mien.
"'The Shoemaker's Prodigious Wife" is a
fine example of this type of work. It is a lyrical.
experimental play for which Lorca adapted
and harmonized folk songs and "surrealized"
folk dance in a spirit of revolt against the
contemporary fashion for Realism.
He described it as a "violent farce." but
the play contains no violence and is less of a

farce in the French or Anglo-American tra·
dition than it is a comedic poem about the
human spirit.
'That spirit," Lorca said, "is the only really
important character in the play .... After all, the
shoemaker's wife is not a particular woman
but all women .... The whole audience has a
shoemaker's wife within its heart."
The play recreates an old folk tale about a
hardworlcing but dull shoemaker who is unhappily married to a beautiful daydreamer
much younger than himself. No longer able to
bear the village gossip about her flirtations
with other men, the shoemaker runs away.
Abandoned by her husband but faithful to
him alone, the wife takes to supponing herself by running a tavern. The shoemaker
returns. disguised as a puppeteer and is deli ghted to learn how much she loved her
erran t husband and reveals his true identity .
She is at o nce horrified and thrilled and,
despite her scolding. they stand together.
united against the villagers.

Feminist Studies group plans lectures, book parties
8y PATRICIA DONOVAN

5

v..... 21',No.U

Spealcing Women, 1850- 1915,'' was published in December by The John s Hopkins
University Press. The book pany is free of
charge and open to the public.
Upcoming related lec:tures at UB include:
"UB at Sunrise" talk on the ''Women 's
Health Initiative" by Jean Wactaw skiWende, co-director of the UB initiative. one
of 18 vanguard clinical sites in the U.S.
involved in the largest clinical study of
women 's health ever undenaken. The talk
wi ll take place from 7:30-9 a.m. on Thursday, March 14, in the Buffalo Marri ott ,
Millersport Hi ghway, Amherst. Breakfast
will be served at a cost of S I0. The event is
sponsored by the UB Alumni Office. Call
829-2608 for reservations.
Lecture by Elaine Kim. director of ethnic

studies at the University of California. Ber·
keley. and author of "East to America: Life
Stories of Los Angeles Korean Americans,"
which featu res interviews conducted after
the Los Angeles riots that raise many questions about gender and power. The lecture is
tentatively scheduled for March . Details will
be announced.
Lecture by Ellen Dubois. former member
of the UB American studies and hiswry
faculties and now a professor of history at
UCLA. Her talk is titled "What Difference
Did Women 's Suffrage Make Anyway?"
Dubois has published widely and to great
critical acclaim about the women's suffrage
movement in the United States. Her talk will
lake place on Monday. March 25. Details
will be announced.

Winners named for MBA Case Competition
Winners have been announced lor US's f~rst annual MBA Case Competition. held Feb. 9 in Jacobs Management Center First place Jeam rece1ved
$1 ,000; second place. $500. and th~rd . $250
The winners First place. Daryl Meyer. Teresa Ratka. Jul1a Schaff. Debra
Couch; Second place. Dara Moore. Guru Sahajpal. Akshaya S1ngh . Marc us
Heinrichs. Third place . Mark Cand1no. W11liam Gorenflo. Dan Longo.
Teams were provided w1th a case and were asked to resolve a corporate
problem spanning several functional areas Each team served as consultants
to the company in question and prepared a written execulive report. Based on
evalualion of the reports. the top live leams presented their conclus1ons 1n a
10-15 minute presentalion before a panel of judges.
The event was sponsored by Computer Task Group and Ernst &amp; Young

recommendations.

"We have found !hat women and
minorities do not traditionally enter
the science fields in large numbers,
especially at the postsecondary level,"
said Charles Carr, UB fellowlbip coordinator. "However, the IRIS Program is a step in 'the diroction of
divcnifyingthe field and geaiDg many
talented women and minorities interested in science."
Burhans, a c:omputer-scicncc doctoral sludcn~ agrees !hat the number of
women and minorities in scicocc significantly falls off at the doc!orallevel.
'Throughout my education, it has
been clear that women and minorities
are very underrepresented in science,"
said Burhans, who also received a
master's degree in computer science
from UB and a bachelor's degree in
mathematics from the University of
Michigan. 'There are ways to make
education in the sciences more accessible, such as providing opportunities
like the IRIS fellowship."
Burhans' stronginterestinimproving oomputer unders!llnding of natu.raJ language is incorporated into her
current research on artificial intelligence. She explained that discovering
new ways to enhance a macbine"s
understanding, adaptability and responsiveness will be highly useful in
the field of robotics.
Both fellowship recipients will
speak at local elementary and secondary scboois as part of an outreach
program to pique interest in sciences
amongpre-&lt;:OIIegestudents. Patterson,
who is pursuing doctoral studies in
chemisny, believes that such efforts
can haVe a positive impact.
''I became fbod of the sciences at
an early age, but I researched on my
own to find minorities in the sciences
who could serve as my role models,"
said Patterson. who received his
bachelor's degree in chemistry at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Instirute.
'There are prominent minoritits in
science. but there is not a rich history
of young minorities entering science
or technological fields."
Patterson's research, funded by the
Office of Naval Research, involves
the analysis of coatings on steel in
marine environments. He says ....It's a
tremendous opportunity to have received the IRIS fellowship. especially
since it was uncenain where I was
going to receive funding assistance
for my final year at UB." After completing his studies, he plans to work
in pri vate industry and evenrually enter teaching. Burhans also is planning
10 leach at the university level.

�6

Faculty&amp;SiaHBillboard
AWMNI TO TOUR
MARKET AACAD£ COMPLEX
The O lf1ce o l Alumni Aelat1ons a1 UB
w•ll hosl a tour of !he Market Arcade
c omplex •n d owntown Buffalo. •nctud-

'"9 the recently opened Breckenr•dge Brewery and Pub, on Thursday .
March 7
The evemng will begm w11h a
cocklall recepl10n at 5 30 p m . lotlo wed by a talk at 6 30 p m on the
hiSiory of the nearly century-old
Ou•ld•ng . c onstdered an h1stoncat
keystone to the downtown Theatre
D•stnc t At 7 15 p m . the program
will move next door to the pub.
downtown's f1rst and only brewery
D1nner will be available at the
brewery at parttc•pants' own expense
The c ost of the cocktail reception
t!; $9 for atumn1 assoc•al•on members
and $ 1 1 for ltle general pubhc Reservations are requ1red . and musl be
made by Feb 29 by calhng the Of·
l•c e ot Alumnr Aelatrons at 829-2608

FRANTZ TO CNAIR
DEPARTMENT IN GRADUATE
SCHOOL OF EOUCAnON
Thom11a T. Fra n tz has been
named cha~r of the Department of
Counseling and
Educational Psy chology in the UB
Graduate School
of EducatiOn
A UB faculty
member s1nce
1967. Frantz is
founder of three
groups tha t pro vrde emotional counseling and support lor termrnally ill patients and bereaved tam1/ies and rndrvrduals The
three are the Life Transition Center.
Compassronate Friends and Surc1de
Bereavement Group .
Frantz has given ITI()(e than 1.300
rnvited keynote addresses. workshops,
rnvrted lectures and in-setvice training
sessrons on topiCS 1nclud1ng death
and dy.ng , stress. and dealing with
chronic and often-terminal illness.
He IS a member of the advisory
board of the Elisa!:&gt;eth Kubler-Aoss
Cemer in Headwaters . Va ., named
for the proneer 1n research on the
emotiOnal and psychological stages
ol death and dying .
A consultant to numerous health
c are-related organrzahons. Frantz

also has p ublished wrdely on tOpiCS
related to student 1ssues and concerns
He earned a bachelor's degree
from Grinnell College in Iowa and his
master's and doctOfal degrees from
the Umversity of Iowa.

NEN$LET AWARDED

CI.AH OF 'M SCIIOI.AIISHIP
.Jemea Hensley , a third-year stud ent In the UB School of Dental
Medrcine , has been named the first
rec1p1ent of the school's Class of
1964 Scholarship.
The $500 scholarshif'liS supported by contributipns from the dental class o f 1964. Selection of scholarshr p recipients Is based on
academ1c stand1ng and financial
need Hensley , a cum laude graduate of State University at Stony
Brook . has supponed himself
through his undergraduate and
graduate education.

KUBALA NAMED

CITIZEN OF YIEAII
BY AM-POL EAGLE
K•tharlne P. Kubal• . assistant
dean . School of Architecture and
Planning . has been named Citizen of
the Year •n the field of education by
the Am-Pol Eagle. She was honored
by the newspaper lor her global ap~
proach to education Kubala. who
works with and assists students from
atl over the world , has traveled to
Poland as an English teacher lor
Pomost International and worked as
an exchange admrnistrator at
Jagiellon1an University tn Poland .
Kubala. who holds a B.A . degree
rn h•story and a master 's degree 1n
educ at ion from UB. worked in student serv1ces at Buffalo State College before coming to UB . She
served as an academic advisor be·
lore becoming assistant dean in the
School of Architecture and Planning .
She currently serves as first vice
p resident of the Polish Ans Club of
Buffalo

CUNIC HAS OPENINGS
FOR CNILD, FAMILY CASES
The Psychological Services Center in
Park Hall , North Campus . serves the
entire WNY region . providing treatment lor a variety'Of problems expen-

anced by children and their lam1hes
Most common problems are
childhood fears. such as fear of the
dark Of school phobias. behaviofal
problems at home and in school. excessive shyness and discomfort in
social situations and parental concerns about how to d iscipline . Fees
are low and on a sliding scale based
on ability to pay.
For IT'IOI'e Information. call Michael
Raulin, administrative director, at

645-3697.

PLAQUE TO HONOR

-

·s cwa -T»N

TO TENNIS CENTER
A plaque to honOf the UB Women's
Club contribution to the Tennis Center renovation will be presented Monday, Feb. 19 at halhime during the
Bulls' basketball game in Alumni
Alena. The donation made possible
the purchase of four state~f-the--art
electronic portable SCOfeboards, a
wind screen, coun equipment and
stadium bleachers.
UB Women's Club Celebrate 501
chair Marilyn Ciancio and club president, Janet Fedor . will receive the
plaque which will be placed in the
lobby"tJf Alumni Arena as a permanent commemoration of the donation.
Funds fOf the Tenms Center renovation were raised at the WOfld University Games Global Extravaganza in
1993. the largest fundraiser in the
history of the club. Marilyn Ciancio
chaired the event and Rosalyn Levy
was president at the tlme .

SUMMIEII AESIEAJICH SET
FOR Ml-m SCIIOI.AJIS,
INEAYICE TEACHERS
The Department of Oral B i()k)gy in
the UB School of Dental Medicine is
oHering a ~voung Scholars ~ summer
program designed to provide minority high school students with handson research experience.
The eight-week commuter program, being funded with a grant from
the National Institutes of Health. will
take place July 8 through Aug . 30.
Eight minority students entering
their senior year of high school will
be selected to participate . as will two
in-seNice teachers who are minorities Of teach in a predominantly minority high school. Students selected
will receive a weekly stipend of $160
Teachers will receive $4 78 a week.
Participants will conduct research
1n one of the following areas: connective-tissue.physiok&gt;gy, bacterial moleCular genetics . structure-function relationship of macromolecules. cellular
and humoral immunology, bacterial
physiology and immunochemistry.
Students and teachers will YIOt'l&lt;.
with a UB researcher on a protect.
and share research experiences in
weekly seminars. Teachers wilt participate in a course on training students in cellular-molecular biological
techniques and the application of research experience to the classroom
Application deadline for the program is March 29. Applications are
availa~ from high-school principals.
gu1dance counselors. or from UB Department of Oral BIOlogy, 829-3827

MALE VOWNTEEJIS SOUGHT
FOR BRAIN FUNC110N STUDY

Pictorial History Celebrates
Medical School's 150 Years
To celebrate its Sesquicentennial, the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences has published a keepsake
192-page pictorial history of the medical school , complete
with rare historical photographs.
The limited volume with its 250 photos retraces 150 years
of achievement, trials and tribulations through the school's
colorful history. Available for delivery in March, 1996, it can
be ordered toll free by credit card from Walsworth Publishing Company by calling 1-800-369-2646, ext. 3339.
Cost of the volume is $39.95 including shipping and
handling .

UB researchers are seeking healthy
men under 40 to participate in a study
1nvotving brain function and anenUOn.
The two-pan study is being conducted
by Ralph Benedict. UB assistant prolessor of neurology and psychiatry
Pan one. a psychological exam.
WJII be conducted at BuHalo General
Hospital Of the Ene County Medical
Center. Part two. invotving neuro-imaglng , will be at Veterans Administration
Medical Center. Those who compiete
the first part will be reimbursed $25:
those who complete both parts. S125.
can 898-3371 between 9 a.m. and 4
p .m . weekdays if you are inlerested rn
par1icrpaling .

~-....wdl•cppallllllilillb
COIIIinuilllablldaa.tllllnce._...llllleldy..... YIIICID. . . .
infi:mlltlioa dintcdy tiom lbe dloal, . . . . . . , or Jli'CIIIDI you're
inm:llodin,!Dnoe.irllcJnpiFI.IIId,fonnmy......-,...,tyCIItiao.
'iJoderpwllllldludy" colainsiDfonlllliouODow:r3,30011CCftldill:d ·inlliluliODi oll'eriua ~ prosi.ms io lbe us. -s
C8Dada. Eolriea provide basic io1'onUIIion oboullbe iDSiiluliorr, llllll)'
iocludei!XIelltli.edeocriptions• well as oolineapplicali011 forma. You
can sean:b lbe tile alphabetically by ioslillllioo or ~ by
SIBle, province or OOUDIIy, or by major, degree. or religious aflililliou.
"Graduate and Professional Study" profiles over 1,500 US. accredited ioslitutions offering gl8dualc and professional programs io lbe
U.S. and abroad. The tile can besean:hcd alphabeticiJiy or geographically aod by academic area and keyword It bas informatiou on more
1bao 31,000 degree-granting programs io 300fields of graduale SIUdy.
Individual entries include information about program requirements.
faculty !!Jl(l their research. research facilities. and financial aid.
Other fea!UreS being developed by Peterson's Edu&lt;:ariCHI Cenler:
campus news, online campus tows, and an employment registry.There
are plans to proville directories of professional associations, informationfromaccreditingagencies,cazeeroffices,andfinancialaidsources.

To access the Peten;on's Edru:ation Cenur, rype wings 01 your UB
e-mail system prompt,tMn enJer IM URLhltp://www.pekn;ons.com/
at the "Go" command. For assistance accesSing thL World Wide
Web. contact rM Crr Help Desk at 645-3542.
- Loss Pequeno Glazier and Nancy Schiller. University libraries

Nominati•s due March 1
lor Phi Beta K•a
Nominations a re due by March 1 for electioo to the Omicron chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the national honorary society for students in liberal arts degree programs.
Candidates should have a grade point average of 3.75 or
higher with 60 hours completed or 3.50 or higher with 90
hours completed. For students with transfer credits, the UB
average as well as the overall average musl meet these
minima. and at least 32 hours must have been taken at UB.
In addition, candidates must have achieved breadth in the
liberal arts (at a miriimum satisfaction of the university's currenl general educatioo requirements).
Eligible are: Seniors graduating in liberal arts degree programs (B.A. or B.S. but normally not B.F.A.) programs in Arts
and Letters, Natural Sciences, Social Sciences and Undergraduate Education (special and individualize:cf majors). A small
number of juniors in these programs are also elected annually.
Chief sources for nominatioos are departmental nominations, self-nominations and a computer printout from Records
and Registration indicating students who meet credit hour
and GPA thresholds.
Send nominatioos accompanied by the relevant student
transcripls to:
Dr. Barbara Bono, President. Phi Beta Kappa; Ann: Mili
Sidorski, The Undergraduate College, 220 Talbert Hall.
Two awards are given each year to distinguished studenls-the Samuel P. Capen Prize for outstanding work in
any genre and the Hildegarde Shinners Prize for the best
student essay. Potenlially qualifying work or a detailed description of such work, should be sent with a nominating letter from a faculty member by April 1 to: Or. Barbara Bono.
Department of English, 306 Clemens Hall, North Campus.
Materials submined will be returned to the student directly if
an appropriately addressed envelope is provided.
Election of new student members is scheduled to be completed by April 15, wilh the annual induction ceremony set
for May 17 at 2 p .m. in Slee Concert Hall. The ceremony is
open to faculty and staff in addition to the inductees, their
famil ies and friends. All persons previously elected to Phi
Beta Kappa are urged to anend.

�11118111

.___,.s.a.,~

Leners

The Reponer llflll9kxmes lettet&amp; from readers

COtlY'I'I8fltin on its 8IOries and oonlent

Lett9fs
llhOI.Adbe brief and may be adJted for style and

·cannot
ol opace
lmWions
, ........
pol'18f
po.btish
an letters
receiYed

Following Is a leher we would like
you to Include in the next edition
of the Reporter.
To all members of the UB
Community:
Sexual assault, sexual abuse,
sexual harassment, stranger
rape and date or acquaintance
rape, are monumental problems
for our society. Unfortunately,
college campuses are not insulated from these harsh realities. It
IS highly likely that as a member
of a college campus community,
you know someone who is or will
be a survivor of rape . As we face
thts problem. there are important
steps we can take to assist
someone who has been victimized . If a woman who has been
raped , harassed, or abused
chooses to come to you . as a
friend , for support and assistance there is much you can do
to help.
LISTEN :
• Allow her to express her feel tngs without interruption
• Be patient with silences as she
may be slow in talking .
• II she needs help conlinUing,
try repeating back what she has
sa1d
BE REASSURING .
• Believe herl A great fear of
survivors is that they will not be
believed

• Reinforce that the rape was
not her fault, oo matter what the
circumstances.
• Comfort her as much as possible verbally .
• Beware of physical contact as
she may not want to be touched ,
but you can always ask If you
can hug her (don'llreat her as if
she is contagious).
• Provide th ings thai make her
feel warm and saf&amp;-a,bfanket. a
stuffed animal, hollea.
• Make sure she has a safe
place to sleep thai night
• Do not talk about geHing revenge: focus your energy on her
and her feelings.
ENCOURAGE HER TO SEEK
HELP:
• Call Crisis Services holline for
professional guidance
(834-3131).
• Go with her for a medical examination immediately-contact
Center for Student Health
(829-3316).
• To preserve evidence. d iscourage her from changing her
clothes or taking a shower.
• Help her gel counseling to
work through the trauma (even if
the rape occurred some time
ago. but she still has not wOrked
through il) .
• Let her make her own decisions! You can help her work
through her thoughts and feel-

ings, but il is Important thai she
has control over her life and her
recovery; support her in whatever she decides to do or not do,
even If you disagree.
• Call Saxual Assault Information
Line (645-3411) for options in reporting and resources available.
PROVIDE ONGOING SUPPORT:
• Be available throughout the
next weeks and months-recovery takes much time .
• Learn about rape trauma syndrome (from the Crisis Services
holline or the Counseling Center)
so that you know what to expect
and can understand her reac tions beHer.
• Respect her rights to privacy
and do not tell others of the rape
without her consent .
FOR YOURSELF:
• Saek suppon for yourself to
work through this; it is natural to
feel great stress when supporting
a rape survivor-talk to someone
"safe" (counselor. friend at another school, parent) about your
thoughts . feelings and needs

Rape, abuse. and harassment
are community problems that
can only be diminished if our
community stands together to
support those who have been
victimized .
Yours truly.
THE STAFF OF tME COUNSEUNQ
CIEHTER

CALENDAR
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

--...

Retlremeal lnformatioa SasloDS,
KPMG Peat Marwick. 104 Parter. South
Campus. 4-6 p.m., and 7.9 p.m. To regis·
ter, call KPMG Put Ma.rwick. 854· 1830.

·-Cai. . . -

Exte.aded GeDH"ali:ted Eatlmatinc
Equ.tloaa ror C l~ Data, Pro£.

Danie l Hall, Univ. of Iowa. 246 Cary .
South Campus. 4 p.m.

UfeW-...ot&gt;
Thesis/Dlssertation Support Group,
Barbara Umiker. Thundays through
April II . 4:3()...5:30 p.m. To register, call

645-6125.
UfeW-.bop
T'al Chi (or Bqlnoers, Ron Ingalsbe
Tuesdays and Thursdays, through May 2.
5:)0..6:30 p.m. To register, cal l 645lll2.5.

BHthovH Cycle IV
Manhattan String Quartet . S\ee. North
Ca mpus. 8 p.m. $4, $5, $8 ,$10.

-...-..
c-u.,.,

ExlllbiU

''Perfect World." a group show, features
work of Vincent Sh ine, Laura Stein, Gregory Crewdson. David Nazio. and
Ronald Jones. through March tS in the
University Art Gallery located in the
Center for the Ans. North Campus. Gallery hours are 10:30 a.m.·8 p.m.,
Wednesday through Saturday , and NoonS p.m. Sunday. Admission is free-.

T_..tbytlllltMU
"DUmping Sight: Landscape/Landscope."
an exhibit by Satoru Takahashi. is the exhibit through March 17 in the University
An Gallery. Center for the Arts, North
Campus. The exhibit is "a complex archi tectural-sculptural work consisting of
two separate revolving doors made of re·
nective glass with fish tanks as ceilings."
Takahashi i!i a Japanese anist living in
New York Ci ty. Gallery houn are
Wednesday through Saturday, 10:30
:t.m.-8 p.m .. and Sunday, Noon -S p.m.
Admission is fret: .

F'NIIIp.olnt
New paintings and drawings by Waller

SportsView
•FOOTBALL

Providing support and assistance for rape survivors: Staff of UB
Counseling Center offers guidelines for the campus community
TO THE IEIHTOR:

7

v..._.n,No. u

Prochownik arc on view through Feb. 23
in the Art Department Gallery located in
the Center for the Aru, North Campus.
Tile show is presented on the occasion of
Procbownik' s retirement from the UB
DcpL of Art. Gallery hours arc Tuesday,
10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Wednesday through Friday. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; and Saturday. II
a.m.-g p.m. Admission is free .

A r-••

Schomburg dedicated h11. life 10 preserv·
ing. The exhibit also traces the evolution
of the Harlem-based resean:h center that
bears his name. There is 111 reception Feb.
29 from 3-5 p.m. in l..oc:kwood.

_ o f _ __

" Building and Landscape: Byzantine
Chun:b Buildings in Greece." a show or
photographic works by Jonas Lehrman. 1s
on view through March 8 in the James
Dyett Gallery , 335 Hayes Hall, South

TourwaFO
Interested in learning more about UB's
public radio station? Join the WBFO
staff Noon- I p.m. Thursday, Feb. 22 1n
Allen Hall for a presentation , followed
by a tour of the station facilitie s. Pan1c•·
pants will have an opportunity to make
an audio recording of a suuion announcement. Space is limited to 20 people. Call
g29-6000 before Feb. 16 to reserve a
place.

Campus.
lllackHiototy'1'he Legacy of Arthur A . Schomburg" is
on display through March 15 in
Lockwood Memorial Library, North
Campus. 1be traveling exhibition of photographs and reproductions of manuscripts explores the g lobal history and
culture of black people, whose heritage

NAME

POSITION

Kulaa Bacheyie
Tyrese Benmng
Steve Blake
Roshon Bradley
Dan Curcione

HOIIETOWNIMIGH SCHOOL

L8

LaSalle. ON/Sandwich Secondary
Buffalo. NY{TurnerJCarrolt
Rochester. NY/EastrldgeiHudson Valley CC
Rochester . NY/Aqwnas lnstrtute
Bnck. NJ/Bnck TOoNnShlp Memorial

Rychard Dykes
Bill FeldmaJer
Brian Garontakos

WR

Syracuse. NYJCofCOfan

Doug Goecke!
Drew Haddad
Matt Harrington
Jermaine Jenmngs

WR

LB
OL

DB
OL

08

B•rmingham, MIJSeahOOn

LB

DE
TB

W Blooml1eld. MI/Orchard lake St Mary s
Williamsville. NYNIIU.amsvtlle South
Clevelancl. OH/SI lgnatJus
Alboon, NY/Alboon
Buffak&gt;. NY{Turner/Carroll
New Kens1ngton. PANalley

TE

Hamburg. NY/Hamburg

08

Youngstown. OH/Andefson-Fitch
Kent. OH/Kent-Roosevelt
Caledon~a . NY/Caledoma-Mumtord
Hmckley. OHJSt Ignatius

WR
OL

Kevin Johnson
Gabe Kogler
Jeff Lawrence
Justin Long
Oom Monacelli
Geoff Panteck
Enrico Pierre

OB
WR

Eric Ptpluns
David Pruce
Joshua Rolh

DB
Ol.
FB

DL

Ol

Dan Shefterty
Brad Tanton

FB

Josh TrexJer

LB
TB
LB

Dl

Theron Walker
Londell Young

Montreal. OUEN.aux College
Arnotd, PA/Velley
Chat'doo. OH/Chardoo
Conewango, NY/P&gt;ne Vattey
Grosse Pointe Woods. MI/Grosse Poime
Vestal. NYNesta/
Elmira. NY/Eim1ra Free
Pic:kenng . ONJOunbarton
Brooklyn . NY/Brooktyn Boys &amp; G1rts/Nassau CC

• MEN'S BASKEniALL
The Bulls picked up an important road VICtory Saturday mght With an 85-77
wm over Northeastern Illinois. UB rema1ns 1n second place tn the M•d-Conhnent Conference. and is 12-8 overall and 9-4 1n league play pnor to thetr Feb
12 meeling at Ch•cago State. UB trailed 35-28 allhe hall bul ratll9d 1n lhe second half shooling 48.5 percent ( 11Xlf-33) 1n the hnal stanza. FO&lt; the game. the
Bulls shol45 2 percent (28-of-62) tncluding 42.9 percent (!Xlf-14) from behind the three-po1nt arc. Mike Martinho led the Bulls with 23 potnts. tncludJng
tour three-pomters, and seven ass1sts. He was 9--of·13 from the tree throw
line. Robert Harns added a double-double wrth 19 points and 11 rebounds
Jarrue Anderson and Bernard Wheeler also scored in double figures w1th 13
and 11 respecttvely Marshall Freeman pulled doNn 11 boards.
Earher 1n the week. the Bulls' 16-game home Winning streak was snapped
by Mtssoun-Kansas Ctty 72-63 Anderson and Man Clemens ued lor gamehigh honors wtlh 16 pomts ap1ece

• WOMEN'S BASKETBALL

u.,mreu

Leonardo Drew's site-specific installation "No. 45-A" was designrd for the
Lightwell Gallery in the Center for the
Arts, North Campus. and now IS lodged
there through Dec. 20.

The UB foolba\1 office has confirmed the 51gnongs of 27 players lo Na!Jonal
Letters of Intent. Head Coach Cnvg Ctrbus satd, "'Vrre are excited at the enthu·
siasm and response that this recruittng class showed dunng dletr officaal VtS~
Its. Aher meet1ng faculty members. tounng our woftd--cfass academiC and
non-academtc lac•hties. and also after sharing the goals. hopes and vtSIOf'lS of
th1s umvers1ty with them. we became a very competitrve optiOn lor these re-cruits. AlhlelicaJly, our competitioo was mosl!y Mid-American (DMSion 1-A) Jl&lt;Dgrams and academically. our CXXJll9(il.OO was Ivy League programs and many of
!he Jl&lt;esligiOUS public and pnvale nstrtUIJonS of !he Nonheast
~This uniVerSity's convnitment to future excenence 10 athletics whtle stJII
mamtaining its stronghc:Md of excellence and beyond 1n the undergraduate departr1lents swayed many recrutts and their families: he sa.ct ~The future rrove
to the M1d-Amencan Conference was an obVK&gt;Us help to our efforts. One objective was to recrUit successful htgh schocM programs-programs that had a
history of w1nning, that put a high pnority on success both on and off the field
and programs that resonated the h1gh standards that we have grown to expect from this football team. In that respect, we fared extremety well.·
The football offtce announced that spnng prachce will beg1n March 30 and
conclude with the annual Bluel#hite game April 27 at UB Stadium
The follc7Mng have SIQned Nalional Letters ollnlenl 10 play locAbaJ at UB

The Royals sullered a 99-71 loss at Norlheastem lntn01s Saturday rnght but rematned 1n first place poor 10 !he Feb 13 deadhne v.nen !he lOP team IS awarded
!he t'osl site lor !he Mid-Conbnenl Conference tournament UB. at 17-S&lt;M!fall
and 9-3 •n league play. IS tied wilh Yoongstown Slate lor !he top spot bu1 holds !he
he-breaker over !he Penguins should bolh teams liniShed lied on !he 13111
Ahc1a Kollmorgen led the Royals. scor1ng a career-high 14 points and grabbtng nrne rebounds. Anne Gallagher cilso added 14 potnts Brenna Ooty, K1m
Coon and Megan McCray each contributed 10 pomts for the Royals. NEIU
shot 52.5 percent (32.of-61) against a Royals team that !~ads the M1d..Cont1nent Conference and IS third nationally tn held goat percentage defense at
35 0 Earher 1n the week. the Royals set an all-hme record, Wlnmng !hell 13th
consecuttve home game 68-52 over Mtssoun-Kansas City at Alumn1 Arena
The Wln eclipses the old mark of 12 stratght won by the Royals between Feb
26. 1994 and Jan. 23. 1995. Ooty scored 21 potnls; Gallagher added 13 wilh
10 rebounds Nicole Blakeslee collected 11 po1nts and four blocked shots

• MEN'S TENNIS
Instructional S up port Assistant (SL1)-University Libranes. Posting IP-600:!
Instructional S uppor1 TKhnH:ian (SL3; Internal Promotiona l O ppor1un ity)Computing &amp;. lnfonnauon Technology.
Posting •P-6004

Faculty
Senior Anistant/Assoc:h1 t ~ librw.rhlln Sciencc and Engineering Library, Posting
lfF-6004. Clinical lnstructor/C iin kal
AsslU.nt ProftsSOr-Phys•cal Thenapy
and Exercise Sc1ence. Posting ltF-6005
Ass:istant ProFessor-Oral and Mu:lllofa .
cial Surgery. Posung lfF-6006. Senior
Assislant/A.ssol:iMte Libnri.nLockwood Memonal Library. Postmg
IF-6007
Projec:l Staff Associate-Development,

Posting lfR -95090. Research Technician
lii· Biochemistry. Posting •R -96003. RrR&amp;n:b Tubnician 11 -0phthalmology.
Posling IR -96004 . Medin! Tec:hnidan
11-Social &amp; Ptevent1ve Medicine, Posting
IR-96006.

To obtain mor' informalwn em JObs
Usud abtn•c, cofllact Pusonnd Scn'ICU.
/04 Crofts Hall. To obtall'l mformtJtiOn
on Research jobs. ctmtact Sponsorrd
Programs Pusonnl'l. 416 Crofts

The 1996 spnng men's tenn1s season opened over the weekend as the Bulls
traveled to Ithaca for the Comelllnvl!atooal Mike Proulx led the Bulls. wtnmng
the consolatton finals over hts opponent from 81nghamton Proulx also defeated opponents lrom Colgate and the Un1vers1ty of Rochester to aavance

.WRESTUNG
The Bulls posted a 20- 15 w111 over East Coast Wrestling Assoc1allon loe
Bucknell Saturday at Alumn1 Arena UB p1cked up w1ns by Bnan Dowdall ( 118
pounds). Jason Wart1nget ( 126), Anthony Conte (158) . Marcus Hutchtns
(167), George Charnoun (177) and Anuro Mazzeo ( 190)
UB IS now 5-4 on the year 1n dual meet compeuuon
- Teo Wasko. Sports lnlormatKJ&lt;l Off1ce

UPCOMING UB HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS

Slllurdlly, Feb. 17
Women's Basketball vs Eastern llhnois
Men's Basketball vs Eastern llhno1s

6 p m at A1umn1 Arena
6 15 p m at Alumn1 Arena

Monday, Feb. 19
women·s Bask.ett&gt;all vs VatparSJso

Men's Basketball vs Valpara1so
Men's &amp; Women's M1d-Cont1nen1
Conference SW1mm1ng Champ10nsh1p

5 30 p m at Alumru Arena
7 50 p m at AIUO'V'II Arena

II am &amp;7pm at
Alumn1Arena Natat04'1um

�__

8

-u,a..-rr.-..
Jxek l'lwlicut. Mario Curi&amp;SI:lodowlb U.Uv. (Polaod). 684

.........,

Baldy. Nortll ~- 4 p.tiL

~­
T-A-~IK-

anile, Scoct TIUIIIC&lt;. 2o48 Coote.
lionb Campus_ 4:30 p.IIL

.... _..,..

Rtli"mut lntonaaiJoa Sasions, KPMG Put Marwick. 104
Parker. South C.mpus. 7-9 a.m..
and 4-6 p.m. To ~ gister, call
KPMG Peat Muwick., BS4-1830.

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop
Introduction to Sun X·
Wlndowln&amp; Syrttms. 2--4 p.m. To
register, call Academic Services,
Computing and Information Tech-

--

ooloay User Liaison. 645-3540.

IIJoloCic8l ~

--

Flipped Out By a DNA Metbylax, Dr. Richard Roberts. New
Englllld Biolabs. 121 Cooke.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

.....__and

PCB
Putkkk B.,_arbn
of E~rposure in Maternal Milk.
Paul J . Kostyniak, Ph.D. 508
Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

........Sip~s-1-

w-..

- · o;.. CUnbo)oL Direct E&amp;-

~ Medlod (DEW).
clayw tbroap April 17. S~ :4S
p.m. To rqi.Jier, call 64s.612ji.

Ukrainian
Daars atUB

~~

.

o.-~ou.......- .~o~uo

Loo..,..., Pllar1!LD, Ulliv. of
-Scboqloflolodi&lt;iooud
o..wuy_,23 Coote.- Compas. 6--9-.30 p.m.

•c--.
.
....
...,._..,..

The Veriovka Ukrainian
National Dancers, a company of 75 dancers, singers and musicians, perform Feb. 17 at 8 p.m. in
the Center for the Arts.

C...., a c.-, ........ To

IDTI.
J o y a e - - Two-IOCIOiao
-...op .. tho Meycn-Brias

Type t.dicatot. 7-9 p.m.. To reps.-

_..,..
Wllatlt---""""
t«.clll6otS-{ji2S.

Statlatlca Col._. . .

~-A Eardoo. 7-8

Non pan metric Aul11ls or Re.,a~t~ Mnsuns, M atildc:
Sanchez. Pennsylvania State Untv .
246 Cary. South C.mpus. 4 p.m.

p.m. Toqlau, cliltlols-612S .

_
_
-----·

... _.... __ _
..

ur.w-...op
ThH~/DWerta tion Support
C roup, Barbara Umilcer Thu r~ ­
days through April II . 4·30-5:30
p.m To register. call645-6125
~erw--,o

Internet lOS/Crate a
Homepa&amp;e. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Un dergraduate Library , 127 Capen.
Nonh Campus. Prerequisite:
UN IX account and Interne t 101 or
equ• valc:nt experience To register
call 645-2943 or e-mail
&lt;s vc @acsu.buJfalo .cdu&gt;

UICNfta,• . . . .

(-~

O.PAX......_Ia
~

Art IActuni
Art at the: End or tb~ Century,
Peter Halley. Albright- Knox An
Gallery Auditorium. 8 p.m. $3.
\4 : UB faculty. starr. studenu.
Albright memben. frtt . Co-sponsored by University at Buffalo An
Gallery!Research Center in An +
Culture:.

DZodlaque: Secrec:y{Dance That
R~vea ls and Cooculs. Drama
111catre, Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $2.SO. $5.

__t,.......

Multi-rui.nut Organisms In

M~l or
EmerJ~nt Antibiolic Resistance,
Lisa Sai man. M.D .. College of
Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia Univ. Kinch Auditorium,
Chi ldren's Hospital. 8 a.m. Irving
M. Snow ~ tu re Series.

Patients with CF: A

Rdln:IHIIt lafonaat.ion St.

ror UNIX URn. 2-4 p.m. To register. call Academic Services.
Computing and lnfonnatio n Tech nology User Liaison, 645-3540.

Jiou, KPMG Peat Marwict. Center for Tomorrow. Nonb Campus.
7-9 a.m .• and 4-6 p.m . To reaist.er,
call KPMO Peat MarwM:k. 854-

~Col._

•••

The Coa:niUve Geometry of
War. Bany Smith. 280 Park.
North Campus. 3 p.m.

c-.try c""-•••

Snrcbin&amp; Tips for CAS React.

CAS llql.1try, aad New EDb.a.ncementJ iD. STN/CAS Fila.
Roben Zuzak and MichAel E.

k-·-

-

Z odiaque: Secrecy/Dance That
Renals and Cooceals. Drama
Theatre, Center for the Arts. North
Campus."8 p.m. SS , $10.

l n t - Folk

-Ina

All leve ls . 2 Diefendorf. South
Campus . 8- 1 I p.m. Free . Sponsored by GSA .

ASCITWOfbMp
Overview XIIR6 aqsl 0pc!n
Windows. 1-3 p.m. To regiSic:r.
ca ll Academic Services, Comput mg and Information Technology
User Liaison. 64S-3S40.

ur.w-...op
How to Pure hue a Microcom puter, Mark W i~r and Kcrri Ca bana . 1-3 p.m. To register, call

645-6 115.

\~
YOU CAN QUIT SMOKING:

Sip up lor Ufe Workshop
Feb. 20 and make a fresh

otart.

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop
Introduction to UNIX. 10 a.m.·

-airy-

12:30 p.m. To register, call Academic Services. CornputinJ and
Information Technology User Liaison, 645-3S40.
Inhibitors of CydlA Dependent
Kbwol: Their Role ID Rqulatory CeUular Growth. A.l.a.n
Kinniburgh. 1348 Farber. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

....~-

Cardiac PerfonD&amp;DC;f; In Divin&amp;
Rats, lngvald Tysseboln. M.D .•
Ph.D .• Univ. of Bergen (Norway).
108 Sherman. South Campus.
4p.m.

--..-...

Retirement Information Se.ions.,
KPMG Peat Marwick.. CenlCr fDf
Tomorrow. North Campus. 4-6
p.m.. and 7-9 p.m. To regislef;. call

-·

KPMG Peat Muwick. 854-1830.

IEAvl...-tal IIMitll
OccupaUonal Be.ahb In Be.ijlne,
Prof. Yi Fu Deng, Capital Univ. of
Medical Sc iences (Beij ing). 125
C FS Addition. South Campus.
8 :30a.m.

__

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop
lntemet Raoura:s-PLACES

Peuirord. Chemical Abstract Service. 215 Natun.l Sciences. North
Campus. 4 p.m .

,....__ROII-

T._ Ya-lltoiL&lt;e, Y1o11a, ud
Midlael K-, pluo. Allea.
South~· 7 p-IlL Toped by
WBFO 88.7 FM f 0 &lt; - tho
followi.Da SUnday at 4 p.m.

ur.w-.....
IaUn.odlate Sip LaaSutlaar, o;.. Curthoys. Direct
E&amp;perienc&lt; Mdhod (OEM).
Wednesdoys tbroaah April l7.
7-8: 15 p.m. To reJiuu. call

645-612S.
LJr. WO&lt;bloop
Drlvlaa To U.. lladt nt s.,.ad,
Poul o....wlld. GcolosY-fOCUJed
travelopes. Wcdneldays througb

ur.w--,.
T'ai Chi ror Bqinners, Ron
Ingalsbe. T uesdays and Thursdays. through May 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m To regislcr, cal1645-6 125

0,.:-U..

.......lc.........., __

Royals vs. Valparaiso. Alumni
Arena. Nonh Campus. 5:30 p.m.

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop
Introduction to 1\.taplf:. Also Feb.
24. 10a.m.- 12:30p.m. To register. call Academic Services, Com·
puli ng and Information Technology User Li aison. 645-3540.

--·

Royals VI. Eastern Jlllnols.
Alumni Arena. North Campw.
6p.m.

-

V criovka Ukrainlan Natlooa.l
Dance Company. Mainstage.
Center for the Arts. Nonh Cam ·
pw. 8 p.m. $16, $20, $22 .
Z odl.aque: Secruy{Dancr That
Reveals aod Conceals. Drama
Theatre. Center for the Ans. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $5,$10.

--·

Mo ndays through April 8. 6:308:30 p.m.
deposit; $20 refunded upon satisfactory completion o r the: program. For
i nrorm~lion. call the Office of
Snldent Life, I SO Student Union.

ru

-

Z odiaque: Secrecy/Dance That
Reveals and Coocnls. Drama
lbeatre. Center for the Ar1s. North
Campus . 2 p.m. $5. $ 10 .

1830.

NIODC)' To,.,...od, piuo. Worn

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop
laterad R.aou..rca-PEOPLE
ror UNIX Uten. 10 a.m .-Noon.
To register, call Academic Services. Computing and Information
Technology User Liaison, 645-

l.nauJ;la&amp; Your Readin&amp; Speed
Wblle lletaialDa Comprehension, Dr. Henry Durand. Noon2 p.m. To register. caii645-612S

ASCITW--,o
Introduction to Matlab. Also
Feb. 27 . I :30-4 p.m. To register,
call Academic Services. Cornputins and InfOrmation Technology
User Liaison, 645-3540.

ASCITW--,o
SAS on UNIX. I :30-4:30 p.m. To
register, call Academic Services.
Computins and Information Techoology User Liaison, 645-3S40.

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop

Buill VJ, Valpanbo. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. 7:50p.m.

Ut. WO&lt;bloop
Runnloa Eft"ective Mediap. Ed

ur. WO&lt;bloop

Brodka. 3:30-4:30 p.m. T o register, caii645-612S.

Latin Rhythm Danclna ror
Slnaa and Couplet of All Aaes.
Ninita and Bjorn BoJUe. 8-9 p.m.
To register, call 645-6125 .

ur.w--,.
Ballroom llucln&amp;: Polkas,
Rhelnlanden. Oben:ks &amp;: Waks,
Ninitl and Bjorn Bogue:. 9- 10 p.m.
To register, call645-6125 .

statJ-·coa._....
Nooparamelric Two-Samplf:
Tests for Survival Data I.Dcorponltia&amp; Loo&amp;ltudiDal Conriata,
Dr. Susan Mumy. Harvard
School of Public Health. 246
Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m.

ur.w--.o
Fresh Start: Bow To Quit
Smok.iaa. S:J0-6:30 p.m. To register, cai i64S-6 125 .

ur. WO&lt;bloop

Socl..

w-w--..

Soclal Work, Tberaptulk Art
and Art Thf:rapy: Some RelatioDJblps. Lucy Andnls. Center
for Tomorrow. North Campus.
$6S. Sponscred by Social Worlc
Continuing Education. For lnrormation, call 645-6140.

T 'al Chi for Bqinnen, Ron
Ingalsbe. TUesdays and Thun days,through May 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m. To register, call 645-6 125.

Eawlr a a

ta.1 Lactw'e

WlDdoWII oa tbt Ea~at,
Jack Krajewski, Dept. of Environmental Conservation. 2 18 Narural
Sciences. Nonh Campus. 7:30
p.m. Free.

StriBI Qunot. Sic&lt;.

Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. S4, SS, $8.

Jolua Fullam. clariDet. llJld

of Arnold. Ta.illeferre. Hindemith.
Stravinsky. Milhaud. Bemstc:in.
Slce. Nonh Campos. 8 p.m. $2,
$5 . $6, $8.

3540.
LJr. WO&lt;bloop

-

$10.

.....

ColD.Dluakation Bdwet:n Pecllatriclaas and Families, Michael
Msall, M.D. Cafetorium A.
Mercy Hospital. 8:30a.m.

645-6125.

--·

."'ceelt ...........

DowB S)'&gt;ld,_: Eobaa&lt;ID&amp;

Advanced UNIX. 3-6 p.m. To
register, call Academic Services.
Computing and lnform~tion Tech ·
nology USer Liaison, 645-3S40.

Bulls VL Eastern lllinols. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. 8: I 5 p.m.

' """"

,

M

Society of U.. Specllld&lt;, film by
Guy Debord. introduced by Keith
Sanborn. Screening Room, Center
for the Alu. North Campus. 7:30
p.m. Free.

March 13 . 7-8:.30 p.m. To reaister.
c.al l6oiS-612S.
-CycleUI

ASCITW-.....

---PLACES

for UNIX Uttn. 10 a.m.-Nooo. To
rqisccr,
s.mc.s.
Ccmputinc IIDd lnfarmllboD Tc:d&gt;JIOio&amp;y User~ 645-3S40.

call-

----·

-Dedlatioa. -llalldiDIPhilip 8 . Wels. M .D.,

......t i l - ........
~ bolonaatloa S..
sions., KPMG Peat Marwick. Center for Tomonow. North Campus.
1-9 a.m. To register, call KPMG
Peat Marwick.. 854--1830.

......,_,_

BarvHtJ.na Stem Celh: Auto

-

MorrowT.....plaat

c....ca-,

r.

C,air, UB Council. Atrium. B tomedical Education Buildina (the:
old CFS Additioa). South Campus. 10 a.m. School or Medicine
and Biomcd.icaJ Sciences officially opens iu Sesquicentennial
Celebration.

.........

MCC Swim Cbamplooshlps.
Alumni Arena Natatorium. North
Campus. II a.m. and 7 p.m.

Bmut
Kevin Garey. 248
Cooke. North C~Jnpus . g a.m.

llllcn~oJae.-

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop
lntrodurtkHl to Suo X-

Tbo ~ID-.aza ltoltlatlw: s.q......,~q, "-&lt;mbly &amp;

Wiodowlna Systems. 9:30- 11 :30
a.m. To register, call Academic
Services. Computina and Information Technology User Liaison.

AaDOtadOD of a 1.1 Mb Geaome, Pror. Joseph Metric.k.. 244
Cary. South Campus. I I :45 a.m.

-

645-3540.
Roawell , _ Stllff
C ontrol of DHFR Gene Expression by ElF, • Complex Family
orc.u Cyde-Rqulakd T...,.
JUtptioa Factors., Prof. Nicholas
Heintz, Univ. of Vmnoot Collese
or Medicine. Kirchhofer Room.
RPCI . 12:30 p.m.

ASCIT WO&lt;bloop
SPSS 011 UNIX. 1:30-4 :30 p.m.
To reaister, call Ac.demic Services, Computing and lnronnation
Technology User Liaison, 645-

3540.

.IIII:.IBICaf~

u... S)'&gt;ltb..U 1D Symblo&lt;k

Soy- Root Nodula, M art R.

---

O'Brian. 307 Hochstetler. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

Lnk

I t81 ............

Poplllatloa Dytwala ., lndk•tor Bacttria Ill the ButfDt RJver

Wattnlaed. Prof. Gary Pellibone,
BLLffalo SweCoHese. 140 Keuer.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

......

~

N-..lanl r-lblo Woricb
ud Geoeralbed Quaatlften.

•ull•

lit,....._

----·

Tbo Trlo.-pb olU.. Marl&lt;et:
What Doa It Meaa for Medi-

cl.ad Stephen Schroeder, M.D .•
Robert Wood Jobnsoa Founclation. Also, bonorary doctorate of
scieoce dcp-cc. awarded 10 Saxon
Gnham. Ph.D .• Prof. Emeritus.
Aint Readina Room. Health Sciences Library. South Campus.
3:30 p.m. School or Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences orricially
opens its Sesquicentennial Celebration.

-

llloloCic-' -

P byloaf:na a.Dd tbe Evolution
ot Geoanpbial ltanp Ia tbe
Okl World Warblen, Pro£.
Trevor Price, Univ. or Cali(orma.
San Diego. 12 1 Cooke . Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

-Col....,lu•
Al&amp;ebra otTlme. Pro(. F. Will ·
iam Lawvere. 103 Diefendorf.
South Campus. 4 p.m.
.......l;lltlca .........
Pbotoclyouslo: Tbonlpy Witb
Catioak D)'«s, Michael Deny.

Ph.D. S08 Coote. North Campus.
4 p.m.

Conlinued on page 7

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UIIVERSITY OF lEI Ylll AT BUFFALO

UNIVIIRIIIY A'IIIUI'MLO
State University cfNew Yorlt

One Huruired Fifty Yean

Public hearing addresses
Rethinking SUNY issues
L.V..Ie conducts hearlnc; Greiner testifies

John B.

C
session puts accent on

.....,,left,-- D. Price

UB

ONCERNS ABOUT coping wilh further
budget cuts while continuing to provide
qualily education took cenler stage as
leaders from SUNY institutions throughout Weslem New York and members of
lhe Stale Senate gathered at
UB1an. 31 for a public bear·
ing on Rethinking SUNY.
It was the fourth such
bearing conducled by Stale
Sen. Kenneth P. LaValle,
chair of lhe Senate Higher
Education Committee, who
was joined by Sen. Mary Lou
Ralh and Sen. Dale Volker
in lhe Cooler for Tomorrow.
"We have . rcacbed the
point where thinking andrethinking must be tniDSlalcd
into action," LaValle said.
Tbe TruslCCS' report, be
nolcd, "has been described
as a work in progress," a
document lhat is "inlendcd
to help the policy makers of
NewYori&lt;Staledecidewhat
lhe Stale UniveBily of lhe
next millennium will be. II
represents a framework to
guide our thinking, but it is up to the Legislature and
the Executive Cbamberto put substance on that frame·
work ."
LaValle called on the legislature, the govemor, lhe
SUNY truslees and lhe campuses themselves all to
work together ..to resolve the issues before us."
While soine may consider lhe measures proposed
under Rethinking SUNY 10 be severe, they' re not
complelely uoexpecled given the hi story oflhe pasl iO
years, said UB President William R. Greiner.
'The Relhinking SUNY process has been said by

lit-

eonr.-.

efficiency in government
OUTICAL LEADERS
from throughout Buffalo
and EricCounl)' I"''D" 10~I}.UB~ f.d&gt;.
2, and cbccked lbcir differences al
lhe door. 1bc occasion was lbc
release oflbc fiBl major report of a
campus lhiok lank dcdicalcd 10
achieving gJeaterregional efficien·

cies in government
Erie Couol)' Executive Dennis
GoBki, Buffalo Mayor Anlhony
MasieUo, numerous stale Asscm·
bly membeB and SenaiOB, Town
SupervisoB, ViUage MayoB and
olber leadeB of government and
industty from Erie Counly came
togelbcr in lbc Center for Tomar·
row for lbc morning-long meeting
unveiling a 321-page report en·
titled ''Governance in Erie County:
A Foundation for UndeBtanding
and Action," prepared by lhe UB
Governance Project.
1bc reP.,rt was lhe culmination
of a two-year study of govemrnen~
demographics and service delivery in Erie Counl)' conduclcd by
five UB archileclllre and planning
professoB: Acting Vice President
for Public Service and Urban Af·
fairs John Sbeffe~ David Perry,
Alfred Price, Henry Taylor of lhe
Center for Urban Studies and
Kalhryn Foster, who chaired lhe
group.
President William Greiner, a
former law school professor whose
area of expertise was local govern-

ment, initiated the Governance
Project in early·l994 an"d charged
lhe group wilh producing an inVentory of lhe region's governmental
struc.tures and service delivery
mechanisms, lhen analyzing lhe
data wilh an eye toward efficiency
and effectiveness. Careful not to
prescribe any specific policy di·
rection, Greiner noted lhal lhe re·
port clearly indicalCS lhat"to simply
bold on 10 lbc status quo would
probably be a losing stnllegy."
Greiner explained that New
Yorl&lt; has particularly "progressive

laws" when it comes to solving
regional problems cooperatively.
Amo0g lhe possible solutions are

shared services, intergovemmen·
tal compacts, public·privale part·

ne_!Ships, seryice. consojidati,.ons.
and governmental consolidation,
allhough be discounlcd talk of a
"metropolitan" orjoint cily-counly
form of government as unlikely for
Erie Counly in lhe near lerm.
The Governance Project will
remain an ongoing public service
of lhe univeBily. The report ex·
plaios that UB "has a genuine obli·
galion to be an active partner in lhe
development of lhe communily"
and it recommends three specific
actions: that an accessible, regional

on-line information network be
established; that a significant sur·
vey be taken of area residents to

prioritize issues; and that a series
of targeted, foijow-up forums be
held on an oogoiog basis. In addi·
tion, bolh Masiello and Gorski
agreed, following Friday'~ meet·
ing, to appoint represcolatives to a
Continued on page 5

some to be radical and extreme," said Greiner, who
was first to present testimony at the hearing. ••tthink
it is not when you put it in the historical context of our
1984-85 efforts."
Adecadeago,a documentlilledTheChallengeand
the Choice led to greater insti tutional flexjbility in the
Slate Uni veBily system. But those changes did not go
far enough. Greiner said. "I
lhink we mis~ some oppor!unities in 1985 to do more
wilh lhe SUNY system. And.
frankl y. had we done them.
we might not find ou=lves
in someoflhedifficultiesthat
we face today."
Greioer continued his lestimony by citiog specific Rethinking SUNY issues now
befo,.lhel.egisla1urelbatbe
said need to be addressed.
High on his list was the
Management Effectiveness
BiU and measures contained
in it lhal could lead lO betler
campus financial management. "Senator, I urge you
and your coUeagues: adopt
legislationlhatwouldgiveus
WIWAIIR.IIIIIEIHER
theAcademic Qualil)' Fund."
legislation lhal Greiner called
·•a step toward creating a
proper ' bank account' for the SUNY syslem," which
would al1ow the campuses to manage all resources
"more wisely. effectively and flexibly." The Academic Quality Fund would be "a necessary fi Bl step
toward a rational tuition revenue policy."
If passed. the Management Effectiveness Bill also
would allow camPuses to benefit from leas ing their
grounds and facilities . Greiner gave as an example a
measure lhal would allow UB to lease the land to
developeB. who then could build affordable. apart·

"Give absolute highest
priority tO restoration of
funds for the Tuition
Assistance Program. "

Continued on page 3

Senate agenda: budget, 'Fresh Start,' use of UTAs
BrnniCOX
Reporter Staff
F~...._.approvedfirst

readings of two academic resolu·
lions and plied President Greiner
and Senior Vice President Robert
Wagner with questions on lhe slate
budget during lheir first meeting of
lhe new year.
Senators set the stage to vote
next month on resolutions governing lhe usc of undergraduale leach·
ing assistants and a new ..Fresh
Start" program for students returning to college after a failed first
attempt. Senate Educational Policies and Programs Committee
Chair Michael Metzger explained
lhat lhe undergraduate teaching
assistant resolution is a new version of a billlhe Senale passed last
spring, amended to answer concerns raised by President Greiner

over the summer.
The Fresh Start program ,
Metzger explained, would allow
poor grades obtained in an earlier,
unsuccessful stint in college to be
discounted for certain studenls
who. after an absence of five years
or more, return to college. Both
resolutions will be debated by lhe
fuU Senate and voted on during
lheir next meeting. Feb. 20.
Wagner told Facully SenatoB
that many of the changes proposed
in Rethinking SUNY legislative
package la~ked onto this year's
budget actually had their genesis
in a report written over a decade
ago by yet another commission on
SUNY's future. 'The Challenge
and lhe Choice" was an indepen·
dent analysis of SUNY commis·
siooed by former Chancellor
Clifton Wharton in 1985 . Its final

repon, acconling to Wagner, became lhe basis of "flexibility legislation .. passed later that year.
However, Wharton left SUNY to
become bead of lhe TIAA..CREF
pension system shortly !hereafter.
so suppon for it waned. according
to Wagner.
"However," Wagner explained,
"a lot of what we see in Rethinking
SUNY exlends or builds off of that
1985 report." Management flexibil ity, program coordination among
campuses and selective, ruther than
across-the-board, cuts in finances
Were the prime recommendations
of that report. Wag ner said that
Rethinking SUNY amplifies some
managemenl flexibility already on
the books and gives more local con trol over revenues with its consolidated fund proposal and relieves
SUNY of lhe financial stress of

running hospitals, by spinning them
off to private, not-for-profit corporations. "The proposals with respect to tuition are some of the
most imponant issues facing campuses in the next few years," said
Wagner. "Weare aggressively pursuing this opportunity to have the
system Trustees, not the legislature, become wholl y responsible
for tuition policy." The proposed
tu ition policy would also enable
Trustees to set different rates of
tuition for different campuses or
programs.
Wagner added that a proposal
to entrust the Trustees with power
to allow entrepreneurial use of campus property could also benefit UB
significantly. "We have 1.200
acres." observed Wagocr. 'The leg·
Continued on page 4

�2

Military sociology is
Moore's specialty
Her book shedalll&amp;ht on Army·~ of mm.tty
By STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

W

HEN IT COMES to racial
equality. corporations and
other soc ial institutions
cou ld learn a lesson from
the military, accordi ng to
U B Sociologist Brenda Moore. However.

\ he adds, women and homosexuaJs do not

fare as well in the military as elsewhere.
Moore has made military sociology her
acade mic specialty . She earned a Ph.D. in the
fi eld from the University of Chicago, where
she studi ed under the late Morris Janowitz,
arguabl y !he lead in g military sociologist of
hi s time. Recently, she authored a book on a

unique battalion of African-American women
1n World War 11 .
Since aniving al UB in 1988, Moore has
become widely recognized for her work in
military sociology, which. she explains, is !he
study of the "culture of the milirary as a institution·· particularl y. !he military ' s level of "democratization" or social inclusi veness. Although
generally reflective of !he cuhure ar large, !he
mil itary, Moore finds. can be "a particularly
good avenueofupwan::l mobility for minorities,
cspeciaJiy minority women, who are oftt:n excluded from mainstream opportunities.''
The military is al !he "cutting edge" of
racial integration, says Moore. in pan be. ·
ca use of their
"zero tolerance
attitude toward
racial segrega lltenda Moono
with President
Clinton on
VeterMw Day.

w-

tion." There are more clear, direct repercussions to racial biases, she explains. such as
the fact !hal making racial sll1J11 can be, under
lhc Uniform Code of Military Justice, a
punishable offense.
Moore also knows about !he military's
racial policies from !he inside. A veteran of a
six-year career in !he Anny, Moore reached
!he rank of staff sergeant and was assigned 10
!he Defense Race Relations Institute as a Race
Relations specialist. Although her sights had
been sci on journalism, Moore rctumcd to her
native Long Island after leaving !he service 10
cam her uodergraduatedegrcc in sociology al
!he State University at S100y Brook.

M

oore views the military as imperfect,
but far ahead of corporate America on
!he race relations fronL In fact, !he mitiwy bas
"a high percentage of African Americans in
leadership," she said, "more !han any olbcr
institution.ll' s a sad commentary on lheolbcr
institutions in society." Moore believes, however. that the high numbers of minorities in
!he military, and in positions of leadership,
may be directly relarcd 10 !he lack of job
opportunities for !hem in olbcr institutions.
When it comes 10 gcndcrequity,lhe military docs not fare as well as corporations, she
mainlains, with some services falling well
behind !he curve. "While !here is a glass
ceiling in !he military gcocrally, lhe Navy and
Marine Corps do even less well ," she said.
' Thein is clearly a male dominalcd cuhure."
The military also scores lower !han other
institutions when it comes to treatment of
homosexuals , says Moore, who believes that
President Clinton's "don'! ask, don't tell"
policy has "created more problems !han it bas
solved." Academic analysis of gays' actual

standing in !he mililllry cullllre is difficu!IIO
ascertain because, as Moore explains. "'fficially,lhcreare no gays in !he military."
MoorewassclcelediOprcsentbcrvicwson
women in !he military as a Unilcd Nations
dclcgarc 10 !he lnlt:malional Women's Confcrcocc in Beijing last year. Sbcfound dwbcr
message was 001 universally welcomed.
"Women all over !he world have played
active roles in !heir country's militia." sbe
said, )iet, many of the women arthecoofcrcncc seemed 10 take !he positioo dw women
should 001 have any part of !he military."
Her new book, "To Serve My Country, To
Serve My Race." chronicles !he cxpcricoccs
of the 850 members ofthe6888th Bartalioo of
!he Women's Anny Corps (WAC), which
was comprised exclusively of African American women. Their vantage was unique because !hey suffered "dual segregation." as
women and as African Americans.
The book also contrasts !he military of
!hal era wilh IOday' s all-volunteer force.
"The all-volunlccr military has 001 bad as
great an effect on youth as its predecessor,"
says Moore. 'The military functions more
like a company today, and enlistees are
making more of a career choice of mililary

service." Moore also cites the lock of a
contemporary equivalent of the G.I. Bill as
a significant diffcrcncc.

I ast year, Moore uavcled wilh President
~101110 the Normandy, France site of
lheAI!icdinvasionforccrcmoniesCOIDIIIall()rating !he 50th anniversary of World War U.
Sbe had received a Presidential appoinlmcnt
10 !he American Battle Monuments Commission in 1994, and lnlvcled 10Europe IOdcdicate a monument constructed by the
Commission. In Normandy, she point«! oul
10 !he Presidential delegation the gravesites
oflbrecmcmbcrsoflhe 68881h WAC Blllalion. Tober surprise, no one in lbc delegation
was familiar with the corps dw was !he
subject of her book research arthe time.
The Commission ovcrsccs !he planning
and construction of memorials on foreign
soil. Amongthefcwstatcsidemooumentslhe
Commission is responsible for are WasbingiOD's Vi!mwo and Korean W11 Memorials, as well as a new WorldWarli monument
planned soon. Along with numerous active
and retired generals, Moore serves in lhenoopaying posl with former New York Governor
Hugh Carey.
:::J

African-American WACs: they changed segregationist military policy
By SUE WUETCHER
News Services Staff

A

FRICAN-AMERICAN women
who served in the Women 's Army
Corps during World Wail! played
a role in bringing about changes
in segregationist U.S. mi litary policy, a new
book by a UB sociologist has found .
''To Serve My Country, To Serve My
Race" (1996, New York University Press).
by Brenda L. Moo~. UB assistant professor
ofsociology,tells !he story of African-American women in the Women' s Army Corps
(WAC) by drawing on the experiences of
members of a postal directory battalion. II is
the first book to document the lives of the
women in the 68881h-lhe first U.S. WAC
unit composed of African-Nmerican women
to serve overseas. Moore imerviewed 51 of
the 850 women who served in the unit and
reviewed archival documents from the War
Department and from the women 's personal
collections.
'' African-American women were not just
passive recipients of the structural laws and
policies that excluded them from participati on in U.S. institution s in general. and in the
military in particular," Moore says. 'lhey
were activists."
She cites numerous examples of this acti vis m in the book. ln one example, Margaret
Barnes Jones, public relatio ns officer of the
6888th. ten s of an act of resistance when she
wa s statio ned at Camp Breckenridge, Ky.
Black WACs protested poor assignments and
were subsequently reassigned to positions
co mmensurate with their abilities.

Moore also relates an incident in which a
member of the 68881h. Gladys Carter, refused to drink out of a drinking fountain
marked "for colored only" when !he unit was
undergoing training at Fon Oglethorpe. Ga.,
before being shipped overseas. She drank
from !he founlain marked "while," and other
members of !he unil followed her lead.
These stands against racism by African
American WACs iUustrate how these women
helped to influence changes in military policy,
Moore says.
While the 68881h's staled mission was to
redistribute mail , its underlying mission was
to debunk the notion that African-American
women were inferior, she says.

Above: Swltcllboanl 0...,.

tor Pic. v - Hayes at

wort&lt; In Eneland- Rl&amp;ht
members of 6888th before
sail i n g - In 1945.

'They (!he women of !he 68881h) helped
10 dispel racial myths !hal had spread throughout England and France," she says. 'The
British and French wcrecagcrto sec wbelhcr
African Americans really had Ulils."

M

oore cites from an article written about
lhc 68881h in a British newspaper.
'"These WACs are very different from lhc
coloured women ponrayed on !he films,
where !hey are usually domestics of lbc oldretainer type, or sloe-eyed sirens given to
gaudiness of costume and eccentricity in
dress. TheWACs have dignity and a proper
reserve," !he article concluded.
During interviews with !he women, Moore

found one consistent theme: Racial segrega·
tion did nol exist in England and France as il
bad in !he United StaleS. Once lbc women
were assigned overseas, !hey reponed no
discrimination within !he 688811&gt;--4bc selfsupponing baltalion had a certain amount of
autonomy since its chain of command was
composed entirely of African-American
women.
Moreover, !he-local population tteatcd
!hem well. Many women were invilcd 10 !he
homes of !he British and French. '"These
were !he firS! black women !hal many of
them had ever seen," Moore says.
The discrimination !he women of !he
68881h did experience, she says, was confined 10 lhc War Dcpartmcnl's ~grcgaled
facilities and activities.
Moore relates lbc experience of Virginia
Frazier, a member of !he 68881h who, along
with two white WACs, was scleclcd lo atlend Portsman College of An in England.
Frazier received special orders 10 repon to
!he American Red Cross in Bath. But once
she anivcd al !he Red Cross. officials !here
refused her lodging because sbe was African
American. The director of !he art school
found her lodging with an English family.
Moore notes that until the war, AfricanAmerican women had been excluded from
military service. except for a few who had
served in !he Anny nurses corps during World
Wai I. "But during World War 11. AfricanAmerican women were accepted into the
Women' s Army Auxiliary Corps (later !he
Conlinued on page 4

ACliNGOIRECTOROFPUBliCATIONS U11Wr11A.. U.. . . . EDITOA ~v-..&amp;.. ASSOCIAT£E.DI1 0fl JOAII ..,...., AATDIAECTOA· .-~ Mpl/lbt*J,pubbl,lft_,I!O.J/f...,../

�3

-e,u. -n.-17

Researchers develop first 'green' solvent system

T

HE FIRST environmentally

friendly solvent sy11em whose
properties may be easily adjusted
or "tuned" bas been developed by
a team of scientists at UB, the
University of Texas, the University of
Nottingham and the University of Colorado.
A ·r esearch paper on it is published in the
Feb. 2 issue of Sci•nc•.
The new hybrid solvent system, called a

water-in-carbon dioxide microemulsion,
demonstrates the fii'Sl tbetmodynamically
stable, bydropliilic (water-loving) environment to be formed in a "green" and continuously adjustable solvent It also can be
recycled and reused.
Solvents cum:ntly in use are often harmful
to the envirorunent and present substantial
disposal problems. The. new solvent system
has broad applications in protein and polymer
chcmistJy, environmental and matt:rials sci·
ence, separations and reaction engineering.
'"Tbcse new microemulsions in carbon
dioxide open up an entirely new way of
thinldng about and doing cbemistJy," said
Frank Bright, UB professor of chemistJy and
co-author of the paper.
Composed of water, a form of carbon
dioxide and a fluorinated surfactant typically
used as a blood substitute, the solvent system
overcomes many of the major drawbacks
associated with traditional liquid solvents.
'1t is generally agreed !bat tbere are only
two environmentally benign solvents in the

wcdd: water and carbon dioxide," said Bright.
Wllilr is an ideal solvent for working with
biological samples and otber hydrophiles (water-loving cbemical species), he explained. but
once these species are dissolved, they are
generally diflicult to remove from water. Also,
their function cannot he modulated without
the addition of external stimuli like temperature changes or secondary reagents.
Proteins, other biological samples and
water cannot be dissolved well in carbon
dioxide alone. But carbon dioxide remains
an excellent ingredient for a solvent system,

since in addition to its "green" properties, it
is naturally abundant, nonflammable and the
least expensive solvent after water.
ortbesereasons,researchershavespent
several decades working to find a way
to many the altrllctions of carbon dioxide with those of water.
The UB scientists and their colleagues
achieved their breakthrough by using carbon
dioxide in its supercritical state, wbere liquid
and gas-like properties exist simultaneously.
Wben the supercritical carbon dioxide
was combined with the fluorinated surfactant and water, it spontaneously formed
stable, tiny balloon·like sacs with water in
the middle, called reverse micelles.

F

•.,.esc reverse micelles are like microscopic chemical reactors that will trap hydrophilic species inside them," said Bright.
'The surfactant serves as llie micelle's walls
and keeps the water within an interior pool
and the carbon dioxide outside of it. So the

s

UB Loke Ontario model
affirms
_,IUD
__ action on game fish
News Setvices Staff

O

WNERS OF CHARTER-BOAT FISHING companies on Lake Ontario loudly
protested the decision by New York State in 1993to cut by 50 percent the amount
of game fisb stocked in the lake.
A new mathematical model of the lake developed by UB researchers shows that
the state's action made good scientific and economic sense.
The model was developed to investigate the potential for a decline in alewife, the main fish
on which Lalr.e Ontario salmon feed, should stocking levels of game fish get too high.
According to the model, if the stocking of salmon and trout had continued at a high level and
the levels of certain nutrients, such as phosphorus, in the lake, remained low, the collapse of
the whole fishery would he a long-term possibility, especially if there were severe winters.
"If the alewife population declines too much, the lake could lose its main food supply for
game ftSb and, if that happens, these fish won't grow because they won't have anything to
eat," explained Joseph V. DePinto, director of the UB Great Lalr.es Program and principal
author of the study.
A paper describing the model by DePinto and Rajeev Jain, UB doctoral student, is
published in the current issue of the Journal of Aquatic Ecosysr.m Health.
The model developed by DePinto and Jain provides scientists with a way of understanding
how w~terquality is affected by the complex interactions among nutrient loads and the levels
of fish stocking and harvesting in the lake.
By taking wbal the researchers describe as a more holistic approach to depicting an aquatic
ecosystem, this type of model may prove to be a useful tool in predicting how other systems
respond to various environmental changes.
'This ldnd of approach recognius that humans are just another part of an ecosystem and
that long-term ecosystem health cannot be maintained merely by considering human needs,"
said DePinto. 1be model takes into account another potential cause for a decline in alewife:
the reduced loading of phosphorus, a key nutrient for the growth of algae. The algae constitute
the base of the food chain in the lake, converting solar energy to food for organisms all the
way up the food chain.
Under the restrictions on phosphates in the lake recommended under the Great Lakes
Water Quality Agreement, phosphorus loading to Lalr.e Ontario decreased by approximately
50 percent between 1970 and 1985. Over the same period, game fish stocking to the lake
increased by more than 400 percent.
In 1993, in an elTon to avoid a total collapse of the ecological balance in the system, the
New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and the Ontario Ministry of
Environment cut back by-50 percent the amount of salmon and trout they stock in the lake,
to reduce predation on alewife.
· However, thechaner-boat fishing companies, who rely on a lake that is well-stocked with
game fish like salmon and

trout~

contended that it was not the overstocking of alewife

predators that had led to the decline.
··soth sides were guessing," said DePinto. '1'he question was, whose guess was more
educated?" To find out, DePinto and Jain have been working to integrate available inform•·
tion on ftSh in Lalr.eOntario into a modeling framework. The project was funded by New York
Sea Grant and the New York State Legislature.
'The state cut the stocking levels because of concern that by keeping them as high as they
were through the early 1990s, they might be in danger of wiping out the fish the salmon and
trout feed on," said DePinto. "Our model suggests that was a wise decision."
rJ

hydrophiles are located within a tiny water

microenvironment that is, in tum, surrounded
by carbon dioxide."
This creates a unique environment for
hydrophilic substances, such as proteins,
with the added advantages assoc iated with
supercritical carbon dioxide.
'The new sol vent has diffusi on proper·
ties more like a gas than a liquid~ so reaction s
that rely on diffusion go significantly faster,"
said Bright. "For example, a chemical reac·
tion that might take I0 minutes in water,
takes one minute in a supercritical fluid."
This is particularly anractive because several important chemical reactions cannot be
harnessed iniodustrialorenvironmental appli·
cations for the reason that they take too long.
'The new solvent system has the loading
characteristics of a normal liquid, so it can
dissolve high concentrations of relati vel y
large hydrophiles. It also eliminates what
may be the biggest drawback to liquid sol·
vents now in use: getting the reactants o r
reagents out of the solvent once a reaction is
finished and di sposing of the solvent.
'Think of tJying to remove d issolved

table salt from a cup of water,'' said Bright.
" It would be hard to remove it without add·
ing a second solvent, another chemical reagent or energy. On the other hand, while an
organic solvent may be volatile and therefore
easily separated, you have to worry about
how to properly dispose of the solvent."
y contrast, supercritical fluidsarecontinuously adjustable solvents, said
Bright. In other words, by adjusting
the amount of pressure applied to the
supercritical carbon dioxide; it is possible to
control the behavior of the carbon dioxide
and, in tum, the reverse micelle, its water pool
and chemicals within it. This property also
makes extracting the chemical species from
the sol vent system easier. For example, if the
carbon di oxide pressure is lowered, the reverse micelles become unstable, collapse
and simply dump out the dissolved species.
'The beauty o f this scheme is that the
carbon dioxide can then be collected and
recompressed so that the whole process may
be repeated again and agai n." said Bright.
The UB portion of the research was funded
by a Department o f Energy grant.

B

PUBUC HEARING
Continued from page 1

ment-style housing on campus.
for the SUNY also is too lean, Greiner said. and
Greiner again voiced his support for differthat lack of funding could hurt UB 's ability to
entiated, campus-based tuition. The state. be
develop learning tcchnologit:s. The budgetary
said, already has a form of differentiated, camimpact on Graduate Resean:h Initiative, alone,
pus-based tuition: among the 30 community
could mean a $3 million loss to UB. Tecbnol·
coUeges there are 19 different tuition levels.
ogy is the "key to the effectiveness of higher
ranging from $1 ,900 to $2,400. "And, fntnldy,
education in the future,·· Greiner said.
we haven't seen one community college conChanges to SUNY, Greiner said, mean the
sume another community coUege," as a result
role of SUNY's central office will need to be
of those different tuition levels.
redefined as more of a leadership institution
He noted that "40 other states do not have
than a management and processing institution.
aone-siu-fits-all tuition policy,'' and SUNY
The implications ofRethinldng SUNY"!&gt;"
already charges differential tuition at the
parently have not gone unnoticed by state
graduate level and at the statutory colleges.
residents,Greinersaid "Applicatioosaredown
Monies from differential, campus-based
by 10..15 percentacrossthesystcm, and it isn ' t
tuition must remain on the campus generatbecause the cadre of ftrst·time, full-time freshing those tuition dollars, Greiner emphamen is going down," be said. "Bad news trav·
sized. ''Every revenue dollar that is earned at
els fas~ and people around the state may he
a campus should stay at the campus," he said. concerned about the future of the SUNY sysAsked by LaValle how UB would benefit
tem as a whole. I think this is a warning sign."
from keeping revenues, Greiner responded it
According to Greiner, SUNY cannot so
would ••atlow us to
quickly absorb the
continue the qual cuts suggested by Re ity of program that "Every revenue dallar that is
thinking
SUNY .
our students want
"Over the long haul.
and expect....What earned at a campus shauld stay at restructuring the hos·
would we do with
pitals and undertak·
the campus. "
the money ? We
ing some of the other
would plow it right
WIWAII R.. IIIIDNEJt efforu proposed by
back into programs - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the BoardofTrustees
with a substantial
should lead to a savamount being reserved for financial aid."
ings. But to think they will be delivered and
Greiner also urged LaVaile to maintain
in place by July-that will be very. very
funding for the Tuition Assistance Program. difficult." he said.
Calling the suggestion that TAP he tied to Pel!
A member of the SUNY Board ofTrustees
grants a "precipitous change," Greiner asked
also voiced concerns that while change is
LaValle and the legislature ·~o give absolute
necessary, the measures contained in Rehighest priority to restoration of funds for the
thinking SUNY may he too much too soon.
Tuition Assistance Progrum." LaValle said
"Some of us have been anxious to see change in
that TAP will he given a lot of attention in the
the State University forsometime," notcdAmold
fmance committee.
Gardner. Bu~ he cautioned, change is not neuNOting that suggestions for greater mantral or positive when it serves a predetennined
agement flexibility in SUNY raise concerns
agenda or progr.un. A great deal of work went
that such flexibility would be abused, Greiner
into Rethinldng SUNY, Gardner said, but that
said, '"The empirical record suggests that the
report is an inventory of ideas. none of which
greater flexibility which was given to State
were tested. completely thought out or ready for
University in 1985 has been very wisely used,"
implementation. "Our report is not inlalded to be a
and !bat UB has received "high marks" on the
scholarly work prodLct." but suggestions that need
way that increased flexibility has been utilized.
further consideration. he said
A 1991 Rutgers study of AAU public
"Rethinking SUNY has largel y been a fisresearch universities showed UB to be leancal exercise ... .lt's been used as a document
est. or next to leanest in terms of administraonly to cut money" and to justify cutting state
tive staff among leading public research
support of higher education. Gardner said.
universities in the U.S. "We have squeezed
Joan Sulewski. president of the Health Sci·
our administrative side very, very hard and
encesChaptcrofUnited University Professions aJ
we take pride in that," Greiner said. "We
UB also presented testimony. noting that " The
have squeezed so hard that our deans have
report cites 'cost' 19 times and 'educatioo' 12
now told us we probably should put some
times. Undefined in the report is how the cost of
more back into administrative suppon beeducating a student is determined. ... Unclear in the
cause we have made it too lean."
report are the problems for which solutions :ue
The proposed allocation for capital funding
proposed ."

�4

'Rustproofing' treatment not worth its salt,
UB laboratory experiments have shown

on daall1 penalty

11J ILUN -.AUM

~

News Services StaH

W

HILE SOME corrosioncontrol treatments may be
beneficial. a UB professor
has proven in laboratory
experiments that one rustproofing treatment billed as protecting motor vehicles against the ravages of rust" Ru st-Evader"- just isn' t worth its salt.
Makers of '' Ru st - Evader," which
RustEvader Corp. also se lls under the name
"RustBuster." "Electro-Image" and "EcoGuard," have been charged with making
fa lse claims about their product by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
The FTC is seeki ng an administrative
order that would prohibit RustEvader Corp.
in Alloona. Pa., fro m making decepti ve
claims about its auto motive products.
According to Robert Good, UB professor
of chemical engineering. he was contacted
about his ex periments by FfC commissioners
while they were making their investigation.
"As far as J can tell. thi s producl has no
effect at all ," said Good. 'The people who
sell it make a big point of saying that it can't
do any hann to your car, and they ' re right.
The only harm dqne is to your pocketbook."
TheFTChasc
edthntRustEvaderCorp.
h"" falsely rep
nted to automobile dealers

that reports of laboralory tests performed on
the RustEvader provide scientific proof that it
reduces oorrosioo oo motor vehicles.
The com pany also provides car
dealerships with materials so that they may
perform the demonstration themselves.
But when Good conducted experiments
that si mulate the method in his laboratory at
UB, he found that the company's claims
about its product were false.
" It looks like an authentic corrosion-control product," said Good, explaining that the
claims sound plausible because the product
is described as providing what is known as
cathodic protection, and the product includes
something that could be called a cathode,
which is a negatively cbl!fged electrode.
"What makes it a fraud is that some of the

pans essential to a cathodic system aren't
present." he said.
The electrochemical system is designed
to look similar to one that works very well in
reducing corrosion in ships and ocean locks,
he explained. The difference, he adds, is that
when a ship's hull is submerged, the sodium
and chloride ions in the salt water conduct
electricity, creati ng a complete_ circuit.
"With the Ru stEvader, the manufacturer
provides a cathode and an anode, which
attaches to the car battery," said Good.
''The catch is that since there's no sah

solution between the cathode and the imode,
there is oo cooduction path. so the circuit is
incomplete and oo protection can occur,"
said Good.
In his laboratory at UB, Good conducted
a series of experiments where a piece of
steel, representing the car, was exposed to
·
salt water.
Without the RustEvader connected, rust
began to fonn on the steel after about one
hour.
With the RustEvadercoonected, rust also
began to form on the steel after about one
, hour.
'This product bas no effect at all," said
Good.
The FTC case is scheduled to be heard in
May 1996.
Car owners who wonder what will prevent or postpone rust might take a tip from
Good, who writes limericks and verse in hi s
spare time:
"Ashes to ashes.
dust to dust.
if you don ' t wash your car,
it'll turn to rust."
Good says this is especially true during
the winter, when washing removes road salt
from motor vehicles.
0

istory Month founder to speak Feb. 12 at UB
, founde r of Black
History Month and f under-chairman of the
Panamerican-Panaft1,:an Association Inc .,
will speal&lt;. Monday. Feb. 12 at 6p.m. in 148
Diefendorf Hall on the South Campus. His
prese nt ati on, e ntitl ed "Change But No
Progress," is being held under the auspices
of UB 's Black Student Union. It is free and
open to the public.

The Panamerican.PanafricanAssociation.
lnc . is anon·govemmenta1 organization with
consultive status before the United Nations
Economic and Social Council.
Pritc hard established Black History
Month as a national/international observance.
expanding Negro History Week, which was
founded in 1926 by Dr. Carter G. Woodsoo.
While visiti ng university campuses, he teUs

a Dew generation of Americans about the
history and growth of Black History Month
Pritchard appeared recently on CNN as a
race relations specialist on a program observing the birthday of the late civil rights
leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Pritchard is credited with being one of
America's first professional African American concert pianists.
0

the front lines; si nce most of them were in
support uni ts themselves, there was no need
for support from African American women.
And racial barriers prevented them from
performing those tasks for white males.
Finally in 1944-45, pressure from organizations o utside the military. mainly the
NAACP, the National Council of Negro
Women, legislators such as Adam Clayton
Powell Jr., and the black press, led to a
co mpromise: African American women
would run the postal directory battalion in
Birmingham, England, and later in Rouen

and Paris, France.
The6888th was a specially chosen unit of
WACs "from both Air Forces and Service
Forces," Moore says. 'These women came
from all walks of life. Some did not have a
high school education, while others were
college graduates.
'They (the ~88th ) had a mission to perfonn , and they perfonned it well. There is no
evidence to lend support to the notion that
African American women were less capable
than men , or white women ," she says.
In the book, Moon: compares the effects
of military service on the li ves of the women
in the 6888th. She found that. in general, the
women were satisfied with their experiences,
in particular citing the ability to travel and
make long-lasting friendships, both with
other military personnel and with people
they had met in France and England.
"For women who weren ' t sure what they
wanted to do with their lives, military service was a turning point: It gave them more
direction and an opportuni ty to grow and
mature," Moore says.
And the Gl Bill for most of the women
was ..a significant tool" to attain higher edu·
cation and job security. For many, it gave
them the opportunity to attain a relatively
high status position in the civilian labor
market. she says.
" World War II marked a turning point in
the status of racial minorities and women,"
says Moore in explaining her interest in the
unit. 'That era, the nature of the con.nict.
challenged the existing fonns of social stratification in the Army, as well as in other
American institutions. Previous restrictions
on race were lifted, and opportunities for
women also were expanding."
0

WACS
Continued from page 2
WAC) as soon as it was founded. The Navy
d id not e mpl oy African American women
until toward the end of the war, and the
Marine Corps did not employ African Ameri can women at all during the war years."
However, she says. the War Department
would not deploy African American women
overseas because of a combination of racism
and sexism. While many white WAC units
supported white male units overseas. ,the
War Department balked a1 havi ng African
American women perfonn the same tasks.
There were few African American men on

The New York State Civil Service Commission has apprOIIEid therequest to suspend the attendance rules for the Dec. 11, 1'995 snows1Dml
in Erie County.
.
To be eligible for leave with pay without charge to accruals a Slate
employee:
• must have had a full day absence for Dec. 11, 1995. ThiSincludes
workshifts that span two calendar days, for example, 11 p.m. Oeo. 10
through 7 a.m. Dec. 11 ;
• must have been absent due to the extraordinary weather conditions
and not on approved leave (e.g., sick leave, scheduled vacation leave
or military leave);
• must not have been absent solely because of voluntary emergency
relief activities.
Pleue not. Employees who did report to work on Dec. 11 will not
be credited with an additiOnal day of vacation or compensatory lime.

eonr.enceset
-=:..-:oc1or

A ........ ...,._oothedeath
peoalty in New Y ocit Stale, spooson:d
by the Mitchell Lectun: Fund of the
UB School of Law, will beheld Salurday, Man:b 2, in John Lord O'Brian
Hall oo the North Campus.
"The New Yocit Death Penalty in
Context" has been planned to stimulate and enrich dialogue about capital
punishment and its implementation
among lawyers, legislators and the
general public.
Organizers note that this dialogue
has been markedly absent in New Yoct,
pointing out that the death penalty biU
passed the state legislature last spring
with little debate. They add that districtattomeysinthemostdeoselypopulatedcountiesofNew Yocitbave voiad
dissatisfactioo with the new death penalty la:w, which went into effect on
Sept. I, 1995, and that prosecutors
throughout the state have been less
than eager to apply the new statute.
Participating in the day-loog conference will be some of the nation's
leading experts on capital punishment.
as well as Erie County District Attorney Kevin Dilloo.
Topics to be discussed will include
problems in implementing the death
penalty, the lil:.ely impact of New
York's new death penalty law, the
responsibility of jurors and miscarriages ofj ustice in death cases, as well
as the U.S. Supreme Court's death
penalty decisioos and n:cent effortS to
reform federal courts' review of state
death sentences.
The n:gistration fee of$50 ($25 for
UB faculty and students) includes
breakfast. coffee breaks, lunch and
conference materials. Registration
deadline is Feb. 12.
For moreinformatioo about the conference, call Professor Marlws Dubber, 645-2 101/6213 (phone). 645-2064
(fax), ordubber@acsu.buffalo.edu (email).

SENATE
Continued from page 1
islation would empower the Trustees to let
parties other than New York State do things
on campus."
Asl:.ed about the process for making
changes recommended in Rethinl:.ingSUNY,
President Greiner explained that, while some
more significant pans of the package such as
tuition policy and hospital spin-offs would
require legislative action, many other things
could be accomplished simply by changi ng
SUNY Trustee policies. And, added Greiner,
the new Trustees are open to proposals for
change. 'There has been more participation
by campus presidents and officers in thi s
process than in any other I have seen," said
Greiner. "'Ibese new Trustees ask to come
out to see the campuses and learn firsthand."
Greiner also explained that earlier attempts to look toward improved "faculty
productivity" as a cost saving measure seem
to have fallen by the wayside. "What they
have realiud is thnt productivity, as least as
they measure it. is actually linked to the
architecture of SUNY," he said. "There simply are no huge classrooms on SUNY campuses, thus class sizes are smaller." Wagner
added that productivity issues were marginally addressed in Rethiol:.ing SUNY with a
call for investment in instructional technology, but that investment is unfunded this
year because oo plan on how best to spend
that investment is yet in place.
0

�~

UB gallery, Albright-Knox to
bring major'artists to Buffalo
a, P A - - M
News Se&lt;vlces Staff

COLLABORATION between The UB Art Gallery/
Research Center in Art+ CultureandtheAJbrigbt-KnoxArt
Gallery will bring t1uee of the
most influential artists of the last tluee decades to Buffalo this spring for the fmt in an
annual series of lectures and discussions.
AJ Hartis P., direclor of the UB gallery
and center, said the series,"Art 11 the End of
the Century: A Dialogue," will present important artists in reflectioo and appraisal of
their field. UB will sponsor the series with
other local organizations.
This spring UB wiD collaborate with the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery to present lectures by noted artists Peter Halley (Feb. 15),
Adrian Piper (Feb. 29) and Ronald Jones
(March 28). The lectures will be held at 8
p.m. in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery auditorium.
Abstractionist Peter Halley is bestlcnow n
for hi s paintings of cells and conduits
grounded in his concc:ro for social space.
This concern has resulted in a 15-year project

involving a number of media. including computer-generated virtual realities. Halley has

published essays and has written tluee books.
Adrian Piper is one of the best-lcnown,
most pbilosopbically challenging and respected artists ofber genention. Her activist
work encompasses several modes of artmaking-&lt;:onceptualism. performance, popular
media interventions and traditional objectmaking. Piper is also a professor of philosophy at Wellesley College.
Ronald Jones, a sculptor and installatioo
artist, has expanded the traditional notion of
sculpture by woriting his powerful observations about such subjects as AIDS, Vietnam
and the Holocaust into operatic design, bonsai gardens and cyberspace. Jones is Senior
Critic at Yale Univen;ity and serves as a
visiting professor at both the Rhode Island
School of Design and Bennington College.
The lecture series will be followed at 8
p.m. April 18 by a panel discussion that will
feature arts professionals from the Buffalo
community reacting to the lectures. The panel
discussion in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
auditorium will be moderated by Harris F.
and will be followed by an open discussion.
The panel will consist of Roberley Bell,
assistant professor in the School of Art and
Design at the Rochester lnstitutcofTcchnology; Ronald Ehmlr.c, Buffalo-based writer
and performer and former performance curator at Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center, Richard Huntington. an critic for Tlu!
Buffalo News and visual artist. and Carol
Zemel. professor of an history at UB and

award-winning author of several distintion issue
There
assessedservicesdetivcryforthe
degree tow ·ch they arc regionalized, comparing Eric
with municipalities nationwide. While some services face obsutcles such
as "racial biases" or "fisc88 distress" along the
road to regionalism. others might more readily
be regionalized, project chair Foster said.
Price emphasized that the report was designed to be "nota prescription for change, but
a valuable sourcebook," stressing that project
members sought to analyze without "justifying any particular set of governrocotal relationships." Price observed that the average
citizen in Eric County lives under a number of
superficialjurisdictions simultaneously; a "layering"ofgovemmentswhicbtheBuffaloNews
has described as "political lasagna."
He also debunked the adage that "everyone
lives in the suburbs and works in thecity."The
project discovered that, on average, one third
of Erie County suburbanites work in the suburb in wbich they reside, another third work io
yet another suburb and another third commutes to work in Buffalo. And, in the city,
nearly equal numbers of residents work in the
city as commute to the suburbs to work... In
short, we are Jiving 21st century tives under
20th century boundaries," Price said.
Sheffer reported that the next step in this
process will come in about six weeks when UB
will host a similar forum to explore on-line
information services for govemmcnL
0

guished scholarly books, includ ing "Utopian Promises: Themes of Modernity in the
Work of Vincent Van Gogh."
AJI events will talce place in the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery auditorium. Admission
will be free for UB faculty and students and
for members of the Albright-Knox Art Gal lery. For all others admission will be S4
(adults) and $3 (students and seni or citi-

zens).

5

.. ~ v......n.-.17

r

Modernist poet
to give readings
Gu.u.t Sobin ....,._. Feb. 14 In Unlvenlty Gllllery
a,PA--AN
News Services Staff

USTAF SOBIN. an American
modernist poet experiencing a
new-found and widespread interest in his work, will present a
reading at UB on Wednesday,
Feb. 14, as the guest ofRobertCreeley, Capen
Chair of Poetry and the Humanities at UB.
The reading, one of the events in the
Wednesdays at4 Plus literary series, will ta1ce
place at4 p.m. in the University Gallery in the
Center for the Arts on the North Campus. It is
free of charge and open to the pubtic.
A poet oflanguage and its voicings, Sobin
is critically celebrated for his ability to transport the reader into the realm of magic and
spirit.
The audience might li sten to his method
of developing rhythmic units syllable by
syllable to produce what poet Alben Mobili o
called "a telegraphic progression" that fo-

G

cuses the listeners' attention on individual
images and indi vidual sounds.
Roberto Tejada, echoing earlier comments
by Robert Duncan, has written that in his
drive to achieve transcendence through the

use of language alone, Sobin produces a
"visual sway of warp and ripple (that) in its

acoustic surge of wave and caesura ...perfonns
an otherwise inconceivable melding of austerity and exuberance.
"(His) stunning work to date." says Tejada.
"has been an enlerprise of voicing the imma-

nence of a nature as mirrored .. .in the frequently impassive medium of language ......
Critic Geoffrey O ' Brien adds that Sobm 's
serious, original and undeniably interesting
work is refined a nd p olished with

"elusive ... philosophical underpinnings··-a
fact that perhaps adds to its mystery and
numinous ness.

GUSTAF SOBIN

Sobin's most recent book, "Breaths' Burials," published last year by New Directions.
took three years to write and is considered
his best collection to date. Other recent work.
also published by New Directions. includes
"Voyaging Portraits" ( 1988) and 'The Earth
as Air" (1984). He is also the author of
"Celebration of the Sound Through" ( 1982)
and "Wind Chrysalid's Rattle" ( 1980). both
published by Montcmora.
His work has appeared in such literary
journals as Conjunctions, Ironwood, Pequod
and Sulfur. It is also included in the recent
Nonon a nthology. "Postmodem American
Poetry."' in MacMillan's " Best American
Poetry of the Year," Marsilio's "American
Poetry si nce 1950" and Faber &amp; Faber's
"Book of Movie Verse."

~~squi Tim~ [apsul~

Throughout US's SesquiC8ntennia/ celebrstion, thtl R&amp;porter will offer a s&amp;rios of
historical articles describing
the people and BV8flts that
have shaped the uniVBISity
during Its t50 years.

Listening·to the Big Band~
You

name 'EIITI--UB had 'em: the musicians and vocal-

Ists ol the Big Band Era olthe late thirties. forties and

fifties ...IMII)Ibody from Glenn Miller's Orcheslra, which
played for the 1Bih Annual Junior Prom (Feb. 25, 1939)
. tD Frank Siflatra with the Tommy Dorsey Orcheslra
(Sept 22, 1941).
Dancing was big at UB where students could count
on Ill least one dance a week.at Norton
Union, from informal "matinee" or
allemoon tea dances to
semiformal theme
and formal dances.
SWing music, only
about a decade old in
the 1940s, shocked the
- older generation much
as Elvis did 1n the 1950s.
At the Moving Up Day
dance May 2 , 1942, Eddie
Charon and his 12-piece
orchaslra played at a cost qf
$70, according tD careful records
kept at the1lme. What would today's
students think of the refreshments ·
served at the dance: Skippy Cups.
pop and cookies? The faculty was

Jreated to tea and cake (two cakes cost $1). ·
In a front page article published March 3, 1939 , The
Buffalo Bee, the student newspaper. reported favorably
on events of the Junior Prom·and Glenn Miller's orcheslra,
"whose refreshing new style features his four sax-floating
clarinet arrangement. an innovation in swing slyle. On
every hand one heard enthusiastic eulogies about
'the killers,' which included One O'Clock
Jump , King Porter Stomp and Big
John SpeciaL The ladies
attending the dance
received as favors
gold pendants bearing the universily seaL·

The Reporter thanks UB
Archives for their assistance in obtaining background informaffon and
photos for the Sesquicentennial Time Capsules.

Frank Slnatrll vocaht In 1941
wl*l the Tommy Doney OtcMstra
plllyed for a tl8nc:e In Norton Union.

�6

dergraduate Ubrary. The 368-page
reference book, "Dictionary of the
United States.· has more than a thousand enlrkts covering subjects from

NATURAL-,
MANMADE~

FOCUS OF Ucn.£
Western New York's enwonmental
heritage will be the subtect of "Windows on the Environment : a talk to
be held at 7:30p.m on Tuesday ,
Feb 20. in Room 218 of the Natural
Sciences Complex on the US North
Campus
.lacll K-.Jewakl, a UB graduate and engineering geok&gt;gtsl wtth
the New York State Department of
Envtronmental Conservation, wtll dtS·
cuss the regoo, whtch ts home to
some of the WOfid's most famous
natural attractions and some of its
most tnfamous man-made hazards
Krajewski , who has worked on en·m onmental problems in New York
State lor 25 years . wtll discuss the
Ntagara Gorge and Letchworth State
Par'K. as well as enwonmental
cnmes, hazardous-waste sttes and

the ~st VaHey nuclear-waste disposal site.
Free and open to the public . the
talk is sponsored by the UB Sciences
Alumni Assoctallon of the Faculty of
Natural Sctences and Mathemallcs
The Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics comprises the depanments of BIOlogical Scienc~Chem•stry. Computer Scl8nce. G
y.
Mathematics and Phystcs . or more
•nformation . call Cindy Ny hi at

U.S. hisla&lt;y and geography to popular culture and spons.
Jurczynski. senior ~turer In
Modern Languages and Literatures
at UB. spent seven years working on
the pro}ecl. He planned the book to
serve as a guide to the millions of
people who are interested in learning
rTl()(e about the U.S. ~I realized there
would be a great need for It, espeCially 1n Eastern Europe, as peop~· s
need to do business with Americans
grew: he has noted.

The book. published by Polish
Educational Publishers, WSiP, is
available •n the U .S .• Poland and
other countries.

The rank of Distinguished Ubrarian,
approved in October by SUNY Trustees. became effective in December,
making SUNY the tlrst Institution to
create such an academk: rank for u..
brarians The process was initiated at
a plenary session of the SUNY Uni·
varsity Faculty Senate. and a committee of librarians including .fucllth
......_, Director of UB's Lockwood
Ubr8ry. was formed to establish cr._
terla.

645-2531

The proposal, andorsed by the
SUNY Ubrarians Association and the

u•MUSICI,._._
MUSICOUMIICAL-

was approved by the SUNY Univer-

OFSC~~

S!.!NY Council of Ubrary Directors.

1

ChrlatophM H. G....., assista\11
professor ot musk: at UB. is the musicofogical director of Schubeftiade
1996. to be held Feb. 10-18 in New
York City at The 92nd StreetY Tisch
Center for the Arts. The event has
garnered nattonal praise SHlCB its inc eption in 1988. including an accolade as "the classiest act in town" by
The New York nmes.
The ninth season of Schubeniade.
on the theme "Opposites Anract
Schuben and Beethoven.· will in·
elude a series of ffve coocens. a
symposium. pre-concan talks and an
art gallery e)(hibit. Gibbs will be a
speaker at the Feb. 11 symposium.
The festival will be an exploration of
Schubert's 'WOI1t and iife in relation to
Beethoven. his greatest contemporary
and the composef he most revered.
The program also features duo
pianists Frled8
....,.. performing in concerts Feb.
10 and 18. He is professor ol music
at UB, she is an active performer and
teacher in Western New Yortt.

and......,

sity Faculty Senate in 1993. The Ac&amp;
demic Planning Committee of the
SUNY Board of Trustees approved
the new rank in 1994. after which the
proposal was fotWarded to the fuU
Board of Trustees. winning approval
at their Oct. 18, 1995 meeting.
The Distinguished Ubrarian rank
requires contributions by a faculty Ji..

brarian which have been •transforma·

tiona! in creaUng a new information
environment by prcMding access to
Ulformation, sharing or networking Information resources. and fostering information li!Of8cy." The rank. which
will parallel the Distinguished Professor rank, "honors and promotes the
achtevement of persona! excotlence,
groundbroaklng professional

signed to better serve the college's
student population. "Two-thirds of
our students wcr1&lt; lul~time : many of
the remainder wcr1&lt; part-time." he
points out. Nearly haH come directly
from wcr1&lt; 10 class.

_..__TO

POCUS 011 I . I aIIIIS AS
-OIICUI.n.E
•American Bedrooms and the Construction of Cotwre· will be the topic
of the next · us at
SUNRISE" break·
fast program, to be
held at 7:30'11.m.
Tuesday. Feb. 13,
In the Center fOf
Tomorrow on the
North Gampus.
Thes~al

the program, whlclt
is open 10 the public. will be -c. ~. profBSSOf and
chair In the Department of Archllec·
ture. UB Schoof of Architecture and
Planning .
Cromley. an architectural historian whose research and writing on
the architectural history and meaning
of domestic spaces has earned her

distinction In her field . wilt discuss
her forthcoming book on the Ameri-

can bedroom.
She proposes that bedroomstheir interior spaces , fumishlngs and
use&amp;-j)(ovide valuable Insights Into
American families' changing perceptions of health. privacy and personality, as well as other public vakJes.
Price of the program. which will
include a full breakfast, is $9 for UB
Alumni Associa.Uon members and
S 10 for all others. For more informa-

---tion, call 829-2608.

WOCIDIOIIftCEJVD

AT-ISlAND

the academic community.·

MILUIID

~

COLLUE

'

Office hours at the UB's Millard

VISIJIIMI UCTVIIEII 8IVU
ENCYCUII'EDIA TO ....aAJIY

Rllmore CollegeJSommer Sessions
have been changed. effective Feb. 5 .
The office In Parker Hall on the South
Campos will be open from 8:30 a .m.
to 7 p.m.. Monday through Thursday.
On Friday, the office will be open

Tomau .IWCQnakl, the Kos-

from 8:30a .m . to 5 p .m .
Class hours have nOt been

ciuszko FoundaUon Visiting Lecturer
at UB. has donated 8 copy of his
one·v~ume encyclopedia to the Un-

changed.
Geo&lt;ge Lopos, dean ol the college. says the new hours are d&amp;-

social sciences subject speclalistln
Lockwood Ubrary,
has received a
second Fulbright
Senior Scholar Research Award. She
will continue her

wcr1&lt;ontheRobben Island Ar·
chives at the Maylbuye Centre of the
University of the Western Cepe.
Bellville. South Alrica. Robben Island
was a prison holding political prison·
ers during the height of apartheid .
Woodson will also join !he planning
188m at !he Mayibuye Centra ior the
lor1hcorOOg Robben Island Museoot In
Cape Town. She leaves ior Cape Town
Feb. 12 and wilwcr1&lt; at !he Mayibuye
Centre through mlci-May.

PAIIIC AnACK SUI'PIIiiEIIa

~--IUUIICII

Individuals ages 18 and older who

suffer from panic snacks are being

sought to partlclpele In non-drug
treatment research being conducted
at the Center for Anxtety Research in
the UB Department of Psychology.
Panic attacks are sudden rushes
of Intense fear or anxktty that occur

out of the blue. Symptoms may in·
elude racing heart. shortness ol
breath, sweating and trembling or
shaldng.
Those selected 10 participate In the
research wilt receive 8 thorough as·
sessment and free trealrnlrt Individuals Lf1dergoing psychotherapy are not
eligible. For more information. contact
Gayle Beck. al645-3650. ext. 337.

- . . . . . . - NIEDED FOI

of
faculty of the
David C . Pef"ry,
tor Jr .. will addrasathe..,..oflhllr

DIIIMSTVDY
Volunteef&amp; ages 18-65 with alcoholic

"Oovernance In Erie

Coonty. A Foundation for~ oncl Action."

=====re~==~

nliw elforr of nrioul ~

-ppller~),
pndaCIId 111
Diu.: As tala....._.

s -...... ~ llpCDIIIed by tbe Center for Blllc:aoalc
Text in lbe Law (ltltp:O-w.Jaw~.llld . . - ,
latenatloul OaiiDe (t&gt;ttp:/fwww~f).
TovisitiMsesilu, typelriapDIJOlU'compM~e·maii,.U.prompl

and ty~ IM above URLs Q/ 1M "Go" commmul. The ldlffe URLs
wiU IH used by those who search 1M Web and Gophe,.pace with a
graphical browser sw:h tu NellCa~. For tusisttJJ~Ce iii CtN~Mcting
to 1M lnle1711!t via UB compuser accormll, con/act the Computing
Center"s Help Desk a/645·3542. For advice on identifying luunan
rights information rtsourcts, contact Nina Cascio,
LWLCASCI@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.BDU. Law Library. 645·
2633.
-Gemma DeViMey and Don Hartman. University Libraries

Participants must spend three
fove-night. five-&lt;lay periods at the UB
Clinical PhBTmacokinetics Center in

Millard Rllmore Hospital-Gates
Circle. They each will be reimbursed
S1,500 for time and travel expenses

upon completion of the study.
Anyone Interested in pertlclpeting
can call 887-4584 and leave their
name, telephone number. address
and Indicate they're calling about

study 1237.

Dorotltv • ........, librarian and

....--progress. and wki&amp;-ranging benefrt to

..........
{ltllf:lllrn.......,...,

cirrhosis are needed to help UB
researchers evaluate a medtcation
used in the lreatmenl of depression.

Pre-retirement Planning
Tile Oflloe .r ...._.. SenlcM has scheduled pre-retirement
planning programs for classified employees who are memben of !be
Employees' Retirement System (ERS).
The program is open to classified service employees age 4S and
older; eligible employees may anend without clwgiog leave accruals.
1be sessions are:
• Retirnleal Bmellll Overview. The firm ofKPMG PeatMarwick
will present group information sessions on "'tin:ment planning begin·
ning Feb. IS .
SessionS will be held on the South Campus in 104 Parter Hall 3-9
a.m. and 4-6 p.m. Thunday; Feb. IS and 4-6 p.m. and 7-9 p .m.
Thunday. Feb. 22.
•
Sessions will be held on the Nonh Campus in the Ceoter for
Tomonow 4-6 p .m. and 7·9 p .m. Monday, Feb. 19; 7-9 Lm. and 4-6
p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 20; 7-9 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 2 1; 4-6 p.m. and·?·
9 p.m. Tuesday. Feb. 27.
·

Reservations to aneod one of tbe retiremen1 planning sessions can
be made by calling KPMG Peat Marwick at 854-1830. Eligible
employees and their spouses are encouraged 10 attend.
• Appolatmull with ERS llep._..tatlve. An ERS "'presento·
tive will be availableiO meet with memben individually on Thunday.
Feb. 29 in 102 Crofts Hall. and on Friday, Aprill9 in 302 Crofts Hall.
To reserve a space. caii64S.3646 ext. 101 or 102. Additional consultations are available on a walk· in basis every fmt. second, third and
fourth Monday through Thunday in room 502 of the Buffalo Consultation Center. 6S Court St. , Buffalo.
• Social Security lleDdlto Overview. A """"""ntative from !be
Social Security Administration will present group infonnalion ses·
sions on the North and South Campuses.
Sessions will be held in the UB Commons Conference Room 7:3().
9 :30a.m. Friday. Feb. 23; 4-6 p .m. and 7-9 p.m. Monday, Feb. 26; 46 p .m. and 7·9p.m. Wednesday. Feb. 28. Sessiolll.willbeheld in Farber
Hall"s Butler Auditorium 4-6 p.m. Thunday. Feb. 29. To 1m10ge to
attend one of the sessions, caii64S-2646, ext. 101 or 102.

Information about an individual's Social Security account is available by completing a Request for Earnings and Benefit Estimate
Statement. which should be mailed 10 the Social Security Administra·
tion. A personalized benefit estimate will be received approximately

six weeks after mailing.
For more infonnation on any of the pre.-reliremeot planning programs being offered. call Jerry Linder. manager of "'tiremenl odmin·
istration. at 64S·2646, exL 103.

�7

UB opens ,drive Feb. 21 to support
scholarships for student-athletes ·
IIJ I'AIIU wn.a&amp;.&amp;.
Reporter Contributor

T

he UB Division of Athletics will conduct its first
volunteer scholarship drive from Feb. 21lhrough
March 27to generate annual support for studentathlete scholan;hips. Jerry lppoliti, commissioner of
the Mid-American Conference and former UB football coach, and UB President William R. Greiner will
address volunteers when the six -week drive gets under
way at 5 : 15 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 21. in the
Holiday !no, 1881 N i agara Falls Blvd., Amherst.
To encourage support for the scholarship drive, a
$100,000 challenge has been established by longtime
supporters of U8 athletics Bob Rich Sr. and Arthur
Woelfle, who will each present $50,000 gifts to the
university should the challenge goal be meL
U8 alumnus John F. Dunbar Jr., who received a
bachelor's degree in civil engineering and master's
degree in finance, i s chairing the fund drive and overseeing the estimated 100-150 volunteers . A former
football co-captain at UB and 1980 Clifford C. Furnas
Scholar-Athlete Award recipient, Dunbar says, " Supporting scholarships in U8 athletics broadens opportu-

nities to recruit and retain outslanding student-athletes
and strengthens the university's proud tradition..
"My experience as a student-athlete assisted me in
developing strong leadership skills, as well as abilities to compete successfully both academically and in
athletics. I've used these slcills throughout my career•., said Dunbar. a senior vice president and priOci~
pal of Strategic Investments &amp; Holdings, Inc.
In addition to procuring scholarship funding, the

drive aims to heighten awareness, interest and in·

volvement from the community and UB alumni in the
university's athletic programs.
Nelson E. Townsend, director of athletics, empha-

sized the need for ongoing support to accomplish

these goals. "UB athletic\ plans to hold this scbol arshipdrive annually to provide the groundworlc needed
for our programs," said Townsend. " However, continued support and community involvement are also
vital to building more possibilities for outstanding
student-athletes."
To volunteer for the scholarship drive or for more
information on ways to support U8 athletics, call UB' s
Office of Development for Athletics at 645-6867 . 0

SportsView
• MEN'S BASKEl1IALL
The University at Buffalo extended their home winning streak to 16 games
as they defeated Western Illinois 63-58 Saturday night at Alumni Arena .
UB is approaching the all-time home winning streak of 23 games sel
between 1929-31 . The 16 straight at Alumni Arena is already the record on
the building, which opened in 1982.
Senior forward Jamie Anderson had a team-high 16 points on !;.of-8
shooting from the field , including 4o()f-8 on three-pointers, as the Bulls
shot 50 percent from three-point range Sophomore Man Clemens came
off the bench to score 13 points.
Mike Martinho (12 poonts) put UB ahead to stay with a three-poonter
with 10:321eft In the game, as the Bulls' defense held Western lllonois star
Garrick VICks to a season-low five points. UB opened an 11-poont cushoon
after a technical foul on Western Illinois coach Jom Kerwin with 3·58 remaining before the Leathernecks cut the lead to three points with :32 left
Martinho and Robert Harris hit two straight free throws to put the game
away. The Bulls, ncm 11-7 overall and 8-3 in the Mid-Continent Conference, are all alone in second place behind Valparaiso.
Earlier in the week, the Bulls defeated Youngstown State 53-5 t on a
tough road game on Thursday. Freshman point guard Bernard Wheeler
M a running jump shot in the lane with 2.8 seconds remaining to give the
Bulls the win .
UB held a 44-391ead with 10:291eft. but dtdn't score another field goal
until Martinho ( 10 points) nailed a three-poonter to put the Bulls ahead 51 ·
48 with t :43to play.
Mer Youngstown State tied the game with 22 ticks rernaoning, Wheeler
mada his clutch shot in heavy traffic Man Clemens added t 0 points. while
Wheeler. Robert Harris and Leonard Tangishaka had eight points apiece

• WOMEN'S BASKEl1IALL
The Royals won their 11th straight home game on Saturday as they de-

PeterS . D' Arrigo,
clinical associate
pr ' essor of medicine

ceived the Hosptce Buffalo Physician
Award in 1992. He had served as United
Way chairman ollhe professional component at Millard Fillmore Hospitals.

A

Rosalyn Zigman
Gammerman,
Engineering lecturer

ass of Christian Burial was held

Fe . 2 at St. Gregory the Great Gatholic Church, Amhers t, for Peter S.
0' igo. medical director of Millard
Fill
Health SystQms and a clinical
associa professor of medicine at US.
O'Arrigo ied Jan. 30 at his home.
He reqeived a bacheiOf of arts degree in 19~andhis medicaldegreein
1956 from UB and served as a captain
•n the Army Medical Corps from 1958
to 1960.
O'Amgo was president of the medi·
cal stat! at Millard Fillmore Hospital
from 1964 to 1986 and vice president
of medlcalaflairs and medical d irector
from 1986 to 1995. He served as chief
of hematology-oncology at Millard
Fillmore Hospitals from 1970.1995 and
was a consultant to Roswell Park Can·
car Institute during that lime .
A Fe IlooN of the American College of
PhysJcians and the American College
of Physician Execulfves, O'Arrigo re-

Services were held in Boston lor
Rosalyn Zigman Gammerman . a lecturer in the Technical Communications
Program in the School of Engineering
and Applied Sciences. Gammerman
died Jan. 14 from cancer
Gammerman . who had been al UB
since 1989. was credited by her col·
leagues with playing a ma}or role in the
growth and success of the Technical
Communications Program through her
technical expertise . strong English
skills. devotion to her students and
dedicated training of teaching assis·
tants.
She was cited also for her work 1n
developing a mentOfing program 1n
which members of the school's Technical Communications Industrial Adv•·

CALENDAR

-

Continued from page 8

Zoclloq1oo' Scc...q/[loJ&gt;&lt;e 1bat R....W
ud Coaceala. Dnml Theatre, Center for
the Am. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. $2.50. SS.

....,_,_
-~

lbe I....ei:acy of Anbur A. Schomburg."
is o n display through Mareb 1!5 in
lockwood Mcmorill Libroty, Nonh
Campus. 1be coUoction explores lhe global history and culture of black people,
whose heritage SchomburJ dedicated his
life to preservioa. 'The exhibit also traces
the evolution of lhe Harlem-based research center that bears his name.

__ ., __

" Building and Landscape: Byzantine
Churt:h Buildings in Gteeee," a show of
ph01ographic works by Jonas Lehnnan, is
on view Feb. 14 through March 8 in the
James Dyen Gallery, 335 Hayes Hall,
South Campus.

.....,._...

CONIINUINCI EXHIIIITS .
"Perfect World," a group show, feat ures
work of Vincent Shine. lAura Stein, GregOC)' Crewdson, David Nazio, and Ronald
Jones. through March IS in the University Art Gallery located in the Center ror
the Ans, North Campus. Ga.llery boun
arc 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m., Wednesday
through Saturday, and Noon-S p.m. Sun·
day. Admission is free .

,_.....,.ft... -

"Dum,pina Si&amp;ht L&amp;ndscapell..andscope,"
an exhibit by Satoru Takahashi , is the tit·
hibit through March 17 in the University

At1 Ga.llery, Center for the Arts, North
Campus. The exhibit is "'a complex an:hi·
leetural-sculpwral work consisting of two
separate revolvin.&amp; doon made or reflective glass with fish tanka u ceilings."
Tllkahuhi is a Japaneae artist living in
New Yort City. Gallery hours are
Wednesday through Saturday, 10:30 a.m.·
8 p.m., and Sundly. Noon-!5 p.m. Admission is free .

-....-

ew paintings and dnwings by Walter
Procbownit are on view through Feb. 23
in the Art Department Gallery located in
lhe Center for the Arts, North Campus.
1be show is presented on the occasion of
Prochownik's retirement from the UB
Dep&lt;. of An. Glllery houn.,. Tuesday,
10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Wednesday through Fri·
day, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; and Saturday , II
a.m.-8 p.m. Admiuion is free .

A y - Ia

1JC11twe11

Leonardo Drew's site-specific installation
" No. 4S-A .. was desi&amp;ned ror !.he
Lightwell GJIItry in the Center for the
Arts, North Campus, and now is lodged
lhcrc lhroush Dec. 20.

__

,

lntemted in learning more about UB's
public mtio 'tation? Join lhe WBFO staff
Noon· I p.m. Thursday, Feb. 22 in Allen
Hall fOt" a pn:sentation, followed by a tour
of the station facilities . Participants will
have an opportunity to make an audio recording or a 1tation announcement. Space
is limited to 20 people. Call 829-6000 before Feb. 16 to reserve a place.

sory Committee pan•cipate '" help1ng
students produce workplace-quality
proposals.

Betty Stark-Guercio,
professor emeritus
Services were held Feb. 6 in KenOlOfe
Presbyterian Church for Betty SterkGuercio , professor ementus in the
Physical Education Department of the
University at Buffalo. Guerc io, 76 . died
Feb . 3 in her home in Tonawanda alter
a long Illness.
S!ark-Guercio rece1ved a 8 S .n
physical educalion tn 1941 from
Cortland StateCoflege, and a master's
degree from UB in 1948.
A member of the UB faculty from
1951to 1981 . she taught square dance
and social dancing in the basic 1n·
struction program of the Physical Education Department and later 10 the basic instruction program of the 01viston
of Alhlelics. She also taught recre·
ahonal activities such as badm.nton
and archery . At one 11me she was asked
to teach ballet to members of the foot ·
batlteam, to make !hem more ag1le

---

Sigma Xi offers cash prius for ~ t post ers, and a fn:c dinner for all contestants,
in ill Student Research Competition. Appltcation forms are available from departmer\! cba.irs, directors of graduate and undef~Rduat.e programs, and by calling the
Graduate School. 645-7315. Deadline is
April 1; awards dinner is April 23 in the
Center for Tomorrow, North Campus.

feated Western Illinois 84-77 at Alumni Arena. Charissa Gatdner led the
way for UB as she scored 20 points and grabbed seven rebounds.
The Royals used hot shooting and tough de1ense to open up a t5·potnt
halftime lead. UB shot51 .9 percent from the field while limiting the
Westerwinds to only 25 percent.
The second half was a different story however, as UB's hot shooting
disappeared. After pushing their lead to 21 woth 14:18 ieft,the Royals
made just ftve field goals the rest of the way. Western rebounded from
their first-ha~ shooting woes. hitting 15o{lf-33 shots (45.5 percent) in the
second half. The Westerwinds outscored Royals 32-12 in a H).rninute
span to trail 58-57 with 4:36 remaining. Western's Lori Haskett led the
Westerwinds with 23 points and 13 rebounds . scoring 13 of her 23 In the
second half.
However Nocole Blakeslee ( 14 points, 9 rebounds) came up big for UB.
scoring ftve of the Royals' last eight points. Including converting a crucial
three-point play and hitting a layup that pushed UB's lead to five with :46
left. Charissa Gardner led the Royals with 20 points and seven rebounds ,
while Brenna Doty added 15.
The Royals, ncm 1&amp;4 overall and 8-2 on the Mid-Contonent Conference.
are alone in first place in the conference . They will look to increase their
lead in the conference when they host Missouri-Kansas City on Monday
at Alumni Arena at 5:30p.m .

• MEN'S a WOMEN'S SWIMMING
UB's men's and women's swim teams split Saturday's dual meet with
Cleveland State at Alumni Arena Natatorium. The Royals defeated the
Vikings 162.50-58.50 in the wornen's meet while the Bulls fell in the men's
meet 152-87 It was the final dual meet of the season for both teams.
Buffalo's Alexandra Barrera won a pair ol events for the Royals. The
sophomore captured first place on the 1,000 freestyle in an ECAC qualifying time of 10:40.92 and the 200 backstroke in 2:11.58. also surpassong
the ECAC quahlying mark.
Suzanne Bohne! also took two events w1nmng the 200 breaststroke 1n
2:30.57 10 qualify for ECACs and the 100 freestyle in 54.87.
Kristen Krenitsky, in her final dual meet at UB, won the 200 freestyle on
t :59.04 and 500 freestyle in 5:16.75to qualify for ECACs. Krenitsky also
teamed with Carrie Grant. Bohnet and Liese lie Trinidad t&lt;&gt; win the 400
medley relay In an ECAC qualifying time of 4:03.72.
On the men·s side, Mark Horgan won two events for the Bulls Horgan
qualified for ECACs winning the 1.000 free on 9:50. t2 and took the 500
free in 4:48.93.
Korry Miller also won a pair of events taking the 200 IM tn 1:58.40 and
the 200 backstroke in an ECAC qualifying 1:57.46.

• INDOOR TRACK a F1ELD
The University at Buffalo men's and wcxnen's 1ndoor track and f1eld
squads both had members who broke school records durong cornpetotton

Plof' I II ..
lAit.nadioD&amp;I Support Auistant (SLl)· University Libraries. Posting tP-6002.
Lead Proarammer/Analyst (St.,..J; Internal Promotional O pportunlty) · Uni ·
versity Libraries. Posting •P-6003.

F...,lty
Amstant Proreuor-Phys1cal Thcnpy
and E.tert:ise Science. Posting •F-6002
Asiioclate/Full Professor-Rehabilita11on
Medicine, Occupational Therapy. Phys•callllerapy. Posting
IF-6003. Senior Asslstant/Assoc:l..tt' Librarian -Science and Engineenng L1 ·
brary. Posting IF-6004. C llnlealln·
structor/Ciinieal A.ssistant Professor·
Physical Therapy and Exercise Science .
Posting ltF-6005. Assinant Professor·
Oral and Muillofac•al Surgery. Posung

-

this weekend.
Atthe .Brooks Classic on Morgantown. West Virginoa. the Royals' Shelly
Hamilton won the W'Omen 's high jump, cleanng 5-8 for the victory The
jump not only set a school record but also qualified the freshman for
Junior Nationals. In the men's competition , Mike Spitz finished fourth '"
the pole vault establishing a UB record with a mark of t 5-8
Meanwhile. at the Meyo Invitational in South Bend. Indiana. Kev1n W1nkler
set a Bulls record finishing fourth •n the 400 meters 1n 48 45 seconds

.WRESTUNG
The Bulls' dual meet at Central Connecticut State on Saturday was post·
poned due to an illness that afflicted most of the Blue Devils squad UB
will be in actoo twice this week, first traveling to Slippery Rock on Tuesday. and hosting Bucknell on Saturday at 1 p m at Alumni Arena

- Andy Punzal. Spons lnforma/lon Off•ce

UPCOMING UB HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS

OF-6006.
P roj«t Staff Associate-lkvelopmenl.
Posting tR-95090.

To olHOIIIIII(Jff

rtifonNJlltJft (HijDb~

lu"d abo•·,..
t'Oflloct Pl'nonMI Mrv•u~. 104 Croft~ Hall To
obloU. ilf/().--1/0it on Rl'l l'arr:ll ~~. C"'O''IIIl' l
$poftJoru/ Pro1rotriS p,.,-,onnl'l. 416 Crofu

Saturday, Feb. 10
Wrestling

vs. Bucknell

1 p m at Alumn1 Arena

Sunday, Feb. U
Men's UB D1ving Invitational

9 a.m at Alumnt Arena Natatonum

�8

-·-

....._,..,.._ ........ .,., ...

__
___

..._____..
....,.

~.7

--...__ _---_
.....__
----

:]

_
..-.......--

-----·
............

WorkMop
The Environmutal Realit6a ol
rhe Curnnt Dru1 Cultun:: ha·
pad oa Clients ..d Providffs,
Gary Metz &amp;. David Monk. Center

ua......., •.-

for Tomorrow. North Campus.
$60. Sponsor-ed by Institute for
Addictions Studies and Training.

te!lle

--

.,.....,,._

--...

For infonnation. call 64.5-6140.

c..._,__, c-ter

ucnw.....-..
GNU Emacs lntrodudion
(UNIX). 3-5 p.m. To regisler, call
Academic Services, Computing

-·-

.......,.___

Brain Dopami.De Rqu.latioa of
~b~ Sexual kbaYkw, Elaine
M. Hull. Ph.D. SOB Cooke. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

ltatlatlcaCollo'l"..•
M-F..almales, 8-Ealmatu, and
CM-Ilolllll.otes: Tbeo&lt;y aad
ComputaUoa, Kay TatsooU,
Rutgen Univ. 246 Cary. Soulh
Campus. 4 p.m.

utew--.,
T'ai Cbi for Bqi.n.Mn. Ron
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays and Thundays, lhrough May 2. 5:30-6:30
p.m. To register. ca1164S-612S.

-

Z odiaqut: Secrtcy/DaDCt That
Reveall and Coauals. Dnma
Theatre, Center for the Arts.
Ncrth Campus. 8 p.m. S2.SO. $5 .

r....-- ...-

copulve Effects of Anii-ConvulsaatJ, Michael Kohnnan.
M.D. Kinch Auditorium,
Children's Hospital. 8 a.m.
~w.....-..

Web demonstration. 223
Lockwood. N~ Campus. Noon.
Modut.lion of Action Polentlab
-·~o~oe­
lo Pain F1ben, Prof. Scott

McCall. 21S Fosler. Soulh Campus . Noon.
AICRWorkMop
WordPerfect 6 for Windows for
Students. 2-4 p.m. To register,
call Academic Services, Comput·
ing and Information Technology
User Liaison, 645-3540.
-~,..

West African Tlleater: The
Traclnaand Praenct of Oral
Tndltlotu lD West African lndi~nous Theater, Samba Diop.
Screening Room, Center for the
Ans. North Campus. 3 p.m. Free.

C-letl7 ColloqooiChemlcall'.colo&amp;Y ofE.scaJX
and DeKelltla Nkotlana
Attenuata, Prof. Ian T. Baldwin.
2 15 Natural Sciences. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

-

Z odlaque: SKruy/l)aDCe Tbat
'Reveals ud Cooceala. Drama
Tbea.tre, Center for the Am.
North Campus. 8 p.m. s:li , $10.

-~

=-~··t;~.:
~~

-11!/CrWaa

- - - 2 - 3 p.m. Uodrqndu-

:....~=:::

...

Hall. Buffalo State College. 8
p.m. $16.$ 18. Co-sponsored by
WBFO.

UNIX accouat ad bNerDel lOI or
equivatem experieoco. To ,...;.ta-•
eall645-2:943 or e--mail
&lt;IVC.ICSU.buffalo.cdu&gt;.

Buft'alo PhilbanDonk,
Muimiaoo Valdes. conductor.
wilh Awadagin Pratt. piano.
Mainstage, Center for the An.s.
North Campus. 8 p.m. S 17. $30,
$36.

.....~ ·
·
·
llto I
-.
IU.IJaWiotpGedaad. 2-3:30
p.m. To..,.;-. eall64S-6US.

-,c-..-

-Dr-kofl-

_.._....

Blo~Sc'--••

Gayla ·~.. Reuption for UB
ay, Labla.Q and Bi:H:xu.al Stud ll, Fac:alty, Statr aDd Suppo en. SOcial Hall, Student
Uni n. North Campus. 4-6 p.m.

... aod . . , . , _ TedloalocY
Utcr LW-. 645-3'-40.

Coatpottioa aod Tcd&gt;ooloal' Utcr LW-. 645-:1540.

Ltaison, 64.5-3540.

QayR....,UO.

c:aiiAademi&lt;Semoea.~­

---PEOPLJ:. .-

SO&lt;ed by G.S.A .

and Information Technology User

fRrc:omblnalional Landscapes
and Genomk Diversity, Dr. C.F.
Aqu adro. Cornell Univ. 12 1
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

TRAN. I:J0-.4p.m. To.._;-,

--......

_ F... DMoiiC
J8zz
Marian Mc:Partlud, plaDOPOSTPONED. Hold your ticket;
will be rescheduled. Rockwell

Technology User Liaison. 6453540.

CMS JIORTL\N to UNIX JIOR-

lof..--ioo Teelloolt&gt;IY Ute&lt; Li-

Co.poltHWorkMop

AICRWorkMop
SPSS on VMS. I :30-4:30 p.m.

_....,.

RI'CL 12:30 P·"'-

*mi&lt;Semc:eo,~-.1

ter. call Academic Services, Compoling and lnfo nnatio n Technology User Liaison, 64.5-3S40.

To register, call Academic Servtces. Computing and lnformalion

-,.,Prof. ~ Wttlll,

Salk ior!ib*- ~­

Woo. 64S-3'-40.

All levels. 2 Oiefendod. South
Campus. 8-11 p.m. Free. SpoD-&gt;

Olson DemonstraUoo. 223
Lockwood. Nonh Campus .
II a.m.

c . CJdo c-...1 fila-It:

C...mRAW lor !'Co- UNJX.
1:30-5 p.m. To.._;-. ealllo&amp;a-

Ru.ent Stu&lt;Hu on Akobol and
Coronary Artery Disease, Dr.
Maurizio Trevisan. 108 Sherman.
South Campus. 8 a. m.

AICRWorkMop
PC-plae. 10 a.m.- Noon. To regis-

pus. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Thloa&amp;b

Man:lt I .

AICITW--.,
latrodutUoa to Sun XWl.adowlDJ Systems. 10 a.m.·
Noon. To register, call Academic
Services. Computing and lnfonna tion Technology User Liaison.
645-3540.
AICITWorkMop
Mkroloft Word OD Maclatosb
for Student.J. 10 a.m.-Noon. To
register, call Academic Servlces.
Comptlling and Information Technology User Liaison, 645-3540.

ASCnw--..

lnlroductioa to UNIX. 1-3:30

p.m. To register, call Academic
Services, Computing and Information Tecltnology User Liaison,
645-3540.

utew--.,
Ho Cbl Medltatioa-A Holdtic
Approac:b To Heattb., Pau1 Mot.
1-3: 30 p.m. To register, call 6456125.

-

Z odlaque: Sec:recy/f)ut:.e That
ltrveall 1nd Conceals. Drama
Tbea.tre, Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. SS. $10.

tion or the program. For information, call tbe OffiCe of Student
Life, ISO Student Union, 6456125.
Life~

Alt .......

S.. Walker. Screenina Room,
Center for the Arts. North Campus. I p.m. free. SUde lcc:tUre followed by preseotation of his prints
in Room 837. Co-spoosot&lt;d by
Printmaking area of UB Art Deparunen• and CEPA Gallery, 700
Maia St.. w~ Wa:lktr's printand-photo show ..Mu1liple Atrutities.. is on view lhroug.b March 22.

AICRW. . . . . .
PiM MaD for tile ....ctu.aer
(UNIX). 2-4 p.m. To register, call
Academic Services. Computina
and lnfonnation TechnolOJy User
Liaison, 645-3540.
~w--..

latmoot IN/World Wid&lt; Web.
2-3 p.m. Undergnduate Library.
127 Capen Hall. North Campus.
Prerequisite: UNlX account and
lntcmel 101 or equivalent experience. To register, call 645-2943 or
e-mail &lt;Svc@acsu.buffalo.edu&gt;.

w-- -

D' ".lelteelklelltiM

Tbe Ceotrallty of Jo.......,.lo

Jnrlsb Life, Mlchael J. Coben,
Ph.D.• Bu-llan Univ. (1snel).

Conference includes music and
dance events, and workshops by
Daniel Bertrand Monk, Rabbi
Heshel Greenberg, Michael I.
(.!bben, and Thonw ldinopulos.
Dinner ($3, $6) 5:4S p.m. in
Pistachio' s. Student Union. North
Campus. Conference $2. $6. For
information, call Hillel, 835-3832.

........

UB DtvinalavitatiouL Alumni
Arena Natatorium. North Campus.
9a.m.

-

Z ocllaquo: Seeney/l)aoeo That
Reveals aod CoDCUis. Drama

C ydlc AMP-Dopbdoat l'r&lt;otolo
Xlaue: StructllraiBuil for Attlvily ud lollll&gt;ltla, Dr. SUsan
S. Taylor, Univ. of California, San
Dieao. Butler Auditorium, Farber.
South Campus. 4 p.m.
c:_...~
latet-ootl~5 : 3().6:30

p.m. Undergnd-Library, l27
Capeo Hall. North Campus. requisite: UNIX ICCOUDI aod
lntc:met 101 or equivalent cxperieoce:. To reJistcr, call645-2943 or
e-maiJ &lt;SVC.Kiu.buffaJo.edu&gt;.

...-.....-.-

Mondaytlhrough April 8. 6:308:30 p.m. $2S dtpolit; $20 refunded upon satisfactory comple-

&amp;-.lludq: Swlq lalo
S,.Wa. N;oloa and Bjorn BOI\IC.
8-9 p.m. To register, ca.ll6456125.

utew--.

Coaatryud w....-. Duclaa.
Nuuta aod Bjom Boaue. 9- 10
p.m. To register, c:all 645-61~ .

....

_

_ _ .... Ute

~of Culture,

Prof.
Eliubcth C. Cromley. Center for
Tomorrow. North Campus. 7:30
a.m. $9,$10. For information, call
Alumni Auoc:iation, 829-2608.

....... ........... l'n&gt;f.-1.
Oatrison. Penuylvaai.a State
Univ. liS Nllural Sciences. North
Campus. 4 p.m..

_,......,..

GlllllafSobia. Univeniry Gallery,
Ceoter for the AJu. NMh Cam-

pus.4p-ttLMoe.

a....,

Ba~

Docloloot ~I&lt; De-

tip r.r
S e q - clblleal Trlalo llnlaa Mllltlplo Eadpolotta, Paotelit K. Vbebos. Uolv.
of Coaoecticut. 246 Cary. Sooth
Campus. 4 p.m.

c:_...w--.
1 - 104/World Wid&lt; Web.
5:3().6:30 p.m. Uocletpadualo Library, 127 Capen Hall North
CIUOpUI. PretoqWsilt: UNIX tcCOUDt &amp;Dd lDiemd 101 or equivalent experic:oce. To rqistcr. caJI
645-2943 or e-mail
&lt;sVc.aesu.butfalo.cdu&gt;.

-~
latnldtldloo to UNilL 5:J6-8

p.m. To rqjsaer. call Academic
Servkes. Computio&amp; aod IDformatioo Tc:clutotosY Utcr LW-.
64S-3'-40.
~-u..
--...-.Allea.
Sooth~ 7 p.m. Taped by
WBFO 88.7 I'M f o r - the
followioa Suaday at 4 p.m.

Ufe~

T'aiCWfor.........,Roo
lngaltbe. Toetdays aod Thundayt, lhtou&amp;b May 2. 5:3().6:30
p.m. To rqi-. call645-6125.

-·--.

l o l r o i o - Wladows r...
Sladesta. ~ p.m. To re,iskr.
call Academic Services. Computin&amp; ud Information Technology
UJCT Liaison, 645--3540.

~toS..X-~

W.......... ~2-olp."'-To
register. call Academic Services.,
Computiog aod lofonoatioa TeeltootosY Utcr Llaitoct. 645-3540.

-..........-

----- ··--- -paW--·__
---- .
TBA.. Main Conference Room.
Mercy Hospital. 8:30a.m.

w_ _ ....,...,

-Eat~)' Loool Pooitloo- 145A
Student Union. Nooh Campus.
I2:30-1 :30 p.m.

-~

Tapo _ _ _
Dota c..--. .. UNIX v1a

utew--.,

WdPJ - - t u d NutritioG. 7-8 p.m. To rqister, call
645-6125.
W_ud__,_.
FRF.SB! University Film and
Video Association Film &amp;: Video
Festivalte~. Screea.ina

Room, Center for the Arts. North

Campus. 7:30 p.m...,...

1:30--4:30 p.m. To rep.tcr. call
A&lt;ademic: Servi.... Computiog
and lafonnatioa TcchnolOJY User
LiaiJoo. 645-3540.

-Modleal Care
~
ia Ute lle.eltlll
Futuro.
Goodyeu. South Camput. 2 p.m.
Board
I p.m.
w
_meeting
_ at....,...,

llocoplloL 210 Student Uolon.

Table Fair. 210 Student Union.
North Campus. 3-4:30 p.m.

Ufe~
Be ............ to Lad, Ed Brodb.
3:30-4:30 p.m. To resister. ca.!l

645-6125.

~--­

...... Dr. Tom R.apoport.

Hatvud Medical S.:bool. 121
Coote. North Campus.. .( p.m.

c-..N--Aooo~J*flbUfe~

_,_

__ _

~--=-~Ub/

Cytttltia Lao:lde. 248 Cooke. Nonb
Campus. 8 Lm.
PNf11

'r

•

..,.....a.

Seu&amp;en' Meetiii&amp;-OpcD to all
Profeuiooal Staff. 326 Squire
Hall. South Camput. 8-10 a.m.

,

The-,__,
Ark.

Now Prodttct ~­
Potty
Rebecca l.aady. Geoqe
Lewetl,andlerry
Center for Tomorrow. North Campin. 8:15-11 :30 a.m. Spootored
by KPMO hat Muw;et aod the
StrateaK: Parmmbip for lndusuial
ResurJencc. Fcc infonnatioe., call
Western New Yort TccbDolngy
Dcvelopmcat Cenler, 636--3626.

,.

-~Acnoallto

PCiudr..ddola-.un

of E_,o i a - Mlllt,
PaW I . Kootyniak. Pb.D. 501
Coote. North Camput. 4 p.m.

246 c..y. South Campus. 4 ;.m.

-----·-..........- .,...... ......
North
2:~3 p.m.
w
_Campus.
_ ....,...,

.....

Sanchez, PamsyiY&amp;Dia Swe Univ.

....,...,

TM Art oftatoniewiaa aad
W..U""" Wonlrollo- 1458 Student Unloa. North Campus. t :302:30p.m.

J 1llpped Out Bra DNA Melllr-

luo, Dr. Richard - New
En&amp;tand Blolabo. 121 Cooke.
North Camput. 4 p.m.

........ ud ...........: lyz- c a r d ......... lo

a.--............... Worb

byJ-........_1..... Dyett
Gallery. 335 Hayes. South Cam-

~Support

a ....p, Barbara Umilt&lt;r. Tltondays lhrou&amp;b Aprilll. 4:30-5:30
p.m. To rqjsw, call645-6US.
c:_...~

latonot 115jCnaQ a
~5 : 3().6:30p .m. Underpaduate Library. 127 Capen
Halt. North Camput. l'm&lt;qWJite:

~~~:=!.~re=t=.

cali64S-2943 or e-mail
&lt;Svc.acsu..buffalo.edu&gt;.

LlfeW. . . . . .
T'al Cltl forlloPt-n, Roo
Ingalsbe. Tuesdays aod Thun-

days, throop May 2. 5:3().6:30
p.m. To register, caJI64S-6l2S.
Altl.MWN

An at Ute Eltd of lito C.U.ry,
Petor Halley. Albright-Knox An
Gallery Auditorium. 8 p.m. '$3,
$4; UB fJOulty, Jlalf............
Albright momben. free. Co-tpOOsorcd by Univenity a1 Bu~ Art
Gallery/Research Center ia Art +

Culture.

Continued on page 7

�,....._.,..,.._ v..... u, .... 17

Recent Efforts,
Current Events,
Future Directions:
A Report for the UB Community ( Part I)

I

IS NOT A NEW IDEA, THIS

NOTION TIIAT TifE CHANGES OF OUR ERA CHANGE US. RECENT
AND CURRENT EVENTS IN ALBANY AND WASHINGTON-AND
THEIR EFFECfS ON OUR CAMPUS--REMIND US HOW TRUE THE
OLD OBSERVATION IS. TifE CURRENT SITUATION FOR NEW YORK

budget has become a bauleground fo r
providers of social services. These interests

IS GREATLY AFFECTED BY EVENTS AND TRENDS IN FEDERAL

invoke the politics of the local real property
tax

GOVERNMENT; IN TURN, THE CHANGING ECONOMIC AND

in each state budget negotiation,

something SUNY cannot do vis

a vis its

statutory and state-operated colleges. These

POUTICAL CUMATE OF OUR STATE HAS HAD AND WILL CONTINUE

interests also respond to large groups of
voters; regrettably , our primary constituency-

TO HAVE DRAMATIC EFFECTS ON STATE UNIVERSITY AND ON UB.

+

+

+

you ng people-is not one of those groups,
since many you ng people do not vote.
This situatio n notwithstanding, we will
continue to insist that educating young

Two things are certain in

this

scenario:

one, all of us at UB will be touched by these

is not entirely partisan, not te mporary , and

peopl~specially

not short-term.

that SUNY offers--must be a crucial priority

via the access to quality

for state investment. We will also oontinue to

changes; two, we can either have changes

In the contemporary political and

made for us• or make our own changes in

demographic mix, Social Security and

urge upon our state leadership SUNY's value

how we conduct our individual and collective

Medicare/ Medicaid entitlements, along with a

as a resource for new knowledge, new

a/fairs. In the face of current pressures, we

very few other big-ticket items like military

technologies, health care, economic and

must focus on managing change and

preparedness. will be protected . As a result.

social development. public service. and highly

there will likely be less for highe r education

trained. technically sophisticated graduates.

changing our institution.

That is the point of view behind much of
the work that the Provost, Senior Vice

and research, public o r private.
This situation is mirrored in New York

But, even as we all work to mise SUNY's

priority with New York and its people. we
must confront the realities of the very tough

President, and I have been doing since this

State. The current administration in Alhany

time last year. At a moment when so much is

has made it plain-as in truth any

fiscal and political environmem which will

happening so fast, our university community

administration in the Capitol would these

confront SUNY .
mad~

must understand clearly the issues and

days be forced to do-that we must and will

initiatives on which we are spending our time

make our state government smaller. more

SUNY does not have the option of dosing

and energy.

efficient, more effective. and less costl y.

campuses. SUNY is left with this stmtegy·

And. at the state level as at the fedeml.
higher education is taking a back seat to

Last year's budge! process

it clear that

tighten the belt funher. wherever possible;
charge our students somewhat more; help

As we are

other issues and priori ti es. New York has

them pay the higher tuition; use the new

constantly

chosen to be on the high end of the scale in

tuition resources to maintain quality: and get

reminded by media coverage of the high-

providing-and paying for-virtually every

greater management nexibility so that we can

stakes brinkmanship surrounding current

social service. Now. as the state seeks to fill

save every possible dollar on campus

federal budget negotiations, deficit reduction

gaps left by vanishing federal dollars and its

operations and earn every possible dollar

is the agenda of the moment. This situation

own revenue-generating limitations. the state

from new revenue sources.

�Recent Efforts,
Current Events,
Future Directions

November 20, I 995
MR . RODERICK 8.W . CHU

{Chair, Rethinking SUNY Mission/VIsion Commfltee}

Last year the New Yor1c State Legislature charged
the SUNY Board of Trustees to "develop a multi·

D••r Rod :
Herein a ... cl:~rif1C3 tk&gt;n of my views on the •Rethinking SUNY' process, and the various proposals,
from me and others, regarding system adminlstr.uion ....
First, I would emphasize that-&lt;lespile certain misreads ol my position-/ have never tulvocated
compkte autonomy for UB or any other SUNY campu$. UB is a proud member ol SUNY, committed
to the proposition that all ol us in State University ate here to serve well the people ol New York, to
deliver well on the trust they have placed in us, and to manage well the resources they have
committed to us. To have every campus operating entire/yon ils own would not ensure good
management of state taxpayer suppon or thoughtful fulfi1lmeru ol "'" public obligations.
On the contra.ry, a redeftned SUNY structUre that t h2ve advocated ... is my view of ways to better
serve our public trust. lll.at redefinition has four key elemenlS.
Ca m

pus

M Is s I o n . The Board of Trustees, supponed and advised by the Olancellor and staff,

highest quallt:y and broadest possible access

consistent with the State University mission.•
1/ethtnlltng SUNY, the resulting report. was
developed through the effons ol four Trustee
comrnitt.ees-&lt;esponsible, respectively, for
examining State University's MissioniVisk&gt;n,

SUuaure, Operations, and Operating Revenue
and Tuitlo!l--&lt;lnd was submitted to the Governor

full text of
the repon was repnxiiKled as an Insert In the
December 7 Reporter.)
UB took every opportunity to have a voice in
the Relbtnldng SUNY process. Senior Vice
President Wagner served as a consultant to the

should review and approve campus missions, and then monitor the campuses' performance of their
respective missions. Review and approval of campus missions should be done periodlca.lly, at
intervals suffidently spaced 10 allow for stable planning and development T1tls process WQltld
encourage campuses to identify and build on suengths; it would encour.tge the Board 10 enoowage
differentiated campuses, avoid unnecessary duplication, and expand sruden! choice. Tbe focus of
the Board would righlly be on the future needs of New York's citizenry and ecooomy and on the fit
of the pie= in the system. Quite frankly, I believe this process would develop a stroager system; it
would recognize the richness of the diversity in the system which is now obscured by our c::wrent
practices; il would eliminate friction and inefficiency flowing from lack of clarity regarding campus

and Legislature on December I. Obe

missions.

ultimately functioned as one committee. Provost

£ n r o II m e n 1 M a n as e m e n t . Within the approved misskxl framework, lhe Board sboukl set
enrollment ranges for each campus. The currenr: use of e:x2a. numerical eruollmena: t:argetS is, as a
management strategy, too Inflexible to be fully effective. Enrollment management is not a science
that pennits such precision. Ta.get mngef-Which cany with them penalties for biling 10 meet the
low end and cessation of state suppon for New York sruden!s above the high end-would be

workable.

\

year, romprebensive, systemwide plan to increase
cost effidency in the continuing pw3&lt;1it of the

diff~ted

T u t II o '' . Having ruitions set by cenlr.ll authoricy without signiflca.ru. considention of the
costs of programs, quality of progruns, or sruden! financial circumstances and needs has made h

immensely diffiCUlt to manage any SUNY campus weU. Panicularly recently, progruns have been cut
and thinned while tui~ increased, and the srudents have seen an increasingly attenuated connection between what they pay for and what they get.
1be viable alternative, however, wouJd not be for each campus to set defmitively and independently its own ruition . My contention h2s been lhat campuses should lnUiale tuition proposals,
taking into cons~tion their status as public institutions; their COSI of providing a quality education,
competitive with state and national institutions in their peer groups; and their srudents' ability to
afford any proposed tuition. Student access regardless ol financial ability is a keystone ol public
higher education, and thus tuition and fmancial aid levels must be coordinated in these campus
proposals. The Board, again with the suppon and advice of the ChanceUor and staff, should review,
adjust where necessary, and approve all tuition proposals.
As a corollary of this tuition policy, all revenue raised by ruition and other campu.s-based. services
should now into campus-based income funds established and audited by the Board. Students should
know that what they pay in tuition suppons their education, particularly as they are asked to pay an
increasing prop:&gt;rtion of the cost. Simply as business practice, assuring lhat our students get alllhat
they pay for is bolh fair and sensible. It will keep us competitive vis ll vis comparable instirutions
outside SUNY.
51 a 1 e Tax A II o c a 11 o n . 1be Board should allocate state tax support. As you have indicated,

such allocations must take into constdern.tlon inherent differences in the costs of different kinds and
levels of education; otherwise campuses would be driven out of crucial but higher cost educational
programs, and the aim of diffenentiated 'blmpus missions would be.frustrated. I believe that, by
allocating state tax suppon-whether at SOli&gt;, 40%, or even less of operating COSI-and through their
control of the capital budget, the TNSiees would have sufficient fUlallcial leverage to implemeru state
public higher education policy. Using this operating prindple clearly fcx:u.ses the Board's m.all2gement responsibilities on those portions of public higher education funding provided by the dtizens
of New York , whom the Trus~ees serve.
What I have described, I believe, adequately balances the proper roles of the Trustees, ChanceUor
and central st:J.ff, and campus management, with the laner rwo groups working in support of the
TOJilees' leadership. Campuses can be held account2ble for their mission, their management of
programs, and their expenditures of funds. The Board would set: policies and would have sufficient
tools to ensure that policies are implemented without using a heavy bureaucratic hand. The
incentives to the campuses to provide their sruderlts with the best education available would be in
place.
...lAs for the role of SUNY Centr.ll,) we agree that SUNY Central shoui&lt;J provide to campuses only
those services that the campuses want and are willing to pay for. We also agree that the primary
mission of the Chancellor and SUNY Central is to support and advise the Board on maners of policy.
The ChanceUor analogizes SUNY Central with a holding company for a large conglomerate; we know
of such holding companies ... which are highly successful and whose centr.JI offices comprise 100 or
so people .... We also know of large public higher education systems which operate on the holding
company mockl, with very small oentral staffs. On this basis ... the question is how SUNY Central
should be restruC1ured so as to operate like a holding company.
I hope this clariftes my views. Frankly, I am troUbled by the widespread misconception that I have
been and am in favor of separating UB, or any campus, from Board oversight on the key maners of
mission, enrollment, ruition·setting, and tax allocation. Clearly, I am not.... Th.ank you for inviting
me 1.0 clarify my opinion on these crucial issues facing SUNY and its campuses at this time.
Sincerely,

JL

~~

William R. Greiner

Operations and Srruaure Committees, which
Headrick and I offered consultation, comrnent2tY.
and suggestions (solidted and unsolicited) on a
range of Issues, but most partlcula.r!y on the work
ol the Mission/VISion Committee. For elCllllples
of our partldpation in the systemwide dWogue,
see the letter to Trustee Roderick G.W. Chu, Chair
of the Mission/VISion Comrninee and the
"Prindples Regarding the Respective Roles of
CentraVSystem Office and SUNY Trustees and the
SUNY 'Sta~pented ' campuses," reprodiKled
here at left and on the back page.
As these documents indicate, we sought
primarily to call the Board of Trustees' attention
to what we felt wene crucial principles and ~tral
Issues. Some but nOI all of these wene reflected
in the ftrutl Retbtnlltng SUNY repon. On the
whole we fmd great merit in Rethlnlltng SUNY,
even though we believe that it must go f.uther in
some respectS and is problematic in others.
The key Issues that surround and shape
Rethinking SUNY are these:
C o • tr o II z • t1 o o : The role and function
of State University's central office vls-ll·vis the
campuses needs careful thought. At the moment.
SUNY Central employs approximately 1,000
people, most of therp engaged in processing of
transactions, and too few involved in the policy
and leadership functions for which SUNY Central
is uniquely positioned. T1tls campus Is pushing for
a smaller, more forused Central; we believe that
many of the operational functions which now
preoccupy Central staff could be accomplished
regionally or locally, with. a bener response time
a nd greater cost-effectiveness.

Rethinking SUNY proposes a 30% cut In central
administration over the next two years and points

toward some increased oversight functions for

·eentraJ. We suppon this effon and expect that
even funller downsizing will occur. Such

�Recent Efforts,
Current Events,
Future Directions
suggestlons, not surprisingly, ;ue ~ seen
as an affront by Central olllce; UB's senior officers

see these suggestlons as means of keeping
Cenual's dfon and resou~ focused on
leadership and stewardshlp, whlle leaving
operations to SUNY's academic units.

•••••reo

•lloc•tlo• •••••• :
In previous papers and presentationS l have noted
that , for the fllSt time In SUNY's history, the I99S-

96 budget left the system

more reliant on
revenues than on taxes as support for our direct
operating budget. In a system so much more
driven by income than ever before, we must
radically reform resource allocation in SUNY.
At the moment, aU ruition dollars are cenc.rally

pooled with tax dollars and then allocated back to
the campuses according to several complex,
somewhat obscure fonnulas and algorithms. In
addition, some $6 million per annum in UB-based
fees and other revenues also go into the central
SUNY pool.

O ne result of this approach has been that
tuitions and some fees and other revenues ralsed
at campuses with significant undergraduate
eruol.lments--particularly the Universiry Centers

and Colleges-have been used to offset reduced
tax suppon for SUNY, most especially for the
ca mpuses.
resources
allocation was ot a concern . Now, with tuition

making up over half of
SUNY's state apptppriation, it is.
We are urging the adoption of a new resource
allocation methodology for SUNY. We argue that
all tuition and other campus-generated revenues
should stay at the campuses which generate them.
We also argue that state tax dollars should
continue to be allocated to the campuses by the
Trustees in consonance with approved enrollment
levels and Central staff analyses of comparable
peer universities, and in consultation with the
campuses, elected o ffidals, and other appropriate
constituents.
These points are all explained in greater detail

in a J&gt;&lt;?Sition paper which was reprinted in the
October S Reporler. We will continue
press the;e points.

to

raise and

T • I tl o • I a a • • a : As these oqservations
about SUNY's economy indicate, tuition policy
and its administration may well be the issue for
State University in 1996-97. Since SUNY is now
more tuition--dependent than ever, we are urging
that the Trustees and campuses have a greater
role and broader latitude in developing tuitiQJ1
policy, establishing tuition levels, and managing
tuition revenues.
One essential point here: the current "one-sizefits-aU " approach to tuition, which mandates the
same tuition for undergraduates in all
baccalaureate programs at the slate-operated
campuses, is beco ming harder and harder to
defend. Undergraduate instruction is not the

The type and quality of undergraduate instructlon
offered also differs from campus to campus,
leading to differences In cost of lnstructlon. These
facts challenge the policy of charging identical
tuition for all bacca.l2ureate programs.
At least fony of the fifty states already have
tuition structures for undergraduate programs in
public higher education that reflect this
understanding. In fact, we recognize program
differences in other ways throughout SUNY. for
example, we already set and allocate the
community colleges' and statutOry colleges'
tuitions differently from the way we set and
allocate the state-operated campuses' tuitions,
and we already charge different tuitions at the
associate's, baccalaureate, and gr.lduate/
professional level-for that matter, even between
some graduate and graduate professional
programs. Only at the state-operated campuses
have we held to the notion that tuition for all
baccalaureate degrees-from Maritime to Geneseo
to llB--&lt;;hould be the same. The Board of
Trustees has already indicated itS suppon fo r a
change in lhis positio n.
The alternative which UB has proposed is a
campus-based ruillon policy, one which relates to
program cost, program mix, and type of
institution, as well as to tuitions at similar,
competing public lnstitutions. Under such a
scheme , the campuses would analyze their
markets, needs, and capacities; propose tuition
levels to the Board of Trustees; and retain the
revenues resulting from the tuitions approved by
the Board of Trustees.
This approach Is a sensible way o f maintaining
the kind of undergraduate education that srudenrs
want from UB , rather than letting our programs be
devoured by the creeping mediocrity which awaits
us if our tuitions continue to be siphoned off to
other campuses. We have , in faCl, heard two
things from students: one, if they put tuition
dollars into SUNY, they want those dollars spent
where they are paid, on their own campuses; two,
they are willing to accept reasonable, predictable
tuition increases if program quality is maintained
and improved.
Rethinking SUNY contains the beginning of a
campus-based tuition policy, but again, we think It
must go farther if we are ro serve our students
well . UB will cootinufto make this case with
SUNY Central and to the Legislature.

SOUJ.ld policy, we think this is a ma}or error.
Fighting for continued TAP assistance at current
levels o r better will be a prio rity agenda item for
SUNY ca mpuses this year. We wiU 01rgue that
raising tuitio n, cutting operating support, and
redudng TAP will lead ultimate ly

tO

a lower-quality

institution which will be inaccessible to many
students, panicularly low-income students.
Moreover, we wiJI press the point that in a higher
tuition environment, both the State and SUNY must
dedicate resources to financia l aid.

Flaxlbllltr/afflcle•cr I•••••=
Another crucial set of issues in Rethinking SUNY
and on the campuses' agenda is greate r
management flexibility, along with the increased
efficiency and expanded revenue opponunities
which such flexibility would make possible. for
example, we will urge the Legislature to help us
cut the regulato ry burden that prio r approva l o f
contracts, purchases, and other transactio ns entails;
we also are urging the Trustees to simplify SUNY's
internal practices for processing and approvaL
Such steps would take us far in eliminating .. paper
obstacles."
Rethinking SUNY supports changes that would

permit campuses to carry forward unexpended
funds, thereby encouraging more responsible
budget management. The vehicle fo r this is a
consolidated fund , the Academic Quality Fund,
within which SUNY could interchange and

reallocate funds, regardJess o f source . For
example. additio nal income that the campuses
might generate through private·seaor pannerships
and lease or sa le o f services and facilities--given
greater freedo m to enter into such tr:J.nsactions-would also go into this consolidated fund. (lfA, of
course, argues that aU such loca ll y generated funds
must be retained at the campus level.)

•

•

•

It is clea r that SUN'Y must ta ke steps such as

those described above; a number of other states
already have . Notably, in states like Pennsylvania
and California. colleges and universities in highly
differentiated multi-campus public systems co-exist
nice ly. because of and no t in spite o f a greater
abiliry to manage their own destinies. In many of
these issues for public higher edu ca tion. New York
is behind the times.

We are de lighted th:n the Governor, in response
to Rethinking SUNY, has submined legislation that
will implement the Academic Quality Fund. penmt

F I • • • c I al • I d I • a • • • : Financial aid is
an important ooncem in dUs budget environment.

If, Indeed, UB does become a somewhat
higheNuidon lnstin1f.i~m, like similar institu tions in
Pennsylvania,

usens, and California, then

adequate fmancial aid is ,an imperative. Proposed
cuts and 'c hanges to TAP fo r 1996-97 could lead to
higher costs for nearly one-quaner of o ur
srudents, undergraduate and graduate. Moreover,
essentially all of the reductlon in su ppon for TAP
would fall on students in publ ic higher edu catio n,
in SUNY and CUNY. In t.enns of equity and

campus-based ruition policy. and extend much
greater management flexibility . We will

create a ydog-ea t-dog" SUNY. with units o ut to do
in other units. We believe that the Board of
Trustees can and will continue to carefully mo nito r
and regulate the syste m. using it'i autho riry
regarding ca mpus missions and the review and
approval of ca mpus-based tuitions: irs power over
SUNY·s

faciliti c~

and ca pital budget; its authority to

spend SUNY's state tax support wisely. and its
power to ho ld campus leadership accountable fo r
good stewardship.

same at all of these campuses. Its ultimate value
to the student differs from campus to campus.

'

'

~trongly

suppon these initiatives. None of them need

�These , then, are Lhe large-scale, long-term
pla nning and policy issues on which the State
University Board of Trustees and SUNY's central

office have been focusing, and on which UB's
semor officers have been pressing. They have
~rved as a plal.fonn for the Trustees'

response to

the recommendations affecting SUNY in the
Governor's

1996-97

J

Executive Budget Jn a

THE TRUSTEES AND CENTRAL OFFICE

(!) The State University Trustees (The Trustees) are stewards for the people of New

follow-up to this paper (to be published by

York regarding the operation and performance of the State University of New
York (SUNY).

mid-February) we will repon on the now
short -term--but extremely impon.ant-

®

The Trustees, with the advice and counsel of the Chancellor and campus
presidents, articulate the mission and vision for SUNY in consultation with the
Governor and Legislature, and provide the dtizen-volurueer leadership for SUNY.

®

The Trustees

lmplications of the reduct ions to SUNY's tax
suppon which are recommended in that
Executive Budget. Another upcoming paper,
w hich the Provost and 1 are now preparing, will

• establish general policy for SUNY;

repon on the planning process which is currently

'
• consistent
with SUNY's mission and vision, determine campus missions,
in an interactive process with the campuses;

being discuSSt.-d with the Deans.
As the~ papers are released , the Provost.
~mor

• allocate state tax dollar.i (general fund support) consistent with campus
missions and system priorities determined by the Trustees;

Vice Prt=sident. and I will renew our ca ll

for any and all react ions from our university

• monitor the performance of the campuses and bold campus officers accountable for that performance;

(:ummunity. The poi nt is not simply that changes
.m: coming

• appoint campus presidents, in a joint process with the campus councils,
and with appropriate involvement of campus conslituendes; and

Changes are taking place , here and

now, and thb. is our wi ndow of opponunity to
shape them

• as appropriate, are advocates for SUNY and higher education in the
processes through which state taxes are allocated to state purposes.

For UB to succeed in the lo ng term,

SUNY must establish a new tuition policy, as well

0

as secu re and promote grea ter campus initiative

and flexibility-and we must do these things n""gbt
now We want our university community and our
I ger community informed about these issues; we
eed your public suppon, and that of UB's

@ Central Office's primary and paramount role is to support the Trustees and
Chancellor regarding their respective stewardship and leadership activities.

iends, in the process of political cons ideration
d ~ bat e .

The Chancellor is the chief counselor and advisor to the Trustees regarding their
several responsibilities; the Chancellor is the Chief Executive for the Trustees
regarding implementation of Trustee policy, the performance of campuses and
their officers, and the realization of campus missions; the Chancellor is the
professional leader for SUNY.

Your active involvement, as we work

@ Central Office's support functions should be funded solely from SUNY's state
tax support.

to fo~e US's destiny, wi!J be essential .

(!) Central Office should not be funded ro or seek to perform services for campuses
except as the Campuses solidt such services and are willing to pay for them
from campus tax support or campus-based revenues.

II

THE ST ATE-OPERATED CAMPUSES

(!) The state-operated campuses (The Campuses) are the agendes through which
SUNY realizes its mission and vision.

(!) The Campuses perform SUNY's teaching, training, scholarship, creative activity,
research, and public service. The Campuses must perform these functions
consistent with the missions determined for them through the Trustees'
mission-setting process.

@ The Campuses receive allocations of tax support from the SUNY Trustees and
apply this to the realization of their mission, subject to appropriate audit and
oversight by the Trustees and Central Office. The Campuses also apply revenues other than tax support to the realization of their missions.
Substantially all revenues are generated by campus-based activities'
• Tuition
•

Fees

• Income fund reimbursable OFR) accountsauxiliary services (e.g., food service)
support services (e.g., print shops)
continuing education

dormitory lFR
other (e.g., conferences and special events, ere.)
• Grants, contracts, and other sponsored programs through the SUNY
Research Foundation (Rf) or campus-based foundations (e.g., UBF)
• Philanthropic gifts and grants (primarily through campus-based foundations)

0

All campus-generated revenues sho uld stay at the campuses which generate
them and be used to support campus-based activities (e.g ., teaching, research,
and service).

@ The Campuses may purchase services from any appropriate vendor, including
Central Office, or may provide such services o n campus, as determined by
campus officers, consistent with state law. The Campuses should not be
required to support Central Office's delivery of services to or for the Campuses,
except as the Campuses determine.
N 0 T E : These prindples are not intended to apply to SUNY's capital budget

process or the State University Construction Fund. They should apply, however,
to all other SUNY auxiliary corporations.

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
State University ofNew Yom

One Hundred Fifty Years
February 1, 1996

Volume 27, No. 16

FSEC hears Heac4lck, Goodman
discuss tuition, academic issues
BJ STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

M

ORE THAN onequ arter of full ·
tim e
UB
und ergrads are
now on academic

probation and UB's tuiti on could
leapfrog $500 higher th an tu iti on
e lsewhere in SUNY nex t year. the
Fac ' lty Senate Executive Commit te learned durin g the ir Jan . 24
m eting.
On the state budget front. Provas Tho mas Headrick conccdc.!d
that . e n if a best-case scenari o

plays o

1

in Albany. UB is likely

facing a\c ut of some $7 milli on in

1996-97'. To close pan of that gap.
Headri c k is hopeful that the s tate
legis lature will fina ll y approve
campus- based tuition. "If the legisla ture supports differential tu -

ition,'' Headrick said. "some or all of
thai gap could be filled by that tuition
differential." He estimated that an

1ncrement ofbetween $300and $500,
over and above any statewide tuition

increase, could be needed.
Vice Provost for Unde rgradu ate Education Nicolas Goodman

told FSEC members th at 3,760stu·
dents, 28.4percentofUB 's 13,229
full-time undergmd uate stude nts.
were placed on academic proba-

Herbert Schuel called the numbers

and updated FSEC members on

"a so urce of embarrassment. "

pl ans for a major capi ta l campaign .
A rece ntly co mpleted needs survey . titled ''The Next Level," iden ti fi e d w is h - l ists across th e
uni vers it y of more th an $437 mi llion. Endowed chai rs. interdisci ·
plinary ce nte rs. scho larships and
researc h headed the lists .
The deve lopme nt depa nment
has stud ied the potential donor pool.
identifying more than 5.000 alumni
with a net wonh of more than $1
milli on. including 60 who are wonh
more tha n $10 million. Stein explained that he and his staff of
schoo l-based deve lopment o ffi ce rs have bee n in co mmunicati on
w ith__many &lt;?f...t~j£ a l~~ to deremline whe ther a suct·ess ful campaign could be waged to ra ise a
sig nifi cant amount of money for
the uni vers it y.
Whi le e ncouraged by the re sults seen so fa r. Stein said a fmal
decision on whethc: r to wage an
actual capi t:JI campaig n won't be
made until April. Howeve r. a first·
ever faculry ·s taff soli ci tation will
be implemented thi s spri ng, wi th a
single mailing to the home s of
employees. offering a chance to m ake

tio n following the posting of fall
grades. In fact, if it weren ' t for
some late grade submi ssions and a

Goodmao responded that they are

computer glitch, about !50 students

simply arenectionofthe insti rution 's

would ha ve bee n di smissed from
the university for acade mic reasons. Goodman added . The st uden ts had bee n o n academi c
probation for three se mesters. he
ex plained. If notices could have
been se nt out in time. those students would not have been all owed
to reg iste r for the nex t se mester.

Earning a 2.0 or lower QPA, fail·

high standards. Engineering Professor Dennis Ma lone agreed with
Goodman. explaini ng that "to lower
your standards because you feel too
many students don' t meet them, simply undercuts your standards."

G

oodman also an nounced
pl ans to beef up awareness

on campusofUB 's policy

ing to complete 75 percent of the
courses for which a student registers.
fallin g be low full-time status or fail ing to be accepted into a major depanmem by junioryearareall facton;
rhat could land a UB undergrad on
lhc "not in good academic standing"
list. under a policy passed last spring

on academic integrity. noting that
some cases of c heating may go
undetected or un reported . He un ve iled a dr&lt;1ft statement on academic
integrity, which declares that "by
placing rheirname on academic work.
students certify the originality o f a ll
work not otherwi se (cited)." The

by the Faculty Senate and imple·

FSEC voted approval of the statement and Goodmansaid that a cam-

mented over the summer.
Losing "good academic standing" status coul d mean the Joss of
ex tracurric ular ac ti vities. stude nt
governance positions. residence
hall activities and. possibly. interco ll egiate athletic eligib ility, said
Goodm a n. However. Goodman
said he felt that academic probation should be viewe d as a sig na l to

ge t help rather th an as a penalty.
Anatomi cal Sciences Professor

paign wa."i being planned to promote
awarenessofth epolicycampuswide.
In othe r bu siness. Vi ce Presi dent for University Advance me nt
a nd Development Ronald Stein
showed off several recently produced 30-second pro motional spots
for televi sion. featuring such UB
a lum s as W a rn aco Corp. CEO

Linda Wachner and CNN White
House Correspondent Wolf Blitzer.

a payroll deduction gift to UB. Most
other SUNY campuses have some
son of solic itation. Stein said.

Retirement
program
planned

D

OES THE weather
ha ~~

you th inking of
retmng to a warmer
cli mate? If you're a member
of the Employees · Retirement

System (E RS ). this might be
a good time to look at your
options. The Department of
Personnel Services is planning a pre- retire me nt program . which will begin in
mid-February and include a
se ries of gro up sessions tai lored for perso ns e nro ll ed in

the New York State ERS.
The programs are designed
to he lp individuals who plan to
retire in the near future as well
ao;: those who expecl ro work
several more years. However,
the pre-retirement programs are
being planned in anticipation
that a state retirement ince nuve may be offered in 1996.
··Lao;;t year's state incentive
program was impleme nted so

quickly thatclassified employees were not given a reason·
abl e period of time to explore
such an option. We would hope
lhat the pre-retirement program
would be of value to eligible
employees who would choose
to consider a state incenti ve:·

said Ellen McNamara. UB as-

New TV magazine will help
alums stay in touch with UB
BJ CHRI&amp;nNE VIDAL
Reporter Ed1tor

U

6:30p.m. throughout Febru ary.
Future shows, whic h will be

B ALUMN I throughout • taped once a month and fo llow the

We stem New York w ill
have a new means o f stety ing con nected wi th their universit y
~ tartin g th is month .
UB Today , a 10-minute UB
a lumni 'TV magazine'' that will
air on Ade lphi a Cab le's co mmu nit y access c hannel. is sc hedu led
to make it s debu l.
Accord ing to W i lli&lt;~m J. Evi tt s.
e xecu tive director of Alumn i Re l&lt;.t tio ns at UB. the show iS "kind o f an
alumn i magazine on cable." de 'iigned to prov ide viewers with
hi ghlights a nd samples of interesting peop le. pl a..::es and things on
c:ampu s.
With the Cente r fo r the Arts as a

backdrop, Evitts taped UB Today' s
premi ere on Jan . 26. The show is
sc heduled to make its premiere on

Suhday. Feb. II at 6:30p.m.. and
w ill be repeated each Su nday at

sa me Sundays-at-6:30 p.m. schedule , will be of broad interest, focusing on aspects o f UB · s mi ss ion in
research, teaching or service. as well Q
as providing information about com- ~
ing e vents, Al umni Association ~
new~. the Sesquicen ten nial ce lebra- ~
Lion und other programs at UB .
~
Most of the sho w s will be shot
on ca mpus or at events such as th e
William J. Evttts, left, Interviews AI Harrts-f'. In Center for the Arts for
UB at Sunrise breakfast lecture
first cable show. UB alum Jason Levine, right , directs taping for
se ries. Evitts said.
Adelphia Cable .
The first show wi ll fea ture variou~ aspec t:-. of the Ce nter for th e
bers : and a "SC',q uu:l·ntennl a l
··us and the commun ity are kind
Ans. includin g In terviews with
minute
of sy nonymous . We kind of grew
Robert Chu mbley. director of the
One out of three \,.'ollege d~grce
up together." Evitts sa id. referring
Ce nter fo r th t: Arb, and AI H arris ho lders in Wes tern New Yurk10 th e uni versi ty's 150-year his F.. director of the UB Art Gallery.
50.000 in all- has a UB degree
tory . "UB Today is a user's guide
Ot her segme nt!' of the show will
Those alumn i. as we ll as th~ thouTO the uni versi ty for a lumn i and the
focus on co ming eve nts: informasands who attended but did not
co mmunit y." he sa id. " We want to
tion on ho w to get tic kets and how
graduate, the ir famil1esand friends
show you the things that are he re
to sign up to use Alumni Arena;
aJI co mbine for a broad base of
for you a nd how you can access
co ntac t points and telephone num suppon for the show. said Evi tts.
them."

sistant vice p~ident for human resources.
Sessions being planned :

Retirement Benerits
Overview. A representative
of KPMG Peat Ma.rwick will
present grou p sessions at UB .
Socia l Security Benefil&lt;
Overview. A Social Security
Administr'.Uion representative
will offer group ses.~ions at UB.

Appointments withERS
Representatives. Depending
on interest. Person nel Services will arrange indiv1dual.
on-cam pu s appoi ntm ents
wi th an ERS represe ntative .
Announcements of dates.
times and locations of the progr.un wi ll be distributed within
the next two weeks. If a 1996
state retiremen t incent ivt' is offered. eligible employee-s will
be noti fi ed separately. Fol loY..ing announcements. ques t1 o n ~
should be referred

10

Jerry

Linder. managerforret1n:men1
services.at645-:!b46.ext. 10.\
UBclassifiedemploy= 45 and
older who are ERS member.;~
eligible to attend progmm~ without charging leave accruals.

�2

Stokes working hard on !
issues impacting staff

$800,000 gift to
aid Distinguished
Honors Scholars

By STEVE COX
Reporter Stall

By .lED NITZIIEIHI

A

S UB'S DIRECTOR of the Office

of SIUdent Multicullural Affai rs.
Michael Stokes often serves as a liai'\OO between diverse studen t groups and campus ad mini strators. Now th at he is president
of the Profe~sional Staff Senate. ht: rmds
hm1sclf pl ayi ng a si milar ro le on behalf o f
the universit y's 1.400 staffer!lo .
Stoke:-.. a U B graduate who has worked
for the umversi ty for nearl y a decade . bec&lt;ame mvolvcd 10 governance a couple of
years ago when he became a memberofPSS .
·· 1 found the organization fascinating. and
hecame more involved," he explained. ''but
wht:n they asked me to run for president. I

have to admit I still was a little reluctam ."
Stoke!-. says he has worked hard to get in volved m the man y issues that 1mpact the
university's sta ff comm unit y. especially
g1vc n the changing nuture of SUNY and the
o;; tate budget.
Only three SUNY m s lltullon ~ have any
'ort of professiOnal staff governance structure and UB 'sIS "by far the most functional
and 111nuential," explained Stokes. "Werei CC IVC a lot of support from the administration and they actively sec k ou r input on
many thmgs." he said. ''That i~ not the ca..o;e
t!lsewhe re ."
II wa~ the oppo rtunit y to have 1mpact on
y ng live !! that has motivated Stokes profes~ l onally as well . Programs aimed at de velqping student leadership and promoting
\.:"U itural diversity occupy muc h of the time of

Stokes and his staff of five ... Next year. we
are putting on three exciting cultural conferences,'' said Stokes. "and we will be highlighting a different cuhure for the university
comm unity every week ."
Stokes earned his bachelor's degree in
Psychology and Community Mental Health
from UB . After working in the community
mental health system for eight years. Stokes
began his professional career here as a coordinator in Special Services in 1986.
" I took the job here in part 'because I was
Interested in getting back to my education,"
recall s Stokes. now a Ph.D. candidate in
Educational Administration. Stokes went on
to become a counselor in the Educational
Opportunity Program before moving into
his current position when it was created two
years ago.

O

ne of Stokes' early assignments was to
secure funding to implement the national Ronald E. McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program at UB. The McNair
Program. named for the African American
astronaut killed in the Challenger explosion.
is an extensive program fo r "first-generation
co llege studems and low income students,"
explains S10kes.
These student s, who are preparing for
grad uate work leading to a Ph.D .. receive
individualized mentoring and faculty support. GRE test preparation and perform extensive researc h. culminating in an academic
presentation to their peers. More than 70
percent of McNair students goon to graduate

Reporter Contributor

A

STOKES

work at UB and other top graduate schools
across the country, Stokes reports.
Stokes truly values working with college
students. "It is probably the most important
time in these people's lives," says Stokes.
"Helping make that a positive experience is
probably the most impact you can have on
some?.ne 's life .. .short of giving bin.h to
them .
Working with the many success stories of
programs benefiting underrepresented minorities like EOP and McNair, makes the
c urrent political cl imate particularly fru strating to Stokes. The federally supponed
McNair program and the state sponsored
EOP are both frequent targets of conservative budget-cutters. Stokes expects EOP to
again be targeted for elimination by Gov .
Patak.i in this year's state budget. The program was axed by Pataki's budget proposal
la s t year, but restored by the s tate
legi slature.

GRIT program awards grants to area companies;
technology will make them more competitive
By ELLEN GOLDBAUM

News Serv1ces Stall
RIT .the Greater Regional lndu stnal
Technology program. a $1 million
industry/university program de 'lgned to help Western and Central New
York manufacturing companies become
more competi tive, is awarding its first round
of grants and accepting nc:w applications .
UB IS the lead institution in the program.
a consortium that also include!! Syracuse
Univers it y. Universit¥ of Rochester and
Rochester Instit ute of Techno logy .
Under the program, faculty. graduate and
advanced undergraduate students from these
universities in engineering and re la ted fields
wi ll he lp selected manufacturers. particu larly those wit h exist ing or prospective export markets. incorporate the late s t
technology into their products .·
Companies receiving grants inc lude
Amherst SystemsofWilliamsville. awarded
$96.800 to conduct the redesign of a Foveal
Vi~1on Sensor chip. with assistance from UB
faculty and students: CNC Systems, Inc . of
Roc he ster. awarded $50.000 to develop new
~:ontrol and interface software fortht!company ·s
optical grinder. with assistance from Univer..; lt y of Roc hester faculty and students: Clark
ln'i;trume ntation/Ciark MXR. Inc. of Rochestc:r. awarded $50.13 I to increase the flexibility
{ll one of the compan y'!! laser product\ for
ultmfast optics research. with assistance from
laculty and student!! from the Un1 vcr.-. ll ) of
Rochester' s Institute of Optu.:!l.
F1ve ot her companies will aJ..,o rct·e•ve
~;r;mt!l under the first round of fund1ng
GR :T •~ ~eek m g application . . from ot he r
manufactu nng compan1c~ mthe regmn that
lit !!pec ific cri teria to app ly for gra nt ~ in th e

G

program 's second round of funding. Indi vid ual g rant s are expected to be in the
$50.000-$100.000 range . Application deadline IS Feb. 29. Representatives of interested
c ompanie~ are invited to attend an information session about GRIT. In Buffalo . the
&gt;CS&gt;ion will be held Feb. 6. from 7:30-9 a.m.
1n the University Inn and Conference Center, 2401 Nonh Forest Road. Amherst.
Created as a demonstration project funded
by the Small Business Administration upon
the initiative of Congressman John J. LaFalce.
GR IT is expected to serve as a model for
sma ll-business produc t development and job
creation and preservation . It is the only program of its kind in the U.S.

T

o survive in inte nse international compe·
tition. small businesses must continuously develop and improve their products or
risk losing not only export opportunities, but
domestic marke ts. and, ultimately, Americanjobs. But for most small firms, the cost of
maintaining research-and-development operations in-house is proh ibitive. GRJT will
help those firm s improve their current prod uc ts. as we ll as develop new ones.
Program director is George Lee. dnector
of the National Center for Eanhquake Engi·
nee ring Researc h at UB. who initiated the
project in 1994 while he was dean of the UB
S\.:"hOOI of Engineering and Applied Sc1ences
Mark Karwan. interim dcun of the UB
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
Duncan T . Moore. dean of the Si.."hool of
Enginecnng and Applied ScJcnce!l at the
Umve rs1ty nf R oc h e~ ter : Paul E. Petersen.
Dean of the College of Enginecnng at Roch ester Jn ... lllute of Technology. and Edward
A. BogutL. Interim dean of the College of

CASH GIFT of $800.000 has been
given to UB for its Distinguished Honors
Scholan Program by the same anonymous
donor who gave Sl.6 million in January 1995
to establish the program. which coven the
recipients' costs ofattending UB forfooryears.
The original S 1.6 million gift is the largest cash gift ever received by UB or any other
college or university in the SUNY system in
which the funds were immediately available
for use . The latest gift will allow the program
to recruit students to enter UB as freshmen in
Fall 1997 for a third round of scholarships.
The donor cited the excellent students
who have been recruited and his pleasure
with the overall way in which the program
has been run as motivations for making the
additional gift.
"I am extremely pleased with the University at Buffalo's Honors Program and the
Distinguished Honors Scholars Program,"
he added. "Seeing my gift used to help such
outstanding students in what is clearly a
challenging yet nurt uring program is extremely gratifying. My hope is that lhrougb
the Distinguished Honors Scholars Program,
I can continue to assist the best and brightest
students who face overwhelming financial
odds. These are students who want the enriching undergraduate educational experience
of working with world·dass faculty who :=
available only at a diverse research university .
I would like to see the University at Buffalo
become the natural choice for these leading
students from throughout the nation."
Eleven freshmen were awarded Distinguished Honors Scholarships in Fall 1995.
Their average combined verbal and math
SAT score is 1469 out of 1600. Four were
National Merit Semifinalists, two were winners. The initial gift also provided support
for a second class of Distinguished Honors
freshmen to enter UB in Fall 1996.
"We place a very high priority on recruiting
more of the country 's most competitive. most
talented students and giving those students a
varied. challenging, rich undergraduate experience within the setting of a public research
university." said President William R. Greiner.
"Thanks to the ongoing suppon and
thoughtfulness of this donor. we can offer
such students the academic excellence to
wh1ch we are commilted and the full finan-

Engineering and Computer Science at Syrac use Univers it y, are coordinating the program m their region!!
During the course of th e two-year project.
which began \a..&lt;iit fall. product -improvement
projects will be cond ucted by the consortium . with the assistance of The Center for
Industrial Effectiveness at UB .
Projects will involve. but not be limited
to. product-focused, muhidisciplina.ry teams
offacuity- led graduate students and advanced
undergraduates.
Companies' eligibility for a grant will be
evaluated based on the following cri teria:
They must be a manufacturer wilh no more
than 500 employees, located in Allegany,
Cattaraugus. Cayuga. Chautauqua. Conland.
Eric. Genesee, He rkimer, Livi ngston. Madi son. Monroe. Niagara. Oneida, Onondaga.
Ontario. Orleans, Oswego. Seneca. Wayne or
Wyoming counties.
They must have an existing. successfu l
product that requires tec hno logical updat ing. including redesign and/or process improvements . The produ ct must have a
significant share of the market and have
significant international competi tio n.
It must account for a substantial proportiOn of total co mpany business. The project
must be able to be completed in a year or less.
The company must be financially stable
and willing to share in project costs. financially
and w11h the suppon of technical staff.
Proposals also will be ;udged on the basis
uf the mat ch of universi ty expeni sc to prod u~..:t tec hnologies and on overall economic
benefit and imponance to the region .
For more information. compani es should
contact The Center for Indu strial Effectiveness at 636-2568.

"The scholarships...are a
refreshing ray ofhope that
high academic grades are
still recognized"
DlmNGUISHED HONORS SCHOLAR

cia\ support that their level of ski ll and accomplishment so fully justifies.
'That's a lasting and powerful way to further the achievements of our best and brightest
young people." Greiner added. "UB is proud
and very, very pleased to have the chance.
through thi s donor's kindness, to do so."
Ronald H. Stein. vice president for universi ty advancement and development noted.
'The generosity of thi s donor is testimony to
the exce llence we strive for in all that we do .
His suppon also demonstrates the power of
private philanthropy where gifts. no matter
what the size. come together to provide the
resources needed to keep UB one of the
premier public universities in the country."

�IHIKIJRIII

3

~1.~ v ...... 27, No.1e

UB Casting Institute to restore
friezes by Buffalo sculptor
BJ PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Services Staff

T

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo
Casting Institute, one of the largest instiwtional foundries in the
United States. has announced plans

to conserve and recast three large

bas-relief panels produced by the late Buffalo sculptor Charles Cary Rumsey in connection with one of his last commissions .
Tony Paterson. UB professor of art and
d1rector of the insti tute. said the UB frieze
co nsists o f positive plaster casts made for a
1920commission for Rice Stadium in Pelham
Bay . It is comprised of three bas-relief pan-

els totaling 60 feet in length that depict
G reek ath letescompeling in Olympic spons.
Rumsey. the son of a prominent Buffa lo
fami ly, was a noted ath lete and a well-re-

garded figure in the second ph ase of the
Beaux-Ans sc ulptural style, one o f the most
disunctive phases of American sc ulpture.
In 1922. shonly after completing work on
the Rice Stadium commission, Rumsey died in
an auto accident. The friezes, cast in concrete
from the original mold, were installed in Rice
Stadium in 1928. but were destroyed when the
.;radium was demolished in 1989.
In addition to the destroyed concrete
fneze . a casting of the panels in plas ter/
burhtp remforced wuh steel rod had also
been taken from the original mold. The pan~ls were given to UB tn 1938 and comprise the
only representation of the work extant. The
p.anels were installed that year in Clark Gym
on the South Ca mpu s, where they remained
for 55 years. susta ining damage from wear
and age. They were removed in I993 and
.;tared in amicipation of their restoration. The
paneh are considered pan of the collection
of the University at Buffalo Art Gallery.
Private funding is now being sought to
underwri te the projec t's conservation phase.

UB frieze to be restored depicts Greek athlet es partlclpatlnC In Olympic sports.

In the meant ime. the plaster friezes are on
exhibit in the atrium of the Center for the
Anson UB 's Nonh Campus. When they are
removed. they will be returned to stordge
until conservation begins.
Paterso n said he and hi s team expect to
even tually recast the works in bronze aod
tnstallthem in a prominent site at the uni versi ty. Paterson. who serves as project supervi so r, has mo re than 30 years of experience in
casting and ftnishing bronze sculpture s. He
ts supponed by a staff trained in the fabnca ~
lion and conservation/preservation o f bronze
and stone sculpture. Among other projecb.
the team rece ntly restored the bronze sculpture o f Columbus in Buffalo's Front Park .
The co~s upervisor of the Rumsey project
t!l Susan Mills. who ho lds a master of fine

'Second assault' on crime victims
Prof assails polygraph In sexual assault c:ases
BJ PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Serv1ces Stall

C

ALLING IT"asecondassault"on
victims of sexual crimes, a UB
professor says that in commu ni tics across the U.S .. survivors of sex ual
assa ult are routinely required to "pass" a
lie detector tes t before po lice wi ll even
begin to investigate the crime.
Lacey Sloan. associate professor of socia l work at UB. writes in the current issue
of the lrtremll/i(mal Joumal of Medicine
lmd Ll1w, that routine polygr.tphing of sex
crime victims occurs in communities in at
least 17 states. and probably more. This
desp1te the fact that the validity of polygraphs isquestionableenough that very few
states allow infonnation from them to be
admitted as evidence in criminallrials.
"As a methcxl of ascertaining truth ."
Sloan ~ys ...the polygraph falls in the same
ca tegory as other ' truth tests.' from the
dunking stool to walk..ingon coals, that were
used throughout history. but have been
proven to be unreliable and invalid."
Po lygraphing of sex-abuse victim!&gt;
tends not to take place regularly in all
communi ties in a given state. says Sloan.
but in "pockets" throughout states that
JXrmit H. Routine polygraphing does not
apply to victims of other reponed crimes
in these states , Sloan says. and "its use
with survivors of sexual assault implies
that the la tter arc more likely to lie than

victims of n on~sexual cnme s. dt.!spite ma~ ­
sive evidence to the contrary."
Sloan says ... In nocri rne other than sexuaJ
assault has there been such an extensive:
history of myth and disbelief surrounding
the survivors. The use oflhe polygmph w1th
these people renects a deep-seated cultur.tl
and legal bias against sex-crime victims ...
Sloan· s results are ba-red on her 1990
survey of 83 rape crisis centers across the
country undertaken with the assistance of
the National Coal ition Against Sexual A~­
s.au lt. She points out that it second look w~
undertaken last spring by the ABC pmgmm
··Prime Time Live .. (on which Sloan ap·
peared), which found the situation large!)
unchanged across the country .
The cen ters originally surveyed were
located in 19 state!' and served approxt·
mutely 17 percent of the population oft he
United Slates . In 17 of the s tate '.
polygraphing of sexual assau lt vtcttnb
pnor to investigation was legall) pcnn1t·
ted and practrced
In 12 of the state s 'urveyed. a~:llon
adverse 10 the comp l arnant~ followed
po lygraph testing: Charges aga inst alleged perpetrators were dropped m 44
percent o f the cases and no tnvesllgatrun
ensued tn 50 percent of the cases.
Today six states, including New York.
hiJve laws banning or restricting Jaw enforcement offkers and prosecuton~ from
using the tests on sex ual assault survivors.

arts degree in sc ulpture and is currently sc ulp·
ture technici an and instructor in the Program
in Sculpture in the UB Depanment of Art
The project team will document all of its
work in writing and with photography and
videotape. All conservation will be perfonned
1n accorda nce with guidelinesofThe Ameri can Institute for Conservation of Historic
and Artistic Works
The UBCasting Institute. founded in 1993
as pan of the uni ve rsity 's program tn scu lp·
tune. operates our of rhe Cen ter for lhL" Afl!«
It~ goa l i' to tram !&gt;C Uiptors 111 the highest
degree of profe~ s ionalism and technical expertise. The institute has ac~.:epted many pub·
li e and private commission" in bronze
scu lpture and suppon s restoration activities
through its gr;rduate program.

Rumsey's work
in Albright-Knox
CHARLES CARY RUMSEY, born in Buffalo in 1879. graduated from Harvard University 10 1902. He served as an apprentice
to Paul Weyland Bartlett. who was at the
time one of the most prominent American
scu lptors working abroad. He later studied at
the Boston Museum of Fine Ans and the
Julian and Colarossi Academics in Paris.
A world--class polo player and amateur
boxer. Rumsey's specialties includedeques~
tnan sculptures-ponraits of polo players
and pnze horses. as well as of cowboys.
cattle and horses as meraphors.
He worked princ1pally in bronze and stone.
often emp loying mythological and histoncal th eme~ an1culated in private commts·
SJOns for free·standang statuary and in public
monuments. His 40-foot bas-relief panels of
Indians. horses and buffaloes for the Manhattan Bridge and Lhe heroic subject matter
of Rice Stadium commission are examples.
A collection of hi s works is on pennanent
exhibition in the Charles Cary Rumsey Room
o f the Burchfield-Penney An Center at Buf~
falo Stare College and hi s work is in the
pennanenl collection of the Albright·Knox
An Gallery Hi s scu lptures and bronze pan·
els are also displayed in a number of public
instttutions in Buffalo, including Forest
Lawn. where Rumsey is buried.

Live Radio
Forum with
the President
UB Prealdent William R. Gn:iner
will take pan in a live radio forum on
WBFO 88.7 FM. UB 's National Public Radio affiliate, Tuesday, Feb. 6.
Among the topics he 'II discuss are the
budget and the governance project.
Call in your questions to President
Greiner at 829-6000 from 3-4 p.m.

New international lecture series in
theater, dance begins this month
BJ PATRICIA DONOVAN

News Serv1ces Sta ll

K

ERRY GRANT. dean of the UB Facult y of Arts and Letter~ . and the In ternational Artistrc and Cultural Ex ·
change Program of the UB Depanment of
Theater and Dance have annou nced the in auguration of an annualrnternatio nall ecture
se ries in theater and dance. to begin in February .
lnt emnllona ll ec t urer~ will d1sru s' tradt ·
tton s and forms of theater that ha ve e\OI\ed
rn thetr cultures. The lectures and d1~CU.l&lt; ·
s1ons will infonn audience understanding of
a broad range of theater ans and t~sue~.
ar.:cording to the program director. Profes~or
MariaS . Home of the Depanmen1 ofTheatre
and Dance.
All lectures are free of charge and ope n to
the public . They will take place in the Screen Ing Room CRoom 112 ) in the Center for the
Ans on the Nonh Campus at 3 p.m. on the
second Friday of each month through Apnl.
The senes will resume in September. For
more tnformation. contact Ho me at 645 -

2595 .
The spnng series is as follows :
Fnday. Feb. 9. We st African Theater.
Sa mba Diop. "The Tracing and Presence of
Oml Tr.tdition~ in West African Indigenous
Theatre.··
Diopdraws examples from o ral traditions
anct popular theater to illustrate the dynamic
impu lse that permeates the cultures and so·

cie ties of West Africa's Senegambian region. The presentation will include video
f09tage of dancing. singing. chanting and
acting recorded in Senegal by Diop. a native
of that nation and professor in the UB De panment of Modern Languages and Literatures.
Friday. March 8. Italian Theater. Mana
Elena Gutierrez ... Alberto Savinio: Drama
And Music ...
ltal1an theori st AI be no Savintocontended
that because theater sy nthe~iLe s the vanous
an foml!&gt; . 11 IS a renection of the untver~e .
Slides and mu!&lt;&gt; tt· w1ll help illustmte Sa\ ini o's
tntenextual approach to theater
Gu11hre1. a Latrn Amencan nallvt:.t~ a
UB associate professor of modern lan guages and ltt eratu res. She teache s modt.' rn Italian ltterature and ha!&gt; wntten and
lectured extensi\ e l) on Sav1n1o·, ae'\thettc.:
theones .
Fnday. Apnl 12. lberoAmencan Theate r.
Luis Mohna. ''The La'' Decade A Global
Perspective ..
Lu1s Moltna ofSparn·' CELCJT present~
a lecture with vtdeo footage thar Illustrate!«
the course in Spanish-Amen ca n theater over
the last I 0 years.
CELCIT -Centro Latrn oa mencano dr.&gt;
Creacion ln vestigacion Teatral-ts an tnternauonal theater organization whose pnnCI ·
pal goals are development and creat1on of
new works. research and publicauon and the
promotion and fostering of theater.

�IHIBIIIN

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Peradotto honored as editor
By PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Serv•ces Statl

J

OHN PERADOTIO. Andrew V.V .
Raymond Chair in the UB Classics
Depanmcnt. was honored by the Counc il of Editor-s of Learned Journals at the
annual nauonal mecLing of the Modem Lan-

guage As!&lt;.ociation m December.
Pcradotto received a Distinguished Retirmg Editor award for hi ~ work. as editor of
A retlw:w. a noted interdisciplinary JOUrnal
of dasstcal studies . One of its founding
editor!-. 111 1968. Peradotto served as editorm-ch oef from 1975-95
The punel of three JUdge~ praised
Pcradouo ·~ c ontrib uti on to his field through
Arethuso as ··Jmaginauve and influential,"
and ci ted h1~ "radical c hanges in edi torial
po licy .. for helping to move scholarship for ward 111 the field of classJcs and for expand -

mg the boundaries of th e discipline.
The journal under hi s editorship was also
cited for " working against the grain, for
originality and subtlety in design, for substance in content." Peradotto also was praised
for his efforts to support women's scholarship and scholars hip on women's issues.
LaS! Seplember. Peradouo' s UB colleague, Martha Malamud, professor of classics and specialist in late antique literature
and Latin poetry, was appointed edilor-inchief of the Ar~thusa.
Peradouo is a SUNY Dis tingui s hed
Teaching Professor and an intemationaliy
recognized Homeric scholar. He is a fanner
president of the American Philological Association, the national professional association for classical Greek and Latin scholars in
the Uniled Slates and Canada.
During hi s tenure as the editor of Arethusa.

Film scholar's book looks at the
creative process of noted director
By PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Serv1ces Stall

O

SCAR - WINN I NG filmmaker
Preston Sturges IS widely regarded
as havmg written and directed some of
1he most sophi stica ted. brightly -written
film comedies ever made .
S1urges' reputati on resls on a number
of remarkable pictures produced by Para moun! Studios or 20th Century -Fox be tween 1939 and 1948 . He was the only
major Holl ywood direclOr to direct only
his own o riginal screenplays and \Oofhi s
12 pic.: lUres have continued 10 enjoy c nti cal acclaim. scholarly alten tion and popu lar admiration for more than 50 years .
In his new book "Four More Screenplays by Preston Sturges:· published thi s
month by the University of California
Press. Brian Henderson. professor of
media study at UB. continues hi s effort to
illuminate Sturges' crea tive process
through a se ries of introductory essays on
the sc reenplays for some of hi s finest
films.
Includ ed are the ongmal screenplays
and Henderson · ~ commentaries for four
of Sturges· best works: "The Palm Beach
Story.""TheMimcleofMorgan'sCreek."
"Unfaithfull y Yours" and 1he biographica l film "Triumph Over Painffhe Great
Moment ," which dramatizes the career of
W.T.G . Morgan. the doctor who revolutionized surgery through the use of ether.

The last was one of the most important
biographical works of the 1940s. Because
the film was recut and rearranged by
Paramount before it was released.
Henderson· s book, which reprints the
original script and explains its transformation, offers. in an important sense. a
"new" work by Sturges.
The book provides background information on the orig ins of the pictures and
examine s every important aspect of script
co mposition. analyzing varian t drafts and
draft frugmenls to illuminate the process
of revision .
William Nestrick of the University of
Ca lifornia . Berkeley , note s that
" Henderson has a fine feel for the emotional implications of the slightest changes
1n the story lines of the scripts and conse quently o ne has great confidence in the
significances he attributes to the various
states of each fi lm."
Henderson. a longtime sc holar of
Stu rges' work, is the author of the 1985
book. " Five Screenplays by Pres ton
Sturges," applauded at the time of its
publication for offe ring readers access 10
some of the filmmaker's best work during
the golden days of Paramount. It included
the scripts for. and commentaries on. 'The
Great McGinty.'' ''Christmas in July,"
"S ullivan 's Travels," " Hail the Conquer ing Hero" and the wickedly funn y "The
Lady Eve ."

Media Study continues series
By PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Serv1ces Stall

T

HE UB DEPARTMENT of Media Study
continues its new and popular "Magnifi c.:e nt Med ia" series of sc reenings. lectures
;,md disc.:ussions on film and video art with
. . cvera l even ts in February and March. All
~ve nts . presented in the Screenmg Room
(Room 112) of the Ce nter forth~: 1\.rts. North
Ca mpu ~. arc free and open 10 the public.
Wednesday. Feb. 7. 7:30p.m.: "DnubleC rossi ng Borders. Video documentanan Bill
Jun gle s, professor of comm uni ca ti on a1
Fredonia Stale College, screens and discusse::~
"Nonh;South;Nonh " ( 1991. 24 mm.) and
··saJvador.m Hislorias!HistoriasSalvadorenas''
11992,24 min.). two films produced as a result
of the collaborative effon of cruss-lx&gt;rde r arts
groups in Tijuana and San Diego.
Tuesday. Feb. 13, 7:30p.m.: Well-done and
;,;ooo-o-o-o FRESH!! Selections from The
1995-96 Univer.;ily Fi lm and Video Associalion Fi lm &amp; Video Festi val. praised as an

··extraordinary collection of student ti lm.c;."
Tuesday.Feb. 20, 7:30p.m.: "Society of the
Spectacle." First public screeni ng of the En glish-subtitled version of thi s major film by the
French filmmaker, Lheorist and political revolut ionary Guy Debord. introduced by UB professor and filmmaker Keith Sanborn .
Wednesday, Feb. 28. 7:30p.m.: "No More
Sweets for You." Just when you thought it wa.-,
safe to come out from under the bt:d- nine
new films and videos about being ALONE'
Soloness exposed in all of its pennutauons. for
gocxl or ill. Exquisite animation? Tonurously angst-ridden boredom? Schizophrenia? Murder? Got 'em aJJ . Leave your friend:-.
a1 home and come o n down! Alone .
Friday, March 29. 7:30p.m.: "Animation
Ma ster Emily Breer." Co-sponsored by
Hall walls Contemporary Ans Center. Live
action collage films are this pri ze-wi nning
animator 's specia lty ('The Genius'' with Joe
Gibbons. "S uperhero") and here you'll see
six of Breer's litt le gems.

he was responsible for nearly 20 notable
theme-centered issues. among them "Population Policy in Plato and Aristotle ,""Women
in the Ancient World ," ··vergil : 2000 Years,"
··semiotics and Classical Studies,"
" Herodotus and the Invention of His1.ory."
'The Challenge of"Biack Athena," "Mikhail
Bakhtin and Ancient Studies," " Rethinking
lhe C lassical Canon" and " Horace: 2000

Years."
Peradotto has served as the general editor
of the SUNY Press Classical Series since
1981 and is a former fellow of Harvard
University's Center for Hellenic Studies in
Washing1on. D .C. He has been a recipient of
the SUNY Chancellor's Award for Teaching. the most distinguished teaching award
bestowed by the New York state universi ty
system . He has lectured al more than 50
co lleges, uni versities and classical associa-

P£RADOTTO

tions in the U.S . and abroad . His latest book.

Man in the Middle Voice: Name and Narration in rho Odyssey, was published by
Princeton University Press in 1990.

Spring concerts to feature Fullam,
Martin, UB Wmd Ensemble
By PATRICIA DONOVAN

News Services Staff

T

HE UB MUSIC DEPARTMENT has
announced the first events in three of
its spring faculty and ensemble concert
series. The UB Organ Recital Series continues
on Sunday, Feb. 4, with a concet1 by Roland E.
Martin on the Slee concert organ at 5 p.m. in
Slee Concen Hall on the North Campus.
The concert will feature performances by
soprano Lydia Evans, mezzo-soprano Denise
Blackmore, tenor Jeffrey Porter and baritone
Clovis de Andre .
Martin 's program will begin with Mors et
Resurrectio ("Death and Resurrectio n") by
Jean Langlais, the blind French 20th-cen tury
organist/composer. and continues with Pange
Lingua, by an anonymous author from the
"Livre d'Orgue de Montr~al. " Two chorales
by 17th-century Gennan organist/composer
Johann Pac helbel will be included as well: a
partita on hi s 0 Haupl vo/1 Blut und Wunden
and a prelude on his 0 Traurigkeit, 0
Herzeleid. Pachelbel' s compositions influenced Bach and both chorales. although stylistically different from those of Franz Liszt.
are employed by Li szt in his simple. un adorned Via Cm cis ("Stations of the Cross'").
which fo llows them on the program. The
final compos it ion is Sarabande for the Morn ing of Easter by 20th-century British organist/composer Herbert Howell s.
Martin is a member of the faculty of the
UB Mu sic Department. where he teac hes
organ. harpsichord and piano and serves as
ope ra vocal coach and acco mpani st.

H

e is mu sica l director of St. Jose ph' s
University Church in Buffalo: assistant
musical director a nd accompanist for the
Chautauqua Chamber Singers; fo under and
director of Speculum Musicae. an e nsemble
for early music. and, with trumpeter Wade
Weast. comprises the trumpet/organ duo
" Baroque· n ·Consort.·· Martin has perfonned
-;olo recital s throughout Canada. the eastern
United States. Bermuda and Europe and.
wuh Weast. perfom1ed a reci tal tour of Europein 1987.
Tickets for th e conc.:e n may be purchased
at the door for $8 {general admission). $6
(UB communit y). $5 {senior ci ti zen s) and $2
(st udents). They ma y a lso be purchased in
advance at the box office in the Center for the
Arts. North Campus. Tuesday through Fri day between noon a nd 6 p . m .. or at
Ticketmaster locations.
A program of sonatas by clarinetist John
Fullam and pianist Nancy Townsend will
inaugurate the Spring 1996 UB Faculty Recital Series. The concert wi ll take pl ace Tuesday, Feb. 20. a1 8 p.m. in Slee Concet1 Hall .
The program will feature Sonatina for

Clarinet and Piano by Malcolm Arnold.
Sonata for Clarinet Solo by Germaine
Tailleferre. Sonata for Clarinet and Piano
by Paul Hindemith: Stravinsky's March,
Waltz. and Pollw; Milhaud 's OuoConcertant
for Clarine1 and Pian o, and Leonard
Bernstein 's Sonata for Clarinet and Piano.
The international award-winning Fullam
is an adjunct professor in the UB Music
Department and principal clarinetist of the
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. He has perfanned in a number of venues , including the
Saratoga Perfonning Arts Center with Eugene Ormandy and the Marlboro Festival
with Pablo Ca.&lt;als and Rudolf Serkin.

H

e has also appeared at the Tanglewood
Festival with Leonard Bernstein, the
Roundtop Festival with Leon Fleisher. the
Amalfi Coast Festival and at Lincoln Center.
Carnegie Hall and with the London Festival
Ballet.
A noted teacher with, among other institutions . the University at Buffalo. the
Eastman School of Music and the Philharmonic Conservatory of Caracas. Venezuela.
he records on the Marlboro Recording Society Series. the Masters. Pickwick. Mode and
Pro Ane labels .
Townsend has demonstrated considerable versatility as a pianist. vocal coach,
conductor and stage director and maintains
an active coac hing and recital schedule. For
the pas1 15 years. she has been an official
pianist for the Metropolitan Opera National
Council Auditions and is pianist for the
Grcaler Buffalo Opera Company. She has
accompanied the master classes of such noted
operatic singers as Lucia Albanese. Sherrill
Milnes, and Janet Bookspan and served as
assistant conduc tor to Christopher Keene
during his tenure at Artpark .
Townsend began directmg opera 10 1991
and has since staged productions of Rigoleuu.
Lu Cen e rerllola. Ln Trm·1ata. L 'Eiiser
d 'Amore and Lucia di Umrmermoor.
Tickets forthb event may be purchased al
the door for $8 (ge nem l admission). $6 ( UB
commun it y). $5 (seniorcitizens)and$2 ( Stu ·
dents) . They also may be purchased in ad vance at the UB Center for the Arts box
office. Tuesday through Friday between noon
and 6 p.m., or at Ticket master locations.
The UB Wind Ensemble directed by Sarah L. McKoin will open UB ' s Spring 1996
Ensemble Series with a concert at 8 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 28. in Slee Concet1 Hall.
Tickels may be purchased allhe door for $3
or purchased in advance at the UB Center for
the Arts box office, Tuesday through Friday
between noon and 6 p.m .. or at Ticketmaster
locations.

�IHIKildlll
~1.,

FEBRUARY 1996

n.utrtc:.l

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" Gospels &amp; Sptntuats· and ·Jazz Vocaltsts .• 2nd Floor Library Educattonal OpponuMy Center 465 Wash•ng ton St Bulfalo 1-2 p m
Sponsored by Educattonal Oppor1unlly Center Call Roosevelt Wardlaw
649-6732

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Country to C1ty ." 2nd Floor Library,
Educat•onat Opportunity Center. 465
washington St . Buffalo 1-2 p m
Sponsored by Educational Opportunny Center Call Roosevell Wardlaw
649-6732

Eye on the Pnze 2nd Floor L•brary .
Educational Opportunity Center . 465
Washrngton St . Bullalo 1-2 p m
Sponsored by EducatiOnal Opponu-~
n1ty Cen1er Call Karen Jellr•es
849-6721

The Ftght lor Freedom Dav•d
Walke(s Appeal Black Box Theatre
Center lor lhe Ans 8 p m $5 students ana sentors $10 general ad m tSSton Sponsored by Afrtcan
Amer•can Studtes and Nathan L
Hare (Hare &amp; Hare) Call 645 -2062
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Roosevelt Wardlaw . 649-6732

Annu.l Cultu,. Nl#rt

A N1ght of Black Elegance Kathanne
Cornell Theatre. Elhcon Complex 7
p m $5 . general admiSSIOn. $3 stu·
dems w1th 10. $2. members ot Greekletter organ1za11ons and E S Express
members Proceeds benef•l My
Brother's Keeper Sponsored by UB
Department of Restdenllal Ltle and
Gamma Iota Chapter of Alpha Kappa
Alpha Soroflty

I
The F1ghtlor Freedom Dav1d
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Roosevelt Wardlaw 649--6732

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The Entry Level Pos•t•on . 145A Student Un1on. The An of lnterv1ew1ng
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Fau . 2t0 Student Umon 12 30-4 30
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Langston Hughes Vo1ces &amp; Vts1ons
2nd FIOOI' L1brary . Educational Opportumty Center 465 Washtngton St
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The F1ght lor Freedom Dav1d
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Panel OtscusstOn Ctvll A•ghts hom
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Debb•e Thompson . 849-6723
Isabelle Travts , 849-6707 Gwen
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Max1m1ano Valdes. conductor . with
p1an•st Awadag1n Pratt Ma1nstage.
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available Call 645-ARTS

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The Trac1ng and Presence of Oral
TraditiOnS 1n West Alncan Indigenous
Theatre. Samba Diop, UB Depa rtment of Modern Languages and L•t ·
eratures Screening Room (Room
112). Center for the Arts 3 p m Free
Sponsored by Theatre and Dance
Call Mana Horne. 645-2595

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Walker's Appeal Black Box Theatre
Center lor the Arts 6 p m $5 . students and sentors . $10. general admtsston Sponsored by Afncan
Amencan Studtes and Nathan L
Hare (Hare &amp; Hare) Call645-2082

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denls and sen1ors. $10, general adm1ss1on SponSOfed by Afncan
Amencan Stud1es and Nathan L
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Center for the Arts 8 p m. $5. stu·
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Amencan Studies and Nathan L
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cat•onat Opportunity Center Call
Roosevelt Wardlaw 849-6732

/16-17 \
1

n.utrtc:.IThe F1ght lor Freedom Dav•d
Walker's Appeal Black Box Thea1re .
Cemer lor the Arts 8 p.m $5. stu dents and sentors . $10 . general ad miSSton Sponsored by Alncan
Amencan Studtes and Nathan L
Hare (Hare &amp; Hare ) Call 645-2082

/22-24 /

n.utrtc:.IThe Ftghtlor Freedom Davtd
Walker's Appeal Black Box Theatre
Center lor the Arts 8 p m $5. students and semors . $10. general ad·
m1sston SponSOl'ed by Alttcan
Amencan Studtes and Nathan L
Hare (Hare &amp; Hare) Call 645-2082

Zodiaque concert will present
new work by ten choreographers

Z

ODIAQUE . the Un iversity at
Buffalo's dan ce co mpany , w ill
present a dance co ncen titl ed "Secrecy--dance that conceal s and revea ls.''
Feb. 8-18 in the Drama Theatre of the Center
ror the Arts on UB' s North Ca mpus.
Performances will take pl ace Thursdays
thro Ugh SaiUrdays nt 8 p.m . and Sunday s at
2 p.m.
Tickets are avai lable [or $10 (general
admission) and $5 (s iUdents and senior citi ze ns). Group rates are available and all tickets are ha lf pri ce o n Thursda y and on Sunda y.
Feb. II .

For tu.:kctmformati on. ca ll1he Cc nta for
the Arts box offi ce at 645 - ARTS .
Lind a Sw 1ni uc h . directo r o f Zodiaque
a nd profe ssor and c hai r in th e U B Depart -

ment of Thea tre and Dance, soud the co nwi ll f ea lur e the worlr.. of 10
~ h o reographer s in spired by the Tar ot. an c ie nt c ulture s. and co nt e mpo rary c harac-

~..·er t

t er s fro m the new!&gt;.
"Some piece) f eatu re

mas ks."

~a id

Swiniuch . " Oth e rs de sc ribe the anatomy
o f good and ev il or th e pass ion a nd power
o r the c reative process. In eac h case. the
c horeographer ha s approac hed th e con ·

cept o f 'sec recy· from a differe nl pcrspec ·
ti ve, re sulting in wo rks that are. in so me
cases, dark . in ot hers,joyous and tran sce n·
dent.
"The musica l score is equall y varied in
theme and style," she said. ''employing composi tions by Samuel Barber. John Adams.
Vangelis. David Van Tiegham and Lukas
Foss."'
Choreographe rs are Swiniuch, Tressa
Gonnan C rehan. Karen Georger. Shelley
Hain. Lynn Kurdziel -Forma to, Ei leen Lam bert , Joyce Miller. Tom Ralabate. Willi a m
E. Th o ma s and g ues t c ho reographer
Paraskevi Boumia.
T he Company members are Jess1ca E.
Abe ll. Stacy L. Zawadzki. Debra Po korski.
Kri st y Argentieri , Michell e Utzig. Jod y
Dombro wski. Stacy L. Zawad ski. Ji ll Ann
W o lin s. Jaimie L. He llme r. Eli zabe th
Poli to .
Abo. ElaineCretaro. Jenn ifer Hammond.
Kristin L. Kni ghton, Tawn ya S. Mahnowsk1 .
Ka tie Margetan s k1 , J od1 Ma n e Pe te r'\,
Heather Shillinglaw .
Also. Cynthia T . Smith. Melissa I. Speight.
Stephanie Plahi t ko. S to rme Sundbe rg.
Kri stine D. Meyer, Tracy Degenfelde r, Sheri
Ce le tano and Paraskevi Boumia.

Challenger Astronaut Remembered
UB Archlv&lt;sl Chris Densmore is tnlerviewed by Channel 4 News reporter Ann M
Schll fke for a slory on ue flag that accompan&lt;ed Astronaul Greg JarviS In the
Challenger d1saster len years ago. Jarvts was a t967 graduale of UB The flag .
presented to UB by his widow. IS 1n Arch111es· Jarv1s collec110n

�18111111

6

..... n ..... u

~t.,:u.ev

Facul &amp;StaHBillboard
AWMNI NIGHT FEB. 3
AT UB BASKETBALL

0

The US D•v•s•on ot Amtet •cs

the Atumn• Assoc•at•on and
the Unrver stty S tuaenr Atumn1
Bo ard ar e teamtng up to present
Alumn• N•gnt at UB Basketball Satu rday Feo 3 m Alumn. Arena
The whole tam•ly •s •nv•teo to par

•Pate on me event whteh oegtns at
'1 p m w •tn a tr ee recept •on oetore
' he Ro yals game agatnst Wes tern U

't(

11no•s

served on the adm1Ss1on student un dergraduate alfa11s and onentatiQn
week commtnees

State

Atumn. and me•r tam•hes

••e •mt•tea to meet teuow graouates
.ma student teaoers IDf retresn

''ems lace oa•nt•ng ana mus•c
Atumn. 11cket s atso •nc tuoe adm•s
..,,on to the mens oasketoa u game at
H 15 p m aga•nst Western llhno •s
1wo oasketballterseys wtl t be re11reo

ar nalltrme For tiCket s call me Sta
O•um T •Cket O lhc e at 645· 6666 TICk
PI S are $9 (gold reserved) $7 (Olue
&lt; na•rback reserveo or general aa
rn1ss•on bleac hers ). $5 ch•ldren s
rocket s are avarlabte 1n $ 7 seatmg ar
~as only Eac h trcket lor the doubleneaoer rs gOOd lor a free trcket to me
nex t doubleheader Feb 17 when lhe
Butts and Royals lace Eastern llhno •s

MADJESKI TO RECEIVE
B. ANTHONY AWARD

lhony Aware Feo
3 at a runcneon 1n
Salvatore s Halla n
Gardens
The aware rec og
n•zes a woman
member o l an
lnterc tuo Councrr
club who has
MAOJESKI
achreved success
rn her held ot work
dnd nas oemonstrated 1eaaersh1p rn
an area outsrde ner own !reid
MadteSkl 1S a graduate ol the UB
Sc nool of Pharmacy and the Roswell
Park School ot Enterostomal
Therapy In 1989 she was elected
the l1rst woman pres1dent olthe Pnar maceutrcal Assocra\lon of the State
o t New York She curren lly serves on
the Board at D•rectors ot the Pharma C+Sts" Assocratron ol WNY and Man aged AX She has served on advi sory comm1ttees ol the V1S111ng
Nurses Assoc•ahon and the Ene
C ounty Health Department
At the Pharmacy School sn~ nas

PSYCHOLOGY STUDY SEEKS
SEX ASSAULT VICnMS

0

The Center for Amuety Re search 1n the UB Department
ot Psychology •S tookrng for
temale sexual-assault surv1vors 18
ana older to par11c1pate tn a study ol
ways that wome n thrnk alter an as sault
The researchers headed oy dOC ·
tor al canOtOate Jllllan Sh1pherd, are
female psychology students spec•al·
,z ,ng rn the neeos of women who
have been assaulted Study par!ICI·
pants w1ll prov1de rnlormat•on that re·
searc hers expect wtll rmprove treat ments tor post -assault problems
exper •enced by v•chms The research rnvolves assessments o f the
thoughts of assault survtvors and
the•r ab•hly to suppress those
thoughls In parlicular the researchers are 1nvest1gattng the role of rntrus•ve thoughts 1n the development of
Post -Traumahc S1ress D1sorder
(PTSO) or Rape Trauma Syndrome
Part1C1pants must be at least three
months post ·assaull and may or may
not nave PTSD They may be m
tnerapy out •t tS not a requtrement
lor partiCipattOn
The stuOy •nvolves completely
c onftdenttal tntervtews conducted ac ·
c ordmg to a very llextble schedule
anc •n a sale qwet almosphere ln terv rews wtU be approxtmately 2· 112
hour s •n length and wtlt take p lace tn
the Psyc ho logtcal Serv1ces Center tn
Park Hall on US 's North Campus
The sess 1on wtlt 1nc lude a d1ag ·
nos!lc tn\ervtew ana tasks des•gned
10 eliCit 1nlorma11()(1 regard1ng thoughts.
though! p rocess•ng and emot1ons
Up-to-date 1nlormat•on and referrals to
tree Of tow-cost area treatment re-sources for sexual-assault surv1vors
w•ll be prov1ded to pan1c1pants To
part•ctpate rn the study Of to obtatn
more •nformalton. call Jrlllan Shrpherd
645·3650. ext 337

LAW STUDENT NAMED
SKADDEN FELLOW

0

Sara Mee,.e, a slur.Jent tn
the UB Law School tS one of
only 25 academrcally outstanding taw Sludcnts nat1onw1de to
oe named a prestrg•ous Skadden
Fellow rn a program funded by a
New York Cuy taw frrm
Skadden Fellows rece•ve an an-

nual salary of $32.500 fOI' each of rwo
years to prov1de full-t1me c1v11 legal
assrstance 10 needy chants through
spectftc non-prohl Ofgan1za1rons
around the nauon The program was
established rn 1989 by the internaI!Onallaw hrm of Skadden . Arps
Slate. Meagher &amp; Flam through the
Skadden Fellowship Foundat1on
Meerse tS the second UB law studen\ honored from among hundreds
from U S law schools who apply
each year
A 1992 graduate of the State Um·
verSJty at Brnghamton . she wtll earn a
law deQiee thiS spnng , from UB and
a master's degree 1n soc1al work '" a
to•nt -degree program In August. she
w1ll beg1n work wtth Ptne Tree Legal
ASSIStance Inc , Presque Isle. Marne
Meerse. who has partiCipated in
U B chores seiV!ng local needy cl1·
ents , worked w1th the Ma1ne program
last summer through a fellowshrp
w1th the Natrona! Assocration of Pub·
he Interest Law/Aural Legal Ass1s·
tance Serv1ce Corps She chose to
return there under the Skadden Fellowsh•p to work wrth cases rnvolvmg
domesltc viOlence and related crvil·
sutt rssues. child cuslody. the etderly
and health-related 1ssues

UKRAINIAN DANCERS
TO PERFORM FEB.17

0

The Venovka Ukra1ntan Nauonat Dance Company w111 be
presented by the UB Center
lor the Arts Feb 17 •n the Center tor
the Arts Mafns tage on the North
Campus Appear·
tng here on tiS hrst
U S tour . the company ol 75 dane·
ers . stngers and
musrctans rs under
the ari!Sttc dllec ·
t1on of Anatoty
Avd•evsky The
AVDIEVSKY
program ol talk
srngrng and dane·
1ng wrll feature 20 p1eces and a thou·
sand coslume changes
The company wh•ch represents
the an of the entlfe country draws
both performers and repenorre from
all parts at the Ukrarne For more
than 50 years 11 has been shanng
treasured dances and mus1c of the
Ukra,ne 1n worldwrde performances
ft11ed wtth fantasy and lotk humor
TiCkets are $ 16 , $20 end $22 avail ·
able at the Center lor the Ails Box
Olf1ce (64S·ARTS) ana au
Ttcketmaster locattons

CONFERENCE TO FOCUS ON
JERUSALEM ANNIVERSARY

WILL RIDGE LEA LARRY
SEE HIS SHADOW?

Jerusalem 's 3 .000th annrver sary and aspec1s oftts past
present and futur e are the
theme o f the Tenth Annual
Wasserman Conference to be held
Feb 11 1n the Student Unton on the
North Campus The event w•ll teature
speakers . workshops and a rephca
of the Walfrng Wall on wh1ch v1s1tors
may w111e !herr names
Student photos ofthe11 t11ps to
Jerusalem will be displayed They
can be brought to H1llel at 40 Capen
Blvd the Jew1sh Studenl Un1on
Room 3 1 I UB Student Un•on the
Hillel Table tn the Studem Un1on
lobby or the Campus Center tor
Jew•sh L1le . Room 210 The Com
mons Oeadhne rs 5 p m Feb 7
Presented by H1llel o t Bull ala and
supported by the wasserman tamtly
of Bullate. the conference 1s co
sponsored by local chapters of the
Amencan Jew1sh Comml\lee and
Jew1sh Campus Servtee Corps of
BuffalO . the Jew•sh student newspa
per 'AAI ." Israel Studenl Organrza·
tton and the JewtSh Student Unton
The keynote address at 2 p m on
~The Centrality ol Jerusalem m J8WISh
Life" will be grven by M tehaet J
Cohen. Lazarus Phthps professor ot
hrStQI'Y. Bar -tfan Untverslty, Israel Ae·

0

A Guide to Internet Wilds:
The Internic Scout Toolkit

n. ......_. .._ .... at such a tremendous rale that it is
almost impossible to lhink ofkceping up with all of its rerouroe&amp;in fact, it bas become difficult to even keep up with the number of
search engines available on the Net!
Luckily, thete is the lfllemlc SeoUl Toolkit, a·~ c:olleclioo
of tools organized by function." provided by Net Scout Services. Net
Scout Services,localed at the Univem1y ofW"ISCOIISin-Madisoo, is a
project based on ~ coocept of an Info Scout who looks inlo the rich
array of Internet resoun:es and oetwod: tools and reports the filldings
baclc to thec:orrununi1y.Theprimaty
goal of Intemic's Info Scout is to
I I I&lt; II&lt;&lt; )NI&lt;
focus on those resources and tools
which are most useful to educalors
and researchers in the United States.
D
Once you anive at the SeoUl
Too/kit,youareoffet&lt;dthechoiccof
"Nolable Browsers," " Search
Tools," "Staying Cuneo~" and "Specialized Tools." ''Nolabl~ Browsers" offers an informative overview of cunent browsers on the ID3Iiet.
"Staying Current" provides several categories of Internet updales.
including ''Net-happcnings,"1be Scout Report." ''Online Newsletten," and "Internet News Radio." For those with very specialized
intetest (or who want to read "about some of the more elusive lnlemel
topics), "Specialized Tools" offers descripcions oflnlemeltools such
as Adobe Acrobat, Virtual Realily Modeling Language. and "CUSeeMe." Internet low-&lt;:051 video u:leconferencing.
The heart of the Toolldt can be found, however, in "Sean:h
Tools." This very thoughtful and useful approach to searching the
lnlemet bteaks searcb tools inlo four categories: "Sean:hable Indexes." "Subject Catalogs." "Annotated Di=tories," and "Specialized Directories." Within thesecalegories, lnlernel search tools
are cau:gorized, described, ind clearly documented. Tools &lt;!is·
cussed includeLY,C:OS, WebCrawler, Yahoo, Point: The Best of the
Web, The Viitual Tourist, and DejaNews Research Service. If you
don•t know what some of these services are, or want to pursue many
more along these lines, the Toolkit offers the best explanations to be
found on the Web!

HiGH

\\~]S

The lntemlc Scout Toolkit is available at http://n.imemic.net/
scoutltoolkil/ or you can acctss the Toolkit 's Starch Tools from the

Libraries Web electron ic resources page at http://
wingJ.buffa/o.edullibraries/e-resources. For infoi7Tilltion on using the Web, contact the CrT Help Desk at 645-3542.
-Lass Pequi!flo Glazier a11d Nancy Schiller, University Libraries

markS by Avram Saci"'S. UB graduate
student. Department of English . and
mus1c and dance Will be part of the
hrst por110fl of the conlerence Events
scheduled for 3·5 p m tnclud e
"Pohtrcs and Moderntsm 10 Mandate-Era Jerusalem and a Present·
Day No-Man 's Land" ana 'AesthetiCS
and Nallonahsm 1n Present-Day
Jerusalem .· Dan rei Bertrand Monk
asststant professor of architectural
hiStory and theory, State Untvers•ty at
S1ony Brook He also rs a VtStt1ng
scholar at Columbra UnNers1ty "s tnslltute ot War and Peace Stud1es
~Orscovenng One's Sptntua!iry 1n
Jerusalem" and "The Spmt ol..lerusalem
and Jerusalem ll1e i'llyscaJ." Rabt&gt;
Heshel Greenberg lectufer. UB"s Department of ClassiCs and dtrector Jewtsh
Orscovery Center . Amherst
MIChael Cohen, ~In Modem Pales·
tJn&amp;-Under the Bnbsh Mandate" and "In
Modem Israel By AccJOent of War •
Thomas fd1noputos . ~Jerusalem
Blessed and Cursed The Struggles
ol Jews Chnsltans and Moslems m
the Hottest Crty' and "P•tgnmage Pr·
ety and Power Jerusalem Meanrng
lor Chnsttans • He tS a profe ssor ot
retrg1ous stud1es at Mram• U11tverstty
Odord Oh10 . and consulltng edrtor
' M•ddle East Rev•ew ~
A d1nner wtll be held at 5 45 p m 1n
Plstachto's 1n the Student Un10n The
conference lee IS $2. students. $6 tor
others Dtnner reservatiOI"'S must be
made by Feb 7 through H1llel and are
$3, students S6 tor others For more
1nlormatton call 835-3832

WELCH TO SIGN COPIES
OF NEW BOOK

0

Claude E. Welch .Jr., pro-

lessor of polit•cal scrence and
d11ector o tthe Human A•ghts
Center at UB . wrll s1gn cop•es of h1S
book. Protectrng Human R1ghts rn Af·
nca Strategres and Roles of Non·

Governmental Orgamzat10ns. !rom
5 30-6 30 p m Monday . Feb 5 at the
University Bookstore. 200 Lee En·
trance . North Campus S1gned copres ol hrs book also may be reserved
by call •ng 645-3131

PARTICIPANTS SOUGHT
FOR UB ME-RY STUDY
Un•verstty at Buffalo research·
ers at E11e County Medrcal
Center are scek1ng 300 adults
ages 25·60 10 take a lest to evaluate
memory Pan.crp&amp;nts must have at
least an erghth-grade educatron and
no degree htgher than the baccalaureate level
The wutten and verbal test reQUifeS about 45 mt11utes Partrc1pants
w11f be retmbursed lor t1me and
travel lnd1vtduals rnterested 1n par ·
tiC!paltng should call 698-3372 and
leave name and phone number on
the answenng mach•ne The research study tS berng conducted by
Ralph Bened•ct UB assoc1ate prolessor of neurology and graduate
studem Mel1ssa Dobraskt

0

ADULTS WITH GUM DISEASE
SOUGHT FOR DENTAL STUDY
Researchers rn the UB School
of Dental Med1c1ne are seek ·
rng healthy adults ages 16-60
for a study of the effects of a new
toothpaste on oral health Parttc•pants must have symptoms of pe11odontal (gum ) drsease . such as red
or bleedrng gums alter brush1ng The
sludy requrres four VIStts to the dental school on the South Campus
Alter the sludy IS completed . par ·
hc1pants wrU recetve a teeth--cleantng
and $100 rermbursement tor I! me
and travel To enroll 1n the study or
obtam more 1nformat1on. call 829·
3940 on Wednesday or Thursday
evenrngs from 4 30· 7 30 p m

0

�7

SportsView

O BITUARIES

• MEN'S BASKEI1IALL

•WRESTUNG

The University at Buffalo jumped out to a 25-9 lead. fueled by a double technical foul on the Central Connecttcut State coach. and cruised to an 84-68
Mtd-Continent Conference VICtory Saturday ntght.
The Bulls ted 1 1-6 when 7-2 center Ketth Closs of Central Connecticut was
called lor hts thtrd foul of the half w1th 11 17 remaining . CCSU coach Mark
" Adams protesteo the call and was hit With two technlcats and ejected from
the game
The Bulls (8-7. 5-3) hi! all stx tree throws- the personal and two
technicals-and CCSU never trailed by less than double diQtls agatn Mike
Marttnho led the way for Buffalo wtth 18 pomts while sentor forward Jam•e
Anderson came off the bench to score 17 Freshman forward Robert Hams
had 1 1 pomts and 10 rebounds tor Buffalo. wh1ch has won 14 stratght at
Alumnt Arena
Closs. leadtng the nation at 7 4 blocks per game . had stx blocks and 10 rebounds 1n Just 18 mtnutes of act10n Bill Langhe1m led CCSU with 16 po1nts
and 13 rebounds The Blue Devils turned the ball over 24 ttmes tn a game
that also featured 48 personal louts
The Bulls have not lost at Alumn1 Arena s1nce a 64-6 1 loss to Central Connecticut last Jan 9 Freshman Marshall Freeman added a career -h1gh etght
po1nts and eight rebounds lor the Bulls
Earher 1n the week. the Bulls dropped a 60-52 game at Eastern IllinOis Mike
Mart1nho scored 12 po1nts wh1te Raben Harns pulled down e•ght rebounds tor

UB

• WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Brenna Ooty and Anne Gallagher ted the way IOJ the Royals as they defeated
Central Connect1cut State 84-56 at Alumni Arena Saturday n1ght
Dory became the seventh player tn UB h1strny to record 1.000 career
po1nts as she led the Royals w1th 18 Her performance gave the JUnior 1,010
tor her three years and moved past LOifle Drennen ( 1.000 points) tnto Sixth on
the all-t1me sconng hst
Gallagher grabbed 10 rebounds to record 500 1n her four years w1th the
program The semor also accounted tor 13 pOints and three steals
Gallagher 's 500 boards rank her n1nth among all Royals 1n that category
UB placed f1 ve players '"double f1gures as N1cole Blakeslee added 12 w1th
e1ght rebounds wh1le Ktm Coon and Megan McCray scored 10 apiece
Cathenne Jacob added 1 1 ass•sts . tnclud•ng n1ne tn the second half
The Royals held the Blue Devils to JUSt 30 4 percent shoot•ng {21-ol-69)
UB ts rated fourth nat•
lly 1n f1eld goal percentage defense at 35.0
Central ConnectiCUt tate (2- 14. 0-8 1n the Mid -Continent Conference) rec e•ved 12 po1nts from eara Langston and 10 rebounds from Beth McBroom
The Royals' w1n . c
b1ned by Troy Slate's 87-69 loss at Youngstown State
and Valpararso's 64-4 w1n at Mlssoun-Kansas C1ty on Saturday. moved the
team 1nto a three-way 11 lor hrst place tn the Mld-Conhnent Conlerence UB
was 14-4 overall and 6-21 teague play pnor to host•ng Troy State on Jan 29
The Mid-Continent Conlere ce Tournament rs scheduled lor March 7-9 to be
hosted by the school whtch f~rst place as of Feb 14
UB lhrashed Eastern llhnojs 79-60 earher 1n the week as Chanssa Gardner
scored a career -h1gh 26 po1n1s NICOle Blakeslee added seven rebounds lor
the Royals

The Bulls dropped to 3-4 with thelf 20-12 k&gt;ss at Kent on Fnday nrght UB

picked up wms by Brian Dowdall (1 18 pounds). Jason Wart1nger ( 126). Rob
PaVIs (142) and Marcus HutchinS ( 167). Wartinger earned h1s v1ctory over
Steve Daugherty with a 6-4 overtime dec1soo The win ra1sed the tunlor 's
1995-96 record to 28-6
UB is back in action this weekend when they travel to Central Connechcut
State for an East Coast Wrestling Assoc1ation match w1th !he Blue Dev11s UB
ts 1·21n the ECWA

• INDOOR TRACK

a FIIEU»

The University at Buffalo men's and women 's 1ndoor track and f1eld squads
crUised to easy victories Friday night at the UB InvitatiOnal at Alumn• Arena
The Bulls scored 97 points to easily outdistance Can•sius· 34 St Francts of
Pennsylvania was third Wllh 24 and Duquense following at 22
The Royals totaled 112 points ahead of Duquesne's 72 Cants•us was th~rd
at 33 with St. Franc•s (24) and Cleveland State ( 4) rounding out the f1eld
Fumu Gakodi led the Buns . winn1ng the 200-meter dash 1n 23.30. Teammates Kevin Winkler (23.52) and Terrence Parker (23.91) finished second
and third 1n the event. Gakodi also teamed with Kweli Musa. Chris Bossert
and Dan McSherry to take .the Distance Medley Relay tn 10:53.60.
Victor Archibald took two field events. winning the htgh JUmp with a mark of
1.83 meters (6-0) and the triple jump at 12.86 meters (42-2.25).
Rachel Refermat won a pair of field events to lead the Royals Refermat f1n·
1shed first in the 20-pound weight throw with a dtstance of 36-2 and won the
shot put with a toss of 39·2.
Kerri Shpur earned a victory for the Royals with a mile run 1n 5 14 .57 . ftntsh•ng ahead of teammate Lisa Reaves' 5:23.41 Shpur also combtned wtth
Karen Lilly, Megan Sanford and Gretchen Welch to take the Dtstance Medley
Relay in 12:58.34 .
Earher in the week, Gakod1 was selected as the M1d.Continen1
Conference's Men's Athlete of the Week for hts performance at the Colgate
Tnangular Meet where he won the 400-meter dash 1n a meet record 50.20
seconds and qualified htm for the IC4A Meet tn March He was also part of
the winntng 4x400 relay squad

- Ted Wasko. Sports InformatiOn Office

Richard W. More,
chaired Friends of
Architecture
A memonal servtce was held Jan 29

.n Tn011y Eptscopal Church lor RIChard W More 7 1 a rettred markettng
execultve tor OcCidental Petroleum
Corp who was ac!lve •n UB 's Fnend s
of the Scnool of Archttecture and Plan·
ntng . servtng as lis chalf for lour years
until 1995 More dted Jan 23 1n Bu ffalo General Hosp1tal alter a bnef 111 ness
He began h1s career as a chem•st
Alter work1ng 1n the research laborato
nes lor the former Hooker Chem1ca1
Corp he sh•lted 1nto sates He tater
was placed 1n charge of the New BuSIness Development OtvtSIOn
Involved 1n several CIVIC organtza ·
!tons alter hts re11remen1 1n 1986 from
Occtdental Petroleum he played a key
rote 1n the establishment of an endowment •n memory or James G Dyen
founder of the Fr~ends of the UB School
of Archttecture and Planntng
More . a graduate of Harvar d
earned a master"s degree 1n bust ness
adm1n1stra!lonat UB An accomphshed
f1gure skater . he was an av1d tenn1s
player . skter and satlor Past prestdent
of the Harvard Club of Bullate. he also
served as dtrec!or of !he Buffalo Coun ·
ctl on World Affa1rs

UPCOMING UB HOME AntLEilC EVENTS

Saturday, Feb. 3
Men's &amp; Women's SWimm•ng vs Cleveland State
Women's Basketball vs Western Hhno1s

-

Men 's Basketball vs Western Uhno1s

1 p .m at Alumn• Arena ~tatonu~

_!.£.._m

at Alumn•

~ena

8 15 p m at Alumn1 Arena

Monday, Feb. 5
_§_p m

Women's Basketball vs Mtssoun -Kansas Cuy
Men's Basketball vs M1ssoun-Kansas C1ty

~~squi Tim~ [apsul~

at Atumnt Arena

8 15 p m at Alumn1 Arena

Throughout UB 's Sesquicen tennial celebration,
the Reporter will offer a series of historical
articles describing the people and events that
have shaped the university during its 150 years.

US's black heritage
Although early record do not indicate race, it is clear
that black students attended UB before the tum of
the century. oloeeph Robert Love (1l!as-1914)
was described In a newspaper article about the 1880
commencement as an Episcopal clergyman who
studied medicine as •an auxiliary to his ministerial calling• and was identified then
as UB's first black graduate. His intention was "to undertake under
Bishop Holly of the Island of
Hayti, West Indies, the introductions pf the church in San
Domingo," according to the
commencement article.
Love's later writing exerted
an important influence on
Jamaican history, it was
indicated.
Comellus Nathaniel

Doraette, (185!}-1897) a
member of the class of
1882, was the second African American to receive a
degree from UB. He was
Booker T. Washington's physician and often was mentioned by Washington in
speeches as an example of black
perseverance and initiative.

Bom into slavery in North Carolina, Dorsene was.separated from his mother at two months of age. He was raised
by his grandmother and graduated from the Hampton Institute In 1878. Falling health fOfced him to resign from the
Medical College at Syracuse. After regaining his health
and being rejected by the Universi1y Medical College
of New York City because of his race, he came
to UB and completed his degree.
He helped organize the National Medical Association for black physicians and
was a trustee at Tuskegee Institute in
Alabama, which Booker T. Washington built from a small normal school
into a nationally known institute wtth
1,500 students.

Best known locally is W. Yertoy .Iones ( 1904- 1979)
a graduate of the medical school class of 1924, who
lived in Buffalo·for 50 years. A prominent ophthalmologist, Jones served a chief of staff of the former
Meyer Memorial Hospital.
Mary B. Talbert, for whom UB's Taiban Hall is
named, was a native of Ohio who graduated from
Oberlin College in 1885.
married a Buffalo
bookkeeper and
spent most of her
life here. Active
in local and
national organizations, she

was chair-

Other early medical
school grads:
Frank L Watk ins , who came
to UB from Montgomery, Alabama.
graduated from the medical school
in 1891, and died in Buffalo in 1921 .
Henry Ha rrison Lewia, class of
1918, a member of the university's first
class in the College of Arts and Sciences before he transferred to the medical school.

man of the
executive

board and
then president of the
National Association of

Colored Women
and vice presi-

dent of the NAACP.
In 1922, a year before
her death, she received
the Springarn Medal from the NAACP.

�lalmalll

8

~1,~

_
__
--................
--......_.__
.... __ _
__

Y..._.2'7, Ne..JA

...

~w--..

Center for the Atta. North Cam-

Contact ASCIT User Liaison Of.
flee at 645· 3540 for reaistntion
mfonnalioa.

day. and Noon--S p.m. Sanday.
Admiuioa iJ free.

SAS oo VNJX. 1:30-4:30 p.m.

_

w ..............

------·
s. CNftla.- .....

~-~

o...r.u: ..........
..........

A- .. Lllilotw..

~w--..

Adoptlw C-putJA1 for SluduU witt. lt.Ndlll&amp; Diabllitla.
2:30-4 p.m. Contact ASCIT Uaer
Liaison Offace at 64S-3540 for
R:gistration information.

.......,._

Cooke. Nofth Campus. 4 :30p.m.

Wordl'afect 6 for WlDdows tor
Studeata.. 6-8 p.m. Contact
ASCfT User l..iaiJon Offtee at
645·3540 for rep.suation information.

0.,...:-U..
Buriod Traawu Euomble.
AUeo. South Campus. 7 p.m.

S aturd.n

--

~Wori&lt;Mop

TBA. 108 Shennan. South Campus. 8 a .m

Lockwood on the Web Dtmon -

!ltration. 223 Lockwood Nor1h

Campus. II a.m. Free No prercgastraiJOn required.

Anlltonor Cell Bloi&lt;&gt;O
kMIMf
Phy!!loloc and New Assays fur
Sptrm Fu ncdon, Dr Lam J
Rurkman 306 Farber Soulh Campus. 12·30 p.m.

Teleconference
Educatin&amp; Amy: The Dlstaru
Student as a Catalyst for
C hance-Part 3. Student SuYic~ Issues. 120 Clemens. Nonh
Campus I p m. Free To rcgastcr.
c all 645 -2992

Phyalca Colloquium
The Large Baitron Collider,

o,

John Womcrslcy , Fcnm Nat aonal
Accclcr.nor Labora1ory 220 Ntitural Scien&lt;:es. Nonh Campus
l ·45p.m.

............1 kl....,..

-~-

Fcr1Ui.ut klo Ecoloc and the
E\'Oiution or Ga mete TrailS in
External Fertilizers. Dr. Don
Levitan, Florida State Umv 12 1

Advanc:ed UNIX. Noon-3 p.m.
Conlact ASCIT User Liaison Office at 645-3540 for registration
infonnation.

··~-

--~­
Pharmacodynamics II : Countu-

UfeWCNbhop
T 'ai Chi for Bqinners, Ron
Ingalsbe . Tuesdays and Thursdays. through May 2. .5 :30·6:30
p.m To reg ister. call 645-6125

vadoran Hi.storiu/H.iswrias

WOMen In HI&amp;JMN'

Rdonning Welfa~ : Organi.UI tional Challenges and the lm ·
pacl on Recipients, lkborah
Merrifield, Commissioner, Ene
County lkpt. of Social Serv1ces
Villa Maria College ~240 Pine
R1dge Rd 8 a.m. SIO. Sponsored
by ACEJN IP. For 1nfomumon.
call 896-0700

Computer Workoltop
SPSS for Windows. 9 a.m.-Noon.
Contact ASCIT User Liaison Offi ce at 645-3540 for n:gimation
1nfonnut10n

Computer Workoltop
BISON demonnnation. 223
Lockwood. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m

Ch-lotr, Colloqulu•
Synthetk and M ec:hanhtic Studies of Orxanozirc:onoc:enes, Prof
Pe.1tr Wipf. Univ . of Pittsburgh.
215 Natural Sc1ences Nonh Cam·
pus. 4 p.m.
Da~tclrtC

All Ienis. 2 D1efendorf. South
Campus 8- 11 p.m Free SponWrt"d byG S.A

Salvadorenas. • Screening Room.
Center for the Arts. North Cam·
pus. 7:30 p.m. Free.

Muolc

The EariroDJDenta.l Realities ol

the C urftlll Dnl&amp; Cuhurt: Impact on Cl.luts ud Providers.,
Gary Mel%&amp;: David Monk. Cente:r
for Tomorrow. North Campt~s .
$60. Spoosored by Institute for
Addictions Studies and Training.
For information. call 645-6140.

-I

TBA. I 08 Shennan. South Cam·
pus . 4 p.m.

!

S undil~

M•olc
Roland E. Martin, organ. Slee
Nonh Campus. 5 p.m. $2. S5. $6,
58.

Woobhop
Akobollsm Counselor Elhics.
Andrew O ' Brien. First day of
two-day program. Center for
Tumonow. North Campus. Sl20.
Sponsored by Institute for Addictions Studies and Training. For Information. call 645-6 140.

AddlctlonaStudle•
Wori&lt;Mop
Understanding Anlisoclallkhavior/Anlbocial Personality
Dlsorder and Chemica l Depen ·
dency, Rounne Webster Friend.
Center for Tomorrow. North Cam·
pus. $60. Sponsored by Institute
for Addictions Studies and Train·
ing. For information, call 645·
6 140.

Royals vs.. Missouri-Kansas
City. Alumni An:na. North Cam·
pus. 6 p.m.

LlfeWBaUroom Daoclna: Swin&amp; Into
Sprin&amp;. Ninita and Bjorn Bogue.
8-9 p.m. To register, call 645 6125 .

--I

c_.erWCNbhop
Web demonstraUoo. 223
Lockwood. North Campus. 8 p.m
Bulb vs. M i.uouri-Kansa.!l City.
Alumni Arena. North Campus.
8: 15p.m.

LlfeWCNbhop
Country and Watun Dancing,
Ninita and Bjorn Bogue. 9·10
p.m. To register, call645-6125.

-·-Woobhop

A d vancftl ln terv~wi n g,

Inter·
ventlon and Treatment Sk.ill!i,
Dr. Tedd Habberfield. Center for
Tomorrow . North Campus. $60.
Sponsored by Institute for Addictions Studies and Training . For •n·
fonnation. call 645-6 I40.

Nutrttloll .._,...,
Clinical Poltntial for Lipid
MocUfteaUoa in Fatty Adds, Dr.
Sulr: Y. Oh, Buffalo State College.
306 Parter. South Campw. 4 p.m.

AldlltK'blre Lecture
Univenal Daiza: A Strategy for
the 21st Century. Paul John
Gn~yson . 301 Crosby. South Campus. 5:30p.m.

LlfeWCNbhop
T'al C bl for BqiDMn., Ron
Ingalsbe . Tuesdays and Thun·
days, through May 2. 5:30--6:30
p.m. To register, call645-6125 .

--·-·
Wori&lt;Mop

Wori&lt;Mop

Combinln&amp; Narrati\-'t and SoluUoo-FocUJtd l'Mraples In Alcobol and Other Drua Treatment,
Dr Perry Fuller. Center for To-.
morrow . Nonh Campus. $60.
Sponsored by Institute fo r Addictio ns Studies and Training. For
infonnation, call 64.5-6140.

C:O.puter Workoltop

Workoltop

lntro to Macintosh System for
S tudenb. 10 a.m.-Noon Contact
ASCIT User Liaison Office: at
645-3.540 for regaslr11tion informa·

Akoholbm Counselor Etbics,
Andrew O'Brir:n. Center for Tomorrow. Nonh Campus. $120.
Sponsored by lnstuute for Addictions Studies and Training. Formfonnauon. call 645-6140.

Pine Mail for the sunCluster
{UNIX). 10 a.m.·Noon. Contact
AScrT User Liaason Office: at
645-3540 for registration infonnat10n.

w-

Cotaputer
lntroduclion to UNIX. 4-6:30
p.m. Contact ASCIT User Lia•son
Office at 645-3540 for regastrauon
•nfonnat1on

Cotaputer Woobhop
BISON dtmonstration . 223
Lockwood. North Campus Noon

c-puterWCNbhop
SPSS on UNlX. 1.30-4:30 p.m
Contact A.SCIT User l•aason Office at 645-3540 for regiStrauon
mfonnatio n.

lt.-o Fon•
UB Praklent William R. G~in~r
take~ questiou-caU WBFO
88.7 FM al 829--6000. 3-4 p.m.

R erenl Studtn on Akohol and
c........,.Ar«.,.Dileue,O..
Maurizio Trevisan. 108 Shennan.
South Campus. 8 a.m .

~w­
PC--piH. 10 a.m.-Noon. Contact
ASCIT User Liaison Office: at
645-3540 for regiSlnltion infonna·
tion.
~Wori&lt;Mop

BISON de:moastration. 223
Lockwood. Nonb Campus.
II a.m.

-

lloloCJcel-

z.-

wort. "&lt;l&gt;annel
throup Feb.
S in the Drewdora Gallery, 144
Parter llall, Soulb eamp.._ Gal lery boon are.I:JO Lm.· .S p.m.,
Mooday throup Fridor.

,_.Ill' __

" DumpiDa Sipc LucbcapeJ
l.aixbcope.,'" an exhibit by S&amp;toru
Tablwhi. is the exhibit throup
March 17 in tbe Ullivenity Att
Gallery, Cen!U for the ArU, Nonh
Campus. The exhibit is "a compLeJ. architectural-sculptural wort
consiJtin&amp; of two 1ep1n1e ~\'Oiv.
ina doon made of reflective &amp;lass
with fl1h tanb u ceilinas."'
Takahuhi ia a Japanese anistlivin&amp; in New York City. Gallery
hours are Wednesday throu&amp;b Sat wday, 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m.. aod
Sunday , Noon-5 p.m. Admission
is free .
New painlinas and drawings by
Walter Prochownik are on view
throuah Feb. 23 in the Art Depart·
me:nt Gallery located in the Cen1er
ror the Arts. North Campus. The
show is prHCnted on the occasion
of Prochownik'1 reti!tmeot &amp;om
the UB Dept. of Art. Gallery
hours are Tuesday, 10 Lm.-5
p.m.; Wednesday throuab Friday,
10 a.m.·£ p.m. ; and Saturday, II
a.m.-8 p.m. Admission is free.

TMrwaFO
lnten:sted in leaminJ more about
UB 's ptJblic radio swioa? Join the
WBFO staff Nooo-1 p.m. lbun·
day, Feb. 22 in Allen Hall for a
presentation. followed by a tour of
the station facilitiel. Puticipants
will have an opportunity to make
an audio m::ordi.na or a station announcement. Spece is limited to 20
people. Call 82'U&gt;OOO bei&lt;H&lt; Feb.
16 to reserve a place.

R ecomblnationall..udxapes
a nd CUCNDk Dfffnlty, Dr. C.F.
Aquadro, Cornell Univ. 121
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

SPSS on VMS. I :30-4:30 p.m.
Contact ASCIT User Liaison Office at 645-3540 for registration
infonnation.
•

.. w--..

~

GNU Emaa lntrodudion
(UNI X). 3·5 p.m. Contact ASCIT
User Liaison OfJi(X at 645·3S40
for registration information.

--·-AIDS Update, William Hammett
&amp;. Brenda Hammen. Center for
Tomorrow. Nonh Campus. $60.
Sponsored by Institute for Addictions Studies and 1'raining. For
information. call645-6 140.

C.........erWori&lt;Mop

SAS on VMS. I :30-4:30 p.m.
Contact AS CIT User Liaason Officc. at 645-35-10 for registrauon
mfonnat10n

Senior arthilecturc students of
Millard Fillmore CoUeae are
showin&amp; an exhibit or JtUdio

~Wori&lt;Mop

Addiction• Studtee

c_...w--..

-IEXIIIBI'
IS
-. --

~.__-

Celebrated pianist Jean-Yves Thlblludet perfonns Saturday at 8 p.m. In Slee Concert Hall.

PhreloloO -~-

J ean-Yves Tbibaudel, plano.
Slec:. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. $4 ,
55, 58, 510

-·- .
w--..

Alu...,. - - Nllld

Alumni Night a t UB Baskdball.
Royals at 6 p.m. and Bulb at 8: 15
p.m .. face teams from Western (1.
hno•s Stale. Alumni Arena.. North
Campus. 5 p.m. Presented by Divasaon of Athletics, Al umni A.ssocaation. amd Univen;ity Student
Alumn1 Board. Call 645-6666 for
11ckets.

a.allation "No. 4S-A"..,.. desiped for the Uahtwell Gallery in
the Ceoter for the Arts, North
Campua, and now i1 lodaed there

:J _,......

a..~~.-IDI-

UB Athletics Honors 2 Players,
2 Coaches, and 1965 Team.
Playe~ Jim Home and Harold
Kuhn, coaches Mal Eiken and Len
Serfustim. and the Bulls' 1965
NCAA Tournament team will be
honored. Buffalo Marriou . 3:30.
S40 s.ngle: S75 couple. Cocktails
a1 J:JO p m., dinner at4 : 15 p.m.
For mfonnation, call 645·6867 .

-·tu-

Education

Junales from Fredonia State Col·
leae screens and discusses
"Nonb=Soulb•Nonb" and "Sal-

...

Tolu•ncc Models ln

rqulalion, Reapto r Down·
Regulation, Prof. John Bauer and
Yu-Nien Sun. 508 Cooke . Nonh
Campos. 4 p.m .

Doublo-Crooolaa Borden. Bill

Bulb a nd Royals vs. Cln-eland
State. Alumni Arena Nalatorium.
Nonh Campus. I p.m.

Cooke . Nonh Campus. 4 p.m

lntematlonal Folk

......-.--

Taped by WBFO U .7 FM for
broadcast the following Sunday at
4p.m.

c_ _ l__,c_.,

Lc:orwdo Ort:w'slire-.spec:if.c: in-

through Dec . 21l .

Cakluaa Ctwmel Blacken and
locroaed IIJsk o( MorUlity: A
CloHr Look, Bardia Akbari. 248
~w--..

Thur&lt;&gt; ri .l\

pus. Gallery houn an: 10:30a..m.·
8 P-"'-· Wednesday throup s--

UfeWCNbhop
Study &amp; Test-Takin&amp; Sk.illa,
Counseling Center staff. Noon! p.m. To register. call645-6125

--

R.,.weiiPwll•tatr
William Canon, M.D.
Kirchhofer Room. RPCI
12:30 p.m.

C-'erWCNbhop
Web ck:mon.stnUon. 223
Lockwood. Nonh Campus. I p.m.

Brain DoputiM Regulation or
Malt SuuaiBdulvior, Elaine M.
Hull. Ph.D. S08 Cooke. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

LlfeW-

T'aJ Chi for Betinnen, Ron
Ingalsbe . Tuesdays and Thursdays. lhrougb M:~y 2. 5:3()..6:30
p.m. To register. call645-6125

-

Z odiaque: Stc:recy{Dance That
Reveals a nd Conceals. Drama
Theatre, Center for the Ans. North
Campus . 8 p.m. $2 .50. $5.

Dlredor of Uelven.lty Syst~:au
Analysis (MP-38 )-Computiog &amp;
Information Technology, Postin&amp;
IP-6001. lostruc:llcmal Support
AsiJ.stanl (SL-1)-University U ·
braric:s, Posting tP-6002. Lead
Pn&gt;arammer/Analyal (SL-3)-

Univenity Libraries. Postin&amp;

IP-6003.
r-~tr
'CUnicallnstrudor}Assistaot
Profeaor-Pbysical Therapy and
Exercise Science. Postioa
IF·6001 . A.alstant Prof~­
Physical Therapy and Exercise
Science. Posting tF-6002. A.aoc.iate/FuU ProftaOr-Rehabilitation
Medicine, Occupationallbc:rapy .
Physical Thenpy. Postins
IF-6003 . Senior Asslslant/AssoWte Librarian-Science and Engineering Library. Postins •F·
6004. Cllnkal Instructor/
Cllnk:al Asslstant ProfessorPhysical Thenlpy and E.xerc1St
Science. Postins •F--6005. A.uistant Professor-Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery . Posting tf-6006

IJA!ii:itb ·-

Projed St.atr Assodat..,Oevelop-

...... -..

menl, Posting •R-9S090. Pro-

OPENIINIEXIIIB!n

cnuamer Analyst-Occupalional

" Perfect Wortd.- a group show,
features work of Vinceot Stli~ .
Laura Stein, Gregory Cn:wd$0n,
David Nazio, and Ronald Jones.
through March 15 in the Uni versity An Gallery located in the

To obtom mon• information on
jobs listrd abo~·r, co11tact Person·
11rf Snvices, /04 Crofts Hall. To
obtoi11 information 011 Resrorch
jobs. COI1toct Sponso"d Progroms
Pers011nrl. 4/6 Crofts.

Therapy. Posting •R -95119.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1403996">
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <name>Type</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403984">
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              </elementText>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

UNIVIItSITY AT BUFFALO
State University ofNew Yom

One Hundred Fifty Year-5
Ja nuary 25, 1996

Volum e 27. No. 15

UB sorting out implications of
proposed Executive Budget
Reduction could go as high as $14 million
11J ~NE VIDAL
Reporter Editor

U

WIIIJem R M - 111m with pl&amp;akln.

'a not like • missile, UB prof detennlnea

C

ONTRARYTOwhat

sports fan s mi ght
think , a football
launched by an NFL
quartemack does not
fl y like a missile or a bullet, according to a UB professor who has
used the science of ballistics to
study a pigskin's flight.
William Rae, UB professor of
mechanical and aerospace engineeri ng, has proposed a theory that
addresses why, contrary to aerodynami c principles, a football o n a
. forward pass doesn ' t swerve to the
right or the left.
It is the first attempt to explain
the flight of a football that t~e s
mto account the effect of aerody ~
namic torques, the twisting forces
th at allow airplanes to maneu ver.
Rae plans to test hi s idea in a
wind tunnel , using a football fined
with sensors.
" It turns out that the flight of a
football is almost as complicated as
the flight of an airJ&gt;lane," he adds.
Rae began studying the flight o f
·a football when he used it as a way
to gel students in his flight dynamics class interested in fundamental
properties of aerodynamic flight.
To study the problem, he devel oped computer simulations of a
football ' s fligh t, as well as frameby-frame analyses of a long forward pass fr om a videotaped
football game.
According to Rae, the wobbly
forward pass footbal l fans often
see in slow-motion replay demonstrates a type of motion familiar to
ballistics engineers as the atmospheric flight of a spinning miss ile.
" lf the missile carries no fins or
wings to control it, then it usually
is unstable and it wilJ tumble end
over end," said Rae.
·•one way to stabilize it is to spin

it, but once the missile is spun, it
experiences gyroscopic torques,j ust
like those seen in the child 's toy."
These torques. he ex pl ai ned ,
compete with other torques caused
by the air rushing over the missile.
The net result is that, like the toy,
the mi ssile may someti mes swerve
to the ri ght or left o f its intended
co urse.
"Anyone working in ballistics
knows that artillery shells tend to
swerve, too," said Rae. "And like a
bullet, a football is noth ing but a
gyroscope with air loads."
So, Rae wondered , why doe sn' t
a football swerve?
Continued on page 5

B COULD FACE a
budget reduction of
as much as $14 mil lion next year under
the proposed Executive Budget released Dec. 15 by
Gov. George Pataki.
In addition, the uni vers ity faces
a $3 million cut to its Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) funding
and a $3 million reduction in the
SUNY Capital Equipment Budget.
In all, the Executive Budget proposes cuts of $92 mi lli on to the
SUNY system, $45 m illion to
SUNY's TAP funding and $16
million tolheSUNY Capital Equipment Budget.
"The co mb ination of these
changes will have a significant
long-tenn impact on the overaJI
budget operati on of SUNY and on
our advocacy efforts this spri ng for
the 1996-97 budget," said Senior
Vice President Robert J. Wagner.
"We're still sorting o ut the campus
implications.··
UB could feel so me relief if
plans proposed by the SUNY Board
o f Trustees' report, Rethin ki ng
SUNY . are implemented. Those
proposals woul d help offset th e
cuts by raising tuition and e nh ancing non-tuition reve nue; reducing
state support to the statutory colleges; reducing System Admini s-

tration ; and providing additional
flexibility to SUNY's hospitals.
The proposal also recommends that
any remaining budget reduc tion be
assigned to campuses wi th no enrollment reduction.
'The result of the trustees' proposed plan, if full y implemented,
would be to reduce the University
at Buffalo's share of the $92 milli on total from $14 million to approximately a S4 million lump sum
redu ction," Wagner said. How
many of the proposals are adopt ed
as suggested by Rethinking SUNY
will affect UB 's total budget reduction.
According to Wagner. ''This
year's budget activities are different from previous years" as a result
of three factors: the impact of Rethinking SUNY on the overall budget process; proposed changes in
the SUNY budget and earlier release of the Executive Budget
Among the major recommendations contained in the proposed
Executive Budget is one establish·
ing a consolidated fund th at wou ld
allow campuses to retain operdtin g
surpluses. do mul ti¥year planning
and expend fun d balances in a later
year. The Executive Budget also
proposes legislation that would allow different ia l tuiti on, transfers
$33 million in fund ing for Educationa l Opport unity Centers to the
Department of Labor. caps genera l

tuition increases at an average
eq uivale nt to $250 and changes the
fiscal year to begin Apri l I. when
the state budget year begins.
Students whose education re lies on TAP fundi ng could be hard
hit by the proposed budget. In addition to the proposed overall reduction in TAP funding. students
eligible for TAP will pay a larger
amount of the total cost of atte ndance because of changes in the
TAP award calc ul ation and shift in
el igibility criteria.
The proposed redt,ction in the
SUNY Capital Equipment Budget
also will di rectly affect students.
Accordi ng to Wagner,that cut "will
disproportionately impact thi s campus and other graduate centers in
SUNY since the allocation of those
fu nds in the past has provided o ngoingca pitalsuppon fortheGraduate Research In iti ative."
Campus advocacy over the nex.t
severdl months. said Wagner. will
focus on TAP resrorat ion; restor·
ing capi ta l equipment funding ;
hos pital ne x ibilit y; modifying
statutory college state su pport : further dece ntralization and targeted
red ucti on in System Administration; tuition increase to maintain
program quality. including campus-specific tuiti on; lobby ing to
keep Educational Opponunity Centers in SUNY : and increased campus Oexibility.

Sheffer in vp post while Moore serves at Buffalo State
By ARTHUR P'AQE
News Services Director

Jolin B. Sheffer, II, sen ior fellow at the
Un ivers ity at Buffalo, has been named acting
vice president for public service and urban
affairs at UB .
Sheffer will serve in the position whi le
Muriel D. Moore. UB 's vice president for
public serv ice and urban affairs, serves as
interim pres ident o f Buffalo Stale Co llege.
A fa nner state senator and assemblyman,
Sheffer has served since 1993 as senior fellow
with du al appointments in the UB School of SHEFfER
Law and UB School of Architecture and Planning.
In announcing Sheffer's appointment, President W ill iam R. Gre iner
noted, "John's experience at UB , around the community and statewide as
a fonner New York State senator will be immensely valuabl e.
"We very much appreciate his willingness to take on this important
responsibility," Greiner added. "We are fortunate to be able to count on
someone of such stature and experience to serve in Muriel Moore· s stead.''
An attorney, Sheffer began hi s career in public service when he was
elected a trustee of the Village of Willi amsv ille in 1976 and mayor of th e
vi ll age in 1977. He represented the 142nd Assembl y District in the New
York State Assembly from 1979-88 and the 60th Senate District in the New
York State Senate from 1989 until resigning to join the UB facu lty in 1993 .
A graduate of Wheaton Co llege in lllinois, Sheffer in 1973 received a
jurisdoctordegree from Syracuse Unive rsi ty CollegeofLaw. where he was
editor-in-chief of the Syracuse lAw Review.
Moore was appointed interim president of Buffa lo State College.

effective Jan. I. by SUNY Chancellor Th omas A. Bartlen with the concurrence of the
chair of the Buffalo State College Cou ncil. A
member of UB · s admini slrntive staff for more
than two decades. prior to her 1992 appointment
as vice presiden t for public service and urban
affairs. Moore served as senior staff officer to
the president.
She joined the university community in 1974
as assistant director of the University Learning
Center and in 1981 was named director of the
"-- --'L-"• center. From 1984 to 1987. she served as director of us·s Educational Opponunity Center.
In 1987, Moore was appoi nted associate vice provost for special
programs. wi th respons ibil ity for the supervision and manageme01 of25
multicultural special programs and their personnel. She held that post
until 1990, when she was appo inted an ass istant to the president. She was
named deputy to the president in 1991 . Since 1986 Moore also has served
concurrently as assistan t professor (adj unct) of educational organization.
adm inistration and policy .
A grad uate of CUNY's Richmond College. she holds a master's
degree in education and a doctorate in educational organization. administration and policy from UB. She is an active member of a numbe r of
stale, local and university committees nnd boards. as we ll as professional
and civic associations. Moore is the recipient of a nu mbe r of professional
and civic awards. incl uding the C hancellor's Award for Excellence in
Professional Service. a Universi ty Ou tstanding Service Award. the
Niagara All iance of Black School Educators Appreciation Award and a
Black Achiever in Indu stry Award.

�2

Headrick names Anderson interim dean of Phannacy School
lly C-~ VIDAL

Reporter Editor

P

ROVOSTThomas E. Headrick
has appointed Wayne K. Anderson as interim dean of the School
of Pharmacy.
A member of the UB faculty

since 1968, Anderson previously served as
professor of medicinal chemistry and asso~
ciate chair of the Department of Medicinal
Chemistry.

in the design, synthesis and development of
anticancer and anti-H!V agents, and in the
study of enzyme inhibitors.
In 1992, the National Cancer Institute
awarded Anderson a five-year, $1 million
grant for continuing fuodamental molecular
research on new cancer drugs. Throughcomputeriud molecular modeling and chemical
synthesis in the lab, Anderson and his colleagues design and formulate hundreds- of
chem ical compounds, searching for proper-

"Over a long and illustrious career he has

ties that are desirable in cancer treatment.

distinguished himself as a teacher, scholar

Their goal is to find new drug candidates
that have good activity against cancer, but
also are selective, shrinking rumor cells while
leaving healthy cells alone.
One of his drug developments, tetraplatin,

and administrator." said Headrick in making
the appointment "I have every confidence
that he will continue the tradition of superb
leadership that the deans of pharmacy have
provided for the school and uni versity."
Anderson. who also is director of UB · s

Phannaceutical Sciences Training Grant Program and holds a joint appointment as pro-

fessorof chemistry, is known for his research

is in phase U clinical trials as an anticancer
agent, and three other anticancer drugsIPP, silaplatin and carmethizole-are in
preclinical development.
Anderson holds a number of patents, and
conducts ongoing collaborative research with
clinical and biological scientists at Roswell
Park Cancer Institute, with the Developmental Therapeutics Program of the National Cancer Institute and with several drug

companies.

of the U.S. Army Medical Research and
Development Command's Breast Cancer
Program, and as an ad hoc member of numerous other NIH panels. He is currently a
member of the National Academy of Scieoces National Research Council Cbemical
Sciences Review Panel.
Anderson has published more than I 00
manuscripts and has presented lectures locally, nationally and internationally.
He has also served as a member of the UB
Faculty Senate Executive Committee, as secretary of the UB Faculty Senate and bas
chaitedorservedasamemberofanumberof
university committees. He currently is a
member of the President's Advisory-Council and the UB Council on Research and
Sponsored Programs.
In 1988, Anderson was named the Niagara
Frontier Inventor of the Year. Oiber bonors
include a NYSIUUP Excellence Award in
!990 and a Buffalo Ambassador Award in
His resemch has been continuously funded
!993.
by the National !nstirutes of Health for the
past 24 years.
Anderson holds a B.Sc. in pharmacy and
In addition to his resemcb experience and · an M.Sc. in pharmaceutical cbemistly from
leadership roles, Anderson has served as a
the University of Manitoba, and a PhD. in
regular member of the NIH Medicinal Chem- pharmaceutical cbemistry from the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
0
istry Srudy Section, the Chemotherapy Panel

Nomiootions .openfor '96 ChnncellorsAwardsfor
librarianship, Teaching, Professioool Seroice

N

OM!NATIONS are being
sought
for
the
1996
Chancellor's Awards for !lxcellence in Librarianship, Professional Service and Teaching.

These awards provide universitywide
recognition of superlative performance and
outstanding achievement by facuJty and professional service employees. Recipients

Pataki appoints
Castellani
to UB Council

L

AWRENCE P . CASTELLANI,

president and chief executive officer

of Tops Markets. Inc., has been ap-

pointed a member of the University
at Buffalo Council, the university's local governing council. by Gov. George E. Pataki.
Castellani is chair of the Board of Trust-

ees of the Unjversity at Buffalq Foundation,
Inc .. with which he has been affi liated since
1986. He has been chair of the board of

trustees since 1993.
His appointment as a member of the UB
Cou ncil expires on June 30, 2002.

..This is an outstanding appointment,"
sa id Philip B. Wels , chair of the council.
"Mr. Castellani has a great deal to offe; the

council and its workings with the university.
" We are delighted and honored to have
him as a member." added Wel s.
Castellani joined Tops Friendly Markets
as a stock clerk in 1962. After holding several

managerial positions throughout the company. he was appointed director of operations
in 1975. 1n 1991 , hewasnamedpresidentand
CEO of Tops Markets, Inc. The company
employs 16,000 workers and operates 64 Tops
Friendly Markets, 92 Wilson Farms NeighbomoodConvenienceStores. 10 B-Kwik food
stores and 10 VIX and Freddy's Deep Discount drugstores throughout Central, West-

ern and Southern New York. State and in
Bradford and Erie, Pa.

In November, Castellani was named Westem New York Executive of the Year by the
UB School of Management.
0

embody SUNY's highest standards and serve

as role models for the university community.
Criteria for nominations are as follows :
Excellence in Librariansbip
Nominations for the Chancellor's Award
for Excellence in Librarianship must have
held a full-time appointment as a profes-

sional librarian at UB foraminimumofthree
years, and must possess the M.L.S. degree.
Criteria for selection include extraordinary
performance and skill in librnrianship, service
to the university and the profession, and scholarship and continuing professional growth.

Nominations must be received by the
local Chancellor's Award Selection Committee no later than noon on Tuesday, Feb.

13. A nomination package must include: a
cover letter from the nominator summarizing the candidate's credentials and demonstrating how the candidate meets criteria for

selection, the candidate•s current vitae. the
candidate' s written statement of "philosophy of librarianship," and letters of suppon

from within and/or external to the university. In addition, the committee requests that

the candidate include as a separate statement
or incorporated into the philosophical statement, evidence of how the philosophical
tenets have been successfully implemented.
Information is available from, and nomi nations should be sent to Gayle Hardy Davis, 645-2818. unllibst@acsu.buffalo.
ed u or Cindy Hepfer, 829- 2139,
hstcindy@ubvm.cc.buffalo.edu.
Excellence in Proressional Service
The Chancellor's Award for Excellence

in Professional Service was created to recognize extraordinary professional achievement
and to encourage the pursuit of excellence.
Nominations must be drawn from indi viduals serving in full-time professional service capacities with more than 50 percent of
the assignment in non-teaching services.

OIRECTOAOFPUBLICATIONS. ~.L~

•

EDITOR: ~...._

Nominees must bave completed at least three
years ofcontinuous full-time professional (not
classified) service in the position for which
nominated. A nominator may be any member
of the university community, and is responsible for preparing a nomination package to
include: a cwreot vitae on the nominee's professional career, an updated position description, amaximumoffivelettersofsuppon(with
atleastoneeachfromasupervisor,acolleague,
and a constituent) and the nominator's summary letter of suppon. Deadline for completed
dossiers is 5 p.m. Monday, Feb. 12, 1996. For
more informatioo, nomination packets and
guidelines, contact Christine Sauciunac, PSS
Awards Committee chair, 645-3544.
Excellence in Teaching
The Chancellor's Award for Excellence

in Teaching is intended to recognize superior teaching at the undergraduate, graduate
or professional level. All full-time instruc-

lors, regardless of academic rank, who have
completed at least three years ofteaching at UB

prior to the fall 1995 semester an: eligible.
Wmners of the award an: recognized as pan of
the UniV'eriityConvocation in the fall, and the
phrase "State University Chancellor's Award
for Excellence in Teaching" is attached to their
name in ~university catalog.
Primary criterion for the Chancellor' s
Award for Excellence in Teaching is skill in
teaching, although consideration also is given
to sound scholarship aod service to the university and community. Nominators should
prepare a Summary Presentation Statemen~
including information on the candidate' s
most important qualifications, major achievements in teaching, services to students, scholars hip and professional growth . The
document should not exceed five pages.
Completed nominations, including a Summary Presentation Statemen~ ao up-UHiate
vitae and leners of suppon, must be received
in the Office of the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, 255 Capen Hall, by the
closeofbusinessonFriday,Feb.l6, 1996. C

Two UB students win Fulbright&amp;
lly PAtRICIA - A N
News Services Staff

Tile J. Will._ Fu~ Foreign Scholarship Board and the United States Information Agency have announced that Hilary
Kahn and John Zielinski, graduate srudeots at
UB, have been awarded Fulbright awards for
I 995-96. Kahn and Zielinski, completiog doctoral studies in the UB Department of Anthropology. will use the grants to conduct research
in Guatemala and Crete, respectively.
Kahn holds a bachelor' s degree fium Indiana University and is studying at UB under
Professor Barbara Tedlock, wbo, with ber
husband, ethnopoeticist Dennis Tedlock, is
co-editor of Amuican Amhropologist, a journal of the American Anthropological Association. Kahn is conducting ethnological research
in the Guatemalan coastal town of Livingstoo
with ethnic groups in the region, including the
Garifuna. a &amp;JOOP descended from the survivors of a shipwrecked slave ship wbo setded
more than I 00 years ago along the coasts of
Honduras, Guatemala and Belize. Sbe is also
working with three Mayan groups. Sbe is
analyzing how these cultures construct their

• ASSOCIATE EDITOR. ..... . . _ • ARTDIAECTOR . . . . ~ •

group identities and bistoiies and relate to the
land. Among the unusual aspects of ber work
is the use of video. Sbe will train the subjects to
produce videotapes that represent their perspectives on the world.
Zielinski received his bachelor's degree
from Marian College in Indianapolis. He is
working toward a doctorate in aothropology
and archaeology under Professor Vance
Watrous, an art historian and archaeologist, and
Shennan MiUsauskas, professor and chair in
the UB Deprutment of Anthropology.
Subject ofZielinski's research is cyclopean
Minoan architecture built in 2000-!500 B.C.
on the island of Crete. Tbe name "cyclopean"
is a reference to the "Cyclops" of Greek myth
and defines a style of construction marked by
the use of large, irregular blocks of stone
without monar. Zielinski's dissenation will
address what cyclopean architecture represented to the ancient Minoan culture.
Enrolled in a year of study and research at the
AmericanScllool ofAtchaeo!ogy in Athens, be is
in Crete to survey the island's cyclopean architecture, plus the masonry of ancient Minoan

palaces and other constructions.

hnp:J/I.kM!to .PI,IbbulfMled~.,l

0

�-..-.---..,.- ...

3

Professional Staff Senate, FSEC
briefed on budget proposal
NIVERSITY administrators
briefed the Professional SlaffSeothe Faculty Senate Executive Committee last Wednesday
on aspects of Gov. George
Pataki' 1 1996-97 Executive Budget proposal.
President William Greioer, Senior Vice
President Roben Wagner and Provost Thomas Headrick spoke with members of the
FSEC, shortly after Senior Associate Vice
President for University Services Voldemar
lnnus addressed the PSS, at meetings Jan. 17.
Pataki 's proposed budget slashes nearly
SIOO million in state tax suppon of SUNY
and another $100 million from the Tuition

Assistance Program, paves the way for another tuition increase and makes major
changes in the state budgetary process itself.
The proposal also calls for SUNY 's fiscal
year to begi n on April l , like the state's, and
moves from an "appropriation.. to a "cash"
budget. All these changes, along with a detail-thin budget message. have UB administrators working overtime to interpret whal it
all actually means in dollars and cents.
Although Greiner, Wagner and Headrick
all found positives in the budget, they told
FSEC members to expect, on the whole, a
very · fficult year ahead. UB 's share of the
cuts oSUNYcou ld beasmuchas$14million
or little as $4 million, depending upon how
man of the "Reth inking SUNY" proposals
packa
with the budget are ultimately
adopted.
us told the PSS, " We are faced
with a re challenge in "96-97 and beyond."
To keeJl budget cuts to a minimum, the state
legislature must go along with politically controversial plans to "devolve" SUNY's medical
centers in Brooklyn. Syracuse and Stony Brook;
cut $8 million from the statutory colleges at
Cornell University; increase tuition and encourage school districts in college towns to pay
to send their talented seniors to courses at
SUNY campuses. Failing to implement these
proposals would mean, under a worst case
scenario, that "'trenchment would be all but
impossible to avoid, according to Greiner.
"I'm going to be way out front pitching for
devolving these hospitals because it works
he,..," said Greiner, who added that the cuts to
sta tutory colleges. which he advocated
strongly last year, werealsoessential. Greiner
also said preserving the TAP program must
be a top priority. "Higher tuition at SUNY
may be inevitable," he conceded, "so preserving TAP is a moral issue. It is (\Tie of the mos1
wonderful policy innovations in our state."
U f hile c utting TAP, the governor's proD posalalsoopenedthedoortoanacrossthe-board tuition increase, with a suggested
cap of $250. The budget bills, however, will
include enabling legislat ion for cam;JUsbased tuition. State Assemblyman Sam Hoyt,
a Democrat who repn:se nts the South Campus a nd Buffalo State College, has predicted
that an increase of close to $750 would be

needed

10

meet the governor's projections.

Inn us told PSS members that SUNY is now
entering its second straight decade ofdeclining
state tax support. Administrators at UB and
SUNY Central, lnnus explained, concluded
that there was little hope the legislature would
"'store tax dollars cut by the governor's proposal.lndeed, although "'!'re than one-third of
the cuts originally proposed for SUNY in the
1995-96 executive budget we"' ultimately restored, SUNY Chancellor Thomas A. Banlett

during the fiscal year. And, fringe benefits,
which had been budgeted separately, are
now included in SUNY's budget. Overall,
these changes, Wagner explained, are likely
to be good for SUNY. They would enable
campuses to manage their funds more efficiently and funds not spent during one fiscal
year could be "carried over" to the next year,
something campus financial officers have
been clamoring for, according to Wagner.
Under the old system, the rule of thumb was
"spend it or I~ it" However, Wagner opposed changing SUNY's fiscal year to ApriJ
I due to the disruption a late state budget
would tben cause to the spring semester.
Tbe governor's proposal also cuts SUNY's
CapitaiEquipmentBudgetbymo&lt;ethanthreequaners, from $21 million down to $5 mil-

lion. This, according to Wagner and Greiner,
would have a disproportionately harsh impact
on UB, since much of what would be lost is
related to the Graduate Research Initiative

and equipment forundergraduate instruction.

A

t its Dec. 5 meeting. members of the
FSEC learned that a six-month-ol d
policy on academic "good standing" generated by last year's Faculty Senate put roughly
one-&lt;Juaner of UB's student body on bad
footing, and voted to send the policy back to

commiuee.
Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Nicolas Goodman told FSEC members
that the policy. passed last spring, has been in
force since being promulgated by President
Greiner over the summer. However, the frrst
round of potential repercussions will come
thi s month , as fall grades become available.
Under the new policy, which Goodman
called a codification of long-sranding practice at UB, students who failed to achieve a
2.0 QPA in the fall, don't have an overall
QPA of 2.0 or have more than 60 credits
without a major, will receive letters from the
Provost indicating they are "not in academic
good standing." Students active in student
government, fraremities or sororities. residence hall governance or athletics could see
their extracurricular activities curtailed.
But athletic teams currently in midseason,
including basketball teams, will not be affected
by the new poUcy, according to Michael Gentile,
director of compUance in the Athletics Depanment NCAA rules continue to pennit the university to certify that student-athletes ""' in good
academic standing once a year, in the fall, so
that student-athletes who play in spons that span
two semesters, such as basketball. would not
face losing their spot on the team midseason. ::-

Portllltt of Walter Prochownlk Is by Harvey Brevennan.

Painter and teacher
Exhibit marks Prochownlk's retirement from UB
t1J P'ATIIICIA DONOVAN

News Services Staff

T

HEUBARTDEPARTMENfwill
present an exhibition of new works
by Buffalo artist Walter

A forum to diKUM the results of a UB
study on the structure and issues of local
governance in Erie County will be held from
8-11 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 2, in the Center for
Tomorrow on the Nonh Campus.

The forum, "Governance in Erie County:
A Foundation for Understanding and Ac -

tion," will focus on the resul ts of the first
study conduc ted by the UB Governance
Proj ect, a multidi sc iplinary effon to study
issu~

moods and atmospheres characteristic of
some of the great western landscapes-visual memories that abound with rich painterly surface."

The exhibi t, from Jan. 25 through Feb. 23

Prochownik, who has taught in UB 's
Millard Fillmore College program si nce
1963, has been a member of the UB Departmenr of Art facully since 198 I . His work has
been exhibited widely in group shows and
traveling exhibitions throughout the United

in the Center for the Ans on the UB Nonh
Campus. features a number of oil paintings.
as well as drawings thar served as srudies for
rhe paintings.
It opens wi th a reception from 5-8 p.m. on
Jan. 25 in the UB An Depanment Gallery in

theCenterforthe Arts. and continues through
Feb. 23 in the gallery and in atri um of the
Cen ter for the Ans.
Gallery hours are Tuesday. 10 a.m . to 5
p.m.; Wed nesday through Friday. 10 a.m . to
8 p.m .. and Saturday. II a.m. to 8 p.m.

Prochownik's recent works, which will be
shown in the exhibit. include a series of oil
paintings. pastels and drawings inspired by
the artist's recent trip to the Western Uni ted
States. In these. according to longtime UB
co lleague, Professor Sheldon Berlyn. "he

ex presses his ongoing interest in forms in
nature and in.environmental issues."
Berlyn noted that Prochownik 's non-lit-

for future inquiry, discussion and action.
Greiner will present introduclory remarks.
as well as discuss "next steps" once the
findings of the study have been presented by
members of the Governance Project. Findings will be discussed in five areas: places
and people of Erie Count y. framework for
governance, patterns of service de livery. state

and national comparisons and assessing governance within Erie County.
Members of the Governance Project include: Kathryn A. Foster. projecl director
and assistant professor in the Department of
Planning. School of Architecture and Planning: David C. Perry, professor in the De-

ing his testimony befo"' tbe legislature 's fiscal
committees at hearings in Albany on Jan. 16.
Previous state budgets have measured

of governance in Western New York.
· Local government officials, corporate
leaders , civic representatives and academics
have been invited to the forum . It will provide an opportunity for those in attendance
to reflect on how systems of government in
Erie County are organized and managed, and
to consider questions about the future of the
region. Attendance wiU be by invitation only.
UB President William R. Greiner initi-

"appropriations,'' which is money that it was

ated the Governance Project in early 1994 .

wit h dual appointments in the UB School of
Law and UB School of Architecture and

an ticipated would be spent or committed
during the fi scal year. The new budget oper-

The immediate charge of the Governance
Projecl was to marshal data, monitor trends
and analyze information on structures and
issues of governance in the region as a basis

Planning; Henry Louis Taylor Jr .. director of
the UB Center for Urban Studies and associate professor in the Department of Planning
and Department of American Studies

made no mention of restomtion this year. dur·

ates on a cash basis, meaning simply that it
measures the actual cash to be distributed

National Park and Lake Powell.
"These paintings," added Berlyn. " reflect

Prochownik on the occasion of his
retirement from a 33-year uni versiry career distinguished by his wide recognition as a noted painter and excellent teacher.

Forum on governance at UB Feb. 2
IIJAJmiURP'AIIE
News Services Director

eraJ invented forms and surfaces suggest
fragments of the vast geological formations
that impressed him in such places as Zion

panment of Planning, School of Architecture
and Planning; Alfred D. Price. associate professor in the DepanmentofPianning. School
of Architecture and Planning; John B. Sheffer

II. UB interim vice president for public service and urban affairs and a senior fellow

States and has been the subject of a dozen
solo exhibitions in New York , Pennsylvani a~ Ohio and Washington. D.C.
"Waller has been a great teacher and a
great colleag ue," sa id Berlyn. "And, of

course. he has long ably demonstrated his
painting mastery. artistic maturity and enduring strength as an artist."
Former Buffalo News ru1criticJean Reeves
noted as early as 1972 that"(Prochownik"s)

patience with nnd encouragement of students is legendary."

"Throughout his academic career, his
generosi ty of spirit and willingness to give
freely of his time and knol!&lt;ledge has en-

deared him to his students and contributed w
his success in teaching." Berlyn said. "He
has earned the gratitude of his colleagues for
collegiality and his enduring suppon of the

academ ic excellence of the An Department
and its university mission."
Prochownik's many awards include the
Owen H. Kenan Award from the 38th Annual

National Exhibition of Contemporary American Painlings, se veral awards from the
Chautauqua National Institution of American
An. the Grand Award of the National Polish
An Exhibition.
Prochownik is remembered as well for hi s
1974 commission for"You. the People." aGOfoot by 40-foot mural for the lobby of Erie
County's Rath Building. He produced a second mural for the Blue Cross Building in 1988.
A member of the Buffalo Ans Commission since 1980, he is a former member of the
Mayor's Committee on Ans and Cultural
Affairs for the City of Buffalo and is a trustee
of the Charles Rand Penney Foundation. In

1976. he was named a Citizen of the Yearby
The Buffalo News.
Prochownik's work is held in man y museum. corporate and private co llections. including those of the Albright-Knox An

Gallery, the Houston Museum of An. the
Charles Rand Penney Collection. the Xerox

Corp .. the Chautauqua An Association and
Ball State Universi ty.

�4

Three concerts set
•Y PAlltiCIA -VAll
News Services Staff

(students and seniors). For ticket infonnation,
call the Slee Concert Office, 645-2921.
Chopin and Schumann will comprise the
program on Saturday. Feb. 3, when JeanYves Thibaudet, one of the nation's most
gifled concert pianists, presents Concert IV
of the Slee Visiting Artist Series Saturday, at
8 p.m. in Slee Concert Hall.
Thibaudet is a widely celeb111ted arti st

T

HE UB MUSIC Department continues three of its spring concert

series in January and February

with concerts featuring pianist
Jean - Yves Thibaudet , the
Am he rst Saxophone Quartet and o ne of
America's leading chamber ensembles. the

whose virtuosity and brilliant interpretive

Manhatta n String Quartet.
The Amherst Saxophone Quartet, c ur-

gi fts have been acclaimed by critics and
audiences throughout the world. His program will include three nocturnes and three '
etudes by Chopin, his Sonata No.2 in b-flat
minor. Op. 35, and Schumann's Etudes
Symphomques inc-sharp minor, Op. 13 with
M-.u.n ltrloC QuM8t- Feb. 21- 22111- ~ ......
posthumous variations.
Tickets are SIO (general admission), $8
Wednesday, Feb. 21 , and Thursday, Feb. 22,
The Feb. 22 program will present the
(UB community), $5 (senior citizens) and $4
Quartet in F minor, Op. 95 (Serioso); the
the quartet will present concerts III and IV of
(students) and can be obtained from the Slee
UB's Slee Beethoven String Quartet Cycle
Quartet in If-flat Major, Op. 18, No. 6 and
Concert Office, 645 -2921 .
at 8 p.m. in Slee Concert Hall .
the Quartet io A minor, Op. 132.
Thi s year the internationally regarded
The Feb. 21 program will feature the
Tickets may be obtained from the Slee
Manhattan String Quartet is marldng its 25th
Quartet in D Major, Op. 18, No. 3; the
Concert Office, 645-2921 for $10 (general
consecutive season with concerts through- Quartet in B-flat Major, Op. 133 and the
admission), sg (UB community), $5 (senior
o ut the United States and Europe. On
Quartet in F Major, Op. 59, No. I .
citizens) and $4 (students).
0

rentl y quartet· in -res idcnceat UB , will present
Concert fll in the university's Resident Quartet Seri es on Monday. Jan . 29, at 8 p.m. in
Slee Conce rt Hall on the North Campus.
The concert , titled "Pushing the Edges,"
wi ll feature a programofcontemporarycompos itions- "the best the ASQ has read in the

last year.·· These inc lude Ru ssell Howland's
Quartet No . 3 ( 1976), Robe rt Willi s'
Tetralogue (1990), Astor Piazzolla' s Four
for Ta ngo. Bernard Hoffer' s Saxophone
Q uartet #2 ( 1992) and Steve Cohe n' s Saxophone Quartet (1980).
Tickets are $ 10 (general admi ssion) and S5

Co cil session focuses on budget, Rethinking SUNY
Asked by student representative Michael
Pierce whether the university had submitted
a budget request thi s year to Albany, Wagner
responded "The campus was not asked for

B DGET UPDATE and an
ove iew of the recently reJeas
Rethinking SUNY
docu'l'ent dominated the discussion at the Dec . 7 meeting
·
of the UB Council.
Since the 1986-87 fi scal year. UB budget
has faced budget reduction s of nearly $50
million, according to UB Senior Vice President Raben J. Wagner, including this year's
mid -year reduction o f $2.2 million. " In fact.

A

and the campus did not submit" one.
He added that UB "made its budget needs
known to the (SUNY) trustees through a

process that takes current costs and, through
a formula. estimates needs for next year."
Pierce also asked Wagner whether the

university administration .. is considering the
elimination or massive restructuring of any
academic areas."
" Each area is Joold ng at what it would do

we've grown so acc ustomed to mid-year

tions for a reduction of the overall staffing of
(SUNY) System Administration of 30 percent," W a goer said. More gene111l recommendations were made concerning degree
programs and shorter time to degree, the
appropriate role of commuoity colleges, bow
to evolve strategic alliances at smaller campuses, an emphas i ~ on administrative and
teaching productiveness, and support of en trepreneurial activities that would lead to
additional revenue and fmancial aid.
The next step is the proposal of changes
that "may or may not include all the steps
here," Wagner said.

identified fund s'' that would offset the antici-

sponded. Whether an area decides to elimi-

Following the senior vice president's presentation, Pierce voiced student concerns

pated cut, Wagner said.

nate programs is up to the individual area.
"At thi s point it is in the hands of the deans
and chai rmen to make those recommendations," he said.
Wagner also gave the council an overview

that the consequences of Rethinking SUNY
will erode the quality of education at UB. He
was answered by Councilmember Roger I.
Blackwell .
" No matter what happens in this room ,"

if resources were reduced," Wagner re -

reductions that as we began the fi scal year we

Applied differentially. the mid-year cut
did not affect funding for students, univer-

sit y development. computing and informati on tec hnology or the university's ene rgy

reducti on. project. ··Additional reductions

of Rethinking SUNY, a document that he

the governor and the state Senate and As-

were assigned to the university mostly by
leav ing positi ons open," Wagner said. "We
see no need for layoffs or reuenchment at
thi s time."
The mid -year reduction, he added. was

noted has specific recommendations in some
areas and more general ones in others.
The plan makes .. specific recommends-

sembly will make the decisions affecting the
future of the SUNY system.

•Y I!UaN tiOUIIIAUM

News Services Staff

of campus operating budgets.

open.
CM~pus closings dtJf) to bad
weather are publlciztid ttvough area
radio and television announcements. The university corrvnunity Is
asked to ca11,2222 in 811 emergency
only.

dent for university libraries.
While the printed word still is an important part of any library, digital infonnation is
increasingly being used, and UB needs to
"prepare for a future that is Jess print based."
von Wahlde said.
Loss Pequefto Glazier, Lockwood associate liblllrian, demonstrated the capabilities
of the Internet, including WINGS, the Liblllries home page and Britannica Online.
UB is commiued to malcing the various
Internet technologies available to the university community through the liblllries, von
Wahlde said. "This will require some investment o n our part ....We think it is the way
students will be worlting in the future." 0

Coppens is recipient of Gregori Aminoff Prize

applied uniforml y across the SUNY system,

and amounted to approxi mately one percent

The university community Is reminded lhat when the weather outside Is frightful, Information about
campus road condttiorts, as well as
information related to the closing of
lha university, Is available by calling
645-2345.
According to John M. Grela, UB
director of Public Safely, during the
Dec. 11 snowstorm, the dePartmenrs dispatch phones became
over1oaded with calls from people
Inquiring whether the university was

"Thi s is a pure political decision,"

Blackwell said."A man has been elected and
he has been given adictate."The most effective way to combat the changes being considered in Albany is to "identify your local
official and make sure that person is a strong
friend of the university." he said.
In other business, the Council heard a
presentation on the library of the future by
Barbara von Wahlde, associate vice presi-

Philip Coppena, SUNY Dlstl.....lshecl Professor
in the Department of Chemistry at UB , has been
selected by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences as
the 1996 recipient of the prestigious Gregori Aminoff
Prize. He is being honored for his methodological and
structure chemical achievements in crystallog111pby,
particularly in the measurement and analysis of charge
distributions in crystals.
·

Named after Gregori Aminoff,the pioneering Swedish crystal lographer, the prize is given annually to

recognize scientists of international distinction who
have made a major contribution to crystallog111phy. It
consists of p gold medal and a $10,000 cash award.

Previous recipients include David Harker, who directed the
crystallog111phy program at Roswell Park Cancer Institute. and
Michael Rossman of Purdue University, who, with collaborators.

solved the atomic structure of the common cold virus.
Coppens will receive the prize from H.M . King Carl XVI Gustaf
o f Sweden at the anniversary meeting of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in March 1996.
A UB fac ulty memhersince 1968, Coppens has pioneered studies
of the use of X-111y-diff111ction techniques to study the nature of
bondi ng between atoms in molecules aod crystals by studying the
distribution of electrons in a crystal.
Coppens has used complex mathematical techniques to develop
an X -Illy method of "seeing" the electron clouds that surround atoms
and bold them together to form molecules. Hi s methods are consid-

ered to be classic standards for such analysis and are
being applied in labo111tori.es across the world.
Coppens is principal investigator for the State University of New Yorl: beamline at the National Syocholron
Light Source located at Brookhaven National Laboratory
on Long Island. The SUNY beamlioe, the result of a close
collaboration between researchers at UB, the State University of New York at Stony Brook and the College of
Ceramics at Alfred, has, in recent years, been an essential
tool in the research on which the award is based.
In 1989, Coppens ' research team was the ftrst to
determine the nature of small atomic distortions in certain
~=L...,.. types of high-tempelllture superconducting crystals that
affect the tempelllture at which they supercondUCL
Coppens and his then-postdoctoral research associates, Mark R.
Presspricb and Mark A. White, also completed the first X-llly-&lt;liffraction study ever done of a molecule in an electronically excited state.
Coppens is president of the loternational Union of Crystalloglllphy, which brings together 40 national crystallog111phic organizations, encompassing about 10,000 crystalloglllphers worldwide. His
term as pre s iden~ which began in 1993, runs through August.
He bas received the highest French natiooal university hooor for
foreign scholars, Doctor Honoris Causa, from the University of Nancy.
The author of more than 200 techoical papers and articles, he has
served as president and vice president of the American Crystallographic Association, and was the recipient of the association's
Buerger Award. He served several terms as a member of the U.S .
National Committee forCrystallog111phy of the National Academy of
Sciences.
0

�5

UB is major contributor
to medical faculties
High marks formed school in AAMC report
1J LOIS 11A1111t

News Services Staff

HE UB SCHOOL of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences received high
maries from Association of Ameri can Modica! Colleges (AAMC) in
its 1995 Institutional Goals Ranking Repon, released late in December.
UB received its highest ranl&lt;ing-14th
among the nation's 125 U.S. medical
schools-i
n the category of pe=nt of gradu'

ares who are on a medical-school faculty.
UB was one of only two public universities
in the top 15.

In the remaining categories, UB placed in
the top fifth to the top half in all listings but
one, and was first or second among the State
University of New York's four medical centers in all listings but one.
John P. Naughton, UB vice president for
clinical affairs and dean of the medical school,

noted that ..These rank.ings indicate we have
been able to achieve a successful balance
between academic excellence and clinical
relevance."
The AAMC report assessed the success

of the nation's medical schools in meeting
five goa 5 considered important in today 's

co

esaccent
the p octical
er MAllY UTH SPINA
News Services Staff

A

SERIES OF innovative state-ofthe-an "bridge courses" emphasizing practical knowledge rang
in the new year at the UB Law
School. R. Nils Olsen Jr .. vice dean of academic affairs. said UB' s Ia w school is among
the first nationally to offer practice-oriented.
intensive courses between semesters. The

courses, which began Jan. 16 and continue to
Feb. 2, are part of the school's new curriculum. designed to better prepare graduating
students to cross from classroom learning to
legal practice. They focus on concentrnted
areas of practice skills. technology and professional issues.
First-year st udents are required to take
o ne course from among a listiqg that includes counseling, mass tort litigation, the
lawyer's role in negotiation. advocacy for
reform, disability issues. reform advocacy.
regulating pollution, products and the law
and real-estate financing transactions.
Upper-division students will choose from
14 course offerings. Sample topics include:
• " Making Rain" and Developing a La';.
Practice in the '90s focuses on how to create
a personal marketing plan; how to obtain,

serve and retain clients, how to become a key
person in a private finn .
• Depositions emphasizes ru les of con-

duct, preparing witnesses, malting objections, marking exhibits, interacting with the
court reporter and questioning witnesses.
• Mediation emphasizes use of mediatio n in family and matrimonial law. explores
other methods of altemhtive dispute resolution and involves considerable role playing.
• Practical Discovery examines problems encountered in making and responding
to di scovery requests and includes protective orders and use of motions to compel.
• Forensic Evidence introduces students
to common forensic tools used in criminal
and civil cases, including DNA analysis,
fiber evidence, lase r and luma light ,
breathalyzers and the use of expert witnesses
0
in trial s.

medical climate: graduates entering primarycare specialties; graduates planning to practice in-state; graduates who are medical
school faculty; graduates who are
underrepresented minorities, and total research grants and contracts.
Jordan J. Cohen, AAMC presiden~ said
the repon is not intended to determine which
medical school is "best," but should be used
by modi cal schools and the public to evaluate these institutions in selected categories.
"All medical schools share the broad and
essential mi ssions of education, research and
patient care," Cohen said . ..However, within
thi s context, individual schools have different priorities and goals. Because of thi s, a
single ranking of modi cal schools is inappropriate and misleading. The Institutional Goals
Ranking Repon is designed to provide medical schools and the public with several scales
by which they can mark an institution's
achievements in various areas."
UB received its highest marks in the category of percent and number of I 981-90
graduates who are faculty. ranking I 4th and
18th respectively. Among SUNY school s.
UB ranked first in percentage and second in
numbers.
Naughton said UB 's high ranking in this
category reflects the emphasis the school's
faculty places on the importance of teachi ng
and education in its basic science and clinical training programs.
"Our graduates learn that as faculty members, they can play an imponanr role in guiding
the future of students and residents, can influence the future of medicine and can enrich their
personal and professional lives," he said.
UB's rank.i ngs in the remai ning categories were:
• Percent and number of under represented minority graduates during 199094-27th and 23rd respectively: second in
both listings among SUNY schools.
• Percent and number of graduates from
1989-9 1entering primary-care specialties45th and 23 rd, respectively : first among
SUNY medi cal schools.
UB's total graduates for the three years.
at 437, is larger than that of 70 percent of
U.S. medical schools. which lowers its rank ing by percentage in comparison to schools
with fewer graduates.
The rankings in thi s category do not reflect the success of the medical school's
Primary Care Initiative, begun in 1990, which
has raised the percentage of UB graduates
entering primary care from an average of 28
percent for 1989-9 1 to 40 percent for the
class of 1995. (In the AAMC survey. school s
with 40 percent of their I 989-9 I graduates
entering primary-care specialties ranked 5th.)
• Percent and number of 1995 graduates
planning to practice in-state-58th and 42nd
respectively: founh among SUNY schools
in percent; second in numbers.
• Federal research grants and contrac ts
in 1993-94-67th overall; second among
SUNY school s.
Naughton noted that UB' s li sting doesn't
include research funding administered by its
affiliated cancer research center. the Roswell
Park Cancer Institute. Research funds attributable to UB faculty working at Roswe ll
Parktotaled$21 ,77 1,842. 1fthese funds were
included with those administered directly by
SUNY, UB' s ranking would have been 36th
instead o f 67th.
Naughton said the repon. prepared since
1990 but released to the public for the first
time in 1995, is useful for gauging the medical school' s progress in imponant areas and
for judging its perfonnance in compari son to
medical schools of similar size and scope.
r

Good Deeds Come trom Dress-down Fridays
Willie Lee McCullough. foreground . a community education leader. accepts gifts
and a check for Fulton Academic Center from staff members in the Office of the
President. Looking on. from left: Dianne Williams. Barbara Hard . Ruth Tiedeman .
Rena Massis and Connie Holeman. The gifts. purchased with funds collected on
"Dress-down Fridays.- will be presented to the school. which serves pregnant
teens.

Child has trouble with reading?
Reading Clinic program can help
ay PATRICIA DOIIOVAH
News Services Staff

T

HE UB READING CLIN IC is seeking children who have se rious reading and/or
learning problems for enrollment in a diagnostic and remedial program that begins Jan.
29. The clinic. located in 8 Baldy Hall on the Nonh Campus, has been in operation
for 30 years and offers a low·cost, full-service afler-school reading remediation
program for persons age eight and over. Younger students will be considered if consultation
with the child 's teacher indicates that the program would be appropriate.
Children may be referred to the upcoming after-school program on ly by their parents. For
enroll ment information. call Debra Dechen. 645· 2470.
Most incoming students are in the second grade. but the program is open to students of any
age. including ad ults. The clinic's principal focus. however. is on young children considered
by their schools as being at risk of failing to learn how to read .
The program will offer low-cost diagnostic services during two morning sessions at the
cost of $150. This will be followed by one-on-one. 45-minute after- school remediation
sessions held three times a week during the course of one or two semesters. The fee for the
remediation section of the program is an additional $150. which includes books and supplies.
Participants' parents and schools will be prov ided with a comprehenSIVe repon describing
the diagnosis and o utlining the student 's individuall y designed remediation program.
Following remediation, a second repon will describe student outc ome and make further
recommendations. if necessary .
Instructors are all supervised teachers, for the most pan already ce nified by the New York
State Department of Education, who are completing final hours of a masters ' degree program
through th e UB Graduate School of Education.
The UB Reading Clinic has been directed for 25 years by Michael Kibby. chair of the
Department of Learning and Instruction in the UB Graduate School of Education and o ne of
the nation's leadi ng ex pens in reading instruction and remediation. The clinic operates yearround , offering programs after school and . in some years. on-campus summer remedial
programs. For the last fo ur years. it has also conducted an off-campus summer reading
remediation program for area st udents from several public school districts. as well as from
parochial sc hools.
Kibby notes that the cost for the UB program is extremely low com pared with commercial
remedial·reading programs. Cost for commercial programs is in the $200-$600 range . with
a comparable course of remediation costing as much as $1.300.

FOOTBAU
Continued from page 1
The answer. he discovered. has to do
with the Magnus effect, named for a nine teenth -century physicist. G . Magnu s, who
published research on thi s subject in 1852.
The Magnus effect impacts the amount of
sideways drift in a Oying object. With the
footbaH . the Magnu s effect provides a torque
that opposes the other two torques involved
in the football 's night: the gyroscopic torque
and the aerodynamic torque.
"When the nose of the football is facing
up. the wind pushes it even higher," said
Rae. "that· s the aerody namic torque. The
gyroscopic torque is what would make the
nose of the football try to tum lo the le ft as
the football is falling back to eanh."
However. Rae explained. computer simulations show that the football does not tum

to the left because the aerodynamic torque is
stronger than the gyroscopic torque .
"In simulat ions where I put in aerody namic and gyroscopic torques. but leave out
the Magnus effect. the football swerves to
the right," Rae said. "I propose that in real ity. the Magnus effect essentially cancels out
the other two torques and allows the footbaJI
to fly without swerving... He said that hi s
simulati ons confi rm the results of Peter
Brancazio. a physicist at Brook lyn College,
who was the first to examine the dynamics of
a football . Now. Rae hopes to test his theory
in a wind tunnel. using a football fined with
sensors. These experiments will enable Rae
to measure air loads around the football and
calculate precise ly how much lift and how
much torque it take s to lo ft a football.

�6

NEW C A R - I N
NA'IUIIAL SCIIHCU IIUIUIIN41
Two former UB basketball greats,
two legendary coaches and the 1965
NCAA Tournament team will be honored Feb . 3 by the Div•sion of AthletICS and the UB Basketball Alumni
Club, Players JIITl Horne and Harold
Kuhn and coaches Mal Eiken and Len
Serfustini were Instrumental in &amp;ding
the Bulls from the late 1940s to 1970
Horne. whO played hom 1951 to
1955. •s the school's all-time lead•ng
scocer with 1.833 po1nts He holds
school career records for most free
throws 1n a career (497) and free
throw anempts (700) Horne also
holds the UB record for most po1nts
•n a game w1th 41
Kuhn. who will be honored posthu·

mousty. 1s ranked seventh on the
club 's all-time sconng list with 1,065
points dunng a three-year cmeer from
1949-52 He SCOI"ed 485 points h•s se-

n•Of season. third-best in UB history
Eiken . who also Will be hono4'ed
posthumously. coached the Bulls from
1946 through the 1955-56 season He
comptled a 1~ 73 record. •nclud•ng a
17-3 mark 1n h•s fu1al ye&amp;
SerfusUn• coached the Bulls lor
14 seasons from 1956 to 1968 and
complied a 206r 105 record. Hrs
1964-65 team
nt19-3 and ad·
vanced to the CAA Tournament.
delealing Ra dolph-Macon 81-69 rn
the f~rst roun before losing to Akron
Players an coaches wrll be for nng a drnner Feb 3
mally honored
at the Buffalo Mar on Cocktalls wrll
be served al 3.30. !lowed by drnner
at 4 15 . Tickets are
0 per person
and $75 per coup l e ~ Following the
drnner. honorees will gather lor an
on-court celebraflon at halllime of the
Bulls Mid-Continent Conference
game agarnst Youngstown State
For tiCkets or more rnlormatton .
c ontact the US Athtetrcs Development Offrce at 645-6867

A new food facility-BUNS·N·
BURNER Cafe-operated by UB Din·
lng Services, opened Monday in the
Natural Sciences Building on the
North Campus. The new cafa. on the
second fkx&gt;t' of the building , features
freshly made deli sandwiches,
soups, snack items and hot and cold
beverages It will be open Monday
through Friday from 8 a .m .-1 :30 p .m .
The name for the new facility was
selected from suggestions submined
by students during a contest in December Karin Maurer received a
pnze lor submitting the winning
name

CREEI.EY WINNEJt OF
READEII'SDIUSTAWARD
Robert Creeley, Samuel P. Capen
Professor of Poetry and the Humanities at
Is a recipient of the 1995
Lila Wallace.
Reader's Digest
Writer's Awards.
Winners must
have published
nonfiction works of
exceptional merrt
and have demonstrated a commit·
ment to writing as
a career Each reciptent will receive
$105.000 to be paid in three annual
InStallments of $35,000.
In addition to having more trme
for !herr writing. winners will partner
wrth a nonprofit organization to era.
ate programs fostering an exchange
of ideas and a greater apprecialion
lor contemi)Ofary literature. Each or·
gantzation will receive about $30,000
to cover related program costs
Greeley will partner with the Just Buffalo Literary Center in Buffalo to work
with high school students who will
write and publish an electronic interactive poetry journal on the Internet.

GERMAINE BUCK NAMED
TO NRC COMMITTEE

FAHRINGER SI'£AKER AT

Germaine Buck, assocrate profes-

Renowned defense attorney Herald
Price Fahringer will be the key·
note speaker when officers and di·
~actors of the UB law Alumnr Association host a luncheon Jan. 26 In the
Unton league Club In New York City.
The luncheon is being held in con·
junction wilh the New York State Bar
Assoc ialion's annual meeting. Alumni
and friends of the US Law School
~ave been invited to attend .
A 1956 graduate of UB Law
School. Fahringer is a partner in the
New York law office of Lipsitz. Green.
Fahnnger. Roll , Salisbury &amp; Cambria.
A leading constitutional lawyer . he
has taken 14 cases to the United
States Supreme Court Among those
he has defanded are Claus von Bulow,
who was atcused of Uying to murder
hrs wife; Jean Harrts, for killing the
Scarsdale diet doctor: and drunmer
Buddy Rich on drug charges.
Among Fahringer's many publications tn the area of criminal law are
"Sentencing-Making the Represent·
ing a Witness Before a Grand Jury;"
"Best of a Bad Situation " and "In the
Valley of the Blind-Jury Selection in
a Criminal Case.·

sor of social and preventive medicme
at UB. has been appornted to a
three-year term on the Natrona! Re·
search Councrl (NRC} Commrttee on
Toxrcology The committee. a component oft he NRC 's Commission on
Lrte Sciences. provides expert advice
to government agencies on a broad
spectrum of tolticologic issues.
Buck has won national recognilion
tor her epidemiok&gt;gic research in hu·
man reproduction and fetal and earlychildhood health. She holds a three-year fellowship hom the Merck
Company Foundation and the Socrety
lor Epidemiology Research to con·
duct a k&gt;ng-term study of the safety
and effectiveness of tubal ligation
Buck . a registered nurse. holds
master's and doctoral degrees rn
eprdemiology from UB. A member of
the American College of Epidemiology, Sodety for Eprdemrologrc Research and the Society for Ped iatnc
Epidemiologic Research. she is a fel low of the Amencan Academy of Cerebral Palsy and Developmental
Medrcrne She pubhshes lrequently
rn professtOnal Journals

LAW ALUMNI WNCHEOM

ROSI WEINS1IIN AWAifD
COMPEl II MIN
Just a reminder tltat the lne lor entering competition for the Rose
Weinstein Memorial Award Is Feb. 29.
The annual competition, spoMor8d by the UB Emeritus Center, calls
for a reaearch projecl related to atudleo on aging. As the Nlae alate, II is
open to any undorgraduala or graduate student 11 UB w110 Is "In good
standing' ar&gt;d "who hU bMn accepted into a degree program.• The
win- receives a $200 award.
Completed projecl8 must be tutmlted to Dr. C08Iaa Yerecer1o. Chair,
Award ~. Emorttuo Cenllr, Souttt Lounge. Goadyeer ~. Soutlt
Gampua, Bullalo, N.Y. 14214. fer"""" f(lfopnation, Cllll883-1258.

He has appeared on national tefe.
vision, has reponed as a ktgal corn.
mentator for CNN and was featured
frequently during the Simpson trial.
Fahringer has received the Oistin·
gulshed Alumni Award from the UB
Law Schoof Alumni Association, the
Thurgood Marshall Award from the
New Yort&lt; Stale Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers , and the Out·
standklg Practitioner Award from the
Criminal Justice Section of the New
Yort&lt; State Bar Association.

- - - " "·Inventor of
the Implantable hean pacamakor,
and A.
first sur·
goon to Implant
the cardiac pace.
maker In man,
were honored
Jan. 31 with
O'Youville
College's first
Award for
Achievement in
HeatthCsre.
Greatbatch is adjunct professor of
ektctrlcal and computer engineering
at UB. A member of the National in·
ventors Hall of Fame , he is a member
of the National Academy of Engineering. the National Aerospace Hall of
Fame and a felklw of the New YM
Academy of Sciences.
Before his retirement in 1994 ,
Gage was deputy director of Roswell
Park Cancer Institute: a professor of
surgery and associate director for
clinical affairs. A surgeon and chief
of surgical service at the Veterans
Hospital for 37 years, he served as
chief of staff for 15 years.

a-.

WBFONAMU~

DIIIECTOit OF DEVELOPMENT
. .._,. Krug has been named di·
rector of development at WBFO 88.7
FM, where she will oversee the
station's fund-raising eHorts includ·
ing membership
and underwriting.
Krug joined
WBFO in October
as the station's
underwriting man·
ager. She previously served as
director of marketing at Ohio
Univefsity's Telecommunications
Center and as on-air promotion producer at WNED in BuHalo. She holds
a bachelor's degree In broadcasting
from Buffalo State College and a
master's degree in telecommunications from Ohio University.

AlrTICLES •Y

u•-

IN "u.IIIALIDUCA'I»N"

Two UB faculty members ,
J..,...tte Luctwltl. associate
professor of mod.ern languages
and literatures, and .John A.
~professor of psycl'lo4ogy, have articles In the fall issue of
Liberal Education, published b y the
American Association o f Colleges
and Universities (AAC&amp;U). The issue
also includes an article by Steven
Sample, former president ol UB.
now president olthe University of
Southern California .
The US professors· artrcles were
based on their participation in the
American Pluralism course at UB and
in the summer seminar held at Wil·
Iiams College for the past few summers. sponsored by the National En-.
dowment for the Humanittes. the
Ford Foundahon and the AAC&amp;U
Ludwig 's artrcle ts tilled. "The
One-Minute Paper : Enhancing Discussk&gt;n in a Multicultural Seminar·.
Meacham's is ·eonmct In Multiculturalism Classes: Too Much Heat
or Too Little?" Sample's article , "The
Great Straddlers: Successors to the

O.a_......._,_..tlllll...

lilaofdlo~

u.twnllyllt~ . . . . . . . . . . .CIItbe.,.. .......
l'lelldeau ofdlo ~- ..... copy of 'l'1w Alltlwftl , _

Arcbi.._

MD._.

Plilll oaliM. 11lo Uaiwnily
Midi, • JOB
wtt.ttllplorillflbillile.-"-adlo_comp:...._..el8dlo
UailedS-" lllddtc Web lileJII'CIVk* lbe ArcbiYea lldwilll dtc
opportuDily 10 biablilbt ils rich colleclioas. Por cxap1e. dtc
Univenily Arcbi¥01 Prut I.JoJd WriaJtt-Darwio Mania ~

collecdon wbicb CXIIIIaiDs over 2.50 Jeaen wrin.en by WriJbt, thin 2,000 leUen by Martin, over I 00 lbcocll of an:hlteclul'll p1aD1
and drawings, llld more dian 600 original pbolograpbs is described
in delaiJ for scbolan contemplating a resean:b visiL
To reo.ch tM Univenity Archives Web site, type wings at your UB
e-mail system prompt, and then 1ype the URL http://
wings.buffa/o.edullibrariu!Wiits/archives/ at tM Go CDmllllllld.
The same URL will be used by those who search tM Web with a··

graphical browser such as Netscape. For assistance in conMcting
to tM World Wide Web via UB computer accounts, contact tM
Computing Center 's Help Deskat 645-3542. For more information
on thL University Archives or its Web site, con/act Christopher
Densmore, densmore@ ubvm.cc.buffalo.edu, Un;versity Archives.
645-2916.
-Gemma DeVinney and Don Hartman , University Libraries

Renaissance Man: was an adaptation of his 1993 Pumas lecture.

Research and cJncaJ applications "
new agents to treat muJtiple sclerosis
and cancer, problems of infertility and
agents to inYnr.xlize against disease are
topics set lor the Series on Disease
States and Therapeutics for pharmacists. Sponsored by the UB Schoof ci
Pharmacy, lectures win be held from
6-9:30 p.m. in 523 Cooks Hall.
Multiple sclerosis was the topic of
the first program Jan. 24 . Terence
Fullerton, assistant d irector of the
Dent Neurologic Institute's Neuropharmacok&gt;gy Division and UB clini·
cal assistant professor of pharmacy,
d iscussed newly approved drugs
and research. Other presenters are:
,_~- University of

Rochester Schoof of Medicine and
Dentistry, Feb. 2t. "Oncology Review.•
pharmacy-education consultant, March 19, ·tnfertil·
ity: Causes and Therapeutic ~

.....,. a,_,

proaches.·

lllchMI Cimino, clinical coordinator of the Pharmacy and Clinical
Pharmacology Center for Women &amp;
ChUdren at Children's Hospital' of
BuHalo and US clintcal assistant professor of pharmacy and pediatrics,
April 25, "Childhood Immunization."
For more Information call 645-3931, ext. 247 .

DIICTOitAL SlUDINT

nciiVU ~ IIIWfT.
llell- Waite, a-doctoral candidate in human resource management

in the UB School of Management,
has received a $2,500 grant from the
Society for Human Resource Managerrienl (SHAM) Foundation to fund
her dissertation, ·Modeling Gain
Sharing and Quality: A Longitudinal
Quasi-experimental Fteld Study."

-··study

irMistigate6 the i1fk&gt;.
ence Jhat gai'1 stvmg, an Jrcentive
~plan. has on an

organization's total quality,..,_,.,..

ntiaiM&gt;s and- performance,

A1HUIICS TO UNVIIL '00110111' WALL'
To hOnor _ . . cl the llllllvillan cl Alltlelial. a acllalenNp-dono
racognftlon cfonnor wll ba held •1:30 P.fll-Jln. 26 in the C.. lor lhe

-Dy·-cllpiating

bathe urMIIng cia donor-=agoflfon Wll. ....
IJB-end-cl the - ( l a m .
puo 10 be _irt .. lobbyrl- ~- Along wlh · UB
coacllfngalltlllnd...,._.,........._ ... on.nd t h e -·
A "Darasol Olllilallan" ~tartl)e..aognlion ... - lnge ol wltD , _ ..oc-d~ to l l l - . inQiudlrtu
G.IIICI131arll L lllediMoplol Wlllrnlvillt: ..... R. ond lWnar C.
Aell cj
ond JroetW. Aichol Bu111tio: ond Artu W.
" " - " '· o l l ' l n t - -. AL NIIJitclnori!d on the~n k.t
~-- ... lndlota.Aog-,.,of~
Dr. lndlota. ClwlleS. n..teol-..-: ~ en..twd Slane;~
Bri; --Fuel fJeL InC! The Lagend Gmup. I n - . hanal8d ....
(lllf ..... aClPQIIn . . Fielllllr*.- AniiCMc ~ ond

Arts. A hlgltllc;tt •

-......:-E.

""'*" .,_...,.ICI!alariHp

ond Cleutll Slnahltlol Clrdad Plrk.
..:tplants will 8CCOrTtPMY the
""""'· deoigned b\lltal ...... .larN¥ Monloe Sofacjd,

�7
Ernest L. Boyer, former
SUNY Chancellor
Ernest L Boyer, 68, SUNY Chancetlot
In the 1970s
and u.s. Com-

missioner of

Education in
the Garter Ad-

ministration ,
died Dec. 8 in
his home in
Princeton, N.J.
after a three-

year battle with
cancer.
Boyer had
been president of tha Csmegle Foun-

dation for the Advancement of Teaching in Prtnceton since 1979, and was a
senior fellow at the Woodrow Wilson
School at Princeton University and an
education OOumnist for the London

Times.
He was the last person to serve as
commissioner of education In the 0&amp;partment of Health, Education and
Welfare before Congress split it Into
the Department of Education and the
Department of Health and Human Services in 1970.

Richard J_Buckley,
surgeon, clinical
associate professor
A Mass of Christian Burial was held
Jan. 11 in SS. Peter and Paul Cathofic
Church, Williamsville, for Richard J.
Buckley Sr., 77, a Buffalo surgeon who
had served as an associate clinical
professor of otolaryngology at the Bos·
ton University School o f Medicine and
the UB medical school and as ad junct
assistant professor in the UB Depart·
men! of Communicative Disorders and
Sciences. Buckley died Jan. 7 alter a
lengthy illness.
A graduate of UB and its medical
school. Buckley served as a captain
and chief of surgery in the U.S. Army
Medical Corps In Augsburg , Germany.
He was a surgical staff member at
Deaconess, Emergency, St. Francis
and Sisters of Charity hospitals and a
courtesy staff member at Buffalo Gen·
eral. Kenmore Mercy and Children's
hospitals. A member 0: several medical societies , he was a fellow of the
American College of Surgeons and the
American Society of Abdominal Surgeons.
Buckley was a past president of the
New Voice Club of the Niagara Fron·
tier. a support group for recovering
laryngectomy p atients and was medical director of the Buffalo Hearing and
Speech Center until his death.

Carlos H_ Frank, North
Campus construction
manager
A Mass of Christian Burial was held
Jan. 12 in St. John the Baptist Catholic

Church, Townof Tonawanda, !0&lt; Carlos
H. Frank, a former project manager for

the construction project on UB's Nonh
Csmpus. Frank. 85, died Jan. 8 In Millard
Fllll'llO&lt;e Suburban HospitaL
Frank. a retired ektctrlcal engineer,

worked I&lt;&gt;&lt; 15 years f0&lt; the SUNY Construction Fund, and took pan in projects
at the State College of Technology at
Allred and Geneseo State College as
wet! as overseeing the UB construction
in Amherst.
An engineering graduata (\I Nolra
Dame. Frank was a member of the New
York StateSocletyof ProlesslonalEngineers and S8fV8d on the faculty of Erie
County Community College. He retired
lrom his state job in 1980.

Catherine Olshevsky,
research technician
at medical school
A Mass of Christian Burial was held
Jan. 5 in SS. Peter and Paul Russian
Ort ho d ox Church for Cathe r ine
Olshevsky, a retired tab techi"Wcian at

the UB medical school . Olshavsky, 81.
died Jan. 2 in the Erie County Medical
Center after a long illness.
Born and educated in Poland , she
moved to the Buffalo area in 1947 and
during the 1950s , worked as a Russian
language teacher at the Berlitz SchocH
and as a research technician at Roswell
Park Memorial Institute. In the late
1950s, she became a virology research
technician at UB. retiring in 1976.

Julian Szekely, former
UB chemical
engineering professor
Services were held Dec. 12 in South
UnOOn, Mass. for Julian Szekety. 61 . a
professor of chemical engineering at
UBfrom 19E)6..1975 . Szekely, a profes.
sor of materials engineering at the Mas·
sachusetts Institute of Technok&gt;gy. died
of cancer Dec. 7 ln the M .I.T Infirmary
in Cambridge, Mass.
Szekely received the Professional
Progress Award from the Amencan In·
stitute of Chemical Engineering 1n 197 4,
when he was a professor ol chemical
engineering at UB and d irector ol the
Center lor Process Metallurgy In 1973
he received the Sir George Bailby
Award for outstandVlg contributions 1n
the field of chemical engineenng He
received two awards recognizing his
work from the Metallurgical Society of

the Aroerican Institute of Mining and
Metallurgical Engineering in 1972.
Wtdefy known as a pioneer in math-

ematical modeling, he developed the
first comprehensive mathematical
model of fluid-flow, ekM:tromagnetics
and heaHransfer phenomena for the
refinement and solidiftcation of metals.
He also developed the first quantitative analysis of plasma torches and
innovative approaches to circuit board
attachment problems. Last August he
organized a "Top Steel Summit"ln Austria that explored future d irections in
steel production and promoted a dialogue between equipment builders and
steelmakers wortdwide.
Szekety was the author of seven
textbooks; his publications also included 12 edited volumes and more
than 420 journal artickts . He held several patents.
He received his B.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the Imperial College in London , where he taught until coming to
Buffalo in 1966.
A memorial service will be held Feb.

16 in tha M.t.T. Chapel.

Laurence E. Gaughan,
oral surgeon, clinical
assistant professor
A Mass of Christian Burial was held
Jan. 15 for Laurence E. Gaughan . 74 ,
an oral surgeon who had served as a
clinical assistant professor in the UB
School of Dental Medicine. Gaughan
died Jan 13 in Millard Fillmore Hospt·
tal after a short illness.
A graduate of UB and its dental
schoc:ll, he served in the Army Alr Forces
as weatherman and cryptographer
during World War II.
Affiliated with Kenmore Mercy
Hospital's Dental Service Division in
the surgery department , he was senior
dentist and consultanl for lhe state
Narcotics Addiction Control CommiSsion. A member of the American Dental
Society of Anesthesiology . he was accredited by the Amertcan Soctety of
Psychosomatic Dentistry at the Amencan School of Applied Hypnotherapy
and Hypo-anesthesia. Gaughan. a fel·
low of the Royal Soc1ety of Health 1n
London. retired 1n 1980

Marvin N. Winer,
dermatologist, instructor
in medical school
A memonal servtce w111 be held 1n San
Francisco lor Marv1n N W1ner . a der ·
matologist for 35 years m Buffalo and
Amherst who had served as an 1nstruc·
tor in dermatolqgy at the UB med1cal
school Winer . 82. died Dec 27 1n
Sarasota. Aa , where he moved about

Continued from page B

-Aiel WorbMp

The New York State Financial Aid Administraton Association and the New
York State Higher Education Servtces
Corporation will hold a workshop on
completing the Free Fcdc:n.l Financial Aid
Student Ponn (FAFSA) 7-9 p.m. Thunday, Jan. 25 (snow date Feb. 6) at Oaemen
College's Wk.lt Center.

Ullnryii-Uota
Facuhy are reminded that Reserve Usts
for the L996 spring semester are now
due. Forms are available 11 al l Reserv~
Desks of l.be Univenity Libraries.

IIA--

Jan. 31 , 262 Fargo Quadrangle, Building
16. Candidates should have good leadership qualities and be dependable. responsible and trustworthy. Non-traditional,
physically challenged and ethnic minority students are especially ~ncouraged to
apply.

ToonWIFO
Interested in learning more about UB's
public radio station? Join the WBFO
staff Noon· I p.m. Thursday. Feb. 22 in
Allen Hall fo r a prc:..u:nlation and a tour
of the station fac ilities. P111icipan15 will
have 1..11 opponunity to make an audio recording or a.station announcemen1.
S~ is limited to 20 people. Call 8296000 before Feb. 16 to reserve a place.

The Univenity Residence Hal ls will hold

infonnational session Jan. 28· 3 1 for students interesled in becoming Residenl
Advison for lhe 1996-97 ac:adc:mic y~ar .
All interested students must attend one or
the fo llowing seuions to cet an applica tion: 10 p.m. Sunday. Jan. 28, Lehman
Hall TV lounge; 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 29,
271 Richmond Quadnngle, Building M5;
10 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 30, Clement Hall
Main Lounge: Noon Wednesday, Jan. 3 1,
145 S tudent Union; 9 p.m. Wedn~sday.

Donald Hall, clinical
professor, medical
alumni president
DonaldW Hall, 79. anobstetr•c•anand
gynecok&gt;gist who served as an assts-

tent chmcal professcw 1n the UB medi--

cal school . died Jan. 7 in Buffalo General Hospital after a brief illness.

Hall. a graduate of UB and its medical sc~ . was a past president of the
UB Medical School Alumni Association A member of the Erie County and
New York State Medical Soc1e11es . he
was a past cha1r of the Section on
Obstetncs and Gynec()k)gy of the Buf ·
lalo Academy of MediCine.
He had served as a physician on the
U.S Army on World War II. rising to the rank
mapr Hal. who reli'ed 11 1983. re&lt;Tlillll8d actiY9'" the medocalliOid.IMlfl&lt;onQ

a

with the 1\rner'ca'l Red Crc6s Blood Ser.
Deaconess Center ol Bullalo GenBuffalo

IIOC8S,

..,. Hospdal Family Ptarvw1g and
Gene&lt;,; Hospdal acmssoons

• U8 BEGINS LEAGUE PLAY IN 1998; FOOTBALL JOINS

MACIN1899
The Council of Presidents of the M1d-Amencan Conference, whk:h met Jan 7.
has voted to include UB in lull league play lor all intercollegiate sports other
than football in 1998. Football will stan sanctioned teague cornpet~ion beginning with the 1999 season. "Although we anticipated lulltntegration of all
sports including football by the 1998 season. we are excited with the op~u ­
nitles that this potentially creates lor us,- says Nelson E. Townsend. UB director of athletics. The league aiso announced an East·West dMston format 1n
football . men's and women's basketball, baseball. softball and IIOIIeybalt.
· Much of our scheduling has already been in place. teading us to MidAmerican Conference teague play in 1998." says Crrug Cirbus, UB head lootbait coach. "The formal attactvnent to the MAC OON being scheduled lor
t 999 will basically be transparent to all assocoated with our program. Our
scheduling process will not change. In fact. th1s may enhance many of the
goals that we set·out to achieve as a 1-AA independent. I was eager to jump
into the new conference as soon as possible but realisticalty understand the
step--by-step progression that the leadership of thtS conference is taking •

• MEN'S BASK£'IBAU.
The Bulls stood at 7-6 and 4-2 in the Mid-Continent Conference as they
headed into a Jan. 22 matchup at Eastern tlti1101s. UB felt out ola first-place
tie over the weekend, losing at Valparaiso 8&amp;65. Jamie Anderson led for the
Bulls, SC()(ing 14 points with Mike Martinho adding 12. Leonard Tangishaka
led the Bulls' rebounding eHons with six. Martinro ed the Buils to an 00-66 win
over Northeastern tninois Jan. 15. COfY'&lt;lCiing on 6&lt;lf.S Iran the field and 11.,;-14
at the free tlvow line lor 24 points. He had a career-lligl132 points. including a
school-record eight threE&gt;pointe&lt;s at Canisius Dec. 5 and was VOied Mid-Continent Conference's Male Athlete of the Month lor December. He was the teague's
American Eagle Player of the Week during the rronth The Bulls. home this weekend, host Central Connecticut State and Troy State on Saturday and Monday

• WOMEN'S BASK£'IBAU.
Head coach Sal Buscaglia's Royals have been ~essive dumg the first hall of
the season as they headed into the Jan. 22 shcJwdooM1 at Eastern Illinois. 12-4
overall and 4-2 in the Mid-Continent Conference. Brema Ooly's 25 points and
Chanssa Gardner's 24 paced the Royals to an omportant non-conference 75-66
w&lt;1 over Ouquesne '"-ghJan 17. The VM raiSed the Royals' wimong
streak to live However, they dropped a 5 t-44 deciSIOf\ to the Crusaders at
Valparaiso Saturday. The Royals have won 10of the1r last 12contests. In the Jan
8 Win at Western l~nois. Buscaglia earned his 100th victofy With the Royals. The
following contest, an 85-60 drubbing of Colgate, gave Buscaglia career win No.
350. The Royals lead the league in seven of the conference's rme categones UB
also leads the COU'ltry in three-point field goal percentage at 43.6 and the Royals'
defense IS ranked third nationally in field goal percentage defense at 34.6 behind
only top-ranked Louisiana Tech and Montana UB oontnJes the Mid{;ontinent wars
at l'o'ne Saturday and Monday t-osting Central C&lt;Jmectico.f Slate and Troy State.

.WRESTUNG
UB finished th1rd at last weekend's New York Stale Wrest11ng Champooshtps
at West Po1nt. The finish was highest for a Bulls team since 1987. Cornell won

the team competition with 156 followed by Army's 128 and UB's 101 in the 16team meet. Tv.&lt;&gt; wrestlers went undefeated in the1r wetght classes to win state
chafr4lionsh1ps. Jlrilr Jason W81Mger at t 26 pounds and seniOr Rob f'aiiiS at
t42 took top honors while seniors Brian Oowdatt (1 t8) and Marcus Hutchins ( t67)
regiStered third place finiShes. The BUts. 3-3 n dual meet CXIfT1)Eitibon and t -2 on
the East Coast WrestiiOQ Association, "avel to Kent lor a match Jan 26

CALENDAR
dren. All work-shops run 7- 10 p.m. one.
night a week for si.J: weeb; children's
c:la.sses run on Saturday mornings. Fees
are S30 and SSO. For more information,
c:all 645-6125 o r 64S-2434.

10 years ago. He earned his undergraduatedegreefrom UB before graduating from the medk:al school in 1939
He served as a major in the mediCS!
branch of the U.S. Army Air Forces
from 1943-46. AdipkxnateoftheAmencan Board of Dermatology and a fellow
of the Amencan College of PhySICians.
he had been a member of the Erie
County Medical Society and a president of the Central States Dermatotogic Society Winer ret1red tn 1981

ltF-5080. Assistant/Associatr ProfHSOr ·
An, Posting IF-5081. C linitall nstruc·
tor/Assistant Professor -Physical
Therapy and Exerci~ Science. Posting
IF-6001 . Assistant Professor -Physical
11\erapy and ExcrciK Science, Posting
IF-6002. A.ssodate/Fult ProftuOr -Rehabilitat ion MediciRt, Occupational
Therapy, Physical Thenpy. Posting
MF-6003. Senior Assista nt/Assoc: iat ~ Libraria.n·Science and Engi neering Lt·
bnry, Posting MF--6004. C linicalln:drudor/Ciinkal Assistant Professor ·
Phy1ical Therapy and Ex~rciSt Scu~nce.
Posting IF-6005.

-

P roject Staff A.ssocialt · Dc\'clopmenl.
Posting I R-95090. C lerk Ill-Social &amp;
Preventive Medicine., Posting lfR-96002
Procrammer Ana lyst -Occupational
Therapy. Posting fR-95 119.
~eC-.medCfvll

hrvlce
FadliUes Provam Coordinator (SL5)-Facilities Planning and Design, Posting I P-5055. Dlndor of VDinnJty
Systems Analysb (MP.JB)-Compt~ ting
&amp;. lnformatio n Technology. Posting
-P-W&lt;l t.

F-ttr

CUDical Assistant Professor -Oral
Health Services and Informatics, Posting

Campus Public Safety S upervi.'ling

Of'rka' (SG-15) -Public Safety, Line
132198. K~y board Specialist I (SG06)-Personnel Services,

Lin~

ITBA .

To obtain mor~ infomuuion on jobs
obovt, conracr Pusonntl Stn•icts,
/04 Crofts Hall. to obrain infornulllon
on Rtuarcls jobs, contact SpotUoud
list~d

Program.s Personnel, 4/6 Crofts.

.FOOTBAll
JuniOI's Gerald Carlson and Cratg Guest were rewarded for excellence on the
football field by being named to the Eastern Colleg1ate Athlettc Conference
(ECAC) 01vLSIOO 1-AA All-Star team Both were selected as first-team all-stars
US lintshed the season at 3..S under first-year coach Craig C1rbus, h1ghhghted
by a road vtctory over two-time defending 0MSK&gt;n I·AA champ1on Youngstown State Carlson llcMds 10 US klck1ng records. tncluding most held goals 1n a
season ( t 7) and most field goats 1n a game (4 ). both ol wi11Ch he set this year

Carlson made t 7 .,;-22lield goats on the season. ll"dudlf1Q a school record-tying
52-yarder against VIllanova His average of 1.54 field goals per game ranked hm
fourth 1n the nation. He led the Bulls 1n sconng this season With 69 po~nts
Guest had a stellar year at inside linebacker, lead1ng nol onty the Bulls. but
the entire ECAC--44 Division 1-AA schools-tn tackles with 168 (15 3 per
game) Included 1n that figure was a school-record 29 stops aga1nst Mame
He recorded a team·high 77 sok&gt; tackles

- Ted Wasko. Sports lnfonnation Office

UPCOMING UB HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS
Friday' Jan. 26
Men's &amp; Women's Indoor
Track &amp; Fteld UB Invitational

at Atumn1 Arena

Saturday, Jan. 27
Women's Basketball vs. Central Connecticut State 6 p m at Alumn1Arena
Men's Basketball vs. Central Connect1cut State
8 15 p m at Alumn1Arena

Monday, Jan. 29
Women's Basketball vs Troy State
Men's Basketball vs Troy State

6 p m at Alumn. Arena

8 15 p m at Alumm Arena

�8
UB marked the beginning of the celebration of its sesquicentemial Jan.
8 at annual observance of the birthday of Millard RUmore, university's
first chancellor and 13th U.S. president. Top left: Color Guard at Forest
Lawn Cemetery. Balow, from left: Dr.'John P. Naughton, UB vice president for clinical affairs, giving memorial address; Col. James Btldick,
Col. Julius Thum. Left, below: reception at Buffalo &amp; Erie County Historical Scx:iety focused on close ties between UB and the corrvnunity.

FILLMORE CEREMONY
MARKS START OF
SESQUICENTENNIAL

--.._
---..................
--....
__
... __
.....
.... _

-~-

----

--ua....., .....
--·
... ......
,..

(¢...

N
ove.lthe~:~;:;:,~:~b~&gt;lil"
from

-J--

Amaz.ollU and Africa, Prof. Eloy
Rodriquez, Cornell Univ. 244
Cary. South Cllmpus. II :45 a.m.

---- -......
·-p--·-·Farber. Soulh Campos. 12:30 p.m.
BISON De.moMtralion. 223
Lockwood. North Campus. 4 p.m .

All levels. 2 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 8- 11 p.m. Frc.e. Sponsored by G .S.A.

Pusbia&amp; tbt Edps, Amherst
Saxophone Quanet. Music of Today. Slee. Nortll Campus. 8 p.m.

Free. No preregistration required.

Tolerance Models iD
Phumatodynamks 1: Over·
view, Pruu nor Depletion, Prof.
William J. Jusko and Prof.
Amamath Shanna. 508 Cooke.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

Openl"' Receptloa
Walter Procbownik: New

~~~~~r:r~~k-~:~~~!':n1·

pus. 5-8 p.m. Free.. Gallery houn

Tuesday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Wednes-

--·
--·

Royals vs. Cc.otral Connecticut

State. Alumni Arena . Nortll Campus. 6 p.m.

Bulls vs. Ctntral ConDKt icut
Stalt. Alumni Arena. Nonh Campus. 8 : 15p.m.

da y through Friday, 10 a.m.-8
p.m.: Saturday. II a.m.-8 p.m.
Through Feb. 13.

BISON DcmoDJtratioo. 223

Asthma EducaUon, Patnc ia
Mouro-Sc huknfl and Cheryl
Brockenshire. Kinch Atxlilorium.
C hildren's Hospi1al. 8 a.m.

AA.tomy- CeiiB~
L.ecblre
1\torpbomdrk Etrerts or Th LI ~
mint Ocr•dc.ocy Witb and Wllbout C oncurnnl Akobol Abuse
on the DcndriUc Tree or Ccr~
tbcllar PurkiQjt Ctlls. Rosanne
C1ccia . 306 Farber. South Campus. Noon.

WHLockwood on tbt Wtb Demonstration. 223 Loc:kwood. North
Campus. Noon. Free. No prcregis-

_,_..

tration required.
UB lovitadonal. Alumni Arena.
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

PhploioO-Uvlnaand ExercblDaat AIUtudt: Mu.Kie Slructural Modin-

cafkto wUb Hypox.La,

Pror. Hans

Hoppeler, Univ. of Bern (Switz.erland). 108 Shennan. South Cam-

-·
SS, SIO.

BullJ VL Troy Statt. Alumni
Arena. North CL&lt;npus. 8: 15 p.m.

Lockwood. Non h Campus. I p.m.
Free. No preregistration requircd.

•Ia du:aliltiJ .......,
A Tale or Pot ud Sex.:
A.nandamldt and the Sperm
Cann.ablnold Rettptor, Herbert
Schue!. 1348 Farber. South Cam ·
pus. 4 p.m.

Prochownik~

New Works

"Geological Formation" is
from New Works show by
Walter Prochownik opening today in Art Department Gallery in the Center
for the Arts. Prochownik is
retiring from the Department of Art a~er 33 years.

ina doon made of relloctiw sJau
withfishtant.saac:ci.l.iap.'"
TatahutU iJ a Japueae ll'lillliviq in New Yort C11y. Oallery
boun.,. Wedoaday lbn&gt;up Sot·
urday, 10:30 LID.-1 p.m.. ad
Sunday, 12-$ p.m. A.dmiuioa i1
free.

-..-

New paintinp and dnwiqs by
Walter Prochownik are oa view

tbroual&gt; Feb. 13 in the An Deport-

of Proehownik's reliremca.t from
lbc UB Dept. of An. AD opcoiDa
r=ption is scheduled Ju. 25, 5-I
p.m. Gallery boun ... Tuctday,
10 Lm.-5 p.m.; Wednesday
dm&gt;u&amp;)&gt; Friday. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.;
and Saturday, 1 l Lm..-8 p.m..
Admission iJ free.

Mdhods or Procram Evaluatioa
Ia Social S.rvlce
D&lt;.
Naml&lt;ee Choi. Spon..-1 by Social Wod: Continuing Education.
Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. S60: students SlO. For infor·
mation call645·6140.

A....-.,

- __

__... p- · -

u .... Bo........., Ph.o.
,__,

Kirchhofer Confere~ Room.
RPCI. 12:30 p.m.

TBA. 108 Shennan. South Campus. 8 a.m.

WH-

-- -

TbaUdam.idt Tbtrapn~ lics, John
Ahem. 248 Cooke. North Campus. 4:30 p.m.

Loc.kwood 011 tbt Wtb Dtmoa ~
otnlloa. 223 Lockwood. Nonh
Campus. II a.m. Free. No pre·

BISON Dtmoa.straUon. 223

_,-Cell 8loloCY

..

Lockwood. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.
Free. No ~n:gisu-ation required.

c-.

BIIIPfiPedl8trlc-Rou'lda

R oyals va. Troy Statt. Alumni
An-na. North Campus. 6 p.m .

plex ud&gt;iiO&lt;IUnl· ocolpl&gt;lnl -

cons.iJtina of two 1Je1Wa1C revolv·

ment Gallcty locMod iD IBe Cen&amp;er
r&lt;&gt;&lt; the Aru. Nonb Campus. Tho
show is prueoted oa tbc occuioa

CellaloloCY

CeU Adbnlon and
Fluropolyme:r Surface Cbcmlj·
try, Prof. Jo~eph A. Gardella. 306

pus. 4 p.m .

........ . .).

MaaU.

Mvcb 22 in the Ulli..mty An
Oallery, Ccoo.r roc the Am. North
Campus. 1be ahibit ia .. COlD·

Opooa:
UY•
Mkbatl Wbtman, ctllo, and
Sar-Sbalom Strooa, plano.
Worts of Beethoven. Crumb,
Prokofiev. Allen. South Campus.
7 p.m. Free. Taped by WBFO 88.7
FM for broadcast the following
Sunday at 4 p.m.

n:gistn.tion required.

Pb)'liolo&amp;y and Nnr AJsay• ror

Sperm Fuadion.. Dr. Lani J.
Burkman, UB Dept. of Gynecology and Obstetrics. 306 Farber.
South Campus. 12:30 p.m.

Talacallfer..ce
Educatina Amy: Tht Dlstant
Studfllt u a Catalyst ror
Ctw&gt;p-Part 3, Stud&lt;al S.rvka: ltsutL 120 Clemens. Nonh
Campus. 1 p.m. Free. To regiJter.
call 645-2992.

Plunlnc: 1ntlca ....._
Toleraaet Modell lD
~yauda ll : Couattr,...ulalloa, J l - r llowDRtplatioo, Prof. John Bauer and
Yu-Nit:n Sun. 508 Coote. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

------

-~
A-

The Univenity at Buffalo Olikl
Care Center Inc., located in Butler
Annex A, South Campus, is ac-

c:eptina applicatioos for its early
child-care prosrams servift&amp; c:hil·dten ages lix weeks to five yean.
Opc:n-7:30 a.m.-.5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday, lhe proanun i&amp; open lo
UB studc:ni:I, Jtaff and faculty ,
with tuition fees bued on a sliding scale. The center is liceaJed
by the New Yod: Stale Dq:.nment of Social Services and ac-credited by the Natiooa.l Aeadeiny
or Early O.Udhood
For
more information, call 829-2226.

Prozrams-

t•.......,

Can
1
All degree candidates plODJ!inJ ID
comple&amp;e a June I, t996dcsr=
muse file an ..Appllcation ror Degree" (degree card) with the Of.
fice or Records and Regislration at
232 Capen or Hayes 8 prior to

Ftb. 1, 19M. Ceremonies for June
1996 degrees as well as Seplember 1995 and F&lt;:bnwy 1996 ...
scbeduled for May 17- 19.
c:nftW......_ . . . .

wort, "Cha»ncl z." through F&lt;:b.
.5 ill the college's Drewdora Gal-

The Qurive CnR Center, 120
Fillmore in the Ellicou Complex
on US's North Campus. is oiTerioa Early Spring '96 Croll Wortshops beginninalhc: week or Jan.
29. Worbbops arc scbednJed in
lextile desi&amp;n. kniuin&amp; ud crocbeting, weavina. quiltina. Brazilian embroidery, arcetin&amp; card •
sign, photography (but.. coloc,
advaooed cok&gt;r and creative).

lery, 144 Parter Hall , South Cam-

camera UJC a.nd operation.. basic

~

. . . . . . . . .N . . . . . WOitl
Senior an:hitccture students of
Millard Fillmore CoUege arc
ahowin&amp; an exhibit of Sludio

pus. Callery boun.,. 8:30a.m.5 p.m., Monday throuah Friday,

T--117--

..Dumping Si&amp;ht: l.a.ndscapcl
Laodscope," an exhibit by Satoru
Tat.ahashi, iJ tbe ex.t'ibit through

ud inlenDCdiate poctcry. jewelry
construction, beJinniQa aad advanced staioed alass, poctery for
chi ldlen and multimedia for cbil-

Continued on page 7

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STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

RIIIIIBiiiiiUNY
Insert pi'OIIides complete report ol SUNY
trustees to Gov. Pataki and the New York
State leglslabJre on plan to reshape SUNY.

--

The Reporter contest winner, plus recipe
Ideas and menu suggestions from an CNer
the university. Pages 4 and 5.

December 7 1995

Volume 27. No. 14

FSEC briefed on
security issues
Grela, Wilson speak on deterrtng ertme
lly nEVE

cox

Reporter Staff

T

HE REC ENT SHOOTI NG of a UB undergrod uate in the
Uni versity Heights communit y has sparked increased patro ls
by Publ ic Safety officers on the South Campus and Buffa lo
police officers in the Uni versit y Heights area. Public Safety
Director John Greta rece ntl y told members of the Faculty
Senate Execut ive Comm ittee.
Grela, speaking at a South Campus mee tin g of the FSEC Nov. 29. said
that in the wee ks fo ll owing the robbery and shooting of a US studen t. a
well as that o f a Cani sius Coll ege st udent. I 0 additi onal Buffalo officers.
including fo ur work.ing undercover. were assigned to the North Buffalo
precincts most heav il y popul ated by students. Also. he ex plained. South
Campus Public Safety eveni ng patrols were beefed up 50 perce nt with all
leave other than sick leave bei ng cancelled for Publi c Safety officers.
Orela credits that increased coverage with leadi ng to the swift arres ts of
suspects in those shootings.
Associate Vice Presi dent fo r Student AffairsCiiff Wilson said that UB
and the City of Buffalo are closer ro seeing eye 10 eye when it comes to
crime problems in Universi ty Heights. ''Pres ident Greiner has spoken
with Mayor Masie llo and insisted that the city do a bencr job in University
Heights ," ex plained Wilson.
Nevertheless. Gre la caut ioned FSEC members that cri me in Un iversity Heights is not go ing away anytime soon. "U nfortun ately, you have to
prepare fo r more of the sa me over the next five years or so,'' Grela said.
" I wish I could have better news th an that. but that's the reality o f it." Grela
called the rash of robberies ''crimes of opportu nity" and said they could
be combated by co nt inuing to inform stude nts of safety precautions they
should observe. such as not wa lkin g alone after dark and avoidin g the usc
of bank automated teller machines late at night.
Gre la and Wilson agreed that a proposa l now be i:1g considered by the
state leg islatu re to provide fu ll police officer status to Public Safety
o ffi cers would en ab le the university to do more itse lf in combating crime
in that pan of the c it y. Currentl y. ca mpus-based o ffi cers have "peace
officer" statu s. leavi ng them without j urisd icti on and indemnification
necessary to pa ni cipate in law en forcement or crimi nal investigatio ns
Continued on page 2

'

Adaptive computing: making technology accessible to all
lly~-u.ER

Reporter ContributOI'

·

S

E1TING .OUR ideas in
motion with computers
is something that most
of us take for granted.
1be proliferation of cheap. powerful, easy-to-use computing technology ha s wrought s uch
s ubstantive changes in society that
some observers compare our era
with that of the Industrial Revolu·
tion. Only a few years ago,. the
computer ' edge,' was enjoyed only
by a small, mathematically-inclined
elite. Now it is the standard.
But try to imagine the frustration of writing a tenn paper when
the very act oftyping is agonizing
to the point of distraction. Imagine
writing a financial spreadsheet
whose credits and debits appear
blurry and indistinct on the monitor, so that you can' t tell whether it
balances or not. Imagine struggling
wiU1 any Microsoft Windows ap-

plication when you can' t manipulate a mo use adequately.
Clearly, one group has not enjoyed full participation and access
to the information technology revolution: the disabled.
But that' s quicldy changin g at
UB, thanks to the combined expertise of three administrative depanment s.
The
cooperative
contribution of three unique problem-solving approaches. infonned
by three fields of expenise, has
created a prototype site at30 Capen
Hall which extends the capabilities
ofUB 's distributed accessible com·
puling sites.
Intended to be a user site rather
than a training location. 30 Capen
houses a special Braille printer
whi ch convens documents written
on standard word process ing programs to Brai lle. A Tele-Sensory
V -Tek visualizer. which resembles
a microfiche reader but operates
with a camera rather than a projection lens. allows users to study

enlarged o n· , - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . - - - - - : - - - - ,,
screen images of
document s or
three-dim e n sional objects. A
s pecial o ptical
scann er all o ws
users to scan text.
whi ch may then
be enlarge d o r
re a d bac k to
them.
The Office of
Di sa bil ity Se r·
vices (ODS) ini - An&amp;elo ConJCIIo Ceb lnotructlon on ualnC new
ti ated the project equipment from Kelll Scott.
earl y last sum me r. ODS Di rector
James Gruber ex pl ains th at his
office 's miss io n is gui ded by landmark anti -d ix rim ination legislati on. incl uding the Civi l Rights Act
of 1964, Title V of the Rehabilita·
lion Act o f 1973. and the Ameri·
cans with Disabilities Act (A DA)
of 199 1.
ODS advocates forthe disabled.
implements anti -di sc riminati on

initiatives. and enforces compliance with New York State anti d iscriminatio n statutes. Because
New York 's statutes are more stnngent than thei r federal counterpart:,,
they take precede nce and govem
UB' s poli cies.
O DS 'srolein theadapt ivecompuling si te projec t was all but in·
evitable. As thecampuscommunity
has become increas in gly reli ant

upon computing techno logy. disab led members of the university
communit y could reasonably ex pect full and equal partici pation.
O nce grant funding had bee n
secured. the project was set to go.
Katie Beaver. re presenti ng the
Center for Assistive Technology
(CAn. contributed tec hnical expert ise in the areas of eval uations
and recommendations. Although
each person with a disability has
diffe rent requ irements. the team
has tried to implement equipment
with a variety of differe nt accommodations to meet a majority of
users· needs.
CAT is an affi l1ate of us · ~ Oc cupational Therapy depart ment.
and works c losely wi th the communi ty agencies Vocational and
Educationa l Services fo r Individuals with Disabilities (VES IDl and
the Commission for the Blind and
Visually Handicapped(CBVH). h &gt;
Contmued on page 3

�2

UB building international ties,Wmter reports
lr C~NE VIDAL

career in intema·
tiooal business.

Reporter Ed itor

E

XPECT UB's involvement in international business to grow: that
was the message from Management Dean Frederick W. Winter
to members of the local business

community.

Winter spoke Nov. 30 at UB at Sunrise,

US' s community breakfast series sponsored
by the Office of Alumni Relations with suppon from the Office of Univerliity Develop-

ment, News Services. Office of Publications
and the Office of Public Service and Urban
Affairs.
"It's ironic, but to a cenain extent our
reputation is bener when we go outside Buffalo." said Winter. "We take some criticism

for it , but you can't be a strong business
school without being a strong international
business school."
UB is building its international ties, and
expecrs soon to reestab lish its connection
with China, where the university first opened
an MBA program in Beijing in 1986. The
program was discontinued after the student
uprising at Tiananmen Square.
"We want to have a very. very big footprint across the globe and in particular in the
exploding Asian economy," Winter said.
"We realty see a first-mover advantage in
Asia. We'd like to jump in there, be the first
in Beijing and have the others go elsewhere.
It' s very much a pan of our strategy."
UB also has strong management programs in countries that include Latvia. Hungary and Singapore, and has received an
endowment to support the Center for International Leadership.
And why is all this international activity

He noted that
UB's MBA program is nationally
recognized, ranking
among the top SO of
7SOMBAprograms
in the country. He
added
that
management's undergraduate program is ranked 30th
by the Gourman
Repon.
But the stale budDMn FrMertck Winter...,_ 1188t ....... . . . - - . 30.
get could spell
imponant to the School of Management? trouble for the School of Management as
Because it's imponantto VB's students and
well as VB , Winter said. "Our competition is
corporate partners, Winter said.
well funded .... Our business school received
Twenty-five percent of VB's MBA class 45 percent of the state funds of comparable
is composed of top international students schools," he sai&lt;L Wliile the School of
who "we don ' t make full enough use of," Management's budget stands at $6.5 million
Wintersaid ... 1think we owe it to our students per year, itsbould beat the $12 million level.
to have an environment where they can study
"UB needs its freedom from SUNY. We
shoulder to shoulder with international stu- are probably the most over-regulated school
dents." That relationship, as well as a strong
in the world," Winter said. "We're basically
foundation in international business, is be- like the old Soviet Union."

coming increasingly important to business

But things are about to tum around as a

sc hool s as they seek to meeuhe needs of their

result of the Rethinking SUNY plan, he
added.
"Western New York has a lot going for it.
I call it the city of great apology, and I think
it's time to stop apologizing for itself... .l
think Buffalo ought to stan feeling better
about itself and that would benefit the univerliity."
0

corporate partners.
Winter also discussed changes that have
occurred in UB 's management curriculum
since he joined the university in January 1994.
He noted that the school has instituted an
executive MBA program that in the last two
y= has enrolled 56 businesspeople from
the area. The school also has developed a

management minor that, for example. would
allow a language major to prepare for a

Nielsen resigns
as SUNY trustee
NANCY H. NIELSEN, a Buffalo physician,
has resigned from the Stale University of
New York Board ofTNStees. Nielsen's tenn
expired June 30, but she had continued as a
trustee to help the board with cost-saving
efforts for SUNY.
Nielsen, 53, ..iceived ber medical degree
from the VB medical scbool. ul bave been
honored to be able 10 give &amp;OIDCihing back to
my swe in rewm for the advantages wh.icb
public higher educalion has given me," she
wrote in berlettecofresignalioo to Gov. Palaki.
Nielsen, the only Republican appointed
by former Gov. Cuomo in 1990, noted that
she has been given an enhuged role at the
New Yorlr. State Health Department and is
now chief medical officer for the WNY area
office.
She is also president-elect of the medical
staff at The Buffalo Geoeral Hospital in
addition to maintaining a private practice of
internal medicine.
0

Grant funds language skills project

T

HE WORLD Languages Institute,
Department of Modem Languages
and Literatures, has been awarded a
$2.0,000 grant for a pilot project enabling students to use their foreign language
skills in non-language courses. lbe pilot
project is scheduled to begin in the 1996-97

academic year.
The a wan! is pan of a $180,000 grant to
the State University at Binghamton from the
Fund for the Improvement ofPostsecoodary
Education, designed to help VB and five
other SUNY institutions develop adaptations of Binghamton's successful Languages
Across the Curriculum (LxC) program.
Basic premise of the LxC program is that

written and audiovisual materials in foreign

the help of a Nicaraguan gnlduate student in
sociology. lbe readings covered such areas
as the spread of AIDS-&lt;:ausing HIV in the
Spanish-speaking world; the cultural context for the spread of the virus in Latin
America; bow the interventioo of the Roman
Catholic cbun:h clerical community resulted
in abandonment of some efforts to encourage the use of condoms; a(ld a fOmparison of
the success of the AIDS fight in Spain and
Latin America.
Among the targeted areas for the program
at VB are anthropology, geography. history.
political science and managemen~ although
other disciplines will be considered. Interested faculty members contact Marlr. Asbwill,
0
project director, at 645-2292.

languages can and should be used through-

out the university, and that use of these
materi.als should be linked to the subjOI't

mauer interests of students.
Unless students major in language or
areas studies, they lack opportunities to de-

velop foreign language competencies in their
areas of academic interest. International students lack opponunities to use their English
skills during the course of their education.
LxC programs address these problems by
enlisting international students as language

resource specialists to prepare foreign language materials for use in courses that would
not usually include such materials.
For example, students who have a reading
knowledge of Spanish (or another language)

and are enrolled in a course on international
business or comparative policies, could meet
in a weekly study group to discuss coursespecific articles they had read. lbe anicles
would substituteforsomeoftheregularcourse

assignments as well as allow students to
obtain intercultural-infonnation and international perspectives on course maner.
At Binghamton, in an upper division history course entitled "AIDS," four students
shared responsibility for a 60-minute presentation on AIDS in the Spanish-speaking
world, based on readings they had done with

DIRECTOR OF PUBLICATIONS _.,.,. ... _ , • EOOOR

~ WIN&amp;. •

ASSOC1All:EOOOR ............ • ART DIRECTOR. , _ . . , _ •

FSEC
Continued from page 1_ /
beyond the confines of the campuses.
On a brighter note. Greta pointed out that
statistics gathered by local police agencies
and the FBI. continue to show that UB is a
relatively safecamPl!S. VB ranked 20th lowest out of 27 AAU institutions surveyed for
incidents of violent crime and 21st of27 for
propeny crimes in 1994.

.. Your odds of being a victim of a crime
are approximately one in 52 on campus, one
in 35 in the Town of Amherst, which was

recently written up in law enforcement journals as one of the safest communities around,
and one in 13 in the City of Buffalo," said
Greta.
Several FSEC members questioned the

number of signs posted on campus warning
of campus security problems, fearing they
might intimidate or discourage potential stu-

dents visiting the campus. However, Greta
explained that the federal Campus Security
Act of 1991 requires promp~ extens ive disclosureofknowncrimeproblems. He noted
that many students and parents have told him
and his officers they were glad to see such a

pro-active approach to crime on campus. 0

IMipJtutWrta .puCI.buftalo. ~WI

�~7.~.,......n

__ _

3

..... 1A

New chair aims to build outreach
.,efforts of Environmental Task Force
Reporter Edi!Or

T

HE ENVIRONMENTAL Task
Fon:e bas made major advances
in helping UB go "green" ODd the
group) new chair wants to build
on those successes, bolh at the
univenityandtbroughoutWeslemNewYOIL
Joseph A. Gardella Jr., UB professor of
chemistry, was named chair of the ETF Nov.
21 by President William R. Greiner. And
he 's on a mission to get the word out about
the success ODd futUie of UB' s Environmental Task Force. "I plan to take the next six
weeks and be nut front to reinvigorate students, staff and faculty, and to determine
how we'll work together," he ssid.
Wbile the ETF has been very successful
in pioneering environmental and ecological
efforts at UB, Gardella ssid he hopes to
expand the group's reach to include academic and outreach efforts. His goal is threefold: to recapture the focus on academic

missions in environmental research and education; develop a strong public service and
community leadership function; and to comhi ne effons in operations, service, research
and teaching to attract campuswide funding
for environmental issues.
'1 got involved with the ElF because I believe
this is a maj&lt;r strmgtb of UB thai doesn'ttllce
major(financial)investmcniS,"saidGardella, who
has been a member of the Environmental Task
Force since 1992. "I want to reconfigure the
ElF, 001 because it did anything wrong, but
because this is a tremendous opportunity. Bill
GrcinerhaschaUengedthecornmitteetobroadly
discuss, with his help, UB's setting goals in
environmental, ecological and green tbinlting
and to integrate green thinking into all aspects
of the university."
The ETF is looking at how it wiU work
with UB's new Environmental Institute,
Gardella said. "What's really important is to
integrate" the work of bolh units, be ssid.
Community nulreacb also is important to
what Gardella hopes to achieve as chair of
the ETF. In addition to inviting community
and industrial representatives to be members, he would like to see the group's expertise extended to the local area. "I intend to
work with community groups, governmental groups" to educate them about the Environmental Task Force. he said, and.
hopefully, to provide solutions to environmental problems in Western New York.
The task force has subcommittees looking at areas that include: transportation and
land-use issues; ,hazardous materials issues
ranging from recycling chemicals to waste

management; administrative practices and
policies; public service; and curriculum.
"This is something we' re really good at
already," be ssid. "This ties into regional
needs. It ties into the community. We have
the expertise. You look at Engineering and
the Toxicology Research Center-dull's a
model for working with industry. You look
at Architecture and Planning, and you see
people involved in regional planning. The
Law School has an environmental lawyer
for a dean. John Sheffer is trying to coordinate a program in planning," Gardella ssid.
University expertise not withstanding,
probably the greatest strength of the Environmental Task Force IS the dedicated group
of students who work with the group. A
number of UB 's environmental programs
were begun by students, be says, including
the recycling and ridesbarc programs.
Gardella expects the ElF 001 only to continue, but to flourish. "All we' re doing is
taking success stories from throughout the
university and knitting them together... .lt isn't
much of a challenge. The bani work has alC
ready been done ."

SludeniS play cards while othels snooze inside sleeping bags Dec. 2 at Fargo
TIIIT8Ce for the 'Night Under the Stars· benefiting the homeless. Canned goods,
clothing and cash were collected during the evening for Buffalo City Mission. The
project was sponsot'ed by the Office of Residence Ufe.

DISABLED
Continued from page 1
mission is to help students from UB and the
community at large to achieve their educaliona1 goals, and thereafter to achieve their
post-graduate career goals. CAT serves the
entire Western New York region.
For the adaptive technologies initiative,
Beaver helped match the technology to the
task, and recommended the appropriate computer systems, technology, and training.
Beaver•s component of the initiative has been
supplemented by the involvement of the SAsponsored disabled student union, the Independents. Once the system was configured,
the Independents have provided ongoing peer
tntining, and help to monitor the system to
ensure that it is functioning optimally.
Once the technology was selected, Jay
Leavitt and Kelli Scott of Computing and
Information Technology (Cm began ordering, installing, configuring, and mainlltining
software and hardware. Leavitt, who has
actively worked to implement technical services for disabled users since 1988, but has
been a proponent of disabled users' rights
for much longer. is sensitive not only to
disabled users' technical requirements, but
also to their~tional and educational needs.
''We decided to depart from what other
schools had done. Generally, they'd set up labs
devoted to computer access for students with
disabilities, which meant that they were isolated. I wanted these in the same locations as
everybody else, so that they could get the same
level of support as everybody else. We have
consultants at all the sites. We also have some
24-hoursites.lfwehadset up a lab just devoted
to them, it wou1d have more limited hours."
Leavitt is especially proud of the involvement of the Independents for providing peer
training. 'The advantage of this cannot be
understated. There was a survey many years
ago by Harris, and they took kids of student
age who were known to have disabilities.
Sixty-five percent of them would not admit
that they had disabilities. even though they
were known to have disabilities. So the problem of getting these people to affiliate with
ODS to get services was a real challenge.
"A 101 of students fear that this might end
upon their transcripts, and that if they try to go
for a job later, that this might disqualifY them.
particularly if they have a hidden disability,"
ssid Leavitt. '"They would rather compete on
their own merits rather then something artificial. So they don't wantto have to 'sign up' if
it's not ""fuired. Unfortunately, a 101 of students get into trouble academically because
they want to do it in the highest degree on their
own, without any accommodation. Because
the Independents are a student group--lbeir

peers--there are no records kept . so it" s essentially a private matter."
"Not only did we eliminate the idea of
segregation, but we said that anybody at the
university may use this equipment," Leavitt
continued, although disabled students are
given priority. 'There's a good reason for
this. You not only have the kids who don't
want to declare that they're disabled. but
their disability could also be invisible. For
example, they cou ld have a reading disabil ity. such as dyslexia. Anybody can sit down.
so they can sit down at the terminal without
declaring themselves to be disabled."
At UB , close to 400 students report some
form of disability, according to Toni Schunke
of the Office of Disability Services. Ofthese
students, fully 25 percent have a reading
disability, such as dyslexia. dysgraphia, or
attention deficit disorder (ADD)-examples
of the 'hidden' or 'invisible' disabilities
mentioned by Leavitt.
Leavitt looks forward to the future of
adaptive technology. which he has actually
see n in a protot·ype demonstrati on: direct

interface of brainwaves to machine .
There are currently eight accessible computing sites, and one on the way. They are
located at 30 Capen Hall. the Independents
office at 142 Student Union. Bell Hall .
Diefendorf Hall. Baldy Hall. C lemens Hall.
and 2 12 Capen Hall . The Ell icott Complex

satellite site at Red Jacket is already func tional , and the one at the South Campus
dorm Clement Hall will be soon. All of these
sites offer a variety of adaptive computing
equipment, software. network. access, and
support services. All software and network
access capabilities are continually updated
to remain current with the state of the art .
ODS is particularly hopeful that faculty
will take advantage of 30 Capen as a testing
location 10 help meet the needs of their
disabled students. If grant funding continues, and Gruber expects that it will , additional sites will be constructed.
Despite the hard work that all three departments have invested in the project. the
acid test remains whether it meets students·the end u·s ers·- needs. Has it made conditions better for them?
"A lot better ... said Ange Coniglio. a
recent graduate of UB · s English Department. and an avid user of the new technologies. "ln general. when I sit and take an exam
in a classroom, in a 50-minute class. I'm more
concerned with my handwriting skills than I
am with the questions. because I'm not as good
with a pen in my hand as I am with a keyboard.
(At the 30 Capen site) I can concentrate 100
percent on the task at hand and be more into the
work I'm doing. rather than trying not to drop
my pencil, or worrying that the teacher can't
read my handwriting."

Software at campus computing sites
FOLLOWING ARE DESCRIPTIONS of the accessibility soft ware available at the eight
access ible comput ing sites, resident on the 'campus backbone' LAN . MS-DOS versions of
all programs ar:e available now, and Microsoft Window s versions are comi ng on-line now
through the beginning of next semester. All of these applicalions run simultaneous!)' with
other software.
• HandiKey and HandiShin (augmenl tactile sk1ll s) . These innovalions allow users to
depress keys sequentially rather than all at once. helping I hem to execute dexterity-intensive
commands. like the illustrious 'Controi-Ait-Delete .' At some locations. sticky 'track ball s'
will replace mice. significantly enhancing users ' control over pointer and cursor placement.
According to Leavin. the next upgrade of UNIX will al o include: sticky-key and stickymouse capabi lities.
• HandiWonl (word prediction software) . Along the bottom of tho scree n. it displays a
menu of frequently-used words. indexed by number. The menus appear as the user enters the
first letters of the intended word. If the software correctly anticipates 'Did_· from the user" s
inputted 'D.' she selects 'Did_' by number, resulting in a net savings of two keystrokes. Over
the course of a document,. the average number of keystrokes is reduced by half. The software
is customizable. so it gets better and better at predicting an individual· s prose the more it is used.
• MJogic and Zoom Text (screen enlargers). These applications magnify the entire screen
from two to eight times. They allow the user to smoothly pan across a vastly increased field
of view (especially when the software is used in conj unction with a 20-inch monitor, as at
many of the sites).
• Vocalize (voice simulator). This software reads text aloud using a synthesized human
voice. Users may listen to text that they have written as well as te~t that they have scanned.
as from a textbook, newspaper or telephone directory.
-·

�4

What to serve
for the holidays?
UB cooks have
plenty of ideas!
'Charles Dickens' muffins win
annual recipe contest
eporter's annual recipe contest brought ideas and suggestions for holiday
partying as well as everyday meals from all over the two campuses. A recipe for
Charles Dickens' Cornmeal Muffins, submitted by Louise Continelli, a Ph.D. student
in English at UB and a reporter for The Buffalo News, was selected as the winner.
Continelli's recipe for Christmas morning
munchies appealed to the judges for its unusual
tngredients and its seasonal aspect.
The judges were john Edens, assistant director of libraries for technical services and Bison
bibliographic database manager, and Hope

BUTTER PECAN
TURTLE COOKIES
CRUST:
2 cups flour
I cup pocked brown sugar
112 cup bull« sofleoed
CARAMEL LAYER:
213a~pbult«

LOUISE CONTINEW
Reporter, Buffolo News:
Ph.D. student

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT

CHARLES
DICKENS'
CORNMEAL
MUFFINS
(for guilt-free low-fat Christ-

mas morning munchies)
I cup Hodgens Mills Wheal
A our
2 cups Hodgens Mills Com
Meal flour
113 cup sugar
4 leaspoons baking powder
I 1easpoon sail
I egg
1 cup skim milk
1/4 cup coolting oil
30 raspberries
Preheatovenlo37Sdegn&gt;es.

Use Pam to grease. a Texas-size
6-muffin pan. Sift all dry ingre-

dieolS into 1 large bowl. Combine egg, skim milk, and oil in
small bowl and whisk to blend.
Add wet to dry ingredients and
mh. wilh a large wooden spoon.
Be careful to avoid ovennixing
Pour batter into pan and add
raspberries now. Stick 5 raspberries into each muffin, pus.bing them down into the batter.
Bake from 27 to 32 minutes.
Test after27 minutes by inserting a plain toothpick into the
center of a muffm. When ex-

Aldrich, clerk I , CTS cataloging department
They recently took part in the production of a

lnlcted, lhe loolhpick should
come out clean. Serve hot from
the oven. No butter or preserves
are needed.

cookbookA TasteofCTS,benefttingSEFA The
Reporter thanks them for their time and effort
in evaluating the entries.
In selecting the winner, they noted, "The

TBEMATB
CHARLES DICKENS' CORN -

MEAL MUFFINS
(lry. M~cu. Cols. Fat

combination of ingredients was unusual-the

hr.m

cornmeal with the raspberries." pointing out the

Aour
Commeal
Oil
114
Salt
I
Sugar
1/3
Bakr powder 4

fact that "it's a healthy recipe for Christmas
morning." The judges liked the seasonal aspect
of Continelli's entry. and found the Charles

Eu

, Dickens title "clever."

•eu8064

Skim M ilk

"The chart was interesting," the judges added.
Continelli and her husband, Bob Smith, worked out the math on their computer.

cols
800 0
cups 224 0
cup 400 400
tsp. 0
0
cup 7S 0
up. 0
0 _

cup

cups 160 0
pt. · 60 o
Toul ca&amp;oria ror6 •aft'l.r.J799caJ
EK-111 •uftla: 300 cab (appnu.)

rw.,

2

1n

"He likes muffins," she said. " and muffins are usually just fat sponges." These Christmas
BA-ARA WELKER

morning muffins, she said, "are the giant ones."
The. Reporter thanks all who participated in the contest-entries came by campus
mail, E-mail and by fax All the recipes were great fun to read, especially ones with
comments on the origin of the recipe. and the editors enjoyed looking at each and

I

Graduate Student

112cup pocked brown sugar
I cup wbole pecan balves
I package milk chocolate
chips

Preheat oven to 3SO de-.
grees-&lt;Jse ungreased

13x9x2

pan.
In a 3 qll&amp;tl bowl combine
crust ingredients. Mix aJ: medium speed. scrape bowl often
until well mixed. Pat firmly inlO

pan, sprinkle pecans cveoJy
over unbaked crust.
PYepare canunel layer and
pour evenly over pecans and
aust. Bake in ceotcr of oven
18-22 minutes or until entire
carunel layer is bubbly and
crust is light golden brown.
Remove from oven immediau:ly-&lt;prinltle wilh cbocolale
chips. Allow chips 10 mcll

sligbtly (2-3 min.) Sligbtlyswirl
lo cover top. Cool compk:t&lt;:ly
and cut (makes 3-4 doun)
Canmd ..,..., In heavy
I qt. sauce pan combine brown
sugar and butt&lt;r. Cook over medium heat stirring constantly
until entire mixture begins to

boil. Boil In to 1 minute stirring constantly.

DEBBIE ·
BUI'FANANTI
DRclOr. GeotJ&gt;phic infonNtx&gt;n
&amp; Analysis Ub
DEPARTMENT Of
GEOGRAPHY

LEMON
POUNDCAKE
In cup unsalted butter, at room
lempenlhU'C,plusadditionalfor
greasing pan
2 cups all-purpose flour, plus
additional for pan
I 1/4 cups sugar
4 tebpcoos grated lemon zest
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
112 ICaSpoon baking soda
I 1easpoon baking powder
112 ICaSpoon tosber sail

314 cup sour cream
tn. cup confectioners' sugar
tn. cup fresh lemon juice
1. Preheat tbe ovea to 350
degrees. Butter and Oour 8
9x.5x3-ineb loaf pan. Using an
electric mixer, cream together
lhe bu~~«llll!l sugar untilligbt
Add lhe lemoo zest. !ben lhe

CANDIED
SAUSAGES

eggs, one at a time. mixing ua·

This reci~ was in'Hnted by my
greal wncle who used to serve it

vanilla.
2. Sift logelhCI' lhe flour.
baking soda, baking powder and
salt Add lhe dry ingredicnu
alternately with the sourcmun.
mixing just to combine. Spoon

in his bor. He was a Buffalo
firemanformanyytUJna.ndhas
passed away. His legacy lives
on in many ways, one of which
i.f through this reci~:

Rope: smoked Polish sausage
12 oz. can or bottle beer
l cup packed brown sugar
I !Ablespoon crushed red
pepper
Cut sausage into 1" slices
and place in 8 large stoclcpot.
Add as many cans of beer as it
takes to cover sausage. For each
can of beer used. add I cup
packedbrnwnsugarand liablespoon crushed red pepper (less
can be used to taste, I Tis quite
zippy) . Bring 10 a boil and lhen
reduce heat and simmer until
sauce becomes syrupy. Serve
in a shallow casserole dish.

tilligbl and fluffy. Mix in lhe

lhe bslt« inlolhe prepared pan.
Bake untilalnolhpick inserled
into tbe cake's center comes
out clean, about I hour. Place
on a rack..
3. Put the confectioners '
sugar in a bowl and gradually
whisk in the lemon juice. Brush
some of the mixture over tbe

�5

..--..,
I

top of the cake. Leul&amp;nd roc 10
minutes. Tum the cake our of
the pon aqd bnlsb the cake lop,
sides and bouom weU wilh the
lemon mixture. RepeatafteriO
minutes. Slice and serve.
Yield: eight SetVings.
Tlais is ""'Y ,..fnshillr after
a h~any dinMr! /found it in the
N.Y. Times MarilVM aboot 3
yean ago and it 's never failed
to plewe. I wsuolly add addi-

tioruJJ lemon

U.Jt

to tM Icing

mixtwre for ~n more zjng!

JENNIFER
GOTTDIENER
Transfer inC! Articulation

c:ao.-.:sNtor
UNDERGRADUATE
EDUCATION

SAFTA'S POTATO
PANCAKES
I medium onion
2 big baking potatoes

I egg
4 tablespoons matz.o meal or

nour
112 teaspoon salt
pepper to taste

canol a or soybean oil for frying
brown paper (bags cut open ok)
Peel onion and potatoes;
keep in water to prevent oxidation. Chop onion very finely in
processor or grate by hand. Into
same bowl, grateJM:)tatoes. Add
salt and stir well. Let sit for at
least 15 minutes then pour into

strainer and press as much moisture out as possible with a large
spoon. PourmiJuure into a bowl
;and add egg, pepper and matzo
meal or flour.
Heat l/8-l/4 " oil ina fry pan
or griddle until quite hot. Place
heaping tablespoonfuls of mixture in pan and spread each
evenly , about 1/4" thic k. Fry
till browned, tum , and brown
remaining side. Remove and
place between layers of brown
paper to drain oil. Keep warm
in 200 F oven until serving with
side dishes of applesauce and
sour cream.

KATHLEEN C.
GRIECO
UNIVERSITY RESIOENa HAllS

ELIZABETH' S
WALNUT
SURPRISE
PUMPKIN BREAD

Note: My niu~ luul to help
make a rtd~ ofrt~gu/Qr PlllfiP·
tin bnad In scloool for IMir
discii.Uion oj"l7vuabgivlng. SM
hDd a.JUd for a copy oftMir
,..cf~ and I tkcid&lt;d to chang&lt;
ilto show tlttlt no r~cifH is rver
mode of stone, tMt you can
always clum&amp;~ it tomah it your
own. W&lt; kft out 1M whol&lt; WMal
jloNrbut added same amou.nt of
all·purpose flour. w~ put in
walmtts itutead ofpeclliU. w~
l~ft out raisiJU altog~ther becaws~ I don 't lib th~m. W~ d~­
cid~d 10 add clwcolate chips
forapleasantsurprise. We also
added vanilla utract- none
was in the recipe. SM has now
l~arned that r~cipes can be
worUd with as a guid~. but you
can add what you want in then.
Not that if you don't hav~ all
the items, you can 'ttrJIJU 1M
recipe. Mynieais9yearsoldju.rt a fHrf~ct ag~ to wanr to
learn. She was so pleased wMn
sh~ r~celve.d compliiseniJ on
"Mrbread. "

DONNA M. KING
Admissions Seaewy
SCHOOL OF INFORMATION
AND UBRARY SlUDIES

EASY CHERRY
CRUMB CAKE
I cup granulated sugar
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1n. stick margarine or butter
I can Comstock cherry pie fill -

ing (21 oz.)
Add the first lh.ree ingredients, stir well ; cut in the margarine or butter and work mixture
until fairly crumbly and margarine is about the size of a pea.
Mix in the egg and fold througho m lhe crumb mixture.
Place In. of the mixture on
the bottom of a 8x I 0 pan, 0 use

a lasagna pan); spread thecberry
pie filli ng on top and spread ;
sprinkle the remaining mixrure

and bake 350 degn:es for 30
minutes or until lightly golden
brown. Cool on rack and drizzle
icing on top (if desired made up
of confectionery sugar with a
little milk). Enjoy, quic k, easy
and delicious!

UNETTE KOREN
Assistant Librarian
SCIENCE &amp; ENGINEERING

UBRARY

3-112 cups all -purpose nour
I teaspoon baking soda

1- 112 teaspoons salt
2 teaspoons cinnamon
I teaspoon nutmeg (optional)
3 cups sugar
I cup oil
2 teaspoons Vllllilla (pure ex -

tract)
213 cup water
4 eggs
I (29 oz.) ca:&gt; (approx. 2 cups)
pumpkin--not pumpkin pie fill ing
I cup chopped walnuts
I 6 oz. bag semi-sweet choco.
late c hips
Heat oven to 350 F. Grease
bonom only of two 9x5-inch
loa'l;pans or three 8x4-inch loaf
pans. In large bowl, combine
all -purpose flour, sugar, baking soda, salt, cinnamon , and
nutmeg: mix well . In medium
bowl. combine oil. sugar, vanilla, eggs, pu mpkin and water;
blend well . Add to flour mix ture; beat I minute at medium
speed. Fold in nuts. Fold in
c hocolare chips . Pour into
greased pans. Bake at 350 F. for
60 to 70 mi nutes or u ntil tooth·
pic k insened in center of loaf
comes out clean. Cool at least
30 minutes; remove from pans.
Cool completely. Yiel d : 2
loaves.

NUT CRESCENTS
4 cups nour (Robin Hood)
I cup sugar
112 lb. butter (2 sticks)•
Jn.lb. margarine (2 sticks)•
1 cup ground walnuts
2 teaspoons vanilla
Cream sugar. butter and
margarine with hands in large

bowl. Add flour slowly. Add
nuts and vanilla. Roll small
pieces of dough between hands
into a 2 to 2-ln.-inch " log."
Bend this .. log" into a crescent
shape while placing on cook.ie
sheet. Makes 3 rows of about
15 cookies each. Bake for 1012 minutes at350degrees on an
ungreascd cooltie sheet. Cool
cook.ies and sprinkle with powdered sugar.
• Butter and margarine sho uld
be room temperature.
Yield : approximately 125
cookies.

My mother has been making
these nut crucenl cookies as
long as I can r~m ember. It is a
recipi! she got from her mother.
While th~re is nothing seasonal
about them in terms of ingredients or appearance, for some
reason th~y are only made at
the holidays. A.nd because of
this, theyarehighlyanticipated.'

Requuufor/Ns~cookies corM

from cousins as close cu Rochester and tU far tU Flo rida.
They want to maU sure that
tMs~ coo/des will IH ·waiting
for tll~m in ample supply upon
th~ir return to the Buffalo area
for IM holidays.
They ar~ th~ best buller
cookies I 've ewr had and just
like LAy's Potato Chips, no one
can eal just one.'

CHRISTINE E. LEE,
CDA
SCHOOL OF DENTAL
MEDICINE

PEARS POACHED
IN CHAMPAGNE
WITH
BLUEBERRIES
This is an elegant, easy. delicious, yet low-fat dessert.
2 cups water
2 cups champagne
I cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon lemon z.est

6 large pears, blanched and
peeled
I pint blueberries cleaned (fro·
z.en will do if fresh is not avail able-thaw before using)
mint leaves for garnish
In large pol bring water,
champagne, sugar and lemo n
zest to a boil. Reduce heat to
medium and continue to cook
until sugar is dissolved and
mix lure becomes syrupy, about
12minutes . Add~and s im ­

mer for about 5 minutes. Tum
offbeat and allow pears to cool
in syrup.
When pellCS are cool , slice
them in wedges removing the
seeds. Arrange slices o n serving dish, sprinkle with syrup,
cover, and chill for at least 6
hours (or overnight ). When
ready to serve, scatter with berries and sprinkle with additional
syrup. Garnish with mint leaves.
Enjoy!

JOHN MANSFIELD
Reverend; Adjunct Professor

CAMPUS MINISTRIES/
REUGIDUS SlUOIES

GRANNY' S
CELERY ROOT

4 c hicken breasts : split in hair
I can cream of chicken soup
I cup sour cream
4 tablespoons flo ur
4 tablespoons lemon juice
6 green onions, sliced fine ly

Oil a 13x9 pan; place chicken
breasts in pan. Combine sauce
ingredients; spoon evenly over
chicken. Bake uncovered 45-60

minutes

81

350 degrees. Serves

4-8.

This is an easy-to-mnU m~al
that sums more dressed-up
than it is. To create an apfHaranc~. serve tM chicUn on beds
of lelluce, and sprinkle with a
f~w more chopped grun onion
tips.

CemnJ Tectnc.i Senoce&gt;

Lockwood...,.,.,

UNIVERSITY UBRARIES

PLACEK

salt
pepper
Cut celery root in quarters
and pee l. Slice as you wo uld
raw frie s. Add vi negar, water
and sugar.
Salt and pepper to taste . Sim·
mer until easily pierced with a
fork a.ndjuice cooks away. Add
mo re sugar if it 's too sour.

1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon sugar
I c up butte rmilk

OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS

NEW YEAR'S DAY
SOUFFLE
I dozen egg whites
I package defrosted and drained
froz.en spinach
I package frozen and drained
chopped broccoli
1 pound non-fat co ttage cheese
I c up grated fat -free pannesan
I In. c ups skim milk
I tablespoon block pepper
I teaspoon salt
I can mushrooms. ste ms and
pieces
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Combine everything and mix
well . Po ur into a large casserole or lasagna pan and bake for
about 35-45 minutes. Yo u"ll
kno w it 's do ne when it begins
to brown. Too brown is no t

good.
This recipe is good becaus~
it 's ~asy 10 make. will h ~lp on~
to stick to their resolution to eat
mort healthfully in 1996.

PAMELA ROSE
Head. AcQUISibonS

HEALTH SCIENCES LIBRARY

CHOCOLATE
CAKE WITH
APPLE-LEMON
FILLING
th ~

tart
fillin g contrasts niul)' with the
swut chocolate. A nice changt!
f rom traditional cookies. I of·
tm use a packag~d chocolate
cuke mi.r and f rosting, bur you
ran go tht wholt nine yards
and m.akr the rl'cip~ bt'low.
2 cups sugar
2/3 c up Cri sco
2 eggs
I c up bunenni lk.
2 tea spoons baking soda
2 cups fl o ur
In. cup cocoa
I teaspoon . salt
2 teaspoon vanilla
I cup boiling water

HEALTH SCIENCES UBAARY

FILLING

and

Add:
4 cups flout

CAP-H igher Educat•on Ph.D
student
Gr.aduate AsSistant

Senior As~ L..h';tnan

Malee a trip to the colorful
Broadway Markel on Buffalo ·s
East Side for your celery root.
where my grandmo thtr purchased it for over 50 years. My
German grandmother originally added two tablespoons of
bacon drippings when combin·
ing th~ liquith and sugar. 1/ikt&gt;
it made the vegetarian, low-f at
way.' I always think of my grand·
mother wht!n I rnake this dish.
f or Sht! filled my lift' with lovt'

1/2 c up margarirK!
3 eggs
2 cups sugar
I c up bune nn tlk

3 teaspoons baking powder

Cream suga r and C risco;
bea t in eggs. Mix soda with
b.uttennilk. and add to mixture.
Stir in dry ingredients and boiling water. Bake350for45 minutes for9 x 13,or30minutes for
9Mcake.

SHARON MURPHY

(Polish Coffee Cake)
MIX:

SHERI RECOON

A great combination,

SOUR CREAM
CHICKEN

MEUSSA
TWARDOWSKI
a.nil

I medium celery roo1
114 cup vinegar
114 cup water
3 tablespoons sugar

I c up sugar
I egg

3 large apples. grated
juice and rind or I lemo n
Mix all ingredients and cook
over lo w heat until thick. Cool
and spread between baked laye rs . T o p w ith yo ur favorite
chocolate rrosting.

warmth·----""-j..""'""'!""!l!'!!'~)

Po ur into 2 g reased loaf
pans. Sprinkle Wtlh the rollow ·
ing to pping:
1- 112 cups n our
3/4 cup sugar
6 tablespoons margarine
Blend with pastry blender
or fo rk until crumbly. Bake in
375-degree o ve n for 50-60 mmutes o r until do ne .

JOANNE
WALLESHAUSER
RESIDENTIAL UFE

CHUCK
MARINATE!
I chuck round steak
I 8 oz. boule Russ ta n salad
dressing
112 bottle Ital ian salad dressi ng
4-5 tablespoons soy suace
Marinate for one ho ur (or
more if you like). Then g rill or
broil. Comes o ut very mo ist
and tender. (You can change
the in gredients to yout liking.)
STORY~ Th is r~cipt' ca me
about as an t'xpninr~nt. Wralways are looking 10 nrarinatf'
our meat in something diffuenl
sow~ .. ~xperiml'nted .. .' We lm•f'

il.

MARJORIE
WEINSTOCK
Graduat~ student

COUNSELING AND
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY
I got this rrcif" f rom my mother.
Neithu of us is sure tt•hy it is
called ..Japanesl' .. Fruit Piethaz ·s simply what it 's called.

JAPANESE FRUIT
PIE
1/2 cup mel ted butter or marga rine
I cup sugar
2 bcaten.eggs
In c up rais ins
In. cup nuts (whate ve r type you
like )
ln. cup coconut
I tablespoon white vi negar
Mix all ingredients together
and pour into an unbaked pie
shell . Bake ror 30-40 minutes
at 350 degrees. Chill and serve .

VALERIE LIMPERT
Sr- Stenographe:r

MANAGEMENT SCIENCE &amp;
SYSTEMS

DUMP CAKE
I can apple pic fillin g
I large can cru shed pmeapple
(with juice)
I box yell o w cake mi x
2 stic ks margarine, me lted
C rushed walnuts {3/4 c up )
Spread apples o n bottom of
9" x 13" pan. Spoon cru shed
pineapple (with ju1ce) evenl y
over pie fillin g. Sprinkle cake
mix evenly over pineapple. Pour
melted margarine eve nly over
all and sprinkle with c rushed
walnuts . Bake in a preheated
350-degree oven for 55 minutes. Cool. Cut mto bars . Fo r

easy scrvmg, pl ace in cupcake
li ners.

PATRICIA
DONOVAN
NEWS SERVICES

NINE TALES'
CRANBERRY
RELISH
WARNING: This is NOT fo r
lovus of cann ed cran berry
jelly- it •J crunchy. chunky,
preuy. swut-tart and nuuy.
This luJ.s been a longtime favorit~ at th~ gang 's annual Nev.•
Yrar 's Day dinner whue w~a/1
drink too much glog and gangsing .. LI!aderoftht! Pad" in an
Irish brogue. with afriendplaying tht! accelerating Harley.
Also, it 's t'asy 10 mnke, sinu
you almost can 't mess it wp. lt 's
pa rticularly good with goose.
duck. and other poultry that luJs
bu n shot f rom th ~ sky by guys
in day-glo jackets.
I bag of fresh cranberri es
I large box lemo n Jell-o. pre pared but not set
At least l - In cups of cho pped
wa lnuts
AI leas t 1- 112 c ups of cho pped
celery
Se veral large . seed less, peeled
oranges pl us their grated zest
Sugar to taste
Cho puptht:cr.mbem es. eel ·
ery. walnuts and peeled o ranges
and put the m in a bowl in
roughl y equal amo unts. Add the
le mo n Jell -o (still in its liquid
rorm), stir well , then add the
grated o range zest and additional sugar to taste.
Mix well aod le t the who le
thing se t in the refrigera tor until it screams, " Get me outa
here!"' This is not a Je ll-o salad
per se. so be sure: to add enough
o r the Other ingredie nts so that
you can'! e ven su the Jell -o.

REBECCA
MESSENGER
CEP Graduatt! Student

Although Rebecca Messenger's
t'ntry fo r tht' redpt' contest arrn•ed too latt! fo r the j udging,
wt' art' including her inteusting recipe fo r UB ruipe aficionados 10 try.

CHINESE NEW
YEAR COOKIES
I 12 oz. bag of c hocolate chips
I 12 oz. bag o r butterscotch
c hips
I 5 oz. ca n o r c how me in
nood les
2 c ups or salted peanuts
Melt chocolate and butterscotch tn large saucepan over
low heat. When completely
me lted . stir in nood les and pea·
nuts. Drop by spoonruls o nto
waxed paper. Allow to cool unti l
c hocolate is firm . Then EN JOY !

My bt&gt;St fnt&gt;nd ·J mothu
malus th ~st' f'\'t'n' \'t'ar fur tht'
hul1day.f. I dan ·, know whuf'
sht' got thl' rt'Cipr b11t I know
tht'y·rt&gt;dt&gt;fm it~l;vnotChmt'S~ I
mnd~ them for som~ frrendJ
from Bl'ijing. China and th~y
informrd mt that tht&gt; Chin~u
don't e1·en ha 11~ chow mein
noodles like tht' ones used in
this recipe. Oh. tt·~/1. Theylo\·t&gt;d
rhem anyway.

�6

Faculty&amp;SiaiiBillboard
Two US students have been selected
to receive American Chemtcal Socl·

ety (ACS) National Minority ScholarShips lor the 1995-96 school year
Jo. . llltluel Cintron is study.ng
chem istry and t..taah8 11.
Beclunaft, chemical engineenng
They are among 201 AfricanAmencan , Hispanic and American
Indian students nationwide whorece•ved scholarships from the ACS.
The scholarships, which are renewable . range In value up to $2 .500
each '" freshman and sophomore
years and $5 ,000 each tn JUOtOf and
sen10r years

DOCTOIIAL STUDENT IN

Q- ._..,...
IIIILTA soctnY~.-

The annual appeal lor the School ol
Engineering and Applied Sciences Is

to .._,

under way, according
.lohn.on, assistant dean. llllcheel
a.ndn is director of the annuaJ ap-peaL part of an outreach effort to expand private support among alumni

and lriends of the school.
A new club, the Oeha Society,
was established over the summer
with AntttonJ L Ruaao as chair.
The club plans to recruit 135 founding members who will make annual
gifts of S1,000 or more to provide the
vital resources needed to keep the
school on the cutting edge of engineering educauon.

....._ prolesaor emeritus of
music, will have two premieres of his
WOtl&lt;a performed Dec. 10 at the Jewish Communily Centsr on North Forest
Road. The program is in -.,lion of
the corrrnunity cente(s golden ""!'ive&lt;sary. ......... and '""
- - - - - will
perlon1\ the compooi1ions, scored for
piano and saxophone quartet
Sigel's Four Naliofls Suite pays
tributs to Poolenc , cleFalla , Bloch and
Bartok and the folk music of their respective countries. The second composition, ShfeU Echoes, lor saxophone quartet, is based on Jollc
songs of European Jewry.

DENTAL S C - WINS
INTEIINA~

AWARD

•n the Department of Oral Biok&gt;gy in
the UB School of Dental Med1cine.
has won the International Assoc•alion
tor Dental Research's (IADR) Hatton
Award. Its top student honor
Lala represented the American AsSOCiatiOn lor Dental Research at the •ntema!lonat meel!ng in Singapore.
where the award was presented. com-

oet•ng aga•nst winners from the 16
other drvtsions of the IAOA He was
named overall winner of lhe compeu11011 for hiS postdoctoral reseafch, "ExpressiOn, Puriftccuion and lrrmu-

-

nochefrucal Characterization of Human
Neutrophil FMLP Receptor •
Ernesto OeNardin, US assocaate
professor of oral biology. was Lala's
mentor and a co-alJthof of lhe study
Other co-authors were Rober! J
Genco, pc"Otes&amp;of and chair ol oral biQk)gy and Hakknuddin T. Sojat, BSSIStant professor of oral btok&gt;gy

The Office oJ the Voce President Jor
Research has announced the
Multidisciplinary Pilol Protect Program
fot 1995-96. It provides limited seed
funding of up to $20.000 in direct
cosiS to enab'e faculty to begin
multkhscipfinary research in an area
new to them by collecting preliminary

data needed to prove the viability of
lhetr research plan and to enhance the
competitiveness of a subsequent research proposal to an external government or private sector funding SOUfce.
Awards 819 expected to be announced by April t9. t996.
Deadline lor submission of proposals os Feb. 9, 1996. Proposals Involving
~ irMlstigalors Jrcm dislildly
different discipfiles IWld departments ....
encouraged. Program guidehs can be
requested Jrcm ll1e Office a the Voce
President for Research. 516 Capen Hal:
pllone 645-332t .

"Studlowarl&lt;s, • a new group formed
at US as a companion company to

the Zodiaque dance troupe, will
present its firSt dance concan Dec.
8-10. Performances will take place at
8 p.m. in the Rehearsal Worbhop
Theatre of the Center for the Arts on
US's North Campus. Tickets are S3
and are available through the Center
for the Arts ticket office, 645-ARTS.
The program will ba directed by
Lynne KurdZiel-Formato and Tom

Ralabate, lecturers in theater and
dance. Choreography is by the directors and by William Thomas, associate professor of theater and dance,
and students Bonnie Butkas, Jody
Dombrowski, Kristine Meyer and

Stacy Zawadzsld. The program will
feat..-e roosic by Prince, Zap Mama.
Mary Mclaughlin, Mer1&lt; Mancina and
the score lrom "Smof&lt;ey Joe's Cale.•

C
I
I
I
I

Total S

\

I

@ S 13.00 each

Maltt c:htdt pDyabk to: VB PubliCAtions/ Oikndar
Pleasr mail or fax this form to lht Pwbficarions Qf/ict, 136 CrojtJ HDll, Urtiwnil)' at &amp;ffalo,

Buffalo, NY

from the free throw line, dished OU1three assists and added three steals for
the Royals. Freshman Kim Coon added 14 points while senior Ame
Gallagher added nine points and six rebounds on 4-&lt;lf-4 shooting. The Royals
shot a blistering 67 percent from three-point range in the game. Senior
Melanie Vogel added six points, five rebounds and five assis1s for the Royals
who played Hawaii again Dec. 4.

MEN'S

I
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I
I

Phone

I
I

WOMEN'SIIAIKEIULL

I
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Address

Quantiry

1~260. Pfoo•t 645-6969 Fa" 6~5-2313.

SportsView

The Royals opened their season in irr4&gt;ressive fashion, dele;~ling the Universi1y of Hawaii, 78-61, In Honolulu. Pre-season Mi&lt;H:ontinent MVP selection
Brenna Doty lived up to her billing by draining a school-record seven threepointers en rOU1e to 32 points. Doty hit 10-of-17 shots from the floor. 5-of-0

-,

Name

1

a graphical browser such as NetsctJpe. For assistance in coruucting to
rhe World Wide Web, conracr tM err Help Desk at645-J542.
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The Bulls posted an Impressive 78-74 victoryDVI!f Rutgers Nov. 27 at Ak.mni
Arena, first win by a UB basketball team """' a Big East school since LIB reJumed to Div. I s1atus. Jamie Anderson and Mi&lt;e MartiMo led the Bolls wi1h
16 points aplect whileiulfor Laonarct-Tangishaka and freshman Robe&lt;1 Harris added 13 pqi&gt;&gt;ts. The Bulls tool&lt; the lead midway liYough the first half and
""""'traile&lt;l wothe second half 10......, their record at1-1 on the season.
UB iP'J 72.07 when Anderson, the Bulls' lone senior, drained an 18-fool
jumper from the baseline wi1h :451eft to help put the Scar1el Knights away.
Martinho hit three free throws af1er that to clinch nlor the Bulls. tt was the second straight year the Bulls have beaten AU1gers and erased the rnernoty of an
89-491oss to Boston College just two days eastier.
"That was one ol the biggest Jurnarounds I've ever seen a basketball team
have,• said UB coach Tom Cohane. "To play the way we did af1er our loss on
Saturday was amazing. It was a tremendous win for our young team.•

elebrnrt 150 years of
tradition with th(
University at Buffalo
18-Month Sesquicerortnnial Desk Calendar,
an elegantly desig,ed,
limited edition desk
caltndar featuring illustrations and
photographs arlled from '!/ficial Univmity
Archives. Each mot~tlr 's images-most in
full color and selected for their charatrer and
uniquttJt.s.s-clrronidt UB's IJistory . Somt of
r/~e imaga have never bifort bun published.
Tiois 5-1 12 x 8-112 inch calendar comes
with a mstom-made lucitt holder mrd stand,
presented iu a gift box adorned 1vitlr tht
Stsquicetllennial ual.

,-

You con connect to tM Nob~l Sener on the World WUU WebDJ IIItp:/
lwww.noiHLu through a te.xJ-ba.std interface such as Lynx or through

_,.'SIIAIKEIULL

The Ideal Holiday Gift:
UB's 18-Month
Sesquicentennial Calendar

I
I

~
tbe cue of the p&lt;ea~ ~leue J1I'C)filiaa lrilb poet IIIII ....,..
Heaney, lliis year't .....UU... of the Nobel Pri&amp; ill ~ wllidl
iDcludeoa linriO copiea of bispoemsucbivedonaJetVer lllli.,..lll1d
by tho Univcnlty of North Carolina Press.
The Nobel Sener alto includeo a sean:bable of Nobel
Laureates Which you can oean:h by prize categocy, yea-, 11111110, iDIIilational affiliation, l&lt;cyword (either &amp;glisb or Swodisb), aad dole of
birth or death, or any combination thereof. &amp;tries include tho fuJI
citation for the award (theenny for UB's Herbert HauptmaD citea bit
work with Jerome Karle on "the development of di=t metbods for the
detennination of crystal structures"), aad tho Nobel Foundolion bas
plans 10 enhance the database with pictures, press releases, aad the cv's
of the laureates at some future date.

s-

Amtt...,.._ Lala, a doctoral student

a WOMEN'S SWIMMING

The Bulls and Royals took pan in the extremely competitive Notre Dame Invitational from Thursday lhroogh Salurday. The Bulls finished sixth of seven
teams bellind evenlual champion Piltsburgh {843.0 points) wi1h 361 .0 points.
Mark Horgan finished third in the 1.~yard freestyle in a time of 16:03.83.
The Royals finished sixth as well with 247 points while Kansas (878) won
the overall title. Alex Barrera was fourth in the 200 yards backstroke {2:08.30).

WRES1UNG
The Bulls finished third at the RIT Wrestling lnlli1ational Saturday with 128.5
points led by individual champion Malcus HU1chins. HU1chins won the 167pound title wi1h a 4-2 win DVI!f Ashland's Tom Pomfret Brian Dowdall {118
pounds), Jason Wartinger {126), John Stuttman {150), Anthony Conte (158)
and Todd Schaffer {Heavyweight) all finished third for the Bulls.
-Paul Vecchio, Spotts lnfoonation Office

UPCOMINII U8 ATHLaiC EVENTS

-..-·
F~,Dec.e

1

Wcomen's Basketball vs. Hampton

7:30p.m. at AlLrmi Arena

I
I

Men's Basketball vs. Cornell

7:30p.m. at Al&lt;.fTVli Arena

\

Wcomen's Basketball vs. St. John's

2 p.m. at Alumni Arena

Wcomen's Baske1batl vs. WOlford
Men's BasketbaH vs. Niagara

6 p.m. at Alurmi Arena
8:15p.m. atAUrri Arena

I

L---- ------ ---- --------- -~

~.Dec. 17

..--..Dec.

21

�7
The Repctter IOOicomes commentary on rssues
ol txoad inlerBSIIO lhe univetsity community.
Material may be Bdfted lrx style and length.

.SUNY:
,_A._ Why Rethink It?
Chancellor

State University of New Yor1&lt;

I

N AMERJCAN higher education. Tile State University of
New York is unique. Created
in 1948 by lhe New York
State Legislature, but taking
its modem shape o nly in the mid ro late-'60s, SUNY is by all accounts a success story .
Why then change an institution

that has achieved such success?
Why "rethink itr' Because lhe
environment in which public
higher education has existed and

has thrived is changing-in fact.
has already changed. Higher education has been caught in our
country 's general concern to re-

)

duce taxes for publi c services. That
concern, in my opinion, has not
necessari ly been targeted at higher
education, but the effect has been
the same nevertheless.
Since 1988, there has been a
shill from lhe state paying almost
90 percent of SUNY's core operating budget to the state paying 49
percent of SUNY's core operating
budget in 1995. ln a few short
year.;, SUNY has experienced a
dramatic budget reduction yet still
tmaged to fulfill its mission of
cess to high quaJity education.

I evidence tells me that state
suppon wlll continue to decline.
SUNY can not ignore this shift or
pretend that the dec line in state tax
support will suddenly reverse itself.
To futr.Jl its responsibilities to

_,

New Yorkers and to lhe state,
SUNY must change and adapt to a

new environment. and must do so in
productive and concrete ways.
Public access to high quality education remains lhe Board of Trustees '

major objective. But to achieve this
goal in a time of fiscal constraints,
SUNY must become more selfsufficient and entrepreneurial. more
focused, and more creative. To do

so, the State University will need
greater management autonomy for
SUNY campuses and for lhe System as a whole.
The document., Rtthinlcing
SUNY. submiued by lhe Trustees
to the Governor and the Legislature. provides soHd directions for
achievi ng these goals. It is in response to a call from lhe New
York State Legislature requesting a
''multi -year, comprehensive
systemwide plan to increttse cost
efficiency" in the University system. However, I believe it is more
than a plan for reducing costs and
increasing efficiencies, although
that is a major component of the
charge .
Rethinking SUNY is a pl an that
also enables all of us, from the
System Administration to the
campuses. to focus on the protec·
lion of academic quality, whether
through effi ciencies that allow
resources to be redirected or by the
delivery of services in more cre·
ative ways-using new technohr
gies, fannin g pannersbips with
private industry, and forging alii ·

ances among
campuses to
achieve
administra·
live savings.
The
directions
the Trustees
set fonh in
lhis plan for
the Univer- BARTI.En
sity will lead
to more campus autonomy by
empowering the campuses to directl y manage more of their academic and operati ng affairs and
use campus resources more efficiently. Recommending that campuses and the System be allowed
to carry forward operational surpluses from year to year means
that savings can be reinvested and
planning can be done on a multiyear basis. This is o ne example of
management flexibil ity that Uni versity administrators sore ly need
and one that will increase effi ciency and enhance academic
quality.
SUNY's hospitals are also in
critical need of more operating
freedoms. As state-operated units
they are unable to compete in
today's evolving health -care marketplace. To survi ve they. too,
must be granted new management
capaci ty.
As I said e.1rlier, the Trustees
are comm itted to access to high
quality education. Public higher
education has long been recog-

nized nationally as a public good
that benefits society and the individual. But access to quality publ ic
higher education does not rest with
the taxpayer alone. It rests also
with students. and their families .
Some 73 percent of all students
receive some form of financial aid.
The Trustees arc committed to the
suppon of affordable tuition and
adequate fund ing of state and
federal financial aid programs.
So that students and families
can plan better. the Trustees agree
that tuition should be more predict able . A balance should be achieved
among tuition increases. financial
aid, and t aJ~: dollar-suppon to pro-.
teet both student access and the
quality of the University's academic programs. The Trustees
suggest that the Tuition Price
Index and the Higher Education
Price Index be considered as a
guide to tuition increases as well as
the cost of education.
The T rustees also recommend
lhat SUNY be allowed lo ser differential tuition rates umong campus types to reflect differences in
cost. Right now it costs more to
educate an undergraduate student
at a research institution than at a
four-year college. Differential
IUition rates suppon campus flex ibility and yet allow the Trustees to
address University-wide priorities,
including student fmancial aid .
Most other public higher education
systems in the United States already have the authority to set
differential rates of tu ition. The
State University should be given
the same authority .
We are also addressing the
challenge of making some of
SUNY's smaller campuses more
efficient. Although these campuses
increase student access and have a
st31ewide economi c impact. they
are costJy to operote due to their

small size. But by combining some
administrative services, they can
become more efficient and focus
more of their energies on their
missions. Tile Trustees are encouraging lhe formation of strategic
alliances lhat will link together
some of these smaller campuses and
foster the development of partnerships with the private sector.
The Trustees' recommendatio ns
mentioned here and many others
contained in the plan are expected
to lead to cost savi ngs beginning
1996-97. However. rather than
articulate savings. the plan pre sents the means whereby such
savings mig ht be achieved. As the
multi-year systemwide plan that
has involved the University com munity from presidents to facult y
to students and that has examined
all components of the Universitymission. vision , structure. operations, revenue and tuitionRethinking SUNY can guide us
into the new century. The environ ment has changed, and the plan
reflects and acknowledges this
change . At the same time, it reaf ·
finns the Trustees· commitment to
access and quality.
SUNY is of cri tical imponance
to the ci tizen!. of the state. offering
opponunity to many thousands of
New Yorkers. who wish to achteve
knowledge and skills for careers or
personal fulfillment. Working
together with the Governor and the
Legislat ure. the State University
can adapt to today's new environment and become not less but
more. Campuses can be empowered to become all that they can be.
The University can become more
efficient and more responsive .
Access and high quality education
can still be synonymous with the
State University of New York .
November 28, 1995

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8

w.-lorC

Buill 't'1. Americaa Ullivuslly. Alumni
A~na. Nonh Campus . 7 p.m.
Bulls va. Northeastern JlUao ls. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. 8: 15 p .•n.

S.1tu rc1

m 1~ Umversuy An Gallery In thiS
group exhibition . Vmcent Shme. Laura
Stein, Gregory Crtwdson, and D:t\'td
Nazio find "a variety or less than roman·
ue ways" of ~prese nti ng naturt The
show will be: up through Mllrt'h I 5

1\

·----

CONTINUING EXHiaiTS

Royals vs. Canlsius. Alumni Arena Natatorium. Nonh Campus. 1 p.m.

OPENING EXHIBITS

P'IIIOCIJ
~ntiThree
an shows
will close thts mooth m
the Center for tbe Ans . Nonh Campus.
Beauvu1s Lyons' "Reconstruction of an
Aazud1an Temple· A Parody of Science ,
History and An ." •s on view through Dec
I S in the An Department Gallery Paml ·
mgs by Lydia Dona llJ'"C on •new through
Dec. 22 in the Umvcrsny Gallery' s first floor space. And the Graduate Sbow 1s m
the University Gallery's set:nnd-floor
space through Dec . IJ

"Dumping Sight Landscape!Lnndscope."

. .tt.. bequlek

,__
Rqion JJ Kennedy Center/American
Collece Theat re Festival XJCVlll.
Through Jan. 21. Mainstage, Center ror
the Ans. Nonh Campus. SS donation. For
pc=rfonnance schedule, cali 64S-ARTS.

,_.....,.,....

-

M argie Gillis. Drama lbeatrt, Center
ror the Ans. North Campus. 8 p.m. S? .
50. SIS. QRS series.

ArtProf• 111o..r St81f Setute
Cene.nl Mem ben bip M edin&amp;. Brown
bag lunch. I04 Knox. North Campus.
Noon-2 p.m.

P'orc:IIIMrJ ·Roundo
Su bstance Abuse In the Elderly, Agnes
P.:ualci. M.D. Auditorium, Rehabi litation
Building. Buffalo Psychiatric Center.
I 0:30a.m.

Roow .. IP•rk Sld - -

Key Driven or tbe lnna mmato ry Rt-'ponse: P-Seltttin a nd PbospboUpue
A2, Dr. fohn Knopf. RPCI . Elm and
Carlton. 12:30 p.m.

_

an exhibit by S11oru Talcahash1. opens

Walter Procbownik : New Wor ks.
Opening reception Jan. 25. S-8 p.m . An
Department Gallery. Center ror the Ans .
North Campus. Free. Gallery hours Tues·
day, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.: Wednesday through
Friday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturday, II
a.m.-8 p.m. Through Feb. 13.

Jan. 24 in the Unwersity An Gallery.
Center ror the Arts . North Campus. The
exhibit, which runs through March 22. 1s
"a complex architectural -sculpturnl work
consisti ng or two separate revo!Ymg
doors made or reflective glass Wllh fi ~ h
tanks as ceilings." Takahashi w1ll g1vc- a
talk to introduce the opening receptio n.
4-7 p.m . Gallery hours are Wednesday
through SaiUrday. 10:30 a.m ·8 p.m .. and
Sunday. Noon-S p.m Adm1ss1on 1s free

Move ow•, .. Red Vertical"
Simon Unger's " Red Venu:al"' gl't·e~ up
its occupancy of the L1ghtwell Gallery :11
the end of the month The conung me specific ino;utllation IS o ne b) Leo nardo
Drew. opening tn late Janual) tn the
L1ghtwel l Glery

Freah paint
Art~

Satoru Tak.abu h i: Dumplng SlghtLancbcapeJL,udxtlpe. Takahashi was
born in Japan and liveJ in New York
City. University An Gallery, Center for
the Arts. Nonh Campus. 4-7 p.m. Free .
Gallery hours Wednesday lhrough Saturday. 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m., Sunday Noon-S
p.m. Through March 22.

....,........,_or

Llatib to StabUJxatloa Stabilized
Bubbles in tbc: Body, Hugh D. Van
Liew, Ph.D., and Soumya Raychandhuri.
108 Shennan. South Campus. 4 p.m.

An exhibit or 1994 compc11110n w1nn&lt;: ~
rrom the National lnsiiiUte ror Arch!IC"C·
tun I EducatiOn IS on \ ' ICW through Dcc
8 m James Dyeu EAh iblllon Hall. JJS
Haye~ Hall . South Campus Admi ss 1on I!&gt;
fre e. Exh1bition hours are Monday
through Friday. 9 a.m -S p m

New paintmgs and drawtng ~ b) Walter
Prochowmk wtll bl: o n vte~ Jan 22- Feb
13 in the An Dcpanment Gallery local~
tn the Center ro r the An~ . N0t1h Campus
1bt ShoW is presented on the OCCaSIOn or
Prochownilc's ~tiremcnt from the UB
Dept. or An. An opening reception is
scheduled Jan. 25. 5-8 p.m Gallery hours
are Tuesday, 10 a.m -5 p.m.: Wednesday
through Friday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; and Sat ·
urday, II a.m.-8 p.m. AdmiSSIOn is rree .

c:..-.-to•c-1._,_
,_
Look ror " Perfect World"" in late January

--

Ttacbinc Hospital Nurv Practilio ntr
(SL-4)-Student Health Center, Postmg
JtP-5032. Diredor or lnve'npmenl
(MP· lB) -Ortice of Vice President ror
Advuncement &amp; Development, Posting
ltP-SG42. Instructional Sup port SPf""
e.iaHs t (SL-4)-School or Engineering and
Applied Sciences. Computer Services
Group. Posting IP-5049. Lead Prognmmer Analyst (SL-3) -Compuling &amp;:
lnfonnation Technology, Posting
ltP· 5050. Senior ProJnmmer An•lysl

(SL4}-Compuung &amp; lnrormalion Tech·
nology. Pos1ing NP-5051 . Stall' Associa te (SL-4; Internal Promotional Opportunity)·Educational Opponunity
Center. Posting IIP-5052. Lead Pro-grammer Analyst (SL-3; lntemal Pro-motional Opportunity) -Computing &amp;
lnrormation Technology. Posting IP-.5053

FIICUity
Assistant Prornsor -Medtc me. Posung
JtF-4 120. Assistant Professor-Electrical
and Computer Engineering. Posting
ltF-5062. Assistant Proressor-Electrical
and Computer linginecring. Post1ng
•F-5063 . Assistant/Associate ProfessorElectrical and Computer Engineering.
Posting lff-5064. Adjunct Assistant/Adjunct A.uodate ProfHSOr (part-lime
position)-Eiectrical and Computer Engi neering. Posting ltF-5065. Assistant Professor -Medicme. Pos1ing lff-5066 As·
sista ntJAssocia tC' Professor-Neurosur·
gery , Posung lrF-5067 Asslstant Profn sor-Medtc me. Posting lfF-5068 . A.ssistant/Associate Prortssor -Med•c•ne.
Poslmg NF-5069 Assistant Professor·
Mechanu:al and Aerospace Enganeenng.
Pos11ng lll'f-5070 A.."sislanl Profl'SSOr
Mechanu:al and Aerospac-e Engm~nn g .
Post1ng lliF-5071 As&lt;iista nt Proressor
(two positions availa ble)-Economlc:o.
Posting •F-507.! lnst ruetor/A.ssistant
P ro rtssor· An~s lhcs • o log y. Po!&gt;llnt;
li F-507J lnstrur to rfAssista nl Prore... so r - An e~ th eslology , Posting JtF-507J
Professor/Chairman-Ped!atncs. Po~11ng
fiF-5075 C linical Assistant/Clinical As·
sociatr ProfHsor-Famd) M ed1nn~ .
Post mg iii'F-507b Assistant/A..,soci111l'/
Fu ll Professor· Utochenustl") . Po,ung
lrF-5077

Re ...rch
Project Staff Associalt-· lk'\'lopm('nl
Postmg IR -95090 CH-rt 1-Struclural U1
ology lmuali\'C. PD"tmg lrR -95 11 7 Prognmmer Analyst -O:cupattOnal 'The111py.
Posting lrR-95 I t9 Principal Resean·h
Scienti.~ - Med! ctnc. Posung lrR -951 20

N.....C ........tHive Cluolfled Civil
Servlc•
Janitor (SG~7) -Um ,·enuy Resukncc
Halls. Lmc lf.alO 18

To obtain mort' mfonnutwn on JObs
l1stt'd abo~·C'. contact Pusonnt'l SC'n•tcC's.
104 Crofts Hull.

�8

~.,.~

--

Campus. 2 one! 8 p.m. SS, SIO.
U ll !iompMM t:a.able, Ed·
wan! Yodzinski, c:oad41&lt;1or. Slce.
North Campus. 3 p.m. Free.

-

Bu.lla vs. CoraelL AJumni Arena.
North Campus. 7:30 p.m .

S ludlowub, Lynne Kunhiel
Fonnlto and Tom Rllabalt, directors. Dances by faculty and advanced studenu. Rcbe&amp;raal Wortshop Theatre, Center for the Arts.

Nonll Campus. 8 p.m. $3 .
MMIIIc

A sign, 'Musicians at Play,· marks the site of Vermont's
Marlboro Music Festival. An ensemble of Marlboro muSICians comes to UB Dec t 2 to perform in Slee Hall.

J
I

---

EnYI-~-..,

-

Nnnh Campus. 9 a.m.· S p.m

....

BloloCJCIII Selene••
Holt or Phosphatidylinositol·

"v«ific Phos pholipase: C in Cell
Signaling, Dr. Randall Shonridge.
11-1 Hochs!elter. Nonh Campus
J p.m.

Mulllc

Mathe-.- COI'-Iu•
The Resolulion of a Hartman is
Conjttlurt, Prof. Jin-Vi Cai. 103
Diefendorf. South Campus. 4 p.m.

Ph_ca_l,...
Renal Adaplalion to Altered Di·
l'hlry Sulfate in Rat.s, Kazuko
Sugowa. 508 Cooke. No nh Campus. 4 p.m.

Statlatlcs Col'-lum
Lat"~t-Sam plt Optimality of
Statistkll Tests, Prof. W J . Hall ,
Univ. of Rochester. 244 Cary.
Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.

Jazz
UB Jan Combo, Louis Marino,
director. Baird. Nonh Campus.
8 p.m. Free .

M•lllcEiec:tra. Play by Euripides: Aaron
Cabell directs, with choreography
by Tressa Ooman Crehan, music
by Raben Chumbley. Orama1be1Ure, Center for the Arts. North
Campus . 8 p.m. $5 , $10.

:J
Pediatric-~~-­
New Drup for Trulmmt of Cl
Dlsorden, Kalherine Gaines,
M.D. Kinch Auditorium,
Children 's Hospital. 8 a.m.

-··w--.,

Update of Drup of Abuse: Rr~rnl T~nds. Michael Nerney.
Sponsored by Institute fo r Addicuo nll Studies and Training. Center
fo r To morrow. Nonh Campus. 9
a.m.-4:30p.m. $60. To register.
~all 645-6140.

PoyclllatrJ-Diffe~ndalini Orpnk: from

Non..()rganic Conditions Followlna Acquired Brain lajury,
Nathan Zasler, M.D., National
NeuJ9Rehabilitation Consortium,
Inc .. Richmond, Virginia. Auditonum. Rehabilitation Building,

JefTny Mark Siskind, Univ . of
Toronto. 218 Norton. No nh Cam·
pus . 3 p.m.

--Envh·-al

~-rlnll

Chlorine Ban Issues, EES Graduate Students. 140 Keller. Nonh
Campus . 3 p.m. Groduate Onenta tion a nd De:''elo pment Seminar.

Philosophy

Col._....

KantJan ld~ab or RUJOn and
Rawls' Law of PeopiH, To m
McCa rthy, Northwestern Univ.
684 Baldy. North Campus. 3 p.m.

C-.tly C:OUO.Iua
Mosak Tilio&amp;lo Molecular Dimensions: A Cbaiakal Approach to NanostruduraJ Tbio
Films, Prof. Gregory S. Ferguson.
Lehigh Univ. 215 Natural Sci ences. Nonh Campus . 4 p.m.

-·
-

Royals va. HamplOo Unlv.
Alumni Arena. Nonh Campus.
7:30p.m.

S tudiowerb, Lynne Kurdziel
Formato and Tom Ralabate, directon. Dances by faculty and adv•nced studc:nts. Rehearsal Workshop lllc:atrc, Center for the Ans .
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. $3.

_

MMIIIc
UB Cbolr, Haniet Simons. conductor. Slee. Nonh Campus . 8
p.m. $3. '1'ndit.ional Voices"music based on folk and popular
song.

.....

Eltctra.. Play by Euripides; Aaron
Cabell directs, with choreography
by Tressa Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert Chumbley. Drama Theatre. Center for the Arts. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10.

..... ,_.

Elertra. Play by Euripides; Aaron
Cabell directs, with· choreography
by Trcssa Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert Chumbley. Onma Theatre, Center for the Arts. North

U ll C ........ and UB Wlad !!a-ble, Harriet Simons and Sarah
L. McKoiD, c:ooductora. Slee.
Nonll Campus. 8 p.m. $3. ~
gram iocludel Bruckner's Mw io

T..._, Leo Tseoa. SOl
Cooke. North Campua. 4 p.m.

_._,

Flul St.deM SINrw. Film, video,
di&amp;ital fS1, documentary. Screen~
ina Room. Center for the Ani.

North Compus. 7 p.m. " -·

lloyolo.,., Morpll Sloto. Alumni
Arena. Nonll Campus_ 6 p.m.

. ....... v........... Stato.
Alumni Arena. Nonll Compus.
8:1Sp.m.

n.e Veer .. llnirw, F. Bruder

S~apleton., M.D. JCjach Auditorium, Chiklml's Hospital. 8 a.m.

,

~---:

ln&gt;alc: Utonc:y-ls""' Book
Dead! Dennis Mite. Mike Kibby.
Jim Collins. 209 B1ldy. North
Campus. Noon- I p.m. Presented

...

by the Center for Educational
Resources and Technoloaies.

!

DNA Ad&lt;IDoU ood Mutolloo
Spedn .. Tooloto Study

~.Aieunclo&lt;

.....

Maccubbin, Ph.D. 125 CFS Addition. South Campus. 8:30a.m.

Me~aiab Siq-ba, Charles Peltt.
conduc.tor. Here's your chance to
siag " KaUellujah!" Slee. North
Campus. 2 p.m. Free.

Flute Cboir-Holiday Conc:ut.
EmerituJ Center's monthly meeting: board meets at I p.m. South
Lounge, Goodyeu. South Campus. 2 p.m. Free.

MMIIIc

J ewish Community Center's
SOtb Anniverury Cooetrt,
Amherst Saxophone: Quanet. with
Stephen Manes. piano. Program
includes two pieces by Allen
Sigel-the premiere of 1be Four
Nations Suite" (the four nations
arc France. Spain, lsnel, and
Hungary). and "Shted Echoes."
Jewish Co mmunity Center, 2640
N. Forest Rd .. Getzville . 7 p.m.
$5, $6, $ 10. $12, $18.

-

S tbdiowerks, Lynne Kurdziel
Fo rmato and Tom Ralabate, directors. Dances by faculty and advanced students. Rehearsal Workshop Theatre, Center for the Arts.
Nonh Campus . 8 p.m. $3 .

.....

...

--oiNIInto

E Minor.

Puel DllcuJaloa: Priat VI. Eke·

~.. k i -

COIIoqulu•

5:45 p.m. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 6:30p.m.

curr-

MMIIIc

- --

----- -.... .. _
ber at

Main Conference Room. Mercy
Hospital. 8:30 a.m.

OIJ' Perspectivt on Sub!tanet
U.w and AbuJe, Michael Windle.
Ph.D. 102 1 M1in. I :30 p.m. Free
Sponsored by the Research lnsli ·
tute on Addictio ns.

A DevelopmentaJ hycbopatboi-

•...,...............

UDIUd Uolwnlty Prof-.,
Roccptioa II S: IS p.m.. buffel cfu&gt;-

. _ . , . . _ for Eooplrio TnoiIHIIl. Roben Welliver, M .D.

Bui'Wo PbilbanDOaic: Orc.bestn. Max.imiano Valdes. music director, with Lily a Zilberstein. pi ·
ano. Program: Roy Harris' .
Symphony No. 3: Rachmaninofr s
Piano Conct'no No. J: Mussora·
sky's .. Pictures ot an Exhibition "
(an arn.ngement by Leonard
Slatkin. using orchestntions by
Ravel and o thers). Mainstage,
Center fo r the Aru. North Cam·
pus. 2:30 p.m. S 17. $30, $36.

lilAW ork b y tlUdcnlS In the Dept ur
Arl A tnum, Cen1er for lht: Ans

8 p.m. Free.

Buffalo Psychiatric Center. 10:30

Nirl&amp;ara River Toxk.s Management , Gerry Miko l. NYS Dept. of
Environmemal Conservalio n. 140
Keller Nonh Campus. II a.m.

Studtn ._ft.rt Work ror Salt.

Maektrom Percusa:ioD Easaabk. Slee. North Campus .

,..._.n, ...._u

UB Womea'1 Cboir, Patricia
O'Toole, conductor. Slee. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

-..

FJec:tra. Play by Euripides; Aaron
C.bell dimcu. with choreography
by Trc:ssa Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert Chumbley. Drama Theatre, Center for ttw:' Arts . Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. $5.$10.

Mu.skians from Marlboro.
String sextet. oboe. and pi1n0;
works by Moz.an. Brahms,
DvOBk . Sloe. Nonh Campus. 8
p.m . $4, SS. $8. SIO. Ct&gt;sponsored by Buffalo Ownber Music
Society.

-·w--..

Uade:ntaDdlag the Court Sy.tem: N~ Dtrtdioas for NoaViolout Drva
Jonathan Cou&amp;hlan. Sponsored by
Institute for Addictions Studies
and Tn.inina. Center for Tomorrow. Nonh Campus. 9 a.m.-4:30
p.m. $30. To reaister. Clll645·

Off....._

6140.
l"'oppoooo
- Bubbla and
O.CO.pnosloa

AJe, Claes Lundgren. M.D. 108
Sherman. South Campus. 4 p.m.

-·body

Se-lected Docu~H-ntary Work,
Sa&lt;&gt;h Elder. Wod: by ldvanced .
students. Screening Room. Center
for the Arts. North Campus.
7 p.m. Free.

_

.. p_ _

Dr. C. Glma Bq.ley. Walter and
Eliz.a Halllnst.itute, Melbourne.
RPCI. Elm and Carlton.
I 2:30p.m.

-

IJidoor Track Med.. Alumni
Arena. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

a.-a: CIMIIIca Uv•

Mary Ar1m.ann. cello, aDd

soe~e~w-w--.,

W........ witlolt....... land
Maadoled Cll••.., 0.. Todd
Habberf.eld. Sponsored by Social
Work Continuing Education.
Oaemen College, 4380 Main St ..
Amherst. 8:45 a.m.-3 :30p.m. S55 ;
students $30. To register. call

645·6140.

•luln•IP'h) .......,
Molecular Mec.lw:lbla of
Rhodopsin ~Uon &amp; Rrmwry ln Retlnal Rod Outer
SqtDeats. D. Pepperburg. Univ.
of Illinois. Chicago. 1348 Farber.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

l"'oppoooo
Pbysiolopcaland
..............
....... lt......lioeolCa ~ Acti­

VII&amp;ed K· Cbaa~aels, Daniel
Devor. Ph.D. 108 Sherman. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

Mid&amp;KIICida. piaao. Allen Recital Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m.
Free. Conccru arc taped for
broadcast on WBFO 88.7 FM the
followin&amp; Sunday at 4 p.m.

-

UBuft'alo Sympboay, Charles
Peltz.. conductor. Slee. Non.h
Campus. 8 p.m. $3. Prugram includes Symphony No. I in C
Minor of Brahms.

-·----

Bulk YL UMBC. AJur:nni Arena
Natatorium. North Campus.. 4 p.m.

-..__ ....... --............
------·....................... -

Royall vs. CbJt.a&amp;o State. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. 6 p.m.
Bulls vs. Cllk:qo Statt.. Alumni

R oyals-vs. NOI"tbenllowa. Hilbetl Con.,.. HambwJ. 7:30p.m.

-

~_,~

C wnut S&amp;vclie. a. Akobol aDd

Conury Arla'y m--, 0..
Mawiz.io Trevisan. I 08 Sherman.
South Campus. 8 a.m.

Arena. Nonb Campus. 8: 15p.m.

......_.

--·-

-.....--.~--

·-;::=·'=t

df

...............

R oyall vs. Northusta"D lWDols.
Alumni Arena.. North Campus.
6p.m.

Continued on page 7

�Submitted to
The Honorable George E. Pataki
Governor of the State of New York

The Honorable .Joseph L Bruno
Temporary President and Majority Leader of the New York State Senate

The Honorable Sheldon Silver
Speaker of the New York Stale Assembly

The Board of Trustees of State Uni versity of Ne- York

PREFACE
Rethinking SUNY is respectfully submitted by the State University Board of Trustees in response to a call from the New
York State Legislature requesting a
.. multi-year, comprehensive, systemwide
plan to increase cost efficiency ... As appointed overseers of the Stale University
of New York, the Board of Trustees has a
continuing responsibility to assess its use
of the state's investment and to seek posilive changes to ensure that we are delivering the most effective services to the taxpayers and the students of the State University of New York.
Since its fo unding in 1948, the State
University of New York has offered intellectual and cultural growth to millions of
citizens who otherwise would not have received it. That farsighted investment in

ourselves and in our co11ective future has
been repaid many times over in a better
'

educated, more productive citizenry. Consislenl with that trndition of almost fifty
years, the Stale University' s major objective remains public access to high-quality
education. To achieve that goal in a climate of constrained resources, it will be
necessary to become more self-sufficient
and CIJtrepreneurial, more focused, and
more creative. We will need greater man-

agement autonomy to do so.
Underlying Rethinking SUNY is the
theme of increasing efficiency by empowering campuses to directly manage more of
their academic and financial affairs and by
eliminating current disincentives to the
prudent usc of campus and system resources. As a result, campuses will have
greater ability tO achieve efficiencies of
operation and to focus on academic qual w
it y. With new management delegation

comes also greater campus responsibility
and accountability.
The Board has endeavored to meet the
legislative charge clearly and directly,
mindful of the Legislature's concern that
the plan be developed in pursuit of the
"highest quality and broadest possible access consistent with the State University
mission." (Appendi x A.) Four Board commiuees carried out !he Rethinking SUNY
review in full consultation with the univerw
sity community. (Appendix B.) This report
outlines subject areas and broad directions
that will guide SUNY in the years ahead.
As a comprehensive multiwyear
systemwide plan, the recommendations
contained in Rethinking SUNY are anticipated to lead to cost savings beginning in
1996-97 and growing in the ensuing years.
However, this multi-year report does not
enumerate anticipated 1996-97 savings;
rather, it presents the means whereby such
savings might be achieved. Specific estiw
mates of cost savings wil1 be included in
subsequent budget requests.

tury and by the public demand for the
most effective use of tax dollars. We endorse the foiJowing seven propositions:
• The State University exists to provide
access to educational services of the high est quality.
• Increased differenti:nion of campuses
is fundamental to realizing the synergies
achievable as a system.
• Undergraduate education is o ur high est priority.
• Graduate, professional. and research
programs are essential to the mission of
the State University and to the economic
vitality of New York.
• Associate. baccalaureate, and gradu ate programs all play a vital role in work
force development and the economic
health of New York State.
• Clearer academic standards and better means for measuring performance are
central to increasing accountability .
• The Board of Trustees has a respon sibility to plan, prioritize. and allocate re sources to programs and campuses.

MISSION AND
VISION

Academic Specialization. The

In 1985, the Legislature approved a restatement of the State University mission
that proclaimed SUNY should provide
"educational services of the highest qual ity, with the broadest possible access, fully
representative of all segments of the population in a complete range of academic,
professiona1, and vocational postsecondary
programs." (Appendix C.)
The Board of Trustees reaffirms its
commiunent to SUNY's legislatively arw
ticulated mission and will continue to reexamine the State University in light of
challenges posed by the twenty-first cen-

State University is now engaged in a wide ranging review of its degree programs at
the associate, baccalaureate, master's, and
doctoral levels. The objective of thereview is to eliminate programs of question able quality as well as unnecessarily dupli cative programs. especially those with low
enrollment and high costs. Distance learn.
ing technologies. which will require new
investment, will be employed in efficiently
maintaining the greatest possible access to
degree programs.
Part of the process of refining the distinctiveness of campus and sector missions

STRUCTURE

DECEMBER 1, 1995

will be a thorough review of admissi ons
policies and procedures at the state-operated campuses. with the aim of maximizing the ability of students to meet high
academic standards with less required
remediation .
Learning Productivity and Time

to Degree. The Governor and Legislature have asked that the State University examine learning productivity and time to degree. Nationally. 45 percent of srudenl5
graduate from baccalaureate programs
within six years. The State University exceeds this average. with 60 percent of its
students earning degrees within this time.
We will develop options to help shorten
time to degree. It will be Board policy for
campuses to ensure that courses are available so that. with appropriate planning. students are able to complete their programs of
academic study within four years.
Many students are supported by the state
in earning credits that far exceed their degree requirement. Given limited state re·
sources. we will consider a policy that
would charge full cost tuition for llOn-transfer resident students in fullwtime baccalaun:·
ate programs unnecessarily enrolled for
more than nine semesters and accumulating
more than 140 semester credits.
We will develop programs which would
encourage qualified high school juniors
and seniors to cam college credits. As
more entering studcnls come to SUNY
having already earned college credits,
more students will be likely to complete
degree programs in less time and with
more advanced work in their programs. In
addition. the State Uni versity will strongly
encourage the schools to ensure that their
graduates are provided with the academic
skills and knowledge requi site for collegelevel work .

�Shortenir.g time to degree will require
increased innovation in instruction. An aggressive commitment to on-campus instructional technology can have many benefit s, such as greater fle xibilit y for students in the pace of instruction; multiple
modes of delivery of course content: and
all ocation of more faculty time to direct
st udent cont act.
Community Colleges . The Board
recognizes that communit y colleges are viral and effic ient access points to the University as well as important work force
training facilities . The Board will take appropriate acti ons to ensure:
• That commu nity colleges be identified and operated as centers of exce llence
for lower divi sion education.
• That community colleges co ntinu e as
centers for work force training.
• The ''seamless" transfer of academically qualified community college gradu ates as third-year students at state-operated
campu ses, with appropriate credit for prior
work..
In light of the special access mission
entrusted to community colleges, we rec o mmend that market forces interpreted by
the individual campuses, be a detennining
factor for setting tuiri on rates and that the
tuition cap for community colleges sho uld
not exceed the level for the lowest state- operated associate degree. Maintenance of
adequate financial aid for both full - and
pan-time students must be avai lable in
amounts large enough. for long enough
durations. and with an emphasis on grants.
as opposed to loans.
It is important for the economic health
of the state that community colleges be
key players in work force development.
SUNY will establish statewide plans for
work fo rce development and for Tech Prep
and School-to-Work initiatives, which will
reduce the number of underprepared stu dents e ntering higher education and the
work force . In addition , th e co mmunity
colleges will collaborate with high
schools. BOCES . and the business community to meet regional needs for specialized technical programs.
A working group of community college
presidents is preparing a position paper on
the role of community colleges in the State
University system. Its report will be presented to the State University Board of
Trustees early in 1996.
Hospitals. SUNY has three University
Hospitals, at the Health Science Centers at
Brooklyn and Syracuse and at the University Center at Stony Brook. As stale-operated units. they lack the freedom to compete in today's highly competitive and rapidly changing health-care marketplace.
(Appendix D.) To survive. they must be
granted new management flexibility .
Two independenl national accounting
firms reviewed the financial status of the
University Hospitals at Brooklyn and
Syracuse. Given widely accepted assumptions about the direction of Medicare and
Medicaid, present market activities, and
the eventual elimination of state subsidies.

they concluded that as cum:ntly configured each insti1ution will continue to experience ever-increasing fi.IUU\ciallosses. By
the year 2000, the Brooklyn and Syracuse
hospitals wiU experience combined annual
operating losses of $73 million.
We considered several options to preserve these hospitals, including devolution
to a public benefit corporation or devolu tion to a not-for-profitJ 50 I (c)(3)] corporation. We believe that the University Hospitals at Brooklyn and Syracuse should be
devolved as soon as practical into locally
controlled, voluntary, not-for-profit corporations. This structure will best allow the
hospitals the freedom to respond to local
circumstances and market conditions and
at the same time to remain closely affili ated with our Schools of Medicine.
With regard to the University Hospital
at Stony Brook, a similar external financial
review is being conducted. Pending the
o utcome of that review, the Board initially
recommends that Stony Brook participate
in legislation to grant il the management
flexibility and authority needed to become
a partner in a regional health care delivery
network of Suffolk County providers.
Strategic Alliances. The SUNY system is made up of many relatively small
campuses. This structure has the advantages of local access for students (especially for place-bound students), of regional employment, and of widely distributed economic impact across the state.
Unfortunately, it is also financially inefficient due to the cost of maintaining and
operating a widely di stributed physical
plant and because faculty and professional
employees of smaller campuses lack the
economies of scale inherent in large slu dent bodies.
The challenge is to make these units
more efficient. To do so. the State University is encouraging strategic alliances that
will link together some of these smaller
campuses as well as develop partnerships
with the private sector. The pilot project
will potentially include the upstate Colleges of Technology as well as the Institute of Technology at Utica/Rome. We
will work with these campuses to mini mize the need for redundant administrative
services. An initial investment will be
needed in the assessment of educational
needs and the acquisition of technologies
to facilitate transmission of administrative
and academic infonnation.
Statutory Collages. The Statutory
Colleges include the College of Ceramics
at Alfred University and the Colleges of
Veterinary Medicine, Agriculture and Life
Science. Human Ecology, and Industrial
and Labor Relations at Cornell University.
Funds allocated to these units are based
on allocation methods different from those
for SUNY 's state-operated campuses.
When the majority of funding for all units
came from state tax dollars , a sustainable
funding pattern emerged. However, the
dramatic increase in reliance on tuition at
the state-operated campuses has adversely

affected that pattern. While we recognize
the quality of the programs at the Statutory
Colleges, some of which are unique and
involve special missions, it remains a fact
that the percentage of the SUNY state appropriation which is dedicated to the
Statutory Colleges on a "pass-through" basis has increased significantly in recent
years; conversely, the percentage of that
appropriation which remains with the
state-operated campuses has declined. To
illustrate the problem, in 1988 tax dollars
for State University' s core operating budget were $1.18 billion, with statutory colleges receiving $108.4 million. By 1995
the numbers were $733.1 million and $118
million, respectively. The meaning and
implications of these numbers are viewed
differently by the Board and Cornell. We
have initiated discussions with Cornell
University, and will shortly do so with
Alfred, in order to clarify the issue and to
work toward financial solutions which are
sustainable in the operating and capital
budgets of both the state-operated and the
statutory campuses.

OPERATIONS
Systam Administration . The
Board has charged the chancellor and system officers to examine system administration in the belief that it can be made
smaller and more efficient. Last winter,
Chancellor Thomas A. Bartlett constituted
an internal working group to make recommendations as to how the system office
might best be changed. The Board also
formed a task force of representatives of
each campus sector to exami ne an aspects
of system administration and to make independent recommendations for its
downsizing and restructuring.
These two separate, ongo ing reviews
point toward a more focused system office
which is more responsible for policy and
monitoring educational resul ts than for
processing and which is less controlling of
campus operations. The Board of Trustees
and system administration are commitred
to the goal of this restructuring and to
completing a concomitant 30 percent reduction in both state and non-state supported system office ~itions within the
next two years.
Systemwide Administrative
Productivity. In rethinking SUNY 's
operations, the BOard's primary goal was
the redesign of administrative processes to
maximize operating efficiency at system
and campus leve ls. We want to make it
possible for campus presidents and their
colleagues to operate more efficiently and
to reinvest the savings on their campuses
to achieve higher quality. Underpinning
this effort are four guiding principles: reduced monitoring of routine decisions and
transactions; increased management flexibility; increased cooperation among all
units; and a consistent focus· on enhanced
academic quality and student achievement.
(Appendix E.)
The Board believes that the State

University's operational functions should
be reorganized to achieve the foUowing:
• Decentralization of processes and
functions that do not benefit from central
review or suppon.
• Elimination of processing and approvals that do oot add value.
• Recognition that campus operating
environments properly vary according to
size, complexity, and campus need.
• Sharing of support services among
campuses, where cost-effective without
diminution of quality.
To achieve these objectives, it is necessary for the State University to have the
following :
• Changes in policy, law, and procedures that inhibit effective management.
• A consolidated fund that will allow
the State University to allocate, inter·
change, and spend appropriations as
needed.
• Allowing campuses to carry forward
operational surpluses from year to year so
that they can plan on a multi -year basis
and can reinvest savings for academic
quality.
• Simplified and reorganized review
and approval processes of the State UniveBil}' by other state agencies.
• Support for, and state funding of,
critical investments in technology and process redesign.
• Continuation of quality assurance efforts to enhance State University's services.
The opportunities for savings outlined
here are dependent on realization of new
operating freedoms.
Increased Teaching Productlv·
ity. The Legislaiure has specifically asked
that the State University examine faculty
producti vity as part of this report. Given
diminishing resources , we believe that
State University faculty should be at least
as productive as their national counter- ·
parts. In most respects our faculty already
meet that goal; they teach as many courses
as their .national counterpans and spend as
many or more hours in the classroom. But
when measured by student contact/credit
hours, i.e., the number of students each
faculty member has in his or her classes.
SUNY faculty are not as productiye.
The Board recognizes that measures of
academic productivity must be qualitative
as well as quantitative; that is to say, we
must be as concerned about the quality of
our students' educational experience as
about quantitative comparisons. The State
University will consider a plan which
would internally reallocate a portion of its
campus budgets into a pool to reward campuses for increased faculty productivity. A
plan for the allocation of these incentive
monies will be developed in consultation
with campus presidents and presented to
the Board. We also intend to encourage
SUNY faculty and staff to explore innovative ways of teaching that will help
achieve new levels of quantitative and
qualitative productivity.

�Academic and Admlnla1:ra1:1ve
Technology. Improv ing the techno logy
infraslructure will be critical to the State
Uni versity's success in increasing aca·
demi c and administrative pnxluctivity.
Technology can penn it greater sharing of
both academic and administrative resources and provide a cost-effective way
to expand statewide access to SUNY's
programs and facilities. Technology will
not only enable us to opernte more effi.
cienlly, it can also increase facu lty and
learni ng productivity. We arc in the age of
in formation; our future depends upon our
hav ing the technology necessary to use
thi s information. If properl y implemented,
rerum on investment, both on money
saved and q uality enhanced, will be significant:
• Streamlined admini strative support
systems.
• Increased sharing/exchange of
courses across ca mpu ses.
• Enhanoed access for pl ace-bound students.

• Increased avai lability of state-of-thean library and information se rvices among
puses.
Improved learni ng productjvity and
short ned time-to-degree.
To cco mpli sh the above, the Board
wi ll prejiiire and thoroughly vel a multi year technology investment plan in support of its academi c and administrati ve
productivity objectives.

OPERATING
REVENUE AND
TUITION
Meaningful access arises out of the covenant among taxpayers, students, and their
fa milies that all share a benefit from and a
responsibility for the cost of an affordable
public higher education. Underpinning ac cess has been affordable tuition and the
state and nation' s historic support of financial aid programs. including both grnnl and
loan progrnms serving stude~ts and their
fa milies. At present, 73 percent of all
SUNY students receive some fonn o f fi -

nancial aid. To preserve access, the Board
of Trustees will continue to support affo rdable tuition and will seek adequate
funding of state and federal financial aid
programs. including the state's Tuitiort Assistance Program.
State University tuiti on levels for undergrnduate and grnduate students have in creased by 58 percent since 1992. Such

dramatic increases make financial plan ning difficult for students and their fami li es. A better approach is to increase tuition based on a gradual, predictable basis.
We believe that the State University must
strive for a predictable balance among tu ition increases, financial· aid, and tax dollar
support, in order to protect both access and
the quality of academic programs. Tuition
increases should take into account. among
other things, a range of cost indexes (including, for example, the Higher Education Price Index and the Tuition Price In-

dex) as well as the cost of providing educational services. The University should
always consider the availability of grants/
loans wben establishi ng new tu ition and
fees.
SUNY's tuition an'd fees at the baccalaureate level are now approaching the
northeastern average of $4,015; at the doctoral campuses, SUNY tuition is below
that of other institutions in the nOrtheast.
Most other public higher education systems in the United States have the authority to set differential rates of tuition; we
recommend that the State University be
given the same authority. Differential tuition would be established by the Board
using rates that better reflect djfferences in
cost, support campus flex ibility, and allow
the Board to address University-wide priorities and needs 1, including necessary student financial aid. The Board will determine what portion of differential tuition
will remain at the campuses; it will also
mandate that some portion of retained differential tuition be devoted to financial
aid.
Entr e preneuria l R evenues. The
Un ivers ity must become more entrepreneurial and se lf-sufficient. ln a time of rising costs and declining state tax dollars,
the Board fully recognizes and supports
State University' s need to increase its levels of non-state funding. To bui ld on and
ex pand these efforts, the Board recommends that system administration and the
campuses identify appropri ate Jong-tenn
revenue goal s. The Board will ask that
some portion of the entrepreneurial rev enues generated by campuses be used lO
support financial aid.
As noted earlier, o ther en trepreneurial
opportunities exist that would require new
statutory flexibi lity to enable the State
Un iversity to pursue the sale or lease of
ca mpus properties, facilities rental. enhancement of self-supporting operations
and partnerships, impositio n of fees and
re nts. and contracting of services. The
Board of Trustees will establish appropri ate guidelines.
Sponsored programs. i.e., grnnt and
contract income. directly benefit New
York' s economy by providing a maj or infusion of new capital for the state; by employing more than 8,000 indi viduals in research-related non-state jobs; by providing
badly needed training monies; and ·by providing the critical base on which New
York can build high-tech industries. Campuses will be encouraged to increase efforts to attract external fundin g.
'71t~ r~t~ntion
compus~s

or infHlr1) by

th~

'I'I'Ould not cnat~ n~'l'l' funds or r~li~ve

th ~

of tuition (in

whol~

Board of its tasl of d~te,.,., :ning prloritin Among

other things, tlu Board will slillnud to ut Jomr tu ition ceiling for tJtl campiU~J tmdlor sectorJ in combintJtion wilh an esttJblislud ~n rollmrnt tQrgetlronge
in order to ensur~ acuss tJNJ to provid~ for elfe~tivt'

and effici~nt ctJmpu.r plmtning.

CONCLUSION

APPENDIX B

We have presented a comprehensive,
multi -year systemwide plan for the State
Universi ty which is ambitious and farreaching. It acknowledges the present climate of constrained financial resources
while auempting to minimize its negative
impact on access and quality. However.
working together with the Governor and
the Legislature:

The Rethinking SUNY
Process

• We can have campuses with the autonomy to become all that they can be.
with a more efficient and re sponsive system admini stration.
• We can achieve efficiencies in instructional delivery and administrative
transactions while preserving affordable.
quality higher education for o ur students.
• We can overcome some of the inefficiencies of smal l ca mpuses and give them
the opportun ity to serve as intellectual resources and imponant eco nomic engines
for local co mmunities and our sla te.
• We can preserve the exce llence of
our hospitals. They can provide beater services to thei r comm un ities in a more costeffective manner, but only if they have the
freedom they need to compete in a changing health-care env ironment.
Responding to your charge, we are rethinking SUNY. We are charting a direction toward a more efficien t and responsive State University of New York .

APPENDIX A
The Charge to the
State University o f
Ne-York
(Chapter 82. Laws of 1995)

§135. Notwithstand ing any prov ision of
law to the contrary. the board of trustees of
the State University of New York shall deve lop a multi-year. comprehensive.
systemwide plan to increase cost effi.
ciency in the continuing pursuit of the
highes t quaHty and broadest poss ibl e access consistent with the State Uni versi ty
mission. Such plan shall be submitted no
later than December I. 1995 to the governor, the speaker of the asse mbl y. and the
temporary president of the se nate. In developing such plan. the trustees shall solicit the participation and contribution of
the university commu nity in its entirety
and consider ways to:
(a) enhance the application of technology for acade mic and administrative purposes;
(b) increase learning productivity, including reducing time to program compl etion ;
(c) increase faculty productiviry: and
(d ) enhance the overnll quality of degrees offeri ngs by stre ngthening academ ic
speciali zation.

Four Board comminees carried out the Rethinking SUNY review: Mi ssion and Vi sion; Structure ; Operations: and Operating
Revenue and Tuiti on. A Steering Commit lee chaired by Board of Trustees Chairman
Frederic V. Salerno coordinated the process.
Consistent wi th the legis lative charge.
the wider University community was involved in the review process. Faculty re sponded to the ca ll to make;: known their
views through the faculty gove rn ance bod ies. The Board solicited the views of UUP.
SUNY 's faculty unio n. and consulted with
studems and the student governance bodies. A SUNY president served as a resource to each of the four committees. The
process also included broad panicipation
by SUNY campus personnel. such as the
acade mic vice presidents, the vice presiden ts for student affairs, and the business
officers.
Discussion doc uments related to Rethinking SUNY were regularly se nt to major University constit uencies, and all the
com mittee meetings were he ld in open
forum .
Rethinking S UNY Planning
Committees

STEERING COMMITTEE
Frederic V. Salerno, Chair
Roderi ck G.W . Chu
Edward F. Cox
Thomas F. Egan
N. Theodore So mmer

Presidentia l Staffing
None
Vice Presidential Sta ffin g
None
MISSION/VISION COMM ITTEE
Roderick G.W. Chu , Chair ·
Cand&lt;Jce de Ru ssy
Arnold B. Gardner•
Diego Munoz
Nanc y H. Nielsen
Presidential Staffing
Willi am Messner (OrJnge CC)

Vice Presidential Staffin g
No ne
STRUCTURE COMMITT EE
Thomas F. Egan, Chair
Roderick G.W. Chu
Judith L. Duken
Erland E. Kai lboume ..
Edward S. Nelson
Presidential Staffing
Lo is DeAeur (Binghamton)
Vice Presidential Staffing
Thomas Leamer (Morrisville)
OPERATIONS COMMITTEE
Edward F. Cox. Chair
Candace de Russy
Arnold B. Gardner

�Miles Lasser•••
Edward S. Nelson
Presidential Staffing
Donald MacPhee (Fredonia)
Vice Presidential Staffing
Robert Wagner (U. Buffalo- Finance)
Aubrey Bonnet (Old Westbury-A VP)
Frederick Preston (S tony Brook-VP for
Student Affairs )

TUITION/REVENUE COMMITTEE
N. Theodore Sommer. Chair
Hazel Dukes
Pamela Jacobs
Diego Munoz
Harvey F. Wachsman
Presidential Staffing
Alice Chandler (New Paltz)
Vice Presidential Staffing
Ken Levison (Geneseo-V P Finance)
Thomas Ke lly (Binghamton-VP for External Affairs)

ation and dissemination of knowledge vital
fo r continued human, scientific, tecbno.logicaJ and economic advancement;
d. strengthens its educational and research programs in the health sciences
through the provision of high quality care
at its hospitals, clinics and related programs;
e. shares th~ expertise of the state university with the business, agricultural,
governmental, labor and nonprofit sectors
of the state through a program of public
service for the purpose of enhancing the
well-being of the people of the state of
New York and in protecting our environmental and marine resources;
f. promotes appropriate program articulation between its state-operated institutjons and its community colleges as well
as encourages regiona1 networks and cooperative relationshjps with other educational and cultural institutions for the purpose of better fulfilling its mission of education, research and service.,.

• Trwtu Cardnu will abo mak~ ruoi'I'&amp;JMndotions
to

th~

Board with

•• Tnutre

r~gard

Kailboum~

to stauuary call~ges.

has ~en asked to abo choir

tll r Board's efforts with regard to thr pilot project

'"'·olving thr

Coll~grs

of Technology.

••• Trwtu LAsser will also coordinote.
nudy of thr role of community

th~

Boord's

co llrg~s.

APPENDIXC
The Mission of State
University of NeVork
(Chapter 662, Laws of 1 986)
'The mj ssion of the state university system shall be to provide to the people of
New York educational services of the
highest quality, with the broadest possible
access, full y representative of all segments
of the population in a complete range of
academic. professional and vocational
postsecondary programs including such
~d~lio~al activities in pursuit of these obJeCt ives as are necessary or customary.
These services and activities shall be offered through a geographically di stributed
comprehensive system of diverse campuses which shall have differentiated and
designated missions designed to provide a
comprehensive program of higher education, to meet the needs of both traditional
and non-traditional students and to address
local, regional and state needs and goals.
In fu lfilling thi s mission, the state university shall exercise care to develop and
maintain a balance of its human and physical resources that:
a. recognizes the fundarnenllil role of its
responsibilities in undergraduate education
and provides a full range of graduate and
professional education that reflects the opportunity for individual choice and the
needs of society;
b. establishes tuition which most effectively promotes the university's access
goals;
c. encourages and facilitates basic and
applied research for the purpose of the ere-

APPENDIX D
~
Constraints on SUNY
Hospitals
Presently, SUNY's hospitals are severely
hampered by their inability to:
• Enter into contracts in a timely fashion.
• Participate in health-care networks.
• Contract with their employees (e.g ..
physicians) in response to the demand for
managed care.
• Maintain adequate cash reserves.
• Access capital.
• Participate in the Dormitory
Authority's equipment loan program.
• Independently purchase supplies and
equipment.
• Attract and maintain qualified personnel due to c ivil service restrictionS;.
• Pay the true cost of fringe benefits.
• Negotiate labor contracts and manage
labor issues at the local level.

APPENDIX E
Management
Flexibility
Reco~rnendatlons

Financial Management. The most
efficient way to operate SUNY is to place
management responsibility more firmly in
the hands of those responsible for delivery
of services. Such "responsibility center"
budgeting is an incentive-based approach
that will empower campus managers lo accomplish their missions more efficiently.
Two proposals are key: creation of a
consolidated fund that would allow SUNY
the freedom to allocate, interchange, and
speod appropriations as needed; and· the
ability to cany over appropriations beyond
the immediate fiscal year, which will enhance campus ability to plan for long-term
expenses.

Operations Management. We
propose streamlining contracting and purchqing to support timely and cost-effective use of operating funds. 1be University
should be able to procure goods and services independently and to enter into contracts without prior review and approval of
any other state agency. Purchasing would
be subject to broad guidelines established
by the Board of Trustees, with specific
guidelines being set at the campus level.
Personnel Management. SUNY
seeks regulatory relief from state rules and
procedures which constrict the efficient
and effective use of resources. The current
process regarding classified service positions is overly bureaucratic and inhibits effective use of personnel.
SUNY also seeks multi-year retirement
incentive legislation, geared to dates compatible with the academic calendar, which
would include the possibility of phased retirements and a benefit structure that may
encourage employees to retire before the
program expires.
Finally, we seek better ways to manage
the payroll, at present a paper-driven process. An automated system would enable
more flexibility and timeliness in processing transactions and enhance payroll accuracy.
Property and Facilities Management. Presently, campuses are unable to lease land to the private sector for
facilities development in support of Universiry activities. Allowing campuses to
do so do might cost-effectively enhance a
number of academic, research. and publicservice activities. In appropriate cases,
campuses might also need the ability to
sell land, facilities, or equipment not being
fully utilized.
Financing and managing the rehabilitation of residential faciHties is an unnecessttrily complex and costly process requiring extensive review and approval by
numerous state and system offices. Campuses should be granted new freedom in
managing these projects.
Finally, under state Finance Law, the
State University Construction Fund must
receive a certificate of approv.i.l of availability from the Division of the Budget for
each project initiated or bid under the
seven separate construction programs that
it adm.inisters on behalf of SUNY.
Providing one master certificate for the
fund's construction programs will help
control costs and provide the needed flexibility to undertake facilities projects in the
fastest possible time.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW
YORK BOARD OF TRUSTEES Frederic V. Salerno, B.S., M.B.A.,
Chairman (Rye)
Thomas F. Egan, A.B., J.D.,
Vice CluJirman (Rye)
Roderick G.W. Chu, B.S., M.B.A.
(New York City)
Edward F. Cox, B.A., J.D.
(New York City)
Candace de Russy, B.A .. M.A., Ph.D.
(BronxviUe)
Judith Lasber Duken. B.S .. M.S .. CAS.
(Plattsburgh)
Hazel Dukes, B.A.
(New York City)
Arnold B. Gardner, A.B.. LL.B.
(Buffalo)
Pamela R. Ja&lt;:Obs, B.A., M.A.
(Buffalo)
Erland E. Kailboume, A.A.S., Sc.D.
(Voorheesville)
Miles L. Lasser, A.B., LL.B., CPA.
(Jamestown)
Diego G. Munoz. Student Trustee
(Albany)
Edward S. Nelson, B.A., LL.B.
(Norwich)
Nancy H. Nielsen, A.B., M.S .. Ph.D.,M.D.
(Orchard Park)
N. Theodore Sommer, B.A., J.D.
(Binghamton)
Harvey F. Wachsman, B.A., MD., J.D.
(Upper Brookville)

STATE UNIVERSITY OF
NEW YORK SYSTEM
ADMINISTRATION
Thomas A. Bartlett, A.B.. M.A., Ph.D.
CluJncellor
Stepben L. Weber, B.A., Ph.D.
Interim Provost and Vice Chancellor for
Academic Affairs
William H. Anslow, B.A.
Senior_ Vice CluJncellor for Finance and
Manag~m~nt

Irving H. Freedman, B.A., M.B.A., Ed.D.
Vice Chancellor for Capital Facilities and
General Manager of tM State University
Construction Fund
Frank G. Pogue, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
Vice Chancellor for Stt«fent Affairs and
Special Programs
Cornelius J . Foley, B.A., M.S., Ph.D.
Secretary of the University and Deputy to
tM Chancellor for Administration
Sanford H. Levine, A.B., J.D.
University Counsel and Vice Chancellor
for Legal Affairs
James R. Rubl, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
Deputy to tM CluJncellor

r--------------------- --------,
1

.

RethlnkJng SUNY Ia available on t:he World
Wide Web SUNY Home Page at the follow-

ing addreaa: http://www .aunycentral.edu/

L-------------- - --------------~

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORI AT BUFFA LO

Nicofas D. Goodman, vice p!O'iOSIIor undergraduate education, will address the Prt&gt;
lessional Staff Senate Tuesday, Dec.·S at a
continental breakfast meeting at Pistachio's .
The meeting will be held from 8-10 am.
Goodman will speak on Undergraduate
Advisement Reservations are due Deo. 1 in

543 Capen Hall.

November 30 . 1995

Volume 27. No 13

Rethinking SUNY
Tna.tees releaM early dnlf't of plan to resbllpe state uni versity
lty C-

Reporter Editor

VIDAL

ALLING IT a "work

C

in progress,.. the

SUNY Board of
Trustees Nov. 21 released an early draft
of"Rethinldng SUNY," a plan that
will reshape the State University of
New York.
Among its recommendations is
a plan to financially rewanl campuses for increased academic and

administrative productivity; sup·
port for differential tuition; measures aimed at reducing the amount
of time il takes students to get their
degrees; and increased management
ex.ibility for campuses.
n releasing the early draft.
SU YTrustees Chairman Frederic
port i jrectional and at this point
" not a blueprint. We have more
work to do." The draft is expected
to be modified anywhere from one
ro three times before it is finalized
and ready for distribution to the
Governor and legislature.
TheSUNYBoanlofTrusteesand
campus representatives from
throughout the SUNY system have

worked for months to make recommendations on what changes are
needed to allow the State University
system to deal effectively with the
dramatic financial reductions it faces.
The report is being prepared at
the request of the New York State
legislature, which charged the
Trustees with developing by Dec.
1, "a multi·year, comprehensive,
system-wide plan co increase cost
efficiency in the continuing pur·
suit of the highest quality and broadest possible access consistent with
the state university mi ssion."
Under "Rethinking SUNY," increased teaching productivit y
would be encouraged by allocating
one percent of SUNY' s campu s
budgets into a pool "to rewanl campuses for increased faculty productivity , both quantitative and
qualitative" in an ~ffort to make
State University faculty "at least as
productive as thei r national coun·
terparts."
Administrative processes also
would be redesigned for more operating efficiency. ''We want to
make it possible for campus presidents and their colleagues to operate more efficiently and to reinvest

the savings on their campuses,•• the
report said. ln addition to increased
management nexibility, this effort
would include reduced monitoring
of routine decisions and transac·
tions. increased cooperation among
units and a stronger focus on qual ity and customer satisfac tion.
The proposed plan supports differential tuition , which would be
established by the Board o f Trustees .. usi ng rates that better reflect
differences in cost, support campus nexibility and allow the board
to address uni versity-wide priori ties and needs."
"Rethinking SUNY" al so calls
for System Administrati on in Albany to reduce its personnel by 30
percent within the next two years.
"Ongoing reviews point toward a
smaller. more focused system office ~.P\~h is more responsible for
policy and monitoring educa tional
results than for processing; which
is less controlling of campu s operations and more focused on serving the Boa rd of Trustee s."
according to the report .
The proposed plan would inContinued on page 3

Alcohol Be health: drinking patterns matter
•J LOIS IIAIIBI

The study
also showed
A NEW STUDY presented Nov. 15
that men who
reports that the effect of alcohol on
dri nk had a
long-term health may depend as
lower risk of
much on the way it is consumed
death from all
and on the genderofthe drinker. as
causes, death
on how much is consumed,
from cardioAn analysi s of the drinking bevascu lar dishavior of a large cohort of Italian
ease and death
men and women by researchers at
from non-carUB has found that people who
diova sc ula r
drank wine outside of meals, as
di seas e
well as at mealtime, had higher
causes, but
mortality rates than people who • women expe- Maurtzlo Trevlaan
drunk wine with meals on ly.
rienced no such be nefit. Findings
showed that women drinkers had
For women. the rates were significantly higher.
similar mortality rates as women
who didn't drink for all causes of
The results were reported in
Toronto at a conference, "Social
death, death from non-cardiovasand Heal th Effects of Different
cular causes and death from canDrinking Patterns," sponsored by
cer.
"It 's clear from this study that
the Addiction Research Foundation.
'This is one of the first studies
for women, the so-called small
to indicate that the way you drink is
benefit &lt;terived from drinking algoi ng to make a difference," said
cohol is not there," Trevisan said.
Maurizio Trevisan. professor and
He noted, however. that the numchair of the UB Department of
ber of women in the study populaSocial and Preventive Medicine and
tion who die from hean disease is
lead author on the study.
very low, so the effect o n cardio''Past studies on the effects of
vasc ular mortality couldn't be asalco hol on health always have
sessed.
looked at the amount of alcohol
On the question of why drink consumed. They have never looked
ing o utside of meals appears to put
at the way people drink. We find
this population at ri sk. Trevisnn
that if you drink a cenain wayhad several thoughts.
ou~ide of meals-women. espe"It could be that a drinker of
cially, are at very high ri sk."
wine outside of meals in Italy may
News Services Staff

be a problem drinker," he said. "It
couiP be that drinking wine on an
empty stomach allows more alcohol to be absorbed. Or mayl!e those
people just drink mo re ofte n."
The finding s were based on consumption of wine. the principal alcoholic beverage of thi s JX&gt;pulation.
Trevisan said he believes the re sults co uld apply to consumption
of other alcoholic beverages and to
other populations.
The researchers looked at alcohol consumption. drinking patterns
and mortality in 8.980 men and
6,669 wo men ages 30-59 who are
pan of an ongoing epidemio logy
study in Italy called the Risk Factor and Life Expectancy {RIFLE)
projec t.
At the 10-year follow-up, 594

Skeptics at home in
Center for Inquiry
1ty STEVE COX

Reporter StaH
NE THING IS CERTAIN about the newl y expanded
Center fo r Inqui ry . El vis has left the building.
The new 20.000-square-foot structure on Sweet
Home Road. across from the Nonh Campus but not
affi liated with UB. has plenty of room for Doubting
Thomases. but no room for budding Kresk.i ns. accordi ng to fou nder
and director Paul Kurtz. professor emeritus of phi losophy at UB . The
newest additi ons, built as pan of a$4.5 million endowment campaign
recently conducted by the Center. opened for business last summer.
The Center houses two sizable o rga ni zations. th e Co uncil for
De mocratic and Secular Humani sm {CODRSH ). which promotes
"free thinking'' and rational scient ific inq uiry: and the Committee
for the Scie nt ific In vestigatio n of Claims of the Paranormal
{CS ICOP). a world-renowned debunker o f all eged UFO sightings,
psychokinetic c laims and paranormal powers. Nearly a dozen
related organizations. all dedicated to the advancement of rational
scientific inquiry. also call the Center home. according to Kunz.
These philosophic di scipl ines share a common interest in the
triumph of rati onal explanation over myth. religion or superstition.
Their bottom line. according to Kurtz: "Prove it to me."
The Center emp loys 60 people who toi l in relenLi ess pursuit of
rational explanations oft he unexplained. "Most of the mysteries on
Un so/v~d Mysleries have ac tuall y been solved." explai ned Kunz.
who taught budding philosophers at UB for nearly 30 years. "We
deal with the real mysteries out there-at the fro ntiers of scie nce
and knowledge-based on rati ona l ev idence. not supernatural
superstiti on."
Rece ntl y. the Center ope ned its new library. housing one of the
world 's largest collecti ons of resources on "skepticis m. humanism.
at heism and American Naturalism:· according to Kurtz. This
center is actually one of at least six centers operating at uni versi ties
around the globe and. along with its publishing house just up the
street. Prometheus Books. it is the nexus of Kurtz 's multi-million
dollar international non-profit cong lomerate for agnosti cs. secular
humani sts and paranormal investigators.
The Center publishes two leading international journal s on
skepticism. Fru Inquiry and Skeplical lnquirn and se rves as an
internati ona l booki ng agency for skeptical talent (or is that talented
skeptics?) Kurtz and othe r experts affiliated wi th the Ce nter are
frequently called upon to explain skeptical inqu iry and sec ul ar
humanism to the nat ional media. appearing on everything from
Oprah to Donahue to Larry King Live. The Ce nter has a full -time
media direc tor with rad io and television facili ties on the premises.
Recently, more than 200 National Public Radio affili ates across the
co untry carried a 13-part se ries produced by the Center on human ism and skepticism. Someday. perhaps. a Skeptics Channel will
grace the cable box.
Although humani sts work to disprove "close encounters" they
come in contact with. they remain excited abou t the prospect of
there being life where no man has gone before. lndeed, noted

0

Continued on page 2
Continued on page 3

�2

- Wagner explains
'budget facts of life'

YIIIPMIULYY
thatwere-lblaa
The Bylaws c-.m- had de11ollllld-lldeia11J,ifll!
fil$t major rewrite of lbe ruJea Iince 1982,

"ed~~~~~;~~~~~~~;

Hoplci11.1.
Altboup
revilioalwwe
_.,.,.
adopt
several
major IIIIIIIY
cbanges
to illllnlclare.
0111c:en
reelection, the number of voting faculty required to
reduced and the university president and provost bave beca
members of the Faculty Senate.
The change !hat allows a Faculty Senate chair to seek a secoad. c:oDieCUIIve tmn
was one af the few !hat drew any debate. Modem Languaaea Prureuor Maureen
Jameson moved an amendment to tbc revisioos llriking tbc 1anguaae permitting
succession. Loclcwood Library Director Juclitb Adams aareoc1 with Jameson, arguing
that the Faculty Senate chair is "a very powerful positioo" and "four yean is too long."
Former Senate Chair Peter Nickerson urged rejection of the amendment, ~g
that there exists a "slrong learning curve" to the office and !hat the opportunity to serve
for more than two years would promote "continuity." The full Senate then voted down
the amendment.

To be fully implemented, the revised bylaws must be approved by the full voting
faculty. via mail ballot. and the revised chaner must be promulgated by President
Greiner to take effect.
In other business. the full Senate passed a resolution calling on traveling faculty
members to help with student recruitment. Faculty on the road for conferences.
research or as visiting faculty at another institution are asked to "consider meeting with
potential UB applicants and encourage these students to apply to UB."
0

~

professor drafted faculty
oplllion on SUNY restructure
By STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

W

HEN SUNY FACULTY
\.
across the state were asked
for their input on the system
restructuring currently being
considered in Albany. the task of drafting a
summary of more than IOOdiverse responses
fell to UB Engineering Professor Dennis
Malone. Malone. a UB representative on the
statewide University Faculty Senate since
1985, was one of three Senators asked to
gather faculty opinion on SUNY and produce a repon as pan of"Rethinlting SUNY."
Among the faculty' s conclusions, according to Malone's report, were that increased
use of adjunct faculty "threatens the academic excellence of programs," that faculty

demic integrity of university programs.
or course. thi s was not· the first time
Malone has stepped up to a task above and
beyond the confines of an electrical engineering classroom or his Bell Hal l office. If
fact, if you ask Malone whether there have
been UB committees on which he has not
served during the past four decades, he would
likely respond, as President Eisenhower did
when queried about the accomplishments of
his vice president. Richard Nixon, "Give me
a week, I'll think of one."
Malone has been a fixture in UB university goverance for many years. He has served
on the Faculty Senate and its Executive Committeesincel978, chaired the Faculty Senate
from 1983 to 1985, and has chaired numerous Senate committees over the years including Academic
Planning, Academic
Freedom and Responsibility, and Articulation. Currenily,
he seeks to keep order among Senators
as Faculty Senate Parliamentarian.
Malone
also
chairs UB's JntercoiJegiateAtbleticsBoard

and recently headed up

productivity should be measured in terms of
student ou tput, rather than fac ulty courseload;
and that new techonology· based instruction,
such as di stance learning, may not be the
panacea that some view it. The trustees are
due to produce a comprehensive repOrt on
SUNY changes by Dec. I.
"I think it' s significant that neither the
1rus1ees nor the legislature seem to underSiand what we as faculty do," said Malone,
describing the politicians' outlook on rae·
ulty productivity as the product of "a TimeC loc k ment a lity ." Ma lone feared the
emphasis placed on "cost-benefit ratios" and
part-time facu lty as a solution for economic
problems could negatively impact the aca·

the decennial Middle
States Accreditation
Review Committee.
And, he has been involved with engineering and technology issues at the state level,
chairing a 1980 State Assembly Conference on
Telecommunications-Growth Industries, and
serving as a consultant to the State Senate
Comminee on Nuclear Energy.
Malone graduated from UB in 1954 and
went on to earn his doctorate from Yale. He
joined the Electrical Engineering faculty in
1963. Three times silice 1968, Malone has
served as chair of the Electrical Engineering
Department A Distinguisbed Service Professor since 1991 , Malone confessed to a little
secret when asked how be decided to become
an electrical engineer. "Actually, I'm not," be
whispered. Malone's B.A.. M.S. and Ph.D are
all in the closely related field of physics. 0

OIAECTOR Of PV8t.ICATIONS· ~ J.

~ •

EDITOR

~

PSS

..._.bilk- fiKIII c1u111e11P to UB, SUNY

.,_,_VIDAL
EdilOt'
Reporter

U

B and SUNY will face tremendous challenges and changes as
administrators statewide work
through the drastic declines in
state funding that are projected
over the next couple of years.
"'t won't be business as usual." according
to Senior Vice President Roben J. Wagner,
who spoke before the Professional Staff Senate Nov. 15.
The reality, be said. is that SUNY will
continue to see state budget cuts. The state's
deficit, which has doubled over the last five
years, could hit $2.7 billion next year and
$3.9 billion the following year. "We're going to see the deficit having a great effect on
suppon for the stale university," Wagner
said.
In 1995-96, SUNY received $732 million
in tax revenue, slightly Jess than half its
overall budget. It is likely that number will
drop to $600 million in 1996-97, and to
perhaps $500 million in 1997-98, be said.
'Think of the impact when this goes to $600
million, perhaps to $500 million .... There are
states where state tax suppon is as low as 15
percent."
What is clear is that these budget reductions will lead to "dramatic changes" in how
the university operates, and what its income
and tuition will be. The university also will
have to make decisions about bow to retain
and provide services to students in tight of a
projected system-wide budget drop of more
than $100 million a year.
"It's nota veryprenypicture, J'mafraid."
Wagner said. If members of the university
community take a this-wiU-pass attitude,
"We' re going to find ourselves in very deep
!rouble, since there are no 'big rabbits ' to
pull out of the bat." he said.
A tuition increase alone is not the answer
to SUNY' s overall budget shortfall "If you
wanted to fill , say a $150 million problem

with tuition, you ' d have to raise tuition
$1,000." Wagner said. "I don't thinlc politically that' s going to go-in the Jegislanire.
with the governor and. frankly, I don't thinJc
it's goingtogowithin the(SUNY)system."
Perhapsone-thinltoone-halfofthe budget deficit will be filled by raising tuition,
"But other revenue and reductions will have
to fiU the rest of the gap." Wagner said.
Student enrollment is vital to UB ' s abilitytodeal with budget reductions. "We need
to give enormous focus to enrollment management and our service to students,"
Wagner said.
Increased fees and charges also will be a
fact of life as a result of the bodget, be said.
This year students faced $166 in new fees or
fee increases in addition to a $750 tuition
increase. "Students are concerned, as they
should be; some are unhappy, as they should
be," Wagner said.
People still co ns ider UB' s-and
SUNY' s-tuition to be a bargain, especially when compared to a private school
such as Canisius College. "One of our advantages is price-an advantage that is
rapidly diminishing." according to Wagner.
As the difference between private and public tuition narrows, UB will have to rely on
the quality of its academic programs and
student life to attract and retain students,
which will be a challenge as basic resources
are going down.
External sources of funding, such as
grants and contracts. will be Yitally importantto UB's fiscal future. " If the level of
suppon for sponsored research went down,
for example. we'd have to think about bow
to deal with a reduction in indirect cost
recovery," Wagner said.
Likewise, UB' s Development program
is an institutional priority with the objective
of significantly increasing gift giving to the
university, both in terms of immediate gifts
as well as bequests !hat will provide income
to the university over the longer term. 0

SKEPTICS
Continued from page 1
aslronomers, including Cornell' s Carl Sagan,
are among the Cent~r·s most ardent supponers. Science fiction aficionados, like the late
Isaac Asimov and the late Star Trtk creator
Gene Roddenberry, who both were Center
members, often are secular humanists, according to Kunz. And. of course, tbere is that
great philosopher... Steve Allen?
"He's actually a very thoughtful man,"
says Kunz of the original ''Tonight Show"
host who, too, is an active member of the
Center. AJ!en apP.,ared in Buffalo last summer for the grand opening of the new Center
facilities.
Center researchers freq uently run afoul of
organized religions, seeking to use rational
scientific inquiry to explain biblical hyperbole, debunk alleged miracles and dispel
unsubstantiated religious tenets, explained
Kunz.. Many "secular humanists" are agnostic or atheistic, he said, and have been out
front refuting such claims as the Shroud of
Turin and statues that are said to have cried or
drunk milk.
The Center' s research into religion has
made it a frequent political target of the
Moral Majority and the Christian Coalition
in recent years, Kurtz. said. However, in cultures that are less religiously tolerant than
ours, Kunz added, dominant fundamental

forces have beenJmown to threaten skeptics
with death.
Barry Karr, director of CSICOP, once
called his organization ''the party poopers of
the paranormal." !Carr explained that serious
scientists seldom studied claims of aberrations or late-night chain-rattling, Jelling such
claims go uncontested. A ·recent Fox Television broadcast. " Alien Autopsy; revived
speculation surrounding a 50-year-old close
encounter of the dead kind and drew the
attention of skeptical CSICOP investigators.
In what is known as the "Roswell Incident." it is alleged that a UFO crashed in the
desert near Roswell , New Mexico in 1947 and
that it, as well as several dead passengers.
were captured by the U.S. government. SkepticssuchasPhilipKJass, whochairsCSICOP' s
UFO subcommittee, cast serious doubt on the
authenticity of a film allegedly taken of the
autopsy of a creature who died in that UFO
crash. The most recent issue of Suprical
Inquirer, published bi-monthly by CSICOP.
features several anicles skeptical of the event
and alleged government cover-up.
Next June, CSICOP will host an international conference of skeptical paranormal
investigators at UB. Expect Casper and hi s
0
friends to be out of town that week.

....._ • ASSOCIATt EDITOA· ........... • ART DIAECTOA· . - . . , . . _ • hUp;Jfulwrlto.pub_buftalo.IICiu/!toPCJt*/

�3

Obesity caused by diet changes may be passed on to offspring
ayiUD-...-

terns of the progeny," said Patel.
" T he mother is o bese and hyper insulinemic and somehow this informatio n
on altered maternal metabolism was transmitted to the progeny."
The researc hers recently observed that
progeny of parents in which only the male
rats were fed the high-carbohydrate diet did
not become obese.
However, progeny of parents in which
only the female rats were fed the high-carbohydrate diet did become obese, indicating
that the metabolic change in the progeny is
contributed by the mother.
In a related paper published in the same

News Services Staff

AN CHANGES in the diets of
newborns that cause them to be
obese later in life predispose
their offspring to be obese as
well? At least in the case of
female rats, the answer may be "yes," according to research conducted at UB.
The results, published in two papers in the
October issue of the American Jou17UJI of
Physiok&gt;gy, are the first to show that dietinduced metabolic adaptations in the early
stages of a first generation were transmitted
to a second generation, regardless of the type
of diet the second generation was fed.
While other studies in this area have shown
that total calories fed to newborns may have
an effect later in life, ·the work by the UB
researchers is the fu:st to show that the distri bution of those calories among major nutrients, such as fat and carbohydrates, also is
significant.
"'The implication of this re~b is that
dietary experiences very early in life play a
critical role in metabolism later on and on to
the ne&gt;ttgeneration," said Mulchand S. Patel,
professor and chais in the UB Department of
Biochemistry and co-author.
"If these phenomena also occur in hu-

C

issue of

MUt.C1W1D I. PATB.

mans, then diet-induced metabolic changes
in obese parents may predispose their children to be obese, regardless of the kind of
diet the children are fed," he said.
The UB researchers mated male and
female rats that were fed a high-carbohydrate diet as newborns, and who subsequently
became hyperinsulinemic (exhibiting higher
than normal levels of insulin) and obese.

Progeny of these pairs became obese later
in life, too, apparently because changes in
the mother' s metabolism were passed on to
the fetus in the intraurerine environment.
The researchers cautioned that there is no
ev idence that these changes are hereditary.
'This means that during the early stage of
development, when cells were differentiating, this change was integrated in the sys-

A~ rican

Journal of Physiology,

the researc hers showed that the increase in
insuli n levels seen in the rats on the highcarbohydrate diets also occurred in their
progeny.
Patel began studying the effects of dietary changes in newborn rats in the mid, 80s. when he was at Case Western Reserve
Uni versity .
He co-authored the recent papers with
Suzanne G. Laychock, professor of pharmacology and toxicology at UB. Satyaprasad
Vadlamu di. postdoctoral assoc iate at UB
and Satish C. Kathan. pediatrics professor at
Case Western Reserve University.
~

RETHINKING
Continued from page 1

~ in¥1111ip11K l!dwltd M- Bednllczyk. research assisWII professor of
nuclear modicine IJid pblrnilcy, said about 10 percent of the U.S. population
eaperieilcel migraine, with women suffering the beailaches three times more often

than men.

,

Migroines are !bought to s~with a oanowing of blood vessels in the brain, which
decnoaseS blood flnw and can cause the flashes of light and dark bar-like visual aura
experienced by some migraine sufferers, Bednarczyk said. This vasoconstriction is
thoughtto be followed by a widening of the blood vessels in the brain, or vasodilation,
which causes the characteristic pounding pain.
No consistent relationship has been established between migraine sy~ptoms and
cerebral blood flow hOwever, Bednarczyk said.
,His study will attempt to show such a relationship by measuring cerebral blood How
at three intervals--&lt;luring a headache episode, following treatment with sumatriptan,
and during a headache-free period-using positron emission tomography , or PET
scans, which are extremely sensitive and allow researchers to monitor biological
processes as they occur.
Interested persons should call 838-5889, or leave a message at 887-4954.
The research is funded by the Department of Defense, with funds made available
C
by the Wo~en ' s Health Initiative.

ALCOHOL
Continued from page 1
men and 173 women had died. Trevisan and
colleagues compared the drinking habits of
those who died with the rest of the study
population.
.
Analysis showed that 88.8 percent of men
and 66.3 percent of women in the total study
population drank alcoholic beverages. or
the drinkers:
• 73.5 percent of men and 94.5 percent of
women reponed drinking wine at mealtime
only.
• 7.7 percent of men and 0.9 percent of
women drank wine both with meals and
outs ide of mealtime.
• 18.8 percent of men and 4.6 percent of
women drank both wine and liquors with
meals.

For men , drinking up to fi ve drinks a day
was associated with lower dearh rates fro m
all causes and death from cardiovascular

disease and

non~c ardiov asc ul a r

disease

causes. Women drinkers, howeve r, derived
no benefit.
0

crease tui tion for students enro ll ing for more
than nine semesters and "unnecessarily accumulating" more than 140 credit hours.
"Rethi nking S UNY~ ' seeks to shorten the
time it takes to earn a baccalaureate degree
by encouraging qualified high sc hool j uniors and seniors LO earn college credits at a
SUNY campu sofrh eir choice, with funding
provided by monies that o therwise would
support the srudents in their home d is triers.
The pl an also would ensure "the ' seamless'
transfer of community college graduates as
bona fide third-year students at state-ope rated campu ses."
The plan also recommends a review of

degree programs at all levels to eliminate
duplication of programs. "especially those
with low enroll me nt and high costs," accord ing to the report . At the same ti me,
distance learni ng technologies will be utilized to mai ntain the greatest possible access
to degree programs.
Redundant administrative services would
be elimi nated through volun tary strateg ic
all iances that would lin k some of SUNY 's
relatively smaJJ campuses. A pilot project
bei ng form ul ated wi ll incl ude the upstate
Colleges of Technology and the Institute of
Technology at UticafRome. with a report to
be avai lable April I. 1996.

iJ ~esqni Time [apsul~
Throughout the UB"s Sesquicentennial celebration. the Reporter will offer a senes of htsror/Cal
artiCles describing the people and events thar have shaped the unJVersiry durmg its 150 years

NOVEMBER 29,_ 1958

Grid team says 'no' to
discrimination
When the UB foo tball team
won the lambert Cup after
an 8 -1 season in 1958.
beating Harvard and Columbia . they were invited to
play in the Tangerine Bowl
in Orlando. Fla.
After the university rec eived the invitation. it
learned that segregation
taws stipulated that "there
be no inte rmingling of the
races in athletic contests,· at
the Tangerine Bowl Sta d ium.
UB Chanc e llor Clifford c. UB Lambert Cup wfnners are ohown tn 1958 photo.
Furna s issued a statement, declining the invitation. -n is my feeling that it wou ld be
in the best interests of Jhe university. the team. and everyone d irectly involved that
the invita tion be declined.• Furnas· s tatement said. -willie Evans and Mikle Wilson
are two of our finest young men. It would be unthinkable that they would be subjected even to the possibility of d iscimination in any manner. way or form
"They p layed key roles in the team effort which res ulte d in our fine season Those
of us in Buffalo and Western New York who thrilled to thei r pe rforma nces recogmze
them as fine footba ll players. gentlemen and worthy representatives of the Un ivers ity of Buffalo. We have never been c onc erned with the color of their sktns. nor do
we think thai should be ma de a point of issue by a nyone e lse.·
The Chancellor's files c ontain leiters of a pproval from faculty. a lumni and community organ izations as well a s a resolution of s upport from Erie County

�4

- - .u. -u.-u

Gift to medical school
to fund scholarships
BJ P'AULA-..-..&amp;.
Reporter Contributor

NENDOWED scholarshipand
award fund for students in the
UB School of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences has been
established through a gift of
residential propeny valued at more than
$121,000from Thomas). Guttuso, the scbool' s
director of admissions, and his wife, Barbara.
Tbe Dr. Thomas). and Barbara L. Guttuso
Scholarship and Award Fund will provide an
annual scholarship for a first-year medical

A

student. as well as an award for a senior with
Amanda Seneca, right, acceptB Denise J. Broughton ScholeJsNp New. 16 110m
Fran Bernstein, assistant director of admiaelons. The ICholatlhlp, creatad In
memory of Broughton, senior admistiicns acMaor in lhe Olflce ol Uldargraduale
Admissions, provides financial support to academically talenl8d 8IUdents In lhe
Minority Academic Achievement Program.

Welch book studies strategies
to protect human rights in Africa
By P'ATRICIA -VAN

News Services Staff

P

OL!TICAL SClENTIST Claude
E. Wel ch Jr. has completed the
· fi rst majo r comparative study of

fulfilled basic needs of populations that the

author says "cried out'' for economic and
social development.

an interest in ophthalmology. Selection of
the recipients will be based on academic
standing and fi nancial need.
"I owe my success in medicine to UB and
appreciate the opportunities I received when
I was a student," said Guttuso, a 1960 alumnus of the .UB medical school. "Now, as
director of admissions and the medical
school' s scholarship committee, I see the
tremendous financial need of nearly 40-50
percent of the school's medical students and
it made me realize how crucial financial
assistance is to these students. Being on the
scholarship committee especially made me
acutely aware of how I could do so much

more.·•

guaranteed by United Nations treaties, national constitutions or presidential speeches.

John P. Naughton, UB vice president for
clinical affairs and dean of the medical school,
praised Guttuso for his valuable contribution.
'The assistance of this generous gift will
help many talented students obtain their
medical education. and, most significantly,

during his undergraduate years. It was pub-

"By examining what NGOs have accomplished and the challenges that confront them,"
says Welch, "people all over the globe can be
inspired by their accomplishments."
Welch has spe nt more than 30 years in a

BJ LOIS IIAUII

lished thi s month by the UniversityofPennsylvania Press as pan o f its Pennsylvania

quest to understand and present to others
informed. sympathetic analysis of the vast

Studies in Human Rights series.

changes taking place south of the Sahara. He

In it, Welch, SUNY Distingui shed Service Professor in the Department ofPolitical
Science at UB, analyzes many of the human
rig hts issues confronting sub-Saharan Af-

studied Namibia under United Nations aus-

how non-governmental organiza-

tions (NGOs) hav e wrought a revolutionary
change in Africa by uncovering human rights
abuses and advocating for reform .
Welch 's book " Protecting Human Rights
in Africa: Strategies and Roles of Non-

Governmental Organizations," is the result
of nearly three decades of study that began

rica in the em of ascendant nationalism and
rapid de-co lo nization that followed 70 years
of European ru le that "balkani zed" the Afri can continent.

Welch. co-director of the UB Human
Righls Center. is widely published in the
field of Afri can human rights, and here focuses on the role of NGOs in promoting
constructive change, often in the face of

strong governmental opposition.
''Human rights are not given, but taken,"
he says.

Welch

say~

that NGOs are especially

important in ensuring human rights in subSaharan Africa, where governments have
often proven reluctant to honor the rights

pices, and his doctoral studies included ex-

tensive field work in French-spealdng West
Africa. This study, conducted in 1993-94,
was fu nded by grants from the Fulbright
Commission and the U.S.lnstitute of Peace.
His publications, many of which address
human rights issues in Africa, include 12
earlier books on human rights, seveial dozen
book chapters and more than a score of articles in refereed journals. He has deli vered

invited lectures on human rights practice in
relation to theory, ethnic violence, the status
of refugees andcivil-military relations at major

universities and anned forces institutions
throughout the U.S., Africa and Asia.
Welch, fonnereditorofthequarterly journal Ann•d Forc.s &amp; Soci•ty. prepared 20

"In a world in which political repression
and economic deprivation are widespread,
citizens must organize to protect their rights.

entries on .the armed forces and society for

And it has been through the rapid spread of
NGOs like Amnesty International that major progress has bee n made."
We lch' s study is differentiated from others in the field by its non-state-centered approach. Instead of looking at variations in

the " International Military and Defense Encyclopedia" published by Pergarnon-Brassey
in 1993. He is a member of the advisory
hoard of the Encyclopedia Amuicana and is
a member of the editorial review hoard of
HumtJn Rights Qua rterly .

governmental polky and practice, he uses a
grassroots-up method to .compare and assess

Welch sits on the national advisory com-

how NGOs in Nigeria, Ethiopia. Namibia
·and Senegal have dealt with such problems as

genital mutilation. syslcmatic discrimination
against ethnic groups and authoritarian rule.
widespread impoverishmenl and the absence
of legal assistance for vast populations.

The organizations he selected for assessmenl arc those that exemplify major strate·
gics in confronting these issues.
Other issues discussed in the book are
self-determination, civil and political
rights-inc luding the relative legitimacy of
governments throughout Africa-mi litary

involvement in African politics and the un-

mittee of Human Rights Watch/Africa and is
a consultant to the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID), the
National Academy ofSciences, the Ford Foundation Program on Human Rights, the Commission to Study the Organization of Peace
and the Asia Foundation, among others.
He has participated in USAID programs
in Burundi and Benin focused on democrati -

zation in Africa. Additional overseas travel
or research has taken him to Cameroon,
Egypt. Gambia, Ghana, Lesotho, .Kenya,
South Africa, Togo, Tunisia, Zimbabwe,
Chi na, the Phili ppines, South Korea, Taiw.an
and several European nations.
0

enable them to concentrate oo their studies
and thrive academically," said Naugb!Oo
''With the continued philanthropic support
of medical-scbool alumni and friends we
will be positioned to offer essential financial
assistance to highly qualified students who
otherwise would be unable to receive their
medical education at UB."
Guttuso, wbo maintains a privale practice
in ophthalmology in Lockpol1, has held several clinical positions 81 the Erie County Medical Center. In additioo to serving as the
medical-school's director of admissions since
1982, be was pq&gt;gram director of the UB
Department of Ophthalmology from 1985-87.
Throughout his association with UB,
Guttuso said be has found his interaction
with faculty and medical studentS to be highly
gratifying. His admiration for the university,
be noted. was particularly heightened wbeo
be became a patient of a UB medical-school
graduate who Guttuso previously accepted
to the medical school. Tbe experience of
seeing firsthand the alumnus' remarkable
work in medicine intensified Guttuso' s commitment to support the university.
"Whether a gift is desigoaled for a scholarship or any other source of suppon, I think
university graduates owe a debito the school
that provided their education and a way to
partially repay that debt is to be as generous
as possible," Guttuso said.
The Guttusos' two daughters are graduates of the UB medical school and their son
is attending the medical scbool.
0

New pediatric dental clinic to open
News Services Staff

THE SCHOOL OF DENTAL MEDICINE at
UB is joining forces with Mercy Hospital
and The Children's Hospital of Buffalo to
establish a new pediatric dental clinic expected to serve 4,000-6,000 children who
currently receive little or no dental care.
The clinic is expected to open in February in Mercy Hospital's Marian Professional
Building, 515 Abhott Road, Buffalo. UB
dentists project they will serve 1,500 children covered by Medicaid the first year.
"This project is a prime example of bow
a successful health consortium can work,"
said Louis J. Goldberg, dean of the UB
dental school. 'Three parties have pooled
their resources to make this happen."
The new pediatric dentisay clinic will be
a six-chair expandable facility. Tbe total
cost of the project, approximately $375,000

including

cquipmen~

computers and fur-

nishings, will be shared by the two hospitals.
Children who are seen in Mercy's pediat-

ric primary-care center- which handJes

'The Children' s Hospital of Buffalo is
very excited shout the new partnership between Mercy, Childree's and the UB dental
school ," said Mary M. Ward, vice president
of clinical services at Children's Hospital.

"Our joint-venture pediatric dental clinic
on the Mercy Hospital campus provides for
an innovative approach to meeting community need for expanding primary dental services to complement the Children' s Hospital
Dental Clinic on our campus. It allows us to
mate certain the children of our community
have access to a pediatric dental network

responsive to their unique needs."
Tbe clinic is one of Geveral UB dentalscbool outreach initiatives underway aimed
at bringing dental care and oral-bealth education to unserved and underserved resideots of
Erie County·and the Southern Tier. Outreach
projects will complement the school's oncampusclinics, which in 1994providednearly
$3 million in unreimhursed care.
Tbe dental school recently received a
$160,000 grant from the Gebbie Foundation
of Jamestown to purchase a 36-foot van

more than 15.000 patient visits a year-and

outfitted as a mobile dental clinic to serve

require dental services are referred to

children in rural Chautauqua Co unty. Effons are under way to secure funding fo r

Children's Hospital for follow-up, said Timothy J. Hogan, vice president for professional
services at Mercy Hospital .
"For many of our patients, getting to
Children's from South Buffalo can be difficult," he added. "As a result, their dental
care needs often are not addressed. This
clinic will make it ·possible for underserved

children to receive accessible dental care
and enhance their overall health."
The facility will be managedjoinUy by the
three participating institutions. Dental students and residents will rotate through the
clinic, with UB dental-scbool faculty serving
as attending dentists. Children wiU receive
basicpediatric-dentistryservicesinitially.Oral
surgery and orthodontic services will be added
as resoun:es become available.

another van to serve Buffalo's inner-city
children.

Other outreach initiatives underdevelopment include:
• Expansion of on-campus pediatric and

geriatric clinics to serve Medicaid and Medicare "patients.
• Research projects on the status of pediatric dental bealth among Native-American.
Amish and other minority populations in
Western New York.
• A rural clinic to serve persons with
disabilities.
• Dental screening of homeless women
and children at the City Mission in Buffalo
by dental -student volunteers.
0

�5

Famed illustrator Mary GrandPre
to lecture in Center for the Arts
manneredelongationsofModiglia~i. whose
"detached" painled figures suggest sculptural relief of the Cycladic figures.
Her work has appeared in a number of
publications, including Atlantic Monthly
and in books published by Random
House, Penguin, Dell
and McGraw Holl
GrandPn!'s national
recognition includes
awards from The Society of Illustrators,
professional trad e
magazines including
Communication Ans,
Graphis, Print, ART
Direction and Diesi.
GrandPn! 's illustra-

uy Gran~. a noled illustraIOr with a national repulalion
for her worlr. in ediiOrial, odvertisi ng ,
corporate and institutional communica·
lions, as well as for
her beautiful children's books, will lectureatUBonTuesday,

Dec. 5.
The talk, sponsored
by the UB Art Department Program in Ulustration, will take place

in

the

Screening

Room, Room 112, of
the Center for the Arts
on the North Campus.
II is open 10 the public
and free of charge.
Gran~' s evoca-

tions were chosen

tive ethereal pastel
paintings of the human figure have their
roots in Michelangelo's lush representations,
as well as in figurative work by Picasso,
Brach, Henry Moore, Degas and Hooper.
Her work has been more recenlly informed
by ancient Cycladic island art and by the

from among those of
thousands of artists for the cover of the arts
publication Showcase 16. She was the subject of an article regarding the arti stic
conceptualization of editorial assignments
in the trade publication Step by Step Graphics.
[J

Leners

M-In Hllhll Cn: It's Pltlllt Na. 10,000
Raymond Wagner, left, accepts a balloon-decl&lt;ed fruij basket as he walks
through the door at the medical school Nov. 17 as the ten-thousandth patient for
University Physician Medical Service. Shown wit11 Wagner are Margaret
McAloon, medical director, and Eli Farhi, a cardiologist and Wagner's physician.

rhe Reporter we.tcomes Jeners from raaders C0t1'WT16(1Mp' on irs stones and
content LentHS shOuld be bne/8/'Jd msy be edited for sty1e and length 88-caUSB of space f~tn~taOOns. me Reporter cannot pubHsh aU letters rtJC6NtK1

Putnam's lost parking
meters set teeth on
edge, poetry in motion

TO THE EDITOR:
(Sing to the tune of Greensleeves)
Oh. whither goes!
The parking meters
Once edged the margin
Of Putnam Way?
Now find ye there
New signs proclaiming
"Service Vehicles· only.
What , what are we to do?
Equipment laden and lots alar
Haste. haste to pay those tickets
No choice be leh unto you.

At some unknown time in the recent past.
someone in the campus bureaucracy de·
cided to remove the parking meters once located on Putnam Way on the north side of
Fronczak Hall and Bonner Hall. These spots
have been converted into "service vehicle"
parking. Perhaps this someone did not realIZe that some of us find it necessary. as part
of our university affiliation , to transport equipment, print materials and supplies to/from
our campus offices for the purpose of presenting professional and/or community presentations. The Governors parking lot hap·
pens to be closest to my office in Capen
Hall, and carrying or wheeling a desktop
computer or box of literature from th is lot is
near 1tnpossible in snow or icy conditions ,
not to mention the hardship inflicted on the

equipment by the JOStling and exposure to
the elements.
In the future . those of us in this situation
will be faced with the likelihood of a parking
ticket when loading or unloading heavy materials between office and car. For those in
my office. this will be a very real and fairly
frequent problem. I am not aware of whether
other meters around campus were removed
as well. or whether this is an isolated circumstance.
My office window looks out upon the
north side of Fronczak and I can tell you that
lor the most part there are no ·service ve·
hicles" or any other vehicles using these
spaces, which leads me to believe that there
was no urgent need to convert them . Was
consideration given to the hardship this (cer·
tainly irreversible) change would inflict on
the university community ("serv1ce vehicles·
excepted)? It d oes not appear so to me

P'A"IIIICIACOTY
NCEER Information Service

President's commitment
to affirmative action
benefits university
DEAR EDITOR:
Just over 200 years ago Benjamin Banneker.
a free black and first African American sci·
entist of record , wrote a letter to Thomas
Jefferson. then United States Secretary of
State. He pleaded with the great statesman
to use the power of his office. and the inllu·
ence of his reputation . to help free his breth -

DvePIIIDM P~WIIder. Parking Rules

Campus Pilrki~ &amp; Transportation Services would like i'o remind you thai winter
parking nltes wilf be enforced Nov. 15, 1995through April15, 1996. There is no
overnight parking ( 12 midnight to 6:90 a.m.) except irt designated spaces or lots.
Please be parking considerate! Do not park in fire lanes or triple park (making
three ianes"out ol two). Trip\8 paft9ng Inconveniences everyone and your vehicle
may be towed. ~lght pao1&lt;ing is restricted to the following lots:
sount~(c~Hit~Mted-onlrl

Abbott (Student Lot)
DielendO!f"
.M~n-Bailey

Michael"
Townsend
Parker

NORTH CAIII'US (enllrelot except • lllllecl)
GOWrnors E1
Furnas' (designated area only)
Bairdjl) '
Gollemols B
Cook&amp; A
Spaulding, Rictvnond, Fargo (Ellicott)
c

~ l..ollt--Cudllt !»frr&gt;&gt;IS nol Vfllid

7 a.m. "'s p.m.

Morocf'y-FridBy.

ren from the thralldom of slavery. Banneker
also sent Jefferson a copy of his soon-to-be
published Almanac and Ephemeris. shanng
with the Secretary some of h1s astronomtcal
data and calculations .
In that fetter. Banneker applauded
Jefferson for his stirring words in the Declaration of Independence, calling that document worthy to be remembered by succeedIng generations. But the sentiment of the na·
tion leaned strongly if not overwhelmingly
agatnst such a revolutionary change and
Jefferson , by hts own words. tacked commnment to the 1dea of freedom. needing ev•·
dence. he satd. that blacks were similarly
endowed as other men
Today. on another matter. a strong senti·
ment sweeps the country 1n opposition to alfrrmative action Some want to return to the
day when a quota system (usually 100-0)
mlttgated aga•nst access and opportunity lor
blacks. other m1norities. and women Politlctans at every level in every sect1on of the
country, rail aga1nst it and get elected
Former supporters of the concept now abandon it in ever-increasing numbers. Polls sug.gest growing opposition to its continuation.
weak though it may have always been. Hate
groups use it as an excuse for VIOlence or
threats of violence . Myths and false inriuendoes abound. despite clear employment,
weallh . hous1ng . income, prison population
and other indicators to the contrary .
Into this environment. President and Professor wmiam R. Gre1ner reasserted his commitmentto affirmative action and diversity ( Re.
poner, November 9. 1995} because the end

results will mean a fairer. bener. more jUSt university that better educates our diverse population. That is what we are supposed to do.
INhatever we have done in the area of affirmative action and diversity at th1S t.mtversity has
not been at the expense of quality
In his forthright statement, the pres1den1
framed a sound, logical course of act1on to
continue. not retreat from the progress
made He proposed not some quick fix. not
some legerdematn. but a reasoned and reasonable long-term commitment that does not
grow faint w1th lime or m fear The campus
would well applaud h1s program and acknowledge h1s Integrity and courage to the
benefit of UB and the pubhc •t serves
Stncerely.
EDWARD S. JEHIUNS
Associate Professor. Sc1ence EducaMn

FSEC action 'hasty ' on
SUNY restructure
TO THE EDITOR:
The Faculty Senate Execut1ve Comm1ttee
acted Inappropriately and too hastily when tt
formally supported the proposal to "restructure· SUNY presented by Trustee Thomas
Egan.
The only apparent reason for such haste
was President Gretner 's desire to present
some evidence of faculty support for this
proposal before the Board of Trustees meettng at a resort tn Bolton Landing on Nov. 13
This deadline IS probably the reason for an
attempt to get a simtlar resotut1on passed by
the Un1versity Council w1thout even hold1ng a
meeting
The FSEC sa•d 11 supported the · scope
and thrust~ of the Egan resolutton Thts tmpi18S that the FSEC supports decreased
state support lor the SUNY campuses . and
"downs1zmg: "Increased teachtng produc·
tiv1ty· and the development of · a stronger
market onentat•on • The only ga1n would be
for local admtnlstrators. who would have
more authonty over ·faculty htnng, pay and
workload : research and consu1t1ng . and the
level of tuitton and lees· If Implemented . th•S
plan would probably resulttn closmg some
campuses. privat1z1ng teachtng hosptta!s
and then med1ca1 schools from SUNY. and
decreasing the nghts and collective barga•nlng power of faculty and staff
It was not only hasty but counter to the tn ·
terest of the faculty to support the Egan proposal. As a member of the faculty , I protest I
hope the lull Senate will reverse th1s •11-con·
ceived dec1sion.
JEAN DICKSON
Lockwood Library

�6

aDBillboard

Facul
ELECTRA TO liE GIVEN
NOV. JO.OEC. 10
·Etectra. • Eunpides' classiCal tragedy of death and madness among
the Greek royals , will be presented
by th'e UB Department of Theatre
and Dance from Nov JO..Dec. 10 '"
the Drama Theatre 1n the Center lor
the Ar!s on the North Campus Perlormances w11l take place at 8 p .m.
Thursdays through Sundays. wuh add•t•onal matinees Saturday, Dec 2.
and Saturday , Dec 9. at 2 p .m

NEW FIIENCN

FOIJ(

TO~

IN ALLEN IIAU.

MUSICIAHS

Canadian muSICians Ad Vielle Que
Pourra will bring their exuberant QuebecoiS music, dance and hufTI()( to
UB 's Allen Hall lor an 8 p .m. perfOfmance on Saturd ay. Dec. 2.
Steeped in the historical songs
and dance of French-speaking Europe and Canada. the original music
ol this new French folk group is perIOfmed on traditional instruments that

include hurdy-gurcty, d iatonic and
Quebecois accordions . bombards,
foot percussion . guitar and fiddle.
Advance tickets at S 12, adults:
StO , seniors and students ; and $7,
children under 12. are available a.t
Earth Spirit Nature's Market in
Williamsville. in Buffalo at New World
Aecofds and TalkJng Leaves Book·
store, and at the Village Green Book-

stores In Buffalo and Blasdell. For
reservations or mc:xe information, call
Compass Concens. 759-9136.

LAW SlVDENT WINS

AJA/AJ!F USAY CONRST
Joeeph P. DIVIncenzo, a third·
year student In the UB School of
Law. has been awarded second
prize in the annual essay competition
sponSO&lt;ed by the American Judges
Association {AJA) and the American
Judges Foundation (AJF).
DiVincenzo's prize of $750 in the
Law Student Essay Contest includes
an award certificate; winning essays
are eligible for publication in the

School of EnalnMrln&amp; ..... Applied
Sciences fonns advleory council
CNoof • ......._ . . . . . . corpct'8tions and agencles tl1roughou1
the U.S. are111'11011Q !he rnembers'ollhe . -•Dean's Adviaofy Council
astablilhed 1&gt;v lhe UB School ol Engl-'ng and Applied Sclonces.
The purpose ollhe council is to provide oupport and odvlca to the
engl-'ng ochool In lndultrial relollona. long4enn plaMing and stral·
egy, clusroom enrichment cooiculurri, student organizallona, new programs and placement of graduates In Industry. Under lhe direction of
the dean and prol/081, membera wiHus1st the school in developing proleaaionaJ eng._,., The councH held 118 first ,_ling earlier this month.
"The oouncll proyldes us with en exCellont perspectiYe on the relallonships
oc-rrnent -lhe ~-ita trtpartite ,...
sion,' aald- " - --.orlhe~ ochool.
'We are
exclled eboullhe group that DMn ~ has put together'for IIIia ArMtay
They - talo(lled, convnill8d. tic . ~·-_,. o l - end Wmi wl1oare bringing
grMI - - - gre111 ~ 10 ongr-tng II UB; aald UB
"ll'sa model group. h lhould be the pot·
tern tor lhe ldnd o l - _ , _ , that can bring crucial ,_ dfmon.
sa.toO&lt;A"ellorlaiO_,_ dl'ec:tiono In 111-ollhe.-ofty."
- - . dllllnguiohed fellow ollhe Council on~
and former direc:lorollhe- Science~ wl1o I'8ClliYed his
bachelar'ldegfee In electrical enor-&lt;ino from UB, II chair. "Ala time
when ~ng and lhe applied ICier1ceo ore experlonclng many
changetl and when R&amp;D raducllono ore occurring In boll\ lhe and
stete gcM~mmonts and the induslrial oector, h ia on oppraprlallt time to
be forming In advisory council with people from - l h e ~. •
said Bloch. 'We hope thet with the ClMIIan of lhe council. we can give
some valuable Input to the dean end the faculty on ~ ore imponentlor the future ol the IIChool."

-lnduslly.

--11.. . . .
-v

eo.n:n.

-II.-

Other council members are:-. ......, P • ......, CEO and praaldent
of Space Industries International. Inc.:
h., prealden1 of M&amp;ll&lt; IV Industries;
chalnnon ollhe
board o l Moog, Inc.: . _ dean of lhe School of Engl. -.
lng a1 The Cooper Union: , _ 8. Defr, oornmlsaioner of the New Vorl&lt;
State Oeparlment of Transponation: - . . . , president of
Greatbatch Gen-Aid Ud .. v.11o rocalved
from UB;
.I.
proleaaor ol managemenl ol tachnology II Geo&lt;·
g la tnatlluto of Technology, end-... I. . . _ , d - olr&amp;seorch and development at PrauK. Inc.

-A._...,

1(-.,

Also, -

AJA's journal, Court Review.
First place and a prize of $2.000
went to Kathy Jo Cook. Suffolk Unt·
veraity Law Schoot Third prize of
S500 was won by Ryan S. Bexzerra.
University of Californla, Berkeley.
The AJA represents fll()(8 than
2.900 judges of all courts of all junsdictions in the U.S.• Canada, Puerto
Rico, Guam, American Samoa and
the Virgin Islands. The AJF sponsors
activiHes of the AJA and is its research and education arm .

his,....,_...

w. ~chairman ol the board ol American

...,_,-vice
Kodak.._.,.,

Axle and Manufacturing, Inc.; preoident
and chief technology offocer, Eastman
l.llbonllories;
Nl,..,. - . president VIA Preas, lno .. w l 1 o - 1 doctor·
ata from UB; -·executive vlca president ol Occidental
Chemical Corp.. wl1o recelvod.a doctorate ~om UB; . . . . . . . . , - . vice president ol worldwide ope&lt;allona, SUn Mlc:rooy-. Computer Co .. and
_ . . . , _ , l o r llWIIger, Information-·
vices, Motorola; Inc .. w11o received a bachelor's degree from UB.
"It gratifies and reassures me greatly the! many able people hive
wittingly c ome forward to advise and assist the Engr-ing faculty In
shaping their future.• &amp;aid Provost , _ . _ . . . , "n- are
critlcal times '"' the university, and we ere blealecl with many oources of
wisdom to help us meet the challenges."

Yart"
Community and UB family are invited
to aid the homeless by participating
in ·A Night Under the Stars· on the
North Gampus from 6 p .m. Saturday,
Dec. 2 to 6 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 3.
Checks , noo-perishabte lood
Items and warm clothing lor Buffalo
City Misston are the ·admission· tickets to the event on Fargo Terrace. If
you cannot attend, drop off your donations with auendants in the Fargo
Pari&lt;ing Lot lrom 6·9 p .m. Dec. 2.
Hot chocolate, snacks and
·sleeping boxes· will be prcwkied to
participants. says Doug Pepe of the
Offtce of Residence Ufe, event sponsor. Participants should dress warmly
and bring outdoof sleeping gear.
Parking is in the Fargo Lot. where
staffers will direct overnighters to the
Terrace and receive contributions.
Signs to Fargo Lot will be posted on
Flint Rd . oH Maple and off Audubon
Pkwy. Make out checks to · auffalo
City Mission· and mail to Dean
Reinhardt. University at Buffalo. Residence Lila , Ellicott South Area Otftee,
117 Porter Quad, Ellicott Complex,
Buffalo, N.Y. 14261.(J()()8.

Balfalo."NN!IIoootlllo\1feb••~

dlleclliab
Callep, lbe UBIWWIIIIV

oO&lt;JL--·ndio..... ::=~F.:!E::

WKBW
Willi a chwitwaflrY
web . .01Dae17
.:11 .lbe
ic&lt;m IIIII lilled. . _ pii)Yidl!r '-"JIIIII tr. 'M
84rJ/D Pru-lkltolbe COIIIIIIIIIdal I.talll• D a.. • well.
Olio ~ lbe iD1caa1iDr pl..- Gil "'llllfaao 111 lbe Web"' Ia lbe
"'noodl NlliCII ~ l'l&amp;e" wbicb ii81Xaaly ............. npdllclllo
Oooida Nllion but also proYidet '-""" linb to .,.,... Nlllw A-an
nations such as the Sioux N.Uoo in SOUib Dltola 11 ...n as adlcrNIIiw
American resources on the Net. Finllly, for the sporlllllindod 111111111,.
"Bufl'alo on the Web" off""linb to a varieCy of web lila dnaled to ibe
Bufl'alo Bills and the Buffalo Sabres.
The aeator and webmaster of the School of Archit«mre and l'lonniDI
web site is Dan Tasman. If you have access to a gnpbical browaer such as
Netscape and want to ge&lt; a feel for Ne&lt; humor click on his DtlmC to.tour
"Dan "s Upper Flat" and the "VIIIUal Olccklowaga."
To rt ach tM School ofArchitectJJre and Planning web silt in ill lUI only
version rypt wingr at your UB E-mail account system prompt and type
th&lt;URL/rJtpll:www.arch.bufflllo.tduliNJ•x.llbftl at th&lt; Go command.
To uprus directly ro " Buffalo on th&lt; W&lt;b" rrs&lt; th&lt; f ollowing URL ·
httpll:www.arch.buffalo.•dulbu/JIIIolltbulralowww.ltlml. Nafllrally
thost using graphical browser such as N~tscape will use tM same
URLs.
For assistanct con.tact Computing Center Help Desk. aJ 645-3542.
-Gemma DeVinney and Don Hanman, University Libraries

.Jack Kotlarz. assistant professor
in the Department of Otolaryngology.
School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, has undertaken a medical
mission to Bosnia. Kotlarz. who specializes in facial plastic and reconstructive surgery, joins another doctor
and a nurse to make up a team which
will spend about two weeks there performing surgical procedures.
The team flew from Tor onto to
Zagreb, then took a short flight to
Split in Croatia . then a 20-hour drtve
to Tusla In Bosnia. which is a UN
Safe Haven deep inside Bosnia. The
normal peacetime drive is 6 hours.
Kotlarz , a member of International
Medical Relief, ,c»ned the university
in 1993. While in Bosnia. he"willalso
lecture in his specialty at the Universities of Zagreb. Croatia and Tusla

FIIIST EDmON 01' EPIC POEM

8IYIJI TO~ UllltARY
A rare tnt edition of tha book.fength apic
poem, Pan Tadsusz by Adam
Micldewic.z was pteSOr&lt;ed ., tha Polish
Colection of l..oci&lt;'M)Od Library in a Noli.

12 cerarrony i n - Theel...
Pet., Qeeaner, professor of
pharmacology and toxicology and
president of tha Polish Ar1s Ctub ol
Buffalo. made the presentation on behalf of the club. ReceMng the volume
for the library
Dlci&lt;Aon,
curator of the Pol1sh Collection
The patriotic poem, written by
Mickiewicz In the aftermath of the
Russian suppression of the Polish revott of November 1830. evokes a society which though present in the
memory of those then living. had diSappeared forever The poem could
not be.printed and issued In Russianoccupied PcMand. so the first edition"
was published In Paris in 1834.

was ,._

1'- c.

A-.rt J. ~vice , associate
director of Student Life, Division of
Student Affairs, has been appointed
district representative for the
Nlagara.M'estem Ontario District of
the Association of College Unions-

International. Region 2. The district includes most of tha public and privata
cottages and universities in Western
New York and Westam Ontario.
Ermanovics holds undergraduate and
graduate degrees from UB.

U-ST-JUDIIE
-..DAY IIECIPE CON1D1
Two University Ubraties Central Technical Services (CTS) staff members
will serve as judges for the annual
Reporter holiday recipe contest. They
recently participated in the production
of a~. "A Taste of CTS." witt&gt;
proceeds benefiting SEFA.
The judges are: , _ . _ . ,
assistant d irector of librarles for technical services and Bioon bibliographic database manager; and
" - Al*tcll, cleri&lt; I, CTS cataloging deparlment.
The contest, which ended Nov. 22.
was open to au faculty. staff and students. Announcement of the winner
will be made Dec. 7 in the Reporter.

NEWIIIDESNAIIEII'IICMIRAM

ISOFI'IJIEDATUa
If those "winter driving conditions"
find you wishing you didn't have to
drive to work every day, you may be
interested in US's new Rldeshare
program. It's a free, voluntary carpooling service coordinated by UB
and NFT A, that matches commuters
with similar points of origin and daity
routines. Participants may drive. rkie
or share the driving.
In the next lew days, UB leculty
and staff will receive a brochure describing the program. If you want to
be involved, just fill out the questiofl..
naira and send it to NFTA.
US Rideshare has been devel·
oped with flexibility in mind . so it's
sultabJe whether you want to car-pool
just a few days a week or every day.
Rideshare has loads of advantages\
• It helps save money on gas and
maintenance costs
• It gives parttcipants a more
convenient way to get to work

• Fewer vehicles on campus
means parl&lt;ing might actually be less
of a headache
• The amount ol harmful emissions In the air will be reduced.
Watch for the brochure in Gampus Mall. Have questions? Call Ellen
Goldbaum of the Transponatlon Subcommittee, 645-6066.

The Women's Club of the I.Jnlveroily at
Buffalo wil hold its aMUal Soup's On
L1rncheon at lhe Centsr lor Tomorrow
Dec. 7 at 11 :30 a.m. Aller hen
d'08lM8S, ..... and jUca, tlln!e """""
and wl be served, lolawed l&gt;v
desserls. Tha"""" was ptamad 1&gt;v
hospitality chais Cennella Henley and

KatmaWObocl1afl. For raservations, cal
Cennella Hanley, 633-4216.1&gt;¥ Dec. 1.
.Poinsettia sales orders will be

-·-

processed, with proceeds IO go IO
the Grace Capeo Scholarsl1ip Fund.

• Book g roup, Dec. 11 . 12:30,
home of Barbara Paganelli; lise
Eben , co-hostess. Marie Schillo
leads discussion of ·Love Medicine.·
• Antiques group, Dec. 6, 10 a.m ..
FISher-Price Toytown Museum, East
Aurora; fofklwed by lunch at Aoycroh
IM; Judy Ba....,., arrangements.
• International group. Dec. 19. 11
a.m .. holiday lunch. Student Union.
Norlh Campus.
• F,rench Conversation, Dec 15.
12:30 p .m., hOme of William
Blanchard, lunch and conversation
• Gourmet Tachniqoes group.
Dec. 14, 10 a.m.. home of Romaine
Rustum, sampling of appetizer plates.
Meena Rustgi will demonstrate sujee.
lowfat appetizer from India.
• Bridge group, Dec. 4 and 18.
tO a.m.-2 p .m., Dandelions Restaurant. interrpediate and advanced
play ; Marie Schillo, coordinator.
• Bowling, Mondays, 10 a.m .
Sheridan Lanes.
• TOMis group, Wednesdays.
1:3()..3 p.m.. Arrha{st Hilts Tennis Club;

chUs. Marie Schillo, Am Shub.

�7
Murray S. Howland Jr.
clinical professor of
medicine

A-

MrYioe was held Nov.

17 in Westmlnst8f Presbyterian Church
for MurrayS. Howland Jr., 84, who hed
served as a clinical professor of medtclne and gastroenterok&gt;gy at the UB
medical school since 1937. Howtand

died

NOv. 14 1n his Snyder home eh8f

a brief Illness.
Founder of the BuffakJ Medtcal
Group In 1946 with three oth8f phys~
cians, Howtand retired In 1990 and
became associate medical director of
Hospice Buffalo. During his illness, he
was cared for by the Hospice Buffalo
team at his home .
A graduate ol Yale University and
Harvard Medical School, Howland

served In the U.S. Army Medical Corps
during Wortd War II in Africa, Italy and
France.
A membOf of the American College
of Physicians , the Erie County and state
medicelsocieliesandtheAJpheOrnega
honor society, he was the recipient of
many honors for his educatk:lnal, civic
and medical contributions, including
the Distinguished Servk:e Award ol

BuffaloGenerafHoopital'sJu-Board.

Clifton Yearley, retired
history department chair
Servlceaw.,.held Nov. 23in Lexington , Va. fDf Clifton Year1ey, 70, reLired chair of the UB history department Yea.r1eydied Nov. 14 in his home
in Lexington.

During his 23 years at UB. Yeartey
served as chairman of the histCH)' department and as d irector of graduate
studies for the department. He also
taught at Johns Hopkins University,
the Untversity of Detaware and the
University of Rome, Italy.
The author of three books and hundreds of artic les , he received a
Fulbright Scholarship and a
Guggenheim Fellowship .
Yearley. who served in the U.S.
Navy dunng World War II In both the
Atlantic and Pacific Theaters, received
two bronze stars. He served in the
Marine Corps Reserve after the war
and earned a doctorate at Johns
Hopkins. In 1950 he was recalled to
active duty and was awarded the Navy
Cross and Silver Star for heroism during the Korean war combat at Chosln
Reservolr. He had a three-decade career in naval intelligence in addition to
teaching, retiring as a Navyoommander
and a Marine lieutenant colonel.

Gladys K. Drewelow,
Advisory Council
member
G~a

.....s USKE18ALL
rm Cohane's Bulls opened the 1995-96 season Saturday afternoon W1th an
89-491oss 1o Boston College at the Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Mass.
Alter racing out lo an B-2 advantage, the Bulls fell be/lind as the Eagles
used a 23,'3 "-"' to ta!&lt;e control. BC camed four three-pointers during the
lllretcll and took a 48-20 lead at halftime. The Eagles led by no fewer than 22
points in lhe final 20 minutes of the game.
The Bulls -•playing without Aff.Mid-Confinent guard Rasaun Young. UB
announced that Young would be redsllirted for the season because of an
ankle injury he suffered last season that has not properly healed. Young had
been projected by The Sporting News as the ieague's player of the year.
Jamie Anderson led the Bulls with jUS1 eight points as UB shot 27.6 percent
for the game. Freshman Robert Harris added seven points, nine rebounds
and four assists. Antonio Granger led the Eagles with 15 points in 15 minutes
while first team All-Big East seleotJon Danya Abrams added 14.
Cohane, former assocfaiB heed coach at BC before arriving at Buffalo, said
following the game, "They - e rruc:h beft8f than us. We're very young and
by the tine we got f1oler our """""""' we - e out of the game.·
Aft8f a Nov. V rmelinQ with Big East newcomer Rutgers, the Bulls take on
crosstown rival Canisius at lhe Koess1er Center on Tuesday Dec. 5 at B p.m.
UB is i'&lt;lme to meet Cornell on Dec. 9 at7:30 p.m.

WOIEN'SIIASKDIIALL
The Royals concluded their exhibition season Sunday afternoon with a ~ 1
win rNer the Offociaf Sports team.
UB led at halftime 26-25 and held on down the s~etch 1o take the win.
Fres!Ynan Kim Coon led the Royals with 16 points off the bench, including 12
in the second half. Coon hn for 8-of-11 field goats and also drained a tllraepointer. Junior Brenna Doty added 12 points while sophomore Charissa
Gardner was lhe only other Royal in figures with 10. Sophorrore
Nicole Blakeslee led the Royals' rebounding efforts with 13 off the bench and
added seven points while fres!Ynan Catherine Jacob tallied elght assists.
Official Sports was led by Maly Ann Kowal's 23 points, 1B in the second
half. Patricia Melville added 14 points and led the team wi1h eight boards.
UB opens their season Friday night when they rooet the University of
Hawaii In Honolulu. The Royals host Hampton University in the home opener
at AJLmnl Arena on Dec. B at 7:30 p.m.

MEN'S. WOMEN'S S~NG
The Bulls and Royals had the week off to prepare for the competitive Notre
Dame lrM1atlonaf. The rooet will be held Nov. 30-Dec. 2 in South Bend. Ind.
The Bulls currently are 1-2 in dual rooets while the Royals stand at 2·2. Because of the number of teams at this weekend's event. it will not count as a
dual rooet.
WRESIUNG
The Bulls open their dual rooet season on Friday. Dec. 1 when they take on
Rider and Drexel. They meet RIT in Rochester on Saturday . US's first dual
meet at home is Jan. 6 when they lace the University of PinsburghJohnstown.

VOUEYBAU.
Four Royals earned All-Mid-Continent Conference Eastern DIVISIOn honors the

league announced recently.
Senior outside hitter Candie Hirst and junior setter Cand1 Sims earned firstteam honors while sophomore middle hitter Kathy Brinkwortll and senior out·
side hitter Laurie Santelli were named to the second team.
Hirst led lhe Royals with a school record 510 kills this season and became
the only player in UB \/CIIeyball history to amass more than 500 kills in a season. A first-team selection lest season, she finished h8f career with 1641 kills
an&lt;l 3.44 kills per game, both school records. She was also first on the Royals
with 4. t5 kills per game and second with 2.77 digs per game and 51 service
aces (0.41 P8f game) this season.
Sims earned her second straight fi"'t·team nod by leading the team in as·
sists with 1,104 (8.76 per game) and was third on the team with 50 service
aces, and 332 digs. Sims also led the Royals with her .296 hitting percentage.
She also contributed 139 total blocks (1 .10 per game) finishing third on the
club. Sims is currently second on the Royals' all-time assist list with 2,218.
Brinkwortll topped the Royals in total blocks with 223 and led the Mid-Con·

CALENDAR

K. DNwelow. 81. along·

lime Republican activist and public
information officer for former county
executive Edward V. Regan . died Nov.
22 in Buffalo General Hospital. She
served on the University at Buffalo
Community Advisory Council.
A member of the Erie County Republican Party's executive committee
lor 26 years, she served on the New
York State Apprenticeship Training
Council, the Citizens Advisory Committee on Downtown Buffa\o and the
Buffalo Convention Center Management Comminee. She recefved numerous awards, including a medal of honor
from the Freedoms Foundation and
WNY lnterclub Council's Susan B. Anthony AwSid .

Professor-Electrical and Compute r Engi neering, Posting lfF-5063 . Asslstant/MProreaor -Eiectrical and Computer Engineering, Posting MF-5064.
Adj u Dd Aaist.nt/Adjunct Associate
Prorcaor (par1-4ime)-Eiectrical and
Compult:r Engineering, Posting •F-5065
Assistan t Profeuor-Medicine. Posting
MF-S066. Assistani/Auoc::lat e Proressor Neu.rosurgery, PostingiF-5067. AssistaDt Prorc:aor-Medicine, Posting MFtoela~

Prof111laa.,
Tetd&amp;lac Hospital Nunc Practitiooe:r
(SL-4)-Studenl Heallh Center, Posting

MP-5032. DIRctor of Deve~pment
(MP~JB)-Orfice of Vice President for
Advancement &amp;. Development, Posting
fP-5042. IutniCtloaal Support Spoclalilt (SL-t)-Sc.bool of Engineering and

Applied Sciences, Computer Services
Group, Posting fP-5049. Lead Pn&gt;lf1IDIIDU'

Analyst (SL-3)-Computing &amp;

lnfonn.ation Technoloay, Posting MPS050................ Aaatyst
(SL-4)-Computlaa &amp; laformadon
T ecluootoaY. Posting IP-5051 .

F-ltJ
Aaistaot ProfeROr -Medicine, Posting
fF-4 120. A.ulJtant Professor -Industrial

Ena:iooering, Posting ffF-SOS4. Auill&amp;.at/Auodale/FuU Profeqor-lndustrial
Engineering, PostingtP-5055. AuiJtant
Proraaor-Civil En&amp;ineerinz, Posting1FSOS6. Atlistaat Profeaor-Civil Engineering, Pos1ing tf-SOS7. Assi.Jtant ~
feaor-Civil Enaineering, Posting
IF-5058. A.aiJta.at Profeqor-Civil Engineering, Postin&amp; IF-5059. Aalst.aa t
Profeuor-Ci vil Engineering. Posting Iff.
5060. Alaistaat Profeaor-Civil Engineerina, PostinaiF-S061 . Aalstaa t Profeaor-Eiectrical and Computer
Engineering, Posting IF-5062. Assistant

5068. AaistaDI/Aaodolt
Prot'CII!Qr-Medicine, Posting MF-5069
~~ Proressor-Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering. Posting MF5070. Atsist.utt Proreuor -Mcchanical
and Aero~pace Engineering, Posting MF5071 . Aalsttia t Proressor (two positiou n•U. b le)-Economics. Posting MF5012.

·-

ua· - --ln -.27----....,.._

tinent Conference W1th 1.84 blocks per game and IS among the national leaders in the category. She also added 176 kills, a .260 hitting percentage and
2B8 digs. In two seasons. Brinkwortll has tallied 320 block assists, second
only to Sims' 3251n the all-time category. This ts hef second selection to the
league's second team
Santelli also piCked up second-team honors for the second consecutive
year. She led the team with 368 digs (3.15 per game) and finished hef career
with 1,31 7 and a school record 3.41 d1gs per game. Santelli also added 330
kills and 2.82 kills per game, placing her second behind Hirst in both depanments.
The Royals f1n1shed the 1995 season at 21-13 after a 1994 mark of 11-21
UB finished thtrd in the Eastern OiviSJO(l wilh a 3-3 h!ague mark. Head coach
Bob Maxwell completed his 15th season with a career record of 363-229-8
and a .612 wmmng percentage

CROSS COUNtRY/1RACK • FIELD
The UB women's cross country and track and field programs s•gned three local athletes to National Leners of Intent last week.
Laura Folckemer and her sister Jennifer Folckemer from CISience H1gh

School and Amy Tarbone of Lancaster High School Will fOin the Royals next
season. The ~ckemer sisters will compete 1n cross country and indoor and
outdoor track and fteld while Tabone will see action on the varsity 1ndoor and
outdoor track and field teams.
Laura Fo4ckemer was pan ol Clarence's Section VI Champion cross coun-

try squad for three seasons. The team also advanced to the State Class B
Champtonships all three seasons winning the state uue in 1993 and plactng

second in 1995. On the track. she was third in the 1995 Sect100 Vl1ndoor
1500 meters and pan of the wmmng 4x8()().meter relay squad. The relay
team was fifth at the state championships and eighth in the national championships . She also placed third 1n the Sectton VI outdoor 15(X) meters and was
again pan of the winntng 4xBCX)..meter relay team She intends to maJOfln
nursing .
Jennifer Folckemer has also oeen pan of the Clarence program lor three
seasons. She fimshed second in 1995's Section VI indoor 1500 meters and
was also part of the 4x8(X}-ielay team With her Stster Outdoors she was fourth
tn the 1500 meters and agam pan ol the winmng 4x800-relay squad She tntends to major in physical therapy
Tabone lintshed first 1n 1993 and 1994's Ene County lmerschotasttc Conference (ECIC) 50-meter Indoor hurdles event She was also third tn the 55meter hurdles at the 1993 Dartmouth Relay and the 300--meter dash at the

1994 Section Vi Champ100sllips Outdoors, Tabone won the 1994 ECIC 400.
meter hurdles and took first 1n the 100 and 400 meter hurdles tn the 1995
meet. She also won the Sectton VI titles in both events tn 1995 and was thtrd
tn the 400-meter hurdles at the 1995 New York State Champtonshtps Tabone
1ntends to mapr tn business.
The Royals and Bulls open theu 1ndoor track season on Dec at the Cornell
Relays. US's women's squad took the Mld-Conunent Conference c rown at
last season's champtonship meet 1n February

- Ted Wasko, Sports Information Office

~· -·B p.m. at Koess1er Cent8f

Men's Baskelbafl at Canfsfus

Projed Starr Assodate--Development,
Posting IR-95090. Secretary U -Social
&amp; Preventive Medicine, Posting MR95107. Stcre.t.ary 1-Public Service&amp;: Urban Affain. Posting IR-95115. Secre-tary JI-Structural Biology lnitiati\'e,

Women's Besl&lt;etbaff vs. Hampton

7:30 p.m. at Alt.mnl Arena

Posting IR-95 11 6.

Men's Basl&lt;atbalf vs. Cornell

7:30p.m. at Ah.mni Arena

....,._

~v•

Ctaulfled Civil

Keyboard Spedalist I (SC-06)-Gradu·
ate School. Line 122701 , 125748. Sen tor
Dental Assistant (SC-10)-Ciinical Dentistry, Line 121730.

To obtain mort information on jobs
liSied above, comact Pusonnd Servic,s.
104 Crofts Hall.

F.w.w.-..

........,Y,-..
-....w,-.17

Women's Basketball vs. St. John's

2 p.m. at Alumni Arena

~. -21
Women's Basketball vs. Wofford
6 p.m. at Afurmi Arena
Men's Basl&lt;etball vs. Niagara
B:15 p.m. at Altmnl Arena

�_
..
__
......__ _
.....
..--..__
__ _

8

~-­

I•J

......, .......

_..._.,...(1011_~

ScroeeUtc Rooco. c.- f"' tho

----·............. ---·
~

_

Atu. North~ 4 p.m. Froe.

_....,

~-Dey

Crater for Tomorrow. North

Pan ofWcdocodays at4 Plus.

Arlit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.._
Tile Art of Doolp ud no-.
- . J - Piaa. 301 Croaby.

Campus. Afternoon.

u•~~~-

South Campus. 5:30 p.m.

ManaaJa1the UB/Bulfalo BuJi.
nns CoDDeCtioR, Dr. Frederick
W. Winter, Dean, School of Man·

to••

aaemenL AdnUuioo includes full
breakfut. Buffalo Marriott, 1340
MiUenport Hi&amp;)lway. 7:30a.m.
S9 Alumni Associatioo membcn ;

,... . .,.

._MX...._Ia

-

-l..oc.kwood..
rr-Net.
223
7p.m. ToreJi.,.,
ca.ll

..,__u..
64S.2&amp;17.

.................. Aibt~
citalllall. Soadl ~ 7 p.m.
"""- Concens . . taped few

S 10 othen. For reservations. call
Al umni Office at 829-2608.

-..ooWBP088.7PMtho
followiJia Suoday at 4 p.m.

c.-op.•o•rt c..ter
Abaoraaalltits Ia tbt
P~re-Ovf:rloaded Bypertr.
phied Left Vf:alrk:)e, Dr. Dirk
Perfu.s~n

Dunck.er. Univ. Rotterdam. 108
Shennan. South Campus. 8 L m .
I~CIIIIIc:

Buffalo Free-Net. 223
Lockwood. Noon. To register, call
645-28 17.

-

Sbemtan. South Campus. 8 ...._

Arta.i.

E xtnttllular Gradleat. of Vole-

age u Controls of NenOUJ" Sys-

tem Denlopm.eat aad

~a­

eration, Dr. Richard Borsens.
Purdue Univ . 306 Farber. South
Campus. 12:30 p.m.

utew--.,
Grant Devc.lopment Worlubop,
Maureen McMahon. 3&lt;5 p.m. For
1nfonnation. calllbe Office of

Student Li fe 11 645-6125.

l'loJelc:eCol._....
When: the B's Are- Tbe Cleo
Expe.rimeat at CESR., Prof. Ron
Poling, Univ. of Minnesota. 220
Natural Sciences. Nonh Campus.
3:45p.m.

--L.elclle---·.............. -..

Toward. M1111brane Protein

Slructllft;Pndktion. Dr. Axel
Brunger, Yale Univ. 11 4
Hochstetler. North Campus. 4 p.m.

The. R.iiJu or llilk. Auc:s:noent
Relllted to the Grat Lakes,
Darry Boyer, Dean, Law School.
122 C lassroom Building. Buffalo

Slate College, 1300 Elmwood
Ave . 4 p.m.

InteradioDJ of Estroaen. a ad
Androce.ns with Cortkoltuoid.J, Guy Meno-Telang . 508
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

Stlltllltlc:eCoi. . .IM•
SpKtral Analysis or Catqorical
Time ~ties. Prof. David Tyler,
Rutgers Un.i v. 244 Cary. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

Aw_C_
J . Scolt Flemlo&amp; Merit Awards.

-

Jeannette Martin Room. Capen.
North Campus. 5:3(). 7 p.m. For
information, call 829-2608.

......

...

Eltttra. Play by Euripides; Aaron
Cabell di~IS . with c horeography
by Tressa Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert Chumbley . Drama Tile·
atn: , Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $5. SIO.

Open
Hallll'l and Gretel, UB Opera
Workshop. Opera by
Humperdinck, directed by Gary
Burgess. Mai nstage. &lt;:enter for
the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m.
S4. S5, S6.

-...

- A r t Wool&lt; lor Sale.
Warlt by IIIUdcnb U. tho Dept. of
Art. Atrium, c.- few tho Atu.
North Campus. 9 a.m.-5 p.DL

Nederlands

D•ers

. . . , - , , , ..,.

Sabine Kupferberg
appears Dec. 1
with Nederlands
Dans Theater 3 in
Mainstage, Center
for the Arts.

8flDC!JyutbetillD tbe

Bndyribo&amp;obium JaponkumSoybeao Symbiosis, Dr. Mart R.
O'Brian. UB Biochemistry DepL
106 Cary Ha1L South Campus.
Noon .

...............

-

Alpha Borpavln&gt;s L Partkt..
and Preps: 'Ibf!ir Pote-aUal as
Vaccines, Prof. Emeritus John
Subak-Sbarpe, Univ . of Glasgow.
108 Sherman. South Campus.
Noon.

~­

c.lloqoolll•

Bhan.t K. Bhargava. Purdue Univ.
2 18 Norton. North Campus. 3 p.m.

4p.m.

• •

-

N f!dertands Dans Theater 3.
Mainstage, Center for the Arts.
North Campus. 8 p.m. $14.$18,
S22. Sponsored by QRS and the
Center for the Arts.

--...

Ioternaliotsal Folk Dancing. A ll
levels. Partners not needed. 2
Diefendorf. South Campus. 8- 11
p.m. Free. Sponsored by Gr.tduate
Student Association.

Muolc:
UB Percussion Ense.mble, An·
thony Miranda, director. Slee
Concen Hall . North Campus.
8 p.m. Free.

Muolc:lloMter
Electra. Play by Euripides; Aaron

Cabell di=u. w;th choreognphy
by Tressa Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert Chumbley. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North
Campw. 8 p.m. S5. $10.

Open
Hll.Ud aDd Gretel, UB Opera
Workshop. Opera by
Humpc:rdinck, directed by Gary
Burgeu.. Mainstage. Center for
the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m.
S4. S5 . S6.

-...
Just Dtaerta &amp;: Mdapbon or
Misuaderstaadiaa, E' gaLs. UB
amateur drama club, Black Box
TbeatJe:, Harriman. South Cam·
pus. 8 p.m. $3. SS.

Ad VkU. Que Poarn. Frenc:hClMdian trio. Allen Recital Ha11.
South Campus. 8 p.m. $7-$14.
SponJOml by WBFO 88.7 FM
and Campau Concerts. For ticket
lnfonnatlon. call759-9136.

-...

-T......

Come.ll Rtla)"'. Alumni Arena.
North Campus.

-...

Ekdra. Play by Euripides; Aaron
Cabell directs. with choreography
by Tressa Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert Chumbley. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. Nortb
Campus. 2 and 8 p.m. $5, $10.

-"'-'·

A Ntpl Uodu the Stara, Doug
Pepe. Residence Life. For information, ca11645-4479. Fargo Terrace. Nonh Campus. 6 p.m.-6 a.m.
Donations to Buffalo City Mit·
sion.

Open
Ba.,.l and Gretel, UB Open
Workshop. Opera by
. Humperdiock. directed by Gary

MisuDtkntaDdlac, E' gats, UB
amateur drama club. Black Box
llleatrc. Harriman. South Campw . 8 p.m. $3, S5.

Mary GraadPrr, Wllltrator.
Screening Room. Center foe the
Arts. Nortb Campus. 3:30 p.m.

j

~

IIURiaDd Gretel,. UB Opera
Worlcshop. Open by
Humperd.inck, directed by Gary
Burgess. Mainst.age. Center for
lbe Arts. North Campus. 2:30p.m.
S4. S5. S6.

.IIIZz
UB Jazz ED.Je~Dble, Russell
Owens, direc:ior. Slee Concert
Ha11. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

...... -...

....,__
Campus. 3:30-5 p.m.

Mnnd.n

!

Olld Leantln&amp; SIX-

Hexmoor. 224 Bell. North Cam-

IIJahi

I

t:r) .........

"-'tably Olld Jteaulalioo of lbc
YcuiVacuolaB'-ATI'ue,P.
Kaoe, SUNY Upstate Medical
Center, Syracuse. 134B Farber.
South Campus. 4 p.m . .

PloploloO-

Tbe PhaniUICGioc of Nctm~nal
CeU Sbape: latencUoa of
BMP'a ud laterleuklas., Dennis
Hipins. Ph.D. 108 Sherman.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

-

UB Coete:1Dporal)' EDIHIIbk,
Jeffrey Stadelman, d.in:ctor. Slee
Concert Hall North Campus.
8 p.m. Free.

c-.-.
~~of

Stadatlcal T - Prof. W J . Hall.
Ulliv. orRoc:bes&amp;et. 244 Cary.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

.IIIZz
UB Juz C..bo, LoWs Marino.

dim:lc.-. BaUd Recital Hall. Noeth

Campus. 8 p.m. Froc.

Play by Euripides; Aaroo
CaheU t!i=U, Mth ~y
by Treu.a Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert C.umbley. Drama Theatre. Cealtt for lbe Arts. North

Campus. &amp; p.m. $5, SIO.

.

Prvl. G. Wllllue ......,., Penn.
State at Erie. 220 Narural Sciences. North Camput. 3:45 p.m.

-L.elclle-

NADPs Mo.....-y Dopoo1ton Not·

work. Dr. Stephen Vermene, Buffa1o State. 222 Na1W'11 Sciences.
North Campus. 4 p.m.
•

.IIIZz
VB Ja:a: C:O.bo, .Sam Fa1zone.
director. Baird Recital Hall. North
Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

._

.._
-~

Tbree an sbowl are up ln lbe Center for tbe Arts oo the North Campus. Beauvais Lyons' ..Rccoolti'UCtion or an Aamdian Temple:
A Parody of Science, lfutory and
Art,.. is oo view throu&amp;h Dec. lS
;. tho Art Depanmcnt Gallery.
Paintings by Lydia Dona 1ft on
view through Dec. 22 in the University Gallery' s flf'lt-Ooor space.
And the Ondua1e Show is in tbe
Univenity Gallery' s scc:ond-floor
space throttJh Dec. 13.

........ .........,.

WNYT-....

_.._

New French Folk Music

-~Col'-111•

il!fonaalloot-Tioeordlc LoPe U,
John Corcoran. 684 Ba1dy. North

Electra. Play by Euripides; Aaron
Cabell dirccu, with choreography
by Trcssa Gorman Crehan, music
by Robert Chumbley. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $5 . SIO.

aatullloa.tlae Activities., Henry

Ad Vielle Que Pourra, a trio of French Canadian
musicians. will perform Dec. 2 in Allen Hall. Sponsors
are WBFO-FM and Compass Concerts.

Pud-:Ed--..w
Tec........,.udN.pd&lt;d
Volcca, Hanl: Bromley, Mart Garrison. Pbam. Kerlan. K.L
Kimmel. 209 Baldy. North Cam-

Froc.

._.liD&amp;

Manaaed Plyeblatrk: CanTheory and Pnctke, Michael L.
Raulin. Ph.D. Auditorium, Reha·
bilitation Buiklins. Buffalo P5ychiatric Center. 10:30 a.m.

carrArt..-r.

CeCIIIIIM-

PllploloCJ
·118}1
Center
ror TOIDOrTOW.
North
Campus.
Morning.
PaycllllltrJ
_ __

llnal Adopoadoe .. Allond D!dary Sdale Ia Rata, Kazultn
Sapwa. 508 Cool:e. Nonh Campus..4p.m.

pus. N~ -1 p.m. Presented by the
Center for Education&amp;] Resoutces
and Technologies.

Just l&gt;esltrb &amp;: Metapbon or

pw. 3-5p.m.

Polley Olld Ecoeoaok lalpllcaliOCd ot Cllaloriae SUIUidtiaala
the Grat Lakes BulD. Tom
Muir, Environment Canada. 140
Ketter. North Campus. II a.m.

c-.-.

Prof. JU.-Yi Cai. 103
l);deadorf. -Campus. 4 p.m.

....-.-Sunrl.n

Fmi;-1\

---

SF

Co~~Jodaro,

-.ery Col._ •••
Tk Slfl'tOCbemiltry or
Viayk:yclopr'opane to CydopentaDf!. R.HJTa.D.~t-ments, Prof.
John E. Baldwin, Syracuse Univ.
2 15 Natural Sciences. North Campus. 4 p.m.

#e&amp;..

.,edlk:" :' . . . tCt.Cdl
Slpolltot. Dr. RudaiJ Shortridse114 Bocltsteuor. Noeth Campus.

Just De:s.st.ru &amp;: Me.tapbors of
Misunde.rdaadia&amp;. E'gaLs, UB
amateur drama club. Black Box
Theatre, Harriman. South Campus. 8 p.m. $3, $5 .

hWa•••at.l~

------tl·-· --D r.- Dlatab. 108

-,-c.~••.......,

De.-_tLac...... Your ProiiU Tbrnu&amp;b

Ekdroelceo..-... Spon-

sor«~ by WNY TcchnoJocy Development Center. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 8: l 5ll a.m. $60. To resister. call 6363626.

utew--.,

--p--

Tete A.adety, Counsc:lin&amp; Center.
Noon- I p.m. For information , call
the Office of Student Life ac 6456125.

T J . Yoo. M.D., Ph.D., St. l odeS
Hospital. RPCI. Elm and Carlton.
I 2:30p.m.

An exhibit of 1994 competition
winners from lbe Nation.allnsri(Ute for Arcb.itectunJ Education is
on view throuah Dec. 8 ia James
Dyen Exhibition Hall 335 Hay.,
Hall, South Campus.. Admission is
free. &amp;hibitioo boun are Monday
through Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

n.lirt.r ..............
'The Women's Hca.lth Initiative
Clinic is pcuenliDJ lbe second annual ..Breast &amp;: Cervical Health
Art Exhibit" throuzb Nov. 30 at
the clinic, 65 Farber Hall, South
Campus.

Rtadlly Available C....nu..atioo
Co•potlllda, Prof. Eric Jocobscn.
Harvard Univ. 215 Natural Scieoces. North Campus. 4 p.m.

-

Exltaltd Nitric !hide, John
Knsncy. Ph.D. 108 Sbemtan.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

Continued on page 7

c-,.Col'--

.uy.-.x Calalylil wltb

...,_..,._

.., ........... ...,..,.
u.

A rt by srudents tho De-_ . . o f An will be foe sale
Dec:. 7 frotn 9 L DL to 5 p.m. in the
Atrium or die Cen~er roc the Ans,
Noeth Campus.

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
Provost Thomas Headrick today begins Update from the Provosfs Office, providing information, comment
and inviting dialogue with the university community on UB issues. It appears on Page 4.
No\&lt; ember 16 1995

Volum e 27. No 12

Education Secretary at UB; looks
at process for federal student loans
II)'~VIDAL

education syste m in thi s country. II would be a shame
if you didn 't have that opportunity (to attend college)
.S. SECRETARY OF EDUCATION Ri and we want to make sure you conti nue to have that
chard W. Riley visited UB last week to
opportunity."
observe firsthand how the university has
But Congress. he said. wants to eliminate the direct
implemented the federal direct studentloan program, which is ..the most false, ridiculous thing
loan program and to panicipale in a
I ever saw." The Senate's ··more moderate version''
roundtable discussion on it.
proposes capping
About 1,400 institutions nationthe number of
wide participate in the program that
schools offering
provides federal student loan funds
direct lending at
directly to universities and colleges,
20 percent; more
than 35 percent
eliminating the role played by hanks.
In stituted in 1994 by the U.S. Deof colleges cur·
partment of Education on a pilot
rently panicipate
basis at 104 colleges. including
in the direct lendBrockport State College. the proing process. he
gram was expanded this year. UB
added.
joined the program in June.
Students gathFollowing a demonstration of the
ered for rhe
process UB is using to award fedroundtable di s·
eral direct student loans, Riley joined
cussion voicc:d
UB students and administrators, At - I l l Kay• c , 11om left: Educ.tlon Sec- the need for con·
Congressman John LaFalce, UB notllry Rlcllanl Rl.ey, Prnlclent 0111lner, Brockport
tinuing financial
President John Van de Wetertnc.
President William R. Greiner and
aid and support of
Brockport President John E. Van de Wetering for a
the direct loan program.
roundtable di scussion on student loans.
"If I don "t have financial aid it will hinder my
Funding for the direct lending program could be in
ed ucation ... .Do they realize students are voters too?"
jeopardy as the Senate and the House of Representasaid Deana Savage. a pre-med student at UB . ··we
tives fight to balance the federal budget ove r the next
need the loans. We need the financial aid to be avai l·
seven years, Riley told participants.
able. I don't just need the money for ruition. I need it
The new leadership in Congress has proposed a
to live off. I realize you' re working ro cut the deficit.
but there has to be another way."
balanced budget that, over the next seven years. would
In response. LaFalce urged students to write their
cut funding for higher education by $36 million. " Part
congressmen 10 voice their concerns about c ut s to
of that is student financial aid," Riley said. President
financial
aid. "Your voices are not being heard. The
Clinton also has proposed a balanced budget ("Notice
voices that are being heard are the institutions that are
both are balanced budgets," Riley said.) that over the
making a profit on the loans .... You must make your
same seven-year period has a $40 milli on increase in
voices heard," he sa id.
education funding . "I th ink that says it all in term s of
Shelaine Rigby . a se nior majoring in management,
priorities." he said.
told the educati9n secretary that in a sense the future of
The United States has ' 'the most wonderful '' sys tem
the
Uni ted States rests on student loans.
of higher ed ucation in the world. but 70 percent of
"We are the future . We are the ones who are going
students need some type of financial help in order to
to be building the nation. If we don't get these loans
attend college. according to Riley. " It 's no opportunity at all if you don't get to be part o f the higher
Continued on page 3
Reporter Editor

U
Henry . . - Taylor In the Unlver.lty Dletflct: he Ia part of new lnltl•
tlve to make It one of the plac.a to live In w-... Yol1&lt;.

Project aims
for quality of life
'trenafwmdon' of University District

Taylor -

11)'~­

Reporter Editor

D

=~~:

in the University District, including two

serious crimes involv-

ing UB students in less than one
week, that area soon could become
one of the safest places in Western
New York to li ve and work, according to Henry Louis Taylor.
director ofUB's Center for Urban
Studies.
Taylor is o ne of the creators of
the University-Community Initiative, a project aimed at combining
the strengths of UB , the City of
Buffalf?. surrounding towns and a
number of area organizations and

businesses in a collabomtive effon
to improve life in the area around
UB's Main Street Campus.
Conducted under the guidance
o fUB President William R. Greiner
and Vice President for Public Service and Urban Affairs Muriel
Moore, with "tremendous help"
from Mayor Anthony Masiello.
University District Councilman
Kevin Helfer and Amherst Super-

visor Thomas Ahem, the project,
Taylor said, aims to "transform and
make (the University District) a
wonderful place to live and work."
Economic problems caused by
Buffalo's shift from an industrial
base to a service and technology
bm have led to problems of unemployment and underemployment,
Taylor said. " Unless the university
intervenes, the problems will continue and make life difficult for
those of us in the University District."

To address those problems, Taylor said he is looking at what is
being done in other cities to fight
urban decay.
' There are a number of things

one can do in terms of the design of
physical space," he said. In addition, Taylor said he will be looking
at .. innovative projects around the
country and the world for things
that people have used to combat
crime.
Taylor cited as an example a
Philadelphia project that uses
you ng adults who work for the
municipality and patrol the central
city area. These community scr·
vice workers not only provide a
presence, they serve as a source of
information and a link between the
area and police, reporting suspicious activity and other potential
problems.
Last week, Buffalo took a step
toward providing more of a pres·
encein the University District when
Continued on page 2

FSEC endorses SUNY proposal; Greiner, Headrick speak
II)' SlOE COX

Reporter StaN
RESID ENT William
Greiner and Provost Thomas Headrick told members oftheFaculty Senate
Executive Committee they were
encouragedbyapreliminarySUNY
reorganization proposal, authored
by one of SUNY 's new trustees,
that offers campuses extensive new
nexibilit y and autonomy. The
FSEC went on to endorse the proposal during their Nov. 8 meeti ng.
Thomas Egan, vice chair of the
Board of Trustees and a recent
Patald appointee, authored an eightpoint plan for turning over tuiti on
revenues and policy, campus administrative decisions and strategic planning to individual
campuses. Egan released his report for consideration by the full
board during a Nov. 13 mini-sum-

P

mit of campus presidents. govern·
ment leaders and tru stees held at a
Bolton Landing hotel. The full
Board ofTrustees endorsed Egan· s
rough·plans at that meeting. sending them on to SUNY administra·
tors to be n eshed out. They will
meet again Nov. 21.
Headrick called Egan "one of
the driving forces of the new trust ees" and credited him with bringing th e "Rethinking SUNY""
process together after it appeared
to have bogged down . Egan·s proposals. in effect, "put each campus
out there on their own. including
the level of tuition they charge."
sai d Headrick. adding that the proposals are consiste nt with the kinds
of changes he and Greiner have
advocated in Albany.
Greiner echoed Headrick"s enthusiasm for the proposals. calling
them "sound for the system and

soundforUB." Also. among Egan's
proposals was the spinning off o r
free-standing health science centers from SUNY to not-for-profit
corporations, savi ng the hospital s
from po tenti al bankrupt cy and
shaving roughly $75 million from
the SUNY budget. " Every unit in
SUNY has a serious stake in seeing
this take place," said Greiner. " If
we are unable to get this through
the legislature, th e rest of the system will eat that $75 mil lion."
Greiner acknowledged some
resistance to the plan, including
many preside nts of university colleges, but felt that consensus could
be reached on the "general principles." College presidents fear that
university centers will use their
new-found freedom to increase
enrollment. gobbling up the state ·s
undergraduate pool. but, Greiner
argued. that is unlikely to happen.

Many of the proposed changes.
even if adopted by the Trustees.
will require action by the state leg·
islalure before becoming effective.
In other business. Vice Provost
for Undergraduate Education
Nicolas Goodman briefed the
FSEC on the current state of fac ·
ulty advisemenl of undergraduates.
A comprehensive handbook has
been produced by Goodman·s office to assist faculty in thei r new
role as advisors
Goodman siUd that, while still
in need of tweaking. the compu terized Degree Audit Reporting System (OARS) is fully operational.
While it shou ld prove a usefu l tool
for faculty advisors. Engineering
Professor Dennis Malone suessed
that OARS is "not a substitute for
facuhy advisement."
Continued on page 2

�2

Calendar
chronicles
UB'spast
VIsual hlghllihb of history
11J ANN WIUTCIIEII
Publications StaH

I

MAGESFROMtheuniversity's pastsomeofthem never before publishedhighlight the limited edition

Sesquicentennial desk calendar, produced by University Publications in

cooperation with University Archives .

The calendar begins in January 1996 and
ex tends the full18 monthsofthe university 's

Sesquicentennial celebration. It is modeled

\

o n one published by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York to showcase importanl works from that collection.
Consisting of nine cards placed in an
atlractive Plexiglas holder, the calendar was
des igned by Scott Fricker, Publications an
director. Working with University Archivist
Shonnie Finnegan, Fricker tried to create a
sense of the university's history by selecting
the most visually appealing photographs and
drawings.
The calendar opens with a stylized photo
of a female student that appeared in the 1898
Iris. the universily's first true yearbook. h
closes with a restful photo of Baird Point,
which has become the de facto symbol of the
modem North Campus.

Also included are a period painting used
to convey the feeling of campus life in the
late 1920s; a photograph of a late 1960s
Hayes Hall proteSt duri ng the height of ideological fervor, and a group of World War II
servicemen/students gathered in front of the
former medical school building at 24 High
St=t In another, pharmacy students in the
early 1920s consider the camera in Foster
Hall, the first new building on the Main
St=t Campus.
"Most of these images have never before
been published," Finnegan points out. ' The
photo of the 1921 Foster Hall cornerstone
laying has cenainly never been published
before. We have many photos of that ceremony, but not from that particular angle.
It's an offbeat view, one not normally used
for that occasion.! think it' s so striking with

those beams in the background. 1llere'sa lot
going on with (Acting Chancellor) Walter
Cooke speaking, a woman at right shielding
her eyes from the sun .. . Scott had a great eye
in choosing this and other images."'

·

Another point of interest in this photo,
says Finnegan, is that construction of Foster
Hall "was a direct result of the 1920 endowment campaign that raised $5 million. Walter
Cooke had cbaired that campaign while chair-

man of the council."
Fricker presented theolderphotos and drawings in a sepia tone and used mostly fuU-&lt;:Oior
inset photographs of modern setti ngs for a
"now and then" contrast. In the last three
panels, the pattern is reversed and the older
photos become the inset image. Text is minimal and was ananged to create a sense of
narrative throughout the piece. "Images were

selected with an eye bolh towanl bisfoPcal
acamtey and visual intetest,~ Finnegan adds.
"The imperfections in some of the very old
photos added to the sense of DOSialgja." said
Fricker, wbo was caJeful to preserve the integrity of the images. "When we did add color
in some of the photos, we tried to keep it in the
style of the period. Also, in order to maintain
the integrity of the photos, we worked bard to
ensure high-quality printing."
Many of the these photographs have their
own story. 1lle image of Dr. Roswell Park in
surgery, c. 1895-98, came from the es~ of
a UB graduate of the period wbo may be in
the photograph. 1lle photo of the original
Townsend Hall at Niagara Square-first
borne to the College of Arts and Scienceswas adapted from a color postcanl mailed
from Quebec. 1lle correspondent had found
it among an elderly lady's accumulations.
Cecil B. WienerandHelenZ.M.Rodgecs,
Class of 1899, the Law School's first female
graduates, are seen in a sniau one-of-a kind
photo found in Helen Rod gees' papen.
'"These images have been selected from a
very large collection which bas been assembled over a long period of time," says
Finnegan. "Most of them wen: gifts. 1llese
rich holdings have depeoded on the generosity of many people who have given or presented them to the univecsity.
"'These are highlights of the univenity's
visual heritage. We're just delighted that
people who perhaps would never come and
look at all these photographs in the Archives

can now have an opponunity to enjoy these
images."

0

Plans for less centralized SUNY get Trustees' approval
cr,x

~Y ·~
eporter ta

gether. reveal a vision of a less centralized
SUNY with more autonomous campuses-

ov. George Pataki · s appointees to

G

the SUNY Board ofTrustees took

a major step toward putting their
stamp on the state university this
week when they endorsed preliminary proposals forrestructuring the system. The trustees met Nov. 13 at the Sagamore Hotel in
Bo lton Landing to give broad approval to

plans drafted by their vice chair. in anticipation of delivering a final report to the -state
leg islature by Dec. I.
Board Vice Chair Thomas Egan offered

eight specific proposals last week that , to-

FSEC
Continued !10m page 1
Lockwood Library Directot Judith Adams

expressed concern that some departments
were distoning the intent of the Faculty
Senate in mandating depanment-based advisement by hiring professionals to do advising, a task which the Senate intended that
professors do.
•
GOOdman agreed, urging that faculty ad-

visement should involve more student contact with faculty members than many have
now. "A majority of undergraduates don't
know any faculty member who knows them

by name," he explained. However, faculty
members, particularly those without tenure,
need to see fac ulty advisement built into the
faculty rewards system somehow before investing time in it. according to Englisli Professor Joseph Fradin, who explained that " it
takes time they feel they just don't have."
Another problem deterring fac ulty ad-

visement is the "massively complicated general education program ...that is far more

compl icated than any rational individual
would ever design," said Goodman. Perhaps

more closely resembling other public uni-

The Egan memo also specifically addressed quality, recommending a commit-

ment to "high academic standards for

from the state each year, may be perilously
close to bankruptcy, according to UB Presi-

dent William Greiner. The Egan memo asks

vetsities around the country. Egan is one of

all...institutions" while allowing individual

that they be "quickly freed from the dis-

seven new trustees Patak.i has appointed to

campuses to set their own standards higher

abling constraints under which they now

the 16-memberboard since takingofficelast

than any promulgated by the trustees, and

operate within the State University."

year. Two more trustees. serving as "holdovers" as their terms have actually expired
but no replacements have yet been named for
them. tend to acl with the new appointees.

embraced SUNY' s .. multiple mission" of
undergraduate and graduate education. research, community service and economic
development.Justweeksago.onenewtrustee

Greiner explained that this would mean
spinning the hospitals off to not-for-profit
corporations wbic~couldcontract withbealth
care managemenl organizations forday-to-

givingPatakidefactocontrolovertheboard.
The tru stees were in agreement on the
general principles embodied in the proposals, according to Tuesday's Buffalo News,
but have turned to SUNY staff to draft ianguage for some of the proposals. The trustees are slated to meet again Nov. 21.
Egan's Nov. 6 memo calls upon the trust -

virtually proposed jettisoning the State
University's graduate mi ssion altogether.
SUNY should also liberate its free-standinghospitalsinSyracuse,BrooklynandStony
Brook, according to Egan' s memo. The hospitals, which together receive $75 million

day operations.
" What they are proposing is simply to
put the other three medical schools on the
same financial footing as UB 's medical
school has been on for 150 years ," said
Greiner.
0

ees to craft, ..in careful negotiation with the

TAYLOR
Continued from page 1

campuses." differentiated missions for each

------~-----------------------

sector (university centers, university col-

city officials announced plans to expand com-

leges, specialized colleges and statutory col-

ition and fees," as well aS "devolving" many

munity policing efforts in that area as well as
in two other high-cri me neighborhoods,
Broadway-Fillmore and Jefferson Avenue.
Key elements of the plan, which was
announced by Mayor Masiello Nov. 10, include: higher visibility for police officers,
who will be assigned to beat patrols and,

administrative functions currently performed
centrally.

weather penniuing, bicycle patrols; stricter
enforcement of relatively minor crimes such

leges) and every inst itution.
SUNY Central would tum over to indi-

vidual campuses administrative discretion
over "fac ulty hiring, pay and workload; research and consulting; and the level of tu -

The downsized cenLral administration
would be precluded from micromanaging
campuses, adopting "a more focused role of
eval uating how well campuses" perform.
Campuses presumably would receive a
smaller state appropriation, roughly on a
pet-student basis, but would be allowed to

retain "a greater portion of tuition and other
revenues." Tuition increases would, in part.
fund additional, campus-based financial aid.
However, campuses would be able to carry
forward surplus funds from one year to the
next and would be freed of much "red tape"

exposure to its intricacies will move more

in areas such as purchasing and managing

faculty to seek to design a better program,
Goodman speculated.
0

campus property, changes valued by campus

financial officers.

DIREC T~OFPU8l.ICATIONS· 1WON'Yl. ~

• £DlTOR

~ w.M.

as disorderly conduct; and greater commu-

nication with the community as well as with
other police agencies, including UB's Department of Public Safety.
CoUaborationandcooperationamongUB,
Buffalo and the surrounding communities are
an important part of the solution to problems
facing the University District. Taylor said.
Plans for the University-Community Initiative began about three yean ago. "We

knew and understood that without intervention the problems of crime and neighborhood deterioration would continue to take
place," Taylor said.
Although the issue of safety and security
is probably the most visible aspect of the

• ASSC&gt;ClATE£DITOR ,.,......,. •

ART DIR£CTOR. -~

•

project. Taylor noted that the initiative bas
four priorities: neighborhood improvement.
commercial development, safety and secu-

rity, and education. "The Point is to create a
healthy environment and totally transform
and change the community," he said.
"We have a basic framework and some
plans already have begun," Taylor said.
Those involved in the plan, Taylor said,
include Buffalo, the towns of Amhent,
Cheektowaga and Tonawanda, the Buffalo
Municipal Housing Authority, UB and area
busi ness, most of which employ police or
some type of security force. Taylor called it
the "critical mass of people who function in
the area. lf we can create a mechanism that
allows for collaboration and cooperation,

you have a unique opportunity" to tum the
area around and make the univenity district

a safe community, he said.
Taylor emphasized that this is a proactive.
not a reactive plan. "We have understood (the
problems) for some time and the university bas
beenworkingforseveralye&amp;Btoputtogether.. .a
program that makes it possible to make the
community safe and secure," he said
0

IWf41 JfUb/nlopubbulfalolt6ulr~letl

�3

Software translates
Chinese into English
UB doctoral student Mln-Hu.., U.O desltned H
IIJIIUNMUIIIAUIII
News Services Staff

SOFfWAREPACKAGEthal
translates Chinese 10 English
and comprehends whal il's
translating has been developed
by a graduate sludenl in the UB
Center for Cognitive Science. The Chineseto-English system translates and comprehends simple and complex sentences in
seconds.

A

Besides significantly improving Chineseto-Engli sh translations, the software, which

communicates as human s do, using natural
language, is helping cognitive scientists to
ex plore in greater detail how humans use
language to communicate.
It may have potential for use in conj unclion with the WorldWideWeb, making Webs ite information instantly avai labl e in
numerous languages.
By understanding and responding in natural language, the system provides key advantages over machine translators that are
commercially available.
"In the same way that a human translator
has to understand what he or she is translating in order to do the best job, an electtonic
stem also should understand what it is
tra lating," said creator Min -Hung Liao,
UB
lora) student in lhe departments of
comput r scie nce and ling uistics.
" If yo asked me to translate something
and you J ~ gave me a dic tionary and the

syntactic rules of a foreign language, the
results would nol be satisfactory. Thai is
how machine translators work now."
With Liao' s system, the user types in the
Chinese characters. The Chinese texl then
appears on-screen while the software package performs the translation, using artificialinlelligence techniques previo usly developed
aiUB.
The correct English translation then appears on-screen.
'
'The system can perform like an expert
system as well ," said Liao. 'The following
slalemenl could be typed in Chinese, 'Mary
are bread and cake and apples.' Later on, I
can query il in English: 'What did Mary cal?'
II will respond in English thai Mary ate three
things: bread, cake and apples."
The " brains" behind the software package is SNePS, Semantic Network Processing System, a knowledge-repre se ntati on
system developed over the pasl several decades by Stuart Shapiro, professor of compuler science a1 UB, and William Rapaport,
UB associate professor of computer science.
They incorporated SNePS into CASSIE
(Cognitive Agent of the SNePS System-an
lntelligenl Entiry), a computerized cogn ili ve
agent that understands information and communi cates us ing natura) language.
Liao, who learned about SNePS in the
" Natural Language Understanding" course
laughl by Rapaport, deci ded 10 apply thi s
system to electronic translation.

MloHiunc Uao lo ohown In Bell Hall with ooftware that tranolates Chinese Into Enfllloh.

"I'm malting CASSIE multil ingual," he
said.
The sys tem utilizes SNePS as an
interlingua. the intermediate representation
of meaning that both human and electronic
" minds" experience when performing tran slati on from one language into a nother.
While it is translating, the system's knowl edge base grows and cha nges, so the translations are not always fixed, Liao explained.
.. Because the system uses SNePS. it
doesn ' t translate one sentence at a time the
way other machine translators do," Rapaport
noted. Instead, it translates all of the material
on-screen. transforms it into this interlingua
and then translates it from the interlingua
into English.
According to Liao. SNePS is much more
powerful than other knowledge-represen tation systems.
With SNePS. CASSIE is able to perform

reasoning tasks, make inferences and do be·
lie f revision, where it is told something and
makes inferences based on that fact, and then
corrects itself later if it obtains additional
infonnation that indicates that it was mi sled.
Because SNePS allows the programmer
to build world knowledge into the translation system, it has the capacity to reason
about w hat it is translating and the power
with which to di scern, based on context, the
proper meani ng of a word or phrase that may
have multi ple meanings.
This turned out to be particularly impor·
tant with Chinese because Chinese has a
freer word order than English.
While in Eng lish a sentence reads " Mary
sent the book," the Chi ne se translation might
read " Mary the book sent" and it would have
the same mea ning.
''Because it's a semantic network, SNePS
can deduce Lhe proper meaning," Liaosaid.

UB center helps four WNY companies obtain state training grants
11J EUEN CICII.o.AUM
News Services Staff

W

ITH THE ASSISTANCE of
UB 's The Center for Industrial Effectiveness (TCIE) and
working with the Western
New York Economic Development Ccrp.,
four Western New York companies have
applied for and received training grants from
Ihe Empire Stale Development Corp. of New
York Stale.
Oliver Gear Inc., P&amp;G Steel Products
Co., Ingra m Micro Inc. and Robin son/
Fiddler's Green Manufacturing Co., Inc. have
been awarded Regional Economic Development Partnership Program gradts.
Ingram Micro, Inc. of Williamsvi lle, a
software- and hardware-distribution company.
has received a $26,400 granl to improve pro-

ductivity and the ski lls of its workforce. Over
the next three years. the company expects to
add up 10 580 employees.
Robinson/Fiddler's Green Manufacturing Co., lnc. ofSpringville, a makerofk.ilchen
ute nsils, a nd a heat-treating, injection-molding and tool-and-die manufac turer. has received a $22.000 granllo de velop a plan to
increase competiliveness a nd efficiency.
Over the nexl three years, lhe company plans
10 add up 10 36 new j obs.
P&amp;G Steel Products Co. of Buffalo, a
manufacturer of stampings and wire assem blies, has received a $15,000 training grant
to implement strategic planning, human-resource planning and other training goals.
The compa ny plans 10 add up 10 24 new jobs
over the next three years.
OliverGear, lnc. of Buffalo, a gear manu-

RILEY
Continued from page 1
and don ' t have funds available 10 alfend
college, you're looking ala sad future," she
said .
Riley agreed lhal ed ucation is vilallo the
future ... Education is what has moved the
country forward .... Everyone in this country
wants their children to go to college," he
said. ··we have never had a golden age of
education for everyone. That ' s what we ought
lo be working toward."
Jennife r Mengay. a UB sophomore who
also works in the financial aid offi ce, noted
th at students need to bC more a ware of
changes in the finan cial aid process and the
danger the program is in.
Elias Eldayrie, director of the Office of
Financial Aid 10 Students, called the direct
loan program "a great program and the best
thing that ever happened to our students." He
noted thai being ab le 10 award loans direclly
has substa nti ally cut the amount o f time it
takes for stude nts to receive their c hecks.
also reOucing thenumberof shon -te nn emergent.:y loans that students often were fo rced

to take out in order to meet their expenses.
Noting that his institutio n took a tremendous risk in joining the new direc t lending
program in its firs t year, Brockport Pres ident
Van de Wetering said it is ..unconscionable"
to so abruptly end s uch a successful program
thai was begun only two years ago.
Leonard Snyder, UB assoc iate vice president and controller, called the direct Joan
program "a tremendous and positive c hange
in the way funds come to the university." He
added tballhe program has been implemented
without adding additional employees to any
uni vers ity office. including accounting and
fin ancial aid.
President Greiner noted that th e program
has saved 24,000 person hours in admini s·
trativecosts. "University a t Buffalo stude nts
are some of the finest persons I've ever met
in te rms of their dedication and they deserve
the convenience." He added that the direct
student loan program .. is such a winner" that
he is "appalled" that Congress would even
consider eliminating it.
n

facturer that primari ly serves the automotive industry , has received a $10,000 grant
to deve lop a plan to inc rease competitiveness and efficiency. Over the next three
years. the company expects to add abou t 5
employees.
Based in the UB School of Engineering

and App lied Sciences and affiliated with the
UB School o f Management, TCIE promotes
econo mic gro~t h in Western New York by
hdping local companies. whi ch pay fees for
service. to become more competitive.
Fo r further information about TCIE. call

636-2568.

Physical Therapy to award Ph.D.
By LOIS BAK£R
News Services Staff

The University at Buffalo wi ll offer a
Ph .D. program in the Department of Physical Therapy and Eltercise Science begi nnin g
in Fall 1996, maki ng it the on ly campus in
the SUNY system approved 10 confer a doclor of phi losophy degree in this field.
The Ph .D. program replaces the
department's highly-regarded Ed.D. program.
which has been offered for several years.
The impetus for the change was a 1988
report from The National Academy of Sciences. whic h warned that 87 percent more
physical therap ists will be needed by the
year 2(XX) to meet the demand for services.
but that there aren't enough acade mic fac ulty avai lable to train these professionals.
" If you are goi ng to ed ucate more students. you must have more qualified facuhy ." said Frank Cerny. assoc iate professor
and director of graduate studi es for the department. "Our program wi ll prepare therapists to be college and un iversity teachers
and researche rs who wi ll. in tum. train more
therapists to fill entry-level positi ons."
The Ph.D. requires a greater emphasis on
research-an esse ntial component of a program that trains faculty-than the Ed.D.
Barry Eckert , interim dean of lhe School
of Health Related Professions, which incl udes the Department of Ph ysical Therapy
and Exercise Science, said approval to offer
a Ph.D. validates what the department has
been doing for several years.
" We 've drama ti cally increased o ur

ressearc h activi ty, and thi s desig nation underscores our success," he noted.
Th e research-oriented degree will attract
student s with a more in tens-ive scientific
backgrou nd a nd specific research interests.
Eckert said.
Department facu lty currently are conducting research in exercise-induced skeletal musc le injury and repair: respiratory
muscle function in health and disease; respiratory muscle mechanics: elecl'rotherapy and
edema contro l; neuraJ control of the respiratory and cardiovascular systems. and
neuromusculoskeletal control of human
movement.
The depanment will admit its first Ph.D.
students in Fall 19%. and hopes to confer
one or two doctoral degrees a year. All
c urrent doctoral students enrolled in what
was fo nnerly the Ed.D. program will now
earn the Ph.D., Eckert said.

�4-

Update lrom the Provost~ OUice

I

bis semester the Provost has
conducted a number of conversa-

tions with groups of faculty
about the future of the universi ty. The faculty groups were
a
ed on many principles: dilectors of
organized research unils , directors of gradu ate groups, the Graduate Faculty, departmen-

tal directors of undergraduate studies,
di sting uished professors, department chairs,
junior faculty, the Council on Research and
Sponsored Programs, the Faculty Senate.

Fundamental issues of mission, organization
and priorities were discussed. There was

consideration of the optimal size of UB, of
the o ptimal mix of graduate sludents, professional students, upper-division undergradu ate students and lower-division
undergraduate students. There was much
d iscussion of how to maintain or enhance the
exce llence of o ur academic programs in the
current unfavorable budgetary climate.
You are invited to participate in this o ngoing un iversity dialogue. Your written comments will be welcomed by the Provost,
Thomas Hendrick, 562 Capen Hall.
At the Un iversity Convocation, the Pro·
va st made the following proposals:
I . '"The univers ity-faculty and adminis·
tr •.tlion- should build on its strengths and not
protect a small number of programs not likely
to achieve sustained vitali ty and success."
2. "De partments should not have organ izat ional prerogatives that prevent other pans
of the university fro m call ing upon thei r
fa culty me mbers ' talents and services when
needed, or that se Jf. Jimit their access to
facult y talents from other departme nts from
which they could benefit. "
3. " We have to find inventive ways to
build exceptional graduate progmms and
suppon patbbrcal::ing research where our
conventiol'la1 departments and disciplinary
structures have not been wholly successful.
and do so with the quality faculty we have.
rather than with a host of new additions."
4 . "We cannot forsake quality under·
graduate educati on for nationally acclaimed
gmduate educa tion and research , nor wonhy
service for both. As a uni versity we must do
a ll well. An indi vidual faculty member.
however. should be able to e xpect rewards
for high quality achievements that contribute
to any of the major university missions."
5. "If our organizational structures and
prioriti es, if our allocations of authority and
incenti ves, inhibit this dri ve for e xcell ence,
then we ought to alter them. To repeat my
predisposition, pursuing our fundamental
goaJs of providing educational quality, our·
turing intellectual di scovery and creativity,
and serving the public is sacrosanct. Maintaining UB 's current organi zational struc ture
is not."
The conversations this faJJ have been
live ly. It is impossible to summarize the many
connicting views represented. Some sense of
the nature of the discussion may be derived
from th~ foll owing comments and suggestions
made by various faculty to the Provost in the
course of the meetings:
• The Provost's Office should be concerned not onl y with the budget, but also
with academic quality control and with fostering scholarship.
• It is difficult to further interdi scip li·
nary research an4 teaching in an env iron·

eo....... _wltll ..........
• Faculty

s-- Budget Prioritieo

Corm1t!ee ..................... Aug. 21 , Oct. 23

+ Faculty Senate EXecutive
Commlllee ..... All~· since Aug. 30

· Chan
~
............ Aug. 3t ; Nov. 9. 16. 17, 21
+ ~oiU~

.................., .................... Sept. 11
• Ditll:IQUiohod
•
ProMooora ................... Sept. 12. Oct. 11
• GradiMe FacUiy .............. _ ..... jlePl22.
• Ana &amp; ! . - . Fecully ................. Sept. 29
+ JI.IliorFacutty~

~ ....... :............... OcLli, No\1. 17

+ G - ~ ElcociANe
~ ............ _ .. _ .............. ".

Oct 5
• Council an~ &amp; 9pcnored
P!og!wra llld Seleclld FecQir ..... Oct. 7 .
• arg.riiZIId ......,., Unllllld
~~

........... Oct.18,

+ Fecully Slollll ............................. OcL 24
• Faculty Ccln:il. Sc:hool oiMedidne &amp;

Blomedlcel ~ ............ :··-~- Oct. 31

ment of social isola·
tioo. We must fiod
ways to bring faculty
together, perbaps
with a faculty club.
• Academic
principles should
shape any restructuring or reorganization.
Not much is gained
by artificially bringing together faculty
with oo deep inu:Ucctual affinity. Hybrid

departments ""' often mediocre.
• UB 's educational sttength is in its
offerings to upper-&lt;livisioo undergraduates
and graduate students. In the recent past,
however, we bave often admitted more
freshmen than we can comfortably handle.
• Lower~ ivis ion instruction is generally
less expensive than upper--division or graduate instruction . How do we save money by
bringing in fewer freshmen and more trans·
fer students?
• On the graduate level, we have spread
ourselves too thinly, trying to maintain a
profile similar to that of a mucb 'larger uni·
versity. We must focus our efforts in fewer
directions. Let us buHd a few genuine ly
excellent programs we can be proud of, even
at the cost of abandoning other programs.
• We must disengage the doctoral programs from the departments. The most inno.
vative and exciting research and-instruction
is interdiscipl inary.
• We should he training students for jobs
that do not ex ist. Specifical ly, we are train·
ing too many Ph.D.s. We are usi ng tax
money to subsidize education which has
little social utility.
• We should measure demand for Ph.D.
programs at input. rather than at output. For
example, if students want to pursue ad·
vanced work in the humanities, why should
we not make that possible, even if there are
few jobs that use the education?
• We should provide more suppon for
faculty so that they can work more effi·
ci ently. For example. we might institute a
secretarial pool.
• We should concentrate our hiring re·
sources and bring in high· profile inctividuals
who could act as catalysts for significant
research and scholarship.
• Taxing the research grants will reduce
research productivity. The departments that
bring in a lot of outside fundin g are subsidizing the less productive pans of the university.
• We cannot continue to support expensive research programs when an increasing
proportion of our fund ing comes from under·
graduate tuition. More and more of our resources will have to go into undergraduate
education.
• lf we appear to be emphasizing undergraduate education . for example by asking
facully to advise undergraduate students. the
best research faculty will leave.
• There is excessive duplication of in·
struction. We are offering many different
versions of the same courses. taught from
slightly different disciplinary perspectives.
We can no longer afford this luxury.
• The people of the State of New York
have not only economic needs but also cultural needs. The university has an obligation
wider than merely contributing to the growth
of the economy .
• We ""'not providing an adequate
cducationa.J experience to our undergradu·
ates. Advising is not working weU . There is
too little cultural life on campus.
·
• We must develop a reward structure
refl ective of university goal s. More than just
research should be rewarded.
• We must make effective usc of educational technology. 'The university of the
future will look radically different from
anything we are now familiar with.
• You cannot get a gro'Jp of fa culty to
di scuss democratically how to triage among
themselves.
• u we can get control of our tuition, and
if we use that nexibility in entrepreneurial
ways, we may not have to take cuts as deep
as many fear.
• lbe university must change in funda·
mental ways. But that will only happen if
someone is willing to declare a crisis.
. Once more, you art invited to panicipau
in this ongoing university dialogue. Your
written comments will bt welcomed by tht
Provosr. Thomas Headrick, 562 Capen Hall.

''Electra'' to be presented with
original score, choreography
URIPIDES ' CLASSICAL lrllgedy of death and madness among
the Greek royals, "Electra." wiU
be presented by the UB Dcpanment of Theatre and Dance from
Nov. 30 through Dec. 3 in the Drama Theatre
in the Center for the Arts on the UB North
Campus. Performances wiU take place at 8
p.m. Thursdays through Sundays, with additional matinees Saturday, Dec. 2, and Saturday, Dec. 9, at 2 p.m.
The play wiU be di=ted by Aaron Cabell
from a new translation by Janet umbke and
Kenneth J. Rockford, and features an original musical score and choreography.
It stars Heather Rae Miller in the title role,
Lorin Swenson as Orestes, Kristin Tripp as
Clytemnestra and Brian Marsch and Peter
Chaskes as Castor and Polydeuces, respectively. The chorus leader is played by
Gtetchen Meyerboefer.
Cabell is a lecturer in the UB Depanmcnt
of Theatre and Dance and has performed as
an actor for some of the most prestigious
regional theaters in the United States, including Steppenwolf, Wisdom Bridge and
Victory Gardens in Chicago; Washington's
Studio Theatre, and the Arden and Festival
Theatre for New Plays in Phi ladelphia. He
also is a company memher of the North
Carolina Shakespeare Festival.
Hi s production blends theater, original
musi c in a contemporary vein composed and
performed by Robert Chumbley, director of
the Center for the Arts, and dance choreographed by Tressa Gonnan-Crchan, a lecturer in the UB theatre and dance faculty .
Costume design is by Catherine F .
Norgren , associate professor of theater ~t
UB and head of design and production for

E

-

~~
~~-

the Department of Theatre and Dance. Set
design is by Carol Beckley, resident scene
designer and assistant professor of stage
design at Buffalo State CoUege.
The play is a re-telling of the legend of
Elec tra, daughter of Agamemnon and
Clytemnestra. the king and queen of the
Greek Bronze-Age city-state of Mycenae.
Electra saved the life of her younger brother
Orestes by sending him away wbeo their
father was killed by the ir mother,
Clytemnestra. in revenge forbis blood sacrificeoftheirdaughter, lpbigenia, at the outset
of the Trojan War.
When Orestes returned to Mycenae,
Electra helped him kill Clytemnestra and her
lover. Electra then manied Orestes' friend
Pylades.
This is a story of conflicting duties to
family and the larger society; revenge, justice, heroism and cowardice. It has been told
by Greek playwrights Sophacles and
Aeschylus, as well as by Ewipides, although
each varies the theme in detaiL Many other
versions exist as wcU, including the 1931
play by Eugene O' NeiU, who moved the
fa mil y Agamemnon to pos t-civil wa r
America in "Mourning Becomes Electra."
Besides the principal players, the cast of
this production features Olristopber Roberts, J. Jeffrey Wilson. Stephanie Bakowslti,
Rebecca Ruest, Kris tin Renee Brandt,
Sus anna Maritime, Elizabeth Poiiicr,
Marianna Rodriguez, Rebecca Simoo. Anju
Visweswaraiah, Rohert S. Manning, Jason
Hare, Brian Dolan, Scot Hartman, Owen
Muirbcad and Colin RusL
The technical crew includes stage manager Alyssa Seiden, her assistant, Jacob
Mirer, light boanl operator, JiU McGuinness
and wardrohe crew, Coleen Ormand and
Ttm Van Patten.
0

~~~~~- ~~-- ~==~~~==

stay away fiom the campu l'otlbe duntdoa of the IIIDOIIIICIIIIe pedod.

'I'boscemployeeowbowortoodtesedayl.lboald.ofcooine.beDII!ted..-,AII
others mull chlrJe the lime to persooalleave credita. eitbec vacadon, periOIIIIIeiiYe or
compensatory lime. Anyone who does 001 bave sufficicot aca:uah, may ~from
ful!R ao:auala. Only the OovemorcaD officially declare tballbe Unlvenity 11 Buffalo
is closed and only.be caD aulborizeemployces to remain away from workwilboul usc
of leave credits. In all other cases, a UB employee must charge this lime 001 worked to
vacation, pcnonal leave or compensatory time.
NoiWithstanding the above, no person wbo is ahle to and does get to wooc wiD be
deprived of the opportunity to work Purthermorc, if it is determined during the COUiie
of a worlc day that the u niversity cannot operate effectively, no
y employee
should be required to leave at that moment; employees should ~-~ ratbs:r be
pennittedtoleavethenoranytimetbercafter.Onlythetimethat
~)..~
they are
absent should be charged to leave credits.
We cannot guarantee tlujt those employees who get to e
the campus or those who stay after a snow aonouncemcnt is DUide will be able to worlcat theirnonnal worlc
places. Adequate supervision may be unavailable
y
o~ it may be that the building in which the indi- ~-~
vidual normally worlcs is not open. Provisioo should ~)..~
he made for alternate campus worlc locations and
• •
alternate worlc for those who do get to the campus but • • •
• •
who cannot go to their regular worlc places or cannot • - '
lllltiJJo..- e
perfonn their regular worlc assignments.
;,JI'
~

- J.·-

Senior Vice President

, J • .)

~

�5

l,ntersession Curtailment Program
As previously announced, the University at Buffalo will be
implementing an Intersession Curtailment Program. As in previous years, the savings to be realized through lower energy consumption and other features of the curtailment will assist the
university in operating within this year's budget.
All univcnity offices will be. cLosed
and lelephooet will no1 be answered

ueepc by departmental answcriaa ma·
chines from lbe close ofbuJioeu 011
Friday, December 22, 199$ undl, the
bc.Jinnina ofbusiocu on Tuescby,

January 2. 1996. This will apply 10 lbe
univcnity'• North. Soutb and EOC
campuses. Noce: A oumber of critical
library, computioa and campus mail
functions will be sustained durin&amp;
lnteneuion CurtailmenL See details
below:
• Temperatures in builcfings that are
closed wiU be. reduced IO S00 and
hoi water will not be available.
• Normal univenicy services, such as
food service and campus butina.
will not be available.
• Buildings will be locked for secu-

riry reuons.
• In the event of snowfaJ I, only
roadways needed for emergency
access and a few selected parking
lou will be plowed.
• Public Safety and Univenity facilities ataff will provide nec:esslt)'
campus and building Slfety and

Ex.......,..
security.

In accord&amp;Dce wilh lhc lntersession
Cun.ailment Program Policy and Exemp-

\

tion Procedun:s,lhe following university
r~ilitieslaclivilies have been aranted
a utomatic: a.emptJou durin&amp; this
ynr'slatenesdon C u rtallmf'nt :
• All laboratory animal facilities
• The Oorsheimer Greenhouse
• All emergency clinicalhreatment
facili1ies
• Alumni Arena (for scheduled
intercollegiate athletic evenu only)
_ • All research buildings where there
is a significant percentage of "wetlabontciry.. facililies in the building
The following buildings will remain
completely open during the curtailment:
a. Bonner Hall
b. Campus Mail ~nler
c. Cary/Farber/Sherman HAlls
d. Cooke/Hochstelter Halls
e. Felter Hall
f. Froncuk Hall
g. Furnas Hall
h. Jarvis Hall
i . Ketter Hall
j . NaturaJ Sciences and Mathemalics I
k. School of Medlcine
I. Squire Hall
PLEASE NOTE: R~qutsts for a building
'xtmplion #Hyond thf' progra11UJ:facilities
listed abow were to haW! #Hen received
b)• November 6 in a procedure pre1•iou.rly
outlined.

Ubr8rtft..£x-pted
The following libraries will remain open
during curtailment:
a. Science and Engineering Library,
open during the cunailmcnl from 8 a.m.5 p.m. on Oc:cc.mber 26-29. providing
access 10 those collections. No reference
service available.
b. Health Sciences Library. open
from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on December 26-29.
providing access to those collectioRs.
Reference Service 1vailable. (See LJ.
BRAIUES for additional details.)

supplied work by lbe site supervisor.
PLEASE NOTE: Stole tmployus who
dwo.re this option wlJI receiw a memorondwn in early IHccmbu thot provUhs
sp«iftc ilutrwtitHU on procedures
rowmlnJ tM aluntlJle wort site.

St.telapiiJswe employees wbo choose 10 1l.ke time
off durin&amp; the autailmcnt can Lltilize
accumuWed viCation. penooal , or
compenwory kave accruals or ean
cboose to lake: the days off without pay.
Employees who plan 10 make UIC: or the
latter option should wrice 1 letter 10 their
supervisor indicatina tbe speci.r.c dates
they wish to take without pay. Stet leave
accruals may not be used.
For those employees who do not have
four days of vacation and/or compc:nsa·
tory accruals, but who wish 10 be orr with
pay d urinathis period, the univenity will
advance: up to four days of vaution
accruals. State employees who choose to
work on any or all of the four workdays
that fall within the curtailment, aod who
are not employees of a department that
has been gn.nted an exemption. or who
are unable to mate alternate arrange·
meats, must notify David Trumpfhc:ller.
Sr. Employee Relations Associate at
64S-2646, ex·t 116oftbat (eel DO laler
than Dectmber 1,1995, to request a
copy of the 199S-1996 lntersession
Curtailment Request to Wort at Aller·
nate Work Site fonn. This form require~
the signature/approval of lhe employee's
supervisor.

R.-n:h F-ndlltlon
EmployResearch Foundation employees may be
rrquired to wort all or par1 of the curtail·
ment. depending on whether the unit in
which they work will remain open.
Employees who are not required to work.
bul wish to do so. may be assigned to the
alternate wort site in the Libraries (see
EMPLOYEE OM10NS).
Employees who do not work. and
who do 001 have sufficient accruals may
reqoeslleave without pay or an advance
up to four days. Requests for an ad·
vance, or for leave without pay. and
requests for alternate wort site must be
sent to Kathie Frier, Sponsored Programs
Personnel. 416 Crofts Hall . in writing by
December l, 1995.
PLEASE NOTE: lkct!m~r is tht' R,..
uarch FoundoJion 's desigflllted month fo r
open enrollment/or health ~nefits.
Material will be sent directly to all Research emplo~es regarding datts. tlmt!J
and locati01t1 prior to 1M curtailment.
whLn perwnnel staff will be ai!Gilable to
o.rsi.rt with Molrh insuranu changes.

Public Safety
Public Safety will opcnte full stuft s
throughout the curtailment period. Sev·
era.l steps will be taken to guard against
theft and provide personal protection for
the limited number of employees and
srudents on campus.
Acc:ountll~ IUid

Peyroll

hrYices

Employ. . OpU-.:
Alt.....te Woct&lt; SHe

Wednesday, December 27, is a State and
UBF payday. In an effort to provide:
service to university employees. all State
and UBF paychecks and direct deposit
statements will be mailed to State and
UBF employees (including those working in local hospitals) via first clian mail.
They wiU be mailed to the address that is
on the employee's paycheck/direct
deposit statements. No paycheck/direct
deposit statement will be obtainable on
campus. All will be delivered to the post
office on Tuesday, December 26. which
should ens~ local delivery by Wednes·
day. December 27.

Employees who wish to work on any or
all of the four ~aulu wori;days, but who
an: not employed in areas that will be
open u a result of an ea:emption, or who
cannot nu.ke alternate arrangements, will
be accommodated at lhe alternate work
si te, which is Lockwood Ubrary on the
North Campus. That site will be heated
to the normal univenity winter lempenturt: . Individuals utili2ina the alternate
work site must brina adequlle work
supplied by their department or will be

PI COSt! note that for the State Student
Assistant poydoy on T1tursdoy. Dtc~mbtr
2 I , checks will be disuibured by Campus
Mail as usual.
Employees have been reminded of
the necessity of an accurace mailing
address on their paychcctldirect deposit
statement, as well as the advantages of
enrolling in the Direct Deposit Prognm.
Change of address forms are available in
the University Telephone Oin:ctory or in
Personnel Services, 104 Crofts Hall.

~Center
The machine room and supponing of·
fices only of the Computing ~n t er will
be open. (See COMPUTING for addi·
tiona) details.)

Rnklence 118Jia
Select residence halls will be open to
intemationaJ 5tude:nts during the curtail-

64S-2646. extensions 101 or t02 for
Swe employees. UBF employees can
cban&amp;e lheir addrus by edvising the
UBF Personnel Office in the ~nter for
Tomorrow, 64S-30JJ.
It is critical that univen:ity depart·
menrs notify Payroll Services by Friday,
Dece..W 15, if it is noc neceuary to
withhold any State employees' December
27 paycheck. or 10 Slop their direct
deposit Payroll Services will ootify the
employee by mail if his/her paycheck is
wilhheld. UBF must also be notified by
December 20, and will notify the em·
ployce by mail if bislber paycheck is
withbeld.
Durin&amp; Inteneuion Curtailment.
Payroll Services will have a staff mcm·
ber cbccting its telephone answering
device and respooding 10 any questions.
The. telephone number is 64S-2600.
UBF wiU have staff available on Tuesday. December 26, chrough Friday.
December 29, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to
answer questions. The telepbone number
is 64S-3011.
Questions rt:garding the proccdu~ for
distributing paychoc.ks during
lnterses.sion Curtailment should be
addreued to Brian Simet, Associate
Director, Payroll Services for Stale
employees. and Josephine Zt:nosky.
Payroll Supervisor for UBF employees.
For lr~~vr:l and petty c.asb , com·
pleted rt:imburscment requests are due in
the tn.veUgeoeralledger offices by
Friday, December 15. in Ofder to ensure
payment prior to the cunailment. Oocu·
menlS received after December 15. will
continue to be processed: however. there
is 001 any guarantee that payment will be
received prior to the curtAilment .

c.mpuaMall
The Campus Mail Services Center will be
open each business dlly (December 260ecember 29) to sort incoming Fedc:n.l
mail including leuer mail. registered/
cenifiedlpriority mail. and Parcel Post.
Tile Campus Mail Services Center
will be c losed on 12125 and Ill .
Although then: will not be any mail
deliveries during the curtailment. Cam·
pus Mail Services will load its delivery
trucks for first dily ba.ck delivery of all
accumulated mail. Expect Tuesday.
January 2. 1996 to be a heavier than
usual day.
All accumulated Parcel Post will be
delivered on Ja.nuary 2. 1996.
Departments that wtsh to receive
their mail during the curtailment should
contact the Campus Mail Services Center
no taler than December 15. 1995 at 645·
2743 to make the necessary arrangemtnts
to pick up their mail at the Mail Center.
Tbere will bt no distribution of mail to
individuals (i.e .. mail can be picked up
for depanmcnu only).
Hours o r operation will be 8 a.m. to
4 p.m.

UbrariH
The Health Scie:nees Library (HSL)
and the Capen Libranes. both the Under·
gnd Witt&gt; Llbnry (UGL) and the Sci·
e:~ and Eacinffring Library (SEL).
will be open during pan of the cun:~il ­
ment. HSL will be open from 9 a.m.
until 5 p.m. from Tuesday. December 26,
through Friday. December 29. UGL and
SEL will be open from 8 a.m. unlil 5
p.m. on the same days. Refert:nce ser·
vices will be provided at HSL on ly. All
other library units on both the North and
South Campuses will be closed during
the curtailment, and all University Li ·
bratiu will be closed on the two curtail·
ment weekends . December 23 through
December 25 and December 30 through
January I .
Barring unforeseen maintenance or
upgrade work on the Univ~:rsity mam·
frame , BISON will be available at 1M
open libraries as well as via dial -up and
network connections. UUBNET will also
be available.
As in past yean. cmt&gt;rgf'ncy re-trieval of materials will be provided for
UB faculty from December 26 through
December 29 from those libraries that arc:
closed durin&amp; the curtailment. Faculty
who need k.nowo items from the closed
coiJections (An:hiteclurc: and P!anning.
Law, Lockwood. Mathematics, and
Mwic) can call 645-l816 between 8 a.m.
and 5 p.m. to place requests. Journal
articles will be copied for pick-up at
Lockwood Library or faxed at no charge.
Books will be charged for pick-up at
Locl:wood between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Two bour. salft'-day resporue wUJ be
provided ror calls made before J p.m

-

.......

CIS$ . . C........

Friday, Decembe&lt; 22
Soll6dsy, Decembe&lt; 23

T.-loy, December 26
w~. December 27
Th&lt;nclay. Oecember 26
Fiiday, Oecember 29
SoMday, Decembe&lt; 30
St.nday, Oecember 31
Monday, Januory 1

T.-loy, Januoly 2

JIIBCwl '

c:t.d 5 p .m.

I .........

.,_.,..._

Allllnded 5 p.m.-Midnight

~

~

ac-d

All8nded 8:30 a.m.-Midnight
Allllnded 8:30 a.m.-Midnight
Allllnded 8::1) a.m.-Midrighl
Allllnded 8:30 a.m.-Midnig111

C1o&amp;ed
C1o&amp;ed
~

~

c:t.d
c:t.d

~

ac-d
Open 8:30a.m.

ComputJnc
'The Computing Center will close ns
centnl facilities and all public sites
during the curtailment . During this
period, one operator will be on duty at
the Computing Cenler between 8:30a.m
and midnighl weekdays, except Christ ·
nw (December 25) and New Year' s Eve
and Day (December 31 and January I). to
monitor the computers and nelworks. do
backups. and handle a limited number of
requests for tape mounts. No output will
be printed, d istributed or delivered from
the Computing Center or any or us
rt:mot.e facilities.
From midoightlo 8:30a.m wee .. days
and :all day on weekends. the systems
will be left in openuor-unanc.nded mode.
meaning that no tape mount requests will
be possible. Also. during unanended
time, should either the systems or net ·
wock:s become inoperative for some
reason, resloration will not occur umil
the nut schedule operator·AUended shift
(Please see complete Computing Center
lntersession Curtailment schedule.)
Outside of providing access to mai n·
frame computers. !hen: will be no other
services available during the cunailmenf
such as consu lting, computer rc:pa1r or
networt services.
Due to the limited disk spaa: on the
IBM system for electronic mail and print
files and the Computing Center's inabil·
ity to monitor use of this space. users an:
cautioned that some E-mail messages and
print file s could be lost if the space
allocated for this data becomes. rut!.
As was the case last year. the Com·
putmg Center n:commends !hat all
critical data files be backed up before
powering down your computer ~qu1p·
men! on Dec~mber 22. 1995.
H there are any special concerns
relaung to the effects on computing
during curtai lment . please contacl Or
Hinrich Mar1ens at 645-3580 or Denms
Henneman at 645-3504.

SPONSORED PROGRAMS
AU Sponsored Programs depanments
will be dowd during !he curtailment.
Sponso~ Programs
Administr-ation

Anyone needing assistance from ll
member of the Sponsored Programs
Administratio n stAff to handle urgent
business should leave a telephone mes·
sage at 645-2980. A member of the staff
will n:tum the call and make arrange·
ments to provide needed assistance.

~

Allllnded

SPONSORED PROGRAMS
PERSONNEL
Following are the dates for submass1on of
Employee= Appomtmenl and Change
rorms:

,...,..............

o- o.a.

Dec 9-0ec 22
Dec 23-Jan 5

Dec t 3

Dec "
SPONSORED PROGRAMS
PURCHASING

~o.te

Dec 22
Jan 5

Requisitions for matenals and supplie!ii
needed dunng the curtailment must be
n=celVed by Dec 8. 1995. Vendors wnh
pendmg orders will be contacted to
request delivery pnor to December 22.
1995, o r arter J.nuary 2. 1996.

Telephone•
A reduced schedule of 1elephone operator
services will be provided Ope111tors will
be on dUly December 26-0ecember 29
from I a.m. lo 5 p.m. At all other times.
calls to the universily 's main number will
be: handled by the telephone answering
servtce .
For emergencies in Phys1cal Pla.nt
call CU5tOmer Service at71 or 645·2025
and emergencies in Public Safety to 6452222. No moves. adds or changes. or
muune rc:pairs to the university tele·
phone system will be doi)C during the
cuna1lmen1. Requesu for repair of
emergrncy o r e ssential servtces lele·
phones should be directed 10 campus
operators during the day or to Public
sarety after hours
Departments that have answenng
machines are ~uested to reprogram
them to furn1 sh an appropnate message
rcl:ued to the curtailment. If the mach me
ts not associated with a departmenf s
m:~m listed phone number. call rorwardmg could be used to dirtttthe calls to !he
machine

Fllll Mechlnea
Fu messages sent to the umver..tty's
listed ru number (645-2895) will be
directed to the Campus Mail Office.
Mes.sages will be placed in campus mail
and delivered after January 2

Fecult)'...Student
Auoc:l.tlon
'The FSA operations will not be staffed
All Food Service faciliti es will be closed
No \'ending mac hines will be servtced.
All lobby cou nters will be: closed. All
recn:ation centers and the Creative Craft
Center will be closed. CFT Catenng.
Inc • will not provide any 5ervt~

Campua Child

c.,.

Sponso~

Programs Grants
and Cont racts Senrices

The center will be dosed dunng the
curt:ailment.

Travel rt:imbursement vouchers and
advance requests must be received 1n
Grants and Contcacls on or before De·
ccmber 8. 1995 ror payment to be made
by December 22. 1995. This also Applies
to peuy cash reimbursements and other
payment requests.
Project Din=ctors will be contacted by
a staff member rt:garding projects tenni ·
n1110g December 31. 1995. to proYide
assistance in co mpleling processing prior
to December 8. 1995.

Banklnc MechliHia

Sponso~

Programs Payroll

Following are dales for submission of
hourly time sheet vouchers for !he lagged
payroll:

HOURLY TIME SHEET VOUCHEII
(Lag Payroll)
~........_

o- a.t.

,.,.a...

NaoJ 25-Dec 8
Dec 9-Dec 22

Dec 13
Jan 2 Noon

Dec 22
Jan 5

All banking machines an campus bu1ld·
ings will be turned oH All funds stored
in the machines will be rt:moved before
the curtailmcm.

�6

Vi
The Reporter welcomes commentary on issues
of broad 1nterest to the uroversity community
Matenal may be edited for style and length.

Remembering
Rabin and Israel's
early days
lly LEON FAIIHI
UB Otstinguished Prolessor

The events of the last few days have emphasized the major political and philosophical differences that separated Prime

Minister Yitzhak Rabin from the oppositi o n without menti o ning the fac t that there
was complete convergence on one of the

cru cial points in his policy. namel y the
fuiUre o f Jerusalem.

Although some elements of his party,

r

1ncluding at least one cabinet member , did
not share hi s views on the centrality of a
unified Jeru salem as the undivided capital
o f Israel. the premier himself ne ve r lost an

opportunity to remind an audience that his
military pas t was intertwined with that of

the holy cit y. that he had. in fact. been
born there. and that he would therefore not
be the one to abandon it. In this respect,

the attachment professed by Rabin
ma tched that of the public to as hi gh a

degree of unanimity as one can ever see in
a democracy.
The alfoctioo of the lstaeli citizenry for
its capital has been demonslral&lt;d many times
and in a variety of ways, but never in recent
memory as vividly as during the days when
young Rabin was leading his regiment into
bailie on the road linking Jerusalem to the
coastal plain. As a young intern, having
recently joined the staff of the Hadassah
Univer.;ity Hospital, I had the occasion to
witness events seldom seen and the privilege
of participating in some of them.
Jerusalem is indeed a strange city. In
1947,the daily activity of the majority of
its people took place in offices-most of
them governmental-which could have
been situated anywhere else. Its hills grew
practically no food. Even water had to be
pumped 2.000 feet uphill from the valley
and reached only part of the inhabitants,
the rest using rainwater saved in cisterns
for the long, dry summer. In spite of this,
its population had kept growing and the
various communities made a crazy quilt
both inside the old walled city and outside
it. There were Jewish enclaves surrounded
by Arab communities, and Arab neighborhoods within Jewish areas.
At the end of 1949, the United Nations
decided upon termination of the British
mandate on May 15 of the following year.
Palestine would be divided into two states,
one Arab and one Jewish, with Jerusalem
becoming an international city. The final
vote was taken on Nov. 29. On Nov. 30.
the troubles staned.

One usually thinks of the beginning of a
war in tenns of one momentous event such
as the invasion of Poland or-the bombing
of Pearl Harbor. In Palestine, and especially in Jerusalem, war crept in gradually.
For the ftnl few weeks, sporadic sniper
fire from the Arab houses caused some
disruption. The road to Tel Aviv, passing
through several Arab villages, beeame
gradually more hazardous and food became scarcer, especially fresh produce.
The Arabs occupied the water pumping
station and shut off the flow. Within the
city, a shake-down readjusted the population lines, with both Jews and Arabs who
lived in e.posed areas being forced to
move. untiJ a continuous dividing line
replaced the checkerboard pattern.
By early spring, the Jewish part of the
city was completely swrounded and isolaled, except for the arrival of an occasional convoy of food from Tel Aviv.
Trucks, although partly protected by armored plates and escorted by anned men,
made it up to Jerusalem only rarely.
Within the besieged city, there were two
isolated pockets, cut off from the main
body, one in the walled city and one on
Mount Scopus, where the Hebrew University and the Hadassah hospital were lo-cated.
Being one of the younger physicians, I
soon gave up my hospital work and devoted myself entirely to the medical
evacuation from the battle lines to makeshift hospitals in the rear (that is, half a
mile back). To this day, I say that my

position was much better ~ that of the
poor civilians: M I moved from one front
to another, I would pass through the city
and see the rows of housewives standing
in line, under the artillery bombardment.
to receive the daily ration of one gallon of
water per person, delivered from a horsedrawn cart. God bless those old cisterns
that saved the day!
People were hungry, thirsty and dirty,
but no feeling of deprivation came even
close to matching that of the smoken,
bereft of their nicotine, some of whom
tried viuious dried grasses or leaves as a
replacement. Since none of these substitutes were used a second time. you may be
justified in concluding that they were not a
great success.
The idea of giving up did not seem to
enter people's minds. Tomorrow would be
a better day. What finally broke the siege
was the ability of the army to hold on to
some mountains and cols south of the now
impassahle road. People too old to man
defense positions were used to move boulders and create a path that could be used
by four-wheel drive vehicles. Food and
ammunition could now reach us.
Thc good old days were never that
good, of course. II I remember them
fondly, it is partly beeause this is possibly
the time in my life when I was the most
useful, and partly beeause it is during the
Jerusalem siege that I had the good fortune
lo meet the girl who would become my
wife. But !hat, to borrow from Kipling, is
another story. my child.
0

FaCittty&amp;StaUBillboard
SMITH NAMED TO PANEL
ON DRUG INFORMAnON
Cedric M. Smith , professor of
pharmacology and tox•cotogy at UB
'laS t&gt;een appointed to a hve-year
·erm on the EMpen Adv•sory Panel on
Drug Information Sc1ence of the

of Pharmacology. pubhshed thts year
by W B Saunders. was wntten and ed·
tied with Alan Reynard . UB professor
of pharmacology and therapeutics
A member of numerous protesstonal soc•ettes. he serves on the
Board of Regents of the Amencan
College of Chnical Pharmacology

UMed States Pharmacopeia (USP)
The USP IS a non-profit organ•za•on responsible for estabhsh•ng pub•c standards of strength. quahly. pu ·•ty. packag•ng and tabehng lor
:Hugs med1C1nes and other heallh·

; are dev1ces and serv•ces
The Expert Adv•sory Panel on
) rug tnlormat•on Sc1ence w1U be
: oncerned pntnarlly w1th expanding
!he USP drug and therapeuttc-tnlormatiOn database. whtch recenUy
c ombtned wtth the AMA Drug E&gt;~alu ­
a!IOns database The new combtned
database w•ll represen t a nat1onat
c onsensus o f drug and therapeultC
1nlormat1on that wtll be used by med•·
c tne . pharmacy . nurs1ng and other
health professtons
Smith hold s undergraduate degrees from Oklahoma State Unfllers1ty
and UnNers1ty of Illinois, a master's in
pharmacology lrom the UnNerslly olllhno•s Graduate College and a medtcal
degree from the Untversity o t Illinois
College of MediCtne
A member
the US faculty stnce
1966. he served as chatr o f the UB
Depanment of Pharmacology and
TOXICOiogy from 1966-73. He was
toundtng dtrector of the New York
State Research lnstttute on Addtct•ons . formerly the Research lnsutute
on Alcohohsm . and rematned attts
head from 1970-79.
For the past 12 years . tn additton
·o hts regular teachtng responsibihtes . Smtih has been course coordl·
lator of the fundamentals of pharma.:ology medical course. a portion of
whtch was adopted b y the USP as a
model lor a national medical-student
c ompetition on wntlng standard drug
tnformation tor patients.
Smith has published widely on his
research in neurop httrmacology and
psychopharmacology, and serves on
the editorial boards of'se&gt;~eral professtonaljournals . His publicaUons in etude four books: the new Essentials

Ot

WINTER TO DISCUSS
US/ BUSINESS UNK
The dean of the Unt&gt;~e r Sity at Buffalo
School of Management will discuss
· Managtng the UBI
Buffalo Business
Connecuon· m a

·us at SUNRISE"
breakfast program
to be held from
7;30-9 a .m Nov
30. in the Buffalo
Marriott. t 340
WINTER
Millersport Highway, Amherst The program ts open
to the pubhc .

Frederick W. Wint er will

focus

on the local, regional. national and
global components ot the mission of
the UB School of Management. as
well as the impdrtance of the bust·
ness community in each. He also will
d iscuss the potential lor partnership
arrangements. and how such alliances strengthen US and WNY .
Dean of the school since 1994,
Winter prevtously was head of the Depanment of Business Administration.

part olthe College ol

ences Alumnt Associatton talk on
"Magic , Sctence and the
Paranormal •
Free and open to the public. the
talk by Clyde F. Herreld1 Disltnguished Teaching Professor of BIOlogical Sciences at UB . wtll be held
on US 's North Campus tn Room 20.
Knox Hall .
Herreid , who is also an amateur
mag1c1an and somettmes uses
magic in his classes, will explore the
controversial field o f the paranormal.
He wilt give members of the audt·
ence a self-test for ESP , then attempt
to demonstrate clairvoyance .
thought transfer and psychokinesis.
using high-sconng individuals.
In the talk . Herreid wtll discuss
the tnterfacd between sctence,
magic and religton . whic h , he says
all ha&gt;~e a common origin-the human desire to understand and con·
trol our world. Historically . these
fields were not seen as distinct . as
each consisted of special knowledge and power granted to only a
few individuals. priests and shamans.
Herreid is academic d irector of
US's Honors Program. The recip ient
of a Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1981 , Herreid in
1988 was awarded the title of Distinguished Teaching Professor. the
highest faculty rank In the SUNY system, by the SUNY Board of Trustees.

He has been featured in The New
York Tmes and on CNN for his innovative approaches to science education.
The talk is sponsored by the US
Sciences Alumni Association of the
UB Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics.

Francl• Frazier received the
1995 Sandy Shaw Student Nurse Practittoner Award from the New York State
CoahtiOfl of Nurse Practitioners Inc. for
his prof8SSK&gt;n81 commitment, community invotvement and leadership abiltties . The award was establtshed in
1990 in honor of Ms. Shaw, a coalition

NURSIIICI STUDENTS, IIRADS
llt:CEIVEAW-

member who died of cancer in 1989.
Frazier. a member of the Cfleyenne

Two graduates and two students In
the Family Nurse PractiHoner Program in the US School of Nursing recently won awards from state and
natiOnal nursing associations.

is studying at UB in the nursing
scllool's Native American Family Nursa

Bev~

Ann Shipe. a 1983

graduate of the nursing school's
master's-degree program, recei&gt;~ed
the Loretta C . Ford Award lor Excellence in the category of advanced
practitioner clinical practice at the
30th National Primary Care Nurse
Practitioner Symposium in Keystone .
Colo. Shipe is a teacher/practitK&gt;ner
in the Sweet Home School District .

Ann Marie l l a c l -. a 1982
master's degree graduate . has been
named 1995 Nurse PractiUoner of the
Year b y the New York State Coalition
of Nurse Practitioners Inc. Macisaac
has worked in rheumat()k)gy at the
BuHalo '!JA Medical Center for 16
years . Her award was based on contributions to her profession through
clinical expertise. published research
and leadership.

Commerce. at

the University of !Uinois. and a faculty
member atlllinots beginning in 1971 .
"US at SUNRISE" IS proQuced by
the US Alumni Associalton and US's
Office of Conferences and Special
Events , News Services and Office of
Publications. It also tS supported by
the Office of University De&gt;Jetopment
and the Office for Publk: Servtce and
Urban Affaus.

SCIENCU AWMNilO HEAR
TALK ON "MAGIC, SCIENCE
ANDTMEP~"

Ever wondered if you've expenenced
ESP (extrasensory perception)? You
may have a chance to find out. Tuesday. Nov. 21 at 7 p .m . at a UB Set-

SHARE tiiANKMIVIM WIIH
INIIRNATIONAL S11IDENJS
Buffalo area residents are being ooughlto share lhalr Tllankagiv)ng meal
with international undergraduate and graduate sludents and SCholars at
UB wtlo would otllerwise spend the hollday alone.'
Many of the students are
to BUffalp or the U.S. and aren't·
familiar with the Thanl&lt;sgivlng event A few of the j&gt;lder studeota 8nd
scholar11 are llere with their spouses. Some alsO ltave clllldren.•
Every effort is made to matcllthe student,. ~ represent varied
fields of study and intarest. with a tlootlndivlduel, couple or family with
similar occupations, hobbles or Interests. Alllho students speak English.
Hoots should be prepared 10 proYide guests with transportation lo and
from the meal. They should also consider hallihg at least two students as
their guests.
Individuals or families inlereated In sharing ll1eir ThankSgiving with students should call Sheila Lewis with the lnlematlonal Frlendslllp Program In
the UB Office of International Education at645-2258 before Noll. 17.

newcome"

Rivaf Sioux tribe of Eagle Butta, S.D..
Practitioner Recruitment Program. He

os completing his fmal semester in the
master's degree program, which trains
advanced-degree health care profassionals who will work with Native

American populations.
......, TucSnl, a post-master's-&lt;Xt
gree student in the Adult Nurse Practitioner Program, has received the first
Hon. Anhur 0 . Eve SI\Jdenl Scholarship Award 1rom the New York Stale
Coalrtion of Nurse Praclilloners Inc.
She placed first in an essay contest on
"The PerceiYed Role of the Nurse
Practitioners in Health Care Reform."
Tudini received $5CX) and a one-year
student membership in the coalition.

The Office of the V'oce President for
Research has announced the Equipment Challenge Grant Program for
1995-96. U provides up to $25,000 as
matching funds to faculty who submit
a proposal to an external government
or private sector source.
The program Is Intended to assist
faculty with adding, upgrading or rep lacing instruments for their research
by providing matching funds to make
their proposaiiTIQ(e attrachve.
Applications tor these matching
lunds will be accepted by the Office
of the Vice President for Research at
any lime , but faculty must appty tor
these funds before their final research proposal is submitted to the
Office of Sponsored Programs Ad·
ministration.
Program gutdalines can be requested from the OHtce ol the Vice
President for Research. 516 Capen

Hall. 645-3321

�7

View
F001UU
Gerald Carlson's three flflld goals including the game wi,......
with 1:58 to go gave the Bulls a !Hi win CNef defending NCAA 1AA champion Youngs1own Stale at Stambaugh Stadium Saturday. "To beat Youngstown in Youngs1own witlllheir tradition
and reputation obviously means a lot for this program, • said
head coach Craig Cirbus. Carlson's 36-yarder capped a 10play, 36-yafd drive that includad a pair of Mark Taylor to Ke~h
Warren third down conversions.
Ca~son got the scoring s~ad on the final play of the first
quaner with a $-yard foeld goal to give the Bulls a 3-{llead. UB
gained the f181d pos~ for the kick following a 19-yard punt by
Ganson which was mishandled by Youngs1own State's Jabari
Teague and recoverad by US's Adam Tard~ at the YSU 24. UB
held the lead through the second quaner going into the locker
room with a 3-{1 advantage.
The Bulls got !heir s&amp;cond field goal on the firs1 drive of the
second haH. Carlson's 34-yarder into the wind extanded the Bulls'
lead to 6-0. The Penguins answered on the next drive as quar·
lerback Mark Brungard M Jake Smalllield in the end zone for a
6-yard touchdown. The score remained tied at 6-6 as
placekicker Jon Dorma, who had not missad an extra point all
season. hooked the attempt wide to the right. Buffalo's defense
held tight the remainder of the game, stopping the Penguins in
UB territory the next three possessions Including laking over at
their own 14 after Brungard threw a pair of incompletions.
UB, r&lt;H/3-7, concludes !heir 1995 season at home Saturday
when IIley hoot Boston University at 1:30 p.m. at UB Stadium.

MEN'S IIASKE1IIAU.
The Bulls opened !heir 1995 exhibition season Friday with an
80-621oss to the Converse All-Stars. UB playad without top
weapons Flasaun Young and Jamie Anderson who sal out the
contes1. The Converse All-5tars includad former UB players

O BilUARifS

Anne Sengbusch, 87,
first Nursing School dean
Anne Sang busch. 87 , the lust dean of the UB School of Nurstng.
ed Nov 8 In Millard Fillmore Hosp1tal A graveside serv1ce was
he Nov 11 1n Woodlawn Cemetery. Cananda1gua
gbusch moved to Buffalo from Vermont1n 1927 to anend the
yer Memorial Hospital School of Nursing. She earned

bache! of science and master of education degrees from UB and
d•d grad ate work at CcMumbia University She was active in the
League lor Nursing Education in New York State and was a charter
member of the AmeriCan Association of Collegiate SChools of Nurstng, serving as an officer for a number of years. She spent nine years
as a member of the state Board of Examtners of Nursing
Sengbusch was appotnted tn 1935 as the first faculty member of
what became in 1936, the Otvtsion of Nursing in the School of
Med1c1ne. The head of the Divtsion of Nursing was the dean of the
med1cal school and Sengbusch was named assistant to the dean
When the School of Nursing was established in 1940, Sengbusch
was named dean. She introduced a basic program in nursing tn
1951. a lour-year program of science. academics and nursing,
leading to state registration. She held the post as dean of the
nurstng school from 1940 to 1965 and reured as professor of
nurstng in 1968.

Madia Cox, Myron Banks, Kelvin Robinson and Rob
Midd--.. Banks led the All-Stars with 21 pornts
UB lad the contes138-33 at the haff but shot just S..Of-36 (22.2
percent) In the second half as the All-5tars macle a 12-3 run
midway through the haH to control the contest.
Mike Martinho lad the Bulls with 17 points, including three
three-pointers. MaU Clemens added 13 points, also canning
three three-pointers. Robert Harris led the Bulls with 13 rebounds while Bernard Wheeler had six assists.
UB takes on a touring team from South Africa Thursday at
Alurmi Arena. The Bulls open !heir regular season Nov. 25 at
Boston College and hoot Rutgers at Alumni Arena Nov. 27 at
7:30p.m. in the home opener.

VOLLEYBALL
Senior Candie Hirst became the first UB player ro eclipse the
500 kill plateau as the Royals downad Canlsius 15-2,8-15, 1614. 15-9 1n the Royals season finale Nov. 8 at Alumni Arena. The
Royals concludad the 1995 season with a 22-13 record.
Hirst tallied 19 kifts on the evening and finished her career with
510. She also added a team-best 20 digs. Laurie SanleiR, also
playing in her final game in a Royals uniform, added eight kiUs
and 14 digs. Kathy BrirkNor1h tolalad 17 digs and four blocks.

MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWIMMING
The Bulls fell at St. Bonaventure 130-107 Saturday, kno«ing
their dual meet record at 1-1 . Korry Miller won a pair of
events for the Bulls, finishing first in the 200 IM in 1:58.57 and
lhe 200 butterfly in 1:58.12. Mark Horgan took first place in
the 1000 freestyle in 9:54.15; Darren Mllun won the 200
freestyle in 1:47. 17. Justin Monin won the 3-meter diving
competition with 269.55 points . The Bulls return home to host
Syracuse at 1 p .m . at Alumni Arena Natatorium.
The Royals rolled to an easy 148-80 victory at Niagara Nov 8
with the RoyaJs taking first ptace in each event. Alexandra
Barrera won three events to lead the team. taking the 200
freestyle in 2:02.40, the 100 backs~oke in 1:04.95 and the 500
freestyle in 5:22.75. Megan Connolly end Kristen Krenitsky also
finished first in a pair of events each. Connolly won the 200 IM 1n
2:17.18, then took the 100 butterfly in 1:03.49. Krenitsky was
victorious in the 11XXl freestyle in 10:54.90 and the 100 freestyle
in 56.17. Saturday, UB droppad a 176-116 decisoon al Sr.
Bonaventure to put their dual meet recofd at 2 1 They host
Syracuse Saturday at Alumnt Arena at 1 p m
4

CROSS COUNtRY
Charlie Moyinhan placed Slxth at the men's IC4A cross counlry
championships Saturday in· Boston. The Bulls scored 175 potnts
as Syracuse won the team competition with 86 On the women's
side, Judith Novak was 19th at the ECAC District II Champion·
ship in Boston. The Royals finished 1Oth with 289 points.
Villanova. one of the top cross country squads in the nar100. won
the team competition with 33 points.
- Teel Wasko, Sports /nlormall0f1 Office

TMIS WEEK'S HOME ATHLE11C EVENTS
n.wscs.r, Nov. 1a
7 30 p m a1 AIUIMI Arena
S.twday, Now. 18

Men's BaSketball ExhibitiOn vs South Afnca

Foolball vs Boston UrwvefSIIY
Men's &amp; womon·s SW1mt'nlng vs Syracuse

Woman's Basloterball ExhlbiiiOI'l vs USOBL

1 30 p m at US Stad1um
1 p m at AJunvu Arena
Natator•um

Electronic Highways:
UB Document Express
NMd

-...y ........._ from the Olher campus

when time is short? The University Libraries have
developed a quick and convenient intercampus documeot deUvery service for your use!
UB Document Express is available to members of
the UB community whose departments are localcd on
one campus 8lld wbo are requesting materials localcd
on the Olber campus. Circulating boob, government
docwnents.lheses, conference proc;cedioJS, BDdjournal articles are available tbrouJb tbe service. Audiovisual. rel\:rmce, 8lld reserve m.atcrials are DOL
How can you usc UB Document Expn:ss?Request
forms are available at each UB library a1 either the
cin:ulalion desk (in the case of the Law, Loclcwood,
Music, Undergraduate, An:hitocture &amp; Planning and
Mathematics libraries) or the reference desk (at the
Science and EQgineering Library and Health Sciences Library). Complelcd forms can be faxed to6453859 or 835-4891 , mailed or dropped off at any UB
library.

Or, perhaps even more convenienlly. you can
submit a UB Document Express request electronically. For those of you with access to the World W ide
Web, connect to the L ibraries Home Page through
Wings and select " Online Services." Alternatively,
on the VAX or U NIX, simply type " ubxpress" at your
system prompt.
Requests are responded to within 24 h ours and you
can choose how you wi sh the materials to be delivered
to you. Books and bound materials will be delivered
to the UB library circ ulation desk you d esignate.
Journal articles wi ll be photocopied and can be deliv ered to your home or office by fax, campus mail , or

U.S . mail--or you can designate a library where the
artic le wi ll be se nr for you to pick up.

For more informaiion aboul the service.
con racr Karen Senglaup a l 645-2815 or
lolkds@ub\'m.cc.buffalo.eduorCindy Bertucaar829335 J or cberruca @ubmedb.buffalo.edu. For in/ormarion 011 corw ectir1g 10 \VitJgs, rile Universitycamp11s
wide info rmation sen·ice, cun tnct 011 the CIT Help
Desk trr 645 -3542.
- Loss Pequeno Gla zier cmd Nancy Schiller, Univer·
sity Libraries

2 p m at AlurM1Arena

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8

Copltlv•Col._...

following Sunday at 4 p.m.

---..

Peter Le11nie, Univ. of Roches·
ter. 280 Park. North Campus. 2
p.m.

WCNUioop

Cbancia&amp; Emp&amp;oyment Trends
in Hl&amp;her Ed and Industry, Drs.
D. Bruce Johnstone and Paul
MaiTOne. 330 Student Union .
North Campus. 3-5 p.m.

Muolc
UB Trombone Choir, Richard
Myen, conductor. Slee Concert
, Hall. Nonh CampuJ. 8 p.m. Free.

.,...,.

Hauel and Gre.td, UB Open
Woruhop. Opera by
Humpentinck. directed by Gary
Burgess. Mainstage. Center for
the Aru. North Campus. 8 p.m.
$4, $5, $6.

-.,Lecture
Storms and Their DepcKits, Dr.
Richard Cheel. Brock Univ. 205
Narunl Sciences. North Campus.
3:45p.m.

......-..-

-'-

Rtaulalloo orP-.. and
Caklum CWftlltl bt Drosophila: Mutallonal and Pbarmarotopcal Analysll, Sa1pal Singh.
:\07 Hochstetler. North Campus. 4

p.m.

An:lllt-wre·-...
Lecture
Community Input Into Nelgb
borbood P1ann.J.nc. Jan Peten . .
30 1 Crosby. South Campus. 5:30
p.m.
4

Lecture
The People and Culturt: of Sri
Lanb, David Schinn. Screening
Room. Center for the: Arts. North
Campus. 6 p.m. Free.

Opoo.:c-.uve
Sel-lchl Matsui, oboe, and
Friends. Sextets for piano and
winds by Poulenc, Jacobs. Allen
Recital Hall. Soulh Campus. 7
p.m. Free. Concer1s are taped for
broadcast on WBFO 88.7 FM the

I•J
~-.,.,
Ceater for TOIIIOITOw. North
Campus. Afternoon.

u..t-..
Maaq;la1 tbe UB/Butra&amp;o Buslaeu Coaaection, Dr. frederick
W. Winter. Dean, School of Management. Admission includes full
breakfast. Buffalo Marriott, 1340
Millersport Hi&amp;hway. 7:30a.m.
$9 Alumni Association member1:
SIO othen. For reservations, call
Alumni Office at 829-2608.

-

~!-reenter

P ertuskm Abnormalities In tbe
PrasurM&gt;wrlooded Hypertrophied Left Ventricle, Or. Dirt
Duncker. Uni v. Rocterdam. 108
Sherman. South Campus. 8 a.m.

--

ceneralion, Dr. Richard Borge ns.
Purdue Univ . 306 Farber. South
Campus. 12:30 p.m.

UfeWCNUioop
Grant Deve&amp;opmenl Workshop.
Maureen McMahon. 3·5 p.m. For
information, call the Office of
Student Life at645-6 12S.

-

lloleCJcel - ·

Chumbley . Drama Theatre:, Cen·
ter for the Ans. Nonh Campus 8
p.m. S5, SIO.

.,...,.

Hauel and Grt:ttl, UB Opc=ra
Workshop. Opera by
Humperdinck. directed by Gary
Burgess. Mainstage. Cen1er for
the Ans . North Campus. 8 p.m.
$4, $5, $6.

T owards MembraDt Protein
Stryct:ure Predktkm, Dr. Axel
Brunger, Yale Univ. 114
Hochstetler. North Campus. 4
p.m.

__

LIUsb
e l tof
..
'l'be
Risk
Assessment
Related to tbe Grut Lakes,
Barry Boyer, Dean, Law School.
122 Classroom Building. Buffalo
State College, 1300 Elmwood
Ave. 4 p.m.

,_

lnttr""aCtioas of E.Jlroiens and
And.rocetu witb Corticosteroids. Guy Meno-Tetang. S08
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

Bt.tlatlcaCol'-lu•
Spectral Au.lyt:d or Cateaori·
cal Time Serifs. Prof. David
Tyler, Rutgen Uni v. 244 Clll)'
Soulh CampuJ. 4 p.m.

1---·Merlt
A--J

Jeannette Man in Room, Capen
North Campus. 5:30-7 p.m. For
information. call 829-2608.

Aniii-J- Cell BloloO

M•Ucn...t:IH

Extnctllular Gradients or
Voltage u Controls or Nervous
Sy.tem Development and Re-

F..ltdra. Play by Euripides;
Aaron Cabell directs. with chon:ography by Tn:ssa Gorman
Crehan, music by Roben

CONllNUINO EXHIBITS
TlM •rt of w0111e11'a tt..lth
The Women's Health lnitJati\•e
Clime is prtstnting the second
annual "Bn:ast &amp; Cerv1cal Health
An Exhib1f' through Nov 30 at
the clime. 65 Farber Hall, South
Campus.

-

Red, white, pink, land fed.

_.,.,..,

OPENING EXHIBITS
There are three an opemngs Nov
16 in the Center for the Ans on
the North Campus. Beauvais
Lyons's "Reconstruction of an
Aazudian Temple: A Parody of
Science, History and
is on
view through Dec. IS in the Art
Depanment Gallery Paintings by
Lydia Dom art on view through
Dec:. 22 in the University
Gallery's first-floor space. And
the Graduate Show is in the Um ·
versity Gallery's second -fl oor
space through Dec:. 13 A recep·
tion for the three openings is
Nov 16 from s.7 p.m.

Art:·

WlnnlnC .chltecture
An exhibit of 1994 competn1on
winners from the: National lnsll·
tute for Architecturr.l Education
IS on view through ~ - 8 1n
James Dyett Exhibition Hall , 335
Hayes Hall. South Campus. Ad·
miuion is free . Ell;h ibition hours
are Monday through Friday. 9
a.m.-S p.m.

T he UB Women·s Club ts hold·
ing its ninth annual poinsettia
s:tlc: 1hrough Nov . 28. Red, while,
pink, and red-and-white pomset ·
tias are available in pots and
hanging baskets. Proceeds of the
sale (plants are S 1.50 to S 18) sup-port the Grace Capen Scholar·
ships. Plants are ready for pick ·
up Dec . 7 at the Center for
TomoiTOw on the North Campu ~o
You may order by calling 83997 10.

Comput1ng &amp;: lnfonnation Tech nology. Posting ~P- 5050. Sentor
Programmt.r Analyst (SL-4; In·
temal Promotional Opportu ·
nity)-Computi ng &amp; lnfonnation
Technology, Postmg ~P- 5051
FKUity
AssociatetFuu Professor·
Otolaryngology, Posting ~F 505 1. Assislant/Associ.atefFuU
Professor-Architecture: , Posting
~F- 5052. Assb:tani/A..uociale/
Full Professor-ArchHectun:: ,
Posting ~F-5053 Assistant Pro-fessor-Industrial Engtneering,
Posling lfF-5054. Assistant/Associate/Full Professor-1Rdustn3l
Engineering. Posting IPF-5055
Assistant Professor-Civil Eng1 ·
ncering. Posting tf·5056. Assi.s·
tant Professor-Civil Engineermg. Posting IF-5057 Assistant
Professor-Civil Engmeering,
Posting lfF-5058. Assistant Professor-Civil Engmeering, Postinf
lff-5059. Assistant Professor·
Civil Engineering, Pos1jng IfF·
5060. AssiJtaat Profnsor-CI\ 11
Engineering, Postmg IfF-SOt)!

Re..-

Lead Programmer Analyst (SLJ) -Compuling and lnfonnat10n
Technology. Pos1ina MP-5046
Senior .Prognmmer Analyst
(SL-4) -Computing and lnfonna ·
tion Technology. Posting MP·
5048. Lad Programmer Ana·
lyst (SL-J; Internal
Promotional Opportunity)

Projec:t Staff ASJOCialt· lk,·el ·
opment, Posting tR-95090 Rr·
searcb Support Spedalist -So·
cial &amp;: Preventive Medicine,
Posting lfR ·95100 C linical
Nurse Specialist -Socual &amp; Preventive Med1cine. Postmg ffR ·
95101 Counselor .Colleg1ale
Science
echnology Entry Pro
gram, osting ffR -95102 Sr. ReSupport Sp«lalist ·
Chemistry. Postmg ffR -95 105
To obtam mort' mfo rmaliiJn un
JObs

li.Jl~d

abo\·r . c-ontact Pnson

nl'i Sl'n'ICI'S,

104

Crofu Uafl

�8

_._,..........,
Ro.e ol tlile "-hhre. Richard
Wicb . Sm:enins Room, Center
ror the Arb. North Campus. 7:30
p.m. Free.

.........
--

Wort&lt;lslcwllll'"-*floo

T--.

c--...~c-p

--~~~~w--.-­

Dr. Chrioaise Flyoo
Saui.U... SpiJDJORd by for Addic6oDs Studict -.1 TrM.
inJ. o.emea Colqe, 43101Min
SL. AmbenL 9 &amp;.m..-4:.30 JUil.
$120. AIJO Nov. 28. To rqil&amp;cr,

To n:siJ!er. call 829-m7.

call645-6140.

~--­

-....... ......

tan. c..- f«Tomonow. NMb
Compos. 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. 515. $21).

OIIIlo Media, Alf!UI Milford
Collier, M.D.. Univ. of Nortb
CaroliAt, Olap&lt;l Hill. Caf&lt;toriwn
A, Mercy H01pitll. 8:30 a.m.

n. .................................... _,____ ... ...._.. ................. _ .............
--.....;
.................. ..._ .............. ~~.sa~--...c
__.......,._,u.~~~ --.au.
ArtOpeelooC
--~
-Knpp't Lui Tape, UB Oepl. of
Grodua,. Show. PlUntinp.
Aotl-1'u tllo F....U..
The
~----..-.---

--·-w-..op

Increased lmportanct or Suppor1 Starr Clie.nt Conlact, Ann
Ennis. Sponsored by lnstitulc for
Addictions Studies and Tn~ining .
Daemen College. 4380 Main St ..
Amherst. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sil O.
Also Nov. 17. To register. call

645-6 14().

...

~=~=

223

Lockwood. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.
To register, call 645-28 17.

aa.ketltall

N•tion•IIMtitute ror Arthit«·
I ural Eduation-1994 Compe-tition Winners. James Dyen Ex·
hibition Hall . 335 Hayes. South
Campus. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Through
Dec. 8. Gallery hours 9 a.m.-5
p m., Monday through Friday .
FKUity/lblff~

D•y
Unlvenlty Boolutore and
UBMkro SaiC!I Center. Nonh
Campus. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Discou nts.
:o;

pri n ~ . pholognpbs. gnpi!K: de·
sign. computer art. sculpture. illus.lnUion, mixed media. University
Gallery (second floor), Center for
1he Aru. North Campus. 5-7 p.m.
Free. Through Dec. 13. Gallery
hours Wednesday-Saturday. 10:30
a.m.·8 p.m.; Sunday, Noon-5 p.m.

Bulls vs. South Arria Exhibi·
lion. Alumni Arena. North Campus. 7:30p.m.

11Matw
Krapp's L,ast Tape, UB Dept of
Theatn: and Dance. Play by
Samue l Becken , dirc:c1ed by
Vincent O 'Neill. with Jerry
Finnegan. Black Box lbeatre,
Center for the Ans. North Cam·
pus. 8 p.m. $5, S I 0.

les.

Role t P~rphJrolltONU
-M
tlntl IU Cysteh•e Prot.uJeS in
Colon lion. Prof. Howard K.
Kuramitsu . 245 Cary . South Campus. Noon.

PMtty T - - DI-Nion
Steve MtCatrrry. 438 Clemens.
Nonh Campus. 12:30 p.m. Frtt.
Pan of Wednesdays at 4 Plus.

Art IActuN
TM PoUtics ot hrody, Beauvais
Lyons. Scn:ening Room. Center
for the A.n.s. North Campus. 2:30
p.m. Free.
Phy8lca
The Sap ollonk Criticality:
~bye-Bikkrl. BjaTum .net~
yond, Prof. Michael E. Fisher.
Univ . of Maryland. 220 Natural
Sciences. North Campus. 3:45 p.m.

Col._...

Art I.KWN
Lydia Dona. Scn:ening Room,
Center for the Arts. North Campus. 4 p.m. Fn:e.

-

BloloCJMI~

T he &amp;lciUIU 111btilU trp RNAbindln&amp; AUenuaUon Protein '
(TRAP): StnKturt, Fuod.lon,
and Role In RqulaUnc Tryp-tophan Blosyntbd.ic Genes, Dr.
Paul Gollnick. 114 HochS!etter.
Non.h Campus. 4 p.m.

-LU. --

Multl-vtador Biorcmediation
Demoll.ltraUon Proj«t, Dr. A .
Scou Weber. 122 Classroom
Building, Buffalo.State College.
1300 Elmwood Ave. 4 p.m.

""--Y-

Opllm•l Samplin1 Theory U:
lncorporatin&amp; Prior hrametrr
Uneert•lnty, Prof. David Z.
D' Argenio, Univ. of Southern
California. 508 Cooke. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

--·---

-

K rapp's t..Jt Tape, UB Depc. or
Theatre and Dance. Play by
Samuel Beckett. din:cted by
Vincent O ' Neill, with Jerry
Finnegan. Black Box lbeatre,
Center for the Ans. North Cam-

AICITW-..op

··.... .

latrodudioc to Sun. 10 a.m.·
Noon . To n:gister, call Academic
Services. Computing and Information Ta:hnolgy (ASCIT) User Li·
aison office at 645-3540.

PayciUtry- - The l!ma-Jia&amp; N&lt;UJ'Oblolo&amp;:Y of
Disloc:ia.tfVe St.tes: Rt:lnanee to
PTSD,lobo H. l&gt;ryiiAI, M.D.. National Center for Post· Traumatic
Stress Disorder. Auditorium, Reha·
bilitation Building, Buffalo Psychi atric Center. 10:30 a.m.

..-...

Royolo .._ SyrKuoo. AIW111U Amla
Nalalorium. North Campus. 1 p.m.
UB Bulk vs. Boston Univn'rlty.
UB Stadium. Nonh Campus. I :30
p.m. For ticket information, call

-.1"!= 100&gt;. M.D., New

-

Yort. Uoiv. Bufftlo-Rocbcller
ll&lt;rmato!OBY Society """'""- Memorial !WI (D-2). Buffalo G&lt;nr:nl
Hoopitai. IOO Hip St. 3 p.m.

......

~­
Lock o1Jik&amp;MII!i8ddoo,
lacck

Puniczdt. 684 Baldy. NIX1h Cam-

....,__
pus. 3:30 p.m.

...-...
.....-

Ne.......,. Calbolic AD-Star

Meet. Alumni Arena Nmtorium.
North Campus. 8 a.m.-Noon.
Royolt Basbtbtll Esblbltloo.
Alumni Arena. North Campus.

2 p.m.

Dpwa
La Bobtmt:, Greater Buffalo Opera Company. directed by Gary
Buraess. Mainstage, Center for
the Arts. North Campus. 2:30p.m.
S I 5, ru. $30. For tickets, call
645-2787.

--'--..

Advocates. 5:30-6:30 p.m. For in-.
formation. ca.U lbe Off'.ce or Studcol Life at 645-6125.

Mqlc,Sdi:Booaodtllo
Para-', Prof. Clyde F.
Herreid. 20 Knox. North Campus.
7 p.m. Free.

-

UB S,....,....UC llaod, Stnh L.
Mc Koin, cooductor. worn of
De.llo Joio, Persicbetti,
Shostakovich. Slce Coocert Halt.
Nonb Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

11&lt;11. Nonb eamp.. 3 ......

Dt'P•F'' ........

. ...... Tyrotl.o.......,.._:

'l'lldrll.olet.C...............
t1oa, Dr. Jtct. E. Dixon. Uoiv. or
Mkhipn. Fuber 0-26. South
Ctmput. 4 p.m.

--

B uill-... a.tp:n. A.1umni Alena.
Nonb Campos. 7:30 p.m.

.
Su, Amhcnl Suopbonc
QuartcL Sloe Coocen Hall. NIX1h
Camput. 8 p.m. $.5, $10.

-.........
--

::!&amp;.
"'t.=::e~- 1ft
v ........ M.D.
A,
CafdOOIIm
Mercy Hocpilal. 8:30 .....

Wort&lt;islc w1111 Dne-tllylo
Cllaolcalllepoadal&lt;y Gruap
'~'no-, Dr. CbrisJiDe Ayoo
Stulnict. Spoosoml by latli&lt;ule for
Addictions Studies mel Traiftin&amp;.

Daemen Colleae, 4380 Maio SL.
Amhe:nt. 9 a.m.-4:30p.m. $120.
Scamd ptn-of IWIH!ay worbhop.
To rep.aer, call64~140.

----

~­
0..~

Medlatloo, Atis~arr
Campbell. 224 Bell. NIX1h Campus. 3 p.m.

ala t

Ish)....._

l-~-Micnlo­

copy of-...,Canncn
Manella., WadsworthCeolet. 1348

Fuber. Soulh Camput. 4 p.m.

=--= ---.....
-.. -u... --

latroduc:tioe to UNIX. 10 Lm.-

Slpalt for CcU
G-clo ad Dltr....,llatloa,
Lorraine J. Ciudu, Ph.D.• Cornell
Univ. Medical ColkJC. RPCl.
Elm and Carlton. 12:.30 p.m.

NIIIIC)'-. pluo. From
Maosfodd Collqe in P&lt;:nntylvania. Allen Recital HaU. South
Campus. 7 p.m. Fmc. Concerts are

tapodf..-broadcaslonWBR&gt;88.7
FM tbc following Sunday at 4 p.m.

~~~~=·
lnf,...,;oo Tec:boolll' (ASCTO
User Liailon off"ICC aa 64~3.540.
CERrt~T~

Lab: WUt Wt Coo Do Fw Yoo,
Colleen McNcil. Utt Milia. lenni!..- Val&lt;fttiDe. 209 Baldy. North

_..__

~-:"c!:'r~ t.~~tion•l

1

Tecboolc&gt;Pt....,__
Resoon:&lt;s and

645-6666.

l'lly8laloOTillu&lt; o.y...,.cioa or Suklal

Cblo Fll CIIOa. 220 Nlllllnl Scieoccs. North Campos.. 3:4S p.m.

Bulk vt. SyracUK. Alumni Arena
Natatorium. North Campus. 2 p.m.

Mude: Evkit:DCt for Replatioa, Dr. 1llomas Oayeski. Univ.
of Rochester Medical Center. 108
Sherman. South Campus. 4 p.m.

Lou ,__llJuotla, Dr.

Sweet Adtlines. Mainsta8e. Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8
p.m. SIS, $20. Presented by
Buffalo Gateway.

......

M - - Martin Swim Cbamp~p.

rium.

Hun10r Camck. Bllffalo Sial&lt;. 222
Natural Sci&lt;ncet. NIX1h Campus .

4p.m .

Alumni Arena NatatoCampus . 5:4S-10 p.m.

N~

utew-.....

s--,
c-uo. n.""""'"
Advocates. ' :30-6:30 p,ra. For in·

..... ...,...........

fomw.ion. cal1lhe Off.ce of Stu·
dent Life at 64~125 .

--IEnYI-

a.-~T~
SNePS•u
........... Min- ..,u.o. 22A

utew-.....

s..otia&amp; Ceaatloa 11, Power

pus. 8:30p.m. $5.$10.

Aiumm Area&amp;. North Campus.
9a.m.·3 p.m.

A f!lio(VIdto Blln'tll TMk, Riclwd Wicu. Scteenios Room.
Center for the Arb. North Cam-

~_,..

---

Noo-DLVO Forus Ia hrtk~
Dynamks., Dr. Domenic Grasso.
Univ. of Connecticut 140 Ketter.
North Campus. II a.m.

put. ?p.m. Ft=

8.-IIIDII Gr&lt;ld, UB
. Open
Wort.shop. Open by
Humpcnlinclt. direc:ted by Guy
Bqess. M.ainsu:ce. Cemer for
lhe ArU. Nonb Camput. 8 p.m.

~Nq.ative Affect, St:Jr.Reaullltory
F•llurt, and Addidioos, Todd F.
Heatherton, Ph.D .. Oanmouth.
102 1 Main . 1:30 p.m. Free. Sponson:d by the Research Institute on
Addictions.

$4. $.5, $6.

Phy81ca-

Col._
...
~­

Lydia Dona: 1989-1995, a IU,...
vey or paladncs. Through Dec.
22. Ga.llery hours Wednesday-Sat·
urday, 10:30 a.m.·8 p.m.; Sunday,
Noon-S p.m. University Gallery
(fint floor). Center for the Arts.
North Campus. 5-7 p.m. Fn:e.

Dpwa
t.. Boheme, Gn:ater Buffalo Opera Company. directed by Gary
Burgus. Mainstage:-Center for
the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m.
$1.5, $25, $30. For tickets, call
645-2787.

~ollllltlerlocllio­

TBA. 220 Nllllltal Scionccs. No&lt;1h
Ctmpu.s. 3:45 p.m.

::::;:a~!:!'n':! =~·All

Diefendorf. South Campus.
8-11 p.m. Free. Sponsored by
Graduate Student Association.

ot Sup-port Staff Clitnt Cont•d, Ann
Ennis. Spomored by Institute for
Addictions Studies and Training.
Oaemen College. 4380 Main St ..
Amherst. 9 a.m.-4 :30p.m. Sil O.
Setond pan of two-day workshop.
To n:gister, call 645--6140.
lDC:reued lmportana

Theolre and Daace. Pity by
Samuel Beckett, directed by
Vincent O ' Neill. with JCIT)'
Ftnnegan.. Black Box Tbeatre,
Cenler f«.lhe Aru. NIX1h Campus. 8 p.m. SS, $10.

---

-·- .--c-

ArtExlollllt

Art OpeelooC

Prof'. Stevn Slba. Univ. of
South Alabama. 215 Nuural Sci·
ences. North Campus. 3:30p.m.

w-..op

·-Col._...

R«&lt;DStrudion of u A.Uud.ian
Temple: A Parvdy of Sdi:Hislory and Art. Beauvais Lyons
Through Dec. 15. Gallery hou~
TuesdAy, IOa.m.-5 p.m.; Wednesday-Friday, 10 L m.-8 p.m.: Saturc:by. II L m.·8 p.m. An Department Gallc:ry. Center ror the: Aru.
Nonh CamP.o~s. 5-7 p.m. Free.

C-*7 ~

Con~nital Esotropla, Scott
Olitsky, M .D. Kinch Auditorium.
Childn:n 's Hospital. 8 a.m.

Coulombk: Crltia.Uty ln Gent:ral DimealkHd •Dd tbe
Kostt:rllU·Tboultu Tnuitioa.
Prof. Michael E. Fisher, Univ. of
Maryland. 245 Fronczak . Nonh
Campus. 2 p.m. ,

Statistical Mdhodt in Specu(a..
live Markds, Prof. Ashim Mallik.
244 Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m.

Mytlt oltllo c-a. o.cratk Republk, t9ls-4:t, Hans
Brinks. 532 Part.. Nrxth Campus.
3: 15p.m.

.,....

----

~­

An MJMD Coaaputln1 Pbtform
tor • llierarchkal. Foveal Mac:b.J.oe Visioa S)'ltt•, Fenglei Du,
A.mbent Systems, Inc. 218
Norton. North Campus. 3 p.m.

~:~~~:::.
nois, Chicago. 103 Diefendorf.
South Campus. 3 p.m.
-....,y~-1

·~·

.

Ten Prob~IDJ of Conscious HIS,
Michael Tyc:, Temple Univ. With
panel: Christine Kirwin, Peter
Hare. Barry Smith. 280 Park.
North Campus. 3 p.m.

_,_
Tllalldaald&lt; Th&lt;npntks,lobn
Allcm. 248 Cooke. No&lt;1h Cam-

Music, ·l ila aa..

81111111111 Fesllvll

George Kahumoku Jr. adds a touch of humor as he plays slack key guitar in Nov. 9
performance at Aloha! Hawaiian Music &amp;
Dance Festival in Slee Hall; Left, Kam Lan
Pukalanikala dances to the rhythms.

pus. 8 Lm.
Ufe .........
-.eC...IIIIicalloo,Cowlseling Center. Nooo- 1 p.m. For
inrormation. ca.ll the Office of
Student Life at 645-6125.

-

_,.....,_

O ltvtn J. FiaD., Ph.D., UWv. of
Piruburah School or Medicine.
RPCL 12:30 p.m.

T'r

• .,..._

Ed...U..a Atty: n. - ·
Sludnl . . . Catalytl
Cbaa-Pan1, Atty ad Audeala. 120 Clemens. North
Campus. !-2:30p.m. free. Tottgister, call 645-2992.

r.r

Continued on page 7

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STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORI _AT BUFFALO

AIPIIIIVBAdll
President Greiner's Statement on Affirmative Action
and Fostering Diversity is
published today on Page 5.
No\lcmbPr 9 1995

Volume 27 . No. 11

Book on campus 'greening out' I
cites UB's environmental savvy I
Smart policy on energy conservation singled out
1bebookcontainsnumerousexamples of environmentally savvy
college and university administrntors who have implemented subs tantial cost savings th rough
"'green" programs.
UB, for example, is mentioned
prominently as a campus where a
progressive, energy-conservation
policy has been successfully implemented.
)\.
" While Congress , for example.
\
seems incapable of formulati ng a farsighted
and eco nomically
smart policy to promote energy effi-

NVIRONMENTALis-

sues on campus a.re
sparking as much interest from university ad-

ministrators as from
students, according to a new book,
Ecodemia: Campus Environm~n­
tal Stewardship at the Tum of t/le
21st Century, published by the National Wildlife Federation.
The book describes how colleges
and universities, including the University at Buffalo, are demonstrntingthatenvirorunentalresponsibility
can help cap, and even cut back,
campus Costs at a time when higher
\
education is increasingly feeling the
financial squeeze.
AuthOduliin Ktniry, national
coordinator for the fedetation' scampus ecology program, writes that
today 's fiscal concerns are putting a

0

have developed
their own,"
writes David
w. Orr. professor and
chair of

new spin on environmental efforts
at colleges and universities.
" Now, accountants can 8Cillally
tra&lt;:k the savings," she adds.
Ktniry ootes tbatsomescbools have
begun to solicit business with environmentally friendly veodorsand to
make waste reduction an important
criterion for doing business.
''Colleges and univenities are
uniquely situated to make a real
difference," according to Keniry,
"partly because they deal with so
many vendors."
She points out that where suc-

cessful,

environ~ntal

initiatives

......,.ora.. Faculty Senate
ExecutiveCommitteewerebriefed
last week on what could~ UB's
largest capital campaign ever and
discussed the future of graduate
education.
President Greiner also addressed
the group briefly. Engineering Professor Dennis Malone asked
Greiner about the current status of
some $3 million in excess UB tuition revenues now held in the State
University Tuition Reimbursement
Account (SUTRA) and about fu ture local control of tuition revenues. Greiner replied that both are
under discussion with SUNY Chancellor Thomas Bartlett.
Greiner explained that the
SUTRA funds are currently being
withheld by the central administration. SUTRA funds are tuition revenue generated by a campus' actual
enrollment over and above that
campus' revenuetargetfortheyear.
Until this year, these funds have

largely been disbursed to the campuses that generated them. The
money exists, Greiner explained,
simply because "we have lots more
students, particularly graduate students, than we targeted."
On future tuition revenues,
Greiner said that ...no compromise
is acceptable to me on the issue of
where revenues should stay. It is
imperative to separate tal&lt; dollars
from revenue dollars. The trustees
should be responsible for tal&lt; dollars and we should be responsible
'for ruition revenue.'' Greiner told
FSEC members he does not take an
inflexible position lightly, but that
he believes, especially if differential tuition is being considered for
SUNY. there is no other option.
''Without that revenue, we have no
incentive to do better and our students have no incentive to pay
more," he explained.
Ronald Stein, vice president for
University Advancement and Development. told FSEC members
the univers ity has identified more

Gergen talks politics, looks
at presidential contenders
11r STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

P

than 3,000 prospective donors with
a net worth of more than $2.5 million. Also, a select group of approximately 550 prospects will be
contacted as research concludes thi s
fall on whether to launch a major
capital campaign.
Stein said nearly $400 mill ion
of capital needs have been identified on campus. including $68 mil lion for interdisc iplinary cente rs ,
$55 million in facilities rehabilitation and construction and $50 mil lion in endowed c h airs or
professorships. By January. Stein
expects to have enough information to determine if a concentrated
capitaJ campaign. which would
seek to raise larg.e amounts of
money in a relatively short period
of time. is feasible. and what a
realistic goal might be.
"The research cou ld tell us we
are ready to go with a $250 million
campaign, or it could say that we
may not be ready to do a campaign
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3

CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

work among

..As a result,.. Orr continues, "the
university will save $3.2 million
per year, equal to 15 percent of the
present energy budget They will
also substantially reduce institutional contributions to global wanning, acid rain and national cynicism.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

FSEC agenda: revenue, graduate education
IIJSlRECOX
Reporter Staff

Gefi&lt;HI .t poclum Nov. 11n MllfnotJW• TI!Htle.

RESIDENT BiLL CLINTON"S FORTUNES have finally
turned. and his chances for reeleccion are improving. according to one professional Washington watcher who visited UB
last Wednesday.
Of course. David Gergen, past advi sor to four presidents
and current editor-at-large for U.S. News &amp; World Repon, reminded a
large audience in the Mainstage Theatre at the Cent~r for the Arts that
George Bush was riding high at this point in the election four years ago
as well. " Bush was high in the saddle. wi th an 81 percent approval rating .""
recalled Gergen. ""and. a year later he suffered the worst shellacking of any
incumbent president since Will iam Howard Taft in 19 12."
Handicapping the current field ofGOPpresidential contenders, Gergen
concludes that most are handicapped. Kansas Sen. Bob Dole deserves the
GOP nod by virtue of his long service to party and cou ntry, says Gergen.
but many doubts persist about his electability. Indiana Senator Ri chard
Lugar would make a fine president, but draws little enthusiasm. he adds .
Texas Senator Phil G ramm is doomed by the television age because,
Gergen explained, he "has a great face for radio." And. fellow TV
commentator Pat Buchanan has true conservative cred~ntial s and the best
ca mpaign of any candidate, but "he scares the bejesus out of a lot of
people. As another commentator put it, they are sti ll translating hi s 1992
convention speech from its ori gi nal German."
EnterGulfWarGeneral Colin Powell? Gergen thinks not. "My gut just
tells me he won't run ." But. Gergen conceded. there is a lot to be said about
military experience. "Say what you might about Shannon Faulkner."
Gergen chided, "but she has more military experience than Gingrich,
Buchanan and Clinton com bined."
Regardless of the candidate, Gergen contends. there is a "nastiness" in
politics that will continue to alienate the electorate, making it "difficult for
anyone to govern" until its underlying causes are addressed. The causes.
says Gergen, are economic polarization of rich and poor. the breakdown
of the family unit and a Joss of a sense of commun ity.
Gergen says he has "worked for more Presidents than Billy Graham
has prayed with-with about equal success." Gergen was speechwriter to
President Richard Nixon. counselorto President Gerald Ford, communi·
cations &lt;)irector to President Ronald Reagan. As Editor-at-large fo r U.S.
News &amp; World Report and a commentator on PBS' s MacNeiVUhrer
NeWshour, Gergen had been out of government for nine years- permanently , he thought-when longtime friend Bill Clinton pressed him back
into service as Counselor to the President between June. 1993 and
December. 1994.
Gergen views each of the four presidents he served as possess ing
unique strengths. Nixon was very well -read and a .. strategic thinker,"

scientists, ad~
ministrators, interns and others
might otherwise have little contact," she writes. 'They provide a
forum for employees and students
eager to participate in the decisionmaking process. Ecodemia is about
both the tangible and the intangible benefits of 'greening' our institutions."

David

�2

Kids do better than
parents at weight loss
UB study shows children bike pounds
•rLOiaUKD

News Services Staff

BESE CHILDREN take
poundsoffeasierandkeeptbem
off longer than their obese parents, the fm;t study to compare
weight loss and weight-loss
maintenance of children and adults enrolled in
the same treatment program has shown.
The follow-up study of participants in
weight-loss treatment programs showed that
at I 0 years, more than 20 percent of the
children had maintained a 20 percent de-

O

crease in overweight, compared to less than

I percent of the adults.
"A tremendous amount of resources are
devoted to treating obesity in adulthood, with
variable success," said lead researcher Leonard
H. Epstein, UB professor of psychology, so-

cial and preventive medicine, and nuttition.
'"These results suggest that as a public-health
issue, it may heahetteruseoflimited resources
to focus on preventing obesity in children,
instead of trying to reduce obesity after it is
well established in adults, with the associated
morbidity and monality ...
The study appeared in the September
issue of O~sity Res•arch.

dren 8-12 yean old who were
20-100 percent overweight
for qe, sex and height, plus
11 Ieastoneobcle J&gt;l""'lfrom

A 10-year follow-up of children enrolled
in four randomized treatment studies, coauthored by Epstein and published in H•alth
Psychology in 1994, showed that34 percent
had decreased their overweight by 20 percent or more. In contrast, adult obesity research bas shown consistently that adults
seldom maintain the weight they lose.
Given these contrasting .findings, Epstein
and colleagues reasoned that children may
respond better to weight-loss intervention than
adults. As a first effort to investigate this hypothesis, Epstein lauocbed the cwrent study,
wbicb compared trealmall results of children
and parents from 113 families who bad perticipated in bebavionll weight-&lt;:OOtrol conducted
bY his group. Children and parents in these
programs were given similar diet, exercise and
behavior-change recoounendalions.
The study cohort was composed of chil-

each family wbo followed the
same llellment regimen.
At six tDODtbs, about 40
percent of children and 20
percent of adults showed at
least a 20 percent decrease in
poutlds overweight, While
bolh children and parents rec
gained weiglit after this irtitial drop, children's weight
gain at five years stabilized
at about 7 percent below
baseline and remained there
at I0 years. Adults returned
to baseline weight by five years and at 10
years weighed about7 perceot more than at
the beginning of the study, results showed.
Epstein mentioned several reasons why
children may experience better results than
adults. He said ao. important foetor is the
nature of most adult llellment programs.
''Typically, adults are treated by themselves,
while children are treated within the family,
which provides important support foe babit
changes and maintenance." Other reasons
include the natural teodency of children to
be more active, a difference in motivation in
children and adults, children's fewer number of fat cells and the fact that children' s
habits aren't as deeply ingnlined.
He called for more studies to replicate
these fmdings and to better understand the
mechanisms that may be responsible for the
0
differeoces in effectiveoess.

kansas," said Gergen. "but, unfortunately, the
country was not ready for this." Each time
Hillasy Rodbam ,Clinton aaserted herself politically, it seemed to diminish the president,
Gergen claimed. Men of Gergen's generation, he said. hoped their daughten would
grow to be like Mrs. Clinton, but were glad
that their wives were DOL
Though a lifelong Republican, Gergen
seemed to paint Clinton as philosophically
closer to Ronald Reagan than Newt Gingrich
is. Gergen eredits the GOP for tackling politically sensitive issues such as entitlements,
but sternly criticized the proposals they have
put forward. " I don't believe this is socially
responsible," said Gergen of the GOP welfare reform plan, "and I don't understand
why this country is so quiet about this ... It is
unconscionable to me that we would continue to broaden the gap between rich and
poor. This goes far beyond what Reagan

would have done."
Gergen also criticized GOP plans to gut
the Earned Income Tax Credit. which his
former boss Reagan called "our best aotipoverty program_"
Gergen'suniquevantagepointonAmerican politics bas meant his words and advice
have decorated the highs and the lows of the
past 25 years. As chief opeecbwriter for
Nixon. the task of penning Nixon's letter of
resignation feU toGergen. lt was also Gergen
who turned the phrase "Are you better off
todaythanyouwerefouryearsago'r' Ronald
Reagan' s 1980 debate closer that closed the
door on the Carter Presideocy.
AnativeofDwbam, North Carolina, Gergen
attended Yale University and earned his law
degree at Harvanl In addition to his dual roles
at U.S. N.wsandPBS, Gergen is now a visiting
profO$SOI' at the Teny Sanford Institute of
Government at Duke University.
0

university's energy officer, at length, de-

it is going to be used.

off.....,

Epstein, who heads UB'sBehavioniiMedicine Laboralory, has worked in the field of
childhood obesity for more than 20 years.
Since 19&amp;0, he has conducted numerous studies comparing the effectiveness of different
treatment programs in helping children lose
weight and keep it off. The most effective
program has proven to be one that involves
parents in treatment and reinforcement
He currelitly works with overweight children between the ages of 8 and 12 who
participate for four months in a comprehensive, family-based weight-control program
called the Stoplight Diet Program. The Stoplight Diet teaches children to eat a nutritionally-balanced diet by linking foods to the
three signals on a traffic light: high-o!Iorie
foods are red and should be eaten rarely,
moderate-&lt;:alorie foods are yellow and can
be eaten in moderation, and low-o!Iorie foods
are green and can be eaten freely.
The program combines diet with regular

exercise, behavior modification and a maintenance program. It is the only treatment
program in the country to document success
in children over an extended period.
(Epstein ' s Stoplight Diet Program will be
featured on CBS's "48 Hours" Nov. 16.)

GERGE,.
Continuep from page 1

according to Gergen. Ford was ..the most
decent man I've worked for," and gathered
the strongest cabinet of any . Reagan was

He believes the best preparation for the job of
president is as governor of a large, complex
state, like New York or California. "Being

..the most naturaJ leader," and Clinton is

governor of a smaller, Jess complex state, ..

"clearly the most intelligent," with a mind
that"processes information like a computer."
Gergen credits Ronald Reagan with doing many good things, from ending the Cold
War to putting a lid on inflation, but calls the
substantial tax cut, implemented by Reagan
in 1981 , "a mistake" for cutting too deeply,
contributing to greatly increased deficits.
When Clinton signed an unpopular tax increase early in his term, Gergen supported it
as the "right thing to do." He explained,
''Those of us still around public life froth the

says Gergen of Clinton, "was not good."
During the transition, says Gergen, Clinton' s
first of three mistakes was that be was
"haunted by Carter, who maintained his 'outsider' status and could not get his legislative
program through Congress."
Another mistake was putting considerable effort into fmding cabinet members, but
spending "almost no lime on putting together
a White Housestaff."Theresult, said Gergen,
wasastaffwithoutanyD.C. veterans, young
and talented, but green. "Clinton would sometimes say that he felt, early in his presidency,
like he was running a head start program."
Clinton's third transition mistake was the
role Mrs. Clinton would play· in the administration. "She had an instrumental role in Ar-

Reagan era have some responsibility to clean
up our mistakes."
Clinton's rocky start surprised Gergen,
who attribu tes it to three significant mis-

takes made during the 11-week transition to
the pn!sidency. You see. Gergen explains,
Clinton did not enter the 1992 presidential

race expecting to win . ..He expected to lose
the nomination to a 'heavyweight' like Mario
Cuomo," recalls Gergen, " who would then
go on to lose to Bush. Then, Clinton would
be well positioned for '96."
Also, GergeR called the leap to the Oval
Office "a bigger leap than anyone expects."

CORRECTION

ECODEMIA
Continued from page 1

By decisive action they have demonstrated to
students, faculty and the public at large that
the future does not have to be bleak and that
with sufficient leadership, large institutions
can act respons ibly."
The self-financing project is the result of
a unique partnership between UB, Niagara
Mohawk Power Corp., CES/Way International, Inc., a Houston-based energy-&lt;:onservation company, and the State University of
New York (SUNY) Construction Fund.

Funded at no cost to New York State
taxpayers, the project would not have been
possible without a $4.3 million incentive
from Niagara Mohawk under the utility ' s
"Power Partners Program" with CES/Way .
Among the project's environmental benefits is an annual 15 percent reduction in

UB 's energy-related air emissions, including about 70 tons less of sulfur dioxide and
107 tons less of nitrogen oxide, prime components of acid rain. UB's program is described in detail in a chapter on energy and
utilities that quotes Walter Simpson, the

scribing how UB 's comprehensive program
succeeded because it iocorporated both shortterm and long-term payback measures.
lbe chapter also notes that universities-

and other businesses, for that mancr-can
ensure success of conservation programs by
utilizing employees to build energy awareness. Simpson cites the example ofUB' s comprehensive employee network of building
conservation contacts, or BCCs. lbcse employees, representing academic departments
and administrative offices throughout the university, disseminate information about environmental policies, monitor participation and
act as liaisons to UB' s conservation prognuns.
He notes that one program that bas been
successfully lauocbed through the BCCs is
UB 's Green Computing campaign, an effort
to encourage more prudent use of computers. The program eocourages faculty, staff
and students to:
• Turn on computer equipment only when

• Tum off computers-or at least monitors-when attending lunch or a meeting.

• Discourage use of a "power strip.. master switch that turns on all equipment at once
if not all of it is necessary.

• Eliminate screen savers with moving
images, which generally do not save energy.
• Gent! y remind co-workers of the need to
conserve energy.
The program aims to cut as much as 50
percent of the annual $300,000 cost for operating the estimated 8,000 personal com-

puters in use on UB's two campuses.
Simpson says one measure of Green
Computing's success surfaced during the 1994
campus sbutdowo between Christmas and
New Year' s. Before the campaign begart he
discovered "literally dozens" of computers
left on during the sbutdowo while patrolling
offices to make sure macbinety was turned
off. Last year, be found only one computer
0
left on during the campus sbutdowo.

DIRECTOR OF PUBliCATIONS ~J.o-..'Y • EOITOA: _...YWIM • ASSOCIATE EDITOR: _ . . . _ • ARTOIRECTOR. -~ • N1P1/Ubinfo pub bulfUO.~f

�--...--aT,-U

3

Hoop dreams: basketball coaches
preView season at Sunrise series
.,_.._

involved in ''Coaches Against Cancer," which
raises funds by soliciting pledges for each
three-point shoe made during the season.
Buscaglia encouraged those anending UB
at Sunrise to show their support of the Royals by attending games and encouraging the
media to cover women's sports. "Give a call
to (Channels} 2, 4 and 7." he said. "I did."
More than anything, the Royals need an
audience, Buscaglia said. ''Those ladies can
play, but there's one thing missing-fans."
1be BuDs have a very young team this year,
noled men's coach Tun Cobane, "but be patient with them, they're going to be very good."
Cobane also spoke at UB at Sunrise-following the team's 5:30a.m. practice.

Reporter Editor

L

ook for a good mix of new and
returning players as the Bulls and
Royals lake to the hardwoods of
Alumni Arena for the 1995-96
basketball season.
UB's basketball coac:bes gave a preview
of the upcoming season Nov. 4 at UB at
Sunrise, the university's community breakfast series jointly produced by the UB Alumni
Association, News Services, Publications and
Office of Conferences and Special Events.
Women's coach Sal Buscagli~ and men's
coach Tim Cohane discussed their teams,
their philosophies and their hopes for the
NCAA playoffs at the breakfast program that
Giving a humorous presentation that
drew about 80 people.
lioked his recruitment efforts to an alleged
"We have one goal-to get to the NCAA participation in the OJ. Simpson trial, Cohane
tournament," said Buscaglia. "Everything kept his audience laughing while predicting
we do is directed , - - - - - , . - - - - - - - - - - - - . great things for bastoward that."
ketball in Buffalo.
Following two
1be Bulls have some
exhibition games
good returning playNov. l9and26in
ers in 6•7"• Jamie
Alumni Arena,
the Royals will
start their season
Dec. I and4atthe
University of Hawaii. They will
open at home
Dec. 8 against Hampton University.
While he noted that the team already faces
some challenges due to injury, Buscaglia has
high hopes for the Royals. "We've got some
tough injuries, but we've got quality ponple,"
he said, adding that he expects stand-out performances from junior Breona Doty, named
the conference's preseason player of the year;
senior Melanie Vogel; and freshman Catherine
Jacob, "anew playerwe'rereallyexcited about"
Buscaglia bad high praise for the women's
team, which has woo 20 or more games in
three of the last four seasons; members hold
the highest GPA of all UB' s athletic teams,
with 10 of 13 players last year named to the
dean's list or scholar-athlete designation.
He praised the team for the class they show
on and off the courts and for their community
service. Both men's and women's teams are

Students and faculty gather in Student Union Monday to watch televislon coverage
of funeral services for Israeli Prime Minister Yltzhak Rabin who was assassinated
Saturday. A book of wtitlngs about Rabin from the UB community will be taken to
Israel next month by students and Rabbi Shay Mintz, director ol UB's Hillel.

Anderson ; Rasaun

Young, a 6'3" junior
who last year was
named Most Valuable
Player in the league;
and Mike Martinho, a

s· J]..

sophomore

who broke the three-point shooting record for
the school last year with a total of63.1be BuDs
also have some beight this year with the addition of Leonard Tangishaka. a 6'11" junior
from Burundi, Africa.
"We're tJying our best to revitalize baskethaD in the area," noted Cobane, who said to
«peel doublebeaden in 1996-97 in the new
Marine Midland Arena pitting the Bulls against
St. Bonavenrure, Canisius and Niagara.
Men's basketball kicks off the 1995-96
season with exhibition games Nov. I 0 and
16 in Alumni Arena. The Bulls open their
home season Nov. 27 against Rutgers. Tbe
Bulls meet CorneD Dec. 9 at home, a game to
be televised on the Empire Sports Networlc;
and Niagara University Dec. 21. Last year the
Bulls, with an 18-IOrecordwonmoregarnesof
any UB men's team in the last 30 years. ;::::

liJl ~esqni Time [apsule
• Throuphour the UB's Sesquicentennial celebratkJn. the Repotter wiU offer a series ol historical.,.
tic{Bs describing the people and IMiflts that have shaped the university during its 150 years.
NOYEMaEII 8 , 1827

Poet in residence: Robert Frost
comes to the campus
Don1 writ!!" poetry for money-or plan on it for a career-lhat was the advice Robert Frost gave to students when the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet spent three days
at the University of Buffalo in 1927 as poet in residence. Novels, essays or other
literary forms might be written lhat way but poetry is too uncertain, the poet said.
Frost. whose visit was made possible by the Fenton Foundation, gave two public readings and spent a great deal of time looking at the works of students. offering ·constructive criticism." according to Tile Buffalo Bee, an early predecessor
to Tile Spectrum.
A poem. Frost said. is written because people can·t help writing it and written
first for the poet himself. If it's published at all, it is not for the
public but for the few who will appreciate ~ . The trouble
with some poets. Frost told The Bee, is that they publish
too many poems and ohen bury their best work in the rubbish they write.
More advice to University of Buffalo students from
Frost:
"Poetry should come when the mood comes.·
he said, adding that he disliked having his
publishers hound him for more poems. "I
like to keep my poems for about a year to
see Hthe mood is a permanent one or just a
passing one.· Frost said. If it turns out that
it's a passing mood and "not true." Frost
confided. he destroys the poem.

FSEC
Continued from page 1
at all ye~" said Stein. 1be university implemented a computerized methodofidentifying
donor prospects last year, Stein said. Analysis
of more than 126,000 UB alums and friends
has yielded a list of 130 persons with net worth
between $5 and $10 million and another I00
worth more than S 10 million.
"Most of these people have never been
communicated with in the pas~ " Stein said.
" All we are really doing is what every other
public institution in lhe country is doing. They
justhavea IO.yearbeadstanon us." His longterm plan involves creating contacts with stu·
dents to develop and maintain their relationship
with UB in the years to come. He also announced plans to implement an annual giving
campaign among faculty and staff. Similar
programs have been implemented at sUNY· s
other three university centers.
David Triggle. in his first appearance before the FSEC since being named dean of the
Graduate School. reviewed a document published in the Reporter outlining his vision for
graduate education at UB. He warned that it
could be a "fatal mistake" to think of undergraduate education as the university's ''number
one mission." Graduate education could then be
viewed as an ..unnecessary ,expensive luxury."

he said. Nevertheless. he predicted thatgraduateeducation at UB would quantifiabfy shrink
in coming years, largely in order to protect
quality. "My piece poses more than 20 questions important to the future of graduate education," he said of the document published in
the Reporter. Some graduate programs will
become "larger, more flexible and more inter·
disciplinary;· he said, "while others will disappear." Triggle said his thrust will be to
make the university more competitive for
studenlS and for funding at the graduate level.
One Triggle proposal, dealing with qualifications of faculty members to become members of the graduate faculty , troubled
Lockwood Library Director Judith Adams.
'"In light of the provost's efforts to build links
between upper division and graduate educa·
tion, it seems that any faculty member who
isn't considered a member of the graduate
faculty will be stigmatized;· said Adams.
adding that such a stigma would likely be to
the detriment of undergraduate education.
Triggle. whonoled that besought to guarantee quality, said he was open to dialogue on the
ideas he bad put forth. "I think it is incumbent
upon higher education to self-assess," he said.
"'If we don"t, someone else wiU."
0

UB takes big steps in development
lly STEVE COX

Reporter Staff

UBhasllllldebiCIIdv- onthedevelopment front in the past four years, according
to Vice President for University Advance·
ment and Development Ronald Slein. That is
because the development office made a plan
and is now working that plan.
Four years ago. the administration moved
responsibility for development from the UB
Foundation to Capen Hall. ''This was a most
significant change," Stein said. "It created a
structure here that now is more like most other
public institutions." Though still a far cry from
Harvard·s $3 billion total endowment. UB
now bas over $200 million in endowed funds .
In the four years since moving develop-ment responsibility to Capen Hall's fifth floor.
the university has seen dramatic results. Last
year alone, the dev~lopment staff, which numbers fewer than 30 and has an overall budget of
under S4 million, brought in nearly $15 million. This year. on a budget just over S4 million, the goal is to raise $17.25 million. Stein
last week unveiled plans for a major, five-year
capital campaign to members of the FSEC .
Development, explains Stein. is ··a sci·
ence. not an art. with proven tools that work,
rather than intuition." Stein's office is actually

a decentralized operation consisting of numer·
ous school-based development officers supported by a central staff of specialists ...Those
officers work with deans to solicit major gifts.
generally those of$25.000ormore." explained
Stein. Last year. one-half of the Sl5 million
raised was in the form of major gifts. Most of
the balance comes from smaller donations and
an annual appeal to alumni.
Recent analysis of a large number of UB
alumni and friends has given the develop·
ment office direction. ··we now know wh o
they are. where they are and what they do,''
said Stein. ''Now we can build relationships
across the world.·· When development does
make contact, added Stein. ''the first th ing
we usually hear is, 'Where have you been for
30 years?' The second thing we hear is ·1 had
a great time and got a great education at lhe
universi1y:· Most are happy to finall y make
contact with a university that holds a special
place in their heans. he said.
The largest single gift the university has
rt:eeived so far, $2.4 million. came anonymously. It was expressly dedicated to full y
supporting 20 top scholars through four years
of college. explained Stein. Proceeds of the
program have. this year. attnleted two National
Merit Scholarship winners to UB. he added.

�4

Parodist Beauvais Lyons brings imaginary "Krapp sLast
archaeology from 'Hokes Archives' · Tape" in Black
Box Theatre

,........ ...... .........
By PAliiiCIA DONOVAN
News Services Staff

PRODUCTION OF " !_(rapp's
Last Tape." a 1957 0111&gt;-iict play
by Irish playwright Samuel
Beckett, will be preaeoted by the
UB Department of Theatre and Daoce Nov.
9- 11 and lt&gt;-18 in the Black Box Theatre of
the Center for the Ans, UB Nortb Campus.
Tbe play stars Jeny Finnegan and is directed by Vincent O'Neill, artistic director
of Buffalo' s Irish Classical Theatre and adjunct professor of theatre and daDce at UB.
Tbe story is set in some future time in
nary civilization.
whi&lt;:h the eponymous Krapp, a bitterly nosLyons' work is a commentary on
talgic old man now nearly blind and deaf,
how the appearance of authority se·
listens to audio tapes be made more than 30
duces the audience to believe. Playful
years before, aDd COiliiDCIIts on them in a
and tongue ~ in-cheek, his work. is a
dark, cootie monologue in which be tries to
parody of science, history and art that
reconcile the present with a fleeting Jove
challenges the popular tendency to
affair be bad in his past. After coosidering his
exoticize the past.
failures as an author and a lover, be sits&amp;Wing
into space, an old and tired man. Like so many
The show, titled "Reconstruction
of an Aazudian Temple," will be on
of Beckett's characters, be is tom between the
exhibit Nov . 16 through Dec. 15 in
pointlessness of his life and his seemingly
inexhaustible instinct to keep going.
the UB An Department Gallery in the
Tbe play is a classic wort of absurdist
Center for the Arts on UB's North
drama spiced with Beckett' s uniqlie use of
Campus. The exhibit is free of charge
the English language and his marriage of
and open to the public. Gallery hour.;
are Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.;
nihilism and humor. Fmnegan bas been acclaimed by critics and audiences alike for his
Wednesday through Friday. 10 a.m.
performanCe in the title role.
to 8 p.m. and Saturday, II a. m. to 8
Fmnegan holds a master's degree from
p.m.
the American Conservatory 1beatte in San
An opening reception for the artist
Francisco and bas performed with that comwill be held on Thursday, Nov. 16,
pany, the New York Shakespeare Festival
from 5-7 p.m. and Lyons will present
andmanyotbertbeatenthrougboutthecouna public lecture, '"'The Politics of
try. He bas received critical applause for
Parody," that day at 3:30p.m. in the
many of his roles, in particular for his interScreening Room (Room 112) of the
pretatiooofBeckenin "Endgame" and ''WaitCenter for the Arts.
ing
for Godot," as weU as in "Krapp' s Last
The exhibit and the Aazudian culTape." He beads the acting program \n the
ture itself were conjured up in the
UB Department ofTheatre and Dance and is
mind of Lyons, who is the director of
"Aaludlan Dlvlnlatlon - · .,. from exhibit by L~.
on the opera faculty at the Eastman School of
the Hokes Archives, a repository of
which bas been shown in univer.;ity galleries throughout the nation,
Music.
archaeological recreations at the Univer.;ity of Tennessee, KnoxO'Neill, an actor, director and mime arthe brings us the imaginary Mideastern "Aazud" culture as "docuville, where he is an associate professor of art. The name "Hokes..
ist;
beads Buffalo's Irish C!Jissical Theatre
by
dozens
of
meticulously
fabricated
artifacts,
ceramics,
mented"
is no accident.
and is a lecturer in ntime and acting at UB.
photographs and hieroglyphs, along with documents that describe
Lyons has been creating and presenting mock documentations
faux archaeological excavations.
0
O' Neill is a graduate ofUniver.;ity College,
of imaginary cultures for the lastl4 years. In this traveling exhibit.
Dublin and Trinity College. Dublin. He also
trained as an actor at Dublin ' 'S noted Abbey
Theatre School and as a mime artist at Marcel
Marceu' s International Mime School, Paris.
.He is the fouodecoflreland's fust professional mime company, the Oscar Mime ComIIJPAULA~
of Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc. and a 1973 technical fields.
pany and of the Dublin Theatre School, a
Reporter contributor
"Master' s- and doctorate-level prepara- . training conservatory for professional acton,
graduate of UB. 'The IRIS Program fits in
tion
in
science
and
technology
is
increaswith
the
foundation's
mission
to
provide
which be directed for eight years. An actor
HE COCA-COLA Foundation bas
assistance for educational opportunities that ingly essential for people wbo will lead in
and director of considerable note, be bas
presented a $50,000 gift to UB's
the lcnowledge-based, higb·tecb economy of
make significant differences."
playedmanydistinguisbedroles,pedlapsmost
Increased Representation in Science
the next century," Greiner added.
UB President William R. Greiner said,
notably, the poetic presenceofJamcsJoyce in
(IRIS) Program. a new initiative to
UB's Office of Public Service and Urban
"By supporting this program, the Coca-Cola
anaward-winningone-manshow, "Joyicity,"
support.gra_d,uat~ fellowships for women and
Affaiis and Graduate Scbool of Education will
Foundation will sttengthen our univer.;ity's
which be adapted from Joyce's wad. Hi bas
mmonues m sc1ence.
efforts to recruit the very best and most ooordinale recruitmont of the fellows. In additoured the show extensively in the U.S. and
'The Coca-Cola Foundation funds proto UB undergraduates, fellowsbip recipitalented women and memben of minority
Europe to consistent praise.
grams that deal with all aspects of educagroups for graduate study in scientific and ents will be selected from other SUNY
Thursday and Saturday performances of
tion," said John R. Aim, chief financial officer
institutions, as well as historically women's and
the play are at8 p.m., Friday performances
African-American colleges and univ=ities.
are at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 (general
The Office of Public Service and Urban
admission) and $5 (students and senion) and
Affair.; established the IRIS Program to incan be obtained at the Center for the Ans box
crease the level of participation in the scioffice (645 -ARTS ) or through any
ences by women. African Americans.
TicketMaster outlet.
0
Hispanic Americans and Native Americans.
With additional philanthropic support. the
uni ver.;ity will establish summer research
internships for undergraduates and outteacb
programs to generate interest in science
among elementary and secondary students.
Aim. a board member of the Coca-Cola
Foundation, is an accounting alumnus of the
UB School ofManagement. He attended two
years of undergraduate study before joining
the U.S. Air Force in !968. Following his
ntilitary service, Aim completed his undergraduate degree at UB. He was named to his
current position at Coca-Cola Enterprises in
1992.
0

A

..,_this month wiU bring to UB a
"hoax
from
Hokes"-an
exhibition
of prints,
relics and
other apparently
real arti·
facts that are
actually fabri ·
cated articles "produced" by an imagi-

Coca-Cola Foundation gift aids IRIS Program
supporting science fellowships for women, minorities

T

tion

�5

1

N

1985, .. Provost, 1 wrole to lhe

cleans urJin&amp; lbem to reoew !heir
commilmealt to lffirmalive oc
lion, and CIICOUI'IIi"'lbem to
promclle lib commilmeots from
lculty and llaff. A decade lalcr,
!bough mucb remains to do in fostering

and celcbnting divenity throughout lhe
Univenity 11 Buffalo community, we have
had some successes in this regan!. and we
have ICbieved thole successes without resort to quotas or set-asides to increase diven;ity. Ratber, we have lakeD those extra
steps necessary to assure that, in making
decisions about access to and advancement
in our university, we overcome lhe lingering effects of our nation's historical discrimination on the basis of race, etbnicity
sod gender.
Recent events around the country have
brought me to review my statements on affirmative action, including my 1985 letter
to the deans. The points 1 made then arc, it
seems to me, stiU valid. They stiU reflect
my own views; they arc no less appropriate in light of this past year's developments in the courts; and they stiU represent
sou nd policy for the university.
At this time, it is appropriate, in my
judgment, to review the core of that 1985
letter to the deans and to reinforce the importance of those concepts for UB. The
following arc pertinent excerpts from that
letter.
Affirmative action in faculty and staff
recruitment has been university policy for
many years, yet we have achieved less
than fully satisfactory results in realizing a
faculty and professional staff which includes substantial representation of minorities and women. That we have not
done better does not indicate that we have
lacked commitment, since there arc many
factors affecting the results of our affirma-

tive action recruiting efforts. There is.
however, some iea.sOo to believe that the
academic community is at least somewhat
ambivalent regarding the concept of affrrmative action.

We are, in the main, a community
wl)jch holds particularly meritocratic val·
ues about appointment to !Uld advancement in the faculty and professional ranks.
Those meritocratic values are a s!Iength of
the institution, and they arc fully consistent with a commitment to equal opportunity in employmeoL That concept requires
commitment to the proposition that every
applicant for a position must be evaluated
on the basis of his or her academic and
professional merits and attainments, without prejudice as to his or her race, creed,
ethnic origin or gender. I honestly believe
that aU members of the academy must ac·
' cepl the equal opportunity norm , else they
betray the ideals of the academy. Moreover, I believe that this norm is broadly
sod well nigh universally embraced on this

0

V

E

M

B

cam!&gt;us. But the coocept of affirmative action goes beyond the principle of equal opportunity.

Affirmative action recruitment means
that extra steps will be taken to seek out
caodidlles from groups whose members
are underrepresented in the academy.
Moreover, affirmative action implies and
requires that in malting the final choice for

a position. extra and special consideration
will be given to candidates from
underrepresented groups who have
emerged in the sean:h.
Thl1 extra consideration should take into
account lhe fact of the candidate's status as
a member of an underrepresented group.
Thl1 fact should be treated as a significant
factor among the several factors weighed in
evaluating a caudidate' s qualifications,
achievement and potential for contribution
to the unit, its programs and its discipline or
profession. Most of those factors are difficultto measure and quantify in determining
the balance of advantage between one candidate and another. In making that detenni·
nation, however, if the weight of other factors is equal or close to equal between lead·
ing candidates, the affumative action factor
should tip the balsoce in favor of the minority or woman candidate.

I

t is this aspect of the affirmative action
concept which is most troublesome to
many members of the academy. The
coocept seems to elevate characteristics
which may appear unrelated to merit, e.g ..
race, ethnicity, gender, to the level of criteria by which choices are made or influenced
in the appointment process. In other words,
affrrmative action, unlike equal opportunity, seems to run counter to the
meritocratic values of the academy. If that
be true, then what is.the defense for afftr·

mative action in the academy? There are, I
think, significant benefits that accrue to this
institution as a result of affinnative action.
The first of these beneftts relates to the
fact that. as a public institution we must.

(and the dollars that go along with prestige)

or fa iling to replace them if they left should
be held responsible. At the end of the day.
Institutions of higher learning gain prestige

the reputation of UB.

about the recent call for change in the university in response to vartous mandates for reor ·
ganizaUOn in a time of budgetary crisis.

In my 29th year at UB. I am distressed to
read In Vice Provost Triggle·s report that we
are now an institutton with ·small departments, small programs and small repute·
lions.· I know that some counter-examples
can be offered, but lei me accept the Vice
Provost's analysis. Who. then , is to blame .

and what can be done?
Whoever tried to save money over the
years by letting distinguished faculty leave

1

I

I

I

and gladly do, serve a student body which
is broadly representative of the society, in
tenms of race, etbnicity and gender, among
other characteristics. It is argued, and I believe validly so, that students from
underrepresented groups need and deserve
good role model s from their own groups
among the faculty and staff who serve
them. It is argued, as weU, that the presence of such role models enhances the total intellectual and personal growth of
these students, and thus contributes to the
educational mission of the university. I be·
lieve this argument is valid, but it has been
stated more fully and effectively by others,
so 1 will not pursue it further.
A second reason for affirmative action
is that persons from underrepresented
groups bring a special perspective to
scholarship, teaching and creative activity.
There is a feminisl, an African American.
an Hispanic perspective which informs
scholarship, particularly in the humanities,
social sciences and arts. If we lose these
perspectives, our students will be educated
in ways which do not adequately reflect
the full range of human intellect and vision. I find thi s argument valid and believe
that it is an especially important reason for
affirmative action appointments.
Finally, what is for me the most important argument for affirmative action in the
academy derives from the social, cultural
and historical miUeu of American higher
education. As enlightened and liberated as
we arc in this university, we are ne ve rtheless a product of our society. Less than
thirty years ago, that society countenanced
de jure segregation of the races. and de
facto segregation still persists. Less than
fifty years ago. blacks. jews, asians, other
minorities, and women had limited or no
access to prestigious universities and colleges. and this situation still persists in
many signifi cant institutions outside the
academy. Less than seventy years ago,
women were denied the vote in this coun-

try, and fuU equality for women is yet to
be achieved.
In sum, we arc not very far removed
from a time wbeo our larger society was not
committed even to the cooa:p1 of equal opportunity. ln the academy, we have moved
very close to full adoption of that ideal, but
I believe that we must work assiduously to
overcome any residual , perhaps not conscious, effects our natiooal history may stiU
have on our jodgments regarding appointments. Affirmative action--Uuu is, the
commitment to go an exua step, to·give
special consideration to the factors of race,
etbnicity and gender-helps to assure that
in our appointment actions we wiU work
very hard and consciously to overcome soy
lingering effects our history may stiU impose on our otherwise enlightened and
meritocratic judgments.
The UB community must take these
views to heart and continue our commitment to affirmative action; it has been and
still is a right course of action for our uni versity.

N

otwithstanding federal and state
laws regarding affirmative action
and equal opportunity. there re·
main invidious fonns of discrimination
against members of groups that have not
been traditionally or formally protected
under federallaw-&lt;Uscrimination, for eK. ample, on the basis of seK-ual orientation.
Whatever protected groups may be specifically listed in any given law or policy, this
point must be clear: The fundamental val·
ues of a university require that our judgments about persons be based on their individual merits, accomplishments, aptitudes and behaviors. Categorical discrimination of any sort has no place in such
judgments; we will not countenance il. We
must reject invidious categorieal d iscrimination as wholly inappropriate to

our university missions and values. Thai
is our fundamental policy position, and
that is what we practice in making our
own decisions about admission, appointment and advancement of persons within
the universiry .
We as a university community are commined to the personal. profess ional and intellectual growth of individuals and to encouraging the broader contributions which
such growth makes possible. It is therefore
essential that UB respect every individual;
that we suppon every iudividual on the basis of hi s or her accomplishments. which
collectively make possible our academic
and professional endeavor; and that every
one of us dedicate ourselves to creating a
campus community in which all individuals feel valued. respected and encouraged
to achieve.
Sincerely.
WIWAM R. GREINER

The RepofffJI wetcomes lfHUNS Iran f19adets ~ M Its stones and COr'llent. LenetS srcukJ be bnfJI and may
be edited lor $l)'M' and length. Because ol space llmitatJOnS. the Repon81 C8/YIIOt {JUbltsll allfJnOtS f8CiftNf1C1

by building and ma1ntaining a strong faculty
who, in turn . train (if this is the right word )
students who will. in time. make d istinguished contributions to society in the ans
and sciences (social and human).
At this time. planners should identify
areas of strength and commit themselves to
making them stronger . The appointment of
one world-class historian. say . can change
the intellectual ecology of a whole department. They should as well take a firm stand
that there will be no retrenchment at UB.
Planning should be long-term so that faculty
in weaker areas will know that they can continue their work. Such units should be encouraged, of course. to improve somehow .
within budgetary constraints.
An institution can get smaller and better:
one needn't be a particle physicist to figure
this out: and the hiring of one distinguished
researcher to replace three middle-range
academics could save dollars and improve

DUIIIDITOR:
rm responding to the suggestion of Professor
Claude Welch Jr .. Chair, Faculty Senate, that
members of the faculty express some views

R

President's Statement
on Affirmative
Action and
Fostering Diversity

Letters
Building strong faculty
helps UB gain prestige

E

What's crucial in all of this. from my point

of view, is to insist upon the dignity of the fac-

ulty. Let SUNY Buffalo begin to herald a new
era of self-definition by saying loud and clear :
we will guarantee our faculty all the historical
privileges of the best private institutions.
UB is a vast institution, a c ity of the mind
expressed In physical and disciplinary terms.
The risk of planning is that the possibility fOI'
significant change will get lost in a sea of
WOI'ds whose emphases no one really under-

stands. We will need to cut to the chase and
speak plainly. I, for one. am wging a principled commitment to improving the quality of
the faculty. Let the best decanal minds. in
consultatK&gt;n with all re1evant parties. determine how we can get smaller (all told). but
better. If we say in any way that we are willing

to help the firing squad shoot us , well. "Thars
stupid ,· as my erstwhile cOlleague Uonel Abel
might have said .

Cordially.

---AIID~
Department of English

Memorial statue needed
to honor Millard Fillmore
DEAR EDITOR,
UB celebrating its ses·
quicentennial is exciting ,
but one thing is lacking
The un1versity's night
school and the academic
center on the Amherst
Campus are both named
for Millard Fillmore. However . both b uild1ngs lack
a memonal statue The
onty statue 1n Buffalo IS 1n
front of Cny Hall
FIUMOR£
Shouldn't the celebratton of our 150th anniversary tnclude a VISible memonal lo the man who staned everything?
Sincerely,
t..Au.~Eauaco

Records &amp; Registratl(}f)

�6

Faculb&amp;StifBillboard
Two events sponsored by the UB An
Department are scheduled during
November.
A Multi-Media Student Arts Gala
presented by Mozaik , the Undergraduate Fine Arts Club. will be held
Nov 13- 16 in the atrium of the Center lor the Arts It will feature poetry

readmgs. vtdeo screentngs. sculpture.
pa•nllngs, photography, musiC~n­
semble performances. theatrical read•ngs and dance. all produced by students in the Faculty of Arts and Leners

The gala begins at 4 p .m on
Monday. Nov 13. and concludes on
Thursday. Nov 16, at 2 p m The performance p1eces will be presented
from &amp;. 10 p m on Nov 13 AdmJS·
stan ts lree. the pubhc ts welcome
A shde lecture on St• Lankan culture . free of c harge and open to the
pubhc , tS set lor Nov 29 at 6 p .m . •n
the Sc reen1ng Room (Room 112) of
the Center lor the Arts Oav1d Sch1rm.
associate professor ol an and a
1994-95 Senior Fulbright Scholar to
Srt Lanka . will present the lecture

UB STUDEHTS TEACH
COURBI IN BREAST
SEL.f.IXAMINAnGN
Students from UB's Living Well Center
traveled out to the COfTVTlUmty lor a
teaching pcogrsm a1 Nonh Tonawanda
H1gh School Oct. 31 Nine girts' physical education classes received in·
struchon 1n breasl self-examanation.
These LiVing Well Center students
h ve completed the American Can ·
c Society's Breast Cancer Delee·
110 Awareness Instructor Certilica·
11on' Program offered at the Center
and taught by Mary Jo Berrettlni.
nurse educator and a certified edu·
calor for the program: Kimberly
Canuaun. Jeanne Gooch , Michelle
lgnaszak. Irene McKenna. Shan
Melman. Nicole Sajecki. Melissa
Smith. Ya Hsin Wu. Marcy Zastrow
The programs on breast self-examination are also offered on the US
campus through the Living Well Cen·
ter . Life Workshops and for groups
on request. The Uving Well Center Is
located in 223 Student Union. FOf
more 1nf0fmation. call645-2837.

Hans Brinks is a historian and Dutch
television journalist whose studies of
Germany's right-wing and the politi·
cat doctrine of anti-fascism has

:::c:~mF:~~~:~~~ as an
Hopkins University's American lnsll·
tute fOf Contemporary German Stud·
IBS and the German HistOfk:al insti·
tute in Washington , D .C .
Brinks will speak at US on Friday.
Nov. 17, at 3:15p.m. in the Pratt Con·

Iorence Room, 532 Pllll&lt; HaH on UB's
Nonh Campus. The lecture is lree of
charge and open to the public.
His talk, ·Anti-Fascism as the
Founding Myth ol the German Democratic Republic, 1945-61 ." will be
sponsored by the Graduate Group
fOf Modern German Studies and the
Department of History.
Brinks has worked as an author
and scienlinc journalist for Dutch
journals and teleVision . He has
served as a visiting scholar to
Potsdam's Forschungsschwerpunkt
ZeithistOfische Studlen and in 1994
was a research fellow at the Center
tor German and European Studies at
the University of CalifOfnia , Berkeley.
His latest book. ·Germany's Right
Wing : was published in 1994. He is
working on a book about the political
doctnne of anti·fascism in the Ger·
man Democratic Aepublk: during the
Ulbricht era .

UB LECTURER DISCUHU
CHINA'S

'YUI'I'It: c - .•

Chentl U,

assistant proleSSOf of political science at Hamihon Cotlege, will
present a talk on the rise of technocracy in post-Mao China on Wednesday. Nov. 15. at 3:15p.m. in 470 Park
Hall. oo the UB Nonh Campus.
A former medical doctor in his na·
live Shanghai, Ll received a doctOfate
1n political science from Princeton Un.._
versity. He returned to the U.S. this lall
following two years as a research fellow of the Institute of Current Worid AJIBJrS. where he studied China's coastal
polilical eocn:my. Is widely published in such journals as WOOd Poli-

u

tics, Asian SurYey, China Ouarteny
and Modem China.
His visit to UB will be sponsored
by the Asian Studies Program of the
Department of Political Science .

ENGINUitiN8 NAIIU
NEW ASSOCIATE Dt:AHS
The UB School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences has announced •
the appointment of three new associate deans.
lllc~ E. ~an has been
named associate de~tn lor under·
graduate education . He previously
was director of the Business-Industry
Affiliates Program with the New York
State Center lor Hazardous Waste
Management at US. A faculty member since 1976, he has research in·
terests in polymer processing , rheof·
ogy. fluid mechanics , ceramic
systems and environmental engi·
nearing .
Ryan has been the recipient of
the Dow Outstanding Young Faculty
Award and the Centennial Certificate
of Appreciation for contributtons to
the Amerk:an Sodety IOf Engineering
Education and the engineering profession . He has authored many research papers and book chapters

and made numerous technk:al presentations. He earned hta bachelor's,
master's and doctoral degrees a t
McGill University.
- - has been named
assoclate dean for research and
graduate education. He has served
as chair of the OepanrMnt of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
since 1990. A lacutty membef since
1977. he is alellow of the American
Society ol Mechanical Engineers.
Soom conducts research in vibra·
tiona, acoustics , trib()k)gy and ma·
chine diagnosHcs.
The author or co-author of books.
book chapters and scholarly jour·
nels. he holds two patents with US
colleagues on an apparatus and soft·
ware combination that can detect
signs of trouble in machines, primarily circutt-breaker failure.
He is a founder of UB's University
on Wheels program, through which
engineering faculty deliver courses
on-site at area corporations. Soom
graduated from McGill University and
earned master's and doctoral degrees in mechanical engineeting
from the University of Wisconsin·
Madison.
.._.S. hasbeen
named associate dean for fiscal
management, a new position. He
previously was assistant to the chair
in the UB Department of Musk: ,
where he managed departmental resources, and was laboratory man.
agar In the Oepanment ol Chemistry.
A graduate of the State University
of New York at Binghamton. he
earned an MBA from UB in 1992.

AW-, FACULTY NAIHD

10 IIUIIIIDa ,..,...
•40 UNDIII POliTY"

Several UB alumni, plus two faculty
members, one who is also a UB
graduate, are among the ·40 Under
Forty• Western New Yorkers recog·
nized by Business First for prates·
sional success and community in·
votvement. They will be feted at a
luncheon Nov. 10 in the Hyatt Regency Buffalo. UB alumni and faculty
to be honored are:
• Paul Candino, CEO , Erie County
Medical Center, who received a
bachelor's degree lrom UB In 1984.
• Ross Hewitt. senior research sciOfilist. SUNY Research Foundation
and UB clinical associate professor of
medicine , who received a bachelor's
degree lrom UB in 1979.
• Kenneth Mac~y. president.
Kenneth MacKay Archkectu&lt;e and
pcesident of the UB Alumni College ol
the School of ArcMecture and Planning, who received a master's degree
in architecture from UB in 1985.
• Michael Metzger, vice president
of the Mcintosh Group. who received
a bachelor's degree from UB in 1980.
• Patricia Weeks O'Conner, administratOf', Schoellkopf Health Center, who received a bachelor's degree
from US in 1983 and a master's degree in social wclfk in 1985.
· • Samuel Savarino president . ADF
Construction Corp., who received a
bachelor's degree from US in 1985.
• Ect-Nard Simmons Jr.. US cltntcal
assistant professor ol orthopaedics.

MUSICAL _ . . . U
8IVt: CONCIEJIT NOV. 12

Dean David Triggle l.flllllils plaque Nov. 2 dediclli1g Murray~
morial Garden at raar at Cooke-Hochslell. Pl'88idenl Greiner
and F'rollo8t Headrick llll8ndad ceremony lor lhe ~. which
remembels the School of Pharmacy's lata dean, Daniel Murray.

Eight musk:al prodigies 9-16. who
immigrated to Israel from their homes
in the former USSR. perform Sunday .
Nov. 12 at 8 p .m . in Slee Hall on the
North Campus. The group, known as
VIVACE !, is presented by Buffalo
Hillel Foundation and The American
Friends of Gifted Young Musicians.
The young pianists and violinists
will be accompanied by the UBuffalo
Symphony Orchestra during part of
their performance. Charles Peltz is
UBuffelo Symphony director; Arie
Upsky will be guest conductor .
Proceeds of the concert will ben·
eli! Buffalo Hillel Foundation and underprivileged gifted young musk:ians
in Israel.

....

__ _

...........aciiDI .....
- I a ""-• a graduate stu-

dent in UB's School of Information and
Ubrary Studies. has received one of
I!Yeescholarohipa pr~lhisyeer
by the library and Information Technology Association (LITA), a division of
the American Ubrery Association.
The LITM3eac Scholarship ccnsista of
• $2,500 stipend presen18d by Geec
Corr'4&gt;utero. lnc ..
George Bobinski, dean olthe UB
School of lnlonnation and Ub&lt;ary
Studies, said the schotanlhip, pcestigious in the library lleld. was awarded
based on a national competition.
Uttaro has a bachelor's degree In
cultural studles and children's litera·
ture from Empire State College and
plans to work with automated library
services targeted to children and
young.edults .

-

degree from Erie Community College
and a bllchelor's degree In criminal
justice from Buffalo Stele College,
The pcogram in Albany InclUdes
cou~k in campus taw-enforcement operations, cusis intervention,
fU"St aki, firearms, defensive tactics,
emergency vehicle operatlono and
legal issues. The pcogram is certifoed
by the Bureau for Munk:ipal Police .

·Mass.

UB FACULTY -101' PIIID
INI'UIANCIAL_III_
Innovative research described by a
trio of UB management faculty·captured the prestlglous first-place
award at the recent 25th annual
meeting of the Financial Management Association in New York City.
Their research in an article , "Do
StoCk Returns ReHect Investors'
Trading ThresholdsT garnered a
$2,500 prize for Dnld "-"""'d.
.IOMplo P. Gt~Mft . and ce..Ma

A.Tn:o-..
LeSmond is a visiting assistant
professor of accounting . Ogden is an
associate professor and chair in the
Department of Finance and Managerial Economics. Trzcinka is an associate professor of f"""""' and managerial economics. The paper. a
pcoduct of Lesmoncfs doctoral disser·
lalion, earned an additional $1 ,000
award in the investments category.

STATE I"'O.JCt: ACADEMY
MADS JOIN I'VaLIC SAFETY
Three men who graduated Oct. 27
from a 1S.week program at the State
Police Academy in Albany have
joined UB as Public Safety officers.
according to John Grela. director of
UB's Department of Public Salol)'.

D.--·

They are: - G e t e e and - 1 1 .

Well&amp;. Each earned an associate's

The Ninth Annual Poinsettia Sale of
the UB Women's Club, is now In
pcogress. Plants In red, whlta, pin!&lt;
and red/white cc:mbinationa are
available In pots and hanging bas·
kets in sizes ranging from 3-1/2
inches to 10 inches. Sale proceeds
support Grace Capen Scholar$hips.
Deadline filr orders is Noll. 28.
Pickup will be Dec. 7 at Cent"' lor
Tomorrow. To Of'der or for more information, call Winnie Doran. 839-9710.
These groups plan sessions:
Art History: Noll. 10. 11 am. at
Albright Knox Art Gallery. lunch and
tour of Children's Extravaganza;
Gerry Ryder, arrangem&amp;nts.
Bool&lt;s: NoY. 13, 12:30 p.m.. home of
Nancy Golden; Rita Jenczlca. cxHlosl·
ess; discussion of books 1o&lt; childran &amp;
)Q'lg adllls. led by Erid t.Wgotis.

Velina Ruckanslein, Susan L - .
Dinner Theater: will see Faith
Healer at Irish Classk:al Theater fol·
kJwed by dinner at Mother's Bakery
Noll. 12 at 2 p .m.; Gerry Ryder.
Norma Zimmerman. arrangements.
lnternaUooal : Nov. 21 , 10 a.m ..
Student Unkln , North Campus.
Needleworl&lt;: Nov. 16. 12:30 p .m ..
home of Lois Sindoni; Work on own
projects, share a light lunch; s·pecial
project, Of'igami boxes.
Evening Gourmet: Nov. 16. 7:30
p .m .. Brunch Buffet. Meena Rustgi.
hostess.
French Conversation: Nov. 17.
12:30 p .m .. home ol Judy Pedgug.
lunch and conversation.
Bridge: Nov. 20. Dandelions Res·
taurant, 10 a.m .-2 p .m ., intermediate
&amp; advanced play; Marie Schillo. coOf'dinatOf'.
Bowling : Mondays, 10 a.m .,
Sheridan Lanes.
Tennis: Wednesdays, 1:30-3 p .m ..
at Amherst Hilts Tennis Club; Marie
Schillo. Ann Shub, chairs.

�7

_.,a-.-u.-u

SportsView
YOLUYUU.
The Royals dropped a Mar1breal&lt;ing five-game decision
to Youngstown State 9-16, 13-16, 16-14, 15-11 , 15-111n
the final game of the Mid-Cooli&lt;lent Conference Eastern
Division Cluster matches at Alumni Arena.
With the loss. the Royals were elin*lated from the postseason finishing In third place In the dMsion with a 3-3
mar1t UB's 0110rall reoord is rtON21-l3. Youngstown State
wrapped up hosting honors of the teague tournament on
Nov. 18and 19 on the basis of their 5-1 league reoord.
YSU is rtONro-6 0110ralf . Troy State, a 9-16. 15-1 , 15-2.
15-6 winner 0110r Central Connecticut State earned the
second spot with a 4-21eague masl&lt;.
To make the post-season tournament, in whicllthe top
two teams from each division qualify, UB needed to defeat the Penguins either 3-&lt;l or 3-1 to advance and give
Troy State the hosting duties. After a spectacular comeback in game two, taking a 15-13 win atter trailing 10-4
In the game, the Royals looked assured of claiming a
spot In the tourney. However, service errors began to
take their loll on the Royals as UB committed 20 in the
frve games, including frve in the rally scoring fifth game.
The Royals picked up 31 kills and 21 digs from
Candle Hirst. Laurie Santelli added 15 kills and a teambest 29 digs. Candi Sims led the Royals with 57 assists
and nine blocks. The Penguins collected 15 kills each
from Jill Rasievlch and Amy Hermann while Jamie PirOIIe
tallied 51 assists.
UB split their opening matches of the weekend's clustar on Saturday. The Royals fell to Troy State in four
games 15-5, 15-9, 15-17, 15-9 in the opener but rallied
to defeat Central Connecticut State in the nightcap 15-5,
15-2, 13-15, 17-15.
The Royals put on a pair of tremendous rallies Saturday. In the match against Troy State, UB rebounded
from a 13-&lt;l defiCit in the third game to down the Trojans
17-15. Hirst led the Royals vs. Troy State with nine kills
while Santelli added eight kills and nine digs. Sims led
the team with 24 assists and 13 digs while Kathy
Brinkworth, ranked as the nation's top blocker at 1·9 per

Br

te&lt;m-

Conference Eastern Division squad. Brian Kruikshank. Dan
Ciolek and Joe Merck were named to the first
Mik.a Bongino, SotirTanevski and Antony Wright earned
seconct teM1 honors. Central Connecticut State placed six
player&amp; on the firnl team Including BRINE/Mid-Continent
Conference Pfayef of the Year Steven Jarvis. Western lllino1s mentor John MacKenzie earned Coach of the Yeai
recogrllion.
Earlier in the week, the Bulls downed Colgate 3-2 as
Rich Bactvnan tallied two times Including the game-winner with three minutes to play. Bactvnan finished the season as the Bulls' top scorer with five goals and two assists for 12 points.

t3 wi1ti

Uour lllltiDa ill lfWn public. ill World-Wide Wob lilc JIIO¥Ides
usen wilh a wealtb of informatioa. 'lbe CIA' o web p~&amp;e~ do
1101 by aay mea111 form a lite for
~ offerinpan: llricdy

csu

The Bulls, under head coach Budd Termin, opened their
season Saturday with 13(}-66 victory over Edinboro. Kory
M~ler and Mar1&lt; Horgan were double winners for UB.
Miller took the 200 IM race in 1:57.14 and the 200 butter-

~ iiii'DnallloL

,. ~ - . . . . . 1/wol/RL -~.Mcl.·.w.t • dw
c--. n..- VR£'1111ill,. ,_,, . _ . . . , _ .
tlw'WIIb1otitorraplrlclli,.,_,IJICIJIU N.,.._ FDI'~
Ia Dtlllll«&lt;iit61D llw 'World-W1M Web 11it1 UB Cfft/lfiiR _ . a ,
c..;;.m, CaNr'r H•lp Dat ar 64S.JS42.
-;-a- O..Vlnttey aiUi Don HIU'IIrll11l. Univenily Libi'Drla

·ao

CROSS COUNIRY
Both teams sent runners to the Kent State Open meet

c..-.

weekend. Kim Nielsen finished seventh in the

women's race. The Bulls placed three runners in the top
10 led by Chris Keenan's third place finish . Josh Reissig
Was fOOrth and Sam Burroughs finished ninth.

WIIIES1UNG

SeveraJ Bulls competed at this weekend's Eastern Mich•·
gan Open. Jason Wartinger finished in fourth place with a
5-2 mar1&lt; in the t26 pound cless. Brian Dowdell was 1-1
in his matches at 118. Rob Pavis at 134 compiled a 6-2
mas1&lt; and finished fihh in the weight class. Jolln
Stutzman. 150 pounds, earned three wins against a pa11
of loss while Arturo Mazzeo went 1-2 at 1 pounds. The
Bulls open their dual meet season November t9 at Syracuse .
- Ted Wasko, Sports Information Office

MEN'S SOCCER

last-.

Afterqualifyrog for the Mid-Conti1entConference Toumament
the Buls - • bolnced in the first raroc1
by a s1rong Western Illinois team, 4-1 . The loss concludes
the Buls' ........., finishing with a 9-8-2 mar1&lt;
Charles Kadiri, who had missed the last 13 games
with an arm fracture, returned to the lineup on Saturday
to score the only goal thai the Bulls could muster.
The BuHs placed six players on the All-Mid-Continent

OBIIUARI[S

n

Marjory Dube, 41,
assistant professor
in medical school
A memorial servtce lor Mar,ory Dube
4 1. a former asststant professor of
med1c1ne at the UB School of Med1c1ne
and B•omedical Sc1ences. was held
Nov 6 1n the chapel at Forest Lawn
Dube died Nov 3 •n her home 1n
Amherst alter a long battle with can-

THIS WEEK'S HOME AlHLETIC EVENTS
Frldlof1 Nov. 10

•

s Basketball Exhibition vs. USDBL

7:30p.m. at Alumm Arena

Thw8cllly, Nov. 18

__

s Basketball Exhibition vs. South Africa

\\~]5

To* tlw0l1JO-.t»M....,...III,_.....,....,,.,_

fly In 1:57.60. Horgan took the top spot in the 1,000
freestyle in 9:43.35 and the 500 free in 4:46.76.

Sener and four aces from Lauren Fern.IOkl.

HiGH

fromtbiiiOUJCC,
lbeFactbootDrJlnuUigtnu documentatbebiotoryoftbcCIA;
it lito proYidel daJa OD tbe miuiOD and l1niCIUI'e oftbe apocy. One
C8D lito ablaiD a brief biopapby OD tbe Director, a lilt of CIA
IIIDdala IIICI booon, a well a an aerial pboto&amp;nopb of tbc CIA
Hwdquatai.
'lbe lile'i adler meau optioaJ JII'O'(ide acccu to CIA J1R11
......__.;pta ofopeocbes givea by tbe ~ ud Deputy
~. ~ 011 employmalt opporiiiDilica wi1bla tbe
. , . . ,. 8114 ~ lillb 10 adler Web ,._ . . . . . . ,_

MEN'S SWWUWtG

&lt;Ner the

I I« )N 1&lt;

D
unclaAified---but useful data
be fouDd bere.
'lbe.CIA 'oopeaing Web page
welc:omeo usen to tbe lite, then otren lbem tbe foiJowiD&amp; meou
oplionr. "Wbat's New~ CIAWEB.""About tbe CIA," "PublicatiOOI," "Public Alfain," aad "Other Intelligence &amp; Community
Uoks." 'lbe "Publicalioas" catc&amp;"'Y IICCOUDts for most o f tbe site's
information by 'proviciiD&amp; acceu to two useful CIA publiealioos:
lbe CIA World Factboot aad tbc Foe/book on Inte/Ugence. The
World Faclbook provides a counuy-by-&lt;:o~~~~lly listin&amp; o f basic
ltaliotical aad fKblal information. Click on a country's name aad
Jel information about ita population, economy, natiooaJ holidays,
literacy rates, type of legal system, and lbe llrengtb o f its military.
TheWorldYoclbookiloocontainslppelldiceswhicbgiveinformatioo on eacb couauy'o membe'nbip in selected U.N. and intcmationll orpaizati001. Wodd and regional maps are also available

FOOTBALL

digs.

I I I &lt;

call

Central State converted three fourth-down conversions in
the first haH and took advantage of four interceptions to
defeat the Bulls 33-7.
The Maraude&lt;s (7-1).rarl&lt;ed first In the NAJA poll, turned
two fourt1K11&gt;Nn conwrsions Into first half touchdowns while
Tony c...,. retuned an interception eight yards for another
score as
jo.JT'4)ed to a 26-7 halftine lead.
The Bulls (2-7) got their only score attar Jerry Corallo
blocked a Central State punt and Pete Conley (13 tackles) fell on tt at the Mauraders' six-yard line. Two plays
tater, Mar1&lt; Taylor hH Kafi Watkins from seven yards out to
tie the score at 7-7.
Central State quarterback Antonio Davis completed 16of-28 passes for 154 yards and one touchdown to Jason
Shelley (five catches, 45 yards) in the game. Jermaine
Smhh had eight tackles and two sacks to lead the Marauders defense.
Craig Guest led the UB defense with 19 tackles and
one interception.
.,
The Bulls travel Youngstown State to meet the defending NCAA f-AA~ Penguins on Saturday.

'~~s~t~T:rle~.:ki~c~ ~dded

Central Connecticut State. the Royals trailed .
the fourth g
13-7 before making their frnal run to take '
the game 1 15 end seal the win. Hirst and Santelli tied
for game-hig honors with 14 kills apiece. Santelli also
led the team · 14 digs. Sims totaled 38 assists. 11
digs and four service aces while Aprine SWeeting cdf.
lected six blocks. The Blue Devils got 14 kills from Kim

..... -CIA .., lie ...... for beio&amp; lea dwl fortbri&amp;bt

7:30p.m. at Alumn1 Arena

cer

Obtatmng her undergraduate degree at Wesleyan College. Middletown.
Conn . she graduated from the UB
medtcal school. serving her residency
at the UntverSily of Kansas before returntng to UB on a fellowshtp to study
endocnnology She to•ned the UB lac·
ulty tn 1983 and practtced as an endocnnologtst lor s•x years at the Eoe
County Med•cal Center

She was a member of the Amencan
MedtCBI ASSOCIBIIOO

CALENDAR

......,_.

-

continued from page

8

__

The &amp;..1/Uu nllrtUU lrp RNAbladla&amp; Atttauatloa Protela
(TRAP): Structun:, FuactioD.
and Role it&gt; Rqulollo&amp;Tryplopbao Blosyou..tlc: G...., Dr.
PauJ Gollnick. 1 14 Hochstetter.
North Campus.4 p.m.

........

Multi-nador BkK'tmediat lon
Demoastratioa Proj«t, Dr. A.
SaMt Weber. 122 Clusroom
Bu ildina, Buffalo State College,
1300 Elmwood Ave. 4 p.m.

_,_

Optimal Sampt1o1 Theory u ,
l ncorpon.tlaJ Prior Paramder
Ua eertalaty, Prof. David Z.
D'Argenio, U niv. of Southern
California. 508 Cooke. Nonh
Campus. 4 p .m.

·
-Colloqoolu•
Statiltkal
Method~ Ia Speculative Martds, Prof. Asbim
Mallik. 244 Cary. South CamJ&gt;"-'.
4 p.m.

AltRuoutrucUoa of an Au udd n
T emple: A Parody of Sc.ieoce,
History aDd Art, Beauvais
Lyons. Throu&amp;h Dec. IS. Gallery
boun Tuesday, 10 a.m.-S p .m.;
WedllCiday~Friday , 10 a.m.-8
p.m .; Sacurd.ly, 11 a.m.-8 p .m.
At1 Depanmc:nl Gallery. Cenler

for the Arts. Nonh Campus. 5-7
p.m. Free.

Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. SS . SIO.

Alt ClpHiooC
Lyd ia Dou: 1989-J995,a au.rvty of palat i.Bp. Through Dec.
22. Gallery hours WednesdaySaJurda.y, 10='0 Lm.-8 p .m.; Sunday, 12-S p.m. University Gallery
(firtt noor-), Center for the Arts.
Nonh Campus. S-7 p .m. Frt:e.
Alt~

Tbt GradUitt Sbow. Painlings.
prints, photographs, gr1phic design, computer art. scul pture, illustration, m ixed media. University Gallery (second fl oor),
Center for the Arts. Nonh Campus . S-7 p .m. Free. Through Dec.
13. Gallery boun WednesdaySaturday, 10 :30 a.m.-8 p .m.; Sunday. 12-5 p.m.

-c-

R istoric:al Raou.rus. 223
Lockwood. North Campus. 7
p.m . To register, caii64S-2817 .

-

B ulb n. South Africa Exbibitioa. Alumni Arena.. Nonh
pus. 7 :30p.m.

c.m.

.._..

K rapp's Last T ape, UB Dept. o f
Theatre and Dance. Play by
Samuel Bcc::tett, directed by
Vincent O'Neill. with Jerry
Finnegan. Black Box Theatrt:,

_.,_

- I I I I I EXHIIIITS
Then:; are three art openings Nov.
16 in the Center for the Arts on
the North Campus. Beauvais
Lyons' " Reconstruction of an
Aazudian Temple : A Parody of
Science, H istory and Art," is on
view through Dec. IS in the An
Depattmenl Gallery. Paintings by
Lydia Dona are on view through
Dec. 22 in the University
Gallery ' s fint -noor space . And
the Graduate Show is in the Unt ·
vcnity Gallery' a second-floor
space tbrou&amp;h Dec. 13. A reception for the three openings is
...
Nov_
. 16 from_
S-7 p.m._ k
Moz.aik, the Undergraduate Fine
Arts Club, will present a multimedia student arts gala Nov . 1316 in the atrium of the Center for
the Arts, North Campus. A performance Nov. 13 from 6-10 p.m.
will inc: ludc video. poetry, music.
dnmatic monologues, and dance.

CONTlNUING EXHIBITS

P ..ntlnp of oplrlt
Gary Wolfe's thesis exhibit.
" Painting. of a Spirit." continues
through Nov. 10 in the An Department Gallet)' located in the
Center for the Anson the North
Campus. Gallery hours llR: Tuesday, to a.m.-S p .m.: Wednesday
through Friday. 10 a .m.-8 p .m.:
and Saturday. II a.m .-8 p.m.

The art of wo.en'• heattll
The Women 's Health Initiative
Clinic is presenting the second
annual "Breast &amp; Cervical Heallh
Art Exhibif' through Nov . 30 at
the c linic. 6S Farber Hall , South
Campus.

·-

Ullnry-Archlv. .
"'The Torchbeart:r." an eAhlbit by
University Archives honoring the
75th anniversary of the UB endowment campllgns of the 1920s
led by Walter P. Cooke, is on
view through Nov. 9 o n the main
floor of Lockwood Library.
North Campus.

-too l8te for

·a.-·

The Campus C lub has extended

irs deposit deadline for its Feb. 25

CACUrslon tO Toronto for lht
show "Sunset Boulevard·· The
package is S 110 for members.
Sll9 for non-members. and in·
elude brunch.lhe show, snacks.
and bus tnnsportation (departmg
11 9 a.m. from the Cenler for Tomorrow on the North C.mpus.
rciUming at 7 p.m.). Send S60 deposit by Nov. 14 10 the Campus
Club, c/o Judith Adams,
Lockwood Library. North Campus. The balance is due Jan . 24
For information. call 645-2592.
CAl . 743 .

Welllht-con1n&gt;l for ciii'*UB psychologists are seeking
overweight children between the
ages or 8 and 12 for a frt:e fourmo nth weight-coolrol study, condueled by Prof. leonard Epstein.
The program is the only one in
lhe country to doc:umenl success
in children over a 10-year period.
and is funded by !he Narionallnsritutes or Heallh. For in forma ·
lion, call 645-6316 weekdays between 8:30a.m. and S p .m.

Senior Pr-ogramme-r An. lyst
(SL-4) -Equal Opportunity/Aflirmalive Aclion Office. Posling

IP-S038 l..e•d Prognmmtr
Analyst (SL-3)-Computing and
Informal ion Technology. Posting
IIIP-S046. Senior Prognmmer
Ana lyst (SL-4)-Computing and
Information Technology, Post1ng
IIIP-5048.

FIICUity
CUnic:allnst ructor/Ciinic:al As·
slstan t/CIInic:al A.s5ociate Professor (two poslltons .vailable)Dennatology. Posting MF-5050.
A.uoc:latefFull ProfessorOtolaryngology. Posting IF50S I. M!istant/A.noc:i.ate{FuU
ProfHSOr -Architec:ture. Posung
lfF-SOS2. Auist.ant/A.uodate/
Fu ll Professor-Architec:lure.
Posting IF-S053.

ReProject Sta" Assoc.iat.e-De"el opmcnt. Posting IR -95090. Secretary I ll -Development. Post1ng
IR-9507S . Resean:h Su pport
SpulaUst-Soc:ial &amp; Prevent1ve
Medicine. Posting IR-9S 100.
Clinkal Nune Spulalist-Soc1aJ
&amp;: Pruen1ive Medicine, Posung
IR -95 101 . Cou ORior -C-alleg1ate
Sc1ence &amp;: T«hnology Enlt)' Pro-gram, Pos1mg IR-9SI02. Sr. R~
sean:b Support Speclatist Cbemistry. Posljng •R -95105.
To obtam miJrr mfonnotlOn on
I1Stt'd abtn-e, contact PrrsOTI ·
nt'l Srrwrrs, 104 Crofrs Hall

jobs

�............._
-----..--__ _
---------------

8

_....

t

ft:ftft*'l).

... Nil_ Ia

_/Y_,_
,_

-

--NonhCamJIU'.
6p.m.
~ ·a.-Tapo,UBilept.of

Ray Kane, master of the
slack key guitar, will perform at 8 o'clock tonight in
Slee Concert Hall, with
Keola Beamer and the
Ku'u Lei Aloha Dancers.

Ravitz.. Kirchhofer Conference
Room. Roswell Part Cancer Jnsti ~
lute. 12:30 p.m.

..._"-ttde
Ivan tiM Stupid ud VasUiu the
WiH on tbe Ead of tbe: Second
MWenlum, Dr. Vladimir Ageycv.
114 H_ochstdter. Nonh Campus.

-

\I a.m.

A - - , - Cell aloloCY
A nucluolde' A EDdoc&lt;oow
Lipad for Caaaabaooid bap-

lors, Dr. William Devane, Univ .
of Wisconsin. 306 Farber. South

Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free.
~'..try~. .

The Hkldta Female Sbaawtic
Tradltloo, Bubanl Tedloclt. 438
Clemens. North Campus. 12:30
p.m. Fmc. Part ofWednesdaysat
4 Plus.

--~

Moclunizalioo ol C'"- Hlotorical Thoop~ Prof. Joachim
Minag, Univ. of Bielefeld (Germany). 532 Part.. North Campus.
2p.m.

~'..try.-..

ltol&gt;ertC......,..t K.amllu&gt;

-··-lb.bn. Hallwalls, 2495 Main St.
UO p.m. $4, $S. $6.

A&amp;oba. Aloha and Ku-Uiei Aloha

Dance.n. Slee Concert Hall . Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. $7-$14. Spon-

sorod by WBFO 88.7 FM and

Compass Concens. For ticket information , call 759-9 136.

Jazz

Alumni Arc:na. North Campus.

....,_c:ouo._
2 p.m.

Critical Behavior ol Mop&lt;tk
Fllms' Cluslcaled Qua.otum

=~~~~~nC!!?pus.

-

3:45p.m.

-....-.-

T be RqulaUoa of ReplkaUoo
Oripa Cboke Ia MaauaaJlaa
Celk, Dr. David Gilbert. SUNY
at Syracuse. 114 Hochstc:Uer.

North Campus. 4 p.m.

JrrtmJr'kn w-.....i

After Pnctlcal T ......... 330
Student Union. North Campus. 4
p.m. Sponsored by lhe Office of
International Education.

-c:ouo....

The Lebaque -pooltloa of

a Complete Spreod. Prof.
Jonathon Funk. McGill Univ. 103
Diefendorf. South Campw. 4 p.m.

·-~­

Optlmol Sch&lt;duU..a olEum~
ulioDI: Bow Oftea Sbou.ld You
See Your Doc? Prof. Marvin
Zelen, Harvud Univ. and Dana-

-_. ........

Farber Cancer Institute. 244 Cary.

South Campus. 4 p.m.

Flnt.Sartb A Carl UnCovu on
lbe lntenaet. 223 Lockwood.
North Campus. 7 p.m. To register.
call 645-28 17.

ur.w--.,

Mauaat Therapy ror u~.
Netk ud Sboultlcn., Dawn Jordan. Session 2. 7-9 p.m. For information. c&amp;lllhc: Office of Student
Life at 645-6125.

.....,.

A Sbort Film About KWoa &amp;
Ni&amp;ht Portu't Point or View,

Tower. Soulb CampuJ. I '30-4:30
p.m. For information. call the
Scbool of Nunina:. 829-3209.

c:_...-

~
J.ck Lutz, towa State Univ. 218
Norton. North Campus. 3 p.m.

-~

1'he C•ln' for lDqulry Librarla-Craad. ()pniq,. Paul Kurtz.,

Peter H. Hare, James Alcock.

Cbk.k Corea: Piaao So~ In
ConCU'L Rockwell Hall Audito-

Patrick Dooley, Gordon Stein,

rium, Buffalo State Colleac, 1300

Center for Inquiry, 1310Sweet
Home Rd. 3·5 p.m. Free.

-

Elmwood. 8 p.m. $16, $18. Cosponsored by WBFO 88.7 FM.

K rapp's Lut Tape, UB Dept. of
Theam: and Dance. Play by

Samuel Beckett, cilrected by
Vincent O'Neill, with Jerry

Finnegan. Black BOx lbeatre,
Center for the Arts. North CamJXU. 8 p.m. $5, $10.

BIJT}' KarT, Timothy Madigan.

~-

Tile Abaobl,. BloovollabUltyof
..._,.... Sodlaa Sololioo ed
Supuoloa "lth
Ealeral Feodlop, Kan:a Doak,

..._,....Add

....,......_

Nonh CampuJ. 3:30p.m.

Optkal Doplwloa ollmpurity

{I]

Prof. O.vid Huber, Univ. of Wisconsin. Madison. 454 Froncut.

-

F our Ceat&amp;aria of Bd&amp;f.u Or- .._
- M-, Jean Femrd, OI'Jan.
Slee Coocen Hall. Nonh Campus.
5 p.m. S2. $S, $6, S8.

---y--

....... Folk Da.clac. S111den1
Union. North Campus. 7-8 p.m.

Craolofaclol Updato'

latenllsc~

pUoary Advuc:eL Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 8 Lm.3:30 p.m. $3S. To register, call the
Craniofacial Center of WNY at
Olildren' s Hospital. 878-7149.

N...Bue-Polred Nacleolidesla
--~
RNA Foldloa aAd Catalyala,

Prof. Douglu H. Turner, Univ. of
Roc:bcst.cr. 215 Natural Sciences.
NOI'lh Campus. 4 p.m.

B ulb .._ USDBL EllhlbWoo.

Alumni Arena.. Noeth Campus.

Msa.U. M.D. Kincb Auditorium,

-WOikWorbMp

Jle&lt;Gaolzhla aAd WorkJoa witb
Clleob Affected by F.W Alco-

s,....,_

v.w

bol
&lt;FAS&gt; •
AlcGbol Elfecb (FAE), Robert
CannaiL Sponsored by S«ial
Work Continuing Education.
Daemcn College, 4380 Main St.,
Amherst. 8:45 a.m.-3:30 p.m. $55:
students $30. To register. call
645-6140.

---

lntraa••.W..........,

Solubilballoa aAd

Bloonlloblllt7 ol Hydropbobk
Oraek Coepoaoda
Naaoq- Pbuo Llqalch, Dr.
Richard G. Luthy, Carnegie

rr-

lalenlatloaal Folk Daaclq. All
levels. Partners noc needed. 2
Diefendorf. South Campus. 8-1I

p.m. Free. Sponsored by Graduate
Student Auociation.

----~'..try
David

-

......

w._.. 250 Baird.

North Campus:. 8 p.m. Free. Part
of Wednesdays at4 Plus.

K rapp'• Last Tape, UB Dept. of
Tbcatre and Dance. Play by
Samuel Beckett, directed by
Vincent O 'Neill, with Jerry
Finnegan. Bl.c::k Box 'Theatre.
Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8:30p.m. $5 , $10.

--~

The Sta.. olC'"- Studies Ia

Gft'ID&amp;.by, Prof. Joachim Minas.
Univ. of Bielefeld (Germany). 2SO
Student Union. North Campus.
Noon.

.

~

Trauf'orm.l.aa Growtb FactorBelo Rqulatloa olCydla Do........., ~Durio&amp; Gl
Pbuo Ia C38 JOT 1/l Mou•
Embryoak Flbroblula, Michael

s

7

•

~c.rr---

~~SatpaJS'......

301-. -~

4p.m.

o.o-~~·'

.............. DavidZ.
D'Ar&amp;=io. PbD, Uaiv. ofSoulbem Califomia. 248 Cooe. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

........

~.......,

-~.Saulliaj:

WriDitein. 220 NatunJ Sciences.
Nonh CamJIU'. 3:4S p.m.

Room, Ceatet lor lbe AnL North

ur. ...........

Campus. 4 p.m. Part of
Wednesdays at 4 Plus.

Saooldaa c--. II, Power
Advocucs. 5:30-6:30 p.m. For in-

formation, call tbc Office of Student Life at645-6125.

ur.w--.

ur. ...........

c.-.111, Patrice Marris. 6-8
p.m. Foe wormaboo. ca0 111e orrsoe or Student Ufe .u 645-6125.

ur. ...........

Weipt~taAdNillri­

--.teo..Let-

ur. ...........

c _ _ _ _....

pus. 1 p.m. SIS, S20, $25. Proseated by QRS and Greater Buffalo Open Company.

V IYa«-ProcJJajatr-tbo
(OI'IM'I" Scwkt v.uo. ... liviD.

.......... American Friends or

Gifted Young Musicians iD lsncl.
Wilb UBulfalo Symphony Orchestra. Charles Peltz. director,
Arie Lipsky, pest cooductor. Slee

Coocen Hall. Nonh Campus. 8
p.m. $5. $10, $2.5, $50. For information, call Hillel at 835-3832.

..... Career Planoioa aod Placo-

----u..........---..Baylqa 8--s-Joa n, Peter J. Mlurer .k. 7-10 p.m. For lnforrnatioo. caD the Office of Stu·
deal Life atM.S-612.5.

meot. ~ 7 p.m. For infonDition.

call the Offic:e of Studeot Life at
645-6125.

--=--

l!olemble

Allea JID.

c:ilal Hall. Soutb ~ 1 p.m.
F.... Coocens are !aped for
lxoadcast 011 WBR&gt;88.7 FM the
followina Sunday u4 p.m.

M J ....... F......... Natia
Zman-KDcxaoowkz. ...... dis-

Cunoio.....,

'l'lleAnoJUodorY-Skla,Dr.

-·............

Brid' ..,....py aAd Rdapae Prevaotloa, Dr. Jack Fittpatrick.
Sponsored by lnstitulc for Addictiol'ls SNdies and Trainina. Center
for Tomorrow. North Campus. 9
a.m.-4:30p.m. $60. To register.
call645-6140.

~­

.........,

~I. K - .

224 Bell.
Nonh CamJIU'. 3 p.m.

£ aerattleooltbol'llqol.ambda

Gaotle S"'"' Dr. Gary Ackm,
Wub.inaton Univ. School of

-·--Medicine. Farber 0-26. South
Campus. 4 p.m. .

M ulti-Media Artll Gala, MozaiiL
Perfonnance pieces 6-JO p.m.
Atrium, Center for the Ans. North

Campus. 4 p.m. FmC. Throu&amp;h

_._,........,..
Nov. 16.

lo-'PIIoa ollldaled Evata,
Janis Pumins. Latvian with En-

a:lisb subtitles. Scn::cnins Room.
Center for the Aru. North Cam·
pus. 7:30p.m. Free.

cu.uioa modenled by Tc.y

Roser K.
Emcat
Wilebtlcy Ceftler for lmmiiDOioaY.
Center for Tomorrow. Nortb Campus. Foe infonnation, call 8292608.

Cauod. Saulliaj: Room. Ceoler
lor the Arts. Nonh Campus. 7,30
p.m. Free.

.,.,., 'a Rlat.ffs-te

........
--

Senior Vice President Robc:rt J.
Wapcr. Se.naton' meeting; open
10 aU professional staff.

Pillachio' s. Student Union. North
Campus. 8-10 LDL

ur. ...........

-~Counsel ing

Center. Noon- I p.m. Pot information. call tbD OfTJCC of Student
Ufe at64S-6125.

~­
c-.M1daael ~Temple Univ. 280
Pule. North

c....,... 2 p.m.

--~

CW.'• •y. . . . earp.•: 'I'M
RlaefiiT-aAdEatre.,..._,.,Prof. Olen&amp; Li.
Hamiltoa Colleae. 470 Park.
NonhCamJIU'. 3: 15p.m.

ur. ...........

Tlleloblalemoor.TIIe

Jtecnaltcorsl'enpective, Louis
Ina. 3:.30-5 p.m. For information.
call tbe OfflOC

or Student Ufe
at645-6125.

...._.._.,s.poi1Siaii'C- C-Alla

Enais. Spc&gt;llb&lt;d by

Addictions -

....u- fe&lt;

aed 'I'Diloioa-

Daemeo Colleae. 43ll0 Maio St.
Amhent. 9 Lm.-'4,30 p.m. SilO.
Also Nov. 17. To rqi&amp;ter, call
645-6140.

,..._.._
.,.... ...... ..,

UIIMkro SaJeo c..t.r .t Ual. . . . J i y - Nortb Campus. 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

__

-'IIOIIoleflll'o#pll-

flail- CylleiM , _ ..

...

c_.......,Pror. Ho.....tiC.
Kwomillll. 245 Cary. Scu* Cam·
pus. Nooa.

~,

Sine M&lt;Calfery. 438 Clemeas.
Nortb Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free.
Part of Wednesdays at 4 Plus.
Alt~

'I'M Polidr.s of Parody, Beauvais
Lyons. 5crocaina Room, Ceftler
lor the Arts. Nonh Campus. 2:30
p.m. Prce.

....,._c:-.-

Mellon Univ . 140 Ketter. Nonh

Campus. 11 Lm.

. t - ol

Liqldd

•lllP ..,_,.. Pla'*lot, Profs.

lobo T. Ho aed Bemanl

!""~~;~·:

tloa, Power Advocau:.. Soulh
Campus. 6-7 p.m. Foe illfonnation. calllhe Office of Student
Life at645-6125.

7:30p.m.

Children's Hospital. 8 L m.

....,......_
c.,.....

eocea.Nadll~3 :4$p.11L

..........
....., .,

Jeny Badley, tnor. Maillstage,

A ........ Ia Cerobrol hloy'

OptilobJaa Ou.._ M;c)u&gt;el

c - . aAd . . Ana, Prof.

v~ Dr. David Crown. Uaiv.
otPI-..,_ 2115 Nalunl Sd-

Center for the Arts. North Cam-

-- __
------ --- North Campus. 3:45 p.m.

..._.

W IIJ-IIllllla.._

. . . _ . ... _ T O r. ViclOr J. DeNoble. fDIIIIOIIy ofl'bilip
M«ris Tobacoo Compaoy. RPCJ,
Elm and Car!IOII. 12;30 p.m.
MyiCa Slatia. Boanl -u.a• I
p.m. Soulb ........ Goody&lt;ar.
Soulb Campus. 2 p.m.

Pharm.D. candidate. 248 Cooke.

•... mN...Metallk c-.

Yolle,-J
Soctioll VI Girls VolkybaiL

a..--Scbool ol Nunloc. 825 Kimball

- - aod Daoce. Play by
Samuel Becket!,- by
Vioceol O'Neill, wilb Jerry
F'Wiepo. Blad: Box n..-,
C...er fe&lt; the AnL Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. $5, SIO.

---_._,._- _____
-- --Nonh Campus. NOOft. To ,.ai*r,
caii64S-2817.

_,...

TaWq s....., &amp; Gettiaa Por........, RDbel1 Deeley aed
Kamiko Hahn. Breakfast at 10:30.
HaUwalls, 2495 Main St. I 1 Lm.

Free.

v-,Sedloto VI Girls VolkybaliJi'laak. Alumni Arena. North
Campus. I p.m.

---

- t a A d ' f n l a -loafii!M--f....... Dyad,
Eliubeth Napnwa, CPNP.

· Caf'etoriwn A, Mercy Hospital .

8:30Lm..

Ji"'ntSearddi a Carl U..Cova- oa

. . ......... 223 Lockwood.

TIIeSopfiiJa.le~

Dob~Hkbl, Bjerna aAd Bey...t, Prof. Micbael E. l'isbc%,
Univ. of Maryland. 220 Narutal
Sciences. Nonh c....,... HS

p.m.

Alt..__
Lydla Dou. Sauaint! R.-.
Center for lbe AnL Nonh Campus. 4 p.m. Free.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 7

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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    <fileContainer>
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        <src>https://digital.lib.buffalo.edu/files/original/6574c071a573dfdfb6d4f2b10f7c391f.pdf</src>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFA LO Inside: l'ille Gives Views

on Graduate Education

David J. Triggle, vice
provost for graduate
education and dean
of the graduate
school, presents
views on strengthening graduate education. Pages 4
and 5.

November 2 , 1995 Volume 27. No . 10

I Education Center project
1
to bring Cisneros here
Moore tells UB Council of plans for downtown center
ly CHRtmNE VIDAL
Reponer Editor

H

Birds of Prey on View
Paul Schnell of the Institute for Environmental Learning holds
eagle injured in the wild , during demonstration
"Liberty,
of birds of
30 in 170 Fillmore. Ellicott Complex

OUSJNG and Urban
Development Secretary Hen ry Cisneros
is expected to visit
Buffalo so metime
before Thanksgiving in connection
with the proposed Downtown Educational Center. according to
Muriel Moore. UB vice preside nt
for Public Service and Urban Affairs .
Moore
discu sse d
the
university's plans for the Downtown Education Center at the Oct.

Faculty
hears Headrick
discuss impact of cuts in state aid
lly nEVE

cox

Reporter Staff

P

ROVOST Thoma s
Headrick told faculty
leaders recently to brace
for more cuts in state aid
and higher tuition next year. However, Headrick vowed to minimjze
the damage done by further cuts to
SUNY's budget and said that the
administration would retrench fac ulty only as a last resort .
Speaking at the first meeting of
the Faculty Senate Tuesday, Oct.
24, Headrick told faculty members
that speculation in Albany is that
state tax support of SUNY. which
wascut20percentthis year, witt be
cut by about 20 percent again. That
would bring the state' s contribution to SUNY from $916 mittion
two years ago to about $600 mit lion next year, Headrick. said. At
least a portion of that would almost
certainly be made up by increased
tuition revenues. he added.
A week earlier, in an unprecedented move, the SUNY Board of
Trustees. meeting in Albany , rejected Chancellor Thoma s
Bartlett's proposed budget request.
thus refusing to se nd it on to the
governor. Such budget reque sts
normally meet with routine approval by the trustees, although they
have little impact on the ultimate
state budget. However, led by new
Pataki appointees , the trustees voted
9-6 to block the $1.5 billion proposal, containing an increase ofjust
1.1 percent.
Headrick pointed to the surpri sing vote of Lhe trustees against the
SUNY budget as indicative of
things to come. "However, we are
going to fight this with an the weap-

ons at our command ," Headrick
pledged.
He said the state legislature was
looking for clear direction from
SUNY, but had not yet see n it. "A
clear, Jong-tenn strategy witt gov ern how we make out in the shan
tenn," he explained.
..We are going to have to chan ge
in some measure what we do."
Headrick said, "including changes
in our culture-faculty must be
wilting to make changes. We witt
do all we can to avoid retrenchment~ but it is a two-way street."
Headrick s3id he welcomed input
from the faculty and would work to
maintain regular communications
with the entire university community , beginning with an occasional
column in the Reporter.
Modem Languages Professor
Michael Metzgerpre!sed Headrick
on whether his plans wou ld impact
matters governed by the faculty
union 's collective bargaining
agreement. but Headrick declined
to elaborate.
Geography Professor Charles
Ebert suggested that faculty earning more than $65,000 should accept a four· year salary freeze in
order to stave off excessive tuit ion
increases. However, Headrick responded, tongue in cheek, that
given the current stare of contract
negotiations. ·•a freeze could be a
moot point."
Responding to a further suggestion by Ebert that sav ings cou ld be
realized by "cutting duplication in
admini stration." Headrick pointed
out that UB ranks 28th out of 29
comparable AAU institutions in
administrative cost. "We are already nearly dead last in adminis-

trative expenses no matter how you
cut it," he said, adding that past
cuts have normall y fallen heavily
on the administrative side of the
university " in the interest of prese rving academic programs."
Admissions Director Kevin
Durkin reponed to Senators th at
the overall enrollment at UB thi s
Continued on page 2

26 meeting
of th e UB
Council.
A work -

ing g roup
that includes
the university,the City
of Buffalo.
the Buffalo
Public MOORE
Schools and others th is fall submit ted a proposal for the $32 million
project that would increase US's
presence downtown by combining

service, research and instruction
into an interactive and logistic
model.
The project took root last December during a panel discussion
in Was hington. D.C.. "as a res uh o f
the secretary of HUD looking at
(the nation's) responsibility forpublic hou si ng and sayi ng we need to
do more than look at bricks and
monar." Moore sa id.
"We have rodo more to improve

the community in whi ch we reside,
and Cisneros said we need colleges
to get involved."
Taking up the challenge. um versity officials including Moo re
and UB Pres ident William R
Greiner met with locaJ HUD repre -

$1 million to fund eye study
lly EUEN GOLDBAUM
News Services StaH

M• lcolm M. Slau-"'er, assoc iate professor of biophysical sc 1encc~.
physiology and ophthalmology . has been awarded a $1 million grant by
the National Eye Institute of the National Institutes or Hea lth to conduct
research on how the retina works.
The retina is a light-sensitive tissue in the back. or the eye's inner
surface. Its nerve cell s convert li ght energy into nerve impulses. wh 1c h are
transmitted to the brain.
The purpose of the five-year grant is to develop a more dctuikd
understanding or how this sys tem handles visual infonnatio n.
Funds will suppon intensive studies in which retinal slices from
amphibians. whose retinas are similar to those of humans. are bombarded
with computeri zed images. By recording the electrical ac ti vity in spccifl r
nerve cells when subjec ted to these visual stimuli . the researchers can
begin to detennine the function of each nerve cell and how it contribute!-.
to th'e ability to see.
Slaughter. who also is research director of the interdisciplinary Group
for Advanced Vision Research at UB. is a pion eer in the study of vi s ion.
His findings have been pub lished in the to p sc ientific journals Science and
Nature, as well as in leadi ng journals in the vision field .
Slaughter and his colleag ue s take a un1que approach to vision re ·
search; they explore the function of individual receptors and the chemi cals that activate them and then relate them to the retinal nerve network.
"We try to correlate functions of a single molecule with the function
of the entire retinal system," he said.
His group has discovered the link between recepto rs and retinal
functions. such as perceiving shape, motion in a panicular direction and
the appearance of light.
The research has application to future treatment s for di seases of the
vision sys tem , inc luding g laucoma, macular degent:ration. retinitis
pigmentosa and diabetes retinopath y.

sentatives and puc wgether a working group to look. at what resources
were available and what could be
done locally. Agencies involved in
the Downtown Educational Center
worki ng group include UB. HUD.
the City of Buffalo, Buffalo Mu nicipal Housing Authority. Empire
State Economic Development Cor·
pora ti on, Buffalo Public Schools.
Erie County Industrial Development Agency. Greater Buffalo Partnership. Buffalo Place Inc ..
Stieglitz &amp; Stieglitz Tries P.C. and
Cannon Architecture.
What they came up with, Moore
said. is a proposa l for an interactive
model that would offer instruction
at the pre-k through post-bacca\aureare levels as well as workforce
prepardtion training and corporate
training ; services that include em·
ploymcnt and job placement, counseling and referrals. oral health care
and legal support: and applied re search in areas that include urban
housing and development. transi·
tions from welfare to work. com·
munity needs a nd iss ue s and
mdustrial occupa tional health .
The proposed site for the new
center is the block bordered by
Broadway . Washington. Mohawk
and Ellicott streets. adjacent to
UB' s Educational Oppo rtunit y
Center at 465 Washington. In addition w construction of the new fac ility, the plan would include
extensive renovation o f the EOC
and a walkway connecti ng the new
facility to the Buffalo and Eri e
County Public Library.
The Do wnt o wn Educational
Center has received overw helm ing ly positive suppon at all levels
of governmen t, Moore to ld the
council . She noted that al l of Westem New York's representative s
have written letters or suppon for
the project. and Rep. Jack Quinn is
drafting legislati on to be presented
to Congress seeking $2 million to
$3 million from the federal gov ernment.
''The fact that we go t to see the
(housing ) secretary two week!o. af·
ter submitting this proposa l is amaz.·
ing:· Moore said.
UB Council Chair Philip B.
Wels also had high praise fo r the
project. "This is one or the Vel}
frw projects I' ve ever come across
th at has had wholesale backing.'·
he said.
Greiner added a voice of cau ti on to the discussion. "'There are
many. many steps between con ception and fac1.' ' he said. ''Chances
Cont•nued on page 2

�2

Computer scientists prove conjecture in complexity theory
ar ILLEN IIOI.HAUM

News Services Staff

A

UBCOMPliTERscientist, Jin-

Yi Cai, and a computer science

graduale
sr udent ,
D.
Sivak.umar, have proven one
of the oldest conjectures in the
field of complexity theory.
They did it using a combination of mathematical techniques, including an algebraic
tool called finite field theory. randomization
and parallel computation. The resean:hers
noted that based on the infonnation contained

Cai said. unexpectedly, on finite field theory.
Thattheorywaswrinenin 1832bytheillfa~ French mathematician, Evariste Galois, on the very night he was killed in a duel
over the woman he loved. Discov~ years
later, his theory has turnedoutiO have had an
extremely profound impact on the entire
development of mathematics ever since, most

recently in complexity theory.
"In our proof, we sta11 with randomization but then use finite field theory to create
an illusion of randomization, and yet ultimately it is 001 random." Cai said.
"Without randomization, we probably
wouldn't have obtained the proof. On the
other hand, by the end of the proof, random-

izatioo is supplanted by a deeper understanding of the problem."
·
The proof, which took several months of
intensive research 10 complete, extends the
wort: of Mitsunori Ogihara of the Universi ty of Rochester, who announced important findings on the conjecture earlier this
year.
0

Domestic violence conference: a first for New York
arS'IEYECOX

the complexity theorist's most powerful tools,
can be extremely effective. but is ultimately
supplanted by other mathematical tools.
The research was presented Oct. 24 in
Milwaukee at the Annual Symposium of
Foundations o f Computer Science, one of
the most important computer science conferences, sponsored by the Institute of ElectricaJ and Electronics Engineers.
The conjecture the proof settled was proposed in 1978 by Juris Hartmanis of Cornell
University, who won the Turing Award, the
most prestigious prize in computer science
researclt, forhis own worl&lt; in complexity theory.
The conjecture concerns the relationship
between problems that can be solved in
polynomial time (that is. in a reasonable
amount of time) and lh ose that can be solved
u · g an exceedingly small amount of space
(as 1 di sk space ).
The elUtion to it depends heavily and.

ESTERN NEW YORK law
enforcement and social ser~ice agencies are a m~el of
cooperation when it comes
to dealing with the needs of women and
children who become victims of famil y violence, UB Psychiatry Department Chair Susa n McLeer declared during a recent
conference on domestic violence hosted by
the Law School Alumni Association.
McLeer, a nationally recognized expert in
di sorders of sexually abused children and
bauered women, delivered the keynote address at a conference on domestic violence
sponsored by the UB Law School Alumni
Association Thursday, Oct. 26. More than
100 area social workers, lawyers and law
enforcement officers attended the day-long
conference in 0 ' Brian Hall
McLeer told the crowd that the Western
New York agencies lhey represented were
"unique in lhe country" for the coordinaled,
regional response they have developed and
lhat thi s w as the firsl conference of its sort in

New Yort: State. 'There are places out there
where you can't get domestic violence counselors and child protective workers in the
same room together," dedarcd McLeer.
McLeerdescribed the actual physical hitting of women as "only an oulward, visible
sign of an extremely malignant problem."
Studies reveal that an estima~ 20 percent
of all adult women bave been physically
abused at least once in their lifetime, McLeer
Staled.
One study revealed that, among adults,
8.7 miltion cohabitating coupies, nearly 17
percent of the population, reported they experienced some fonn of family violence.
However, McCieer said, that study actually
understated the full extent of the problem by
ignoring separated and divorced couples.
In most jurisdictions, McLeer said, the
responses of social welfare organizations to
the problems of domestic violence have been
" fragmented and polarized," with social
workers fiequently operating at cross-purposes. McLeerquo~ a 1991 study of child
protective services nationwide adding thai
"if we had intentionally sought to design a

abandon the children wbo use it, we could
not have done a bellt:r job."
Also, studies reveal that, in 1993, there
were more than one miltion substantia~
cases of child abuse, McLeer said. Oilldren
who witness acts of domestic violence also
may suffer traumatic effects from it, atcording to McLeer. Although some experts attribute emotional and behavioru problems
10 such witnessing, there is little reliable data
available, she said.
Experts do clearly agree that "the effects
on children cannot be good." but McLeer
fean that the additional trauma caused by
removing such a child from the custody of
the victim could exacerbate the problem.
"Are the consequences of this so bad that
we should remove the child and place him or
her into the foster care system?'' Mcl«r
asked. "I'm going to see a lot more data
before l throw my hal into that ring." She
called upon social workers involved in such
situations 10 remember the Hippocratic oath,
"Above all else, do no harm."
0

o f thi s coming to fruition are far less than
100 percent. "
He emphasized lhat external funding must
be found for the project to occur. "We won't
expose the assets and income oflhe university
in this venture- it 's too risky," Greiner said.
He added that if the project is successfu l,
it will be a lremendous asset to the area.
''The City of Buffalo and Western New
York. if we can pull it off, will greatly
benefit."
In hi s report to the Council. Greiner
noted thai SUNY is in for some intereiting
- and changing - times. He gave two
exl\mples-the execulive budgel and the
Chancellor's budget.
'1'he governor is doing something quire
innovative and creative. putting together
the executive budget to present iq Decem-

ber," Greiner said. Approval of the SUNY
Chancellor's budget, an ordinarily routine
action, was turned down by the SUNY Board
of Trustees last month.
"In a very short timetable a new , active,
very aggressive group has come in and said
it was their job to tum over every rock, open
every can," in an effort to improve the SUNY
system, Greiner said.
Greiner and Senior Vice Presidenl Roben
J. Wagner "have worked more closely and
with more intensity with the SUNY Board of
Truslees than we ever have in state university history ," Greiner said.
"(Wagner) is in Albany 2-3 days a week
working on committees that arc doing a total
review of the way the university is organized
and struclured. They are turning over every
administrative process.. to see if there are

better ways to run the State Universily system.
"Every aspect of the State University is
under intense scrutiny," he said.
Greiner reiterated the need for tuition
revenue to he made available to the campus
generating it, and "the new trustees are very
i nteres~ in this," he said.
"I do not envy the trustees their job,"
Greiner said, adding that the current trustees
"face problems greater than any trustees
have faced. and they will have to be accountable for them."
These are times "fraught with tension, but
some good things are going to come oul of
it," he said.
Greiner also commented on the Students
for Life exhibir that recently engendered
demonstrations and public debate. He noted

that "it is the kind of demonstration that you
would expect would elicit a response ....That
is what universities are abou~ an open forum
for discussion.••
Greiner added, "We got a lot of coverage
on it but on the whole, the university came
out of it bead held bigh .... This university
will always support First Amendment
rights."
In other business, Student Representative
Michael Pierce posed a list of questions
regarding UB ' s budget and possible depanmental cuts that could result. A tense exchange ensued and Greiner rcques~ that
such questions be submitted 10 him in advance. "I' m not objecting 10 the questions,
I' m objecting 10 the process," Greiner said.
The meeting was ended abruptly because of
a medical emergency. .
0

in the conjecture, the success of this multifac-

Reporter Staff

eted approach was extremely unexpec~ .
Paradoxically, Cai said. the proof is an

example of a case where randomization, one of

W

system 10 frustrate the professionals wbo

staff it, anger the public that finances it and

FACULTY SENATE
Continued fro m page 1

We- WIIIIICtD ea11a1t ,_.
for promotion 10 1he rank ol Distinguished Professot:, Oistingulsl)ed SaM&amp;! Prolesaor Of Distinguished Teachlng Professor. If you know a colleague who should be considered for such a promotion, and
who currently holds 1he rank Of Profes:!!or. we would appreclale your C!llflng his or her name 10 a.r attention. Please write a letter explaiOOg In detail Ykry you 1hr« 1he
candidate merits this extraordinaty honor. We need 10 receille your lel1er by......,,
Nov. 17, so lhal we may SOlicit appropriate dossiers from 1he depar1meniB ollhe
candidates and so lhal a.r mspective cornnitlees wiU have time 10 do their WOtil.
If you are nominating 1he candidate for 1he rank ol Distinguished Prolesaor, your
letter shoUd go 10 Prolas8or Kennelh l.elly, Senior Vrcel'rtMlsl, 562 Capen Hall. If
you are nominating 1he candldale for 1he rank ol Oisllnguiahed Service Profeeaor,
your letter should go to Prolessor David Triggle, Vrcel'rtMlsl for Graduate Education, 409 Capen Hall. If YQU are nominating 1he candidate for 1he rank ol Distinguished Teaching Professor, your letter shOuld go 1D Professor Nicolas Goodman,
Vrce l'rtMlsl for Undergraduate Education, 255 Capen Hall.
Thank you very much for your help in finding colleagues whose contributions
over the years are so significant lhal they should hold 1he highest rank lhal SUNY
recognizes.
KBftneth L.e\ly, David Ti'fgg/e, Nicolas Goodman

year grew s lightly and that women now
comprise the largest portion of that student
body ever.
The admissions office processed 22.254
applications in 1995, up slightly from 1994,
and enrolled 5.126 new students. 578 more
than in 1994. according to Durkin. The increase in the size of the freshman c lass to
meet overall enrollment targets accounted
for most of the increase, he said. However,
it also resulted in a class with slightly lower
mean high school aven~ges, class ranks and
combined SAT scores than the previous
year, Durkin said.
In other action, two resolutions, one revising the charter and by-laws of the Faculty
Senate and another delineating a policy for
faculty participation in student recruitment
efforts, received their first readings. making
them eligible for action at the November
meeting.
Although debate traditionally occurs at

the second reading of resolutions. several
Senators were already lining up in opJXlSition to a proposed by-laws change which
would, for the first time, make the chair of
the Faculty Senate eligible to run for reelection. Currently, the Faculty Senate chair
is elected to a two-year tenn in the spring of
even numbered years by the full voting faculty and may not seek successive terms.
Management Professor John Boot said that,
"Although such a proposal may seem rather
democratic, actually, it is not. l don ' t think it
would serve the university community well."
Boot asked for an infonnal "sense of the
Senate" show of hands on the proposal. but
was ruled out of order by Faculty Senate
Chair Claude Welch. Lockwood Library Director Judith Adams urged her colleagues to
"consider carefully a four-year tenn." Seoators also unanimously approved a resolution
thanking 'Peter Nickerson for his service as
0
Faculty Senate chair from 1993-95.

�3

Genner gift will help support
Mindell Chair in Orthopaedics
As a new twist on the Day of cartng condepl. the lJrWenJily 81 Buffalo has
formed UB Pros. a unique consulting/lien prOIJan thai ellowB UB faculty
and 811111 to Ull81heir talents and expertise to benefit the Western New York

COITVTUlity )'1181'-mund.
·us Pros~ indMduals and companies throughout Western New York 1o
hire a~ from the unillersity COITli'OOility to perform a variety of tasks Bl
market niles. In return for these sarvices, the user wrnes out a check to the

United Wwt.
UB Pros olferu a wide range of sarvices: consuhation on Issues ranging from
the Internal and local area networks to equal opportunity/affirmative actlon isSU88, grant propoea1e to patent Jaws. UB Pros also offers a wide range of workshops and rnolfvatlonal spaakers who can address topics such as tsamwork.
markel strategy and peraonallty In organlzallons. Entertainment Is not neglected
In the
throuQh VB Pros, the Amherst Saxophone Quartet Is available to perform muaic ranging from popular and ragtime to cJasslcal.
Fees 1118 delermlned by the Individual service prOIIiders based oo their normal COI'liUimg or other fee schedules. Fees are determined oo an hourly or per
project basis. and range from $25 per hour to $3,CXXl per evenl Since most service prOIIiders are lull-time employees of UB, arrangements must be made to
accommodate the schedules of both the !J!jrV)ce provider and user.
All UB Pros services can be arranged
calling Louis Schmin at645-3678.

mx:

bY

Dorn receives award
for health study
RST awards aiel projects of new researchers
11J .__ IIAIWI
News Services Staff

J

OAN DORN. re rch instructor of
soc ial and preven ive medi cine at
VB. has received a $350.000 fi veyear First Independent Research Suppan and Transition (ARST) Award
from the National Jnslilutes of Health.
Do m · s award is based on a research proposal to investigate the role of physical acti vity in di sease preve ntion. She will conduct
long~ tenn follow-up and analysis of two
epidemiological studies contai ning data relating. to this issue-a general population
study conducted in Buffalo in the I960s, and
a clinical trial conducted in Western New
York in the late I970s that was pan o f the
National Exercise and Hean Disease Project.
The FIRST award is given to new researchers to support their fi rst independent
research project and help them become competitive for traditional NIH grants.
The '60s study, originally called the Buffalo Blood Pressure Study and now referred
to as the Buffalo Health Study. contains de-

tailed health and lifestyle infonnation collected from black and while male and female
reside nts of the City of Buffalo. The data
include a record of .daily physical activity
both at work and home, during weekdays and
weekends. This information wiJI be used to
compute a physical-activity index. which wi ll
be related to deaths in the group from all
causes and from hean disease. The results
should indicate whether a relationship exists
between physical activity and mortality and if
the rel ationship holds across rnce and gender.
The National Exercise and Hean Disease
Project is a multi-ce nter, randomized clinical trial designed to study the effects of a
regular, medically-prescribed, supervised
exerc ise program on the rehabilitation of
male survivors of a myocardial infarction.
Panicipanls were 30-64 years of age at the
study's inception. Dom will determi ne current status of all original panicipants and the
cause of death of those who have died. and
will analyze various health factors determined at one and three years and their relati bnship to long-term survival.

IIJ.-DIIITDIIICI

accomplished and distinguished alumnus

Reporter Contributor
I 954 GRADUATE ofthe VB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences has made an
$825,000 commitment to the
school through a charitable
remainder trust.
The commitment from Byron A . Genner
Ill. M.D., funded through a gift of real estate,
will be used to stimulate interest among
other medical-school alumni in supporting
the Eugene Mindell Chair in Onhopaedics,
named to honor the renowned bone-tumor
researcher and fonner chair of the VB Department of Orthopaedics. who is now a
professor emeritus.
•This is the kind of generosity and commitment to excellence in medical education
that makes VB medical graduates stand out,"
said John Naughton. vice president for clini cal affai rs and dean of the medical school.
'This gift from Dr. Genner will act as a
cornerstone that others will build upon. one
that will assure continued excellence in
orthopaedics research and education ...
The school needs S I million to S I .5 million to fund the chair endowment. Genner' s
commi tment will become pan of the chair 's
funding in the future when the trust's conditions are fulfill ed.
"UB provided me with an outstanding un dergraduate and medical education," said
Genner. 'This became evident during my internship and orthopaedic-surgery residency. II
was satisfying being as well or better prepared
than my peers in my academic endeavors. I
appreciate what the university did for me."
UB President William R. Greiner said.
"Genner' s magnanimity means a lot not on\y
to the medical school. but al so to the university as a whole. The suppon o f such an

11J PA'IWICIA DONOVAN
News Services Staff

ning has announced a seri es of slide lectures
to take place in Nove mber and December.
The lectures, to be held in 30 I Crosby Hall
on the South Campus, are free of charge and
ope n to the public . They will be followed by
a reception to which the audience is invited.
Wednesday, Nov. 8, 5:30p.m.. 301 Crosby
Hall: "Competition to Completion," Michael
R. Winstanley, AlA , AICP, Cannon Design.
Winstanley, design leader and vice president of Cannon Des ign. chronicles
the progress of a major projectthe Center for Environmental Scie nce and Technology at SUNY
Albany- from design competition
through construction. He illustrates
how architects and des igners deal
with the many hurdles they encounter o n the road from concept tO
completion.
Wednesday, Nov. 29 ,5:30 p.m ..
30 1 Crosby Hall: "Community
Input into Neighborhood Plan-

ning," Jan Peters, executive director. Buffalo Federation of Neighborhood Centers.
Jan Peu:.r.; is a well-known communi ty organizer and admi nistrator under whom the
BFNC has deve loped from a$400,000-a-year.
not-for-profit-organization to one thm annually admini sters $4.5 million in diversi fied
community services for all age groups. She
will discuss how a community can make or
break the best laid plans. and how input from
those 10 be served can be soticited by neighborhood planners and used to best effect.
Wednesday, Dec. 6. 5:30 p.m.,
30 I Crosby Hall: "The An of Design and Delineation: ' 1 Know What
it Looks Like But I Can't Dra w h.''
James Piatt. Piatt Associates.
James Piatt is an innuenti al perspective delineator whose architectural renderings not only illustrate
the work of architects. but actuall y
help to determine the end result. He
will di scuss his way of "seei ng" and
depicting a project still in the conceptual phase and his relati onship to the design process.

among our alumni. proud of the successes he
has achieved, and proud that he has seen fit

to give so generously in order to help us
maintain the excellence in medical education that he valued in VB," Greiner added.
After graduation from med ical school.
Genner spent 15 years on active duty in the
Air Force. retiring as a lieutenant colonel.
He practiced and taught orthopaedics in
Washington, D.C., from 1965-83, holding
appointments as an associate clinical professor at George Washington University and
assi stant clinical professor at Georgetown
University medical schools. He continues a
pan-time orthopaedics practice. along with a
medical -legal consulting service .

lcket IIICill oll8red
-for MOZI'IBUIIDIC8rt
The Center for the Arts is offering lo
US faculty and staff a two-for-&lt;&gt;ne special oo tickets to the Mozarteum Orcheslra of Salzburg, which will pertonn
at Jhe Center at B p.m. Friday, Nov. 3.
The offer is valid ooly at the Center for
the Arts box office, and faculty and
staff must show their SUNYCard to receive lhe special ticker price. Prior
sales are excluded, and the discount
applies to Sectioo 2 and 3 seats only.
Box Office hours are nooo-6 p.m.
Tuesday-Friday. For more \nf011l\8tloo,
call 645-ARTS.

University at Buffalo
18-Month Sesquicentennial
Desk Calendar
eleb ra rr 150 yrnrs c•(
tradition !Pith th f
Unil'('rsity at B1~JTt1 lo
18-Nftmtl! rsquin•u.
tt'lluial D rsk Calmdar,
an rh·gmuly des(l!m.&gt;d.
limited rdititln dl·sk
ca/eudar {l·mun·u'! illusrratimu aud

C

phmogn;plu cull;d JrCi m l~ffici,,J

Architecture sets slide lectures
1'1111 UB School of Architecture and Plan-

speaks volumes about the quality of the
medical training that UB provides.
"We are very proud to count Dr. Genner

U n illt' rSit )1

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�4

The Status and Future of
Graduate Education and Training at
the University at Buffalo
A Wortd"' Peper by David J. TriUie
PART 1

uons of employmem vary gre:nly It 15, perhaps, notewonhy that a
recently published rtpon (ThomasJ Kennedy) on physictan traintog also described similar defic1e.nctes m communicauon. maruge.ment and ~lated sk1lls.
Other reports have advocated both qualuauve and quantitative
chang6in graduate educauon. It is argued that current and future
Nauonw1dr. thr:rr arr sharply dt\'ldt:d and contrastang views o n
employment patterns for Ph.D. recipients do not justify the p resent
graduate cducauon Th~ dtVISions and contraslS are summanzcd
m threr recent repons
, size and numbers of graduate programs and that reductions in both
e.nrollment and the numbe.rs o f graduate programs must occur (se.c
Nationa l Acadr:my or Scit: ncr:, Enginee ring and Medicine,
list of articles above) . Th1s same lSSUC has been nised in the Rand·
Rrshap•ng thr Gradu:ur Educauon of Scu~:nllsts and EngiStanford n:port by William F. Massy and CharltS A. Goldman and
Ot'rrs Tht Commuter on Sctt:ncc, Engint:t:nng and Pubhc
15 a dominant theme. of the. book, -Prometheus Bound; by John
Polley Nauonal Acadrmy Press. Washmgton, DC. 1995
Zlman and of a rece.nt eduortal by Davtd Goodstein. Vice Provost at
W F Massy and C. A. Goldman. The Production and Uuhz.auon
the California lnstttute of Technology. both of wh1ch focus on the
o f Sc•rnct: and Engmet:nng Doctorates in Tht: Unilt:d States
impact of the end to the growth m fund ing for sctentiAc re.sea rch.
~ tan ford lnstHUtt' for H1ghcr Ed ucauon Research Stanford , CA.
David Goodstein wntes·
1995
"I be.lteve that in Amencan SCience , the Btg Crunch took place about
0 . S. North, Soothmg The Estabhshmt:m Tht: Impact of For25 years ago-after two decades that saw the enormous postwar
t'lgn -Bom SciC'nltsts and Engmerrs on Amcnca Umversny
expans1on of academia and the creauon of corporate and govern Press o f Amrnca , Lanham. MD 1995
ment research laboratones all around the U.S. in response. to
a standard volumt on tht: anai)'SIS of doctoral educauon
e.conom1c growth and the Cold War. The. good times ended forever
W. G. Bowen a nd N. L Rudenstinf:, In Pursun of The PhD
around 1970, as one can see fro m the graph . By 1m porting studenlS
Prmceton Um\·ersny Press , Pnnceton . NJ 1992
and e.mploymg Ph .D.s as temporary postdocs, we have stretched
t1me out, pn:tending that not hmghaschanged , wa•tmg for the good
and eduonals and amcles mcludmg among others
umes to return . For a quarter century we have bet.n trying to tgnon:
T. J . Kennf: d y, Graduate Educmon In The Btomedtcal Sc1ences
the end of the great expansion of American science . What we havt
Academic Medtcme. 69 779· 799 . 1994
to
do now is to solve a problem that has never even occurred to
Nf:wswf:ek, No Ph 0 s Need Apply . Newsweek , Dec 5. 1994
cosmologists What do you do after the Big Crunchr
New York Ti mes, Supply Exceeds Demand for Ph D s tn Many
These arc not optimistic words. but it ls d1fncult to doubt the1r
Sctence F1eld.s 7/4195
convtction The same theme has . m fact, been sounded previously
R. Fin n , DISCouraged Job-St:ekers Cue Cnsa5 m Sc1ence Career
by John Zmlan m ~ Promethe.us Bound: Elsewhere, Goodstem
Adv1ce The Sc1ent1St , 9 I , 1995
J. C. Fleet . Young R~archers · DtStllus1onment Bodes Ill fo r notes, ·Education and scientific research are mtrinsically good
ahmg.s. Nevenheless, u seems to me that we have a real moral
Future of Sc1c-nce The Sctennst. 9 II , 1995
dilemma " ·--tt's dangerous to do nothmg The market place w111
L R. RaMr . Chem tsts Gtve Mtxed ~vtew of NRC Repon on
event ually work th~ problems out 1f we let h But in the course of
Doctor:al Education C 6l EN News . 44, May 29 , 1995
domg that 11 may hun a lot of people, and il may even destroy sc.umce
L. R. Raber , New Ph 0 s Sui\ Face Very Ttght job Market C &amp;
completely .·
EN News. 9,june 26, 1995
That quan11tat1ve changes are needed 1n the numbc=rsof gradu:ue
Na tiona l Rr.starch Cou neil,/ssucs Bnd, Ph D sand Postdoc10ral
students
and programs Is also vtgorously advanced by OaVld North
Appomtmems , June 1995
m •Soothmg the Establishment.· North argues that the mcreasmg
J. A. Annst ro ng, Rtthmkmg The Ph D . Issues In Sc1e nce and
number
of non-U .S. studenlS m American graduate programs .
Technology , 19, 1994
cu r~ntly approximately 50 percent and largely ce.ntered m the
M. Heylin, Chem15fsjob Market Sull Weak C &amp; EN News 10
and
engmcenng, does not serve well the long·te.rm nauonal
sctences
August 7, 1995
'
'
mterest. although 11 may serve the 1mmedtate interests of the
C. E. Mannix and K.. A. Ross, Pomt ofVtew, Chrontde o fHtgh er
un1vers1ty and the. faculty He suggeslS that non -U .S. students serve:
Educauon. A40, August II , 1995
to depress SCience and engmeering opportunities and salanes for
P. A. G riffit hs, Res hapmg Graduate Educauon . Issues In Sc tU S stude nts and graduates with a particular impact on mmomy
ence and Technology, 75-79. Summer, 1995
groups . Such comme.nts are oftt=n d1smissed as xenophobtc: that ts
D. Goods tr:i n , Peer Rtv1ew After The Btg Crunch. The Amencan
an
overs1mphhcauon Th15 number of non-U .S. students m graduSctemist, 83 401 -402 , 1995
ate school rai.SCSSCveraltmportant issues. On the one h.a.nd. it argues
D.J . T riggle, The Road Ahead For Graduate Educauon . Pharma the qualuy of graduate educauon tn the. United States and the
for
ceut ical News, 2 Sept/Oct , 1995
abtlny of the system to accommodate such a large number of
R. Byerly and R. A. Pie lke, Tlie Changmg Ecology of Unued
Students
It tsalsoundentable that manyextremelytalented Students
States Scu::nce . Sc1ence 269 1531 , 1995
amve m the U S b)' th15 route and that some. 50 percent of theSt:
The report from the Nauonal Academy of Sctences . m parucular .
same studenlS eventually reside here pennanently. However. th61!
has recetved maJor attentton 11 focuses on an 1ncreasmgly reiterated
same n umbers nise tssues of the cost of graduate education. tts
theme of a miSmatch between graduate educauon and the world
tmpact on undergraduate education, resource use. the employment
outstde the Umversit)' Although this report dtscusses only the
market , and assummg that these numbers of graduates are rrquired ,
sctencC(&gt; and engmeenng, u tS hkcly that m b road outline us general
of a fatlure. to attf'3ct a surfletem number of domestic students Into
conclustons may be applicable to other d1scaplmes. mcludmg those
these same areas.
m the humamues. ThLS ~port does not o rfer any spectfk recommenSamilarly, it has been assr:ne.d that the role of graduate education
dations reg~~rdmg numbers of graduatt students, but it d~ note
m th~::: University has hule to do -w&amp;th external demands. Graduate
that changes m research support are occurnngand that a contmumg
studenlS serve as inexpensiVe te.ach ing asststanlS. rese.arch assistanlS
downward movemem tS to be expectt=d over the nut seVt=ral yurs.
and clerical asstStants: these roles may be separate from or evtn
Nor ts thts decrt=asr: expected to be hmtted to the sciences and
compromise the functions of graduate education . It is argued that ,
engmeermg s upport for the arts and humamties ts decrtasmg at
dtvorced from the impact of the market, the Umversity and llS
least as raptdly . The maJor thrust of the NAS report centers on the
faculty have little lncenuve to redefine or reform the process of
growmg reahzaull-n that a faculty posttton can no longer be the
.~raduate education. The humorist Daedulus , wnung in the sctenpnndpal reahzed outcome of graduate educauon and that knowluftc weekly Natu~ . argued that each prospective graduate student
edge and skills add111onal to those conventionally ddmed by the
should constitute a company and tssue stock bastd upon the ideas
Ph D degree art mcreasmgly needed
that they mtend to research . It ~'aS cbtmed that exposed to the
The NAS report suggestS that graduate educauon m engmeenng
tnOuence of the market , the value and o ngtnaltt)' of the.' tdeas might
and SCiences, tn addn1on to prov1dmgthe base for ourengmec:nngand
be more appropnately assessed'
sctenttfic strength for the future. must also achtevt the followmg
Due skepucasm as, however. needed tn the mterpretation of the
+ serve the needs of thoR whose cart=ers w11l not cemrr on several sets of opmtons and numbers descnptive of American
research or academtc positions.
gruduate educauon The qualuy of ava1lable data on graduate
• provide a broader runge of academic options mcludmg mul enrollment, graduation . employment, etc .. 15 not always conslSient .
uple subfields to prevent O\•erspcctalization ;
Man)' insl!lutions. tncludmg our own. ha\'t both mcomplete and
• provtde mternshtps m govern ment. academr and the work·
poor qualuy data Additionally. quoted data concernmg placemem
place to fac1htate the development of commumcauon. tnlerperrates often d1ffrr Wldely between reponmg agenctes In large pan
sonal and group sktlls
th15 ts due not to mcomct data , but rather 10 methodologu:al
Clearly, stmtlar arguments are able to be made for d1sctphnes other
d1fferences tncludmg the use of d1rrerentelapsed ttme. poinlS follow·
than SCience and engmeenng
mg deg~e. comple uon to assess employment status IP. D. Syver.son ,
U changes m graduate educauon are to occu r, however, the
Coping Wuh ConOtcttng Data The Employment Status .or ~cent
Sctence.
ond Engmeering Ph O.s Commumcator, p.8,June 19951 .
report notes a maJor dtfficulty-fundmg Fundmg m the sc1ences
and engmewng ts frequent ly provtded by granlS for ~ research
Addnionally , the wtddy quoted Massy-Goldman report is not a
survey but a simulauon. albeit a sophtstlcated one Some of the.tr
ass ts tantShips~ m fa culty· run laboratones when~: thr emphas1s tS
mput data are stmply mcorrect , notably that for Ph.D. production 10
predommantly on proJeclS tnd thr sattsfacuon of granttng agency
computer SCience where corrected figures s how an emplo)'Olent
requ1rements (or even the career of the faculty member) rather than
longer·term educauonal objectives An mcreasr: m trammg grants
excess of only 3 6 percent rather than the previously projected 50.3
for the sc1ences and engmeenng as advocated . .but.thts wtll cenamly
percent.
come at the expense of md1v1dual tn\'C.Sttgator awards that wtll not
These gencr:al observations o n graduate education may well be.
meet with popular approval. Addmonally. the repon notes the
extended to postdoctoral educauon There an: few,t£ any, structural
models for postdoctoral education m the sciences and engineering.
dtfficulty m drawmg broad conclustons from the very dtverst areas
of graduate education, commentmg that condtt1ons and e.xpecta·
Postdoctoral educauon IS characteristically a highly project-ori -

Graduate EducationA National Crisis?

e.nted and IOdlvidual re.Lauonship wtth a faculty member, roeus~ng
inte.nscly on a discrete problem or technique. In Larger laboratories
there is fre.quently a sign!Acant SUpei'VlSOI')' n:lationship wtlh less
experien~ membe.rs or the laboratory. ln principle, postdoctoral
education is a funher period or sdentific education and training. but
there are tn:nd.s to suggest that this p rocess is increasingly corrupted
with fellows being hired because of their spe.dfic txpertl.se and/or or
being parkrd "se.ml·pe.rmanentJy• in postdoctonl orbit In lku of or
pendmg regular employment .

PARTl

The Graduate
School at the
University at
Buffalo
The Graduate Sc hool at UB tS m
trouble Downsized , devolved and
devalued . u is at the potnt where
critical de.cmons have to be made as
to whrther 11 should be re.duced fur·
ther to a minor paper-processing operation or ~cast and strengthened to
play ll larger and more critical role.
Over the years the Graduate School at
Buffalo has been reduced in influence
pnmarily by two proce.sse.s: an appar·
ently Willing dect.ntralization to the
schools, depanmenlS and other ad·
ministrative areas. and the absc.nce of
any coherent and mutually agreed·
upon VlSton, developed by the faculty
and the. Dc:an of the Graduate School.
of the. nature and scope of graduate
education . As a direct consequence of
these: dehber:ate actions, the Gndwue
School now bcks both the physical
and mtdlectual resources with which
to am pact and dire.a graduate cduauon at Buffalo. These: resourres are
now criucally needed giVen the triple
Wltching hour of dunge-declining
resources from state, federal and private sources--that has sounded anauonwide signal for graduate
educauon.
The Nattonal ~rch Council n:pon on resurch doctonte programs
IResearch·Doctonte Programs In the
Unued States· Conunuityand Change)
was recently released to the public . It
Will serve as a national index or qualtty, resource aiiOC2tion and priorities
for a decade. If we have not developed. with few notable exCeptions,
strong and nationally re.cognized
graduate depanments and programs
at UB, we. need look only to ourselves
for answers 10 the que.suon-"Why
notr In significant measure 1 beliew
that our ranu~ lie in our inability [0
have made critical choices and to ad· .
equately monitor academic quality.
When we. we.re building we built
broad ly, when we were forttd 10 cut
we cut largely across the board, and
when we had opponunity to change
we ducked . All of these: decisions are
those or least resistance and have rt·
suhed in small depanments. small
programs and small reputations.
The critical choice facing UB and
our Graduate School was outlined m
the 1994 upon ~Ex.te.mal Rt:vlew or
The Gnduate School; UniVt=rsny at
Buffalo~ Uune 14-15. 1994) . That
choice has now been made-the
Grnduate School is to again btcome a
major player and mfluenct in graduate. education at Buffalo. Th1s will not
be: easy. The solution tS not to recast m
the old mold , but rather to create a
new Graduate School with sufficient
credibility, creativity and rtiaurces to
become a primary positive influence
on the quality, quantity and organizatiOn of graduate education at Surfalo
The: defining mechanism is that or a
catalyst for change. ; and the challenge
is to avoid being consumed by the
very process of this change..

The problems faclnggr&gt;dU&gt;Ie edu-

�5
anon at Buffalo art many They can, how~r. bt class.ifaed under a
number O[ broad general headings each of which will define COrTe·
spond.ingly broad issues that must be addresstd .

A. Organization and
Priorities:

1a

faculty member, rocusmg
tnique In larger l2boratones
visory re.lationship with less
y. In princ1ple , postdoctoral
ccducatlon and training, bu1
:es.s is increasingly corrupted
lr specific expe n ise and/or of
&gt;Stdoctora l orbit in lieu of or

1. What is tht proponion or post·baccalaureate education relativt: to other [unctions or the University including undergraduate,
professional and service roles? What are the priorities within and
across graduate programs?
.... 2. How do we: know what we do have-&lt;ollecting comprthtn·
sive, consistent , accurate and userul informauon about our graduate
programs?
3. How should graduate education outside or the professional
p rograms bt o rganiz.cd-by school and deparunent, by discipline
across school! and depanmcnts or by interdisciplinary programs?
4 How do we: gencntc new and dynamic models of graduate
education that renea and respond to newly emerging and changing
nerds over time?
5. How do we recogmz.c the need for and create new proglllmS?
6 . Relationship between the Graduate School and Research/
Sponsored Programs--who does what and why?
7 Re lationshtp of graduate to postdoctoral education-Is there
one and should there be one1

B. Program Quality:
What cntena should be esLablishcd to detenmne program quality
and nced-prescnbed minimum
numbers of studemstracuhy/graduates. resources commmed, soctetal
need or other?
9 . Quality control-roles of the Aca·
dem~e Deans and the Graduate
School?
10. What prict for fa1lure of a program-real consequencts: assoctated
wuh real evaluauon?
11. What are the cntena for btmg a
member of the Graduate Faculty and
for re.mammg a member of thls faculty?
12 The roleoftheDeanoftheGradu·
ate School m tenure/promouon deciSIOns?

C. Resources of the Graduate School:
13 What resources are eSS(.nllalto
suppon the miSSIOn of tht: Graduate
School and whrrr w1ll 1hey come
from?
14 How do we calculatt: the rral
costs of our gradua1e programs and
how should 1h1s knowledge Impact
o ur pnonues?
15 Rrwardmg the best programs-what cntena and what rewnrds1

D. Graduate Students:
16 Recruiting the students we want
and need--depanmemal . school and
Graduate School rolcs?Tra1ninggram
progrnms?
17 Graduat-=: educat ton and re st:arch-roles, funcuons and rvaluauon of·graduate studt:nts· as students.
teachmg assistants, research asststants, tt:chniCJans--what relat•onsh•ps?
18 What orgamzauonal framework
and suppon systems for graduate students? Housmg, caretr 1nformauon
resou rces, interacuons wnh outstde
world through 1ntemsh•ps . cooperative programs, etc

Preparing for
Change at Buffalo
If we are to T(ahze our objet:Uve that
the Graduate School at the Umversuy
at Buffa lo be a Significant and erfec·
uve player In graduate educauon. a
n umber o f changes nre necessar)'
Somt: must occu r rapidly and some
will reqUire Significant faculty consultation to define appropriate pannershlp roles.

Role of the Vice Provost for
Graduate Education and
Dean of the Graduate
School
The V1cc Provost for Graduate Education and Dean of the Graduate
School must be seen as an academ1c
leader with substantial mtelltttual and
academ •c credenuals and wuh recogmttd scholarship and commumcation sk•lls This md1V1dual must be
trusted and have the rt:s~ct of fa culty . starT. admm•strators and st udents Addu10na ll y.t he V1ce PrO\'Ost
and ~an should be an md1v1dual
who conunues to pracu ct: scholarship, research and tcachmg and 1..5
percewed to be an eHecuvc leader
more broadly wuhm the academy
The role or the Dean of the Graduate
School1s Similar to that of the other
academic deans-name ly to ensure
the t rfectlve operauon and allocation

of resources withm the school and tO ensu re that thr appropnate
academic standards for graduate educat•on are mamtamed As V1ct:
Provost ror Graduate Education the role 1s s•gnificanliy larger and
will embrace both lmra-campus and Inter-campus responsibihues
The Vice Provost w1ll be the pnnc1p31 academtc vo1ct for all post ·
baccalaureate education and traming b&lt;Mh withtn and wnhou1 the
campus , will serve as tM principal advLSOr to the Provost on all
mauers of post-baccalaurea1e eduauon, and wdl sr.rve as the
pnnc1pal racllitator and orgamu: r of graduate educauon mcludmg
evaluation and change The Vice Provost for Graduate Educauon
will be: a pnnCipal player m the necessary SUNY·wtdt cxammauon
and reorganization of graduate education and programs Addt~ 1 on ·
ally.the Vice Provost will be a princtpal player. along wilh the V1ce
Provost lorUndergraduatt Education, m deflmngthat mttrface. and
with the Vice Presidtm for Research m redt:fming the roles of and
Interrelationships between research and graduate educauon
The Vice Provost [or Graduate Educauon wnt t:nsurt: that the
appropriate que.suons are :tSked, answered and that solut1ons are
implemented.. Smce changes w1ll clearly be needed, u 1s tmponam
that thc:sc quest1ons be as~d and answered m the public domam
lnevil&lt;lbly, m a pcnod of declining rtal resources tht soluuons w1ll
not be unirormly pleasmg-this will s1mply ha,·e to be accepted as
the necessary price of doing what 1s best for the mswuuon rather
than simply ror the ind•vtdual Fmally. we must movt Irrevocably
rrom the ~across-the-board1sm· that has been our norm to focused
change . The role of the Vice Provost for Graduate Educauon •s to
ensure that the focus IS appropnate and accurate- and that dfttt1vr
leadership Is provided to •mpltment tht: changes that w11l be
nttessary.

The Consultation Process
The resources and the academic rcspons•bllttlesof the tnstttutlon
res1de sigmflcantly wuh the Academ•c Deans and 1he1r faculues
Both groups will have to be acuvr: ly panic1paung players as we move
toward a redefinmon of the rolt: and funct1ons of the Graduatt
School. Th~ pames. together wuh the Faculty Senate. w1ll nccessanly h.3ve to subscnbe to changmg arrangements of graduau·
educauon Addu•onally, tht: Graduate School needs a refocused
Execuuve Committee cons1st1ng oflead1 ng practitioners •n graduatr
education at Buffalo F1nall y.the Graduate Student Association mus1
become an efrecuve pamc1pant m the consultative process Tht::.
mulupanuc process of consuhanon will be :1 criucal fae~or 10 an}'
changes m the Graduatt School

Changes in Graduate Education
at Buffalo
Although consuhauon Wlll be a cnucal step pnor to tmplemcmauon
of changes, 1t1s clear that change must occur Resource hmnauons.
changmg employment opponunmes :md markets . he1ghtencd SOCIetal expectauons. growmg pohucal pressurt: and our O"-"Tl re.spons•bthues Will all demand change The~ changes wtll fa\ltnto sever.1.l
general areas

A. Graduat e Program Priorities and Organization
Priorities. Although we often speak of our Umvcrsny mtSSion
With promme.m refe~nce to graduatt work. we should not speak of 11
m isolation , nor should we speak of 11m terms of campus umqueness
If SUNY does not first ensurt thatn dehvers h1gh qual It)' undergradu ate t:ducauon,then gnaduatt: educanon Will be seen mcreas10gly as 1hr
luxury we should not have Slmtlarly, 1f we conunue to st:e the
graduate orfenngs of each campus as sr:para1e and mv1olate terruones ,
we will be subject to JUSttfiable cnUclsm conccm mg resource alloca uon The SUNY S)'Stem may wt:\1 undergo some s1gmf1cant struc1ural
and fun ctional rtorgamzauon 0\'cr the next decade Regardless of the
spec1fic form of thiS change 11 Will hkcly mvolve both ca mpus
differences and program cooperauon mcludmg dlStance leammg
Graduate programs w1ll be afieoed b)· these changes and u ts both
plausible and des1rable that we WillS« greater1nstnut1onal spec1ahza·
non and ~g•on.al concentrations of graduate programs Such concentrauons of programs and assoc1ated concemrnuons of resources w11l
be necessary to permuthe •ncreased qualn y and cost -e ffe ct t\·encss that
art nt:eded and bemg demanded of us
Organ ization and New Models. Qunc gencr:tll)' . 1 believe that
II will be necessary for Ph. D graduate programs to become largn
and more nextble •n the1rorgan•zat1on and to bt:comc mort mtcrd 1sClplinary Some programs Wltl do both , some w11\ do neuher and
some w1ll disappear I look fo r graduate programs to become larger
by e.xpandmg beyond depanmental boundanes-for example, a
graduate program m Chemical Sc•cnces that would mclude facult)'
rrom Chemistry. Medlctnal Chemistry . ChemiC! I Engmeenng . BIO·
chemistry, etc Another area m1gh1 well bt: Struclural B1ology where
we have rt:cently made a s1gmf1Cant tnsmuuonal mvestment Man )·
otherex.amplescould be g1ven fo r both thr sc1enctsand humann•ts
Such programs. hmur:d onl)' to act1w graduate fa cult y, should be
more dft:cuve competitors for students as well as for nauonal
mdiVtdual and program fundmg . should faclinate new lacuh)• re .
crunmem. and should rentct the broader modtls of graduate tdu .
cauon recom mended m recen1 reports These o rgamzauonal
constderauons should also apply to Roswell Park Cancer lnsututl'
Such orgamzauon.al changes automatlcttll)· ra1sc the ISSUe of where
the respons•biluu:s he for the degrct' progmm--depanment or
program?
We need 1o look close!)' at tht:" ml:&lt;ture or PhD and profess 10nal
doctoral programs we offrr It IS not hkely that surflclent freedom
w1ll be g•ven to campUS(::s m the ncar term that we w1ll be free from
1hc tyranny of numbc~ Accordmgly. we Will need to usc our
cxtslmg resources 10 ren«"t both demand and •nstiiUtlonal pnon11es
mcludmg budget More . ra1hcr than less. nex1bilu y or resource
allocat1on w1ll be necessary
AI the non-doctoral level we need a comprehcnswc and v1gorous
dtscuss•on on the future of1he master's degree Although a largely
devalued currency , this degree could bc rcvnahzrd to sausf)' a hkti)•
mcreasmg need for post-baccalaurentt educauon at the non-doctoral and contmumg cducauon IL"vds. as well as 10 st:rve as a key
element m poss1blc JOint or accelerated bachelor/master degree
programs ThiS diSCUSSion should bc broad m nature and mcludt
Roswell Park , Mtllard F1llmore College and local busmcs.s and
mdustry
New models of graduatt educauon should be explored tn coop·

erat1on wuh mdustry to gc.nerate exchange and cooperauve prognms and to fat:llnatt: and encourage gradU2te program and swdent
suppon as well as later employment opponumtJC:S Th1s maylK most
east!)' applicable to the SCiences and engtneenng. but in any e..·em
should bt seen as pan of the larger seMce role of the University
Postdoctoral educauon IS no1 currently consldt re.d wtthm the
scope of the Graduau~: School. but rather IS v1ewu! as an tnd!Vidual
faculty ~pom1b1hty Th1s shou ld change and cons1derauon m1ght
usefully be gJVen to some formal set of studies ttut better prepare
postdoctoral fell ows for subsequent employment that wtll mcreasmgly be outs•de of academta We should also stnve to ach1eve more
appropnate budgetary and faculty workload recogniuon for our
mstHuuonat effons m superviSmg postdoctoral persons
En hanced Communication and Data Colleclion. The dilemma
of madequate and maccurate data concemmg graduate educauon at
the nanonallcvel has been no1ed previOusly Wt ha\·e a s•m•lar lack
of accurate reponmg and useful data collecuon at the campus level
Th1s problem has bt.cn eucerbated by the decentrahuuon procC:SS
that has occurred dunng the past two drcadcs Accurate reponmg
and comprt:henstve daHl asscmbl)• conccmtng s1udcnt apphcauons.
admiSstons, studem progress . program complcuons .md careers are
vumlto assessmg I he status and qualuy of graduate programs Wt
need to cst.3bhsh an electromc commumcauons capacuy through
Which Standard mformallon mcludmg apphcauon , admtSS\On, financial suppon . candtdacy , academic records. thesiS requtrements ,
subsequent career hiStory . etc are a\-atlable and used by all programs for their own purposes and 10 prov1de a managtmem mformauon datn.bas&lt;- for the Graduate School and the larger mstnuuon
Through Ihe recem eHt&gt;ns of Assoc:utt PrO\'OSt Myron Thompson "'·r have made somt' 1mponant advances 10 these areas. however .
much more rematns 10 be done There are ca mpus-wtde com mlllees
m wh1ch the Graduate School actn•ely pantc1pa1es mcludmg the
Data Warehouse P1lo1 ProJeCI Group and an ad hoc group focu smg
on the de\·elopmenl of UB"s presence on the lntc:met!World W1dt:
Web Addn1onallr . Dr Thompson has alread) begun to txplore new
technologrcs thai should enablt• ·on -hm·· ca1alogues and apphcalh.ms for admiSSIOn electromc- rccordsrxl·hange . tiC As pan of the
enhanced commumcauons capa.brht)' of the Graduate School. van ous grnduatt pohcy documents and the enmc: graduate catalog art
txpectcd 10 soon~ avatlable m elec1romc format These technolog•esare. of course:. pan of thr \'astl)• Lncreased commnmcnt . includ mg thr: Graduate Sc:hool. that tht· campus has to make to the
t:lectromc agt Wnhout 11 wt w11l not surv1vr as an mstnuuon of
other than thtrd · rate status
Graduatt: School Teaching. Dlsctphnc-based courses and subJect matter are appropnatcl) and best taught m the mdt\'ldu.al
depanments and programs Thts pohcy should commue Howtvcr .
thert arc a number of largeted areas whett u IS appropnale for the
Graduate School to orgam:e and even conduct spcc1r1c course
offenngs Thtse could mclude courses on rese:arch and profc:ss10nal
ethiCS, wnung. carerr opponumues. etc As a spec1fic example , my
colleague R1chard Hull and I have offered a course on R~arch
EthiCS 1hrough the School of Pharmacy for the past thret ye::tni
Gtven Its broad apphcab•luy , 1h1s course: s hould be offered under
Graduate School ausptces, "''llh a Graduate School course number
and supponed b)' the Groduate School AddHionally, the Grnduate
School should coordmatr pou~nual orfenngs by other Schools m
areas whcrt Ll IS deemed appropnate thai they be pan of a general
grnduatt program-management , commun•catlons, e1c
Graduau School Publici ty. The Graduate School must m1Uate ,
excrc~se leadershtp and acuvcl)· pan1ctpatr man expanded program
of publ1c mfonnatlon where: by through newsleltcrs and othe r means.
and wuh the coopera uon wnh the UB Nr:ws Servtces, we bettt'f
mform and ed ucate the pubhc regardtng tht rolt: a.nd value of
graduate educauon and tht achtevemcnts of our graduates

B. Program Quality
Graduate Program Evaluat ion . Central to the generation of a
revnahzed Graduate School ts the cnucal t:\'3luauon of graduate
programs Thts process , essenually abandoned tn recent ~ars. Will
bc res10red and strengthened The shape and consequences of the
e\•aluat1on process w11l be developed through campus-wide consultation The only useful process·of progr:tm cvaluauon Will be o ne
that has real consequences ror failure , mcludmg program lermmauon m whole or m part , and real rewards for success
In thts process o f progDm evaluation there w1lllx a need for tht
closest cooperouon between the Vtce Provost for Graduate EducatiOn and the Acadtm1c IX:ans Thts must be so. gtven the current
state of resource and program dtvoluuon to tht: Iauer Howc\·er . the
Graduate School must have suffic ient resources m the form of
nex1ble funds. graduate aSSIStantships and tUitiOn schola rShip sup·
pon to generate both rc"'·ards and penalues for programs
Gradua te Facu lt y. The graduate fa cult )" arr the cart of our
graduate programs The quaht)' and dft'CU\'eness of those mdlvtdu ·
als determme the corrcspondmg success or failure of the programs
themselves We need to reconsider the cntt:na for membership 1n the
Graduate Faculty and. more •mponantly , to estabhsh cmcna for
conunued memben;h1p There' should no1 bc nn automa.m· pamancnC)' of stalus as a membt-r uf tht' graduate faculty As pan of thr
mechanism through wh1ch l:tcuh)' prcparr annual reports. an ap·
propnate se.cuon should bt- dnected 10 nnd revtewcd b) the Graduate School S1mtlarly .quatuycontrol standards and rc\1ew procedures
rcgardmg Graduate Facult)' membership should be dt'vrloped and
rrs1de at the program and Facult)·!Schoollevels as wtll
Pro motion and Tenu rr of facul ty . Among the most1mponam
deCISIOns wt make arr those regardmg the promouon and 1enurc .._,f
facuhy Smcr re-st:arch and scholarship •s onr cnucal and mdtspt"n~­
able cond monJor promouon and tenure . and smcc thts IS s•gmh ·
ca ntly linked to graduate educauon.thert shoJuld be mput from 1hr
Gradua1c Dean to this process One step that could ensure 1h1~
would lx·1o appomtthe Dean of the Gr.Jduaa: Scho('ll as a standmg
member of the Pres1dcm ·s Rev1cw Board (PRB)

C. Resources of the Graduate School
Nectssary Resource-s. Thtre w11l not bt- a masst,·r mfus,.,n ul
resources mto tht Graduate School Nonetheless. the ch.3ngcs that
must occur mcludtnga heightened abilu)· to assess progr.Jm quail!)".
to gcner.Jte ne"'' programs and to pto\'ldt' mcemlvts for change- Wlll
rr-qu1re thai the Graduau~· School Ctlmmand mmprcht•nSI\"e suppon

Cont1nued on page 6

�6

Faculb&amp;SiaUBillboard
MAYNE, WHALEN NAMED
CHAlliS IN ENIIINEDIN8
AND AI'I'UED SCIENCU
UB's School of Engineenng and Applied Sc•ences has announced the
appointment
Mllyne
_,.....,__of
_"astheW.
new
chatr •n
....-"""' "..,. the Department of
Mechamcal and
Aerospace Engt·

..........
neenng and

Whalen as the

new chatr m the
Depanmentof
Electncal and Compuling Eng•neenng
Mayne . a member ol the UB faculty
Since 1970. served as cha•r ot the deoartmentlrom 1966-89 A fellow of lhe
Amencan Soc~ery ol Mecharucal Eng•neers. he was named Educat(l( of lhe
Year •n 1992 by UB's MechaniCal and

Aerospace Englf".eenng Graduate Sludent AssociallOn
Mayne coordinates studyabroad 8CIIV1118S

!Of the school of
eng•neenng . and
has helped to establish exchange
programs wnh um-

verSit•es tn Japan.
Ch•na and France. among others He
has been a National Sc•ence Foundation Santor Postdoctoral Fellow
and recetved the Dow Outstand•ng
oung Faculty Award
He ts co-author of •tnlrOductton to
grneenng . • (McGraw-Hill . 1982)
numerous techmcal papers Hts
research tnterests are 1n computer ard en des1gn and systems des~gn
and he has recetved several patents
A graduate of UB . Mayne earned
a master's degree from Georgia lnsutute of Technology and a doctorate
from Pennsylvania State Un1verS11y
The pnmary research Interest of
Whalen . a faculty member stnce
1970. rs the measurement . prediC tiOn
and suppresston of electromagnetic
rnterlerence (EM I) in analog and dtgrtal rn tegrated CirCUitS. He and members of hrs research team have published more than 40 research papers
on the subJeCt and are Widely known
101 their work
Whalen has organrzed and
chatred sessrons on EMitn mteroetectronrcs at electromagneltc compattbllily symposta and 1s co-author
of the Study Gutde for Electromagnettc Compattbtlily A sentor member
of the Institute of Electncal and Etec-

Ironic Engrneers . Whalen also is a
member of the honorary engineering
society, Tau Beta Pi, and the honorary electrtcal engineering society,
Eta Kappa Nu. He was inducted into
The Johns Hopkins University Society of Scholars in 1985. A graduate
of Cornell Untversity, Whalen earned
a doctorate and a master 's degree
from Johns Hopkins University.

CONFERENCE TO FOCUS
DNRUOUilCUBRAIIHNJURY SURVIVORS
A one-day conference focusing on
commun1ty servrces and facilities for
persons with traumatic brain injury
will be held Nov . 9. from 7:30a.m . to
3 30 p .m in the Center 101 T()(ll()frow
on the UB North Campus.
Sponsored by the UB Traumatic
Bra1n Injury Rehabilitation System.
the conference will locus on developIng commumty resources tor indt~
v1duals with disabiliues and will hlghhght the work of local d isability
advocates Titled · Nav•gallng the
Maze · Community Re·entry for tndlvJduals with T raumauc Brain lnturv, •
the conference will feature the follow·
1ng presenta!JOns .
• ·surv1vor Views on Communrty
Integration.· Geri Hens. disability advocate and brain tnjury survtvor
• · Advocacy WOfks. • Diana K
Landwehr . president. Headway for
Bratn Injured. Inc.
• ·Firehouses Aren't Just for
Ftres. • Jam1e Lembeck. d•sabitlty advocate . People Inc • who converted
an old firehouse rnto rndependentliv-

'"9 quarters
• "Hello I'm Home." Joanne
Lampey . president. People Rebu•ldrng and Livtng 1n Drgnily
• "Legal Advocacy for IndiVIduals
w1th Drsabtlities. • Bruce A Gold stern.
law firm of Bouvier . O'Connor
• "Community Alternatives to
Brain Injury Rehabilitat+OO. • Raymond
G Rempel , program dtrector. Anagram Rehabilitation Community
• "Employment Options Alter
Brarn tn,ury." Aobtn Ttrado. vocational placement counselor. and
Sharon Mornssey . program coordtnator . People . Inc
• ·stress Management 101
Careg1vers .· Russell Cornman . soc•al
worker
The $25 regrstrat1on lee •ncludes
contrnen tal breakfast . coffee break
and lunch For more tnformatton, call
R1chard T. Ltnn. program dnec tor lor
the system. at898-4759.

'

many, will present a public ~ture .
·ModernizaUon of Chinese Historical
Thought.- at the UB on Nov. 9.
The ·talk, which will address the
tension between tradition and modernization in 20th-century Chinese
historical thintong, will take place at 2
p .m . in the Pratt Conference Room.
532 Pari&lt; Half. on the North Campus.
Admission is free of charge.
• The following day. Minag will ad·
dress the sta te of Chinese studies in
Germany as part of the History
Department's •Asia at Noon" lecture
sertes at noon in Room 250 of the
Student Union on the North Campus.
It is also free and open to the pub lic.
Mittag studied a t the University of
Munich and has spent a good d eal of
time In Taiwan and the People's Republic of China. where he studied at
Shanghai's Fud an Untversity. He is
associated with Bieleferd's Center for
Interdisciplinary Studies , where he is
invoNed in anatysis of historical
thinking on literate and non-literate
occidental and oriental cultures.
The lectures are co-sponsored by
the UB Department of History and
the Asian Studres Program

CTS-ESC-AS SEFA BENEFIT
Central Technical Services staH
memt&gt;ers have produced a 283-page
cookbook chock-lull of tempting recrpes as a benefit project lor SEFA .
More than 50 people contributed
their efforts to the project
The spiral-bound book, · A Taste
of CTS." has plastic covers and is
carefully Indexed (of course). It includes a variety ol recipes from appellzers to soups and salads. pasta .
main dishes . casseroles. vegetables.
breads . desserts . cookies and
candy . beverages . sauces and
even-yes-petlood .
-A Taste of CTs· was sold out rn
rts f~rst printing but a second puntmg
w111 be available for the campus community at a cost of $15 Proceeds will
go to SEFA.
To obtain the cookbook, send
your request to John A Edens. dtrec tor . Central Techn•cal Servtces.
Lockwood Building , North Campus
by Nov 17 Include your name and
campus address and a check tor
$ t 5 payable to ·John A Edens •

William Dev•ne, ass•stant profes-

~

Deadline for receipt
of entries is Nov. 22

oo the Web

Historiographer .loachlm lllttAig
of the University of Bielefeld. Gar·

LEC11JRE SET ON RUEARCH
DN MARUUANA COMPONENT

Time to share your best reci~ with friends and colleagues at
UB--ilnd win a prize. too. Send us your favorite holiday recipe.
the one that everybody raves about. You could have npublished
in the Reporter and win a handsome COffee table cook book!
Our annual recipe contest Is under way. The rules are simple:
lt"s open to faculty, staff and students. (Contest winners of the
past three years are not eligible.) The recipe (one to a contestant)
should be typed In cook book style with Ingredients first. directions following.
Put your name. address. department. your UB
!Hie and phone number at the top of the page.
We'll judge your recipe fqr taste appeal. ease of
preparation and originality.
. If there"s a brief •story" about the recipe--how
you created it. what kind ol traditions it represents.
how many years you"ve
served it to rave reviews.
etc .. Include that. too.
Mail or fax to:
Reporter Recipe Contest,
136 Crotts. University at
Buffalo. 14260. Or e-mail to

Science Ethics

sor in the School of Pharmacy at the
University of Wisconsin will present a
lecture on his research into the
body's interacttons with THC . the actiVe chemical component '" manjuana that alters bra1n funclion. Nov
9. at 12·30 p .m in 306 Farber Hall on
the US South Campus
The lecture. sponsored by the UB
Depanment of Anatomy and Cell BIology. IS free and open to the public
Devane demonstrated that a specihc receptor lor THC ex1sts 1n the
brarn and d tscovered the natural
substance produced by the body
that reacts with the receptor His lec ture. ~ Anandam i de . An Endogenous
Ltgand for Cannabano1d Receptor .·
will address th1S d rscovery
Devane obta1ned his doctorate at
St louis Universrty and worked as a
post-doctoral fellow at Hebrew University 1n Jerusalem with Raphael
Mechoulam. an 1nternat10nalleader
rn marijuana research He later did
research at the National Institutes of
Health under Julius Axelrod. who
won the Nobel Prize 1n mechcal
physiology In t970.
During his visit to US. Devane w111
meet with students and researchers.

ioajoumaJJ,
audiovisuals, 011 llioolllb IIOiecled fnn

ouniog.bioJoay,pllllooophy,reliJion,law,andlbelldrMiillibr:titl-.
from 1973 10 !be~
EtJoiCI In Sclnou is 111 llltp:llwww.cltnt. 111-..W ' 1

rn

&amp;I ...,

HUBNETct»tbexarr:MdOfl·siltillflwliMJIIJI~-­

ScimcetJIIIIEltf-rilll Library, llltllrYtJfllw ..................tw
rmrouly. Formoro~OfiHUBNET. -~

Htahlt Scitncu UbrtU7, -a29-U09, ~u~ra.•..b-

-Lou P&lt;4Wflo Glatkr tJIId N-=y Sclliller. Urtlwnilr,..,..,

TRIGGLE
Continued from page 5
Th(st resourct needs will be tlaborattd during the nut several months and will
necessarily reflect 1~ fundingshonJalls facing both SUNY and UB. H owcvt:r, h tsdear
chat che Graduace School will n~ resourttS to lnitwe new data collection and
dissemination, to suppon and allocate tuition rrmission, graduate groups, new
program Initiatives, program evaluations and incentiv~ for change, etc. Additionally,
the earlier divestment or resources and responsibiliti~ from the Graduate School to
other offtc~ mclud1ng those: of the Vice Presidents for ~rch and Public Service and
Urban Affairs must be revel'Sf!d. Research suppon and minority student rrcrulting
should be functions of the Graduate School, albeit carried out with dose collaboration
with all appropnate constituents and U niversity officers. Quite dearly, the Graduate
School will need more rather than fewer resources: Improvement or qu2Jily. organiz.auon. responsibiltty and reputation must be the expected and necessary results of
mcreast:d spendmg
Program Costs. W1th dtmmtShmg rtSOurces there l5 a grater imperative to
understand the true COSlS of progmms. The implementatton or more com prr.he.nsive
and eHecuve d ata collection. together with increased collaboration with UB's Office
o f lnstuuuonal Analysts, should pcnmt such calculation of the costS of graduate
programs and graduate educatton . As Important as those costs may be. it is lmponant
to keep m mmd that they are but one component of the total srt of facto~emand ,
need, value, qualny and cost--dt.'\t collectively should mfonn and Influence instituuonal pnorities.

D. Graduate SIUdents:
Graduate School Recruiti ng. The Graduate School cuTRntly plays only a
su pporting role m the student recruiting process,. although it does issue the comprehensive Guide to Gradllltte Programs (Graduate School Catalog). Given the size of the
staff and the dJscipli nt./program ~base:d nature o f graduate student rttruitmtnt, it is
unhkel)' that a much more substantial d1rca mvolvement m the recruitme:nt proc:ess
can be assumed by t he Graduate School in the neartenn . H o~ve r. it is irnporuntthat
all programs take advantage o f elc:ctromc communication for recruitrnem. Some
programs alrtady have a ~ home page~ on the W orld W1de Web. It· would appear
ad\-a ntageous to expand and coordinate thlS program so that therr is a Graduate
School home page wuh appropriate gt:neral mformat1on and hyper-linked to more
detailed mdtv1dual program horne pages. lnd1vidual program home pa~ should
contain in fonnation regarding facu lty profil~ . courses and cumculu m . admLS.Sion
requtrements. financial suppon opponuniues. graduation success and placement
rates. etc. A committee should be established by the: Graduate School to coordinate
ongomg prattSSeS and to deu:nnine the resources necessary for fuller implementauon
or these concepts.
H1gh quality p rograms attract high qual ny studcnts---panicularly domestic students. Earl1er . the need to create stronger and more rtSponstvc graduate programs has
been noted In tum . the Graduate School and our programs of advanoo:l study will
need to proVJde mcentives for heightened gradwue st udent quality. These incentives
should come in the fonn of enhanced stipends for recipients of national £ellowships
including training grants, and en hanced tuition and research suppon for those
programs. ln addition. the umversity should continue. to aggressively pursue opportunit•~ for dedicated housing for graduate students and their famili~ . The avatlabilily
of such housing would considerably facilitate the recruilmem process.
Interrelationshi ps Among Graduate Educal ion , T rain ing and Research . The
roles. rrsponsibiluies and expectations of graduate students arr a dual function of
both the academic program and the Graduate School. The Gradualt School nttds to
assume a mort eHectivc function in determtnmg and monnonng imerrelauonsh1ps
among the several roles stude.nts play as teaching, research and techmcal assistants
and the comribuuons of these roles to gradWite educauon

Duld J . Tr1aJe
Disrtnguishtd Untvtrsily Projessot
Vice Provosr for Graduale EdllCarwn and
Dtan of rht Graduare School (Dnignatt)
October 26. 1995

�7

Leners

The Reponet we~ccmes JermJr5 htm r8IK1etr ~on a

SIOneS

and

conf80t. LBners lhOcJkJ be brief and may be «Jifed lor st)M and lengrh. Because o( ~ ~ rhe Ffeponerc.tnat publitlh Ill letters r9CffiVf1d

U.S.A. and the women traumatized by 111e ul-

Your ideas needed on
UB's future direction

timatum of abortion.

DEAlt EDITOR:
Provost Headrick has challenged members
of the university community to consider
·some shift In the way we set and evaluate
the expectations ollndividualleculty mem-

Ta support the termination of lives whose
only crime Is ·untimeliness." is appallingly
"unAmerican." Usted first. in the rights
stated, in the "Declaration of Indepen-

_

dence,• is life. For the simple reason that
without the guarantee of life. all other rights
are moot.
Sincerely,

.

reconceptualization of this university in the

.._._

next decade. In his Convocatton address. he

UB Students for Life. Adviser

bers• as part of a far broader

proposed reconsideration of our organiza·
!ton, particularly in terms of prerogatives
held by departments. His call is necessary.
albeit challenging and potentially threaten·

ing. Our assumptions of many years are un·

New Memorial Garden
destroyed by vandals

der question, not only by entities such as the
Board of Trustees and the k!gislature. but
more broadly by the general public We can-

TO THE IEDfi'OR:

not be silent.

Cooke-Hochstetter. Complete with benches,

The provost 's call lor ·serious discussion
and debate among us· should be carried

flowering trees. patios, a walkway and a
decorative sundial . the garden was in honor
of our previous Dean, Daniel Murray. Within
a lew days, and perhaps inevitably, the gar·
den has been vandalized and the sundial removed.
Whether this vandalism was perpetrated
by individuals within or without the University
community it is regardless an act without
purpose . A small oasis of peace and calm
has been destroyed-for what? We will not
be anxious to pursue further efforts that add
to the local quality of life here.
Yours sincerely,

out. in part at least. through the pages of the
Reporter I hope that my colleagues. whether
or not they are members of governance
groups like the Faculty Senate, will contrib·
ute to the discussion. II might be advisable .
tor example, to invite Op·Ed contributions
from a wide range of individuals and groups.
The Facully Senate. collectively and through
its 100 individual members, will be a vigor·
ous participant in thts exchange of ideas.
Sincerely.
CLAUDE L WELCH JR.
SUNY Distinguished Serv1ce Professor
Chair. Faculty Senate

A lew days ago 111e School of Pharmacy
completed its Memorial Garden at the rear of

DAVIDJ. - L E
Dean. School of Pharmacy
University Distinguished Professor

Promenade traffic ban
aids safety. campus life
response to Harvey Axlerod's
letter in the
t. 26 edition of "The Reporter •
UB Students Qr Life would be remiss if we
did not admit
failure to educate our community about our memorial. "The Cemetery
of Innocents.·
"The Cemetery of Innocents" is a travelling pnrlife memorial sponsored by local
Cathol ic parishes. The 4,400 crosses which
make up the memorial, represent the number
of abortions performed each day in the
U.S.A . The Cemetery is also used as a fund raiser to support organizations such as St.
Luke's Mission of Mercy, a missK&gt;n located
on the East-Side of Buffakl which serves the
tmpoverished. and Our Lady of Victory Infant
Home, a home tor women facing crisis pregnancies.
UB Students for Life is a bipartisan , inter denominational organization whose sole oblec tive is the promotion of the sanctity of human" life. Since we are an interdenominational organization, we certainly did not
mean to imply only Christian women should
not abort their unborn c hildren: we merely
utilized the memorial to visualize the. number
of abortions performed each day in the

our

DEAR EDITOR:
I congratulate the university on its recent decision to ban motorized traffic on the Norlh
Campus Promenade. During the past year. I
have observed three incidents where the
personal safety of campus pedestrians was
placed in danger due to truck and van traffic
on the Promenade . The most recent incident
occurred on Oct. 25 near Baldy Hall and involved tiny children from UB's day care center . Earlier this month on a glorious fall day, I
saw a UB dump truck push its way through a
lunchtime throng attending a tabling session
sponsored by many SA organizations
Those who have to change thelf park1ng
and driving practices because of this ban
may well be annoyed. I hope they will come
to appreciate the improvement in pedestnan
safety and quality of campus life whtch will
be achieved when. due to this ban , the UB
community can once again gather and walk
safely on its Promenade
Sincerely,

l~!;~~~~~~~--~~~h*~ ~~~~

Ohb UB'o Buk firilhed ~beThe Rovals firilhed will a record 24
Judllh Nowk 8IWII8d hi fellgue's Run51( race in 17:53. The Rova. plaCed fille n.nin 18:53; Grelchen Welch, fifth In 19:03:
In 19:15. Nowk. Plwlp81Wld Welch 8IWII8d
and Shpur nllde hi Second,...,_
painla toY~ Slate's SliD finish aec25:\8 to earn Runner of hi Year honors. Charlie
KaMan sixth in 25:56. Dan McSheny was 10th In
~erence honors wilh KaMan and McSheny fol.
lowing on
Second Team. UB womerfs coach Dick Barry received hi league's Coach of
hi Year nod lor hi oeccnd ~year .

_..Ale...,... SOCCIII

The Bulls qualifled lor hi Mid-Continent Conference Tournament Sunday wilh a 1-1 lie et
flrlt place Central Connecticut S1ele. U8 is roN IH-2 overell and finished 3-2-1 In hi con-.ce.UB picked up their only gael from lvltony Wright first gael gillen up au season by
Central Connecticut 81 home and only the second this season against a Mid-Con opponent
Jay Palmer and Chris Barletta combined in gael lor the Bulls, stopping seven CCSU shots.
UB travels to MacorTtl, lA. lor this weekend's tournament. The Bulls. second in the Eastern
Division, ,_Western llliools. Western Division champs, in the first round.
In women's soccer, Coach Jean-A. Tassy's first season wilh the Royals ended on a sour
note Sunday as US Ieiiia Colgate 5-{) in Hamilton. The Royals, 9-3--3 Olle(eJI got 12 saves
from goafl&lt;eepel' Nicole Pillara, who finished the season with 150 saves and a 1.75 goals
against average.

VOIUY8ALL

The Royals earned their 20th win altha season Saturday with a 15-11 , 15-7. 15-7 win over
Aober1 Morris in women's volleyball action at Alumni Arena. UB (20-11) was led by Candie
Hirst's seven kills. Hirst finished the match wilh a .545 hilling percentage. Laurie Santelli
added six kins and eight digs. Candi Sims led the Royals wilh 24 assists and 11 digs. Kathy
Brinkwor1h and l&gt;m( Burda led UB with lour blocks each. The Royals hostll11s weekend"s
Mid-Continent Eastern Division Cluster matches at Alurmi Arena UB is tied lor firS! in the division et 2-1 wilh Youngstown State end Troy State.

FOOI'BAU.
The Bulls put together a gritty second hall effor1 but fell shortta Hofstra 17-14 in Long Island
Friday night All the Bulls did against the undefeated Flying Dutchmen was outscore them
14-{) in hi second hall end outgain them 196-116 yards to nearly pull off one of the biggest
upsets in Div. ffoolballthls season. The Bulls (2-6) did not fold 111e tents at halftime despite
trailing 17-0. lnstead,lhey gotlremendous second-ha~ performances from their defense. offensive line. quarterback Mark Taylof and halfback Anthony Swan. The defense, led by
Craig Guest (13 tackles), Pete Conley (12 tackles) and Terrence Rsher (seven tacl&lt;les, 111ree
pass breakups) shut down the No. 2 ranked offense in Division 1-AA the entire second hall.
Taylor completed a career-high 20-ol-37 passes lor 198 yards . His favorite target was
junior Keith Warren who pulled In a career-high six tosses for 83 yards. Swan finished the
game with 139 yards on 26 carries and scored on touchdoYm runs of 17 and 1 yard . The
Bulls meet Central Stele. top ranked in the NAIA, Saturday al UB Stadium

MEN'S AND WOMEN'S TENNIS
Coacl1 Russ Crispell's Bulls finished their fall dual season with a 10-2 record lolta.ving their 5-2
bss vs. St. Bonaventure. Wadie Kawar and Mike Proulx 'Nefe VICtoroos tn lhe1r singles matches:
Arv:Jrf!!N Garber and Pr..-p Rebala contlined to Win the number three doubles contest
The Royals improved to 12-0 in the fall season with their 7-2 wm over St Bonaventure. Three
sophomores. Amy Borden. Stacey Gargan and Annulen Dilion. helped the Royals down the
Bonnies by Winning thetr singles matches
- Ted Wasko. Sports Information Office

THIS WEEK'S HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS
S.turct.y, Nov. 4
Football vs. Central State

130pm

Volleyball Mid-Continent Cluster matches

11 am

Alumnt Arena

Men's &amp; Women's Swtmm1ng vs Ed1nboro

2p m

Alumn1 Arena Natatonum

UB Stadium

Sunday, Nov.. 5
Volleyball Mtd-Cont1nent Cluster matches

1 pm

Alumnt Arena

Wedne.Uy, Nov. 8
7pm

Volleyball vs Can1stus

Alumn1 Arena

EUEHII. Associate Dean and Law Library 01fector

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
Political -

a..ctoore

ModenduUoa of Cbinae His·
toria.J Tbou&amp;bt, Prof. Joachim
Minag, Univ. of Bielefeld (Germany). 532 Park.. North Campus.
2 p.m.

PII,UC.Col._...

Critical Behavior of Ma&amp;ntt.ic
F"llm.s: Claakal.,.d Quaatum
Theories, Prof. D.L Un. 220
Natural Sciences. Nonh C.mpu!..
3:45p.m .

-

........,_._

The Rqulalioa of Rrplica lioa
Origin Choice Ia MaiDID8lian
Cells, Or. David Gilbert. SUNY
at Syracuse. 114 Hoclutetter.
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
. _ . , _ Wotbloop
After Pnctkal Trainbla. 330
Student Union. Nonh Campus. 4
p.m. Sponsored by lhc Office of
International Education.

_Col._...

The Ubesqut DteompociUon or
a Co1Dp6ete Sprnd, Pior.
Jonathon Funk, McGill Univ. 103
Dicfcndoci. South Campus. 4
p.m.

·--Col._...

Optimal Scbedullne of' Eumi-

naUons: Bow Often Should
You Sft Your Dor:! Prof.
Marvin L:len, Harvard Univ. and
Dana-Farber Clncer Institute.
244 Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m .

-Cihllc
Fii'SlSe:ard &amp; Carl UnCover
oa the JatH"Dd. 223 Lockwood.
North Campus. 1 p.m. To register, call 645-2811 .

_.

IJtw Wotbloop
Massa~

Tbenpy ror H e~~ d ,
Neck aod Sbouklen, Dawn Jor·
dan. Session 2. 1·9 p.m. For information, call the om~ of Stu ·
dent Life at 645-6 12S .

.....,..._...

A Sbort F"tlm About Klllinc &amp;
Nl&amp;bt Por1er's Point of View,
films by Knysztof Kielsowski.
Screening Room. Center for the
Arts . Nonh Campus. 7:30p.m.

F.-ec .

PoetlyR-..,

---·-Robert C rMiey &amp;: Kamiko
Hahn. Hallwa!ls, 2495 Main St.
7:30p.m. S4. $5. $6.

A&amp;oba. Aloha aod Ku·Uiei Aloha
Dineen. Slee Concert Hall.
North Campo!.. 8 p.m. S7-SI4 .

Sponso&lt;W by WBFO 88.7 FM

through Friday, 10 a.m -8 p.m ,

and Compass Concc:ru. For tic hi
infonnation, call759-9136.

and Saturday, II a.m -8 p.m
The art of • .,...,...........

Jazz
C bkk Coro: Piano Solo in
Con«rt. Rockwell Hall Auditorium, Buffalo State College, I 300
Elmwood. 8 p.m. $16,$18. Cosponsored by WBFO 88.7 FM .

The Women' s Heahh Initiative
Clinic is presenting 1he second annual "Breasl &amp; Cerv1cal Health
An Exhibia"' through Nov 30 at
ttM: clinic , 65 Forber Hall. South
Campus.

'lloNter

Ubrary baa Archives

Krapp'!. Lut Ta~, UB Dept of
llleatre and Dance. Play by
Samuel Beckett , directed by
Vincent O'Neill, with Jerry
Finnegan. Black Box Theatre: ,
Cenler for the Ans. Nonh Cam pus. 8 p.m. S5, S IO.

exhlbll

~

Archttecta on South
c._.

COIRINUINII EXNtSnS

.....u.caotoplrlt
Gary Wolre's thesis exhibit,
"Painting, of a Spirit," contmues
through Nov. 10 in ttM: An Department Gallery located in ttM:
Center for the Ans on the North
Campus. Gallery ho urs an: Tuesday , 10 a.m.·5 p.m.: Wednesday

'The Ton:hbearer.'" 3Jl exhtbll by
University An:h1ves hononng 1he
75th anmversary of the UB en dowmcnl campaigns of the 1920s
led by Walter P Cooke . 1s on
view through Nov 9 on the mam
Ooor of Lockwood L1brury , Nonh
Campus

"!-l ami hon Houston Lowme Arc hitects" 1s on vu:w through Nov
3 m James Dyeu Exhibmon Hall,
335 Hayes Hall , South Campus
Hours llfl.' Monday through Fn day, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. lbe exhibit
IS pre~ntcd by the School of Ar chitecture &amp;. Planning.

Yolo•• aolo altow
Alfonso Volo IS a poet and an

llM -

1st whose work IS on view through
Nov. 5 m the Umvemty Gallery ,

Center for the Art'\, North Cam·
pus.

J) -Computmg and lnform:umn
Technology, Posting tltP-5046
Senior Programmer Analyst
(SL-4)-Compuung and lnfomla ·
uon Technology. Postmg IJP5048

Gol"'

F..:utty
downhill? N - •

lift?

The Schussmc!slers Skt Club mvues new membe rs to JDIO m 11me
for liS 35th season. Deadline to
JOin IS Dec I. For informat1on
about rates and pions for the sea ·
~on, call 645-3100, or \' 1511 the
dub 's headquarters, 360 SIUdt:m
Union, North Campus.

-

-

l nst rudional Sup port Trchnidan (SL-3) -In(ormation Resources. School of Dcntol Medicine, Posting IP-5013 . Sentor
Stan Assistant (SL-3) -Publica ·
ttons. Posting fP -SO.U Senior
Programmer Analyst (SL-4)
Equal Opponumty/Affirma11Ve
Act10n Office, Posting IP-5038
Lead Programmer Analyst (SL-

As!istant Proressor-ChemiStl) .
Posting IF-5049. Clinical In·
st ructor/C tinical Assistant/
C linical Associate Professor
{two positions available) -Dcrmatology. Postmg IF-5050

··-

Project Starr Associatt-Dcvel opment , Posting lrR -95090.
Projrct Starr Associ.ate · Dcvcl opmcnt. Posling MR-95098 Sec:~lary 11 -Calspan· UB Restarch
Ce nter. Postmg IIR-95099 SKrctary ll(.[kvelopmc nt. Post·
ing •R -95075 .

Conopetltl•• Cleoolfled
C!YIIhnrlce
Keyboard Specialist I (SG--06) Career Planning and Placement .
Line 1t27062 Sec:retary I (SG 11 )-Resldcncc H all~ . Lmc

"-'32 1..$
To obrmn m o rt' mfarmatlon fJn
jobs IHtt'd abow•. cm1ftlc t Pt'r·
mnnt'l St'n ICt'S, I ().I CmftJ Ho/1

�___
--..................
__
_
---.....__
_____

8

-----·
.. _
_....,

$10.

bft:ho*').

_.,AX .... II

Co.putMF81r
UBMkro Compulrr Fair. Stu den! Un1on Nonh Campus. 9

o.m.-4p.m.

P"'M T81k- Dlacuoalon
Lance Olsea. 438 Clemens
North C1mpus. 10 a.m. Free Pan
of Wednesdays at 4 Plus

G..-Jt&lt;IB--Cu-

auesc

Sympbony No. 7. Mlintlqe, c...
ter Cor lbc ArtL North Camput.
8 p.m. $11, SJO, $36.

-

ZodlaqDO Duct Coapoay,
U nda Swin.iucb. director. Cboreoanpby by Ka= o-p, Tretta
Gormln C..han, Shelley llaio,
L)'DIIC Kunlziel-l'ormolo, Eileen
Lambert. Linda Swiniuch, Joyce
Miller, Tom Ralabate, William
Thomu. Throuc.b Nov. S. Drama
Thealre, Ceot&lt;r Cor the Ans. North
Campus. 8 p.m. SS, $10.

-·--..

co.,.mve Sctenc:e

~ Xllti aad Opc:a
WlDdowl. 1-3 p.m. To rc&amp;iJICf,
call Aaldemic Sc:Mces, Comput·
ing and tnronnation Technolgy
(Ascrr) User Liaison office: at

san Goldin-Mcadow, Univ of
Chicago. 280 Park. Nonh Campus . II a.m.

--

645-3540.

_._

c.....,..-

ToJllcoloCY R . -

Kllowlcdp . _..tloo ....

ors...-.

Signal Tno.tdUdion Pathway!

tbe Notloo
Topic,
M.tthew DrytT. 224 11&lt;11. North
Campus. 3· 5 p.m.

in Vanadium IDdU«d Rn piralory Bunts I• Lung Macrophaae, Dr . Gn::g Grabowski.

VIMoAT...

Harvard School of Public Health.
1348 Farber. South Campus.

MytlwaodR,.IItlcto(Gayt,
Letblaot aod BJV Ia Cuba,
Sbld Rcins&amp;cin and Jody Laine .
640 Clemens. Nonh Campus.

\I a.m.

- lnt.metCIIIOic
Govenuaent Ia formation on
the Nel. 223 Lockwood. Nonh
Campus. Noon. To register. call
645-2817.

3:30p.m.
•tahl .. ,,......,
Tbe Hydroplooblc Elre&lt;t, C.

MlcroMoloCY _...,

vanOss. 134B Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m.

.....,_..,_

lgC2-Medlated Op§Oniulion or
ActioobadUus actiaomy« teiDCOIIIItans: lllftueott of
Cmetically-Dt:fiMd Strudural
Polymorphism of FcyRU on

Polymorpbonudur lA:ukoc:yta:, Prof. Mark E. Wilson. 245
Cary. South Campus. Noon.

Pllyolca

Col._...

Compton Scaltering from tbe:
Nucleon, Prof. Brad Keister.
Carnegie Mellon Univ . 220 Natu ral Sciences. Nor1h Campus.
3·45 p.m.

-·-

BloiOCJcool ac.......

uv Ab50rbing Compounds in

Tropjc::al a nd Polar lnve:r1~
brales, Dr. Sid Bosch . SUNY at
Geneseo. 114 Hochstaller Nor1h
Campus. 4 p.m.

lmmlpatlon Workahop
O ptional Practical Training.
330 S ludent Union, Nor1h Campus. 4 p.m. Sponsored by the Office of International Education.

Phanaac...tlca ........,
AdvanHd Toplc::s in
Pharmac::omelrk:s I and II, Pruf
Dnvid Z. 0' Argenio. Univ. of
Sou thern California. 508 Cooke .
Nor1h Campus. 4 p.m.

StatlaUca Col'-lu•
lnfenn« About Ddec:tJ in the
Presenc::e of Masking, Dr. BenJ.O.min Reiser. Univ. of Haifa. ~44
Cary . South Campus. 4 p.m.

Life at645-6125 .

UfeW-...op
Tbt Moral &amp; Ethica.l Dimen·
dons or Ladenhip, Pastor
Roger Ruff and Father Patrick
Keleher. 7:30-9:30 p.m. For information , call the Office: of Student
life: at 645-6 12S .

-

.body

Re«pdo n for Soutbtowns
Alumni. Roycroft Inn, East Aurora. 5:30-7:30 p.m. $16 Alumm
AssociiUion members: $ 18 no nmembers. For infonnation, call

-·-of

County Community College. 2 I I
Building G. Niagan County Community College, Sanborn. 8:30
a.m. $7 . For information, call 731 ·
3271, ext. 530, or645-2181. ext.

537.

Payclllaby- Rou~buru:

A NeuroloJk:: Jaterfatt
Psyc::biatry a nd Neurology, Michael Cohen. M.D. Am·
phi theater. 3rd noor. Erie County
MedicaJ Center. 10 :30 a. m.
~tween

Sc:rMalto&amp;

.. A Woman AloM" and .. 89 mm
from Europe:, " films by Agniesb
Holland and Marcel Lozinski.
Scrrening Room, Center for the
Ans . Nor1h Campus . 7:30p.m.
F=.

-

---·-

hYI-IIEaCI_rl..,
Formation or Cblorinakd Orcank:: PollutaatJ Durlnc Solid
Wute lnc.lneratlon, Dr. Michael
Milligan, SUNY at Fredonia. 140
Ketter. Nor1h Campus. II a.m.

Z odillque Danc:e Company,
Linda Swiniuch. director. Choreognaphy by Karen Georger. Treun
Gonnan Crrhan. Shelley Hain.
Lynne Kurdziel-Fonnato. Eileen
Lamber1. Linda Swiniuch. Joyc:e
Miller, Tom Ralabate. William
Thomas. Throo8h Nov . 5. Drama
Theatre. Center for the: Ar1s . Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. $2.50: S5.

-

IW:la Flec.k and tbe Fltc:ktoncs.

~­
~too·

.._

Rockwell Hall Auditorium. Buffalo Slate College. 1300
Elmwood. 8 p.m. S 16. S 18. Cosponsom:i by WBFO 88.7 FM .

Frul il\o

Souttttowna AluMftl

Roawell P - Staff

N uclear Cak::ium Si&amp;naUin&amp;, Dr.
Anent Malviya. Research Centrr
of Neurosciences. Stn.sbourg.
RPCI. Elm and Carllon.

!2:30p.m.

S.S. Ravi, SUNY Albany. 218
Norton. Nor1h Campus. 3 p.m.

A RevHil to tbe
Dt.mand
IEc:c&gt;noaca
- Side of
Bultb Insurance Markets: Coinsurance Rates and Ramsey
Pricinc Optimality, Dr. Eric
Nauenberg. 424 Froncuk. Nor1h
Campus. 3:30p.m.

3

u.........
Hoop Dreams: A Preview of

PllyolcaTbe: Dynamics ofCryalalllne
Surfaas on Ditorde~ Substrates. Prof. Yonalhan Shapir.
Univ. of Rochesler. 454 Fronczak .
Nonh Campus. 3:45p.m.

829-2608.

1995-96 UB Basketball, S•l

E-DI-

Buscaglia and Tim Cohane. Cen·
tc:r for Tomorrow. Nonh Campus.
7:30- 9 a.m. $9 UB Alumni Association: SIO others .

C-atry Col'-lu•

Fever ln Cbildru Under Three
Yurs of Are: Put, Pn:sr:nt ud

Prof. Eric Jac::obsen, Harvard
Univ. 215 Natural Sciences . Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

The HOC and Blue Ar1: Under·
standin&amp; Jan. Prof. Rober1 H.
Rossberg. Fanny's Restaurant. 7
p.m . $25 GSEAA members and
students; $30 non -members, fac ulty. friends . For infonnation. call

1&gt;45-2491 .
Ufe Workahop
Myths and Fads About Criminal lnvtsCJptions. Therese R.
Banas. 7-8:30 p.m. For infonnation, call the Office: of Student

tfl'ud ... , . . _ , . , Nft'l.
tloaal Stotdlct, Dr. Eliubdb A.
Rq&gt;atty, RPCL 306 ParUr. South
Camput. 4 p.m.

utew--.,
-...c-

U.Powor

AdVOC'alca. 5:.30-6:30 p.m. For in(onnatioa, call !be Ol6ce or Stucleat Life 0164~12$ .

_,........,.

S.loded
vueed -

n. Wort&lt; by .U.
·Screeoioa

Room. Cenr.. ror lbc ArtL Ncxtb

Campus. 1 p.m. Fn:c.

WNYT.-..o
Dee 'r
,......._

Col'-lu•
Transitions In Lumina: Usia&amp;
the Ha nd to Read tbe Mind, Su-

\

-_

..... s.-

Mehta. 220 N.... sa-

N... ~-,......

losepll Scbw__.t "A Soddeo

Soprano Emma
and Anthony Rooley,
lute. perform Nov. 4
at 8 p .m. in Slee
Concert Hall as
part of the Slee/
Visiting Artists
Series.

0164~125.

...... North~ 3:45p.m.

Rainbow," Telernann's T Nmpet
Cooceno in D. and Beethovm't

Dr. Jelf"y f1Mm..n, Univ. of
California, San Francisco. 108
Sherman. South Campus 8 a.m.

ure
...,...._
s...~&gt;.ii&lt;

B ull'oloPiio-olcOrc...._

1\

As.- o r a - - - .

matioo,calllbcOffic:eorStodcul

I'Jiodor~

tra. Marin Alsop.
conductor, wil.b David Kuehn. tnanpec..

Thur'&gt;tl

utew--.,

Ed Brodta. 3::»-5 p.m. For Wor-

porlluld or..- or-..,

-

laCillllllilr,• ......

( •

and Anlbony Rooley, IU&amp;e.. Musk
of Lawes.. Locke, Purcell, Blow,
Humfrey, Lanier. Slec/Visitina
Anist Series. Slee Concen HaD.
North C.mpu5. 8 p.m. $4, $5, $8•

----

Futurt-, Stephen Teach. M.D.•
M.P.H. Kinch Auditorium,
Children's Hospital. 8 a.m.

..__

ACE/NIPSpeak Up and Get Ready for the
SUentt, Mary Roseberry. Niagara

-·~,.,

~Prof. Toby Berger, Cornell Univ .

-

lor, with Hideko Udagawa, violin.
Mol.IJ't prognm--Sym'pbony No.
29, Violin Concer1o No. 4 in D,
Symphony No. 40. Mainstage,
Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. S 18. $24, $28.

-

ZocUaque: Danc::e Compeny,
Li nda Swiniuch, director. Choreography by Karen Georger. Tressa
Gorman Crehan. Shelley Hain,
Lynne Kurdziel -Formato. Eileen
Lamber1 . Linda Swiniuch, Joyce
Miller, Tom Ralabate, William
Thomas. Through Nov. 5. Drama
Theatrr. Center for the Ans. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. $5. S I 0.

F o l k -. .
lnternaUonal Folk Da ndnc. All
levels. Pannc:rs not needed. Social
Hall. second noor, Student Union.
N0r1h Campus. 8 -11 p.m. Free.
Sponsored by Gn11duatc Student
Association.

Saturcll \

-

Mu.kko,Emma
Kirkby, sopnno.

3626.

-~
eo.
..........,.- Ito Ed--

---

tloa, Dr. Lionel R. Meoo. 479
Baldy. North Campus. Noon1 p.m.

A Pri.ary Role for pllfW/J-11
ClpllotMitod-o(l-

c.u our.....-,

oal
Pror.
Andrea Quaroni. Comell Univ.
RPCI, Elm aDd CarllOCL
I 2:30p.m.

ASCfTW--.o
loti'Gductloe to UNIX. I:)().

4 p.m. To reaU&amp;er. call Aadcmic:
Services. ComputiaJ and lnformalion Tecbnolc,y (ASCIT) User Liaison offtee at 645· 3540.

ASCfTW--.o
Mort Swa t1N1X. I :30-4 p.m. To
re&amp;iJtcr. call Academic Ser:vices.
Compucina and lnformarion
Ttchnoll)' (ASCfD Uter Uaitoo

.....,_..,_
office 11 645·3.540.

Tbe Molccularlliolou of Myoardlalbdoeaala aod Modct of
Protoctloo, Dr. Oorit Cope, Univ.
of South Alabama. 108 Sbcnnao.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

-c- --...
Berretioi. 5:30-6:30 p.m. For infonnation, call the Office of Studen! ure at 645-6125.

utew-...op

corr.. Talk 11 Tastiq, James

Govenuaeot Information on the
Internet. 223 Lockwood. Nonh
Campus. 7 p.m. To reaister. call
645-2811.
UfeWorbMp
Tbe. Resurcmce of Fundam~taJ..
ism, Pastor Roger Ruff, Lutbenn

Campus Ministry. 7:30-9:30 P.m.
For information. call the Office of ·
Scode:ru Life at645-6 125.
SliMly acr-.itC
You Haven't Beard the Record,
You Haven.'t R.ead tbe Boo~
NOW!! Don"t Sec tbe Movte!.
Screening Room. Center for the
Arts . North Campus. 7:30p.m.
F= .

Slayaon. S--7 p.m. For information,
call the OCfKe or Student Ufe as

645-612$.
~

..._..

Competition lo Completioo,
Michael R. WinstUiey. 301
Crosby. South Campus. 5:30p.m.

c-. u..

Opot.:
Eric Badabuld, pia.ao. Allen Recital Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m.
Free. Concerts ue taped for
broadcas1 Of) WBFO 88.7 FM the
following Sunday al4 p.m.

Mttolc
VB Wind En.se:mblt, Sarah
McKoin, conductor. With David
Kuehn. trumpel . Slee Concen
Hall. Nor1h Campus. 8 p.m. $3 .

TlltAIII. . .

"'-b aaau.l School of Manaze-

Zoc:liaque O.oce Company,
Linda Swiniuch. direclor. Chcmography by Karen Georger, Tresu
Gonnan Crrhan,
Shelley Hain, Lynne
Kurdziel-Fonnato,
Eileen Lamben,
Linda Swiniuch.
Joyce Miller, Tom
Ralabale, William
Thomas. Through
Nov. 5. Drama
llleatre. Center for
!he Ar1s. North
Campus. 2 and 8
p.m. $5, $10.

M ourteum Orcbtstra of
SaW»ura. Max Pommer, conduc-

utew---.

Wbea, Why ud Bow of Breut
SdfEsaaioalloo-0, Mary Jo

MMACT

645-6666.

M•olc
~Tbeatrt:of

aion, Robin Steinhom, M.D. 108
Shennan. Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.

Oevelopmeal Caner. Ceoter for
TomocTOw. Nonb Campus. 8:1511 a.m . $60. To re&amp;iJter. eaU 636-

Thur..,c1;n

UB Bulb va. Central Stale. UB
Swtium. North Campus. I :30
p.m. For tid:el infonnation. call

Knox 14. North Campos. 4 p.m.

• - to Nltrk Oxlclc Ia
Puslstatt PltJIDOIUiry Byperte.n-

MRP-~tMMytk.

Sponsored by WNY TecboolocY

•j•·..

-l..ecbtnl

p-- -

menl AJullllli Aaodat.ioa
A wants BaaqueL Hyan Regency
Buffalo. For infonnation. call

J

645-3224.

lvao the Stupid aod Vultila the
Wile oa t.be Ead ottbt SeeoDd
Millemuan, Dr. Vladimir Ageyev.

JounW Club/Quality ,u,.,.

I 14 Hochstetler. North Campus.
II a.m.

aoet.

C.fetorium A. Mercy Hos~taJ. 8:30a.m.

_, -

Ru-IAcbt..

An.I.DdaMkle: A Eadoaeoou.
Llpad for Caa:aabiDokl Reeepton. Dr. William Devane, Univ.
of Wisconsin. 306 Farber. South
Campw. 12:30 p.m.

Forward to the Past, or
Wby Capitalltm Failed
Ia R....W. Apia, Dr.
Vladimir Aceyev. 114
Hochstetler. Nonh Campus.
II a.m.

-LaCicCol.....lol•

Speecb-Ad Lock:, John Keams.
684 Baldy. North Campus.

~·

3:30 p.m.

CellllloloC)'

Poetry.._.. .
Tbe Hkld~a Female Sbamaak
Tnditioa., Barbara Tcdlock. 438
Clemens. North CampUs. 12:30
p.m. Free. Part of Wednesdays at
4 Plus.

Conlinued on page 7

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                    <text>STATE UIIVEISITY OF lEI YD-11 · AT BUFFALO
Full text of Provost
Thomas E.
Headrick's address,
given at the University Convocation
Oct. 13, is published
today on pages 4
and5.

OctoiJcr 26 1995

Volume 27 No 9

ELI planning English language
program in Bosnia at war's end
1J I'AIIIICIA - A N
News Services Staff

T
No·easychair
for Finnegan
'RetiNd' .-cltlvlst hard at work for Sesqul

should be sunning herself on a tropical island, flipping through

a favorite novel. Instead, UB' s recc;ntly retired archivist is back in the stacks scouring
the collections of a dozen generations of UB faculty, staff and students, helping the university
prepare for its I 50th anniversary
celebration.
A recently released IS-month
Sesquicentennial Desk Calendar
containing numerous un ique images ofUB's past is only the first of

a number of Sesquicentenn ial
projects Finnegan will be working

on despite her retirement. She
culled the pictures, including arecently acquired 1895 image of Dr.
Roswell Park performing surgery,

tum-of-the-century science labs
and the first two women graduates
of the Law School in 1899, from
the more than 250,000 images in
the archives colltction for the calendar, explaining that some have
never before been published.
Finnegan is also preparing a
major Sesquicentennial collection
exhibition, tentatively titled "UB
Remembers,'' slated to open in the
archives in March, 1996. And, she

explains, "since it is the thing to do
to have a home page these days,''
Finnegan is fashioning a new Sesquicentennial exhibit to be available online through the archives
website.
"I sort of fell into this line of
work," explains Finnegan, who
served as university archivist for
28 years before taking early retirement last summer..She taught English Literature at a small women's
college near Boston, had three
daughters, then arrived in Buffalo
30 years ago intent on earning her
long-postponed doctorate. Instead,

some research work in the library
led to a part-time job in the archives office. 'A ShOrt time larer,
the archivist retired and Finnegan
took over the fledgling operation.
Under Finnegan's direction,
University Archives grew from a
single, cl uttered room in the old
Lockwood Library to occupying
half of the fourth floor of Capen
Hall, with some spillover in a
nearby warehouse. Packaged delicately in acid-neutral boxes are
7,000 linear feet of documents,
photographs, memorabilia and microfiche , more than·seven million
items in all. Sunlight, temperature
and humidity are all enemies of
document preservation. so much
attention is paid to the climatecontrolled conditions in the archives, explains Finnegan.
University Archives has grown
to be much more than just a storehouse for official university matters. "Some people become very
attached to their records," said
Finnegan, who had to earn many
people's trust before large donations of records began arriving.
"Older records are probably the
most valuable. just because few
records were created in the 19th
cen tury and fewer still survived,"
she explained, describing a bill of
lading in the coll ection that describes a shipment of"subjec ts" to
the medical school in the mid 1800s
via the predecessor of the Wells
Fargo Express. The "subjects," of
course. were not living when deli vered.
Finnegan feels that, through archival records, " I really gotto know
people whom I never laid eyes on.
J' d recognize their handwriting instantl y." h is that intense interest in
understanding more than just ''the
facts" that makes an archivist, believes Finnegan. "History is more
Continued on page 3

HE ENGLISH Language Institute (ELO of
the University at Buffalo expects to open an
intensive EngHsh language program in Bosnia, possibly
as soon as the spring of 1997, once
that nation's civil war ends.
Stephen C. Dunnett, institute
director and UB vice provost for
international education, said a representative of the UB ELl has just
returned from Tuzla in Bosnia,
where he met with Bosnian officials to determine how such a program might best be structured to
meet the needs of the Bosnian
people.
"After the implementation of the
peace accords, Bosnia will require
tremendous reconstruction of every secror of its society," said
Dunnett. a prime mover in the de velopment of American overseas
education programs.
"Education is a top priority of
both the Bosnian government and
of the international donor agencies
that serve Bosnia," he said. ·They
recognize that after the war ends.
the nation will need a population
literate in English in order to attract
foreign investors, participate in
joint business and educational ventures and update medical facili ties." he said.
Joh n K. Fitzer, ELI assistan t director for academic support ser-

lum for self-instruction in English now used at
the Tuzla Medical Center that
uses donated audio and video
tapes and language instruction
books.
The goal has been
to upgrade the
medical staff's
A m11knhlft ohrlne marko the olte of • popular
English language
Tuzla nl&amp;lrtspot where 77 younc Bosnian Serbo,
skill so that memMuollmo and Croats died durlng • Serb ohellln&amp;.
bers are able to
Many auch memorial• are found throughout TuzJa.
read current medical journals. most of which are in
vices. arrived in Tuzla on Oct 7
English. Pre-civil war Yugoslavia
along with a group of physicians
was a communist nation, so access
from International Medical Relief
to important western medical jourof Western New York. That organals
was not a priority and the Ennization, founded and directed by
glish language not widely taught.
Jacob Bergsland. UB assistant proBased on the success of this professor of surgery and director of
gram and the ELl's experience in
heart transp lantation at The Bufthe
field, Tuzla University and the
falo General Hospital. has for sevmedical relief group have now in eral years sponsored an exchange
vited UB to establish a grant-funded
program between health-care perlong-term ELI program on site in
sonnel in Bosnia and medical staff
Bosnia once the war ends.
at The Buffalo Gener•l Hospital.
The proposed classroom proThe group provides Bosnian
would serve not only the Tuzla
gram
physicians with instruction in new
Medical
Center staff but also Tuzla
medical procedures and has helped
University students-initially those
eq uip the Tuzla Medical Center
in the medicine. nursing and busiwith advanced technology for di ness programs.
agnosis and treatment.
''Many aspects of the program
In connection with thi s, the ELl
are still tenuous,' ' Fitzer added. ''but
developed a medical English
it
calls
for UB teachers to go to
course for the vis it ing Bosnian
doctors and nurses and a curricuContinued on page 2

Bloebaum is Presidential Fellow
BJ ELUN GOLDBAUM
News Services Staff

Christina L Bloebaum, assistan t professor of me chanical and aerospace engineeri ng at UB. has been
named a Presidential Faculty Fellow . The award.
bestowed b y Pre si dent
Clinton, recognizes the
scholarly activities of the
nation's most ou tstanding
science and engineering
faculty members. The program provides to each re cipient a National Science
Foundation grant of
$100.000 a year for five
years.
Bloebaum is one of only
30 scientists and engineers
BLOEBAUM
in the U.S. to receive the
prestigious fellowship this year. and th e second UB
faculty member to receive one since the program' s
initiation in 1992.
Bloebaum conduc ts research in multidisciplinary
design synthesis, concurren t engineering and anificiaJ applications in optimal design.
In these areas, she is working to develop new, more
effic ient and less costly techniques for design syn thesis in complex, multidisciplinary environments, such
as in aircraft and automotive design. One of her

research projects involves the use of a method known
as "genetic algorithms." in which approaches to the
sequencing o f design tas ks imitate aspec ts of genetic
processes in nature.
A faculty member since 1991. Bloeba um previously was a researc h assistant in the Depanment of
Aerospace Engineering. Mechanics and Engineering
Science at the University of Florida and a NASAl
American Socie ty of Engineering Educators summer
faculty fellow.
Bloebaum is a Universi ty Teaching Fellow and a
recipient of the RieOcr Award. which recognizes out·
standing junior faculty at the School of Engineering
and Applied Sciences.
Her research has been funded by NASA Lan gley.
NASA headquaners. the National Science Foundation. the Engineering Foundation and a seed funding
program at UB.
She earned her doctoral. master's and undergradu ·
ate degrees at the University of Florida.
The Presidential Faculty Fellow program 1S En tended to foster developments in science and techno logy, increase the attractiveness of careers in science
and engineering. recognize the interdependence of
teaching and research in achievi ng excellence and
highlight the importance of science and technology to
the nation· s futu.re. Nominees must go through sever.ll
layers of reviews . Winners are selected by a White
House review panel.

�--.--..,·-·

2

Presidential advisor
to speak Nov. 1

Terry Sanford Institute of·Public Policy at
Duke Univeralty, and a trullco and aeniQr
AVIDGI!RGBN,joumalistand • fellow of tbe Aspen Institute.
Gergen' • lecture will be spoi\IORd by the
political pundit and senior ad·
UB Office of Conference• and Special
vitor to foor American preaiI!
vents.
dents, will deliver the second
Delivering the remaining lecture• in tbe
lecture in lhe 199S-96 Dislin·
1995·96 Distinauisbed Speaket'l Serlea will
guishcd Speakers Serlea at UB at 8 p.m.
be author Gall Sheehy, on Marolt 14, and
Nov. I, in the MainStage Theatre in tbe
Howard Stringer, former president of CBS/
Center for the Ans on the North Campus.
Broadcast Group and internationally recog·
The 199S-96 Distlnauishod Speaker Senir.cd expert on the "information auperttigh·
ries is presented by UB and the Don Davis
way ."
on
Auto World Lectureship Fund. Key Bank Is
Apnl25.
the series sponsor, and tbe Ambel'll ChamTickets for
ber of Commerce is tbe affiliate 1pon10r. .
Geraen's lecContributing sponsors are the Buffalo
ture
ranae
Marriott, UB Center for the Alta, Makin'•
from $19Copies, UB Alumni Association and the
$25 . DisJume Fenton Lecture Foundation.
countt arc $3
A senior advisor to former Pre idents
for UB rae·
Nixon, Ford and Reagan, Gergen served
ulty. staff and
hetween June 1993 and Oeccmher 1994 in
alumni
and
the Clinton Administration as counselor to
senior citi ·
the president and special advisor to Clinton
zens; $6 for
and Secretary of State Wamn Christophe&lt;.
students . A
Gergen recently returned to two posts he
held prior 10 joining the Clinton administra10 percent
0di sco unt is
tion: editor-at-large for U.S. News cl World
available for groups of 10 or more.
Rep"", a post he held from 1988-1993, and
Tickets may be pun:hued at the Center
a contributor to PBS ' '1'he MacNeil/Lehrer
forthcArtsTicketOfliceandatTicketMastet
NewsHour," where he Is interviewing aulocations. Tickets also may be pun:hascd
thors on public-policy issues. From 1987·
through MastetCurd and VISA by calling
93, Gergen teamed on '1'he MacNeil/Lehrer
NewsHou~· with columniot Mark Shield to
TicketMuter at 852-5000. Subject 10 availability. tickets forindividuallcctures may be
unalyz.e events of the week. Their coveraae
of the 1988 Pre1idential campaign won them
pun:hascd at tbe door.
Funher ticket information may be obthe title of "best pundits" of the year by the
"Political Almanac."
tained from the UB Office of Conferences
Gergen nlso is a visiting profe sor at the
ri
and Special Events 81645-6147.

D

Oeblll of Gary Wotfe'a •Ecce Homo," oil on canvaa, 1HI.

Gary Wolfe exhibit explores

Judeo-Christianiconognaphy
8J ..ATIIICIA DONOVAN
News Sorv•ces Stall

A

\

the Age of Enlightenment and, Iuter. by the

N ARTIST and un historian. Gary
Wolfe has long been fuscinutc:d by
the ubi4uitnusncss of the conven -

ti onal Jut..lco·Christi un imagery

tlmt pcrmcntes I he lus10ry of western art .
In u new exhibit of h1s own work. titled
"pui nting , of u spi rit ," he allcmpt!-&gt; to artil:u lutc the tension between the matcriul and
•rnmutcriul. the spi rit and the fl es h and to
~x plorc the states in which they co-exist.
- The show will he held Oct. 26 through

Nov . 10 in the University at Buffalo Art
Department Gallery (Room B4S) in the Center for the Arts on the UB North Campus. It
ope ns toduy with a recepti on for the artist
from 5-7 p.m. and will he followed by u
lecture by Wolfe on the subject of JudeaChristian imagery in 20th-century art at6:4S
p.m. in Room 11 2 of the Center for the Arts.
All cvenl&lt; arc free of churgc and open to the
public. Gallery hours arc Tuesday, I 0 a.m. to
S p.m.; Wednesday through Friday. 10 a.m. to
K p.m. and Saturday, II a.m. to 8 p.m.
Wolfe

10

i~

n ca ndidate foro Muster of Arts
the Humanities degree from UB in paint·

ing and art history. He points out that he ha.&lt;
long been interested in the widespread usc of
Judco-Chri stian symbols and representations

in western art through the 13th century and
its rapiddcclincafterthe 17th century, fueled
by the icon·neutral Protestant Reformation ,

modernist manifesto that called for the aban·
donment of past imagery and the eliminntion
of rcprescnuuion .

"Despite the powerful effects of these
~ignilica nt cultural drifL~. religious imagery
survived," Wolfe says, "perhaps because it
represents nn inherent connection between
the urtistic und the religious experiences.''
He points out that we sec it emerge in the
fine arts during times of political crisis (the

Holocaust, the Atom Bomb blast) and at
times of personal crisi s, such as the loss of a
loved one or during a decisive spiritual moment .
Contcmporury unists such as 0 ' Keeffe,

Mark Tohey and

other.~

have depicted reli-

gious sy mbol s in their role as part of the

cultural landscape as well, he says, and it
showi up for other rcason li in Nolde and
Chagall. for instance, as they recall in their
work child hood experiences inclusive of a
religious or spiritual element.

"In my own art," Wolfe say•. "I look
uround me and sec that such symbols speak
to me or the eradication or community and
its replacement by alienation and isolation. !

look for the pull hetween what I call, transliterated from the original Greek, 'numa'
(spirit) and surks (flesh) and, since I was
rai sed in the Christian faith, I explore in my
urt just whut is the relevance of such beliefs
and such images today."
II

New North Campus JXlrking policy
aims for safety for pedestrians, vehicles
~nn~oox

Reporter Staff

A - .-rldftll ,.._, promulaated thia month aimaiO defuse the'danaeroua mix
of pcdeatriana and vehicles on the North Campua apino.
Travel by any vehicle, except emerpncy vehlclet, bu boen banned on the
promenade and adjacent walkwayt. acconlina 10 a Sept. 29 memo rrom VIce

President for Student Affail'l Roben Pal.met 10 tbe univel'lity's deana, dlrecton and
chail'l. Plantel'l will be erected u barrien to diiiCOuraee traffic from enterln&amp; tho
academic tpine and walkwaya. aceordina 10 Palmer.
Alto, all employee service and metered parldna tpaces alone Putnam Way hu
boen eliminated, Parkin&amp; and Tl'llUiponation Director Carmella ThofDP'On ex·
plalned. lnttead, now lleiVk:e perldna tpacel have boen opened up alona Flint and
Hamllton Roadl, approacbl.na !bole loopt, u well u In Hamilton Loop iiiClf.
alona
Stare aervlce perldna. now jJenniaed In the prevlou11)' metered
Putnam Way, appllet only to unlvenlty lleiVice vehlclea and a rcw lil!liled ll&amp;le
service pennlll. Employee service parldna ..,. wiU no Jonaer be boooted In tlale
lleiVIce perldna . - . 1bomp1011 llld. AIJo. employee IIOr.Yice parlclna, which
. previoutly had been wilbout a time limit, will be mtrlcted 10 betw- oae and tluee
hout'l. Silvct employee lleiVice parkina bana·tap are i11ued with a number I, 2 or 3,
indlcllina the number of houn allowed.

"**

DIAt;CTOftOfP\J8t..ICATIOHS

,_,.,.J._., • [ OfJOA _ . . . . . •

BOSNIA
Continued from page 1

Bosnia once the war has ended to teach

English language upgrading. The long-range
plan is to bring Bosnian l!nglish teaChers to
the U.S. to study so that tbey can return home
and operate the language program by themselves."

Fitzer met with a numher of officials
including To Sadik Latiugic, rector ofTu7.la
Universi ty; the heads of most of the
university' • fiiCultics; Selim Beolagic. the
region's provincial governor; the mayor or
Tuzla, the director of the Tuzla Medical
Center and othen.
UB was offered physical facilities in
Bo~nia in which to operale the program and
has been promised accommodations for

American personnel.
In the meantime, the ELl will follow a
practice the institute has used successfully in
such countrie• as Cambodia. It will host a
· Bosnian scholar ai UB during the spring or
summer, 1996 semester and will initiate a
professional development program for

Bosnian I!SL teachers in Tuzla.
Fitzer's trip was punctuated by the Oct. 8
Sertt bombing of a crowded Muslim refugee
cump at Zivinicc, south of the United Na·
tions safe area at Tuzla. Zivinice'a many
cuualtics, virtually all children and women,
were brought to the Tuzla Medical Center for
treatment while the UB-Buf(aloGeneralteam
was there.

"Dying children." Fitzer said, " It isn't
something I'll forget . Sighll like thi1 alter
your pel'lpecli Ve aboot a lot Of things, including how fonunate we arc in this country 10 be
untouched by this kind of tragedy."

AIIOCIATEI!DIIOfl ,.,. . . . . . • ARTDIAftlOA . - . . . . . . •

The Muslims in the camp had previously
been pushed out of two U.N. "safe areu" in
Srcbrenica and Zepa when Bosnian Serb•
overran those camps during tbe summer. All
of the camp's men and boys were separated
out and removed by the Serbs and their
whereabouts are unknown.
"In spite of the war," Fitzer said, "tbe
hospital staff and the wounded themaelves
comprise all of the seaments of the Bo nian
population ~Catholic Croau, Mu sli m
Bosnians and Orthodox Serbs. They work
together, care for one another in the middle
ofmadneu .
'1'hc people of Bosnia themselves expresled conslantgratilude for our presence,"
he said.
"I have never experienced this kind of
welcome. They exhibited great dignity and a
strong sense of pride und hope for lhe future
of their country. This de pile the fiiCt that
they've felt abandoned for four years," Fitr.er
added. "Many promises have hecn made to
them and broken, but they arc very, very
positive ahout what we arc trying to do
here."
The ELl, which operates at UB as well us
abroad, has awarded ccnificatex to more

than 17,000 studentJ from 101 countries
since it wa rounded in 1971. The institute
hatl cxtenJive expCrience in the teaching of
llngli•h for specific purposes, especially
llnglish for ocience, teehnoloay and busi·
ne 1 profe ionals, and hu developed program• with univmities and other educational
inaillutions throughout f!altern Europe and
tbe PIICific Rim.
rl

Ntp/~puDbuhioeckiii_.,.,Wf/

�3

'Magnificent Media' offers work
of innovative tilm, video artists
lr PAl'IIICIA - A l l
News Services Stall

T

HE UB DEPARTMENT of Me·
dia Study will pre~~Cnt. "Magnifi·

cent Media,.. u Merica or
screenings, lecture• and discus -

lions of film and video art durin¥
November. The oerieo include work by in·
novative local Olm and video makers, UB
media study studenta, and some or Europe's
celebrated and controversial media artills.
The evenll, free and open to the public,
will take place in the Center for the Arts
Screening Room (Room 112). Some events
are co-sponsored by the Polish Commun ity
Center as part of Kino Polski• Ill. Buffalo's
Poll•h Film Fesllval. Others are co-spon·
soled by Hall walls Contemporary Arts Center and other UB departments.

lMMIMdule:
Thurwday, Nov. 2, 7:30p.m.. two films
curated by UB Media Study grad otudenl
Oall Mantlik and co-sponsored by the Polish
Community Center of Buffalo and Hall walls
Contemporary Arts Center In connection with
Buffalo's Kino Polslde Ill Film Festival .
• A Woman Alone by Agnie5ka Holland,
198 I, a powerful performance by Morin
Chwulibog in a poetic tole of two misfits
finding love under murtiollnw.
• 89 mm from Europe by Marcel Lozinski.
1993, winner of 1994Academy Aword fnr
Best Short Documenlllry, u poetic mcdiW·
11011

on the rift hetwecn Ettst

IUKI

West.

duy, Nov. 6. 7:30p.m.. lilrn screcnmg: Yu Huvf!n 't HcanJ the Record, You
lluven't R 1dtl1e Book, NOW II Don'l Seethe
Movie! An venin~ titled "A So·-Cilllcc.J Whut ever'' fwtu
he ubove-tUI.rned rccenl fi lm
presented in person by its tli~tm , u selfdescribed "mad scientist, sound thinker, thought
wllcctor, u.&lt; been (sic) and psychoputhfinder."
Tuesday, Nov, 7. 7 p.m .. f11mmulc.erKeith
Sunbom, UB visiting assistunt professor uf
media study. presents njuricd progmmofwnrk
hy udvanced media study students. Part of the
dcpiU'tment's "Tuesdays nt 7'' prngram.

Thursd•y, Nov. 9, 7:30p.m.. screening
uf two films by Kn.ysztof Kiclsuwski co ~
sponsored by the Polish Community Center
und Hallwulls us pnrt of lluffnlo' s Kino
l'olskie Ill Festival.
• A Short Film About Killing (Krotki lilm
o t.ubijoniu), 19H7: winner of the J9KK

Cannes Film Festival Jury Award and
the Felix (E urope 's Acudemy Award)
for Best Film.
• Night Porter's Point of View (Zpunktu
widzenio nucnego portiero), 1978.
flllms comprise a feanure-length cAtcn!Cion uftwo parts of Knysz.lof Kicslowski's
Oec.aloguc, a medilution on mnrul choice in
aaeculur world. Kicslowski is considered hy
many to be the most importunt European
director of the lust two decades.
Monday, Nov. IJ, 7:30p.m .. lnvestig•·
tion of Reloted Events, 1993 Lntvian/Eng.
!Ubtitles. Latvian director and UB grad student Janis Putnins presents his film, which
tells about a young mun who htcon s involved In the investigation of u friend's death
only to lind himself subverted by the public
manipulation ofbeliefs, events, drenms. myths
and symbols. Actor Armands Reinfelds won
the 1993 Kristaps, Latviu's NotionAl Film
Center Best Actor Award. for his perfonnuncc.
Wednesday, Nov. IS. 7:30 p.m.. Chnl·
lenging the Academy: UB Women in Polw1d.
Screening of Polish director Muriu :z.nun·
Kos1.anowicz ·s cuntrovcrsiul 1994 documenuuy. My Rood to f-eminism, followed hy a
pone! discussion modc:rutc:d by Mcdiu Study
Professor Tony Cunrud. Film includes interviews with UB prufcs.sc.m; who visited Polnnd
a.~ pun of the ongoing cxchnnge prngrum hetween UB undJugiel ltmiun Univc.Nity. Amon~
UB fuculty interviewed were lsu lwl Murcus
(l.uw), Clnire Kuhunc (Englb.hl. F.liuaht-th
Kennedy (A merkun Studks). C:trulyn
Kursmcycr(Phihlsophy). EliiJtbcthCrnrnk y
(Ard\itc::cture). Curul i'...cnu· l (An Hi .. wry)
und lJB exchunge sc holur M urgurct
UsuwKku-Mugdlittn, Dcpurtmcatt nf Jour·
nulism, Ju gid luninn llnivC'rsiry
Mondtty,Nov.20, 7:JOp.m .. filnl~lTccn
ang. flume of the Future, worb hy f{aduut.l
Wicku , president or the huom.l uf l-lullwulb
C'on telllJXmary Art,Cenh:r. Wid.u lives uml
wurksut'nleUomc.of thcfu ture an lluffnl11·,
Ogden Street neighborhooO Thr " liumc"
house~ u complete produclinn ~tudau whc:rt'
he hns pi"'lluccd u wide vunety uf wor~!l­
whkh im:ludc more thun 100 video' wi th
fonncr 1-iullwulls t:urutor f{nn Ehmke'

Steven N. Blair exPlains hoN physlcalacllvlty and IllneSS
can eortlribule 10 along llfa, at J . Warren Perry Lecture
Oct 13 In Kalharine Cofnell Thealer. Blair is direc10r of research, epidemiology and clinical applications at Cooper
lns1hute for Aerobics Research In Dallas.

International Transplant Society
to lwld symposium in Buffalo

B

UFFAI.O liAS lli:I:N 'dn·tnl ·"
the: si te' oflhl' Firth Uu ~ll' Snt·ntal•~ ·
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Continued lrbm page t
th am just official pupers of the pn~sidcnts of
the universily. It involves the cupturini; of
th e institution11l cu lture," she explui ncd .
Finncgun suys hc:r fascination wi th urchivnl
history grows from herucademic buck ground
in rhcwricul unolysis in English Literature.
"They ure rather similar," she suys, "unaly&gt;·
ing wriucn muterlols in u specific context : ·
Preservation iii unother high priority to un
urchivisl . "During the period of campus unrest people probably thought I wus crazy,"
rec•ll• Finnegan. "In the midst of all that, I
wa~ running around picking up leaflets and
other th ings off the noor to snve."
The archives is full ofu "tremendoosumount
of rich materiul," according to Finnegan. It houses
the official pupers or several locRI political
leude111, including fomlCI'BufTniCHlR:IICongress·
nUUl Juck Kemp. Personal correspondence between Darwin Munin, n tum..of-the-century
8uffulo businesJimttn, und his longtime friend,
f•med architect Fronk Lloyd Wright, designer
Martin'R home, now owned hy the university. •re also stored there. Mnrtin, Finnegan
cxpl•lns, was a compul•lve letter writer and
110 meticulou• that he Indexed hi• person•l
diaries, which are ·ni!IO in the collect inn.
Likewi,c, Snmucl Capen's conlributlons
IO the collection extend beyond the Officiol
correapol\dence of his 28-year term aa Chan·
cellor. OnceanadvisortoPre ldcntWoodrow

or

Wilson umlu nutiunulleudc:r mlu~hc:r edul'u
tinn, Cupcn wus ulso prolilic leiter wri tl·r. 111C"
privute leuc:rs hr wrote almost dull y 111 lu ~
wife while he wns truveling were llnmtlcd In
the collecti on by his duughler. Finnc:gun ell.
pluins that the university "cun't gn out unJ
buy this sturr· und depc:nds e-. ten.sivrly ur\
churi tublc ContributiOn!i or muteriuls.
Pinnegun also draws from the urchivt'!o
collection to put together "slide/tulks" un
unique uspecb or univeBity history . Recently. she: ddivered on ulldress to UB devel opment oflicer~ 1ut the hugely successful
cupitul cu mpuign of the curly 1920s whil'h
uttructcd Surnuel Cuptn to UB und precipa ·
httcd much constru clinn on the Muin Street
curnpus. l·ler next presenllHion will be 1t1 thl'
locul Jl\edicul history ussuciution nn the: h1'
tory uf the medlcul schuul
Turnnrrnw's urchivist wlllJirtlhuhly huw
more mc:dio to keep tmd: ur in cullin g h1'
tory , but the bu sic~ will lilc:l y remu1n the
same. according to Finnegan. "One funu nt
technology usually supplants unother, ruther
than replacing it ," she oxpluins. "Vurium
types or electronic media will come und
become tcchnoloaically obsolescent ov~r
time. But, paper documents will probubly
remain the ml\ior aource or lnrormatlon. If
prourved properly, they remain readable
and acceasible much lonaer."
rI

Da,tul ~ lu,h rt. l

1995 SEFA Campaign

Tueschty, Nov. 18, 7 p.m .• A Film/ V•drn
llurvcst 'J'uhlc. n gnthcri n1-1 frumthL' vu lcu ami
films nf fu ll. Event is pnrt ufTuc~tlu y .. ut 7 A
cusunl hnrwst frl'CJ11ion willlollow

FINNEGAN

l iB

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�4

UNIVERSITY C
r. W cis and .Members of the

Univeni ty Council, President
Greiner, Dr. LawrenceLiglufoot, Distinguished

Profeuon, C hancellor's
Awardees, Faculty, SWT,
Students and Friends.

The House of Commons
has a tr.adition dlat when a new Member of Parliament
nses for hts or her first speech the nonn.al cwtoms of the
Ho use are held in abeyance-the hoots, jeers, and heckles
from opposing backbenchen are rcpbced by polite
attenrio n. In a way this occasion nu.rks my maiden speech
as Provon, and though in this setting I would not expect
heckJel'l (actually that might offer a re~hing challe n~) .
I will have very much &amp;iled if w~at I have to say today
goes unremarked or unchallenged bter. I have already
stimulated co nsiderable discussion with M&gt;me ideas for

\

rearr.mging our enroJJment distribution and emphasizing
our appeal to upper division undergraduate and graduate
students. I wiU not spend time today elabon.ting on those
1deas. but don' t take thu to mean that I have laid them
as1de .
The Presidents' rece nt M ission Statement ser :a goaJ :
that UB be recognized as the premier public univenity in
the N onheast by 2005, and thus be acknowledg&lt;d as
SUNY's Oagship campw, competing vigorously with
Rutgen, Penn State, Pittsburgh, and Matybnd; and
become a public univenity of stature in a region of our
nation tlur has aJways held privne universities in higher
esteem dun the publia.
There is more than a little irony chat as tbe Mission
Sarement was being f..ashioned the state government was
cutting &lt;11e seate Pl' subsilly tO SUNY by moce than 20
percent and is now Ooating the pouibility of another
nearly 20 percent withdrawal of state support next yeaz.
The "public" in .public ·rc:search univcnitieS has been put
on a rather strict diet. These political realities also mean
that UB is likely to remain a small public /\AU
univenity, more like Virginia, Nonh Carolina and
Colondo than the largo Midwest flagships.
But be that as it may, I have not come here today to
rellect upon the SI.]NY budgets or their impact on UB.
Too many of my recent waking boun have been given
over to those concerns. I would prefer on this occuion to
pose and thinlt about the question: how should UB
orpnize itself to punue its 2005 goal?
One of the reasons I have been drawn into
administration over the yean has been my fascination
with orgaAizatioru, with how humans structure: their
reLationships and intenct to achieve some common goaJ,
or perfonn some coUective ask. It started when I spent
two yean as a graduate student studying local
governments in England. Organiz.a.tioru.l analysis later
became a source of my livelihood when I worked as :a
management consultant in &amp;ctories in Glasgow and board
roonu in London; is corutituted one of my graduate
eJWO subjects at Stanford and has been a focw of a
significant share of my teaching and writing ever since.
My experience has made me particularly sensitive to the ·
problems that can be exacerbated by allegiance to existing
structures, and to the good that can flow from
organizational resilience and flexibility. lu a result, I bring
ro the Office of the Provost a clear predisposition about
organiz.:ation in a public research university: that pursuing
our fundamental goals of providing educational quality,
nurturing inteUectuaJ discovery and creativity , and ~rving
the public is sacrosanct. Maintaining UB's current
orgmizat:ional structure is not.
' Departments based on disciplines have long provided
the essentia.l structunl elements of a research u niversity .
They define nujor and gr:ad~te degree requirements,
recruit and appoint &amp;culty, and set standards for quaJity
and excdJence. Through faculty representation in
professional associations, journals and conferences,
deparonents represent the university to the research and
educational world beyond the university.
Widlln the univenity, they provide academic
identity for faculty and simply the complex task of
nwuging a largo, essentially non-hienrchical
orpniz.ation because they are granted auronomy in key
decisions about the important elements of our

responsibility--what students should learn, what areas of
knowledge should be taught, what avenues to the creation
of knowledge should be punued. And the autonomy is
justified by standards of exceUence extemally created ·
thro3gh the professional expectations of the discipline.
For the most part this form of orga.ni.z.at:ion and its
attendant decentt:alized autonomy Ms succeeded. It has
made univenities stronger than they would have otherwise
been in :a more hienrchical and central.iz.ed environment.
But valW;ble as tlut org:a.n.iutional form has been it
also Ms a downside. The present deparanental and
disciplinary structure imposes limits on the university's
potential for development. Today I want to focw on the
need to overcome some of these limiting features.
In :addressing those problenu, I don'[ want to leave
the impression tlut I seek :a wholesa.Je abolition of
deparonents. Absolutely not. But I do see the need for
some change in our orga.niution and its incentive system.
For insance. sometimes depamnentaJ autonomy has
protected weak departmena and progranu by permitting
them to perpetuate their own weaknesses. Efforts by deans
to intervene have occasionally succeeded and at other
times failed. University &amp;culty have tolerated weakness
more th~ was probably warramed, creating a milieu in
which it h:as been easier to take from the strong than from
the weak whe·n resources become reStricted. lf UB is to
punue itS goaJ of being the premier public university in
the Northeast, undermining strength to shore up weakness
cannot be a sensible development strategy.
Simply declaring on the side of academic sttength, of
coune, docs not nuke .it happen. Existing prognms luve
been protected by our chanctc:riution ofUB as a
comprehensive public research university. 11Us conception
tw given each •prognni. once established, a license 'to
grow and expand. Only the 'Programs regarded as
. peripheral, those unallilia~ with f diocipline, bcked this .
· license. For example, the olll CoUege system dioappeared,
and the more recent Undergndw.te CoUege failed to gain
a foothold and was folded into our traditioru.l structure.
Any examination of major research univmitio-almost all of whiCh claim to be comprehensive- shows
that their amy of progruns are far &amp;om uniform . Of
course there are many s:imibrities, but there are also
differenc:es which arise ~m the accidents of history or the
put inJ!enllity of particular faculty memben. Though the
range and1divenity of prog;r.uns at UB arc important to
our mission, it is hard to support the argument that
dropping a few programs would deprive w of our c:b.im to
comprehensiveness. I believe -that we need to deal more
directly and honestly with the vety few UB ptogruns that
are unlikely under any circumstance to become strong and
attractive to good students.
Tolenting weakness, however, is not the only
problem that the departmental and disciplinaty
orga.niz.:atioru.l structure might occasionally pose. This
structure also provides obstacles to nuking the most of the
talent and ingenuity the univenity possesses.
The ~-directed, academically-free &amp;culty member is
also an important structural component upon which great
universities are built-a &amp;ct that most people 'outside the
univenity do not and cannot undcntand. But to the extent
that the univenity determines the activities ofia faculty, it
docs so prinwily at the departmental level of our
organization. Because the aggregate nnge ofUB's
professional schools and arts- and-sciences departments
encompasses some disciplinary overlap, a number of
faculty have relevant· uaining to reach outside of their
departmental or school niche. Yet we bow more often
dun we should to obsacles cast by departments in the way
of sensible solutions to broad instructional problems.
Departmental prerogatives can frustt:ate reasonable
deployment of our faculty's teaching talent in seven) ways.
In an institutio n this size there are shifts in student denund
for particular courses, a1ten.tioru in enrollment
.
distributions between lower and upper djvision, and
changes in faculty availability because of research grants,
ubbaticals and turnover. These shifts can le:ave a
department short of &amp;culty for teachi!lg an important
offering in its program or long on offerings marginally
important to its prognm. In another department or school
there may be &amp;culty memben whose competence lends
itself to ccaching the needed counc and whose own

courses may not be as irutitutiorully important--as

distingoish•d .fi9m depatment:ally impotUnt-11 the
offering left uruttended.
In these situations the departmen~ priorities almost
invariably trump institutional need. An imporunt.:o...,.
goes unt2ught or an am person mtJSt be hired to r.=ach.it.
Or sometimes- the reve:ne' occun.. faculty in one
deputment may be willing with their chair's blessing to
teach another department'• o!Rring. ~the-receiving ·
department balb because its faculty had no hand in
appointing and :anointing these willing faculty membets
&amp;om the other departmenL Such exclusionary authority, of
coune, should scuc&lt;ly be relevant to whed&gt;e. faculty
membets by education and expetience have the ability to
teach the subjea well.
This is not to dismiss the depaiunental view as mere
obstructionism. It ftoW1 quiu: undenaandably &amp;om a key
role that the department pbys in the univenity's
org:aniz:ation, that is, to maintain the univenity's :academic
quality by selecting excellent faculty in the area where the
departmenrs possess the necessary expertise to make such
judgments. The department pen:eivcs the importation of
&amp;culty it has not selected as an erosion of its academic
authority and satus. B_pt a more salient &amp;ctor may be that
it lessens the apparent leverage which the department Ius
(with the dean or provost) to gain more resources. This is
particubdy meaningful to the extent that status both
within the univers.ity and in the academic world outside
derives &amp;om possessing significant resources and brgc
faculty size. Although the obsbcles to sensible
cooperation have ntional underpinnings in the roles that
departments have been assigned within the univenity,
they can be countetproductive for ensuring the
univenity's appropriate overall usc of its faculty.

hese obstacles are compounded by
a culture within a department that
ranks the importance of the
department's variow
responsibilities. For irut2nce,
among the optioru of teaching to
graduate students, to
undergn~uate majon, and to
undergraduates who will major elsewhere, the
.. elsewberes" are not perceived to be as important as the
others. These non-nujon arc perceived as 10meone else's
students, not the department's. Think about that for a
moment. Although they are students who have signed up
to learn what the departmental faculty have to teach, they
are considered less significant to the academic mission and
enterprise of the department. It seems to me that ~hen a
student enrolls in a department's coune. that student is
the depamnem's studenc, there to leun what the

�...........

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5

~~.,.

:ONVOCAT ION
tas

E. Headrick

be done through collaborative work. at disciplinary
intenections. In fact. forward chinking and good rel.SOn

\ department and disctpli~e have to offer. To chi~ .
'f.therwisc cannot contribute to the healthy. funcnorung of
the univenity as a whole.
~And yet from the depamnental penpective, the
ranking .nukes sense. Both the univen.ity and the extem.al
disciplinary world measure the department's contribution
by the number of its nujon, its gradw.te' srudeots, and ·tbe
degrees it. grants. The faculty rutunlly invest themselves
most in thutuderus .enpged by and &amp;scinatcd with their
particular wbject matter and research. In many
departments, faculty see and work with their nujon on a
regular basis, and ccminly. in c!eportments with doctoral
progntns &amp;cuhy work closely with their graduate
students, who in nuny cases also become integral
conaibuton ro the &amp;culty memben' research
investigations.
Not only do the organizational and social incentives
of deparanents encourage the priorities that put the
.. elsc:whercs" at the bottom of the list. but our lmgua.ge
also reinforces that ranking. Teaching non-majon is
universally described within academia as "service"
teaching-t:h.at is, a teaching obliption of departments
fulfilled in ordtt that they can maintain tbeir place and
size within the univenity, rather than being thought of as
teaching done because' of a basic mission to enable
students to learn. For the univenity to meet its broad
undergraduate obligations, we will need to change the
incentives and perhaps _the linguistic conventions.
So far 1 have touched on wme of the limitations of
departments in our undergradll2te mission . If we tum ro
graduate education and research, the problems are of a
different order. Essentially, the departmental structure and
intellectual jdentity flow from the gndll2te mission,
particubrly in a univenity Jike oun. The discipline
provides the link to the extenul validation of our
academic efforts and for many graduate programs the
discipline links its graduate students to their ca.reer
opportunities.
.
The problems at the graduate level arc Jess inherent
to the organizational structure per se, and more related to
the particular context of this univenity. To put the
nutter direcdy, UB, with its 3 &amp;culties and 28
departments in the Arts and Sciences, 5 Schools of Health
Science. and 7 a¥-itional professional schools, is spread
too thinly to do everything well. Strong graduate
education and research depend upon a critical ouss of
faculty and students sufficient to produce inteUectual
friction and creative spark. In several areas, dut essential
critical mass is lacking. A number of depamnena are too
small to provide adequate coverage in the discipline,
often .fostering an inward-looking academic conservatism
that limits intellecnW engagement :across disciplinary
boundaries. Yet, as our own efforu at interdisciplinary
research and education indicate in the several successful
Centen we have established, much &amp;uidW research is to

suggests that some of the most exciting advances in
knowledge in the years ahead will come through such
work.
How , then, ao we overcome the built-in disabilities
of our size for graduate education and research as they are
reinforced in our departmental/disciplinary structure? Let
me suggest several strategies.
One, for those deparnnents and schools where
critical mas:s ond demonsttated quality exist , we mamtam
current size and try to enhance quality. In other words ,
we support and enhance suength.
Second, for areas without critical mass or recognized
quality, we reorganize thro ugh combinations offaculry
into Centen; or Institutes or multi-department graduate
programs to emphasize develo ping areas of gradu.ue
education and research that bring mgether dtfferc:nt
disciplinary perspectives . We may need to invent new
areas of graduate study along the lines of emerging
mixed-disciplinary research and suppon the development
of related journals or their elecuonic replacements. These
pro grams may provide broader, less narrowly specialized
doctoral education as they respond to a widening concern
that doctoral education attune itself to the needs of
society beyOnd the now diminishing academic market.
Third, in graduate areas aught both at UB and o ther
University Centen in· SUNY, we nuy be able: m work
out undentandings to concentrate specializations at
specific campuses and also to share studect access to
faculty at ocher SUNY Centen through feUowship
exdunges as well as conventional and electronic
commu.picat:ion.
Fourth, because of our rich mix of professional
schools and arts- and-sciences graduate programs, UB has
an opportunity to develop graduate programs that blend
srudy in the traditional academic disciplines with
·
professional education. A variety of such combinations
might broaden career opportunities for our students while
taking particular advantage of the spec:Ul role and
configuration ofUB within the SUNY system.
In other words, if UB is to esablish itself as a
premier univenity as the millennium rums, we must
retbink our academic organization, we must let ingenuity
lead w down unconventional paths, we must alter some
of the depamnental structures defined by disciplinary
penpectives, and we must combat department
isolationism.
Departmental isolation arises in part because among
ourselves as faculty we do not know enough about each
other, we do not talJc enough with each other, we do not
share ourselves academicaUy and intellectually enough
with each other. In general, we are falling short in
maintaining an academic community which is a key
aspect of our idealization of univenicy. No qui ck fix
exist:J for this problem, but I hope through efforts of my
office and of the fine group of Vice Provosts-Ken Levy,
Bill Fischer, Nick Goodman , Stephen Ounnc:n and OaV1d
Triggle. who is soon to take oike, we can encourage
more knowledge about our colleagues, more discussion
with them, and .collaboration among them. We can help,
but our efforts will be a snull conaibution compared to
what would occur if all &amp;culty seized just a few of the
many opportunities to find some other kindred acadc:mtc
and intellectual spirits in a department or school outside
of their own.
My final point shifts from consideration of the: parts
of our university to its whole . I cannot tell yo u how
many times 1 have encountered fa culcy who voice
concern that the univenity is turning away from graduate
education and research to focus on undergraduates a.nd
public service. At the same time I hear from other fl culty
who fear jwt the opposite , that o ur preoccupation with
graduate education and research relegates undergradu:ne
education and public service to secondary status. The
Missio n Satement makes it clear that research , graduate
education, undergradll2te education and pubhc service-all four activities-ue integral parts of institutional
rcsporuibility. lfUB is to be the: premier public univ.e niry
in the Northeast, the univenity as a whole must do aU of
chese well, exceedingly well.
But for particular &amp;culry memben, that does not

mean that they must div1de the1r acadc:m1c work and
effort among aU four of these activioes. Different b culty
memben have different talents and interests. Their
particular contributions to th ese multiple responsibihues
may and should vary . UB must do a.U four well. but not
every faculty member must do a.U well or even do all . w~
need to organize o unelves so that each School or Faculty
has a clear undc:nta.nding of its responsibilities m these
activioes. so that each, m rum, organizes Itself and Its
fac ul ty to deliver on these responsibilinc:s coUecuvdy.
The rol~ of the central administration IS to orgamze thes~
expectatio ns to enable the univenity as a who le to ddJVer
excellence in aU these activitaes.

his approach wall requar~ some
shift in the W'J.Y we set 'J.nd
evaluate the: expecrauo ns of
mdividual Uculty members We
should expect md1vidual &amp;.culty
members to do what they can do
best to contribute to ovenU
univenity responsibiliu es, and no t
necessarily do what every other fa culty member does. We
need to work with a somewhat more differentiated model
of faculty performance, finding ways to acknowledge and
value different sets of strengths a.nd fonns of distinction.
We have had a tendency to rely more on extema.l
validatio n of performance than internal assessment of
contribution, with the consequence of impeding the
univenity's success 'J.t achieving all that it might achieve .
In short, we need to look hard ac how we evaluate and
hold accountable the Schools and Faculties for their
teaching, their research ana their public serrice, and we .
need to revisit how we evaluate performance meriting
promotion to full profes.sor. 1 continue to believe that
tenure should be gnnted only to ·&amp;culty who have strong
research accomplishments and fine teaching abilities. But l
also believe that promotion to full profes.sor might rest on
demorutrated achievements in one oc two of the major
areas of univenity and f:a.culty responsibility.
To summarize, let me review briefly and succinctly
what I am proposing.
1. The univenity-faculty and administrationshould build on its strengths and not protect a snWl
number of programs not likely to achieve swtained
vitality and success.

2. Departments should not have org:an~tio na.J
preroptives that prevent o ther parts of the univenity
from calling upon their faculty member's talents and
services when needed , or due self-limit their access to
&amp;culty talents from other departments from which they
could benefit.
3. We have to find inventive ways to build
exceUent graduate programs and support path-breaking
research where our conventional departmenal and
disciplinary structures have not been wholly successful,
and do so with the quality bculry we have, rather than
with a host of new additions.
4. We cannot fonake quality undergraduate
education fo r nationally acclaimed graduate c:ducanon and
research, nor worthy public service for both. A5 a
university we must do all well. An individual fac ulty
member, however, should be able to expect rewards for
high quality achievements that contribute to any of the
majo r university missions.
5. If our organiz.a.tional structures and departmental
priorities, af o ur allocations of authority and o ur
incentives. inhibit this drive fo r excellence, then we
ought to alter them . T o repeat my predisposinon ,
pursu~g our fundamental goals of providing educaoo nal
quality, nurturing inteUectual discovery and creatiVIty ,
and serving the public is sacrosanct. Maintaining us·s
current org2nizational structure is not .
A5 I said at the beginning, J expect that these r~mark.s
wiU lead to serio us discussio n and debate among w . That
would be a welcome step toward our becoming the
premier public university in the Northeast by 2005.

�6

o.~~Mer-. ~

.,....... n , ..._ •

Faculb&amp;StaHBillboard
, ROSE.ERRY TO ADDII£SS
ACE/Nil' MEmNG
·speak Up and Get Ready lor the 5•tence. • w•ll be the top•c when Mary
Roseberry . profe ssor •n the Humam IIBS OtvtStOn of Ntagara Coun ty Community College, addresses the Amencan Coone•! on Ed ucatiOfl, NattOOal
IdentifiCation Program lor Women tn

Educauon (ACE/NIP) The breakfast

meeung Will be held Nov 3 from 8 3010 a m tn the small d1ning room of
Bu1ld•ng Gat N•agara County Commu-

nity College. 31 11 Saunders Senlement Ad , Sanborn. N Y
Goal of the orgamzallon whiCh •s
approaching •ts th•rd decade. ts •ncluSO'l of women's VOICeS and values
along w1th that of men tn moldtng the
fu ture of h•gher educatiOrl The 1994
ACE/NIP V1S100 Statement speaks of
the necess•ty of c reating a chmate •n
wh•ch the votces of women are valued
•n §ethng the pubhc agenda
Cost of the breakfast SBSSIOO IS
$7 Aeservat•ons should be made by
Oct 31 Call 73L-3271 , ext 530

DESIGN STUDENT WINS
NAnONAL SCHOlARSHIP
Krlatlnn Rlctt.rd Rzepkowakl,
a tumor tn the UB Art Depanment

Communtcat•on Destgn Program . has
t&gt;oen named a 1 5-96 rectptent of
an $800 schotarsht rom the National Scholarshtp Tru Fund o t the
Graph1t Ar ts (NSTF)
RzepkowskttS one ol 2 scholar Ship rectptents selected lro more
than 2.000 applic ants to the STF tn
1995-96 He recetved NSTF sc"hotarshtps lor the 1993-94 and 1994-95
ac ademtc years
The lund tS a 39-year -old non-

profll orgamzat100 that offers educalton asststance to student artists to
encourage their involvement in the
communications tndustry

CONFEIIENCE - S E S
ltESOUitCES TO END
FAMILY VIOLENCE

Suaan McL..er, cha1r of UB's Department of Psych18lry, will be keynote speaker at
9:30a .m . Friday,
Oct 27 in 106
O'Brian Hall. Nonh
Campus, at a con-

ference on coordi-

nating community
resources to com~=~---- batlam1ty violence
The conference rs
sponsored by Baldy Center IOf Law
and Soc1at Pohcy Workshops will fol·
low the keynote address from 10:30
am to ~ . 30pm

u• IIALLEIIY INI11ATES
SATURDAY AliT LECTURES
The Umvers1ty at Bullato Art Gallery
has announced a senes of free . pub·
11c art lec tures on Saturday mormngs
to •ntroduce current exhibitions and
diSCUSS the gallery'S UOIQU8 miSSIOn
•n Western New York
The lectures w1ll take place at
noon on Saturdays through Decem·
ber 1n the gallery. located 1n the Cen·
ter for the Arts on the US North Campus For an updated schedule of
speakers and toptcs. call the gallery
at 645-6913 In addihon to the teelure hours. the US gallery IS open
Wednesday through Saturday from
10.30 a m to 8 p m and on Sunday
from noon lo 5 p m

Electronic Highways:
Britannica Online
The University Libraries is pleased to announce the inclusion of the
Encyclopaedia Britannica's Internet edition Britannica Online on
its UB Wings web site. The Libraries site license permits members
of the UB community with EI I I &lt; ' II{&lt;&gt;NI&lt; : mail addresses ending with
bul'ralo.edu to access: I ) articles
from the 15th edition of the
Britannica including illustrations
and maps, 2) hundreds of n~w
articles not yet appearing in the
most recent printins of the Britannica, 3) texl of Jbe 1994 and I 995
editions of the Britannica Book ofthe Year, 4) flags, maps, articles,
and statistics from Britannica's "Nations of the World," aod 5) text
of the lOth edition of Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary.
Special featui"C!l abound in this exciting addition to the University Libraries collection of electronic infonnalion resoun:es. For
example, "Britannica Classics" is a collection of classic articles
from past editions of the Britannica such as the article.r:&gt;n "Psychoanalysis" written by Sigmund Freud for the 13th edition. "Britannica
Lives" presents a collection of biographies arransed by dale of
binh. "Random Access" makes a random pick of a BritaMica
article for you lo read.
As an added fealure the Britannica Online development team is
constructing a search engine which, in addilioo 10 allowing its
readers to use standard boolean searching techniques. such as
"ANDing" or "ORing" keywords, allows searching by natural
language. For example, one can query"Why does lbe moon appear
larger on the horizon?" Also, last but nollcast, Britannica Onliot
provides links to additional resoun:es on the Internet The article on
AIDS, for example, provides a direct Internet connection to the
National AIJ?S Clearinghouse.

HiGH

~ \\~)S

Starch Brilllnni&amp;a Onlinl by typing wing• at your UB E-mail
system prompt, then stltct "libraries," tht11 the bunon, "Online
Resources, " andfiM/Iy "Britannica Online. " (Forrhost wlw use
a graphical www browser such as Nttscape tht URL is hltp:/1
www.tb.com:IBO/tb.lllml.) F.or assistanetl in logging on to UB
Wingscontacttht Htlp Desk in tht CompuJing Ctnttrat645-3542.
For mort information on searching Brilllnnktl Onlint conJact
Unt ttt Koren, LXOREN!IACSU,BUFFALO.EDU, Science and
Engineering library, 645-2946.
-Gemma DtVintrey and Don Hartman, University libraries

Current exhib11tons include a solo
show of work by Western New York
artist Alfonso Volo through Nov. 5. a
sokl exhibitton of WOf'k by nationally
recognized painters Matthew
Weinstein and Lydia Dona and the
continuing exhibit of Simon Unger's
Installation, · Red Vertical.·

lllt.ADUATE- Mt:lnS;
TO--ONDEATNNNALTY
Graduate Group on Justice in Democracy will met Monday, Oct. 30
from noon to 2 p.m. in 1010 Clemens
Hall. The group will focus in setting
the agenda on a lecture series, re·
search , publicattons and communfty
work. Lunch will be provided.
The group is co-sponsoring
· MUMIA: A Struggle Against Racism
and the Death Penalty in America ,·
Oct. 27 from 6-9 p .m . in Harriman
Hall. South Campus. featuring Bruce
Jackson and Charles Carr as speak·
ers. panelists Chuck Culhane.
Samantha Dow. Daniel Fynch and Ed
Wolkenstein and music and poetry
-with Elliot Smith of the Marshall Bad·
ger Band and Ken Sherwood and
vark&gt;us concerned poets and politi·
cat prisoners.

KIIIKIIY-ROOI.£Y DUO OFFERS
'THEATRE OF MUSICKE'
The Kiri&lt;by·Aooley Duo. acclaimed
1nternalionally fOI' thelf early·mu~ic
practice and performance, will
present the second concan In th1s
season's SleeNisiting Artist Series at
8 p .m . Nov. 4 in Slee Concert Hall.
Since 1974 , soprano Emma
K1rkby and lutenist Anthony Aooley
have been presenting the repertoire
of the 16th and 17th centuries lor votce
and lute . They will perlonn "The Theatre of Musicke,• conststing of restOI'ation ayres by PurceU, Lawes. Locke.
Blow, Eccles and Wet-.
Tickets are $4 , studems. $5, se-nior citizens; $8 for the UB commu·
nity and $10 lor all others, and may
be purchased at the door one hour
prior to the performance Tickets may
be purchased in advance at the Cen·
ter for the Arts Box Olf1ce (noon-6
p .m. Tuesday through Fnday) or by
calling TicketMaster at 852-SO(X)
The concan 1s sponsored by the
UB Department of MuSIC. For more
information. can 645-292 1.
~ INSTTTUTE TO HOLD
MEDITATION-

The UB Qigong Institute will hold a
Buffalo Qigong Day on Sunday. Oct.
29 in 210 Student Union on US's
North Campus.
The National Institutes of Health
recently announced its endorsement
of meditation as a remedy lor chronic
pain and insomnia. Qigong is an an·
cient Chinese fOI'm of medit~tk&gt;n that
heals the mind as well as the body.
The program will be presented by
q igong practitioners from Buffalo and
Toronto. AdmtssOO is free, with registration at 12:30. followed by lee·
tures and workshops from 1·4 p .m .
The program will include a trip to
Niagara Falls for an outdoor prachce
session. Refreshments will be served.
Those traveling to Niagara Falls are
asked to bnng along a blanket For
fTlOfe information. ca11689-3947

SELECT-A-SEAT NIGHT

TO INCWDE SASKERAU.
SCIIIMMAQE
The D1vision of AthletiCS will hold a
basketball ·Select-A-Seat Night · at 7
p .m Saturday, Oct 28 1n Alumni
Arena Athletics staff will be availabkt
to help fans select seats and the
Bulls will hold an intrasquad scrimmage beginning at 7:30p.m .
Season tickets start at $63 and in·
elude au men 's and women's games.
For IT'IOfe infOI'mation, call645-3178.

page;

judge YIU' IIICIJ»

_,_. .,.__

lor.., appeal, '
ease d pt8plfttion and Ollglnalily.
If lhe!:e's a brief
"stoly" about the
recipe-how you
created ~. whal
kind of traditions it
represents, how
many years you've
served ~ to rave reviews, etc .. include
that,loo.
Mail or fax to:
Reporter Recipe Contest, 136
Crofts, University at Buffalo,
14260. Or e-mail to
Np0rtet4tpub buffalo.edu
Deadline for receipt of entriesjs Nov. 22.

ZODIAQUE TO STA8E
DANCE CONCERT AT u•
The Zodlaque Danca Company of
the University at Buffalo. directed by

Llnd8 Swlnluch, will present a
dance concert , ·chotc:es· from Nov.
1·5 at 8 p .m ., and on Saturday, Nov
4, at 2 p .m .• 1n the Drama Theatre in
the Center for the Arts.
Theme of the concert Is diversity
and pieces presented will incorporate a variety of chOI'eographic
themes and dance forms from tap to
blues. Music styles include compos1·
tions by Ralph Vaughan Williams: tra·
ditional Gaelic music: a flute. drum
and VOice score by · echoes of
Incas.· and American popular mus1c
Choreographers are Karen
G804'ger. Tressa Gorman Crehan.
Shelley Ha1n. Lynne Kurdziel-Formato.
Eileen Lambert. Linda Swiniuch, Joyce
Miller. Tom Aalabate, William Thomas.
The company includes Jessica E
Abell. Kristy Argentieri. Chen
Cetentano. Elaine Cretaro. Tracy
Degenleldei. Jed)' Dombrowski . Jenni·
fer Hammond. Jaimie L. Hollmer.
Kristin L Knighton. Tawnya S .
Malinowski. Katie Margetanski. Kristine
D. Meyer. Jodi Marie Peters. Stephanie
Plahitko. Debrah Poko&lt;ski. Elizabeth
M. Pol~o. Karen Jay Schupp. Heather

Shiningtaw. Cynthia T. Smith. Tnicy L.
Smith. Melissa I. Spe;glll. Stonn

Sundberg. Michele Utzig . Jill Ann
Wolins and Stacy L. Zawadzlo ..
Tickets are $10 (general admis-

sion) and $5 (students and senkJrs)
and can be obtained at the Center
lor the Arts ticket office (645-ARTS)
or at any TicketMaster outlet.

The Center for Global and Comparative Studies in Education is hosting
the Northeast/Midwest regionaJ conf9fence of the Comparative &amp; lntema·
tiona! Education Society Oct. 27 and ·
28 at the Niagara Falls Ramada Inn.
The theme is "Global Ascendancy
and Local Challenges in Education
and Development· Scholars will discuss educational leadership. the servtce university and academk: freedom,
gender and minority issues, regional
inlegration. mutticultural education,
educational refoon. teacher education.

VESI'EIIS FOR . _ T I O N
IN SLEt: CONCERT HAU.
Vespers fOI' AeforfY\Stion will be presented Sunday. Oct. 29 at 5 p.m . in
Stee Concert Hall on the UB North
Campus. The music vespers, free
and open to the public, include OC'·

gan music and a bell choir from First
Trinity Lutheran churches ot Lockport
and Tonawanda. II is sponso&lt;ed by the
Lutheran Campus Ministry in association with M~ P. BurXe, US director
of mostc. For more Information call
Rev. Roger 0 . Ruff. ~ .

�--.---.........

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contBnL LBttBtl .tlould be britJiand msy be edited for~ Mtd length. 88.,....,. alspoce - . .. ... RsporlstcrnJtpubMsh .. - - , _ _ ,

7

taking. The Earth's population IS presently
5 .6 billion . This number by itself may appear to be meaningless. But if we cons•der
that it took about 30,000 years to reach a

world population of 1 billion. 123 years to

Pro-life display: for
Christians only?
DEAR llllrOR:
I am writing in regard to the recent •pro-life•
display on the UB fronllawns. I will nol en·
gage in a debate about abortion: others can
do lhal more eloquenlly lhan I. However, il
should be pointed out what the pro·lifers are

really about a pro-Christian, only-Christian
agenda. There are 4,200 pieces of evidence
to support this contention. One need only
look at the form of the •protest• : 4,200 white

CROSSES.
Whal exaelly does this mean? Does il mean
only Christian women need not have abo&lt;tions.
bul we of the gutter religions may do as we
wish? Or does il mean lhal unborn souls are
already Christian, only lo be borrowed by nan·
Christian parents for their lime on earth? Or.
are we non-Christians not a part of the · big

picture' in a Christian America?
So, if you are personally agalnsl abortion,
fine wilh me. However, before you suppon
one of lhasa pro-life groups, be clear lhal
lhis is not lhe American way, not the moral
(meaning for everyone) highroad, bul really a
Christians-only scheme lhal funher divides
an already divided America.
IIAIIV1IY " " ' - Computer and Information Technology

Commitment needed
to create more equitable
global society
TO liiE EDITOR:

The week of Oct 22·29. 1995 has been designated as World Population Awareness
Week. This is the time to reflect on the course
that we, the residents of the planet Earth, are

reach 2 billion, 47 years to double that

amount and lhen 13 years lo add lhe fifth
billion. the situation becomes frightening It
is projected that at the present rate of

grOWih of 1.7 percent annually the population will double again in about 40 years ,
with the fastest growth occurring in the
poorest countries.
Some politicians keep their minds closed
to the fact that if population keeps growing
at the p resent rate. the earth will not be able
to accormlOdate the increasing demand on
its limited resources . They maintain that the
free market and technology will solve all our
problems. They theorize that when the d e·
veloping countries raise their living standards, their population growth will slow
down. The fact is that the rate of economic
development of these countries cannot
keep up with the rate of population growth.
Consequently the gap between the have
and the have not is widening . Whereas one

=. .

billion people en)oy an opulent lifestyle
and consume 70 percent of all resources, another billion lives tn appalling
poverty, suffering hunger. malnutritiOn
and ill health Whereas Americans spend
SS biiiK&gt;n annually on we1ghHeducing d•ets. 400 million people consume d1ets Insufficient to maintain normal body and
mind functionS .
The creation of a susta1nable and
more equitable global soc1ety cannot be
accomplished w1thout the United States·
commitment to curbing its htgh consumption level as well as 1ts full parhc•pa t•on in the populalion stabil1zatton pohCies. An 1nternat1onal effort to ra1se the
status and education of women . and to
provide them with access to fam•ty planning services is essent1a1
For information on what everyone of us

can do, contact Zero Populallon Growth.
1400 16th St. f'ofW, Suite 320. Washongton.
DC 20036. phone (202) 332·2200
SIUIUND F. ZA.KitZEWSIU
UB ProfesSOI Emer~tus

e-m DMaion ~ r:Nerthe-10 put lheir

In_.

lliOtlld II N·1'Wit8:e
play.
Kb't -·lle74:08nwk llred the 11&amp;*1 peal Northeastern llinols Saturday aile&lt;·
noon it CNclgO. Ediu Oltpewho aamed the 88list an lhe goal, a 25-looter from OUISide the _
boot Jitl Schoenberg -.ned allliAI:U it his collegial&amp; game s1opp&lt;1g seven Golden Eagle
ahols. The lllllfDh was~ &lt;mer raity condltiono wilh mixed in at llmeo CIIU8ing for a
nUidv field.
UB lhen II.Cieled aoelback as lhe Buls _ , - t e d 2-1 at Valperaloo on Sunday.
VllpontiiO'o 8rylrt McCullough IICOI8d lhe fi&lt;sl goal for lhe Crusaders just 2:05 iniD the matcl&gt;.
Keith Cabltl-.cled lhe margin to 2.0 acortng atlhe 26:57 mt!l1&lt; belore UB's Dow1 Ciolek
8COIIId lhe e.JII' only goal at37:51 . Schoenberg stopped three shoes. UB OUCShct the Crusad-

a.-

ens 32-6.

Ill

htMI"""'ItYee
chat I l)i&lt;A ISlip&amp;.

fiiCIIUII.
The~ '*I., open W8ll&lt; on the IIChtldule as1hey prepare for a 1es1 at Hofstra lhis Friday
n11n- IJII'a ,_home game Ia against NAJA _ . Cenlrai'State of Ohio at UB Stadium on
"""'· 4. Klc*clllulallld.for 1:3l p.m.

VOLUYULL
The Royals -.1 2-1 """' the weekend vislling lhree of lheir Mid-Conlinenl Western Division
rivals. UB now stands at 16-11 overall.
'
.
UB breezed pas1 Chicago Slat'e 15-5, 16-14, 15-7 an Friday. Laurie Santelli had nine kins lo
lead coach Bob Maxwell's squad. Aprllle Sweeting added lhree service aces as UB lolaled
12 in the malch.
Tha Royals lhen fall fo.defending conference champion Valparaiso in three games 17· 15,
15-12, 15-a. Candie Hirsl had 15 kills and 10 digs in lhe match wilh Santelli adding 12 kills
and 14 digs.
UB concluded the weekend wilh a four-game victory at Norlheaslem Illinois 15-a, 15-4,
· 12·15, 15-4. Sanlelli registered 15 kills and 14 dig~ lo lead the Royals past lhe Golden
Eagles. Candi Sims had a sttong match wilh 37 assists, 17 digs, eight blocks and lhree ser·
vies aces while Kalhy Brinkworlh, the conference leader in block average, also had eighl total blocks. Sweeting led lhe blockers wilh nine.

The Buls concluded their home schedule on Oct. 18 dropping a 2· 1 decision to St.
~ at RAG Allld. David SeM!IIo 8COIIId t'AO goals for lhe Bonnles 10 lead the team to
lhe win. SeM!Itoopened lhe sooring in the first half with his first goal 11:15 into the match off
o n - from Chip Wamer. St. Bonaventure led 1.0 at halflime.
The I!Uio ~ 10 Ia the ITIIIch 11151:16 as Mike Bangilo teglstered a goal o!! an assist by 500'
T-.Bol\~-ln'Cif'IJtD&lt;-in'"*""'MRACAIIId lcrt'eiNI-. SeMiohll
.. .~juat-45- - - I O g i \ 1 0 the Bcnrtlt!e lhe2·1-.
UB had chances to tie lhe match including a pair of direcl kiclcs lhat Sailed high """'
the CfOIIber bul could nol get anolher - Tha Bulls oulsholthe Bannies 13-10. Chris
BarteUa had eight- for the Bulls while
Valesky had 6even for St. ~.

MEN'S

wau...

a WOIEN'S 1ENNIS

Again Mother NaJure ~ a role In the weekend's tennis action as rain and winds forced the ·
pos1p0t temet rt of the UB Fall Clas&amp;lc.
Both teams hav8 had strang fall seasons wilh Joe Davis' women's squad currently holding
an \Jndefealed 1HI marl&lt;. Slacey Gargan leads the Royals singles players wilh a 1M mark
this fall at number five while Nr!y Borden Is 10.1 ovet'all a1 number fOUf.
The Buns are currently~ 1 for coach Russ Crtspell. Mike Proulx remains undefeated In
singles play ai9-0 seeing action at numbers two, lhree, and lour. Three Bulls, Bill Par1&lt;s, Wadle
Kawar, and Andrew Garber, are each 6-1 . Kawar and Sieve Dahm are 7.{) in doubles play
while Proulx and Parl&lt;s are 6-1 .
- Ted Wasko, Sports Information Office

nus WEEK'S HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS
Thursday. Oct 26 Men'S &amp; Women's
Temis vs. St. Bonaventure

3 p .m

Univers•ty Tennis Club

Robert Morris

1 p .m

Alumni Arena

Women's Tennis vs.
Cleveland State

10a.m

Untverstty Tennis Club

Saturday. Oct. 28

Women's Volleyball vs.

Sunday, Oct. 29

CALENDAR

---of
-CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

members. For infonnation, caJI
829-2608.

The Bot ud Blue Art : Unde.rltandla&amp; Juz, Prof. Robtn H.
Rossberg. Fanny' s Restaurant. 7
p.m. $25 GSEAA members and
students; $30 non-members. fac ulty. friend s. For information.
ca11645-249 1.

Cbokes. Zodiaque Dance Com-

pany. Drama 'ThealrC, Center for
the Arts. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m.
$2.50, $5. Call 645-ARTS .
Jazz

Btla Fleck and the FIKkl:onts.
Rockwell Hall Auditorium, BuffaJo State College. 1300
Elmwood. 8 p.m. $ 16, $18. Co-

sponson:d by WBFO 88.7 FM .

a.allavestiptions. 'J'heresc R.
Banas. 7-8:30 p.m. For inform•·
tion, call the Office of StUdent
Life II 645-612.5.
LJr.Wori&lt;Mop
The Moral &amp; Etbkal DimenaioDJ of l...eadHihlp, Pu tor
Roaer Ruff and Father Patrick
Keleher. 7:30-9:30 p.m. F« inform.ation, call the Office of Student Life at '645-6125 .

_. .........
....,

"'A Woma.a AloDe" aDd " 19
..... ftoaa Europe." films by
A,niesb Holland and Marcel
Lozinski. Scrcenina Room. Cen-

ter for the Arts. North Campus.
7:30p.m. Free.

of·----··....

lite
.t
ttll
Tile Women's
Health lniti1tive
C linic is presenting the second
annual .. Breast &amp; CervicaJ HeaJth

-IDI-.r

.,_.,...,-"

Gary Wolfe' s MAH thesis ex-

hibit, .. Paintina. of a Spirit,"
operu with a reception todly
from 5-7 p.m. in lhe An Depanment OaJiery located in the Center for the Arts on the North
Campus. lbe exhibit continues
tbrou&amp;h Nov. 10. Gallery hours

are TUesday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.;

Wednesday thtouJh Fridoy, 10

a.m.-8 p.m.; and Saturday. II
a.m...a p.m. Also today. the an.ist
willcive a slide-lectu re on
Judeo-Christian imagery in 20.h-

Volo' e eolo altow
Alfonso Volo is a poet and an anist whose work is on view
through Nov. 5 in the Univenity
Gallery, Center for the Aru.
Nonh Campus.

Cr.rt

w-..._ beCin

The Creative Crafl Center. 120
Fillmore, Ellicott Complex,
North Campus, is offering fall
'95 crafl workshops beginning
Oct. 30. Children's classes also
arc offered. For more infonnation. call 645 -6125 or 645·2434 .

An Exhibit" throug h Nov . 30 at
the clinic, 65 Farber Hall, Sooth

Campus.

·-

CONJINUINII EXHiaiTS

ur.w~

Myths aad Fa&lt;U Abovt Criml-

ceruury an, at 6 :45p.m. in the
Screen ina Room of the .Center for
the Arts. Admission to these
evenu is free.

l.lllnry- - ""The Torchbearer,"' an exhibit by
Univenity Archives honoring the
75th anniversary of the UB endowment campaigns of the 1920s
led by WaJtc:r P. Cooke, is on
view through Nov. 9 on the ma1n
floor of Loc:twood Library ,
North Campus.

...

-

~
~
.. Hamilton Houston Lownie Ar·
cbitects" is oo view tbtouglt Nov.
3 in James Dyen Edtibition Hall .
335 H1yes HaJI, South Campus.
Houn are Monday throuah Fridly, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 1be exhibit
is presented by the School of Architecture&amp;

Pl~nnina .

-..

ACE/NIPMary Roseberry will give a talk,
"Speak Up 1nd Get Ready for the
Silence."' at the ACfJN IP breakfast meeting Nov. 3 at8:30 a.m.
m Room 2 I I of Building G on
the Niag&amp;B County Community
College c1mpus in Sanborn. Professor Roseberry is from the
NCCC facu lty . ACfJNIP is the
Americ1n Council on Education.
and the National ldentific1tion

Program for Women in Education. Tiw: cost of the breakfast
meeting is 57 . To ~gister(by

Oct. 3 1) call 73 1-3271. ext. 530.
For information, call ACfJN IP' s
UB liaison Kim Pachetti at 6452 181. ext. 537.

.....,........

lnstructk»nal Suppor1 Techni-

cian (SL-l) ·lnformation Re ·
sources. School of Dental Medi·
cine, Posting tP-5013. St:nior
Staff As btant (SL-l)-Public•·
lions, Posting fP-5043. Senk»r
ProznuaiD&lt;r Aul)'lt (SL-4)Equal Opportunity/Affinnative
Action Office. Posting fP-5038.
lmtructional Suppor1 Sp«iallst
Ontrnal PromoUonal Oppor-

sistant/Auoc:iar~

Proreuor-Pe·

diatrics. Posting fF-5042. A.tsi.slani/Assodat~

Proressor -

Neurosurgery. Posting tF-5043

Clinical Assodal~ Proreuor
(HS)-N uclear Medicine. Postmg
IIF-5044. Assistant Professor·
Chemical Engineering, Posung
fllF-5045 . Assistant Prort:S§OrChc:mica\ Engineering, Posting
fllF -5046. A.ssinani/Assodate/
Full Professor -Chemical Engineering. Posting iiiF-5047 A.uis-

lant Professor-Chemical Eng1 ·
n«ring , Posting IF-5048.
Assistant Proressor..Chem1stry.
Posting IIF-5049. C linic.alln-

structor/Cilnical AssisUnt/
C Unklii Associate Proressor
(two positk»ns available)-Oer·
matology. Posting fF-5050

·-

Project Staff Assoc.iat~-Oevel opment. Posting fR -95090.

ProjKt Staff Auodatt-Dcvel-

5049.

opment. Posting tR-95098. SH-relar-y II ·C1lspan-U8 Research
Center. Posting •R -95099.

AssisUnt/Assodatt ProfeuorPedi•trics. Posting fF-504 1. As-

To obtam morr information on
jobs list~ abo\·~. contact Pusonnel Suvius. 104 Crofts Halt.

lunity, SL-4) -Engineering and
Applied Sciences. Posting lfP-

,_"'

�8

o.e.e.r-.~

....... .,.....

.--_...__
............... __ _.,
--... .......
__.. - ----·---_
.. _ _.
·--......
--·
...................
- -.lo)oce-w..-

Nicbolu ~~-For

-

.... c

·-·

Ph.D. 306 Farber. South Campus.
I 2:30p.m.

~c-a-..­

BonavealUft. EIHcou Couns.
North Campus. 3 p.m.

I'IIJolco Collooitt-

Fnctal Geo.dry u a Meus of
StudyiDJ Trabecular 8oae
Slrudure, Prof. Stwmila
Majumdar, Univ. of California,
San Francisco and Berte ley. 220
Natural Sciences. North Campus.
3:45p.m.

-

lllclloCic.l . . , _
Controllrd lte Formation In

O...erwt.;terlaa Pt.ants: The Rok
of Itt Nuc.keatloa.ad Aatifret:u
Proteins, Dr. Marilyn Griffith,
Univ. of Wllerloo. 114
Hochs:tetter. Nonh Campus.
4 p.m.
Plt.... FCJUtkl . . . . . . . .
Pb.ydo&amp;oakal Alteratkms In Su\falt R~aal Traaspor1, Hwa-

Jeona Lee. S08 Cooke. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

S_Coi._IM•
SoiH Statistial Iuues iA Fonnsk DNA, Prof. Seymour Gcisser.
Univ. of Minnesota. 244 Cary.

Alt.,......

Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.

hlatiaa, of a Spirit, Gary Wolfe.
MAH thesis u:hibit. Ar1 Department Gallery, Center for the Arts.
North Campus. S-7 p.m. Free.
Throu&amp;h Nov. 10. Gallery hours
Tuesday 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Wednesday-Friday 10 a.m.-8 p.m.: Saturday II a.m.-8 p.m.

-,.-u..,

lnf'ormatiollllmfttlne Fall1996
adlllisslon lata the Batbdor of
Sd eMe In PharnlKy. 225 ·Natural
Scicpces. North Campus. 5-6 p.m.
Art Lecture
Judeo-Chrbtian Imagery In
ZOih-Century Ar1, Gary Wolfe.

,.._, ..... -...usap.

__

_.._

a,.......lo..........,Greu

...,_,

Broffmarr., M.D. Kincb Auditorium, OUktrco's Hospital. 8 a.m.

---

en Worbbop, UB WUid EDICIDblc, Sui&lt; Cboi, cxpa, Kim
Foo&gt;es,Oute,ThloCbqY001.
piaoo, Heleoo Bupllo, piaoo,
UBuffalo S,...,.,..y. Slce Coocen Hall, Nor1h Campus. 8 p.m.
$3. Pwt D of two-podi!IDdettUlh
Celdntioo pmeotcd by the UB
Dept. of Music.

TBA- Ampbi_,.,., 3nl floor, Eric
County Mccficol Ccn~&lt;r. 10:30 a.m.

1lllnll •

.....

c...,.._ Sorptloa "'Or-

..,..., Aclcb ud '-Pal&lt; lou
oa ~. Dr. OIVid Dz.ombak,
Carnegie Mellon Un.iv. 140

-

......,__

KelleT. North Camplu. II a.m.

The .......... "' ............. octloa

................... .,....,..,Dr.
l..any Trussell, Univ. of Wisconsin.
134 Cary. South Campu.s. Noon.

~­

~htric:ia
J . Ekrttia. 2 18 N0r1on .
North Campus. 3 p.m.

..................
-·~

_
-

R........., Alloaotloo Ia Dlslrlbuted-MtiDOry Sy.ae...., Prof.
Nian-Feng Tung. Univ. of S.W,
Louisiana. Knox 14. North Campus. 3 p.m. Sponsored by IEEE
Computer Society.

__,

D oslp, Syot....U aad Antitumor Activity or AnaJop or the

Cytotollic: Saqoltaplne IUudiD
~Or. Frederick R. Kinder,
Sandoz Pharmaceutical Corp. 121
Cooke. North Campus. 3 p.m.

-......, Celloo!JooProposlllo. .l TbouJbt b Structured, Mark TeJ.lor, CSU
Stanford and Univ. of Hamburg.
68,4 Baldy. North Campus. 3 p.m.

C-.trr Colloqttht•
Chemistry of lon .R..dicals, Prof.
Joshua L. Goodman. Univ . of
Rochester. 215 Naruntl Sciences.
North Campus. 4

e-m.

HI-C-

" Bin und Zuriik" opera, and
works for winds, oraan, nute,

Elli&lt;:oa C4tnple&gt;t. North Campus.
6-7 p.m. free. Dink;...- Bald
Eqle_ Rod Toll Hawt, Banod
OwL-byED-

,_

..,.... ... c......-StatL
Ellicca Courts. North Camplu.
10 a.m.

-w--..
Qlpoe Dey, QiaooaiMlitute.
GSA. l.c&lt;lun:o IUid wortJhopo 1-4
p.m., tbea. trip 10 Nlacara Fans.
(brl"' • bl..ut). Qiaooa II .. oocient Olioese form of modiwion
tlw beals the mind u well u the
body. 210 StudeDl UDioo. Nonh
Campus. 12:30 p.m. free. For infomwion, call 689-3947.

Statter"l.r- Caa We Talk! Lee

Reeves, Natioul Sruttering
Project. 101 Baldy. North Compus. 9 a..m.-5 p.1n. $35-$45: Sludents $10-SIS. Register in .dvance by calJioa838-3999 or
645-3400, ext 132.

__

N iDi~ IUid Bjonl

.u"""'

Dope. 7-8 p.m.
For illfomwion, call the O!fia: of
Srudeot Ufc at 64S-6125.

....--.
_...,......,

.._

h f f T - . ...... .U.bfree. c - -...... for
.. Wlii'O D.7 PM tbe
foiJowiDa s-, .. 4 ......

The UDil&lt;d Natloas Aft&lt;r SO
Yean, Prof. Michael Prosser,
Rochester lnstiwte of Technology.
Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 10 a.m. Free. Sponsored by
WNY chapter of Fulbright Assn.

ut.W_.._.
Albriabt-Kno• Art Galluy

Tour,L.orey Repicci. Depart from
campus IO: IS a.m.; gallery tour
starts 11 : 15 Lm. tO: IS a..m.-2:30
p.m. For information. caJilhe Office of Student Ufe aJ 645-6125.

ucrrw--.,
lntrodudkMIIO Sua. Nooo-2
p.m. To register, call Academic
Servieel, CompulinJ and Information Technolgy (ASCTT) User
LiaiJOn office at 645-3540.

w-··v...,_

Royollva. Rob&lt;rtMonU.
Alumni Arena. North Campus.
I p.m. Free.

-c:ouo....

Opencb ood Moduli Spacos.
Prof. A. Vorooov. llniv. of Pennsy lvania. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
Mttolc
16tb ADnlllll HJ&amp;b ~bool Honon
Chorale aDCI UB Cbolr, Harriet
Simons, conductor. Site Colleen
HaJJ. Noeth Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

---~·
For illformotioo, call the

Wolcto, Nilllto IUid Bjoni-Bope.

8-9 p.m.

o.--.

0 ... Zodlaquo ~Moe a-

Omc:e or Srudml Ufe at 645612S.

pay.

Otr-.

ldeotllylor. ............... ...,
Tra........ Sa
Dr.
Carol Ball. S.......... by Social
Wort Cootloulna Education. Center for Tomorrow. Nonb Campus.
8:45 a..m.-3:30 p.m. $60: students
$35. To rt:&amp;isler, ca1164.S-6140.

_.._
~­

A...._.tk: Voctobldary E~:paD­
ao.'J'Iaroqla Narrative c_.
tot, Kareo Ehdi&lt;:h. 224 Bdl.
Nonh Compos. 3 p.m.

ucrrw--.

latnldactloa to UNIX. 3-S:30
p.m. To reJlslC:r, call Academic
Services, Computina and Information Technoi&amp;Y (ASCffi User
Uaisoo office at 645-3.540.

ur.w--.
You're Not LilteDlac, Ed
Brodka. 3:30-S p.m. For information. call tbe Offtee of Student
Ufe at64.S-t;t25.

-

TBA- Cofetorium A- M=y HospitaL 8:30a.m.

c:-roc

ur.--.

~ ler MM1alt, Pot L
Smith. ~pants shoWd have
rt:ad some of AnD Rice's wvam.
pire Ouooiclcs.. 3:31)-S p.m. For
information. call the: OffiCe of
Srudent Ufe at64S-6125.

....,.._

G. Younkin, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, florida. G-26 Farber.
South Campu.s. 4 p.m.

_,_

~

AdvucodToplc:slo
~I adD,
David Z. D' Ar&amp;enio, Ph.D., Univ.
or Southern California. 248
Cooke. NOrth Campus. 8 a.m. In
conjuoctioa with Dept. or
Pharmaceutics.

of Lelldenhlp, Pastor
Roger Ruff and Father Patrick
Keleher. 7:3()...9:30 p.m. For information. call the Office of Student
Life at645-6 125.

=YM~~~"T~~
Elm and Carlton. 12:30 p.m.

-LZ.IeoltiM.-.
I.Actotre

UNIX~t

Custo.JutloL I :3()..4 p.m. To

1945: Poland ilttbe End of

register, call Academic Services,
Computin&amp; and lnfonil.ation
TechooiiY (ASCfl) User Liaison
offiCe al 64·S.3.S40.

Inspecting Clolhesline Project at 'Take Back
the Night' program Oct. 19 are students Jeer
sica Simon, left, and Jody Treiser. Events included a candlelightvigil. The bbservance,
focusir1g Oli survivors Qf sexuai8S811U1t, IDOk
place on the South Campus.

leV_ _ ...,_.

tory-loLac .........

-........_.......
_

... Dr. Gre&amp; Gnbowlti,Scbool or Public llealtb. 134B
Fubef. South Camplu. II o.m.
G....--tlal'......-ootlle
Net. 223 Loctwood. Nonh &lt;;ampus. Noon. To reJister, call 645-

2817.

........,

,

I aG2-Medlaled~or
Adlaobodluo
--:-oiC..

-y-

~oiFc:yaDooi'Diy­

_,._.....,...........,... Prof.

M IIi: E. WiiJoo. 245 Cory. South

,..,_c-...

Campu.s. Noon.

OptloDal Pnctlcal'lnioalq. 330
Student Union. North Campus. 4
p.m. s.......... by the orr... of
Intemational Education.

N oola......., LaJoas or tb•
Brust: Atypia Ud 111 SliM Ductal c..u-, Dr. Jomes

!lion~

Plua.

_...._.

.......

ut. WOfi&lt;Mop
The Mon~t &amp;r: Ethkal Dlmen-

-

.....,.._

WedDe:tdliY~Il4

'S lpol-r..--.,.

-

seling Center staff. Noon- I p.m .
For information. call tbe Office of
Srudent Ufe at 645-6125.

~~;~ ~~:~ ~~· i~~~c:..

..

_,

,..,_ oiooa. 438 a-...-

_
-

lledodJsa IDtol&lt;niDC&lt;, UB Coun-

tion, call the Office of Student
l.ife at 645-6 125.

__

:-~.lii!···--·­

Dr. l d l n y - . , UDiv. of
s.. Frucioco. 108
s-Sooth Campus. 8 .....

Califcnio.

Campus. 10 a.m. free. Pin or

Appllcollooo ol Statlsticol M ..
.. Iodamy, Dr. Rojat
B - Alli&lt;d Sipallac. 220 NOIU
raJ Scieoc:a. North Campus.
3:45p.m.

~--ot

T be Role of A•yloid in
Ab..bt:haer's Diteue, Dr. Sleven

I
I 0&lt; .... AtU. Nor1h ~ 8
p.m. $6-$18. For- diocoullt
caii64S-6147; fe&lt; liD&amp;Ieca11 as:z-sooo.

Data Coo--. to UNIX VIa
Tope fnlta Olila' Plolfanu. 2-4
p.m. To reaiJaer, call Academic
Serviea. Computina and lnfonna
lion Techoolgy (ASCIT) User
Uaiton offlCC at 64S-3S40.

ur.w--.,

..

7-8 p.&amp; For-Olficeol-

c:italllall.-~7p.a.

.UC:ITW.........
latroductioo to Sun. 10 a.m.Noon. To rt:gister, call Academic
Services, Computing and Information Tecbnolgy (ASCm User
U&amp;ison offtee ll645-3540.

'IDBDII

____

ur. .. 64S-612S.

mm•,,,......,.

ur.w--.,

Du Maritnlebe.n. Sarah Leonard,
soprano. and Jens Bamleck, piano.
Buffa lo KislOrical Society, 25
Nottingham Court . 8 p.m. $3. Part
I of 1wo-par1 Hindemith Celebra·
tion presented by the UB Dept. of
Music.

........ c_...,

2817.

lib-.,""--

tho AtU. llas1b " - ' I p.m.

The Key to the Ha ppy Life a nd
Immediate Ea.ll&amp;htenment. 330
Srudent Union. Nor1h Campus.
7- 10 p.m. Free.

NI-C-

....
--. .... ....--.
Lode..,..._..
--.coli
c:....-.
....
Studies .......... For illformMioa,
caii64S-224.5.

c;.,..

...,..223 ~-c-.

.,.._ 7p.m. To,..;.._coii64S-

nso." ·CaU6U-AKTS.

·---

Lounge. Canisius College. 7:30
p.m. Free.

UI Wlop:

w-- --w--.I•J -- -=.=r.-uij-""=
----.

--..--.

Screening Room. Center for the
Ar1 s. Nor1h Campus. 6:45p.m.
Free.

World War II, Piw Wrobel,
Univ. of Toronto. Grupp Firt:side

--y--

llaody. 6-8 p.m. F o r call .... Ol!'w:e o f - ur. ..
64S-612S.

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Continued on page 7

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFA LO

Clllleliid llilto Fas

On Sal Aalh VIctims

"Take Back the Night." a candlelight vigil
and program focusing on victims and surv~­
VO&lt;S of sexual assault. will be held Thursday,
Oct. 19. on the UB South Campus. More
than 500 are expected to attend the event.
which will begin at 7 p .m in Harriman Hall
Speakers will include survivors of sexual assault.
The program. sponsored by UB's AntiRape Task Force. a division of Sub-Board I.
is open to the public

October 19 1995

Volume 27 . No. 8

Provost asks UB to
'look at priorities'
Honors presented at Convocation Oct. 1 3

ROVOST Thomas E.
Headrick presented his
first formal address to
the university community Oct. 13 as UB faculty, staff, students and friends
gathered for the first in what university officials hope will become
an annual fall tradition celebrating
the accomplishments offacuity and
staff, the University Convocation.
The Convocation was held in
honor of SUNY honorary degree
recipientSaraL.awrence-Lightfoot.
and in recognition of faculty appointed to SUNY distinguished
ranks in 1994-95 and the 1995
SUNY Chancellor's Award recipients. Chancellor Thomas A.
Bartlen. was scheduled to assist in
the presenUltion of awards, but was

unable to attend the ceremony.
"I will have very much failed if
what I say today goes unchallenged," Headrick noted at the be-

ginning of his address in the Center
for the Ans Mainstage Theater.
If UB is to meet its obligations
to students in the future, it is going
to have to tnke a look at its programs, priorities and its attitude
toward the way it educates students, according to Headrick. 'The
'public' in 'public research university' has been put on a strict diet,"
he said.
While the range and diversity of
programs are important to the university, UB can no longer afford
academic programs that cannot
hold lbcir own. The university
needs to deal directly and honestly
with programs that are unlikely to
have what Headrick called "criti -

Study sees differences in
his/hers brain patterns
II)' LOIS IIAKEit
News Services Staff

A .tuc1y of br81n orpon1ut1on in prepubenal children by UB
neuroscientists has demonstrated for the first time that differences in the
way the male and female brains process infonnation are present early in
life, and are not laid down during the hormonal surges of pubeny. as
previously thought. The researchers also have pinpointed for the first
time the areas of the brain in prepubertal children that are involved in the
perfoflllllnce of cenain tasks.
The findings may lead to a bener understanding of why hoys are more
likely to develop language-related disabilities such as dyslexia and stunering,
and why girls are more likely to develop "nonlanguage" problems such as
math disability. The resean:hers stress that their findings indicate a difference
in brain organization between the sexes, not superiority or inferiority. Not all
hoys and girls show these differences. they state.
Principal researchers Janet L. Shucard and David W. Shucard. facult y
members in UB 's Department of Neurology , presented results of the
study Oct. 13 in Toronto at the annual meeting of the Society for
Psychophysiological Research.
"We wanted to answer the question 'Is there a brain organization that
is developed very early based on hormonal expression prenatally and
early postnatally?'" said David Shucard. UB professor of neurology.
pediatrics and psychology. "Hormones are known to affect brain devel opment and certain types of cognitive functions in animals. It -has been
thought that in humans, differences in cognitive function between the
sexes emerge during puberty. We hypothesized that these differences are
laid down before and shoitly after birth."
In the present investigation, prepubenal children were studied to determine if behavioral and neurophysiological evidence is present to support
this hYJX&gt;thesis, and to define the brain areas most involved in two specific
tasks~bject-recognit ion memory and spatial-localization memory.
The study is pan of a large, multi-year NIH -funded project
Using an electrophysiologic technique called probe auditory-evoked
potentials to locate and measure brain activity. the researchers rec~rded
brain responses of 12 mate and 12 female 8-to-12-year-olds, vta 20
electrodes attached to the scalp, while they did face matching and dotlocation matching, two tasks requiring spatial reasoning and memory.
The study produced two previously unreponed findings:
The parietal lobes of the cortex were more involved than other areas
Continued on page 2

cal mass."
While he does
not foresee the
wholesale abolition of depart ments , Headrick
said. university
faculty have probably tolerated departmental
weakness more
than was neces- PniSident Greiner, rleltt, conlero honorary cSe&amp;ree on Sara t..wJene&amp;UChtfoot lit Conve&gt;sary, and "taking eatlon Oet. 13 In Center lor t he Arts. UB Council Choir Philip Wels Iaiit left.
from the strong to
fessional schools-is spread too
US faculty and administration
shore up the weak cannot be senthinly to do everything well," he
need to build on the university's
sible strategy."
said. "ln several areas that critical
strengths and not cater 10 the small
"US's organizational structure
mass is missing
number of programs that do not
is not sacrosanct," he said.
Programs that \ac\:. the criti.ca\
share those strengths. Departments
The universit-y needs to make
mass robe effective may need robe
must no longer have the prerogathe most of the talent and ingenuity
reorganized into centers and insti tive to prevent collaboration across
UB's faculty possess. Headrick
tute s, Headrick said. In addition.
depanmental lines. UB needs to
said. "Self-directed, academically
UB will need to look at offering a
find inventive ways to build its
free faculty are the strength upon
broader. less narrowly specialized
graduate programs. And "if our
which universities are built ."
doctoral
ed
uca
ti
on
.
Likewi
se.
organizationaJ structures inhibit our
And the university needs to engraduate programs may need to be
drive for success, we must overcourage a more cross-disciplinary
consolidated within the system by
ride them." Headrick concluded.
method of education. ··we bow
concentrating specializations with
In add ition to Headrick's ad more often than we should to de other SUNY Center campuses.
dress. nine members of UB · s facpartmental obstacles to teaching
"UB has an opponunity to deulty were honored as the 1995
o uts idedisciplines .... Too often de recipients of Chancellor's Awards
velop graduate programs that blend
partmental priorities trump institust udy combinations that broaden
for Excellence in Teachmg: Richtional needs,·· Headrick said.
the opportunities for studen ts while
ard R. Almon, associate professor,
''U B-with its three faculties
taking advantage of US's unique
and 28 department s in the an~ and
stre ngt hs." Head rick said.
sc iences. five schools. seven proConunued on page 2

SUNY 'rethink' has
By CIIIIISnNE VIDAL
Reporter Editor

T

IME IS without a doubt
the greatest enemy faci ng
the SUNY Board ofTrustees as it continues its work
on Rethinking SUNY. a multi-year.
comprehensive, statewide plan to
reform the State University sys·
tern.
With the Dec. I deadline fast
approaching, the stakes are high as
the trustees look at the future of
public higher ed ucation in New
York State.
In response 10 a mandate by the
state legislature, the tru stees have
formed four committees, made up
of trustees. members of the SUNY
Faculty Senate and SUNY campus
representatives , to examine a vari ety of issues related to higher education. The committees· charge: ro
find ways to deal with the dramatic
and recurring reductions in state
tlU suppon for SUNY' s operating
budget. "!'hile at the same time
avoiding huge tuition increases.
Committee areas are Operations.
Structure, Missio n/Vi sion. and

Dee. 1 deadline

Operating Revenueffuition.
The issues to be examined cover
a broad range. from system-wide
administration to faculty productivity. learning productivity and
time-to-degree averages. utilization of academic and administra tive technology. condi tions for
encouraging entrepreneurship and
strengthe ning academic specialization. Even the configurat ion of the
SUNY system is not sacrosanct. as
the trustees and others responsible
for Rethinking SUNY look at detail s such as the geographical origins of students on each campus.
space utilization by campuses. expenditures and comparative peer
revenue data.
The Operations and Structure
committees have been asked to
exami ne areas that include busi ness services. management nex ibility, computing services and
technology. student services am.l
systems, SUNY system administration, campus colla boration. faci lities and entreprene urship.
More specifically. th e focus is
on a fundamental redesign ofbusi-

ne ss functions: redefinition of the
system office and campus re!estionships; a serious exa minati on
of regional or multi-campus pannerships: and a renewed emphasis
on campus responsibility and accountability for measurable outco mes. rather th an inputs and
process controls.
Among the recommendations
under consideration:
• Re-engineering of SUNY's
busi ness services by improving and
automating the revenue account ·
ing system. and investigating competitive procurement of se lected
suppon services.
.. lncreased management n~x ­
ibil ity through the decentr.Jii zat!o n
of Civil Service position classification, certification and recrull ment req uirements. a nd the
introduction of an ongomg rcure ment incentive.
• Improvements to computer
services and technology by re-c:ngineering current procedures to
utilize computer technology tore Contmued on page 2

�2

Nation's official poet 1
reads from works '
Rita Dove appears In DlatlftCUished Speakers Series
• r aTEiiE cox
Reporter Staff

.S. POET LAUREATE Rita
Dove gave her final reading Oet.
II as the nati on's official poet
on Mainstage at the Center for
the Arts. The first of four speakers to appear in UB 's Disti nguished Speakers Series, Dove is the Commonwealth ProfessorofEnglish at the UniversityofVirginia.
where she teaches creative writing and poetry. She has authored four poetry collec-

U

ti ons and a soon-to-be-produced play.

Dove became the first African -American, as well as the youngest person, to serve
as U.S. Poet Laureate when she was ap-

pointed by President Cli nton in I 993. When
her term expires thi s later thi s month, forme r

UB professo r Robert Hass will assume the
post. She has been awarded I0 honorary
degrees during her career and was named
one of I 0 "Outstanding Women of the Year"
in 1993 by Glamour magazine.

Love brought her to poetry, Dove explained, and it fill s her poems: Love of the
Engli sh language. Jove of her grandparents,
love of mythology and Jove for her husband
and child . Dove's poetry has a strong
storytelling element. and it is not metered as
conventfonal poetry might be. "To read me
correctly ," said Dove a1one point. ··requires

a strong rhythm and blues syncopation."
Dove read a number of excerpts from her
I 987 anthology ''Thomas and Beulab," a
collection of poems based loosely on the
lives of her grandparents, that earned Dove
the I 987 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. "I say the
poems are based loosely,'' she explained,
"because I changed · some things-mostly
facts. See, you can change things like the
color of a sCarf or a name, but you can't
change the emotional truth."
Poetry writing is very much like work to
Dove. It is a daily activity in her scbedule
and, she explained, it is part of her continuing education. ''The great pan of the writing
is the di scovery," she said. "If I don' t come
away knowing something I didn't know before, then I feel I failed."
''The Great Palaces of Versailles" captures her grandmother daydreaming, as she
pressed alterations in an Ohio dress shop,
about a trip to Paris she would never make.
Later, Dove explained that when she finally
made it to Paris herself. "it was like I was
seeing it through my grandmother's eyes."
"Better not look an island woman in the
eye, unless you like to feel unnecessary ... "
declared Dove. desc ribing the strong-willed
women from the West Indies encountered on
the streets of Paris in the poem. " Island
Woman."

CONVOCATION
Continued from page 1

biological sciences; Stephen J. Free, associate professor. biological sciences; Stacy C.
Hubbard. ass istant profe ssor. English:
Michael S. Hudeck.i . research associate professor, biological sciences; James N. Jensen,
assistant professor, civil engineering; Will iam A. Miller. professor. oral diagnostic
services: Johannes M. Nitsche, assistant professor. chemical engineering; Judith H.
Tamburlin, assistant professor. clinical laboratory science: and Margari ta Vargas. ass ista nt professor. modern langu ages and
literatures.

Recipients of the Chancellor's Awards
for Excellence in Librarianship also were
honored. They are Gayle J. Hardy-Davis,
subject specialist. library sciences and communications, Lockwood Memorial Llbrary ~
and Cynthia Hepfer, head. Serials and Bindery Department. Health Sciences Library.
Also, re cipients of the Chancellor's
Awards for Excellence in Professional Ser·
vice were honored. They are Rita Green
Lipsitz, assistant to the chair, Department of
English: and Judith K. Miller, director of
State Purchasing Campus Services.
0

RETHINK
Continued from page 1

duce cost and the admin istrative burden of
paper dbcuments.
• Integration of student services and systems. including Financial Aid, Registrar,
Student Accounts and other related offices.
to improve efficiency and customer service.
• Elimination of duplication of effon
within SUNY System Administration among
State UniversityoOf New York (SUNY), Research Foundation (RF) and State Univers it y Construction Fund (SUCF) and
re-engineeririg business systems and practices to benefit from economics of scale.
• Encouraging campus collaboration in order to provide selected human resources func·
tionsona regional basis and achieve economics
of scale in equipment and operation.
• Acceleration of energy conservation
effons.
• Encouraging entrepreneurship by changing the utility allocation model and allowing
campuses to retain the savings~ amending
the SUNY Board of Trustees policies to
permit short-term rentals and leases; and
providing relief from restrictive personnel
policies. including term/permanent appointments.
Senior Vice President Roben J. Wagner
wi ll be talking with various university groups
between now and the Dec. 1 deadline, and

members of the university community will
have an opportunity to offer their comments
on and reactions to Rethinking SUNY .

BRAIN PAnERNS
Continued from page 1

of the brain in performing the spatial tasks in
prepubertal boys and girls, a finding other
investigators have seen in adults.
Even at this age, patterns of brain activity
were different between boys and girls when
they performed spatial tasks. During the facememory task, males showed stronger involvement of the right parietal lobe than the
left, while in female s, right and left parietals
showed nearly equal activation. The dotmemory task showed a similar panem of
response in males and females, but the difference was not as striking.
"As a result of our findings, we know that
these differences exist before pubeny," said
Janet Shucard, UB resean:h assistant professor
of neurology.
"Since it is also known that the only other
period of dramatic hormonal activity occurs
around the time of birth and shonly thereafter.
we believe that it is this early exposure of the
brain hormones that is responsible for these
cognitive sex differences."
0

DIRECTOR Of PuBliCATIONS ,_,...., J. c:o-eT • EDITOR

~

only that sbe was trying
to "recreate that strange,
almost hallucinogenic
time of adolescence."
But sbe added, "One
day, a few years after it
was published, a woman
approached me after a
reading and congratulated me on the deep symbolism of the seal
It seems that some ancient ciVilizations regarded "seals" as symbols
for virginity. "I could
have kissed her,'' Dove
exclaimed.
A native of Akron,
Ohio, Dove earned ber
undergraduate degree
from Oxford. Ohio and
her Master of Fine Arts
from the University of
Rita Dove at -!18bee podl..,. In ~for the Arb.
Iowa.
Her visit to UB was co-sponsored by the
Dove would not choose a favorite among
Just Buffalo Literary Center, Inc. Buffalo
her poems, explaining that " they are all like
Mayor Anthony Masiello pronounced the
my children, and you shouldn't have favorday
"Rita Dove Day in Buffalo." President
ites." Nor could she recall exactly when she
WiU iam Greiner read the mayoral proclamabegan reading poetry. "The earliest poems I
tion, presenting it to Dove before she began
remember were the times my mother would
her reading.
run around the kitchen preparing a meal
Although she is the nation 's poet. Dove
while quoting Lady MacBeth."
shied
away from matters political, except to
An audience member sought to have Dove
pitch for protection of the arts in the federal
reveal the true meaning of some of the
budget.
symbolism in her poetry, asking her to ex"We don't have to apologize for an: we
plain who the "seal men .. were in her poem
need it," declared Dove, who also said she
" Adolescence Two," which describes a little
found
President and Mrs. Clinton to be "genugirl's adventures in her dreams. Dove conine and absolutely natural people, which is
fessed. "For years I was terrified that someprobably why the Washington medi a find
one would ask me thai ," explaining that she
[1
them so baffling."
really intended no symbolism in the poem.

men.:

Admissions standards at UB
among issues discussed by FSEC
aySTEYECOX

Reporter Staff

EW MINIMUM high school performance standards promulgated
by the NCAA precipitated a di scussion of admission standards al
UBduringtheOet. I I meetingoftheFaculty
Senate Executive Committee.
Beginning in the fall of 1996. entering
freshmen will need to have attained a minimem high school average of 2.0 and combined SAT scores of 980, or an average of
2.5 with combined scores of 700, to be eligible for NCAA sports on campus, according to Admissions and Retention Committee
ChairMilcbeU Horwitz. TbenewNCAAregu-.
lations furtber require that students complete a
''rigorous core curriculum" in higb school,
Harwitz added. Admissions office personnel
indicated to Harwitz that these.core requirements would apparently be met by the state
Regents program in New York. he said.
Freshmen are currently admitted to UB on
the basis of a formula that employs a weighted
average of three factors : high school average.
SAT or ACT scores and class rank. Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Nicolas
Goodman called the existing admission standards "excessively mechanical" and "disgraceful." Although he is reluctant to let the NCAA
dictate adntission standards, Goodman urged
the FSEC to fashion a "somewhat more sophisticated process." possibly relying moreonqualitative measurements, including essays, and
Jess on standardized test scores.
Up to 10 percent of the freshman class
may be admitted through the Individualized
Admissions Program (lAP), according to
Assistant Admissions Director Frances
Bernstein. lAP allows for separate consideration of factors such as personal circumstances (deaths or divorces in lhe family),
unique community involvement or individual
auditions for candidates to fine arts depart-

N

ments. Despite the fle xibility in lAP admissions, Harwitz told FSEC members that a
review of admissions records revealed that
the new standards would not have presented
a problem recently." Although some athletes
are admitted through the Individualized
Admissions Process (lAP)," Harwitz said,
"all of our student-athletes over the past four
admission cycles would have met these
NCAA requirements."
Engineering Professor Dennis Malone
remarked that "if the effect of (the NCAA
standards) were that it raised the general
standards of the student body to those of the
student athletes, that would be awfully nice."
The FSEC acknowledged the report without
taking action on it.
In other business, the FSEC forwarded to
the full Senate a comprehensive package of
revisions to the Bylaws and Charter of the
Faculty Senate. The changes, produced by
the Bylaws Comntittee, include extending
voting privileges to "geographic full-time
faculty members with academic ranlc" which
could affect between 250 and 757 people,
mostly in the health sciences. and reapportioning the number of senators elected from
each decanal unit. The amendments would
also allow, for the fi rst time ever, that the
chair of the Faculty Senate could succeed
himself. serving up to two consecutive twoyear tenns.
Also. the FS EC approved the movi ng and
renaming of the Center for Applied Public
Affairs Studies. On the recommendation of
Vice President for Public Service and Urban
Affairs Muriel Moore, the center will be
organi.z.ationally moved from her department
to the School of Architecture and Planning.
under the Department of Planning, and it
will be renamed the Center for Urban Studies. The center will continue to be located on
the first floor of Allen Hall on the South
Campus.
0

WINIL • ASSOCIATE EOilOA JOM INtiiDe • AAT DIRECTOR . - CI.OUnD • ht!Q f/UOonlo pub bo.lflalo.ltdu/feoortctt/

�3

..... 27, No.a

~u. ~v

Gala Nov. 3 will note Women's Club's 50th anniversary
SERIES OF EVENTS highlighted by a concen will be
pan of a Celeb111te 50! Gala
Nov. 3 signalizi ng the 50-year

guests will receive
as a gift at the Gala.
Additional Celebrate 50! commi t-

I
~

anniversary of the Women's

tee members are :

University at Buffalo.
The Mozaneum Orchestra of Salzburg,
Auslria, directed by Huben Soudant, will
give the first Bernice Poss Memorial Concen at the Gala. The orchestra, with 45

Janet Fedor. club
pres ident ; Ninfa
Straubinger, vice
pres ident ;
Pat
Addelmar. ; Lona
Allendoerfer; Lee
B aker ;
Annie
Blumenson; Shirley
Buc kl e;
Juli e

touring members, is performing in the United
States for the first time in 30 years.
A prelude to the evening •s events , which
will benefit UB'sCenterforthe Ans , will be
a si lent auction and champagne reception
for sponsors and patrons. Among the auction
items are getaway weekends, dinners, theater
tickets, decon~tor items, an works, jewelry,
gift baskets,and more. Following the concen,
winning bidders will be announced by President William Greine r at a dessert reception.
The receptions are being sponsored and catered by Premier Gourmet under the direction of Joe l Chemet. an award-w inning
French chef. who heads food operations for
Premier Gourmet, principal corporate spon-

publicily; Joan Ryan; Gerrie Ryder. secretary : Dottie Soong. publications; Irene
Swiatowy. co-chai r. invitations; Kalfina
Wobschall and Norma Zimmerman. corresponding secrelary .
Assisting the club are Kerry Grant. UB
Dean of Ans and Leuers; Roben Chumbley.
director. Ce nter for the Ans; Sandra Fazekas.
Center fo r the Arts events coordinator: and
Connie Campanaro. Center for the Arts marketing director.
In addition to the Gala. a yearlong program of events will celebrate the club's 50th
anni versary year, including an English tea, a
trip 10 Seneca Falls. a Soup· s On lunch. a
Valentine's Day wine tas ting. a Chinese
banquet. a spring luncheon featuring a multimedia concen. and a Fun Run -Walk.
1be Women's Club, a service organization
to the UB and its community. is open to women
who have a commitment to UB and the club's
purposes. Members participate in educational
andcharitableactivities which sponsor the Grace
Capen Academic Awards in April and the Financial Aid Scholarships in September. For
reservation s or more information about the
Gala. call Barbara Paganelli a1 689-9077 .

Cohan, co-c hai r.
publi cations;
Cerle ~left,- Mar11Jn C!Mclo are lhown with auction
Lucille Gasparini ;
Itfor UB
Club Cele-. 501 Gala.
Carmella Hanley ;
MentholanunCompony,TheAoristry&amp;Bravo
Aurilla Holloway; Jean Jain. chair. invitaDisplay and National Fuel.
tions and logo; Irma Katz. publications;
The yearlong Celeb111te 50! observance is
Elaine Knopp; Joan Kunz; Josie Lapetina;
chaired by Marilyn Ciancio, who is also
Roz Levy. underwriting and auction; Sheila
chair of the Gala. Carol Greiner is honorary
Lewis; Lynn McFadden, treasurer and cochair of the Gala. Gala co-chair and auction
chai r. reservations; Jean McFarren; Marisa
chair is Carla Goldberg. Celeb111te 50! coMih ich; Barbara Paganelli. chair. reservations: Bernie Priv itera: Norma Rubin , cochairs are Marie Schillo and Anne Brody.
editorofa specialcommemorativebookthat
c hair. publicity: Meen a Ru stgi. chair.

w-·•

sor. Other corporate sponsors are The

Gift from family of UB staff member to support annual event
By JED NIIDEIICI

Francisco, Calif.; and Roben Poss of New
York City.
Poss began her association with U B as a
graduate student in the history department.
She held appoi ntments as assistant to the
chairs of the depanments of sociology and
history. assistant to the provost in the Faculty
of Social Sciences. assistant dean in 'the Faculty of Ans and Letters. assistant to the vice
president for academic development. At the
time of her death in 1988, she was executive
assistant to the uni vers ity provost.
Poss served on the Professional Staff Senate, as well as several university task forces
and committees. Her outstanding work performance and dedication to the university
was recognized in 1978 when she received
the SUNY Chancellor' s Award for Exce lle nce in Professional Service.
Pass. known for being a strong advocate
fortheadvancementofwomen, was a founder
of the Women's S!udies College and taught

Reporter Contributor
The family of the a.te Bernice Pou
has made a $25,000 gifJ to US's Facully of
Ans and Letters to support an annual event
in memory of Poss, a UB professional staff
ember for more than 20 years.
A performance by the Mozaneum Orchestra considered the foremosl ensemble dedicat to 18th-&lt;:entury music, will be presented
at the ll'St Bernice Poss Memorial Concert at 8
p.m. Nov. 3 at US 's Center for the Ans.
'' Bernice Poss' children have chosen a
fitting and generous way to honor and remember their mother." said Kerry S. Grant.
dean o f the Faculty of Ans and Letters.
'They have laken the fll'SI slep loensure thai
Mrs. Poss • love of the arts will be shared by
scores of aud iences for many years to come."
Supponing the gift are Poss' chi ldren:
Ellen M. Poss, M.D .• and Stephen Poss o f
Boston, Mass.; Katherine Salazar-Poss of San

University at Buffalo
18-Month Sesquicentennial
Desk Calendar

C

1995 SEFA Campaign

-

Unit

'

Architecture &amp; Planning

Arls&amp;L.-s

~ of-1

$9.712

103%

25,579

70

Dental Medtcine

17,699

58

Graduale Sat100I of Education

14,675

96

Engineering &amp; Applied Sciences
Health Related Prol-

•'

19,467

62

5,760

56

lnfO&lt;malioo and library Studies

1.641

Law

9.965
24.534

85

=. '

Medicine &amp; Biomedical Sciences •

91 ,256

85

.' i

Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematics

26.399

72

Nursing

5,679

69

Pllarmacy

6.051

54

~-

Olfoce o! the President

5,502

62

1

6.584

60

25.949

70

I
I

Social Sciences

71

Social Work

3.683

74

UB Foundation

2,185

59

Student Affairs

23.408

69

103.653

88

University Selv1cas
Emeritus Center

Spon9ored Programs

UnivOISily Advancemenl &amp; Development

Public SeMce &amp; Urban Affairs
11n1ven1ty Total

- ·

. .. . ..
"' .,

Sesquirt'utrrwi,,/ seal .

ORDER

FORM

NJillt"

I

Addre" - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1
1
1

Pho ne - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- QuJnmy - - - - - - @ $13.00 &lt;Jch

s_______

-

I

T olll

4.901

53

1

6,406

56

12,860

67

z\lakr thtrk pay.Jblr to liB PubJ,rat•ons! CllmdtJt
Pfr£Ut mall or fax tluJ f&lt;lnn to tlu• P.•blitruions Ojfirr, I 36
B•!lfo/o, l\:Y 14160 Phor1t 645-6969 Fax: 64J.]J 1J

75~

18-Momh Sesquirentmuial Desk Calendar,
an elegantly desigt~ ed ,

TI1is 5-1 12 x 8- 112 inch ralrudar romrs
with a nutom-madt' lurite holder and .Haud.
presented it~ a g!ft box trd(lnwd will! thr

17.283

$470,833

tradition witl1 tlu•
University at B•!lfalo

ArchizJes. Each mouth 's imaJ!es-most in
full color aud sderted fo r their chararta ami
Jmiqueness-chron idt UB's l1istory . Some of
the images luwe never biforr been publishrd .

Management

Office of the Provost

rlebralf /50 years of

limited edition desk
calrudarfea turing illrutrations mrd
pholographs mlltd.from official University

91
~

Higher Education Administration established
the annual Be rn ice Poss Award in 1990.
II is given to an individual who has been
involved in ac tivities for the advancement of
women professionals. demonstrated commitment to and participated in community services and programs for women. and in her
daily cond uct shows professionalism. sup·
port for women colleagues and co mpa ssion.
For ticket infonnation on the Bernice Poss
Memoria\ Concert. call the Center for the
Ans box office a1 645-ARTS.

some of the first courses in wome n' s hi story
ever o ffered at a major university. Chair of the
President's Committee on the Rec ruitment
and Promotion of Women. she was an acti ve
participant in the Americ an Council on
Education's programs fortheadvancemenl of
women in higher education administra tion.
In honor of Poss' man y contribu ti ons to
acade mia and the communi ty. the Western
Region of the Ameri can Counci l on Education/National Identification Program (ACEJ
NIP) for lhe Advancement of Women in

I
I

C r,l/IJ

H.J II. I

1

tlll't'f'Sll)' tJI

Hujl.Jit•.

I

L----- ---------- -------- -~

�4

AWeekend of High Spirits
School spirit was high as UB played host to parents, students and alumni for Parents/HOmeCOming
Weekend . The campus community enjoyed a full plate of events, ranging from a Friday night bonfire and
a carnival to Saturday's football game against the Massachusetts Minutemen and a comedy performance by the Smothers Brothers that attracted 3,500 to Alumni Arena Saturday night.

Brothers enteltaln parents
and studBnts In Alumni Arena
during Parents/ Homecoming
festivities .

r

H

0

T

0

S

B y

FRAN

I&lt;

C

E

S

A

R

0

�IHIDIIIN

0a--.r s.e, ~

--------__
==-----

Coppens wins Harker Award; presentation
to be made at Nobel Anniversary Dinner

,._,.
::....,::::.:t.!.:t;:.*':..
HILIP COPPENS, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the Department of Chemistry at UB
has been selected as the first

A chsJienge to restore
high quality graduate
programs

mathematical tech niques to develop an

~

ing''theelectronclouds

e

6
X-ray method of "see- a

that surround atoms ~
and hold them together

.....

winner of the Hauptman -

to form molecules .

Woodward Medical Research Institute 's
David Harker Award.

Coppens' methods are
cons idered to be clas-

The award is presented in recognition of
ou tstandjng contributions to the advancement of the science of crystallography. It

sic standards for such
analysis and are being

just published NRC raling ol ~

was established in memory of David Harker.
who directed the crystallography program at
Roswell Parle Cancer Institute, and who con-

across the world.

Pror.uor Welch II right, in Ilia recent
- . 1 0 lhe Faculty- ExecuIIWI Convnlnee, to be dltturb-.llboul the
achools. We did no1 fare well. ·
Prolesaor Welch Is qOII8 WfOtl{l w1*1 he
calls the reeuila •aternbie indlclment of
the academic ieadenlhip of the university
of the last couple of years." That Is, uniaoa his defonilion of academic ieadenlhip
lncludeo al otua. The! the graduate
- h a s been downsized,and devalued waa not the ._,.lbillty
of one or two indiYiduals-we ali acttvety

anc:1 enthusiastically partlclpaled in the
proceoa.
Ouf ~now Is noiiD follow the
~tradition

ol pointing the fin-

"" end htmg a lewye&lt;, but,_ Ct881inG end ieo1oring high quality graduate
PfOQIIIml. This will Lnevflably mean. In
generel, r...larger, btOedef, regional
and bel1ar progtamS. H we fall to octMve
the 18nar otijecllve then the gradUate progrlllll8 wilt be viewed as the luxury thel
weshouldnothaVe.
.
In the

next fe w _ , wiiiStJbmH to

the uo'-alty C&lt;lmrJ¥JniiY an lnHial analyalad new ideas lor the graduate school
and graduate programs. I lock forward to

working wf1h 1100 as we make the qualitative and quantitalive chinges in graduate
aducallon end organization that will be

__ "__

-.ary as we face the new realities.

,_

Yoo.rs sincerely,

Vice Provost for Graduate Education

(&lt;*ignBte)

Help newcomers to
America practice
speaking English

tinued an active research program at

Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research
Institute (then the Medical Foundation of
Buffalo) in a research emeritus role.
The award will be presented at the

Hauptman, president of the Hauptm an-

in an electronically excited state.

Woodward Medical Research Institute and

In 1993. Coppens was elected president
of the International Union of Crystallography, which brings together 38 nati onal crys-

UB research professor of computer science.

A UB faculty member since 1968.
Coppens has pioneered studies of the use of
X-ray-diffraction techniques to study the
nature of bonding between atoms in molecules and crystals. He has used complex

of her best volunteers have come from
UB, and she is very eager to hear frOm

you.

about 10,000 crystallographers worldwide.
Coppens is principal in vesti gator for the
State University of New York beamline at

phy of the National Academy of Sciences.

ta1lographic organizations. encompassing

School of Law in
1964.

News Services Staff

ERALDS.LIPPES.afounderand
managing partner of the Buffalo
law fmm of Lippes. Silverstein.
Mathias &amp; Wexler, wiU receive
the 1995laeckleAwardataluncheonat t2: 15
p.m. on Saturday.Oct. 28, in theCenterforthe
Arts on the UB North Campus.

G

He also serves on
the board of direc tors of Gibralter

Steel Corp .. Na·
tiona! Health Care
Affiliates. Niagara

Envelope and Up·

The award. the highest honor presented

grade Corporati on
of America.

by the UB School of Law and the UB Law

annual Alumni Convocation . .. Elder Care
Counseling for Today 's Practitioner."

Named for UB alumnus Edwin F. Jaeckle.
the award is given annually to an individual

who has distinguished himself or herself and
has made significant contributions to the
law sch_ool and the legal profess ion.

It will be presented to Lippes by UB
Pres ident William R. Greiner.

Lippes, a distinguished attorney who represents businesses such as Mark IV Indu stries. a Fortune 500 company of which he is
corporate secretary. graduated from the UB

UPPES

U.S. National Committee for Crystallogra-

of elderly li vi ng in Aorida.
Topics to be discu ssed include accessing
services. paying for care. application and appeals processes and adv ising elderly clients .
Speakers on the program include David
Dunkelman, president ofThe Weinberg Campus. Amherst ; Mark E. Hami sler. president

and CEO of Nltional Health Care Affiliates
Inc.; the Hon . Barbara Howe. New York
State Supreme CounJustice, Eighth Judi cial
Distri ct; UB law professors Kenneth F. Joyce
a nd Anthony H. Szczygiel: Karen L

Nicolson. Legal Services for the Elderly.
Disabled or Disadvantaged of Western New

York Inc. and David R. Pfalzgraf. Esq .. of
the law finn of Renda. Pare&gt; &amp; Pfalzgraf.
Corporate underwnters of the convocation are Marine Midland Bank and National
Health Care Affiliates. bendactors : Harold
C . Brown &amp; Co. In vestment Services. patron ; Independent Health. sponsor: Ticor
Title Guarantee. donor. The Commonwealth
Land Title Insurance Co . al so contributed.
For more informatio n about the program
call the UB Law Alumni A~sociation office.

645-2107 .

Basketball preview to be given at 'UB at Sunrise'
BJ AJITHUR PAGE

News Services Director

1be heold coac:he• of the UB men's and women'&gt; basketball
teams will offer a preview of the 1995-96 season in a "UB at

-.Yrau.

SUNRISE" breakfast program to be held from 7:30-9 a.m. on Friday.

Director, Russian program

Lippes heads the

uni versity ' s Re gional Advisory Board. as well as the law
sc hool' s Dean·s Advisory Council. He is a
member of the President' s Board of Visitors
at UB and a trustee of the University at
Buffalo Foundation .
W e ll ~k n ow n for hi s tireless and ent husi astic effons for his alma mate r, he is eq uall y
ac tive in civic. c ultural and communitydevelopment organizations.
The focus of the Alumni Convocation on
elder care counseli ng is panicularl y relevant
since 17 percent of Erie County residents are
at least 65 years old , rivaling the perce ntag~

Sincerely yours,
Associate P.rr&gt;fessor of Russian

Long Island.
In 1989. he received the highest French

Lippes to receive School of Law's highest honor

Alumni Associat ion, will be presented to

If you are Interested, please call Julie

the National Synchotron Light Source located at Brookhaven National Laboratory on

national university honor for fore1gn scholars. Doctor Honori s Causa. from the Univer~
s ity of Nancy .
The author of more than 200 technical
papers and anicles, he has served as president and vice president of the American
Crystallographic Association. a nd was the
recipie nt of the association ' s Buerger Award.
He served several terms a.li a member of the

BJ MARY BETH SPINA

Lippes followi ng the morning-long 20th

Lewltsky at 883-1914 Monday, Wednesday and Friday 9 a!m.-2 p.m.
Ms. Lewltsky has told me that some

In 1989. Coppens'
research team was the
first to detennine the
PHIUP COPPENS
nature of small atomic
distonions in certai n types of high -temperature superconducti ng crystals. which affect
the temperature at which they superconduct .

gram Nov. 8, in the Center for the Arts. The
dinner will celebrate the I Oth anniversary of
the awarding of a Nobel Prize to Herbert

I would 01'1'8 again like to Invite members of the UB community to help new
emigres from the former Soviet Union
prscHce their English.
People of all ages are still coming to
Buffalo every month. Many ~ava studied
English before and are studying It now,
btJI they an have difficulty understanding .
the apolcen language and need practice
In corwarsalional English In O(der to get
jobs (lnd participate In American life.
111100 ljke psopla, have your own
Ish Family Service of Greater Buffalo will
match you up with an Individual or famIly and give you an orlentaUon on how to
begin.

applied in laboratories

Coppens and his then-postdoctoral research associates, Mark R. Pressprich and
Mark A. White, also completed the first Xray diffraclion study ever done of a molecule

In stitute 's Nobel Anniversary Dinner Pro-

10 '1111111111011:

transportation and can spare about an
hour of week (plus traval time), the Jew-

5

v-.-. 27, No. a

Nov. 3. in the Center for Tomorrow o n the UB Nonh Ca mpu s .
Tim Cohane of the UB Bulls men's basketball team and Sal
Buscaglia of the UB Roya ls women ·s basketball team will discuss
the new atmosphere of big-time sports at UB and answer questions

by Wednesday. Nov I.

�6

..... 27, ..._a

~u. ~v

Facul &amp;StaHBillboard
CRAFT SHOW TO BENEm
KIIOI.AJISHIP' FUND
More than 70 vendors will display a vanety of
merchandise dunng the th1rd annual
Octoberlest Craft Show. to be held hom 10
a m to 4 p m Saturday and Sunday, Oct 21
and 22 1n Alumm Arena on US's North Campus
Hosted by the D1visiOI'l of Athlellcs. the show
benehts the Alhfe!Jc ScholarShip Fund
AdmiSSIOn IS $1 50 and Children ages 16
and under.are admttted free In addii!OO to
crafts. the show wall feature lace patnling . the
UB Skills area w•th basketball nms and a loot·
ball ~ Bull s-eye." liVe mus•c and refreshments.
Booth space lor the craft show IS still ava•l·
able. for more •nlormat•on . call Tom Koller at

645-3178 by 9 am Fnday

PHARMACY STUDENTS
TO HOLD HEALTH FAIR
Mall walker s and shoppers ahke wlll have a
chance to do someth•ng good lor the•r health at
a pharmacy health !au to be held 1n the Walden
Galiena on Sunday . Oct 22. from 11 am to 6
p m The ta•r wtlltake place •n front of the Bon
Ton store lower level
Free consultattons wtll be provtded at the
la•r . betng held 1n recogn•llon of Nauonal Phar macy Week . by students tn the US School of
Pharmacy and pharmac•sls from commun.ty
drugstOJes and area hospttals
The pharmac•sts and students w11t be avail·
able to d•scuss heart blood-pressure . diabetes
and patn med1cat1ons. cough . cold and allergy
med•cat1ons . antactd s. laxa11ves . and
anhdtarrheals
They w111 d1scuss what fOOds and olher
drugs may 1nterlere wtth a med1cauon's ellec·
ttveness and the best place to store med•ctnes
t•l's not tn the mediCtne chest). as well as answers to quest1ons about spec•hc pharmaceuticals
• Amertcans pay a htgh puce lor not comply·
tng w1!h a phystctan ·s or pharmaCISt's dtrecI10ns about taking thetr medtcauons .~ sa1d
Aoae Mary lladejald. chntcal asststant prolessor of pharmacy practice at UB
She satd that an esttmated 125.000 Amertcans d1e each year beCause they do not take
thetr med1ca1ton properly
Ten percent of all hospttal adm1ssions. 25
percent of hospital admtssiOOs among the eld·
erly and 23 percent ol nursing-home admisSICf'ls
result from drug noncompliance . Improper use
ol prescnption medic1nes due to lack of knowl·
edge is estimated to cost the U.S. ec~y be·
!Ween S10 btllion and S15 bilhon a year
In addition to the UB SchOOl of Pharmacy.
lalf organtzers and sponsors tnclude the Phar ·
mactsts Assoc1atton of Western New York. the
Western New York Soctety of Hospital Pharma-

c•sts. the UB Pharmacy Alumni Assoctation and
the Nattonai Association of Retail Druggists.
For fT'IOfB infoffnation. contact Rose Mary
Madejski at 645-2826. ext. 24 1.

are conducung funded research in diabetic
retinopathy. retinopathy of prematurity, age-related macular degeneration. corneal inflan"mation. neurcrophthalmok&gt;gy. and outcomes of
surgical procedures in the developmentally d is-

- O N STUTTERING
TO BE HELD AT UB

abled .

The BuHakJ chapter of the National Stuttering
Protect will hotd a workshop entitled "Stuttering:
Can We Talk?" from 9 a .m . to 5 p .m . on Saturday. Oct 28, in The Kiva (Room 101) of Baldy
Hall on the UB North Campus.
The workshop, open to the public, will be fa·
cthtated by~ Reeves. a co-founder of the
Dallas. Texas. chapter of the National Stuttering
Project.
Partictpants will discuss stuttering openly
and frankly in a caring and understanding environment. confront issues about stuttering that
are obstacles in life. learn that they are not
atone and be empowered to take control .
The registration fee is $35 for chapter members who pay in advance, $40 for those who
pay at the door. and S40 lor non-members who
pay tn advance. $45 for those who pay at the
door The fee for students is $10 paid in advance . $15 at the door.
lnformalton about the workshop and regts·
trauon may be obtained from BOf).nie Weiss at
838·3999, or Gary Rentschler at 645-3400. extenston 132

RESEARCHERS FORM IIROUP'
FOR VISION RESEARCH
Organtzers of a Group for Advanced Viston Re·
search. including researchers and clinicians
from several UB departments are bringing together
people working In the field to
collaborate on research . coordinate funding efforts ,
share resources and enhance teaching.
William Colea, professor
and chair of the UB Department of Ophthalrt'\Ok)gy, has
been named executive d irector of the group .
w1th Malcolm Slaughter, associate professor of biophysical sciences and ophthalmology,
duector of basic research. and Jamee Relctw,
ass•stant professor of ophthalmology, director
of cllntcal research
~we encourage any scientist in Western
New York working in the field of basic or clin1cal
v1s1on research to join this collaborative eflort:
said Coles ~All of our work can benefit from
sharing knowledge and resources.·
Researchers from the UB departments of
clmicat laboratory sctence. anatomy , pediatncs.
biochemistry and social and preventive medtcine have affiliated with the group. Members

The group is organizing a research conference to be held in 1996. Periodic grand rounds
where researchers can discuss their work. and
continuing education seminars for clinicians
also are planned .

UB-end win 8 prize. too? It's line to r!MIIII yoor
favorite holiday recipe. the one that's sooo good.
It can bring you fame and forti.Jnlr-.you COUld
halle h published in the Reporter and win 8 handsome coffee table cook book!

e,..."'

fil,....;,;;;...

Our annual recipe contest beQins today. The
rules are simple:
It's open to faculty. staff and students. (Contest winners
of the past three years are not eligible.) Tha recipe (one to
a contestant) should b(\ typed in cook book style with ingredients first, directions following.
. Put your name, address, department, your UB title and
phone number at the top of the page. We'll judge your
recipe for taste appeal, ease of preparation and originality.

If there's a brief •story· about the recipe-how you created it, what kind of traditions it represents, how many
years you've served it to rave reviews, etc., include that.
too.
Mail or fax to:
Reporter Recipe Contest. 136 Crohs, University at Buffalo. 14260. Or e-mail lo ......,rteritpub.buffalo.edu
Deadline for receipt of entries is Nov. 22.

w-

IICid

a

11111 die

lhelopic:ICOYenld
by !be~
Oaelda
llldiu Nalioa
-·-"'
Wai-Mart Stores. Inc. has selected u ..
~~;..,.., a UB freshman planning to ma)or in
chemistry, as this year's recipient of its annual
Wai·Mart Competitive Edge Scholarship.
awarded to an outstanding freshman In a tech·
nology-related program.
The schotarship, totaling $20,000 over four
years. was created by WaJ-Mart founder Sam
Walton to honor students pursuing careers in
tech~icallields. including aerospace, com·
puters , biotechnology, electronics and telecommunications.
Wal-Mart also has presented a second-year
scholarship award to last year's winner. Ethan
S.elel•. a sophomore who intends to ma;or In
computer science.
Chosen by the University Honors Program.
Competitive Edge Scholarship recipients are
selected based on outstanding academic per~
formance and financial need , explained Ctrde
Herreid, academic directOJ of the honors program. MWe look at their background in science
and engineering and choose the very best." he
added.
Herreid said Reaves and Sasiela have
shown promise as excepUonal contributors to
the htghty competitive. technology-related
American marketplace of the 21st century

THEATRE A DAJICE TAKES
ITS ACT TO -.nJNE

THEATER FESTIVAL
The UB Department of Theatre and Dance is
one of 20 theater groups from throughout the
Western Hemisphere Invited to participate in
the First International Theatre Festival for Young
Audiences . taking place Oct. 13-22 in San Luis,
Argentina The festival was organized by the International Theatre Association for Children and
Young Audiences (ASSITEJ) and is sponsored
by the Argentine state of San Luis and the National University of San Luis.
~~art. Home, UB assistant professor of theaue and dance. will be presented with a special
award by the ASSITEJ tn recognition of her contnbutions to International theater. It will be presen led allhe Award Gala. which will be attended
by lhe dean ollhe Nalional University of San Luis
and the governor of the state of San Luis .
faculty delegation represents the In- .
The
ternational Artistic and Cultural Exchange Program of the Department of Theatre and Dance.
It includes Horne. who will produce two theater
events: Jeny ,.,.,......, and Wllllant Thomae, assistant professors of theatre and
dance; Tre- Qonnan Crehan, lecturer in
theatre and dance, who Will serve as artistic
consultant. and Ken Saczepanald, techntcal
director of the UB Center for the Arts.
The·UB group presented a two-part program Oct. 16 and 17 co-sponsored by Buffalo's
lnsh Classical Theatre and The Inter-American
Art Theatre . Inc.
The program included "Not Findtng: a solo
dance choreographed and performed by Thomas with music by John Williams, and the
festival's only English-language production .
Samuel Beckett's "Krapp's Last Tape." starring
F1nnegan and directed by adjunct Qrofessor
Vincent O'Ne•ll . director of the Irish Classical
Theatre.
The UB delegalton conducted workshops in
achng . directing. jazz dance, musical comedy,
computenzed lighting for the stage and expresSIVe movement techniques.
The fes tival emphasizes the integration of
the cultures of North and South America and
featured performing groups from Venezuela,
Costa Alee. Mexico. the U.S.. Argentina and
many other nations.
ASSITEJ was founded in Paris in 1962 with
the goal of furthering a beller understanding of
theater for youth among the nations of the world.
The organization is headquartered in Denmark,
with branches in most nations of the world.

u8

Family and friends always lllk lor the recipe...eo
wtrJ not share nwith friends and co11eaguea a1

Online
AdaDiic

........... *-"•tifW._
GUN II a .,.,........ ..... ol
qeadea and .....lp!Mw. . . u.s.
and CuldL Ill papooe is 1D pnwide

one place fer people 10 fillll ~
lioa RWed ID lbe eo~ and
ecooomy of lbe world's larplt hiiiWIIior l)'llaiL
BeautifuJJy deois-J, i111 pqeiCOIIIain a wealth of facll. fipw udllm
lhat~I&lt;Mn.Kiiviiii.IIDdeallof

ecology and enviloameolal .meetllls
and engineers will 6Dd of i - .
"Great Lakes Ec:osyiiCID~ aad
"Great Lakes Enviroamc:lll" dacribc
the air,

w~~er,

land.

n~

r.- and

people of the regioo--IDd lbe iDierrclationsbips bclwecn them.

Here you can read abclul tbc dob.sc
over the usc of cbloroOIIOI'OCmballl or
study tbc environmental and ccooomic
impacu of exotic species IIICb u lhe
zebra mussel. (Scientists estimalle lha1
zebra mussels, which cJos tbc water .
intake systems of powerp!MD and water treatment facili~ will cost water
uscn in the Great Lakes regioD u mucb
as SS billioo over tbc next dlade.)
Through GLIN you caa link to a
variety of information resoun:a developed to assist with -~and
control of nuisance species lib lhe zc..
bra mussel, includinadistribalinomopo,
dala sels, IIWUS reportS, legiU!ioo. and
geogropbic information l ytlt::niL
And there is more. WilbiJIIbepaaca
of GLIN you can study lbe 1909
"Boundlly WileR Trealy"'-"-lbe
U.S. and Canada; follow lbe 111111e of
the Great Lates Circle Tour, a IICCIIic,
intemaJioaal !Old Clllllleelin&amp; all oflhe
Greatl.abaandlheSL UwlalceRivu;
consult the fact sheet for LaU Erie,
whieb bas 871 miles of lbcnliae and il
lhe II tb largesa lake in the wadd; or
browte cuneot ~ofthe.IDtmoDJ of
· GMJt LDku ~
Y011 Can evCDihow )'OIIfllllppCirtfw
an "ecosystemsiJ'PC'OKhwtoCIIIYitwmenlaiiJWII&amp;elllenl and ecoiiOIIIic development of tbc regloo by makin&amp; an
oolineendonemeatofthe principlcs of
the 1994 "Ecosystem awter for the
Great Lakes.St Lawrence Buin."
You can COIIMCtto 1M Grwot LDku
lnformariim Network on 1M WorldWide Web or http://www. greatlakes . net:2200/0iglinhome. html
rhrough lynx or a groplrir:ill browser.
For /oelp on using 1M World-W'ule Web,
conJIJCtthe CITHelpDtskat645-3S42.
- Lou Pequeno Glo&lt;ier Olld Nancy
Shiller, Universlly Ubraries

�7

...._u, ~v..._.zr, No.e

1995-96 Campus Heating Policy
UTI..INEO IN thi s memorandum is the campus policy for
energy conservation for this
winter. It is, essentially, the

Due to an inability to precisely control
temperatures, it may be the case that some
spaces may be warmer than planned. It may
also be the case that central controls will not

same policy that we had in

~ ............ lid . .. _ . , ,

permit us to raise the temperature in specific

llddiL AIIIOtnlvlWI 13lleldlelclr UB(2-6).

¥OLLftULL

O

previous years.

tended weekend/shutdown, or due to the

spaces to 68 degrees F without significantly
increasing the temperature in the rest of the
facility. In those situations, University Facilities will permit the use of portable space
heaters. Please note, however, that portable
heaters no t authorized by University Fac ilities will be removed. Please ca!J Uni vers ity
Facilities Customer Service (extension 7 1 or
645-2025) in the event you experience heating problems. Please repon overheated as
well as underbeated areas.
If you see any opponuni ties for energy

partic ular characteristics o f some o f our fa- ~
cilities, there will be instances when the

savings or wish tb suggest an energy conserva tion project, please call Mr. W alter

temperature will drop to 55 degrees F.
Heating for academic program purposes
will be provided on off-hours and weekends
as needed. Each Dean's Office should provide the University Facilities Customer Service Depanment with a li st of individuals in
each depanmental office authorized 10 request off-hour/holiday heating. The request
foroff- hourlholiday heating must be received

Simpson, the Uni vers ity's Energy Officer
(645-3528). Any general questions regard-

Offices will be heated to 68 deg=s F
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and classrooms will be
heated to this temperature from 8 a.m. to 10
p.m. for the rest of the time, and on weekends and holidays. the temperature will be
allowed to drop to 55 deg=s F before
heating occurs. In most spaces, the temperature will not drop to that level before workingday heating cycle begins again. However,
during a severe cold snap or during an ex-

ing our efforts in the energy conservation

area should be directed to Mr. Ronald Nayler,
Associate Vice President for University Fa-

cilities (645-3643), who is also Chai rman of
the University's Energy Policy Committee.
Please share this memorandum with members o f y o ur staff and ad v i se them to dress

by Cusrome r Service (ex tension 71 or 645-

appropriately for the intended bui lding tem-

2025) by 12:00 p.m. of the preceding business day. Uni versity Facilities will utilize the

peratures.

most energy-e ffi cient means of supplyi ng

Senior Vice President for
Un iversity Services

heat for approved off-hour/holiday requests.

R - J. W.....,,

2222

The following are some o f t he lncl-

denta that were ,.ported to the Department of Public S.fe ty between
S..,t. 211 •nd Oct. 5:
• A bookbag contaln1ng two textbooks worth
a combined value of $140 and a wallet conta•nlng cash and cred1t cards were reported m1ss10Q Sept. 29 from the Undergraduate Library
• A backpack, conta1n1ng a Walkman . tapes .
notebooks and a sweater. was reported missing Sept. 29 from Goodyear Hall.
• Three six-foot banners were reported m1ss1ng Sept . 29 from UB Stadium
• A mountain bike valued at $250 was reponed missing Sepl. 291rom the grounds outside Squire Hall.
• Five computers. worth a comb~ned value ol
$ 10,000, were reported miss1ng Sept 30 from
the Center of Excellence fOf Document Analys1s
and Recognition.
• Public Safety reported on Sepl. 30 that
$ 100 was missing from a concession stand to-

cated at the UB Stad1um
• Public Safety rece1ved a report Oct 1 regarding two men at Lake LaSalle who allegedly
were catching ducks with a hsh1ng net The men
were advised not to bOther the ducks
• A smoke detector ln Porter Quadrangle
was activated Oct 1 after birthday cards on a
muror fell off and landed on a lamp . where they
caught hre The f1re was exllngu1shed by the
roorn·s occupant and no damages were reported
• A b1cycte . valued at $500, was reported
mtss1ng Oct 3 from Putnam Way
• An electroniC balance was reported m1ss1ng Oct 4 from Farber Hall
• A wallet conta1n1ng a drtver's license. btrth
certificate. SUNYCard and personal papers was
reported m1sstng Oct 4 from Macdonald Hall
• Public Safety charged a man with menacIng. possess1on of a weapon. resisting arrest and
disorderly conduct alter he alleged ly threatened
a woman with a razor Oct 5 in the Commons

onUB~MIIkT.,U,~-.c&gt;t&gt;t

......Kellr Slwctlt*'l

goal wilh "*"~ geve ... Royale. S-2 will OWir
Loyola o(Ctic8go on &amp;nlay. StM:hck got
lhe glrTltHWtner just leur"*"- after the
Royale lied lhe 10018 on Tracey Brifton's
llnll ccllegllle golll. Arnae Mann also
8COOICI fer lhe ¥iclolioul Royale, rDN 7-3-3.
PIUato slopped """ 8ltola In the win.

eo.d&gt; Bob Mtl¥wel'l Royale picl&lt;ed up llalr
ll*d ..... In 8- In &lt;ll1lea*lg Nlllgtn I.Hwerally16-6. 12-15, 16-11, 15-120ct.11aAitlml
""-· c.ldie Hlr1111ed the lqala wilh 22 lela
and 18 digs while l.alle Slnllllll adCied 12
lela and 11 digs. Clnli lilrNiallled 48 .-sts
for UB. Niagara, who fell toB-13, picl&lt;ed up 13
killo, 16 digs and nine bloclca from Jeaica
Anderson. Jemlfe&lt; Godfrey added 11 blocks
fer the Purple Eagles. I t - the oecond W:tory of the season fer the Royals owr Niagata.
UB dropped a grueling four game malch to
Ivy League membef Pam Friday night 15-12,

15-13, 12-15, 15-llatAII.mniAranatoonap
the wiming streak.
Hirsl paced the Royals. roN 16-10, with 'Z1
kills in the fOUl games while adding 15 digs
and two S8Mce aces. Sims totaled 38 assists
with Santelu picking up a team-lllgh 24 digs.
Bossen finished the 8K coorse in 25:57.9
Kathy Brtnkworth had nine blocks. The Quakwith teanvnate Josh Reissig placing fourth
ers (&amp;-n got 21 kills from Abby Daniels. Carol
in 26:30. Rochester won the l"''ffi competic~ Kovic registe&lt;ed 15 digs while Karen
tion with 53 points to US's 59.
Kinsherf and Heather Glick taflled 13. Glick
On the women's side, Kim Nielsen's sixth · also had 47 assists.
place f.nlsh paced the Royals to a second
UB visits Mi&lt;H:ontinent members Chlcago
place team showing at the event Nielsen
State, Valparaiso and Northeastern lmnois in
completed the 5K course in t 9:58 with
their next action Ocl 20-22.
Roberts Wesleyan's Jen Burdick winning
MEN'S ISOCCER
the race in 19:14. Rocheste&lt; won the team
The Bulls took a rrtJCh deserved week off be~titian with 52 points edging US's 54.
fore tackling the f.nal two weeks of the schedFOOI8AIJ.
ule. UB travels to Northeastern llfinois for the
Saturday's Homecoming football game
second round of Mid-Continent Eastern Diviproved to be a soggy day lor the Bulls as
sion cluste&lt; matches taking on the host
Massachusetts' Frank Allessio rushed lor a
Golden Eagles on Saturday and Valparaiso on
career-lligh 172yatdson t9carriesasthe
Sunday.
Minutemen defeated UB 33-9.
MEN'S TENNIS
Rene Ingoglia added t 48 yards on 26
The Bulls downed Robert Morris 5-2 Sunday at
carries including three touchdowns for
tl'le University Tennis Club under brutal condi·
UMass (3-3) as the Minutemen ground out
tions with wind gusts in excess of 40 mUes per
347 yards rushing on the afternoon.
hour.
Head coach Russ Crispell reported that
UMass went 58 yards after recovering a

CIIOMCOUNIIIY

Girls e.:-t 11111 a couroe I1!CO(d to lead
lhe BUio to a second place finish at the
Harry Andenlon Memorial Invitational at
Roberts Wesleyan College on Saturday.

tumble on its first possession of the third
quarter to go ahead 20-9 and tooK advantage of three second-half turnovers by UB
The Bulls got all their scoring from JUnior
kicker Gerald Carlson on field goals of 51.

37 and 43 yards.
The Minutemen were aJded by

11

sacks

his players were forced to serve underhand on
many occas'ons to keep the ba\1 tram b\ow\ng
out of play. Bill Parks won his number one

smgles match defeating Jason Gray 6-2, 6- t .
Parks also teamed with Mike Proulx to deleal
the Colonials· number one doubles squad 8-2

-

Ted Wasko. Sports lnlormatKXl Office

THIS WEEK'S HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS
Fr•day-Saturday

Oct 21-22
Tuesday. Oct 24
Thursday. Oct 26

Men's Tennis UB Fall Classic

9 a m . Umvers1ty Tenms Club

Women's Soccer vs. St. Bonaventure

7 p m . RAC Field

Men's Tennis vs. St. Bonaventure

3 p m . Un•vers1ty Tennts Club

Women's Tennis vs. St. Bonaventure

3 p m . Untverslty Tenn1s Club

CALENDAR
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

-

c:..opu1-,

c_.,

Flow-Mediated VuodUatlon in
Isolated Coronary Cornd uil Ar. teriH, Or. Sandeep Dube. 108
Sherman. South Campus. 8 a.m.

I -t Clinic
UB Wings AJ \'our I nternet
Gateway. 223 l.od.:wood. North
Campus. Noon. For registration
inronnation, call 645-28 17.

-·-

_ _,-Cell Blolo&amp;Y

Endothelial Phenotype a nd Vasomotor Control, Scon Diamond,
Ph.D. 306 Farber. South Campus.
12:30 p.m.

,_..

Bulls .and Royals v • St.
Bonaventure. Ellicott Couns.
Nonh Campus. 3 p.m.

-

BloloCicel Sc'-••

St.tlotlco Col'-lu•

HI-

Some Statistical lu uH in Fortnsk DNA, Prof. Seymour
GeisKr, Uni v. or Minnesota. 244
Cary. Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.

Du Marienleben, Sarah

ArtOpenlnC
M..A.H. Thesis Sbow: Gau y
Wolfe. Art De part ~n t Gallery,
Center for the Arts. North Campus. 5-7 p.m. Free. Through Nov .
10. Gll.llery hours Tuesday I0
a.m.-5 p.m.; Wednesday-Friday
10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturday I I a.m 8p.m.

....__,M-tlllll
lnfoi"'DJJUona.l meeting FaU 1996
admission into tbe Bachelor of
Science in Pharmacy. 225 Naturnl
Sciences &amp; Mathematics Complex . Nonh Campus. 5-6 p.m.

tn. Woobllop
SMking Jnntr Wisdom , Eileen
Stewart . 7:30-9 p.m. for information. call the Office of Student
Lire at645-6 125 .

ur. Woobllop
Tbe Moral &amp; Ethical Dime nslon.s nf Ludenbip. Pastor
Roger Ruff and Father Putrid:
Keleher. 7:30-9:30 p.m. For Informa tion, call the Office of Sludent Lire at 645-6 125 .

C ontrolled Ice Fonnatton in
OverwlDtuin&amp; Plants: Tht Ro~
of l ee Nut.~ llna and Anl ifrttU
ProtOns, Dr. Marilyn Griffith .
Univ. of Waterloo. 114
Hochsteuer. North Campus. 4 p.m.

- B. Zaleokl - al
l.ec:tuN

Pbyslolo&amp;kal Alterations In Sulfatt Rena l Tnn.tport, HwaJeong L..ee. 508 Cooke. Non h
Campus. 4 p. m.

1945 : Poland a t tbe End or
World War II, Piotr Wrobel.
Univ. or Toronto. Grupp Firt:ll ide
Lounge. Can isius College . 7:30
p.m. Free .

- --

HIIC-on

Leonard, soprano. and l ens
Bo.mieck, piano. Buffalo Historical Society. 25 Nottingham
Coort. 8 p.m. $3 . Pan I or twopan Hindemith Celebration pre·
sented by the UB Dept. or Music .

Scephen Fisher. and Nancy
Friese, through Oct 21 m the An
Depanment Gallery located in 1he
Center for !he: Ans. Nonh Campus. lllhographs. elc hmgs. wood ·
cuts. and mezzocincs Gallery
hours Tuesday. 10 a.m.-5 p.m ..
Wednesday. Thursday , and Fnday, 10 a.m -8 p m .. Sa1ur&lt;by. II
a.m.-8 p.m.

Yolo '• aolo ahow

OPENING EXHIBR
Ubrwy hao Alchlveo
allhllllt
'The Torc hbearer," an edubtt by
University Archives honormg the
75th anniversary or the UB endowment campaigns or !he 1920s
led by Walter P. Cooke. 1s on
view on che main floor or
lockwood l •brnry, Nonh Campu.s. through Nov 9

c_.

CONTINUING EXHIBRS
Alchltacto onaouth

"Hamilton Hous1on Lowmc Ar·
chttects" is on view through No\
J in James Oyeu Exhibiuon Hall .
335 Hayes Hall. South Campus
Hours are Monday through Fnday. 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m. The nhibu
is presented by the School of Ar·
chi tecture &amp;. Plann ing.

3Prlllbooal&lt;aro
Show by Rhode Is land
prinlmak:ers Leslie Bos1rom.

Alronso Yolo 1s a poet and an an ·
ist whose work IS on \'lew
lhrough Nov. 5 in 1he Umve~ll)
Gallery. Center ror the Arts.
Nonh Campus

s..~ n.:

•sunMt" In

T-o
The Campus Club ts planning n
trip to Toronto Sunday, Feb :!S .
1996. to sec "SunK! Boulevard,"
a musical by Andrew t.loyd
Webber. Ticke1 to the: show, bus
1ranspona1ion, brunch and snacks
art Sil O ror members. $1 19 for
non-members. The bus leaves at
9 a.m. from the Center for Tomorrow on the North Campus.
and re1ums a1 7 p.m. A. deposll of
S60 IS due Oct . 27. the bu lance
Jan. 24 . Se nd deposic to The
Campus Club, c/o Judith Adams.
l..oc:kwood l tbrary. Nonh Cam ·

pus. lr you hl\'e n questiOn. call
645-2592. ext. 743.

Profeulonal
Ins tructional Support Tech nidan (SL-Jl ~ lnronnntion Re MJUrtes. &amp;hool of Denull Medl cme. Postmg #IP-SOIJ. Stnior
Programmer Analyst (S L-4}Geognphy. Posting .rP-5040 SC'niur Staff Assistant (S L -J) ~ Pub
heations. Posting ltP-5043 Lead
Programmer Ana lyst (l nlt·rnal
Promotional Opportunity, S L~
3) -Admissions, Posung #IP - 5~7
Senior Programmer Analysl
(Internal Promotional O pportunity, SL-4) -Compuling
InformatiOn Technology, Postmg
#IP - ~8

Faculty
Assist a nt Professor Neurosurgery. Pos110g II'F·5037
Assh"ta nl Professor -HIS!Or)'.
Pos1i ng ltF-5038. Assista ni/Associale/Full Professor -Phys1cal
Therapy and Exen:i~ Sc1ence.
Posring lfF-5039. As.sodatt /FuiiJ
C linical Assista nt Prores.sor Phys•cal Therapy and Exercise
Sc1ence. Posting IF-5040. Assi!ita nt/A.uocia te Professor -Pedt:U ·
ncs. Posung II'F-5041 . Assistll nt/
Assoc:U.te Professo r -Pedialn c~o.

Postmg ll'f-5().12. As.si.•.-tant/Assodate PrortsSOr-Neurosurger}·,
Postmg tF-5043. Clin ical Associat e Proressor (US)- Nuclear
Medic 1ne. Posting ltf-5044. AssHunt Proressor -Chemical Engineering. Postmg ltF·5045 Assisla nt Professor-Chtm•cal
Eng1neering. Posting iFF-5046
A~isl a nt/Associ•te(FuJt Profes·
sor -Chem1cal Engm~nng . PostIng ll'f·5047 Assisl• nt Profrssor -Chemlcal Engm~nng.
Posung iFF-5().18 Assista nt Proft-ssor -Chem • ~tr). Pnsrmg •F50-l9

ReMarch
Proj ec:t Sta rT As..wchtte-lX\d upmcnt , Postmg #R -9SOCXl
Projf(;t A dn•lnist n~ti \ r O fli ct-r
Development. Posung #R -95079
Educalion Specialisl · Publu: St:r
' 'ICC &amp; Urban Afrturs. Postmg
#R -95093 Educ•tion Specialist
l:.ducat10na l Opponunuy Center
Post1ng #R -95()9.$ Project St11rT
Assist • n t - Neurolo~) . Po!&gt;l lng
II'R -95097

Competitive Claulfled
Civil Servic e
Keyboard Sp«ialisl I (SG-06)
Dt&lt;i:llbtluy Sc-n•tces. Lme 11'-46067
Keyboard Sp«ialisl I (SG-06)
Conrercnces &amp; Spec1al En~nb .
Lmc:: #21824

r.,

obtam mort&gt; mjllrmut WII 1m
Jtlbs l1srrtl ld Jfll't'. cvnW r l Pt&gt;rson

nt&gt;l St&gt;n•1rn. 10-1

Crt~ft~&gt;

Hall

�8

...................... .... ____

..

..............

......... ,......... .....,......
..
_ t:lllldiC,..__ ...................................
........,,.........,......
~

_..__

...... ~~.l» CNft:e.•.._.(. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .).O.fAX..._ .. ........

ln..utute
Adnnced Commudal Lending
Program, UB School of Manage·
mcnt . For professionals an commercial lt:nding: through Oct. 21
Cemer for Tomorrow North Campus. S3, 700 includes an.§tructio nal
matennls, smglc-oc:cupancy lodg·
mg for I0 mghu, breaUasts and
lunches. onentataon buffet and
OMI banquet For infonnat1on,

caii 64S -3200.

C--l"""""l' Center

-~-

For mfonnation. call the Office of
Student Life at 645 -6125.

1'MIIter

Life Worllahop
Seck.in&amp; Inner Wl.sdom, Eileen
Stewart. 7:30-9 p.m. For infonnation. call ~ Office of Student
Life at 645-6125.
Life Worllahop
The Moral &amp; Etbklll Dimensions or Leadership, Pastor
Roger Ruff and Father Patrick
Keleher. 7:30-9:30 p.m. For mformation , call the Office of Stude:nt
Life IU 645-6 125.

-

Mooncbildren, comedy directed
by Richard Mennen. Drama ThtIUre, Center for the Arts. Non.h
Campus . 8 p.m. $5. SIO.

Rahman. 108 Sherman. South

Soulh Campus. Noon.

PM,tr7 T... -

DI--

Aa tiRouoter Bdweeo FreMb
aad Americao Pons, Jean
Fn!mon, Emmanuel Hocquard,

Jacqueline Riaset, Claude Royet Joumoud. 438 Clemens. North
Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free. Pan of
Wednesdays at 4 Plus
ASCITWorltoMj&gt;
1nlrodudion to Sun. 3-5 p.m. To
register, call Academic Servia:s.
Computing and lnfonnalion Techoology (ASCIT) User Liaison offia: at 645-3540.

Open-..
Come One, Come All To Wende
II all! Central Deve lopment Staff.
102 Wende. South Campus.
J -5 p.m.
I'IIJal.:. Col'-lum
Hl1h Energy Neutrino Astronomy, Prof. Francis Hab..cn .
Univ . of Wisconsin. Madison 220
Natural Sciences &amp;. Mnthem:ll ics
Complex. North ClliTlpuS. 3:45p.m.

--

BJoloCical Sclenceo

P-I.Mbore
Phyaic:lan'• Role In Providing
Comfort Cart to End Stace Patients and Tbeir Famllits, Neil
Lombardi, M .D .• Columbia Univ .
School of Physicians and Surgeons. Kinch Auditorium.
Children's Hospital. 8 a.m.

PoJclol8try- - Psyc:blatry Wilbout Walls:
Emergency PJycblatry at tbe

Turn of tbe Century, Victor
Steibc l. M .D., Univ. of Piusburgh
Medical School. Auditorium, Rehabi litation Building, Buffalo Psychiatric Center. 10:30 a.m.

RIAa-1...,

Growth .. R-nsing" In rungal organisms: The rolf: or strttcb-aetivated channels a nd calcium
gradients, Dr. Roger Lew. York
Univ .• Ontario. 11 4 Hochstetler
North Campus. 4 p.m.

Sponsored by !.he Research Institute on Addictions.

- l c o - 1....

C_.erkleftCe

Bioorganic Cbem~lry or Modified Cydodutdns, Aleuy
Elisee v, Ph.D. S08 Cooke. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

ArciiHecture a P'-1"'
Lecture
Jerusalem An:bltccture: Old
and New, George Anselevicius.
Un iv. of New Mexico. 30 1
Crosby . South Campus. 5:30p.m.

UfeWOI'kahop
When, Wby and Bow or Breast
Selr E:uminaUon, Mary Jo
Berrelini. 6-7 p.m. For infonnnLion, ca ll the Office of Student
Life at645-6 125 .
AntWI- C-ellpt Vl_,l
Take Back tbe Night. Harriman.
South Campus. 7 p.m. Free. Sponsored by the Anci-Rape Task
Force . For infonmuion, call 8293322.

......ur.w..k
Pro-Ure Piim and Pro-Lire
Pastor. Sludcnt Union Assembly
Hall . North Campus. 7 p.m. Free:
c t~ nned goods and clothing donatipns appreciated.
LlfeWOI'kahop
Sleepln&amp;Bcauty: Myth or Real·
lty! Michelle Nd ll. 7-8:30 p.m.

The Fon-e or Habit : A Cognitive
Model or Drug Craving and Use.
Stephen Tifrany, Ph.D .. Purdue
Univ. 1021 Mai n. 1:30 p.m. Free.

--

Worldna Topthtr To Keep
Wo~DU~ Huhby: Meoop~~use,
Graham A. Cold.itz. M.D., with
Paresb DandooA. Frank Gonzalez.
Jean Wac:tawski -Wende, and
Donald Swam.. Buffalo Hilton.
7: IS a.m.-2 p.m. $65 physicians;
$45 nurse pr.actitionera. other
health professionals. For inronnation, call 818-7861.
bWra•rl't8fFrom Obstadct To Opportuntties: Improviaa Binalioa.a.J RAP
Coope.ratioL Sponsored by Grut
Lakes Program and International
Joint Commission. Holiday Inn &amp;.
Conference Ceoter, Grand Island.
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. $35. Conclusion
or two-day conference. For information. c:all

~~

CtiMtpla11lllp
1995 Mr. &amp; Ma. U.S.A. Natural (Drug tested) Bodybuilding
ChampioD!Jhip, Niagara Assn. of
!he Amateur Athletic Union.
Mninstage, Center for the Arts.
North Campos. 9:30a.m.; finals a t
7 p.m. For ticket infonnation call
839-2626.
ASCITWOI'kahop
Jntrodudlon to UNIX. 10 a. m.·
12:30 p.m. To register. call Academic Services. Computing and
Information T c:c.hnolgy (ASCIT)
User Liaison office at 645-3540.

C...t'l-w

-eCol'-lu•
Embeddinp or 3-Dimensional
CR Maalfolck, Prof. Charles L.

lntrodudioa to Meditation,

Epstein, Univ. or Pennsylvania.

PllllooopltJ Col'-lu•
Pracmatbm and lhe Courtly
Muses of Euro'Pt-. Barry Allen ,
McMaster Univ., Hamilton,
Ontario. 684 Ba ldy. North Campus. 3 p.m.
C-lotry Col'-lu•
Developmeal or Novel RadicalBased Metbodoloc' ror Asymmelrk Syotbc:sls, Prof. Philip
Gamer, Case Western Reserve
Univ. 21S Natural Sciences &amp;
Mathemat ics Complex. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

......ur.week
Lesbian ror L-ire, Cec:i la
Hoelshevky . Student Union As ·
scmbly Hall . North Campus.
7 p.m. Free; canned goods and

clothing donations appreciated .

......ur.w-

Feminlst ror Life., Hollis Hite.
Student Union Auembly Hall.
North Campus. 7 p.m. Free;
canned aoods and clothing donaLions appreciated.

Alumni Arena. Nonh Campus.
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
LlfeWCN!uMp
Mary Gail Sovik. 10:30 a.m.Noon. For infonnation, call the
Office of Student Life at 645·
6 125 .

ThMter
MooDC-blldrta, comrdy directed
by Richard Mennen. Drama Theatre, Center ror the Ans. North
Campus. 3 and 8 p.m. $5 , $10.

-·body~

Corridor, film by Pierre
McAloon. Film explores the decision in !he 1960s that led to building the new UB campus in
Amherst rather than downtown on
the Buffalo waterfront. Pie~
McAloon. who died last summer.
was a student in the Dc:panment
of Media Study. Screening Room.
Center ror the Ans. North Campus. 3 p.m. Free.
Art Lecture
Adrian Pipe.r. Artist's subjects
are sexism and racism. Scrttning
Room, Center for the Arts. Nonh
Campus. 7 p.m.

UfeW.........
lloUrootB DuciDc: Polkas,
Rhelnlaoden, Ob&lt;l'tb &amp;
Waks, Ninita and Bjorn BoJue.
AIJO Oc:L 30. 8-9 p.m. For information, call the Office of Student
life at 64S-612S.

aod II&gt;&lt; llbo Tbe Mind&lt; of
Morpe'• Creek (lJ44), Or.

Brian Henderson. Scn:enin&amp;
Room, Center for the AtU. North
Campus. 7 p.m. "'= Praenl&lt;d
by Depc. or Medio Study.

w. . ..........
Royah: va. SL BouvntW"t.. Varsity F'aeld. North Campus. 7 p.m.
Royals' last home pmc: or the

Cnoft· -

.......
Utew--,

_,_

Silas. WUian, Sweclinc:k.
DurufU. Slee Concert Hall. North
Campus. 5 p.m. $2, SS, $6., $8.

--

Fll•

ucnw--,

Fllm FestivaL
Student Union. North Campus. 7
and 9,30 p.m. S3, S5 .

latrodud:ioll to PVM. 9 a.m.·
Noon. To register, call Academic
Services. Computing and lnrormaLion Tcchno1gy (ASCIT) User Liaison off.ce at64S-3S40.

Aluaal Aftaa. North Campus.

llobert S11ore, Plwm .D. 248

lOa.m.-4 p.m.

·Cooke. North Campus. 8 a.m.

or,..-..
ZkHI Wu. Works of Bach. Franck.
Bnhms. lsoir, Brvhns. Saint-

-

Hulllall Rlahu

MOOKhUdrea, comedy directed
by Richard Mennen. Drama
Theatre, Center for the Arts.
North Campus. 8 p.m. $5. S I0.

......

c.ll'-lu•
1\fok&lt;ular Structure Delennlnatlon via SnB. Russ Miller. 218
Nonon . North Campus. 3 p.m.

103 Diefendorf. South Campus.
) p.m.

Nelson Townsend, UB Director of Alhllllal,
Torch lhrough ~Buf­
falo Qct. 12 on Its journey to the 199f~
pies in Atlanta. Tawnseild ~ loc:atCIIIiollll
fcii' on&amp;-mile run that began at City Hall.
carries~

MaiRJiagc, Center for the Arts .

Nonh c.mpus. 8 p.m. S 17, $30,
S36.

EaYI--

From Obstacles To Opportu"ttltles: Improving Blnattonal RAP Coopcralion. Sponsored by
Great Lakes Prognm mnd lnternauonal Joint
Commission.
Holiday Inn &amp; Confert:nce
Ce nter, Grand Island. II :30 a.m.
$35. Two-dny conrerence: through
Oct. 2 1. For inrormation. call 6452088.

Yo

I

Buffalo Pb.ilhanDOak Orcbatn, Eiji Oue, conductor, wilh
Corey Ccrovsek, violin.
Smetana's "Bartered Bride" overture, Dvorak' s Violin Conceno,
Tcha.ikovsky' s Symphony No. 4.

ThMter

BioJocy or Estroa:eo In the Va5cular Wall, Dr. Ehad Abdel·

~~i~5~~t:
~"'1'.

~

Mooac.blklnn, comedy directed
by Richard Mennen. Drama 'f'he-.
aue, Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $.5, SIO.

Wlln Baby is Bon wilb Craolal Foclal Defects, MK:hacl
Dent, M.D. Cafetorium A, Mercy
Hospital. 8:30a.m.

---

Lot:llwood Ubrary Booksalt..
Friends Room, Lockwood Ubnuy. North Campus. IO a.m.4:30 p.m. Hardcovers $2. paperbacks S I, periodicals SO cents.

- r e a . . -. .

SociiiiWorltWOI'kahop
Sand Tray Therapy witb Adults
and Cblklren, Or. Wendy Miller.
Sponsored by Social Work Con·
tinuing Education. 0Aemen College, 4380 Main St., Amhent.
8:45 a.m.-3:30p.m. $6S. To regis·
ter, call645-6140.

-__

Lot.kwood Ubrary Booksale.
Friends Room. l...ock:wood Li-

brary. North Campus. 10 a.m.4:30p.m. Hardcovers $2. paperbacks $1 , periodicals SO cents.

,

CoCJoltiYe-

Dtddlaa What To Do Nut, Phil
Goetz. 224 Bell. North Campu.s.
.lp.m.

-.tryLlfeW.........

GniUplbiok, Ed Brodko. B0-5
p.m. For information, call the: Of-

fi ce of Student Life at 645-6125.

Rot. or Pti....Spedllc Pbo&lt;pho-

llpuc C ia Ce:ll Sipalio&amp;.
Randall Shortridge. 1348 Farber.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

PIIJIIIoioO Counting K* ions ln.side ruombinaal c:balmek, Dr. Per Stampc.
Univ. or Rochester. 108 Sherman.
South Campus. 4 p.m.
UkWOI'kahop
Garda~ Art, Jerttn Michalski. 68 p.m. $6 for materials. For infor·
mation, call the: Office of Student
Life at64S-6125 .

LlfeWOI'kahop
Latin Rbrtbm Dandaa ror
Sinatcs aDd Couplet of AU Aaes,
Ninita and Bjorn Bogue. Also Oct.
30. 7-8 p.m. For information, call
the Office of Student Life 11 64S6125.

OwDen, Utcn, Spetulators aad
lnveston: Public. Policy aad
Prope.rty Dcvclopmcnl in
Rus1bclt ClUes, Dr. Patsy Healey,
Univ. of Newcastle Upon Tyne.
Hayes 108. South Campus.
I I a.m.
Poetr}&lt; Lecture
Comm~ si - Commc (1, Michel
Deguy. French Festival event. 930
Clemens. North Campus. 12:30
p.m. Free. Part of Wednesdays at
4 Plus.

-

Roft,e~I..-Sblff

PllyaiQProfs. P. L JIIIA ud Vlri&lt;b
B.lur. 220 Narun.l Sctences &amp;.
Mathematics Complex. North
Campus. 3:4S p.m.
•ta;llrMIDill............,.
N lcotlak

R~MCpton

oa Neuroa.s:

Multiplicity of Subtype aod
Fupdioe, Darwin K. Sera. Uoiv.

of Caliromia. San ~go . 11 4
Hochstetter. North Campus.
4p.m.
ll_,uo. for ..........
Receplloo for Pro- Thomas
Bead.ritk. Studcnl Union Social
Hall . North Campus. 4' 15·5'30
p.m. Presented by Campus Club,
wilh t.hc: Faculty Senate aod the
Professional Staff ~te .

I.Mbore- Fllol
Sc ..... plays of Preston

v.........,.....

UteW--.,
s..tdac ..._.

w-.

Eiltco

Stewart. 7:30-9 p.m. For iaforma·
tion. call the OffiCe of Srudenl
Life at645-6J2S.

LlfeW--.,
Reoolvl"l CoalllcU, VB Couoselinc CcDr.er staff. Noon-1 p.m.
For inf()t~Mlioo, call the Office or
Student Life at 645-6125.

-I.Mbore
Russi.. Cultlll't: Afttr eo.aua1sal: Ji'1owuw lD 1M
Yek:aterina Genieva. Ph.D. 930

w......-.

Clemens. North Campus. Nooo.

.......

-weiiP-Sblff
KennethJ. Pienta. M.D.. Un.iv. or
Michigan, AM Arbor. RPCJ. Elm
and_CatiiA&gt;n. 12,30 p.m.

ASCITW.........
Mort Sua UNlX. 1:30-4 p.m. To
register, call Ac:adc:mic Services.
Computing and lnfonnadoa TcchnoiO&amp;Y (ASCIT) UJCr Liaison office at 645-3540.

PoetryR.-,

Ge.nomk lutability Ia Tumor
Cells: ladadJoa of~ac AmpUrtcalioG by Can:laott'u uc1
Suppreoaloo by Site Spt&lt;lllc: lntecratioa of Admo-Aaodated
VIrus, Or. Sara Lavi, Tel Aviv
Univ . Roswell Plut Cancer Institute, Elm and Carlton. 12:30 p.m.

-

All Aboard Ill&lt;

ltallroHI Kevin Couron. 7-8:30
p.m. For information.. caJI Ibc: Of.
fice of Student Life at 645-6125.

s...,....,

Mlcbd Dqoy. French Festival
event: bilingual readioa. Screc.ning Room. Center ror lhe Arts.
North Campus. 4 p.m. Fret. Pan.
of Wc:dnesdays at4 Pl us..

LlfeW.........
Exploriaa C&amp;l'ftr Cbaaae, Janet
Mather. Joyce Anderson. Sandra
Handy. 6-8 p.m. For infonn.atioo.
call the: Offia: or Student We II
645-6125.

Life Worllahop
The Aalat.als' Aae:ada, William
E. Palka. 7-9 p.m. For information, call the Office of Stude:at
Ufe at 645-6125.
Opooo:
u.e
Lisa Coopt, plaoo. Worts or
Schubert, Uw, Ravel, R.zewski.
Allen Recital Hall . South Campus.
1 p.m. Free. Cooceru arc taped for
broadcul on W8FO 88.7 FM !he
following Sunday at4 p.m.

c._...

LlfeW__,
VB Hillo&lt;y: F..U I&lt; Folklore,
Bill Johnson. 7-8:30 p.m. For lofomwtoa. ca.lllbc. Off.ce of Student Life al64S-612S.

Continued on page 7

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Chancellor ·to.Speak
at ConvoCBiion Friday
SUNY Chancellor Thomas A Bartlett will
speak at UB's Convocation Oct. 13, and assist
in award presentations.
Honorees include Sara
Lawrence Ughtfoot. who will
receive a Doctor of Humane
Letters degree . faculty appointed to SUNY Distinguished ranks 1n '94-95 and
'95 SUNY Chancellor's
Award recipients

October 12. 1995 Volume 27 . No. 7

Greiner address calls for
more independent UB
President delivers annual message to voting faculty

~~:o~s:x

Unvellln&amp; --nnlall&lt;&gt;eo, lmm left: John P. NaUCJrton, Philip B.
Welo, Preoldent William R. Greiner.

UB plans 18-month
sesqui celebration
8J PA~~::.~VAN

,

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo has announced plans
to mark its !50th binhday
with an IS-month celebration to begin in January 1996. A
highlight of the UB sesquicentennial celebration will be a four-day
period in October 1996 that will

Department ofPolitical Science, and
Barbara Bono, associate professor in
the Department of English.

At the press c.onference. Philip

B. Wels, chair of the UB Council
and honorary chair of the sesqu i-

centennial committee. singled out
the commiuee co-chairs. Carole
Smith Petro, Claude Welch and
Barbara Bono, as well as the medi includeaconvocation,anacademic
cal school sesquicentennial cosymposi um , pro- r-U-IIIVIBn1'----.--------, chairs, Ron ald E.
gramssponsoredby
SIIJieUnivmit]o{NewYorl&lt;
Batt and Harold
US's 16 academic .~
Brody,fortheirserfac ulties and profes•
vtce in planning the
sio nal schools, a
celebration. Wel s.
concertandasesquiwho recalled the
centennial gala.
•
1946centennialceiebration which enPlans for the eelebration were angendered much
nounced Oct. 10 at
O...iiur.drtdFijtyYttm
excitement in the
communi ty: said he
the unveiling of the
believes the sesq uicentennial will
UB Sesquicentennial Logo during
be equally exciting for WNY .
a press conference in theJeanneue
The IS-month calendar for the
Martin Room of Capen Hall . The
universiry's sesquicentennial celcelebration will mark the foundebration includes:
ing of the University at Buffalo as
• An enhanced ceremony coma medical college in 1846. an event
memorating the birthday o f Millard
that will also be celebrated in 1996
Fillmore, one of the founders of
and 1997 by the UB School of
UB and its fin;t chancellor. on JanuMedicine and Biomedica1 Scieoces
ary 8, 1996.
(Su related story on Page 7).
• An exhibition of historic UB
UB President William R .
photographs, documents, books
Greiner noted that " It 's been a great
and memorabi lia to open in March
century and a half for the Univer1996 in the universil'y archives.
sity at Buffalo .. .it's the people in
The exhibit will present the c hang thi s room and all those who went
ing picture of UB life from the
before you who made these 150
university's early days as a mediyears together great, and who guarcal
college in downtown Buffalo to
antee that there are another 150
its.
deve lopment as a major public
great years ahead of us." Also payresearch and service university.
ing tribute to the university's
• A University Founders event
150,000 graduates and current
andaFoundersDinnerinAprill996.
26.000 students. he said, "UB is a
• A special four-day, univergreat community of people."
sity·wide convocation period in OcFestivities and special events
tober
1996. Among the events
for UB's sesquicentennial are bescheduled are :
ing planned by a commi ttee of
• Octobu 2: A university conmore than 30 members of the univocation with a presentati on by the
versi ty com munity headed by
first speaker in US's 1996-97 DisCarole Smith Petro. associate vice
tinguished Speaker Series.
president for university services~
• October 3: Programs in the
Claude Welch, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor in the
Continued on page 7

P2l

~

un1 ve rs ity
according to
Greine r. comITH THE SUNY Board of Trustees !
paring it to the
JX)ised to produce a major report on ~
U niv e rsities
restructuring the state universit y ~
of
fllinoi~.
Dec. I, President William R. Greiner
Iowa and Penn
turned up the volume on hi s call for
State. Greiner
a more independent UB during his Oct. 9 address to the
explained
voting faculty in the University Gallery of the Center for
that, in his
the Arts. Greiner engaged members of the voting fac~--'----------' view, "since
ulty in a 90-minute discussion. "New Context. New
President
Greiner
speaks
Oct.
9
In
our vision is to
Approaches: UB and a Changing SUNY."
Center for the Arts.
become the
Greiner told faculty members his unofficial anthem
premier public institution in the northeast. and the rest
is "If you can't send money, send freedom ." State tax
of the SUNY campuses are also in the northeast. we
support of public higher education accounts for nearly
will become the flagship of the system ...
tO. percent of the state's total operating budget, acGreiner credi ts SUNY's new trustees for being
cording to Greiner. 'There are severe external presengaged
and devoted. saying "'they are on a fast
sures on state support of higher education," he added.
\earning curve and are w\Hing to put issues onto the
The state contribution to SUNY was, for the flfSt time
table that should have been there long ago." Also, in a
ever, less than ruitj on revenues this year, and could slip
break from the past. Greiner says the trustees freeven further, he said. Greiner predicted tax support
quently
call him and other campus presidents for
could bottom out at 35 or 40 percent of the total
input. ··1 don't envy them their jobs," Greiner said,
appropriation.
''but neither will I make it any easier on them because
Greiner suggested that the first step in formulating
I keep pointing out stuff. ..
a sol ution to SUNY's woes was to "stop all thi s
SUNY Central specializes in "decision making by
·systemness' and face up to what we really are : a
delay,"
according to Greiner. Adding that.·· precious
federation of very different institutions. We should
little
power rests in that 1.000 person office in Alrevel in our diversity ." Greiner's address was pepbany:· Greiner made clear that his "pitch" to the
pered with criticism ofSUNY Central and talk ofUB 's
trustees is that UB needs to be slowl y divested from
de facto role as SUNY's flagship campus. Greiner
SUNY Central. "And. the trustees buy it." he said.
conte nded that UB "has all the makings of a flagship
Using overhead charts and graphs. Greiner painted
uni versity" but cau tioned that "flagship is a word we
speak of. but others do not.''
UB should grow to ''look more like a midwestern
Continued on page 3

W

~

'Rethinking SUNY' gets wide input
By CHRISnNE VIDAL
Reporter Editor

ampus representatives
from throughout the
SUNY system are pre·
paring a report to the
SUNY trustees titled " Rethinking
SUNY," which recommend s
changes in SUNY administrative
systems and work processes to allow the state university sys tem to
deal effectively with the dramatic
financial reductions it faces .
The report comes at the request
of the New York State legislature ,
which has charged the SUNY Trustees with developing by Dec. I ··a
multi-year, comprehensive. sys·
tem·wide plan to increase cost efficiency in the continuing pursuit of
the highest quality and broadest
possible access consistent with the
state university mission."
According to Senior Vice President Robert J. Wagner. UB is actively participating in planning the
future of the state university system.
an endeavor that involves campus
officers, governance leaders and system officers from tluooghout the state.
And while the timeline under

C

which the report is being produced
is "very compressed.'' he empha·
sized that the scope of the planning
effort is even broader than what
was requested in the legislative
charge. In addition. "Rethinking
SUNY" is receiving wide input.
with comments being solicited from
preside nts and other campus groups
throughout SUNY. Wagner said .
"Rethinking SUNY" recommends an aggressive range of ini tiatives that would reduce costs,
redefine SUNY administrative and
camp!ls relationships. and place re·
newed emphasis on campus responsibi lit y and accountabilit y.
"Rethinking SUNY'' also emphasizes
that management nexibility is needed
if SUNY is to reduce and minimize
bureaucratic impediments to efficiency and effective managemenl
The report says, "SUNY will need
to change the way in which it does
business. SUNY is approaching a
period or rapid and dramatic change,
when 'business as usual' will no
longer be appropriate. We must begin now with a multi-year, multi ~
facetedstrategytotrnnsformsUNY·s
business and suppon operntions."

Elements of the strategies being
recommended by "'Rethi nking
SUNY"' include:
•Identifying and applying "best
practices" on as many SUNY cam·
puses as possible in the near future .
• Optimizing the use of available technology for administrative
efficiency.
• Outsourcing se rvices where it
is cost-effective and feasib le.
• Expanding o pportunities for
emrcpreneurship to increase nonstate resources to meet program
objec ti ves.
"'SUNY 's current approach to
m..lllagement and resource allocation will need to be reconsidered."
the report says. ··From the system 's
perspective. stronger incentives for
good management and resource utiLization will need to be devised. The
system must place renewed emphasis on effective planning and the
achievement of results when making
resource allocations. At the campuses. effective management needs
to be affumed and inter-campus and
sysrem collaboration and resource
sharing must be encouraged and
rewarded ."

�2

Grad student was DNA expert at lab used in Simpson trial
Br StEVE COX
Reporter Staff

means of extraCting DNA pauem information, is a method Corey used at Cellmark and
stiU uses in ber doctoral researcb. CNN addicts may also remember RFLP as being the
DNApnx:essSimpsooattomeyBanyScbeck
spent so much time trying to discredit on
cross-examination.
Today, CeUmark remains a complement .
rather thao a competitor to the FBI and
various state laboratories. "It it not their goal
to replace crime labs, but to provide services
that the State lab can'~" explained Corey.
For instance, state labs will not do research
for defeodants and sometimes lack the ability to perform vital tests fast enougb to meet
deadlines imposed in many states that expedite criminal trials under laws Icnown as
"speedy trial" statutes.

A

lthough Marcia Clark may not
be the only perron disappointed
with the verdict acquitting O.J.
Simpson, UB Ph.D. candidate
Amy Corey says that DNA scientists from Cellmark Laboratories, her
former col leagues. who testified for the prosecution in that case probably aren't among
the di straught.
Cellmark became a household word earher thi~ year when it backed up the Los
Angeles Police Depanment Crime Lab, per·
forming additional DNA testi ng on blood
~ tain evi dence in the murders of Nicole
S impson and Ronald Goldman. Located in
the Wa s hington. D .C . s uburb of
German town. Md., Ce ll mark is one of the
largest pri vale foren sic laboratories in the
country . The lab was one of lhe first private
DNA fa ci lities in the country when it opened.
No stat es. not even the FBI Criminalislics
Laboratory in Was hington , had yet invested
in DNA research as a forensic tool.
Corey. herself a forensic DNA expert at
Ce ll mark from the time that firm opened in
1987 until starting her doc toral work in molecular biology here in the fall of 1992, says
that the primary concern of a Cell mark sc i·
enList is the accurate presentation of their
findings . '" Most scienti sts would say they
find reporting their findings (cou rt testi·
many) to be a real pain," she confided, ''because their focu s is on their research. not on
how it impacts the whole case:·
"' When yoo start at Ce llmark, the lab
direclOr tells you there is one o verriding
rule ; always tell the truth," she explained.
The "truth " means lhe honest prese ntation of
what was discovered. regardless of whether
that he lps or huns the party that employed
your services. she explained.
Cellmark Supervisor Robin Conan. a
friend of Corey's who has visited her in
Buffalo. spent many days on national televi sion las t spring testifying to DNA pattern

A

Amy COfey, ahown In Cooke Hall tab, worl&lt;ed aa lorenalc expert lor c.Jim8ltl untll1992.

matches and misses on the many pieces of
evidence collected at the cri me scene, 0.1.
Simpson· s estate and in his infamous Bronco.
Cotton. however , was a s upervi sor at
Cellmark and did not actually conduct the
research in the Simpson case herself.
er experience, says Corey. was an exception. Most DNA researchers follow
their cases right through from receipt of
evidence samples to testimony at trial. And.
few anticipate the kind of attention that the
Simpson "Trial of the Century" created.
Most cases Corey encountered at Cellmark.
are "horrible crimes from small towns all
over the country that are rarely read about in
the national press."
Everyone has a unique DNA signature.
obtaining one-half from each of their biological parents. Most human DNA is vinually identical , explained Corey. DNA
scientists toil to identify those few strands.
out of dozens in a DNA molecule. that are
unique from person to person. Chemically
extracting the DNA from evidence. as well

H

UNIVERSITY
CoNVOCATION
Friday, Oc:t.13, 1995 • 3 p.m.
H

o

n

lthough the legal profession is developing in its use of DNA evidence, Corey
says the Simpson verdict points oot one of its
greatest shortcomings: its complexity. "One
problem with jurors, we know this from
interviews with them after trials, is that they
feel overwbelmed by this stuff," explains
Corey. "Sometimes it seems they just block
the technical stuff rigbt out and lean more on
who they like better or believe more."
Jurors aren't the only ooes who have
trouble understanding the meaning of DNA
pattern matches. Corey has encountered lawyers who "sometimes just don ' t get it. I had
a case once when the defense attorney who
had retained Cellmark, said to me during
pretrial preparations, ' Okay, I will ask you
this and you say that. '
''When I tried to explain to bim that I
couldn' t say 'that' because it wasn't what the
tests results actually showed, he would ignore
me," recalled Corey. ''Then, at trial , wben my
responses didn't match what be was looking
for, he even went so far as to say, ·Hey, that is
not the way we discussed this at pretrial."
Although UB 's was the only doctoral
program Corey even applied to, the decision
to return to scbool was not an easy one for
her. "My husband, who is in biomedical
sales, had gotten a great offer in New York,"
she recalled, "so he said 'Hey, you always
said you wanted to get your doctorate,' and
I was like 'Yes, but !love my job."'
Having passed ber qualifying exams, following a brief delay last year wben she and
her husband had their first child, Corey expects to wrap up her doctorate in about
1-112 to 2 years. After that, she predicts,
"maybe teaching, maybe forensic work again,
0
maybe a different sort of resean:h."

o r

n

New construction plans placed on
hold by SUNY Board of Trustees

g

SUNY Ho norary Degree Recipient

Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot

Br S1EVECOX

Faculty Appointed to
SUNY Distinguished Ranks

Reporter Staff

and th e

1995 SUNY Chancellor's Award Recipients
University Provost Thomas E. Headrick
will deliver Convocation address
SUNY Chancellor Thomas A. Bartlett
will present awards and deliver remarks

Tickets are not required. For participation information,
call the Office of Conferences and Special Events at64!&gt;-3414.

OIREC TOROFPUBI..ICATIONS ,._,..,.t._Y •

EDITOR ~

as from a blood sample of a suspect and/or a
victim for comparison, along with the requisite paperwork to preserve the legal integrity
of the evidence. is time-consuming and ex·
pensive, says Corey. When she left Cellmark
three years ago. each sample cost nearly
$600. And, there were literally hundreds of
samples in the Simpson case, although he
was the only suspect.
Corey recalls working on many cases
without that luxury. One particular Florida
case occupied her for more lhan a year. The
case involved the sexual assault and murder
of a 14-year-old girl. "Over six months, we
were sent samples from all sorts of suspects-family members, friends. acquaintances-but couldn't find a match," recalls
Corey. More than six months passed when a
diligent detective on the case heard of an
arrest in Texas of a murder suspecr driving a
car that resembled one seen in the Aorida
incident. A "perfect match" from thai
suspect's blood ultimately led to death sentences for him in three states.
Still, Corey explains, the DNA scientist
maintains a professional detachment from
the outcome of legal cases. "Even the most
interested scientist there doesn't really get
that interested in the outcome of any particular case," explained Corey from her molecular biology lab in Cooke Hall.
Corey's doctoral research centers on photosynthetic plant DNA rather than human.
However. she says, the process is much the
same. Restrictive Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP). one of the two principal

........ •

ASSOC~TEEOlTOR

P

lanned construction of new buildings for the natural sciences and
student services on the North Campus have been placed on hold by
the SUNY Board of Trustees.
The trustees have issued a temporary
moratorium on construction f u nding
systemwide until they can better assess the
impact of the 1995-96 and 1996-97 operating budgets, according to Senior Associate
Vice President for University Services
Valdemar Innus.
Design work was to have begun by now
on phase n of the Natural Sciences and
Mathematics complex, a new building adjacent to the cunent NSM facility that would
house Mathematics, Computer Science and
Geology, said !onus.
"An architectural finn has been selected

. . . . . . . . . • ARTOifiECTOR

.-~

•

and we were awaiting a release of funds to
enable that firm to begin design work.,''lnnus
explained. In addition, the South Campus'
new Co-Generation Energy facility is stalled
at the design stage by the moratorium, said
lnnus.
The moratorium further complicates plans
for development of a centralized student
services location on the Nonh Campus. he
noted.
"We had planned to begin that project
with the 1996-97 fiscal year," said lnnus.
Numerous planned rehabilitations on both
campuses are also on hold, he added.
However, !onus pointed out that the new
South Campus facility for the School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences was
largely completed before the moratorium
and was not impacted by it. Much of that
new facility was officially put on line Sept.

20.

Mp ./tutJlnlopuoou"•lo~u/repoll.,/

0

�3
Reception to honor
Provost Headrick

Comedy on
student life
opens Oct. 12

The c.npua Club, along with the Faculty
Senate and the Professional Staff Senate,
will host a reception for Provost Thomas
Headrick Tuesday, Oct. 24 in the Student
Union ·social Hall on the North Campus.
Faculty and professional staff are invited
to meet the newly appointed provos~ who
will be introd uced by President William R.
Greiner. The reception is scheduled from
4: 15-5:30 p.m .. with wel come and remarks
at4 :30 p.m.
Those who plan to attend are asked to
notify Judith Adams, director. Lockwood
Memorial Library, with name and department. or rax the information (645-3859). 0

T

Townsend to join
Olympic torch run
UB Director of Athletlca Nelsoo
Townsend has been invited to join local offi.
cials who will accompany the U.S. Olympic
torch on the Buffalo leg of its journey to the
1996 Olympics in Atlanta.
The one-mile run will begin with a ceremony at lOa.m. today at City Hall. Follow-

ing the ceremony, Townsend and other
Buffalo dignitaries including County Executive Dennis Gorski. Seymour Knox IV of the
Buffalo Sabres and Rob McKenzie of the
Canadian Consulate will pass the torch in
relay, each carrying it for approximately
I /20th of a mile and continuing on. all crossing the fini sh line together.

DARS reports to be
available Oct. 16
UB DARS, the universit y's automated
records system. is up and running. and stu dents wi ll be ab le obtain their record s beginning Oct. 16. UB OARS takes the guesswork
o ut of deciphering university requirements,
generaJ education programs and major re quirements by providing an automated record
that shows how courses a student has taken
apply to a specific degree program as well as
what courses may be selected to complete
degree requiremenls. Repons are available
al the fo ll owi ng locations:
Accepted m ajors-see your department.
E ngineeri ng students (intended and accepted)--41 0 Bonner Hall.
Intended m ajors-145B Student Union
9 a.m.-4:30p.m. Monday. Oct. 16-Friday.
Oct. 20.
Alter Oct. 20, aud its may be obtai ned from
departmental advisors; the Academic Advising CenleJ; 109 Norton Hall; Center for Academic Development Services/EOP, 208 Norton
Hall; and the Sehool or Engineering and AJ&gt;plied Seiences, 4 10 Bonner Hall. Students
must present their SUNYCard to receive a
report. For more information, cal l 645-2450.

Media Study to
screen McAloon film
P I - McAloon was a 20-year-old j unior
in the UB Department of Media Study when
he died unexpectedly this summer. O ne or
his last projects was the production of "Corridor," a one-hour documentary that explores
the complica ted relationship between BuffaJo and its northern suburbs.
The Department of Media Study will
prese nt a memoriaJ screening of the fil~
Oct. 21 at 3 p.m. in the Screen ing Room m
the Center for the Arts. North Campus. The
screening, open to the public. will be free . It
will be preceded by comments in commemoration of the filmmaker by friends and fam ily and will be followed by a reception.
Jim Swan. professor of English and chair
of the Department of Media Study, calls the
fi lm "a very good and well-contextualized
work rhat presents a strong sense of the
history of the 'conidor' that connects downtown Bufialo to the town of Amherst."

Dave Nielsen places door hanger with tips
on safety Oct. 6 in University Heights area.
Erik Kurens, left, and Joe Dennie are in
background. Student volunteers placed
4,000 hangtags in crime prevention effort.

Workshop to focus on international
efforts to remediate Niagara River
ByiELUN GOUIBAUM
News Services Staff

I

NTERNA TIONAL EFFORTS to
remedlatelhe Niagara River ecosystem is
the focus of"From Obstacles to Opportunities: lmproving Binational Remedial
Action Plan (RAP) Cooperation," a workshop
to be held Oct. 20 and 21 in the Holiday Inn &amp;
Conference Center on Grnnd lsland. lt is sponsored by UB · s Great Lakes Program and the
International Joint Commission.
Highlight of the workshop will be a twohour, narrated river cruise on the Niagara
Clipper Oct. 21. from 2-4 p.m. Scientists
and naturalists will demonstrate how they
monitor the river's health, as well as di scuss
the river's aquatic life. remediation, ecological importance and history.
The cruise and workshop are open to
elected officials and policymakers. the media, educators. sportsmen and members of
other groups invol ved in remediation efforts.

Opening remarks will be given by Joseph
DePinto. director or UB. s Great Lakes Program and Bruce Kirschner, RAP coordinator
of the UC. Sessions will include discussion of
the St. Clair, St. Lawrence and Detroit rivers
and U.S. and Canadian perspectives on the
Niagara River Remedial Action Plan.
Alice Chamberlin. U.S. commissioner to
the IJC. will be the guest speaker at a dinner
Oct. 20 at6:30 p.m. One or six commi ssioners on the UC, which assists local governments in solving problems affecring the Great
Lakes. she will di sc uss the commi ss ion's
perspectives on binational RAP cooperation .
The conference IS being held in conj unction with the New York Sea Grant Ex tension
Program. the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service' s
Lower Great Lakes Fishery Reso urces Office, the New York Stale Department of
Environmental Conservation and the Ontario
Ministry of Environment and Energy .

--

GREINER MESSAGE

--------- - -

1995 SEFA Campaign

Continued from page 1

the specialized colleges. statu tory colleges
and free-s tanding health sc ience centers as
disproportionate drains on SUNY resources.
"If I were a trustee , facing a university whe re
more and more of the support was coming
from tuition. I woul d be concerned with how
to defend spendi ng one-third of state tax
do ll ar support on less than I 0 percent of the
students," observed Greiner.
Although nearly 44 percent of SUNY students attend one or 13 university colleges and
another 38 percent attend the four university
centers. those institutions receive only 61 percent oflotal state taX dollar support. according ·
to Greiner. State taX support per FTE ranges
from $2,087 at university colleges to $18.192
at the statutory colleges of Cornell and Alfred
to$35, 181 attheSyracuseandBrooklynHealth
Science Centers. Nevertheless, Greiner conceded that ··consolidation and closure are still
words not to be spoken at this time."
Greiner unveiled a few specifics of hi s plan
for decentrali zi ng SUNY. noting that he was
pursuing an end to the centr..tlized admissions
process in Albany ("No one else in the nation
does that. Give us our application fee money
and we will process them here.") and foFmation of a regional administration. housed at
UB. for all five Western New York SUNY
schools ('The time to download some of these
adminislrdtive tasks is now."). These moves,
among others, are steps in his longtenn plan to
reduce UB •s dependence on the central administration in Albany. "We need to become more
self-reliant, and we need to move in that direction one step at a time," he said.

-----

HEUBDEPA RTMENTOFTheatre and Dance will present
Michael Weller 's 1971 comedy.
" Moonchildren." about the life.
love, and existential.angst of uni·
versity sludents in the 1960s.
Performances will be held at 8 p.m. on
Oct . 12- 15 and 19-22 and 2 p.m. on Oct. 14
and 21 in the Drama Theatre, Center for the
Ans. on the UB North Campus.
Ticket prices areS I 0, general admission,
and $5 for srudents and senior citizens.
"Moonchildren" is a look at a critical
time in recent American hi story through
the daily li ves of those who experienced it.
The characters deal with perverse land lords. upti ght neighbors. encyclopedia sales·
men. dead relatives and police. They bring
guns to peace rallies. fall in and out of
relationships. study (son oO and search for
meaning m their li ves.
This production of "Moonchildren" will
use video and other media to enhance the
historical accuracy of the setting.
"Moonchildren" is directed by Richard
Mennen, and fea tures performances by the
following students: I amond C. Billyard.
Brian E . Dolan. Scot Hartman . Bri an
Hemedinger. Paul Joseph. Jordan Mann.
Susanna Maritime and Jacob C. Mirer.
Al so in the cast are Michael Providence.
Rebecca Ruest. Colin M . Rust, Lorin E .
Swenson. Kri sten Tripp. Joshua Baker Vink
and Leonard Ziolkowski.
The costumes are designed by Heather
Rae Mi\\er . Sets are by Caro\ Bec'K.\ey. and
sou nd design is by Thomas Burke .
Richard Mennen ha s directed for
Shakes peare in Delaware Park and the
Alleyway Theatre and produced appearances by the Polish Laboratory Theatre in
this country .
A UB professo r of theatre and dan ce.
Mennen has taught and directed at several
univers ities and toured internationall y as
an actor.

UnH

Contrtbutlono

% of goal

Architecture &amp; Ptann.ng

$8.345

88%

Arts &amp; Lett8f11

t3.301

36

Dental MediCine

9.546
t2,t46

3t

14. 145

45

Graduate School of Educatioo
Eng•neenng &amp; Applied Sc.ences

79

Health Related Professlons

4,850

47

InformatiOn and L•brary Stud1es

t,5t6

84

7,115

55
78

law ·
Management

22598

Medicine &amp; Biomedical Seiences

65.971

47

Natural Sc.ances &amp; Mathematics

11990

33

Nursing

3.649

Pharmacy

4.623

44
4t

Olfooe olllle President

5240

OH1ce of the Provost

4.692

Social Seiences
Socta!Work

78
43

16,5t2

45

3 t32

63

UB Foundation

0

0

Student AHaus

t3 494

40

University Se&lt;v1ces

73,002

62

Emerttus Center

t2563
4,264

46

Sponsored Programs

Umverstty Advancement &amp; Development

2,2 16

t9

Public Service &amp; Urban Affairs

4.502

23

University Total

$320,0 1 2

5 1%

�4

Info missing from
prescriptions proves costly
Tracking It clown Is tlme-consuml~~~&amp; task for phMmaclsts
BY Eu.EN CIOLDBAUM
New s Servtces Staff

l

mi ss ing from prescription forms
cos ts pharmac ies an average of
$6,0 84 annually .
··our study sho ws that clarify·
ing mi ssing infonnation from pre·

sc ript ions is a time-consuming and
ex pensive task. for pharmacists: ·
said Rose Mary J. Madejski , clini-

cal assistant professor of pharmacy
at UB who conducted the study.
Madejsk.i noted that the problem al so creates a cost for the physicians who fail to provide th e
information, since staff in their of-

fice must take the time to obtain the
correct information and relay it to
, the pharmacist before he can fill
lhe prescription .
- The objective of the study . presented at the annual meeting of the
American PharmaceuticaJ Association. was to examine what it costs
pharmacies each time they have to
contact a physician 's office for
addi tional infonnation in order to
correctly fill a prescription.
" It cost each phannacy in the
study $117 per week to obtain the
additional infonnation, which during a year amounts to $6,084," explained Madejsk.i. "Profit margins
for pharmacies are so tight that
$6,000 a year for clarifying prescriptions is a costly sum,'' he said.
The study looked at 36 pharmacies over a period of one week.
During that week , they filled a total
of more than 4 7 .000, prescriptions.
of which 1.532, or about 3.2 per-

Mobile dental clinic
Br LOIS IIAKDt
News Services Staff

Clll'*- .. ~e-ly wbo may never have seen a dentist

"It cost each pharmacy in the study $117 per
week to obtain the additional information. "
cent, had missing infonnation.
Contacting physicians ' offices
to clarify and add the missing information required a total of 127.6
hours of pharmacists ' time for the
36 pharmacies.
Madejsk.i estimated that each
time a pharmacist made such a call,
it cost about $2.75 in pharmacist

salary and telephone fees.
A major problem identified by
the survey was that on 23 percent of
the prescriptions written for controlled substances-medications
with a high potential for abu~
physician had no1 indicated the maximum daily dose of the medication
that was not to be exceeded.
['

A better test for computer products
Br Eu.EN CIOLDBAUM
New s Servic es Staff

A INitiMnultlclll approach called
complexity theory may be more
effective than current methods
used by computer hardware and
software manufacturers to test performance claim s -or bench mark s -for cheir products .
according to computer scientists
at UB .
Using complexity theory. they
recently randomly generated a test
using high-precision division arithmetic that pinpoi nted the flaw in
the Pentium computer cbip.
Jin- Yi Cai. UB associate professor of computer science, said
that prototype benchmarks using
complexity theory that he developed with hi s colleagues and students, have the potential to test
computer hardware for a range of
variables, including processor
speed and memory capacity.
"The purpose of a benchmark

. . _ 81111 • - wllo develop alcoholism in middle age began
dri~g ~lier in life than non-alcoholics, according to a research study
publtshed tn May by James L. Vorl&lt;, a pharmacologist at the Research
Institute on Addictions.
.
"This is the first lime that detailed data have been published about the
early alcohol use of people who later develop alcoholism," York said.
"Tbese findings can help us identify young people who are at risk of
developing alcoholism." The study of lifetime drinking patterns of
E alcoholics was published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol.
York interviewed 273 middle-aged alcoholics and 1S2 moderate
2 drinkers in the Buffalo area. Among his findings :
~
Early drinking: Alcoholics began drinking regularly at an earlier age
~ than non-alcoholics (about age 16 for men and age 17 for women).
~ Moderate drinkers staned their alcohol use about one to two years later.
. Heavy drinking: In their youth, alcoholics drank heavily, averaging
Stx drinks per sitting in their teen years and 12 drinks per sitting in their
early twenties. In comparison, moderate drinkers averaged three drinks
per sitting when they were young, an amount that did not change
significantly in their adult years.
The Research Institute on Addicition, (RIA) an affiliated institute with
the University at Buffalo, is located atl020 Main SLIt is par1 of the New
York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance-Abuse Services, which
provides its basic funding .
Directed by Howard T. Blane, a psychologist and oatiooally known
addictions researcher, the RIA is a national leader in the field of alcobol
and other drug studies. With a staff of almost 200 working on 40 separate
studies of alcohol, illicit drug abuse and related issues such as crime and
violence, it also provides treahnent for addicted persons as par1 of
resean:h programs in its Clinical Research Center.
In 1993, RIA was designated a National Alcohol Research Center by
0
the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

i

lle~blehandwrttlntisn ' t
the onl y diffi culty pharmacists e.nc?unter when filling
prescnpuo ns. A recent study
conducted by a UB pharmacy

researcher found that information

\

Risk in early drinking

is to verify a manufacturer's performance claims about the speed
and accuracy of a specific product," Cai explained.
Problems may get past design
teams, he noted, because cuJTCnt
benchmarks are not rigorous or
objective enough. By subjec.Ling
products to a problem with a specified complexity. Cai said, manufacturers could prevent or correct
design flaws before they hit the
market.
What ' s missing from the current generation of benchmarks, Cai
believes, is an objective criteria
and a certain amount of randomness in generating the actual test
that will provide a realistic assessment of how a product will perform under the most demanding
and unpredictable computational
conditions.
Cai and Richard J. Lipton, computer science professor at Princeton
University and co-investigator on

a National Science Foundation
grant, say that a benchrnarl&lt;: based
in computational complexity would
be more accurate because it would
safeguard against " loopholes" in
current benchmaz:ks that allow
some errors to go undetected.
If a benchmark is generated that
has a certain specified computational complexity, then a manufacturer who can pass the test in a
certain amount of time essentially
proves his performance claim.
Cai said that he and his colleagues could generate an objective benchmark based on
computational complexity and a
certain amount of randomness that
certifies the objectivity of test results of many computer products
by any manufacturer.
Cai has been awarded the prestigious Alfred P. Sloan.Fellowship
and a Presidential Young Investigator Award for bis work in complexity theory.
0

will get regular biannual checkups in the future in a mobile dental clinic
made possible by a S 160,000 grant to the UB School of Dental Medicine
from the Gebbie Foundation, Inc., in conjunction with the foundation's
early-childhood "Success by 6" initiative.
The 39-foot custom-made van with four fully-equipped dental exam
rooms will begin circulating throughout the county next summer, stopping for 4-6 wee~ at targeted preschools, Head Stan Programs and
locations recommended by "Success By 6." The rotation schedule will
allow cttildren to be seen twice a year, providing continuity of care.
Louis J. Goldberg, dean of the UB dental school, said the school
appreciates greatly the Gebbie Foundation' s generosity and reaffinned
the dental school ' s commitment to public service. "'Ibis project will have
a significant impact on the birth-to-6-yearpopulation, and will further the
dental school's commitment to disease prevention," he said.
The mobi le clinic will be staffed by UB dtntal school faculty. UB
hygieni sts and dental assistants, and UB dental students who will intern
on the van. "Success by Six" participants and children from preschool age
through third grade will be eligible for dental care through the mobile
clinic. The UB dental school expects to serve 3,000 Medicaid-eligible
children the first year, increasing to a maximum of5,000 by the third year
of operation.
In addition, clinic staff will offer a prenatal nutrition and dentaleducation program to pregnant women, coordinated by Paul Creighton,
UB clinical assistant professor of pediatric dentistry.
Beverly Spencer, assistant dean for community affairs in the UB dental
school, said Chautauqua County was chosen as the locale for the rural
mobile dental clinic because of the strong need.
The mobile cl inic and future UB dental-school rural initiatives will be
monitored by an advisory board made up of community and UB representatives. Joseph B ema~ associate dean and chair of pediatric dentistry at
the UB dental school, chairs the board, with Sebastian Ciancio, UB chair
of periodontology, serving as vice chair. The other members are Dianne
Eisenhart, director of the Gebhie Foundation's "Success by 6" initiative
and Chautauqua County dentists Francis Palmer. Vincent Nalbone, Peter
Masone, Robert Siegel and Mark Twichell .
0

~ ohows • •• oknllar to one to be -

---

lor mobile -

cNnlc.

�5

Leners

TheRtspotte£~1ettfn fromtBI!tdets ~onttss«JneSand

CCWltent. L.snets ShoukJ be briel and may be edited lor~ and .isngth Be-

remark that the ongrna1 decrsron to treat
Rosh Hashanah and Yom Krpp ur as unrver -

ebralion of lhls rich and vibranl herilage.

sity holidays was "forced by political realities ." To be sure, it is probabty true that state
pohcies had something-maybe everything- to do with the decisron: on the other
hand . it is p reposterous and even inflamma-

Some of the events p lanned are as follows: Ocl 9-1 3, •Semana Latina,· sponsored

tory to say that the decision was a "forced"
one, as opposed to one freely chosen to wrn

wro1e lo The News. I queslioned lhe felicily
of lhe faculty buying oul lheir leaching and

by lhe sisters of Lambda Phi Della; Oct 12.

support in democratrc pohtics

other duties with g rants obtained from third
parties , In exchange for se.rvices provided to
suc h third partie s.
In the instant case, the fund mg is g ranted
to enable Professor Sternberg to eng age in
professiona l p ractice. Research and scholarship are. so he informs us. not in p lay. This
makes the construction even more question-

5 p.m.• 145 C. Student Union; Oct 12. Latin

caused Sf»C61mitati:Jns. lhe Reponer cannot publish~ Jemn

Are Faculty Fungible?
In response to a letter Professor Sternberg

f'8Cflived

Latin American Student Association meeting.
American Student Association d inner and

party. 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Social Hall. Sludenl
Union. $6 for bolh events. $3 for one; Ocl
12. Oct 13. Latin American Art and Food
Festival, sponsored by the Latin American

Sludenl Association; Oct 18, Film. S!udenl
Union Thealer, 6:30 p.m.; Oct 19. Lalin

able.

American Student Association meeting, 145

For there are many architects 1n pnvate
practice. They rent space, they employ an
office staff . they pay taxes . and they com·
pete to meet the ac1d test of the market.
None such for university d enizens : The mirastruc tu re support is at one's beck and call.
taxes are not levied. and so we can readily
underb id the p rivate sector.
The winners are the umvers1ty (saving on
salaries and overhead); the professor (g arnering summer supporl and. often, additional
benefits); and the granting agency (paying
less than they would 1n the private sector) .
The losers are students, who must deal
w1th the b ackups of no proven distinction or
long-run comm itment: and private practitkr
ners, whose b id s are not (cannot be) competitive . The winners are read ily identifiabl e
units, the losers are somewhat anonymous.
In the nature of things. pointed beneficiaries
will win out over d if1use vicums
Professor Sternb erg does what the university expects him to do. but not what SOCIety exp ects him to do, and p ays h1m lor doIng. I am trouble d by that, the more so because nobody else seems to agree that
here Is a problem here

C Student Union, 5 p .m.: Oct. 26, movie
nigh!, 145 C Sludenl Union. 5-7 p.m.; Nov.
13-18. Lambda Phi Oella Sororily. Week of

H C.ll. 1IOOT
Pr essor and Cha1r
De t. of Management Sc1ence and Systems

Support Events Noting
Nat1onal Hispanic
Awareness Month
Sept 15 1hrough Oct 15 is !he period of National Hisp anic Awareness Month . The Otfice
o f Multic ultural Affairs would like to e ncourage all students to supporl events planned
by various org anizations on campus in eel-

the Butterflies, cultural awareness week .
These events and many more are
planned to educ ate the UB community about
Latino c ulture as well as to share the nch
legacy of this heritage .
For a comp lete calendar of all events
planned for this month and throughout the
semester , stop by the Office of Stud ent
Multicultural Affairs In 220 Norton Hall , North

Campus
MICIIAD.ITOIID
Ditector. Multicultural Alfatrs

Controversy_ and the
Academic Calendar
TO THE EDITOR:
A number of Jewish faculty members are not

happy willl either John Bool's explana11on ol
why the c alendar committee recommended
that the Jewish holidays of Rcsh Hashanah
and Yom Kippur be no longer treated as uni·
varsity h~idays (Reporler, Sept. 7) or with
both the tone and substance of some of the
letters engendered by Bool's column {Sept.

14).
Along with other Jews. I share the distaste lor Boot's gratuitous and insensitive
comment that Jew1sh students who are unhappy with the recommended changes can
always g o to Bing hamton or somewhere else
in the SUNY system ; aside from the ments of
his argument. which are at b est d ebatable ,
the tone and p hrasing of it unavoid ably
translates as: "If you don't like 1t here, go
somewhere else •
Similarly, Boot is JuStly chastised for h1s

Nonetheless. the heart of the reasonrng of

the calendar committee, as explarned by
Boot, strikes me as persuasive. First of all. u
is either entirely or almost enltrely a pnn -

cipled decision: by contrast. rn my judgment
the critics come uncomfortably close to special pleading. The princrple, of course. rs the
separatton of church and state. a prmciple
that should be especially important to relig ious minorities . By recommend ing that the
c alendar recognize only national holidaysthat is. no religious holidays- the commlllee
acted perfectly appropriately and 1n a pnndpled manner, one that IS supenor to any
other alternative not only tn punciple but 1n
democratic politics as welt
But what about Christmas . 11 IS asked . or
lor that matter the observance of Sunday as
a national day of rest? There are two ways to
look at this questton One could QUite reasonably take the posit1on . as do Boot and
the calendar commi!lee . that Chnstmas and
Sundays are different. and not merely because they are off1c1al national holidays Unlike purely rehg1ous hohdays, Sunday IS 1n
fact treated as a day of rest by the overwhelming maJOrity of Jews as well as Chnsllans Indeed , even Christmas Is at least par tially observed by many Jews. not because 11
is Christ's birthday but because 11 IS a won-

dertullamlly holiday
Alternatively, one could take the stnct
constructionist position and refuse to recog ntze any differences between Chnstmas and
Sunday and any other religious hohday In
that case, however, the critics' quarrel prop erly should be addressed to the nahan as a
whole, not to John Boot and the calendar
committee for conformmg to the national
norm.
Here I will speak qu1te p ersonally . as a
Jew who has greatly benefited trom
America's not mere •toleration· but warmhearted acceptance and genutne mtegrauon
of Jews into the national soc1ety. Even 1f the
observation of Chnstmas and Sund ays
should be regarded as a dep arlure tram
pnnci p l&amp;-a position with which I d1sagree~
II IS a quite minor departure wh1ch Jews and
other m1nonties should accept m good
grace. or at least in a sp1nt of comprom1se
with the over 90 percent ma,onty

As1de from the 1ssue of pnnc1ple , there
are also pract1cal matters. and here, too, the
JUdgments of Boot and the calendar committee seem more persuastve to me than those
of the crittcs . It 1s ptamly undeniable that
unNersitywide observance of three Jew1sh
holtdays (recently reduced to two) at least
somewhat d1srupts the fall academic calendar. although the costs of such dtsruption
may fatrly be debated Of course . u 1s
equally plain that the Withdrawal of the official status for the Jew1sh holtdays would Impose some costs on Jews What therefore is
cruc1at IS the s1ze of the m1nority that is adversely affected and the prec1se nature of
the costs that would be 1mposed
Let us assume that Jews cont1nue to consltlute roughly 10 percent of the student
body, as 1n the past However. of those 10
percent. a not-Insignificant number are completely secular . and do not observe the hoh days at all Beyond that there are a probably
larger number of essentially secular Jews
who par11ally observe the JeWish h1gh holy
days- for example . by fam1ly celebrattons .
attendmg synagogue. 1ast1ng on Yom Ktppur. etc -but who do not feel the need to refrain from work. classes. or (m the case of
faculty) teach1ng F1nally, there IS some proponlon of Jews who regard themselves as
essent1ally rellgtous rather than secular but
who nonetheless d o not tallow the stnct reQUirements that no work shall be done In
short . the number of Jews who stnctly observe the rehg1ous requtrements of the h1gh
hohdays IS far tess than the totahty of Jews
who compnse the t O percent mtnonty, while
I have no ftgures . my tntu111on and expenence tells me 11 IS only a m1nonty of the mt nor~ty

But perhaps the most cruc1al argument ts
thiS 11 IS hardly necessary that those who
compose th1s small m :nonty tnstsl that the
entJTe un1verstty accommodate it by cancellmg classes All that 1s necessary 1s that the
un1verS11y cont1nue 1ts c urrent p ractice (recently afftrmed by Provost Headnck) that
those whose rehg1ous behefs preclude the1r
attend1ng classes be excused without academiC penalty Indeed. 11 IS hard to see why
th1s pr:nctple should not be ap plied to other
rehg•ous m•nor\tles as well. lor example. to
Cathohcs who observe Good Friday or to
Musl1ms observ1ng an analogous htgh holy
day Such a rule w1ll allow us to dispense
wl!h spec1al. ptead1ng and . 1n my Judgment.
111s onlyw1th such a rule that pnnctple , tolerance . and respect for mul!lcullural d1vers1ty
all can be truly served
J~EILATER

Professot .
Department of Political Sc1ence

~ picl&lt;ed up I'll flu1h &amp;hulout of the season. needing only lhree saves In the effort
The BlAis . . .-7-5-1 CMIIlll1 and 2-11n the Mid-Con. UB has along restahaad olll&gt;em as
!hey ralum 10 8CIICn on Wednesday, Oct 18 vs. St. Bonaventure al RAC Raid at 7- p.m.

_..socca

The Rovalo .-1 _ , dllfarent goal scoreno to extend lhelr record to 5-2-3 wi1h a 7-1 victory
over Niagara University at flAG Raid Sa!Urday afternoon. The Royals. who OUIShol the Lady
f;:aglas 12-9, gotthe~goal .14:04iotothemalchasJoamaTower'sdirecl free kicJ&lt;
salted iniD lhe.nel put Niagara goal&lt;eeper Heather Boardway giving UB a 1.0 lead.
UB l8dcad en a aecond goal )Jill before the half as Lori Perillo knocked in a reboUld In front
of the Niagara nel at 42:341Dr the 2-ll halftime edge.
In the second half, UB got goals from Annamaria Gasbarra. Belti Cosleflo, Dana TaJerico,
-Mann and Jemlfer Devita. Talerico and Gasb&amp;rra also picked up"second half assisl$.
Niagara'slone goal came from Amber Hutton off an assis1 from Gina Prinzevali.
Senior goail8eper Nild&lt;i Pittaro stopped seven Lady Eagle shots while Boardway had two
S8VIlS for Niagata

a-..17 ao1o. !or US. Including an fnlerception.

a anar-hlgh
16 tactdee lor'llie BoAs.

-lied 3-3 at hallllrre dalpfle Mlline holding a 182.&amp;2 edge in 10181 offense and
edge In tine ol _ . . . , .,
Cllrl1lon opened the scoring for the BulB wi1h a 27-yatd field goal wi1h 8:021eft In the half.
Ml!ne tied Mon Clv1s Binder's '*--long 48-yard field goal wllh 2:0151111 In tha aeoond quartar. UB had a o49-yard touchdown f\1'1 by SWan callad back by holdilg In tha aecond quarter
and al8o lest two h.rnbles In tha half.
~
.
UB .o pened !heir Mld-Gonlinent Easlem Division schedule Friday willl a lour-game loss ID hosl
Youngstown S1a1a15-12, 15-9, 12-15. 15-13. Cendie Hirstoollecled 20 kfl1s and nine digs
while Laurie SanllllH added 16 kills and nine digs. The Royals plcf&lt;ed up lhefr first conference
win and slopped a six-match losing streak wi1h a 15-1 . 15-11. 15-5 vlctoryoverCenlral Connec1icut Slate. The Royals also scored a herd-foughl five-game victory over Troy Slale lo now
eland 15-9 overall and 2-l ln !he league. UB downed 1he Lady Trojans 15-5, 10-15. 15-13. 1015, 15-11 as Hirst led the way wilh 23 kills and 15 digs.
.
Earlier in lila week, !he Royals dropped a lhree-game decision 10 Cofgale 15-Hl 15-9. 1510 al Alwmi Arena. The Royals were led by Hirsl's 13 kills and seven digs. Kalhy Brini&lt;'M&gt;rth
added eighl kills and four blocks while Cendi Sims !allied 22 assls1s and four blocks. The Red
Aalders go114 kills from AU1umn McKenzie wilh Julia Civardi adding 10. Tory Rodger collecled 26 assisls.

MEN'S SOCCER
The Bulls pid&lt;ed up a 2-1 win over Norlheaslern lllioos Salurday allhe Mid-Cor111nen1 Easlern
DMston cluster matches at Central Connecttcut State Sot1r Tanevski scored the game-wtnner

on a penally kick wilh 1:36 remaining in !he secood half 10 Iill UB 10 !he win. The Bulls also got
a goal from freshman Sebastian Zawistan with an ass1st from Ediru Okpewho
UB knocked off Valparaiso 2-0 on Sund ay to move into second place in the division R1ch
Bachman registered a goal and an assist while Joe Mercik added a goal lor the Bulls Jay

-to

CROU CCIUII1IIY

The BUia and RoVal8
Sou1h Bend, Ind.. lo participate in the Notre Deme Cro6s
Country Invitational. The Bulls finished fif111 in the men's gold division race wi1h 188 poinls. The
Royals placed 14th In the women's.competillon.
Chris Keenan was the Bulls' top fmlsher in the men's 8K race laking 15lh In a lime of 25:55.7.
Char1ie Moynihan was UB's next finisher in 24111 al 26:08.6. Judith Novak led the Royals placing
22nd in 17:56.1 over the 5K coorse.

lEN'S a wu.ti'S TENNIS

. Both learns -a Wlllhed out by the remnan1s of Hurricane Opal last Thursday forcing the cancellation of UB's matches agalns1 Cenisius. Bolh 1eams lace Rober! Morris on Sunday al the
Unlvernily Tennis Club.

MEN'S a WOMEN'S 11ASKE111ALL

ll's !hal lime again! The Bulls and Royals hold their annual"Midnighl Madness" lo tip off the
1995-96 baskelball season Saturday nigh! al Alumni Arena. A priH!Vefl1party will be held in
!he main foyer of the arena al 10:30 p.m. followed by slam dunk conlesls. lhree-poin1conlesls
and 1eam scrimmages beginning a1 midnight Under NCAA regulations. no learn can hold a
formal prac tice prior to Oct. 15, so many schools hold their first p ractlce at the stroke of mldn,ghl and open !he practice 10 llle public.
-Ted Wasko. Sporrs lnloonation Office

THIS WEEK'S HOME ATHLE11C EVENTS
Fnday. Oct 13
Salurday. Oct 14
(HOMECOMING)

Volleyball vs. Pennsytvania

7 30 p m Alumn1 Arena

Foolball vs Massachusens

1 30 p m UB Slad1um

Sunday. Ocl 15

Men's Tennis vs Robert Morns

10 am Umversny Tennts Club

Women's Tenms vs Robert Moms

Wednesday. Ocl 18 Men's Soccer vs St Bonaventure

10 a m Un1verstty Tenn1s Club

7 pm RAC Field

�6

Faculty&amp;SiaUBillboard
MANAGUIIEHT NAMES
LAJIItY CASTELLANI
EXECUTIVE Of YEAR
UB School ol Management has
named Uny P. C.atell•nl. pres•dent and chtel executive ofltcer of
Tops Markets Inc
•Ntagara Frontter
Execuhve ol the

Year ·
Established tn
1949, the aware
recogntzes a
CASTBUNI
Ntagara Frontier
res•dent who has dtshngutshed htmsell or hersei11n a career mar ked by
execut•ve success .· a proven wtlltngness to assume a leadershtp role
tn CIVIC al!aus and a d emonstrat•on
ol htgh personal mtegnty Past rectpl ents •nclude Robert E Rtch Sr Paul

l Snyder Rober! E Rtch Jr Jeremy
M Jacobs . Burt P Fhcktnger Jr
Seymour H Knm: Ill , Sat H Alltero
and Robert G Wllmers Last year's

rect ptent was Bernard J Kennedy
CasteUant w t11 recetve the award
at the 46th annual School of Management Alumnt Assocta tton Awards
Banquet to be held Nov 7 at the
Hyatt Regency Buffalo For more tn lormatiOn about the banquet. ca11
John Shellum at 645-3224

Michael .. ohen, professor of
neurology and
dtatrtcs and chatr
nl of Neurology
o f the UB Depart
'"ISS been elected estdent of the
Chtld Neurology
t!!:tY for a twoyear term The Soctety wtth t .200
members . 1s the maJOr profess1onat
organtza tton tn ti S field
Chtel of neurology at The
Children's Hospttal of Buftato, Cohen
has been a UB faculty member Stnc e
1968 and has chatred hts department
stnce 1985 COhen attended
Dartmouth College and holds a medt·
ca t degree from the UB School of
Medtcllle and BIOmedtcal Sc1ences
A spectalist tn child neurology
wtlh expertise tn pedtatoc neurooncology. he IS the author of three
books . more than 100 bOOk chapters
and tournai arttcles. and has lectured
wtdely He rs a member of the Bra•n
Tumor Core Comml!lee of the Pedtatrtc Oncology Group and chatrs tiS
Neurosc•ence CommtUee Past prest·
dent of the Professors of Child Neurology. he has been acuve in the
American Academy of Neurolog y,
the International Chtld Neurology Assoctahon and the American Neurologic ASSOCiation

"UFE ON A COIIAL REEF"
SUDE P'II£SENTAnoN SET
Bnlhant red coral "flowers,· butterfly
fish of many stnpes and ftsh that hve
safely tn the anemone's tentacles are
among the exouc sea creatures that
wtll be featured m a slide presents·
!ton at a UB Sctences Alumn• Assoctallon talk on Monday. Oct t6 , at 7
p m Free and open to the publtc ,
"L•Ie on A Coral Reel" wtfl be held on

the North Campus 1n Room 210.
Natural Sctences Complex
Expert underwater divers and photographers, How""' and a.tty
Tleck...,._, who once lived in
Matays1a. whefe they took many of
the.r 20.000-plus underwater slides.
w•tl d•scuss carat reels. the delicate
underwater ecosystem and threats to
tis v•ab1hty The Tieckelmanns witt diS·
cuss how coral reefs provtde not only
fOOd and sheller for sea creatures.
but potenhat ant•-cancer agenls. anti·
m•crob•ats and analgesics and possJble treatments for AIDS
Shdes wt U feature coral reefs and
thetr tnhab•lants from the Pacific
Ocean . the South Ch1na Sea, the
Celeb es Sea and the Bay of Bengal
Howard Tteckelmann •s a SUNY
Dtsllngwshed Teach1ng ProfesSOf
ementus ol chemtstry at UB and Betty
Tteckelmann taught at the Oh10 Elementary Sch0011n NDfth Tonawanda.
Both are graduates of UB.
The talk ts sponsored by the UB
Sc•ences Alumm Assoc•allon of the
UB Faculty of Natura l Sc•ences and
Ma themattcs

HRP' RECEIVES DONAnON
Of CYBEX SYSTEM
Mark Howard. '86. and Denn1s Ruh , of
Southtowns PhysiCal Therapy tn West
Seneca. have donated to UB a CYBEX
trunk-extens!Ofl-flexion system valued
at $20.000 The gifl was made to the
Department of Physical Therapy and
Exerc•se Sc•ence '" the School of
Health Related Profess100s
The CYBEX machine IS an
tsokJnet•c dev•ce thai gathers data on
endurance . muscle strength , llex•blltty and other physiological factors
The data can lead to a better under standtng of how 1n1unes are caused
and how to treat or prevent them
Scott White. d irector ol the b•omechantc s laboratory and other phys•cal therapy and exerc1se faculty 1n
HRP , w•ll use the CYBEX eQuipment
lor research and •nstruction

COLOMBIAN MINISTRY
HONORS GARY HOSKIN
Gary W. Hoakln, UB assoc1ate
professor of political science and an
-expen on Colomb•an politics. has received the Orden de San Carlos award
from the Colombian Ministry of Foretgn
Relat!OI'ls. The award honors those
who have disringuished themselves tn
service to Colombia and 1n strengthentog cunural ttes and relattOns between
Gob'nbia and other nations .
Hosk•n conducts research on political parties and electoral behaVIOr
tn Colombia and Venezuela , includtng the relalionshtp between polilical
reforms and violence in developing
countries. He also studies aspects of
U .S -Latin American foreign pohcy.
A US faculty member since 1965 ,
Hosk1n has• hetd visiting professor
posit1ons at Los Andes University in
BogotA. and conducted field work in
Venezuela as a research fellow for
the Institute of Public Adm inistration
1n New York.
The author of numerous
scholarly papers and book

chapters, Hosktn
has received fund·
ing fDf his re-search and field
work In Latin
America from the
Nalioroal Endow·
ment on Democracy, the U.S. In·
fOfmaUon Agency.
the Social Science Research Council
and the Rockefeller Foundation .
He holds a doctorate from the
University of Illinois at ChampaignUrbana, a master's degree from
Johns Hopkins University (School for
Advanced lntema tonal Studies) and
a bachelof's degree from Drake Uni·
varsity. The award was presented
Sept 30 in a ceremony at the Cokxnbian Embassy in Washington, D.C .

M-AUSE TOR FOCUS
Of MmiCAL CONRIIENCE
Graham A . Colditz. author of a recent
study and an article in the New England Journal of Medicine on a possible hnk between breast cancer and
hormone replacement therapy will be
keynote speaker at a conference to
be held Oct 21 . 1n the BuHalo Hilton.
The conference , "Working Together to Keep Women Healthy:
Menopause,· will be sponsored by
the Department of Gynecology-Obstetrics 1n the UB School of Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences.
Also updating research on menopause will be Parellb Denclon8,
US professor of medicine; Frank
Qonulez, UB assistant professor
of gynecology-obstelrics ; .lean
Wactaweki-Wencle , UB clinical
assistant professor of gynecologyobstetrics, and Donald Swarb of
Albany Medical College.
The1r topics Include a descnption
of menopause. menopause and card iovascular disease. hormone replacement therapy and osteoporosis
The conference IS expected to attract
physicians and health care providers
tn obstetricS/gynecology. tnternal
medicine and lamtly practice.
The program w111 be held from
7 t5 am to 2 p m Call 878-786 1 for
more information.

NATHAN BACK IS ADVITO NEGEV COLLEGE

NatMn . .clr., UB professor of biochemical pharmacology and chatr of
the Ctfancellor's Advisory Committee
on SUNY-Israel programs , has returned
from a recent miss1on to Israel as advi·
sor to the Negev College in the pharmaceutical sciences.
The Negev College. located near
the Port of Ashkalon bof'dering tne Palestinian Gaza strip. was fOfmed as a
coHabofative venture among 15 local
municipal and regOOat councils to provide Israel 's southern residents access
to higher education and professional
training . It Is exploring the establish·
ment of a pharmaceuUcal sciences
program to ease the country's short·
of pharmac ists .

Chartea G. Rader, vice

Blrdaofprey
clemonstratlon ..........
The Environmen1al Studle&amp; Program of Social
Sciences lOP Will host a 111/e demo! ostt Bltolt of
birds of prey from 6-7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 30
In 170 Rllmore, Ellicolt Complex.
The demonstration Willleature a bald
eagle, a red tail hawk and 8 barred owl,
which is a closa relative of the spotted
owl. The demonstration is open to all
members of the university community and their families as well as to
the public. For more information,
call 645-2245.

president of technology and
development 101' Occidenral
/ ' Chemical Corp , has received the · eng ineer of the
Year· Award of the UB Engt# neenng Alumnt Assoctatton
Rader received the award at the
assoc•ation's annual reu niOn banquet
on Sept. 29 In the Umversity Inn and
Conference Center It honors a US
engineering graduate who has demonstrated outstanding profess•onal
achievement . as well as distinguished service to the prolesston.
the community and US.
The author of numerous SCI8nlitic
and educational papers , Rader h~ds
lour U .S. patents In 1976, Occ iden·

j

110 Deed

l'ltrlhe.--.mce.

Sboulcf you lip 0117 O f - )'Oillluddl '11111 ~....,.

curreala_lenice_aD ~._..,.
decCIIIIIrucliC ~ ....
iaairy clefellle.-.dle liJI II Yirlllally CDdleu aDd lila joMII
ciwiau am -10 you • al!-llllii-.,A wanlilfCIIIIIOrt.
however. CARL uaeo- would JcM 10 Mild ,.,..~~~o fidleatd
ism, earpaJ lllaKI ~

sn

eachlllticle "revcalccl" for. fee of approximaiDif
l*cllltiea.
Rallt lbc lemplalion! Log 01110 liJliON aad -as l'llrthe.ic-filal
tide (DOC lbc article Iitle) iD lbc "UB Ubnriell CalaJos-•Jtwe OWD
it on c:am~t! If oot, submit an interlibrary loa req11C1L
The Univenity Ubnuics web site occ:essible via UB Winp
provides you with I) documenWion for setting up an UIICowr
Reveal profile, 2) a direct telnel c:onnection to CARL, 3) lbc ability
to search BISON to see if we own the journal, and 4) the capacity
lo send an Interlibrary Loan n:quest if we do not

To access rhe University Libraries web site type wiltp a1 your Email system prompt and rMn sekct "Libraries " from tM opening
screen. (For rhose who use a graphical www browser such a1
Nerscape rM URL is: hltp://wings.bu.ffaJo.edullibl'tlTUs/.) Once
you are aithe Librari~s homepage select the "Online Resources"
burton, then "Genera/Indues and Library Caralogs, "rhen " CARL
UnCovu. " lntulibra ry loan request forms are found by s-leeting
the "Services, Questions, Comments" button. For assistance in
logging on to UB Wings contacr tM Help Desk in the Computing
Center at645-3542. For more information on UnCover Reveal or
assistance in selling up your profile, contact Don HartmlUI
(UNWON@UBVM.CC.BUFFAW.EDU), Loclcwood Library,
645-2817.
-Gemma DeVinney and Don Hartman , University Ubraries

tal Chem ical honored h1m wtth its Inventor of the Year Award
Rader also has been honored for
h•s efforts to 1mprove science educauon . 1nclud1ng the Grand Island
Chamber of Commerce's Cit1zen of
the Year Award in Education . He received the Schoellkopf·Award f01
outstanding contributions to science
and science education and the
Niagara Frontier Industry Education
Council's Eugene T. ReviUe Memorial
Award for ·exemplary effort In buik:ting
bridges between industry and educa·
tion . ~ In 1991 . he received the Distin·
gulshed Service Award for exceptional
leadership and service to Grand Island
from the Grand island Rotary International. He is a mem~ of the Grand Island SchooVBusiness Alliance.
A member of various scientific
and professional societies, Rader •s
a member of Tau Beta Pi honorary
engineering fraternity , and Phi
Lambda Upsilon , honorary chermstry
fraternity . A member of the Niagara
Frontier Association of Research and
Devek&gt;pment Directors. he has
served as chatr of the Industrial adv•·
sory board of the UB Department of
Chermcal Engtneering .
Rader earned a bachelor's de·
gree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. a master's degree from ihe

Correction
. . , _ Dlop, UB assislanl
professor of French . is the author of a new book on lhe

Senegal people. He was mistakenly referred to as ·she· in an arlicle In lhe Sept 28 Reporter.

University of Rochester and a doclor·
ate in chem•ca/ engineering from UB.

STEIN ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Of HIQHO ED JOUIINAL
Rot~a~lcl H. Stein, UB vice prtlsi·
dent for University Advancement and
Development. has been named associate editor of the international Jour.

nsl of Higher Educslion Polley and
Management, headquartered in Aus·
tralia .
He will be responsible for assisting the editorial board in setting an
appropriate course for the journal ;
assisting the editors in the identifica·
lion of major issues to be covered
and identification of authors to be in·
vited to write for the }ournal , and act
as referee for submitted articles.
Stein received his bachelor's.
master's and Ph.D. degrees in philosophy from UB. In addition to his
administrative duties. he is a member
oft he graduate faculty. and past
president of the Amencan Associ&amp;·
uon of University Admmistrators
CANDLE~

VIGIL

TO FOCUS ON YrcnMS
Of SEXUAL ASSAULT
"Take Back the Niglll." a candlelight
vigil and program tocusing on victims
and survivors of sexual assault, will be
held Ocl 19. on the Soulh Campus
f.Aore than 500 are expected to attend
the event, which will begin at 7 p.m in
Harriman Hall. Speaka&lt;s will onclude
survivors of sexual assault.
The program. sponsored by UB's
Anti-Rape Task Force . a d ivision of
Sub-Board I, is open to the public

�7

Medical school to note sesqui
IIJ LOIS IIAKD

News Services StaN
n!REE-DAYnationalsympo-

A

sium on Ethics and Values in

Medicine, the national meeting
of the American Association of
the HiSUlry of Medicine and a
spcciaJ-opera perfonnance will highlight the
celebration of the I 50th birthday of the UB
School ofMedicineand Biomedical Sciences.
Founded in 1846, the medical school was
the first component of what is now the Uni versity at Buffalo, which is marking its ses-

quicentennial during an IS-month period in
1996 and 1997. A 24-member committee

composed of physicians, historians, archivists. scientists and representatives from
UB 's teaching hospitals has spent the past
three years planning special events to commemoratC the medical school'scentury-anda-half of education. research and service.
Ronald E. Bau. clinical associate professor of gynecology and obstetri cs, and Harold
Brody, SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Department of Anatomy and Cell

Biology. cO&lt; hair the committee. Joyce Vana.
clinical assistant professor of social and preventive medici ne, serves as its coordinator
and liaison to the dean of the medical school.
For residents of Western New York. the
most visible s ign of the medical school 's
sesq uicentennial ce lebration will appear in
January 1996, when 50 blue-and-gold commemorative banners will be installed along
Main Streel and Bailey Avenue on US 's
South Campus. home of the medical school.
The celebration will begin officially on Feb.
2 1996-University Day-with the dedication of the medical school's new $33 million
bio
ical resean:h building, the awarding of
an ho Q[llr)' degree and the presentation of the
t995 D.W. HarringiOn Lecture. Evenl&lt;planned
for 1996 and 1997 include:
• Publication of a pictorial hi story of the
medical school-February 1996
.. Mounting of memorial plaques marking
the three original medical school buildings
in downtown Buffai&lt;&gt;-May 1996

• National meeting of the American Association of the History of Medicine in Buffalo in honor of the medical school
sesquicentennial-May 9-12, 1996
• Bestowal of honorary degrees at commencement in 1996 and 1997
• Symposium on Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine-Sept. 20 &amp; 21, 1996
• National symposium on Ethics and Val ues in Medicine-Nov. 14-16, 1996
• One-day scientific colloquium and bestowalofanhonorarydegreo-February 1997
• Special performance by the Greater
Buffalo Opera Company-February 1997
• Special exhibits at the medical school's
affiliated teaching hospitals
Other members of the sesquicentennial
committee are: Douglas Bacor?, assistant
professor of anesthesiology; Lois Baker,
senior health sciences editor, UB News Services; James Bono, associate professor of
history; Joyce Buchnowski, director of public affairs and marketing at Roswell Park
Cancer institute; Ivan Bunnell, clinical professor emeritus of medicine; Stephen Ebsary,
Jr., assistan t dean of the medical school and
director of development.
Also, Leon Farhi. SUNY Disti nguished
Professor of Physiology; Thomas Feldman,
Millard Fillmore Hospital administrator;
Shonnie Finnegan. university archivist; David
Gerber, professor of history; Richard Jones.
medical school registrar. Richard Lee, professor of medicine; Gerald Logue, professor of
medicine and chief of staff of the VA Medical
Center. Barbara Mierzwa. director of conti nuing medical education for the medical school.
Al so. John P. Naughton, vice presidenl
for clinical affairs and dean of the medical
school; Janet Parker, staff assistant to the
dean of the medi cal school: Carole Smith
Petro, associate vice president for university
services; Jack Richert., associate dean for
alu mni affairs in the medical school ; Mildred
Sanes, retired medical reporter with The
B11jfa/o News ; Lilli Sentz, curator of the
Hi story of Medicine Collection, Conni e
Oswald Stofko. research assoc iale .

~
~

f
~

~

£

AIIIRin~l

.-1? Ni to worry

Serious but not scared, students watch
•Jaws: as they float in Alumni Arena's natatorium Friday. Even! was part of National
Collegiate Alcohol Awareness and Prevention Week.

SESQUI
Continued from page 1
disciplines to be sponsored by UB 's 16 academic faculties and professional schools. These
will include mini~nferences. distinguished
speakers. alumni activities and other events.
• October 3: Alumni Concen. with presentation of a commissioned sesqu ice nlennial orchestral composition by Lukus Foss.
• October 4: A university-wide academic
symposium on "Does the Body Mauer?" featuring six scholarsofintemational di stinction.
• October 4, evening : A sesquicentennial
gala featuring the Parsons Dance Company
and Billy TaylorTrio in UBCenterfor the Ans.
• Ocrober 5: Student leadership conference featuring past and present UB studentgovernment leaders.
MC!mbersoflhe UB Sesquicentennial Plann1ng Commince include Philip B. Wels, chair. UB Council; Richard E. Baldwin. associaledirtttor, Office ofConferences
and Sprc1al Evenl!i; Ronald E. Bait. chmcal assocJate
professor of gynecology and obstetncs: DenniS R. Black.
a.~SOCHll e Y I ~'C' preside nt for stude nt scrv 1CC'!&gt; and dean of

studentll; Rona ld R. Bhck.hahn, ass•stant v1ce president
for fa::iliues planmng 11nd des1gn. D1v1s1on of Umversily Serv1ces: Jl.lllles J Bono. a.s.socJate professor of
h1story: Harold Brody, SUNY D1s11nguished Teadung
Professor 111 tm Departmenr o f Anatomy and Cell
Bio logy: Mari lyn Ciancio. past pres ident of the UB
Women 's C lub: Timo!hy J. Conroy. director. Office of
Publications: Laura Cornwall, s1uden1 representative to
lhC' commltiC'e : Stephen C. Dunnen. vice provos1 for
international education: William J. Evitts, executi~
dJtector, Office o f Alumni Relations: SandBJ . Fnd:as.
program coordinator, UB Center for the Arts.
Also, Shonnie Finnegllll. univenity :uduvlSI; M ill'}'
H Gresham, assocuue vrce president. Division ofPubhc
Service and Urban Affwrs: Kenneth J. Levy. seruor vice
provost J ~ A L1ebner. assistant djrec~or for pruiden113.1 events and protoCOl, Office of Conferences and
Spcc1al E\·ents: Bruce D McCombe , professorandclwr,
Oepartmcnl ofPhys~s: Kan MiUonzi. student~
tative to thC' comn11tt.ee: Arthur H. Page, din:ctor. UB
News Serv1ces: William J. Regan. dim::tor, Offia: of
Confen:rll.:es and Special EveniS: Kathryn A. Sawoer.
C!ltecutivc assisunt to thC' president: Stuart C. Shapiro.
professor o f computer SCience : H:vriet R. Simons. professor of mus~e: Qwies I_ Stinger, professorofhisuxy:
Ndson E Townsend. director. Divisionof Athlet.cs.and
Ezra B Zubrow. professor of anthropology

THIS WEEK
Continued from page 8

---..-··
·--·

Ad vaottd Commercial Lending
P'roinm, UB School o f Management. For professionals in commercial lending; 1hrough Oct. 27 .
Center for Tomorrow. Nonh '
Campus. $3,700 includes instruclional mBterials, single-occupancy
lodging for 10 nights, breakfasts
and lunches. orientation buffet
and BMI banquet. For information, call 645-3200.

--

~•--cettter

Biology of E.ttrogen in t.h e VaJ:-

cu lar Wall, Dr. Ehad Abdei Rahman. 108 Sherman. South
Campus. 8 a.m .

MlcrollloloCY . .....,
Mkroblologk{l mmunologk M peets of Otitis Media. Howard
Faden. M .D.• Children's Hospital.
245 Cary . South Campus. Noon.

ganisms: Tbe role or strelchactlvated channels and calcium
gnd leats, Dr. Roger Lew, York
Unlv .. On1ario . I 14 Hochstetler.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

Phanaaceutlca S..lur
Biooraan k Chemistry or ModiCyclodutrins, Alexey
Eliseev. Ph.D. 508 Cooke . North
Campus. 4 p.m.

ARhHectureAPienftl" '
IActure
Jerusalem An:hiltcture: O ld
and New. George Anselevicius,
Univ. of New Mexico. 301
Crosby. South Campus. 5:30p.m .

Ufew--,
When, W hy and How of Breast
Self Eumlnallon, Mary Jo
Bem:tini . 6-7 p.m. For infonnaliorf. call lhe Office of Student
Lift at645-612S .
~C- ..... VIall
Take Back t he Night. Harriman.
South Campus. 7 p.m. Free.
Sponsored by the Anti -Rape Task
Force. For information , call 829-

3322.
Pn&gt;-UfeW. .k

An Eocou nter Bd.ween French
a nd AIMrkllD Pods, Jean
Frtmon. Emmanuel Hocquard.
Jacqueline Risse!, C laude Roytt·
Joumoud. 438 Clemens. Nonh
Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free. Pan of
Wednesdays al 4 Plus.

See-kin&amp;Inner Wisdom, Eilttn

Come Ooe, Come AU To Wende
BaU! Central Development Staff.
202 Wende. South Campus. 3-5
p.m.

Col'-"'•
Bl&amp;h Entre Neutrino AsPllrolc•

tronomy, Prof. Francis Halz.en.
Univ. of Wisconsin. Madison. 220
Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematics.
North Campus. 3:45p.m.

-

~Sc:lencea

G rowth "uiiSilfl " in fu ngal or-

Theater
Moonchi ldren , comedy duccled
by Richard Mennen. Dnun:1 Theatre , Ce mer for the Am Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. S5 , $10

ned

Poetry T..k - DlocuMioA

Opeellouoe

dent L1fc at 645 ·6125

Pro-Life Priest and Pro-Lift
Pastor . S1udent Union Assembly
Hall . North Campus. 7 p.m. Free ;
canned goods and clt&gt;lhing donations appreciated.

utew--.,
Stewan. 7:30-9 p.m. For informa tion, call the Office of Student
Life 11645-6125 .

utew--,
Slup lng Bt•u ty: Myth or Rullty? Michelle Neill . 7-8:30 p.m.
For information. call the Office
o f Student Life at 645-6 125 .

utew--,
The Moral &amp; Elbkal Dimtn·
sioDJ of Ludenhip, Pasto r
Roger Ruff and Father Patrick
Keleher. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Fo r infonnation, call the Office o f Stu -

---OPENING EXHIBR

~·

" Hamilton Ho uston Lownie Architects" is on view through No v
3 in James Dyeu Exhibi1ion Hall.
335 Hayes Hall , South Campus.
Ho urs are Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. 10 5 p.m. The exhibit
is presented by the School of Architecture &amp; Planning.

CotmNUING EXHIBIT$

3Pri-Show by Rhode Island
printma.kers Leslie Bostrom,
S1ephen Fisher, and Nancy
Friese, through Oct. 21 in the An
Depanment Gallery located in the
Center fo r the Aru, Nonh Campus . Lithographs, etch ings, wood cuts, and meu.o1in1s. Galle ry
hours Tuesday, 10 a.m .- 5 p.m .,
Wednesday, Thursday , and Fn day, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.: Saturday. II
a.m.-8p.m.

Volo'a eolo Mow
Alfonso Vola is a poet and an an lSI whose work is on view
through Nov. 5 in the Uni vers11y
Gallery, Center for the Ans.
Nonh Campus.

J.--..Aw _

_._

ThC' University S1udent Alumni

Board {USA B), Ihc student affih ·
ate of the UB Alumm Assocla 110 0, IS ac«:pung applications for
the J Scali Aeming Merit
Award . ThC' award recognizes
full- 11me s!Udents whose volunteer efforts and leadership havC!
helped to prom01e student involvement 111 UB and have en·
hanced lhC' !iludent experience
Apphcauo ns must be received no
larcr than 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Oct. 25 . Fo r more info rmatio n
and an apphcat1o n pac ket, ca ll
829-2608

Ronald McNai r

-'lcatlona
The Ronald Mc Na1r Program IS
occep1ing 11pplications until Oct
30 for the 1995-96 program. The
progr:~m , open to JUniors and seniors w1lh a mm1mum 2.5 GPA.
IS designed 10 prepare students
for graduate and doctoral stud y
SIUdenls rece1ve a S2.400 sti pend . Applications are available
from the Office' or Student
Muhicuhural Affa1rs, 215 Non on
Hall, No nh Campus. For mformation . call 645-2732.

Receptloft for Provoat
A reception for Provost Thomas
Htadn ck. is being held 4: 15-5:30
p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 24 tn the Stu dent Union Social Hall on the
North Campus. The Campus Club
1s hosling the recepcion. along
with the Facully Senale and the
Professional S1aff Senate. President William R. Greiner will introduce the Provost. The umversily community is welcome.

llodyllullclera In
c.ter f o r - Arta

-

The Ni agara AssociatiOn o( the
Amateur Athletic Union wi ll
preSC'ntthe 1995 Mr. &amp; Ms.
U.S .A. Natural (Orug-lested)
Bodybuilding ChampiOnship.
Sa1urday . Oct. 21 in the Centcr
for the Ans' Mains1age on the
North Campus. The j udging be-

gtns :n 9 ]0 a m , and final:. arc a1
7 p m Tidc:ts are av:ulahlc:
th ro ugh T1cketMastcr or by cnll mg 839-2626

Profeaalonal
Personnel Associa te (Internal
Promotional Opportunity, MPSl· Personnel Servtces. Posting
#P-504 1 lnstruclional Support
Technidan (SL-3)-Comput ing &amp;
Information Techno logy, Posting
ltP-5036. StnH&gt;r Programmer
Analyst (SL-4)-Co mputing &amp; lnfonnation Techno logy. Posting
#P-5037. Director of ~vdop-­
menl (MP~JB) - Un ivers it y Advancement &amp; Develop~nt . Posting #P-504 2. Sen tor
Programmer Analyst (S~ ) ­
Geography , Postmg IIP-5040

Faculty
Assirtant/Associate/Full Professor-Anesthesiology. Posling lfF5024 . A.ssociale Professor-Anlhropology. Posting ffF-5025 .
Aulstanl Profeuor-Anthropol ogy. Posting lfF-5026. Assistut/
Allsoeiate ProfHSOr-Socio logy,
Posting NF-5027 . Assistant Professor -Philosophy , Posting IF5028. A.Wstant/Assoc&amp;.te/Full
Professor-Geography. Posting
NF-5029. Auoclatt/Full Professor-Geoglllphy, Posting lfF-5030.
Assistant Profeuor-Economics.
PoSting IF-5031 . Auistant Professor-History. Pos1ing ffF-5032 .
Assi.Jtant/A.uodlltt/Full Professor-Political Science. Posting lfF5033. Assistant Professor-Po litical Science, Posti ng IF-5034.
Assistant Professor (two positions •vailable)-Psychology,
Posting MF-5035. Assistant/Assodale/FuU Professor (N·o positions IIVailable)-Psychology,
Posung lfF-5036. As.sHtant Pro-

fesso r-N euros ur~C'ry , Po!&gt;tmg IIF5037 Assistant Professor-History . Posting lfF-5038. Assistant/
A.ssodatt/Full Professor-Physic;~ ! Therapy and Exerc1~ Sc ience. Posting #F-5039 AssociatetfullfCiinical Assistant
Professor -Phys1cal Therapy and
Exercise SciC'nce, Posting lfF5040 Assistant/Associate ProfC'SSOr-PedTatncs. Posting #F504 1. As!istant/A.oisociate
Professor - Ped i:~trics, Postmg •F5042 . Assb1ant/Assodat~ Pruressor-NeurosurgC!ry , Posu ng IfF
50·H . Clinical Associate
Proff'SSOr (BS)-Nuclcar Mcd.J ·
c ine, Posting #F-50-W . Msislant
Professor-Chemica l Enginet'ring,
Postmg lfF-5045. Assistanl Professor -Chemical Engineering,
Posting ltF-5046 Assl.stant/A!lsocia tt/Full Professor-Chemical
Engmeenng. Postmg MF-5().a7
Assb'tanl Professor-ChemiCa l
Engineering, Posting #F-5048

Re....-ch
Project Staff Associate-Devel opment. Postmg ltR-95090 Edltcational Speel•list Coordinators
Instructor-Educational Opporto
ntl)' Center. Posting lfR-95095
Registered Nurse-Social&amp;: Pre vc:nti ve Med1c me. Posung ltR 95096.

C _ . n lve Ciaaaltlecl
CIYitServlce
Keyboard Spec:ialist I (SC~
University Res idence Hal b. Lint
i30&amp;03. Campus PubU.t Safety
Omcer 2-Pubhc Safety. Ltne
12093 1 and • 20932
Noft.C0111~ttt1 ve

CIMalllecl Civil Service
Dental Assistant (SG-07)-ChOJ
CAl Dentistry , LtnC' ff21723
Paainter (SG- 12)-RC'Sidcnll al Fac ihues. LinC! 143092
To oblam mo rr mformu/IQII on
jobs lutt•d abm•r, cot~/arl Pl'rro"
nt&gt;l Srrvrcl's, 104 Crofu Htlll

�_
__
--.................
...............
--... __ ___ ...
------·--.
.............. --

8

...

_....

ASCITW--.,
GNU Eoua/IINIX. 10 o.m.·
Noon. To register, cal l Academic
Services. Computing and Information Tcchnolgy (ASCm User Liaison o rfice a1 64S..3S40.

-__

_,_

CilooPol-lo ....,..
c.,_._,.
....
_ s..... vopl.UI~
Nonbea-.la.m.

111...-lc-.c•

sa~.-.-

(

C e&amp;ebnUnc Our Difl'ur.nc::es,
Roberto Quintana. EdUQtional
Opponunity Center, 465 WashinJ ·
ton St. 11 :30 a.m.- 1:30 p.m. Free.

,.

O.PAX...._II

,

~

sor sioce 1982, died Mny 26 afler
a long illness.

Col._....

CIII--Youtll
Careen. Custody, and Mother·
hood: Tbt- Lqal Doubie Bind,
Prof. Ke lly Weisberg. Univ. of
Cahro m1a. Hastings School of
Law . San Francisco 545 O ' Bnan
Nonh Campus. 3:30p.m.

=~=~

Steps ia TuiiDOI" Metutasls: New
CoDCCpta froiD Intravital Mi-croKOpy, Dr. Alan C. Groom,
Univ. of Western Ontario. 108
Sherman. South Campus. Noon.

Arnold L Rose:nbcrJ, Univ . or
Massachusells. 218 Non on. Nonh
Campus. 3 p.m.

~­

o.to1opea1 Mediatioll, Alistair
Compbell. 22A Bell. N&lt;&gt;&lt;th Campus. 3 p.m.

......... ........

. . . . . . _ . , - Cytoldot
ptododloa It N~ Itt-

.......... R. Spengler. 1348
Forbcr. South Campus. 4 p.m.

··-w--.,

..

Untvenlty C o n v -

C ak.lum, Mkrodomalns aDd Cellular Dec:Woru;ln MJtods, Or.
Rober! Silver, Marine Biological
Lab. Woods Hole, Mass. 114
Hochstetler. North Campus. 4 p.m

Collo4iloo...

TIM: Dynamk IJTationah, Prof.
Scott Williams. 103 Diefendorf.
South CaliJPUS. 4 p.m.

...........--

Etred or Aae on the P..Ciyc•
protein Transpor1 System in Rat
Canalk:ular Membrant: Vesicles,
Amrita Kamath. S08 Cooke . Nonh
c..mpus. 4 p.m.

--I.MbiN

TH MkrodrculaUon: Blood
Cells and Cancer Cells. Dr. Alan
C. Groom, Univ. of Western
Ontario. Butler Auditorium, 150
Farlxr. South Campus. 5 p.m.

Lllw Plllty
UB lAw Gold Group and SBA
Par1y. Pcu ibones Grille, 275
Washington St. 5:30..7:30 p.m.
Law students free .
Life Worbllop
SeU Defeo.te and Penonal Pr.
tccdon, Dave Chemcga and
Kathy Zysek. J. 9 p.m. For infor·
mation, calllhc Office of Student
Life at 645·6 125 .

Lllwa,.;_.u.,
The: Suprr.me Court 's Move

----.,

Col._....
Maln.sta~,

lo

the Right, Lee A. Alben and
Lucinda Finley . with moderator
Alan Cam:l. UB Law_ School . Jewtsh Community Center, 2640 N.
Forest. Amhcnt 7:30p.m. Free.

P-.c.!DIKu.......
Post-BcULna Round Table:,
Wo men's Studies and Asian Studies prognuns. With Jane Fi sher.
Shi rley Joseph , Bruce Liu, Pat
Shelly. Joan Sulewski . 330 SIU·
dent Union. North Campus. 7- ..
9:30 p._m. Free.

n...tM
Mooncbildrcn, comedy directed
by Richard Mennen. Droma 1beatre, Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $5. SIO.

Center for the Arts.
North Campus. 3 p.m.

........,..._...,._.

Robert Chumbley, left, and Shirley
lrek, piano duo, will perform works
of Ravel and Messiaen in a faculty
recital Oct. 15 in Slee Concert Hall.

___

C-otry-

Strudurc and Dynamks or Proton TnnslocaUon alon&amp; hydr.
~t:n-bondcd water c.bala., Dr.

-

Benoit Roux. Uni v. orMontn::al.
215 Natural Sciences &amp;. Math·
ematics Complex. North Campus.
4 p.m.

,

Atbktic Ball of Fame Dinner
and Jnductioa Cerr.mony. Center
ror Tomorrow . North Campus. 6
p.m.. cash bar reception; 7 p.m..
dinner. S25 . For information. call
829-2608.

J.

w...... Perry Lecbne

Pbyskal Activity &amp;Dd Fitness:
Contributioas to Loaa Llle and
HiP, F1lneu., Steven N. Blair,
Cooper Ins titute of Aerobics Re·
search. Dallas. Katharine Cornell
lbeatcr, Ellicoll Complex. North
Campus. 6 p.m. Free.

w-·•
VolleyNII
Royals vs. Ua.iv. or Penmylva·

nla. Alumni Arena . North Campus. 7:30p.m. Free.

Jau
G ultft"ist Gury Eastman wilb
the: New Jau. On;bcstra or Buffalo. Allen Recital Hall. South
Campus. 8 p.m.

-

M ooMhlklrr.n, comedy directed
by Richard Mennen. Drama The·
au-c. Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $ 10 .

M -"'ldroo, comedy dirc&lt;U&gt;d
by Ridwd Mennen. Drama Theatre, Center ror the Arts. North
Campus. 3 ond 8 p.m. $5. $10.

Ua••ca•IACWeekead

Ha••ca•••~

. ,...............

MA&amp;k,SdtD&lt;Oa.adi.bt
Pa.ra.aonW. Prof. Clyde Herreid.
130 Student Union. Nonh Campus. 10 a.m.

n.t s.otMn Brolllen. Alumni

Ha•• n•l-c Week....

Mid...... Mod-, UB BuUs
and Royals ba.ske:tball teams. First
offM:ial NCAA prKtice. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. 11 p.m.
F.,..

U8's History ill PidUftS. Stu·
dent Union lbearre. North Campus. I 0-11 a.m. Free.

Arona. Nonb Campus. 8 p.m. SIO.

0.,.. Lllcb!N/
0

ASCITW--.,
JntroducUon to Sun. Noon-2
p.m. To register, call Academic
Services, Computing and Information Technolgy (ASCIT) User Liaison office at 645 ·3540.

-·
-···

UB Bulls vs. Massacbusdts. UB
Stadium. North Campus. I :30
p.m. For tickel inrormation. call
645-6666.
ln~

Son. Allen Rttilal Hall.

South Campus. 2 and 8 p.m. $7.
$14. Sponl&lt;md by WBPO 88.7

FM and Compass Concerts. For
ticket inronnation. c:all 759·9136.

-

Ealin&amp; Oisorden in Adoluccnta: lssuct for t.bc Primary
Carr. Provider, Richard E..
Kn:ipe, M.D.• Univ. or Rochester.
Kinch Auditorium, Childn=n 's
Hospital. 8 a.m.

ASCITWO&lt;bllop
latrodudion to Maplt/UNlX. 9
a.m.-Noon. To register, call Aca·
dcmic Services, Computing and
lnfonnation Te:chnolgy (ASCIT)
User Liaison orfJCC at 645·3540.

~~·
or

Molecu.. r Dyu.aia Me•·
braoe Prote1Ju. Or. Benoit Roux .
Univ. orMontreal . I34Cary.
South C.mpus. Noon.

1
All&lt;r Prodlcal Tnlsola&amp;- 1450
Student Union. North Campus. 4
p.m. Sponsored by the Office of
International Education.

~­

Nitro-Ptroddt llodbls Ia tbt
Beort, Stq&gt;bcn Thom. M.D.•
Pb.D •• Univ. or Pennsylvania. 108
Shtnnon. Soulb Campus. 4 p.m.

-·........

.._.
T......,s......,.,c_ _,_
1q A - b a to Spotlol Strol·

. . , . . -.. 0&lt;. Potsy Htoley,
Univ. of Newcastle Upon Tyne.
301 Crosby. Soulb Campus.
5'll!p.m.

..--.wror

Na,.
Life ud P"barmaddt
Lire, loWy Kayhill ond O.vid
Caputo. Student Unioo Assembly
Halt. North Campus. 7 p.m. Free;
canned goods ond clothlag dona·

ror

--LIIcbl.
tions appreciated.

Lllt: 011 1 Coni R.ecf, Betty and
Howard Tie:ckelmann. 210 Natural
Sciences &amp;. Mathematics Complex . Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.. Free.

DAibwtloll

The F'lSk 01"Jan, Pror. David
Fuller. Slee Concert HaiL North
Campus. 10- 11 a.m. Free.

. . . . ._

pnwrt

Advaac:«&lt; COIU:Ic.n:iaJ LeadJae
ProaniD, UB School or Management. For professionals in commerc:iallending; lhrough Oct. 27.
Center ror Tomorrow. Norlh Cam·
pus. $3,700 includes instruc~iooa.!
nwc:rials. single-occupancy lodging ror 10 nights, breakfasts and
luoc.hca, orientation bltffet and
BMJ banquet. For inrormation,
coll645-3200.

T...

Royall aad Bulls vs. Robc.rt
Morris. Ellicott Couru. Nonh
Campus. 10 a.m.

--

OIIIet Work-Up of Aatmla,
Martin Brecher. M.D. Caretorium
A, Mercy Hospital. 8:30 a.m.

~-

lntcnaatktu.J Coft'u. Exptorina
the lrt.ditions of Kallowccn, with
pumpkins and seasonal roods..
Sponsored by the lnternalional
Committee of the UB Women's
Club and the International Friendship Prog.ram.. 250 Student Union.
Nonh Campus. 10 a.m.-Noon.

Sblrlty Ink &amp; Rob&lt;rt
Cbumbky, piano duo. Fac:ulty rec-ital ; works or Meuiaen and
Ravel. Stee Concert Hall. North
Campus. 5 p.m. S2."S5. $6, $8.

LlfeW--.,

l'nl-l.ltW

LlfeW--.,
lnlrodud.ioD to t.bt: lntcmct via

w-

Lawyer for Llh, Stacey Vogel.
Knox 20. North Campus. 7 p.m.
Free ; canned goods and clothing
donaliona appreciated.

-

MooodUidrct~,

P...._I.Mtol,.

Old Dl-

...., Ia New.....-.., 0&lt;.
Patsy Htolty. Univ. ofNewcutle
Upoo Tyot. Hayes 108. South
Campus. 11 a.m.

ASCIT Worbllop
SPSS for WindowS- I :30-4:30
p.m. To n=gister, call Academic
St:l"'l lces. Computing and lnformauon Technolgy (ASCIT) User Li·
a1son offi ce at 645-3540.

eo-put., Science

-

-

a..._...
NtJPI&gt;on' c.-.

Aralrltr 1ture

M aodoriol, City F...__.

PllyololoO-

Prof Howard E Jackson, Um v of
Cmci nnau 220 Natural Sc u:ncco;
&amp;. Mathcmallcs Co mp l c ~~: North
Campus 3·45 p.m

-

9 a.m.--4:30p.m. S60. To rqil:aer,
call 64S-6140.

Phyalce Colloquium
Seck.ing Spa tial Satisfaction Near Field Optics Takes a Bow,

8loloCJcal Sc:lenceo

N-VIolool-~

Olfadon, Luis Acoola. Spooo-

CoUep. 4380 MaiD St., Ambon~.

MemoriaJ Calbula&amp; rw Alan
Fl"ftman. Speakers inc lude Barry
B. Boyer, Law School dean. and
Provost 'Thomas E. Headrick Student Uniolf llleater. North Cam-

pus. 3 p.m. Freeman. a law profes-

.--.
llowto"--r.... ... . -

comedy directed
by Richard Mennen. Drama The·
atre. Center ror the Arts. North
Campus. 8 p.m. $5. $10.

Asthma ud AUerpes. Or. Aries
Uu-Helm. Noon· I p.m. For information. call the: Office or Student
ure at 645--6125.

............, .....

UB Wlap, Jim Gerlond. 2-3'30
p.m. For inronnation. call the or.
fi ce or Student Lire at 645--61 25 .

,...

....._Tbaauu

E. Btodrick.
Genenl membership meeting. 111
JGmball Tower. Soulh Campus.
3-Sp.m.

LlfeW-.....

·uB History
in Picbres
Earty view of x-rays being
used in the dental school
is among images on view
in exhib~ Oct. 14 in Student Union Theatre.

Mtellep, Bloody Mttllop, Ed
Brodta. 3:J0..5 p.m. For htformation. call the Offtce or Student
Life at 645--6125.

,_,__

Toolo roc S&lt;udylaa
Fut ...._ Pror. Richonl
GoDJalves. 220 NaruraJ Sciences
&amp;. Mathematics Complex. North
Campus. 3,45 p.m.

LlfeW--.
Std&lt;lq ...... Wlodota, Eileen
Stewart. 7:30-9 p.m. For information, taU the Off10t: or Student
ure .. 645-612..5.

Giobei.F-- oe Wa.ca' • t.
met, Modentor\ Kim M.ne
Mcl&lt;.enwl. WNY lnltmotionol
Tnde Council ond proarom chair.
Council on Wortd Alfaitl. Panel:
Safoun Boubri. UB Pulbripn
acbollr from Toao; Moa.ia
Jardioc, UB USL prof. or AJneri.
can Studic:J; Bebjaa He.ndenon.
UB lecturer ia Americaa Sllletic:l.
14SA Student Union. Nonb Campus. Nooo. Sponsored by Off""
of Student Ufe. For inf01'1Dlt:iob.
call 645-6125.

_
........._
-

P rot S. Buu. Univ. of Notre
Dome. RPCl. Elm ond Car1100.
I 2:30p.m.

~­
c
-.-

David B. Bader. 2liO Park.
Nonb Campus. 2 p.m.

LlfeW--.

a ... To._..._. BtJp •

Fritoc1 Wbo Boo o DrWdoa

............ Bad&gt;on Umik&lt;r. 2-4

~-=-0';;~~~~~-

_......_..

DoiooiG-.r Ia ~.
Lot Mer&lt;, 0&lt;. Poul H. RdlaA,
Amanutl Waldo, DuldJe F...,,
ond Jomes Sdlueu. lOS Noruril
Sciences It Mlllhomotics Complex. North e a - . 3:45 p.m.

......,. .......

Frtods F...ml, J... Frtmon.
Emmanuel Hocquanl, Jacqueline
Riuet. Cloude Royet-Journoud.
8ilinzual reading. Screening
Room. Ccn1cr ror the Arts:. North
Compus. 4 p.m. me. Pon or
Wednesdays II 4 Plus.

LlfeW--.,
El&lt;plorioaCo.....-Ciwlp,J&amp;Dd
Mather, Joyce Andenoa, Sandra
Handy. 6-8 p.m. For information,
caU the Offlce or Student Ure at
64S-6125.

LlfeW--.,
Row To Purc.l:i.ut: a Mkrocol.putcr, Mart. Wi.ocr. 6-8 p.m. For
informaliOft. call the OfriCC or
SIUdeno Uft 11645-6125.

LlfeW--.,
Good

Eolloc' " " - ..

V~ , Walter and Nan
Simpoon. Off campuJ. 6' 30-~30
p.m. S3. For i.nronnaiion. caU the
OffiCe of Student Ure at 645-61 25.

LlfeW--.,
Buylaa •

a---. tl,

Pe-

ter J. Maurer Jr. 7-10 p.m. Another session Nov. 14. For iDfor-

mation, call the Office or Studcn'

ureal

645 ~12.5 .

Opooo: LIYe
Robert Haunaaaa. tdlo, aad
Alr&gt;&lt;d .-......w.., plono. Concerts
are taped for brOidcast oa WBFO
88.7 FM the foUowina Sunday al
4 p.m. Allen Recital Hall. South
Campus. 1 p.m. Free.

___
l'nl-l.ltW

w-

,......_

W~!

Pro-ChBdf ProCt.oia! Patricia Bainbridae. Ufe
Decisions lnlenUIIionol. Swdcot
Union Aucmbly Holl. North Campus. 1 p.m. """'' eanncc1 aoods onc1
d othin&amp; donations~

U11a1ra1o Sy. ......7, Owles
Peltz, conduc:lot. Mou.rt's "'Paril"
Sympbooy. ond worko of
Sbo&amp;tokovich ond Rands. Site
Concen Hall. North e a - .
8p.m..S3.

Continued on page 7

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BU FFALO

laide: Praiiii'IAMta
toVItingfalty

message to the voting faculty. The address. "New
Context, New Approaches:
UB and a Changing SUNY"
will be given Oct. 9 at 2 p.m
in the University Gallery in
the Center for the Arts.

Octob e r 5 , 1995

Volum e 27 . No 6

UB in '48 Hours' spotlight for
childhood weight CQntrol research
.,~VIDAL

Reporter Ednor

T

ELEVlSIONcrewsfrom
"48 Hows," the CBS-TV
weekly newsmagazine,
came to the campus
Wednesday and Thursday to film a segment on UB's
Childhood Weight Control research
program directed by Leonard H.
Epstein, UB professor of psychology. The program helps children
reduce and maintain a healthy
weight throughout their lives.
CBS correspondent Harold Dow
interviewed Epstein and spent several days with a family enrolled in the
program. filming them as they followed their normal routine, including a visit to their counselor at UB.
The program is expected to air
in November or December.
According to Epstein, one of the
country's leading expens on childhood obesity, the prevalence of
obesity in society is on lhe rise.
Thiny-three pen:ent of adults
and 25 perce nt of children are
obese---d!ey weigh at Jeast20 per-

cent more than standard height-toweight chans indicate they should.
lfs a pattern Epstein is working to

reverse.
Epstein, who has studied obesity for 20 years, originated the
resean:h program that combines
diet, exen:ise, and behavior modification to belp children reduce their
weight and maintain it not only as
preadolescents, but throughout a
lifetime.
Funded by the National Institutes of Health, the program is the
only one in the country to document success in children over a 10year period. He began it I 7 years
ago while a faculty member at the
University of Pittsburgh Medical
Center.
The medical risks associated with
obesity are well documented, and
obesity carries the same risks for
children as it does for adults: an
increase in health problems that include insulin resistance, high blood
pressure and high cholesterol.
In addition, obese children run a
higher risk of beconting obese

adults, notes Epstein. Children who
are obese at age 10-13 face a 60-70
pen:ent chance that they will become obese adults. "Very few will
outgrow it." he says.
Furthermore, Epstein says, there
are significant medical problems
related directly to being obese as a
child and adolescent. He cites a
Harvard Growth Study showing
that males who were obese at age
15 had a greater rate of monality
and morbidity 50 years later. regardless of their adult weight. Researchers also have found that
childhood obesity relates to early
pubeny, which in girls is strongly
associated with an increased risk
of premenopausal breast cancer.
Epstein notes.
Given the potential problems
they face as they grow older, it
becomes increasingly important for
obese children to reduce their
weight before pubeny and keep it
off for life.
"lf you want to delay pubeny.
you have to start treating it at age 9
or 10," says Epstein. He points to

CBS Conesponclent Harold Dow, left, Interviews Leonard H. Epet eln.

the fact that in the United States the
average girl reaches sex ual malU rity at age I I , while in China the
average age is 16.
UB's Childhood Weight Control Program has worked during
the past two years with approximately 120 fammes with obese
children to help them lose weight
and keep it off. Another 40 will
enter the program this fall. Designed for 8-12-year-olds, the program requires that participants be
joined by at least one of their parents in making a commitment to
change not only their weight, but
their entire way of life .

''You can't treat a childhood
weight problem without also treating a parent.'' says Epstein. Since
environment and strong support of
the children enrolled in the program are crucial to long-term success. the program is most effective
when lhe entire famiJy is involved.
The 16-weekChildhoodWeighl
Control Program adopts a threeprong approach that advocates a
balanced diet. regular exercise, and
behavior modification.
The cornerstone is the Traffic
Light Diet, a nutritious, low-calorie program of eating that is easy to
Continued on page 2

FSEC session focuses on national graduate school survey
-,auwcox

Reporter Staff

A

PLANNED discussion
of Graduate Education
at the Sept. 26 meeting
of the Faculty Senate
Executive Comminee centered on
UB ' s disappointing showing in a
recent national graduate school
survey. Though newly appointed
Grad uate School Dean David
Triggle was unable to attend the

meeting, his school dominated the
FSEC discussion.
A recently published survey by
the National Research Council
(NRC) of more than 3,000 doctoral
programs in 4 I categories across
the nation found many UB programs to be sorely Jacking. Only
10 ofUB's programs were rated in
the top half of thei r respective categories. Geography neared the top
I0 in its class, finishing I I th out of

36 programs. Other top-half fmishers included Industrial Engineering (No. 18 of 37); English
(No. 26.5 of 127); Chemical Engineering (No. 29 of93); Civil Engineering (No. 3 I of 86); and
Chentistry (No. 57 of I 68).
Among the UB programs that
fared poor! y were German Language and Literature (No. 3 I of
32), Ecology. Evolution and Behavior (No. I03 of I 29). Statistics

and Biostati stics (No. 56 of 65)
and Political Science (No. 72 of
98).
Faculty Senate Chair Claude
Welch set the stage for the exchange, calling the results of the
NRC survey of doctoral programs
a "terrible indictment of the academic leadership of the university
of the last couple years." Welch
distributed copies of a Sept. 22
Chronicle of Higher Education ar-

Pediatricians to lead crusade against childhood violence
. , LOIS IWIIII

News Bureau Staff
We've . . beent ..UIItlca like this: Every 75 minutes a child in rhe
Uniud States is starved, beaten, shot or killed in some violent manner.
Sometimes a child does the beating, the shooting, the killing.
A group of Buffalo pediatricians think they have some common-sense
suggestions for averting these tragedies, and they are taking their ideas to
the streets of Western New York beginning this month--Child Health
Month-in a physicians' public-health crusade to prevent violence by and
against children. The crusade is under the auspices of the Division of
Community Pediatricians in the UB Department of Pediatrics.
Their message is that children are not born violent. The six-year-old in
Modesto, Calif. , who recently stabbed her 7-year-old playmate during an
argument over Barbie dolls was merely mimicking behavior she sees in
ber own small world.
"Violent behavior is learned," says Entily Friedan. chief of the Division
ofCommurtity Pediatricians. " It can be prevented from the very beginning,
and prevention must start with the adults who fill children's lives."
The physicians will fan out into Western New York communities
beginning in October, making house calls at churches, PTA meetings and
other parents' organizations, to hammer home this message. Friedan and
pediatricians from The Children 's Hospital of Buffalo and the Western
New York pediatric community developed thei r own ill ustrated lecture.
a 14-minule video, plus posters and a variety of self-help pamphlets.

Their campaign targets four specific circumstances that increase the risk
of childhoon violence-parents' violent behavior. violence on television.
bullying and firearms--and suggests common-sense ways to avoid them.
"Rather than lament the problem of childhood violence. we wanted 10
do something very positive." Friedan said. "We wanted to bring solutions
to people. We wanted to show parents what they can do in the home that
day, so they don't feel powerless."
On parental behavior. their advice is straightforward: Be kind to each
other and your child will learn kindness. Don't discipline with physical
punishment. Doing so teaches children that the people who love them are
the ones most likely 10 hun them. that physical force is justified "for a
good reason" and that violence is an acceptable way of solving problems.
Aside from parental behavior, the major influence on children in the
home is television. The pediatricians quote recent studies showing that
children see more violent acts during children' s programming (20-25
violent acts per hour) than during prime time shows (8- 12 violent acts per
hour). Their statistics show that children who watch an average amount
of television will have witnessed I00.000 violent acts before they become
teenagers.
"Studies have shown again and again that all forms of violent programming- realistic shows as well as cartoons-may have harmful effects on
young children;· Friedan says. "Heavy television exposure to violence is
Continued on page 3

ticle on the report, which reprinted
its rankings. to FSEC members.
"UB ranked below Stony Brook
in almost every category." Welch
continued. "and finished below
Albany and Binghamton in some."
This, after more than a decade of
c.onsiderable emphasis being given
to graduate education at UB. he
continued.
Stony Brook has been beller
funded than UB for some time.
according to Provost Thomas
Headrick. 'They have fewer students but more faculty and resources. When it came Lime to cut,
they had more slack than we did."
Headrick concluded. FSEC members noted that the Center at Stony
Brook. on Long Island. is located
in the legislative district of State
Sen. Kenneth La Valle. chair of the
Senate Higher Education Committee.
Though also disappointed in the
survey results. Headrick told the
FSEC " It really doesn't get us very
far to rehash the past." He felt "the
survey sorted out our programs the
way we would sort them out."
Headrick urged the group to
consider the survey a "wake up
call" and step up serious consider·
arion of whether UB should continue to offer its broad range and
number of doctoral programs. "Our
resources have been spread very
thin," Headrick said. "While this is
Continued on page 6

�2

Discovery may help unravel
mysteries of nervous system

From left: State Sen.tors Kenneth LaValle, Mary Lou Rlth and Dale Volker--~

dent Greiner at the Center for Tomorrow.

LaValle, administrators meet

to discuss SUNY's future
Sr STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

T

HE CHAIRMAN of the State Senate Higher Education Commiuee met with top
administrators from UB and many of its sister Western New York public institutions
at the Center for Tomorrow on Sept. 26.
At the invitation of area State Sen. Mary Lou Rath , Sen. Kenneth LaValle, a Long
Island Republican who has been at the helm of the State Senate committee that oversees
SUNY for the past two decades. lunched with President Greiner, then held a three·hour,
c losed door meeting with presidents, provosts and other administrators from UB, Buffalo
State, Brockpon. Fredonia, Alfred Tech. Geneseo and several community colleges.
''By spending time out on the campuses I can gather a better understanding of their
blems." explained LaValle. "Already I have heard plenty of good ideas tocany baek with
me Albahy.''Campus leaders believe this will be a crucial year in the future of SUNY. A
" long rm Master Plan" being drawn up by SUNY trustees should spark major debate on the
future f SUNY at the next legislative session, according to LaValle.
The ~rt. due to the legislature by Dec . l . will examine "missions. campuses, programs
and how aJI the pieces of the sys tem inrerrelare," said l..DVaJie. Though the repon could
recommend significanr changes, including campus closures, LaValle said he and his colleagues in the legislature believe ""there may be other way s--other than campus closings" to
reformulate SUNY.
[J

TUDIES OF MUTANT fruit
flies have led UB phannacologists to discover a previously
unknown protein that plays a
key role in the electrical si~;nals
that are the basis for nervous-system function. The finding allows researcherll to begin
to unravel the mysteries of the nervous system at a molecular level, not only in fruit
Hies, but possibly in otherspecies, including
humans.
It also may have eventual application in
the development of new treatments for diseases and clinical conditions in which sodium channels are involved. The new protein
is important in the function of sodium-channel alpha subunits, bagel-shaped proteins
that open and close, controlling the flow of
ions, which is the basis for electrical activity
in the nervous system.
The work was described in a paper published Sept. 22 in Cell.
The UB researcberll have licensed the
new protein to Men;k &amp; Co. as a rapid
screening assay for new insecticides. A patent
is pending on the protein and the new gene
encoded by it.
"Sodium-channel alpha subunits in fruit
nics arc very similar to those of other species, including humans," explained Linda
Hall, professor of biochemical pharmacology at UB and senior author of the Cell
paper. Hall explained that mutations in these
alpha subunit proteins in both humans and
flies lead to severe motor defects.
The researchers reasoned that mutations
in other protejns that interact with alpha
subunits may also. cause similar motor defects . In their research, they focused on one
such mutation: alterations in a gene called

EPSTEIN
Continued from page 1

undemand and apply. Foods are categorized
as "green," "yellow ," or "red" according to
their caloric and nutritional values. The
"green" group. primarily vegetables. is
made up of foods that are low in calories and
can be eaten without limitation. "Yellow"
foods. such as skim milk and apples. which
are higher in calories but also needed for a
balanced diet, can be ea ten in moderation.
"Red" foods, such as potato chips and sweets.
are high in calories and low in nutritional
value, so these are strictly liplited.
Food is not the onJy contributor to obesity.
Epstein notes. Obese children do tend to eat
more. but they are also significantly less active than their non-obese counterpans. And
that activity level may have a.~ much or more
to do with obesity than what they eat. To
address thi s issue. the Childhood Weight
Control Program also emphasizes· what
Epstein calls a li(estyle exercise program.
The problem most people have is that it 's
roo easy for them to be sedentary, Epstein says.

He suggests they rearrange their environments.
For example. put the exercise equipment in a
well-lit room nod banish the 1V to an uncomfortab le comer in the basement.
1V is no help in battling obesity, says
Epstein. who is also swdying this relationship.
Not only do obese children watch more lV. he
notes. but the more they watch. the greater their
risk of becoming obese. The average child
watches three and a half to four hour.; of 1V a
day, Epstein states. "By the time the average
child is in high school, he has spent more time
watching 1V than he has attending school."
All of these factorll help illustrate why it
is so difficult to get people to start an exercise program, let alone maintain one.
"When we firllt began the Traffic Light
Diet." says Epstein, "we focused on aerobic
exercise"-30-minute workouts three times a
week that raise the pulse to 60-70 pen:ent of
capacity and make the exerciser sweat. While
this type of exercise is effective for weight
control , getting people to keep up a regular

OverweliJd Kids Sought for Pr...,....
OV...._. ...._between 8 and 12 are being sought to participate in tbc
Stoplight Diet Program, a free, four-month weight-control prognuncooducted by UB
psychologists and directed by Leooanl Epstein, professor or psychology.
Participants are placed oo a plan that iocludes a nutritionally balanced diet. regular
exercise, behavior modification and a maintenance program.
To be eligible, children must weigh at least20 percent more than the idea\ weight
for their age, and have one parent willing to attend weekly treatment meetings with the
cliild. Although the program is free, a refundable deposit is required. Enrollment is
limited. For more information, or to enroll a child, ca1164S-6316 between 8:30a.m.
and S p.m. weekdays.
_'

DIRECTOA OFPU8l.ICATIONS

,_..,.&amp;.~Y

• EOilOA

~v.M

routine of this intensity is no easy task. ''Most
research on adherence to exercise programs
suggests that the higher the intensity, the
lower the participation," be says.
Surprisingly, however, many lower-intensity activities are just as effective as highintensity ones. 'The caloric expenditure per
mile is the same if you walk or run," Epstein
points out Program participants are encouraged
to inco&lt;porate more moderate physical activity.
on a regular basis. into their everyday lives such
as walking back nod forth to school rather than
forcing themselves to jog two miles every day.
Since the lifestyle exen:ise program offerll more flexibility and choice, "it makes it
a lot easier to do your activity and gives you
more sense of control," says Epstein. Participants in the program also lose more weight
and do better over longer periods of time.
"Weight-loss effects do not depend on
intensity," he says. ' The idCfll situation when
exercising is to bum fat. The body preferentially bums fat at lower levels of intensity.. as
opposed to glucose, which is burned during
higher-intensity workouts. "Whal' s more im portant is to shift people from being sedentary to being moderately active."
Participants in the lifestyle progrnm are
encouraged to increase energy expeoditure
through activity. '1t's easy to modify your life
to get300caloriesof expeoditures a day," says
Epstein, offering this example: Leave your car
at the far end of the parlcing lot rather than the
space closest to your destination, and then walk
a mile atlunch.lt may take longer to see iesults,
but participants are more likely to stay with the
program. And wbeo they do see results, the
effects, psyehologically, are positive.
D

• ASSOCIATtEDITOR JOMMIIIDI • ART

DIRECTOR ,_~

•

tipE (lemperature-joduced J!8r81ysis gene f)
that cause fruit flies to become paralyzed
when exposed to heaL
'This gene, pronounced 'tippy,' describes
what happens when the flies are heated to
human-body temperaturc---{hey tip over and
an: paralyzed until the temperature is lowered to a comfortable room temperature when
they get up again and go busily on their
way," said Hall.
After determining where the tipE gene
was located on the chromosomes, Hall and
her co-authorll studied the chromosomal region until they fouod several candidate geoes.
The final proof that they had the gene
responsible for the paralysis came from "gene
therapy" experiments in which they replaced
the mutant gene with a normal one and cured
the fruit flies' paralysis.
They then sequenced the gene responsible for the cure, which allowed them to
show it encoded a unique protein.
..'Tbere was nothing like it in tbe exten·
sive databases from the genome projects,"
said Hall.
Using the tipE protein, Hall and her colleagues functionally expressed, for the f1111t
time in vitro, the para sodiumchanne~ which
causes paralysis or death wben mutated.
Several groups had tried to make the gene
for this sodium channel work in vitro, but
none had been successful.
It turns out that both the tipE geoe and the
para gene are requin:d for expression of this
sodium channel during neural development.
When expressed during a specific period
in the development of the fruit fly's nervous
system, the gene endows the fly with properties that prevent the adult from becoming
paralyzed at high temperatures.
"The gene is at its peak expression when
the fruit fly ' s nervous system is undergoing
reorganization," said Hall. 'This is a critical
time for the gene, when something key in
development changes, but we don't yet know
what that is."
The findings suggest that this protein
may exist in many different species, from
insects to mammals.
''The protein we discovered, tipE, may
also be a missing key required to turn on
sodium channels at appropriate times in other
species," she said. '"'The fact that scientists
have cloned sodium channels from other
species, but have not been able to get them to
function properly outside the organism, suggeSts there may be a factor missing and tipE
may be that factor."
Hall added that if homologues of tipE
regulate sodium-channel function in the human brain and heart, better treatments for
diseases in these organs may be possible.
A sodium channel in the human uterus.
which may be involved in the birthing process, may also be regulated by tipE, she said.
By affecting sodium channels in the uterus,
Hall said. it may be possible to develop more
natural labor-inducing agents or prevent premature binhs.
Co-investigatorll on the paperareGuoping
Feng, now Jane Coffin Childs Postdoctoral
Associate at the Washington Univerllity
School of Medicine; Peter Deal&lt;. now associate professor at Attila J6sz.ef University
(Hunga ry), and Maninder Chopra,
postdoctoral associate at UB. Hall, Chopra
and colleagues are continujng this work with
support from a Jacob Javits Neuroscience
Investigator Award from the National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke and
by a grant from the Muscular Dystrophy
Association.
D

I'IUpJ/VI;Jiltlopl.lbbuflalo. ~et/

�3

Hqll of-Fame
inducts Oct.13

Valuable Player
in 1985,1986 and
1987.
Ranked as one
of Western New
York' s top five
tennis players
since 1980. White
has played in the
U.S. Tennis Association Na tional Amateur
Circuit and is in
the top 20 in the

__ _
T
.,

News Bureau Staff

HREE OliTSTANDING former athletes and lhe
coaches and members of lhe 1977-78 wresUing
team, the only UB team 10 win a national cbampionsbip, wiU be inducted into the UB Alhletic Hall
of Fame on Friday, Oct 13.
Tbey wiU be inducted by UB President WiUiam R.
Greiner at a dinner at7 p.m. in the Center for Tomorrow on
the North Campus.
The individual inductees are Stephen M. Klein, who won

the NCAA Division ni All American wrestling competition
in 1986; Lisa Lamey, three-time
NCAA All-American swimmer
and UB ' s first female athlete to
be named All-American in both
Division D and IlJ, and Kenneth
J. White, UB's first tennis player

men '-s division.
~

r-----=-------.,.------------,= --,

to receive the International Tennis Coaches Association AllAmerican Award.
The UB Alumni Association
established and administers the The 19n-78 ue -ulnC
Alhletic Hall of Fame· to acknowledge the importance of
intercollegiate and club athletics. It honors outstanding
athletes, teams and other individuals who have represented
and served UB's athletic program in a professional or
participatory capacity in an exemplary manner.
Stephen M. Klein, a 1987 UB graduate, won first place in
the NCAA Division I1J All-American wrestling competition
in 1986, becoming a national champion wrestler in his
weight class.
That year, he also won the Cornell Open and was named
outstanding wrestler in lhe SUNY Alhletic Conference. Cocaptain of the UB 1986 wrestling team, Klein was named
"Most Valuable Wrestler" and " High Point Wresller,"leading bis team with 75 team points, the fastest fall and least
number of points sum:ndered.
Klein, who majored in electrical and computer engineering, is a sales engineer for Zeller Electric.
Three-time NCAA AU-American swimmer and UB's

A geography major at UB, he is
president of White &amp; Co. Printing Services Inc. in Williamsville.
The 1977-78 UB wrestling team
was the only UB team to win a national
championship. The team included six
1978 NCAA Division I1J All-Americans.

Led by Coac h Edward W .
Michael. the team scored a total of
1,075 match points to their opponents'
155 points; recording 223 lakedowns
to their opponents' 149.
The team 's All-Americans were
Michael T. Jacoutot of Centerville,
Ohio, a 1988 Hall of Fame inductee:
Kirk D. Anderson of Raleigh, N.C.;
Paul D. Curka of Edison, N.J .; Jeffrey
T. Wheeler of Kennesaw. Ga.; David
c....,plone
Stephen M. Klein
P. Mitchell of Frewsburg and Bruce L.
flTSl female alhli:te to be named All-American in both DiviHadsell of Twinsburg. Ohio.
sion D and ill, Lisa Lamey was the first UB woman swimmer
Other team members were Edward L. Tyrrell of Spring,
lO place in an NCAA-All American championship.
Texas; Anthony C. Oliveri of Webster; David TundoofEast
As a member of UB 's first women's SUNY Athletic
Aurora; Stephen H. Zoota of Riverside, Conn.; Allan G.
Conference Champion Team in 1987, she held records for 10
Sluberski of Spring Brook; Walter R. Hellmich of Massapequa
different events during her UB swimming career.
Park;
Thomas J. Jacoutot of Asburn, Va.. and Thomas J.
A native of Binghamton, she received a bachelor's degree
Egan of Cedarhurst. Also: Richard M. Silvestri of Amherst;
in exercise science from UB in 1990. A forensic detective with
Kurt A. Linske of Guilford, Conn.; Paul J. GrandilS of
lhe Broward County (Fia) Sheriff's Office, she is a graduate
Sharpsberg, Ga.; Frank J. Massaro of West Hempstead;
srudent at Florida Atlantic University.
ChrisGuyNessofLockport;JosephB.CirilloofTonawan&lt;la;
Kennelh James White, a 1988 UB graduate, currently ranks
Tab B. Mal:. of Inwood; Francis P. Cirillo of Getzville;
asoneofWestem New York 's top five male tennis players. ln
Joseph
A. Bottone of Plano, Texas; Bernard J. Quinn of
1988, he ranked third nationally in singles and doubles. In
Jamestown;
Michael GalassoofCentern:acb;John H. Hughes
1986, he was UB 's first player to receive the International
of Marion, Ind., and Patrick M. Riley of Orlando, Fla.
Tennis Coaches Association All-American award.
The coaching staff included assistant coach Scott Stever
In singles play, he was the first UB player to win the
of Rochester, manager Anthony Butera of Blasdell and
Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference tournament. CoCJ
captainofthetennisteamfrom 1984-87,hewasnamedMost equipment manager Joseph Staebell of Sarasota, Fla.

-=-

Convocation, tours, carnival set for Parents/Homecoming Weekend

S

CHOOL SPIRIT takes on a new
definition as the University at Buffalo celebrates "UB Mania," Parents and Homecoming Weekend,
Oct 13-15.
Co-sponsored by the Undergraduate Student Association, Office of Student Life and
Office of Alumni Relations, this year's
Homecoqting and Parents Weekend events

include an Academic Convocation; a carnival on the South Campus; fac ulty presentations and tours; "Midnight Madness," the
first official NCAA practice for lhe Bulls
and Royals basl:.etball teams; a tent party in
a heated tent and, of course, the Big Game as
the Bulls face lhe University of Massachusetts in UB Stadiuin.
The celebration begins Friday, Oct. 13
with the Academic Convocation, honoring
UB faculty appointed to distinguished ranks
during the 1994-95 academic year and the
1995 SUNY Chancellor's Award recipients.
SUNY Chancellor Thomas Bartlett will assist UB President William Greiner and Provost Thomas Headrick in the presentation of
awards. The Convocation will be held from
3-4:30 p .m. in the Center for the Arts
Mainstage.
The Alumni Association Athletic Hall of
Fame Dinner (see related story) and J. Warren Perry Lecture also will be held Oct. 13
Sponsored by the School of Health Related
Professions. the Perry Lecture will feature
Steven N. Blair, director of research. epide-

miology and clinical applications at The
Cooper Institute of Aerobics Research in
Dallas. Blair will discuss "Physical Activity
and Fitness: Contributions to Long Life and
High Function" at 6 p.m. Oct. 13 in the

Katharine Cornell Theatre on UB's North
Campus.

The Undergraduate Student Association
will sponsor a series of Spirit Week. events
including a carnival, pep rally and bonfire
from 6-11 p.m. Friday, Oct. 13 on UB's
Sout4 Campus. (Note: Goodyear Road between Goodyear Loop and Pritchard Hall
will be closed from6 a.m. Friday, Oct. 13 to
6 am. Saturday, Oct. 14 to accommodate the
carnival.)
Learn more about the universi ty's I 50year history through William Johnson· s
..UB's History in Pictures" at 10 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 14 in the Student Union Theater.
Or get a peek into UB's fine academic facilities. Tours will include the Center for the
Arts, The Center for Excellence for Document Analysis ·and Recognition (CEDAR)
and a demonstration of the Fisk Organ. For
information and a complete schedule oftours
and lectures that will be held as part of
Homecoming and Parents Weekend. call the
Office of Student Life at 645-6 125 .
Bigtime football is back at UB as Coach
Craig Cirbus and the Bulls take on the University ofMassachuseus Minutemen at 1:30
p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14 in UB Stadium. Tickets are $5 and $7 in advance (free to UB
students) and $12 at the gate; for ticket
infonnation. call 645-6666. Halftime events
will include announcement of the Homecoming King and Queen and Spirit Week
winners.
The game will be preceded by "Norton
North," a tent party featuring a colossal
heated tent across from UB Stadium where
alumni, parents, students and all UB football
fans can gather for lunch and entertainment

by Alpha Delta Nik, a theme hand spin-off of
the internationally acclaimed party band Nik
and the Nice Guys. The tent party will include pizza, wings and all-you-can-drink

beer and soft drinks. Proper identification
and reservations are required. Tickets are $8
and S I 0, and available by calling 829-2608.
Top off the weekend in the Alumni Arena
Main Gym with a performance by the Smothers Brothers. and featuring an appearance by
theY o- Yo Man. Tickets for the 8 p.m. show

are SIO in advance and $14 at the door. For
ticket information, call 829-2608.
And finally, kick off of the 1995-96 basketball season at "Midnight Madness," the
first official NCAA practice for the Bulls
and Royals. Sponsored by the Division of
Athletics, the basketball season begins at II
p.m. Oct. 14 in the Alumni Arena Main
Gym, and will feature special promotions

and festivities . The event is free and open to
the "Public.

PEDIATRICIANS
Continued from page 1

associated with subsequent aggressive or
violent behavior."
The pediatricians advise parents to limjt
television -watching to two hours a day, or
less; keep television out of the child· s room;
refrain from watching violent adult programs
when children are present; monitor other
media such as music, video games and VCR
movies. and complain to their local televi sion stations and elected officials about the
quality of ch ildren 's programs.
To prevent children from being targe ts of
aggression , the pediatricians recommend
these approaches: Explain that a bully's behavior reflects his own problems. and has
nothing to do with your child; teach your
chi ld that fighting back g ives a bull y what h&lt;
wants and can be ·dangerous. and use roleplaying to help your child learn how to react
assenively without being aggressive or
threatening.
On the subject of gunshot injuries, most of
which occur accidentally as a result of an easily
accessible handgun in the home. the pediatricians have this ad\•ice: Get rid of lhe gun.

"A firearm kept in the home is 43 times
more likely to kill familymembers orfriends
than an intruder." Friedan states.
lf guns are in the home , they should be
empty and locked up away from children or
teen-agersat all times. the pediatricians stress.
In addition. children should be taught never
to lOuch a gun and to call911 immediatel y if
they find one. If an adolescent shows signs of
depression or impulsive behavior. firearms
should be removed from the house . Depressed teens commit suicide wit h guns more
than any other method. Friedan says.
The pediatricians eventuall y will set up
their video and materials in Western ew
York malls. in their offices and any other
location that offers the chance to get th1?1r
message to adults.
··we want to encour-J.ge p arent~ to develop a belief system of non\'iolcnce." she
said. "If violence is already a pan of their
lives, we will encourage them to change . For
people currentl y at risk of being harmed or
harming others, we will provide a lis t of
places they can go for help ...

�......... ...............

4

~

Leary to continue
work in human rights
Law professor retires to wOIIl, write In Geneva

•r

CHRI&amp;ltAN IIILUII
Reporter Contributor

get to go there." Thus, with thaok.s to a grant
from the Ford Foundation, began UB' s Geneva
Internship Program in 1989.
" I thought that internships should be caretional law professor. and after fi ve
fully organized. Ul was there I could see that
year.; as co-director of the UB
the placements were good; if there were any
problems I could move the students. I ran a
Human Rights Center. Virginia
l..eaJy retired and left Buffalo to become a
weekly seminar not just for our students, but
full-time resident of Geneva. Switzerland.
for all the students who were there, and about
Any story about Virginia Leary is also. nec70 or 80 came each week."
essari ly, a story about Geneva, the epicenter
l..eaJy' s personlil history includes a great •
Vlfllnl8 IMiry
of international human rights activity .
deal of intensive scholarship as well as wideyears. They' re kind of a libenllion group, and
Geneva was the site of Leary 's formative
ranging experience. After graduating Phi
have been fighting and they're still fighting.
years as a human rights scholar and activist;
Beta Kappa from the University of Utah, she
It's been going on for 12 years.
it is where she completed her doct~ur ~5
entered law school at the University of Chi"A 101 of the things are happening in the
scitnces politiques degree in 1980; and it is
cago. Later, after spending three year.; at 'a
United Slates.[ was in California a few months
where she has directed the UB law school's
big Chicago fmn,' in the early 1950s, l..eaJy
ago
and the altitude towand the immigrants
Geneva Internship Program, which ultibegan to pursue her interest in international
there is very, very strong, and we have our own
mately grew to embrace all student interns
issues by taking an administrative position
racial problems. So far they're 001 as serious as
with the Intercultural Cooperation Associastationed in Geneva .
in a 101 of countries. But they are problems."
"Geneva's a wonderful place." Leary said,
tion, an international women' s organization,
One consequence of the much-publicized
which led to an appointment at its headquara week before returning there. Her office at
' cooservatizatioo of America' may be a genters in Geneva.
the Human Rights Center was piled high
eral
lessening of involvement in interna"When
I
got
to
Europe,
I
realized
that
I
with boxes or book.s and papers-her career
tional human rights affairs, Leary says. "I
missed the law. I finally discovered that
al UB- awaiting export. "When I first went
there was such a thing as international law.
there I was very surprised because it' s a little
So I quit and went back to get a doclll&lt;ale in
place. Much smaller than Buffalo.
international law. When I did that, I did it with
"It's been a center for international life
the intention or teaching. always, but with the
forever, ' ary said. "When the League of
or specializing in human rigbls or in
intention
Nations w started, they decided to have it
development issues because I was !lO( interin Geneva. S e the Congress of Vienna in
ested in international tax, I wasn't interested in
1850, Switzer! d had been neutral. Also it
international business transactions, but I was
had a vision tha it wasn ' t linked to any
very interested in human rigbts."
particular side, so lot of things have always
Leary's extensive body of work includes
gone to Geneva beCause of the concept that
to
the text lntemotionol Labor Conventions
ir 's neutral.
and International Low. numerous book chap'1ne lntemat.ional Labor Organization
ters and articles on international law and
started there, then the United Nations when
human rights , and missions to Sri Lanka, the
they took over from the League, the Red
Philippines, and Pakistan on behalf of the
Cross. the United Nations European Office,
think there's a lot or things that we could do
international Commission of Jurists and
the High Commissioner of Refugees, the
to assist problems around the world that
Amnesty International. She has taught in
World Health Organization, International
don't mean sending forces necessarily.
Toronto, Saskatchewan, and San Francisco.
Labor Organization. World Meteorological
"I've been very impressed by ScandinaIn 1993 she was named a SUNY DistinOrgani zation. International Telecommunivian countries and by the Dutch, by a !01 or
guished Service Professor.
cations.
things they ' re doing in the way or human
The greatest human rights problem fac"But those are all governmental . There
rights. The Norwegians, for instance, helped
ing the world today, according to Leary, is
are a lot of non -governmental organizations
negotiate the Arab-Israeli peace agreement
"Ethnic disagreements. We don't have many
which have set up there because or these
because they maintained a certain neutrality;
wars b~twetn countries these days, we have
other organizations. So it's really the hunow, that can only be done by asma//country.
them within countries. In Ireland, the former
manitarian and social side of the UN."
"We actually give an extremely low perYugoslavia, the former USSR, everywhere."
centage or our funds for humanitarian purhroughout her career at UB. Leary reModern ethnic conflicts are nO! limited
poses.
We think we give a lot, but we give
turned to Geneva every summer. She
to those that are in theheadlines,like the former
much less proportionaily than the Scandinabegan infonnally assisting international law
Yugoslavia or Ireland. One of the worst ongovian countries. And there's a lot or human
and human rights student interns. ''I notired a
ing conflicts is occurring off the southeast
rights centers at the UN that need extra fundlot of interns sort of lost there," she explains.
coast of India in Sri Lanka, according to Leary.
ing. The United States could give to that.
'1nere were interns from different countries
'There are two groups, the Tamils and the
"In sending troops, we should be very
and the United States, and I thought there
Sinhalese. The Sinhalese are about 80 percent
cautious,
and only do so under multilateral
should be a program for them so they could
and the Tamils aboot 20 percent The Tamils
auspices. You do have to think about what
get to know each other and get to know the
are claiming an area in the north as a homeland
we'regetting into and why and soon; on the
different international organizations. Then I
apd feel that they have been mistreated for other
band, we belong to the United Nations
thought it would be nice if our students could
and we can't simply say we just regand our
own interests. We have a certain responsibility that is over and above that of just our own
sheer interests ...
Another imponant problem, and the subject ofDr. l..eaJy's forthcoming The Right to
H•alth, is the futureofhealthcare in America.
"Under international human rights law,
there is a concept of economic and social
rights. They have been accepted by almost
all the countries of the world. There's a right
8IIJdenlia.
to housing, a right to education, and there' s
11llld "SSIIBcttd VIdeo Wodl." 118 ~- p11101117 PJII.'il . . Olnwhat they call a right to health.
lllrfor the Ar1B Saaening FloCim on IIIII RanhC:....'Thlt
he ol
" In the United States, we find it very band
charge and open to the pubic.
to think or a right tO health or a right to
On Tuesday, Oct. 24, UB Media Sludy Pra.oor Brian Hendenson. a nollld
education or a right to housing. We' re alfilm scholar and historian widely published on the WCfl( of wrlterldinlclor Preston
most unique in that----certainly among the
Sturges, will screen Sturges' 1944 film. "The Miracle of Morgan Creek' with comindustrialized countries. Generally, other
mentary and dlsctJss his own recent book, "Four More Screenplays by Preston
countries think or those things as rights, and
Sturges,• published this fall by the UnilleiSity of Ca!Hornla Press.
certainly in international law they are rights.
The event takes place at 7 p.m. in the Center for the Arts Screening Room.
"When you say there is a right to health,
North Campus. II is free of charge and open to the public.
what does that mean? It doesn't mean that
every single person has the right to a dialysis

E

ARL Y LAST July. after 19 year.;
as UB's onl y full-time interna-

"The 'right to health'
concept is new. .. so what we
have to do is try to develop
what it means and that's
what I'm trying do. "

-LUIIY

T

-.tw

treatment or that everybody could be guaranteed good health. But we have other
phrases; for instance, we talk about the right
to property. Well, does thai mean everybody
bas the right to be given a bouse? It just
means the right 001 to be atbitrarily deprived
of your propeoty. So the 'rigbl to bealtb' concept is new, and it sounds strange to people
because they' ve never beand it very much. So
wbal we have to do is try to develop wbal it
means, and that' s wball'm trying to do.
"For instance, I think it does mean there
should oOI be discrimination in the allocation of health care. Now if you look at the
U.S .. there is such a huge number of people
who don' t have health insurance, and certainly they are the poorer, and, I think I can
say without a doubt, there are certain ethnic
groups that have less care. Certainly, there
should be some basic minimum thai everybody gets. Now, whatthalmioimumisbas to
be worked ouL But the situation in the United
States where some people do DO! have any at
all is contrary to what my concept of the right
to health care is.
"Canada spends less on health care than
we do, as far as administrative costs are
concerned. Their system is very good. II' s
supported and paid for by the government,
but. in fact. you choose your own doctors.
It 's a better system, I think. than what we
have here in the sense that we're being pushed
more and more into managed care where you
don't choose your own doctors.
Where, then, did the Clintons go wrong in
attempting to launch their national health
care system last year?
"I thinl&lt; theirs was so complex that even
those of us who were in favor of universal
care didn't understand it and we found it
confusing," said l..eaJy, "And so we sbn of
gave up."
eary can take great satisfaction from her
many noteworthy accomplishments
throughout her tenure at lJB-.&lt;Iccomplishments that wiU be her legacy to the university.
' 'Together with Claude Welch in the Political Science Depanment. we did set up the
Human Rights Center," she said. "I think
we've done a creditable job of trying to
encourage students who were interested in
human rights to go on for careers. We have
several people who are in careeB now in
human rights. We've gotten people to go to
Geneva to learo more about human rights
and international law. And the Human Rights
Center has been very active; we've bad a lot
of student involvement and we're beginning
to get more faculty involvement. So. to me.
I guess thai's the thing that I'm most happy
about."
Claude Welch, l..eaJy's co-founder of the
UB Human Rights Center and fellow Distinguished Service Professor, says, "Professor
l..eaJy is unique in her combination or global
knowledge and local application. Through
her many year.; of experience in Geneva.
Professorl..eaJy knew almost all the world' s
major advocates of human rights. She was
thus a human bridge between the academic
world and the activist world. with profound
knowledge of both."
0

L

�5
The Repotter wek:ooles CCtTmBnlaty on issues
the unil;ersity COI'IY7lUflily.
Material may be edffed for sty1e and /englll.

nts

of broad interast to

"Contract with America" is War on Environment
11J W A L l l l t - ith the exception of the
first Earth Day in 1970,
the most significant environmental revolution in
U.S. history is now underway. But this revolution is
a counter-revolution; it'li a war against the environment

Newt Gingrich, congressman from Georgia
and Speaker of the House of Representatives,
is leading the charge. It's pan of the Republican Party ' s much heralded ''Contract with
America.''
You didn't know that the Contract with
America was a war against the environment?
WeU , join the club. And wake up and smell the
coffee before it' s too late.

A-ferbwllol · - In a repon released last month, the National
Wildlife Federation (NWF) described the bleak
environmental vision of Newt ' s army of Congressional revolutionaries, as follows :

• Suspend enforcement of major provisions
of environmental laws.
• Exempt the oil and .gas, phannaceutical,
machinery, and food processing industries ,
among others, from requirements to obey
specific provisions of environmental law .
• Cut off funds to assist local communities
to build or improve drinking water and
sewage treatment plants.
• Suspend numerous environmental pro.
grams.
• Enlarge public subsidies for some indus·
tries, iuch as taxpayer.supportcd consuuc.
tion of logging roads in National Forests
for the timber industry .
While the long-term goal of the Contract

crusaders may be the total elimination of the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
their immediate goal appears to be to cripple it.
The EPA is being hit with the largest dispro.
portionatc budget cuts inflicted on any major
federal government agency. The House·appro·
priation bill which contains these cuts also in·
eludes, in the words of the NWF, " 17 sepnnue
provisions either ordering the EPA not to en·
force environmental law or exempting specific
industries from having to obey the law."
Says the NWF report: "Taken as a whole,

lbe Bouoe plaa coDStllutes lbt broadtol and
dttpest attack tvtr mounted opiost laws
lhol protect public beallb, lbt tDvironmenl,
natunJ resources ud wildlife." This is the
view of virtually every major environmental
organization in this counuy, including such
stalwarts as the Sierra Club, Grecnpeace and
Nntunllltesoun:es Defense Council (NRDC) .
NRDC refers to the Republicans' attack on
environmental protection as a ..stealth attack"
which uses the budget process to promote
''dirty water, dirty air, more pesticides, and un·
safe drinking water... Our environmental laws
are being rewritten, NRDC explains, " by the
lobbyists of mining companies, real estate
speculators, oil co1npanies, pesticide and
chemical manufacturers ."

----

Why has it taken so long for the Republican·
led war on the environment to become public
knowledge? And why are we seeing so little
public response?
The answers to these questions can be
found in the same epidemic of public disillu·
sionmcnt and cynicism which helped elect the
Republican majority. But ignprancc about the
Contract and the misleading way it has been
promoted have also contributed to public si·
lencc .
From day one, I thought that the Contract
with America was a suspect document, a Tnr
jan horse filled with far right fringe politics.
But many said, lei's give the Republ icans a
chance.
instead of a campaign gimmick, the Con·
tract turned out to be a dangerous weapon. The
right·wing revolutionaries used the Contract to
camouflage their attacks on the environment
(as well as against the young, the old, the poor,
the middle class and other targets).

To construe lhc 1994 Republic victory as a
mandate for the Contract is a demagogic jok.e.
During last year's election. wbcn the Contract
was bau:bed, biii'Ciy 50 percent of the U.S.

electorate voted. The Republican "landslide"
was achieved through the suppon of only about
30 percent of eligible voten. And very few had
any idea what the Contract stood for. 1bcre
was no mandate for auacking 25 years of legis·
lative and regulatory progress protecting the
environment

,......,_._

Let's look: at what Newt's revolutionaries have
in stem: for the environment:

Water Qwlllty-Botb the Clean Water Act
and the Safe Drinking Wnter Act are under nt·
tack as pan of Republican· led efforts to climi·
nate Federal mandates. While most Americans
support mandates which fnvor public health,
compliance with the requirements of these wa·
ter protection laws may be undenn.ined by
"Waivers" and a shift toward "voluntary con·
trois ."
The Clean Water Act programs to control
sewage overflows are slated for suspension.
The EPA's water quality monitoring program
may also be eliminated.
The "clean water'' bill passed by the House
would also eliminate the Great Lakes Water
Quality Initiative, designed to create uniform
programs to reduce, prevent and control toxic
pollution in states which border the Great Lakes .
Air Quality-Key elements of the Clean
Air Act are threatened by Republican efforu to
undermine EPA enforcement abilities and to
provide pollution exemptions. Even seemingly
innocuous programs are in the line of fire. For
example, the House voted to prohibit states
from including in their clean air plans any
strategies to reduce car use by encouraging
carpooling, public transit. etc.
Endance;red. Species--While our planet is
losing biodiversity at an unprecedented rate,
the Endangered Species Act has become the
lightning rod for Congressional opponents of
current environmental laws and regulations.
New listings on the endangered species list
have been barred. Legislation now under con·
sideration would favor commerciaJ development of land over species protection.
While it might seem reasonable to compen·
sate land owners when species protection
thwarts development and affects property vaJ.
ucs, the compensation requirement in the pend·
ing legislation would severely curtail govern·
ment...:lircctcd action in behalf of threatened or
endangered species. Private property rights
should not be allowed to supersede community
or public interest.
Wetlands-The protection of wetlands is
likely to suffer as a result of an easing of re·
strictions and a requirement for compensation
similar to that proposed for the Endangered
Species Acl
Leading the charge against wetlands protcc·
tion is Senator D.M. Faircloth (R-NC), who,
according to Rollcall, has an estimated S 19
million invested in the pork industry . His Wet·
lands Regulatory Rcfonn Act would substan·
tially relax standards on water pollution from
large scale hog farms and other factory livestock opemtions.
Hazardous Cbemicals-Funding for
Superfund cleanup of toxic chemicaJ waste
dumps is slated for significant cuts. as is EPA 's
Superfund enforcement budget. The latter cut
would eliminate much of EPA's ability 10 identify responsible parties and initiate new cleanups.
While consumers overwhelmingly want putr
lie heaJth regulations which limit pesticide con·
lamination of food. proposed legislation favors
pesticide manufacturers who want regulation of
their products relaxed .
National Forests-Efforts to tum
America' s National Forests. including irreplaceable old growth forests , into saw logs and
pulp for paper, took a giant step toward the environmental abyss when the Republican major·
ity in Congress approved a two-year program
to promote the cutting of so--called "salvage
timber." The salvage timber program suspends
all existing environmental laws affecting log·

ging, including the Endangered Species Act.
the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, the National
Forest Management Act, the National Environ·
mental Policy Act, the Clean Water Act and
the Safe Drinking Water Act
Clinton had opposed thi s measure but suc·
cumbed to pressure to approve the appropriation bill whicb contained it as a "rider."
Natiooal Parks and Wilderness-Funds to
operate national parks and 10 acquire new park
land and wilderness appear likely to suffer rna·
jor cuts. And the Arctic NationaJ Wildlife Ref·
ugc (ANWR), a huge, pristine wilderness area
in northern Alaska. is on the chopping block.
Anti~nvironmentalists are seeking to open it up
to oil and gas development~ven though a
slight increase in automotive fuel efficiency
could save more energy than is likely to be
found in this wilderness refuge.
Eoergy--On a per capita basis, Americans
consume twice as much energy as Gennans
and three times as much as the Japanese. De·
spite the significant environmental impact as·

"If you. .. care about
maintaining government
protection of the
environment...let your
Congressional
representative know
where you stand. "
WALTER SIIII'SOII

soc iated with our continued over·reliance on
conventional energy sources (fossi l fu els and
nuclear power), the Department of Energy's
modest budgets for energy efficiency and re·
newable or solar energy development are s lated
for disproportionately large cuts.

• - Won't Worll on • Shrlnklllll
I'I8Ret
International environmental programs are also
being targeted. Legislation passed by the House
would enact major cuts in U.S. global popula·
lion stabilization efforts. Funding cuts are also
likely to affect U.S . participation in international
efforts such as the lnter·govemment Panel on
Climate Change {which evaluates scientific re·
search on globaJ wanning) and the Montreal
Protocol Fund (which helps control CFCs in or·
dcr to protect the ozone layer).
Human population was at the 3.5 billion
mark when I began teaching environmental
studies at UB in the mid· '70s. Now, only 20
yean later. human population has reached .S.7
billion. It doesn't take a genius to figure out
that, as a species, we can't keep growing like
this-without terrible environmental, ceo.
nomic, ·sociaJ and political consequences.
The habitability of the Earth itself is fast
becoming an issue. Population growth must be
addressed. The same can be said for addressi ng
potentially devastating problems like globaJ
warming and the destruction of the ozone layer.

lludC.t.ry Trvtloe Trlcb
What about lhe budget? Do budget realities
force major cuts in environmental programs ':t
We do have a budget problem. A recem
Associated Press story stated that on
Friday. Sept. 22, the national debt totaled
S4,8S9,555.000,000 and was increasing at
over SSOO million a day.
Luckily, a consensus has emerged to address
this problem. Reducing the deficit and balancing
the budget are obvious first steps.
At lhe bean of the current debate is how to
achieve a balanced budget. Given the size of
the deficit, it is reasonable to suppose that
some federal programs must be eliminated and
many will have to be scaled back . Since most
government programs contain fat or wasteful

spending, they can benefit by efficiencies
forced by budget cuts. But this logic does not
lead to the concl usion that all programs must
suffer cuts or that social and environmental
programs should be cut the most:
Gingrich 's revolutionaries are going after
environmental programs because they oppose
these programs, n01 because of the need to bal·
ance the budget.

.......,_

Tu C.U F - .,._C.UIB Select
The Republican·sponsored tax cut has been
criticiz.ed for providi ng more tu. relief to the
rich than to the middle class and poor. But this
tax cut is more than that; it's a carefully crafted
tool designed to exacerbate the budget crisis,
forcing even more draconian cuts in programs
Republicans oppose. The tax cut will have the
effect of:
I. directly transferring wealth to the
weal thy by taxing them less; and
2. indirectly transferring wealth to the
wealthy by increasing corporate profi ts for
regulated industries by deregulating them, i.e .•
allowing them to operate without environmen·
tal controls.
Recent Republican efforu to increase
spending for the Department of Defense: (DoD)
by $6.7 billion over the amount requested by
the Pentagon is of the same cloth. While Re·
publicans generally favor higher levels of mili·
wy spending, they undoubtedly hope that fur.
ther increases in the Pentagon 's budget will
force even deeper cuts in other areas, including
Medicare, welfare and environmental programs.
Dumping more money into the DoD will
also result in more profits for large weapons·
making corporations. Welfare for big business is
in . Welfare for the poor is not.

AWolf.ttlleIf the Contract with America is a wolf in
sheep' s clothing. then what do we do when tbc
wolfs at the door'?
If you are among the majority in this coun·
try who care about maintaining government
protection of the environment. please don ' t sit
on the sidelines.
It' s time to pick up the phone. or pen and
paper. or a picket sign and let your Congres·
sional representative (Jack Quinn. Bill Paxon
or John LaFalce) and Senators Daniel
Moynihan and Alfonse D' Amato know where
you stand. Legislation that could change the
course of environmental history is now being
deliberated in Congress.
Paxon. Quinn and D' Amato have generally
supponed the Conlr8Ct with America and its
radical ..anti·cnvironmentalism. Paxon, in par·
ticular. has championed the Contract with great
enthusiasm. A11 of the above characters have
local offices li sted in the blue pages {..govern·
me nt li stings") of the phone book.

P - . ... lnCrlone?
What about President Bill Clinton and Vice
President AI Gore ? They definitely need a
wake up call. But it goes deeper than that.
The Clinton Administration has done little
to stop the attack of the Republicans. suggest·
ing that this issue is not as partisan as it may
appear. The deluge of campaign contributions
from corpornte special interests have polluted
both parties and created "government for sale."
This condition will not change until there is
signi fican t campaign finance reform.
While demandi ng this refonn is esse ntial (if
we want to return democracy and public inter·
est to government), we also need to hope for
the best and encourage Cli nton to publicly take
on the environmental issue and veto bad bills.
Perhaps if the public shouts loudly enough.
Clinton will discover some latent concern for
the environment and begin resisting the Republican ons laught.
As for Gore. he needs to reappear and re ·
sume his passionate championing of the env1 ·
ronmental cause. In his 1992 book. Earth 1n
1he Balanc e. AI Gore called for "bold and un ·
equ ivocal action" on behalf of our kids and the
nex.t generation. Now is the time .
Walter Simpson is UB's energy officer

�6

The Rsponst wet:onrts 1eatn Item I'Niin ~on .b sa:ri!s lltld
antJnl. LBIIfn 5ha&lt;Jd . . trill r.dmoybe odilrldlor ~--a..

couoeal.,...,..,_·l he---.,..,.,.,_,
Boot' letter to News
gives wrong impression
lO THE EDII'OII:
II seems that Professor John C. G. Boot of
the Department of Management Science and
Systems has been burdened tor some time
by UB's policies tor handling sponsored
projects, since he has quite suddenly decided to unload himself in public. He did so
in a letter to the editor at the Buffalo News on
Sept.17.
Boot saw fit to make his point by targeting
two sentences in a letter that I had written to
the News to address a separate topic,
namely UB's involvement in Buffalo water·
front planning. My letter explained my role
and that of Bruno Freschi, tha dean of tha
School of Architecture and Planning , in wa·
ter1ront planning and stated my position on
certain waterfront issues, such as the matter
of public hearings, on which tha News had
editorialized. According to Boot.o/TlY letter il·
lustrated the ethical problems in sponsored
work by faculty.
Perhaps I should answer Professor Boot
in the News, but he makes such roundabout
assertions, while intimating some unspecified vtolation of principle, that I need more
room to respond than the News' readers
could reasonabty tolerate .

0 B I 1 U

~

RI [ S

Bernard B. Skerker, UB
Athletic Hall of Fame
8emard •· Skerker. 76, one of UB's most
devoted alumni and a member of the UB Athletic
Hall of Fame. d1ed Sept. 24 in Millard Fillmore
Hosp1tal A meffiOI'ial service was held Sept. 26 in
tht: S1sterhood Chapel of Temple Beth Zion.
Skerker. active 10 community service activities
1nclud1ng 01oe years as a member of the Millard
Fillmore Hospital Board. spent more than 50 years
1n actiVIties 1nvolv1ng and supponing UB. A past
prestdent ol the UB Boosters Club. he was inducted toto the Athletic Hall of Fame in 1961 and
tn 1967. won the Samuel P. Capen Award as the
outstandtng alumnus. Skerker. who attended US
from 1937-40, was student manager of varsity
football during his undergraduate years.
Longtime chairman of Robinson Knife Co ,
Skerker served as president of the UB Scholar·
sh1p Funt::J in the 1960s and set up a scholarship
lund with his family for children of Robinson Knife
employees.

Boot objected to my sentence explaining
why UB has requested funding for our planning work from Development Downtown Inc ..
the quasi-public agency that is sponsoring
the project. My sentence said that Freschi
and I as UB faculty needed the funds in or·
dar to reimburse the untversity in case we
had to forgo our normal teaching. research
and administrative commitments.
Boot retorts that "the state pays the lac·
ulty to teach and do research.• Faculty
should not "sell their expertise to third par·
ties" nor "employ substitutes to do what they
are paid to be doing." He goes on to say that
"To tha extent that some of these third·party
payments end up as extra remuneration for
the consulting faculty. the construction is
grimmer yet." People will wonder "why they
should be paid from two sources for work
done once.·
These assertions are so convoluted and
distorted, I barely know whar e to begin re·
sponding, but let me g ive it a try.
As a faculty member engaged in a spon·
sored program, I do not employ substitutes.
Rathar, with tha permission of my departmental chair. I engage in professional practice
consistent with my role as a professor of urban planning. I reimburse the university for
tha equivalent of my salary and overhead. It
does not lake a management scientist to fig·
ure out that I am still gening the same sal·
ary-l am not being paid twice. I cannot
fathom why Professor Boot would want to give
to News readers the impression that faculty
members are paid twice for the same work.
Then while making no firm assertion,
Boot's language gives the impression that
faculty recetve some kind of underhanded
"extra remuneration.· Quite to the contrary,
the waterfront project will not provide me any
remuneraHon above my normal salary, unless
it is for work conducted in the summer. when I
am .not employed by the state. I resent the un·
specified implication that I or my colleagues
are engaged in something devious.
Boot goes on to write that "faculty teach·
mg loads have a built·io buffer for research ~
and that waterfront development 1s ~ ideal·
for such research. Of course I do engage 10
research, b y which I would hope to make
contributions to my discipline. But by partiCI·
pating in planning for the Buffalo waterfront , I
am not engaged in research, but rather in an
act of professional practice. Like faculty
members in other professk&gt;nal schools, I
should perk&gt;dically engage in professional
practice in order to develop my skills and
maintain links to my prolesskxl. The State of
New York should not have to pay me tor

that-my own professional qualifications
should be strong enough to allow me to fond
outside sponsorship for my practice. Surpris·
ingly tor a faculty member In a professional
school, Boot confuses professional practice
and scholarship.
Boot's conclusion is the more remarkable
part of his lener. He writes that "in the bente
between economics and ethics, economics
wins out~ut it is unusual that that victory is
by detaun because ethics are not judged to
be in play." The tendentious language
makes it seem as if there is some ethical
lapse in my or my colleague's Interest in the
waterfront project. The News seized on this
newsworthy Implication, prDIIiding the haad·
line · 1n UB waterfront dispute, economics
overwhelms ethics.·
Professor Boot: My understanding of eth·
ics is that in ethical public discourse one
does not engage in innuendo. If one sees
wrongdoing, one should state It clearly, and
give evidence for it. Do not leave your col·
leagues noundering in unspecified suspi ~
cions.
Nonetheless, I must admit that there is
something charming in this last part of Boot's
tener. It Is the Idea of a mortal conflict be·
tween economics and ethics, as if market exchange were necessarity inconsistent with
morals, and ethics necessarily ran counter to
the need to make a living. Students of ac&lt;&gt;nomics and ethics might object thai this dis·
tinction is gross, but they woulq misunder·
stand . What Boot probably really means is
that lucre is inherentty corrupting. For a pro-fessor in a business school. this is. to say the
least, an interesting viewpoint.
Sincerety yours,

_,_

Associate Professor,
School of Architecture and Planning

P.S. A final point. Issues ol principle do
sometimes arise in sponsored faculty research and faculty practice. I suspect that
these problems arise far more when faculty
members bypass procedure to do private
consulting during the academic year than
they do in this case, when Bruno Freschi lind
I are engaged in a normal sponsored project
administered by the Research Foundation of
SUNY. Nonetheless, I think tha broader ethi·
cal issues should be explored. I propose
that the Faculty Senate establish a commit·
tee to look at sponsored research and professional practice at US, and compare our
procedures to those at other universities. I
would be glad to explore these issues further
in such a setting.

FSEC
Continued from page 1

DOl a signal to get rid of graduate education.
certainly we should look e&amp;~efully 11 the
bottom quartile of programs we offer."
Headrick said be advoclles ClliiCalllaling
resoun:es amoog fewer, more suca:ssful doc·
tond programs, as is done II oCber in11i1u1ions.
He indicaled to FSEC members tbll the four
university c:enlen bad llllllcnal= df011S to
coordinale graduale programs IIIII sbano ..,_
sources before the NRC rqnt was released..
FSEC members also discussed adocumeot
from SUNY's Uni-=ity Faculty Seo8lle titled
"RethinkingSUNY."UniversityFacultySenator Peler N"derson explained tbll tbe document wascin:ulaled atar=t Albanymoeling
of tbe Senate to encourage faculty fecdbeck to
acommitteeoftrusteesdrafting a rqnt fortbe
legislalure oo SUNY's futwe.
The trustees, according to Nickerson, will
produce this report Dec. I, and SUNY od·
mioistrators are balding up thcir budget request to the governor until then. University
Faculty Senator Deriois Malone added that
the meeting made clear tohim that "there are
no sacred cows. Tbe trustees clearly believe
that we don't need departments of a particular discipline on every campus."
Management Professor Jobo Boot said tbe
trusteesare~ootbesame wavelength. There will
be heavy empbasisoo undergrUJateeducation
and they feel SUNY should oct fritter away
mucbofwba!itdoes ooremedialcoursewcd.O

�7

..... n , Ne.e

.,...._a,~v

Facul &amp;SiaHBil board

--counL A W - '10 DIICUU

The impact of recent decisions by

the U.S. Supreme Coun and its move
to the political right In critical areas
will be discussed by two UB law prolessors in a program Oct. 12.
The program, free and open to
the public, will be held at 7:30pm
in the Jewish Community Center of
Greater Buffalo. 2640 N Forest
Road, Amherst.
Featured speakers will be Lee A..

A - and Luclnclll Finley. Alan
Carrel, v1ce dean of the UB Schex&gt;l
of Law, will serve as moderator
Supreme Coun decisiOns they w111
d1scuss Involve alfirmauve-acuon
programs, separation of church and
state and Congress' power

POST..EIJINCI ROUNDTABLE

'10 H HELD OCT. 12

\

The Women's Studies Program and
the Asian Studies Program wilt cosponSOf ·Report from Beijing," a
roundtable to be held from 7-9:30
p .m . Oct 12 in Room 330 of the Student Union on UB's North Campus
Speakers will include P•t Shelly
of the UB School of Social Wont and
Oepanment of American Studies:
.loan Sulewald, UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sctences
and president of UB's UUP Health
Sciences Chapter; Bruce Uu, UB
Department ol Educational OrganizatiOn , Administration and Policy: Jane
Fisher ol Canislus College, and Shirley
Joseph, a Buffalo activist for women
The panel will give eyewitness repons of the historic women's conference in China, including video of the
open~ng ceremony. followed by an
open discussion of the issues raised ,
1ncluding sexual and reproductive
ughts. violence against women and
the economics of development
A reception will follow. The program is free and open to the pubhc

DRUG stUDY '10 PAY
PAimCIPAHTS S12II'Eit DAY
Healthy adults ages 18-40 are being
recruited by researchers to pan1c1pate in medication research studies
in the UB Clinical Pharmacokinetics
Research Center at Millard Fillmore
HospitaVGates Circle.
Participants . who must have flex ·
ibte schedules. will be reimbursed up
to $ t 25 per day upon completion of
the studies. Those interested in par·
tlcipating should call887-4584 and
leave thelf name and telephone number on the answe~ng mach1ne

VOWNTEERS NEEDED

FOR UB KIDNEY STUDY
Volunteers ages 18-70 who have lOOney impairment or kidney disease with
elevated serum creatinene and BUN
(blood urea nitrogen) are
for a
UB study. Participants , who cannoc be
on hei-nodialysls. will be required to
visit the UB Clinical PharmacokinebCS
ClinicaJ Research Center in Millard
Fillmore Hospital/Gates Circle six omes
tor eight hours each.
At the completion of the study.
each participant will be reimbursed
$1.200. Those interested in paniclpatlng should call887-4584 and
leave thelf name, telephone number
and the words "study 11 28" on the
answering machine

n¥ed

COI'I'ENS FIRST RECIPIENT
OF D A V I D - AWARD
Philip Coppena, Distinguished
Professor of Chem1stry at UB , has
been selected as the first recipient of
the David Harker Award from the
Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute.
The award, which recognizes Significant contributions to the advancement of the scktnce of crystallography, wilt be presented Nov. 8 at a

special Nobel Prize 10th anntversary
cefebralion to be held in the UB Center for the Arts.
Coppens , a member ollhe UB
faculty since 1971, is a crystaUographer widely published in the Ueld of
applied physics and engineering. He
has served as president of the
American Crystallographic Associ&amp;·
liOn and holds a Drs. degree and a
doctorate from the University of
Amsterdam (Netherlands) . In 1989
he was awarded a Doctor Honoris
Causa degree by the UniverSity of
Nancy, France.
The award was established to
honor the memory of the late David
Harker, a world-class authority in t~e
field of crystallography, who served
as the first chair of the UB Department of Biophysics. He was director
of Roswell Pane's Biophysics Research Oepanment and d1rector of
the Center lor Crystallographic Research. Harker dedicated his lite to
the advancement of crystallography:
his life and works still serve as a role
model to asptring young scienttsts .

"I'OIITIIAITS IN STEEL"
RECEIVU- AWARD
·ponraits in Steel." the nationally celebrated collaborattve work on Buffalo
steelworkers by
UB history profes·
sor lllchael
Frfach and documentary photographer lllhon
llogovln, both of
Buffalo. has re·
ceived the 1995
FRISCH
Book Award from
the Oral History Association-the llrst
ever presented by the organ•zallon II
w111 be given next month at the annual meeting in Milwaukee
The book. published by Cornell
Umversity Press in 1993, features oral
histories of steel-industry workers who
discuss their jobs and thEnr lives belora. during and after the shut down of
the region's steel compan1es and affiliated industnes •n lhe 19705
DIDe Trevelen, pres1dent of the association. said that the selection committee was panicularty impressed with
the book's 'refreshing authenttc•ty ·
\hey' recognized Milton Rogov1n's
photographs as both dignity1ng the1r
subjects and documenttng conhnutry
and change 1n the lives of the featured
steelworkers and their families,· he
said The committee noted that
"Fnsch's thoughlful interVIews bnlhantly
complement the photographs. not onty
enhancing the dign1ty of hts subtocts
but empowenng them as wen:
He added that Frisch 's "beautifully written introduction .. prov1des a
succinct history of the political and
economic evolution of Buffalo. New
York .. offering insight into the hlstoncal causes of social change and atfords an elegant context for the photographs and interviews. wh1ch
illumtnate !he meaning In human
terms of the ·post-Industrial wOfld '"

BLOOD CIRCULATION IEXI'ERT
'10 II'II£HNT RAHN LECTURE

A.. n C. Groom, professor of medical biophysics at !he University of
, - - - - - - - , Western Ontario
and an expen on
mammalian mtcroctrculation . w1ll
present the fi fth
annual Hermann
Rahn Memonat

~···~ Lecture
The leclure. ·The

~

GROOM
MICfOCifCU!aUon
Blood Cells and Cancer Cells." w111
be delivered at 5 p.m on Thursday.
Oct. 12, in Butler Auditonum 1n
Farber Hall on the South Campus
Sponsored by the UB School of
Medicine and BOO'Ied1C&amp;I Sc1ences.
it is free and open to the publiC .
Groom's distinguished career has

spanned four decades A nallve of

Surrey, England. he earned h1s undergraduate and doctoral degrees
from London Untversity, where he
conducted radioisotopic studies of
circulation in hypotension
He served as lecturer in phys1cs
at London Umversity's St Mary's
Hospital MediCal School from l9SS..
66 and , dunng that ume , came to
Buffalo as a research associate 1n
the UB Oepartmen1 of Phys1otogy
While at UB, he worked wilh Leon
Farhl. SUNY Distinguished Professor
of Physiology , on perfustan and diffusion limitations to 1nen gas exchange
in human tissues
Groom emigrated to Canada ln
1966 and joined the Biophysics Department at the University of Western
Ontario. He rose through the ranks to
become professor and cha1r of the
departmen1. a poSII)()(l he held unhl

1987.
His research career has focused

on the mammalian circulatory system, wh•ch he has studied with a vanety of sophisticated biOphysical
techniques He is currenlly studying
the passage of metastatic cancer
calls into the microcirculation us1ng
videomicroscopy.
Groom has served as president of
the Biophysical Soc1ety of Canada
and the American Microcirculatory
Society. He 1s assoc1ate ed1tor of the
journal Cell Biophysics
He has been honored by numerous lectureshtps. scholarships and
research awards from the Mteroclrculatory Society ol Nonh Amenca,
the Med1cal Research Counc11 of
Canada and the Fulbnght CommiS·
ston .
The lecture honors Rahn. IDfmer
chatr of the UB Department of Physiology. whose p100eenng research 1n
env~ronmental physiology helped
prov1de the foundation for today·s
aerospace and undersea medic1ne
Rahn d1ed 1n 1990

WOMEN'S CWB PLANS

OCTOBER EVENTS
A day bus tnp to Seneca Falls on
Oct . 12 IS a spec1al Celebrate 50• anmversary event scheduled by the
Women 's Club of the Un1vers1ty at
Buffalo The group w11ltour the Nattonal Women's Hall of Fame. wh1ch
1nctudes the Women's Rtghls National Histone Park , and v1sttthe Sen eca Falls Htstoncat Soctety
A luncheon IS planned at h1stonc
Bellhurst Castle 1n Geneva. followed
by a tour and w1ne tashng at the
Knapp V1neyard 1n Romulus Jos1e
Lapellna IS chau of the event . asSISted by Aunlta Holloway and Lorey
Repicc1

Other October eventa:
The Book Group meets Oct 9 at
12.30. Pat Lerner wdltead a discussion of The Shippmg News by E
Anne Prouty Emd Margohs IS host ess. wllh Vehna Ruckenstem and
Hays Farh1 as co-hostesses
The Bndge Group meets Oct 16
at Oandehons Restaurant hom 10
a .m to 2 p m . tor tntermed1a1e and
advanced play Bndge Fhght sesSions will be scheduled
The Evemng Gourmet Group
meets Oct 19 at 7 30 p m w1th
Dawn Halvorson as hOstess for an
even•ng of -QuiCk Rec1pes - For
each meettng a theme 1S chosen and
the commlnee selects rec1pes and
prepares lhe food to be sampled
The French Conversation Group
w1U meet for lunch and conversation
at the home ol Rolene Pozarney on
Oct 20at t230pm
The Needlework Group, chatred
by Lots S1ndon1 and Anne Mane
Nalal1no. will meet Oct 26 at 12:30 at
the home of Patnc1a Addelman . to
work on thelf own protects and share
a hght lunch
Bowling meets every Monday at
10 a.m . at Shendan Lanes for three

games at open bowhng
The Tenn1s Group, chatred by
Marte Schillo and Ann Shub . meets
every Wednesday from 1:30 to 3 p m
at Amherst Htlls Tenn1s Club
Membership 1n the club IS open to
any woman who IS Interested m ser v1ce 10 the un1vers1ty and the purposes of the Women's Club

- . n u l NAMED TO

PHYSIOLOGY JOURNAL BOARD
...ry Anne Rokltka. UB aSSIStant
professor of phys1ology. has been
named to a threeyear term on the
ed110nat board of
the Amencan Jour nal of Physiology
Advances 1n Physiology Educat1on
Rokitka , d~rector
LL.--'-''-'-~ of undergraduate
stud•es 1n the PhySI ology Department . recenlly com ·
plated a three-year term as assoc1ate
dean of the Undergraduate College
She was tnstrumental 1n devetop1ng
science courses tor non-sctence ma JOrs and developed an honors seminar. ·uta 1n Space." lor UB Honors
Scholars
A rec1p1ent of the Chancellor"s
Award lor Excellence 1n Teach1ng .
Rok1tka was recogmzed lor her commitment to L•fe Sciences by awards
from the Undersea and Hyperbanc
Med1cal Society . She is a member of
a publisher's locus group develop•ng
a phystalogy textbook lor under·
graduates

FIRST ZALESKI LECTURE
'10 H 111VEN OCT. H
The f11st Marek B Zaleski Memonal
Lecture w1ll be held at 7.30 p .m Oct
26 1n the Grupp Fires1de Lounge at
Can1s1us Col~ge P1otr Wrobel . noted
Pohsh h1stonan and author at the
Un1vers1ty of Tor onto w1!1 d1scuss
• 1945 Poland at the End of World
War II • The lecture 1s lree and open
to the publiC
Zatesk1 . a professor of mtcrobl~­
ogy a1 UB known here and abroad
for h1s dechcauon to Poland's Sohdar ny movement. d•ed 1n December H1s
11reless suppon of the movement. Instrumental 1n lead•ng h1s nattve coun·
try toward a free government earned
h1m the Cross of Ment. one of
Poland's h1ghest awards
In 1984 . Zatesk1 and the Rev
Ben,amtn F1ore . S J . of Can1s1us Col·
lege . translated 1nto Enghsh the sermons and essays of the Rev Jozef
Tischner , who supphed from the put·
p1t the underly1ng sp1ntual philosophy
of the Sohdanty movement Three
years later . Zatesk• aSSISted 1n the
English translation ol Lech Walesa"s
autObiography
Zaleski 1nterv1ewed Walesa and
translated h1s Chnstmas message to
the Buffalo commumty from 1985-87
through the efforts of WBFO
He served on the academ1c
board of UB's Center for Poi1Sh StudIes and the board of d1rectors of
Can1s1uS College's Permanent Chatr
of Polish Culture
The program IS sponsored by the
Permanent Cha1r of Pohsh Cullure a1
Can1s1us College

GeUiPg 1bece Online:

CitieS at Your Fingertips

l*'k=aJar city-ita lrUipOIWion
IYI1eiD or cullllre? Ale yoo clobla' -a. oo a city or pluDiDg a
ldp for buaineu or pleasure?Tbe Wodd Wide Web caa help clwt
lMr .-1 iDfalmalioll oo a

your counel
at,..Net on !be Web bu IDformllion on more diu 1.000 c:ilies
aDd some SOOocber1ocatiooa. c:.tegllrica from which youcaa ICiecl
include "CuliWe &amp; J..anauaac,"
"Arts &amp; Enlettainmcnt." "Pood &amp; I I I &lt; . I I{&lt; &gt;N I&lt; :
Drint," and "Books &amp; Libraries."
In addition , for many cilies there
are images and maps which users
witl! access to a graphical interface can view.
You can search City.Net by
region or country, or browse locations using the alphabetical index.
If you're feeling adventurous, you can spin the globe. in effect, by
selecting "Random Destination" and see where you alight {we did
and wound up in Pt. M~. South Dakota; we tried again and
landed in Kemi, Fmland). Or you can access another Web site. Tbe
V"lltDal Touristl, wtiichopcnUcS a map-based interface to City.Net
and-using a graphical browser like Netscape-:.access the same
information by clicking on a series o f global, continental, and

HiGH a

\njs

country maps.
Under the category "Transportation," Cily.Net will link you to
Subway Navigator, which can help you figureoul how to get from
point A 10 poin1 B in Toronto, Paris, Milan, Washington, New York,
or Berlin, to name a fe w. Subway Navigator prompts you for the
name of the subway station you are starti ng out fro m and the name
of the station you wi sh to arri ve at. If you can't recall the station
names, the system presents you with a list 1ojog your memory. Or.
if you have a gl'llphical interface, you can view a map of the subway
system and simply point and click on your origination JXlint and
desired desti nation. Subway Navigator computes your route and
estimated t ravel time. and displays the infonna tion for you to print
o ut and pack away in your briefcase. duffle bag, or backpack.
These sites are l oaded with information and can enhance your
travel, research, or mental voyages. Bon voyage!

Yo~ can reach Cily.NtU at http://www.ciry.net. TM URLfor The
Virtual Tourist 2 i.s hllp://wings.buffalo.eclulworldlvt2 and the
URL for the English-language version of Subway Navigator •s
lwp:l/metro.jussieujr: 1000//binlcities/english. For more information on accessing URL.s through your mainframe account,
contact rhe CIT Help Desk at 645 ·3542.
- Loss Pequeno Glazier and Nancy Schiller. University Libraries

�--..___
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.... Naacyl'rioae, ........ Oc:L Zl

io .... Art c..-- a.my 1&lt;&gt;.... ...... c-r..-.. Atto,

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Surfact.aDt Rtplattmut

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Wtstr:ra Ntw Yortr. Fall Coaft:r·
--~
ence oa AIDS: SuuaiJty It BJV.

t

Buffalo Convention Center. 8:30
a. m . ~ p.m. Rcg.islt&amp;tion $125
phys1cians, SIOO others, $35 fuiJ time students. For information,
caJ1645-20 18.

. . . . . . . . . .).

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-·w--.,

Plflrllt oil
HUIIUI VIIIIJI

O«upatiooa.l Therapy Pre-

MIIjor Meetl.ap. Ill Kimball
Tower. South Campus I I a.m.
and Noon.

--.--J-__

MlcrollloloO
Antibody
to Carbohydrate
Anti-

gem, Kate Diakun, Ph.D. 245
Cary. South Campus. Noon.

-

--...- .........

•1o1o0

Connectina Nuclear Arc.bitectu~ and Genomlt Function, Dr.
Ronald Berezney . 306 Farber
South Campus. 12:30 p.m.

Rita Don~ U.S. Poet laureate.
MaiDJU~e, Center for tbc Arts.

.......,_.

-

N - Campus. 8 p.ID. $6-$18. Series tiettt (for cvenb:) $31 ~$67 .

For"""" diJcow&gt;t call 64S-6147;
fD&lt; olap tid&lt;e&lt; c:aii8S2-SOOO.

P uulu ill tRNA SpiH:inJ, Or
Eric Phizicky. Univ . of Rochester.
114 Hoctuteller North Campus.

StallstlcoiA.tp«taofPhuo-II

-__,_

Canar Clinkal Trials, Dr.
Edmund A. Gehan, GeorgetOwn
Univ. 244 Cary. South Campus.
4p.m.

ea..n,Cuolody,udMotllerbood: Tile Lep1 Double Blad,
Prof. KoUy WeisbcrJ, UniY. of

4 p.m.

-Col'-lu•

--

Polynomial Oripm l, Prof. John
Isbell. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

Galloorla&amp; l'w Alao
.........._ Spcaken lacloxlc Bury
B. Boyer, Law Scbooldcao. and
'lbomu B. llcadrick. ScudeRI URioa Theater. North Campus. 3 p.m. Freeman. a law profes~
sor since 19&amp;2, died May 26 after
a loa&amp; illness.

Pharmaoodynamks of Cortkost.uo\d F.lfect.s oa Musdt lD the
Rat, Prof. Richard R. Almon, UB
Dept. of Biology. 508 Cooke.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

·--Col._...

c.......,.

--- - ...
--California. Hastinp School of
Law, San Francisco. S4S O'Brian.
North Campus. 3:30p.m.

Frul.n

--- -1

.........

Calduo,-udCel-

H..,__

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Rttonl Keepin&amp; and Doc:umeot.alion, A nd~w O'Brien . Sponsored by Institute for Addictions
Studies and Training. Daemen
College. 4380 Main St.. Amhenl
9 a.m.-4 :30p.m. SilO; conclusion
of two-day workshop. To register,
call 645-6140.

RIA ........

PbJ..na.HoJo&amp;k:al AaalysiJ or lbe

SubJ«IM Etr«ll or Alcobo~

Kathleen A. Grant. PhD .. B ow~
man Gny School of Medici.-.e,
Winston-SaJem, North Carolina.
I 021 Main. I :30 p.m. Free. Sponsored by the Research Institute on
Addictions.

C-atrr Col'-lu•
Prof. Roan MWu. Univ. of
Nonh C:trolina. 215 Nalllral Sciences &amp; Mathematics Complex .
North Campus. 3:30 p.m:

...., _ _1_

Vortices In UDCoaventional Supt-rroodudon, Prof. Catherine
Kal lin, McMaster Univ., Ontario.
454 Fronczak. Nonh Campus.
3:45p.m.

~
hopleof~ya:Ponrail

of a Hulaul Vlllap-,....._
l"'plos, Lida Suchy. pbo&lt;oarapber. SUNY Bnxkpon and Roch-

c-foroboAtto,Ncxtb~

.......... .

Tho er.aa... Cnft C.... located
ia 120 F'illmore ia lbe EWcaa.
Complex oo obo N-~
otrcn fall worbllopa ...ma, obo
wcdc or OcL JO_ Tho -...opa
ND. one DiJbl. a week fords
woob,liom7-10p.JIL; cllildral'o
claucl aro s-.lay--..,
Fees are $30 for studeab. S50 for
othcn. n... ..-iU be WCibbopo U.
&amp;e.xtile dc:sip.. bittiq .... ~
chetioa. weaviDJ, quiltiq, Bruilian etnbroOicry, pt:llaJ can! do-

Photographer Uda Suchy lectures Oct. 7 at 3 p.m. in Center
for the Arts Screening Room on ·
her "Portra~ of a Hutsul Village: She lived in the Ukraine
village for a year, capturing the sip. pbotopapby, traditions and life in the rural
u:c:boiq-. poUery. jewolry .....
community.
laa.llaiood .......... ....

OT-..

-·-

AlrODtO Volo is a poe~: aDd aaan:~
iot..-wutltODYiewtltn&gt;uJI!
New. S Ia the UDMnily Oall&lt;ry,

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Record Keeplaa aM Doc.um.eatatioa, Andrew 0 ' Brien. Sponsorut by Institute for Addictions
Studies and Training. Dacmen
College. 4380 Ma.in S1.. Amherst.
9 a.m.-4 :30p.m. $110; first part of
two-day workshop. To register,
ca ll 645-6 140.

Thomas A. Bartlett, SUNY Chance llor. First of three Bruk:fast
Seminars for Western New York's
Higher Educators . Mooc Hall.
Buffalo State College . Elmwood
Ave. campus. 8 a.m. $5.

Oall&lt;ry ...... 1\oeadty, 10 LtD.-S
p.m.; w~. '11otndoJ, _.
Fridoy, 10
II LilL-I p.m.

....__,p.m.;-...,..

'f"beonpy: Put, Prneal aad Fu·
tun, Dr. Bruce Holm. 108
Shennan. South Campus. 8 a.m.

Cell

- . .... -..

-~l..idlopaplta.­

~

lular~itoM-,Dr.

Robert Silver, Marine Otological
Lab, Woods Hole. MaiL 114
Hochslctter. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

ester lnsti.tute of Technology.
Screening Room, Center for the
Ans. North Campus. 3 p.m. Free.

GeM Transftr by Catlonlt Lipommes: Mee.baalsDlJ and AppUc:aUou, Set-Wen Hui, Ph.D.

UB Bulls vs.. Maine. UB Stadium.
North Campus. 7 p.m. For ticket
inform~tion, caU 645-6666.

:J ---La-

-&amp;Miety--

DylaJla America, UB Prof. RichardT. Hull. Uniwia.n-Universalill Church, 695 Elmwood Ave.
2:30p.m. Annual membenhip
meeting of Greater Buffalo Memorial Society.

-

D droit Cbamba- Wlada, H. Roben Reynolds. conductor. Visiting
Artlsl Series; WOJts of Reinecke.
Gounod, Molter. Mozart, Bizet
Slee Concert Hall. North Campus.
l p.m. $4, SS, $8. $10.

__
.,...,..

A Unifyiaa Meebanlsm for Prokln FuDCtloa.. Dr. Dan W. Uny.
Urtiv. of Alabama. Birmingham.
0 ~26 Farber. South Campus.
4 p.m.

1

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~,._'l'nloltoa-

14SD Student U..,._ N - Campus. 4 p.m. Sp&lt;OIIOIOCI by obo Ofrx:e of lnlemllioltal P..ducaOoD..

...,......,_

David J. Trigte, Ph.D., Dean,

You, Your Govemmeal and UB,
MoUy McKeown. Cen1er fOf Tomorrow. North Campus. Noon.
S I0. for infonnation, call 829-

-·--u-c
2608.

hport of Reteareb on Mea.&amp;al
Capacity Durtnc A&amp;Jaa, Prof.
Ralph Benedict. Board meeting at
I p.m. South Lounge, Goodyear.
South Campus. 2 p.m.
P!oya~Q-

Serits on Pllysia R.e~Ureb at
VB, Prof. Surajit Sen and Prof.
Dermot Coffey. 220 Natun..l Sci ences &amp;: Mathematics Complex.
North Campus. 3:45p.m.

_._,.

Se:kcted Video Work. SIUdeo1
wor-k PfaCOtcd by Prof. Tooy
Conn.d. Screening Room, Center
for the Arts. North Campus. 7
p.m. Free. Prescnled by Dep1. of
Media Study.

RPCI. Elm and Carlton.
I 2:30 p.m.

C&lt;otPoiiiYe ~
~

Ptruiria&amp; Layout a nd Knowing
Dilta~

James Cutting,

CornelL 280 Pari&lt;- Nonh Campus.
2p.m.

--~

Can We Talk! f'"tnt floor lounge.
Clement Soulh Campus. 3-5 p.m.
Sponsored by the Comminee for
the Promotion of Tolerance and
Oivmity.

~~A lladlc:ala.datlq of the £cypU... Mlddlo IOaJdooo, Lynn
Rose. 684 Baldy. North Campus.
3:30p.m.

• •• t

'c: •• ,...,.,_....,

Fuadloa .... lhplatloa of Cll&gt;ary---..,..Fadorllocep....... DonloplaJ ~Prof_
Stanley W. Halvancn. 307
Hochstt:acr. North Campus. 4 p.m.

P'oetr7 .......
Luc:l Tapaboldo. Screening
Room. Center for the Ans. North
Campus. 4 p.m. Ftec. Pan of
Wednesdays. at 4 P1UJ.

o.oo-.-u...
WNYT-.o

Dau'

.........

ISOI _ _ l l l e _ t a l

~-Spon ­

oorodbyWNYT..........,[)e.

c.-'"'

velopmeal c -.
Tomorrow. Nortb~ . I :IS- 11
a.m. $60. To ~&amp;iJtcr. ull 636:!626.

Concerts are taped for broadcast
on WBFO 88.7 FM the following
Sunday at 4 p.m. AUen Recital
Hall. South Campu'- 7 p.m. Free.

-

U ll W l l l d - Sanb
MciCoio. ..,...._., Worb by
oodlliadt:aDIIL Slce
Conca1 Hall. Nortb Campus.
8p.m. $3.

Etroct of A&amp;&lt; .. !be 14:1ycoproula -rn_.. s,.._~a Rat

Caaalkul..- MaoiHuo Vakles,
Amrila Kamath. 508 Cooke. North
Campu1. 4 p.m.

-~

Larae-Suople Optimality of
Stallotlcal ,...., Prof. w_1. Hall.
Urtiv. of Rochcs&amp;er. 244 Cary.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

.___

Tbe MkrodrculatiDD: Blood
C&lt;llo .... Ca....- C.U., Dr. Alan
C . Groom. Urtiv. of Western
Ontario. Butler Auditorium, I SO
Farber. South Campus. 5 p.m.

Lllwhrty
Ull Law Gold Group aod SBA
Party. Pettibooes Grille, 275
WuhinJion St 5:30-7:30 p.m.
Law students free.

-

P oot-ll&lt;ijlq lllouodtabk,
Women's Studlel and Asian Sludies proa:rams. With Jane: Fisher,
Shlrley Joteph. Bruce Uu., Pit
Shelly, Joan Sulewski . 330 Stude.ol Union. North Campus. 7·
9:30p.m.. Free.

--

M oo.dllldrm, Comedy dirccled
by Richanl Mennen. Drama Theatre, Center for the Aru. North
Campu1. 8 p.m. SS. $10.

IPu

'

a

Sbow by Rhode Island prinomaten

multi-media for childraa.. For iaformalioG, eall 645-fillS in tbc

momina. o.- 645-2-434 mthe after~
noon ud cvaU.Da.

�IIPtiTII

liiiiiT

New Context, New Approaches:
UB and a Changing SUNY
Col...,.._

LAST YEAR'S MEETING of the voting faculty, we talked
bout the changes in the national environment for research
universities that have shaped recent challenges and opportunities for UB. The passage of the 1995-96 New York State
budget has brought these challenges and opportunities home to us in
a dramatic way.
ru the figure below indicates, this
year's state appropriation for SUNY leaves
State University-for the tint time in its
history-dependent more on the revenues
it generates than on the t.ax dollars which
have heretofore been the primary source
of the system's suppon.
All of us throughout SUNY are now,
as a result of these budget outcomes,
driven to reconsider basic questions: Wha(
i.s the mission of State Univenity as a
whole? What are the appropriate missions
of its campuses. and who decides what
those missions will be and how they may
best be carried out? How and where can
we bnt generate, manage, and maintain
the resource base that supports our
pursuit of our various missions?
These questions are now being posed
by the State UniVersity Trustees, who havtbcen charged by the New York State
l...egW.ature lO "'rethink. SUNY" and report
on their deliberations by December 1 of
this year. In order lO accomplish that wk.
the Trustees have established committees
to review the system's mission/vision ,
operations, structure, and operating revenues/ tuitio n.
These committees are generating a gTeat deal of
dialogue both within SUNY and among observers, friends,
our elected leadership, and other public officers. UB has
been and wiU continue to be an assertive contributor to this
dialogue. Provost Tom Headrick, Senior Vice President Bob
Wagner, and ]-along with others around the state-are
providing the Trustees with data, campus perspectives,
critique, and· as much other information and advice as we
can muster to ensure that the Trustees and system officers
understand UB's priorities. strengths, and directions as th e
leading SUNY campw.
ln these pages you will find one item that we have
contributed to the dialogue, a paper entitJed "Three
Possible Paths to New York's 21st~ntury State University: A
View from a University Center" (here slightJy condensed for
publication). It offers an overview of the fiscal, economic,
and political realities that are now driving SUNY and its
campuses. It also makes the case for a differentiation of
institutions, structures, and operations that will enable UB,

and all of SUNY's campuses, to use our
distinctive stre ngths to best advantage fo r
New York. State.
The ultimate point while we , ru a
public univtnity, will alw:af5 be accountabll'
to and responsible to th e SUNY Trustees
and the people of New York., we will be
most successful in o ur endeavors on their
behalf to th e extent that we are more selfreli ant.
Hand in hand with self-reliance goes
self-direction. We are reminding our
leaders in Albany that VB i.:s unique \o\-ithin
SUNY; that we offer the people of
New York a breadth and depth of opportunity unmatched anywhere else in State
University. and that our distinctive
character as an AAU public research
institution makes wan unparalleled
resource for inquiry, discovery, instruction,
training. service, and Lhe sharing of
knowledge. It also gives UJ a singular place
in higher education in New Yo rk. State.
We wiJI con tinue to reinforce the
message tha t UB has a unique capacity
for and role in service to New York. State,
and that more flexibility will enable us to serve the state
better and more fully. As we d o so. the mission Statement
which has been shaped by many of o ur campus constituencies over the course of the past year will receive increasing
attention. That missio n statement is also reproduced in
these pages.
Given the breadth of endeavor that UB represents, this
is necessarily a broad mission statemenL All of us, in o ur
respective programs, depanments, schools, and faculties,
must be more ready than ever to tell th e world what we do,
what we intend to achieve, and how we propose to do it.
given the available resources and opportunities.
And aJI of us must be ready to take pan in the dialogue-with each other, with coumerpans around the state.
with o ur leadership in Albany-that will clarify our directions and effons as we move toward the tum of the century.
I look. forward to hearing your th o ughts o n these issues on
October9.

William R. Grel...,

SUNY'S APPROPRIATION
FY 95-96
$1,S19M

$1,494M

ANAL APPROPRmlON
$1,519M
1.494M
$25M

REOUCTlOH 1H OVERAU ~IATION liNCLUOING EOPJ

INCOME
$600M
762M

(REA..fCTS $S4M Of REDUCED INCOME REQUIREMENTS FROM D.!CUTIVE BUOG£1 FIGURES!

$162M

AOOffiONAL REVENUE

lUDOUARS

1994-95

1995-96

$919M
732M

(RElUCTS $103M Of STATE TAX RESTORATION RM)M EXECU TIVE SUOG£1 fiGURES I

$187M

REOUCTJON IN STATt TAX OOl.lARS

While SUNY's direct state appropratJon saw an overall reduction of less Ulan ZIE.. tax SUDPOfl for the
system shrank by more than 20%. The difference is profected Income. derived mainly from tu1t1on .

�Three Possible Paths to New Yor1
A View from a lJ
.__

__

President, University at Bu.ffaJo

INCE THE LATE 1980s, the Sta~.&lt; Univenityof
New York-initially conceived as an almost fully
low-tuition institution operated by
Now York State-has been undergoing a gradual
but inexorable shift The past decade's trend has
seen SUNY derive its basic operating funds less and
less from state tax dollan, and more and more
from tuition revenues and other sources of
support. The 1995-96 state budget dramaticaJiy
advances this decade-long trend.
In 1986,90% of the dircct'stal.&lt; appropriation (tax
support plus tuition revenues) for SUNYs state-operated
campuses and statutory colleges came from tax dollars; in
199.!)..96, the tax-supJ&gt;O:rted portion of this state appropriation
has dropped to 48.9% 1• While enrollment has remained
subsWltially unchanged since 1986, the 1995-96 budget puts
New York State tax support for SUNY's direct state appropria·
tion at about half its level of a decade ago (Y~ I). Under
this set of conditions, SUNY must and will become a fundamentally different university in the 21st century. Henceforth,
SUNY will be a much le55 tax~ubsidizcd, much more revenuedependent. higher-tuition university, still public in its mission
and affiJiation but. by neceuity, more driven by market forces
than it ever has been.
The State University Trustees are now planning for these
changed conditions. We urge them to adopt a perspective
founded on new understandings of the academic and
economic market in which SUNY and its widely diverse
institutions operate.
tax~ubsidizcd,

,; IIINY'•......,.
---·.
.................
...............

-·--.Ill

11le Syst.n 1hllt Is Mel

Isn't

The market forces which now increasingly drive State
University differ somewhat for every SUNY insti~tion, and
~n more among its clusters of instirutions. As it has evolved
over the past four decades, State University is a collection of
disparate lrutitutions-univenity centers, univenity coUeges,
colleges of agriculture and technology, specialized and
statutory colleges, and rwo free--etanding health science
centen--with widely diverse missions, constituencies, market
shares, and potentials (see sidebar). While this agglomeration
of institutions offers New York a range of educational
o pportunities, to call it a "system • is more wish than reality.
When it was originally as.scmbled under one cemral
governing suucture, SUNY was almost entirely supponed by
state tax dollan, and it was therefore appropriate to have very
centralized allocation ofSUNYs resources. Heavy investments

Figure 1

smE TAX SUPPORT FOR SUNY DIR£CT smE APPIIOPIIIA1IOI TO
smt-OPEUIBI CAMPUSES AND smuiORY COLUGES 1986-1996
10

"'~
&lt;

tuition income and part tax dollars. In Tele I, SUNYt
allocation , by institutional sector, of tax suppon:-that is,
direct tate appropriation leu the tuition income which the
campuses are expected to return to the system-is compared
with the JyStem 's enrollments by sector.

New Resourc. Alloaltlon

Chill....,_

~Table

I shows, the univenity cen~.&lt;n' shMe of the tax
support which SUNYallocalel to its cunpwes is slightly higher
than their share ofSUNYs total enrollment. since their
graduate, professional, and health sciences missions cost more
to support than aru and sciences undergraduate education but
do not bring concomitantly larger tuition revenues back to
those campuses. But 10me large disparities among other
campuses argue for a general review of the tinb between state
support and the state's educational needs and priorities:
• the university colleges receive less than one-fifth of the
campuses' state tax suppon. while they enroll more than two-ftfths of the system 's students;
• the specialized colleges' share of the campuses' tax support
is over twice the size of their share ofSUNYs srudents;
• the statutory eolleges receive better than 15% of the
camputeS' tax support but represent only a little more than
4% ofSUNYs enrollments; moreover, they charge higher
ruitions than other SUNY units and retain much of that
tuition in addititm to their SUNY allocation;
• the two free-ctanding health science centers receive over
10% of the campuses' total state tax dollan to educate less
than 2% of the students enrolled in SUNY;
• the two sectors which together account for just over 80% of
SUNYs enrollmenu--c.he university colleges and univenity
centen--f'eeeive only about 60% of the taX dollars allocated
to campuses; and
• altogether, the higher-cost campuses (the statutory and
specialized colleges and the two free.4tanding health science
centen) enroll just over 8% of the system's students, yet
receive very nearly onNhinl (52.6%) of the"""' t:ox dollan

allocal.&lt;d to campuses.
Were tax dollars still the only or the primary component
of SUNY't appropriation, the system might justify theae
disproportionate investrnena by arguing a need to support
and protect the smaller-enrollment. higher--cost. highly
specialized campuses within the setting of public higher
education. This year, however, with Jess than half of the
system's direct state appropriation coming from state tax
support, State University's operating budget is now driven , for
the first time, more by tuition than by tax dollars. Under such
circumstances, a5 the abo~ observations indicate, those
campuses with large undergraduate populations in effect
"subsidize" those campuses which have smaller undergraduate
populations and high-cost, heavily focused missions.
The 1995-96 dollar figures for tax support and total slate
appropriation per student at each type of campus, indicated
in T ableD, further reveal the wide disparities in SUNYs
relative allocations to its various types of campuses. This year,
Lhc university cen ters will receive roughly half as much tax
support per student as the specialized colleges: the university
colleges, one-fifth that amount The starutory colleges are
allocated bet'ter than three times the taX support per student
that is directed to the university centers, and almost nine timt!S
more tax dollars per student than the university colleges.

New Manacement Needs

..to

..

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u ...

. . ,_--,---,---,----,---,---,---r---r--~
-.a . , . - - - - 1041 1142 tHJ; U44 ..........
• INF\.ATION ADJUSTED USING MONTHL'I' 4VERAG( Of CONSUMER PfiiCE INDEX.
Sources SUNY Gross 0Pitf81U'W ButWel Allei)'SIS; US &amp;qoe/ OfriCit;

BuretJCJ of labor SI•UsNa,

COnsUIJief' ~ lntM~ (rnonlfl/y ...,lltPI}

were made in the specialized and sta lutory colleges and health
scie nce cen ters throughout the early development of the
system, and somewhat less~ invested in the university ct:mers
and universicy colleges. In addition to these ongoing commit·
menu to its six insti tutional sectors, today's SUNY also allocates
portions of its totaJ state appropriation to its cenu-al office; to
the Educational Opporrunicy Programs and Educational
Oppon:unity Centers which are operated by various SUNY
campuses; and to other systemwide programmatic initiatives.
Since the SUNY-wide progr.t.ms and S)'Stem adminisu-a·
tion do not directly enroll studenu, they do not re1urn tuition
income to the system. The campuses, however, do generate
tuition income, which is returned to SUNY Central, pooled
with state tax dollars, and reallocated to the campuses
according to an algorithm developed by Cenu-al Office. The
campuses· resources, therefore, can be understood as part

The 199~96 SUNY budget signals that, henceforward, State
Universicy's success will depend on the abili[)' to aur:act
student and sponsor dollars and manage them wisely. Yet
SUNYs customary centralization of income, along with the
centralized state regulations that govern SUNY purchasing,
personnel, and other oper.uions, will promote inefficiencies
in management, limit incentives and opportunities for
generating new revenues, hinder many cost-saving local
initiatives, and cause campuses to incur administrative cosu
that offset possible economies of scale.
Other external fiscal pressures are also changing the
conditions under which SUNY has operated. For example.
three of the ro ur heallh science centen (at Stony Brook.
Brooklyn, and Syracuse) operate hospitals that will becom e
increasingly heavy burdens for SUNY to carry as their
financial stability is severely affected by national changes in
health care delivery systems and by the rising costs of treat·
ments and technologies.
It serve3 little purpose to argue that, simply by becoming
more cost-efficient while maintaining all of ir.s campuses (and
with very low tuition .to boot). State Univenicy can adjust to
these complex changes in the economic climate and handle
its budget shortfall. Over the past SC'\'C:n years, State University
campwes have become generally more cost-efficient by
trimnling support services as well a5 some academic programs,
leading to a range of "service shortfalls• for students and
faculty alike. Though some tightening is always possible, most
of the slack at the campuses has disappeared.
So how. then , can State University respond to this

fundamental change in its
resource ba.Je, making itself
more responsive to the
corutituencies and sponson
who will provide the majority
of iu reaources? The bouoin
Une: M state taxes support
smaller proportions of the
cosu of public higher
education, the state's role in
centrally controlling and
directing reoources and
services should diminish. At
this point the I)'SlCT11 can
essentially adopt any of three
counes of action with
varying degrees of success.

SceurlolBilslneu As Usual:

DrlviRC SUNY Down
In recent yean, SUNY has
responded to reductions in
its"""' support by following
one fundamental approach
based on acrosHbe-board
assumptions. Fint., when
politically feasible, it has
raiJed tuition for under·
gradualel equally across the
oysu:m and app...-d a
proportionate inaeue for
allgradua~.&lt; prognms. With
few exceptiono--most
notably the privileged
position of the statutory
collegeo-all tuition
revenues, including the
increases, have been
returned to Central Office
for reallocation. Then SUNY
has parceled out to each stale-0
tion adjusted on a pro-rata basil
based mOldy on its share of the
One by-product of this sys~.&lt;m il
generated at the campuses whi(
enroUments have been used to !
the high&lt;ost.. Jow.cnroUment co
Under such a cut-taking rm
to be absorbed by cutting every 1
programs comple~.&lt;ly. With qual
every campus deteriorating, Stat
ened across the board. Moreove
hikes and outright cuts, the uni-.1
55% of the system's enroUment :
its state mx support-would, un&lt;
tion strategy, absorb nearly one-l
Changes of this magnitude
particul:orly at large, complex. h
tilc.e the university centen---star
farulty leave for positions at
institutions that offer more
stable support; only some are
replaced. Both gradual.&lt;
students, for whom top
fuculty and research
resources are a major drnw,
and undergraduates also
become harder to recruit.
since they look elsewhere to
find the same or better
quality at more auracth·e
prices.
Under such circumstances, the universicy
centers and other campuses
either fall short of their
enrollment and revenue
targets or take in leu
qualified students in order
to meet revenue targets.
Revenue shortfalls become
clear in late September,
leading to midyear reductions that would have to be
all the more drastic, since
they would be taken well
into the flSCal ~·Planning
becomes nearly impossible,
and some SUNY institu·
tion...-.pennanently lagging
in the enrollment/revenue
fonnula and therefore

�~w York's

21st-Century State University:
om a University Center
fundamentaJ change in il!
resource base, malting il.5elf
more responsive to the
constituencies and sponsors

The SUNY Trustees were forbidden to consider campu.s
closings, mergers, or consolidations, and were given a virtual
mandate regarding the share of the tax support reduction
which could be assigned to the statutory colleges. In lhe
implementation of the 1995-96 budget., the Division of the
Budget has exerted authority in ways not done in almost a
decade . We can only hope Lhat the 1995--96 budget process is
but a short·tenn response to extraordinary circumstances.

Tilblc I

1J!I5.tl APPIIIIIIIIJII' OFSIIIY-.u&amp;r MD
TAIUPOII'IY tmll1fi10IIAl. sa:t1ll

who will provide the majoricy
of its rC$0urces? The bottom
(joe: M state taxes suppon
smaller proportions of the=

costs of public higher
education, the state's role in

Scenarto 2-

centrally controlling and
directing resources and

Pianned and Targeted Cuts:
Slimming SUNY Down

services should diminish . At
this point the system can
essentially adopt any of three
counes of action with
varying degrees of success.

ScenartolBuslneu As Usual:
Driving SUNY Down

Statutory Cotle&amp;es

• TAX 5IJPf"'RT AGURES SHOWN H£Rf. LfAVE ASID£ TliE POfmOH Of SUNY'S TOTAL'" STATE APPRCIPRSATKIN AU.OCATED TO
COlTRN.. omcE /IHJ SUNY-WIDE PROGRAMS. THESE FIGURES ARE BASED ON..Y ON SUNY'S AU..OCATKIN Of TAX SUPPORT TO
CMWUS£5 (STATE AI'PfQ'RIATlOH TO £ACH INSTITUTIONAL. SECTOR LESS ESllMATED TUI'nOH INCOME FJIOtol EACH INSTlfU.
notW. 5£CTOR).
Soutcn: SUNY~~· 199S-96: SUNYrllfrlon ..-.--

r.,.-..!31 .wt ~ r..r-t. 1gg5-D5 (SUM' Ol'l'k:. ot

PollcrAMI/M).

In recent yean, SUNY has
Tabl e II
responded to reductions in
its state support by following
one fundamental approach
ba.ed on across-the-board
assumptions. First, when
politically fe3$ible, it has
raUed tuition for under·
graduates equally aero" th•
system and approved a
proportionate increase for
aU graduate prognum. With
few ceptio~ost
notab
e privileged
•
DEDUCTS ESTVAATEO PAYMENTS TO STAll: G9IDlAl. R.INO ~ $1542/STUOEHT.
position o the statutory
•• NO OIRfcnY c::oMPARABI..E AGUR£ IS A\IAII..A8l.E BECAUSE STAruTOfiY COllEGES RETAIN MOST Of THEIR TUmoN REVENUE. ANO
colleg~
ition
THUS THEIR STATE. APPROPRIATlON DOES NOT RER.ECT THE CONTRIBUTION Of FUll TUfTlON TO THE COST Of A STUOEHT'S
revenues, ind ing the
EOIJCATJO!j ,
increases, have
ScV"on : SUNY~~ 1995-9tl; SUNY tl.lltlon ~ !MfeiS MW1 ~ I..,.U Jggs.SNf (SUNY Ot7b at Polley
returned to Cen
for reallocation . ll!.cn SUNY
has parceled out to each state-operated campus an appropria·
underfunded, yet at the same time overpriced relative to their
tion adjusted on a pro-rata basis, with the cut for each campw
competition--become unable to compete with other institu·
based mostly on its share of the previow SUNY appropriation.
tions either in or beyond New York State. The spiral of
One by-product of this system is that the tuition revenues
decline becomes unstoppable. This scenario, based on th e
generated at the campwes which have large undergraduate
same o ld strategy, is only plausible if New York is con tent to
enrollments have been used to soften the blow of reduction at
see SUNY deteriorate rapidly and haphazardly.
the high&lt;ost. low-enrollment campuses.
And yel, regrettably, this is precisely the scenario played
Under such a cut-taking routine, reductioru are most likely
out in the 1995-96 budget process. In spite ofSUNYs plea for
to ~ absorbed by cutting every program some and a few
more flexibility in addressing these issues, the Legislature and
prognu:ru completely. With quality in almost every program at
Executive constnined the role and responsibility of SUNY!
every campw deteriorating, State University would be weak·
Trustees and offi cers. Tuition at th e undergraduate level.
ened across the board. Moreover, in any combination of tuition
essenti&lt;illy established by agreement of th e Governor and
hikes and outright cuts, the university centen--with jwt over
legislative leadenhip, was set at differing levels, but with no
35% of the system 's enrollment and slightly more than 40% of
provision for differential reallocation back to the campuses.
its state tax support-would, under SUNYs customary reduc·
Graduate tuition, initially slated-with almost no prior
tion strategy, absorb neaTly one-half of the cuts to the system.
analysis--for an increase that would have priced SUNY out of
Ch~ges of this magnitude at any institution-and
its graduate market, was ultimately increased commensurate
particularly at large, complex, highly competitive institutions
with market leve ls, but only after considerable lo bbying and
like the university centers--stan a downward spiral. Excellent
negotiation among the university centers and SUNY Ce ntral.
faculty leave for positions at
institutions that offer more
stable support; only some are
replaced. Both graduate
students, for whom to p
faculty and research
._part,
resources are a major draw,
Conl8nd,
State, Alfnld, c.ntan. Cobleaklll,
and undergraduates also
lleiiii, ........... -.JAe
become harder to recruit,
DISTINGUISHING
Old
a.-a,
0.
since they look elsewhere to
..... l'llllllllllllf ........... OIS11NGUISHING MISSION:
MISSIONS: •
find th e same or better
......../Pi '
-181eduquality at more attractive
prices.
OISI1NGUISHING t.ISSION:
• ~ unclllpll&gt;Under such circum·
IIIIIHIUIIIIr ............ HIGHEST DEGREES
11111-~br
stances, th e university
GRANTED:
ce nters and other campuses
-naed ......" " ' lniii*C
----~ly
e ither fall short of the ir
enrollment and revenue
HIGHEST DEDREES
( - t o SUNY carntargets or take in less
GRAN'IED:
IIIUIIIIY CIOIIIelal
qualified students in order
aome-.,~...,.
to meet revenue targets.
~
Revenue shortfalls become
clear in late September,
leading to midyear reduc·
tions that would have to be
all the more drastic , since
they wouJd be caken we ll
into the fiscaJ year. Planning
becomes nearly impossible,
and some SUNY institu·
tion!t--perman enlly lagging
in the enrollme nt/ revenue
formula and therefore

1995-96 TAl SlfiiOIJ MD TOUl. SIIIE APPIOPIIlJIOIC PEl SJUDEifr II' SUNY
smt.auA'IU CAMPUSES MD SIJJ1ITOIIY COI.LECES IY INSIIIIJ..a. SEC10II

.....,.,,

___ ......--......... -JIIIIMIIII'-·-----.........- __
w.aur.

.....,._

I

....,....,... ..........

.._

....,..__

A second scenario would have State University accept that th ~
1995-96 Executive Budge t presages a smaller SUNY and
develop a plan based on that fact. Such a plan, again, would
entail a major shift in tuition policy and much higher tuition
levels. Campuses and units which could not auract sufficient
students at the new tuition level and thus remain economi·
cally viable would be phased out, either in a planned fashion.
o r as a result of their inability to meet revenue targets.
In addition, some ofSUNYs high&lt;ost units with on ly
modest enrollments might also be jeopardized. The four
health science centers, for example, generate relatively little
tuition revenue: moreover, as previously noted , the financial
viabiJity of the hospita.ls operated by three of these four
cen ten is likely LO be severely tested and to create additional
costs for SUNY. State University might therefore be driven to
ask whether it can afford to maintain four full heaJth science
centen. Similarly. the level of support now provided to some
of the specialized and statutory colleges might become harder
to justify in a downsized SUNY.
While most observers are loalh to suggest campus closings.
it is a grim necessity for SUNY to acknowledge the possibility of
such closings. The SUNYTrustees have clearly stated their
willingness to make the hard choices about what to close, if nttd
bo. In the 199!&gt;-96 budget process, that strategy was deemed
unacceptable by the state's elected leaders. Whether or not this
will be their long--term point of view remains to be seen.

Scenarto3Refocusecl Effort, Reconfigured Operations:
A Highly Differentiated SUNY
The remarkable diversity ofSUNYs camp\.I.SCS is a great adva.n·
tage-not a detriment-to the system and the stale. But the two
layers of central control under which SUNY has long functioned
(its own and the state's) have become less safeguards than
levelers, and cent:ra.l..i.zed management strategies may have
diminished, rather than ensured, State University's diversity,
quality, viability, responsiveness, and good stewardslUp.
In 1984, th e Independent Commission o n the Future of
State University found cent.ra.J conLrol to be the single most
significant impediment to quality education throughout
SUNY. ll1e Comm ission's findings led to the 1985 passage of
the so-called flexibility legislation, which relieved the system
of sorfte procedural and operational strictures imposed by the
state. While the resulting new opportun ities for local resource
manage ment has helped the campuses, to some extent, "do
more .,.,;th what they have .- the remaining central conu-ols

CcJiela rtf~- fid.
Fcnsi!J, CcJiela rtf

.... end

Dp~Dme~~y, 1ns111u11t rtf

ra.:

nolalll' at Rame/l)llca, MMtime ColloCe

llllc:...ll:
~-UfeSciences,

-

Human EcolaO. Industrial anti
Lllbor Relllllons, Veterinary

DISTINGUISHING MISSION:

. tMNd:

veiloua niUTowly focused,
hW&gt;IY epoclallacl ...........
IYPICalll' prafe-..r or """
~

DISTlNGUISHING MISSION:

eer.nJcs

specialized, lldVanced edue&amp;-

tlon -

HIGHEST DEGREES
GRANTED:

Some--·· ....

HIGHEST DEGREES
GRANTED:
Ph.D., M.D.

-Since_lloo_
sciMcecenlllnl(-ltJelloo
at rnd Slmy Brook)

research

--"'--··
----·-lbr "'--·
--------.

JfiGHEST DEGREES

GRANTED:

Ph.D.

-medical----DISllNGUISHING MISSION:

Some ....-a, some Ph.D.
..,. _ _ ,_SI4'POtf
!he _ , . , . coi-

.....,SUNY,--.
...
not
tied ID !he SVM' .,._,
rnd • /itll - " « ! Df lbelr

--. ......ltJenrltlerftl8n-SUVY

-

1D

Income

llnl,esisltJe&lt;a.WIIti!Uitlon

they-..-

slly,
on Jntw.
dlsc/pllnetY blontedlcfll ,..

-

on

rndnn/IW rnd""""

~

17111n1tW

rnt1

�have kept the campll.lt:s swc.eptible lO Jhort-run ahlfu in
political and economic climate, as well as still tightly bound
by many bureaucratic strictures.
In SUNYs new revenue-driven environment, individual
campuses n«d greater flexibility in order to respond more
crcativdy and with greater alacrity to their market!, to their
students , and to revenue-generating opportunities. Many
states recognize that considerable campw autonomy
en cour-ages differentiation within public higher educationdiffe rentiation whi ch , in fact, creates a broader range of
o pportunities. at a higher quality, for more state citizens.
Embracing this understanding of differentiation in public
higher education would lead State University to rtvise iu
.,tructure signific-.u1tly.
Th e following steps. taken together as an overall
si.J'atcgy fo r differentiating SUNY, could help New York
achievt• this critically important goal:
se parat ing o fT the university centers into diffe rent
go\'rming structures , such as tht· Pennsylvania "statere lated " model , m which the stat e provides support to
seve ra l universities--Penn State, PitLSburgh , and
Tcrnpl&lt;·-that arc se parately managed by th eir own
boa rds of trusu:t·5: o r, alternati"cly, o perated on the
rnodc:l of tht· sta tuto!)' colleges 10 th e present SUNY
S\'S tl ' ll l,

continumg the un•vers•t)l colleges as primarily und ergrdduate mstituuons, managed by the State Uni\'ersit)'
Tmstecs according to a modd that would recognize th eir
smulanties as institutio ns and &lt;·nable them to develo p
difl e rcnt program e mphases, or possibly link them in
regu.mal alliances with each o ther and with a university
centt.' r, whe-re:· such an approach makes sense;
putung the SJ)t'cialized and statuto !)' colleges mo re on
their own . with adjusted SL.'lte subsidies that reduce the
disparities between their resourcc!li and those of other
SUNY units;
fitting thc two-year Co lleges o f Agriculture and Technology 11110 the community collegl" system , with which they
haw the most affinity, or linking them more d irectly with
ne ighboring university co lleges o r centers; and
deciding upon the appro priate level of state support fo r
dicaJ and all ied health training in New York , and
rec figuring SUNYs health science centers and
hospi s to fit t11at design .
Fo r the un i\ rsity centers, these changes would entail:
changing cir legal status as a part of a state agency to
tha t of a h)\brid public educational corporation , or that
of st.atutOI)' Universities operated alo ng the current New
York sta tutory colleges model;
• freeing them from most state and central controls,
though maintaining state oversight of policy and educational coordination and performance and accreditation
standards, so as to justify continued state a.ssi.!ltance
compar.t.ble with that received by high-quality public
universities in other sta tes;
allo wing them to keep their own tuition revenues and,
wi tJ1 state approval, sc= t competitive tuitions, differentiated by program:
allowing them to use their property as endowments to
prO\ide sustaining revenues and build public/ private
partnerships to provide services, such as student housing;
• relieving them from statewide classified service regulations, and developing separate regu lations appropriate to
university cen ters; and
relieving them from statewide collective bargain ing, and
al lowing such bargain ing to be done at each center. or
collective ly for the four centers.

Mapping SUNY's Future: Three Paths,
One Good Direction
SUNY could fo llow any of these tJuce paths, but, if the
o hjecti\'C b~ to maintain State Unive rsity as a viab le and
\':tluable resource for New Yo rk State, the lan is the best
uJJtio n. The system 's historical and current tr;tjectory rna)'
represent t11e path of least resistance, but it is a "path to
nowhere " for New York State's students and citizens. The
downsizing approach of Scenario 2 would certain ly be
preferable to the leveling approach of Scenario l -and
more productive for the state-since it would promote a
reasoned process of sc::lection, but the geopolitics of public
employment in New York make this an ex tremely d ifficult
o ption. Scenario ~. the rcconfiguration of State University in
a fashion that lets different campuses operate d iffe~ntly
and better, offers the one path likely to take SUNY past its
currem jeopardy and into the next century as a competitive,
valuable, productive instit ution , wh il e also dealing wi th
geopo litical and economic issues which dri\'e deci.!lionmaking in and for SUNY.
In the end , the State Uni\'ersity of New York can only be
the best possible Sta te University jrw New York if it recognizes that it is, in fac t, several sulHystem.!l of higher education , each responding to a different state need, a diffe~nt
market sector, and different competitive miliew (both
internal and external) . Creating such an approach to public
higher education in New York will , in the short term,
require more e nergy, more courage, mo~ care, and more
leadership than either of the other two options. It is,
however, almost certainly the most reasonable, respomible,
lasting way lo protect New York's investmenu in its Sen e
University, one of o ur critical resources for the 21st centul)'.

tJa . .. Ill dclinfDc
ODd dlllinpllllllw ...... - m.echallnldp. ll!!ildc aadoa, ODd
~ niDiagiD dieariiiDII....._.ad ..........
VII• coatlnue 10 provide biPquaii&amp;J, blaaoldloc. :wlc
letel uadecl' lhW .............
VII . . oupport die'lleoelopmeat~hl cq1oD _ _ .........,. pulollcad _ . . , ....,. ..W.C &amp;occl lla
r-.:11 million ODd brood..,..,.~.......,._.
VII . . build upon tbe DilDY cuiiUnlad ......_. . . ._lboped ,. ...__.._ ID ...... llllleclor
pr&lt;:pU"e our llludenu ODd...,. fo&lt; tbe p.bel.......,oud ..-y~dietltt~.
VII• nurture mutual coaunllment be-.. die unMnlty ODd ill people, 111pp011111&amp; lite~ ...S
advarl&lt;ement ~all metllben ~ tbe ua COIDIIlllllity and espect~aa tbelr lib oupportfar die~­
advancemmt of tbe uniYenity.

*'

........

. . .I IUD
IN RESEARCH, SCHOl.ARSHIP,
AND ARTISTIC CREATION
. -~DV)'fi"'O""'D'and

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10 pr&lt;:pU'e pduMes for
problem .......... poot-ba&lt;calaareate educ:adon,life)ong
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...........
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~

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IN THE H£ALTH SCIENCES
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""ou ou-.dina ac:ademic baltb
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AJ BUFFALO

wear Blue on Friday
In recognition of the success this
fall of US's athletic teams. Director
of Athletics Nelson Townsend is
asking members of the
university community to
wear blue and white on
Friday. Sept. 29 as a
show of support for the
Bulls and Royals.

September 28, 1995 Volume 27, No. 5

i~ Enrolhnent figures at UB
on target, provost says
Increasing trend noted toward full-time status for students
By CMRISnNE VIDAL
Repocter Editor

BHASreleasedilsfall
t 995 Enrollment Slatus Report and officials
are calling this year's
figures encouraging .
With a total st udent population
of24.493. UB"s Iota! enroll men! is
443 over the number that had been
targeted. As of Sept. 15. UB has
18.320 full·lime and 6.173 pan·
time students. according to mfurmation compi led by the Office of
Institutional Analysb.
"The good signal!&lt;. are th at we
made our targets," said Provost Thomas E. Headrick. "Our graduate
enrollments were up somewhat and
undergraduat e enrollments were
right about at what we expected.
There was a shift somewhat from
part Lime to full time. We don't
understand why that happened and
we're going to explore that"
Undergraduate st udent s total

U
UB Grad H•red for Jlescue Work
President Greiner congratulates Lt. Stephen T. Spall of the New
York City Fire Department Sept. 24· in St. Joseph's University
Church. Spall, a UB graduate who aided in rescue efforts after
the Oklahoma City bombing, received the Distinguished Alumnus Service Award of the UB Newman Centers.

Triggle named dean
of Graduate School
ly CMISTINE VIDAL
Reporter Editor

D

VID J. TRIGGLE. dean of the UB School of Pharmacy and
UNY Distinguished Professor. has been named dean of the
Gradu ate School and vice provost for Graduate Education at VB.
He wi ll phase oul of his duties in the School of Pharmac y
and into his new responsibilities over the course of the fall 1995 semester.
In announcing the appoi ntment. UB Provost Thomas E. Headrick said.
"I n these difficult times. he brings a wea lth of experience and far-sigh ted
vision to our Graduate School and to graduate education and research
~enerally . The university is most fo rtun ate to have a scholar and leader of
his talent and imag ination to serve in thi s absol utel y crudal area of
academic administration."
"To become vice provost for graduate education and dc:an of the
Graduate School at thi s time is a particularly challenging opportunit y.
Nationwide there are sharply divided and contrasti ng views on graduate
ed ucation and where it is going," said Triggle.
"Here at UB we have over the years seen the Graduate School
dece ntralized and devolved to the point where decisions have to be made.
The recent report on the Graduate School is a critical step in strengthening
graduate education here. Weare going to need quantitative and qualitative
changes in grad uat e education in th e decade ahead in light of thedeclining
resources from sta te. federal and private sources."
A member of the UB faculty in the Depanment of Biochemical
Pharmacology si nce 1962. Triggle was chair of th e department fro m
1971·85. He has served as dean of the School of Pharmacy si nce 1985.
ln 1994 he completed a report on behalf of the Provost's Advisory
Committee on the Structure of the Arts and Sciences.
Hi s internationally recognized research focuses on how drugs interact
with calcium channels, cellular mechani sms that regulate the ent ry of
calcium when stimulated. He has conducted pioneering research into the
action of calcium-chan nel an tagonists in the cardiovascu lar syste m and
studies ca lcium chan nels and aging.
A fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
and chair of its Pharmaceutical Sciences Section, Triggle is a member o f
numerous profess ional soc ieties. He serves on many editorial boards and
recently started hi s own trade magazine. Pharmaceutical News. of which
he is ed itor.
Among his numc:rous ho nors. he has received the Otto Krayer Award
in Pharmacology from the American Society for Pharmacology and
Experimental Therapeutics. the Volwiler Research Achievement Award
Continued on page 2

16.150. 200 fewer than had been
projected. UB ~aw a greater num ber of undergrad uates enroll full
time-326 more than had been targeted-a hhough the number of
pan-time undergraduate siUdent'
was 526 lower than cxpech.:.d .
The number of grnduate studem~
enrolling at UB abowm. higher than

expected. with a fu ll-time gradual~
\t udent population of 8.J4.l an Increase of 643 over targcL
Continui ng and reiUming student figures were strong. with 9.476
undergraduates returning full time.
a figure 476 higher than had been
projected. and 3.090 graduate students returning full lime. 730 over
rarget .
'The increase in con tinuin g and
returning students is a strong sign
that we're not losing students at the
rat e of previous years:· said
Headrick.
Part-time enrollment was lowe r
than targeted in all categories ex-

ccpt one: new part-time gradua1e
student enrollment. which at a total
of 426 was I I 6 h1gher than expected. Overall. UB has 727 fewer
part-lime 'tudents than expected
th~:o. yea r
" What '' t:ncouragmg '' that
our work. ove r the past yea r or two
1n O \ era II management ~how'
we·re gett mg better at mak.mgedu ca ted judgments about enrollment. ..
Headrick said. '1'he tuition increase
may have had some effect because
we're down from last year. but we
made our target" Last year's fall
enroll ment was 24.943.
UB's full-time eq01valc!nt student workload for fall 1995 i\2 I ,59 J. an increase of 49 J O\'er
target. According to information
released by Institutional Analysis.
this figure represents "the enroll ment statistic with the greatest budget implication'' and is ..extremely
robust because of the increasing
Lrend toward full-time status.··

At 38, Wand is 'pioneer' in his field
By STEVE COX
Reporter Stall

RECfOR ofUB"&gt;new
tru cturnl Biology lni ativc. A . Joshua Wand
as made a very big career intimate ly swdylng very small
things.
"I'm an atomic scale structural
biologist: that 's what I do for a
living." beams Wand: and he does
it rather well. At 38. Wand is already nati onall y known for his work
in structural biology. particularly a
process known as Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR). Modestly.
Wand explains that his stellar ri se
in the acudemic world is attributable. in part. to being in the right
place at the right time.
In its si mpl est lt!nns, NMR involves placing molt:cult:!oo suspended in a solution under a very
strong magnet. It yic:lds a view of
the ba.sic atomic struct ure of thOse
molecu les. Wand was a graduate
st udent at Penn State. researching a
project. when he uncovc:red a new
use forNMR . However. si nce Penn
lacked it~ ow n NMR fa.~cility in the
early 1980s, Wund commuted to
the University of Seattle.
'"The end result was that soon I
was the only person in North
America under 25 who knew how
to do this:· he recalled. After that.
finding a job was no problem for
Wand. He first went to the In stitut e
for Cancer Research in Philadel ·

D

A. Joshua Wand In his lab In the chemistry department.

phia. then on to teac hm g position ...

11 ve

at the University of Pennsylvania

~eve ral

in Philadelphia and th e University
of Illinois at Urbana.
Research capaci ty in stru ctural
biology is c:ssential in order to support research in several disciplines.
including biophysics. biological
sc iences. medicine and chemistry.
said Wand. ··tn order 10 even apply
for many research grants. you have
to be able to show the atomic structure you arc working with:· he ex ·
plained. Research in s tru ctural
biology enables things like devel opme nt of com puteri zed modeling
of ce ll membmne1&lt;o and internal
molecular structure' of proteins.
which kad 1n turn w many scientific advance!'&gt;.
Tht: Structural B1ology lmll a-

grew out of proposal made
years ago by the schools of
Medicine ~tnd Biomed ical Science ~
and Natural Sciences and Math·
t:matics to the late Provost Aaron
Bloch. accordi ng to Natural Sciences and Mathematic s. Dean Jo seph Tufanello . ..The need for a
presence 111 structur.tl b1ology "••~
first brought to nl) attention b~
faculty in volved wnh the Center
for Advanced Molecular BJOIOg)
and Immunology (CAMBil ... sa1d
Tufariello. "Our proposal. as well
a,, u similar o ne dc\·doped b~ the
Srhool of Medu:inc v.ere devel oped indepc;ndentl). but \ irtuall~
'\l multant'uusl y.··
Bloch saw intcrd!sct plinal)' 'UP·

Continued on page 3

�2

...... ZT,No.l

..,......_ -,~v

UB Council hears Greiner, Innus discuss Pierce in repeat
measures taken to offset budget reductions role as student
By CHRISnNE VIDAL
Reporter Edl!or

T

HE UN IV ERS ITY h"s raken a
nu mber of steps to offse t financial
diffi c ulties caused by thi s year's
state budget reducti on. but despite
those efforts. UB need s to liquid&lt;.n e $4 mi ll ion of its endowmen t to help
make up for the &lt;ihonfall
This wa!oo thc me ssage that Vo ldemar lnn us.
' cnior v ice pre!&lt;- idenl for univer!rl it y services.

dl'li vc red to the UB Council at its Sepl. 2 1
meet mg .

lnn u' outl •ncll a number of mc:a~urc :-. that
um vcr,H y urtinah. ha ve take n in re spon se to
thl' $8.2 million hudgct reducllon. incl uding
h1ghcr fcc ~ for "i tuden ts. the earl y retirement
mcent •vc program and a reduction in library

:u.:qu1 sittom•.
''T h1 'i ycm we 've changed fundamentall y
we ' re funded. We ' re no w more than 50

h {IW

\

perce nt revenue funded." said lnnu s. who
ex plo1ined that the majorit y of the university's
fundin g no w comes from tuition and fees.
UB ha ~ worked hard- a nd successfullyto mee t it s studt!nt enrollment targets. he
' a1d In addi tio n. thi s fall students were
~o: harged a n addi tiona l $166 in fee s. including
a ne w techno logy fee and higher costs for
' e rv1ces that include li ving in residence hall s.
meal plans, health care and parking.
Approxi matel y 140 faculty and staff took
adva ntage of the earl y retirement incenti ve
program. Wh1 ch will save the university about
$6.6 mitrion 111 salaries. Those savi ngs. how-

ever, a re partially offset by the cost of the
retirement incentives and the loss of approximately $2.4 million in funding conducted by those researchers.
OLhercost-saving measures that have been
implemented, lnnus said, involve management efficiencies suc h as outsourcing some
services and increased use of tec hnology to
o ffset losses of personnel.
As a result of rhe 1995-96 budger. 142
course sec ti ons. 47 full-time faculty positio ns. 52 pan-lime fac ulty posirions and 27
staff positions have been elimina ted; 75 degree programs have be~n impacted by the
c uts.
And the cuts for 1995-96 proba bly won "t
sto p here , lnnus said. "SUNY has been informed that we should expect a n add itional
cu t a t mid-year. probably more than the o ne
percent we've faced before."
In hi s repo rt to the counc il. UB Pres ident
William R. Greiner also di scussed the impact of the 1995-96 budget, its ramificatjons
on the future of the university. and the new
face of the SUNY Board of Trustees.
"There isn' t e no ugh tax money to support
the SUNY system as we now know it."
Greiner said. As a result. the trustees and
cam pus officials all around the state are
rethi nking the State University system. especia ll y it s business and administrative functions.
"We are more nearly in control of our
own destiny than in a ny other time in our 30
years as a state institution." he said. adding

''the down side is the loss of state funding."
He to ld the council that he and the presidenrs of Buffalo State College, Geneseo,
Brockport and Fredonia have proposed a
regional centralizatjon of budget functions
that would relieve the administration of
SUNY Central of " those rourine rhings thai
are so necessary."
He said he sees the UB of lhe future as an
insti tution modeled more after a Midwestern
uni vers ity than a Big East institution , and
added tha t he will be discussi ng the UB of
rhe future during his message 10 the voting
faculty, which will be held ar 2 p.m. Monday . Oct. 9 in the Universily Gallery, Cenrer
for rhe Arts.
In other business. the council referred to
the Student Life Commiuee a measure proposed by sl udent representatjve Michael
Pierce, who wants the UB Foundation to
create a $2 million fund that would provide
financial aid to needy students.
Hi s proJX.lsal did not come without controversy. however. Pierce·s intention to raise
the issue has been featured at length this fall
in The Spectrum, In submitting his proposal.
Pierce said he personally knows 20 srudeniS
who were unable to return to school this year
because they couldn'l afford the higher ruili on. He called rhe proposal "a moral commitment to students so no one is denied the
opportunity to succeed."
" It is unimaginable that some students
would not be able to achieve their dream
because they couldn ' t afford it." he said . :::::

representative

II)'SUVECOX·

Reporter Slaff
ICHAEL PIERCE is a nontraditional student in more
ways than one.
This year' s elected studenl
representative on the I 0-member University
Counc il drew headlines in the srudent paper
and loucbed off controversy with the Counc il c hai r and administrarors, all before setting foot in a University Council meeti ng.
Before the meeti ng, Pierce had said he
would use legal action ro force a proposed
resolution onro the Sepl. 21 agenda. " It is
my righl as a full member of the Co uncil.
New York Education law makes the elecred
s1udent representative a fuiJ. voting member
of the University Council, wirh the same
parliamentary righiS as rhose exteoded 10
appointed members," said Pierce. Ultimately.
lhe council did consider Pierce' s resolution
and referred it to the Student Life Committee.
Controversy is not new to Pierce. In fact,
he says it reminds him of his first go-around
as student representative on the University
Council 15 years ago.
A lifelong Buffalo resident, Pierce graduated from UB with a B .A. inhisrory in 1980.
After careers in social work and teaching. he
has returned to earn a second degree in
English and his dual reachi ng certifi cation.
He was twice elected student representati ve
on- the council between 1978 and 1980. -

M

-SUNY Chancellor to speak at University Convocation
By CHRISnNE VIDAL
Reporter Ed1tor

S

UNY CHANCELLOR Thomas A.
Bartlett will deli ve r remarks and
assist in the prese ntation of awards
at the University Convocation to
be held al3 p.m. Friday. Ocr. I J in the Center
for the Ans Main stage Theate r.
The convocation will recognize a SUNY

honorary degree reci pient. UB facult y appointed to SUNY Disringui shed ranks and
1995 SUNY Chancellor's Award recipients.
Ed ucator and soc iologi st Sara Lawrence
Lightfoot will receive the Doctor of Humane
Letters degree. A professor at the Harvard
Graduate School of Education, she has publi shed a number of books. including IVo r/ds
Apart: Relationships Between Families and

j oilled tbe uniwnlly ill Jeuuy
of special, IDIIUalllld resiooal pvlng.
Rooald H. Stein, vice prelidellt lbr univenlly

ld-

vancemenr llld development. noledlhal utlellior~

tor o fdevelopmeni,Michalto"hu provided excepliaall
leadenliip to the university' s opedal, IDftual llld rc&gt;gional gift programs.
"Under her direction,• he odded, "gifts lhrousb tbe
annUal appeal increased oubslantially by almolt 7(1
percent As creator and founder of the special and
regional gift programs, she pur in pl ace concepti and
systems thai have enabled development operations lo
successfully identify, cultivate and solicit major gift
prospecls throughout lhe narion."
-.u!O
Prior 10 joining UB , Michalko was a vice president wilh Ruffalo, Cody &amp; Associates. Inc .. of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. a nationally prominenl fund-raising consulting and
relemarketing finn. where she was responsible for designing successful annual and
capiral-campaign programs for colleges, universities and hospitals. Her Clienls included Columbia Universiry, Yale University, The Calholic University of America,
Ho ward Un iversity a nd Ci ty Colle&amp;e of New York, among o rhers.
Before joining Ruffalo. Cody. Michalko was director of development for rhe Yale
Universi ty Graduate School of Forestry and Environmental Studies in New Haven,
Con n.. and assista nt director of annual g iving for the West Virginia University
Foundati on in Morganto wn , W . Va.
Michalko has a bac helor' s deg ree in publi c relatio ns from Wheeling Je sui t College
in Wheeling. W. Va.

Schools, Beyond Bias: Puspectiveson Classrooms and The Good High School: Portraits
of Character and Culture.
In 1984. she received a pres tigi o us
MacArthur Fellowship. whic h supponed her
work on Balm in Gilead: Journey ofa Healu,
the story of her mother. the eminent psychoa nal ys t Margaret Morgan Lawrence .
Lighrfool received lhe 1988 Chrisropher
Award for literary meri t and humanitarian
achievement for he r book.
Recipient of the Candace Awanl of the
Narional Coalirion of 100 Black Women.
Lighrfoot had been a faculty member at
Harvard since 1972. She received her baccalaureale degree from Swarthmore College
and her doc torate in the sociology of education from Harvard. She has studied at the
Bank Street College of Educarion and is a
forme r fellow ofS ra nford Universi ty ' s Center for Adva nced Study in rhe Behavioral
Science-s.
The convocation also will honor five UB
faculty appointed in 1994-95 to the SUNY
Dist inguished Ranks . Recipie nts include:
SUNY Disring ui shed Professors Suk-Ki
Hong of Physiology and Jorge J . Gracia of
Philosophy; SUNY Distingu ished Teaching
Professor Haro ld Brody of Anatomy and
Cell Biology; and S UNY Dist ingui shed Service Professors John T . Hoof Phys ics and
Murray Levine of Psyc ho logy.
In add ition. the 1995 SUNY C hance llor's
Award recipie nts will be ho nored.
Recipients o f the Excellence in Teaching
Award include Ric hard R. Almon , Biologica l Sciences; Stephen J. Free. Bio logical
Scie nces ; Sracy C . Hubbard . English;
Michael S . Hudecki. Biolog ical Sciences;
James N. Jensen. Civi l Eng inee ring ; William A. Mill er, Oral Diagnostic Sciences;
Johannes M . Nitsche, Chemical Engineering; Judith H. Tamburlin, Clinical Laboratory Science; a nd Margari ra Vargas. Modem
Languages and Literatures.

Recipienr s of rhe Excellence in
Librarianship Award are Gayle J. HardyDavis, Reference andCollecrions, and Cindy
Hepfer. Serials and Bindery.
Recipients of the Excellence in Professional Service Award are Rira G. Lipsitz,
English, and Judith K. Miller. Purchasing.
The University Convocation is free and
open lo all members of the campus and
community. Campus personnel interested in
marching in the procession should call 6453414 for more information.
A reception in the Center for the Arts
Arrium will follow the ceremony.

TRIGGLE
Continued lrom page t
of rhe American Association of the College
of Pharmacy . rhe Educalional Ciration of
Honor Awanl from lhe National Columbus
Day Committee and the George F. Koepf
Awanl for Advancemenl of Biomedical Researc h from the Ha uptmann -Woodwar d
Med ical Research lnslilule Inc.
In addition. he has been cired by the Joseph
P. Kennedy Foundation for his extensive work
on behalf of the Special Olympics.
A native of London. England. Triggle
received a doctorate in c hemi stry a1the Univers ity o f Hull and a bac helors degree from
the University of Sourhampton. He has held
post-doctoral fellowships at the universities
o f London and Ottawa. a nd was a visiting
professor at the University of Leeds.

CORRECDON
A pholo thai accompanied an article
about Thomas A. Russo, UB assistant
professor r:i medicine. in the Sept 21 Issue of the Reporter was thai of Anthony
L. Russo, former director of the Calspan
UB Research Center.

The Rcpon&amp; IS a campus com numty newspal)el published by lhe OMsion ol UnNei'Sity SeMces. State~ ol New Yen a1 Butlalo Ed itol'ial ott.ces are lOcated 11 136 Crofts Hal. Armors~ . (7 16) 645-6969
O.REC IC*IOfPuBtiCAHONS I'WOTWY.t.COMaOY • EOITOA

~vaAL •

ASSOC~t[EOITC*I JO.UI~ •

ART DIREC TOR IOMCUIUNII • l\ltp/lut&gt;mloouat.ullllo.OuheQoflet"/

�IHIIIIII

3

--...-v-:n.-•

Recruitment, retention, enrollment on FSEC agenda
BY C-11AJI Mlu.Ell
Reporter Contnbutor

D

ISCUSSIONS at the Sept. 20
faculty Senate Executi ve Com-

mittee (FSEC) remained focused
on recruitment. enrollment. and
retention of students.
Provost Thomas Headrick, recently returned from a forum of the Association of
American Universities (AA U). reported that

UB is grapp ling with many of the same
issues as its sister institutions. UB's futu re
student profile. Headrick said. wi ll include
fewer freshmen but more transfer students;
increased combination upper division/gradu ate cou rsework opport un ities: and perhaps
fewer Ph .D. programs in fields that will
offer only very limited opportuniti es for
employment after grad uation .
Disc ussing UB's progress toward meeting
those goals in fall. 1995, Vic-e President for
Student Affairs Roben Palmer said, "In a strange
way we started in one direclion and veered off
and ended up where we wanted to be in the first
place. In February we set a target for the
mstitution to reduce the number of freshmen.
to stab ili ze it around 2.400 or 2.500. and in·
crease the graduate and u-ansfer student areas.··
When UB 's share of the the 1995- 1996
budget was revealed last summer. freshman
enrollment targeLIIi were necessari ly increased
and grad uate targeb decreased. Ultimately.
the freshman class numbered 400 more student~ than targeted. and ··amduate studenl'i
were u ~urprisingly up." said Pa lmer, ··and
tmnsfers were about where they should be."
" We had estimated thai we'd lose anum r of studenl s." Pa lmer continued. " But
hen the dust settled. we were about 500
)
udent s ahead of whe re we anticipated.
eYe.,!l in M arch . So !hat's the good news."
Palmer pointed to five efforts "to make it
easie r forsiUdents to functi on in this institu tion." despite the tough budgetary e nvironment. He thanked Provost Headrick and
Vice Provost fo r Undergraduate Educati on
Nico las Goodman for he lpin g to im prove
access to majors, ci ting the expansion of the
popular physical therapy program. Other
improvements included the new tuiti on time
payment; a simplified federal financial aid
application process: the DARS system. which
a llows students to automatical ly consul! the ir
u-anscripts; and " the big one for us." he said.
the BIRD (Billing. Inquiry, Registration. and
Drop/Add} touch· tone registration system.
Faculty SenateChairCiaude Welch initiated a di sc ussion of how fac ult y might mo re
active ly participate in siUdenl recruitment
and retent ion. "Admission is not a pa ssive
process in 1995," he nQted. ··h 's something
that require s a great deal of interac tion with
sc hool sys1ems. wi th individua l families.
with persons w ho have a variety of choices
as to whe re they can go for undagraduate
and graduate work ."
In 1985. the last time the Facu lt y Senate
exami ned admi ss ions policy. it t;.ei nforced a
threefo ld h;~sis for determining whe ther a
fre shman applica nt is offered ad mi ss io n:

Man charged with
rape of student in
Lisbon Ave. house
A UB rellldent atudent was raped Sopt.
22 at 2 a. m. while visiti ng in a house on
Lisbon A venue. Shortly after the attack. Uti be

ldiok, 20, of 430 Lisbon. a former UB student. was arrested by Buffalo po lice and
c harged with the rape. The attack occurred
down the street from where he lives.
ldiok is being held in the Erie County

Holdi ng Center in lieu of $20.000 bail. Student Affairs has issued a persona non gm1a
letter w hi ch would ban the suspect from
en try to 1he campus. on request of Publi c

Safety .

GPA,class rank, and standardi zed test scores.
Presenting the fall '95 student profile, Director of Admissions Kevin Durkin surprised
some Senators by including a founh basis used
to determine admission: the academk rigor of
the student's high school preparation.

D

urkin noted that this addi tional basis is

panicularly helpful because 34 percent
of New York State high schools no longer
repon class rank. Many high schools. Durkin
noted, find the process of ranking students to
be a difficult and tjme.consuming process
that benefits only college admi ssions offices. Senators Maureen Jameson and Peter
Horvath rai sed concerns about the nebulous-

ness of the concept of rigor; for example:
what about the potentially great an student
with a beaut iful portfolio but poor grades?
Durkin responded. " How is a program in
a vocational tech nical hi gh sc hool. o r a

BOCES program. different from an academic program. a college·bound program ?
How is fo ur years of math. four science, and
four language different from two years of
metal shop. woodshop. orhomeecono mi cs?
No s lam on those disciplines. so much as I'm
sayi ng that within the con text of the p~t we
have looked fon he very best prepared fresh man app li can ts. and have offered adm ission
to those applicants. It is conceivable that an
app licant could have the average . the ra nk ing. and the test. but still not have the rigor."
Durkin presented the fall 1995 student pro-

today. '"Arts and Sciences applications increased by 3.6 percent," Durkin said . "Manage ment. architecture. and the health sciences
were virtually unchanged si nce 1994."
" Attempting to reach the larger freshman
enrollment target from an applicant pool that
was prelty much the same as it was a year ago
necessitated that a greater proportion of stu dents be accepted from thai pool." Durkin

explained. "Eighty percent of regular day
applicants were admitted thi s year . com·
pared to 70 percent in fall 1994." The mean
high school average for incoming freshmen in

falll995 was 89.6.compared to90.2 1ast year.
Their mean recentered SAT scores were: verbal, 561 ; math. 591; and composite. 1152.

EOP applications declined by about 6
percent from fall ,1994, "likely the resu lt of
uncertainty over continued funding of the
program." Durkin specul ated. "Remember
the media conj ec ture that was played out for
so long last spring at a c ritical time in the
admissions cyc le."
reshman e ngineeri ng applications a!-. a
proportion of total freshman applica tions continued to decline since fall 1990.
from 17 percent in that year 10 II percent

F

" We had estimated that
we'd lose a number of
students. But when the
dust settled, we were
about 500 students ahead
of where we anticipated,
even in March. So that 's
the good news. "
ROBERT PALMER

Since the early 1970s. there has been an
FSEC reso lut ion to prov ide for individual ized consideration to control fo r "persons
with special abilities but fall below the normal zone of admissions." Welch n01ed. including athletes. "persons who have had very
complex family circumstances. and person~
with physical handicaps." Transfer applicanb
are evaluated solely on the basis of GPAs i.ll
previously·attended colleges or uni versi ties.
Vice Provost for international Educ atiOn
Stephen Dunnett reported on the state of
internationa l student enroll ment. Accord ing to Dunnett . UB slipped from 25th to
39th place among AA U insti tut ion~ in terms
of international e nrollme nts . Dunnett c ited
UB' s lock of a coord inated international
recruitment program and SUNY '!. budget ary problems. which he sa id were "widely

Electronic High'Ways: FirstSearch
&lt; I H.&lt; &gt;N IC

Por ibe past two yoors lbe UB community has had
acc:cu10 JllntSean:h, an outstandina aean:h system

HiGH o \\WS

!bat includes: Wor/dCat (lbe world•s larJCSt and
moal comprebelllivc soura: of infonnalion about
bQob, serial titles. sound re&lt;:Onlings, INIJlUscripiS,

I I I

back into the coffe rs (at Alban y)."
Mauree n Jame~o n re ferred three propoo;;-

file to the Senate. "For fall 1995, the Office of

fers from non·SUNY. or private and out-ofstate schools, increased by more than 5 percent.

enator Hertx:rt Sc hue! suggested inren si fymg efforts to recruit out-of-state
students. Not only would they broaden rhe .
dJversii'Yof the student body. he said. but they
would pay higher out-of-state 1uit1on for at
least a year. Palmerexplamcd that such a plan
wouldn "t benefit UB asonem•ghtexpect. ··we
don't reap the extrJ tuition.·· he sa.~d . "' It all goc~

S

als to the FSEC to help faculty become more

Admissionsprocessedover22,0CX&gt;undergmduale applications. including more than 17.000

domestic applications, nearly 3.000EOP. 1.500
international. and 500 Millard Fillmore College application.&lt;.'' The aggregate number of undergraduate applications increased by slightly
over I percent over 1994; transfers from wi th in
SUNY increased by 2 to 3 percent; and trans-

reported overseas." Even in Jul y. UB could
not provide tuition costs to traditional international "feeder sc hoo ls:· so student s
couldn't make budgelary dec ision s leading
lo matriculation. Plus. it takes three monlh s
to get a v1sa. wh1ch is granted o nly upon
commitment to nttend the: uni versi ty.

di: .),Anic/eFint(indexingofjoumala)Cont~niSFim

(!able of conlalls service), ERIC (education), GPO
•
(Jovemn&gt;e~~t documents) and M~dline (medicine).
Now F)nCSeardl offen two additional databases of interest to researchers; Pro. cetdings Fint and Pti[H!nFirst. ProceedingsFint provides a listing of publications
from worldwide conferences, meetings. wod&lt;shops, congJeSSeS, etc. In ProcudingsFir.rt
you can searchby conference name. date, location, or subject. Confe~nce proceedings
identified through FlntSean:h and not listed in BISON (UB 's onli ne catalog) can be
obtained via intcrlibrtll)' loan.
Many people are less interested in deter'mining what conferences have published
proceedings than in identifying actual papers presented at meetings worldwide.
PaptrsFirst lists over 580,000 conference papers on a huge runge of topics from
Shakespeare to urban planning to DNA to linguistics. You can sean:h by author, title,
subject. and conference name. To determine if the papers identified are available in the
Uni versity Libraries, type the source name in BISON's "UB Libraries Catalog." If it

mvolved in rc:nulling siUdents.The propo~ ­
als suggest that facuh y attending confer e n ce~ or teaching 10 otherci rie s m:.~ke effort~
to meet w1th potentia l UB appl icants; that
dean.. andchai111 provide additional travel fundlli
to encourage n!\."nutment by facult y on trip!-.:
:.~nd that :.~lumm organJLt.Jllon' in other ciues be
asked to facilitate.' contac t between travelmg
facult y member- and potc0l1al UB applicant~
In other ne" '· the FSEC pl a ns to take a
hardc:r look at Ihe ··credJI wonh 1nt:S'&gt;" of !-.omt.'
t:oursc o ffenn g .... n&lt;.m rhat th e requaremc:nt
for gradu&lt;lllon ha.., been n:duccd from 128
aedi t!'l to 120. The Eduf..'allo nal Program ~
and Poli c) Comm1ttee will dmft an mventory
of course' that might bear further scrutiny.
including but not limited to I00-level classes
that overlap with high school c urricula. remedial ~.:ourses. athletic courses. 'tutoring for
credit.· undergmduate independen t srud). and
undc:rgraduate leaching assistant.shlj)1\

WAND
Cont1nued from page 1
pon from two maJOr unit s of the univen.lly
and recogn i7.ed the ab il ity of thi s technology
to support spinoff. grant ·generating ac ti vity
that would not be possible o therwise. according to Provosl Thomi.ls Headrick. He
cxpl:1ined that il was technology ··e veryone
ag reed the university needed to in' est in. It
wa!. ~impl) a matter o f to what degree."
Bloc h forged a program that would maJ...c
UB'!- reso u rce~ not me rely adequate but.
··~ ta t e -o f- the - art : reall y putting u ~ out to
front o f eve ryo ne: 10 thi !-. area ." added
Hcadrit:k. Wuh President Greiner' s 'upport.
the um vcrsit y dipped inlnc:ndowment fund '
to launch the proJt:CI !h" ) Car
Wand ex plamcd th :ll. undcrth c: fir~ t phol't'
of the 1n11iative. acqu1,1t1on' cxpec teJ th1'
)'t.'ar of X-ra) rry,tallographll' i.lnd NMR
t!quipment will stmpl) hel p UB cat~o:h up ll'
curn:nt !&lt;! lanJanh. Ultim:llcl) . hC'I " •ever. ··v.e
will lcap fro!:! p a~t the Jc:,el ofh:chnolog) out
there 110\\ _-· W ~mJ ag rt:\.'' that. 1f 'Ul'l"C"ful.
the initl:lll\e "Ill maJ...t.' U B '~ . ; trUt' IUra J hu1l
ogy fa c 1lit1t" ~ the en\") nf rc,c:l rt·her' nati onwide . The c: nllre lflltlall \C 1 ~ rou gh! ) :J $10
m1llio n propoS iti On ··Thc: um vt·r"'l)' 1' fund ing a mode.;t ' tart anJ 11 '' Ill ht.' ur to mt: to
ral !.t' th e rc,t. " W and 'i.lld Hov.c' cr. hc '' nn
..,tr:mgc:r tu gr.mt ,man,htp. W:...nd '' pniJCt"l'
at other in ~ tuution ~ ha\t.' fe tched mo rt.' th.m
$2 .5 m11l1 on 111 grant .. uppon , 10\.'C 19~0
"There i ~ rl'&lt;all ) no dcl\\n,llk to lhl ' 1111
ti a ti vt.' Evl'n m &lt;a \\Or!&lt;! l ca't' ,\.·cnano. ,,~.
will \till be left '' llh a mu \.'h-ncedeJ ,~;~tc
of- th e-&lt;~rt NMR fat-1111) . ht'llt:r tha n th O,\.' .11
H:...r\'urd. Yale. nr \'lrtuall) an) ot ht·r r\.'~c:arch umver' ll ) m the l' Ountr) .'" \\'a nd
said. Tufanell o cx. plamcd that the 1\\ 0 nc"

is not listed. you may submit an interlibrary loan request.

NMR machine &gt;. 600 Mh L and 750 Mh t

To connecliO Firs1S~arch log on to you r campus £-mail accounl and at your system
prompt type: wings. Selecl "Libra ries," then "Online Resources," 1hen "General
Indexes and Ubrary Catalogs," 1he11 "FirstSea rch." For infonnation on connecting
to UB Wings call the Computing Cemer Help Desk at 645·3542. For questions
rega rding FirSISeorch. conwct Don Hanman unldon @ub~m.cc. bu.ffalo.~du, Lcx:J..'l,•ood
Library, 645-281 7.
- Gemma DeVinney and Do11 Hartman, University Ubraries

unit s. are among the moo;;t p&lt;mc.:rfulm production tod ay .
A nat1 ve of Otta'~ a. Canada. Womd il rrivcd thi s summer frnm the Um\J:~Ity of
Ill inois at Urba na with hi~ family and thret.•
graduate srudents 10 tow. He holds a JOint
appointme nt between the departments ofh10·
physics 3nd chem1 Sll)'.

�4

Many U.S. bridges built like ones that failed in Kobe quake
By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
News Servtc es Staff

bridges in both the Kobe region and the
eastern and central U.S. tend to be con structed of several discontinuous parts. These
include a concrete deck slab and steel girders
suppon ed by stee l bearings that sit on concrete columns a nd foundations. The purpose
of these bearings is to allow the bridge superstruct ure to expand and contract in response
to seasonal temperature c hanges.
In Kobe , many of these bearings failed,
said Buckl e, causi ng some bridge decks to
fall from their suppons.
" We· ve been suspicio us of these devices
for some time," he said . .. We' ve seen them
fail before, but assumed that it was s imply a
matter of improving the design.''
In Kobe, he added, reco~naissance teams
saw litera11y hundreds of failures of steel
beari ngs.
In past eanhquakes, engineers have attributed failures of bridge bearings to inadequate

T

HE CATASTROPHI C damage
suslained by bridges in Kobe. Ja-

pan, during January 's eanhquake

reveals important evide nce about
the vulne rabilit y of bridges in the

eastern and central .U.S .. according to the
deputy direclOr of the Nati onal Center for
Earthquake Engi neeri ng Research. headquartered at UB .
Jan Buckle said that ··for bridge e ngi nee rs
and owners in the eas1em and central U.S.,
Lhe K obeean hquakc h as perhaps even greate r

signifi cance th an rece nt earthquak es in Cal iforn ia. suc h as Lo rna Prieta and Northridge."
A professor of civil engineering at UB ,
Buc kle made reco nn aissance visi ts to the
Kobe region follow ing Lhe earthq uake .
Whil e bndges in Cal iforni a are generally
mon olithi c cont inu ous stru cture s, he noted.

design details and poor workmanship.
" But Japan's standard of e ngineering is
exceptional ly high and yet they still fai led,"
Buckle said, "even in new bridges.''
Determining the cause of these failures
presents a difficult problem for engineers,
Buckle said.
UB researchers and others have tested
individual bearings in customized test machines in which hydraulic actuators apply
loads that mimic those expected to occur in
an eanhquake. However, in these laboratory
tests, the bearings did not fail.
" Based on our test results, you wouldn ' t
havee•pected these bearings to fail ," Buckle
said. 'They appear to have adequate capacity
for resi sting seismic loads."
He a nd John Mander, UB associate professor of civil engineering, are now proposing to shift the emphasis of their research to
focus on the demand that earthquakes place

on bridge bearings.
"We don't understa nd · well e nough the
forces that an eanhquakedelivers to a bridge
bearing," Buckle said. 'They may be much
greater than we have calculated."
According to Buckle. bearing failures may
happen because of an uneven d,istribution of
loads among the many bearings that suppon
a bridge deck.
"Some bearings may be resisting far
greater loacjs than we expect while others
resist far less load than we expect," he said.
Once the bearing with the greatest load
fails, the load distribution changes, he CJI:plained. Since fewer bearings are now carrying the same total load, another bearing is
likely to fail . causing another redi stribution
of load and so on.
" Bearings could be fai ling progressively
one after the other like falling dominoes,"
sai d Buckle .
~

Helping patients

Survivors of natural disaster may suffer
get a handle on
longterm psychological effects, study says taking medicine
By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
News Serv1ces S1a ll

.

8y EU.EN GOI.HAUM
News Services Staft

~

EARS AFJ'ER e.perien cing a ~
natur&lt;.t l di saster. both children and •
ad ult."' suffer from psyc ho logical ~
and phy siologicalcffcc ts. two UB ii
~tudies suggesl. And. 1hey showed. the ef- ~
fee ls may worsen_ wi th repealed exposure to
n&lt;.ll ural di sasters
Condu cted by researchers in the UB De'partment o f Social and Preve nti ve Medici ne
i;; cooperat ion wi th It alian researc hers. the
3tudies foc used on chi ldren and factory workers living in or near Naples. Italy . Th e region
experie nced ea nhquak.es in 1980 and again
in 1983-84 .
The study of c hildren is one of th e first to
document how they respond to natural di saste rs.
'This is one of the first studies on chi ldren
that has used what we ca ll sta ndardized instruments as a method of measuring the
c hildren 's well -be in g ," said Mauri zio
Trev isan. professor and chair in the UB Department of Social and Preventive Medi cine
and principal investigator on both studies.
Trevisan said tha t standardi zed instrume nts , such as the Achenbach Child Behavior Profile. with which teachers evaluated
th e children's psychologica l states. allowed
researchers to qua ntify psychological and
physio logical effects c hildre n experienced
after the earthquakes.
"O ur findings show that the experience
these c hildren had during these nat ural di sasters could ha ve long-term implicat ions for
their ability to adjust later in life." he said.
The study of 274 c hildre n ~g e s 8-11 who
had been c•posed to the 1983 eanhquake
showed tha t as long as four years after the
quake, they demonstrated more behavior
problems and difficulties in adaptive functi on ing th an c hildren of a simi lar age who
among survivors of natural disasters.
had not bee n exposed to an eanhquake.
The study of adults, c urrently in press
The children demonstraled physiological
with Psychosomatic M•dicine, followed 772
co mplaints , as well as behavior problems.
male factory workers participating in the
follow-up to the Olivetti Hean Study of
such as anxiety and depression , attenti on
proble ms. withdrawn behavi or and delin1975. They became the subjects of the eanhquake study when major temblors struck
quent and aggressive behavior. These problems remained even afte r controls were made
It aly in 1980.
All of the men in the study experienced
fo r age and gender.
the first quake. Approximately half of the m
The same chi ldren al so demonstrated probexperienced a second series of strong ground
lems in adapti ve functioning . This was meamotions. which struc k in 1983 and 1984.
sured by the quality of a chi ld ' s schoolwork .
According to the results, men whose
the ex tent of happiness he or she felt in class.
homes had e xperienced some kind of dam~
the extent of learn ing in the classroom and the
apprOpriateness of a child's behav ior as co m ~
age. who were evacuated. or who suffered
financial loss from either o f the quakes were
pared to that of children of a similar age.
at an increased risk of experiencing signifi According to the authors. the findings
cant distress as a result of psychological and
suggest that chi ldren. as well as ad ults. should
physical sympto ms.
be inc luded in programs designed to amelio Their so mati c symptoms included headra te long-term psychological problems

Y

\

B

aches and joint pain, while self-reponed
psychological symptoms included depression, anxiety and hostility.
These symptoms persisted as long as seven
years following an eanhquake.
Co-authors on the study of children are
Surinder Virk, UB graduate student; Raffaele
Palombino. epidemiologist with the Local
Health Unit, Pozzuoli, ltaly: Dennis Benram.
UB assistant professor of social and preventive medicine, and Maria Zielezny, UB associate professor of soc ial and preventive
medicine.
Co-authors o n the fac tory worker study
are Susan Bland. UB researc h instructor;
Erin O'Leary. UB graduate s tudent :
Eduoardo Farinaro. associate pro fessor of
preventi ve medici ne. University of Naples.
and Fabrizio Jossa, researcher in the Depan ment of Medici ne. University of Naples.

UFFALO AREA residents who are
being treated for hypenension now
ave an opponunity to get personalized counseling and mon itori ng
every time they go to three local pha rmacies.
The phannacies are panicipating this fall
in a UB· program designed to monitor and
improve how well patients comply with
medica tion regimens prescribed by their
doctors, as well as lifestyle reco mmendations. Patient compJjance incJudes refi lling
prescriptions on time, taking medi cation in
the proper dose at the proper time and conforming to the physician's recommendations
about smoking, diet and exercise.
Recent estimates pul the number of Americans diagnosed with hypenension at about
60 million, about 50 percent of whom stop
taking medication during the first12 months
of therapy , said Rosemary Madej ski, clinical assistant professor of pharmacy practice
at UB and director of li)e program.
'The goal is to help patients better understand their hypenension and instruct them as
to why compliance with their medication
regimen is so imponant," said Madejski.
..We want to see if counseling and other
clinical services witl make them more compliant and improve blood press ure control."
The year-long. vol untary program will be
implemented by fifth -year phannac y stu dents as pan of their Professional Experience Program, the Sc hool of Phannacy · s
mandatory extemship.
Participating pharmacies are: Clarence
Leader Phannacy, 8899 Main St .. Clarence:
Transit Hill Phannacy, 6344 Transit Road,
Depew, and the pharmacy at Wegman· s
Galleria, Walden Avenue in Cheektowaga.
By counseling patients each time they come
in to fill their prescriptions, the phannacy
students will be able to determine if medications are being taken correctly, to monitor
patients for side effects due to their medications. and to repon problems with the medication regimen to the patient's physician.
" Patients will be instructed to refill their
prescriptions e very 25 days so they will
never be without their medication," said
Madejski. " lfthey're not taking their medication. it will probably show up in the prescription records." She said the pharmacy
students will use the counseling time to rein force the physician 's recommendations about
the imponance of taking medication, fol lo wing a proper diet, inc reasing exercise and
decreasing or c unailing smoking.
To participate. inquire at one of the parti cipat ing phannac ies, o r at the School of
Pharmacy. 645 -2826. ex t. 24 1.

�.........,..,~

The lollowln&amp; deacrtbes the

type •nd frequency of campus procrams dftl&amp;nated to

lnfonn atudents and employees abouf campus security

procedures and practices
and to encourage students
and employees to be responalble for their own security
and the security of others .
A description of pro-

REPORT

grams designated to inform
stu d e nt s
and
employees about tbe prevention of crimes.

I

n compliance wirh the requirements of the federal law, and in an effon to
promote the personal safety of the academic community, the following
information has been prepared for campus review. The information is
updated on an annual basis and is available to all current students and
employees. and to prospective students and employees on request.
This repon focuses on Uni versity programs and properties and faci lities
owned or controlled by the University. UB has campuses located within the
C ity of Buffalo and Town of Amherst, and each municipality has law
enforcement agencies and maintains crime statistics. For information on
safety and crime in !he local communities, conlacllhe Depanment of Public
Safely.
The Universi ry is concerned aboul crime in the community and works wilh
local law enforcemenr agencies 10 promole safety awareness, in an effon 10
reduce !he number of incidenrs and ass is! in the invesrigarion of crimes.

~~~~=.:.~~~~e~~~~~~

Most campus faci l ilie~ are

in daily contact with the City

open to the public under ex-

for studenta and others to
report criminal actions or
otheremergenclesoccurrtng
on campus and policies con-

istingcampus pol icies. Residential areas are limited to
reside nt s and guests. Re idcmial roo ms are lockab le

of Buffalo and Town of
Amherst pol icedepanmem~.
th e Erie County Sheriff~
Office and the New York

State Police. The Depan-

cemlng the Institution's response to such reports .

and exterior doors on the
SouthCampusandtheNorth

ment maintains 24 hour a
day radio and teletype con-

The Depanment of PubSafety is the University ' s
e nforceme nt age ncy. It
an o ffi ce on the North
Campus (Bissell Hall ) and a
sub -s tation on th e Sou th
Campus (Clement Hall ) to
faci litate the reporting, preven ti on,and investi gati on of
crimi nal acti vitiesandtoprovide fo r prompt re sponse to

Campus Governor·~ Complex. and the Joseph Ell icott
Co mple x a re co ntro ll ed
through a card reader sy~tern .
The following are current
campus policies concerning
campus law enforcement
Including: (I) the enforcement authority of security
personnel, Including their

tact wi th area law enforcemen t agencies.
Juri sdiction of ca mpu s
law enforcement perso nnel
as peace offi cers is limited
to the campus and highways
that are adjacent to or travel
through the campus. Personnel may engage in "hot"
pursui t into the surro unding
commu nit y.

The following describes cur-

)

o ther emerge nc ies.
Membersof theacade mi c
co mmunity and visitors to
the cam pus are encouraged
to report c rimes to th e
Department's dispatcher by
telephone (645-2222). In
addition. the campus has a
"blue li ght " direct line sec uri ty telephonesystem located
at strategic locati ons o n the
campus for emergency use.
This d ispatch offi ce is oper·
ated 24 hours a day. se'.'e n
days a week and dispatches
patrols to emergency call s
and reports of crimi nal activity . As appropriate, the
Department interacts with
local crisis service agencies.
law enforcement units. emergency health care age ncies
and prosecutors in respond-

::rk~::~::'~:::P~1 !:
1

Department personnel
co nduct crime prevention
and &lt;Jwareness programs for
the campus e nco uraging
members of the comm un ity
to be responsib le for their
ow n safety . The programs
include safety videos, d istri bution of materials. presenlations to student. fac ult y.
and staff groups. newspaper
ale~. and participation in
ca mpus- wide events.

agencies; and (II) policies
which encourage accurate
and prompt reporting of all
crtmestothecampuapollce
:;:n~~=-~pproprtate pollee

Public Safety Depanment
cam pus law enfo rce me nt
personnel ha ve the full State
au thori ty to enforce and in vestigate all law s and regu lations. The Department is

SUNY / BUFFALO CRIME STATISTICS
CALENDAR YEARS 1992-94
These statistics reveal the nature and frequency of reported crime
on the Unrversity at Buffalo campuses. In the categOt)' of burglary .
forced entries are rare: the majority of incidents are thefts from
unlocked student rooms. One of the most challengrng tasks we
hi've rs to educate students to lock their rooms at allttmes
1994

~~~i v1~ie~~~·~e~~ecn~:~~al

-~-~b-'~-e-~--------'------=----_..:..

The following are the current campus policies concerning security and access
tocampusfacilities,includingcampusresidences,and

Aggravated Assault

security considerations
used in the maintenance of
cantpus facilities.
The campus has 8 Perso n a I Safe ty Com mitt ee
which co ndu cts facilities
audits from a safety perspecti ve. Defic iencies are iden tified and correc ted when
repon ed. Campus community members wi th sec urity
concerns should contact th e
Depart ment of Publ ic: Safety
direc tl y.

217

Burglary
Motor Vehtcle Thefts
Sexual Offenses·
Forctbte
Non-Forc•ble
Bras-related crimes
Arrested for
Liquor Law Vrolallon
Drug Abuse Vrolallon

36

0
12

6

Weapons Possessl()(l

"The category of sexual offenses 1ncludes fOtCible acts (rape. forc1ble sodomy. sexual abuse and sexual m1sconduct) and non-lore1ble acts (statutOI}' rape, tncest. certam cases of sexual m1sconduct) From 1/ 1192-713!JfJ2. before me reportmg category was
changed from rape to fexual assault. there were 2 reported rapes
on campus

5

v-.-27,No.a

The campus has an active
crime prevention and awareness program. The Department of Publi c Safety
conducts a series of campus
programs on topic s related
to sex ual assault. self defense. personal safety and
general crime prevention.
Presentations are made in the
residence halls. at employee
and student orientation pro grams. campus activity fairs.
and for campus bargaining
units on request. To mak e
arrangements for a group
presentation. ca ll Public
Safety directly. In formation
about Public Safety is also
avai lable on the computerIZed campu~-wide informa tiOn system ··win,gs." under
.. University Servi c e ~ .. o r
··student Lrfe:·
The campu~ Personal
Saft:ty Task Force prepare:-.
an an nual report on campu~
o;ecurit y for revteY. . The
Task Force also cond u ct~
open for ums. distribute:-.
printed information . and arranges for appropriate campus safe ty related signage .
The Director of the Depart ment of Public Safety serves
as chairperson of the Task
Force.
ln. addition. safety and
secu rit y programs for st udents are offered by Resi ·
dence Life and Student Life
offices. Residenti al swdenh
di sc uss safety issues at man datory floor meetings and
are provided with sec urit yre lated prin ted materiab.
Student Life conducts onent ati o n programmi ng on
campus, whi ch include secu rity informati on in pri nted
student guidebooks. distri bution of a personal safety
broc hure. and a sex ual a~ ­
sa ult prevention brochure.
and related presen tations on
these to pics. The presentati ons are conducted by Stu dent Life. Public Safety, and
the University Counseling
Center.
The following Is UB'a campus policy concerning the
monitoring and recording
through local pollee agencies of crtmlnal activity at
off-campus student organa.
zatlons which are rec&lt;&gt;enlzed
by the Institutions and that
are enc,aged In by students
attend In&amp; the Institution, Including those student org•
nlzatlons with off-campus
housing facilities.
Loca l community law
enforceme nt agencies are
encouraged to monit or and
respond to off-ca mpu~ stu·
dent and st udent organization crimi nal activities. The
ca mpu s participates in a
neighborhood adv 1sory
board to monitor stude nt ac tivit y in the area surround -

mg the Soulh Campus. Law
enforcement personnel and
commun ity leaders are mvited to meet an nually with
student o rganization leadership. panicularly the cam pu~
fraternitie s
and
~ororitics .

Students are advi sed 1f
they are apprehended for a
viola ti on of law of the community. State. o r natio n it IS
the University's position not
to request or agree to special
consideration fonhe st udent
because of his or her stude nt
status. Students who violate
a local ord inance o r any law
risk the legal penahies prescribed by civil authorities.
The following describes cu rrent campus policy ree:ardlne:the possession, use, and
sale of alcoholic beverages
and enforcement of State
underage drinking laws and
a statement of policy regardIng the possession, use , and
sale of Illegal drugs and enforcement of federal and
State drug laws and a description of any drug or alcohol abuse education programs.
The;: campus compile'
with Swtc and federal Jaw"
regarding the po':-.c~:.. "ron .
:..ale. and con,umpllon of ai I.;'Ohol and illegHI drug:.. All
-.tudenb are provided with
an annua l Drug Free S c hool ~
and Communi ty AL·t com pliance ~tatcmcnt. wh~eh
dctaib campu~ polictes .
trea tm ent and cnun ... cllng
programs. ~\nd education cf fans . Facu ll y and sl~tffmc.:m ­
bcrs receive thi s statcmcnt
and the campus Drug Free
Workplace Policy .
For additional copu!s of
thc~e pohcies. contact Stu dent Affairs (542 Capen
Hall ) or Personnel Servtces
( 108 Croft; Hall ).
The following describes the
current campus policy with
regard to sexual assaults.
The University co ndu ct ~
a number of training and in formation programs to fi.l mi li arize facu lt y. staff. and
stude nts wi th the proc ed ure ~
to fo ll ow should a sex ual
assault occur. These programs are conducted by the
Public Safety Department.
the University Health SerVIces. the Student Life Dcpanment. and by numbers
of stude nt groups including
the Anti-Rape Task Force
and the Sexuali ty Education
Center. Reside nt student s
attend mandatory noor meetings on this topic. and the
topic is cove red in the
Universit y· s orient ati on sessions.
Students arc informed
that the University wi ll im -

pose maximum disciplinary
sanctions and advise the vic tim of his/her rights to notify
law enforcement authoritie~
and the University's willingness to a ~si ~ t in doing so. If
VICtim ~ w1sh to pres s
charges. the University will
arrest and charge the accused
offender on campus. Disci plinary acuon cou ld include
dismissal from the University. The accuser and the
accu sed will have lheir legal
rights maintained and both
will be informed of the outcome o f any internal and
ex tern al proceedings. The
victim is notified of avail·
able coun~eling. mental
health. and other ~en• ice ~
both on campus and in the
community Public Safety
and the University Health
s~rvice~ will provide a cn , 1 ~ services sexual a~sault
advocate and female offi\.&gt;
en. are available to a~s1~t at
all time~ . Vict1ms al so have
the nght to change the1r aca dcmtc and living s ituation ~
and w11l be a:-.~J s ted in doing
so 1f the} c hoo~e . Informati o n
cu ncc rnrn g
the
U nl\ c:r"t ) ·' ..cxual a ~~ault
pr01 ocul and pre\ enti on are
a\ ailablc m a number o funr ver'lt} brochures which re CCI vc w1dc distribution on
c:ampu~ . There is also a recorded ~exua l assault mformation line 1645-3411) for
information on action to take
tn the event of a sexua l a, .
~au \\ . opt ions in reporting .
and re~ourccs available to a
victim.
The following Is UB's campus policy on timely reports
to the campus community
on crtmes considered to be
a threat to other students
and employees that are reported to campus security
or local law pollee agencies.
Such reports shall be pro-wlded to students and employees In a manner that Is
timely and that will aid In
the prevention of similar OC·
currences.
The Department of Public Safe ty publishes a weekly
ltsting of crime on campus
thi.lt de.tails the date. time.
location and offense of all
campus criminal incidents.
The listing 1~ c ircu lated to
campus offices and is summarized weekly 10 the cam pus newspaper. the Rrporter.
In addiu on. Public Safet)
uses the studen t newspaper.
The Spectrum. telephone
call s. posters and local media to communicate more
urgent sec urity information
and can provide bu ll etins to
departments and unit s on
crime activi ty as warranted

For l'urthw lnfornultlon, c:ont.ct:
Departmenl ol Public Salely
Office of Sludent Life
OlfM:e of Residence Lile

· Universily Counseling Center

645-6125
645·2171
645-2720

Sludent Affa~s

645-2982

Personnel Serv~ces

645·2646

Prepared by Otftce of the Vtce Prestaenr for Srudenr Affcttrs arrd rhP
Department of Public Safery m cornphance w1fh me Ieder ar Stud~nr
Rtght-to- Know and Campus Securtly Act ( T111e 11 Cnme Awatr&gt;
ness and Campus Secuflt ~ I 9 195

�6
tion to Buffalo Free-Net. Western New
YoOt's public connection to the
Internet.
"With th1s generous MCI grant , the
Buftalo Free--Net Will be able to ac·
commodate more users with easier.
more reliable service,• said Nell
Yerkey, professor of information and
library studies at UB and chair of the
Buffalo Free-Net steering committee.·
Through the Free-Net's School House
ServiCes. area schools will be able to
Implement new interactive educational programs '"

Facul &amp;StaHBillboard
ACADEMIC DISHONESTY
IS TELECONFERENCE TOPIC
• An tnterachve na!lonalteleconler ence on academ•c dtshonesty w•ll be
held from 1 3 p m Fnday Sept ?9 '"
120 Clemens Hall on UB s Noflh
Campus
Academtc lntegr•ty The Trutn of
the MaHer Will lOOk at tOpiCS that 10

c•ude tne eptdem•c of academ•c dts
noncsty lactng colleges ana untverst
ttes who 1s respoostble 101 protecllng
tr•e academ•c tntegrtty of a campus

communtty causes ol ac aoemtc dts
t1onesty artd procedures tnat shOuld
oe used '" resotvtng allegations ot
academ•c dtsflonesty
On-campus sponsors tnclude Un
dergraduale Eoucahon Student AI
ta,r s ana the Facully Senate For
rnore tnformatton or to reserve a seal
c all64~

6t?5

REAR ADM . TRinSHAUSER,
UB DENTAL GRAD, TO RETIRE
• Rear Adm lr•l Rog a r W .
T rlft aha u aar , deputy ass•stanr
chtel lor dent1st1y U S Naval Re -

award last week at
the Nat1onal Meet·
1ng of the Academy of Pharrnaceu!ICat Sc1ences
and Tectmotogy '"
Kobe
The award IS presented b1enmally to
a top non-Japanese researcher who has made stgn1h·
cam contflbutiOfls to the pharmaceutical sc1ences and 10 1nternat100al
pharmaceut•cal educat1on
Fung 1S one of the world's lead1ng
•nvesTtgators •n nl!rovasodttator phar macology ana biOChemistry A UB
faculty member s1nce 1970 he has
been chan of Pharmaceutics Since
1980 He recenTly was elected pres•oent of the Amer.can AssoctatiQn ol
Pharmaceutical Sc•en\ISIS for 1996
One of a lew rectp1en1s of a MERIT
award tram the NatiOnal Heart lung
and Btooeltnst•tute olthe NIH Fung 1n
1988 rece1ved the Research Achieve·
ment Award tn Pharmacokineltcs.
PharmaCOdynamiCS and Drug Metabolism from the Amencan Assoc•at1on of
PharmaceutiCal Scrent1sts and the
AmeriCan Pharmaceuucal Assoc1atl0fl
Research Ach1evement Award tn
Pharmacodynam•cs 1n 1992
He 1S an elected lellow ot the
Amertcan Assoc•at1on ol PharmaceuTical Sctenltsts the Ameucan Assoc•ahon tor the AdvancemenT of Sc• ence and the Academy of
PharmaceutiCal SCiences

GERLAND HEADS
UB SCIENCES AWMNI
Tr.ttshauser
1
an ens•gn 1n the Nava~ Reserve-Program 104'
dental offteers •n 1961 was on acr•ve
duly unul 1967 He earned a masler s
.n ortnodonhcs from lorna L1nda
School ol Denr1S1ry m Calllorn1a 1n
1969 af!er h1S release !rom act1ve
duty He ret()lned the Naval Reserve 1n
1970 and served ar the Naval and Manne Corps Reserve Cenrer 1n Buflak&gt;
He has observed Naval Reserve
Dental Corps fac•llt1es worldwide The
Secretary of the Navy recogmzea tum
tor hts superb gu•dance of the dental
corps dur•ng OperatiOn Oesen Sh1eld
and Desert Storm In 1994 he was
promo!ed to rear admlfal top post m
the Naval Reserve Corps respons•ble for !he demal healll'l care of
more !han t30.000 selected reservIStS He w•ll conttnue work•ng at h1S
pr1vate orlhodon!lcs practice 1n
Barav1a alter h•s Naval retirement

FRENCH PROF AUTHOR OF
BOOK ON SENEGAL PEOPLE
Sa mba Dlop US aSSIStant pro
lessor ot French tS the authOr ol
The Oral History and Literature ot
lhe Wolof People ot Waalo Northern
Senegal The Master of the Word
(Gnat) 1n tne Wolof Trad1t1on · Vol 36
.n the Alr•c an Stuches
Ser 1es publtsfled by
The Edw•n Mellen
Press
D•OP whore
ce•ved her Ph D 1n
comparat1ve literature
a\ the Untversety ot Caltfor nla at Berkeley teaches tn the DeparTment of Modern Languages and
L•teratures at UB Her areas of teach•ng and research •nclude Ftench Atncan literatures and poetry 1n French
and Enghsh Alr.can Ol'al !rad111ons and
literatures Afocan theater and him
medieval studies and Islam

PHARMACEUTICS CHAIR
RECEIVES TOP AWARD
• Ho-Leung Fung, professor and
cha1r 1n the Department ol
Ptmrmaceu!ICS 1n the School of Pharmacy at UB has been awarded the
prest,gtous Takeru and Aya H1guch1
Memortal Award from the Academy of
Pharmaceuhcat Sc1ences and Tech·
notogy 1n Japan Fung accepted the

• .Jam•• A. Gerland has been
elected pres1dent of board ol dFr&amp;e ·
tors of the Sc•ences Atumnt Assoctatton of the UB
Faculty of Natural
Sc•ences and
Mathemaucs lor
the 1995-96 academiC year
Gertand tS assOCI·
ate d1rector 1n
computtng and 1nlormatton technology at UB Martha M Hams. an attor ney wtth Buchanan Ingersoll . PC IS
secretary/!feasurer
Appotnted comm111ee cha•rs are
Nancy Markwart nom1nat1ons. Ted A
Badura membership . and Stuart D
Gossets . programmtng Other board
members are Joseph F Ceravolo.
Patnc1a M Costanzo Randall K
STegner Mary E Stock , John A
T1bbl:!Us and Howard T•eckelmann
The Sc•ences Alumn1 Assoc1at•on
a conshtuent group of the UB Alumn•
Assoc•ahon tS a mulhdiSCipltnary
group alf1hated w•lh the FaculTy ol
Natural Sc•ences and Mathemahcs.
whiCh compnses the Depanmenrs of
BIOIOQICBI Sc•ences. Chemestry, Compuler Scerat . GE!OOgy. MathematICS and PhySICS

--on

::.z:tllt~ID::::::::.::~

-ollhe ....

"""~of- Mulllt.

lng-.

0t

"-

obaoll MlrClll I ollie fallaw.

• T'NO fourth-year students 10 the UB
School o1 Pharmacy. Thomas Greg and
Cl1eryl Ritchte. have OOY1 awarded
$1 .!XXl scholarships by the Women's
Cilb n.oo a OlUrbia Uriversily College
a PharmaceWcal Soences
The UB School of Pharmacy was

glfto.-

Amual grants.
onc1ships, ~lly ranging lrom SI.IIDO 1D 1&amp;.000.

are eva-lor lliiJan .......,., lellclwlhlpe

of--

10 further lhe prof...,... SlaiUI
performers and compooera, ond gr-10....,.
oJc ensembles, pr~~. ....,.
sic festivalS and recotding CO(I"'paniea.
The Trull has been recognized ao a noi40t.prolit.
table trust.
funding categories oro:

tax-

char!·

one of four insututtons selected to receive funds from the Women's Club
when the College of Pharmaceutical
SciBnces at Columb1a closed

Tuition •MiaUnoe ror students of new music at appropriate edu·
cational Institutions or witt, individual instructors In the U.S. and abroad.

EDUCATION CUTS AFFECnNG
WOM_EN TOPIC Of LECTURE

Fello........., . . - • • - lor yoong proleslllonals who
will not have achieved their 30th birthday by the annual application
deadline of Dec. 1. Projects for car--advancing research or documen·
tation (e.g .. seminar/Workshop study, travel. f&amp;CO(ding) will be consid-

•wtllProt••-•
-~.. Sl8ughter
d iscuss ways the Contract with

ered .
Grants to not-lor-profit music ensembles, presenting organizations or
recording companies that are devoted pcimarlty to the public presentation or recording of New Music anywhere in the world.
For more Information. contact Anne Mclean, administrator. Yvar
Mikhashoff Trust lor New Music. c/o Aduciary Services Inc .. 4476 Ma1n
St SUite 206 . Snyder . NY 14226 Phone 839·3005

EOP CENTER PLANS HISPANIC
HERITAGE CELEBRATION

a "Celebral!ng Our Differences~ w1ll
be the theme of an H!spamc He11tage
Cetebra\100 to be held !rom 8:30 a.m •
noon Oct 5 1n ltle UB Educattonal Opponumty Centet' . 46!? Wash'!'QIOO St
The tree event w111 1nclude flu
shots. blood-pressure screen•ng and
m1n1-lectures as part ot an Hispamc
Heallh Fa11 presented by the Ene
County HE:alth Department. H1span1c
f1lms . and a breast-cancer awareness program presented by Roswell
Park Cancer Institute

KEEN NAMED TCIE
TRAINING COORDINATOR
• Pamela H. Ke en has been promoted to tra1n1ng coordinator with The
Center lor fndustnal Eltect1veness
(TCIE) Based 1n the UB School of
Eng1neenng and Applied Sc1ences
and alhhated w1th the UB School of
Management. TCIE helps local compames 1mprove compe1111veness
Keen w111 coordtnale trainingneeds-assessment projeCts. adminiSter state tra1mng grants. custormze
tratntng-course delrvery tor compan1es
and ass1st companies applyang lor
NYS training grants She •S a graduate
of Emp1re State College

KRAYBILL JOINS MEDICAL
SCHOOL, RD~WELL PARK
• William 0. Krarblll has b een
appointed c h1ef of the Soft T tssue
Sarcoma/Melanoma . Bone Depart ·

Madness Ill:
30, Oct. 1
Get ·em while they're hot· records. !apes or
COs-everything from Bach to B B K1ng.
reggae to rock . Gershwin lo gospel- a! V1nyl
Madness Ill. the fund·raiser of WBFO 88 7
FM. UB's National Public Rad•o aHihate
A free WBFO member prev1ew 1S set
for Saturday. Sept. 30 a! Allen Hall on the
South Campus from 9-11 a.m followed by
a welcome to the general public from 11
a .m.-6 p .m .. with $2 admission. Records
and tapes are $1.50: COs. $5. A bargain
clean-up will be held Sunday. Oct 1 from 11 a.m.-6 p .m. Proceeds will benefit the station and its activities.

........ ... .. ... ..... ... ... ..... ....

ment. DIV!s•on of Surgery. at Roswell
Park Cancer Institute. and assoc1ate
professor of surgery at the US School
o1 Med1c1ne and BIOOledk;.al Sciences.
He was associate chief ol the surgiCal
SBMC8, Veterans Admlmsuation Hos·
p1taland assistant professor of sur98fY, Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis, Mo.
He received h1s medK:al degree
from the Unfversity of C1nc1nnat1 and
served as director of surgery of Ell1s
F•schet State Cancer Center in Columbia, Mo. He has published more
than 50 an1cles in scholarly jOurnals
and serves on the editorial board of
the Journal of Surg1cal Oncology

ASTHMA, WNG DISEASE
TOPIC Of CONFERENCE

• The search tor

~asthma

genes.· en-

wonmental factors 1n lung d•seases
and substances released by cells that
affect lung development and pulmonary dtseases w1U be discussed at the
Second Great Lakes Lung Conference
to be held Sept. 29-0ct 1 at The Pillar
and Post Inn. Niagara-on-the-Lake.
The program 1s lor U.S. and Canad•an physiClClflS. sc~enusts and bK&gt;mechcaJ-sc1811Ces p8f500nelln Great
Lakes areas H1ght1ght will be a lec ture , "In Search of Genes lor
Asthma • by Noe Zamel of the Urn versify of Toronto. at a 7 30 p m dinner on Sept 29 Featured topiCs and
speakers w1ll 1nctude. Cytok•nes and
Asthma . Steven 1-iofgate.
Southampton. U K . and Manet
Jordana. Hamilton Ont . Dehvery ol
Drugs 10 Pulmonary Dtsease. Joseph
M PileWSkl. Ptttsburgh . MIChael F
Tose , Cleveland. and
Cunmngham. Boston . Cytok1nes and
Lung D1sease. Petet' Barnes. London.
U K and Jack GauldiB. Hamilton. Ont
Conference co-chalfs are Jamson
Lwebuga-Mukasa. assoc1ate professor of med1c1ne at UB and Gregory
P Downey Umvers•ty of Toromo
Sponsors are the DIVIstOn of Pulmonary and Cnucal Care at UB. the
D1vcs1on of Respiratory Diseases at
Un1vers1ty of Toronto. the OntariO ThoraciC Soctety and the Amencan Lung
Assoc•aTtOn of Western New Yock

'om

casey

MCI GRANT AIDS
BUFFALO FREE-NET
• Buftalo res1dents and students w1ll
lind a smoother on-ramp to the Infor mation Superhighway. thanks to a
$10,000 grant from The MCl Founda-

America and other conservative proposals w111 1mpact on women and
women's fields in h1gher educauon 1n
a lecture today at 3:30p.m 1n 410
Clemens Hall on the North Campus
A professor of higher educat!OO affill8ted with the Center for the Study of
H1gher Ec:lucat101'1 at the Unfversity of
Anzona . she win review trends from the
mid-80s to the mid-90s that suggest
'NOI'l'l8fl's rl8ids have received a disproporuonately low Share of the realloca·
uon of hiQher educatJon resources. Hef
research has shown that women's fields
..vere more likely to be cut dunng retrenchment and that gender was the
critical•ssue 10 academiC freedom
cases of the 19805
The lecture IS presented by the UB
Women's Studies Program and the
Department ot Educational Organization . Admenistration and Policy Stud·
•es in the UB Graduate School of Edu·
cat•on Co-sponsors are the UB
Department of Sociology, United Umversity Professk&gt;ns and the UB Graduate Group for Feminist Studies .

GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
TOPIC Of AWMNI LuNCHEON
• '"You. Your Government and UB "
will be the topic of the second program in the UB Senior Alumni Program
Senes. to be hek1
Oct. 10 10 the Center for TomorrOIN on
the North Campus
Speaker wdl be

Molly McKeown,
depufy to the pres•dent lor univerSity
relatoos at UB. who
MCKEOWN
•s respons1ble for
government-relatiOns programs at UB
PreviOUsly sentor legislative 3551Stant
to Iarmer State Sen John B. She Her. she
has authored pubhcahons on educat100
advocacy. and IS a past president and
legtslatJVe chatr of the SUNY Confederal)()O of Alurm• McKeown served as
state chair and advisor to New York
Stare Public Affa1rs Corrmrttee. and 1s
the rec1prent of a Law Day Award from
the New York State Court of Appeals
For reservations . call 829-2608

BUSINESS AUTHOR SPEAKS

ON ' PURSUIT Of WOWI'
• Tom Petera, noted bus1ness author and speaker, w1U present a program based on h1s bOok. ~The Purswt
of WOW!." Oct 2 1n the International
Agn-Center on The Ene County Fairgrounds in Hamburg
The program. offenng adviCe on
how to succeed 1n today's busmess
world. will be hekt from 9 a.m -4 30
p m. It •s sponsored by WynCOm and
the Center for EntrepreneurlBl Leadersh•p '" the UB School of Management
JlfTl Harnck. coach of the 1995 NCAA
champi00Sh1p UCLA basketball team.
wtll speak at a noon luncheon

�7

Leners
fiOOIULL

C811 ~the "Heartbreak in Slorrs.• The B&lt;AI8 played a
tremendous gtWTI8 Salurday night at Cavwlc:llcU
against the r-viy ~ad and undel-tukiea
falling 26-25 as UCom'a David IJeAtrnM ldd&lt;ed.,
lll·yard field goal with 10 oecondo 11ft in regulation.
UB bulh a tf).() lead In the tnt quer18r behind a
Gerald Cattton 47-yBid field~ a ' * -·
bast-end a 56-yBid Interception return by Terrence
Ashe&lt;. nbecame tf!.{)""""" Mike~ fotcod a
fumble by DeArmas, UCom'a punier, In his own end
zone that Ibrahim Giles recowred for anolher US
score.
Sophomore tailback Anthony Swan, who had 145
yards 011 the night. made " 22.{) with 8 fiv&amp;.yard M
late in the first half, before the Huskies scored to make
~ 22-6 at halftime.
Todd Pace added 73 yBids rushing for the Butfs In

:::~:r:!..~~~=~ta!:~

fumble recovery tD go with his first career touchdown,
while Guest end Conley eacll had 15 tacldee.
Jason Kuehn had a career-best three quBitarbacl&lt;
sacl&lt;a. Keith Hansen (seven tackles) and Steve
McOuffle (six tackles) cornbin&lt;!d 011 e sac!&lt; aa well fot
the Bulls. Freshman kJcl&lt; returner Kali Watf&lt;Jns hod 106
yBids 011 three returns. including a career-best of 59
yards.

The BuUs. ncm 2-2, return to UB Stadium to host the
Villenov8 Wildcats fot 8 7 p.m. klcl&lt;off. The series is
tied at five wins each with the BuDs posting a 2S-27
win in the last ~ng ~ the two schools. Iron~
celly that win by .UB, CNer the DMslon 1-AA Wildcats
prompted talk ol 11)8 ll1eiHJMalon Ill Bulls returning to
Divlslon I. That became a realey in Februaty ol1986
IMlen the ln1erco11egiale Athletica Board (lAB) ap- ·
pr&lt;Ned US's 8llllf1tuaJ""""' back to Divlslon I in 1993.

VOI.I.EYULL
The Royals raised lhelrrecord to 13-3 with a pair of
Yic1orles Saturday at Alumni Arena The Royals
St. Francis (Pe.) 15-6, 15-9, 1&gt;9 and Loyola
( . 15-11. 2().18, 10.15, 15-tOtoexlendtheirwinning s
to nine matches.
In the
over St. Francia, the Royals - e led by
Nancy
's 10 kills and three blocl&lt;s. Candi Sims
tallied 28
along with 12 digs and fl\18 kills Aprllle
ng added three service aces.
Against
' Candie Hinllled·'the
25
kl1ls and 11 digs. l.Burle Sanleti with 19 kills and
~with 11 _ . al&amp;o I n - figtn klfls for
UB. Kathy llrtnlr,oor1h tallied a ijarne-!ligh 19 digs
-Sweeting lllso contribulod 10 bloclai. sm. led
t h e - with62-.
· Friday night UB dalealed ~ ~ 157, 1$-15, 15-6, 15-121&lt;&gt; open lholi'toOIT-.d.
Hir8t led the Royals with 13 kllla- Sdall added
1 1 kills and a ~igh 12 digs. sm. tailed 47-and 10 digs ....... AoR and Kalhy BmkwOI1h

way""""

hod---·
...... SOCCI!R

The Bulls IDOl&lt; " pair of 8hutOul vlc:lcrios last -lo
raleo their record to &gt;3 downing Nlaganl &gt;0 at home
and Marlst 1.{) 011 the road.
In the NiagBia match, Dan Ciolet&lt; ocorod two goals

Ediru Ol&lt;pewho, Eric Ad&gt;ola and Rich 118c1vnan
tailed lingle IT'OIIIkels. Goellei.Jtli Plmer and Chris
combinocf for the llhLlout as the BlAII out&amp;hol
the Purple Eagloe 31-6.
At~ Ad&gt;ola ocorod the march's lone goal in the
first half as Palmer stopped seven shois Ill pr--.,e
,the arutout. Woth the ahulouts. Palmer lowered hi8
goa1a _.,.,
to0.93.
The Bulla hoot Slana Friday at 7 p.m. and open their
~ sc:lleOAe with Central Conneclicut Slate
Sl.ndayat RAC Aold at 1 p.m.

a.-

-aoe

...........

v•.

The Royals -e fit lobe tied"""' the~ in
ginia as they played to a pair of deadlocks. UB tied the
Radford ~ J.3 011 Saturday and the Virginia
Tach 1-jokiea 1-1 011 Sl.ndaylo put their 1995 record 81
$-1-3.
Jennifer 0e111ta. Joowlna Tower and Lori Perillo each
nol1od goals in the match vs. Aadlerd. Perillo's avne In
the first of two CNertime sessions.
· On Sl.nday, Tracey llriUon scored off of Tower's corner ldcl&lt; at the 40:41 mar1&lt; ol the firat half tying the
match 81 ono. The match remained tied through the
second hall and bolh CNer1irna sessions aa the Hol&lt;les
OUlllhat the Royals 3&gt;12. UB's N'okki Pittaro stopped 22
sl1ola In the meldl ..
The Rovals l1IMII to Penn Slate 011 Friday night lot a
match"""" the Lady Lions. They ere at horne Sunday.
Oct 1 Ill fece Central CoMectJcut Slate at 11 a.m.

CllOU COUNIIIY

The Royall ~ second In a 15-team field Saturday
at the w..n OnWio Invitational at the Thames Valley
Golf Colne. The Royals SC0!8d 113 points behind only
hoot Weetem Onlarto with 53.
.
Judith Novak- the Royals' lop finisher crossing
the line -.In 18:40 rNfK the~ course.
Grelclal Welch- the Royals' next finisher In 19:31
for 23rd place.
.
The Bulls placed lourth with 109 points In the 14
_ , men's foetd. Syracuse loOk the lop spo1 scoring
59 points. Chris Keenan~ the 10 K race in
32:47. fourth CNeral, taamrna18 Chaifoe Moynihan
was~ in 32'.59.
Both teams travel to Miami ol Ohio next weekend lot
a~ with the Redsklns and Bowling Green.

_..,...

Coach Joe DoMa' _,., lltoff to a 4.{) record this falllncluding their 7-2 win CNer Youngstowll Stolll Sept. 19.
Frealvnan twy Borden Is off 1o an Impressive star1
with her 4.{) record 81 number four singleo for the Roy.... Staoev Glrgan Is $-0 at number five this year with
her fl.{), fl.{) win """' YSU't Kri8ty Zagolti.
Tha Royala , _ Siena on Friday 813 p.m. and Pil18·
~ al'lO a.m. II the lkWeraily Tonnia Center.

_..,...

Ill*...,.,-

thanks to their 6-1 win"""'
~ Conterance f6e Yomgo~C&gt;Wn Stale at the
l.iWerdy Temlo CU&gt; lalt - .
SIIMI o.tm, W8dle Kawar, Mike Proulx, ArtdrfNI
Galtler and Pradeep Aebela each look alnglos wins to
lead CC*lh Russ Crispell's Bulls. UB also swept the
three doubles matches.
-Tad W'IISicO, Sports Information Office

The

The Reporter web:Jmes letters from readers commenting on rrs stori8S and content Letters shoulc1 be
tx/81 and may be ocliled fof style and lenglh

Actions that can help prevent date rape
TO ALL MEMBERS OF 111E CAMPUS COMMUNITY:
Welcome to the beg1nn1ng of a new school year We hear a lot about the
meantng of a untverstty expenence A unwerstty IS a communtty wtth stmt larities to a Ctty. town or ne1ghborhood We can't expect to have a · ,usr
or -caring · communlly unless we take responstblhty lor how we treat each
other Thts means that we beheve tl ts tmportant to respect the nghts ano
care about the well-betng of each member of the UB communtty
In our community, date/acquatntance rape 15 unacceptable Date rape
ts defined as forced. unwanted tntercourse wtlh a person you know
Please make no mtstake about tl 11 ts an act of vtolence ll•s not a cnme
of pass1on or merely a resuU of mtscommuntcauon It ts an attempt to as
sert power It ts a vtolation of one's body and one's 1rust
To help prevent date rape
1-Become clear about your needs and wtshes m a relat•onsh•P
2-Communtcate clearly Be drrect. assertive
3· Do not make assumpltons! No means NO
4-Make sure lnends know where and wtth whom you are gotng out.
and when to expect you back.
5-Get away from anyone who makes you feel uneasy
6·Don't gtve m to pressure
7-Be aware of how much alcohol you 've consumed Alcohol and drugs
may cloud your Judgment-and your date 's'
8-Don't leave a party or soctal event wllh someone you have JUSt mel
9-Have your first date w1th someone new tn a publtc place
II you feel your nghts have been vtolated . please go 10 fnends who
can give you emottonal support. Contact Pubhc Safety, whtch employs female officers specifically tratned to asstst you Pubhc Safety, faculty and/
or staff members can put you tn contact wtth a counselor Or you may call
the Counsefmg Center. 645-2720. or Crtsts Serv•ces Hot L1ne . 834-3131
Remember that date rape ts never the vtcttm's fault For further lnlorma lton, contact the Counseling Center. 645-2720. the Ant•-Rape Task Force
645-3322. or the Sexuality Educatton Center . 829-2584
Yours truly.
STAFF OF TH£ COUNSEUNG CENTER

OBITUARIES

Irving E. Hagadorn, 85,
longtime surgeon
lrvtng E Hagadorn. 85, tongttme Bul lalo surgeon and a !acuity membet at
the UB medtcal school. d1ed Sept 10
•n Buffalo General Hosp1tal alter a
lengthy Illness
Hagadorn attended UB ana
CamstuS College and graduated tn
1937 !rom med1cal school at Loyola
Umversuy. Chicago He returned to
Buffalo and served on the stall at Buffalo General and Children's hospitals
He was a member of the Amertcan
College of Surgeons. the New York
State Soc•ety of Surgeons as well as
the AMA and New York State and Ene
County med1cal soc1e!tes
Funeral serv•ces were pnvate

Joseph Macmanus, 84,
surgeon, clinical prof
THIS WEEK
Con tinued from page 8
t h~ Center for the Art.s on the Nonh
Campus. These cables will be set up

throughout the semester-on Mondays
from 10-1 1 a.m. in 926 Clemens. and on

Mo ndays and Wednesdays from 12:301:30 p.m. in the Center for the Arts C.fe
For infonnation, call Prof. Fnmk
Pelliconc: at645-2 191.

A nwthelll.tl~l cow.petttlon
Undergraduates are invited to panicipate

m tilt 56th annual Putn4m Mathematical
Compct uion, wh1ch wi ll take place Dec .
2 It is the most prestigious competitio n
m mathematics at the undergraduate level
111 North America. Entry forms and information may be obtained from the Math ·
ematics Undergmduate Office, 11 9
Diefendorf Ha ll , South Campus. Deadline for registration is Oct. 6.

ln.Jtructlollll Support T«.bnidan (In·
ternal Promotional Opportunity. SLJ) -Office of In formation Resources.
Posting IP-5013 . Staft' As!Jistanl (Internal Promotional Opportunity, St..-.2)Law Libr.uy, Posting IP-5034. Senior
Programmer Analyit (lntemal Promo-tional Opportunlly, SIA)-Equal Opportunity/Affinnative A.ction. Posting
IP-5038. Personnel Auoc:iate (MP-5)Personnel Services, Posting lfP-5041. lnstrucllonal Support Technkian (Sl.-l) ·
Computing &amp; Information Technology.
Posti ng fiP-5036. Senior Programmer
Analytvl (SL-4)-Cumputing &amp; lnforma-

110n Technology, Posting IP-5037. Oif'Kior of Development (MP· JB)· Un•·
versity Advancement &amp; Development ,
Posting IP-5042 .

FIICUfty
AssiJtant/As.sodate/Full Profw;or -An·
esthesiology. Posting • ~ 40024. Associate
Proft:SSOr-Anthropology, Posting IJF5025. Assistant Professor-Anthropol ogy, Posting lfF-5026. Aftlstant/Assoc:iale Professor-Sociology, Posting
lfF-5027 . Assista nt Professor· Ptlilosophy, Posting lfF-5028 . A.uoc:iate/Full
Professor-Geography. Posting lff-5029.
Associate/Full Profestor-Geography.
Post ing lfF-5030. As.siJ't:ant Proressor Economics. Posting NF-5031 . As.'ilstant
Professor· History. Posting •F-5032 . As·
sistantJAssociate/Ful l Professor (two
positions available) -Poli tical Science.
Posting Iff-SOB. Assista nt Prores.!iOr ·
Political Science. Posting I'F-5034 . AJ·
sistant Professor-Psychology. Posting
•F-5035. Assistani/AssodatefFull Pro-.
fessor (two posit tons available)-Psy chology , Posting W:F-5036
N~tltlve

s.mc.

Claulflecl Civil

Plumber and Steamfitter (SG-12)-Un• ven:ity Facilities. Une ilf43127 . Lodtsmilb (SG-11)-Univenity Facilities.
Line 83 1642. Maintenance Assista nt·
Plumber/Steamfitter(SG-09) -Univen:i ty
Facilities, Line "20986.

eo.petltlve Claalflecl Civil
....Ice
Keyboard SpedaUst I (SG-06)-Equal
Opportu nity/A ffinn ativc Action. Line
1122690. Keyboa rd Specialis t I (SG -

06) -Admiss\Ons. Lmes lfH815 . 11'34821,1
Keyboard Specialist I (SG-{)6)-Purchasing, Line N30892. Computer Opentor (SG- 10) -Compuung &amp; In forma ·
tion Technology. Lmt IJ3239J
Secntary 1 (SG- 11 )-Carttr Pla.nmng
and Placement, Lmt lf3257S

Reeearch
Project Admin islntive Officer- Dev~l ­
opment. Posting •R -95078. Project Staff
Associate-Developme nt , Posting lfR 95089. Project Staff As~iate· De\·elop­
ment, Posting •R-95090. Secnlary 11 Medicine. Posting lfR -95092. C le rk
11 -SPS Purchasing . Posting lfR -95087
To obtain morr mfomwtiftn vn JUbt
lisud ab&lt;w~. contact Prrscmnr-1 Sf'n• ~e 'f'J .
/04 Crofts Hull.

Servtces wete held Sept 9•n Ptkesvllle
Md . lor Joseph Macmanus 84 . a sur geon who played a P•votal rote tn estaOitshtng the open heart surgtcat set ·

v•ce at Buffalo General Hosptlal
Ma cmanus d1ed Sept 6 m Johns
Hopktns Bayvtew Genatnc Center •n
Balt1more
Macmanus who rece1ved hts medtcal degree from Harvard Unrverstty tn
1936. was a surgeon tn Buffalo from
1942 unltl h1S rettrement tn 1974 He
was an attending surgeon and chtel ol
D•v•s1on Ill at BuHalo General Hosp•tal.
where he was credtted With spearheadtng the eftort •n 1959 to obtatn a
large grant cnttcalto the establishment
ol the open heart surgteal serv1ce He
was also a consu lttng surgeon at
Children's Hosp•tat and at Roswell Park
Memonal (now Cancer) lnsltlute
Affiliated With the US medteal schOOl
throughout h1s r:.areer •n Buffalo. he
was appo1nted an ass1stant•n surgery
tn 1942 ancJ served as ct1ntca1 professor of surgery tram 1961 to 1972
He was a past prestdent of the Er1e
County Medtcal Soc•ety. Ene Counly
Chapter olthe Amencan Cancer Soctety . Heart Assoc•at10n ol Ene County
and Bullate Surgtcat Soctety

Boyer, Headrick to speak at
memorial for Alan Freeman
A gatherin g to remember the late A lan
Freeman. U B l aw professo r. noted author and ex pert in constitut iOnal l aw,

wi ll be held at 3 p.m. on Thursday.
Oct. 12. in the theater in the Student
Union o n the Nonh Campus.
Speakers in the program wi ll in -

clude Barry B. Boyer. dean of the UB
Sc hool of Law. and Thomas E.
H eadrick. UB provost and fonncrdean
of the school.

The popu l ar professor and proltfil·
wnte r died M ay 26 following a long
illness. He joi ned the UB law faculty FREEMAN
in 1982 after serving one year as a
visi ting professor. H e and hi s wife . B~o:tty Mensch. a UB professor of
l aw. co-a uth ored "The Poli tics of Virtue : I s Abortton Debatable '\"
which advocates introducin g theological thought tnt o the publtc
debate on abortion to bring about a compromise between the two
sides oft he volati le iss ue. They al so autho red a text on property law.
and collabora ted on numerous book chapter!~.. artH: I c!~. in kg:.ll
journals. essays. reviews and commcntane"

�8

. . . . .......

...................

"-lt..-ter .............. fw.....ta~ ..... -~-- . . . . . . . .w.-. .............. ......
~

w.u..----~

~

~.l.II CNfta.• ~( ~). O..P'AX .......... ~

...........

BloloCJcool Sc:lenceo
Tb~

Cardiopulmonary Cent er
Seminar
EfTn-b or Suslltint'd
Jl ypen:apni11 on Cen:br11l Hlood
fo1ow in H uman~: Tht' NASA fo:SA Joint C0 1 Study, Dr Juhn
A Kr.J, OC) Dtpt nf J&gt;h y'i ml ugy
lUX S h~·nnan South C:unpu'
X J rn

Dlaabllltlea Sem i nar
l'hr Amt'rkon!' ~i l h lli~ahilitit''i
Act : Wh.11t 'Jo In II Fur \ ou ?
M)lh " · Re.alily, J:imeJo J
V..'~hm,m . E1oq . kt' ymue .. pc:al..c-r
~ lud cm

U mon North C:1mpu'
II '\0 a m -J 30 p 111 l·m mforma

11 . ~.· all WNY lndcpcm.lcnl Ll\
mg
mer, 836-082:!

Socl•l ork Workshop
A Tninio ' Retreat (or Womrn:
l n tc-grut klg
Then~py . Do

iriluMiily in
te Colhn\. FirM ul'
I WO SCSS IIlll .l.
llSO rc d by Soc1al
Work CunllnUI g Educall on
Stella N1agara. LeYm10n 8·4 5
a m -3 JO p.m. $105 To rtg1stcr.
ca ll 645 ·6 140

ASCIT Workshop
Pine Mail/UN IX. 10 am -Noon
To n:g•slcr, ca ll Ac11dcmtc Serv•ces. Computmg and lnfo nnat10n
Techno logy User L1a1son office at
b45-J540.

--r
-·- . . .

Cell BloloO

Problem s or Embryonit Cell
F11te and Asym metry Solved
W ilh Spatially Resoh·ed Dye
Un-cagi ng, Ruben Summers.
Ph.D 306 Farber Smuh Campus
12 30 pIll

French Featlv•l Poetry
Lecture
M~:~ N ar m i 's Art , Lul'Ctt e Finns
438 C lemens Nonh Campus.
12. 30 p m Free . Pan of'' Wednco;days at-l Plu ~o"

Regula ted ExprHSion or a
Neurosporo Gene During
Asexual Spore Develop ment. Dr
Su: phen Free. I 14 Hochstetler
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

-....uca Coll-lum
Examples of Fundament.11l
Group!!: of Smooth Projec:tivr
Varieties, Prof. Mohan
Ramachandran IU) D1dcndorf
Sou1h Campus -l p m

Phannaceutlca S.mlur

I ~~~~~n~~~~~o::a:~i!~~;~o"
P:m:'h Dandona. M D 508
! Cooke Nunh Campus. 4 p m

Sbttlatlca Colloquium
Ho"· Are Bayesian.s Trying To
Be Objec:Un in Model Seleclion
Problems? Dr. Jacek
Drnochowsk1 24-l C'ary Sou lh
Campus. 4 p.m

Urban Educ-tion
Colloquium
Politics o r Urb.11n Ed ucation :
Pollciet ror t be Next Cent ury,
Rober1 Bennett , Regent of the
State of New York. and Prcsidcn t
of United Way of Buffalo and
Eric Coun1y. Center for To mo rrow . No r1h Campus. 4 p.m. Free

Artl)peftlft&amp;
3 Printmakers. Work by Rhode
Island printmaken Ltslie
Bostrom, Stephen Fisher. and
Nancy Friese. Show runs through
Oct. 21. Ar1 Department Gallery.
Cenler fo r the Ans Nonh Campos . 5 -7 p.m.
Gerwalln FilM
Wenn ic.b tin Vogel wire, Rua
Kuczynski . llle filmmaker's
childhood in divided Berlin of !h e
1950s ' 120 Clemens. Nor1h Ca mpus 1 :30 p.m.

He•tth Selene••
Colloquium
Spotlight on Women 's Hu ll h,
Dr Maunzto TrtVIl&gt;Uil . Jo
Osborne, Dr. Saleh Fetouh. and
Su1..annt' Wilson. Presented by the
Western New York Health Se t·
cnccs Ltbrarians. Heallh Sciences
L•brary . South Campus 1-S p.m.
S5 For rescrvauon call 829-3402.

Internet RHOun:H -PLicesfor UN IX Users. 10 a.m.-Noon.
To reguter. call Academic S~r­
vices, Computing and Information
Technology User Liaison offi ce a1

6-15-3540.

Arena. North Cam(KIS. 7 a.m.

Blopltyaical Selene••
._
......

C-latry~--

Co ngenital Myaslhenic Syn·
dromts, Dr. Andrew Engel. Mayo
Fo unda!ton 134 Cary South
Campus Noon.

Teleconfereace

1&gt;45-3540.
Children and Youth
ColloquiuM
C hild Protec:tlen Policy Rerorm,
Ho ward Davidson. ABA Center
on Chi ldren and the Law , Wa.s hmgton, D.C. 545 0' Brum Nonh
Campus 3:30p.m
GermanRe.clln&amp;
Die Zitadelle, Rna Kuczy n s ~t ­
East Gennan wruer read~ from her
lalest novd 930 Clemens Nonh
Ca mpus J 30 p.m

Women' • StuiQea Lecture
Wom en and t h~ C ha nKinK
Struct ure or H igher Ed ucation,
Prof. Shetl a Slaughu:r. Univ of
Ari zona. Tucson. 4 10 Cleme ns
Nonh Campus 3·30 p.m

Prof. Kenneth Houk, UCLA .
Open to pros peclivc students and
alumni. Natural Sciences &amp; Math·
ema1ics Co mplex . Nonh Campus.
10 a.m. To register. call645·6800.
ext. 2194.

M.,.'aTennla

Aeademic lntqrity: T he Trulh
or the Mau er. 120 Clemens.
North Campus. 1-3 p.m .

UB Bulls vs. Duquesne. Ellicott
Couns. North Campus. II a.m.

Computer Science Lecture

WBFO-

Reading Names a nd Add resses
on Tn Forms. Sargur N . SriharL
4 Knox . Nonh Campus. J-US p.m.

Vinyl Madons Ill. Records.
magazines. posters. !apes. COs
even. Allen. South Campus. I I
a.m.-6 p.m. $2; WBFO members
free . Call 829-2880.

UUP Foru•
T h~

Future or SUN'V . Moot Hall
Restaurant, Buffalo State College.
Sponsored by SUNY Buffalo HSC
Chapter. SUNY Buffalo Center
Chap1er. Buffalo Slate College
Chapler. Call 878-5732 .

w....... , ......
UB R oyals vs. Siena. Ell icoct
Coons. Nonh Campus. J p.m .

a.n..- Lecbore
Germany, Five Yean After Unlrication-a n East Germa n Perspective., Rita Kuczynski. 280
Park. North Campos. 3:30p.m.

-*'~-

John Mc:Kdvey, Eastman Kodak.
2 15 Natural Sctences &amp; Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 4 p.m.

Men'• Soccer

ASCIT Workshop
Introduction to S un. Noon-2
p.m. To rcgis1er, call Academic
Servi~s . Computing and Informatio n Technology User Liaison office at 645-3540.

...... ,.....

___ . _
,

UB Bulls vs. Sienna. Ellico u
Couru. North Campus. 2 p.m.
A L itany ror Su rvival: The L ire
a nd Work of Audre Lorde.
Scrttning Room. Center for the
Aru. No rth Campus. 1 p.m. 54, $6.

Suncla-..

Great ... kH LllnC

'
Pediatric
Grand Rounda
Perinatal Bereavem ent. William
Zorn. Ph.D. Kinch Audi!o rium,
Children' s HospitaL 8 a.m
Operation lnro nn. Workshops
for high-school cou nselors. Spon sored by SUNY College Admlssmns Professions . S1udent Unio n.
No nh Campus. 8 a.m.-12 :30 p.m.
To rcgister. call 645 -6900.

Socl•l Work Workshop
A Trainin&amp; Retreat for Wom en :
ln t~ra t in&amp; Spiritua lity in

I n Search or Genes ror Asthma,
Noc Zamel . M.D.. Umv. of
Toronto. Through Oct. 1. Sponsors include the UB Division of
Pulmonary and Critical Cart. Pillar and Post Inn, Niagara-on-theLake, Ont. 7:30p.m. For infonnatton. ca11645-20 18.

I•J
Voller"-' I
Vo ll~y ba ll

Tourn ament. Alumnt

SIOIIIrs Brodlers
to perform Oct. 14
The Smothers Brothers will bring their unique style
of comedy-to UB Oct. 14 as part of Parents and
Homecoming Weekend '95. Sponsored by the Office of Student Life with support from UUAB, their
performance will be at 8 p.m. in Alumni Arena.
In addition to the Smothers Brothers. the performance will include an opening act by comedian
Fred Greenlee and special guest The Yo Yo Man,
with music director Michael Preddy.
Tickets are $12 in advance and $14 at the door,
and fire available at the UB ncket Office, 221 Student Union. For more lnformatiOfJ, call645-6125.

l'hrsloloCY
Cakium:
Control oC
a Charism a tic Calioa . Mokcul.a.r M«.banisms a nd C lillkal Collllderatioos, Da,•id J. Triggle. Ph .D..
Dean. School of Pharmacy. 108
Shennan. South Campus. 4 p.m.
Muolc
Baroque Beyond Belid', Amhent
Sa.xophone Quanet. Works of
Gibbons, Bach. Handel, Purcell,
Dowland. Slee Concen Hall.
North Campus. 8 p.m. S.S, $10.

SKRUR
Sixt h Ann ual Li nda Vale.m Me-morial Ru n. In memory of Lind3
Yalem. UB studenl assaulted and
murdered while running ncar the
campus. Alumni Arena. Nonh
Campus. 10 a.m. Registration is
$12 if by 9n.9: $15 day of race:
SIO UB students. Fo r infOtmalio n.
call 645 -3 141.

....

1-.tly_l_
The Role oftbe Ublq uitinprotea.'fOme Pathwa y in NF-kB
A~tlva lion , James Chen,
Myogenics, Inc. 1348 Farber.
Sooth Compos . 4 p.m.

P uula Ia UlNA Splicioz, 0&lt;.

Eric Phiric:ky. Univ. ofRoc.hester.
Ill Hoc.ttsteuer. North Campus.
4 p.m.

-~-­

PolyDOm la.l Oripml, Prof. Jobn
Isbell. 103 Diefendod. Soutb
Campua. 4 p.m.

Rol, Ri&lt;lw&lt;IIL Almon. Ph.D.
508 Cooke. North Carnpu5- 4 pm.

-

-ell P..t&lt; St.rr

T elomerase, Celllmmortalily,
a nd Caottr , Dr. Karen Prowse.
Geron Corp .• Menlo Pvt. California. RPCI. Elm and Carlton .
I 2:30p.m.

Pftrolca-

Profs. D. L Lia ud M endel
Sachs. 220 Natural Sciences &amp;.
Mathematics Complex. Nonh
Campus. 3:45 p.m.

·

"'--1--

!

T ri-lodotbyrod.ine In O pen
Htar1 Surca-y: Hopes, Diuppointmeots a nd Questions,
Daniel Walters. 248 Cooke. No nh
Campus. 8 a.m.

Opuo:c-.uve
Ma ttbew Hayd en, baritone. a.nd
Katherine Littlerw.kl, piano.
Concerts arc taped for broadcast
on WBFO 88.7 FM the follo wing
Sunday a!4 p.m. Allen Hall .
South Campus. 7 p.m. Free.

..,..._
,_
Show b y - Island
printmakcrs l..ealit: Bostrom.
Slq&gt;l&gt;en Fuhu. and Nancy Friese.
opens 1oday with a reception from
S-1 p.m. in the Art Oepattraent
Gallery located in the' Center for
the Ans. North Campus. Tbc
show. which includes lithographs.
etchings, woodcuts. and
mezzotints. continues through
Oct . 2 1. Gallery hours arc TuesdDy. 10 a.m.· S p.m.; Wednesday.
Thursday. and Friday , 10 a.m.-8
p.m.; Saturday, I I a.m.-8 p.m.

voto··--

c:o.tl ..... ~
Alfonso Yolo is a poet and an anist
whose work is on view through
No v. S in the: University Gallery,
Center for the Arts. North Campus.

U.......MdhC..-Ic

-•AIDS
Western N~w York Fall Conrer~
entt on AIDS: Sexuality &amp; HlV.
Buffalo Convention Center. 8:30
a.m .-4 p.m . Registration $125
physicians. $100 ochers. S35 full time students . For informal ion.
call 645-2018.

__._ -·-

Author Tom Peters a nd basketbaU coach Jlm B arrick. Pe1cn.
who will present a program based
on his book ""The Pursuit of
WOW ,'' is sponsored by Wyncom
and the Center for Entrepreneurial
Leadership in the UB School of
Managemenl . lntemalional AgriCemer. Eric Coumy Fairgrounds.
Hamburg. 9 a.m.-4:30p.m. Tuitio n $445. To register. call 1-800..
873-345 1.

-

Ph..-maeodyaaakt of Cortk~
sterokt EtrccU oa Made 1D the

WBFOVInyl M a d ness Ill . Records,
magazines. posters. tapes. COs
even. Alle n. South Campus. I I
a.m.-6 p.m. $2; WBFO members
free . Call 829-2880.

lu re and Geno mic F uocdoa. Dr
Ronald Berc.zney. 306 Farber.
Sooth Campus. 12:30 p.m.
........,... Scleoocee

3--

Footbell
UB Bulls ' '5. Villa nova. UB S!a·
dium. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m. For
ticket infonnation. ca ll 645-6666.

c-..ce

ASCIT Workshop
SPSS fo r UN IX. 1·30-4 30 p.m
To register. call A ca d crni~· Servu.:cs. Computing :md Information
Technology User Lm1$0 il offi ce at

Volunteers scoured the shores of Lake LaSalle Sept. 23 in the Fifth
Annual Great Lakes Beach Sweep, sponsored this year by the Air &amp;
W!!Ste Management Association _Left. Darrell Mayer, a sopllomore,
tallies the garbage as Fred Rhoades, a senior, comes by with more_

ASCIT Workshop

UB Bulls vs. Siena. Varsi ty Field.
Nonh Campus. 1 p.m.

ASCIT Workshop
Maple for Wi ndows. 1-4 p.m. To
rcgtstcr, t:all Acadcm1c Servtcc:s ,
Cumputmg and lnfu nnuiiOil Technology u~ r Lmtsun office at 6453540

Th~rapy, Bo nnie Collins. Second
of two sessions. Sponsored by SoCUll Work. Continui ng Educa1ion.
Ste lla Niagara. Lewiston. 8:45
a.m.-3:30 p.m. $ 105. To register,
call 645-6140.

Wwkoloop
Record Kffplnc and Docum entat ion, Andrew O ' Brien. Spon·
soR:d by Institute for Addictions
Studies and Training. Daemc:o
College, 4380 Main St .. Amherst.
9 a.m.--4:30p.m. SilO; fin t pan of
two-day workshop. To registtr,
caii64S-6140.

OT-1111
Otc:upaliooal T herapy Pre--Ma j o r M eetiap. Ill Kimball
Tower. South Campus. II a.m.
and Noon.

- ·
_,. -

Tbe Center for Anxiely Research
seeks individuals 18 and older
who suffer from panic anacb to
panicipate in non-drug treatment
research conducted at the center,
which is part of the UB Department of Psychology. Those urklergoing psychotherapy are noc eJi·
gible. For information. call Gayle
Beck at645-36SO, ext 337.

.......... ..._..w
.....,.,_y ..

The School of Pharmacy announces a ~shadow program" for
studenlS considering careers in the
field of pharmacy. StudenlS would
gain cntrtt to wortplaces of UB
al umni. The program Was initiated
by !he UB Pharmacy Alumni As·
sociation. For information. call the
School of Pharmacy Office of Admissions at 64S-2825.

ltJIIIMcon•lf you wish an Italian conversalion
you may want to visit the Language Tables in Clcmens Hall and

CelllllofoCY

Connecllnc Nudear Archil« ·

Conlinued on page 7

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

GPiiiP ID llllkiD
VDIIIgflcully0ct.9
The date of President William A.
Greiner's message to the voting
faculty has been postponed.
His address now will be held at
2 p.m. Monday, Oct. 9 in the
University Gallery in the Center
for the Arts.

September 21, 1995

Volume 27 , No. 4

Faculty Senate to restudy issue of
undergraduate teaching,assistants
lly STEVE COX

Reporter Staff

T

he future of undergradu-

ate teaching assistants
(UT As) will be reexam ined by the Faculty Senate thi s year after

President Greiner declined to

imp lement a resolulion o n liT As
passed by the Faculty Senate last
spring. Members of the Faculty

Senate Executive Comminee re-

\

ferred the proposal. along with a
letter from Greiner outlining his
o bjection s, to its Educational Programs and Po licies Committee at a
meeting Sept. 13.
In an Aug. 24 letter to Faculty
Senate Chair Claude Welch.
Greiner returned the resolution
rather than pro mulgating it as uni ~ersity policy. speci fically asking
1qSead that the Senate further consider .. which students are qualified
to serve as instructors" and "by
what process do we ensure (that
UT As) have re levant credentials to
ensure their disciplinary and pedagogical competence?" Welch re-

minded members that while the
Senate's role is advisory by charter, their advice is "almost always
taken by the president. We just
might have to advise twice on thi s."
Without a polic y in place.
courses that make use of UTAs
could be endangered . Nicolas
Goodman . vice provost for undergraduate ed uca tion . told FSEC
members that he suggested to the
Women · s Studies Department, in
response to their inquiry . that
courses that employ UTAs o nl y be
offered as c urrentl y constituted for
one more year. However. Women ·
Studies Pro fessor Liz Kennedy said
she was confident that an agreement could be reached. "As I un derstand it. the o nl y iss ue is the
qu alifications of the st udents as
instructors." Kennedy said . "Since
our sta ndards of selec tion are quite
high, I am confident something can
be wo rked oul."
FSEC members also heard from
Provost Thomas Headrick. who
out li ned his strntegy for dealin g
with the coming year's state bud -

get. Although Gov. Pataki 's budget director has put an overall budget cut or roughly $150 to SUNY
in 1996-97 on the table, Headrick
believes that changes in the overall
management of SUNY as a system
and changes in tuition policy could
enable UB to escape without further cuts. "Cuuing UB's budget
funher would be cou nterproducti ve to the interests of the state.'·
said Headrick.
Headrick advocates "estimat ing the elastici ty" of ruition for
popular and professional programs.
He believes that differential tu ition. either c harging different rmes
of tuilion at different campuses or
between different programs. will
be given se rious cons ideration by
the Trustees thi s year. In the pas t.
they ha ve ruled out such a policy .
However, a committee of
SUNY Trustees is currenlly un denaking an examination of all
SUNY campuses and programs in
developing a proposa l for rea li gnContinued on page 2

Plants, animals: not so different
BJ ELUN GOLDBAUM
News Bureau Staff

ochemists at UB have
taken un enzyme from a
acterium found in plants
nd, to their surprise. genetically e ngi neered a m utant that
has an important property normally
found in the a nima l version of the
enzyme: It requires zinc instead of
magnesi um to fu nction properly .
The enzy me was inserted back
into the bacteri um, which was introduced into soybean seedlings.
The plants containi ng the mutant
grew normally, demonstrati ng that

B

the animal version could function
in plants. The research was published in the Aug. 25 issue of the

Journal of Biological Chemislry.
According to the authors. the research has imponantapplications for
protein engineering and research on
agriculture and the environment. It
also provides insight into the differ·
ences between plants and animals.
" It was very surprising that we
were able to a lter a fundamental
property by making only a small
change in lhe enzyme." said Mark
R. O'Brian. associate professor of
biochemistry at UB and lead au-

thor. UB postdoc toral researcher
Sari ta Chauhan wa~ co-author. By
changing just four amino acids in
this 353-amino acid protein, the researchers deve loped a mutant en zyme that require ~ zi nc to functio n.
" It was equal!} surpri sing that
the enzyme fun c t ion~ in bac teria l
cells when they are put back into
the plant ...
Brian sm d.
ln making the altered enzyme.
the researchers have demonstrated
the potential for enzyme engineer·
ing. wherescientistscandesign new
enzymes with special properti es.
O'Brian added that what may
be even more illu minating is wha t
the research contributes to know I·
edge about the sc ientific differ·
ences between plants and animaJ s.
" It may be difficul t to believe. but
at the molecular level. plants and
animals are more similar than lhey
are diffe rent,'' said Brian. 'That is
why pesticides used to kill plants can
be potentially harmful to people and
animals. Defining speci fic molecu·
lar differences between plants and
animal s may aid the development of
safer. more effective pesticides."
The knowledge also can be applied in phytoremediation. in which
plants are used to clean up sites
where soils have been contaminated
with tox ic levels of metals. 0' Brian
said. Tile work may also contribute
towanl understanding how proteins
with desi111ble properti~s can be
engineered for medical. agricultural and commerc ial uses.
,.

o·

o·

AAna Day lor Falltest
Blessed Union of Souls pertoons for an enthusiastic crowd
of 3,500 at Fallfest '95 held Sept.16 at Baird Point. With the
weathe(s cooperation, students enjoyed music . impromptu
artists and the wares of crafts vendors.

'Crime of century' ·
why it fascinates
Lecturer explains i mpact on public Imagination
By CHRISnNE VID"L
Reporter Edtlor

ARY EARL ROSS ha!&gt; been studymg murde rers fo r years.
Jack the R1pper. Lizz1e Borden . Joh n Wilkes Booth and
others -he'!-. researched thei r crime~. vis ited thei r h o me ~
and the s1tes of thc1r murder ~. studied newspapers and
photogra phs and a utop~;~ y repon s.
Ross discussed "The Urge 10 Kill : Murder throug h the Ages" Sept. 15
10 the Center for Tomorrow a~ pan o f the Senior Alumni Lecture Sene'
sponsored by A lu mni Relati ons.
" My interest in homicide is strictl y" wri t er'~ 1nt e rc ~ t ." Ross rea!-lsured
hi ~ audience. "A~ a writer l' m concerncd with why we kill and why we're
fasc in ated wllh why we J...ill. "
R os~. a lec turer in the Educational Op portunll y Center. ha ~ pur-.ued h1~
fascination wi th murder for yea r ~ . What make:-. murder fascinatmg . he
says. is not the everyday . on-the -stree t J...•llin g but c rim e~ that ove rwhelm
ou r ability to absorb them .
"Ordinary murd er i~ no more exciting. int~rc ~ung and note worthy than
walking the dog . If you're personally mvo lved. you may disagree. On I)
when murder becomes personal doe~ it become ~ome th i n g we need lO
react to.'' said Ross .
"Ordinary murder does not capt ure ouz: imagination. What does is
murder tha t i ~ on a di fferent type o f sc ale .'' a "c rime of the ce ntury "
murder.
These murders share three elemen ts : ma uve. method and magnitude.
Ross said . There mu st be somet hing extrao rdinary about at least two of
those things-a motive so unimagi nabl e. a method so horrible . an assa ult
of such magn itude that we're disgusted by the crime-for a murder to
qualify as a "c rime of the ce ntury."
"O ur time s are ex lnlOrdinaril y vio lent . but the hum an spec1es has
always li ved in violent times ." Ross said. " If you stud y hi story enough.
you'll find we ' ve a lways lived in violent times as a ~;~per: 1 e::o. .... The se t ype~
of crimes have always been committed."
One of the earliest mass murderers in recorded h1story was Locu-.ta of
Ancient Rome. "a master creator of potion~" who pOisoned hundred" of
people. Ross sa id. A contrac t killer who ke pt a stab le of slaves on whom
to try ou t her potio ns. her most fam o us victim was thc Roman Emperor
C laudius I. She also ran a sc hool for poisoners: she and he r student.. an:
believed to ha ve collectively killed 10.000 people .
Another earl y mass murder appt:ared in Sco tland in tht: 15 th t:c ntu r) .
Ross said. Travelers to a country fair were accosted by "s ubhuman
savages" who killed a woman a nd drank her blood. Another traveler 10 her
pany survived the attack and a search of the forests turned up the awnc)
Beane family . "Sawney Beane was a general reprobate as a youth." who
married a woman much like him self. Refusing to work. they moved into
a cave near the sea. where they and soon their offspring survived by
murdering travelers and dining on their victims. When arrested. Snwney
Beane and his wife had eight sons. six da ughte rs. 18 grandsons and 14
granddaughters. All 48 were taken to Edinboro and executed.

G

Continued on page 3

�2

........ as..~v.e.-.27, ......

Poet Laureate leads off 1995-96 speakers series

lly MAltY HTN SPINA

·

News Bureau Staff

T

HE UNIVERSITY'S popular Distingui shed Speaker Series will
open Oct. II with a lecture by
Rita Dove, U.S . poet laureate,
winne r of the Pulitzer Prize for
poetry in 1987 and Commonwealth Profes-

sor of English at the University of Virginia.
The 1995-96 seri es will al so present
David G erge n.j oumali st and former preside nti al po lit ical advi sor, author Gail
Sheehy and " information superhighway"

ex pert a nd te lev isio n/co mmuni cation s
exec uti ve Howard Stringe r.
Eac h lec ture will be at 8 p.m. in the
MainStage Theatre in the Ce nter for the
Arts on the North Campus.
The se ri es 1s presented by UB and the
Do n Da vis Auto World Lec tureship Fund.
Key Bank is series spon sor, with the
Amherst Chamber of Commerce as affili ate sponsor. Contribu ting spon sors are the
Buffalo Marriott, UB Center for the Ans ,
Makin ' Copies. UB Alumni Association and
the James Fenton Lecture Foundation.
Rita Dove. who opens the series. was the
youngest person and first African -American
to receive the highest official honor in Ameri can lcners when she was appointed U.S . Poet
Laureate and Consultant in Poetry in 1993 .
Her appointment was rene wed in 1994 and
continues through Octo ber.
Dove is the author o f the poetry collection s, 'lhe Yellow House o n the Co mer: ·
" Mu seum," 'lhomas and Beulah.'' "Grace
Notes" and "Mother Love." "Thomas and
Beulah." a collection of poems loosely based
on her grandparents ' lives. earned her the
1987 Pul itzer Pri ze in Poetry. making her the
second black poet to receive the Pulitzer.
Her other publications include a novel.
'Through the Ivory Gate;" a verse drama.
'The Darker Face of the Earth," and a shortstory collection. "Fifth Sunday." A commissioner of the Schomburg Center for Research
in Black Culture at the New York Public
Library since 1988. Dove is an associate
editor of "Callaloo," the pre-eminent magazine for African-American ans and literature.
The holder of I 0 honorary degrees . she
was named one of 10 "Outstanding Women
of the Year 1993" by Glamour and recently
received the Great Ameri can Artist Award
from the NAACP. Dove' s lec ture will be
sponsored by just buffalo li terary center inc.
David Gerge n. journalist and poli tical
pundit and senior advi sor to four American
presidents, will speak No v. I. A senior ad vi-

sor to fo rme r Presidents Nixon. Ford and
Reagan . Gergen served between June 1993
and December 1994 in the Clinton Admi nistration as counselor to the president and
special advisor to President Clinton and Secretary of State Warren Christopher.
He is a visiting professor at the Terry
Sanford Institute of Public Policy at Duke
University, and a trustee and senior fellow of
the As pen Institute.
Gergen served as edito r-at -large for U.S.
News &amp; World Report from 1988 until hi s
appointment to the Clinton Admini stration.
From 1987-93, he teamed with columnist
Mark Shields on "The MacNeil/Lehrer
News Hour'' on PBS. Their coverage ofthe 1988
political campaign won them the title of "best
pundits" of the year by the " Political Almanac."
He is returning to 'The MacNeiVLehrer
NewsHour" as a weekly contributor. Hi s lecture will be sponsored by the UB Office of
Conferences and Special Events .

Gail Sheehy, who forged new landmark
perspectives on adult life as a series of predictable stages, will speak March 14.
Sheehy is the best-selling author of"Passages," 'The Silent Passage"-which was
on The N~w York Times bestsellers list for
more than two years -and the recent
bestseller. " New Passages: Mapping Your
Life Across Time' '.
A survey by the Library ofCongress placed
" Passages" among the top I 0 books that have
most influenced people ' s lives. Her new book
is based on her ongoing study of the second
adulthood for men and women. Sheehy frequently appears on "The Today Show,"

Grant aids Korean language, culture program
By JED NITZaERQ
Reporter Contributor

T

H E KOREA FOUNDATION· of
Seo~l. Korea. has made a grant of
$70,000 to the World Languages
Institute' s Korean Language and
Culture Program in the Depanment of Modem Languages and Li teratures
at UB . The grant, the first UB has received
from the major government agency of the
Republic of Korea that supports Korean studies overseas. wil l ass ist in fundi ng a fu ll -ti me
lecturer in Korean language and cuhure.
Only in its third ye3r of operation. the
foundation has committed major funds to
prestigious American universities such as
Harvard, Columbia, University of Michigan. University ofCalifomia-Berkeley. Uni versity of Tex as- Austin and the University
ofHaw&amp;i.
Among the Asian languages currently
offered by UB. Korean ranks second in total
enrollment to Japanese. In 1994-95, the

World Lang uages Institute Korean Program
attracted more than 140 students. many of
whom are Korean-American.
''For these students . Korean instruction is
an imponant means of developing their cultural identity and opening up career opportunities that demand fluency in Korean and
a knowledge of Korean and American culture," noted Mark A. Ashwill. director of the
World Languages Institute .
Kerry S . Grant, dean of the Fac ulty of
An s and Letters. said the immediate goal of
UB · s Korean program is to introduce a fouryear sequence of classroom language and
culture courses and to significantly increase
the visibility of. and in teraction with. Korean culture and Korean institutions at UB .
" Korea Foundation assistance will enable
UB to bui ld upon a solid base that has been
established overthe past 14 yeatS," he added.
Like other World Languages Institute
classroom offerings, the Korean program
uses an innovative team -teac hing approach

and has embraced computer-assisted instructional methods.
A program in Korean language and culture has been offered at UB since 1981
through the dedicated efforts of Sek Yen
Kim-Cho, who has devoted her life to helping Korean-Americans live in a multiculturaJ
society while maintaining a strong ethnic
and cultural identity through the study of
language and c ulture.
In addition to academic pursuits, she and
her husband Kah Kyung Cho, SUNY Distinguished ProfessorofPhilosophy, have spearheaded a campaign to attract private support
for the Korean language and culture program at UB. As a result of their efforts, the
university has received over $350,000 in
gifts and pledges since October 1994. These
private funds, along with the support from
the Korea Foundation, will be used to secure
matching resources from the university to
support a full-time tenure-track position. C

DIAECTOA Of PU6liCATIONS .,...,..,. .1. ~1' • EDROA ~ v.M • ASSOC IATE EDITOR ........... • AAT OIAECTOA

-ca.ou... •

"Nigblline," '"TheMacNeii/LehrerReport"
and 1bis Week With David Brinkley." An
original contributor to New York magazine
and a contributing editor d Vanily Fair,
· Sheehy has been crediled with eslablisbing a
oew genre of political writing. Her character
porll'llitsof world leadets, including Mikhail
Gcrbachev, Dan Quayle, Hillaty Rodbam
Clinlon and Saddam H~ won her !be
1991 WasiUngtonJoumaJI$rn&amp;viewAward
for Best Magazine Writer in America.
Sheehy is a member of the Women 's
Forum of New Vorl&lt;. on tbeboardofPoets
and Writers and on the board of advisors
to the Women 's Health Initiative for the
NllJ. Her lecture will be sponsored by
University Bookstores.
Howard Stringer, president of CBS/
Broadcast Group from 1988-95 and internationally recognized expert on the "information superhighway," will speak April 25.
During his presidency at CBS/Broadcast
Group , Stringer wa s credited with the
networi::'s turnaround, with strengthening
all broadcast divisions of CBS, Inc. and in
bringing David Letterman to CBS late night.
Regarded as one of !be most powerful and
respected media executives, be heads a multi million dollar media venture cnealed by Bell
Atlantic, NYNEX and Pacific Telesis, pit&gt;neering the use of !be nation's telephone networks to offer homes an array of direct
programming and inlenletive video services.
His presentation will be sponsored by !be UB
School of Management Alumni Association.
Series tickets for Tier! (oo:hestnl)are $67;
for Tier D (rear orchestra. front balcony), $58;
for Tier D (balcony). $49. UB faculty. staff.
alumni and senior citizens 60 and older will
receive a $9 series discounL Students will
receive an $18 series discount.
Individual speakers tickets range from $12$18 for Dove; $19-$25 forGergen; $15-21 for
Sheehy and $15-$21 for Stringer. Discounts
are $3 for UB faculty. staff and alumni and
senior citizens; $6 for students. A I 0 percent
discount is available for groups of ten or
more. Series subscriptions and discounts must
be purchased by mail order or in person at
Center for the Arts Ticket Office. Subject to
availability, tickets for indjvidual lectures
may be pun:hased at the door.
'J

FSEC
Continued from page 1
ing SUNY, due to the state legislature by
Dec. I . Headrick says that high on the list of
ideas being considered by these trustees is a
proposal put forward by President Greiner,
among others, that the University Centers be
separated from the rest of SUNY and housed
in a new legal structure known as a public
benefit corporation. Such an arrangement
would give the centers more nexibility to
operate and allow more admini strative decisions to be made loeally.
In other business, the FSEC considered
but took no action on a new policy on ''Data
Security, Access and Acceptable Use of
University Information." The draft policy,
presented by Senior Associate Vice President for University Services Valdemar Inn us.
seeks to balance the "right to know" of
faculty and administrators, and the need for
data on the part of researchers or investigators with the university's legal obligations to
maintain confidentiality, particularly with
respect to student records. The policy will
govern written and electronic data and becomes even more imponant, Inn us explained.
as access to electronic data becomes easier.
It designates cettain "data custodians" and
"data trustees" who will have responsibility
for securing compliance with the policy and
managing access to the university's vast
CJ
compilations of data.

f'MIQ//uOfntopucbun-'o ~leJI

�IHIKildlll

............ u..,._

Fitness expert to give
Perry lecture
Steven Blair directs r e - a . lit Cooper Institute
~LOISIIMD

News Bureau Staff

S

TEVEN N. BLAIR, director of

research, epidemiology and
clinical applications at the internationally recognized Coo-

per Institu te for Aerobics

Research in Dallas, Texas, will present the
1995 J. Walter Perry Lecture at 6 p.m. on
Friday. Oct. 13. in the Katharine Cornell
Theatre on the Nonh Campus.
The lecture wi ll be titled " Physical Activ·
ity and Fitness: Contributions to Long Life
and High Func tion ." Sponsored by the UB
School of Health Related Professions, it will
be free and ope n to the public.

The Cooper Institute is the research arm of
the Cooper Aerobics Center. fo unded in 1970
by Kenneth H. Cooper, M.D .. a fonne r U.S.
Air Force night surgeon and one of the carli·
est proponents of aerobic conditioning as the
key to physical fitness. His book, " Aerobics,"
made the concept a household word.

Blair was named director of epidemiology at the Cooper Institute in 1980 while he
was a professor in the School of Publi c
Heal th at the University of South Carolina.
He joined the Cooper Institute full-time in
1984. He remai ns an adjunct professor of
epidemiology and biostatistics at the Uni-

versity of South Carolina. and is also adj unct
professor of epidemiology at the University
of Texas Health Science Center's School of
Public Health.
A graduate of Kansas Wesleyan Uni versi ty, Blair holds master's and doctoraJ degrees in physical education from Indiana
University , and spent two years at Stanford
University School of Medici ne as a post-

BlAIR

doctoral scholar in preventive cardiology.
He is associate editor of Amuican Jour·
nal ofHealth Promotion and American Journal of Epidemiology. and serves on the
editorial boards of six additional journals. A
prolific writer, he has authored or co-authored
more than 150 scientific articles.
Blair is past presidcnl and a fellow of the
American College of Sports Medicine, and a
fe llow of the American College of Epidcmi·
ology, the Council on Epidemiology of the
American Hean Association and the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physica l
Education.
Blair has received several awards from
the American Allia nce for Health. Physical
Education. Recreation and Dance, was named
to the 1985 Runner ·s World All Star Team,
and is listed in "Who's Who in America."

3

¥ ...... 27 . .... ..

U.S. News ranks UB No. 15
anwng national universities
~ Almii.IR PAGE
News Bureau Director

OR THE SECOND year in a row .
UB has been ranked by U.S. News
&amp; World Repon as being a mong the
top nationa l universities in the country offering lhe best value -a qual ity education at a reasonable cost.
UB is ranked No. 15 among national
universities in the magazine 's ranking o f
instit.utions in that category that provide th e
best value in tenns o f "sticker price," which
includes tujtion plus room, board and fees.
The university moved up one spot on this
year' s li st. having ranked No. 16 when U.S.
News &amp; World Repon last year published its
first ranking of sc hools that provide the best
value. The best-value ranking will be pub·
lished in a special sec tion o n financin g col·
lege in the magazine 's Sept. 25 issue.
'Weare glad to see UB move up a notch,"
sa id President Willi am R. Greiner. "We think
U B should move up a notch. We are work ing
harder than ever to give ou r students more for
their money, and that' s a trend that will
co ntinue. Even with the state's budget constraints , we are manag ing to preserve very
high quality academic offerings at UB ."
He added: " As this ranking indicates. we
are in the company of some of the nation · s
·powerhouse publics,' like UCLA and Illi noi s a nd Rutgers. We do the same kind of
sophisticated undergraduate educa tion: we
do it very well.
" We do it with a broader range of academic
opportuni ti es than other SUNY institutions.
yet we do it in a setting that 's smaller than
most comparable universities-we don' t have
30.000 or 40.000 srudems. we have abour
20,(X)(). And we do all that at a low cost by
comparison with many or those institutions.

F

and cenainly at a low cost in comparison to
similar pri vate institutions here in New York.•·
With a sticker price of$12,324. UB ranks
in the U.S. News &amp; World Report list ahead
of such national publi c researc h institutions
as Pennsy lvania State Uni versity, the Uni versity of Virginia, the University of.Cal ifornia a t Be rk e ley an d Univ ers it y of
Mic higan.
Also. in the magazux:'s first~ver ranking
of the top 50 undergraduate busi ness programs
at U.S. universities, the UB School of Management has been ranked No. 48. The delermina·
tion of this country's 50 best bustness schools
was based on a reputational survey ofbusinessschool deans and administrators.
Frederick W. Winter. dea n of the US
Sc hool of Management, said his schoo l' s
ranking is parti cularl y noteworthy in li ght of
budget c uts confronting it a nd the un iversity.
"G iven the New York Sta te budget reali ties." he added , '"we' re heart ened w remain
as a Top 50 bu saness school, especially in
light of the increased competitiveness among
the more than 1.000 business programs at
co lleges and universities in the U.S."
Winter noted that " based on some comparative research of other highly mnked programs. the UB School of Management is one
of the mosl- i fn otthe most-efficient business schools in terms of re sources provided
per student.
'The creativeness of our faculty and staff.
the continued high quality of our students and
the backing of the busi ness communiry has
allowed us to maintain and even advance our
position in some areas . Like most successful
businesses. we're committed to serving the
needs of our cusromers-studems. alumni
and employers-while carrying out the mission of a major research uni versity."

MURDER
Continued from page I
" When we talk about murder we also
have to talk about assassination," said Ross,
who was J2 when Kennedy was shot. The
teacher who announced the nation 's loss to
hi s class noted that thi s had ha ppened once
before in Buffalo. Hi s interest piqued, Ross
spent the re mainder of the day learning about
the assass in ati o n of President William
McKinley in 190 I, "and I became completely fascinated with preside ntial assassinations," he sai d .
The assassination of Abraham Lincoln by
John Wilkes Booth is the one Ross said he
finds most fascinating. Booth, who perceived
Lincoln as evi l, was convinced that he was
doing the right thing, Ross said. " And when
you know it 's the right thing to do, is it
murder?"
And he would have gouen away with the
assass.inati on if he ' d just disappeared down
the back stairs. the way he'd come. " But he
was. after all , an actor.... He felt he had to
have a perfonnance. That was what tripped
him up more than his spur in the nag."

Whil e some murderer.; are remembered
for whom they killed. others are known for
how many or how they killed.
The first documented psyc hosexual serial
kil ler was Jack the Ripper. ''who we look at as
the quintessential seri al killer. " Ross said.
Never positive ly identified. there are numerous theories about who he actually was. Suspects include a doctor who poisoned a numbe r
of patients. a lawyer. a midwife atte mpting to
hide botched abortion s. and members of
Britain' s Royal Family.
America's most famou s unsolved mystery is Lizzie Borden. Ross said. "Lizzie was
acquitted, so we have to look and see if she
was guilty." Ross, who has visited the Borden
house, concludes that she was. indeed. guilty,
but juror.; were unwilling to convict a woman
who, if found guilty, would be hanged.
Another lesse r-known tu m of the centu ry
serial killer was Belle Gunness. believed to
have killed bel ween 40and 180 "starry-eyed
suitors" who came to he r Indian a farm in
answer to a lo ne ly hearts ad .
Charles Manson is typical o f mass murderer.; today. Ross sajd. Most have a hi story o r
child abuse. drug or alcohol abuse, head trauma
and may have tortured animal s as a c hild.
" Monsters are not born. Monsters are
made," he said. One mass murderer' s mother
dressed him in girls' c lothing. Another' s
mother, a prostitute. forced her so n to lie in
the bed while she en te rtained her customers.
Charles Manso n's mother once so ld him for
a pitcher of beer.
The lesson in a ll thi s. Ross sa id: we mu st
be carefu l how we treat peo ple. " I have
visited many of the sites of these murders .
and there I feel the vibratio ns and echoes of
these crimes. The voices I hear are murderers and victims a li ke .... They warn us to be
careful lest we become mu rderers and vic tims, too."

1,500 expected to take part
in Yalem Memorial Run Oct. I
Sonte 1,100 runners, joggers, racers and walkers arc expected to panicipate in the
sixth annual Linda Yalcm Memorial Run to be held at !Oa.m. on Sunday, Oct. I , on the
North Campus.
The SK annual event remembers a UB studenl who was assaulted and murdered in
1990 while running near campus while in training for the New York City Marathon.
Proceeds will suppon the Linda Yalcm Memorial Scholarship Fund and campus saJcty
programs. Beginning at 10 a_ m .. it stans and ends near Alumni Arenu . The race is part
of The Buffa lo News Runner of the Year Series.
Advance registration is $12 and musl be paid by-Sept. 29. The race-day registration
fee isS 15 . The fee for UB students is $10.
Participants who pick up their race packets on Friday, Sept. 29. belween 4 and 7:30
p.m. wi ll receive a coupon redeemable for two tickets to the
UB vs. Villanova football game
to be held Saturday. Sept. 30. at
7 p.m. in UB Stadium.
Every partic ipant will receive a sa fety giveaway item
and a mce T -shirt . Parti ci pants
also will be eligible for a drJw ing ror a trip for two to the Nev.
York Ci ty Marathon. anclud1ng
airfare . acco mmodatio n-. and
finish-lincst:ating . One tnp wi ll
tx awarded to a U B swdcnt
participal ing an the ru n and one
to a non-UB studem
Prizes will be awarded to the overall male and fe ma le fm1 s h e r~ an the ope n dl\ '''on .
as well as the top three male and female fini shers in 13 five -year age ca tegone,. There
al so wi ll be pri zes for a wheelchair category and for top race wa l~er~ Se parate pn1e'
will be awarded for UB fini shers in five catego ries.
For registration infonnation, call645-3141 between 9 a.m and~ p.m. wed.. days
Sponsors are WJYE-96. 1 FM. the UB Student Asscx·mllon. Ce ntury Printmg and
Graphi cs Inc .. Mrs. T's Pierogies. Happy Spring Water and Coc.1-Cola. The race a lso
is supported by the: UB Division o f Athle ti cs. USAir. the Women·s Health Init iative.
Custom Tee Acti vewear. UB Divis ion o f Student Affairs. Anderson ' s Froze n Custard
and Roast Beef. Gordon Highl anders Pipe Band a nd Color Guard. Runner's World .
Tops Friendly Markets and Health Care Plan .

�4

Teatro Avante brings
award-winning play

'Community Quilt' is theme
of SEFA/United Way campaign
lt'a 811 llbout reaching out.
Through SEFA and the Untied Way, UB employees have the opportunity to reach
out into the community around us
It tS because community is so important that the United Way has chosen · community Quilt" as the theme of its 1995 national campaign. An upbeat, hopeful portrait of the mosaic of our nation's communities. "Community Quilt" brings to life the
faces and personalitieS behind the United Way. its volunteers and agencies.
Between us and the rest of the world is our community, a kind of quilt. if you will.
wtlh each of us a untque patch. The United Way ts the thread. and the quilt is sewn
together through the efforts of its hard-working volunteers and non-profit agencies.
The United Way connects those who have great need with the places and people
who can till those needs. When you support SEFA and the United Way you become
a patch tn the "Community Quilt.· helping to keep the circle going and the thread
strong UB's SEFA campatgn runs through Oct 28

Study offers hope for cure

of urinary tract infections
By LOIS BAKER
News Bureau Staff

N

EW FINDINGS o n the causes of
rec urrent urinary tract infections
in women. reponed by research ers at UB and the Uni versity of
WtJshington, may lead to a more effective
treatme nt and, possib ly. a pem1anent cure .
In a s tu dy of 23
women with recurrent

infecti ons, the researchers found that most pa-

tients were being
rei nfected by the same
st rain of£.· coli bacteria
that caused their initial

infection a nd not by different strain s each time, RUSSO
as reponed previously. ln add ition, they found
that the bacteria caus ing recurrences in most
of the women were harbored in the patient 's
own intestinal trac t.
Resulto;; o f the stud y were repo n ed in the
August Journal of Infectio us Distases.
''These fi ndings gi ve us a new understanding of the mechanism of recurrent urinary-trac t infections," said Thomas A. Ru sso,
UB ass istant professor of medicine a nd lead
in vestigator on the st udy.
Most women with urinary tract infections
are treated with a short course of antibiotics
designed to kill the bacteria in the urine. This
may no longer be the best approach, given the
study's results. he sa id. because while suc h
therapy clears up the infection in the urinary
tract. it doesn' t kill the same bac teria ex isting
in the fecal flora, ready to infect agai n.
.. It 's possible that alternati ve approaches
ai med at e radi cating a persisti ng strain from

the intestinal n ora. and not j ust the urinary
tract . would result in a long-lasting permanent c ure." Russo said.
Urinary-tract infections in women account
for an estimated 7 million office visits a year. at
a cost of more than $ 1 billion. About 20 percent
of women with an initial infection will develop
recurrences. some as many as 20 a year.
Previous st ud ies concluded that more th an
75 percent of the recurring infections were
caused by a new strain o f bacteria from an
outsi de source . Using a technique simil ar to
DNA fi ngerprinting unavailable to earlier
researchers, Russo's group found th at 68
percent of recurring infections in the 23 young
wo men were caused by the same strai n of
bacteria that caused their fi rst infection.
Further analysis determined that the re curre nces were new infections, and were not
caused by bacteria that pers isted from the
prev io us infec tion. The researchers traced
the new infec tions to bac teri a harbored in the
patient's own colon. " If our results are con firmed in future studies , they may have significanttherapeutic implications fo r some or
all women with recurrent liTis," Russo stated.
" Daw from at least two previ ous treat ment studies suggest that lo ng -term remi ssion can be achi eved with a ntim icrobials in
so me women. We also know that ce n ain
antibiotics can eradicate bacteria in the fecal
nora better than ot hers. Funher data on the
impact of different treatment regimens on
long-term cure clearly are needed."
O thers part icipating in th e study were
Ann Stapleton, Thomas M. Hooton and
Walter E. Stamm of the University of Washington, Seattle, and Suzanne Wenderoth of
th e Nati onal Institutes o f Health.

N AWARD-WINNING production in Spanish by the Miami -basedTeatroAvanletiOed
"Mirando a! Tendido" is coming to the Cenler for the Arts
on UB's North Campus for three performances Sept. 21-23. The event is presented
by the International Artistic and Cultural
Exchange Program of UB' s Department of
Theatre and Dance. Performances will be
held in the Center's Black Box Theater.
An opening gala, featuring a champagne
reception with the cast following the production at 8 p.m., will be held tonight. Tickets
for the perfonnance and gala are $25. Subsequent performances will be at 8:30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 22, and at 8 p.m. Saturday,
Sept. 23. Tickets for these performances will
be $10 general admission, $5, students.
Teatro Avante is a nonprofit organization
whose objective is to preserve the Hispanic
cultural heritage, and in particular that of the
Cuban community, through theater. The
troupe has toured widely in Europe, Japan
and the Americas, presenting works of Hi spanic, U.S . and European playwrights.

The UB produ c tion , " Mirando al
Tendido," ("Looking into the StandS") by
Venezuelan playwright Rondolfo Santana,
received the best production award at its
1994 premiere during Teatro Avante's IX
lnlemational Hispanic Theatre Festival. 'The
play uses the bullfight as a mechanism for a
meditation on life and death, but revenes the
role of the matador and the bull.
Rondolfo Santana, one of Venezuela's
most prolific playwrights, has writu:n nearly
50 plays and eight movie scripts, and has
directed several \healer groups, including
the Group Cobre, which represented Venezuelan theater at nalional and international
festivals while under his Jeadenhip.
"Mirando aJ Tendido" is produced and
directed by Mario EmestoS4ncbez. Avanle' s
anistic director, and stars Magaly Aguero
and Gustavo Labori~ . The cast will include
seven UB students from the Department of
Theatre and Dance. Leandro Soto designed
the set, costume and mal:.eup. Lighting is by
Manalo FemMdez., with music and sound
effects by Rent Alejandro.
Ticl:.ets may be purchased at the Center
for the Arts Box Office or by calling 645ARTS, and at Ticl:.etmaster outlets.
C

TCIE helps company stay
competitive, retain jobs
By ELUN~U M

News Bureau Stalf

T

HE CENTER for Industrial Effectiveness (TCJE) at US is partnering
with American Axle and Manufacturing. Inc. (AAM) to hel p the company remain competiti ve-and retain 2,300
jobs in Erie County-by assessing. planning.
schedu ling and implementing education and
tmining sess ions for labor and management at
the company's two local plants.
" In essence, this (education and trai ning)
will put us in a position to be one of the
powers in the forging industry throughout
the world," says Kevin Donovan. presi dent
of United Auto Workers ' Local 846 al the
Tonawanda Forge plant.
'"'They provided an ed ucation a nd training
plan to help us accomplish the goals we need
to be measurably compe titi ve in the marketplace," agrees Gary Witter, director of personnel at the Forge.
With a grant from the state Urban Development Corporation and matching money
from AAM and the state Department of
Econom ic Development, TCIE conduc ted
an assessment o f the c urrent ski ll leve l of the
fo rmer General Motors operation's work
force and recom me nded education and training programs, to be implemented over the
next three years. to help the company achieve
it s long-range goals. Thi s assessment will be
followed up with state g ra nts totalling
$500.000 for implementation.
Those goals, as defi ned by AAM president
Richard E. Dauch. are to become a premier
global supplier of drive-line systems and forging with a world-c lass work force. says
Rebecca Landy..TCIE executive di rector.
TCIE ' s. work with AAM is just o ne instance of the UB ce nter working to funher
economic de ve lopment in Western New
York. No other organization is doi ng that
type o f co mprehen sive assessments. Landy
notes . AAM is in an unusual position in that
about 55 percent of its work force is relatively
new to the plants. notes Witter. "Our challenge is to get our associates up to speed on
everything from new technology to teambuilding skill s to safety issues," he says.

Enter TClE, based in the UB School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences and affiliated with the UB Sc hool of Management.
TCIE looked at all levels of the worlc force
at the company's plants and all aspects of its
operations. After a quick review, TCIE put
together"blended teams" ofexperts from UB •s
engineering and management schools, private
industry and other colleges and universities to
do more specialized assessments. Landy says.
The assessment determined that AAM
needed to pursue training in the areas of
strategic planning, total quality management.
lSO-QS 900 I certification and trade skills.
she says. TCIE assembled a three-penon
team to help AAM train its penonnel to plan,
Schedule and implement training. which already has begun at both plants.

Chancellor Bartlett
speaks at seminar

,..,_.A.-, cbanceUorofthe
Stale UnivenityofNew Yorlc, will be the
tint speal:.er in the 1995-96 Breakfast
SeminarsforWestemNewYork's Higher
EdocatorsSerieson Friday,Oct. 6. Bartlett
will speak at8 a.m. in Moot Hall. Buffalo
State College.
·
The series is sponscxed by the Westem New Yorl:. Higher Education Consortium , the UB Graduate School of
Education, the UB Department of Educational Organization, Administration and
Policy, Buffalo State College and Erie
Community College.
Bartlett. wbo holds undergraduate and
doctonl degrees from Stanford University,
is former chanoellor of the ~ Stale
System of Higher Education and the Uni·
versityof AlabamaSy~~em,andapast president of Colgate University, American
University in Cairo and the Associatioo of
American Universities.
Tickets for the series' tbrec programs
are available for $15 or $5 for each program, from WilliAm C. Bama, 468 Baldy
Rall, University at Buffalo, Amherst. N.Y.
14260.

�5

Leners
Academic Calendar:
Medical Student
Expresses His View
DEAlt .DR. IIOOT:
Thank you for assumtng all Jews are from
New York City.
Thank you also for suggesting that Jews

unhappy with UB's new holtday policy atlend
Binghamton instead .
Maybe we can build an electrified fence

around both places.
Finally . solve those · educational htc-

cups •
I know. some of your best fnends are
Jewtsh
Affecttonately .
J-DIRUCH
UB graduate '94
UB Mad School '98

Jewish High Holy Days:
What Kind of UB
Community Do We Want?
TO THE EDITOR:
I found Professor John Boot's article about
p hastng out the university's long-standing
~ i cy

The ~w we1c::omes JerlfNS from rNders carYn6flhng on 1ts stones ana
be bnel 8f'ld may be ed1ted lex styfe 8lld JenQltl Because ol HJIIC8 Hrrvtat~ons me Reponer C8flllO( pubhs/1 aJI/eners recetV9d

COflttJnt Leners should

Provost Revises Plan on Holiday Observance
Provoet Thomaa E. Headrick has sent the followinglstter to the senior vice presidenl,
vies presidents, deans, vice provosts, chaits and directors:
Then&gt; have been concems expressed by various members of the UB communily
about the plan ID phase out Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur by Fall 1997. After lislenlng carefully, I have decided lo revise the plan_!n the Fall semesler. UB will continue
to observe the following religious holidays as non-class days: the first day of Rosh
Hashanah and the day of Yom Kippur.
Classes will be held on the second day of Rosh Hashaneh. Following our clear obligation to conform to New Ycxk State law, no student is to suffer any penalty for being
absent on that day of class. This will also hold true for other similar religious holid ays
d esignated in a list we will , in the future, stipulate on each year's university calendar.
As a further matter of policy, the universily asks all facully nol le hold 1es1s. exams

or cruc ial'13resentations on religious holtdays named on the list.

In cases where prob-

lems might arise, facully should go out oflheir way 10 make sure thai sludenls don 'l
feel fUng led out by having to miss required tests or exercises . I want to stress the importance of everyone's complete understanding and cooperation in this regard If satisfactOI'Y arrangements cannot be worked out between the student and instructor. and
failing resolution by the app ropriate d epartment chair or dean. an ap peal can be taken
to the Provost's Office.
In making its orig inal proposal to p hase out Rosh Hashanah and Yom Ktppur. the
Calendar Commission was motivated to conform the university's sched ule to a calendar it felt suitable for an ed ucational institution bound by the b roadest public Interests
My decision to p reserve two of the three d ays of Jewish religrous holidays slated tor
removal is in the sp irit of achieving a balance among ~gtlimate contend1ng concerns
within the US community

-..E.Provost

of not holding classes on Jewish High

Holy Days intellectually dishonest. meanspi rited and offens•ve
Professor Boot begtns h1s antcle by observmg that the calendar commtllee has rec ommended phasing out the old policy so
that . tn hts word · a few years from now
classes will be held on reltgtous holidays
whatever that religion. and whatever that
hol1day (holy day) may be • [Emphasts supp lied ] The p roposed calendar reform. he asserts . witl ~ t reat all religious holidays the
same· by recognizing only the lollowtng · na uonal holidays": Martin Luther King Day , M emona\ Day , Independence Day . Labor Day ,
Thanksgtvtng and Chnstmas I musl confess
thai hsltng struck me as c uuous
I had always constdered Chnstmas a ·rellgious " holiday-a magntltcent and beautiful
one I suspect that member s of all non..Chns Uan fai ths, as well as those who are non-believers or agnostics. feel much the same
way. Indeed, I hnd 11 hard to believe that
most Christtans don 't th1nk of Chnstmas as a
rehg1ous holiday. If my own 1mpress1ons are
1nsuffictent to resolve that questton. then perhaps the Amencan Hentage 01cUonary can
Under the head1ng ol ~Chns tma s. • 1t contatns
the follow1ng entry ·a hohday celebrated by
Chrisllans as the anntversary of the btrth of
Jesu s.·
Professor Boot's asser\lan that under the
proposed new calendar c lasses will be held
·an religious holidays. wha tever the religion"
reflect~ either a gross d1shones1y or an appalling callousness toward people of lailhs
other than hts own Although Professor Boot
asserts thai "polittcal realittes· (a Jew•sh ca bal perhaps?) "forced" PreSident Ketter to
cancel classes on the Jewish Holy Days 20
years ago. Boot is silent aboul the polit•cal
realiltes that preordained the current recommend attons What are those reallttes? That •s
not hard to determrne 11 one •s willtng to be
honest about tl.
This country tS, as so many on the extreme religtous nght like to rem1nd us these
days, a "Chnsuan" natton Because the vast
ma1onty of the Amencan people are Chnst•an . b ecause they constder Chnstmas to b e
thetr most 1mportan1 relig1ous holiday, and
because they have !he power to control both
the larger society's and the univerSity 's c alendar , they have made thelf religious day a
·national" hohday. Those. Professor Boot.
are the operating "poli11cal rea1111es· !hat are
dnv1ng the current reform proposal Taktng
those realities as a given. 1n deahng wllh the
holy days of non -Chnsltan retig1ous mtnon t•es. what p rinctp les should gu1de a dtver se
university committed to mutual tolerance and
respect among heterogeneous groups? It
seems to me that a few baste pnnciptes can
be tdentified
Rrst . every effort should be made through
formal umversity poltCieS and otherwtse . to
welcome and accommodate people of all
faiths I found it partiCUlarly 1nsulttng that Professor Boot suggested that . s1nce SUNY/
Binghamton does not have classes on the

Jewish High Holy days and even grants ltme
for Jewish students to travel home. the · d •+
lemma can be avoided altogether by students attending another center tn the SUNY
system • Is th1s really the message UB wants
to send out to observant Jewtsh students.
parents and taxpayers in New York State? Is
that the senttment UB wants to advance
about tis openness to religious and other mtnor ittes? One of our greatest strengths IS !he
heterogeneous character ol our communtty
We need to nurture that d iversuy by poltc•es
that show respect and tolerance for those
who are d ifferent whether tl tS because of
thetr race , nationality, rehgton or other personal charactensttc
It IS a mtstake to portray thtS controversy.
as some have tned to. as tnvolvtng lavonusm
toward one minority latth The large question
thai the 1ssue raises IS how the untverstty w1ll
accommodate reltgtous mtnonttes on c ampus generally I concede that that queslton
poses dtlltcult problems Yet we ought not 10
run from those problems and tgnore the
need s ol rehgtous mtnonues allogether . as
the current proposal does
In recent decades our soc•ety has grown
dramattcally more diverse ractally ano reltgrously That trend is gotng to conttnue On
our campus, for tnstance, we have. among
other mtnonttes. a grow1ng Musltm populatton A fa1r. tust and defensible unNers•ty
policy toward rehg1ous observance requ1res
ltndtng out more about the rang e ol rehgtous
mtnon ltes on campus and about what can be
done to accommodate thetr rellgtous needs
rn a way that parallels what •s done to accommodate the needs of the rehg tous marortly At the very least, untversny p ohc tes
should try to 1nsure that members at mtnon ty
rehgtous groups are not penahzed because
they may choose to observe a holy day
Is tl hkely to be complicated 10 rev1ew
and address the needs of all rehg•ous
groups on campus and to constder how the
calendar affects them? Yes. tt ts Is tl likely to
be 1nconventent for the untverstty to try to be
evenhanded 1n how 1t accommodates the rehgtous ma1on ty and mtnorittes •n our commu ntty? Yes. 11 1S Is •t the rtght thtng to do? II
the un1verSlly 1S senous about tt s commtlment to nurtunng a dtverse communtty and 11
11 wants to be m the vanguard naltonally 1n
dotng that . tt 1s unquesttonably the nght th1ng
to do
In the new c alendar proposal. tn response to our growing rehg1ous dlverstty and
1n response to the allegat 1on that cancehng
c lasses on the Jew•sh holy days shows fa vonllsm toward one m1nor11y , the matonty has
adopted a s1mpte. unla1r and unpnnctpled
approach As 1t now stand s. 1n that proposal
the reltgtous matonty ts. tn effect. saytng We
have restructured the calendar so that we
can conttnue to celebrate our holy days
(both Chnstmas and Sundays) Without havtng to worry about anendtng or teachtng
c lasses. but we w1ll not extend that same op-

ponuntty to people of any m1nonty rehg1ous
fa1th because tl would be •nconventent to d o

so
Should we cancel classes on every tmag tnable reltgrous holtday lor every reltgtous
mtnouty on campus? 01 course not How ever, tn each 1nstance we ought to examrne
the 1ssues tnvolved b y at least constdenng
the number of people tn the campus commumty who wtll be aflected and the docu mented rehgtous Importance ol a specthc
holy day to those people On rrte basts of
these constderaltons. there are compelling
reasons not to change the untverstty·s tongestablished poltcy on Rosh Hashanah and
Yom K1pp ur Jewtsh students. !acuity and
stafl constttute the largest non-Chnshan reh
grous latth at UB Wh1le there are no ofltctal
stat•sttcs avartabte. there are well 1n e,.;cess
of 1.000 Jewtsh students. Iacuity and stall on
campus Moreover . Rosh Ha shanah and
Yom Ktppur are the most sacred rehgtous
days tor Jews hence the ~r very name- the
"htgh holy days
II one were look1ng for a parallel I wouto
venture that 1n theu rehgtous s1gn1hcance
and tn theu tmportance wtthtn Jew•sh famtty
hie Rosh Hashanah and Yom Ktppur are tf
you wtll . the Jewtsh equt valents ol Chflstmas
Fam1ltes gather together to pray . soc1ahze
and celeb rate thetr rehgtous hentage and
culture College-age children all en travel
home to be wtlh the1r lamt hes and dunng
those days even Jews who are not o therwtse
observant. very often attend synagogue
In ltght o! the stze of the Jewtsh mtnonty
on campus and the reltg1ous 1mportance of
the days to that m1nonty tl IS •nexcusabte
that the calendar comm tttee d1d not even
seek out the reac ttons of observant Jews at
UB unttl alter 11 made tiS recommendations
Much angutsh . acnmony and mtsunder standmg could have been avo1ded had
someone thought to extend that stmpte cour
tesy to the m1nomy most deeply affected by
the proposed c hange
Th1s controversy tS more than a catenaar
1ssue Its 1mp1tca11ons go well beyond wha t
the un1verstty doe s for a parttcutar mtnonty
on th1S spectftc matter What IS •n 1ssue 1s the
ktnd at commun11y the umvers1ty wtll be- the
ktnd of commun•ty we want to be Untvers1·
lies are places where dtlferences of all types
are nurtured and allowed to llounsh Because of that commument . un1verstt1es are
1nclustve commumhes that are recepttve and
welcom1ng to people of varyrng latths, v1ews.
values and pra~uces That ts one of t he~r
hallmarks-the., !terce comm1tment to and
celebratton of "d tflerence • In a telling way
these fundamental aspects ol our communal
hie here at UB- our commttmentto tolerance . openness and respect lor mtnonues
are at stake m the current debat e
There ts no way lor a small mtnonty to
compellhtS un1versny to extend 1tsell to accommodate thai mtnortty·s religtous needs
The ma,outy has the power on th1s matter

and others. •f 11 w1shes. to do as tl w1shes
Yet by lathng to d o the generous and grac+Ous th1ng- by failmg to bend . extend and
yes . even mconventence ttself. out of a
sense of respect and tolerance fOf those who
are dtfferent. we lose somethmg of tntangtble
and profound tmponance It ts tronte that tn
an era m whtch we have presumabty learned
so much about the multicultural character of
Amenca and m a ttme in whtch the fatlure of
nattons tn Europe , Afnca and elsewhere to
accommodate minont•es has had such tragtc
consequences. UB IS now potsed to take thts
g tant step backward As a Jew, as a member of a m•nonty communtty at thts untverstty.
and as a tongtune member ol ·tts faculty. that
prospect d1sappomts and saddens me
STEPHEN C. HALP£Jitl
Professor or Polmcal Sc1ence

A Letter to John Boot
DEAR JOHN:
(I've never wrrtten a ·oear John" letter belore•)
You express vtews tn your letter to the Reporter that I heard repeatedly dunng my d ecade as Chatt of the Calendar Comm•ttee
Your proposals seem emmently sensible ,
and your pnnctpled rattonale both hlghmmded and wtdely held by fac ulty. though
your nfl on the soc1al psychology of the tntltal
wtlhngness to accede to g1v1ng holidays on
the Jewtsh H1gh Holy Days stnkes me as a
trifle tar-fetched However. you skate over
some detatls that don't Itt very well
Flfst . the 1990 survey gave us more tnfor matton tha n you used It showec very clearly
that only one subset of the student body fell
strongly about the calendar When ottered
the cllotce of a calendar that began after LabOr Day and had few breaks (one hohday 1n
October and the ThanksgiVIng holidays m
November ). versus somethmg like the current pracu ce . the maJOnty at students preferred the shorter , neater calendar , but not
strongly The 10 percent of students self·
tdenufted as Jews preferred the current
pracltce very strongly As tar as I am aware
we have no early ( 1970s) data on the proper
!ton ol Jews 1n the sludenr body The ques tion was not asked. so any numbers are
guesses 1 have myself no reason to suppose that the tO percentlrgure ts part of ei ther a nstng or talhng trend
Second despt te the fact that post-Labor
Day starts appear to make emtnen!ly good
sense I thrnk you can venly wtlh Bob
Palmer 's ofhce that a ma,onty of lour -year
and gracua te tnstrtullons tn the country actually start before Labor Day tn the tall Why
would they do that 1! they were not under ttle
ktnd ol potmcat-rehg,ous pressure that laces
UB? I suspect that post-labor-Day stans are
more a dream and desne of academ1cs than
ol etther stall (who are here all the ttme) or
students (wtlo would preler to start the tall
semesl er around October 1 and 1tn1sh
around November 15) You annbu te grea t
1mportance to the supposed need of students•to work tn the summer to pay lor the1r
educatton In tact the ma,onty ol UB students work all the t1me •nclud•ng dunng the
school year A start at1er L~bor Day doesn·t
necessanly represen1 a gatn 10 total1ncome
earntng capaCity It may stmply represent a
reallocation of work trom full ttme to part
time and for an unknown lractton of the stu·
dent populatton
In other words the cost-beneftl c atc ula tton you 1mphcttly propose may oe tncorrec t
There may be relat tvely little 1nc ome ga1f'l for
the student s rn a post-Labor-Day sta rt
There w1ll be a ga1n 1n the coherence a t
the tall semester a g a1n that could be
eaually well reat1 1ed by hm111ng the number
of tnterrup!lons 1n the first lour week.s as we
propo sed •n 1990 That ga1n ma~ 1mp rove
the qualtty of tearn1ng at UB tho ugh 11 ma,
be much tess ot a ga1n than couto oe
ach1eved by senously re-exam1n1ng our
teactung methods The tac t 1S that we navP
only aneccotat evtdenc e about the ecuca
ttonal c os! otthe ·spultertng start to tne se
mester • Ther e IS no question that one Sub
group ot student s w11t feel a ser 1ous pe• sofl a!
toss
My personal obtectton to lf,e catenaar
promulgated by tht:! Palmer Comm11t ee IS not
that the calendar ts bad but tnat the aut
come shoutc nave been atra1ned oy a 01a
Iogue that srmply was not tnea as ta r as 1
am aware II we are to be bot p r1nC1p1ea
and d1verse 11 1S our obhgatton to lear n what
pr acuces other than the o ne we w1sh to
change would recuc e the cost 1mposea on
Con ttnu ed o n page 6

�6

-:U.,UM-27,No.4

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Salurday's 1~ win 8l Illinois Sl8le should be tegarded •

M

· UB is rDN 2-1 Lr1der Coach Craig Cirtlue llllerh
1/icDy BIISU's Hancock Sladium in Nonnel. II. The Rectids,
Sp7fs ~~q,.21l~. ctq,pedl01-2.
Two Bulls established school records In the win ulin&amp;backer Pete Conley forced four~ In the.,.,... and
kicker Gerald C8ttson coonecllld on leu field goals In the
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longest of his .,..,_.,
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pair of field goals by Todd Kurz, 1he
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yarder In the 11m half made 1he
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1he
1oc1&lt;er rooms lor hall1ime.
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LEn'ERS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
\

the penalized

~•nanty to a level that they

can ltve with and st•ll consider attendtng
DB What alternative does an observant

Jewtsh student have, who wants to be an
engtneer and needs to go to a public unt·
verstty? What can thts community offer

such a person when it imposes upon htm
or her the cost ol being away from home

rehgtous dictat10n over others. As I recall
from previous years, additional Chemistry
lab c lasses had to be sched uled on Satur·
day due to the large number ol students
enrolled. Couldn'tthey have been held on
Sunday? Are any final exams held on Sun·
day? Not that I can think ol. But Saturday

tS OK-even though on a ·nationaiMlevel

on very tmportant Holy Days? I have no

both days make up the weekend , one

answers. The quesuon should have been
asked tn a systematic and sympathetic

group's Sabbath is more important than
another's.
2 01 course any m1ssed days of class
can con!ribute to a sluggish start of the
semester, but that ts not the only factor .
The first few weeks of the Spring semester
are pretty slow moving as well. Did Dr.

way
Stncerely ,
MnCHEU. IIAIIWnz
Department o f Econom1cs

Viewpoints article made
him feel unwelcome
DEAR EDITOR:
I am writing in response to the arttcle wnt-

ten m the "V iewpo in t s~ sec tton of TheReporter thts past week by Dr John Boot. I
am very dislurbed by what he wrote. lf he
stmply wrote that there were no longer

enough Jewtsh students and faculty at this
untversity to wa rrant giving everyone off
lor the holidays ol Rosh Hashanah and
Yom Ktppur. I would accept it I am not so
selfish to expect the world to stop thetr

business just for me
The excuses he made. however, are

school-! was one of them--but let's not
kid ourselves. Count the days. Underg raduate classes began on Monday. August 28. giving five days ol classes belore
La bor day weekend . Five days . How many

days are being missed because of the

that I was an accepted member in this

Jewish holidays? Two this year. So where
do the other three days go? I'm sure that

community. but I was reminded thai I have
only been tolerated .
Perhaps I should have wri«en this le«er
last year, and addressed it to the calendar
commi«ee. Perhaps not enough Jewish
people voiced their opinions at the appropriate time. I would guess that this is prob·
ably the case-and perhaps our perpetual

Or Boot can count. Are those students really missing work over Labor day because
of some Jews? No. butlhanks to Dr. Boot

they now believe so. In fact. even if
classes began on the Tuesday aher Labor

day. many students would still have to
move up to Buffalo. or check into dorms
over the weekend so they would not be

Boot lorget about drop/add? Many proles·

able to work lhrough Labor d ay anyway-

sors do not get heavy into teaching because they know that there w•ll inevitably
be students who will miss up to four or five
lectures. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur
typically fall out very early in the semester
(it varies because of the d ifferences between a lunar and a solar calendar) so
they do not interfere with any exams.

Or was Dr. Boot thinking that freshman
check·in to the dorms would be on Tues-

3. How difficult is it really lor people to
switch a day around? Dr. Boot makes it
seem as if it is such a hassle and so confusing . It should not catch anyone by surprise since it is planned well in advance
and most professors remind the students
of the switch a few days before.
4. When was the last time Dr Boot took

day the 5th, regular check-in on the 61h.
and classes would begin on the 7th? Well

that is seven school days later than when
11 did start. Am I asking for seven days for
the Jewish holidays? Is anyone?
So why don'tl go to SUNY Binghamton.
he asks me. Because I don't want to go to

B1nghamton. Because Binghamton does
not have a medical school. Because I feel

1 They are not nauonal hohdays
2 They cause a "very sputtenng" start
to the semester
3 They creale mass confuston by hav·
tng one day betng another to make up for
the mtsstng class time
4 Laboratory classes are greally Interrupted
5 Students cannot work through Labor

ample. What did I do the lirst week? Noth·

wheelchair access ramps at SUNY

tng What did I do the second week?
Check in (that's when students count thetr
test tubes to make sure none are m1ss1ng)
Lab courses are usually off to a slow
start-even in the Spring semester where
there are no missing days of class II there
1S such a shortage of t1me couldn'tthey
get the ball rolling a little earher The fact
of the matter IS, there IS no major shortage
ol time After completing two semesters ol
general chemistry lab. two semesters of
organ1c chem1stry lab . two semesters of
phys1cs lab, one semester of cell b1ology
lab, one semester of primate anatomy lab.
one semester of human gross anatomy
lab, and one semester of histology. all w1th
m1ssed days for the Jewish holidays. I can
assure you that all of the material was covered and there was no additional cramming of material.

Brockport or Buff State College. Why don 't

tem- whiCh in turn ex1sts pnmarily for the
Citizens of New York State. and not for the
nation. I add that on a state level, there

are enough Jewish people to consider
Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur school

holidays-whic h shouldn't be viewed as

.s . 1 can sympathize w ith people who

miss out on summer work over Labor day
weekend because they have to be in

DEAR EDITOR:

and language study or to add an impor-

Let's take general chemistry lab for ex-

about US-which oS part of lhe SUNY sys-

National Security
Education Fellowships
are available

students to pursue specialization in area

tollowtng

1 Oemographtcally . there •s not a large
enough, homogenous distribution of JewISh people 1n the U S. to warrant Jewtsh
nat1onal holidays So what? We are not
talking about the nation. we are talking

NEILUI'IIE
UBMed '98

he called it progress. Well how about we

Boot to tell me where to go? He wrote

stop providing lhe disabled with cosily access to buildings There are pl.enty ol

Well , I would hke to submit th e lollow-

With Respect .

about turning back the clock 20 years and

a look at a laboratory schedule anyway?

ong

flaw-that we wait until it is too late to
open our mouths.

The Study Abroad Office would like to in·
lorm students ol lhe availability of National
Security Education Program (NSEP) lellowships. The NSEP enables outstanding

like being in Buffalo. How about simply
and appropriately BECAUSE. Who is Dr.

poor and tnappropnate. He included the

Day

This is my sixth year at UB and I have
always lelt welcome here-until I read that
article by a faculty member in a newspaper published by the university. II put me
back in my place-for a while llhought

the disabled go there? Or maybe it would
be easier on everyone if we send them all
to one des•gnated state. Let's make
Flor1da or Ar1zona the troublesomepeople-state and all of the Jews and the
d1sabled can live there-and they can
make any holiday they want.
D•d Dr. Boot even real ize the 1mphca110ns o-1 hts remark? I don't know Is Dr.
Boot ant1-Semit•c? I don't know and I don't
c a~e . But I refuse to make a sacrifice for
the patheuc reasons wh ich Dr. Boot gave
1n h1s "viewpoinr. Rosh Hashanah and
Yom Kippur are holidays. but they are also
solemn. holy days. They are not spent barbecuing or partying. School seems to

have been getting along so far over the

tant international dimension to their ed ucation. The program funds students pursuing
study of languages. cultures and world re·
gions outside Western Europe, Canada,
Australia and New Zealand. NSEP was de·

signed to p10vide American students with
the resources and encouragement
needed to acquire skills and expenence 1n
less commonly studied languages and
cultures.
NSEP oilers lundong ro both under·

graduate and graduate students through
the Undergraduate Study Abroad Scholar-

ship and the Graduate Enhancement Fellowship programs
More information and application mate·
rials are available at the Study Abroad 01·
lice, 210 Talbert Hall (North Campus). 9
a.m.-4 p .m . Monday through Friday

Deadline for graduate applications: Nov.

years . so why all of the change all ol a
sudden? Is it really a problem about
scheduling and counling days ol class. or

24. 1996. Deadline lor undergraduate ap·
phcations: Jan. 5. 1996.

IS there an underlying change in attitude
at the university?

SANDRA J. IIEINAIIEL
Interim Study Abroad Coordinator

�7

Facul &amp;SiaUBillboard
0

An Operation Inform program
for high school counselors will
be held from 8 a m .- 12:30
p m Friday. Sept 29. in the Student
Umon on the North Campus
OperatiOn Inform. lhts year mark·
tng tis 20th ann•versary, ts a program
sponsored by SUNY College Admtss•ons ProfessiOnals to provide htgh
school counselors wtth tnlormation
on admtsstOns cnterta and academtc
programs lor the 64 SUNY campuses. The sesston at UB ts one of
several betng held across the state
The program wllltnclude lour
workshops "The Cost to Go to College Ftnanctng a SUNY EducatiOn ,·
"Opportuntttes Unhmtted Helptng
Students Make College Chotces .•
"How Are Admtsstons Oectstons
Made?" and ·careers 2000 What Every School Counselor Should Know
About Tomorrow's Marketplace · A
tour of UB will be held at 12 30 p m
For regtstrahon matenals call the
Ofhce of Adm1SS1ons. 645-6900

SEMINAR SET ON AMERICANS
WITH DISAJIIunU ACT

0

James J Weisman. assoc.ate
executiVe d1rector of legal af·
ta1rs for the Eastern Paralyzed
Vet8f'ans Association, Will present the
keynole address at a sem1nar . ·The
Amencans wtth D•saDiht1es Act
Whars In 11 lor You? Myth vs Reality •
The semtnar wtll be held from
8 30 a m -3.30 p m Sept 28 tn the
Student Un1on on the North Campus
A key negotiator with members ol
-Congress in drafting and supporting
passage of the Americans wtth Dis·
abtli!les Act. Weisman has spent h1s
legal career working to enhance the
quality ol hie and promote the ctvll
nghts of people wrth disabilities
Seminar workshops tnclude
TransportatiOn and the NFTA.
OMRRD and Employment for People
with Developmental Disabili!les . As a
Mental Health Consumer . Title I of
the ADA-Employment. Title ll of the
ADA-Public Enlities . Tille Ill of the
ADA-Public Accommodallor.s and
Commercial Factlilies. Tille IV of the
ADA- Telecommunications, ADA Ac ·
cessibility Guidelines and Amer1can
National Standards Institute. Sect1on
504 of the Federal Rehabelitat•on AcV
ADA in Post -Secondary Education .
Advocacy Skills , Native Amencan Is·
sues. and Reasonable Accommoda ·
lions and Other Legal Issues lor
Mental Health Consllmers For more
tnloonattOn, call 836-062:2

ADELE HENOEIISON WINS
NEA FELLOWSHIP

0

Adele Hendenon, aSSIStant professor of art at UB. nas
been awarded a NatiOnal En·
dowment for the Arts Fellowshtp 1n
V1sual Arts , Works on Paper , lor
1995-96 Henderson was one of 17
tellowsh1p recipeents selected from

among 1.700 appltcants.
Her work will be featured in a solo
exhibition, ACCRETIONS , to be held
from Sept. 17-Nov 12 at the
Castellani Museum ot Art at Niagara
University.
The exhibit well enclude prints.
works on paper and paintings done
over the past four years. The work for
this exhibition was completed with
the help of MacDowell Colony and
Yaddo residency fellowships . along
with funding from the Nuala M .
Drescher leave program at UB.

FOIT..u..aT- FOR
DIST1118UISNED SDVICE

0 ..

¥~FoR-. UB
clinical associate profes·
sor of archllecture,
rece1ved the
Medaille College
Award for distin·
guished service dureng the college's recent Founder's Day
denner. Foil-Albert is FOO'-ALBERT
pres1dent and chief executive officer
of Fait-Albert Associates

UIIVEY CHAIR OF
DEHTIS11n' AT SISTERS

Michael"' ·

a.rv.,,

aSSIS·
tant clink:al professor 1n the UB
School of Dental Medec1ne. has
been appointed chaerman of the Department of Dentistry at S1sters Hospital He is a graduate of UB and the
Unrvers1ty ol Mlssiss1pp1School of
Dental Medic1ne.

0

GREATBATCHAT RESEARCH EVENT

0

Wilson a,..u...tch, ad·
junct professor of elec·
tncal and computer
eng1neenng at UB
and 1nventor of the
1mplantable pacemaker . was hon·
ored IDf hts work
Sept 15 at aRe ·
search 2000 testi·
monial sponsored
by the Women's and Cheldren·s Re·
search Foundat1on ol The Ch1ldren·s
Hospital of Buffalo He presented h•s
most recent findtngs on ·genes 1n a
machine : to block replicatton sites
on the AIDs wus, at the program
held 1n the Saturn Club

MANAGEMENT ROUNDTAIILE
HELl'S BUSINESS MANAGERS

0

A senes ol presentations de·
s1gned to provide managers
w1th knowledge needed to
compete successfully 1n today's glo·
bat business environment are be1ng
offered by the UB School of Management The sess1ons are held from 89:30 a.m 1n Fanny's Restaurant ,
Amherst They are sponsored by the
Center lor Management Develop-

Rose Weinstein Award
Competition Announced
The Emeritus Center of the University at Buffalo announces us annual

competition for the Rose Weinstein Memonal Award The $200 annual
- ~~ lor lludiMon aging.
The compedtion is open to any undergraduate or graduate student
~ at U8 in good standing who has been accepted in a degree program
1bl protect (paper, art form, techniq ue , etc .) must be written or ere·
.-.:1 und8r lhe auperviaion ol a member o f the faculty. and must be
iiCOflli•idtld In writing by that faculty member to the Ementus Award
Conl'nlleM no . . . than the IUt day of February each year . The faculty
....,.mecr llhall teltify to the scientific or technological valid•ty of the
. ptOjlcl or to the
or amsuc value of the project, depend•ng on

Ill .-.gary.

...meuc

TN project rrust be submitted to: Constantine Yeracans. cha1r .
A - Cammlltee, Emeritus Center, South Lounge . Goodyear Hall.
Soulh c.mpus, UniYeral!y at Buffalo, Buflelo. N.Y. t42t4 For more on.
formalion, call 829-2271 .

ment 1n the UB School of Manage·
rnent and the School of Management
Alumn1 AssociatK&gt;n
The schedule·
"Doing Business on the Internet.·
Sept. 21 . Mark Winer, CEO . and J tm
Garland , president. of After F1ve
Technology, Inc ., will conduct a live
presentat•on in wh1ch attendees w•ll
see real businesses using the
Internet A bnef IntroductiOn to the
Internet is included
1'otal Quality Managemem How
to lnstituhonalize the Process.· Oct
19. Orland Pitts. total quality process
leader for The Carborundum Co . w1ll
explore reasons lor quahty emptementation false-starts and map out a process lor successful1mptementat 1011
"ISO 9000 lnlernauonal Ouahty
Standard. How to Avo•d the Ntght·
mare Syndrome of Process Certel1ca·
tion ." Nov. 16. Orland P1tts well ex·
pla1n documentation requtrements
tiered manual format. education and
train1ng . and regestrar-selecuon pro·
cess. InteractiVe workshops wtll help
auendees develop an approach to
ISO 9000 certehcallon

DISCOUNT FOR AWMHI
ON KAPLAN COURSES

0

UB alumn1 and the1r tmmed•ate
fam111es can rece1ve a 10 percent d1scount on the cost of
any test-preparation course oflered
by Kaplan Educateonal Centers .
thanks to a dea l negotiated between
Kaplan and the UB Oil tee of Alumn•
Relations
The dtscount •s good at any of the
more than 150 Kaplan centers and
classroom Sties throughout the U S
and abroad tmmedtate lamtly mem·
Ders who may take advantage ot the
offer mctude spouses. fathers . moth ·
ers. sons . daughters s•sters and
brothers
Kaplan offers serv1ces lor more
than 20 standardiZed tests. 1ncludtng
college admess100s exams such as the
SAT and ACT. graduate and protesSJOOal school entrance exams such as
the LSAT. MCAT. GMAT and GRE
prolessl0081 hcens1ng exams lor medlctne. nurseng . denltstry and account·
•ng . spec1ahzed exams lor enternattOnal
students and prolessiOflals, and other
educa!lon-related courses For more
Information. call 829-2608

MATES TO RECEIVE AWARD
FROM ASME IHTERNAnONAL

Robert E. M•tea. US prO·
lessor of mechamcal and
aerospace engeneenng and
d~tector ol the Center tor B•omed•cat
Engeneenng . wtll rece•ve the H R
L1ssner Award of the Amerecan Soc•
ety of Mechantcal Engtneers (ASME
tnternahonat} at •ts lnternaltonat Me·
chamcat Engrneenng Congress ana
Exposet1on Nov 12· 17 1n San Fran .
cesco The award recogmzes out ·
standeng ach1evemenr tn b1oeng1·
neenng
The 125 .000-member ASME •S a
worldwide engeneenng soceety lo·
cused on tBCM1cat . educational and
research 1ssues lq::onducrs one ol
the world's largest techn1cat publish·
1ng operat1ons . hotds some 30 tec h·
necal conferences and 200 prates ·
stonal development courses each
year . and sets many 1ndusrnal and
manufactunng standards
A Fellow of the ASME . Mates nas
been an act1ve member ol me
soctety's Bullalo section and the
B1oengtneenng diVISion He has been
assoceate e(Mor ol the Journal of BlomediCBI Engmeeflng and v1ce pres•·
dent of the Board on Communlca ·
l tons. whech oversees all ASME
pubhcaltOnS
He holds a B S 1n eng1neenng from
the Un1vers1ty of Rochester and M S
and Ph D degrees in mechaniCal eng1neer1ng from Cornell Umversity

0

Hands on the Web
If you've never explored the Internet using a graphical browlier, here's
your chance! Graphical browse~ like Netscape open a window on the
Web. allowing you to experience the many colors. lcxtures. images, and
even sounds of the Internet. But toexperiencethe Web graphically requires
hardware and software w e know some of
you don't have access to.
For that reason, the Undergraduate

Library.laauedon the fir.t floor of Capen
Hall, is open ing up one of its state-of the-an computer instruction facilities to
faculty. staff. and students to access UB
Wings and the Libraries Web during selected hours beginning the week
of September 25th . Come see for yourself what the new Wings looks like
and explore the vast array o f [ntemet resources we' ve been telling you
about-all in a fully graphicaJ environment! The setting is informal.
Libr.trians will be on hand to assist you, but if you feel more comfortable
exploring on your own. you're welcome to do so.
Tour the White House. view the latest photographs from the Hubble
Space Telescope. or pore over fragments of the Dead Sea scrolls. It's
your opponunity to take in the " si ghts"' of the Internet!
Please note that the facility . Room 127 of the Undergraduate Library, t
will be available during selected week-day hours beginning the wed:. of
September 25th . Look for posted hours at the entrance to UGL, ncar the
UGL Reference Desk, and next to the UGL Internet Information Rack.
For more information about exploring the Web at the Undergraduate
Library, contact the UGL Reference Desk at 645-2945. The URL for the
UB Libraries Web is ht t p :/Jwings.b utralo.edu(Jibraries or 1ype wings f
at your system prompt and select "Libraries ...

- Loss Pequeno Gla:.ier and Nancy Schiller,

VOWHTEERS NEEDED FOR
'BEACH SWEEP'

0

You 're pari ol the solution to
water pollution ef you volunteer
lor the hlth annual Great Lakes
Beach Sweep to be held Saturday
5ept 23 . on the Norlh Campus
Armed weth garbage bags . gloves
and data·collecllon c ards. teams of
volunteers wttl scour the Danks of
Lake Reta and Lake LaSalle Irom 10
a m to noon Whtle trothng lor trash
they w111 atso collect •nlormat1on on
the types ol1tems they gather to be
1nctuded 1n a database at the Center
lor Mar1ne Conservallon rn Flonda
Ellens olt1red trash collectors last
year were rewarded when a heron
pa•d an unexpec ted v•s•tto a newly
cleaned area
"Most of the trash collected •s
typtcally food contatners and wrap ·
pers .~ says Helen Domske assoc•ate
d~tec tor ot the UB-oased Great
Lakes Program Volunteers may can
Domske at 645-2088 for more enlor ·
malton and d•rect1ons

MCKAY JOINS WBFO
AS AN~UNCER/PRODUCER

0

Bullalo rad10 veteran Mike

McK•y has

oeen appoented news and
1nlormatton an ·
nouncer/producer
at WBFO·FM 88 7.
UB's National Pub·
he Radeo alftl•ate
McKay prevt ·
ously anchored re· MCKAY
ported and produced tor WBEN· AM
He atso has served as a reporter . an·
c hor and aSSIS!anl news dtrector at
WGR -AM. promohons d~rector at
WGR-FM 97 Rock . and anchor and
reporter at WJTN-AM 1n Jamestown
He was an anchor/reporter at WBFO
trom 1987·88 and 1982·84
McKay. who has oeen a free·
lance reporter lor state and nat tonal
rad1o networks . earned a bachelor's
degree 1n broadcast ,ournahsm from
Meda1\le College
ELECTED TO MASTERSHIP
IN PHYSICIANS COLLEGE

P. Nol•n. chalf of
the Department of Med1cme •n
the UB School of Medecene
and B1omed•ca1 Sc1ences and ch•el
of medec1ne at The Buffalo General

0

Jam••

Univ~rsity Ubrari~s

HospitaL has been elected to mastership tn the Amencan College of
Phys1c1ans
Mastership IS the h•ghestlevel ot
memberShip attainable tn the Amencan College o f Phys1c eans Masters
are elected · tor thetr personal char acrer pos•t•ons of honor or rnlluence
contrebuttons toward lurtherrng the
pur poses of the College. and/or eminence tn prac11ce or en med•cal research ·
Nolan was recogn1zed for hts con·
tnbu!lons to 1nternal med•cme and to
the Amencan College ol Phys1c1ans
A UB faculty member s1nce 1963 he
has served the College as governot
regent and currenlly as charr olthe
Board of Regents
AulhCK o f more than 100 anteles
he has served on the edttonat board of
the Journal ol MediCine Experimental
and Cllmcal, and as a rev1ewer lor fOUr·
nals tncludtng The New England Jour.
nal of MediCine and Annals of Interna l
Med1c1ne He receeved h•s mechcat degree lrOQ'I Yale Un•versl!y

ABRAMS, PIVER
AID TME HOMELESS

0

The Frtends ot the N•ght People
soup kttchen es much more than
that It's a health chn•c too
thanks to the ef1oas of . .rbara J .
Abrama, cltn1cal ass1stant professor
at the UB School of Med1ctne and Bl(}
mechcal Sc1ences
Abrams. a physcaan 11"1 me Depart·
menr ol Emergency Medc•ne ar me Ene
County Medtcat Center went to
UB
mediCal schOoiiOf volunteer help
Among her recru1ts are Steven
Piver ol Roswell Park Cancer lnst• ·
lute a nationally-known oncolog•sr
and chmcal professor at the UB
med1cat school lor whom the cl1n•c IS
named Ptver longttme champ1on ol
the soup k1tchen lor the homeless
had anttc•pated the establiShment or
a health chnec there After the butiO·
1ng at 394 Hudson St unaerwem a
remodehng two years ago Prver nad
two rooms set as1de lor such a chntc
Abrams stat! also •nctuoes tour
students from the VB medrcal
school two paramedtCals and sev
era/ nurses The chn1c rs open !rom
S· 7 p m on the hrst and therd Tues
day of each month Pa!IBnts can get
a meal and medtCal help Senous
medtcal problems 1nctud•ng those
•nvotv.ng drug add tct•on are referred
to hOSPital rehab chn•cs

me

�-------....__ _
....__
------

8
Information Technolgy User Ltai·
son offtee a1 645· 3540

..... -~--

-- --- ---

ASCITW-.....
PiAt: Mail/UNIX. 10 a.m .• Noon.

Grutt:r Niaeara Frontier Jnn-

lal Medin&amp;. Openmg day. Sponsored by I~ UB Dental Alumni
A.lisoctatiOn Buffalo Convention
Cenu~ r 8 a.rn.-3 p.m.. To rcghaer.
ca11829-2061
CllldlopuiMG~~WJ

c-...

An tap ism o( tbr Endothdin

Pathw.y Ptnmts Va.'JOC'Oft5trictkm Durin&amp; Cb.rook Low Flow in
Rabbits., Dr William Ca1vo, Dept

of OlenucaJ Eng~necnng. 108
Sherman. South Campus. 8 a.m.

MlcrollloloO
-in
RNA Edilin&amp; Com
pkns

Trypt~noiDfM bruc~i, Laune K
Read. Ph.D. 245 Cary Soulh
Campus Noon .

-

Poet.y 1.8ctuN/

Sak of Baldwla plaaol; part of
proceedJ to benefit UB. Atrium,

-

DlatJotCIII- k - l o t
B rain Waves and Bralo Wlrio&amp;,
Dr Carla J. Shatz.. Univ . ofCalifomta. Berkeley . Farber G-26
South Campus. 4 p m.

IP;''

ment Gallery located in the Center
for the Ans, Noeth Campus. The
show, which includes lithoJ.raph&amp;.
etchinas. woodcuu:, and
mezzotints, continues through
OcL 2 1. Gallery houn arc Tues·
day, IOa.m.-5 p.m.; Wednesday.
Thursday. and Friday, 10 a.m.·8
p.m.; Saturday. II a.m.·l p.m .

A_....., __ _

m-

"ary tor runnmg SAS on UB Unu.
machtne\ I J0-4 · 30 p m Call 645\ 54 2 fur n:gtslro1110n mfo m\aho n

Art prot has

Phyalce ColloquiuM
T~sllng th~ Stabil it y of Aotimat ·
tt'r, Dr Steve Oeer. Femu Nat
A 1.: c l.abor.UOr) 2211 Natural Se t
\l'cs &amp;: Mathe mattes ComplcA
h Campus 3 45 p.m

....

urea Exhibit

~;!~~5ie~n~{!~~~h:; sn.~t

fo l
ln wed by recepuo n at 5 p.m Um
'crsuy An Gallery. Ccntcr for thc
An ~ Nonh Campus 4 p m Fret
Galkry houn; . through No\ 9

MathemMk::e Colloquium
Prof. Fnmk Sonile, Univ of
Toronto. 103 Otefendorf South
Campus . 4 p.m

s ...lnar

Antioiidants as Food Add it ives,
Dr John Sean O ' Mahony, Rich
Products Corp 306 Parter. South
Campus 4 p .m

Pharmaeeutlce Seminar
Pharmacodynamia of M~tb y l·
pi'Tdnisolon~ in th~ Ra t, Yu·
Nten Sun. 508 Cooke . Nonh Cam·
pus 4pm
Statlatlca Colk»qulum
UH of Risk Functio ns to De·
v~lo p lnsigbt.J Into Physiological
M echanlsm!l : Dttomprrulon
Sickness a t Allitud~ . Dr. Hugh
VanLiew . 244 Cary South Cam.
pu~ . 4 p.m
Theater
Mir-ando a.l Tendido (Looking
Into the S ta nds), Tea1ro Avante
from Miami. Work by Venezudan
playwright Rondolfo Santana.
Black Box Theatre. Center for the
Ans Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. $25
opening night gala.

Gertatrk&gt;Medlclne

c-r.-

Evan Calkin.!!, M.D., Michael L.
Freedman, Jerry H. G urwit'l,
a nd Paul R. KatL Spon ~red hy
Dtvtston of Gcnalncs/Gerontol·
ugy and the Mulhdisctplmary
Center o n Agmg In School or
Medu: me and Biomedtcal Sc1·
cnces . Umventt y Inn and Conference Center. 2401 N Fo rest Rd ..
Amherst 8 a.m.· I p.m $15 tn ·
eludes luncheon To rcg1Mer. call
645-2018.

Plano Sale
Sale of Baldwin pianos: pan of
proceeds to benefit UB. Atrium.
Center fOf' the Ans. North Campus
10 a.m.·8 p.m. Appointments may
be amanged by calling 662-2201

._u
Volley ba ll. Alumm Arena Nunh
Campus. II a.m .. I p.m . 7 p m

Theat...
Mirando a l T~ndido (looking
inlo the Sllllnds), Teatro Avante
from Miamt. Work by Venezuelan
playwnght Rondolfo Santana.
Black BoK Thea~ . Center for the
Ans. Nonh Campus 8 p.m. $10
general admission . $5 students

Sate of Baldwin pianos; pan or
proceeds 10 benefit UB . Atrium,
Center for tbe Arts. North Campus.
II a.m.·6 p.m. Appointments may
be arranged by calling 662· 2201 .

c-

New--c..ten

Ann al ConvocatkJn and Lit·
ur&amp;)' oftbe Holy SplriL Receiv·
ing awards are Bishop Edward D.
Head and Lt Stephen T. Spall. St.
Joseph's R.C. Church, 3269 Main
St 11 :30 a.m.

UBIItSUIIIIH
Notes of a Whlk Black Woman,
Judy Sca les· Trent, UB law professor. Admission includes full
breakfast. Center for Tomorrow .
North Campus 7.30 a.m. $9
Alumm Assoctntion members:
$10 others. For reservations. call
Alumm Office at 829· 2608.
G~a ter Niagara Fronlie.r Dental Meelin&amp;- Second and final
day . Sponsored by the UB Dental
Alumn1 Association. Buffalo Con·
vention Center. 8 a.m.-4 :30p.m.
To register, call829·206 1.

p--·--

Computen aDd hdlatrics, Peter
Winkelstein. M.D. Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital. 8 a.m.

ASCITW__,.
lat.Wucdoa to UNIX. 10 a.m.·
12:30 p.m. To reJi&amp;ter. call Academic Services, Computing and

Allergic Rhiniti!/Sinus ilis,
Kathleen Dooovan. M.D.
Cafetorium A. Mercy Hospital.
8:30a.m.

-Studleo
Worbloop
Twelve Steps and Otbe.r Se lfHelp Groupa. K.atharint Terry .
Sponsored by Institute for Addie·
tions Studies and Tr1ining.
Oaemen College, 4380 Main St. .
Amherst. 9 a.m.4:30 p.m. $60. To
reaister. call 645·6 140.

ASCITW__,.
SPSS for VMS. 1· 3:30 p.m. To
reaister, call Actdcmic Serviccs,
Computin&amp; aod lnfonnatioo Tech·
noloJY U&amp;er Uaisoa office at 645·

3540.

~

solo show

"Abiogenesis No.
a drawing by Adele
Henderson . Assistant
Professor of Arl. is on
vtew through Nov. 12
tn her solo show , "Accrelions." allhe
Castellani Museum
of Art. Niagara
Universtly.

Her solo show, "Accretions,'' is on
view through Nov. 12 at the
Castellani Museum of An at
Niagan University.

ASCIT Wotbhop
Introduction t o MATLAB. 1.304:30p.m. To regisler. call Aca·
demic Services, Computing and
Information Technology User llatson offtce at 645 -3540.

Phy..co_l_
TBA. 220 Na1ural Sciences &amp;
Mathemalics Complell . Nonh
Campus. 3:45 p.m.

SPSS for Windows. 9 a.,n .- Noon.
To register. call Academic Servi~s. Computing and lnfonnatton
Technology User Liaison office a1

645 ·3540.
ASCIT Wotbhop
lnt~mel

ResourttS- Peoplefor UNIX URn. 10 a.m.·Noon.
To register. caJI Academic Ser·
vices, Computing and Information
Technology
Liaison
office at
_ _... p User
__
_

-

645-3540.

T M Formation or Scnpie-A!J.so..
elated Prion Prottln : Convert·
lD&amp; Jeky U into Hyde, Dr. Byro n
Caughey , senior investigator. Nalionallnstitutes of Health, Rocky
Mountain Laboratories. Hamilton.
Montana. RPCI. Elm and Carlton.
12:30 p.m.
ASCIT Wotbhop

P..a.trtc:~e

Adele Hendcnon. assistant

fessor of att, has been awarded
one of 17 Natioaal Endowment

ASCITWork-.,

...........

*om

Show by lthodO Island
prinunaken Leslie Bostrom.
Stephen Fisher, ud Nancy Friese.
opens Sept. 21 with • reception
from 5· 7 p.m. in the An Depart·

Volleyball. Alumn• Arena. Nonh
Campus 7 p.m and 8.30 p.m.

Comput ... Wotbhop
SAS ror UN IX. F-~!.t: nllab Reces-

Hutrttlon

---.

Convuution About UB's f u·
tu.re, Provost TIK&gt;mu E.
Headrick. Cenler fDf' Tomorrow.
North Campus. II a.m.

Theat ...
Mirando al Tendido (Looking
into the Stands), TealrO Avante
from Miami. Work by Venezuelan
playwnght Ro ndolfo Santana.
Black BoA lbea~ . Center fDf' the
Arts North Campus 8.30 p.m SJO
gentral admtsston. S5 students

rt:~l stnatJo n

_,..

, ........ thftte'*).

_ _ ,_lty

c..._.t... wotbhop

Cal1645 -3542 for
lnnnauon

~.~~

Center for the Arts. North Cam·
pus. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Appointments
may be arranged by calling 662·
2201.

._u

Computer Workehop
l ntrodu('tion to Microsoft Windowll fo r Students. I 30.3 30 p m

---...................
--·

645-3540.

Play True Be at Make Mean,
fiona Temph:lon 438 Clernenll
North Campus 12 30 p m Free
Part of '' Wednesdays :u 4 Plus··
lntrodudkm to VMS. Bas•c mfor mauun necessary to u~ the
VMScluster l -330pm Cnllb4 5\542 fo r rcgtstnallon mfum\3t1Un

_

To register, call Academic Ser·
vices, Computing and Information
Technolgy User Liaison office at

lotroducHoo to UN lX. 1· 3:30
p.m . To regi ster. call Acadcmtc
Services, Computing and lnfonna·
tion Technology User ltaison of·
fice at 645· 3540.

CoCJdtlwe Science
CO!Ioqu . . .
Artlfk:ial Scientific: Discoveries.
Monon Shagrin, Slale College at
Fredonia. 280 Park . Non h Cam ·
pus. 2-3 :30 p.m.

for lhe A1U fellowships in vi1uaJ
ans. worn on paper. for 1995·96.

COHT111UIIIQ EXHIBITS

u•-~

Work in bronze, stone, wood. and
fabricated metal, through Sept. 26
in the An Department Gallery located in the Center for the Arts.

N0&lt;1hCampus.

Opua: ClaMic• Uve
Alf«d Frt:nnin&amp;. ttllo aod pi·
11no, a nd Sten Thomas, violin
and piano. Concerts are taped for
broadcut on WBFO 88. 7 FM the
following Sunday at 4 p.m. Allen
Hall. South Campu.!i. 7 p.m. Free.

Volleyball
UB vs. Cornell. Alu mni Arena.
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.

--·

~IMOIIWJ

Hyperapnirt on Cerebral BJood
Flow in Humans: Tbe NASAESA Joint COl Srudy, Dr. John
A. Kruney. Dept. of Physiology .
108 Sherman. South Campus.
8a.m.

ADA--

Royals vs. Canbiua. Ellicoet
Courts. North Campus. 3 p.m.

Lucdte I'1Du. Saec:nina Room.
Center for the Arts. Nortb Cam·
pus. 4 p.m. Free. Put of .. Wcdnes·
days at 4 Plus."

12:30 p.m. Free. Pan of ''Wednes·
days at4 Plus."

ASCITWorbloop
Maple for Windows. 1-4 p.m. To
register, call Academic Services,
Computing and lnfonnation Tech·
nology User Liaison office at 645-

-- ---3540.

COl ........
Spotlia.bt on Womeo '!l Hn.ltb,
Dr. Maurizio Trcvisan. Jo
Osborne. Dr. Saleh Fctoun. and
Suz.anne Wilson. Presented by 1~
Western New York Health Sciences Librarians. Heallh Sciences
Library . South Campus. 1-5 p.m.
S5. For reRrvation call 829· 3402.

__,_

ASCIT Wotbhop

SPSS for UNIX. I :30-4:30 p.m.
To register, call Academic Set·
vices. Computing and lnfonnalion
Technology User Liaison office at
645-3540.

_c. . ,.

Tbt Aaxrkans wltb Disabilities
Acl : What'!l ia U for You? Mytb
vs. Reality. Keynoce speaker:
James J. Weis man, Esq., u.soc.
e~~:ec . dir. of legal affairs. Eastern
Paralyzed Veterans Associatiori.
Student Union. Nonh Campus.
8:30 a.m.·3:30 p.m. Call 836-0822.

CilUd Pr-otectioo PoUcy Rdorm.
~-Howard Davidson, ABA Center

-Wori&lt;Worbloop

Varieties, Prof. Mohan
Ramachandran . 103 Diefendorf.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

A Training Retrul for Womeo:
lotqratia&amp; Spirituality In
Tb~r-apy, Bonnie Collins. First of
two sessions. Sponsored by Social
Work Continuing Education .
Stella Niagara, L.twiston. 8:45
a.m. -3 :30p.m. SIOS . To register,
call645·6 140.

ASCIT Wotbhop

--y-

Pine Mall/UNIX. 10 a.m.· Noon.
To reg1ster. caJ I AcademiC Scr·
VIces, Computing and Information
Technology User Liaison office at

--- __

·-·......,.,.......,

Center

£ffecb of SU!Ilalned

438 Clemens. North Campus.

645-3540.

Coli

BloloCY

l'n&gt;blnou Dl Embryoalc Cdl

Fa,.aod-Somd
Willi Spelially llaolwcl 0,. U o-

..._,

Caclolo Dr. Roben Summcn. 306
Ftubcr. South Campus. lBO p.m.

........

~·· Art, Lucette Finas.

Alfonso Volo is • poc1 and an anist
whose wort is on view throo,gh
Nov. 5 in the Univenity GaUery,
Center for the Arts, North Campus.

on Children and the Law. Wash·
ington. D.C. S4S O'Brian . North
Campus. 3:30-S p.m .

Eump\ai oCFuod.uDHtal
Groups o( SJDOOth Proj«tive

Phlnl•~
R~at

PollllcalictThe Department of Political Sci·
ence is acceptina applications fcx
three internships: The New Yort
State Senate Undergraduate Ses·
sions Assistant Program for 1996;
the New York SLate Assembly
Sess ion Internship for 1996: and
the Washin&amp;ton Semester Program
fur 1996. Deadlint is Oct. 5. Applications are available from the
department, 520 Park Hall, North
CamP!15.

wut'o l l l n - f o r - l ' ?
'"'The Future of SUNY ... a forum.
will be hekl Sept. 29 starting at 3
p.m. in the Restaurant in Moot
Hall located on the Buffalo State
Colleae Elmwood Avenue campus. 'The forum is presented by
United University Professtons.
Today is the deadline to register
by ca1ling 878·5732.
OJ__.,~

'The Department of Occupational
Thcr1py is holding Pfe"mlljor
meetinss at t 1 a.m. and al Noon
Oct. 5 in Ill Kimball Tower.
South Campus.

••tlca ........

OMern.IJoDs oa Facton

--

Arfectin&amp; Veoous Rudivity,
Paresh Oandon.a. M.D. S08
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

Colloolll...

Politics of '-'rblln Education:
Polkies for tM Nut Century,
Roben Bennett. Regent of the
State of New York. and President
of United Way of Buffalo and
Erie County . Center fDf' Tomor·
row. North Campus. 4 p.m. Free .

Art.,......

3 Pr1ataaUn. Work by Rbode
Island priotmak.en Lcslte
Bostrom. Stephen Fisher, and
Nancy Friese. Show nans through

Oct. 21. ""DcpuunentGallery.
Cen~ for the Arts. North Cazn.

pus. S-1 p.m.

lo.sl:ructJoa.al Support Technician (lolonW PromOIIoaal Oppor1oolly, SI,-3)-0fficc of InfO&lt;·
mation Resources. Posting
tP-5013. Staff Asdsta.AI (latr:mal
Oppor1uolly, Sl .-2)·
Law Ubrary. Poaing IP·S034.

-

.....,_;.,w

Project Ad.alalstntlvt Ol'l'lar·
Development. Pollina I R·9S078.
1'1-ojcd Stair .uoodaiO-Dcvelopmeoc PoslmatR-950119. 1'1-ojcd
Staff .U.CS.te-Deveklpmrot.

Pollina tR-95090. Socn&lt;ary D·
Medicine. PostinlfR·9509'2.

Cieri&lt; U-SPS Pw&lt;huina. Postina
tR-95087.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Ask the President on WBFO
What do you want to know about UB
today? Call in your questions this afternoon when President William Greiner
appears on
rm MPI Mfllll t Jtll
WBFO-FM 88.7.
the university's
national public
radio station.
Greiner will answer questions in a live
public forum from 3-4 p .m. Call 8292555 to participate in the open forum

88rWBro
7

September 14. 1995

Volume 27. No. 3

FSEC hears Townsend, Fourtner
describe.future plans for UB sports
Middle States rated athletic facilities 'well above expectations'
11J STEVE COX

letes- in check at UB. acco rd ing
to Townsend. "Our grants-in-aid

PORTS AND rec re ation at UB are lea n
and mean when compared with the program min g at o th er
SUNY institutions. Athletics Di rector Nelson Townsend told me mbers of the Fac ult y Se n a te
Executive Committee at its Sept. 6
meeting.
Athletic depanment spendin g
per student was $97 .59 at Stony
Brook and $108.64 at Albany. but
onl y S58.48 at UB. according to a
survey conducted by Townse nd .
O nly Binghamton spends less; at
$43 .71 per student . because they
have no football program, he added .
Of his depanment' s $4.4 milli on
budget. only 57 percent comes from
s ta te tax dollars , explained
Townsend. The ba lance of the budget is compri sed of stude nt fees .
currentl y $100 pe r year for full
time undergraduates, and revenues
generated by other means such as
gate receipts.
SUNY's historical ly low tuition
has helped keep the largest ponion
of most schools· athl etic budget sc holarship grants-in-aid to ath-

are only about one-t hird of our
budget, while it runs 50 to 60 percent ofthe budget at many schools:·

Reporter Stall

S
8,.,_. Opens SEFA CIIIQIIgn
President Greiner, right, and other UB officials join
Barry Ull' of Cl1annel 2 News in Center for the Arts at
SEFA Kicl&lt; Breakfast Sept. 11 . Lillis thanked all those
who participa
in the Day of Caring. Theme for SEFA
Campaign Sap . 11-0ct. 28 is ' UB: Leading the Way.•

More than -1,000 expected
to attend AIDS conference
lly MARY IIElll SPINA

News Bureau Staff

F

INDINGSO Fa landmark
study suggesti ng major
differences in some brain
ce ll s of homosex uals and
heterosex uals a nd major findings
o n adult sexua l behavior in the
U.S. will be discussed Oct. 5 at the
W estern Ne w York Fall Confere nce on AIDS: Sexuali ty &amp; HIV .
More than 1.000 health care professionals, edu cators, clergy, communit y service workers, patients
and the ir fam il y members are expected to attend th e conference in
the Buffalo Convention Center.
Major sponsors of the conference are the UB School o f Medi c ine and Biomedical Sciences and
the Erie County Medical Ce nter
Immunodefic iency Services.
The progra m will begin at 8:30
a.m . with a presenta tion on "Deve lopment of Human Sexual Orie nt a ti o n" by Simon Le Vay. a
neurobiologist formerly with the
Salk Institu te, Lalo ll a, Ca lif. Authorof"The Sexual Brain." Le Vay
wi ll rev iew resu lt s o f hi s landmark
study that suggests there are differences between ce rtain brain cell s
in homosex uals and heterosex ua ls.
LeVay is co- founder of the Insti tute of Gay and Lesbian Education. West Holl ywood, Calif.
"Sex in America: What Do We
Reall y Do?" will be the topic of the
second speake r in the pl enary session , John H. Gagnon. professor of
psychology at the State University
of New York at Stony Brook. He
will di sc uss major findings on aduh
sex ual behavior in the U.S. based
o n data coll ected at the Universit y
of C hicago. Findings of the study.

on which Gagnon was a co-inves ~
tigator. challenged pre vaili ng
myths that previously shaped popular images of sex ual conduct.
'The Hea ling Powe r of Humor"
will be discussed at a noo n lunc heon by Lesl ie Gib&lt;on. hea lth and
Continued on page 2

he said. No state tax dollars are
used to pay for athlete grants-inaid, Townse nd added.
The Middle States Association
rated the UB recreationa l facilit ies
as " well above expec tations."
Townsend pointed out. The bas ketball team now practices early in
the morning . so facilities are avail ab le to facull y. staff and sl udcnts
for a greate r port ion of the day . he
explained. The director of athlet ics
also ci ted the new UB Stadium and
football facilities. acquired via the
Wor\d University Games. as another big asset.
Townsend and NCAA Facu lty
Representative Charles Founn er
shared insights with FSEC mem bers into the future plans of the
NCAA. and the how those plan~
impac ted US's decision to '\tep up
to Division 1-A span s.
It was Founner who. over the:
summer, recommended j umping to
the Division 1-A Mid -At lantic Con ference (MAC) to a then- skeptica l
Townsend and President Greiner

"Defections left the old Mi d-Con ti nent Confe re nce wit h only four
team s," Founner explained. "a nd .
a lthough their commissioner was
recruiting hard , the prognosis for
th at conference was not good." The
Mid -Continent Conference had
lacked a Division 1-AA football
program. meaning that US's foot ball team had played several seasons as an "indepe ndent. "
In its new conference. UB will
join Akron. Ball State. Bowling
Green. Central Michigan. Easte rn
Michigan. Kent . Miami of Ohio.
Ohio Uni versi ty, Toledo and Westem Michigan. Marshall and North em Illinois join th e confere nce next
year and Eastern ttltnois and another school are likely to join the
MAC as we ll whe n UB does in
1997-98. making two seven-ream
divisions .
UB need play onl y seven of iL'\
II game~ agains t other conference
s4uads. Contests with ot her Oi viSion I power~. such as Syrac use: .
Notre Dame . Army or Navy. are
now possib le. Schools negotiate
with each other for non-co nferencl.' game!'o. WhiiL' the early years
Cont1nue d

O:"l

page 2

Nerve tissue studies offer promise on growth
11J EUEN QOUIBAUM
News Bureau Stafl

&lt;l lENTISTS AT UB and
collaborators at ot he r in stituti o ns wo rkin g on
substrates for nerve- ti ssue regenerati on have deve loped
new surface chemistry to create
the first modified Teflon surface
th at control s how c~lls stick to it.
. Eventually. the researchers say,
the new surface chemistry could
be pan of a ti ssue-rege nerati on or
wound-healing syste m that would
help support, as well as direc t. the
growth of new neural tissue where
existing tissue has been damaged .
The researc h. involving mouse
cell s from pennanent cell lines. is
described in two papers publi~ hed
in the Jou rnal of Biomedical Ma·
terials Research. A paper on re lated research is in press at the

S

l oumal ofNeuroscience Research .
The surface modification brings
two key potential adva ntages to
biomaterials: It a llows scie nti sts
to attach nerve ce ll s to a Te fl on
surface. a material of choi ce for
biomaterials used today. and it lets
them control where on the surface
the cell s wi ll grow.
··we don't yet know why ce n-

tra l-nervous-systcm tissue
doe s not regenerate." said
Jose ph A . Gardella. Jr .,
professor of c hemistry at
UB and co-a uthor of the
papers.
"The idea is that so mething happens in the early
developmental s tages,
some kind of biochemical
switch that says don't grow
there. grow here ." he said.
" In later stages of development, th at swi tc h turns
off and we don· t know how
to tum it back on again."
Once neurobiologists isolate that switch.lhe new surface c he m is try co uld
incorpordte it. eventually be~
coming an imponant subSlrJtefabiomedK:alimplant'i. Ron A: .......... cella ........... ~ In patThis is because the new sur- tams on moclfled Teflon polymer. B: NeMI
face chemisuy developed at eel has diiJelentlated, growing a neurite.
UB allows scientists to put
if ce lls are not positioned properl y
cells down in precise patterns. a preon a surface. they won't transmit
requisite for substrates that would be
nerve signa ls as well .
used to grow nerve cells.
'"W h:Jt was stanling about our
"In order for ne ural ti ssue to
experimen
ts is that in a lmost all
regenerate, ce ll s need to be po~i ­
cases. the nerve ce lls. which will
tioned in a pan ic ular direction."
stick to and grow on an unaltered
explained Gardella. He added that
Teflon surface. preferred instead
neural -cell biologists be lie ve that

to grow on ou r modified Tenon
surface when expo~cd to
he
said. "The nervc cells made a defi nite c hoice between two differe01
surfm.:c l' ht:mrstne~ ...
Even no" . the surface chemJ!'Itry provide!&lt;! &gt;t te st surface for ex periments c:xploring factor'\ tha t
cont ribute to the growth of neural
ce ll s on surface!'! " No" we have a
testbed for protetn s or pcptidt:!&lt;!that
biologists believe may be pan of
the signaling proce'\S thattell !&lt;o neu ml cell s whe re and how to grow."
said Ga rde ll a. "A nd because the
new surface provides a clear. ~ 1mpl e
and rapid Wi.IY to tes t hypothcse!'o.
fewer anim al tests will event ually
be needed ." The nex t step w ill be
to test nerve ce ll ~ from living an•mal s and then humans .
Gardella co-authored the pap.:r..
with Fmnk V. Bright. associate professor of chemistry at UB: EJ. Bd~cr...
UB doctorJI candidate in chemisU) .
researchers at the Centre Hospitaller
Universitaire Vaudois 111 Swil7..erland.
M.I.T. and Kodak Research Labom·
tories. and fom1er UB postdoc10rJ.1
associmc~ T cm:nct.' G. Vargo. now at
the Naval Rcsean:h Labor.u ory mK.I
Y. S. Kim at the Korea Standards
Research Institute.

u:·

�2

Welch back on job
as Senate chair
Issues look familiar to political Klence prof
taking helm a decade after first t By ST£\IE COX
Reporter Staff

P

olitical Science Professor Claude

Welch believes he is the first
··recidivist" cha ir of the Faculty
Senate. a role he has assumed
for the nex t two years. He says it

is a task he has again undertaken without

reservat ion. because hi s com mitment to the
value of facult y governance is deep and
since re.
..Though some v1ew facu lty governance

as meetings and repons that are produced

\

then forgoue n. I di spute that:· asserts Welch.
To bad up hi s fee lings in true academic
style, Wc kh has already done hi s research.
Fac ult y Senate members will soon receive a
dossier of Senate re solutions of the past
decade : more than 50 si ngle -spaced pages of
them . AILhough the Senate's r o le in
po licy making is only advisory. Welch says
the list of resoluti ons show s what cooperative negotiating can accomplish. A ··remark able percentage" of the resoluti ons have been
acted into po li cy by the campu s admini slrati on. says Welch.
A decade has passed since his first term as
chair. but Welch finds that the issues facing
the faculty look remarkably fami liar. "For
instance.the Undergraduate College had been
established to deal with, among other things,
establishing general education requirements;
the state was beginning to shift support away

from state tax dollars and toward tuition,"
observed Welch, "and President Sample was
urging us to step up from Division III athletics." In addition to being past chair of the
Senate, Welch has served as chair of the
Presidcnr 's Board on Appointments, Promotions and Tenure; as well as having chaired
several Faculty Senate committees.
Welch also is one who has viewed the
university as both an administrator and a
facul ty member. Eight of his 30 years at UB
were spent in administration. ln fact, when
he became dean of undergraduate srudies in
1967 he wasoneofthe youngest deans in the
country , earning him the nickname, ..Boy
Dean." Welch went on to serve as associate
and acring vice president for academic affairs and acting dean of the colleges. as well
as chair of the political science department.
A pol itical scientist at UB for 30 yean;,
Welch' s academic passions include the poHti·
cal roles o f anned forces. international human
rights and terrori sm. He has produced a dozen
books, another 50 book chapter.; and major
journal articles in these areas. In 1993-94,
Welch was awarded a Fulbright grant to study
in Ethiopia, Namibia, Nigeria and Senegal. His
latest book. on human rights in Africa, will be
published shortly by the Univer.;ity of Pennsylvania Press. His knowledge of the history
and JXllitics of terrorism made Welch a muchsought-aftercommentatorfollowingtheOklahoma City bombing earlier this year.

Welch holds the Faculty Senate in high
esteem. ''Perhaps it is because, as a politicaJ
scientist, we tend to believe in institutions,"
he speculates. Among the benefits Welch
sees in faculty governance is a closer identification with the university, truer collegi ality
and a genuine sense of accomplishment
'' Difficult times such as these test our collegiality the most," he said. "Working cooperatively with the administration , while
maintaining a dynamic tension, we can make
thi s a more humane place."
Welch' s personal roots run deep in Boston,
where his father was a well-known surgeoo,
but his association with UB goes back many
years. He was only 25 and hadjust "steppedoff
the boat from Oxfonf' when his teaching career
began at UB in 1964, but he fondly remembers
attending a US-Harvard football game six years
before that, when he was a Harvard undergrad.
" I vividly recall that football game at that
fine inslitution in Cambridge because it was

FsEC
Continued from page 1

will surel y present many challenges, the conference change improves Buffalo's chances
to earn football bowl berths or spots in NCAA
or NIT post-season basketball tournaments.
"Last year. four teams from the MAC went to
the NCAA Tournament." Fourtner said. Also.
UB stands to earn about five times its current
financial package for playoffs.
When you play a nationally know n team .
you earn a share of the NCAA national
televis io n reven ues. Fourtner explained.
··Being Division 1-A gives us access to play
nationall y known teams,"sa id Founner. Lik ening UB 's squads during the first couple of
seasons at thi s new level to Mike Tyso n

sparring opponents, Fourtner said " It means
th at, in the early years ar least, we might get
an opportunity to play a Syracuse or a Navy
and get our heads handed to us, but make
quite a bit of money for it. "
The new level of play shoul d also further
fuel the department 's successful deve lopment operations. "Over I 2 years, between
1975 and 1986, thi s depanmentraised a total
of$63.000 in endowments," Townse nd said.
"The nex t year. when I arrived. we rai sed
$80.000 in o ne year and, in o ur best year so
far, we raised $160,000 in 1992-93. With
another $2.5 million from three large gifts
directed towards athletic scholarships. we

Volunteers needed to spread the word
about WHY's architectural heritage
If you love the prairie houses of Frank Lloyd Wright, the art deco motifs
of City Hall, the grain elevators along the Buffalo f:jiver, gothic cottages,
historic churches and.Oimsted parks, you now have an opportunity to
learn more about the region's great arcMectural heritage and to share
that knowledge with others.
The Architectural Awareness Project for Buffalo (TAAP), a 16-year-old
program sponsored by the UB School of Architecture and Planning, is
seeking volunteers for .docent training.
Participants will attend lectures, tours and workshops taught by UB
architecture faculty, TAAP docents and experts from the architectural
community. The course runs from September 1995 through the sprihg
of 1996, Tuesdays from 2:30-5-p.m. in Hayes Hall on US's SoutliCampus. ·
Once trained, docents will present educational programs on the built
environmenls of Buffalo and Western New YOO&lt; to school and community groups. Volunteers are expected to make a minimum two-year
commitment.
To obtain applications for the TAAP docent program, call Margot
More, 829-3543 or Annegret Richards, 829-3485, ext. 317.

The Reootlet tS a campus communtty newsoaoet publiShed 0y the Oov!SO"' ol l.lniY&amp;f51ty
OIAfC IOAOf"I&gt;UOliCA I IONS nMOrM1'J, COM01' • lOIIOfl

~TIMit:V.OAL

have made great progress toward completely
endowing our footbaJI program."
What's ahead forUB athletics?Townsend
explained that current facilities should suppan the athletic department 's needs for some
years to come. "So meday, it may make financial se nse to expand the s tadium. "
Townsend told FSEC members , " but that is
now required by virtue of the change in
conferences." For games that could potentiall y outsell the 18.000 seat UB Stadium,
Rich Stadium has been o fficiall y designated
as an alternate playing site, accordi ng to
Townsend.
Also, the coming years will see NCAA
leve l competition begun in lacrosse, crew and
so ftball . Townse nd said. These sports were
se lect·ed in part because they , too, would
involve use of facilities UB already has and
not require new construction. he explained.

AIDS
Continued from page 1

humor consultant and direc tor o r Pegasus
Express ions.
There will be workshops from 10- 11 :15
a.m.; I: 15-2:30 p.m. and from 2:45-4 p.m. on
topics including "Drugs. Sex and HIV ," "Cultural Differences in Sexual Expressions" and
''Dimensions of Human Sexuality."
Co-s ponsors of the conference are the
AIDS Alliance; AIDS Community Services:
Buffalo Chapter, American Red Cross; Deaconess Family Planning; Geneva B. Scruggs
Community Health Care Center; AIDS lnslitute, New York State Depanment of
Health; New York/Virgin Islands AIDS Education and Training Center; Sexuality Center and Weigel Health Centei. Buffalo State
College, and Western New York Regional
HIV/AIDS Training Center. Erie I BOCES.
For Informa£ion on registration. call64520 18.
-

a very wet day, so my date and I huddled
under an umbrella to watch the game. I don't
even remember for sure whether UB or
Harvard won," Welch recalled. "However,
that gal and I so enjoyed ourselyes that. a
couple years later, we were married."
Welch gntduated magna cum laude from
Harvard, where be was named outstanding
premed student and president of Harvard' s
daily campus paper, 1'11#: Crimson. He earned
his doctorate in philosophy at Oxford University in 1964, then "walked off the boat from
England and into my teaching position here."
He was a successful professor, acting dean of
the colleges and father of four children aged 6
to 16 in 1979 wbeo he lost his fint wife to
cancer. Today, Welch is married to Jeannette
Ludwig, an associate professor in the Modem
Languages and Uteratures DepartmenL His
children are oow grown. In fact, severnl live
within blocks of each other and their family
roots in Boston.
.....

FaiRest livens
LaSalle shores
FellfMt ..eun. to Baird Point
Saturday, Sept. 16 wilh a lineup
that includes God Street Wine, Buffalo Tom, Mobb Deep, Blessid
Union of Souls, Buju Banton and
Julianna Hatfield.
The annual fall music-fest on the
shores of Lake LaSalle will begin at
2 p.m.. weather permitting. In case
of inclement weather, the concert
will be held in Alumni Arena.
Sponsored by the Student AssociatioA and UUAB, admission to
Fallfest is free and open to the
public if the even! is held outside.
Should weather force Jhe concert
to be held in Alumni Arena, UB students will be admitted free; all othcharged $10.

. .. --......

SeMces &amp;ate University o1 New York a1 Buflalo EdiiOrtaJ offices ate JoeatOO., 136 Crotts Hal. AIMelsl. (716) 64~

• ASSOCtAIEEOITOf'l

JOM~

• A.FITOIAECTOA IOMCLOIJTID •

HTTP /AJ81NFOPUI'I 8Uff.fol 0E~POA I£RI

�3
'Notes of a White
Black Woman':
Sunrise Series to
feature law prof
.Judy

ScaJe•Trent will discuss what

"race" really means in America and her
experiences of being
rejected by the whi te

community because
o f race and by the
black community be-

cause of color in a

1· 1 1. 1 · ···

"UB at SUNRJSE"

breakfast
program
to
be held from
7:30-9

a.m . on Friday . Sept.
22, in the Center for Tomo rrow o n th e
North Campu s.
''Notes of a White Black Woman. "
also the title of her new book. will be the
topic of Scales· Trent , a U B professor of
law. A light -s kinned black woman ,

Scales-Trent explores in her book what it
is like to li ve simultaneously inside and
o utside Or both black and wh ite comm unities in the no- man' s land that has both
defi ned and challenged her .
"UB at SUNRISE" is prod uced by the

UB Alumni Assoc iatio n and UB' s O ffi ce
of Conferences a nd Special Events, New s
Bureau and Office of Pub lications. It also
is supported by the Office of Universit y

Development and the Office for Public
Serv ice and Urban
airs .
Price of the program, hich i nclude s a
f ull breakfasr. is $9 for U B lumni A ssociat ion members and $ 10 for II others.
For more informatio n. co tact the
A lumni A ssoc iati on at 829-260 Ticket
orders mu s t ~ recei ved by M onday.. Sepl.
18.

Indonesians here to train as master teachers
ay PA1111CIA -OVAN
News Bureau Staff

E

IGHTEEN
I NDONESIAN
sc hool teachers-all but two o f
whom left families and children
behind in Indonesia to take pan
in the project-have arrived at
UB. beginning two years of postgraduate
study to· become master teachers.
They are pan of an extensive teacherretraini ng program undertaken by the Indonesian govemmenl as pan of an effort to
lfansfonn the country into an industrialized
nation within 25 years .
In support of the Indonesian effon, the
World Bank Second Secondary Education
and Management Project is funding the ove rseas education of 132 teac hers, including the
18 at UB , who wi ll return home with new
professional skill s to serve as agents of
change. Thi s group. along with nearl y 16,000

teachers trained at home. will help supervise
the retraining and professiona l upgrading of
the country's 189.000 teachers.
The UB participants. representing five
I ndonesian provinces and several teachi ng
fields. are the only ones who will attend
school in the United States.
After arriving in June, they began trai ning i n Engli sh for academic purposes through
U B 's Intensive English Language Institute.
During their two years of graduate study in
the UB Graduate School of Education. they
will complete master' s degrees in learning
and i nstruction in sc ience, mathematics, English, foreign-language instruction and so·
cial studies.
The UB program is headed by Willi am
Cummings, director of the UB Center for
Comparat ive and G lobal Studi es in Education. Richard H arrington, a doctoral student
in comparative education and Cummings'

Relays aid innovative gift program
By JED NITZIIERG

Reporter Contributor

T

HE LEGENDGROUPofBuffalois
taking an innovative approach to its
commitmen t for $34,000 to the UB
Divi sion of Athleti cs for scho larships. II is organi zing a statewide high schoo l
track-and -field competition, ' The LegendRelays." 1be annual competition. supervised by
James L. Cecchini. draws about 3.000 partici pants from I 02 high schools. More than $17.000
has been raised for UB in the evenl' s first two
years. and the company and Cecchini are commined to at leas11wo more yearsoffund raisi ng.
A portion of the fee paid by spon so rs for
the competiti on i s set aside for UB scholarsh ips. according w Cecchini , vice president
of The Lege nd Group's Buffalo reg ional
offi ce. These pay ments make up about hal f

of the annual payment to UB on the gift; the
ba lance is provided by The Legend Group .
''Everyone is expecting great res ults f rom
our program," sa id Nel son Townsend, UB
director of athletics. " Jim and The Legend
Group are setting a standard for act ive vol unteer leaders hip."
"UB does a lot for Buffalo and it's a good
chance for us as a company to give something
back to the city." Cecc hini says. A llhough he
did nol attend UB. Cecchini 1s an active
voluntee r who has been a member of lhe UB
A thletics Advisory Commiuee for 1 h r e e
years. and chaired the corpor.tte season-ticket
campaign. The Legend Group. specializing in
fmancia) planning for nonproflt org.aniuti.ons.
co lleges and~piraJslhcallh -careorganiza tions,

has provided funds for sc ho l ~hips at coll ege~
and universities for II years .

admimstrative aSSistant , is coordinating the
teachers' stay and will teach a course introd ucing them to the U .S. ed ucational system
According to Cummin gs. Indonesia is
i mplementing a uni ve rsal nine-year basic
education program. an addi tion of three year!&lt;.
tO the country' s compul sory education re quirement. Thi s will require an enormous
effort in a nation made up o f 17 .000 islands
with a population of 180 million in 300
ethnic groups who speak 250 dialects.
II will necessi tale increased institut ional
capaci ty and improve ments in the quality of
ed ucation. as well as the imposition of national nonns in a nati on whose schools are
generall y organi zed and run loca ll y.
The government maintains, however, that
the new education system is necessary in
order to strengthen work-force skill s i n the
fie lds of science . tec hn ology. econom ics.
culture and co mmunical ions, and lo make
Indonesia compet iti ve industriall y .
The W orld Bank project is assisting by
al lowi ng teac hers to take advantage of strong
teacher and ad ministrator training progra m ~
at foreign universities. most of them in A ustra li a and other United Kingdom nations.
When the participants return 10 Indone sia. they will introduce innova ti ve teach mg
and learni ng melhods for different content
areas, provide instructional leadership in
teac her training and help establi sh and ad mini ster reg ion allencher-ln!ining cen t er~ .
Harrington said 1he US prog ram is de !tlg ned to acq uai nt the teac hers with the l at est de v e lopme nt s in curriculum and
mstructio n. wi th emphasi s on approaches
that s t re s ~ ac ti ve learnmg
II w ill assist them in mastcn ng dfeclivc
pre sentati on ski lls that the y (.·an then employ
a!" master teachers 10 their local selling~ .
Thei r program al so will mcl ude visit s to. and
the slud y of, A merican ~c h oo l sys l t: ms in
Nt:w Yurk and other ~ tall' ~

SportsView
FOOTBALL
Quincy Miller caught seven passes for 158
yards and the go-ahead score as Lafayette
gave head coach Silt Russo his 1OOth ca~
reer victory as the Leopards downed the
Umversity at Buffalo 24- 17 Saturday after noon at UB Stadrum
Miller's 35-yard touchdown pass from
Shawn McHale put the Leopards ahead 7·3
and hiS 27-yard catch on thlrd-and- 19 m the
third quarter set up the first of Nino
DiMatteo's two touchdowns to put Lafayette
(1·0) up 17 ·3. The Leopards took a 24·3
lead belore the Bulls 1t . 1) rallied late rn the
fourth quarter .
Anthony Swan threw a 46-yard hatlback
option pass to R1ch Sitarek with 3:30 leh 1n
the game to cut the lead to 24- 10 Nose
guard Keith Hansen then re1urned an inter·
caption 42 yards afler V1nce Canosa hit
McHale's arm with 2:04 lef11n regulation
However. Miller again saved the day for
the Leopards as he lielded Gerald Carlson's
onside kick and Lafayette was able to run
the clock down to ·Ot . UB quanerback
Kevin McGriff's Hail Mary pass on the last
play was incomplete
McHale completed 2CH&gt;I -34 passes tor
236 yards on a day when the Leopards
were held to 30 yards rushing on 42 carnes
Both teams lost three fumbles in the game.
all of them 1n the l~rst hat! as ne1ther team
could establish any offense UB linebacker
Craig Guest had 18 tackles, includ1ng five
lor losses, white Pete Conley added 12tack·
les. two of them for loss. and two tumble recovenes Hansen had nine tackles. two pass
breakups and a hatl-sack lor the Bulls
Rawle Howard led Lafayette with nine
tackles and a fumble recovery .

VOLLEYBALL
The Royals traveled to South Orange. N.J
tor three matches in the Seton Hall Tournarnent over the weekend UB defeated
LaSalle 15-17. 15- tO. 15· 11 . 15-9 and Long
Island 15-8. 15·7. 15·5. The Roy'!ls Iosi to
host Seton Halt 15-8. IO·t5. 15-1t . 15-7 to

put the1r record at 4-2 th1S season.
Cand1 Sims had impress1ve numbers for
the tournament. The junior sener had 26
kills, five aces and a .448 hitting percentage
on offense and added 87 ass1sts. DefenSively. Sims totaled eight blocks and 34
digs. UB takes to the road this weekend for
four matches at Robert Morris

MEN'S SOCCER
Goalie Jay Palmer led the Bulls to a 2·0 w1n
over the Big East's Pittsburgh Panthers Sat·
urday afternoon to push US's record to 3- 1
Junior'forward Ediru Okpewho opened
scoring at the 22:05 mark on a breakaway
pass from Anlony Wright . play1ng in his first
match s1nce returning from the Australian
World University Games soccer squad 1n Japan. Joe Mercik scored 1n the second half
on assist from Mark Malikowski for the decid ing margin. Palmer made five saves in
the match to postohis second shutout of the
season. The Bulls opened their homestand
with a 3-1 w1n over Canisius Sept. 6. Freshman Sebastian Zawislan scored two goals
while Okpewho added the other on a pen·
ally kick . Palmer stopped six shots

ern Mlch1gan Fnday and the Un•verstty ol
Mlchtgan Sunday

CROSS COUNTRY
Chris Keenan broke the course record •n
leading the Bulls to a tn-meet v•ctory at the
UB Open over Nragara 115·48) and St
Bonaventure ( 15-49). Keenan completed the
8K Akron Falls Park course •n 26 12 7 US
took the top live spots to ensure the w1n
On the women's s1de. Judith Novak ted the

Royals to the lop lour spots 10 lead UB to
w1ns over Ntagara ( 15-50). Cleveland Stale
( 15-49 ). Sr Bonaventure ( 15-50) and
Duquesne ( 16-41) Novak comp leted the SK
run 1n 18 29 6
Both teams host the UB Invitational at Ak ron Falls Park th1s weekend Tearns from
Colgate. Western Ontar•o. Youngstown
State. Rochester and St Bonaventure wtll
also be part•ct pallng
Ted Wasko. Sports lnformatson Offsce

WOMEN'S SOCCER
The Royals scored three second half goals
to down S1ena 5-2. on Saturday. UB IS now
2- 1 Delenseman Dana Talenco gave the
Royals a 1-0 lead 3:28 into the match scor ing oH a corner kick by Jenni1er Devita
Siena came back to tie the game at the ntne
m1nute mark when Melissa Oldi scored
UB then dominated . scoring three unanswered goats with freshman Beth Costello
starting the rally with an unassisted goal at
10:58 put the Royals ahead to stay.
In the second half. Annamaria Gasbarra
scored unassisted at 55:26 to g1ve the Royals a 3-1 edge. Two m1nutes later, Lori
Perillo scored off a cross1ng pass from
Gasbarr a for a 4-1 lead. Aher Siena's Bess•e
O'Dea gave the Saints an unassisted tally.
Gasbarra scored the linal UB goal. UB scans
a five-match road swing as they face East-

Ready to View UB from the Air
Computer Science Senior Eric Rose gives a thumbs up during free helicopter rides given by U.S. Marine Corps to students and faculty Sept.
6 and 7. Capt. F. C. Janik. USMC. helps Eric buckle up before he takes
off for a bird's-eye view of the UB campus.

�4

UB projects win APXs top regional awards
8y PATRICIA DONOVAN

One winning UB project, " Niagllr1l Park,
North America," was developed by II first-

News Bureau Stalf

P

ROPOSALS PRODUCED by
students in the UB School of
ArchiteclUre and Planning have
been cited as two of the top

three student projects of 1995

by the Upstate New York Chapter of the
American Planning Association ( APA ).

The APA is a nonprofit. public-interest
a nd educa tion organiza ti on representing
28.000 professional plan ners. e lected and
appointed orlicials and citi zens concerned
wuh urban a nd rural develo pment iss ues.
The Upstate New York Chapter represents
approx imate ly 600 planners. and e lected and
appmmed publi c offi c ial s through out New
Yark State and Southern Ontari o
The award ~ will be presented during the
APA Upstate Chapter's annual conference
to be held in Buffalo Sept. 28 and 29. The
aw ard!&lt;. lunc heon Will take pl ace o n Friday.
Sept. 29 , from 12 :30
Re gency Ho tel.

w

2 p.m . in the H yatt

direction of Ernest Sternberg, UB associate
professor of planning. It proposed that attractions on both sides of Niagara Falls be
turned into a bi-national pedestrian park..

Students worked with an advisory group of
business and government leaders from both
sides of the border, convened and funded by
the Canadian Consulate in Buffalo.
Among the necommendations made by
the students is elimination of auto traffic

planning professor Roben Shibley.
The Urban Design Project, sited in the
UB School of An:hitecture and Planning,
has, for the last live years. worked with
Lower West Side residents and businesses to
identify and implement community· based

planning strategies for neighborhood improvement. The plan was cited by the APA
for impact it is 1\lready having on Buffalo's
revitalization effons in this key neighborhood, bordered by the Peace Bridge, downtown and the Main-High medical complex.
"It is always critical," says Shibley, "to

more interesting tourist experience. Other
recommendations include the eventual clos-

keep the community direclly involved in
detennining its own future by helping to
identify the emerging community consensus

ing of the Rainbow Bridge to automobile

of what needs to be done here and how."

traffic. creating. instead, a pedestrian link
between the two sides of the park.

ln addition to residents and businesses.
the planners worked cooperatively with com-

The second winning UB project is 'The
Lower West Side: Strategies for Neighbor-

munity centers, block clubs, politicians and

and landscaping of the area to make it a

resources ... doable now.··

They also identified strategies for addressing crime. poverty and housing issues;
removing obstacles to private investment in
a manner consistent with community visions; increuingopponuoity for homeown·

ership and attractive, affordable rental
housing, and minimizing the negative im-

pacts of traffic, trash and unattended vacant
lots.
Masiello has called the Lower West Side
neighborhood a longtime " victim of some-

body else' s improvement project,•• many of
which, he has said, have had deleterious
effects on the quality of life in the commu nity.

He has applauded the UB West Side

hood and Community Revitalization," de -

representatives of development agencies and
governmental bodies to identify physical

veloped by the UB students in the Urban

development plans that Mayor Anthony

project as one that wil.l help insure that
"future infrastructure investments, targeted
code enforcement activities. home ownership programs and incentives for commercial development are put in place in a way
that make the Lower West Side a beautiful,

Design Project under the direction of UB

Masiello has called "well within existing

healthy and safe place to Jive."

Learn how to surf the Net
for free at Sept. 18 lecture

Leners

By Eu.EN GOLD8AUM

D£AR EDITOR:

calendar poses a difficult choice between

Although I do not make it a practice 10
write letters to the editor. I must respond to

lhe diclales of religion and
education .... The damage is mitigated by

John Boors letter, 'Academic Calendar
and the Jewish Holidays." published in the
September 7, 1995 issue of The Reporter. I

or penalties, for late homework, or tests.
on religious days of observance." Only

News Bureau Staff

D

O YO U WANT to &gt;urf the Net for
free ? Learn how to do it with Buffalo Free -Net. on Monday . Sept.

18. at 7 p.m. 10 Room 201 ofUB 's

\

year graduate students in planning under the

Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematics Comp lex.
James R. Gerland, associate director of
user services at UB . a 1986 UB compu ter
science graduate and a founder of Buffalo
Free-Net. wi ll discuss how Western New
Yorkers can take ad vantage of the Internet' s
va."t informalional resources by using thi s
free, community connection .
Desig ned for those who have never surfed
the Net, as well as for those who have some
familiarity with it, the free lecture is part of
the UB Sciences Alumni Association lecture
series. It is open to the public.
Since it began operations in 1993. Buffalo Free- Ne1 has grown to more than 12.000

members. It provides them wi th access to
infonnation about government, legal topics.
medicine and health, technology, arts, recreation. education and many other i ssues.
Through UB's Internet connection, BuffaJ o Free-Net provides Western New York ers with access to electronic mail, electronic
news. discussion groups. and literally mil lions of electronic infonnation resources .
Gerland wi11 explain how to access FreeNel, how to apply for an account and what
hardware and software are necessary. and
discuss l ocal Internet service providers.
Buffal o Free-Net was started by Jim
Finamore of the Town of Tonawanda ; Neil
Yerky , associate professor of information

and library studies at UB, and Gerland. who
is president of the UB Sciences Alumni
A ssociation of the Faculty of Natural Sci ence s and Mathematics. For more informa -

tion. contact Cindy Nydahl at 645-2531 .

The Repotter welconss len«S ftan rsadets corrrnent.nQ 01 If'S stOries and
content ~should be bnel and may oe Bdtted lot style and IMgth. S.
cause ol spacs timit81ions. the Reporter camot publish ttlleltets f8CeNfld

Proposed Academic Calendar not 'religion-neutral'

will respond to Or. Boot's points in order.
Dr. Boot said that · a few years from now

classes will be held on religious holidays,
whatever that religion , and whatever that

holiday (holy day) may be.· That is not correct. The proposed calendar calls for no
classes on Sundays, the Christian Sabbath,
nor on Christmas. a Christian holy day.

Dr. Boot said, "The calendar will recognize only national holidays. In chronological
order. these are Martin Luther King Day.

Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor
Day , Thanksgiving. and Christmas.· This
list. of course, omits all Sundays of the academic year, which are not classless because they are national holidays. but be-

c ause they are religious (Christian) holy
days. Also, this comment ignores the fac l

that there are national holidays which the

Electronic Highways:
Authors Online
Altbou.,. eurftiiC

the World-Wide Web some-

times diverts our attention away from the books and

I I I &lt; " II{&lt; )NI(

HIGh w \\~\~

authors we Jove, there is much on the Web to satisfy
the "book worm" in us all. For example, the web
fanatics at Yahoo have pulled togetber Intemet sitca
of interest to print fanatics• Its " Books" bomepoge
pulls together electronic texts, bookstores, and publisher catalogs. The Publishers Wukly bestseller lists reside here as wellalillin&amp;s of
author book signing tours.
•
The "crown jewel" of Yahoo's " Books" page, however, is the lilling UDder
" Authon." Over 100 titerary autbora ate tilled from Shakespeare to TOOlllobbinlonil
from Jane Austen to Joyce Carol Oates. Select the Samuel C1emcos eouy aDd you fiDel
online versioos of his sboll stories, essays, and novels, famous Marie Twain~.
syllabi and resources for teachers, a "Twain TOUJ" of Hannibal, Missouri and a link to
TW AIN-L, the electronic discussion group devoted to Twain's tife and writinp.
Anne Rice's web page includes cot&gt;ies of ber news\eller to faDJ entitled "Commotion Strange" and complete transcripts ofrcceotinterviews. J.R.R. TJ&gt;Ikieo '111Qmepqc
contains a ''Tolkien Timeline," a ''Tolkien l..aDguage List" which bu "reeoun:a for
Tolkien linguists," and "Middle-Eanh and the Moviea" which includes discussion of
past and future cinematic endeavors rela!ing to Tolkien.

To s.arch the Yahoo "Books " site in 'its text only version, iype IJM at yourcampiU Email system prompt and then type the URL 11/q:/lw.,.,.,Jwo.CHI/BIIU~at/
Boola/ at the "Go" command. Those fortiUIDU ettOUgh to have cu:cessto a graphical
browser such as Netscape wiiiiUe the same URJ.. For assillllnCe in ctJnntcti!'g to the
World- Wide Web via UB computer accoiUitS, ctJrlliJCt ·the Compwing Cetller's Help
Desk at 645-3542.
- Gemma DeVinney and Don Hartman, Uni~rlity Libraries

calendar does not recognize. inc luding Co-

lumbus Day and Presidents' Day. Why is
Christmas never one of those national holi-

days on which classes are held? I suspect
because it is a major Christian holy day!

Dr. Boot said, "Mosl troublesome of all
is that the education law. which dictates
minimum numbers of contact hours, forces

us to begin classes before Labor Day."
Th is is simply not true . Classes must beg in
before Labor Day only because it is taken
as so important that it does not even merit

mention thallhe Fall semester musl end by
Christma s! Why is that? Even if Christmas
is taken as a holiday. why not treat it like
other holidays and resume classes on the
next day? The semester could begin before Labor Day and still end before New

Year's Day.
Dr. Boot said , ~ Many adherents of other
faith s are puzzled about the asymmetric
treatment their holiest of religious observance rece i ve .~ Here I agree! Why are only

Christian holidays to be observed? When
the Calendar Commission started, I sug-

gested to lhe Provosl's Office that a survey
be taken of all the religious councilors , to

find out on what holidays their adherents
are required to abstain from normal activities. so that the Commission could consider observing all of them. I d on 't know if
th is was done, but the forthcoming calen dar is certainly asymmetric.
Dr. Boot said, "Christmas. when , according to its status as a national holiday.
the whole university closes." As I said
above, th is is not due to Christmas' status
as a national holiday. since classes are

held on national holidays.
Dr. Bool said, "For many Jews, the new

policies prohibiting required attendance.

sli ghtly mitigated, however. since, unless
lectures are worthless. there is no way to
miss a class without missing something
important. and as Dr. Boot said . ~a number of laboratory courses are designed
such that you miss the whole week if you
miss a day."

Dr. Boot said, ' The dilemma can be
avoided altogether by students attending
another center in the SUNY system. UB
had a substantially larger Jewish student
population before the mid-seventies than it

has today. This change might further reduce their number.· This is the most outrageous statement in ~ typically outrageous

letter! Does Dr. Boot actually want UB to
advertise: ~ No observant Jews are wanted

at the UniverSity at Buffalo-go elsewhere?
Dr. Bool said. 'Binghamton has a 13
MTWThF ralher lhan a 14 MlWThF calendar. but longer class periods-a construc-

tion not feasible here." Why nol? He
doesn't say.
Dr. Bool said , ·Just as one's religion
sometimes requires sacrifices , so do principles-in1his case to treat all religious

holidays the same: but as I have already
pointed out, the new calendar does not
treat
rel ig ious holidays the same" it ob-

·au

serves the Christian Sabbalh and Christmas, but no others. For example, there are
some c lasses. laboratories and final ex-

ams on SaiUrday, the Jewish Sabbalh.
and there are many classes on Fridays,

the Moslem Sabbath. (01 course , the current calendar does not treat "all religiou s
holidays the

same~

either . but no one ever

said that it did.)
Dr. Boot said, "we are a multicultural,
educational, public institution, and ... it
serves our varied constituencies . our
teaching mission. and the religion-neutral
stance appropriate for a state institution. to
make the change· [italics in the original},
but I hope I have now convinced you thai
the new calendar is not "rel igion-neutral.·
True religion-neutrality would treat the
Sabbaths and other holy days of all reli·
gions the same. The current calendar
does not do this. Neither does the new
one. Tell us that Christians are the majority, and regardless of the Constitution and
the fact that we are a multicultural state institution, we are going to observe Chrislian, but nol olher. holidays, but lo hide
this under the guise of "relig ion·neutrality"
is either ignorance or hypocrisy.

c.-

II1VAirr
Professor of Computer Sc1ence
and Member. Center f01 Cognitive SclellCe

�......._SA,~

,..._.27,Ne.a

5

Inner ear can
generate sounds
tllatdUsrupthea!Uag

'Natural antibiotic'
is cloned by
biologists at UB

R__...,. n UB studying the inner
em of chinchillas have discovered that some

A powerful huiNIII pro1ein that destroy s
pathogens by depriving them of the •ron they
need to grow has been cloned. expressed and
purified by UB biologists. Recombinant
lactoferrin has potential for products includ·
ing an antimicrobial agent. food preserva·
tives and an tmproved infant formula .
At the first stgn of infection. white blood
cells release lactofe rrin . which lights bacterial invaders by depnvmg them of the iron
critical to their growth. "Lactofernn's high
afli nity for iron makes it a key player in the
human immun e system." ex pl amed Darrell
Doyle. professor of biological :,ciences at
UB who direc ted the research . " It '~ a natural
antibiotic." he satd.
Un li ke currently avatlable antibioti cs.
each of which is designed to combat a spe·
ciftc type or group of bacteria. lactofernn ~~
nonspecific . ··over ttme. bacteria being
treated wi th antibi01ics such as penicillin or
strept omycin can evolve stmin s that are re·
sistant to specifi c characteristic~ in those
drugs.·· explained Marian L. Kru1.el. research
directorofFerroDynamicsofHouston, whtch
fu nded the researc h. But human lactoferrin
binds to the iron of all pathogens. "Without
iron, pathogens cannot survive,·· Kruzel said.
"For years. people have tried un success·
fully to clone a full-length lactoferrin gene."
noted Kruzel . Cloni ng was difficu lt because
of the large fragment of DNA that had to be
expressed. The UB team was successful when
Paul Goll nick. assistant professor of bio·
logic:ll sciences at UB. andTomasz Kurecki .
senior research support specialist. used the
PCR (polymerase chain reaction ) method to
clone the full-length human lactoferringene .
FerroDynamics expects to have its first prod·
uct on the market within two years.
-Ellen Goldbaum, Nt:ws Bureau Sraff

ears can spontaneously broadcast intense
sounds that are transmitted into the brain and
mask external sounds of similar frequencies.
These sounds, called spontaneous otoacoustic
emissions. are loud enough to be heard by
others standing nearby.
The results of the research , reported in
Nature, indicate that this masking of external
sounds-a phenomenon the researchers call
a "line busy" signal- leads to a significant
hearing loss that is completely different from
that caused by damage to sensory cells.
Nicholas Powers, UB assistant professor
of communicative disorders and sciences,
and Richard J. Salvi. UB professor of com-

muni cative disorders and sciences, said many
human ears emit low-i ntensity sounds that
are not noticed by most listeners and do not
affect hearing. However, these sounds are
very stron g in a small percentage of individuals and are associated with noti ceable hearing loss.
The researchers. members of the Center
for Hearing and Deafness al UB, have found
these high-intens it y sound s in 15 chjnchillas
and conducted extensive measurements on
two animals. The sounds being emi tted from
these two animals were so loud that they
could be heard by the researchers when the
animals were taken into a quiet room .
While it has been known for years that the
ears of some human s and animals can produce sound (objective tinnitus), it was thought
that these inner-ear vibrations did not reach
the brain. The UB research team is the first to
detennine that these sounds actually are transmined into the brain by way of the auditory
nerve.
Other members of the research team were
Jian Wang, a research sc ientist, and ChunXiao Qiu, a doctoral student. both in the UB
Department ofCommunicative Disorders and
Sciences.
-Sue Wuetchu, News Bureau Staff

PCBs in fish from
Great Lakes don't
cause fetal loss
R e . . - . . from UB have found no link
between consumption ofPCB-contaminated
sport fish and a hi story of spontaneous fetal
death or spontaneous abortion in human s,
despite evide nce of fetal harm in other mam mals from PCB exposure.
Their study onive-birth certificates from
1,820 women who gave birth from 1986-9 1
and had a history of eating fish from Lake
Ontario showed no relationship between
consumption oflake-caught fish and greater
risk of recogni zed spontaneous fetal death at
any level of exposure. Chemical contamination of wildlife in Lake Ontario is estimated
to be twice that of the other Great Lakes.
Result s of the study were published in a
recent issue of Environmental Health Perspectives, the journal of the National lnsti ·
tute of Environmental Health Services.

Michael Fallacan&gt; ..........,._SAM's potential In Center for Tomonvw.

SAM the Mannikin:
computer 'patient'
Nursing School expects to acquire patient simulator to train
health care professionals
By LOIS BAKER
News Bureau Staff

he patient on the operating tab le
suddenly goes into cardiac arrest .
Blood pressure drops. Respiration
becomes labored. Surgeons, anes·
thesia providers, nurses and tech ·
nician s work frantically to save the patient
and figure out what went wrong.
But, not to worry. This drama is on ly
make -believe.
Meet SAM, the Simulated Anesthesiol ogy Mannikin. It is manufactured by CAE
Electronics of Binghamton, a company th at
once made flight simulators. SAM is used to
teach aspiring surgeons, nurse anesthetists.
anesthesiologi sts. dentists, pharmacologists.
operating-room nurses, techn icians and others how the body responds to various d rugs
and 3d verse conditi ons in a safe but realisti c
clinical environment .
Faculty from the Nur.;e Anesthesia Program in the UB School of Nursing demonstrated SAM's capabilities in Jul y in the Center
for Tomorrow on the Nonh Campus.
The nursing school expects to acquire the
patient simulator in the near future . Ap·
proximately I0 of the de vices are in use in
locations around the world. including To·
kyo. Belgium, Toronto, Pittsburgh, New
York City, Stanford University and the Uni versity of Washington. The University at
Rochester owns a similar syste m.
Originall y designed to train anesthesia
providers. the patient simulator can be used

T

Pauline Mendol a, UB research instructor
of social and preventive medicine and lead
author on the study, said the results were
surpri si ng. " I thought we were goi ng to see

in any field where experience an human
physiological responses are critical. The system also is valuable for training in team·
c ri sis management. eval uati ng human
behavior under stress. assessing performance
of rout ine medical procedures and testing
new equipment.
SAM's body is fully computerized to
respond realisticall y to nearly any nursing or
medical intervention. It breathes. has a pal ·
pable pulse. maintains body temperatu re and
produces breath and heart sou nds . Monitors
record a variety of responses induced by
circumstances such as equipment malfunction. pathophysiological conditions and various metabolic, pulmonary and/or cardiovas·
cul ar events.
For exa mpl e. SAM can be induced to
suffer from hypertension and diabete~. en·
abling student s to learn the physiological
effects o f vari ous drugs and interventions on
such a patient It can experience an allergic
reaction to an anesthetic. Heart valves can be
made to malfunct ion, breathing tubt:s to be·
come displaced. monitors to become disconnected. IV lines disrupted.
SAM is programmed to respond to a total
of 77 anes1 hetics. narcotics. cardiovascular
drugs, neuromuscu lar blockers and mi scellaneous drugs
UB nursing and medical school administrators hope SAM's acquisition will be the
fir.;t step in establishing a fully equ ipped
sim ulation center that can be used for teach·
ing and research across several disc iplines.
some evidence of risk." she noted. The au·
thor cites seve ral reasons why this investigati on may have fo und no adverse ou tcomes
from eating contaminated fi sh. including the
possi bility that PCBs affect human reproduction in ways other than causing sponta neous feta l death.
UB researchers Germaine M. Buck, John
Vena and Maria Zielezny, all from the De·
partmen t of Soc ial and Preventive Med icine.
also participated in the study, along with
Lowell E. Sever from the Battell e Centers
for Public Health Research and Eval uation.
Seattle. Wash.
-Lois Baker. News Bureau Sraff

Shielding devices
from electromagnetic
interference
As cellular telephones and all kind&gt; of
eleclro!JiC systems become ubiquitous. the
prob lem of elec tro magnetic interference tn ·
crcasingly concem:l manufacturers.
Radi o frequency waves from wireles~
devices, such as cellu lar phones. tend to
interfere with those from dtgital compute rs
and devices. such as calcul:ltors. That can
result in problt'ms ranging from minor di s·
ruption s to disastrous losses of informatio n
Engineers at UB have devel oped a ne"
material that provides better shidding against
electromagnetic interference than any mate·
nals currently on the market. Nicke l·coated
carbon filaments are embedded in a polymer
matri x. By reflecting and absorbing radia·
tion. composite matcnals can shield elec tron ic sys tem ~ fr o m electromagnetlL"
in terference.
The researchers note that when filament ~
are used in these matenals. they are most
effecti ve when they are very thin and dem·
onstrate low elec trical resistivity . "By usi ng
nickel to coat carbon filaments that are leso;;
than a mi cron-&lt;me millionth of a metcr- m
diameter. we have developed ski nny fila ·
ments that shield a!\ effectively a~ solid cop·
per."' sa id Deborah D.L. Chung. profes.sorof
mec hanica l and aerospace engmeering.
Niagara Mohawk Chair of Marerials Re·
search at UB. and principal tnvestigator.
Chung conduc ted the research with UB
doctoral candidate Xiaoping Shut.
- £/len Goldbaum. News Bure(W Staff

�6

Facul StaHBillboard
AmRMATIVE ACTION
TO BE DEBAT£D
A d ebate o pen to the p uOitC
on the pros and cons ol alhr maltve ac t•on w1U oe held at 4
p m Sept 14 1n the Student Un1on
f heater o n the No rth Campus
D•scuss•ng the v1ewpo•nt that em
plo yment -equ•ty leg•slatton •s a m•s

0

take will be .l•n N • rveaon, professor ol philo sophy a t the Un•vers•ty or
Waterloo Ontano A wnter and ph• ·
losopher Narveson IS author ot the
te xt · aus•ness Ethtes '" Canada ·

lak1ng the ·oro· side'" the debate
w111 be Wllllam Rachel' UB v•ce
orovost 101' faculty development Map
Coleman UB ass•stant prolessor oi
OOIIIIC.at sc •ence and Bulfalo Common
Counc•l Memoer-at-Large James w
P•lls A•char d Hull UB professor ot phi
losophy w1H be moderatOt

BRAEN COAUTHORS MANUAL
ON EMERGENCY MEDICINE

0

Emergenc y Medrc1ne
Braen also ts coauthor of ~ Emer ­
genc y Care.· pubhshed thrs year .
and ~ aed stde Dtagnost•c Technology .~ due outrn 1996

cliEELEY LECTURES
IN NEW ZEAlAND

0

Robert C,..lev. Samuel

Capen ProleSSOf ol Poetry and
the Humanrtres at UB. re~
cerved a gram
from the J Wrtltam
Fulbr~ght Foretgn
ScholarShip Board
to grve lec tures at
the UnrverSlly of
Auc kland rn New
Zealand Greeley
rec etved the award
on the t&gt;asrs of a
CREELEY
natrona! c ompehtlon alter peer rev•ew by the Councrtlor the International Exc hange of Scholars. alllh·
ated w1th the Amencan Counc11 of
Lear ned Soc1et1es

G . Rlch•rd Brae n , cha'' ot
emergenc y med•c•ne at the
UB School o f Med1C1ne and

FORUM TO DISCUSS
DRUG LEGALIZATION

810fT1ed•cal Sc•
ences 15 coautnor
ot the new ed1!1on of
the "Manual ol
Emergenc y Med1
r•ne ~ a stanoar a
reference lor pro lessrona
The man 1 rn
•Is th 11d eOrhon
~_. ov er s problems
1 mrght b e en
·ountered t&gt;y pnysr ans resrdents
nedrc a t stuaents an other person
net Pubhsheo by l•lll~r own and
Co ol Bo ston '' rs ava•lable a\ med •
at books tores
Presodent of tne Amer•c an Board
at Emergenc y Me d•c•ne h om 1994 95 and a d•rector ol the organ11a
1100 Braen rs the bOards Ch1CI exam
oner and 11s delegate to the Ameflcan
Board of Med•c al Spec 1a111es
He IS a member ol the Low Bac k
Patn Task Forc e olthe Agenc y tor
Health Care Pohcy ana Research
arl d serves on the Er~ e Counly
Crhzen ·s Commruee on Rape ana
Sexual Assault He heads Bullate
General Hosp•tat s Department ot

A public forum on drug pohcy
w•tl be held from 9 30 a m to
noon on Fr 1day . Sept 15 10 the
Bulfalo and Er•e Coumy Pubhc Lt·
Crary Lalayene Square Sponsored
by us·s Department of PhilOsophy , tt
wrU explore top1cs rnctud1ng the pros
and cons of decum1nahz1ng or legal ·
tz1ng the use of drugs
Among the speakers are A G11
Kertrkowske . Buffalo Pohce Coovn•sSI()f)ef . Sanora Mobley- Terry, C1ty ot
Buffalo dlfector ol AlcOhol and Substance Abuse Ptograms. John Walters.
pntiOsopher soctallheor•st and member of a Washrngton-based ·thrnk tank :
and A1chard Gallagher Cha1r of the
Erre County Consorttum of Alcohol and
Substance Abuse Prolesstanals

0

EVmS HONORED BY
Gin TO HOWNS COLLEGE
Hothns College has rece1ved a
$50 .000 grit !rom an alumna
estabhshrng the Wllll•m .J.
Evttta Fund lor the hiStory depart ment Evttts . exec uttve dttector of
alumn• relallons at UB . IS a former

0

English Tea opens Women's Club
Celebrate 501 anniversary
The US Women's Club will open its Celeb~ate 501 anniversary year w ith
an English afternoon tea and activity signup on Sunday. Sept.-17 from
1-4 p .m . at the Center for TOI'TIOfrow. Betty Feagans. vice president of
marketing. Royal China and Porcelain Comp anles. Inc. will present so-.
ciat and ceremonial information on the subject oltea. Guests and new
members are welcome .
Honorary and p ast presidents will be recognized at the tea. UB
Women's Club Presid ent Janet fedDf and Vice President Nlnfa
Straublng er w ill serve tea using Spode and Royal Worcester china
shipped in for this event. Chair of the tea is Marie s.!hillo: co-chairs are
Marisa Mih ich and Shirley B uCkle.
The p rogram will also feature information about UB Women's Club ac~
tivlty g roups and service p rograms. Members will be able to sign up lor
groups they w ish to join . Groups and their chairs
are Activity Coordinators, Josie Lapetina and
Aurelia Holloway; Antiques. Judith Baumer and
~
Katrina Wobschall; An History, Doris Sorenson~ :
~
Books , Kristen Milbrailh and Anne Brody; Bowhng,
Rhoda Storr; Bridge. Pat Addelman and Nicki

~ Yeracarla: Bridge Flight, Marie Schillo: Cross~

Country Skiing. Gloria Piau; Dinner Theater,

Ryder and Norma Zimmerman: French
versation, Jean J ain; Couples Gourmet.
ki Yeracaris: Evening Gourmet. Meena

Rustgi and Norma Rubin: Gourmet Tech- .
niques, Sun-MI Fung, Barbara PaganeiH,
Barbara McCarthy: International, Kathie
Mogensen : Italian Conversation. TBA:

Money and Investing, TBA: Needlewor1&lt;,
Lois Sindoni and Anne Marie Nalalino: Photography, TBA; Tennis. Marie

Schillo and Ann Sllub.

·

Members hip in the c lub. a service organizaUon to UB and its corrvnu-.
nlty. is open to all women who have a commitment to the unrversky and
the purposes of the Women's Club. For more infoonation about the club.
call Joan Ryan at 626-9332 or Lorey Repicci at 688-2039.

history professor at Holhns and
served as depanment cha1r from

t974-80.
FAU.ACAIIO NAilED TO
STAT£ BOAIIO FOil NURSING

0

Michael D. F81'--ro,

co-

director of the nurse anesthe-sia p rogram
1n the UB School of
Nursing, has been
named to the New
York State Board for
Nursing . The board
ad vises the New
York State Educa- l

tiorl Depanment

!!11!1!1!1::~=-

and the Board of
Regents on matters relating to nursIng licensure. education, p ractice
and drsc•pline
Fallacaro. the only certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) on the
board and only the second nurse
anestheustto be appointed, is a practiCing anesthehst at the Buffalo VA
Medical Center and a chmcal assistant
profeSSOf 1n us·s School of Nursing.
He recen1ed bachelor's degrees
from D 'Youvttte College and George
Washtngton Universrty. and a
master's 1n nurstng and doctorate 1n
nursrng scrence from US
A past pres1dent of the New York
State Assocrat1on of Nurse Anesthe. trsts. he has served on committees of
the Amerrcan AssoctattOO of Nurse
Anesthetrsts (AANA) and the Amen·
can Veterans Assocrauon of Nurse
Anesthet•sts He 1s on the ed1tor1al
advrsory board of the AANA Journal

UBilRADWINS
NATIONAL ESSAY CONT£ST

0

Edw•rd .J. Lydecker, who

recerved a master's degree rn
urban planmng /rom US in
May . has been selected one of hve
ftrst-place w.nners rn a natiOOBI essay
contest sponsored by Sunkyong
Group. one of Korea·s largest buStness
groups The annual ~ Global leaders of
Tomorrow" contest tS held natrona.Jiy
tor regtstered graduate and undergraduate students rn the US
Each hrst-place w1nner recetved a
$2.500 cash puze and a week-long
tnp to Korea . whrch took place 1n
June Lydecker won lor hts essay.
"The Threat of React1onary Gover nance to Gtobahzatron •

MUSIC FACULTY
WIN DISTINCTION
Four faculty members 1n the
U S Department of MusiC re·
cently were recognrzed lor
drs!lnguished work
Cort Lippe, v1S111ng ass1stant
professor of compostllon . has earned
a growing 1nternatronal reputation lor
hts electroacoust•c and computer·
generated compos1trons Hrs Mustc
lor Flute and ISPW was performed at
the Emergtng Votces Fesuvat at the
Un1vers1ty of Calilornra . San Drago.
the fifth btenniat Sympostum lor Ans
and Technology at Connechcut College . and at the 1995 Soctety of Elec troacoustic Mus•c olthe United
States Conference at Ithaca College
He was composer ·ln- restdence at
the 4th annual Etectroacoustrc Musrc
Fes11vai at Unrversrty of Flonda Performances of hrs mustc were grven rn
Sweden . Un•vers1ty of Maryland ,
Nonhwestern and Towson State un• ·
versihes
Arte Llpaky lecturer 10 mus1c
w1U conduct lour c onc erts next season w1th the Israel Chamber Orchestra. four with the Israel Stnlonretta
and plans a U S tour wrth the Israel
Chamber Orchestra 1n 1997
PercuSStOnlst Anthony
Mlr•nc&amp;.. lecturer tn music. recen tly
completed a senes of concerts and
chntcs at Penn State. Geneseo State
College and Unrstage of Bullalo

0

Mtranda. who performed 1n the
Academy Awards Orchestra lhts
year. contrnues his studio record1ngs
tor TV and motion ptctures. This summer . he toured with Glad ys Kn•ght
and Englebert Humperd ink and wilt
tour in the fall with Natalie eo.e He
also has two new pubtk:ations.
"Drum Set Technique• and ·snare
Drum Technique,· bol:h from AM Percusston Publications.
Richard Myers. lecturer In mu·
sic, recently saw his 53rd arrange·
menl of music for trombone choir
published by Acura Music , Inc . He
has inaugurated a new series. · Music for Trombone Choir and Organ."
also to be published by Acura
One of Myers' earliest transcriptiOns. J .S. Bach's Fugue in 0 Minor.
has sold mofe than any music ever
p ublished for trombone ensemble. It
recently was recOfded b y Summit
Record s on a CD. "Four of a Krnd. •

MAIIIU _ . , A S
DISTI_,ISIIED ALUMNUS

0

Kenneth D ......... .,,..,

professor of mathemattcs at
UB. has received the 1995
Jesse D. Heiges
Distinguished
Alumnus Award
from Sh1ppensberg
Umversity .
Sh1ppensberg . Pa
Magill is a t 956
graduate of
Shippensberg
The university's
h1ghest award recognrzes the alum·
nus ' drshngu1shed achtevements 1n
hrs l1eld to the benefit of soc1ety ana
community
Mag1ll, who holds M.A. and Ph.D
degrees from Penn State. came to UB
tn 1963, serving as assrstant and assoCiate professor of mathematiCs before
becormng a professor of mathematiCS
rn 1967 Between 1967-70 he was
cha1r of the depanment He 1s a natiOnal leader 1n the flekt of near-nngs of
continuous function and has been a
V1S1t1ng p rofessor in Leeds. England. at
the Un1verstty of Florida. the lndran lnsttlute of Technology tn Kanpur and
Monash Umversrty in Austraha

MSALL RECEIVES
INT£RNATIONAL AWARD
Mlctulel E. M . .n , assoc•ate
professor of pedratrrcs and re·habthtahon mediCtne at US .
has recerved the S1r James Carreras
Medrcal Award lor 19951rom Vat~e ty
Club International The award and a
pnze of $10,CXXl are g1ven annually
by Vanety Club to •the phystcran who
has done outstandrng work tn the
!reid of ped1atrrc med1c1ne dunng the
prev1ous calendar year.· Msall was
chOsen hom among 60 physrc1ans
nomrnated from around the world
A UB faculty member s1nce t987 ,
Msatt also 1s ch1el of developmental
ped1atncs and rehabrtrtat1on medr Cine at Ch!ldren·s Hosprtal of Buffalo
and the Robert Warner Aehablltlallon
Center H1s research has focu sed on
the problems and consequences of
extreme prematuuty and luncttonat
tndependence 1n chrldren w1th
Down"s syndrome . cerebral palsy
and neurodevelopmentat drsab1ht•es

0

UB GRAD WHO AIDED
B-BING VICTIMS, BISHOP
TO RECEIVE AWAIIOS

sronal w1ll wear academtc garb
The Newman Centers' h1ghest
award. The Newman Medal. will be
presented to B1shop Head 1n recognition of his longtime support of the
campus ministry at US.
Lt. St ....... T. Spell of the
New York City Fire Department, who
received a UB degree in cfvll engineering in 1985, wilt be p resented a
special DistJnguished Alumnus Ser·
vice Award from US's Newman Cen·
ters. He was an active Newman Cen·
tars member while at US

Spall JOined the New York Coty
Fire Department shortly a fter gradu·
ating from UB In 1993. he became a
member of a 56-member elite task
Ioree des1gned to assist municipahlles requesting emergency assistance during urban cris1s and operat·
ing under the d irecuon of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
Spall's group , activated to assist
rn search·and·rescue efforts at Oklahoma City's federal office building on
May 20. worked at the bomb1ng sne
tor seven days

SIUU'IRO SPEAKER FOil
INTDIIIATIONAL EVENT
Stuart C. Slwplro, proles·
sor of Computer Science. and
a member of the Center for
Cognitive Scrence. gave the invited
Clostng Plenary Tatk at the Eighth
Ftorrda Arttliciat Intelligence Research Sympos1um (FLAIRS-95) held
1n Melbourne . Fla. In hrs talk. "Steps
Toward a Computational Rattonal
Agent. · Shaptro drscussed hrghhghts
of h1s 25 years of research

0

TOMKINS RECEIVES
SERVICE AWARDS

0

~E.

Tomklna, a co--

founder ol the Domestic VIOlence Chnte tn lhe UB SchoOl of
Law. has receiVBO several award s
from social serviCe organizations. 1n·
eluding the Exemplary SeMCe Award
lrcm the Ene County CoaliOOn Agatnst
Family VIOlence. composed of agenCICS and 1ndiv1duats 't'o"'fkkng together
to stop farmly viOlence She served the
coahuon 1n 1994 and 1995 as vice
charr
She also was named C1ttzen of the
Year. along Wlth Bernadine BuUer. a
1994 US law school graduate. and
thrrd-year UB taw student Julia Hall. by
the WNY DNISIOO ol the NatK:Jnai Assocoatoon of Socoal Workers (NASW). That
des1gna11on led to the tno receMng the
same hOnor at the state level
The NPSW awards recogn~ze the
work of Tomkms. Butler and Hall as cofounders of the Women's Law Center .
Inc founded 10 t993 to meet the legal
needs ol women who do not qualify for
lree legal seMCes. but who cannot alford a pnvate anorney
Tomk1ns. a 1992 graCiuate olthe
UB law school . serves as cltnrc tnstructor tn the Oomestrc VI06ence Chnrc.
pan of the Legal Ass1stance Program
tn the law school Whrle a student at
the US law schoOl. Tomktns also
helped set up the schoors DomestiC
VtOience Task Force

ACE/NIP PLANS
BREAKFAST SEMINAR
The Amencan Council on Educauon/NatiOflal ldenttflcatJOn Program W1Vhold a breakfast semnar Sept 15 at 8:30a.m 10 the

0

Presodentoat Loonge of Seton Hall,

BI8Mp Edwllld D. Head, Iarmer

N~&amp;gara UniVEtfSity ThiS will be an opportumty to networ'K wrth other women
of ACE/NIP-WNY
Speake&lt; will be Corofyn Schaik, OX·
ecuttVe d..-ector of the Centec C1ty Corp

b1shop ol the Buffalo Diocese. w1ll receNe awards Sept. 24 1n St. Joseph's
UniverSity Church. 3269 Ma1n St
Sponsored by the Newman Centers at UB. the Mass wtll beg1n at
tt 30 a .m Faculty rn the proces·

in Niagara Faits, who Wlll dtSCUSS nsk
management and the mplicauons lor
those who hue. supervtse. teach or operate SE!f'VlC8 programs Art enhanced
contJnental breakfast will be served For
more lnlormatiQI1. call 28&amp;6072

0

A UB graduate who atded tn
rescue efforts at the srte of the
Oklahoma Crty bombrng and

�IHIIIldlll

7

.......... SA.~ v ...... 27,No. a

The Reporter welcomes commentary on
1ssues of broad mterest to the university
communily Matenal may be edtled lex style
and length

Mother nature
is trying to tell
us something
We need to develop systems to ....,,. a
suatalnllble future for all humanity

he -crY white male. Mother
nature is trying to tell us some-

T

thing , but most of us don ' t get it.

Our (X&gt;Iiticians don ' t gel it. ei-

ther. Perhaps some do get it, but

they don' t dare to say it because themessage won ' t be popu lar.
The victory of the Republi can party. especially of its right wingcrs, in the last November election was attributed by many to
the angry white male. Allegedly he was an gry because despite the economic growth,
take- home pay stayed the same or sometimes eve n receded. whe reas Ji ving expenses rose. To ease the frustration he
eded sca pegoats : Past liberal policies, affi ative action. welfare mothers, environment regulation. etc., etc.
Sen or Dole, the champion of regula tory ref m, figured out that environmental
regulatio'n.s....cost corporate America biHio ns
of dollars. and the consumers about $6,000
per household . Certainl y thi s does not
mean that if e nvi ronmental regulations
were aboli shed. every household shall be
awarded $6.000: our wealth distribution
system is not so equitable. Senator Dole
co nsiders the cost of environmental regulations a tax on industries: in fa ct, it should
be viewed as the cost of doing business. no
different from the cost of labor, material s
and energy . W ith an expa nding econom y
and growing production. an ever-increasing amou nt of waste is c reated . To all ow
des poilment of natural resources whi ch be·
lo ng to all of us. presently li vi ng and those
to be born, just to keep the cost of productio n low. is foolish . Thus. for the welfare
of humanity , pollution prevention is essen tial. The cost o f pollution prevention is
fa ctored into the price of products. Consequentl y the increased prices should act as a
damper to limit our consumptio n.

How lone: can we &amp;row? The conventiona l economics. to whi ch our leaders for
the most part subscribe . considers growth
as a so luti on to une mpl oyment and low
wages. The problem with this theory iS
that , as the experieilce of the last decades
shows, economic grow th docs not necessaril y translate into more jobs and better
pay. Corporati ons are more inte rested in
their profit tha n in providing employment:
a lthough corporate profits keep growing
and the economy ex.pands at 2.5 percent
annually . compa nies are siz ing down and
layi ng off workers. If new jobs are created ,
they are mostl y temporary or pay ing low
wages. These shortcomings of our economic system are manmade and perhaps
could be remedied .
Much more serious is the essenti al
problem: How long can we grow without
undermining o ur future ? The earth has fi nite dimensions and finite resources. Pres entl y we are reaching the limit of earth 's
carrying capacity. In ocean's fi she ries we
have a lready ex.ceeded the li mits o f
sustai,nability . In oth er areas we arc ap proaching the limit s. ln some regions of

the world , including some
areas of the United States,
water begins to be depleted. Fossil fuel s and
mineral s are still in ample
supply. but the most productive sources have been
largely ex hausted. Now
we have to ex.ploit the less
productive ones that render increasi ngly more
waste per each unit of the
desirable materi al.
It is thi s amount of
waste that puts limits on
our continuous expansion.
The industrialized countries compri si ng 16 percent of world population. uusrRATION· AKHWte:ITIS
co nsume 50 percent of world energy. The
striving to increase the ir living sta ndard
United States and Canada, with 5 percent
also and that the total world population
of the world population, consume 35 perwill be then between 14 and 15 billion .
cent of all resources, whereas the U.S.A.
Population pressures. Population
alone emits 21 percent of world greengrowth in the United States as well as glohouse gases. Yet we are ta lking about the
bally is the main factor that will force our
standard of li vi ng down . In nature, when a
need to increase our standard of living.
which means more producti on of conspecies is subject to a stress, the first th ing
sumer goods and more consumption. Ou rthat goes is reproduction . Humans are ex.ing the 1992 presidenti al cam paign Ross
e mpted from suc h nature pressu res, but arc
Perot bemoaned that at the present eco~
subject to eco nomi c pressures. such as a
nomic growth it wilt take at least 100
high cost of living. and a high cost of
years for the prese nt generation of Amen ·
bringing up and ed ucati ng child ren.
cans to double their standard of li ving .
Since earth's resources are fini te. they
Such a stateme nt is laughable . If the
can suppon only a certa in amou nt of
present trend continues. by 2090 the
people. How many. depe nds on ho1.1.
United Sta tes popul ation will reac h about
much we consume. At lov. number' of
4 16 milli ons. How can we ex.pec t. withal people we may have a hi gh li ving ~tan ready-dwindling resources. to provide for
dard ; at hi gh numbers we h1.1ve to lower
thi s amount o f people at doub le the prese m
the li ving standard. Of cou rse, the way we:
standard of living ? Moreover we have to
carry on in ou r duily Ji ves i'\ al"o impor co nsider th at the developing countri es are
tarn . Do we live 10 a .;; ustainable 1.1.ay . or

do we waste the resources?
The lllt......tlve to crowtll. It
is the American way that if you
can not maintain your living stan dard because of decreasi ng in come. borrow the money . Ha ng
onto your living standard no mat ter what. even if it means mort ~
gag in g the fu!Ure of genera ti on ~
to come .
Since the perpetual growth
cannot be sustai ned. what is the
alternative ? We may not li ke to
hear it. but the a lternative is to
lower our ex.pcctations and to
cunail our standard of living.
Less cons umpt ion. smaller can..
small er houses. more apartme nt
living. more use of publ ic trans ~
portati on. in shon. less emphasis
on the acq uisi tion of material
goods . Instead. let us concentrate
our efforts on improving the qual ·
ity of life: Public safety. good
and uni versa l health care, good
education. good public transpor ~
tat ion. clean a ir and water. whole~
some recreation. and aest heti c
surrounding!'!. .
Of course. there are many
among us whose living standard 1:-.
so low that they have nothing to
give up. On the ot her hand. some
wi th a very high living standard
still try to increase it. Thus. a more equi ·
r.ab le distribution of wealth is the precondi tion to sustai nable future .
I understand that findin g a soluti on to
a\\ soda\. economic and e nvironmental
problems of the nati on and the world
won't be easy. However. I wish to poi nt
o ut that we operate unde r an economic
syste m. based on continuous growth , that
goes back to Adam Smith. i.e .. to the 18th
century. whe n earth's population was
about one bi ll ion. when mosl of the earth
was covered with fo rests . when the ind ustri a l revolutton was bare ly e mergmg. when
tht: rivers and lakes we re pristint: and 1he
air wa~ clea r. With the enormou!l. demographi c and technological change~ that oc curred ever ~ince. perhap~ it i!o&gt; time that
we rethrnl... the whole tdea of perpet ua l
growth and IT) t o develop new ~ystem'
that \\'(&gt;Uid a.;;~urt· ;1 ... u.;;talnable future for
a ll humanit}.

ili:llili;i ; l l i _. . _____________ -- - ----Verne M. Chapman, 56,
mammalian geneticist
A ftMIIMHial aervke for Verne M Chapman
chairman of the Roswell Park Cancer Institute
motecular and cellular biology department. w111
be held Sept 19 at
6 p m tn Unttartan
Untversahst Church
695
Elmwood
Avenue Chapman
one of the natton ·s
leadtng mammalian
genett c ts ts and a
research professor
in the Roswell Park
Graduate D1vts1on ot
UB. dted suddenly
CHAPMAN
Aug 30whtleattendtng a sctenhhc meet
tng tn Tsukuba Sc1ence C1ty . Japan He was 56
Chapman's research over the past 75 years
has led to the development of gene\lc and phySI·
cat maps of the chromosomes ol the laboratory
mouse These toots are cnt1cal to tdenttfytng and
analyz1ng molecular defec ts often assoctated w1th
cancer
A graduate of Cahlorma Slate PotytechntC
College . he recetveo a doc torale tn genettcS 1n
1965 from Oregon State Untverstty JOtntng me
Roswell Park staff tn 1972 as sen1or cancer re
search scten!lst 1n the molecular and cellular

btOiogy oeparrment t&gt;ecomtng oepar1ment chau
1n 1982 From 1985· 1989 heservedasassoctate
tnSIItu!e d1rector ot sc tentti iC al!atrs He servea on
several federal pubhc advtsory comm1uees ana
published more than 200 papers
tn 1994 he rece,ved lhe Thomas B Tomas1
Hope Award honoung a Roswell Parlo. cance'
researcher whose work has made a stgnthcant
contrtbu110n to advances 1n cancer care Re
cently he was oestgnated an em1nent sc1ent•st of
the lns111u1e ol Phystcal and Chem•cal Research
111 Tsukuba Sc1ence C1ty
Contnbuhons may oe made to the Verne M
Chaoman Memonal Fund c/o Healtn Research
Inc P 0 Box t 2 t6 Bullalo NY 14240

Lois S. Bagel, 61,
Archives staff member
s.RIH• were held Sept 3 1n Delaware Park
Memonat Chapel tor Lots S Bagel a tongttme key
stall member wtth US Arch•ves Bagel 61 . d1ed
Aug 3 1 at her home tn the To wn ol Tonawanda
alter a long tllness
Sagers more tnan 20-year career at UB was
spent pllmanly With the un.vefSIIY LtbrafleS She
,otned UB m the cred1t- lr ee program 1n 1973 was
'" charge ol c•rculat10n and reserve w1th tne
Undergraduate L1brary from 1977 -B t then ,omed
the ArChives where sne worked unTil her reltre
ment1n 1994
Her ass•stance as me hrst ootnt ot contact lor

VISIIOrs ana researchers to the comprene"s1ve
arch1ves was acknowledged by many aumors
mctudtng Brendan Gtll '" hts · Many Masks A Ltle
ot Frank Lloyd Wugnt

Marshall Clinton, 81.
physician, professor
M•ra.h•ll Clinton, B 1 a Bulla to pnys•ctan ana
chntcal professor ol med1C1ne at UB d1eo Sept '2
1n Buftato General Hoso•tal Clinton was a oe
scendant of OeW111 Chnton tne governor wnt'
opened the Eue Canal1n t 82~ alter cnampton·n~
tne proteCt
A 1936 graduate ot Cornell un1vers•1y Chn1on
rece1ved a master ot arts deg ree 1n phys1o1ogy tn
1938 and a medtcal aegree tn 1940 from the UB
med1cat school Ounng World War 11 ne was a
research ofltcer at the U S Army CIJmatotog~·
Laboratory atta1n1ng the rank ot ma,or
After tra1ntng at Pmer Bent Bngnam Hospttaltn
Boston and Harvard School ot PubhC Health ne
returned to Bullate to enter pr1vate pract1ce He
was an anendtng pnys1C1an at Bullato General
Hosp1tat where he was pres1den1 ot 1ne med1ca•
stall 10 1973-74
A Fellow ot the Amencan College ot Phys1
Ctans he servec as 11s governor tor upstate Ne~
York hom 1973-77 He was a memoe' ol Alpna
Omega Alpha honor mectca soctely me SocteT\
of S1gma Xt the Enoocrme SOC1ety ana tne Roswell
Park MeOtCal Ctut&gt; Clinton tt!llleO hom achvt'
oract c.e ot mea1(Ulc! 1f, 1

�8

=_,

~

! Premiere at UB

c-··

ThrMrtaboli5m
Rok oro;,,11nd
• ..,. Hult
F.r ••••••
on
h in
Runners, Dr Oav1d R
Pe ndcrgaJ:I , Drpl of PhysiOlogy
108 Sherman Soulh Campo~ 8

MlcrvbloloCJ a-h..,
DNA ~ Bawd Loss or SpeciHd ty
Muta nb in Baet~riophaae Rr prusors, Gerald 8 Koudelka.
Ph.D 245 Cary Souch Campus
Noon

l'oetry Lecbore
Poet 's Theater, Clllla Harryman
438 Clemens Nonh Ca mpus
12 30 p.m Fr~ Pan of "Wed ne'
days at 4 Plu!. ··

-OpenFonoM
Livr Call -In Prognam, wuh UB
Pres•dem William R Gremer
WBFOMM 7 FM Jpm Tc1p;ar
II CipDIC: ,

by toun of Lockwood Ubnry on
!be Nonh Camput ... Friday .. 3 and 4 p.m.. Tuaday at
7 ood 8 p.m_, and Sepr. 21 01 II
Lm. and AOOD. AJI seuioeJ meet
in Lockwood Room 223: ao pre~ciantion is required.

for Ping Chong~
'Chi"Doi·Serl·e'

----

The New York CoafertDCe oo
Asitn Scudies holds its annual

As1an American theater
artist Ping Chong presents
the world premiere performance of "Chinoiserie" at
8 p .m. Friday, Sept. 15 in
the Drama Theater of the
Center for the Arts. The
musical theater work,
commissioned by the US
Center for the Arts. is the
second in a trilogy of
works on the Asian
d1aspora.

mectin&amp; Friday ud S~ aa
the University Inn lDd Conference

Ce.nu:r, 240 I North Forest Rd.
The mcetina i• boiled by us. and
chaired by Thomas BtA'bnu. di·
rector of the UB Aliu Studia:
Propm. For &lt;qiSinlioe iaronNItioa. c&amp;u 64S-3474.

....................

The IDiemational Commiuce of
UB 's WOmen's Club boiU a
monthly coffee IOdal on l.be third
Tuesdly of the month. bqinnin&amp;
Tuesday, from 10 a.m.-aoon io
Room 250 the SbldtDI. Uaion
oo !be Nonh Campus. Srudeou,
faculty.lla.fT.Iftd community arc
welcome.

or

_
..__
--....
...
.................. -.. .....
-------------------.

_....,
--~

call IS29 -l555

Tennl•
UB Royah and Bull.~ vs.
Niagara. Elrtl'Oit Cuurh Nnnh
Campo!&gt; J p m

Children •nd Youth
Colloquium
.. The Quiet Rt'Volution·- Tht'
Convention on.. t he Ri.:hts or the
Child 1-'lvr Yurs On, Prof

Tbe aUIUmD meclin&amp; of l.be Gradu·
alt: School faculty is scheduled
Sept. 22 at II a.m. in the Cenlt:r
for Tomorrow, Norlb Campus.
ProVOII Thom1s E. Headrick will
give lhe lddrcss, "Conversation
About UB's f;uture ."

......,

Vcr.•lt.lmc Van Bucrcn , d•rc~o.· cor ,
Dcpanme nt u r Law . Queen Mal)
and Wc.,.lflehJ College . lJ ntv o f
Londo n ~50' Hn an H all Nonh
Campo) .l 10 5 p m

Phyales Colloquium
Vortu Entangkment in High
Su pe.rtonduclors,
Prof Dav1d Nelson, Harvard 220

Tempentu~

,..

~.~~~-&amp;elll

~-~

Ow FAX...._ ..
II4WU&amp;.

S!udcnl Unum ~ulcr Nonh
4 pm

Campu~o .

Pl\araaceutlca Seminar
Populatkm Vharmacoki.netiu or
S irolimu.'i", Geraldine Ferron SOS
Cooke Nonh Campus 4 p m

Beetltoven Cycle II
American S tring Quartt:l. Slce
Concen Hall Nunh Campo' t1
p m S4. $5 . SK. SIO

K a.m FQI: mfonnat1on. call 61 12895

Tennla
UB Royals vs. Wagner. Elhcou
Coons. Nonh Campus. 9 a.m

Co.puter Wort&lt;ohop
Introduction lo UNIX. Basil: infonnalion needed to usc UNIX
machines at UB . 10 a.m.-12:30
p.m. Call 645-3S42 for rcgistra·
ttu n Information.

Nilric Odde, Robm S lemhom,
M.D. Kinch Audilnrium,
Chi ldren's Hospual 8 am

Drull l'ollcr Forum

Luncheon end Lecture
l''amous Murder Ca~- Frum
Jack I he Ripper lo Jdfr?y
DMhmer. Gary Earl Rm.&lt;O Ccnlcr
fnr Tomorrow Nonh Campu)
Noon Pan o f Semnr Alumm Program Scnes Call K2Q-2608

Computer Wonrohop
Generic SAS. Cunlinua!Jnn of
Sep1. I 3 workshop, preM:nl ~ mur..dctails on usc: of SAS I .\0--4 ..10
p.m. Call M S- 3542 fm rcg1~1ru
lmn infonna1Kln

Mualc Theatre
C hinoiserie, Ping Chong Contemporary mu s1c theUier work
about ('hma and !he West frum
18th cen1ury lu prescn1 . Drnma
Theutrc , Center for !he Ans Nunh
Campus Mp m Free Work -mpmgrcss. conunJSSIOncd b)' Cc niCT
for the Ans .

Social

won. Wort&lt;ohop

Group Work Process with Adolcsc:ents, Dr. Barbara Riuner
Sponsored by Social Work Contmutng Education. Daemen Cnl·
lege, 4380 Main St.. Amherst
8:45 a.m.-3:30 p.m. $60. To rcgislcr, cal/ 645-6140.

CotapUter Wort&lt;ohop
GNU Em acs/UN IX . Basics of usmg GNU Emacs edi to r on UNIX
umeshanng sys1em I :J0-.4 :30
p m Call 645-3542 for reg1strauun tnformauon .

Computer Wort&lt;ohop
Generic SPSS. Essentials of writ ·
ing SPSS code 10 read and analyze
reliCarch date: workshop continues
Sept 20. 1.30-4:30 p.m. Call 645·
3542 for registnllion informallon.

RIAS...Iaat

Asia in the C lassroom. Sponsored by Enc I BOCES and UB
As1an Studtes Program.
Wtlhamsv11le Nor1h High School

Introduction to SUN. lnlroducc
user 10 conc~~:pu and practie~lities
of SUN-based X-Windowing 5YS·
terns. 1-3 p.m. Call645-354l for
rcgisiBtion informalion.

Co.puter Wort&lt;ohop
SAS for VMS. Essentials of run-

Wort&lt;ohop

lnlroductioo to the Macintosb
System fo r Slude.nlt. 2:30-4 p.m.
Call 645· 3542 for registration infonnation .

Phy.tc•h•ln.Relalivlstk Quantum Mtt.ha nics
of Fe.w Pa rticle Systems, Prof.
Michael Fuda. 220 Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematics Complell .
Nonh Campus. 3:45p.m.

-·tudr

St:lttled DocutMntariu, Prof.
Sarah Elder and advanced stu·
dents. Screening Room. Center for
the Ar1s. North Campus. 7 p.m.
Free. Pan of Media Sludy' s
'1'uesday a1 7" series.

"oef!J"-

Rtt.oaniUo o, Fiona Templt ton.
Hallw•lls. 2495 Main St. 8 p.m.
Free . Part of " Wednesdays at 4
Plus."

Focu5 on Ostcopor 05i5, Or. June
Coulcy. Univ of Piusburgh . 102 1
Main I :30 p.m. Free. Sponsored
by the Research Institute on Ad·
dic1ions..

Science• Alu11111l Lecutre
The Burfalo FrH--Nel • nd the
lnlernel, Jim Ger/and. 20 1 NoiUral Sciences &amp; Malhematics Compick.. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m. Free.

~.,

Wort&lt;ohop

loleraet Rnoun::es-Plattsfor UNIX Usen. \0 a.m.-Noon.
Call 645· 3542 for t1Cgis1ra 1ion information .

-

. ....__
c _ . , Wort&lt;ohop
lntt met R~rttt- Peoplt­
for UNIX U~~en. 10 a.m.-Noon.
Call f&gt;45-3S42 for registr.lion infonnation .

D r. Grqory H.nnoo, Cold
Sprina Lllbol"lllories. RPCI. Elm
and Carlton. 12:30 p.m.

e-..uterw-.......

Gmt:rk SPSS. ConcinUition of

Sept. I 8 workshop: JmSCnts more
dc:t1ils on usc of SPSS. I :30-4:30
p.m. Call 645· 3542 for registration information.

Copltlve-

~-

Extmplar Mtmoria in
Cai.Jiaorfution aDd Rtt.O&amp;nilion,

...

lhrough,N~v .

9.

Roben Nosofsky, lndi1na Univ.

Gallery hours:

-~
Prof. Fn.a.k Sottlle Univ. of

l'oetry- . . . . . . . .
You-tbe Cily, FioRI Templeton .
Scrttning Room. Center for the
Ans. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m. Free.
Pan of " Wcdnesdlys a1 4 Plus."

Campus. 4 p.m.

AntioxidanU as Food Additives,
Dr. John Sean O'Mahony. Rich
Producu Corp. 306 Parker. South

-- ·--......
Front~r

DenIal Merlin&amp;- Opening day. Spon·
sored by the UB Oenlll Alumni
Auociation. Buffalo Convention
Center. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. To register.
call 829-2061 .

--

c---,c-..

Anla poism of the Endothelin
htbwa;t Prn'e.ots Vuocoldlriction During Chronic Low Flow
in Rabbits, Or. William C1lvo.
Dept. or Chemicll Engineering.
108 Shenntn. South Campus.

8Lm.
l'oetry Lecbore/

De• a ubatloa
Play True Be •t ~"bb Mean,
Fiona Templeton. 438 Clemens.
North Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free.
Pan ofyWcdnesdays at4 Plus."
~.,

Wort&lt;ohop

lotroductioo to VMS. Basic ID·
fonnalion necessary to use the
VMScluster. 1-3:30 p.m. Call
645-3S42 for registration infor·
mat ion.

Wort&lt;ohop

lntroducUon to Mk1'050ft Window• for Sludeots. 1:30-3:30
p.m. Call 645·3542 for rcgistra·
tion infonnotion.

Co.puter Wort&lt;ohop
SAS for UNIX. Essc:nti1ls neccs·
sary for running SAS on UB UniA
machines. 1:30-4:30 p.m. Call
645-3542 for registration informat ion.
~Celloqooloo•

TestiqtM SI.JibiJily or Antimatter, Dr. Steve Gcer. Fermi
Nat. Ace . laboratory. 220 Natu111.J
Sciences &amp; Mathematics Compick.. North Campus. 3:45p.m.

Phanucodyoa.mia of Mrthylpre.da.isoloae in l.he. Ra~ YuNien Sun. 508 Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

Use of llisk Fuactions to Develop lnsl&amp;hts into Pbyliolo&amp;kal
Me.chaoisau: Duomprusion
S ickness •t Altitude, Dr. Hugh
VanLiew. 244 Cary . South Campus. 4 p.m.

-.

Mirando AI TeDdido, Teatro
Avante. Work by Venezuelan
playwright Rodolfo Sant.anl.
Black Bm Theatre. Center for the
Aru. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. $25
opening night gala.

IJA!IUIM
-....~

ua-......

Wort in bronu. stone. wood. and
fabricated metal, through Sept. 26
in the An Oepat1mcnt Gallery located in the Center for the Ans.
Nonh Campus. Regu lar gallery
hours are Tuesday 10 a.rn .-5 p.m .•
Wednesday-Friday 10 a.rn.-8 p.m ..
and SaiUrday II a.m.-8 p.m. Free
Admission.

Lelray'a
John Lek1y's
·sculp~u~
- · installa·
tion ··Dc.lires De L'Ange Neutrc"
is on display through Sept. 17 in
!he First Aoor Gallery of the Center for the Aru. Nonh Campus.

Volo'a eolo ellow
Alfonso Volo is 1 poe! 1nd an art·
ist whose wort is on view lhrou&amp;h
Nov. 5 in lhc University Gallery,
Center for the Arts, North C•mpus. He may embncc dich&amp;.

_.,_

Irene Worth has cancelled her

Oct . 28 one-woman show. "Poe-·

1111.it of Edith Wharton." whK:h
was to htve been a benefit for the
Center for the Aru. For- up-to-date
information on Center for the Ans
events. call 645-ARTS.

Teacbin&amp; Hospital Nunr Pndi·
tiooer (SL-4; cb.rft positions
.val.. ble)-Studc:nl Health C~~:ntc.r.
Posting IP-5032. Senior Pro-cnmmtr Anllyst (lottraal ~
motional Opportun.ity, SIA)·
Computing &amp; Information
Technology. P~&gt;Sting lfP-SOJJ.
SI.Jitr Assistanl (later'llll Promotional Opportunity, Slr2)·0ivi sion of Athletics, Posting IP5039. St:nk»r Proanauaer
Analyst (lnltl'lllll ProiDOiiooal
Opportunity, SL-4)-0cography.
Posting lfP-S040.

ReCie.rk UI · NCEER, Post ina IR·
95080. Researcb Techaician JJ.
Oral Biology. Posting IR-95085.
S«retary 11 -Physiology, Posting

•R·95086.
~weC­

CIYIIhrYice
K&lt;y board Sprdall!il I (SG-06)Purt:hasing, Line 130931 . Clerk 1
(SG~·Law

ubnty. unr

126332. Nune 1 (SG- 14) ·SnJdent
Health Center. Une 146023 and

-

046)30.

I.M«C-CIYII

C leaotr (SG--o5)-Rc.sid1Cntill Fa·
cilittes, Unc 143028.

Art a..ct.re a Exhibit
ClpeooloC
Painliop by Matthew
Weinste in. L«turc by anist fol ·
low~ by reception II S p.m. Universily An Gallery, Center for the
Ans. Nonh Clmpus . 4 p.m. Free .

P enons 60 and older are invited to
participate in a UB study of mood
and memory, conducled by
R1lphy Benedict. Ph.D.. .Ws1ant
professor of neurology and psychiauy, and a studcnl, Matthew
H.ine. Two one-hour written tests
will be administered over 1 onemonth p~t:riod, in the home of the
participant. or atlhc Erie County
Medical Center. lbc:re will be reimbursement. Participants must
have finished eighth grade, bul not
have gone beyond a four-year undergnsduale dc:ptt. For information, call 832--0966.

-- __,.._
-9

Toronto. IOJ Diefendorf. South

Campus. 4 p.m.

Grater N..pn

-

•.....,..-.-y_

2fl0 Park. North Campus. 2 p.m.

~.,

R. .w.UI'-Staff

1995 OpbthiiiiDOlo&amp;Y Upd.atr for
Pedi.alrics. Steven Awncr. M.D.
Cafet orium A. Mercy Hospital.
8:30a.m.

T..chera' COIIfttrence

Co.puter Wort&lt;ohop

~.,

Student Voice Recital
Mu1in Mallhew Ruminski,
bass Oamt Rcdt.d Hall . Nor1h
Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

UB Bulb and Royals va. Youag.d own. Ellicon Couns. Nor1h
Campus. I I a.m.

ning SA.S on VMScluster. I -3:30
p.m. Call 645-3542 for regis! ration informati on.

l'edlatrlc Grand Rounda

Pros • nd Cons of Decrim ina llz·
in~: or Legalizing I he u~ or
Drugs, Buffalo Pulice Cunmussioner R. Gi l Ker hkowske , Sandra
Mobley -Terry . John Wall ers, and
R1chard Gallagher. Ruffalo anti
Enc Cuun ly Public L•hrury .
L:Jfaycttc S4uarc 9 JO a m · Noun
Sponsureu b)' UO Dcrt of Ptu losophy

,_.

.,

Healthy ldults between 18 and 75
arc needed for a Jtudy of gum disease conducted by the School of
Dental Medicine. Those selected
for the one-month-Jon&amp; lludy will
help p~~:riodontists evaluate: the effectiveness of electric and m1nual
toothbrushes in reducing oraJ
plaque. ReimburKmcol is $100.
For information. call 829-J&amp;SO
w~kdays between 9 a.m. lDd
4p.m .

-

~--­

B ISON demonstnuions followed

mor~ infonnotion CHI
lis1~d obov~. contDCI Ptrson-

Tu obtain

jobs
n~l

Sen•icu, 104 Crofts HaiL

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1403695">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451947">
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403681">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403683">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403684">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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          <element elementId="116">
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
Greilr
·R.- - - 28
President
William
Greiner will present an
address on the state of
the university at the
annual meeting of the
voting faculty to be held
at 2 p .m. Tuesday.
Sept. 26 in the Screening Room of the Center for the Arts. Fac ulty Senate Chair Claude Welch also will
discuss upcoming issues.

Se pte mber 7 , 1995

Volume 27 . No. 2

FSEC discussion focuses
on shaping UB 's future
llystnECOX

Reporter Staff

P

RESIDENT
GREINER and Provost ThornJIS Headrick
engaged members of
the Faculty Senate Executive Committee in a discussion
of how to reshape VB in the future,
in light of an $8.2 million reduction
in this year's budgcl and with another difficult state budget looming
ahead, during their first meeting of
the academic year on Aug. 30.

UB will continue to seek more
autonomy from SUNY' s central
administration, according to
eadrick, and greater flexibility 10

m nage its resources locally.
S NY , he added, is a "system" in

na

only. "Bureaucratic dictates

force systemwide edicts, but it 's
not always obvious why."
Headrick stated that although

UB was unlikely to ever become a
40,000 student mega-campus. it
could find a niche among "out-

standing, small public research universities, comparable to North
Carolina or Colorado."
The provost urged that UB re-

think its emphasis on a large lowerdivision undergraduate program.

"We are many things, including the
largest community college in the

system, and that is something we
need to consider." Reducing the
size of the lower division would
also allow VB to make small reductions in some expensive doctoral
programs , as the need for teaching
assistants would decrease. The incoming freshman class this year is
expected to be around 2.700, an
increase of nearly 500 over last
year, said Headrick.

Headrick instead urged increased reliance on transfer students and a s trengthenin g of
upper-division programs. Streamlining upper-division and master' s

level course offerings in cenain
programs could shonen the amount
of time it would take to earn a
master's degree, Headrick added.
recognizing that the master' s degree is fast becoming the minimal
entry level degree in so me fields,
including engineering.
UB will also become more and
more tuition-dri ven . explained
Headrick. A form e r law school
dean , Headrick said that " professional programs that lead to signifi cant employment opportunities
should be put more on their own

financially ." Headrick urged tuition increases for medicine, pharmacy and law that would achieve
"a balance betwee n ensuring opportunity and quality a nd charging what the market will bear."
Taking a page from private college manageme nt , Headrick suggested that part ofincreased tuition
revenues be convened to scholarship funds to help ensure access to
these programs.
Greiner characteri zed Gov .
Pataki 'sspring budget foray as "a
degree of intervention in SUNY
by the leadership of the state that
we hadn't seen in years. SUNY
was told ' You will not close campuses and your income will be
capped." ' Senior Vice President
Robert WagnerexpJained that, for
the first time ever. state tax dollar
support of SUNY is less than rev enue SUNY generates it self
through tuition. Wagner added that
a new Technology Fee was imposed thi s year. several other fees
we re increased and a new Faculty/Staff parking fee may be in
the works. However. no re trenchment of faculty or staff has been
Contmued on page 2

Region's Asian Studies scholars
to meet here for annual conference
Br PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Bureau Staff

WO HUNDRED As ian
scholars from all di sciplines will gat he r here
Sept. t5-16 for the ann ual
meeting of the New York Confe; ence on Asian Studies (NYCAS). a
scho larly association that serves
coll ege a nd univers ity faculty .
graduate students. teachers, journalisls and members of the business commu nity.
The conference is expecled to
draw Asian specialists from across
the state and southern Ontario to
share information on research ,
teaching and program development
in the field.
The meeting, hosted by UB and
chaired by Thomas Burkman. director of the UB Asian Studies Program. will be held in the University
lnn and Conference Center. 2401
North Porest Road, Amherst.
More than 125 panelists. some
from the People' s Republic of
China, Hong Kong. Japan and Taiwan. will participate in 27 aca-

T

demi c di scussion s on suc h issues
as ideology and politics, aesthelics. corporate and educational exchange, electoral politics in Asia
and the Asian-American experience.
NYCAS is the oldest of eight
regional societies under the umbrella of the Association for Asian
Studies. the premiere organization
promoting scholarship concerning
East Asia, Southeast Asia, South
Asia and Inner Asia. The interdisciplinary associat ion publishes the
quarterly Journal of Asian Studies
and the ann ual Bibliog raph y of

Asiaii Studiu.
Mee ting events include a Sept.
16 keyno te addres s by the
association's national president,
Evelyn Raw ski. professor of history at the Uni versity of Pittsburgh,
titled. "The Qing Origins of Ethnic
Nationalis m in Contemporary
China." The Qing (al so Ch ' ing or
Manchu) Dynasty ( t644- 19 12) was
the last of China's imperi al dynasties. Under its aegis. the empire's
territory grew to tre me ndous size

and the population inc reased from
I 50 milli on to 450 million .
Gary Y. Okihiro, assoc iate professor of hi story and director o f the
Asian American Studies Program
at Cornell Universit y, will de li ver
a plenary session address on Se pt.
15 .
Following a banquet on Sept.
15, conferees will attend the premiere of "Ch inoise rie.'' a major
new theatrical work by the di stin guished Chinese- America n play wright Ping Cho ng. Commissioned
by the UB Center for the Arts.
"Chinoiserie" is the second part of
a trilogy about the Asian diaspora.
The multimedi a production features an intern ati onal cast and will
go on to tour major Ameri can cit ies as well a~ Paris. Singapore and
Hong Kon g
A conc urrent mini+con fe rencc
for K- 12 h::achers . " Asia in the
Classroom," sponsored by Erie I
BOCES in cooperation with the
UB Asian Studies Progra m. will be
held on Sept. 16 at Willi amsvill e
North High Sc hool.

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:

Show &amp; Tell: software
system looks, listens
i'i~ft'fm~"u,Jhc COn\CXlrnCorilPUie-r
NEW IMAGE -unde rsta nding so ftware system th a t ca ta log ue s.
annotates. sto res and retrieves images based on its "worldknowledge" and verbal instructi ons
from a human user has been developed by researche rs at UB .
Called Show &amp; Tell. it is the
first compu .cr syste m to combine
image processi ng. natuml-language
process ing. speech recognitio n and
spati al reasoning to store and re trie ve images from a da tabase. ac+
co rding to Rohin i Sriha ri. researc h
sc ienti st with U S 's Ce nter o r Ex ce llence ror Document An alys is
and Recognitio n (CEDAR ) and
researc h assistant professor or computer science. The system was devel oped with fundin g from ARPA
to expedite image analys is at government agencies that index hundreds of surveilla nce photos taken
by sat ellites for int ell igence purposes.
Srihari said potential appli cati ons for Show &amp; Tell include an y
situati on where pictures in large
databases mu st be retrieved . based
on the computer's understanding
of wh at is in th e picture. Pote nti al
uses include the indexi ng of medical X-rays .
She notes. for ex ample. th at a
ph ys ician would be able to talk to
the system about an X-ray he is
examining. While informati on provided by him verball y would be
sto red through the speec h recogni tio n co mponent. the co mputer- vision compone nt wo uld store visual
data that cOrrespond s to th e
physici a n's verbal input.
" If the data mu st be sent to anoth er physic ian. that doctor will
have immedi ate point and clic k
access to wh at hi s or her co ll eague
has obse rved ." she added .
The UB researc he rs· goa ls in

A

vision- help ing the compute r to
fig ure our wh at it is "seei ng" based
on tex tual clues provided by the
human user. The result is an ex tre mely use r-frie ndl y syste m .
C urre ntl y . most image- retri eval
syste ms need prec ise. three-dimen+
sional information about indi vidual
images. down to measure me nts of
buildings and even camera angles.
"The Show &amp; Te ll syste m. on
th e othe r hand. detec ts build ings
and other struct:Jres and featu res in
an image based o n pu re ly qua litative informati on that is provided
by the analyst speaki ng to th e system." said Srih ari .
The syste m also has had signi fi ca nt "world -kn ow ledge"' bu ilt in.
For ex ample. it knows that a gy mnasium is an athletic facility. If a
user asks Show &amp; Tell to ··fin d
pi ctures cont ain ing athl etic fac ili ties," it will hi ghlight a buildin g
that be fore may have onl y bee n
ide ntifi ed as a gy mn as ium.
The sys te m uses a speec h-rec ogn it ion system that the U B re se archers c usto mi zed for Show &amp;
Tell. As the user speaks. the onscreen tex t box automatica ll y print'\
each sentence . while it stores the
data. This in forma tiOn may be up·
dated or mod ified by subsequent
users.
" We can say to the system. ' Fi nd
the headqua ne rs build ing in thi s
image.' and the build in g is hi ghli ghted.'' sai d Srihari .
Also working on Show &amp; Tell
were Zhongfei Zhang and Mahesh
Venk atra man . CED AR resea rch
scie nti sts ; Raji v Chopra. De bra
Burha ns. Ch arl o tte Baltu s a nd
Rad ha Anand. UB co mputer -sc i·
ence grad uate students: Eugene
Koont z. lingui stics graduate stu de nt. and Gongwe i Wa ng. elec tri ca 1-a nd -co mp ut er-engi nee ring
gmdu ate stude nt.

�2

Castellani reelected chair of
UB Foundation Trustees
•r

JED NITDEIHI
Reporter Contributor

L

chair, he was
chair of lhe
investment
committee, a
position he
will retain in
fiscal year

AWRENCE P. CASTELLANI,
president and chief executive of-

ficer of Tops Markets, lnc., has
been re-elecled chair of 1he Board
of Trustees of the University at

1995-96.

Buffalo Foundation, Inc.

Under Caslellani, who has been affilialed
wilh i1 since 1986. 1he foundalion has participated in a major reorganization of the
development program. This has created the
framework for the uni versi ty's emerging
fund-rai sing initiative, and has resulted in a
significant increase in philanthropic support
for UB .
The foundatio n promotes the activities
and programs o f the Universi ty at Buffalo by
providing support and advice regarding fund raising. managing gifls and grants on behalf
o f the university, providing a wide range of
financial services for various units of the
unive rsity. developing and managing real
property on behalf of the university and
providing a broad base of private-sector support fo r the univer s ity through the
foundation 's trustees and directors.
The board of trustees is responsible for
raising com munit y awareness of the need for
private suppon for UB. soliciting gifts on
behalf of it and managing assets received by
the foundation . Its stewardship of these assets has meant an average annual comunded return in excess of 13 percent on the
f, ndation 's investment of donated funds
ove the last I 0 years.
R gin aid B. Newman II , presidcmofNoco
c....~ · · ···- --.1...........! .. u...., .. ~n...:. .. c,( \.he.
foundation . Newman has been affiliated wilh
the board si nce 1989. Prior to becoming vice

Olher
officers appoinled by
the foundation are: Richard
E.
CASTEllANI
Healh , Esq .•
secretary;
and Donald A. Ross . treasurer.
The foundation also re-elected several
trustees for three-year terms. They are
Randall 1. Benderson, vice president,
Benderson Developmenl Co .. Inc.; Ellen E.
Grant Bishop, commissioner. Erie County
Depanmenl of Menial Heallh; Frank L.
Ciminelli. presiden~ Ciminelli Development
Co., lnc. ; GeraldS. Lippes, panner in lhe law
firm of Lippes. Silverstein. Mathias &amp;
Wexler, and William H. Pearce, president.
Pearce and Pearce Co., Inc.
The following directors were re-elected
to three-year terms: Sheldon M. Berlow.
c hairman. Berlow Real Estate. Inc.; Kenneth
L. Gayles. M.D.; Lawrence D. Jacobs, M.D ..
head. Depanmenl of Neurology, The Buffalo General Hospiral; Ross B. Kenzie. reI ired chairman, Goldome ; Leonard
Rochwarger. chairman and chief executive
officer, Rockmonl Corp., and Harry R.
St"i.n.-oo\:... e.x.ec ulive vice presi.denl of trusts

and investments, Manufaclurers and Traders Tru st Co .

NCEER conference will study impact
ofearthquake on eastern U.S. cities · ·
. , 11.1.111 -.ouulll
News Bureau Slaff

w..t woukl .......... to uansponation or lhe financial markets if New Yorlc City .
experienced an earthquake as dCvastating as the one that struck Kobe, Japan, in
January?
Such questions and relaled issues will be lhe focus of a conference 1o be held in
New Yorlc City Sept. 12 and 13 by the National Center for Eanbquakc Engineering
Research (NCEER), headquartered at UB.
'
"Economic Consequences of Earthquakes:
focus on sociocconontic impacts of a major eastern
including NCEER's deputy director lao Buclde, bave
due.
Buckle sees a significanl parallel belween the kinds of
damage sustained in Kobe and lhe kind that could be
sustained in the eastern U.S., if the Iong-&lt;:xpecled eastem lemblor should occur. This parallel will also be
discussed at the conference, u will insights from the
1994 Northridge quake.
Leaders in the fields of economics, insurance, seismology, cn&amp;ineering and earthquake-hazards mitigatioa will eumiDe bow
earlhquakes affCCI .bulineu,
dustry, iosuraDQI and !he fiDancial
Tides of -.ioaa include: "Wbat happened in Kobe and Wbal If It Happened
Here?"; "Scenlrio Eanbquakes for Urboo
Areas AIODJ tbc Atlantic Seaboard of
the U.S.;" "Priorilizin&amp; New Yodt City
BridgesA=xdinatoEanbqulblfazard Criteria," and "'mpplccl ofa-

u.s.

Disulers 011 B u l l -: The
1993 Midwest Plooda and tbc 1994
Northtiqe Eanbquake."
0

WBFO to expand broadcasts
of'All Things Considered'
waFO 18.7 FM has announced that beginning Sept. II il will expand iiS weekday
broadcasiS of " AU Things Considered." The award-winning NPR news magazine will
air al 4 p.m., an hoor earlier lhan previously scheduled, and will run until 7 p.m.
As a charter member ofNPR, WBFO began airing "All Things Considered" in iiS
debul year of 1971. The program was developed by a former WBFO station manager,
Bill Siemering, who moved from Buffalo lo Washington, DC in 1970 10 become
program director of the fledgling public radio nelworlc.
"We're lhrilled .l hal NPR is now offering stations a chance to carry iiS best program
ala time when more people are available 10 listen toil," said WBFO General Manager
Jennifer Rolh. "'This will be a boon, especially for slations in lhe eastern time zone,
which had been limiled for 25 years to starting ATC a1 S o'clock. Now, as they're
closing down lheir worlc day and heading borne, our liSieners will be able to bear more
of NPR 's premiere news magazine and thai's terrific."
Accompanying the ATC expansion, WBFO also is expanding 10 1wo hours iiS
broadcast ofNPR 's call-in show ''Tallc oflhe Nation," which will air live from 2-4 p.m.
weekdays. WBFO Program Direclor David Benders said. 'This is really a win-win
situation. Our NPR news lisleners gel lo hear ATC a1 4 o' clock and lhey'll also
appreciate lhe fulllwo hours of 'Talk of lhe Nation' live so lhey 'II be able to participale
in lhe broadcasl by calling in questions. WBFO will be offering lhe complete slale.of
NPR news shows, including ' Morning Edition' in lhe a.m. and ' Fresh Air' al 7 p.m."
Anolher schedu le change occurring on Sepl. II also benefiiS WBFO 's news
lis1eners: " Morning Edilion," NPR 's weekday a.m. counterpan 10 " All Things Considered" will expand by one hour, airing from 6-10 a.m. Bolh " Morning Edilion" and "All
Things Considered" broadcasls on WBFO are localized for lhe Buffalo community.
with traffic and weather reports. local news and commentaries, and announcements of
cultural events.
WBFO's signal is "repeated on two frequencies in the Southern Tier: 91.3 FM in
Olean and 88.1 FM in Jamestown. II also can be heard via lhe all -band FM service of
a number of cable companies. including Time Warner in Olean.

President announces reassignments

P

RESIDENT WILLIAM R .
GREINER has announced reassignmeniS in lhe Office of lhe Presidenl,
1he Office of lhe Senior Vice Presidenl and
the Office of the Vice President for University Advancement and Development. The
reassignmeniS lake effecl immedialely.
Governmental Relations has been transferred 10 lhe Office of lhe President In her
new assignment, Molly McKeown will carry
lhe lille of Depuly 10 lhe Presidenl for Un1versity Relations. She will continue her work
in governmental relations and assume additional responsibility as liaison to the SUNY
trustees and the media .
The News Bureau has been reassigned to
University Services and will repon to Carole
Smith Petro, who currently is responsible for
Publicalions and WBFO. The News Bureau
will carry a new name, to be detennined by

FSEC
Conlinued from page 1
necessarY so far to meet the nearly four
percen1 decrease in UB's budget
Campuses wilh large undergraduale populations, like UB. suffered disproponionalely.
Greiner said. " Basically. our students are
paying more for somewhat less. which is a
major negative in and of itself," he said.
Greiner crediled his seniorslaff wilh fashioning several of the rare budget victories
SUNY won lhis year, including full funding
of graduate assistants and restraining the
increase in graduate and professional tuition, which in the past had been increased by
the same percentage as undergraduate tuition. One significant loss, however. was the
elimination of the State University Tuition
Reimbursemenl Accounl (SUTRA). Through
SUTRA. UB had generaled some income in
the past, Greiner explained, because campuses had been able to retain tuition reven ues which exceeded budgellargeiS for lhe
campus. Now, however, all tuition reve nues
go direclly 10 SUNY Cenlral.
Greiner commented that he had· spoken
wilh lhe new SUNY Truslees and he found
them "aggressive, yet approachable." The
new trustees, as a group, have a ..sense of
mandale lhal is differenl from 1heir prede-

The Aepor1er 111 a campus commuruty newspaj)8f publlsnea Dy the OMslon of I.Jntversity SeMc:es. Slate Uriversily ot New Yortt at &amp;lftalo
OIRECTOflOFPU8LIC.t.TIONS- nM011fl'l.CCMMO'f • COI TOA

~WN&amp;.

the Senior Vice President.
'The purpose of lhesechanges is 10 beller
position the university to meet our needs for
significantly increased gifl support. iocreased
advocacy and improved marketing and communication, without the need to recruit any
additional s1aff. These reassignmeniS were
worked out after extensive consultation with
the vice presidents," said Greiner.
··1 am especially gnueful 10 Senior Vice
Presidenl Wainer and Vice Presidenl Slein for
lhe good counsel lhey gave me regarding lhe
need for a highly focused effort in advancemen! and developmenl, and regarding lhe need
for a coordinaled and very professional approach to instiwtional communications. All of
us are grateful to Molly McKeown and Carole
Pelro, who have agreed to assume expanded
responsibilities a1 a time wben doing more with
-.
what we have is especially imponant."

• f&lt;SSOCI.-.TEEOfTOA JD.UINGM • ARTOIRECTOA

cessors, ·• he explained, "and they clearly are
no1 con1en1 lo .work only wilh lhe SUNY
Cenlral Adminislnllion. which I like 10 bear.
Sofar, l wouldsay,lhey are doing more good
than harm." With several more seats on the
SUNY Board up for reappoinlmenl, Greiner
expects several more new faces . The trustees
have been charged by lhe legislalure with
producing a comprchensi ve proposal to reorganize and reform the State University by
December I.
Faculty Senate Chair Claude Welch report·e d that President Greiner had taken action on several resolutions sent to him by the
full Senale lasl year. Policies have been
impleme nted reducing the minimum number of credil hours required lo earn a UB
degree from 128 10 120, defining Academic
Good SlaOding, delineating Public Service
slaOdards for facuhy, eslablishing an Investigator Disclosure Policy and designating a
process by which schools can establish lheir
own Liberal Arts requiremeniS; lhe lasllwo
resolutions were amended slighlly from lheir
final Senate fonn. Greiner, however, returned
a resolution on Undergraduate Teaching
Assistants to the Senate for further consideration this year,

Editorial otfces are lOcated k'l 136 Crotts Hall. Amhefat. ( 7 16) 6tS-6969

~Q.OimU

• HTTP /IU81NFOPU88UFFAI.OEOI.JM:POATERI

�3

Ne~ dean ~s yital role for Millard Fillmore College in

making umverstty resources accessible to community
IIJC~VIDAL

Aeponer.,E_d,_
'tor
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
EORGE J. LOPOS has had it
with c ritics ofhighereducation.
"I get really tired of people
whipping the American educa.
tionsystem. ItisincrediblyOextble. If you dropped out of high school or
weren'table to attend (college) for any number of reasons, when you want to re--enter,
there are a variety of ways to get back into
post-secondary education," Lopos says.
He ought to know. lopos is the new dean
of Millard Fillmore College, UB' s evening
divi sion dedicated to providing educational
opportunities for adul ts and non-traditional
srudents .

"Continuing education offers people
hope-&lt;&gt;f bettering themselves financially.
educationally and spiritually," said Lopos,
who became dean July I . He previously was
associate dean of the Division of Con tinuing
Education at the University of Iowa.
Continuing education, he said, is a com-

plex blend of evening classes, off-campus
classes and distance learning, designed ..to
make university resources accessible to the
community." Lopos said, "As a public institution , we have an obligation to the taxpayers of the state. My responsibility is to make
that connection."
It' s not always an easy connection to
make. '1nere are people who are urban and
have their needs. There are people who are

suburban and have their needs. And there are
people who are regional and have their needs.
You're Hke a yenta-you •rea matchmaker,"
Lopos said.
In this case, the "couple" to be brought
together is UB and the Western New York
community. Accessibility is the key to the
pairing, but that's not just a geographical
concep~ he emphasized.
" When we talk about access, there 's a
corollary-what's keeping them from gettmg to us?" Lopos said Time. money and
distance play key roles.
'"'There's a lot more drop-in, drop out
now. We're finding fewer peofle who can
comm1t themselves even in a non-traditional
setting. And it 's getting harder and harder
for students to meet college expenses. Financial aid for non-traditionaJ students is
hard to get. It' s been cut left and right .... This
is like taking things away from people who
don ' 1 have much to begin with. But these are
hard decisions, and I respect that."
Most non-traditional students also work
full time. and "as the employment situation
becomes more volatile , these people are
forced to move and their education suffen.,"
he sai d.
Globally , the face of post-secondary education is changing, and universities are seeing an increase in the number of
non-traditional srudents . More and more
people don't have the luxury of progressing

, Greiner names Lee to post of Senior
-University Advisorfor Technology

LOPOS

directly from high school 10 co llege. bu1
choose to auend at a later stage in their lives.
lopos said.
It is precisely these conditions that make
the administration of higher education so
interesting. "'It's always changing. It' s not
stagnant. it's not stati c. It's dynamic. ln
continu ing education you have to be an op·
p&lt;munist in the best sense of the word ··
Lopos sai d.
·
So as he integrates into the university

Stull steps down as dean of HR P:
Eckert to seiVe as interim dean

Reporter Editor

By STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

G

G

By CHRIS11NE VIDAL

EORGE C. LEE, director of
the National Center for Earthquake Engineering Research
and Samuel P. Capen Professor of Engineering, has been named Senior University Advisor for Technology
by UB President William R. Greiner.
Lee, former dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. will servr
as the presidential and provostaJ advisor
regarding opportuniti es for UB to expand
its presence in technological development and technology transfer and to form
new technology-related partnerships.
Lee's "extensive familiarity with national and international technology issues
and of the global environment for technological innovation has been-and continuestobo-anexceplionalresourceforUB."
said Greiner. He added that Lee's leadership in establ ishing NCEER and formulating the university's CUJ'TCnt infrastructure
initiative has led to enormous advances for
the universi~. as have hi s inte~lional
initiatives and his commitment to community pannerships in research and service.
Lee retired July I asdeanoftheScbool
of Engineeri ng and Applied Sciences.
where he had served since 1977. He has
been a UB faculty member since 1961.
Hi s research has covered a wide speclrum ranging from earthq uake engineering to modeling of the mechani cs behavior
of biological systems.
''Professor Lee 's extensive familiarity
with national and international technology issues and of the global environment
for technological innovation has beenand continues to be-an exceptional reso urce for UB ." sa id Greiner. " H is
leadership in establishing NCEER and
fonnulating our curren t infrastructure initiative has led to enormous advances for
the university. as have his international

initiatives and his commitmen t to community partnerships in research and service. By building on this base, as Senior
University Advisor forTechnology. he will
provide UB with key support as we continue to develop new partnersttips here in
the Niagara Region and arou nd the world ...
Presently, Lee is developing a software/hardware system based on principles
governing human body motions and control , which would allow structures to self
adjust to withstand vibrations caused by
eanhquakes and o ther dynamic forces.
Lee wa s in strumental in bringing
NCEER to UB in 1986, and fro m April
1989 to September 1990 served as the
center's act ing director; he was named
director in 1992. In 1994 he was named
director of the UB Greater Regional Industrial Technology Program, which
helps area businesses develop new products in cooperation with regional research
universities. Also in 1994. he founded the
Engineering Career Institute (ECO. a summer program designed to provide UB
engineering students with skill s not covered in a typical academic program.
In 1980. he launched a major effort to
encourage minority student·s to pursue
engineering careers . Since then, Buffalo
Engineering Awareness for Minorities
(BEAM) has reached more than 1.000
middle and high school students and today involves several dozen Western New
York industries and schools. Lee played a
central role in the fonnation of the CalspanUniversity at Buffalo Research Center
(CUBRC). a partnership that today conducts S7 million of research annually.
A nati ve of China, Lee received a
bachelor"s degree from National Taiwan
University. He holds a master' s degree
and a doctorate in civil engineering from
Lehigh Universi ty.
0

communit y. Lopos said, his first priority is
to become acq uain ted with UB's evening
division and how it fits into the universi ty as
a whole.
" ("ve got to get to understand MFC and its
history. I'd like to get together with other
college and administrative departments to
make MFC more comprehensive in its offerings to publics.·· he said.
"We" re going to review everything. I hope
we're goi ng to look at things differently and
try to be responsible in what we do."
This is not to imply a "'clean sweep··
approach to his new job, Lopos said. "New
brooms are scratchy and stiff. l don't want to
have a scratchy break-in period."'
What he does want is a break-in period of
open com mu nication . ··t don't want to be a
dean who works behind a desk . I look forward to working with other academ ic units
on campus and in the community."'
And Lopos knows that. at times. getting
10 know the un iversity and Buffalo communities wi ll be bumpy .
'There definitely will be challenges to
carry out the mi ssion of continuing education at the university at a time when money
is tight and morale among some people is
low:· he said.
'Tm goi ng to do a lot of listening this
year.'" although due to UB"s budgetary constrai nts. "I can't make any promises other
than good will."

ALAN STULL. who led the
School of Hea lth Related Professions for the past seven years.
• ste pped down as dean of the
School of Health Related Professions in Jul y.
Associate Dean Barry S. Ecken has assumed
the posi tion of interim dean while a search is
conducted for a successor to Stull.
Swll came to UB from the University of
Wi sconsin-Madi son, where he served as dean
of the School o f Allied Health Professions.
Prior to that. he held posts at the Universities
of Kentuc ky and Maryland. as well as with
the U.S . Army Advisory Group in Korea. A
Pe nnsylvania nati ve. Stull ho lds an M.S . and
Ed.D. in physical educatio n from Penn State.
In the summe r issue of HRP Newsleuer,
Stull no te s that alth ough it was a period of
declining resources. th e school expe ri enced
in creases in productivity and quality. Ex -

ternal gran t s received by the school
increased
from
$324.000 in 1987 -88
lo more than $3.2
m illi o n last year.
Student demand for
HRP programs has
increased nearly I 0
STULL
pen:enteachyearduring his tenure. according to Stull. This fall. capacity of the incoming
class for the undergraduate Physical Therapy
program was doubled to I 00 students.
Ecken. who came to UB in 1977. is a n
associate professor of unatomy a nd cell biology. He is the principal•investigator on a
three-year, $135.000 gr.mt from the National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
to st ud y the early biochemical changes in
liver cells caused by alcohol.

Kenneth Kiser to chair Chemical
Engineering Department at UB
By EU£N GOLDBAUM
News Bureau Staff

K

ENNETH M. KISER. associa1e
dean of engineering at UB. has
been named chai r of the Depanme nt of Chemical Engineeri ng.
He succeeds Ralph Yang. who left UB to
chair the Depanment of Chemical Engineermg at the University of Michiga n.
Kiser. a UB facully member si nce 1964.
served as ac ting c ha ir of chemical engineering from 1977-78. A recipient of the SUNY
Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1974, he was honored with the Tau
Beta Pi Teacher of the Year Award in 1973.
He has been a member of numerou s universi ty and School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences committees. and c haired the Fac-

ulty Se nate ' s Committee for Admi s sio ns and Retention .
Ki se r has taught
graduate and undergrad uute courses in
transport processes .
fluid mechanics. de sign. reactor theory .
rheology and biOKISER
medical engineering.
Before joining UB, he laught in Renssdac:r
Polytechnic Institute's Engineering Science
Program and was a researcher at General Electric Co. He earned a bachelor's degree from
Lawrence Technology Unive~ity. a master' s
from lhe University ofCmcinnati and a doclorme
from The John Hopk.ins University.

�4

Contetnporary artists to be
featured in University Gallery
Shows to spotlltM works by Mlltthew Weinstein, Lydia Doni!;
Collaborative e xhibition ..,.....U WNY ..Ustjpoet AlfoMo Yolo
By PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Bureau Stall

L

YD IA DONA a nd Ma llh e w
Weinste in are nationaJiy· regarded
contemporary artists who consider
pamting not only still a viable
medium . but one uniquel y ca pable
o f re pre se nt ing our time s . Their
deconstructions of the moderni st aesthetic
wtll be featured in the Un tverstty at Buffalo
Ga llery fall season.
The Mauhew Weinstcm cxh ablt open ~
Sept. 2 1 wi th a lec ture by lhe arti st at 4 p.m.
fo llowed by a receptton at 5. The show will
LOOIJOUC in the ga ll ery '!~ first noor CX hibi ·
IJOn area through Nov . 7.
Ma uhe w We instei n· s paintings have been
ca ll ed as ··aggressively vulgar and obnox ·
tou sly vi brant as a Grand Guignol performance." Another critic said they capture a
state of .. pathological ecstasy .'' Critk Jerry
Saltz called hi s compositions .. ungainly and
undi gested ," adding that "there 's an eager.
adol escent sk ull·· n ··crossbones side to the
work that makes it see m panicularl y male.''
Wein stein · s assault o n moderni st noti ons
fthe "pure" and the ''ideal" generall y takes
the orm of a mucous. garish. so metimes·
kink y r poetic marriage of di sparate images
from an omy. bike r cu lture. Rimbaud and
pop.
Thi s so l ex hibiti on traces the develop·

ment of lhe ani st' s peculiar and startling
personal iconography over a fi ve-year period. Look for his exploration of cell-like
surreal organic forms and hi s manipulation
of the pain ting itself as a metaphor for the
body.

He often cuts into his paintings, some·
times sewing them back together to pi'Qduce
a scarred canvas·skin surface. In other cases,
the cuts remain open to reveal the wooden
skeleton across which the canvas is stretched.
He uses what he calls synthetic "non-art''
colors to di scourage a literal reading of the
painting as a tom and reassembled human
form . Others feature ungainly , undigested
images produced in a wildly exuberant ada.
lescent style.
Weinstein himse lf calls hi s oeuvre one
that "cenrers itself upon the corporeal resean:h of pleasure" and upon the psychological or physicaJ obstacles experienced
during that journey.
The Lydia Dona show opens in the fllSI
Ooor gallery Thursday, Nov. 16 with a 4 p.m.
public lecture by the artist followed by a reception at 5 p.m. It continues through Dec. 22.
The gallery also presents a collaborative
dual-site exh ibition with Buffalo's Big Orbit
Gallery featuring another anist who casts a
peculiar eye to the modernist past. He is the
criticall y applauded Western New York art -

isl and poel Alfonso Volo, whose show began Aug. 31 and will run concurrently with
the Weinstein exhibil through Nov. 5 in the
gallery 's second floor exhibition space.
Also on the gallery's fall schedule:
John Lekay 's sculptural installalion
"Delires de L'ange Neutre, which opened
Aug. 31, continues to Sept. 17 . A lecture by
LekayonSept. 14 at4 p.m. will be followed
by a reception. Both events lake place in lhe
first floor gallery.
An Ocl. 21 sUde lecture by pioneering
American anisl Adrian Piper will take place
in the Center for the Arts Screening Room at
7 p.m. and will be followed by a public
reception.
The uni versity's annual Graduate Student Show runs Nov. 16 through Dec. 13 in
the second floor gallery. II opens with a
reception from 5-7 p.m. on Nov. 16and will
feature work in sculpture, illustration, photography , painting, printmaking, computer
an and communication design.
The Lightwell Gallery will continue its
long-term exhibition of site-specific con·
struction, "Red Vertical" by Simon Unger,
through Dec. 31.
The University Gallery is free and open to
the pubtic. Hours are 10:30 a.m. 10 8 p.m.
Wednesday-Salurday and noon to 5 p.m.
C
Sunday.

Hungarian students here to study medical
practice under new exchange program
By LOI S BAKER
News Bureau Staff

TUDENTS FROM four Hun garian medical schools are tal:.·
ing cou rses at the UB School of
Medici ne and Biomedical Sci ·
en ces begi nnin g thi s fall . mark·
mg the start of an exchange program that
even tuall y wi ll include med ical resident s.
doctoral student s and UB and Hungaria n
faculty.
UB Sludc nt s will go to Hungary begin·
ning in the spri ng 1996 semester ,
The exchange program is a joint vent ure
with the Hungarian Medical Assoc iation of
Ameri ca. headq uan ered in Buffa lo.
"The Hun garian medi cal community was
very interested in establi shing relations hips
with American schools." sai d John Feather.
•
project co·di rector.
··such arrangemen.ts were hard to hold
wgether during the Communist era . and it
was clear from the start they wanted toestab·
Iish a formal on·going relationship. The Hun·
garian Medical Association of Ameri ca acted
as li aison wi th the four Hungarian schools
and was cri tical to the successofthe o rganiz.
ing effon ."
Irene L. K.ri sztinicz. a radiologist and
past president of the organi zation, said the
effort finally ca me to fruition after a year and
a half of hard work .
"We wanted to do something to help our
young phys icians improve their ski lls and
widen their experience. U.S. medical techniq ues. skills and teaching are excellent. Our
st udents will come away with a much broader
view of medical poss ibilities.··
The schools involved in the exchange are
located in Szegcd, Debrece n. P~ cs and
Budapest. Each will send up to five students
to UB fo elective courses last ing one to
three months.
Only fourth -year medical students will be

S

eligi ble for the exchange. Housing in donni·
tories and mea ls in univers ity dining facili ·
ties wi ll be provided free of charge in both
countries.
Dennis Nad ler, associate dean for aca·
demic and curri cular affairs at the UB medi·
cal school andco·coordinator o fthe program,
~ aid the exchange wi ll be va lu able for every·
one.
"For the Hungarians. it's a chance to see
how medicine is pracliced in the U.S . Their
facilities. especially in the major ci ties. are
quite modern . but we have some facilities
that are more advanced lhan they are accus·
ta med to ," Nadler said. "For example. their
transplant units are up· to-date, but their
ambulatory settings are not as well·devel·
oped.
'' For our students, the cultural experience
is a real plu s. It also o ffers the opportunity to
study some fields in more depth than we do
here . Anatomical parhology is an example.
Hungarian slUdcnts assist in se veral au top·
sics a week because nearly every death there
resul ts in auropsy. Opportunities for our stu ·
dents to do auropsics are rare."
American srudents wi ll experience strik·
ing differences in medi cal practice between
the two countries.
"Because phys icians there arc relatively
low pwd, they do a lot o f things physicians
here never do. incl uding making their own
appointments," Feather said. 'lhat will give
our students a new perspective."
Other differences include modem health
facilities concentrated in the cities while
remote areas may be lucky to have even
basic equipment, anesthes iologists in charge
of intensive care and a universal organ·
donor program. ··unless you specifically
refuse ," Nadler noted. "you are considered a
donor."
The payment system also is unusual.
Hungarian physicians cam much of rheir

livelihood through tips. The upshot is areversal of the U.S . nonn: Hungarian famil y
ph ys ician s m ake mo re mone y than
subspecialists because they see more pa.
tients directly .
lnteresl in international health is keen
among UB medi cal srudents, Feather said.
The UB medical school operates a fonnal
exchange program wi th China. but students
wishing to study elsewhere have had to find
their own placemenls in the past.
-

UB, Jagiellonian
librarians join in
editing process
BJPA--AN

News Bureau Staff

F

OR NEARLY SO yeaR, librarians
in Poland were educaled, tJained
and required In work under a government Ubrary system that severely
restricted the collection of published material and limiled public and scholarly access
to even these restricted collections.
To assisl the librarians of Poland in their
transilion to a new philosophy and practice
in their field, librarians at Jagiellonian Uni versity in Cracow, Poland, and UB have
jointly edited a book, 'The Role of Libraries
in the Democratic Process."
Published this spring by Jagiellonian Uni versity Press, the book is a collection of
essays by librarians and library professors at
both schools that explores such issues as the
role of libraries as a vital force in democracies, the development of balanced collections, theories of scientific Ubrarianship,
conlemporary Ubrary trends and philosophies that promote full participation of the
e1ectorate in a library system.
Articles appear io Polish or English, with
summaries in the alternate language.
The book is one resull of a three-year,
library-faculty exchange program between
UB and Jagiellonian. It was c~ted by
Maria Koc6jowa, professor and chair of
Jagiellonian's Depanment of Library and
Information Science, and George S .
Bobinski, dean of the UB School of Information and Library Sludies.
Contributors are faculty members of both
institutions and practicing librarians from
both countries. Several, including Koc6jowa
and Bobinski, panicipaled in the ongoing
exchange program.
UB facul ty who conlributed articles are:
Bobinski; Susan Hildenbrand, associate professor of infonnation and tibrary studies; William McGrath, professor of library science;
Lorna Pelerson, assistant professor of information and library studies; A. Neil Yerkey,
associate professor of information and library
studies; Barbara von Wahlde, director of University Libraries. Jagicllonian University librarians wbo contributed include: Koc6jowa;
Sabina An:isz. assistant professor of library
and infonnation science; Wanda Pindlowa.
professor of library and information sci·
ence.

Money magazln' &amp;ulde ranks UB one of
top ten best buys In education
UB Is 1'8nked by Money rnagllZine among the lOp ten four-'year schools in
the Northeast, on its annual Ust of besl buys In American education. The
rankings appear in Money magazine's "Money Guide: Your Best College
Buys Now," which hit newsstands Tuesday.
tn the Northeast top ten, UB is ranked tenth, behind Yale (ninth) and
Harvard (seventh). SUNY schools received high marks with Binghamton
first, Albany second, and Geneseo third. Fredonia Stale was No. 5 and
Stony Brook eighth. Among•area schools, Siena College was rated fourth
and St. Bonaventure came in sixth.
-In the ~stofthe top 25 in the Northeas~ .eighl were SUNY campuses. In ad;9itlon 10 UB. AlbanY. Binghamton, Fredonia, Geneseo, and
Stony Brook, Oneonta and Ptattsl:ugh were listed. Among the top 100, UB
was raled 47th.
SUNY Chancellor Thomas Bartlett said in a Buffalo News article,
"This survey demonslrates the quality and allordability of our campuses. It is
signlficanl that our CIW'OPuses have been well represented on MOney's list
since the magazine began rating college best buys six years ago.• Bartlett
said the placing was even more ImpreSSive to him in light of a major tuiliQn
increase in all of tha eight SUNY campuses.
To rank the 100 best buys, Money analyzed cost in terms of tuilion
and fees and education.quality, using indicators such as entrance e)(IIITl
resulls, facully and libnuy resources. instructional and student services
budgets, graduation rates and delau~ ratio on student loans.
0

�.......... 7.

~

5

,......27,No.2

Densmore's book is first comprehensive
history of Quaker community in New York
lly PA1111CIA - V A l l

News Bureau StaH

L

IBRARIANS. COLLECTORS

and preservers of the written word
since Aristotle have their own obsessions. even as they serve ours-

papyrus scrolls. 18th -ce ntury
pleasure parks. penny dreadfuls. The list is
endless.
Christopher Densmore. associate archivist at UB, has a principal research interes~
too. It is the early history of New York 's
Quakers, who, though nominal in number,
have had enonnous influence on American
life and polity.
Syracuse University Press recently published .. Quaker Crosscurrents:• a book by
Densmore and several other historians and
archivists that offers the first comprehensive
hi story of the Quaker community in New
York State. Densmore. who has published
widely on the subject, wrote and edited three
of the book's 17 chapters and contribu ted to

It describes aspects of Quaker architec·
ture, philanthropy and political and religious
views, and documents the group's ideas regarding a wide range of subjects from the
treatment of Native Americans and African
Americans 10 the role of women in public
and religious life-atthudes that were peculiar to very few in the early days of the
nation.
1be New York Friends' involvement in
the broader society is further demonstrated by
their three centuries of work ~ abolitionists
and educational reformers; as advocates for
troubled children. the insane and the indigent.
and as civil~rights and peace activists.

seven others.
The authors made extensive use of the
archives of New York Yearly Meeting of the
Religious Society of Friends. which ce lebrates its 300th anniversary next year. The ~
.. meeting .. is the Quaker forrn of spiritual i!!
contemplation and religious worship, as well ug
as the means of conducting congregational ~
b

~:e~\ork Yearly Meeting, formalized in

7, is an associati on of many local Quaker
etings in New York State, northern New
ey. Connecticut and Vennont. ln the
19th-century, New York Meeting also in cluded meetings in Ontario and Michigan
and a few in the very nonhern pan of Pennsy lvan ia and in Quebec.
The book also renects contemporaneous
periodicals.journal s. letters and manuscripts,
oral-history interviews with modern Qu_a kers and the recollect ion s of panicipants, a nd
includes maps of Quaker settlements, photos
of Quaker archi tecture and many of the
group's leadin g figures.
By focusing on the Quakers of the New
York region, the book illuminates American
Quaker life and thought from its first appearance in the 1650s in the Dutch colony o f New
Netherlands to the present.

Isaac T. ~ waa • Quaker abolltJon.

1st 8llld Underground Railroad agent.
Documented are the scores of Quakerfounded schools, hospital s and asy lums for
the mentally ill and homeless in the state, and
their "i nvention" of arbitr.ltion and other
methods of non-violent connict resolution .
The Quaker-originated Alternatives to Violence Program. for instance, is now used in
prisons and school s used throughout the U.S.
and Canada. These activities also have mobilized many non-Quakers and exe mplify
the interaction between Quaker conscience
and the wider world .
The book also examines Quaker architel: -

ture, whose deliberately plain facades and
·•meeting-house" style marry design to function as a metaphor for the Quaker approach
to community, dress and spiritual life.
Since Quakerism focuses on "inward
light .. (the seed ofGod the Quakers believe
is within each person) and spiritual communion, the meeting houses have no steeples.
pulpits or outward sacraments . Meetings
might be entirely silen t, although ministry
can and does come from anyone in the congregation.
Quaker churches. which co-exjst with the
meeting houses. on the othe r hand, reflect
the influence of traditional Protestant practice and more closely rese mble the Protestant congregation in ritual and structure.
The authors also explore how various currents in American religious thought have in fluenced Quaker belief and pmctice. They
discuss the division that developed in the
early 19th century between Onhodox and
Hicltsite Quakers and the role it played in
their religious experience. They also examine
how the evangelical and holiness movements
affected Quakers and indicate that Quakers,
like other Americans. have faced c hoices
between modernism and fundamentalism .
Densmore said that in most of his published work, he 's tried to bring unknown or
underutiHzed primary source material to the
attention of the scholarly community and
this book is consistent with that goal.
Although there were reams of fascinating
primary sources about the state's Quakersletters. journals , photos, accounts of meetings-until now there were few secondary
sources on New York Quakerism to which a
researcher cou ld refer and no books on the
history of New York Yearly Meeting.
Densmore. an honors history graduate of
Oberlin College. holds a master· s degree in
history from the University of WisL·onsm.
An archivist at UB since 1974. he received
the SUNY Chancellor ; Award for Excellence in Librarianship in 1990.
He has contributed to many book~. m·
eluding the upcoming '"American National
Biography"' from Oxford University Pre s~ .
Densmore is the author of several an ides on
the Quakers of New Yo rk State and Canuda
in such refereedjournah as QuCIAn Histor: .

Midwestem Archivist. New York Hiswry.
New York Folklore, Man in the Nonheast
and the Journal of Long Island History.
He has presented papers and conducted
archival workshops throughout New York..
Pennsylvania. Ohio and On tari o. and is very
active in the Society of American Archi -

Old Quaker Meeting House near North
Collins, N.Y.
vists. as well as in local and regional professional groups.
In addition to Densmore. the principal
authors and edi tors of''QuakerCrosscurrents' "
are Hugh Barbour. professor emeritus of
Quaker History at Earlham College and the
author of several books and numerou s articles on American Quakers; Elizabeth H .
Moger, keeper of the records at the Haviland
Records Room. Archives of the New York
Yearly Meeting: Alson D. Van Wagner of
New York Yearly Meeting. and Arthur J.
Worrall of the Depanment of History at
Colorado State Universi ty .
Contributing authors and editors include
Mary Finn of Buffalo Friends Meeting.
Thomas D. Hamm of the Department of
Hi story at Earlham College. and Nancy A. .
Hewill of the Depanment of Hi s lOry al Duke
Unive rsi ty.

QUAKER FACTS
• In 1964 , UB philosophy prolessor Newton Garver. a Quaker. supported by
New YOfk Yearly Meeting. refused to
sign the loyalty oath required by the
state's Feinberg Law when UB became
pan of the State Un1versity of New York
system. He claimed the oath would v~&lt;&gt;­
tate the principles of h1s religion. Along
with other UB faculty . he filed a class
action suit 1n this regard , which resulted
in the !967 U.S . Supreme Coun deci·
sion that declared the law unconstitu-

tional

National Book Award winner Tim O'Brien
opens Wednesdays at 4 Plus series Sept.12
lly PA1111CIA DOIIOVAII

News Bureau StaN

N

OVELISTTIM O'BRiEN. aNa·
tiona1 Book Award winner wide ly
acclaimed for his literary treatment of the American experience
in Vietnam. will open UB' s Fa ll 1995
Wednesdays at 4 PLUS literary series. All
events connected with the series are free of
c harge and open to the public.
O'Brien wi ll read from hi s work at8 p.m.
on Tuesday, Sept. 12, in the auditori um of
A llen Hall on the South Campus. The read·
ing is sponsored by Talking Leaves Books
and will be broadcast live over WBFO-FM
88.7. UB's National Public Radio affi liate.
O'Brien writes about the impossibility of
telling stories true to the American experience of Vietnam. Hi s I 989 novel. "'Goi ng
After Cacc iato," won the National Book
Award and hi s 1990 collection of short stories about the war, 'The Things They Carried," was both acriti~al and popular success.
Its fragmented narrative concerns a sin gle
platoon whose members include O'Brien
and among its stories are several that are

widely considered among the best ever writ ten about any war.
His most recent novel from Penguin. '" In
the Lake of the Woods," is a haunting mystery that evokes the horror of the My Lai
massacre and its terrible reverberations in
the life of one participant. It. too. has garnered enonnous attention from the literary
press and is a popular best sel ler. O"Brien is
also the authorof .. lfl Die in a Combat Zone
Box Me Up and Ship.. ( 1973).
The Wednesdays at 4 PLUS series also
wi ll include in September a reading of poetry and play excerpts by Carla Harryman.
aulhorof"There Never Was a Rose With out
a Thorn," at4 p.m. on Wednesday. Sept. 13.
in the Center for the Ans Screening Room on
the North Campus. She will prese nt a lecture/demonstration , ·• Poet' s Theater,"the fol ·
lowing day at 12:30 p.m . in 438 Clemens
Hall. also on the North Campus.
Writer, director. perfonner and instaJiation artist Fiona Templeton will give a performanceofher ingerUous. gender-bending works
at Hallwalls on Tuesday. Sept. 19, at8 p.m.
The nex t day. Wednesday. Sept. 20,

Templeton will screen the film " You - the
City,'" based on her book of the same name
and prese nt a reading from her work at 4 p.m.
in the Center for the Ans Screening Room .
On Thursday. Sept. 21. at 12:30 p.m .. she
will prese nt a lecture/demonstration titled
.. Play True Beat Make Mean" 10 438 Clemens
Hall. North Campus.
Lucette Fi nas ends the September events
with the first of the Fall 1995 series "'French
Festival." which will also present several
nmable contemporary French writers during
the month of October.
Finas is a distinguished French novelist
and cntic whose books include "L' echec"
( 1955). translated by Ralph Manheim as
"The Faithful Shepherd .. and published by
Pantheon in 1963. She has also written essay
collections on Derrida and Bataille. short
story colleclions and other works.
She will present a bilingual prose reading
on Wednesday. Sept. 27, at 4 p.m. in the
Center for the Ans Screening Room and a
lecture ... Mallarrne's Art:· at 12:30 p.m. o n
Thursday , Sept. 28. in 438 Clemens Hall .
North Campus.

• One of the book chapters contributed by
Densmore records the long-terminvolv&amp;
ment ol New Y&lt;irl&lt; Quakers in the antt·
slavery movement. He noted that
stav~ing by members of the New
YOfk Yearty Meeting ended around the
time of the American Revolution and thai
12 of the 18 founders of the inHuential
New YOfk Society lor the Manumission of
Staves were Quakers. The Friends were
also among the first conductors oo the
Underground Railroad in NewYOfkState.
• One ol the first Protestant groups to
recognize women as the spiritual equals
ol men , The Quakers brought their be·
liefs to the colonies by the mid·1600s.
Their members conlributed heavily to
the country's first and continuing wave
ofpoliticalactivismonbehalfofwomen's
rights.OfthefiVewomenwhoorganized
the groundb&lt;eaking Convention on the
Rights ol Women in Seneca Falls, N.Y..
in 1848, lour. including Lucretia Mott.
Mary Ann M'Ciintock and Jane Hunt.
were. or had been. Quakers.
• Quaker pacifism and antK:Irafi activity
during America's wars has been well·
known. but not universal. The Civil War
and World War II. in particular, chal·
lenged Quakers to examine their paci·
fist tenets. While the Society of Friends
remained pacifist. some individuaiOuak·
ers joined the milttary in these and other
conftlcts.

�6

........._7,~V......

n , Mo.a

Facul &amp;SiaHBillboard
Til-.: RECEIVES
P'HARMACOLOGY HONOR

0

O.vld .1. Trtggle . dean of
the School of Pharmacy and

SUNY [:)JShnQUIShed Prolessor
at UB, has been awarded the Otto
Krayer Award

1n Pharmacology

by
the Ameucan Soc•ety lor Pharmacol-

ogy and Expen-

ENeiNEERINQ I'IIOfESSOII

mental

I'UBUSHU 1WO BOOKS

TherapeutiCS
It recogn• zes a
diSIIOQUIShed and
mature Investigator
whose research
over many years
nas contnbuted SIQO•hcantly to a better understand•ng ol the mechan•sms
of act1on of drugs or other chem•cals
Tnggte's research focuses on how
Orugs •nterac r wllh ca lc•um channels cellular mechan•sms that regulate the entry ol cafc1um when cells
are stimulated He has conduc ted

o•oneenng research 1n10 the ac11on of
c aiC•um-channel antagon1sts '" the
cardiOVascular system. and stud1ed
catctum channels and ag•ng
A member of the UB faculty 1n the
Department ol BIOChemical Pharmacology s1nce 1962. Tr1ggte was Chair
ot the department from 1971 -85 He
has served as dean o f the School of
Pharmacy stnce 1985

acu.r,

n G.
chatr
of de t1stry and mwullolactal
prost tiCS at Roswell Park
Cancer lnstttut&amp;. and Iii- pro fe ssor tn
the U'B School ot Dental MediCine
was recenlly awarded the Andrew J
Ackerman Award lor "outstanding
conrnbultons to max1llofactal pros thetics· b y the Ameucan Academy of
Maxillolac tat ProsthetiCS (AAMP)
The award IS g1ven lor profess•ooal excellence and contnbut1011s to
research . literature and conhnutng
educatiOn Not an annual award. it 1S
reserved by the AAMP to honor outstanding professiOnals Schaal's cur ·
rem research tnvolves the use of lm·
pfanrs 1n the head and neck area to
rebutld feature s destroyed by cancer

0

CIANCIO SP'EAJIS AT

WHITE HOUSE BRIEFING

0

chne He reported results showtng
that when applied at d1sease s•tes .
Act1s1te kills the bactena below the
gum line . stops bleeding and attows
the bOdy to heal itsell .
He also has received an honor Cl·
tat1on from the 1990-1995 Board of
Trustees of the Untied States
Pharmacope•al ConventiOn.

Sebastian Q . Cl•nelo, pro-

lessor and chaff of the Depart·
ment of Penodontology at the
UB School of Dental Med1c1ne . was ;i
presenter at an
Amencan Medtcat
ASSOCiatiOn-sponsored bnef1ng precedmg the 1995
White House Con ference on Ag1ng
1n Wash,ngton .

DC
Under the lheme
·cop1ng W1th Ag1ng . Soltemng the
Impact of the Inevitable .· C•anc1o
d•scussed methods for treattng gum
d1sease •n the elderly and presented
data on the newest advance in nonsurg•caltherapy for peuodonhllS-a
special type of hber called ActtSI!e .
whtch contains the antibiOtic tetracy-

O

Oebor8hO.LCh-.

N1agara Mohawk Chair of Ma·
tenals Research and professor
of mechantcat and aerospace engl·
neeung at UB. has published two
books ·carbOn Fiber Composites"
(Butterworth--Heinemann. 1994) and
"Matenats for Electronic Packaging·
(Butterworth·
Heinemann . 1995)
·carbon Fiber
Composttes. •
authored by
Chung, discusses
processing , properlles and applica tions ol carbon
composlles. dormnan! matenal used tn aerospace. au·
tomottve . sporting goods and even
construc tion applications
Components tnvolved 1n the packagtng of Integrated c ~rcu1t chtps are
the subtect ol "Matenats lor Elec tronic Packagtng ." ed1ted by Chung
Semtconductor technology has made
tremendous progress 1n recent dec ades . Chung sa1d . and the prob·
lems that rema1n are ma1nly •n the
area of electroniC pac kag•ng. Th1s
book locuses on the development of
matenats that would make more demanding packag1ng schemes pos·
s1bte

IIALPEIIN I'UBUSH£S BOOK

ON LAW, CIVIL III8KT1I

0

Stephen C. H•lpem, pro-

fessor of political science at
UB . IS the author of On the
Lim1ts of the Law· The Ironic Legacy
of Title VI of rne 1964 C1v11 Rights
Act The book . 1n wh1ch he analyzes
the legal and poltt1cat battles that
have been fought over thE" federal
governmenrs efforts to enforce Title
VI. was published 1n March by Johns
Hopkins Press
"The author 's goat IS to show the
hmttat1ons o f agenc1es and courts 1n
enforctng CIVIl nghts laws. especially
Title VI of the Ctvil A1ghts Act of
1964. wh1ch prov1ded lor the cut-off
o f fund s for federatty asststed programs and actiVIItes that d tscnminated on the bas•s o f race," wrote
Kenneth Tollen. Dist inguiShed Professor of Law at Howard University
"He achteved that goal very well by
revealing that procedural concerns
and ,Ssues and body counts carne to
dom1nate and displace substance tn
the pursuit o f equal educational opportunity lor Blacks.· Totten wrote
· Halpern has made a substantial and
original contribution to the analysis of
law and CIVIl r!QhtS "
Halpern , a graduate of C1ty College of New York , received h1s
master's degree and Ph D 1n pohh·
c al sctence from The Johns Hopk1ns
Unrversily , and his J D from the UB
Law Schoof

GOLOVE WINNER
OF ASCAP' GRANT

0

Jonattwn Qolove. a doc-

toral cand1d ate •n mus1c composUIOn at UB. has been
named one of 30 wtnners of the 1995
Grants to Young Composers Awards
presented by the Amencan Soc1ety
of Composers. Authors and Publish-

"" (ASCAP)
The grants are awarded to composers under age 30 in a national

competitoo . The 1995 wmners will
share $20,000 1n awards. Golove 1s
studying at UB as a Woodburn fellow
under composer David Felder .
Goklve's winning composition .
· Shreds of Evidence ." was composed for two p iano duos and premiered at UB in 1994. A second version was performed by The
Instrumental Factor at the North
American New Music Festival in February. A version of the work lor two
pianos was performed at UB's JUNE

IN BUFFALO Festival.
~-Ell

OF NATIONAL SOCIETY

0

Linda arodaky, associate
professor of otolaryngok&gt;gy
and pediatrics at UB. has been
elected treasurer of the American Scr
Clety ol Pediatric Otolaryngology.
Director of the Department of Pediatric Otolaryngology 1n The
Children's Hospital of Buffalo,
Brodsky also serves as the hospital's
dlfector of ambulatory surgery and
medical d irector of the Department of
Speech , Language and Hearing in
the Robert Warner Aehabilitahon
Center. a d ivision of Children's HospttaL
A nationally recognized specialist
1n craniofacial anomalies. she has
published a reference leiCI for pedis·
trictans and other phys1cians or denliSts treating children with craniofaCial anomalies. She is assoc~ate
editor of the International Journal of
Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology.

HAMILTON P'RESIO£NT
OF MANAIIEMENT AWMNI

0

Inc.; Cynthia M. Shofar. assistant
dean for career development serVICes, UB: Philip J. Szabla . partner .
Albrecht Maguire Heffern &amp; Gregg ,
Richard A. Tesmer, vice president .
Tesmer Builders Inc.: Steven J
Weiss, associate anomey.
Saperston &amp; Day.

F. - . Stapleton, A.
Conger Goodyear professor
and chair of the Department
of Pediatrics in the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
has been appointed to the editorial
board of the Journal of Pediatrics
for a seven-year term.
Stapleton. pediattician·in-ch lef
at The Children's Hospital of Buffak&gt;, has assumed the post of president of the American Society of
Ped iatric
Nephrology, a soc iety representing
420 pediatric kid·
ney specialists in
North America lor
1:-:::c"""'='!IU-' the purposes of
pro fessional and
public educaUon, Improving patient
care and promoting relevant scientifiC research.
A fellow of the Amer;can Academy

of Pediatrics, Stapleton se&lt;ved as
chair of the Sub-Board of Nephrology
of the Amerk::.an Board of Pediatrics in
t993. He is also a membe&lt; of the
American Pedl8tric Society and a dtplomate of the American
Medical Examtners

Board of

Seminars on new dental tech-niques and programs for personal devek&gt;pment w ill be lea·
luted at the Greater Niagara Frontier

Dental Meeting, to be held Sept. 2122 from 8 a.m.-4:30p.m . in the Buf.
lalo Convention Center. The meeting
is sponsored by the Alumn1 Association of the UB School of Dental Medicine. A d inner and dance will be held
on Sept. 22 in the Statler Golden
Ballroom. Cocktails at 8:30 p .m . witt
precede the d inner at 7:30 p .m .
Day-k)ng seminats to be held dur·
lng the meeting are: ·PracttcaJ Cfl)INI"'
&amp; Bridge lor Predicable Esthetics,'
Gerald J. ChtChe. professor of fixed
prosthodontics. loufslana State Un._.
varsity, Sept 21,8:45 a.m . to 4:30
p .m.: •Esthetic and Cosmetic Dentistry: Materials. Techniques and High
Tech Applications,· Ross w Nash.
clinical instructor in restorative dentistry, Georg!B School of Dentistry. Au·
gusta, Ga.. Sept. 21 , 9 a.m. to 4:40
p .m .: "Make Dentistry Fun . Exc1ting
and Rewardtng.- Unda L. Miles. head
of Miles &amp; Associates. a national
practice-development consulting firm.
Sept. 22 . 8:30a.m. to 4 p .m
Partial-day seminars will be ol·
fered on infection control , d ental
dams. mammography and early detection of breast cancer . dentistry's
contribution to medicine. dental antiques. preventing back injur.as.
medical emergencies in the dental
office . CPA, financial fundamentals .
child abuse and risk management.
For more information. call 829-

2061

William A . Hamilton, vice

president tor hnance at TAM
Ceram1cs Inc . has been
elected pres1dent of the UB School of
Management Alumm Association
Hamilton rece1ved a bachelor's degree from UB in 1968.
Other officers are· Pres1dent
elect · Lawrence J . ZielinSki , vice
president , ancillary and support serVICes. The Children 's Hospital of Buf·
talo. Vtce President/CommuntcatiDns
Denn1s P Szywala . corporate controller. Graph1c Controls Corp : Vice
Pres1denl/Membersh1p: Charles C .
Swanekamp , partner . Saperston &amp;
Day, Vice President/Programs· Judil h
A Ruck1 . director of public relatiOns
and development. Sierra Research.
Vtce Pres•deni/Student Relations
Paul E Ste1mle. consultant. KPMG
Peat Marwick; D•rector/Development:
Michael J Murray. panner . Ernst &amp;
Young , also elected to the board of
dlfectors for a three-year term: Sec retary Lisa A . McKigney. state controller . The Park Assoc1ates Inc ;
Treasurer : Dav1d A. Barrett . partner .
Freed . Mwnck. Sachs &amp; Murphy
New members of the board ol d irectors elected for a three-year term
are M1chael A. Brace. hnanc1al ana·
tyst. Fleet Bank; Bernardo J
Carotenuto. admimstrator. Aurora
Park Health Care Center Inc . L1sa
Clark Driscoll . v•ce prestdent . bUSIness development. National Health
Care AHihates Inc . Susan J Grellck .
Willtamsvifle, Amherst Town Clerk.
Joseph A Kreuz . preSident. Advantage Opportunity Co
Re-elected to serve three-year
terms on the board are Dav1d T
Hare . manag1ng partner. Troncon• .
McCarthy &amp; Hore CPAs. Came w
Kahn. pres1dent . CWK Enterpnses
ConiiOUJng members on the board
are Ann Burstein Cohen . asSIStant
profesSOf of accounllng . UB . M1chael
0 Deak1n. president. Vat-Kro Inc .
Evelyn C. Grau , product manager .
Fisher-Puce Inc.: Michael J . Jakubik,
dltector ol accounting and finance .
Basicnetlnc.: Teresa M. Murphy. senior manager. KMPG Peat Marwick:
Arthur J. Raga Jr . president. RISE

UB Libraries Web:
Campus Vntual Library
.._....._. iiiJ the "liifonnation Superhighway"? Wondering
wbeno 10 begin for your research needs? Try your campus virtual
library-die UB Libraries Web!
This new web offen integra1ed access 10 a wealth of information and extends libnuy resources and libnuy services to your
home or office. From within its carefully crafted pages, you can
browse the on-line catalog, searcb
remote bibliographic databases,
scan the tables of cootents of cur· I l l &lt; II«&gt;NI&lt;
ren1 journal issues, reguest mate·
rial on intetlibnuy loan, renew a
0
\\
book, aslr a librarian a question.
'
or pay a "visit" to one of the
university"s nine campus librar·
ies.
Each campus libnuy bas designed its own se1 of pages; links to
these are featured prominently on the University Libraries Home
Page. Heie you can find specific information about a particular
libnuy' s collections, boun, services, and staff. Tile campus li·
bnuy pages also provide links 10 a snmning variety of Internet
resourcea that subject librarians bave selec1ed. organized, and in
some caseslllll0ta1ed for you. 1bese include electronic journals,
in•ttuctional materials, government information, maps, graphics,
software. and information aboot discussion lists. Within these
pages you can also find career information, job listings, directories, publisher calalogs, grant infonnation, patents, and product
data sheets.
Reganlless of your subject area. the Libraries Web bas re·
sources 10 get you going on your rese8rch palh, whether you will
be using traditinnallibnuy sources or electronic information.

' HiG~

~~~

To connect to tM Libraries Web, type wings at your UB E-mail
accoUIJt system prompt. Seltct "Libraries" and you will be at our
horM p&lt;~ge. For Mlp with E-mail accoUIJts or Wings, plwne tM
err Help ~sk at645-3542.
-Loss Ptqueifo Glazier and Nancy Schiller, University Libraries

�........._7, . _

7

v..... 27,No. 2

OBITUARIES

Howard Carpenter,
'Mr. Pharmacy'

Academic Calendar and the Jewish Holidays
l l y - C.41. . _

T

wenty years ago, President

Ketter. his hand forced by political realities, decreed thai hence.
forth no classes would be held
on Yom Kippur and Rosh

Hashanah.

The current calendar committee recommends that thi s deci sion be phased out, so
that a few years from now classes wil1 be
held on religious holidays. whatever that
religion, and whatever that holiday (holy
day) may be.

The calendar will recogni ze o nly national holidays. ln chronological order,
these are Martin Luther King Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day. Labor Day.

holidays the same.
Although the calendar committees of

recent vintage all

special days.

included Jewish participant&lt; , they did not

include a vocal defender of the status
quo. It was only after
the ca1endar commiltee rcconimendations

Although a number of persons of Jew-

Thursday schedule will be followed ."

ost troublesome of all is that the
educac.ion law, which dictates minimum
numbers of contact ho urs, forces us ro

were widely distributed that the intense

objections from some ranking Jewish

Hashanah and Yom Kippur?"

faculty colleagues were heard.

It is also argued lhat the absence of
many students from class will hamper
progress in coverage of materiaL This is

It is unfortunate that none of these
colleagues were in the loop at an earlier

correct. The problem is that the absence of

"The most fundamental
reason for the change is
that the classless days
in early fall are educationally harmful. It
invariably leads to a
very sputtering start to
the semester:"
JOHN C. G. BOOT

begin classes before Labor Day. This not

only adds an extra sputter to the start. it
also means that many students arrive a
week late for classes: they are serving
dinners on Cape Cod before Labor Day . to
pay for their education after Labor Day.
All these problems are solved by turn ing the clock back 20 years We are able.

now as then, to design a calendar meeting
all requ irements starti ng after Labor Day,
without regular recourse to changing days
of the week, with more full weeks for
bio-and chemistry labs. and without any
hiccups once we stan.
A secondary reason is our growing
diversity. Many adherents of other faiths
are puzzled about the asymmetric treat ment their holiest days of religious observance receive-with the ~xception of
Christmas when. according to its status as
a national holiday, the whole university
closes.
For many Jews. the new calendar poses
a difficult choice between the dictates of
religio n and education. It is a no-win situation. The damage is mitigated by policies
prohibiting required attendance. or penal-

ties for late homework, or tests, on religious days of observance. It can be further
softened by tape or video recorders. But
such remedies are costly and not eq ual to
the task .

The di lemma can be avoided altogether
by students attending another center in the
SUNY system. The Binghamton calendar

even incl udes lrnveltime (to the New
York City area). [Binghamton has a 13
MlWThF rather than a 14 MlWThF

calendar. but longer class periods-a construction not feasible here.]
UB had a substantially larger Jewish

student population before the mid -seven ties than it has today. This change might
further reduce their number. II is a high
price to pay for an institution which labors
hard to welcome all. and make all feel

welcome. Yet. just as one's religion sometimes req uires sacrifices. so do principles-in this case 10 treat all religious

Also. a 1990 student survey indicated
that roughly 50 percent o f the student
body, randomly sam pled, favored classless
Jewish holidays. I wonder what the re-

sponse to this question would have been.
or would be: "Do you prefer a stan after
Labor Day without further breaks. or a
start before Labor Day but breaks for Rosh

Thanksgiving. and Chrislmas.
ish faith are not particularly exorcised
about this-and some go so far as to profess it is a change for the beuer-many
more are deeply distressed. indeed, anguished.
The most fundamental reason for the
change is that the classless days in early
fall are educarionally hannful. It invariably leads to a very spunering stan of the
semester. Beyond that, a number of laboratory courses are designed such that you
the whole week if you miss a day. It
leads to constructions "On Tuesday

ful , and demapd far stricter observance.
including fasting, than the dictates of
[most} other religions do for their [mosl)

stage. The calendar committee members
thu s heard no powerfully presented dis-

se nts. and conversely. the Jewish colleagues did not hear the depth of feeling of

non-Jewi sh constituencies (including the
clerical staff. a far-too-often neglected
segment of our enterprise).
The arguments in support of the Jewi sh
position included. in my rendering {but
much better they speak for themselves).
the observation that not all religious holi days are created equal. Rosh Hashanah
and Yom IGppur are vastly more meaning -

many students during the whole first week
is even more debilitating than students
missing a number of individual classes
later on when the course has been
launched. An additional problem is that
even with classes off, many st udent s mi ss
classes anyway during the days they
traveL If classes are held , some of the
pressure to go home may abate.
My impression is that the overarching
reason has little to do with a popularity
poll or a numbers game. ll is that the effect
of the change will be borne on Jewish
shoulders; that they are the o nes facing a
lose-lose choice; that they will have to
make the sacrifice.
Phrased in thi s fashion. it is a correct
sentiment h was. however. stated more
pointedly. with reference to eve nts in Europe in the thirties and forties. and word ~
like suffering and vic tims. It diminishes
the memory of those who perished to suggestthat there might be an analogy here.
My own conviction is that we arc a
multicullUral, educational, p11blic irtslilll ·
lion, and that it serves our ''a ried constituencies. ou r teaching miss ion. and the
religion-neutral sta nce appropriate for a
state institution. to make the chang~
JoJm C. G. Boor is professor and clrwr.
Departmenl of Managemem Science and
Sys1ems a"d a Unil,ersitywide Senator.

Sefvlc.s • • • held Aug. 23 in St. John the
Baptist Catholic Church. Tonawanda. for
Howard G. Carpenter. 88. a charter member
of the Pharmacy Hall of Fame at UB and
"Mr. Pharmacy" of 1986. Carpenter. head

pharmacisl at Herzog's Drugstore at Main
Street and Nonhrup Place for four decades.
died Aug. 20 at hi s home in Kenmore after a
brief illness.
A 1932 graduate of the UB School of

Pharmacy. Carpenter was a past president of
the UB Pharmacy Alumni Association. He
received a plaque of··affection and esteem"
from the alumni group in 1983 and in 1986.
was one of the first four to be inducted into
the Pharmacy Hall of Fame.

Later the same year he was named Mr.
Phannacy and in 1971 , he received the alumm
group· s Gregory Memorial Award for service to the profession. The many hon or~
came from his service to "all local pharmacy
groups. past and present.'. the association
newsletter noted last year.
Carpenter was actrve m the Pharmacy
School's Spring Clinic and annual welcome
back roast for students and rhe Pharmacy
Museum Panicipating Fund fo r research. He
also was active in the UB Community Advi sory Council.

Thurman N. Trapp,
jazz radio host
Services were held Aug. 22 for Thurman
Nathaniel Trapp. longtime novelist jazz ra dio host and activist in the African American
community . Trapp. 53. died Aug. 18 in hi s
Ellicott Mall apartmem af\er an i\\ne~s of

several weeks.
During the 1970s ands '80s. Trapp was
host of "Street Life.' ' a jazz program on
WBFO-FM. broadcasting from UB .

Trapp stud ied video production in recent
years and taped TV programs for Buffalo

Cable Acce ss Media. He also had experi mented with radio drama on WUFO-AM
and had stories and essays published by the
Ans Counc il of Buffalo and Erie Count y.
A mentor for youthlt in the black community . he had served a-!1 a tutor in reading and
writing for children at the Langs ton Hughes
Institute. 25 High St. At the time of hi s death
he was working to establish a youth ani st
award contest there.

Swan sets record in 49-13 victory
Anthony Swan set a school record with hve touchdowns to lead
the University at Buffalo to a 49-13 victory over Fordham rn head
coach Craig Cirbus' inaugural game before 7.025 fans at UB
Stadium
Swan had touchdowns of 1. 3. 4. 6 and 74 yards en route to a
career-high 204 yards on 26 carries as UB outscored the Rams
35-0 in the second hatf. Junior quanerback Mark Taylor completed 12-of-22 passes for 157 yards and the Bulls' firstlouchdown. a 2-yard flip to John Szymendera.
Fordham pulled to within 14-13 on a 26-yard f1eld goal by Bob
Hagan atter Joe Moorhead had thrown a 12-yard TD pass to
Randy lingo late in the second quarter. UB tool&lt; control of the
game when SWan ripped off a 74-yard run around nght end on
the Bulls' first play of the second half.
~ , think the balance between our passrng and runnrng allowed
our offense to take control of the game. sard Clrbus. a 1980 UB
grad who spent the previous 11 years at Penn State W
We came
out with a lot of intensity in the second half and staned to control
the line of sctimmage. ~
Chris Behan had five catches for 85 yards for UB ( 1-0) wh1le
Craig Guest and Pete Conley each had 10 tackles for the Bulls
Guest also broke up three passes. Jason Kuehn had two sacks
for the Bulls in the game. Jack Preracrnr and Carl Barbera had 13
Quartetback Mark Taylor passed lor 157 yards In game.
tackles each for Fordham
The Bulls allowed Fordham to JUSt t 0 yards of net rush1ng on
the evening while piling up 279, the most srnce a 215-yard output vs Colgate last season. ue·s 35 pornts m one half also was the most srnce
they scored 42 in the first half of their Oct 31 . 1992 win (60-27) at Central Connecticut State. The Bulls' 49 points was also the most srnce
w

th~:~ftve touchdowns broke the old mark held by Pat Whitehead who scored lour rushrng TDs rn US's 42-14 wrn over Albany State on

Nov. 6. 1982. 11 was also the first time since 1991 that a UB rusher garned over 200 yards 1n one contest Alan Bell rushed for 266tn a 49-0
win over Duquesne on Nov. 2, 1991 to set the school record lor rushing 1n one conrest
Last season, Swan gained 363 yatds in nine games with one touchdown H1s prevrous rushrng hrgh was 120 yards vs lllrnors State and
was the last time that a Bull had gained bener than tOO yards 1n a game
- Ted Wasko. Sports lnformaoon Olf•ce

�8

--................
-----__ _
.._
__
--.. _ ""'~
---·
--·--..-should have a

-

further iofonnalloa, -

M odulation or rat 11-veol.r cytoan:hltectare: durin&amp; postutaJ
drntopment by bue.ment membrane romponeolJ, Dr Ja.mson
l.webuga -Mukau, UB Dept. of
Medicine 306 Farber Soulh Campus 1230pm

,......................
~

T he Cteative Craft Center, 120

lura/ msralla1 10n "De lm·s de
on

).

O.IMX-*w ..

Jobn LA:kay. Umvcn uy Gallery .
Cen1er ror the An!&gt; Nonh Cam
pus 4 p.m Free L..d: ay's sculpI)

S62 Part HaD, Narth Campus,

UICINftla..•._.

Art Lecture

L'angc Neutre''

Fillmore, EUicou Compk:a. North
Campus, is offering £arty Pall ' 95
Cnft Worbhops be&amp;inoina Monday. Children's clusea alto are
offered.. For more information.
ca1164S-6125 oc 64S-2.434.

\ ' IC:W

through Scpl 17

&amp;loloCical k ..nce•
The Sf:•-Spedftc:ity of Dosage
Compen.s~~tion

in Dropsopbila,

Dr MiiZJ Kuroda, Bay lor College
of Medtci ne 11 4 Hoc hstcuer
Nonh Campus 4 p.m

Phannaeeutlc.s Seminar
lnhibitton of Drug Transport by
P-Giycoprotrln at t.he BloodBnin Barrier, Prof Jean-Michel
Schernnann. Um\Cr!&gt;lli' Pans V
"iCiti Cot&gt;kc Nonh Cumpu' .! p m

:)
Pedllllrlc -

Rounda

Neurologic Complications of ln frdions, Michael Cohen , M.D
K1nch Aud1tonum. C h•ld n:n'!&gt;
HMpllal 8a.m

Mueleal Showea.M
Skysuapen, lbc New Sensa
uunal Semors. Scmor Cttl:tcn cast .
directed by Sandy Callahan
Mamstage . Center for the An'
Nonh Campus.
od H p.m SIO
Sponsored by Cia.~.\ s V Restau
na.nt Call b45-AR TS

R.c:reatfon
Services

a

.....................

David Fuller to
present organ
recital Sept.l 0

The: Enalish Langu.ap lnllitute a1
UB is offering a part-time,
evenin&amp; Enalisb lancu.age procram designed for intemat.ional
professionals, scbolan, studc.niS
and bomemakm whose fiBI languaze is not En&amp;]isb. The follow·
ing counts are offered: Advanced
Communication for the lntcma·
tional Profeuional. LivinJ and
Wort.ioa in EnaHsh (lntennedi·
a&amp;e), Acct:nl Reduction Count:.
TOEA.. Preparation Course.
Courses begin Monday. For more
infomwioo, call645· 2077.

Oav1d Fuller. curator of
the Stee Hall organ, will
present works of Bach .
Louis Couperin and
Wagner in an organ
recital Sunday, Sept. 10
at 5 p .m . in Slee Concert Hall. Fuller . UB
professor of music
s1nce 1963. specializes
1n 17th and 18th century French music .

_,_.....,.

UB lnlemational Friendship
Program is looking for local host
families to provide ovuniJht

The

lodain&amp; ror members o( lhc
PeDdyrus Male Choir from Wales.
which will perform in Buffalo ll
7:30p.m. Sepc. 13 in Wesaminsrer
Presbyterian Church, 724 Delaware Ave. Choir members range
from their early 20s to lhcir 70s.
Hosu. who will rec::eive IWO free:
tickets lO tbe concert, should be
prepared 10 tHe tWO or lh~
guesu. To participate, call 8835804 by Sep&lt;. I 0.

lntraali

Aerobic Kickoff. Try out Ste .
Slide. Funk . Rupmg and other \
workout expenencc:s Tnple G}'Q.!_.

::~·; ··
Potluck Dinner ...S Social
W~kome

to Buff•lo: Ttd Nolan
&amp; F•mity. Nolan. an Ojibway
fro m Omanu. '-" ne.,.,, head coach
for th~· Buffalo Sabrt'\ Alumm
Are na North Ca mpu ... 5- 11 p m
Sponsored hy lruqum\ C'ro.-.sroad...
Cen ter. ND tl ve Amcncan Commu ni! )' Servt~:es, and UB's Orlicc of
the Vtce Pres •dent fur J'uhhc Scr·
vtce and Urhan Affau·-.

Student Recital
C l6vb: d e Andric, bllrilone, with
James Bigha m, piMno. Works of
Schuben . Brahms. Mussorgsky,
Ravel Baird Recilal Hall. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. Free

~~
PedllllrlcNeonatal Dermatology. Ilene
Rothman. M .D. Main Conference
Room. Mercy Hospital. 8:30 a.m

RIAS...Iaar
Behavk)ral Science Rrseareh
and Dnelopmentln Thailand,
Dr Duangduen Bhunl humnavi n.
Graduate Sc hool of Soctal De vel·
opmenl , Nalional lns titul~ of De\'elopmenl Admtntstrution ,
Bang kok. Thailand. Research InSlllut ~ on Addiclions . 1021 M:un
St 10 a.m. Call887 -2566.

Emerttua

c.m... MeeUn&amp;

T he lnltmd: What bIt and
What Does II Mean To You?
Pro f. A. Neil Yerkey. School o f
lnfonnat 1o n and Library Studies.
South Lounge. Goodyear. South
Campus. 2 p.m.

UB Bulb vs. l..afaytllt. UB Sta·
dtum. North Campus. I :30 p.m.
For ticket infonnalion. call 645·
6666.

.........

lntematiOIIIII Frlendohlp

Rec:eption and Polluek Supper.
sponsored by UB"s lntemation:t.l
Stucknt and Scholar Services. the
UB Wo~m:n's C lub and the Inter·
national Friendship Program. Uni ·
versity Presbyteria n Church, M:un
St. and Ntagara Falls Blvd. 6 p.m
Call 6-15-2258. 688- 13.39 or 692 30S4

How Modernization and War
Have lnnueneed J apane. Historical Writing, Prof. Masayuki
Sato . Yamanashi Univ. Panel with
Proressors David Abosch, Tilomas
Burkman. "Thomas Kirstead. 280
Park. North Campus. 3 p.m.
The Tbree-G•p Tbeo~m arwl
Some ExttnsionJ Arising from
Music Theory, David Clampin.
306 Diefendo rf. South Campus.
4 p.m.

. . . . . .tudy
l'ilm, Vidco/Dig.ltal Arts, Media
Study teaching assistants. Screening Room, Center for the Arts.
North Campus . 7 p.m. Free . Part
of Media Study's "Tuesday at 7'"

Tim O'Brien. Allen Hall Auditarium. South Campus. 8 p.m. Free.
Pan of ""Wednesdays at 4 Plus."

$8

..

~]

.,. .___,_
WNYT..-....r

•-Recital
Kim Fornes, nute. Baird Recital
lin II. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. Free: .

.--.~

Regulated Adivatlon or Protein
Klnue C-a by cl!-Unsatunled
Fauy Add. Feleke E.shete. 307
Hochstetler. No rth Campus.
4p.m.

Bl_otry_l_
Heme Regulates Yeast SOD 2
Tranxription by Adlvatlon and
Repruskm, Prof. Jennifer
Pinkham, Dcp1. of Biochemistry
and Mo lecular Biology . Univ. of
Massachusem . 134B Farber.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

PoetrJR-...
Carla Harryman. Scrc=ening
Room. Center for the Ans. North
Campus . 4 p.m. Free . Pan or
'"Wednesdays al 4 Plus..
American String Quartet. S lee
Concert Hall . North Campus.
8 p.m. $4. S5. $8, SIO.

Poeby IAcbl..

~!

Poet 's Thf:ater. Carla HlltT)'man.
438 Clemens. North Campus.
12:30 p.m. Free:. Part of'"Wednesdays at4 Plus. ..

Marketing De-MystifledG uklelines for Small CampaniH. Sponsored by WNY Tech·
nology Dcvelopme:nl Center. Center for Tomorrow. Nonh Campus.
8: IS- II a.m. $60. To n:g ister, call

636-3626.

on display through Sepc . 17 in the
First F1oor Gal~ or the Center
for the Arts, Nonh Campus. 1be
installation consists of 12 demons
and an angel. sculpted in
paradichlorobcozene and encucd
in ainight plexiglas boxes. 1bc
artist will be present to discuss his
work today at 4 p.m .• after which
t~rc will be a reception. Regular
UB An Gallery houn an::
Wednc:sday-SaiUrday 10:30 a.m.8 p.m., and Sunday 12-5 p.m.
Admission is free .

Studio, and at noon Tuesday,
Thursday and Friday in the Oark
Hall Dance Studio on the South
Campus. Introduction to Aerobic
Fitness for Faculty&amp;: Staff (fee
S48) is scheduled at noon for an
hour Tuesday and Thursday in the
Alumni Arena Dance Studio. Fi1ness Check· ln (fee $25) is held
Saturday from 9-10:15 a.m. in
Alumni Arena Dan« Studio. For
information about these: R&amp;d pro-gnunJ call 645-2286. Program director is Tressa Gorman Crehan.

Witty ..........
Alfonso Volo is a poet and an art ·
ist whose work is on view through
Nov . 5 in the Universi ly Gall~ry.
Center for the Aru, North Cam·
pus. He may embrace clid~s . Ae·
cording to o ne blurb. WVolo's
hairy eyeballs, lively blue tongues
and active spennoid fonns suggest
the biological underworld writ
large in a sexual. procreative
script." This is a dual-site exhibit
presented in collaboratton with the
Big Orbil Gallery. Vola will give
a poetry reading, foll owed by a
rece ption, Nov . 16 at 7 p.m. in the
UBGallery.

-.cnllnrJoldllo

Have y011 ........_.

v-..·?

Simon Ungers' site-construction
" Red Vertical" remains on view
through Dec. 31 in the Ughtwell
Gallery in the Center for the Arts,
Nonh Campus. 11\e piece "e.t·
plores the interaction between art
and architecture."

- •... Cycle II

Amukan String Quartet. Sl«
Concert Hall . Nonh Campus. 8
p.m. $4, $5 , $8, SIO.

•ua:II:Hb
C - 1. . Exhlblto:
u•-~pton

o.p.Recltal
Oavkl Fuller. S\ec Concert Hall .
Nonh Campus. S p.m. $2. S5, $6.

.--

Martin
and Marco Wibon,
McMaster Univ. 280 Park. North
Campus. 2 p.m.

-Lecture

....,_R.....,

{1]

~·-~Daly

a..tlloven Cycle I

Hlatorr..__

F-1

ProC.

GcorJ G. lucn-ltistDry Dopt.,

-~-..-...
.__....,

Cell •~o~oe

-.., -

-·-

well-defined~

JCalcll proposal~ ...........
1cry of the Gennao . . . _. Fo&lt;

Faculty and student show, including work in bronze. stone. wood.
and fabricated metal. through
Sept. 26 in the Art Dcpanmcnt
Gallery located In the Center for
the Arts, North Campus . Regular
gallery hours are Tuesday 10 a.m.·
5 p.m .. Wednesday-Friday 10
a.m.-8 p.m.. and Saturday II u.m •
B p.m. Free admission.

-

0..-elva..adoZH
John Lckay's sculpture installation "Delires de l'ange neutre" is

_ .. ..,_,.nnr-All are invit.ed·by Recreatjon &amp;.
lntBmural Services to meet inslrUClors and try Step. Slide. Funk,
and Roping at the R&amp;:t Aerobic
Kicko ff, Friday from 4-7 p.m. in
the Triple Gym of Alumni Arena
on the North Campus . Admission
is free . Also scheduled is a Oyno
Workday Workout Seminar. Oct.
25 from 5: 15· 7 p.m. in Room 21
o r Alumni Arena. 1lle seminar
will focus on ways to develop 10minute workouts at 1he desk and
during breaks. A $20-fee includes
instructional material and a Oyno
Band. The R.&amp;J Services Aerobic/
Fitnc:ss Program runs Sept. I I·
Dec . 16, and includes hour-long
Super Toning sessions (fee $48) at
noon Monday. Wednesday and
Friday in the Alumni Arcn01 Dancc

The Health Sciences Library of·

fen a seminar. Introduction to
HUBNET (Hospitals and University at Buffalo Library Resource
Network) .t. Searching the Bibliographie Databases. Sept. 7
through Nov. 30 in the Medi a Rcsources Center o f the ~lealth Sci ·
~ences Library on the South Campus. 1be hour·lona sessions are
~ld Mondays at 2 p.m. and
Thursdays a1 tO a.m .. Other classes
include World Wide Web Using
MOSAIC on HUB NET. Sept . 27,
Oct. 31. and Nov. 8; Searc=hing
Full-Text Resources on HUB NET.
Oct . 3. Oct. 18. and Nov. 28: Connecting to HUB NET from Home:
orOffice, Scpt. 12andNov. l4:
and E-Mail on HUB NET. Sept. 28
and Oct. 24. Classes are limited to
si.t people. To register call 829-

3900.

IHIL· - wCHbbopo
1be Undergraduate
Library
(UGL) in Capen Ha ll is offering
hour-long BISON workshops
Sept. 12 at) p.m., Sept 14 at 7
p.m., Sept. 18 at 3 p.m .. and Sept.
20 at 2 p.m. Workshops are held
in 127 Capen. Sign up at the UGL
Reference Desk , or send E-mail to
Eric Acree" at
acrce@acsu.buffalo.edu. The
phont for regislrlltion is 645·

2943.
Cou. . . . . . ....._.
TIAA-CREF Institutional Counse·
lor. C harles Head. will be avail able for individual counseling sessions Sept. 13. Oct. 18, Nov. IS.
and Dec. 6. in the Personnel Sirvices ConJercnce Room. 102
Crofts Hall, No rth Campus. To ar·
range an appointment, call 1-800842-841 2 .

Study I• - - . , .
Tbe Gennan Academic Exchange

Service (DAAD) invites applications for fellowships for study and
resean:h in Germany for the 199697 academic year. Applicants

""·---The Music Department is offering

a new course, Introduction to
Electronic Music, which will
cover the earliest uses o f elec·
uonic instruments in the so-called
MWestem An Music Tradition," as
well as some: of the uses of this
music in film and recent technWiues and practices in the fteld.
S1udcnts arc required to do listening usignme:nts in the Music Libr~~ry as well as some readin&amp; assignments. lbcre arc no boob for
this class. For more information.
contact the instructor via E-mail,
&lt;fonellacsu.bufTalo.edu&gt;.

F-ltJ
Asslstaat Professor-StaliSfics.
Posting IF-5023.

R-

Postdoctoral Auoc:iate--Bio logical Sciences, Posting tR-95081 .
RHearch Tuhnkiaa JU-Biologieal Sciences. Posting IR95082. Assistant to the DirKton-Mo lecular Cell BioloJY/
Center for Advanced Molecular
Otology and Immunology. Posting
IR-95083. CUnicallnslruttor/
Nurse Coordinator-School of
Nursing. Posting •R-95084.

Prot••··-··

SUIIT Alsiltut (put-lime, SL·
l)·Bioc:hemistry. Posling IPSO 18. Studea.t Activities Auoci·
•t.e (SL-l)-Officc of Student Life .
Posting IP-5029. Teacblq: Hospital Nurw Pn~d itioner (tbrH
positions available, SL--41)-Siudent Health Center, Posting IP5032 . Academic O~ratioa Coordinator (Internal Promotional
Opportunity, SL-3)-Compubng
and JnfomW.ion Technology.
Posting tP-5036. Senior Applications Analyst (Internal Promotional Opportunity, SL-4)-Co mputing and Information
Technology. Posting IP-5037 .
Ttchnkat ()flke Spte:ialist (lntemal Promotioaal OpportuDily, (SL-4)-Equal Oppo&lt;turutyl
Affirmative Action Office, Posting IP-5038.

-

LM«C-CI¥11
C leaM:r (SG~S)-R.esidenti al Facilities, Line 43211.

To obtain mo~ infortniJ/Ion on
jobs list~d abo~·t. contact Penon·
ntl Suviets. 104 Crofts Jlall.

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

August 31, 1995 Volume 27, No. 1

Provost sees' tough times'
challenging UB 's mettle
lly CtunanNE VIDAL
Reporter Edilor

F

our months of specula-

lion ended June 7 wi th
the passage of the 1995 96 state budge! . The cuts
"
to SUNY and UB were
deep - $64 mill ion and 8.2 m illi on. res pec tively . A s a re s ult .
"We're goi ng to have a toug h year,"
said UB Pro vos t Th o ma :-. F.
Headnck
Tough time;: ~ are gom g to mean
U B will bt: exa mm 1ng li Sprogra m'

and the ed ucatiOn

slude ms.

11~

s11..e

a~

11 prov ide ~ h i

an lnstitut1 un

and its re lat1o ·h1p wlt hm SUNY

an d wi lh govern• nt and industry
But the proce~s "ho ld be vtewcd
a)! an o pp o rtuntt y, H ead ru.· l..

stressed .
·
This fa ll , the provoSL sa td he
plans " to engage in d iscuss ions wi1h
fa c ult y and staff. peop le in the uni vers it y and ou 1sidc . aro u nd the
ques1ion of how U B c an bt! the best
at w hat 11 doe ., with the rt&gt;sou rt·e!&gt;. it
c an com m a nd .··
Responsive nc:s!&gt;. to ~ l uden t m
1eres ts is going to be mcreas mgl)
11n ponant . w u h tuitt on now al·count ing for 50 percent o f SUNY '"

revenue and
more than 40
perce n t
of
US' s re venu e
a n d heading
hi gher in the
f u tu re 'Th e
un i·terSit) w il l
have to assure
s !Udcnt 't that
thei r money ~ ~
be tng used to prov1de a nd 1mprm l'
the ed uca t1on tht') 're p;.! y m g lo1 ...
he ~a td
"U A h:h been •nne;t.., lngl)
forced 10 &lt;i pread 11-. resource!&gt;. mon:
th 1nl y a-., .., uccess 1ve .. tat ~ budget
l·ut., hol\c been ab!&gt;.orbcd aero~~ the
board. Wi thou t reg ard to the h1 gh
quaht y or !&gt;.J&gt;CC!al plan of U B 111
the SUN Y systc:m ." Headru..:k ~ a1d
·· w ~ still manuge to r:du ca t~ stu d e nt s well a nd a" ard the degree.,
they see k." but a lo ng thl' v. ay man y
are fru strate d by ;.1 lac.: J.. of L·our!-t'
l'ffenng!&gt;. of the tr chfHL'e
U B need !&gt;. to CO il!&gt; lder tht: num
be r and the kind.. o f prog rams 11
offer!&gt;.. and bcgm to deve lop tho!&gt;.e
that bnd ge disctplmary boundane-.,
.. We need to define new way-., or
educa tmg student..; to lit the c hang ~

mg cont o urs of knowledge and
needs of soc1ety ... H eadnck sa1d
Though SUNY IS being pre s~ ured to c ut duplication in programs among It s ca mpu ses.
Headric k emphasized. "Most of o ur
program!- 1nvolve an 11111mate mi Xture o f underg raduate. maste r 's and
d&lt;X~ t on1l educcllum w h1c h we ca n ' t
disengage fro m . A nd. if we ' re the
on ly SUNY ''' h(x)l wuh a mas ter' ..
or Ph .D Jeg ree Jn a !&gt;.UbJCCI. 11
make -.. nu "en-.e to c ut a n undergraduat e rrogram . JU..;t bCCiJU,l'
ot ht:r SU . 1 Y ,t· hoo l-.. offer ..,.mJiar
program .. ·
The Ulll\t:r-.11) lhx:" ha\t: "orne
prugrtun .. that .1rt'" no t allfi.K' t•ng
man) .. tudent., and 111 .. nme CaM:.,
..; tudent., are fi nd mg that the o pportu mtll..:-.. th ~u prompted them to pur::-.uc thc.: •r ed uca tiOn here do not livl'
up 10 lhc• rt•:&lt;pcc ta tJ Oil' O rtwr progra nh ma) he operat m g w 1t h \)U I·
diltt:d t: 4 l11p nwn t a nd h a\ r no
pro!&gt;.pel.:l!&gt;. for upg radmg H " In tho-..c
c a:-.c: ... we hav e to as ~ our-..eh e~
abuut lh t' vt abdit) of tho-..e pro
granbo\crthe lo ng haul .'' H eadnl' ~
-..atd ... hut not "1th11ut tal~1ng 111
Contmued

"Z;n oaqt:

J

Renovations, SUNYCard, costs
among changes for new semester
By STEVE COX

Reporter S taH

W

10 upgrad1nt-! h."dl
anJ com
puter.. ·
M ea n ~ t".\ t-..t lor
stude nt... to appl~
fur wal\t'r ., PI
so me fc:e., In tht'
ca!&gt;.e ot the Ill'"
Tec.:hn o log) 1--t&gt;t' .
student !&gt;." ho h:n l'
proof or a Tran .. .
po rt a tt nn
Fn~
wa1 ve r and J o not
h&lt;J vc an arnlllnt
o n th l' cent tal
co mputm¥ 'Y\It"m
\.·a n fl' 4llt'"' .1
Students Hope Sherman, lOft, and Marta Smtth
v. a1 ve 1 of that ft-e
compare 'mug shots' afterrecelvlngthelr
W al\l' t re4uc-..1-..
SUNYCards Aug. 29 In ttie Student Unlon.
t·an ht: rn.u.k •n
"flll ll ~ 111 Al·a
inc reases in costs.uccordi ng to Prodcm11.' Sc rvtt·n. Co mputm ~ .1nd
Inform
at
io
n
Te'l'hnillng
~ :11 1hc
vost Tho mas Headrick. the ne"
Tec hno logy Fee re prese nts a "real
Computmg Center
izati on !.h a t we a rc beh ind in tec h O ne mea~urc that" .., l1ghtl'llt'J
nology and we c an 'r afford to let
wallet:-. arou nd l 1B 111 •• dtfkrcnt
our lack of reso urces hinder the
way ha!&gt;. heen mtmduCIIOil ''' tht•
quality of educ ational tech no logy ...
versault- Sl iNYCard . R cturmng
Fee ~ ca n not pay di rec tl y for edu .;;t udent ::-., falult) a nti "itaff h;l\t'
ca t ional prog r a m s. exp lai ned
been limng u p 111 the S tudcn t l ln1 1)1l
Head ri d .. but they can be used to
s u ppon us·~ " heav y mve stm cnt
Conttnued on page b
n o l og~

hat fall.1995bnngs.
to U B ~ ~a mnner of

Mor e and Le ss
More
pa rk1ng
s paces . Les s wai ting 111 lines. a nd
fo r e leva tors . More compu te r te rm ina ls. M ore lab space . Less to
work wt th in office and depart men ta l budge ts a nd un fonunatel y. More
money for tu ition a nd fee s.
C uts m ad e 10 S ta te U n ivers ity
resources during l a~t s pri ng' s budget battl e h&lt;IVe prec ipit ated an nuaJ
tui tt on in c reases o f $750 for unde rgradua te s; $ 1.1 00 fo r law, grad uate and pharmacy students; and
$ 2. 390 for de ntal. medical and phar macy stude nts. In ad d ition. students
fa ce a newS 120 per year Techno logy Fee, aS 150 per year T ra nsportation Fee . up_S I 2. a S 150 pe r year
Health Service Fee . u p $ 34. and
tnc re a scs in most do rm 11ory and
mea l p lan c ha rges. T u ition leve ls
wert' estab li shed by agreem ent of
the stat e legi s la tu re a nd the SUNY
Board of Trustees . H owever. fee
leve ls arc e stab li s hed by the UB
adm tnistration .
Wh ile mos t fee s simpl y renec t

Craig Cirbus: quantum
leap for UB football
By ANTHONY
VIDLANTI

The circle

*' nml -

plete for Cnug (IT
bu s Eln e n year'
a fte r he left Buffalo
h e'!&lt;~ back home to
reVIVe football at hi'
a lma 111&lt;:~ter . the L' n1
v~:r" t ) at Buffal o
Thc nn' t'O&lt;U.:h e \
udc s a qu1c1 c:onf1
de nee anti dcJ1 cat1~ )11
that ex tend" he~ und
th e fu? ld C1rbu-..
football p h do-..oph~
IS tht· ... aml' &lt;.~-.. ht-..
outlonJ.. ilrl lilt' at
t•eptthe dtalkn~t' tn
bt· tht' ht~.,, "Then:
arc nnl) -..o 111an)
game-.. 1ll ~our life .
and th en: ·~ no -..tn::-.e
CRAIG CIRBUS
10 ~'nrk1n¥ h;ml ;md
pultlng uut lht' t'ffon un lc-.,-.. )UU v.;mt to ht·thl' he.,t." -..a1J C1rbu".
n fo rmer U B player " hu "a' named \ar., ll) ... oa~o:h carilt'llhl-.. ~ear
Cra tg Ctrbu-... 18. ~n m~.., all &lt;lbL)U! bl'mg thl· tx- .. t He" a-.. pan n t
a co lleg1ate natiOnal c hampt on-..htp fLitltb;lil prllgnun Junn~ h1-.. II
year t.:arec: r at Penn State ll lll\ l'r-.. 1 1~ C1rhu-.. .. cncJ '"an a-..~!.,tant
under lcgcndar;. head t.:O:h: h Joc Pa t t~rnu
"('r;u g 1' a n OU t'il a nJIIlg young t.:Oadl &lt;...~nd I" lllulll fiJentthat ht·
"ill provaJc the Buffalo program "11h the leadl'r\htp dm:..::tton 11
requ 1re ..... Patcrnn -..a1J "Ct:ng ha-.. dernon .. trated thc ~1nd of matu
nt) . ~n ov.lcdgl' and pt·r-..,,naltntc~nt~ ht.., nn' p1l\lt10n V.1ll de ma nti ..
C1rhu-.. "dl lead lht' t ' H IPP!h.tll prPg.r.un thh1ugh ''' fllihl
c ruCial pt:nnd 111 relt'lll h1-..h1r~ l'hc Hull-.. ha\t' ... ompetcJ ..t l tht•
DI\ 1\ !Ull 1-.'\A k\t'IIP1 thl' p;t-..tt"') ~t· .• r-.. .din rTh'\111~ up from
Dl\1\l on Ill
l fB &lt;iiiii\IUili..'Cd tht -.. -..UIIIIIIL'I II \\il l U lk"t • .1~,1111 upg_r,tdt" 11-..
lotllha ll prl1g ram . thr -.. 111llt' "' Dt\ t'll'n l .-\ .wd fPHI the ~1•J
Allll'fll'an Cnn !t•rt·nt.:t' 1J\.1.-\ C ! fp[]p\\ 111~ .111 til\ 1\:Hulfl {r{l111 thai
nrgan tttt lu m Current ... onlcrenLL' member-.. ,!rl' -\1-..riln. Mtalll1 ut
Oh1n . Ea-..tcrn Mll" h•g~tn . Ct·ntral M1 t.:h1!!:111. B.dl St:llt' . Ohu1 lint
\t"r'\r l ~. Bnw h ng Green. Tokdn . \\\· .. tern Mtl h1g;m a nJ Kent State
In the la tt.' l 1NO-.., the Bull-.. "JII hq!lll pla\Hl g lnoth;,tll 111 tht.'
MAC and ll H t'\ c nt ualt~ ht,pt.·.,nnc Ja~ tn he pl.1~ 111~ -..ut"h n:lll\lll.li
ptmcrhf'lU'e' il~ S~ranJ..;c anJ Pt:rlll St.Jtt'
" It ·.., a mDnumentalmn\ t'l11 1 tilt' 1\luth.Jll prPgram ·· t ' 1rhu-.. '.ti...l
" Yuu 've gol 1('1 he e\l llt'J .mJ kd g1111d .1hou1 the Ulll\t'r-..11~
m a~111g th l-..lllo\t' It '-.. .1 yuantum !11111p h'r lt&gt;tlth.ill.md 11.., !!-i1 tng
to he h'l u~h . hut that d•w.::.,n·t nw.m \\l' t.lll·t dn II I !hill~ \-l.t''il ht•
Tht· m11\t' up hnng' pre-..-..urt· .111d t''-J'I.'~Ul1P rh 1n• iht· ~11.1lh
lk ·-.. nn ttw hPt 'J'tll hut l ' R ', .1thkt1 t dep.u-trnnll '' 111lt' r1ng lull
~uppnn

"('r;u !!·.., .111 11Ut-..t.mdlll~ ~i1;1~o h. and JlltlfC lfll Jli'lrl.tnll ~ . .111 llU\
hum:rn ht·m); ... -..a1&lt;..1 Nd .. on 1 ~~" rhenJ. l ' B ' .., Jnt'lliH '''
.tthlt·tt t'.., " ~.)nnw 1an-.. mtght thml.. JU't hec.m-..c he t·.m1e ht:n· lhlrll
Pt:nn Statt' ht• ' ... ~\1 1 11~ I l l " Ill t'\ ery game rh.!l Wtluld tw nJ(l' hut \~t·
~Ill I " ltt;ll..t·-.. tune to htuld a" mnt~r \\'l" · n· ~~~Ill~ Ill ~1\ t' { ·ral~ nme
\il huild ..t p11 1gt;Jill "t" ca n .til ht· pfllud ol ·
(' lrhll -.. h.1 .. &lt;II " a~-.. ht·t'll .tble tn mt'l.'t 1hc tkma mt.. 111 thc ~alllt'
dunnf ht-..li'l'lh:illl·.lrt'l'l . v. hu.: h hc~an near!~ a 4uant' rcentur~ a~l~
at St Jo-..t·ph "., Co ll qpa tt· ln ~ tltut l' 111 Ken mort' He "t"nltll LIB 111
'tUd) t• nglllt"Cflllg_. aJt tlilu gh the Unl\er-.. 11 ~ dal OPI hll\C .1 fPll \h;.J![
tt'am w he n he enrolled
Cna~.· h R1ll D a ndo brought ft~.l tball had \1' LIR 111 1977. :Jild
C 1rbu-.. p la yed a!&gt;. an undcrs it.ed oflen-..1\ t' hncman , b01rd) "t' lghtn_g
111 at n\t:r ::!00 pound-..
-..!.tndtn~

Con11nued on Page !l

�InUllaIll

2

AuCU.t

as.. 1 - v...... 27, No. 1

FSEC holds special session to update membership on
budget; Greiner, Headrick, Wagner among speakers
By USA WILEY
H e p or ter Contri!Ju [r)r

M

tM B~. K ~ ()~ th &lt; h tc ult )

Sena te I : Ae~ utt ve Comml!
tee mt: t June: :! I ' " Capt: n
H a W , J ca n t' ll c M a r t1n
RtHl m fo r J ' Jku;d b udge t

,c,, u..m to update mcmhe r' and ro cnabk
the m to il \ ~ 4U l' \ ll on ' and \ t !IL'l' the u

I: Oi l

Lt.' rn ' t u u nt LL'P., II ) tuJmmt , trato r '

·· l r' ' not ;1 parl l,a ni\ , Ut' II ~o:an ' t he ':&gt;OIL ed

&gt;A h de
thm~

\I . I) IO g ll hldc..·

the I"H. u. We..· ha\ C: to

oubtc..h : the ~ ., ... 'dHJ l iB Prc , lc..k n t

Wil l tam R (irc mcr
'' A tl c oh tthe parameter' art' 1-.m,v.n :· \uuJ
Pt~ tt: r N •ck~,_·r;on . uut g.u m g h u: ull ) Se na te
~..· har r
~,. a,c

··n 1e

w o r-.r ~,.a ,t'

'n:nan o mH.Ithe

be ' '

'L'CIMn o ·

' ' We iJ f (' u h\ IUU , I ) u /1 a \ICf} . \ C' l) . 11g ht

tHn c..· lmc ."' ''-li d Ro ht!n J Wagner . ,e,u m Vll'c:
pn: wJc rll ~' a gncr went on to rt·' 1e"" the
prn po-.t"d tu1t1on m c rea s c ~
A t.:~o: ord m g to Prov n!'t 11mma ~ 1::. Hcad nd .
the dcam are opc ra tm g u nde r th e cunstra1nt
nl no t \ J&gt;e nd mg mo re tha n 95 pc:n:en t of Ia -.\
)'Car" -. budg&lt;:t He la ter added. " M ) ~y .. tcm
tor ge n mg th roug h tht' year wil l he to no t
mal.. e mul.·h l' hangc to ha.,e b u d~CI \ ·· He
went on to \OJ ) ...Th ,.., yt·a r we h ;~ v c to .,ct up

d .. y~ t cm o f ana] y.,. ., and d1 stnbut1 o n tha t
e\tablt :-. he., pno nt 1e' and h o ~Jr. to go about
lundm g them ··
Tcrr) G on t' ~ .l' h a trufth e bud get pnont1c'
l·(unm mec. ' atd th at the comm tuee 1 ~ o n c al l
tu the \COlor vu.:c prc stde nt and to the pru·
'u't o n .1 2-' · hour haM:-.
Maureen Ja meson. asststant profes ~o r o l
mo dern la ng uagc ll and lit erature . as l..cd
whether the lUll ron wa1vers that have been
av. arded to ne w g raduate students wi ll still
he I ll effC(;' t ror the Upcoming acade mic year.
'The: offe r~ that have gone o ut will be
ho no red." Headn-ck responded.
In the future. both UB and SU NY . "wi ll
ha\l' to anal yze every unn in te rms of its
l·a.., h re venue to the institut ion." Grei ner
' a1d He sa1d he fav ors c hargi ng differe nt
tUHi o n fee' fo r vano u ~ undergraduate program !~ o n th1 s ca mpu s. O n the subject of
SUNYw ide issue!&gt; . he d1sc ussed the pos!&gt;tble c losing of less profitable campuses a nd
the possi bilit y of pnvati zmg SUN Y Man ttme C o ll ege
C laude E. Welch Jr . Se nate chair-elec t.
n prc o;;sed his v ts1o n fo r the upcommg year
He: ha..... me t wuh half the FSEC leadershi p
and wil l be meet mg with the deans of the
, chnob ·T he task of the Senate cha ir tll

pri man ly o ne of hsten mg," he !&gt;a1d Their
concerns are potenuaJ co mp lamt~ We lch. a
Di stinguished SUNY professor. last chai red
the Faculty Senate for the 1985 -87 te rm.
We kh to ld the Se nato rs that the y ho ld the

d ual responsib tlt ty of beang the "ears of the
fa cul ty who elected yo u" and ··servants of
the umversi ty as a who le ."
" Let' s hope: th1 s tab le becomes the rea l
M&gt;urce of informa tio n e~ c h an ge ," he said .

Resolution on Minimum Semester
Hour Graduation Requirement
WHEREAS the University at Buffalo CWTOntly requires candidates for the B.A.,
B.S., B.P.S. and B.F.A. tocomplek a minimum of 128 semeskr hours of courses
to qualify for graduation, and
WIIER£AS a reduction to a minimum of 120 semeskr houa might enable some
studentll to fulfill degree requirements and graduak earlier, improving access of
others to the university, and
WIIEII£AS the University at Buffalo's degree programs would not be adversely
affected if the minimum were reduced from 128 to 120 semester hours, since
individual units are free to defioe uodergraduak majors that, together with university-wide requirements, llUlb: it necessary for students to take counes In exc:eu of
tbat minimum, departments being obliged to infonn their students of such
conditions:

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED 'IHAT the Faculty Senak recomme nds that the
university reduce the minimum requirement for B.A., B.S., B.P.S. and B.F.A.
degrees to 120 semester hour.; for students graduating after December of 1995.

J hnstone to form Learrring Productivity Network

T

HE IM PI:. RA TI VI: o l erl un ttmg mo re
stude nt s ,bc! llet fur II!!.!. money ha'
~.: om m a nded tht: attcmton of M: h(:-0\\ .
l·oiJcgC!. and UOI \'CI"!.I I I C\ ill"fO~\ lhl'
l'OUill t) th.at arc fed mg tht tt ghte nlllg of lh ~
fmanCial noose D Bruce Jo hn stone . former
dtance llor of thc SUNY ~ys te m and no w
Unt vers tt y Professor o l
Hig her F..d ucatto n m the
UB Graduate School of
Ed ucatiOn. has been ad ·
vanc ing a new perspec ti ve o n the old cha ll enge
of prodUL'tl v11 y Ill ht ghcr
ed ucatiOn
Johnstone ·, approach.
wh it: h he fi r"! la bekd
JOHNSTONE
" leam tng pmd uctt v tt)"
1n a 199::! mo nogra ph. co nce nt ra te s o n e n·
hannng lu ghe r ed ucal! on ' ll o utpu t. which t!lram mx . ra lhcr than conlmur ng 10 r ut or
cheapen II ~ mpuh . wht ch con!&gt;ISI pnm anl )
of lac ult ). \ laff a nd eq u1 pment
He ha' hecn awarded a $50.000 gmnt from
thl' Ford h lUnd auon lo re.,pond lo lll4 lllrtC\
truml·o llege,, um vcr!&gt; tttc\ a nd researc her.. t m
thl\ .. uhJCl'l. b) fo nm ng J Leammg Pnx.hll'·
It\ II ) Ne t \~ orl.. Ill ' hare mfllmlat ton and bc't
prar trl'e ' m the fidd vta ncw ~ l e ll cf\ . E-mail
and l· unferen ~o.: ell A c cordm ~:; to John stone .
thc t~ l crnc n b of \c ;trnmg prod uc ll vtt y are
• l.t'\\t' llln g the r:Accs stve downtr mc 111
' tudt:nt karnrng an .. mg fro m lc:n gth y ' :u.:a·
lttm ' . .; hnn \C illC.S ic rs and o th er 1nte rru p·
\ton ' of tt:a ~.: hm g and learning

• L.c:-.~e n 1ng the red undancy of learn ing
m the tra nsrtto n fro m hi g h :-.c hoo i iO co ll ege:
and max tmt zing the possible co lleg iate.; leve l
leammg d unn g the hi g h-school years
• Reducm g the ex.cess1ve " drift " that
no w c h ar..t l' l e rr ze ~ Amen ca n co !Jeg iale ctl ucall on and prolo ng!&gt; the n um ber of years and the cos t- lo acqu tre a college degree
• Pro vtd mg more self-paced Jearmngpnmaril y thro ug h educatio na l techno logyto allow s t ud e nt~ to proceed more raptdl y
and at les:-. mstructlonal expense .
" I am de lt g hted wi th the ne ws of Bruce
Joh nsto ne' s recen1 grant fro m th e Fo rd Foun dat io n to begm the establ is hme nrof a h1ght:r

ed ucauon netwo rk. look in g at learning prod ucti vi ty.'· said Hug h Petrie . dean of the UB
Gmd uate School of Education. " All of us in
education. from the schools to the uni versity.
must begin to pay more attentio n to what
swdents ac[UaJ iy learn from ou r efforu. mther
than concentrating solely on what we attempt
to teac h." Petrie said. "This grant is the flfSt
step in what may ultimately result in a restruc·
tunng of higher education conso nant with the
restructuring and refonn that is occuning in so
many other of the msti tutions in our society : ·
Johnsto ne ackno wledges that colleges and
universi tie!l ·· mu st become mo re prod uctive.
fo r the sake o f stude nts. parents and tax pay -

ers alike ." He adds. however. th at we have
nearly exhausted the possibilities o f in crea.~d
leaching loads. reduced prog rams. de ferred
mainte nance. reduced studenl aid and hi gher
tuitio n. ··w e must become more productive
by e mploymg methcxJs that will enhance
learning rather than reduc ing teachin g o r
st udent services or shifting even mo re of the
cost burden o nto the student,'' he says.
The ne1wo rk . he says. will bring together
people from public and pri vate sectors, and
from colleges. universities and government.
who share in the belief that higher education
can and must be made more efficient through
enhanced productivi ty of learning.

UB, Thai university establish exchange program
By PATRICIA DONOVAN

News Bureau Staff

T

HE UNI VERSITY at Buffa lo ha;
establi shed a n exchange program
wllh Ch ul a lo ng k. o rn Un ive rs it y.
Thai land· s o ldest and most presti·
g tous un iVCI31ty T he program . UB' s fi rst
w11h a Th at institu ti o n. is offe red in coope ra ·
tto n wi th "1milar programs at the Uni versity
of Washmgton and Oregon S ta le Universt ty
C hu la \o ng ko m Un1 versit y. in !he center of
Bangk.ol.. . ha!. more th an 20.0CK1 gr.1duate and
undc rgrad uotte stude nt.s enro lled in program:-.
run by 11 ~ 17 facult1es and professional school!-.
The um vers it y w1 ll 'oon send doc to ral stu Jc nb to ' tully at UB
Jose ph Will ia rm. d1rcctorof lnte m ati o na l
S tudent and Sc holar Servtces at UB, sa id the
Tha t progr.1111 1!1 opc:n to all UB graduate and
underg rad u;ile "tudenl\ and fac ult y
The prog ram ofTe~ UB ~t u dents mtensl\ t&gt;
couNe!. tn the That language at the beginmn g.
mtenned iatt' and ad vanced le vel s throughout
Th a il a n d '~ Ju ne -Marc h acade mic year Durmg the fa ll ~e m es t er . wh tch 111 Thai land ru m
fro m June to October. stude nts may al!&gt;o
e nroll m a ., ~c t al That l' lnli zation course
The course 1!- tau ght m Eng li sh and examine!.
the hi story , geography. relig ton and ans thai
mnuence and define Thai culture. lntens1ve
Tha1language and&lt;.'i vilizatio n courscs offer a
tota l of 16 academi c c redi ts

CMA£ C TOR Of'Pu6t..CADONS r-..ont'f l. CO.OT , I IJI TQA

~~ .t.SSCX;: I,.,Tf£()1 1 QR

Chul alongkom·, busmess ad mm1strat1on
program i!&gt; also taug ht in Engli sh, and busi ness-manageme nt majors can ta ke speCia l
co u ~s focusmg o n the ThaJ busmes!&gt; en vironment.
The cost per semester. excl ud ing air fare.
i!. $5.920 and includes tuition. fees. books.
pe rso na l ex pe nse s a nd ho us in g i n

Presidential
Handshake

JIOUI ........ .viTDIRE CTOR

C h ul a l o n gk o m ·~

au -co ndit1 o ned residence
hall s. A weekly meal pl an is avail able m
university cafeteri as.
Students must have a G PA of2.7 m above
to be accepted for the progntm . For In fo rmat io n o n th e 1995 -96 wi nt e r ter m at
Chulalongkom . whic h ru ns OctOber th roug h
February. ca ll 645 -39 12

UB President ·William Greiner and Jerry Miller.
Niagara County Community College prestdenl .
seal agreement at UB Aug. t 7 recogntzing coop degree program between Jhe two schools

JOM~ WTTP III)BINFQPU88UfJ"'L0 (0UIRfP()R T ERI

�3

--...-.-n.-1
Weber is director of
Hazardous Waste
Management Center
llyi!UDI~

News Bureau Staff

N

EWEXECUTIVEDlRECI'ORof
the New York State Center for
Hazardous Waste Management at
UB is A. Scott Weber, associate
professor of civil engineering at UB. He
succeeds Ralph Rumer, who is stepping down
from the post to focus on resean:h and teaching. Rumer had served in the positioosincethe
establishment of the center by the New York
State Legislature in 1987.
A faculty member since 1983, Weber is an
expen in bioremediation, the use of indige nous microorganisms, typical ly bacteria.

that occur in nature to render hazardous waste
harm less by convening it into common
minerals. Hjs research focuses on new methods of treating soils and water contaminated
with hazardous and non-haza.r:dous waste.
Last year, he was on-site manager for a
$1 . 1 million demonstration project at a hazardous-waste site south of Brockport, N.Y ..

to test different methods of bioremediation.
Weber has been appointed to the Water
Environment Research Foundation's Research Council. a subcommittee of the EPA's
Biorcmediation Action Com mittee and the
Technical Review Group. Radioactive Waste
Management and Low Level Radioactive
Waste Disposal. of the New York State En·
ergy Research and Development Authority.
He is the author of numerou!t research pub·
ations.
eber ha!l cham:d the l!nvironmental
l'O m ttee of the Amencan Society of Civil
Engine rs. Buff::Jio sec tion. and has se rved
as~ecre
andpresidentoftheWNY Amencan Chen1tral Society Environmental Group.
He is vice ch::ur of the Research Council of
the Water Environment Research Founda·
tJOn and a member of the board of direc tors
of the Niagara Frontier section of the Air
Waste Management Association.
Weber earned· a doc1orate in civil engineering from the University of California,
Davis and received master's and bachelor' s
degrees fro m Virginia Polytechnic Institute.

Course in Swahili
begins this fall
Br PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Bureau Staff

T

D'Elia to head new library research center
lly PATRICIA -VAN

News Bureau Staff

G

EORGED'ELIA,associate profes sor in the Unive rsi ty of
Minnesota's Carlson School of
Management and fanner direc·
tor of that university's library
school, has been named professor and dirtttorofthe new Center for Applied Research in
Library and Information Science (CARLIS)
at UB. He assumed his responsibilities in
August.
The announcement was made by George
S. Bobinski, dean of the UB School of Information and Library Studies, which houses
the center.
D'Eiia will be responsible for establishing the center and developing its ability to
link the research and service capabilities of
UB faculty and students with the research
needs of libraries and other information agencies throughout the United States.
Bobinski described D'Eiia as "a widely
known and respected scholar in the fie lds of
public library service evaluation, user stud·
ies and studies of information systems. He
has assisted major public libraries in improv-

ing user satisfaction and in effectively marketing library programs and services.
" In recent years," said Bobinski. "D'Eiia
has also completed major studies on the
design and evaluation of integrated information centers in the academic environment. "
The UB School of Information and Library Studies has moved in new directions
recently. Its master' s degree program in library science and its new doctoral program
have forged formal partnerships and collaborations with UB's University Libraries.
as well as with other libraries and information agencies in the region and across New
York State.
Bobinski said these partnerships are in
keeping with two or the school's missions:
helping libraries meet the challenges of the
information revolution , and making grearer
use of libraries as laboratories for UB students and faculty .
He said the new cente r will be an impor·
tant force in maintaini ng these new relationships and collaborations and will enhance
the doctoral program as well.
D'Eiia holds a bachelor's degree in history and a master's degree and doctomte in

librarianship from Rutgers University. He
also holds a master's degree in statistics
from Syracuse Uni versity. Before joining
the faculty of the University of Minnesota in
1978, he was a library consultant, taught at
the Syracuse University School of lnfonnation Studies and served as the head of circulation at Norlin Library at the University of
Colorado.
He has conducted research projects funded
by the Council on Library Resources and the
U.S . Department of Education. D' Elia has
published widely in hi s field, winning the
Library Researc h Round Table Research
Paper of the Year Award in 1980. 1982 and
1984, and the Association of Library and
Information Science Education Research
Paper of the Year Award in 1990.
He is a reader for six library and information science research journals. including the
Journal of Academic Ubrarianship and f.j .
brary Quarterly. He is active in the America n Library Association and the Association
of Library and Information Science Educati on. in which he has held several elected and
appointed positions.

Cromley chairs Department of Architecture
Br PATRICIA DONOVAN

News Bureau Staff

E

LIZABETH Co llins Cromley.
UB professor and a noted hi sto-

rian of vernacu lar architecture.
has been named chair of the De·
partment of Architecture in the
UB School of Architecture and Planmng.
Croml ey is the first woman to hold a
permanenl chair 10 the sc hool since 11 wa~
founded in 1969. and. according to the Association of Collegmte Schools of Architec·
ture. is also one of the few non-archi tec ts m
the Uni ted States to hold such a po-.i tion .
Cromley. a member of the UB faculty
since 1980. in 1981 received the Student
Association Award for Excellence in Teaching. She has served as director of the undergraduate program in the School of Architecture
and Planning si nce 1990and previously served
as assoc iate chair and acting chair of the
school's Department of Architecture.
Cromley's research and wri ting on the
architec tural hi story and meaning of domes·
tic spaces has earned her dist inction in her
fie ld. She is the a uthor of .. Alone Together"
(Cornell Uni versity Press), a 1991 hi story of
the New York City apartment bui lding. wh ich

received the best·
boo k
prize
awarded by Nt!v.
York's Victorian
Society. :md coa uthorof··Re ~o rt .,

of the Ca"k ill &gt;.'.
publl; hod in 1979
by St . Murtm !l

Pre .... andtheGul lery Assoc 1a\l on
of Nc:w York.
She: \\a .. tht• ed•CROMLEY
to r o f two vo l·
umes in the Uni vers ity of Mi..,~oun Pre~!l
series. "Perspectives in Vernacular Archi tecture," and has two works 10 progrc s!l.
"Sleeping Around : A History of Amencan
Bedrooms," and " Internal Affair!~-: A Histor)
of American Domestic Space."
Cromley has prese nt ed her research 10 a
number of refereed journals and has worked
as a director. project master. cons ultant or
contributor for several archi tc:ctura l exh ibitions by the Buffalo &amp; Erie Cou nt y Historical Society. as well as for the Smi thsonian
Inst itution and th e Whitney Muse um .
She was a Nationa l Endowment for the

HIS FALL. in response to student
demand and at the init iative of the
universi tywide Afncan St udies
Comm ittee. UB is introduci ng
Aa the1HIS fall semester begins, it is time to remind the campus comm unity of our
class room instruction in Swahili, the princicommitment to the non-smoking policy. Smoking is strictly prohibited in all uni verpal language of eastern and central Africa.
sity-owned and university-operated buildings. stadium s and outdoor events, and in all
The course was developed by the World
vehicles owoed aod operated by the university. Doorway areas and loading docks are
Lang uages Institute administered by the UB
considered part of the building.
Department of Modem Languages and LiteraIt is the responsibility of all members of the university community to observe this
tures.
smoke-free policy and to remind others of their responsibility. Complaints relating to
It will be taught by Adjunct Professor Simon
the implementation of this policy should be referred to the appropriate department/
Chilungu. a native Kenyan who holds a doctor·
division head. If a resolution cannot be reached by the department/di vision head. the
ate from UB and is on the facu lty of Buffalo
matter should be referred to e ither the appropriate
State College.
personnel office or in the ..case of stude nts. to the
Mark Ashwill. who direcL&lt; the World LanOffice of Judicial Affairs/Ombudsman. Established
guages Institute, said UB is offeri ng 3"'' ""' "~-..
rules and regulations regarding policy violations will be
101 this Fall. Swahili 102 will begin in the
implemented according to one' s university status (i.e ..
Spring of 1996.
student
or employee). In addition to being charged with
The progmm will be expanded in the 1996failure to comply wi th the reasonable request, Public Safety
97 academic year to a two-year. four·semester
may be involved.
course sequence. Courses in Hausa and Zulu
Visitors must observe thi s smoke·free policy. Demay be added during the 1996-97 academic
partment heads and building coordinators. and sponsors/
year if there is student demand.
hosts of university events are responsible for
Peter Eke h. professor and chai r of the UB
visitors• compliance with the university•·s
Depanment of African American Studies
smoke-free policy. Visitors who smoke will be
and chair of the African Studies Commi ttee.
requested to extinguish the cigarette, cigar,
said these language programs eventually may
pipe, et&lt;:., and will be informed of the policy.
serve as a base for an African area studies
Refusal
to do so will constitute a violation of the
program that would coordinate faculty. stu·
poticy and will result in removal from or denial
dent and visiting-scholarexchange progmms.
of readmittanCe to the building or event.
C
as well as instrucaion in African languages.
~
cultu res. politics and economics.

Smoke-free policy in effect at UB

Humanities(NE H) Fellowm 1990-9l ,a Benno

Forman Fellow at the Wmtenhur Museum m
1988 and a NEH Fellow at Wintenhur' sCenter
for Advanced Study in 1984. She is a rounder
and pa~&gt;t president of the Vernacul:tr Architec ture Forum. nnd a memlxr of the Society of
Art:h ll ectur;~l H1 stnnan ...
-\ ~m duat eof th e Unl\cr'll) of Pcnn.:;ylva·
n1a tn :.J rt hJ!ItO!J . ,he: rccc- Jved a mas ter''
Jeg rec: from the Nl'" Y o r~ U nivcr ~ Jt y Insti tute of Fmt: 1\.n ' and a doctorate 10 an hi stuf)
irom lhl' Cu.\ Un i\ C~II) t)f eu Yo rk.
Cromh.: ) heiJ a Vl'&gt;llmg profe ~!'&gt;O r!lhip tn
the College of l::.n v1romncnt al Dt! ~ J gn. Un1·
\•Cr!lit y of Califomta at Bakeley. 10 1987
and . before co mm g to UB. taught at
CUN Y·-. C1ty College and Bronx Commu·
nit y Coll&lt;ge.

English departments
form organization
Br PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Bureau Staff

E

NGLISH DEPARTMENTS from 18
public and pri vate colleges and uni ve rsui c:!t ha ve formed the Western
New York Organization of English
Departments (WNYOED) tO di ~c u ss and
pursue matters of common concern and -.erve
as an advocac y group for Imp roved English
education in Western N"ew York.
Kenneth Dauber. professor and cha1r nf
the UB Department of English. JOJIJated the
group 's format Jon. H~ wa!t a!~-ked to ~erve for
one year a~ t: hair. wllh C u ol Jam1e ~o n of
N1~gara Coun t) Co mmunit y College a~ vi~e
chair The group '' 1ll he headed by one
rcpre:-.c-ntauvc from a fo ur·year mstlllltlon
and one from a tu o-) c:ar mstuuuon.
Dauber ,;ud th ~.: group \\Ill l.:otmhn.tlt.'
~md , Jmrc Hl'lllutionallnturmallnn .md po, .
, thl ) alter polk1c' to c::t..,l' tr:tn,kr of 'tu l.ic m :-. . Stn:..,:-.tng the 1111purt~t1K~' nl \\ ritm~ .
the group\\ Ill n&lt;ll lllllC huu Engh ... h \.'Uillptl "llon 1111ght he Oc,t taught at arl"'.l cnlll.' ~ t· ,
Member' aJ,n :.Jrc mtcrt:,ll'd 111 th."\l'iopmg way~&gt; of a ttr:K IIn ~ morl· Alnl·;.m Amen can!&gt;. Hl!lpanJC Amcni..·an.., anJ other ethnu.
group!'. to the fi eld of Engh-.h cJul':.ltnm :mJ
111 drawing tho"e a Iread) 10th~· field to Wc,t ern New York
In addition to UB and 1agara Cou nt )
Community College. member L·ollege!l a.re·
D' Youville . Buffal o State. Hilba t.
Houghton. ECC City Campus. Villa Maria.
ECC South, JameSiown Community. ECC
North. Can isi us. G~nesee Communit y.
Fredonia State. Medaille. Daemen. Monroe
Communit y and Niagara Universi ty.

�4

Chancellor's Awards for Excellence recognize UB faculty
and librarians for teaching, scholarship, seiVice
By SUE WUETCHER
News Bureau Stall

N

ine UB facuhy members and
two libraria ns have received
1995 SUNY C ha n ce ll or's
Awards for Exce llence .

The Chancellor's Award for
Excellence in Teaching honors '"superb"

teac hing at the undergraduate , gradu ate or
profess ional le vel. Reci pi ents are Ric hard
R. Almon, associ ate professor o f bio logical
sc iences : Stephen J . Free, associate profes·

so r of biological sciences: Stacy Carson
Hubbard, ass istant professor of English :
Mich aelS. Hu decki, research associate pro -

fessor of biological sc1ences; James N.
Jensen, associate professor of civil engi ·
neering: William A. Miller, professor of
oral di ag nos tic sc iences; Johannes M .
Nitsche. assistant professor o f chemic::al eng ineerin g: Ju dith Tamburlin, ass istan t professor o f c lini cal laboratory sc ience. and
Marguer ita Vargas, associate pro fessor of
modern languages and literatures.
The y we re cited for "mastery of teaching.
dedication to students. adherence to the high est academic standards and co ntinued profess ional growth and scholarship."
The C ha ncellor's Awar d for Excellence
in Librarian s h ip recog ni zes "skill in
librari a ship; serv ice to the campus, the uni versit y an to the field: scholarshi p and
professional ow th . and major professional
ac h le\?e ment s. Recipi ents are Gayle J .
Hardy, assoc iate "br.1rian in Loc kwood LI brary, and Cind y epfer, head o f the Serials
and Bindery Dep
ent in the Hea lth Sci ences Library .

HEADRICK
Continued from page 1
lots o f people and looking at all the ramificatiOns
Headri ck stressed that '" the curre01 cha llenge offe r~ an opportunit y to fashion new
progra m•( maybe rep lac ing existing ones
wi th programs th at are better att uned to the
future needs of students. For ex ample. there's
bee n much public discussion about the lim ited opportuniti es in ;.~ca demi a for Ph .D..s in
sc ience and engineering but the strong need
for them in hi gh tech industries. Industry
want s graduates with broad, high le ve l education. We may have to restructure our Ph.D.
programs 10 allo w less specialization ."
One of the impediments UB faces is its
size . "O ur size is problematic. We're trylng
to do too much with too little," sa.id Headrick,
sug gesting three different uni versity model s
UB may need to consider for the future.
"We might become a universi ty that has a
strong undergraduate mi ssion and also main tains hi gh-qu ality programs at the post-bac caluureatc level, emphasizi ng high-q ualit y
g raduat es in spec iali zed re search areas.
around which we build institute s and centers
that have a good cross- represe ntation of specialti es." he sai d.
"Or we could reduce our commitment at
the lower-divi sion undergraduate level and
set up a network of feeder schools " ~om ­
munity coll eges. pri vate colleges and agri cultural and tec hnical co lleges. "This would
produce a stro nger marriage of upper leve l
undergrad uate and beginning graduate stud ies. The lines between undergraduate and
grad uate wo uld become less clearly delineated. By offeri ng high qualit y undergraduate upper-di vision education and blending it
wi th graduate education , we' d be an excellent small public research university wi th a
broad array of graduate P.rograms.
"A third model would be to expand ourse lves to the range of 35.000 10 40,000 stu dent s. This would take a while-maybe a
long while- to accomplish. But it would put
us on a par with other major public research
universities."

A UB faculty membersince 1977, Rich-

ard R. Almon speciaJizes in cell and mem-

State University at Ch.ico and master's and
doctoral degrees from Cornell.

the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
J udith Tamburlin has been affiliated
with UB since 1981. She also holds an appointment as an assistant pro fessor of
anatomy and cell bio logy. She has won numerou s teaching awards, including the
Graduate Student Excellence in Teaching
Award , a Lilly Teaching Pellowship, the
Milton Plesur Excellence in Teaching Award
and the Excellence in Teaching Award from
the UB School of Health Related Professions. She and a UB colleague received
NationaJ Science Foundation grants to develop anatomy texts for blind and visually
impaired high-school students. Tamburlin
earned a bachelor's degree in medical laboratory technology and master's and doctoral
degrees in anatomical sciences, all from UB .

brane biology . He ha s a uthored or
co-authored nearly 40 scholarly papers and
lljlkbael Hude.:ki conducts research on
seven book reviews and chapters. and has
IYI the genetic cause of muscular dystroserved as a referee for numerous pro fesphy. A UB faculty member since 1978, he
sional journals. including the American Jour·
has authored or co-authored more ·than 40
nal of Physiology, Scienu and the Journal of articles in scholarly journals and made nuNeurochemistry. He received bachelor 's,
merous presentations at professional meetmaster's and doctoral degrees from the Uniings. He received bachelor' s and master' s
versit y of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign.
degree s from Niagara University. and
Stephen Free has been a UB faculty
master's and doctoral degrees from UB. He
member since 1979. His research. which , al so has done postdoctoral work at Syracuse
focuses on the mo lecular genetics and develUniversity and UB.
o pmental biology of lower eukaryotes, has
An eovironmenlal engineer, James
received funding from the National Science
Jensen aJso serves as direclor of the EnviFoundation, the National Institutes of Health
ronmental Science Program in the UB School
and the U.S. Agriculture Department. He
of Engineering and Applied Sciences. He
has published more than 30 articles in scholjoined the faculty in 1988. Jensen has taught
a..arga ri~ Vargas joined the UB faculty
arly journals and has made numerou s precourses in environme ntal engineering, water
HI in 1985 as a visiting assistant professor
sentations o f hi s research at professional
quality and pollutant analysis, among othof Spanish and became an assistant profesmeetings. lectures and symposia. Free reers. He has received funding for more than
sor in 1987. She has taught Mexican and
ceived a bac helor's degree from Purdue Uni 20 research projects from government and
Spanish-American
theater and literature, as
versity and a doctorate from Stanford.
private agencies. the three most recent totalwell as Spanish language and conversation
Stacy Carson Hu bbard joined the UB
ing nearly $250,000. He has published more
courses. Vargas has published articles in
facu lty in 1987. She has taught courses on
than 30 articles in scholarly journals and has
scholarly journals; contributions to books,
modem American women's poetry. Ameri presented his research at numerous conferand translations of novels, plays, anthol ocan women writers, and lyric poetry and
ences. He received a bachelor's degree from
gies and short_stories. She has delivered
lyric th eory . In add ition to numerous articles
the California Institute of Technology and
numerous papers and invited lectures , and
and reviews. s he has authored a book,
master's and doctoral degrees from the Uni has participated in panels and conferences.
"Dissembl ances: Revisionary Authority in
versi ty of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
She received a bachelor's degree from Yale
American Wo men's Poe try," that is being
A faculty member in' the UB School of
University and master's and doctoral depublished by Cornell University Press. She
Dental Medicine si nce 1967, W illiam M iller
grees from the University of Kansas.
delivered a paper on Mari anne Moore' s poalso serves on the core faculty of the Western
Gayle Hardy serves as the communicaetry a t the Co nferen ce o n Rethinking
New York Geriatric Education Center at
tion and communicative d isorders subject
Women's Poetry. 1730-1930, held in July at
UB. He has authored or co-authored more
specialist at Lockwood Library, responsible
Bi rkbeck College in London. Hubbard rethan 200 scientific publications, 50 of which
for collection development. specialized refce ived a bachelor's degree from California
are related to dentistry and the aging populaerence and subject-specific bibliograph ic
tion. He is panicularly interested in the conShe joined the staff of the library
instruction.
nection bet ween oral health and general
in 1963. She is the co-author of the second
health and well-being. Miller holds a dental
edition of "Subject Guide to U.S. GovernWhatever direction UB mo ves in, these
degr&lt;:e from Guy's Hospital , London Uniment Reference Sources,'' which will be
changes are bound 10 affect the university' s
versity , London. England. and a masrer's
published th is year. Hardy earned a bachelor's
relationship with SUNY . "If we had 35.000
degree in hi stology and periodontics from
degree
in sociology and a master' s degree in
to 40,000 students, that would be 25 percent
the Universit y of Illinois.
library
science. both from UB.
of SUNY ' senrollment. Another campus that
Ci ndy Hepfer joined the staff o f the
size would place half of SUNY's students at
ohann es Nitsc he joined the UB facult y
Health Sciences Library in 1985 after servtwo large campus ce nters. and the need for
in 1990 after serving as a National Sciing as a serials librari an at Bay lor University
small coll eges scattered around th e state
ence Foundation/NATO postdoctoral fellow
and the SUNY College at Brockport. She has
wou ld be put into question." Headrick said.
at the University of Cambridge, Cambridge,
served as ediror of Serials Review s ince
Federal suppon to the univers it y ove r rhe
England. His research involves the study of
1985. and also co-edits Advances in Serials
past decade has played a significant role in
the transport of macromolecules and colloiManagement. She is finishing a term as pastsupponing UB' s research mi ss ion, but that
dal panicles within porous materials and
president of the North American Serials Insuppon is probably going to dec rease. ··can
membranes.
terest Group. Hepfer was o ne of five se.rials
we make up fo r that in some way? We ' re
He was among 220 scientists nationwide
librarians
in the country selected in 1994to
pursui ng the possib ilit y o f finding pri vate
in 1992 to receive NSf Young Investi ga10r
participate in a record-maintenance project
suppon ." he said.
awards recognizing young faculty members
by the Library of Congress' Co:operative
"We ' II need closer li aisons with industry
who have demo nstrated outstanding potenOn-li ne Serials Program. She earned a
and commercial ventures and that worries
tial as science and eng ineeri ng investigators
bachel or's degree from Indiana University,
some people" because the corporate culture
and educators. Nitsche recei ved bachelor's
a master' s degree from the University of
differs from that o f higher education. Part of
degrees in mathematics and chemical engiPittsburgh
and a graduate certificate in gerthat diffe rence, Headrick noted, is the openneering from the University of Minnesota
ontology from Baylor.
ness of academi a as opposed to the desire of
and adoctorote in chemical engineering from
a 'Pri vate firm to preserve information and
secure its competiti ve advantage. Adjustments
will be necessary on both sides, he said.
"I hope in rhe long run for more money to
flow back into the university from technology transfer. The policies are in place. and
we ' re going to have to count on more revenue from this source. In the professions.
such as the medical school and the dental
sc hool. revenue from practice has been and
wi ll continue to support the educational progra m. Other professions will have to look to
these sources as well.
"We're not in thi s alone. The univers it y's
budget woes are not peculiar to UB . All
uni versities are experiencing the same o ut side pressures. What makes US 's situation
more diffi cult is that we' ve been a small,
underfunded public research uni versi ty,"
Headri ck said. "On the other hand we ha ve
Jim Guercio, left. supervisor of residential fafewer restrai nts and a shorter history to concilities, and Robert Palmer, vice president for
tend with. so we can be more fle xi ble in
student affairs . enjoy buffet at Student Affairs
solv ing problems th::an a more enLrenched
recognition luncheon Aug. 9 in Center for Touni versity would be."
morrow. President Greiner was a speaker.

J

Sbldent Allairs
holds luncheon

�5

Cirbus, a 1980 UB graduate,
began career as an engineer
Continued from page 1
'That son-of-a-gun wasn't big but he was
tough," Dando said. 'The thing that was
most impressive was his intelligence."
Cirbus graduated in I 980 with a B.S.
degree in civil engineering. He lucked out in
a job search and was hired the day after
graduation by Hatch Associates. the company responsible for the design of Buffalo's
subway system. It was a dream job, but
Cirbus just couldn't get football out of his

see those values at a Division I college football

blood. He became an assistant coach at

tory including John Gerak. Greg Huntington, Todd Rucci, Dave Szott and Roger Duffy.
All made it to the Nf'L. Last season Penn

Cheektowaga Central High School for two
seasons. I 980-8 I and Dando brought him
back to UB the following year as a recruiter
and offensive line coacti.
" It was amazing the way he related to the

kids, and the way they took to him," Dando
said. "Craig picks things up very fast and is a
good teacher as well as a coach. He's honest,
well-organized and he' s the kind ofcoach who
will look a kid in the eye and tell him the truth."
irbus was growing restless after the 1983
season. His engineering career was blos-

C

soming. but football was the center of his
life. It was time 10 make a decision on hi s
future. " My avocation became my voca-

tion," Cirbus said with a smile as he sat in his
office in UB · s new stadium on a warm
summer 's day . Cirbus was sweating, as he
came off the field after an afl em oo n work out. Mu scular and about six feet tall. he
presents a lean athletic figure .
Cirbus is anicul ate, friendl y and softspoken . The emotional intensit y he di spl ays
on the field di ss ipates in everyday conversati on. At times, he see ms more like a pro fessor than a coach, but football is the essence
of his being. That ' s why. during the early
'80s. he wrote to virtu all y every Di vision IA football coach in the cou ntry . asking for a
j ob. "I kept sending o ut letters for a couple
of years and heard nothing," Cirbus said.
'Then, one day out of the blue, Coach Paterno
ca ll s me a nd asks me to come to Penn State
for an interview."

Cirbus quit his job. packed his bags. and
in the spring of 1984. headed south to Pennsy lvania. He spent two years as a gradu ate
assistant coach, a nd agreed to be a vo lunteer

coach during the I 985 season. Penn State
was supposed to have weaknesses that season on defense, and Cirbus worked with the
linebackers. One of his pri ze pupils that year
was a young linebacker named Shane Conlin.
"That was hi s first job wi th the defense
and we had a trelnendous year," said Conlin,

a former No. I pick of the Buffalo Bills who
now plays for the St. Loui s Rams. " You
won't find a smarter coac h anywhere," said
Con lin, who describes C irbus as ''a players'
coach, because players respec t him. He 's not
the kind of guy who hangs out with the players.
but he cares about them at1d he's honest with

them. That's the kind of coach players Jove."
ln I 986, Conlin developed into an All
America player and the defense helped lead
Penn State 10 a national championship.
The major influence on Cirbus at Penn
State was Joe Paterno. ''He was my mentor and

my friend," Cirbus said. "Joe renects everything that is good about college life. especially
perseverance and integrity. What! saw in Joe
Paterno for I I years, validated my values ....To

__

....,. ..

level was very reassuring. It shows you can

have ethics and still be successful."
Cirbus was part of Penn State' s success.
In I989, he moved from defense to coach the
offensive line. He helped with recruiting and
became an administrative assistant in 19909 I, before returning to the offense in I992.
Cirbus molded the careers of some of the
best offensive linemen in Penn State's his-

Sta te was undefeated and won the Rose
Bowl. One of Cirbus· linemen, guard Jeff
Hanings, made firs1 team All America.
irbus' personal life became intertwined

C

with the football program in I990 when
he married Peggy Bill , the sister of former
Penn State quarterback Tom Bill. Craig and
Peggy Cirbus have three children: Tommy.
4. Kelly, 2. and Megan, who was born th is
year. Cirbus' life and career see med set a1
Penn State. Th at' s why it was a surpri se

when he left to take the job at UB. Cirbu s
said. ''Leaving Penn State was one of the

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

player. I came here to get a n ed ucati on."
Cirbus adds. That commitment to academics
was reinforced during hi s time at Pen n Stale .
Cirbus is determined to meet those high
acade mic standards wilh US's football program. " I want my pl ayers to know they go to
college to get an education. At the same
time , th ey' re going to get a c han ce to be a
part of a Division I program. For them, UB
athletics wi ll be an exciting, beneficial and
powerful experience. But I want them to
remember that it can all be a very fleeting
expe rie nce. I te ll each of them that at some
poim in their lives. they will havr to rel y on
their education. Football onl y la'\ts so long.
and then you move on ."
Discipline is vital to CJrbu~ . but he has a
ligh te r side, even as a coach. "Footbal l is still
a game and you ' ve gut to ha ve fun." he said.
UB hasn' t had much fun on the fie ld with
eight straight los ing seasons. During the pas I
two years against Division 1-AA competi ti on. UB posted a won-4 . losl- 18 record .
One of Cirbus ' challenges is to rebuild
pl ayers'confidcncc. They can already sense
a difference . .. We're all e;\ci ted th at someone with his background is coaching U B,"
said Chris Behan. a senior tight end who is
captai n of the team . ..Coach Ci rbus brings a
new leve l of profession alism here with his
experience and bei ng arou nd Joe Patern o."
Ci rbus arrived at UB in January a nd has
already demonstrated his ability to attract
players. Howeve r, he refuses 10 single out
individuals for the upcoming season. He
stresses the team concept. .. Afractionofmy

job with UB is coaching on the field." he
says ...The main pan is pullin g in place the
right mech ani sms to all ow our kids to be
successful."

ANTHONY VlOLANTI is a writer for Tht•
Buffalo News.

_..........,

Saturday, Sapt. 2 .................. FORDHAM ................................ ................ 7 p.m.
Saturday, Sapt. 9 ...... ............ LAFAYETIE ............ .............................. 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sapt. 30 ................ VILLANOVA ............ .... ...... ........................ . 7 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 7 ........ .. ......... MAINE .............................. .... ..
.. ....... 7 p.m.
'Saturday, Oct. 14 ................ MASSACHUSETIS ...................... ......... 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, N011. 4 ................... CENTRAL STATE .... ................ ...... .. ...... 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, Nov, 18 .. ............... BOSTON UNIVERSITY .. ...................... . 1:30 p.m.

'Homecoming Week&amp;nd

JI001'IIAU.
The Craig Cirbus era klcl&lt;s oft Saturday night at UB Stado&lt;.m as tho Bulls host Fordham at 7 p.m.
Cirbus has named jooior Marl&lt; Taylor as tho Bul16' stalling quane&lt;bacl&lt; '"'tho opener. Taylor.
tho backup to record-setting OB Cliff Scott tho 1as1 two seasons, saw action In frw contests in
1994, completing six paoses for 82 yards and rushing IOf an additional 40
Taylor's main target will be senior tight and and oo-captain Chris Behan wt1o had 334 yards on
31 receptions and two touchdowns last season. Behan was selected tho top DMsion f·AA Independent tight and by The Sports Netwotl&lt;. The defense wiH be anchored by lineback,.. Pete
Conley. Conley led tho Bulls with
tacl&lt;tes las1season incloding fOlK tackles'"' looses and
ttvae &amp;aeks. lhe senior oe&gt;&lt;:aptain had five games of bette&lt; than 10 tackles last seasoo.

toe

vounuu.

The Royals host alwo&lt;lay event this weekend at Alumni Arena to begin their t995 season. UB
maets ragiooal rival St. llonavMture in tho opener on Friday night at 7 p.m The Royals then
tangta with Northoas1em Illinois at 1 p.m. and East Tennessea State at 7 p.m on SattXday.
UB win raly on senior Candie Hirst wt1o Is just two kills shy of tho au-time scllool mail&lt; held by
Kelley B&lt;eonan with 1133. Hirst was selected to the Mid-Conl.Wlent's fitS! team All-Eastsm OMIlion squad In t994. Also ratlJming fa coach Bob Maxwell's squad are senMJf Laurie Santetti and
junior Candi Sims. Santelli had 410 kilts last season to rank second on the team while Sims was
the team's top setter with 750 assists.
~·a

SOCCER

..-and

After an 11-7- t record in 1994 and the Eastern Otvision etCJINn o f the Mui-Continent Conference .
tho Bulls look to continue thejr winning ways. UB kicl&lt;s oft their season on tho road tJ&gt;s
at tho Pittsburgh Tournament against Raben Morris and St. F&lt;ancls. Head coach John Astudillo
returns nine starterw from I8SI season's squad including leading scorer Ediru Okpewho wt1o had
nine goals and throe assists in 1994. Okpewho was selected as tho league's co-Most Valuable
P!ayer in the conference toumament and aatned first team AJJ..Eastem OMSIOI1 honors. Junior
goelkeepe( Jay Pall'llef also returns after earning both AU-Tournament and AH-Eastern Division
honors in 1994. PaiiTlef posted a 1.59'goals against average with five shutouts last season

WOMEN'S SOCCER
The IYiNI era begins this weekend as the Royals under new coach Jean-A Tassy takes on Stony
Brook (Saturday) and Guelph (Sunday) al 1 p.m. at RAC Foeld Leading seoter Lon Perillo relurns
for haf' junk&gt;f season after 10 goals and three assists in 1994. Perillo tied ICif the team k!ad in
points with Joanna Tower I8SI season with 23. Tower scored nine goals for the Royals.
In goal. SC:'licx Nicole Pittaro retums to handle the nets. Her 1 78 goals agaulst average and
three shutouts led the team. Pittaro saw action in to games !Sst sMson stopp1ng 89 ShOtS.

hardest decisions of my life, but being a head
coach is something I' ve always dreamed

about. And it's great to be back home.
"I didn't come to UB to be a football

1995 UB Bulls Home Schedule
(

Sports te

A look at some of the players
expected to see action in '95
he UB Bull!&lt;&gt; team fo r 1995 mcludes 35
lencrw inners from last seaso n' s squad .
including 15 staners . Nine of the returning stanerl&gt; come fro m the de fens1ve !o ldl'
o f t he ball . Below. some o f the playc,.., e 'lpcc tcd
to see acti on this season.

T

season All Amenca n at Greenv1lh.•

Everell Anthony, Junio r , Dde nsive Buck:
Anthony. the Bulls' third leJ.Jding tackler in 1994.
fini shed the year with 56 tota l tackle'. mcludmg
26 solo. A ft er breaking an ankle in practu:e. hl !o
status fo r the 1995 season 11&gt; uncerta m.

Jaso n Kuehn , Se nior, Defensive End: Kuehn .
who comc!o to UB from Rutgers. wao;; capt am at
Greece Athena. when: he set a sch oo l record fo r
most rccc pt10 nl&gt; and yards a ~o wide rccc1 ver

C hris Behan. Senior. T ight End: Be han . Bull )&lt;,
co -captain . was rated by Sportitlg Newj a., the
natio n's top Di vi1&gt;io n 1-AA mdepcndent ught
end . He played and .. tar1cd 111 all II games in
1994, was st.-cond in recepti On' wuh 3 1 and th1 rd
m yards per reccpt 1o n at I 0 '1

Kyle Booker, Se n ior, Offe ns ive Tackle : Pro·
j ected mamstay o n the Bul h ' 199-1 o ffenl&gt; l\'e hnc
before suffering a bro~cn arm m the gamc aga mst
To wson St ate. he pla yed 1n alii I ga mell •n IQQ3
Vince Ca nosa , Se nior, Defe ns i ve Tuck le:
Cano!&lt;&gt;a , the Bullll ' !&lt;IXIh leading tackler Ill t99-l .
fini shed With 46. of " 'hlc h 19 were , o )o He led
the team mt:ackles for loss and m sad !&gt;
Gerald Carlson , Junior, Punter!Piacekicke r :
Carl son saw act1o n m all II ga mel&gt; last year.
averng mg 3M .6 yard!o per k1ck He had 20 o f '74
kicks do wn tn)&lt;.•de the 20.
Mike Ch ichester. Junior. Defensive Back :
Ch ic heste r. who saw cxtens1ve acti o n last ye ar U!&lt;&gt;
a sopho mo re. fini shed with 32 tucklc ~ and was
ued for team lead in fumb le recovcnes.
Pete C onley, Senio r, Linebacker: Bull s cocaptain had an outsta nd ingj unior season. leadi ng
the team in tackles with 108, 47 solo. He was
second in sacks. and was named team MVP.
M11rk DiNardo, Senior, Offensive Line: . mam ·
stay o n Bulls' 0 line after coming off '93 knee
surgery . DiNardo is a student -athlete mentor. He
!otartcd every game as a freshman and sophomore.
Edward Ellis, Junior, Offens ive Line : Ellil&lt;&gt;
was a ,oJid lineman for the Bull s in 1994 . battli ng
h1\ way through nagging injuncs In 1993. he
played m se ven games . starting fi ve .
Terrence Fisher, Sen ior, Ddens ive Bac k: Tht&gt;
1e am 's fifth -leading tacklet in '94 with 49. m ·
eluding 27 o;; o lo. Fi she r led the team 111 pass bre a~ ·
ups and was the club 's top punt returner.
C raig Gu~l. Junior, Linebac kt&gt;r: An e'lccp·
tiona ! performer as a sopho more. Gue st was o ne
of the team 's top tacklers w1th I O·t mclud ing a
team-high 50 sol o.
R obert Heggemunn . Se nior, Guard:
Heggcmann. who comes to US from G1ce n\ ille
College. wa!&gt; named All -Conference :md pre ·

Joe Jones, Sophomort, Defensive E nd: Jo nes
trJ nsferred to US from Greenville Co llege . when:
ht.· recorded ctg hr sacks and 54 solo uu::k/e ' lao;r

Eric L tt, Senior, Defens ive Back : Lee comes to
U B from G reenvi lle College. where he was named
hi )&lt;.

t e am ·~

de fe nsive back MVP.

S te\'f McDuffie. Senior. Linebacker: McDuffie
!oa W cons iderable ac ti11n at lmebac kcr Ill ' lJ-1 ,
tim .~o hm g "11h 28 tadle,. fiH· fo r IO!&lt;l&lt; HI.' had a
..eason-h1 gh ~ · x tad lell agam o;; t Western llllno 1.,
Ke ,•in McGrifT,Junior, Quur1erback: McG nff.
who tnm ll fern:d to UB fro m Nas!oa u Commu !UI)
College. thrc " a tea m record 13 TD pal&gt;SC!&lt; :11
Na!&lt; .. aU and "'"' :1 twU-) car ~ t ancr " uh a \.'area
record o f llJ· ~ _
Hurd) Mih: ht'll, So pho m ore, Defe nsh ·e End :
Muche ll . lllltcd all o ne of the top 50 recrml ' m
South Carol1na . fin1 .~o h e d the 1994 season w1th 21
t ac kle ~. o f wh ich fi ve we n: for loss.
John Sandusky. Junior , Offensive Line:
Sandu sky. who saw con,idcrable play tng 11mc a ..
a sopho mo re 10 199-1. ' ho uld bailie fo r u.;;tanang
spot as a JUm or
Anlhony Scott. Junio r , Defensive Line: St.·on
led the Bul b 10 receiVIng Ill 199-1. WJih ~3 catc hc;;;
for a ream- h1gh 508 yardl&gt;. He led all n:cc 1vcr~o 10
liCOnng with three to uchdowns
Ric h Sitarek, Sophomore. Wide Rece iver:
Sitard . who pl ayed 10 l&gt;Cven g ame!&lt;&gt; m 199-1 . had
three recepuo ns for .t8 )'llrd!o . In '93. he led all
W NY rece tvc rs w1th 669 yards.
Antho ny Swllln, So phomore, Running Back :
Swan led the club m rushmg last ye ar wnh -I l l
yard!&gt; on 106 carnes. He started in fi ve g amel&gt; and
played in mnc . His 120 yards on 23 carn e' \''
Illinois State l!o last 11mc Hull s ru' hed for 100·
plul&gt; yards 111 a game
Mllrk Taylor, Sophomore. Quarte rback: T;t~
lo r played 111 fi ve games la' t ..ca,on al&gt; bad;. u p 1t1
Cliff Sco tt He completed b o f 16 p a,~e ' fur M~
yards.
Rich '" Bubba .. Wulker .St&gt;nior, Ode ruin End :
Walker. who fim shed hh j um or yc:1r "uh ~()
tackles. h a.~o been a mamsta) o n the.· tk fe n"l' c.' II Ill'
lht.• past thn.•e 'iCa!&lt;&gt;OnS
Keilh Warren. Junior, Wide Receh ·t'r: W.mcn
played 1n all I I game' l;ht year a~ a 't)pho mo rc
He wa ~ the team ·' fo unh -\cadm g re(.'c.' lvcr "1th
19 for U7 )'ard'. and t~ o TDs

�6

Faculty&amp;SiaHBillboard
HENDERSON HEADS
Ul AWMNI AUOC:IAnON

0 ~ c~~=~=~ ~;~~~=~~~~

rector ol personnel lor the Bulla to
Public Schools .
has been elected
presu:lent o f the UB
Alumnt Assoctahon Henderson .
who recetved
master's and doctoral degrees tn
e ducation from UB .
tn 1963 and 1988,
res pectively has been an educator
for more than 30 years
Others elected as olhcers tor
1995-96 are Jonathan A Dandes.
vtce prestdent and general manager
of B A Guest Ud . prestdent-elect
and Susan J Grahek . Amherst town

clerk treasurer Vtce prestdents are
Wtlham E Cressman. busmess consultant Therese Wegter executtve
asststam to Assemblyman Rob•n
Schtmmtnger Jean C Powers a norney Jaeckle Fletschmann &amp; Mugel
Donald C Roberts . tnsurance executive Potter Harns &amp; Scherrer . Jay
Frted man manager FSA/Fooa and
Vendtng Servtces at UB
Newly elec ted dtrec tors are Rob
~rt M Banon pnncrpat Kens.ngton
'"1•CJn SchOOl Paul F Ctm.nellt crest
tent
tm•nel lt Oevetoomem Co
nc Be rly Fott Alben oanner
c:ntt Alben ssoc,ates , S Magts
·rate Juoge l Site G ~=oscr••O Otane
Me Ma non ~x Cuttve ••&lt;..1:! ore!'•
Jent Stovrot t &amp; erman Meturntny
J!&gt; d11ec1ors are:
cnotas ...
go&lt;:r.;t)luCc• rnanag iTig (1tre-(""tlU R.tqnt
4.ssOt...tates n Wtll,amsv· te J .,O
onway Poner Ill :t'r! •lten Ot~ OI If
accountant

&amp;EICHNER IS NEW
WRESTLING COACH
0

0 ~~~~~~ :~:~?n: :~~=~~o~ ;~
years l1i Pennsylvanta . J im
Belchner tS comtng ~ home ~ lor hts
hrsl head coachtng JOb at UB
Betchner . two-ttme AII-Ameflcan
a1 Clanon UnNerSity. grew up tn
Stnclatrvtlle and has spent the past
seven years as top asStSJanl at the
Untverst'y ol PtUsburgh
He played a vuat rote at Ptttsburgh as recrUiter . coach and adm1n ·
1strator of a team that was conttnually
ranked tn the top 25

EVInS TO SERVE ON
CASE COMMISSION

0

~~~,!~:,e~==~lt;~;,~:~~

Letters at UB and the author of 22
books of poetry and cnttcal essays
tS one of 116 arllsts statew1de to re·
ce1ve a t995 Arttsts Fellowshtp from
the New York State Founaat1on tor

:!~~:"oi;,~~~~,:·,;~:ncsu~~e

UB. has been selected to serve a
three-year term on the Council for
Advancement and Support ol
EducatiOn 's (CASE) Commtsston on
Alumni Relations
The CASE commtSStons support
d1ssem1nation ol knowledge 1n the advancement diSC tphnes. research
evaluating professtonat pract1ces and
monrtor programs and serv1ces lor
eth1cat and prolesstonal standards
A graduate of Johns HopkinS Um·
vers1ty Evttts holds a master"s degree
tn hiStory from the UniVersity of Vtr ·
g1n1a and a doctorate 1n htstory from
Johns Hopk1ns

FORMER FACULTY MEMBER
IS U.S. POET LAUREATE

0

1

~n~~:~e=~:; ~~:~~~~~: Ye~~s·

savtst ana scnolar who was a faculty
-nemoer al UB lrom 1967-73 has
been nameo poet laureate at the
,Jntteo States tor a une-yeat term
--iass a MacArthur fellow now
teaches at the Umvers1ty of Caltfornta
at Berkeley He nas recetved profes·
SIQ(IBJ recogmt100 for htS wnt1ng . wn1ch
tnctudes several collections ot ltterary
essays and translatiOfls of poetry
The poems 1n hiS celebrated 1989
bOOk "Human W1shes : allude to
campus unrest of the late '60s and
early 70s and to the reacttons of UB
tacully and students at that ttme H1s
book . -rwentteth Century Pleasures
Prose on Poetry." won the 1984 Na·
tiona! Book Crtllcs Ctrcle Award lor
crtttclsm Hass has edtted colleCtions
ol work by other poets . including UB
Capen Professor Robert Greeley

JAEN APPOINTED TO
ruaUC HEALTH ~OUNCIL

0

BERNSTEIN RECEIVES
NYSFA FEUOWSHIP

0

the Arts th1s year. The fellowship carries a $7 .000 cash award
Fellows are selected by peer
panels of artists active 1n the same
diSCtphne and receive grants to advance thetr careers in any way they
constder appropriate . One aspect of
the fellowship is tiS pubhc service reQutrement Five llundred dollars from
eacl"'t grant IS set aside to help support a public serv1ce activity by each
fellow through the Foundatton's "ArtISts &amp; Aud1ences· program

~~~;~f=s~:~:~a~~:~·e~~~~s-

Ctne at UB. has been appo1nted by
Gov George Patak• to the Publtc
Health Counctl of New York State lor a
term exp1nng Jan 1. 1999 The
Counctl"s responstb11t11es tnclude approving cE!'tttf1cates of need lor health·
care facthttes 1nves11gat•ng complatnts
aga1nst hospttals and mak1ng cnanges
1n the oubltc-heafth code

WBFO wants
music donations
Don" t throw out those good olayable
records tapes or COs ' Donate )hem to V1nyl
Madness Ill the September fund -ra1ser of
WBF O 88 7 FM the Nattonal Pubhc Rad10 alftltate operateo t&gt;y US WBFO w1ll take all
ktnds of mustc-from Bach to B 8 Ktng
reggae to rock Gershwm to gospel Receipts lor tax purposes wtll be g1ven to
donors
The records . tapes and COs wtll
be available tor a per-1tem donat1on dunng
me fund -ra1ser 1n September 1n Allen Hall on the South Campus Proceeds from V1nyl Madness Ill w111 beneftt the stat1on and 1ts activtttes. Do·
nors who have boxes 01 b ags full of records . tapes or COs. or who need
to arrange a drop-ollt1me outside the station's regular bustness hours30 a m to 5 30 p m . weekdays- may call 829-2555 lor ass1stance

a

~Wmgs:

Ja~n has been actrve •n publte
heallh research since 1985. Director of
the UB Center for Urban Research In
Primary care, he was principal investigator on the first comprehensive health
survey of Buffalo's Lower West Side.
completed 1n 1994.
He was one of 15 people '" the
U.S. selected to receive 1995 Generat•st Ptlysic~n Faculty Scholar Awards
from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation this past May. He will use the
$240,000 grant to study asthma
among Buffalo's urban poor and identify ways to improve access to health
care for the d~ase .
A graduate of Niagara University.
where he earned bachelor's and
master's degrees in biology, Ja~n
holds a doctorate in epidemiology
from US and received his medical degree from the university in 1989. He
Joined the UB faculty in 1992.

PARTY IN AWMNI AII£HA
NEW SAlliES COACH

0

!~:c~~~;: =~·a~~wh~se~a':n-

tly will be welcomed to Buffalo at a
potluck dinner and social Sept. 8 to
be held from 5 p .m to midnight at
u e ·s Alumn1 Arena. Nolan comes to
the Sabres alter servtng as assistant
coach lor the Hartford Whalers .
The soc1at hononng Nolan. an
0Jtbway from Garden Rtver Reservation. Sault Sa1nte Mane. Ontano.
Canada IS sponsored by the IroquOIS
Crossroads Center Native Amencan
Communtty Serv1ces and the Office of
the V1ce PreSident lor PubliC Serv1ce
and Uroan Alfatrs at UB
For more tnlormallon call M1chae1
Gendrue at64 5-6014

ANew Look
,1'IIDee ......... 10 campus will sec lhal the uniyenily'o electronic informatiooocrvice lrnown as UB Wings has a new lootbright, airy and beautiful. It beckons sllldenls, fiiCII!Iy 11111151aff 10
searcb iiS compulerized links to univen;ily informatioo and to use
il as a starting point for surfing the World-Wide Web (die lalenlet
at iiS hyperteJ&lt;IUAI best) The. UB Wings borne peac offers die
foUowing menu: Happenings, Direclories, SiudeniJ, IW:uJiy a:
Slaff, Libraries, Computing, Department&amp;, Serviceo, IIDII of c:oune.
the lnlemel.
Selecl any option and you wiD
I I I&lt; I I~&lt;&gt;~ I&lt;
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n~~.Lilli
choosing ~Services" you Delli
' 1
•
decide between linking 10 "Campus,""Aiumni" or"Community"
serviceo. Pick "Campus" and you
bavelhe option of ocleclina ~Public Safely." From "PubwrSafely"
you find. for example: "Aniclea About Public Safely,'' "Compuler
Crime," "Lpst and Pound," "Safely Information." "Send Mait to the
Depanment," "SexuaiAssaulllnfonnalioo," and ~unsolvedHomi·
cide." Choose "Safely Iriformatioo" and you find such i~em~ as
"Alcohol Policy," "Important' Numbers," "Operation 10." ~uu
Crime Slatislic•" and "Vehicle &amp; Bicycle Safely."
While the welcome banner proclaims that within lhe "pag..:' of
UB Wings you will find "almosl anylbing you need 10 know about
the university," in fact this campus resource is "a work in progress.."
The Wings slaff is eager 10 recruit new UB "information providers" who have non-commercial material of inleresl 10 the univer.;ily

\j . . ,

h \ .,

commu nity.

To search UB Wings via your campus E-mail accounl in iiS leJ&lt;I
only version lype wings al your syslem prompt. Those using a
graphical www browser such as NeiScape (lhe only way 10 experi·
ence lhe ·• new look" ) e nter the following URL: &lt;hllp://
wings.buffalo.edu&gt;. For assistance in connecting to UB Wings,
conlacl the Computing Cenler' s Help Desk al645 -3542. To volun·

teer

to

become

an

information

provider

con t act

&lt;wings@acsu.buffalo.edu&gt; or call Jim Gerland al645-3557.
- Gemma DeVinney and Don Hartman. University LibrBties

ATHLETICS NAMES
PROMOTIONS DIRECTOR

CHANGES

0 ~~n~t~:::!~:'~n~~a~lth

to mug for thei r new. bar·coded, m agnetic -strip 10 card which replaces a
number of cards current ly in use. including st udent lD cards. library cards.
dining se rvice cards and buildi ng and res idence hall access cards. In
addition, the new card can functio n as a "cashless" debit card good at
vending machi nes and various other locations arou nd campus, including
the UB Bookstore. Banking and telecommunications services are also
available to cardholders. and new uses are likely to be added in the futwe.
If you have y~t to gel your SUNYCartl, they're available until 8 p.m.
tonight and between lQa.m. and2 p.m. Friday in the SIU denl Union. Room
210 on the North Campus and in Hayes Annex B (Records and Registra·
tion area) on the South Campus. After Friday, permanent sites will be open
at 230 Student Union and 101 Harriman Hall between 9 a.m. and 7 p. m ..
Monday -Friday. Mosl campus vendi ng machines will be equ i ~ped to
accept the new cards shortly and old sludent or faculty/s1aff 1D cards will
not be accepted in campus libraries after September. ·
On the North Campus. a large new parki ng area for more than 250 cars
will open shortly for stude nt and special event parking, according to
Ronald Nay ler. associate vice president for university facilities. The lot
is adjacent to Ihe Campus Mail build ing on Augspurger Road . across from
Bai rd and Slee lots. Also. se veral areas have been renovated to yield new
classroom space. including the former Norton Cafe and dining area.
The wait for students goi ng from Capen Hall' s first-floor Undergraduate Library to the .second-floor Science and Engineering Library should
now be shorter thank s to a new stairway connecting the two. Previously.
a single bank of overworked elevators was the only way to reach the SEL.
Nayler said. Also. 1he outdoor area between Capen Hall and lhe Cooke/
Hochs tetler complex has become a public garden. dedi cated to the late
Pharmacy Srhool Dean Dan iel H. Murray. Murr..ty is credited with
developing the UB pharmacy school into an institut ion respec ted world wide fo r its research in pharmaceutical sc iences in the 1960s.
Th e Sou th Camp us has been co mpletely reencrgi7..ed. The elec tri cal
distribut ion system , wi th a 4.000-voh capacity, was "antiquared and
req uired n greal deal of preve ntive maintenance." according IO Nayler.
The new system carries a capacity of 23.000 volts . ''This will not onl y
better se rve the South Campus, but also allow for anti cipated future
1ncreases in demand ," said Nayler. Renovationworkhas improvedclassroom and lab space on the s Outh Campus as well. where Diefendorf Hall
received its first-ever elevator. making the building now fully handicapped accessible. Physical space in Diefendorf was upgraded to handle
the newly expanded Physical Therapy program. A new Pub lic Computing
Lab was added on lhe second noor.
Nay lernoled that the ftrs1 phase of restoration of the Darwin Martin House,
part of a residential comp!eJ&lt; designed and builtjusl after the tum oftheceniU!y
by famed archilect Frank Lloyd Wright, has begun. The School of Archilec·
ture and Planning is extensively involved in its restoration.
.--

the Buffalo 81sons. has been named
promottons d1rector and ass1stant markeung director 1n the DwiSIOO of AthletICS at UB
Rex1nger . a 1989 graduate of Buffalo State College. w1ll be responstble tor promoltons lor UB football
and basketball games as well as
other spec1at events hosted by the
umversity. She wtll also a1d 1n fund ralstng and will culltvate tnlerest 1n
UB athletic events from umvers11y
groups and '" the WNY commun1ty

SIMPSON RECEIVES
APPAAWARD

D ::~t;ru~ .7:C:::~~~:r~~n~~1

annual Rex Dillow Award lor the out·
stan ding arltcle 10 Facrlities Manager
magaz1ne The award was presented
at the 1995 Educational Conference
of The Assoctatcon of H1gher Education Fac•httes Olhcers (APPA) held tn
Philadelphia 10 July Facrlities Manager 1s publJshed quanerly by APPA
S1mpson·s art1cte -Recharging
Campus Energy Conservatton
ESCOs and Demand Stde Management at SUNY Butlalo - was selected
lot 1ts conten1 readab•li ty and t'fter
est to readers

VECCHIO TO DIRECT
SPORTS INFORMAnON

0 ::~, :~~=~!~' ~a t:~o~~a;eu·

1

has been named dtrector o f sports
1nformat10n at UB
Vecchto . dtrector of sports tnlor matton at Allred UntverSily lor the
past three years . w1ff coordtnate a
sports Information office tha t w ilt
cover 18 Otvtstan I intercollegiate
sports . Including us·s jump Into DiviSIOn 1-A football when It roins the MidAmerican Conference

Continued from page 1

�IHIDRill
~U..~Y. . . . .

0 B I ' u k 1: I I

~

Robert Guthrie,
professor; developer
ofPKU test
Robert Guthrie. whose
·Inexpensive test to
screen newborns for

phe nytketon uri a
(PKU) has spared an

===-- -

7

27, Nct.1

estimated 30.000chil·
dren from the effects

of mental retardation ,
died June 24 in Saante after a long illness. He was 78.
A professor emeritus of pediatrics
and microbio~v at UB. Guthrie is
creditedwithdevek&gt;pinga test30years
ago for early detection of PKU using a
spot of blood taken from a newborn's
heel and special filter paper.
Guthrie's PKU test IS a standard
~est for newborns in all 50 states and 25
countnes . The cost of a single test is
about 3 cents , compared to an esti-

mated $1 mii/K&gt;n for l1fetime care of an
affected. but untreated. youngster.
Guthrie credited his son John, and

h1s ntece, Margaret Doll. wnh being tbe
inspiration lor h1s research and campaig n to get newborn testing widely
accepted . John Guthrie, who had nonPKU mental retardatton , died earlier
this year at age 4 7. Margaret Doll. 36.
tS profoundly retarded and hves in a
Minneapolis group home Shewasborn
with PKU tn 1958. one year before
Guthrie d iscovered the filter-paper test
During the past 15 years . Guthrie
expanded his research to include detection of lead potsoning 1n infants and
children , and fought lor stncter lead
standards In products
Guthrie received three bachelor's
degrees. a master's and a doctorate
from the University of Minnesota. and a
master's degree from the University of
Maine. all between 1941 and 1946.
He was a surgeon with the NIH, a
professor and chair of the Department
of Bacteriology and lmmunok&gt;gy at
Umversity of Kansas. befOf'e taking a
position as principal cancer research
scientist at Roswell Park Cancer Institute In BuHalo 1n 1954. He joined the
UB School of Medk:tne and Biomedical Sctences facutty in 1958, serving
until his retirement in 1986.
Guthrie's PKU test had earned him
numerous honors . includ ing the
Kennedy Foundation Award , the Assoctation for Retarded Citizens Distinguished Research Award . the Amencan Association on Mental Deftciency
Award and the Pool of Bethesda Award .
This April, he received the Founder's
Award from the Heritage-Oak Foundation. which provides philanthropiC support to Heritage Centers and other human serVIce agencies in Western New
York that address the needs of people
with developmental disabilihes
Guthrie and his wife . Margaret.
moved to Seattle in May.
Donatk&gt;ns in his memory may be
made to The Heritage-Oak Foundation
and/or the Robert GLtthne Btochemical
Genetics Fellowsh1p Fund . both in care
of North Presbyterian Church

Robert M. Cooper,
pharmacy law expert
Robert M Cooper, , assoctate professor of pharmacy ptapt1ce at UB. dted
July 2 in BuHalo General Hospllal after
a long illness He was 55
A UB faculty member s1nce 1967.
Cooper also served tn a vanety of admtnistrahve posts at the School of Phar macy In addition to serv1ng as chalf ol
the Department of Pharmacy . he was
associate dean of profess•onal phar·
macy alfatrs. associate dean of the
school . assistant dean of student and
professional alfalrs. and admissions
officer for the School of Pharmacy
An expert in pharmacy law. Cooper
was regarded as a leading authority on
state and federal regulations governing pharmacy practice in New York
State . He was editor of Phamlacy Law.
pubiished by the School of Pharmacy

for New Yor1&lt; State pharmacists.
He was honored with the SUNY
Chancellor's Award for Excellence in
Teaching , the Rho Chi Excellence in
Teaching Award and the only honOfary
membership in the UB Pharmacy
AJumni Association
Cooper played a key role in numerous~ of Pharmacy functions . particutarty those that involved service to
students and alumnt In 1975, 1983
and 1995, the school yearbook was
dedicated to htm. From 1973-90, he
salVed as commencement CQ()(dinator and master of ceremonies fOf' the
School of Pharmacy. He founded and
directed the annual Pharmacy Career
Day programs at UB, and was cocoordinator of the schoofs continuing
education programs.
,
-eooper represented in many ways
the core of the Sctlc:»o' of Pharmacy. His
passing signifies the end of a major era
of pharmacy education at UB. ~ said
David Triggle, dean of the School of
Pharmacy .
A member of the New York State
Board of Pharmacy and a Board chairman. Cooper also bek)nged to nurnerousprotessK&gt;nalorganizations . includtng Rho Chi. the pharmacy honors
society.
He earned a doctorate degree in
pharmacy from the University of California . San Francisco Medical Center

Daphne Hare, former
UB professor
Daphne Hare . 58.
former UB professor
and director of the
Medical/Dental Division of the Veterans
Administration central office tn Washington. dted al her
home Aug. 3. aher a
six-year battle with melanoma. She was
the wife of Peter H Hare. a US faculty
member who served as chatr of the
Department of Philosophy tor many
years.
Hare, who from 1979-93commuted
weekly from Buffalo to Washington.
administered 8.500 medical residency
posilions with 100 medical schools
across the nation Prior to her position
in Washington. she was on the faculty
of the departments of Medicine and
Biophysical Sciences in the UB School
of Med1c1ne and B1omedical Sctences
In 1993. she became assoc1ate
ch1ef of staff tor education at the VA
Medical Center In Buffalo. Her national
leadership role with the VA earned her
the Worthen Award for Academ1c Excellence from the Association of Amen·
can Medical Colleges and the VA.
D.Jring the past frve years. she was
involved in the transformation of medical
education in the former Soviet Union and
tn instituting an International medical
licensure process. This led to her obtatntng a $2.4 million grant from the US
Agency for International Development
through the University of Rochester
Much of Hare's research publica tions in the biophysk:s df membrane
transport were done in collaboration
wtth sctenlists 1n Germany. where she
held a number ol vistttng professor ships. She served on the edito(lal board
of Physiological Rev1ews and the executive committee of the BIOphysiCal
Soctety of North Amenca
Hare was past pres1dent of the Buf ·
lalo Chapter of the Nat1onal Organtza tlon tor Women and former chatr ot the
WNY Chapter of the Amencan Crvrl
liberties Unton.
She received a bachelor 's degree
1n phys1cs rn 1958 from Barnard College/Columbia Umversity. where she
was a student of Nobel laureate
Polykarp Kusch. She earned her med1·
cal degree at Cornell Medtcal College
A celebration of her life wrll be
scheduled In Buffalo this fall . Contributions may be made to lhe Barnard
College Alumni Fund , Columbia Umverslty, New York. N.Y. 10027.

David G. Hays, former
linguistics professor
Funeral serviCes tor Oav1d Glenn Hays.
former profesSOI of hngUtsttcs and computer sctence at UB. were held July 30
in New York City. Hays, who hved 1n
New York City, dted July 26 tn White
Plains Hospital after suffenng complications from lung cancer .
Founder of lhe dtsctpline of computationallinguisttcs. the use of computers to understand language, Hayes was
a professor of linguistics. computer SCI·
eoce and library and •nformahon SCI·
ence at UB from 1968-1960 From 1980
until he became ill, Hayes, author of Six
books, was an independent writBf. consultant and researchef.

Veterans'
Games

Athletes pause for national anthem
July 13 at opening ceremonies for
World Veterans' Athletic Championships held at UB Stadium.

Dorothy Lynn, retired
social work professor
Retired US social work professor Dorothylynn. whosecareerbeganln 1929
at the University of Chicago's Settlement House in an era when there was
little public assistance available to the
poor, d ied June 3 at Millard Fillmore
Hospital-Gates Cucle She was 85
Lynn, who JOined the then-Untversity of Bulfalo School of Soc1al Welfare
'" 1949. retired m 1977 Her hobbtes
tnctuded ratsing German shepherds.
and she was a familiar sight on the
South Campus as she walked wtth her
dog, Dnest. who always camed her
bnefcase tn h1s mouth.
She taught graduate courses 1n soc•al work. and 1nterd1SC1phnary ones m
the UB School of Nurstng and the
Cornell University School of Labor Relations. Instrumental in developtng the
soctat work curriculum at UB. she also
helped to develop programs 1n Rochester. Syracuse . B1nghamton and St
Cathermes . Ont She recetved a
bachelor's tn soctal work from Northwestern University and a master's tn
soctal work from Columbta UniVersity

Philip E. Pepper,
associate librarian
Funeral serv1ces were held Aug 2 m
Ashev1lle. N C lor Rev. Phthp E Pepper . a retired Eptscopal pnest and UB
hbranan Pepper , 71 . who moved to
Asheville 1n 1993. died there Aug 1
Assoc1ate rector of St Andrew's
EpiSCOpal Church tn Buffalo tram 195861 . Pepper was on the staff of the UB
ltbranes !rom 1961 un111 he retlfed •n
1986 Amonghtsmanyroles.heserved
tn catalog1ng . as acttng head of the
Architecture and Enwonmentat DeStgn library. and as head ot the Ma1n
Street Library He became assoc•ate
libranan m 1968. complehng hts career 1n the Undergraduate Ltbrary
A graduate of the Untverstty ot Cahtornla at Berkeley and Seabury-West ·
ern Theologtcal Semtnary .n Evanston.
Ill . he rece1ved hts M l S !rom
Geneseo State College

Hermann Bozer, headed
otolaryngology
Hermann E Bozer 100 head of the
Department of Otolaryngology at the
UB medtca l school !Of 30 years. dted
Aug 2 at hts home 1n Juno Beach . Fla
A graduateot the Un•verSIIyol MtChlgan. where he also rece1ved n.s medi cal degree Bozer spent three years at
the Mayo Chmc as an asststant 10
founders Cnarles and W•lham Mayo
He came to Bulla to 1n 1922 10 lound a
chn1c pauerned alter the Mayo Chn1c
Duttng hiS years as a professor and
head of the Department of
Otolaryngology al the UB med1CSI
school . Bozer was ch1el olthe Department ol OtolaryngolOgy and Chief of
stall at Buffalo General Hosp1tal. E J
Meyer Memoual Hospttal and
Children's Hospttal
Bozer . who was the launder of the
BuffalO Heanng and Speech Center ,
reured tn 1969 after 50 years tn the
pract1ce of med1c1ne and surgery. He
moved to Juno Beach. Fla . tn 1988
The family is planmng a memonal
service . to be held tn Buffalo

UB GRIT grants to help
area finns compete globally
BJ Eu.EN GOUIIIAUM
News Bureau StaH

UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY to become more competitive in
the international arena is being offered to a limited number
small- and medium -sized We stern and Central New
York companies facing critical overseas compelition.
From now until Sept. 30. companies that fit specific
cri teri a may apply for grants to bolster their competitiveness that will be
awarded through the UB Greater Regional Industrial Technol ogy Program, or UB GRIT. Indi vidual grants are expected to be in the $75,000$100,000 range. A total of Sl million is available through the program.
funded by the federal Small Business Administration (S BA).
UB is the lead institut ion in the program, a consortium that also
includes Syracuse University. University of Rochester and Rochester
lnstitute of Technology . Faculty. g raduate and advanced undergraduate

A

of

students from these universities in engineering and related fields will help
se l ~cted manufacturers. panicularly rhose with existing or prospec ti ve
expon m arkets. incorporate the latest technology into their products.

Created as a demonstration project funded by the SBA upon the
initiative of Rep. John J. LaFalce, UB GRIT is expected to serve as a
model for small-business product development and job creation and
preservation . his the only program of its kind in the U.S.
To survive in intense international competition. smaJI businesses must
continuous l y develop and improve their products or ri sk losing not only
export opportuniti es, but domestic markets. and. ultimately. American
jobs. But for most small firms, the cost of maintaining research-and-

development operations in· house i prohibi ti ve. UB GRIT will help those
firms improve their c urrent products. as well as develop new ones .
The program is direc ted by George Lee. director of the National Center
for Earthquake Engineering Research at UB who initiated the project in
1994 while serving as dean of the UB School of Engineering and Applied
Sc i ences .
" GRIT is lookin g for companies that manufacture good. technologically advanced products, but that pmy not have the knowledge base to
sustain their growth," said Lee . "With GRIT , we want to provide those
companies with the mom_e ntum and expertise they need to upgrade their
product s in order to make thern competitive in the world market."
At the same time, he said, the program will give engineering slUdents
at al l the partner insti tutions the opportunity to participate in new-product
development .
'lhi s is the type of technical serv1ce activity UB should offer to the
region and the state . as advocated by President William R. Greiner," Lee

added.
During the course of the two-year proJect . between se ven and 15
product-improvement projects wi l l be co nduc ted by the consorti um. with
the assistance of The Center fo r Industrial Effectiveness (TC IE) at UB .
Projects will involve. but not be limited to . product-focused.
multidisciplinary teams of faculty - led gradua te ... tudent!, and advanced
undergraduates.
Companies' eli gibi lity for
following cri teria :

a grant will be

~valuated based on the

They must have no more than SOOcmployec~ . They ntu~t ~ lonucd 10
Allegany, Cattaraugus. Cayuga. Chautauqua . Erie. Genc-.ce. L1v1ngsto n .
Monroe, Niagara, Onondaga, Ontario. Orleans . Oswego. Seneca. Way ne
or Wyoming counties. They must have an existing. successful product
that requires technological updating. including redesign and/or proces:.
improvements. The product must haven significant share of the market
and have significant international competition . The product must account
for a substantial proportion of total company bu si ness. The project must
be able to be completed in a year or less. The company must be financial! )
stable and willing to share in the cost of the project
Proposals also will be judged o n the basi s of the m atch of uni versit)
expertise to product tec hnologies llnd on overall economic benefit and
imponance to the region.
For more information on applying for a GRIT grnnt. companies should

contact The Center for Industrial Effectiveness at 636· 2568.

�8

Day ol Caring

Faculty. staN and students
from UB 101ned thousands
of others 1n a day ol communily serv1ce Aug 23
P1ICh1ng 1n as pa1nters
and cleaners , runn1ng a
c arn1vat and prov1d1ng
serv1ces to sen1ors were
tust a lew of the ways that
UB volunteers made the
Un1ted Way 's thtrd annual
Day of Canng a rous1ng
suc cess

CLOCKWISE,,_ TOP I..EJ'T: -

--~. pcolltalacl-

-----QIIIaCiulo;---·-·Halyc.....
ence, a..,. wtttt pony rklle lit c:.rntw8l at

_s_.._...,,-.-.,-.

--__
................
_._____ _
--...----_.. _
-----

tofcf _ _ _ _

..,R..-Mc~-; ~~.--..

... ~

ectuc.tlon, wortc.a with union .t Notth

PHOTOS B Y FRANK C ESARI O

-

Community

....

Buf..

c.nw.

Posung IIR -95081 Research

. . . . . . . . M"'IIIID ......

,.,

Exlllblt Openl ...
UB Sculplon. F!k·ully and

_....,

~tu

dent work tn hronzt. wond. ~lnnc­
fuhrKatcd mt'tal Opt-nmg rect'p
hnn Through Sept 2b Gallery
huurs Tu~ lOam Spm , Wed
l·n 10 am . g p m , Silt II am
N p m An Dcpanment Gallt"f)',
Cente t for thC' A n s Nonh Cam
pus S-7 p m For mfumlalllln . ~· ull

ue~

• ._..

~-~

Football

HlatOI'y l.ectuN
What Ha~ lhppened to SchoiYrl y Thinking in t he Huma n Sc:i t-nct'll Sine .. th t&gt; E nd of WWII ?
'' Mr-lah• sloneal Con ~adt:r.u wm. ''"
!he n,.,\·tplmc of H1 s1ury Smcc rhe
Hu iUI.·au,! ,'' Prof Jnm Ru ...en .
l in!\ uf B•ddr-ld. Gcnnan) . ami
"CummC'nt An Italian Pcrspc~o.
11\c:· Dr l::.duardo Tonarolo.
llnl\ ufTunn . h al) 280 !'arl.
Hall Nonh Campu\ \ p m SJ)\10
\ured by Dept of Hr story , Grndu
ale Group m Modem Germ!tn
S1ud1es and Counnl for Eumpcan
SIUdles

Cocnftlve Selene•

t~r fur !he Ath. Nonh Campo!&gt;

Colloquium

The mstallauon con"'"h of 12 de
mons and an angel. sculpted m
pan~d l chloroben:r.enc and encased
m amtght ple,.•glas bo.11.es The an tst Will bC' prcsenl to d iSCUss ht s
work Sept 7 at .J p m . aftC't whtch
lhcrc vnll be a rect"pUon Regular
UB An Gallery hours art' WcdnC's
day -Sa!Urday 10·30 am ·
ll p m ,and Sunday Noon 5 p m

Metaphor a.~ C ha nge of Rep n-!ltntat ion, B•pm lndurkya. Toky('l
Umv of Agncui!Un: and Tech not
ogy 280 Park Hall Nunh Cam
pus 2 p m Co-sponsored by liB
lkp-! of Compu !cr ~· •cncc

Ubnlry Education

AdnliSSIOR IS

Pro-

f~c

"Red VMtlc81 " Still Up
s .mun Unge-rs' Sltt" -('OnstruCIItJn
··Red Ventcal .. rcmnms on vte ~
lhroogh Dec J I 1n lhC' Ltghr.,.,.dl
Gallery m 1he Center for •he An-&lt;.
Nunh Campus The p1ecc "n
plnres the mreractton hc: !wet"n an
and archJieCIUrt •·

Introduction to H UBNET and
Searching the Bibliogn~phic Databases. Rm fl. Medra Re!ffiuree ..
Ccnler. Heah h Sctem:cs L1bral)
Sour h Campus 10 a.m Clask' ~
held 2 p .m Munda)!l. and 1011 m
Thursday~ 1hrough Nov )0 Nn
cla~s Oc1 12 Classes hmrtcd ttl
su regaslranb . reg1s1er at II SI
reference d~·!l.l or call H29 '2UO

Blolo.. c.l Selene••

--

Roewell ...,. Staff

Tn ns location -Act ivalrd
Oncogenes and lht&gt; Origi n of
H igh- Risk Lc-ukt"mia~ A.~i­
ated with Traru:locations to the
ALL I Gene oo Hum am C b ro m o!IOffi t llq23 , Prof Georg H Ft"y .
Fru:dnt·h-Aieunder Unn .
Erlangen , German) RP'f'l. Elm
and Carl lon I:! 1() p 111
Open HouNe" · Diefendorf Publir Lab
...acility Open House'. :!tlb
01efendorf Hall South Campu'
I 1 p m Sponsored by Academrt
Sl·n ll'C ~ and Compulln j.! &amp; lntm
mat Ifill T(•r;hn••logy

Molecular Biology and lmmunol
ogy. Posting IR-95083. CUnkal
ln.structorfNunco CoordiaatorSchool of Nurs-mg, Posung wR -

95()84

, _ _,

h4'i b878

Bulls vs. Fordham . UB Sladtum
Nonh Campus 7 p m For mfnr
ma u nn. call b45-6bn6

Ttcbakl.u III ·B.olog.cal Sc1
encc:s. Postmg WR-95082 Assistant to the Oirff:ton-Molecular
Cdl Biola&amp;y!Center ror Advanced

-~-

The ~a ·Sp«ificit) o r Dosag•
Compensation in Dropsophila,
Dr Mm.• Kurll((a. Bay l01 College
of Med1cme 114 Hochsletter
North Campoli 4 p m

IJ!Hil:itb
u• kulpton
Opcntng of facull) and

~1uden1

show . mcludmg wor~ tn bronLc= .
Slone= . wood. and fabn cated mc 1al
'\ 7 p m Aug 3 I m thr- An IXpanmt"nl Gallery located 111 lhc
Centcr for the An!!.. Nnnh Cam
pus Regular ga llery lloun: arcTuc-«&lt;ay 10 11 m -5 p m . Wednc'
day-Fnda) 10 am ·8 p 111 . and
Saturday I I a 111 -8 p m

I

GSEU Benefits lnfonnat10n/En·
rolhnenl SesSIOns for eltgible
Grndualc AssJstanls and Teachmg

··tnner Ciiy" by Em1ly
Chang &amp; Barry K1esler
IS on v1ew 1n faculty &amp;
student ex~11b11 open1ng
today 1n Art Department
Gallery . Center lor the
Arts
Contlnuln&amp; Exlllblta
John l..d:ay's sculpture' rn!l.talla t•on " Ochres De L' Ange Neulrt" ..
"on display through Sepl 17 111
the F1~1 Floor GalleT) C&gt;f lhC' Cen -

I

As!l.tstanls wh('l ~ tsh 10 cnroll1n
!he Slude nl Employee' Heallh Plan
!SEHPJ are bcmg held through
Sept 22 The sess10ns las! about
twu hours North Campus se.!I.Stons
m 102 Crof1s Hall arc sc~duled
for II JO a.m. Sept 6. 2 p m Scp-1
7. 9 a.m Sept I.J. I p .m Sept 15 .
2 p.m Sept 19. 9 a.m Sept 20.
and 9 a.m Sep! 22 South Campus
SC't.Mons m !he L•ppschulz Room.
I ~5 Cary/Farbtr/Shcrman Hall aTe
scheduled for 9 a.m Sept 7 and Q
a m Sept 18 GAs and TAs musl
show a copy of Appotntment Au ·
thonlat!on or appotnlmcnl IC'ner ,
wh1ch must spcc tfy amount of supcnd. csumated weekly obhga110n

(m1mmum 10 hours per weeki.
and dates of appmntmc:nt For In formation. call Personnel Serv1ces
at 645· 2646. ext 132 or Ill

c...n WCHt&lt;shops beiiJn
~ C n:ahve Craft Center. 120
Fillrnon: . Elhcou Complex . North
Campus. ts offen ng Early Fall '95
Crafl Workshops bcginmng !he
wed. of Sept II Chtldn:n 's
dassts also an: offered For mon:
mfonnauon. call 645 -6 125 or 64~ ·
2434

EniiJioll

1..8n&amp;Uq• Pro.,...

The Engltsh Language lnsmute al
UB 1s offering a pan-11mc.
evcntng Enghsh language program dc:stgM'd for mtrmat1onat
profeSSIOnals. scholars. ~ !udcn b
and homemaken: whos.e firs! tan
guage •s no1 Enghsh The- folio~
mg courses aTe offcn:d Advance-d
Commumcat1on for the ln!ernu ·
uonal Professional. L1vmg and
Workmg m Engh!!.h (lntcnncd! aleJ. Accent Reducuon Course .
TOEFL Pn::parallon Course
Courses bcg •n !he week of Scpt
II For mon: tnfOmlallon. call
645-2077

FACULTY
Assistant Professo r-Staii StiC~.
Posting iff-5023

RESEARCH
Clerk II (53,. position)-Prupeny
Control. Posting IIR -95069 Re-starcb Tu::bnidan li-Pharmarology &amp; ToUcology. Postin&amp; tR 95077 C lerk 111 -NCEER.
Posung IR -95080. Postdoctoral

A.'i.!i0Ciatt--8Jolog•cal Scicnces.

PIIOFEUIONAl.
Starr Amsta.Dt (part-time, SL-

2)-BJochcm.tstry. Posttng jfp.
5018. Student Activities Auol:iate (SL-2)-0ffice of Stude-nt Ufe .
Posung IIP-5029 Staff AssJiunt
(lrue.mal PromoUo.W Opportu nity, SL-2)-l...aw Library. Posting
•P-5034. lnstructkHlal Suppot1
Associate (lnttrnal Promotional
Opportunity, SL-2)-Computing
&amp;. lnfonnalion Technology . Post·
mg IIP-503S. Seaior Provammer Aulyst (lbrw positiocu:
avait.ble, pendln&amp; dass:irtcation.
SL-4)...Computing &amp;: lnformatioo
Technology. Posting fP·5022 . Senior Pro&amp;ramme:r/AnaiYJC (SL4)-Compuung &amp;t lnfonnation
Technology. Posting •P-5025
Lead Provammer Analyst (SL·
J)-Computing &amp;. Information
Technology. Posttng IIP-5026
Teaching Hospital Nu.nt Pratti·
tioner (lbl'ft potltions available,
SL--4)-Student Hea..hh C!en1er.
Posttng •P-5032. Academk Operation Coordinator (latemal
Promotional Opportu.aity, SL3)-Computmg &amp; lnformauon
Technology . Posung lrP-5036 Senior ApplkatioDJ Analyst (ln tertUII Promotional Opportunity, SL.-4)-Compuung &amp;
lnfonnatton Technology . Postmg
•P-5037 Tec:bnial Omce Spe-dalHt (Internal Promotional
O pportunity , (SL-4)·Equnl Op
ponumty/Arflnnauve Acuon Of
fice . Postmg •P 5038

COMPETmVE CLASSIFIED
CIVIL SERVICE
Keyboard Sp«.ialist I (SG-(16)0ccupallonal Then~py . luK
121652 Keyboard Sp«Uilist I
(SG ~)-Dean · s Office. Denial
Medrcme , l1ne r2149J Keyboard Specdli.st I (SG-06)-Edu ·
ca11on.al Opponunll)' Program.
Lmc 02790 Sec~tary I (SG11)-Personnel SC'rvu.:n. L1nt"
-'24119 Campus Public S.fet }
Offker 2 (SG-ll)·Pubhc Safe!).
Lmc 1131939

L.UOR CLASSIFIED CIVIL

HIIVICE
Ckaner (SG-05)-ResJdc:nt•al
Faciltttes. Ltnc 1432 11

To obtu1n lf!o rr mfonnallon on
)tJbs Jw,.J abo1'' · ('Orlla&lt;"f PC"r:nm
llf'l Sf'r\l f' t'S. 104 Croft5 flufl

��Which library to use1 Brchitecture and Plannin~ libraiq lBPlJ
T

E

ACH OF TiiE ten UB Libraries has seiVices
and collections tailored to students and
researchers in specific subject areas, with the
exception of the Undergraduate Library
(UGL), which contains general works in most
subjea areas.

_,._
·1/Fi"'''
_.......,.

11
....._ ___

-....._.. -

Keep in mind

that research

H

l

l

I

I

•,

~

~

'&gt;

t

829-3505
URL httpJ/winp;;.buffalo.oou/librarieslunits/apl
V'ISual Resources Center 829-3485

+

APL has a collection o( over 22,000 volumes on ARCHfiECTURE, ARCHJTECTIJRAL HISTORY, DESIGN 11iEORY, ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN, and
PlANNING. APL is a branch of the Lockwood Memorial Ubrary and is located

on the first floor in Hayes Hall, which houses the School of Archirecture and
Planning. APt's collection includes books, journals, construction produa catalogs, nups, architectUral drawings, videotapes, asscncs, and miaoforms.
Master's theses of the school are also housed in APL APL provides study areas,
work 1ables, a typing room, an A-V room, and photocopying fadlities. There is
.also an extensive slide colleaion in the Visual Resources Center associated
with the School ln Room 332 Hayes Hall.

a&amp;&amp;OH ..

-litH..........

projects will often be

[enter for Booh Presemation

multi-disciplinary, so you

__.

~

may use several different

C.._fcK&amp;ook
P'N..rv.UO.

c..............

libraries whose collections overlap. ·Below is a guide

,.....

Clrc• ..U..

to the subjea specialties of the UB Libraries.

~

~· -······-·-··-···s

.......

Dl.......uty a.rvtces

-·
"-·

Art, Art

u ....

........

ooc.noo

_

u..u.......,

.......
...............
._......u....
\ ...........
UbrwylkMirl

---·

Loot/~..

•
•

,.........

7

.l

IIWek: Ubnry .
DCLC .

--·

... 4

6

"'-t~· -·
P'oetr)'/ R.,. aoob ..

.... 4

..........

6

Recalls ...

••Mal'dl •tr.teo

- ;

..........
...........
_,_.

c.-•ect~ou

........ .

SdMioe ..... E...........

.... 3

~Cola.ct~otts ,

-..ca.. Senlc••
..btect Locatlofts
(MIIdiiMwarr

to .... ,

TyJIII. . Facllttl••

"""'-"'•
uw.,.(UGL)

...........

..

"""'"

Unlvenlt} U lwMe s

DlrectCN''a Offtc•
Wlqo

Lockwood Ubrary
Lockwood Ubrary

Cbemlstry

Science and Engineering Library

Lockwood Ubrary

Health Sciences Library
Lockwood Ubrary
SCience and Engineering Library

Lockwood , taw, and Science and
Engineering libraries

Health Sciences Library

Science)

~.uw.,.

...........

Architecture and Planning Ubrary

Business

Dentistry

taterllbnry Lo..
(ILL)

-...

LIBRARY

Architecture, Design Studies

History
•
•
• Classics
•
•
• Education
• Engineering
• Government Documents
Professions
• (Health-Related
PhJ"l lcal Therapy, Exercise

--

" - ····

SUBJECT SPECIALTY

•

~

4

•
•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•

Lockwood Libr::uy

History of Medicine

Hea hh Sciences Library

lan guages

Lockwood Library

Law

Law Library

Ubrary Studies

Lockwood Library

U teraturc

Preserving the University Ubraries' collections has become more challenging in recent years due to the increasing variety, age, and heavy l:lse of library
ma!erials. In response oo this challenge, obe Cenoa- fa-lloolc Preservation was cleYrl- ·
oped within lhc University Ubr.uies to maximize lhe availability cilbary collections.
A g03l of the Center is to preserve nuterials for future generations of scholars.
Since its inception in 1985, the Center has created a program of conservatio n 1.reatmcnts, including archival photoduplication of brinle books, and a
heightened sensitivity to factors which speed deterioration. Working with the
circulating collections, the Center staff has rejuvCN.ted thousands of books,
constructed prot.ective enclosures for fragile materials, and upgraded storage of
special format items.
_
In addition to the physical p reservation of library materials, the Center
also fosters staff and public awareness of conservation issues. Jnstruaion regarding the proper care, handling and storage of the collections, and food and
drink restrictions within the-libraries emphasizes the imponance of cooperation
with the university community to achieve an effective preservat·ion program.

Health ~ciences librarg lHm

Lockwood Library

Administration 829-3402
Circulation/Reserve 829-3335
Fax 829-2211
URL http:/lwings.buffalo.oou/librarieslunitslhsl
History of Medicine 829-3024
Information Dissemination Service (IDS) 829-3351 (Fax 835-4891)
Interlibrary Loan 829-3337
Media Resources Center (MRC) 829-3614
Reference 829-3900

Management

Lockwood Librory

M aps

Science and Engineering Library

Ma thcmatJet;

Mathematics Library

•

McdJclnc

Hea lth Sciences Library

CINE. HEALTH-RELATED PROFESSIONS. MEDICINE AND BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES. NURSING . and PHARMACY. Combined books and journals total over

Mus iC

Music Library

Natural Scie n ces

Science and Engi neering Library

NUJ'Sing

Heahh Sciences

• Polls b Studies
•
•
Sciences
• (Anthropology,
Sociology)

Health Sciences Library
Lockwood Library
Poetry/ Rare Books Colk,·t ion and

Poetry

•

+

AUOTT HALL (aount CAMPti&amp;)

History

Pharmacy

•
•

laiiAIIT IIUIUIINII (~ CAIII'U&amp;)

645-2255

Lockwood library

Social

Lockwood library

Statistics

He:l!t h Science:, and
Scie::nce and Engineering libr.tric:,

Theatre and Dance

Lockwood and Music

U8 History

Univ€-rsit)' Archives

libr::lric~

Uroil'&lt;!rsity at Buffalo "n/ESES a rod DISSERTA770NS are found
library• of the disciplim•

._,.for_ unit

-Ita

MI'Yice

300.000 volumes. and journal subscriptions total approximately 2,000 titles . The
MED IA RESOURCES CENTER (MRC) contains over 2.000 audiovisual titles in
various forma ts, includi ng computer-assisted instruction for self-instruction,
review and classroom use. TI1e ROBERT L BROWN HISTORY OF MEDICINE
COLLECfiON houses 12,000 volumes of rare and hi~orical materials as well as
antique medical and dental instru ments.
HUBNET (Hospital and University at Buffalo Library Resource NETwork)
provides compute r access to bibliogr-Jphic databases, full text fOuma ls, clinical
manuals a nd textbooks, drug information resources. and expe11 systems in the
health sciences disciplines. HSL's HOME PAGE, available through Wings, provides information on services.and resources, and pointers to lntemet gophers
and releva nt web sites. Instruction on the organization of bi0mediC31 informa tion and other spcda ltopics is provided by arrangement with a reference librarian. lmerlibrary loa n services are also available in HSL.
Health ca re professionals, law firms, businesses, and individuals not affiliated 'With UB or located off campus can oblain biomedical and he:J.Ith informa·
oion through ohe INFORMATION DISSEMINATION SERVICE (IDS). This

the

111

ll~HHHY H~llH~
~ tbe Clrcullltlon ~of tbe unit

HSL., founded in 1846, contains materials in the fields of DENTAL MEDI-

to-..

~Since._,.

__ ....,_ ....
..._
............. ..........
..............
..........
.........
--............................
_._.....,
'-",.... ...... _..-......,
.....,.....,
___
...,....__..,. ______ _
..................
. . ....,..............
......._______
-....--.,.......
......... .....,_
M
R.,
R
E ______
E
E
-17.-...............
.......M_......,...._
..a....,._,..-.

,..

..,

_ _ _ _ , _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ..... -

tbe

vary

. . . , . , . . . . . . . t o t b e _ , _ _ . . well ,e ~cell wlllhelp

you ..va time- ellow you to plan y o u r - better.

department of HSL can provide. on a fee-for-service basis, photocopies of journal articles, books and audiovisual loa ns, intt:rlibf3ry loan referrals, computer
searches, and reference info rmation.

~

_....

•• ,,

I'

.,.....,...,
.

.,

�[hades B.~eaiS L1m librarg llBIDJ
0'-IIAU, - ~-~)

7111.._

Circulation/Reserve/ILL (2nd Floor) 645-6765
Reference (2nd Floor) 645-2047
Koren &lt;:enter/Audiovisual &amp; Microforms (5th Floor) 645-2045
Documents Department (6th Floor) 645-2084
Fax 645-3860
URL httpJlwin~.buffalo.edu/libraries/unitsllaw
• The law collection covers a wide variety o f materials o n L\ W and L4. w
REL'.TED SUBJECT'S.

The library o ffers students, facu lty, alumni, and the community full re-

search facilities, including professionally staffed reference and audiovisuaV
microforms depa rtments.
The collection of nearly 270,000 volumes and 425,000 miCrofo rms includes
FEDERAL and STATE COU RT CASES, STATUTES, CODES, REG UL'.TIONS . and
GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS; TEXTS and TREATISES o n a wide va riety of
legal topics ; collections or INTERNATIONAL and COMPARATIVE L'.W;
UNITED NATIONS RECORDS; and a small collect io n o r FOREIGN L'. W . The
MORRIS L. COHEN RARE BOOK COLUECTION oF the Law Library, which contains ENG LI SH AND AMERICAN LEGAL SOURCES Fro m the 16th , 17th, 18th,

and 19th centuries. p rovides background ma te ria ls for resea rch in the early
founda tions of our legal tradition . The papers of John lo~O'Bria n , the distin -

guished lawyer and prominent public servant for w hom the law school build ing is named, are available for the use of researchers.
The KOREN CENTER FOR CU NICA L LEGAL EDUCATION maintains a
collection o f audiotapes , vrdeotapes, microforms, and o ther non-book materia ls
:10d equ ipment to su p pon lhe Law School cu rriculum. L'lw students may pracuce thei r ora l advocacy or cou n.room skills using the videotaping equ ipment in
the CENTE R.
CompUier-ass rsted lega l resea rch through t.he on -li ne lega l databases.
LEX1S/ NEX:IS and \l'ESTI.AW/ D IALOG , is ava ilable to currentl y enrolled law
students and fu ll-time law facu lty . O ther university patrons may access ELECTRON IC INFORMATION SERVI CES via government and commercial CO-ROMS
and on -line databases in the Reference Dcpanment. The Llw Library's HOME
PAGE on tht: Internet , :wailablc through Wings, provides pointers to ot her
gophers and web sites o f Interest to legal reSt-~ rc h

lochmood illemoriallibrarg (lilllJ
LOCKWOOD UBRAIIY BUILDING (NORTH CAMPUS)

Circulation 645-2815
Reference 645-2820
E-Mail Reference UNLOCK (on IBM,VAX, UNIX platforms)
Interl ibrary Loan 645-2812
BusinwGoverrunent Documents Reference Center (1st Floor) 645-2821
ReseiVe 645-2144
Fax 645-3859
URL http:/lwings.buffalo.edullibraries/unitsllml

+

ART. BUSINESS, EDUCATION , HUMANITIES , LIBRARY SCI ENCE, SOCIAL
SCIENCES, and SOCIAL WORK collections are loca ted in Lockwood Library
alo ng with GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS, PO LI SH and EAST AS IAN materials,
and the JUVENILE books l'OIIect io n. Holdings include O\'er 1, 400,000 books.
and journals, and 3 million micro forms, making Lockwood tht:" brgest hbr.tf)' :11
UB and in the SUNY system .
Reference, instruct ion, i nterlihr:tf)' loan. and graduate reserve a rt~ some of
the se rvices provided in Lock\vO&lt;Xi . A full range of electron ic databases in the:•
social sciences , humanities, and busi ness is avai lable o n dcdic:ued computer
stations and via network at.:cess . A fu ll -text da t::tba.se of :~ II ENGLISH POETRY
published between 600- 1900 is avail able in the main Reference area . Studenb
and facu lty may sc~uch the extensin· NEX1S/ LEX:I S system at fo ur compute;·r
stations. Lockwood also p ro vidl"S a fec.·-based com puter sea rch servin.·
The BUSI NESS/ GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS REFEREN CE CENTEil i&gt; a
deposhory for U.S .. New York State. and Canad ian Govemmc::nt Publit'&lt;lt iOn., ,
and it cont:tins referenn: resources in Bu!iincss and Management. The Centl.'T
p rovid es access to hundreds of clt.·ct ro nic resources related to census. tr.1dc ,
business/industria l fim1s, financia l data, ere. Geographic Info rmation S)•stcm
(G IS) soft wa re is ~wa il ab l e , such as ArcUSA and ArcWorld , for the cre:Hion of
custo mized maps depicting social and economic ind icators . na!lrr.tl and mfr.t structure features for areas and regions.
Tile PO LISH COLLECTION is an extensive resea rch colk'"Ction of Po lish
language boo~ and joum:tls. Lockwood has severa l exchange agreements with
Polish universities and scho larly associa tions which assist with the acquisition
o f Polish language materials.

illathematiffi librarg n
BUILDIN41

e (aocmo CAIIII'Ua)

829-2165, 829-3278
Fax 829-3913
•
A branch o f the Science and Engineering Library , the Mathematics L1hrJ.f)'
houses research materials in mathematics, including books, p rofessional journals, reference books, indexes, abstracts, 3nd reserve ilems. A full range of
library services is available, including reference, int erlibraf)' loa n, databa.s&lt;~
searching, and photocopy facilities.

music librarg (illll~l[)
- I I A U , I'WST , . . . - ~~ CAIII'Ue)

Circulation 645-2923
Reference 64 5-2924
Director's Office 64 5-293 5
Fax 645-3824
URL httpJ!wings.buffalo.edu/libraries/units/music

+

The Musk Library holds broad-based resea rch collel1ions whrch suppon
not only the programs o ffered by the Depanment of Music, but also those 10
DANCE. BL'.CK STUDIES. AMERICAN STUDI ES. ANTHROPOLOGY and LIN·
GUISTICS. The catalogued collections comprise over 60.000 scores and performance pans, 26.500 volumes of literatu re about music, 15.000 pericxhcal ::tnd
serial volumes, hundreds of photos. 6,000 m1cro forrno; , several hundrl·d vidl-*0
tapes. ::tnd nearly a thousa nd music-rdatcd posters . The record ing collcct\Oib,
numbering ne-arly 27,000 items mclude JAZZ, FOLK, LJTI!RGICAI. , POPULAR.
CLASSICAL, and is especia lly rich in the AVANT-GARDE They c:m he lbtcne;-d
to at any o f 24 listening stations (17 of which ::~rc;.· eqUipped w1th compal1 d1:o.t'
players). Severa l CD-ROM products are available for refert'nn.·. as art' O\t'r
1,800 separate microfiche containing images or over 92S,O&lt;X) catalogu&lt;.· card~
representing books and scores in the Pan:-. B1blotht-qut' N;~t1unak :.1 nd the
Conservatoirc .
Special strengths of the libra f)' includt• 20'n t-CENTURY M USIC, JAZZ and
JAZZ DISCOGRAPHY, O I'ERA, MUSIC SCORES IN FACS IMILE. MUSIC BIBU ·
OGRAPHY. ELECTRONIC MUSIC, and REFERENCE MATERIALS Spenal colin l ions include close to a hundred MFAKE BOOKS .~ thousa nd.'&gt; uf MUSIC
ANTIQUARIAN AND AUCTION SALE CATALOGUES. 2.000 MUSIC ICONOGRAPHY SLIDES, original mate riab documcnung tht' HI STORY OF U.S Ml 'SIC
UBRARIANSJ-IIP (includi ng oral mtcrv tt·ws). tht· ardliVt·!:l of tht: CEf\'TER O t·
THE CREATIVE AND PERFORMING ARTS and tlw DEI•ARTMENT OF MlfSIC.
as well as what is probabl)' one of thl' largest collt.·ctlon' o f SOLO SON&lt;;" Ln
the U.S. (in which all of th l.~ :.tuthors of tex ts :ITt' an:.ti)'Zed)
Many speci:1 l indexes. c:ttaloguc.'J. :1nd o ther a1d:-. a:.:-.~st 111 fimli n~ \\ u rk'
by Buffa lo mu s i l'i~1n s. Bu ffa lo re:,idents. progr:-.nh and re\'ICWS asson.3tt:d \\ uh
the Dcparment 's events since 1962, work!:~ in st•vt·ral m:mu:.cnpt colll'&lt;:t10 n:-. of
composers · \\Ork!.. and in the;- arch\Vl'S g1vcn to th1.· hhmf)· hr m&lt;.llndu.tl f.~euln
memtx•rs

~cience and Inqineerinq librarg (~HI
CAPEN HAU, 2ND AND 3RD FLOORS ( NORTH CAMPUS I

Reference 645-2946
E-Mail Reference ASKSEL
Circulation/Reserve 645-2944
General Information 645-2946
Fax 645-37 10
URL http:llwings.buffalo.edu!li brJiiesluni ts/sel
Information Technology Center (lTC) 645-2747
General MiC!IXDmputing!BISON Olrmect Support, call Help l);&gt;sk 645-3542
• SEI. 1s h.x::ll cd o n the set·ond and th1rd floors of Capen Hall. wnh emr.mn·
through thtc" first floor of C 11&gt;C n in the Unc.k·rgr:tdua tt· Libr.tl)'. SEL 3C:f\'t•:o. tlw
f:~eu lt )' and studl'nt:. u f NA11JRA.L SCIENCES :tnd MA"n-IEMATICS, as well J.!&lt;o
ENG I NEERING and AJ&gt;P I.I EO SCIENCJ-.:S. Collt:ctiOn:. mdude over 41'5.000
hooks, I ,800 proft'SSionaiJOUm:~ l :-. , l S m il lio n m1crofo rms, and v:lfluu:. amhun sual collcl.1 10ns SEL h:1:. unt' hr.mdl , tht• MATI-I EMATIC"i LIBRARY. [Q("':ltl.'d on
thl' South Cam pu3
SEL offers drrulat 1on and re.'tt:r\'1.' 3t'IYK'e:. 101ntly \\ 11h \ 'GI. Tht· Cm ·ul:t tlo n 1Rt•st·rvt• Dc:-.k 1:. 1tx::1tt-d on the first nuor fin l lC.U Otlwr ~EI. :tt'rYKl'~
mdudC' rcft· rcnn·. Lnterllhr.ll)' loa n. and lihr.tl)' instnKt 1on Cmnplllt'r 'l':lKhm~
l:t abo :1va il:tbk· on .;nt·nn· and l.'ngmel.'rtng d::rt:lh:l!&lt;&gt;t"' hy adv:tnce;- :1ppouHmcnt. CD-ROI'\.1 tl'ch nolugy 111 SEI. .tffords thl.' o pp&lt;) nunll) to 'l.--:m·h ;,: l.·n:un
d:ltaba~t' ' at no t·&lt;)!&gt;t
Tht· I NFORMATI ON TECHNOI.OliY CENTEH { lTC I h o u,t.·' :1 \~lrlt.'l\ 1}/
mH.:n:x:ulllplltl.·r and :tUdiO-\'ISU:II t•quipnwnt Cumplllt'r ~.~qu1pnwnt uwhu.Jc,
Macintosht':., IBi\1 PC' and Sun WorkstatiOil!&lt;&gt; The!-t· computt'r!'&gt; :trt· nt'l\\ urkl'd.
offcn ng :1 v:mt·ty of , oft ware:- . :t.!&lt;&gt; welt .ts connel.'tt~d to lllgh -3\:&gt;c:t:•d b,.,.l.·r pnntl'r'
O ptk-:t l SC:lnnt'T3 ;; re :~vai l:i h l e for l t.'XI :md gr:.1ph1c3 !'&gt;canning The Ca pen lTC
also h:ts VCR.' and :wdioca!&gt;settl.' playt·r:, for \'ldt'O- and :~ud i Ol'.l~!&lt;&gt;l.' ll t' pi.l)'h:lcl.. ,
:1 m k rofkht· rcader/ cop1l'r 1!- abo il \':I IIahlt·
The MAP ROOM 1-" on tht' third lloor o f SEL Th1.' cu llt•&lt;.'tlun of m 't.·r 200.00U
maps mdudl.·s TOPOGRAPH IC, GEOLOG ICAL. Lo\NO USE. HISTO RI CA L. PO ·
LlllCAL. FOREST. WORLO AND CITY M:\I'S . : md ATL-\SFS from :tround tlw
world .
Also on the third noor 1s th e EARTHQUAKE CENTER INFORMATION SERVICE. The Informat ion Serv ice st:tff ha:. devt•lop&lt;:d ::tn intern:monall y 3\.Tt'S..,.Ihlt·
da t ab::~se on ea n.hqu:.tkl' resources ca ll&lt;.-d QUAKELINE. avail:ihle :t!&gt; an MDA!'
file on BISON They also prov1dc specia li zed reft'ren ct~ aS...,ISt:lncc m eanh ·
quake cngmeerm~
SEL o fft·rs J ft't'-h;I.Scd computer sc:a rch and docunwnt ddt\'ef)· : o.t"f\ll."t' , tht'
TECH NICAL INFO RMATION SEARCH SERVICE (llSS), for loca l busm&lt;.'S$\.'S 3nd
any ()(ht:'r rese3rchcrs tntt'rested in packaged information Price;- schedu le:. and
01 her informat1o n Jhou t llSS are available at the Reference Desk o r by ca lll n~

645·2946.
VAX tenninals connected 10 Univer.;ity Com puting Se rv1ces are availablt.· on
the th ird floor. Also. microcomputer instruction for the univer.;hy commumt)' rs
provided in 212 Capen ( in SE L). Arrangements for this computer tr:uning art·
madt' th roug h University Computing Services

�CAPDIIALL,

---~ ( - ' I I C - a)

Circulation/Reserve (lst Floor) 645-2944
Referenre (1st Floor) 645-2945
Fax 645-3858
E-Mail Referenre ASKUGL
URL http://wing;.buffalo.edu/libraries/unitslugl
•

TI1e Undergraduate Libr..ry. commonly ca lled "UGL,"' serves as an entry

poim to the larger UB libr.uy system. Founded in 1973, UGL is designed especially for undergraduates. It is the only undergraduate library in the SUNY
system and 1 of only 34 undergraduate libraries in North Amerio . UGL is a

great place to begin your research and le21m more about the UB library sys·
tern . l...oc'ated on the ground and firs~ floors of cape:n Hall, UGL features ser-

vices and materials designed for the research and study needs of the
undergraduate. Librarians at the UGL Reference/Information Desk can help

wilh all aspens of your researc~rom selecting an interesting topic to locating the best information about it--and will teach you the skills you need to be
"information literate."

UGL's collection of 105,000 books, 600 tournai subscriptions, 50,000 microforms. and variety of study areas wiiJ he lp you do the best work possible for
your courses. Other research sources are available on computer workstations
m the Reference area-including full·screen images of articles, futl·text news
and jou rnal services, college and uni~ersity profiles, and much more. The
Ci rculation/Reserve Desk on the first floor is where you can charge a nd rerum
libra!)' materials and loca te readings placed on reserve by professors. Finally,
when it's time to write your paper, the Information Technology Center, located
on the second floor in the Science and Engineering Library, offers a variety of
computers, software and printers.
Visit the library e learonica lly by using your E·Mail account to ASKUGL.
ASKUGL is an electronic reference service available to anyone with an E-Mail
accoum. Reference questions can be sent to UGL librarians via electronic mail
from the IBM, VAX, and UN JX systems and are answered within twenty-four
hours. E·Mail requests should be sent to ASKUGL o n all platforms.

The UB Libraries are a member of !he Online Library Compuler Cen!er (OCLC),
the world's largesa organization offering computer based services to librarieS
and other users. The OCLC online netWork links more than 20,()(X) libraries in
61 countries and territories. Its central database, the online un;oo catalog, conslsts of over 30 million catalog records with attached holdings information. Not
only is this file a resource that the l.ibr2ries use in cataloging the materials we
acquire , but it is also a tool used in locating materbls requested through Interlibrary Loan. OCLC also offers online reference service to library users through
its First Search Catalog which provides online access to more than 60 databases, including WorldCat {the OCLC online union catalog).

mh~r librart~s on [ampus
In addition to the UB Libraries, there are other collections on campus. Since
these collections complement the research of faculty and/or depaitmental specializations, there may be ceruin restrictions on their use. Consult the staff at
each location for information concerning these libraries.
AliT .aYOIIY . . . . COI.UC1»M
(By appotntmenr only)

508 Clemens Hall (Nonh Campus) 645-2437
-a..IIAIIY

(Open 24 bour&gt; durlngflnal exams)
J67 Fillmore Center, Ellicoo Complex ( North Campus) 645-2348

CAMD ~ a..11A11Y
259 Capen Hall ( Nonh Campus) 645-6865

-WMCIIITDI
17 Baldy Hall (North Campus) 645-2488

DUCA~-y-- ~
24 Capen Hall (North Campus) 645-2802
- . u l . a A - AIIU ..... (IIRAF)
IIAIIIAJIL --~
260 fillmore Cenler, Ellico&lt;1 Complex (Nonh Campus) 645-3357

~- CIIITDI a..IIAIIY
103 Talbert Hall (North Campus) 645-2394
-...aMY

420 CAl'UI (11011T11 CoUII'Ua)

University Archives 645-2916, 645-2918
URL http://wing;.buffalo.edu/libraries/unitslarchives
Poetry/Rare Books Collection 645-2917
URL http://wing;.buffalo.edu/libraries/unitslpl
Fax 645-3714
• Special CoUections include~ the University Archives and the Poetry/ Rare
Books Collection. Materials in these collectio ns do nOI circu late ; however,
materials from the Special Collections can be used in a la rge, comfortable
rt..--ading room . Photocopying services are also avai lable.
University At'chlves: As the official repository of histo rically significant
university records, the University Archives contains materials documenting the
HISTORY OF lliE UNIVERSITY and its srudcnts, alumni, facu lty, and administrators. TI1e collection, comprised of over 7 millio n items, includes university
records, personal and professional papers of members of the university community, officia l university publications, and more than 250,000 photographs
and 2.500 recordings.
Specia l collections include materials relating to the architect FRANK
LLOYD WR IGHT and the DA RWIN MARTIN HOUSE. The Arch ives also maintains a sma ll local history collection and provides infonnation about local
sources available for research in the Buffalo area. .
Poetr)o!Rare Books Collectloru Devo&lt;ed 10 201li CENTURY POOffiY IN
ENG LI SH AND ENGLISH TRANSLATION , 1he Poe1ry Collection con1ains 90.000
volumes by every major and many minor poets writing in English. Recordings
of poets reading from their o wn works, poets' notebooks, letters &lt;.nd manuscripts, and a wide variety of literary magazines are also included in this col·
lection. Approx imately 3,500 linle mag3Zine titles, 1 ,200 current subscriptions,
and a number of port rai ts, scu lptures, and photographs round o ut the collectio n. The collectio n is internationally known for its significant holdings on
JAMES JOYCE. ROBERT GRAVES. DYLAN 11-IOMAS. WYNDHAM LEWIS. and
WlUIAM CARLOS WlliiAMS.
The cornersto ne of the Rare Books Collection is Thomas B. Lockwood's
t.:o l k~tion of first editions of the works of Engl ish language authors from the
16th through 19th centuries.

llniu~rsitg librari~s Oir~ctor ·s~Hie~

(Study area only, open 24 hours durltJg exams)
220 Fillmore Center, Ellicott Complex (North Campus) 645-3649

VlaUAL-CIJRD

School of Architecture and Planning
332 Hayes Hall (Sou!h Campus) 829-3485

locallibrari~s
This is a short list of other libraries in our area you are likely to use.
BUFFALO AND ERIE COUNTY PUBIJC LIBRAIIIU
Downtown I.ocadons

Audiovisual Department .........
. .............................. 858-7188
... 858-7161
Handica pped Services {includes hearing impaired)
Information Scrvl&lt;:cs
Business and Labor .......................................................................... 858-7096
Children .
.......................................................................... 858-7193
Database Searchi ng
............................. (call ind ividual depts.)
Fiction .
. ..................................... 858-7 123
General Reference {Humanities) ..
.. .................... 858-7111
Hours .....
...... .... .........................
.................... 858-8900
Learni ng Center ..
.................................. 858-7123
Microforms ............................................. ........... ......... ................... 858-8303
Music ... .
.. . . ..... .........................
.. .. 858-7 121
Patents ..
. ................... ... . ............................
. ..... 858-7101
Rare Books ...................................................................................... 858-7118

Science &amp; Technology ..
Telephone Directories .
Branch Locations
Amherst Main Ubrary (Audubon)
Clearfield .
Eggensville-Snyder ..
Fairfield ( Amherst Street) ..
Greenhaven (Tonawa nda) ..
Brighton (Tonawanda).

.................................. ........... 689-4922
·················· ········· .................. 688-4955
................................... 839-j)7()()
.......................... 834-7500
. ......... ............................. 694-2111
. ................................ 832-7931

IUWFALO aTATE COUEIIE (Bulle r Librnry) .......................................... 878-6313
CAJiaaaua COUHE l.leiiAIIY .

432-434 CAPO HALL (11011T11 CAMI'Ua)

DADIEN CDlUIIE UIIIIAIIY .

General Information 645-2965
Fax 645-3844
URL http:/lwing;.buffalo.edullibraries/unitsldo

D'YOIJVIu.E COUEIIE ...aMY ...

l11t: Director's Office supportS the admi nistratio n of system-w1de libra.ry services. The Office of the Associate Vice President for University Libraries is
located in 433 Capen Hall. Some o ther functions which operate out of the
Director's Office are: Ubr.~ry Personnel, Budget, BISON, Frie nd-. of the University Libraries, and Venda Card services. If you have problems wi th opera ting
your Venda Ca rd, or if you need to credit Venda Cards with an lmerdepanmental Invoice, please go directly to Room 434 Capen Hall Friends me mberships
are availab le in Room 214 Capen Hall

.................... 858-7101
............. 858-7103

U . - I I I T Y CCK.UIIE

..... 839-8243
................ 881-7618

~

....... 851 · 1074
........... 851 - 1273
. 851-1n2

City Campus .
North Ca mpus .
Somh Campus ..
IIIUDT COUEIIE l.leiiAIIY ....
lllA8AIIA COUIITY COUHE...aMY ..

................................. 888· 2910

649-7900

ITY

73 1-327 1 x401
...... 286-8020

�Ifsllut Th~re ~omemh~
. . . . 0 FIND TilE library materials you want,
you need to follow a "game plan" and
allow yourself some time. At each step of
the research process, you may use both
general and subject-related resources.
These are in a variety of forma ts such as
paper, audiovisual materials, or computer
databases. REFERENCE LIBRARIANS ARE
AVAILABLE IN EACH UB LIBRARY TO HELP YOU
DECIDE WHICH RESOURCES TO USE. The
following "Research Strategy Flow Chart" suggests
the path you should take:
RESE

ARCH

~TH

A

TEG'!'

FLOW

CHART

SEl£1' A TOPIC

READ AN OVERVIEW

IDENTIFY KEY TERMS AND CONCEPTS

IDENTIFY AND
LOCATE

AR11CLES

IDENTIFY AND LOCATE ontER MATERIALS

ld~ntifg and lo[at~ Boobs &amp;
Hndiomsual IDat~rials
BISON
Buffalo InformatiOn System ON line IS the Libraries' computer system. offenng
acceS$ to the UB libraries ca talog, catalogs of selected libraries outside UB. and
selected indexe~ to a rticles from magaz.nes and 10umals ONDX) BISON may
be searched from terminals in the Libraries or by modem from your home or
office computer If you plan to search BISON from your home or office computer. ask for the BISON REMOTE gu1de from an)' reference dt'sk m the Libr.Jr·
ie~

THE UB LIBRARI ES CATALOG IS the largest and most 1mponant BISON
database. Use it to ident1fy books. audiovtSua l materia ls, microforms. mU.!&gt;IC
scores. jou rnal titles, government documents. and other matenals available m.
and on order for, the UB Libranes. Detai led mstructions are available on the
screen, from printed materia ls near the BISON te rminals , or from a reference
librarian. Type help &lt;return&gt; or explalo &lt;return&gt; from a lmost any scn:en to
learn more about the sy5tem or ASK A REFERENCE LIBRARIAN to get hdp at
any poim in your sea rch.
TO S IAIICH 11IE u• DATASAH FWOIII A TERMINAL IN THE u•IIARIU :

•

SEARC

H

Type 1 &lt;raurn&gt; to get into the UB LIBRARIES CATALOG

•

Type your sea rch statement a nd then press &lt; ~tum &gt; Search b)'
TinE ( t• ), AliTHOR (a•), SUBJECf (s•&gt;. MEDICAL SUBJECf (sm•&gt; .
or KEYWORD (k•). Example: t•double hellx &lt;rrturn&gt;

•

Follow the directions at the bouom of the ~en to browse:.• through
the results of your search

•

Look at the RECORD for each uem of lntt.· rc:st. then pnnt the screen or
make a no te of the LOCATION . CAU NUMBER . and STAruS

To loca te the materials )'OU identify in the UR libane!-1 catalog, go to tht.• hbr::tr)
indicated in the lOCAnON line. where you will find thL' matenal.s organ l7.t.'cl
by CALL NUMBER . The Libraries use different ca ll number schemes. so l:x:- ~ ure
to ask if you need help mterpreting the call number or determmmg us locauo n
in the library. Be sure to check the STA11JS message m each record to Set:' 1f
the book is in the library. If the item IS not on the shelves. ask 31 tht.· Cm·ui&gt;J ·
tion Desk. ll ems \Vh1ch arc cha rged o ut may ht· RECALLED or pla('(•d ON
HOLD for you (see the "HOLDS AND RECALlS" scct1on of 1h1s GUidt.' )
Materia l... nOl owned h)' the UB libranes may he available from otht.·r loc.:·:tl
libraries or th rough Inte rlibrary Loan (for more informatiOn. t·onsuh "INTERll ·
BRARY LOAN" m this Gu ide)

ld~nti~ and lo[at~ Rrtides
To identify journal. magazine . and/or newspaper art 1 de~ on yo ur to pK , yo u
w ill need to usc an index or abstract ing tool Indexes and :tb..;;;rract.s kad yo u ro
art icle ci tations by subject. Abstracts difrcr from indexes m that rhey contam a
brief description of the conte nts of the a n1clc. Tht: Uniwrs iry Libraries sutr
scribe to hundreds of indexes and abstracts. Consult a reference librari::tn to
select the two o r three most useful indexes or abstracts for researchi ng yo ur
particular topic . In consu lting with a libranan. you w1ll find that indexes and
abstracts are available in a vanety of formats.

STRATEGY

•

Selecting an interesting "wo rkable ~ topic ts the crucial first step in undertaking
a project involving significa m li brary resea rch. Yo ur topic should not be so
broad that you are overwhelmed with research material or so narrow that you
are struggling to find su fficient in format ion. Most importantl y, you want to
select a topic that will ho ld your interest throughout the research and writing

processes. Reference librarians can lead you to a variery of sources to he lp
you generate topic ideas. It is a good idea to consul! with the instructor assigning the research paper to make certain that your ideas for topics are readily
resea rchable a nd have sufficie nt focus

R~ad an ~u~rui~rn
After selecting a mpic, the next step in the research process is to identify and
read materia l wh ich g ives an overv iew of the topic. The University Libmries
own hundreds of sources w hich provide background informalion o n thou·
S3nds of research to pics. These include subject encyclopedias, h andboo~.
yearbooks, state-of-the-art reviews, magazine cover stories, and textbooks just
ask a referehce librarian fo r assistance in determini ng the hcst place to sta n
fmding info rmatio n on your topic!

ld~nti~ H~g T~rms and [on[~pts
Read the overview a rticlt.· ca refu l!)' and criuc3 ll y to 1dentify tht.• kl'y term.) and
concepts of your topic. Usc dict io naries--both general and suhject-to ddinc
the key terms. The Libr:mes ca n asstSt in this area of rt'search with hundred:.
of gene ral and specialized dictionaries Ask for help if you need 11

Type start &lt;return&gt; 10 see the DATABASE ELEcnON MENl 1

•

•
•
•
•
RE

..

Printed (book fom1at) indexes/ abstracts
Selected recent compute rizt:d mdexcSJ abstracts on BISON
Computerized indexes/ abstracts on CD-ROM
Computerized o nline indexes/abstracts wh1ch usuallr mvolve a
search ing fee
Online indexes v1a U BWing~ (e g f lr&lt;&gt;r.st·a rch. Carl llnco\'er )

[omput~ri2~d Databas~s
111c Uhrarie.!o publish a lisr entirled "Computerized Databht.'!- fo r Rc...,.ean._.h ..
which is available m each library. RI SON computeri7.L'd d:H:~nases and CD- I{OM
da tabases are quire user-friend ly , and the re 1s printed material available next to
each computer terminal to heir you with the SC3rchmg process (Of course. 1f
)'OU have any questions concern ing St:archmg tt:chniqut:.!o, reference lihranan!-1
are available to help you during regu lar refL'rent·e hours) On hne datahasc~ :~rc.·
typica lly searched by a reference librarian. If you arc interestt..--d in paring for
this type of compu terized sea rch (usua ll )' because thcrt.· are no appropnate
BISON o r CD-ROM databases a\·ailabit.' for your top1c or yo u \vant to updatt: :t
CO-ROM or BISON sea rch). consult a rderenc~ librarian
Most indt'xes and abstracts prov idt: you with 3 citation (I(' . 3uthor of tht•
art1cle . name of th e article . title of the iOUmal. volume numher of the 10 umal.
da te of the 1ournal, and pagL' num be r of the artlt"ld You must take th e add• ·
ttonal step of determini ng if th e Univt.· rslt)' Libranes own tht... JOurnal issut'
containing the artiCle you neL'd. To do th1s, go to any Bl ON tem1mal. typt.·
start &lt;return&gt; and choose tht: un libraric.!o cata log 31 the Da tabase Selt.·t•t•on
Menu . Then typt.: , .. &lt;the lllit: of the JOurnal&gt; &lt;return&gt; (not tht.· :trtlclt.· 111\t.'l
that you are lookmg fur
Tben.• an! tu 'O maJor e:.rC£ptions to the above practJCt• for

lcxalitt~ JOIInwls 111

tbe

flnit~.&gt;rsf~1 · Ltbmrles

1 . 11ll'rc.· are severa l computL'n zcd full -tt:Xt mdL'xe~ abstract:. , '\uch J.:. GPO
(Ge,wml Periodicals On Disc) in the Undergraduate: Liba.~ry , wh!C'h g•n:~ vn u
til&lt;" t._. a p3t'll }' tO rrint the lCIUal article at a computer termm:tJ
2. Tht· BISON mdcxes/ abstracb (from tht: BISON Da tabase Sclect 1o n Mt.·nu and
the n sclet1 :a databasL' from the list) have rhe capahilit)· to f.:l\'t.' )'Ou the: lllt"!&gt;·
sagt' -Held by libr.tr)· " If you see thts statemL'nt at thL' OOuo m or tht· ARTI CLF
RECORD scrt."Cn . type hoi &lt;return&gt; to receive preose locatto n mform:tt•o n
If you ascertain that the Unlloerslty Libraries do 1101 011'11 t1 jounwl tbat )'0/1 llt't.' d
yo u bat!f! 111'0 options
I. Subm1t an lnterlibral)' Loan Request ht·t.· "t.'CIIo n o n "INTERLIBRAR'I
LOAN " in the Gtudt: ) or

�~

A II E

2. If you are unable to wait the one to three weeks It often takes to get an
article through Interlibrary Loan and you are willing to travel co ancxher library, consult the Westenr New York Regional Union Catalog available at the
Lockwood Ubrary, Undergnduate Ubrary, Science and Engineering Ubrary
and the He2hh Scien~ Ubrary to see if the journal issue you need is owned
locally (a list of local libraries is provided in this Guide)

The University Ubraries are a treasure trove of useful rese-o~rch materials be-

yond books, journals. magazines, newspapers. and audiovisual materials. Refe rence librarians have the expert ise and tools to help you 1dentify :md IOC"ate
pcrtincm associations, government documents , sta tistics, conference proC&lt;.-cdmgs , book reviews, dissertations, biographical matenal, manuscripts , microform setS , bibliographies, electronic resources, etc. JUST ASK!

Borrornin~ librarg materials
\X1uh ten lihr.uic!&gt; and millions or book and journal resou rces. th~re 's somedung for everyone at UB. 'fhen you want to take libra ry materiab outside of
tht: library , follow these steps:
1. ldcntlr)' the ca ll number of the ncc."Cted item from a BISON te rmin al

2. Fmd tht· 11em on the shelf.

3. Prc.·St·nt )'OUr UB SUI\rvCa rd at the lihr.1ry's Circulation Desk.

(Uultlf!rsfty a/

Buflalu S1VDENTS, FACUL7Y, and STAFF may borrow ltbrary malcrlals) Eli·
g1hlt: nun-UB harrowers must obtain a Uni versity Ubraries Special Borrowers
Card from authorized libr.try st:1ff. For eligibility requi rements, see the M
SPECIAL BORROWERS" section
4. A..o. yo u leave the library , you will pass through a book dctecuon system. An
:alarm w1ll !&gt;-OU nd 1f library m:ucrials h:1ve not bec:n properly checked o ut at the
Cm·ul:it1 0 n Desk Be sure to chec k out m:ncrills at the Ci rculation Desk when
r ou plan to lt.·an: the libr.ll)'

Bonornin~ Periods
APL, MATH, IISL, SEL, AND UQL u•RARIU

4 weeks for all borrowers
MUSIC UaRARY

4 weeks for all UB students and Special Borrowers
16 weeks for UB Faculty/Staff
LAW AND LOCKWOOD UaRAIIIES

4 weeks for UB students (except doctoral) and Special Borrowers
16 weeks for UBfaculty, staff, and doctoral students
Journ:tb and rl'fert·m-e material~ normally c::mnot be: taken outs1dc of the: library Check with Cir&lt;·ulation Departme nt pc.:rsonnel if you have a n~· quest1ons.
With the exception of Reserve, lnterlihr:JI)' l..o:m. and Special Loan items,
hhr.JI)' m;lh.:riab may be retu rned :at the Circtlb tJon Desk of any UB Libr.try
Cl:11ms regarding the rt.'lurn of libra I)' mate ria ls will not be honored wi thout :a 11hr.try·issucd rece1pt. Re&lt;·e1pts for rciUmed materials may he obta ined at
an)' lihr.ary Circu lation De:-.k upon request

Reserue [olle[tions
H.cqutn.~d

readings used m conm.~l110n " ·•th clas:-. :t'!ts tgnmcnt!&gt; arc rt.·:-.en•cd for
use 10 spcci:tl areas of somt: or tht.· tJU LibrJrics Reservt.' item:-. Me available to all Mudt:ntS cnrollt.-d 10 a pantcular das..;; Bee..·;• use these.~ sma ll (.'OII cctiOO!&gt; :.trc..· 10 such heavy demand. tht.· foll o \viOg spc.~ 1 al nil e~ for use arc strictJy
enforced.
da~

HOW TD · - W RESERVE MATERIALS

lkscrvc: lb t!3o, o rg:1 nized h)' the m~t ru ct or':-. n:tme . arc.· kc.·pt at tht.• Reserve Desk
or the library where the m a t t.•nal~ ha\'C !x-en ptu:ed 13orrowcn. 111U!'-t n:qucst
1tems by author :tnd tit lt' and m:t)' he rt•qturcd to present a Rt:scrve Request
Sli p to obtain mat(•ri.:lis.
The: number of items th:u mar ht.· c:h:uged uut to any one p3tron at one ILmt' 1s
restricted :as SJX."Cifit.-d: law, 10 itc.·m ~. All o the r unit~ . 3 ncm~
LOAN PIEJitDOS

• 2 Hour, Library Use Only
Due at ho ur speci fi ed

• 2 Hour/Overnight
Due I hour after libmry opem (Law 2 ho urs aftr:r ope ning)

• 3days
Due on day specified

• 7 days (Lawonly)
Due on day specified
All reserve materials must be returned to the Reserve Desk of the l ibr.uy from
which they were borrowed Fines will be assessed for items returned to an-

ot he r li bra I)'

--~

Reserve borrowers must present UB SUNYCards. Non·UB borrowers with a
University Libraries Special Borrowers Card may use Reserve materials (but in
the library only).

-

B ecause of the high demand for items in Reserve ColJections, loan periods are
relatively short. All borrowing privileges will be stopped ror a library user in all
UB Libr.uies o ne day after a Reserve item is noted as overdue. Tile
for a 2·
hour loan is S.OS per minute ($20 maximum). For 3-&lt;by and 7-d.ay loans, the
fine is SS ~r day ($20 maximum). Fines accrue even when the library i.s dosed
on weekends and holidays.

rll\e

liB faml~. ~taft. and ~tndmt mards
After October 1, 1995, all UB faculty, staff, and students must present a vaJid
UB SUNYCard in order to borrow materia ls from any University Ubrary.
SUNYCards are non·tr:lnsfe1"3ble; UB faculty and staff and disabled Individuals
may obtain proxy cards eithe r in person or by advance -mail requesa from any
Circu lation Desk.
Faculty, staff, and student UB SUNYCards are issued by the SUNYCard
O ffi ces IOC"ated on the North Dmpus at 230 Stude nt Union and on the South
Ca mpus in Harriman Hall.
loss of a SUNY Card shou ld be reponed immediately to the SUNYCard
Office at 64s-2346. Replacement C3rds ca n be obta ined at a cost of $10.00.

Renewals
Students and most specia l borrowers may renew irems three times unless hems
are overdue o r have been requested by other patrons. UB and Open Access
faculty/ staff may renew three times unless items have been requested by cxher
patro ns.
Renewals can be made in person or by mail, but cann01 be honored over
the phone. Renewals can be made upon presentation or the actu:~l items or a
list o f the hems' barcode numbers Ooca ted in the back of librnry items). To
renew books elect ronicall y, visit the Ubaries Web pages at hnp:l/
wings.buffalo.edullibraries. look for the services menu option.

Holds and Re[alls
Borrowers ca n request that a HOLD be placed on any libr.try item already
checked out or the library. A HOLD insures that the ma terial will be available
to the requeste r upon the return of the items to the library. When the items are
re turned to the library, a notice is sent through the nuilto the HOLD requester:
the HO LD requester then has the option to borrow these items. A HOLD elimin;Hes wasted time checking o n the location/sLatus or circu lating materials and
insures that the item will be ava ilable.
Books may be RECALLED from borrowers upon the request of another
borrower o r if needed fo r a Reserve Collection. A Reserve request will have
precedence over all HOLDS.

BI~~ll Dillin~ and Borrornin~ mfi[e
PAYMENT 1M . . . . -:

Fines ca n be paid in person at :
BISON Billing/Borrowing Office
214 Capen Hall , Nonh Campus
64S-59SO
Enter the Undergraduate libr.uy on the firsl: floor in Capen Hall and use eleva·
to r inside.• librory to go to the second fl oor
PAYMENT ay llAJL:

Make checks payable to :
State University of New York a t Buffalo
Scnd chc.-ck or money order, with origi n!ll BISON notice to
University libraries
BISON Billing/Borrowing Office
State University of New York at Buffalo
214 C:lpen Hall , Buffalo. NY 14260-1625
PAYMENT A T - SITE LOCATIONS
( ru!ar tbe Circulalio" Desks altbe Lockuvotl. !Au·. H£"UIIh Scitmces ami Undergradue~te

Libraries)

•

Fill in transaction slip.

+

Rctain bottom copy for your records. No other receipt will be issued .

•

lnsen payment , to p copy of transaction
envelope a nd put in DROP SAFE.

~ lip ,

and original BISON notice in

For proper crediting of your account, UBitAltY FINE NOTICE OR 8~ MUST
ACCOMPANY PAYMENJ'. PAYMENJ' AT DROP SITE LOCATIONS IS AN
OPTION AVAilABLE ONl.Y DURING LIBRARY HOURS. See library
schedu le ::available at all Library Circulation Desks .

�__

Overdue charges , replacement costs, and a processing charge will be levied for

,

P A 8 E

all lOSI or da.m2ged materials.

$25/item
HE UB LIBRARIES offer a number of
~C-:

special services which make the re earch

In-Print-Current cost of item
Out-of-print--Average current item cost by unit
+ APUSSO
+ LMUSSO
+ MATH/ $1 00 + MUS (Book), SSS, (Scorc)/ $40
+ HSU SI OO
+ SEU SIOO
+ LAW/ $70
+ UGU$30

process a linie easier. Whether you access
information electronica lly , o r visit the
Libraries to conduct your research. yo u will
find special services available to help you .
Among them are typing and

fin~s

microcomputing facilities, phowcopying

Fa ilure to pa y fmcs may n:~ ult 10 the loss o f borrowing p rivile ges. suspensio n
o f regiStratio n . a nd a b o sto p!&gt; the d ist ributio n o f transcripLS.
Claims regard1ng reiUrn o f library materials will no t be hono red witho ut a
library-1ssued rt."Ccipt Fine!&gt; accrue a t the rat e of $.50 per day ($20 maximurr &gt;
fo r each da y ovcrdut•. INCLUDING days the library is closed . suc h as weeke nds and ho lida y!&gt; Pa }'mCnt sho uld be mad e e ither in person at o r b)' mail to
the BISON Bilhng a nd Borrow10g O ffi ce

Int~rlibrarq loan (DlJ
Research mate na b \v hk h art: n ot o wned by the UB Libranes m ay be borro wed
fro m o ther libranes thro ug h Inte rlibrary Loan Services.
A minimum o f two weeb sho u ld be a llowed fo r receipt o f mate rials . More
t1me should b .: allo wed as the semester progresses; the number o f interlibrary
lo an requeslS 10c rc:l ~!&gt; dr.tmatiC.J II y as deadlines fo r te rm papers and class
ass ignme nlS a pproaeh To s peed the delivery proces~. a SUNY EXPRESS ser\'ICC has bee n 10it1a ted amo ng the fou r SUNY Ct:nters · Buffalo, Binghamto n .
Alb&lt;'ln}' and Sto ny Brook If the destred matc:na l is avai lable at any of these
university centers . the re quest IS t~ut om :uic all y rou ted and filled pro mptl y.
Ccrtam restm·uo ns a ppl)• to lnt e rlibrJry Lo:1n requ ests . Only ma tl.'rials no t
;tVail::abl c a t UH may be borrowed . Futhe m1o rc. ccnain trpes o f mate rials wh1c h
no rma lly do no t n rc ulate (suc h 3!&gt; ra n:• hooks. ma nuscripts, fragil e ma terials.
r ~feren ce hook:.. c: lt" J w1ll not he avai la ble thro ugh Interlibrary Loa n Ho wevt:.•r.
o tocop ie!-1 of c ha ptL·n. a nd anicleJ:o fro m no n-ci rculating mate ria ls ca n be
ai ned, provided that the request d oes not vio late cop ynght law
UaRAitiES INTERUaRARY LOAN OFF1CU ARE:
GENERAL UaRARtES: A\ .; •!a ble to faculty . reg i s t e r~ stud e nt ~. a nd staff wlto a rc

no rmally served by a nr of the Gene ral Libraries (L\1L. SEL. lJG L. APL. Math )
and the Mus ic Library Tlw Ve ne ra ! Libr.tries ILL o ffi ce i... located in Lockwood
Library . set:ond Ooor. south side . The pho ne number is 64S-2812 Fo r patrons
served by the Gene ral Libraries. a n E-M::ail service-UBLOAN- is :IVailable for
submiu ing reques1s dectromcally. At the system prompt in E-Mail , typing
LIBLOAN brings the lo an request fo rm to the screen . A series o f easy to fo llo w
directio ns make thb service conve nient to use . Yo u rna)' a lso s ubmit req uests
vi :t the Libr.Jries Web page at hu p ://wings. buffalo. ed u/lihraries. Look under
the ·servi ces~ o ption
LAW UUARY: Ava ilable to

La \\

School faculty a nd studt•nts o nly.

and electronic mail reference service.

The Gene ral Lib raries (lockwood. SEL. a nd UGU no ~ o ffc.: r clt'&lt;."t ronl~ m:u l
reference serv1cc fo r info rm:uio na l que rie!a O ur l"IL·ct ro n~ c m.ul rt-ft· re JKt· .td·
dresses a re : UN LOCK. ASKSEL. a nd ASKUG I.

Tqpin~ fa[iliti~s
The Unwe rsit }' l.ibrnric!l. o ffe r a va nc tr of c&lt;Jt n p m ~ nt :10d f.ll' til t' e' to prepa rt·
tc m1 pa pers . rest.-a rc h repons. a nd o ther don unL"Oh Alo ng tr:td lltonal I me\ we
offer the fo llo w10g t}'pmg facllltll'J:o

•
•

Health Sciences Ubrary · ' 1gn up a t ti lt" rl"'l"f\t." dt:!ak

•

law Ubrary . !'&gt; lg n up m A ud t OV I~ u a l Dl·p:t nmL·nt I ) th fltxJr 1

•

Lockwood Ubrary - d1eck out kt·v :11 tlw t urren t pl·flodJl:a J.,
r1..'SCf\'C dc:.k

o nly. Health ca re pro fessio nJb. 13\v f'iml~ . businesses, and individ uab nut
associated with UR s ho uld contact the lnfo ml3tion Disseminatio n Sc rvu.:t· :11

R[[~55 to ~th~r librari~s
'

UB studcms. fa n dty. :tnd ~ t :tiT nw r borro w m:ucnab fro m the lihr.tncs o f o ther
educatio na l ins tituti On.!&gt; m Nl..' \\' York State. w11h ccn a in pro vb 1o ns ·n le!&gt;c.: In·
dude :
• All SUNY lnMIIUIIOll!&gt; a nd .my ~ ·o nunumty college in Ne\v Yo rk ~t a t e p:lnll'l ·
pating in the O PEN ACCESS p ro~r.ull -:l\'3 1l a bl e to li B SllldCnt .!&gt; . f~t l' Uh)' and
staff: requ lrt:J:o a tJ B SUN YC:a rd
•

Weste rn New Yo rk IOstitU tiOfh p:t rt Ktpating in the Library AlTC:&gt;o!&gt; PrOJL"{_1

( LAP I 3\'3 ila b le to U B fantlty and resea rch staff as we ll as gr.Jdua tL' and p rofes-

sio na l students who h:l\'l' obta mt.'&lt;.l an lnfo pa!i") fro m a li B Library .
• Unh·crs1ty o f RocheML"r a nd S)'i.KU:&gt;L" Unl\'l' rSity-av:til:ihk· to UU f:ll"uh y
a nd doctor..d J:o tudcms, rL·qtmc:. a UB SUNYC:m l :md a ll'tte r o f introcl uct1u n
fro m :1 ll B library l"lfCUhHI OI\ dL' IXIrtllle nt !&gt;UpcrVISOf

JJuffalv rcsidc•ul:!. m uluo n rc.osidt'lll stude,ls am/ sw.ff tl t'P C'ligibh• tu app~ r for
bunvu•IIIR prll'ilt'J.:L'Sjrom /h(' /Juffa /o a nd Erl1• Counly Public Libmn·. a libran ·
carrlll"iiiiJt' ts.w l'd upon prt·~ii' ltlolfon nfprtJ()J uf lucol mul 1ur perm mu•m a d
dn.•ss

K29·Hl9

ffiinommpntin~ farilities
Adva nced tL'l~hn o l ogy ha!&gt; eaSt'd thl· d lure.. o l t }' p tn ~ .md till" l lB Lthr.lnl·:-. .
alo ng with University Computtng Sc f\"ll"C!'&gt;. :trl" pleaM.:d h l ofTt•r mKrLK·nmpu t m~
faci littes at the fo llo w10g lc)(;":ltto ns
NORTH CAMI'US

•

Information Technology Center ( ITC)
lO lA Ca pen Ha ll in SEL: Mac10tosh
2:07 Capen 1·1:1 11 10 SEL: M:tci ntosh fl' l;lssroom l
l i Z Ca pen Hall m SEL IBM PS l !&gt;. SUN \X'ork!&gt;t:ll ton:.

•

UCS Clemens Computing Facility
128 Cle me n .. 1t.1ll IBM PS/2,!o., M ac mt o~h

•

CIT Baldy Computing Center
201 Bal d ~· Hall IBM llS 2 ..

•

Music Ubrary

HEALTH SCIENCES UBRARY: Available to Health Scie nce!&gt; faculty :~ n d ~t ud cnt!&gt;

829·335 1

Architecture and Planning Ubrar y · dll'd.: nu t kc ) .t t thl·
circulatio n des k

B:m d 11.111

~ 1.1 ~

().i::;; . r .~

()..::;;.r .h-+"·.U!O

mto:-.h

SOUTH CAMPUS

•

UCS Crosby Microcomputer Fac illty
')1 '5'i Cm.. h\ H.tll I B ~ l I'S 1:. . M:Knll u:.h

•

Health Sciences Ubrary
H.!9 · "thlt

IDin~s
\X1tOA!a pnn1tk ..

dc~·tnll\ l l .llll""''n'nlurmathJil .t houtt.ll n pu ...111d lttmmuntl\
re:&gt;l'&lt;l rl·h . d., .... ~.... &lt;... il.th '~' .t nd more.· Yt &gt;u \\ Ill h nd .1l mo.,1 .til .I.. J"'lt."l!-. .tlh.l ~k
p:! Milll"nl :o. ,,] I II r&lt;..·pn·'-l" llt cLl ..1.. \\dl ·'" n..·..tHirn:' th.il .lfl' :1\"J tl .1hk ..H ro .. , ihl
I ' S :a nd :Il l OH"r th1..· \\ orld Fl n·t nt fll ~ d.t l.l :n .u l.th ll' t hrnu~h t]u., ~.l l t'\\.1\
&lt;:unttn Ul" " tt l ~rot\\ t\0 .1 d.nh h:~-. , ..
11w L1hr.tnt'" pont&lt;~n ul th&lt;..· \\Ill_~.! .. l .unpu .. " Ilk· mlormatu m .,, .,,~,_·m u.,c,
thl• \\ 'c1rJd · \\ I l k \\ l"h Itt p111 ,\ rll h . l rr,l\ tll 'l"ll"tt ithf.if\ l"l"'IIUill"" .II \ o tll!
fi ngl"M IJ1" Till""' m .. lud~: HI..,&lt; lr-..: l H.ll ttln d.n.th .l -.t"" .. uch _,., Ft.-.. t ... l·.tr.. h .Ill\ I
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lldd ..Ill,! \'H""'l'lltnl th fl ttJ_l!h .IUl"""lhlt· \ \ d ' l p.l~l"' To lt·.1rn 11h •rt• .t h nut till
lntt·nwl ,ht·l l.. tht· ·\munn\ ( t"llll"llh ~ 't·num o lt ht· l.1br.mt·.. \\t ·h 1t1r !lht.tltv ...
llll t"mt· l \\ tJrJ...,Ju'r" t ou llllt Jnll. ll htn ctn htl\\ t ••t-11111\t"ll 111 \XI'\t i ' ~·l!l t.tll ti ll·
ALtdt·nm "l"l"\ltt ·~ t.umputm~ ln lurm.ltllll\ .md "lnhnnlct_l!\ l \"lll"l I kip lk .. l-.
.11 !l t"i F1 1..~ , 1r .,~·nd ~· m.ul ttl&lt;.() '"l "LT

�Buffalo fRH·ll~t

librarg ~~mi[~S .for P~rsons mitk Disabiliti~s

The Buffalo FREE-Net provides access to a broad r.~nge of community-focused,
on-line information to computer users across Wesr.em New York. In panicular,
the FREE-Net provides a means by which are2 students and leacher.i an become acquainted with computer-based information resources and tools such as
the INTERNET. The Buffalo FREE-Net and US-Wings are linke-9 so it is convenient to move from one to the other.

The University Libraries provide auxiliary services, facilities, and equipment for
libr.uy users with a dWbiJiry. Each service i5 designed to make Libory materi~
als readily accessible to all .
Services are available for any individual regiscered wilh Disability Services,
capen 25, Nonh campus, 645-26o8, mo 645-2616. Regislmion with oos is
n&lt;&gt;l required , but recommended, for an individual with a disability to access
services and equipment. Each library must supply infonnalion concerning specific services and facilities. Contact personnel should be called in adva.nce of a
vlsil 10 1he libr.tries if 3ny special arrangements are required

Photo[opgin~
Photocopiers are located throughout the library system. Copies cos1 $. 10 e-.&amp;ch
Photocopiers also accept S I bills. Machines are operated by cash and
vendacards.
The VcndaCard System features re-encodable cards , which have a one time
charge of S.6o and can be purchased for $1 (includes SAO copy credit) from
encoder/ dispensers located in the Heahh Sciences, Law, Lockwood, Undergraduate , and Science and Engineering Libr.~ries . Additional instructions for
use of the encoder/ dispensers are prinled on each machine.
VendaCards purchased a1 UB will operate only a1 the UB Libraries.

+
+
+

+

CAMPUS

LIBRARIES

MAP

1
OSCAII A. SILYDilAII
U-.uiUATE
U8IIAIIY:
~

Hall, ground and
lstjloor.

-!HI
SCIEIICE AND

U8IIAIIY:
c;ape,1 Hal/, 2ud ami J rrl
}loon
aPECIAL
CDLLECTJONa:
420 Capen Hall

2

3
LOCKWOOD
MEMORIAL UBRARY

4
MUaiC U8RARY:
Bulrd f-lail. lsi floor

SOUTH

1
ARCHfTICTUft AND
PLANNIN8 U81tARY:
Hayes Noll

2

3
MKALTH SCIENCES

LI8RARY:
Abbott Hall

CAMPUS

LIBRARIES

MAP

645·2160

Music Library ................................................................................
Sclentt a.od l!nglnccrlna Library
Ruth Oberg .
.. .............. ....
Special Collcctlons
Christopher Densmore (Ar&lt;Nves) .. .. . ........................................
Robert Bertholf (Poetry/ Rare Books) ..
.. ....

+

NORTH

Law Library

+
+

c 1104-95

Health Sciences Library
Sharon Murphy .............................................................................. 829-3337 _
Marcia Zubrow

dcpartmental Invoice cha rging a departmenta l account or grant. These cards
are i!.sued as requested to mee1 the individual's or department 's p3rticular
need Fo r more inform:uion. con1ad the Libl"3ry Administrative Office, 6452974 . or go 10 Room 434 in Capen Hall.

Produud b}' tbt&gt; Un1~ u1
811jfulo ~of Publkanom.
Dlt-'inofl o{l.lhh&lt;rml)· ~

- - ------ 829-3505
.. ..... 829-3278

Lockwood MemorW Library
...........................................
Karen Senglaup ..

•

n ee- AU8JU11995

Plannioa Library.

Mathematics Library ...

+

NOTE: Venda Cards can be issued to faculty or staff members lhrough an lmer-

lllere 1!) a dollar bill change machine located in the Lockwood Library on the
No rth Campus. Additionally, there is a five dollar bill changer located in the
vending area outside o f the Student Accounts Office on the 2nd Ooor of Capen
Hall, North Campus. Occasionally, these machines run out of change; it is
always a good idea to bring cha nge (dimes, nickels. quarte~) or your
vendacard with you when you know that you'll be phoux:opying. Our photocopie~ also accep1 S I bi lls. S1aff a1 the Circu lation Desks of UB Libraries cannot make change for you-so be prep3red!

Archl.ICCtUrc and

Undergraduate Library
Glendora johnson.COOper

.. .... 645·2815
645-2923
645-2946
645-2916
645·2917

....... 645-2943

11tle 28 of the Code of Federul Regulalions, Implemen ting 11tle U of tbt• Americans wUb Disabilities Act qf 1990, dtiflnes a disabled pmon as one wbo bas ( 1) a pbyslcQJ or menial Impairment wblcb substonllaJ/y II milS one or more major lfjr acllultfl!:s, (2) a record of s:ucb an
lmpalrml'7JI, or (3) Is resarded as boult'IJ such an tmpotrmerrt, u.71Jo CQn, wllb or u'llbout
reasonable accommodation perform I be essential fimctWtu of a job, or m£'ef tiN essential
reqult'f!ments for recdpl of a :service or participation In a fW'OBram

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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    <collection collectionId="166">
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        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Reporter</text>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
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          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1403649">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451945">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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        </element>
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            <name>Title</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403627">
                <text>Reporter, 1995-08-31</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403628">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403629">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403630">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403631">
                <text>Insert: "Guide to UB Libraries"</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403632">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403633">
                <text>1995-08-31</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403635">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403636">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403637">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403638">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403639">
                <text>LIB-UA043_Reporter_v27n01_19950831</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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                    <text>..............

Will" . . . .
UB graduate Molly

,. 2

Raiser' is Chief of
Protocol.

Freell .......
to An. . . .

GolnCfor

tile Gold

Chemistry
researchers
synthesize new
structures.

Students, prof travel
to Africa to help gold

,. 2·

mining project.

Greiner calls '95-96 budget

:~~t di~.~!ft_~~v:~~:~
epo&lt;ter

or
H E EXACT NUMBERS probably won ' t
be known until early
July. but universityoffi·
cials are predicting that
UB will face a 1995-96 budget cut
thatrangesfrom$6milliontomore
than $8.5 million.
l..egislatorspassedthestatebudgetonJune7,makingitthesecond
latest and narrowly missing last
year's record 69-day delay. And
whileitincludesrestorationof$103
million of the original $290 mil lion cut proposed by the Feb. I
executivebudge~ the numbers still
fall considerably short of where
they were a year ago.
''It's the most difficult bud gel
we' ve ever faced." said UB President WiUiam R. Greiner. " It comes
on top of a steady string of reduclions in the past few years. Unless
some different resol ution can be
workedoutintheyearsahead, we'll
have to face a radical restructuring
of the university."
SUNY won ' t be able to make

T

According to Senior Vice President RobertJ. Wagner. the tuition
income requirement is $144 million. although even with tuition
increases, the estimated revenue
from tuition is only about $115
million. Proposed tuition increases
currenllyare$5.50peryearforassociatedegreecandidates: S7.50per
year for in-state undergraduates:
$! , !()()per year for graduate students and $2,390 for medical and
dental students.

nd two major fiscal issues. which could mean a potential loss to UB of another S3
million. are unresolved: the continuation of the State University
Tuition Reimbursable Account
(SUTRA). which may be discontinued. and full funding of tuition
scholarships for supported graduate students.
The final state budget also provides selective restoration of tu·
it ion assistance at both the
undergraduate and graduate levels. with the Educational Opportu-

cent budget restoration. graduate
TuitionAssistance Program(TAP)
receiving.SOpercentrestorationand
aid to part-time students fully restored.
People hear the word "restoration.~ and they think all the problems have been solved. said
Voldemar lnnus. senior associate
vice president for university services. "Even though there's been
restomtion. we have a very big
problem to deal with." he said.
And part of !hat problem is that
there has been® improvement in
SUNY 'sorthe campuses· nexibil ity to manage.
" If you can' t send money. send

A

f~ .

but what we have is no

money and no freedom.·· ~id
Greiner. who expressed disappointment that the chancellor and the
elected leadership were unable ·~o
reach a package of reforms that are
desperately needed.··
The only way the university is
going to survive the current budget
crisis is through "a management
Continued on page 3

UB begins switch to SUNYCard:
signup process starts next week
•:rC-VIDAL
Reporter Ednor

T

HE CASHLESS society

comes a step closer next

week as UB begins the
switch
to
the
SUNYCard. a multipurpose photo identification card that
will replace those currently in use
by all faculty , staff and students.
The all-in-one. free SUNYCard
' will replace the myriad cards that
members of the UB community

"We want to simplify your ability
to move about this campus and
partake of servictJS by giving you a
single card to do these things."
The SUNYCard will serve a

carry: identification cards, meal
cards. residence hall and building
access cards. photocopy vend-acards. long-&lt;fistance calling cards.
Hence. the slogan, " It's all in
the card .... "
Already in use at Fredonia.
Geneseo and Buffalo State where
pilot programs were conducted this
spring. "this is a project that affects
S UN Y. the community coll eges.
C UNY and Cornell," said Leonard
F. Snyder, UB associate vice president and controller, who is UB's
SUNYCard implementation team
chair.
wEvery campus bas, to some
degree. the problem we have-the
proliferation ofcards," said Snyder.

number of funcuons :

• Photo identification card for
faculty. staff and students that replaces the previous card and. for
students, eliminales the need to
have their cards validated
each semester. individual
cardholder status will be
maintai ned
,n
the
SUNYCard campus database:
• Library card:
• Dining sen•ice card;
• Building and residence hall access card:
• Optional "cashless··

___
... ___.......
_

_,

_,_

10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tueoday. Jwie 27
7 a.m.-6 p.m. Wcdllesday. JUDe 28
10 a.m.-&amp; p.m. Thwsday. JUDe 29
10'"-tQ-·S p.m . .Friday, JUDe 30

Ill order ID obWa your fnoe
SUNYCud. JOG-~ lppiO-

pn."-i"•"-.-.••-IIUdt:at JD C8ld, driwr'• ~

pa~~~a~tarocbK

!"- m•!flo .,,..

use of services such as
laundry facilities. vending
machines and photocopi-

ers;
• Optional telecommunication services;
• Optional banking services. wbich enable the
card bolder to make pointof-sale purchases at participating merchants from
a declining balaoce ac-

count:
Continued on page 5

~ . . . . . far . . . . . . . llllt:c...tyEucutM

.,..... Gorald, , . . _ T---'.

~

car.m..

The big MAC attack:
Bulls to compete at 1-A
ALL DUE RESPECT to the McDonald's
Corporatioo. "MAC auack" soon will take on a
whole new meaning in Buffalo. UB bas been

:,.,~ ~ ~~~!:'!
~~~~eUC'!
' CA!J..,..l~£""-tiJI:fE~lo
the U. S . 1be annauocemeor came last week. wbeD Coafereoce
Commissioner Jerry lppoliti said the MAC's 10-member schools
had voted to bring Marshall and Northern Dlinois into the league in
1997 . with UB expected to join the conference in 199&amp; 0&lt; 1999.
It 's a big step up f&lt;&gt;&lt;the Bulls, wbocunmdyOOIIIjldeat the Division
1-AA level in the Mid-Continent Conference (MCC). And in order
for the move to be suc:cessful. the entire WNY community bas to get
involved, said UB Athletics Director Nel5on Townsend at a June 15
press conference. 1bis is the biggest single step the university has
taken in the upgrade of the athletics program." be said.
'This is just the beginning. This is where we start." said UB
President William R. Greiner. "Wben we beat the pants off Syracuse in Ricb Stadium in a year or two I want you to remember this
day." He was onl y balf jolting. Entry into the Division 1-A level
opens the field of competition to major opponents such as Syracuse
or Penn State.
'"The university bas made a tremendous
commitment. the state bas made a tremendous cornmitmen~ " Townsend said. " Now
Western New York needs to make that
commitmenL" Alumni. the media and the
entire university community must get involved in UB's athletics efforts, be added.
This is a big move for any university,
Townsend stressed. one that should not be
approached without complete anentioo to
the university's mission and goals. And as
ol the Mllletlca
it proceeds. UB will keep its commitments
, . . . . _•
to gender equity and to broad-based programs. "But we can' t get there by our- . . . _ _ , _
selves. We need support. Weneedpeopleto
be there. Attendance is the key," Townsend said.
In f~ attendance is critical to the healthofUB's Division 1-A
athletic program. MAC and NCAA guidelines require member
institutions to maintain paid-attendance averages. Non-axnpliance
can result in stiff fines or expulsion from the conference.
All 17 UB athletic pragrams wiU join the MAC, wlticb is
composed of Akron, Ball State, Bowling Green. Central Michigan.
Eastern Michigan, Ken~ Miami of Ohio, Ohio Univ~ty. Toledo
and Wes1em Michigan.
Erie County Executive Dennis Gorski called the IIIDOWICelllellt
a "community announceme~" and pledged that, if needed, Rich
Stadium and the Buffalo BiUs' new indoor pnctice facility would
be available tO the BUlls. 1be UB Stadium curretllly bas sealing for
16.000, and may need to be expanded f&lt;&gt;&lt; Division 1-A competitioo.
1be move to Division 1-A will bring significant n&gt;eognitioo to
Wes~em New Y ad:;;&lt;loGki said '"This is a tNjO&lt; piece in saying In
lbe rest of tbe ~Buffalo is aliv.: and wdJ and can c:ompc:te
witb anyone else anytime and anyplace.~ be said

�--.u.--.--

2

Protocol chief:UB grad is calm, collected ..and discreet
to Brussels.
Prague, Moscow. Paris, Rome,
Naples, Minsk. Kiev, Cambridge, Normandy ,"Berlin and
Bonn-but Buffalo is still
home.
And Molly Raiser. Chief of Protocol for
President Clinton. came home Commencement Weekend, when UB presented its most
prestigious award. theChancellorCharles P.
Nonon Medal. to her mother, Eleanor
Millonzi .
Raiser has served as Clinton's Chief of
Protocol forahouttwoyears. and "it'sclearly
the best job in Washington. and !think the
best job in the world," said Raiser. who holds

a masters degree in American Studies from
UB.

In a nutshell, she said, she is responsible
for plannjng visits with foreign heads of
state both here and abroad. That's a simple
way to describe what s he does.
Prior to official trips abroad, Raiser makes
an advance trip-along with other members
of the protocol staff, members of the White
House press. Secret Service. the Secretary of
State and a member of his securiiy staff-to
lay the groundwork for these meetings
abroad, and make su re that th ings go
smoothly.
..We go and meet with our counterparts in
a foreign country. Generally we have some
ideas of what we want to accomplish.'" she
said.
She's also the U.S. liaison for about 165

foreign ambassadors, "the brightest and best
of their foreign services." wbo are accredited in Washington. "I'm the first person
they deal with when they come to the U .S .."
she said.
So what kind of qualifications are needed
to be Chief of Protocol?
" You have to be able to cope, you have to
be organized, and you have to like people,"
Raiser said. Some background in American
history and other cultures is helpful , as is
tremendous fortitude. "It takes a lot of energy. The average length of time served is
1.3 years and I will stay for a few more

months at least ..
ll's a fun job for someone with a sense of
advenmre, which Raiser clearly has. But
there occasionally can be down sides to the
job. s!fe admits.
en the president of Bosnia first came

~

to as

or aid, I k.Dew he wasn' 1 going to get

help d I couldn't tell him," she said. As
they waited for his meeting to begin. small
talk fizzled until they both sat in awkward
silence. ' That was one of the worst jobs of
my life." she said.
Diplomatic immunity cases also can be
difficult. especially when the chi
n of

ambassadors are involved in a problem. since
most ambassadors are friends of hers.

Moly RaiN&lt;, rfC11t, w1tt1 her mother, Norton Medal winner Eleanor Mllonzl.
post. " I didn ' t even know what the Chief of
Protocol did," she said.
One look at the job description and she
knew it was too good a job to pass up.
Sorting ou1 culwral differences is not as

difficult at one might expect~ she says.
..We are all becoming more and more one
world. There is more one understandjng of

Raiser was pursuing a Ph.D. in urban
ethnicity at American University when "I

cultural things. I have no problems when I go
to an Asian country. There are cultural differences but they ' re not the problems they
once were. And I've had no problems because I'm a woman. In IUev, one has to
watch drinking the water. bul dealing with
people is no problem.'' she said with a smile.

got a call abo\lt four months into this admin istration" asking if she'd be interested in the

tell about the people she has mel an~ the

But overall the job is "absolutely great.
and the tho ught that I almost didn ' t take thi s
job appalls me:· she said.

\ She must have marvelous anecdotes to

places she's been, but Raiser is as discreet as
any diplomat.
'The best anecdotes. I can't tell. They're
funny, personal or just private," she said.
The best parts of the job, she added. are

lhe private conversations with world lead·
ers. citing ta.Jks with King Hussein. the juxtaposition o fback -to-back visits from Bons
Yeltsin and Nelson Mandela. the approachability of John Major. •
'The higher you go. the more normal and
wonderful they get." she said. "I suppose it's
because they've made it."
Surely she has some favorites among all
the world leaders she· s met as Chief of

Protocol? ~ver I'm with at the time is
my favorite."

Chancellors, se11Jice awards Research may_provide leads

honor professional staff
11J SUE WUEICHER
News Bureau Staff

BJ IEI.a:N GOLDBAUM

T

HREE UB professional staff members have been honored for their contributions. two as recipients of the 1995 SUNY Chancel-lor's Awards for
Excellence and another as recipient of the 1995 Professional Staff Senate
Outstanding Service Award.

The Chancellor' s Award for Excellence in Professional Service honors
accomplishmenls and sustained performance excellence. "'both within and beyond the
position.•· Recipients are Rita
G. Lipsitz.. administrative assistant to the chai r of the Department of English. and
Judith K. Miller. director of
purchasing.
A member of the UB pro-

fessional staff since 1970.
Rita Lipsitz has served on a
variety of university commi l·

in search for new antibiotics
News Bureau Staff

R

ESEARCHERS in the Depanrnent of Chemistry at UB have.
by rearranging the molecular

structure of penicillin, recently
synthesized severa l novel
classes of penici llin-type chemical strucrures that may serve as fresh leads in the
search for new antibiotics. The new struc·
tures not only have the potential to serve as
leads for drugs that could beuer fight drug-

resistant bacteria. but may how scientists
how to improve existing antibiotics.
"'Despite the enormous succe-sses that
UPSITZ

Mlu.ER

FRIEDMAN

tees and organizations. These include the General Assembly of Undergraduate
Curriculum, the Professional Staff Senate and the Educational Programs and Policy
Commillee of the Faculty Senate.
Sbe earned a bachelor's degree from UB .
Judith Miller, a UB staff member since 1988, also has served as an adjunct
professor in the Cornell University Division of Industrial and Labor Relations in
-Buffalo.
As director of purchasing. Miller plans. supervises. directs and coordinates all

purchasing activities at the university. including capitaJ equipment.
Miller and the purchasing department received the prestigio us Minorit y Busi-

ness Advocate Award from the Resource Planning Corporation.
In addition, Miller helped establish the Western New York Governmental Purchasing Consortium, comprised of personnel from 15 governmental agencies, to provi de
suppon to minority- and women--owned business.
She also played an active role in serving on the university's Minority- and WomenOwned Business Advisory G roup.
Miller received a bachelor's degree from Buffalo State College and a master's of
business administration degree from Cartisius College.
In addition, Jay R. Friedman, manager of the Faculty Student Association,
received the 1995 Professional Staff Senate Outstanding Service Award.
The Professional Staff Senate Award is presented to members of the university' s

professional staff who make outstanding community service contributions.

penicillin and related families of drugs have
enjoyed over the last 50 years in waging their
war on bacteria. there is now growing COO·

cern among the medical and scientific com·
munities that these agents are rapidly losing
their effectiveness,·· said Edward Turos, assistant professor of chemistry at UB and
principal ipvestigator on the project.
While perticillin still works well against
certain types of infections. he pointed out that
there is fear that many more strains of bacteria
may evenllJally develop resistance even to
perticillin. "Penicillin kills bacteria by shutting
down the enzymes they need to build their cell
walls," be continued. "Without a strong cell
wall, the hacterium literally explodes due to its
internal pressure. However, these microorganisms have come up with some remarkable
ways to protect themselves from the lethal
effects offt-lactarn drugs siich as penicillin."
According to Turos, the most corqmon

cause of penicillin-resistance is the production offl-lactamases, defense enzymes that
are manufactured in large quantities by drugresistant bacteria.
"Thcfl-lactamases 'patrol' the bacteriJU

cell in search of an invading drug molecule.
which upon binding to a fl-lactamase. is
rapidly neutralized before it can damage the
cell wall." he explained.
In order for the drug to kill resistant
strains of bacteria. it must evade the JJ·

lactamases. One approach is to administer
penicillin with a powerfulfl-lactamase inhibitor. which attempts to knock out the P-

lactamases. so that the drug can more
effectively disable the enzymes involved in
cell wall biosynthesis.
"The catch-22 is that while theft-lactam
ring endows penicillin with sufficient reacti vity to kill the bacteria. it is also the Achilles heel
that makes the drug susceptible to destruction
by the P-lactamases." said Turos. "We have
noticed that all of the penicillin-type drugs
studied 10 date have the reactiveft-lactarn ring
in the same location within the drug's 'molecular skeleton.' This makes it relatively easy for
the bacteria to mass-produceft-ladamases to
quickly re.oder the drug useless."
Traditionally,beexplained,scieotistshave
tried to improve the antibacterial properties of
perticillin by synthesizing SIJUCtllral analogues.
chemical compounds with similar overall
structures, but which differ in the chemical
groups around the four-membered ring.
Turos and his colleagnes have taken a
uniqu:_ approach by altering the arrange ment of atoms within thefl-lactam ring itself.
"By reconfignring the ft-lactarn ring, we
have the oppol1lmity to design large numbers
of compounds that will perllaps be reactive
eoougb to kill bacteria but resilient enough to
withstand the destructive forces of the Plactamases."Thros said. This research i&amp;l.ilc.ely
10 provide further insight into bow 10 "chemically rejuvenate" existing ft-lactarn drugs to
help them keep their poiCDcy longer.
-

�------UB to lead demonstration project assisting area business

----T
News Blnau Staff

•

"It means a
great_ deal to UB
to be a leader in
a partnership

HE UNIVERSITY a1 Buffalo bas
roc:eived $1.5 million from tbc federal Small Business AdminisiJa..

tion-&lt;JporHbe initiative of Rep.
John 1. L8Falce-to lead ademonstJation project to assist area bus.iiiCSSe$ in
developing new products in cooperation with
regional n:search univcralties.
lbe two-year project-UB Greater Regional Industrial Tecboology Program. or
UB GRIT-is expected to bcx.t the economy
of Western New York. as well as New York
State. It wiU "Serve as a model for smallbusiness product developmen~ and job creation and preservation.
UB GRIT, to he directed by George Lee,
former dean of the UB School of El1gineering and Applied Sciences, will help smal{)

firms make technical improvements in their
commercial-industrial pmducts, particuii!!!Y,
pmducts with existing or pmspective expon
markets.
UB wiU he the lead institution in a consor-

tium of universities that includes Syracuse
University, the University of Rochester and
Rochester Insti tute of Technology that will
help these small manufacturers incorporate
the latest technology into their products.

To survive in intense international competition, small businesses must continuously
develop and improve their pmducts or risk
losing not only expon opponunities, but
domestic markets, and, ultimately, Ameri can jobs.

that offers such

immense
opportunities for

Western New
York."
Rep.

John J • ....,.., left, 8fld President Gnolnet lit

UBGRf!~

But for most small firms, the cost of
maiotaining research-and-development operations in-house is prohibitive . .
UB GRIT will help those firms improve
their current products. as well as develop
new ones, lhus allowing them to stay competitive in the domestic and global marketplaces.
"It means a great deal to UB to he a leader
in a partnership that offers such immense
opportunities for Western New York as a
whole." UB President William R. Greiner

said at a press conference announcing release of the funding.
"We see building our regional and tllte

-

WUJAIIa.-

economies as a key form oflhe university's
service to our neighbors and fellow New
Yorl:.ers." Greiner added.
"Supponing teChnology-intensive businesses in our region. and helping to foster
their collaborations with both education and
government. is one of the most practical and
longest-lasting ways to build competitiveness
He added: "We are grateful to the Congress for the opportunity to make the GRIT
partnership a reality. We especially appreci ate the enormous effort and suppon thai Congressman John LaFalce has dedicated to the
initiative. His leadership wiD translate into

3

immense benefits for UB, for our partner
univcralties, for the porticipoling busioesses
and, we think. for all o( New York Swe.•
lbe consortium, with the assiSt11nCC of
regiooal economic developmeot &amp;ga~Cies.
will solicit proposals from small busiDestes
for product-development projeds bucd oo
the maleh o( univenity expertise to product
tet:hDolo&amp;ies: IIWtd and cocnpeUtioo conlideratioos; ~y williAs- to COliS, and ovenll...,_;., beDdit and imDoooiow _
..._ , . . . . . _
p&lt;&gt;naDce to the "'SiooL
7 and 15 product-tmpro•emeot projeds will
he conducted by the consonium.
The individual projects would involve.
but not he limited to. pmduct-focused.
multjdisciplinary teams of facuhy~ Jed
graduate studenls and advanced undergraduates.

Lee stressed the strong educational component of the project.
"Faculty. suff and students of the engineering schools panicipating in the consor-

tium will coJiec1ively imeracl with
technology-based small industries in theregion," be said.

1'he schools' faculty and students will
gain invaluable expe.nencc by working on

real-world indwstrial projects that involve a
multidisciplinary team approach to pmduct
improvement and development." Lee said.
In addition. employees of the industries
involved will benefit from the continuing
education and ceruftcate programs organized
with them by the consorti um, be added. -

FSEC briefed on budget, Honors Prog{mn fraud_policy
N ITS LAST meeting of the academic
year May 3, the Faculty Senate Executive Committee hosted Provost Thomas Headrick in his first day on the job.
And, President G reiner warned the
FSEC that the late state budget could mean
there will he plentyofworl:.aheadduring the
normally q uiet summer months.
Headrick. former law school dean and
presidential counselor. conceded that long-

cated thai he might consider bringing a faculty member with such background into the
Provost's Office.
Asked about his views on tenure, Headrick
called it "a good thing. whose benefi ts far
outweigh costs. The university may have
failed as an organization in making clear
what the benefits of tenure are." Recall ing
that be was often critical. as a dean. of the
tenw-e process that "homogenizes candidates." Headrick chided, "I'll probably want
a little different position as Provost. won't

range planning was nor extensive at this

IT

point. "The budget is the whole thing right
now," he explained. "My interests align
closely with President Greiner's. so whatever priorities be has expressed over the year
is what we will he doing together now."

In other business. Clyde Herreid briefed
FSEC members on the success of the Honors

Headrick cited flexibility in revenue rais·
ing and more clearly defining UB's role
within SUNY as key ageoda items. He said
he was eager for faculty input on many
issues he would have to face. and was particularly concerned about seelcing advice of

a scientific nature ...1 had enonnous respect
fo r Aaron. and that clearly was a strength of
his," Headrick said of his predecessor. the
late Provost Aaron Bloch. Headrick indi-

Program. and Vol(lemar lnnus. senior associate vice president for university services.
unveiled a new campus fraud policy.
Herreid. academic director of the Honors
Program for seven of its 14 years. reponed
that the program. designed to attract some of
New York's high school"best and brightest' '
to (}B, has grown !Tom 20 to more than 350
students. Honor students come largely in
four varieties. explained Herreid. Top high
school seniors who are recruited as freshmen
comprise the lion ' s share of the program.
Gifted students in the performing or creative

arts. top-notch transfer students fromjunior
or community coDeges and UB students wbo
develop into Honors students while freshmen. round out the program.
Honors students receive modest perl:.s.
such as early registration and honors-only
seminars and colloquiums available to them.
according to Herreid. And they earn stipends
that average around S 1.000 per year for their
first two years. all from endowments. not
slllte funds.

"The budget is the wlwle
thing right now. "

instructions were that all the money must he
spent paying student COS1S.
What does it t1lke to he an Hooors student? Herreid ooted thai for high school
seniors to he ..;ligible. they must have an
average of 93 or better. he in the top seven
percent of their class and have combined
SAT scores of 1300 or higher. "CorneD.
Harvard. Yale ...these are our competitors
for this caliber of studen~" said Herreid.
Once they arrive at UB. Herreid continued,
they tend to be overachievers. earning hetween 160 and 250 credit hours. many with
dual or double majors.

lnnus, together with the university
controller' s office. developed a policy to
encourage state employees to report sus-

This fall. the first-ever " Distinguished
Honors Scholars" will arrive with the incoming UB Class of 1999. Altogether, 40
students, 20 this year and 20 nex~ will enter
UB with the entire cost of their educatioo
covered. said Herreid. lbe unique program
is being funded by a $1.6 million contribution from an anonymous donor whose only

pected fraudulent activities and outlined a
process for investigating such charges. lbe
policy contemplates handling most problems here on campus. lnnus explained. but
could lead to criminal charges where that
was thought necessary.
"Wehaveastewardshipobligationtoward
resources on our campus." explained lnnus,
"so we need to articulate it to our employees
and urge them 00110 put the resources of the
univenity in harm's way."
-

What is needed the ~ both Greiner
and Headrick agree, is a change in the way
SUNY is structured. UB needs the flexibility
to set its own tuition rates and to have that ...
money directly benefit the university.
"We should have some input into the
tuition we charge on this campus," Headrick
said. "A small addition in tuition would
preserve programs and improve programs.
But to make that worl:. the tuition we charge
bas to come back to this campus."
As tuition becomes more than 50 percent
of support for the S UNY system. a line it
now has crossed, the economic reality wiD
seem obvious to more and more people.
Headrick said.
"If we have the responsibility for deliver-

ingquality of education, we should he able to
make those decisions." he said. "If we're
going to charge higher prices. students should
see the benefits. lbe logic of it and economics of it should make this happen at some
point in the future."
UB needs more control over use of space
and land, which could provide new streams
of support for tbc university, the provost
said.
He cited the case of St11Dford University,
w.hich developed an industrial park on its
land, generating rents and leases thai benefited the university. "St11nford built its
strength using thai land as an endowmen~
and I think UB could do that as well,"
Headrick said.
0

BUDGET
Continued from page 1
system that recognizes that the institution is
more dependent on income and less dependent o n tax revenue." he added.
And dealing effectively with this year's
budget cut is onl y one piece of the puzzle.
Additional cuts also are expected in the fu ture, and may force the universi ty to
reconfigure. said Provost Thomas Headrick.
"TTle budget is going to change the opportuniti es we have to seize possibilities for
change. for new initiatives, for adjusting to
student demands for programs. If we can 't
do these things. it plays back in to the system.
People get disappointed with wbat'soffered,"
Headrick said. That disappointment can result in a "classical dowoward spiral" o f programs being cu~ enrollment dropping, lower

tujtion revenue being received. and further
program cuts.
UB has not seen student enrollment fall
off "yet," Headrick said, "but we can translate cuts into losses of facu lty and suppon
slllff. classes that won't he offered, students
who won' t he able to get into programs they
want.''

espite this potentially gloomy prognosis. Headrick says he is optimistic about
UB 's future. " I think as bad as this is-and
it's 001 a happy situation-it does give us
opportunities in terms of reconliguring our
place in the SUNY system and removing
some of the constraints on us that make it
difficul ~" he said.

D

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Faculty Senate deals with teaching, tenure, public service issues
out its academic year with a busy
May 2 meeting that saw passage
of resolutions affecting undergnduate life, public service, departmental chairs and new mothers on the
faculty.
The Senate approved three measwes developed by the Educational Policies and Procedures Committee, dealing with the use of
uncll:rgraduate teaching assistants, improving access to undergndua~e rnajon and cetl-

t.ralizing the process for approving
departmenral liberal arts degree requirements. The Senate also passed resolutions
mandating departmental recogni ·on of public service activities. faculty con ultation in
the appointment or reappointmen of depart- .
ment chairs and a one· year ext ion of the
tenure clock for junior femille faculty mem bers who have children.
The new policy governing the use of
undergraduate teaching assistants (UGTAs)
drew the honest debate. Proponents of
UGTAs. mostly from the American Studies
O.partment. secured two amendments to the
original resolution designed specifically to
protect a course in thatdepanment, Women 's
Studies 213. from the full impact of the new
restrictions. One amendment that was adopted

protocts departments like WOIDOD'S Studies,
which have ~developed innovative prosrams
to use UGT As to improve undergtaduate
teaching" so Joog as "such a program cooforms to nationally accepled pedagogical standanls and ;. fully supervised by faculty." .
Anotbendoptedarneodmauchanged the prohibition against actual instruction by the
UGTAs to e~empt "innovative programs" as
defmed by the lin;( amcodmenL
The fear expressed by faculty who spoke
in support of the amendments was that the
new policy would inhibit creativeness and
e1..perimentation with .. Peer Teaching."
which the). claim is becoming more extensively utiliz.ed in learning nationwide.
Women · s Studies Professor Ruth Meyerowitz
explained that the furor over Ulldergraduate
teachers stems from one father's Complaining. ftrst to UB then to the State Education
D&lt;panmeot, about the content of the course
his child was taking. UGTAs wboco-instruct
Women· s Studies 213 are thoroughly trained
and don ' t actually lecture, according to
Meyerowitz: they simply facilitate discus-

sions.
·~I th ink this is an overreaction to a single
incident." she aid " We don ' t abolish faculty teaching when we get a single complai nt
about a faculty member."
Mathematics Professor Samuel Schack
opposed the amendments, arguing that "no

one has proposed eliminating undergraduate
teaching." saying tbll the policy only calls
for beller regulation of the practice. "Undergraduates are here to learn. not to teach other
undergBduates... argued Schack.
•
The new poljcy prohibits UGTAs fn:m
teaching unsupervised and Jays down strict
rules on their role in grading. To become a
UGTA. a student must be 11leasla junior with
a 3.0 or beller QPA. The student may earn up
to 12 creditstowanl graduation for the teaching
assistantship. which is uncompensated.

"''"be Senate passed resolutions improving
I occess to undergraduate major programs
and proscribing procedures for approving
liberal arts components of undergraduate
degrees with only minor amendments.
Because the State Education D&lt;panment
and SUNY require significant liberal arts
cootent to undergraduate degrees. the Division of Undergnduate Academic Services
Curriculum Commiuee will be reconstituted with appointees nominated by the
Faculty Senate Executive Comminee and
decanal unit heads with the power to review
and approve liberal arts components of all
major degree programs. before the programs
are sent to the vice provost for underg:radu·
att education for implementation.
Junior female faculty members woll be
able to extend their deadlines for eammg

tenure by a year fO&lt;each child borne, and any
faculty member wiD be able to apply fO&lt; a
similar extension of the leolure cloclo: if they
suffer certain "critical life events" under
lDOI.ber resolution passed by the Senate.
Drafted by the Tenore and Privileges Committee, chaired by Marprel Acara. the resolution makes the extension for childbirth
virtually automatic. but places a strong burden on faculty members todemoaslrate need
with respect to the ~critical life events" clause.
The latter policy has existed for some time.
say supporten. but the Senate resolution will
require it to be printed in the faculty/ taff
handbook so that j unior faculty members
can be made more aware of iL
F. Bruder Stapleton. from the Pediatncs
D&lt;panment. praised the childbirth extension. "Forty percent of the facul ty in our
department is female and childbirth is the
single largest career impediment faced by
our young faculty members."
A resolution calling on depanments to
develop defutitioos of public service also
passed the Senate. Supporters Oaude Welch
ofPolitical Science and Vice President Munel
Moore said the resolution was needed to
begin to better judge what is and is not pubh
service. The resolution urges that public service become a credited oomponen! of a facull)
member' s dossier for promotion and tenu~
purposes.

Former UB law lecturer to defend
suspect in Oklahoma bombing

irnlng on to Science
Science came alive for high school students from Erie and Niagara
Counties May 23. at the 12th annual 'Science Exploration Day on the
North Campus. More than 1400 students attended demonstrations
and exhibits on topics rangin!} from space science to organic gardening, visiting labs and viewing the "shake table" at NCEER. Among
UB sponsors were the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics.
Office of Admissions. Graduate School of Education and Educational
Technology Services,
along with \1M'( teachers' groups and Wilson
Grealbatch Ud.
Top photo, R. A
McClellan of Praxair
gives a cyrogenics
demonstration, submersing a carnation in
liquid nitrogen. At
right, NASA Specialist L Dennis Christopher "suits up" Alden
High School junior
Onalee.Aquila as part
of space flight demon-

stration. Below
rtght, Marisa
Fallacaro. left. and
SarahStruckusof
Cheektowaga Central
High School, view a
hologram that depicts

a dancing ballerina.

ICHAEL E. TIGAR. a former
visiting iocturer at the UB law
school. is the defense anomey
for Terry L. Nichols. one of
two men charged in the Oklahoma City born bong case. Nichols is charged with l&gt;elpi ng the
chief suspect. Timothy McVeigh. obtain
explosives that were used in the bombing
last month that destroyed a federal office
building and killed 167 people.
Tigar. who taught criminal procedure at
the UB iaw school in 1966-67. is a professor
at the University of Texas Law School and a
former chairman of the American Bar
Association's litigation section. The author
of several books and numerous articles for
legal magazines. he has written three plays
about the law.
Tigar. 54, has represented a number of
conlioversial clients in the past. including
John O.mjanjuk. accused of being the death
camp guanl "Ivan the Terrible:" Angela

Davos, 1960s activist: and the "Weathermen" terrorist group.
Several Buffalo auo rn e~ who look
courses from Tigar. recall him as a colorful
and effective instructor.
''He was a lively, interes_ting teacher. I
remt:mber that, and lie was a member of one
of the most prestigious defense law firms in
the country." said U.S. Attorney Patrick H
NeMoyer in an article in ThL Buffalo Nr.•s
NeMoyer heads the WNY investigation into
the Oklahoma bombing.
FBI Special Agent Pau l M . Moskal saod.
"He was thi s flamboyant guy from Texas. I
remember staring at hi s cowboy boots. But
he also made a big impression on me because
of hi s outgoing nature and his great mind."
O.fense anomcy John Molloy of West
Seneca noted, " He bad a pretry high opinion
of himself. but he could back it up. He knew
the law-&lt;~otonly what was in the Jaw books.
but how it appl ied on the street."

Nurse Anesthesia Program plaDS"
Patient Simulator demonstration

T

HE UB Nurse Anesthesia Program
will sponsor a demonstration of the
CAE Patient Simulator at 4 p.m.
Wednesday, July 26 in the Center
for Tomorrow.
The simulator-a complex system that
includes a manikin instrumented to simulate
a range of patient responses , a computer that
drives the system, communication equipment and software systems-was developed
to provide hands-on training in anesthesia.
Known as a "cockpit for clinicians," the
device was developed by CAE Electronics
Inc .. a company known for its work in the
field of aircraft, naval and manned space
flight simulation.
Event organizers Tom Obst and Michael
Fallacaro, clinical assistant professors and
co-directors of the Nurse Anesthesia Program, said the simulator is designed to allow
students to experience catastrophic events
without any risk to the patienL
~tudents in training see 1,000 to 2,000

patients. but some cataStrophic events occv
in one out of every I 00,000 cases. Thi
technology can simulate a catastrophic event
a student can work through without any
harm to the patient." said Obst.
The technology also has significant research applications, such as studying the
reactions or clinicians under stressful situations, aspects or team wort and crisis manageme.nL
Approximately 10 of the simulators e~ist
throughout the world, Fallacaro said. Locations include Tokyo, Belgium. Torooto. Pinsburgh. New York City, Stanford. and the
University of Washington.
A similar type of patient simulator system also is in use at the University of Rochester.
The program also is sponsored by the
School of Nursing, CAE Electronics Inc.
and Ohrneda Inc. Reservations to attend the
demonstration must be made by July 14 by
0
calling 829-2410.

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5

.,.Greiner speaks to MBA grad11ates in Latvia
News Bureau Stall

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dressed thousand of new UB
graduates on his own campus,
Presi dent W illiam R. Grei ner
spoke to a much smaUer~t no
less signif~Cant-4udiencc on May 20, when
he delivered the address at the flnl commencement of tb e firs t We stem ~11yle
master' a of busines odministrat.ion program
in Eastern Europe.
UB iu foundingpartnerwiththeUn iveroity ofOUawa. c.....ta.- Rip T~
University in Ri gO:. Latvia, in developing the
MBA program at the Riga B usiness School
at Ri ga Technical University. Faculty who
teach the MBA courses are provided by UB
and University of Ottawa. They also ai-e
involved in trai ning the Latvian faculty wbo
are expected toeventually takeover all teaching responsibilities, and in developing links
with the Latvian business con;muntty

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As pan of the program. UB's lnlen ive
English Languoae Institute established an
English lang...,ecenter in Riga. also funded
by the U.S. government, to provide Enghsh
instruction to the MBA tudenu befon: they
begin the core MBA program. The two-year
core program. si milar to the program offered
at UB' s North Campus. is conducted entirely in En&amp;Jish.
There also are advan~~&amp;es fO&lt; the IJ&gt;OD·
lOrin&amp; univenitie., occonlin to JobD 1bomas. usoc:iale c1ean or inlemationaJ IIIUdiea
aod
programs
the ..
UB_School o f
-.n.e
_&lt;n_

School of Management a unique opportunity for exchange programs through which
its facul ty aod advanced graduate students
will assist Latvian business and educational
en terpriJCS. It also opens the door for LatVIan
companies to take advan~~&amp;e of trade and
investment opponunities in New Yori: Stale.
UB"s participation was imtially funded
by the U.S Information Agency The uni -

AROLE SMITH PETRO. as·
sociatc ' 'iCC pres1dent for uni~
versity services. has been
appointed by County Executive
Dennrs Gorski to th~ Erie
CountyCommiSSI?fl on the Status of Women .
1be commission was established an 1988
to promote gender equality througq a program of advocacy. including publicleducation and information Tbe commission also
makes recommendations for coordination.
consolidation or expans1on of servic~ for
women. offers legiSlative and pohcy analyses ::md promotes links with women•sequit)
networks.

Petro has been a memberoftM unJVCT'\11)

staff Since 1973 and rece1ved both a masters
and a doctoral degree from UB"s Depart·
ment of Counsehng and Educational Psy·
chology Sh&lt; has been mvolved with a
number of umverstly and commumty organiz.allons mcluding the Unated Wa) . 1be
Women 's Group. C111zen~ Umted for Edu catiOn and the Jumor League of Buffalo
The Ent County CommiSSIOn on the Status of Women IS composed of II appotnt ments from the county executJ\C, four from
the county legislature and SIX ex~fficio &amp; panment representath es. Lynn Marinelh is
executi\·e director or rhe commi skwl.
"Dr. Petro exemplifies the high quahty
and commun1ty leadership of our Women ·~

SUNYCARD
Continued lrom page 1
• Access to certain universi ty servicts
(such as voting in student elections).
Vendors in a consonium that inc ludes
Ci tibank. MC I. Digital and D1ebold have
joined forces to provide the services. technical expertise, systems and equipment necessary to enable SUN YCard to be issued at
UB.
The front of the card includes a digitized
photo or the cardholder and his or her sta-

tus-student. fac ulty/staff or vol unteer-as
well as a library ban:ode and number.
The back ofthe card looks like any other
bank card with the exception of an extra
stripe near the top. which Snyder called the
card's ··junk stripe:·
This ··junk stripe"" may make the need for
spare change a thing of the past at UB . By
fal l. vendi ng machines and possibly photocopiers wi ll be equipped with card readers;
washers and dryers in the residence halls
also wi ll accept SUN YCard.
Cardho lders will be ahle to deposit a maximum of S50 at a ti me on this junk stripe;
deposi ts can be made at campus Faculty Student Association (FSA)Iocations, Snydersaid
In addition. SUNYCard will contain the
American Banking Associatio n (ABA) stripe
that includes the standard 16-digit International Standard Office (ISO) number. food
service and other campus infonnation. 1be
ABA stripe also may hold information about
the cardholder's debit accoun~ an optional
declining balance option being offered by
Citibank.
Optional telecommunication services
~rough MC! also are offered through
&gt;UNYCard. Snyder said Long-distance serlices previously limited to donn residents
lOW wiU be extended 10 Students living Off
:ampus as well as faculty aod staff. A calling
:ard also wiU be available.

vemty eJ&lt;peCU to rece1ve continumz funding for three yean from the U.S Agency for

International Development..
While attending the program, "'hlch be-

gan in FaU 1992. most tudents conUntJe to
work full-ume osengmecrs. ~small­
bustnessownerJO&lt;empioyees or sta~e-owned
enterprises. In addi11011· to the &amp;J11&lt;1uaung
cws, tba-e are two Olber claues enrolled in
the prop-om aod aoochcr class eq&gt;OCOed so
lqin in the fall

Beoideao..:u-....Sbis'lrik.c-.1.-

-:~::~==~~~:::::::.-o....-.
the&lt;&gt;
M ID . . ceremony_ tq&gt;l&gt;en
C. Dunnett, vice provO&lt;! for mtemation.al
education; Voldem.v lnnus, senior associate
vice president for u.nive:rsrry services and 1
Lalvaan-Atntncan wbo wu instrumental in
development support for the JXOIT"III at UB ,
JohnM. Thomu, assoc1atedean forintema uonal program m the UB School of Management. and Phihp B Wels. chau of the
UmvenH)' Council

Petro named to status of women commission

-C

I ....... MewYOIII, . .

the - - ., -

ESS THAN a week after he ad-

That· sa lot all rolled up m one card. And
it's reasonable to expect that "'the uses wall
just grow and grow and grow."" Snyder said
The technology could be used with electronic information kiosks . card~readable
machines that make available a 'ariety of
infonnation ranging from grades and academic records to computerized campus maps.
faculty and studenl direct ones. campus events
and other serv;ces.
·•tt• s all based on infonnauon and con' enience." Snyder said.
ob Worlmeister. Student Association
president. says he is enthus•asuc about
SUNYCard and its options.
··J'm excited about It It 's offenng a lot to
students. I thinl students are going to like 11
a lot.·• said Work.meister.
"You can vote on it, you can eat on u. you
can call on it. you can usc vending machines
anywhere off it." he Said. And. as an added
benefit. it's sturdier than the pre\'ious laminated student ID. "I th ink students are going
to be exci ted about a new card that doesn't
fall apart on you," Werkmeister said.
" l" m lool:.ing forward to June 27. and 1" 11
be o ne o r the firs t people in lin&lt; to get it."
And while convenience is an imJXXUnt
advantage to cardholders. SUNYCard also
offers a pumberofbenefi ts to the un iversity.
By us ing SUNYCard, cardholders will produce revenue for the un iversity at no cost 10
themselves. The card also has the potential
to improve efficiency and reduce costs of

R

various services to students, such as processing financial aid , through the Citibank declining balance account. said S nyder. ·
Implementation of SUNYCanl begins
next week. O ngo ing m a n age m ent of
SUNYCard activities will be the responsibility of the FS A. "The issuance of new or

replacement card~ . markeung 3CII\'JUes and
vanous card sen•1ces w1ll be handled by the
FSA from locations on each campus:· says
Chfford B Wilson. UB assoc,.te v1ce preSIdent for student affa1rs and execuuve darec·
tor of the FSA.
The first phase of carding "Ill take place
10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesda) . June 27 . 7 a.m.-6
p.m. Wednesday. June 28; 10 am -8 p m.
Thursday. June 29 and 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Fnday. June 30 in Room 210 of the Student
Union on UB · s North Campus.
Those receiving card must present appropnate identification such as a current
student identification cani. dri\~r·s license.
passpon or other photo adentification.
As pan of the June 27-30carding proces .
on-campus vendors. as well as Citjbank and
MCI "ill be offenng a variety of giveaways
to faculty. staff and students who sign up for
the card.
Faculty. staff and students who will be on
campus are encouraged to take ad&gt;antage of
the lim phase of carding. For those unable to
attend the ftrst phase. additional carding will
be conducted 9 a.m.-5 p. m. Monday-Friday
(except bol idays) from J uly 3 to Aug. 24 in
two locations: Room2 10ofthe Student Union
on the North Campus aod aJ the Harriman
Hall candy counter on the South Campus.'
Carding for returning students. and anyone else who bas 1101 received a S UNY Card
willbebeldAug. 2.5-Scpt.l in Room 2 10of
the Student Union on the North Campus aod
Hayes Annex B on the South Campus.
Beginning Sept. 2, ongoing carding will
be held as needed at the second floor candy
counter in the Student Union on the North
Campus aod at the Huriman Hall candy
counter on the South Campus.
For more information. call 645-2505 or
645-2241.
0

membe~ .and has an 1mp~s·
St\e record,of ser'\lce to organ1..1..1.uons m\ o l \ cd ~ uh communaty. umverSII) and
"-'O~n ·§. IS~~ I am pleased !!.he hM ac cepted thl' appomtment.'' satd Gorslr..J
Petro has b~tn a member of lhe
commass aon 's Appo1nune.nts for Women
Commllt~ &lt;mce 1989 Ola1red b) Suo;an
Curran Ho)L the corrurunee """-' formed to
mcrease the number of women ~mg on
pubh . DOl-for-profit and pnvall! boards of
directors and to assure equal occess for women
to boa:n:ls wnh community tmpact. lbe
commiuion ·s Resouroe F.Je was deve)Qped
by the comnunee and is open to all ~omen
mterested m ser"·mg board appomtments

Commas!IJOn

WBFO booming
in all directions
WllfO.f'M 88.7 has replaced 1ts dlrectjonal antt:nna \l,'lth one that uansmit the radto stauon · s sagnal 10 all
d.JrectJons.
PreVIOUS I~ . area to the north of
WBFO "s transmmer m Amherst had
been receivmg a ""'eak ignaJ from
WBFO due to a darecuonal antenna
pattern wath a ··null .. oriented to..., ard
the nonnlnonhwest , affectmg communiiJCS Lhat mcluderl Loclpon.
Niagara Falls and Lc", ton .
The proJect, funded by contnbuuons. has been m the plannmg stages
smce 1993. "'hen WBFO reoo&lt;nted
JlS directional antenna to prov1de full
service toward Buffalo.
According to General Manager
Jennifer Roth. "getting rid of the null
is the most impon.anr technicaJ improvement wt could rna~ for our
li teners. ot only does it improve
se.l"•ice to resident.s of communities
to the north, it improves service to all
of us when w-t:· re traveling in that
direction."
Since the installation was comp leted June 15, the station has logged
dozens of calls from listeners wbo are
now receiving a strong, clear signal
from WBR&gt;.
Re sponsib le fo r pla nni ng and
implementi ng the antenna project
were S&amp;B Communications o f Buffalo under the directi o n o f B ill
Stachowiak. broadcast engineering
consultant Peter Moncure aod Don
Boyd of Western Tower Service.

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WEDNE S D AY

o(~­

c - . Miebod Clartr&lt;.
241 Coote.-~

3:30p.m.

_...

Y..U. _ . ()petlil!l CerUB Sladium. Nonb
Camprn. 5:30 p.m.

19
-

- . &amp; . P-

July

" 12
29
-

n UOP

. .-a.T-.M.D.
Plo.D, Presi&lt;krol and CEO.
Rolwell Part CaDcc:r lnstitute .
RPCL 12:30 p.m

-=:..==------

~~

DEP,..,_OFANA~

D J v

AND CIEU. - y KM

Tbe pH Pando• Ia

2J
---

lleperfu;toa IJtj ary to Uver
aod Heart Colis, John J .
Lemasten, M.D .• PhD .. Un.iversity of Nonh Carolina.. Ill
Kimball Tower. Soulh Campus.
1:30p.m.

1.. E

UB Socur Camp.Runs

27

Coof&lt;ftiiC&lt;, Sao Dlqo, Ca.,

Josephine WeUiver, M.D.

22

OUidreo 's Hospiral. 8:30 a.m.

MMYCAJID._
Carding EveoL Faculty. soaff
and students can sign up for
new. froe, multipurpose pholo
ID card. 210 Student Union.
North Campus. 10 a.m. ~ p.m.

DEPAII1IIEifl OF ANATOMY
AMI CIEU.-.cMIY NMIItAII
MAP4, a ModulaiOr of MJuo.
tubule D)'IUimlcs Durin&amp; Pro.
life.r.Uon aod Dlfl'erealla tion,
Jeannete Chlol Bulinski, Ph.D .•
College of Pbysicians &amp;: Sur-

geons of Columbia University.
Ill Kimball Tower. Soulh
Campus. 1:30 p.m.
FlllDUIIRaTUOADCUT
CamW. Paella lecture. WBFO
88.7 FM w1U broadcast major
portions from Fiedler Fest.
8 p m. Call 829·2880.

Camille Paglia lecturo '•
among highlight$ of

AWIINI WNCMEON LS:IUII£
Rovllrlllzrolloo of Bu.lfalo,
Henry Louis Taylor Jr., Ph.D.

Center for Tornorr"CPW. North
Campus . Noon. $10. Call 829·

Fiedler Fest to btt anec

2608.

June 22, 27 and 29 on
WBFO at 8 p.m.

FIUILIJIRaTUOADCUT
I.shm.el R«d lecture. WBFO

88.7 FM will broadcast major
portions from Fiedler Fest.

MO N D A Y

""" Mulllor.dol bdiolo&amp;Y.
Laurie C. Carter, DD.S., Pb.D.

Spoosorc&lt;l by UB Sdoool of
Deolal Medicine. Independeno
Heallh of Buffalo, and Warner·
Lambert Coosumer Heallh Prod ·
~ G~ . Cbaut1uqua lnlliwuoo. Callj829· 2320.

8 p.m. Call 829· 2880.

FIUILIJIRSTUOADCUT
All&lt;a Gioaber&amp; kctu~. WBFO
88.7 FM will~ major
portions from F'ledler Fes:L
8 p.m. Ca11 829· 2880.

0
L-M
9

g~o~=~~~vary

Agurrre. D D.S. Sponsored by
UB School of Dcnral Medoc10e.
lndependeru Heallh of Buffalo,

~;;i:a;,::;·~~:.,~oosumer

_,.JIIIC IIIIAIID IIOU-

SypbWis: Wballbo Pediotrio:iouo

-

IIOC10II OF I'MUMACY

E ll'ects of A&lt;damiDopbeo and
lbuproteo oo tbr: ADtiplatelel
Ell'octs ofCbroolc Aaplrio io
Older Subjocts, Debra Oeoul,
Doc:tor of Pbarmacy candida!&lt; .
248 Cooke. Nonb Campus.
Ba.m.

-JIIIC.,.,.,All
10 Meotio&amp;
All&lt;naath~

tbr:

Ed--...al Neecb ofSpedal
Cltlldna, Ann E. Wesner, d i·

n:croc of educatioa, Sranl&lt;y G.
Falk School. Kinc:h Auditorium.
Otildreo's Hospital. 8 LID.

_.CAMP

UB Swim Camp. Runs lhrough
J ~nc: 30. Alumni Arena Natatonum. North Campus. 8 a.m.p.m.

----s

Oral Compllcalioos aDd Man·
a.aemeat of Patieots Comprised by ~ aDd Systom·

~u~~~~~ponsorcd

by UB School of Denial Modi·
cine, Independent Health of
Buffalo and Warner-Lamben

Needs to Know, Debra Tristram..
M.D. IGodo Audioorium.

~~=30a.m.

Carding EvarL FIICU!ry. salT
and students can sign up for
new, free, multipurpose pbolo
ID card. 210 Student Unioo.
Nonb Campus . 10 Lm.·5 p.m.

sites. North Campus. 8 a.m.4p.m.

Palhology. RPCI. 12:30 p.m.

'

You c.1n no\\ fmd the Rep orter on the
Our URL •~

http

uhmfo pub buff alo edu

\~fe b

~XI Wortd V - ' Atbldi&lt;
• \f

C"lwa I

a..... Cfr..

UB SUidium. Nonlo
c.a.&gt;us. SI8: 1ictols...,_ ao
Prime Sears locobonL Group rorc.
available by callinc 849.()704.

ED

26

--lilA~

AntLE'IICXI World V&lt;teruls' Atblotlc
CbampioasbipL UB Sladium
and other locations. Through
July 23 . Call 849.0704.

l'etlelolSiooulroiOr-....
tioa., comput.e:r-drivea mannikin
instrumemed co simulalc a range
of patient responses. Coon1ioaled by lhe Nunc Anesthesia

Program. wilh spoall&lt;l&lt;Ship by
School of Nunia&amp;. CAE EJec.
IrOnies Inc. and Obmeda. Inc
Center for Tomorrow. Nonb
~s . ·~p .m. Call 829·

-ww.

:.~ ~·~~

14'.
=

CEIIIIIONIU
XI World V.urans' Atblotlc
C bampioashlps 0peo1aa C~·
eDI&lt;IIlics. UB Sradium. Norlh

-

~p~l~~.

boos. Group ralCS available: by
calling 849.()704. Games con·
tinuc lhrough July 23.

7
y

M 0 N D A

1
=tiON

P.uat nllff

~1

-===-....::=------=~~~TO

-

==~
Louis~J~·
Harvard Univ. Cba1auqua Am·
pbilhuler, Alhenaewn, Smilh·
Wolkes !WI. Spoosorcd by lhe
Graduate School of Educalioo
Alumni As.soc::i.alioo. Preseota·
tion. 10:45 Lm.; Lrmch. 12:15
p.m.: Panel discuuioo. 1:30
p.m. $35. $40.Call645·2491.

A

II' ~

ac.NCD AWIIIO

SUMMa

Sec.rft PlaoeJ: Scenic Trailllt'tl of Westeru Nnr York
aDd Sootbr:ro ODWio, Bruce

Kermocr. 218 Harural Sciences
and Matbematics Complex.
Norlh Campus. 7 p.m. Fr&lt;c. Call
645· 2531.

UB l..atroat Camp. Runs
lhrough June 30. Old Sladium.
Nonb Campus. 8 a.m.·5 p.m.

UB Boys' 11111btbe11 Camp.
Runs duough Juoe 30. VariOU£

T ruspaablo Elem&lt;Dts iJr
CaD&lt;ff Colis, Thomas Fanoio&amp;.
Ph.D .• Annc:d Forces lnstiwte of

F R I D A •

Chautauqua lnstitution. Call
829·2320.
SPOII1S CAIIP
UB Footboll Camp. Runs
lhrough July 3. Locatioo TBA.
Nonb Campus. 8 a,pl.·5 p.m.
SPOII1S
Empln Statt: Games Tryout£.
Runslhrough July 2. Alumni
Arena Naworium. North Campus. 8 a.m.·2 p.m.

SPOIITSCAIIP
UB T....US Camp. Runs rhrough
June 30. Ellicott Tennis Coons.
Nonh Campus. 8 a.m.·5 p.m.

-

- . a L P.uat STAff

ocw, free., multipurpose pboto
ID can1. 210 Student Union.
North Campus. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

-JIIIC-E
P&lt;dlatrir: Potpourri- APA

iH I.II1SC~

P riDdpla o( lateryorelalioo
aDd Dedsior&gt;-Maldaa iD 0n1

autn'CAJIDCarding E-L Faculty, staff
and 5tudents can sign up for

D

through June 29. Soccer Fields.
Nonb Campus. 8 Lm.·5 p.m.

CIIAUTAUQUA DElfT AI.

7a-bydroxyluo Dr. John
0Uan&amp;. Dept of Biocbemiotry
lnd Molecular Patholoay.
Northeastern Ohio Univen:ittes
134B Farber Soulh Campus.
II a.m.

l§.p
-

WEDNESDAY

2

�To sign up. c::ootac~ Carole

--.---.-Notices

7

------9
-----Dopl. of BioJosy, Uoiv. ofCalifomia or S.. Die&amp;o- RCPI.
I 2:30p.m.

WE D NESDA

Smill&gt; Peao, n.y or c.m., eoordiuto.-ror UB, 521 C.,...
Hall, Nord&gt; Campus.

Exhibits

~­

day, Suoday, IUidloc- Mooday
witb exceptioa of one boor prior

P-AT~

AWeveou.
_
10

Romanian-bona Lydia Doaa

~PABSTAW

J M&lt;pb 8ertlao, M.D, Molecular Pbarmooolo&amp;Y and Thenpeutics Program. Memorial SloaoKctttring Cancer Ceoter, New
York Ci ry. RPCI. 12:30 p.m.

The Calrl:r for lhe Alii Box

Off"oce bo&amp; bopa ournmer boun.
The Box Office will be ..,..
Thesday-Fridly from Nooo-6
p.m. and will be closed Satur-

iatludeotou........,_
and desip. pricillc. and credit
admi"'-ioa; ...... firm
development;
malysis; specialized laldina aad ....
vica: aDd c:ommiJioe CMeL
Re&amp;iJlratjoa deadline is Sepo. 22
and . . . .. $100 deposit it requind. For more inf..--ion, pboae 6&lt;15-3200, ru
64S.3202. or E-mail
krul•pop.acJU.buffalo.edu.

__

and M&lt;IW..W Wdallda will
exhibit lbeir pointinp in lhe
UghtweU Gallery this IIUI!IIJler.
The AwARE Procnm orren
Doo.l' s paiDliop ..empty out..
free usi.Jtance in~ down
modemistns'J patrian:bal baaon drinkina. The program it
gage witlt her own brand or
desipcd for modeme 10 heavy
..new abstrlc:tioa:." Her paintings driJ1ken from 21 -55 yean of age
~ oo lhe first floor or lhe
who arc DOl aJcobolia. The
Ughtwdl. Weinatoia's po;atiap PfOII"'U'D ~ tbe i ovolvcassault modemim notions of the . ment of a parmer, friend. or
spouse . This is a research pro"pure" and "ideal" and talce lhe

The Creative Craft Cent&lt;r will

otr..- aa11 ..-orkJhopo beJinnina

lhe woel: or July 17. Worbbops
ioclude telUik desip . koittio&amp;
and c:roc:betio&amp;. ..-;., c:anl
desip, basic pbouJpapby,
quiltioJ. advanced color pbotosraplly. buic potlery, Broziliaa

c:raative photopa:pby, irdt:nDcdiate pot1ery. jewelry c:utio&amp;oigbt pbouJpapby, aature pilotogTipby. po11ery for cbildn:n
and multimedia for cbildrea. AU
workshops run from 7-10 p.m.
ooor: a week fOI' 1ix wecb:. Fea
arc SlO for studeou: and SSO fM
all others. For mort information.
call645-6125 or 645-2434.

DAY OFC_IIEII_

UB faeulry. oulf. students aod
volunrcen: are invited to join
thousands of other WesLem Ne"'
Yorten for the United Way's
Third Annual Day of Caring on
WedneJday. Aug. 23 . The
United W1y will match interests
of volunteers widl the needs of
one of the 90 non-profit healdJ
and human services agencies.
(Professional and support ~~
are asked to aznnge with supervison for approved leiYe from
job responsibilities.) For more
infonnatioo, contact Carole
Smitlt Petro. Day ol Caring Coordinator for UB , 521 Capen
Hall. Nonh Campus.

-A&amp;.C-.IIK
Womea and men coooemed
about their drinking wbo want
to reduce their aloohol use can

=~~tr~!~~~r
ltmitute oo AddictiOM in Buf-

falo. The Couples Driolcing Reduction Program is • I 0-week
course for early Rage probtem
drinken and thc1r pannc:n or
spouses. It is not geared (Oward
alcoholic needs. lbe program
includes an individual inter'Vitw
and medical evaJuatioo. 10
small group seuions. and fi~
UB researt:ben at Erie Coun1y
follow-up ioterVtews. ParticiMedical Center a.re seek.ing SOO panu an: paid for the follow -up
adults •ges 25--60 to take a test
interviews. Call 887-2242 for
to evaJUite memory. Partici more information; all calls art
pant$ mus1 havt a minimum of -confidential.
an eighth grade eduatioo and a
snmen -nc«ET
maximum of a baccalaureak
I'OUCY -"--NCIED
degree . 'The wrineo and vefbal
A. oew student ticketing polk)
te$1 requu-es about 4S minutes.
will be m effecl for the 199S..
Parucipant.s will be reimbursed
fOOlbaJI
scasoa. Under the "DeW
for their timt and tn.vel. Anypolicy. all student tickets will
one interested in participating in
distributed
oa the day or night
lite s tudy &gt;hould call 898-3372
of the game only. A vaJid sru and luvr their namt and numdent lD will be lhe ooly occcpt ber on the answering macbine.
able proof allowed: there will be
a li mit of ooc ticket per student.
Parents Weekend g~me bckets
will be onter.d through lite offlee of Studcot Ufe and an:
available only through the
Parents Weekend P-ck.eu

--y

8 facuft), staff. 1-tuOent
~ .,.
""'~{M'\(( lttMT' flbC'klJ't !he•· n-c--:1

Au,. 23 Car you painl c\e

" UE S DAY

~~

_..__ER

ac:tDICUAU*NI
L.EcnMU

Uving i.a the Shadow or a Voleaoo: Volcani&lt; Huard A.ssessmeol a.od Risk Mil4atioo.,
Michael Sheridan. Ph.D., UB
profeuor and geology chair. 2 10
Natu~ Sciences and Mathemat·
ics Complex. North Campus.
7 p.m. Free. Call 645-253 1.

~!.

i f': ... !'_

., ...

.... ..,,. :mi..:~:

t"' '

t::

form of raucous, sometimesDnt;y. or poetic marriages or
images from anatomy. biker·
culture, Rimbaud and pop. His
paintings arc on the second floor
of lite Lightwell.

IIEUCID I'IIINTS
Tbe UB Art Gallery will present
Sel&lt;cted Prints from tbe University Art CoUectioa through
July 16. Part I in a rotating eUti bition of the Uni versity Art Col lections. the exhibition features
grapbic work by prominent artists Dooa.ld Judd and Marisol.
1be exhibition is shown in the
First Aoor Gallery; gallery
houn are 10:30 a.m.-8
p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and Noon-5 p.m.
Sunday. Admission
is free and o pen to
the public.

gram that ancludes a free med.a cal exammation. All parhetpants
·wi ll be paid for taking part 1n
lh1s 8-week program. All mformation remains completely confidential. Call887-2573 anytum
for more information.

IIANKIN8 IIAMA-ENT
-SLATED Rill FALL
1lle Bank Management lnstitu~
and UB School of Management
announcel its 19th annual Advanced Commeteial Lending
Prognm for professionals in
commerci.allendiog on Oct. I S27. 199S. Curriculum overview

disttibuted through the
Student Lift Office .
WAJRD: IIEAL111Y

--I'IISIIlVDY
Healtlty females 18-45 years
of age with PMS symptOmS
arc invited to participate in a

Wtnl ALCOIIOUC
Women's Pro,rect. an eaght-week
pnlCJOJ1l offered by lite Re·
ICAI'Ch Institute on Addictions an
Buffllo offers free. profes5ional
help for wo men watb alcoholic
pattncn. Women of It least 18
yean of age wbo arc living walh
1 problem drinker and arc mtet·
ested can call &amp;87-2255. All
calls are coa.fideoti.al .

Jobs
FACULTY
Clinical Aslociate Prof....,..
School of Law. Pquing IF5013. ~Asoodate Pro,....,._Dopl. of Surgery. School
of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences. Po&lt;ting IF-5014

-

R eaean:b Tochnieiu 0 -Boocbemistry. Po&lt;ting IR-95049
Dala Maoqerf.itatistidan·
Family Medici.neJOtrtee of Rural Health. Po&lt;ting I R-95050.

Researcb T&lt;duoldu 0 -Pbarmacology aad Toxicoloc, Postong •R-95051. Sec:ntary IIITechnology Transftt Services.
Po&lt;ting tR -95052. ~
TeduUciaa III-Physiology.
Posting tR -95053. Nmrse (halflimo positioo)-Social and 1'1&lt;ventive Medicine. Posting
IR95054.

-

S WI AsaiiWII (SL-2,
part-tiJH)-Biochemistry.
Po&lt;ting IP-5018.

-

~

-CIVL

W EDNESDA Y

~l

DAYOFC-'Uaited Way Day of Cariag.
Breakfast. 7 a.m., Buffalo Convention Center; various project
locations throughout Buffalo.

,_

study. Eligiblt women will re ceive free treaunent if warranlc:d. Call 89'8· S446 for ~
information.

l'aialer (SG-12)-Residential
Facilities. Line 143092.
To obtllln more

~ 01'1

~--- --­

--

- - 1.04 Cn&gt;fta

......----.
....,..__ _
Socc. C.. &lt;-"'1111 June

25) ill the flnt

"f11flhe---~tobll -atUBcluri.,g

t h e -- """"'C- ~

--

~----·

(

�.8

-u...---.-...

H 0 '.

0 P S

_,_

ART DEPARTMENT

Harwer ......... pre&gt;fessor of 811 81 UB since
1961 , has bel3n awarded
the Leo Meissner Prize In
G raphics by the-National
Academy of Design. He

was elecled

a member of
the academy
two years
ago. The

-dscer&amp;monytool&lt;
place In the

-

Museumof
the Natlonal
Academy of Design In New
YOO&lt; City last rnomh. Brev·
erman also is partlcipatlng
In the 14th Spanish Prinllntemaciona l. which wiUtravel
to England, France and Fi
land.

STATISTICS
GOU» MEDAUST:

Irwin Q~, professor and chair of the UB Depanment of Statistics, has
been named the 1995 Gold
Medalist of the Statistical
Society of Canada. This is

the most
prestigious
award of the
Society and
Is given for
meritorious

contributions
to statistical
research and
education.
Gunman , who received a
B.Sc. from McGill University. earned his masters and
doctorate in stabstics from
the University of Toronto.
He came' to UB in 1993
after serving as professor of

the Department of Statistics
at the University of Toronto.
A Fellow of the American
Statistical Association, the
lnstiMe of Mathematical
Sta tistics. the International
Statistical Institute and the
Royal Statistical Society. he
has written five books and
more than 100 publicatoons.
ARCHITECTURE &amp; PlANNING

RED JACKET AWAIID:
Wllllem 11. E. Clarluaon,

UB professor pr8pares to publish comprehensive
study on flndlnp of~lit Emaq Hafer project In • - •
NA1'KAII--

eludes this period of study. Paley
asserts that they have uncovered only
f you're going to Egypt and
the smallest fraction of what the area
you're coming from Syria, as
holds. "The Israeli government is
coundess armies and tr.lders • curren~yexpandinganexistinghigh­
have tluooghout history, and
way tluoogh the site. and each time
you want to follow the sea
the tracton; prepare an area for conroute. you're prnctically forced to
struction, they uncover more matepass all of our sites," says Sanuel
rial for study." says Paley. " We can
Paley. VB professor of Classics and
nev..- really finish."
principal researcher at the Emeq
In 1987. Israel' s Depanment of
Hef..- Art:hoological Research Project
Antiquities loaned findings from the
m lsrn&lt;l' s Alexander River Valley
Emeq He fer project to a show titled
some 30 miles nonh of Tel Aviv.
"Among Ancient Empires" at The
" It' s been a crossroads all tluoogh
Jewish Museum in New York. 1be
history. and it still is. The same roads
Jewish Museum. in tum . transferred
hove been used agnin and agnin."
the~pieces to UB fora three-month
It has been 14 year.; ince the
run m the foyer of Lockwood Liproject'scommencemenLandalmost
brary. This show featured anifacts
eight years since Paley and his assofrom the period between the Middle
ciates displayed their findings from
Bronze Age (c. 2000 BCE) and the
the project on a large scale. No"'• as
Roman/Byzantine ern (400 CE).
Paley prepares to publish the first
Since that time. the site has pro-comprehensive study of the area in
duced fascinating and oflen stanlmg
English. years of independent and
revelations about the various cullooselyconjoiningresean:h will fmally
tures that have inhab1ted the area.
be unified into one series of volumes.
Slowly (because nearly all archeoloThis is no small task. but the story of
gists engaged in this son of research
this historic thoroughfare and the
are loath to jump to conclusions). as
towns and senlements that evolved
the various pieces come together. a
around iL is no small story.
story--or rather a series of corre·
The road through the region was
Ia ted stories-is beginning to emerge
known for centuries as the "via
from the endless piles of raw dalll.
eporter Contributor

I

marls," or "the way of the sea," a
tenn preserved from Biblical times
when the ancient Hebrews called it
"derekh hayam." It witnessed the
transformation ofhumankind from
nomadic hunter-gatherers into sed-

County Historical Soci-

entary fanners some 8.000 years
ago and has been inhabited by
armies and traders of the Egyptian.
Assyrian. Persian. Greek. Roman.
Arab. Turkish. and British empires.
Th~ region can boast this impressive lineage for a few simple
and binding geographical reasons:
its proximity to the sea. its height

ety's annual

and

Red Jacket
Award lor
community

water sources and arable land in
the area. and its position along the
only sea route from Syria to Egypt.
These factors have made it a valu·
able piece of land since the beginnings of civilization.
Paley and his associates stan ed
lheir work on several sites (Tell el
lfshar. Ma ' avarot. and the pon of
Mikhmoret) in 1979 after a Brooklyn Museum project with which
they were affiliated ground to a
hal t. UB began fund ing the new
project in 1979, a nd with substantial suppon fro m private sponsorship, mainllli ned it up until 1992
whe n Paley and hi s associates con·
eluded their second stage of the
work. During that time, Paley supervised II seasons and inlroduced
some 500students to the site and to
the history buried within it.
While the forthcoming publication of the four-volume series con-

adjunct professor in the
School of Architecture and
Planning, was honored
,.,-::----.rn June 14 with
the Buffalo
and Ene

CLARKSON

Uncovering the
stories at historic
crossroads

serv+ce.
Clarkson shared the award
with his brother, Max B. E.

Clarkaon.
William Clarkson served
as CEO and chairman of
Graphic Controls Corp from
1970 to 1983, when he b&amp;came executive deputy
commisssione r of the state
Commerce Department. A
management consultant
and e member of the Family
Business Consultancy, he

received the Waner Cooke
award from UB Alumni Association In 1992. He and
his wile endowed the William and 8isabelh Clarkson
Vlsilfng Chair in ArchHecture and Planning In 1969.

dryne s~.

the presence of fresh

erhaps the most exciting of the
conclusions. is
the result of apatite and collagen
testing ofbone fragments dating back
to the Chalcolithic period of approximately 4000 BCE . Anagnosti
Agelarakis of Adelphi University.
after 15 years of research, has pro' ''ded the first scientifiC analyses that
disprove previous theories that all
the Chalcolithic people ofthis region
were nomadic hunter-gatherers.llle:
bones he analyzed re,·ea] that their
diet was primarily vegetarian. indj.
eating a sedentary agrarian lifestyle.
"I knew that pathologists had been
doing such bone studies in conjune·
tion with archeological research for
a while." says Paley. "and I thought
it "ould be helpful to use this~­
nology forourworl&lt;at Emeq Hefer."
While other Chalcolithic people
in different areas of the ancient
Middle East were already construc ti ng cities. it has been widely
held that the people of th is region
remained nomadic unt il into the
Early Bronze Age. Agelarakis' findings not only disprove this assuml&gt;'
tion. but also reaffirm the potential
val ue of apatite and collagen testi ng
for archeological research.
Not long ago, archeologists had
to rely exclusively on scarce or
sometimes mi sleading evidence of
a people' s diet, preserved in the form
of "garbage" materials scattered
around a site. But with this new technique--&lt;&gt;penuing on tlie reliable

P recent research

Claulcs Professor Samuel Paley
"you are what you eat" principleresearchers can actually see what
these ancient people ate as evidenced
by their physical composition.
Paley has also recen~y cooperated with Mfliam C. Olemoffofthe
Harvard School of Public Health on
a study of a storage bin discovered at
Tellellfshar in 1990.&lt;lltmolfsstudy
of the seeds collected from this site
has revealed that slr.llegies changed
dramatically from subsistence agriculture to the creation of a cash crop
during the Late Bronze Age. Paley
and Chernoff speculate that this
change was the result of external
pressu~ on Canaanite towns to produce a taxable commodity. pressure
probably coming from Egypt. which
extended its empire inlo the Levant
during the Late Bronze Age.
In addition to this. the prelim inary repon has just been completed
on a cune.ifonn tablet found at the
pon site of Mil:hmoret in 1984.
The ll!blet was conserved at Yale
University and prepared for publication by Paley, Roben Stieglitz
(Rutgers University) and Ira Spar
of the Metropolitan Museum of
An. Transcriptions of the ublet
were sent to specialists in Chicago.
Moscow, England, and France. in

order to verify the content of the
tablet. It documents the sale of a
young, female slave during the
reignofCambysus. the Persian king
who conquered Egypt at the end of
the SIXth century BCE.
What is interesting about this find.
says Paley, "that there have been
barely 1"0 oozen examples of such
tableu found in all of Israel. The
peopleoftheregiontraditionallyused
papyrus for written records. a form
that is far less durable over time.
While only one half of the ublet
was found. the content of the other
half can be guessed aL given the
precedence established by similar
ll!blets uneanhed in Mesopolamia
Such objects functioned essentially
as stone receipts or proofs of ownership, and are written in a highly
standardized form.
As Paley anempts to assemble
the final sums of money needed to
fmish the survey. it could seem file
theconclus1onof a longjoumey. But
he is reluctant to view it lhat way. (
·111e publication of these volumes
does not really signify any son of
conclusion," he says. "'There is more
information in that site than we could
ever document, so you just publish
what you've found. and k&lt;&gt;ep going.''

Sadder Foundation gift
aids archeology project
A promiM macle toa UB professor by the late Anhur Saclderhas
resulted in a $25,000 gift in •uppon of a publication describing the
result.i of the university 's archeological excavations in Israel.
According to Samuel Paley, professor of classics and chainnan
of the V B Judaic Studies Program, Saclder was perhaps the most
imponant supponer of archeology in America. He had promised to
suppon Pale y's work at the Emeq Hefer site in Israel, and that
promise was fulfi lled in a bequest after his death.
The gift from the Sackler Foundation will help archeologists
complete work: includi ng carbon-14 dating of bone fragments
found at the site.
The carbon- 14 datiog also will allow researchers to pinpoint the
exact tin:"' period when these people inhabited the region. This
information wtll conclude the research for, and result in publication
of. the first in a four-volume comprehensive survey of discoveries
in the region since the dig began in 1978.

�----.-Greiner accents setvice

9

....

Wealthy Knight,
senior therapist

_,_,_YIOAL

Reporter Edttor

ERVICE WAS HIGH on the
list of topics as UB President
William R. Greiner presented
the final UB at Sunrise program of the 1994-95 academic

.,._..~ . . . Mid June I in
the Coldspring Bible Chapel for Wealthy
" Sally" Knight, a senior occupational !hera- pist at the Buffalo Psychiatric Center for
many years who had served as a clinical
year.
supervisor for occupational therapy students
"Public higher education in the United
at UB. Knigbt,46,died May 26 in her home
States to a large extent was built on the
in Buffalo following a long illness.
premise that universities would serve. It was
Knigbt, who received her bachelor's deon that land-grant tradition that the great
gree from UB in 1971 , became certified and
public unjversities were built.. .. said Greiner.
licensed as an occupational therapist. In adwbo spoke May 3 in tbe Center r... Tomor·
dition to her therapy work, she was founder
row before a crowd of about 200.
and owner of Patchwork, a craft business.
'Those of us wbo work at UB are privi ·
She was a member of the Occupational
leged. With that privilege goes obligation."
The emphasis on public service needs not
Therapy A ssociation, the New York State
Occupational Association and a number of
only to conti nue. ljut to grow, he emphasized. " I ' m tall&lt;in~ about what we do in
crafts organizations.
health care. I'm talpng about' what we do
She is survived by her mother, Margaret
Knight ; five sisters, Willa Parrott, Betty J.
with our law school' clinics .... We should be
Moss, Johnnie B . Hill. Dorothy L. Jones and
doing a much better job in technology transMatt i~ L. Rhodes; and a brother. Richard A.
fer than we have," Greiner said.
A s an institution, UB has always supported and revered individualism of both

Alan Freeman,
law professor

AIM F - , professor of law in the UB
School of Law, died Friday, May 26. in
Buffalo General Hospital after a long illness.
He was 51.

A constitutional law expen. Freeman
joined the UB faculty in 1982 after serving
as a visiting professor the previou,;tear. He
formerly taught at the University of Minnesota Law School.
"Alan was a valued colleague and friend,"
said Nils Olsen,

vice dean for academic affairs at
the U B law
school. " He was

an exceptional
teacher
who
taught over a
broad range of

subjects. He was
deeply appreci·
ated by his students; they have
beenextraordinarily fond of him

over the ~ - His articles on critical race
theol)' are nationally renowned." Olsen said.
''His recent scholarship with his wife and colleague, Elizabeth Mensch. touched upon many

difficult. contemporary issues with great sen-

sitivity and insight.
" Alan always was willing and delighted

to assist others on a collegial level as well:'
he added. "Hi s thoughtful comment an~ critiques have helped many in their sch0larly
pursuits. He will be deeply missed."
Freeman's most recent book. "The Poli tics of Virtue: I s A bortion Dehatable?" coauthored with M ensch. advocates introducing
theological thougbt into the public debate on

abortion to bring about a compromise between the two sides of the volatile i$sue.

faculty and sludents. ''We give tenure to
promote freedom of expression," Greiner
noted . Somewhere in our suppon of indi·
vidualism. however. we've forgotten that
there also is an obligation to the institu·
tion. he said ...The privilege that a univer·
sity supplies ca11s for some regular
giveback."

Research and schola~iti p art: what distin·
guish UB as an institution. Greiner also

at Sunrise program

noted. "We're one
of a l&lt;ind. .. the only

comprehensive in·

stitution within in
the State University
system," he said. As

such. Greiner said
he wan!$ UB to be
recognized as the
premier public insti-

tution in the nonh·
east.
Accordin&amp; to
Greinc&lt;. while there
has been a decline

in the traditional
cadre from where

students are drawn.
SUNY's under- . President GreiMrlectures at~--..
graduate enrollment
expect to see a further decline in state tax
has risen steadily since 1980. " We were
support for SUNY. Greiner said.
exporting not only most but the best of our
s1udents. We want to stop the brain drain:· Close to 60 percent of UB •s budget is going to
come
from revenue. he said. Of that amount,
he said. •
Greiner S3ld. "64 percent is generated by what
we consider ·ourrevenue•"--tuition and fees.
e also suggested thai the State Univer·
sity system needs to reorganize to allow
"All tuition incomegoesintoaoentral pot. ... You

H

the four university centerl more autonomy.

''"Wlun we think we need is a change in the

have to leave the income where n is generated.
1bc: campuses have to keep their own rev·

relation hip between us and SUNY."

enue. They ha'e to be encouraged to 1\,ener-

11le four uni versity centers are organized
and operate differently from other SUNY
schools. " SUNY is going to have to differentiate the system. We need to let institutions
take advantage of their differences." Greiner
said. SUNY is loving from tax supported to

ate the1r own mcome." Gremer said. Given
its siu and pntenual. UB needs "to be freed
up a little bit" from SUNY . Greiner said.
"We should be a model for how you deliver

pubhc scrvtces ..

Leners
'Selective memory' affects April 27 account of the Hayes H§ll 45
DEAR EDITOR:
I guess we 're all a little gu1lty of se1ect1ve memory and recall
A Significant om1SS1on from your story on the good old "Hayes
Hall45" (Reponer. Apnl 27 . 1995) 1s that one or several of
!hem had pr~nted a flyer calling on "all like m1nded people " to
JOin them m Hayes Hall Th1s flyer was being d1stnbuted 1n the
Student Un1on wh1ch then served as headquarters for the
student strikers In other words. students were be1ng asked to
JOin th1s "peacefu l faculty meeting •
Hayes Hall was surrounded by Buffalo police If any large
number of "like minded people" had tned to jo1n the ' 45 '
there was a great likelihood of a clash like the one of the mght
before. which was quite unpleasant
So there was an urgency to get the "45 ' out before others
accepted the invitation to try to JOin the group But there was
warning. at least 30 mmutes and I bel1eve more Several nonU.S. citizens d1d leave the group when Dr Bush-Brown . an·
other VP. warned that arrest m1ght cause a v1sa cancellation
Ther_,ay have been one or two others who leh
Whether the Buffalo police should have been on campus 1n
such numbers or even at all, is a question quite separate from
the "45' incident. but one wh1ch nevertheless gets very Intertwined w ith 1t There were many faculty who argued loudly
and persuaded many students that the police had no rig~tto
be on campus at all. that campus was a sanctuary from the
police. that the police were the enemy Ironically familiar. 1s ''

not? Well . some force had to stop the rock throw1ng library
fife bomb1ng. ' On Strike' Shut It
class d1srupung acliVllies of the student (and other) demonstrators The adm,mstrauon . w1th 1ts grand total of 10 campus police for all sh1hs .
could not The faculty. s1ncere and well-1ntent1oned as so
many were. could not The campus was and 1s 1n the C1ty of
Buffalo Law and order 1n the C1ty of Buffalo was and IS the
charge of the Buffalo police
Charlie Ke1l seems to be an exception to th1s. but It has
been somewhat amus1ng over the years to hear how those
brave enough to "lay the" bod1es on the line' were so 1nsulted
and Indignant when the police , very gently. moved those bodIeS to the paddy wagon
Dick Siggelkow. another v1ce pres1dent. but one not Involved 1n th1s 1nC1dent. wrole a more balanced account about
10 years ago 1n h1s book on the campus unrest m the '60s and
70s. I say mot'e balanced because h1s sources 1ncluded more
than JUSt members oJ the "45" 1tself He 1S alive and well and
lives m Ellicottville.
Ed Doty . by the way, stayed with the un1vers1ty until h1s
ret~rement 1n 1989. and continues to live fairly actively in the
Buffalo area

Down:

LW. DOTY
(former UB VICe Prestdent lor Fmanoe and Management)
'"Orchard Park. N Y

He and Mensch also co-authored a text-

s

book on property law and collaborated on

numerous book chapters. articles in legal
journals, essays. reviews and commentaries.

DEAR EDITOR:

Freeman earned a bachelor's degree from
Brown University and a law degree from
New York University School of Law.
In addition to Mensch, Freeman is survived by a daughter, Jennifer Freeman of
Amherst; two sons, James and Jeremy of
Amherst; two stepsons, Jonathan and Joshua
Mensch of New York City; his parents, Aorence and Julius Freeman of Amherst, and a
sister, Jane Levine of Evanston, Ill.
Services were held in Delaware Park Memorial Chapel and a memorial service was
held May 30 in St. Paul ' s Episcopal Cathedral. A memorial service is being planned by
the law school. to bike place in the fall.

If Robert McNamara can admit he made m istakes. it would be
no shame for Peter Regan ('Remembering the Hayes 45.'
Reponer. April 27. 1995. Vol. 261126) to do something similar
At least he should explain to us why he thinks he · was not
d irectly involved" when we understand that he gave the order
to call in the police (who then arrested the 45 demonstrating
faculty)!
I was a UB faculty member until November 1969. and had.
for example, engaged in the Dow Chemical picket the previous year (which Martin Meyerson defused with some ingenuity and w ithout any arrests or violence beyond one broken ·
pane of g lass).
I leh the university because I foresaw the kind of confrontalion that occurred in March 1970 and was uncertain of my
ability to deal with the moral ambiguities involved. We tried to

preserve our nght to demonstrate peaceably and effectively.
but there was always a penumbra of violence that loomed
over us from both sides. Everyone made m istakes . Sometimes
we on the "side' of ·peace and freedom" alienated potential
allies by our actions (I remember making Edgar Friedenberg
uncomfortable one day with one of my more eccentric proposals) Sometimes we let things ride when we should have acted
more firmly .
So come on. Peter Regan! If the Weathermen have been
replaced as the apparent threat to the American "order· by
the Militias. surely the time for the "wast)ing of the spears· has
arrived . Adm~ you might have mishandled some of~ and then
we can all go out for a drink.

-~
Profess&lt;X of Biological Sciences
Brocl&lt; University
St. Gatharines. Onr. canada

�and Management of Patients
Comprised by Local and System-

C1

UB s public radio statioo. WBro-J'Jo( r=ived 11uee firstplace awards and one specialllli!olion in the New York

Stile Assoc~ Pras aMuallleW$ competition.
WiDDJDg fust-ptace awards in Oass 2 Radio wete Au
Pearce for her ~tary.-'"lbeMammogram. Jeulfer Gold
for ber featDre. ~Breakfast Ill flllll11)''s." and 1u ~and
.._... .,_.. far lllair clocumosltary serie5. "The FIRI y ear.M
~'8.16, 'WBPO ...,...t manap, DOled- Pearoe and
Gold are botb voluntecn ttthe 518lion.
. Mad ScoCt. 1M " ' - " and BW Rall'el won a special
~boo a wan! for lbeir CJD&amp;Oin&amp; coverage of the Buffalo teachM

~a Kaplan, professor
of medicine in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, and his wife
Marilyn Kaplan, UB director of
regional developmen~ have d&lt;&gt;nated a painting by poet e.e.
cummings to the university's
Poetry and Rare Books Collec·
'tion, where the work is now on
display.

atic Cancer Therapies," William
Carl, UB clioical associ&amp; professor of fiXed pros1hodontics.
June 29: "Principles of Interpretation and Decision-Making in
Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology," Laurie C. Carter, UB resean:h and clinical assistant
professor of oral diagnostic sci-

ences.
June 30: "Current Concepts in
Salivaty Gland Disorders,"

ers contracl dispute.

0

Twist King Chubby
Checker will perform next
month when the North Campus
plays host to the lith World Veterans Athletic Ownpionships.
lbe international field competition for women 35 and older and
for men over age 40. will be beld
July 13-23, with Clubby Olecker
as star of the gala opener. "Still
Rocltin' After All These years,"
July 14 at UB Stadium. lbegames
will be sponsored by NYNEX.
.which will also sponsor the closing ceremonies at UB Stadium on
July 23, featuring Buffal&lt;&gt;-area sax
legend Bobby Militello and singer
Maureen McGovern.
Classic hot rods and street
machines carrying local officials
will lead the parade of athletes
with singers and dancers dressed
in poodle skirts, bobby socks and
leather jackets accompanying
Cbecker in a performance of rock
' n' roll from the '50s and '60s.
Olannel 2 will broadcast live
from both the opening and closing pageants at UB.
About 6,000 athletes and
6,000 spectators are expected for
the competition featuring masters
track and field talent. It will take
place at UB , in Niagara Falls and
Akron and along the Skylon
Marathon route. Tickets are S 18
for both the opening and closing
ceremorues, and are available
from Prime Seats. Call 849-0704.

Alumni to hear talk on
~•lo

revitalization

r-l Henry L. Taylor Jr., asS&lt;&gt;1!...1 ctate professor of American
Studies and director of the Center
for Applied Public Affairs Studies at UB, will lecture on the
revitalization of Buffalo at a Se-

nior Alumni

Luncheon. to be
beld at noon June
27. in the Center
for
Tomorrow.
Cost of the
luncheon is SIO.
TAYLOR
Reservations
deadline is June 23. For more
informatiOn or to make reservations, call 829-2608.
A UB faculty member since
1987, Taylor has research and
teaching interests that lie in the
areas of urban studies and public
pohcy, American urban history.
African-American history and
U .S. history since I 877.

. He also is an adjunct professor
m the Department of Planning
and Design in the UB School of
Architecture and Planning.
He Is editor of "Race and the
City: Work. Community and
Protest in Cincinnati" and "African Americans and the Rise of
Buffalo's Post-Industrial City,
1940 to Presen~" for which he
won the William Well s Brown
Award from the Afro-American
Historical Society of the

Enhancing math. science
and computer skills is the

Niagara Frontier for his outstanding contributions to the
preservation of African-American history .
He is completing a book,
" Menace to the City: Black
Suburbanization and the City
Planning Movement in Cincinnati, 1850-1950."
Taylor, a founding member
and president of the Office of
Urban Initiatives, Inc., a planning
and economic-development
group. is a member of the Greater
Buffalo Economic Development
Coordinating Committee, the
Buffalo branch of the New York
State Neighborhood Based Alliance and the Buffalo Metropol itan Housing Partnership, Inc.

SUmmer Sc:llolars
Proiram begins July 10

0

lbe Summer Scholars

Program. a six-week. nonresidential enrichment program
for academically gifted high
school students will be held from
7:30 a.m.- 5 p.m., Mondays
through Fridays. July 10-Aug. 18
on the North Campus.
Participants wiU take a university course and get a head stan on
college degrees as well as attending two non-credit seminars:
Methods of Inquiry, which enhances critical tl)inking capabilities _and lbe Discovery Seminar
featuring lectures by UB faculty
on hot topics in the disciplines,
contemporary research initiatives
and a look at professional ca=r
issues.
Field trips. athletic activities
c_omputer workshops and an o;
bonal driver education course
round out the program.
Tuition of $2,500 covers course
costs and fees. UB will select
students based on high school
transcripts and guidance counselor
or teacher recommendations.
For more information, contact
guidance counselors or call the
office of UB at Nite, 829-2202.

cycle engine supplied by Briggs
&amp; Stratton.
Team members are Eric •
Miller, Karen Sweeney. Glenn
Wilson, Man: Orloff. Jobn
Swaine and Stephanie Cornelius.
Olristina Bloebaum, UB assistant
professor of mechanical and
aerospace engineering, serves as
faculty advisor.
Technical assistance from the
UB Engineering Machine Shop
was provided by Ken Peebles,
Dan Cook, Roger Teagarden, Bill
Macy and Gaty Olson.

While best known for his
poetry, cummings painted most
of his life.
lbe painting donated by the
Kaplans is an unframed oil paintmg on stretched canvas. It depicts
a landscape of mountains in New
Hampshire. On the back. the
painting is dated Oct 4, 1940,
followed by cummings' initials.
"ibis painting is a line illustration of the close association
between modem poetry and
painting," said Robert Bertboll
curator of UB · s Poetry and Rare'
Books Collection. "We are grateful to Marilyn and Stephen
Kaplan for their generosity."
The painting will be included
in the UB Poetry and Rare Books
Collection. which includes an
extensive collection of poetry,
manuscripts and memorabilia
from distinguished American
poets.
This e .e. cummings piece is
distinctive because of the artist 's
dedication of the painting to his
wife. evidenced by the words "for
Marion" written after his initials
on the back of the painting.

Dental Congress at
Chautauqua June 28-30
Oral complications and
management of patients
compromised by cancer therapies
wdl be among the topics discussed at the 16th annual
Chautauqua Dental Congress. 10
be beld June 28-30 at the
Chautauqua Institution.
Designed to keep the dental
~mmunity current on topics of
mteres~ lbe congress is sponsored
by the UB School of Dental
Medicine, Independent Health of
Buffalo and Wamer-Lamben
Consumer Health Products
G roup . Sessions will be beld from
9 a.m. to noon each day and are
open to the dental community.
Topics and speakers are:
June 28: "Onll Complications

0

Alfredo Aguirre, UB assistant
professor of oral diagoostic sciences. For more information, calJ
829-2320.

A high-mileage vehicle
getting ~ miles-pergallon that was designed and built
by UB engineering students won
second prize in the 14th annual
Supermileage Competition, beld
June 4 in Marshall. MX:h. Fll'SI
place went to a Canadian entry
from the University of Sberbrooke
making UB 's bullet-5haped car~
finisher among U.S. teams. lbe
UB team brought home a $550
cash prize and a trophy.
Some 33 juel-stingy vehicles
designed by students at colleges
and universities in the U.S. and
Canada participated in the competition, sponsored by the Society
of Automouve Engineers.
Fuel econom¥.was tested as
the vehicles moved at a required
m1rumum average speed of 15
miles-per-hour in 9 .6-mile performance runs. The UB vehicle
powered by I 00-octaoe fuel.' was
outfitted with a modified four-

fc:x:us of a summer program
atmed at female and minority
high school students from Erie
and Niagara counties, who are
interested in careen in science.
engineering and architecture.
The program is offered
through the non-profit BEAM
(Buffalo F.ngineering Awareness
for Minorities). a joint effon of
30 WNY businesses and industries and educators at UB. Erie
Community College-North and
Canisius College.
Students will work on research
projects, take field trips and bearguest speakers. On the program:
Architecture and engineering fo.post-eighth graders, July 6-28.
ECC-North; computer skills,
communication, math and science
for post-ninth and tenth -graders.
July 6-28, Canisius; college-pr-.p
courses in calculus and chemistry
for post eleventh-graders. July 6Aug. II , UB North Campus.
Selected students in grades 912 will be enrolled in the honors
program at UB to work on resean:h projects with grad students
and professors. July 6-Aug. 11 .
On July 14, all students will parUCJpate'" laboratory demonstrations in the UB engineering
facilities on the North Campus.

UB team winner In
ateel brlcl&amp;• contest

0

Engineering students at UB
placed first in one category
and 13th overall in a field oi 31
schools at the National Model
Steel Bridge Competition. May
14 '"Ga~nesville, Fla. Faculty
adv1sor 1s Stuart Chen. assistant
professor of civil engineering.
Team c&lt;&gt;-captains are Blaise

�--------Blabcc and Man Mroz. Other
ream members are Maria
Balingit, Gregory Ball, Greg
Bendell, Steven Boelc. Chelsea
Brandau. Patricia "Broderick.
Brian P. Oarl&lt;e, Anthony Cypert.
Jonathan DePJanche, James
Elmer, David Evers, Neil C.
Godden, AI Hanbridge, Katherine
Kooistra, G uy Mason, Mike
McManus, Nilti Shute, Alfred
Simeone and Joseph Holm.
Technical assistance was pro·
vided by Dick Cizdziel of the
National Center for Earthquake
Engineering Research and Gary
Majewslti of the UB Civil Engi neering Structural Laboratory.
Concrete~

contest prtzea

wlna

0

"Water Buffalo," a concrete
canoe designed and built by
engineering students al UB. was
paddled to two first-place prizes
and third place overall in the
American Society of Civil Engineers' Concrete Canoe Regional
Competition April 29 at Union
College, Schenectady.
UB ream members James
Roessti ng and Mary Jo Kirisits
won' ftrst place in the coed sprint
category; Douglas Fink and Keith
Stanczewski came in ftrst in the
men's long distance category.
Roessliog and Fink placed second
in the men's sprint, while Kirisits
and Maria Balingit were third in
the women's sprinL Kirisits and
Keith Gifford are co-&lt;:aptains of
"Water Buffalo."
Other ream members are Jeff
Briglia, Patricia Broderick, Barbara M . Herstein, John Lovelace.
Thomas Luck, Michael Marino.
Brian Sibiga, Bruce Utter and
Cathy Zalocki.
John Mander of the UB Department of Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering was faculty advisor. Gary Majewski of
the Deparunent of Civil Engineeri ng Structural Laboratory
was technical advisor.

UBarnlnthln

...u-1 competition
A form ula-style car built
and designed by UB engineeri ng students placed ninth in a
field of vehicles from 84 colleges
and universities in the annua1
Soc iety of Automotive Engineers
Formula Car event. held May 1821 in Pontiac, Mich.
The UB ream placed first in the
fl owmaster Exhaust Technology
competition, which carried a
S1,000 award, and advanced to the
finals in engineering design.
Team captain is Simon Dean.
Other team members include Jeff
Woblschlegal, Jim Keane, Bill
Lepley, Jon Honig, Jon LaRue,
Fred Thurston, Kyle Moll,
Stephanie Cornelius, Olarles
Pandelis and Steve J..eonard.
Faculty advisor is Robert
Wetberhold, UB associate professor of mechanical and aerospace
engineering. Dan Cook of
Lancaster was team advisor at the
national evenL Other technical
advisors from the UB Engineering Machine Shop are Gary
Olson, William Macy, Roger
Teagarden and Ken Peebles.

0

A

1',

A

Twenty-live 5IUdcots in the UB School or Pharmacy wen: honored during
the school's ~~ceremony M1y 13. Among the =ipients
....,.. five multipic-.word winncn:
Docuisc WeUs, Robel1 H. Ritz Aword and Roy M. Barr Award: Richard
Glaboch, Raben H. Ritz Award, Eino Nelsoo Award and Merck Sharp &amp;
Dohme Award: Suocey Shcplrd, Eino Nelsoo Award, Francis P. Taylor Aword,
MUJaret C. Swisher Memorial Award; Alecia Montone. American Pbarmaccutical Association McNeil Moour and PeoUe ProfesUoaalism A
by McNeil Conswna- Producu Company and l'lulrmocist'• Anodarion or
Western New Yon SIUdentl..eadeBitip Award: O&gt;eryl Rose, Facts and Comparisons Award of Excel lena in Oinical Commumcations and Merck Sharp &amp;

won!-

Dohme Award.

Other award winners we~ :
JenniferGrampp. Roger Mantsavioos Award; cOurtney Enright, Roy M.
BUT AWild: Shannon Weise&lt;. Samuel J. Bauda Award; Debn Merlo. A.B.
Lemon Memorial Award; Jennifer Arnone, UB Pharmacy AJumm Assoc1auon
Aword ; Susan Vogel. Renee A. Dederich Memorial Award; Raben
Redzilcowski, Michael E. Crawford Award: JefTn:y Ermer. Cope! Rubenstetn
Aword: Stacey Hulick. lilly Achievement Award: Gino Casey. Smiti&gt;Kiine
Beedwn Pbarmaceuticals Patient Can: Award: Cori Miltlejn. Roche Pharmacy
Communications Award: Nancy Rompala. Pfiur Pbarmaccuticals Community
Pbarmacy Internship Award.
Also: Deepa Misra. Mylan Pbarmaccuticals Excellence tn Pharmacy Award:
Michelle Mllllhies. Western N Yon Sodecy of Hospital Pharmacists Award:
Pamela Man.ello-Kubek. McKC$0011 and Robbins Academy of Students of
Pbarmacy Aword: Jerri Lemm, Academy of Students of Pharmacy Certificate
of R=gnition; Oleryl Conway, Patient Counseling Competition Award: Bn:u
Mascia. John F. M&lt;nn Mell'KJiial Awani; Gail Oll.ntaduJy, American Institute
of Chemists Foundation Aword; William Kielblsa. Dlvid E. Gunman

58 Inducted Into Beta Ganuna Sl&amp;ma

0

lbe School of Management inducted 5$ graduates into Beta Gamma

Sigma. the National Scholastic Manag~t Honor Society at an indue·

tion cemnony and n:ception held May 2 in the Center for Tomorrow. Those
inducted were:
Undergraduates: Joseph R. Birtman. Cynthi1 A. Brickell. Conni A. Bron.
Thomls D. Cassidy. Michael W. Elcstrum, Stella M. Fulcher. Anny L Gfroerer.
Matthew A. Gray. Michael D. Horgan, luditl&gt; A. Lawson. Joseph l . Levinson.
Keith H. Monn, Daryl I . Meyer. Momchil K. Momchilov. Maria E. Murphy.
Paul1 M. Panonc:. K"""' S. Piersllalski. Nadine R. Potiscnsky. Timo&lt;hy R.
Privitera. Carlos Rey Martin, Soon W. Rice, Christopher A. Schenk. Canine A.
Smith. Walter W. Staniszewski. Weei ling Tam. Masayukl Uemura. William
E. Wood
M.B.A.: Susan M. eairier. Pao-Chung Chen. William F. Daltoo Ill. Michael
D. Dosilk. Phyllis A. F1eischman. Cynthia A. Holwoy. Michael! K1ye. Ed·
ward R. Kennedy. Kathleen t... Lamb Grieco, Brion W. LaPrade. Sukelcyu lee.
Nancy G. Lynch. Thomas G. McElhenny, Alan P. Mtnney. lo Ellen Paoliru.
Donald W. Pfeiffer. William F. Phister. Petrus Phol. Alan R. Saltzman, Rochanl
R. Shopmyer. Michele A. Tronconi, James M. Tucker, Ke\in W. Wagoer
Ph.D.: Arindam Bane&lt;joe. Sheng-Syan Chen. Joanne P. Heal y. Naresh
Khatri. Sung-Hun Kim. Uday R. Kuman. Rajan Sambandam. Susan A. SIJt.esDoe.

Medical School ewanla go to 38 atudenb
Thiny~ight students at the UB School or Medicine and 81omcdical
Sciences were honored during the school's commencement ceremony
May 14. Among lhe recipientS we~ 10 multiple-award winners:
Michele Potemp1. Charles Bauda Aword and Medical Society of the State of
New York Award; Martin Mahoney. Amc:rican Academy of Family Physicians
President's Award and S. Robert Narins Memorial Award; 'Thomas Owens. Dr.
Cryenius Chapin Award and Medical Alumni Association Award; Susan Poets.
Dr. Cryenius Olapin Award and Dr. Austin Ainl Award; Joel Shapiro, Dr.
Cryl:nius 0\.apin Award and David K. Miller Prize in Medicine: Omalara
(Lara) Akinbami. BacceUi Award and Dean's Award; Jennifer Zubler. Gordon
S. Ehrlich Award and Ester Ponce Grimaldi. M.D.. Award: Ralph Tufono.
Norman Haber Memorial Award and Dt-. Heinrich l..eonltardt Priu in Surgery;
Thomas Stone. Maimonides Medical Society Award. Bernard H. Smitl&gt; Memorial Award in Clinical Neurology. The Stephen l . Paolini Award and EJ .
Weisenheimer Award; Miroslav Bobek, Bernard H. Smith Memorial Award in
Clinical Neurology and John R. Paine Aword in Surgeiy.

0

Otber graduates receiving awards were:
Wendy Weinstein. Gilbert M. Beck Memorial Prize in Psychiatry: Kan:n
Chojnacki. Buffalo Surgical Sodety Prize in Surgery; Frank Carnevale,
Otildren •s Hospital Prize; Carole Fenton, Sodety for ACIIdemic Emergency
Medicine Award: The&lt;ue Duaoe, BernJwdt and Sophie B. Goulicb Award:
Maurits Boon, Francis J. Klocke Award; Tant Sosa.l..icbennan Award: FPitl&gt;
He1vens, S. Robert Narins Memorial Award; Lori Cohen. S. Raben Narins
Memorial Award.
Also: Dll'ttn Caparaso, S . Roben Narins Memorial Award; Lynene
Emery, G. Nonis Mi ner Memorial Award; Romauld Sl uyten, Benjamin E.
and Lila Obletz Award; Breu Arnoldo, Jobn R. Pai ne Award in Surgery;
Oona Lim. Clyde L. Randall Society Award in Gynecology-Obstetrics;
Kathleen Bethi n, Emilie D avis Rodenberg Memorial Award ; C raig
Cbeifetz., PhilipP. Sang Memorial Award; Jeffrey Tessier. John Watson
Award in Medicine.
Also: JIUIICO Killius. Dt-. George Alker Award: Timo&lt;hy Van Dour. l iUIICO
Platt White Society Award; Shane Ferguson. Frederick B. Wilkes Pediatric
Award; Ellen Whyte, Farney R. Wurlitzer Award: Denise Solcolofsky, Buffalo
Pediatric Society Award; Eric Skoog. Thomas J. Gunuso Award; Matthew
Withiam-Leitch. Hans J. Lowenstein Aword in Obstetrics; Oleryl Buck, Nl·
tional Medical Aslociation Award; Tracie DiMarco. Marie A. Petrino Award;
Dlvid Odell, S. Mouchly Small M.D. Award; Dlvid Fiorella, Morris &amp; Sadie
Stein Neuromatomy Award.

f

[1

~

The UB Department or Art has presented awards to tw0 outstanding
undcrg;raduate students, JUDCS Bums and Gina Hallock.
Bums, a junior in the Pawling Pmgnm. has recetved the Philtp C. and
Virginia Cutl&gt;bett EIOOII Painting Scholanhip. The pointong faculty m the Art
Oepanmcnt seJecu the annual winner, a fuJJ.fime JUnior 5Ndenl in the Pamtmg
Pmgnm who has 500wn oui&lt;Widing 1bility and interest in the foeld.
The ocholmhip wu established wuh a JPDI m. Viq;aia Cuthbcn ElliotL
SboODd _ _ _ _ PbillpC. EIIIolll..--srar:lOyanoo--01\

0

educot&lt;n in Western New York. tneludin&amp; lengthy taNTeS • the AJbd&amp;lll Art
Schnot and its successor. the UB Depanmcnt or An. From 1941-69. Philip
Ell101t was dirta« or the an school and the UB Art Department's first chair
Vu-ginil Cuthben Elboo raughr an •• both JnstitutiOru from 1941-61 8oth vt'cte
1 strong fon:e in shaping the UB Art Department.
Hallock. a jun1or in the Conununication Design Program. has teee~\'ed the
Juhus BJoom Memorial Scholarstup. Tbt. wmnc:r, selected by the communJCt:tion-design faculty. must be an unde:rgraduaJ.e Art Departmeru ma)OI" spccJ&amp;hztng in graphic arts Of grophic design who has nwnwned at least 1 3.0

grade-point average.
The ocholarslup w&amp;S endo~~o-ed by Toby Bloom Schoellkopf in rnerno&lt;y of
her father, who had a tifdong mtcrest in ~tc aru and was instrumental
in estabhs.hing the International Center for the Typocrapluc Arts.

0

Eleven UB students received awards for excellence in their ftelds of Rudy
during the commencement cermplY for the UB Schnot or MIDigemeoL
held oo Saturday. M1y 13. They an::
Boo-Min Shao. Robert F. Berner Award for Excellence in Swistocs: Soon
A. Dylewski, Carborundum Company Award for MBA SIUdent Excellence 1n
Human R.esources Management: Bylewsk..i also reccwed the MBA Adue~·e­
mcnt Award; Conni A. Brott. Delta Sigmo Pi Scbolmhip Key; Bingwe. u.
Charles H. Diefendorf Award in Finance; Klaus Bruning. Sidney N. Kahn
Memorial Award for MBA SIUdent Excellence in Sales and Mlrlteting; Camne
A. Sntith. Undergraduate Achievemcnt Aword: Rahan Sambondarn. PbD.
Achievement A word: Wendy M. Savage and Frank StBngio. UB Aa:ounting
Association Miclutel S. Dockery Memorial Senior Award: Susan C. VISI:o.
W.U Street lownal GradUite SIUdent Achievement Award; Juditl&gt; A. Lawson.
Wall Slreet Joumal Undergraduate Student Achitvement Award.

Ge Urr-ia w l - of Weinstein Awn
Gc Lm. a Ph.D. student in the: Department of Geography. ts the: wanner of
the 1995 Rose Weinstein Memonal Award. sponsoml by. the UB Emeritus Center.
The: S200 award. keyed to stUdies atld research related to studies on agmg.
honors the memory of the late Rose Wemstein, a founder of the Center. Un
received the award, wh.ch includes a cenificate, •• a ru:epcion hekl M..y 9 11
the Emeritus Center.
'The compet:ition. which is open to scientiftc: and arustic projeCtS. ts pn:·
sented to • UB undergraduate or undergraduate m good standing who has been
acce-pted into a degree program.
Lin's award-winning paper was titled, "Elderly Parents and the Geograptuc
Availability of Their Adult Olildren."
Main focus of Lin 's study. tbc: judges reponed. -was to dcl:emunc vanables
associ.ated with contacts between children and lhe!r older parents based on
geographic distance or their residence. The most salient conclusion leads toward a dismal prognosis of the de~ 10 which. in the future, ftlial dependency
of aged parents is becoming less and less possiblt and therefcn , nonfamihal
intervention becomes increasingly oecessary."'
A 1983 graduate of Peking University, Lin rrcei~·ed a master-"s dcgrer 1n
geognphy in I 99 I from the Univenity of Akron.
Peter Rogenon. professor and din:cto&lt; or undergraduate stUdies in L'lc: [)e.
pan.mcnt of Geography. was faculry supervisor of Lin's awltd-winning project.
At the ev&lt;:nL REV ·UP memben were hono«d for performing 2.364 boon
of voluntc:e:r service for the university during the pas1 year. Carmen Priviten is (
the new president or the Emeritus Center.

0

Poaa Awn preaented to Anne Bertholf
The I 995 Bernice L Poss Award was presented May S at the Center for
Tomom&gt;w to Anne R. Bertholf, ditector the Nioglll1l Frontier Center of
Empire State College. The award. iipOilSOC&lt;d by the American Council on
Education National ldentif'lCIIioo Project (ACENIP). honors the memory or
Poss, who served UB for 23 years in • variety of posts.. incloding executive
assistant to the provost and asoistant dean ans and letters. lt is given annually
to recogniz.e individual efforts to organize and plan activities for the advancement of women professionals.

0

or

or

Law awcs-t to be Curtin Justice Funcllntem

or

Sylvia Wa&amp;!"". alCCond-year student in the UB Schnot Law. is one
throe ~ts nationally to receive awards from the John l . Curtin Jr..
Justice Fund Legal Internship Pmgnm.

or

'

The program. manag&lt;d jointly by the American Bar Association (ABA)
Commission on Homelesmcss and Poverty. and the Standing Committee oct
Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants, provideo $2,000 llipends to law students to
spend their SUt1UDOt1 working with legal cxpniDtions semng homeless ctients
and those at rill: bomelessncss. It offenlegal uoiswx:e to cxpniDtions
serving the undenqxl:sentcd and giveo students dir&lt;Ct et&lt;perience in a publicinterest forum.
·
Wagner will work 1n the Affordable Housing Oinic. pan the Legttl Assistance Pmgnm at the UB law lCbool.
Funding fllf the inlmlsbip prc&gt;IRID is provided by the John J. Curtin Jr,
Justice Fund, a permanenl ~ in the ABA Fund fllf Justice and Education. It was aeatcd to hoaor Curtin, ABA pn:sidenl from I 99G-91 and longtime
advocale foe lOCia1 justice and civil-rights issues.

or

or

�--------

we

•

m
Geology students,
professor to assess
Eritrea's gold mining
prospects
11J EUEN GOI.DIIAUM
News Bureau Staff
SEVEN UB STUDENTS have decided to

go for the gold-literally-and they are
going all the way to Africa in search of the
precious mineral.
The geology students will spend this
summer as volunteers conducting geologic fieldwork in the East African country
of Eritrea to assess its potential for gold
mining.
They are making their trip at the invitation of the Eritrean Department of Mines
and with expenses paid by Ashanti Eritrea,
a branch of Ashanti Goldfields Co. Ltd ., a
mining company based in Ghana. Paul
Reitan, UB professor of geology, will
accompany the group.
The trip was suggested by Amanuel
Woldu, a native of Eritrea who earned

bachelor's degrees in geology and environmental studies from UB and is now a
graduate student at the university. "I
have always wanted to go back and do
something for Eritrea,· he explained .
The students asked Reitan to be their
advisor and, under his supervision, developed a plan to target potentially valuable mineral resources and subm it
proposals to potential funding sources
and the Eritrean Department of Mines .
This now-tranquil country is the youngest in Africa, having achieved independence in 1991 following a devastating
30-year-war with Ethiopia. Currently in a
stage of intensive reconstruction, the
new government is moving toward a market economy.
"There are many geolog'IC81 indications
that Eritrea would be a fertile region for

gold min ing,·
Woldu
noted .
"However, there is
very little geological information on this country.·
Virtually no geologic
work has been done in Eritrea since
Wor1d War II, according to Reitan, and, he
pointed out, none of that was done with
the knowledge of advanced methods of
mining.
Eritreans
using primitive
techn iq ues,
such as panning, already
haoe extracted
several thousand
kilo·
grams of gold
from some
sections of the
country.
" But Eritrea ns are
farmers,· said
Woldu . "They
are not know~
edge able
about min·
ing.·
He and his fellow students started
thinking about making a field trip to
Eritrea after attending UB's field camp in
Utah and Wyoming, which is required for
geology students.
"I thought If we could match my classmates' energy with Eiitrea's need, then

could do
the country a
favor,· he said.
The plan is to
' rent a house in Keren, a
town west of the African Rift
Valley and in the Eritrean highlands, where the fieldwork will be
done . The students will camp for
several days at a time in the rugged
terrain, gathering data on rock types
and their geographic distribution in order
to prepare geologic maps .
They will tum their information over to
the Eritrean Department of Mines .
While Woldu has the most intimate
connection to Eritrea, his American classmates have their own reasons for participating.
·As a geologist, you aspire to do something big, to take advantage of being a
geologist in order to see the world,· said
Jim Schuetz.
"It's part adventure, part altruism,·
summed up Reitan.
Woldu noted with pride his friends '
eagerness to help his native country.
"I applaud the students for joining me
on this," he said. "They are very courageous.·
Along with Woldu, the UB students
taking the trip are James Schuetz, Matt
Melnyk, Jane Francis, Usa Paquette and
Danielle Fino. Trond Skyseth, a UB doctoral candidate from Halden, Norway,
who is conducting research on gold mineralization, also will participate.

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                    <text>STATE UNI VERS-1TY 0F NEW Y0RK AT 8UFFAL0

COMMENCEMENT

E
MA'I'

11

1995

•

VOLUME

26

•

X

T

R

NUM8EA

A
21!

UIN A TIME OF TURBULENCE AND CHANGE,
IT IS MORE TRUE THAN EVER THAT
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER."
JOHM F. KE.MME.DY

�lnldllll

MAY II . 1995 VOLUME 26. NO 28 ·COMMENCEMENT 149 EXTRA

Commencement '95:
Honorary ~rees
for George Tliorn,
Ishmael Reed !

..

r.

1995 COMMHICEMENT CONFERRAL AND ADDRESS SCHEDULE

FRIDAY. MAY 1?
~School

3:30 p .rn.ICerkr for the Arts

FeaJity of Arts IJIId ILt1rJs
FeaJtyol NiliJn/Scienczs
IJIId MiJdrt:mtJtia
fiK:tJtyofSocilll Sdera:s

SATURDAY. MAY 13

UB alumnus who invented the artificial
kidney and a nationally
known novelist and
playwright will receive
honorary degrees during commencement
ceremonies at the University at Buffalo
May 12-14.

School of Hallh
Rdellcd l'rofaslons

9 e.rn JAiumi Nm!l

De.Yllouis J. Goldberg

School of Ht.nlng

9 e m /Siee Concert Hllll

Robert v l'lernart£,
eocecutNe director,
Netion!ll Sluder1 NLfses
Assoclll!lon

School of lnfonnation
Library Studies

10 a.mJStudent Un1on Theater

About 5.500 students will be candidates for degrees
from the university during 14 separate commencemem
ceremonies scheduled during the weekend.
President William R. Greiner will speak at the
university's I49th general commencement ceremony. to be
held at 10 a.m. on Sunday. May 14. in Alumni Arena on
the Nonh Campus.
Greiner and Provost Thomas E. Headrick will confer
degrees on graduating seniors from the Facult y of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics. the Faculty of An s and Le11ers
and the Faculty of Social Sciences.
The university will award
honorary degrees to George
Widmer Than;, one of US's most
distingui hed medical alumni who
developed the first effective treatment for Addison's Disease and
invented the artificial kidney; and
to novelist and playwright Ishmael
Reed.
Thorn will be invested with the
indicia of the honorary doctorate in
science from the State University of
New York by SUNY Trustee Miles
Lasser at the general commencement ceremony. Lasser will confer
the degree on Thorn at the commencement ceremony for the
School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences. to be held at 3 p.m. on
May 14 in the Center for the Ans on
the Nonh Campus.
Thorn was a founding editor of
the internationally known medical
. .ED
text. "Harrison's Principles of Int er·
nal Medicine. ·• As a teacher at
Harvard University. Thorn trained
more than 5.000 medical st udents.
He is also a founder of the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute.
Reed will receive the honorary
doctorate in letters from President
Greiner and SUNY Trustee Arnold
Gardner at the general commence·
ment ceremony.
He has wrilten nine novel s. four
essay collections. poetry and several
plays ble:1ding ~Meet talk. sc ience. literary allusions. jazz.
African and Caribbean legends. and political and social
critiques.
A Buffalo native and a former UB student who began
his college career taking courses pan time. Ishmael Reed
was encouraged by hi s English teacher to enroll full time .
Hov.:evcr, he had to withdraw from UB during hi s junior
year.
Also at Lhe general commencement ceremony. the
university's most prestigious award. the Chancellor
Charles P. Nonon Medal. will be presented 10 Eleanor V.
Millonzi by UB Council Chairman Philip Wel s. and President Greiner.
The Nonon medal is presented annually in public rec·
ognition of a person who has. in Non.on's words ... per·
formed some great thing wh ich is identlfied with Buffalo
... a great civic or political ac t, a great book, a great work

School of Law

1 p.mJC~ for the Arts

School of Phannacy

1 p m./Siee Concert Hllll

A

of El1glnuring
Applied Science

Dean George s. Bobtnslo

Assoc- VICe President
8arban! \&lt;XI Wahlde

1 p mJAiumni 1\rerla

Dean 8My B. Bct,oer

DemiS C VI!JCCO, Stzlt£
Attorney General

School of~ 2 p rn IHIIyes Hlllll81M1
and Planning

Attorney William Kmstler

School of ManagerMnt 5 p .rnJAiumni 1\rerla

Dean FrederiCk W. Winter,
faculty, students and
eiiSIY'II Will speak

Graduate School of
Education

5·30 p .rnJCenter for the Arts

Dean Hugh G Peine

VICe Presldert
Mt.nel A /&gt;loofe

)

M;11J!I•t·SW!'·' if
tlni&gt;&lt;asity

President Greiner

10e.rnJAiumni 1\rerla

VMI!n Santora

Cornmmcanmt
tJndasrllcfuates:

Clessof1995

fiK:tJtyof Arts IJIId L&lt;ttm
fiK:tJty of NiliJnl Sciences IJIId Mllli&gt;erntN1cs
fiK:tJtyofSoci/JI Sciera:s (lrmdtSCp/My PrognJms)
Specia/IJIId lnt:iivdJ!JIIZed M4'0rS
As!ocio!f!~

2 p rn./Siee Concert Hall

L1sa Tedesco, associate
de.l!n for academiC eff~~~rs.
Unr.&lt;erslty of Michigan
School of DentJstry and
former UB ~I fllculty
member

School of~~ &amp; 3 p m /Center for the Arts
lliomedical Sciences
~II Parle Graduate DMSion
School of Social Worlc

7 p m./Siee Concert Hall

Pres1dent Greiner

Dean Naughton

Professor Paul H

Gewtzman

of an. a great scientific
achievement, o,r an)
other thing wh1ch in
itself is trul great and
ennobling and which
dignifies the performer
and Buffalo in the eye
of the world ."
A leading patron of the
an s in the Niagara Re·
gion. Millonzi has ghen
unsti ntingly in behalf of
local ans institutions and
organization s. including
Studio Arena. the
Amherst Saxophone
Quanet and UB's Center
for the Ans.
George C. Lee, a
faculty member at the
University at Buffalo for 35 years who is retiring thi s
year as dean of the School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences after almost two decades in the po t. will re·
ceive the President's Medal.
First presen ted in 1990. the President 's Medal is
given in recogniti on of "signal and extraordinary-service to the university. It is presented for o ut standing

~ holarl) or anto,tic
achievements. humant·

uo ns of time or
treasure. exemplary
leadership or any other
major contribution to
the development of the
University at Buffalo
and the qu ali ty of life
in the UB community ."
Lee establi&gt;hed
Engi et. a distan e·
learn ing collaboration
among UB and other
SU Y engineering
programs, and is the
fountter of the Buffalo
Area Engineering
Awareness for Minori·
ties program (BEAM) that has encouraged more than a
thousand local high school students to pursue degrees in
engineering.
The UB-based National Center for Eanhquake Engineering Research. which Lee will continue to head. is a
worldwide leader in designing buildings towithstand
eanhquake damage.

The Reporter 1$ a campus cornmunlfy newspapet publiShed Dy the 0Ms1on c:A l..lrwer'Sity ServiCeS State I.Jrwel'slty of NewY01t at6utfalo EdaOI'o.at ottc::cs are locatea 1n t36 Crotts Hal Atmot'st (716)64S-6969

�IHIQIIII

3

MAY 11. t9'/S VOLUME 26. NO. 28 ·COMMENCEMENT t49 £XTRA

VIVian Santora: UB enthusiast
to be Commencement spealcer

A MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT
To the MeMben of the O.U of 1995•
During your )~ars attM Univ~rSity at Buffalo, you haw ach1 n~d unpnrumttlungs It

ty STEVE COX

is appropriau. as you complt!tt your degru. thtlt .YOU c~lebrat~ ~our mtl'lkctual,

Rqxxt&lt;r St4ff

professional. and ptrsonal succt!SSt!J, UB is proud to JOin you m thu r~l~bra11on and
ro applaud what you hat't! accomplishLd for _&gt;'Oun•lf

~~T..:~:~~

D

Even as we celebrate the 1ndnridual gam s you haw mat:k. hoMel'~r-

Santorabubbles
with enthusiasm.
She's been a
UB enthusiast
since her high
school idol,
former Student Association
I'Tesident Kelly Sahner,
gave Vivian her first UB

No man is an island. t!niire of rtst!/f; ~"t!ry man rs a p1ect' of the COO/I"'"'· a por1 of
promontory• wtrt, as wt/1 as if a manor of th) f n end's or of rlu.n.t' own ....~re: att)'
man 's dMih dimmUMs me. b«oust' I am im'Oiwd m monland. and t~r?jorr nn'f"r
s.nd ro laww for whbm thL ~//tolls: it tolls for thLt

Though our world is

roucMs us. We are-in Franklin

Santora's academic success

ago-"~mbtrs oftht! human

~lana

Whatr~~r

wuches oth.t'rs,

Roosf'vt!lt 's famow phrllit' of half a ct!ntUI)'

communit)." and our comnwn humanm ob/i~att!s us

to rt!cogniu and resp«t our murdt{Nndt&gt;nre
Around t~ world. and thiS spnng Mre 01 !rome. M't' stt' trag1c t'XJUnplt's of tM
\•ioltnct dOM to humanity a.nd tM human spm·l wlum tndh·rduals durt&gt;gard eM

mencement ceremonies.

righu. opinions. opponumtu•s. an.d f'l'l'"OJ /ll't'S of others Ho....

During her senior year in

Graduating in four years
with a dual major in En·
glish and Women' s Studies.
Santora says she will use
her address 10 urge her
peers to surrender the1r
fears and find comfort in
discovering who they truly
are. ''hs about us-Genera·
tion X : not who we are
perceived to be but who we
really are . I think we are
perceived to be slackers.
really. because they had
Vietnam and we have
MTV. Bu1 we ' re not. We
have core values:· she
explained. Finding many in
her generation paralyzed
wilh fear over the life
choices they face. Santora
urges them simply 10 follow their heans.
" Just be who you are . If
there is something that you
love 10 do . then you will
probably be the best a1 il,"
said Santora. the youngest
of seve n children. She
thought she had completed
her address before exams
began. but then Santora
began reading ··A Return to
Love" by Marianne
Williamson and found it so
comfoning that she just had
to work some of it into the
speech . "She's very spiritual. and so am 1:· explained Santora. "and she
just urges people 10 let go
of their fe~ ."
Santora earned strong
grades in high school, but
says she didn't do well on
her SAT exams. She entered UB by successfully
audi tioning for the theater
depanmenl. Though she has
taken many theater classes,
it took just one course in
Women's Studies to convi nce her that her theate r
cou ld wait in the wings.

/Jomuo '$ and mor~ st/f-(l'HIS('IOUS!y dJ·

bt!drock of humanity. an Ult$ha.kablt' common growuJ

have earned her the right to
deliver the keynote student
speech at Sunday' s com-

and mueh more."

~'t'r)' difftrt!nt from

,.,,.,,,all ofus,fmm all narwnsand badgrounds and•avsoflift. sui/ sNIT? thL

high school freshman in
Dix Hills, Long Island .
That enthusiasm and

came here. and it has really
been everything I hoped f&lt;'r

hofN that

rilL main. If a clod~ washLd awaJ by lhL s.a, Eu""f" 1.1 rilL Ins. as • til as if a

sweatshin when she was a

high school. Santora vi sited
UB and Sahner gave her the
grand lour. 'Tve IOlally
followed in her footsteps;·
said Santora. who.' like her
idol before her. was elected
10 the S1uden1 Assembly
and the University Senate.
" I was really exci1ed when I

Mt&gt;

you will also ummtbu thL u/1-known words of John C&gt;ottM

prott.&gt;ct indiwduaiJ ' nghiS

to form

if our d~mocrocy LIto

tMrr own opm10ru and chooJt&gt; tMtr own dlrt'C·

rion.s. do Wt' protrcttht soc-ll!n·fmm /Nmg tum apo.n b\ ttnswns INI'Mt!t'n

~pit&gt;

and

groups'

"BE WHO YOlJ
ARE. IFTHERE IS
SOMETHING ...
YOU LOVE TO DO
THEN YOU WILL
PROBABLY BE
THE BEST AT IT."

Her tenure as an undergraduate teaching assistant
tn the Women · Studies
department is highest on
Santora' s long list o f fo nd
memories of U B.
··women' s Studies 213 was
one of the best things I ever
did . It was a great expenence," beamed Santora.
Earning a slot as a co-instruclor was very compe.tl·
tive. requiring a preparatory
course first. Facilitating
weekly discu ssions with her
peers. centering on a wide
range of readings. conlributed greatly to Santora· s
self-confidence and poise.
In explaining Women ' s
Studies as a discipline. she
differenriates ~tween
feminism. which tends to
center on white, uppermiddle class issues. and
womanism. which. says
Santora. is the real focus of
the Women ' s Studies program.
"Womanism focuses on
women 's problems on an
international scale." she
explained . ..centered generally around women of
color. Abonion rights. for
instance. is a huge issue to
femini sts in this country.
bul in Third World countries . it's like the least of
their wonies. They have to
be concerned about basic
nutrition
Santora has faced her
share of ac.ademic and
personal hardship and done
her share of soul-searching
during her UB career.
Along the way. she has
fo und e njoyable ways 10

cope and 10 give somethmg
bac k to liB . She and about
15 friends re-established a
campus chapter of 1he Alpha Gamma Delta soronl) .
dormant si nce lo ng before
U B became a public universi ty . The sorority h@S been
muc h more than a s&amp;cial
mstrument. taking a maJor /
role in the Linda Yalem
Memorial Run and the
AIDS Coal ilio n. as well a.
raJ~mg money for Juveml e
Da abetes
Last month. three of her
sororit y sisters were run
do wn by an allegedly
drunk driver ru. they walked
bad. to their UniverSit)
Heights apanmenl. Her
sorori ty "'linle ~is ter ," 20year-old Brill Nellenbach.
was dragged by the vehrcle
and pinned beneath it The
sorority responded by v.Tit mg an article for the student
publication G~n eration on
the dangers of drunk driv ·
in g. trying to educate stu dents 10 the risks of driving
under the influence.
Thi s year. as a semor.
Santora returned to live on
campus to work as a Resident Assistarlt in Fargo
Quad. "MyRA when I was
a freshman was just great.
and we became great
friends." Covering 42 students on the top three floors
of Fargo Tower was a liufe
1rying at first "It can really
bring you back 10 reality.
bu1 soon I realized I en joyed being someone 1hey
could depend on."
She so loved her
Women· s Studies teaching
experience that Santoro
says she may pursue a
teaching career some day .
But not before she does a
little more learning. In the
fall. Santor.1 will enroll in a
graduate program in Political Administration at
American University in
Washington D.C. Her specialty will probably be in
H uman Resources Management. and she may conti nue
on to earn a Ph.D.

I
I

Each of us must hf'gtn M'llh a pe rsonal rommllmt!nt to rtmember-('\'t'n as
to~

the mOJI of ourstl\·~.f. t'\'tn

as ~ t' ct'l~brGlt'

mt'ntS-that .....~OM t' sotni'thmg 10 1M grrarer good
cus~s

M

t! seel..

our ltuln·rdual CU'compltsh~rt'

ts a rt!ason

h

h) our SU£ •

and pm•rlegrs almost a/MaH depend on rM succrsst's of othen v. 1w haH• gone

before; thert u a reason M'h_\ our suC'ctSSt'S orr all th' greatu " ·hen
successes and pn \ 'll~ges for others

If we lil'e tog~thtr.

tfu.~

lead to

v. t' must ad\·am.·t' together

Your tllnL Mreai UB has. ue hope. sho-ro.'11 _\0U tM truth of these pnnnplt!s on
scalr ofour campus communtll' £\t'r'')1hmg that

YOU

t~

hol't' leamtd for mursrlf lu-re.

you ha\'t' leamt-d m pan through tht' msrghts and gmdam t' of otht'rs. and from others · persperm·eS--t'l't'n those .-.·ah v. luch you could not agru Nm, 11 tl tmponant
that. m your mdl\'rdualli\•es and mdn•1dual carurs and rndtndual v. avs.
create that same senst' of humiin nxnmumn

()t1

\'OU

help to

the larger scale nf our nation and

ltur/d As leaduJ. ltl..e Shrrle\ ChuhoJm and Manon Wnghl Edelnum hol't' satd.
"Sen•tce

11

tht' rt'nT we fJO' for room c•, rhu eanh. .. Sen IC"t'

IJ

aiM' rht- upket'p

V.t'

owe-the uoa\ of ensu nng room and nghts on rhu eanh for mhers
}'uur 11me at V B has offered the opponumt\ , rhe rrammg. and-v.r

ho~-1M

msptrarwn that v. til help \'Ou v.·orl... tn vour own v.·a .\', to fulfill tht' pmnust' of a
contrnt'nt·M'Idt' and worldM·tdt' rnmmumty thnt

•·alu~s

011d cheruhel n't'n rndwtdual

rn 11 To tht- ertent that you do .w . \'Our indn·rdual succ~ssn v.·t/1 IN successt&gt;sfora/1 of

us. and vour alma matt'r will M'Uirh vour progrus v.·ith pride.
WIWAM R. GREINER

SERVIN' THE SENIORS
P - " ' - Gret.., h , - . , ...... wttlo Hlcole
...... 81
~ .......
. , loy of
' -"'" '· stall
........
_ Setoler
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Siuolettt u-.
s-Calelw- Jlltlot, ,.,..., ,...... - ....
leltJ
.......,.... _ . . . . . _ . , StMoet UN! ....

n.. -

... ,..... .,

Den!..,....,-··-_......._c..u._., ........ w..

�4

MAY IL 1'195 VOWME 26. NO. 28 ·COMMENCEMENT 149 EXTRA

A SALUTE TO
STUDENT
ACHIEVEMENT -

MODERN lANGUAGES
INITIATES 21 INTO BETA NU

The Oepoo1moolc(- ~ '"'""""' 21 ~ ...
Beta Nu, !he local chopa' c( S..,.. Ddla Pi. doe .-...! Sporusb
bootJr ~- New manbe:n IN:Iude
Juha C. Beanc:cn. Dolores H Butder. O...u1na M 8~.
T'"""" Eddy, Mdoua S Fan&lt;L Vooona E. Foouna, Polly IWL
Melwa lujwenlo, Doone M l&lt;noH. Jauufn Kropveld. c.ro~...
M.onpoo:L
Kelly Murphy. Fanh Noll. Ka!tey C Nye. Wolloam E. OTlonneiL
Vaneua K.. Odell. Athe.na ~ Jacqur-lyn M Puctak. Mu.
Sk.ohuL Javier Sou. Ahson L W1nkb'

Jcmufer Hetdemann and Marta
F~

~

wM!uatlon SNson

a~

'Mt'
=

br..., wtth tt _ . . . o f hll""- ..-.. ect..__.t

•nd other outstllndlns contrlbutlotu _.by UB students- • 'Arlety of fronts:

JKM..ks,

resurch, -•unity serYke •IMI •rtlstlc

,.m.r--. ...._, the

•nls receivecl this sprln!J .,. tho.. llstecl Mlow. 1M list, by no - n s

complete, Is INsecl on INt.rl•ls sub•lttecl by v•rlous unlftnlty clep1ut.ants.

...,.........._.._

ARCHITECTURE Jamet: Kovach
Kimberly Kraft
AND
PlANNING
~~:!! tr:=~~t\:•nts
ond
D.t:l'n Stud lfl Awards
Out.sundmg Acadenuc Ach.e,~ ­
mrnl awanJ • .,.,1uch trad!tJOnally rtt·
ognrtL"S thr graduaun&amp; Des1gn SrudtCS srudenl .....,th the hlg~ gn.dt
potRI IVU'Jgc", has been prr:sctMcd IO
Shanley O.Soobo

Oesl9n Excellence
This year, Tinoy Haboon has been
honored as the gnduaung Desrgn
Studtes studenl v.ho tw nwntamed

a high le,·el of ach~e,·ernenl an aU
design SludtOS and Vt'ho tw shown
exttptional deYelopmtnl &amp;n des•gn
skills.

Atc-hltectur• Awards
Honor Roll
The honor mU rec:c&gt;gml.t'S thost
gnduating B.P.S ond M.Anoh SlU·
dents 'lllho. after oomp&amp;eunc all scu-

dJOS n:qu.ired for thtu prognm.
have adut''ed a RUdJo grade pom1
avenge of 3.50 «benet nus kvel
of aduevement &amp;Siinguishes those
students ...,1lo ranl. tn apprw.tmate:l)
the upper 25 percen1 or lhw class.
Tbt membc:rt ofthts year's honor

...

roll are as foUO'olo·s

Andrn fehpe Angel. AkJandro
Anon. Jooathan James OabeauA .
Tyson J. Cure10. MIIU Anna
Falkowsk.a. Gregg Andrew Herman .
Sil.-Man Lam. GeofTrry B Urn.
Cristina Cassandra Murphy . Dllk
MWParl:.s.

"""'
Ruth M lteno;tem. Tnnoth)' Patncl.
Watas.

'"""""'

Den:~ 0esta. SMn M ~to. Jdf~y A Napnwa. MIChael J
Poczl.alskt, lrril Ra.z.. Aneta
Sdnscerman. J~m B~ Tocler.
Marc Wilham Warrm
fiNl ,...,

u_,_,.-.GO'
. ...
_,.,_

Marta Falk0111'Ska. 3.685
u....,~-~Rut

.,.......tdiW,MttGPA
Michael O'Han. 3.77

=---~~ M.Ndl.

eon.,..

Students art narrurwed by tht fac ulry and sekcted based on a combt ·
nauon of scholatstup actavaty. paroapanon to acadenuc and txtrKWncu Jar actJ VIbeS, CJtJttnsfup and
SC't"V)C(' 10 lhr school. and pol.enllaf
for fuwrr- aduevement Tk foUo"" lRf; students ha''C been named
Donna Brok.. Annent Montanaro
DINicola. Kevm Dworal. Nata.l~t
Jabbour. Sheri Lent Kcnc: Mtnlru.

Cbrislopho&lt; Payne, St&lt;phanoe
R.andaz.w. Jrnrufer Wilke$

~n·J'~f~:~.Medal
Each year the AlA recocmr.n tht

top ICIIdenur pc:rfonncn tn each
aan:dlled school of ardu!CCIW'l' tn
lhc rou.ntry Tilt award goa 10
those first professiOMI degn:r candub~ tn lht Dq.ttmen~ of ArdnkX:lurc who hold d~ fu-g and second htghesa cumulall\'t r,nrrde potnl
.,~ nus year. the: med11 tw
been awarded 10 Jdf Naprawa
(3 986) and rhe ceruftc:alt has bl%n
awarded 10 AM Ia Sctustrrman
(3.868)

Alpha Rho Chi Medal
Alph.l Rho 0u 15 a naaiOOI.I pofrsSMlnaf h1c:nury. Each ytar 11
awmb I modaJ 10 I r~ profnslOfl&amp;l degttt candJCb~ Ul each accm:l!ted school of an:h.iteeture 1n
lhc country 'flko medal lS awarded
for leadef~tup . sen·ttt and mml and
I!&gt; meant to promo1e pmfesstona.l
quahOt:S an Sludenuo llus year's
wmnn ts Om!&gt;t~ P.ynr Ol:hcr

SIGMA XI ANNOUNCES
WINNERS OF STUDENT
RESEARCH COMPETITION
lyDORARMl

......... c..v-......
Eh3d M.A Alxki-RMlman and Amtt.abha Lala ha'e been sek:cted b
grMu:lle wrnners and Col!«n Weber and StC'\~ Su:z.r:pankx"'-'lCZ
"'-ut: undergntduatc- "'-tnnrrs of 1M Stgma XJ Studem R~ C001pettuon held April25
S1gma Xa. abt:lrt\1.!iiiOn for spmui011 o·not~n. mean!&gt; -compantonl&gt;
to zealous research- TI.e SOC't('l) 1s tht world's largest lnlcm.atJonaf
honorary SCienltfK' organiZAIK&gt;n
~ studen1 teeel\'td $100, v.rhiCh Wb tnsc"nted by Edward J
Fine. chapltt pm:ldenl and a member of tht UB De-partme-nt of NC"tJrology and the Buffalo VA MediCal Ccnler
lluny-Uutt undergradutte and graduate: studtnls parurtpaled m
lhc sc•entJfac poster cootesz. "'-'hach was Judgrd by 39 membcTs or
Ros-...oell Park Cancer lnstiiUIC' and thltt e~~:temaf judges.
Abde.I-Rahman, a graduau~ Sludenl m btochemutry 11 Roswell
Pan. Cancer Institute. ~ted ''l'bt: Effects of Estrogens on the EApttSSion of Estrogen R.c:ceptors and Nunc Oxide Synthast to Human
and Rabbit Endolhell&amp;l eLl I!&gt;." l~ e observed that posa-menopausaJ
~its ha~ decreased Je,.·els of the enzyme that synthesaes natnc
oude. wtuch has been prev•ously demonstmed 10 dilak bkaod vessels and improve blood flow. reoearch lhal evmNafly may be lmpClf·
tantiO changes foUowmg menopause 1n women. Has ad\•tsor as
P=sh Dandona.
l....a1a.. of the UB Depanment of Oral B1ology, presented. ""&amp;.~·
s.on. Punfation and lmmunochmucal Ctwactenzauon of Human
Neub'Ophil EMPL Rec:q11or ·· MY the firsa ume. he purified human
recombinant fonnyl pepttde Receptor prote.n (FMLP). using a bactenaf syn1hesis system. FMLP plays an 1mportan1 ro&amp;e an flghllng mfoc-

Paul Pcmll. 3.94

oons. His advasor as Ernesto De-Nardin.

Douglas McCallum. 3 91

Weber. an undergradua1e s.tudenl atlhc lime or her ~searcll bul
now a fii'SI -year medical studem a1 UB. presemod: "'Cort1r.osteront
Regula1es Heme o~~:ygenase-2 and NO Synthase Transcripuon and
Prolan ExJn:SSion m Rat Brain." which dlowcd that corticosterone
ruiuced the ac~ivity of NO Syrutwc. lhc enzyme thai. controls the
prodtx.1ton or nitnc OXIde:. She also demonscratod that Heme
Oxygen.asc:-2 was decrused an thr hippocampus but not ln lht oet-

-...., ....,...............

~h6fMst GII'A

Richard Grove. 3.70
Bri..an Szpakowski. 3.68
~ 'f..1Jt..,.., M..Ardl.

............. GO'..

Ow1es

~is.

ebeUum. Her advisor was Mahin Mt.ms. Uruvers1ty or Rochester

4.0

FrHh••n Awa rds
a.-rto-..1 ,.,.....,__

-·ElaintO.OW

-----

Melisa Delaney. Anlhony Caputo.
Jeffrey IWI. JO!Whan Sel120r

--

M anish Kalantri, Michat:l Tunkcy.

Dan;.! Puff

Soph-reAwonl•

........
Gtona

.

Paok:rcio. Kimberly Kraft

School of M c:dicme.
Sz.c:u:pankiewic an undetgradualC: swdent 1n cbenustry at
Canisius C:O.kge. presentedc "1'he Ciokkn Penny Oemonstrmon.. An
Explanation of the Old Experiment and the Rat tonal [)esjgn of lhc
New and SimpK:r Dremon.stra.bon." Su:.upant;ewia. described a new
and safer mc:diOO 10 perform a demonslration or how a copper penny
can~ a silver tppearuce and then a zoidcn color. Ht shov.-ed
chat 1 room ~ surf..-r aUoy fomw:ioo was the forct behmd
depositing a silvery layer of zinc on copper. This experiment defined
the Slalt of the alloy and elim intted ll.Se or boilin&amp; 50dium hydroxide.
His advisor is Mariusz Kozik.
A dinner and a presenwion by Vivian Cody of lhc HauptmanWoodward Medical Research lnst.ifUle followed the competition.
Cody discussed virtual rr.aliry metbods ln analyzing the shape of
molccuJc::s and designing new drugs.

nommen for the a"" aN •ncludc:d
Ehubeth G&amp;SI and Slepharue
IUontbw&gt;

Motth- W. Del &lt;Nodlo
A.werd
Each year. lht: Ntv. Yort. Soraet) of
ArdnlcCU presenu the Matthew W

Del Gaud10 Aw.-d for Exc:eUencc·
m Total Dreslp to a gradtw.in&amp; swdenl m vanous ardutectural K'hools
m lht Statt of Ne"" Yort Tht mlt·
na of ToW ~•gn emtncc:.. the
demonstraatOn of an IINIINili\"C' soJuuon of an ardulc.'CtUBJ problem
that•sfunatonall) tdeai,SO'UC'tW"aJiy r.easible. suu.ably s11c:d. and empWymg avaJiable matenaho an a
po&gt;&lt;1ocal ond ...U.:.ocall) sound
manner W1nner ofthe award I!&gt;
Sttphamc: Randau..o Normnea also
uacluded Jeff Napra"'-a and Ou-tstopheT Pl~·ne -

OlrKtor's Aw•rd
lN:: Dutttor's A""·ard for ru~l­
lenc:t In JtduleC1UraJ de- lf" IS
1"'-'arded to a gradualmg fu'!il professtonaJ degrtt candldalc for ton"iiSk:lll. high caliber design wod ~
formed 1ft lht design 5tudtos
Wanner m the: two-year program
1S Mur Wanm, nommc:es from lhat
propam lllC'h.tded ~_II( Destt.
Denrus Escobar and Sam Espogo
Wanner of the 3-112-year program IS CtUlstopher Pl)nt, non\1 ·
noes tncluded Annmt DlNtcO!a,
Jdf~y Napnwa and Alissa Paul

~~::r::~~~~worlc Schol•rshlp
llm award&amp;~ gnn1ed 10 a !iluckm
wbots a ~SJdmt of Ne"" Vorl. Cn)
~ud)'1ng archttet1U!"e In an accrrolled ftrst proftSS:tooal degrtt prognm 1n N~N' Vorl. Swc: 1be ~u­
denl must be recognl1b:l b) thr- ftc ·
uhy as havtng wong acadenuc
abtlnies and ftnanoal neo:1 1be
base award IS a cash pnz.r: up to
S.S.(XX) to be utilized for rhe
studenl' s tuJlJOR next year llus
year's nominees ..-err Shlrle) Lee:
ond Ben Pollonl

AlA/MY Scholonhlp
Th1s tward IS ldmmlsterul b) AlA
and lhc NAAB. Nomtnces ~ su~
mined from Schools of An:hitc:cnare
m the U.S and Can.da. Numben
~ hnuted based on nu.mbn of
graduale gudenu. Wmnen oftbe
twards art chosen based on aademk achtrvement, recommendauom. and financial need. 1lus year.
award~ were m.de to Douglas
McCallum ($ 1.500J, Anthony
Santangelo (SI.SOOJ ond Donn&amp;

Brok (S7S0).

r:~~".rvSch'olanhlp
AepresentatJ..s)
For approxinwely the pasa 10
yean, the ~lla Window Store/A
Division of Pei.WWESTNY Bwldang Products Compuy ha~ sponsored a competition and award for

feneszr-atioainan:hi&amp;ccture. Thc:

prop:u chosen inleiJ'Ie.fenc:stration in ardtit.ecbiBI design in sensitive. unique:: ways eapruring more
lhan light. air. and view. Recipients
of this year's twvds ~Tashiro
Tanaka (lint p!aco. 51 ,000) ond
Ben Pollanl (""""" ploce, S700) .
1-lonc.nbk: mention awards of S I00
each went 10 M.orina Kosmoupolos.

Gtacluallon with

DlltiMtlo~t :

Jooeph Boalobralo, """'

~=,4• Plannln' Student

Hop r&gt;,,

"""""'

_,......_,.._

Elu.abedl ConttpCIOn. •11h HJ#t
o,..,ncuoa
Knsl.ln Dolena. 'l lo'llh Ht&amp;h

E4wonl J. Lytlocka

O.Sionctooro
JennLfer Finlelstrtn.. wtth

,_...,.

u • ......-,-...
Rachel F Beadk ond Jod J
Fonwot:Jr

-

......_, ........
.._,_,_
............_.,

Annt Mane- Poba:lla. ...'llh

Theodore Mohon Rhode&gt;

...,..._
.....................
=-....:r.:::..'"
,....
.. ,.......
..._ .. . _ ...
........ ,..... ....._,...............
.. . _ ....
=:..:=.
....., ............ ,.. ...
. . . . (Ida. .....

Rachel F. BeodJe
GMtlflute .. ....,....,.. ..

~

Uwrenct J. Kstoo7)'k and KJm
berty" l.aonz

.................... ..w..ty

Fan U and PauJ R Wluk

-~

JJII E. Schm1dle and

~I

Dtwncuon

Bnan G«r.. wJth l&gt;tSt.Jnctton and
-...-rlh Honcn
San tfasungs. •1th 0U:Uncb0ri
Mary Howanl. wtlh OtatnctK:Jn
Janut Kkm. wuh Dtwna10n

Mocloael F Kant

_
-

O..Uneoon
Abbe Geffner. With H1gh

P

TOO&lt;nwo

ART HISTORY
The undergndu.atr" Stnngooursr
A""ard. for tht best undetgraduatt
1et1n p1pC:f m an An HlSIOf)' ('(Jl&amp;fK ,
was pven to Carol Polasll (Of her
poper
Companson c(tfoe
Art of Kun Schw1nen and Ott~
m&amp;n) Betw-een tht Wan..."
The grodow&lt; Stnng&lt;X&gt;Yne
Award "-'IS pvn1 50 Elisa Deynela
for her paper tJtled ""Pt-ints and lht
Witch Cnzt of Rc:twuano: Eu-

'""""/I.

rope ..

Do&gt;bncbOn

Shan Scher. Wtlh Ot.sllndton

ENGINEERING
Tou

e.to PI

Deborah Mary Antontn-1
W1lham MIChael Ba11Slnl
Br&lt;ndan Pie= Ban)
Mill\&amp;m GamaJ Bas~ltOUs
JosepllL Bongom·anru
krem) Raben Bnuer
Mattbe""J~~

Sle\en Mdarl Bun
Oan..el Eu~ Cart
Todd M C&amp;ITOttl
Tal.-Shun But-ell Chew&amp;~

U@:O G Clbla
Ro) A Dante!
Mtehac:l James Doheny
Ttmolh) D DuM
Fredend. ~10 Ect!rvema
Ronald A Eths
Jeffrf')' R.chard Emngton
Bnan Da\·1d Fabto

Jll'ieA Faun
Kttlh AI~ Gtfford
Manht'w C~

John Joseph Gnpby Jr
Vn:gtlr) Raben Handw
Mallhe-a A 'nm Haman
F\_-terW Hunr

Tunrxhy Russdl Jenrungs
Rdwd John Ktdt
Mary Jo Kuuau
Souh.ana Kooru -S1ottz
Enc Jonathan Lla
Kcnn Owks Lmdqwsa

JonatJwo Owlcs Masa=

ARTS AND
LEITERS

----

Outstandtns A.chi•••••nt

Aw•rch

Ntrok Janc:cn G1booon

Hent)' Fcrnardez. Jason Han:1mg.
Vl\t.anS&amp;niOD...

....

Todd A Gu)-nn. Benjanun 0 Pond.
Moupr&lt;t Spotlo

.......

M.anhiN

~

Mroz

MX'hacl C&lt;tt) 0....-elkn
Stt\'t:n Ovlqoph« P&amp;FU:r
TammyM F\"troru~
Gre,.-.y w l'cru

Joel RaL
Om~1ophf'r Paul R1c-han1
Oonoopho&lt; M RodoJ
[)a, td Ow-k:-s Rlmme:h
ScooT Roodue
M tehael V Rtu.o
Jonlan C RO&gt;enlhal
Robc:n Mu. S.netK'k

Mart' Raben Schultz

SlaC) Moone 5qoUmacher
Scoo Jooeplo Sbopoeo
Bnan MIChael Sibtp

Abson Besnmder. Mat) Edwanh,

/\.my Beth Spoccr

Jenn1fer K.annin. Brandon Mtebals..
Slurky Moody. Jacolo Paul. Patncu
Pnor, U.. R.apapon.. IGnton

James &amp;kvd SICamS

...... ......,.

Reynolds. Ooarles RJclwd&lt;on

ChriSiopher RKiwd Coosullo, Moog
Koon Chan. Lyon Doyen,
Davtd Wayne Meinzer. Kruttne
:~•ller. ChriSiopher John
~

....,_,.. ... Ut.t.wr..

Marysue Gootlburlct, Glenn
McC&amp;M RtiSCb, Michad Samuel L
Roberu.

......

_

MJchc-Ue Klc:c. K011oe ShsmoJO,
Mtchad Sautb, ~ Soscia.

...........

Melarbe J05bola, Ecsu.y Swcn,
Jeffrey Van Vel.sor.

~;;;t!"vaol
En!fnHrlns Dlltlnctloft
Ha"in&amp; adue:''Cd "'ncnge of at

:::,3~:::=~=·

ter, lhe follov.·inc ~~tni&lt;n ha\e been
•warded Ensinoenng Distinction
Others who achte\'e thu levtl
through their fioaJ temeSlCr wdl
subscquenlly b&lt; "' honored.
Kenneth P. 1\.nden&lt;n (Eiectncal
Enj:oncennal. Deborah Mary

1\.ncOIIOOCCO (Eiceuieal Engineerift!I.
Paul Raben 1\.pplepo&lt; (El&lt;ancal
Engancenn&amp;J. K.Mhc:rine Jean
llohmen (lnduRrial EnPceringJ.
William M.tehael Balisaen (FJertn ·
aJ fn&amp;oneenn&amp;). Br&lt;ndan Pie=
Sorry (Elearical

CDMMUNICAlM
DISORDERS&amp;
SCIENCES

En&amp;•""""').

Manam Gamal BaSJhous (ChemiCal
~n&amp;). Joseph L

Boft&amp;tO\'annl (Olerrucal Engu~cr­
mc.). Jtttmy Robert Brauer (Cbenual Engu""rinal. ManJocw Jarno
Burger (CkrJUal Enguooenngl
Steven Mtebac:J Burr (Chenual
Enpncennal. r:&gt;ounel Eugene Carl
COI&lt;mocal fn&amp;in&lt;crin&amp;), Tat-&lt;huro
Birrell ChNn&amp; (Bc:ctrical Engineer·
ong), 01uck J. eror.. (Eiec1rical Eng.tnc:enng). Roy A. Darnel (Ekcm -

�IHIIDalll

5

MAY II . 199S VOLUME 26. NO 28 ·COMMENCEMENT 149 EXTRA
col

En&amp;lnocrin&amp;J, MW:hocl Jomcs

Oobeny (Mcchanic:ol

Encin=in&amp;l.

ScrP&gt;
Ech&lt;..m.
(Olcmic:al
En&amp;lnocrin&amp;J,
Ronold A

Ellis (Mcchanic:ol Ena&gt;n=in&amp;J. Jef.
f~ey ltidw1l Ezrin&amp;ton (&lt;llmricol
~O&amp;).MdloeiT. Fobian
(Eic&lt;lric:aiEn,i"""""a).
Brian Dovid Fabio (McctwUal
~nal.J.,. A. F""" (Elcctncal Enainoerin&amp;). Matthew

Michael Fay to.emkal EnJineer·
ing). Siaw..QUn Gan (Industrial Enginoenng), James Want Gment
(Eic&lt;lric:al EngineerinJ) John Jo,.ph Grig.by Jr. (Ch&lt;mical EngJneerinJ). Todd Evan Heckkman
(Eiectrical Engineerina:). Matthew
Avram Herman (En&amp;inoering Phys·
tes). Peter W. HUN (Mechaftical

Engineerin&amp;). Michael James Ka1ser
(Mechanical Enaine&lt;nnl)
Wee S.em Kc:h (Eiectncal

Enc•·

wu ..,;p.l ~lity for developnaM and m~r~ufllttllrinc
worldw;de. He hod I IWf of
12.000, and.,.,.....,..- hi• di-

=tionlnclllded Spcny focilibeS ..
doe u.s. w... G&lt;nnlny and
c.n.da. He served on lhc bawd of
dirccton of spcny·s affiliak company in Japan.
He serves on the board of du"eC·
unof N&lt;nnd Corp.. • rnanufac-

n= of mobil&lt; computina &gt;"""'

and win::Jess cb.la comti'IIJnicallions

networks using nKtio frequency
lodulology.
Now a nannlizc:d U.S . c:&amp;ht.en.
Tyabji was born in Bombty. lncha..
m 1945 and rcceaved • B.S.E.E.
from the Coller;e or Engineennc an
Poona. lndia. He camt 10 the

u.s

inl967,and~hisM.S &amp;n

EJectncaJ Engmcc:ring from thr
Univervty .a Buffalo. He bokls an

Scholarslups is 11ven \0 Jtudeou
who we mtmben or w tOc:iery w

- Bali mceiva:IMitllllCia's
militory Jcience dt·
pin-""""'*''l'fn&gt;m
Erir Cammunity Ccllqe bdlft ...
roUint in UB. He- - . r y of
lh&lt;Aidliroaun!IOubii ECC.
a... ;. 1 uo presidenlw honor5
IChol.ar and 1 member of Tau Beta
Pi national en.cincennc honor society, Phi Et• s,cma and the Golden
Kc:y Nlllonal Honor Soc.ay. He u;
• membtt-dcc:tofPl Tau Stgma.

EDUCATIONAL
OPPORllJNilY
PROGRAM

Bn101: 1...-.Z.If~All
Jaffn. Emily N JIC'I*. Makehnt
lln•ott. Kar-elleleln-Jcromt, Joy E.
En ~J"""' Donan
A. Johmoo, IGmllcrty E. Johmon,
Dovod Jooeph.

UB'S SllJDENT ATHLETES
ARE MAIU NG THE GRADE
IN THE CLASSROOM.

J-

Tenyt. Juna,. W&amp;n&amp; Yu Kam,
Wilham S. IC.cca&amp;n. Tncu K.c:lly.

Ac:a:wd:an&amp; 10 the o.,-15101'1 of Athaet.cs. 32 pcnxrw of aU UB'tllvdc:dl-.dtftl were n.amcd SchoW Alhklts for the raJJ 1994 ltme'SItt, eanung •l.O &amp;rade pou11 .,~or beneT and compk:una a1
..... 12cralol .......
The women's btilrrbatl team k.ads all teams • 11h • l 21 5 GP A
folk:twtd by the 'N'CIInen·s crtK countJ') 81 3 169 and • ·omen's trad.
and fsdd. 3 167

Hyun Soo JCim. Junchoon Kun.

Jennifer R. Kirtwood., Jacqudlnc:
Kana. Jollo M
Krou... Pool K. """'"'· Leondra
Knywinol:•. Kin
Kwons. Lo
Hll1&amp; Loi. Oinlon U.... Sheryl&lt;

•Kooesky, Jiozhu

a.u.,.

Llu,Bolui1VOIII!Ubun
Amy W. L«. Frank Ka Hoac
~ Hon Sfna l...ce, Mdw:l Wlfll
C. La:. IUchanl La:. Giaru Lo.
Elaine H.L Lwl&amp;- lion&amp; Zlu Lon.
w .. Lin. Dwd Upon. Cbun
Guang Lou. O.C... 1... Lopez. Y10

$cholar AlhJ~" for th. fall1994 s•IHfler

..,_., ...........

(• tle.11'1 ll•t) (ac:lu4el

x..o

QuJn l.o. Hoong Luong. !(.,

• Nw:o~e BlaLcUcc. • k:nrufer ~l.en , Jlll ~. Brenn.
Docy. Anne Galla&amp;hc&lt;. Amy IUle. Canney Llncford. ........
Pruwftl. Tiffany Rutru •Metarue VQ~CI

J""

. . . .........

Ma1, Wende Anne Ma1n. Fernando

necrinJ;). Mary Jo Kmsits (C1vil En-

·-··a..

Mocbc: Cot. Ryan Cros"- M•lc Mmmho. Ras.aun YCJU.Ill:

ginernnJ). Kenn Ow1es l...&amp;ndquig
(O&gt;cmical Enguwnng). Jonathan
Ow1es Mascers (Mcdwual En&amp;•·
oeerin&amp;). William F. McAlhuer Ill
(Eicctncat Engintenng), Ja::l

Thaddeus Morzan CEJectrica1 En&amp;•·
necnng). Matthew Pete{ Mroz
!C. vii Ena"""""'1 Bn\an JOI&lt;ph
Nugent (EloctricaJ EncirE~ng).

~~~:~~~~:am·

.-...

Pollin (Bectncal Engu'ICenns;).
Grq;ory w. Polu (Modwucal
Eng•neering). Joel R.ak (Mechana.l
Enginccnna). Cbnstopher Paul R.Jctwd (Mechanical Engineering),
Ouulophcr M. R&gt;&lt;hl (Ek&lt;lneal

Ma.rl Duwdo. Grq O.naJ , C"twk1o Fnn. T)kf Md)onndl Sunn1l
Modey. Todd Sc:hafTer ~·hl..e Schk:ehen Mari. T•)lor. O:tm

\\oJlti
,...,_CIM'
I
RJdwd Bachman. • Jnvn) 8r.wet" Sha...,n Dt.t,k. Bnan Ouro''K

Enginccnn&amp;). Jordan C. RO§C:nlhal
(Elecuical Engmeennc). James H
Samidt: (lndustnal Engmemng}.
Roben Mo. Sanebc:.. CMechantcal
Enganomng), M art' Robttt Schull7

Da' ld Marunez

·-··~
Jcnn1rc:r DeVIta. ShanOCII'I Ha,lun&lt;.. L1~ PilqUCR.e

Lon Pmlkl.
Heaher Phelps. • -\ndrea Sc:houlu_ IU!hnn Smrth Dana T•kncu
NIC06e Weber

..._ .,........., ...

(Mechamcal Engmemng). Stacy M
Schumacher (lnduslnal Eng&amp;f'ftf·

........

Enganecnng). Edward Elmer
Wagner Jr (Ekctne~J Enguunru:,l.
JeffI\") Au!&gt;tm Whne 4Aenr.tpaCt"

Dean 's Award
1lle Dan'~ Award forengmomng
aduevemcnt IS &amp;1\'en th1.1o year 10
Hatim A. Tyabjt. chairman, Jn.S) ·
dent and chief CkiXU1Jve ofTICCf of
VmFonc, Inc of Redwood C11y.
Calif.. for has can:er-long Khtevemmts as an enginen 1n tndustr)
TyabJI JOined VeriFone an 1986 a!o
po&lt;Sd&lt;nl. CEO. and I mcmbrr of ...
board of d.&amp;n:aon. Under h•s ado"·
stup. VmFonc has grown from annuaJ .n-mues ofS31.2 nullMJR. opcr·
aong aa bn:ak-e-.-en 11986),to Sl09 I
milhon ,.mh $27 .7 null100 m nee tn·
rome C1994) (The comp:any became
publiCly held in March 1990 ) The

company's bus1neslo has dj,~afiCd
from poant..of-SIIk: payrnc=N pruces.s·
illj; m lhe U.S. to Tnnsacoon Alii~
mat&amp;on v.'OridwMk. servmg retail
mcn:hanls. pcli'Okum o;m.·K't' ita·
tJonlli and oonveruence §tCRS. ~per­
mrl&lt;ts. healthc= provocl&lt;n. and
gD\'tmmenl agmc10.
In addition 10 h11 slnateg&amp;c: and
openiltOrUI c:orunbut10ns. TyabJ• 1\
chtd arch&amp;tect of the VcnFone Ptuklsophy. a wntten 'id of shared be·
hef1o and ' 'alues "'tnch define lhe
C1W'jXlntte culru~ Thts cultu~
unno~thlln 1.9(X)c:mployer..
:around the worid
Bcft:n hss appomtmenl at
Verifone. TyabJI spent I l years m
tiW\ag(:ment po511100s at Spc:ny
Corp., last sernng as ~Kkn1 of
the: lnfarmat100 Systems Producb
and Tcchnolog.es Group of the
merged Spcn)· and Burroughs org•·
ruz.atkwls. v.tuc:h has 1o1ncc bec:ome
Umsys Corp. He became 1 SpcrT)
~ofTsttr1n 1985. "'1lenhe

~

Jul.e Ahr;. Akuodnl BatTtra. Suun~ Butu~ l ~ Clubot
Megan Connoll) "Karen~ ) Kcll~ Sharln. knmfer \'•u~

mg), Umau SKidlQUI CfJectncal Engn-.eennc)
Kunberiy Robtn Va!l (AMKpX"r

Engrneenngl. Cra1g A Wild (CI\11
Enr:meenngJ. IOctwd Lee W1ll11o
(lndu.\tnal EnJuV!t'nng ). Ala:a
Yoos•f (Electncal Engmccnng)

c:..Mry/....0.

Mdtelk Bui'JCT. Am) Gnnnel. Mawa-n tbm1hon . • Aleuftlh
KMclas. Parncu. Lari.Jn. Sharle} Moocty . EhT.abefh Murph)'. 8ndgtt
N1land.Judrth /'1.0\U. Barb Rabmc:nX"~. *Tan Rruner Ten)
Sdlemc. Kern Shpur
. . , . .. , CNQ ce.Mry/ti-MJCah A.ddsteJn. Ben AtllnloOfl M1U D.tn.a. Chnsuan mnll1n
Fumu GalodJ_ Chru Kem.an, -0wto M~ruhan, JWv.&amp;a Rtt»•g
ian Sotm. Mile Spu.. Mari. Tasbn Geoffrey Warlocl.. Kr' 1n
W&amp;I\Un, [)a,~ Yll.()tlsll. John Zell1

...........,.....,~

Robert Aller . Un) BI\U'OO@.. • Mar\ H&lt;W'~Olll
\In Jbsop. K('JI'}
M1ller. • J~ Pl«lonl..a htn Sa.l~. Jo.Jihn 'ilra.t.dln!&gt;.. RK.il
Wonuai.
· -· . . . . . . . I

M B.A m mtemauona.l finance
from Synw:use Un1~1ty and I) a
graduate of the- Stanford &amp;ecutl\'t
Pmgmn

Four Unlftnlty at B.uffalo

::~~d:f 1:c\~\:~.1,j~•,-;•r•
J M!ducl Colyer. 1 JUruor 1n 1 .tom1
ctnl eng.tnecnng and masler of
bustness adnumstr.at10n progr&amp;n.
and Jose A Faun. a se:mor m8JOI"·
mg an electnc:al engmccnng. ha' e
rt.a'lvoj 199J Engn~nng Alumm
Schol.~ps from the VB Eng1
n«nng Alumru ASSOCI8hOn
J~ W Ball. 8JUnJor ~JOI'
mg m cml engmeenng. and J•r·
Shyr Chen, a JUniOC' ~JOOng tn
mec:han.cal engmttnng. lla\e ~ ­
C'CI'~ Socae~y or Amcnc:.an M•litat} Engsnens Scholars.tups
'The SSOO Engmec-:nng Alumni
An«,•t•on awanh, funded through
alumn1 oontnbuuon\, ~ t&lt;iJabh!&gt;hed to recogmt..e -leaden. an CA •
alienee" tftd to tnct'.IUnlgt •n ··engutttnng sp&amp;rit" and loyall~ 10 tho:
School of Engu'lttnng and Applied
Sco&lt;nm&gt;
Colyn i\ presJdent of tht Eng• ·
nec-:nn~ Studmt Anuc:1auon. the un dergraduate rcpresc:ntatu·e to the
Englf'leenng AJumm Assoca•t•oo
and a member of 0u Epsdon 1\:1
Uof\11 C:l\'11 enganoenng honor !&gt;OC"I
~) and the Golden Ke) Nattonal
Honor Socat:t)
Fauna lS pressdenl of the Soc:tet)
of H1span1C ProfCSSJOn.al E.ngsne:en.
and • member of fJ.a Kappa Nu
ek::ctncal eng.neenng honor SOL~Y
and the lnsttlU&amp;c of Electncal and
Electronics Engmeers
Preft'f!:ncc for the SI.(XX) Soc1c."t)
of Ammcan Military Eni!•noeno

FOUR HONORED WITH
NANCY WELCH AWARDS
Parry Shen tw received fi~ place: horlor.!. for the 16th annual N:&amp;nc)
Wekh Award, given annually m honor of the fOC'11lel" resuient1al cooniinator of Rachel Canion CoUege. .
1'ht- "'"'wd recognizes • cunntly enrolled undergndua!~ n::slden·
lial P.Udcnl who has made a wbslant18l oontribution to the unJ\'m:lt)
through the ~·t:lopment or support of an imagirw_1ve and~­
mg program ot project during the 1994--95 w:adenuc year. Rccip! ·
ents n::ttive a cash •ward and a plaque noting thctr s•gruHcant contnbution to the university.
Shcn was honored for her Ak:ohol Awareness Wc:ck proJCCt. Sec·
ond p1aot honors went to Kara A. Millonzi for her P"_'joct bdc:d
"'Making a Differr:nc:t in Someonc 's Life.- whK:h asstsled the home·
less, and to Jennifer M. Grant for her projCCl. ~A Night of African
Arncrican Elepnc&lt;." Esdott Santiago received lhinl pllce honors for
her "Cck:bnllion of Divenity" project.
An awards c:cttmOnY was bdd May I in the Jeanenc Martin
Room. Claude: Wekh. Distinguished .5ervicr Professor in the Depattment of Political Scienc:r, ~the •wards.

gram honored ~udena 81 ib
Award:) ~mon&gt;· and Honor..
Convoc:~t1on hdd M8) 2m the Stu
dem Un1on Theater
Students were recogntzed

ror

H1,:h AcademiC AdurV'('menl.
State-W1de Ac:adem1c Awanh. and
u-.clu!&gt;tm In Who's \\'ho Amon@.
Students 1n Amencan Un1\CTS1t1n

Joseph R_ Ml!is!d._ Cas...ndr
MolyncauA. Laune L Monlo.

andC1~i&lt;go

Hong Ng. Hmg Fung N ~,., Hong

Hl!h Aude•lc Ac:hlen•ent

KICI 'guyen. Jusun Chanh Ngu)en.
Kenh ~er Nu)en. Tuong,, Th1

~;~~~~ 1:9': f!~JentH for

Bartw-a Abaci. Kuma Oeh•

At:ullar. Ngttb M

4.1~1~

u._..

A Alexander. Jacob L Allen. LuCia
RO!o( Alme .ta_ Jose I Almon1e. Pt-ter A Ahaf*lo. E'enste C
Ambm. Kell) J Asher. Khuram

A_\hnaf. Bmjam.Jn R Atbn§Ofl.
MK'htlle C Barbn . Thc:reo;a M
Be.d.er. Mdon) C Bedford. Ra) E
Bcmard, Kea!&gt;lla L Bodnd. ,
F•s~)'t 8oLUJt7.JOO. Sha..., n E
Bra\lo·dy. Kalhlttn Bf)11!311il.l.
Van-Khrn Tu 8u1
lam Wynans Bush. Adnenne L
C""'f'b&lt;ll. A~ C Campbell .
Patnma C. Canada. Jacqueline
Cansdak. Joaqum J Caro. Johnme
Caner. J~1c CaStarnoiL
Tabatha Castro. Jmn~e 0\a. Alfredo
R Chatun. Cecil) S Kwan Owl.
K"''DR~ Chrong Owl. Ng• S:r..e
Cban. P\l. Wes Chan. Samm) Chan.

Tae S Cll.ang. Ayanna M Chaslme.
X110 Yan Chen, Ou Kln Cheng.
Cherlmt M Olerubtn. Yi Btn

Cbeung. Pamna J Oussm. Linda

Ouu. Bhawna OKw.·dtwy. Hyun
Owng. John I Ctpolhtu. Ja.son C
Clarl. n.odort: C Clemons.

Rafael Con1udo

"lguyen. T•bttlu M Ngwas.tu.
.4.rlene Jonn.r M Nyc. Kyung
H)ung Pan.. Aaron M PereL Juan
Pn"rz. VICCO!" Jose- Peru. Roben J
Pemal. Oaudlne C. Ptw~ . 0
Phakusonh. Haen 1lu Ph:un. M) hnh

T Pham. Nguyec Thanh Pham
Phuc Vmh Pham. Ktw The Phu.
Jean P1~. Wilham ~mente! ,
Alison Mtha Poole. Scon C
Pnmup. Joshua 1..tt Ralph.
Rodcndranauth Rampul. Oak Edward Rtndcr. Kn·stm Kync
Re,'OOidlo. lakC'JSha S 0 Robinson.

aWtes L

Roche. Hugo R

Rodnguez. Rlquelme A Ro.Jngue7.
Oann Ke11h Russe:ll . Manu" N
Sx-a. Robeno Santnez
F~r Sanu•go, Todd M

Schaffer. Am) LB Sttdorf. llram
Shah. Ann) M Shth. Kan L
Sclnlherger. 'l'h&lt;=sl E.
Sl.ouua . M..arcus A Snuth.
T~n Lum Smith. V!Oll P Snuth.
Euncho Sohn. Ana Isabel Solano.
Sul.. CluJ Song. AnlonLa Stamos.
Fuh·10 Swnpone. Cindy L Stank).
Cathleen Ann Steffan. FUfael 0
Swuu. lklhann Sypou. Londa J
Tabor. Muc:hell J Thomas. KcrT) S
Tomlmson

Maria I Ton-es. Ernest
Tov.-nscnd. Olnsla1·Tuyet Th1 Tran..

P Duffy. Ct:ny 0 Ed.,.,'atds. Stt:\'en
A Elsss, Altmgasha Eng&amp;da. Richard Funun. Elizabeth D Fen-emL.
Yuliy• G Fishman. Tno• K..

A Wnlunglon. o.pr.,. Weeki.
Conn.c: C. Withams. .Iamey D
Wilhams, Luther W&amp;nfdd Ill,
Ousttn W .S Wmg, S1 Nun
Josephine Wong. Yok-Mon Wong.

Carlton Ford. Casey R. Forgente,
Bnan Fung. O.un Qsang Gan, Jenrurer M Gan:u. San.h Jane Gart-ea.
Dth·tn F Gomez. Ed\lo•an:t F
Gonutez. Tilus Dnid Goode.
Kelly Goon. Ramona M. Gore. Ja.
son P Gou.lah. EJlen B. Goulci.
SUI&lt;rY G. Gr&gt;nl. Euna Guillo&lt;.
Cuong John Lip HI. Tinoy
Haboon. Jamill• He. Terry Lynn
Hi niL
David J. Hodge. D.
HoiUngsworth. Shi Ming Huang.
Kimberty A. Hufner. F\m' K. Hui.
Angelica M. lnfan&amp;e, Edward lp,

SH·n Hldl. Bnandon

\1 1l.·hal~.

Su ....n Hartot1

Chn!&gt;lopht-r MuUer. M1l.~ Proulz.

v........

..........

•Cathy No.. OC'IIsk.~ . Jenmfn Potz•n, Launc S:lrltdh Oand, S11Tl\

Anthon) Conte_ • M.atthev. Jarnun

Ronald M Mrw. Adam P
Muga,ero. Souphol Muneash. Km

Slwlna lngnd Crump. Emesl 1
Custocho. Ow1e.s E. Dati) , bmes
W Debose. V1c:t0f S D•u Jr Anna
Man• ()Ina.. E\·dyn D D1sl•.
Ger1Jdme Dixon. Huy Due Ooon.
Jody A Oombrowsk.t. Teresa Dou·
glas. Bnan Kylt Do)·le. L...achelle V
Dubose. Lahu• M. Dubose. [bvtd

Fiugenld

Too~• Wbnel. Stac:t"~ Garr.an
,.._.,...._....,

Mill-.onett. Natahc B Manudla.
Nu:ok Man) wether. Joscptune P
Manno, Peggy Marunc:z. RO\s)
Mateo. Jad.te K Mathunn. ~d
J McAihster

Hung Xullf1 Tran. Lynn Nu Tran.
Tuan X Tran. Freda M Tyson.
Serg.10 M Vasquez.. Lourdes M.
Venrura, Annnwic Vincent.

Demc:lnos Voikl!s. Dung KJm Vu.
H1en Th1 Vu. Wendy Vung, Nancy
J Walker. Adrian G. Wandcr.Mart'

Knulon Wu, Wa Tao X&amp;aa. Man
Ym Yeung. Rasaun N. Young.
Abdul M Zald. Mac:he.lk M
Z=voo&lt;.

lknllsnJ-. EW1h K Blal.esi«
Keasha L Bodnd. Jost L Borulla.
Manhcv. R Boosghen, Sha.... n E
Brawd)
Unda E. Brov.-n. Andrev. C
C•mpbell. Jacqueline A Canslblc:,
Johnnae Carter. Tan T Caner.
Jeanene Cast.qnOb.. J1nrue Ola..
Cec1l) Szt' Kv.:an Owl. Cyndua
Chan. Kwong Oleong Owl. ~18t}
CC Chan. K tM) Oaen.Ou Km
Oleng. Gar Lunr: Oun. Mull
Oloccsupll'aC'h. Jost M1guc:l
Cmtmn. John lm C1polhn•. 01fTord
C Coll~er. Da"'-n M Connoll) .
R.:.) mood C Coorer. Mauncc VK"toryCoA
C1audu~ A Cr.affq . Doleta
Crosby. VeB L . 0rres.. Billy A

DelossantM. Anna Mana O.na..
StqiwuC' Do.

Jod~

A

Domtrowsl:a. Ju.an Dommguez..
AlhiOn C Edv."afds. Katen Ur
Elhou. SIC''tn h. Elsa.s. In lfiJ
Roger Esae-.~z. Cok Enman.
Lyn&lt;!l&lt; F""""'. He~ R.
Fernandez. Ellza:beU1 Delc:anntn
Fm-ei.-a. Yuli)'ll G fuhman. Shinnon P Floyd. Eduardo Fonl.IJ.nc.
T...,.... L Fnnas
Jude Francots. Kenn) Klm Fung.
fuiTIJ GakodJ. Jcssic:ll Kell) GaUo.
Je.nrufer M. Gan:ea. Sarah J~nt
Gattta. F'tdel E. Gomez. Man• V
Gon:t.alez. Kelly Goon. Ramoo.a M
Gore. Jason Peter Goulah. SlaCC':)
G. Gnnl. Shense . Gn:gor).
Vinttnt S. Grtgor)·. Jason 0
Guffey. Cuong John Lip H1. TIOO)
H•boon. Allhla N. Hanullon.
Joanne T Hamme. Darnel

Hlrnmoud.
Da\'id Justin Hodge. Oaruc:l

Hom. Haibin Huang. K.irnbc:rly A
Hufoer. Oinh Con&amp; Huynh. Michael

P. JenlciM. Beuy Jimenez. Donny
Jiminian.. Dooald R. Jodaun.
Doriln A. Johmon. l...onrucr K.
Jones.l..ismaid.l Jusino. Wing H
Kam. Hyun Soo Kim. Sq Jo Kom.

Foll1994•

Marina Krivonos.. Leandra Ja1
Knywin11&lt;i. Kin Chung K"""''Sheryl&lt; S. Llu. Trinh Tu)'&lt;t L&lt;.

Ba.mar. Abad. MIChelle' Agyeman&amp;Willy Anlhony Airaldi, LiSI A

Ka

Alexander. Lucia Rote Almcid&amp;.
Enc R. Almon~. Ed.,.,in A. Apoute..

Li. Hong Zhi Lin. Abnlwn E.

Khuram Astnf. Benjamin Ridwd
Al.kiruon. John Nathan Barr,
Melony c . Bedford. Sleven R.

"'J&gt;h Marcinilk. ChrUlophcr M.

Belfdd. Charlton A. Benjamin.
Scca D. lknjlrnin, 0..-dlnd J.

Mandl. Jactie K.. Mathurin. Jill
Annt Mau:ragis. Salina Oair

1«0 L&lt;bun. Fftnk
1..«.. Hon Sing l..ce. Shonielk
Nicole Lee.. Billy Levin. Shu-Fen

Lopez. Hoang Luong. WiUilm C
Maisonc:n.. Aklo Alain Manino, Jo-

Ma)'fi. Alh\01'1 M McCaJI. Ku
Ta' ll Mcll-..aan. Samuel S Millner
Sandra 0 Moody
Ke'&amp;n S L Mu1 \tOf!tTI [b,ld
~ada.! . H1n1 Fung !l.f:al. Du)en
Thanh Ngu)tn. Hoo1 K~~tt Ngu~en.
JUSIIR Chanh r.guyen. l...aum'l
Nguyen. Tuong,,llu Nruyen.
Timothy P O' Conndl. Manw
Or1tL Dan.rl T Parter. 1..on)
l..ous~ P.:tNJn. M~n1J.h Patel.

Norma Pma. Frukl) Lrn1n Pm:z.
Ju.an Peru_ Ktw The
Rac:turd
Pledratnta.. On Kat Poon. JOM.i..man

Phu:

JPr=od
f'lorr:f'IC'C C Qwah. Ku..;tm K
Reyn&lt;&gt;l&lt;h. F""""""'Rhoad&lt;&gt;.
ChnSiophcr G Robens. Sonp R
Robc:ns. l....al.t-isha S D Robtru.un.
0\arics L Rcx:he. Hu,I!O R
Rodnguez. Robert Bnan RO\Io le~.
Lts.a Mane Ru).bol._ Oann Kt.~th
Russe:ll, Paula Andrr:l Sagon.
Hair) Quo&lt; 5")&lt; Roberto Sanch&lt;z.
Todd M ~er. Marun J
Sctull&amp;nJ. We.n(ty S Sc:huiiZ. Anel
A AnnsrturiJ Shea. Un) V
Shone. Adtsh Mile Sinp..
kanncn&lt; Snulh. s..lwm
Smnh. Ssu l...lllg So. FuiVlO

Swnpon&lt;. ~ J Swlwn.

MOIIIQU&lt; SIJ)'I. \61nn1 Sl&lt;peliSI.') .

=~~~~~-HeM

Tll. Y1m Tam. Pri ~Tan. Yos.ef
Tekestc:. knn1fer Lee ftrrano,.._

Tcc:lemicad K.. Ttwolde. Feltcu
Phoong llw. 1\.Jt Hom 1lw.
Flore- Marie T.A. Thomas. J ~e:~nthe
Annid: Thomas. M•lc:he.ll J.
Thornls.
Tyront Thornls. C1w&gt;c&lt; M.
Thurmond.. livid Tol;tu. K&lt;ny Sl.

Palnc:k Tom! anson. Ernest

Tov.'ftSelld. Phuon£ Quoc TrM. Vi
Tuona Tl'lll. l&gt;e&gt;'CIII l'llnc&lt;
Tud.&lt;r. RhldJrncs A Ulloa. Darud
Carlos Vda. Oemetrios VoikiJS.
Dune Klm Vu. arq Jean Walker.
Susan M Wandell, Adnan G Wande&lt;. lln&amp;· Huey W~n&amp;- Mlr&lt; A.
Wastungcon. Dil\'ld TIO)'U Wa.
HeatlottM "'hccla.JoonV
Willwns
H.amet T Wilson. TaJ1sa M
Winfiekl, Lap Yan Wong.
Raymond Mma Wona. St Nun
JOICph.Jne Wong. Me:llmg Wu. Wan
Hua Wu. R.tiaun Nahimt Young.
Aid M. Zaod. M111 Bo 7=&amp;. Hong
Ji lbont. Shannon A ZDinows.lt

~-

... •

�IHIIdiiN

6

MAY 11. 19'1S VOLUME 26. NO 28 · COMMENCEMENT 149 EXTRA

.... ,.,..

Checkout :::r:-J :::::these Apple
-price breaks!

s..... R_

CaftJdalo. Cu&amp;apola.
h'IX'I Choana
MM) O&gt;on.
Ehzabdh D. Fenrin. RAmona M
c:;a.., Sonio S Gruo., C....,. John

a.a..

Ha. 0...;.1 A. Holhngswonh.

K.unberly A Hu:fner, JeMJfcr R

$1139
Savings of $308
Performa 636
• MB RAM • 250MB Hord Dnve

.a::.::.:=:"""'"""'"- ....:~

~nd

CDROM Ori\'e! ~,_...,., .,.....w

$1925
Savings of $335
Performa 6USCD
• 8MB RAM • 350MB Hord Dnv• •
15"' Cok)r Morutor • CDROM Ori\'e
• 14.4K Modem and software•

$2737
Savings of $183

Konesi;) .

u Hon&amp;t.a..
Chuen-Po ~ lau, Sul MUJ.

Roben J Pemal. Wdd1 Ramos·
Mercado. ICnlin K Rc:ynokk. Ana
Mlllkk Rlvua. Owks L Roche.
Huto R Rodnpu.. l..da M~ne

Rusld. E.- Sanw&amp;o. Man: A
Washington. O.vid Taoyu Wr:e .
Jam&lt;y 0.0 W'dliams. Lap Yan
Won&amp;. Hmnan Wun, Henry Yer

Who's,.,. Awercl . .s,
Fall '94
Balbora Abad. Ngtd&gt; M Akio'·

wedt, K.huram Mhnlf. Mdon) C
Safford. Keasha Bodnck. S:au Pun

au.... KnonJ a..,., a.an.

01ff0fd CoU.er. Mauntt V CoA.
Apnl Ezzell. Casry Foq.,ur. Mana

Mtw_.f!.~IIM~

Mon, Tu• •
Th
• •

A non-pn:&gt;IIT /lnlvef&gt;hy program tor studsnt&gt;, focvhy 6 slafr
TheConvnons • Nofth~ • (716) 6&amp;i·l.SS4 • Faa:645-.381A

Saepensk) , Tanyeua Tabb. Sofomon
TanuDI. M!tchtll Thonw.. Nanc")
\\ aller• .lo$ephant Sa Nun\\ 00,

Hufnrr. Donan John!oOA. Carmelha
Jonr:~. Jacquehnt' KOOC"Sl ). Sol
Mu1 l..8u. Sha-.n Mal.. J~ R
Messd.... Vtctu- Pl:~l- Jean PK"m
W1kb Ralno§-Metndo. SooJl Robern. Nona Sruchl. CbmW Tu"~
1lu Tran. Fm1a Mant T).wn
()a, ld T*'fU We-a. T odtrnt" R
W,l)aarm. kn'y Xsng.hu1 Yuan
~y

1995 Graduates

Sandra L Adamsll. Karin.. Agu1lar
Edv.•m A Aptlnlt, 0nw A. A-.as,,
Me&amp;on) C Bedford. ~'t:n R
Bt:lftdd. b y Q Bt:rndL KaulRI A
Boney. Brandon C Buni&lt;n. ka..nr
Castagnola.
0.001 Olan.
MIUC Darb. John I C1polhru.
01tford C Coli~. Claudtne A
Cnlfey, Dolda Crusb) . Emrso l
Cusaocbo. James W Debose. HU}

K"""''

Duo: Dmh. E&gt;&lt;lyn 0 O.Si&gt;
Cic-raldu)e Duon. Huy Due
Doan. Juan Dommguez.. Jason Ron

Edwards,

Karen~..«%

EJIK)(t, lrvmg

Rom ~vt.z.. Lynenc: Fanchrr.

Rdoard F&lt;nNn.
Ehz.abeth Ferreara. Vaknr M
Ronwod P

~'capo.

Rprella. Bnan Fung. Cynth•• A
C.bn. Amha Gc:zahangn. A&amp;buda
Gonzalez. Ramona M G&lt;ft. Soma
S Gnnt. Vincenl Stephen Gn:gOC).
Cuong lohnJ..ap Ha
Tinoy Haboon. Alison Pandcn
Hedgepath. Kenneth Haclr) . Rener
Hams. Oavtd A Ho lhngs.,..orth.. ~
'L Huang. C'kalus P Hunt . 8ruct'
Wavnc- lsselbaecbt:r. Rochelk:
Deti1SC' Jackson. Jacquehnt AM

Jones. Lonmcc: K1mberly Jones.
Um~.a.da

Jusino. Pada K1m. Jtffrt-)
S Klem. Trw:y Yvenc: Kyter.
Otuen-Po ~er Lau .. Rtdwd l..ce..
Elatne Huan-Ung Liang. v, Quang

Lu.Loo Dan Luc
An Huu Ly, JOSI!ph Man:m1al.

Jackie Kcrula Mathunn. Rossy
Mateo, Laskesha C.nulk: M1Ucr.
Launc- Les.lit: Mcnks. Ja.'ipCI"
Koon- Hung Mui. H1ng Fung Ng&amp;.~ .
Duyen Tbanh Nguyen. J u~m
Ow\h Nguyen. Tuong\1 Th1
Nguym. Lony l..ou1sr Parson.

Aan&gt;n M. I'ttu.Robcn l Pomd.
OW;.cena Elaine Perry. Sharon
~.Chi K.ai Poon, lvor George
Reid. Oak Edward Render. Ku'Siin

Professionally Managed by

SIARA MANAGEMENT

Kyri&lt; Reynolds.
AR1 Malilde Rivera. 0\aries
Lawrt Roche. Cynthia Ela.me

Rodri"""' Liso Marie Rushol&lt;.
Ma.riw: Nelu Sica, Pedro Jose
Santana. Esther Santiago, Micharl

'

Ht-haiOCJidr.cwrd~·tht

,.__.w--..Ro-

Van E\'Cf'dancm- M.ag.e Vohaw ..
Vuonc.

Dun&amp; Vu, Npyen H

...miMbtuatoodthoUB~

Waslunpxl. David T.oyu Wt:a.
Jarney Dan Walllamt, Luther Ill
W1nf"..ekl Oetnoft W~. Hmnan

Lab. ood has. -bone~­
'"the Amrt'lt'I:M lotmttJJ of P'lrmcoJ

M«&lt;inN and Rdtabildtllltltl He-remvtd lht NabonaJ ~ Fwnda
bon Y~ Sc:hol. A..-.d
Ht 1$ a rnmtber of lht Golden

Y~.

Robm E.
Younc.lmy Xmpo Yuan. Anna
Man&lt;Zqohm.
Wun. Man Yin

Fanandu..ll&lt;nnda Mmamforth.
Jamtlla He;, lcnnlft:r Rd:Jeca.

I U - SlqlNm&lt; Odocsha

1.Mharn. Mocen Oa•'Od Nadal.
Taman Dent« Willaam1.l..lp Yan
Wong. Sally Sy -Jut~ Yan,;

HEALTH
RE LATED
PRO FESS IONS
l k folkwo 11\f- student\ ha\'t b«n
named 1o Whc)s Who Arnone S1u
den!: ~

m Ammcan Cofk&gt;Jn and

Uru\tnl lte~

Gradual••:
Ahson Todd Cooper tE.J.en:uoe Sc1
encc-1. Eua:tshant:h Assian 1Mcd1
aJ T rctonolocy I. En&lt; A
Hr)tomko (MedJcaJ Technc.ioc 1.
F~ng Lin 1t.1t:d1Cal T«hnokJc I

Under,raduates:
N:&amp;n~..')

A Akundcr fPh)'tok:al
Shon L)'M Ibn""'
lf'loy&gt;ocal Th&lt;np} '· Kenn«h B
Jobnson11'1oy&gt;oal Th&lt;npy&gt; Ronald
Th&lt;npy ~

~ cMcdocal

A

TrctonolocyJ. l....,

)a~ yi Med.caJTectudog\ 1

LINGUI~TICS
1bt fufkJ'VroiAf: (r.'dlYIInf!

~

.... u ~l\'r ~t.al honor\ 'ol.ilh
then Bache-"• uf

A.n~

deptt 1n

Llni!Ul"K.'\

Pen-) \\ Amm\. h1ghcw hun
Anna Bun. high dt'-

()f'\_ l ;~ural«

orw."tk"lfl

MEDIA STUDY
Kn~u'lt

'orlk Mollet 1\a~ rteet\'ed
the &lt;ifqOf) Capano Memonal
Awan.J from lhc- Depanmtn~ of Media Study f« her ouNandang ere
all\C...,'Orl.tnfllm

MMio Soucly also hos
awardH departiMntal

hoftOf'l lo tM followtn';
H~t~

Mantr-A J c.Jos. Otn~ophr-r R• dwd Casuno. Pam Lynn Doym,
Brt:m Murphy Karpta.k. Dand
Wayne MelfU!CI'. Knsunt: Noelk:
MuJkr. Zot Lynne- Plttman. Ovlsoopha JaM R-..:1, a..~opha
M RJChJ. Donakt Rentg Gertncht

.....
Moo&amp;

Kuan Ol.an. Otfford Owmd

CoU~tt. Knsten

Mmt Ilanas.
MiChael Gonion Dns,ula. Kr\·m
Gerard FU. Elazabtth L.outscHugan. Eugenc- Franos Martm.
Fredend: WilLiam Millet IV , Oerel
Ja~Summslt

J ohn Pt'llhp Brt-WSia-. John F
Foi&lt;) . Modoaelloseph Mamo&lt;L
W1lhamA Berg
St. . ........,...,.. .... Leften

u...,..... ....,. .......,,

Otn~opher

Richard CI.Slal~. Moog

Kuan Oum, Pan1 LyM Doyen.

DaVId Wayne- Me-tnzct, Kn5ttnt
Nodk Moller and Otnstoph:r John
lt-..:1
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u......... .-c.a.,....w.,

John 8rt-Wster, Scou Bruner, PaUl
Doyen, Ralph Melillo. Scon Mdkr"
and Jason un

NATURAL
SCIENCES AND
MATHEMATICS
OutsUnclln' Senior In
Natural SclencM a ncf
Molhe-tlcs

..............................
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................
.......... ,......,...., .
Kty Honor Soctety. dJr UB Band
and tho Polrtocal Same&lt; C1ulo

Jamet Monuon. a bto&amp;c'l) map.
W1tha)910PA
't\'l.lll Fa! C'h:N. a c.-on:-lfJ'*'f KXTit"t'
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Mill-had ~IJ»&gt;O'

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pbyst~..'S miJIIf

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PHI BETA KAPPA INDUCfEES

BrasiC:t. Wihoa 81'U§~ l..tndl
Woo.Qlum 0o&lt;nc- Hmry R

february 1995 Graduates
Machrllc Barber, Chn'&gt;lnpht:r
81ihop. Ke.u.ha Budncl. Andn::v.
Campbell, Mat') C Chan. Sau Pun
Chan. Kalhmne Da' •~ - Donan
o~\'C') ' SIC\'m Ehl&gt;. Oatman
Fom:sltt. Alan Holtr'ln. K1mherl~

•w:RF for t.s awne wort • a mlp .. ""' Oq.1mmt dOotnoary

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A&amp;ushn Ttver~L Emily Tq.Ja.
Jenniftt l..ce Tannova.
Teckmicld Kdlu Trwolde,
F&lt;lina ~ Thao. Komberty A

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Jacbt K. Machunn. Hena Pune

A 0onuJet.. Edward Gonukz..
Jason Goulah. .klhn L H.a. ~ Z..
Huang. Kunbcrly Hufner. Rochrlk
D Jacbon. Oonan Johnson.
Lonna K Jones
L« Kt:mlkn. K C Kwong.
C1~nton l..atnw. Haft Smg L« .
Glona u. Hoanr L.wonJ. Hoan~
~ Fnnando MatJOndl . H•nf!
Funr. Np. TuongVl T Nf.U)'t:n.
Henry N1uyrn. Robtt1 Ptmel, Jun
P\m'e, Ktrstm K Reynokl • Anna

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Asld Sdoplhas bca nomod Quo

E.Suoo,MaahowSems-,

AWARDS

~

I
I

�18.111111

7

MAY II. 1995 VOLUME 26. NO 28 · COMM ENCEMENT 149 UCTRA

SCHOOL OF
NURSING

eaceUc:nor in clinical nunin&amp; pnclice
demonslnlcs spocW prom·
ise for JOCtic:e iD lhe fulW'e.

AJu•nl Aw•nil

Ruth G. El&lt;le&lt; Eac.ll-. In
ReM.rch4wonl

and

The RUih G. Elder Excdlenoe mR&lt;sean::h Award for Nuriing Rc:scart:h
is pacnocd by lh&lt; Gnduooe Teacf&gt;.

Shannon Butte (llacalauroao&lt;J
and Janke Wrighl (GnduaiC) hlw
received the AJumru Award for
their demonstnited outstanding
scholastic ability. consistently JI(Kt·

ing Faculry so Janice Gr:t.ank.oMb ••
~--hudcmon·

live in~ ~IMions.c•oel ­
aence in nursing petfonnanot and

-~"'~and

ability in the rt:ICifCh prooesli' as well

.. IC:IIduna and leadcrshtp potential .

as special promise for leadership in

nursinc.ft:lltM:h.

~:~.!tp~=:~

f;;.~,j Mouchly

K.rutin Cleary (8accalaurate) and
Susan Gunn !Gnduak) hllvc retti\'Cd the Dr. S. MouchJy Small
Award. wtuch honon a gnduaung
student an the Nun:mg Program
who giYCS C\'ldencc of supc:rtOf UR·
dc:rstlndmg and ab1hty in the mental health aspect or nun:tn&amp; cart

Anne S.nsbuJCh Award
Knsta Wdch has I"C'Cel\'ed thc:
Anne Sengbuich A•·r i an honor
inscituted by tht uudents '" the:
School of un:mg and presented to
a graduating student in lht: 8at'CII·
laurwc Program who has made a
,,~niftant contribution to thr ~ of Nursing lhrough aawe
paruapation on the Studcm Council

sr,... 'J'h.ta T...

1

G••••

l«ip,.. Cluoptor 4word

The Sigma Theta Tau. Gamma
Kappa OJ.apler Award. has been
prosenled ID Michael Oslolda
(BKC&amp;laun:alt) and Edward Wlutt.
(Graduate) in mcognition ohheir
personal and professionaJ charlc·
tetistics thai suggest poltmial for

making a s:•gniflcant conuibuuon to
fostenng the purposes of the orp·
niz..ation. Reciptems are current
members of Gamma Kappa Ch.:lpter. Sagma 'Theta Tau

~~:t~,ti!!i~~.•••rd

for

het"a~ions

with dienu and colRec:tpimts of' the awlll'd
musttntmd 10 pn1chcc nun;Ul£ tn
O.SinCI I (Fn&lt;. ChaUiauqua.

apes

Gencste. Cattaraugus. Naagara. Ork:ans. and Wyomin~; counoc:sl

Mlllo•d Flll•ore SchoJ.
~
hl
Ste\'~ E. Bert.cz has received the
MiUard fillmore Scholarship. es
hmod by t:ht Mtllard Fill~ H
pttal0assofi9S3 tobcaw
o
a registered nurw who griduated

~the Millard Fill~ HosptUll
School of Nursing and is ptnUIRJ
further gudy at the Un!Vet'lll} 11
Buffalo SctlocM of Nl.lBang

Hun• Pr•ctlllon•r Aw•rcl
lk Nurse Practit1onrr Av.ard hb
been prestnted to Carol OK(f'O\'C'
(Oukt)., Dsant l...oomn; (fanul) 1and
UndaCmnsn (Women'sJ llus:
IWard lS prucnted IO Sludmu
graduatmg from~ N~ Prlc1Jt l0ner Muer's Program v.ho demon watr potenttal for funhmn&amp; thr
rok or the Nurst Pnk:t1twner sn lhc
corrunumt) The awan:i 15 ao:ompl·
n.ed b) • one-year membrnJup to

the ursr PnctJuoner AsSOC'111Jon
of Western Nn· Ycrl (NPAWNY I

AACH-WMY O.epter Aw1rd
Amencan Assoctauon of Cntteal

Cm NUJ'Seli (AACN)-We!olem
Nev. Yorl: Chapter Award has been
awarded to Susan Karrt. Pmoemed
to a gude;m grwluai•ng from the
Critical Can: Mast(:f's Prognm. the
award honors lcadenh!p pocenttal
for funhmn&amp; the rok componcnb
oftheOuucal Nurse SpecitltSi m
the cntical c~ sening and 15 accompanK:d by a one-year memberstup 10 lht Amencan ASSOCIIhOn of
Cnocal Care Nurses as wdl b a
one-year m~mbentup m thr local
Western Nev. Ytrl Cba.pter

••.

~:;t,:t~~.~:~c::

The Gradua~ Faculty Award foe
01nle&amp;l Exccllc:ncc IS presented 10

Mal&lt;)

Denise Dunford. a graduate scudent
wbo tub consi51enll y dernonstnned

ce~vtd

POLITICAL
SCIENCE
8~ \\rilliam F.
o.cam;11o. Davod Rdlard Kloos.
MIChael Uchac:r

Shlwn Dand

District I Mmlbership Award of the
New York Stale NW"SSCS Assoc:ia~Klll
(NYSNA} tS presented 10 Jul!e Here
for her pro(euionalism in mnans '"

·

s..oll

-.i&gt;ohudemooslntedoupmorlltill
in c:ornnuUcMinc wich and ror ....
btnU as a n&amp;n1nc llUdc:N. The
PWd is cndowtd by DeVoe;, who
mcr:ivcd bolh her B.S. and M.S sn
ruruncrromUB

HoftOr stuclenh lncfucfer

MY$144 Dlrtrlct I
M..,Mnhlp 4word

Uu WaUenfels (Baocalawutt:}
and 8elh Smith (Gnduak) have
mcei'•'Cd the' Rulh T McGrorey
Leaderstnp Award. orignWiy ts·
tlblished by Ruth T. Mc..'On:tty an
I'1!C:Opi~ of the contributions
nwde 10 numng procre$8 by Anne
WaJ .... ~. ICJUndoTc(lh&lt;
UB School of lniRl After Dr
McGrorey's dealh.the award""~
renamed IR her ITimlOr)' . The
award recognized lhcJie two stu·
dents who hi~ demon.saraacd the:
• rughesl c~epoc or •......,... or profcss.ionll rn:poi\Sibllity. k:adership
pot.c:ntia! and personal. professional
and in~ellectual gfO'tJ'th

~-fmmbodldlo:
p&gt;duaond~_.,.

SOCIAL
SCIENCES
~
O.pert. .ntal Honors will
be presentN to the

·."

~;1'ti:!:'..~"~=~=:y

tho Kathorlno Cornell
The1teta

Oloyl Albndu. She&lt;}l Ald&lt;nnan.
Suzanne Alw1ne. Phil Andtmw ,

Jennifer Angtd. Alyssa Bq:asson.
Lyndo llart&gt;&lt;T. Slq1hcn Ben.,...
Oleryl Ben.er. James 8onSJg:J'I(ft
Jdfe&lt;eyllol)do. K&gt;mbcrly-

Sha""MdlldKmliN ~ ~..eno~. a,.... u.n

Bykowsb. Cymua CaJI.ms. Thomoo
Capolon&amp;o. Tonya Can
Nocol&lt; Cas&lt;. Br&lt;nda Chapman.
L1~ OlestC'!'.

Timoth) Oadcn,

Oana' Coleman. David Conlhn.
Thomas Conk.lm. Canda CooL.
N1101ru Corson. Enca Crane
OvutO(ftr Crorun. Kalhleen M
CusacL. Ja&amp;nne Ihvson. Akudra
Denan. Kmtln 0o&amp;ma. Swi1ta
Oona.ldsoo. Rocco Dragaru. Chmtopfier Duchemm. Amy Epge1n.
Nancy falL

Mtehelk- Falzone. Oem!ioe M
f·nurue:r. Andrea Franc:a~ Timc:Mh)
F~. Roben Fussner. Olnstt~
G1bson, Nee:luna Gok. Vargm1a
Gonzalet. MK:helle Gocdon.

Ramona &lt;Jon:.
Chloe Gonheb. U101 ~go.re.
Thomas Gruber. Cyntl'ua Guguencz.
Ryan Gu11ds. Amy Haden. Unda
Han.st:n. Amy Hellenschml(h. Dana
Ho. Dame! Jacbon.
Susan Jov.'dy. Thora\n KJi.,.·:tJec.
Son}I Ked. Ke' 1n Kenned},

Hohnc' fU~~&lt;l and

Susan KJem IGradwuc l h:t''e re
the Sluriey D. Ot-Vc:c Com·
mun~Ca~Jon Award. ~ted to a

WINNERS OF UB POITRY
CONTE5TS ARE ANNOUNCED
The Oscar A. S1lvmn:m Undergraduate Ubrur) has announced thtwinnen of §le\'entl student poetry conte~ held at the unl\'er"Sit)
Ed Kiq&amp;r:, a th~nl ·)'eat Ph 0 cllndubte m b•ology. IS v.·mner of
the Acadc:my of Amencan Poeu; ( AAP) Puetl') Pnzt Ktegk. v.-ho
holds a B.A. m Enghih and bioi~) from UB and 1 ouster'&gt; dcptt
m cnm1na1 JUSUcx from SUNY Albany , ha.-. had a poem pubh~ m
Srrrt't'Mr.
Antan Satc:hicbnand rteel\'ed hononbk ment1001n the AAP
poetry cooleSt. A ~ior gnduatsng lh1s month .,.,m a degrtt mEn·
glish. she also woo honorable mentJOn for lht Academ) of Ameocan
Poets Prizt in 1993
Judge for this year's AAP pnzr was Carl£_IXMb. UB professor
ofEnghsh.
Brian K. Doyle l.)t v.rmnc:rofthe Fncncb ofthr Um"mlt) LlbntrIC'S Undergraduate Pow)· Pnu. An cd1tor of lht studeru htenuy publtcation Armosphnr. Doyl(' IS 1111 English and kgal ~ucHes majlw' in
his third year a1 UB A teachmg assistant in the English Depanment,
he has been publ ished in maga1Jnes and an anthoiOf!y.
Jennifer Kannin rettl\·ed honorable mention A .senior gntduat ·
ing this month with a degttt 10 Engli~ and v.·omcn's stud1es. she
also is an ed1tor of Atn10sphur and ILOIY 8ookJ She anended UB
ot1 a four-year - aankmg on Creativity" writing scholar.&gt;hip from
Roc:N$er Commun~~y Savings Banlr. and rectl\'ed horKnble mention in 199-t for the Academy of American Poets Pnzr.
Mkhae:l Basinski, 3SSJSWII etntorofthc:: Poetry/Rare: Books Coi Ject:ton. and Mac Hammond. professor emeritus of English, v.-ere
Judges of this year's Friends of the Uruvenity Ubraries Undergr.ldu·
me Poetr)• Pritt.
Virginia Coon is winner of the:: Anhur Axelrod M('moria) Award
A co..founder and editor of the poetry magazine Word Ouw Buffalo.
she came to UB to reacquauu herself with college wort and 10 get
rc:commendations for graduate school. She hopes to enter the M .F.A
tpoetty} progmn at New Yort University and is currently ma.io!'lng
in English at UB. Joseph Conte. UB associate professor of Enghsh.
was judge.
Susann8 Maritimr is winner of Scribbler's Prize, awank:d for
the besc piece of auth•e writing by an undergradualt' woman. A
transfer ~udent whn has acted wilh the: Buffalo En~mble Theatre.
the Irish Classical Theatre and at UB, is an English major.
Scribbler's Prize judges v.ue Dcidre L)•nc:h. assistant professor of
English, and Professor Susan Howe.

AMBUlANCE

RUN
....._, Tltlnl..,.., Ul low students
oM tholr lo•lllft lnausurotod tho
flrn Annual.t..lttdaace Run Mly 7,
" - tho fodorol Court House to
tho) llson MtoMII Aol~. p ....... ,
wiU betMflt Cld141space, • not..for·
_
profit OfJioRlutlon Min' ,.,..... to provide 1 s.fe

hne~t

for children to wlslt 1 aon-

custocllll perent.

Rlshll Cluottlns ot tont ,..rty which loll-..1 tho roce oro UB J.w stud..,t HoctO&lt;
Flsuo,...., loh, •IMI How Yorio s..te 4r,...~S.• Hoyt.

Jac:quehne Konffi.) . Mat) K.a)

Kuzma. Joanna ~ . Jenmfer
Lane . Chttlyn Latka, Ven
Ucbn&lt;hl

Enc:a Upov.-W. Da'td Macdua.

d

lAW

STUDENTS'

Moon Manm, Sw.an MaN'IR.

Dmo.e Manrey. Trac) McC'Io!.lr.e) .
Und3 Mc1stet. Joan MeiUot).
Sh~non L Miller. Todd M1llef
Bl)·an M1lkr. M1chelk M
Mlr..erliC"Vo'ICZ. Shuie) Mood)
Laune Monies, Mane Mons51Ct.
Steptuuue M yen;. Cathehnc Nitgel,
Mananne Na...m. Hmg Nga1. Quo•

Nguyen
~nstopherOlne) .

Elton P:ul.er.

N1hma Paul. Mtchelle P Paul) . Jill

Penman. RobC"n J PemaJ. Su..an
Pen) , M ~llc Pfeil. Joseph
Ptuhpose. Amy Pldtkr
Blll'ban PKxrowsl..t. Trac)
~hnslr.!. RIChard Poule. Joshua
Potrocll. Jeanne PBn. Barbara
Profitt. Knsnnr: Pmnobu .• Sandra

Prov.se, Oms11ne L Pr)gon. Mat)
R&lt;M Puth1yamadam.
Rhonda Ra). Mill) R K'OC.ta.
GkM Roben, M..an Robnts.
Roland RocchJ. Tabrr Rov.ke.
TtaC) Saluda. Came Schnetckr.
Adam Sdnndt. Doreen Sheech
Han·ry Stege!. Sha.,.·n S•eg~l.
Oleryl S&amp;lw:stnna. Rac~l Small.
JeMifer Sm1th, V1t1ona Snell.

Rnmdra SnnJ\'asan, Chn-.tane
Stachura. Carolyn Starl..e) . Candict

SteeL.
Jonathan Swfl(:. M•ch:k-1
Stoermer, Daman Tot h. Jenmf~r
Umng. Carolyn Walbesser. Lisa
Mane Walker. Strven M We1ss.
Tracy Welsh. Dancu WKnen. Jenruf(:f Wikol.. Anna W illems. Can
Wotfberg. EJIUbeth Wood. Jeruf(j"

Zal&lt;sk&gt;

•
CX&gt;nfCTIOM

In an anKle. "Financtal Dtscmu.re
Polte.esSel by Faculty Senate" •n 1M

Apnl27 R~ponu. Lockwood Library
Dtrector Judith Adams d id na use the
word "suspect" in reference 1o curricular decisions made by VK:e Provost for Undergraduate Education
Nlrolas Goodman. Adams Slid thas
Goodman's ''recentiCitons rel:ucd to
consultation (with faculty mem~
Facull)' Senate) l\lvr not inspim:lconfidence in 500le membm: of the Senate."

AS
A REMINDER,
MAKIN ' COPIES WILL
BE OPEN DURING THE
1995 SUMMER SEMESTERS
AND WILL BE PROVIDING THE
SAME GREAT COPY SERVICES.
INCLUDING
OUR NOTES ON FILE SERVICE

Faculty !
Help your students
by putting your notes
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�IHIIIIII

8

MAY II. 1995 VOLUME 26. NO. 28 ·COMMENCEMENT 149 EXTRA

FOUR EVENTFUL
ClASS OF 1995
F

Jyne1991

Su.1Mr199t

S150 mllhon 'A'Orth of

M!Cho&lt;JSh&lt;ndon,
-.nolo9rst &amp; cho•

constructlOn getS Uldo WI!Y on the
~·Nolth

c.mous

U8 Stadrum.

Cerurfc&gt;th&lt;Ms.
N.!nlal Sc~a~Ccs anc!
Mott1emotiCS Com·
pl&lt;x,SrudoniUruon,
and The Cornm::ns

5

E

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oiGeology, .....
mon!h-long &lt;&gt;&lt;P&lt;d•·
t.on IOSobr:no, finds

H

0ernts MtUe:, forTnc'
So!u-doyN.ght I.N&lt;
sur, VISitS on Perern
Wttk.end Oct 11-13

Urw&lt;n"Y 01

Buffolo R&lt;s&lt;ord1 Cen·
t&lt;r (CUBRC J, iorgest
by

T

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U8 research&lt;1&gt;

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folo. !0, 1H!

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Ne-w tdec:OI"TYT'U"'&lt;~

oped bysco&lt;rotrstS
encf ens·~ at
&amp;
Millard Ftllmorc Hos·
prtals, allows re-

ua

~todtr«t

grant~rttr.Nf:d

rrviVNMix&lt;n

" " "by
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01'1&lt;ChornsmlhottnS

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$8_3 rntlliO"' Au force:
corcmct .swarded to
C.l&gt;pon

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MOIT1S Otts, CMI

[.ghtnt:W~

oons system Ml-

ngt&lt;si&lt;oder,SN&lt;S

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Ap&lt;111Ht
Stme:bt..dge:tforccs
lJ9 to nW:t S9 rmlhon

ra.nc&lt;d fo,

keynOte: at Marttn

Uno'l~Gits

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cornp.JS

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food COlll

mcm&lt;l'Otoon

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me.h~

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Enghsh, named
MaCArthur felloN

Sept. 18, 1992
Gov

Cuomo. omcrs

laudWtlliamR

GreJl'lef as -students·
pres•denC et htS •Nu-

guratm as 13th ores1-

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folo . 28 , 1991

P~toGreatnes.s

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Mlrch 10, 1991
UBse.lec!edas ~

""""14. 199)
T•m (Ot'\Gnr: of Bostor

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le«i'f19'-'0tCt:•nM•
C:¥,.A.menc:&amp;f'lart

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•esea&lt;ch CentC' on

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..IO..malrst lcrv
Anoer'!.of1 nrtldtos

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ca~..~S&lt;eS

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ra•s•ns S56 3 m•IIIO'l

Un101'1 opens to~
~ ru;, fa st\.IOetlt
hfe. offenng ~.000

Cooct"

fC&gt; UB

soume

Arena dlSlng B•ac•
HstO!'YM.cwltt'l

do&gt; classes

Oct. 19, 1992
Datgn goes CM!J

too

too of se«e

d•n.ns. 1o&lt;.ng&lt;s

15, 1991

canceltatron ot

liMy 16, 1991

tenonstsf0f7~

~!ttl

rtt~r..oes

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dent of Unl\l'tfSity 5t

fC&gt;

Buffalo

oubhcatlOn!.ano

O'lanc:elbP"JortOI"'
medal at ue·s u7

organ•zatJC:nS

commencement .....
Alumnr Aren.!

E

July 8 , 1991
UB becomes a m•nlll·
IUTC Unrted NatiOnS
~ 5,000 WoOd Un1vers•ty Games athlete:s take CJII'ef North
Campus fa ten days

Sept. 4, 199)
Grand Qpe:rung of UB
Stad1um, With Ct!l'emon~a th&amp;l IOC.Iuck

baHoon rides, patac:huttsts and oart•es.

bnngs DMsKJn I fOOt

S.pl. 1, 199)

Sept. 9 , 199)

Sop~

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wrth sallenes, elMs

UB getS fl\o'e·vear.
S7 5 m1lhon grant to
establish f1f"it Nt!ONII
center fa ~ncms
devices for mdMdu
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After 18 years at UB,
Humor1st .v.ari: Russell
grves hnal show lr'l
KatNnne Comell

rooms. ~tm and
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opens on Nolth

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human brain, and
bra•nch•ld of Professor Horold a.ody,
opens .n CFS Bu•ld·
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UB cooduct card10-

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�</text>
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Joltllaw' ....

New interactive
program helps
students in job
search.

-y,.

.. 4

2

Art a
Gov..........t

P.....ts

Gany Wills gives
Distinguished
Speakers lectur~

Pediatric dentists say
including parents can
be rewarding.

W.lconae Mat for

3

George_C. Lee to retire as
e~gineering dean July I
IIJ~VIDAL

myself."
Over the course of his career,
Lee said he has seen a shift in
enginecring•s orientation at UB.
"Over the last20 years, VB'sdrive
has been to become a research university,to elevate our capacity and
ability and visibility in the area of
research." More recently. be added.
the emphasis has moved toward
working with industry. developing
con.son.ia and working with other
schools.

Reponel- Edn"'
EORGE C. Lee will
retire July I as dean
of the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, a
position in which be has served
since the fall of 1977. He will continue as director of the National
Center for Earthquake Engineering Research (NCEER). headquarlered at UB.
A member of the VB faculty
since 1961, Lee was instrumental
in bringing NCEER to VB in 1986,
and from April 1989 to September
1990 served as the center's acting
director, be was named director of
NCEER in 1992.
Lon&amp; considered a leader in the
field of eanhquake engineering,
Lee has been instrumental in making eanhquake engineering a research focus at VB.
"My entire professional career
has been here. I've never worked
any other place. I have a lot of
feelings for this institution." said
Lee, wbo joined VB as assistant
professor of civil engineering. After serving as chair of the Depan-

G

L

La

ment of Civil Engineering from
1974-77. be became dean of the
Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
"I think I've taken the school
from one level to a higher level.''
Lee said. "But it takes a lot of
steam (to do both jobs)."
His retirement as dean of engineering will allow him to devote
all of his attention to the earthquake center. a change that be called
"best for the university and for

ee has been instrumental in that

change. In 1994. he was named
director of the UB Greater Regional
Industrial T-echnology Program_ or
VB GRIT, a project designed to
help area businesses develop new
produc" in coopen.tioo with norgional research ._universities.
Funded by a S 1.5 million appropriation from the federal government , the project helps s mall
businesses make incremental tech nical improvements in their commercial -i ndustrial products.
particularly products with existing
or prospective export markets.
Also in 1994. Lee founded the
Contmued on page 2

Trustees name four UB faculty
to Distinguished Professor rank
., WIIETCtiEII
News Bureau Staft

OUR VB faculty members have been named a
Distinguished Professor, the highest rank in
the State University of
New York system. by the SUNY
Board of Trustees.
The rank is an order above full
professorship and has three coequal designations: Distinguished
Professor. Distinguished Service
Professor and Distinguished Teaching Professor.
The rank ofDisliDguished Professor was conferred upon Jorg&lt;
J .E. Gracia, professor of philosophy.
This designation is awarded to
individuals wbo have achieved national or international prominence
in their fields.
Two faculty members were
named DistiDgubbed Service Profe.on: John T. He, associate dean
for research and graduate studies
in the Faculty of Narural Sciences
and Mathematics and professor of
physics, and Murray Levine, professor of psychology.

F

GRACIA

L£VlN£

HO

This rank recogrliies outstandingservicetothecommunity, state
or nation through the application
of intellectual skills drawn from
scholarly and research interests to
issues of public concern.
The rank of Distlngulsbtd
Teacbing Professor was conferred
upon Harold Brody, professor of
anatomical sciences.
This designation is awarded to
persons wbo have demonstrated
outstanding teaching competence
at the graduate, undergraduate or
professional level.
Suk K1 Hong, VB professor of
physiology, wis named a Distinguished Prof......- in January.
Jorge Gracia, a VB faculty
member since 1971 , is an expert in
medieval and Hispartic philosophy,
and metaphysics. His book.

"'ndi-

BRODY

viduality: An Essay on the Foundations of Metaphysics." won the
first John N. Fi.n dlay Priz.e in Metaphysics from the Metaphysical
Society of America as the best work
in metaphysics published in North
America during a three-year period.
Gracia has served as president
of :;everal national professional
groups. including the Society for
Medjeval and Renaissance Philosophy. the Society for Iberian
and Latin American Thought and
the International Federation of
Latin American and Caribbean
Studies.
He has authored four books and
published more than 100 articles
and 30 reviews in scholarly journals.
Continued on page 5

OR 11m liiSI time, indusuial spoosorsbip of researdiM
the Uniw:rsity 11 Buffalo last )a&lt; surpiSI&lt;!d all "*80ries of external support of researdl besides federal. ICc:udin&amp; 1o the FIICII Ycor 1994 Year-End Report of the
Presidenl fDI' Relean:h.
The report. which takes a c:omprebensiwe look 11 VB's contniCI
ancf gran1 awards, sbows lOial indUSirial awords received in 1994
were$19millioa. an I 8 peroeot increue, canpared with $16 million
in 1993.
"lndusiJy has been our faslesl-growin&amp; sponsorship sector for
many years." said Dale M . ~ vice pn:sident for research. The
lOial amount of mooey spenl hy t.rB 011 researdl in 1994 was tl22.3
miilioo. a sligbt decrease from $123.4 million the previous )a&lt;.
The lOial of contnc1 and grant awards from external~
which in oome cues represent fwds to
be expended o...- several yeara-was
$284 miJiioG.

v-.ce

.,... fedt:nl fundina fOI' ill ,.,..,..-ch prognms despile a mucb more ClliQIIOlitiwe
eaviroamenl forfedenl fupdjn&amp;," Llndi
noted.
In fact. be aaid, ~ex­
ternal spontnnhip fur the cwreul fiacal
yeaa- (PY I 99S) is up hy I I penlCGL
Addrcssin&amp; the ~ in iDduslrial
S(&gt;OilSOBbip of UB .-.-reb. Landi

~~-~in~to~inthe

llllll.t

forllsrll

R

cia

. . . .W

~·--

global marUiplace. many companies
have downsized their opc:ratiom lo beaxne more cost-compeOiive.
"At the same time, with tecboology
advancing rapidly in many areas, large

...,.. oit Ill at for

coq&gt;orations are realizing they can no

,..._..

_..

ca-. lltlw

longec do it all in-boose and have turoed
1o universities for research assistance."
~•
bewd.
More than 200companies funded 294
DAIZ II. LANDI
VB researcb projects in 1994. Major
industry-funded projects included:
/
• Grao!s of $168.428 and $165,6261from the Upjohn Co. to
reseercbers in the School of Pharmacy 1o Sllldy the effectiveness of
AIDS treatmea1S. Upjobo was the top industry opoosor of VB
research in I 994, funding 13 projects~ a lOial valueof$681.887 .
• A$163,955 grmtto Scbool of~ scientiSIS toc:ooduct
research aa viSOdilalors from Baker N01108 l'lw:tMceutical.
• A $161.855 grant to engineers with tile Nlllional Ceater for
ElrtbquakeF.nginceringResean:bfrom~Grnaquist

Binlsall. an engineering firm. lo conduct 1 IICisDic-bazanl IISCSSment of the Queensboro Bridge in New Yorl&lt; Oty.
• A $142.897 grant from Biogeo. a biolecboology compaoy,to
reseercbers in the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences for
wodr. 011 a new MS llealmcDL
The report aJsobigblighrs us·s first Muitidisciplirwy Research
Pilol Project Propam. which was initiated in 1994. Desigoed lo
provide seed funding fDI' pilol projects~ improve the univermy's
c:bances of lltnOCting extemal support. the program awarded grants
lo 15 multidaciplinary foculty teams.
Major grants awarded 1o VB~ in 1994 included $6.3
million from the Nlllionallnstitut.e 011 Disabilities and Rebabiliwioo
Research for the CSiabiisbment of the liiSI natioDai center for
s=ening. sdecting and c:onunen:ializig new assistiwedeviccs for
penaas with disabilitic:; and $3.3 million from the Nlllionallnstitut.e
of Dental Research to develop molecular approecbcs 1o anti-infective and anti-infllmmatory thenpy for periodontal diJease. and to
assess the role of growth f1octon in regenentive tbcrapy.
0

�2

__

Videoconfere~mg

.. ---.-'"
program

.,to help students in job search
News Bureau Staff
RADUATING students at VB
and prospective employ~rs
now have access to cutbng
edge computer technology designed to assist them in job
searches that have become more difficult
due to CO&lt;lJOrale downsizing.
UB is one· of three institutions that recently · completed a pilot program of
ln!t!rVIEW. a two-way, PC-based. videooonkrenci~ - - """ brin&amp;• proopec-

G

r/ve cmployoes and employenllioco-to-face

at a cost of only 75 cents a minute.
At a time when many corporati~s are
cutting back on the number of cam s recruiting visits they make. InterVIEW lows
them to interview prospective-employees

face to face without ever having to leave the
oomfon of their offices, says Eugene Manell,
director of the VB Office of Career Planning
and PlacemenL
"In the old days, it was a seller's marlel-&lt;:nmpanies flocked to campus to recruit students i.n all disciplines," Martell
says. But with the recent recession and subsequent trend toward corpon11e downsizing.

edding, "'t's now a buyer's marteL
"We're alwayslooldog for new ways to
get companies to 'buy our product.'"
• Enter InterVIEW, an interaCtive software
package developed by VIEWnet. Inc .. of
Madison, Wis.
1l\e system consists of a computer, monitor, camera and microphone that connect to
AT&amp;T data ~n~nsmission lioes.

Toinitiateapreammgedinterview. acan-

i

didate presses a bunon to automatically dial ~
the employer. When the connection is made. !
the employer and caudidatc -

... their

l

respective monjtor screens. Also appearing ~
on the screens are each person's minor im- t
age and a copy of the candidate's resOme,
which is pulled electronically from a database. Candidates can highlight or uoderline
parts of their resumes using a mouse and
several irons at the top of the screen. Special
features allow either emp)oyers or candidates to alter the size or placement of any
image displayed on the screen.
InterVIEW is 001 intended to replace on-

campus interview Mancil points ouL But
employers can use it to narrow their choices
for subsequent personal interviews.
'The corporate user pays the cost, which

the number of companies recruiting on cam-

is about 75 cents a minute. AI that price, it

pus has decreased dnlmaticall y. he notes,

would only cost a company $22.50 for a 30-

L---..u:e:=:=.-------------minute interView. That's about the cost of
parking at an airpon." he notes.

artell believes interactive interviewing

an-~ K8Nn Nemeltl
Mel Tom HUIIey utllza ~

M

students and alumni.
Students and alumni also have access to
the offices' Automated Placement Services.
which include the Job Vacancy Hotline providing 24-hour access to thousands of avail·
able positioos via touch-tone phone; resume
pre=ingand OO&lt;ampus interview sign·
ups via touch-tone phone. and resume referral to hundreds of employers through the
office's referral service and national employment networks.

NSF-supponed study on the loss of strength
and stiffness of ordinary and high-strength
concretestructuresafterfreez.e-lhawtemperature cycles, providing imJ&gt;OIU!!! infonmatioo
for concrete infraslnlcture design. such as
that for highways and bridges. in temperate
zones where the winter temperatures fluctuate above and below freezing.
In an effon to understand and apply principles ofhuman physiology to manmade slruetures. he has worked on lung and soft tissue
modeling in research supponed by the NSF
and National Institutes of Health. He is a
member of the U.S. National Comminee on

Bi~cs .

will be the wave of the future in job
recruiting.
"Within the next five to 10 years, the
majority of on-campus interviewing will be
done through some type of phone-in
televiewing process," be predicts. ''1be next
thing will be ' Beam me up, Scotty."'
lnterVfEW isjustthe latest weapon in the
Office of Career Planning and Placement's
" arsenal" of job-placement services for VB

LE~
Continued from page 1
Engineering Career Institute (ECO. a summer
pro&amp;nlffi designed to provide UB engineering
students with skills not covered in a typical
a.cadc:m\c: progrun. Wbi\e gra«.\uates• teebnl ~
cal abilities are usually up to par, companies
that hire them also want a high level of non lt!Chnical skills, such as communication skills

or an understa.nding ofbasic management and
business coocepts. "More than 80 percent of
our students go to work in industry immedi·
ately after gnlduation," Lee said nt the announcement of the program. '1lley need 10
underslllndtheworldtheywill be walking into."
He also was the leading offon behind
SUNY Engineering. a "vinual university'"
whose lectures are beamed overseas via satel·
lite and whose classroom and laboratories
treat industry as a bona fide panner. Devel-

Karwan to be interim
dean of engineering
school after July 1
Mark Ka.wan IS currently acting dean
of 1he School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences. After July 1, he Will
become intenm dean
Ka.wan joined the UB faculty 1n
1976 as an assistant professor. In
1987 he was appo1nled chair of the
Oepartmen1 of Industrial Engineering and in 1992 was named lo the
newly created position of associate
dean for graduate education •n the
School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences.
Ka.wan. a recipien1 of the SUNY
Chancellor's Award for Excellence in
Teaching in 1989. a lso was named
Tau Bela Pi "Professor of the Year· at
UB in 1984 and again in 1986.
Karwan holds a doctorate in operations research from Georgia lnslitule of Technology and a bachelor's
degree in mathematical science and
a mas1er's degree in operalions research from Johns Hopkins Univer-

sily.

oped in conjunction with schools of engineering at SUNY university centers at Stony Brook
and Binghamton and the electrical engineering depanment at the State University College at New Palrz. the organization is the
primary instrument for implementing the Stralt!gic Pannersbip for Industrial Resurgence
(SPIR). an eco{lOmic development initiative
also originated by Lee and aimed at bolmring
the state economy by promoting consultation

and resources for industrial restructuring.
In 1980. Lee launched a major effon to
encourage minority students to pursue ca·

reers in engineering. Since then. Buffalo Engineering Awareness for Minorities (BEAM )
has reached more than 1,000 middle and high
school minority students and today involves

A nativeofOlina, Lee r=ivedabacbelor' s
degree from National Taiwan University. He
hold a master's degree and a doctoralt! in mit
engineering from Lehigh University. He 1s a
recipient of the National Science Foundation's
Superior Accomplishment Award. as well as
an Engineering Achievement Award from the
Olinese Institute of Engineers.
Lee belongs to seven! honorary societies.
including Oli Epsilon, Tau Beta Pi. and the
Society of Sigma Xi, and is a member of the
American Society for Engineering Education
and the Society ofManufacturing Engineers.

several dozen Western New York industries
and schools.
ln addition. Lee played a cenlnl! role in the
formation of the Calspan-University at Buffalo Research Center (CUBRC). a panner·
shiplhattoday conducts $7 million of research
annually.

T

his spirit of collaboration and cooperation is fundamental to what Lee calls "a
new era" of engineering in higher education.
"Engineering is the key discipline in a research un iversity 10 develop true pannerships
with industry because it is all about putting
scientific knowledge to practical use," lie
said.
Lee's research has covered a wide spectrum of basic and applied fields. ranging from
ea thquakeengineeringtothemodelingoflhe
mechanics behavior of biological systems.
As a structuraJ engineer, he has made
imp:&gt;nant contributions in the development
finite element method by using the
"weighted residual" approach in formulating
stru&gt;tural stiffness matrices. A 10-yearstudy
by Lee sponsored by the Navy, the American
Institute of Steel Construction and Metal
Building Manufacturers Association on the
stability behavior of steel tapered slnlctural
members has provided the basis for the current design specification of the ~merican
Institute of Steel Conslnlction.
In recent years, Lee has conducted an

or

Laying lhe CorneriDne
Placing mortar on cornerstone for US's new Center for the Arts on
April 2~ .are, from left: Robert Chumbley, director; President Greiner
and Philip Wels, chair of the 1JB Council.

�3

Arts and freedo.nra recent alliance,Wills tells UB audience

==bulof

__.-----

RT WAS great in the past but
it was not free in the past."
Garry Wills told the audience
atten&lt;!ing his Distinguished
Speakers Series lecture April
Center for the Ans. The
Pulitzer Prir.ewinning author discussed the
relationship between the arts and government in a democratic society as part of the
lecture series s.ponsored by UB and the Don
Davis World Wdership Fund.
Wills, now an adjuoct faculty member at
Northwestern University, began hi s career
as a classics scholar at Johns Hopkins Uni vers ity aod has written nearly 20 books on
topics ranging from opera. civil rights and
Renaissance art to Nixon.
Giving an overview of the uodemocrati
conditions including snict censorship andre
call of manuscripts under which artisa
past. such as Shakespeare, produced major
works, he noted that every play had to be
licensed by political authorities. Penalties for
presenting unlicensed worlc, Wills said, were ~
severe; they included Oogging or mutilation.
' Those are hard restrictions under which
to write." Will s said. " How did he
(Shakespeare) write all these masterpieces1
~
Yet he did it."
Artists who worked during the lull ian
Renaissance faced similar resnictions. Comcreated under undemocratic conditions. he
mi ssions spelled out materials, subject mat·
said. But here. too, great art existed under
ter and cost. Masters could refuse to make
con&lt;Htions of coercion. Tht! church and state
payments .if all contract conditions were not
were not separated. 'The Greek art w,e admeL "Most Renai ssance art is glorification
mire was official an." Wills pointed oLt.
of rulers," Wills said. "Jealous partisans
Turning to a discussion of art in America.
incinerated each other's works."
Will.s noted that even in a democratic counAncient Athens was an exception ro an
11')'. art can be created under repressiv~ con-

"Art was
-great in the
past but it

was not

free in the
past."

Our leaders took • "truly ori&amp;inaJ SWice"
by sepanlling the state from religjon. They
did not give government support to arts that
celebraled secular religion. he said.
Exploring the question or the IUU' survival without the largely religious uppon it
received in the past, Will s pointed out that
art was intended not only to glorify religious
and state authorities but also to give oesthetic satisfaction. To that end. it will survive~ be said.

W

bolwanant-our~bave

for supplemcntin&amp; our IUU clirectly7
Wills asked. He answered his own query by
pointing lo the copyrighl clause in tbe CooSiirulion, wlticllstates that Congres bas tbe
power "to promote the progress of science
and useful arts b) securing for a limited
time to authors and inventors the exclusive
right to their respective writings and dis-

3

coveries ...

"'-~dent GreiMt
.. 811 lltt8ntlw'8

I

lstener - GarTy

w-.p.~

~s.......,.

lec:tur8 In the Center "" the Arts.

ditions. Or. Martin Luther King Jr. did some
of his best writing from prison. Wills said.
Why havedemocmcy and arts rarely mel ?
Wills said, "Democracy is a rare and la1e
development. Athens was a very nawed democracy a1 best. .. he noted. 'Oemocmcy began principally in the late 18th cen1ury in the
United States.

"The fine ans were useful arts in the 18th
century." Will s e~plained . It expressly commissioned the protection of citizens ' interests and marked a daring disengagement of
religion.
" It should be a challenge 10 see whal the
new lr.id on the hi storic block can do." Will s
said.
,
After the nearly hour-long presentation.
Wills responded to questions from the audience.
As a " part-time pres1dent watcher:· Wills
was asked hj s opinion of the presadent's
policies toward art and hi s public embrace of
Hollywood artists. Many o f the presidenl' s
1deas regarding an are formed by his wife.
Wills said ... Hi s own taste on an 1s a lntle
elusive ...

Financial disclosure among policies set by Faculty Senate
lly STEVE COX

Reporter Staff

F

acuity members will be required
to file annual financial disclosure
forms. beginning July I, under a
new policy adopted by the Faculty
Senate at the April 25 meeting.

The "lnvcsligator Disclosure Polic y,''

developed by Vice President for Research
Dale Landi and the Faculty Senate's Committee on Research and Creative Activit y,
wiJI requjre faculty to file a one-page statement briefly outlining their investments and
financiaJ interests. According to committee
chair Philip Yeagle of Biochemistry. the
policy was required in order 10 comply with
federal regulations handed down last year
regarding grant applications. The 30-page
policy was passed after one amendment was
made, requiring that the forms be filed with
an administrator not in the faculty member's
direct chain of command This amendment
relieved coocems of several Senate members that information like this could be used
inappropriately by deans in malting promotion and pay decisions.
The Senate also gave final approval to a
policy defining "good academic standing."
Developed to clarify vagaries in the undergraduale caullog, the new policy requires
thai students I) maintain an overall QPA of
2.0 or higher, 2) have a QPA of2.0 or higher
in the immediately preceding semester, 3)
that students who are juniors be at least
provisionally admiued to major departments
and 4) transfer students maintain at least a
2.0 QPA in all course work done at UB.
Failing any of these tests would see a student
placed on academic probation, which could
lead to eventual dismissal.
Worlr.ing feverishly to complete their
year's work, the Faculty Senate extensively
debated five more controversial resolutions
that will be voted upon during a special
meeting May 2. Among those were proposals to restrict the use of undergraduate teach-

ing assiStants. offer female junior faculty
members a year 's extension to their tenure
clock for childbirth, require facu lt y con&gt;ultation in the appointment or reappointment
of depanment chairs. and establi sh a new
procedure for departments to develop and
implement uilored ve rs ions of th e
un iversity's general education requirements
for undergraduates.
Ruth Meyerowitz. an associate professor
of Women 's Studies. offered onl y qual ified
support of the undergraduate teaching assistant resolution. cautioning Senators that it
could, in herdepa.'1ment, hamper the courses
that have been successfully taught by undergraduates for 20 years. Joi ned by Acting
American Studies Department Chair Charles
Keil and Professor Michael Frisc h.
Meyerowitz explained that the course in

The policy... will require
faculty to file a onepage statement briefly
outlining their
investments and
.fnancial interests.
Women'S Studies taught most extensively
by UGTAs was developed in the ' 70s to
··encourage women students to become more
aggressive and articulate in the classroom.''
The department employs between five and
15 UGTAs per year.
The resolution would establish a p&lt;ilicy
restricting the amount of unsupervised teaching UGT As may do, prevent freelance grading of papers by undergraduates and limh the
amount of academic credit they can receive for
their service, which is uncompensated. to 12

credit hours. The resolution also allows the
Faculty Senate to consider exceptions to the
policy on a case-by-case basis. According to
Stephen Cavior. an associate professor of
Mathematics who chaired the suhcomminee
thai ~led the UGTA resolution. the issue has
been oo the table for several years. bu1 came to
the fore when "concerns about the pracuce
were expressed by the family of an undergraduate in a course taught by an undergraduate teaching assistanL··
A proposed resolution to increase access
to undergroduate majors was defended by
Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education
Ni colas Goodman. who has been grappling
with the problem for nearly a year. 'The
system we have now encourages. or even
forces. students into academic limbo... he
said. Tile resolution allows many students in
arts and sciences fields to simply declare
their major. rather than apply for admission.
The student will then have to meet departmental standards to be awarded the degree.

M

athematics Professor Samuel Sehack
supported the resolution. Too many
students spend too much time now trying to
get into a paniculardepanment, said Schack.
'The point that this resolution is addressing
is that if you can't get into one thing, you
shouldfiodsomethingelsetodo.Goodstanding fora studenl requi res reasonable progress
toward a degree. And, you can't get a degree
without a major.··
Limited resources head the list of reasons that departments restrict access. How ever. Goodman promised to look carefully
at resource problems if departments truly
were overburdened . For instance .
Goodman pointed out that resources shifted
to the perennially oversubscribed Physical
Therapy program will nearly double its capacily next year.
Senators also sent forward to their next
meeting one resolution that would employ
the Division of Undergraduate Academic

Services CO&lt;Mlinee, worl..ing with Vice. Provost for Undergraduate Education Nicolas
Goodman. in approving general educauon programs in the various decanal units and 3llOiher
toofferwomen facuJ ry childbirth exrensioru: 10
their tenure-track timetable. The DUAS commince. whose primary responsibi lily had been
the approval of new courses. " 'ould be redefined for its new mission.
Librarian Judith Adam ~ cri ticized the firsa
proposal for concentrating too much curricu lar-defin ing power in Goodman's office. Claiming that many of Goodman · s
decisions regarding these curricular matters
were su pect, Adams argued thai these powers should rentain with the Senate. Mathematics Profe sor Samuel Schack rebuned
Adams' comments about Goodman. asking
that the record reOect that " Professor Adams'
comments are of a personal nature. and do
not reOectthe feel ings of the FSEC."
The tenure clock proposal. presented by
Tenure and Privilege' s Cornmiuee Chair
Margaret Acara. drew criticism from the left
for repressing women and from the right for
discriminating against men. Medical Sehool
Professor Clara Bloomf~eld . chief of medicine at Roswell Park Cancer Institute. said
the resolution would be "used as a way of
keeping women in a lesser role in academia.
llwillbecomeanotherexcuseforwhywomen
don't get promoted as fast as men."
Engineering Professor William George
opposed the resolution for its narrowness.
"With the many things out there that can
hamper your progress toward tenure that are
out of your control, we have singled out
about the only thing that is within your
control to allow a break for. It ' s probably
discriminatory ." The resolution allows
women faculty members who become mothers to take a year' s leave without pay and put
the university' s seven-year tenure traclc deadline on hold for a year. lt could be exercised
with each birth, pointed out Schaclc. " If you
have 10 lr.ids, you could take 10 years."

�_ . , _ _ _ _ 117

4

.,Pow!
__ _ Zap! ~wie! Paglia socks it to 'em at Fiedler Fest

purposes. Heck.lllbeisU can tbiok about their
girlfriends or somedring." Sbe also cbutises
the "bbandification" of university hculties
lOCI AmericAn convnunities lOCI regrets that
ethnicity no longer defmes people as clearly
as it did in the 1960s. "I have beeo pugnaciouslyethnicallmylife,"saysPaglia. "When
the blacks grew their afros. the Italians just
tried to stay loud and abrasive."
Paglia. 4&amp;, grew up in upsut1e New York,

Reporter Stall

NTHUSIASTS say hen is one of
tbc fmest minds of tbc century.
Critics ask, which century? Nationally known writer, provocateur and dissident Camille Paglia
left ber distinctively caustic impression on a
near-&lt;:apacity crowd in UB's Center for the
Ans Saturday, April29.
Paglia, the Rush Limbaugh of feminism,
delivered a fast-paced two-boor strum-of- ~ assault against Ivy Leaguen,
false feminists,emply-beaded college graduates, phony P.C. intellectuals. homophobes.
and virtually every "ism" 10 roll down tbc

E

i.ntciJocfualhigllway&lt;bin&amp;lbe ..... JO~.

going toltiPIICh&lt;Jol

f

9

But she loved Sharon Stone in the film Basic
Instinct: "Now there is a laliy who knows l
what glamour is."
·
f
Paglia was the first act of" 1edlerfest." a l'l
weekend of litetaty sws, including poet and ~
playwright Ishmael Reed and poet Allen
Ginsberg. celebrating the wori&lt; ofUB's resident titetaty intellectual Leslie Fiedler, the
Samuel L. Clemens Professor of English.
He's now widely read, but Fiedler's radical writings bad long kept him outside the
mainsuum of academia. He told the crowd
gathered at UB's Mainstage, "I find it difficult beyond belief to tive with acceptance. I
must be doing something wrong if so many
people feel I am righL" He also noted accurately, in introducing Paglia. that "she will
offend some while pleasing others. gut will
-'

Above:

sexual, endocrinological
differences between men
and women."
CAIIItLl.£ P'ACIUA

~noone."

"You cast out ideas like seeds. and have no
idea of the results," Camille Paglia said. Not
until 25 years from now, when today's Silldents replace her and her peers as tomorrow· s
intellectuals. said Paglia, will she reap what
tlhe sought \0 sow at us· s Center for the Arts
Saturday nighL Cntics argue the seeds that
this intellectual Johnny Appleseed sows are
rather seedy.
High on Paglia' s priority tist for remaking
society: pornography. paganism and Paglia.
She calls feminist leader Gloria Steinem. a
"Barbie doll." That's only fair. since Steinem
has compared Paglia to Hi~er. "But I'm not
going lo spend the whole evening 'dissing
Gloria."' she said.
The feminist movement in this country.
according to Paglia. has failed because it has
disenchanted all but the moste&lt;treme women.
Essentially, Paglia e~plained, the problem is

c.n.e ...... rteht.

..,._ 8lltaplph tor v "They (feminists) are in
Zcl. RICht: ..... with
'
absolute denial of the real * - ...... Reeler.

that feminists don't listen to her. 'They are in
absolute denial of the real sexual, endocrinological differences between men and women, ..
she explained. "I mean, if you try to wk about
honnones, testosterone.lust ... they just go ba1·
listie."
FailUJ"e to deal with our own human sexu·
ality and aggression also must bt: overcome.
according to Paglia. When Judea-Chri stian
morality crushed paganism centuries ago.
Pagliaisconvincedthewrongsidewon. "What
we. really need is a return of the. great whores
of Babylon,'' she said. Fortunately for her. she
sees Hollywood as the savior of hedonism.
Paglia also yearns for the surreal, psychedelic. acid-laced days of the late-'60s, and believes the free thought/free speech movement
should stage a strong comeback on campuses.
"It was not just dippy nower-power stuff," she
explained. "1bere was a real. radical change in

cuilUre and an incnodiblc creative fusion."
Paglia's goal for rcfonning university English departments is simple: destroy them. A
special circle in heU. she promised, is reserved for "post-struclUralists: and they all
have to sit there and listen to each other."
Ukewise. feminist-dominated Women· s
Studies departments should be obliterated,
believes Paglia. " It was my generation that
put sex on the lllble," she e~plained. "and
Women's Studies departments were just
thrown together in response. Noone gave any
real thought to wbat it would take to be
qualified to teach th1~ And. in places like
SUNY Albany , where they wenloutandhired
SO·Called 'real feminists' to teach the
courses ...oh. God. lbey were all safe. married
old ladies, while people like me who really
made the '60s couldn't get hired."
In fact. according to Paglia, universities
nauonwide are led by "pedestrian minds" and
s1affed with " B-minus scholars." What they
need are more Paglias.
ttp&gt;ough religiously a Catholic-tumed-athe1 ist, Paglia supports prayer in school. and
feels that opposition 10 it by liberal political
figures is disingenuous. "'lbere is no harm in
a moment of silent medn.alion for religious

in Syncuse and
graduating from
SUNY
at
B inghamton in
1968. Sbe went on
to earn ber doctorate II Yale, which
drew !be wnlh of
her friends in the
radical element Bl
Biog!wntoo. "The
leader of !be campus radicals scolded
and denounced me
for that. He said, 'If
you are going on to
grad school. there is only one place to g&lt;&gt;Buft'alo."'Fiedler and other radical thinkers on
'the faculty made UB "the Alexandrii of the
'60s" for student radicals then, she said Nevertheless. she chose Yale("forthe libraly'') and
found it a shockingly apolitical experience.
"Yale was absolutely untouched by the ' 60s."
Once fired from a college faculty for getting in a fist-fight. she lingered in relauve
obscurity until five years ago when her first
book, ''Sexual Personae" was published. She
has produced two more provocative books
since. "Vamps and Tramps" and "Sex. AI1
and the American Cullllre." and been a rt'gular on the university and lalk·show circuits
Paglia credits rock-n-roll for influencing her
writing style. "I am theonl y woman out the"'
)"hose writing is like an acid rock band's lead
guitar."
Paglia did share al least one view popular
with the entire audience: an enormous love
and respect for Leslie Fiedler. Recalling
Plato's writing of procreating intellectually.
not physically. she declared herself "a child
of Leslie Fiedler, and proud of iL" Paglia
recalled realizing what a hero Fiedler was to
her when he had been invited to speak at
Yale and the entire English department boycotted the event.

Law unit presents Distinguished Alumni, Bloch awards
Br USA WILEY
News Bureau StaH

F

IVE GRADUATES of the UB
School of Law received Distinguished Alumni Awards at the
Law Alumni Association 's 33rd
annual meeting and awards dinner, May 3 in the Hyatt Regency Buffalo.
The awards, established in 1963. recognize
the valuable contributions that law school
alumni have made to their profession and
community.
Rep. John J. LaFalce received the first
Aaron N. Bloch Award for service by a nonalumnus.
Awards were presented to:
Hon. Josepb P. McCarthy ('61 ), acting
state Supreme Court justice, supervising
judge of criminal courts, 8th Judicial DistricL. ·'for his conscientious and diligent per·
formance in the judiciary." Elected an Erie
County Court judge in 1977, McCarthy has
lectured at the law school since 1975. A
former member of the Erie County Bar Association Board of Directors. he is a membt:r
of the board of directors of Neighborhood
Legal Services.
John H. Stt~~ger ('58), a senior partner in
Stenger &amp; Finnerty, "for his leadership by
example as a private practitioner... Stenger

has served as an assistant U.S. attorney. as a
special assistant to the New York attorney
general in litigation related to the 1971 Attica
prison riots, and as speeial counsel to Erie
County in litigation arising from an aborted
domed stadi um project. He is a fellow in the
American College of Trial Lawyers.
Thomas Maligno ('77). e~ecutive director of Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee Inc .... for his commitment to public
service." Maligno is responsible for all as·
peelS of management for tile bi-county legal
services program. A member of numerous
committees of the Nassau County Bar Asso·
ciation, he received the New York State Pro
Bono Award in 1992.
Anthony J . Colucci Jr. ('58) of Block &amp;
Colucci ... for his many contributions to thet

betterment of the community." Colucci
served as chairman of the Buffalo Civil Service Commission for J8 years and as president of the New Yorlr. State-'Civil Service
Association. He is an active member of the
Erie County and New York State Bar associations. He served as president of the Catholic Lawyer&gt; Guild. the Marshall Lawyers
Club and as a director and officer o f the Erie
County Bar Association. He is past president
of the Erie County Bar Foundation and UB
Law Alumni Association.
Diane J. McMahon ('78), general manager and executive vice president at Stovroff
and Herman Realtors, "for .her exemplary
pe.rfonnance in business ... McMahon over·
sees all aspects of the real estate finn while
concentrating on strategic planning and sys-

terns. She previously served as executive
vice president and chief operating officer for
Ecostar International in Tonawanda, a plastics manufacturing ftrm. She was also a
partner for 14 years in the Buffalo law firm
of Hodgson, Russ, Andrews. Woods and
Goodyear, where she concentrated in real
estate law and securities.
Bon. John J . LaFalce. (D-NY) U.S.
Congressman representing the 29th District
of New Yorlr., the Aaron N. Bloch Award
"for significant contributions to federal legislation and distinguished service to the University at Buffalo law school community:·
LaFalce was first elected to Congress in
1974 and is a member of the House Banking
and Financial Services Committee and the
Small Business Committee.

�_.., .... _..,_aT

5

UB community-remembers Bloch at setVice in Slee Hall

·y

HE UNIVERSITY community
filled Slee Hall to capacity Tues·

day !0 bid farewell to Provost
Aaron N. Bloch. Colleques and
friends who eulogized Bloch
praised his visioo, his intei tigence and his wit.
but above all else, his deep commitment 10
and affection for !he University at Buffalo.
Provootoflheunivemty since 1992. Bloch
died unexpeccedly April 8 in his But Ambent
home. He was 53.
"~le often speak of untimely death.
&lt;.ven !bough death rarely if ever is timely,"
said UB President William R. Greiner. "Nevertheless, out time with Aaron is done. He
changed us. UB did DOl hsve him for loog, but
we were fort\lJUilC !0 hsve him."
•

3

Greiner rern&lt;.mbered Bloch as a
who appreciated UB 's tal..nled faculty and
staff, a le.aderwith an abiding affectiooJ
univusity and its people, and a tireless advocaiC for its SIUdenls. 'We will rtmember Aaroo
and how he would hsve made us think twice,"
Greinorsaid. "UB will always heahenerplace
for !he l..adership he gave so selflessly 10 us."
Pe!.er A.. Nick...-soo, chair of !he Faculty

Senate, called Bloch "a strong supporter of
faculty governance," and read a resolutioo
unanimously passed by !he Faculty Sena!e:
"The Faculty Senalcextendsilscoodoleoccs
tolhefamilyofl'rovcotAaroo Blochaod mourns
!he loss of hi s l..adership, judgment. insight
and values, au of which gave us confoden&lt;:ein
!he continued vitality and growth of !he university, even in the most difficult of times ...
Nickenoo ooled Bloch's ability "to put
our coocems about tbe university into natiooal aod int.emational penpectioe" aod to
alwaya look forwonl. '"His- wilb us was
100 short. much 100 short." Nicbnon said."
"I will remember our ooUc:.gue who by his
natUre SlreldJed my tbinkin&amp;." said Senior Vice
Preaideol Raben J. w -. w_.,aoec~tbal
Bloch's "analytical and sean:hing mind" often
led to questions thai "made me think about whsl ·
I did, how I did it." and at limes, "why I did iL
" We will all beoefit from Aaron's hsving
been at UB for a loog, loog time !0 come."
Muriel Moore, vice president for Public
Service and Urhsn AJTain&gt;, called Bloch "a
visionary, an innovator, a devoted hushsnd
and father and a great friend." a man who
"loved art. music and good food.'' and who
was "extremely quick wi!U'd and had a highly

refined sense of humor."
Bloch had a visioo of !he way in which
UB as on instilulioo was changing, and !he way
!he world was cbonging,"Moore said. And he
was ~ 10 public c:ducalion aod 10 !he
community !he uni~ serves. "He was a
gifted man, a leader whose shan time a! UB has
left an indelible~" she said.
Joseph 1Ufariello, dean of Natural Sciences aod Malbematics, ooled !hal he fmt
bec8meawan:ofBiodaintbe 1970o•a....tt

amoog others. A graduate of the University of
Hong Kong, he received hisdoctorale from the
Massachuselts Institute of Technology.
A faculty member since 1968. MII,""Y
Levine also serves as oo-direclor of OB 's
R=rch Center for Olildren and Youlh and
an adjunct professor oflaw.
In 1994, be was named 10 the U.S. Advisory
Board on Olild Abuse and Neglect by Doona
Shslala. secretary of health and human services.
The 15-member hoard evaluates the nation· s
efforts 10 implement the Olild Abuse ~=lion
and T=tmen! As:! and makes recommendations
for improving those efforts. The panel recendy
pres..nted its report on maltrealmenl-related fa!alities in the U .S . to Hillary Clinton

doctoral degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and a law degree from UB .
Harold Brodyhsshe&lt;.n a UB facultymem·
her for40 years, serving for hslf of !hal time as
chair of the Department of Anatomical Sci·
..nces. He hss dooe researctr and published
widely in the field of ...uroanatomy, and hss
served on several editorial boards.
As a Fulbright scholar to Denmark m 1963.
he helped establish the country's firsu;adaver
donor program. He was one of the founding
members of UB · s Cen!Cr for Aging and is pas!
president of the Gerontological Society of
America. He receiVed the society's Raben W .
Kleemeoer Memorial Research Award for
Outslandmg Resean:h in Gerontology in 1978.
Brody left the anatomy deparunenl chairmanship in 199 I to conti nue teaching. do research and to fulfill a lifelong dream of
establishing a Museum of Neuroanatomy at
UB. The museum. dedicated in January. hss
received national publicity and is being used
actively for education and research.

of-.:bBiodaw•.SC,....-Hapo~ao

Unlwnity, - - UB ~abo were
punuin&amp;. * As a acienl\lt,....,.,.,- simply
outstanding," 1Ufariello said. "His mind was
remarkably slwp and analytical."

grateful," said Louis Goldberg, dean of IJen..
tal Medicine. He called Bloch *a powerful
aod complex man," who also was "perceptive, articulate aod e.anat." Goldberg spate
of hi• admiratioo for Bloch' • scope and clepdo
of lcnowledge. "It was a privilege to know
Aaron Bloch. He wiU alway• be with me."
" It has he&lt;.n said that death is !he sum of au
it Sleals from us," said Ka&gt;noelb J. Levy ,...UO.
vice pr&lt;IYOil. " ADyooe wbo woo1&lt;;ed Aanlo " - be ~ a hip leoel of

per-.fcrm.aooce.
. . .".,-----· -a~-.

He a1ao- Bloch's 'W\t. "Aaroa- a
sense of humor that could catdo you by
swpriJe wbeo you leall """""""" it.*
keen

-.J. W-.-~

e praised the work !hat Bloch did at UB,
especially his interdisciplinary efforts in
!he areas sucb as informatioo technology.
medical informatics, structural biology. distance learning and environmental science.
" It is of some comfort 10 know that his
legacy will&lt;.ndure and continue to shspe the
university in the future.'' Tufariello said.
.. Aaron Bloch was instrumental in giving
me the opportunity 10 come to the Univusity
at Buffalo. and for that I will always be

H

president. pres&lt;.nled a boolc of mndoleoces
~by SIUdenls to the Bloch family.
Bloch 's widow, Enid Bloch, spo1&lt;e about
his sense of commi!ment to UB and its stu·
den!S. " He cared deeply about studen!S and
never forgot for a mom..nt that that was why
we were here." she said
" I want you 10 know that during !he three
yurs we spent here. Aaron was very hsppy . I
hope 10 remain pan ofUB and tocootinueour
tife here." she said.

Dl&amp;nNGUISHED PROFS
Continued from page 1

He=nedahschelor' s degree from Wheaton
College,rnaster'sdegrees from the University
of Olicago and the Pontifical Institute of Me·
diaeval Studies in Torooto. and a doctorate
from !he University ofTorooto.
John T. Do hss he&lt;.n a UB faculty member
since 1975. He served as chair of the UB
Depanmen! 6f S!atislics from 1987-89. and
was a visiting scientist a1 AT&amp;T Bell Laboratories in 199 1. He hss directed UB ' s lnterdisciptina:yNaruraiScimcesPrognun since 1984.
He has conducted experimental studies that
hsve enhanced !he und=tanding of phsse
transitions and critical phcll0nl&lt;.n8 in magnetic
systems. liquid crystals and biomembranes.
In 1990, Ho was elected a fellow in the
Am&lt;.rican Physical Society, aci!ation reserved
for members who hsve coolributed to the ad·
vance men! of physics by independent. original
res..archorhsve provided special service to the
sciences. He also hss been a John Simon
Guggenheim Memorial Foundatioo Fellow and
a SUNY Faculty R=rch Fellow.
Authorofnumerousscientificpublications,
he hss served on comminees of the American
Physical Society, the National Institutes of
Health and the National Science Foundation.

L

evine hss wrinen extensively on legal issues
related to child abuse and neglect. and hss

served as a member of the American Psychological Association' s Wo.ting Group on legal and
Policy Issues in Olild Abuse and eglect.
His book. " Helpi ng Children: A Social History:· is considered a classic S!udy of the

evolution of child welfare scn•ices in the U.S.
He ..amed a lo:lchelor' s degree from College of the City of New York. ma.&lt;ter' s and

A graduate of Western Reserve University. nowCa~ Western Reser\'e University.
he receaved a doctorate from the University
of Minnesota and a medical degree from UB .

Claude Welch
to be chair of
Facuity Senate
arsnvECOX
Reponer Staff
An.~ eT1'0ft acun\cd

\be

first election. the Faculty Senate fona11v has a new chair. Political SCI·
en~ Professor Claude E. Welch. Jr .

will retake the
helm of the fac uhy governance
body for a twoyear term. effec·
Live thi s fall.
Welch last chaired
, the Faculty Sen·
ate for the 198587 term.
Welch. a SiJNY Distinguished

Professor. won a unh'ersitywide
four·way race for the seal in a mail·
an election concluded last week.
Ballots and return en,·elopes were
distributed to nearly 1.700 faculty
members two v.eek.s ago. An election mailing in late March inadvenently omitted nurly 300 part-time
and clinical faculty members.
A UBfacultymembersince 1964.
Welch is a fonner dean of the DivisiooofUndergraduateEducationand

associate vice president for Academic Affairs.
He has been active in the Faculty
Senate, s..rved on !he Faculty Senate

Executive Committee. chaired the

PraiBIIII*t•
pre$idenJS.

.

past, honolaty and current. gathered Apr~ 29 lor a luncheon at the ~ for the Ms. The club
1995-96. Front row, from left Marie Schillo. Ruth Berner, ~Shaffer, ~Puller, Harriet
Strauss. Diana Slalin. Marisa Mihich. ~row, ~ left Vorginia Vaidhyanathan. Shirley Chan, ~ Ft.alg, Janet Fedor,
Shirley Buckle. Carol Greiner. Manlyn Coancoo. Cynth IS Hagerman, ())rothy Soong, ~ ~. Third row, from
Baker, Lema Allendoerler. Doris Smith. Patricia Addelman, Ann M. Triggle, Ju&lt;fllh Papaloa. Vonnoe ~. Kathleen Felic!MO.
UB Women's Club
notes its 50ih annivefsarY in

left: l:eila

Political Science Department and codirects the Human Rights Center.
"I had the pl..asure of ...rving as
Faculty Senate chair a decade ago.
M y major &lt;.mphasis oow, as tbert
will he to ensure effective account·
ability and coosullation oo all matte:rs
that involve !he facuhy," said Welch.
Welch. who lives in Snyder. holds
an undergraduate degree in gov..m·
men! from Harvard and a doctorate
from Yale. His specialties include
human rights and internatiooal ter·
rorism. Welch sp&lt;.nl !he 1993-94
academic yur as a Fulbright Senior
Scholar conducting research oo hu·
man righ!S in Africa.
2

�-..----.-27.,.....

6

'

-:tNt
........
..., ....

-·-ln!:..d ..

-uau..

lnto...ty

June.

Campu. 4:1 5p.m.

-~

FaiDAY

IDoplratloo Aabuk ln
tJoo Doolp ol ......... Robota,
Dr. Robert I . Pull, UB alumnus,
1995 GeorJe W . 1bom Award
rocipieal and Prof. o f l~ve
BioJocy, Uoiv. of Califonua.
Berkeley. 21 0 Natural Sciences
&amp; M.alhematics Complex. Nonh
C.mpw. Reoeptioo immodimly
followioa. Call645-2531.

12

~-llio&lt;ovory:

-----Beart~ Dr.

Fricker. KiDdl Auditorium.
Cbildml's Hospillll. l a.m.

-~

Alcolool Uae:
Troods Ia Now Yort: State,
..,._and-~

TUESDAY

.. PottenloolMiluo, Gnco
M. S ames, Ph.D. Raeorchlnstitute em Addic::tioos. I :30 p.m.

9

(pu~. 2p.m.

-EYEJn
Aluaal Auodatlon Aa.nual
Awa:rd.J Dlnoer. Center fpr
Tomonow. Nonh Campus. Call
829-2608.

-CDfiDI

Praeatatioa oltbe ceater'•
aDAualllow W.ua.tdD Memorial A--and rocGfDitloo

or

Rev-Up Voloatftn, Rosalyn

___
__
___
---UB
-u.aoc-----_.._ ........,__
.,._
--..
.,........_
.._,
_ _ bt.._
8oa~Cafor

~..--.

c.-.--

c...... Coon~~Mtor, ~

,~·· t
e+e).
-FAX -loM6oUU.
t

"

I

of Hea.llh. Kinch Auditorium.
Dlildren' s Hospital. 8 a.m.

-anAL

- A N D IICIEJICE

T'be Fate of Contamina.ats ia
C old C limales, Dr. Donald
Mackay, Univ . . ofToronto. 140
Ketter. North Campus. II a..m.

I'KYSICS SEIIJMARaDID
Dyaamlcs or Den5o Uquids
Near tb&lt; G luo Trusltloo,
Prof. Chandan Dasgupto. Indian

Jnst. of Science, Bangalore. 222

THURSDAY

Natun.l Sciencu &amp;: M.athematK:s Complex. North Campus.
H5 p.m. Call645-2017.

WilkillWil, UB Community
Affain off.cer. PfCSiding.
Goodyear Hall , South Campus.
2 p.m. P=eded by Emerirus

8ol.nl meeting at I p.m. Call
876-9085.

CAU.fN-ONWSFO
Talk Radio ln Bull'alo. Guesu
include Anlbony Violanti and

Gary McNamara. 4 p.m. on
WBFO 88.7 FM. Questions""
invited at 829~2555 .

_
. . _ I'IICNIIIWI
-~
latrodlldory Pltys'ical Asoeumeat of tb~ Adult. 6·9 p.m.
S250. Cal1829-3291 for r&lt;gisuation information.
- . v i D-'IIIEATD
Alvin Ailey. Sbea's Buffalo. 8
p.m. SIO, $20, S25 . Call
886-0067 .

-

~CEJnEII

D istribution of Pulmooary
CapUlary Truslt T'un.., Dr.
Robert Klocke. 108 Shennan .
South Campus. 8 a.m.
CAU.fN FOliUM ON WSFO
UB Praideot William R.
Grtincr holds his final caU-in

forum or the aademk year. 4

DAJIC£Youog Cboroovapb&lt;r's
Workshop, Tressa Gorman
Crehan. faculty dircc1or. Center
for W Arts Black Box Theatre.
Nonh C.mpus. 8 p.m. S5 , SIO.
C.ll 645-6898 .

p.m. on WB FO 88.7 FM . Questions are invited at 829-2555.

S A TU RD AY

MAlHEIIATICS COLI.OQUIUM

6

_..__

'J'bto Cecb-stooe Compactificatioa of tbe Rea.ls, Prof. Klass
Peter Han, Univ. ofDc.lf1-The
Netherlands. 103 Diefendorf.
South Campus. 4 p.m. C.ll
829-2144.

NURS- CONIINUINQ

Certifacatt: Program in
Gfl-oDto&amp;ogical Nursing. Sessions run Thursdays through
May II. 4:30-7:30 p.m. SIS,
S50 pe&lt; session. Call 829-329 1
for registration infonnation;
registration deadline is five
working days bc:fon: each ses·
lion.

waFO TO IIDIIOADCAST
ucn.E
Garry Wills, wbo spoke April
27 u pan of Distinguished
Speakcn Series. 8 p.m. WB FO
88.7 FM .

ALUMNI EYEJn
Pharmacy Al umni Spring
Clinic. Radisson H01el and
Suites, Buffalo Airpon. 8:30
a.m. followed by a noon lun cheon and evening banquet
continuing education program .
Call 645-393 1.
DANCEW-

Young CboreognpMr's
Workshop, T~ssa Gorman
Crehan, facul ty director. Center
for the Ans Black Box Theatre.
Nonh C.mpus. 8 p.m. SS. SIO.
Csli64S-6898 .

---c-...
Heolth

P1aDDln&amp; and Polley

Ia Now Yon. State,
Edward Sahber&amp;. M.S . and
Elysa Femra. NYS Depanmeol

WEDN E SDA Y

- I S T R Y SEIIJMAR

RNA Edltiac C..plono ln

uurie

Read. IJ.4B Farber.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

PKY-.oav . . .INAR
Hypotllon8lo, I. Frim, I'IID.,
DCIEM. 108 Sherman. South

---

Uillvenity HoDOn Convoa ~

-

t1oo. Slce Coocen HalL Nonh
Campu. 5 p.m.
-ALO~IC

Four Sa laterludes and
PuAcqJio from Brittoa's
• Peter Grimes.,• aod V•ucbaa
William.J's • Sa Sympboay, ..
James Paul, guest coodUC!Or,
Pbilhumonic Chorus directed
by 1llomas Swan. Caller--for tbe
Aru Maioslap:. North Campus.
8 p.m. S20, S30. US . Caii885SOOO or 645-ARTS .

1~

-

Orp.oizationaJ Structures.

COMIIEJICEIIDfT
Scbool or Nu.raia&amp;. Slee Con cert Hall. Nonh Campus. 9 a.m.

WNYTDC SEIIIMAII

Buffet breakfast included: space
is limiled , prercgisltation aDd
prepayment requested. Center
for Tomorrow. North Campus.
8: I S-11 a.m. S60. Call 6363626.

-WELL P'Aitl( STAFF
SEIIIMAR
Pending, Dr. Nahum

Sonenberg. McGill Univ . RPCI.
12:30 p.m. Caii84S-3261 .
I'HARIIACY SEIIIMAII
Aaaboli&lt; Steroids in Atblet..,
Debn Deou:l. 248 Cooke.

Nonh Campus. 4:3()..5:30 p.m.
M D I - MIEETWG
Uolted University Professions
SUNY Bulfalo Cboptor, Prosiding: Paul Zarembk.a., Presi ~

denL PisLaChio's.. Nonh Campus. Cash bar. 5:15p.m.; Buffel
dinner, 5:45p.m. Call645 -2013
lD RSVP.

S chool or Health Re lated Prorasioos. Alumni AreaL North

Campu.s. 9a.m.

COMIIEIICEIIEJfT

Sc:bool or lnform•tioa and
Library Studies. Studen1 Umon
lbea1er. North Campus. 10 a.m.

COMIIEIICEIIEJfT
Sdaool of Engineering and

-

Applied Sdenu. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. I p.m.

S chool or Law. Center for the
Aru. Nonh Campus. I p.m.

COMIIEIICEIIEJfT
~or Pbarmacy. Slee Concen Hall. North Campus. I p.m.
~or Arehltecture and
l'llumlng. Hayes Hall uwn.

Nonh Campus. 2 p.m.

COMIIENCIEIIDIT
~orMaaap:meoL

Alumni Arena. North Campus.
5 p.m.

11

-IIDUCA..__

~ lonc:&lt;i, Dr.

Gradute ~ -Faaolty of
Arb ud Letkn, Foca lly of
Natural ScleMa and Matbemall&lt;o, and Faaolty of Social
Scie:DCH. Center for the Arts.
Nonh Campus. 3:30p.m.
- y IIECEI'TlOfl
Alltbropolocy Departmeat 's
eo....._...... Reaptloa.
Anthropology Muteum, second
flooc, MFAC. 4-7 p.m. Call6452414 .

10

THURSDAY
MONDAY

...,

SATURDAY

AI.&amp;MNI EYEJn
Pbarmacy Alumni SpriDg
Clink. Rodi..son Hotel and
Suites, Buffalo Airport. 8 p.m.
warm-up pany. Cal1645-3931.

__

CDWJMIMDIT
Pltl Beta Kappe lodDCtioa.
Slce Coocett Hall. North Cam -

Certlllcate Program In

Guoatolocl&lt;al NIIJ'Sio&amp;. Ses-

sioos run Thursdays througb
May II. 4:30-7 :30 p.m. $15,
S50 pe&lt; sessioo. Call 829-3291
for registration information;
reg.iwatioo deadline is: fi ve
working days before each
session.

COIIIIENCEIIENY
G.-.duate Sc.bool of Eduatioo. ~ .... for the Aru. Nonh
Campus. 5:30 p.m.

SUNDAY

14

~ c ~··•
UIICierp'alluate

c-

meat- Foaalty ol Arb and
Letten, Foaalty ol Nlltlu'al

�_____

...._

ullyoiSodol-. .... Sp&amp;-

-.,.._Alumni

doloaci~M¥n,

lor l.edvo: lAlla 1'roalplael.llloa Ia tile J - , Joel Cou-

pes, M.D.• Wubin&amp;100 Uoiv.
IGncb Auditorium, Oti~'a

c--" ----011
c-•- ---

Nor!b Compas. 10 un.
c_.._"'

-

oiDndal Mtdldoo.

Slee Cooccn Hill. Norlh Campus.2p.m.

-oiMeclidooandBiomedlaol SdoDc:et, ~~.......u
Pork G....t..... DMsloa. Ceolef f« tbe Aru. Norlh Campus.

Hoopital. 8 a.m.

oiSodal Wori&lt;. Sloe
Coocert Hill. Norlh Campus.
7p.m.

MONDAY

~M&lt;tabollo.ol

~-lathe
llal aod fish, llarith Sitka.
Pb.D . I25~-Farbe&lt;-Sbennan

Adclitioo. Soolb Campus. 8:30

a.m.

-~

~L Univen.iry lnn
and Confemx:e Center, 2401
Norlh Forest Rood. Gettville.
9:45a.m. Clll645-3446.

Mlhl, M.D., Ve&lt;erao'a Admioi&gt;tntioc Mediell Cenlef. Buffalo.
RIA lint floor seminar room.
1021 Main SL, Bull'alo. II a.m.
Fn:e admiosioa. Clll887 -2566.

M•ltW'tlllrJ ............
laclc Coyne, M.D., Child Advococy Ceot«. Mercy Hoapital
Cafetoriom A. 8:30a.m.

ca

IIUT1IIf»N
- 1.a TaJwan: EpJBnut
c......-

.......,.live

WEDNEaDAY

IIUfJ"A&amp;.O~IC

-

W orb by L&lt;oeard BenHie!n
and Sa-gt Kouswvii.Zky,
Maximiano Valdes. conductor.
with Paul B~iani , double
bass. and soloists from the
Eastman School of Music.,
Center for the Arts Mainstage.
North Campui. 8 p.m. $20, $30.
$35. Clll 885-5000 or
645-ARTS .

-WILL~-

lst...........-kera-Ue

$1139
Sa:oings of

IUNE
aATUaDAY

OPUS: CUAICS UV£
Piano Prop-am of Cooumpo-

Allen Hall. South Campus. 7
p.m. Frtt admission

$308

Pedonna636

10

•and
8MllllAM.
~Raid~
CDROM Drive!
_...,_

$1925
Savings of $335

-EVEIIT

WalltiOJ Tour ofGntia El.-.-.toro. $6, $8. Call 829-1!608

Performa 6115CD
• SMB RAM • 350MB Hvd Drive •
15" Cok&gt;r Morutor • COROM Drwe
• IUK Modem and softwa..t

$2737
Savings of $183

STAFF

M olecular Patilol&lt;nesls of B
Cdl Lymphoma, Ricanlo Della
Favera, Ph.D .• Columbia Uni' .
RPCI. Norlb Campus.
12:30 p.m.

world premienl, Jens Barnick.

21

Checkout
these Apple
price breaks!

C Eif:bntion of WNY'1 Musieal Family: Spyro Gyn.
Melody Fair, North Tonawanda
7 p.m.

rary Music., lDc:ludiq110m~

SUNDAY

9
---

7

1 -

Measura. Dr. Wc:i-Otu O!.le,
National Taiwan Univ. and Visiting Scholar, HlUVItd School of
Publit Helllb. 252 Farl&gt;er.
Sou II&gt; Campus. 12:30-1 :30 p.m.

u. Utah Pbillps, sillcu, pitar-

---

lO

CldldAMR ...

IUNE
Pal DAY

..... Gen.la. Allen Recital
HilL Soolb Campus. 8 p.m.

PDU.-.ccoa

16MSTITUTI-- --TUESDAY

TUEaDAY

Aicobal U... ~ : tho
Past and tho ............ 1bomu

1J..mvni----11IAINIIIII Tedutlcal Advilory Committee of tile N.,. Yori&lt; Slau
CeDter for B.uardous Waste

Aru
· M=
Norlh Campus.
TS or
5000.

8 p.m.
'lickcu!wler 8

D~iALIIIALYH

&lt;I&lt;miolo&amp;Y aod

A Jteraatms to Viole~~« : A
TraiDlD&amp; bl CGDIIid Raolulloo Skllk, Dr. Mary Rnn and
Audrey Mang. Wick Center,
Dacmen College. $50 fee. Clll
645-6140.

IC1aa en- Cenlef for tbe

TO-,

3 p.m.

-

-

_.., _ _ .,_u

JUNE
aUNDAY

~~'!~~s~~s~

and Modem!

1J

$2787
Savings of $633

--

Power Macintosh 7100

IUII.IIDIEJrriiOUIIDTAIILE

• 80MHz • 16MB RAM • 700MB
Hlonl om-. and CDROM Drive!

Tolal Quality "anacemeat at
Motarola M.U. "Six Si&amp;ma"
ill E...-yt.llio&amp; W• Do, lobn
Lupienski. Fanny 's Restaurant.
3500 Sheridan Drive. Amherst
8-9a.m. S40 per se"ion; Sl20
for all four seuions. Cal164S ·
3200.

~,~...,.,....,

::--::----:-----::

Son-ells. Allen Recital Hall .
Soulll Campus. 8 p.m. Clll 881 3211 for admission information .

~~mv~~~: A

TraiDiD&amp; bl Coollict Raolulloo Skllk, Dr. Mary Finn and

TUESDAY

Audrey Mang. Wick Center,

Dacmeo College. $50 fee. Clll
645-6140.
I'IDIAl'IIICCOIIfDDICE

lmqio1 Cboices ill Pediatrics:
A Pnoctlcal Approo&lt;:h, Ehsan
Afshani, M.D. Mercy Hospital
Cafetorium A. 8:30 a.m.

I'IDIAl'IIIC CONFERENCE
Asthma aod Allergies: Ao Update, Mark Billow, M.D .•
M ercy Hospital Cafetorium A .

8:30a.m.

THURSDAY

-

ALUIIIII EVEIIT

CU'ftf" Workshop for Receal
Gr-.dutes. Reception included.
Center for Tomorrow. Non.h
Campus. 6-8 p.m. $6, S8 . Clll
829-2608.

··-IIIOUIIDTAIILE

Bicb Perlorauon« Workplace

Strat&lt;&amp;ies
tile Future!
Wbat Doafor
It Take,
Fred Smilb
and Tony Strusa. Fanny's Restaurant. 3SOO Sheridan Drive,
AmhersL 8-9 a..m. S40 per ses-

W E D N E S D A Y

~~

sioo; $120 for Il l four seosions.
Clll645-3200.

=:......:=-------

lnformal Coaverution on
Curriculum Assessment and

AUJIIIII EVEIIT
Senior Alumni Program; Tour
of Strooc Museum ud Georg~

Currieulu.m Frameworks in
N.,. Yori&lt; Slate, Linda Dar-

Clll 829-2608.

-LEC1VIIE

Eastma.a Bouse in Rocbester.

ling-Hammond. Teachen College. 17 Blidy. Nonh Campus.

3-!5 p.m. Free admission.

FRIDAY
FRIDAY

19

-l'IIIC---

Stlt Au~ 111.oae ud AI Pu-

~6

PIIIIIAl'IIIC..__,_
SPill. Praeotatloas, TBA.
Kinch AudilOrium, Children's
Hospital. 8 a.m.

r----------------,
Summer Delivery of the
R/Jf/1/I'IBI'
Faculty members who will be out of town
this summer and would like the summer
issues of the Reporter mailed to their summer address. are asked to provide this information: Please send coupon to the
Reporter. 136 Crofts Hall.

Summer Address

-

·L----------------~
'

�_ . , . . _ _ _ _ liT

Electronic Highways: Yahoo!
-a-

Tile
Is ....... down and you just migllt fiDd some time for exploring
lhe Internet. Tbcte is ooeasierway to experience !be lniCmel via lhe World Wide Web
!han connecting to Yahoo. Yahoo which is lhe acronym for " Yet AnolherHierarchical Officious Oracle" is, in lhe wonlsoriiScreators. "a bierarcbical index oflhe World
'
Wide Web" and conmins, a1 lhis writing, nearly
40,000 entries.
I I I &lt; I I{&lt; &gt;"-I&lt;
Information is offered first by general calegory
sucb as art, business, computen, economy. govern D
'I j\ \
I II
!
I I , ~
ment. beallh. law, news, politics. science, reference, and enleiUinmenL Just follow lhe links from
lhese categories and you will lind yourself at web
sites around lhe worl&lt;l "The connections are generally quick and lhe diversity of sites
is truly remarkable.
Or try one of Yahoo's olher features. Besides keyword seaa:b capabilities, you
may brow~e through "What's .Ncw," ''Wbar'• Cool," tK ... Whal 't PopulAr, .. lists of
special sires available lhrougb Yahoo. " Wbat's Cool," for example, currenlly
contains links to itelll$ such as BrillliUtica's Birthday Calendar, links to companies
!hal are doing "cool things on lhe Web."
"Cool SiteoflheDay ," and Oreal Outdoor
Recreation.
ven wish to try one of lhe most fun features
telling what will rum up if you choose lhis
one!

~iG':...

To connecJ to Yahoo via your campus E-mail account type lyiVC. lrttp:/1
www.yalroo.com/ (or wwwlrttp:l/w.,.,.yaltoo.com/ on the/BMICMS platform). For
questions about using the World- Wide Web, contact the Computing Cent&lt;r Help /Nsk
at645-J542.
-Gemma DeVinner and Loss Pequello Glazl6f. Locl&lt;wood Library

CALENDAR

vaoocdsw-1 Olaa, Bruilian
Embro;dcry, l'&lt;la&lt;sy for CliJ.

Continued from page 7

c1r&lt;a. lllld Mullimedia for OUI·

IXN181TS

-~
Nadluloi-'IMMter

oCF"me ArU lhciH exbibit ~
maiN 011 display throoal&gt; Miy •
;, ""' ..... !leportmerll Gallery.
Gollety houn ... Tuesdays. tO

L m.-5 p,m. Wodneodayo-Fridays 10 1.m.-8 p.m., ond Saturdays II Lm.-8 p.m. Aclrlu
Plpor'l nbibil, "'ocide Who
You Asc," will be up throoaJI
May7 lltheCen...-fa&lt;theAIU
Gallery (fUll floo&lt;). Admission
is free; pllety houn ... 10:30
a.m.-8 p.m. W&lt;dnelday-Sawnlay
lind Noon-5 p.m. Sunday. Lilcewise, Vidor Burala '1 ""'Tbc
End" wiU be lihow'D

tbrat.p M•y

7 in tbe Center far me Alta Gal·
lety (oocood floo&lt;). Admission is
r...; p11cry houn .,. 10:30
a.m...S p.m. WcdDetday-saturdly
IIDd Nooo-5 p.m. Sunday. Call
645-69120&lt;645$76. U ......1 "Red Venical" runs
lhrouiJ! Doc. 31 in the LiJbtw&lt;ll
Gallery; odmission is ...... Qol.
lety houn.,. 10:30 un.-11 p.m.
Wcdneoday-Sanuday and Nooo5 p.m. Sunday. Caii64S-6912.
lames Dyett Exhibition Hall
(lhinl floo&lt;) is lhc w r.. ..
exhibitofrecent-lwOO&lt;s
by Jama DJ&lt;tl 011 displly
lhrouiJ! May 19. Gollety hours

9 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday-Friday.

tla'nack IIMNIIOital MI'VIce to be held May 17

Transfon11ing the
Organization:
Leadership Conference for
Women in Higher Education

Friday, May 5, 1995
Keynote Spukers:
Dolora E. c.n.
Pr!sldtnt, Cblc4!io Stat. Unfvmlly
'90« Making ll 00 Out Own
Terms"
~

~ d""'

Pr!sldtnt,-~ of~--­
'Cl!oclL!q I=lersbip"

This mnf=noe ~ spons&lt;Jr&lt;d by ""' Wesem
New Yarlt Region2l ComrniDoc d the Americ:ln
Council 00 F.duationiNalio l&lt;lmificujon
Progr2m for the Advanc=enl d 'lbmen in
lllghcr Educllion- (ACE/NIP).
c....errorTOI!Ill!JOO&lt;
SW.Ilni-msily d New Yarlt "

Buffalo

Buffalo, New Yarlt

For------·......-...

aoiiiDm-. 64S.2111, -

537.

The Compuo Oub lnlvels 10
Toromo &amp;o see SboWboel on

May 31. Fora$90a&lt; $100 fee,
panicipants ...,.;.. aliJI&gt;Ibrat·
claaner bus
lnlnlpC&gt;r1Mion 10 and from
Tor.-. ond dinocr. The bu
lea.,.. a! 8 a.nt.. frnm TOfl&amp; Piau.
Colvia lind Ega1 ond ......,. •

fiSt,.....,-

9 p.m.~tooerve your p1acc ,..;m.
$SO depooit. poyable 10; ""'
Compuo Oub. Balance is due 011
Apil 21 . Call 64$-2&amp; 16. 64$2592, 0&lt;645-2145.

p---

.wiALS!WIY

UB dcnlalreoean:ben~r&lt;I&lt;Ckin&amp; 111CR tban 100 bcaJ1hy oduiu.
betwoea 111-70. wilb ..........
of
diteue to help evalu.a&amp;c:
the effect of a rnoudJri:ue. a
IOOCitpale. lftd I mouth modtur·
iur 011 on1 bealm. Pwtic:ipanu
must have tome symplDmJ. such
u roc1 gumo and bloodinagumo
lifter IOOI!tbrusltina; lhcy ,..;n
mat. foor brief YiliiiiO the
Scbool oC Denial Mcdicifte 011
Soum Campuo. Upoo completion
of 11te sbkly. eac1a panicipont ...;u
be reiml&gt;uncd SIOO for ome ond
lrOvel. Call 829-3850 bet-. 9
a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays.

cum

Af'--IWUL

Jtomanian-born Lydio Dona and
M.ttbtw Webutelo will uhibit

lheir paintings in the Lightwell
Gallery this summer. Dona' s
pamtmgs ..emp:y out.. modem
isms's patriatdlal baggage with

her own brand of "'new abstrac- lion... Her paintings are on the
fim floo&lt; of the Ugblwell.
Wcinstt:in's paintings assault
modemil&gt;ls notions of the ..pure ..
and ''•deal.. and tab: the ronn of
raucous.. sometimes-kinky. or
poetiC mam~&amp;es of trnages from
anatomy. biker-cuhun-., Rimbaud
and pop H1s pamtJngs are on tht'
second floor of the Ughtwell

C~AU*MA~

"The Alumn1 Association's Alh·
letic Hall of Fame 5eeks oomma·
lions for inductees. Nornina.oon
forms are available at the OffiCe
of Alumni R~labons . South

---

Campus. and muse ~ completed
and r=ived by May 5. 1995.

CliOfiVE CIIAFT CENIDI

Creating a Culture fur
Inclusion and Diversity

--UISUIL
--f

p- ------..are 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday.

A tner]'tOrial service for Robert S. Harnack. prolessor emeritus in the US Graduate
School ol Education and one ol the nation's leading eulhorities in curriculum plaming.
wfU be.beld at 7:3) p.m. on Wednesday, May H . in Unl1arian Unlvetsalist Church_ol
Amherst. 6320 Main St, Williamsville, N.Y. Harnack, 76, died April22, in O&amp;rence. N.'t.,
ol natural causes.
He was a highly respec!8d teacher and a recognized au1hor in the fields ol curriculum
develop!nent medical education and computsr Instruction.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimer's Foundation ol Western New
YOII&lt;. the Heart Association or the Harris Hill Nursing Facility.

clr&lt;ft. All warbhopl nut 0110
niJN • week fw a .. wceb from
7- I0 p.m. except cbildreo' I
claueo. 1'1111 00 Salunloy
monrina. feel are SJO lllld 530:
early sip-ap is odvilcd. call
645-6125 .. 645-204.

Tbc: Creative Craft Center in the
EJiicou Compl~x of North Cam ·
pus ts offering Early Summer
'9S Craft Workshops ~ginning
the week of Tuesday. May 30.
Workshops are scheduled in
Weaving, Kmuing and Crochet ·
ing. Quilting. Textile Design,
Grectmg Card Design. Pottery,
lnt~rmediate Pouery. Basic Photography , lnt~rmed i&amp;le Photog ·
&lt;Ophy. Night Pho&lt;ography.
Color Photography. Advanced
Col&lt;&gt;&lt; l'bolography. Aerial Pltoogn~phy.

Camera Use and Op-

eration, J~~lry Constntcrion.
Beginning Stained Glass. Ad·

2222

COIIM'«IIIW OPIJIS
Competition fOJ 1996-97
FulbriJI&gt;I Granu fOJ gradual&lt;
study in aadc:m.ic ftelds and

profeutoo.a.l trairun&amp; in the ere·
alive and pc::r(onnin&amp; aru
opened May I. Fulbricht Granll
are available for study or ~­
seuch: tnvd grants are avail able to selected countries to
suppleroent maintenance awards

~~C:U::Sm'!:~

travel or to supplement the
applicant 's personal funds. Apphcants must be: U.S. etttzens at
the time of apphcalioo and hold
a bache Jar's degn:e or 1lS cqu1 va·
lena by !he beginrung dale of the
granL Creative and performing
artists ~ nol reqtJirt:d U) haYC: I
bachelor's degree. but they must
have four years: of rek\·ant trainme or study. Ca.ndidat.es 10 mcdi ·
nne must hlv~ an M.D or
eqwvalenl at the lime or apphcatlon All appiK:ants must hive
suffiC~a~t prof.ciency 111 the lan·
guagc of !he hoot c:ounary. Full
gn.nts prm•ide round-trip intema·
t1on&amp;IU'Ivd, main&amp;m~.ncc for the
cenun: or the award. a research
allowancr. and tuiuon wa.tven. 1f
applkabk TDvel grants provide
round-uip international b':lvel to
the counuy where the SIUdenl ....ill
punue ......m; all granu tnclud&lt;
health and accident 1nsurance
Contact Dr. Barbara Bunker.
Fulbrighl Program AdVIsor, 10
362 Pirie Hall. 645-3650. ext 362
or exL 358. Deadline for rocelpt
of applicaions is Sept 2.6. 1995.
~-TICKET

POUCYA new student tict~ng pohc-y
will~

in effect for the 199S

football seasoo. Under the new
policy. aJI student tickets will be

clillribwld0111hecloya&lt;aqltlof

dae-OIOIJ.AvalidID ...;u be m. ooly . . . -

_w__ _

prod
allowed;
......
will
linUtoC
__
.,
. .be.
_

b e - tbroucl&gt; lhc of.
ftceoCs-.tUfellldore
dtroaalt lbe ......
ems Weetead-. diolribur.d tbroucl&gt; l h c - Life
Offtee.

·-only
will

_...,. __
--

R&lt;:oen-e U.U for the 1995 Sum·
mer Sctaioos: are now due.
Forms are available • Ill rncrve
- o f " " ' lhuvmity L i Faallty "-ld nooelhe deadline
for Fall 1995 R.escrvc Utts is
Au-16.

-wtnl~
pWomca'o Project. aa eialt&lt;--

__.,-..sbylholaslituae on AddiCiions ;, Buf·
falo olfen f..., . pofeaiooal help
for women with aJcoboljc J*t ·
ncn.. Womcao!•lca:sa II re-s

ot .,e who 1ft livina .;m a
problem- ...s ... iaoer-

eslcd call call 887-2255. All calb

are COilfideDtial.

~­

ITALY-

Fund~n.iliq c.fforu for mr UDi·
vcrDty Ok»ir's concert lOW' of
Italy are under way and iacludr: •
Cti5CO&lt; lap&lt; sale.

c-llpCS

bizbligbtin&amp; paf""""""" from
1972-92 ~ $12 each w two for
$20 and are available lllbe
Boobtoft Of send chec:b CD·
cloned 10 UB Fowxlalioo: 0.00.
10 Harriel Simons. 222 Boinl
HaD. Tape I feaawes music frnm
the 181h ond 19dt &lt;=Wries plus
Cllnsunas. foOt. and pop odcc·
tions. Tape 2 includes Renais·
ADCC R:kctioos aod c:ornptCl·
"""' from lhc 20ih cauwy. Call
64S-2964 for more mformaliOn.

Joas
~

Reooamt T&lt;CiuoicioJa/Suppnrt

SpocialiR (•two pooilioal avd
able)-Biodtemi.uy. l'ooli01: fR·
95038. 1'1yc"-ridoa-Nevrology. Posung IR -95039.
Proj&lt;d Coonllnaaor-Offoce of
Medical Educauon. Pooling IR95040. Study Caatff Coonllnalor-P&lt;dillric Ophlhalmology.
Posting IR-95041.

--

"""........... Analysa (IDI&lt;mal
Promotiotutl Opportun~y. SL-

JK:omputing &amp;t lnfOOTW&gt;On
Technology. Posung fP-5009.
Appli&lt;atina ll&lt;wlopor (Internal Promocional Opportua~y.
L-J)-Compulm! .&amp; lnformati011

Technology. Posting tP-5010.
Asoistaat Diredor of Pllbll&lt;

Safety (lnl&lt;mal Promociooat
Opportunity, MP-4)-PIIblic
Safeay. Po&lt;ting IP-5014. Anislaal DUulor of Pllbti&lt; Safety
(int&lt;mal Promociooal Opportunity, MP-4)-Publl&lt; Saftty.

Posting tP-5015.

-.-nmtE
C&amp;.AAIFIED CIVIl. AIIYICE

I.abonllory Medwlidaa (SG12:H:lirUcal Denu.uy. Line

1211&lt;52.
To obtDin

mor~ ut/orrrtlltiOn

on

jobs lintd abm~. contact Pu·
sonnd ~niCYs, /04 Crofts HalL

Public Salefl''s Weekli RepOl'l

Tile followhiC- of
tlleleciiiMta- ....
--totllehpM-

o f - s.t.ty ....
tw- Apoti1A- 20:
• A sil&lt; plant, valued a1 $100.
was reported missing April 14
from Michael Hall.
• About 100 COs, a book
bag. CO case and books.
v.oth a canbined value ol
$t .740. _ , reported missing April 15 from Porter Quae!.
rangle .

• A daily plamer, valued at
$35, was reponed missing
April 17 from lhe Undergraduate UbraJY.
• A Texas license plate was
repooed missing April t 7 from
a vehicle parl&lt;ed in lhe
Spaulding kL
• Two Clement Hall residents
were referred to lhe StudentWide Judiciary April 17 for
allegedly IIYowfng bOO!es CXJl
ollhe window.

• A book bag. containing a
wallet and compuer disks

was reponed missing April t9
from lhe men's locker room in
Alt.nri Arena.
• A bag of laundry was reported missing April 19 from
lhe lat.ndty area in Roosevelt
Hall.
• A Fargo Ouadrmgle resident reported Aptil20 !hat
someone had stolen nxJ
from cards and lettetS in lls
mablx.

�_ . . , _ _ _ _ a?

The Repcxter welcomes conmentsry on issues of
broad interest 10 the I.II1Mirsity comtrunily. Material may be edited tor styje and length.

1

Senate should reject
rules restricting UGTAs
TEVE COX wroce in your
· April 27 i sue about lhree
controversial resolutions !hat
!he Faculty Senate Executive
Commince sent on 10 !he full
Senate for consideration. I would like to
comment upon one of them.
One resolution would set a fonnal policy
on the use of undergraduate teaching assistants (UGTAs). I hAve had considernble
opportunity 10 observe flfSihand the effons
of undergraduates teaching labs in the Biology Depanment, and I would like to explain why I strongly protest the effort to set
a formal policy on the use of UGTAs.
I have seen the work of UGTAs in my
Basic Bio 121121abs and in Kipp Herreid's
Evolutionary Biology, Bio 200 labs. The
UGTAs in the two courses= of very different interests; the Bio 200 UGTAs =
generally university Honors students. while
mine are generally not Honors students, but
are greatly interested in the health professions and/or teaching. Both groups of
UGTAs provide quality instruction and are
,·ery dependable and trustworthy.
I recently polled my Basic Biology st udents about their perceptions of their lab

"~ave t~ supervision of

the UGTAs to the
instrnctors of record of
the courses. "
DEJINIS F. ..IETWAS

instructors in conjunction with lht standard
course survey. I asked the students to identify whether their lab TAs were undergrad
··interns" (as I call them ) or grad students.
but I did not ask them to specify the name
of their lab instructor.
Then, I asked "How did your lab instructor rate in comparison to your chemistry or physics TAs?" l intentionally left that
ques1ion somewhat vague to let the students decide what component(s) of quality
to rate. and made it a comparison to grad
TAs in other natural science courses (almost certainly at the lower division level)
because that is the alternative to using
UGTAs. The responses I offered the respondents to choose from ranged from I,
much better through 5, much worse with 3.
same.
The grad TAs scored an average of 2.8.
The UGT As scored an average of :Z..I.
Even if you object to UGTAs and counter
by thinking that the students are protecting
their friends/peers in this evaluation. realize that the respondents did not need to
identify the instructors by name and that
any such confounding factor could scarcely
alter the observation that the UGT As are
providing instruction that is at least as good
as the average grad TA.
I also have come to know several
UGTAs that instruct the Comparative Primate Anatomy Lab from the Anthropology
Department and end up studying my
courses to complete the "one year of biology with lab" for medical school prerequisites. These students are not even in the
same "peer group" as the first- and secondyear students in my class. lbey are rela-

tively expert in anatomy, as they should be
to help teach a 300-level course. This leads

9

United Way's Third Annual
Day of Caring
· ·. r·

10 my first concrete objection 10 !he resolu-

i.

tl ()
.

T

,.,

:

•·

rr

[
1I 0
'-' 0
.. I)
I

tion.

lt calls for a requirement that UGTAs be
at least juniors. Why is !hat needed? In just
one example, full professors can learn from
the n::search o(, and have their grant applications and paptT submissions reviewed by,
assistant professors. Sophomore UGTAs
could hAve advantages over juniors and
seniors in teaching lower division cou~.

The sophollllll'eS would have a more VJ id
memory of the frustrations of freshme and
women.' Those first-year studen!S'wooid be
more likely to view sophomores as more
credible "advisors" in many ways. Also.
many upper-division students here are in
professional programs that would not allow
them the time to be involved in reaching.
So. I believe that. a class standing restriction
on UGTAs is counter-productive.
I also object to the proposed requi,.,ment
of a QPA of 3.0 or better. The total QPA is
not the most !!!!;x&gt;rtant gauge of the qualifications of., student to teach a particular
course. Any instructor who has the help of
UGTAs Wi&gt;Uid be interested in their qualificatioOB in the subject area, but other courses
are not always crucial. Think about how
many grad TAs with to!Jll undergrad QPAs
of less than 3.0 that we have teaching students here!
I also worry about the implications of
not allowing UGTAs to reach courses "unsupervised" or "outright." Those terms are
too nebulous to be enforceable. Does it

. . ......,,....,,.......__. • I 1 nswiDjoinlbottsandsofodtot _ eaem
New Y.o rten oo ~a~ 23 10 pol1icip111e ia Day of ~ 8C1iriti&lt;o1. Tiley' D do
e~ng ~porn~ walls, gardening and acrving mcaiJ to reading 10 dtlldrea or
holding a social for JelllOI'S. (Professional and support staffs.,.. asked to !lt"AAJCe willa
supervisors for ipp!'OVed leave from job n:apoosibilities.)
The United Way will ma1cb
interests of volunteeR witb the
The Day of Caring Schedule
· needs of one of the 90 0011prolit
health and human services agen.7.......
cies in the Unired Way family.
Registration, cont1nental breakfast and
To ~ pert in this itnponanl
send-off rally at Convention Center
project and to experience ftRtband tbe work being done by
SEFA/United Way agencies,
Travel lo agency
please complele !he form below
• 8:30 ...._.12:30 p.m. OR
Carole Smith
and return it

·84:30--

Petro, DayofCaringCoonli~

for UB, 521 Capen full , North
Campus.

11:30 --~ ........

Wor1&lt; at projeCt, lunch and celebratiOn at
project locatiOn

VOLUNTEER SIGN UP

I
I

NAME

'
I

DEPARTMENT OR UNIT
ADDRESS - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -

mean that some grad student must be in the

lab or lecture hall "supervising" the
UGTAs' every word? Do the writers of the
proposal realize how "demeaning" that is to
the UGTA? Do they realize what a distraction those observers can be? I tried that for
a semester. assigning a grad studenl who
failed his SPEAK test to be present in the
labs while a UGTA led the sessions. The
first week. the grad student put his head
down apparently sleeping in the back row. I
got in his face about it afterward. and he did
it again the next week ! That son of supervision requirement will not work in any positiv~way .

9be one aspect of the resolution I can
I suppon is the allowance of the UGTAs
to earn up to 12 credits of Supervised
Teaching credits. However. I must emphasize that grad students "'gistered for Supervised Teaching do not have observers
routinely in the classroom or lab. As Joyce
Sirianni emphasized at the recent program
at which graduate s1ude.nt teaching excellence was emphasized. if an instructor
enters a class or lab unprepared, the sharks
in the audience will have the instructor for
lunch ! That's all the in siru supervision
that's really necessary.
So, I call on the Faculty Senate to reject
the formal rules restricting UGT As. Leave
the supervision of UGTAs to the instructors
of record of the courses. I would also like to
challenge us as a whole to formally recognize our best UGTAs along with our best
grad TAs and faculty instructors. My best
UGTA over the last year did an excellent
job of not only teaching her labs independently, but was a crucial assistant to me in
proctoring and grading my lecture exams.
while doing research in Chris Loretz's lab
and working two jobs. The Carla Swartzes
of UB deserve recognition, not restrictions!
DENNIS F. I"'EI'It.U
Biological Sciences

PHONE AND FAX NUMBER

I

*Whlc:h~doyou ....,_to work w1t11

People who are physically/
mentally challenged
SeniOI' c~izens
Adults

I
I
I
I
I
I

lit--&gt;

(. . . dleck
Preschool ch1ldren
Children and youth
Anyone who needs help

*WIIlot kind of work do you.....,_ to do(....,_ dleck lit--&gt;
Physical labor
OutdOOf work
Office work
Whatever is needed
lndOOf work

Yes
No

AN you

wlllinC to MrVe • a - - for U B - - - ' pinC to

-~~
Yes
No

Do you plan

to ett.nd the celellndlon ......., lit the Con....tloa

c-ter?
Yes
No
Do you .....,_to drtYe your own car cw do you plan to use the o.y of
syst.n to the aPncY from the c-.atlooo

. c.toc tr-.portatloe

c-ter?
.:... Own Car
Day of Caring Transportation
Do you .....,_to work from

8:30a.m. to 12:30 p .m OR
8:30 a .m. to 2:30 p .m.
'Note: selections cannot be guaranteed.

L------------------------~

�_., .... _..,_Z7

$200,00 gift to benefit Korean
language, culture programs atUB
.

-

.,~
News Buteau Oirecto&lt;

$200,000 GIFT to help expand
Korean language and culture programs at UB has been donated to
the university by LG Electronics,
formerly called Lucky Goldstar Co .. one of
Korea's leading technology companies.
Tbe gift was sent to UB President William R.Greioerby John Koo, presidentofLG
Electronics, a Korean technology giant that
manufaclures multi-media consumer products and is a world leader in the field of
semiconductor5 and liqujd-crystal displays .
Sd::-Yen &lt;llo, who has taught UB's Korean
language and culture cour.;es for ~ 4 years, and
her husband, Kah-Kyung &lt;llo, SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Department
of Philosophy, were instrumental in drawing
the aaeotion of the top management of LG
Electrooics to the need to enhance UB 's Korean Studies Program. Sek- Yen &lt;llo is an
adjunct associ&amp; professor and director of the
Korean Studies Program in UB' s World Languages InstittoOC. part of the Department of
Modem Lang~es and Literatures.
It was Hun-Jo Lee, chairman and CEO of

LG Electronics, whose success in making
the compai.y a major global player was profiled last fall in Bwsiness W..k. who made
the decision to support an overseas Korean
program for the first time in the company's
history. Lee studied philosophy at Seoul
Natiortal University, where Kah -KyungCho
taught for 13 years before joining the UB
faculty in 1970, and a cordial collegial spirit
has developed between the two men .
LG Electronics'gifl is the largest received
in suppon o( UB 's Korean Studies Program as
part of a drive launched last October by The
Sociely in Support of Korean Studieo, a comntiaeeoffriendsandalumni volunteers headed
by Suk-Ki Hong, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the UB Depanment of Physiology.
More than $340,000 in gifts and pledges has
been raised to date from the Korean-American
cooununity and from dooors in Korea.
The program will include cour.;es on Korean art, history, economics. business. politics
and education. UBcurrentlyenroUs more than
500 Korean-American students, hosts 200stUdents and scholars from Korea and enjoys
widespread suppon from the WNY Korean
communi ty.

Undergraduate major offered in
new field~ognitive Science

U

B NOW OFFERS an interdisciplinary undergraduate major in a
relatively new field-Cognitive
Science, the studyofhow the ntiod

works. Cognitive Science, which has been

The Student Association's international clubs celebrated their cultures
and traditions April 28 with food, music and dance at a fiesta in the
Student Union. Top photo: Representing the Latin American SA, Yvan
Umbal, wearing wig, helps Evelyn Disla with mask of the ·diablo. •
Performance recalls lndepehdence Day celebrations in the Dominican
Republic. Above: Drummers Charles Costner, left. and Aaron Woods
are guest artists
for UB African
Dance Troupe.
Left, Jim
Phinney plays
the bagpipes.
Right Ulana
Moroz, a member of the Ur.rainian Dance
Ensemble, performs the
•Hopak."

expanding across the country and abroad.
has been represented on the UB campus for
the pasl four years in activities at the Center

forCogOitiveScience,located in Baldy HaJJ .
The Center. with 35 affitiated faculty
members from nine disciplines. recently pUI
together the new program leading to the B.A .
According to Leonard Talmy. director of
the Center. the Cognitive Science B.A . is de-

signed for students who are interested in pursu.
ing an interdisciplinary study in such cognitive
fields as philosophy. artificial intelligence.

cognitive psychology and linguistics.
Each department partic ipating in the Center b.as a faculty member who serves as the

Cognitive Science mentor.

TRACK a RELD
At Saturday's UB ()pen meet, Tany Carroll won
two events for the Buns. taking the diSCUS ttvow
at 46 74 meters (153'4' ) and the Jilvelin Wlll1
52. t8 meters (1717) to qualify for the IC4A

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Championships.
•
Also with victo&lt;ies for the Bulls were Ctms
Keman taklng the 1500 run tn 4:07 25 and Ben
Atkinson's wimtng pole vauh of 3.50 meters
(1 1'5 3/4') Adam Maday set a school rflCOI'd rn
the hammer throw with 39.58 meters ( 129' 10')
to finish second in the evenL
Shirley Moody won two hurdle events to lead
the Royals. Moody t - the 100 high hurdles tn
16.66 to edge out tearnma!e Sue Mika.lich who
finished second in t7 31 and the 400 IH Wlll1 a
time ol 1:06.54.
The Royals finished 1-2 n the 100 willl
C;audine Waite taking the event tn 12 5 seconds. Naquetta Davis was second in 12.8 Terry
Schefne won the 400 in 59.36
US's distance runners won three events Juhe
Phelps' 4:51 .09 was good enough to take the
1500. Tara Reiner won the 3000 rn 10:43.56
with tearrrnate Gretchen Wek:l:l second in
10:46.14. The Royals t - the top three spots rn
the 5000 as Bridget Niland won the race in
18:39.71 _Amy Grinnell was second in 19:37 74
and Karen Ufly third in 19:50.16.
The Royals 4 x 100 team also placed first rn
50.94.
Several team members made good showings
at the prestigiOUS Penn Relays in Philadelphia
I

Cognitive Science investigates the propenies of the mind, both at the level of its
conceptual organizat ion and at the level of
its neural and computational infrastrucrure.
It covers intellective Processes. eJ;hibited
either by the human mind or by computer.
The field brings together the ponioos of
traditional disciplines that dim:tly address
the nature of mental phenomena. It draws
from the areas of artificial intelligence, cognitive psychology. linguistics. philosophy.
anthropology and neuroscience.
Although these traditional disciplines typical ly include much material that has tittle direct
concern with cognition. Cognitive Science
concerns itself solely with the nature of cogni tion without including relatively unrelated
materia]. For more information. contact lhe
Center for Cogniti ve Science, 652 Baldy or
the Social Science Interd iscipli nary Program.
643 Baldy.

Aprd 27-29 The Bulls' Dave Falgiano set a
school record tn the 400 IH in a time ol54 10.
Also on the men's side. the 4 x 400 relay squad
qualified for the IC4A meet ftnishing ninth in
3:15.12.
Stacey Strottmann finished 22nd in the
10,0Xl meters in 37.12 14. Judilll Novak was
25th rn 5,0Xl n 17:2625 IMlile Nitam Shukla
placed 32nd 10 17·46.80. The Royals' 4 X 400
squad of Shirley Moody. Terry Scheme, Jame
Htrsdlman and Usa Kragbe ran a 3:56.19 race
to finish SIXth

MEN'S TENNIS
Coacll Russ Crispell's Butts ftnished1ifth at the
Mid-Continent Men's Temis Championship held
last week in Kansas City_
Top-seeded Western IDtnois won the tournament championship in oonvincing fashion
without dropprng a single garre in their sweep
to the title. The Bulls earned the fifth place
))OSition with their 4-3 victory CNer Valparaiso.
UB. seeded sixth in the 10-team tournament.
dropped their first round match to Jhird seeded
Eastern lllrros 4-3. The Bulls rebounded in
playback bracket to down 01icago State 4-0
setting up the fifth place match against the

-Crusaders.
Buffalo's Rami Zuwryya, playing noobet' six
singles. won all three of his matches to lead the
Buffs. Steve Datm. at noobet' one. and rrn
Buch, at noobet' fiVe , each put together 2-1
marks in the tournament

�-.. ----.-27

Facul

,...
......... .,.
............

Qlltllde ........ _.,.

0

Internationally !mown UB
scientist Robert Guthrie,

whose inc~pensive screening test
for newborns spares thousands of
children from the effects of mental
mMdation, was honored April 24.
by tbe-Heritagc-Oak Foundation.
He ...ceived the organization's

Founder's
Award at a
dinner in the
Center for the
Arts.

Gulhrie,
UB profes
emeritus. is
cn:diled with
developing a
test 30 years
ago for early del&lt;Ction of PKU
(phenylketonuria) using a spot of
blood laken rrom a newborn. s heel
and special filter paper.
Infants born with this disorder
are unable to metabolize the essential amino acid phenylaline. which
builds to toxic levels in the brain
and leads to retardation. If detected
at birth, a special diel is prescribed
that ucludes food containing large
amounts of protein.
Gulhrie's test is a standard for
newborns in 25 countries. Cost of a
single test is about 3 cents. cornpared to an estimated $1 million for
lifetime care of an affected. but
untrealed. child. He has upanded
his research to include del&lt;Ction of
lead poisoning in infants and children. and has fought for stricter lead
standards in products.
He and his wife, Margare~
were pioneers in the local Heritage
Center, affiliated with the Association for Retarded Citizens. and
helped open sheltered workshops
and olher facilities. lbeir late son.
John, benefiled from Heritage
Center services. A niece was born
with PKU in 1958, a year before
Gulhrie developed the test.
Gulhrie's PKU test has earned
him numerous awards and honors.
including the Kennedy Foundation
Award, the Association for Retarded Citizens Distinguished
Research Award. the American
Associalion on Mental Deficiency
Award and the Pool of Bethesda
Award. 1be Gulhries plan to move
to Seattle next month.

Schaefer receives
nat1on111 awa'd In

ophthalmology

0

Arthur J .Schaefer,a 1947
graduate of the UB School
of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and a nationally known
ophthalmic reconstructive surgeon, has received the Lucien
Howe Award for contributions to
the field of ophthalmology. He has
been UB clinical professor of
ophthalmology and UB clinical
assistant professor of
otolaryngology since 1984.
1be award is presenled joint! y
by the UB medical school and the
Buffalo Ophthalmologic Society.
Recipients are selecled by anational committee.
Schaefer is the 22nd recipient
of the national award and the first

Buffalonian. He ...ceived the
award, a specially cast gold medal,
earlier this month in a ceremony at
the Westwood Country Club.
Howe was a pioneering ophthalmologist and reoearcher who
pncticed in Buffalo in the late
19th and early 20th oennuy and
was a member of the UB medical
school faculty. In 1926, he
founded the Howe Laboratory of
Ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School, known worldwide for
its research . He endowed ihe
Lucien Howe Award in 192&amp;.
Schaefer has spent most of his
professional career in Western
New Yort. He served in the U.S.
Army from 1954-56 as chief of
ophthalmology at hospitals in
Korea ai!d Japan. A specialist in
ophthalmic plastic and reconstruc tive surgery, he has maintained a
private practice in Snyder since
1961. He has published w
in
professional journals and has
lectured in the U.S. and abroad.
Active in professional organizations. he is past president of the
American Society of Ophthalmic
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. He is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons and the
American Society of Ophthalmic
PIBstic and Reconstructive Surgery.

Herber1 A. H.auptman,
research professor of biophysical sciences at UB and the
only non&lt;herrust to receive the
Nobel Prize in chemistry. is one of
21 alumni of nationaJ and intema·
tional starure to be inducted into
the newly established University
of Maryland
Alumni Hall
of Fame.
Hauptman
was honored
at an Academy Awardstype

0

ceremony

April22 in
College Park.
Md. He received his doctorate in
mathematics at the University of
Maryland in 1955. Haupunan
received the 1985 Nobel prize for
inventing a revolutionary method

of determining the three-dimensional shapes of molecules, a
discovery that holds significance
for drug research worldwide.
Hauptman's technique enables
researchers to design new drugs to
comhat such health threats as heart
disease. cancer and high blood
pressure. Others inducted into the
Hall of Fame include Astronaut
Judith Resnik and the late Jim
Henson, creator of the Muppets.

alumni.
1be Tailored Solutions software package includes a student
ernploymentii"IICm, an employer
database systetn, a report writer
and a job-listings module.
'This system will be used by
the Career Development Office to
provide greatly expanded services
to our students and to the many
alumni wbo utilize lhat offoce,"
said AlaD S. Cam!, vice dean for
administration for the law school.
"Job-seekers will have a much
broader access to employment
opponunities and will be able to
conduct a more focused and more
effective search."
1be Tailored Solutions software will replace an outdaled
system. parts of which have been
in use for more than I0 years.
One new feature of the system
will allow the Career Development Office to 1J11Ck students from
the moment they enter the Ia"'
school, making the link hetween
career planning and the student
body more comprehensive and
effective. 1be system also will
create a much larger and more
accessible employer and job listin~s database.
Key Bank's interest in the law
school was sparked by a UB alumnus. said Audrey Koocielniak.
direc!or of the Career Development Office.
"'It"s wonderful that an alumnus· commitment to the law
school will allow the school to
benet serve future students in a
tough job marl&lt;~" Kosc1elnial:
said.

Wamoc:k Is awlsta11t
clrector of c-ter for
llndustrtal Effec:tlv-

0

Linda J . Warnock has been
appointed assistant director
of 1be Center for Industrial Effectiveness ar US.
In her new position. Warnock

will help develop and update a
strategic plan for the center. mark.etthe center's services. including
furthering links between the center

and companies and local and S181e
agencies. and manage the center's
finances. She also will be responsible. in response to requests from
business and industry, for identifying resource needs. seeking resources from internal and utemal
sources. and deploying those resources for specific projects.
In addition. Warnock will help
oversee the Strategic Partnership
for Industrial Resurgence (SPfR)
program, a statewide program in
which students and staff of the UB
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences are linked with
small and mid-sized Western New
York companies in need of research and development assistance.

1be Career Development
Office in the UB School of
Law has received a $16,500 grant
from Key Bank of New York to
purchase a specialized computer
software package that will allow it
to expand services to students and

0

1be center, which was established in 1987 to assist the economic growth of Western New
York by providing consultation to
regional businesses, is hased in the
UB School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences and affiliated
with the UB School of Management
Warnock previous! served as
taX manager, taX senior accoun-

tan~ tax staJT occountant and audit
staff accountant at Deloine &amp;:
Touche in Buffalo.
Warnock gradualed with distinction from UB with a
bachelor's degree in business
administration. She is a certified
public accountant.

WocbhoD Mt-

'tNI:l~

A workshop designed to
bring children wbo stutter
and their parents together 10 sitar&lt;
concerns regarding the condition
will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
on Saturday, May 20. in 280 Pari:
Hall on the UB North Campus.
1be program. designed for
children from ages 6 years to
teenage, their parents and siblings.
teachers and language pathologists, is co-sponsored by the
Speech-Language-Hearing Association of Western New York
(SHA WNY). the National Stuttering Project and the Speech. Language and Hearing Clinic at UB. h
will offer interactive prognms for
the children and training sessions
for parents and speech-language
pathologists.
_Speaking at the workshop will
be Susan Cochl"llM and Ronald
Hook. along with members of the
Buffalo Chapter of the National
Stuttering Project. Cochrane is a
provider Of fluency therapy 10
school-age children in her private
practice and within the Rochester
taUght the
city schools. and
graduate-level seminar on fluency
disorders at Nazareth College of
Rochester.
Houk has been a noled speechlanguage specialist in Western
ew York since 1980. both in
pnvate pnctice and with The
Children's Hospital of Buffalo. the
United Cerebral Palsy Association
and Erie I BOCES. He has taught
graduate and undergraduate-level
fluency courses at Buffalo State
College. and has made many presentations on school-age fluency
disorders.
1be workshop costs S 15 per
person. or $20 per family. with a
$5 discount for SHAWNY members. 1be early registration dead line is May I 0, with a $5
additional charge for all registrations after that date.
For more information. coutact
Nan Regan at 837-9541. or
Bonnie Weiss at 838-3999.

0

Law ablcleats Mlectecl
for Rural ....,.. Corps

0

Three students attending the
UB School of Law have
been selected 10 earucipate in the
National Summer Rural Legal
Corps, a new fellowship program
of the National Association for
Public Interest Law (NAPIL) that
is designed to place second-year
law students in rural communities
that have a hard time recruiting
·
lawyers.
1be students are:
• Scott Budelmann. assigned
to work with Western Nebraska
Legal Services, Inc .. in Grand
Island, Neb.
• Sara Anne Mea-se, who is
in a joint law/master's degree in

social wort program. She will
-.-ort with Pine Tree Legal Assistance, Inc., in Presque Isle, Maine.
• Daniel Werner. assigned to
work with the Neighborhood
Legal Assistance Program in
Charleston, S.C.
The UB students were among
50 choien from 80 law schools
eligible to~ in me program due 10 me tchoob' pro bono
poljcies,

1be rural legal corps fellows
w1ll be placed in rural. legal-5el"vi~ organizauons across the
country to wo.t on su....'-h essues as
domest1c '1olence. communit y
econorruc development. Native
Amencan tribal regulanons and
conce'7's. migrant-farm-worker
1ssues. and assistance to people in
poveny. 1be fellows will attend an
intensive training program in June
1n Washington. D.C.. and also will
work one week pro bono for
NAPIL.
1be fellowship program was
created through a grant to NAPIL
from the Legal Services
Corporation's Law School Civil
Clinical Program. II is the f~
national aniuative to attempl to
reach rural areas of the country. as
well as the first designed to proVIde summer training for students
who have 001 yet cornpleled their
legal studies

"SU-

Arts "-":

acu-..,...a.

for 1116 scMolers
The UB Depanment of
lbeatre and Dance will offer
··summer Arts Jam !..-an action·
packed.. intensive summer pro-

0

gram in theater arts for high
school students who may he interested in pursumg a career in the
field.
The program. direcled by
Tressa Gonnan Crehan of the
UB lbeatre and Dance faculty .
will he staffed by UB faculty and
guest artists from the Buffalo area.
h will be held in one-week and
two-week sessions. 9 a.m. to 4
p.m .. Mondays through Fridays.
1be one·\ol.eek sessions. which
rost$125, ,.illrunfromJuly 10- (
14 and July 24-28. Two-week
sessions. priced at $225. will run
from July I0-21 and July 24
through Aug. 4. Preregistration is
required. For registration information. call 645-6990 during business hours.
1be "Summer Ans Jam!" program has two cooce.ntratjons:
theater/acting and dance. Students
will siUdy in their concentration in
the mornings and have the opportunity in the afternoon to select
worl&lt;shops in comedy. balle~
voice training. stage combat.
make-up. mask construction and
performance. improvisation. creative movemen~ jazz., modem and
Afro-Cuban dance. dialects. script
work. musical theater and more,
including a "mystery class" with
surprises devised by the faculty .
1be Theatre/Acting Concentration will emphasize the art of
performing as a contribution to the
larger lhealrical event 1be Dance
Concentration will focus on finetuning technical skill and performance coaching.

�_._ _ _ ..,_117

Paren ••
In or out
when chi 's

in the dental

chair'l
To all- or not

"A parent who

to allow parents in the
dental treatment room with their childrenthat is a question dentists have been debat·
ing for decades.
Those who say "no" contend parents
distract both the child and the dentist. create

anxiety in the patient. increase

negativ~

heanachild

behavior and interfere with the development of dentist-patient rapport.
Proponents argue that parents should be

crying or

included because separation can increase

screaming from

behind a closed
door may create

problems ror the
dentist and staff
when reunited
with the child."
MARGARET CERTO

the child's stress in an already difficult
situation, they can observe the child' s experience and allay fears, and are available
immediately to consult with the dentist on
treatment options. Supporters cite studies
showing that parents' presence has no adverse effect on the child' s behavior in the
dental chair.
Two pediatric dentists from the UB
School of Dcntul Medicine-Margaret
Certo, clinical assistant professor. and Joseph E. Bernat. associateprofessorandchair
of pediauic dentistry..- viewed arguments
on both sides of the question in a recent
issue of N~w York Stare D•ntal Journal and
suggest guidelines forpermining parents in
the treatment room that should please both
parents and practitioners. Both have permined parents 10 be present during treat·
men! throughout their practices.
Recommendations 10 exclude parents.
developed in the 1960sandearly '70s. were
based largely on several studies that found

that a child's negative behavior increased in
response to rising anxiety in an anxious
mother. The recommendations do not per·

tain to the initial exam, Ceno said. when

l

pilot study they conducted at The Olildren · s
Hospitai of Buffalo, involving parents of
100 randomly-selected children. which
showed that 75 percent always wanted 10 be
with their children during dental treatment.
The remaining 25 percent said they w.11nted
to be with their children "sometimes" dur-

ing their treatmenL

A related study

published the same
year. conducted at a U.S. Air Force dental
clinic. found that92 percent of parents who
wished to remain in Lhe room felt their
children would feel better if!hey were !here.
However, a 1983 survey of dentists
showed that nearly 75 percent said they did
J\01. allow parents in the mum when treating

their children.
The authors point out !hat. given societal
changes in recent y~. a unilateral decision by the dentist to exclude parents may
no longer be acceptable or advisable.
The changes they cite include: an in-

crease in violence. leading parents to feel
they must prot.ecttheirchildren at all times:
more families in which both parents work,
leaving them linle time to spend with their

children and increasing their motivation w
be a pan of all their activities whenever

possible; and more
lmowledgeable con-

sumers. who are rT'IOf'e litigious and want to
be sure they' re getting good value for the ir
money.
In addition 10 satisfy ing the desires of
parents. inviting their participation has several advantages for the dentist. the authors
note. the most important being opening

communication between the dentist and
parent.
"A parent who hears a child crying or
screaming from behind a closed door may
creale problems for the dentist and staff
when reunited with the' child. especially if
the child' s report of the experience con·
nicts with that of the dentist and taff,"
Certo points ouL
friendly dental practices. the authors propose that dentists adopt the following
guidelines defining responsibilities ofhoth
parents and dentists:
• Establish an office policy encouraging
parents' presence in the exam room and
specifying what to do with other children
accompanying parents.

eteperietiCie for
the dentist who

children."
MARGARET CDTO

ents in the t:reaunent area.
• Place an "observational chair" for the
parent out of the child's sight
• Establish rules for parents-be a silent
observer. remain seated, observe others"
privacy in open bay offices, leave when
asked-and discuss them with parents be-

forehand
Learn to address both child and parent
simultaneously during treatment

•

which found no significant difference in

• !:lave ready the appropriate informed-

behavior between children with and with out parents in the room . Some data showed
that children were more relaxed and showed
slightly less negative behavior when a par·
ent was presenL
Surveys of parents have revealed a definite wish not to be excluded from the treat·
ment room. Certo and Bernat cite a 1992

consent fonns for behavior-management

has not sup-

avery

• Train office staff on how 10 handle par-

ported this position. The authors ci te several studies, the most recent published in
1993 in the British Dental Journal, all of

H owever. other research

parents can be

To use the transition toward family-

Learn lO use the "time-out" strategy in
difficult situations. which allows the child
to calm down and gives the dentist a chance
lO discuss behavior management options
with the parenL

dentists routinely allow parents 10 be presenL

"Including

•

interventions for parents 10 sign, if necessary.
" Including parents can be a very rewarding experience for the dentist who treats
children," Certo staLes. "It can help build
truSLand understanding with the families of
our young patients."

(

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Two Prnlll111b
to . . . . . . . .

A........,Day
• Blllrd
Pictures tell it best:

.3

College presidents
are keynoters for
women's leadership
conference .

UB's 11th annUal
Ooztest.

1'rlllutes to

•...............,

..5

Provoet 8locll
Faculty offer an
appreciation of the
late provost's style
and standards.

Plit

4

Recalling the turrroil
in the spring of 1970.
Apnl 27 . 1995

Volume 26 . No 26

Greiner names Headrick
provost of the university
.,_wwn:HD
News Bureau Staff

"/and many
others are
confident that
om Headrick

1homas E. Headrick,
Distinguished Service
Professor at UB and senior counselor to UB
President William R.
Greiner, has been named
provost of the university.
Headrick will sua:eed Aaron N.
Bloch, who died unexpectedly on
AprilS.
~
1be appointment, effective May
3, was announced by Greiner.
Headrick. whose appointment
runs through at least 1997-98, will
serve as the university's chief academicoffioer,oveneeingacademic
units, budget issues related to academic affairs and appointments for
the UB's 15 schools and faculties.
"It is precisely the complexity
and difficulty ofUB' s and SUNY's
cunent situation that forces useven as we mown the loss of a
valued and respected leader, colleagueand fri~o more ahead,''
Greiner said. " We now confront an
extraordinary coofluence of emergency and opportunity. Our unsettled pol itical and fiscal
environments, both in Albany and
in Washington, are full ofpossibil.ities, as well as perils. SUNY .too. is
in the midst of an enormous transition, as a new chancellor works
with a new governor and prepares

UB's di.ffiJult
provostal
responsibilities
at

this time. "

a,aBVJECOX

Reporter Staff

HE FACULTY Senate
Executive Committee at
their April 19 meeting
sent on to the full Senate three controveBial
resolutions that would restrict the
use of undergraduate teaching assistants and make pennanent sev·
eral measures temporarily adopted
to improve access to majors and
courses for undergraduates.
Michael Metzger, chair of the
Educational Policies and Programs
Committee, offered resolutions on
the use of undergraduate teaching
assistants, access to undergraduate
majors and procedures for approving liberal arts components of undergraduate curricula. All three
now are slated to be voted on by the

Native American

MaliC COIIference
to be held Friday
A11VE AMERICAN health-are provideR aDd
ocber health prol'euiooah from ..:ross the United
SWes will COOVI!IICII the Buffalo Hl100G Oil Friday
IIDd Saturday, April281lDd 29, fora nmioul conference oo traditional aDd Weslem beating metbods.
1be mcetin&amp; will include a native ansexhibit from 6~11 :30
p.m. on April 28, in the Hilton Hotel atrium, and a tnlditicaal
Iroquois social fCIIUring native foods, music: and claDce ol 7:30
p.IIL on April2811 WNED-1V, Owtnel17, 140 LowerTemce,
Buffalo. Both events are open to the public. Other events are open
to paid registrants only.
Trtlcd "Healin&amp; Today, Yeslmlay and TDrllCIT'OW-lbe Jlrid&amp;e
Between Tradibonal and West&lt;m Medicine," the coofamce will
explore Native Americ8n cultures and tradilional bealing mesbods.
It is sponsored by the Indian Health Service, UB Scbool of
Nuniog, UB's Native American Family Nunc Pnctitioocr IIDd

_ _ _ ,..ogt.,ns;-tliemleotlrllllfii« •
Nunc lldllcatioo l'lopam. Mecca Cranley, dean of the IIUI'dlta

school, will JRSCDI open if~&amp; remarlcs.
1be program is inlalded 10 develop cultural ...Wtivity to
Native~exploretbe~olweiiDossmdunwdiDtss

for the appointment of as many as
eight new SUNY ttustees. In such
circumstances, UB •sacademic leadership can scarcely pause for a moment"
~iner

noted that a nationwide

U search for a provost could last
as long as a year-"an amount of
time which. in my judgment, we
simply cannot take. given the immediate demands on UB .
"'The appointment of a very experienced UB leader for a substantial term, therefore, seems prudent

While we are fonunate in ha\'mg a
number of ~xperienced and distin guished colleagues on UB's faculty
and in our administrativ~ ranks. the
overwhelming majority of the
people with whom I have consulted
on this specific choice have strongly
recommended or concurred in my
decision." he said.
"I and many others are confident
that Torn Headrick is a superb choice
to uniertake UB 'sdifficult provostal
responsibilities at this time.··

Conunued on page 3

Resolutions by FSEC would set
new policy on undergrad teaching

T

...

tile ....,. . 4S

full Senate at a special meeting
tures, lab work or grading. UnderTuesday, May 2.
graduate TAs are unpaid, but may
No formal policy on underearn up to 12 credits toward gradugraduate TAs has e&gt;tisted previation through enrollment in Superously. The new policy regarding
vised Teachi ng courses.
undergraduate T As will require that
icolas Goodman. vice provost
they only be used when qualified
for undergraduale education.
graduate students ane not available
explained that in anticipation of
and that they not be allowed to
potentially large tuition increases
teach courses unsupervised. 1be
use of undergraduate TAs in teach- - that could have scared many students away from UB. a new policy
ing courses is most prevalent in
was introduced several weeks ago
women's studies, anthropology.
that allows many liberal arts stuand in troductory economics
dents to simply declare their macourses. according 10 Metzger.
jor, rather than apply for admission
Under the new policy, to be an
to an arts and scieoces departnlent.
undergraduate T A. a student must
be at least a junior with a QPA of This policy would become pennanent under provisions of another
3.0 or bener. The student' will not
resolution.
be able to teach a course outrigh~
1be third resolution sent on to
as is the casein some units now. but
may assist an instructor with lee·
Continued on page 2

N

u !bey relate to Indian beallh, and introcluce portidpants 10
different concepts of N11ive American healing.
Preseotatioosand panel diocussioos will addres5 the followin8
topK:s: "Cultural Diversity,""Cultural Sensitivity.""'Swea!Lodge
Healing." "Use of Hems in Healing," "Use of Traditional Medicine in Specific Native American Settings." .,.noditiooal Medicine: Historical Framewort." "Women's Health Issues: Blending
Traditional aDd Western Medicine," "Aicobol Rehabilitation for
Native Americans," "Suicide aDd Other Mental Health Issues"
and "Blending of Culture aDd Promotion of Healjng."

.... ,_.,

.. ---.-

• Joseph I . Jacobs, former director of the Office of Alternative
Medicine in the National Institutes of Health.
• Barbara Klyde, emergeocy room physician' s assistant 11 Kaiser Pcnnanenre EmergeDcy Medicine, Bell Flower, Calif.
• Jennie R. Joe, associa1e professor of family and COIIIIDllnily
medicine II the UniYetSity of Arizooa and diredor o( the Native
Americon RJ:seart:b and Tnoming Cenll:r, T"'*"'• Uraula KDoki- W'llsoo, catificd nunc midwife, lndian Health
Service, Olinle. Ariz.
• Wauoeta M_ Looe Wolf, special projecu diredor,lndian Rdlabililllion, f.nc_, l'tloenix
• Edward R. Starr, assistant profesoor, UB Departmool of COunseling aDd Educlliooal Psychology.
• Roo Wermuth, uibal chairman IIDd spiritual leader, Kern
Valley Indian Community. Kernville, Calif.
• Jay J. Johnson, sweat leader, Yosemite Lodge, Yosemite
National Park, Calif.
• Alice Bryant. berbalist aDd assistant rezjstnr, Bowen Museum of Cullunl Art, Santa Ana, Calif.
• Cecilia Milcbell, pr1ICiitiooer o( llolllwal aDd berbal medicine,
Roosevelt Town. !'i.Y.
UB is ooe of live colleges and universities in the US. fuadcd by
the IndiaD Health Service (IHS) to troio Nalive Amaica11 1111n1e
pncliliooen ODd nurse ....aholisu. UB is the only si1e eoiSI at tbe
Mississippi and tbe only fli'OPID fixusiD&amp; 011 the _ . . di::ptle.
IHS's Dllional coal'aaJce ,_IIIIOQg tbe r-icd iDstibtlioaL
lbeNaliveAml:ricaDNinepKtilica&amp; PC!IIf- fuadediD 1990.

bas ftiCO!iw&gt;d -

. . . . . . . . ._

than $1 milliaa iD &amp;n* liar ldlollnlli!ll -

.....,art IICiivilira. ~,.... ... pad~-' ........... todlle;
--~a.oletl-llfS
1 .

,..._--..,.ill 19MwilllaS7S71/95 ......... .

�-117·-----

.2

Rec6ptionA~9 honors long service by UB faculty, staff
RESIDENT AND Mn. William R. Gteiner beld a reception
April19atthePresident'sResidence honoring faculty and staff
who'COtnpleted 30 and 40 years
of service to tbC university in 1994. Service
recognition pins were presented.
Tbe following received recognition for
40 years of service:
Harold Brody, Anatomical Sciences;
Charles H. V. Eben. Geography; Alben G.
Fadel I, Mathemstics; William E. Goll, Academic Services; William Stoberl, Building
Services and Grounds; Donald R. Wilson.
Physiology.
The following received recognition for
30 years of service:
Bruno A. An:udi, Modern
LileralllrCS; James B. AUeson,l..aw; Se
Axelrod, Psychiatry; Carla M. Benz, ffice
of the President; John C. Boo~ Mana ment
Science and Systems; Lawrence A .
Cappiello, Health Behavioral Sciences;
Jeanne Catalano, Physiology; Richard
Cudeck, Housing Custodial Services; Jane
A. DiSalvo, Interdisciplinary Degree Pro-

l..anguagY§

grams-Social Sciences; Jerome Drost.
Lockwood Libiary; Raymond Federman.
English; Irving Feldman. English: Leslie
Fiedler, English.

Also: Jooepb K. Gong. ·stomatology and
Jnlmlisciplinaty Sciences; MiiCbell Harwitz,
&amp;:onomics; Ann S. Ha&amp;kell, English; Robert
W. HeUer, Educational Organization, Administration and Policy; Dennis A.
Henneman. Opentional Suppon Services;
Frank C . Jen, Finance and Managerial Economics; Verdia Jenkins, Cora P. Maloney
College; Kenneth F. Joyce, Law; Nancy A.
Kacala, Office of Senior Vice President;
John T. Keams, Philosophy; Kenneth M.
Kiser, Chemical Engineering; Elizabeth A.
Kopra, Sponsored Programs Services; Elizabeth Lawson, Microbiology; K. Nicholas
Leibovic, Biophysical Sciences; Duo Liang
Lin. Physics; An:rubald MacGillivray. Mathematics; Margaret H. MacGillivray, Pediatrics; Irving J. Massey, English; James Mq;ca,
Health Science Fabrication ; Eugene R.
Mindeii, Orthopaedics; Betty A. Moran. Student Health.
Also; Roben W. Mundier. University Print
and Mail Services; Neal Niesen. Microbiology; Sanford I. Nusbaum, Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery; Roben J. Olewnicz.ak.
Pathology; Martin J. Piersall, Residential
Custodial ; Alan M. Reynard, Pharmacology
and Toxicology; JAnice Rogacki , Office of
the Provost; Donald B. Rosenthal. Political

Science; Derek A. Sanders. Communica·

At reception In PIMident'a Realdence, from left: ~ F8del, W..... Stobelt,
Harold Blody, PIMident Grein«, Cllartes H. V. Ebert, William E. Gol, Donllld Wilson.
tions Disorders and Sciences; Frances M.
Sansone, Anatomical Sciences; Stuan D.
Scott. Anthropology; David T. Shaw, Electrical and Computer Engineering; Carl L.
Smith, Admini strati ve Computing; Alfred
M. Stein. Med icine: Eva Tarnoy. Pharmacology and Toxicology; Agnes J . Tiburzi.

Administrative Computing; Lorraine I.
Walerowicz, Grants and Contracts; Claude
E. Welch Jr.. Political Science; Jan G. W illiams. Music; Cilia Ping Yu. Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering; Patricia A. Zadner.
University Libraries: John M. Zahark in.
Physiology.

Internships to be required for MBA Management students
IIJIIIAI"'IAAII_._

. fessor in the Depanment of M.Ju.gement
Science and Systems and chairman of the
chool of Management MBA
Internship Advisory Commiuee: "Many stustudents will be required to endents arc choosing to seek an internship even
roll in an internship program
though they have done internships previously.
beginning in the {all semester
lbey know from e~perience the value that
of 1996. unless they ane in the
such extracurricular wort can have on their
registereil accounting program or have pre vieducation and their future employabilit y."
ous work experience that fulfills the requireEmployability is the central concern of the
menL
committee. whict, voted last year to pursue
'"This program is a major change for the
this reform. While Koglet points out that 37
School of Management and we' re very experoent of the students who completed interncited about i~ " says Geraldine Kogler. direcsllips in 1994 receivedjohofTers. she says that
tor of the program. "We're one of the few
mandatory internships should improve this
management schools in the country that has
number. "Most potential employers today
taken this imponant step."
expect thi s sort o f experience, and it is the
In the 1995-96 academic year the school
duty of the univ~ily to see that st ude nts get
anticipates a 94 percent increase over the
iL"
previous year in students applying for internKogler and Rao predict that the example
ships. Tllis figure is expected to go up another
which the program sets will con vince many
20 percent for 1996-97.
undergraduates to enroll in internships as
According to Hejamadi Rao, assistant prowell . They' ll get an idea about the area of
Reporter ContribUtor

S

business they' d like to pursue earliet in their
academic careers. and will be better candidates for graduate schools.
While the School of Management has al -

ready established numerous connections with

trouble expanding our lo st of business spon-

sors."
Kogler and Rao say that they currenUy
have more than 1200 bus inesses in Western
New York on their internship programs mail -

the business oommunity~n Western

inglisL This e:uensivelistallows themtofind

New York and around the coontry-lhrough
the existing internship program, these con-

sponsors tailored 10 the needs of the stUdent.
both in terms of educational specialty and
personal interesL
Kogler also points out that this iticrease in
internships will serve to educate the entire
graduate student body on tbe business real ities in Western New York. This, sbe hopes.

nections have shown a con iderable increase
because of the new mandatory policy. For the
fi rst time. the School of Management has
initiated a conscious marketing effon to in cruse the number and variety of sites available to students .

will create a greater interest in lhe region on

ogler has met wi th many local business
associations which. she says. are enthusiastic about worting with Management students. "A student intern brings an enthusiasm
and vigor to a busines&lt;S which can be of great
value:· says Kogler. " There ane always mu tua1 benefits. which is "''hy we have had no

the pan of these students as they enter the
work force.
·we have students from our internship
program who are now local businessmen and
women. calling us 10 ask about future interns
we might provide for them. They know what
the program did for them, and they ane eaget
to help a student in the same way."

K

FSEC
Continued from page 1

the full Senate esUiblishes procedures for
approving liberal ans components of undergraduate curricula.
Tbe plan reconstitutes the DUAS Curriculum Committee. whose primary func-

tion now is the approval of new course
offerings.
Control over the redesign of ans and
sciences requirements bas been at the bean
of a struggle between the administration and
the Faculty Senate ever since last year's
T riggle Commission repon made clear the
need for a revamping of undergraduate edu-

cation.
Conflicting opinions and budgetary con-

straints have scuttled two previous attempts
at uni v~itywide general education requirements.
Tbe FS EC also received a draft repon
from Political Science Professor Claude
Welch examining the state of public service
at UB.
Tbe report urged, among other things,
that a requirement for faculty to perform
public service be integrated into the ·:re-

wards system" of the university; namely.
when awarding tenure and promotions.
However, such a requirement would not
be universally welcome. Management Professor John Boot warned. " It would be very
difficuh to recommend to people in my depanment that they go out and do good thin&amp;•
10 get promoted."
Boot said that faculty who came to the

university with no expectation of having to
perform public service work would feel
tricked.
.. It is not our function to make the world
a better place," Boot said.
W illiam Cummings of the Graduate
School of Education explained pan of the
difficulty is that the public doesn't understand the value or the extent of research work

academicians do, nol to mention public service.
.. People say, 'You can teach only one or
two courses a week? How can this be? '
These are the kind of questions you
get...aod that's from your re18.tives,"
Cummi ngs said.

c

Committee on Arts Sets Open Hearing
Provoat' aAciHoc CommitteeontheArtshasplannedanopenhearingoneommittee
issues Friday. May 5 from II :30a.m.-l p.m. in the Screening RoomoftheCenterfor
the Arts (112 CFA).

The committee is interested in hearing UB faculty and srudent input on questions
such as:
• Is the way the arts units are organiz.ed preventing or helping productive activity?
• What potential is there for the arts at UB that is not now being realiz.ed?
• What financial resources exist that are not now being explored in suppon of the
ans at UB ?
• What developments in degree programs and other academic arrangements can be

---·net-

realized at UB given current resources?

Geocge l.eWle. Ergtislt,

:n; Clemens Hal
Am Binholz. Art Hislory,

6J6 Clemens Hall
Robert Ourbley, Directa,
202 Center fo" the Arts
Saul Em. Theatre &amp; Dance.
285 Altnri Nrra
Teny Gates. Music,
222 Bai'd Hal

Tytme Georgiou, An.

202 C'er1er fo" the Arts
Brian Henderson, Media
Study, Z31 Center b the Arts
Stephen Manes. Music,
222 Bai'd Hal
Ben Nelson, Antlvopology,
361 RiciYrood Quad

Ga!herile Norgren. Theatre
&amp;Donee.
285 Altnri Nrra
Jciene Ric:l&lt;ard. Art Hisa:Jry.
6J6 Clemens Hal
Lilda s.ri.r::h. Thealre &amp;
Donee, 2285 Alllmi Nrra
AI Harris F.. Art Galery,
Center lor the Arts

�-u.---.-•

3

:Sig change~ead for higher education, Greiner tells PSS
i&amp;)&gt;er education will be experiencing "big changes" over the
next five to I0 yean, and as
those clw&gt;ges occur, UB will
have to reposition iuelf within
the nation, the state and the SUNY system,
UB President William R. Greiner told members of the Professional Staff Senale 11 a
general membership meeting held April 20
in Jacobs Management Center.
"We are subject to a large extent to
disipvestment. and that'• true everywhere,"
Greiner said.
UB will need to deal with these changes
by being "self critical." he said. "You ask
youn;elf how you're doing things: who we
are, how we fuoction. l t'nk
h
if w5 that we
can come out of this very, very we ." Greiner
said.
.
While faculty have
ned to he
independent and to focus on their iodividual
researcb and careers, in the future their orientation may need to be rnon: global, and
focused as well on "the place wbeno they're
cooducting their career," Greiner said.
Likewise, "we'regoingtohave toreposi·
lion oun;elVes within the State of New Yort
and within SUNY," Greiner said. "Univer-

sity Centen need to be orpniud and managed differently within SUNY .•
Greiner also told the PSS of his plans for
filling the position ofunlvenity provost. He
said he bad come to the conclusion that the
post should be filled with a three-year internal appointment. And while he bad settled
on an appointee, Greiner stopped short of
naming the iodividual II the PSS meeting.
although be indicaled that the announcement would be made sbortly. (The appoint ment of 1bomas Headrick as provost was
announced the next day.)
"I think we do a lousy job with the problem of succession." Greiner told the PSS
members, noting that no place does it very
well. "'n the academic side, in particular,
we don't think in those terms. Every time
there's a vacancy in a job we have&gt; to go out
and do an intergalactic searcb." be said.
And all the universities in the country are
playing the same game or musical chairs.
" We're stealing eacb other's deans and vice
presidents," Greiner said.
"Nobody' s paying altention to thinking
about developing ldministration," the presi·
dent said. adding that " I think this institution
ought to think about it.... Every time we appoint a dean we need to be thinking about
their ability to step up."

In other busines•. tbe PSS announced
newly elccted offioen (see relllcd story) and
beard commiltee repons.
hair Rosalyn Willdntooremiodcd mem-

C

bers that the annual awards luncheon
will be beld at nooo May 17 in the Center for
Tomonow. "'ThiJ is a very. very special
occasion because people get awards from
their peen." Jbe said.
Keith Herms indicated that the PSS Qual ityofWork Life committee needs a chair and

Stokes to chair Profa

rnon: members. He also noted that be has
agreed to serve as chair of the Constitution
and ByLaws committee. and hopes that
within six mon
that commiltee will be
able to make "sic nifiCOIIt changes and amprovements 10 the bylaws "
WitkiDIOCl eoc:ount&amp;cd RJWOn to encou~ their collea&amp;ues to get in~ohed in
PSS. Notin&amp; that the budget crisis miJbt
make it more dif facult to get professional
staffin volvcd. Willcinson askcdcurrentsena·
ton; "to get people an your area to run "

••ional Staff Senate

has been eiec:led chaJr of the Professaonal Slalf Senate. and Keith
Herms and Maur_, KanaJey W!Mcontanue as VIC8 chair and seer~ . respectNely. of
the PSS. S1ckes succeeds Rosalyn Wilkanson, who served for the past ""' years
Stokes has served SinCe 1992 as d~ector of Multacultl.oal Alfar.; at U8 A U8
~ sance 1986, he prevaously was dorector of the Ronald E. MeN&amp;&lt; PostBaccalaureate Achievement Program, a senaor counselor ., the Educabonal ()pportunily Program, d•ector of the Special ServiCes PrOject and c:oordanator of Student
ServiCes. He holds B.A. '" psychology and comrnunaty mental health and an Ed M an
college counseling and student personnel trom LIB.
Herms is a senior prograrrmer analyst ., AdrrwlastratNe Services. ~ Facafi.
bes. A UB ~ SinCe 1986, he prevaously served as assostant dlrec1or of
AdminastraiMI SeMces He holds an M.BA from UB
Kanaley has served sonce 1989 as a senaor financaal aad advisor at UB She holds a
B A. In English and a B.S on Business AdministratiOn from UB

PROVOST
Continued from page 1

Greiner said that Headrick's appointment
cwnes after "a brief but inteose perio&lt;t of
analysis, consultation and conferencing
tbrougbout our university community. I have
ta11ccd. in some cases several times, with memberJ of the Council and some others among
UB's volunteer leadership; with the vicepresideniS, tbe deans, the Paculty Senate Executive
Commince. the Professional Staff Senate and
key staff in the provostal and vice presidential
areas; and with some senior colleagues in the
faculty. Virtuallyeveryooeofthoseconversations produced a quick and clear consensus that
UB' s best choice is 10 appoin1 from within. and
ro. a period continuing at least through the
1997-98 academic year.
to a key
cabinet-level appointment is admiliCdly unusual, but the times and challenges are clearly

This"'' ""*"'

unusual as well."

Headric1a: has held a wide, variety of academic andadrninistnrlive positions in his nearly
two decades at UB. He joined the faculty in
19'76asdeanoftheSchoolofLaw, holdingthat
position until 1985. when he returned to the
faculty as a full professor. He was co-director
of the Canada-U.S. Legal Sllldies Centre in the
law school from 1989-92.
He served as associa1e dean for academic
affairJ in the law school from 1992-94. with
prime responsibility for the school's recent
cwriculum revision. He was acting law dean
for the Fall 1994 semester while Dean Barry
Boyu was on sabbatical
Headricbcrvcdasi.ottrimdeanoftheFaculty
of Ans and l...ellr:rs in 1990 and chair of the
General Assembly ofthe UradcrgOO.aale College

Ollllesi--Yir ra.111

from 1987-89. He has been a member of the
..Uversity's "-'! Policy ~ Board sux:e
1989. He holds .. ~ as an adjllnct
pro{eJIOI' in the~ ofl\:llitical Sc:iena:.

In addition to his administraove dulleS.
Headrick has continued to teiCb law and other
gnoduate and undergnoduale rourses. He has
authored numerous boob and joumalll'ticles.
and de~ vercd papers 11 professional meetings.

or the past several months, he has been
Senior Counselor 10 the Presidetu. gaining
in that position a flltlband understanding of the
complex and sensitive nuances of our current
fiscal and political cona:ms." noted Greiner
Headrick was named a Distinguished Professor, the highest position in the State Univer·
sity of New York syotem. by the SUNY Board
or TNSieeS in 1993. Tbe appointment to that
rank ·•is just one index oftheeoormous respect.
admira!ioo and c:onfidence he has inspired in
virtually every quarter of our academic community." Greiner said.

His recent pub1ic:uions have dealt with aspects
of &amp;)obaJ capital markets.
Before ooming to UB. he served as vice
president for academic alfairJ at l.awreoa:
Uru versity and assistant ~ at the Stanford
Law School.
Headrick m:eivcd • bacbelor' . degree.
magna cwn lmMJL, from Franklin and Marshall
College; a bacbelor' s degree in politics from
Oxford University. where he was a Fulbrigbl
scbolar, a law degree from Yale Uni versity.
and a doc1orate in political science from
Stanford.

F

�_.,,

4

____ _

iKILTY OFFEI TilliTES TO PIIVDIT AARON BLOCH .
"His nwst important legacy is the spirit in which he taught us all... to
approach the institution which is both our job and our home. "
LrnOUGH I KNEW AARON BLOCH
only as an admini5trator, be was educated
as a chemical pbysiciSL He was a scientist
in the fullest sense-a man whose primary
drive was to understand. I think I never bad
a conversation with him of any length in
which his scientific training was not visible. We used to
laugb tl&gt;gether about the implications of tbermodynantico for
the administration of general education and about the form of
the equation determining the optimal undergraduate tuition.
He compared the mysteries of the overhead recovery on
research grants to the obscurities of quantum mechanics and
teased me about ooo-differentiabl5:sinlarities in the curve
of the QPA of freshmen versus their ~scores on ent:rance to
UB.
.
'The metaphor of administntion as ·eoce was centraJ not
just to Bloch's humor, as I experienced it. but to his whole
approach to being provost. He often said that administrative
problems Were more interesting than scientific problems. and
more difficult He attacked them with an intense inteiJectual
curiosity. rather than with a dri ve to exert his will. His lirst
impulse was always to demand data.. Often hi i questions
would lead to weeks of wori; to generate a table or a graph.
Typically he ..;as dissatisfied with the data presented. It did
n01 answer the question be had meant to ask. Do it over.
Once the graph was acceptable. he would study it eagerly.
grasp it easily. draw astonishing conclusions from it, and
fonnulate a new question demanding more data.
It was notorious that Bloch did not make deci sions easily.
I used to think he relished ambiguity. In retrospect. I think
tha1was a misunderstanding on my pan. I think now that be
practiced a proper scientific suspension of judgment until the
evidence dictated a conclusion. He used to insist that the
right decision would make itself in due time. To rn.ake a

A

decision prematurely, be tbougb~ was to risk malting the
wrong decision. The wrong decision, I suspoct be tbougbt.
was wone than no decision. To act in the absence of adequate evidence would have offeoded his scientifiC conscience. At the core of his penooality. be was IIIOIC
interest&lt;d in undemanding than in octing. He reiiJlliDcd the
scieotist. inwardly, long after be tool: on the role of ldministnuor.
His scientific conscience. I think. was pan of a compulsive fnuneworlc of high standards which be imposed rigidly
on himself and on those around him. On a few occasions.
when I managed to please him. be was wann in his praise.
Usually, however, be was not pleased. Above all, be hated
florid or imprecise~ · On several occasions he went over
memos I bad written and pointed out to me ways iu which
the prose could have been clearer or more effective. Hil
staodards for writing were so higb that he lavished effort on
routine memos as though they were sonnets. As a resuJt he
wrote few memos. He was rarely willing to sign documents
written by others. He was often unwilling even to read documents wrinen by others.

B

loch wanted clarity and precision not just in prose but
also in administration. He wanted the university to work
efficiently and justly. He told me more than ooce that my
fundamintal responsibility as viu provost was to undersLand
the undergraduate educational programs of the university "as
a system," and to find and remedy the ways in which that
system worked hadly. After I had been in office for a while.
he used to ask me questions. often questions of detail, about
that undergraduate system. If I did not know the answer. or
was unable 10 gi e a rationaJ account of the reasons why the
answer was what it was. he would blame me for not ha~ing
done my homework. He taught me an enormous amount.

larJely by forcins me to find out the answers to his questions, and by forcins me to try to understand the answers to
hil questions. My fundamentAl responsibility, according to
him. was to undenw&gt;d.
nderstanding was my primary responsibility. but not
my ooly responsibility. He insisted that. when the system seemed inefficient or unjust by his standanls. I was to
see to it that the system was fixed. Often I was unable to do
that, and 10 be often was impatient.
I think that Aaron Bloch was nor happy as an ldminiltra·
tor. 1 think be found the job frustrating and. on occasiPn.
boring. Especially toward the end of his years in Buffalo, he
often seemed irritable. But always he made jokes, often he
was affectionate, and every now and then a problem would
arise that seemed interesting to him. lben. with his mind
engaged. be would begin to have fun. His face grew ani mated. and he would ask questions. His first responsibility. 1n
his own eyes. and his grutest joy. was to understand.
I miss Aaron Bloch. I often seem to hear him say again.
with his c~stic warmth and impatience...Fix i ~
Goodman." He contributed much in his three years as provost. But I suggest that his lllOSl important legacy is the sp1rit
in which be taugbt us all. or tried to teach us all. to approach
the institution which is both our job and our home. We must
think about its strengths' and its weaknesses. about its possible future and how that futu~ can be realized. with me
same intelligence and objectivity we bring to our scbolarsh1p
Let us take pride when we do well. let us admit it freely
when we do badly-and in that case. as he would have said.
Jet us fix. iL

U

-D.VICe

Provost tor Undergradusre Education

"Aaron Bloch wanted to create a university w_here students ofall
backgrounds couklfeel the exhilaration of intellectual life. "

S

OME PEOPLE REMARKED that Aaron Bloch
approached administration not as an honorable
retreat from science, but as a next experiment.
He gathered data and tested hypotheses. Scien·
tific terminology enlivened hi s everyday speech:
he joked about the ..semi·permeable membrane"
between administration and governance and the ''decay
rate" of ne~· faculty . The revelations of these playful im·
ports was Aaron Bloch's aptitude for metaphor-that is, for

an.
Citizens of the modem university rarely imagine scie n·
tists in pursuit of beauty, or arti sts in pursuit of lrUth.
Stranger still will be the suggestion that we evaluate an
administrator on aeslhetic criteria. To be sure, we asked
that the Provost be accountable. effective. and conscien tious. and so he was. Yet Aaron Bloch marched to a
rhythm we had to strain to hear. and which we may do
well to remember. When interviewed by the FSEC in June
1992, he was asked about efficient management techniques. He replied that the efficient way to paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel would have been with a roller
brush.
For Aaron Bloch, there were projects worthy of time.
sacrifice. back-breaking effon, and public skepticism. He
was engrossed in such a project. neither by ambition nor by
power lust oor by the need to do good. but rather by an imperative to create. Often his an was apparent in the detail of
hi s words and gestures. and invariably. it was more our creativity than our admiration that he sought to eliciL It was 1.0

inspire our thought that he spoke so thoughtfully. as when he
clarified the faculty's public service mission: ..Our service is
a worldly expression of our scholarshi p." Aaron BJoch·s kind
gestures were as anful as his language. as though he thought
kindness important enough 10 warrant premeditation. Seeing
that we dismi ss admini strative assenions with contempt and
embrace hearsay as revelation. he often praised people by
enumerating their vi rtues in front of their friends, confident
~at the praise would be instan tl y reponed and taken as genu·
me .
Aaron Bloch· s grand design was mterrupted. but many of
its motifs had been performed in our hearing. Aaron Bloch
wanted to create a uni venity where smdents of an badegrounds could feel the exhilaration of intellectual life. where
kindness was not incompatible with the demand for excellence. and where all of us felt ownership of the institution
and responsibility for it and for each other. He wanted to
build community, not by cosmetic measures, but by the
painstaking creation of trust among the facult y. one colleague
at a time .

H

is design seemed beautiful for its coherence. fcc the orchestralion of its maoy themes and voices, for the intricacy of
the detail, and for the SIBggering improbability of its success.

Aaron Bloch undenoq_k not to create a university from
scratch, but 10 change a university beset with stubborn habits
and intraclllble problems, whose destiny depended on factors
hopelessly beyond his innuence. Most painful of all. he had
to confront hi s own ambivalence , for the role necessitated by

his destgn was not an Wy one for him to play. Thus like the
parents of small children. he would teach people not to need
him. and then be seized with regret He forced people to
confront their own fears. shovi ng lhem out of nests they had
overgrown, but he risked being associated more with the
fears than with the triumph over them. At the bean of his an
lay the parado~ical necessity of both making people feel
better and making them be better. To fail at either would
have been a betrayal , and 10 undertake both was to accepl a
painful isolation.

A

aron Bloch invested hi s creative energy in a project
unlikely to meet his high standards for success, and
persisted doggedly 81 a design whose beauty was not yet
evident to its intended beneficiaries. For the sheer courage of
that gamble be was exemplary. as for his honesty, his wit. his
energy, and his decency. We ntiss not ooly the uncommon
man be was. but the people be imagined we were, or could
become, and may yet be.
!last saw Aaroo Bloch on Saturday AprilS, 1995. in the
Atrium of the Center for the Ans. Prospective freshmen were
being honored with petits-fours and Vivaldi. When the
Atrium was nearly empty. Aaron wallted by. "I• the ball
over?" he inquired. "Can we go home?" He shook a few
hands, asked a few questions, then turned, and went home.
and was gone. Yes, the ball is over. But strains of his unfin·
ished melody will echo for years to come.

--

Modem Languali"S and LifiKarures

Memorial Service for Aaron Bloch to be Held May 2 In Slee Hall
A nwnoriaJ service lor Aaron N. Bloclt, former prll\IOSI of the UnlversiJy at
Buffalo, will be held at 3 p.m. oo Tuesday, MaY 2, Iii Slee Halloo the UB
North eainpus. A reception will follow In the Center for.the Arts Atrium.
Bloclt, 53, died unexpectedly on April B in his home in East Armerst.
Funeral services were held Apnl 11 In Chicago. Bloclt had served near1y
lhree years as US's chief academic ollicer. He also was a professor of
chemistry and physics.
.
The memorial service wiU include opening rernat1&lt;s by UB Presiden1
Wiliam R. GtWier and an opening prayer by Rabbi Shay E. Mintz. direclor
of the Hillel Ruldalion.
'
Speakels ... lnc:Uie l'8l8r A. Nic::l&lt;er8o!&gt;. Facully Sen8la chair; Robart J .
Wsgw. UB senior \lice pre&amp;ldenl; Uurfal A. Moore, \lice p!8ljdenl for Pub-

,_...Sciences

Jl
......
.:

Ic s.llice ll'd l:lrt81 Allalrs; .loeeJlb J. Tufariello, dean ol
and Mafh.
ernatics; l.ools J. Goldberg, dean ol Denial Medicine; Ksnnelh J. lelly, us senior \lice

provost; John D. Dearden, senior counselor 1o the president; Greiner.
Robert J. W811&lt;meister, 'Student Association president and Enid Bloch.
Music lor the service Wi1 be performed by tenor Gary E. Burgess, UB
associate professor of music, and organist Roland E. Martin. In addition,
Joame Castellani and Michel Andriaccio will perform a classical guitar

duet

Rev. Monslgnor J..Pa!ricl( Keleher, director, Catholic Campus Ministry, wiH P&lt;lMde the beoediclion.
Bloch is surviwd by his wife, the lamer Enid G&lt;eenberg; e daughter.
Sarah, of East Amherst two sons, Adlwn and Michael. bclllt of East
Armerat his molher, Judith Bloch of Chicago; and two slslers. Meny
Jones of Gladwin. Pa., and Janet Marfu of Miami Fla.
Memorial CCf1lributions can be made to the UB ~ N Bloch Memo~ FUtd, Oflice of Developrneot, Box_ 607400, University al Buflalo, ~. N.Y. 14200.

'

n

�-n.---.-•

5

College presidents t&lt;lj~ at ACFJNIP conference

T

WO WOMEN college p-esidenls.
Dclon:s E. Croas of Cbic:a&amp;o Slale
Univarity and Roac Marie lleltoo
of Nazamh College of Roc:bester,
will be keyDO(e speaken May ~ for the
moual confOI'ellee of tbe WNY Regiooal
CommiUeeoftbeAmericanColmcilooEducation/National Identification ProJf&amp;ID
(ACI!INIP). Croas wilhpeak 011 "Women of
the '90s: MUing lt 011 Our Own Terms."
Bestoo's topic is "'Ooosing l...eaderlbip."
leadenhipcoofc:renceforwomen, to
be beld at lbe CeDU:&lt; for Tomorrow, will
explore lbe topic, "''ransfonning lbe Orpnizati011: Creating a Culture for Inclusion
and Diversity."
The WNY ACFJNIP is an organiz.alion
devOied to the advancement of women in
higher education administration.
fereoce aims to build and stta~glben networla amoog panicipants and to provide
opportunities for leadenhip develop
em.., president of Cbicogo
liince

Tbe

1990. tKa a leaderlbip role iD issues of
IICOellforwommand

as a member of the
National Associalion of IDdepeadelll
Co!Jeses and Univenities, tbe N atioaaiCommiUeeOII
Campus Trends and
tbe Commiuioo 011

miDorilica.Sbeeamed
her B.A. from Seloo

Hall Univenity, a

_.sfromHofslra
UniwnilyandaPb.D.

iD higher educati011
adminiltralion from
the Univenity of

l.olanatiooa1 Educa-

Mictlipl.
Sheserves011lbeboardsoflbeAmaican
CoUDcil 011 Education, lbe College Board.
Campus Compacl and. the Auociati011 of
Black Women in Higher Educati011. She is
chair of tbe Dlinois Campus Compact for
Community Setvice and served as ~ident
oflbe N.Y. State Higher Education Services
Corp.
Beston; Nazamh president since 1984,
bas beld faculty and administrati011 posts
from New England to Australia. She serves

Tbe§J-

s-

lioooflbeAmaican
CoUDcil 011 Bducatioo. She received a
B.A. from SL Joseph ' s College. Maine; a
master' s from Boslon College and a Pb.D . in
English from the Univenity of Pittsburgh.
The program, wbicb begins at 8: 1~ a.m.,
includes tabletop discussions Oil topics taken
from "Dialogues for Diversity: Community
and Etbnicity 011 Campus."
Following the luncbeoo at 12:30 p.m., the
Sixth Annual Bernice Poss Award will be
~led to an outstanding woman in higher
education.
o
-

Grad students receive Excellence in Teaching Awards
IXTEEN AWARDS for excellence in teaching were presenled
to UB graduate students at a special ceremony April 7 in tbe Cenlbe Arts Screening Room. The awards
recogniud graduate students who have developed an excepti.o nal competence in teaching.
Among crittria for the award are teachi ng
sltills, mentorship, competency in eval uating student achievement and progress toward professional growth.
According to Leigh F. Kieffer. associate
dean of the Graduate School, this year"s
nominees were "an exceptional group. The
committee was delighted to discover. once
again, the wealth of teaching talent and creativity among the ranks of our graduate stu·
dents.'"

I

John J. Peradotto, DistiJ;puhed Teaching Professor, addressed the group on"''caching: Reward or PunishmenL"
The program included an introduction by
Joyce E. Sirianni, vice provost for graduate
education and dean of the Graduate School.
Musical presentatio ns were given by Jill
Shrewsbury and Maria Lucia Ramos, De·
partment of Music. A reception in the Atriud.
followed the ceremony.
The award winners, presented by deans
of their departments, are:
Faculty of Arts and utters: Natalie
Grinoeii.English; Hella Jacob. ModernLan·
guages and Literatures; Michael Klein , Mu·
sic; Thomas Loebel. English: Julia Miller.
English.
School of Health Re!Jaled Professions:
Carole Tucloer, Physical Therapy and Exer·

cise Science.
Faculty of Natural Scieoc:a and Mathematlca: Davin Milun. Computer Science;
Amy Rehnstrom, Bio logical Sciences.
School of Nursl.nc: Martha Bergren.
Nursing.
Faculty of Social Sciences: Richard
Newman. History.
Honorable mention awards. presenled by
Dean Sirianni, were given to: Faculty of Arts and uners: John
Harrigan, Media Studies: Anne McGrail.
Eng lish; Melinda Plastas, American Studieo: Dawn Smith-Sherwood. Modem Languages and Literatures ; Manin Spinelli.
English.
Faculty of Socia l Sciences: Co lleen
Sprecht. Psychology.

Sunrise series: Greiner to discuss changes facing UB
lly ARTIIUR P'AQE
News Bureau Staff

RESIDENT William R. Grei ner
will discuss changes that lie ahead
for the universi ty in light of state
budget c uts in a ··us at Sunrise"
breakfast program to he held from 7:30-9
a. m. on Wed nesday, May 3. in the Center for
Tomorrow o n the VB North Campus.
His talk will he entitled ""UB or Not Us .··
Severe reductions in state suppon fo r
SUN Y mean the 64-campus system and VB .

P

1995 ScholarAthlete Award
Presented
Shirley Moody received the 1995
Furnas Scholar-Athlete
Award at a Capen Hall
ceremony Apri112.
From left: Keith
Davidson, Richard
Barry, President
Greiner, Moody, her
stepfather, Kenneth
Paulin Jr.; her mother,
Celia Paulin; Joyce
Sirianni and Nelson
TOINI1Selld.

its most comprehensive campu s, can no
longer carry on business as usual . Bolh must
reexamine their missions and endeavors. UB
must begin to position itself in SUNY "s
inevitable resiiUcturi ng. changing its o wn
siiUctures in the proc;ess.
In the last program in the 1994-95 ··us at
S unrise" series. the university ' s 13th presi·
dent will discuss candidly the kinds of challenges that confront VB as it prepares to
enter the 21st century .
"UB at Sunrise'" is presented by the VB

Alumni Association and the Office of Co nferences and Special Events, in conj unction
wi th the Bee Group Newspapers. UB News
Bureau. Office o f Publications. Office o f
University Development and VB Vice President for Pu blic Service and Urban Affairs.
The price of the program. which will
include a full break.fast, is S8 for VB Alumni
Association members and S9 for all others.
For more infonnation. contacl the Alumni
Association at 829· 2608. Ticket orders must
he received by Monday. May I.
~

,..........,.

.

__ __
....·.,

-~--

-------·· 1
s
Ut:
• A conduit bender 1Wld allaoT-.-, WOI1h a
combined ...... of $«). raponading Apt 5 Iran THoi.

• A wonw1 repaABd Apt 5 that eameone
brol&lt;e inlo 8 c:aem..s Hal ollica 1Wld . .
IT10YBd 75 oonts Iran a desk a -.
• A P\blic Safely ollicar rasponding 1D an
rinal ~AprilS reporled that 8 staff
member had brouglt her dog inlo Crofts
Hall lor protection when leaW&gt;g the bulldrlg
81 night
• A wallet rontairWlg cash. Ctlldit cards 1Wld

personal papers was repcrtsd rt"lisoog April

6 from the men·s lod&lt;sr room in AILnwli
Arena.
• A wallet containing $80 in cash. credit
cards 1Wld personal papers was reported
missing April6 from the men·s lod&lt;sr room
in AILnwli Arena. According 1D P\blic Safely.
the lod&lt;sr and lock 51-.-J ro signs of
~• A Florida license plate was reported missing April 7 Iran a vehicle par1&lt;ed in the
SpaoJding Ia..

thai-

• Two women reported
they we-e
dOOg laLndry in~ Halt April 7.
someone lOOk lhiW '""'*-·
• A Richmond Quadrangle resodent reported a bird !lying around the room AprilS.
Officers assisted with gelling the bird out.
• A envelope containing personal papers
and credit card nt.mbers was reported
missing April tO from a desk- on
Clemens Hall.
• A wallet rontaJning cash. credit cards and
personal papers was repo&lt;ted missing April

tO from Knox Hall.
• A Capen Hall~ reponed Ap&lt;il II
!hal while he was out of town. h is vehicle.
containing a fax, celflJaf phone and compute&lt; equ1pment worth a combined value of

$6.225. was stolen
• AA eoght-foot wooden taddef was reponed
ITliSSiflQ Apnl 12 fr6m AiL&lt;mo Arena

GSEAA plans
July 31 trip to
Chautauqua
Institution
The Graduate School of Education
Alumn i Association is sponsor for an
excwsio n ro Chautauqua Institution
Jul y 3 1. with a presentation o n
··America: One People or Several."' by
Henry Lou is Gates Jr.. chair of AfroAmerican Studies, W.E.B. DuBois
Professor of Humanities and professor of Englis h at Harvard University.
Gates, a London c:onespundent for
T~ magazine before he received his
Ph.D. in history from Cambridge Univenity. has received natiooal recognition for his wort in African-American
literature. His publications include ~

Signifying Monkey: Toward a Theory of
Afro-"-ncan /..iterary Criticism. win ·
nero( an American Book Award; Loose
Canons: Noreson the Culture War:s,and
recently. Coloml People: A Memoir.
The event includes a presentation in
Olautauqua Amphitheater. lunch. a
panel discussion with Hugh G . I'O:Irie,
dean of the Graduale School of Educa·
lion as moderata". Panelists are Samuel
A- Alessi. assistant superinlendeot for
curriculum, Buffalo Public Schools;
Catherine Cornbleth, professor and assistant dean. GSE; John T. Curtin. U.S.
Dislrid Cowt Judge and Judy ScalesTrent, professor. UB Law Scbool.
Excursion cost is S3S, members.
$40, ooo-members. For infonnatioo.
cootact Graduate School of Education, 367 Baldy Hall, orcall645-249 1.

�.....,,._ .............
UUAIJ--

6

1beotre. Non11 ~ I p.m.
$4, SS, $6. CaD 645-ARTS.

.-n'-oll&amp;.

ell-

Twloa ..... Student Unioo The- · North Campus. II :30 p.m.
$2. $3..50. CaD 645-2957.

---oll&amp;.-

v.Mr ... , _ , _

c-tlaoti
Alldrioccio. ...... Sloe Coacat
11o11. Non11 Campus. I p.m. S2,
SS, S6, S&amp;. Call 645-ARTS .
.............. , .
'liCE
A1111i1Mo Ia New Ywt. J...,..

Olowocl:i't """""""' .....

.

lth Au.als..lor llala. Spoooorod by the Uoivenity Studall
Alumoi - . t Buffalo MatriotL
North Campll. Call 829-2ro8.

aioo ol ~· c - lortbc
Ant Bloct Bott 1beotre. North
I p.m. ss. $10. Call
64S-61911.

Camp~~.

A'I'IILEnCS

Div1q Mllllla'l Mod. AIIIIDDi
Alma Divi111 Well North Campus. TBA.

- A . - Mole Gym.
North Campus. 8 a.m.-10 p.m.

Homoly, D.D.S .. Homoly Markotiag
Hooday Inn. 100
Whildll..,. Road. Gnnd bland.
8 a.m.·S p.m. Call 876-2115.

Groui&gt;.

PEDIA'IIIIC----

Sexual Abuse, Robert M. Reece.
M.D.• Tufts Univ. School of
Medicane. Kinch AuditOOum.

8Lm.

~

The

Olina. 228 Natun.J Scteoccs &amp;
Ma!bematics Complex. North
Campus. 3:4S p.m. Call 64S·
2017.
IIIOt.OIIICAL SCIEIOCO

__
--~-,...~

_

................. LIIiiiiiiiP . .

_.._

,_

............. t. ........

~~.1M

, ........

b:s::ftstc**).OW

FAX...._ .. ~

DNA Rtpl.iatt.ioo ud GaKtic
Iastahilily in Caac:or Cells, Do-.
William Burhans. RPCl I 14
Hocbstener. North Campus.
4 p.m.
L08IC COLLCIQI,. ..
Af'I"UlH'Dl.,Gwea Burda.. l04

Oemeos. Nonh Campus.. 4 p.m.
Call 837-4068.

_,__

MA-nes COUOQIIIIIM
Somt Metric: Variations oo

THURSDAY

27

-

Some,...,.. !rom~
Prof. PauJ S. Muhly, Univ. of
Iowa. 103 Diefendorf. South

WUFIUISEIIIU
Scent or G ....o Popaya (subtitled). Student Union Theater.
North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2.
$3.50. Call 64S -29S7.

-

T QM: y.., Yeoon Later, Drew
Clmpbell, QUONO Corp.
Fanny's Restaurant. 3500
Sheridon Do-.. AmhcnL 8-9 Lm.
S40 per session: $120 for all four
sessions. Call645·3200.
CIUITAIIIIECII'AL

Studeot ltecila~ students or
Prof. Joanne: Castellani. Baird
Rccilal Hall. North Campus.
Nooo. Call 64S-ARTS.

FINANCUL-

Stuci&lt;Dl Lou Coua.oelinc lor
ProopectiY&lt; Gnodual&lt;s. 114
Wende Hall. Sooth Campus. 2
p.m. Cal1829-2197.

~­
lliodlaDiaol ud Moloaalar
~olaaExtn­

M..........,._

cdlular Motriz-Spoc:ilic:
Jahibilor:
nMP-3, Dr. Nuendn IGshoani.
CS08 Coole&lt;. North Campus. ,
3:30p.m.

-COIUICII••
s-New-ol
--....Prof.
o.._ Fen&amp;. Naojin&amp; Univ..

c:oNCSrT
Solo Lmprovi&lt;aliooal Cello,
Oavtd Darling. former member
or""' PaW Winter Conson.

Allen H.all. South Campus. 8
p.m. Call 886-S869 for conccn
tick.eu.

Admission i.s free: and open lO the

North Campus. 3-7 p.m.

~ISTIIY

Ca.o

CGU.OQUIUII

Electron Density in Crystalline
H PO from Quantum ChtmicC:...putat.ioo and Crystal·
loc"phlc Etrperim&lt;nt. Do-. Rob·

ca'

en Bks:sing. Hauplm3n-

Woodward Medical Research
North Campus 4 p m

BUFFALO I'MWIARMONIC
ORCtES11tA

Brahms' Vtolin Cooceno and
Cbarltslves' Symphony o. 4,
Maximiano Valdes. conductor.
with Elnw Oliveira. violin . 0-ntrr for the Arts Mainstagc . North

-AilE

Campus. 8 p.m. S20. $30. S3S.
Call 885-SOOO or 64S-ARTS.
TIIEATER
R.oc:.ky Bonvr Show. Pfetfer
Theater. 8 p.m. SIO. Sl2. SIS.
Call 839-8540.
TIIEAT111CALI'fJIRIRMAJIC£
Aotigoor ill Nrw York. Janusz.

sion of Antigone. Ctn~r for the
Arts Blacl: Box Theatre. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.OII. SS. S I0. Call
64S-6898.

-AilE

TIIEATER

Rocky Horror Sbow. Pfeifer

Thca~et.

8 p.m. $10. Sl2. SIS.
Call 839-8540.
TMEAT111CAL ~
Ant.iplx iD New York, Janusz
Gtowack.i •s contempOrary version of Antigone. Center for the
Arts Black Box Theatre. North
Campus. 8 p.m. SS. SIO. Call
64S-6898.

wu ... sanu

ll..ik&lt; It Like Tlud. Student
Unioo Theater. North Campus. 9
p.m. $2. $3.50. Call 64S-29S7.

North eam,.us. 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

UUP - T I V E

GloWJCk.i 's coottmponuy ver-

Cooc:on Hall North Campus.
8 p.m.

Brock Univ. and SUNY Genesco

Stuclent Lou Cou....W., lor
Prospecti.. Graduates. I()I
O'Brian. North Campus. 3:30
p.m. Call829-2197.

SUES
Cony W'dls, joomalist and
atrtbor. Center for the: Arts

_,S.a. D£GIIEIE RECITAL
C hristopber Swist, percussion,
student of Jan Will iams. Sler

Yori&lt;,ISoathent Ontario Uoderp:wduate l'llllooopby Coorer-

FINANCUL-

-SPUIIDIS

Ma.instage. North Campus. 8
p.m. SS. Sl2, SIS. For informa·
tion. caii64S-3414.

ter

....-n-w
6th Allllul w........ N...-

students. A complimentary deli
lunch will be provided. 280 Parle

WAll F11M IIDIIES
I Uke II Like Tb.aL Student
Umon Theater. North Campus
6o30 and 9 p.m. 52. S3.SO. Call
64S·29S1.

lotracel.lular Cakium Regulatioo in Ju""'&amp;lomerular Cells,
Do-. George Hajducwk. 108
Sherman. South C.mpw:. 8 a.m.

Stevea Smith, Or. Anlhony
Auerbach, Do-. Chan Juna. Center
for Tomorrow. North Campus.
8·4S a.m Call 829-2366 to reps-

~Open. UB Sl.adium.

Certiro&lt;att Program in
G&lt;rootoioci&lt;ai Nunin&amp;. S&lt;sMay II . 4:30-7:30 p.m. SIS. SSO
per session. Call 829-3291 for

IIIIAIIUATE
SpriG&amp; Symposia on Mem·
bnDe l'rot&lt;Uts. Do-. Richard

eoco. SUNY Buffalo. Canisius
Colkce. Buffalo State ColleJe.

--~

regi stBLioa mfonnat.uMl : registra-

North Campus. 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

Aiumai A.- Mole Gym.
NMb Campus. 8 Lm.· l 0 p.m.

I'm: and open to ""' public. Call
887-2566.

lnsututc:. l nc. 215 Natural Sct -

tion deadline is five working
days beftll"e each session.

Implants: ls It T"UDC! Cart E.
Misch. D.D.S .• Univ. of Pittsburgh Scbool of Dental Mcdo ·
cine. Holiday Inn. 100
Whit.ehaven Road. Gnt.nd Island
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Call 876-211S.
IUIUMIIFHJ ROCJM)TABL£

«al S..bstaaco Uoo: Lmpl.iatt.ioas ror Prnmtion.. Tom
DiWon. Plt.D .. Oregon Social
Leamilll Center. Eugene. (ft.
egon. Researcb Institute on Addictions 5eminar room. 1:30 p.m.

enccs &amp;. Mathemaucs Compkx

~CEJnER

IIEJfi'ALIIIEI*Q

F.&lt;:o1acY ol Eorly Adol&lt;s-

Campu•. 4 p.m. Cal1829·2144

slons run Thursdays through

~Opal. UB Stadium.

Epand. Do-. Phil Yeogle. Do-.

-MCIEIIKIII

....... tllldi!C__._

Alma Divin&amp; Well North Campus. TBA.

-·--liES
----=
. .plaaa: bIt Time! Poul

---..........................
........ ...

A'I'IILEnCS

Dlvlaa M - . Mat. AJamoi

ueOPOA-

MOZOU'l: The Mamace or
Fipro. Ga.sj Burgess, dirtttOJ.
Center for the Aru Drama

public. Call 887-9428 .
COMIIfTTEE
~

Alfirm~~lh't

Action Staad

lbf Assluh!
Kan:n

Benmein Cof•
r~

and pastnes
and an mfor-

'CT»N

A'I'IILEnCS

--

Dlvlaa Matttas Mod. Alumru

matioa Ulble will be available.
Studall Unioo 'lbeata. North
Campus. 10 Lm.-Noon.

-.ESDES
UB Jon r.-ble, Russell
Owem, dircdor. Baird Realal
H.all. North Ompus. 3 p.m. Call
64S-ARTS.

-AilE TIIEATEJI

--

ll«ky 8......- Sbow. pfeifer
Theater. 7 and 10 p.m. SID. 512.
SIS. Call 839-1540.

Adlvitlos HODOrioc LaiJe
Fiodloer, Samuel L Clemens
Profe&lt;sor or English and SUNY
Distingtrishcd Professor Emen·
tus. lecture by cultural critic

Alma DivinJ Well . North Cam·
put. TBA.
Aiumai A.- Mole Gym.
North Campus. la.m.-10 p.m

-I'DT

ActM11oo HODOrioc LaiJe
Fiodloer, Samuel L Clemefts
Pro!eucr ol Engljtb and SUNY
Diltia""shcd Professor Emen·
IUS. l...octul'e by ooveliR. poet and
playYo'riJbt lllunad Reed. I· 2
p.m.; mu.Dcal performances b)'
Kyung Hce 01! an !he Knrean
K.tyakum and the Rote Gatden.... 2:30-3:30 p.m. teadong by
poet AU... GintburJ. 4-S p.m
c:.:nt.. for !he Arts Mainslag&lt;
North Campus. Por lucl: picruc
follow~ in lhe Ccruc:r fOf the: An~
Atrium. wich music by Afro-.Pop
andBioc:eotric5.
- . &amp; . -IIECifAL

s...-... DiMarul, pltar,

"' t:tudent of Prof. Joanne

Casu:Uui. Baird Rec1ta1
-Hall. North Campus 3
p.m. Call 64S-ARTS.

-.ESEIIIU
Ull Sampboae Ea.... ble, Edwanl

�--- ___ A-Yodzimty,

...-.or. Sloe Coll-

catllall Nordl Campus. 5 p.m.
Coll 64s-ARTS.

u...-...- ~.llidwd

Myers. coacb:tor. Sloe Co11cat
Hall. Colnpus. 8 p.m. Call
64S.ARTS.
~~1-MUIICa

A.llli&amp;oM Ia New Yoct., Jam&amp;

Glowocli 'a cco~-­

n o- fi C)'dla Dl 1a

er-.wac--..-.M.D,
.. -

RPCL

Uoiv.
Campus. 12:30 p.m.

.,,.

Dr.-.-·

NOTICES

~AU.­
kbcRallolPome
n
. . -_
-··_
Atb- _
ticxlsfor..,__-.

may &lt;Xlllmlt the D;¥isioo ol Atb-

l«ica..., uru.....ny AldUwato

........ Dr. Anbur M.
Browo. MetroHatld! Medical

7

.... n •. - ....... - . - . .

-P-STAI'II'

...... them Ia COIIIIillol lafomwttioaaboui~Norrooa­

Coa&amp;at:t
- . . . . .......... Advioor, ill
362 Port Hall, 64S.3650. .... J62
or etU. 3S8. Deodline for m:eipl
.,..,.,._ d Sqlanla 26.

---I'IIIU
1995.

!be-==~-~..!~[);d'codorf-HaiiODibeSoulb
A ll . . wdcometojoia

lle---A
irol -..rt'-- -w-- --- -laTa-h-WITH
plioo of Auticoae. Con.., fur !he
AJU Bloclt Box Theatre. N Campba. 8 p.m. $5, $10. Call
645-a98.

M-ru

no,..,..,."'
8-

Ji'lpro, Gary

diroaor.

c.n.... for !he Arts Dnma Theatre. N - Campus. 8 p.m. $4,
$5, $6. Cali645-ARTS.

M 0 N D A Y

.
1
-

Ccota-.t06Cary. SoulhCam-

lioaf01111Swe~•tbc

..... 4 p.m. Call 829-2328.

Oftioe "'Alumoi Rdationl,
South Campua. ond naat be oompletod and roc:ci...t by May 5,
1995.

~­

Fibrillotioll,
Karmm
248
Coolz.Campus.
4:30
p.m. Call636-2828.
AW-

Law .U..UU ~··
llnl.u...J M..W.Caad
A - - · Hoa. looepll P.
Mc:Cartby,l&lt;lbo H. Steop,
Thomas Maliogo. Anlhooy I .

Colucci lr" I&gt;Wie McMahoo,
and Hon. Jolm I. t...Falce will be
booored. Hyatt Regency Bull'alo.

J ::.~:~.::'""

IN,.,_,.,.AL
Q X
-AND SC1EJIC£

.-.n'UCSucn.E

4
-

T........-iptiooal Cootn&gt;l ol
Adlpocyt&lt; J);ft'&lt;natiolioo, M.
Daniel Lane, Pll.D.. Johns

EDUCA'IlOII-

P rilldplcs ud Applicotioas of
Disloh-.d Air Flo&lt;atiotl, Dr
James K.. Edzwald. Univ. of
Massacbuscus at Amberu. 140
Kcl..... N - Campus. II a.m.

u:M:MEMIIINW SEMDMR
RNA E4itin&amp; Ia Trypooo- , Uuric Rood. 1348
Farbco-. South Campus. 4 p.m

Hopkins Urtiv. Butler Audito-

rium, Farber. Soulh Campm 4
p.m.

DISIII8LE--

UB Cboir, Harric:1 Simons. con-

ductor. Sloe Concen Hall. N Campus. 8 p.m. Caii645-ARTS .

TUESDA Y

~

-CCMmHU-

EDUCA'IlOII-

lotroducto&lt;y Pb)"ical Asses&lt;...,., ol th&lt; Adult. 6-9 p.m

$250. Call 829-3291 for regisltation information .
INIEIINEfLKl\111£
Silicoct SaaU Oil: A Look at
the lntormatioa Hicbway,
a;trord Stoll, UB ' 73. Center fD&lt;
the Arts Viewing Room 112
N - Campus. Lecture, 6:30
p.m.; reception 7 p.m. Fra: ad·
mission but reservations I"C'·
qu;red_Call829-2608.

WEDNESDAY

~-

W A T - SPEAliERS

UB or NoC UB, Pres. William R.

G~ncr.

Center for TQfllOn"'W.
N - Campus. 7:30-9 a.m. S9.
S8 membc:B. Call829-2608

-UIIucn.E
Tho Art ollllrill&amp; Ia lli&amp;ber
Edua1looa, Rooald H. Stdn. 210

Studeot Uruoo NMh Campus.
Noon Contact ProfessHloal Staff
Scrwe by mail or fax 645-2717
toanend.

-)()_.,otoemoewUbao

.-rioc"' food and fun lleP•rrin&amp;•6p.m.•lheRocti....
HotclOD~SlArof!le

D istributioa of Pllimooary
Capillary T......;tl'imeo, Dr.
Robcn Klocke. 108 Shennan.
Sout_!l Campus. 8 a.m.

-~

Certlf'oca.. Procram Ia

Gerontotop:al Nurslag. Ses·
sions run Thursdays through
May 11.4:30-7:30p.m. SI5, $50
per session. Call 829-3291 fc.
registration information; reg.i..sua-

lion deadline: is five working
days befcn each session.

E X H I B ITS
~~

Nathaniel Brockmann'1 Masler
of Fine Arts ttais c.dlibit re..Wns oo d;spt..y tluoogll May 4
;. the An Oepanment Gallery.
Gallery bourure Tuesdays. 10
a.m.-5 p.m.. Wedne5dlys-Fridays
10 a.m..-8 p.m.. and Saturdays II

a.m.-8 p..m. Adrian Piper's ex -

rumc -De&lt;:Nie woo You~­

wi.U be: up through May 7 at the
Cent&lt;r for the Ans Gallery (fi.-s~
floor) . Adnllssioo ;_,free; gallery
bours 8.R! I0:30 &amp;.m. -8 p.m.
Wednesday-Saturday and Nooo-5
p.m. Sunda)'. V.aor Burgia's
"The End" will show tluoogll
May 7 tn the Center for the Atu
Gallery (sccood floor). AdnUssion
os free: gatlcl)' hours are 10:.30
a.m.-8 p.m. W~y-Sanuday
and Noon-S p.m. Sunday. Call
645-@12 or645-6976. SiDJon
Unger's "'Red Vertical.. runs
tluoogll Dec. 31 ;. the uglltwell
Gallery: admission is free. Gallery hours are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
Wednesday-Saturday and Nooo-5
p.m. Sunday. Call645-@ 12.
J..,.. Dyett ExiUIMtioo Hall

for an ex-

worts oo

clisplay tluoogll May 19. Gallery
~ 9 a.m...-8 p.m. Monday. 9
a.m.-S p.m. Tuesday-Friday.
LI8HIWEU. QAUDY
Lydia llooa and Mottb&lt;w
Weio:steiD will exhibit their paint-

u. ""'

;ngs
ugll~well Gallery from
April 29 through !he summer of
1995. Romanian-bam Dona's
paintings ..entp()' out..

modcnUsm 's pauWt:hal baggOjlC
Mth he.- own lnnd of "hew obstr.tction... Ha paintings are oo
""'fllSI floor of !he uglltwdl.
Weinstein't paintings assauh
rnoclenUst notions of""' ~­
and ";deaa" and take the fonn of
rauc:ous.ICllliCIUneHtin. or

poetic lfWlilp o f " ' - from
anatomy. bilcttcultwe. RUnbaDd
and pop. !lis po;ntiop ... .. ""'
sccood floor o1 the u glndl

Campus.,_.-...-~

Aa..cialioe.

~ Lilla for ibe 1995 Summer Session~ an:: now due. Fcwms
we avaibbk • all I"CCC't'Ye dc:dcs

ol the ..,;,.,..;ry
Foculty
sbouJd ooae !he cleodlin&lt; for Fall
I 995 ~ Lilts ;, AuJUII I.

cn....mc will be bdd ""' rughl

Mlh all1n011ey nboed soil&gt;&amp; ctimctly to AIDS Coo-nmimiry Servica:; ticb:u are available •
CAC. Call 64 S.~75 or stop by
370 Studoor Uoioo. NMh Cam-

pus, for more informllion.
DllfTALSTUDY
P~ANTS~

UB derual.......-chcn acdc more
than tOO healthy adults. from 1870, w;th oom&lt; ,;gus ol gum (periodontal) ctisease ID help evallhe effect of a moutbrinse. a

IOOihpas1&lt;.
and • rrouth LZ.Cf on oral health. Patuc:ipants

~c:&amp;nDI

(third floor) is the site
hibit of recent student

""'Com-

Oa 5.-y, April30.
lllllllity A&lt;:tioa Coopl will cel-

slawUII-...-.....
-.n..--;alheOndu-

musl have some: s.ympeoms.. adt
as met gums and blc:cd.ine gums
.tier IOCllhbnasiW&gt;c; IIIey will
maU four brid visits &amp;o the
Scbool of Dental Medicine oo
South Campus. Upon complctK&gt;o
of""' SIUdy. coct. pon;cipont w;n
be rcimbutsc:d SI00 for rime and
tnlvel. Call829-3850 between 9
Ln\. and ol p.m. weetda)'L

-~­

n.: orr- of Fooancial Aid and

Studc:o1 Accounts ate having prt:-

sentat.ions on loan ooonseling for
pro511C&lt;tive grodualo and nonretuminc audenu on Thursd.y.
April27 at 2 p.m. in Room 114

Wende Hall and oo Friday. April
281113 :30 p.m. an Room 104
O'Brian Hall.

R.IIWDSRIII
CAPENIC:HOUIISHIP
The 1995 Women's Oub F1owu
Sale lO benefit the Gnrcc: Capen
Scbolar.tup has begun. Geraruums and 1mpa1tens ate avaiJ.abk
for the wnr price as last year
geraniums. 4-1/2" pou @ S 1.80
each or S20 per dozen. impattens.
6 plants per pack. S 1.50 per pack
or S IO fD&lt; 10" lwtg;ng pots. Call
839-0469 or 634-1727 to O&lt;der.
pid.:up orders at the CenlCf for

Tomom&gt;W on May 10. Put alittk'
color in your spring-but onier
by April28.
CGW"EIIIWM OPalS
The official opetUng of compe!l·

tioo for 1996-97 Fulbright Gnum
for grodualo SIUdy xadcmK
rldds and professtonaJ u-ainiog IR
the creative and performing aru as
slatod for May I. Fulbright Grants
are available for study or research; u-avd grants are available
10 seic:ctc:d coonuics to suppk:ment mainlenlnC:C awards from
other soura:s tlw do 001 provWie
funds for inlmwiona.l travel or to

u.

supplemenlthe appltcant' s: personal funds. The 1. w;mam
Fulbright Scbot-;p Boanl es-

tablishes ait.eria for the: selec·
tion or candk1ates and awards lb:
grants. Applitants must be: U.S .
citizens at the time of application
and ho&amp;d a bachdor's degree or its
equivalent by the beginning date
o( tht grant. Creative and per·
forming anists are noc 'required to
have a bachelor's deg=. but !hey

mUSI have four years of relevant
training or study. Candidates in
medicine must have an M.D. or
equivalent 111 the time of applica·
tion. All appttcanu must ha\·e
sutrtcieot profM:icncy in tht lan ·
guoge of !he host counuy. Full

grants provide round-trip intcmationaltrlvd, maintenance for the
tenure of tbe award. a research

allowance. and tuition waivers. if
appiK:able. TraYd gnnts provWie
round-trip international lniYe1lO
""'cououy when: ""' srudcnt .,;n

all .,-.

punuo: resc:ard!;
UJclude
bealtb and IC'cident insurance.

A&amp;-.:

8--

Womeo's Pro;c&lt;t. an
procrom otreftd by the Rae.d!
lnstiwa.e on Addiaions 1n Buffalo
offers f'n:e. pro{cuional help forwomen with Uooholic partnerS.
Women at least ts_.,of,.
who are livmg witb a problem
drinker and are tnleft:SUld can caJJ
887-2255. Calls are confodcntaal

-SliD

W~TO TOUII

The: Alumni A.uoc:iation WlU
sponsor a bus tour 10 the Strong
Museum and GcorJ&lt;

e-m..

tioust' in R.ochcsler May 24. Bus
will leave the Center for Tomorrow. North Camp-;~~.. at 8.30 un.
and 1UUm a1 3:30 p.m. Tnp C05lS
S35 per person. '1*%" hnuted 10
45 pcq&gt;le. Call 829-2608 for additional infonnabon or 10 n::gJSteJ

--.n' -

RALY- Fund-faising effom for the Uruversiry Oaoit's oona:rt cour of
Italy are under way and include a
Cassette tapes
tugllt;ghliog cboir perfonnances
from t972-92.are$12coch or
two for S20 and arc available al
lhe Bookslore or send checb
endcncd to UB Foundalioo:
Oxxr, to Harriet S1mons.""222:
Baud Hall. Tape 1 fea.n.tre5 music
from the 18th and 19th cali\Ulco
plus Omsunas. folk. and pop
seiectJOnS. Tape 2 includes RenatSSanet- sek:ction:s and ccmp:lS.I ·
uons from the 20m oenrury Call
64S-2964 for more mformauon

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�-ft·-is.-·--

'8

Iden~g ab~_#lfamilies

topic of Spring Clinfcal Days ·
IIJ' .._ IIAIIBI

Morning lecture sessiQns will deal with
News Bureau Staff
issues of abuse and ne~ at every age:
BUSE WITHIN the family and
• "LandmarksintheFJCldofOiildAbuse"the physician •s role in identifyStepben Laz.oritz, medico! dimctor of the
ing and treating will be the topic
Qlild Advococy Center 11 the Children's
of the 58th annual Spring OiniHospital of Wisconsin and assistant pmfescol Day, tn be held on Saturday, April 29, in
sor of pediatrics in the Medico! C'.oUege of
the BuffaloMmioU, 1340MillenportHighWiBCOnsin in Milwauk£e.
way in Amberst.
• "Post Tnwmatic Stress in Abused ChitSpring Clinicol Day, sponsored by the
dren and Adolescents-Susan V. McLeer,
UB Medical Alumni Association, is open to professor and cbairofpsycbia!Iy, UB Scbool
the public. A registration fee is cbarged to aU
of Medicioe and Biomedicol Sciences.
attendees except dues-paying mem~ of • "TbePbysician'sRoleastheOlildAdvothe association.
CalC"-Robert M. Reece.climctorofthe IDRiclwd D.Krugman.deanandpmfessor
stitute for Professional Education,
of pediatrics at_the Uni_versity of Colorado
=sachusetts Society for Prevention of
Scbool o f Medicine. will present the 1995
lty to Children and clinical professor of
Stoclctoo Kimball Memorial Lecture at the
· ·
Tufts U ·
' ty Sch 1 f
oooo luncheon. His topic will be ~--Medi=
ruvers•
oo o
Abuse Prevention: Is It Too Linle Too Laic?
•
''TheTnogedyThatMaybeOverlooked"Or Is lt the Light at the End of the TuruiCI'I"
Kathleeo G. Pharris, dimctor of SeniOr Day
From 198!-93,KrugmanservedasdirecCenter and Family Focus Program. Catholic
tor of the C. Henry Kempe National Center
Charities of Buffalo.
for the Prevention and Treatment of Child
• "Caught in the Middle: Partner AbuseAbuse and Neglect in Denver, in addition tn
Child Abust&gt;-Elizabeth A. el.abunta, ashis responsibilities at the University of Colosistant professor of internal medicine at the
rado. He also spent a year as a Robert Wood
University of Rochester School of Medicine
Johnson Health Policy FeUow at the Naand Dentistry.
0
tional Academy of Sciences.

.:'so..oo.

--·-

The Royals finished seventh among nine
teams at last weekend's Mid-Continent
Conference Championships in Youngstown, Ohio . .Troy State won the team competition defeating Eastern Illinois in the
championship match. UB's number one
seed, freshman Amy Cohen was selected
to the All-Conference team.
UB fell in the first round tn Valparaiso 51 with Cohen picking up a singles victory
and Susan Harloff and Connie Hernandez
combining to win their doubles match at
number three. The loss dropped the Royals to the loser's bracket where they wbnewashed Northeastern Illinois 5-0. The
Royals did riot lose a sat to the Golden
Eagles winning the match In convincing
faShion and moving to the next round .
The Royals dropped a heartbreaking 54 decision to Youngstown State in the
closest match of the tournament UB
picked up wins in the match from Stacey
Gargan and Melissa Martin in singles and
doubles victories by Wernlliie Arellano and
Jennffer Sheen as well as Harloff and
Hernandez. The Penguins got the decisive
point in the number one doubles match as
Santi Nail uri and Tarra Pavlosky defeated
UB's Cohen and Tonya Gabriel 9-7.

MEN'S'IENNIS
The Bulls picked up a much needed win
last week defeating Edinboro 7-{) in Pennsylvania. Tim Buch led the rally at number
five singles with his 4.0, 6-1 , 6-&lt;l decision
over Edinboro's Scott Russell. After dropping the first game of the second set.
Buch ran off 12 straight games tc:&gt; win the
match. Steve Oahm (number one) and
Mike Proulx (number two) also rebounded
from first set losses to take their matches
in three sets.

Altar a pair of matches against Niagara
early in the week. the Bulls prepare for the
Mid-Continent Conference Tournament in
Kansas City.

RIOI'ULL
Matt Dorsey's 35-yard interception return
highlighted a 50-19 Blue squad victory in
the annual Blue &amp; Whne football game at
UB Stadium that marked the end of spring
practice.
Under a modified scoring system used
lor the game, the defense (the Blue team)
earned points lor holding the offense to
three plays and out as well as sacks.
fumble recoveries and interceptions. The
olfensa (the Whne team) scored their
points in the usual way (touchdowns, field
goals, extra points).
Anthony Swan scored on a 15-yard
touchdown run to spar1&lt; the offense.
TRACI( AND FIELD
The Bulls and Royals competed at the
Kent State University Kinko's Invitational
Meet on Saturday. UB's women finished
5th of 13 schools with 35 points while the
men's team was 7th of 12 entrants with 36
points. Kent State's squads won both the
men's and women's meets.
UB 's Gretchen Welch finished second In
the 10,000 meters in 39:05.1 behind
Ashland's Angie Cas1elluci who finished •n
a track record 37:52. 1. Elizabeth Murphy
was filth lor the Royals in 4t : t 9. 7. Tara
Reimer's 18:23.7 in the 5.000 meters was
also good eoough lor a second place
showing.
On the men's side, the 4 x 400 meter
relay squad placed second with a time of
3 :22.6. Eric Fischlein earned a third place
finished in the 400 meters in 49.3 as Fumu
Gakodi was fifth in 49.8.

OBITUARIES

Robert Harnack, UB professor emeritus
A .........n.l MfVice will be held May 17
at 7:30p.m. in Unitarian Universalist Church
of Amherst, 6320 Main St., for Roben S.
Harnack. UB professor emeritus. who served
as chairman of the Department of Curriculum Developmenl and Instructional Media,
Faculty of Educational Studies. from 19661975 . Harnack. 76. died April 22 in Harris
Hill Nursing Facility.
A flight instructor at the Naval Air Station
in Pensacola, Fla., during World War ll.
Harnack later was head of all instructional
units on the West Coast.
He recei ved his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin in 1951 , then served as
cu rriculum coordinator for the Milwaukee
Public Schools.
Harnack joined the UB faculty in 1954
and established the School of Education' s
doctoral degree program in curriculum planning- and development. The prognun produced many nationally and internationally
recognized educational leaders. Eighty persons received their doctorales under ttis advisement before his retirement in 1984.
Harnack' s research in the use of computers for instruction brought the university in

1965 what was then the larges1 grant the
federal government bad awarded for researching the use of computers in education.
As director for UB · s Center for Curriculum
Planning. he obtained other federal and private funding forthecenter' s pioneering work
in computer-based curriculum planning.
A medical text he co-authored in 1961
was translated into many languages and used
by the U.N. to improvo medical education in
many countries. Harnack was an advocate
for democracy in education, gaining national
acclaim for hi s 1965 book. "The Teacher:
Decision Maker and Curriculum Planner."
He served as chainnan of the Supervision
Council of the National Association for Su-

pervision and Curriculum Development,
NEA , Washington D .C . and of the
professionalization comminee of the New
York State Association for Supervision and
Curriculum Devoloprnent, as well as holding memberships on the board of directors of
national, state and WNY associations for
Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Survivors include his wife, Dorothy; two
sons. Roben ofGrand Prairie, Texas and Wil~am of Lancaster. and four grandchildren. -

Male, Music, Music

Richard Kenline, physician, teacher

Top to bottom, the Center for the Arts
is alive with performance April 22 as
the UB MUSic Department presents
"Carmina Burana• by Carl Orff, spotfighting the Zodiaque Dance Company, UB Chorus, and,the UBuffalo.
Symphony conducted b.y Charles
Peltz. At right: Allen Sigel, professor
emeritus of music, plays clarinet in

Rldwrd J. K...llne, 74, a longtime physician in Buffalo who taught in the UB medical

lhe~.

and nursing schools. died April 16 in
Kenmore Mercy Hospital after a six-month
iJiness.
Kenline, a graduate of both the UB medical and phannacy schools, practiced internal
medicine for almost 50 years, until be became ill last year. He served as De Graff
Memo rial Hospital's chief o f staff and president of the medical staff in 1967.
A fellow of the American College of
I

Cbest Physicians, he was a member of the
8th District Medical Society and the Westem New York Internal Medical Association.
Survivors include his wife, Jane; a daughter, Barbara Thompson of Syracuse; four
Sons, Brian E. of New Philadelphia, Ohio:
Gary P. of the Town ofTonawanda; Richard
J. of Bowmansville and Mark A . of Atlanta:
two brothers, William of the Town of
Tonawanda and Paul of Raleigh, N.C.
Memorial setvices were held yesterday in
Parlcside LutberanOmn:h, WaUaceAvenue. :::;

�HAYES4&amp;
Continued from page 12

Fred Snell (!ben dean of "College A") ODd
about 40 of bis T As are here to meet with
you." but !"' refused ODd ordered them arrested. The faculty memben were takeo into
custody just moments after they were waroed
to leave. Frisch rocalledthal, "Reany,ldon't
think anyooe anticipated that we would actually be arrested for a peaceful demonstration."
At flTSt. they were charged with criminal
contempt of the Supreroe Court injunction
against demonstrations. Later, the district
attorney added charges of criminal trespass
and the university pursued civil contempt
charges. " During the course of those legal
proceedings, evidence was introduced that
tried to link the professors to the student
effort." Frisch recalled. " It became clear
they (the district attorney's office) were
worlcing on conspiracy charges, which cou ld
have carried I0 or more years in prison." The
cases wound through local and state Supreme courts for more than a year. At one
point. all45 were convicted and sentenced to

"After that incident and
the arrest, I became very
politicized against the
war. A few weeks later; I
drove all night with a
group of grailuate
students to go to a huge
protest in Washington. "
30 days in jail. Ultimately. though. all con·
victions were overturned.
N~wsw~~k

magazine. in its March 30.

1970 issue, called the troubles "The Buffalo War" and reprinted a Courier Express
photo of four UB professors behind bars.
The newsmagazine reported that student
sni pers had fired at least six riOe shots at
police, that three students were arrested for
bringing Molotov cocktails and bags of

rocks onto campus and that, in one brawl,
35 police oflicers and 22 st udents were

injured. Frisch said there were also inci·
dents of students being shot with "birdshot''
fired from what was believed to be an un·
marked police car.
Frisch said hi s reason for joining in the
action was simple. ''We would have to meet
on campus to decide whether to hold classes
under armed guards. It is impossible to conduct a university under a state of martial
law." Nightly clashes between students and
police were ••escalating tensions 10 the point
thatsomeonecouldget killed. We just thought
we needed to break that spiral," said Frisch.
lu ~t weeks later, on May 4, Frisch's worst
fears were borne o ut when national guardsmen shot and killed four students in the
infamous riots at Kent State University in
Ohio.

J

im Swan, now associate dean of the Faculty of Arts and Letters. was one of the
four professors featured in the Newswuk
photo. Swan. who had just come to UB from
Stanford University in California, was already a veteran of non-violent demonstrations. Howe .. er, he explained ...getting
arrested had been pan of the plan of the
original non-violent protest model, as implemented by Dr. Martin Luther King. However, by the late-'60s, most leaders of the
non-violent movement had concluded. as I
had, that it was foolish to get arrested. It's
counterproductive and it keeps you tied up in
court a long time.
"So what's the first thing I do when I get
to Buffalo? I get arrested," said Swan.

-ft·-----

Although disseDt wu DOl to Friacb,
Swan or Keil, ~to UB in I968 u a
"tax refutet" wb6 would DOl pay federal
we. because tbc government was SpcliiiO&lt;ing the war in Vietnam, it wu new to many
of tbc Hayes 45, Frisch rocalled. "lt wu a
unique mix of people. For many of them, this
wu the first 'political' thing they had ever
done."
Goodman did not consider bimaelf 'political.' In f1lcl. he recalls, bis real motivation
at the time wu the preservation of the university, DOl necessarily the ending of the
Vietnam War.
One night, Goodman recalled. be was
patrolling Hayes Hall with the faculty Peace
Patrol. "A student broke in ODd started smashing several glass cases that displayed awards
and such with a large stick. I wanted to try to
calm him down, but all I could think to ask
him was 'What are you doing?"'
"lilitrying to end the war in Vietnam."
the stu nt told Goodman, who found himself at · loss to undeBtand how smashing a
boo!&lt;
in Buffalo would end a war in
Indochina.
Goodman fell ·that the sit-in succeeded;
but in a perverse way. "We wanted to still the
hostilities between the students and the police. What we did was move the focus of the
community from that confrontation \0 the
o ne between the faculty and the administra·
lion."

ederman, also shown in the Newswuk
photo. said that. although at 41 he was
one of the oldest faculty involved, he had
never been political before. He only got
involved after; while driving his babysitter
home one evening, he saw a clash between
students and police brewing, so he stopped.
Political Science Professor Claude Welch
signaled to Federman to join the faculty
·•peace patrol," professors who were trying
to act as a human buffer between the police
and students. After only a few minutes,
Federman was struck over the head. he believes by the police.
" After that incident and the arrest. I becarne very politicized against the war," he
said. "A few weeks later, I drove all night
with a group of graduate students to go to a
huge protest in Washington."
The arrests, coming on a Sunday. al so
created quite a run on local grocery stores.
recalled Federman. In the days before A TM
machines, grocery stores were the only place
where you could cash checks on Sundays.
and then only up to SIOO. " Bail for the 45 of
us totaled $90,000," Federman explained.
"so. the whole city went a lit ecrazycashing
checks for us. "
Legal expenses began to mount. Eventually, their defense would cost hundreds of
thousands of dollars. A legal defense fund
was established for the 45 and contributions
came from ao.demia nationwide.
Several musically inclined members of
the faculty recorded and released "The Hayes
Hall Blues: 45 Revolutions per Minute" to
raise funds. Also, pre-&lt;:minent French philosopher Michele Foucault. now deceased .
was a visiting scholar at UB at the time. He
subsequently gave paid lectures at Harvard.
Yale and Brown univers ities, and had the
checks for his honoraria made out to the
Hayes 45 Legal Defense Fund.
Acting President Peter Regan , with whom
the45 were seeking to meet when arrested, is
now retired from a career with the Veterans'
Administration in Washington and lives in
Buffalo. He declined a Reporter request to
be interviewed for this story, saying only
that "ll was a long time ago and I was not
directly involved in it. so I would not care 10

ns
i1

r,\iH'liN COPIES WILL
iH OPEN OU~ING THE
i 7? 5 SU [flf,'\E~ SEr,iES TE ~ S
11ND WILL BE P~OVIDING THE
SAME GREAT COPY SERVICES.
INCLUDING
OUR NOTES ON FILE SERVICE

Faculty !
Help your students
by putting your notes
on file today !

TbeHayes45liveon in the annals of New
York law. When the Court of Appeals overturned tbeircoovictions in Juoe, 1971, its
decision effectively hanned injunctions
againsl uonamed persons. It WU I so-ailed
"John Doe Injunction" against civil disorder
that had fueled UB's student-police confrontations in the spring of 1970.
0

Located at
the UB Commons.
Watch for our Great
Weekly Specials !

....
~

F

comlDCllL''

~EMINDE~,

520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

rH£ u•JvttSin AT IUffALO AIID TH£ - DAVIS AUTO WOILIUCTIII£SHIP
FV.D CCHI'OIIWI TH£ IH4-IHS DISnJIGUISiffJ SI'UUIS Slll£5

Garry Wills
Thursday, April27, 1995
8 p.m. Center for the Arts
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_____ _
Grant will fund research to prevent
blindness in premature babies
.,~IIAUII

News Btxeau Stalf

UB RESEARCHER has received

a $436,000 tw&lt;&gt;-yeargrant funded
by the National Eye Institute to
investigate a treatment that could
p.event blindness in exuemely p.emature
babies.
Called retinopathy of p.ematurity, the

condition is characterized by excessive
growth of retinal blood vessels, which can
. . ...._,,....,, ............ , 1

1 urrwilljcliD.__ofodlerWeotem

=23 • ........

'Diey'U

New~
Day of c--.~
do
....,...,.._
. . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . dllldrenor
holdillt•tllill ...., "' r J"a ,_..,.....,..
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11le Utliled Way wiD ,._.
inla'elll of . , . _ , wilb lbe
- " of DOe of lbe 90 IIIIGpOfit
beallb llld .......... laYicel ......
cies in 1be Uniled Way funily.
To IUe put in lids impoo1ant
project llld 1D ~ fint11-' lbe
beiDa ~ by
SEPAJUIIited Way ~aeacies,
. . _ complele tbe form below
ud - . . it to Carole Smitb
l'etrQ. Day of Carina Coon1inator
for UB, 521 Capell Hall, North
Campus.

-'

Registration. continental breakfast and
send-off rally at Convention Center.

""'*

.N:30 .....
Travel to agency.
• 8:10 ..._.12:30 p.m. OR
8:10......:2:30p.m.
Worl&lt; at project, lunch and celebration at
project location.

VOLUNTEER SIGN UP

NAME: __________________________________

DEPARTMENT OR UNIT: _________________________
ADDR~: ----------------------------~---

PHONE OR FAX NUMBER:------------------------

*WIIIclt

=

o-do,... ,.,_to wort! with (piMM cMck lit ..... _ ,

People who are physically/
mentally challenged
_ Senior citizens

Preschool children
Children and youth
Anyone who needs help

cause vision degeneration and blindness .
Degree of prematurity. heredity. and !real·
ment of immature lungs with increased air
pressure and oxygen concentration in an
effon to force sufficient oxygen into the
bloodstream 11e risk focton for the disease.
About 27,000 exuemely low-we;ghr babies 11e born annually in the U.S., of which
approximately 20,250 survive and 11e at risk
of developing the condition .
James D. Reynolds, UB associate professor of ophthalmology and head of pediatric
ophthalmology at The Cbild!en •s Hospital
of Buffalo, will lead a three-&lt;:enter study to
detennine if !educing exposure of infants'
eyes to light can p.event .etinal destruction
in these babies.

The study will involve 220infonts weighing less tban 1,251 grams. or aboui 2-1/4
pounds. at binh. Half the patients will be
randomiud to wear goggles for four weeks
or until the infant re8che&gt; 31 weeks of gesutional age, whichever is longer..The eyes of
all infants will be examined throughout the

period to dete.-mine developmenl of
retinopathy.
"As tecbniques for managing smaller and
less mature p.e-term infants continue to improve. we expeet to see an increase in l:be
number of infants at risk for blindness,"
Reynolds said. " A p.eventive treattnent for
retinopathy ofp.ematurity that is safe. effective, easily applied and inexpensive is needed.
The.e is reason 10 believe that light !eduction may be an effective preventive ...
Cur.ent techniques for treating the disease and its effects. such as cryotherapy and
surgery, can be destrUctive and baven' t
proved to be fully effective in preserving
vision. Reynolds said.
UB and The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas each will
enroll half the patients. The University of
Texas Health Sci..,a: Center in Houston
will conduct the statistical analysis.

live radio broadcast at UB to focus
on personal finance, investing
"SoaBII au_,.,• a public radio program tbat focuses on personal finance and
investing, will be broadcast live from UB's Katbarine Cornell Theatre at II a.m.
Saturday, April 29. Doors open at 10:30 a.m.
The program. which will focus onlk question. "Can You Afford to Grow Old."
will feature Cbris Farrell, Businus Wuk economics editor and regular "Sound
Money" commentator; Charles Trzcinka. UB associate professor of finance and
managerial economics anddirectorofUB's PII.D. program in f\nance: and Cbarles
Head, TIAA-CREF senior individual consuiWlt.
The broadcast. which can be bean! on WNEO-AM 930 and will be .ebroadcast
at 8 a.m. Sunday, will be followed by a one-boor personal finance seminar. UB
employees who wish to attend the "Sound Money" broadcast must make reservations by 4 p.m. Friday. April28 by calling Shakiela Scepersaud at 1-800-842-2733
ext. 2329.
National broadcasts of "'Sound Money'" are made possible with funding from
TIAA-CREF. the leading pension system for higher education. For mo.e information. call 1-800-842-2776.

= Adults
*Whllt ....... o# ...... do,... , . , . , to . . (JIMMe cMck lit ..... _ ,
Outdoor work
Whatever ts needed

- Physical labor
Office work
Indoor work
Do you

.W.tobe _.......totha--

,.....~

•othw--. of

Yes

We
The Reporter is UB's convnunily newspaper and we want you to become
involved. Give us your comments on current topics relating to the university
and higher educatior. es well as on timely subjects in areas of your expertise. We welcome articles, Viewpoints, Letters to the Editor es well es news
items. Send materials to Christine VIdal, Reporter Editor, 136 Crofts HaU.
Buffalo N.Y. 14260.

No
wflllnC to ..va • a . _ laadar for UB _......... ColnC to
• .-Hie apncy?
Are you

- Yes

- No
Do you plan

to attend -

HOUSE FOR SALE
• Historical "Country
in the City" - Univenity

calabrdon _.....,., lit the Convention

Canter?
r Yes

Heights district.

• Covered front porch. Inlaw setup. • A must see. •
Completdy fmced-in yard.

~ No

Do you pnfe: to *Iva y - own-« do you plan to .... the 1M)' o#
Caotnc ba Jp wtalluo• _ , - t o the IIPftC)' , _ tha c:onv..tlon

One of the original &amp;nn

Canter?

houses in the area. Has
been nicely mainained.

0 Own Car
0 Day of Caring Transportation

• New roof &amp; bathroom;
glass block celhr windows;
copper plumbing. Apprmimarely 3/4 acre.

Do , _ , . , . , to wort!,_

0 8:30am. to 12:30 p .m. OR
0 8:30a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

'Note: selectioos cannot be guaranteed.

L------------------------~

BY APPOitf1'MINr ONLY
(716) 447-1111

�-&amp;7·----Facul
aUBillboar
............
...........
_.
~

UB alumnus Cllflord Stoll,
author of tbc bistscUer Tile
Codoo 's Egg and 1990 winner
of tbc UB Alumni Associalioo 's
Gea&lt;ge Thome A ward. will discuss his new book. Silieon SIIDU
Oil, at6:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 2
in tbc Center
for tbc Arts
Viewing
Room 112 on
UB's North

Campus.
In Silicon
SIIDUOil,
StoU takes a
ITOU.
provocative
look at the
information highwAy as it is, not
as it's promised to be, and questions where tbc Internet is leading
us. His talk wiU be followed by a
reception at 7 p.m.
1bere is oo charge for the
event; however. reservations are
required and space is limited. For
more information and to make
reservations, call the Alumni
Office at 829-2608 by Friday,
April28.

The UB Alumni Association will sponsor a bus tour
to tbc Strong Museum and
George Eastman House in Rochester on Wednesday, May 24.
These museums have achieved
national recognition for tbefr
wide range of historical. cultural.
scientific and multi -media art
displays.
The bus will leave the Center
for Tomorrow on the UB North
s at 8:30a.m. It will leave
R
ter to return to the Center
forT
w at 3:30 p.m.
cost of the trip is $35 .
Space is limited to 45 people.
For additional information or
to register, contact the Office of
Alumni Relations at 829-2608.

~Run

Third-year law students are
planning the F'lnit Annual
Ambulance Run, to take place
Sunday, May 7 at II :30 a.m.
from the Federal Coun House in
downtown Buffalo, to tbe Bison
basebaU .field.
The run wiU benefit
Childspace, a not-for-profit organization being fanned by several
third-year law students wbich will
provide a safe place for children
to visit their ooo&lt;ustodjaJ parenL
Tickets are $10, wbich include
an after-run tent party at the field,
a ticket to the Bisons game that
day and a prize drawing. Only
third-year law students can par·
ticipate in the run but others are
welcome to purchase tickets for
the drawing, game and party. For
more information, call 639-3968.

0

The sixth annual Western
New York/Southern
Ontario Undergraduate PhiiOS&lt;&gt;pby Conference will be held on
Saturday, April29 from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. in Room 2&amp;0 Par\: Hall.
North Campus.
Papers and commentaries will
be presented by undergraduate&gt;
from UB, Canisius College, Buffalo State College, Brock University and Geneseo State College.
Topics to be discussed include
wFriendship as a Violation of
Ouistian Morality," "Plato's
Proofs for the Immortality of the
Soul: An Interpretation," "'n
Pollock's Critique of Basic Beliefs," and wWit.al is Philosophy?"'
The conference is free and
open to the public. A complimentary deli lunch will be provided.
For more information, call 8779428.

tcooa.

College and bolds • - · .
degree from Columbia University
and a doctorate from The University of Michigan.

3§

annual Citation Banquet
in theSta~er
Golden Ball-

Ellc BlumM ,_.v..

two,.••~••_....

room.

Eric M. Bluman, an M.DJ
Ph.D. student in the laboratory of Michael Caligiuri at
Roswell Par\: Cancer Institute,
has received two awards for bis

research, " Low Dose ll..-2 Ex-

.... atlldeftta .....

Colony and the Virginia Center
for tbc Arts.
He bas traveled widely and has
taught and lectured in Tuttey u a
Fulbright fellow and in MalJiysia,
India, Greece and Hong
Wolf is a gnduate of Amhent

pands Natural Killer Cell Populations by Selective Prevention of
Apoptosis."
Bluman received fii'St honors
at the UB School of Med icine
and Biomedical Sciences' 14th
annual Student Research Forum
on Dec. 8 and as a resul~ was
invited to present his work ar the
Eastern Student Research Forum
beld at the University of Miami.
Miami, AL, where he received
the Rockefeller University
Award.

New Wolf novelle
book

~·tenth

0

A new novel by Howard
Wolf, professor of English
at UB, will be published next
month by the Academic Foundation of Delhi, lndiL The book,

Broadway
Serenade, is
Wolfs tenth
and the sixth
published by
Academic
Foundation.
Its punfilled narrative describes
the conflicts
and adventures of a Jewish American torn between family
loyalty, bis literary conceits and
the lively pursuit of his sexual
fancies.
Wolf is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir, ForgiV&lt;
I~ Fath~r: A M~moir of Changing G~Mrations, about bis life as
a liberal college professor and
father caught up in tbe cultural
upheaval of the 1960s.
Works in progress include a
book of travel essays and leuers
from Hong Kong. Wolf has published more than 200 literary and
cultural essays, short stories,
poems and social commentaries.
He is a niember of the PEN
American Center and has been a
fellow of both the Macdowell

-

Johnstone is a
leading au thority on the

t:conomics
and finance of

higher education.
Along "th Seymour H. Knox
Ill. president of the Board of
Directors of the Buffalo Fine Arts
Academy. Johnstone will be recognized for malting an impact in "not
only the community but on the
international level," according to
Wayne D. Wisbaum, banquet cochairman. The Council also will
recognize the contributions of the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
Tim Russert of "Meet the
Press" and the "Today" program
will give the main address at the
banquet.
Theurer~p

bolsters s c i - eel

0

The family of Ralph F.
Theurer, a UB alumnus.
has established an endowed
scholarship fund to benefit students pursuing degrees in chemistry in the Faculty of Natural
Sciences and Malhematics or
graduate degrees in science education in the Graduate School of

Education.
"The University a1 Buffalo is
grateful for this generous gift from
the Thew'er family." said Joseph
TufarieUo, dean of the Faculty of
Natural Sciences anctMatbematics.

I I I t

I l·'t &gt;'-..It

~I-

~

.

'

'1be;r support is import.aot to us as

we pcrpcawe R.1pb Thew'er's
belief in tbc importance d lOpquality lcieoce insuuaioo for
fllllR generations of sciaJiiJu and
ICieace~"

A Buffalo native. Tbeurer
received bis becbelor's degree in
cbemistry from UB in 1946, and
a master'' in science education in
19SO. He WOI1ced as a chemist
before beginning a career as a
science teacher at Seneca Vocational High School in 1948. 1n
I 962. be became assistant principal
of Boys VOCitiooaL and three
years later was named supervisor
of vocational education for the
Buffalo l'llblic Schools. He retired
in 1979 ~ 31 years of service to
the district. He died in 1991.

Clutllen fund to llkl
. . . . .. - t student
B~Cballen, a 1930
alumnus of UB. has established an undergraduate scholarship in the UB School of
Management with a bequest of
$200,000.
Challeo expn:ssed a desire to
help financiaUy needy students
with de:moostrated academic potential . His gill will est.ablisb an
eodowment and the inoorne will
provide partial tuition benefits to
one outstanding undergraduate
management student per year.
~ugh his senerous gift.
Bruce Challen wiiT be helping
talen~ students of business and
management wbo might not be
able to afford higher education."
said Frederick W. Winter, dean of
the UB School of ManagernenL
Gail Parl:inson. the school's
assistant dean for developmeoL
says Challen decided to set up the
scholarship~ receiving a call
from a UB student during UB 's
annual appeal in 1990. He was 82
al the time and indicaled that be
wished to OJime UB in his will.
The scholarship was crealed with a
bequest from Challen's estate
when he and his wife died in 1993.
Cballen, born and raised in
Buffalo. began bis career as a
distributor a1 Kraft Foods in Chicago after graduating from UB.
He was food of saying that he sold
tbc first pound of sliced cheese for
Kraft. He served in tbe U.S. Navy
in World War U. and lived in tbc
Vilginia Beach, Va., 111ea wh.ile
working for tbe U.S. Treasury. He
returned to Buffalo in the 1980s.

Wmgs
Gazette

..._fnlm .m

log on IOU.
Cllt1'US E...,.,
~the

)IQJ'

8IOCQ61I

llt1QS

~.

your Instant , _ source.
News feeds tan Reuter's encJ
the Asmcilled Press pi'OIIitje
you wlh racenl CXMngll d
'Top Wor1d News,. "NNItlonaa
News.· .,.... Yorl&lt; ,.,.,... or
"New Vorl&lt; Ctly , . _,. In N8
~ fall1ion there Is
also • 'Ueslyles" option ....
lhe .._,. on ,.,.,.,., IIIIIMsion. nuic. n encJ boc:*a.
(For 8lall'f1lle, . . . 11811W1)1
8llbls • ew wrb1g on~

ert McNinwa's IYIIIII10Wolthe
- Vlelrwn Will era.) The llt1QS

GaZI!IIIrlelsofalllnaiCiance,

buM-. and aporta IWIIclal.
Nallnly , . . , . predic&gt;
lions are lnc:Lded. You may

chooee 8ullalo. New von.
Slate, or worldwide foracBs.
Ard IOtllti"Mlllld • GllzeDe be
wilhol.t "The Clalllliads?" ~
08611 classified~ lor UB,

Weslem New Vorl&lt;, encJ be-

~~ ·

is eilhef WMIBd or lor sale but
especially compute!$ and.
oorftptaa- ~

The lMnQS Ga..- also
prcwides ready accea 10
online pt.Ciicationa pnxU:ed
here on campus lncludng
Gen&lt;Bme. lhe Pt.tllic Sefaly
NewsleOer.lntsdace. the Compuling &amp; lr*"mallon Tec:lvdogy Newslaaar; the .JI:&gt;.IMI d
~ Anlh'opoobgy. and lhe
Repot1sr.

Cal1lOfl -

are listed

as welln the M&gt;QS Gazllaa.

The "CCIrJ1)U8 e-u a.dar" 1\as a search fea!Ure
wJ-ich, lor~. lllowsyou
lo _ . lhe word "dlwlce" ID
team of upcoming parfor·
rnances. OCher UB calendln
In lhe Wklgs GaZI!Iflttl ilclude
lhoae ollhe Engfish Depenment Poetics f'rogt8m, the
WBFO._andii'Uiiceched\Jes,endWisUmi-lat~To access the Mtvs a.

IG'.,._,

DJtle!n»......

Students reminded to,....... to ..........
The ftnal deadline for students to register to graduate bas
been eneoded. Undergraduate candidates in the faculties
of Arts and Letters, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Social
Sciences and Special and Individualized Majors are urged fo
register oow to participate in University Commencernmt to be
beld a1 10 a.m. Sunday. May 14 in Alumni Arena.
Forms are available in the University Commencement Office, 537 Capen Hall, or at tbe Information Desk in tbc Student
Union on tbc North Campus or in Harriman Hall on tbc South
Campus.
Only students wbo are registered will be allowed to participate in CommencemenL For more information, call the Commencement Office at 645-34 I 4. Students wbo are scheduled
graduate with academic units other than those lisu.! above
should consult those depanments regarding specific registration
deadlines.

ptDir'fJt (subsiiiiAe b'
~mille IBMQCSpllllb!mJ

snd,

safl!lct

'MVS a.

-· Q'l"" m.n•-

IIWIILFa........_oo~

ging a!ID . . . . . . CDIIICt
""~ 0..... HIP

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- - - 00\!JnnoyMdU..
~Giodor.~

�25 years later, faculty recall tense days ofclashes,
confrontation, andpro]tssors behind bars
1970 photo: pollee In riot
helmets wield blly clubs as they guard Hayes Hall.
university had launched a
preemptive slrike agaiilst student protesters."
Another Hayes Hall 45
alum, a young Mathematics
professor. also laid the blame
for the crisis squarely at the
doorstep of the administration at the time. " It is difficult to imagine any
admini stration lhat could
have handled it worse," recalled Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education
Nicolas Goodm an. " Peter
Regan refused to communicate with us . Outgoing President Manin Meyerson was ,
as one fellow put it. guilty of
·aggravated hiding.' There
was a Iota) vacuum of leadership."
Now. lool..ing out from
inside the administration
building, Goodman has a
vivid recollection of thai

comp1ete breakdown in communications. and it's a conslant remindertohimofhow
nottodo his job. "A willing ness to talk to the people

In a downtoWD meetin&amp;, the Faculty Senale IIIIM&gt;d a
resolutioa coademning the police preoeoc:e Oft ca111f1US, and
rwrowly failed to approve a resoluti011 calling
Repn's
resigoali011.

r..-

"Doty called up Regan, he was in a daze.
He said, Fred Snell is here with his 40 TAs.
And they're standing on your carpets, sitting
at your table too,
It's just an awful situation, only one thing to
do.
Call the cops, stop playing games,
Throw them all in jail and give the papers their

names,
We got to show the city we ain 1afraid or
e:ffete,
I mean this whole p/oce would cnunble once you
stan Letting teachers meet. "
-

·n.. Hay.s""" · - ·

On Sunday, March 15. the Hayes45 mo\'ed into position.
"One of the guys in the group had an office in Hayes Hall, so
he had a l&lt;ey," recalled English Professor Raymond Federman.
one of only two full professors among the arrested .... We just
told the cops we had a meetong with the president and walked
right in.'' In Regan ' s office one of hie; v1ce presidents.
Edward Doty, greeled the group. ,
Regan. a medical school profes~r. had become acung
president in January. while outgoing President Meyerson
pursued natjonal academic credential from a downtown
Buffalo office while on terminal leave Doty told Regan
Continued on page 9

whose Jives or careers your

~

§
0

decisions influence is absolutely fundamental." declared Goodman.
Students had called a
"!;lrike," abstaining from
classes to protest the
university ' s support of defense-related research and
the presence of the ROTC on campus. Following several
serious incidents of war-related vtolence in late February and
early March, 1970. then-Acting UB President Peter Regan
requested that the Buffalo Police Department intervene.
More than 400 riot gear...clad officers stonned the South
Campus. then UB's principal campus. to quell the unresL
The state Supreme Court issued an inju nction prohibiting
further acts of civil disobedience.

~ ~----------------------------------~
llysnYECOX

Repo11er StaH

"I got the Peter Regan Hayes Ha/145 Blues,
I got the Peter Regan Hayes Hall office blues,
I was there /0 minutes, got 30 days to Lose. "
C-.oa of "Mayea 11811 Bluea• b y - Vldoua V-Ia.
ERE AT UB, as on campuses
throughout the country. the spring
of 1970 was wrought with tension.
The nation was deeply divided over
American involvement in Vietnam
and sri II stinging from the senseless
killings of leaders such as John and
Bobby Kennedy and Martin LtJther
King during the decade just ended. UB had achieved a
nationaJ reputatjon, ranking with other public institutions
like Berkeley and Kent State, as a hub of anti-war activism
among students.
Though it was 25 years ago, the memories are still
panicularly vivid for some current facully members whose
efforts toward a peaceful resolution of the issue of police
presence on campus landed them in jail.
' 'I'm a linle ashamed to say I haven ' t
been back to jail since," said Charles Keil ,
a musicologist and professor of American
Studies, "because there are some things
worth laying your body down for." On
March 15, 1970, Keil and 44 of his colleagues became known as the " Hayes 45,"
after they were cleaned from a sit-in at
Acting President Peter Regan 's oflice in
Hayes Hall, then the administration building on the South Campus, and arrested.
History Professor Michael Frisch said
that not since 16 Harvard professors were
arrested for protesting the Spanish-Amen- ,
can War had faculty engaging in peaceable
demonstration on their own campus been
jailed. A 27-year-old first-year history professor in 1970,
Frisch said that the police had been called onto campuses to
quiet disturbances before, but this was "the l'ust time a

H

Behind bars: From left, Jason Berge&lt;, Raymond

Federman, Charles Palethotpe, James Swan.

�</text>
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                    <text>........,....
.. 10
.,....•• . , . view,

TMkForce.on
Women

New director looks at
future of HSL

Noble reports to

For;.3

FSEC on continuing
work of Task

AlumniAw.rda

Udderty

UBAiumni
Association to honor
career, public service
accomplisnments.

et..llllnC
The winning speech
in recent
Toas1masters' contest

,.5
Aprol 20. 1995

Volum e 2 6. No 2 5

Plant compounds good for
humans, researcher finds
IIJ .__ 8AKEII

~on~ssenlial

::_) ondary.
dietary facand differentiation, and motility.
tors. However, this position may
•
They
oeedlobemodifiedinviewoflheir' can inhibit the degranulation of
o plant compotentially health-promoting acmast ceUs and hasophils, which in
pounds called tivities that have come ID be appre - tum inhibits the release of histacialed, at least in experimental
mine.
flavonoids
have the abil- settings. They display a ~- • - - - - . . . , - ablearrayofbiocbemical andpharThey can inhibit the activation and
ity to promote health in
macologicalactions, someofwhich
degranulation of oeulrophils. presuggest
that
ceruin
members
of
ventingtheproductioooffreeradihumans by modifying
lhis group of compounds may sigcals that damage cells.
the body's biologic renifican~y affect the fuoction of
· - -Theyhave
many human cells and tissues."
sponses?
been sbown 10 inhibit the activity
Aavonoids, of which more than
Elliott Middleton, Jr., professor
of number of viruses, including
4,000-exjst in nature. are responof IIIMicioe at UB, thinks the anpobo. herpes, RSV and parainnusible for the red, yeUow and orange
sweris yes. He has been investigatenza. and to inhibit some enzyme
ing the function of these of nowers. vegetables and fruit.
functions essential for the life of
and for the hues of autumn leaves.
low-molecular-weight, organic
the HTV virus.
They are involved in plant growth.
plant compounds for 16 years, and
sex determination. nitroaen fWlbas published a number or papero
havebeen shown- 10 InterfereThey
with
tion, respiration and ·
on the subject.
the growth of rumor cells. causing
phol
osyn
thesi
s
.
Middleton was inthem.
in
some
cases.
to
mature
into
They also protec t
vited to review his
a nonmalignant state. They also have
plants from insects
findings and summabeen sbown to inhibit the developand act as antioxirize other navonoid
ment of mammary cancer in rats.
dants and su nresearch April 12 at
screens.
• ....._a.,atft8CtlvtUM:Aathe annual meeting of
Given thi s broad
vonoids are thought to be the actbe Federation of
range of action in
tive agent in red wine responsible
American Societies of
plants. it is reasonfor the so-ealled French paradox .
Experimental Biolable to think they are
The polyphenols in red wine. also
ogy.
imponant
micro-nufound in red grape juice. are cred~·Aavonoids have
trients for humans as
ited with causi ng a lower heart existed in nature for
welL Middleton asdisease rate among Lhe French.
one billion years. so MIDDI£TDN
sens.
despite a diet high in saturated fat
clearly they are doing
Middleton says his own work
and cholesteroL
something very important for
and that of other reSearchers show
plants," Middleton says. "h may
Middleton is preparing the fa rst
flavonoids influence biochemical
literature review of studies dealing
be thai they are important for hu ac1ions
of
cells
in
several
ways:
with the effects of flavonoids on
mans too, but they haven ' t been
News Bureau Staff

studied sufficiently.
"AI present, navonoids-found

in fruits. vegetables. nuts. seeds.
stems. bark, flowers. tea and
wine-are considered to be sec-

• EllzJinlltlc -

Aavonoids
have been shown to influence enzyme systems associated with ceU
processes that result in specific activities, e.g .• secretion. cell division

-..ro -

gene functi on. and is continuing
hi s own flavono id research.
"We are going to be bearing a
lot more aOOul these compounds in
the nex1 five years ... be states.

Pataki nominates UB alumna to
serve on SUNY Board of Trustees

P

AMELAR.JACOBS.
a UB alumna and
former
English
teacher at Buffalo' s
Bennett High School,
has been nominated by Go v.
George Pataki to serve on the
SUNY Board of Trustees.
Jacobs is being nominated for
one of four seats that currently are
vacant;-atotal of eight seats will be
vacant by Juoe 30, including one
held by Nancy Nielsen. a Buffalo
internist and UB clinica1 assistant
professor.
Highly regarded for her involvement in community service. Jacobs
hold s a bachelor' s degree from

Rosary Hill College and a master's
degree from the University at Buffalo. Sbe presently serves as a member of the Board of Regents at
Canisius College and is past chair
and member of the Board of Trustees at Canisius High SchooL
Other nominees 10 the Board of
Trustees are:
Thomas Egan. managing director of Champlain Asset Management Ltd. and owner of Biltmore
Financial Analysis, Inc .• a New
Ybrk City consulting firm.
Edward F. Cox, partner in the
Jaw fltlll Donovan Leisure Newton
&amp; bvine, specializing in corporate
and finance law.

Candace DeRussy. a trustee or
Westchester Community College.
EdwardS. Nelson. a member of
the Committee on ProfessionaJ
Standards. Appellate Division.
Third Department of the New York
Stale Supreme Coun.
" It is a privilege to announce
these nom inations.'' said Gov .
Palaki .
"They are all uniquely qualified
to serve on the SUNY Board. committed 10 building a constructive
relationship with the State University and stand ready to fulfill my
vision of a vibrant public higher
education system in New York
State," Patalci said.
0

Mohammed calls for
religions to cooperate
•

nalicJaaly recopized ..,.._.a.e o/albltd ..... .....,.__
Is1am---aiJedfoeiocreasal~llldClCJCIIIC'fllbl...,..

all religious groups, ina speecboo UB's North Campu_lut week.
Imam WaJIIIOC Deen Molwnmed. religious le.derand spolceapersoo foe American Muslims tnd !be 100 of Nllioo of Islam
fOIIIIder Elijah Muhammad, told 1 aowd of more llwll,OOO at
UB ' s Center foe tbe Ans thai tbe secret ID eodins ...,W and
religious boslilitics IDIOOg Muslims, Jews and Olristians lies in
the recognition tha1 while tbcR may
bedisagl'eemooloo some issues, lhese
groups agRe 00 the most impooUnt
principle: thai there is one God aod
ooe God only.
"lbe most powerful way ID ease
racial and religious tensions is for all
of us 10 focus oo lbc fact lh.a! there is
one God, one creator," Molwnmed
. . . . . . . 1111111
said. "If everyone were to recognize
thai there is but one God, then I would
have lo admit lh.a! !be same God wbo
created me also created you. And that
therefore we are all equal."

...
.......
...,.

~~-- .. 1

-

ohammed, who broke from !be
Nation of Islam lo preach I
more moderate message, said racial
or religious separatism is not the
answer 10 this country's social problems. He said be believed thai
racism and prej~ stem from ignorance. ~I don't see people
bating each other because of lbc coloe of their skin." Mohammed
said. " I see people using the coloc of another' s slcin as an excuse
10 bale."
I
An author of several books oo Islam and the fUSI Muslim 10
deliver an invocation in the U.S . Senate, Mohammed said be is
coocerned about the deterioration in the family SlniCtUrC and the
loss of respect people have for themselves and others. He allributed these i.1.Irto agcoenlloss of respect foe God " If you don't
have the rigbl respect for God, you woo 't have the right respect foe
bis creations," be said.
"Your God is wba1 you fear the most; your God is wb.al. you
obey the l1lOSl," be said. Yet, many people today, Mohammed
added, act as though !bey obey only themseh-es oematerial vices.
like drugs, instead of God "Human beings know !bey ore special," be said. "For we can control our environment. It's easy 10
dip into the belieflhll mao is God But mao is not God. Man can
only be God's se&lt;Va!'L"
Mobammed's speecb. entitled "Where 'slbc Dartness. Where' s
the LicbtT' was ex&gt;-~ by Cora P. Maloney College and
tbe University at Buffalo.
0

M

(

�·2

-~---- -

Boyer refutes reports on
downsizing of law school

Report to FSEC urges study
of facilities to serve disabled
.,_u.a
ContributO&lt;

the ADA cove!l a much broader range of
physical and mental disabilities than many
people might realize-such as clinical &lt;!e.B NEEDS to conduct a compression, dyslexia and alcoholism.
prehensive study of its faci~­
At UB. 320 students have identified
ties to identify and renovate
those areas that amount to dis- · themselves as having a disabil\_ty to the
Office of Disabili ty Services this year.
crimination against disabled inaccording to the office's records. Twentydividuals in order to comply with the Amerisix percent of these students have some
cans with Disabilities Act. according to a
form of learni ng disability , compared to
report presented to the Faculty Senate Exthe
three percent who require use of a
ecutive Committee last Wednesday.

B LAW SCHOOL Delli Barry
Boy..- has refuted published reports that the law school will be
admitting few..- students or red~~eing its •iz.e thi• falL
Boy..- say• be was incorrectly quoted in
an April!? article in the student newspaper.
the Spec~rwrt , as uying that the incoming
fall class would be limited to 210 students.
"While downsizing has been discussed in
connection with im plementation of the new
curriculum." said Boy..-, "the current state
budget has meant that anydiscussi005oftbat
have been postponed for at least a year."
Boyer expects the incoming class to be
roughly the same size as recent classes; that
is, about 260 stu dents. Overall enrollment
for the school was projected byGov. Pataki's
proposed budget at 790 students, up from its
current level of 776. Enrollment projections
directly relate to the amount of tuition revenues the school is expected to generate.
Admitting fewer than the targeted number of

students would creat.e a serious financial
shortfall. Boyer explained.

Although full implementation of the law
school' • planned curricular revision i• on
hold, a number of elements of the plan will
be unveiled next year. The law scbool will
have an additiO&lt;tal three and one-half faculty. having hired four new professors (one
half-time profestor is retiring.),and the new
block-format calendar will make its debut.
rust-time law students will arrive three
weeks before returning students for an intensive introductOry course. Uppen:lass counes
wiD not begin until Sept. II. rust year stu·
dents will also have a special "bridge" course
during the tim three-week block of the spring
semester designed to b:ing together what
they have learned in a more practical man -

ner.
Also several coordinated concentrations.
in specialized fields like affordable housing
and community development and family law,
will become available in the fall. These concentrations will require more sequential
courses that build upon each other as weU as

intensive writing and research components
designed to bener prepare future law school
graduates for an ever-tightening legal market. said boyer.

Reporter

U

Uadet' \be AD""- \JB--\ilte al\

()(her .U.t.e

institutions-must ensure that the physical
construction or layout of its facilities does
not impede a disabled person's access to its
programs.
Any physical barriers denying a disabled
person access to a program must be removed
by July 26, 1995, Scott Danford. UB associate professor of Architecture, told the FSEC.
Yet to date, he said. no comprehensive study
has been done to indicate what facilities may
need modification.
A study is important. Danford added.
because it would allow the university to
identify areas that need anention and to prioritize whatever actions it must take. Currently, Danford said, there is no real policy to
organi ze UB's efforts to comply with the
ADA.
Danford said part of the problem is with
people's mistaken beliefs as to what constitutes a handicap. For instance, he said it's a
mi sconception that the average d isabled person is in a wheelchair. "Disability takes a lot
of different forms," he said, "and we tend to
g laringly ignore those that are not immediately noticeable."
Mel inda Saran. head of the UB Law
School's Education Law clinic, reported that

w b ee\ eb.a.ir.

In the SUNY system as a whole. learning
disabled students constitute the largest group
of disabled students (42 percent).

f tanford specifically cited twoofthe newer
Ubuildingson UB's North Campus-the
ru&gt;e Arts building and the Natural Sciences
building-as examples of facilities not in
compliance with the ADA .
..What was done in these buildings."
Danford said. "was against the law." He
noted that. among other things. these buildings have signs without raised lenering or
braille and are positioned so that they are
nearly impossible for visually impaired
people to read .

Ln a time of budgetary uncertainty .
Danford added. it is worth noting that the
cost of bringing a building into compliance with the ADA is far less when a

building is still in its design stage compared to when the building has already
been constructed.
The number of disabled students enrolled
in the SUN Y system has almost quadrupled
since 1980, according to SUNY's Central
Administration Office of Institutional Research.

Maiju..a seized in drug bust
IIJnnECOX
Reporter Staff

SalfetJ c:otlflac.ted one and one-half pounds of marijuana and more
than $2,000 in cash during a drug bust in the Ellicon Complex early Friday
morning. April?.
Two Pub~c Safety officell, Roy Guarino and Lori C intorino, were called to
Wilkeson Quadrangle in Ell icon around 3 a.m., according to Public Safety Director
John Greta. Two studenu, whose names have been withheld, were apprehended and

Pulollc

were issued appearance tick.et:s for possession of marijuanL However, further
investigation by the Public Safety offiCC!l resulted in the arrest oftwo non-students
on felony drug cbarges.
,
Barry Weisbaus, 18, was charged with second degree possession of marijuana
and second degree criminal trespass. Eric Cohen, 18, was charged with criminal sale
of marij uana and criminal trespass. The two, who are from New City in Rockland
County, were apprehended in Wi lkeson Quadrangle around 6 a.m.

Feminist scholar to lecture
on Thailand's sex trade
11J PATRICIA -VAN
News Bureau Staff
ORMER UB Ameri&lt;oan Studies
Professor Lillian S. Robinson, a
noted author. critic and Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State Univellity. will present a free public
lecture. "At Play in the Killing Fields: Sex

F

Tourism in Thailand." at 3:30p.m. on Monday, April 24. in 103 Clemens Hall on the
North Campus .
The lecture. which will he followed by an
informal reception. is sponsored by the UB
Women· s Studies Program and the Graduate
Group for Feminist Studies. Co-sponsors are
the Faculty of Arts and Lenell, the Graduate
Student Association and the American Swdies Graduate Club.
"Robinson is one of the most important
feminist thinkers and writers in the United
States today. and we're very fortunate to
have her hack at UB for even a brief time,"
said Ruth Meyerowitz, professor of American Studies and coordinator of the UB
Women's Studies Program.
"She's the author of ~ of important
scholarly articles and essays in academic journals and in such publications as 1M NaJion and
1M Women 's Revi~ of Boolcs." Meyerowitz
said. "She'salso wriaen several notable books,
is widely tl'llveled here and abroad, is a lucid
and learned cultural critic, and has many friends
and former colleagues here."
Among Robinson's current works in
progress is a book whose worl&lt;i ng title is
" Night Martel: Thailand in Post-Colonial
Sexual Cartographies." In it. she and coauthor Ryan Bishop examine the pertasive
sex industry oflbailand and the effect it has
on t:he li ves of a sizable number of Thai
women.
She points o ut that in 1bailand, which
rontracted with the U .S. government in 1967
to provide ...rest and recreation" services to
troops during the Vietnam War, sex· now
amounts to a $4-billion-a-year business.
Many Thai sex workers, who. according
to Bangkok police , number m ore than
500.000 in that city alone, are recruited from
rural fami~es under a kind of indentured
relationship. A Thai sociologist estimates
that l&gt;etween 6 .2-8.7 percent of 1bailand' s

female population between the ages of IS
and 34 is or has been employed in the sex
industry.

Robinson· s observations cover the nature
of 1bai sex bars, the role of imperialism '"
Bangkok's sex industry. the rampant AIDS
epidemic· in Thailand (where moi-e than I
million people are believed to be infected
already), official efforts to curtail child prostitution and the absence in contemporary

Thai cult~ of sex as envisioned by women.
Her previous books are "Class. Sex and
Culture;" "Monstrous Regiment: The Lad)
Night in Sixteenth-Century Epic," and
"Feminist Scholarship: Kindling in the
Groves of Academe." which she co-authored
with four UB faculty members with whom
she worked as a faculty member here from
1972-79. They are Elizabeth Kennedy, professor of American Studies; the late Gail
Kelly. professor of comparative education:
Carolyn Kollmeyer. associate professor of
philosophy, and Ellen DuBois, a former
member of the history and American Studies
faculties.

R

obinson holds a doctorate with distinction in comparative literatures from Co·
lumbia Univ=ity and has served as a visit-

ing scholar. visiting

professor or

distinguished fellow at a number of major
institutions, including the Univer.;ity of
T exas, Au st in; Stanford University;
Weliesley College, and the Unive11ity of
Paris.
She has received many academic honDil
and awards, including fellowships from the
American Council o f Learned Societies, the
Rockefeller Foundation. the National En·
dowment for the Humanities and the Mellon
Foundation.
Robinson has lectured widely throughout
the United States on topics related to mass

media and popular cu lture. literatu re.
women's studies and feminist criticism and
theory.
In addition to her book on the sex trade in
Thailand, she recently compiled and edited
three volumes of "Modern Woman Writers"
for the Library of Literary Criticism and is at
work on two other books, "In the Canon's
Mouth" and " Mixed Company: Race, Rape
and Representation."
C

�------for fall report, Noble tells FSEC

3

Task Force on Women aims

=.=-=

.f

ERNICE NOBLE told fellow
FSEC members April S tbal a
proposal to off&lt;r a year' • break
from the normal tenure cleadline
·bipregoantjuniorfocultymemben wu fiDe, h\tt tbal"it io about the otingieot proposal of this lOri that could bave been
brought for1h."
Noble, again. was acting as the
university's advocate for women on campus. Now, in fact. it is part ofberofficial role.
Noble co-chairs. along with Cora P.
Malobey College Master John Staley, the
UB Task Force on Women. The I 5-member
taSk force was founded more than a year ago
by President William R. Greiner to investigate and report back on the sllltus of women
in all walks of campus life. ~
Tbe wkforce was issued broad
es to
look into hiring and promotion
·ces and
pay equity, as well as qualitji o · e issues
such as public safety. child care and sexual
harassminL Several bearings already bave
been held with representatives from numerous university constituencies, and more forums are pla.nned. "We are really looking for
people who will tell us anything they want to
tell us about the Sllltus of women on campus
today." said Noble, "problems. solutions or
wbat'sjust fine." She and co-chair Staley also
welcome comments from individuals on any

relevant issue, Noble oddcd.
Pcnooalitieooothelllskforceranaefrom
"militant feminiou to really quite cooservalive," according to Noble, wbo adds tbal all,
including the four men on the task fon:e, are
very dedicated to the iuues involved. In
addition to gathering input from campus
representatives, the lllsk force has been col-

"The bottom line is that
women are very poorly
represented in the highest
levels of the universitythe fifth floor of Capen
HalL "

lecting similar reports from other AAU institutions across the country. The involved
process has meant that Noble and Staley
already have informed President Greiner it
would not be JlOI'o'bk to issue a report within
their fu:st year. as Le bad requested. "'There is
simply 100 much to this. We are aiming for
issuing a preliminary report next fall," said
Noble.

The preliminary prognosis. however, of
the slllte of women on campus io noc good,
Noble said. Promotional opportunitieo and
payequityiosuesweighheavilyootheminds
of the task force memben and people wbo
bave opoken at lllsk force bearings. According to Noble. many women experience great
frullntion wbeo they bump up against the
university' I "glasa ceiling."
"The bottom line," explained Noble. "i•
that women are very poorly represented in
the highest levels of the university-Uie fifth
floor of Capen Hall. We are very much
outnumbered and out of power."
Vivian Fernandez., acting associate ditector of personnel operations. lent statistical
credence to that notion. Testifying before
the wk force earlier this year, Fernandez
said that the higher up the UB chain of
command you look. the fewer women there

are.

A

ccording to Fernandez., 87 percent of
vice presidents. 69 percent of associate
vice presidents, 65 percent of assistant vice
presidentsand71 percentoffaculty are male.
Only among classified slllff do women outnumber men. 62 percent to 38 percent.
Tbe Promotions Review Board (PRB)
annually reviews between 60 and 70 dossiers for promotion to associate and full
professorships. One PRB member. Oral Pathology Professor Mirdul Neiders. told tbe

Engineering students w~Jarvis Scholarships
II)&lt; NATIIAN _ . _

News Bureau Staff

F

O UR UB st udents have been
awarded 1994 Gregory B. Jarvis
Memorial Scholarships by the UB
School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences. Tbe scholarship fund was established from individual and corporate gifts in
memory of Jarvis. a 1967 UB graduate in
electrical engineering who died in the 1986
Challenger space sh unle explosion.
The award has been given annually since
1987 to students with outstanding academic
records who "best exemplify the enthusiasm
Jarvis had for engineering." Prior to this
year. six of these S 1.000 scholarships have

been awarded.
This year's winners are:
Leun Wab (Iris) Lau, a junior majoring
in chemical engineering Vr'bo transferred to
UB from New York University in 1993. She
has been named to the Dean's List for two
semesters. is a member of the Golden Ke y
Honor Society and has been nominated to
the Tau Beta Pi engineering honor sociery.
Daniel J. Seide.r, a junior majoring in
civil engineering who transferred to UB from
Alfred University in 1993 . He is a member of
the Tau Beta Pi and Alpha Lambda Delta

engineering hon or societies. and the
Schussmeister's $Jc.j Club. He was named to
the Dean's List for the fall 1994 semester.

A

Keynote speaker is Suzanne Stensaas.
associate professor in the Department of
Pathology and Director of the Education
Center. Cornell University Medical College.
New York. A developer of medical education software, she created the Slice of Life
videodisc now in its sixth edition.
Other main speakers include:
Naomi Broering. director of the Biomedical Information Resources Center and the
Medical Center Librarian at the Dahlgren
Memorial Library. Georgetown University
Medical Center. Washington, D.C. Sbe is
principal investigator of the Georgetown
IAIMS Project supported by the National
Library of Medicine.
Mark Fosse. director of the School of
Medicine Library and Biomedical Communications Center at Washington University
in SL Louis. He is associate editor for medical informatics for the journal Acatkmic .

Medicine.
John Loonsk, assislllnt dean, School of

Medici ne , University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill . Active in medical informatics.
Loonsk created one of the first mandatory
courses in medi cal computing for medic.al
students.
Judith Ronald, associate professor and
coordinator of nursing informatics at the UB
School of Nursing. She has consulted on the
integration of health infonnatics into nursing curricula in the U. S .. Canada. Europe.
Scandinavia, and Australia.
Thomas Riemenschneider. vice provost

Blallllf~ SIWI

sc••M••

Grant J. Davidson, a junior majoring in
electrical engineering, is a member of Tau
Beta Pi. Eta Kappa Nu. Phi Eta Sigma national honor society. and a mentor to freshmen in the School ofEngineO:ringand Applied
Sciences' HOPE program. He is a member of
the&gt; Engineering Student Association and was
named to the Dean's List for four mesters.
Burt D. LaFountain. a junior maJoring
in mechanical engineering. LaFountain is a
member of Tau Beta Pi. the Engineering
Student Association and tbe Society of Automotive Engineers. He has received the
Grace Capen Memorial Scholarship. has been
named to the Dean· s List for five semesters.
and is in the University Honors Program.

Conference is planned on Health Informatics
CONFERENCE on "Health
Informatics: Integrating Re ·
sources for Education and Health
Care" is set for Friday. May 19
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Natural Sciences
Building on the North Campus. Conference
convenors are Amy Lyons, associate direcror, and Sharon Murphy, senior assistant
librarian. Health Sciences Library.

lllsk fon::e, at a meeting last mooth. tbal only
27 percent of candidates for promotion to
associate professonbip are female, as are
only 19 percent of full profeuor-&lt;:andidates.
Anocber PRB member spoculated that. in
pan. the problem was that many women
faculty left the university before reacbing
the teoure applicatioa procesa.
"'The doosien tbal get to PllB are quite
(gender) sanitized." said Noble. "There i•
Usttally no reference to marital owus. children or feminist activitieo by women candidates." Noble su peelS many fear tbal would
be viewed unfavorably by the male-&lt;lominated PRB
Even successes for women on campus
can been fleeting. said Noble. When the late
Provost Aaron Bloch told ber he was intercsted in establishing a vice-provostiallevel
office of women and minority affairs. she
recalls. "I was thrilled." Eventually. however. that office was broadened into the post
of vice provost for faculty developmen~
now occupied by William Fisher. Noble
fears its initial mission with respect to women
was watert:d down too much.
Recalling a 1970 Reporr.reditorial written
by then-Professor Ann Scoo. Noble said "The
Half Eaten Apple." was nationally recognized
as a cuning-&lt;&gt;dge analysis of the needs of
woml!n oo campus. "We were avant garde
then. .. recalled Noble, "but we are still in about
tbe same place today. 25 years later."

for health sciences and hospitals for the State
University of New York System Administration. He oversees the 269 health professions programs and 16.900 health professions
students in the SUNY system.
The conference is sponsored by tbe Conversations in the Disciplines Program of
SUNY with support from the University Libraries and the Health Sciences schools of

UB.
For more information. caJI Amy Lyons at
829-2483 .

Schedule is announced for
Fiedler Fest events
....., F..t, ho.;,ru,g Leslie Fiedler, Samuel L Clemens Professor of English
and SUNY Distinguished Professor Emeritus at UB, will be held April29 and 30 in
the Center for the Arts.
The sChedule for Fiedler Fest begins in the Center for the Arts Mainslllge, with
a lecture Saturday, April29 at 8 p.m. by cultural critic Camille Paglis.
On Sunday, April 30, novelist, poet and playwright lsbmael Reed will lecture
from 1-2 p.m.; from 2:30-3:30 p.m., musical performances will be presented by •
Kyung Hee Oh on the Korean kayakum and by tbe Rose Gardeners, Afro..CIIban
pen:ussion ensemble;
Poet Allen Ginsburg will give a reading Sunday from 4-5 p.m. A pol luck picnic
at S:JO p.m. on Sunday in the Atrium will follow the Ginsberg reading. M'!'ic will ·
be provided by Afio-Pop-.nd Biocentrics.
Tickets for tbe evenu, wblcb are free, or charge, may be obtained at the door.

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Neiders to host
Q &amp;A session
FridayonPRB
P8tltoloO Prof•- Mirzda (
Neiders. chair of the President's Review Board. will host a questionand-answer session about the PRB
for interested faculty on Friday, April
21 at 3 p.m . in Room 330 of the
Student Unjon.
The session. which will feature
some other members of the PRB as
welJ. was initiated this year in response to a request from the Faculty
Senate. It is open to any faculty member.
1be eleven-member PRB reviews
all candidates for promotion to nonqualified Associate or Full Professor
rank. and makes recommendations
to the administration. However, this
year' s deadlines for dossier submission have passed.
Applications for Full Professor
candidates were due.December I and
Associate Professor candidates were
due April 15. said Neiders.

�4

Architecture &amp; Planning begins
celebration of 25th anniversary

'Ill .VUSIIT AT IUffA10 Alit Till - DAVIS AUTO WOilJ IICTllllSMIP
fUll CO.SPOIISOI TMl I 9t4- I "S lllmii5IIISIID~~ lUllS

Garry Wills ....._
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Thursday, April27, 1995
8 p.m. Center for the Arts
Sddil. daoiisl,

1382 Hend AYe.

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HE UB SCHOOL of Archileeture
and Planning will celebrate its251b
anniversary Ibis monlb wilb a series
of eveniS se1 for April W-22. Festivities open 10nigbt wilb a gala black-tie
anniversary dinner 10 celebrate lbe founding
of lbe schooL lt will take place at 6:30p.m .
in lbe attium of lbe Albrigbt-Kno• Art Gallery. Former SUNY Olancellor D . Bruce
Johnstone will be lbe gueol speaker. 1be
dinner is sponsored by lbe Friends of lbe
School of Architecture and Planning, a volunteer organization that has for many years
provided s.ignificanl suppon for many of the
school's key educ.ational efforiS, including
the Architectural Library. annual lecture series. scholarships and student assistantships.
On Friday, April 21 , 1beschool'sAiumni
College will sponsor a lawn party and cookout-rain or shine-on the lawn of Crosby
Hall on the South Campus.lbe picnic. which
will begin at I p.m., is open to faculty. staff.
studeniS, alumni and Friends of the School.
"Atelier ' 95," an anniversary open house
and extensive ex.hibition of student work.
will be held from 3-7 p.m. on Saturday, April
22. in Crosby and Hayes halls on the South

Reporter Contnbutor

U

B'•FACULTY andstaffwillhave
a unique opponunity to Jearn how
to use tht: latest instructional tech·
nologies. thanks to a new SUNYwide program being offered thi s spring "
UB .

" New Dimensions in Teaching and Learn-

AS
A REMINDER,
MAKIN ' COPIES Will
BE OPEN DURING THE
1995 SUMMER SEMESTERS
AND W!ll BE PROVIDING THE
SAME GREAT COPY SERVICES.

Hall studios. the James Dyeu Exhibition
Hall (3rd floor of Hayes Hall) aod in Room
333 and lbe lobby of Hayes Hall.

This year. "Atelier" includes a reception
sponsored by the Friends of lbe School. A
silent auction of unique centelpieces designed by studeniS. faoculty and professional
staff will be beld at 6 p.m. in Hayes Hall.
1be celebration ends that evening "ith
lbe Beaux Arts Ball, lbe school's annual
spring soirr:e held in a building ofhiSIOric or
architectural significance. This year' s site is
the Larlcin Warehouse on Seneca Street. and
the lbeme is "Time Warp." Suggested dress is
formal attire O&lt;costumes reiBl&lt;d to the theme
~ ball

will feature hve mus ic, an elabo-

1 rate buffet and entertainment.
Bruno Freschi, dean of the school smce

I989, said that a quaner of a century is a YO&lt;)
short time for the UB School of Architecture
and Planning to have come to be a nationall)
recognized center in both disciplines.
"I am extraordinarily gratified to ha"e
shared in the school's recent history." he saJd.
"and the uoiv=ity should be proud as well to
have the benefit of the capability and talent of
thi s small bul highly motivated facult y ..

Seminar to be offered May 2 on
Teaching in a 'Smart' Classroom
•r -IHIEA

AddidonaJ suppon provided by the Cenrer fat the= Aru., Unwcn•l') Booio:lOU:s •nd WBFO 88.7 FM

Campus. 1be etdlibits will be in the Crosby

ing," developed by the SUNY Office for
Educational Technology. will offer a day long
semmar on '"Teaching in a ·sman' Classroom'' for faculty and staff at UB on Tuesday . May 2. I995.
~e seminar will focus on concepts underlymg a "sman classroom" and will fea ture presentations by SUNY faculty and staff
members who have experience working with
some of the latest advances in educational
technology. such as the electronic class·
room , virtual libraries and use of the information superhigh\\•ay.

The need to train faculty and staff o n the
use of the latest technology is growing. according 10 a recent report, because SUNY
investment in these technologies is n !-lm~
and because many of the problems student,
will face after they leave college "ill b&lt;
technological in narure. lbe report. j,repared
by the Strategic Planning Committee on
Developme.nl and Training. was subm1tted
last month to James Hall, SUNY Vice Chancellor for Educational Technology. There·
port called for additional training for facult )
and staff on the use of the latest educational
technologies and for the creation of a ne\\
office on every campus to oversee lhe de\·clopme.nl and mtroduction of these technolo-.
gies.
Thts workshop will run from 9:30a.m to
3:30p.m. and will cost SIO per person. To
regis ter or obtain more infonnation. call
Sharon Gallagher. 1be New Dimension;
Project Manager. at (315) 464-4114.

INCLUDING
OUR NOTES ON FILE SERVICE
BASKElBAU

Faculty!
Help your students
by putting your notes
on file today !

Located at
the US Commons.
Watch for our Great
Weekly Specials !

~~~

Makin' Cop_ies

. .A..
...
Tel 63~440
"V" Fax 63~468
520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

After successful seasons. both Untver·

Slly at Buffalo men 's basketball coach
nm Cohane and women's coach Sal
Buscaglia recetved contract extensions.
Terms were not disclosed .
Cohane. in just his second year at UB
led the club to an 18-10 record this past
season-lhemostVIctoriesbyaUBmen's
teamsmcethe 1964-65season. The club
advanced to the semifinals of the MidContinent Conference Tournament
Buscaglia has posted three 20-win
seasons tn the past four years as coach
of the Royals-the first time a men's or
women 's team has won 20 games tn a
smgle season Prtor to this year
Buscaglia's clubs had won three straighl
conferenc~ champtonships The Royals
were 20-8 In 1994-95. Buscaglia IS 92-4 7
In h1s f1ve years wtth UB
·

F001BAU.
The Bulls conclude the~r spring practice
schedule Saturday, April 22 with the annual Blue and White game at us Stadium.

Kickoff 1s at7 p .m. and adm1ss100 1S free

TRACK a FIELD
Ben Atkinson set a school record 1n the
decathlon. winning the event with 5,325
po1nts ~U'lhe Umversity at Buffalo Invitational meet last Saturday.

TENNIS
The weather has not been cooperative
th1s spnng raining out several Bulls and
Royals matches. US's April 12 home
contests vs. Niagara were postponed
due to the wet conditions at the Ellicott
Tennis Courts. The Bulls were snowed
out ol a match Friday at Mid-Conl1nen1
rival Youngstown State.
The Royals only managed one match
out of three scheduled dates in New
Vorl&lt; City defeating Wagner 9.0. Amy
Cohen scored a 6--0, 6-0win over Donna
Bailon at number one singles and combined with Tonya Gabriel to defeat Bollon
and Marianne Barone 6-1 . 6.0 at number one doubles. The Royals are 1·1 1n
dual matches this spring.

�5

--.~-----

Alumni Ass~iation to present awards May~
Nine distinguished alumni, leaders will be honored at dinner in Center for Tomorrow
IIAIIIM---~·­
HERET!RED cbainnan
ofKratt, Inc., and a busband and wife born in
WestemNewYodcwhohave
won inaemational acclaim fe&lt;
helping hundreds of thouSands of persecuted Jews. including survivon of Nazi
death camps, immigrale to
friendly counDies will be among those honored when lhe University at Buffalo Alumni
Association holds its annual awards dinner
May 9 al6 p.m. in lhe Center for Tomorrow.
Tickets for the 1995 Alumni Awards
Dinner are $25 and must be purchased:}"
advance from the UB Office of Alumni Relations at 829-2608.
Arthur W. Woelfie, Jr.• a 1943
graduate of UB and retired chairman of Kraft. Inc:. will receive the
Samuel P. Capen Award, the UB
Alumni Association's most presli·
gious award.
Gaynor and Florence S .
Jacobson. who earned bachelor's
degrees, social-work certifications
and master's degrees in social work.
from UB, will receive a Distinguished Alumni Award for their
work with Jewish immigrants.
Also to be honored are George RJU.
C.l..ee, who'will receive the Walter
P. Cooke Award to a non-alumnus;
Thomas F . Mich, who will receive the
Clifford C. Furnas Memorial Award. and
Robert J. Full, who will receive the George
W . Thorn Award. In addition to the
Jacohsons. Donald W. Fisher, Harley E. Aack
and Manha Herr will receive Distinguished
Alumni Awards, given in recognition of exceptional career accomplishments, community or university service, or research and
scholarly activity.
~ur w. w-lfle, Jr. , who earned a
bachelor's degree in management from UB
in 1943, recently gave UB Sl million to
create the Arthur W. Woelfie. Jr .. Athletic
Scholar.hip Fund. The fund provides support for UB student-athletes meeting specific academic standards, helping them prove
themselves in the classroom. as well as on
the playing field .
During hi s year. at UB.
Woelfle earned varsity leners
as a member of the football
team. A retired chairman of
Kraft. Inc .. and a longtime
friend of UB. Woelfle is a
member of the UB Board of
Visitor., a group of voluntary
advisors who work closely with
President William R. Greiner.
He received a UB Alumni Association Distinguished Alumni
Award in 1981.
Gay.-lllld~S.

.._.,.., each hold several
degrees from UB . Gaynor
Jacobson earned a bachelor's
degree and social-work certificate from UB in 1937 and a
master's degree in social work
from UB in 1941. Aorence
Jacobson also received a
bachelor's degree. certification in social work and
master's degree in social work
from UB. in 1934. 1935 and
1957. respectively.
A na t ive of Angola. ASHER
Gay nor Jacobson spe nt most
ofhis professional life confronting the legacy
of death and displacement created by the
Nazis during World War II. He worked for
30 year. to help hundreds of thousands of
Jews. a large number of them Holocaust

and the atudy of new cbemic:al n:actioos. The
holdet of 30 pa1a11s in the area of I)'Dibesis
of • variety of becteriaJ agCII1&amp;, incladin&amp;
pc:oic:illins.~aodll•• •·· ,.
be plays an eslelllial role in C01D1D01Cio1izi
the
effcru of a large group of~

........a.

Davis ........a. cbemists.
. . . . J• .,.... • natiooally recognized
teacher and researcher. and bead oflhe PolyPEDALLahonuory at. the UnivenityofCalifomia at. Berkeley, will receive the George
W. Tbom Award. The Tbom award i.s given

/

survivors, escape discrimination. torture and
death, and to negotiate their safe immigration
to new senlements in the U.S., Brazil. Turkey.
Israel and elsewhere. During much ofhis early
work, he was accorded the U.S. military title of
colonel, although a civilian. to give him leverage in his work. He was arrested and jailed as
a spy for a short time in Hungary.
He worked for the "American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee (JDC) in the 1940s
and early 1950s. overseeing the
organizati on's relief activities '" Italy.
Greece. Czechoslovakia and Hungary . He
was instrumental in keeping Czech borders
open to Jews neeing from Poland following
World War II. In 1953.he joined the Hebrew
Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS}as directorof
Latin American Operations. He was named
executive director in 1966 and later became
executi\•e vice president. a post
he held until retiring in 1981.
Jacobson's work has been
recognized internat io nall y
with many awards. including
the Fighters for Israel's Independence Citation and silver
pin award by the State oflsrael
for his work on the behalf of
Holocaust survivors. His ef·
forts as a key figure in the
network of political activists
who facilitated the mass mi·
gration of European Jews that
led to creation oflsrael in 1948
are highlighled in "1"he Secret
Alliance." by former New Yor*
Ti=s reporter Tad Szulc.
Jacobson. s paper. and artifacts from his !enure at HIAS
and the JDC are in the archives
oflhe U.S. HolocaustMemorial
Museum in Washington. D.C ..
in a collection chronicling the
clandestioe role of American
Jewish organizations in the res ·
cue and resettlement of Jews
from the 1940s to the present.
Florence J a cobson often
worked alongside her husband, putting So\ cial work concepts learned at UB into prac~
tice as she worked with immigrants. She
worked with the JDC in Czechoslovakia and
Hungary. setti ng up and suporvising social

services for thousands of Jews living in those
countries and to those who immigraled there.
She later worked as a social wodcer specializing in immigration cases wilh the Jewish
Social Service Ageney of Chicago; worked
with lhe H!AS in Rio de Janeiro in programs
involving resettlement of immigrants from
"Europe; taught and trained social work students at the L'Ecole d'Etudes Sociales in
Geneva. Switz.erland. and worked for the
New York City Department of Social Services from 1967 until retirill!l in 1980.
Gec~~C• C. Lee, dean of lhe UB School
of Engineering and Applied
Sciences and director of the
National Center for Eanbquake Engineering Research.
headquartered at UB. will receive the Walter P. Cooke
Award. This award is given to
non·alumni in recognition of
notable and meritorious con·
tributions inn uen cing the
growth and improvement of
the university .
distinguished and dedi ·
cated 34-year member of
the UB fatuity .Lee has guided
the growth of the School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences t&lt;lWard its current highly
regarded position in the world
research community.
In uumental in developing
pannerships between UB and
the industrial community, in·
eluding formation of the
Calspan-UB Research Center
and the Straaegie Partnership
for Industrial Resurgence
project. Lee also initiated the
Engineering Career Institute forundergradu" te engineering students. He has played a
major role in establishing the Buffak&gt;-area
Engineering Awareness for Minorities. Inc ..

A

(BEAM) program.

n.o-

F. Mlch, vice president of
chemical development at the Parke-Davis
Pharmaceutical Research Division of the
Warner-Lambert Company. will receive the
Clifford C. Furnas Memorial Award. The
award was established by Furnas· widoW.
Sparkle Furnas, to be given annually to a
graduate of the School of Engineering and
Applied Scienees or the Faculty of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics who has distinguished himself or henelf in a field of science, bringing honor to the university.
Mich. who received his doctorate frorri
UB in 1967.isoneofthemostprominentand
successful graduat.es of the Depanment of
Chemistry through his work in chemical
research in the synlhesis of natural products,
the preparation of unique strained sysaems

to UB graduales under the age of 40 in
recognition of therr outstanding national or
international contributions to their career
field or academic area. Full received a Presidential Young Investigator Award from the
National Science Foundation for bis wodc in
the f10ld of inlegrative biology. His researc:b
is at lhecuttingedgeandencornpasses many
areas of science and engineering.
The developer of lhe general model for
terresuial locomotioo, Full's work has provided much of the biologital inspiratioo for
the design of robots. A eonsultant to the
Office of Naval Research, he panicipates in
several robotic's groups developing vehicles
for space expedition. He received his
bachelor's (1979), master's ( 1982) and doctoral degrees (1984) from UB.
Dooulld W. Fleller, designated as New
York State paleontologist in 1955. will receive a Distinguished Alumni Award.
Fisher, who received bachelor's and
master's degrees from UB in 1944 and 1948,
respectively. redesigned the
New York St.ale Museum'•
e:dtibit halls and dioramas of
ancient marine eo vironments
through geological time .
Throughout a career ~voted
to developing an understandmgofthe geologyofNew York
State, he has maintained a high
level of scholarly activity while
providing outstanding public
and educational service.
tt.rvey E. FJ.dl, the
fourth president of Wright
Sl3t.e University. will receive
a Distinguished Alumni
Award. Aack, wbo received
his doctorate from the UB
Graduate School of Education
in 1971. also has held positions in academic administra·
tion at Rowan College of New
Jeney. SUNY Old Westbury
and Howard Univenity.
A past president of lhe
National Society of Allied
Health. Flack served as founding editor of its journal. He is
a former Middle States Association evaluator. and also serves as a consultant in the area of straaegic planning. An
accomplished musician and composer, F1acl:
has created more than 25 works for piano
and voice.
......._ Herr, a singer of inlemational
reputation who specializes in conaemporary
music. will receive a Distinguished Alumni
Award. Herr has participated in concerts.
operas and recordi.ngs in lhe United States,
Brazil, and Europe as a soloist and as a
member of sevwal chamber ensembles.
A resident of Braz.il, she is a professor of
voice at. the Univenity of Sao Paulo, where
she developed lhe curriculum and program
requirements for lhe bachelor's degree in
voice. In 1990. she earned the Sao Paulo
Critics' Association's "'Singer of lhe Year"
award. as well as high actlaim in the national
press.
S he received a bachelor of fine arts degree and a maslerof fme arts degree from UB
in 1977 and 1983, respectively.
0

�6

_,__
--

Priao, Arthur Axkn&gt;d Me.o-

--Al.

rialA....-d, aod tlloSaibblor's
Priu. 420 Capell. Nonh Campu&gt;.4 p.m.

St1ocloDt lllcilaL Students of
David Fuller and Roland Manm
Sic&lt; C........ Hall Nonh Campus. Noon. Free admi KWl Call
64S-ARTS.

Cortlllmle ........... lsi

~ Nllf1in&amp;. Sessions Na through May I I . 4:JO..
7:30p.m. SI S. $SO per oemoo.

Ridwd WraQIIwn. Horvllrd

is five wcxting day1 before each
scuion.

AIITS-AIIDa..

Enec:S·.,_Goals,
SodoUl . _ . . . Allocalioo:
n.. Etblal

Jamea UDdcnwul Nelson. The
Haslinp Center. Butler Auditorium. Sbmnoo. South Campus
S: I5-7:U p.m.
W.UFIUI_.
Oil tbt W• terfroeL Student
Union Theal..-. Nonh Campus.
6:30 p.m. S2. S3.50 Call
64S-2'1S7.
- A R E TMEATDI
Tho Ro&lt;ky Borror Show.
Preifer Theau:r. 8 p.m. $10. $12.

SIS . Caii839-8S40.
THEATWICAL I'EIIFOIIIIANCE
Antigone ia Nnr Yort.;.. Janusz
Glowacki"' contemporary ver.

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20

~UIONAJIY

Etrecu of EndotoJin on Vascular Smooth Must~ Dr James
Russell . 108 Shennan South
Campus. 8 a.m.
IIIC-IOLOQY SEMINAR

Clustrrinc or Gro""th Factor
R~tors on Ce:ll Sur1an:s. Dr
Nils Peterson. Dept. ofChemiS.-y,TI\e Univ. of Waotem
Ontario. 106 Ca&lt;y Hall South

Campus. Noon.

_,_

Ga&gt;&lt;nl ......_.,, with ChaOT of
Prosidcnfs Rev;cw lloart!. 330
Student Union. North Campus
3 p.m.

-

-~
E loctrocbomical tuJd

doa.s-Butct

s.p......

Approac:~

SlncJ&lt; Cdl Analysis. Dr

to
An

drew G Ewm&amp;. Penm;yh·ama
State Uruv 215 Natural Soencr'
&amp; Mathcmaucs Comple:A Nonh

Campu . 3:30pm.

Bic Ban&amp; Cclsmolocr- Suc:-

Challmcos- Dr

M"ochael Tumor. Fcnru
National Acc:elerator Lab 228
Naunl Sciences &amp; MathematiC'
Complex Nanit Campus
3:45pm.
WDIIIESOAYS AT 41"WS

Pbydcs, Prof. Silvao S.
Schwcber. Brandeis Umv. 228
Natural Sciences&amp;. Malhematia

Comph;.x. Nonh Campus. 3:4S
p.m. C.! I64S-2017 .

aiOUIIIICAL SCIENCES

S trurtun, Fuodioo and Engillftring oft he N eurospom ' "S.
Ribozyme, Dr. Rld: Colhns.
Univ of Toronto Dept. of Molecular and Med1cal GenetJCS.
114 Hochstener Nonh Campu s

IIA-tlCS COI.LOQUIUII
Simplt c •-atge-bras aDd Type
U_ Factors Arising from Fl"'ft
Products of Cycltc Groups.
Prof. Shuang Zhang. Unt' of

F R I DA Y

2l

I'EDIATWIC

QRAHD IIOUHOS
Ado~t PregnaMy and
Rdatftl Risks: tlw St..a1~ of th
Nation, James S. Marks. M.O.
M.P H • Olltttor. Olvasaon of
Reproductive Health, Cc:nttt (Of
Dtsc:asc Control Ktnch Audatonum . 8 am.

TOXICOLOGY,

NUTRIT10N SEIIIINAR
Nutritiona l Support of t htC ritically Ill Child, Dr Dav1d
M. Stcmhom. Children·, Hospt·
tal 306 Pan.cr South Campu~
4-5 p.m.

RMIIIAII

64S-2921.

casos and

PHYSICS~

CuK"mnatt 103 Otefendorf
Sooth Campus 4 p m

CEHnJI

oll'&lt;nd b)
tho M•ir Stria&amp; Qaan&lt;t:
Bayla Koya, violla. Slce Con
cen Holl. Ncnh Campus 2.30
p.m. Fftll" adm.iuiOfl Call

Campus. 8 p.m SS. SIO. Call
64S-6898.
W.U FIUI SERIES

Tho Cbancin&amp; M_elaphy&gt;i&lt;s of

4p.m

THURSDA Y

__

FIDal-.,.

PHYSICS CCIU.OQUIIIII

llrr. North Campus. 9 p m S2.
S3.SO Call64S-2'1S7

----,.... ..... e....,_

Univ. 261 Miflard FilliDOR:
Nonh Campus_ I p.m.

s.on of Antitooe- Center for the
AJU Blad: Box Theatn:. Nonh

IGllift&amp; Zoo. Student Umon The-

...............

U.B:OUIIIY~

Call82'1-32'1 1 for~&lt;Jitllntion
information; re&amp;istration deadline

-COU.OQI-

,.,

~--y

Tho E.olutlo.ary £aloe of
B omiaold ~ Pro1

STATISTICS DEPARTMENT
COUOQUIUM
Nonlinearity in Modeling a nd

Forecasting U.S. Econom ic
Time Series. Prof G C Ttao.
Um,·. ofChicago 106Cal)
South Campus. 4 p.m.
STUDEHT POETRY IIUDING

Winners ortbe Academy or
Am~ Pods C ontrst,
Friends of t he Univen;l) Libraries Undergraduate Poetry

~Al.HEALTM

SCIENCES 11ESU11CH

Ma.n.ganew rurotoxk:ity: Ox.idatin St.rHs or Apoptosis
Enluation w.ing C ultured R.at
Pheocbromoty1oma U l.ls
(l'CI2 Cells,, Jerom&lt; Roth.
Ph.D 125 Cary-Farber-Sherman
Add1t1on South Campus 8.30
EN~ENTAL

IENQIH&amp;JIIHQ AND SCIENCE
SEMIIIAII
Uneertaint) in W a trr Qualit)
Modtls: Applications (rom t..bt
G....., Bay Mass Balana
Study. Dr. Thomas Young.
Clartson Univ . 140 Ketter North

At-boro Poetry ReadiJ&gt;g.
Center fOf the Aru Screening
Room. Nonh Campus 4 p m
W .UfllMRIID
Kit~"&amp; Zoo. Student Unoon Th:
ater. Nonh Campus. 6:30 and 9
p.m. S2. S3.SO. Call 64S-2'1S7
IIAIIQAIIIET-FILMAND
VIDBIFES1TVA1.

Vid&lt;o Procram. Featured ano
the v1deos "'Porte'""' D'Ombrr'
Electnc."' -Lighting m the 7lh
Fire.- ''Copperwotbng tn tht
Santa 0ora d&lt;l Cob«.- -co.t·'
AlcattU..- Center for the An~
Sncen1ng Room- North Camp.h
7 p.m Free adnussaon Call
64S-6902.
IIUIW SntiHCI QUAIITET

fiul Con«rt. Sic&lt; Con=1
Hall. onh Campus. 8 p m S4 .
SS. SS. SIO uclet&gt; Cai164S·
2921
SUIIIIIEJIFAR£ TMEATDI

T"be Rocky Horror Sho"' .
Pfe1fer Theater. 8 p.m SIO. ~1.2 .

SIS. Call 839-8540
TIIEATIIICAL ~
Anlicone in Nf'W York. Janu v
Glowact.i'" contempor&amp;J) ver·
~on of Ant1gone. Center for the
Ans Blac.L. Box lbeatre North

Campus. 8 p m. SS. SIO Call
64S-6898.
W.U FILM SERIES
id &amp; Na.ncy. Student Umon
Theau:r. Nonh Campus. 11 .30
p.m. S:t 53.50 Caii645-2'1S7

Campul&gt;. 11 a.m.

OIIQAHR£CITA1.

Orpo Performance. Student
of David Fuller and Roland Martin. Slee Concert Hall . North

Campus. Noon. Frtt admi!&gt;MQil .
Caii 64S-2'121.
~RECITAL

Student RecitaL Studtnts of Jan
Williams and Anthon)' Mi randa.

Baird Recital Hall . Nonh Campus. Noon. Fret admission. Call

Choires
Carmlna Burana: orchestra, chorus, dancers

64S-ARTS.
WEDNESDAYSAT4PWS
Lecture: What Use Podry'!
Ouistian Prigent. 438 Clemens.

Nonh Campus. 12:30 p.m.
-LEClVR£

H istory of Nurse Anesthesia.
lra P. Gunn. Director of Resaon
##7 of the American A!&gt;SOC. of

Nurse Anesthetists. RPCI.
Ki rchhofer Room. 3 p.m Call

84S-S944.
PMOMACamcs SEIIIIIIAII
A Biophann~tk Dntg Qu..
si.fiCIItioo Sc.huM: lmplialions
for Drug Dis&lt;ovory and Drug
o...lopmen~ Dr. Gonloo L
Amidon, Prof. Owies R.
Walgreen Jr. CS08 Cooke. North

Campus. 3:30 p.m.

*

The UB Chorus. UBuffalo Symphony and Zodtaque Dance Co. will pn
forces wtth vocal solotsts and lhe Western New York Olndren 's Choir lo
presenl Carl Or1fs exut&gt;erant and ribald 1937 composilion. "Carmina
Burana.• whtch Wlll t&gt;e presented al 8 p .m,Saturday, Apnl 22 on lhe UB
Center for lhe Ans Ma1nstage
Adm1ss100 to thas excrt1ng tnlerd1sc1phnary presentauon of the 20th-century

classic IS free

Based on a collectoo of poems from an early 13th-century manuscnpl.
·carmtna Burana· was composed as a work of "lotal !healer· meant to engage lhe spectator

tn an exhilarating amalgam of wocd s. mus1c and movement
The te&gt;&lt;l follows a bantone protagontSt who leaves the walls of hos rronaslery. abandontng
hts sptntual call His jOUrney cames htm to taverns. lrysting P.laces and May Day celebrahons
where '1e learns that on lhe secular world (a world dominated by Emp ress Fortune, lhe mantpulator of the greal wheel of Fale), there ts no Dtvine salvahon no elemallove. Instead, he
find s lhe fleel tng love of Venus and the sodden cynicism of the ia~~em .
The stage will t&gt;e populated at hmes by an enhre village of d ancers, chndren and a chorus. while at other times. soloists Wtll take lhe stage alone--barhone Brian Zunner. who represenl s lhe searcher: soprano Martha Herr. depicting elusive love and comfort: and 1enor DaV&lt;d
MacAdam as lhe voice of the condemned.
For more information. call 64~59 .
I

�__ .... ____ _
PW\'811:1-

SATURDAY

eur,. ~ia.\Jnysol
---DolL"""- Alan

~~
·-

MMidlecoo. S)'nlalle Uoiv.

---..__
---Wloat

228 Naou.t Scicoc:es It Matbc:maticsCompleL Nonh Campox 3:4$ p.m.

~l'll&gt;*al._

-

., 1110 AdaiL 6-9 p.m.

S2SO. CaU 829-3291 focrqiJlr».
tioo informatioll.

USVBA a.p-ls. AIWllDi
Arona MaiD Gym. Nonh Campus. 8 un.-11 p.m.

__,__K-,

VlllUYUU.. , _ -

Advocau:t. 7-9 p.m. CaU
64S-612S for,.cistratioct informatioa.

11th AlliiiW Ooaroot. Spoo·
50I&lt;d by lhe u,;....uy Student
AIWllDi Boord. St. Rita's Uric.
Nonh Campus. 9 a.m.-4 p.m:
Call 829-2608.

Performa 636
and CDROM Drive'~·~

~South Campus.

Students Assoc::i.ltion. SS. S8.
CaU 829-4497.
-UETIIEATEJI
Tbo Rocky liorTor Sbow.
Preifer Tbcatcr. 7 and 10 p.m.
SIO. Sl2. SIS. Caii839-8S40.

Performa 6115CD
• 8MB RAM • 350MB Hard Dnw •

STMID-~
Carmiaa llurana, Owles P&lt;llz.
conductor, Lioda Swiniuch. cho-n::ogr.pher; features UB OJorus,
Harric:1 Simons. d.irt!clor,
UBuffalo Symphooy. 0w1es
Peltz. director. Center for the
Ans Maiasta.,oe. North Campus.
8 p.m. Admission is free. Call
645·2921.
TIIEAntiCAL -

E

AntigoD&lt; inN., Vori&lt;, Janusz
Glowacki's conlenlpOntY version of Antigone. Center for the:
Arts Black Box 1beatre. North
Campus. 8 p.m. SS. SIO. Call
645-6898.

WEDNESDAY

-Point.-....-....
MONDAY

_,
~4 __

Cbancterizatioo and Rqulalioa of Sebist-. Glulalhiooo !Hransfens&lt;s, Dr.
James W. Tracy. Dept. of Com·

parative Bioscienccs.. Univ. of
Wisconsin-Madisoo. I06 Cary
Hall. North Campus. 10 a.m.

Serg1o Zan1, Umv. of Genoa, 830
Oemeos. North Campus. 2 p.m.
Caii64S -2191.

-ISnl't -IIWI

Sbiftlo&amp; Garo of Respir11tory
Ciliary Molors. Raben Hartl.
134B Fuber . Sooth Campus.
4p.m.
........ _ , . IIUIJMAII
TBA, Prof. Bliss Fort&gt;ush. m .

Yale Univ. 108 Shennan. Soulh
Campus. 4: IS p.m.
IIESIDEJffQU.unnE aEJIIES
Ambenl Suopboo&lt; Quttrtot,

Salvatore Andolina. Russ Ca:rere.
Stephen Rosenthal. HilT)'
Fackelman. Slc:e Concert Hall .
North Campus. 8 p.m. SS. SI O.
Caii64S-ARTS .

- 1 ' COUOQIIIUM
Ell'fCII ofll&lt;mO&amp;Dpbic
Clwl&amp;&lt; oa Multij:eo&lt;ntioaal
Family Stnl&lt;turo, U.S. 181161990. Dr. Steveo Ruggles. Dept.
of History, Univ. of Minnesota.
280 Pari: Hall. North Campus.
10-11 :30 a.m. Sponl&lt;l&lt;Od by
G.-.duate Group in Demography.
Dept. of Geography and Dept. of
Sociology. Caii64S-2417 .

SUNDAY

~l

~AND~

AlrT .-nlln UECTUitE

"Throap IIDmantic Eyes: Europeaa lmq&lt;sof lllth-llDd
19th-Century Greece," FaniMaria Tsigakou.. Athens' Benaki
Museum. Albript-Knox An
Gallety. 2 p.m. CaU 645-2435.
11.11.-IIECITAL
Teraa Zager, mprano. Student of Sylvia Dimiziani. Baird
Recital Hall. North Campus.
3 p.m.
OIIQANIIECITAL
Sbayoe Doty, St. Paul's Episropal Cbwch. Washington. D.C.
Slee Concert Hall. North Cam·
pus. p.m. S2,
S6.
For
information call 645-2921 .

-s

~a

.snnrrE- ADOIC110H

ATHLniCS
US'V'BA Rq;onals. Alumni
Arona Main Gym. North Cam pus. 8 a.m.-8 p.m.

ss.

sa.

1 Mudd de Montreal. Yuli
Turovsky, coodUCior, with R.i vka
Golani, viola. Pari of QRS series.
Center for lhe Ans. North Cam·
pus. 7 p.m. Sl2. Sl6. S20. Call
645-6259.

TIIEAntiCAL - . v i C E
AntJ&amp;oo&lt; ia New Vori&lt;, Janusz
Glowacki's contemporary version of Antigone. Center for the
Ans Block Box Theam:. North
Campus. 8 p.m. SS. SIO. Call
645-6898.

Treating Substanc:&lt; Abusing
Clitou ia the Criminal Justico
System, Mart Sanders. Center

for Tomorrow. North Campus.
Sl20 fee. Caii64S-6140.
-~-AND
UIDIAn.E~

Tbo Epic ia llD Aa&lt; ol DissimuJatioo: TonJuolo Tasso, Prof.

~6

ISE-

wsnnnE- ADOIC110H

~AND TRJIINIM
Treating Subslaoco Abu.&gt;io&amp;
Clients i.D the Criminal
Justice System, Mart Sanders.
Cen1er for Tomorrow. North
Campus. Sl20 fee. Call
645-6140.

VOICEBCRAL

Student Jtecital. Students of
Gary Burgess, Sylvia Dimiziana.
Dania! McCabe. Harriet Simons.
Baird Recital Hall . North Cam·

pus. Nooa. Free Admission. Ca11

-

645-ARTS.
-

JIAQ IIEADINQ

I JJ!nldon, by JIUJ Mabor. Cen·
ter for the Ans Reheaful Wori&lt;·
shop. North Campus. 12:30- 1:30

p.m. Free admission.
~ac:JDICE

~

EDdwin&amp; Acca:s: Praervation
ia the Di&amp;ilal Ace, M. Stuan
Lynn. VPforTochnology.Com-

missioo on Preservation and Ac-

cess. 220 Natw&gt;l Sciences It
Mathematics Complex. North
Campus. 3-4:15 p.m. Call
645-3 180.
,._
Buill.._ Niapra. Tennis coons.

'EIIic:ou Complex. North Campus. 3:30p.m.

15• Color Morutor • CDROM Dnvt• IUK Modem ond software!

$2737
Savings of $183
~~~'r~s~~s~

11\d Modem!

$2787
Savings of $633
Power Macintosh 7100
• 80MH% • 16MB RAM • 700MB
!Urd Dnve ond CDROM Dnvo!

...................
~b~llllltl.,...,..

Test Aluidy, UB Counseling
Centtt Staff. Noon- I p.m. CaU
645-6125 ror reg.strauon rnfor·

-

mation .
~

..Alii! STAFF

E dward Reicb, M.D., Pb.D,
Rockefeller Un1v Roswell Parl
Cancer Institute. 12·30 p m C.all
845-3261.

- - . v i i LS:nlM . .
TboTemperofOurSouls: Ethics and Coafessioo., Caleb
Thompsoo. 684 Baldy North
Campus. 4 p.m.
IIUaiCUECTUitE

TUESDAY

$1925
Savings of $335

8p.m.

Sanoh McKoiD, cooduc:tor,
Louis Vit.tllo, usiltaat cooductor, Joha Fullam, c:lariaot. Slee
Concert Hall. Nonh Campus. 8
p.m. Free admission. Call
645-ARTS .

lt'a -'J ~ bqiM f'ltUy lit 3 p.m. lit
sic: lhellcJCinen, Uon, KRS4ne, TAD, -eel R-, Slah'a - e p l t .

• 8MB RAM • 250MB Hard Dnw

w-~

Anaual autbeat.ic Afriau1 dinner ADd lbow. Dinner, 145 Studenl Union, 6 p.m.; lhow. Stu-

dent Unioo Theater, 8 p.m. Nonh
Campus. Sponl&lt;l&lt;Od by African

$1139
Savings of $308

=~=~Sally
.--..u.a. ........

-AAIICA

Checkout
_these Apple
price breaks!

-CUNICSLMI
Allred
Allen
Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. Moe
admission.

-COWi'LIR&amp;:I
PIIYSICIAIIS
W ...... PllyliclaDS ia
l'rimary C...., Evaleen K.
Jones. M.D., family physician
and fouad&lt;:r of Cintcnndes USA.
will prescat lhe keynoce address.
Radiuon Hotel It Suite$, 4243
Genesee. Oled:towaga. For
more iofonnatioo CXlOtacc Kim or
Greu:ben at !he Primary C...
Resource Center or an
829-3 176.

7

In Honor of lsraellrw:lepeudeuce Day

TemPLe BeTH CL
OF ~ ReATeR BUFFALO

Plaudt Vienna manu: lbt- Musoic aod Art ot a IWf'-Forgottea
Ordu, Jeremy Noble. 211
Baird. North Campus. 4 p.m.

WEDNDDAYSAT41'WS
Prooo R.-ding, P&gt;ul Aster. Cen·
ter for lhe Aru Sc~run g Room
North Campus. 4 p.m.
-YUECTUitE
CAJICEUD)

1lemot&lt; S.nsinlf\'olc:anism, Dr.
David Crown, Uni v. of Pitts·
burgh. 210 Naou.l Sc1er&lt;:es &amp;
Mathematics Complex . Notth

Campus. 4:10p.m.
-YL.Een.E
~ Classic Tamoks and
Stnlo: lmplk:atioas for Mountaio Building IUJd Aecmiooary
Prism5. Dr. Art Goldstein.
Colgate Uruv. 210 Natural Sci·

eoc:es &amp;. Mllhematics Complex.
Nortb Campus. 4:10p.m. Call
645-6800.

,....,tioa

I'HMMACYaEIIIMAII

Stroke
in Atrial
Flbri1latioc1, Karmen Jensen.
248 Coolce. Nonh Campus.
4:30-5:30 p.m.

c:...vacwe
RLu:ptioo.. to introduc:e and wel come UB Football Coach Cr&gt;ig
Cirbus. Pistachio's. Student
Union , North Campus. 5-6:30
p.m. Caii829-2BII.
W.UFIUISDIU
Sceltl ol G ..... Papaya (wbtitled). Student Union Theater.
North Campus. 6:30 p.m. S2.
S3.SO. Caii64S-29S7.
FACULTY IIECITAL

Frina Arlchaosb Boldt, piIUJO; Keawyt&gt; Boldt, pillDo. Slee
Concert Hall. North Campus.

ss. S6. sa. Call

8 p.m. S2,
645-ARTS.

Continued on page 8

The # 1 Jew~sh Mus1cal Group •n Amenca

�--.----.--

8

CALENDAR

--

MainllaJC. Nonh Campus. 8

Continued from page 7

•

Presents ••

~----------==~~

a-

""®

RUINS OF MEXICO
MAY13-20

IRISH P£IIFORMANCt
MAYI4-27

An:booolosi&lt;:a1 bislory vililm&amp;

Hool Viooalt O' NciD aCBalfalo'slrilh

UUDOI, ClDcboa liD. Merida.
"Nam.Xd-lll.llldC..C..

Couicol~lltco)'OO . .
Doi&gt;Ua to Golway

,_ ..--.--from

OIINA'S IMPERlAI. TOMBS EXHIBIT
AUGUST 10·13
Oo u:bibit ia Memphis. view
thepricdcaBurial......,..
in re-a'Cidcd lanD.

IMPERlAI. cmES OF AusrRIA
JUNE17·26

AUGUST 19·28

l·

•

lllroololoaa-N~ 50

-...--~~~.

y..,.

Uler. Speat&lt;:n:: Yob&gt;
N'asbi~~~~n. UB pdttole IIUtleut
and dauJbler a( aromic bomb
IUn'iYO&lt;, and UB Pro(. HestoEileaslcin. 301 Cralby. South
Campus. 7:30-9 p.m. s~

by the WNY . , _ Center and
UB's American Studies Prognm.

UIIM--

1 Lib It Lib tbot. Student
Unioa llater. Nonh Campus. 9
p.m. S2. $3.50. Call645-29S7.

Visit the cities of the Hapf;bu:rJ Dyrt.uo .
Vieo&gt;Aa. Gnz. KlaF&gt;futt. laDsbnldc.
Sa1doq. aod u.z

Ca/1633-3480 for nwre infonMIUm and
brochures or to ltlllU resenations

to 50%
a

THURSDAY

27
-

~CENIIII

l nln&lt;dlular Calcium Rqulatloo lu JoJrta&amp;lomenllar Cdls,

Dr. George Hajduc:zoL I08

Shennan. South Campus.

8a.m.

FREE PICKoUP a DEUVERY
to All Unlvenltr l..ocatioll8

DENTALIIU11NO

~~~~~~
Apple, ........ !II*

burgh Sdlool of Dental Medi -

....._Printers,

Implants: Is It Tho&lt;! Carl E.
Mi.sch. DD.S.. Un.iv. of Pitts·
cine. Holiday Inn. 100
Wtucehlven Road. Grand Island.
8 a.m.-S p.m. Caii876-211S .

c.-.

-

1UNA81MDfT IIOfJIIUn'UL£

811dFu~

..._Printer ...... 811dllalntFAIT, QUAUTY SERVICE ·100'!b s.tllfactlon
au.r.nteed
"Rec:yc... Don't waste .._, and L.andllll Space"

Tc Technologies

(716) 838-2745

835 EngiiMood AWI008, Town ol Tonawanda, NY

FAX~

p.m. $5, Sl2. SIS. For luformatioa. call 645-3414.

T QM: Ta. Van Later, Ort:w

Campbell. QUONO Corp.
Fanny 's Reaauranr. 3SOO

Sheridan Dr.. Amhc:m. 8-9 Lm.
$40 per session; Sl20 for all four
!ieisions. Cali645,J200.
.m'AII.,_,... IIECRAL

Studeat R.edta.L Students of
Prof. Joanne Castellani Ba.1rd
Recital Hall. Nonh Campu.
Noon. Cali645-ARTS.

C1uiolopllor SWill, ............
SWclcal of Joa Williams. S,..
Concert Hall. Nonh Campus.

I_
p.m. _

n.A,..

'noelted&lt;yllenwSioow.
Preir..lbeat..-. I p.m. SIO, Sl2.
$15. Calll39-8540.
1111AtacAL hliE MI'Nea
AatiF-IDNtwYorli,Janun
Glowaclci's coaremponsy ....,._
lion of Aatic-- Ceo,... for th&lt;
Ani Blacl:
Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10. Call
64Hi898.

Boa,_._

UIIM--

1 Lib II Lib !bilL SWdeat
Unioa llater. North Campus. 9
p.m. S2. S3.SO. Call 645-2937.

EXHIBITS

-a-.

Nalhaaid Brockaan.a's Mas-

ter of Finr Aru thesiJ exhibit
remains on display through May
4 in tbe An Department Gallery.
Gallery hours art Tuesdays. I0
a.m.-S p.m .. Wednesdays-Fridlys 10 a.m.-8 p.m .. and Saturdays II a.m.-8 p.m. Adrian
Piper's exhibit -Decidt: Who
You Art ... .-in be up through
April 22 at the Center for the
Ani Gallery (f&gt;nt noor). Ad-

mission is free: gallery hours ~
10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. WedncsdaySarurday and Noon-S p.m. Sunday. Likcw1se, Vidor S..r&amp;ia 's
"The End- will b&lt; show""
through April 22 in the Center
r.,.. the Arts Gallery (scoond
floor). Admission is free; g.allery hours are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
Wednesday-Saturday and NoonS p.m. Sunday. Caii64S-6912 or
645-6976. Simon Uncer's '*Red
Vcr1ical .. runs through July 3 I
m the Lightwdl Gallery: admission u f~. Gallery houn ~
10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. WedncWaySaturday and Noon -S p m. Sunday. Call645-6912

FIIIAHCUU. AID

Student Loan Counsell.nc for
Prospective Grwluates. 114
Wende Hall. South Campus.

2 p.m Call829-2197.
I'HAIIIIACEUT1C SEMINAR
Biocbemic:al and Mo&amp;ec:ula.rCbaracterization or an ExtracUlular Matrix-5pecifx
Md.aUoproteinut lnhibilor.
TIMP-3, Dr. Narendn K.ashnan.
CSOS Cook Nonh Campus.

3:30p.m.
aiCK.OIIICAL SCIENCES

HMIIWI
DNA Replication and Genetit

Instability in Cancer Cells. Dr
Wilham Burhans. RPCI . I 14

--nca

Hodu:tener. North Campus .
4 p.m.

COLLOQUIUM
Some Mdric Variations
on
Some Themes from Algebra,
Prof. PaulS. Muhly, Univ. of

Iowa. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m. Call829-2144.

Leadership Conference for
Women in Higher Education

COHI'lHUIIMI
IEIIUCAI»NCertirK:ate Program in
Gtrootologic:al Nursin&amp;- Scs·
sions run Thursdays through

May II. 4:30-7:30 p.m. SIS. SSO
per session. CaJI829-3291 for

~riday,

May 5, 1995

regisuation information: registration deadline is fi\'C wort:ing
days bef~ each ~ssion .
UU.U FIUll KIIIU
S..at or G...... Papaya (sul&gt;-

titltd). Student Union Thc!ater.
Nonh Campus. 6:30p.m. S2.

S3.SO. Cali64S-29S7.

Keynote Speakaos:
Dr. Dolora E. Croll

PmklenJ. ~Slate llnil.esity
"''ll:xn&lt;n d !he '9'l&lt; M2blg It on Our o..n
Tcnm"
Dr.-lllarle-.q

PmklenJ. Na:zontb ~&lt;I IIDcbesla"Oioosing Leadmhip"

This oonr......., is 'JX)rlSOI&lt;d by !he Western
New York Regional Comtninee d !he Am&lt;rion
Council 00 ~ ldeOOfialion
l'rosnm lor !he A&lt;Mnoement d 'll&lt;lmen in
Higber fDJalion A&lt;lmi(&gt;istntion (ACE/NIP).
Cet1er for TOIOOtlOW
Swe UnlYersi!y d New York :n Bufhlo
Bufhlo, New York

For-----.

bruc:lllft
aiiiilllPicbt!al • 645-2181, en S37.

CONCEIIT
Soto Improvisational ~Uo,
David Darling. former member
of lhe Paul Wincer Consort.
Allen Hall. Soulh Campus. 8
p.m. On April 2S and 26, Mr.
Darling wiJIIcad workshop$ at
the Unitari.an Church at
Elmwood and W. Ferry. Call
886-S869 for wortsbop registration and concert tickt:ts.

-II'EAIIEIIS

KIIIU
Gany Wills. journalist and
author. Center for the Arts

NOTICES
.
A W A l t £ - CWRJtS
AUISTAJICE
1lle AWARE Program offers

free assiSKancc: in culling down
on drinking for heny drinkers.
21-55. who are nOI alcoholics
1be program requires the in \'Oh'ei'J"tent of a spousr. part~r .
or fnc~od . All panicipanlS ••••II
~paid for liking pan in th1~
e1ght-wed: program: informa tion remains completely confi denual. Call 887-2513.
CAWHII AU. ALUMNI
ATMLEIU

11lc: Alumni Association's Athletic Hall of Fame Sttks nominatiom; for inductees. Nominaton: m&amp;)' consult the Division of
Athletics and the University
Archives to assist them m compaling information about and for
candidates. NominaJioo forms
arc available at the Office of
Alumni Relations, South Cam-

pus. and must be completed and
=civcd by MayS. 199S.

--·"
c-.

CUJa SETS SAIL

The Campus Oub uavels to
Toronto to see Showboat on

Wednesday, May 31. For a $90
01'"$100 fcc., participants receive
a light breakfast, show tickets.
chatter bus transportation to and

from Torooto, and Wnner. 1bc
bus will leave at 8 a.m. from
Tops ft a.z.a, Colvin and Eggert
and return at 9 p.m. Reserve
your place today with a $50
deposit. payable to: lh&lt; Campus
Club. Balance is due on April

21. Cali64S-2816, 64S-2S92. or
64S-214S.

-

CIIDIIT FOil COIUIUNrrY

T he Community Action Corp5
(CAC ) will bold interviews and
elections for staff positions for
lh&lt; 199S-96 academic year oo
April 23. Fulfilling th&lt; responsi-

bilities of CAC staff positions is

worth 2-6 houn of academic

credit e.cb aemeat.er. Tbcte an:
12 pa.itioas availabae; a temett.er or yurloas cammitme111 is
required lD seMc:e leaminJ that
brinp valon-. from th&lt; UB
community to .,eDCies wortiDs
to deliver counsctinc. cducatioa,
bealth care. older adults. poverty
and hunger relief servia:~ lD
Bulfalo. Availablc pooitions
ludud&lt; Eec:utivc l&gt;ir«::o&lt;,
Tre&amp;swa'. Publicity Director".
OIT~ee ou.ctor, Transponation
Di=tor. Eventll&gt;ir«::o&lt; (x2).
Counsel ins Director, Education
Di=tor, Health Care: Dir&lt;e~or.
Older Adulll Diredor, and Food
and Hou.sins Director. Job de.ocriplioas and applicatiom are
availabl&lt; a1 th&lt; CAC offi.,, 370
Student Union.

GanALaniOY

l'unc.AJnS--

UB dental resea.n:hers are seekina rrtOI'C lban 100 healthy
adults, between 18-70, w1lh
some SlgDS of sum (periodontal)
disease to help evaluate lhe dfect of a moulbrinsc. a toothpaste, and a mouth moistwittr
on oral health. ParuC1panu must
hav~ some symptOmS. tucb as
red gums and bleechns gums
afler toothbrushing: they wall
make four bnef viSIU to the
School of 9ebtal Med1ctne on
South Campus. Upon complcuon of the gudy. each patlJCi ·
pant Vr"lll bt reamburscd SIOO for
ume and travel Call 829-3850
between 9 a.m and 4 p.m
weekdlys.
F111ANCIAL AID W - s
OffEIIED
n.c Offica of Financ1al A1d
and Student Accounu t.rt: hav tng presenwion on loan counseling for prospective graduate
and non-returning students on
Thursday. April27 at 2 p.m. in
114 Wenck Hall and on Fndly.
Aprill8 &amp;13 :30 p.m. in 104
O'BnanHall.
FLOWDS FOil MAC€ CAPEN '
~

1M t99S Women 's Club
Aov. er Sale to benefit the Grace

Capen S&lt;holarslup has begun.
Geramums and ampatiens t.rt:
ivadable for the same pncc as
last )rear geraniums. 4--1/2" pou
(j S 1.80 each or S20 per doz.eo.
tmpahen ~. 6 plants per pack,
SI.SO per pack or SIO for 10"
hangmg pots. CaJI 839-0469 or
634-4727 to order. pad up orde~ at the Center for Tomorrov.
on May 10 Put a hul~ color m
your spnng-but order by Apnl

28
FUL.alttGHTGRAHT

COMI'ETITtON OPENS
officaal opening of compett·
tton for 1996-97 Fulbright
Grants for graduate study m
academte fields and proft::5)aonal
trammg an the cn::ative and perforrmng arts is slated for May I.
Fulbnght Grants are avall.able
for study or ~h: travel
grants an available to Klected
countri« to supplement main~ ­
nancc awards fro9J other
sources thai do npt provide
funds for international travel or
to supplement the applicant''
pmonal fuads. The l . William
Fulbnghl S&lt;holarsbip Board,
composed of J) educational and
public leaders a...,tnted by the
PreMdent of the U~tcd States,
establishes criteria ftt, the selec·
uon of candidates .OO.wards
the grants. Applicants q,st be
U.S. citi..z.e:ns at the time fX ap-phcation and hold a bac:heklr''
degree or its equivalent by the
beginning dAte of the grant.
Creative and performing anists
are not required to have a
bachelor's degree. but they must
have four years of relevant
training or study. Candidates in
medicine must have an M.D. or
equivalent at the time of application. All applicants must have
sufficient proficiency in the
language of lht: host country.
Full grants provide round·uip
international travel, maintenance for the tenure of the
award, a research allowancq
and tuition waivers, if applicable. Tnwel grants provide
round-trip ioternational travel to
the country where the student
will pursue research; all grants
include hea1th and acdden1 in~

Continued on page 9

�___ .... ____ _
IJIJIJIJ P lie saney's

LLLL Weekly Rep

..... _ _ _ _ f/1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _

9

Choit)o perform May 1 in Slee Hall
before leaving on concert tour of Italy

~--• ;at&amp;elitfll,.......,.,._
.....,.,._..,.1:
8 Public Safety charged a man with driving ..nile Intoxicated
alter he was. stopped Match 31 in the AkMnni Arena pru1&lt;lng
lol
• A wallet, containing a bank card, crad~ cards and pe&lt;sonal papers, and a garage door opener were reported
missing MaTch 3 1 from Kin1baH Tower.
• Public Safety received a complaint April2 from a woman
who said her ex-boyfriend without her kncN.1edge videotaped
her undressing and is showing it to his friends .
• Public Safety received a report of an ~ult in progress
April 3 . According to officers, the incident was a film project
for a class.
• A facsimile machine , valued at $1,530, was reported missing April 3 from a UB depanment in MUiard Fillmore HospMI.
• Two calculators, worth a combined value of $200, were
reportad missing April3 from Talbert Hall.
• A projector, valued at $635, was reported missing April 3
from a UB department In Buffalo General Hospital

CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
sunnce. Cool.act Dr. Barbara
Futbri&amp;)ll Procram A dvisor, in 362 Part HaJJ, 6453650. ex.t. 362 or e.u. 3S8.

Bunker.

Deadline for receipt of applica -

uons is Seplembcr 26, 1995.
CIENIJIAL _ , _ O F PIIS
In cooperatioa with the Offtec
of the Provost, lhe Ol&amp;ir of the
Faculty Senale has amnged for
a general meeting for facuhy
throughout the univcnity w ith
the: Olair of the Presidenl' s Review Board (PRB) Prof. M irdu

Neiden: and other membe~ of
1hc PRB on Fricby, April 21 a1 3
p.m. in Room 330 of the Student
UniO!' Assembly Hal l.

Italy art: underway and include a
cassene tape sale. C,ssettc: tapes
of the choir, highlighting performances from 1972-92. are
priced at $12 each or two for
$20 and arc: available at the
Bookstore or make checks payable to UB FouDdation: Clair
and send to Harriet Simons, 222

Baird Hall. Tape I features mu sic from the 18th and 19th cen luries pWs O..ristmas, folk , and
pop sclecuons. Tape 2 i nclu~
Renaissance selections and com ·
positions from the 20th century.
Cal1645 -2964.

IHTEIINAnoMAL FOUl

OAIICINO
All~ wek:orne to join the lnler·
nat1onal Folk Dancing group
e3Ch Friday from 8- 11 p.m. in 2
D1efendorf HAll on lhe Soulh
Campus. 1bese free sessions
' begin with teaching. Partnerl: ~
not needed. 1be sponsor i.s the
Graduate Student Association.

OUTSTAMOINO SERVICE
AWAIIOS

Current full-time professional
slaff employees of UB. thC' Research Foundation. the UB Foundalion. or the Facuhy-Studcnl
A~ation who have completed
two years of continuous full -time
professional staff service art'
eligible for the Outstanding Service Award. Members oftht UB
community who wish to submit
llOnlirwions must~ ados·
sicr in support of the nominee.
mchxfinga maximum of five lei·
las o( support. the nominator'$

m'tt'\l'iew, the oominoe's current
\ita stalemc:nl and position de·
scription signed by the nominee's
supervisor. as wd1 as 1 nominal ion
fonn.. Nominations must M
,....;vee~ by Fridoy, April21 ,
1995 and may be: submitted to:
Ilene Fleischmann. Oulir. Professional Staff Senate: Awards
Committee. 310 O' Brian Hall,
North Campus, 645-2 107 or 64561 1S. Winners receive 1 S 1.000
cash award. cen.iflcate of recognition. and will be: honored at an
awards luncheon on May 17.
WAHID: HEALTHY WOMEN
Healthy females be1ween 18 and
4S are ne:ded for a premenstrual
syndrome study; participants
will receive free tteatment if
warranted. Call 898-5446.

-IEJI WITH A1COMOUC

PAIITMEIIS
Women' s Project. an eight-week
program offered by the Re·
search lnstilute on Addictions in
Buffalo offers free . professional
~ lp for women with alcoholic
panncrs. Women of at least 18
years of age who are living with
u problem (lrinker and are interested can call 887-2255 . AU
calls are confidential.

UNIVIIIUTYnALY4«JND
Fund-raising efforts for the University Choir's concen tour of

JOBS
PIIORUIONAL

Director, Lh•ing Well Center
(SL-3, Internal Promotional
O p portunily)-Studcnt Health
Ctnter. Posting IP-SO II. Ad ·
missions Ad\-isor (S L-3. lntnnal Promotional Opportunity)-Collegc Outreach and
Placement Consonium . Postin~
MP-5012 . Educa.lional Son" a~

HE UNIVERSITY a1 Buffalo Cl&gt;oir. di~ by
Harriet Simons, professor of music and awardwinni ng director of university choruses. will
present a free public concert at UB before leaving
on a May 18-31 conoett tour of Italy.
1be choir, comprised of 25 men's and women's voices,
will perform at8 p.m. on Monday, May
I , in Slce Concen Hall on the North
Campus. The concen will offer a perfect opportuni ty for uni versity and com-

the tour with a sigh~ing visit 10 Aorence .
Simons ruesses that a c:oocat tour offen an ensemble the
opportunity 10 repeat performanc:es, increasing ensemble
cohesion and perfonnance frcedom.lt also preaents tbe choir
and its music 10 new and differ=t audieoces and givcs
students an opportunity 10 expand their undetstaodin&amp; of tbe
history of their music. much of which is grounded in Europe.
"The great vocal e nsemble music--&lt;:speciaUy that of the

munil y audiences to hear this
much -heralded group.
1llechoirtour, which was completely
finaa by the choir members ' own
fund-ra ing activities. will open with a
concen n a church in Rome that was
arra
by the Academia Leonard
Bernstein.
II will be followed by a performance
in Pisa' s Chiesa di Santo Stefano &lt;ki
Cavalieri (Church o f Si. Steven of the
Cavalieri). sponsored by the United
Nations Economic, Social and Cuhur.U Organization.
The c hoir also has accepted a covetrd invitatio n to partici pate in a mass in St. Mark 's Bas ilica in Venice. Some of the

music in the choir's repenoire was composed eK.plicitly for
performance in St. Mark' s, incl uding works by 16th-century
composer Heinrich Schtitz--one of Bach· s most illustrious.
prodocessors-andbylhegreao16th-ccnturycomposerGiovanni
Gabrieli, who was, for many year.;, !he basilica's organisL
Another highlight of the lour will be a perfo'\"ance in
Chiesa di San Pietro. a 12th-century church in Ass"-&gt; i. It was
selected as a ve nue after the cathedral that was originally
booked was appropriated by Luciano Pavaroni for rttording
sessions that will take place during the choar's stay in Assisi.
Sightseei ng exc ursions- will include visits to Palestnna.
the birthplace of ihe noted 16th-century composer who look
hi s name from his hometo wn , and to Cremona. the b1nhplace
of Monte verdi. Their mus ac is also m the choir's repenoire.
The group next will vtstt Arez:w. where the IOth-centuf)
monk Guido d'Arez:w invented .the four-line mu~ t cal staff
and developed a system of "sol mization." the me thod of
using syllables (ut. re . mt. fa. sol. Ia. 11 . . ) to de!.ignate notes
on a mu sical sc.ale. The choir will present a concen in
Monticell o. where the) will sta y in the ho mes of members of
an halian cho tr with whom the) .,..,11 perfonn. before endmg

16th and 17th centuries--comes from I!Jlly or from composers who studied there:· Simons points ouL adding that !he UB
Choir, comprised of stu&lt;knts from many disciplines. many f
whom have never traveled outside the U .S .• has been perfanning Italian and Ital ian-influenced music since the cboir
was founded . - Persons who are truly educated seek and value
an understanding of cui lures other than their own," she adds.
"University classes provide much of thi s understanding , but
when sludenls uavello a foreign country with professors and
expen travel guides 10 present themselves professionally,
their understanding and :fpprecialion is grea~y enhanced."
...,e Uni\'ersity al Buffalo Choir and Chorus performs
I frequen~y throughoul New York S!Jlte and Ontario. and
1a.s1 loured Europe in 19118. ~ensembles h ave appeaml
with the Buffalo Ph ilharmonic Orches1ra under Michael
Til &lt;an Thomas, Juhus Rudel . Frank Collura. Eiji Oue and
Raymo nd Harve y. a nd at " btnhda) •· concerts for Aaron
Copland and Lukas Foss. " 1th the compu.ers in attendanc~ .
Simons . who ha~ !'&gt;erved as director of the universit y
c horuses si nce 1972. has prepared choruses for Pablo Casals.
Lukas F"''· Pierre Boulez. Roben Sha" and Mich""l Tilson
Thomas and has appeared ~ a guest chora.l conductor in
man) Amencan CI U e~.o

Developer (SL-3. 1ntemal Promotional Opportunity)-Offlce
of lnfonnation Rcsourcclt,
School of Dental Medlcme,
Posting tP-5013. Programmer
Analyst (IWO posiliOM nail·
able)-Computer and Informati on Technolog}'. Postmg fiP-

5009. Application De\·cloprr·
Comptuing and lnfonnation
Tcchnolog)'. Postmg MP-5010.
IIESEAIICH

Research Support Sp«.iafu1·
Psychology. Posting MR -95009.
Research Support Sp«ialist-

Occupational Therapy. Posting
IR-95031 . Field Trac:t:r-Psychology. Posting MR-95032 .
Dididan/Nutrilionist 11-Psy-

chology. Pos1ing ~R-95033 .
Drvc.lopmc.nt Communications
Assistani-Dcvelopmcnt.. Posting
MR-95037 . Director of Oenl·
op mcnt, Scbool of Den tal

Medicine-Development. Post·
ing «R-95016. Director of Develo pm rn ~ Scllool or Pharm.ICy-Development. Posting
NR-95035 . Cou ns&lt;lor (half-

time during the ac•demic
year, ru.ll-time d uriog the summ er)~UPP/Upwanl Boond
Math Science , Posting IR 95034.

COMI'ETtTIVE CLASSIFIED
CMLSEIMCE

Keyboard Speeiatist I (SG06)-Geography. Une N21933.
Keyboard Specb lisii -School
of Management. Unc 120924.
Caku lalions C lerk t (S~ ­

Office of Student
Unel304 16.

A ccoun t ~.

LAIIOII CLASSIFIED CML

SEIMCE
CieaD&lt;r (SG-l~S)- Une 1143028.
To obtain mo rt informotion on
jobs /isud abo\·~. contact Ptr·
sonn~l Services. 104 Crofts Hall.

Lener
Counseling Center offers advice on helping rape survivor to res;overy
D£AR MEMHR OF THE UB COMMUNITY:
It is highly likely thai as a member of a college campus community. you 'll know someone who tS or will be a surv1vor of
rape If a 'NOfT\an whO has been raped chooses to come to
you, as a frtend . fOf support and ass1stance. there •s much
you can do 10 help her Jake ihe appropflale steps toward
recovery

uat...:

•

• Allow her to express her feelings WIIhout Interruption
• Be pauem with s ilences as she may be slow 1n 1alk1ng
• If she needs help continuing. try repealing back what she
has said

a. .......rtRC:
• Believe her! A great fear of survavors IS that they w111 not be
believed.
• Reinforce that the rape was not her fault. no maner wflat
the Circumstances.
• Comfort her as much as poss1ble verbally
• Beware of physical contact as she may not want 10 be
touched , but you can always ask 11 you can hug her (don't
treat her as ~ she 1s contagiOUs)
8 Provide things thai make her leel warm and safe-a b lanket , a sluffed ammal. ho11ea
8 Make sure she has a safe place 10 sleep lhal mght ·
8 Do noltalk 10 her about gen1ng revenge. focus your energy
on her and her feelings.

_ , . ...... tC.-help:
• Call Crisis Services hotline for professtonal guidance (8343131).

• Go w1th her for a mediCBI exarT\InatiOfl mmedl8tely-contacl Center for Student Health (829-3316)
• To preserve evtdence, d1scourage her from changing h£"
clothes or ialong a shower.
8 Help her get counseling to WOI1&lt; through 1he trauma (even
rt 1he rape occurred some 11me ago bu1 she stin has no1
worl&lt;ed through n)
• Lei her make her own OeciSIOflSI You can help her WOI1&lt;
through her lhoughts and feelings . bu1 il is important that she
has control over her l~e and her recovery: support her in
whatever she decides 10 do or not do, even ~ you disagree.
• Call Sexual Assault lnlormaiiOfl L1ne (645-3d 11 ) for ppOOns
an reportmg and resources availab~

Provide oncolnC aupport:
• Be available lhroughout 1he next weeks and monlhsrecovery takes much ume

• Learn about rape trauma syndrome (fr.om 1he Cnsis SerIIICes hotl1ne or Counseling Center) so thai you know whalto
expect and can understand her react tOns better.
• Respect her nghiS to pnvacy and do nollell olhers of 1he
rape Without her consent
For yourself:

• Seek support lor yourseH 10 WOI1&lt; through thiS; 11 &lt;s natural
to feel greal stress when support1ng a rape survivor-talk lo
someone ·sate· (counselor, friend al another school. parent)
about your lhoughts, leellngs and needs.
THE STAFF OF THE CCIUNSE1M8 CIEJITEit
120 Rd&gt;mond Ouad. 645-2720

�--.---.-HSLof

future: a
Byrd's
•
eyev1ew
...!::c=,-:.,

__:]book. for library
.,. S1EYE cox

Reporter Staff

UBRARIES

__ ......,asso-

ON M'IIONAL ~

ciale vice praeidenllor University libral1ae, began her
term on #le board ol dlraotorsol#le

Aasocialion
ol Fleselwch
libraries last

month In
W8s00glcn,

D.C. She

-

was elected
,• 1D a thre&amp;yeartoon.
Voo Wahlde. who came IQ

U8;;, f986; is an~ pre&gt;
'-*'111111'1c11aa ollnlormalian and Ubrery Sludies.
She has served as a past
president of the WNY Li-

brary Resources Council
Board of Trustees and past
chair of the SUNY Council of
Head Ubrarians. She is cur. rentty library reprasantative
to the SUNY Council oo Educational Technology.
She earned a B.S. in education and an MA In fibrary
science a! Indiana University.
DENTAL SCHOOL

IIIECUYU HIRSCIIFELD
AWAIID:

T

HE HEALTH Sciences
Library of the 21st centwy won't have quite as
many books on the
shelves as itdoes!Oday.
It will have more computer termi~
nals, though, according to the South
Campus library'snewdirectorGary
Byrd.
"Will there still be books? Yes.
Bu~ they will be a less primary
mode of communicating new research results," predicts Byrd. who
anived at UB in January after almost 12 years with the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Health Sciences Library.
Electronic online databases and
new media. lilce CO-ROM . will
become more and more necessary
to keep information management
affordable over the coming years,
explains Byrd. Many large libraries are working on mounting their
collections into databases now, to
make them accessi ble to others.
The average journal the library
subscribes to costs upwards of$300
per year. Some run over S 1,000.
'The only reasonable way to assure access to these journals in the
future will be online," Byrd said,
Except for the most widely recognizable medical joumals1ike the
American Medical Association's

or the New England Journal of
Medicine. most circulate only to
health science librariCO&gt; 'There are
some online journals available
now," said Byrd, "and that trend
will conti(lue to accelerate."
Byrd. who was the library's assistant director in Chapel Hill, is
eager to bring t:Us experience to
innovations already underway here
that will make medical information widely available ...lt is challenging to develop better ways to
make library resources available to
the dispersed settings the medical
school uses," he said. Without a
medical center of their own, UB
medical students work in eight different area hospitals and are moving toward training in primary care
settings as well.
Byrd praised the technologydriven initiatives UB has already
undertaken at the HSL, such as
HUBNET. and is excited by the
physical space available in the library, which he says is slightly
larger than his previous library. At
just under $2.5 million. however.

- J . - , Distin-

Byrd's budget here is less than half
what he had to work with in North
Carolina and the staff is "substantially smaller," he said.
Byrd, who recently completed
his doctorate in library science,
first learned his love of information resOurce management while
out to sea, although only a few feet
out to sea.
n 1968. Byrd-interrupted work
on his master' s degree in English literature after concluding that
the teaching life might not be for
him. He found himself looking for
a new direction. The solution: Byrd
joined the Peace Corps. He spent
two and one-half years teaching in
Tunis, the capital of the African
nation o f Tunisia.
That was when Byrd"s ship came
in.
Ship Hope was a volunteer
project of American health professionals who refitted a World War
n vessel as a floating hospital. The
ship docked at the pons of Third
World countries for nine months to

I

Gary Bynl, . . . llreclor of the
HNittl ~ Llbrwy, . . .

to continue techr~
lniUatlves lit the llbrllry.
a year at a time, bringing modem
mediCal services and training for
local doctors. When the ship
docked in Tunis, Byrd. who was
teaching in the evenings. volunteered to help out during the day.
Assigned to the ship's chief of
staff. Byrd credits that experience
with leading him to pursue a fel lowship in Biomedical Library
Scie"nce at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis when hereturned to the states.
Aftercompletinghis fellowship.
Byrd worked for two years as an
associ a~ in the National Library of
Medicine outside Washington D.C.
''That is one of the three official
national reference libraries, along
with the Library of Congress and
the National Agricultural Library,"
explained Byrd. Having contacts in
that library have come in handy
over the years. he added.

gutshed ProfeSS()( of periodontics and orel biology at
UB. has received the 1995
Isadore Hirschfeld Memorial
Award and Cenificate from
the Northeastern Society of
Periodontists
(NESP). The
Hirschfeld
Award, highest granted

- =-·

edges distinguished work in
education, research and
significant contributions to
periodontology. The award
rec:ogrOzes Genco's more
than 20 years of grandbreaking research into the
causes. prewntioo and treatment of oral d iseases.
A faculty member 1ri the
the UB School of Dental
Medicine since 1974, Genco
also iS d irector of the Buffalo
Periodontal Disease Research Center.

S~er in Provence: intensive cultural program

"I

BJ PATIIICIA -OYAH
News Bureau Staff

AM STILL IN complete awe ... " " ... a treasure." " ... the rest of my life

has been changed because of it." That' s what last year's participants
•
said.
"It" is "Summer in Provence," an intensive four-week. 10credit-hour interdisciplinary program in the south of France cosponsored by the Studies Abroad Programs at UB and Erie Community
College. For the program. to talce place June 2-30 this year, the itinerary
is romantic, richly educational and the views of an and architecture
nothing short of stunning. Students earn six undergraduate credits in
French culture and four credits in language.
Based in or near Vaison-la-Romaine, France, the program is organized
around day trips to historical sites and museums, beginning with the
Roman ruins in Vaison-sa.id to be the most extensive in France-and the
city's Haute Vill._:"higb town"-a medieval village built high on a rock
outcropping across the river.
Last year, the participants, along with Professors Ann Haskell of UB
and Richard Koepsell of ECC, visited A vignon, si~ of the medieval
Popes' Palace and the Petit Palais, which houses an extensive medieval
religious art collection. They also visited the '{asarely Museum in
Gordes, M adame de Sevigne' s chateau in Grignon and museums in Paris.
Among the other sites visited were the antique Roman theater at

Orange-the most complete Roman theater extant-several Roman bridges
still in use and parts of the Roman aqueduct that supplied water to
A vignon. Medieval sites included the Abbey de Sananque, one of several
founded by St. Bernard during the height of the Cistercian movement.
Students will live independently in Vaison or Nyons, wbere Haskell
says they can experience local cafes, restaurants and theaters; visit the city
market, which has been in continuous operation for more than 600 years.
and malce trips to local "caves" or wine cellars to sample the regional
C6tes-du-Rh6ne.
"'"bey will spend many days traversing sites once traveled by the likes
I ofChaucer, Cezanne, Van Gogh. Matisse, Picasso, Petran:b, Lawrence
Durrell and the troubadour poets. They'll= novelist Alfonse Daudet's
windmill. commemorated in "Leners from My Mill." and Serignan.
entomologist Jean-Henri Fabre's "world in a grain of sand."
There also may be a sunrise hike to the top of Mount Ventoux-'The
Giant ofProvence"-from which hoth the Alps and the Mediterranean are
visible, or perhaps botanical, ornithological or entomological tours.
Cost for the four-week program, which includes airfare, room and
board, in-country transportation, pocket money, course costs and insurance, is ahout $4,450. For information, call Ann Haskell at UB at 645257 5, or Richard Koepsell at'ECC at 851-1091 . They can be reached after
business hours at 731 -9420.
C

�--.----.--

I I I&lt;

Facul SlaffBillboard
c.....,....,._

.... 111111 _ . . OozfMt ................. 22

....... . . _ ...... u.s. ....

'lbc:re.'U be no inhibited Msticb in the mud" IUDOCI8 the 800 clownand-dirty denizens c:ompelina in UB' s lith annual Oozfest, to be
held from 9 Lm. to 4 p.m. on SllUtday, April 22. on Oozfest Field on
SL Rita's Lane on the North Campus.
SpollSCI1ld by the Uaivenity Srudent Alumni Board (USAB),
Oozfest is billed as the
largest conlinuow volleyball-in-the-mud COIIlCSl on
a college campus.
The muddy playing
field will be prepared by
USAB volunteets. Herbert
F. Darling and Sons-Construction, Inc. and, the
GetzviUe Ftre Co. Proceeds will benefit the J.
Scott Aeming student
scholarships. Marine Midland Bank is the major
corporate sponsor.
Oozfest bas grown
from a modes~ muddy
beJinning with I 6 local
team to the 1995 version
with 96 teams from the
United States and Canada.
Oozfest is listed as UB
students ' ''favorite tradition·· in national writer
Lisa Bimbacb's ..New and Improved College Book_'' says mud maven
and USAB President Jason Kane .
The RoUing Rhinos. UB's men ' s volleyball club team, wi I help
with refereeing chores for teams featuring such muddy monikers as
"Mud About You," "Club Mud." "Muddy for Nothing" and "Circle of
Dirt."
WKSE-FM radio, KISS 98.5, will be the media sponsor, providing
disc jockeys and promotions from 9 a.m. to noon. And WRUB. UB' s
student-run AM radio station. also will be on hand with record giveaways from ooon to 4 p.m.
UB student bands "Nurse Brown" and "Amphetamine's Love Child"
will pep up the teams and spectators.
Players and volunteers will receive commemorati ve gifts and are
encournged to shower off in free outdoor facilities after the festivities.
Official Oozfest trademark shirts can be purchased by spectators. UB
student Hugo W. Justiniano designed this year' s official shirt. which
features an ill-tempered buffalo with pierced ears.
Co..chairs of the event are UB juniors Shazi Go lchin. Eva Levicchi
and Vincent Dunleavy.
In addition to Marine Midland. other sponsors include Campus Tees
and Sweats. Makin' Copies. Domino' s Pizza The Steer Restaurant.
Mentholatum. Kaplan Educational Center. Wegmans Food &amp; Pharmacy, Sunsations Sunglasses Co., Sub-Board I. Inc .. Faculty Student
Association, Buffalo Marriou. Coca-Olla Bonling Co./Powerade. J.P.
Bullfeathers.
Also. AMC Como 8 Theaters. CVS Drugs. Tim Horton Doughnuts.
Famous Doughnuts. Dunkin' Doughnuts, TOPS Friendl y Marl.:ets.
American Society of Civil Engineers/Student Chapter at UB. the International Association of Students in Economics and Business Manage men! and the Educational Opportunity Program and UB Undergraduate
Student Association.

... ,.... .............

c.....u. law professor
to clacu. . hllr trial

0

Jlllllie Cameron, a professor of constitutional law at
Osgoode Hall Law School at
Vorl&lt; Uaiversity, Toronto, and a
vice president of the Canadian
Civil Liberties Association, will
present a lecture, "Fair Trial vs.
Free Press: Too Far and Not Fa.J:
Enough?" at 6 p.m. on Friday.
May 12, in the lnteroationallnstituu;, 864 Delaware Ave. A wine
and cheese reception will precede
the lecture at 5:30p.m.
The program is presented by
the Canada-U.S. Legal Studies
Center in the UB School of Law.
the Canadian Consulate of Buffalo, the B uffalo Council on ·
World Affairs and the International Institute of Buffalo.

Cameron will discuss the
difference between the approaches of the United States and
Canada in controlling media
coverage of sensational trials. She
will examine this issue with specific anention to the OJ. Simpson
trial and the trial of Paul
Bernardo, who is charged with
the sex -slayings of two teenagers
in s~ Catharines, Ontario.
Beroarclo's wife, Karla Homolka.
was convicted of manslaughter in
these deaths. A publication ban
prohibited any coverage of the
evideoce in her trial because of
possible prejudice to Bernardo.
An expert in comparative
freedom of press and expression
issues. Cameron has taught both
Canadian and U.S. oonstitutional
law in universities in the United
States and Canada. She is edito•

i!Khief of Media aN1 Commwticalion.r /..aw Revinv, and I coeditor of Canado Wmch, Onlario

Reports, Conodian Rlgltls Reporter, and Annals of HeaiJlt
Law.
Director of the Centre for
Public Law and Public Policy at
Osgoode Hall, Cameron bas been
an adjunct professor at the University of Toronto and a visiting
scholar and professor at the UB ,
Cornell and Columbia law
schools.
For more information, contact
tbe UB Canada-U.S. Legal Studies Center 81645-2102.

I

Institutes for Health. Tbe City
Uaiversity and Imperial College.
boCh illl..ondon, and the Kaldall
Lesingtoo Laboratory of the
Colpte Corp. in~

Mass.
Good bas aulbored or co- ·
aulbored more than I 30 publications on surface and colloid
chemistry. and bas presented
numerous papen on the subject at
major professional meetings in
the u.s. and Europe.
He received a bachelor's degree from Amherst College. a
master's degree from the University of California at Berkeley and
a doctorate from the University of
Michigan.

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Par IIJlher sites. lbere is
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The UB Art History Department will sponsor a
lecture by Fani-Muia Tsigakou.
curator of prints, drawings and
paintings at Athens ' Benaki Mu seum. at 2 p.m. on Sunday. April
23, at the Albright -Kno x Art
Gallery.
In her lecture. 'Through Romantic Eyes: European Images of
18th- and I 9th-Century Greece."
Tsigakou will discuss the changing European concept.and vision
of Greece from the 11th through
the 19th centuries.
She will illustrate her talk with
paintings, watercolors and prints
by 18th- and 19th-century European visitors to Greece. and address Romanticism and ongms of
Neo-dassicism in Europe and the
role Greece played in those
movements.
Vance Watrous, professor o f
art hi story and classics at UB.
points out that before 1820. European knowledge of classical an tiquity was based exclusi vel y on
Roman ru ins in Italy. When the
successful Greek war of independence ended in 182 I . Europeans
began to come to Greece: in great
numbers. What they saw there
had a profound effect on European art and how Europeans
viewed the: origins of their culture.
For further information. call
the UB Art History Department at
o45-2435 .

Good ..-lves awn
from Adhesion Society
Robert J. Good, professor
emeritus in the UB Department of Chemical Engineering.
has been selected by the Adhesion Society to receive: its 3M
Award for Excellence in Adhesion Science. This award recognizes Good's extensive: work in
the search for the role of intermolecular forces on adhesion and
interfacial tension. The society
will bold a one-day symposium in
his honor ne&lt;t February.
Good joined the UB Department of Chemical Engineering in
1964 after serving as a senior
scientist in the Space Science Lab
of General Dynamics Corp. in
San Diego.
He has served as a member of
tbe UB Surface Science Center
steering commi~ and bas been
a visiting scientist at the National

0

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Stelnlaepeeker
for PSS event

Brian l'inkl:t1oo of lbe Uaiversily of WIIIJin&amp;lon, how-

0

searcben.

Ronald H. Stein, vice
president for University
Advancement and Developroen ~
will be the speaker Wednesday.
May 3 at a broWll bag lecture
presented by
the Professional Staff
Senate professional developmerucommittee.
Stein will
address the
group on "The
An of tiirm~; in Hi!;be&lt; Education." The lecture wiD be held at
noon in 210 Student Union.
To anend the lecture, contacl
Professional Staff Senate. 543
Capen Hall. Nonh Campus. by
mail or fax (645-2717 ) by April
28.

Mahoney appointed
to commlulon
Martin C. Mabo~y. a
student in the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. has been appointed to
serve as student representative on
the American Academy of Family
Physicians' Commission on Public Health and Scientific Affairs.
Headquartered in Kansa.s City.
Mo .. the American Academy of
Family Physiciarts represents
nearly 80,000 family pbysiciarts,
family-practice residents and
medical students nationwide.
Instrumental in establishing the
medical specialty of family practice in 1969, it was the fttSl medical organization to require its
members to complete a minimum
of 150 hours of accredited continuing medical study every three
years.
Mahoney received his doctoral
degree in experimental pathology-epidemiology from the UBI
, Roswell Parlt Graduate Division.
An assistant professor in the
Department of Epidemiology in
the School of Public Health at the
State Uaiversity of New Yorl&lt; at
Albany, he also serves as an assistant research professor at
.Roswell Pari&lt;. He expects to
receive his medical degree this
May.
Mahoney received the Jay S.
Drounan Memorial Award from
lbe American Public Health Association in 1992.

0

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..Mus6e Conti Wu Museum," "'riginal Jan
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woddmusic.
Though makin&amp; no claims
lO complete indexing o( lbe
Web, Wd&gt;CIUW~r is thorough in the Wrb sites it ·
indexos. JR5011ting results of
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order, wilb the moot significant results lisred first and
nurneric:al ranlcings to indica1e bow many oocurreooes
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wea first place winner of
the Tall Tales Contest for
UB Toeatmaatera, held Feb.

14, which qualified her to
compete at the next level,
the ,.,. . Ill contest.
Claydon, • charter member

of UB Toeatme_atera, won
first piece at Area Ill on
March 6 end wea scheduled

pert In the Western
Dhtio.lon of Toea-tera

to take

competition M.,.., 25, but

wea unable to attend due
to illness.
The following Ia her win-

ning ortclnel __.._...,._.
plat e with eo.ide• f or the

,_Ired gestures end

graphics.

By SALLY CLAYDON

• Special/a 1he Re{Xmer

I DON'T KNOW about
you, but I grew up in
the big city and I'm
convinced that we city
folks don' t speak the
same language as
people raised in Ll)e
country. Let me explain .
Now, some of my country frie nds say I talk
funny-Me? Talk

funny? I'm
not sure if
they mean
funny ha ha or
funny as in peculiar.
But I don't think I
have a problem communicating. You be the
judge. OK?
For instance, we all
know what udder
means, right? Like
when J say "the udder
day" or "the udder one"
or "in udder words"- I
don't lose you: right?
You know what I mean.
Well, let me tell you
about tny farmer friend
who, if she doesn't stop
criticizing me, is going
to be my former friend.
She says, Sally, this
(point to cow posterlarge exaggerated udder on cow) is an udder.
I said, an u9der what?
She said it's not an udder what-it's just an
udder. I think she has a
problem finishing a sentence. Then she said,
"How do you think we
extract milk from the
cow?" Extract? She
thinks I'M confused?
Dentist extract teeth
from people who don't
drink enough milk and

get cavities.
Then she brings this
out (hold up
bull) and
says, "Now
you see THIS
farm animal
has no udder.
NO UDDER
WHAT? You
haven't convinced
me "what udder
what" the black and
white cow has.
Frankly, I said, I think
this is a lot of bull. She

said, "I think you're beginning to understand."
Now, this same country lass has a horse
named WIDZ-W H I ZWhen she wants
the horse to turn left,
she says, "GEE WIDZ."
She says Gee
is a command!
(click heels,
salute) Yes,
MA'AM! Now
everybody
knows that
GEEWIDZ
meansAW
SHUCKS. But
I can't say
AWSHUCKS
around her
Sally Cla)'don
because
SHUCKS is the name of H's.a 'WN'Y
the cow-you know, the
tall tale, but
one with the UDDER.
The UDDER WHAT, I
all you kids
still don't know.
should find
We've been friends a
long time so I really
it udderly
didn't want her mad at
me. I said, "I' U.bet your charming...
kids are really getting
big; why don't you send
me a picture of your
KIDS . Well, this is what
I get in the mail. (Hold
up posTer of 3 goaTs)
Now, I'm no judge of
BEAUTY, but I know
UGLY when I see it.
You know, I've never
met her husband, but I
really wonder what their
FAAAAAAATHER
looks like.
Boy, I'm glad I grew
up in the city.

wmz:

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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Prof aims to build

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....

hello to that famous
"last' class before
tum of the century.

g
Apul 1 3 1995

Vf •lumc 26 No. 24

University mourns
loss ofPrQyost Bloch
President Greiner acclaims his leadership, vision
"Helriy

RESIDENT
William R.
Greiner praised
the vision and
leadership of
Aaron N.:.Bloch,
provost of the
University at Buffalo,
who died unexpectedly
Saturday, April 8, 1995
in his home in East
Amherst. Along with
other UB faculty and
administrators, Greiner
spoke of the great loss
the university bas suffered with the death of
an outstanding academician who had a strong
commitment to UB and
its students.
Bloch. who was 53, had served
since June 30. 1992 as US ' s chief
academic officer, overseeing all
underg111duate, graduate and professional academic units in the
university' s 15 schools and facul -

ties. He a1so was a professor of
chemistry and physics.
He joined UB after serving four
years as vice provost of Columbia
University. where his responsibili·
ties focused on science. engineering and technology.
Greiner praised Bloch for his
accomplishments in the less than

three years he served as the
university's provost. ''He was a terrific leader for the university who
had a real ability to pull together
faculty,"headdcd. "Everyone. from
the deans to faculty leaders and colleagues, had the highest regard for
him. He was able in the shon time
he was here to en&lt;:oun~ge the deans'
creativity and self-reliance."
Greiner described Bloch as ··a
great teammate and exceptionally
nice man. He brought superior in tellectual perspective and extraordinary experieoce to the job.
"He understood the importance
of maintaining a balance between
our core mission , which is under-

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ill role in Cllplliz;ina llld ~ ,_c;c pro-

tut weet: • the firll ma.i&lt;w illtl:tuliooa1 coar........ ..._
voted ID the DUCieat IIUIIrix.

-

The new data iaclude identification of a new noclear man
procein and ill role ill gcoetic ~ ideolificali011 of replicalion Iiles in lbe llliCieus, aod the use or adVIIDCCd 1.- miaolcopy
and lhree-dimemiooal COI!Iplller·iJna&amp;ia&amp; tecboiques 1D IIUdy
replicalioo rites.
Ronald Beremey, profesoorofl&gt;ioloP:allci&lt;:Dces at US, and the
fint resean:ber 10 propose the idea of a nuclcw manU. wu
prioc:ipaJ orpnizer or the
Keystone Symposium oo
The Nuclear Malrix: Involvement in Replicalioo.
Transaiplion.~Splic­

ing and CeUular Regalatioll.lt was held on Hilton
Head bland, S.C.
pI
• ..._.__,
and olben in the J970a,the idea that the nucleus
had an intricate SlrUCtllre

that affected replicalioo
and other genetic pro-

cesses was received skeptically at first.
Since then. however,
the development of ad- Ronllltf
to ~
vaoced techniques, such the Idea of a ......, INitJtx.
as laser confocal micrD$copy and three-dimensional imaging, has allowed scientists 10
view the architecture of the nuclear matrix. Now the idea of a
"structural code" inside the nucleus is gaining increasing accep-

a..zn.r.tnt

graduate education, and our unique
mission in graduate education and
research as a major public university. He often said that public uni versities have obligations to serve
the publjc, and that a great univer-

sity is one that tries to make a
difference. He truly was a key
player in shaping US' s vision."
Senior Vice President Roben J.
Wagner also recalled Bloch· s contributions to the university.
"He provided leadership for the
transition of our financial management and he challenged all of us on
the fifth floor (of Capen Hall ) to
think." said Wagner. who in addi tion noted Bloch's strong commitment to UB ' s students . .. He often
spoke of his concern about the qual ity of undergraduate education. He
had an enormous concern and affection for the student body."
US Senior Vice Provost Kenneth J. Levy noted, "Aaron had
remarkable insight and inco:dible
energy. He set high standards for
people around him, but even higher
standards for himself for the benefit of the university."
Bloch's accomplishments at UB
included decentralizing budget
decision making, and overseeing

the recruitment of new deans for
the School of Dental Medicine,
School ofMaoagement and Millan!
Fillmore College, ,l,hich administers the university's evening division and summer sessions. He also
fostered a closer worlcing relation-

ship between the deans of the faculties of arts and letters. na1uraJ
sciences and mathematics. and social sciences to improve undergraduate education at UB .
"Clearly, besides the enonno us
personal Joss for his family. it's an
enormous loss for the university
because in his three years here he
established a finn grasp on the academic issues and priorities of lhe
university," said David J_Triggle.
dean of the School of Pharmacy.
"It's a double blow. We've lost a
fine academician and administrator, and we 've lost a fine person.
We're going to mi ss Aaron Bloch
very much indeed."

T

ri ggle said Bloc h was
·sympathetic. interested and had
a broad understanding of the scientific and academic issues facing the
school. It's a major blow to bolh the
School of Pharmacy and the
university ....Everyone has lost."
In a repon to the UB Faculty
Senate delivered in October 1993,
Bloch indicated his commitment
to building on US's breadth of
academic programs.
"We are the most comprehensive university in the State University of New York-the only
university with anything approaching our I 2 professional schools,
the only one with so full an amtyof
g111duate programs," he added. "We
Continued on page 2

Continued on page 2

Major changes improve
'lJlXbgtaluate experience
...._Ill 2
, US-vice provost far u~ education, says US is mating "" cmaordinaty effort to inqlnwe die
ownll UDdriJnlduale experieDce and 10 help 5IUCieab, iDckldiD&amp;
ttMsfentudeots,movemonoeasilylhrougbthesysumandgrwluali&gt; wilbio four~ of auollmenL
Goodmall uys majcw ~In US's ...-vices llld ~
Joruadelp8dullclllldtlllnoill.ialpl!¥estu&amp;nt~eliml- ·

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....

BLOCH
Continued from page 1
are the only public university in New Yorlc
State that can offer all of this in &lt;me place aDd
can nurture the ioterdiscipl.inary synergisms
that follow."
He said be believed that UB also was
prepared to take a leadership role at a national level.
"''bo5e univer..ities who are willing to
work in partnership with odler segments of
society. and to look inside themselves and
evaluate and project what they have to offer,
aregoingtotakethe lead nationally ... . There
are lots of reasons why we can be in the
forefront."
"

1he faculty have fost an
u

extraordinary person. rze
'[[ rtainJY be ha-l
Wl Ce
ru to

New Yort State Depanmcu of Education
aad ~ew Yort SWe Temporary Commiuioo cHi&amp;b-Speed Rail aad Mqlev.
A
ve of Chicqo, be received a
bacbelor's degree iD cbemiJIIy from Yale
University aad adoclorale iD cbcmica1 physics £rom the University of Chicaao. He was
a posldocloral reaeardlasaociale at the Massacblddll lnsliblt£ of Technology before
joiDiDg the faculty at Tbe Johns Hoplrins
University in 1969. He achieved the rank of
full professor in 1977.
Blocb left Johns Hoplrins in 1980 for a
senior scientific position with Exxon Research and Engineering Co. While at Exxon,
be recruited and beaded groups in theoretical
chemistry and physics aad in coodensed
matter physics before being named director
of the Physical Sciences" Laboratory in 1984.
He held that post until be left for Columbia
in 1988.
AsviceprovostatColumbia.Btocbbetped

J coordinate

replace.

,,

ra•---

• _

• __

"Tbe faculty have lost an elUniOrdinary
per..on. He will certainly be bard to replace."
said Peter A. Nicker..on.-chairofthe Faculty
Senate. "His accomplishments have been
tremendous in pushing us toward the furure
and we have to continue in that direction."
Bloch was a member of the board of
trustees of the Calspao-UB Research Center
Inc., the board of trustees of the Western
New Yori&lt; Technology Development Corp .•
the Commisslooer's Doctoral Council of the

the evaluation aad planning of
broad academic programs, took the lead in
devising and administering research policy,
organized major interdisciplinary initiatives
and developed woricing partnerships with
industry. He also helped to build one of the
natioo' s most successful technology transfer programs.
In addition to his adminiwative post.
Blocb served as an adjunct (lltllessorofchemistry at Columbia. with researcb interests in
the areas of theoretical and experimental
condensed matter physics and chemistry.
Bloch authored six patents and more than
90scientific publications, and delivered more
than I 00 presentations Ill technical meetings
and institutions arouod the world. He had
served-as a consultant with the Tbeoretic;t

NUCLEAR MATRIX
Continued from page t
tance amoo&amp; biologists.
According to Berezney. the work pre·
sen ted by his group and others at the conference is part of an overall effon to understand
the relationship between the architecture of
the cell nucleus and genomic organization
and regulation.
Those relationships may also have important implications for the understanding
and treatment of cenain diseases.
"While research on the human genome
project is providing infonnation on the linear order of genes on our chromosomes, the
UB research on the nuclear matrix is intent
on taking things one giant leap further: mapping where the linear array of genes func·
lions in three-dimensional space,'' he said.
The UB group is one of the few groups
studying the fundamental mechanisms be·
hind the nuclear matrix.

A !ready. Berezney and colleagues at UB
Ahave used the advanced techniques to
pinpoint specific replication sites a1ong the
chromosome. information that will eventually provide insight into how the replication
of individual genes i~ organized and regulated in three-dimensional space.
.. We want to understand how genes ex·
press themselves in three dimensions ,·· he
said. ··when the chromosome unravels in
the newly assembled cell nucleus following cell division, different regions of a
chromosome or different chromosomes
may aclually be close in three dimensions,
and those spatial relationships may be regu·
Ia led."
In other words. he said. the linear array of
genes along the chromosome is transformed
into a three-dimensional arrangement.
One of the keys to a better understanding
of the nuclear matrix and its architecture is
the identification of the specific proteins that
make up the nuclear matrix and how they
interact.
Berezney' s group, which has pioneered
this field by cloning and sequencing the very
first nuclear matrix protein, bas now identified and reported on a new nuclear-matrix
protein that may be involved in the mechanism of gene splicing orits regulation. While

it does not appear to directly affect the &amp;plicing of RNA. it may affect pr&lt;&gt;~eins caJJed
splicing factors. by acting as a "molecular
chaperone"to target certain critical proteins
and/or assembling them. into regions in the
nucleus where splicing takes place.
The protein is also of interest because it
shows significant structural simiJarity to
cyclophilin. an important regulatory protein
that may play a role in H!V (AIDS) infectivity.
The UB resean:hers also intend to apply
their approaches to chromosome transloca·

tion. a process where a piece of ooe chromosome moves to another one and may prevent
it from functioning normally.
Chromosome lrjlnslocations are of interest in part because they occur frequently in
cancers. such as those of the breast and
prostate and in leukemia.
" It is very likely that an elevated level of
chromosome translocations could be one
bas~ for understanding cancer," said
Berezney.
In one example. the UB researchers will
be looking at translocations that occur with
the genes for acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(ALL) and acute myloid leukemia (AML) .
"'It is striking how often this chromosome
aberration appears in patients with these
diseases. especially children.·· said Berezney.
In these cases. the gene is translocated
from chromosome II to a different chromo·
some. possibly signaling an abnonnality.
By looking at the three.&lt;Ji mensional structures of the chromosomes involved inside
the functioning cell nucleus. the UB re·
searchers are trying to see if they are close in
three-dimensions, which could account for
their tendency to trans! ocate.
The role of replicating the DNA at these
critical si tes will also be investigated.
"No one knows for sure why or how
chromosome translocation occurs," said
Berezney. "We do know that the two chro:
mosomes have to make physical contact.
over a kind of demilitarized zone.
" It de{"'ods on which chromosome is the
dominant force." he said. "and we are suggesting that it's controlled three-dimensional ly."
0

Physics Group of Bell Laboratories. ffiM' s
ThomasJ. Watson ResearcbCenter, Energy
Conservation Devices and the National Sci-

ence Foundation.
fellow of the American Physical Society. Bloch was an ~x officio member of
its couocil and member and former chair of
its Panel on Public Affairs. He also was a
member of the Committee on Public Affairs
of the Materials Research Society and a
former member of the society's council. as
well as a former member and former chair of
the Committee on Public Policy of the American lnstiblte of Physics and the instiblte' s
Corporate Associates Advisory Committee.
He also had been a member of the New Yori&lt;

A

City Pannership's Technology Executive
Council.
Bloch is survived by his wife, the former
Enid Greenberg; a daughter, Sarah, of East
Amherst; two sons. Adam and MichaeL both
of East Amherst; his mother, Judith Bloch of
Chicago; and two sister.., Merry Jones of
Gladwin. PL. and Janet Martin of Miarru.
A a.
Funeral services and burial were held
Tuesday in Cbioago. A memorial service
will be held at UB at a furure date; detail s
wiU be announced in the R~portu.
Donations in Aaron Bloch· s memory may
be made to the University at Buffalo Office
of Development. Box 607400. Buffalo. N.Y.
14260.

Three students are injured when
auto drives onto city sidewalk
II)' nEVE COX

Reporter Staff

T

HREE UB STUDENTS were seri·
ously injured Sa1urday. April 8.
when a vehicle drove onto an
Englewood A venue sidewalk and
struck them.
Brin Nelenbach. 20; Jill Franldin. 19;
both of Engel wood Ave .• and Amy
McCoppin. 20. of Goodyear Hall on the
South Campus. were taken by ambulance to
the Erie County Medical Center. Nelenbach
was dragged and pinned beneath the vehicle
for nearly half an hour. according to police
reports. She suffered head injuries. a broken
forearm and internal injuries. She underwent
surgery at ECMC Sunday morning and was
listed in faircoodition as ofTuesday. Franklin
sustained hip and lower back injuries and
also was listed in fair condition. McCoppin
was treated for leg injuries and released.
The accident occurred shortly before 8
p.m. when a vehicle police say was operated

by William Wagner. 48. of Montrose Place.
nuned off Main Street onto Englewood..then

continued turning left. veering onto the
sidewalk on the wrong side of the street.
Wagner was charged with secood degree
vehicular assault, driving while intoxicated.
recldess driving. driving on the sidewall.
and driving at a speed not reasonable or
prudent.
In addition. Diane Wagner. William 's
wife. was arrested for obstructing govern·
mental administration. Police said she ar·
rived at the scene in another vehicle. but told
them she had been driving the vehicle thai
struck the three students.
Wagner was previously arrested for dri v·
ing while intoxicated in Kenmore in May.
1992. He was later convicted of a lesser
charge and had his license suspended. Had
the previous conviction been for DWJ. Buf·
falo Police could have charged Wagner with
felony drunken driving. which carries a man·
datory prison term.

Graduation, Student Honors for
Reporter Commencement Extra
The Reporter will pub lish its annual "Commencemenl Extra· edition on
Thursday. May _tt . II you have not done so a lready. please send us lists of
students rece1v1ng graduat ion or other honors identifying
honors conc1sely; they must be received no later than
Thurad8)', Apotl 27 &gt;
Because of production requirements. we can only
accept lists electronically. E-mai l:
reponer@pub .buffalo.edu. You may a lso submit 3 .5-inch
computer d1sks w1th an accompanying hard copy version .
IBM (text only or WordPerlect for all versions except 6 .0)
and Mac1ntosh disks are both acceptable and we will
retum all disks. Specify the program please.
No FAX submissions.
Deliver disks to Reporter. 136 Crofts Hall North
Campus. Please include contact name. depart~nt and
campus address With phone number. Please phone editor
Chnst1ne V1dal at 645-6969 with any questions.

�_...,

____ _

3

R~ent gives psychology prof 'the best of both worlds'
.,- - A8por18r Editor
OSEPH MASLING, UB profesoor
emeritus of psycbology, bas lik.....thisretirmlentiOadecompres-

HmmcnymdCounlerpoi.nt.
Next fall, be may lake anOlbecmusiccoume,beoaid.
"I'd like 1o go t.ck to !be
piano, which I probably
lim chamber.
haven 'I touched in 6S
He still has an office in Park
yeam. •
Hall, md an assistant. He still edits and
Ofcourse, ooeofcbeloeya
publisbes extensively. He still teaches two 10 a succasful redmnent is
courses each year. But there's no more of being in good health md
"!be ~ork, !be red tape, !be endless
having !be funds, Masling
said. Another is planning.
committee meetings, the endless discussioo
of curriculum." ln retirement, Masling says
"It' s not luck. We had 10
be is enjoying all the joys and none of the
stiUcture it We try 10 struct:ure our life 10 suit us. You
drudgery of academic life.
"I jettisoned everything I didn 'I want and
can't be passive about it •
Retiranent has opened
kept everything I did want, so I have the best
of botb worlds,• said Masling, wbo retired
up a whole new world, be
from tJitin 1991.
says. "ODe of the joys of
He~ often wondered what would m&lt;&gt;retiJement (is) you can do
tivate hijiJ to retire, he said. "One day, I
whatever you want,"
notic:ed.iliatl didn't want to prepare a syllaMasling said.
bus and I didn't want to fill out a book list for
"I knowforsorne people,
the Ubrary. Both of those take 20 minutes • retiring is leaping into the
and I just didn't want to do it"
great uuknown. So what 1
Andinthatmoment,beknewitwastime.
did is spUt the difference. It's like going
A look at the family fiJUIDCeS showed that
through a decompressioo chamber."
between his pensioo and Social S=uity
Ithough Joseph Masling retired in 1991,
benefits and his wife 's pensioo and SQcial
many of his ideas about careful planSecurity benefits, they could Uve at a level
ning apply to those who are thinking of
"veryclose"totheir pre-retirement lifestyle.
retiring
in 199S, and utilizing the early~
"'n the other hand, I didn't wantiO retire
tirement program that New York State bas
and beoomeold," Maslingsaid. "So I hedged.
offered.
I retired from my paycheck but not from my
In conjunction with the 199S State of
work and my colleagues."
Ne~ York Early Retirement Incentive ProHe's been well satisfied with his decigram, UB bas retained theservicesofKPMG
sioo. The Maslings now spend three months
Peat Marwick 10 provide individual and prieach winter in San Diego. "We find we can
vate persOnal financial planning services for
Uve in Buffalo much happier if we can leave
those unclassified employees who submit
behind the gray months," Masling said. "I
the Non-Binding Notice of Interest 10 the
haven "tlefl the field, I left behind the stuff I
Personnel Services Office, 104 Crofts Hall,
didn' t Uke-course outlines, exams.•
by April 19, 199S.
Retirement also has allowed him to pur·
An orientation session that outlines the
sue interests be didn't have time for before.
specific retirement benefits and services will
"Since I was no longer 'careering; I could
be beld for intuested faculty and staff .and
read things that weren't in my ficld, • said
their spouses from 7-9 p.m. Thursday. April
Masling, who has tsken a class at UB each
13, at the Center for Tomorrow. The session
fall since he retired. "It's nice to be a student
is free of charge.
again. You know, the excitement of learnThe purpose of the session is 10 help UB
ing-it"s wonderful.•
faculty and staff considering retiring to make
Masling bas tsken classes in Shakespeare,
the decisioo that is best for them, according
the Bible as Literature and a basic course in

J

A

u~ 'retrying fiJ get people

w think about the. ..process
andhowtheyammakean
analysis oftheir needs. n
IIAIITIII J. -

10 Martin J. Skrip of KPMG Peat Marwick.
"We're trying 10 get people 10 think about
the whole process and how they can make an

analysis of cbeir o&lt;eds," said Skrip.
_ In addition 1o the specific provisions of
the early retiJement incentive being offered
by New York State, the orientation session
will focus on different issues that need 10 be
considered when contemplating retirement,
issues such as fixed vs. discretionary expenses, lifestyle planning, retirement income
distribution. income tax planning, cash flow
needs and providing for dependents, among
other considerations.
"This group of people are probably in-

...........
M..a.c: "' ' - ' t left u. tleltL
I left behind u. __ , cldn't ......
volved in Olbec activities that will genmw:
income (after retirmlent). They're not just
going 10 be playing golf or sitting on a
sailboat,"Skripsaid. "We"regoingiOiookat
the specific 5leps of developing a retirmlent
plan..
People often find that they are in a better
f1D811Cial position after !be retire, lie noted.
"New York State bas very favorable provisions fD&lt; retirees, • Skrip said. For example,
New York State retirmlent income is excluded from New Yorlr. State taus. In addition. retirees no ~mae&lt; pay Social Security
taxes, which can save an individual thousands of do!Ws • year.
He noted that for many, receiving Social
Security benefits also is • """""""- But, "by
drawing earner, rather than later, the benefit
is smaller, but you draw it longer."
Faculty and staff wbo submit the NonBinding Notice of Interest by the April 19
deadline also will be able 10 take advantage
of individual financial counseling sessions
free of cost, he said.
0

Gender bias in tenure policy among issues discussed by FSEC
IIJaTEYECOll
Reporttlf Staff

HEFACULTYSenateExecutive
Committee tackled gender bias in
the university's tenure policy and

T

revisited the controversy sur-

roullding the restructuring of the
atts and sciences curriculum during a meet·
ing last week.
Promotions and Tenure Committee Cllair
Margaret Acara and Macbematics Professor
Samuel Schack presented a resolution at the
FSEC"s April S meeting, which proposed extending the seven-year clock for promotion 10
tenure by ooe yearfor"special circumstances.·
The only covered "special circumstance,"
however, is women who give birth. The
proposal, a onetime opportunity to essentially extend the promotion to tenure period
to eight years from the date of employment,
would be retroactively available, upon request, to any woman on the faculty who bad
a child but bas not yet "e arned tenure.
Schack explained that "many, many cir-

cumstances came to the commiuee·s mind
that could warrant an exception like thissuch as those covered by the federal Family
and Medical Leave Act -but pregnancy was
the only one everyone could agree on."
Schack and Acsra botb said the committee
offered this proposal as a "fust step. •
Bernice Noble, t:o-ebair of the UB Task
Force on Women, who said her task force
bad looked at this issue on other eampuses,

urged begrudging suppon for the resolution,
concluding that "we are probably quite back·
wards here. This isthet0061c::omc:rvative poUcy
you could write and still have a poUcy at all. •
Other FSEC members expressed similar
reservations about the narrowly drafted proposal. The promotions committee will reconsider the resolution, and it will be voted
upon at a future FSEC meeting.
Controversy also continued to surround

the issue of control over cwricular decisionmaking in the arts and sciences last week.
The latest flUrry between administrators and
faculty was prompted by revised undergradu·
ate general education requirements.
At issue, say several FSEC members, is
whether the right of the Faculty Senate to
make interdisciplinary curricular decisions
is impeded by the restructuring of three formerly independent liberal atts units: the Faculties of Arts and Letters, Natural Sciences
and Mathematics and Social Sciences.
Functimingcollectively,throughtheCouncil ofDeansoftheArtsand Sciences chaired by
Social Sciences Dean Ross McKinnon. theans
and sciences unit n~eased oew, downsized
general education requirements for atts and
sciences students, as well as an experimental
Uberaftz.ed poUcy of declaring majors.
The new poUcy, according to Nicolas
Goodman. vice provost for undergraduate
education. will reduce from four to three the
number of courses which could be required
of students to achieve "intermediate profi-

cieocy" in a foreign language. It also drops
from four 10 three the number of bard scieoce
courses required of liberal atts students, and
now requires students in Natural Sciences
and Mathematics departments to lake just
one course, rather than two courses, from
either of the other two liberal atiS scbools.
nother important policy change, explained Goodman. is a "trial run • at
allowing atts and sciences students, about
half of UB's undergraduate population, to
merely declare, rather than apply for, their
major. With limited exceptions for cenain
art or music disciplines, students with 60
credits can declare themselves in any departmental major in the atts and sciences unit
Though they may still have to meet cenain
departmental requirements to stay in that
major, Goodman said, this will enable more
students-to avoid problems with TAP and
flDBDcial aid requirements that students with
60 credits or more be enrolled in majors.
Political Science Professor Claude Welch
and Lockwood Library Director Judith
Adams expressed dissatisfaction with new
undergraduate general education requirements and the process that led to them. A
mail ballot, .which was sent to the 4QO..plus
faculty members in the arts and sciences,
was "substituted for real faculty input," said
Welch, who said be believes the Faculty
Senate "fell asleep at the switch· with regard
to this issue this year. "The Senate bas a

A

historic and well thought out concern with
curriculum,• explained Welch, "and I don't
see much reason to find this poll as representative of faculty will" Adams urged formal
FacultySenaterejectionofcbechangesimplbmented by ~":5and sciences deans, but no
action was """"! on that proposal.
In Olbec business, FSEC members received a report on the state of communicationsoneampusandcbe&amp;potUrfromEditor
Cbristi.oe Vidal Vidal detailed changes that
bavebeen made · cbepoper's fonnat, including a "news ~·10 the froot page and
oew coiiDDDS deve~ in response 10 faculty
r&lt;queSts. Sbe also called upon faculty members universitywide to offer leuers and Y"leWpointsarticles for publication. FSEC members
urged Faculty Senatea..ir htor Nickerson to
reactivate an advisory board that had existed
for the RepotUr 10 aid in developing the
broadest possiblecoverageof campus events.
Also, the FSEC voted 10 boklanalbecround
ofbaUotingfortheofficeofcbairofcbeFaculty
Senate. The panel adopted a m;oiutim calling
for new ballots, with the same four candidates,
tobemailedouttoslleUgiblefacultythisweek.
The last round of balloting for the position
stirred controversy when it was discovered that
mailing labels from Persortndomitted as many
as 2SO eUgible voting faculty members. 11tis
time, the mailing list of eUgible faculty will be
culled from lists submitted by each school's
dean. E1ectioo resubs should be known before
the Senate's final meeting May 2.
o

�4
Uleiii8RAD
Continued from page 1

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..........WelJ .

For tkie1s ($12.00, iiDdlln SS.OO) llld
IIXR infmnatloo, please caD 838-2383.

aod oftell beld up lllldents' SJ*Iualioo as
!bey wailed to pi.Dacc:eastomquiredc:ounes.
New recuJa1ioos allow llllderpldulles 10
ljlply for IICCepWICe 10 • rpecifi&lt;: depart·
mcn1 if they bave a 2.0 GPA aod bave com·
plcted It least 60 credit hours.
availability of 20 new advanced·
technology classrooms aod enhanced access
10 campus computing facilities .
• Dnmalicimprovementsin undergradu·
ate registration, class scbeduling aod student
advioement through tbe BIRDsys~an.atoueb­
tone pre-registralio ~)'stem that, for many
liludents, eliminaJes hours in coune regima·
Lion lines, aod tbe Degree Audit Reportin&amp;
S)'llem--DARS. OARS is anacttdemiciDforIJI&amp;Iioo..relrial ~)'stem bod:ed by a massive
dwbase tbaloffers tbe possibility ofbeucr aod
more aa:uraiC uoclcrgradualc Sl1Jdeol advisemmt witb tbe assistance of faculty adviJcn.
• n.; availability of more sections of
setVice counes, wbicb are mJuiml for ad·
mission 10 advanced classes, a change that
facilitates student movement through tbe
undergraduate system.
• l1te m!uction in the number of credit
hours mJuiml for gradualioo from 128 10
120. Goodman stresSeS that many individual
degree programs. particularly those in professional schools, still mJUire morethao 120
hours for graduation.
• 1be negotiation and improvement of
inter-institutional articulation agreements
thai ease problems confronted by students
transfening from other colleges and universities. UB is engaged in discussions with
Erie Community College. James town
~ College, Niagara County Community CDIIege aod GeneseeCommwli.ty Col·
lege, and has signed a joint admissions
agreement with Monroe Conununity CDIIege .
• Newbonorsscbolarshipmoney-nised
from private sources and totaling $1 .6 mil·
lion-is available for honors scholarships
for srudents entering UB in the 1996-97

academic year. UB is wortiJt&amp; to anr.:t
NalioDa!Meril Scbolmbipwinnenaodolber
top m,tHcltooiiiUdenta. says Ooodman.
• Notice of fiDancial aid awards to studeoll IIOW will be lalt i.mmediaJely after
tbeir accepiiiDCe ao tblt studeaiJ aod porents
can immedillely asaeaslc.l and pmt1 ""!Uire·
mo:ms aod deletmine out-oC-poc:Soc experues.
AooordiDg 10 John Karrer, director of
student finances aod records, maoy students
who apply 10 UB alsoljlply to lllllller SUNY
~eges. which bave until now been at an
advantage because their lliu allowed for
faster response. "Now," he says. "we can get
the proper information into the baods of tbe
parents aod students quickly so they can
make a decision as to where 10 enroll."
• Establishment of tbe Council of Arts
aod Sciences Deans, whicb iocludes deans
from the Ftteu!Lies of Arts aod 1..eatn, Social
Scieocesaod Natural ScieDces aod Matbematia. 1be council OV&lt;I1IeCI aod ooordinates Un·
~artsaod ociencesedualtion, tracks
&lt;:&lt;J~mC demaod aod helps assure tbe avaiJabil.
ily of geoeral~ courses.
Goodman DOleS tbal tbe SUNY system
guarantees tbal SllJdenls who complete • twoyear community college program satisfactGrily may be admitted 10 a SUNY four-year
college or university. UB is wortiog to ensure
smooch tnmsfer of those students iDIO degree
programs. He oays tbal despite tbe faa that the
1995-96 Slate budgel will call for major reducLioos in state support for UB aod the SUNY
sys1m1. UB is still one oftbt nation's best buys
in higher education. AllboughOOSIS may rise as
a result of SUNY budgel reduaioos, he points
out thai tuition for uoclcrgradualc New Yon
State resideoll probably will increase by per·
baps $1,000 or by as little as $500 in the
coming year. As previously l1\IIOI1DCed, the
~)'stem anticipates an iocreue in tbe $700-800
range, which woold increase in-stale annual
tuilioo from $2,650 10 approximately $3,350.
"lbe state's Tuitioo Assistaoce Program
(TAP) wiU cover up 10 90 percent of the
lib:ly undergradUile tuition cbar8ed for el igible students," Goodman said.

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Robert L. Brown, med school dean, archivist
Robert L Brown, 73, the first associate
dean of the UB School of Medi cine and
Biomedical Sciences. died April 5 in Buf·
falo General Hospilal after a short illness.
Brown's work as an archivisl helped to preserve records from lhe early year. of the
medical school.
Brown was a graduate of the UB medical
school and served as chief of the medical
service of !24th General Hospital in Austria
and as a major in the surgeon general's office
in Washington.
Before joining the UB medical school in
1959 as assistant dean. Brown was medical
and technical director of the AmerCompaoy
in Buffalo. He was appointed acLing dean in
1960. directing the planning for UB" s merger
into the slate system.
In 1974.be became archivist forthemedi·
cal school. In addition to locating and pre·
serving early records. he de sig ned the
school"s cap and gown. ln 1985, recognizing
his 26-year support of the Health Sciences

Library. the university renamed the histori·
cal and rare books colleclioo the Robert L.
Brown History of Medicine Collection. At
his retirement in 1985 he was appointed
consultant to the University Libraries and
continued a clast association with the book
collection until hi s death.
Among honors he received were the
Dean'.s Award in 1967 and 1973 and the
Medical Alumni Award in 1974.
Brown. who was director of the Visiting
Nurses Association from 1975-1978. was a
member of the medical booor society Alpha
Omega Alpha, the Medical Foundation of
Buffalo, the Faculty Club, the Medical His·
rorical Society. the Albright-Knox Art Gal·
lery. the Museum of Science, the Buffalo
and Erie County Historical Society. the
Friends of the School of Architecture and the
Buffalo Club.
Brown is survived by his good friend.
Donald J. Savage.
Private services will be held.

Kenneth Gay, poetry collection curatOr
K- u t Glly, 83. who had served as
curator of the pnetry collection of the University at Buffalo for I 0 years. died March
26 in Palma. Mallorca.
Robert Bertholf. the present curator, noted
in the New York Times obituary that Gay
had brought about a remarkable improvement in the collection's holdings of first
editions of books of pnetry from Britai n,
Canada and other Commonwealth nations.
Gay was a longtime friend of the pnet
Robert Graves, many of whose manuscripts
and pubbcattons are included in the UB
collection. During Gay's tenure-from 1968

until hi• retirement in 1978--the collection
more than doubled in siz.e to more than
65.000 items.
Robert Graves lived on Majorca for many
years and his son, William, told the lndepen·
dent, a British newspaper that Gay had been
his father's secretary, friend and collabora·
tor. Robert Graves died in 1985.
A nativeofGermaoy, Gay, whose original
name was Karl Goldschmidt. left Germany m
1933 when HiUercametopower. He served in
the British Navy during World War II.
Gay and his wife, Irene, had two daugh·
ters.
::

�_...,

r

Last week, the Faculty Senate Executive Committee voted to hold another round of balloting for
the office of Chair of the Faculty Senate.
The last round of balloting\ro~ the position was
declared invalid when it ~vered that mailing labels from Personnel omitted as many as 250
eligible voting faculty members. This time, the
mailing list of eligible faculty will be culled from
lists submitted by each school's dean, rather than
mailing lists from Personnel. Results of the new
election are expected to be known before the
Senate's last meeting of the year, May 2.
Following are the position statements of the four
candi~tes running for Chair of th~ Faculty Senate.

M.D.

a:::

O

expericDced

IDOUDting pr&lt;S·
sures from with·
out and from within. Rapidly developins ltJdmologies; changes in the
peroeptioo or higher educatioo in the
geoenl public; and the move towards
on incn:asingly managerial odministrative style; these are just some of
the fliC!ors involved The pe!Sistent
erosion of the stole ·s fmancial suppan for our institution bas now culminated in a proposed cut of over 30
pen:eul of stole suppolt- A5 I n:sul~
fuwlcial oooccms and business
efficieocy have become sometimes
the oveniding coocems. With them
often come distrust and disoonl
111100&amp; faculty members and academic units, and. ultimately, fragmeotatioo of seq&gt;&lt; and identity.
Despite these difficulties and
despite the advisory Slo!US and limited power of the Faculty Sc:oate, I am
convinced that it can contribute mo5l
significantly to achieving the best
0t11C&lt;XDe of w1w theN~ YOTi 7lmes
of Feb. 22, 199S calls "budgd-&lt;:UIIing
era reshaping of state universities."
The Sc:oate is the natural cooduit of
communication belwceo faculty and
administration; it can help to render

dec:isioo-making man: transpan:Dl; it
can recruit and focus a pmlll of
faculty talent and cxperien&lt;:e. and
thus footer cobesion. collegiality and
integration. Sbould the budgetary cuts
indeed be implemented in anything
_.-:bing their cum:ot map&gt;itude,
it seems prudml for the Sc:oate to
provide oclditiooal orpniDtiooal
llrUCIUr&lt;S t o - dficacious infor_.., plberin&amp; and prompt ddil&gt;....... and asiot adivdy our
odatinlllnDoo In the final dec:isioo-

mokia&amp;proc&lt;S-

1D my opiDica. the mo5l impol1mt
projocll for the Pocully delil&gt;-

5

fiCILTY IEIITE CUll UIIIIITEI

Faculty Senate
candidates offer
statements

Boris Albini,

____..

entioos over the next few years are
the following. First. the Sc:oate should
involve itself in exploring 90W"'CS for
fuwlcial reveuue other than the stote.
Since faculty, toge1ber with the stoff,
will be the primary agents in such
efforts. they seem best able to plan
them. 5ecood. and clooely linlced to
the fino item. the Sc:oate should
discuss the best approoches to assure
survival of the bosic principles of
ICidemic life. i.e.. collegiality. academic rr-tom. foculty governance.
and fair and due process. IS well IS
honesty in educatioo and scbolar.;hip.
After all, our primary goals are education. research-i.e., the pursuit of
knowledge-and community service.
Procwuneot of mooey is importan~
but ooly as 1 means to achieve these
academic goals. Third, tbe Sc:oate
should do its best to improve the
quality of life on campus-at and off
wad. A truly positive """""'&gt;b= of
mutual respoc1 and the possibility to
discuss eveo cootroversia1 issues
opeuly, will belp this great inslitutioo
survive
challenge. Indeed, in a
positive ll!llOOpbere. we will acc:omplisb much man:, evm with much
less budgetary n:soura:s.
A5 to myself, I have received my
M.D. degree from the University of
V'I&lt;IIDI, Austria. and have also a
-··degree in musical composition. I have worbd in Buffalo for 20
years, and I am a professor of Microbiology and research professor of
Medicine. My inten:sl in research has
n:sulted in over a bllllllml papers and
reviews, as well as foor boob. In
1991,1 was a visiting professor 11
lnnsbruck, Austria. and Podua, lilly
on a Pulbriabt Scbolar. I have bad the
fortune to serve oo oor Faculty Sc:oate
over the last eiabt years mil have
tqliOS&lt;Illed my~ in the

any

medical achocl's Faculty Couocill
am a wore of bow modest my abilities
are wbeu COOlpOI'd to the cballeoges
ol the pooitioo. Howeva-, lam mo5l
willqt&amp; to opeak out for !be faculty
and ooopenle witb !be aclmiuiatrlllioo
a:ad olber ...,
k • dour pe111:
illoliluliom; and I om ....,... than ..,.,.
to COIIIiDue loomin&amp;-

Stephen C.
Halpern
UIUNO 111E 22
yean that I haw:
'-&gt;IIUB, faculty l n f l - over
the institution has
climinisbcd, academic units have less cootrol over
tbeit own affairs, and power has
become more c:oocentrated in the
bands of a larger and less acx:ountable odminislrative structure. In
short, UB
less and less
along the troditiooallines of academic collegiality and decentraliutioo and more and man: alona the
lines of a bienn:bical business
torporatioo . The Faculty Sc:oate has
been ineffective in protecting againsr.
these developments.
I! elected, my filS! objective
would be to eliminate the eUsting
Senate structure. It simply doesn .,
work. I would try to replace it with a
system that provided a meoningful
role for faculty in governing UB. To
that end. I would move lo cooveoe a
Faculty Sc:oate Govenwx:e Committee, composed of foculty ond administtat""' ond charged to roudy the
moot o4=ssful models across the
natioo of faculty participatioo in
institutiooal governance. The Commince would be asked to issue a
repon by May 1996 proposing a oew
system to replace the Faculty Sc:oate.
t am not sure that it is pou~'ble to
Wldo the puwerful changes in bigber
educatioo that have made a foculty
voice so insignificant 1 force oo
campuses... but it is imperative to tr)'
to do so.
Altbougb stUdents, and administrators to a lesser eJ.tent, oome and
go, faculty are the most permanent,
core component of any university .
By virtue of the longevity of our
attachment to the institution., we
have the greatest stake in il. By
virtue of the oenlrality of ow tasks.
we have the greatest impact on it. If
we do our jobs as teachers ond
scholars well , the instirutioo will
nourisb; if we do DO!, notbing elsenot efficient administrators or bril·
liant students-can compeosate for
that failure. In sum, the reputatioo
ond performance of the faculty is the
, _ important~ of the greatness of ony institutioo of bigher
educlltioo. Given tha~ it is especi.aUy
striking that faculty have'-&gt; relegated to marginal. ineffective roles
in the running of tbo6e institutions.
There are greater pressures oo
faculty than ever'before from stote
bureaucracies and universiry administrators. Efforts by odminislrators,
politicians and others to reevaluate
the prerogatives and responsibilities
of faculty will c:ootinue largely
because faculty have failed to do
that job themselves. We have DOl
been bard enough oo ourselves in
evaluating oor performance, rethinking our role ond judging how weU
we use the autonomy and job security that we do have. Coosequently,
in partnerShip with the UUP. I propose establishing a joint UUP-Faculty Sc:oate Task Force on Faculty
~ibilities. Within a year of its
formatioO that Task Force would
issue I atatemeol (li"OI&gt;&lt;lSinB bow
faculty in each departmenl or professiooal achocllhouid develop I
foDdt7-&lt;:o1J1T01kd mccbanism for
ideatifyina faculty , ..poosibilitieo

opent&lt;s

and IDCJI1ilorina bow and -

faadry . - - .._.n,ilitieL I

._u:. !bat- of my c:otieac- w i l l - Ibis idee. Y&lt;l h

eva!-_..

to In our iDierest to
tel- both boca- it lo the rip
thin&amp; to do and becauoe i f - do DO(,
- - be ...... that otbers, leoo
UDdenlaDdin&amp; of - - do, will
.,._ to do that job for .,._

Claude
Welch

I

N RUNNING for Chait of the
Faculty Sc:oate. I ...;,n to
suess thm: points: I) my
c:ommiuneot to effective
tioculty government •• all

levels, in which I&lt;XlOUOtability plays an important part, 2) my
inteotioo to seek ..odespread coosultatioo.. to addn:ss serious issues CXlll-

froming the University, and 3) my
experieoce in governance, notably
througb the Sc:oate.
Accountability is a:nual to leadmbip in an ICidemic serting. Accountability should be a general
principle in our University. Senior
academic 1eade:s are accountable to
their foculty colleagues; we IS focul ty
are acc:ountable to om studeols for
effective teadlin8 11 aU levels; we are
accountable to academic commtm.ity
and our professions or disciplioes for
quality research; as members of the
public sector, we are txt.Dy acx:ountable 10 the c:orillnunity iD wbicb we
live and work. I believe that accountability includes evaluatioo of performance. Ac:axdingly, I '-"! to
stress. within the areas of n:spoosibility given by custom and University
policies, meaningful assessment of
how well all members of the academic community perform. I! elected
Ollir, I would be responsible for the
Senate's effective operations, in
particular for its oomm.ittees. tbeir
repons. and !be overall c:oeduct of
Senate business.
Coosultalioo is essential; however. it may be severely tested as the
University experic:nccs continued
severe reductions in direct suppor1
from the State. Tunes of cuts threat&lt;:O
the basic ICidemic fabric. The Faculty Sc:oate must ensw&lt; that decisions
made by our coUeagucs in major
admin.istrat.ive positions cx:cur as a
n:sult of systematic, reasooed. exlmsive disaJssioo with faculty. The
Faculty Sc:oate is the faculty's key
University-wide voice. lt bas its
greatest impod througb persuasive
repons. cogent debat&lt;s, and willing..... to pn:ss s&lt;roa&amp;IY for ICidemic
values at this period of mbinlcing
SUNY priorities and funding. I!
elected Chait, I would n:preseot the
faculty as a whole, througb widespread. open coosultatioo. I would
eosure that foculty views an: fully and
effcaivdy represented in all appropriate settings. I would_.ensure .. best
I can that all JliOil05IIs for ..-ing
the cwr&lt;Dl crisis, .. well .. otbcr
JliOil05IIs for change. are thorougbly
eumined by the Sc:oate.
Experieace counts. I have loog
been involved with the Faculty Senate. I cbain:d it from 198S to 1987,
and took the lead in establislting
committees 00 Budgd Pri&lt;Kitic5,
Studeol Affairs, and Teaclting Quality. I haw: scnoed oo the Eucutive
Committee for more than ball my IS
years .. Ibis University. From 1989 to
199S,t ..... elect&lt;&gt;d - - -

- o f four s-u oo !be SUNY
Facuky s - ; dlio Olial iDcludod
two OIIID-J"* tr:aDI OD ils aeallift
caauniaoe. Since mivina • Buffalo
·--par-riD 1964,1

t.ve 8S"WWd. VKiola - - - -

--(e.a-.•0...

vice...-..

ol !be ao-called uai-.lty Ccllep iD
1967-70,. -.x:iole
for acadomic alJaim 1976-110, and as
Chair ol Political ScieDoe 1980-13~
.. Chait olaewnl University ......
(mt:ludin&amp; !be..._.,
Review Boord 00 Aw'iPromotioos and Tenure; the Ullder-

Jrlduate College Olrriculum Comminee; search committees for thm:
deons), and as member of many
others. This experimce, combined
with my c:mcems for IIOCOUDIIbility
and c:ousuhatioo, should maU !be
Faculty Sc:oate a """"effective
instirutioo under my leadersbip.

MichaelJ.
Cowen
OONECA.N
f&lt;X&lt;Oee wbat the
cbanged political
climate will mean
to UB in the next
-years. What is
clear is thai the Faculty Sc:oate and its
Chait must ensure t h e from WgeDC)' of ID instirutioo wbicb
is &amp;till devced to eu.dlcuce iD reand loomin&amp;. To do Ibis, !be
Chait of the Faculty will ooed
10 be a quick Ieamer, I lrzleo Ji!omer,
a SlroOg advocate., a ~ and •
facilitator. Most of all, the Chair must
pOssess the ability to evaluate the
Administl¥ioo •• JliOil05IIs dealing
with the budget crisis, 10 SUUesl
impnrv&lt;m&lt;DIS. and to rally the faculty
wben noc:essary. My uperi&lt;noe in
deportmenlll administratioo, 00
University c:omrninees, and in the
Sc:oate has pre.-red me for this !1Sk.
As ruitioo rises. the University
will be under iDcn:asing pn:ssure to
provide a more caring, less impersonal enviroomeu1: for om srudc:nts.
(Indeed. we oup 10 have '-&gt; doin&amp;
this r&lt;gardless of budgetary problems.) I have spent the past 10 years
IS Uoderpduate Diroc:tor promocing
euctly such an CDYiroorDml in the
Departmeol of Mathematics. -

-

man:. as a member of the curriculmn
committees of both DUAS and Ans
&amp; Scieoces, I have '-&gt;an adVOCIIe
for treatin&amp; oor srudeolsless art&gt;i-

tmily.
In additioo to an abiding inten:sl
in tllldcrlf*luale and graduate educatioo, I have'-&gt; a aroog propooeot
of the adminisullive and instructicoal
uses of computer t&lt;dmology. I am
Chait of the Pocully Sc:oate Ccmputin&amp; Servioes Commillee, pppliDg
with the Comput:ins Cmt&lt;r. This
aperieoce has givm me ao uoder-

SW&gt;ding of the service of !be
University and its relatimsbip to
ICidemic progrmns.
In my prolessiooallife lam a
tbeoretician, scbooled in analytical
thinlcing and problem-solving. Bull
also know this is DO( eoousb= dealing
with people taRs c:ommoo .......
UDderslmdin&amp;. and .....mvily. The
c:ombinatioo of criticallhiDkD&gt;&amp;.
.,._..;sm.andskillll~

relaliooshipl is my pa~e~tllmiJ1h­
Tbal is why you lbauld elocl me

Chaitol ! b e - -

�_...,

...--

8

_____ .

'

C..._

~·­

__
N....-.tropllk of
G.--tb
l'actono:

G ....... ~......Jbop Maureea Me
- 5:307:30p.m. Call 64 '6125 for
~pauatioo informaiiOD.

cu.lcal Scltaas, Jolu&gt; A.
Kesiler, M.D, Albert EinSiein

UUM--

Colle&amp;&lt; of Medicioe. Butler
Auclilorium, Farl&gt;er. South Campus.4 p.m.

North Campus. 6:30p.m. S2,
S3.50. Caii645-29S7 .

.-HY-YDyumic Sarfaco Teuloa of
SorfKtaDI TA: EsporilDoatl
aod n-&lt;y, Mort Johosoo.
PhD.. M.LT. 108 Sherman.
SouthCampus. 4:15p.m.
CONCPT
Computer Muic SU.dlo, Cone
Lippe, clirector. UB Coa..•porary - b i t , Jeffrey

Uobearablt IJ&amp;bblal of !loin&amp;- Student Union Thealt:f.

~-

UB Symp~ llaDcl, Works
by Vaughan-WitHams,
Mendeluohn. Arnold. lvea.
Fillmore. and Sbosukovi&lt;b:
Sanh L McKoin, eondiiCUl&lt;.
Louis Vitello, assi5Wlt cooduc:to&lt;. Slee Concert Hall. North
Campus. 8 p.m. Free admission..
Caii645-2921.

Sudelman. clirector. Erik 0na.
eooduc:to&lt;. Slee Cooccn HaD.
North Campua. 8 p.m. Fn:e ad-

- U E TIIUTIII
Rocky Borror Show. Pfeifer
Theater. 8 p.m. SIO. Si2. Sl5.
Call 839-85-40.

.-HY-GI... lladlallM iD Top
Quarl&lt; Playwka, Prof. Lynne
Orr. Uoiv. of Roc:bt&amp;t«. 228
Nanni Science A Malhemahcs
Complex. North Campus. 3:45
p.m. Call645-2017.

-~

-~latrodKtory Playlieal ....1 o( .... AAillll. 6-9 p.m.
S250. Call 829-3291 for r&lt;li•tratioa informatioo.
Harrimao Hall. South Campus.
8 p.m.
acrTAL
Amy
plaDo, Student
of Stq&gt;hco Manes. Baird Recil&gt;i
Hail. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free
admiwoo. Cail645-2921

11.11.W--

UUM ... -

Student Union TheCampus. 9 p.m. S2.
645-2957.

-MERFARE TMEATER
Rocky Horror Sbo"'- Preafer
n...Mer 7 and 10 p.m S 10. S 12.
St5 C"all 839-8.540

MAS1'D CLAIS
Martha Herr, soprano- B a~rd
Recital Hall North Campus
Noon Fru: admiss10n Call 645·

2921
.IOCHEII11'111Y SEIIINAII
Purirtcatioo, Cbarac:teril.ation.
Cloning and Regulation of
Brancbed..CbaiJI alpha-Krlo

Add Dthydrogenase Kinase.
Yos.hiharu Shimomura. 1348
Farber. South Campos. 10 a.m.

ENVI-MEHTAL
ENQINEEIIINO AND SCIENCE

SEMINAJI

...,.,: very,. atiog
w___ .__ ........ ..._w-.......,
Good EaiiiC: An ........ ctl .. "" v............. ...
Apotl1t. Call 14541211

far-_......_

Univ. of Guelph. 114 Hochstotter.
North Campus. 4 p.m.
IIATIIEIIATICS COUOQUIUM
Applkalloos of Sd-Valued
Mappings to Dyoamlcal Systems. Prof. Tom&amp;Sl. Kaczynski,
Univ. de Sherbroolte. 103
Diefendorf. South Campus.
4 p.m.

-

C-I.MONAIIY CENTEII

Supentltl011 iD Nitric O xide
Tberapy, Dr. Jun Iwamoto,
Asahibwa Medic~ College.
Japan. 108 Shennan. South
Campus. 8 a.m.

-uu

Friend's Room Book Sale.
Lockwood Ubrary Friend 's
Room. North Campus. IOa.m.S p.m. Prices will range from Sl
to $3. All saJes will be final and
only cub will be accepted.

P'IAJIO .-niDEIITS 11£CIJAL
Plano. Students of Frioa
Arschansta Boldt. Baird Recital
Hall. North Campus. Noon. Free
admission. Cali64S-2921.
-ALSCIIMCU
DEI'AIIJ'MEIITAL HIIIIIAR
Lyme Disease: The Dilemma
of Diaposis, Sousan S. Altaie.
Ph.D . 106 Cary . South Campus.
Noon.
PHARMACEUTICS HIIINAJI
Liposomal Therapy of Brain

Tumor: Evideocr of IntraTumoral Uposome lnposition? Dr. Uma Sharma, postdoctoral fell ow. C503 Cooke.
South Campus. 3:30p.m.
,.HYSICS COUOQUIUM

The Discovery of tbe Top

Quark at Fermilab, Prof.
Ulrich Baur. 228 Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematics Complex.
North Campus. 3:45 p.m.
a~AL

SCIEifCU
Rqubrtioo of Nitra,. A5similalioo iD Ceruls, Dr. Anne Oaks.

-

s~ ~.EADEJtSHW

Passi.P&amp; tbe Torch. Maggie
O'Connor, Jason Kane, Jill
Cole, Adrian Knigh Hakeem
Oseni , Cassaodn. Fra.ncique,
Bjorn DeBear, Joanne Rmaldo.
panelists; modcnou:d by Debr&gt;
Palka. 330 Student Union. North
Campus. 4 p.m. Call 829-2608 .

IEDUCA,__
COIITINUIIIIl

Cortilieate J&gt;rocram iD
GerontoJockal NuniD&amp;- 4 :307:30p.m. Sessions run Thursdays through May II. Sl5. S50
per penon. Call 829-3291 for
registration information ; reg!s·
tration deadline is five working
days before each session.

_,__--IJIYE

SCIEIICE

Dismantling lbe Cartesian
Theater, Prof. Daniel Dennen.

Tufts Univ. 2SS Natural Sciences &amp;. Mathematics Complex .
North Campus. 5 p.m.
01'£111110 -~
Master or F'me Arts Thesis

Exhibit-Nathaniel
Brockmann. The exhibit runs
through May 4 . Center for lhe
Aru-Art Department Gallery .
North Campus. 5-7 p.m. Call
645-6878.
ETHICS IN aiOMEIMCAI.
RUEARCH COUOQUMIM

Intellectual Property and Con·
nid or Interest, Kathleen
Terry. J.D., Office of Technol-

ogy Transfer. Butler Audito-rium. Shennan. South Campus.
5: 15-7: 15 p.m.

Pollutant Load Estimation
Using a Stntified Ratio Esti·
maJor. Dr. R. Peter Richards.
Heidelberg College. 220 Na1un111
Sciences &amp;. Mathematics Complex . Nonh Campus. ll a.m.

1tr

SUMMERFARE THEATER
Rocky Horor Sbow. Pf'eifer
Theater. 3 p.m. SIO. SJ2. SI S
Call 839-8540.

HOUilAIII LE~ n
The Coafessional Na.rn.tive or

-

V ertk:all.nnovatioo, Product
Cycles ud Eod..-•JS
sylva.nia State Univ. 414
Fronczak. North Campus.
3:30p.m.

.-HYaiCS HIIINAJI HJIIU

Quantum Moote Car1o Slmu·
lations of Heavy Fft"lllion Sys·

...... Dr. Richanl M. Fye.
Sandia National Lab. 222 Natu ral Sciences"&amp;. Mathematics
Complex.. North Campus. 3:45
p.m. Cail645-2017.

-

IIBIICAL c..MISliiY

Metal-EDT A Complexes: Manipulatlag Interactions and
Knctlvity iD Biolocl&lt;al Systems, Dr. Rosemary Marusak.
Kenyon College. 21S Narural
Scieoc:es &amp;. Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 4 p.m.
UU.UFIUISEIIIO
BarcelonL Student Union The·
ater. Nonh Campus. 6:30 and 9
p.m. S2. S3.50. Call645-2957 .
MAJtQAII£T MEAD FIUI AND

vmEOFUTIVAL
Sbaman•s Today. Featured aJt:
the film -children'' MagicaJ
Death." "S urvi vors of the
Rainfo rest:' "A Shamanic Me dium ofTugaru ." Center for the
Ans Screening Room. North
Campus. 7 p.m. Free admission.
Call 645-0902.
SUMMERFARE THEATER
Rocky Borror Show. Pfeifer
Theater. 8 p.m. SIO. Sl2. Sl5.
Call 839-8540.
UUAIIFIUISolll&lt;lbiD&amp; Wild. Student
Union 'Theater. North Campus.
11 :30 p.m. S2. S3.50. Cail6452957.

Health Bnldits Assodattd
with Regular Exerc~ Fn.nL.
J Cem) . Apn ll71.sthtre~r.;,

Sobd. CcruerfortheAru.RehearuJ Wottshop. North Carnpu.i
12;30-1 :30p.m.Freeadnussl00
DR. S. -ERT NAJIINI
MDIIORIAL LECTURE
Bulfalo-RO&lt;beoter Doralatoloc,y Society Meeting: Update
on lcbtbyosis. Mary W iUaam~.
M.D .• Umv . of California, San
Fntnc1sco. Buffalo General Ho ·
piull Memonal HaJJ D2. 3 p.m
Call845- 1566.
TEACHING EFF'EcnYEJrtUS
WOitKSHOP
loequity ln tbe Classroom. 2 19
Talbert HaJI. Nonh Campus
64

lion dc:adlule. Center for Tomor-

on hCampus . Noon Si n

J'0\1,

co&gt;l Call 829-2608

I'EJICUSSION anJDEJfTS

RECIJAL
Pe:ta~S§ion Perfoi"''IWK't., Stu dents of Jan Withams and An·
thony M•randL Baird Roc•tal
HaJJ. North Campus. Noon Frt"t:
admi~aon . Call 64 5-2921
UFE W Etrectlve llesumu and Conr
Ldten. M•chelle Druzcowd..,
Noon- I p.m. Ca.1164S-61~ for
regtS:tration mformation.

w-

DV'I1IEACM
£xploriag Divenity, Counsel·
tng Centc:r. 14SE Student Umon
North Campus. Nooa- 1 p.m

CIIEMICALSEMIIUIITBA, Scon Diamond. 206

E - I C S SEMINAJI

G.--tb iD Seardlof Equilibrium, Prof. Ping Wang, Penn ·

WNCIIEOii

aotU
Sr\.&lt;eD Tunes£,~ by Beauu

U-

ATHLETICS
UB Track Invite. University
Stadium. North Campus 3-7 p.m.

ecrosis Fac:t:or. Chn ...
248 Cooke: North
8-9 a_m.
AUOCIAnoN

BROWN UCl READING

;~!~!'::!~~~~~~~2

Witt.censtein 's TrociD!us.
Caleb Thompsoo. 684 Baldy.
North Campus. I p.m.

I'HARMACY HIIINAA
Treatmeot TaJ"'d ln StpsisTumor
une Hon
Campus
ALUMNI

.....NO SEIIINAII SEIIIU
Proj&lt;ct ALERT: Adoleseont
Drug Prevention. Phyll is L.
Ellickson, Ph.D., RAND. Santa
Monica, California.
Research lnstitut.e on
Addictions seminar
room. 1:30 p.m.
Free and open
to lbe public .
Call 887 -2566.

....--JmCat

Steve LKy, left,

Aelll ... juz concert
Apotl1t .. ~
-

s-t
w........,.
........ ••
Clull, -

of

�_...,. ______ .

7

Checkout
these Apple
price breaks!
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Savings of $308
Performa 636

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_._..._.._IE'ni._..Sitlllot_O.C..IaUMfwO._W_.._,WAI . . . fwA,otl U-20. . . . 1tllle:aG ...... IaS-u.looo'l'llelll8r.
Furnas. Non.h Campus.
3:4S p.m.
aiOCIIDIICAL
I'Ho\. . o\COI OGY RMIHAII

I on Channels of Vlruaa, Prof
Lawrence H... Pinto. Northwest-

154 W. Chippewa. Buffalo. 8 p.m.
UUUFILM-

KiUin&amp; Zoe. Student Unaon
Thealer. North Campus 9 p m
$2 . $3 .50. Call 64S-29S7

NUUINCI COfmNUtNCI

EDUCA,._,._

em Univ. 307 Hochstcuer.
Nonh c.mpu•. 4 p.m.

days through Ma) II SIS. SSO

per person. CaJI829- 3291 for

WEDIIUDAYS AT 4 rLUS
p,.... R...tmc. Michael
Ondaatje. Center for the Ans

Weatherin&amp;; Paleoclimatic
lmplicat.ioos, Dr. Sam Savin.

Case Western Rese:rve Univ.
210 Natural Scieo&lt;e$ &amp; Mllh-

UFE-

ematics Complex. Nonh Campus. 4;10 p.m.

Good Ealia&amp;: Ast lotroductioo
to v.....,....u.., Walter and

Nan Simpson. 6:30-9:30 p.m.

C~CIEMTD

OIIUJI S11m£NTa IIECITAL
Orp.o Perf"oi"'IILUCt. Students
of D1vid FuJier and Roland
Martin. Slec Concen Hall.
Nonh Campus. Noon. Free admissioa. Call 64S· 2921 .

Cali64S.-612S for registration
mformation.

I"EEICUaaKNt at\JDEJITa

UUUFILM-

Student Recital.. Students of

0. u.. w--. Swdc:nt Unioo
n-... Nol1b ean..,.. 6:30p.m.

--

S2. $3.50. CaD 645-2957.

~AWIINI

Voter Respoasibility and the

Rolo of Go..... meat, Or.

James J. Twombly. Romanello's

South, S793 South Part Ave.,

II.\IIUBJ---AI.

Hamburg. OillOe!', 6:4S p.m.

$18,$20. Call829-2608.

o\ND
A WOID&amp;Il'• Place: Ethiopia,
Naaoibia, and South Africa.
Feauu.d an: tho video "'ur
Way of Loving," and film "'Nla.i,
The Story of a !Kung Woman."
Center for the Arts Screening

Room. North C4mpus. 7 p.m.
Free admiuioo. Caii64S-6902.
OPUS: ClMaiCa LIVE
Viola, Doona Lorenzo. Alleo
Recital Hall. South c.mpus.
7 p.m. Free admission.

-__

COCD puler Musk: Studio, Corte
Uppe, din:ctoc, UB Coatemporary EDS&lt;IIlble, Jeffn:y
Stadelman, di=tor, Erik Ona.
conductor. Slee Concert Hall.

North c.mpus. 8 p.m. Freo
admission. Cal164S -2921 .

_,

21TH-ALPNDT
~

OriciiHpecif'oc Ropllcatioo
Factorslodueed by Lymphoid
Factors. SlaDiey Cohen. M.D..
New Jen:ey Medical School.
There will be a reception fol lowing the lectu.n::. Butler Audi·
torium, Fari&gt;e&lt;. South c.mP"'·
8 p.m. Call 829-290 i.

RECITAL
Jan Williams and Anlhooy
Miraod.L Baird Recital Hall .
Nonh c.mP"'. Nooo . Free ad-

mmion. Cali64S-ARTS.
-Yao\T4rLUS
Loc:turo: What Uae Pootry!
Ouistian Prigent 438 Clemens,
Nonh C4mpus. 12:30 p.m.

~­
A
lllopbanaacatllc Dnl&amp; ClusillattioDSebome: lmpllc:atlom
ror Di'v&amp; lllaotn&gt;ery and Dnoc
o...topmeat, Dr. Gordon L
Amidoa. Prof. 0\aries R.
Walgroeo Jr. S08 Cooke. Nonh

c:ampu.. 3;30 p.m.

I'HY- COI.UIQIIII.

Tho Clwt&amp;iJII Motapbyaia or
Pbyaics, Prof. Silvao S.
Sehweber, Brandoi&lt; Univ. 228
Natural Sciences&amp;. Mllhemal·
ic:s Complex. Nonh Campus.

3:4S p.m. Cali64S-2017.
IIA-~ COI.UIQIIII•
Simple C*-aJcebru 111d Typo
n_ Facron AriiiDc !'rom Fl'ft
Producb of CydJc GI"'Upa.

Prof. Shuang Zbaog. Uoiv. of
Cincinnati 103 Diefendorf.
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
IIUTIIIT1CIN RMIIIAII
Nutritlooal Support
tbe
Critk:ally IU Cblld, Dr. David
M. Steinborn. Children' s Hospi·
tal. 306 Parter. South c.mP"'.
4-S p.m.

or

ato\nat!Ca COI.I.-'lUII
Noolioearity iD Modolln&amp; aod

Forecastiog U.S. Ecooomic
Time S.ries, Prof. G.C. Tiao,
Univ. ofctUcago. I06Cary.

--y· . ,. -I'OEnrYJazz

c-. Stc\'e LacyPLUa
aod

l=e AdJi. Calume&lt; Ans Oub.

Co\UJNCI AU o\WIINt
ATHLETU
The A.lwruu A..uoCl.Glwn · s Ath·

Societal Resouru Al&amp;ocation :
Tbo Elbia of R....,..b Goab,
RMINAit
Etfects or EodotoDD oo Vas·
cular Smooth Must~. Or.
James Russell . 108 Sherman
South c.mpus. 8 a.m.

South C4mpus. 4 p.m.

w....... ollbo AC8da.y of

A - . P..U Coateot,
Frialda ollbo Uolwnity U-

NOTICES

days before each sesston
ETHICa IN aiOMEDtCAL
IIUEAIICtt COLI.OQUIUII

Screenang Room. North Campus. 4 p.m.
Stablo lootopo Stud ies of

Wednesday-Sarurday and Noon -S

regtsuauon '\nformauon . reg.ts-

tralton deadltne •~ fh e worbng

James Undc-mann Nelson, Tbt.

Hasongs Center. Buder Aud&amp;to..
rium. Shennan. South C.mpu~

S iS -1:1S p.m.
UUU FILM HJitU

On the Watufrool Student
Union Theater. North Campm.

6:30p.m. S2. S3.SO. Cali 64S29S1.

--o\R£ TMEATD

Rocky HGrTOr Sbow. Pfe1fer
Theater. 8 p.m. SIO. Sl2. SIS

Call 839-8540.
THEA1111CAL - N C E
AalicoH ia Ntw York. Janusz
Glowacki ' s contemporary version of Antigone . Center for thC'
Aru Black Box Theatr&lt; Nonh

c.mP"'. 8 p.m. SS, SiO. Cali
64S-6898.
UUUFILMKiliU
KilliD1 Zot. Student Union
Tbeot«. Nonh c.mpus. 9 p.m.
$2, $3.50. Call 64S-29S7

--u

~-··-­
Natblnid Brocbnann 's Mastc:rof

FiDe Alii thesis exhibit opens
with a r=ptiolt on Apljl 13, from
S-7 p.m. a1 the Ccnlcr for !he
Ans. His phntDgrapbs will n:maiD
on display lhrousb Moy 4 in !he
An Deponrnont Gallery. Gallery
hours an: Tucsdlys. 10 a.m.-S
p.m.. Wedoesdays-Fridays 10
a.m.-ll p.m.. and Saturdays II

--COII'I-..u
a.m.·8 p.m.

An exhibit of rec:eOl audcnt
woru iD conjunction with the

national ta:m:fitation team' s review opened Apil 3 in !he James
Dyell Exhibition Hall, third floor.

Hayco Hall South Campuo. Oo
Wednesday, Gallery hours an:
Mondays 9 a.m. lO 8 p .m.. lnd
Thesdays through Fridays 9 Lm.
lOS p.m.

cwa an. lUlL Rill

The Campus Oub nvels to

Toronco to sec Showboat on
Wednesday. May 31. Fora S90or

SIOO fee, participantS rec:c1vt a
hght ~ .._ tickeu. charter bus tnnsponarioo 10 and from

Torooto, and dinner. The bus will
kave 118 Lm from Tops Plaza.
Colvtn and Eggen and """"' at 9
p.m. ~ your plac&lt; today
woth a SSO deposit. payable 10: !he
Campus Oub. Balana:;. due on
April 21. CaD 64S-28i6, 64S2S92. er 64S-214S.

DIJITAL
_,

.niDY Po\III'ICIPA!fra

beftNec:o 18-70. with iOIDC' signs
of gum (periodontal) diseuoto
help eval....., !he eflca of a
moulhrinae,a100Citpaol&lt;.aodp
mouth moisturizer on on! health.
Participants must have torDe
symptoms. such u rod gums aod

bleediD&amp; gums aftt:r ,_,_
bruabiJts; !hey will IDik&lt; fOIU

brief visits 10 !he School of Deotal
Modicioe on South Campus.
Upon completioD of !he swdy,
each participaol will bo reimbuncd SIOO fer lime and ..vd.
c.u 829-3850 bctwceo 9 a.m. and
4p.m.weekdays.

--·-

~UURIII.._

The 1995 Womeo'• Oub Flowtt
Sale 10 beoefitlhe Grace c.p...
Scbolarship has begun. Geraniums lnd impatiens ~ 1vailab~
for lhe same: price as last year:
geraniums. 4-1 fl" pots @ s1.80
each er S20 p e r - impaliem.
6 plaDu per pock. si
per pack
or SIO fer IG-inch banging pots.

.so

CaJI8~er634-4n7to

crdeo. p;ctup onlm allhe Center
for Tomorrow oo May 10. Put a
lillk color in your 'Pring4out
crdeo by April28.

are 10:30 a.m.-ll p.m. Wodnesdoy-Sarurday aod Noon-S p.m.

CCW4111NMONJII
The official opmiD&amp; of oornpctilion fer 1996-97 Fu1brif1&gt;1 0....

Suoday. UUwiJe, Victor
Burgin'• "The End" will bo .OOW-

Power Macintosh 7100
• 80MHz • 16MB RA.&gt;.! • 700MB

c:.u.us
-.u

--~
Adrian Piper's exhibit. "Dccido

Who y 00 AI&lt;,- will bo up
through Apil 22 at !he Center fer
!he Alii Gallery. (lint floor).
Admissioa ;. froe; gallery hours

$2787
Savings of $633

teuc HaJJ of Famt sn*s oommation for induaees Nonunaun
may c:onsuh the DIY11.100 of Ath~ucs lnd the Univemty Archives
10 asaiR them m c.omphna il!for·
mauon about and fc.caodid.a&amp;c:s
NommanOO fonns are a"vailabk aa
the Offa: of Alumn1 Rel.aoorb.
South Campus. ltld maw be compleltdand n:cet\'ed b) Ml) 5.
199S.

UB dental .....men.,.~
mon: than 100 healthy adul ...

.E XHIBITS

• 8MB RAM • 3.SOMB Hard Drive •
15"" Color Morutor • CDROM Drive
• 14.41&lt; Modem and software!

p.m. Sun&lt;by. Cali64S-6912 er
645.@76. S.rnon Unger's ""Red
Veruca.r runs through July 31 tn
!he Llghtw.ll Gallery; admtWOn
IS fme Galler) hoon; ~ I 0.30
a.m -8 p m Wodoesda)·Saturday
and Nooo-S p m Sun&lt;by C.ll
645-69 12

Certifta.te Program in
Cerontolocica.l Nurs:inc. 4 307.30 p.m. S«saon~ run Thurs-

IIOUIIo\lll lK'IVR£ 1M
1be Search and the Oiseonr, :
Wiugenruin, tho Will and
._.~ Pb.Uosophk:al Resolution.
Caleb Thompson. 684 Bald)
Nonh Campu•. 4 p.m

GEOLOGY LECTUR£

brarlos UackrJradual&lt; Pootry
Priu, Arthur A..dtrod Memorial Award, 111d lbo
Scribb~r's Priu.. 420 Capen
North Camputi. 4 p.m.

"'llluouJj1 Apil 22 in !he Ccnlcr
fer !he Alii Gallery. (oocond
floor). Admissioa is free; gallery
houn 11e I0:30 a..m. -8 p.m.

Continued on page 8

Episcopal Campus Ministry

"BriUging the Ga~"
Holy Eucharist Rite II
Every Sunday at 2 p.m.
The Commons 5UJCc I 00
AND

Every Wednesday at Noon
The Commons Suite 215

Student Worship Service
Every Sunday at 6:30 p.m:
Untv"'Sity Presbyterian Olurch
(at the comer of Matn SL and
Niagara Falls Blvd.)

It's gomg !0 be a joyful time m the Lord!
Come and seel
jOH• 1.1 6

The Epiocop•l Colle,e Minbtry
The Rev. &amp;verly Moore-Tasy
Umversn y at Buffalo
The Commons Suue 215
520 Lee Enlrance, Amhersl_ NY 14 228
688-4056

�_
...
-_
__
----oilier ....
--

_...,

8

CALENDAR

~5461'1rt~:

Continued from page 7

(Uopillil:a~

w~

Wolct. 629

fer,..._ IIUdy i l l -

--~lrllinilllio

• lht a&lt;Cve ..S performiaa- ia
,_fer May I . Alltirip G..a
II'&lt; avoiloble fer IIUdyor-m;

---IIYIIilolllo.JooelocoedCIJUIIIri&lt;oiO~

"""""'"""do
... pvv;dt fimds
fer u.m.ioaa1 traYe1 or to
~lhtiiJlllicanl'spoo­

a.l fuods. lbe l . W.niom
l'lllbriP SdiOionhip s-d. compoooddl2oducMioool-.!pli&gt;li&lt;
leaden~ by lht ~'resided

oflht
critcrillUailcd
for lht&gt;cloclioo
dCllldidoamel...-lhtBJWlii. .Applic:oOis ...... be us. c:iti=ls ..
lht time of ..,pic:alioo mel bold.
aria &lt;qWvolclll
bylht.......,.._dlht-a..ove ..S p«fonniDc ortisls ore
001 required 10 hive a bechdor's
c1epe. bu&lt;lhty"""' hove four

_.,depoe

yemof-lninin&amp;oriiUdy.
~ io modicine"""' ho..
., MD. or &lt;qWvolcllllllht lime
d opplico&lt;ioo. AD oppliconls mus1
have sufficienl proficimcy in lht
iangua&amp;e d lhe ~ oountry. Full
gr&gt;niS pvv;dt mund-trip ~
lional a.&gt;&lt;~. mainrenuco for lht

......
dlheoward, · ollowonce.llld- ~..... if
~ TrawlJ!llllUpovide

mund-tripiru&lt;mabonolaowJto
the coontry wber&lt; lhe swdcnl will
pursue.......:h;allpnos ioclud&lt;
health llld insunonce.
Ccmaa Dr. Barbont Buoi:D-.
Fulbrigbl Program AdviJor. io 362
i'aat Hall. 645-36SO, Ul 362 or
UL 358. Deadline for rca:ipl of
applicatjooo' is Sepcember 26.
l99S.

,_,_._..TID

-~fW

In coopc:ntioo with the Offioe of
the Provost. the OWr of !he Foculty Scnole has otraQ&amp;Od for •
gencnl mccting for foculty
lhrou.g,houtlbe Wlivtnity with the
OWrofthe Presideor's Review
Boord (PRB) Prof. Mirdzo
- m e l ocher members of lht
PRB dw: art: able ro anend oo

Fridoy. April21113 p.m. io
Room 330ofthe Srudent Unioo
Assembly Hall.
~..­
c~

The Wes~tm New Yort: Hcol!h
Science Ubrarions ,.;u spoosor •
daylong oonf......, on "Getting

Funded: Developing Sltills in
Proposal Writing- Fridoy. April
21 in us·, Health Sciences u.
bnry. Taught by Alan Rees, profCUOf cmcribls, School of Libnry
and Information Science, Case
Weslcm Reserve Universiry, lhe
OOW'K will outline critic:aJ eJe.
ments in the propo5&amp;l writing
proocss and show how lO prepot&lt;
peBUUive and winning propooals
in a highly c:ompetitive grants
rnartt.qJioce. CoR is S25 for
WNYHSL mcmben and $30 for

non-members. An lddibonal
clwge of S20 applies to !hose
who wish 10 receive ModicaJ Libnry Associatioo CXlOliouing

education CRdilS, wtUdt includes
six CE credits. a c:ertificale and a
course manual. Call K.-eo

Krcizman. WNYHSL pn:sidem.
887-3637, E-moil:
Krcizman@bms.com. Registnltion clcadline is April 14.

--

-~

The University Humanities Com·
mio.ee asks the university
community' I aid in their coosidcnJion of lht prc$CIII stale of
humanities ar UB and tbe fDnN-

tion of plaos for lhe fuwre. Please
send ideas, io writing, to: Corol

Jooobs. Commi""' awr. Dione

OuiSiian, or Robcn Daly, J06
Clemens (English): James Bono.
5S9 Pan: (HiRayl: Sltpbm
Dr- 712 Clemens. Jd!n
- . 733 Clemens (Clossics): Rudolplle Goocbe, 638
Clemcns(~ve Li-llll&lt;): l&lt;q&lt; Grocia. 681 lloldy
(Pbilooopby): O.WIP&lt;ny 201G
Hayes (1'\aDniog oad o..;,.J:
Jd!n QWnao. 606 Clemens (Art
Hisaory): Hcory Ric:bards, 910
Clcmcns (Modr:m ~ ood

uocrmx.aJ:IIarboraTcdloc*,

365 Millard fillmore Acotk:mic
C..... (Aitlllropolocy): TIIDIO

AD -wdcomell&gt;joia lht IJW«-

-l'riclly from
Foltlloncioa-1-11 p.m. io 2

____ ..

UB Bulls open season Sept 2 against
Fordham; Homecoming set for Sept 30

.., _,__, .....

Maine's Black BeaR mate their second visit to UB StaEASON TICKETS for tbe 1995 Univemty at
Buffalo footblll oea100 are DOW on sale to UB diwn on Oct. 7 at 7 p.m. The Bulls and Black BeaR cbristeoed
tbeocwUB Stadiwnbeforea record crowd or 14.179onSepL
f..:ulty IDd staff.
- T h e - is lhtGniduThis year, Athletics is offering three season 4, 1993, with Maine taking a last minute 30-27 victory. The
ticket paclcages, as well as a payroll deduction Bulls returned tbe favor in Portland last season, downing the
Black BeaR 24-21.
plan to pay for tickets .
The Marioo ~ ScbolwThe Bulls will boot Massacbuseas on Oct. 14 at 1:30 p.m.
The V l.P. Plan is $84 and includes free parking adjaceot
lbip for Acotk:mic Escdleaoc is
The Minutemen have ooc met the Bulls since 1970.
to
UB
Stadiwn
IDd
chairt&gt;lck
seating
at
midfield;
tbe
F'.eld
opca 10 Olllhropolol)' mojan in
After an open week, the Bulls travel to Long Island to
Goal Plan is$60, or seven games fortbe price or six, a savings
!heir junior y..-. T h e foropplioolloa Is April IS, 1!194. of29 perceot off the game-&lt;lay ticket price; IDd the Baby Bull
take on Hofstra on Oct. 27 in wbal has become an exciting
Send leacn of nomination to s.
Plan is $30 for children ages 121Dd UDder, a savings of 64 rivalry since the two teams fml met in 1988. Hofstra
Milisauskas. awr. Dq&gt;t. ot Anpercent off tbe game-day ticket
lbropolocy. 380 Fi11mor&lt;. Bufprice.
falo, N.Y. 1~261.
The action continues off the
field, too, with promotions that
include the human slingshOL the
•SaliXday, Sept 2 ............. FORDHAM ......................................... 7 p .m .
Fair Catch at the Half contest
sui! emplo)j:&lt;s of UB, lht Re•Saturday, Sept 9 ............. LAFAYEITE .................................. 1:30 p.m.
ocardl~lheUB Founand fireworks at all night games .
doboo, or lht Foculty-Studeol
Coached by former Penn State
• Saturday, Sapt. 16 ........... a! Illinois State ................................... 1 p .m.
AAociolioD who hove oornple&lt;ed
assistantiDd UB alumnus Craig
•Saturday, Sept. 23 ........... atConnecticot ................................... 7 p .m.
o( &lt;XJDiinuous fuD -Iime
Cirbus, the Bulls will take on
profeuiooaJ lUff IC'IVice are eli·
• Saturday, Sept. 30 ........... VIUANOVA ....................................... 7 p.m.
gible for lhe Oualanding Setvicc
five members of the YanlceeCon• Saturday, Oct 7 .............. MAINE ............................................... 7 p .m .
A wan!. Mcmbcn oflht UB comference and a pair of Patriot
•Saturday, Oct 14 ............ MASSACHUSETTS .......: ............... 1:30 p .m .
n:JJD..ity who wish to sut.nit oomi·
League members . A game
IUiboos for lht Oualanding Ser• Friday, Oct 27 ................. a1 Hofstra ...................................... 7:30 p.m.
vK:e Award must~ I
against defending NCAA Divi• Saturday, Nov. 4 .............. CENTRAL STATE .............................. 7 p .m.
do6sicr in support or lbe nominee..
sion 1-AA champion Youngincluding a muimum of fivr
• Saturday, Nov. 11 ............ a1 Youngstown State ......................... 1 p .m.
stown
State
highlights
UB's
road
teucn d support. the nominolo&lt;'s
• Saturday, Nov. 16 ............ BOSTON UNIVERSITY ................. 1:30 p .m .
games this season.
overview, the mxnince's cum:ol
vita SlalemeDl and cunmt posiThe season opens at home on
tion des&lt;riplioo siBJICd by the
Sept. 2 when the Bulls wiU take on Patriot League member defeated the Bulls 34-21 in last season's meeting at UB
nominee's superviJor. as we-U as •
Fordham at7 p.m. The Bulls defeated the RAms 33-14 in their Stadium.
nomination form. AD DOIJl.i.DaNAJA Division I member Central State or Ohio meets the
tioos must bo roaMd by Frilast~tingin 1993\
day, April21, 1J95 and may be
Patriot League champion Lafayette comes to town the Bulls in a 7 p.m. game on Nov. 4.
submilled to: Ilene Flc:isdunoon.
The Bulls' fmal road contest features defending Division
awr. Professioool Stoff Scnole following Saturday for a I :30 p.m. game. The Leopards l· AA
Ownpion Youngstown State on Nov. II at I p.m. YSU
defeated the Bulls 29-15 at UB Stadium in 1993.
A words Coovniaee. 3100' Brian
Hall. North Compus. 645-21 rn 0&lt;
The Bulls hit the road for the first time with a I p.m. game downed UB 27-3 in last season's home finale Nov. 5 in a
64s-611S. W"mnc:n receive a
driving
rainstorm.
at Olinois State on Sept. 16. The Redbirds downed the Bulls
$1,000 cash •wan!. ccrtifiCI!e of
.J)B concludes its schedule with a Nov. 18 meeting with
17-7 in their fim meeting last season.
"""'KJ'itioa and will be booorod
Yankee Conference member Connecticut hosts UB at 7 BostonUnivenityatl :30p.m. lbeirlas:tmeetingwasin 1993
Ill UniverVI:y-wide awards IUDcbooa on Moy 17.
p.m. Sept. 23. UConn is coached by Skip Holtz, son of Notre when Boston University tool: a wild61-33 contest at Nickerson
Dame bead coach Lou Holtz.
Field.
ffALY-For more information, call 645-{;666.
Homecoming at UB will be Saturday. Sept. 30 when the
Fund-raising efforts for the: Uni Bulls
meet
Villanova
at
7
p.m.
versity Oloir' s conccn tour of
Dideaclorf Hall '"' tbe Soulh

~ 'Ibcotfree-be-

__

...

--a1=0=.,

1995 UB Football Schedule

........... _ .. u.. . . . _ ........,

two_.

~-·

lilly ... uodcrway llld ioclude •
CISSCIIe tape sale. Cosoeoe lopes of

lht Uaiversity • Bulfalo O!oU-,
bigliligllling pooflln1lOIICU from
1972-92..,. priced 11$12 cacb or
t'NO for $20 and arc availabk • tbc:
Boob1ore or din&gt;c:lly from lht UB
Rlundation O!oU-. Tape I feoD~teS
music from lht 18th llld 19th=lllrics p1m 01rislmas. folk. and
pop sdcctioos. Tape 2 includes
Rcnaissanoe Sldoc:bons aod oompositions fiorn lht 20th """"'Y·
Call 645-2964.

-

JOBS
a ...rch Support SpocialistPsychology. Posting JR-95009.
......... Dirodor, Rqiooal
~-Uaivasity Devd-

-

tut

Pooling IR-~. AosioDirodor ol C«porooo IIDCl

F - Relotlooo-Develot&gt;mcot Pooling IR-95029. h-

Support Spocialist-0.-al
BiolosY. Pooling IR-9S030. h-Support Spedolill~­
potioool Ther&gt;py. Pooling fR9S031. Field -rr-r P&lt;yc:hology,
Pooling tR-950321Jidlciaal
Nulrilloaist 0-Psychology. Pooling IR-95033.
PIIOfUUON4L
.......,.__. Allolyst (1DI&lt;nW
. . , _ Opportwolly, SL-

3).Compuling "' Information
Tcc:bnology. Pooling ft'-5009.
~ Dowlopor (laternal

. . , _ Opportwolly, SL-

3)-Computing"' lnfonnotion
Tcc:bnology, Pooling IP-5010.
Dirodor, lJvillc Wol Cad.tr

(lat&lt;r..t , _ ()pportl&gt;-

alty, SL-3}-Studeol Hcaltb Cenl&lt;r, Poaing1P-5011.Adooloolom
Ad.-~,_

~. SL-3)-Placcmeot

eo.-uum. Pooling IP,-5012.

To oblain rJtOn U'(ormtlliott on
jobs lisl&lt;d ""'-. CC&lt;tiDCI Penonn&lt;l Ser.icu. /IJI Crojls Holl.

Speaker series to present Gany Wills
ll)' MAllY liETK aPINA
News Bureau Staff

ll8ny Willa, noted ectlolar, journalist and classicist who
has written on such wide-ranglng topics as the Catholic
Church, Jack Ruby, race relations and the natu"' of leadership, will speak at UB on Thursday, April 27 .
His presentation at 8 p.m. in the Center for the Arts on the
North Campus is pan of the Distinguished Speakers Series
sponsored by UB and the Don Davis Auto World Leadership
Fund.
Wills' 1993 book., "Lincoln at Gettysburg," won a
Pulitzer Prize. Hi s " Nixon Agonistes," a st udy of Richard
Nixon's political career, was called .. astonishing" in its
deft combination or " psychobiograpby" with " a provocative essay on political theory" by John Leonard of The New

York

Tim~s .

Wills, who teaches at Northwestern University, also
authored " Under God," "Reasan •s America," 'The Kennedy
Imprisonment" and "Inventing America."
He is a past recipient or the National Book Critics Circle

Award. the Wilbur Cross Medal from
Yale University and the Peabody
Award. He holds a doctoral degret'
from Yale.
Tickets are S5 for students: Sl2
for UB faculty, staff, Alumni Association members and senior citizens,
and $15 ror general admission.
They may be purchased at The
Book Revue, 1382 Hertel Ave. ; BufWIU.S
falo State College Ticket OfficeJStudentUnion, l300EimwoodAve.; Doo
Davis Auto World Inc., 2277 Niagara Falls Blvd.; Fredonia
State College Central Box Office IDd New World Record.
512 Elmwood Ave.
Tickets also may be purchased on the UB North Campus
at the Center for tbe Ans Ticket Office, 103 Center for tbe
Ans; tbe UB Ticket Office, 221 Student Union, and at the
University Bookstore, 200 Lee Entrance. Seating at this
even! is limited.
D

Business Days seminar planned in May
......._ &amp;Mrs, a two-day seminar sponsored by the
offices o~ Accounting and Payroll ~ices, Budget, Personnel Services and Purcbasmg, wtll be held Monday and
Tuesday, May I 5 and 16.
The seminar, which will include a range or sessions and
panel presentations, is open to the university community.
Two panel presentations are scheduled: Appointment Processing and Purchasing and Accounts Payable Procedures. In
addition, an Open Forum Panel Discussion will be beld at the
end or each day or the seminar to allow participants to ask
general questions.
The following sessions will be held:
• Accounting: BARS/Payroll Distribution Training;
Travel RWnbursemenl Procedures from the Traveler's Per-

spective.
• Budget: BARS Refresber-Fmal.cial; F'l.scal Budget·

ing; Income Fund RWnbursable (IFR).
• Payroll: Overview or Regular IDd T AlGA Payroll;
Overview or Hourly, Student Assistant IDd Work Study
Payrolls.
• Personnel Services: Position Classification !-Classified Service Positions: Position Classification il-Professional and Faculty Positions; Appoinunenl Proce.. ing
!-Classified Service Appointments; Appointment Process·
ing il-Piofessional, Faculty IDd Teaching and Graduate
Assistant Appointments; Tune and Attendance 1-Ciassified
Staff: Time and Attendance il-Professional Staff, Faculty
and Teaching and Graduate Assistants.

• Purchasing: Speed Order System.
Business Days participants must register by Aprill4. For
more information, conlact Sue Krzystofilk, Aa:ouoting and
Payroll Services, 330 Crofts Hall, 645-2663, exL 260. o

�•

A fresh look at \}'NY schools and how they petform
NEW STUDY by UB education researcben casts a new
li&amp;bt oo the performance of
100 of Wellem New .Y ort's
102 school districts (dl.la was
insufficient for two clislricu),
It supports past IIUdies showing rhat student academic llcbievemcnt depends on maDY
variables independent of Cbe schools themselves, including a district's per&lt;apita income and pareniS' educational levels. The
study finds rhat in !pis region. some districts,
even if unable to produce average achieve-

motber"s age 11 child's birth were modestly
significanL Otbcrsignificrs of academic failure include a family whose primary language .. home is not English.
Wbdbcr Cbe IIXlCbrr wodced .. not bad •
ocglicibleeffectand~ while
not lignifi&lt;:aDt in itsel£, highly oorrelated with
Olber £-.. tbll have oeptive effects on
acl1ieven!alt, lliCb .. family income.
ince the presence of these factors differs markedly among school district
populatioos, tbe work of some school dis-

S

Jameatow11, Ripley, Frimdship, Salamanca,
Kinsdaie. J:luDidJi&lt;, Gowanda, Buffalo, LimeSIOOe and Niapra Falls.
No oubwban school districts are among
Cbe bouom 10 in IIDdeot-acblcvement level.
but mosl districta in Cbe lOp 10 in llcbievement are suburban districta with an average
household income of $38,003.
The public may be mos1 surprised by Cbe
fact tb8.l the Buffalo city schools. whose
school population has the bigbeslll-rid: rate
(10.9%) of any of the 100 districts studied
and ranks in the bottom I 0 wben coosidcred

"Most o~
the analvses
that have been made o~
school
'J
J'
'J
~ maDY wealthy districts in teaching the district effectiveneSS havefiocused On Student achievechaldren Cbey get_
r
:J./'
.
The report, " School District Effecl;' and
ment
alone.
The
accurate
measurement
or
school
Etficoeocy," was produced by Austin D .
"/
·
'J
swansoo.prof~and~oftbe~district quality... can't be captured by a single statistic."
ment of l!ducabooal Organization, Adminment tevels "'!ua1.to those of.upper-micJd:'•class school districts, are far""'"' effecllve

istration and Policy in the UB Graduate
School of l!ducation, and Frank Engert, a
doctoral student who wiU receive his degree in May.
The purposeoftbe report, said Swanson,
is tn offer a fresh perspecti~e on how weU and
forwbalreasons various scbooldisttictsacbieve
their goals. "Most of Cbe analyses that have
been made ofscbool-&lt;listricteffectiveness have
focused on student achievement alone," be
said, an assessmeo1 melbod tn which Swanson
and most Olber educators take exception.
"The 8CCUf@)e measurement of school
district quality is very complex and can't be
captured by a single statistic," be insisted.
" In this study," he said, "we've broadened tbe focus 10 include not only student

achievement. but the unique effect that a
school district has on student achieve·
ment."

Swanson and Engen did this by ranking
school districts by achievement teSt scores
~fore and after controlling for tbe social
and economic factoB that influence academic achievement levels.
The study points out that the RAND Corp.
study undenaken in 1994 found that tbe most
i!Rp(Snant family characteristic influencing
student perfonnance in school is tbe parents'
education levels. Income, family size and

AUSllll D. S W -

tricts, like those in Williamsville. Ambers!,
Orchard Park and Oarence, say tbe researchers, is assisted by favorable environmental
factors. In districts like Buffalo and Niagara
Falls, for instance, tbe wotil: is frustrated by
unfavorable environmental factors.
Swanson and Engen say that by conlrolling for important risk factors in each district
wben considering achievement levels, tbe
study offers a much more accurate picture of

how successful-bow effective-variou~

districts are in educating tbe student population with which they must wotil:.
The study also includes a measure of
school district efficiency. which is a ratio of
school district effectiveness to the resources
each one uses in the educational process.
Whenlookingonlyatachievementscores.
he said. tbe greatest credit has tended 10 go to
wealthy suburban districts because they are
seen to be responsible for turning out students with high teSt scores.
Predictably, many oftbe school districts
in tbe area that have historically ranked low
in tests of academic achievement are city
districts and several rural districts with an
average household income of $21 .000:

in terms of achievement scores alone. nevertheless ranks among the lOp I 0 districts in
tenns of its effect oo student acbievemenL
Other higb..:ITect districts are Scio, LeRoy,
Newfane, Frontier. PortviUe, Bolivar, Pavilion, Belmont and Pine Valley.
wanson pointed out that these districts,
because they are usually -rated~ publicly only by achievement test scores. are not
normally recognized fn&lt; their positive impact. The study underscores that in Western
New Y ott. as in the rest of the country,
student academic achievement levels can be
predicted principally by a district's household and community per&lt;&amp;pita income ~v­
ets, parents' education levels and primary
language spoken at home.
When these factors ue taken into account, the study points out, the percentage of
students entering school in districts like
Williamsville and Orchard Park who are at
risk of academic failure is minute (. 1 percent
and 0 .0 percent, respectively).
City districts like Niagara FaUs, Dunkirk.
Jamestown, North Tonawanda. Buffalo and
Salamanca. and many small, rural districts.

S

mull educale IIUdeoiS rhat ore. from Cbe
outset. 11 coosiderlbly bieber educalioDal
risk. The ~.. of II-risk IIUdeoiJ in
Buffalo, Dunkirk and Jameltown city
scbools, fO&lt; example• .,., 10.9 peroen1. 8 . 1
pen:ent and 6.&lt;4 pen:ent, respectively.
"PubliJhed reporU-especialy lboserhat
make c:amparUons amoaa ocbool clislricu
and~ 10 oversimplify this very
complex lllbject.~said s ............ "and often
lead 10 misleading conclusioos about how
weU a particular district is doing its job . ~
OUicln:n lil&lt;dy to lllmd ""- 0&lt; some
ruralllChools are mucb more dependeru on Cbe
schoob fO&lt;theirintdlectual~ than
arec:bildren mending school in wealtby suburban districts. The sludy ooocludes tlw dislricts
populaled by people of relatively lower income and lower educllion levels ooofroot a
much more difficult task than upscale dislricts
when it comes 10 educating children.
That is why, when Cbe study cootroUed
forsucb influences, maDY oftbe smaller and
poorer districts, including Buffalo, exhibited very high levels of effectiveness and
efficiency in educlling children.
''I don ' t wish 10 imply rhat Cbe wealthy
school districts aren't good.~ said Swan500"They are very good schools and woO; bard
to complement w&lt;l(l&lt; of Cbe families in edu cating Cbe pupils in Cbeir schools.
"The point is, however. that f&lt;&gt;&lt;Cbe wealthy
districts, Cbe effort is a compkme111Dry one.
with parents and schools jointly providing
inoentives and an environment that enhances
and encourages learning," be added.
'1n po&lt;&gt;&lt;erdislricts with low per-capita education levels, Cbe schoob a/oN have 10 carry
much of Cbe responsibility for intelledual developmeolof students. ll's a very difficulljob.
but maDY of tbem do it extraordinarily well
"We hope this report. which offers what
will be 10 Cbe public a fresb analysis, wiU
clarify tbe issues bere and give credit wbere
credit is due,.. be said.
Policy implicl.lions of Ibis analysis ,
Swanson and Engen said. include the suggestion of better use and coordination of
resoun:es already available for educational
and social support services. and the need for
additional resoun:es for districts that serve
high proportions of students from lower
socio-economic status families.

'lllJ.
no.--.--af-Public SafeW's
Weekly Report

afao:,._._,

---24-

- ..- - ' * ' .. - 0 · -

• Textbooks valued at $123 and a b&lt;acelet
valued at $200 were repo&lt;ted rTllssing March
25 from Red Jacket Quadrangle.
• A man reponed March 26 that someone
had thrown a fire extinguisher and pots and
pans out of the 10th floor lounge of Richmond Quadrangle.
• Three pai' of jeans and a pair of pants
were reported missing March 26 from a
dryer in the Port,.. Quadrangle lat.ndry room.
• A leather jacket. a calculator and a checkbook were reponed missing March 26 from
a locked locker in the Ak.mni Arena men's
locker room.
• A backpack. containing clothing. a jacket
and a wallet WOI1h a eo&lt;rbined value of
$200. was reponed missing March 27 from
All.mni Arena
• A wallet containing cash. a phone cald
and personal papers was reponed missing
March 28 from Alurmi Arena
• A Dewey Hall resident reponed March 30
that someone entered his room and dam8ged a carton of milk.
• A woman reponed March 30 that $107
was missing from a desk drawer in Jacobs
Management Center.
• A U.S. Department ol State Consulate
license place was reported missing March
30 from a car parked in the Pal1&lt;er lot.

�_..,

......-.

L.._.....wct1

. . . . . . . . . . mecllcn
h . . U88ct1ool al Mlldlcnt
llld8iomeclclll Sc:lllr..-.00
pi1llldlrt d .. Cllholc 1'11)'. . . . Qlld all!lli8lo, ...
--..s l'lralli l&lt;nl(t4h0od al . . &amp;pelrtan Older
allbe Haly SecUctnAmbru.i. a UBtaa.«y member Iince 1955 and prales8or
emart1Ls Ill Rcnel Perk Cane«lnllilula, 1111&gt;8- of
""""..,500~

)lumlll ~He lo lhe.
....._..of Joumllld
~llld

R!Mewso/He-

,.,q,y, a n d - on 11&gt;8
edllarielboatd d HofiP/tBJ Foras chair Of 1he
of Experrnenlal
and cfwector of C81&gt;-

cer-m.

from the Sorbome Graduate
School of Science, lnstltut and
Ho6pftal Pastsur, in Paris.

MADe AIICIIAIOLCIM:n

.-mvn:

~ist and art historian
.....,_ L . , _ prclessor
and chair d 1he Department d

Classics
81
UB,hasbeen
elecled president oi lhe

ArchaQogl-

cal Institute

Of America
.

The AlA Is
81'l!J01)rofit,

cultural, aclentlflc and educa1lonal orgorizallon fiu1ded In
1879. l1a 11,000 membenJ are
dedie:a*!ID the encourag&amp;monl and support d archaec&gt;
logical poJJIIcallon and
...-ell, end ID lhe prolec1lcn
d lhe world's Wllnl hel1tage.
A UB faculty member since
'1991, Oyoon specializes in
AoriWl~. Roman
80Cillllld liCor\airic ~·
llld4rl:hMclogiclllheci't.
Ita field- Includes exCIMIIIcnlllll Buccino and
CoM In IWy, Ol'lllalo 'f'roy.
lnce 1n Swclnla. and Sol8aon.
France. He lo the author d
1he Creallon ollhe Roman
F1a1lier" lnd "Carrmr&gt;lly and
Socialy In Aanen Italy.•
He has publlohed widely In
clallllca jolmals, Including
1M Ametfc:Ml JoumsJ ol Ar~.~hewaslhe

ICrmor asslslant editor. He has
lecllnd 81 uniYerallles and ar~ conler8nces
llwotqloullhe u.s.
Oyoon has raceived many
academic honors during his
car.', including SIIY8rallellowohipe and re8earoh grants
from bolh lhe Nallonal Endowmont lor 1he tUnanlties and
lhe American Councl d
~~
A llllml8 cun ~ gradu-

ate d Brown University with
highest honors In dasslcs, he
raoelved a dlpkma in classical archeology from Oxford
Unlv8rai!y (England) as a Fulbright 8Chalar. He holds master's and dcx:toral degrees
from Yale UnMinlity.

........ Instruction
beyond tile~
News Bureau Slaff

, _ School in Phlladelphla,
- e he received a doctor·
ate In medical sciences. He
received a medical degree

-

cOntext
ttrUUw.n

He recen1fy was named a
d~ at0010US d Jeffanlon Medical College Grad-

. (AlA).

Teaching
Spanish
•
manew
AYII8 w•ld tllke

a! Aoowell Park, ~

---~

_____ _

PUERTO RICAN
parrot slaDds on her
sbelf looking out the
window. "It kind of
reminds me of home
-at least the color," says Barbara
Avila-funenez, assistant professor
of Spanish at UB, refming to the
wooden memento that she brought
from her native country.
Home is,• very important place
forsociolinguis!Avila, who teaches
upper-level Spanish and a Spanish
linguistic course at UB. Itoccupies
a special spot not only in ber beart,
but also in ber researcb.
Sbe join&lt;d the UB Department
of Modem Languages and Literatures last September and brought
oew ideas for the teacbing ofSpanisb, wbicb she is implementing as
the new directoroftbedepartmeot's
Spanish Language Program.
"I always loved language," sbe
says. "By the time I was II , I bad
read tbe whole library in the bouse."
Most of the gifts she received as a
cbild were books.
Yet ber family's suppon for ber
Jove of language went weU beyond
bercbildbood years. Avila's father
accompanied ber throughout 27
Puerto Rican municipalities as she
conducted 90sociolinguistic interviews as pan of ber doctoral researcb. Her parents were "very

A

proud, very supportive and very
scared," she says, wben she finit
left the island to pwsue gmiuate
studies at ComeU University.
Avila beUeves that language
insttuctioo sbould not be confiDed
to the classroom. Buffalo's large
Hispanic community is pan of wbat
attracted b&lt;:r to UB .
"Here you bave a community
outside the university wbere you
can do researcb andllsosbareskills
and information,'=.sbe says. "1 really want to know the needs of the
community by COODeCting with the
people and knowing tbem on a
persooal basis.•
ventually, she would like to
conduct sociolinguistic interviews with Hispanics in Buffalo,
discussing such topics as their backgrounds, families and religion. Sbe
then would analyze the tapes linguistically for features such as semantics and synw to see if pattmls
emerge.
Avila bopes to reintegnte into
the UBcurriculum a Spanishroom;e
for native speakers that was previously offered bere. It would be for
students who grew up biUngual,

E

"I really want to
know the needs of
the community by
connecting with the
people and knowing

them on a personal
basis."

but bavebadliuleformal language
instruction and CUIIlO( be placed in
upper-level courses. Tbe need for
such courses is expuding, says
Avila, as the university 's Hispanic
population grows .
In addition, she would like to
introduce computer-assisled language insttuction and is examining
possible computer language Jes.
sons and drills.
Avila spent the SUIIllnttof 1991
at the University at Pt~~mylvania
under the tutelage of William

Labov, tbe fallaof sociolinguistic
in the United States, who estal&gt;lisbed tbe field as a separo1e discipline witb its own metliodology.
Avila ~ved boo- bechelor's
degree from the University of
Puerto Rico, wbere she majored in
English language .and linguistics
and minon:d in education. Her booors tbesis was on tbe Spanish influence on English lexicon.
Her doctoral dissertation f&lt;&gt;cuses on bow different variables
such as age, education and occupation bave an effect on Puerto Rican
speakers' use of Spanish proDOUIIS.
So far, she bas found that people
with Jess education are more likely
to foUow tbe norm of Spanish dialects spoken in Spain and other
Latin American COUIIIries. atizeos
with professional backgrounds
bave a bigber rate of subject personal pronoun usage, she says.
These findings, Avila says, may
bave implications in terms of tbe
entire synw of the Spanish language as it is spoken in Puerto
Rico.
0

Scholar to lecture on Italian Renaissance poet
1tJ PA'IWICIA - V A l l
News Bureau Slaff

T

~~;=

ily off the Englishspeaking tongue, nor is
Tasso known to most of
us even by reputation. He is, bowever, the greatest poet of the late
Italian Renaissance, a genius celebrated in particular for bis controversial 16th century beroic epic,
"Jerusalem Liberated, "a reconciliation of invention and bistorical
truth that dealt with the capture of
Jerusalem during the Fm;t Crusade.
The Italian section of the UB
Department of Modem Languages
aod Literatures will present a free
public lectwiabout T&amp;&lt;lSO by Italy's

leading Renaissance scholar.

Sergio Zatti, professor at the University of Genoa, at 2 p.m. on
Monday, Apri124, in 830 Clemens
Hall on the UB North Campus.
Tbe lecture is one of a series to
be presented at major American
universities this year, the 400th
anniversary ofTasso'sdeath. Zatti
also will lecture at Princeton and
Columbia universities, the University of Cbicago, New York University and the Newberry Library
ofCbicago.
The lecture, entitled "The Epic
in an Age of Dissimulation,• wiU
consider the extreme pubUc, professional and persooal difficulties
encountered by Tasso after publisbing a brilliant work that vi&lt;&gt;Jated the moral and literary canons
of the time.

Tbe coofljct between the sensuous ideals Tasso so lyrically articulated inbisepicand other works
and bis own unwarranted sauples
about bis Catholic religious orth&lt;&gt;doxy aggravakd tbe poet's latent
severe persecution maniL As a result, Tassoalternatedformorethan
IS years between periods of extreme aeative invention and tormented submission to the moral
and literary biases of the period.

F

inally, after many years of
forced bospitalizatioo for bis
mental disorders, Tasso produced
a "new" version of"Jerusalem Libernted" titled "Jerusalem Conquered" and dedicated it to bis
current patron, a nepbew of Pope
Clement vm. Tbe work was a po-

etic failw-e but dernonsuated tbe
of the author's final, and
ratbel desperately justified, submissi~ the rigid morality oftbe
Counter ~formation.
Tasso's oestless, tormented life,
bis alleged romantic attachments
and bis real or imagined persecutions became tbe stuff of cultural
legend He became a well-known
literarysubjectin 17thcenturyitaly
and later, throughout 18th and 19th
century Europe, and was generally
reganled during those periods to be
a misunderstood and persecuted
genius.
For further information about
the lecture, contact Maria Guitm-ez
of tbe UB Department of Modem
Languages and Uteratures, at 6452191.
0
~

�_u. _ _ _ _ ..

...........
................,.

Tbc UB l.aliDcJ, Ollplef of
Mortar Board Natiooal
Honor Society inducted 30 oew
memben at a cemnooy held

March 7:1.
The following juniors have
been selected for Ibis booor:
Bruce Allen, Amy Bandolik,
Daren Bry&amp;lll, Andrea Oilford,
Sarah Datt, James Domzalski,
Vincent DuDleavy, Cassandra
Francique. Kara Grosser, Holly

Gurbacki.
Ricbatd Hayes, Michelle

[~lmahori,

illboard

Knight, Sub Boanl l, Inc. vice
presideD~; Hu-n Oseni, Sit«·

,,_ editor-in-chief; Caasandra
Fronciquc, B lack Student UllioG
presideot; Bjorn Ddlear, S A
ocademic council coordinatoi-;
and Joanne Rinaldo, SA ~~USUrer

1994-95.
Tbc panel.~ by
Debn Palka. assislan! dircclor of
Alumni Rclatioos, wiU diacuss

areas l&gt;f organizatiooal transition
including: facing c:hallenges,
campus issues, utilizing resourcea

aod keeping records.

For more information. call
Jennifer Sacher at 829-2608.

Qui
Joseph. Monique
Keith.
Kim. Kristin
Kiale,
. Knight, Heidi
Ludwig. Kara Millonzi.

Margaret O'Connor, Sharon
O'Neill, Marylisa Rcynders.
Scon Rybarczyk. Kerry Sbeel y,
Abby Singh, Julia Slack. Erin
Tims, Arne van Lcuk.en and
Michael Zvolensky.
Two faculty membeR also
were inducted as boooraty mem·
bers: Charles Bebllng. Depart·
ment of Psycbology, and Stephen
Ktllogg. School of ManagemeoL
Monar Board is an hooor
society for college seniors who
have demonstraJod outstanding
acllievemeot in scholarsbip, lead·
ership and service during their
undergraduate career. Started in
1918, the group has developed
more than 200 chapters at col·
leges and universities throughout
the United States. UB is ooe of
!he newest chapters of Monar
Board.

M...u-torUB
In Windows Online
UB gets a plug in Wiodows
Online, compiled by Julie
R. Blumenfeld Under !he head·
ing The Search is Over,
Blumenfeld's article says: .. Ser·
endipity is the standard method
for finding anything on the World
Wide Web, but it's not practii:al
when you need information now.
Web search tools will make your
job easier and help you meet your
deadlines. The folks at the State
University of New Yorl&lt; at Buf·
falo have put together a great
jump si te to many of the most
popular Web search applications
Use hnp://wings.bulfalo.edul
contestlawards/navigators.html co
get there ...

0

Worbhop to focus

on student I4Niderahlp

0

Passing the Torch. a student
leadership worl&lt;sbop aimed
at bringing students together to
discuss issues of leadership tran·
sit ion. will be held at 4 p.m.
Thursday. April 13 in 3;J&lt;l Stu·
dent Union.
Sponsored by the Office of
Student Life, the worl&lt;shop will
include a student panel presented
by representatives of various
clubs and organizarions: Maggie
o·eonnor, Community Action
Corps (CAG) president; Jason
Kane, University Student Alumni
Board (USAB) president; Jill
Cole, Student Association (SA)
vice president, 1995-96; Adrian

E\'aleeD K. Jones, a family
physician and founder of
Cinterandes USA, a oon-profit
organization that brings medical
ClrC to remote areas of Ecuador
via a new mobile surgical unit,
will be keynote speaker at the
second annual "Women Physicians in Primary Care Conference." to be held on Saturday,
April 22, at the Radisson Hotel &amp;
SuiteS, Ailport. 4243 Genesee St..

llpOildin&amp; secrewy, Norma
Zimmerman; IIICIIIben-lt-large,
Meena Ruqi; BlrbGa l'lganelli;
Dorolby Sooq.
All put UB Women'a Oub
presideDia and boooraty pres;.
deals - iDvited to the apring
luncbeoo in anticipation of the
latmchiog of the club' s 50th annivenary yearoo Sunday, Sept. 11.
The anniversary year will be
commemorated in 1995-96 with 1
"Cdebrate 50!" program of special activities. The chair for "Cel-

ebrate 50!" is Marilyn Ciancio;
C&lt;H:bain are Anne Brody and
Maria Schillo. Membership in the
Women 's Oub is open to any
woman who is interested in service to tbe university and the
purposes of the Women 's Oub.

'Beat New Joumllll' Is
edlt.d by UB prof

Cbeektow~

A journal C&lt;Hdited by
James J. Booo, assistant
professor in the Depanment of
History and the Depanment of
Medicine, has received top bon·
on from the Professional and
Scholarly Publishing Division of
the Association of American
PublisbeB.
Conjigurotions, A Journal of

The program is designed to
showcase to women medical
students the variety of generalist
career options that are available
aod to introduce students to out·
standing role models in these
fields.
It is sponsored by the Primary
Care Resource Center. the Gradu·
ate Medical Dental Education
Consortium and the School of
Medicine aod Biomedical Sci·
ences at the University at Buffalo.
In addition to !he keynote
address by Jones-who also has
established an international pri·
mary care exchange program for
medical students aod health professionals in Equador-the con·
ference will feature small group
discussions on such topics as
selecting a residency. sports
medicine. managing career and
relationships , and maintaining !he
balance between femininity and
professionalism.
For more information, contact
Kim Crooks or Gretchen
Schueclder at the Primary Care
Resource Center at 829-3176.

Uterorur., Seienu and Tecluwl·
ogy, C&lt;Hdited by Bono, with
Kenneth Knoespel of the GeorgU
lllstitute of Technology aod
Wilda Andersoo of The Johns
Hopkins University,"Wu named
Best New Journal in science/
tt:chnology/medicine March 9.
The journal. which began
publication in 1993. is devoted to
cultural studies of science, tt:ch·
nology and medicine. It is !he
official publication of !he Society
for Literature and Science (SLS)
with an international membersbip
of nearly 1.000. Bono has been
president of the organization
since 1993. His book, The Word
of God and rhL Languages of
Man: lnrup~ting Nmur~ in
Early Mod•m Scienu and Medi·
cine, v.ill be published by !he
University of Wisconsin Press in
!he next few months.
Bono who received his A.B.
degree from Fordham College of
Fordham University, received his
M.A. and Ph.D. in the History of
Science from Harvard University.
He came to UB in 1984.

Women's Club plans

s~,
I
Aprtl29

The Women 's Club of the
University at Buffalo will
have its Spring Luncheon Satur·
day. April 29 at II a.m .. at !he
Center for the Arts. The program.
presented by the UB An Gallery.
will include a show of works by
UB An Department students.
Exhibited items will be offered
for sale.
The luncheon will be followed
by the installation of officers for
1995-96, the Women's Oub 50th
anniversary year: The following
officers will be installed: president, Janet Fedor; vice president.
Ninfa Straubinger. treasUrtt,
Lynn McFadden: recording secretary, Geraldine Ryder; corre-

0

Historians Online
1 ell Dl t .... and ocher iCbobn from over 50
countries pollied over ooe millioo mesaa&amp;C~Iast mooth via the
IDianet. Tbeoe WCDI to elcctrooic di.acuuioo groups in I wide
1111l&amp;e of 1ubjoct .-eu iacludin&amp; AmericaD lludies, bolocausl

111 I

I I I&lt;

•. (_ ..

It·&lt; •

r:·.::

.t&lt;

.. '

lludies. A1im. Britiab. LlliD
Amerieu... R.ualiu. aad
women's biatory. Over ~
discuuioo groupoiD all! This
scbolarly discoune is made

possible by H-Net, an international iliitiative with fonan·
cia! support from the Natiooal Eodowmeot for the Humanities,
the University of illinois at Chicago, and Michigan State
University.
In addition to topical discussion groups there are H·N&lt;t
groups devoted specifically to pedagogy including teaching
college-level hiatory, high school history and social studies,
economic hislOry, and U.S. survey counes. Plans are in the
worl&lt;s for a variety of oew discussion groups including African
history. Canadian studies. Frencb history. "bigb-tecb" teacb·
ing, Japanese studies, military history, aod teaching American
studies. There is even one discussion group specifically geared
to the interests and c:oncems of graduate students.
The goal of !he founders of H-Net is to provide a forum for
scholan to discuss current research and teaching interests. Most
discussion groups feature mini-essay•. book reviews, course
syllabi, job annouoc:emeots. reports on new electronic re·
sources, and more. Participants contribute questions. commettts, aod reports. Each group is moderated to ensun. that the
contributed material is appropriJote for the scholarly nature of
the lisL
Parricipalion in H -N~t is limit~d to scholars, educators,
librarians, archivists, and gradU4l~ stud~nr.s_ To obtain a
complete list of thL groups available through H-N&lt;t and-in-

structions for becoming a group "subscriber" ry~ l]tu: gophtr:l/goplotr.uil:.tdWII/nsurclt/hisl«ylltntJD:IrhLnfollow
riot menu path H-Net&gt; H·Net Doc~~~Mnts &amp; Discussions&gt;H·
Net Nlnounct-&lt;hL Ust of Usts ( va.r or unix). If you have an
IBM (CMS) campus account subsrirure ...., for 1];.,. For
fwrthLr information send an E-mail - ssage to thL followirtg
address: &lt;li-NI!T@IIicrm..llic.tt/M&gt; .
-G8nwnr1 DeV/I)ney snd Loss l'eQCJ6(1o Glaz161. LockwoodlJ/Na!y

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UB welccMned the

ca-. of '99 a-t
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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Expert mental

. Deblltlng Death
Penalty

Poetry

Does death penalty
deter crime? Issue is
debated at Law

Acclaimed poet·
Christian Prigent
teaching at UB for

SchooL

,.. 3

frve weeks.

From Poland

Anthropology
a Health

to Buffalo
Jagiellonian law
students visiting
Buffalo.

'-

,.10

Remote Thai village to
be studied under HIH
project.

4
Aprt l 6 . 1995

Volume 26, No. 23

The Big Bang
UB physicists recreate aspects in the laboratory
8J ELLEN GOLDBAUM

News Bureau Slaff

In an experiment

~------·

Retirement: it means
setting new goals
OR BOB Mcisaac, retirement has meant time "to do
things I couldn't do before."
Professor emeritus of pharmacy and therapeutics in
the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
Mcisaac was among those who took advantage of a
previous incentive program and retired in 1985.
Teo years later, he's probably never been busier in his life.
'These days he plays first bass in the Niagara Symphony Orchestra. (his wife. Carol. also performs on piano and organ with the
volunteer orchestra). They've been to the Galapagos Islands.
volunteered at a marine biology center in Hawaii. traveled to
Alaska. taken up square dancing. round dancing and ballroom
dancing. They volunteer as ushers for fOotball games in the
University Stadium and concerts and
performances in Slee Hall and the Center for the Arts and regularly attendand have giveo-lectures at the Buffalo
Museum of Science. And they're active-in the Emeritus Center.
"I think if you talk to anyone who's
..,..~
retired, they'll tell you it's wonderful," Mcisaac said. "It's really great to
do all these things."
" I do n' t understand people who say
808 MdS.UC
they dread retiring;· said Mrs .
Mcisaac. "It's been wonderful."
Mcisaac didn ' t completely sever his ties with the university
when he retired in 1985. For three years. he served pan time as
assistant vice provost for research and graduate education and
continued to maintain an office at UB. He took full retirement in
1988.
After 35 years. his job "had truly become worJ..:' said Mcisaac,
who added he has no regrets whatsoever about retiring. " None at
all. I've enjoyed myself very much. I've been able to do things I
couldn't before retiring," he said. " I think if anyone is thinking of
retiring. they should have goals in mind of things they'd like to do ."
And they should do their homework. the Mclsaacs said.
" lt•s a big step. You have to do a lot of .figuring. We did
everything we could to prepare," said Mrs. Mcisaac. ''It does take
a lot of thinking, so I can understand (people's) anxiety (about
retiring)."
It's important to plan. they stressed. Talk to people who have
retired, attend programs designed to help those considering retiremenlto understand what their income and benefits will be.
"We went to a financial planner early in retirement. They help

...
.

..,.. nYllliUJ

.,.

1'1 lllllirtt"

Continued on page 4

)

that has. for the first
time, recreated aspects
of the Big Bang in the
laboratory, UB physicists have ob erved the
strongest evidence yet
of the mo t basic form
of matter, the quark/
gluon plasma.
.. With the~ re~ull-.. we are eptering a nev. Y.Orld," sa1d PJ)are L.
Jain. professor of ph y\lc; at UB

and principaltnvestigi.itor. ··a Y..orld
that only eAi~tet.l during the micro!oe!cond of the- B1g Bang··
The re~ean.:h "&lt;s' publt,hcd tn
the Feb 1.7 '''ue of Pin HI a/ R~·
\ 'll'U Uuen.the"orld',mo,tprt"'·
ug10u' ph) ~IC~ JOurnal
The UB expenmtnt. ~nnduct~d
at the Allerna11ng Grad1~nt 'i) nchrotron at Brool..ha' en 1\i.itu\nal
Labor.UOr) on Long 1-.land. 1.., the

fiht to prO\ 1dc uneque' (X:al e' l·
dence of the complete 'toppmg of
an 1ncommg h1gh-energ) gold
beam by an emui'Jon that ·~ both
target and detector Th1' re,ullcd

tn his lib, Plyale L Jain examines • t111c1c emulsion~ plate
wi&gt;Jch ..lo_ hlm to get • th........tlmenslonlol -of pMicle collisions.

m a collect!\ e no"" of nucleon,.
either prot one; or neutron~. ""htch
1' J prert.: l.j ' ll'&gt;lte for produong the
quarUgluon pla-.ma

E

\en

~fore

the re...earch v.a'

publt~.hed .

the re~o,uJt, ""ere
h1ghhghted a1 the tnternallonal conferen&lt;.:e Quark Mauer ' 95. held 10
Januan m Montt:re\. C Jhf ...md
.mend~d b) bOO ph).'&gt;ll.'l-.h . Jam·.,
.... orL. "a~ cued b) the emmcnt
ph) '&gt;ICt't Hor ... t St(x:ker uf the In-

slllUte of Theoreucal Physics.
FranL.fun L'nl\ er'll}. ""ho 'ol.lth
\\'alter Gre1ner ongana1ed the
theor) thatm orderto\ee t.hequarU
gluon pla"'ma.tt ~,o~,ould ftN:t be nece"af) to produce a collectl\e flov.
of nucleon'
Dete1..'1IOn of the quM gluon
pi.Nna. the: "..oup" that t:At'-ted for
nnl~ an tO\LJnt follo\1. mg the Btg
Bang . t~cnucaltoe\entuall) free mg the quan. from th confinement
Continued on page 5

Weightless environment shouldn't
hamper work in space, study says
BJ LOIS BAKER

News Bureau Staff

P

ROLONGED expo·
sure to a weightle'&gt;s
environment should
not hinder astronauts
from domg ~,o~,ork requiring phy!-1cal exenion in ..,pace.
re~ult.., of a new '&gt;tUd) b~ re,earcher.., 3t B hol\e ..,hown .
Usmg ..,ubjech 1mmcf'~d head out m "mer a~ a groumJ-ba ..ed
~imul:.tuon of J.ero-gra\ 11~ e,.pen enced m 'P~u..-~ n1ght. th~ re .. ean:hr:r.., \hll\\Cd that the cardiO\ a~u l ar
")~h:.m adJpt.!&gt; ,uffil." it:nll) to the
t.·ondi tton,of -.imulated ""eig htl e!&gt;'inC!&gt;' to allo"" humam. to perform
work at allle' eb of e,.enion other
th an the maximum.
''These re~ults ~hm' that astronauts in space~ as well a~;; diver.. who
have to lx in water for exte nded
periods. sho uld be able to CaJT) out
their work quite adequate!} . except
for tasks that require the very hi ghest level of oxygen metabolism."
sa id David Pendergast. UB profcs-

R-

Silvia f'oCIIaghl takes ............... • Dean
exetelses on cycle
ergometer In Center for Research In Special Environments.

-.or of physiology.
He noted. however. that reduced
ability 10 perform tasks at maximum exenion level s after three
hours o f immersion. the time-period tested in the study. may suggest
that longer exposures could decrease

capaci ty further. perhaps compromising the body's ability to perform
physical acti\'ily at near-maximal.
as well as rruu..imallevels.
The study appeared in the JanuContinued on page 9

�_., ....

2
H

0

N

0

R

S

_..,_

Election for Faculty Senate chair 'on holcr

MUSIC
OPEJIA AMEIIICA - :
GMy ........ associau: professor of
music at U8 and general director of the
Greater Buffalo Opera Company

(GBOC), last mooth was bonor&lt;d by OPERA America, the national not-for-profit
service organiwion in
the field of opera.
OPERA America honored Burgess. along with
several other opera nota·
bles, at a banquet in
BURGESS
Washing10n. D.C .. for
his long and distin·

.

guishod service in the field of opera. and
especially for his work with GBOC.
Burgess leaches voice and opera in the
UB Oep3rtment of Music and directs the
university's
Wortshop. As a teach·
been associated with The
Cunis lnstitu e of Music,-rbe Academy
of V
. Temple University and the
EastrfWt School of Music.
ln OOdition, he has tnught at the Poulenc
Conservatoire in Tou.rs. France. and in
1988. lectured. taught and perfonnod in
Olina during a six-wee~ scholarly ex·
change with lhe Beijing Teacher's College.

er, he also h

Burgess has degrees in voice and voice
pedagogy from Indiana University and the
Cun is lnstilute of Music. He also has

studied at Rome's Academy of St. Cecilia. the Juilliard School and the Easunan
School of Music. He was awarded

France's Prix Claude Debussy in 1984.
ROSWEUPARK
API'OIIf'IED TO NIH STUDY
SECTION:

M-aot M. lp, resean:h professor. Pharmacology/ Roswell Park; a cancer researcher in the Department of
Experimentallllerapeutics at Roswell
Park Cancer Institute. has been invited to
serve as a member of lhe ChemicaJ Pathology Study Section. Division of Research Grants. of the National lnstjtutes of

Health.
She was selected on the basis of prof~-,
slonal stature. conuibutions to the fields
of cell biology and endocrine oncology
and lhe quality of her research .
She recei\'ed her doctorate an biochemistr)' from lhe Univen.ity of Wisconsin.

....

have any idea how
many faculty there an: at UB?
If not, you are not alone.
The'Faculty Senate and the personnel office failed to accu"'""" Jl""'·'"''w many "voting faculty" then: are at UB . The result is a stalled
election for Faculty Senate Chair.
1be Facul ty Senate was due to learn who
its chair-elect was at the March 28 meeting.
However. the uncovering of a potential flaw

in the election proceedings has stalled the
process iodefinitely.
" We have some problems with the election," outgoing Faculty Senate Chair Peter
Nickerson told senators ... We are taki ng under advisement,the fact that not all eligible
faculty received ballots."

Four faculty members were vying for the
chair: Boris Albini ofMicrobiology; Michael
Cowen of Mathematics and Stephen Halpern
and Claude Welch, both of Political Science.
1be c hair serves a two-year tenn.
Several weeks ago, baUou were mailed to
1,400 faculty with address labels generated
by the Personnel Office. Sources familiar
with the problem say what's at issue is
wbether all faculty who are technically members of the voting faculty received ballou.
Faculty Senate bylaws st.atelhat "aU fulltime members of the academic staff having
academic (or qualified academic) rank" are
members of the '"voting faculty." This would
include professors, assistant professors, clinical professors, visiting prof.,.sor.;,lecturers,
instructor.;, geographic full-time faculty
members. librarians. associate: librarians.
senior assistanl librarians and assistant li-

be mailing list inadvenenUy omitted a
number of qualified voting faculty, including area physicians who are affiliated
with the medical school or affiliated hospitals. and clinical professon in schools such
as architectun=. law or dentistry, as well as
professors who hold joint appointments with
two or mon: departments. but do not show up
as a "full-time equivalent faculty member"
at either department.
The FSEC is due to consider the issue again
at its April 5 ..-:ing. lbey may order the
eloction held again, with new ballou bemg
distributed to all eligible faculty members.

T

Scholarship accolades for student athletes

0

NCE AGAIN, UB's student
athletes are making tbe grade
in the classroom.
According to the Division
of Athletics. 32 pen:enl of all
UB 's student -athletes wen: named Scholar
Athletes for the fall 1994 semester. earning a
3.0 grade point average or better and completing at least 12 credit hours.
The women's basketball team leads all
teams with a 3.215 GPA followed by the
women'sC,Osscountryal 3. 169and women 's
track and field at 3. 167 .
Scholar Athletes for the fall 1994 semester
(*dean 'r lirr) include:

Women's basketball:
•Nicole Blakeslee. • JenniferdesGroseilliers.

Jill Desoto, Brenna Doty, Anne Gallagher,
Amy Hale, Conney Langford. Liselte
Prinzing. Tiffany Rutnik. *Melan ie Vogel.

Men's basketball:
Modie Cox. Ryan Cross. Mike Martinho,
Rasaun Young.

WOO*I'S ClOSS

country/ track:

Michelle Burger. Amy Grinnel. Maureen
Hamilton. • Alexandra Katelas. Patricia Larkin.
Shirley Moody. Elizabeth Murphy. Bridget
Niland, Judith ovak, Barb Rabinovici , *Tara
Reimer. Terry Scheme, Kerri Shpt\r.

Men's cross country/ back:
Micah Adelstein. Ben Atkinson. Mike Daluea.
Christian Franklin, Fumu Galmdi. Chris
Keenan, *Olartc:s Moynihan, Joshua Rei ssig.
Ian Sohn. Mike Spitz, Mad Tasber. Geoffn:y
Warlock, Kevin Winkler, Dave Yagiclski.
X&gt;hn Zelli.
Football:
Mad D inardo. Gn:g Duval. Charles Ferri.
Tyler McDonnell , Sunnil Motley, Todd
Schaffc:t Mike Schleelien, Mad Taylor. Otris
Wojt.as.

Men's soccer:
R1chard Bach man, •Jeremy Brauer. Shawn
Doyle. Brian Durovic, David Martinez.
Women's soccer:
Je nnifer DeVita. Shannon Haskins. Lisa

PHYSIOLOGY
RECEIVES HEALTH CARE AWARD:

Leon E. F.tll, Di stinguished Profc'isor
of Physiology at UB. has received a Westem New York Health Care Technology/
Discovery Award from The Heath ~re

lndu.stnes ~ocaation .
The award. co-sponsored by the Haupt manWoodward Medical
Rd;ezm:h ln.stitute. hon ors th~ who ha' e
made a difference an

WNY hcahh care.
Farhi ha~ st udied lhe
human circulatory system and physiological problems of human
lung·glS exchange for more than 35 years
He has authored or co-authored more than
I00 scient ific ankles and abstracts.
He was instrumentaJ in developing new
approaches for measuring cardiac output
and distribution of respiratory gases within the lungs and tissues of lhe human
OOdy. Working with colleagues at UB. he
developed a technique to measure circulatory functions in a weightless state that
was applied by NASA in a space-shuttle
night in 1989.
Farhi is a fell ow of the American Institute of Medical and Biologiqll Engineering and a member of the Biomedical
Engineeri ng Society, the American Physiological Society and the American Hean
Association. among others. He served as
chair of the UB Depanment of Physiology
from 1982-91. Born in Cairo. Farhi received his medical degree from the Un iversite St Joseph in Beirut.

brarians. Geographic full-time faculty ""'
physicians who, though not paid by SUNY.
are available to the medical program on a
full-time basis due to their affiliation with
the medical center or affiliated area hospitals.

FARHI

i
Budget cuts 'dead wrong'
With Buffalo City Hall in the background, protesters
againsl _the Pataki budget, above, carry a mock coffin
across Lafayette Square in March 31 rally. At right,
Henry Durand, EOP director, speaks out against deep
cuts that threaten the Educational Opportunity Program.

Paquette. Lori Perillo, Heatber Phelps. • An drea Schoultz, Kathrin Smith, Dana Talerico.
Nicole Weber.

w-·sswllnlnk1g and ciMng:
Julie Alig. Alexandra Barrera. Suzanne
Bohnel. Heather Chabot Megan Connolly.
*Karen Lasky, Kelly Sharkey . Jennifer
Vaughan.

Men's awlrnmk1C and dMng:
Roben Auer, Larry Bistrong. *Mad Horgan.
Kevin Je5sop, Kory Mil.ler. • Josh Piccwnf.a.
Ian Salsberg. John Strazdins. Rich Wozniak.
W""*''stemls:
T onya Gabriel. St.acey Gargan. Susan Harloff.
Men'stemls:
Sven Hida. Brandon Michals, Otristopher
Muller, Mike Proulz.
V~:

*Cathy Novocilsky. Jenn ifer Polzin. Lauric
Santelli, Dandy Sims.
WrestJIIC;
Anthony Conte, *Matthew Jarman .

�_.,._

___ ...

3

.... .,.....,. .......

In O'BIWI tt.1,
punishment ills retumed 10 New Yortc.
criminal justice expens at UB believe it
will be rarely invoked and will result in few actual executions.
According to Heritage Foundation scholar Ernest van den Haag, it
will likely take at least ten years
before anyone convicted of acapiiAI
crime in New Yort is put 10 death.
'"There are 2,900 people on death
row today, but most will die of old
age. We execute fewer than 2 percent ofdeath row inmaleSeacll year."
be explained.
Van den Haag spoke in support
of the death penalty during a debate
Man:b 29 at the UB Law School.
Vanden ~antagortist in the
debate was
Culhane, a
masters degrc&lt;:~date inUB's American
Studies Departmlont. Culhane spent 27 years
in prison. including 33 months on death row.
A retired law professor from Fordham
University and contributing editor oftbe National Review, Van den Haag argued that the
death penalty was justified on both moral and
practical grounds. "Why do we punish the
guilty and not the innocent? Wedon't feel that
the innocent deserve to be punished. Since
murder is the greatest of crimes, therefore it
should deserve the greatest of punishments:•
concluded Van den Haag.
Van den Haag also argued that the death
penalty is an effective deterrent of crime.
Citing a 1973 study by lffi Economics Professor Isaac Ehrlich, Van den Haag claimed
that each execution would have the effect of
deterring between seven and nine murders.
"On the whole, it is well established that
lhe death penalty delers crime. But that is not
importan~" be said. 'The important question
is: does it deter more than any reasonable

~

cases.
••tt is 10 be seen whethtt New
York 's experience witb the death
penalty will be similar 10 that of
otberstates: between 1973and 1993.
4,900 people were sentenced to die
in lhe United States. but only 216
have actually been put 10 death.
" In New Jerse) , !he first 28 convictions under their new death pen·

The death penalty
spurs debate at UB
Schollll', former death row Inmate spar over

Its effectlv-u In detentng crlnne
Culhane responded that those 23 were
only those killed so far among more than 350

documented cases of innocent persons on
death row . He questioned lhe validity of
Ehrlich ' s stttdy. which has been discounted
by noted ecdnomists over lhe years. and argued that there was no moral justification for
lhe death penalty.
"In Texas, for example, people with IQs of
70gotolhegaschambe&lt;.''saidCulhane. ''That's
simply a crime against common sense." The
death penalty. he added. "erodes the moral
and legal foundations of the country."

outparoleT VandenHaagsaiditdoes.andhe
believes that too much is made of lhe of the
potential for innocent people to he executed.
"If. as I believe. each execution deters ten

C

murders. then the issue is whether we spare a

sheriffs deputy in 1968. was ovenumed one~

guilty murderer, and thus sacrifice ten innocent lives. My opponent values lhe life of a
convicted murderer more than the lives of
those ten innocent victims who could be spared
by that execution."
Asked by a student in the audience about
lhe potential risk of sentencing innocent people
to death. Van den Haag responded that " Ambulances sometimes run down inbocent
people, but we don· t give them up. " Since lhe
tum of the century. Van den Haag said, about
7.000 people have been executed. but only 23
of them are known to have been innocent.

by the Coon of Appeals. only to see him
convicted again. His co-defendant was granted
clemency by Gov. Mario Cuomo in 1985.
Culhane served 25 years of a 2.5-year-to-life
sentence and was paroled in 1992.
Most troubling about the death penalty,
said Culhane. is its disproponionate application to minorities. ..Discrimination in the: death

ulhane is a prizewinning prison poet

and playwright. His convict ion in co nnection with !he death of a Westchester County

penalty is a reflection of discrimination in the
criminal justice system.'' said Culhane: "85
percent of the cells on death row are occupied
by blacks."
Culhane quoted Supreme Coun Ju tice

Charles Culhane:
from death row
to role as teacher
IIJSliiVECOX
Repone.- Staff

tn$op(snber. 1968.twosheriff'sdepuliesweretransporbng Chat1es
CUlhane. GillY McGivern and Robert Bowerman from Auburn
Correctional Faciflly to the WasiChesler C&lt;lUnty Courthouse Itt
hwasa ride thalcllangadallfive fives--.
PlAting olf the New Yorl&lt; Sla!a Thruway, the inmatao altemptad
toescape.Ga.nsJQsrangoutandwhen ftwasovar, ac-manand
Deputy Shari!! Wiliam Rtzgereld - • dead; ~ depiAy was
-.-rdad. CullaneandMcGivemb.ndthernoeiYesfaclngcharges
that v.oold arllimately lead to their baing senlencad to die in the
state's Edeclric: chair.
Today, Culhane. 50. a noted prison poet and playwright who
spent33 months on death row. is completing his master's degree
in American Studies here at UB. Jmprisonad almost oonlhoJoosly
since he was 21 , Culhane . - leaches a """""' on a subject he
1cnows all too wal: People n lnstiiiJtions. ·1 di&lt;tt' let t h e - in
my class know that I had been on the Inside urti about halfway ·
lhroogh the """"!"'"'· 1hey were really surprised." said CUI&gt;ona.

001.11_..,....

Cutheneeamadhfsassociate'sandbachetot'sdegn!esduring
his years as an inmateatGroamavenandWOO&lt;IbumaCorraclional
Faclllias. He began his master's degree CCIUIS8WOif&lt; ttvoogh UB

v.!lile he was at Wende Correctional Facility.

v.n den

Erie County Di.&lt;trict Anomey
Kevin Dillon. whotelebescriminal
procedure at the UB Law School.
said that probibiti ve costs will make
many prosecutors shy away from
seeking lhe death penalty in eapital

O.V•es

alternatives such as life imprisonment with·

~

Hue. wt,-' a.... a.-.

LTIIOU~iiAI

"Since murder is the
greatest of crimes... it
should deserve the
greatest ofpunishments. "
EIIHEST VAN D£JIIIAAII

Ironicall y. when asked what difference lhe

death penalty would make in New York ten
years from no" . both Culhane and Van den
Haag agreed: probabl y very little. " It won't

make one iota of difference." sa id Culhane.
"but it will help bring th1 s state down morally
and financially."
''I don't think it will male much difference. either;· agreed Van den Haag ... It will
take ten years to execute anyone. and "''e will

In 1971 . CUlhane's convoctJon '"Westchester Co.mty earned
him a small cell in whalwas tt&gt;en Greenhaven State Pnson. just a lew
ht.ndrad teet trom the electric chair_He was notified that he would
be put to death in April. although that data was deferred pendong
appeal. Culhane awaited execution lor t8 months. until. in J&lt;no of
t972.thedealh penalty was held to be unconotitutiooal by the U.S.
Suptwne Cotrt Still. ~ was more tha!l a year belora Cuflana left
death row alter theN.YS Cotrrt of Appeals """"'"""' tos a:rwicOion.
Alll'oogh the Supreme Cotrrt later r~ Itself. holding in
t976 that the death penalty was conslitutoonal.vetoes by demoCt8lic Gollem&lt;n carey and Cuomo kepi the death penalty trom
retiJming to New Vorl&lt; unti this year
Altogelhe&lt;. Culhane and McGivern were lfied three times for the
murder of Deputy fitzgerald . .Prosecutors alleged McGivern was
the8Cil.rai-. A t970trialendad lnat-ungjo.-y.ln t97t . lhey
were both c:orMcl8d IWld sentenced to death, but tha1 conviction
was later overtlrmad. M. their truro trial, in 1974. they_, again
1Xlr1Victad. lhls tme of felony murder. and sentenced to 25-years10-f~a.

Both Culhane and McGivern insisted throughout the trials thel
Bowerman. the deceased inmate. had ectad alone on the escape
attempt. ~ing the deputies with ooe ol their own service revolv·
en;. 'The prooecution was very charged.' recalls Culhane. "be·
cause, you know. itwasacop. ~ lnovertLrningthei'fwstconvic:tion.
CUlhane racalied. the state Court of Appeals commenlad that the
prosecution 'presents wbstantial questions about the cradibilrty ol

their case:
The &amp;8COnd conviction. drew rruch Ctificism in legal cOctes.
since the underlying crime o1 attempted escape was only a misdemeanor In 1968. .appealsoflhatlssua tailed in the courts.

"Belorethaloonviction. Kavanaugh(thedistriclattomey)offarad us
manslaughter, which would have..- us eligible for parole-

Robert Morgenthau. Dillon says he will use his
"prosecutorial discretion very wisely." The
Bronx district anomey has stated categoricaiJy
he will not seek lhe death penalty in any cases.
EstimaleS of the cost of litigation needed 10 see
a death penalty case tluoogh range from one 10
five million dollars_

D

Harry Blackmun, who wrote shonly before
retiring from lhe bench that " I have struggled
to develop procedural rules to make it (i mposition of lhe death penalty ) fair. I must conclude that !he death penalty experiment in this
country has failed. No combination of rules or
prOcedures can ever save lhe death penalty
from its constitutional uncertainties.··

only execute a vel)• few."

ahy
were
overturned.
In
Pennsylvania. 175 persons ha\e
been sentenced to die, but none ex ecuted.'' said Dillon
Like Manhattan District Attorney

ilion also has serious doubts about the
deterrent effect of !he death penalty. " If
you look at lhe ten states with lhe highest rates
of crime per 100.000 population. all ten have
lhe death penalty;• he said. "but. only six of
lowest ten states have lhe death penalty ." A
recent Time magazine article. Dillon pointed
ou~ showed that California. Texas and Aorida.
states that execute prisoners most frequently.
all have crime rates fv in excessofNcw Y c:rl: · s.
Professor Ehrlich. lhe Mel vin H . Baker
Chair of American Enterprise. authored a
groondbreaking study of !he economics of!he
death penalty in 1973. His study was cited by
U.S . Solicitor General Roben Boli:. who
argued for-n::instatemenl of the death penalty
before lhe U.S . Supreme Co un in 1976.
Still confident of his earlier findings that
''the condational probability ofexecution does

deter murder." he explained in an interview
in Economic Times. that thi s. alone. would
not necessarily be reason enough 10 imple ment a death penalty. "Whatexensadeterrent
effect as the probability that lhe death penalty
" 'lloctually be applied." he said.
"Even af capital punishment is a more effecu ve deterrent than imprisonmen~ this does not
automatically justify its selection if an altema11 ve

is considered less costly from a social point

of view." Ehrlich says his research indicated that
an increased likelihood that murderers will be
c:wght and convicted would have a grcata deterrenteffect on mwder than capital punishment.

immediately.' e&gt;Cplaonad Cuflana. 'bullhal
have been an
admission ol guilt. and we were not guilty.McGavem earned the support of religious and pollltcal leaders.
including New Yorl&lt; Cathok: Bishop Pa&lt;A Moqe. folc si1gor Pete
Seeger and ~ oolumnisl Wiliam F ~. cUing his
campaigntobeexoneratad AmongthebeliiM!rso¥MarioCuomo.
Cuomo investigated the case thorcogl-ly in 1979. Oltaila 6llfWlg as
goverTU. He recQIIIIOOioded Clemency to J\a ""-,thenGall. Hugh Carey. v.tlo declined
'-...
"Gary (McGivern) look two polygraph tests during t h a l lion. andpassedbolh.'explarnadCUfhane. ·bultheSI.I'olivingdep&lt;Ay.
otin refuses to lake a polygraph- In 1985. Gov. Cuomo lltirrad
oontrovero)'when he granted McGivern ctemancy. Threeyearaloter.
McGavem was paroled. 'h was just OSSLmad that once Gary was
granted damency. l would be. too.' raca1s QJt\ane. · the
polibcal heat proved too much Itt Cuomo. said ~ - whose
damency applicatD'I was r8jedad. Despite spending . . - of his
a&lt;iJIIIife in pnoon, Culhane says he'slucky. ·1 alwayshadalc(of h:tpa
thai.~ I would be ciaarad ThaiJ-.,pe kepi me ~ - I-.
al9o luckywtlenl got out.- Cuflana said. 'that.._, after aD thai uma.
I had a lamiy and lnends and a job to come out to Today, Culhane added. conditions are better than when he was
firnt in prison. during the Altica uprising. but far too many people ana
lncaroeralad. The prison popula!lon in New Vorl&lt; haS gaown from
t 2.000to 70.000 in the last two decades. Culhane blames mandatory
sentencing and second felony offende&lt; laws... ..,. as llllqler drug
laws. Itt the overcrowding.
'H 1IOU ar-e the CEO of Extton and 1IOU destroy the ecology of a
stata.)'OU get a fine. H)'OU'realtidv.tlo..,..tM:&gt;bagsof~coeaine
on the cor-. IIOU go to
Cuflana_'Since the~
dealer W&amp;r1l to prison and the CEO &lt;frd not, the ~dealer is &amp;earl
as the criminal.'

prison,·-

�_,.__..,_u

4

Jagiel1:ooian law students here on exchange program
students from the
J agiellonian Law School in
Knkow, Polaod, are visiting Buffalo from April2-ll for the second
half of a human rights •~change
p&lt;Ogram with the UB School of Law.
The 1994-95 Polish/American seminar's
theme is " Principles and Practices of Tolerance.'"
1be idea was to have the exchange coincide with the UN' s Decade of Tolerance,"
according to Isabel Marcus, UB professor of
law who helped organize the project with
Virginia Leary. UB Bistinguisbed Service
Professor of law and co-&lt;lirector of the UB
Human Righ!Center.
andtwoprofes orsfrom
Jagiellonian.
This P"'!lf
is a pi lot project fora proposed
10-year exchange pro-

gram that would coincide with the United
Nations Decade for Hu man Righ1 s Education
and Tolernnce.
The project began
this past fall. when
Marcus and Leary traveled to Krakow with 10
UB law students.
During theses ion at
the Jagiellonian Center for Human Rights.
UB and Jagiellonian students and faculry
addressed the topic of discrimination against
various groups. including religious minori-

Above: Anna T'lmolzenko
enjoys shopping lit ~~toad­
way Malbt. Left Malle
Goldman with .JaCiellonlan
and UB law lltuclents lit
Assumption Church.

ties.

indi~nous

populations, women. chil-

dren. persbns with djsabilities and persons
with HIV. Lectures and readings on the
protection o f human rights served to guide

the students' development of thqr research
agenda for a joint project concemmg minority rights. They are grouped into four-person
teams. consisting of two s1udents from each
country .

Ulhen the seminar reconvenes m Buff t falo, each student team will be schedoled for a presentation of its work . In th&lt;
interim. they have communicated \'i3 elec-

tronic mail.
UB students will receive three credit hours
for their participation in the seminar.
··r believe that thi s format has interesung
possibilities for all pans ofthe world." Marcus
said. noting that South Africa would be an other country with which 10 create a simi far
e.change. While in Krakow . Marcus lee Lured on the recognition of women 's rights
as international human rights .

Procter fellowship to aid Management graduate students
By JED NI1DEIIG
Reporter Contnbutor

T

HE COL U MBUS Mc Kinn on
Corp. and the Dunlop T1re Corp.
ha&gt;&lt; e tabli shed a fello" sh•p for
graduate s tudent s in the UB
School of ManagemC'nt in
memory of A.. Ne-\iUe Proctrr. former president and chief executi\"e officer of Dunlop
Tire Corp. and a former direcror of Columbus M~Kinnon .
Thl! corporations haH· m.ade a com bmc-d

pledge of S I 00.000 to ward the endo " men!
m honor of Procte-r. \lohO died 10 1994 .
The Procter fello" ship endo"' ment 'Nill
provide pan iaJ tuition su ppon for full·llme
graduate slUdents enrolled 10 the UB School
of ~lanagemem \4 ho demonstrate fmanc1al
need a nd ha,·e an interest 10 stud)mg ma nu facturing . The fell owship will be awarded tO
o ne student C:\ ery other )ear and will folio"
each rec1pient foratwo-yearperiodof stud)
Prueter began bi ~ career with Dunlop Tire
m England m 1950 and quid.!) established

RETIREMENT

Buffalo- Niagara Sales &amp; Marleting Execu tive Award in 1975. !he Niagara Frontier
Executi ve of the Year Award in 1977 and the
Community Leader of the Year award from
the Junior Chamber of Commerce in 1985
Frederick W. Winter,deauofthe School
of Management. said the Procter graduate
fellowship will provide the school with another opponunity to attract the besl and the
brightest students with financial need and
help them continue their studies- in manage·
ment.

FINANCIAL PLANNING SERVICES AVAILABLE

Conunued from page I
) ou get an 1dea on as~t!&lt;t and m~ome It· ~
b&lt;."&lt;:n vel) helpful forli :· Md""'c ,;ud.
'Thereufl:'ment progntm we had" a~qunc­
good.'' he said. ··It \\asn't large-. but it "a~
t"nough to pro\'ide a fairi) t.'omfon~tble rellrt"·
ment.''
UB would like to mal..e retirement equally
positive for emplo)ees eligible to parti1.·ipate
10 the c urrent earl) reurem~nt mc~ntive progmm.
April 19 is the deadline for faculty and
staff to file a non-binding Notice of lmen:st
with Personnel Scn·ices.
"We ha\·e retirees who tell us they' re
financially better ofT retiring than worlmg.
It's especially true of those who keep some
affiliation with the university." said Provost
Aaron N. Bloch.
Those eligible for the reun:~nt incen·
tive program inclu&lt;k: some Oft~ most productive and vital people at UB. and
administrators are very open to arrange·
ments that would allow continued access
and affiliation. Bloch said.
"We'd like many of them. as appropriate.
to remain affiliated in some way with the
institution. Tile tetirement incentive offe~
nexibility in life to them and nexibility in
fuoding to the university.· We can bolh benefit from !haL" he said.
Faculty who opt to retire may. for example. be able to cootinue to use lab or office

htmse lf as an mnovato r in manufacturing
and operalions. He was called on tp share hi s
expeni~ at Dunlop· s di visions in Brazil.
Spam. Nigeria and Canada before coming to
Buffalo . He was named exec utive vice president of Dunlop Tire and Rubber Corp. m
Buffalo '" 1970 and became president and
chief ex..ecutive officer in 1972 . He served as
adirectorofColumbu s McKinnon from 1987
until hi s death.
Procter recet,·ed recognition from nu ·
merous \VNY bus mess groups including the

~pace to perform researrh and obtain gr.:mts,
or to teach pan time a~ des1red ... but be freed
of t'om mitt~te " orl and otha obhgatton~ ...
Bloch said. UB can make arrangements ta1 ·
lored to lhe mdi\'ldual. depending on the
degree and appropriateness of affiliation th~
mdividuaJ \1. ould lile to keep.
"Man) facuhyandstaffhaveprepared can:fully for retirement , but I know there are other&gt;o
who may 1101 have fully assessed the implica·
tion&gt;' ' of their retirement benefits. Bloch said.
To assisr all those considering retirement , the:
university will make available an outside professional financial planner. Peat MllN icl.. "'ho
can provide information and advice.

he financiaJ advisor w11l provide the fol ·
lowing sessions: a general information
session for alllhosc considering retiring 10 be
held prior 10 !he April 19 non-binding otiC&lt;
of lnterest deadline: and intensive sessions.
lasting two to three hours. for those " 'ho file
a Notice of loteresL 1bc individual sessions
will be completely confidential and no information from them will be available to the
universiry.
"For people who actual! y choose to retire.
we will make available upon request an add.i·
tiona! private follow-up session." Bloch said.
Financial advisors "will 001 be selliog products.. so the.rr ' s no vested interest on the pan
of the planner... Bloch said. 1

T

In coojunction with the 1995 State of New YOlk Early Retirement Incentive Program. UB has retained the services of KPMG Peat Marwick lo provide individual
and private personal financial planning services 101' !hose unclassified ~
who submit the non-binding Notice of Interest to the Personnel S&lt;ltvicys Offioe.
104 Crofts Hall, by April19, 1995.
(
Orientation sessloos that outline the specific t&gt;enefns and services will be held
at the following times and places 101' mterestad faculty and staff and their spouses:
• 3-5 p.m. Wednesday. April12, Center 101' Tomooow.
• 7 .g p.m. Wednesday. April12. Center 101' Tomorrow.
• 7-9 p.m. Thursday. Apnl13. CenterfOI' Tomorrow.
KPMG Peat Ma!wd&lt; wiU be sending invilatlons and registration lnfOI'mat
101'
these sessions to all employees that QUalify 101' the incentive program

"The intent is to clarify...
financial issues and to
help facility and staff
make the decisions that
are right for them."
"There· s nothing to lose by taking this f~rst
step or at least anending the fust seminar.
There is no obligation resulting from this. The
intent is toclarifythese financial issues and to
help faculty and staff !1laU the decisions !hat
are right for them," Bloch said.

UB " doing evel)'!hmg ir can to help
e-mployoelt male an edu aled decision about
retirement, according to Valdemar hmus. senior asMX:iate vtce president for Universiry
Services .
1be univen.i ty will provide each indi\1iduaJ
who qualitie. for the early retirement incen·
tive program with a resources benefit form.
which will conUli n TlAA-CREF annuity infonnation. vacation buyback information and
an analysis of sick leave accruals that can be
used to pay for health insurance benefits after
retirement. lnn\15 said.
In addition , Social Security will provide
an analysis of the Social Security benefits that
each individual will qualify for "and they will
do it by a special process !hat will permit them
to send that information within seven days of
submission of a request." lnnus said.

�_._u. ___ ...
BIG BANG
Continued from page 1

=r

in the nucleon so that it may be studied
'This is a very exciting time," said Jain.
"Weoreappmacbing the point wb= we will be
able to recrea1e the Big Bang in the 1ab&lt;n1ory.
In fact, there ore so manydiffercn~ poramden to
eumine during tbeseexporimelus. it is possible
we have already produced the quartlgluon
plasma. But it is quite complex. and our
experimenlallirnitations may be such that we
have not directly observed iL"
Quarts and gluons are subatomic particles,
the snlallest forms ofmatteflmown and which
comprise nucleons. Physicists have long
~anted to free the quarlc from gluons, the
massless particles that bind quarl&lt;s together
with a very strong fon:e, but they bave not
been able to do so because quarl&lt;s are so
tightly bound up in the nucleon.

e·

By freeing the quarlc,
ti will, for the
first time, be able 10 SIUdy it and
the aurent
assumption that the quart bas subslnx:lure.
maJcing it the most basic fl
malter.
AccordingiOtheBig-Baogtheol)l,thequarlU
gluoo plasma was aeated during the cataclysmic explosion that caused the creatioo of the
universe. During that explosion. tempernture
andpn:ssurewereextremelyhighandthequarW
gluoo plasma formed for a rnicros&lt;cond. After
the Big Bang, the plasma expanded. tempen~ ­
tures cooled and the quarl&lt;s became ' frozen'
into neutrons, protOns and other particles of
which the universe is comprised.
By recreating in the labon~tory similar
conditions that will produce the quarklgluon
plasma. physicists and cosmologists will be
, bener able to understand the origins of the
universe.
Current research builds on panicle-acceleration work with silicon that Jain reponed in
1987 and 1988, also in Physical Review Let·
ttrs. In that experiment,Jaindisco\1ered highenergy-density nuclear ouues, where very high
energies are deposited in a small area. in the
interacting volume observed in the targe1
material. These high-energy states are essen·
tial to observing the nuclear Oow.
"'ln lhat earlier experiment. we observed
20 times more energy density in the interacting nuclear vol ume than there is in the real
world." said Jain. "an indication that it would
be possible to produce the plasma."
But with the smcon beam there was still no
evidence of the collective now of nucleons.
To produce those inten!Ctions. still-higher
energy densities were needed. which could
only be produced using heavier ions. At
CERN. the European Laboratory for Particle
Physics in Geneva. Jain tried oxygen, whiCh
has 16 nucleons. and silicon. which has 28
nucleons. as well as sulfur. which has 32
nucleons. The~ experiments were done with
high energy beams. but the stopping of the
beam was not observed.
"We knew we needed even heavier par·
ticles." said Jain. "'The problem is that the
heavier the panicle, the greater the energy
that is required to push them around ."
Finally. in 1992 and 1993. a gold heam
was made available to 1M UB physicists at
Brookhaven National Laboratory. Gold has
197 nucleons. In the experiment. gold nuclei
were accelerated to 10 billion electron volts

5

per nucleon, an extremely high energy.
But it wasn'tjusttheuseofthegold beam
and the high occelerations that contributed 10
Jain •s recent success.
Unlike similar experiments conducted by
other groups that use electronic deteclon that
are in some cases as large as one-story buildings. Join bas developed bis own special,
pbotosensitive delectors made from ordinary
pbotognphic film mounted oo glass. The
detectors, which are small eoougb to bold in
the band, register results that may be seen
with a high-resolution microscope.
'This is a poorman'slab," Jain explained.
For each experiment, he customizes the detecton, a painstaking process that involves
complicated logistics. Jain ln!vels 10 CERN,
the only labon!tory in the world with the ·
proper facilities for making a Japanese-manu factured liquid gel into the tltick emulsion he
needs for bis experiments.

AS
A REMINDER ,
M AKIN ' COPIES Will
BE OPEN DURING THE
1 ? ?5 SUMMER SEMESTERS
AN D WILL BE PROVJI)ING THE
SAME GREAT COPY SERVICES.
INClUDING
OUR NOTES ON FilE SERVICE

U e then brings the thick film r'o the labon~ ­
I'Wtory, where the appropriate particle hearn
is located-in this case. Brookhaven-and
where the experiment will be conducted
To develop the film. Jain must then go
back to CERN. He then returns to UB to
analyze the emulsions, a process that may
take several years. "[t Lakes very hard work to
produce these results and to compe~ with
other group5 thai have 40 or 50 researchers on
a single paper," said Jain. who conducts all of
the measurements and analy is himself with
assistance from two colleagues at UB.
What it lacks in sophisticated electronics.
Jain· s special photrosensitive emulsion makes
up for with extremely accurate space resolu tion, i.e .. the exlrtmely SfT\.all angles at which
the particles are produccOI in these htghenergy nuclear collisions.
It is because of that high resolution that tt
has achieved what other detectors could not:
the first direct evidence of the nuclear collective flow. " Because the emulsion is so thick..
we can sec the three~mensionaleffectofthe
reactions of these particles ... explamed Jam.
"When we are finally able to break the
strong force. separating the quark from the
gluonsand producing the quark/gluon plasma.
the energy will remain. so the plasma' s en·
ergy density confined in the nuclearcolli 5.10n
will be very high." Jain said.
In the Brookhaven experiment. during the
brief head-on collisions betw~n projecules
and the target emulsion. 2 trillion electron
volts of energy were produced 10 a space that
measured just 10 " of a meter.
ln their continuing effon to recreate the
Big Bang in the laboratory. Jain recentl y
COIJtPieted a new experiment at CERN. with
the highest poss ible energ) available. using
the heaviest element. lead. which has 209
nucleons. The analysis will take bet"'·een
and three years. "We hope that with thts nev.
beam we will achieve what we ha\e been
looking for. direct evidence of the quariJ
gluon plasma." said Jain.
Jain's co-authors on the Ph )•sica/ Re,·tew
utters paper are Gurmukh Singh. research
assistant professor at US and Amitabha
Mukho padh yay. former postdoctoral researcher at UB. Tile research was hmded by
the U.S. Depanment of Energy and the Researc h Foundation of SUNY Buffalo.

'"o

Faculty!
Help your students
by putting your notes
on file today!

... ...
~

Makin' Cop_ks

...
.A.
...
Te/63fr8440

Wendy .._. . ., director of the Digital Libn~ry Progn~m at the University of
Michigan. will give a presentation on computing and networked information at I 0
a.m. Friday. April 7 in the Special Collections Reading Room. 420 Capen Hall.
[n July 1993 the University of Michigan's Information Technology Division.
School of Information and Library Studies and the University Libn~ry launched a
joint progn~m. the campus-wide Digital Libn~ry Progn~m. to address the campus
environment for network information resources. The program seeks to devel op and
encourage the creation of a broadly defined "digitallibn~ry,'' including .behavioral.
technical and institutional issues that arise in the context of exploring new mechanisms for creating. accessing and using d igital resources in the emerging scholarly
communication construct.
Lougee's presentation is open to interested libn~ry staff. teaching faculty and
students. For more information call 645-5947 or send E-mailto booz.e@ubvm.

~

Fax 63fr8468

520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

THI UNIVIISITT AT IUHALO ANO THI DON DAVIS AIITO WOilD UCTUIISHI~
FUND CO · S~ONSOI THI I 994-1 "S DlinNGUISHID S~IAIIIS SIIIIS

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Thursday, April 27, 1995
8 p.m. Center for the Arts
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Digital library director to speak

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--TO-ArU Saearin&amp; Room. North
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Collins. Ccnler forTomonuw.

North c._.._ S60. CaiiC.CS 6140 for regislration infomWion.

lAw
Robert M. O'Neil.
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Protection of ~'toe~
Moot Hall. Buffalo Swe Cnllqe. 8 Ul1. ss. Call 64S-2471.

#1 Jewish Musical Group in America

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Emory Umv. 280 Park Hall

---ISTRY
North Campus 2 p.m .

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Sulk.owsk.i. RPCI 114
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MUSICAl. THEATER

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Rock Musical-TBA. Pfc:afer
Theater 8 p m SIO. Sl2 . S15
Call 839-8S.IO
UUAB Ftl.M SEJU£S

Star Trek. ~Mrations. Student Umon Theattr North Campu~ 9 p m S2. SJ 50 Call 645~LMONARYCEMTDI

:!9~7

HIIIIINAR

UFEWORKSlnlroducttoo to tbt&gt; World
Wide Web and HTML. Bran don Plewe . 2:304:30 p.m Call
645-6125 for reg1strat1on tnfor-

mation.

Applicatioas ol F.eld Theon- to
Turl&gt;ul....,. Probloms. Prof.Steven Orsz.ag. Princeton Unw.

228 Narural Sciences &amp; Mathematics Complex . Nonh Cam-

pus. 3:45 p.m.
- - COHTINUING

EDUCA~I'tiOUWll

Cn1.ificatt Prognun in
Geronlo~ical Nursing. 4.307:30 p.m . Sessions run Thursdays through May II. SIS. SSO
per session. Call 829-3291 for
registBtion information;
registration deadline
is five working days
bc.fon: each session.

DI-

-NQ
Butralo Law Review, honoring

Thomas E.

Heodrick. Hon.
Hugh B. Scott.

guest speaker.
Oassics V Banquet and Conference Center,

ln Reoctioo-Dilfusioo Equa-

tions. Prof. Palrick Miller.
Brown Unav. 103 Dadrndorf

Soul!i Campus 3:30p.m.
PHYSICS HIIIIINAR SDIIES

IIIUSICALTHUTD
Godlpdl, Zodioque Dance Compony and Gemms Musical Thl:lllr&lt; Company. Dnma Tbeou..
Ccnt&lt;r foe the ArU Nor111 Campus. 8 p.m. SS. SIO.

IPECIAL- EVENT
Adam Holzmall. pilar. Bam!
Rcc1tal Hall North Campu.

-AilE
8 p.m.

THUTDI
Rod Mldkai-TBA. Pf'eifer
Theat..- 8 p .m. SIO. Sl2. SI S
Call 839-8S40.
UUABFILIISEJIIU
Re.vy Mdal. Student Umon
Theal&lt;T. North Campu . II :30
p .m S2. S3.SO Ca1164S-29S7

SATURDAY

~

AU*NIEVENT
UD.iVU'Sity- Wkle Open H0U51t
for Fall1995. Call 64S-644 2.
IIIABTDI CLASS

SberriU Milnes. banitooe. Slet
Hall 81 . North Campus. 2 p.rn
S20. sso. Caii8S2-2072.

-AilE

Pbysks of Rapid Granular
Flows, Prof JafT'It:S T. Jenbns.
Cornell Umv. 222 Natural Scaencc:s &amp; Malhematao CompleJ.
Nonh Campus 3 .$5 p m Call

THEATEll
Rod: Musical-TBA. Preif&lt;r
lbeat.c:r 4 and 8 p.m. S10. S 12..
SIS Call 839-8540

64S-2017

ART LEC1UIIE

CHDIIS11tY CCIU.OQtiiUII
Determination of Sequent'-!
Bond Dissociation Eoergies in
Organic: IUid OrgiUKHDdallic:
Mot.cula, Prof. Robert R.
Squares. Purdut: URI\'. 215 Natural Scaentts &amp; MathematiCS
Complex . Non.h Cam~ 4 p m.

Ad.Un Pipe:r. P1pc:r':. \Ideo and
pholognph1C .exhibit. "'('ornc-ed/
Decade Who YOU Are," IS on
daspla) lhrough May 5 tn the UB
An Gallery Center foe W Aru
S(Tecmng Room Of'th Ca:mpu:.
bp.m. F=
EJISDI.U SERIO

UB Percussion Ensemble, Jan
Williams ~nd Anthony Mtrand.a.
dartctors Sle.c Concen Hall

Visiting Artists

PKARMACE\/TlCS SEMINAR

PHYSICS CCIU.OQUIUII

IIAnEMATICS CCIU.OQUIUIII

samples .. 6:30. C.oter roc the
ArU North Campus. 7:30p.m.
S3. Caii64S-612S oc 64S-ARTS

Cellist David Soyer pianlllt s.,-n-r Upldn
perform Apotl10 at 8 p.m. In Slee Concert Hall In
Vls!HngArtlstSeotes.

Tho Effect o( Antimetboerexatt lgG and fab

Balthasar. C508 Cool:.• Nonh
Campus. 3:30 p.m.

A Softwart Eoviroo.mmt for
Pal"'lllel Computer Vision. Leah
H Jamieson. Purdue Um' 4
Knox. North Campus 3-4 IS
p.m. Caii64S-ll80.

UUAB FILII SOIU
St•r T~ Ge:oerations. Studem Umon Theater. North Cam-

A.ogtogeoesis, Dr John Ricotta.
Dept_ of Surgel) I 08 Sherman.
,SOUth Campus. 8 a.m

fragments oo Mdhotruatr
Disposition in the Rat. Joseph

CCM.LOQI .. Nll

Iuide Salop J1bodl.q
Succao w~ Socrilk:laa a
Sodol Coaleloaee, Fred "ChicoLap. Fonner Praident and
CEO of Ben &amp; Jeny's Homemade.. Inc. Free tee cream

SOCIAL WORK COHTINUIHG
EDUCA~I'tiOUWll

Exploring and latq:ratinc
Spirituality ia Working "'"itb
Vomeo in Tbtrapy, Bonmc

�-.. -~--.-

lloolldbla Solr~.

Cauruelln&amp; Center. 14SE Stu·

deft~

Uoioa. N - Compus.
Nooo-1 p.m.
~PABSTAfF

T lleGIItlo Rod...- Fllllllllal
o..riu a.ptry: U71,_.t,&gt;4. Stevco Plvu, M.D.

UBMicro will be open
Sat. 4/8/95 9"'"- 3pm

for Open House!
Check out these Apple
price breaks!

RPCl N'""' Compus.

12:30
_,.8C_
p.m.

~

7

...

....

~&amp;OutA~t~U~I~

$1139
Savings of $308

Prof. Daniel Dennett. 1llfls
Uoiv. 280 Port. N - Campu
2 p.m.
Hidcloo
Moclds ror
-Markov
- LEC1Utlll
Spoeoh and Sipal Recop ~
tioo, 0.. RH:hanl C . Rose.
Mwny Hill 106 Cary South
Campus 4 p.m

Performa 636

.iiiiir.Oiii:::iii.:lliloll .....

$1925
Savings of $335

_..AUILCMIIC

COUOCII-

Uncoaraected Information Re-mnry Prob~.s.. John

Perform a 6115CD

Con:oron 684 Bold~ Nonh

·-·.--....~of-MI.., Ku.-. nov.. will
be - . . Aprll12 13 .t 6:30 p.m. In Student Union ThNtw.
North Campus. 8 p.m. Free ad mossiqn. CaJI645-2921.
MUSICAL THEATDI

GocbprU, Zod..iaque Dance
Company and Gemms Musical
TheatTe Company. Drama Thealt'C. Center for the Aru. North
Campus. 8 p.m. S5. SIO.

SUNDAY

UFE-

Dr Ha1yung Cheng, Merd. Rto ·

F"U"St Aid for Pd.s, Ke"an J.
Kuhn, D.V.M 7-9,30 p m CAll
645-6125 for tct.u:trallon mfor·
m.IIIOO.

nL.M SCIIEENING
Tbe Mothers or Plar.a

SUIIMEitFAJl£ TMEATDI
Roek Musical· TBA. Pfe1fer
Theater. 3 p.m. SIO. Si2. Sl 5
Call 839-8540

Public nftption for Lourdes
~

~hyo.

Lourdes Porullo. A"'ard
wmnmg Ch1cana film wntn.
duector and producer Center
for the Ans Scrccmng Room
North Campus. 8 p m Free and
open to the publte.

David Soyer, cello, and
Seymour Lipkin. piaoo. Sona·
tas by Beethoven. Martmu .
Brahms. Slcc Concen Hall .
Nonh Campus 8 p.m. S4. S5 ,
$8, SIO. For informauon . call
645 -2921

Ballet Hispanico. Pan of QRS

MUS.a . DEIIIIEE R£CnAL

Katherine- Sosda, soprano.
"ludent of Sylvia Oimazaom .
Baird Recital Hall. orth Cam ·
pus. 8 p.m. Admtuion IS free .
Call645-2921.
MUSICAL TMEATDI
Gods~ll. Zodiaque Danc:e
Company and Gemms Mu),ical
Theatre Company. Drama Tile ·
alt'C. Center for the Ans North
Compus. 8 p.m. S5 . SIO

MONDAY

TUESDA Y

11

MASTDI CLASS

Seymour Lipkin, piano. Slee
Concc.n Hall . o'* Campu~ 9
a.m. Free admiss1on. For mformalion. call 645 -2921
FILM SCREENING
~\il

Nenr Sleeps.
Lonn&amp;es Ponillo. Award· 'ot.tRaing Chicana film wntcr. dutt·
10( and producer. Center for the
Arts Screening Room North
Campus. 10 a.m. Frtt and orx:n
to the public.
Tbe

CAilDIOPULMOII-UY CENTER

IDIIINAII

10
-

INSlTTUlE FOil ADDIC'IlONS
ANO T11AJNIIIG

S~

SpedaJ Seminar-Fetal Respoose to Hypox.ia., Dr. Oano
Giussani. Cornell Uni\'. 108
Shennan. South Campus. II

a.m.
111LUS STUDENTS R£CnAL

Recital. Students of Richard
Myers. Baird Recital Hall.
North Campus. Noon. Frtt ad·
mission. Call645-2921 .

Medical Aspe&lt;U or Dnog ond
Akobol Abuse for Prevention/
Educatioa Professionals,
Sheila Banks. WCA Hospital.
Jones Me@Of"iaJ Health Clr..
Jamestown . SSO fcc . Call 645 ·
6 140.

· - aAG READING

INTtlllln CUNIC
Tbe Buttalo Fr'M'-Net. 223
Lockwood. Nonh Campus .
I p.m. CaJI645-2817 .

Hiroshima and Nagasaki-the
SOtb Annh·ersary or the
Atomic Bombing. June Alker.
The &lt;alk will be preceded by a
board meeting at I p.m. Emen ·
tus Center. South Lounge.

BIOC.-ISTIIY IUIIIIWI
Structure and Localit.ation of
Vacuolar ATPut and Other
Regulatory Secretory Mem·
brane Proteins, Gary Dean.
ll4 B Farber. South Campus.
4p.m.

PoniUo. A\loard · \lo·anmng
Ch1cana film V~'nlcr . darector
and producer Porttllo's ' I.Sitl'
spoo'iOfed b) the UB Deponmem of Modem Languages and
Luera1U\c1. tht- lkpanmen1 of
Med1a s\ud) . the Melodaa Jonci
Chan an french (Raymond
Federman) and the James
McNulty Cha1r an Englbh llkn ·
n1lo Tedlod:.). 830 Ckmen),
North Campus 4 p m Fret and
open 10 the pubhc
CIIITR£ACN WOIIIIINOP

Ex:ptorinc Suualldentity.
Center. 14SE Stu·
&lt;knl Unaon Nonh Campu.~
530-7pm.
Coun~lang

DANCE
series. Center for the Am
North Campus 7 p.m SIO. Sl5.
S20. Coil 645-6259

seart"h Labontones CS08
Nonh Campus 3 30
pm

Cook~

RECEPTION

VllmiiG AJmiT IDliiEI

9

• 8MB RAM • 350MB H.ard Orn--e •
Cok&gt;r Morutor • COROM Dnvt'

Compus 4pm Call881 - 1640
or 64S-2438

n-.PIIIIlHUftus of BeiiPd

IEIIIIEI
In CoDftdeoce, by Margaret
Hollingswonh. Center for the
Ans Reheaisal Worbhop.

North Campus. 12:30-1 :30 p.m.

Free admission.
EMEJifTUS CEHTD

Goodyear Hall. South Campus.
2 p.m. Call 87b-9085.
l'ti.UIIIACEUTICS IUIIINAII
Calculatin&amp; Volumes of Distri·
bution in Nonlinear Systems,

IIIMS IIIG CONTINUING

EDUCAT'IOIOIntroductory Ph)sicallusns·
m t.nl of I be Aduh~ 6-9 p _m
\250 Call 829-3291 ror Tt'J!I!io
tntJon mforma11on
U fE WORKSHOP
An lnl tn·ie"'·e-r's Ptrspt'Cti'~
o n lb~ lnte:r~it-"M , Manto Bul~er
7-9 p.m. C411164S-6125 fm reg
l),lrJIIOn anformauon

COfnDIOUIE
Cotr~houst . Hamman liall
South Campus 8 p.m
M.M. DEGREE R£CII'AL

Anotbony J . Burke. organist.
Studenl of 03\ ad Fuller Slee
Concen Hall North Campus 8
p m Free admiS),IOn Call 645 ·
292 1

WEDNESD A Y

1~

l'ti.UIIIACY SEMINAR
C linical Impact of Gent
Thera py. Susan Chuck. 248
Cook Nonh Campus 8-9 a.m
WNYTDC SEMINAII
OSHA: What 's Ntw and What
Does It mn.n to Your Busioas. Buffet breakfast mcluded.
space ts limited, preregistration
and prepaymc:nt requested. Ccn·
1er for Tomorrow. Nonh Cam ·
pus. 8 ~ I 5-11 a.m. S60. Ca11636·
3626.
·-SA(£
friend 's Room Book Sale.
Lockwood Libr.try Friend's
Room. North Campus. 10 a.m.-5
p.m. Prices: will range from S I
10 $3 . All sales wiiJ be final And
o nly cash will be. accepted.

15~

• 1-4 o4K Modem and 50ftw•rP'

WEDHESOAn AT 4 PWS
Prow Rudin&amp;. Lyd1a Da''l.!i

Cenler ror 1~ Am Screemng

$2737
Savings of $183

Room. North Campus 4 p.m
l'ti.UIIIACY IDIIINAII
Factors • ·bk:b DdermlM lhf.
Maximum ~orCip.-.

~lf~~~~~B~~S&amp;,~

no.utin, Angela Cht:ng 24g
Coob Nonh
5:30 p m

Campu~

• 8MB RAM • 250MB Hood om..
•nd CDROM Om.? w.-..Jtt~.,..,.....

4 30-

and Modem '

$2787
Savings of $633

AW MNI EVENT
Studa~t Alumni Annual J.
Smtt flemln&amp; Merit A.-.rds
~mony. Jean~ne Marun
Room . b-8 p.m Call829-2608

Power Macintosh 7100

UUAII FIUI SEiliU

• MJU • 16MB RAM • 700MB
H•rd Dnve 1.nd CDROM Dnvel

Uobearabl&lt; Llchtnos of 8.i.ng. Student U~ton 'Thea~r
North Campus 630 p m S2.
nso. Call 645-2957

........ b~tM .........

INTtlllln CUNIC
1'b&lt; Bull'alo Fl'ft-N&lt;t. 22J
Lockwood. 1 p m C.ll 6452817
-MARGAIIET II£AD FILM AND
VIDEO FUTIY AL
Music: P~rfonnanc~ to P~
t.:st. Includes 'tdeo .. From
L•ule Thmr: Btg Thmgs Gro~ '"'Gand) Dan~~- and .. Eart
R 1lb tn~ Ballad of 11.n Amc'ncan ··Center for tilt An Screcnmg Room North Campu" 7
p m Fret :sdmtss1on Call 6-t'\

I

690~

OPUS : CLASSICS UVE
Pillno. Paul Rumnll Allton Hall
South Campu), 7 p m Fn:t ad

I.£CTUR£
\\"herT ·~

the Oarknes,..

Wht.rt 's the-light ? !man \\o
Dttn Mohammed . Mu slim
Amencan Spokesman for Hu man Sa h 3llon Center for the
Ans Nonh Campus 7 30 p.m
Free admiS),Ion Call 6-t5-2:997 .

645 -2234. Of 645 -2097
Ua JAZZ COMIO
Jazz. Perfonnaoct:, Sam
FaJzonC". conductor Ba1rd ReC ital Hall North Campus 8 p m
Frtt admass1on. Call 645 -2921
UUAIIFILMSEJUIEI

Barutona. Student Uruon Theater Nonh Campus 9 p m S:! .
SJ.SO Call 645-2957

A Workshop on Passover lor Interfaith Families &amp; Others

with

• lam "wwlylhls nigh! lsdllletenl from .. ~·
• LamlheFottto.-..
• Learn how
)'Ollf own Sedel
•• Specilllecipes
v.. _ , be.andlllnpllllllll'lber

to.,._.

THURSD AY

1l

(

Rabbi Ronne Friedman
Cantor David Goldstein
Nan Meyer

to_,.,

Sunday, April 9, 1995
4:00-6:00 p.m.
Temple Beth Zion Suburban Building
700 Sweet Home Rd . Eggertsville. NY

CARDIOPU"--ARY CENTER

SEMINAR
Supe:rstilion in Nitric Oddt'
Tberap) . Dr. Jun Iwamoto.
As.alul.:awa Medical College.
Japan . 108 Shennan South
Campus. 8 a.m.
.-s~

Friend '' Room Book Sale.

Contonued on page 8

-ID

This WOO&lt;shop is tree and
lhe enli&lt;e communily.
Registration a mus11 Cal T82 a 886-nso"' roglst!r,
or eal Ellen Goldsl1lln ll881-2697.

I

�8
CALENDAR
Continued from page 7
Lockwood Library Friend's

Room. North Campua. 10 Lf!L·
p.m. Prices will ranee from
St -$3. AU sales wilt be final and
only cash will be acccpled.
!§

PIAMCI._,.BCITAL
Piaao, students of Frtaa
Anchansta BoldL Baird Recilal

--

lUll . N&lt;X1h Campua. Noon. .,_
admission. Caii64S-2921.
Upooomol Tbonpy d BraiD

Tumors: E..-.. or~
Tu--.1 ~ Dopooitioa!
D&lt;. Uma Sharma. ~-&lt;loaoral
fellow. C508 Cooke. South Cam·

pus. 3:30 p.pt
PffYUCII CCIUGCIIIII•
The lllocovery oftbo Top
Qoaark ol F.....U.b, Prof. Ulricl1
Baur. 228 NII!Ural Scicna:J .t
Malhemalics Complex. North
Campua. 3:45 p.m.

IIA-nca COU.OCIIIII•
Applicotioas d Sot-Voluod
Moppiap to Dyumlcol Syo......, Prof. Tomasz K.oczynsl:i.
Univ. de Sbert&gt;rooko. 103
Diefendorf: Soulh Campus.
4p.m.

---~-

c.rtificolo PnJcram Ia
Gm&gt;alolop:al NW'Iia&amp;- 4;3().
7:30pm.. Sessions run Thtmdays
tluooJh May II. SIS, S50 pc:r
penon. Call829-3291 lor registration infc:nnation; regislratioo
deadline is five wcrting days

---before each session.

DismanJlin&amp; U.. Cartesian 'J'bo-

•ter, Prof. Daniel Dennett. Tufts

Univ. 255 NlllW'lll Sciences &amp;
Malhematics Complex. North
Campua. 5 p.m.

Master or FiDe Arts Tbesls Ex--~
hi!Mt-Natharuel Brockmann.
Tho exhibit runs tbrougll May 4.
Cc:nr.o- for meAns-An Depan:ment Gallcfy. North Campus. S- 7

p.m. Call 64S-6878.

.__

Enecs•-.u.

IIESE.UICtiCCIU.OQUMtl
lnl&lt;llec:lual Properly aad Con-

Did ollnl..-.st, Kathleen Terry,
lD_ Offteo ofTedmology Tnmsfer. Butler Auditorium. Sherman.
Soulh Campua. S;IS-7 ;15 p.m.
Grants o.v.iopiD&lt;IIt Wcrl.shop, Maw-eon McMahon. 5:307:30p.m. Caii64S-6125 IO&lt; regtStration information.
W.UFILII-

Unbeanble Uj:)Jtness of Boing.
Student Union Theater. North
Campua. 6;30 p.m. S2. S350. Call
64S-29S7.

~-UB
5)'111phooic Band, Sar.dt
McKoin, conductor. Louis
Vitello, assistant conductOf. Sl«

Concen Hall. Nonh Campus.
8 p.m. Caii6&lt;5-ARTS .
- A R E TIIEATER
Rock Music:aJ.-TBA. Pfeifer lkau:r. 8 p.m. SIO. Sl 2. SIS. Call
839-8540.
W.UFUIIRRIO
8arcdooa. Swdeot Union lk-

au:r. North Campua. 9 p.m. S2.
S3.50. Caii6&lt;5-29S7.

--EXHIBITS

-u

Nathaniel Brockmann's Master of
Fine Ans thesis exhibit opens
with a reception on April 13. from
S- 7 p.m. aalhc: Center for the
Ans. His phooognlphs will remain
on display tbrouJh May 4 in lhe
An Depanm:nt Gallcty. GaiJcfy
ltoun are Tuesdays, I0 un.- 5
p.m., Wednesdays-Fridays 10
a.m.-8 p.m.• and Saturdays II
a.m.-8 p.m.

S1UDIJIT- COIIT1IIUD

An exbibit of n:a:nt SIUdcnl
worb in c:oojunctioo with tbe
rwiooaliiCCl'Cditation team'' review opertod April3 ill lhe James
Dyett Exhibition lUll. third floor.
Hayes lUll. South Campus. On

_,s-._..,_aa
Wodneodoy,Gallctyboon.,.
MaDclay5 9 a.m. 10 8 p.m.. omd
, _ y s dJrouab
9 a.m.
toS p.m.
-

r

--

Adrian Pipe&lt;'. exhibit. "Decide
Who You tue,• will be up
duouJh April22 alhe C..... for
lhe Arts Gallcty (lin! Floor).
Admission is !roc; pUcry boon
are 10:30 Lm.-8 p.m. Wcdnes-day-Salunlay and Noon-S p.m.
Sundly. Ukcwise, Vicuw
BUIJin's "Tho End" will be showing duou&amp;h April 22 iD lhe Cc:nu:r
lor lhe Arts Gallcty. ( oocond
floor). Admissioo is fra:; pUcry
houn are 10:30 un.-8 p.m.
Wodneodoy-Salunlay and Noon-5
p.m. Sunday. Caii64S-6912 or
645-$76. Simon UDI""'' "Red
Vertical" runs duou&amp;h July 31 in
lhe l..iJhlwell Gallcty; odmission
is f=. Gallcty boon are 10:30
Lm.-8 p.m. Wodnelday-Sanuday
and Noon-S p.m. Sunday. Call
645-6912.

plicns- be u.s. a.;....,.
lhe limed ..,p;c.;oo ood hold a
bacbdar'adqroeoriii..Pby lhe lqinain&amp; dooe d lhe .....
er..;-e ood perf&lt;l1111iDa artisb ore
not n:quiftd W&gt; bave a t.cbdor's
........... lhey must ba-e lOur
yean d - oraiDin&amp; or Jllldy.
~ mllEdiciDe rraas~ MYe
.,MD. orcquivaletlallhelimc
d applicabon. AD applicools must
have sutricicnl po!ic:imcy in lhe
ian- d lhe boa country. Full
-provide round-&lt;rip inlt:mational ...a, ....,_for lhe
\cn~.R ~ tbe award, a research
allowance. aod tuition waivers. if
applicoble. Travel sraots provjde
round-&lt;rip im&lt;:mal:iooal ....110
lhecounll')' where lhelllldcnl will
pursue - . : a l l pants include
heallh a n d - ........,._
Conraa 0.. llarlJonl B..W..
FulbriJhll'rllpm Advisor. in 362
Plat Hall64S-36SO. en. 362 or
exL 3$8. llcodlino for reoeipl of
llpplicalioosis~26.

1995.
-~MntE

NO_dCES
CAU..AU.~

AlMIDD
The Alumni Association's Ath·
ktic Hall of Fame sccb nomina·
lions for inductees. Nominaun
m~y consult the Divisioo of Alh·
ktics and the: University Archives
to assistlhcm in compiling infor·
mation about and for candidates.

Nomination forms are available at
lhe0ff10eof Alumni Relations.
South Campus. and muSI be: ~
pleted and reoeivod by MayS.
1995.
CAMPUS CW8 SET$ SAIL FOR

-·"

Tbe Campus Oubunels to
Toronto to ser Showboa.l on
Wednesday. May 31. For a S90 0&lt;
SIOO fee. participants receive a
ltght breakfasL sho\lo ockets. chartc.r bm lr.Ulsportatton to and from
Toronto. and dinner. 1ne bu will
leave at 8 a..m. from Tops Pla7,&amp;.
Coh'in and Eggen and n:tum at 9
p.m. Reservr yow- plact roday
wilh a S.SO deposit. payable to the
Campus Oub, Balantt is due on
April21. Call645-2816. 64S2592, or6&lt;5-214S .

DENTAL StUDY PAR'IlCPAHTS
IIOUIIHT

UB deotttl ......-chen an: sooking
""'"'than 100 lteallhy adults. between 18-70. with some signs of
gum (periodonlal) disoase 10 help
e-.'&amp;Juate thr effo::t of 1 mou~.
a tooehpaste. and 1 mouth moisuuizc:r on onl health. Participants
mus1 ha~ some symptomS. such

" red gums and bleating gums
after toodtbrushing; lhey will """"
four brief visits tO the SchooJ of

Denial Modicinc on Soulh Campus. Upon completion or lhe study.
each panici- will be reintbtu&gt;ed
SIOO lor time and u.vel. Cal18:!93850 between 9 Lm and 4 p.m.
weekdays.
FLOWER~FOR

IIRACECAI'EII SC-.aRSHIP
The 1995 Wornc. 's Oub Aower
Sale to benefit the Grace Capen
ScholaMip has begun. Genn•ums and impatiens are 1vail.able
for the same price: as last year:
geraniums. 4-lf2" polS@ $1 .80
each or S20 pc:rdo1.cn . impatiens..
6 plants per pacl&lt;. S 1.50 pc:r pack

or SIO fO&lt; 10" hang;ng polS. Call
839-0469 &lt;&gt;&lt; 634-4727 to order,
pickup orders at the Center for
Tomorrow on May 10. Put a littk
color in your spring~t order
by April28.

~CGMP£11
liON OPENS
The offtcial opening of oornpetilion for 1996-97 Fulbright Gntnts
for graduate study in academic
f~c:k!s and professional training in
the creative and pc:rfonning arts is
slated for May I. Fulbright Gntnts
are •vailable for swdy c:w n::sc:an:h:
traYel gram are 1vailablc: lOse~ cn.mtric:s to suppiemer:u
.....-.........aw.n~srrornoc~tor

"""""' that do 00( provide funds
for i.memational tnlvel or 10
supplement lhe applicant'• pc:rsonal funds. Tho J. William
Fulbright Scbolanhip Bootd. oornpoood of 12 educational and public
loaders appoint.c:d by lhe Prosident
or lhe United s.-, establishes
criteria for lhe selection of eandidatos and awards lhe grants. Ap-

. . . RA111D
In coopcntioa will&gt; lhe OfflOt or
lhe Pro-. rho Clair or lhe Foeulty Senate has arranged for a
seneraJ meeting for f11CVhy
throughout the University with the
ClW.rofthe Ptaidcnl's Rcv~w
Boaro (PRB) Prof. Mirdza
NeideR and orhcr memben of lhe

PRB thai are able to anend on
Friday.April 21 atJ p.m. in
Room 330 of lhe SuJdent Umon

-

Assembly Hall.
GETnNaRI-.&gt;

Tho Westom Now Yort Heallh

Scienct librarians "&lt;~till sponsor a
daykxlg conference on "Geltmg
Funded: Oe~'C:Joping Skill an
Proposal Writing" Fridlty. Apnl

~-~~;~~~esb_ ~
fessor emeritus, School of Ubr.uy
and Information Soenct. Case
Western R~ Um\'enJI). thr
course "''ill outline muca\ e~ ments an the proposal \lo'nlmg
proceu and show how to~
persua.stve and wmning propos.ah.
m a highly compellUve grants
marketplace. Cos!: is S25 for
WNYHSL members and S30 fe&lt;
non-members. An addmonal
charge of S20 applies to lho!r.c
who wash tO receive MC'd.caJ LJ.
bra1)' AsSOClatton conunuang
educauon credits• .....tuch tncl~

sax CE credtlS. a ceruficale and a
cours.r: manual . Call Karen
Kre1zman. WNYHSL president.
887-3637. E-mail:
Kreuman@bms .com. Regastratioo deadline is Apnl 14

.....
---··.,.

lbip for Acodemi&lt; EJcellcllce il
opm 10 andwt&gt;poloey mo,jon iD
lheir jul1ior year. T h e for appUcalioo is April IS. t 994.
Sendleamld-toS.
Milisausbs, C&gt;air,llq&gt;t. dAnlhropolocy, 380 Fil~ Buffalo,N.Y. t•261.

cu..... fuU"Iimo prdessiooalsWf

omployoos ofUB,Ihe R.-t:b
FOundalioa, lhe UB Fcundalioa. or
lhe Fac:uhy-51Udcnl Aaocilaion
who have complclod IWO yean d
CX&gt;IIliiiiiOUII fuU"Iimo prolessiooal
.wf servia:.,. eliJiihl&lt; forlhe
Ouuuuxlina Servia: Aword.
Mcmben oflhe UB commuoi!y
who wish 1 0 - nominations
for lhe !Jwundin&amp; Servia: A....-d
trMl ~ I cbsiel' ia JUppDn
of the nominee. indudin&amp; I maxi·
mum of five leaen of support. the
nominalor's ovavicw. the
nominee•• cm'ltD: vita a.tcmcnt
and""""" position dclcripcioo
oipd by lhe norninco's supcrvisor. as weU as a nominaion form.
Norninalioos must be reoeivod by
Friday. April21 , 1995 and may be
submiut&gt;d "" Deno Flcidmann.
awr.
Pl'ofcWonal SWfS....
Awards Commi..._ JIOO' Brion
Hall, Norlh Campus. 645-2107 or
645-6115. Winners receiYe a
SI.OOOcash awonl. c:onifoca~&lt; of
recognition, and will be honored al
an awards luncheon on May 17.

HUM.\Nm£$ COMMITTEE

-

- - R)lJ(

All are wek::omc to join tile International Folk Dancing group each
Friday from 8-11 p.m. in 2
Diefendorf lUll on lhe Soulh
Campus. These: free sessions begin with teaching. Partncn are 001
needed. The sponsor islhe Graduate Studcnl Association.

... _

.. n. _

_,..,.,,

nJDI!NTS typicaJJy'encOUiller I great
deal of stress (academic:, living arnnge.ment. family, wor1c, finlllcial) during
lbc coune of an IICldemle year. l'or
some, lbc pressures become o-wbelmin&amp; and fed unmanageable.
The JIUlPOI" oC Ibis message is ro belp you icleotify
bolh the leN obvious and tbe more dr-x: signs of
emotional distreu and ID S1JU$ bow you might be of
ISSiJtance ID lllldr:nts.

,...... .........

___

......__

• Adual self-barmin&amp; (Ctttting. taJdn&amp; an overdose oC
a medicalico, drug or toxic ebemical).
• Alt.empling 10 harm ooeself (ciimbins out 01110 1
wiDdow ledge or tbe roof).
• Tallcing to olben about JciUing oneself.

• Leaving a suiCide DOle.
• Agressiveness in dealing with tbe environment
(&amp;lammins doon; violently, using one's fistro break a
window or bit walls, throwing or breaking of fumi·
lure.

UNIVEJISITY-

Fund-~sing cffons for tht Uru ·
versity Ox&gt;ir' s conccn wur of
Italy ~ underway and include a
ca..'&gt;settc: tape saJc:. Cassc:ne tapes of
the UB 0.00. highlighting !"'for·
mances from 1972-92. at&lt; pnad
a1 St2 each or two for S20 and ;n
avwlabk • the 8&lt;:dsu:Jrt or dJ •
rcctly from lhe UB Founda!&gt;on
Olotr Tape: I feanuu mus.c from
thr 18th and 19th centuries plus
Chnstmas. folk. and pop ~Sec OOns Tape 2 mcludes Rerwssance
!oelc:cttons and rompositeom from
the 20ih centUl) Callf&gt;&lt;S-2964

These signs of serious distress should be reponed
to Public Safety (exL 2222) without delay in order to
ensure the individual's safety. Utbe student resides in
the residence halls, hislber Hall Director or the Office
of Residence Life (645-2171) also should be notified.

ITALY.,._

-OUT FOR AIDS
Jotn the fun and show )'OUJ suppon for AlDS and related Cancer
rrse&amp;~eh on Sanud.ay. Apnl 8
dunng the Work"out fOf Aids at
the Alumnt Arena., North Campus. from 10 a.m. to Noon All
proceeds w1ll benefit the C&amp;l) of
Hope attonal Medtcal Center
and Beckman Research lnJ&gt;tttutt:
Call691 -5676

IH~AWARDS

SEEKS INPUT
1be University Huma.mtaes Comrrunee asks the UB communtt) 's
atd m their consJderatu)n of the
present stat.e of humamttes at UB
and the formation of plans for the
future. Please send ~. an wnt·
mg. to: Carol Jacobs, Committee
Dla1r. Diane Christian. or Robert ..
Daly, 306 Clemens !Englislt);
lames Bono, S59 Pttrl&lt; (History );
Stq&gt;hon Dyson. 712 Clemens.
John Peradono. 733 Ck.mens
(Ciass•cs); Rudolph&lt; Gascho, 638
Clemens {Comparative Uterarure); Jorge Gracia. 681 Baldy
(Pttilosophy); David Perry 201G
Hayes (Planning and Design);
John Quinan, 606 Clemens (An
History); Henry RicltardJ. 910
Clemens (Modem lAnguages omd
Literatwu); Barna.. Todlocl&lt;.
36S Millard F"tllrt'IOfe Academic
Cent« (Anthropology); Tanwo
Thornton. 546 Pttrl&lt; (Hjstory);
Wolfgang Wolck. 629 Baldy
(Linguistics) .

Spotting the Danger
Signs of Stress

• Agressiveness towari! otltets (screaming, lhreatening, insulting. actual physical aiUCk).

GRAll -EXCEUDICE

Tht. Graduate School will host the
Graduate Student Excellence an
Teaching Awards Ceremony on
Friday, April 7. a.t 3 p.m. 1R the
Center for the Arts SCToemng
Room. Tilt ceremony is open to
all memlx~ of the uni,·ers!l) and
commurury.

COUNSEliNG CENTER AlERT

TheM.iou~--

JOBS
IIESEARCtt

Assistant Oinctor or Rtst':at'Ch

r.. ~ 0ooor PTosports-

Umvers:ity Development Postmg
MR-950"-2. Assistant l&gt;i.rutor of
Research for PI"''SJ)td RecordsUmversity De\-c:lopmenL Postmg
HR-95023 . Res&lt;an:b S..retaryUmversity Development Posung
•R-95024. Director or BudgetUmvasity Oc:\"elopmc:nt. Postmg
•R-9502.5 . Resatrcb TechnM:ian
(half-time)- Anatomy &amp; Cell Btology. Posting HR-95026. Seentary n (60'1&gt; positlooH&gt;ffte&lt; of
Controller. Posting HR-95027 .
As5ociak Director, Regional
Dn'elopmen.t-Uni,•ersiry Dc:vel·
opmenc Posting HR-95028. Assistaot Director ot Corporate and
Foundatioo Rebtions-Dc:velop-

-

ment. Posting MR-95029. Resoarcb Support Spodalist-Oral
Biology. Posting NR-95030
Raidmco Hall DirodiHis) (lotemal Promolional Opportu-

ruty SL-2)-Rexidential Life. Posting HP-5007. fnlcrammer
Analyst (lntornal Promotional
Opportunity, SL-~puting
.t Information Technology. Posting NP-5009. Apptieation 0..-dopor (lotemal Promotional
Opportunity, SL-3)-Computing
&amp; Information Technology. Posting i'P-5010.
To obtain mort informariOfl on

jobs listN abo~.

C'Otll act

Puson-

nt!l ~n&gt;iet!s, 104 Crofts Hall.

____ --pMt----------W:
_,.....

... _...,_

. . . . . . . . , . _ . . . . , . _ _ UM..

of .......
- • Social participation (per.;on either becomes significantly more dependent on your time and attention or
withdraws liom usual participation and becomes

relati Ycly socially isolated).

·

• Appearance (a usually neat person becomes careless in tenns of hygiene and/or dress).
• Class attendance (person either becomes significantly inconsistenl or stops attendins classes).
• Energy (unusual fatigue or inexplicable burstJ; of
activicy which may or may not be productive).
• Mood (unusually irritable, restless, sad).
• AlcohoVsubstance use (occasional drinker/user
engages in the activicy with significantly greater fiequency and/or the amounl consumed per usage increases significantly).

• Exlleme weigh! loss/gain.
You can be of assistance by encouraging the person to cootact one: of the foUowing services:
c-....-, 120-~
Coollpie• (M&amp;-2720)

To scbedule an appointment. phone or walk in weekdays 8:30a.m. to 5 p.m. Services.,.. free, voluntary,
and confidential.
_ . . . . . . . . , -(113WU1)
An off campus. daily 24-bour telephone hotline; if
necessary and appropriale, Crisis
Services' Emergency Outreach Unit
can come 10 campus for evaluation of
risk to self or others.

.11

t

llle-of_.
t

Academic deans and Olber
offices provide assiS!ltllce for

acade;niCauy related problems. Their names and numben can be found in tbe
Univ=icy Direc:to&lt;y.
U you have any questions
or concerns about someone,
call tbe Counseling Center
(645-2720) and consult with
the counselor-oo-duty. Remember. it is better to obtain
assurance tliat a perceived
problem is not serious than
not to call at all.

�_.,,..._..,_u

D.~ Filmmaker

.._......POrtillo,_....._,

to ..,...m provOCIItlve

ANIHROPOLOGY
Continued from page 12

'1111 Witter/director/....._
doca__,
"'-at

11J PAniiCIA - A l l
News Bureau Staff

L

OURDES Portillo is an awardwinning Olicana film writer. director and producer wbose daring
and distinctive work has helped
redefine the documentary genre.
She will present two of her films. including
her most recent. next month at UB. Both
screenings are free and open to the public.
Ponillo'scritically acclaimed 1986docurnentary. "'The Mothers of Plaza De Mayo."
willheshownat8p.m.onMonday.ApriiiO.
in the Screening Room of the Center for the
Arts on the North Campus.
Her~ film. 'The Devil Never Sleeps.''
is a "d
mystery" about a family murder
set in her tiveChihtiahua. lt will be screened
at 1~ . on Tuesday. April II. in the
Screening Room. There will be a discussion
with the filmmaker following both screenings and a public reception at4 p.m. on April
II in 830 Clemens on the Nonh Campus.
Ponillo's visit to Buffalo is sponsored by
the Depanment of Modem Language• and
Literatures. the Depanment of Media Study.
the MelodiaJones Chair in French (Raymond
Federman) and the James McNulty Chair in
English (Dennis Tedlock ).
'The Mothers of Plaza De Mayo·· ('·us
Mad res De P/a;p De Mayo") is the story of
the mothers of Argentina· s "disappeared··young, polilical dissenters who were arrested
or kidnapped. tenured and often killed by
that natjon 's military regime. The result of a
three-year collaOOration with writer-director Susana Munoz. this film secured Ponillo's
professional reputation and earned her the
PBS funding needed for her next project.
'The Mothers of Plaza De Mayo·· was the
recipient of 20 national and international
awards, including an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary and an Emmy
nomination.
··The Devil Never Sleeps· os a
groundbreaking work that explores the cir-

cumstances sUITOunding the possible murder of Ponillo's beloved uncl e Tio in
Chihuahua. The filmmaker uses many tradi·
tiona! and experimental tools to mine the
intersections of cuhural analysis and autob1·
ography. evidence and hypothesis. melodrama and police procedural. The result i a
film that is tragic. humorou s and mythicone that traverses the borden: of personal
values. cultural more!&lt;. and the di!!.cipline of
filmmaking itself.

U8

A Mex.ican-bom Chicana. PoniUo has
focused on the search for Latino identity.
working in a wide range of forms from TV
documentary to satirical video-film collage.
Her ftequent collaboration with other women
anists, Ponillo says. has helped her bfeak
down the proscriptions or traditional documentary-making because... women, and
women of color in panicular. have come into
filmmaking with a different set of objectives
than their male counterparts ...
Her 1990film, "LaOfrenda:TheDaysof
the Dead." was her most serious attempt to
challenge the notion that "documentary is
always asscxiated with injustice ... In it she
celebrates·the Mexican/Chicano holiday of
the ··days of the dead" using a dreamlike
structure that has become a hall mart of her
recent work.

·A

later grant from the NEA lnter-Ans
progra m allowed Ponillo to commemorate the 500th anniversary of Christopher
Col umbu s· "discovery" of America in her
own ironic fashion with her 1993 film. "Columbus on Trial." screened at the London
and Sundance Film festivals and selected for
the 1993 Whitney Biennial.
Portillo· s recent award -winning works
include "Declarations/Equality's Child." an
experimental 1993 film only eight minutes
long. that features civil-rights activist Derrick '{Jell narrating a parable about equality.
and "Mirrors of the Hean•· (1992). an exploration of notions of ethnic identity filmed In
the highlands of Bolivia and on the island of
Hispaniola. "Vida" ( 1990). a shon narrati ve
for AIDSALMS . is about a young Latina
woman in New York City coming to tenns
with the danger of AIDS.
Earlier works onclude "After the Eanhquake!Despues Del Tu"moro·· (1979). a
shon documentary about a Nicaraguan maid
trying ro adapt to America and her dilemma
over her impe nd ing marriage to a N1c.ara
guan rcvoluuonary. and ··chela· ( 1982). an
origmal screenplaycommi sioned by Amencan Playhouse about a teenage Salvadoran
refugee li\ ing m San Francisco. Ponilloalso
"Tote ··The Aztec Myth of Creation· ( 1991 ).
a screenplay for an an1mated feature by
Patncia Amlyn funded by the National Endowment for the Humani ties. In 1994 she
~as awarded a Guggenheim fellowship in
recognition of her contri buti ons to filmmaking. All of her work IS now widely integrated
into film and med•a-.,audy programs.
4

WEIGHTLESS
Contmued from .page I

ary issue of A\•iation Space and Em•ironmema/ Medicine.
Immersion in water is known to be a good
si mulation of weightlessness and to cause
cardiovascular changes similar to those docu mented in space flight. While other underwater research ha s document ed these
changes. this study provides insight into
how the hu man body might respond to increased metabolic demands in prolonged
space fl ight. Pendergast said.
The study was carried out in the UB
Center for Research in Special Environments.
and involved se\•en male subjects who were
fit. but not athletically ll]lined. Each subject
was tested in three phases-in air. after I 5
minutes of head-out immersion and after
three hours of immersion.
Subjects sat on chairs while at rest and
performed exercise on a cycle ergometer.
They exercised at 20 percent. 40 percent. 60
percent. 80 percent and 100 percent of their
maximum oxygen consumption. Researchers measured cardiac output, hean rate., stroke
volume, blood pressure and oxygen consumptio n during rest and exerc ise.
After 15 minutes of immersion. subjects

showed elevated cardiac o utpu t. ex panded
plasma volume and increased dilation of the
peripheral blood vessels. but these changes
did not affect performance durin g exercise.
The subjects ere able to perfonn exercise
equally well in water as in air.
After three hours of immersion. plasma
volume and cardiac output had returned to
pre-immersion levels. Cardiac stress was
slightly higher during exercise. Pendergast
aid. but subjects remained capable of perfa nning work up to 80 percent oftheirmaxi
mum oxygen consumption.
"Even though immersion causes immediate and profound cardiovascular changes.
the adaptation to these changes over thrtt:
houn does not seem to affect the system 's
ability to respond to submaximal levels of
exercise stress." he said. ··However. prolonged
immersion can cause a loss of cardiac function sufficient enough to have a detrimental
effect ooi the physiological response to maximal exercise."
Vincent D. Kame. a doctoral student in
exerc ise science. assisted in the study. which
was supponed in pan by a gra nt from the
U. S. Navy. Office of Naval Research. 4

I

9

teams. Both we5tem and Thai physicians required Bethany'• lrnowledge of Mons'
edmophysiological oonoepU and his lrnowledge of classif...- usage among the Mons.
As he worted with thete teams. Belbony
became interesled in Utiloring the linguistic
research he had done toward work in public
health. "Epidemiological data is ofien quantitative. and. of coun;e, with quantitative data.
you run right smack into the problem of how
to count things." explains Belbony. "So 1
began to switch my interest into wnting medocal histories for the area."

A

fter finishing his first two-year tenn as
a teacher. Bethony returned briefly to
the States to apply to UB . After making his
connection with UB. he: re1urned to
Sangk.laburi that summer, and has continued
to return each summer for the past five years
When the abbou of the local Buddhist
temple asked Bethony to help the villagers
assess their medical status . Bethony went to
Donald Pollocl.. UB assistant professor of
anthropology and an HIH fellow . for help
and advice. This led to the HIH project for
which Bethany is principal investigator
··AJJ the longuistic data wed collected
would usually Sta) in some database. but I
think this program " 'Ill put 11 to good
explains Bethony "Luckoly•Thailand has a

use:·

very good public health service. and the people
are very open to tbi• sort of aid. md to
incorporating new ideas into their lives."
Because the rural Mons' basic ClOCIOCJll of
iUness is so different from com, this IISit of
accumulating epidemiological data posed a
new seriesoflinguistic problems for Belbony.
"Our notion of health is direc:tly related to
pathology. and tluot Wti. diftocult ClOCIOCpl to
tnonslate for the village." uys Betbooy. "For
instance. the Mons have a concept of winds
entering and leaving the body. regulating a
balance of humors."
A classic eumple of this. Bethany says.
os the Mon pracuce of pl acing a warm stone
on the belly of a wonian after sbe has had a
baby. This is supposed to replace the heat
that was lost when the body expelled the
child. In addition to this. suciJing the oewbom is prohibited until this balance of temperature is restored. "hoch takes roughly
four days. Dunng that time the baby os fed b)
the father. who ma5ticales nee and hone).
then pub u mlo the bab) · s mouth.
Bethony will return 10 SanglJabun thos
summer 10 contonue the publoc health projtcl.
One specific problem the) wtlltr)' to combat.
ts the endenuc malana 10 Sangklaburi.
Bethon) says that the ''tllage "··among the
worst places on the face of the earth" for
malana. due tomulu-drug resostance By tracl.mg the mfihrauon of the dt~ mto the
villag~. the) hope to dtSCO\'er how 10 prevent
11 10 the futu~

s

Track&amp;Reld
UB sent teans to two track and field meets lasl-..nd wilto strong results.
At the Raleigh Relays at Nor1h Carolina Slate. Usa Kragbe aeta school record In the
400 intennedlalB hurdles tiniohing Chird in 1:03.1. Her also qualified tw u ...
ECAC meet and the J\.nior Nalionals. The Royals also qualifoed a paor of dislanca
- rumers for the ECAC's with Judith Novak finishing sixth in the 5,&lt;XX1 meters (17. 19 36)
and S1acey Stroctrnam's tenth place finish in the 10,00) meters (36:21)
Meanwhile. at the Rochest..-lnstitule of Tectrology Ear1y Season lrMtaiiOnBI. /&gt;my
Gnnnell won a pair of events taking the 1,500 in 5:1 t .6 and the 3.&lt;XX1 n 1127 Other
wmers for the Royals tQCiuded Gretchen Welch in the 5,&lt;XX1 (19:232). Ragona Larl&lt;ro
n the 100 (13.38) and Karen Lilly tn the 800(2:32.0)
Ben Alkinson won the men's javelin competiOOn for the Bulls at 46 38 meters Josh
Reissig finished second In the 5,&lt;XX1 in t6:25 and Eric Fisctolein's 22.51 ., the 200
meters was good for second
The Buffs set a paor of school records Saturday during the Co1oria1 Relays in
Williamsburg, Vorgonia. The distance medley relay team of Chns Bossert. Kns Wonlder.
Da~~e Falgiano and Chris Keenan set a school mart&lt; finishing tO!h In tO: 19.7. Arolher
relay squad. the 6 .&lt;XX1 met..- teMl. consisting of Bossert. Ke..-lan. Kwelo Musa and
Dave Yagiefski finished eighth in 16:30 to break the school record
The women's 6 .&lt;XX1 meter relay also set a school record at the same meet. S1acey
StrOihmam. Tara Reimer. Kerri Shpur and /&gt;my Grinnell ronished tn t9-58 to establish
the new mark.

followln&amp;--

tJtf---·-

-cAPul&gt;llclafet)&lt; _ _ _ 10-2J:
Tile

I

r;;c;J... to tiM o..-t·

• A wallet containing cash. credn cards and pe1SOOal papers was reponed missing
March 10 from Jacobs Management Center.
• Public Safety reported March 11 that a BB gun was confiscal*j from a Clement
Hall room.
• Public Safety received a report March t4 that someooe broke in the mail room
on Spaulding Quadrangle and broke the doors on several mailboxes)(:ausing S45
damage.
• A wallet containing cash and pe1SOOal papers was reported mosslng March 15
from the vending area in L.ocl&lt;wood Library.
• Public Safety cllarged a woman with possession of b16glary tools and loitering
March 15 after she was stopped in the P311&lt;er lot.
• Public Safety charged a man with trespass March 19 alter he was stopped in the
basement of PaJ1&lt;er Hall.
• A Fargo quadrangle resident reported March 19 that someooe entered his room
war break. took a CD player and COs and ransacked the room.
• A bicycle. valued at $200. was reported missing March 20 from the grounds out·
side Squire Hal.
• A wallet containing cash. a cred~ card and pe~l papers was reponed missing
March 20 from the Health Sclences Library.
• A Red Jacket Quadrangle resident reported March 21 that he has repeatedly
received cans from a male caller propositioning hill in a lewd manner.
• Public Safety recelvad a can March 21 concerning firewor1&lt;s being launched out a
window in Fargo Quadrangle. A bottle rocket was confoscated. according to the
report.
• A laptop computer was reported missing March 23 from Riclvnond Quadrangle.

�.. ---.-poet

Leading ex~rimental
gives readings, seminars
11r f'AmiCIA - A N
News Bureau StaH

HRISTIAN Prigent, one of
Europe's leading theoreticians
and practitionen;of e~perimen­
lal poetry, pn:sented a bilingual
poetry reading with Ray
Federman, Distinguished Professor of English and Melodia E. Jones Chair in French,
last week in the Center for the Arts.
• The reading was one of several events
connected with Prigeot"s five-week tenure
as Jones Chair Visiting Professor in French,
a position previously held by Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, Michel Serres and
more than 50 other Fn:nch li~ figures
since the position was establis~ed in 1932.
Tbe event offered an intrigui~ exposition
of the meaning and aural..&lt;jU31ities of language, which Prigentemphasizes in his n:adings. Prigent, for instance, pn:sented ooe poem
in the persona of ru\ out-of-bn:ath ancient
Gn:ek actor required to pn:sent a lengthy
speech segment before he is allowed to inhale
again.
Federtnan translated several of Prigent' s
pieces, some of which, in subject and expression, had much in common with

C

ClwiMIM

f'llllnl

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lila-'&lt;

M.-cll291n
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Ceflter for
the Atta.

Federman's own writing. If the French was
incomprehensible to most aod sometimes deliberately unintelligible to all, the sense of the
poetry as an "oral sonorous, rhythmic perfcirmance," to use Federman's terms, was nollost
on the audience.
The poetry n:ading and a public lecture,
"What Use PoetryT at I 2:30p.m. Thunlday,
April 20, in 438 Clemens Hall an: among
several events presented as ~ of UB's
I 995 Wednesdays at4 PLUS loterary senes.
Federman will translate the lecture from the
Frenctt. Prigent is also presenting a free
public seminar in French on the "Genealogies of Modernity." Mondays and Fridays at
4:30p.m. in 930 Clemens Hall. ·
The seminar and lecture will undoubtedly
renect Prigent's disquietude about what is
happening to language and literature todaythe malaise that he believes has settled into
the literary arts perhaps as a consequence of
the proliferation or advertising lingo and
other media-induced modes of expression.
The seminar also focuses on the simiJarities and differaoces between "modernism."
which to the English-speaking world generally indicates a specific period. and "'modernity." which is a French tenn describing

~

~
0

5

l
Prigentwasbomin 1945,aod in the 1960s
aod I 970s. belonged to what in France was
called the literary avant-gardt movement.
Among his other activities, political aod literary. he founded TXT. the most radical maga-

what is new or ..modem.''
It examines the evolution of poetry in
French and English from the end of the 19th
century to the present and the innuence that
avant gardt Fn:nch aod English writen; have
had on one another and a discussion of the
ways in which modernism has taken shape
in cinem~ painting and other am.

zine of this movement, which he edited from
1969-83. TXT published the writings of such
noted French experimentalists as Francis
Ponge. Pierre Guyotat. Antonio Artaud aod
Valm Novarina, as well as those of many
German, French aod American writen; .
Prigent' s lit=ty output. which is prodigious.
includes I 0 works of fiction, I 2 onllections of
poetry,eightonllectionsofessays. severn~ translations : radio aod audio tape productions: a
screenplay. aod wens of journalism.

nstead of striving toward "meaning .. or
.. sense," a writer who is modem plays
with its irregularities and throws language
off balance. In doing this, says Prigent. "'he
or she throws the audience off balance as
well, raising questions about what language
means and bow it defines our reality ...

I

Medicaid no guarantee to good health care for urban poor
1y LOIS IIAKDt
News Bureau Staff

SURVEY of I ,226 adult residentsofa largely Puerto Rican
Hispanic neighborhood in
Buffalo has shown that Medicaid coverage does not guarantee access to quality health can: for the
urban poor. The study, conducted by researchen; in the Center for Urban Research
in Primary Care at UB, is published in the
March issue of Family Medicine.
E~pens agree that the lr.ey to good health
care is being able to go to a family doctor. or
general physician. when sickness first strikes.
Health-care providers call this having a
source of first-contact care.
Using this criterion as an indicator of appropriate health-eare access, the UB researchers
showed that adults in this poor wban population who were covered by standard Medicaid
were four times more likely to reJX&gt;n having no
source of first-contact care than people with
private indemnity-type insurance.
individuals with no insurance were six
times more likely than person with private
insurance to repon no first contact with a
primary-care provider. "We heard a lot during the health-care reform debate about
how we don ' t need to worry about the poor
because they are already taken care of by
Medicaid. and that it was the middle class

A

who needed help.·· said eal}os R. Jaen. UB
assistant professor of family medicine and
lead author on the study. "This study shows
that having insurance is bener than no insurance, but for the urban poor. standard Medicaid coverage is not sufficient to overcome
many existing barriers to basic health care.··
Persons who were enrolled in a Medicaid
managed-care program or a health maintenance organiz.ation, on the other hand. were
as likely as those with traditional insurance

"Standard Medicaid
coverage is not sufficient
to overcome... barriers to
basic health care. "
CARLOS R. J AEN

to identify a primary-care physician as a
regular source of care, the study showed.
'These resuhs suppon arguments to get
the urban poor off traditional Medicaid and
into managed-care plans." Jaen said.
The pwpose of the study was to identify
the facton; that predict where people in poor
urban neighborhoods will go first when they
get sick, to help understand access to care

to .50%
your

y contrast. emergency rooms, the source
of health care for some inner-city residents, provide no continuity and are much
more expensive than primary-care services.
Persons who go first to an emergency room
are considered to have no source of firstcontact care.
The study showed that 9 percent of the
st udy population wenl no place for care; 15
percent used hospital emergency departments:
19 percent used hospital-basedclinics: 24 percent used onmmunity-based clinics and 33
percent used private physicians· offices.
Forty-nine percent of the population was
Hispanic. 73 percent of whom were born in
Pueno Rico; 27 percent was non-Hispanic
white: 17 percent was African American and
6 percent was from other ethnic groups.
Fony-four percent of the study population was covered by standard Medicaid insurance. but more than aquarterofth is group

B

•
~

FREE PICK.UP 1: DEUVERY

Unlnrsltr ~

Presents •.

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to All

had no source of primary cane. Eight percent
was not covered by any type of insurance.
Additional results showed that:
• Thirty percent of males had either no
place to receive care or went to an emergency room.
• Only I 2 percent of Hispanics used
pri vate physicians, but 40 percent went to
comm unity-based clinics·.
• African Americans. at 2"8 percent., were
most likely to Jack a source of primary care.
compared to 23 percent for Hispanics and 2 I
percent for non-Hispanic whites.
• Pen;ons with alcohol problems were
less likely to identify a primary-care site as a
place where they receive care fi.rst than those
who do not have alcohol problems.
"This study demonstrates the need for
univen;al health coverage." Jato said. '"but
traditionaJ Medicaid is not the answer for an
ethnically diven;e. poor. urban population.
We need to develop links between patients
and specific primary-care providers."
Also participating in the research were
Kristen S. Robillard, a third-year medical student; Laurene Tumiel. research assistant in the
UB Department of Family Medicine : ~ ­
Adriana Alvanez. UB assistJmt professor{of
family medicine: Robert O'Shea, UB associate professor of social aod preventive medicine. aod Caroline Patchel, assistant professor
of criminal justice at Buffalo State College .

among poor minority populations. Options
were: no place fOI"care, hospital emergency
department, hospital-based clinic. community-based clinic and private physician.
Proposals for health-care refonn recommend that patients see a Q!imary-care physician first when they get sick. This can occur
in a hospital clinic. community clinic or
private office. The phys ician can get to know
the patient and provide continuity of care.

RUINS OF MEXICO
MAY13-20

IRISH PERFORMANCE/\ ,
MAY 14-27

Host Vinca:Jt O'NeiU ofBufblo's Irish
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fea.u on-stqe. blcbuge. from Dublin to Galway

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AUGUST 10- 13

Apple, 1111 Mel other
l.aMr Printers, Coplen
Mel Fu IIIKhkiH
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On a;hibit in Memphis, view
the pric:dess Burial tn:asures
in re--created tombs .

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IMPERIAL CinES OF AUSTRIA
JUNE 17-26

AUGUST 19-28
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Archaeological history visitinc
Uxmal. Chicbco ttta..Mcrid&amp;.
Tu.lwn. Xei-Ha. and Cancun

Visit lhe cities or the Hapsbu.rz Dynury .
Vienna. Gru. Kbpfwt.lnnsbruct.
Sailbw-&amp;. ond U.Z

Call 633-3480 for more information and
brochures or to ma1u reservaJions

�_,

.... _..,_ .

Facul
The bealth benefits associated with regular exercise
will be the topic of a luncheon 10
be offered by the UB Alumni
Association at noon oo Wednesday. April 19, in the Cente&lt; for
Tomorrow oo the North Campus.
Frank J . Cerny, UB associate
professor of physical therapy and
exercise science, will present the
luncheon lecture. Cerny will 001
only discuss the benefits of regular exercise, but also will outline
how individuals can establish a
fitneSS regimen appropriate for
their particular lifestyle. Cost of
the program is $10. Reservation
deadline is April 17. For more
informatioo or 10 register. call
829-2608.

Dozier joins RQSwell

DennlltoloO' Dept.

0

Susan EU..beth Dozier

has joined the staff of
Roswell Part. Cancer Institute· s
Department of Dermatology.
Dozier completed a fellowship in
Mohs micrographic surgery/derm -

atologic surgery at Washington
UniveBity in
St. Louis.
where she
DOZJER
served as a
consultant in dermatology. She is
certified by the American Board
of Dennatology.
She received her medical
degree from the University of
Texas Medical Branch in
Galveston, where she completed
her residency in dermatology.
She served her internship in internal medicine in New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center.

Ren wins fellowship
In neurophysiology

0

Dejian R en, a graduate

student in the Department
of Biophysics at UB. has received
a 1995 Grass Fellowship in Neu·
rophysiology to conduct research
at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole. Mass .. this
summer.

Ren is one of only 12 Grass
Fellows named thi s year. The
fellows will participate in a
weeki y seminar series. where
they will meet national leaders in
neurobiology research.
A native of Beijing. China,
Reo is doing his doctoral thesis
work in the laboratoryof Linda
M. Hall, UB professor of biochemical pharmacology.
He has proposed a novel way
to regulate calcium-channel activity using ribozymes, which are
catalytic RNAs (ribonucleic acids) that can be designed to !Mget
specific messenger RNAs within
the cell. These messengers encode the important proteins in a
cell. Ribozymes constitute an
important dimension oftoday's
research because scientists are
attempti ng to develop them to
control viraJ infections such as
HIV and hepatitis.

.... -c:M.• ......, t n . (INiidcllllllllchicfexecutive
aftbrCIIBeil Allny'e ............,.,,Inc. will diacua his
-!~oaR, ..._ llllllmy'a: 11le lllllde Scoop,"

·

lllCI the eocenllic . . . . _ -... ;.piled illl 7:30 p.DL--ice cn:am will
be .-116:30 p-11L-&lt;lll friday, Apri17, ill the Cente&lt; for the
A111 011 the UB Nor1b c.mpu._
LIFr'• ~will Dele off UB'slllllual opec boule for fresbmea edmillled for the faD 199S · II is lflOIIJOR'd by the UB
Office o1 Sllldeltt Life IIIII the nnivenity's honor societies.
lager joined Bell and Jeny' 1 ill 1982, when it WU a S I million ~store-front" business, and helped 10 build it into the "$150
publicly held ice cn:am empire" that it is tOday. During
lccl=., ~ will disculs bow Bell Cohen and Jeny Greenfield
able 10 remain true 10 their eocial and political vision while
creating a IUCCCSSful business with a conscience.
Born and raised in New Yod; City.
Lager receiWCI a bachelor's degree •
from the University of Vermont and
an M.B.A. from the University of
Soutbem CalifomiL He remains
00 the board of directors at 8(111
and leny' s, and is the director of
Working Assets Funding Services.
a San Francisco telccommunicatioos and financial services company.
TICkets are S3 and can be purchasedlt the Center for the Arts Box
Office, trom II LID. 10 6 p .m. Monday
)
through Friday and noon 10 S p.m. on Saturday, or tbrougb Ticket Muter.
For more information, conlllCt the UB
Office of Student Ufe at 645~ 125.

He recently received grants
from the Association of Chinese
Biophysicists and the Biophysical
Society to attend scientific meetings in San Francisco, where he
presented IUs research.
He received a bachelor' degree in electronics from Sichuan
University and a master' s degree
in acoustics from the Chinese
Academy of Science.

ter Institute of
Technologyhas released

Firat Lower Lakes
dental meeting
to focus on lm~a'!_ta
The first annual Lower
Lakes Dental Meeting will
be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
April 27 and April 28 in the Holi·
day Inn. lOQ Whitehaven Road.
Grand Island. The program. "Implants: Is It Time?." is sponsored
by the UB Dental Alumni Association, UB School of Dental
Medicine and the Eighth District
Dental Society.
On Thursday. April 27. Carl E.
Misch. a faculty member at the
University of Pittsburgh School
of Dental Medicine and founder
and president of the Misch Institute for Advanced Implant Dentistry, will discuss the rationale
for implants, prosthetic options.
treatment modifiers, force factors
and single-tooth implants.
On Friday, April 28. Paul
Homely, president of Homely
Mart.eting Group in Charlotte.
N.C., will discuss communication
strategies and answer the most
commonly asked questions about
implant dentistry. A hands-on.
restorative clinic marathon for
dentists only will be offered from
information
1-5 p.m. For
and registration. contact the
Eighth District Dental Society at
876-2115.

0

more

··concerned in
SDOL

Concen." a
new work
available on

CD or cassene.
Armed with guitar. banjo and
autoharp. the duo performs such
tunes as "All Mixed Up,'' "Beans.
Bacon and Grnvy" and "Solidar·
ity Forever: ·
Each of the 14 songs in this
mix of folk. blues. pop. and country and western was. selected
because its lyrics focused on
issues of co~cem to social-work
practitioners. educators and students. says Seidl. Issues presented
in the songs range from
multicuJturalism lo alcoholism to
crime. with liner notes on each
song's lyrics. background and
relevance to social work educa-

tion.
Other performers featured on
the release are Susan Martin
Robbins , Mari Ann Graham. Tom
Lawson and Phil Brown.

of a mouthrinsc, a toothpaste and
a mouth moisturizer on oral
health.
Participants selected for the
two-month study must have some
sympiOmS, such u red gums and
bleeding gums after toolhbrushing. They will be required 10
make four brief visits 10 the
School of Dental Medicine on the
South Campus.
Upoo completion of the stud) .
each participant will be reimbursed $100 for time and travel.
Anyone interested in participating in the study should call
829-3850 between 9 a.m. and 4
p.m. weekdays.

Renowned philosopher
to speak at UB

0

Noted philosopher Daniel
Dennelt of Tufts University will discuss "Dismantling the
Cartesian Theater" at 5 p.m. on
Thursday. April 13. in Room 225
of the new Natural Sciences and
Mathematics Complex on the
North Campus. The lecture will
he free of charge and open to the
public.
Denneu follows John Searle
and Noam-Chomsky as the third
guest of the Distinguished Speak·
ers in Cognitive Science series
sponsored by the Cognitive Science Center at UB.
Dennen' s late's"i book. "Consciousness Explained.'' takes on
the persistent dilemma, established more than 300 y · ago
by Rene Descanes. of how to
reconcile the SCientific or quanti fiable aspects of cognition with
the more mysterious levels of the
mind.
In thi!!. age of computer tech nology and artif1cial intelligence.
thi s h1stoncal debate is find tng a
ne~ urgency, ~ ilh cognitive
scientists such as Dennen be he\ ing thal human consciousness
will become increasingly explatnable as scientists beco me more
able to duplicate mental tates
w ith computeB.

Quarterback Club plans
Spring Camp Luncheon
Head Football Coach Craig
Cirbus will be the speaker
when the University at Buffalo's
football Quarterback Club holds
its annual Spring Camp luncheon
Tuesday, April 18 at UB Stadium.
The event begins at 11 :30
a.m .. with lunch at noon. Cirbus
will introduce his staff.
A tour of the stadium is
planned following lunch. Cost of
the luncheon program is S 15 per
person. To make reservations,
call the Division of Athletics.
645-3142.

0

~t::lcomc~

)OUf

.-.ccomph~hmcnt~. honor~

and
hncf

publication~

St_•nd

.announcement~

to

Chr~~tlnf' Vadal. The

UB dental researchers are
seeking more than 100
bealthy adults, ages 18-70, with
some signs of gum (periodontal)
disease to help evaluate the eftect

ll&lt;ci"JH

HIG~

c:J

\ 1.~.'- ~

Kids Web
is fun for
all ages
- Highway
• -with
on the
lnlormaa favorite
lion
kid In )1011 life! Kids Web: A
~WOe Web Dlgllsl
Lbary for Sd'oo/lads makes
searching the Internet fun
and enlghlenlng lor kids.
The Kids Web grew CIA of a
computer class taught lo 8th

grsders~psrt
of Syracuse
·
· s Young
Scholars
The goal
of its ar ·
Is to p!OIIide
kids with lrl&lt;s to web sites all
CMll the WOI1d thai have
material that Is 'useful, Intelligible and interesting lO

schoolchildren.'lhe Kids Web menu 001&gt;tanng the followWlg biOad
categories: 'The Atts,' 'The
Sciences," "Social Studies,"
and 'MiscellaneouS." Wl!hin
these areas you wil find a
wide range of resow:es: The
Froggy Page: Lots snd LOIS
d WeWd Sluff about Frogs,
H:Jw to Become an Astrt&gt;
naut, Theater. Tfl)(f snd Dlscussm d Pla_ys anc1 ScraM
Plays Including the Con;llsls
l'klf1&lt;s 0( Shal&lt;espeere,
MidlitV&lt; Magazkla: An aoctronJc Magazine for Kids, The
Children's Ut81l11Ur8 Web
Guide. and Chatfolte 1119 ·
I'Wla.'9: The Sloy 0( .
the Olscove&lt;y 0( the Bones d
8 I-Wlale Beoosth the Fields
of Rural V9f77100f among

v.,..,.,

many. many others.
The meoo ends 11n1&lt;s 10
"Other CollectJons of Web
Sites lor Klds." "Web 66· The
Wor1d Wide Web Schools
RegiStry- (WilliamsVIlle Nor1tl
H~gh School •s among those
listed) and 'The Classroom
Internet Server Cookbook' 101'
teachers •nterested on setting
up a web serwr •n their
classroOmS. Teachers and
s!Udenls are invited to suggest links to other relevant

Internet clocumerlts in Ofder
to foster the growtll of lh!S
parcel of the Wor1d Wide
Web.
Although the develOpers
ol Kids Web proclaim that h
is a site on the NeJ for kids
from grades K-12. parents

snd sdulr friends ol elementary school ciVIdren ~
prefer to make searching h 8
shared sctMty. To 8CC8SS
the Kids Web via your UB
e/eclroniC

msi account type

,_.....V/

........--..c~

-...,r at your S)ISism
pt'CJfTf1( (vax or unbt) or ......,

...V/IOWW.--..cl

- . . . , {ibm). For ftlthtlr
information on~ th8
HQid WOe Web. conlllct 1119
~ C6of8r Help Dssk
8t645-3542- Pl9ase nol8 that
graphical www~

lht: Rt•portcr

1nform;:1t10n on

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Butf.IIO N.,.
m,ttl til f, 1 o

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u~--·

£,.,;5 ::313 1

such as Mosaic or
NetscBpt&gt;--&lt;f )'W have ac-

cess 10 onrr--oMI1 erllance

the experience ol umg Kids
Web.
-Germla DeV'IMey and Loss
Pequeflo Glazier, l.o&lt;:kwood

Ubraty

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r

Ar\1hropologu &amp;Health
Bethony's language studies in remote Thai village lead to public health proiect

)

\

/

hen Jeff Bethony arrived to
teach English in Sangklaburi,
a remote Thai village, he
could not have predicted how
this would lead to a future role
as principal investigator in .a fiveyear public health project.

The ~t. which is being
funded by Health In Housing, a
World Health Organization Collaborating Center locateaat the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, will seek to establish a
Health In Housing facility in the
village.
Belhony. who is
enrolled in a program in medica] anthropology with the
depanments of Anthropology and
Social and Preventive Medicine at
UB. is working toward a Ph.D. in
Anlhropology and a' master's degree in epidemiological research in
Social and Preventive Medicine.
In 1988. the young Bostonian
who had graduated in 1985 from
SUNY Binghamton with a B.A. in
English.
volunleered
for
WoridTeach, through the Harvard
International Institute for DevelopmenL It offered a chance to travel
and get out into the world as more
than a mere tourist.
But Bethony soon found out how
difficult and alienating this son of
travel can be. He knew hardly a
word of Thai. and the village. buried deep in the jungles of
K.anchanaburi pro vi nee near the
Bunnese border. was four hours
from the nearest city .centuries from
the world he had just left.
"l was so cut off from everyone;
l can't even remember saying ~
si ngle word for the first three
months;· Bethany recalls, ·'Butthe
villagers. a mixture of Thai and
Mon peoples. were very gracious
hosts and they took the time to teach
me about the language and the culture." Betha ny eventually learned
not only Thai, but also a Bunnese
language called Mon and became
familiar with two other languages
used in Sangklaburi .
As Bethany learned Thai. he

became fascinated by elements of
the language known as "numeral
classifiers." When he was later exposed to the·concept in a course in
cognitive anthropology with UB
Anthropology Professor Charles
Frake, these classifiers would becorK
centerpiece of his linguisLie investigation into the lives of
rural Thai people. While Frakes
work pr jmarily concerned the
Subanunpooplesofthewestem Philippines, his theories about the connections between cognition and
cuhure had a universality that appealed to Bethony)

o understand numeraJ clas!!.ifiers. Bethony says, we should
look at an eJl8Dlple of a similar
system in English. When we say.
''"Two sheets of paper," the word
''sheer" is what would. in Thai. be a
numeral classifier. the "extra .. word
used to count that applies to aJI
nouns. While similarly functioning
words exist in English. they are not
the rule. In Thai. a classifier is used
for every noun.
Because the Tha1s have onl)o
about 40 of these classifiers.
Bethony became fascinated with the
way in which classifiers tended to
group nouns together. AnthropologiSIS have long suspected that understanding this organi2ational quality
of numeral classifiers would offer a
window into the way lbais conven
their environment into language.
An example of this process can
be found with the numeral classifier
"kan.'' It is used to count umbrellas.
rice paddy dikes. cars. and bicycles
(among other things). This seems at
first glance to be a fairly random
assonrnent of nouns. in that while
cars and bicycles are both modes of
transportation. they share "ery linle
in common with rice paddy dikes
and umbrellas.
•

T

"It's like using the word sheet to
classifien to count rice, while most
countclutirs. It's very strange," says
other people used very few.
Bethony. He goes on to explain the
In the instance of the rice. the
most prominent theory of this arclassifter is changed as the rice is
rangement wherein the word "kan"
handled in different forms: it has
was traditionally used to describe
one classif.er wben it is used 10
things that are long and thin: "Rice
count grains of rice. another for
paddy dikes are mounds of earth
bowls of rice.
that are very long and thin, and an
ln his paper, "From the Raw To
umbrella is also long and thin." But
the Cooked: Numeral Oassifier Use
how does this system eventually
Among Specialists:' Bethany was
come to incorponu.e a car? The
advised by UB Associate Professor
theory continues that the bicycle
of Linguistics David Zubin, who
was the technological advance
first taught him about numeral claswhich began the transformation of the classifier:
"Because the handlebars
are long and thin, and are
the most salient feature of
the bicycle. it was categorized w1th the classifier
'k.an.·
"As people began to
see more and more bi ·
cycles, they began to use
the numeral classifier
more and more . and
slowly. over timC. they
began to associate it with
modes of transportation.
so when the car arrived. it
received lhe clasSJ fierlhatthe bicycle had established."
But while thiS theory
works well for this set of
nouns. Belhony points out
that u is not an Immutable
rule . For most new technologieS in Thailand. a
"default classifier.·· is employed. and it is uncenain
whether or not these modem nouns are ever ab~o rbed
by another.
Jeff lethony is principal investigator
specific classifier.
for a public healtto proj«t funded

through Health in Houoing.
hen Bethony Interviewed a surgeon during the pmjec~ he found
that to count most of his tools, the
surgeon used this default classifier.
But when in terviewing people of
more "traditional"' professions, there
were highly developed sets of classifien. For instance. Bethany found
that cooks used up to 20 numeral

W

sifiers. 1be Iitie is borrowed from
renowned anthropologist Claude
Levi-Strauss.
As Belhony' s grasp of the Thai
language continued to de\'elop, he
began to work as a translator for
visiting public health intervention
Continued on page 9

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Retirement Task Force
to aid faculty, staff
lly c ; _ , _ VIDAL
Reporter EdrtO&lt;

A new cr-P .,_been put together to ISSJSt faculty
and staff who wish to take advanUJge of the states
retirement incentive plan.
The Retirement Task Foree, appointed recenUy by
Provost Aaron N. Bloch, will be worldng tohelpease the
transition for those who express an interest an retiring.
Chaired by Senior Vice Provost Kenneth Levy, the
committee includes William Fischer. vice provost for
faculty development; Elmira Magnum -Dan~el. as ost.ant
Con~nued

on page 3

FSEC hears Greiner describe
fallout from deep budget cuts
iiY _ . atiEA
Reporter ContnbutO&lt;

J

~

battle over Gov.
Pataki ' proposed state
budget is quickly becorning, according to
UB President William R.
Greiner, "like a game of
chicken."
With the governor publicly refusing to yield on his budget and
many state legislators behaving as

· ·if they si mply

~~~ybe~i~~ t~~

Trustees' ominous
forecasts of what
will
happen
s ho uld Pataki 's
budget be implemented. it would
appea r. Greiner
told the Faculty
Senate Executive Comminee last
Wednesday. that there will be substa nti al s uppo rt "to ge t the
governor's budget passed as intact
as possible."

Then, it will be up to the SUNY
BoardoiTrustees, the SUNY Chancellar and the individ ual SUNY
schools to deal with the impact of
the cuts. Greinersaid.
Aithough man y within the
SUNY ystem. including Chancelthe Board
lor Thomas Bartlett '
of Trustees. have voaced concerns
about the possib1lityof campusclosings and drops in enrollment if lU·
ition is raised substantially and

things hke retrenchment," Gremer
said. "but this budget may be"' bad
we won't be able to avoid H ...
Greiner also said that although
he thinks the SUNY Board ofTrustees will not close campuses right
away. he added that he thinks some
SUNY units will fa1l fmancially 1f
Lhe governor" s proposed cuts go
through .

a.Je

noted th ai many sc hooh m
n the SUNY system-pa nJ cularly the SU ' Y agncultural and
outgrowths of the governor's bud technical school,-are almost full)
get cuts-the legislature and the
go,·emorareskepticalofthesewam- ) reliant on ~tate atd. These school.s
ings. Greiner said.
may 001 be able to ~un ive thts round _
'"They think it's scare tactics,"
of cuts. Greiner s.atd. At UB. he
he said.
warned that the med1cal school and
the Health Science~ depanments
Although Greiner added that he
will be affected panicularly hard by
thi nks the cuts tO the SUNY system
this budget because these depan"ill be "moderated a little" through
ments are aI read~ m danger of lo~·
the political process. he also said he
ing additional mone) from the 'itate
txlie,·ed thi s moderation will nOl
and
federal cutbad.s 10 the Med1be enough to prevent both UB and
care and Medica1d program~
the SUNY system from doing things
With cuts in state aid. UB "111 be
that are "very unpalatable:· As an
forced to look for ne" ~urce~ of
example, he mentioned the possibility of retrenchment.
··we will. as always. try to avoid
Conttnued on page 2

financial aid is cut-two logical

UB helps Birdair get contract
to build Shanghai stadium
BJ EU.EN GOLDBAUM

News Bureau Staff
IRDA IR . INC. . the
Amh erst company
wh ose air·supported
and fabric·membra ne
structures include the
elegant. white-peaked roof of the
new Denver airpon. knew it had a
winning design proposal for the
new Shanghai Stadium in China.
Unfo nunately. it also had a lan guage banier.
.. Noone in our company speaks
Chinese.'' said Jon Dun can. senior

B

vice president and chief operating
officer of Birdair. "A nd unlike
some other Asian countries. in
China most people don 't speak
' much Engli&gt;h. That makes it diffi cult to conduct negoti ati ons. eve n
if they are interested in your technology."
To solve the problem. Bi rdair
turned to the Center for Industrial
Effectiveness(TCIE)at UB. Based
in the UB School of Engineering
and Applied Scie nces and affili ated wi th the UB School of Man ageme nt. TCIEpromoteseconomic

growth 10 Western Ne\\ YorL b}
helpmg local compantes." htch pa)
f~s for ser\'ice. become more com·
pctiti \'e.
"We told Btrda1r that tf the)
could communicate in Chinese. it
wou ld show the people in Shang·
hai they were that much more serious." said Rebecca Landy .
execu1,1ve director of TCIE.
Mai Tong. a nati\'e ofCh 1naand
a postdoc10ral researcher m UB's
engineerin g sc hoo l. began worl·
Conttnued on page 2

Andrea--

"The AnthropoloCJst" by
(1.992) will ...
onown Apfil 5 In the Center for the Arts Screenlnc Room.

Margaret Mead film
fest here in April
BJ STEVE COX
Reponef Stat1

ULTU RES FROM around the globearecom1ng Jothe
Center for the Arts m Apnl.
The 18th annual Margaret Mead Film &amp; V1deo
Festi\a) ""til ffiake th firM stop e\er m Buffalo ne&gt;.t
month. The presug10us exposllion of documental)
films by anthropologists. the only fest1"aJ of its kind in the countl)'.
is dedtcated to the late ""orld·famous anthropologi t Margaret
Mead
Mead. "ho \1. orled m e"' Yon. · s American Museum of
atural HtsiOf) from 1926 unul
her death tn 1978. "'as a p1oneer
tn the u ~ of film to document
the wo rld 's cuh ures.
Medta Studies Professor
Sarah Elder. herself a documentary filmmalerofnauonal repu tation. is coord inating UB's leg
of the fesu"al's nine-city tour.
Once a Mead st udent at Columbia. Elder ha seen all of her
films featured in the festival .
"She was very supponi"'e of
my work and helped me secure
funding for my first film:· said
Elder of Mead.
The fesuval will present
screenings each Wednesday and
Frida) be£inning at 7 p.m. during the first three "eels of April. All
~hO\o\S.to be presented in the Center fort he Arts Screening Room.
are free and open to the public .

C

Wedne..t.y,

AprilS:~

Anlla-"'CJ, Rim -

Whlt"i&gt;&gt;aked
structure at

new Denver
Jllrport. left,
Is by Blrdatr,
whlcbtumed
to TCIE for
help InlandInC contract
for 5MnCIIal

s-.....

OtMn:
Tourlom.

• Trekk •ng on Trad1110n (Jenn1ler Rodes 1992)
Westerl'll!rs search tor mysttQue and msp,ratiOn '" tne H•malayas
and '" they search1ng often change Nepali hves
• The AnthropolOgiSt (Andrea Geschwendtner 1992)
Rudolph Poch . the hrst anthropok&gt;gtSI of V&amp;enna was also a PIOneer
'" ustng 1T'1QV1ng PICtures and wax cyhnder record•ngs m 201h century
fieldwork When WWI bfoke out he continued h1s studtes '" Austrcr
Hunganan POW camps
• /magmmg lnd,ans (Vtctor Masayesva 1992)
Masayesva a Hop• filmmaker v•sns Nauve Ameucan communct•es '"
the Amer•can West to •ntrospecttvely exam1ne the consequences to the
1nd1ans of the hlmmg of lnd•an hves by documentary fllm:nakefs

Friday, April 7: - - Abroad.
• Homelands ('TO&lt;n Zubryck1. 1993)
The pohucal and personal•ntersect '" thts dramahc S1ory abOut two
refugees from El Salvador who errugrated 10 Australta A deeply engag-

Continued on page 2

�2
FSEC
Continued from page 1
financial support. "A big tuition increasealthough maybe 001 as large as the S1.600
increase recommended by the SUNY Board
of Trustees-will happen," Greiner said.
Acoording to Ronald Stein, vice president
for'University Advancement and Development, increased fu nd-raising is another alternativesouroeoffunding. Stein said one method
10 increase UB's ability to rnise money from
private sources is 10 conduct a capital campaign.
Capital campaigns, Stein told the FSEC,
are intensive fund-raising efforts in which
alumni, other individuals and private corporations are all actively solicited to contribute
gifts. grants or endowments to the university.
These kinds ofcampaigns have become popular at state universities all across the country.
he said.

Stein said UB is planning on having a
capital campaign up and running "within five
years." He said the campaign goal would be to
raise $150 million during this five-year period.
Stein reported that UB expects 10 raiseS 15
million in gill and grant revenues this fiscal
year, up 15 percent from last year. This year's
S15 million includes the largest si ngle spendable gift given to a SUNY sehool-a S1.6
million gift given anonymously 10 further
ua·s recruitment of meritorious students.
Stein also added that, within the past two
months, UB has formally solicited two Forrune 500 companies for S I million gifts or
grants. If received, one of these million dollar
gifts would be utilized to further educational
programs for underrepresented minorities and
women;theotherwouldbeusedtodevelopan
International Management progrnm.

BIRDAIR

Expect change, Wagner tells
Professional Staff Senate
•ru.A~

Reporter Contributor

HANGE IS THE order of the
day. said Senior Vice President
Robert! . Wagner, who updated
members of the Professional
Staff Senate (PSS) on the budget crisis at a March 23 meeting.
"If there's a theme for this presentation.
it's change. There' a lot of decisions 10 be
made," Wagner said.
" We're here to help each other," said
Rosalyn Wilkinson, PSS chair. "As managers
and professionals, we have an obligation to
lead people through variou changes that will
come about." Wagner put the budget crunch
into perspective by outlining cut in SUNY
appropriations and the recommended re"··

C

enue increases. ··you can't ever find in SUNY's

Continued from page t

ing with Birdair. Each time documents were
fued from Shanghai , he and a team of UB
grnduate students trnnslated them into English, then translated Birdair'sresponses into
Chinese and prepared them on computers at
UB that print Chinese characters.
''Once we began communicating with
them in this way. it quickly turned from a
competitive situation into a negotiating situation," said Duncan. '"The ability TCIE gave
us to communicate helped us secure the
contrnct We are tremendously grateful for
their assistance."
Using a Chinese translator to quickly respond in overseas negotiations is just one exarnpleofhowTC!Eindividualizesitsapproach
to helping c.ompanies be more competitive.

assistanceth~t helped thecompanycreate 50
new positions.
• organized and trnined cross-functional

teams at Sherwood. a division of Harsco
Co~.

thelpedslashthecostofa valve for

JON DUNCAN

Since its establishment in 1987, TCLE has
established an impressive track record:
• It has worked with 125 firms in Westem New York.
• It has been credited with creating or
saving 5.000 jobs in Western New York

companies ranging from multinationals like
Genernl Motors and Prau &amp; Lambert to
operntions with fewer than 40 employees.
• It has helped 20 firms obtain training
grants totaling more than $1.3 million from
the New York State Department of Economic De\•elopment and t~e state Urban

Development Corporation.
• The National Association of Management and Technical Assistance Centers has
awarded TCIE two national awards for excellence in training and development programs.
• When the New York State Department

of Economic Development instituted a statewide Industrial Effectiveness Program. it
was modeled on work that TCIE and the
WNY Economic Deve lopment Center performed fora Southern Tier company in I 987.
While just a few years ago 90 percent of

TCIE's fu ndi ng came from state grants. the
center now receives 60-70 percent of its
support as fees for service from companies it
assjsts ... We don't take a cookie-cutter approach," added Landy. "Every project is

tailored to what a company needs.··

percent

had requested.

reduce that percentage as the university filled
the gap with income-mainly tuition_
Wagner also addressed the impact of the

Unlike other university-based centers created toaddresscompetitivenessoflocal flfllls.
TCfE takes advantage of the broadest range
of resources in the community. not just those
available at UB. Landy noted that other
centers often bid o~ly on aspects of a project

in which their home instilUtions have expertise. " If a company has a need UB can't fill.
the experts at the co mmunity college," she

According to Landy, TCLE's success may be

attributed in part to its interdisciplinary nature.
~nique among economic assistance cente~.
ith roots in engineering and management, the center calls on facult) and
grnduate students. usually with industry experience. who can address problems ranging
from plant layout, manufacturing systems and
processes. to a host of engineering and scientific specialty areas, technical writing, product
and market research and employee trnining.

W

"Our Center for Industrial Effectiveness
provides both manufacturing and service
industries a unique window into the Universi ty at Buffalo,'' said Mark Karwan. acting
dean of the School of Engineering and Ap·
plied Sciences. "It is an effective mechanism

with which to support economic development
in Western New York by leveraging the
university's human resources and expertise.··
Landy stressed that another plus forTCIE

is that staff and consultants-including professors who have ~·orked extensively with
companies. graduate students with industry
experience. private consultants and even
experts at other companie -share a strong
industrial orientation.
In addition to services for which there is a
fee. TCIEoffers a range of services at no cost:
locating appropriate resources in the univer·
sity and community. researching information
requests. providing new business leads to
local industry. recruiting student interns and
initial consultations to assess company needs.
TC IE also administers part of the UB
component of a new program called SPlR.

the Strategic Partnership for Industrial Re·
surgence. Through SPIR. a consortium of
SUNY engineering sehools recently received

• Helped Moog Inc. develop an ergo-

nomics system that improved accident and

to help develop part"nershi ps with large com-

injury rates by 69 percent.
• Provided Stri ppit Inc. with train ing

TClE" s serv ices may call 636-2568.

that re nect the diversi ty of its assistance are:

ta.x.

support. Mario Cuomo began to

Sl.600 anticipated tuition increase for undergrnduates. It would be equivalent to an m·
crease from S20.000 to S32.000 at an
independent university. he said. The proposed
budget aj:;o assumes that SUNY will hit its
enrollment figures. he said.

agner also discussed the consultation
planning process that will be used to
develop the 1995-96 budget. "Before we get
to layoff and retrenchment of anyone, we have
to make sure that we get general administration down as low as we can get it... he said.
Human resources and employrneot strntegies will also be implemented. An aggressi,·e
pursuit of early retirement will be launched as
well as training and development to promote
career mobility and the ability to promote
from within. UB will also examine revenue
and fee opportunities such as establishing a
parking fee for faculty and staff and for computer repair.
Wagner foresees that the university w11l
increase investmenl in advancement and de·
velopment as it cuts other areas in order ''to do
the things that make us attrnctive,'' he said.
"We need to thin\: about the problems 1f
we are: going to get to the right answen: an the
fall and next year.''
In other bust ness. nominations for I 995
PSS Outstanding Service Awards are dU&lt;
April 2 I. They must be submiued to Dene
Aeischmann. chair of the PSS awards commiuee. in 310 O'Brian Hall.

W

but a community college can. then we 'II use

state funds to offer technological support
and research and development capabilities
to small- and medium-sized companies. and

Examples of ways TCIE has helped firms

ln addition. the institution has never received such a low level of state tax support. he
said. In the 1986-87 year. UB's budget consisted of90 pen:enttax support. By contrast.
the I 995-96 proposed budget consists of 43.5

patio grills by even more than management

said. Thecenteralso makes companiesaware
of community and government resources.

"The ability TCIE gave us
to communicate helped us
secure the contract. "

history a change of $290 million,'' he said.

When asked if the administratJon were
resignedtoa$290millionhudgetcut, Wagner
replied. ~we have a loud voice that is being
heard at the moment But we're 001 the only
voice that is being heard." Funding for health
care, and primary and secondary sehools has
also garnered attention. he explained.

panies in the state. Companies interested in

FILM FEST
Cont1nued from_£age 1
tng story the film documents the•r struggle to
matntatn their culture and sense of family tn
thetr new land whtle also pxplonng the ethiCS
of documentary lllmmakmw

• S1kt (N1ek Koppen 1992)
The stCMY ot ·aanttng S.kt .• the first
Senegalese to w•n the world hghH'W!avywetgm
oox•ng IItie It follows htm through Alnca and
Eurooe to the U S where he d~d trag ally tn
New York Cl1y

• P1emule(Jana Sevetkova 1991)
A black-and·whlte proouctJOn at:&gt;out a group
of Czechs whO settled over 150 years ago '"
hills near Ttmrsoara Romama Isolated from a
fOfetgn world, thts communtty has kept Its
language culture and sptntuahty tntact

w - ,, Aprtl12: Muolc:
-tol'lotHL
• From Ltttfe Thtngs 81g Thtngs Grow(Trevor
Graham , 1993)
A story about Kev Carmody . an AbOftgtnal
mus•c•an and songwnter touted by Aolhng

Stone Magaztne as havtng produced the best
protest album ever made tn Australta
• Gandy Dancers (Barry Dornfeld and Maggie
Holtzberg , 1994)
A him tocus•ng on the expresstve culture ol
etght rettred Afttcan-Amencan ra•lroad track
laborers The etghttell of hie as taborers 1n the
segregated south bPtore eMf ughts orgaruzed
labor and occupattonal safety standards

• Earl ROb1nson Ballad of an AmeriCan (Bette
Jean Bullen . 1994)
A fasctnattng ponrart of Earl Robtnson a
balladeer of the Amertean Commun1st Pany
who became a New Age sptntuallst tn later hfe
RoOtnson was the composer of the labor protest song -Joe H1W and the opereua · sallad for
Amencans-

Fricllly, Aprll14: S1Ym11ns Tocl8y.
• Ch1ldren·s Magtcal Death (Ttmolhy Asch.

1974)

-

A delightful humorous story of a group of
young Yanomam1 boys tmltatJng then fathers
• SuMvors ot the Ra1nf01est (Andy JJ!Itngs
Jacques LJ.Zot. 1993)
The Yanomamt of Venezuela mvne thetr
enem.es to settle old scores and least How·
ever sw:kness and death overtake the prepara·
1100s Thetr shamans' heahng powers are no
match 101' these new dtse'ases earned by gold
prospectors

• A ShamaniC Med1um of Tugaru(Yasuh~ro
Omon. 1994)

In northern Japan . famous shaman
Karrusama (woman of sptntuat betng) summons
spmts through a pa!t of puppets and other
medtums

A-·· -=
EtiiiDpla.----w-..s.y, Aprll1t:

• Our Way of Lov1ng (Joanna Head . Jean

Lydall.

1994)
Thts stunmng compteK film . Part Ill of the
Hamar Trdogy. revtSlls Saoo and Dutta. a young
marrted Hamar coup~ tnlhe remote southwest
of Eth10p1a as they candldly dascuss contltcts
and controvers~ '" thetr retatJonstup. center·
tng on Duka's dtssat•sfactiOO WTth her
husband s sometJfl"M!S vl06ent beatings of l'lei

• N'at. The Story of a 'Kung Woman (Jonn
Marshall . Adnenne M~esmer and Sue Marshall
CabeKas 1980)
An ltllimate portrart oJ an Afrtean !Kung
woman •n her mtd ·lhtrttes Remarkable footage
sho1throughou1 the 1950s and 1978 complement her narratrve of the probkm\s created by
her wealth . from woOung wnh the Marshall ftlm
crew, and the cont•nu1ng corrvnerc.ahzatK&gt;n of
Afrcan bushmen . wrth mov.es ltke
Gods

Jne

Must Be Crazy -

{

Fttdllr. April 21: .......--.
• Poneurs D 'Ombres Electnques {Eiectnc

Shadows) (Herve Cohen. Renaur;f Cohen, 1993)
The VlSualty powerful portrait 0( a woman
and two men who travel around th&amp;,country·

~~.d~~ t:r::~~c;~~~~~nlbtng
shows

• Lighting the 7th F~re (Sandra Johnson
Osaswa. 1994)
An Oitbway prophecy tndtcates that Natrve
Amencans are lrvtng an the age of the · 7th Ftre·
- a ttme W'hen tradttiOflal ways are strength·
ened . The vtdeo features the OJibwas of North·
ern Wisconsm

• Copperworklng m Santa Clara del Cobre

(Beale Engelbracht. Manfred Kruger , 1989-93)

A beautifully crahed film abOut the art of
copperwork tn thts regiOfl. where it has extsted
Sjnce pre·Spantsh tunes
• God 's AJcatraz (Bons Stout, 1993)
A poy.rerful observatiOI'lBI him by a Bnttsh
filmmaker about an Alncan Amertean corrvnuOity Seader tn Brooklyn. Or Johnny Ray
Youngt»ood , who advocates segregat.on as a
way to empower lhe cornmumty

�3

UB Council uJXktted
on budget ramifications
-y-

~~~r VIDAL

er

or

HE BUDGET and its rami fica• lions were again the topic of the
day at the Manch 23 meeting of
the UB Council, where UB President William R. Gr'einer updated
the group on the state budget crisis and
council members reported on their lobbying
efforts in Albany.
The 1995-96 fiscal year continues to look
bleak for SUNY, the president indicated. "I
think SUNY is going to take
a real rocking in this budget." Greiner said.
"We have done as much
as we' re going to be able to
do to change the budget.
Something good may happen (in terms of restoring
some budget funding), but I
don 't think you'regoing 10 see a return to the
SUNY we knew even a couple of weeks ago."
The March 14 press co~ference held by
the SUNY Board of Trustees was " a traumatizing experience for the trustees" that
..caught the governor and legislators by surprise," said Greiner. because the hoard unani mously recommended such a ·grim plan to
deal with the proposed SUNY budget cut.
Butasauniversity president.hisresponse
was ''Thank God . Someone had to say thi s.··

Greiner said.
It was signifiCarlt that the trustees issued
their plan "after six weeks of silence, very
public silence," and that theirrespoose was so
grim, according 10 Greiner. "Read into it that
there's a lot of tension and a lot of emotion"
over the proposed budget cuts, he said.
" I think we're going to have a very different SUNY," Greiner told the UB Council.
"We can't operate in the future as we bave in
the past .... No matter what, next fall we will
he functioning in different ways. No one
thinks UB will he a target for closure. No one
thinks any of the four university centers will
he targets for closure."
Two council members alsO reported on
personal experiences lobbying in Albany.
" It was an enlightening but discouraging
mee§·g. all in all," said council member
Jam Phillips, who lnlveled to Albany as
part the UB A~umni Association· s Legis1 · Action Committee.
Participants in the Feb. 28 trip took part in
the lobbying effort '1o plead our case" fpr
"more time, more TAP and more nexibility
in deciding our own fate," Phillips said.

ized as "an interesting experience.''
Overall, he said he had the impression
that legislators he met with didn't realiu the
ramifications the budget cuts would have,
reducing the number of students and faculty
in SUNY. Legislators didn't realize that severe budget cuts ~uld lead to what he called
"cherry picking." "Some of our faculty are
going to get plucked" away 10 jobs at other
institutions, he said.

si ble for usto do what you want usto do with
this type of cut," Wets said.
In other business, the Council:
• Viewed a video titled "A World of
Poss ibilities: Celebrating Di versi ty," a
project that evolved from the work ofUB 's
Task f':orce on Intolerance. The video was
presented by Robert Palmer, vice president
for Student Affairs, who said it was devel oped in an effort to "celebrate diversity rather
than try to stamp out hate speech" and similar problems. 11oe Office of the President.
Department of Media Study and OfCice of

Student Rules and Regulation&gt; for 1995-96.
including a rule that would make ot a voolalion to tamper with doors. 11oe new regula ·
lion is in response 10 the problem of building
doors being propped open 10 allow access,
according10Council member Mary Reynolds.
• Discussed the ramifoclllions the proposed budget cuts would have on new building projects. According to Greiner. plans for
the second phase ofthe Nlllural Scoences and
Mathematics Complex. which would house
the Departments of Mathematics and Computer Science, and the Student Servoces
Building. are at risk. 11oe president ooted
that construction of the new NSM building is
"absolutely crucial" and said he hopes "to
crack that one loose this year." He added that
constructionofstudentapartment-stylebousing also os omportant to enhancing student
life. but predicted "the only way v.e're going
to he able to do 11 is privately."
• Praised John Naughton, who announced
earlier thi s month that be intends to step
do wn in July 1996 as dean of the medical
school and vice president for clinical affairs.
Noting that Naughton "has done an exuaor-

Describing his interactions with state leg-

Student Affairs were icvolved in the video's

dinary job under difficuh circumstances.··

islators as "pleasant and light but discouraging," he noted that "those on our silk said they
sympathized with us, but it was fair accompli."
Council Chair Philip Wets also reported
on hi s advocacy efforts. which he character-

inception, Palmer said. and tapes are being
used by programs that include Freshman and
Transfer Orientation. hou sing and Teaching
Effectiveness.
• BrieOy reviewed suggested changes to

"elevated the standing of the medocal school,"
and "clearly made an enormous contribulion." Greoner ondocated that the unoversoty
probabl y would separ.!te hos JOb onto tv. o
di stinct pmataons.

'Pie council chair said heal so tried to leave
I legislators with a message: " It's impos-

RmREMENT
Continued from page 1

--- --

to the provost Valdemar Inn us, senior associ-

ate vice president for University Services;
Ellen McNamara. assistant vice president for
Human Resources; and Nancy Kielar. senior
staff associate. University Services.
Those considering retirement. but worried
that they can't afford it. could be surprised at
how affordable it can be. Case in point: when
asked why he chose to retire, a psychology
professor told Levy that his decision became
clear when he realized that he actually would
receiveahigherincomefromhisTIAAICREF
annuity than from his salary.

In other words. in his case, it paid to retire.
"I don't think faculty and staff are fully
awareofhowmuchtheirincomeislikelytohe

from an annuity relative to what their income
currently is. We'U be working to close that
gap for them and to smooth the lnlnsition,"
Levy said.
'There are different needs for different
faculty, and those go beyond money. We're
exploring ways to meet those needs."
Faculty who choose to take advantage of

the state's ret.irement incentive plan may be
able to come back and teach a class, he noted,
or use lab facilities, which would allow them

to continue their research and to interact with
students and colleagues.
•"The decision to retire is a major life deci-

sion and I can understand facult) and staff
being hesitant to take that step.'' Levy said.

"We just want to encour.Jge anyone who's
eligible to find out more about it" so they will
be able to make an informed decision.

acuity and professional staff interested
in taking advantage of the state· s early
retirement incentive plan have until the close
of business on April 19 to file a non-binding
Notice of Interest with Personnel Services.
An irrevocable written notification of retirement must be provided to the employee's
retirement system no later than the close of

F

business on July 19. The open penod for
retirement is May 12-Aug.. JO. 1995 .
Eligibility criteria for the early retirement
incentive program are based on an employee· s
age and years of service. Employees who
have I0 years of state (and/or participating
employer) service. are at least 50 years of age
and were on the payroll o r paid leave as of
Feb. I . 1995 are eligible.
TIAA-CREF will hold group and individual information sessions April 28. May 3.
June 7 and.July 12 in 102 Crofts Hall on the
North Campus. Interested employees enrolled
in TIAA-CREF can call 1-800-842-8412 to

schedule an appointment for a session. A
private consultation is about 30 minutes.

Buffalo man charged in rape,
beating ofUB student in 1992
By Sl£\IE COX

Reporter Staff

A convicted nopl.t, now servi ng a sentence of up to 40 years. has been charged with
the brutal rape and beating of a UB student at her Lisbon A venue apartment in 1992.
Charles Croskery. 24. formerly of 51 Com tock Avenue. was arraigned March 21
on charges of second degree attempted murder, first degree rape, first degree assault.

first degree burglary, and criminal possession of a weapon.
Croskery is currently serving a 20-to40-yearstate prison term after pleading guilty.
in August 1993. to charges of first degree rape and first degree burglary in connection

with another at.tack that occurred just five weeks after the attack on the UB student . He
has been arrested at least three other times since 1990 on similar charges.
The Lisbon Avenue attack, which occurred on Sept. 5, 1992, left a 21-year-old UB
junior in critical condition. She was discovered in her blood-soaked bed by two

roommates the next morning, some eight to I0 hou~ after the auack.
Erie County District Attorney Kevin Dillon indicated Croskery was linked to the
Lisbon Avenue attack, in part, by DNA evidence.
·

,...._ Wearing "costumes of the royal
court," dancers perform Fan Dance, a '

traditional folk dance, at Korean Night
cultural show March 25 in Student
Union Theater. From left are RaeKyung Yoo. Eun-Hye P.dik and Julie
Pa!X.
......-: Eun-Hye Paik checks her
makeup before the show.

�4

_..,.___..,_aa

WM-~:1~-7: 1 ~

'

p.m.

M ......... lJ Part L S1udenl
Union n-e.-. North Campus.
6:30 p.m. $2. $3.50. Call
64~-29~7.

I'ODIIY--

CbarlosllftmU!o, Robert
CrH:ky, SU:JaD Ho'ft.
Unitarian UniYCr$8list Olun:h.
69S Elmwood Ave. 7 p.m. S3,

ss. ~nc:fit for Atmosphere.
COMII'UTDI &amp;DIIIWI

lnttr"Mt C link: Govtrnment
R....,rus. 110 Lockwood.
North Campus. 7 p.m. To regis!« call64~-2817 .

UKIWNWI WEEX

Explosive 1J.suos in UkraiDianRussian Relotioas, l'eler
Potichnyj, Ph.D .• McMasttr
Uni\•., Hamilton, OnL 20S Natu·
raJ Sciencc:s &amp; Mathern.a.tia
Complex. North Campus. 7 P m.

Free.
MUSICAL THEATER

God.spd.l. Zodiaq~ o~ Company a.nd Gemms Mus1caJ The·
aln: Company. Dram&amp;~­
Ceruer for lhe Arts. North Cam·
P"'· 8 p.m s~ . s10
UUM F1U1 SERIO
M......... lJ Part II. Suoden&lt;
Union T'hplter. Nonh Campus. 9
p.m. S2. SJ.50. call645·2957 .

to ... -

-·--............................
__ _..

campus. 3:30p.m.

................

Cosmic Strinp. Prof. AleundnVilenkin. Tufts Uru~ . 245

__

.... M'MU blldiC ...... -

~-~-~

,........,._............._
_..._.._
....;;_

~

~~.1K

Relationships Bmt·eeo N l~
L-Argioint Conftntratioo and
Hemodynamic F.lferts in Anes-

l.beliud Rats, Mohammed A.
Tabrizi-Fonl. C508 Cooke North
l'tiYSICS c:Ou.oc!uiUM

Fronc.z.ak. North Campus. 3 45

CNI'b,or £._.

p.m.

~-----~
FAX ........ IaMWU.1. ­

.IOLOGICAL SCIENCES
&amp;DIIIWI

T HUR SDAY

or Replication and O ricins or
Cancer, Dr. David G Kaufman,
Univ. of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill. 114 HochStetler
Nonh CAmpus 4 p.m

~0
-

LIFEWORK-

Drums and UDbe:a ltb) Cui·
tural Values: Pa.r12, Pat L.
Smith. Second session . 4-6 p m.
Caii645-612S for reg1stration

mfonnation.

TUC- UFECIIVEJIESS

M ulticulturalism in Ibe: Classroom. 218 Talbc:n. Nonh Campus. Free. Sponsored b~ !he Of-

fie~ of Teachi ng EffectJ \'Cness
To register. call645·3364 or E-

mail to v443tplx@lubvms.
C~LIIIONARY

Cooo«tions ~-~n Origim

CEHTBI

&amp;Oil NAil
C brook Adaptation lo Myoc:ardiallscbemia, Dr. John
Canty. Dept. of Medicine. 108
Sherman. Soulh campus. 8 Lm.
UIUIAUIWI WEEK
Display and Sa .. of Ukrainian
Crafts. Student Union Lobby.
North Campus. II a.m.-3 p.m .

LIFE-

Tho World or E-mail, Jim
Gerland. 2:304'30 p.m. Call

64S..f&gt;l2.S for registration information.

MATliDIATICS COLLOQUIUM
Bialgcbra Adions. T";_,u., and
Unh't.n:al Dd'oruuttion Fo nn u-

l.as. Prof. Tony Giaqa.unto, Una'
of Michigan. 103 Diefendorf
Soulh campus. 4 p.m.
NURSING CONtiNUING

EDUCATION rROGRAM
Certiftcatt Program in
Gu-onlological ursing. 4.30..
7.30 p.m. Sessions run Thurs-

day• through May II. Sl5. S50
per session.Ca.ll829-3291 for

regislration informatJon,
regiWiltion deadline is fi,·e

working d3.ys before each ses·
sion.
UFEWORKHat~ Speech and Harassment,
Lucinda Finley, J.D. 5-7 p.m.
Ca1164S-6125 for regrstratton

information.
.IOMEDICAL RESEARCH

~iscoodud:

Fraud
and Plagiarism, David Triggle.
Ph.D. Dean. School of Pharmacy. ButJer Auditorium.
Shennan. Soultt Campus.

l1

PEDIATRIC

1

Exteosh·e! Prof. Constantino
T'-lllis, CNPq, Brazil. 222 Natu·
raJ Sc 1encn &amp; Mathe.m.aucs
North Campus 3:45 p.m.
D ROUND$

Choical Implications of the Molecular and Cell Biology of
Polycystic Kidne) Disease.
Ellis Avncr. M.D., Prof. of Pedl amc5 and Ch1ef of Ped1atnc

Nephrology. Seaule Washln~ ­
ton. 8 a.m Kmch Aud..
Children's Hosp1lAI
COGNITIVE SCIEHCE
COlLOQUIUM

Teaching and Multiplication
Tables to a Na.na.l Nrtwork:
Fluibility vs. A.ttur-Ky, Prof

J:lrnes A. Anderson. Brown
Univ . 280 Park.. North Campll'&gt;
!0:30a.m.
UKRAINIAN WEEK
UkrainiaD Aru and Craib.
Student Umon Lobby onh
Campus. II a.m.- 3 p.m

G5EAA EIII'LOYM£NT
CONRitEHC£

CHEMISTRY COlLOQUIUM

Cornplox.. of HF llDd HCI ,.;lh
Chloromdhan&lt;s. Prof. Janel Dd

Bene. Youngstown
215

KJ, a. Bakj)'. North Campus
8.30 li.m.- 1 p_m Frtt adnu !ioSJOO
Call 645-2491 to regl!&gt;ter

atun:tl Sclenct!!. &amp; Math·

emal.c.J. Compk~
pu~

J ob Planning in tbt Ninnies.

State Um'

North Cam-

WOMAN POWER

4 p.m

GRADUAl'£ CONFERENCE IN
MARXIST S TUDIES

-

Rrdefinin g Genders, Values,
Communitit:s. Center for tM
Arts Scrttning Room Non.h
Campus. 5-6:30 p.m Frtt
GRADUATE CONFERENCE IN
MARXIST STUDIES

Ho" to Look at Pomograph)'•
or, A Responw to tbt Recent
Cull ural W ars. Prof Laura

EVOUITIOMAJIY .IOLOGY

K1pncs. Nonhv.e~tan Um'
Center for the An:-. Scrttmng
Room onh Campu!!o 630-830
p m Fret

AND ECDUIGY LECTURE

UUU A LM S ERIES

Tbt

Jonu ~

of Hunting Upon
lhf Frequmcy of Wa rfa~
Among Huot er-G a lh~n!I"S.

Prof. Kr1th Ouerbem. Drpt of
Anlhropology . 261 Millard
Fillmore. North Campw.
11:.30 a.m.
OI'EN NOU5E

School of Nu rsing O~n
House. 825 Kamball Tower
Soulh campus. I :30-4,30
p.m. For mformauon. call
829-3209.
$PRING &amp;DIINAJI KIIIES:
SUUTANCE U5E IH
ADOLESCENCE
Ak:obol u,. llDd Risky Sox: A

Nr\4· Look al Old Evidenee.

Mary Gillmore:. Ph.D.. Uni~ . of
Washingtoa. Seattle. Wastu ngt"on. Research lnstirute on AddiC tions seminar room I :30 p.m.
Fret and open 10 tht public . Call
887-2566.
UfE11AJ1Y LECTURE
Wallaa Sltv~DS a nd the Pragmatist Trad ition, Prof. Jonathan
A. Levin, Columbia Un•v~1ty
309 Clemens. North Campu~ 2
p.m. Free.
LECTURE

Ukrainian
Week

Large-Scalt Assem bly of DNA
Strings, Prof. Rao Km.araju.
Johns Hopkins Um' 4 Knm
Nonh Campus 3 p.m.

~­

$EIIIIWI

----~

SATURDAY

PHUICS 5EIIIIIWt
Should lb&lt; Entropy Always Be

COMI'UTER 5CIENCE

.......,_
-..--_..._,_

Aprtl 5 - .... -

ECONOIIICS SEMINAR
llarpinin&amp;-lnduced llt:mand
for Fiat Money, Merwan Enga neer, Uruv of Guelph. 414
Frooczak. N - Campus. 3.30
p.m.

IDA Y
I'IWIMACEliTICS &amp;DIIIWI

--left,-.,..--..,
5-Union---__.

Citizen Kane

- w-.

MEDICINAL CHEMI$TRY
.

A..lxlvimer's D ~- D rug
Design, Synlbesis. a nd E\•aluation, Timothy Fahrenhoii..Z, Dept .
of MedicinaiChemistry. l2 1
Cooke. North Campus. 3 p.m.

CONFEIIEMCE
Woman Po.,.-er in tbr lh1
C~otUI') Ad U coorereoc:t.
Kno\ North Campus. 830 a m

"e.!... mmg rem.a.r\.s. R~
Sron1c-n.. sLate Suprrme. Coun
JUdge and WIN project director
Sponsored by l'roJ&lt;CI WIN
Workshop ~ssion s follo\lo Call
645-3705
GRADUAl'£ CONFER£NCE IN
MARXIST STUDIES
RnoolutioD&amp;r) Brack.eting. 280

Park Hall North Campus 9 -1 1

Brahms's Wnnan Rrqu.iem~
Maum1ano Valdes. conduct1ng .
Buffalo Philharmootc Chorus.
11Jomas Swan_ di~or . Centtr
ror the Ans Mainstage. Nonh
campu&gt;. 8 p.m. S20. S30. S35 .
Call 88~ - 5000 or 645-ARTS .
GAMING CONVENTION

UBCon '95-A Twist in
Time. Studenl Un10n . Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.- midmght S5SI2 . Call~5-4106 or

645-•884
MUSICAL TliEATER

Godspt'll. Zoc:haqut Dant"C Company :md Gcmm)io Mu.~o~callllc­
.:nrc Compan) Drnma Thealrt.
Center for the An, Nonh Cam J&gt;Ul&gt;. K p.m. S5 . S 10
UUAB FILM SERIES

Robol Cami n 1l. Studcm Umon
Theater Nonh Campul&gt; 9 Jnd
II :30 p m S2 . SJ .50. Call
&amp;45-:~957 .

SUNDAY

~

IIAIIING CONVEN110N
UBCoo '95- A T"'·ist i.n Timt&gt;.
Student Umon. North Campus
J0a.m-7p.m. S5 -SI2 Call

645-4106 or 645-4884
MUSICAL-..

Fa\'Of'ed Operat.ic Arias and
f..ase:mbles. Oemse Blac~ .
sopnoo: Timolh) Schuman.
tenor.lllomas Witalowsb, bas~.

GRADUAl'£ CONFER£NCE IN
MARXIST STUOIES

ORCHESTRA

64~ - 2&lt;J57

GAMING CONVENTION

WOMAN IIOWER
CONFER£NCE
Wo man Po"'·er in tbe 21st

.UFI'ALO PHILIWIMONIC

Mainstagr. North Campus
8 p.m. Sl6, S20 Cai164~ · ARTS
UUM -SEIIIU
M.......,. lJ Part I. Soudcn&lt;
Union TheaiCT Nonh Campu&gt;
9 and II 30 p m S2. S3 .50 Ca ll

m&lt;l2DSOJnnO. Ol&lt;ryl Hudson.

ater North Campus . 6 30 p m
S2. Sl_50. Caii6-15 -2&lt;J57

Cenlut') Act II ronf~~oce.
Sl~ Htdl
onh Campus. 6:45
p.m rrg1strat1on. dramauc prcs.tntatlon. 8 p.m.: recepuon.
9;30 p.m Sponsored by Project
WIN . Ca1164~ - 3705 .

POriiUSIC
Bobby McF.rna's Hard ChoraL Center for the Arts

a.m Free
UBCon '95-A Twisl in Time.
Student Umon. Nonh Campu!io
10 a.m -madnight S5-SI2 Call
b45-4106 or 64~ - 488-1

Macross II. Student Un1on The-

Clllzell " - ·

41;30 ........

Reading ConlemporarJ
Manisms. 280 Park Hall . orth
Campus. II a.m.- 1 p.m. Free.

Unda Mabry. piani.st/.ccompa·
mSL Sponsored b)• the Western
1!"'- York Chapter oflbt

Kosctuu.L:o Founclat:ion.
Kathanne Cornell The.a.tn 2
p.m. Sl5. Call688-4427.
M.M. DEMEEIIECfTAL

1'boauls F11111lin&amp;or, pc:n:u5&gt;IOO
Baird Recilal Hall. North Cam-

MARXIST STUDIES

f::·=;~rj:~;~

Free.

f'IAHORECITAL
R..a..li'Gotbooi. pianiSt. Sler Concat Hall. North Campus. 7 p.m
S7. 50, $1~ . Free 10 QRS

GRADUAl'£ CONFEJIEHCE IN

On lbe Polilics or Art. 280 Park
Hall. Nonh C&amp;mpu•. 2:304 p.m.
GRADUAl'£ CONFEREHCE IH

MARXIST STUDIES
Constnac:ting Attematives. 280
Park H•ll. North Campus. 4-~ : 30

p.m. Free.
MUS•• • DEGREE RECITAL

Dante« Boring, guitar. Baird
Recital Hall. North Campus. 5
p.m Fret. Mr. Boring is a Stu·
dem or Prof. Joanne Castellani.

"fri~nds ."

-THEATD
God.spd.l. Zodiaque D:mcc Company and Gcrnrm M usjcal Theall&lt; Company. Dram&amp; Theaue.
Center for the Arts. North Cam·
pus. 8 p.m. S5. SIO.

GRADUAl'£ CONFEJIENCE IH

MARXIST STUDIES
Histof")' is What Bu.ru:
Historicizing Post -Colonial
Feminist Critiq ue ofScit:nCf' in
Dn·eklpmeot, Metn. anda.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
280 Park Hall. North Campus.
5.30.0:30 p.m. F«&lt;:.
UUM ALM $ERIES
Ro bot Carnin.l. Studmt Umon
Theater. North Campus. 6:30
p.m. l2. S3.50. can 645 -2957
MUSICAL TliEATER
Gods~U, Zodiaque Dance Com-

p3ny and Gemms Musical Thcatrt Company. Dratm l llull'e,
Ctnt er for the Arb. Nonh Campus . 8 p.m. S5, S IO.

MONDA Y

l

IIIOCIEMI5TRY &amp;DIIIWI

Human Cellular Fact ors in.
Papillom.a Virus DNA Repli cation, Tom Melendy. 1348
Farber. Soulh campus. 4 p.m

COMII'UTDI CUNIC

Vuooica and Yaboo. 223

�...

_

Lockwood. Nonh Campw. 7
requirod;

5

-

Bnoce J. l'focllolson. 206 Furnas•
North Campw. 3:45p.m.

p.m.~

call 645-2117.

Dyaamlc Med.ltatloa: Mo..
lato R.luation, Dawn Jordon.
7-9 p.m. Call645-6125 fouq:istntion information.

...

·~CMIT-

~t...:~~

....-..~slat, Pror. Daniel J.
Kosman. Dcp&lt;. of Biochemistry.
307 Hochstcncr. North Campus.
4p.m.

-•~n

TU.ES DAY

IIAN:k Musical·TBA. Pfcifcr
Theater. 8 p.m. $10. Sl2. $15.
Call &amp;39-8540.

STUOOIT VOICE ltECITAl.

Bairtl Rcco'"l Hall. North~
pus. Noon. Moe. StudeniS of
Gary Burgess. Sylv1a Dimizi i.
Daniel McCabe, Harriet Si
s.

_

Witt-Watt: Tbt:

Laocuag&lt;of~

Resi&gt;taD&lt;r of Laogua,o,
MIIJ)Ori&lt; PcrlofT. Phi Ilea Kappa
Visiting Scholar. Center for 1M
Arts Scn=ing Room . North
Campus. 4 p.m.

...

The ~ob lntervi&lt;w: The
Recruiter's Prrsptctiw., Louts

IIIIOWN IIAD -

lzzo. 4-5:30 p.m. Call645-6125
for registraJ:ion infonnatioa.

Rcheouul Wotbhop. North
Campus. 12:30- 1:30 p.m. F=

Citli.e.a K.aae.. Student Unton
Theater. North Campus. 6:30
p.m. S2. 53.50. Call645-2957

SEIIIU
An Evening Walk., by Teresa
Marichal. Center for the Aru

WAll ALII SEIIIU

LIFEadmissioo.

\\'bera. Why and How of Brust

ALII AND VID£0
Margard Mead Film aad

\'ideo festival Center for til('

Srlf Examination. Power AdvoClOIC$. 6-7 p.m. Call645-6125 for
regis112tion informauon.

Campus. 7 p.m. F=.

-

Clarin&lt;t, Soprano, Ctito. Pi-

COIITIIIUING

EDUCATIONPIIOGIIAM
lntroduo:l&lt;l&lt;y Ploysical Ass&lt;ssIM:nl of tk A dull 6-9 p.m
S250. Ca11829-3291 fOf re~IStra ­
tion information.

UFEWSi ressbu~1et's, Po ~o~.er Advocates. 7-9 p m Call ~5 -6125

Arts Screening Room . North
OPUS: CI.AUICS UY£

ano, Susan Wells. Cht:l)·l

Hudson. Jot:l Becktdl. Lmd111
Mabry. Allen Hall South Cam-

J!U.!I 7 p.m.. Free: admtsston
WAB ALII SERIES

Star Trek. ~oerations.. Stufor

registr.uion information

dent Union Theater. North Campu&gt; 9 p.m S2. S3 50 Call 1&gt;'5-

2957

COR'EEHOUSE

UUAII ALII SEIIIU

Star Trok, c.o.ntJoos. Student Uruoo Theater. North Cam -

pus. 9 p.m. S2. 53.50. Caii64529S7.

6

CARDIOPULMOIWIY CENTER

SEMIIWI
Angiogenesis. Dr. John R1cnuu.
Dept. of Surgery. I08 Sherman
Soolh Campus. 8 a.m.

AWMNIEVENT

Dinnu and speakt.r- for
Southlown alumni. Calll!\29-

UFEWORKSlntroduction to the World
Wide Web andii:TML Brandon Plewe. 2:30-4:30 p.m C:tll
645-6125 for registration mfor-

2608.
UB AT SUNRISE

The Splintering Metropoli&gt;,

pHAJIMAC£liTICS SEMIIWI
Effect of Anti·

~

Prof. David C . Perry, School of
Architecture: Dept. of Planmng
Crnter for Tomorrow. North

methotruatr lgG and Fab
Fragments on Melhotruate
Disposition in IM Rat, Joseph

Campus. 7:30a.m. S&amp;. S9. Call
829-2608 for reservation.

Campus . 3:30p.m.

I'HARMACY SEMINAR
Penicillin Resistant Strr:ptcxocCUJ

Pneumonia: Prrvakntt

and Therapeutic lmplicalions,
Jolon Alt&lt;m. 248 Cooke. Nonh

Campus. 8-9 a.m.
UFEW-

Strus Management, UB Coon·
seling Center Staff. Noon · l p.m.
Ca1164S-612S for rcgistrntion
infonnation.

ROSWELL PAIIII STAFF
SEMJIWI
Pending, Oebash•s Ghosh. Ph.D.
RPCI . North Campus. 12:30 p.m.
COGNITIVE SCIENCE
COLLOQUHIM

Modal Structurt" and PeruptuallnfermCH-, Prof. Allan
Jepson, Uni\'. of Toronto. 684
Baldy. Nonh Campus. 2 p.m.
C._ICA1. EJIGINEERING
UNOE SEMINAII SERIES
The Art of Bridging Communi ·
cation Gaps Bd"·crn Cell~: ,
loterttllular Cbannels as Biologlcal Diodes, Protein Insula·
tors and Sckd.ivr Conduits,

B:tlth.asar. C508 Cooke: North
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM

Applications of Fadd Theory 10

Turbulence Problems. Prof.
Steven Oruag. Princemn UniV.
228 Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematics Complex . North Campus. 3:45 p.m.

-NQ

CONTINUING

EDUCATIONPIIOGIIAM
Cmincate Program in
Geronto&amp;ogic:a.l Nursing. 4·307:30p.m. ~ssions run Thu~ ­
days through May II. SIS. S50
per ses5IOD. Call 829-3291 for
rcg•s tr.nion infonnat1on : rcgi.,tr.~ ­
tion deadline is rh·e worlin{!.
da)'!o befOre each session
HONORARY DINNER

Buffalo Law Rniew Dinner,
honoring lnomas E. Headricl .
professor of law and semor
coo nS(' lor to UB P«:s1den1 William Gremer. Gues t speaker.
Hon. Hugh B. Scon. U.S. Magistrate. Western District of Nev.
York. Classics V Banquet and
Conference Center, 2425
Niagara Falls Bh•d . Cocltaih. 6
p.m .: dinner, 7 p.m . $40. Call

645-2 107.

Break's Not
Over Yet!
Check out these
Apple price breaks!

$1139
Savings of $308
Performa 636
• 8MB RAM • 250MB turd Dnn·
c=-=:::,:.:.;;~~"'- .OOCOR0\1 Dnvr! ,._...., tiiiM ~

$1925
Savings of $335

call 645-3348.
FULBIIIGHT IIIIAHf

EXHIBITS

COMt'ETTTION OPENS

UOCIUIIANN SHOW OPENS

APRILU
Nathan1el Brockmann·) Master
of Fine Arts thesn; es:h1b11 opens
\lo'ith a recepoon on Apnl 13.
from S-7 p .m. at the Center for
the Ans. H1s phocographs will
rematn on displa)· through May
4 in the: Art Department Gallery.
Gallery hours art Tuesdays. 10
a..m -5 p.m .. WedoesdA) s-Fn days 10 a.m -8 p.m.. and Saturdays II L m.-8 p.m.
"IIWKIUSE CONVEitSATION"
UQINS STUOENT SHOW
An exhibit of recent student
v.-orls m conjunction v.·tth lhe
national accre&lt;htallon team 's
re' iev. opens Apnl 3 m the
James D)e11 Exhib1uon Hall.
th1td floor. Hayes Hall . South
Cam~uJi On Wednesda). Apnl
5. StU~Il i.S v.IIJ hoM the e.J.htbll.
presen1ed a~ an " In -house con "'e~auon .. Galler) hour!. art
Mondaylo 9 a .m to 8 p m .. and
Tuc~a) ~ through Fnda)'s 9 a m
to 5 pm

NOTICES
CAWNG AU AWMNI
ATHL£TES

lllc Alumm Assoc1ataon·., Ath letic Hall of Fame !&gt;eels nom• ·
nat1ons ror mdudees Nomma ton mD) cons-uh the D1' l!oiOO of
Athlet1cs and the Um"ersn)
Archl\elo to as\ISt them m com plhn~ mfurmauon about and for
candtdatello Nommauon rorrm
arc aYailable at the Offict or
Alumm Relations. South Campu.,.. and must be completed :md
ret'CI \'ed b) M il) 5. 1995

cw•

CAMPUS
SETS SAIL
FOR SHOWBOAT

The Campus Club tra\d!o to
Toromo to se:e Showbo.:lt on
Wedne.!&gt;da) . Ma~ 31 For a S90

or SI OO fee-.

part1c1~nts

Opening of competiuon ror
1996-97 Fulbnght Grants ror
graduate study 1n ac:ldem1c field).
and professional tn1mng1n lhe
Cfellll \'e and perforrmng aru 1s
May I. Fulbnght Granu are
8\'&amp;llabk for srudy or research.
lntvel grants are av&amp;Jiable to
selected countnes to supplement
sources that do not pro' 1de funds
for intemauonal tn\ el or to
supplemen1 the applicant ' s per ·
sonal funds. Apphcanu must be
U.S c1tiztn.s and hold a
bachdor's degree or Ill. equJ'a
lent b) lhe begmmng date of the
grant Cream·t and perforrrun~
lniSIS art llOII requ1red to haH• a
bxhelor's degree. but they must
ha,·e four yea~ of rde,anttraln·
mg or stud) CandJdales m medi Cine must hnc an M D or
equJ\·alent at 1he ume or apphca llon All apphcanb must ha\e
"'Hic1ent prWic1enC) m the language of the ho t count!) . Full
granb PfO\ ade round-tnp 1ntema
t1onaltravel. mam1cnance for the
tenure of the av. ani, a reioeart'h
allov.anct. and IU1t1on v.al\·m . 1f
apphcablc Tra\el gr':ml.\ prtl\1de
mund -1np mtemauonal tra\elta
the count!') ..-.here the student
"'Ill pur.ue re~arch . all granh
mcludt' ~alttl and acc1dent u
!'uranc-c Contact Dr Barbar.t
Bunl.er, Fulbn~ht Progra:m Ad\1loOf, m 362 Part. Hall . 645-3650.
es.r 362 or e,.t 358 Dead! me for
rt'C'C'Ipl of apphcat1on' 1' Septem
ber 26. 1995

Performa 6115CD
• 8\48 RAM • 350MB Hard Orn-e •
15~ Cotor Mont tor • CDROM DnH
• 14 4K Modem and softw.ut-1

$2737
Savings of $183
~lZ.l:'!~~B~~S&amp;,~

and

Modem~

$2787
Savings of $633
Power Macintosh 7100
• SOMHz • 16MB RAM • 700MB
Hard Onvr and CDROM On\'P'
~b~~~

I

Hall. South Campus. 8 p.m.

THURSDAY

DINE IIULTHY DDUTa
A software presentation or
DINE Healthy, a full ·featured
diet improYement software program for both Windows and
Macintoih that teac:hes 5c:nsible
eatjng. nutrit)on and u .erc1sc
Slnlleg_JCS debub at the
UBMacro Traimng Unt.er oa
Friday, April7 from 10 L m .·
Noon Darwin Dennaon, EdD ..
Cen•fted Nutnuon SpeciahiC .
will male the ttehmcal presentalJon Pleue RSVP b) Apnl S.

and Gemms Musical TileatreCompany. Drama llatre.
Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. SS. $10.

Prest"nte.d by UUAB Hamman
EMSEMIIU SERIES
UB J azz Combo. Louis Manno.
conductor. Band Recmal Hall .
North Campus. 8 p.m . Fret

CamP!''· 64~ -2991.

Godspell, ZodiaqU&lt; Douooe Com ·

- M E THEATDt

L«tu.~:

N1colu D. Goodman, Vi« Provost for Under,.aduate Education, S49 Capen Hall , North

~THEATDt

LCMIIC~

WEDNDDAYSAT4PWS

bo submitted by W&lt;d......,y,
April 5 to the Stud&lt;nt Sp&lt;U&lt;r
Selectton Committee, r::Jo

Citlua Kane. SIIJdcnt Union
Theater. North Campus. 6:30
p.m. $2. 53.50. Cali64S-2957.

The GrolliD&amp; Pando., Voll:cr

112 Baldy. North Campw. 4
p.m. Call881·1640, 645-2438.

COMI'I/TEII CUNIC
V&lt;rooica and Yahoo. 223
Lockwood. North Campus 10
Lm. Ca1164S-2817 to reg.is.ter.

malloo.
UUAIIALII-

pany

Peckhlus. Univ. or Ertan gen.

no looger than ~x mioules. Sc·
lection will be bued oa relev.ncy, appropriateness of content , and delivery. Eetrin: m.W

EoUtl&lt; l'laaola&amp;. bcplt ....
Lynn Faroin. 6:30-9 p.m. Call
64S-612S fc:w reJistndion infor-

wu._.u., Tolstoy, and the

Meaning or ur., Caleb Thompson. 684 Baldy. North Campus.
4p.m.

4

._.._

rece1'c

a hght brealf:w. shov. ucleb .
charter bus transponauon to and
rrom Toronto. and dmner The
bus will lea,·e at 8 a.m rrom
Tops Piau. Coh•in and Eggen
and return at 9 p.m Re~n e
your plact today wuh a SSO
depos1t, payable t o ~ the Campus
Club. Balance is due on April
21. Cai164S-2816. 6-H-2592. or

645-2145.
COMMENCEMENT SI'£AKER
The Uni\lersity Commencement
Commiuec seeks a student represcnt.ati ve to address graduatelo
at the I ~9th University Co mmencement. scheduled for 10
a.m Sunday, May 14 in Alumm
Arena. All ~raduating J&gt;Cmors m
the facultte~o of Ans and lellef'.
Natur.1l Sc1eOCelo :md Mathematics, Socul Sc1ences and Spectal
and lndl\idualized MaJor.. arc
di~ibl(' to act a ... romrnencement
~opca ler Nit,:o l:a" D Goodman .
'1ce prO\'Olol for undergraduate
educatiOn. v.11i ch:ur a ~ lect1 0n
comminu compri!&gt;ed or f:.cult).
!tt:aff. and students. Semon. v.ho
. .-. l!oh to be consHkrcd mu~t submit a wriuen 'er..•on of the1r
speec-h tOGoodman. Each fin;~l ­
i!ol will present h1slher addreS!t
before the commiuee. and the
winning speech will be presented by the lotu~nt at commencement. Speecho should be

I

1n Horor of Israel lndeperoerce Day

TemPLC BCll-1
OF

el

C1 Re t\TcR BuFFALO

GENERAL MEETING OF THE

PRI 5LATED
In cooperat10n ...-. 11h the Orfil·e
or the- Pro\ OSI . the Cha1r fl( the
Facult} Senale has arran~td fm
a gene-ral mee-t mE for fscult )
throughout the Uni\Cf'lt) v.1th
the Ch:ur or the Pr('Sident'~ Rc\ ' 11.""' Board tPRB ) Prur M1rtJ/A.1
Nc1def) and other membe~ of
thl." PRB thllt are able to attend
on Fnda). Apn121 at l p m Ill
room 330ofthe Student Umon
A..semhl) Hall

GET11NG FUNDED
CONFERENCE
Tlle Western Nev. Yorl Health
Sc1ence Llbnlnans w1ll sponsor a
da) long conference on '"Gttu ng
Funded· Dc-velopmg SlJJis m
Proposal Wntmg·· Fmb). Apnl
21 1n UB's Health Sciences l.J .
brary. Taughl by Alan Rees.
profe-ssor e~ntu.lo. School of
L1brarr and lnforrnaoon Sctenct .
Case Western Resen.·e Um\erslly. the course- v.ill outlmc- cnucal elc-menls m the ~I v.•nt mg process and sho~o~.• how to
prt-p3rc pc-rsullSI\'e and v.-•mning
proposal!&gt; m a h1g.hl)' rompetni\·t
grants marketplace . Coo;t IS S25

for WNYHSL membef"'i and SJO
for oon -membeD. An ackht1onal
or S20 applies to those...
w.hn l.l.l loh to m:el\e Med1cal
L1br.11) A~1ai1Un conhnu1ng
diut"OitiOO Credits, V. hl('h IOdudt!&gt;
,I,. CE cre&lt;hts. a cen1ficate and a
t.."Uul'l&gt;C" manual Call Knrtn
!t\.relzman. WNYH SL prC'\Idtnt.
887-3637. E-ma1l.
Kn:11.manfe hrru..com Reg.l ...lr.l·
tmn dudhnc 1s Apnl I~
char~e

GRADUATE STUOENT
EXCEU£HCE IN TEACHING
AWARDS
The Gradu;ue School w.lll hnst

Con11nued on page 6

Presents

The # 1 JeWish Mustcal Group '" Ameroca

�_.,,..._.,_...,

6

'New Spirit' conference scheduled
by American Indian organization
AS
A REMINDER,
MAKIN ' COPIES WILL
BE OPEN DURING THE
1995 SUMMER SEMESTERS
AND WILL BE PROVIDING THE
SAME GREAT COPY SERVICES.

H EAMERICANindianScienceand
Engineering Society (AISES) will
sponsor Lhe 1995 Region Six conference, " Beginning of a New SpiriL"
March 31-Aprii2. Co-hosted by AISESchapters at UB and Buffalo State College, the
conference is expected 10 draw J00 s1udents
from more than 17 schools in Lhe Northeast
and upper Midwest, as well as professionals
from across the country. Saturday· s programs
will he held in the Center for Tomorrow.
Events planoed include a tree-planting
ceremony and Council of Elders. student and
professional caucuses. career and graduate

T

INCLUDING
OUR NOTES ON FILE SERVICE

J

school fair and social activities. Session will
be held on Chapter Development; Interviewing and Resume Skills; Graduate School and
Beyond; Malcing Community Connections;

Located at
Faculty !
the UB Commons.
Help your studentS
Watch for our Great
by putting your notes
on file today ! ~ Weekly Specials!

.. ..

T

the Center for the Ans Screening

Room and in 280 Park Hall on the Nonh

. .A.
.. .

Campus. The evenls are free of charge and
open to the public. The conference promotes

Te/636-8440
~ Fax 636-8468
520 Lee Entrance, Suite /05

THI UNIYIISITT AT IUFFAlO AND THI DON DAVIS AUTO WORlD llaUIISH IP
lUND CO-SPONSOR THI 1994· 1995 D1STINGUISHID SPIAIIIS SIIIIS

Garry Wills
Thursday, April 27, 1995
8 p.m. Center for the Arts

__,

Sd1ob lb!idsl

~n.-

10 c&amp;lllll!lomq

lnnrlhislort

en!"""""""'

lit. lie""'' be
beslt-llu

lirmAgrlisle.

ollfll'IIIIIIMSlUdy
olllidodlf...,·s
pcjtioi!IROf.
lisliroilatGenys/Jq
-lhe1993
1\jfzftPrize

lu...ttlin
Wls o&lt;Zo lhe
IIJiheroiiR!tJGod,
,_,~Amm.

The~

.............

8J P'A1111CIA DONOVAN
HEUBGRADUATEGroupmMarxist Studies will hold its lOth annual
conference March 3 1 and April I in

Makin' Cop_ies

tnterdisctplinary discussion of Marx1s1 theory.

SWotS!

:-:::~S..~Sil

--SIS
OFF CAMPUS

r--.w-1

1\oWI-

critiques and methodology. and the ir apphcallon 10 a broad range of scholarly fields.
Two keynote speakers. Laura Kipni s and
Meera Nanda. are scheduled. in addition to
se\ era! dJscussJon sessions.
Kipms. an independent film/videomaler
and cultural cn tic from NonhY.eslem Univer ''&gt;· will speak March 31 at 6 :30p.m. in
the Screening Room ·on " How to Look at
Pornography, or A Response to the Recent

lhr Graduate Student Excellence
1n Teachmg Awards Ceremony
on Fnday. April7 . at 3 p.m 1n

1300 Elmwood A\'e.

HUIIIIANmO COMMITTEE

n.on,

Doo--

aEDLS INP'UT
1be Umvers;ity Humanut~

w.w,.._

Zl77 Nr.apn
Boulcvoonl

Fall~

---

~.!.~Coloto

Campu:li Center

512 Elm"Uid Ave..

,,__,

ON CAMPUS

C..lwtlotAm
lllbtotfico
IOJO:mcr f01

'"'""'

11CKhT

MASTER
Trlcnan he
purrlwcd :II til
Trlct tl.b!l'tcr
ka.uom Cca!ih onl) I
' I() cbar~ -tn ·phone
callliSZ·SOO'&gt;

Commino: asks tht unevcrsJty
community's aid in their consideralion of the present na~ of
humaniues at UB and thr: forma tion of plans for the: future .
Ple~ send ideas, in writing. 10:
Carol Jacobs. Comminec Chair.
Diane Christian or Robert Daly.
306 Clemtns (English); James
Bono. 559 Park ( History ):
S1ephen Dyson. 733 Clemens.
John Peradol1o. 712 Clemens
(ChiSSJcs): Rudolp~ Gasche.
638 Clemens (Comparative Liter.nure): Jorge Grac1a, 681
Bald) (Philosophy): David
Perry 201G HayC'i (Planning
and Design); John Quinan, 606
Clemens (Art History): Henry
R1chards. 9 10 Clemens (Modem
Languages and Lite:ratures):
Burb.ara Tedlock. 365 Millard
FiJI more Aca£km 1c Cente-r (An-

~Amm

lhropnloo): Tam.ant Thornton.

cn!IID!I'otlw

546 Park {History ): Wolfgang
Wo ld.. 629 Baldy (Linguistics).

boob.

INTERNATIONAl. FOUL

DANCING
All ;trt" W(:Jcome 10 JOin the lnttr·
nauonal Folk Dancmg group

tach Friday from 8- 11 p.m. m 2
D~efcndorf Hall on th&lt; Soolh
Campus. Tilese frtt sessions
bc:gin with teaching. Pan neB arr
not needed. Tile sponsor is tht
Graduate S1uden1 Association.
Additional support provided by the Cen ter for the Aru, Uni\•e niry Bookstores and WBFO 88.7 FM

Culture Wars :· Ktpm s' collec1ion of essa ys
and video scripts, "Ecstasy Unlimited: On
Sex. Capital. Gender and Aestheucs" (M innesola Umversny Press. 1993 ). marked a
decisive tum in the field of Marx ist and
femiruSI snxlies. A 199}-94 Guggenheim Fellow, she IS currently a Rockefeller Fellow.
Second keynote ; peaker is b1ochemtcal
engineer Meera anda of Ren sselaer Po lytechmc lnstilute. who v. 111 peak on .. History
ts What Hurts: Ht stonc tt mg Post-Colonial
Femmist Cnuque of Sctence in Development .. a t 6 :30 p.m. Apnl ~ - in 280 Park Hall .
Nanda is lhe editor of ""Planning the FuIUre A ReM&gt;urce Gutde to Sustai nable Agn c-uhure m the Thud World.'' a book that

records effons of Thard-\\'orld farmers. enVIronmental groups and vol untary organiza-

tions to popularize less mtenst and more
ecological fanning practices.

Cont&lt;nued from page 5

the Center for the Aru Screen mg Room. The ceremony is
open lo all membc:rs of the um YC'f'5tly and commun11y .

Srudent

The conference 1s sponsortd by Lhe Division
of Student Affairs, OffiCe of the V'""' Presidenl
for PublicServiceand Urban Affairs. Lhe School
of Engineering and Applied Sciences. Kodak.
IBM and Westwood-Squibb Phannac:eutical.
For more informalion. call Mlchael Gendrue Bl
645-2234 or Sue Hill Bl 878-4631 .

CALENDAR

=-=Colop

tJSZ Hcncl Ave

successful scienc:e and engineering careers.

Two keynote speakers for Marxist
Studies group's annual conference
News Bureau Stafl

~

Maintaining Your Nauve American Culture
in Lhe Corporate World; Starting an lll(llanOwned Business; and Environmental l"u'"
en Nauve America.
A private, nonprofit organization, AISES
seeks to significantly increase the number of
American Indian sc1enusts and engineers in
Lhe U.S. AI Lhe collegiate level. AISES provides scholarships. mentoring support and
leadership traini~g 10 ptepare students for

-~­

CIUTSTANDINII HJMC£

AWAJIDa

Current full-t1me profesSJonaJ
staff employees of UB, the Reseat&lt;b Foundauon. !he UB Foundauon. or tht Facuhy·Studeru
Assoctauon •'ho have completed

yean or continuous full-time
professional .staff service arc
eligible for the OuiStanding Ser1\\ 0

\'ice Award. Members of the UB
community who wi5h 10 subnut
nominataons for lhe Outstanding
Service A ward mus1 prepare a
dossier an support of the nomi·
oee, tncluding a mu.tmum of

~==-~~=-~

AJDa

cer~

oo SaiUnlay. Apnl

:~~~~:n~::=l ~~IdS
Campus, from 10 a.m. 10 Noon.
All proceeds wiJI ~fit the
Ctty of Hope National Medical
Center and Beckman Research
lns:u tu~ Caii691 -S676.

(--

nominee's cuneot vita ~nt
and current position descnptioo
s1gned by the: nominee's wpcrvt sor. as well as a nomination
form. Norrunalions must be: reo.
by Friday, April 21 , 1995
and nuy be submiued to: Ilene
Aeisc-hmann, OuUr, Profess.ional
S1aff Senate Awards Commiuee,
310 O'Brian Hall. onh Campus. 645-2107"' 645-6115. Winnt'TS recti\•e a S 1.000 c:uh
a....-ard., cenificate or recognition.
and will be .honored a1 an awardl&gt;
luncheon May 17.

''"ved

UNIYIJtaiTY CIIOUI
nALY..OUND
Fund-raising efforts for 1hc: Um \'ersit)' Choir's conccn lour of
haly a~ unckrway and include= 3
cassette tape sale. Cassene- tape-s
of the UB Oloir. highlighhng

performances from 1972-92. art:
pnced at S 12 each or 1v.-o for
S20 and arc available at the
Bookstore or directly from t~
UB Foundation Choir. Tape I
feature-s music from I he 18th
and 19th cenluria plus Chrislmas, folk. and pop select tons.
Tape 2 includes: Rena1 ssa~
Klections and compositions
from the 20th century. Ca ll

645-2964.

WCMIILOUT FOil

Jom the fun and show your s uppon for AIDS and n:laled Can-

Joas

R.-rdl Toc:hnidon I (par1 tim~)-Biochc:misuy . Posttng
IR-95018. R.....-ch AJJaf)'ll
(50 ~ posltion)-An:haeolog1cal
SurvcyiAntbropology. Posting
IR -95020. Stnior Instructional
Sprci.alisl-Biologtcal Sciences.
osting IR -95021. Rcaarcb
Sec:rd.ary-Uni \·ersity De\'elopmeol. Posting fR -95024. Dirrc-tor of Budgd-Unh·ersily Oc: ' 'elopmcnL. Posting •R -95025.

R.....-ch Toc:hnkion (halrtime)-Amuomy &amp; Cell Biology.

Posung IR-95026. Sec...,_.ry II
(60~ position)-Qfr~&lt;e of Controller. Posting IR -95027 .
I'IIORSaiONAI.
Resid~o~ Hall Director(s)
(lotemal Promotional Oppo..-tunlty. SL--Z)-Resideotial Life.
Pos-tmg lfP-5007. Assi.sUnl for

UB/Sl!NY Sen·ica (lnl&lt;rnal
Promotional Oppor1u n ily. L ·
2)-0ffice of Trademark s and
Licensing. Posti ng JP-5008.

To obtain mou mforma twn on
jobs lw~d obtw~. rontoc-t Prrsonn~l s~n ·tus. 104 Crofts
Hall.

�7

--.u.--.- 22

Facul
tion to provide subsidies for law
students who attend. Checks may
be made payable to the Buffalo
LAw JoumtJJ and mailed to
Pauline Costanzo, 436 Colvin
Blvd., Buffalo, N .Y. 14216. For
more information, call Dene
Aeischmann, 645-2107.

Alumni to explore
voter responsibility

0.

-c:on.M" (1M8l by -

....

Ia- -Oft-

Voter Responsibility &amp; !he
Role of Government" will
be !he topic of a dinner and lecture to be held on Wednesday,
April 19, in Romanello· s South.
5793 South Park Ave .. Hamburg.
The event, sponsored by the

Adrt. . Piper to ..,._t lecture

Adrian Piper's investigation of racism has led her to create an
arresting body of confromalional an over !he past two decades.
Today, she is one of America's most frequently exhibited artists and
her work is the subject of a large body of critical commenllii)I.
Piper will lecture Saturday, April 8 at 7 p.m. in !he Sc=ning Room .
Center for !he Arts. Her talk will be followed by a reception in the First
Aoor Gallery.
An e~hibit of her works is being shown through May 5 in !he UB
Art Gall'ery. The exhibit features a series of images composed of photographs and texts. Admission to the gallery is free. Hours are 10:30 a.m.·
8 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and Noon-5 p.m. Sunday.

0

Alumni usocllltlon

to ol'fer btp to

Holocaust Museum

0

The UB Alumni Associ•·
lion is offering a day-trip to
!he United States Holocaust Me·

morial Museum in Washington,
D.C .. on June 22.
The trip will include an orien·
tation by a member of !he mu·
seum staff, followed by a
self-guided tour of !he museum.
Price of the trip, which includes
airline travel, bus transportation
while in the Washington area.
orientation, lunch and dinner. is
$235 for Alumni Association
members and $245 for non-mem·
hers. Reservations must be made
by April 12. There are a limited

number of ticketS. For mo~ information call 829-2608.

School of Management
names exec:utlve
MBA lldvlsory board

0

The UB School of Management has established an
advisory board for its new Executive MBA Program. The board
will advise administrators on the

direction of the executive program by making sure it directly
relates to skills that managers
need in the workplace. said C arol

Newcomb, executive director of
the Center for Management Development in !he School of Man·
agement~

which administers the

executive program. The UB program began in !he fall of 1994.
Advisory board members are
Larry T. DeAngelo. Wilson
Greatbach Ltd.; Larry R Qralce,
Graphic Controls Corp.; John E.
Friedlander. Buffalo General
Hospital and General Care Corp.;
Karen L. Kemp, Fisher Price;
John Lee. Praxair, Inc. F. Christo·

pher McLaughlin. Marine Midland Bank; Raymond A. Mereu.
Outol::umpu American Brass:
Sharon D. Randaccio. Manufacturers &amp; Traders Trust Co.; William E. Swan. Lockport Savings
Bank: and Richard A. Villari.
formerly of Blue Cross &amp; Blue
Shield of WNY.
Executive MBA programs
accept only experienced execu·
tives who have top management
potential. The UB program follows the model that Frederick
W . Winter , dean of the School of
Management. helped establish at
the University of Illinois 20 years
ago.

Law Review Dinner

honors Heaclrlc:k for

dlatinlulshecl Mrvlce
Thom as E. Headrick,
professor of law at UB . will
be honored for his distinguished
service to the UB law school and

0

on his appointment as senior
counselor to President William R.

Greiner at the
sixth annual
Buffalo lAw
R~vit&gt;w

Dinner.

which will be
held on Thurs·
day. April6.
All UB law
HEADRICK
school graduates
who have served
on !he editorial board of the Buffalo Law Revit'w are invited to
anend. Guest speaker will be the
Hon. Hugh B. Scott. '74, recently
named U.S. magislnlte for the
Western District of New York.
The dinner will be held at
Oassics V Banquet and ConferenCe Center, 2425 Niagara Falls
Bl vd.. Amherst. Reservation
deadline is' Monday, March 27.
The cost is $40 per person, with

0

The Center for Management Developtnent in the
UB School of Management i•

accepting registrations for a six week seminar on 10e Valuation

assistant professor of political
science, will give !he after-dinner

presentation.

critical aspects of any tnmsaction

The cost isS 18 for Alumnt
Association members and $20 for

involving a closely held corporation. Shares need to be valued for
estate. gift. and income-tax purposes; purchase or sale of a company: buy-sell agreements:
litigation. and corporation-plan·
ning purpose .

non-members. Reservations must
be made by April II . For more
information, call Alumni Relauons at 829-2608.

Muslim leader
Aprll12

dent of closely held business

director of the Center for
Assisuve Technology (CAT):
William C. Mann, professor and
chair of !he Depanmenl of Occu·
pauonal Therapy at UB and di ·
rector of CAT: Douglas Usiak.
execuuve dtrector of the ILC of
Western e-. Y ori..: Denise
Figueroa. executi\'e director of
!he Troy. N.Y .. ILC and president
of the National Council on lnde·
pendent Living. and Patricio
Figuerio of the New York State
Office of Aging. The Brazilian
group wtll visit Buffalo in May

his current position as vice pres• ·

p.m . on

Wednesday.
April 12, in !he
Center for !he
Arts on the
North Campus
The son of
MOHAMMED
Elijah Mohammed W . Deen Mohammed be·
came the leader of !he Nation of
Islam in 1975. following his
father's death. He obtained this

position despite being excommunicated twice for his dissent from
the nation's beliefs.
Mohammed eventually renounced the political leadership

of the Nation of Islam in order to
pursue his own. more traditional
mterpretation of~ faith . As a
leader of American Muslims.

Mohammed has moved 3'-''BY
from the militant separatism of

his father and current Nation of
Islam leaders. believing rather in
the need for racial and religious
reconciliation.
Quoted in the Chicago Sun·
Timts as saying. ''We must

present the best image of Islam as
it is found in its true practice."
Mohammed has worked to gain

greater acceptance for the American Muslim in America. He has
argued that while American Mus·
lims have a special duty to represent the needs of African

Americans. they also have a
similar duty to uphold the non-

discriminatory principles of
Islam.
The program is sponsored by
UB's Cora P. Maloney College in

conjunction with the Buffalo
Federation of Neighborhood
Centers. Buffalo State College.
the Islamic Society of the Niagara

Tile Amencan vtSltors are m

Brazil from March 24-April 15 to
gam an understanding of !he

service for Manufacwrers &amp;

Muslim Americans and MuslimAmerican spokesman for human
salvation. will
speak: at 7:30

Brauhan and Amencan
actiVists In !he "independent
living .. mo\emenr and research·
ers spec1alizing 10 ass1sLi"e technology at UB are participating
this sprtng in an exchange program designed to tncrease contact
between the disability communities in the U.S. and Brazil. The
exchange ts being funded by !he
United States Information
Agene)

Traders Trust Co. Registratior
deadline is Aprtl 17.

The seminar. which will meet

amW.Deen
Mohammed, Muslim
religious leader for !he society of

0

0

achievements and diffoculties
expenenced by organizations of
persons with disabilities. including
mdc:pendent hving centers (ILCs)
in Rio de Janeiro. Sao Paulo. Belo
Horizoote and Sao Luis.
The American group i com·
prised of John Stone, UB clinical
assistant professor of occupa·
uonal lherapy and education

in Jacobs Management Center on
the North Campus. will be taught
by Edward Hunon. who has more
than
years experience valuing
closely held businesses. including

to

A 12-&lt;lOUrse Chinese banquet.
including Pelting duck . will be
served. Cost i $30 per person.
Guetits are invited to attend. Ar·
rangements were made by Dorothy Soong and Anne Brody. For
information. call Anne Brody at
834-5596.
Proceeds benefit !he Grace
Capen Scholanhip Fund

UBtoofferiMHIIinar
on business valwrtlon

of Closely Held Companies:· to
be held from 6-9 p.m. on Tuesdays from April 25 through
June 6 .
Valuation IS one of the most

UB Alumni Association is open
19 !he public. Jim Twombly. UB
In U8 Art Gollory.

Frontier. !he Langston Hughes
Center. Masjid Numan, !he National ConfereOCC&gt;-formerly !he
National Conference of Olristians and Jews-and Temple
Beth Zion.
Tickets are free and may be
obtained by calling 645-2997.
645·2202. 645-2234 or 645-2997.

fo

For more

inform oi.!.'~

n call 645·

3200

Flower sale benefits
scholarship fund

0

A flower sale fund-raiser to

benefit Grace Capen Schol ·
arships. is being sponsored by the
Women's Club of the Uni•·ersity
at Buffalo. The scholarships are
given annually.
Geraniums in 4-112-inch pols
are S 1.80 each or $20 a doun ;
colon; include scarlet. pink. fuch ·

sia or white. Impatiens are
Sl.50 per six-pact-. come

in ~ pink. white or
mixed. Impatiens in 10inch hanging pots are S I 0
and come in the same colors.
Send orders by Friday. April
28. with check payable to UB
Women· s Club. to: Barbara
Meenaghan. 227 Sagewnod
Terrace. Williamsville. N.Y.
14221.
Onders may be picked

up at the Center for
Tomorrow May 10 from
Noon-5 p.m. Other ar-

rangements may be made
by calling Joan Sp'9wl at 8390469 or Barbara Meenaghan at
634-4727.

Women's Club plana
ChlneM Banquet
The Women 's Club of
the University at Buf·
falo will have its anitual
Chinese Banquet Sunday. April 2 at 6:30 p.m.
at Dynasty I restaurant.
Garden Village Plaza.
Cheektowaga.

0

�8

''Notes of a
White Black
J Woman''
" I just found ou~ you are a Negro.
I thought we should make an aonouncement over the PA system
and let everyone know that you
are a Negro just to avoid trouble.
You understand."

Judy S.:.I-TNnt,

... High school principal • ·ho thought h• had
hiud a whitt woman, to Judy Scalt's- Trent on
her first day as a French teachtr.

Press). ~bes a pain-

By PATRICIA
DONOVAN
Nt'-ws Bureau Srajf

professor oflaw at UB.
is a light-skinned black
woman whose new
book, "Noles of a
White Black Woman"
( 1995 , Penn Stale

ful and hidden part of the
black experience
America.
Able to "pass" as white but determinedly
black. ScaJes-Trent explores whar iris
like to live si mulraneous)Y inside
and outsideofboth black and white
communities in the no-man ·s land
that has both challenged and defined her sense of self.
Scales-Trent Y.'as raised in
Winston-Salem. N .C .. and
then New York Ciry in a professional. middle-class family wilh a st ro ng and
Y.ell-ariiculated black

heritage . Her greatgrandfather was white,
however.andfromhim
she inherited the light
skin that caused her
to .. look white.. and
to spend a lifetime
questioning the
validity of di screte racial categaries.

T

he book begins with excerpts from a diary she began
in the 1970s. in which she describes theguih she fell at not
being "black enough." particularly " ' hen white
people-not realizing her
racial heritage-used racial slun; in front of her.

When her observations in this regard were
published in the Yalt- Joumalofi.Awand Feminism more than 20 years ago. her essay became
a cult hit. She· s been developing a series of
essays o n such subjects since 1989. because.
she says. she thinks it important to explore how
one works through the problematic iden tity
issues created for light-skinned blacks by the
American experience.
In "Notes of a White Black Woman." the
author does so first by analyzing the social
construction of race in the United States and the

power of racial calegories in ou r personal lives.
She describes racial purity laws. for instance. and how they have operated over 400
years of U.S. history. She demonstrates how

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                    <text>Retlr.......t
~ncent~v..

Who's eligible under
the bill recently
signed by Gov.
Pataki.
----....

2

IEnCineerlftll

lhear..t

They acquire job-

Speckled Bird
Inside look at battle

Int..,.

specific skills in
Career Institute .. .

3

Breast cancer risk,
arelinkd

rewriting the
history books.

c:Ner

Salerno outlines Trustees'
plan to deal with budget cuts
II)' CMR1S11NE VIDAL
Reporter Ed•tor

ESEAROf AT UB hu yielded funber evidence of
aaenetic link between c~ smolrina and breastcaDCCJ risk in bWIWlS.
A study conducted by UB sci""tists hu shown
that female smoJcen who bave !be slow-acting aenotypeforN..acetylttansferase(NAT2),anenzymelmowntodctoJ&lt;ify
arcioogenic &lt;Xlll'lpounds in cig~ 5molce. c:ould bave eight
times tbe mk of developing breast cancer com~ witb women
born with !be Cast-acting NAT2 gene. The two genotypes are
referred to as slow ~~:e~ylalon and fast acetylators.
The study was done in collaboration with tbe National Cancer
Insti!Ule.Results of !be research were presented for !be firSt time
March 19, ~a press briefing at the American Association for
Cancer Resean:b meeting in Toronto.
Olristine •
post-doctonl fellow in !be)m Dc:poutmeat
c{Socialandl'reveoliveMedicine
and lead autboroo !be study, cau11 _,
tiooed that !be findings .must ~

..um.-

.........
___
.........*._
........
........
--

"DDPP
_,_

IIIII

and to dell:rmine .
y
apply to women in geoeral. However, sbe pointed cut that smoking
clearly increased !be risk of breast
caJlCCO' Cor women with !be slow· acetylation genotype in th is
study.Mit is ooc more c:anta'site in
which cigaretle smoking has~
implicaled." sbe stated
The research provides new insight into why previo us
epidemiologic studies may have
failed to show a consistent association between cigareue smoking and
breast c:anta', in !be faa: of evidence that tobacco smoke is a caJlCCO'
mk factor at many olber organ sites. Research by olber investigators
has shown that smokers with !be slow-acetylation genotype for NAT2
bad higher levels of t"""""9's carcioogenic compounds in their
bloodslream and were at increased risk of developing bladderc:anta'.

H

ypothesizing that differences in NAT2 genotype also may be
relevant to the risk of breast cancer among smokers. the UB
researchers anityzed the cbaracterisiics of the NAT2 gene in the
DNA of !59 r"tmenopausal women with breast cancer and 203
cancer-free women in a control group.
Extensive information on smoking history, as well as health
history in general, was collected through personal interviews.
Their analysis revealed a SU'OOg association between smoking and
breastc:anta'forwomen with !be slow-acetylation genotype. The risk
was highest for women who began smoking before 18. lnter\iity of
smoking-the number of cigaretteS smoked per day at two. 10 and 20
years prior to the interView-appeared to be mare significant than
duration or smoking. Among slow acetyla!ors. there was a fivefold
increase in mlc for women who smoked more than a pack a day.
There were no significant associations between breast-&lt;:aneer
risk ,.;,d total years smoked, packs per average year, or pack-years
smoked among rapid acetylators.
~ ftndings on breast cancer require substantial replication. but the potential implications may be important," Ambrosone
said. "If further inves!igations in other study populations reveal
similar associations between NAT2 genotype, cigarette smolcing
aod breast-cancer risk, it would be an important insight into the
. etiology of breast cancer. "'There are many health reasons to'!""
smoking," Ambrosone added. "'Ibesedata suggest that decrea;rng
their risk of breast cancer gives women one more-reason."
Other researchers in the study were lo L. Ff'Cildeo!leim. Sasoo
Graham. John E. Vena. John R. Brasure, Arthur M. Micbalelc, fWso.
mary Laughlin. l ames R. Marshall. and Takuma Nemoto, UB ~­
mcnl of Social and Preventive Medicine. Also. K. Gilleowa10t, Anita
Harrington and POI!i&lt;i. Shields. National Cancer Instilll1e.
a

HE STATE University
of New York Board of
Trustees issued a grim
message last week with
thereleaseofil5 plan for
dealing with the $290 million budget red uction proposed for the system in the executive budgeL
"'Today we wish to demonstrate
what a plan to meer the budget
woul d require. Let no one have any
doubt5 about what is at stal.:e. There
is no room for denial. There mu st
be no vagueness about how devasUtting the course will be if we implement the proposed budget. Let no
one say he or She did not know
what was happening," said Frederic
V _ Salerno. chai r of the SUNY

T

_ Boaal of Trustoea•• M tm:*t 14

press conference.

I

"Higher education for thousands
of New York State citizens of all
income levels is at stake. Communities that have grown up
aroundcampusesa.rethreat1
ened wirh irreparable
harm," Salerno said.
Under the plan outlined
bySalemo,eigbtcampuses
1
and/or hospitals would
close; undtvgradua.tc:tuition
would increase by $).6(X)
per year and all othertuition would
rise proponionally: and SUNY
would carry out a systemwide restruc turing that includes a 30 percent cut in SUNY administration.
lnadditJon, l20programswould
beeJiminatedandanother600curtailed. Thoseprognunscollec:tively
represent28percentofaJISUNY's
prograTmandeverycampus"WODl&lt;l
be affected. Salerno said .

I

Sysremwide, 2.500 jobs could be
eliminated and 20.000 students
denied access. Tile job cuts would
affec:tfacullyprimarily. he
said. ''It is a mix. but a
good portion ofthar would
be facully ."
Salerno steadfastly refused to "identify campu ses or respond to
rumors·· about what camposes or hospitals face
closing. "We know specifically the
campuses that are targeted. We are
not going to disclose that.~ SaJemo
said.
Asked whe.ther il was fair to
indicate thai there would be closings bur not name campuses and
hospitals threatened by the budge~
Salerno replied. " I thin1: it's very
llirbecausnot1ieelaen to wblcft
Connnued on page 2

What's expected next year?
UB 'family' wants to
know
_.....,. __,............,.
II)' CHRISnNE VIDAL
Reporter Edttor

WlurtlatiMcu......t-•of
SUNY' s $290 .,lllloe .......et

-w..

to _ _

....,...cut?

HE LAST sJX weeks
cut - .. v - oi&gt;IICMioft
Ina March 14pressconference.
_..tletiMExhave been a turbulent
SUNY Board of Trustees Chair
ec:utlve BuciCet?
rime for UB and SUNY
Frederic V_ Salerno. with the unaniNo changes to the executive
as the system faces the
mous suppon of the board. ourbudget were made by the governor
loss of nearly one-third
lined a plan to meet the $290 mil bon
during the 30-day amendment peof its state tax su ppon in the 1995budget cut and revenue obligation.
riod. It i now up to the Legislature
96 fiscal year. In addition to a bud(See related story.)
to
determine
what
shape
the
1995get reduction of $75 million, the
96 budget will taJ.:e.
Conttnued on page 4
system also is expected to raist an
addi tional $215 million of . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---.
incomeforatotalreduction
~
I
inslatesupponof$290mil-

T

nt

lio~s

me April 1 deadline
for legislative approval of
the budget draws close. the
university community is anxious for answers regarding
what can be expected next
year. While il is difficult to
speculateabour the final budget and the impacr ir will
have on the State University
of New York and UB. followi ng are answers to some
of themorecom mon lyasked
q uestions.

b

Pat*i sigiiS l'eia"8111811
ii1C611tiV8 for employees
.-rtoftltle UM-M ..._.._reduc:tion plan. Oov. George .P ataki bas
oltfl

signed a reti.remelil incentive for employees age 50
over Wtth at least
10 years of service.
. .
.
EligibleclassifJed employees were required to file a OOO&gt;binding N~
of lnteresl by March 17 in onlec to participate in !be 1995 poogram: April
7 is the las! day an employee may file an irrevocable application with the
retirement system and campus personoel office- Retirement date for
classified employees must be on or before April21 , 1995.
UB faeulty and professional staff who wish to consider the 1995
retiremeQI incentive must ftle a non-binding Notice of Interest With
Continued on page 2

�--.---.-a.

2
RETIREMENT INCEN11VE
Contl~pagel

Penonne Services DO later than the close of
busineuWednesday,April 19. 1995;anim:vocable wrinen nolificatioo of retirement
must be provided to the employee's retirement system DO later than the close of businessooWednesday,July 19,1995. Tbeopeo
period for retirement is May
12-Aug. 10, 1995.
Eligibility criteria for the
early retirement incentive
program are based on an
employee'sageandyearsof
service. Tbe TIAA-CREF

incentive provides three
equal cash payments (not

added to accumulatioris) at 2, 14 and 26
months after the retirement effective date
based on one-twelfth for each year of service
multiplied by 15 percen~ multiplied by the
annual base salary rate in effect on Feb. I.
1995. up to a maximum of 45 percent of
salary.

J

...,e ERS or TRS incentive pro~i des an
I additional one·twelfth of a year of ser·
vice for each yearofservicecredit as of the
date of retirement. up to a maximum of

three years. Retirement benefits are

re ~

duced if one retires before me age required
by one's tier.

In an effort to enable employees to best
be able to make an informed decision about
whether to take advantage of the early
retirement incentive program. information
sessions will be held starting today .
Health insurance information sessions will
be held at 3 p.m. today (March 23) aljd
tomorrow (March 24) in 102 Crofts Hall.

Sessions are conducted by Personnel Ser·
vice staff. and will focus tJn health insurance
benefi ts in retiremen~ Medicare enrollment,

prescription drug coverage and other ben·
efit·s.
A TIAA-CREF representative also will
hold group and individual information sessions today in the Human Resources Development Center: and April 28. May 3.
June 7 and Jul y 12 in 102 Crofts Hall.
Interested employees enrolled in TIAACREF should call 1-800-842·84 12 for an
appoin tment to sc hedule a session. A pri vate consultation ession is about 30 minutes.
Following are some of the questions asked
most often in early retirement incentive program information sessions:
Am I el ... ble to pwtlclpete In this 1,..
eemlve ?
Yes. if you have I0 years of state (and/or

participating employer} service. are at least
50 years of age, and were oo tbe payroll or
paid leave as of Feb. I. 1995.

--~-'

A Wgeted incentive retirement program
means that position titles are selected and
incumbents of those selected titles may
elect to retire under the program if they
meet the eligibility requirements. For
SUNY. the Chancellor determines thewgeted titles.

........ .,

If _,. ....,_ le t.ptMI -.-~

Both TIAA CHEF. EHS and THS

I do -

The Retirement Incentive Program and
retrenchment are separate processes and unrelated.

c....,. ..,.._t
_.....,
t.re_,.. ..,. ....,_

• Eligible Illes ateiD be~ bV 1he SUNY Chancelor.

No. The Chancellor determines the targeted titles.

_.,1_?

- w ll l " - t o • J - 1 . . . . . , . .

If you are eligible to retire under this
incentive. you may continue health insurance coverage by continuing to pay the
employee's share.
You may also convert up to 165 days of
your sick leave accruals to a dollar equivalent of your salary to pay the employee's
share.
8Mecl 011 the alck leaYe accrual
.._for-~--

COllY.,...

--'u•

- . 8t • • wiiiiiiJ _ . , .
cndltrvnout?
-

The monthly credit remains the same for
the retiree"s 1ife.

for-

TIAA CHEF only

EHS and THS only

• Eligible TIAA-CREF members may
retire IWid receive ttvee equal cash
payments 2. 14. IWid 26 months after
retirement based on 1he formt.Aa: onetwelfth ( 1/12) for each year of service,
rrultiplied bV t:i"· mtAiiplied bV 1he
amual salary rate in elfecl on February
1. 1995, up to a rnaxinuT1 ol45% for
lhe llltal of paymen!B.

• For elgible fn111oyees' RelhlmerC
SVslam (ERS) IWid Teachenl' AelireITIIR SVslam (TRS) members, 1he incenlive &amp;lows one to retire wilh an
additional one-IWelf1h (1/12) ala year of
service for each year of seMce credit
one has as ollhe dale of retitamenl. up
10 a rnaxinuT1 of three years.

• Faculty IWid professional staff rrust
file a Notice ollnteresl wi1h Pelsomel
Services bV April 19, 1995. An lrJevo.
cable Notice of Reliremertt rrust be
filed wi1h Pen;omel Services and llAACREF bV .My 19, 1995 wi1h a retirement dale on or before August 10,
11196.

Do I 1oM my -Krlptloa cov...,e?

o. Prescription coverage becomes pan
of the health insurance package provided by
the state.

•-nt

•-nt

• Unclas&amp;llied serW.e employees
rrust file a .Notice of Interest wi1h Per-

90fYW!I Services bV April 19, 1995. An
irriMX:8ble Notice of Relirement rrust
be filed wilh Personnel Services and
1he eligible ~·s retirernenl system (ERS or TRS) bV .My 19. 1995 wi1h
a retirement dale on or before August
10,1995.

Willi cat p8lcl
8CCnlala?
Yes. up to 30 days vacation accrual s.

Ia doll•
of- TIAA.C:REF
-lncentlvedlvldMb)'-p8icl ov • - lnstall......ta, or Ia of- Incentive p a l c l tl-?
The dollaramountofthe cash incentive is
divided by three and paid in three equal
installments at two months. 14 months and
26 months after your retirement effective
date.

• Classified service employees had 10
file a Notice of interest by March 17.
1995. An imM:x:able applicallon for
retirement rrust be filed bV April 7,
1995 wi1h a retirernenl dale on or belore April21 . 1995.

For more information. eligible ~s should caN Jeny Linder, Manager of
Retirement Administration. Personnel SeMoes, 645-2646, ext. 103

__, _ _ for __
How did y o u - up wltlo- ...,_.

.. 011-

TtAA.c:REF

~-· _ ,

The percentages are based on the calculation one-twelfth for each year of service
multiplied by I 5 percent, multiplied by the
annual base salary in effect on Feb. I. 1995.

for,... - -

tlve
8 t - ~·
potor to Sept. 1, 1HZ?

No. Only state service (campus became
state on Sept. I. 1962) as well as service in
the Optional Retirement Program.
c:

SALERNO
Continued from page 1

there is restoration. some of these campuses
might survive ... .To talk about them right
now would be premature and cause devastation to the campuses and/or hospitals if we
prematurely said they were going to close."
He denied that the Board of Trustees·
plan was an attempt to blackmail the state
legislature into reducing the level of cuts
proposed for the State University system.
" Let me tell you. this is no blackmail. We're
responding to a cut we have received. We
have looked at all the alternatives and found
that this is the best way for the State University of New York to proceed. This is not
blackmailing," Salerno said.
" We're hoping and praying there will be
some resloration. We're working with the
governor's office. We' re working with the
Assembly and the Senate, and we're trying
to make sure everyone understands the consequences of this budget. And we ' re hopeful."
S UNY employees will DOl face salary
cOts, Salerno said, because most salaries are

"The governor. .. has come out with a

budget that is painful in many different
areas. It is our obligation as trustees to
respond to that budget cut. "

covered by collective bargaining.
He was adamant that there is no "fat'" left
to be cut from the SUNY budget. "We have
taken over a five-year period of time $200
million in cuts ... .When we benchmark ourselves against any other system. we find
ourselves in a very, very good position competitively. However. having said that , we
don ' t think there ·sa lot offat there." Salerno
said.
"Clearly the governor has received a

mandate from the people. He has come out
' with a budget that is painful in many different areas. h is our obligation as trustees to
respond to that budget cut. If we do have to
respond to that $290 million budget cut... we
will have to cut campuses and slash hospitals. We will have downsized the remaining
programs ... and will have historically raised
iuition."
The best solution SUNY can bope for.
Salerno said. "is some restoration and a

stretch out. lf this we~ a business, we would
try to restructure the business over a period
of time. It's difficult to get all these cuts
accollll'lisbed in the first year."
But.~e added. ""If we have an immediate
$290 miltion cur we will have immediate
closures.... e would find a way to take care
of the ellisti'fi&amp; students (but) we would not
admit new students."
The cuts also mean that relationships the
universities have with affiliated hospitals
could be affected.
There is DO mistaking. Salerno said.'that
'"$290 million will be saved this year. That is
what this budget tells us to do. That is what
our plan enables us to do.
" Accessandavailabilitytothegovemor's
office and to the Assembly and to the Senate
has been very positive. We do have a huge
budget problem in the State of New York
and l don't know how much restoration will
be coming.
"We're running out of time. April I will
be here very soon ...

�...
cuts benefit wealthy, Mauro tells UUP members

3

.... ~----

Pataki tax
llynnECOX

Reponer Staff

r

"The.,_
middle class
is losing the
opportunity
to attain
even a basic
college
degree."

NLY THE wealthiest New
Yorkers can afford Gov .
Pataki's proposed tncut.s, the

O

ex.ccutive director of an Al-

bany-based think tank explained to UUP members at UB recently.
Frank Mauro, executive director of the Fiscal Policy Institute. spoke at a UUP dinner in
Pistachio's oo March 9.
Tbe Fiscal Policy Institute. created by several public interest groups and unions, iocluding UUP, is promoting
several alternate tax cut plans
tliat they claim offer "real
taX relieF to middle-class
tnpayers, in pan by raising
tax rateS on the highest income ~in ~ew Vorl&lt;
and closing~ loopholes
in business ~es that Mauro
calls "corporate welfare." including accelernted
depreciation and the in~t tax credit
1.{1 a recent report, Mauro's organiz.a~ion
claimed that Pataki's budget and tax cut plan
would exacerbate an already huge differential
between the wealthiest and poorest New Yorkers. "Only Louisiana has a larger gap between
the average incomes of the wealthiest and
poorest fifths of it.s population," said Mauro.
Citing a Port Authority study that indicated a high correlation between educational
attainment and income, Mauro specifically
blasted Pataki's proposed cut.s to education
and higher education. "'Only Rhode Island
and Pennsylvania have more people without
' high school degrees, but only three states
have more people with post-graduate or pro-

1

Frank Mauro
speaks March 9 In
Pistachio's .
fessional degrees." he explained. "The disappearing middle class is losing the opponunity
to attain even a basic college degree."
Mauro. a political economist. explained

that taxation generally takes one of three
varieties: progressive. proportional and regressive. " A progressive tax structure slightly
increases the percentage of personal income
paid in taxes as income grows. Proportional,

or fl at taxes. keep the percentage the same
among all taxpayers. Regressive plans actually take a higher percentage of personal
income in taxes from lower income than
higher income taxpayers\' he said.
"People advocate progressive or even
proponionaJ tax plans. Regressive taxation

is something no one would defend. No gm'emment sets out to create that. yet that i!&gt;
what we have in New York.;· said Mauro.
noting that the lo west fifth of New York.
taxpayers spend over 15 percent of their
personal inco me on state and local taxes.
while the middle fifth spends 14 percent and
the top fifth spends just over 10 percenL
~ ough

slashing millio ns of dollars in
social spending. Patali 's tax cut will
save most lo w income New Yorkers just S.l
a week. and middle income earners less than
S3 a week.. And. it would continue to shift tax
burdens to the local level. he pointed out
Betwee n 1986 and 1993. the FPI study con-

I

eludes, personal income grew only 32.2 percent wbile the economy grew 45 .7 percent .
However. property taXes grew 58.3 percent
during the saroe period. ln fact. implementing the long-delayed final leg of a 1987 tax
cut plan. which Pataki has iocluded in hi s
plan. would actually cost many New Yorkers more money. Mauro said.
Married tnpayers with two children and
average itemized deductions for their income
level. and with an adjusted gross income or
S42.880wouldactuallypay $58 more in taXes
as result of this '"tax cut'" Mauro said. Savirigs
would 1101 be realized until adjusted gross
incomes reached $85.000. However, families
with adjusted gross incomes of $850.000
would save $2_250 a year.
Mauro has extensive experience in New
York politics. Under former sta"' Assembly
Speaker Stanley Fink. he served as director
of the Program !Xvelopment Group and
secretary of the powerful Ways &amp; Means
Committee. In 1986. he left the Assembl y t.o
become deputy dtrector of the Rockefeller
Institute at SUNY Albany. Mauro also chaired
the 1ewYorkCilyOlanerRevisionCommis·
sion that overhauled the structure of New York
City government Lhrec years ago. eliminating
the Board ofEstima"' and Apportionment and
returning I"J"KM"e powers to the city council.
' Mauro ex.plained that. under Governors
Carey and Cuomo. Ne" York had already
implemented big tax cuts. "'No other state has
ever reduced personaJ tax rates in such a dra ·
mauc manner." Mauro sa.Jd. From .a high in the
late ·60s of 15 percent New York· s top tax rate
has fallen to 7.8 percent currentl y. Pataki "s four
year plan would draw that down to 5 .9
percent. he said.

Engineering Institute: success stories for interns, companies
lly ELLEN -..AUM

News Bureau Staff
TUDENTS IN college internship programs generally get onthe-job experience through a
summer or pan-time job.
At the Engineering Career
Institute in UB's School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences. student.s get that and much
more: They acquire skills no1 covered in
college classrooms that will give them a
jump on the competition when it's time to
apply for full-time jobs.
Placed as interns with companies in Westem New York, the 47 student.s who enrolled
in ECI last summer following their junior
year. received regular paychecks and three
academic credits. in addition to valuable
work experience in lheirchosen fields. They
anended intensive. mandaloryclasses taught
on campus by managers from local oompanies who explained planning. time management. leadership. teamwork. total quality
management, workplace diversity, financial
issues and communications.
Several of the students have already landed
full-lime positions as a result of their internships.
But the UB st udent s weren't the only
ones to benefit from panicipation in the
institute. According to the 21 Western New
York companies that panicipated. the interns boosted efficiency, provided computer
and process suppon and. in some cases.
helped cut hundreds of thousands of dollars
in manufacturi ng costs.
ln fact. interns played a central role in the
following local business success stories:
• A design and manufacturing team at
Prestolite Electric Inc. in Arcade redesigned
an electronic component of an alternator.
savi ng the company $143.000.
• A new test protocol designed for a laboratory instrument that was about to be re·
leased by Leica Inc.'s Optical ' Products
Division in Buffalo was so successful that
the company has instituted it as a standard
procedure for all new instrument.s.

S

• Steuben Food in Elma decided to pur·
chase new equipment that makes operations
much more efficient and will pay for itself in
only six months.
About 130 student s have al ready signed
up for this su mmer's program and UB is
actively recruiting new companies to participate in the Engineering Career ln st i·
tute.
"'The UB program is not o nl y effective fo r
its students. but it'san academic alliance that
is also beneficial to industry:· said Susanta
Datta. director of engineering at Prestoli te
Electric. ••J highly recommend the program.
and1 thank UB for havi ng the foresight to
develop it."'
At Leica. Bruce J. Yorio. manager of
human resources. said. "Our experience with

UB student Roben Atkin son was an idea l
example of t he win·win experience afforded
by VB· s 1994 career institute. The project
that resulted in the new test protocol was
chall enging in scope and magnitude and it
was critical for Leica' s release of a new
product:· Yori o said.
Initiated by George C. Lee. dean of the
School o fEngineering and Applied Sciences.
the Engineering Career LnstilUte is desi gned
to supplement the technical education UB
engineering students receive.
"UB 's strength in provi ding talent to
local compani es is critical to our manu·
facturing and indu slrial b3se in We s1ern
New York." said Dean Mill ar. assistant
dean o f engineering and direcror of the
institute. He was formerly Praxair's man·

ager of human resources . ..This is impor·
tant at a time when COI"p9rations are restruct uring in order 10 rem-ain compe1i11ve
and un iv ersities ar~ being challenged to
provide a more rele va nt education lo SIU·
dents." he sai d .
Some of last year' s interns already ha' e
full -time job offer. from the companies they
worked for. an unexpected bonus in a job
market that is uncenain. at best.
'" I can't believe it really happened.- said
Patricia Beamish, a senior who will soon
begin working full lime as a mechanicaJ
engineer for Motoro la in Elma, where she
had her internship. Companies interested in
participating in ! he Engineering Career In·
stitute thi s summer sho uld contact Dean
Mill ar at 645-2768.

(

Bobby Militello
performs in S1ee
Concert Hall
March 20at a

benefrt for WBFO,
faced with state
and federal funding cuts. The nationally acclaimed
saxophonist, a
member of the
WBFO Advisory
Committee, joined
the UB Jazz Ensemble lor the
concert_

�4

-aa..- --.-:a
WHAT'S AHEAD?
Continued from page 1
In order to meet the cuts proposed in the
1995-96 executive budget, ecconding to
Salerno, S UNY would have to:
• Carry out systemwide restructuring,
including a 30 Per-cent cut in SUNY administration, for estimated 5avings of $3.S million, as well as reduce support to the statutory
colleges in SUNY and other reductions.
• Eliminate 120 eampus programs, curtail 600 others and make other campus reductions, for total 5avings of $42.2 million.
• lnc:rease undergraduate resident tuition
by $1,600 to $4,250, with proportional increases for all other students, for a total net
reven ue of $188 million.
• Merge or close eight campuses and/or
hospitals, for total savings of $41 million.
Should SUNY pursue this course of action , an estimated 2.SOO jobs would be eliminated systemwide, and 20,000 students would
be denied access to the SUNY system, acconding to Salerno. Twenty-eight percent of
all programs. and every SUNY campus.
would be impacted by the cuts.

AS
A REMINDER,
MAKIN ' COPIES WILL
BE OPEN DURING THE
1995 SUMMER SEMESTERS
AND WILL BE PROVIDING THE
SAME GREAT COPY SERVICES.
INCLUDING
OUR NOTES ON FILE SERVICE

Facultv !
Help vour students
bv putting vour notes
·on file todav !

Located at
the UB Commons.
Watch for our Great
Weekh~ Specials !

LeCIU.
fu.,.••-

-

8Ctlona,lf ...,, - -

ture tM• to....,._
eut I a - exeeutl\'e budll•t?

AI press time, initial meetjngs are being
held with the legislative leadership regarding the trustees' proposal .

~~~

How

,.,.A..,.,

Makin' Cop_ies

will_.,. __ .,,_

- - budlletcuta- .......u.
olol)pUoe?

"We 're making a transition from an institution that was aJmos1 entirely subsidized
less than 10 years-,ago to one that will be
almost entirely revenue driven," said Provost Aaron N. Bloch.
"If everything holds close to what the

"Y"'

Tel 636-8440
Fax 636-8468
520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

govemot" has proposed and the trustees h.ave

• GET YOUR WRITrEN
MORTGAGE

COMMITMENT BEFORE
YOU BUY YOUR NEW

found necessary in their iesponse, students
are going to find the cost of
theireducation ubstantially
higher, with les• .ud a- ailable than before That will
cenainly be a burden on our
undergraduates and as no"''
formulated, it will bean even

I

HOME
PURCHASE YOUR NEW HOME WITH
CONFIDENCE AND LEVERAGE ! !!
TAKE THE STRESS OUT
OF MOR TGAGE
APPROVAL
"Old fashioned" ofU!-onone attention from the
owner and your personal
processor
You can dose weeks
earlier.

Know the moruzage amount
you qualify fo r.

lncruse your~
power when negotiating with
sellers.

No unpleasant surprises. Your
interest rate can be locked in at
application for 60 75 90 120
or 180 davs.

Pre-approval evm for Private
mortgage insurance. (Less than
a 20% down paymtnt.)

EJ
E
IT

•

lsi MDI11fllffD

•
•
•

2nd Mongages
Home &amp;[llity I.Aan.s
OWNER OCCUPIED OR
l/VVESTMENT

-do-to.-....~
Opportunity ,.,....., fundlall _ . ,

"The campaign for the restoration ofEOP
has been very impressive in the way in which
it" s been conducted." said Bloch. EOP students. al umni and program staff have been
mobilized and are waging an extensive campaign to have funding put back in the budget.
'There are encouraging signs. hjany in Albany are impressed with the conduc1 of the
campaign to have EOP restoned."
. Numerous vehicles are still being utili zed to promote the importance ofEOP and
to encourage its restoration. Efforts include
letter writing. telephone calls. petitions.
de monstrations and personal visits to the
capital and to those local elected officials
who will contribute to the decision to restore thi s vital New York State program. As
of yet, however. university officials have
not been apprised of any official changes;

HUNDREDS OF LENDERS

DOZENS OF PROGRAMS

FOR M0R1! INFORMATION CALL:

MAINSTREAM FUNDING NETWORK
~ Martpp BnUr- NYS BanJciD&amp; I:lef*tmeot.
'I'IIird~ Martpp l'loYider

147 Pin o8k Drive, WdlimnsWie, NY 14221

716-636-8297

1!11!::1!:2~1\!::;!:::l~i\\!::i~::i\l!:i\\!::il!:::l!::i\i!~I!:::;!:;!~;!J

greater burden 10 our gradu-

ate students"'
Graduate Costs, he noted. will approach the
level of private universities. espec1ally when
tuition incrnases are combined with the tOlal
elimination ofT AP for graduate students.
The budget propo al also means sludents should expect so me cunailment of
academic programs and possibly the elimi nation of some majors. altho ugh " I can't
begin to tell you where that burden will
fall." Bloch said.
··us is commined 10 ope ning channels
for undergraduates to get their degrees in a
more appropriate period of time," according
to Bloch. "Our students deserve a responsive. accommodating and supponive environment. and we intend to provide that."

1

th e governor's budget as of March 1 did not
ind ica te any restoration for EO P. Hence,

although officials remain hopeful of some
level of restoration, at this point, EOP access for thou5ands of students still is not
part of the state agenda.

__
,__., __
-........---"--

-

, . _ - _ _ . , - 1111

to ...

J.HI.M?
UB has been engaged in contingency
budget planning for the past several weeks.
Groups are working on enrollment planning,
human resource and employment strategies.
including the early retirement program, organizational and administrative review . particularly in the area or general odministrauon
and selected revenue fee oppon:unities. Discussion related to potential targeted neductions has begun. The provost's academic
planning process is examining closely the
capacity of each school and faculty to absorb
neductions in budget. 'These planning effons
have involved broad consullation, includmg
the Faculty Senate Executive Committee
and the Senate Budget Priorities Committee.
as well as discussjons with vice presidents.
deans and department chairs.

--key---

Ia-

State'o

- -... ......-?

• Employees must be members of the
Optional Retirement Program (TIAACREF). Employees' Retirement System. or
Teat!ters' Retirement System.
• Eligible employees must be at least age
SO with 10 years of service credit on the
effective date of retirement and encumber a
targeted title.
• For eligible Employees' Retirement
System and Teachen' Retinement System
members. the incentive allows one to retire
with an additional one-twelfth of a year of
service for each year of service credit one
has as or the date of retirement, up to a
maximum of three years.
• Eligible TIAA-CREF members rna)
retire and receive three equal cash payments
2. 14 , and 26 months after. retirement based
on the formula : One-twelfth for each year of
service. multiplied by IS percen~ multiplied
by the annual salary rate in effect on Feb. I,
199S, up to a maJCimum of 4S percent.
• Eligible Classified Service employees
had to file a Notice of Interest by March 17,
1995. An irrevocable application for retire ment must be filed b)' April 7, 199S with a
retirement date on or before April21. 1995 .
• Eligible Faculty and Profe sional Staff
must file a Nmice of Interest with Personnel
Services by April 19. 199S. An irrevocable
NoLice of Retirement must be filed wilh
Personnel Services and TIAA -CREF by July
19. 199S with a retirement date on or before
August 10, 199S.
Will-

bulfCIIt_..,- .....tt

lnlayofraetUB?
Depending on the siu of the
neduction and the guidelines provided by
SUNY Central and the trustees it may be
necessary to retnench at UB. The trusetts'
plan calls for selected program neduciipn
and elimination that, depending on the sa
ings requirement, could lead to the need to
go beyond faculty/sta/T vacancies in meeting the requined reduction.

cam{u.

furtou.,. -to

I a - - · .,._1111 to • - pink allp

- - "....
" ' If
_....,... __ 't _ SUNY
_.....,
17

No. Because SUNY has a continued appropriation through June 30. J99S. it is unlikely that the university will be affected by
any failure to enact a New York State budget
by April I . Additionally. state civil service
laws require that workers be told at least 20
days in advance if furloughs are planned.
March 12 was the deadline for notification
of an April 1 layoff. And. according to a
report published March 14 by the Associated
Press. Gov. Pataki has said the state's 211.000
workers will have a job on April I and, with
the exception of the legislators. the legislative
employees and the executive employees. will
continue to be paid.
-

�-----.-...

C-lassrootn
Technology

5

UB hlc:ulty In foreflont of electronic developments
for tellchlnc, test1n1 todlly'a aWdenta
II)'EUDI--.wtll
News Bureau Staff

T

HE ELECI'RONIC classroom is
becoming a reality at UB. Technology is changing the way that
professors teach, test and communicate with students.
Roben Allendoerfer, associate professor
of chemistry, believes that students who
have learned about molecules by using computers in thei~r
ahsand for homework cannot
be tested effi ·vely using traditional methods. He and a Ueague at the University of
Wisco_r&gt;9n.-.a Madison have developed
"VizQuiz," a software program that tests
students taki ng the general introductory
chemjstry course.

VizQuiz q uestions include movies. pic·
lures o r animation, plus text. Students find a
"Buy a Hi nt" option in the program, with
hints costing several points. With clicking of
a computer mouse, a helpful hint pops up.
"In the new world of multimedia education, students have been educated by computers, and by movies and video games,"
Allendoerfer said. " If they've learned to
move molecules around using a mouse, I
don'tlc:now that it's fair to give them a paperand-pencil test." The program. being published by the lou mal ofCh•mica/ Educmion,

will be &lt;listributed nationwide in the fall.
Allendoerfer and colleagues at other SUNY uni -

versity

centers

have

received a grant from the
state Office of Educational
Technology to write an

eleclronic introductory
chemistry course that will
be available statewide on
the Internet.
"The idea is to incorporate movies and animation
and make a talking. living textbook for the
cou=," said Allendoerfer. The text could
then be used in conjunction with chemistry
courses taught at community colleges or

"The idea is to
incorporate movies and
animation (1JUi make a
talking, living textbook"
1

other educational institutions. Ambitious
high-school students (or anyone else for that
matter) who have access to the I ntemet could
also explore the world of chemistry this
way."
In the field of geology. a new interactive
computer program for an introductory coo=.
developed by Marcus Bursik. 3l\Sistant professor of geology at UB. makes geology
leclures much more exciting.
~

program. which is projected onto a
movie-sized screen in new high-tech lecture halls. demonstrates geological phenomena such as volcanoes and landslides. Unlike
-other programs that have mostly point-and-

I

click features. this one
shows how changing
a specific variable,
such as the viscosity
of a lava now. can aJter the speed or outcome of a geological event .
"Other people call theor programs "i nteractive.· when they are really just fancy 'pointand-click ' programs that makes things
move ," said Bursik. "But our program is
truly interacrive because it changes calcula·
tions. and shows what will happen based on
those changes. Since the program really
makes the: material come aJive. the students
find the material easier to understand."

FSEC delays action on proposal for financial disclosure·
EMBERS of the Faculty
Senate Executive Committee recently balked at a
subcommittee's preliminary
proposal that could institute
extensive financia1 disclosure requirements
for fac ulty and staff.
Biochemistry Professor Philip Yeagle.
chair of the Committee on Research and
Creative Activity. explained at the FSEC' s
March 8 meeting that federal regulations
promulgated last summer require that the
university develop a policy on C'l"flicts of
interest and fi nancial disclosure by June 30.
Although the full scope of these federal
regulations is unclear. and may require only

incidental disclosure of potential conflicts of
interest by faculty seeking grants for research for now. Yeagle said that a broader
policy should be developed.
"We are interpreting the inlent of the
federal regulators as requiring sweeping disclosure;· said Yeagle. ··and we are preparing
for that."
Several FSEC members expressed concern for privacy issues that could be compromised by such financial disclosure. Others
were concerned with the impact connict of
interest regulations could ha ve on outside
consulting by faculty members. The FSEC
will consider the full text of the Yeagle
committee's proposed policy at their next
meeting.
The FSEC also delayed action until their

Child C•e

Cider
Nita
10111 Yllr

Assemblyman
Sam Hoyt
speaks March
10 at University
at Buffalo Child
Care Center.

Celebrating its
1Oth anniversary. At podium
with Hoyt is
Vickie
Loghinanieh,
director of the

center.

next meeting on a codification of requirements for students to ~ in academtc "good
standi ng." Vt\.e Provost for Un~J,ergraduate
Education Nicolas Goodman called the proposal. "not a change in policy. but an interpretation and codification of current policy.··
ost fina~cial ~id, as wei~ as~ ability
to pantcJpate '"many umve.rsJty-spon·
sored extracurricular activities. is predicated
upon mamtaining good academic standing.
said Goodman.
A proposed. the policy would require
that (I) the student cumulative grade point
average be 2.0 or above. (2) the student's
grade point average for the most recent semester be 2.0or above. (3) at least 75 percent
of all credit hours for which the st udent

M

registered in previous semesters at UB must
have been completed. and (4) at least 75
percent of all credit hours for wh1ch the
student registered in the most recent semester must have been completed. Junior and
senior students. in addition. must have been
acc.pted by a depanment or program offering a major.
Goodman. however. stressed the need for
nexibility. rather than rigid rules in this area.
Issues such as student withdrawals due to
illnes and difficulty getting .into desired
major programs also need to be considered
in designing a final policy. he added. However. Goodman noted. for more than 80
percent of srudents who are n01 in good
standing. the problem is their grades.

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS
Nomln.tlonsare belnt -=cepted for the Professional Staff Senate (PSS) 1995
Outstanding Service Awards. Winners receiveS 1.000 and cenificatesof recognition
at the universitywid&lt; awards luncheon. to be beld May I 7 in the Otnter for Tomorrow.
Ilene Aeischmann. assistant dean for alumni and communiCations in the law
school. chair of the PSS awards committee. notes that a workshop and brown bag
lunch will be held March 28 at Noon in 545 O' Brian Hall to help those
want to learn
mort about the nomination process. Award criteria wiU be reviewed ~jnstructions
given on putting together a successful nomination dossier. Deadline for completed
dossiers is Friday April 21 at4:30 p.m. Dossiers must be delivered to 310 O' Brian Hall.
Outstanding Service Awards recognize members of the professional staff who go
beyond the nonnal scope of their responsibitities to make outstanding community service
contributions. To be eligible for the awards, an individual must be a current full-time
professiol);li staff employee ofUB. the Research Foundation. the UB Foundation or the
Faculty-Stud&lt;nt Association. The employee must have completed at least two years of
continuous full-time professional staff service by January. 1995. Previous winners an:
ineligible for five years after receiving this award. Criteria for selection include:
a Service-the scope and depth of the individual's past service to the university
and/or to the community that is distinct from service expected in hiSitter job
description. This may include religious. charitable. scientific. educational. artistic.
literary or civic involveme nts that enhance the quality of life.
• Exceilence-specitic evidence indicating excellence within his/her professional staff position. Grounds for distinction could include. but are not limited to.
evidence of leadership. commilment. creativity and initiative. Materials supponing
the individual candidate must include detailed examples of both service and professional excellence. Funding for the awards is provided by the UB Foundation. Inc.
For more in formation or nomination packets contacl Dene Aeischmann, 6452107or645-2115.

w""

�6.

---

l'lolp Jlldlo&amp;. Snodeat Ulrioo
~- Nonb Campus. 9 p.m.

S2. $3.50. Call 64S-29S7.

___

Pucol ~piano. C...... for

.,.

.... AtU. Compua. • p.m
$2l). $30, SlS. Coli W-5000.

---

-n.Pkif&lt;rn.c...a

p.m. SIO. Sl2. SIS. 0111139-&amp;540.

FRI-DAY

24

RIDESHARING
makes for easy commute:
sign up today!

PDIA\'IIIC...__
Voidlae hDCliH utd 0,....

Car troUble got you down? Sick of driving? Whether
you want'to share rides once a week or daily, help
for faculty and stall who commute is on the way! A
new RIDESHAAING program is being organized by
the Environmental Task Force's Transportation Subcommittee. Send in the coupon (below) and you'll

fuoctioto, David A. Bloom.
MD.. Chief of P..tiauic Urol·
Oil' aad Prof..- of SutJ&lt;tY.
Univ. ofMicbigan at AnD AI·
bor. Kinch Auditorium.
Otildtoa'a Hospital. 8 LUI .

receiveaquestionnaireaboutwhere~ive, when

- A Y I Af 4 PUIS

coa......-of-aad

you arrive at and leave campus, e . You'll be
contacted by the subcomminee with
of other
UB people in your area interested in
·ng a ride .

tb&lt; BuiiWI.Itios: 1....-...t

Techoolo&amp;io&amp; aad Scholarly
Rrsourus Confereoct-. 1bc:
Buffalo Manion. North Cam·
pus. 8 :30 a.m..... :30 p.m. Call
64S -2946.

r---~----------,
Seve pal Seve - : r l
S.ve the envl.....-.tl

-

~AL

- A N D IICIEHCE

Be part of an exciting new RIDESHARING
program at UB! If you would like to get involved . simply fill out the following and we
will send you more information.

M omory Ia Adiroadac:k
Latr..., Dr. Olarieo T. Dnscoll.

---... .... ....
.......... WdiiC , . _ . -

............... .,....

c....-.--~

WORK PHONE

E-MAIL

Pfease return to CK'Idy Guguentz. TranspcxtatiOI'l Chaff
U8 Envuorrnenlal TasK Force, 140 Helm,
Nonh Csff&lt;&gt;us

nwa-SIUdeat UDJOD
Thu~e&lt;. Nonb Compos. II :30
p.m. S2, S3.50. Call 64S-29S7

----_ .._ ___
--~..................
~

~~.1-ae

......,.Ow

~~.........,

F.U: . . . . . . . MW.I1.I.

T H .U R S DAY

Syracuse Uoiv. 140 Keuer
Nonb c:ampu.. II a.m.

--~

-~-

c.rtlrocalt l'rocram U.
Gen&gt;ato!opcal Nurolq. 4:3().
7:30p.m. Sessions Nn ThuB ·

day• through May 4. SIS, $50
p&lt;T ,..sioo. Call829-3291 foe
regiscration informJijon; regis- tratioo deadline is five working

days before each session .
EniiCS Ill 8-IEDICAL
IIISEAIICII ~IUM
Dettpt\oa 1.111 R~ : Tbe

Lump«tomy·Mutectomy
Study, Donald Marqujs, Ph .D
Unt\'. of Kansas. Buller Audito·
num. Shennan South Campu5 .

5: 15-7·15 p.m.

2~

UUU FILM SDIIU

coronary micrO\'CSsc:h.. Or.

SUMMERFARE TMEATER
Nunst'n.st 11. Pfetfer Theater

C~UMDNARYC~R

SOli NAil
Endothelium-dependem and
·ndependcnt cont rol of human
Fntncis ~1111cr. Ikpt. of Mcd •cinc . Un&amp;\'. of Io wa . lOS
Shennan South Campu1) 8 a.m

&amp;lit Epoqut.. Stocknt Umon
Tht:at.er Nonh Campus 6 30
p.m S2. S3 .SO Call 645-2957
UFE WORKSHOP
An lntrodudion to MediU·
tion, Paula Schank 7-9 p m
Call645-6125 for regt!&gt;trauon
mformauon .
FACULTY RECITAL IERIU

Danit l McCabe. bariton~. Slee
Concrn Hall Nonh Campus 8

p.m. S2. S5. S8

8 pm SI O. SI2. SI5 Ca ll
839-85-10

IIANAGEMEIIT ROUNDfABLE

IUIIDNS
ECMC Finandal Turnaround
&amp; CurTeDI Heallb-Can
Trrnds, Paul J, Candino, CEO
Ene County MedK."al c~nter
Fanny's Resuurant. 3500

Sheridan 8-9 a.m. S40 ~r SC!t·
sion or S120 for all four ~ !t­
sions. Call 645-3200.
IIUITAR SfUDEJITS RECITAL
Studf:nts or Joann~ Castf:ll.ani.
Baird Recital Hall , Nor1h Campus. Noon.

UFE WORKSHOP
lntroduction to the Wortd
Wid~ Web and HTML Brandon Plcwc . 2:30-4:30 p.m. Call
645-61 25 ror registr.J.uon mfor-

Buying aHome
P - J.MarwJr.lellds
• Life Workahop29 on~ of buying

·--

-YI.EC'IUB
T'bo at Nopotism Ia a
Kloublp-llaod Primate DomiDr. 11eman1
~- Dep&lt;. of Aalhropoiogy.
Uruv. ofMontreat 261 Minard
Fillmon: Academic Ccnu:r.

..... s,.._,

Nonb Campus. I p.m. Spomon:d
by the Dep&lt;.
Aalhropolocy
aad the Gradual&lt; Group ia Evolutionary BioiOI)' aad EoolocY

--

CCW184MMI
Wom&lt;a'sllaltk: Sdooa: aad
Politics, K&lt;yDOC&lt; Speal:.er.
Judilh LaRosa. PIID .. R.N ..
FAAN. Tlllaae Uaiv. Rqi.uaoon deadline is Marc:b 20.
Sheraton Inn. 2040 Waldea

Ave. 8:4S a.m.-3 p.m. SI O. S20
__
,__fER
Ca11645
-3426or688-1721
NuutaJ~t

n. Pfeifer Theater. 4

p.m. aad 8 p.m. SI O. $12. SIS
Call839-8~ .

~-

Leba- bull'ot diJoaor, bdly
daaca', Uw baDcl. Center fCM'
Tomonow. Nonh Campus

6 p.m. SI S Call691-6202.

SUNDAY

or

, . . . . _ , . UCfUIIE

......_......, Kai Nelson. 280
P""V'orth Campu•. I o30 p.m.
MYIIIU. ucnME
Diuipatioa aad Its DdichU.
Prof. StuartS. Antman. Um\'. of
Marylaad I"'' Diefendorf.
Soolh Campu•. 3 p.m.
E~ICS SEIIIIIAII
lot~rtemporal Population Ethk:s., Waller Bouen. Umv of
Waler1oo 414 Froocz.a.L.. North

Campus. 3:30p.m.
CHEIIIIntY ~tuM
Kindia o( Bromtdt Ox.tdatioo
by Peroxomolybdnlum (VI):
A Synthetic AMtogw of Vanadium Bromope.roxidut.,
Prof Manha Rtynolds. Colgate
Umversuy. 215 Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematic) CompleA
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

26

_,...,__ID
UD.KD.It 0. Pfeifer Tbcat.Cr.
3 p.m. SIO. Sl2. SIS . Call
839-8~.

DRQAJIIIECifAL
Micbad Barl&lt;e, Dq&gt;&lt;. of Mu..c
Sleo Concen Hall. North Cam·
pu• S p.m. $2. SS. S6. $8. For
&amp;nformation C11l64S-2921.
IT. JDMI'II'I DAY DtiiNEII
ltaliaa bulfot diaaor, spon50R&gt;CI
by lh&lt; Italian Srudeor Assoaatwn. St. Joseph' ' University
Ouut:h. AD you can c:al. S3. Proceeds benefir Ouldron •s Hosporal

UUU FILII SERIES
Pulp F'"ICtioa. Student Umon
Theater Nonh Campus 6.30

AU*NI EVEIIf
Ea.gineerinc Studf:nt Awards/
Dean 's Recqnion and Concut. Slet Concert Hall . Nonh

and 9 p.m S2. S3.50 Call b-15 2957

64S-2768.

IIUFl'ALD I'HIUIARMDNIC
DIICNUTRA

Saiot-S.ens: two Frmcb masl&lt;rpio&lt;u utd .... .s. 1"?mlo.-. or • worit by
Caaoda'sleadlq &lt;om pose:r, Muimiano
Valdes, conducung:

Campu!i . S:J0-7 :30 p m CaJI
M.M. DEQREERECITAL
Bon.c· Yf: Han, piano, Ms. Han
IS a student of Prof. Frina
Ar5chansb. Baird Recital Hall

North Campus. 8 p.m. Call 645·
2921.

MONDAY

27

AIICIIITEC1URE EXH!a~
B.amittoa Houston Lownif:.

IEIIINAR
Sexual M:lrttion in a Coral
R~fYash, Dr. R~n Warner.

Dyeu Exhibirion HaD. 335
Hayes. Soolh Campus. Gall&lt;l)
houn. F...,_ Through 4121/95.
Call829-3485. 1321.

Univ. of Cali forn ia, Santa Bar-

. - . n 1 Y IEIIIIWI

·-ICAL SCIENCES

bara. I 14 Hochstetler. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

T.-...locatioos, T...-ription
F.aonaadT~D~~

IM'EWDreams and Unbullby Cultural Values, Pat L Smith. 4-6

mlas, Dr. P&lt;rer Aplan. RPCI .
I 3-48 Farl&gt;&lt;T. Soolh Campu•.
4p.m.

p.m. Caii64S-6125 for registration information.

~ YDIITM, LAW AND
10C1AL POUCY COLLDQUIUM

Violent JuveDlk Cf"i.me and
l'llbllc Polky, Prof. Bany
Field. Univ. of Minnesota- 280

�7

_u,.___..,_u
l'ld. Nonb Campus. 4 p.m.

cordial bcboala, Dr. John
Canty. Dept. of Medicine. 108
Shennan. South Campu5. 8 Lm.

~­
Ex...... C..... flllbo
Gulli&lt; CWoridc CUud.
Jolin CUppolcui, Pb.D. Univ. or
Cincinnati. Scbool of Medicine.

..--

I 01 Shcn!wl. South Campu•.
4:13p.m.

EIIo!- (or doo AJplriDa Prof. - . I , Tanya Parin-Jolmson.
4:30-6 p.m. Call 64S~I2S roc
rqiltrllioo informal....

..--

MJ(M ud F..U oboul Crimtnallo•-..tipllou, Tbet&lt;sc R.

Banas. 7-1 p.m. Coii64S~I2S
for re&amp;Jsrration information.

..__

Tloo Worid fll &amp;-.all, l im

Gctland. 2;30.4:30 p.m. Call

..................... _
--__
...........................
64S-6125 for regisuaaion informatioe.

L-A.rpalla&lt; c-tnlloe ...

a.-,..-m..ula

~- Rala, Mohammed
A . Tabrizi-Fard. CSOI ~e.
Noeth Campus. 3:30p.m.

__,

..... T............... _

TUESDAY

~~

NMAftiC .COWDIENCE
AD~ Intbo

~-~
Mmin
Hoffinao. MD. Men:y
HospitaL Cor-'um A. 8:30 Lm.

----

Prorasioa.al Staff Senate OutAaodlD&amp; Senic&lt; Aword Nomiutorr' Brown Bac LuM:h.
S4S O' Briao Hall. Nonb Cam·
pu•. N00&lt;1. Caii64S-2107 or

-

64S~IIS .

_,.ua_

D iai-4·M- by Diana
Raznovich. Centc:r for the An..s

Rehearul Worbbop. Nonb
Campus. 12:3G-I :30 p.m. F=
admission.

..--

Eifed.lw: Coauauaication, UB
Counseling Center Staff. 5:307 p.m. Caii64S~I2S for regis·
tratioo information.

--.---~

Introductory Physical Assessmeat or the Aduh . 6-9 p.m.
S2SO. Coll829-3291 for regis·
tration information.

MUSIC LEC1VIIE

Jau., A~rica' 1 Unique Art
Form, Dr. William H. Coles.
Buffalo State College. Registn ·
lion deadline was 3122 . Life long
Learning Center. Buffalo State
College. 7- 10 p.m. SIS . Call
878-S906.
THE " ' - 1 1 1 TOLE
COfFEEHOUSE

Opea Mic Nitr. Harriman HAll.

South Campus. 8 p.m. Free coffee
and free music. CaH 645-2957.

AtllooJ 811:10 ............

......... Unlolo ,..,....._
Group in Evolutiooary Biology
and Ecology and lhc Dcp&lt;. or

=~--

B&lt;iat' VoundriJi Relotioa-

~ CouDKiing CeoLef. 14SE
Stude-nt Union. Nonh Campus.
Noon-I p.m.

-

- . n L PAIIII STAR'
T bt Role of TrMP~ l ln Tumor
lnvuioa and R.tsistaDCt to
Iora:tion, Paul Soloway. Ph.D.
RPCI . 12:30 p.m Call 84S·

3261.

~

Cb.lo ...... Nuc:kolla, Dept of
Aolhropology. Emory Univ. 280
l'ld. Nonb Campu5. 2 p.m.

.._

--NG

TaiiDr&lt;d Acborbot&gt;u, Keilh

Gubbins. Cornell Univ. 206
Fumas. Nonh Campus. 3:4S p_m.

--~ft
Etlolc:al, Philooopbical, and at

tho ....,.lime Ut&lt;nry, Caleb
Thompson . 6114 Baldy. Nonh
Campu.s. o4p.m .

- A Y S AT 4 I'WS
Bilinpal Pootry and Proso
Readia&amp;. Christian PrigenL
Center for the: Arts Screening
Room . North Campus. 4 p.m.
UF'EWOIIUTht Business of the Bun,
James Slayton. 4 -5:30 p.m . Call
645-6J2.S for regi!OIDIIOR Information.
QEOUIQY LEC1VIIE

Higb Resolution Sequena
Stratigraphy in thr Albert a
Basin, Dr. Roger Walker.
McMaster Univ. 210 Natural
Sciences &amp; Matht:matJCS Complex.NorthCamru 4.10pm

AWIINI EVEHT
Human Sen'icrs Caretr FW.
North Campus. 5:30-7:30 p m.
Coii64S-68S7 .
UUU FILII SEJIIES
Ukranian Fl lm. Studtnt Umon

pus. F=. Sponaor&lt;d by lhc

Office of Teachin1 Effectiveness. To rqia.er. ca1164S-3364
or E-mail to v443tplx@ubvms

-

- . - A L SCIEJICU

Coa..wdiou bdween Ori&amp;i.ns
o( Replialtioa ud Ori&amp;im of
CaMer, Dr. David Kauffnan.
Univ. ofNonh Carolma 11
0\lipel Hill . 114 Hcx::h tettn
North Campus. 4 p.m

..--

Dreams and Unhealthy C ul tural Vai.Hs, Pat L Smith. 4-6
p.m. Caii64S~I2S .

lilA-TICS COUOQUIUII
BiaJcebra ArtioGs, Twills, aod
Ullivtnal Defonnatioa Formula. Prof. Tony Giaquinto, Untv.
of Mlelugan. I 03 Diefendorf
South Campus. 4 p.m.

EDUCA-.--

Certil'ocato Pr-ocram In
GeroaiOiockal Nunin&amp;- 4:307:30 p.m. Seuions run Thurs·
day• lhroogh May II. SIS. SSO
per session. Call8,_29-329 1 for
registration infot·n~uion ; rtiU·
tratioa deadline is five working
days before each sns1on

Halo Spooei&gt; and

u............,~

Lucinda Finley. J.D. 5-7 p.m .
Ca11645-61 25 fOJ registrltion
information .

-AI.

IIESEAIICN

COUOQUIA
Scie:ntirac Miscondud : Fraud
and Pla&amp;iarism, o,, td Tnggle.
Ph.D .. Dean. UB School of
Phannac)' . Butler Audttonum,
Shennan South Campus
5:1S-7c15 p.m
UUU FIIJIII SEJIIES

Mqazoot 2J Pan I. Studem
Umon lbeater. N0r1h Campus
6:30pm. S2. S3 50 Call 645 ·
2957
COIII'UTDI SEMINAR
Jntrmet Cliaic: Govrrnmrnt
Resouru:s.. 110 Lod."'ood
North Campus. 7 p.m. fu~r.•1o ·
tration requtred. Contact
Gemma DeVmney. MS-2817 or
lolgemllUI Ciflubvm
UUU FILII SIEitiES
Mquone .23 Part II. Studc:nt
Union Theater North Campus.

Theater. North Campu~ 6 ;30
p.m. S2. Sl-SO. Caii645-29S7 .

9 p .m S2. S3 .SO. Ca11645 -2957

UF'EWBuying a Home. Peter J. M au~r
Jr. 7-9 p.m. Ca11645-6125

EXHIBITS

OPUS: CU.UICS UVE
Soprano and Counlt:r-Teoor,
Cris:ten Gregory and Theodo~
Gentry . Allen Hall. South Campus. 1 p.m. fret' admission.
ENSIEII•LE SEitiES

INSTITUTE FOR ADDICTIONS
lnUDIES AND TRJUNING
Rn:istana and Cont rol in Ad didion.s Tru.tment: An pdate, Shirley Kucera Reiser.

Center for Tomorrow. Nonh
Campu5. S60. Caii64S·6140
f'NAIIIIACY SEMINAR
Promc: Cootronrsy, Edward
Wang. 248 Cooke. Nonh Cam·
pus. 8-9a.m.

UB Wind Ensem ble, Sarah L.
Mc Koin. conductor. Slet Con ·
ttn Hall. North Campus. 8 p .m.

Call 64S-2921.
UUU FIIJIII SERIES
Mac:ross ll. Student Union
llleater. North Campus. 9 p.m
S2. S3 .SO. Caii645-29S7.

COIII'\ITDI SEMIIIAR

Internet Clink: Governmrot
Resources. 110 Lockwood.
Noeth Campus. 9 a.m. Preregis·
tration required. Contacl
Gemma DeVinney. 645-28 17 o r
lolgemma@ubvm.

-YL.ECT\111£
Tho Ecology or Peace, Dr. Roben K. DenlaD., UB DepL of An·
thropology. 261 Millard
Fillmore Academic Center.
Nonh Campus. II :30 a.m.
Sponsored by the Gntduale

-

C~YCEHT£11

C hronic adaptation to Myo-

roc

r,.,.,,

Break's Not
Over Yet!
Check out these
Apple price breaks!

$1139
Savings of $308

-~

Moltlaoll...-alilao In tho Class. . -. 218 Talbcn. Nonh Cam-

__ -..-.....

-ITIVE SCIENCE

S p.m. Sunday. Ukewite, Victor
Burcin's ""The Encr wiJI be
5howio&amp;thtau&amp;b April 22 ia the
C&lt;ater
the Arts Gallery. I&lt;C·
onc1 floor. Admission is
pllery boun are 10:30 un.-1
p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and
Noon -S p.m. Sunday. Cai164S6'JI2or64~76. Simoll
Unser's "Red v~- ruas
throup July 31 ia the U&amp;htweU
Gallery; admisag is free. Gallay houn are IO:JO t .rn.-1 p.m.
Wednesday-Saturday and NOO&lt;IS p.m. Sunday. Coii64S~I2 .

•EETOW SNOW 01'£NS
lliAJICtl 24

Master of Fine Ans candtdate
Chnstine Beeto\1-'' s thests exQtblt
opens March 24 wtth a recephOn
from 7-9:30 p.m. tn the Center
for the Arts. Her tllustrntJon~ w1ll
~mam on d•splay in the An ~ ­
panment Gallery through Apnl
10. Galler)' hours are Tue)(b)'.
IOa.m.-5 p.m .. Wednesda)·
Friday. 10 a.m.-8 p.m .. and Sat·
urday II a.m.-8 p.m.

COHTUIUING EXN.. ITS
"Consuuction. Intention. Det:ul ·
Five Projects from Five Swiss
Alt'hitecu.. runs through Mm::h
24 in the James Oyett Exhibition
Hall on the third noor of Ha)·~­
Architects re~t ed include
Herzog &amp; de Meuron . BurthaJter
&amp; Sumi , Meili &amp; Peler. Dtener &amp;
{);ener. and Peter Zumthor-. Gallery hours are Mondays 9 a. m.-8
p.m .• and Tuesdays-Fridays. 9
a.m.-5 p.m. Adrian Piper's ex ·
hibit, ..Decide Who You A~ ...
will be up through April 22 at the
Center for the Ans Gallery (first
Aoor). Admission is free: gallery
hours are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
Wednesday-Saturday and Noon·

NOTICES
Nominations IU't! bc:in11CCCptod
for the Profcssiooal Surf Sena~e
Ouwanding Service A .....d.
presented eKtt year 10 members
of UB's professional staff -...-oo
make OU15tanding communiry
scrvtce contributions. To be
eligible . individuals must be
current full-time profe ional
staff employees of UB. the Resca.rch FoundatJon. the UB
Found.atton or tht Faculty-Stu denl As-sociation. and must have
completed at leas;t 1wo years of
conrinuous full -time profc:sstOnal staff sen·icc by JanuM)'
1995. Nommat1ons must be~­
cti\ied, walh doss.en comp~te .
no later than 4 :30p.m. Fnday ,
April21 , 1995. Nommauons
11\1)' be submitted to, and mort
tnformation obtained from. Ilene
Aetlhmann , Clair. Profeuional
Staff Senate Awards Commit tee . 310 O'Brian Hall. North
Compuo: 64S-2107 or 64S~IIS .

C-DIEJIT IIPEAKEit
The Univcts.ity Commencement
Committee seeks a student reprt·
sentattve to address graduates at
the I 49th Univenity Corrmlc:oce·
ment. scheduled for I0 Lm. Sunda) . May 14 in Alumni Aieoa.
All graduating senicn an the
f.wllia or Arts and Ltuen.
Natuntl Sciences and Mathemat K'S, Social Sciences and Spec'JIJ
and lndJvtduahzed MaJors an
eligible to X'1 as rommenctme:nt
speal..er N1colas D Goodman.
VI Ce pt"'\'OSI for undergraduate
educaiJoo. wtll dwr a select ton
commJitee rompnscd of faculty .
starT. and students Semon who

Drivel-·-

Perfonrut 636

CAU.FOR~-.-s

• 8MB RAM • 250MB Hard Drivo
and CDROM

$1925
Savings of $335
Performa 6115CD
• 8MB RAM • 350MB Hard Om-. •
IS"ColorMorutor • CDROM Dnv~
• 14.41&lt; Modem and~·

$2737
Savings of $183
~~~~;:JB~~s~o;.
'

and Moden!

$2787
Savings of $633
Power Macintosh 7100
• 80MHz • 16MB RAM • 700MB
Hard DriY&lt; and CDROM Drive!

.........

~

....

~

Wish 10 be C'OflSidefed mu~l \UbmJI a v.nuen ventoo of then
speech to Goodman Each ftnal ·

tSI wtll presan h1slher

add~

befOf"'." the oommmee. and the
wtnmng sptteh w1ll be presented
b) tht: Sludent at com~menl
Spetthti should be no longer
than MX mmutes . Selectton wtll
be ba.sed on rdevancy. appropnattO(ss of content. and delt\'er') .
Entries must be submitted by
WedMSday. April S to tht: Student Speaker Sti('CtJon Commit Itt , cJo Ntrolas D. Goodman.
V Jet Prov~ for Undergraduate
Education, 549 Capen Hall.
North Campus. 645 ·2991
CIIEAnYE CIIMT CENTIEit
1be Creative Craft Center. lo·
caled at 120 Fillmore. Elhcou
Comple:... North Campu . offers
us Spnng '9S Craft Wortshop&gt;
stanmg tht- wtt.l. ofMan::h 20
Worlshops a~ scheduled tn
weavmg. crocheting and kntlltng.
quihmg. Br.u.d ian embrotder) ,
g:reeung cant destgn. potter)'.
tntermediatt ponery. canoomng.
baste photognaphy. natu~ photograph). creative photography.
color photography. advanced
color photography, aenal photography. darboom techmques,
JC'""'elry construction. begmmng
stan1ed glass. advanced Rained
glass, pottery and multtmecha for
children. All workshops run from
7-10 p .m one night a week for
Sill weeks. except children' s
classes on Saturday monungs.
Fees a~ $30 for students and $50
fgr all ochers; early sign · up IS
advised. For more mformat1on.
ca11645-6125 or 645-2434

FUU.-T CIIIANT
COIIPEm1011 OI'£NS

The offi cial opening of competl ·
uon for 1996-97 Fulbright
Grants for gntduate study in
acadt:mic fields and professional
traini ng in tht: c~atJ\'e and per·
Com~nued

on page 8

Episcopal Campus Ministry

"Bri~~ng the Gap"
Holy Eucharist Rite U
Every Sunday at 2 p .m.
Tht Commons Suite 100
AND

Every Wednesday at Noon
The Commons Suite 215

Student Worship Service
Every Sunday at 6:30p.m.
University Presbyterian Church
(at the com&lt;r of Mam St. and

Ntagara Falls Blvd )

It's going to be a joyful time in the Lord!
Come and see!
j OHN

1 16

The Episcopal Col!_,. MlniJtry

The Rev. Beverly Moore-Tasy
University at Buffalo
The Commons Sune 115
510 Lee Entrance, Amherst, NY 14118
688-4056

(

�_..,.,.._..,_u
Doctoral student wins Presidential
or
Award for science, math teaching

8
CALENDAR

817-3637, E-mail.
Kmzman•bms.&lt;:om. Re,illnlioodcacllillcisApril 1~ .

Continued from page 7
fonni"l arts is slaled for ~fly I.
FulbriJht Granu arr available

ror audy « n:seon:h.nvel

avail-we to ~e)ectcd
countries 10 ppkmml main~­
nance awards from other
VJUJ'CU thll do not provide
funds for m&amp;cmational tnvel or
to suppkmtnt lhe apphcant's
penooaa1 fuftdl. Th&lt; I. Winiam
Fulbri&amp;bt Scholarship Boonl.
composed or 12 educau-1 ond
public: appoinl&lt;d by the
President or the u.;...s s.-..
csublisb« cnleril foe !he tdccIIOO of candidates and award&amp;
rh&lt; granu. Appli&lt;:anu must bt
U.S. ciliuM al the lUnt of app)tCOI&gt;OC! IJid hold a boclldor's
dqree or 1U eqwvaleol by the
IJtciMina dat&lt; of the Jl'lUU. Cre•••ve and petfonniq an.tiU are
not required to baw: a
bllc'hekJr'1 degree. but they must
hne four yean of rekvanl
trainin&amp;: or study. Caodadates in
medicine mUSl ha"-c an M.D. or
equivalent at the time of apph ·
cation.. All apphcants must have

IJ'DU are

uffic~ntpmf~~~n~

languacc of the holt counuy.
Full granu provide round-tnp
1ntf!11\.l..tionaJ travel, maintenanct for the tenure of the
award. a reiCaf'dt allowance,
and tuittoG waiveR. if applicable. Trn"CJ pllftU provade

round-trip1nternationalln.Yd to
the country wheft tbt stUdent
will purwc ruearch; all pnt.s
tncludc: health and accident m-

surancc. Contact Dr. Barbara
Bunker, Fulbright Prognun Advisor, in 362 Part HaiL 6453650, cxl 362 or Cl&lt;L 358.
De.dline fCK receipc of apphcluons is September 26. 1995.

--

~~...-

Th&lt; Wes~&lt;m New York Health
Sc:tcoccs Librarians wllllpOnJOr
a day'ong conference oo "'Get:·
IIRJ Funded: Devc.\opan&amp; Skills

in Propoal Writina .. Friday.
April 2 I in UB '1 Health Saenccs Ubnry. Taught b)' Alan

Rees. professor ementus,
School of Ubrar)' aod ln(Oiltlahon Scicnct, Cue Western Re~r'\"t: UnaVt:Rity, tht COUr5e will
outlinr cnliCal c.lemc.nu an the
proposal wnuna process and
v.-,11 show how to prepare persuasi\•c and v.•mning proposals
m a hi&amp;hly compc.tiuve gr2n1S
mar\.etptacc. Pr.ctK:al guadancc:

v.all be given an idenufyang rele,aot funchng sources (government. foundauoo and corpontt: ),
rcfini.ng ideu and foUowang

o;;equentaaJ stcps invohed m
'uettssful proposal wntmE.
Cos:1 11 S2S for WNYHSL mt:m ·
has and S30 for non-mc:mbc:n
FOf" ~who wi!.h to rteeiVt:
Medaca.l Ltbrary Anocaauon
conlmumg educalion credit .
there will br an addltU&gt;MI
charge of S20. which ancludes
!!&lt;I' CE crechts, a ctn1ficatc: and
a course manual 11\c: add1Uonal
fet can be pa1d at the: nc:nt . but
panicipanb should uwhcate th1 ~
v. hen they regaster. For more
mformat1on. call Karen
Kre•.z:man. WNYHSL prn•dcnt .

~no

The Universuy Humanities
Committee asb \he univenity
community's aid mtheir con.Jidr:ration of the prHenl l:t.ltt: of the
bumanilies at UB aod !he fonnatioo of plam for the fu.uJrC. If
you have any ideas cooccnuna
!his subjecl. the COIDII!iuee uk.s
they be sent in writin&amp; lO any of
the followiftl: Chair Corol
Joc:obs. En&amp;Juh, l06 Clcmem:
James Bono. HiiiOI)I, 5S9 Pari! ,

Diane CbrillWI. Ena!isb, l06
Clemens; Robert Daly, En&amp;lisb,
l06 Clemens; Stepha~ D)'aoa.
Oawcs, 7 I2 Clemens;
Rodolphc Gucht. Comparauve
u~. 638 Clemens; Jorsc
Gracia. l'llilosqrlry, 681 Baldy;
John.,.,_ Clusic:s. 733
Clemens: David Pary. Plamrin&amp;
and Desi&amp;o. 2010 .Uyes; John
Quinan. Art Htaory, 606
s: Henry Rlc:lwds, Mod·
em Lanpages and UteT'aluru.
10 Clcmcoo: 11atban Todlock.
AnlhropoloiY, 365 Millud
Fillmore Acaderruc Cmtc:r.
Tatnarl Tbom1on. History. S46
Pari!: Wolr,.., Wold. Linguistics, 629 Baldy.

---~FOUl
D~
All are wckorne to joia the lnternatiooal Folt Dancinc group
each Friday from B-11 p.m. an 2
Dic:feodorl Hall on !he S...lh
Campus lbesc free KUtOnS
be&amp;m with teadunc. Pattnen
ate DO( needed. Tbe ipOO.SOf IS
the Grwtua1e Student Anocaa-

"""_,.stUDY
UB resc:archcrs at Ene Count)

Mechca.t-Center are seeking SOO
adulu 11es 25· 70 to ~k:e • ~
10

evaluate memory . Tbc written

and verbal leSI rcquua about 45
nunut.ts. Paruc1panu wdl br
reimbuned for ume and tnvcl
t:Jlpemel. Anyone intereslc.d an

invited so read from their work
.. • poetry readiola !0 bt held ..
4 p.m. Thunday, April 20 in the
Poeuy/Ratt -Room !he
Ubnry. 420 Capco HaU

-CGWWI

Woman Power in the 21 t~ ­
tury Act II, a two-day cortferencc spomored by Pro)Od WIN
(Women's I ues Network), a
forum for Afncan Amc:ncan
women in Weste:ro New York to
d11CUJ1

issues lhat affect tbem.

will bt held Friday, March 3 I
ond Sa!wday, Apnll at UB
Coaferuct:
include wortsloopo 011 "EEllrcpmtcunlup:

wm

SwtiaJ Your Own Bu.siness...
"'Pohucal Undenonet: The

Games"-'&lt; Play," "Raoovlftl CoftflK1

lbrou&amp;h EtfCC'IJVC

Conu:mutication .. a.nd ..Priontiz·
in&amp; Commitments few • Wdl·
Balanood PenonaJ ond Profes-

sional Life - 1bt: confemw:c
abo will include PfC$1CDllbOOS
by 5.-.h Non!-Piulhpo. procram and publ~ 5CfYKC. dueclor
11 WKBW-TV ; ROK Scontt:.rs.
Ita!&lt; Supranc Coun )udJ&lt; aod
WIN proJtCl diredor: and Jean
Hill , li&lt;Wiancbor ond reponer
at WKBW-TV. -Re:JIItrlltKIII is
S65 af!Cr Marclt 21 . For.,...
uoforinaboa. call !he UB Offitt
of Collferenc:c Opc:nhom. MS3705

U~oe

Libnry '!"·

oounces lht 199S potU) conI$$ spomored in cooperauon
••lh 1he Department of Enthi.h
and W Fnt:od of the Umvtrsaty l.ibrarin. Two pnus of

S I00 each are offered for tht
bHt poems submitted by UB
students. 'The Academy of
Amc:ncan Poets contest as open
both graduate and under·
graduate stUdents. the Fnends of
the UmvtrSaty Ldnnrs pnu: li
for unckrgraduatt:s onl) Ent.ne
should consist of ont 10 sa•

10

typev.·riuen pages 1bc wnter · ~
name should not appear on the:
poems. but on a cover s.il«1 "'•th
the name oflhc pn1.c and the
wnter's name. class. 8ddres5
a_nd tc:lephonc numbrr Entno
should bt sen1 to Margare1 R
Wells.. Dutttor. Undt:rgDdu:uc:
Lrbnq&gt;. 107 Capen HaiL orth
Campus. Buffalo. NY 14260-

accompli hmenrs in lhe clas room as a

teacher."
lbeaward. whicbcamesa$7,50llgrantto
Wolff-Reichert 's home school, wu ..tablished by the Nalional Scrence Foundatlon in

entupcore to help advance the map reform
movemcnu in lhese disciplines. Every year.
the presidential award t &amp;iven to 200 leaChen-50 elemmtary and 50 secondary science teachers and 50 elementary and 50
secondary math ~eaebers.
Wolff-ReiChen. a doctonol &lt;1Uden1 tn the
US Gnodulle School of Education. tearcbes
physics in Livingslon Higb School 1n
LtvingSion. NJ., from which she os on leave
while completing a doctorate in learning and
!D5IJUCUOII,

She holcb a Master of AIU de&amp;rec in
Teaching Physics from Yale Uni vcrsity and
os gradlllle u iswu tn UB's Buffalo Researcb lnsliiUte on Educ:auon for Teaching,
"'here she co-teaches a fidd uperience and
seminar for pre-servta: teachers and supervises student leaehers

-out-A.a

11 lbc

Alumni Arena. Nonh

Campus. from I 0 a.m. to Noon
All proo:ccds will btn&lt;:lit the
Crty of Hope National Mcdtcal
Center and Bcc:k:man Research
lnsti!Ule Call 691 -5676

ZALUIU..-sAL

~~::!Marek

B. blcslt, M D., I'll.D., will bt
h&lt;ld at NoOC! on Fnday, Man:h
24 on !he Ltppscbutt Room. I 25
CFS Ackht1oa. Sooth Carnpu~

lOBS

I'OETIIY CONTUt

Th&lt;

work in the development of
"amusemenl-pari&lt; pbysics" u a
teaching tool and ro-authored 111
amusemen1-p&amp;Jt manual for studen competing in the International Physics Olympiad
hostedbytbeU.S. in 1993. Morch9. Bl1banr
WoiiT-Reichertlnlveledto Washington, D.C .•
to receive a Presidential A wan! for Excellence in Science and Mothemotics Teach ins.
Hersisoneofthe 1995 presidential awards
presented to tbe lOp 50 high-school scieoce
teachers 11 a White House ceremony 1be
awan!J ore given in recognition of what John
Gibbons, IS i.anl to President CIJnton for
science and tochnok&gt;gy , calls "extraordinary

1983 to identify, rccognrze and reward outtanding teachers of scoencx and mathematics on grades K-12. Such teachers serve as
models for the or coli~ and form • leod-

Join the fun •od 5how your Alpport for AIDS ond ,.lal&lt;d Cancer rescarelr on Satunlay. Apnl
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HE IS KNOWN nationally for ber

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Proj&lt;d Aick-Psycbology. Pos! tng fR -9.SOI9 RDrartb Tr&lt;:bakiaa I (pu1 -tiaw po.-hion)·
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To ootatn more 1nformat10t1 on

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PerSOf)t"'ee Servrces 104 Crotrs
Hail

Tl'8ckAField
'llhile UB look tme olf lor spmg break. lhe
Bulls and Royals ITack and foeld learnS started
u- outdoor season in Nortll Carolina
The learnS opened Ita" season Sllhe
Seahav.lc ln11118tronal rn Wolmrngton, N C ,
.. Cllns Bossert..., lhe
n
15"()6, senrng a~ record Bossert ai9o finIShed filth rn lhe 1500 rn 4"004 The 400 relay
team of Thorn Kaye Enc Foschlern. Kieran
Doheny and Kellon
QUalofied lor lhe
IC4A meet With crew filth p1ace nme at 43 54
On lhe women's Side. Claudrne Walle set a
school record rn lhe It"~ JtXTlll al 36 feel
2-1/4 rnches placong lhord rn lhe e11001 Wan.e
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and Naquena DaVIs 10 frnrsh sec '&gt;d rn the
400 relay rn 49 3 Maureen Harnnon s 5 coo
trme ol t8 59 and Juhe Phelps· 10 19 2 rn the
3 .000 were also second place frrushes for the

s.cro-

w-

Royats

The Bulls and Royals also competed 81
lhe Wake Forest lrMiaoonalto conclude lheor
southern swng Ktagbe set a P8ll" of school
records lor lhe RovaJs WVYWlQ lhe 100 high
hurdles n 14 96 and fnshong lourth n lhe
400 hlgll hurdles .., 1"04 66 Tara Rermer's
lh!rd place finosh in lhe 5.000 ( 18 26) and
Stacey SlrOihmann's 3 coo tme of 9.57 lor
lourth ai9o ~led lhe RovaJs Kns
Winkler's lh!rd place forvsh of 48 56 .., lhe
400 meters was tops lor the Bulls

.._•• T.....
Russ Cnspetrs SQuad r&lt;Ulded out
SouJh
Carolrna Wllh S-21oss to ~I nval
Troy State on Salurday Wan:en Polakoffs
VICtory a1 runber ttvee srngles led lhe BuMs
Pclakolf also learned Wllh Trn Budllo lake a
doubles IIICIOfY wi"Mie Ram Zwnyya prc1&lt;rng
up the Bulls' other srngles wrn
Coach

crew spmg lrtp IO Hilton Head Island

We Want to He

ice

The Reporter is US's community newspaper and we want you to become involved. Give us your comments DO current topiCS relating to
the university and higher education as well as DO timely subjects in
areas of your expertise. We welcome articles, Viewpoints. Letters to
the Editor as well as news hems. Send matenals to Chnstine Vidal,
Reporter Ed1tor. 136 Crofts Hall, BuHalo N .Y. 14260.
(

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9

UB operates education program in Malaysia

T

r

HE UB Intensive English Language lnstiwte, which in the 1980s
helped prepare more than 1,000
Malaysian swdents fOTtransfer to
U.S. colleges. is once again involved in a transfer-prepanuion program in
Malaysia.
The current program was established in
conjunction with Stamford College in
Petaling Jaya. Malaysia, a suburb of Kuala
Lumpur. Stamford has funded the lirst year
of the project with a $225,357 granL
The oew UB branch campus, which began operations last month. has enrolled 86
students and expects to have nearly 200
enrolled by September in the American Degree Studies Program, a sequence of courses
equivalent to the fi~t two years of undergraduate course wJin a U.S . college or
university.
.
Although transfer an American college
is nol automatic, llie graduates will be pre-

pared 10 begin their junior year abroad and
are expected to apply lOa broad rangeofU.S .
institutions. including UB, according to
JanjceA. Nersinger. the UB in.stitute'sassistanl director for overseas programs.
UB operated a similar, albeit larger, overseas campus, which at its peak employed a
faculty of 60, from 1986-91 in .c onnection
with the lnstitul Teknologi MARA (ITM) in
Shah Alam, o utside of Kuala Lumpur. More
than 1,000 Malaysian students completed
that two-year preparation program and transferred to U.S. universities.
Nersinger says that since that time. many
Malaysian schools followed suit and have
continued to exhibit a lively interest in such
cooperative preparation programs-nol surprising, she said. given the "exceptional economic development of the nation and the
staggering growth of its cities:·
Although students who complete the program can transfer into any number of American colleges and universities. Nersingersays
thai many will transfer 10 UB because of the

Graduate School
11r PATIIICIA -YAH

·News Bureau Staff

T

he UB Graduate School of Education has been ranked in the top 10
graduate schools of education in
the Northeast by U.S. Nms &amp;

World Rtpon.

Nationwide, the school ranked 39th nationally among 223 schools thai grant Ph.D .
or &amp;J_D. degrees in the magazine's lirst
ranki ng of graduate schools of education.
"All of us in the Graduate School of
Education are delighted 10 be ranked among
the top graduate schools of education in the
country," said Hugh Petrie, dean of the UB

school's appeal as a large univenity with a
strong undergraduate base and a large number of excellent professional schools.

'l"&gt;e Malay government has given priority
I to the preparation of Malaysian students
for transfer to U.S. schools of engioeering,
she said. Because the country produces a
great deal of oil and is undergoing rapid
development, Malaysian students who enroll in electrical. mechanical. chemical and
petrochemical engioeering programs abroad
are likely to find employment in the lield
upon their return .
George Lee. dean of the UB School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences, will vi it
Malaysia soon 10 help determme the nature
of a program appropnate fOT studenl5 "ho
wish to transfer 10 that school
UB currently operates more than 50 O\ erseas education programs. including programs
in Cambodia. Latvia and Hungary thatlnlin
only foreign national s. Several others are m
development in Europe and Asia

of Education in 'top 10'

sclvlol. " It 's a real tribute to our facuh) .
students and alumni . In these diflicuh budgetary times. it is good to receive such an
external validation of the hi&amp;h quality o f our
programs
U.S. Ntws has published "Amenca 's best
Graduate Schools" for six consecutive years.
but thi s is the lirst year the guide ranked
education schoo\_s. The rankings were determined by using live categories: faculty re sources. research activity. student selectivity
and two separate measures of reputatjon.
The UB Graduate School of Education
serves 1.200 graduate students in three departments: Learning and Instructio n: Educa-

tiona) Organiz.arto n. Admm1 stra11on and
Policy. and Counseling and Educauonal Psy·
chology .
II houses the Buffalo Research Institute
on Education for Teachong, the Early Child·
hood Research Center, the Western New
York Educational Service Council. the Center for Educational Resources and Technology. the Center for Comparalive and
lnt.emationaJ Educatjon. and the intensive
Englisli Language Institute. h sponsors programs in reading diagnosis and remediation.
for gifted math students and for the assessment of educarional compurer software.
among others._

2222

Puhlic Safety's
Weekly Report

The followlllll • • - of U.. -

. . . . reported to U.. o . p . t of Publle Sat.ty - - Feb. 2 4 Mudlt:
• A woman reponed Feb 2• lhal while she
was studYJng

1n the Undergraduate LJbrary

a man used a m1rror on h1s shoe to anempt
10 look up her dress
• A d rgrtal m•crOf'Tleter valued at $104 was
reported m•ss•ng Feb 24 from Jarv•s Hall

• A computer and VCR. worth a combined
value of $2.900. were reponed m•ss•ng Feb

261romMFAC
• A

................... with their . . . . . flom 18ft: s.ld v.......... Roeot
Wuler, M.ta Elena GutlerNz 8nd John Boot, acceptiiC tor lblymond
~. who- UIUible txl 8ttend the ceremony.

Milton Plesur Excellence in Teaching
Awards presented in Student Union
Tile ·, . . . SbNiellt ~M ilton Plesur Excellence in Teaching Awards
were presented March 8 ala ceremony in the Student Union. This year's winners are
Raymond Orrange, assistant professor of management science and systems; Maria
Elena Gutierrez, assistant professor of modem languages and literatures; Saeid
Vafaeisefat. research assistanf professor in physics; and Roger Waxler, assistant
professor of mathematics.
·
The only universitywide teaching honors selected and given by undergraduate
students, the awards are named for the late Milton Plesur, a longtime UB professor of

history who was famous on campus for his colorful and engaging classroom manoer
as weU as for his scholarship.
The awards aro. given annually to faculty members who best e&lt;emplify the
dedication of the late history professor.

mounta1n b1ke. valued at $5CX)_ was

reponed mtsstng Feb 27 from Crosby Hall
• A man reponed Feb 28 thai $1 50 was
mtsstng from a locked SIOfage room m lhe
Center '"' Tomorrow
• Two cameras. worth a comb&lt; ned value of
$450. were reponed mtsstng Feb 28 from
lhe Center fOf lhe Arts
• A book t&gt;ag con1a1mng textbooks. calculaIOfs and personal papers. worth a cornblned
value of $2t0 was reported mtsSJng March
3 from Alumm Arena
• A wallet contatntng cash and credn cards
was reponed m1ss1ng March 3 from the
Health Sc&lt;ences Library
• A backpack contatning a checkbook,
dnver's hcense and personal papers was
reponed mtssmg March 5 from lhe Student
Umon
• A man reponed March 5 thai while h1s car
was parl&lt;ed 1n lhe Fargo lot. someone dnlled
a hole near lhe doOf lock. entered h&lt;S car
and removed the compUler . A similar incident also was reponed 1n lhe Governors lot.
where someone dnlled a hole 1n lhe passenger-Side door and anempted 10 steal !he car
computer

• A woman reponed March 6 thai whtle her
car was parked tn the Governors lot. it was
broken into and the computer. valued at
$400, was taken A car computer also was
reponed missing from a car parked in lhe
Spaulding lot.

Letters
Committee welcomes
views on future of arts
PrOIIOSI Aaron Bloch has
appoonted a spec18l commrttee to assess the
present strengths and
future dtrectJOnS of the
arts programs at UB AI the hrst meellng
ol the com:runee on Feb 1 , he arlteulated
the charge as follows
·
The cornmtllee &lt;s charged WJih presentJOQ a clearly artiCulated VISIOfl ol what
lhe arts oughllo be on ttns campus. how
10 get there. whal the relaoonstup of untverSlly arts programs ought to be 10 communrty arts programs He sa1d !hal the
commmee s repo!l would be the basts '"'
deftmng the future of UB arts programs
WJih respect 10 oompeung programs and
will consuMe part of the strategiC plan tor
UB II would also be useful. he 5ald. rt the
commJttee could assess the degree of
suppon for the UB arts programs lhai
exrsts "' the communrty al large. mcludtng
among alumnt
He asked the corrmrnee 10 look at the
strengths. weaknesses of extsttng programs. areas 10 be emphasized. the potennal tor leadershop In addl!lon. the
foflowmg QuesiiOOS should be addressed
How are the arts programs related to the
other d iSCtphnes? Where are oppo!lun&lt;ttes
lor synergtsm? Are there areas where key
addttiOOS would leverage tmportanl
changes?
We will be asking tor more systematiC
tnpullrom you presently. but at lhts llrT1e

we would welcome your gene&lt;allhoughts
on these maners Please feel tree to respond 10 any of the followmg members of
the commmee
• Alan Btrnholz. Art Htslory
• Robert Chumbley Center for the
Arts
• Saul Elk&lt;n. Theatre and Dance
• J Terry Gales . MusiC (co-chatr )
• Tyrone Georg tau Art
• AI Hams F Unwerstly Gallery
• Bnan Henderson. Med ta Study
• George R levine English (chaJr)
• Stephen Manes. MusiC
• Ben Nelson, Ar1 hropology
• Cathenne Norgren, Theatre and
Dance
• Jolene Rtckard Art Hts tory
• linda Swtntuch. Theatre and Dance
Stncerely
QECIWGELEYINE
Professor ol Engltsn and Chaff F•ne ArTs

Commmee

OBITUAR Y

Jocqueline G. onald,
cbltal assistant
s.rvtceaw-held March9atSLAmelia's
Catholic Church. Town of Tonawanda. for
Jacqueline G . Ronald. 65. a dental assistant at
UB'sdentallabandclinicfrom 1969until her
retirement in 1994. Ronald. 65. diedMarch5.
She received the Aorence Kronson Award
for the most dedicated dental assistant at UB.
After retirement, Ronald was a pan-time
consultanL
A graduate of the ECC dental technician
program. she anended UB in 1964 and ' 65.
She was a memberofthe National Organization for Women and the Dental Assistant
Association of the State of New York.
She is survived by two daughters. Leslie
Jones of Hamburg and Becky Aorentino of
Clarence Center: a brother. John Sikorski:
lwo sis ters. Lindsay and Mary Ann
Grandison; and three grandchildren.

�_..,

_____ ...
Frisch is chair as historians
take on controversiatlssues
11y I'ATRICIA - V A l l
News Bureau Staff

HEN TilE Organization

MilCh Day: Til Nlllll All Gill
v... Peter Stengel, with raised fist, expresses the feelings of fourthyear students al UB med school who have just heard good news
. about assignments for for hospitals and l1lldcal center:; where they'll
pursue their specialty. Celebrating Match Day results with Stengel at
the Flying Tigers reslaurant March 15 are.
from left, above:
Ingrid Elliott. Joel
Shapiro and Karen
Roll.
1111111 five: Mirek P.
Bobek, left, and Scott
J. Belote, clutching his
envelope, give high
ftve approval to their
residency matches.

Dental bleaching agents can
damage fillings, study shows
lly LOIS
·News
Bureau
Staff

ENTAL BLEACHING agenlS
can damage some tooth fillings.
leaving the toolh suri"acc potentiall y more susceptible to staining and plaque fonnation. a
study by researchers at the UB School of
Dental Medicine has found .
Results of the research were presented
March 12 at the American Association of
Dental Research meeting in San Antonio.
Texas.
The study looked panicularly at the effect
of a carbamide peroxide bleaching agent on
glass ionomer resins. a family of newer material s becoming popular with denti sts for
filling cavities in teeth. Carbamide peroxide
bleaching agents are available only by pre""'ription. and are not to be confused with
over-the-counter teeth whiteners.
Gerard Wieczkowski. UB associate professor of restorative dentistry and lead author on the study. said there has been a
substanti al increase in interest in dental
bleaching. When the bleaching agents. are
applied. dental restorations. or fillings. are
exposed along with the natural teeth.
'1be resin-based materials have the advantage of containing fluoride . but they also
contai n many other chemical compounds
prese nt as filler particles." Wieczkowski said.
""Nobody "!mows the effect of bleaching o n
this group of restorative materials."
To test the effec~ the researchers prepared simulated dental fillings in ·molds.
using five commercially available resin-

D

based materials. After allowing the samples
to cure, they bathed them in the bleaching
agent eight hours a day for 14 days. The
researchers analyzed the restoration surface
before and after bleaching.
Results showed that three of the five
brands experienced ubstantial erosion.
"'The bleaching agents caused physical
changes on the surface of the restoration:·
Wiec7.kowski said. "'We think the agent might
be washing out the resins. exposing the filler
panicles. These roughened surfaces mtght
leave the tooth more susceptible to staining.
and to the accumulation of plaque . Increased
plaque could lead to damage of the gmgtval
tissue.''
•
e cautioned that these laboratory studi e~
need to be followed up with climcal
studies to substantiate the findings.
Patients are instructed to go back to their
dentists to have their bleaching monitored.
but man y do not. Wieczkowsk i said.
'They can use these bleaching agents as
frequen tl y as they want at home. but they
may not know that. in a sense. they are
making the problem they are trying 10 solve
worse," he said.
He noted. however. that carbamide peroxide bleaching agents must be prescribed.
and that dentists probably would not prc:scribt them for patients who have a lot of
fro nt -surface fillings.
Members of the research team in addition
to Wieczkowski were Xin Yi Yu. Robert B.
Joynt and Elaine L . Davis. all of the UB
Department of Restorative Dentistry.

H

of American Hi storians
(OAH) and the National
Council on Public History (NCPH) meet in
Washington, D.C .. from March 30 through
April 2. they will bring with lliem the idea
that history has come 10 matter in public life
and that American historians have something to contribute to the public discourse.
Urban historian Michael Frisch. professor of history at UB and chair of the program
committee f.; the 1995 OAH-NCPH convention, says the program will reflect the
fact that these days. historians are central to
that discourse "in ways we had not anticipated."
Frisch notes , for instance. thai OAH President Gary Nash of the University of California, Berkeley. "has become the whipping
boy of Rush Limbaugh for his effons 10
bridge the gap between modem scholarship
and primary and secondary education." The
conslruction of social studies curriculums
has. in fact, been an increasingly imponant
and contentious issue among educators fo~
the past decade .
Many of these issues will come to the fore
again by spring, when Frisch says he expects
that the public agencies supponing much of
the work done by academic and public historians-the National Endowment for the
Humanities. the National Archives, the National ParlrService and the Smithsonian Institution-"will be on the chopping block.
fighting for their lives against an anti-intellectual public purge rapidly gaining momen tum.··
._
.
He ca lls it an .. unusual concatenation that
brings the profession together at a critical
moment" and says that he and his program
commiuee have tried to p1.1n events in a way.
that they hope ··can help center what is nec essary and imponant in this debale and move
beyond what is demagogic:'
Several events will focus on current controversies involving history and historians

and may shed a fresh light on issues lha1 have
raised hackles up and down the political
spectrum.
Tbeconvention"splenary session on April
1. for instance, will addres the hoi spollight
oow trained on major public agencies that
suppon historical scholarship. Frisch says
that in 1 roundlllble. tbe leaden of the National Endowment for the Humanities, the
Smithsonian·s Museum of American His·
tory,lhe National Park Service and the U.S.
Archives wiU discuss the challenges, dilemmas and contradictions inherent in their acc:ounlability to scholarship.lhe U.S. Congress
and the genenll public at a lime when dl"l!matic social and cultural change make public discussion of history both difficult and
indispensable.
Roundtable discussions on several other
hot topics will be held on March 30:
• Hi storians and the Disney Challenge: A
discussion of the Disney Corpomtion · • plan
to develop a history theme park four miles
from the Manassas National Banlefield.
• Hiroshima and the Politics of History:
The Enola Gay Controversy at the
Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum: Although lhis controversy was caricatured a a debate between the ''lwo
PCs"-patriotic correctness and political
correctness-it raises questions about the
role of scholars and scholarship in public
history processes and in public discussion.
Discussants will include representatives
of the National Air and Space Museum, Air
Foru Magatin• . the .S. Air Force. the
University of Wi sconsin-Oshkosh Departmenl of Religious Studies and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
• Other roundtables that day will address
many other issues. such as contradictory
versions of the American past that were
assembled by leftist · groups in Cold War
Europe: childless Americans in the 20th century (including a historical perspective on
1es1-1ube babies) and the 1965 Voting Rights
Act on its 30th anniversary. its legal and
political impac1 on American history.

The Whole Internet Catalog
is now online
Often cited as the first and most well -k nown printed reference guide to the Net.
Th• Whol&lt;lnrem&lt;t Catalog (WI C) is now available through the Net itself. No longer
are you limited to reading about the WJC 's extensive listing of interesting web sites.
gopher holes. electronic publications. and virtual services. Now as you read a}:Klut a
resource of interesl in Tht On/in~ Wholt 1'-ttrnLt
I I I C n~&lt;&gt;NIC Catalog you can select the item and are propelled
through cyberspace to the source via an active link
10 the Net.
If you have ever wondered why everyone,seems
to be talking about the Net. use thi s cat.alog. There
is something for everyone on the lnformalion
Highway! As the "" About the Online Whole Internet Catalog"" page states. ''Th~
catalog is for anybody who has access to the Internet. It isn't about compu ting on the
Internet; it's about usi ng the Internet to find what interests you:·
The basic design of the catalog is to present information in basic broad subject
categories suc h as "Arts &amp; Entertainment;• · ~Business &amp; Finance:· ..Computers ...
"Ed ucation:· "Government," ··Recreation &amp; Travel," among others. If this listing
seems at all""stuffy .""think again. Just select the "What"s New·· orthe ""Top 25" option
available on the operri'ng screen and you wi ll see at a glance the latest in Net circles.
As the Catalog's owners stale, "'There is no single rule for what constitutes a
resource in the Wbole Internet Catalog. We just try 10 include the most useful .
unusua l. and interesting things we can find ." Recent entries on the "'What's New.. and
the "Top 2S"' Iists have included Archa~ological Fi~Jdwork. An on th~ N~t. Comics
'n · Stuff. Consen•ation Onlint, lntern ~t Movi~ Archives, R~ggat Down Babylon,
Spac~ Cal~ndar. and Window's ShauM"art Archivt.
Toaccrss Thr Onlint Who/~ /nternrtCaialog via your UB ~Jectronic mail account
typr lynx hnp:/ln~arntl.gnn.com/wU:/ at your system prompt (''ax or unix) or www
hup:/ln~arntl.gnn. com!wic/ (ibm/ems). For further infonnation on accessing the
World Wid&lt; W•b. contact th• Computing C•ntu H&lt;lp D-sk at 645-3542.

HiGH -~ \\A)'S

-Gemma DeVinney and Loss Pequeflo Glazier, Lockwood Ubrary

�--.---.-21.
Nl- from UB-

wbo are African American or are
interested in Africa's future un- _
derstand that tbey can play a role

.

. . , . ....... ~~ore
UB faculty, staff and swdeniS were honored recently by the Buffalo Convention
and Visitors Bureau as Buffalo
Ambassadors, for their efforiS to
bring meetings and conventions
to Buffalo.
Among those honored Feb. 4
at the Ambassadors BaU at the
Buffalo Convention Center were:
Jennifer DeCory for The Society
of Women Engineers; NILDcy
Dnlar for the UB medical alumni
reunion; Daniel Green for Fourth
International 'Conference on Survivo rs of Childhood Cancer; Carl
V. Granaer for Managed Care in
Medical Rebabilillllion; Laszlo
Mec:btler for First Annual
RosweU Pirk C.lncer Institute
Neurology-Oncology Confer·
ence; MaryiLODt Neary for the
Native American Nurses Conference; Catherine Norgren for the
Kennedy Center/American College Theater Festival; Mattie
Rhodes for Delta Sigma Theta;
and Edward Simmons for the
Orthopedic Symposium on Spinal
Deformities.

Joins Physical Therapy
A Exen:fM S c l Gaspar Farkas, who
comes to UB from the
Mayo"Oinic in Rochester. Minn ..
has joined the Depanment of
Physical Therapy and Exercise
Science as an associate professor.
Farkas received his B.Sc.
d_egree from Concordia University, Montreal, the M.Sc. degree
from Universite de Montreal and
his Ph.D. in experimental medi·
ci ne from McGill University.
Farkas' research area is the
function of respiratory muscles.
His focus is on the role of obesity
and emphysema in altering the
muscles of the breathing appara·
tus and the effect of these condi·
tions on respiration as we age. He
wiiJ teach neuroscience in the
Department of Physical Therapy
and Exercise Science as well as
lecture in other courses.

0

Geriatric psychletr)'
~to beheld

0

The eighth annual "Current
Issues in Geriatric Psychia·
try" regional conference will be
held from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. on
Friday, April 7. in the Radisson
Hotel and Suites Buffalo, 4243
Genesee St., Cheektowaga.
The conferenee is designed to
inform health-&lt;:are professionals of
staJe.&lt;&gt;f-the-art mental-health assessmeniS and treatmeniS. update
them on methods of overcoming
barriers to mental health care in
later life, and strengthen their confidence in addressipg older aduiiS'
and their familid'-concems about
such conditions as depression and
Alzheimer's disease.
It will be sponsored by the
Division of Geriatric Psychiatry
in the UB School of Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences and the
UB Department of Psychiatry.
The registration fee is $90,
with a deadline of March 3 I. For
more information call829-2917.

in a more positive outcome as

Gamine convention to be held at UB
Starfleet Battles," "CarWars." "Call ofCthulhu." ''Civil
war" and "Advancedageons and Dragons" will be
among the battles "fought" by me 500 gaming aficionados at
the sixth annual gaming conve ·on, "UBCon '95-A Twist in
lime," to be beld March 3 - ril 2 in the Student Union on the
North Campus.
Mpre than 160 role-playing, board-game and miniatures
compe?tions at all sldll levels will be beld during the weekend,
which IS sponsored by the Strategist and Role-Players Associ a·
lion (SARPA).
Guest of honor for the weekend will be Sam Chupp. coauthor of W&lt;rewo/f. Th• Apocalypse and several other
White Wolf Publications. Derek Pearcy, print buyer. graphic
desagner, editor and writer for Steve Jackson Games. will be
guest speaker, and Robelt Aradio, local comic·book artist and
president of Targiin Studios, will be a special guest.
HighlighiS of the weekend will include medieval-combat
demonstrations. an area for gaming dealers and Japanese anime

_..films.
_
Hours for the popular event, which draws competitors from
Western New York. Northeastern Pennsylvania and Ontario,
w1ll be 8 p.m.-midnight on March 3 I; 10 a.m.-midnight on April
I. and 10 a.m.-7 p.m. on April 2.
For more information, contact Jennifer DeMarie at 645-4106
or Todd Minnella at 645-4884.

Musicology Has

Electronic Info
Gatta know who turned
Chopin' s Fantaisie-lmpromptu into one of Broadway" s
most saccharine emetics? Looking for the title of a grisly Czech
opera? UB ' s musicology program
has established a Home Page on
the World Wide Web. It offers
information on the UB program
and provides elecuonic links to
academic research sources around
the world. For information, or to

0

offer suggestions, contact Associ ate Professor Michael Long
(mlong @ascu.buffalo.edu). To
visit the Musicology Home Page.
use your WWW browser (Lynx.
Mosaic, etc.) to go to the URL
http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/mlong.

selected as one offive finalists in
the composition competjtion to be
held during Mexico'sl995 Festi·
val Callejon de Ruido in August
Lippe ' s ·~Music for Guitar and
Tape'' received a performance 10
Paris in JanUai)' and earlier. a
concert of his live computer music was presented in Grenoble.
France.
The premiere of composer
Jeffrey Stadelman's Fromm

commission. ''Marx ville
Songbook," was performed by
members of Boston Musica Viva
at Boston's Tsai Performance
Center in January. Conducted by
Richard Pinman. it featured a pre·
conceit talk by Stadelman to
BXM subscribers. Stadelman is

an assistant professor of music.

Conference to address
Music faculty
e11111 dlstlnctlon
Several members of the UB
Department of Music faculty have di stinguished them·
selves in their respective fields
recently.
Musicologist Christopher
Gibbs, assistant professor of
music, has been named director
of the I 995 Schubutiad&lt;, the
eighth of 10 programs in a
highly acclaimed, decade·long
Sclulbertiadt Festival sponsored
by the Tisch Center, the performing ariS center of New York
City's 92nd StreetY. This year' s
Schulurtiad&lt; will run from April
I -8. Gibbs will present a preconceit talk on April I , "Schuben
in his Own Time."
Composer Cort Lippe, assis·
tant professor of music, has been

0

Africa'• past, future
The economic and political
past, present and future of
Africa will be the focus of the
second annual Pan-African Conference, to be held on March 2426 on the UB North Campus.
Some 500 studeniS from
across the country are expected to
anend the event, which will fea·
ture workshops and guest speakers on Africa's role in the world.
Since 1900. many African
countries have become independent. but some will not achieve
their potential in a global
economy and society unless factions within and outside their
borders cooperate toward positive
' goals for all, says Peter Ekeh,
chair of. the UB Department of
African American Studies and a
speaker at the conference. "It's
important that the young people

0

these newer natioos take their
place in the world," be says.
Registration for the conference
is slated for6-10 p.m. March 24.
and 8-9:45 a.m. March 25, in the
Student Union Lobby. Work·
shops will be held from 10 a.m.
to 12: 15 p.m. on March 25 in
Knox Hall. A panel discussion
will be held from 2-4 p.m. in
20 Knox .
The African Dance Troupe
will petform at a dinoer from
5:30-8 p.m. in Pistachio's in the
Student Union. ParticipaniS will
tour Niagara Falls beginning at
9 a.m. March 26.
In addition to Ekeh, speakers
at the conference will include
Samba Diop, UB assistant pro·
fessor of modern languages;
Samuel Nyarnbey of the United
Nations Development Program;
Benny lgwabey of the Organiza·
tion of African Unity; Paul Wash·
ington of the Institute of
International Relations. and
Taharka Odinga of the All Afri.
can People's Revolutionist Party.
. ) Guy Kayembe, a UB economICS srudent from Zaire. is chair of
the event, which is sponsored by
the UB African Student Associa·
tion.

O'Neil to speak
at seminar on
higher education
Robelt M. O' Neil, founding
director of the Thomas
Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression and
former president of the Univers1ty
of Virginia. will speak at 8 a.m.
April 7 in Moot Hall at Buffalo
State College as part of the
Breakfast Seminars for Western
New York 's Higher Educators.
The lecture series is SJXmsored
by the Department of Educational
Organization. Administration and
Policy in the UB Graduate School
of Education.
ln addition to writing numerous anicles for law reviews and
other journals. O'Neil is the author of several books. including
"Free Speech: Responsible Com·
munication Under Law," '1lle
RighiS of Public Employees" and
"Classrooms in the Crossfire .··
He served as a law clerk to
former Supreme Coun Justice
William J. Brennan Jr .. before
beginning his teaching career in
I 963 at the University of Califor·
nia Law School at Berkeley.

0

He went on to become provost
of the University of Cincinnati.
vice president of Indiana University at Bloomington. president of
the University of Wisconsin. and
president of the University of
Virginia. He founded the Thomas
Jefferson Center, and continues
as a member of the University or
Virginia law faculty .
He has chaired the National
AssOciation of State Universities
and Land Grant Colleges, and
served on the Executive Commiltee of the Association of Ameri.
can Universities. He is a trustee
and director of the Carnegie Foun·

dation for the Advancement of
Teaching. the Educaliona1 Testing
Service, the Commoowealth Fund,
the Johnton FoundaDoo. the James
Riv..- Corponlion, IIIII 1lAA.
TtclccU are SS. For more information,

caJI William Barba, 645·

2471.

ot·-

Peny to offw vision

~cit)'"

lltSulll'lse ......

David C. Perry, professor
of urban planning in the UB
Scbool of Architecture and Planning , will offer a vision of the
"new American city" as part of
the UB at Sunrise breakfast semi·
nar series, to be beld 7:30-9 a.m.
April 5. in the Center for Tomorrow.
The series is presented by the
UB Alumni Association and the
UB Office of Conferences and
Special EveniS, in conjunction
with the Bee Group Newspapers.
UB News Bureau, UB Office of ,
Publications. UB Office of Uni ·
versiry Development and the UB
Vice President for Public Service
and Urban Affairs.
Perry is a political economist
widely recognized in the fields of
urban political economy. public
a'ilministration and politics, and
urban redevelopmenL Director of
UB · s Center for Regional Studies.
be also holds pennanent posiS as
the Albea A. Levin Urban Scholar
at Oeveland University's College
of Urban Affairs and as a senior
faculty fellow a1 the Rockefeller
Institute in New York City.
His most recent books mclude
"Managing Local GovemmenL"
" Building the Public C ity." "The
Cleveland Metropolitan Reader"
and "Spatia] Pract1ces." a \'ol ume
on urban theory.
The price of the program.
which will include a full break·
fast. is S8 for UB Alumni Association members and $9 for all
others. For mo~ information. call
829·2608 .

Woman Power
confereiiCe
to be held at UB

0

The Woman Power in the
21st Century Act D confer·
ence will be held at UB on Friday.
March 31. and Saturday, April I.
The conference is sponsored by
Projec1 WIN (Women ' s Issues
Network). a forum for AfricanAmerican women in WNY to
discuss issues that affect them.
The conference begins Friday
with registration at 6:45 p.m. in
Slee Hall on the North Campus.
Sarah Norat-Phillips, program and
public service director at WKBWTV. will give a dramatic presenta·
tion at 8 p.m. A reception will
follow at 9:30p.m.
Rose H. Sconiers, state Supreme Counjudge and WIN
project director. will give the
welcome at 8:30a.m. April 1 in
Knox Hall. North Campus. Two
workshop sessions will follow.
Jean Hill. television news anchor. will lead luncheOn ceremonies from I 2:45 to 2 p.m. in the
Center for the AriS.
For more information, call
645-3705.

�_..,

__

..,_ ....

Prof's ~ves behind-the-scenes look at debate
over updating history for America's schools

•

eat

II

J

WIIJ&amp;b co...-.d tbo

HB BRAND of American biSIOI)I !aUJht to tbe
llllion• s scboolc:lliJdre once again is at the bean of

a beased and often&lt;xplosi~ llllionwide ~
This time IIQUDd, it pits "neo-oativisls" against
"muuticulluralists" from New Ycdc to California.
"Tbe Great Spccldcd Bird" (SL Mmin' s Press.
I 99S). a new, widely bemlded and itnmensely readable book by an East-Coast historian (Calherille
Canblelh, a UB Gmduate ScbooJ of Educatioo
profm) and a West-Coast jouni.alist (DeXJer
Waugh), looks a1 bow banJos OYer national values
and priorities are currently being fougbt outjn the """"' of
school cwriculum and textbook selection. At stake is wba1 it
meansio be an American in the 1990s and which vision of
America is to be transmitted to the next generation.
Autbo&lt;sCombletb and Waugh note that a pre-1960s ver.;ion
ofhistorythat still prevails emphasius kings and presidents and
statesmen. plus a few scientists and inven1ors. while mini miring
or ignoring the historical experience of ordinary people. They
argue that history should be rewrinen to restore the history of
ordinary people that has been omitted from school cuniculaand
textbooks and increas&lt; the possibilities for realizing American· s
democnllic ideals.
"The 'great speckled bird' isour 'countersymbol' tothebald
eagle." say Combleth and Waugh.
"To as it represents the racial-elhnic-eultural diver.;ity that
has cbaracterized the United States from its beginnings;· says
Combleth. "'It is our metaphor for both the multicultural real it)
of American society today and for its as·yet-unreali7...ed expression in our schools· social studies curricula."
Combleth is a fonner high school history teacher. Waugh is
a reponer with the San Francisco Examintr who helped repon
the paper's lengthy series on California's "curriculum wars."
Thei r book is not only an examination of disputed values and
cri tical issues. but a behind·Lhe-scenes look at the politics and
personalities of education policymaking in action.
Among those whose thinking and actions they scrutinize are
historian Arthur Schlesinger. formereducation secretaries Diane
Ravitch and Chester Finn. former NationaJ Endowment for the
Humanities director Lynne Cheney. New
York State Education Commissioner
ThomasSoboi.CharlonCrabtreeandGary
Nash of UCLA and Bill Honig .
Califomia'!r~ superintendent of public instruction.
~ ey

also look at links between these
educator.&lt; and policymaker.; and such
groups as the conservative Olin Founda·
tion; American Textbook Council; the
Educational Excellence Network., which
spawned the Bradley Commission on History in the Schools; the National Center
for History in the Schools. and the National Council for History Education.
In addition to providing the historical
context in which the American debate has
been waged. the author.; take reader.; to
two of the major t.;;nlegrounds of this
ofl en-acerbic national comest-the history and social studies curriculum wars
waged in New York and California since
the late 1980s.
Combleth served on two committees
appointed by Ne"• York's Board of RegenL'i to review and revise the social stud·
ies curriculum consi stent with the
multiculturnl realities of U.S. hi;tory and
contemporary society. As a reporter,

I

m- social SIDdico lextbool: adoplioo

COlllnM:rSy in Calili:lmia.

Its insider-&lt;llltSidcr penpccli~ and their ridl cue studies
of the largest. most c:lbniaiiJy and racWJy diverse swes set
"The Great Spccldcd Bird" opart from books that ownirnplify the American debate os ad!oice between plurnlismand
unity.
'We'~ p1ben:d tbo evidence and told the Slories of how
~llllivisl oppcnen1S of multia1lturalism ha~ tried to caricature multic:ulnnl..,.,..,...,..tatioo and then dismiss A." says
CombledL "By 'caricalwe'l mean eqlll1ing multicultUTaiism
with extreme forms of political correctness or with
Afrocenlrism," sbclldds. "To us, 'muJticulnnJ' history means
including ll'1Cn !ban tbo exporience. perspeclive. history and
cultun: of one group. It means run inclusion and tbo pnosentotion of multiple penpocti vcs."
1be authors ooUicd the term "neo-oativist"' to describe tbe
master hiSUlrical ti8D'IIIi~ that flauens social hierarchies,
fades away !liCe and racism, and represents all player.; as
immignmts of similar experience and fortune.

9he authors claim thaiContemporary neo--nativtsm has
I the same exclusionary effects as the "nativism" that

bird' Is our 'counter
symbol' to the bald

eagle. To us It
repreMnts the raclal-

culturakrthnlc diversity
that has c:ta.ac:terized
the

u.s. from Its

beginnings. •
CATIWIIN£ CORNBUTll

precedes it historically because it treats Native Americans.
enslaved Africans.conquered Mex.,.:-ans. Asian imrnigr..mtsa/1 of us-as if we were European immigrants.
•
Although the issues are complex. the book informs the
debate on the nature of America in a number of ways.
Education policymaking in New York and California are
wtndows through which reader.; can view and make better
sense of the pitched ban1es over definitions of .. America.. and
''Americanism.'' llle authors demonstrate. for example. how
thecal I by minorities for inclusion has been turned on its head
by neo-nativists and redefined as a problem of fragmentation
or separatism. Funher. they show ho\lo' neo-nativists' minimizing of his1oric struggles to realize America's ideals mask
configurations of political and economic powerthat privilege
some racial-ethnic groups. classes and genders O\'er others.
Combleth explains that what we are seeing today is less
a traditional. liberal&lt;onservative division than a divide between "'elitists"' and "'the people."' An "'elitist"' version of
history. she says. "'seeks to maintain a
pre-1960s view of the world that emphasiz.eskingsandpresidentsandstatesrtlef4 plus a few scientists and inventors.
h minimizes or ignores the historical
experience of ordinary people."
Updating the academic content of
school programs to accommodate the
last 30 or40 year.; ofhistorical research
means making room for the experiencesand perspectivesoflesserlmowns
who have been the focus of much recent scholarship. she notes. Combleth
acknowledges that such an update
would change what is tough! significantly and in ways that are likely to
make cena1n people uneasy. principally those who are currently wellrepresented. TheSO&lt;alled"'mioorities"
who cha!lenge neo-nativists and elitist
claim to ownership of America in the
1990s frequently can claimequallydeep
generational title to this country.
In thiir concluding chapter.
"America Not Yet."' theauthorscall for
"'dialogue among differences"' instead
of debate. to increase the chances of
realizing the promise of America-&lt;&gt;f
freeing, rather that trying to cage. the
"great speckled bird" of their title.

''

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                    <text>Battle to
SaveEOP
Director Henry Durand

041 front in effort to
save endangered
program.

,. 5

Modern Racism
Study says it may be

• behind cuts in social
programs.

~10

March 9 . 1995 Volume 26. No 20

Mission to Albany: alumni
&amp; lawmakers, face to face
llySTEVECOX
Reporter Slaff

)

·

The alumni message tOSfiii'e legislators: We need Time, TAP and Tools.
The legislators' response to the alumni: Keep up the good work, but bring us

a plan.
Members of the UB Alumni Association Legislative Action Committee met with nearly two do1.en
statelawmake" on Tuesday, Feb. 28
during a day long mission to Albany.
The trip came with just a month left

I

gave SUNY flexibilit y. Cntics then said it would just
shift the bottlenod: from the state Division of Budget
to SUNY Centro! You know what. they were right. "
LaValle added thaL to make any restorations at all .
SUNY had to present a workable cou nter proposal.
ne~ds

someone to say ·t have a game

until the legislature is due to adopt a

"SUNY

state budget.
The legi slature is divided

plan .... Th is is my vosion of SUNY .''
pol~ti­

cally, bt:tween the Democr311C -

controlled State Assembly and R"·
publican-dominated State Senate.
However, legislators from both houses gave indications to alums they spoke with that the proposed cuts
to SUNY were disproportionate.
Long Island State Sen. Ken LaValle. chair of the
Senate Higher Education Committee. when questioned by UB Alumni Association President Sarah
Ande...on on the elimination of programs like EOP
and pan-time TAP. said. "I think you will find that

legislators are committed toensuringaccess. lt's more
just a question of 'Do we have to spend S60 million to
do it?'
'The independents (private colleges). SUNY and
CUNY are trying now to agree on a program that
allows access through opponunity programs for less."
Responding to her plea for greater flexibility for
SUNY.LaValle noted "We did that. In 1985-86, we

Learning that UB President William Greanef s
scheduled visi t with him was cancelled by an ice storm
th at closed the Albany Countytirpon. LaVaJie picked
up the pho ne and called Greiner in Buffalo.

S

tephanie Sorrentino. representing As!!oemblyman

Edward Sullivan, told a half dozen students and

Commiuee. ha s been traversing the stale speal ing 10
SUNY students. He is slated to speak to UB students
during a noontime rally in the Student Union tomorrow .
Sorrentino felt the prognosis for the SUNY budget
was not as bleak as others may say. "You have an

audience here , you know . Probably half of the
legislature's employees are graduates of SU Y I
Continued on page 5

lly STEVE COX
Reporter Slaff

T WAS WELL before
dawn and area roads were
a sheet of ice. But that
didn 't deter a dozen UB
alums from embarking on
an 16-hour mi ssion 10 the state
capitol inAibany.todefendtheir
alma mater.

I

GJtrO u
1hat
w $leJ) wn
as dCiin of the School of Medicine and Biomedic:al Sci-

eilces and vice president for Clinical Affairs effective
July I, 1996.
Naughton un March 2 celebrated his 20th anniversary ·
as dean of the medical school .
"John's depanure from the deanship will mark the end of an
important era in our institution· s ttistory." said UB President

William R. Greiner in a memorandum to vice presidents. deans.
chai" of the medical school and the medical school Faculty
Council, and executive officers at affiliated hospitals.
"In shaping an unprecedented set of programs to train generol-

ists and primary care physicians.
John has led this school into the
ranks of the top 10 comprehensive
medical schools. Atthis same time.
he has guided the school in estab-

lishing new research strengths
through several pioneering
multidiscipl inary cente" which
ha•e attracted major national grants
and federal funding to UB."Greiner
said.
"John has also reshaped the
medical school's connections with
the Western New York medical
community at large. He helped to
~reate

"The UB 81111

,..uy IIIIM John'•
.. d ..........

vt.lon_._ ...
v1c:e

~•
W1WAM R. GR£1NER

extraordinary new relation-

ships with UB ·s affiliated teaching
hospitals. relying on a consortia! model that has garnered national

attention as a new approach to medical education. He bas also

alumni-advocates

refined individual physicians' relationships with the university by
developing a UB Faculty Management Plan.
'The UB and Western New York communities will greatly

boarded a chanered bus before

six o'clock in the morni ng in the
Center for Tomorrow parking
lot to make the 300-mile trek.
They were joined by Alumni

miss John's leadership and vision as dean and vice president.-

Association Executive Director
William Evitts and Assistant
Director Jude Schwendler.
Formany.thiswastheitthird Bus trip orientation: Jude Sc:hwendler, William Evitts address group.
trip in three years 10 the statehouse. But. clearly the stakes were much higher this
TAP and EOP restored and that we need more flex ibil-

year.

.-pta--,_ Deolllll ...... lll

Naughton announces
plans to step down

alums. "Simply put, Mr. Sullivan is taking the
governor's budget as an unacceptable proposal."
Sullivan. who chairs the Assembly Hagher Education

Stakes high for high-powered group
defending UB in the state capitol

The

John NaCMon

celelutlon at* 20th annhwury •.......,.. Khool liNn.

.

Handing out information packets and appotntment
schedules. Schwendler and Evitts explained that the
message of the day was Time, TAP and Tools; "Our
talking points are that we need time to phase tn any

ity and independence to manage a much more tuition driven budget.'' said Schwendler.
Molly McKeown. UB assistant vice president for
governmental relations, met.the bus at the ca pitol and
accompanted the group to the e1ghlh floor of the

reduction over several ye.,.., or find other means oL.,._ =--.--,----.,---- - - - -- - financingatransitiontoasmallerSUNY, thatwe need
Continued on page 5

" lt is a great tribute to John Naughton that he is among the longest serving medical school deans in the country," said UB
Pro\'OSt Aaron N. BJOC:h. "He has shaped UB 's SehoolofMedicine
and Biomedical Sciences and indeed many aspects of the Western
New York health care community as we lmowthem today. l do not

believe I have ever encountered another academic leader with his
exceptional depth and breadth of vision. We owe much to him. and
we hope that this next chapter in his career will be as successful
and fulfilling as the one he is now completing."
An internationally-known eardiologist. Naughton joioed the
UB faculty in 1975 as dean and professor of medicine. He had
previously served as professor of medicine and dean for academic
Continued on page 2

�_.,..._

2

____ _

Lockw~ exhibit portrays

UB as 'ecological' campus
ByUSAWUY
News Bureau Staff
be UB North Campus could look
a lot different in the year 2025
than it does today-more trees,
less lawn space and shops mingled
with academic buildings along the
main ''Spine" area--&lt;&gt;CCOrdingto"UB 2025,"
an ex.hibit that opened earlier this month in
Lockwood Library on the North Campus.
The exhibit, which will run through the
end of March in the second-floor reference
room of Lockwood. is based on the "UB
2025 Proposal"-a 30-year plan to trans-

been projected, be said.
"You can'tjustlook at the budget for thisyear or next year." Barrell noted. "It's going
to take us at least 30 years-which would
take us to 2025 ."
The benefits of&lt;iividing the campus into
parklike, urbanized and naturalized areas
would include reduced overall costs and
energy consumption. an enhanced and more
diverse community of ecosystems and increased natural beauty, educational benefits,
recreational opportunities and prestige for
the university.

fonn the North Campus environment into a

greener. mo~nergy-efficient. well -man aged. ucampus ike" environment.
The plan, c aled by the Land-Use Sub-

commiu.ee·o

e university's Environmen-

tal Task Force. has been in the works for
three yean:.
The exhibit was designed and mounted
by subcommittee memben; Julie Barrell. a
UB undergraduate student in environmental
studies and a formerchairofthe subcommittee; Adam Brozost and Michael Poczkalskl.
UB graduate students in architecture, and
Gary Day and Lynda Schneckloth, both UB
associate professors of architecture.
The display consists of blueprints and
photographs that depict how the campus
would look if sharply divided into parklike,
urbanized and naturalized areas.
'There are significant benefits that can be
gained from a plan like this," said Ronald
Naylor, chair of the Environmental Task
Force and associate vice president for University Facilities. The first stage in the ap~roval 'Proce£'- ~ 1.0 obt.ain admin~trative
suppon for the concept in principle, NayJer
said, adding that he expects to present the
commen ts on lhe plan to the administration
in April. The project's costs have not .yet

"You can!tjust look at the
budget for this year or
~year. It's going to
take us at least 30
years-which would take
us to 2025."
JUUE UIIRETT

The areas that would be ··naturalized '' are
on the periphery of campu s, have the most
potential ttnd offer the most in terms of
ecologicallbenefits. Barren said. They include the Ellicou. LaSalle and Flint woods;
the Bitzer Creek Corridor and the Letchworth
Woods Extension. The exhibit defines the
lawn area as "a green desert:· noting there
are negative aspects of maintaining a lawn based landscape. including low biodiversity
and productivity. and high energy/fuel con·
sumption. Naturalizing this land would involve allowing the grass to grow and planting

more trees. thereby reducing the yearly cost
to maintain a lawn-based landscape.
The "urbanized" area of campus. defined
as the outdoor "Spine" area from Capen Hall
along the Student Activity Centeno the edge
of Lake LaSalle. is depicted in the,exhibit as
being full of activity, with shops and stalls
similar to those feaiUred at the bustling
Quincy Market and Fanuel Hall in Boston.
Noting that there is a tendency for students.
faculty and staff to feel "locked up" inside
buildings on the North Campus. Barrell explained that an urban ized area would ena&gt;urage people to go outdoors.
9'he exhibit defines the "parklike" area as
I being the parkways. "official" playing
fie1ds, ~ south and west sides of the lakes
and land around dormitories. administrative
complexes and parking lots. These seningscomposed of lawns interspersed with trees.
shrubs and wild flower lields-proyide places

for outdoor ac· ~ and drawings
tivitiesandopen are part of UB 2025
vistas to cam- exhibit In second floor
pus . Each of reference room at
these , areas Lockwood Ubrary.
would allow the
university to add to the variety of the landscape, while reducing overall maintenance
costs.
In addition to the blueprints and photographs. the exhibit also includes interactive
components--two graffiti boards and two
North Campus blueprint boards-for viewers to "be an architect for the day ." Observers may convey their ideas by writing.
drawing or highlighting the sheets. ,
Up until now . the subcommittee has re ·
ceived only limited feedback from the Unl ·
versity com mun ity· at-large. Schneck loth
notes that subcommittee and task force mem bers wiH record and seriously review the
comme nts o ffered at the library.

Management guru keynote speaker at March 17 conference
BJ SUE WUETCHER

News Bureau Staff

E

DWARDLAWLERIII.recently
named one of the top six new
gurus in the field of management
by Business Week magazine, will
be one of the keynote speaken; at
a conference designed to help cbmpanies
develop a team·based work environment. to
be held on Friday. March 17, in the Hyatt
Regency Buffalo.
The conference is sponsored by the Center for Team Performance in the UB School
of Management.
The conference will feature expens from
companies and academia who can discuss the
different points along the life cycle of a team ,

says Jerry Newman, UB associate professor
of human resources and organization and
director of the Center for Team Performance .

Tbe speakers:
• Barbara Benedict Bunker. UB associ·
ate professor of psychology. who will discuss how to institut e a quick change in
corporate culture to one that emphasizes
team efforts.
• Karen Kemp, vice president for human
resource s for Fisher Price, will offer sugges·
tions on how to avoid land mines during the
first year in a transition to teams.
• Lawler, founder and director of the
Center for Effecti ve Organizations. recognized as one of the country's leading man agement research organizations. wi11 provide

mfonnation on the latest innovations in team·
based compensation.
• Representauves from three companies
will discuss their experiences with a team·
reward system: Lisa Cohen. director of hu·
man resources for American Express; John
Butler, vice president for human resources for
Nabisco. and Jim Valkwitch. industrial engineering manager, and Jeff Karcher. U.S.W.A.
incentive chairman for Local593. both r&lt;:prescnting Outokumpu-American Brass.
• Barry Friedman , training team leader
for Mobil Oil. will detail how teams survive
and thrive during corporate downsizing.
• Brian Pettit, human resource manager
for Motorola. will d iscuss how a growing
company adapts to team-building.

The Center for Team Performance was
establi shed to help student s. busi nesses and
scholars in understanding and developing
effective team·based work environments.
The center helps develop the teilm skills of
students and practitioners by providing case)
and courses on building-team skills.
It also acts as a centraJ clearinghouse for
information about learn work environments
gathered from both organizations reporting
about their practices and from scholars com·
municating their team-based research find·
ings.
In addition. the cen{er promotes the un·
den;tanding of team skills through conferences. co llaborations and funding for studies
of team performam:~.

NAUGHTON

Honored at Service Assembly
Among those honored at a Service Assembly of Univen;ity Services employees Feb.
3 were these project team members. some of whose names were omined from the
Service Excellence program:
Workplace Skills for the ' 90s Committee included the following from Univer.;ity
Facilities: Philip Cahill, Joanne Lantz Fletcher, James Hubbard, Kenneth Kavanagh.
David Lytle, Gemma Moell, David Rhoads, Jill Uebelhoer; also. Kathleen Ben:hou
and Carol Kobrin . CSEA; Barbara Christy, Pen;onnel Services (retired); E. Dewey
Bush. Pauline Eshleman. Donald Erb. Residence Halls; Harriet Spector. GOER/
Project REACH: David Street. CSEA, Inc .. Project REACH ; Ri chard Sawicki (i nstructor) and Sheila Groeger (program administrator). BOCES.
Among those cited for staff training initiatives were: General Education (GED)
diploma. Jill Uebelhoer, Univen;ity Facilities; Carolyn Johnson. Maryvale Continuing
Education (i nstructor); Suzanne Yale. Maryvale Continuing Education (Director of
Continu ing Educat·ion).

Continued from page 1

affairs at the George Washinglon University
School of Medicine and Health Sciences.
In 1984 he assumed the duties vice president for clinical affairs and in 1985 was
named professor of physiology. In addition
to overseeing the uni versity's clinical af·
fain;. Naugh(on has served since 1987 as
vice chair of the Western New York Health
Sciences consortium.
He is a fellow oft he American College of
Cardiology.AmericanCollegeofChest Physicians. American College of Physicians and
American College of Sports Medicine.
Naughton is considered an expert in the
field of exercise and physical activity and
the prevention of coronary heart di sease. He

developed the Naughton Treadmill Protocol
used in exercise testing.
Author of two books and more than 125
scientific publications. be has served as editorandon the editorial boards of a number of
professional journals.
Naughton. a graduate of St. Louis University, received his M .D. degree from the
University of Oklahoma College of Med icine. He was named Physician of the Year
in Academic Medicine by the Universil y
of Oklahoma College of Medicine Alumni
Association in 1990. cited for ..outstanding contributions and leadership in fur·
th~ring scholarship. administration and
research."

�_.,

_____ _

3

UB making pl~to cope with cuts, Bloch tells Senate
S 11iE MARCH I deadline
for the governor to amend hi s
proposed budget has passed
and the Apn1 I deadline for
the legislature to effect any
changes in this budget looms, it has become
clear that neither branch of government will
save SUNY from the largest cuts in support
in recent history, UB Provost Aaron Bloch
said Feb. 28.
Provost Bloch. addressing the Faculty Senate, echoed the opening remarks of Faculty
SenateOlair Peter A. Nick"""" when he said.
''This time the wolf is really at the door.
Bloch said that although
the final numbers on how

concerning the admiiWICe of students and
the hlringoffaculty for the fall now or in the
next few weeks," he said.
Bloch said as a result of the expected cut
in SUite aid, UB is planning to admit a larger
freshman class this upcoming fall than it did
last year. But he said he is concerned about

ations. Bloch, who said be has assembled a
small committee to study the financing of
gn~duate education at UB. predicted that
"the financial jolt for gradual~ students may
be more serious than the financial jolt for
undergraduate students." He noted that th is
year S I million in graduate TAP (tuition

"Nothing has been put on the
chopping block. We are doing our
best to plan flexibly. "

much state support UB w i l l j

lose are not expected until

at impact_a rise in tuition will have on th is

around commencement
time.preparalionsneven.he+
less have begun to ready UB
llilij~· for the financial hit. Bloch
said the deans of schools
have been asked to make contingency plans
incorporating 5 percent cuts and 10 percent
cuts in their budgets. He .emphasized that
these were only "loose plans." "Nothing has
been put on the chopping block. We are doi ng
our best to plan flexibly,'' he added.
The timing of this budget debate, the
provost said, makes it hard on a universit y
that has to plan months a~pecially
when lhe exact magnil'Ude of these cuts is
still uncenain."We have to make decisions

a mi ssions process.
··we have no experience dealing with
what the effects of a tu ition hike like this will
have on the admi ssi ons process," h~ said.
"There's going to be a great deal of guesswork involved."' UB also recently eliminated its Feb. 15 applications deadline for
incoming students and. instead, adopted a

l..

rolling admissions program. Ad missions
applications will no w be evaluated every 30
days. thereby allowing UB to contact prospective students more quickl y.
Bloch also said that the system of grad uate education at UB will be fundamentall y
affected if the governor's budget pa.sses
th rough the legislature without major alter·')

assistance prog ram) money was spent at UB .
Under Gov. Pataki's proposed budget , graduate TAP will be eliminated.
In addition to losing TAP aid. Bloch satd.
graduate students may see their tu iti ons rise
substantiall y. He noted that many of these
gn~duate programs- particularly UB · s professional programs-are "underpn ced" v. hen
compared to the programs at comparable
state universities. He stressed. however, that
.. we mu st try to avoid 'tuuion shock' for
those professional school tudents who have
budgeted in advance for the cost of thetr
education."
Faculty Senate Chair Peter A. Nid.erson
predicted that the battle to win support for
miti gating the cuts to SUNY may not only be

difficult in the legislature; but may be difficult in the media as well.
He said that members of the UB community should be prepared for a " Blame the
Victim" approach to be adopted in the media
wbere the SUNY sySiem is portrayed as
bloated and ripe for cuu.
efore the budget debate js over, he
warned ... some people will call us
(SUNY) mi smanaged."
The budget si tuation was not the only
item on the Faculty Senate· s agenda. however. A recent proposal put forth by the
Faculty Senate · s Educat1onal Programs and
Policies Committee (EPPC) was also de bated. The proposal-whtch would lov. er
the number of semester hours requ1red for
graduation from 128 to 120 for B.A .. B.S ..
B.P.S. and B.F.A degrees-received strong
support among memben. of the Faculty Senate.
Many faculty memben&gt; potnted out that
the current requirement of 128 semester hours
for graduation was based on a 30-year-old
system when students tool four4-credit classes
a t.emester. Currentl y. most classes receive 3
credits. thereby forcing students to take extra
classes to make up the dJfference.
Bloch vmced ht' suppon for the reduction as well ··students shou ldn ' t have to go
to summer school or overload on classes in a
~mester in order to graduate in four years:·
he said.
The Senate Will vme on th1 s resolution
March 28.

B

Grand jury investigates '92 assault
on student in Lisbon Avenue flat
A grand jury lnvestlptlon has begun
and charges could be filed soon m connectiOn with a vicaou~ assault t'-"O years ago that
left a UB student with permanent lnJUne~
The you ng woman. who has been pub ~
hcly adentified only as Kam. still suffer:,
heanng loss. conti nued weakness 10 o ne of
her arms and h~ trouble readmg a~ a re"lult
of her injuries.
Authoriue:s believe a man ""ho aI read) ll; m
Jail for another crime is responsible for the fall
1992 attack on the young" oman. Tile' iclim.
who was 21 and at UB ;unior at the time. " 3.l;
beaten into unconsciousness and may ha' e
been raped in the Sept. 5. 1992 attack. "hich
occurred in the fi rst-floor Lisbon A venue flat
she shared with two other UB SlUdents.

The- ncllm had returned homcabour m•d"'1!-hl from a pany. police say. when some·
one apparently bro~e into her apanment m
the early mommg hour;; and brutal!) attacked her. She ""as fo und the next mom mg.
unconscaous and lymg in her bed in a pool of
blood. b)" her roommate . ""ho had returned
home se' era I hour~ after the assau lt.
The att ad. left the 'ichm m criucal condation . She remamed uncon\CIOUS for !I.e'·
eral da) ~ - and " eeb later ""as able to 'peal.
on I) a fe" words. A nati' e of Long hland.
she " as trano;ferred to a long-tcrm care facallt y m Phaladelphia. and wnhm a year wa.,.
bad home \oll.ith her parents. where ..,he attended commumty college and continued to
receave ph )'~ilcal therap~

Juclltlt Adams, LockwoOd Ubrary clrector, right, and graduate student Laurie

Steinmetz use new laser technology.

Laser disk technology
comes to Lockwood
In a ..,.clal study room near Lockwood Library 's mai n reference area. UB
students and faculty can now immerse themselves in an encyclopedic panorama of
Italian civilization-the subject of the libraries' first laser di sk. It vis uall y presents
not only Italian art. architecture and history. but also the country's landscape. cities.
flora and fauna, politics. military baules, etc.
The UB community can experience laser information products, now that Lockwood
has acquired a Pioneer laser djsk pl ayer and a Sony 20-inch stereo color monitor.
Laser technology has arrived at the University Libraries thank s to a gi ft from the
Robert and Marion de Mauriac Nonh Library Fund.
In education and research, laser di sks are increasingly used for interac ti ve
teaching and learn ing. especially in an. an hi story and aichitecture. One di sk can
hold vivid reproductions of the contents of entire museums; present an active
mu ltimedia cultural history of a civilization. country or genre; or comprehensi ve ly
survey the works of an anist or school.
This technology can integrate visual material. sound. music. motion. and text. In
the commercial realm. laser di sks are beginning to replace videotapes as a medium
for movies.
The Art and An History Departments are e_specially enthusiastic about the new
technology. Lockwood has several additional laser disk products under consideration, including "Van Gogh Revisited," " Masterpieeeo.Dfllalian Ar1 Series." ''The
First Emperor of China," and " Pioneer Great Artists Series."

Grant funds product design study
promoting independent living
lly U SA WILLY
News Bureau Staff

The UB School of ArdtHecture and
Planning has received a grant to conduct a
universal criteria and product-evaluation
project that will address universal design
issues for household products.
The $29.700 grant from the Center for
Universal Design at Nonh Carolina State
Universi ty was awarded to Edw ard H.
Steinfeld, UB professor of archi tect ure. who
directs the sc hool 's Adaptive Environments
Laboratory . He will be principal investiga tor. with Abir Multick. UB assistant profes·
sor of architect ure. co- principal inve ti gator.
The project' s goal is to promote affordable. independent living for people " 'hO are
elderly or di sabled. according to Steinfeld.
"The idea behind universal design is that
products are designed to be used by as wide
of a variety of people as possible-so you
don't have to have special products for people
with disabilities," Steinfeld says. Specialized products usually are more expensive

and are less readily available. he explains.
"We would like to in Ouence mass production in the marketplace for general consumers:· Steinfeld said. '11le aging of the
population is dri vi ng an expansion of manufacturers· target markets. ~ design of everyday items can be modified to be more
easily used by the 'silver market."•
Researchtrs will select several products
for detailed analysis. starting with bathroom
products such as the bathtub. s in~ faucets
and sho wer sprays. They also will develop
universal desig n criteria by which to evaluate the products. and di sse minate the design
criteria to indu stry and standards-development organizations.
The results should be applicable to design
standards for accessible housing. giving guidance to architects and interior designers on
how to facilitate uni versal design of household products like appliances and plumbing
fixtures. The project marks the beginning of
a long-range research program to evaluate
products current! y on the mari.:eL

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two studies conducted by researchers at the
UB School of Dental Medicine have shown.
The fir.;t study was presented today at the
American Association of Dental Resean:h
meeting in San Antonio, Texas. The second
study will be presented Friday.
In the fir.;t study. UB researcher.; sought
10 evaluate the tmpact of various risk factors
on the development of oral lesions ranging
from canker sores to tumors. These lesions
can occur on the lips. tongue. cheeks, palate.
noor of the mouth or any other soft tissue in
the mouth.
A UB dental research team headed by
Julie Cianciola. a dental s1udent under the
mentor.;hip of Sara G Grossi. UB clinical
assi 1ant professor of oral biology. assessed

said. Manytypesoflesionsdisappearedwhen
subjects stopped smoking. but stopping
smoking did not reverse the deepest tis.ue
damage, Grossi noted.
Additional researchers on the study wen:
Alex Ho. oral biology statistician: Roben
Dunford. senior sdentific programmer in
oral biology. and Robert Genco. chair and
SUNY Distinguished Professor in the UB
Department of Oral Biology.
The research was supported in pan by
grants from the U.S. Public Health Service
and the William E. and GraceS. Mabie Fund
In addition to increasing the chances of
developing oral lesions, smoking is a risk
factor for periodontal disease. commonly
known as gum disease. However. lillie is
known about the effect of smoking on gum
healing after treatment for periodontitis .

n the second st udy. designed to answer
thi s question , a UB team headed by Gross1
followed 55 smoker.; and 88 non-smoker&gt;
diagnosed with substantial periodontitis and
assessed them before and after treatment to
determine: the amount and rate of healing
the impact of age. gender. education.
Resu lts showed that although both group'
subgingival microbial nora. smoking and
had comparable disease and ~ceived the
alcohol on the development of le ions in
same treatmenl. the non·lliimolers healed bet1.426 subjects. Results showed that of all the
ter than the molers.
variables examined, smoking was the only
"This finding has profound implications for
factor associated with all of the most fre ·
the clinical management of periodontal disquently observed abnormalities.
The d,ata sho,.•ed that 37 .6 percent of
ease." Grossi said. "Smoker.; do not respond a.&lt;
favorably to treatment as non-smoker.;. These
current slnokers had oral lesions. compared
to 29.3 percent of non -smoker.; and 34.5 - were very conservati \ e treatments:· ~he
added
... For more invasive procedures. such
percent of fonner smokers. The most fre·
quently observed abnormalities were
as surgery. the problems will be compounded.
This is evidence of an adverse effect on the
leukoplakia. benign lesions rhat can provide
favorable conditions for the development of
imml.U)e response
malignancy. l..eukoplakia wen: found in 15.7
Treatment for all participants cons1~t ed
percent of current smoker.;, but in only 8. 7
of four to six sessions of subgingival scalmg
percent of non·smokers.
and 1001 planing. The amount of healing ""'
Oral ' 'aricose veins. another type of leassessed three months after tbe last treatsion. were present in 8.8 percent of smokers.
ment. The number of sites still prone to bleedbut in only 3. 1 percent of non·smoken.. A
inghad decreased by 20pen:ent in noo-smol..er&gt;.
third type oflesion. capillary haemangioma.
compared to only 12 percent in smoker.;.
also was seen mo~ often in smokers than
Members of the research team. in addi non· smokers. 'The finding that 1wo types of
tion to Grossi. were Joseph Zambon : Eh
vascular lesions were found more frequently
Machi&lt;!. Roben Schifferle : Sebastiano
in smokers add to the evidence linking
Andreana: Diane Cummins: Godfrey Harrap
tobacco to vascular disease. both 10 microand Roben Genco. all of the UB Depanmen1
circulation and macrocirculation," Grossi
of Oral Biology.

I

Presence of periodontal disease
also may point to osteoporosis
IJJ LOIS BAKER
News Bureau Staff

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A

MONG postmenopausal women.
a diagnosis of periodontal dis·
ease--commonly known as gum
disease-may indicate that the
patient also has osteoporosis. bone: loss that
can result in se~ous fractures, a pilot study
by researcher.; at the UB School of Dental
Medicine: has shown.
Resu hs of the study were presented this
month at the American Association of Den·
tal Research Meeting in San Antoni o. Texas.
The research lays the groundwork for a
largerinvestigationoftherelationshipbetween
bone density and periodontal disease to be
conducted by the UB dental school and the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
For the pilot study. researcher.; led by
Mmc: Altekm. UB clinical instructor of oral
biology. assessed 25 postmenopausal "omen
who had differing levels of periodontal disease to identify I he c:xlent of their gum dis·
ease and lo measure bone·mineral density.
an indication of bone loss.
Gum-disease sratus was assessed by .sev.
~ral methods: clinical attachment level. probmg pocket depth. presence of plaque above
the gum line. bleeding of the gums. calculus
above and below the sum Jine and a measure

ca lled alveolar crest height-the amount of
bone in the jaw where teeth are located. This
lasl assessment was obtained through com·
pute:r·assisred X·rays.
Results showed that women ~~ ith lower
alveolar cn:st height also had lower bonemineral density at both the spi ne and femur.
A significant relationship also was found
between clinical attach.ment level and bonemineral density at the femur, but not the spine.
Ahekin said that if the same relationships
an: found in a larger study, postmenopausal
women diagnosed with gum disease will be
advised to have their bone-mineral density
measured for the existence of osteoporosis.
Membe" of the research team. in addition toAhekin. wen: Jean Wactawski -Wende.
UB clinical assistant professor of gynecology and obstetrics; Sara G . Grossi. UB clinical professor of oral biology: Maurizio
Trevisan. professor and chair of the UB
Department of Social and Preventive Medicine: Myrosfaw Hreschyshyn. professor and
chair. UB Department of G ynecology and
Obstetrics: Robert Dunford. senior scientific programmer in oral biology. and Robert
Genco, chair and SUNY Distinguished Pro·
fessor. UB Depanment of Oral Biology.
The n:sean:h was supported in part by
U.S. Public Health Service grants.

�_.,

.... _., __

5

Director in forefront ofoampaign to save endangered EOP
llySl'KWCOX

Reponer Staff

T

HE DIRECTOR C!f UB's Educational Oppor1uni1 y Program
(EOP) is out front in lhe stalewide battle IO save lhe $15 million endangered program from Gov.
Palalti's budge! ax.
Since Gov. Palalti released his budge~
Henry Durand, who chairs lhe New York
State Council of EOP Directors, has been
bunonholing gubernatorial aides. calling
on legislators, collecting thousan~ of signatures and mobilizing a n army of EOP
students and alumni across the state. It
appears that their efforts may be having
some effect.
"Some legislators are very su pportive
and want restoration:· Durand said. "Some
olhers are uncommitted. I don 't really know
of any who are outright unsupportive." Between EOP and its counterparts in lhe City
University (SEEK) and at private institu-

tions (HEOP), more lhan 35,000 students
could be adversely impacted by Pataki's
proposed cuts.
Durand and his colleagues have developed a comprehensive "strategic plan" to
secure restoration of EOP, TAP and pantime TAP. " Number
one, we bope to galher
up one million new
voter registration
forms:· explained
Durand . " and drop
themoolhegovemor's
desk. •· Other activitie~
include gathering petition signatures in suppan of EOP, a print
DURAND
and broadcast media
campaign. even filing
class action suits gainst the· governor and
the stale legislat
!hat contend lhe stale
had a "contract" with EOP students il is
obliged to fulfill .

1

EOP, SEEK and HEOP students, alumni
tially higber, Durand explains. !han the naand administrators will converge on Albany
tional graduation rale for students in !hat
March 14 for a rally at the slate capi tol.
income brackel: 6 percent.
MEOP is not a minority program. it's an
1be governor, in his budgel message. '
called EOP an ineffective minority funding
economically and academically disadvan program, biu Durand says he is dead wrong. taged student program.- Durand explains,"
EOP actually serves only slightly more Afand the stale gets a big return in its invest·
rican American than while students. Curment. Conservatively. it isestimatedlhatthe
rently. 37 percent ofEOP st udents statewjde
30.000 graduates of EOP each year generate
are black, 32 percent are white and 18 per$754 million in income and pay over S 182
cent are Latino. In fact, Durand projects that,
million in federal . state and localwes each
based on the application and acceptances
year. They •re academically disadvantaged
already logged white students will become
students when they arrive. but not when !hey
graduate:· The stale currently spends less
the largest ethnic block next year.
!han S17 million on EOP. Durand explams.
urand pegs the average annual cost of
and about 80 percent of EOP graduates reanending UB at S I0,30 I . The average
main in New Yo•k State.
family income of UB students generally is
.. In a conservati\'e fiscal climate. I find
$43,000. but the average annual income of
the elimination of this program puzzling."
EOP students is only $11.000. Also. !he sixDurand explains. " It would seem to me 10 be
year graduation rate for EOP students is 32
what you want; the students stay and con·
percent. While lhal is below lhe graduation
tribute back to lhe state. working largely in
rate ofthe university as a whole. it is substanunderserved areas."

D

FACE TO FACE
Continued from page 1

lhink we have lhe governor's people sweating a little bit."
Stale Sen. Dale Volker of Depew, himself a UB Law grad, shared with fellow UB
Law alum Jean Powers, i partner in lhe
downtown firm JaeckJe, Aei schman and
Mugel, hi s frustration with SUNY Central's
lack of a coherent message in ttre c.apitol.
Nevertheless, Volker said lhe Stale Senate
had usually been kind 10 SUNY when proposed cuts ran deep, and he hoped the same
could be true thi s year. Volker encouraged
-the group to .. keep the pressu re on, that 's
what legislators respond to."
A member of the Democratic minority in

"I have never been
this far along in the
budget process without
having a grasp on
what is going to happen.
I feel completely shut
out."

Above,

McKeown and
Jude

SEH. WIWAM STACHOWSKI

his house. Sen. William Slachowski of Buffalo to ld Angola attorney Wally Pacer. "I
have never been this far along in the budget
process without hav ing any grasp on what is
going to happen. ! feel completely shut out."
Frank Horsch. legislative director of Assemblyman Sam Hoyt's office. told Don
Roberts. ''The proposed tuition in rease
would move Us from 13th most expensive
public university 10 third. The assemblyman
feels !here is almost nothing about thi s budget 10 support.. This is a serious and unpleasan t game of brinkmanship." Horsch invited
the alumni to attend Hoyt's next ..town meeting" on March II. in Moot Hall on the
Buffalo State College campus.
Olher legislators visited by UB alumni
incl ude
Assemblymembers
Robin
Schimminger of Kenmore. Paul Tokasz of
Cheektowaga, Sandra Lee Winh of West
Seneca. WiHiam Pannent of Jamesto wn.
Anhur Eve of Buffalo. Patricia McGee of
Olean, Joseph Pillinere of Niagara Falls.
Richard Keane of South Buffalo. Charles
Nesbin of Brockpon. Thomas Reynolds of
Springville and Francis Pordum of Orchard
Park. Also. Senators Mary Lou Rath of
Amherst, Jess Present of Jamestown and
Anlhony Nanula of Buffalo.
-

SchWMidler
txlef alurMI.
Far left, Sen.
Dale Volker
speaks to the

group. Left,
Aslemblyman
Rk:hanf Ander-

son talks
about budget

cuts.

STAKES HIGH
Continued from page 1

Legislative Office Building (LOB ). where
they borrowed the conference room of
Kenmore Assemblyman Robin Schimminger
to confer.
" Yo u are not going to get a .lot of sy mpathy o ut there tod ay. You are playing 10 a
tough aud ie nce," warned McKeown. as
she briefed the group before se nding them
out on 22 appointments. most with members of the We stern New York leg is lative
delegation.
"Be to the point when you are speaki ng.
and don 't be di scouraged if you meet with
a staff aide: !hey are very important pans
of the process here as welf:'Piease note any
questions the legislator or staffer may have.

\Ve will be su re to get back to them: ·

Tuesday is usually the busiest day for
lobbying in Albany . It 's the only da j most
legislators are in town for the ful1 day
without sessio n duties . Many organizati ons from all aver the state were out in
force. airing their grievances. And. just
the day before. more than 250 busloads of
SUNY student s had traipsed through the
crowded LOB .
etween ap.pointments. the ad vocates
dropped by lhe conference room of Sen.
Mary Lou Rath fo r lunch.
Most oflhe UB group had taken a day ofT
from work. or away from their professional

B

practices. 10 make lhe trip. Among those
making the UB case 10 legislators: Dr. James
Phill ips. a Buffalo internist who serves on
lhe UB Council: Donald Roberts , an insurance agent with Potter. Harris and Scherrer
in Clarence; Buffalo Public Schools Alhletic Director W illie Evans; Attorneys William Hamilton. a hearing examiner~ Jean
Powers of Jaeckle. Fleischmann and Mugel
and Jeannene Ogden. of Damon and Morey.
Alumn i Association President Sarah
Anderson. retired educator Leon Henderson
Sr. and Yvonne Ware from lhe UB Office of
Preparatory Programs, as well as several
students, also made the trip.
C

�I
4:30-7:30 p.m. Sessions nm
Thursdayslhrou&amp;JI May II. SIS.

sso per ... ion. Call829-3291
for rezi tnllion information;
regiwaooo deadline i.s five
working days bcJorc: eacb srs-

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THURSDAY

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WEDNESOAYS AT 4 PWS
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l'tiARMACEUTICS SEMINAR

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Mta-odialysis Techniques to
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Cooke. North Campus. 3:30p.m.

MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM

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Quant;.td Chaotic Systems

From Cootracrption Maoage-

Gr.vity as Curved Spacetime ~
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porters
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aiOCMMIS11IY SEMINAR
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PHYSIOLDIIY SEIIIIINAII
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Ex presssioo, Edward G . Nile!o.
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TUESDA Y

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TOXICOLOGY ,
ENVI-MENTAI. HEALI'M
SCIENC£S RESEARCH
Quantitaaion or Xtnobiotic
lnduciblt Gtnn by RT-PCR.
J1m 01~. Ph 0 and Adam
DrahushuL . 125 Car\ -Farber·
Sherman Add1t10n South C a mpu!&gt; 8 ~ 30 a.m
MANAGEMENT ALUMNI
SEMINAR

The S«nls of Po"'u

N~oti­

ating. Ro~er Dav. !&gt;On Hohda)
Inn A1rpon. 4600 Gene-.u 9
am -Noun S75 fee Call tH'i
3200

OPUS: CLAUIC5 UV£

SliMMERFAR£ I'MEATEII
Nunwnse U. Pfe1fer The.:.ter 8
p m. SIO. SJ2. Sl5 Ca11839-

Sl. Paul's Catbrd ral Nond.

85• 0-

Allen Hall. South Campus. 7
p.m Free admission .

SATURDAY

I'EDIATRIC COHFDlENC£
Tbe: Use of Psycbolropic
Agents in Children and Ad ole.sct.nts. Davis Kaye. M .D.
Mercy H ospital, Main Conference Room. 8:30a.m.

Lounge, Goodyear Hall. South
Campus. I p.m .
EMERITUS MEETING
Carole Petro, Associate VP for
University Se rvices and co-chair
of the Sesquicentennial Com·
mi uee. South Lounge. Goodyear
Hall . South Campus. 2 p.m.
NURSING CONTINUING

EDUCA,__
lntrodudory Physical Assessmeat ortbe Adult. 6-9 p.m.
$250. Call 829·329 1 for rtgi!&gt;·
tration information. ,

Q11a .una ~NOAnON

-..:.....

Joshua Bdl, violinist.
Kleinhans Music Hall. 8 p .m.

Sl 2. Sl 6, S20. Call 886-0067.

$ 3568

•

PowerBook 540c 41320

$665 Price drop!

Active matrix Color'
·

$4372

PowerBook 540c
121500 with modem

$786 Price drop! Active matrix Color!

(7Jj{-1r.-rJJ.
fr:
.Jr.J[f
I, J ...P
.4

• City li~H&lt;)ie in oeldom

equaled dcp-. •
beautifully deuiled and

cared loc voaon... ~
in the bean o( the

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR

The Physiology or lhc ON Bipolar Ce.ll : On~ N~uro n 's

Elmwooci-Oelawve

View or the Rei ina. Malcom M

District. """" from

Slau~hter.

Ph.D. 108 Sherman
South Campus. 4 15 p .m

Cbil&lt;lnn~~

36Hodge

PHILOSOPHY / HISTORY
L£CTUR£
Hi...-tory a nd t ht- Me.tbodotoc
or the Social Scirnas. Prof
Rudolf Ulthe. Umv . of Aachen.
Gcnnany . 684 Baldy North
Campus 5 p.m.

• Gut tpocos loc
..,...,.ininr -doable
porlor, dco, ~ Iars&lt;
cat-in kitdlf!l&gt;.l•llaar
laandry, s ~ 2.S
badw, , .......... 3,000.
oq. h. Plus lcpl Jrclllaar
I bcdroooo apt. SUS ind.

SOUTH AF1UCAN ALII

EDUCAT10N-

North Campus.

C rrtifieatr Program in

PIANO R£CnAI.
Elir r Sua rez., piam st Bamt
Rec1tal Hall. Nonh Campul&gt;
I :30 p.m . Free admi ...MOn

TUESDAY

du-ector. Center for the Ar1s
Scr«ning Room . North Campus. 7 :30p.m . Follov.·10g the
scrcenmg. James Sey will
prtsent a papertnled "Apart·
he1d . AesthetiCS. and Med1a
Poser· Three lndepen~nt South
Afnc.:.n F1lms .~

utifuia.

• lmnJcdja..,.,.,.......,
oieoorinJ
..._,.,!-.
Opal loc

1:1W:GIJ.L

-~

$169,950 .........

ATHLETICS

EMERITUS IIOARD MEETING

Emeritus Center Board. South

matrix Color!

~0

1~

2608.

PowerBook 520c
121320 with modem

$607 Price drop! Dum-scan passive

INSTJTVTE FOR ADOICT10N
STUDIES AND TRAINING
Et h kal and Boundar)' lssub
in ub...1ance Abuse Prf:\'tD·
tion and Tnatmcnt. W1lham
Whllt" Center for Tomormv.
Nor1h Campu .. SbO fee Call
bJ3 -61.$0

SCRESIING
Shot Down. Andrtw WON:Sale.

SENIOit ALUMNI WNCHEON
Your Family T~ Betty
Keehn. Center for Tomorrov.
North Campus. Noon. Call 829-

m~tnx Color!

MONDAY

I'EDIATRIC IIIIAND IIOUNOS

CHEMICAL ENIIIN££RING
UNO£ IJDIINAR SERIES
Avi Halperin. CNRS. Mulhouse.
France. 206 Fuma . Nonh Cam·
pus. 3:45 p.m .

1~

SliMMEIIFAll£ I'MEATEII

17

The Budgd and Job S«urity
St ress_ Counseling Center Staff.

$2919

Dual-sam passtve

North Campus.

FRIDAY

POWIIIIAIIMINI

P'lltFOIIMANCE

PowerBook 520 411 60

$277 Price drop!

NURSING CONTINUINII

Gerontological Nursing. SeJosions run Thursdays through

May II. 4:30-7:30 p.m. SIS .
SSO per session . Call 829-3291
for registration informatiOn:
rtgistratioo deadline IS five
working days be: fore each
s.ession.

Top 100 Basketba ll Clinic.
Alumni Arena Naunonum

SUMMERFAR£ I'MEATER
Nun.stnst 11. Pfe1fer Theat er 4
p.m. and 8 p.m . SIO. Sl2 . SIS

Call 839-8540.

~1

WNYTDC SEIIIIINAR
Capita iWng on Opportuoilies
in tbe Former Soviet Republics. Buffet breakf:ut included;
space is limited. prtregistration
and prepayment requested. C e n·
te r for Tomorrow. Nonh Cam·

Continued on page 8

tor...,._,

call:

Jane G. Kearns
Licensed Sales Representative
631-4800
24 Hour Voice Mail: 635-8784

�_,..._

8
rna&amp;.~

CALENDAR

~ IUid

Continued from page 7
pu1. I : U- 11~.

Col1636-

3626.
I
....._liiiCSC. . . .&amp;Ma
P..tlotrk""" A . -

G,.........,., Carmen Todoro,

-liM-

M.D .. F.A.C.O.G. M=y Ho&lt;pi·
ul Cafetorium A. 8:30 Lm.

'l!'.miCft Qaooa, by Kazi•lon
Bn_u.a. Cenler for tht Aru Re hurul Woruhop. North Campus. Noon-1 p.m. Free admiston.
lfYIIIU. LECTUIIE

Dissipotioo ond l u Ddicbts.
Prof. StP.WI S. Antman. Univ. of
Maryland. 146 Dtoefendorf.
South Campw~. 4 p.m.

-

liOUTII AIIIIC.UI FIUI

MapanUW. OUnr Schmitz.

-...,Ia £aclish, ZMiu,

Solbo, Alriboas wlfAI- sub1
Centedor the AtU
nln&amp; Room. North C.mp.m. Following the

inc there will be • panel
ion with JameJ Scy,
James Pappu. and Sombo Diop.
- T S ..U41'LUS
MeN lilly Chair l'enpedlvu
oa Trudatiolt IS Ledu..rrPodry: A

Fip~

ia

___ _

Ra~

Jose

Kozcr. 930 Oemc:ns. North
p.m.

Campw~ . 4

~---

E•plori11&amp; c.,..... Cboacc.
Janet Mather, Joyce Anderson ,
Lynn Suchev.icz. North C.mpus. 6-8 p.m. Catl64.5-6125 for
registration information.

EDUCA,__
HUIISIM CONTUIUIHG

lntroduelory Physical A.sse-ssmeni oftM Adult. 6-9 p.m
S2SO. Call829-3291 for rtr•"'·
trallon mfonnation.

and frer: treatmeaL
lodiV&gt;dualo uoder-Jouol poycho-

UlitUDIICD(

I

DdlpU,

--

Prof. St... S. Antmu&gt;. U..iv. o(
Maryland. 146 Dideodo.r.
South Compoo. 4 p.m.

~an: - elt&amp;iblr Fa&lt;
fu.n.hrer lDfClm\lfbOn, OOGtlc:t
Gayle Bee Ph 0 . .. 645· 36SO.
ut )]7

lllf&lt;dlao-Coatrol1'rolala&amp;.
olferocl by the Olfttt ol Con·
tinuin&amp; Nune Education. 4-7
p.m. S20. $35 . Coll829-3291.
-TaAT4PLUS
lllliepal Poetry Jteodin&amp;. l as&lt;
Kaur. Ceotcr c..- the AtU

....,.,...,.~

n.. UnderJrotl.... ubrafy ...
poeuy c:t»ICStS lpon501'Cd '" ~
....h the Dcponmcrtf o( .;,.,.....
and the Fnends o( the IJtttV&lt;f·
9ty Ubnncs T'IVo pnza ol
SIOOeoch llrColferod f..- the
brst poems .ubmined by UB
11udcnts The Academy ol
ArMncan Pod contest 1 open
10 bodt gnduatc and uodcr·
gnduatc srllllcnts. the Fnends ol
tbt Utuven;uy Lbranes pnu ts
nounct.J tht 1995

Scn:eain1 Room. Nonh Cam·

pu

- ~p. m.

AIICNITWCTUIIE LECTUitE

TCH"''ftlo: Coarronti.ng lht Recionol City, K&lt;ll G=aber&amp;.
SptlllliO&lt;ed by Jh&lt; 5obool of Ar·
chiteclure and Plannm&amp;. 30 I

r.. ~ ... Jy E.mnes

Crosby. South Campu . 5 30
p.m. Free adnu noo.
UUAII FIUI SIJIIO
llldle Epoqu&lt; (Aiblided). Sru·
dc:m Uruoa Tbe:a1er. North Urnpus. 6:30p.m. $2. SJ.SO Call
645-2957.

~-

r.

Buyia.c a BOIH-o Peter Maurer
Jr. 7-9 p.m. Call645-6125 for
reJiitration infonnallon .

CUSSN:S UVE
Cello IUid Piaao, Htlenc Gap
and Silv1e Bcaudent Allen
Hall. Souch Campus. 7 p.m. Frtt
admiuion.

WBFO listeners heard a Utile music talk with Branford Matsalls Sur
day at 2 p.m. when he came to the studio to appear on Jazz Favor·

AJICHAEOLOQICA&amp;. LECTUR£

Romans ud Natives of the
lslaod

or Sardlala,. Prof

Ste\'e
. 205 Olurchh1ll Tower.
Caahius 7 _JO p m

nes. He's only ·on leave" from the Tonight Show, Marsalis revealed•

MUS.a . Hili!EER£cn AL
MicheU~ Ki«, clanntl M~
Kt« 1 a tudc:nl of Edward
Yadzmsty Ba1rd Rec11al Hall
Nonh Campus 8 p m

R£SJE'AJICN C CIU.OQUIUM

Dcceptioo Ia R.... rch : Tit&lt;
Lumpedomy-Mulfl'tomy
Sl udy. Donald Marqut~ . Ph 0
Unn of Kansa~ Butler Audllttnum. Shennan. South Campu'

UUAII nUl SERIES
Pulp F'lrtton. Sludenl Un1on

~;~e;ri~~ ~T-~~~ 79 p m

lation or nine films. Vllrious
d.ired:on; compiled b) Robt:t1
Weirttk. Center for dlt Am
Screc:ning Room Nonh Campus. 6:30p.m. Followmg 1M
screemng there w•ll be 1 panel
diSCUSSion With JameS~) .

11IE ~N TAIIL£

COFFEDIOUR
Planer Sandals. Hamman Hall
South Campus. S p.m. Frtt coff~ and mu.!&gt;IC. Call M5-2957

DEC- WNO YOU ARE
Adrian P1per' s mvesttgatton of
racnm ha!io kd her to ctealt an
arre,UnJ!.' bod) L&gt;f confmnt•·
t1ooal art 1-1~ exhabtl ...Oectdt
Who You Are.- .... ,n bt up
tt,mugh Apnl 22 at the Centet
for the: An.!t Gallet} Cfif"'t noon
Adm1~1on ~~ free ~ gallef) hour\
are- 10:30 a m .-8 p m Wcdnes -

Sll-715pm
UUAII nUl SERIES
8«-1~ Epoq~. SIU&amp;nt Un1on
llle11ter Nonh Campus 6 }()

SOUTII AFIUCAN FIUI

SCIIEENl'be P f"'C'HSed lm•ge. compi-

Wrdnesdly-Saturda) and NoonS p m Sunday. Call 645-6912

I

T tt

u

s

R

pm S2. SJ50 Call!&gt;4l-29l7

0 A V

~l

UFE WORKSAn Introd uction to Mf'ditation. Paula Schanl 7·9 p m
Callt&gt;'l-611\ for rc:~ostratoon
•nfnrmal•on

da~ - Saturday

TNl ENO DECONSTIIUCTS

STDI£0TTI'U
Th ~ h1~ e~h1btt. '-'The End ..
Vu;u.M· Burj!tn deconstlltCts'SO·
l•al 11otereot)'pes. myths. and
c Iicht about tendt:r and pov. a .
p.aMlcularl) b perpetuatt'd b)
the meda.a HI v.orl v. ill be
di,pla)ed throufh Apnl 22 1n
I he Center for the Art~ Galler.

FACULTY R£CnAL SEittES
Oani~l McCabe-. b:mt~ Skr
ontl Campu ... 8
p m \2. S5 . S6. S8
..:
.....,.
=:..GDII
_:::..EJIT
- -IIOU
- -N-DT
_ AII
_ L£
_
UUAII nLM SERIES
SESStONS
\ Pu lp Fktioo. Student l rmu n
ECMC F'lnaMial Turnaround
lkaleJ Nonh Campu' q P m
&amp; Currrat Huhb-Care
S~. S' 'iO C'all ()J"i ~~"i 7

l

Cnnet:n Hall

\CCOnd Ooor Adml!to'iilon u.

WEDNESDAY

22

COGSCI COUOQUIUM
Be~1. Wesle)an
Um ' . 280 P\rl... North Campu.'
Co-sponsored b)' Spolen Language Traaning Grant

TBA , Cath.i

PHARMACY SEMINAR
~ Rolf: of Long Acting Beta
Ad reoergit Agonists in Man·
a~m~nt of Ast hma. Ba.rcha
Akban. 248 Cook~ Nonh Cam-

pu.s.8·9a.m.
- I N I I COHTINUINII
EDUCATION l"'llUAM
R~view Course for Nursing
Cont inuing Eduatkm a nd

Staff Devdo p ~M:nt Certif"K:II·
tioa Eum1nation. I 0 a.m.· I
p.m. SISO. Call829-3291 for
registration information.

OUTIIEACN-

SIOR~ -

Call

~.5 · 3200

GUitAR S1UD£HTS R£CI1'AL
S1ud~nts

or Joann~ Castellani.

Ba1rd Rec1tal Hall Nonh Cam Noon

pti!&gt;

UFE WORKSHOP

lntroduction lo ih~ \\'orldv. ide
Web and HTML. Br:mdon
Ple\l.·e ~ - 30-4 . 30 p m Call 645 ·
6115 for regastr.uion mfonnuuon
~HARMAC EUTICS

SEMINAR

TBA. Dr Scon D1amond C'50M
Cooke Nonh

Campu~

3 30

p.m.
a~A&amp;.

SCIENCES

SDIIINAR
Sexual Sele-ction in 11 Coral
Rt'd'F'tSb. Dr Roben Wa.rntr.
Uni\ of Califom1a. Santa Barbar:t 114 Hochslc=ller Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

UFEWORKSDrums a nd Unhealthy Cultural Valu~ Pat L Smith 4-6
p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration informatmn.

Overrominc S byMSS. Counseling Center. t 4SE SrudC'nt Unioo.
North Campus. Noon -1 p.m .

--JICAL

l"ttiLLSSf'NT LECTURE
Promd.beus., Kai Nelson . 280
Park . North Campus. 4 p.m

,....._OI.OIIYRMINAR
lo-vitro aod In-vivo Studies
With Glycin&lt; Partial A.caailts:
A. Novd St.-.tecY Cor Modulal·
iac NMDA. lteceptor Function,
Kathleen Boje. Ph.D. 307
Hocbste{l&lt;'f. North Campus.
4 p.m.

- - COHTINUINII
EDUCATION-

..-~

Ga-ontolotic:al Nursin&amp;. 4:307:.30 p.m. ~sions run Thursdays throogh May II. $15, SSO
per session. Call 829-3291 for
registntion infomunion ; regis·
lralion deadliiX is five worting
days bc:flft: each K:Uion .

£i&amp;lltlo Medlq. 684 Baldy.
Nonl! Campw~. 4 p.m.

Certiftcat£

EniiCS ..

Procram in

·-AI.

E X HIB I TS
AIICHITECTUR£ EXHiamoN
'"Cnn"lruet•on. lntc-nt1on. Detail
Fi't PrnJ«1' from Fi\e S~t"
Archuect'.." run' through Mart'h
2~ m the Jame~ D)elt EAhtbl ·
11on Hall on the 1h1rd floor of
!lot)t"' Art:huech rcpre~med
tnduJc Hcnn(! &amp;. de Meuron
Buri.lullcr &amp;. Sum1. Mr1h &amp;.
Petc-T. Du~ncr &amp;.. D1ener . and
Peter Zumthor Gallt"r) houn
are Monda)'' 9 am -8 p m .. and
Tue!&gt;day!t · fru.la)~. 9 am · 5 p m
BEETOW SNOW OPENS
MARCH 23
Ma.'&gt;ter of Fu~ Am cand1date
Chno;;une Bc-e10"' ' ~~o theMs e._ .
h1b11 open!!&gt; March 24 at 1~
Center for the:: An~ wath " rect:p·
110n from 7-9 30 p m. Her 1llu.,.
lnUllm~ v.all remaan on d1~~opla)
m the An Depan:mtm Galler)
through Apnl 10 Galler) houn.
are Tuc~ay. 10 a.m.-5 p.m•.
Wdoesda) ·fn&lt;h!.)'. 10 n.m -8
p.m . and S;nurda) II a. mAl
p.m.

CONTINUING EXHIIIITS

March 9 1s the fi nal day for
'The Semor Show.- fealunng
work by semor BA and S F A
cand1d:nes m pamtmg.. scu lp·
ture. computer a.n. photoj;taph) .
pnntmalc.ing. lllU!iln.tion. and
commumcation des1gn 1n the
An Ocpanment Gallery SmlOn
Unger's " Red Venical" runs
through July 31 in the Lightwell
Gallery. This site-construction
uplores the interconnections
between art and architecture.
Admission ir; free. Gallery
hours arc 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m.

rrtt.

~alief) houl"\ art 10.30 am -8
p m Wedne&lt;.d:ii )' · Saturda) and
~oun ; p m Sund.:t) Call 6-1 "i()qll nr b4'i-b976

Trend$, Puul J Candmo. CEO
Enr Count) Med.ca1 Ccntet
Fanny'!i Reslaur.ant. 3500
Shendan 8·9 a.m S40 per ~, .
SIOO or S 120 for all four ~~ ­

and Noon -5 p m

Sund.l) Call645·6912

I

••••••••••

N 0 T I C £ 5

cated a1 120 Fall~ . EUarou
Complu. Nonh Campus. offen
1ts Spnn&amp; '9S Craft Wori.ibopl
Manang lht v.ttk of March 20
Wor\.shops art' scheduled tn
"-'n\ IDJ. croche:tmg and lmt ·
ttog . qudttn,:. BraL•han embrm
dc-r) . grec11.ng card do•J!n. poe
ttry. mlttmedaate poUef)
CartOOfUDJ:. ba3o.IC pholOf.r.liph)
natu~

photograph) . CTe.aU\r

photograJlil) . color pltotocraphy • .tnncrd color pholoe:ra -

ph) . aenal photograph) . darL ·
room tc:chmque~~o . Jt"""-elf1
con truchon. bt-gmnmr SlAJnt"d
glass, ad' anl'td llolalned glass.
pocttl) and multune&lt;ha for chi I·
drm All worts~ run from 710 p m one ntcht a v..·tt.._ for 1011
v..tt . ea.cepc dukiren ' ~o dasSN
on Saturd.l)' monungs ftt\ anSJO for studrnts and S50 for all
ochen . earl) s1p up IS ld''~
For more mformattOO . call 645 ·
612..5or64S-2434
INTUINAnoHAL FOUl
DANCAII a~ v.elc(\11')1! 10 JOin 1~ ln ·
tematwnal Fon, DanCing ~roup
each Fnda) from M- Il p m m l
Dteft.ndod Hall on 11\e South
C.ampu, ~~ frer it'll tom

I

ber,m V.tlh teachmg Pa.nners

art" not OC"eded 1be &lt;ponsor ''

COMMENCEMENt SPEAKER

lbt

Unne~ll) Commcncc~nl

Commlltec- ~d.~ il \Ioden! rer
n~"it'nt:.li\t" 10 adJre.,, gradua.le"
Jttht 1-l'hh Uni\C'O.ll\ Com ·
mtnct'tnrol. !ooC'hcduled ror 10
.1m Sunda)'. Ma~ I~ tn Alumm
An.-nn All gmduatm1 I&gt;C'RIOfl: m
the f:.cul~e-, of An and Lc1ters.
N:tlural Sctc-nce.. and bthenu.t·
1n .

Soctal SctCOC'e!l and Spec1:tl

and lndn •duahtrd MaJOrS are
lo "ct a!i commc:ocemen1
~pealer Nu.:olas 0 Goodman.
\ICt' pro\0..1 for UtMkf!!radUate
edUl' :IIIOR. v.tJI chatr I );C)ec\100
comma nee- compnsed of f3CUhy.
eh~1blr-

~taff.

and 'iudenb Semon who

m1t

v.nnrn \'er5ton oft:ht-ar

. . ,~n 1o bt: conMdered must sub.
;a

spee-ch

10

Goodnun. Each final-

l~~ol

..... 11 ptr~nt hilolhrer address
before the commltlt"C, and the
"'mnu:ag speech v. ill be pre·
i~oenled by Lhe student a1 commerK:·ement. Speeches should br
no longer than sir. mmutes. Sf:.
lectton will be based on rele-vancy. approprin1eness of COO·
tent. and dehvrry . Entries must
M submitt~ by Wednesday,
AprilS lo lhe Sludent Speaker
Selecttpn Committer. clo
Nicolas D. Goodman, Vitt Pro·
vMt for Undergraduate &amp;location . S49 Capen Hall. Nonh

Campus. 64S-2991.

CREATIVE CRAFT CIDITUI
1be Crutive Craft Ccnter, lo-

the Gmdua~ Student A'JSOCII ·
t10n

JAZZ HISTORY COURSE TO
SETAUQHT
Ja.1.1 npcn \\'alllam Cole\. l iB
Prof and Ch:ur of Ophthalmol ·
og.) . .,.,.til prnent-Jau
Amenc:a:'\ Untque An Form.. 710 p m Tuesd.:~y, Murrh 28 at
I he BuffaJo State Collc.ge Ltfelon~ Learning C~ter The OI'IC'·
e'·enm1 course rxp~ thc
t\·Oiutton o( J8U mW.IC In
Amenca and bo.,., Ja.zz. antsb
h:l'e boill upoa theu musical
hentagc to male uniq~ and
CTeati\'C mu ic. Course fet ts
Sl5. plus S1 for matr.nals Pre·
regtsnatton i ~ed by
M.arch 22. For more infonna·
lion. call 878-5906. WBFO &amp;8 7
FM LS co.-sponsor.

-~ANIC

AnACII SUFRIIEIIS

lndi\·iduats agt$ 18 and older
who suffer from panic anacks
an:: being sough110 pan&amp;cipate
m non-drug treaLrnent ~search
bc:mg conducted &lt;U lhe Crntcr
for Ana..iety Raearch in the UB
Oepanment of Psychology.
Panic attacks aft' mdden rushes
of intense fear or- anx.iety thai
occur out of the blue. Symptoms
may include- racing heart. shortness of breath, swt::Uing and
trembl ing or shaking. lbose
selected to panicipalc. in thc
research will receive a thorough

sboukl consist of one 10 su.
typewnuen pap 'The: •ntcr' s
umc should not appear oa me
poems, 00. on • cover ~beet owtth
the ...... o( the ....... aod the
writd's n.ame class, addn:u
and crlcpbone number. Emnes
hould be stnt ro Marpret R.
Wells, O.rco:tor. Uoderpodual&lt;
Ubnory. 107 Capea Hall, North
Campwl. Buffalo. N.Y 142602200 Tlw cloadliao is Fr\doy,
Mardi U. W1nMR wtll be nourted by Apnl 12 ono1 w~J be
IOVIted lO read from thelr work
at a poeu-y read.tn1 10 be held at
4 p.m Thur&gt;day, Apnl20 •• the
Poetry/Rare: BooU Room of the
Ubrafy. 420 C&amp;pen Hall

P'CMm'OUO..,..
The UB An Oepanmreat wttl
hne ponfoho rf:\·1c-ws for cur
rentJ) enrolled stodeQI:S Salurda)· , March 25 an the: Cmter for
the Arts Jf )'OU arr planmn&amp; to
Chan@:r )OUt ma,or tQ a 8 F.A
or a B A 1n An be!IMJRI wuh
tht ran 199.5 ~mestcr. you mu't
ptTRftl. tn person. an acctptabir
pon_folw:1 or an .,.,.orl Apphc auons and mformauoo abou1
ponfo ho rM~UaremetU~ tit' a&lt;vaJI ·
abk tn 1ht An Offtee . 202 Cen·
tef r()f lhc Am Re\ te'A'S V.'lll be
b~ appoumnc;.nt only Please see
the ..Ponfoho Requu~meots
Cum"ntl) Enrol~ UB Stu
denh ~ form for deta1l'

IIETNIEU NEEDED
LIB rt§el~ S«k health} .
~tired adults a'e1 60 aDd okler
to partldpate 10 a bnef stud) 10
•n:d~ le tht ~ sa used an
lhmltng Those §t:kcted to par l.cspate 1n the stud) •dl un dt'rgo one- tnlen'.ev. and com·
p~ a fc:-v. s1mple mental tasU
In addition. each pou'ttCipant
mu'&gt;l ha"r • sagntficant other or
rel:-.ttve v.•ho can comp~ a
hnc-f QU('SI.tonnatrc PaniCtpams
v.1ll be ~tmbun.ed for thrren
It me 1'tlo\t "'ho cannor comt to
1~ Ene Counl) MediCI! Cc:-nLer
can be tntCT'\ te-v.ed •I bome
Tbo'OI: mtt-rt-\led tn partletpaung
m 1he '!ud) ~hoold call &amp;84biiM and leo:~,·t thC':u namt . tele phone numbe.r and the llmh
the-} can br rc-achtd at home.

ZALOIO M-.A&amp;.
SERYICl TO SE H£UI
A memon.1l set'\ 1te for Marek

8 Z.l&lt;&gt;ko M D . Ph D.. wtll be
held at 'oon on Fnda) , March
2.- m tbt Ltppschuu Room. 12S
CFS Atkhuon. Sooth Campus

JOBS
IIUEARCN
R""!'rch Support Sp•&lt;ialist·
Nurs.,.g. ~~n,g#R--95015 .
S«:mary 11-Socta..J &amp; Ptt vet~­
liVC Med1C'1.ne. Posttng MR95016. Patian Care Tecbnid.an·Social &amp;: Prtvcnti\'e
Medicme. Poslmg tR-9501 7
f'tiOI'EUIOICA&amp;.

Computa- Network ilnager
(SL-J)-Uni,·ersity Pub1icauon

Posting JP-4110. Assiltont
Dean, C....... o.-v.lopmet&gt;t
Scni«s (SirS)· School of Management. PoslmJ fP-S006.
LUOII CLUSIFIED CML
RIIVICE .
Cleaner ( SG-S}·Unn't"fStly Fa·
Cllities. Lme 131597.

To obtam ~ Information on
jobs listed abcwe, contact
Personnel Senrices. 104 Cro/ls
Hall.

�- ..---.--

9

OBITUARIES

John B. Fortini, UB Hall of Farner
Services w... .,.lei Marc h 3 in St.
Joseph's Cathedral for John B. Fortint, 57.
director of park s and recreation for
Lackawanna, who died Feb. 27 . Fonini, a
UB graduate, played on the 1958 lamben
Cup championship football team , which in
1993 was inducted into the UB Alumni Association Hall of Fame.
After receivi ng his degree rn phy&gt;rcal
education and recreation at UB. Fortint
worked as a recreation specaalist at the Veterans Hospital in Batavia from 1959- 196-1,
then went into the ~staurant busmes!ri Afler
turni ng over the ~st.aurant operation to his
son. Chrislopher. he tooL the Lad.. aV~anna

parks posnron last year
He was a pa&lt;t prcsrdent of the Buffalo
chapter of the New Vorl&lt; SUite Res!Jiurant
Association and a member of the state
organization'&lt; board of dtrccton. He held
memberships tn the Niagara Frontier. New
Vorl State and ationaJ Recreation Asso-

ciations
Survi\'Or'\ 1nclude h1s wife. Anna; two
""n&gt;. John R of West Seneca and Christopher of Blasdell. ~ daught&lt;r. Anne Mane
Rich of Laclav. ann:t; three SISters. Ruth
Sorger of Laclawanna and Anita Rohloff
and Mana Slencr, both of Checltowaga:

and

~\en grandch1l d~n

Joseph B. Rounds, library director
Private Mt'Yices will be held for Joseph
B . Rounds. 85, first director of the Buffalo
and Erie County Publ ic Libral) system. "ho
died Feb. 25 in Millard Fillmore Suburban
Hospital after a !rihon 11lness.
Rounds. who had worked to the Ne""
York Pu blic Labral) and 10 Geneva. Swit zerland under a Roclefeller Foundauon Fellowship. was manager of the Amencan
Library rn Part"n 1940 He came to Buffalo
that year at the request of Samuel P Capen.
UB chancellor. charged -wuh o rgamzing the
library school at the Uni,c,;ny of Buffalo
Withtn a year he became head of the UB
Library School and acting hbranan at the
Grosvenor Libr.lf) . He headed the Gtm•cnor
from 1941 -1947. "hen ll merged wrth the
cou nty library. and he became the fintt dJrec·
tor of the Eric Cou nty Public Library . In
1954 , he became first director of the consolidated city-county library system.

When Rounds retired rn 1975. the lrbraf)'
board noted that he " led long banles that
resulted m man) branch libranes being
ope ned , specaal program~ being initiated in
the mner ity and staff sa lanes being raased
to a compe:llll\e level."'
The untral Ltbrat) Board room" named

an h1 s honor
From 1942-45. Rounds&gt;ened rn the U.S.
Arm) ·, Stgnaf Radro lntcllrgence Untt, parliCJpaung 1n fourcampa.~gns an the European
Theater dunng World War II
Round,, a graduate of Earlham College rn
lndrana. held bachelors and master s de grees 1n hbrar) lOC'aence from the Umversuy
of M1ch1gan.
Honored for outstandmg public service
by the Buffalo Eventng Nc"s tn 1954 .
Rounds recehed UB's University Cit.ation
m 1973 and rece1ved the alumnt recognition
award from the Univen.ity of Michigan.

Psychology professor B. Richard Bugelski

Bulls end season
wi1h best record
since '84-85
Rasaun Young, top left.
goes up lor a shot 1n Bulls'
Win over Valpara1so Top
right: exc1ted fans perform
free throw ritual. Left: Scalp
and Blade frat members.
Including many UB alums.
celebrate the v1ctory.

Men'a B•lntlrell

The men's basketball team closed rts seasoo Sunday rliQhl . losing lo Wes1em llhros 76-70 rn
the semiflll8! rpund of the Mid-Contrnenl Conference Tournamenl
The Bulls finished the year 18-10. the roost wins by a UB men·s team Since the 1964-65
seasoo. Woody Williams led the Bulls against Western with 23 po1n1s while Myron Banks
addled 21 points and Rasaun Young had !8. The Bulls played Wtlhout startrng center Kelvin
Robinsoo , out with a broken fOOL
UB advanced to the semninal game with an electrifying 70-65 voctory Fnday mghl over
Eastern Illinois a1 the Big A. Down by five with a brt more than four mrnutes left, the Bulls
rallied to post the victory. Young led UB with 21 points.
UB now waits for word this weeke nd whether or not rt has earned a berth rn the Natrona!
lnvrtational Tournament.

w-·•aa.ketbllll

The Royals posted their second straight 20-win season by beatrng Missouri-Kansas Crty 7762 in the forst round of the conference tournarnent last Saturday. UB was 20-7 heading into its
semifinal game at Youngstown State Monday night. Natosha Cummings led the Royals with
23 points. The winner of that tournarnent earns an automatic berth rnto the NCAA Tournament

w-··

swilln!IIIC...,
The UB women's
swirlvning and DtvlnC
diving team took second place in the 39-team ECAC Cham-

pionships last weekend in the Big A Natatorium. The Royals' BOO free relay team took frrst
with a school record time. MlemberS rncluded Suzanne Bohnet, Man~e Duffet. Alexandra
Barrera and Kristen Krenrtsl&lt;y. Barrera also set a school record in the 200 backslroke. Duffet
set a school mar1&lt; in the 200 butterfly while Krenrtsl&lt;y established a school record in the 500
free. Lenina Trinidad set a school mar1&lt; in the 50 back.

Men'as.......-c..., DtvlnC

·

The Bulls swin-vning and diving team finished founh with 344 points. James Madisoo took forst
with 557 points. Mark Horgan set three school records. Also breaking a school record was
Kevin Remaly in-lll&lt;l..100 breaststroke. Justin Monin, coming off his Diver of the Year honors
in the Mid-Continent Conference Championships, won the 1-meter diving at the ECACs.

a. Rich8nl Bu&amp;elsld, Drstingutshed Prof.,.
'oOfEmcntu&gt;ofPsychologyat UB and a "orld·
reno" ned scholar in leamtng theory. died
Marrh 3, tn hi Getzville home. He " 'as 81.
A UB faculty member from 1946-78.
Bugel~l..1 made a number of ''gnificant contrtbutton&lt; to the field of psychology. Whtle
a gradu:11e ~tudent :11 Yale Uni,ersity. he
conducted the fi~t e&gt;.penmental demonstra·
uon of the concept of secondaf) reinforce ·
ment. "'h1ch is no"" referred to 1n all
p;ycholog) textbools.
He aho v.as the first to demonstrate experimenla ll ) the phenomenon of unconsciOUS
med1ation in learmng. which ~h awed that
although a person rna) believe he is leammg
a nove l idea or new informauon. the associations he has ''learned" actually represenl a
combinaLion of hi s pre\'iousexperiences in a
new , temporal sequence.
Bugelski authored or co-authored seven
books, eight book chapters and 50 articles in
scholarl y journals.
He served as chair of the UB Depanment
of Psychol c~y from 1965~9. resigning that

post "hen he v. as named a 01stmgui~bed
Pro(cssor. the htghc t acadcmtc rank tn the
State Unl\ersttyofNc" Yon system, by the
SUNY Board of Trustees. The promotron is
made in recogniuon of an ind1vidual' s repu·
tallon m h1 s or her field and contributions to
the research llleratureortht ~- At the time.
he was one of on ly four D1 ~ti nguished Professors at B.
Bugelsl..1 ~ned as pre~tdent of the East·
em P ~ycho l og 1cal Asc;oc lallon in 1970. and
received the SU Y Chancellor's Award for
Excellence in Teachi ng in 1978. shonly be·
fore hts retirement rn May of that year.
A native of Johnstown. Pa .. who moved
to Buffalo "ith his family at age 8. Bugelski
"as acuve in the Poli sh community in Buffalo. servi ng as president of the Polish Arts
Club of Buffalo.
He received ""belor's and master' s degrees from the Univer.;ity of Buffalo and a
doctoral degree from Yale.
He is survived by his wife, Sadie Locuno
Bugelsk.i of G&lt;Uville: two daughters; a sister. and four graiwlchildrcn.

2222Public Satetv~ Weekly Repll't

no.-....c--flf--

_..,_,. _ _ u_:u:
-ol

--.._uo~to-DI,

• A wallet, containing cash, a bank card,
personal papers and idlentificanon, was
reported missing Feb. 17 from Crosby Hall.
• A Poner Quadrangle resident reported
Feb. 18 that someone entered her unlocked
room and threw clothing and other ~ems all
over the room.
• A Fargo Quadrangle resident repc&gt;~ned
Feb. 18 that someone entered his room and
took an unknown amount of cash.
• About $160 was reported mrssing Feb. 20
from a desk drawer in Clemens Hall.
• Public Safety received a report Feb. 20
that a stray cat had been seen in Cary Hall

over the last three days . Officefs were unable to locate the cat.
• A JSci&lt;et, textbook and a wallet, containing
cash, a credrt card and personal identification, were reported missing Feb. 20 from the
men's loclcef room in Ak.mni Arena.
• A wallet containing credrt cards was r&amp;ported mtSSing Feb. 20 from Crosby Hal.
• A Poner Quadrangle resident reported
Feb. 21 that a baA&lt; card and personal papers were missing from hts wallet
• Rolls of toilet paper and paper towels
were reported missing Feb 21 from the
men 's room in Crosby Hall
• Two thousand magazines were reported
missing Feb. 21 from Capen HaH.

�- ..----.--

Cuts ins~ programs
Your Key to the White House
'modem racism,' prof says

that are ruinou s to them .

tions to it. Enlightened white Americans
have learned many genuinely democratic
altitudes toward race.
''On the other hand, we also have learned
and retained all the old stereotypes, fears,
ignorances and aversions that produce n~~c­
ism," he added. "So we have two sets of
attitudes-&lt;lne democratic and one racistat war within us."
We don't want to have the raci st attitudes
we•ve learned, and we •re ashamed of them.
Rather.than confronting them l,onestly and
controlling them, however, Behling says we
may push them below our level of awareness. "By keeping ourselves unaware of our
biases:· he says. ··we continue to benefi t
from t.he oppression of olhers without confronting the shame of our bigotry and the
institutionalized racism that nunures it."

'This kind of racism is
genuinely unrecogniud
by affiicted persons. It is
nevenheless extremely
destructive to social jusBEHUNG
tice and progress."
Behling says that as a group, modem racists
may act out their repressed negative feelings
about minorities by auacking the efficacy or
cost of programs that help them. They demonize individuals, he says, by accusing them of
lacking "personal responsibility." And, he says.
regardless of the actual consequences of _these
- policies, the policymakers believe that they are
both justified and non-racist.
Behling points out that some psychologists believe that modem fonns of raci sm
developed in the Uniied States after the Civil
Rights Movement of the 1950s and '60s.
This raci sm is fueled by a tendency for
human beings to erase shameful auitudes
from their awareness. even when behaving
in ways induced by those aui tude .
He disc usses these theories in new grad uate and undergraduate course s he deve loped
at UB. whe~ he directs undergraduate programs in psychology.
'"Whe~ once it was common for many
white Americans to talk in unabashedl y racist terms." he says. "today most enlightened
persons not only wouldn't defend racial inequity. they would cxpre s si nce re objec-

ehling says the result is that we really
don ' t see our own racism any more and
we become outraged when someone points it
out. We cont in ue to think th at we're being
fair. even when the evidence-that is. the
outcome for the affected groups-strongly
points in another direction. He thinks that
this may be one reason that cu rrent proposals
to eliminate programs for the economically
di sadvan taged 8l'e couched in language that
&lt;uggests that the budget reductions will actuall)• benefit the ir victims.
"We talk of 'breaking d~ndence rather
than acknowledging our prej udice and guilt
toward persons " 'ho are poor and sufferi ng
in this society," Behling argues.
Another example, the psychologist says.
may be the proposed elimination from New
York State's 1995-96 budget of funding for
the Educational Opponunity Program (EOP).
one of the most successful college programs
in the co.unt ry for educating economicall)
and educationally disadvantaged students.
"As a white man. there are messages in the
theory of modem racism for me," he says.
"One is that! shouldn't trust m) labeling
of myself because I and people like me will
try to belie\'e the \'ery best about ourc;el\'eS.
We must look instead at our behavior and ito;;
consequences for tho~e "'e claim we want to
help."

lly PAIIIICIA -VAN

News Bureau StaH

ODERN RACISM" may in
some cases be behind proposed cuts in social and education programs at the
federal and state l&lt;vels, according to a clinical associate professor of
psychology at UB.
Charles Behling defines "modem rocism'' as a set of repressed and conflicting
attitudes aboul race lhat allows some indjviduals to believe that they want the best for
economjcally disadvantaged minorities (toward whom they may or rna not harbor
unconscio s prejudices)
while at th same time
supporting
ial policies

B

Where can you take an eleCtronic tour of the nation's most famoos residence. browse
executive briefings on jobs or loreign allais, read a copy of the 1995 Slate of the Urbl
Address, or "meet" the First Fan-Oiy'? The lntemet home page for the While House.
Billed as ·an interactiw citizen's handbook,· the White House home page can be
accessed through the Worfd-Wode Web. Basic choices as you "enter" the electronic
White House include a President's and Vtee President's welcome massage, a "Guest
Book.· and menu options tor the "Executive
Branch.·the "First Famly,• '1'ours,· "What's New.·
I I I &lt; I I{&lt; lN 1&lt;

"Publications" and "CCfrments."
Electronic publicati6ns distributed by the White
House include dally press briefings and press
releaseso.rrrnanes Forthoseinterestedonbrowsing lor executive pubhcatJons topically a menu
offers options such as "Science &amp; Technofogy.•
"Jobs: ·Healthc:are: and "Environmental Issues." You may also browse publocatJons
by date.
Major ooeuments at the WMe House site Include speeches, the proposed FY 1996
budget, the Health Securily act, and reports on the Nationallntormatoon Infrastructure.
the National Performance Review, and Technology tor Econorric Growth. as well as
treaties and historical documents such as the DeclaratiOfl of Independence and the
Constitution.
Coomunication Wllh the Wh1te House IS encouraged as this Site also provides
·guests" with the ability to send an E-mail message to the President or Voca President
with ease Select the E-mail option, tin inthemessagetorm,andsendthemessage You
get an almost instant acknowledgment that your message was recewed How's that for
government efficiency!

HIGh ~ \\~]S

To visft the Whfte House vra your UB electroniC mail account type lynJr trtfllt://
........ ......r at your system prompt (vax or umx) or ......,. lttfp:/ /
......,.,_.,..,. (ibr'rVcms) For further informatiOfl on accesSir!Q the WorldWide Web, contact the Computing Center Help Desk at 645-3542

-Gemn1a DeV111ney and Loss Pequello Glazlt!H. tack~ Library

Volunteers raise $140,000 to
expand Korean Studies Program
lly .lED NI1ZIIERG
Reporter Contributor

expand the Korean Studies Program as an
integral pan of UB 's uni versi ty-wide, interO FURTHER enhance the ·exceldisciplinary Asian Studies Program.
le nceofthe UB Korean Studies Pro"The immediate goal of the Korean program. friends. s1aff and alumni
gram is to introduce a four- year sequence of
classroom language and culture courses. We
volunteers have created a commitalso want to significantl y increase the vistee known as The Society in Suppon of
ibility of. and interaclion with. Korean cul Korean Studies.
ture and Korean institutions at UB."
Over the past few months. the volunteers
have raised more than $ 140,000 in gifts and
UB has offered a Korean language course
si nce 198 1. The universit y currently enrolls
pledges to expand US's Korean Studies Promore than 500 Korean -American student s.
gram. The program wi ll include courses focusi ng on Korean an , history. economics.
hosts 200 international students and scholars
busi ness. polit ics and education. The group
from Korea and enjoys widespread suppon
also will seek resources to fund a full- time
from the large Korean community in Westteaching position and provide instructional
em New York.
Student demand. the increasing impormaterials.
tance of the Pacific Rim to the economy of
The Society in Support of Korean Studies
is chaired by Suk-Ki Hong. SUNY Distin- - the United States. and the inter-relationships
of the U.S . and Asian economies have
guished Professor in the UB Depanme nt of
prompted UB to establish a comprehensive
Physiology. Moon II Cho is director of the
Asian Studies Program.
group. Vice chairs are Kyu Ho Shin; loon Je
"UB is joining the ranks of those Nonh
Sung and Ch ung II Hong. The treasurer is
American institutions that place Asia high
Young Ja Bae; Soong Hee Han is secretary.
on their agendas." said Stephen Dunnett.
··w e are gratefu l to the generous volunvice provost for international education.
teers and donors who have stepped, fo rward
Chinese. and more rece ntly Japanese. Koin support of th is program," said Kerry Grant,
dean of the Faculty of Arts and Lett~ rean and Arabic. are among languages now
available to undergraduates ful fi ll ing UB' s
'Thei r commitment., volunteer efforts and
foreign-language requirement .
gifts will enhance efforts to ele vate and

T

Uzmaida Jucino, left.
and Christine Brugh
perform a traditional
Latin American dance
known as "La Plena,·
top, as part of a cultural show presenled
March 4 by the Latin
American Student Association. And students who prefer a difterent
beat got an opportunity to "beat' their opponents March 3 thanks to a
virtual reality video game demonstralion sponsored by Sludent Life
and the Undergr~ Student Association as part of CorTmAer
Awareness Week.

�_.,

Iboard

Facui
0

For the second consecutive

year, Praxair. Inc. of _
Tonawanda has made a gift of
$55,000 to the UB School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences. Pan of the gift will be used
for faculty and student enrichment in the Chemical Engineering, Industrial Engineeri ng and
Mechanical and Aerospace Engi neering depanments.
The first gift. given in January
1994, was used by the departments to create the Praxair Lecture Series. The series has
featured such noted scientists as
William Maxwell of Cornell
University, and Robert Graves
from Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute.
The gift also was used to sponsor student events for the student
chapter of the Institute of Industrial Engineers, and to bring outstanding lecturers to specific
undergraduate courses.
The gift also supports the
school's Praxair Professorship.
RAlph T. Yang, chairman of UB's
chemical engineering department.
is the c:urrent Praxair Professor of
Chemical Engineering.

Medical ec:t-1 to
spons« symposium
on childhood violence

0

The UB School of Medi -

cine and Biomedical Sciences will co-sponsor the second
annual Childhood Violence Symposium. from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
March 16, at the Buffalo Museum
of Science. The symposium's
goals are to identify the psychosocial roots of violence and ways

to eliminate or reduce them; pnr

vide information on televised
violence and how
to deal with it. and
explore roles that
physicians and
other health and
social-service
professionals can
'---''-"'-...J play in preventing
violence against
children.
F- Bruder
Stapleton, professor and chai r of
the Department of
Pediatrics at UB.
,.......u......• will make opening

statements.
Other speakers
will include:
Frederick P. Rivera. Depanment of Pediatrics, University of
Washington, "America: Armed
and Dangerous;" John P. Murray,
professor and director, School of
Family Studies and Human Services, Kansas State University.
''Children &amp; TV Violence;" Peter
D. Edelman, chair, 'President's
Task Force on Violence, "National Policy on Violence;" R. Gil
Kerlikowske, Buffalo police
commissioner, .. Prevention and
the Crime Bill;" James
Garbarino, family life and development director, Cornell University, "What Children Can Tell Us
About Living with Violence;"
Susan Mc.Leer, professor and
chair, Department of Psychiatry

.... _., __

at UB, "Treatment Approaches
for Victims of Violence;"
Kathleen Utlis, chief, Emergency
Depanment, Children' s Hospital
of Buffalo, "Local Perspective."
Karen Blount. vice president
of nursing, Children's Hospital,
will lead a panel diseussion from
4: 15-5 p.m. A reception will
follow.
The American Academy of
Family Physicians has approved
the program for six prescribed
hours of continujng education
crediL The UB School of Medicjne and Biomedical Sciences has
d~signated the course for six
h I1i of Category I credit toward
t Physician's Recognition
Award of the American Medical
Association.
Registration fee is S30 for
physicians and SIO for non -physicians. Lunch will cost an additional SIO. Registration deadline
is March 10.
Other sponsors incl ude the
departments of Pediatrics and
Emergency Medicine at
Children's Hospital of Buffalo.
and Erie County Chapter of the
Unks,Jnc. For more information.
contact Janet Lathrop at 8787109.

Frank Mauro, executive
director of the Fiscal Policy
Institute in Albany , will address
the UB community on ..The
Roots of the NYS Fiscal Crisis
and Its Implications for Education.. at the Student Union Theater today at 3 p.m. A questionand-answer period will follow
the discussion.
The program is sponsored by
UB United, a coali tio n of student
governments at UB and the local
chapter of United University
Professions (UUP). Students
from other colleges as well as
concerned members ef the Westem New York community have
been invited to attend.
Other events include a question-and-answer forum Friday.
March 10 at noon in the Student
Union. Assemblyman Edward C.
Sullivan. chair of the State
Assembly's commiuee on higher
education, will address student
concerns about the budget cuts.

0

NunlltC student

wins Fuld Fellowship
Lucia R. Almeda, a junior
nursing student at UB, has
received a 1995 Fuld Fellowship
from the Helene Fuld Health
Trust. an award that re:ognizes a
"demonstrated interest in hoJistic
nursing. as well as academic and
extracurricular achievements."
Almeda is one of 53 nursing
students chosen to receive the
fellowships from more than 400
applicants. The Fuld trust is the
largest charitable trust dedicated
to nulliing in the U.S.
The Fuld Fellowship will pay
all' the recipients' registralion fees
for the 199.5 National Convention
of the NMii&gt;nal Student Nurses'
Association, to be held April 5-9
in Charlotte, N.C. It will also pay

0

0

or
..m ..,.......

SaUdi AtrM:. IJal cliollc'*lr ,_A-S., Villa Uoiverlky. ..__,Republic
Afril:a.
~
'
Soutb """'- m.. • UB Mardi 20-21.
Amonalbem i "~"by Oliver Schmitz, (MJII"dt 21,
4 p.m.~ for lhe Arts Screellin&amp; Room), lhe fmr.lllli-oputbeid fellllft film by, for and about Sou1b Africaos. It wu filmed
in I989 inside Smmo and scored to lhe wban bell of '"!'ownship live."
Also oo lhe program is "Shot Down" by Andrew WORdalc,
(March 20, 7:30p.m., Center for the Arts Sc:reening Room) a
film that, according to Sey. is like "Mapantsula" in that it exploits. but is ultimately delennined and c:onstmned by_ the ge·neric conventions of the Hollywood noit film. The third ftlm is
"'Tbe Processed Image," (March 21. 6:30p.m_, 20 Knox Hall), a
compilation of work by several directors, including Sey.
Discussioos wiU follow each screening. All films are free of
cltarge and open to the public.
The prognm ia sponsored by lhe UB Council for lntematiooal
Studies and l'rogrami and the UB departments African
American Studies, Media Sllldy and Englis!L

or s....

. ' I

or

traveling and lodging expenses.
special program fees and a personal stipend for recipients to
attend nursing conferences in
Edinburgh, Scotland. and Lon don, England.
Recipients are expected to
share"}nowledge gained from
these conferences with peers and
faculty in their schools of nursing. They also will be required to
write an essay about their ex peri ~
ences.

Conference explores

l m - t Impact on
scholarly research
The Intemefs impact on
scholarly research and
communication is the subject of a
conference. 'The Convergence of
Science and the Humanities:
Internet Technologies and Scholarly Resources.· ·
to be held Friday.
March 24 from
8:30 a.m.-4:30
p.m. at the Buffalo Marriou.
The conference
is sponsored by
BERNSmN
the Conve~ations
in the Disciplines Program at UB
with suppon from the Uni versity
Libraries and Computing and
Information Technology. Academic Services. of UB.
Among the speakers are
Charles Bunstein, David Gray
Chair in Poeey and the Humani ties at UB. editor of the Poetics
listserv. one of the most vitaJ
electronic discussion groups in
contemporary literary theory;
Neil Calk.in. professor of math ematics at the Georgia Institute of
Technology. co-founder and
managing editor of the Electronic
Journal of Combinatorics.
Also: Susan Herring. associate
professor of linguistics at the
University of Texas. Arlington.
who has been investigating the
language of discussion groups on
the Internet; and John Unsworth ,
director, Institute for Advanced
TechnOlogy in the Humanities
and associate professor of English
at the University of Virginia. who
is working on a study of information theory in the context of
postmodem literatu,.,, literary

0

theory and social history.
Program orgamz.ers are L.oss
Pequeno Glazier, English and
American literature subject specialist at Lockwood Library, who
assists in maintenance of Internet
resources for the UB Libraries,
and Nancy Sehiller, engineering
librarian at UB whose research
focuses on the impact of networked technologies on academic
libraries.
Fee for the program is S30
(SI5 for students). Registration
deadline is March I 0. For more
information. call645-2018.

Candlno, Campbell to
apeak at M.,..gement
roundtable sessions

0

The UB School of Management will present a series of
morning seminars de-signed to
help provide managers with information needed to compete successfully in the challenging
modem markets. They will be
held once a month from 8-9 a.m.
at Fanny"s Restaurant, 3500
Sheridan Drive. Amherst.
The schedule:
• March 23. ""ECMC Financial
Turnaround &amp; C urrent HealthCare Trend,"' featuring Paul J.
Candino. chief executive officer
of the Erie County Medical Center. who will discuss the signifi·
cant accomplishments made in
wrning around the medieal
center's financial and operational
performance.
• April 27 . "TQM : Ten Years
Later," Drew Cambell, quality
manager from QUNO Corp .. will
discuss the progress and pitfalls
of a large American newsprint
company working with the
Deming philosophies.
• May 18. " High llerformance
Workplace Strategies for the
Future: What Does It Take." Fred
Smith, Outok:umpu American
Brass training and development
manager. and Tony Strusa.
United Steelworkers of America
Local 593 E.l . facilitator. will
present a case sludy on one selfdirected work team. and plans for
the future.
• June 15. "'Total Quality Management at Motorola Means 'Six
Sigma' in Everything We Do."

John Lupienski. quality manager
for Motorola. will examine total
quality management and the six
s1gma process.
Fee for the roundtable session,
which includes breakfast and
lecture materials. is $40 per session. or $120 for all four sessions.
For more information call6453200.

UB

CCHpOI'I_..

Malaysia conference

0

Top scientists. managers
and go"~mment representa -

tives of 30 countries from every
cont1nent gathered in Malaysia
recently at the Thud International
Conference on Frontiers of Polymer Research and Ad\'anced
Materials. organized by UB .
~ conference is now re garded as one of the leading mternauonaJ forums at which
participants are able to share
news of scientific developments
and d1scuss potential business
opportunities in the field of pol ymers and advanced materials.
Allendees included representatives from corporations such as
Dow Coming, Hoechst Celanese.
Toray Indu stries, Ford Motor
Company and Boeing. Scientific
institutions represented included
University of Illinois. UrbanaChampaign; University of Cincinnati: University of Pennsylvania;
University of Massochusclls. and
the Standards and Industrial Research lnstitut&lt; of Malaysia.
Paras • Prasad, photonics
!JCience professor of chemistry at
UB . was international chair of the
conference. He also gave IA'elcoming and closing remarks and
chaired a technical session.
D. Allen Cadenhead, associ ate dean for natural sciences and
mathematics at UB. was a
speaker. Stephen C. Dunnett,
vice provosl for mtemational
education al UB. also attended.

VLSI Symposium Set
for M.-ch 16-18

0

The Fifth Great Lakes
Symposium on VLSI (Very
Large Scale Integrated) computer
chip techoology will be beld at
UB March 16-18 at the Buffalo
MarriotL Speakers from around the
world will present papers on stateof-the-an advances in eleclronics.
Dale M. Land~ vice president
for research. will give the welcoming address. James D. Meindl,
Joseph M. Petit Olair Professor of
Microelectronics at Georgia Institute of Technology will deliver the
keynote address on ''21st Centwy
Gigascale Integration."
The conference was organized
by Ramalingam Sridhar and
Sbambbu J. Upadbyaya, both
associate professors of electrical
and computer engineering at UB ,
Sreejit K- Cbakravarty. associate professor of computer science
at UB and Vidor Demjanenko,
assistant professor of electrical
and computer engineering.
It is co-sponsored by UB. the
IEEE and the Association for
Computing Machinery.
For more infonnation. contact
Sridhar at645-2422. ext. 2139.

�_.,u._.., __

llt-:r;;....

lie University
has
planned an April series of literary
and musical events honoring Leslie
Fiedler, Samuel L. Clemens Professor of English and SUNY Dis-

tinguished Professor
Emeritus at UB and one
of America's pre-eminent

literary critics. The event. a
" Fiedler Fest," is free of charge
and will be held in the UB Center for the Arts on
April 29 and 30.
II will featu~ presentations by several writers who, like the guest of honor, are controversial
and celebrated iconoclasts. They are poet and
cultural aitic Allen Ginsberg; feminist (or anti feminist) provocateur Camille Paglia, and mercurial African -American novelist, playwright and
poe1 Ishmael Reed.
one of America's foremost literary critics and theorists, is best-

known -for his applicatjon of
Jungian and Freudian concepts to
U.S.Iiterature and social thought.
His ingenious and controvenial
theories earned him his early repu- •
tation of tnfam ttrriblt of American

identity in ''Fiedler on lhe
Roof." a popular and critieally
applauded collection of essays
published in 1991.
Fiedler's ltljljor work .
"Love and Death in the Ameri can Novel" (1960), is an acCount of the way in which a
large portion of American literature emphasizes the theme
of escape from a female-dominated society manifested in close male relations in the wi lderness and
on the seas.
Like his cohorts in the UB Poetics Program,
Fiedler is a populist provocateur who can stimulate
the ire of the more staid and conventional academic
critics. Shalom Goldman. writing last year in
N~sdily, noted that although Fiedler "occupies a
distinguished place in the Ivory Tower-as the
Samuel L., Clemens Professor of English at SUNY
Buffalo-he does not hide behind the mask of
academic objectivity. He is, rother, a livel y participant in the nalion 's cuhural life."

By

leuers.

Ishmael Reed

PATRICIA

Bruce Jackson. SUNY Disti ngui shed Professor
ofEnglish at UB who is coordinating the even~, cal ls
it "a celebration of leslie's lifelong commitment to
honest, forceful and creative e~amination of an
enormous range of sociaJ and artistic mauers. ln his

Novelist, - ' playwrtCJrt Ishmael Reed .
who attended UB. has spent a lifetime "whittling
down the groves of academe." A spokesman for a
new black aesthetic he calls "Noo-hoodooism." Reed
is an anti-assimilationist opposed to the confes-

DOHOV,lN
Nev.;s Bureau

StaH

Fi( Ih~r H~st Iwit 1g~ n
1
(

pridPof' lil( 1 f&lt;ll·~·liotls
worl&lt; and inhislife," lacksonsays, "Leslie has consistently taken difficult issues and forced other people to
think about them anew and has done it with a rare
lucidity and accessibility. Likewise, the three primary performers in this event have each made many
people think, gotten some people mad and wriuen
well about many things."
Tile lectures will be punctuated by musical performances by Kyung Hee Oh. a master Korean
kayakum player. and by two of the
honest dance banlts in town-the
Rose Gardeners. and the
Biocentrics. an Afro-pop band
headed by UB Musicologist and
American Stud ies Professor
Olarlie Keil.
The Fiedler Fest schedule hegins in the Center for lhe Ans
Mainslage. with a lecture Saturday. April 29 by Camille Paglia.
On Sunday,Apri130, lshmael Reed
will lecture from I -2 p.m.; from
2:30-3:30 p.m .. musical performances will he given by Kyung Hee Oh and by the
Rose Gardeners: Allen Ginsburg will give a reading
from 4-5 p.m. followed by a potluck picnic at5:30p.m.
in the Atrium, with music by Afro-Pop and Bioccntrics.

THE CAST OF CHARACTERS:

Leslie Fiedler
Lealie Fiedler has written more than two do1.en
books in which he has not only exploned a broad
range of topics. but rebelled against high culture
itself. The heady events of campus life in the mid
'70s were d iscussed in "Being Busted:" literary
issues in "What Was Literature?'' and "An End to
Innocence" andOlhers: science fiction in " In Dreams
Awake;" cultural roles A Ia Freud and l ung in
"Freaks: Myths and Images of the Secret Self," and.
most recently. tre nc h~rvalions on Jewish

sive politics. He created an American intellectual
style that was truncated by the invasion of faddish
French theory in the ' 70s and '80s. Let's tum hack
to Fiedler and hegin again."
Critics call Paglia "a rabid poseur" who distats the
aims of the women's movement sosbecan claim to he
the voice of reason. They call her arguments convoluted, pretentious, grossly generalized and aiticiz.e her
loud. fast, interruptive style for overshadowing whatever substance her ideas may have.
Says Molly Ivens, "That she is taken seriously as
a thinker in New York intellectual circles is a clear
indication of decadence, decay and idiocy."
Paglia. for her pan. derides shoddy scholarship.
which she ealls "epidemic in higher education and
responsible for the lowly sute of liberalism and the
humanities.'' and claims to have no ~spect as a
scholar for any member of her generation at any
major university. Such pronouncements and ber
claim that men lm:destined to rape: women (women,
she says, should "get tough or stay home") tend to be
reported as news. She appears regularly on talk
shows. in national magazjnes aod newspapen and is a
popular speaker on the university lecture cirt:uit.
However unsympathetic she may appear to some,
she has libenarianappeal andadoetorate from Yale.
Among the Paglia books that have ignited maelstrom..c; ofcontroversy are ..Sexual Personae: An and
Decadence from Nefertiti to Em ily Dickinson,"
"Vamps and Tramps: New Essays" and "Sex. An
and the American Culture."

Allen
Gil1sberg
For more 40 , . . . poet Allen
Ginsberg has lived a remarl&lt;able life. first as
the poetic voitt of the beat generation. laler
as one of the most important figures in poslwar political. literary and cultural criticism.
AJways relevant. always on the anistic and
culturaJ vanguard. Ginsberg has remained in
the public eye from the 1956 publication of
his signature work. " Howl,··
through decade• of eloquent. courageous and
sometimes notorious poetry

sional voice and atmosphere found in much AfricanAmerican literature.
His separatist point of view has irritated some
African-American critics who have accused him of
political irresponsibility and of fostering negative
images of his race and cuhure. He. in tum. accuses
them of being cosseted by academia and out of sync
with contemporary black. cuhure. Reed also mises
hackles among feminists. politicians. Christians and
the rich, a fact that he says amuses hjm. Nor is he
dissuaded by critics who have called his aesthetic
argument for a form ofblack. cultural nationalism "so
esoteric it's hard to know what it means even to him."
A mercurial figure, he has establ ished his role as
a subversive poet of the urban landscape with darkly
sati rical works that include ··The Free-Lance Pallbearers." "Writin · is Fight in·: Thiny-seven Years of
Boxi ng on Paper:· "Terrible Twos." "T errible
Threes:· " Yellow Back Radi o Broke Down" and
" Mumbo Jumbo."
Other notable works include 'The Last Days of
Louisiana Red." "Airing Diny Laundry" and "New
and Collected Poems." His plays include "The
Preacher and the R:1pper" and ··savage Wilds. Pan
U." about theprobk!msofWashington Mayor Marion
Barry.

Crnnille Paglia
C...,llle Peglla Ia a bomb-throwing cuhurnl
critic known for her fie ry takes on sex. an. history.
educ&lt;ttion and pagani sm. An abra·
si\'C. self-styled celebrity reviled
by prominent femini sts including
Gloria Steincm. Paglia has nevertheless emerged as a loud voice of
dissent in the field of gender politics. She is:~ fan of Les lie Fiedler
for maki ng '"the finot important
synthesis of practical criticism
with psychoanalysis and progres-

and performance. political and otherwise.
His many works include
"Kaddish." "The Gates of Wrath."
"Planet News." "CosmicOuooicle,"
"Amphetamine Cowboy:· .. Apocalypse Rose.'' "Mind Break Poems:·
"The Fall of America: Poems of
These States," ··Mostly Sining
Hail.:u" and " By Surprise ... First
and important editions of Ginsberg's books and
some of his papers are held by the UB Poetry/Rare
Book Collection and he has been a frequent visitor to
the UB campus for three decades.
Although long a significant figure on the American literary landscape:, he is currently center of a hot
trend in audio pop chic: a major boom in the popularity of readings and music by ' 50s and '60s avant
garde poetS. Among hjs recent successes are the
recording "Holy Soul Jelly Roll: Songs and Poems
( 1948-1993)," the jazz album "The Lion for Real"
and several audio anthologies of beat writers like
Ginsberg. Kerouac and Burroughs.
He also has produced an album of the music
theater work " Hydrogen Jukebox." with music by
Philip Glass. and a memoir. "Snapshot Poetics: A
Photographic Memoir of the Beat Era.··
Ginsberg is co-founder of the Summer Writing
Program at the Naropa Institute in Boulder . Colo ..
and was the subject of a week-long tribute at Narop;1
in 1994. He also recently made a controversial sale
of hiS personal journals. poems. manuscripts, recordi ngs and memornbilia. to the Stanford University archives for Sl million. He
has been the subject of severn!
films. including Jerry Aronson's
'The Life and Times of Allen
Ginsberg" (1994) and hi biographies include "Ginsberg, A Critical Biogrnphy" by Barry Miles
and 'The Dharma Lion: A Biography of Allen Ginsberg" by
Michael Schumacher.

(

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                    <text>Helping Hands

UBSTARS

Art majors create
mural to help young
victims of abuse.

Volunteers ease
students' transition to
-college.

,.10

,.5

Girts

a~

He Saki,
She Said

Video games
designed tor girls
may raise selfesteem.

UB researcher look.s
at men's and

women's speech
differences.

Belafonte tells of leadership
role in fight against racism

Plants have 'memory,'

UB researchers find
Br EUEN QOIJIIIAUM
News Bureau Staff

OREWARNED is foreanne&lt;! and. according to
UB biologists. plants are

F

no exception to that sur-

vival rule. Plants nremember.. when they 've been attacked and they respond faster to
future attacks by hastening production of chemical defenses, Jan

Baldwin. UB associate professor
ofbiological sciences reportedf'eb.
21 at the annual meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science in Atlanta.
Ba ldwin said the research .
which eventually will be useful in
developing generations of pest-resistant plants. demomarates th at
plants have a more sophisticated
relationship to their environments
than is commonly thought..

"We have thi s idea that animals
are sman. and that they have knowledge of thei r environments and of
predators. but we don't at all ha\'e
that perception of plants." he added.
"'This research is helping us develop that perception. that pl ants
are individuals with hi stories. who
perceive their environments and
who have evolved responses to
those environments." he said.
Baldwin spoke at a session focusing on the pathways through
which animal s and plants percei,•e
injury or damage. and how they
respond.
The UB research supports the
premise that plants defend themse lves usi n&amp;._ a chemical pathway.
called a signal-transduction pathway ,that parallels~ne involved
when animals register damage or

injury internally and respond to tl.
"Animals can run away: pl ants
cannot." sa id Baldwin. "" But both
pla ms and animals ust a similar
ignal·transducrion pathway to say
·vou "re damaged."'"
While animals respond to damage by produci ng prostaglandins
and ex periencing pain, pl ants respond by inducing the producti on
of chemical defenses. Baldwin said.
To determine whether or not
memory is at work in plants ' defen ses. Baldwin and his co ll eagues

"Research is
helping us develop
that perception that
plants are
individuals with
histories. "
IAN BALDWIN

needed to uncouple fro m the re sponse to the wou nding.
"'A key issue for unraveling the
sig nal cascade involved in these
chemical defen ses w a~ to elicit the
response to the wound without actually wounding the plant:· said
Baldwin.
If the experiments had invo lved
ac tu ally damaging the leaves.
plants would ha v~ had to be repeat edly wounded. generating signifi·
cant scar tissue and poss ibl y
resulting in a plant with no leaves.
Co ntinued on page 2

m ore abusi,•e than
embracive ... His family tree is decorated with rumrunners and bool..makers. Struggling just to survive
the v1olence at home and on the
street s of Nev. Yorl... he never finished high &gt;chool. He "ound up
li terally clmging to life for three
days after bemg run do" n b) an
au10mobile in Harlem.
That he survl\ ed at all 1;; im·
pressrve. That he grev. up to become a world-renowned arllst.
humanitari an.actorandcivi l rights
activist is tru,ly re~k.abLe . He i-5
Harry Belafonte and. thoogh a remarkable s uccess. Belafonte's entire life has been co;~;umed by hi~
strugg le against raci sm.
Belafo nte delivered the 19th
annual Martin LutherKingJL Commemorati on. spo nsored by the
James Fenton Lecture Foundation.
on Mai nstage at the Ce nter fo r the
Arts on Feb. 22. He s well known
as a jazz performe r. singer and film
and stage actor. yet few realize that
Be lafo nte was a dose . inner-circle
confidan te of Dr. Manin Luther
King Jr.
A quiet leader m the st ruggle for
racial equality for almost40 year.;.
Belafonte spoke extemporaneously
for two hours.

ing the McCarthy era as a result.
King sought oot Belafonte durmg a visi tto New Yori&lt; in 1956. The
rwo met privately in Adam Clayton
Powell"s Harlem church. at King"s
request. " He came to seel my coun&lt;el."" explained Belafonte. - and I
""" deeply moved by hts words.
From th.at potnt on. we""' ere mextn·
cabl} bound. He brought me mto
h1~ mner c1rc le of ad' 1sors:· Sev eroil benefit concen;, o'er the years
b~ Belafonte ra1sed huge ..;um.s of
morte) for Kmg·, Southern C'hn..,uan Leader-.h1p Conference
h1Je Kmg "as dee PI) committed to Cl\ II right!. ,
Belafonte ~a) she d1d not covet the
leadership role he later assumed in
the movemenL ..He be.a;m scekiJ&gt;&amp;
to cure an imn hi5 community, and
it IUmed mto a lifelong thrust.·· At
the tlrne of the Montgomery Bus
Srnke. the older. established mmJsters in that city ··couldn ' t stand
each other... Belafonte explained.
··so they gave the job to Martin. the
new kid in town . because he was a
college graduate: ·
And. it was King ""'ho urged
Belafon te to meet with th e
Kennedys about the growi ng violence in the south.
··1 denoonced Bobby Kennedy.
still angry over his affiliation with
Joe McCarthy."" said Belafo nte of
the former cou nsel to the Un~
American Activities Committee.

W

Quiet leader: Belafonte at UB.
" Fewyeople R&lt;OI\Y kDow who I
am or where I came-from ; I am very
private that way .. Belafonte confessed to the mumate gathenng of
more than 800. ··My life may have
been driven by my expene nCes.
but I doa"t rel ive them
··Racism has sucked up my entire life." he conti nued . .. and race
never. eve r goes away . It is always
there. So. I set out t.o be courageous. To me. that meant never
accepting an ind ignity wherever I
might find one."
A signifi cant pan ofBelafonte · s
life ce ntered on hi s comm itment to
civil rights and hi s close frie ndship
with Dr . King . As a youth.
Belafonte had spoken ou t agamst
racism and was " blacklisted·· dur-

Conttnued on page 2

Albany hears roar ofprote~t from
UB at rally on budget cuts
S, C~NE VIDAL
Reporter Ed~or

CALL IT the assault on Albany.
Nine buses departed in the very early morning hours this
week filled with members of the UB community-students,
alumni, administratorswonied enough about the
SUNY budget cuts to take
their concerns to the state capitol.
Late Sunday night and early Monday morning students
gathemd in the Student Union for a pre-road trip concert
and party and to make protest signs. Nearly 400 UB
students filled eight buses that headed for Albany a1 4 a.m.
as part of a SUNY wide rally that attracted a reported 7.000
students from across Ne"! Yor1c State.
On Tuesday, it was tbealurnn.i's tum as members of the
UB Alumni Association Legislative Action Commiuee lt'a 3:30a.m. a U8 ...._.. .._..
made lhecross-counuy trek as part ofUB Day in Albany. . . _ tD join AIIIBIIJ llllllllt ,....._
Continued on page 3

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BUFFALO'S ~ NlEI'IMlENT BCO&lt;STORES

TAUONG lfAVES•..BOOKS AND THE BOOK REVUE
WB.CC:WC THE Of'fOili\.NTY TO JOINTlY
CB..EBAAl1: PU8UCAI10N Of UB lAW PKlfESSOI!

Judy Scales,lient's
Notes of a White
Black Woman
(Pmn S= !Jnwmol)· Preu)
WITH A llf.ADHG &amp; ~

PARTY

Al M r-EW

HAllWAllS
2495 MAIN STREET
nJESDAY, MAROi 7TH, 7:00PM

Continued from page 1
" But Martin said. ' We have to win people
over 10 our side. lbete is no victory in
punishment.'" At his death, says Belafonte.
Bobby Kennedy was completely suppon:ive
of tile 5tnlggle. "He had rnlly rurned 180
degrees. He could have been tile next Uncoln."
II was from Belafonte's lips. during a
1960 visirto his New Yon apanment. thai
rhen-pre idential aspiranl Sen. John F.
Kennedy lint heard tile name Man in Luther
King Jr.JFK was tryingrosecure Belafonte's
endorsemenL to oiTsetlhe recenl defection
of Brool&lt;lyn Dodger greal Jackie Robinson
to lhe ixon camp. Belafonte remembered,
"lrold him he had come 1o rhe wronJ place
to play celebrity games, bur that he should
metl Dr. King." Belafonte became a trusted
advisor 10 Pre idenl Kennedy and one of the
foundef!l of tile Peace CotpS
Belafonte also recalled 1wo recenl Whole
House visits with President Clmlon. " I lold
him he and John Kennedy were very much
alike. Kennedy, too, wa not very dtlitln·
guished when he entered rhe presidency. Bu1
he had Manin, and you do not . He was fon:ed
10 make hisrory. Nothing ho&gt;loric os being
pushed roday.
"In Dr. King' s day," recalled Belafonte,
'lhere were barely 300 black elected officials in this country. most at tM Jowestle"els
of govemmenr. Today. there are
rhan
8.000 African Amencan elccled officaals
We have governors, mayors. congres men.
How couJd so many of us be silting 10 the

more

highest levels. yet we

~

still seen as so

wretched a race?"'

B

elafonte does not suffer the entenamment chic well '1'1ley '-"ant to celebrate the1r fame. not use 1t.'' he explams.
saying that most of hts life cho1ces are
deliberale. "I live in New York, nOI Holl ywood For 'acauon. I went to Africa, not
the beach . I'm no1 a pany regular because
the H olly~ood crowd behrves I am an
eternal malcon,cnt ··
Just a wa:l shy of 68, Bel•fonle find' h"
career a~ a \Creen actor aga1n nounshmg He
ha\ JUSt completed a mo' 1e v.uh John
Tra' oha. "Wh1te Man· s. Burden:· 10 ..._ h1ch
th~ nation·,., rac1al balance 1~ r~'ersed
''Biad.'\ run the COUOIT) and WhltC'S are I~

o ppressed m1nont) :· he explamed AI '\to
com1ng ~.ooon are a film directed b) Roben
Allman. m ~ h1ch Belafonte ~tars .,.,llh Kim
Ba'\IO£!er. and another to be d1rected by
Jonarhan Demone tdoreclorof"Pholadelphoa"l
based on the bool "Panon g the Waters."
whn:h chronicled the Cl\ 11 nghh mo\Cill('nt
dunng the Kmg ye~ .
Belafonte attnbutes h1' entry 1nto perfonmng almost entn'el) to luck. but hllii attachment to 11 wa~ penna~nt and purposeful .
He '"ng "ith man) of I he legends of Ja7J-

Paul Robeson, Dizzy Gillespie. Mu Roachbut il was not unlil hi 1957 album of calypso
mu ic and West Indian cultural song be·
carne the first solo album ever 10 aell more
rban a milloon """""'thai Belafonte realized
'1he power of an and communocauon The
gifrofan.IIearned. osrbeabthty IOinOuence
people" He saw a powerful platform on
music from whocb 10 impan has message of
racial harmony Paul Robe on. whom
Belafonte calls ho rnenlor, once IOid hom.
"Get them 10 song your song and they "'II
want to lnow who you are ..
Belafonte, "'""had not made il pas1 h"
first yearofh1gh school. hed about bas age ro

"Racism has sucked up my
entire life, and race never;
·ever goes away. It is always
there. So I set ouJ to be

courageous. "
enhst on the Nav) dunng World War II " I
fell compelled by racoal oppression 10 become pan of stoppmg wh.ote supremacy .. He
recalled one channing oncidenl while he,..,
a sailor thai changed his life forever
Belafonte gra alated 1oward a group oJ
well-«&lt;ucated ""'mbers of has segregated
uniL
" I would li ten 10 rhem speal. mtelh genlly of ourhiSIOI) and would occa oonall)
beg some mstrucuon. for 1t was "ery complex to ""' One day. growong welt} pf me.
they tossed me a book, Th&lt; World and llfroca
b) Dr W.E.B. DuBoos." Belsfonte recalled
"As Du8o1s v.asooeofthc gre:ate t Intel lects of h1 ume. he ga' e no special con~•d ·
eration in the v.Titingofhis books to dropout'
I struggled ·through 11. and dosco-ered Ilk'aluable sources cued at the bottom of e:k:h
page. So. I made a 1"1. And. on thai li st. one
personsho~&lt;ed upmoreoflenthanan) other ..
Belafonte decoded lhaL on has nexl &lt;bore
leave, he ...,.ould go to the library tochecl out
the bools b) tile "'riters he had h ted from
DuBo" · foo1n01e&lt; Leammg I hal I he ""
presenred more boot.s than he "'as alto" ed
IO checl OUI. be told lhe libf'anan lOJll I J1.el
hom lhe bool, by the man cited rnosl often b)
DuBot "Ht~ name was lbtd~ .. Bel afont~
'aid
lbe hbJ'3nan tned. but fa1led. tocom me(
Belafonte he wa' m1')10fonned about an au·
lhor named Ibid
Bur after hos shtpmate; heard rhal 1ale.
Belafonte' , noclname became "lbod" for til&lt;
rest of hts tour of dut) (

II&lt;EAifSHMINTS AliAIAIIlf . ~ 0 7 15 PM!

PLANT MEMORY
Contonued Jrorn page 1

Women's History
Month Sale

.. We needed to IMJiate the cue that causes
the plant to produce a lkal Oid (tOXIC chemicals plant~ produce defen\1\C'Iy). M&gt; that ..._e
could asl these que liOn~ m a much morr
ngorou~ wa) thai 1 n't confounded b, the
secondary a~pech of woundmg:· Bald'"'" in
explained.
The UB researche~. the firM to explorr
memol) 10 whole plants. 'iitudied a nat ive
~pecies

of tobacco. Nicouana s\·1\·~Jtris

Damage to its lea ves activates production
20l OISClJlM 12510 FOR MEMIIERSl FROM 'M:lMB&lt;'S
ST\.OES &amp; UTBWURE. HEALTH, 011ll81!TH , PAI!ENll-IG
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of

Jasmonic acid. which. in tum. activates production of nicotine. ""hich is loxic to pest .
To induce a defensive rrspons.e, the re searchers added jasmonic acid at different
intervals 10 the roots of plants grown in
solution.
Plants were dosed with the same amount
of jasmonic acid once, twice or three times
d uring an 18-day period, allowing six days
between inductions so that the defensive
response could subside
Accord ing lo Baldwi n, plants that had

tv.o prior mduct1ons attained ~ignificant Increases in their nicotine pnols rwo day!o earlier than did plants with Oil&lt; or no prior
mduction .
"'ur v.ork shows thai plants male theor
nicotine faster if they've had prior expo ure
lo the ignal," said Baldwin.
Bald" in describes tile memory mechanosm in planrs as a type of "immunologacal
memory ...
'1be: reason why vaccines worL. 10 hu·
mans and animal is that you·re stimulaung
the immun~ system 10 remember something.
In the same way. it seem that plants do ha,·r
""'maries from prior auacks," he said.

CorNction
JennoJer Rolh. general manager ol W8fO.

was host of Presdent Gre1ner s -ralk
ollhe U!we&lt;SIIy' program Feb 21 The

FM,

hosl ollhe momhly call-on snow was
..,._,llhed on lhe Feb 23 Reporler

�3

-a.u._ae,_u

Newly appointed Public Safety Director speaks to FSEC

r

=J STEVECOX

epo&lt;ter Staff

,

OUR ODDS of being a victim
of crime at some point during
the y= •\J"e one in I 3 in the
city of Buffalo, according to
UB Public Safety Director

John Grela.
The good news, though. is thatllteodds of
becomingacrimevictimoncampusareonly
one in 52, Grelasaidduringa briefing of !he
Faculty Senate Executive Committee on Feb.
21.
UB Public Safety ranks as one of the 13
bus iest police departments in Erie County.
handl ing 35.000 to 40.000 calls a year. ac-

cordingtoGrela. "'We
handle everything
fromopeningclo&lt;nto
arresting felons."
A••ociate Vice
President for Student
Affairs Cliff Wilson,
in introducing Grela.
announced officially
thal''acting"' badbeen
GRnA
droppedfromhi s title.
Grela was appointed,
effective that morning. permanent Public
Safety Director following a nationwide candidate sean:h. Orela had served as Acting
Public Sitfety Director si nce Lee Griffin' s

retirement last yeu.
Wilson lauded Orela' s work in community-oriented policing. which takes a "prob!em-oriented. con&lt;umer-friendly approach
to law enforcement."
G rela said lite new approach is getting
great reviews by "consumers" of Public
Safety services. "We aJ"e being proactive.
and bring the community and the police
together in problem solving." He adds, " We
have even arrested people who were grateful
for the treatment they received. vers us Olher
police agencies that have arrested litem in
the past."
Mathemati cs Professor Samuel Schack

addedapersonaltestimonialtolltequaJityof
community policing. Last week. Schack
called Public Safety after smelling marljuana as he walked by a room in Diefendorf
Hall. The next morning, a Public Safety
officer called him back to thank him for
making lite call. He realized !hen tbat it was
hi s call that led to lite arrest of two juveniles
in that room who had handguns and drugs in
their possession.
" Youusuallydoo'tgivettasecondthoughL
I was just going to stick my head in there and
telllltese kids to lea•·e." said Schack. " never
anticipating that !hey might 001 be students
and could be armed. The lesson is. don't walk
into something Joke that: call 2222."

~.:~?rt cjs fo~..~:~~~~~~~"re~,~~~.~,?=~,~~,~~~:~~~~
epo&lt;ter ta

COMMISSION appointed by
President Greiner to revi ew
UB 's academic calendar presented a repon to members of
lite Faculty Senate E•ecutive
Commiuee which calls for phasing out the
observance of many religious holidays by
1997.
Calling the calendar revisions "appropriate for (a) major public university held in
public trust," the commission moved to con·
dense the semester by a week and remo ve
religious observance holidays. At the same
lime. the universily would promulgaie a
policy which excuses st udents from classes
without penalty on significant days of reli -

be scheduled for those days or on Saturdays.
"State law encoufllges us to be sensitive to
religious holiday s." explained Robert Palmer.
vice president for studentaffairs. who chaired
the 15-member commission. However. he
added. !he commission viewed it more important to move toward a schedule more in line
with that of most Olher institutions.
Therepon.whichwasforwardedtoPresident Greiner. will likely be di scussed by the
full Faculty Senate as well, according to
Facuhy Senate Chair Peter Nickerson. '"The

gin on Monday. Aug. 28and holidays will be
o bserved o n Labor Day (Sept. 4 ). Rosh
Hashanah (Sept. 25). and Yom Kippur (Oct.
4). as well as Thanksgiv ing break (Nov. 2224). Exam period will run from Dec. 15-22.
but no e.ams will be scheduled on Sat urdays. The spri ng semester will begin Monday. Jan. 22 and the only break will come the
week of March 18-22. Spring exams are
slated for May 9 -16. Future spnng semesters
will follow thi s format.

calendarandparkingareprobablytwooft~

u

most contentio us issues oq_ campu s. so we
will consider it and offer oUr comments to
the president before he makes a final deci sion," explained Nickerson.

1996-97academiccalendarwillobserYe
only Labor Day (Se pt. 2) and Yom Kippur
(Sept. 13). as Resh Hashanah falls on a
Friday. beginning at 6 p.m. Then. in lite fall

nder the commission proposal. the fall

the day after Labor Day. giving students an
extra 10 days of summer. The only fall break
v.•ill be at Thanksgivong. woth &lt;Aams ending
Dec. 19.
In other matters. Provost Aaron Bloch
reponed to the group that UB had officially
been assessed JUSt under S3 million as its
sh~re of curren t y= bod get C\Jts mandated
by Go• . Patalo He explained that this sum
would be met by using S 1 million of reserve
funds and through cost-cutting measures
implemented through academic deans. ineluding deferring any new appoi ntments.
" P'rl!limmarily," said Bioch.lhereJsenough
out therr to mec:t this "ithout serious djslo-calion . Students and faculty really won't feel
its effects.""

ALBANY TRIP
Continued from page 1
The 6 a.m. depanure could not weaken their
mission: to apprise state Jegi Cilator.; of their
deep concern over severe cuts to the S UN Y
budget.
" We want to presen t the problem as we
see it to the legislature on behalf of S UNY
and UB and ask for their assistance." said
Jude Schwcndle.r. assistant director of Alumni
Relations and chair o f the. Legislative Action

"We want to present the
problem as we see it to
the legislature on behalf
of SUNY and UB and ask
for their assistance. "
JUDE 5CHWENDL£R

Committee. ··we want to tell them what we
see as the problem."
In addilion to 15 alumni. Tuesday's contingent included William Evill . executive
director of Alumni Relations; Schwendler;
Molly McKeown. assistanl vice president
for Government Relations. and four students. More than 20 appointments were
scheduled throughout the day to allow members of the group to voice their concerns to
legislators.
It is important to these advocates that UB
remain a high quality institution held in high
regard. said Schwendler. because if the value
of the inslitution drops. so does the perceived value of their degrees. 'These people
have a vested interest in (the SUNY budget)
as well as in the students v.•ho are future
alumni." he said. " They are taking a day off
from their jobs. They' re lawyers. doctors.
teachers; they ' re prominent people,"

Above, Sandi Uppel,
shouldering the all-Important slen, confirms
her bus seat for trip to
Albany, with SA repr&amp;sentatlve Joanne
Rinaldo. Left, es others
compare notes on ~
bany plans, D•Ykl
C•nn1111 t:rabs some
shut•ye In the Student
Union before boarding
the bus.

uled to meet Tuesday with legislators who
include Assembl ypersons Richard Anderson.
Anhur Eve. Sam Hoyt. Richard Keane.
Patricia McGee. Charles Nesbitt. William
Parment. Joseph Pillenere. Francis Pordum.
Tom Reynolds. Robin Schimminger. Edward Sullivan. Paul Tokasz. Sandra Winh.
and Senators Kenneth LaValle. Anthony
Nanula. Jess Present. Mary Lou Rath. William Stachowski and Dale Volker.
The Legislative Action Comminee was
formed in March 1992. and has made lobbying trips to Alban y in March 1993 and February 1994 .
And UB will continue to be a presence in
the state capitol-March 7 is SUNY Day in
Albany.

DtA(ClOROf PUBLICATIONS NMTKY I.~T. rD!TOR

a.t:~tw.YIDM. ASSOCIATE

EOtlOR

JOM..--., AAT DIRECTOR

..ec.A'~

ADVtRliSINGMANA.QEFt ..au.b. . . , . . _

�4

Gasche explores work
of French philosop~er
8J PA'IIIICIA - V A l l
News Bureau Staff

" I

Series presents exhibits, talk
on contemporary architecture
. . . . . - . . fonner director of the Division of Archhecture and Urban Design
for the City of TO&lt;onto's Department of Planning and Development, will discuss
"Toronto: Confronting the Regional City" on March 22, as part of the Spring lee- •
ture &amp; exhibition series fO&lt; the School of Archhecture end Planning.
Several exhibitions are scheduled in the James ()yell Exhibition Hall in Hayes
Hall on the South Campus, including "Construction, Intention, Oeta~." an exhibh
• of the works of frve young Swiss 11,rchftects. All events will take place on me South
Campus and are free of charge ahd open 10 the public.

.

Ale

An:llltecta"

a.m. l! lf.rn.;liJesdays 1hroUgh l'fldays, 9 a.m. 10 S17.m.

The fil/8 projecls e&gt;camine lhe means through which, "' by which, oonslruction
expesses, enriches"' contradicts an underlying an:hitectural intent The worlcs share a
concern for lhe aJn1binalion oflhe physical dinension of archilecture with 1he genesis
of a building. The )IOUnQ architects and worlcs represented include Herzog &amp; de Meuron,
"Goetz Coflectlon, Munich;" Burkhalter &amp; &amp;.mi. "Turbenlhal Field ~· Meill &amp; Peter.
"School for Wood Technology;" Diener &amp; Diener, "Office Building at Picassolatz.." and
Peter Zumthor, "Housing for lhe Elderly in Chuc, Switzerland..
This exhibition has been presented at Princeton University, Catholic l.l1""-sily,
Columbia l.l1""-sily and lhe University of PeMsylvanla. among OChers.

WeclnMUy, MM:I\22, 5:30p.m., 301 Cro.bf Hllll
Lectin bJ Ken G~ "T~: ConfnlntlnC tile RecJona! City"
Greenberg's frm. Berridge. L.ewinberg and Greenberg Ud., has focused on lhe
redellelopmenl of imer.Qty areas. He has taught atlhe l.l1""-sily of Toronto. Ycxk
University and lhe Unillersily of Montreal. He recently completed a number of SIUdies,
including "Reurbarization Guidelines !0&lt; Metropolhan TO&lt;onto, Shaping Growth in lhe
Greater TO(Oillo Area" fa lhe Province of Ontario. "llving Downtown" fa the City of
TO&lt;onto. ®d "Transportation 2000" IO&lt; metropolitan TOI'onlo. He has lecWred widely in
North Amenca and Europe.

APRIL
April 3-May 19
James Dyett Exhibition Hall, 3rd floor, Hayes Hall
Exhibition of recent student works in conjunctoon with the national accreditation
team's review.

Gallery hours: Mondays 9 am. to 8 p.m.; Tuesdays through Fridays, 9 a.m. IO 5 p.m
WeclnMday, April 5 , 5:30 p.m.
J - Dyett Exhibition Hall, 3rd floor, Hayes Hall
Students win host an e&gt;&lt;hibh of their own works. presented as
versation.·
...

an "in-house con-

NVENTIONS OF DIFFERENCE: On
Jacques Derrida." a new book by literary scholar Rodolphe Gasche, explores
the work of the consummately difficult
French philosopher who initiated the
concept of"deconstruction.'' the wide-rang·
ing critique or the possibility of coherent
meaning in language.
Gascho!, Eugenio Donato Profe sor or
Comparative Literature at UB. is one of the
world's foremost authorities on Derrida and
is known for his provocative and detailed
analyses or the philosopher's theories. o,·er
the years. Derrida himself has been a regular
lecturer at UB and was last here 10 December.
'"Inventions of Difference ... published by

Sussman calls Gasc~ · s work ··a mettculous reading or some of the gestures made by
Denida in questioning biases common to
Western thought."' Derrida inaugurated
deconstruction. in which a master work chosen as the object or analysis-always one
that has achieved historical recognition and
influe.nt:e-tssearchedforcont:radicuon and
misunderstandings that undermine it.s re ceived stgnificance and social value.
In this way, deconsuuctionismchallenged
an entire set of attitudes associated with
logical proof and scholarly cenitude.
oth Demda and Gascbe are panicularly

B

interested in the biases of .. st.ructuralmodem tntellectual movrmtnt derived from the longuistic theoriesofFerdinand
de Saussure that analyzes cultural phenomena by emphasizing the systematic interrelaHarvard Universily Press. continues the
tionships among the elements of any human
analysis begun in Gascho! 's 1986 book.
activity.
'1be Tain of the Mirror: Derrida and
"'In Gascht's mathe Philosophy of Reflection."' It adjor American work.
dresses the concepts of difference. sin ' The Tain of the Mor·
gulanty and alterity. and the affiliated
ror. ... .;ays Sussman.
topics or rt!lating and responding .
'"he e~amines the nowhich are the very is!.ues di~u"ised
tion of self-reflexi\ H)
and ''performed .. throughout the writand ultimately emerge'
ings or Derrida.
with a notion of 'infraDerrida · s theories are seen by
uructure
... Th1s as
Gasc~ as so singular that they have
something both more
··most often provoked either a vio.. . .,.,., ' I I ' ' ~'
and less than a ··struclent hostility or a mechanical imitature"-a very subtle
tion that obscures them from our
mechanism deployed on
sight."' Claiming that many or the
"deconstruct-ing'' or unphilosopher· s devotees do not know
hinging
some or the bo·
their Derrida. Gascho! sets out to challenge
ases of thought aniculated 10 master wor},. ~
bolh cri tics and adoring imitators. neither of
like tho"' or Plato. Kant and Rou"sseauwhom he thinks have read the philosopher's
thin'-.ers that the wesl has chosen as insigni
worl with the understanding that it destr\'tS .
or itself.
He says he hopes to illuminatt 1.1.ays of
"In hts ne-. collection of essays. Gasche 't.
reading worls like Derrida"s that - do not
not onl) ~xp/ams Demda. Y.ho is such a
limit themstlves to making a point. but aJso
difficult
philosopher."' says Sussman. ~bul
perform and enact it." It is a task made more
mal.es a consummate statement about the
difficult. says Gasche. by the fact that
20thcentUI)1.S important nination with StrucDernda's writings "foil and frustrate given
tureS and structuralism. His work helps bring
expectations.. and .. meditate on the rules of
to ll!il fullest aniculation what Freud, \\'oo lf
breakong the rules ..
andJo)ce instincti,·ely knew-that realit) t!o.
not something ·out there ' that language
enl) Su!o.sman. who heads the UB Promerely sen'·r s. but that through language. 1.1.e
gram in Comparative Litenuure. calls
Gasche one or the most distinguiohed schol·
construct our realit) :·
ar.o in his field . He note:, that over the last
Gaq-h~ "'as born in Luxembourg and
half-dozen years. Gasche has no1 only pubau ended the Free University of Berlin. from
whtch he received a Magister Ani urn d~gree
lished widely. buo purwed an exhausting
round of lecturr:, and colloquia throughout
1.1.ith distmction~ in philosoph y. sociolo!!) the United States and Europe. as 1.1. ell as in
and h!&gt;IOI) of religions and a docuf"r:llt.
Thailand.
wmma cum ltwdt. in philosophy. soc10log)
Sussman po1nts out that Gasche prO\ 1des
ansi romance languages. Before joimng t~
the philosophical base for the -.ell-regarded
UB racult). he taught all he Free Univer\11)
UB Program in Comparati\e Literature and.
of Berlin and The Johns Hopkin ~ Univen.it) .
Besides " Inventions of Difference·· and
sincejooning the faculty in 1978. has taught
a v. ide contingent of UB students from the
"'The lain of the Mirror:· his books in En·
depanmems of English. Modem Languages
gljsh include several in progress: "'Wold
and Literature!!-. Philosophy and. mort reCards: On the Rhetoric of Paul de Man.cent!). from the School of Architecture and
..Th Honor of Thinking" and "Essa) s 10
Planning
19th Cltntury French Literature."'
1~m ... the

H

UB Libraries add ten new indexes to Bison database
By USA WILEY
News Bureau Staff

J

UST IN T IME for the spring semester. the UB Libraries have added I0
new indexes 10 the BISON database
system. The indexes. which went on·
line last month. also will serve several other
smaller State University of New York campuses as a pan of the Joint Database Access
Pi lot Project funded by the SUNY Office of
Educational Technology. UB will serve the
SUNY colleges at Brockpon. Geneseo.
Cobleskill. Oneonta and Oswego: commun'i'iY" colleges in B roome County and
Jamestown, and the S tate University Lnsti tute of Technology at Utica-Ro me.

The project marks the first collaborative
venture to use the computer capacit) oj a
SUNY center to provide access to information
databases at SUNY colleges and community
colleges u~ ing client/server technology. according to Barbara von Wahlde. allii~late vice
president for University Librarie~ .
The new BISON indexes are the Biogra·
phy lnde.. Bool Review Digest. An lnde.x.
Essay and General Literature Index. Business Abstracts. Biological and Agricultural
Index. Education Index , Library Literature.
Index 10 Legal Periodical and ERIC.
BISON's Readers' Guide. Humani1ies
Index. Social Sciences Index and Applied
Sciencci &amp; Technology Abstract s also have

been extended to the other campuses.
ER IC is the federal higher education penodical -and-abstract index that reference
report:,, artic les and dis~rtations related to
educational topi cs . lbeothcrdataba.sei~ii.com­
piled by the H.W. Wilson Company. offer
accc=s:, to a broad range of periodical indexes
and abstrdcts in law, the humanities. social
..;ciences. general scie n ce~ and education.

B

ISON u!r.e'rs no1.1. routine!) conduct more

than 3 m11lion information 'e.archeseach
month. "That' s a very high number. even in
comparison lo other universities ," von
Wahlde said. She expects that number will
increase with the new databases and traffic

from the eight remote campuses.
Distributed dalabase system s great!) Increase student and faculty access to library
resources and infonnation. Rather than
loalfiii"g'mal!osive file on each local system. the current plan is to mount the databases on one ~ystem and then share them
"ith the other panicipating sites aero~:-. the
netv.ork .
The pubhc may access the UB L1branes
catalogue and ERIC through the Buffalo
FREE-NET or ,;a remote access to BISON .
FREE-NET offers community ::~ccess to an
alliitonishi ng array ofinformation. educanonal
resources and the Internet at no charge to the
user.

�5

Art majors
llyUSAWUT

News Bureau Staff

C

HJLDREN WHO VISIT the
Child Advocacy Center in
downtown Buffalo are now
greeted with a bngh~ uplifting
mural 'When they walk through
the front door, courtesy of two UB art majors.
Rachel Pietrzykowski and Duane Schneider
designed and peinted the mural to provide a
happy, non-threatening view of life to the children who visit theoenler, which helps victims of
incest and sexual abuse from infancy to age 18.
"We wanted somelhing really positive and
opimistic." Slys len E. Heny, a:nl&lt;r direaa'.
'They (the childrm) have been th!wgh """" ~
scary stuff. We """*'&lt;( somelhing mu1ticuJturaJ.
with a feel or lhe city as well as lhe oounuy."
The students installed the six panels in the
waiting room just in time for the holidays~
mural is the first thing that children see w
they enter the oenter, located at 560 DeJa
Ave. The summer scene depicts a redli8iil.'an
orange apartment house and Jots of children
enjoying the outiloors. A girl on rollerblades
on an urban sidewalk, while a boy swings from
a lire into a pond fllled with flamingos.
II also features lots of
animals: there's a .giant Rachel
tunle with flowers on its Pletl'l)'kowskl
back. an oversized hippo and Duane
jumping through a candy- Schneider In
cane-striped hoop. All are front of mural
arranged against a green- at Child Adv~
cacy Center.
grass background.

Putting baby to-bed: should it be tummy up or on his side?
ay LOIS 11AXE1t

vice from nurses and doctors."

News Bureau StaH

P

She designed the study to delennine how

HYSICIANS ARE RELUCTANTto follow the recommen-

dation

of the

American

Academy of Pediatrics and suggest that parents put infants 10
bed on their backs as a way of reducing the
risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
new research from UB has shown.
SIDS is the term for the sudden. unex plained death of a healthy baby under the age
of I year. Some incidences of the sy ndrome.
which accounts for between I A and I. 7
deaths per 1.000 infants in the U.S. each
year. have been linked to the prone posiuon
and may be caused by accidental suffocati on
in soft mattresses and nuffy bedclothes.
The academy in 1992 recommended abandoning the practice o f placing babies on their
~isdom si nce
the 1930s, in favor of the "tummy-up .. or
side position.
Results of the UB study . involving 121
primary-&lt;:are physicians who care for new·
horns, were reported in the January issue of
Ptdiatrics. They howed that only 24.4 percent of the respondents said they strongly
agreed with the AAP recommendation and

stomachs. the con\'tntional

physicians fell about the issue and ho\o\• their
attitudes innuenccd what they were telling
parents.
Reasons given most often for having reservations about the recommendation were
the lack of puhlished data on the connection
between sleep position and SIDS on the U.S ..
and pa t experience. Also mentioned frequently was the possibility that an infant on
its back might regurgitate stomach content~.
an occurrence called gastroe,ophageal re nux . and breathe the material int o its lung ...

"I began talking to other
parents and teamed that
pediatricians weren't
recommending the back
position, despite the AAP
recommendation. "

son for not recommending back-sleepinggastroesophageal renux and poss\ble a"Spintion-probably doesn 'I happen o ften . "There
is no evidence than any healthy child placed
on its bad.. died of aspiration:· she stated.

S

ixty-nme percent of the physician"&gt; '"
the study recommended the stde post lion. even though il i' unstable. re'ultmg an
bab1es rolling onto their bacls or stomachs
dunng the night. Hudal c ued a Ne" Zealand
\tUd) ... ho" 1ng that on!) 30 percent of infant'
younger than 4 month'" ho \\ere placed on
thr1r \Ides at mght "ere found m that po~l·
t1 on m the mommg SJ'(I) ·fhe percent had
turned on the1r bac k!\ , \o\hlle ~percent "ere
round on the1r stomach"&gt; Anotha 'tud~
o;;ho"ed Sim il ar result, .
"The~.;e data suggc-5-t that \\ hlfe plucmg
mfanto;; on then ''de" represent' an mtellec -

tua1 compromise for physicians. it IS a subtle
end&lt;mcmem or the •~pine J&gt;O'Iltlon .~ 1&gt;e
sa1d.
" Wh1le the debate over the need for a
eli meal trial in the U.S. and the elhicaJ imphca uon~~; of such a tnal continues. physicians
must male recommendations to parents."
'he stated . .. All phy1iiic1ans should dJscus5sleep posttions and recommend enher the
bad. or s1de positiOn, finn mattre sses. no
pallows and a cool room··
De~pHe the bes.t intentlono;; of parent.; and
ph)'~1c1an~. ho"e'er. bab1eo;; ull•mmel y
do what the~ "ant. a fact Hudal knO\o\'ti v.-ell :
Her O\\ ndau~hler,tcadfa,tl) reru...ect IO'IIe~p
on her bacl
A'"'ung 1n the \lud) "ere Jane
o · Donnell. 3 ped!atnc nu~ praclllloner.
and !'\ad10e Maz) rla. a regbtered nurse.
h01h rmm Ch1ldren'li Ho~pital

BONNIE B. HUDAK

only 42 percent recommended 1he supine or

tummy-up position. Most recommended the
side position, a less well-studied ahemath•e.

The new guidelines did change significantly one aspect of physician behaviorthe frequency with which they discussed

sleeping position with parents. Before the
recommendation. only 34 percent of the respondents addressed the issue regularly: afterwards. 70 percent said they usually or
always talked about sleeping position with
parents.
Principal author Bonnie B. Hudak. UB

assis1am professor of pediatrics affiliated
with Children's Hospital of Buffalo. undertook the project as a resull of her own experience with her new daughter.
"When 1 had my baby in 1993. nobody
talked to me about sleep po ition," she said.
"I began talking to other parents and learned '
that pediatricians weren't recommending the
back position, despite the AAP recommendation. Parents were gelling conflicting ad-

Hudak acknowledged that there are no
published U.S. data on sleep position and
SIDS. but noted that extensive studies ha\e
been published using data from Europe .
Australia and New Zealand. where SIDS
rates are high . Great Britain reponed in December that SJDS cases had decreased by
more than half since 1991. when it began an
educational campaign urging parent "&gt; to put
infants to bed on their backs.
Some physicians have questioned whether
such data apply 10 the U.S .. pointing out that
bedding materials common to these areasdown mattresses in northern Europe and
sheepskins in Australia and New Zealandmay be the culprit rather than sleep position.
Hudak said.
The AAP has acknowledged the importance of proper bedding, and recommends
puJJillg babies 10 bed on a firm maltress
without pillows.
Hudak said anotheroflen-mentioned rea-

Pie IIJJII flee

·

How's it feel, dean? Channel 2's Barry Ullis interviews Mark
Karwan, acting dean of the School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences, who had just been pelted during Engineering Week
festivities Feb. 22 in the Student Union.

"'II

�--....---.- ...

6

lllACtl -TOllY ~
T..-o Trains Raonl... Sarah
Norat-Phillips.. director. LomJ
C. Hill . artistic dircdor.
Theated.of~ S45 Elmwood Ave.
8 p.m. 5 t 2, 515. Call 883-0380.

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

~----

INSTTTUTIE FOR ADOIClWN

Adolec:enl Ou.ol Dia&amp;nosls,
Belinda Terro Mooney. Hilbert
College, Hamburg. Nonh Campus. S60 fee. Call645-6140.

-

COMMUTERAWAKNESS

-

Comm.u lK Cotret Break. Student Union Lobby. North C am·
pus. 8:30-10:30 a.m. Sponsored
by Student Life, SA Commuter
Affairs Council and Judicial
AffairsiOmbudsman .

-

COMMIITEII AWAitENESS
R.ela.ution Station. Student
Union Lobby. North Campus .
9 a.m.-2 p.m. Sponsored by
the Li ving Well Center.

COMMUTER AWAIIENESS

fw eveab

Uk.lftt plac:e Ofl

CMtt,.. a, cw f or

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM

off~•

•-M• whef'e U8 crouP• _.
1

priadpal
dYe DO

~

U•tin.P e re

t.ai• t tAan l'tOCWl 0" tt'l•

Tttu,...u.y

~"' pubkQ'tKII1

AOCireN entM• to Reporter
C-'-nciM CoordiMtcw. 1 36
repcele pub.bUtf a-.o.H..,l-

o.n

FAX .,.:mbet I• 645-.2313

TH UR S D AY

2

MEN' S SWIMMING

ECAC C ha mpionships.
Alumni A~na N:u alonum
North C ampus. All Da)
WOMEN 'S SWIMMING

ECAC Championships.
Alumni Arena N01ta1onum
North Campus. All da)
COMMUTER AWARENESS

WEEK
Commuter ColT~ Break.. SIU denl Umon Lobby . North Cam pus 8 :30- 10 ;30 a.m. Spon100rt'd
by Studenl Life. SA C o mmoner

Affa1rs Counca l and Pubhc
Safety.
COMMUTER AWARENESS
W££1(

Relaxation Station. S!Udent
Union Lobby. North Campu.!&gt;
9 a.m.-2 p.m. Sponso~ by
the Living Well Center.
WEDNESDAYS AT 4 PWS

Words. Space, Design. Context, Meaning, Ourles
• Alunnder. 438 Clemens.. No rth
Campus.

1'2:30 p.m.

UFE Wotl1(S-

Car Cart 101, Howard Hunke.
Peter Evans. Nonh Campus.
1-3:30 p.m. Ca11645-6125
for rcgistrdlion inforrTUition.

Ultnt-0.11K Byd ....... : Still
Eluding the M rtaiJic Stale-!.
Prof. Neil W. Ashcroft Cornell
Uni v. 228 Natural Sciences &amp;
Mathematics CompJu . Nonh
Campus. 3:4 5 p .m.
B~AL

SCIENCES
SEMINAR
Slnle:ture.. Fuoctloo a.od Eo.&amp;ineering of the NeMrosportl vs.
Ribozyme, Dr. Rtd.. Collins.
Univ. of Toromo. 114
Hochsten er Hall. North Campus. 4 p.m
MATIIOIIATIC5 COUOQUIUM

A Characterization of the Sets
of Points of a T"'o-Spht.~ Em bed d~ in R. 1 at wbkh
Weinu'li Criterion Fails. Prof
Stephen W atson. Vorl Um, er·
sity. 103 Diefendorf Hall. St.uth
Campus. 4 p .m .
MUSIC LECTURE
Charlie- Parku and Themat ic
Improvisation. Henry Manm .
Mannes College of M ~ 1 c 211
Bau d Non h Campu1o. 4 p.m .
Call 645-29 21
PHILOSOPHY LECTURE
Post modem ism a n• I he Ori·
gin of Modern Philosoph) ,
Hemun Phihpse. Princeton 280
Park. North Campu1o. 4 p.m.
snnsncs cou.OQUIUM
Sometlmes Therr is a Free- a nd
Delicious Lunch.- . Dr Dav1d
' 'an.D) L. Unh . ofOucago 106
Cat) Hall. South Campu!&gt; ~ p.m
NURSING CONT1NUING
EOUCAnON PROGRAM
Certificate Projtram in
Gerontological Nursi ng. -1 :30·
7:30 p.m. Sess:ton!l run Thursday!~ through Ma) I I S 15. S50
per SCSSIOR. Call 829-329 1 for
rega~ tr.mon mformat1on : regt!l·
lr.l.tion deadline t) five workmg
days be fore each ~s~to n .

ETMIC5 IN .IOMEOICAL
RESEARCH COLLOQUIUM
Background to the Use of H uman Subject.s in Research.
Richard Hull. Ph.D. Butler
Audiotrium. Shennan. South
Campus. 5: 15·7: 15 p.m.

UFEWOIIK$-

Fresh Start : How to Quit

COMI'tJTlNa WORKSInt roduction to M aple. 2-4
p.m. Call 645-3540 for registrn ·
tio n infonnation.

Smoking, Power Advocath
Nonh Campus . 5:30-6:30 p.m.
C a11645-6125 for registr.Uton
informat ion.

UFEWORIISA Sen~ of Humor Makes
Senst, Ed Brodka. North Cam ·
pus. 3:30-5 p.m. Call645-6125
for registratio n infonnation.

UUAB FILM 5£RIES

PHARMACEUTICS SEMIIIAR
Assessing Parameter
Estimat.ability of Non-linear
Models, Sandeep Dutta. CS08

14th Toumet of Animation.
Student Union The;uer. North
Campus. 6:30 and 9 p.m . S4 . S6
' 0.11645 -2957 .
5UMMERFARE THEATER
Nun~ U . Preifer Theater. 8

p.m. 510. 512. 515 . Call8 398540.

4

SUIIIIERFAIIE THEATER
u.DilUI.K II . Pfeifer lbeas.er 4

p.m. and 8 p.m. 51 0 , 512. 5 15
Call 839-8540.
BlACil _,_,. ~
Two Train RIUUiinc.. Sarah
Norat-Phillips. direc•or. Lorna
C. HiJI. artistic d irector.
lbeatcrLofi. S45 El mwood A\e .
8 p.m. Sl 2. 51 5. Caii883-0380

w -·s IIASKETWAU

MCC Womea's BaskdbaU

IKN'SS_M_

Tounuurten-L Alumni Arena

ECAC Champ ionships.
Alumni Arena Natatorium.
onh Campus. All Day.

M ain Gym. Nonh Campus

8 p.m.

ECAC Championships.

Alumm A~na Natatori um
onh Campus. All Day

UFE-

I AU CONCUIT
Buck bot IAFonque. featurinc
B... nront ManaliJ. Presented
by Umvcn1ty Umon Activ&amp;UO
Board Ctnter for the Arts
NorthCampus. 8pm 513 . $ 16.
Sl9. 522. Caii645 -A RTS

Nonb Campus. All day.

Aibrilbt-Kooz Art Galluy
Tour, l..or&lt;y Rcpicci. Nonh
Campus. 10: 15 a.m.-2:30p.m.
Cali64S--612S for re&amp;istntion
information.
AIITEX*BIT
Dedd~ W bo You Are, Adrian
Piper. Elthibit runs through
April 22. Ccnlel' fO&lt; th&lt; Arts UB
An Gallery (fi rso floor). North
Campus. 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
Wed.·Sat .. Noon·5 p.m. Sun
Free admission . Call645-6912
AliT EXIII•n
Tbe End. Vtci:Of Burgin EJ.·
hil);t runs through April 22 .
Ccnler for t.ht Arts UB Art Gallery (second fl oor) Nonh Campus. 10;30 a.m.-8 p m. Wed Sat., Noon ·5 p.m. Sun. Free
admission Call645-6912.

MONDAY

-AilE

THEATER

Nuost.DH D.. Pfeifer llleater
3 p.m. 51 0. 5 12. 515 Call
839-8540.

•LACK HISTOIIY MONTH
Two Trains Runni.nc. Sarah
Norat-Ph.J lhps. dtrector. Lorna

C. Hill. an1stte dlfeC1or
Theaterl..oft. S45 Elmwood A v~

6 p.m. 5 12. 5 15 Call88 3-0380
FACULTY IIECnAL
F'rina Arschaosb Boldt.

Abstract #5. below. " by
Ellen Car ey. M FA '78 .

ECAC Cham p ionships.
Alumni Arena Natatonum
North Campui . All day

6

..ocHDIIST1IY SEIIIJWt
Th&lt; SWIISAF Pro&lt;ria Complex: A Chromatin Remodeling Mac.bioe. Cratg Peterwn
1348 Farber. South Campus
4pm
PHTSIOI.OQY SEIIIINAR
Air Flow Dynamics iD lbf"
Nose. H.K Chang. Ph D . Una\
of Pittsburgh. 108 Sherman

South Campus . 4· 15 p.m
COMPUTEII CUNIC
loteme.t Clink: First.Search
and CARL UnConr. 223
Lock-wood. Nonh Campus
7 p.m PreTegtSiriUOfl requared
Con•aC1 Gemma De V innc:) .
645 -2817. &lt;lolgemma@ ub\m&gt;
URW~

Ballroom Dan&lt;ing : PolUs.
Rbe.in.. nders., Oben:k.s &amp;
Wala., Dr Ninita Bogue:. Mr
B)Ofll Bogue Nonh Campus
7-9 p.m. Call645 -6125 for
reg&amp;stnl!on anfomutaon.
RESIOEJIT QU.IUIT£T SERIES
Amhf'nt SaxophoM Quartet.

ENYI-MENTAL
£MQIN££JIINO AND SCIENCE
SEIIIIIWI
Assessment of the Ecologic-al
u~

c ...

MCC Mea 'J B.uketball Tournamnt. Alumru Arena Mam
Gym Nonh Campus 8 p m

WOMEN' S S-MINQ

Risks of the-

IIUS.L OEOIII&amp; IIECITAL
Aaroa
bowsk:i, orp.a. Student of Prof. David Fuller Sltt
Concen Hall North Campus
8 p m Call645-2921

MDI'S • ABKETliAU.

ECAC C hampionships.
~···-­
Alumni Arena Nataaorium.

V irtual Reality Mat:bioe:s. Stu dent Union Lobby. North Cam ·
pw:. 10 a.m .-4 p.m. Sponsored
by Student Life and SA .

MEN' S S-MINO

pl.aoo. Slce Conttt1 H• ll North
CampuL 8 p.m S2. 55. S6. sg
Call 645-2'121

of CbloriM

Dioxide- for tbr Bleaching of
Pulp. Dr Keuh Solomon . Um\
of Guelph 140 Ketter No nh
Campu~ . I I a.m.

HIUT) Fackdman' s arrangrment
from Prol:o fie, 's Romeo and
Juhet Slet Concen Hall. Nonh
Campus 8 p m S5 . S.IO Call
645 ·2'121

N0RTM AMERICAN NEW
MUSIC INSTITUTE

Robert Black..

ba~-s and Karen
Bentley, violin. Band Recital
Ball . North Campu!&gt; Noon Ca ll
645 -29::!1

WOMEN' S .ASKETIIAU.
MCC Women ' s Basketball
Tournament. Al umni Arena
M:un G ym on.h Campu~
8pm

COMMUTER AWARENESS
WEEK
Time Management. 3 17 Student
Umon ()((h C ampu.,. 1·2 r m
SponJ&gt;Ored b) the Ll\'lng \\'d l
Center POWER AdvocaiC'!Io

TUESDAY

COMPUTING WORKSHOP

SPSS f or Windo••s -Part 2.

7

I 30--1 30 p m Calll&gt;lS -35&gt;0
for rct;t s:tral ton mfonn:uum
PHYSICS SEMINAR SERIES
Condenst'd Matt er Pbvs ic-Jo on
lht! Work5tation : Apphcatio n~
or Molecular Dynamics. Dr
Rohen S Smko \IU., Na\ al Re)o('arch Lab. 2:22 Nat ura l Sn c- nc e~ &amp; Mathe manes CompkA
North Campu!io 3 -1 5 p .m
CHEMISTRY COUOQUIUM
Infrared Spectrosc:Dpy as a
Probe ofthe Actin Site in a
Nick~l Hydrogenase, Prof
Kamber! ) Bagley. Buffa lo State
College . 215 Natural Sc t ence~ &amp;
Mathem:U1cs Complex Non h
Campus. 4 p.m .
UUAB FtLM SERIES
14th Tou m ee of A nimation.
Student Umon Theater. No n h
Campu!io 6:30. 9 and II 30 p m

S4. SO. Call 64 5·29 57
MEN 'S BASKETIIAU.
MCC Men's Basket ball Tourna ment , rin1 round. Alumnt
Arena M tun Gy m. North Cam ·
pu1o. 8 p .m.
SUMMERFAR£ THEATER

Nu nse.nsc II. Pfeafer The:ner
8 p.m. 510. 51 2. S l5. Call
839-8540 . .
BLACK HISTORY MONTH

T wo T rains Running. Sarah
Nor:tt- Phillips. director: Lorna
C. Hill. art i tic d irector.
Thetuerl.ofl . 545 Elmwood A\e
8 p.m. Sl2. 515. Ca1188HB80.

(

GROUP LEGAL SERVICES
SEIIIINAII

UB alumna Ellen Carey, a photographer
whose work has t&gt;een presented by the
lnler nal!onal Cenler of Photography, lhe
National Academy of Scoences and the
Wadsworth Atheneum , w tll present a
lecture at 4 30 p m Wednesday , March
8 on the Black Box Theater. B-85 Center
lor the Arts
Carey who leaches al t h~ Hartford Art Sc hool. receoved her MFA on photography lrom UB on 1978 Her
work IS represented 1n numerous collections. mclud1ng the
Metropolitan Museum ol Art. the Art lnst•tute of Chtcago
and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Her photographs woll be exhoboted locally March 11-Apfll 12 on the
N1na Freudenhe•m Gallery. 300 Del aware Ave
Cnttc s have satd that her recent abstract photographs
·confound the expectation that a photograph shou ld be a
reahst1c documem of some aSpect of v1sual reality The
an•st created lhe vabrantly colored patterns, shapes and
forms 1n these works us1ng the bas1c Jools and apparatus
of the photographiC med1um. whale refus1ng to conform to
the representational str ateg1es normally assoc1ated with
those Jools " Carey's lecture IS free and open to the pubhc
For more onlormal oon. call the Art Department a1 64 5-6878.

AlDS A"'a~nes-s. Bnan
Lampkin. AIDS Commun
Ser"ices and Jennifer CokflltUl
of Mum)' &amp;: Coleman. S tu~
Umon Social Hall Nonh
Campu ·. oon-3 p m. Call
645-30S6 .
VOICE ltECnAL
Sludent Voitt RtciUI. Stu dents of Gary Burgess. S) l\ ia
();mizi:m i. D:lniel McCabe and
Harriet Sunons. Batrd Recttal
Hall . North Campus. Noon Call
645 -2921.
BROWN UQ READING
SERIES
Playground. b} usao An.ner.
Center for the Arts Rehearsal
Wo rkshop. North Campus.
Noon- I p.m. Free adm l.~&gt;~ton

UFE Wotl1(S-

Sun ·iving on a Collqe Bud ·

~~t Audrosc M Banh. orth
ea:Opus. 4 -6 p.m . Ca116-15 -bl25
for registration mform:at1on.

WEDNE$0AY5 AT 4 PWS
L«t u ~: Basil Bunting. Rtc
C addel. 438 Clemens. Nonh
Campus. 4 p .m.

�-a.----.-..

OUTIIUCtiCat'ftf' a Ufe Plaa.aiq. Coun-

Plelry

seJ;n&amp; Cenw. 14SE Student
Union. North Campus.
S:30-7 p.m.

Plus4

_,__

UFEc.....r

Ric Caddel

E&lt;plorin&amp;
Cha nco,
Janet Mather, Joyce Andenon,
Lynn Staehewicz. North Cam pus. 6-8 p.m. Caii 64S-612S f0&lt;
~gi

lectures
March 7
and reads
from his

tration infonnation.

NUHIIICI COII11NUIIIQ

poetry

Introductory Physical Assessment of the AdulL 6--9 p.m.
S2SO. Call829-3291 foc "'gis-

March 8 .

7

Uc.htYo-eU GaUery. This site-

construction elplores lhe i.nter .
connectioos bely.·ecn an and
archiledure . Admis ion IS (rec .
Gallery houn are 10:30 a.m .-8
p.m Wednesday-Saturday and
Noon-S p.m Sunday. Call 64S6912. -rbe Senaor Sbow," fea turing work by sentor BA and
BFA candidateli in painunc.
sculplure. computtt art.. photo&amp;·
n.phy. Printmaking. illu.stratlon,
and communication design runs
through March 9 10 the An Oc:panment Gallery.

Bag a great deal on
a PowerBook today!
Added bonus!
Flw~~

conyhtg ClUe ..ub ...
ptn'dJaa! of tuty
l'oftJerBoolr 500 rerln

lration information.

COIIIJ'VIDI CUNIC
lnterMI Clink: FlrstSear&lt;b
Lockwood. Nonh Campus. 7

p.m. Prerqiwation required.

Conlad Gemma DeVinney,
645-2817, dolgemma@ubvm&gt;
UFEWLosin&amp; Wdcbt •nd Keepin&amp; It
Off. Ron lngalsb&lt;. Nonh Campus. 7-9 p.m. Call64S-612S foc
registration information .
UFEI'llm~tiq : Tb&lt; Ultimate C 1~o~ David L Myrow,
. .
Nonh Campus. 7:30-9"p.m. Call
645-6125 forregistrauon information .

cl

encapsulation in Syntbetk
Po ly mers, Michxl V. Sefton.
Univ. of Toronto. 206 Furnas.
North Campus. 3:4S p.m.
aiOCIIDIICAL
l'tWiiiAc:ouMIY SEMINAR

Mnle&lt;ular Mec:baaisms of
Learninc and Memory, Shu ·
Jen Chen. Ph.D. 307 Hochstetler
North Campus. 4 p.m.

FACULTY IIECITAL SDIIU

THE~NTULE

Clf:OI.OQY LECTURE SEJIIU
M uka.n/Appalachian Tfdon.ics, Dr. Tom Anderson. Umv . of
Pittsburgh 210 Natural Sc1encc~
&amp;. Mathematics Complu
f'l.h
Campus 4· 10 p.m Call64 ~
6800 ext . 6100.

COFFEEHOUSE
Tbt Ruzl&lt;s aad Happy Dogs.
Hamman Hall. South Campus.
8 p m. Fru coffee and music
Call64S-29S7 .

WEDNUOAYS AT 4 f'WS
Read ing by ~·o British Poets.,
Ric Caddel and Peter M1ddleton
Ccnttt for the Arts Screemng
Room. North Campus 4 p m

Harpskbord, vi'l:inalaad

organ. Roland E. Manin. Slec
Concert Hall. North Campus.
8 p.IJl. S2. SS, S6, S8. Call
64S-2921.

MEN' S AND WOMEN' S

I'IIAIIMACY SEMINAR

BASKE1'8ALI.

The Future o f AntirclrO\·iral

MCC Mea 's ud Women 's

ror

Therapy
th~ T reatment of
UIV, Alan Chapman. 24-8
Cooke . Nonh Campus 4 .30·
S:30 p.m.
UUMFILM...._.
Gas, Food, Lodging. Studem
Union Theater. Nonh Campu!lo
6:30p.m. S2. S3.SO. C.ll 645 ·
29S7 .

Tournament Finals. Alu mni
Arena M ain Gym. Nonh Cam-

Jllllo TimeTBA .

E DNESDAY

~

UFEWOIIKSHow t o Pure-bast a M ic.roc.om puter, Marl Wmer. Kc.m Cabana. North Campus. 6:J0.-8 30
p .m Call 645-6125 for regl"&gt;&gt;rB uon 1nforma110n.
UFEWOIIKSSelf-Dtfmst and Personal
Prottdio n, Dave Chernt"ga.
Kalhy Zysek. North Campu!!o 7
9 p m. Call 645 -6 125 for regntratlon mformation .

INSTITUTE ADOICTION
STUDIES AJID TIIAINING

Incl uding Sexuality in Issues
in Treatment Strategies for

DI'US: CLASSICS UVE
Juliann• Sabol. soprano a nd
Ida T rebicka. piano. A lien
Hall . South Campu" 7 p.m Free
adm1ss1on.

Clients Addicted to Akobot
a nd Other Drugs. John
Oswald. Cenler for TomorrO\Io'
Nonh Campus. S60 fee . Call
645-6140.

MUSIC AND VIDEO PROGRAM

PHARMACY SEIIINAR
C hronic Fatigue Syndrome.
Denise Komorowski . 248
Cooke. Nonh Campo . 8-9 a.m

Tbe M aj esty of Louis
Armst rong, Lincoln Center
Jau Orchestrn. Cemer for the
Arts Mamstage . North Campus
8 p.m. SIO. Sl4. SI S. C.ll
64S-ARTS .

NUHIIIQ COIITUIUING
EDUCA,__
Revi~· Courw for Nursin g

UUAB FILM SOltES
M i Vida Loca.. Stucknt Umon
Theater. North Campus 9 p m
S2. S3.SO. Ca11645 - ~957

Continuing Education a nd
Starr Dtvelopmeot Cen irte:alion Eu.mioatioo.. 10 a. m.· I
p.m. SISO. Call829-3291 for
registration information .

011111£ACH WOIIKSUndergraduate to Gradua te
Student : Making tbe Transilion, Co unseling Cenler. 145E
Student Union . No n h Campus.
Noon- I p.m.

SEMIIUUt
Molecular Genetics of Bladder
Cancer, Peter A. Jones. Ph .D ..
D.Sc .• Univ. Southern Califor·
nia. HiiJboe Audilori um. RPCJ.
12:30 p.m.
COMPUTIIIQ-

9

North Campu.!!o 4 p m Call 64S·
6912
aiOLOQICAL SCIENCES

SEMuwt
ldt otifyin&amp; Calciu m Transporters in Pbni.J., Dr He,·en
S1..c, Um' of Maryland , Colle{!t
Part.. II~ Hoch!&gt;teuer Nonh
Campui. 4 pm
NUHIIIQ CONTINUING
EDUCA.,_I'ItOGII.UI
Cm ifacatt Program in
Gtrontologkal ' u n:in g. 4 307.30 p m Sessions run Thursda)!!othroughMa)• ll ~IS , SSO
per '&gt;eSSIOO Call829-329 1 for

~:~r~~:~~;:'~~~~~;E:~~
days before each st!r.ston

UFEWOIIKSHow to S u r-vive you r l..aodlord, Don Shonn. ~ . North
Campus S· 7 p.m. Ca116-15-6J 25
for reg1stratJon mfonnat1on

cknt Speaker Select101'1 Comm1t·
tee. c/o Ntcola; 0 Goodman,
V1ce Provost (Of UnderJraduatt:
Edun uon . 549 Captn Hall .
Nonh Campus. 645 -2991

D'MICS IN BIOMEDICAL
RESEARCH COLLOQUIUM

Mult i«:n.U:r Trials. E l igibilit~
C riteria a nd IRBs. BenJamm
Freedman. Ph D.. Unl\ of
Mo ntreal Butler Audttonum.
Shennan South Campu .. 5 I~
7 15 p m
UUU FILM liEJIIES
Lodgi n ~. S1udc-nt
Un1on Theater Non.h Campu~
6.30 p m S2 . SJ SO Call 64'

Gas. Food.

:!957
SCHOL\RSHIP CONCERT

P rism . Charle\ PeltL dtrector
Proc'erd~ benefit the UB Mu \tl'
Scholarship Fund Slee Concen
HaiL Nonh Campu\ K p m SS
Call 645-29:! I
SUMMEIIFARE THEAT£R
Nu nseoR II. Pfc1fer Theater
Sp.m SI5 . S12 . ~10 Call

839-85Jll
BLACK HISTORY MONTM
T"o Train Run nin g. Sar.ah
Norat - Ptulltp!~, d1rector. Lorn ...
C HJII. an1s11c d1rector
Theaterloft. 5-'5 Elm-.-.ood A\e
8 p.m . Sl2. Sl5 CaliS J--OJ80

WAB FILM SERIES
M i \'ida Loa. Student Umun
Theater Nonh Camrus. 9 p m
S2. S3.50 Call ~5-2957

VIDEO PIIUENTAl»H

\

EXHIBITS

l'tWIIIACEUTICS SEMINAR
Tbe.q,plication of Mic~
dialysis Ttt.hniques to AsKSS

CONTINUING EXHIIIITS
Si mon Unger's " Red Vcn ical"
runs through J uly 31 in the

Barbour. Center for Tomorrow.
Nonh Campus. 7:30-9 a.m . S8.
S9. Call 829-2608.

COMMENCEMENT SI'EAIIDI
lbe University Commencement
Commmee has annoonced the
critena (or selection of I Audent
representali,·e lo addreu gradu ates at the I 49th Universily
Commencement. xhedukd for
10 a.m. Sunday. May 14m
Alumni Arena. 1be competttlon
for a commencement spul.er IS
open to all graduating semors m
the faculties of Ans and Letters.
Natural Science!!. and Mathemat ·
ics. Soc1al Science and Special
and lndl\•idualited MaJors
N1cola.s D Goodman. \'ICC proHl!.t for undergraduate educauon . will cha1r a selectiOfl com mmec composed of faculty .
Slaff and students &amp;mon. who
v,.1!Jlto be conMdered muSI submil a \lontlen vers1on oflhetr
:.peech to Goodman Each final ·
111 wall prnenl h1!J'her addrt:.S!.
before the commlltee The WJR·
nmg )pecch &lt;Nill be presented b)
the !.tudenl at commencement
Speeche!. should be no longer
than s1x mmutes Selectton &lt;Nail
be ba!r.ed on rele,•anc) . appropra ateness of content and dell\el)'

Entria mu.st bt submitted b)
Wed nt'Sday..Apri.J S to the Stu·

WEDNUOAYSAT4f'WS
Lecture.: Why So Muc.h T a lk
in Contemporary Novels'!
Peter Middleton. 438 Oemens .
North Campus. 12 :30 p .m .

ua AT SUNRISE SEIIIES
falo Waterfront, Warren T .D.

The End, Victor Burgin. Center

lian Cells by Micro-

ART LECTURE

The End, Vtctor Burgm TBA.

ARCHITECTURE EXHIBmON
''Construction . Intention. Detail
Five Projects from Five Swiss
Architect.s" runs through March
24 1n the Jamb Dyeu Exhtbt ·
1aon Hall on the thml Ooor of
Hayes. The projeCts uamme the
mean by or through wh1ch ron!!ltructJon expresses, ennche!io. or
contradictS an underlymg a.n:h•leC"IUral unit. Architects rc:prrsented include Herzog &amp; de
Meuron. Burkhalter &amp; Sumi.
Meilt &amp;. Peter, Diener &amp; Diener.
and Peter Zumthor. Gallc:ry
hours are" Mondays 9 a.m.- 8
p.m .. a..nd T uesdays-Fridays.
9a.m.-5 p.m .

The Archaeology of the Buf-

lntermtdiatt Unix-Software
Dn-elopme.nt Tool. 2-4 p.m.
Call 645-3540 for regislntllon
mformation.

CHEMICAL ENWHEEIIING
UNDE SUIIIIAII HlliU
lmmunoisolation of Mamma ·

the R_..nftheN-metbyl 0-aspartat~ Reuplor Com plex, Teresa Lopes. CS08
Cooke. Nonh Campus
3o30p.m.

T HURSD AY

ROSWELL PARK STAFF

for the Ans Screen ing Room.
Nonh Campu!i. 2 p.m. Call
645-291 2.

romptaer u111il 3131/95.

NOTICES

a nd CARL UaCnver, 223

$1749

PowerBook 520 41160

$277 Price drop!

$2232 PowerBook 520c 41160

$357 Price drop! Dual-~n passive

matru: Color!

.2919

PowerBook 520c
121320 with modem

$607 Price drop! Dual-scan passive

matrix Color!

$3588
.

d

PowerBook 540c 41320

$ 665 PrICe rop.1

$4372

Adive matrix Color!

PowerBook 540c
121500 with modem

$786 Price drop! Active matrix Color!

CREAnYE CRAFT eENlER

The C~ati\'C Cr11ft Center. lot:alcd at I 20 FJIImo~. Ell1coH
Compln . Nonh Campus. l'i
offcnng 1h Spnng ' 95 Craft
W orl s h u~ s1anmg the- v.ed. of
Ma h 20 Wort. .. hop" a~
..cheduled JR We;J\ 1ng. rrochct·
tnf1: and lnlltln(!.. qualtmg. Bro~­
ZIII&lt;In ~mbmadcr) . gn:etmg. ran!
dc .. 1gn. poltef) antermedlatc
poUC:I). t·3nOI.'niR(!.. b3\IC phuIO(!I&lt;tph). nature photog:raph~ .
c~all\c: pholograph). t•olor rholu~raph), ad\ anttd wlor phoh.)l!-raph~. aenal phot og r.~ph~ .
darlroom tt'Chnu..jues. JeWell")
cono;trut·uon . bcgmnmg stamed
gla\\. advanced .,ta med gla""·
I'OIIC:I) and multJmedtD for Chll·
dren All wnrl ..hof"' run from 7 10 p m one mght a wed forM"
wed '&gt;. c-.cept children·) cla ..se\
on Saturda) momangs. Ftt) an:
S'O fur :.tudenb and S50 for all
othcl', earl) Mgn-up IS ad \ 1sed
For mort mformnuon. call 64S bl25 or 6-15· 2-'Jl

Sabbatical House

IHTDINAnGNAL fOIJ(
DANCING
All are v.elcome to Jmn the In ·
t~ma11onal Foil D.1nc1ng grotJp
each Fnda) from 8- 11 p m m 2

Diefendorf Hall on the South
Campu .. The..c: free ..e~.Mons
be{!m "-llh teaLhmg . Pannc:t!l
arc no1 needed. The spon~r '"
the: GrJdu:ue SIUdenl As~l a­
tlon .
PANIC AnACK SUFFERERS
SOUGHT
lndh·iduah age!!. 18 and older
who wffer from p.amc auad.s
are bemg sought 10 pamc1pate
in non-drug trcatmenl resean:h
bemg conducted a! the Ce.ntef"'"
for Anuety Research m the UB
Oepanment of P )Cholog)
Pamc :macks an )Udden rushe!!o
of mtcnse fear or anx1et) that
occur out of the blue. Symptom ..
rna} mclude racmg hcan. !r.hon ·
ness of breath. !1-'-'oeatmg. and
t~mbhng ur .. halmg Th.l\('
!&gt;Ciectcd to pan1npa1c JR the research w11l rece1\'C a thorough
assessment a nd free treatment.
lndl\' tduah undergomg psycho·
th~rapy are not e hg•ble . For
funher infonnatton, contact

Continued on

page 8

VIctorian House In The Ctty
• Elmwood District
• 4 Bedroo'T\5
• 3 1/2 Baths
• Garage
• Mailable 9-14 months, June '95August '96

Call Elaine or Dave aner G:OO P.M.
l/i61 886-4790
s•athOt' c ... h\

r ... ~c;

B~.' t' 1 ('
4

'

•

'""'

�_.,.._._..,_u

8

CALENDAR
lrompage7
Gayk &amp;ok. PhD . 11 64S -36SO.
ext 3J7

P'OWnrY CON1UT
Th&lt; UndetJtllduate Library "

plened 10 n-aeethe 199S
poetry COIIIeiiS iipl)rlliOred in
coopc:mion
the Depart·
ment of En&amp;h and the Fncnds
of lht: Umven.ity Labnne T•o
pilei of S I 00 eacft arc- offered
for the best poems subnnued b)'
UB &gt;tude""' Th&lt; Acodtmy of
Arnenc:an Potu cont«t I:S oprn
10 both pw!IIOIC and under-

••Lh

INAdvanced VIdeo Techniques
/JH
5500 Hol n · WllUomsvme. New Yottc 14221

631-0515

pw!IIOIC snodenu. the Fncads of
tJx: Uruvenny Libranes PlU 11
ror undefl:radua&amp;ts only EaUle'i
5houJd COIUlSI of OGC IO &amp;l.l
1ypc1•'nlte:a pa&amp;n 1br wnacr·,
name dx»uld no1 appear on tM
poc:rns. but on a CO\"er ahcet ... rth
the oamt ol the pnu and lhr
wnter' s name. da s. addteu
and telephone number Entncs
should b e - to Morpm R
Wdl5. Otrrctor , Undel'p'lduatt
Library, 107 C•p&lt;n Hall . North
Campus, Buffalo, Y 142602200. Tho d...tllne Is l'rid•y,
Marcb l4. Winners ""'" be no.
tiftftl by April ll and Will bt
InVIted to read rrom thtll '&lt;lloOft
11 a poetry readanc 10 be hdd at
4 p m Thursday . Apnl20 an lhe
Poetry/Rare Boob Room of tht:
Ltbnry. 420 Cap&lt;n Hall

2222 Pu~lir

-

U llra&lt;ard&gt;cn .... ooekul&amp;
heallhy rrtued odulu •ib 60
-s older ao f*\ICIJ*C 1n a bnd
snody 10 onaiyzo ""',...,......
u'ted '" thaoJana. 1'bote sc~
to p.n!CtJ*e •n tbc rady must
underJo one mtrrYttw and romp&amp;dc. • rew sample mertiJll ~ '
In Mld!uon, cadi piii'\IC:Ipranl

muSI have 1 51pif~ och« or
wbo CM compldc a

~lauve

hoe( questtOMa.t.re Pantelp&amp;nU
~Ill be ~•mbunied ror thru
tune . Tbose
cannot C'Ofnt to

-.no

""' Enc: County Medw:•l C..ltt
can bt

1ntcrv~

at home

1'holr 1ntauted 10 part..Kapa,tn&amp;
Ullhe snody illculd alll!8-&lt;6111 Md a-.~ l:be.&amp;r namt. k-k'
pbooe DUmber ud l:bt llmt'S
they can be re.cbed ar home

,.... Spodolioa-&lt;bl Booloc7
l'ollta&amp;fR-9SOIJ . _
S.ppert

Spodolloi-N-

""""'cfll-9SOIS ~
rot-s Spodolioi-Fom!Jy
MediCUI&lt;. - . I R-94091

-

C otalocTte-

J)Uiw ubrw) , """"' fP-SOOI
.. 0..., c..--o.-t-

~Servias(la........

-ioMI~.SL­
S)-S&lt;hooj of Mana,.._. f'a&lt;t.
u:~c

IP-5006

,...n

C..pt~&amp;er

Net-

-..,..u........,Y

Publ...,..,.. Pa&lt;tmc

fP~ IIO

ll.........,. H.. Dinuor1sl
(lo...,...,__~

tollil ,SL-Z)

(1..,..,........

ovaibblo)-lt&lt;Stdentool Life.

l"uwaa fP .S007

-EIIIIW~

CIVIL_,_
Clorlt I

Joaa
FAC111.TY

.........../Foil Pro(.._-.o.po

ofPalholoo. l'osllaJ IF-5004
~"-&lt;ialo/F•U

.....,_

r.._..o.po of POJboiocy. Past·
'"I ff -SOOS. I•...........,.UU..
taoVAI:iodate Proli .,. (ttuu
positioes •vallable)-O.po of
Emertc:RC') Med.ctnr , Posctnl

(SG~UIIIIerpadowe

l..tbrw) Ltae fZ634&lt; Ubntry
Cieri&lt; Z (SG-,)-Saentt aad
Eltatne&lt;nn&amp; Ubrary . u~~&lt;
f26JIJ

-

...._ClAMmED CfYIL

C latter (SG-S)-Uaavemty Fa
cdaues.Luat 131S97. P\aat
UtUitln Helper (SG-4')-un ....
ill}' f..:1hltn. l.Jnc 4J.C314S,
J20Sl

To obtam litO" mfonrtatlon on

•F-S006
KRAIICOI
f"lelcl T.......--Ps)&lt;'holofl Post
m1 tR -9S007 Resardt Sup-

jObJ lmrd Dllf.,"~·
JI'Htltr/

.S,n·•as

p,.,

rot~loN
J().f Crofts

Hall

Safetj's eekly Report
the whole bulld •ng was shak
An offiCer
who spoke to the staff sa•d the vtbratiOOs
were hnked 10 a problem at the Chilled
Water Plant
• Aboul $300 was reponed mtsstng Feb
13 from a deSk drawer tn F,argo Quadrangle

• A laptop computer valued al $3 t 00.
was reported mtsstng Feb 16 from Por1er
Quadrangle
• A wallel contatntng cash and etecht
Cjlrds and an AM/FM cassene player were
reported mtsstng Feb 16 trom the Health
Sctences Ltbr ary

Now there is an easy
organized quickly and
File Service distributes
Homework Solutions,
and more.

way to get your students
efficiently. Our Notes on
Lecture Notes, T.A. Notes,
Test Files, Study Guides

Our convement hours. access1ble location, and
free p1ck-up serv1ce make 11 virtually effortless for
you to pur your notes on file ' Call us today' 1

Makin' Cop_ies

~. Fax 636-8468

Te1636-8440 . . . .

Located at the UB Commons

Lion Dance, above. opened the
show as the Chinese Student
Association presented China
Night, '95 on Feb.
25 in the Center
for the Arts. Left,
comedian Phil
Nee entertains
the crowd and
right, student
Teena Huang performs Dun
Huang, traditional dance from
the Tang Dynasty period.

�9

_.,.___.,_"
Charges dropped against
in fraternity rampage
C....... ~ have been dropped agai nst three UB tude nts accused in a Feb. 10 fraternity n1mpage in a Lisbon Ave. apartment house.

1114
. . of . .

o.n·.

A-doflha
1lchoolof
........ Relet.
edPIOies8iana.He
-c:ledlor

~

IIUCIC
the un~end hla profession. and lor excellence
in teaching.
The Dean's Aw.d Is sup-

IJValo

ported
the
UB Foundlllon
Rekate.~

Albert
·

,

School of
•
Biomedical Scieoces. Rekate
was instn.men1111 in establishing !he School of Health
Related Proles&amp;ions and
served es acting dean.
Klick. who came to UB as
an instructor in the former
Oepartll*ll of Medical
Technology. previously
W0&lt;1&lt;ed es a research b iochemisl at Beaumont Ror
search Laboratories at Mt.
Sinai Hospital, Cleveland.
He receM!d a B.S. degree
in biology and an M.S. in 00medical biology from Cleve- •
land Slate University and did
graduate work In experi'lwltal pathology at the Roswell
Park Division of UB.

MICROBIOLOGY

API'OMI1ID 10 11M SlUDY
RC110M:
Plllllp
professor
of microbiology at UB. has
been appointed a member
of the Tropical Medicine and
Parasnology Study Section.
Division of Research Grants,
National Institutes of Health.
LoVerde joined the faculty
of the UB School of Medi·
cine and Biomedical Sciences as an assistanl
professor in t98t after sarving on the faculty at Purdue
University. He has performed distinguished research In parasitology lor
the past 23 years, focus ing
on schislosornes. Thase
parasnes are the cause of a
chronic and often fatal ill·
ness endemic In alleast 72
countries.
A recipient ol the Henry •
Baldwin Ward Medal. highest award presented by the
American Society of Parasitologists. LoVerde has spoken wor1dwide and has
more than 100 publications.
He has SB!Ved as ediiO&lt; of

I.e¥....,

&amp;perimental Parasitology
and as a member of the edilorial board of Microbial

Pathogenas/S.
MEDICINE

ELeC1D 80CIEtY

.... 111•rr.

...,. v.-., clinical as-

sistant prolessor of dermatol·
ogy and chief of dermatology
at Veterans Hospital , has
been elected president of the
Buflalo.Rochest Dermatological Society. The society
prO\Iides a forum fO&lt; the exchange o1 ideas and lnforma·
lion white providing continuing medical education tot
area dermatologists.

District Attorney Kevin Dillon. who said that the case needs funher
investigation, obtained a di smissal of burglary, assault and criminal
mischief charges against Charles Faison, Kenneth Eng and Christian
Mink, members of Sigma Alpha Mu frntemity .
Although charges have been dropped, Dillon said the investigation
being carried out before an Erie County grand jury has not cleared them
of wrongdoing in the case. Funher investigation could resuh in c harges
bei ng filed against them and others .
The three have been suspended from UB pending a deci sion by a
student judicial panel on disciplinary charges. The fraterni ty has been
suspended by the un iversity.

Women's Club to hold election
11le w-·•

Club of the University at Buffalo will hold its annual
election meeting March 7 at7:30 p.111. at the Center for Tomorrow. A new
slate of officen as well as three members -at-large will be elected.
The followi ng slate of officers will be presented by the nominating

committee: president. Janet Fedor: vice president, Ninfa Straubinger:
treasurer. Lynn McFadden: recording secretary. Geraldine Ryder: corre·

sponding secretary. Norma Zimmerman.
~
A program on the Akzosalt minecave·in which occurred last year, will
be presented by Andrea Dargush from the National Center forEanhquake
Engineering headquanered at UB. Followmg the program. dessens. fruit.
tea and coffee' wiJI be served. Arrangements were made by hospitaluy
chair.; Katrina Mobschall and Carmella Hanley.

Video gatnesjust for girls?
UB profs say the games might help raise self·
esteem, encourage Interest In computera

D

ESIGNING VIDEO
games specifically for
girls isn't sexisl. In
fact. it may help raise
girls' self-esteem and
foster an interest in computers. two
UB faculty members say.
Lu&lt;Unda Finley. UB profes&gt;or
of law who specializes in femimst
studies. suppon s the creatton of
video games designed with g 1rls'
interests in mind. Most game!o.
which feature male actors. are no
more than "compute r versions of
cops and robbers." Finley say .
adding that. "i f s no secret that
most video game designer'\ are
men.
'The high action shoot 'em up
stuff turns girls off." she say . The
content of current video games r.tise~
issues of long-term concern. such
as turning girls away from comput~
e~ when they are young. which
may lead to educational and em ~
ployment disadvantages. she says.
"A lot of the (current ) games
feature women as victims of vio~
lence.'' Finley adds .
. Games aimed at girls should foc us more on "strategy a nd creative
problem~solving ." rather than on
··fast ~action crashes and shoot~
in g." she says. "Girls are
much more likely to want to
create a whole story which they .
can interact with." The characters
should engage in a broader range of
human activities-not onl y those
that are stereoty pically male, such
as milit.a.r)l situations. In addition.

Ull'a

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-tin!•

1S6. a-. llilaaio
S63 with V~(486).c-.l
~Slate (392)11nd Noo-..llliaois (IS7) ~ lbe
fidd.
The Bulls swept Ill 1bo M~ .....to a reloctt.d by 1bo
cooc:ha. Ke&gt;in Remaly llndlilmie l'layfair- am&gt;Od Spoedo coSwimmm Olflbc y.., wbile 0..... Mi1uD ""'JIlftd 1bo ~of
the Year. Buftiolo'slustln Moain won the Spoedo Di= o( lbc Yur
aword lind Budd Termin ........ Coodt Olflbc Year bonors.
Buffalo's
Bobnol-lbo Spoedo
S......_.Oif
lbc Year awant willl AleuDdra Batrn
the Mid-Coa'• Newoomcr of the Year twa1l. Karen Laky ...,.;Yedlbc Spoedo ~of
the Yut awant for Buffalo. Wes~em Dlinois' Jerry O&gt;ampa-- ~&amp;­
leaed u Spoedo
Coodt oCibc Y. ..
The Royals set 1broe ~ iD SIIUrdayoiJIII' s~ova
the 1broe day eveut. Bam:ra- be&lt;"""' reconl ia 1bc 1650fn:c:slyle
finishing finl in 17:20.77. The tim&lt; ..... also a Mid-C-ment Meet
record. Batrn followed """ wilh a reconl reuiaJ pedonnance in lbc
200 bectstrott: lllkina lbe evau in 2:04.94.
Remaly' a 200 ~time of 2.f17.24 also set a Buns· record.
He fmiShed second in lbe eYall to Western Illinois' M'llz Uyder is&gt;

s........

w.,.,_·,

-mna

w.....,•,

2.'06.83.
Korry M'aller lind Playfair finished one-two iolbe 200 bectstrott:
Mth Miller toucbing first in 1:53.03 lind Playfair in 1:53116. The Bulls
swept Ill fiw: notay tveiiiS during lbe tbree-&lt;loy meet hi&amp;)lligllled by
Remaly. Miller. Playfair and Milun lakin&amp; lbe 400 fteestyle relay in
3:06.27.

Findin s
BJ USAWtt..EY
News Bureau Staff

.-_.,.....,...di,...
....,.__,u,...
...-,...-....

_.....,

111eu.n..i~Ja...,._.

more of the lead characte111 should
be females who have active roles.
In~tead of "~tmply 10\'0 iving
reflexe o:; 'IA.'ithout thmking and reacting to nashing sou nds and light ...
these games would mvolve thinL·
ing through problem~. Finley ~ays .
" Parenh would like them better for
all children."
uth Meyerowll7. associate
profes!oor of American ~tud·
ies and coord ma tor of tht: U B
Women·!&gt; Studie~ Program. agrees
that companies should c reate ,·ideo
game' spec1fically for girl~ . Ideally. these game; would appeal to
both ~eAe'i and have "a much more
positive overa ll content ," she say~.
If their content IS not altered. both
boys and girls will assume that
~iris shou ldn "t be playing those
game!\.
Meyerowitz add~ that marketing techniques. such as commercials ~ ho"'-ing girls playing and
enjoying video game~. are needed
to attract girls to the games.

R

.................

The Bulls fell tow.....,., Olinois 81-62 in !heir ontr actioa during lbe
wc:ek Myron Banks bad 17 points lind tied f«topo with six rebounds. The Bulls were bdd to just 32.4 paceD&amp; shocJtill&amp;. UB's fiaal
two borne recu~a&lt; seuoo c - apiDit E.astan miDois (Feb.
lind

m

lbe seedinp for lbe league tournaiD&lt;JII wllicll
Mm:lt 3 and continues Sunday lind Tuesday.

beiw"" Friday.

w-·.a-.lhll

Ull s defense shut down their oppooenu las1 week 10 la:ep the Royall
in lbe niCt for lbe Mid.COOtiDCDt women·s clwnpioasbip. The Royals banded Wesl&lt;:m Olioois I 64-49 defeat limitinrlbe W.........u.cls
to just 23.8 pen:ent shooting while UB lbola JeUOD-besl68.6 from
the floor. Brenna Doty and Anne Gallagher led lbe 1eam Mth 16
points apiece.
The Royals followed that Mth 1 71-48 pasting of Miuouri-KaoJU
City u UB beld lbe Roos to jusl26.2 pcra:ot from lbe floor. Natosba
Cummings' 15 points led the way while Nicole Blakeslee and Doty
added 12 points apiece. Blaloeslee also set career-hij!lts with 10 rebounds and nine blocked sbols.
UB entcn the Mid.COOtiotnl Conference tournament this week·
end folloMng lbe regular season finales vs. Eastern nlinois and
Valparaiso. Likelbe men's towoamen~ lbe Mid.COO tourney will
feawre the ...,ue'•top six~ playing at campus sites. The first
and second place teams earn byes and wr11 play at borne in lbe second
round. The women's tourname&lt;&gt;t begins Satunlay. Mm:lt 4 lind continues next Monday and Wednesday.

Indoor Tr-* a FWd

I

The Royals captured lbeir first Mid.COOtinent Coof=nce Olbnpiooship on Saturday with their win atlbe conference meet at Eastern
Dlinois. Judith Novak earned lbe Athlete oflbe Year awanl with ber
victories in lbe 3,000 run in 10:04.34 and 5,000 run in 17:~74. Lisa
Kngbe received lbe league •s Newcomer of lbe Year awanl ud Dick
Bany earned Coodt of the Year recognition. Kra8be woolbe
meters i.n 59.93 and fmished second in lbe 55--meter btmlles in a
school record 8.42.
The Bulls finiShed seventh in the eight-tum event Mth Chris
Keenan ftnisbed fourth in lbe 3,000 in a scllool·record 8:42.3. Fumu
Gakndi set a scbonl marl&lt; in the 400 in 48.95 and Eric Fischleio's
6.5 I in the 55 meters also set a UB standard.

WrntiiiC
Oylrlk O&gt;eney's gnippler&gt; fmished their dual season with a 27-13
loss at Duquesne to cooclude the year 0.16. Brian Dowdall ( 118).
Rob Pavis ( 134), Rennie Ciisafulli (1 42) and Tun Falloo (ISO) earned
victories for the Bulls as they bead for the East Coast Wrestling
Olampionships at Rider Univenity this weekend. Winners of lbe
ECWA matches advance 10 lbe NCAA Championships.

.._.• r ......
The Bulls dropped a pair of matches 10 open lbe spring season falling
to SL Bonaventure 4-3 and Duquesne 6-1 . Vinay Rajebdml was
victocious in both matches defeating his opponents ar. number six
singles. ·

�...,...,._......_-. .... "
Jeeon Wblte,
• pllltlclpant
In tba UB

UBST~S

STARS pro-

, _ , talka
with 5eftlot
Acln*alona

help with
transition
to college

AdwiMf

M. . , _
Hammett In
tba Adm...
tllone Olllc:a

In Capen
Hall.

F EXPERIENCE is the best teacher,
next year's freshmen should be well
taught, thanks to a new group called
UBSTARS.
UB Student A ission and Recruitment Specialists (U B TARS) was formed
this year to help inco ng students with the
ool to college.
transition from hi h
The idea too'k shape last summer. said
Maureen Hammen. senior admissions ad vi~
sor in the UB Office of Admissions. at a
CASE conference she attended in St. Louis
that focused on the use of tudent volunteer.;

in admissions.
. " I'd had an idea in the hack of my head
that I wanted to expand our use of student
volunteers,'' said Hammen. who was so ex·
cited by what she heard at the conference
that she drafted the plan for UB STARS.
An expanded version of peer recruiters.
students in UB STARS offer incoming UB
freshmen the benefit oftheiroW]l knowledge
about UB. Hammen said. They vi it high

"What we had to do for this year was difficult-get
the word out, attract students, get them trained and
get them going. "

schools, often including their own. to dis·
cuss their experiences at UB . They also

people and how to diffuse a potentially angry client.
The 72-page UB STARS manual is filled
with information about admission crire:ria.
special programs. campus \lisits. linanc1al
aid, housing. academic program~. under·
graduate majors. uppon sen tces and stu dent life. There's also a lisung of student
clubs. a coaching roster. a h1stor) of the
u.Oiversity. local weather stausucs. and a
descripuon of the Buffalo area In add !loon.
students partici pate in tramang se~!l.IOO' that
focus on infonnation and role: playing
Because this is the first year of the pro-

assist with the annual open hou se acuvities.
and provide assistance in the Office of Admissions by working in the reception area.
handling in-per.;on traffic and talking with
prospective students and their parents. Mem·
her.; ofUB STARS also conduct a telephone
campaign. currently under way. to welcome
accepted freshmen to the university.
Students panicipating in the program receive ··extensive and intensive.. trainmg.
Hammett said, on topics that include effec·
tive communication. how to interact with

gram. filling the ranks for 1994-95 "'"'a real
challenge. Hammeu said. "What "'e had to
do for this year was difficult-et the word
out, attract students, get them traaned and get
lhem gomg."
arl) 10 the: fall semester. the word ~-ent
out that the Office of Admt'i tons was
looktng for outgomg. em.husuJSUc st uden15
to serve as ~r recruuers. General requirements were a grade: pomt average of 2.5 or
htgher and sophomo re stand mg or h1gher
"We don' t requtre that they have a tremendou'\ amount of knoy.Jedge about t~

E

NCEER-tested project wins national award
By EUEN GOI.DIIAUM
News Bureau StaN

PROJECfTOretrofitthehostoric U.S. Coun of Appeals
building in San Francisco with
an inno\'ative eanhquak.~-en­
gineering technology has won
the General Services Administrario n · s ationa! Design Award in Engineering. Technology and Innovation.
Invented. developed and manufact ured in
the U.S .. the Friction Pendulum System (FPS )
was tested extensively at the National Center
for Earthquake Engineering Re sea rch
CNCEER), headquanered at UB.
The project was selected out of a total of
108 im,olving federal structures. The award
is given every other year to celebrate design
and engineering excellence in federal build ings.
Damaged in 1989 by the Loma Prieta
temblor. the circa 1905 building has been
closed ever since. h is the most ornate fed eral building west of the Mississippi. a!Jd is
listed on the National Register of Historic
Places.
The structu ral retrofit work. designed by
the architectural/engineering firm of
Skidmore. Owings and Menill of San Francisco. was compleled last spring. It involved
lifting the block-long building off of its
foundation so that the eanhqual.:e-engineering devices could be slipped underneath.
'This project was completely lllliq ue for
th e fe d eral gove rnm e n t," said John
Petkewich, regio nal manager of the General

A

Services Adm1nistrauon. "h1ch o" " "' the
building. He explained that the FPS was
chosen for the building because 11 r&lt;quired
far less in\'asi"econstruction ""·ork than competing technologies. and because It 'WOuld
save the GSA SS mil loon. The technolog). he
added. also had proven itself 10 euensl\ e
testing.
In vented by Victor Zayas. pre-.dent of
Eanhquale Protection Systems of San Francisco, the FPS should allow the 60.000-ton
building to r&lt;spond to strong eanhquakes b)
swi ng ing gently from side to s1de. like a
pendulum. minimizing the ri!llk of damage to
the structure and the people who"' ork inside
it.
''The tests and research performed at
NCEER were cntical in verifying the reli ability of the FPS bearings:· Zayas 'aod.
"Without the NCEER tests. the application
of this product to th~ court \A.Ould not ha\e
been possible ...
For five year... UB researcher.. led by
Michael Constantinou. professor of civil
engineering. subjected models of buildings.
bridges and noor systems equipped with the
FPS to simulations ofhis10rical earthquakes
on UB's shale table. They developed the
computer codes necessary for evaluating the
system' s performance. on the shake table ,
and provided the experimenlal data necessary for verifying them. They measured
forces and displacements at the friction-pendu lum suppons installed on model structures.
Those tests showed that the isolators could
I

reduce eanhqua.ke force~ m )tructure~ 'ill
that damage IS significant!) reduced orehmtnated.

N

Amm. ch1e:f !l.trucrural engmeer
""'ith Sk1dmore. 0'Ntngs and Merrill.
led the design team. Anoop S. MoiJla. a UB
graduate. and no" project structural engi neer w11h the firm. performed the analysis
and design for implementing th~ system. His
doctoral "ork at UB focused on st1smk
isolation systems. mcluding the FPS system.
The retrofit work was completed last
spring. Current!) undergoing architectural
renovations. the building i!lo sche:duled to
reopen in the fall.
George Lee. dir&lt;ctor ofNCEER . said that
the compleu on of the wor~ and the award
underscore NCEER · s success at transferring
-.etsmic protection technologies from the
laboratory to real-" orld applications
He noted that th i~ has..been a mission of
the cen1e r s1 nce it "as eo;tablished m 1986.
" In the la~t cou pl~ of yean.. we ha\e
placed an e\ en greater emphasis on the impl~­
mentation of knowledge and the shortening
of the lime it takes to find applications for
research.'' he said. "This project is represen tative of our efforts in th1 ~ regard."
The building was chosen by a jury of
nationally recognjzed design profes ionals
selected by GSA in consultation with the
Design Program of the National Endowment
for the Ans.
The award will be presented March 9 at a
reception in Washington. D.C.
3\10

school or a tremendous amoont of expenena ~•th untversity groups." Hammett said.
Her recruitmen1 effons resulted in a broad
group composed of 31 sophomores. JUnior.;
andsenoors from throughout Ne" York State
and representing a wide range of academtc
maJors: e.ngmeering. commumcation. psychology. occupauonal therapy. business.
anthropology. geology. political scoence.
commumcauon design. b1ology and medical
technology , among other.;.
" It' s adiversegroup wuh \ ariousstrengths
and opportumties. and who overall have had
a goodexpenence here.- said Hammett. 'T m
always so pleasantly surpnsed at how dedicated the) are and ho "' eager lO learn and~
10\' 0 )\'ed It's nice. tt' s reaJ nice ··
UB STARS woll be tooling for five to
Se \ en ne~ recrui1s To r next year. Accord tog to HammelL recruitment for the 199596 year wtll be held throughout March and
Apnl Fo r more 1nforma11on on UB
STARS . call the Office of Admo ssions at
645-6900

OBITUARY

Walter A. Olzewski,
neurology professor
A Memorial M - was held Feb. 27 in the
Catholic Church of the Transfiguration on
Rome for Walter A. Olze,.ski, ~- director
of the Transcranial Doppler Ulj)oratory at
Veteran Hospital. Olz:ewslti. who was assistant professor of neurology and clinical
associate professor of anatomical sciences at
UB. died Feb. 23 in Buffalo General Hospi tal after a brief illness.
Olz.e\t.'ski. a native of Rome, w~ navigator in the Army Air Force during '+'orld
War II . He received his bachelor' s deyee
from Colgate Univer.;ity and hi s medical
degree from UB in 1954. He was associated
with Buffalo General Hospital from 19611983 in the depanment of neurology and
neuropal.hology and was direc1or of the
Multiple Sclerosis clinic from 1970-1983.
In 1983 he joined the neurology service at
Veter:ms Ho pi tal. sen•ing as its chief from
1984-1986 . He was director of the
Transcrnnial Laboratory from 1989 until his
death.
A Fellow of the Stroke Council of the
American Hean Association and the American Academy of Neurology. he was medical
director of the Cantalician Workshop for the
past two years.
Survivors include his wife. Virginia: a
daughter. Lisa Elliott of Chicago: two sons.
Christopher of New Jer.;ey and Paul: and
three grandchildren.

�--.u.--.- ...

Claelcsto~
~lectures
WMTe~~ T .D. Barbour,
lissociate professo.- of anthropology.,.~ UB, will discuss
urban an:haeology in Buffalo,
New York City and Mexico as
pan of the "UB at Sunrise" break·
fast seminar series, to be held
from 7:30-9 a.m.
Man:h 9. in the
CenttT for To-

0

0

RIDESHARING makes for easy
commute: sign up today!

morrow.

0

Car trouble got you down? Or""' you just sicl or driving'
Whether you want to share rides once a weel or everyday.
help for faculty and staff who commu te is on the way! A new
RIDFSHARING progrnm is being ~ani zed by the Environmental Task Force's Trnnsponation Suboommiuee. Just send in the
·coupon (below) and you ' ll receive a questionnai"' to fill in about
where you live. what hours you generally arrive at and leave
campus and other ridesharing preferences. You will then be contacled by the transponation suboommiuee wi th names of other
UB people in your anea interested in shari ng a ride.

The series is
presented by the
UBAlumni
sociation and he
BARIIOUR
UB Office of
Conferences and Special
in conjunction with the Bee
Group Newspapers, UB News
Bureau, UB Office of Publications. UB Office of University
Development and the UB Vice
President for Public Service and
Urban Affairs.
A physical anthropologist and
arc haeologi s ~ Barbour has di rected .excavations at the test sites
of the Crossroads Arena in do wn town Buffalo, finding reli cs dat ing back to 1820. Funher
_, excavations will be conducted
later this year. He also has stud·
ied an 18th-century AfricanAmerican urban cemetery
disco•·ered in the hean of Man hauan, and has analyzed pollery
and figurines from Teotihuacan,
one of the New World' s largest
pre-Columbian urban sites.
The price of the program.
which will include a full breakfas~ is S8 for UB Alumni Association members and $9 for all
others. For more informalion. call
the Alumni Associatio n at 8292608.

School of Nursing
to offer training
in Infection control

0

Persons applying for licenses or renewal of reg h.·
trations in dental hygiene.
dentistry. licensed practical nursing, optometry, podiatry and
registered profes ional nunoi ng
may obtain required training in
in fection control through the UB
Sc hool of Nu rsing .
The UB Office of Continuing
Nurse Education is offering five
~Lion s of a course in infection

control and barrier precautions
thi s spring and summer. The
course will run from 4-7 p.m. on

Man:h 22, Apri l 5, May I 0. June
14 and Aug. 16, at a location to
be annou nced. The curriculum
has been developed in accordance with regulatory standards
&gt;et and admini stered by the New
York State Depanment of Health.
A certificate acceptable to the
state Depanrnent of Education
wil l be issued upon successful
completion of the in struction.
Registration fees. which incl ude course materials, arc $20
for UB faculty, registered nurses
at UB and graduate students
a!lending UB. and $35 for all
others. The application deadline '
is five work ing days prior to each
section of the course.
For more infonnation, caJI
829-3291.

r------------------,

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

S.Ve gut Save money!
Save the environment!

Be pan of an excl!lng new RIDESHARING program a t
UB' If you would like to get1nvolved, s1mply f1ll out
the follow1ng and we w1ll send you more 1nformatJon

NAMf

)

WORK ADDRESS

WOAKPHONE

E-MAIL

Please retum to Cmdy Guguentz. Trsnsponat1on Chatr
UB Env1ronmental Task Force. 140 Helm. Nonh Campus

Ride alwrftJe just onc:e • .,...,.. can mMre • dlfferent:e!

L---~--------------~
Eve to address
ACE/NIP session

0

Constance Eve. cha1r of
the Board of Directors of
Women for Hu man Rights and
Dignity, Will be guest speaker
March 10 at a brea.l..fa~t stmmar
for the Western Nev. York
American Council on Educau on
Nmionalldentifi cation ProJect
(ACE/N IP).
ACEJNIP IS an organJ7..atlon
for women m higher educat•on
Eve will &lt;iipcal.. on ··Pro' 1dmg
Leadership to Groups" at the
seminar, scheduled for 8 a.m. m
the M&amp;T Conference Room of
Villa Maria College. 240 Pme
Ridge Rd .
Adm ission for the event and
buffet breaHast i• $10. Male
reservations by March 3 by call ·
ing 896-0700.

Judy Scales-Trent
to give reading
of new book

0

Talking Leaves Books and
The Book Revue will sponsor a book signing/reading pany
for "Notes of a Wh ite Black
Wom~n" by Judy Scales-T rent ,
Tuesday. March 7 from 7-9 p.m.
at Hallwalls. 2495 Mai n St., Buffalo.
Scales· Trent. professor in the
UB School of Law, will give a
reading at 7: 15 p.m.
For more infonnation. call Jon
at Talking Leaves, 837-8554 or
tyilna at The Book Revue. 8745553.

Women 's health expert
keynote speaker
at BASAH conference

0

Judith La Rosa. former
deputy director o f the Office of Research on Women ·,
Health of the a1ional Jn~t • tu t e!i&gt;
of Health. \\ill be the le)note
..,peal..er March 25 at an interd1sc1·
plmaf) research conference pre·
sented b) the Center for the Study
of Baobehav10ral and Social A&lt;..·
peel\ of Health (BASAH ).
LaR o~a . no" chmcal pro ks ~o r
of pubhc health at the Tulane
Univer. lt) School of Healt h and
Trop1cal Medicine in New Or·
leans. La .. "ill speal on
"Women· !io Hea lth: Science and
Polit ic'" at the conference. to be
held at the Shernton In n on
Waldg1 Avenue. LaRo~a ha' had
a distingui~hed career spanning
education. research and clinical
practice. At the NIH. !&lt;.he was
central in effons to achieve the
mandate on women· J. health research and the inclu!&lt;.ion of
women in biomedical research
and scientific careers. She l!io a co·
author of the recentl y relea&gt;ed
NIH Guidelin~s on the Inclusion
of Women and Minorities as
Subjects in Clinic-al Research
David W. Shucard. BASAH
director. and professor of neural·
ogy. pediatrics and psychology:
. wil l welcome panicipants.
Reg istration fees a"' S20 for
faculty and other professionals.
S I 0 postdocs and "udents. Deadline for registrnlion is Man:h 20.
For more infonnation on the
conference. call 645-3426. ·

The UB Depanment of
O assics. the WNY Chapter
of the Archaeological Institute of
America and Canisius College
will ponsor two an:haeology
lectures this month. The lectures
are free and open to the public
Eugent • Borza, professor
of aocienl hiSlory at Penn ylvania
Stale University and an authoncy
on Alexander the Great and
Macedonian archaeology, "111
present "Treasures of the
Macedonian Royal Tombs" at
7:30p.m. on Tuesday. Man:h 7.
m Room 207 of Churchill Tower
at Canisius College.
tev~n Dyson, UB professor
and chair of the Depanment of
Classics and nauonal president of
AlA. will present " Romans and
Natives of the Island of Sardima"
at 7:30p.m. on Wednesday,
Man:h 22. in Room 205 of
Churchill Tower at Canis1us.
This talk Wtll h1ghJight tw~ Of
Dyson·s areas of specializationSardinian archaeology and the
interaction of Roman and nonRoman populauons m the RorruJn
Empire. It will include a shde
presentation.

Group Legal Services
to spon- ~Mtf!~lnars

0

Group Legal Services. a
division of Sub Board One.

Inc .. a ~udent -run orgamzation

at
UB. "''"hold a series of semi nan.
on Mill"Ch "' Q m the Student
Umon on the Nonh Campu . All
!ioem•nars are free of charge and
open to the public. The schedule
AIDS Awareness. March 7.

oon-3 p.m. Student Union Social Hall, presented in conjunction w1th AIDS Coalition. Brian
Lampkin of AIDS Community
Services and JenniftT Coleman of
Murray &amp; Coleman will address
such topic a.s discrimination,
testing procedures. rights and
respons•biiJtJes. and confidenttaJ·
it)' of test~ and results
[mmigration Law Stminar,
Man:h 7. 5-7 p.m., 145-C Student
Uruon Jo) Memman of Gnffith
&amp; Yost \lo tJI diSCUSS type!io of \'ISBS
a••rulable and ho\\ to obtam studenL ammtgrant and worl. nsas.
D . W.J~ March 8, Noon -3
p.m .. Student Union Lobby. Representallve of the Buffalo and
Amherst Pohce depanments and
UB Public Safety wlll discuss
defintUons and procedures of
D.W.I. and D.W.A.I. and demon_,rate a breathalyur test.
Rapt Seminar, March 8. 5· 7
p.m .. 145-C Student Un1on.
Speakers will be Marya
Mys links1 of Rape Cn is Services, Diane LaValle of the Enc
Count y District Anomey·s Office
and Debra Coach of the AntiRape Tasl Force. They will di scuss ~ H ow to Protect Yourself
from Being Raped," "How to
Protect Yourself from Bemg
Accused of Rape." "How Rape
Offende" ""' Prosecuted" and
~ Sexual Assault Awareness."
How to Survive Your Landlord, March 9. 5- p.m., 146-C
Student Umon Donald Shonn of
Allen, L1ppes &amp; Shonn "ill ad dress such topics as tenant and
landlord ngh". li;·mg off campus
and neighborllood crime watch.
For more information. contact
Nicole Rus""ll at 645-3056

Electronic Highways:
Computer Select
Agonizing over purchasing a computer, munimedia
equipment, or peripherals? Doing research on the computer industry? Writing a paper on d 1stance learning?
Following loptes such as privacy 011 the Interne!? Interested in the latest 011 Bill Gates? Don't know the d ifference beJWeen a SUP connection and a PPP hool&lt;-up?
Come to the Science and (
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Engineering Ubrary for answers!
Computer SeJec/
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CD-ROM from leading industry journals and newsletters
such as A/ Expert, Computer Graphics World, Electronic
Learning, lnfoWorld, PC Wool&lt;, PC User, Software Magazine, Tetecommumcations Review. and T,)'I.E Journal. Full
keyword access is available.
You can also search by hardware and software producl specifiCations in addition 10 oblaining computer company profiles, a glossary of computer lerms as well as a
user's guide. The product specifications are sigrmteant as
over 7'5,000 hardware , software and data communication
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For more information on Computer Select contact
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---Gomna DeV'mney and LDss l'8queOO GlazJsr, LociM&gt;ood Ubtaly

HiGH ~ \\~15

sa's

�UB researcher looks at differences
in mens and women s speech
Hesaldthls.Shesaldthllt.
How they said it can have an effect on which one gets a
promolion in the workplace, says a linguist at UB whose specialty
·
e structure and history of language.
]
p

rudies have hown that the main goal of men 's speech is to get something done, while
objective ·ar women's is to get along. according to Jeannette M. Ludwig. associate
essor of French.
Because women's use of language differs from men's--they use much more indirect
language and hesitant tones to e1icit behaviors-they may be excluded from office
team-buildin g efforts. she note .
For example, men assume that people want to hear what they
h:Jve to say. '"They pass around the megaphone:· Ludwig say~.
Wo(l)Dfl don't.

In the workplace. if a woman says: " I w1sh
that you would call me by my title like C\Cr) •
one else.·· 01hers may write off the re·
quest as ..a stupid little detail."
" But these ·stupid linle detail s '
o ' erthe course of time can ma.._e a
tremendous difference 10 hov.
peoplt\ perceive them selve~:·
says Lddwig. ··we need to tune
up the performance of every·
one. Everyone can be alen to
what it is they are doing when
they think they are talking."
While their language patterns may be Jess likely to win a pro·
motion for women. studies ha\'e shown
they may be more effective than men' s 10
some-instances.
For instance. Ludwig refers to one study
of female and male doctors and their patients
that showed that women· s softened requests
received nearly a two:fold level of compliance
compared to men's. Impl icit imperatives were at the
heart of the female· s success rate . While a man would
simply say: "Take off your shirt." A female doctor would
say: 'This could be easier if you took off your shirt.··
Ludwig notes that some male students who have taken her
course. "Women· sand Men· s Language.·· have become defensive when
she has pointed out language patterns that uphold the male-dominant
parad igm.
People are se nsitive to criticism. she adds. because language as extremely
personal and invisible. "Language is who we are. ll's like giving out a piece
of yourself."
Ludwig offers tips for women and men about language that should help
"level the playing field" in the "'orkplace .

Su-----=

• Speak up. Don't hang back . Women should support and encourage
other women to do the same.
• Be direct. Eliminate detail. "Other'\ can ask for detail later if the)
want it." she says.

• Be read y with evidence or argumenb. "lie just as prepared a~ Cliff Cla\'en to
shoot your mouth orr:· Ludwig says. Men are more likely than women to gave their
best guess when they don't know the answer.
• Be prepared to take it and di sh it out. to take ri sks and fail. ··Men don"tlct defeat set them
back." she says. "'Don't apologize for stuff and carry on. It make~ it look like it"" your fault
and it's probably not your fault ."
• Maintain •·grclvitas:· Speak with a'\ low and contro lled a vo acc ~ possible-It has a
grounding effect. When speec h becomes hagh and excited. it undoes the impression that you
are trying to maintain.

Su--·--=

• Listen. Really li sten. '"There·~ a tendency for men to let their eyes wander.· !-.he
maintaining eye contact is important in feeling listened to.

sa)~ -

But

• Acknowledge thoughtfull y the contents of the mess&lt;.~ge . Men le&lt;.~n toward repl) mg "Ye~.
but," instead of .. Yes. and." .;;he says.

• Do not assume that your opinion or observation b of interest. She call' thi~ the ··c liffCia\·en
Effec,t."
• Acknowledge the success and contributions of others.
• Do not tetrbthers how they feel or should feel or give the imprcs~ion that they are not
supposed to have feelings.
• Extend the simple counesy of being inclusive. Do not "play c ubhouse."

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                    <text>Faculty a Staff

' SpellldtCUp
for Science

News of
appointments. awards
&amp; events across

Clyde Herried points
up importance of
improving scien~~
teaching.

7

What's
Happenln'?

Need for
Leaden
Marine urges
students to opt for
community
leadership .
p_.

p_.

the campus .

,.;L

A whirl of activity at
UB on all levels:
entertainment,
learning and fun .

3

.....

February 23, 1995 Volume 26. No. 18

UB officials field questions on budget cuts,
urge students to join in advocacy process

ENIOR V ICE President Roben W agner and Vice President
for St udent Affairs Robert
Palmer fielded questions. and
some heat. from students angered by proposed budget cuts during a forum in the Student Union Feb. 15. ·
Wagner. responding to Law Student Paul
Beyer. first questionerofthcday. laidout the
admin istratio n's top priorities: "First. $290
million is way too much. We can't absorb
that big a cut at once. The number has to
come down. Second, reinstatement of EOP.
graduate and pan-time T AP. Third. we advocate taki ng this back to the drawing
table ... $290 mill ion means a fundamental
change in th is system. Such a change has
never been discussed or debated."
"Do I believe higher education is a right ?
Absolutely. I wouldn ' t be in public higher
ed ucation if I didn't," responded Palmer to

another questioner. Wagner agreed. explain·
ing "We do ha,,c a different mi sion than
private colleges.··
The two UB veeps spent more than an
hour answering student budgetary concern s.

Tiley emphasized the efforts the administra·
tion has been making. adding that thear goals
were the same a those of students advocat ing for SUNY. although their tactics might
differ. Wagner explained
that Pre idcnt \\'illiam
Greiner has been ·•further

out front in Lhis fight than
any other univcrsit)

pre ~ i­

dent in the state. perhaps
even more than the chan-

cellor:·
Palmer sU.ongl) enco uraged the students to take an active. vocal role

in the advocacy process in Albany. but de clined to join a st udent rally planned for Feb.
27. saying. instead. that he and many administrators would be panicipating in j)UNY

day March 6. "We
Robert Palmer,
may disagree sl ightl y left, and Robert
on slraleg)'. but lhls ls
to-lit
where we have choforum Feb. 15 In
sen to'ltlake a living. I
Student Union.
happen to Ia .. c my
j o b:· Palmer said .
However. in ·&lt;'sponse to another question.
Palmer promised students that hi would look
into the legality of excusing students from
classes Feb. 27 to attend the Albany rally.
.. Docs Gov. Pataki know that I carry 18
credit hours, work ~0 hours a week. have big
loans and am still struggling to do this r
a~led one exasperated undergraduate.
Wagner answered that the gove rnor likely
docs not. "He is projecting modest enrollment increases in spi te of all this. He just
docsn·t get it. There will be st udent ~. poor
and middle income students. who simply
wi II not be back : ·
The PataL.i admi ni stration has concluded

w..,..,_,.

Greiner offers
vision of future
UB in radio talk
ESPITE PAINTING a blea
picture of the magnitude of
the damage thai proposed
state budget etAs could cause
US. Presidenl William R. Greiner reassured arucious students and faculty during a radio talk show Tuesday: "We are
not going out of business on my watch!"
Gretner answe~ed questions from
callers and host LydlaColbeda on "Talk
of the University." his hour-long. monthly
call-in show on WBfO.FM. US's National Public Radio affiliate. He was
joined by Vice President for Stude111
Affalrs Robert Palmer.
Budget politics dominated the discussion. Greiner also offered Insight
imo his vision of the UBof the Murf: that

.

.

no opera

. urwersJty.
Greiner said Gov. Patakfsproposed
$74million funding cut and$212milllon
tu~lon increase coostiMes ·a bigger
reduCtion in stale tax support than any
university has ever taken, that we knoW
of. anywhere in the United States."
Though Pataki's camp refers to it as
simply a 4.8 percent reduction in appropriation, Greiner stressed 10 listeners
that, in fact, ~ is a reduction of 31 .5
percent in state supponof public higher
education.
"In 1986, SUNY received about 90
percent of its funding from dir~ stale
appropriation." Greiner explained. "By
1992. that level had dropped to about
60percenl, acutofone-third. lnone fell
Conbnued on page 3

Conttnued on page 2

Law s~dents from inner city 'beat the odds' with help frop1 EOP
By STEVE COX
Reporter Staff
OU RDES VENTURA and Rob
Ramph ul have a lot in common.
They arrived at UB as freshmen
in 1989. Rob from the Bronx and
Lourdes from Queens. Products of single
pareOl homes. public assistance and ··awful''
neig hborhoods. both arc firs t-generation
Americans. Eac h had just become the first
child from their family eve r to go to college.
And. both have beaten the odds.
Today, Ventu ra and Ramphul arc mem-

L

bers of the UB law school class of .97 . They
made it through their undergrad uate degree
programs and earned a place in law school
due. in large part. they say. to the aid and
su pport received from the Ed uca tional Opportunit y Program (EOP).
The EOP. whi ch offers support services
to 15,000students with academ ically or ceono mi cal!y di sad va nt aged backgro und s
througho ut the ,statc. has been targeted for
elimination by Gov. Patak i. Ventura and
Ramphul. like many ~en ts who feel they

owe their success to EOP. an: very troubled
by that.

"Pataki just saw this thing called 'EOP
program' and said 'Cut it .' He didn't con*
sider that it involve!) people." clai med
R~phul. "There are ple~ ty of kids w~o ju~l
Will not he back to fimsh college tf tht~
happcns. lt" s trallfc."
~r~ugh fi~an.cial assistance and special
adm1sstons cntena. EOP reaches out to SIU·

dents "'ho. due to barriers in their educational. economic or personal background.
mightothcrwisebeunablclOpursueahigher
education. Studc~ts admitted to ~B throuG-h
EOP attend spcc1al sum mer sess1ons hefore
.chool begin&gt; to polish skills needed for
succ.e s~ i~ college. skills they ma&gt; not have
rct.:ctved m school.

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Ill a ll•n JFCIMIRI lll-..t ...a11er:

Ventura and Ramphul believe in EOP. It
works.theysay.bc-causcitoffersopponunities to students who would otherv.isc "just
end u~ out on .the street.··· And. says Ventu~.
EOP ts not JUSt abdut money. "There IS
tutoring a~ailable. and~ecounselors arc
~reat. The&gt; real\) kno~ y and )OU feel like
you are part of a fam1l) .
) check up on
you and are real!) there for you."
They co ncede that "college isn"t for evcryone:· but. Ventura and Ramphul argue.
eliminating EOP would mean eliminating
the opponunit) for man) lids who do want

It is indud i11l honorro ~ SMtil(ing to you mrthls day. I did
rnakt it to this podium by ludtqr mndotn dranct aiid 1
amnotagenius orchildprodigy. JamsU..plyaLDriMHi'ho
is doing what sht It~ to dafor htNti[.llu /#mit,. and to
provt!othtiswrong. OthtNColum/lrgdfP'Of&gt;lttttonr.~u
gtnre nit' a chaJI~tordid not ~litvt in mt. Pyoplt
m i11l
aunt who told my mothtrthat I could nn'Utlifttlt'l&gt;«aust
Wt "Wen Oil -/fa~. a high sc-hool COUIIStfOr who told m( that J should ~\in* bnd
postpone college. a teacher who told mt that! could11 ·r get a sumnterpositfon in an
archittctu~ Jim• ~cauu I was a girl and "Spanish, • and rht list goes on.
Such MOPit gavimt tht drivt! anddntrmillation "'go against tl'r.~iftr"lltey'd

to try college.
··These arc inner-city kids from poor
schools. "here maybe the) weren'tthat well
prepared . Maybe the) had to work 30 or
more hours a week to support their families
while they wen: in high school." Ramphul
explained. 'That says something about their
sense of responsibility. EOP students are not
·lazy.· That makes me really angry. Most
people 1 know work. two or three jobs once
they do get to coll ege just to survive:·
Ramphul's mother and sibhngs still live

Continued on page 2

Continued on page 2

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�--.---.-..

2
FORUM
continued from page 1
that SUNY tuition is too low, declared
Wagner. "Tiley see us as a high value product that is underpriced." The dramatic in-

crease in tuition coupled with severe cuts in
service comprise "the worst possible scenario," he added. "lf we heeome less of a
financial bargain, compared with other pub-

lic institutions or private ones, then we can' t
cut services. In fact, we will need to provide
better services to stay competitive.''
Wagner also addressed the issue of cuts
required during the current academic year.
expla_ining that non-academic posi ti ons

would not he filled, but that he expects no

layoffs or class cancellations. Also. student
assistaritships, which had been rroz.cn since
Feb. I, should soon he made available again

to open up opponunitics for student employment.
Palmer explained toone stud~nl who asked
about the future of the Educational Opportunity Program (EOP) that. "culling EOP will
truly challenge the notion of egalitarian educati on. I think it's remarkable. It drew me

here because this iilsti lUtion was providing
opponunities for those who would not otherwise get an education." Should EOP not he
reinstated by the legislature, Palmer vowed

nevenhel

that ..no sophomore, junior or

senior should leave hecause those funds are

ence has made the world a more dangerous
place. Hetried said.
As the body of scientific knowledge accumulates, Hetried said, boob and resoun:es
are simply expanded with very little reganl
for new interpretalions and revision. lt is up
to the teachers to streamline this mass of
knowledge into something digestible and
help students to develop a more permanent
unden;landing of scientifiC principles. he said.
Herreid called the traditional lecture-based
style of teaching as "medieval." He pointed
to "more than 600 studies showing that stu-

ROFESSOR Clyde HerTcid struck
a blow for science Feb. 14 in the
UB at Sunrise lecture series. PointIng to a dangerous trend away from

science in school curriculums and, as a result, in society. he insisted that 20 percent o f
kindergarten through llth grade content
should he composed of scientific instruction
as opposed to the 6 percent that schools
average today.
Herreid blamed the dwindling interest in

science on an American tradition of bad
teaching in the sciences. Teachers should
make these potentially intimidating subjects
more accessible and peninent. Herried said.
through rhc use of case histories. stories. and
other real-life exannples. He described his
own efforts to liven up lectures on DNA
testing by using the OJ . Simpson trial as a
..murder mystery" example of DNA research

come to

seC

science as less esoc.eric and.

hopefully. as a viable career option.

To pinpoint the source of America's scientific malaise. Herreid cited the preponderance of tabloid science fiction in our culture.
People tend to see science in extreme and
dramatic tenns. as with the excessive pessimism of "Frankenstein·· or "Jurassic Park ...
he said . With both of these examples. Herre id

applications in police investigations.
It's important for students to sec how
scientific advances are made. with special
attention paid to the numerous mistakes,
arguments. and unresolved issues that are an

said. one sees a tendency to con ider the
scientific process as violating natural laws or
attempting wanswcrquestions that shouldn't

integral part of science, Herreid told his

continuetosolvetheworld'sproblems. while

audience. Only in this way can students

a similarly high percentage think that sci-

he asked. Recent polls show that 76 percent
of people think that science has and will

dents have much better success in sma.JJ.
cooperative groups.'' and drew a few terrilied gasps when he mentioned the merits of
cooperative test-laking. quickly assuring
teachers that this is a learning technique, and
that students would ultimately he graded for
unassisted work. Simply changing the curriculum and modifying outdated testing techniques will not he enough. Herried said. It's
crucial to make scientific thought a datly
pan of students' lives forever, he said.
"The old ways can' t cut it." said Herried.
··You've got to prepare students for science
that's yet to he discovered. for books that
have yet to he wriuen, and for ethical questions that have yet to he posed."

:~~~; !emh:s:e.,:.~~igation •o •hose "'!;

Fraternity suspended; three face felony charges

VENTURA

By C...STINE VIDAl.
Reporter Edrtor

continued from page t
ever to ld me. From all tlltt I had seen and
gone through in my world, I knew I had to go
to college. I wanted to go far away and I
wanted to be an architect. 1lle University at
Buffalo was the only place that !it the description economlcatly speaking. 1 filled out
the application and checked the EOP box.
which my high school cou nselor erased.
She assumed that I did not qualify and

never took into account that I might have
been academically and/or economically eligible. Undergraduate admissions accepted

me and. after speaking to several people:
within the university. the Educational Opponunity Program accepted me into their
family late Summer of '89. After aucnding
the uni versity for a semester I decided that

architecture was not for me. Instead I deci ded to pur&gt;ue a double major in Health &amp;
Human Services and Spanish. I wou ld be
able to help people in o ur society.

J am very proud of all of us who are here
today. We, the graduating seniors, are pav-

A

was:· said Public Safety Inspector Dan Jay.

UB FRA TERNTTY has been

suspended and three members
face felony charges in connection -with a break-in and assault
on several students in their Lisbon Avenue
house.
Accon:lin &amp;lo w1tne5s 6\a\emen\s. belween

30 and 40 individuals ....armed with bats, bro-

of Heath Street. was arraigned Tuesda y af-

ken hollies and frying pans and helieved to
he members of Sigma Alpha Mu fratemit).
broke into a house on the 100 block of
Lisbon A ve nue at about 2:45 a.m. Feb. I0

ternoon. and also faces felony charges of
burglary. assault and criminal mischief.

and attacked the residents oft he house. one
of the victims' injuries were believed to be
serious.
A fonnerUB student walking in the neigh·
borhood also was attacked and recci\1Cd ~hat
arc believed to be the most serious injuries.
He was hospitali7cd with a broken jaw. ac·
cording to university officials. and required
surgery.
''It could have been a lot worse than it

ment. and determination one can accomplish
their goals. Evel)' time we break a barrier
we've shown others that EOP gave us the

in the Bronx . His family emigrated from
Guyana when he was nine years old. Gradu-

to establish lifelong friendships (.within and

outside of organizations).
All of us here today must take pride in all

of our achievements and successes. The Educational Opportunity Program has already

given you the most needed tool in your
survival-the strength of believing in yourself. Now lhat you have this. many other
strengths come easily and you must learn to
use themeffectively. EOPdoes not end at the
end of your college career. EOP goes with

you so you can achieve your own personal
goals and at the same time help those who
need to be given a chance just as we once

needed it. This is how you can give back to
EOP-be there for someone else and usc
your experiences in guidinjl them.
May we all continue to prosper and succeed!
0

While on I) three mcmher&gt; .of Sigma Al-

pha Mu currently have be.cn charged. it is
like!) that additional charges will be filed

against other members of the fraternity. according to Dennis Blad... associate vice president for Student Scrvice!t and dean of
students.
··only three individual!) have been identified b) victims There is an ongoing effort to
1dentif) individuals involved in the auack
and we expect there to be additional charges."
said Bl ack.

Sigma Alpha Mu frnternity has heen suspended and is no longer entitled to conduct

any campus activities. accordjng 10 Black.
Likewise, "'three studenu have been suspended from the univer&gt;ity for their alleged

involvement in the attack."
he fraternity could face penalties rang
ing from multi·year suspension 10 expulsion from the university. Last year. Black
noted. another fra1erni1y involved in an inci·
dent that led to hazing charg received a

T

three-year suspension from UB.

He stressed that this was an i~ated incident among UB'sGreekcommunny.one he
likened to ..a classic bad movie.·· The violence apparently was sparked by an alterca-

tion in a bar over a female friend of a member
of the fraternity .

'This is not a common occurrence within
our fraternitie!t and sororities. We have no
past history of th is and don'ttolerate it now.
·We don'l expect it to happen again in the
future." Black said.

LAW STUDENTS
contmued

active members in our communities (on and
off campus), even to become leaders and
role models within these communities. and

week. and two Sigma Alpha Mu memhe~.
Kenneth Eng. 20. of Northrup Street. and

Charles Faison. 22 of Winspear Avenue,
were charged Friday wi1h felony counts of
burglary. assault and criminal mischief. A
third fraternity member . Christian Mink. 20.

ing the way for future EOP graduates. We
show that by hanl work. courage. comm it-

opportunity to do so. EOP gave many of us
the o pportunity to go to coll ege. become

who described the: rampage as .. sickening."
Three arrest warrants were issued last

from page 1

ating from Brooklyn Technical High School.

Ramphul came to UB with his eye on an
engineering degree. He ended up earning a
degree in Political Science and Legal Studies.
Many of his friends. though. remained in
the Bronx. "When I talk to my friends at

would go to college . "But. nobody in my

Now. he·s really !ighting .~L.Ast week. in

family has ever done th is before. It was kind

testimony before the legislature· sjoint fiscal
comminees. Gov. Pataki's own Social Ser-

of intimidating at fir&gt;t." she said.
I
Ventura picked UB hecause it was the
o nly SUNY school that offered architecture.
Last May. she earned a bachelor's degree

vices Commissioner, Mary Glass, called the

elimination of EOP unwise.·

he battle to save EOP is heing waged

Fonner SUNY Chancellor D. Bruce
Johnstone, speaking at an education school
alumni event. faulted Pataki •s call for EOP' s
elimination. calling the program ..one of the
glories of the univer&gt;ity system." JohnsiOI'IC
called EOP an easy target for Pataki. " It is a
heavily minority program. but by no mean s
exclusively minority. And. Pataki owes nothing to that constituency politically," he said.
Jo hnstone was clearly troubled by policy
decisions which, he said, "make job training
for minorities okay. but not higher education. It is a type of ·son and stream' mentality that is very dangerous . Ironica lly.
opponents of EOP cite the notion that only
31 percent ofEOP students graduate in live
years. versus 39 percent of students overall.

now in the state legislature ...At least one

as evidence of its failure," he continued . ...,.o

at UB. Her mother came to New York City

Assemblyman. Sam Hoyt. has really gouen

from the Dominican Republ ic in 1967.

involved," said Ventura. "He didn't think

rite, if EOP brings graduation rates of substantially disadvantaged students that close

Ventura said. and, for vinually her whole:
life, her mother has been insisting that she

anything about EOP until he fo und out that
two of his aides were fonner EOP students.

to overall graduation rates. I'd say it's a huge
success. but what do l know!'
11

home. I sound like a parent. I'm always
preaching education to them.·· Like 100 many
young people from urban neighborhoods.
both Ventura and Ramphul. though only in
their early 20s. have already buried close

friends who were victims of violence. ''My
hest friend didn ' t go to college. Now. he's

dead. He got in a fight at a club and some kid
just shot him.
..-Without an education, ill there is to
aspire to in my neighborhood is heing toughest. It heeomes a big turf thing."

with majors in Health and Human Services.
specializi ng in Early Childhood. an Spanish. A sophomore year trip to a Latinoconference in Albany changed the direclioll of

her academic career. says VenLura ... It wl6
like . I realized then how much I wanted to
help people." She has si nce given of hcr&gt;elf
to the Latino commun ity of Buffalo' s West
Side. volunteering through her sorori ty and
working at the Boys &amp; Girls Club, one of the
three jobs she held during college. ''Even if

I become a whatever someday, I don't think
I' ll ever forget where I came from . I want to
he able to help my community."

Ventura has now moved her whole family
from Corona. Queens to Buffalo. Her younger
brother, al so an EOP st udent. is a freshman

OIAECTOROFPVBL.ICATIONS. ~ ,. ~,EDilOR ~~ ASSOCIATEEOITOA

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No ease in financial burdens
for SUNY, Greiner tells FSEC
PDA TING THE Facully Senate

Executive Commiuee on the
currenl status of Gov. Pataki's
proposed budget cuts, UB President William Greiner said Feb.
15 that he does not foresee the state legislature easing the financial burden placed on
the SUNY system.
''I' m not optimistic," he said. " We ' re
going to have to face up to some very difficult decisions.''
Greiner, who has traveled to Albany and
met with both the governor and state legislators, said the sentiment in Albany is that the
SUNY system can he pruned financially.
That sentiment, he continued, eXplains why
such a highly disproportionate amount of
cuts in aid to state agencies were directed at
the SUNY system.
The average funding decrease for other
state agencies under Gov. Pataki · s proposed
budget is approximately 6.5 percent. For
SUNY. Greiner said. the decrease in aid
amounts to a 1.5 percent reduction.
"It 's cleat e were a target:· he ~aid .
TheUBpr •ident saidGov. Patalllooked

at the levels of state support and the amounts
of tuitjon charged at other stme schoo ls.
particularly in Penn sylvani~ M a~sachusetts
and New Jersey. before he decided to reduce
the Je,•el of state aid to SUNY . Greoner said
that the picture the governor has ofSU Y is
that it's more of a bargain ompared 10 the
other stale systems. By culling state atd . he
added, Gov. Pataki would sav~ the state
money by forcing SUNY' s budget to be-

or SUNY's budget would stem from Stale
taxpayer money. " We will have gone,"
Greiner said, " from being a state-owned,
state· funded institution to a sta te-owned~
state·assisted institution.··
Greiner said that although the SUNY
system has not had a tuition incr-ea,; in three
years the effects on students will still be
harsh. "It will not be a bright picture for
those students throughout the SUNY system who may have to re-think where they
will be next year." The impact on the parttime student, he added. will be particularly
harsh because ofthe expected rise in the cost
of individual credit hours.
reiner also warned that thi s year's
proposed budget would probably not
be the last time SUNY faces cuts-although
future cuts probabl y could not be as severe
as the ones thi s year
Before hearing from President Greiner.
the FSEC also di scussed and outlined the
role that the Senate and some of it.s committees should play in preparing UB for the
looming budget cuts.
One of tho;e groups. the FSEC'&gt; Budget
Priorities Commiuee. currently chaired by
Professor Jennifer Crod.er, \.\Ould play a
central ro le in allowing the FSEC to commun icate its concerns regarding issues such
as academic and enrollment planning. the
allocation of funding. and other area~ of
uni\ ersity operations that are sure to be
affected b) the upcoming budget. according
to FSEC Chair P,~:ter iclerson
Professor Terry Gates. convenor of the
Budget Priorities Commiuee. aid the com-

G

come tuition-driven , not taxpayer..miven .

mittee also provides a useful forum fOf'mem·

Less than a decade ago, in 1986-87.
Greiner noted , more than 90 percent of
SUNY's funding was deri\'ed from state
ta;w;payer money; yet under Gov _ Pataki · s
proposed 1995-% budget. only 43 .5 percent

bersofthe faculty to help identify alternative
sources of funding to replace state aid He
said the commillee ha~.; alread, met "llh
Semor Vice Pre"'1dent Roben Wa gner fo r a
""'tr31eg) meeting ·-

_..,_ ..

3

RADIO TALK
continued from page t

swoop, Gov. Pataki is proposing to reduce
state support or SUNY to 43 percen1. It is an
cnonnous change, and it comes in a budget
that was put togelher in just four weeks."
SUNY trustees would almost certainly
have to close campuses if this budget is
implemented as proposed, Greiner said. 'That
bodes very badly for the small. rural institutions known as Agricultural &amp; Technical
Colleges. " If tuition rises dramatically at the
ag &amp; techs. students could well abandon them
for oommunity colleges in droves." Differential tuition rates. between types or institutions
or between types or degrees, and dramatically
higher out-of-state tuition rates are options
Greiner would like to see placed on the table.
Greiner called for an intensive ree~ami­
nation or the nature or public higher education in New York . He urged consideration of
..public benefit corporation" structures for at

least the current university centers. This
would make UB a nco-private institution
that bas greater control over its own destiny
and receives ~te aid without suinp altached. The University of Michipn. Rutgers
and Penn SWe, as well as other public institutions, operate UDder tin. model, Gteiner said.
Greiner told one caller he had lhe impression that the budget was as much a shock to
S!Jtte legislators as anyone else. "Hey, George
Pataki is a man or courage . He is doing what
he said be would do during the ran campaign." Greiner said. "Legislators are trying
to figure out how to handle this." He went on
to say, however. that 1bere seems to be a
sense emerging that this was an awfully
large hit on higher education. Higberedcuts
alone were enougb to pay for the entire tax
cut in one year. Lots oflegislators seem to be
saying 'This is too much to ask.' " .

Marine officer asks students to
take leadership role in community

A

MAN WHOM Time masa1ine
recently named a' one of the
nation·) 50 most promising.
leaders for the future vi)ited
UB Feb. 16to tall about leadership. personal motivation and the rewards
of public service.
'1lle signs they put around campus "iaid I
was going to talk to you about leadershop.
But I'm also here to talk to you about leaders." said U.S. Marine Corps Major Rod von
Lipsey. who has served as an aide to Colin
Powell. former chairman of the Joint Chiefs
ofSta.ff. and special assistant to former White
House Chief of Staff Mack McLarty.
''I've been privileged to know a lot or
leaders. some you know. some yoU don't
know. We come across the real leaders in our
lives every day."' said von Lipsey. whose
lecture was sponsored by Students Afliliated wit h tbe Armed Forces.
"The wonderful young peo ple in uniform
who brought me here thi s afternoon want
you to be leaders in the military." But von
Lipsey, a Gulf War veteran and fighter pilot
who flew 40 combat missions. said he wants
- those who anended his lecture to be leaders
in their communi ty. thei r school s and their
churches.
"Leadership is not about pointing a finger
at what you don't like; leadership is picking
up and maki ng things bette r. It' s not about
raising your voice. it' s aboul lifting your
voice: to cheer on a teammate or just speak
the truth," von Lipsey said .
..Once again we' ve become jaded wi th
Ameri can politics." von Li psey said. Just

"Did you know we do poster titles?"
twoyearsaftertheGulfWar Maj. Rod
victory. he said. people ex - von Upsey
pressed their di spleasure speaks In
with government by voting Student
a president out of office; Un1on
two years later. they again Theater.
voted their discoment by
ovenuming the Democratic majorit) in both
the House and the Senate.
Von Lipsey also answered audience questions concerning the size of the milit ary. hi~&lt;;
opinion of the media. and whether leade rship is an inborn or learned char:K-.eristic.
Following his presen talion. listeners were
invi ted to talk direc tly with von Lipsey and
military represtnlatives who accompanied
him.

�4

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Friday, February 24, 1995 •
noon-1:00 p.m.
108 Hayes Hall, South Campus

En&amp;•cincthr Latino Cli~ot In
Fnectin Akohol &amp; Other
Dnac Trutmfllt, John Torres.
Center for Tomorrow Nonh

Campus. S 120 fee Call
64S-6140.
IIIEN' I IWIMMING

Mid..Cootinml Championships.. Alumni Arena Natatonum. North Campus. All day
- E N 'I SWIMMING

Mid-Continent Champions hips.. Alumni Arena

Nau.to-

rium. North Campus . All day .

EXHiarr
Th r Senior Show. An opening
reception will be held 5-7 :30

p.m. An Depanment Gallery.

• Talk with planning facu lty
and graduate students
• Discuss careers in urban
and regional planning
• Learn abour the Masrer of U rban
Planning program at U.B. where we
address: Environmental issues. urban
poliqo, housing, transportation, land
development, urban design, social
justice, economic development, mega
cities, small towns, global issues, and
the future.
Come and Enjoy lunchtime Refreshments

Nonh Campus. 10 a.m.- 5 p.m.

!::d~=~ay~;;,~~:. ~-~~-m.:'s

1

p.m. Saturday. Call

~5 -6878.

MEDICAL ICIENCES
IEMINAJI

Adivation of thr lntrstinal
Cuanylatr

Cycla~

Recepto r

for Eschtrichia coli Heat-

Stable Toxin (STa) by PbosphOr)'lation ' 'il Protein Kiqasr
C, John Crane. M.D.. Ph .D ..
Erie Count) Medical Center.
106 Cary. South Campus. Noon.
BLACtl HIITORY MONTH

Video PrtSf'nlation &amp; Discussion: Black M usic a nd thf' Rtc:ord inglndustry- Rhythm &amp;
Blues. Educational Opponunity

Mid-Continellt Champion ships. Alumni Arena NalliO·
rium . Nonh Campus. All day
Mid-Continent Championships. Alumni Arena Natatonum . North Campos. All da)
I'EDIATRIC QRAIID IIOUNDI

Futility io 1M Pedi.atrK Populatio•" A 14-Moolb.()ld Veotricular-Depondeol Cltild,
Peter Wmk.el slein. M.O Kinch
Auditonum. 8 a.m.

ENVIRONMENTAL
ENQINEEJtiNQ AND SCIEHCE
IEMINAJI IERIEI

COMPIITDI ICIENCE
COLLOQUIUM
F..xperieoces with Parallel N-

cade, Dr. David Hyck. Um''· of
Notre Dame. 114 Hochstetler
North Campus. 4 p.m

MATM COLLOQUIUM

body Simulalions, Sandc:c:p
Bhatt. Rutgers Univ 4 KnO),
North Campus. 3-4 : 15 p.m Call
64s-3180.

Non-Linear POE's and finan-

CMEMIITRY

clal Duivatives, Prof. Macro
Avellaneda. NYU. 103
Diefendorf. South~~ 4 p.m.

R.edudive Elimination Reac---

NUTRITION IEMINAR IERIES
Nutrition and Patieots with

Cystic Fibrosis, Dr. Drucy S.
Borowiu. Children's Hospital
306 Parter. South Campus
4-5 p.m.
ITAnlllCI GEPARTMEHT
COUOQUIUM

Cross-Match PI"''«dures for
Multiple---Imputation l nf~.-..
en~ : B ay~iao Theory a nd
F'rf"Qut:nlb1 [ \·alualion, Dr.
John Barnard. Uni\ . of Olicago.
106 Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m.
ETMICS IN .IOMEDICAL
RESEARCH COLLOQUIUM

Ethics or Expuim~nta l Dt-sign. Data ~bnagemeot and
Analysis.. Elaine Hull, Ph .D ..
Bruce Holm. Ph.O .. l..Jnda
Duff). Ph .D. Butler Auduonum,
Sherman South Campus. 5:15-

7: 15p.m.
UFE WORKSHOP

Fresh Stan : How to Quit
Smoking, Power Advoca1es.
Nonh Campus. 5:30-6:3-0 p.m.
Call 645 -6125 for registration
inform ation .

III.ACtl NJITORY

-™

Thtatric:al PrrformaD«: T"·o
Trains Runnioa. Sarah 0n11t
Philhps. director. Lorna C. H1l l.
arttstk d~rector . lbealerloft.
545 Elmwood AH: 8 p.m Sl2.
SIS Call 883·0380

SUNDAY

WOMEN 'I IWIMMINQ

The Drosophilia Gq alpha
Subunit: A Key Component in
the Vb-u..al Tnnsduclion Cas-

pus. 3·45 p.m.

Cui·
S25.

pus. SilOfoe Cai164S-6140.

ArroPop Worfd,.ld..-&lt;:r«&gt;&gt;•
C• l'ft.otl la the: Carribean. On
WBRJ 88 7 FM. 7 p.m.

MEN ' I IWIMMING

BIOLOGICAL S CIENCES
SEMINAR

NS&amp;M Complea. Nonh Cam -

Graduatr Sc:hool Alumni As·
Win~ Tastinlland Italian
sin~ Daffodils Restaurant

Druc Treatment, John Tom:s
Center for TomtWT'O'A'. NOI1h Cam-

Gqnpbic Information and
Decision Makin&amp; Support for
the Great Lakes. Dr. Le:c
Hanington . 140 Ketter Nonh
Campus. II a.m. Call ~5 -208&amp;

AUJIIINI EVENT

soci.atioa Ann ual Dinne:r:

INITTT\In Rill AIIOICT10N
STUDIES AND ntAINUI8
EncaJi.n&amp; the LatiDo Client In
Effective A.kobol &amp;: Othe:r

..__.

1

.26

III.ACtl -TOllY-™
Cullunlll Ni&amp;hL Student Umon
Thulef onl1 Campus.
III.ACtl NIITORY MONTH
Theatrical Ptrformancc: Twn
Trains Ruonioc, Sarah Norat ·
Phillips, d irector, Lorna C H1ll .
an1s1ic dtrector. lbeaterLofl.

545EimwoodAve 6p.m Sl2.
SIS Call 883·0380.
_ ......_f

MONDAY

cCII..L.bQutuM

tiofts:~aodMedoa·

nisms or Ca.rboa...cariJoa and
Dtnd Formalion from Pl(IV) C.OI&lt;rS, Prof.
Karen I. GoLdberg. 111\nois State
Univ. 21S Narural Sci&lt;¥es.!:

Carbon~Balide

~~~~~~1- ~
UU.U FU.IIIERtES

lnten-inr Wlth the Vampire:..
Student Union Theater. Nonh
Campus. 6:30 and 9 p.m. $2.
S3.50. Call 64S· 2957.
.LACK HIITORY MONTH

Competition: Hip Bop Tournament. Harriman Hali-Biad.
Box Theatre. 7 p.m. S3 .
III.ACK NIITORY MONTH
Theatrical Puformantt: Two
Tnins Runnin&amp;, Sarah Norat Phillips. director: Lorna C. Hill.
anistic director. lbeaterLoft.

545 Elmwood A\'e. 8 p.m. S 12.
SIS . Ca11883-0380.

IIUFFALO PMIUIARMONIC
ORCHESntA
Th~ t rad ition or the great Ger-

man masters from Bach to
Berg. Mu imiano Valdes. conducting; Kyoko Talezawa. violi n. Center for the Ans. Nonh
Campus . 8 p.m. $20. $30. S35.

27

IOCIAL- CONnHIANG

-~
Clinical
Practice io tb~ fldd
o( AMl&lt;ty Dlsonl•rs, Dr.
Bruce Thyer. Center for Tomor·
row. Nonh Campus. $35. S60
fee. Ca1164S-6140 for regiwa·
tion information.
IILACI( HIITORY

-™

Video Presentation &amp; Discussion: Sources of Soul: Musk
Quiz Contest:.. Educatio nal Oppor1unity Center. 465 Washing-

ton St . Libr:ll)'. North

Campu~ .

12:30-1 :30 p.m. Free admiss1on
Call 849-6732.
COMPUTING WORilS-

Intro to MaJhrmo.tic• . 2-4 p.m
Cai1645-3S.W for regtstratiOn
an format ton.
IIIOCHEMIITRY SEMINAR

Allosterism at

tb~

ynapst' :

ACh and NMDA Reuplors at
Work.. Tony Auerbach. 1348
Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m.

�------.-:1.8

~­

-y-

·
·· S.o
Uols-Uab
Powor
Tools.
2-4 p.m.
Call
64,S--3S40 for rqiwation infor·
mat ion.
-AL

Molteolar 11io1ocY or Opiate
RC'etpi.OrS, Terry D. Rcisinc.,
Ph.D.. Univ. of Penns-ylvania
School of Medicine. 307
Hochlteuer. North Campus.
4p.m.

-SD,\YS AT 4 PWS

Poetry R...UOC. L.aun

Moriarty and Charles
Alexander. Caner ror the Aru
Screening Room. North Campus. 4 p.m.

UFEW-

()per8! Oadl!, Stratton
Rawson. North Campus. 4~ 5 :30
p.m. Call645-6125 for registn -

lion information.
I'KY._Y SDIINAR

Functi0111.l Outcomes i.n Chil·
drftl Aner Nt"W Cardiopulmonary T«:hnique:s, Michae l E..
M ull, M .D .. Child~n·s Hospt-

108 Sherman. South Campus. 4 :15p.m.

Weilesdays

114 Plus
Charles Alexander
g1ves a poelry read1ng
March 1 in the Center tor
the Arts Screen1ng Room
at4 pm

111.

UFEW-

G.O.A.L.S.: Getting o,·er
Anything Limiting Surcess.

UOWN BAG READIHG
SERIES

WOMEN' S IIASKETWAU.

III.ACK

Alumni Arena. North Campus.
UFEW-

Survivin&amp; Roommate Hell,
Andrew Morri s. North Campus
6:3().9 p.m. Ca1164~-6125 fCJ&lt;
registration information.
UFEW--

Ballroom Danclng: Swing Into
Sprin(, Dr. Nlnita E.F. Bogue
and Mr. Bjorn Bogue. Nonh
Campus. 7-8 p.m. Call645-6125
for registration infonnuion.
ENSDIIIU SERIES

University at Bufi'alo Trom·
bone Choir, Amherst Saxophone Quartel. Slee Concen
Hall . Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. S2 .
SS. $6, SB. For information. call
645-2921.
UFEW-HOI'

Country Western Dancinc, Dr.
Ninita E.F. Bogue and Mr.
Bjorn Bogue. North Campus .
8·9: 15 p.m. Call645-6125 for

PIIYSICS COLLOQUIUM

ZnFeM: Spin Loc•li.ution
and Chemical On:l~ring. Dr
Berend T. Jonker. Naval Re s.earch Lah. Washington. DC
228 Natural Sciences &amp; Mathemaucs CompleJ. . Nonh Campus 3:45 p.m.
UFEWORKSFrnh Start: Ho"· to Quit
Smokin&amp; Power Advoca1e
NMh Campus. 5:30-6.30 p.m
Ca11645-6125 for rejpstrauo n
infonnat1on.
THE ALGONQUIN TABLE
COfl'EDIOUSE
Open Mic Nite. Free cofftt and
free mu-.ic. Harriman Hall
South Campus 8 p.m Call
645·2957

registration information.
liEN'S USKETUU.

Bulls vs. Eastern Illinois.
Alumni Arena Main Gym.
Nonh Campus. 8: IS p.m.

TUESDAY

2~

IMST1Tlln FOR ADDICTIOH
STUDIES AHD I'RAINIHG
As.se:sUng Clients for Early
lntervrntion for Drug and
Alcohol Abuse.. Ann Ennis.
Center for Tomorro,... Nonh
Campus"S60 fee . Call
645-6140.
IHTERNET CUNIC

Tbe Basics. 223 LocL.wood .
North Campus. II a.m. Prereg·
istration is required : call
645·28 17.

Subje&lt;Uin R&lt;Rarcll,
Richard Hull. Ph.D. Butler Au-

1'ofDer&amp;olt 500

lloe.._.,..

-~
to llle U.. or Ho-

WEDNESDAY

1

PIIARMACY SEMINAR

Pufluorocarbons: Partial Liq·
uid Vrntilation in Rrspiratory
Distress Syndrome. Ch ri stopher Rubino. 248 Coole Nonh
Campus . 8-9 a.m .
OUTREACH WORIISHOI'
Women &amp; Body Image. Coun -

seling Center. 145-E Stud&lt;:nt
Unton. NorthC~NOCJn-1 p.m.
ROSWELl. PARK STAFF
SDIINAR
Ptndioc, Jane Olson . Ph.D.
RPCI. 12:30 p.m.
COMPUTING WOIIKSHOI'

SPSS for Windows-Part 1.
I :30-4 :30 p.m. Ca11645-3540
for registration infomwtion .

Jnlrchale cf _,

DWI

d itorium. Shennan. South Campus. 5:15-7:15 p.m.
UFE~-

Ease:aUal.s or Spiritual Well·
!loin&amp;: S.Crru of Happlnns.
Ron Inga lsbe. Nonh Campus .
5:3().7 p.m. Call645-6125 for
regi.st~t1on 1nformat1on.

UUAB nUl SERIU
24th Toui"Dft or Animation.
Student Umon Theater Nonh
Campus. 6:30 a.nd 9 p.m $2 .
53 50 Call645· 2957 .

-EN'S IIASII£TBALJ.

SUMMERFARE TMEAnR

Royals \ 'S. Valparaiso. Alumm
Arena. North Campus. 6 p.m.

Nu.nse:nst IL Pfeifer Theater 8
p.m. SIO. S12.SIS Call839 ·
8540.
BLACK HISTORY MOHT11

$1749

PowerBook 520 41160

$277 Price drop!

$2232 PowerBook 520c ~160

$ 357 Price drop! Dual-scan passwe

matnx Color!

$2919

PowerBook 520c
12/320 with modem

$607 Price drop! Dual-scan passive
matrix Color!

The Basia. 223 Loc~wood
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m Prt-regis.tratlon is requ1red ; call
645 ·2817.

MEN 'S SWIMMIHII
£..astern CoiL Cbampioru:hips.

$665 PrICe rop.1

Alumm Arena Natatonum. All

$4372

INTERNET CUNIC

OPUS: CLAUICS UVE
Piano, Eugene Gaub. Allen
Hall. South Campus. 7 p m.
Free adm1ssion.

Day

c&lt;:n H:~ll . North Campus 8 p.m
Free admiSSIOn Call 645-2921
MEN ' S BASKETBALL

Bulb ,.,_ Va lparaiso. Alumnt
Arena. Nonh Campus 8 15 p.m

THURSDAY

~

- E N ' S SWIMMING
ECAC Championships.

Alumm Arena Natatonum
Nonh Campus. All day
WEDNESDAYS AT 4 PWS

Words. Spatt, Design, Con·
Int. Meaning, Charles

Aleundcr. 438 Clemen§. Nonh
Campus. 12:30 p m.
UFE WORIISHOI'
Car Cart 101 , Howard Hant..e.
Peter E\•ans. Non.h Campus
1-3:30 p.m. Ca11645 -6 125 for
registnn1on 1nfonna1ion.
COMPIITIHG WORIISHOI'
Introduct ion to Maple. 2-4
p.m. Call 645 -3540 for registra tion informa tion.
UFEWA Senst or Hu mor MakH
S.OS.. Ed Brodka. Nonh Cam ·
pus. 3;30-S p.m. Call645-6125
for registration 1nformauon.
PIIARMACEUYICS SEMINAR

As.sessin&amp; Parameter
Estitn.atability
Non·linnr
Models, Sandeep Duua. C508
Coot..e. Nonh Campus. 3:30pm
Ullra· IH:nst Hydrogen: Still
Eluding th~ MetaiHc Stat~'!.
Prof. Neil W. Ashcroft. Cornell
Unh . 228 Natural Sc1ences &amp;
M:uhema1ks CompleJ. . 'onh
Campus. 3 : ~ 5 p.m.
MUSIC LECTURE

and Th r mllllic
Improvisation. He-nry Man1n.
~1 anncs College of Mu \k. 211
Baird. Nonh Campus . ~ p.m
Free admission. Call 645-1921

C harti~ Park~r

PIIILOSOPMY LECl\IR£

Postmodemism and th ~ Origin or Modem Philosophy,
Hennan Philipsc:. Princeton. 280
I

$358&amp;
•

d

PowerBook 540c 41320

Active matrix Color!

PowerBook 540c
121500 with modem

$786 Price drop! Active matrix Color!
EX.HIBITS
ARCHITD:TURE EJUIIBIT10H

"Construction. Intention. Detail:
Fl\'t Pro~cts from Five Swiu.
Architect !I.. ND!i throu&amp;h March

2--l'" the James Dyett E.xhlbi uon Hall on the- th1rd Ooor of
Ha)es lllc- prOJects txammc the
means b) or throu gh v.I-J•ch construe-lion e~pressrs . &lt;:nnches. or
ccmtrad1cts an und&lt;:rlymg archi tectural unu . Archueca reprt sented mcluc:k Herzog &amp;. de
Meuron. Burlhahtr &amp;. Sum1.
Mc1h &amp; Peter. D1ener &amp;. Diener.
and Peter Zumthor Gallery
houn; are Monday~ 9 a m p m . :~nd Tuesda) §.-Fnda) s.
9am -5 pm.
CONnNUIHG EXHIBITS

S1mon Unger·§ "Red Ven1car
runs 1hrough Jul) 31 m the
L1ghtwell GaiiU} Thu; MIC·
construction ea:plores the mterconnecrions betv.een an and
archllectu~ . AdmiSSIOn 1s free .
Galler) houn; are IO.JO a.m -8
p m Wcdnesdi) · Saturday and
1\oon-5 p.m. Sunday. Cal1645 691l Kri sun Opptnhe1m's
- The Spider and 1 .~ 1 sound ·
Installation . conunues through
Feb 25 1n Gal lei) I of the C&lt;:nter for the Ans ''The Senior
Sho ...- reatunng wort. by srn'or SA and BFA eand1dates m
pa1nung. sculpture. computer
an . phOlograph) . pnntmatmg.
illustration. :~nd communicat ion
des1gn runs through March 9 1n
the An Depanment G.aH&lt;:r)

NOTICES

or

PIIYSICS COLLOQUIUM

.mes

cxmcp.m rntiJI ~BI/95.

Thntrial Perl"onllllntt: T"o
Traios Rwminr,. Sarah Nortl ·
Ph1lhps, dir~or, Lorna C. H1ll.
an1shc duector ThtaterLoft.
S45 Elmv.ood Ave _8 p m S 12.
SIS Call 883-0380

HISTORY~

Video Pn:sattatioa: Cotton
Club. Educational Opponunity
Ccn h~r. 465 Washington St. 6th
Floor Audilorium. North Campus. 12:3().1 :30 p.m. Freudmission. Ca11849-6731.

AIUkd bonus!
Free AMitiJI c:--ris
carryl11g case IIJUit the

fnsh Slart: How to Quit
Smokta&amp;, Power Advocalu.
North Campus. 5:3().6;30 p.m.
Caii64S-6125 for f'eJISirltion
1nforma1ton.

UUAB F'IUI SERIES
24th Toumer or Animalion.
Stu~nt Union Theater. Nonh
Campu~ . 6:30 and 9 p.m S2.
53.50. Call 645-2957

Bag a great deal on
a PowerBook today!

ITliiCS • · - A L

AIICIIITD:TUM LECl\IRE

UBurrato Symphony. Slee Con-

Bun Stafford. Nonh Campus.
6-9 p.m. Call64~-61 25 fCJ&lt;
rrgi.stntion information.

6p.m.

GeronlolcJcjcal Nvrsift&amp;. 4:30·
7:30p.m. ~sions run Thursdays through May II . Fee of
SIS. SSO per SHsion: studenu
mutt reJiSler ftve wortdn&amp; days
'before eacb session. CaU
829-3291 for registrauon informatioa.

SYMPIIONY PERFORMANCE

Frame-wort, Sandra Shotland .
883 Center for the Aru . North
Campus . Noon- I p.m Frtt
admission .

Royals vs.. Eastern IUinois.

Pari&lt;. North Campus. 4 p.111.

-~
-~, .. . . Ia
Certillc:ale

Work, Kenneth S. Mac Kay.
Fontanese Folu Aubrecht P C
Architects. 301 Crosby . South
Campus. 5:30p.m.

UFEW--

5

ATTN: FACULTY EDITORS

In eiTon to L:e-ep pace v.1th nev.
forms of JOUrnal pubhs;auon. the
Unl\ersit) L1br.mcs .asls that
facult) members from all dcpanmc-nts who ~"fH' u JOUrna l
ed1tors or editorial board mem he~ send the-ir names to: Barbara \ On Wahlde. Um\tf'SII \
L1l'lranes. Orrice of the D1r~ctor.
~ .n Capen. Bo" 6016::!5. Buffal o. N Y 14260- lb25 ., A series
of mcrtings bel'•lottn in&lt;hvidu3l s
IR\Ohed m journal publicat1on.
poiLq. and de\'elopment and the
L1hranes 1s plannrd to bmadcn
the L1branes' understandtng of
ho"' JOUrnal editors .. on... as

Continued on page 6

M &amp; T Classic Series
TH£ BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC ORCHE STRA

Bachat

UB

The BPO opens Its DC"- conccn st-nt-s at UB ~rcr for the
Arts. Th1s IS the fim of SIX concms, sponsort"d bj 'at1onal
Fud that will bnng tht BPO ro du· AmMm uta.

Friday, February 24, 8:00 PM
UB Cmtrr for tbt Am
Saturday, February 25, 8:00 PH
Sunday, February 26, 2:30 PM
Klrinhans Musir Hall
Maxim.iano V:a ldes, con.:luctmg
Kyoko Taknawa, no! in

Bach: Suire No. .I

lkrg: Violin Concerto
Mende-lssohn: S~·mphon~- No. 5 "RdOnnltu.:m "

Call 885-5000 or
645-2787 for tickets

�6
CALENDAR

P'ottDen ...

DOl-

&amp;pcllll« is lhe G -

continued from page 5

The

Studenl

- ~=-

wellu enhance lhe editors'
undenlabdina or tbe Libnries
oeecb ODd coooems. The union
or thele 1wo sroops will en·
delvor to influeoce future jour·

The oewly-formed Lesbi10 ODd
Gay Focvlly-Sia!T Auociatioo
seeb to ra.ise awareness or gay
and lesbian coocems in the
univen.ity community. Also. it
aims to create a wpportive
campus environment that rec·
ogni.u:s tbe cootritNtions of its
lesbian, gay, and bisexual

nal pubticalion l1eods and developments for the benefit of
AW _
__
sch4?llrly
communication.

_,_

--

Ubnly Clortt l (SG-9)·Uoi·
venity Libroriea. Lioe 126313.
Cl&lt;rti: I (SG-6}-Univenily Libnries. Line 126344.

-

. . _ CUIUIFIID CIVIL

Piaat Utilitl&lt;s H elper (~·
University Facilities. Line

ages suppon for research and
scholarly discussion of gay and
lesbian IOpics. The LGFSA
meeu monthly to discu.u the
university climate for gay, les·
bian, and biJeluaJ employees.
C.U64S-2S46 for more information, or E-mail
ulcregftubvm.cc.buffaJo.edu .

signed for modefale to heavy
drinkers age 2 1 to SS who are
not alcoholics, rcquirc5 the
invoh•ement of a friend.
spouse. or partner. This is •
research prog.ram that includes
a free medical eu.minatioo:
participants will be paid for
rakiQg part in this 8-week pro-

WAIIIED: IIEAUIIY - E N
Heallhy females belween 18
and 4S wilh premenstrual syndrome symptOnU are needed
for a study. Eligible women
will receive free. treatment if
warranted. Call 898-S446.

grun. Caii887-2S73.

==~mJ

tee on Rape. Sex.ual Assa;;:J

and Sex.uaJ Abuse, Jnc.-;is a
not-for-profit organization
c:ommiued to drawing attention
to the problem of sexual vio-

JOBS

lence. Training about seJCual
victimization is provided by a
volunteer speakers bureau,
CORSA 's programs reach community organizations, agencies.
businesses, service clubs and
schools. Through cornmunil)1
education, CORSA advocatc:s
the. prevention of sexual assauiL Students are needed to
present programs on date rape
to local hlgh schools: training is
provided. You can make 1 diffet"ence. Call 858-7878 or 8587879.

FACULTY
l nsl ructor/Assistant}Associatr
Professor (thrft positioOI
availab le)-Dept. of EmergeiiC)'
Medicine. Posting NF-5006.
RESEARCH

Information Systems Spec:ialist-Family Medici~ . Posting
IR-94091. Field Tracrr-PsychoiOSY. Posting IR-95007.
I"'IDf'ESSSIHA
Colnpu ~r Network Manager
(SL-3)-University Publications.
Posting IP-4110. Calalog
Technician (SL-3)-Law Li ·
brary. Posting IP-5001. Rai·
elena: HaU Directotis) (lntor·
nal Promotional O pportunity,
SL-1)-Residenlial Life, Posting
IP-5007.

Now there is an easy
organized quickly and
File Service distributes
Homework Solutions,
and more.

13~2 .

C.....,. (SG-!rUni·

. versiry Filcilitie&amp;, Une IJIS97.
Planl Utilltlos Holpor (SG-6}Univenity Facilities, Lioc:
1143145.

To obtain morr information on
jobs listtd abovt, contoct Pcrsonntl 5.!rvicu, lt:U Crofts
Hall.

Letter to the Editor

memben. 1be group encour-

The AW AilE Program offen
free Ulistance in cutting down
on drinking. 1be program, de·

IHTEitNAT10tiAL FOUl
DANeAll are wc.lcome to join the
lnlemational Folk Dancing
group each Friday from 8·J I
p.m. in 2 Diefendorf Hall on
\he South Campus. These free
~ssions begin with teaching.

------.-..

CW:Riilid CI.ASSMID

If we are lo wrile tellers aboul lhe
proposed stale budget cuts il
slrikes me thai as professionals
in higher education we oughl to
do more lhan say simply. "g1ve
us back our money because we
deserve il, • bul ralher we should add 10 lhal "and here
are my suggeslions as lo how lhal could be done.·
Here are lhree examples of whal such a letler could
look like:
1 "G1ve us back our money because we deserve 11
and you can do 11 by laking anolher $100 million oul of
Med1care. anolher $50 million oul ol Medicaid, another
$75 million oul of stale aid 10 local school d1strrc1s and
anolher $60 m1ll1on out of law enforcemem Thai would
tusl aboul do il • Or
2 ·G1ve us back our money because we deserve 11
and forgel aboul lhe 1ncome tax reducllon prom1sed
last fall Thai would JUSI aboul do 11 • Or
3 "Give us back our money because we deserve 11
and forgel aboul balanc1ng lhe budge! Thai would
fUSt aboul dO II "
I a(T1 sure lhe rec1p1en1s of lh1s k1nd of leiter would
find i~ much more usefullhan the usual message of
oulraged indignalion untempered by any useful suggeslions
Sincerely,
. _ . . . . . . . .y
ClassiCs

way to get your students
efficiently. Our Notes on
Lecture Notes, T.A. Notes,
Test Files, Study Guides

Bulls win over YoungstOwn
Sophomore guard Rasaun Young scored a career-high
31 points Saturday nighllo lead the BuUs pesl the
Youngstown State Penguins 75-72 al Al umni Areoe
before 5,1 61 chanting, fool-stomping fans . lhe largesl
crowd in the modern Division I era at UB .
The win kepi the Bulls. now 15-8 overall and 10-3 in
the Mid-Continent Conference, firmly in second place
behind Valparaiso. UB 1\osls the Crusaders on March 1
in lhe regular season finale .
The Bulls look the lead for good with 3:06 left when
Modie Cox made a sleal and converted a layup at ihe
other end lo give UB a 68-66 advanlage. Young and
Cox would accounl for the Bulls' final 13 points.

WOMEN'S BASIIEIBAU.
The Royals dropped oul of a firsl place lie Salurday
night falling 10 Youngslown Stale 65-64 in front the
largesl crowd lo see a women's basketball game al
Alumni Arena lhis season, 1,023_ The loss snapped the
Royals longesl winning slreak of the season al six.
Youngstown Slale shol 57.1 percenl from the field 1n
lhe game lo retain a frrsl place tie with Weslern lllino1s
in lhe Mid-Conllnenl Conference stand1ngs. The Royals
(16-6 overall, 11·3 1n lhe Mid-Con.) travello Western
Illinois on Feb 23
Nalosha Cumm1ngs led the Royals wilh 14 po1nts
againsl the Lady Pengu1ns wh1le Anne Gallagher and
Kris HoiiZ added 11 points ap1ece

INDOOR TRACK A FIELD
L1sa Kragbe&lt;sel a school-record 1n the 55-meter
hurdles and helped lhe Royals 10 anolher school mark
1n lhe 1.600 relay during the Robert B Cane lnv1lational
at Cornell. Kragbe learned wnh Terry Scheme. Jaime
H~rschman and Sh1rley Moody to qual1fy the foursome for
lhe ECAC's with a time of 3.55 9 She also placed second
1n the hurdles 1n 8 46 seconds 10 eslablish the UB mark
Judilh Novak look the 3.000 meter run in 10:20.3
while lhe dislance medley relay team ol Colleen Hart,
Sue Mackovich . Aimee Mann and Stacey Slrothmann
look flrsl place in 12:30.6.
On lhe men·s s1de, Krrs Winkler . Kev1n Winkler. Geoff
Wark&gt;ck and Eric Fischlein won the 1 600 relay With an
IC4A qualifying time of 3:20.7 al the same meel

HARRY .
BELAFONTE
World·renowned arti•t,
humanitarian, and civil
rights activist. A close friend,
confident, and odvisor of the lote

Our convenient hours, accessible location, and
free pick-up service make it virtually effortless fo r
you to put your notes on file! Call us today ft

Or. Martin luther King Jr

•

CENTER FOR THE
ARTS, MAINSTAGE
UB NORTH CAMPUS
AMHERST
FREE ADMISSIO~

nCKET REQUIRED

Makin' Cop_ies

~. Fax 636-8468

Te/636-8440 ......

Loc(lted at the UB Commons

•

For ticket in formation , con tact the

Office of Confe.-.nce• and Special
Event's, 526 Capen Hall , at 645~34
Wrth odcht.onal SUWOf1 ~by !he U~ty 01 BuKolo's
the ~1; PvbiiC Serottce ond Urbon AftottS; Con5erences
~=;~ty ondStoffAuoc.ollonAndWKBW-TV . ______ ~~. . .

�7

_..,.__.., _ sa

d
Conference, held in Buffalo.
A 1967 graduate of Columbia
College, he holds master' s and
doctoral degrees in English from
Princeton University. A member
of Phi Beta Kappa, he taught
brieny at Yale University.

SUNY-nces1H5
~~petition

0

Director MeiWI Bernhardt. a liB ak.mru whose stage and lV w011&lt; has
won awards~ Obies 10 Errmy
nominations, toured 1he campus and
Center for the Arts Feb. 14.
Prof donlltes Rolla
Royce to . . . .
autr.lo Opera ColnpMy

0

Um berto Albanese, cli nical
assistant professor of oPh·
lhalmology, has donated a 1978
Silver Shadow Rolls Royce valued at S27 ,000 to the Greater
Buffalo Opera Company. The
elegant automobile. which has
been used to chauffeur famous
opera personalities around town,
will be used to raise funds for the
opera company, with the car to be
rafned off and the winner to be
selected at the 1996 Opera Ball.
Albanese is co-founder and
president of the Greater Buffalo
Opera Guild, the company's
pri ncipal source of pri vate funds.
Last June. he was honored by
Opera Guilds International for hi s
contributions to the ri si ng popu·
larity of opera in the community.

Byrd I• director of
Healtll Sclenc:H Ubrary

0

Gary D. Byrd, newly·

named director of the
Health Sciences Library. began
work at UB Jan. 12. Byrd comes
to UB from the Uni versi ty of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
where he had been assistant di ·
rector for finance, plann ing and
research at the Health Sciences
Ubrary, a pan-time position he
held while ~ing his doctorate in
Information and library Science.
Byrd was associate director at
UNC-Chapel Hill from 1983-89
with an intervening stint as acting
director jn 1986. He served as
project i:oonlinator for the Coun cil on Ubrary Resources Collabo-

rative Information Resources
Development Project for libraries
in the Research Triangle: Nonh
Carolina State, Duke, and UNC·
Chapel Hill. He was chief librar·
ian at the University of Mi ssouri
at Kansas City Health Sc iences
Library from 1976-83.
Byrd holds a bachelor's degree
in English from Rutgers, a
master's in English from the Uni·
versily of Virginia. the M.A.L.S.
from the University of Mi nnesota
and is completi ng his writing for

the Ph.D. in Information and [j.
brary Science from UNC-Chapel
Hill. He is a Disti nguished Mem·
ber of the Academy of Health
Information Professionals.

O.Uber to head
Engll... Department

0

Kenneth M. Dauber,
professor of American
literature at UB. has been named
chair of the UB English Depanmenl for a three-year term. He
was appointed based upon the
recommeodation of the facult y of
the English Depanmenl. which. al
51 members. is the largest depanment in the UB
Faculty of Ans and
Letters.
Dauber. "''ho
joined the UB
faculty in 1970.
has primaril y
taught early· and
mid- 19th-century American lit·
erature on the graduate and un dergraduate levels.
Since 1992 he has served as
director of graduate studies in the
Depanmenl of English and serves
as a member of several d epan~
ment committees. A member of
the UB Faculty Senate, he serves
on the Faculty of Ans and Let·
ters ' Undergraduate Curriculum
Committee and Graduate Divisional Committee.
He is the author of 'The Idea
of Authorship in America: Democratic Poetics from Frankli n to
Melville" (University of Wi scon·
si n Press. 1990) and "Red iscover·
ing Hawthorne" (Princeton
University Press. 1977). Dauber
is preparing a series of linked
essays relating the relationship
between democratic and sacred
poetics 10 literary authority.
Dauber is a member of a number of professional organizations
including the Modem Language
Association, the Nonheast Mod·
em Language Associati on. the
Ameri can Literature Assoc iation.
the American Studies Association
and the International Association
of American Studies. He coordinated the 1991-92 Nonheast
Modem Language Association

"Computers. Pri vacy and
Free Speech" is the subject
of the J99~ Benjamin and David
Scharps Competition. which
awards a cash prize of S 1.000 and
a commemorative plaque to the
SUNY junior who writes the best
legal essay of up 10 3.000 words
on the topic.
The Scharps Competition has
continued to challenge State
University st udents with impor·
tant issues of our time.
The Scharps Prize is made
possible by a bequest from the
will of Han nab , Hirschhorn and
is open to all SUNY juniors at
any SUNY campus who are con·
sidering law school as pan of
their future plans.
The submission deadline for
the competi tion is April I0. 1995.
lnlerested members of the junior
class should contact Shelley )
Frederick. Assistant to the: Vice
Provost for Undergraduate Education at UB. Call 645-2991 for
more details. "The: winner will be
announced in May of \995 .

R-.chlng family tree
.. alumni luncheon t opic

0

Researching the "family
tree" will be the to pic of a
UB Alumni Association luncheon
lecture, to be held at noon on Tues·
day. March 14. in the Center for
Tomorrow. Genealogist Beu y
Keehn . who teaches a credit-free
course on ge nealogy at UB. will
instruct panicipants in how to
stan looking for their "roots."
The cost of the luncheon and
lecture is S I0 . RegiSU11tion dead·
line is ~arch 10 . For additional
information. call the Office o f
Alumni Relations at 829-2608.

Receives grant
to .tudy monkeys
In Puerto Rico
Barbara DeVinney, a
doctoral student in the
Depanmenl of Anthropology at
UB , has received a research grant
from the Wenner-Gren Founda·
tion for Anthropological Re·
search to conti nue her studies of
rhesus monkeys in Pueno Rico .
The S7.800 grant will suppon
her research at the Caribbean
Primate Research Center in Cayo
Santiago. Pueno Rico. where she
is studying sibling-social relationships in free-ranging rhesus man· ~
keys. She has been cond ucli ng
the study of 36 one-year-old
monkeys si nce January 1994.
The purpose of the research is
to document the infants' and mothers' responses to the arrival o f new
siblings. DeVinney will return to
Buffalo in July to conduct data
analysis and write her dissenation.
Carol M . Berman. UB profes·
sor of anthropology. is her advisor. Berman also studies the
mother-infant relationship of
mesus monkeys at Cayo Santia~o.

0

A World of Eiectronic Joumols
With the explosion of E-joumals appearing on the InternaL how
can you gel a feel for what is available? One avenue is to
search an E-journal archives such as the one made available
through CICNet. CICNet was founded in 1988 by the ConYnit·
lee on Institutional ~ration (CIC) which has a long history
ol supporting cooperative academtc programs among the
M1dwest's major research institutions.
The goal of CICNet's e lectronic journals project is to ITI3Intain fu ll historical a rchives of electronic journals and newslet·
ters. Their ·onginal 600 journal
I I I &lt; I I~&lt; l 1'-.; I&lt;
server." the CICNet ElectroniC
Serials Arch1ve cont3lns pubhc
domain E·JOUrna ls and newslelters
!1
II 1 . ._
Without regard to ed1lor1al stan·
dards The Journal of Technology
Education and Eleclfonic Ant1quity IS collected along With
Blooba/1 and Tox1c Custard The E-senals arch1ves a lso has a
menu opllon 11tled "About ElectroniC Pubhsh.ng and E-Jour·
nals." wh1ch con1a1ns a number of essays on lh1s lalest pub·
hsh.ng phenomenon
CICNet's most recenl venlure. the CIC Electromc Journals
Collecllon 1S an altempt 10 develop a collecllon of schola11y
JOurnals Eleclron1c JOUrna ls such as Arch1tromc. Bryn Mawr
Med1eval Rev1ew. The Bulletm of the Amencan Mathematical
SoCiety. The Electron1c Journal of Analyt1ca1Philosophy. and
The Journal of Arflficlatlnrelltgence Researc h have been selected for Ihe collection by hbranans aff• hate!l w1th CIC AI
p1esent the JOUrnals are arranged a lphabellcally but an add l·
11onal sub1ec1 arrangemenl IS p lanned P10J9Cl pan1c1pants
promtse "VISible progress· 1n develop.ng the collecuon 1n the
next several months
To access CICNet v1a UB WINGS type wing• at yo..q user
prompt and make the followmg menu selections LJbranes &amp;
Library Resources/ElectroniC Joumals! A1Ch1ves of Other£.
JOUrnals at CICNet. You can also gopher dtrectly by typmg
g ophe r goplter.c lc.net at your system prompt For ques·
lions regarding UB WINGS and gophermg contact CIT's Help
Desk at 645-3542, &lt;con•ul«&lt;ub,.•.cc. buftiJio.edu&gt;

.IGh c
H

·,h

-Gemma DeVsnney and Loss Pequel'lo Glazter Lockwood Library

OBIIUARY

Monica Helmbrecht, 33, pediatrician
..mce •••

A memorlel
held Feb. 17 at Salem Unned Church of
Christ in Tonawanda for Mo nica Hc:lrnhi'"("'C ht. 33. an Orchard Park
pediaLrician and a clinical in\itructo r o f pediatrics at the UB Schoo l of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences Helmbrecht . who suffered from
scleroderma. a severe circu lator) disease. died Feb. 12 after collapsing in
t~ Piusburgh airpon She was en route to Cancun. Mex ico for a vacauon
with fnc:nds .
Family and friends charactcri1cd Hclmbrcl·ht as a dedicated physic1an
who suffered ext reme pain from her di3ease. especially tn cold weather.
but always showed a cheerful face to her )'Oung patients.
Fran!. T. Schreck M .D .. worl.cd with Helmbrecht at Orchard Park
Pediatrics where she had practiced si nce 1990. He told Th~ Buffalo N~·s
that .. Because of her condi tion I to ld her man y times she sho uld live in
Arizona or some other wann climate. hut she wouldn "rlea"e this area. She
loved her family. her home10wn and her practice.·· Helmbrecht was
engaged to be manied to Ke vin Merkel. a computer worker in Rochester.
A graduate of Canisius College and the Alban) Medical College of
Union University. Helmbrecht was an assistant attending physician at
Children's Hospital. She was a member of the Buffalo Ped iatrics Society
and the American Academy of Pediatrics. Survivors inc lude her parents,
Ernest and Barbara Helmbrecht of the City of Tonawanda: two brothers.
Marcus and Gary. both of Spotsylvania. Va.: and her grandmother. Erika
Prade of Lippstade. Germany.

DeVinney received her
bachelor's degree from Wake
Forest University and her
master' s degree in physical an·
thropology from UB .

UB to offer graduate
tax certificate program

0

The Institute for Tax Stud·
ies in the UB School of
Management will offer a Gradu ate Tax Cenilicate Program the
week of April 17 through the
week of June 26.
The program is designed to
provide comprehensive tax instruction through a series of four
courses to be held o n the No nh
Campus: Tax Practice and Proce·
dure: State T axation o n Corpora·
tions: Transactions Between
Corporations and Shareholders:
U.S. Taxation of Foreign Opera·
lio ns.

Courses. which meet one
evening each week, are taught by
qualified tax practitioners from
the legal and accounti ng profes·
sions. A cenificate will be
awarded UJX&gt;n completion.
The Institute for Tax Studies is
registered with the New York
State Board of Public Accountancy as official sponsor of con~
tinuin&amp; education courses for
CPAs. The Graduate Tax Cenificate Program is recognized by the
Internal Revenue Service as a
qualified sponsor of conti nuing
education programs for individuals
enrolled to practice before the IRS.
Thdse interested in attending
must register by March 21 to
receive a syllabus and an assignment to be completed before the
first class meets. For more informa.tion. contact the Institute for
Tax Studies office at 645-3200.

�_,..,

8

I

______ ...

TWAS FUN, IT WAS LEARNING, IT WAS
ENTERTAINMENT LAST WEEK AS UB
HOSTED A POTPOURRI OF CAMPUS EVENTS
THAT IS ROUGHT OUT FACUl:TY 1 STAFF AND

STUDENTS .
AMONG THE HAPPENINGS THAT ATTRACTED

J"M RLporin- '1 CAMERAMAN

WERE A PERFORMANCE

IN THE STUDENT UNION THEATER BY THE ZULU

DANCE THEATER OF SOUTH AFRICAj A HUGELY
SUCCESSFUL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY FAIR IN
THE CENTER FOR TOMORROW; A CONFERENCE ON

WOMEN'S ISSUES FEATURING REBECCA WALKER IN
THE STUDENT UNION THEATER AND A GATHERING
OF UB ATHLETES AT A BASKETBALL GAME IN

a:
&lt;
Ill
1&gt;.1

u

ALUMNI ARENA, SPEAKING OUT AGAINST
EDUCATION BUDGET CUTS .
ON THE FUN SIDE : A FLOPPY DISK TOSS IN
THE STUDENT UNION TO CELEBRATE ENGINEERING
WEEK AND A JELL-Q WRESTLING CONTEST IN

•

ALUMNI ARENA TO BENEFIT THE AMERICAN HEART
ASSOCIATION AND THE NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO

1&gt;.1

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Ill

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�</text>
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                    <text>Guest Qu..ters

Challenge

to Standard

All the comforts of

home on South

UB prof's turbulence
theory disputes
accepted
standard.
p_. .

Campus for
visiting scholars~

FDA Speeds
Drug Approval

Alllbat
Jazz

FDA commissioner
speaks about access
.to new drugs.

Photo exhibit cosponsored by WBFO
focuses on jazz
greats.

3

,.4

5

February 16, 1995 Volume 26 , No. 17

Bloch,Wagner brief Faculty Senate Johnstone assesses
on implications of proposed budget impact ofSUNY cuts
8rtn£VECOX

Reporter Staff

T

HE BUSIN S of the
Facully Sc ate took a
back seat1o the fuiUr&lt;:of
the university as Provost
Aaron Bloch and Senior

Gov. Pataki bccamclheflfStchic;f
executive of New York since lbomas Dewey to propose an actual
decrease in slate spending. but university administrators argue that
SUNY is absorbing ,a di sproportionate share of the cuts.

Vice President Roben Wagner

briefed senalo~ on the proposed
Slate budget and its implications
for UB at a Feb. 7 meeting.
Bloch called the
proposal -an ex.
traordinarilyscri ous " problem
which '1hr&lt;:atens
the viabilily of
thi s university as
\\' C ha ve known it.

I

"No, we won't

close," he said. "but it could be a
very different place than it has been.
Our scope a nd scale could be
changed dramatically."
Wagner echoed the seriousness
of the proposed cuts. saying -ours

is the largest decrease of any major
agency in New York State."

"Ours is the largest
decrease of any
major agency in
New York State. "
ROBERT WAGNER

"I suspect." said Bloch, -~!).gov­
ernor seriously overestimated the
amount of revenue that could be
raised by SUNY . He has sought to
bring tuition to kvels comparable to
the average ofourneighboring states

overnight. However. that may OC an
unrealistic comparison.
··t'veonly experienced anything
close to thj s magnitude once in my

career," Bloch continued. ··and we
must be careful: this 1ype of experience can bring a university to·
gc.ther, or it can tear i1 apan."
Wagner explained thai the proposed budge! would reformulate. a1
a basic level. the way in which the

university would be:: financed. ''Last
year. SUNY received S900 ntillion
in st.atetaxdollar suppon andgencr-

au!d

$6(X)

million m 1ncome. for a

total budget of S 1.51 billion.
'The propose&lt;! budget would
sec state lax do llar su ppon fall 10
$629 million and income suppon .

namely tuuion. ri'l.e to S815 mil lion. for a 101al bud gel o f S 1.44
billion. down S74 million overall"'
explained Wagner. The: danger to
SUNY lurks in the govemcrr's position that the total budget is only
down by S74 million . The

F

RACTAL GEOMETRY
may hold the key 10carlicr
detection of osteoporosis.
according to researc h conducted a1 UB.
It may al so provide a better un derstanding of ho w microgravity
affects bone structure.
UB bioengineen; will desc ribe a
new computational tool they developed and
tested that characterize s bone
deterioration
more accurately
than methods
curren tl y used.
at a conference
r,.,~~,---' on Physiology
and Function
from Mult idimensional Images to
be held Feb. 26 in San Diego.
The technique is based on evidence that bones arc composed of
fractal struct ures. Fractals have a
property called se lf-similari1y.
which means they retain the same
properties regardless of the angle.
scale or resolution from which they
arc viewed.
..Bones arc composed of two
types of tissue-solid cortical ti ssue and interco nnecting honeycomb s truc1ures. called tdbccular
ti ssue," explained Raj S. Acharya.
associ ale professor of elcclrical and
computer engineering at UB . and

Cont1nued on page 2

fornonnal bones and the values for
princi pal investigator. ··Jt is these
hones with ostcoporo~i~." he sa id.
honeycomb structures that arc simiOnce bone rna~~ begin!&lt;&gt; to detcJar to fractals."
noratc. it u ... ually me an' oqcnAcharya explained that cllm p
o
rn
s, l ~ ha~ prog re-.~cd to an
eians who look at X-ray images of
aJ, anced stage But in the carl)
bone "have only been able to track
stage s of the di'Casc. It ts the ho ndeterioration in bone mass: dete ~..·y~..:o mb ~trucwrc that prm ideo.; the
rioration in the honeycomb struc most imponant informauon . ·· Jn
ture h a~ hccn too subtle to see.
these stages. the honey comb strucNow. Acharya and hi s col·
ture might ac tuall ) be broken.
league~ have found a way to exam""hich v.ould wcaJ..en the hone. but
inc the fragile interconncclions in
because the rna ~~ might sti ll be the
thi~ ti ss ue and lO determine the
~arne. a hone dcnsit) tc~t would not
level of dctcrioratinn . Using nc"
~ h o " an}thing.abnonnal.·· he s&lt;Jid .
algorithms theydevised.lhey round
'The aJva ntageof our approach
that the technique lets them ho me
i~ that if )OU can pick up ~ig n s of
in on each piet.-c o f visual infonna..
di
sintegration
nght at the hcgintion in an X-ray or magnetic-resoning before the hone !~ IUn ~ massi ve
nance image. and assign to it a specific
deterioralion. then )OU can start
value called a fractal dimens ion.
therapy.·· he sa id ... And ifyoucat..:h
''With fractal dimensions. we can
it at an early stage. there·:- a good
compute structural information."
chance that a deeper o~ t COJXlrtl"l!'
Acharya said. ''Together. rna! s and
v. ill not de velop:·
st ru ctu~J information give a much
In collaborat io ns v. ith researchbetter indicator of bone condition ."
ers at the NASA Jo hnson Space
Center and BaylorCollege of Mcdi orking
with
animal
·
data from Merck Corp ..
cine. Acharya is also analyzing how
Acharya and colleagues from the
bonesdcterioratcduetomicrogravity
UB School of Dental Medicine have
co nditions in pace. The worl in used frnclals to compare the trabecuvolvcscomputing the fractal dimen lar ti ssue of lhe bones of normal rats
s io n of magnetic-resonance images
wilh those of r.tts with osteoporosis
of the bone~ of human suhjects
induced 1hrough es1rogcn depletion
who have undergone prolonged
or the immobilization of limbs.
bed rest. The researchers are quan" ln bOlh cases, when we comtifying lhe deterioration in lhe traputed the fractal dimension in these
becular bone s1ruc1ures. as well as
data. we found ther~ was a signifihow exercise and drug therapy affect that deterioration.
cant difference between the values
r

W

.·

So says the one man on campus 'IOto WOUld su:ely know.
D. Bruce Johnslone, once SUNY chancellor himself, weighed in

l

racenllywithtjs=~~~~sec::

and higher education. He spoke to studerG,
faculty, alt.nri and former colleagues Feb. 7 on
"The Politics of Education: 1995." in a discussion
sponsoredbytheGraduateSchoolofEducalion's
AlLmni Assoc:ialion.
3ohnstore spent eight years as president of
Buffalo State College and nearly six rrore as
chancellor of the State University before resigning in the spring of 1994 due 10 ~I heal!h. He is now a faculty
member in UB 's Graduate School of Education
IJ'It'tf were SUNY's cuts so deep? Well, f01 at least IIYee
reasons, SUNY was an easy target f01 Palaki, says Jomstore.
Rrst. IIYough titian, SUNY has a l.l'liQue ability armng state
agencies to raise its own riMlOlJS, Second, SUNY has derroostrated an ability 0\lel' the years to manage cuts. Rnalty, Palaki's
closest political allies hail tar
from sul:uban New Y011t COLn-

governor's propc::t!oed bud!-et re-

duces tax receipts tatcwldc from.._
$33 .5 billio n 10 $32 .3 billio n. or
about 3.4 percent . Yet SUNY 's

Technique developed at UB may hold
key to earlier detection of osteoporosis
BJ EU.EN GOLDBAUM
News Bureau StaH

.................................
.,AWl COX
Reporter Stall

Senators widely hold the view lhat SUNY is an upstate instiMion
and is vastly OYerbuill •
Johnstone also believes Pataki's call 101
some sort of tuition increase is "absolutely
mevilable .• Patald is a "pro-!Uition, pro-p!t- ·
vale sector" gowffior, he explained, "and
there Is a strong feeling out there that SUNY
isgellinganextremelygooddeal. You haw
lo realize. the people v.to elecled Pata1&lt;i see

n

theirfriendsspending$20,00001S30.000a
year on college.· Jomstone said. "and then
they compare thai with SUNY tuition."
If tuition lakes M exceptional leap this ~
year. part of the blame, says Johnstone. may belong to Mario
Cuomo. "By leading students 10 believe that higher educatiori
ought to be free. Mario Cuomo did the whOle state a disservice."
Rather than a cost-sharing between the state, parents and students. as Johnstone and hos trustees had advocated. Cuomo "so
pol~icized tuition that students felt there should be only lwO, 01
perhaps jus I one source ol fundtng tor higher education." he said.
Despite managing previous cuts wen, Johnstone doubts the
abWty of SUNY to absoro the magnitude o1 cuts the QOIIOOlOI has
proposed without dOing substantial damage. "Over five.and-ahaH years as chancellor. I cut SUNY by nearly $200 ~1011," he
recalled, "and the bener you manage, the rroreolten they look to
you f01cuts. But now.there'snotaloloffat !here. Higher education
is a very labor-intensive enterprise. There are 001 a lot of traw;
funds to cui around here," Jomstone chided. SUf'I.Y Central
estimates that closing the budget gap will require the ~off o1
1,900 faculty and staff system-wide .
The prospect of closing campuses arises whenever larg6cuts
are contemplaled. However, Johnstone says, thai is not r9aJiv a
V18ble short-term anemative. "The only C8ITJlllSeS that could be
closed without wreaking havoc on the system are small, so they
won1 save much money," he said. Campuses such as the
Maritime School in Manhattan, Old Westtuy on Long Island or
Purchase in Westchester County are attractive candidates because their property Is valuable. "But, I clon1see how that is much
l!ilferenl from selling Attica prison to the Ufban Dell'elopment
Corporation; it's a one-shot revenue raiser."
Nevertheless. Johnstone seemed to expect a bud.gel much
like the one Pataki presented Feb. 1. Albany politi:s, he says,
contributes to the budgel-making equation. "Hisloricalty, the
legislature has been pro-SUNY. Ttismeans thegcNemOI'musteul
deeply,under1heassu:nptionthatthelegis!al\&gt;'ewillrestcrescme
fl.!'ldjng. That w;ry, the governor ca"l end ~ v.here he wmiS b be..
The 9QOd news? To Johnstone, the future of education is still
bright. "I really do not see an antH!ducalion sentmenl outlhere.
We are just caught up in the strong anti-tax sentiment, but
education is still viewed as an engine of social mobility and
econonic progress In this country.·
D

�2

_

SENATE
continued lrom page I
share of those tax

doll~"'~ I 0

Budget process lengtfiy; UB may not know fate till June

times thal.
" While it's true that the reduction in SUNY's overall budget is
less than five percent. the reduction in stale aid 10 SUNY i s 31..5
percent," Wagner told the Faculty
SenaloN&gt;. Adding to the problem
IU'e

simultaneous cuts in other pro-

gram s. like the Educational

Op-

portunity Program and Tu iti on
A ssistance Program (TAP) funds
for graduate and part -Iime students.
all of which would be wiped off the
books.

None of theoptjons available to
meet thi s challenge are anractive,
according to Wagner. To put it in
perspective, he described the $74

million reductio as amounting to
roughl y 1.900 pos tionsthat ':"Ould

havetobeelimin edsystem-wide.
and the e 1va ent of 9.000 students (FI'Es) who would be denied
access to SUNY .

.... u.--.-1T

is

now in the hands of ew
York' s 211 state legi sla-

tors. The entire process
in lhe capito l corridors
is constitutionally due to conclude
by April I . but UB may not entirely

know its fate until next summer.
The state constitution gaveGov.
Pataki an extra 10 days. until Feb.
I. to presen t his budget proposal to
the legislature si nce he was newly
elected in the fall .
B etween Feb. I
and M arch I. the

I

eventually emerge. H owever, thi s
year Gov. Patald and the legislative leadeN&gt; have staled that things
are going to be different. While
there cenainly will still be closed
door meetings, Assembly Speaker
Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno have
vowed 10 open up the process. For
one thing, leadeN&gt; of the minority

party in each house have bet'n invited to join in the negotiations. a
first. Individual legislators, who
ha"e been made to feel sh ut out of
the proce s~ in years past, should
also ha'e more access to the bud-

gel negotiation s.
I nput from the public is valuable to the advocacy process. said

Senior Vi ce President Rober1
W agner at the Feb. 7 Faculty Sen ate meeting. He encouraged people
10 write LO their A ssembl y member
and Senator 10 express support for
SUNY and UB.
1be last time a state budget was
passed by Apri l I was 1983. The
latest budget pa&lt;sage came on July

7. This did not create overwhelming problems for state go\'emment
because former Gov. Cuomo always signed emergency appropr1a-

tion bills to see that things such as
state payroll checks went out on
time. Gov. Pataki has vowed not LO
use this mechanism. If the budget is
not in place by the April I constitutional deadline. no one gets pa1d.
Even if the 1995-96 tale budgel passes on time. the SUNY fiscal year does not begin unul lull
1. The state appropriates mont) to
SUNY '"· basically. a lump sum
and SUNY Central d1nies up the
p01amongsuhecampuses.l1could
be late June or early lui) before
UB kna.. &gt; exactly what it has to

deal '""ith

governor ma y
s ubm it a mendments 10 hi&gt; bud ge t
propo sal.

either increasi ng
or decreasing th~

overall proposal.
Also. during !his period, the leg-

islature holds public heari ngs on

uition. which has risen $1.350

the budget. Joint heari ngs of the

over the past six years. would

Senate Finance Commit tee. chaired

have to go up at least $1.300 next
year 10 meet the income proJeC-

by Sen . l!o nald Stafford. and the
A"embl y Ways &amp; M eans Committee. chaired by A~ ~:;emb lyman
Herman Farrell. hear teo.;umony

T

tio ns. "To meet income projection'\
and 10 make up for the $74 mil loon

cut v- ould require a tu ition increase
o fS 1.900," said W agner. "and that

assumes making o ur enrollment
projections.··

from agency heads and others on
the potential impact of the budget
proposal. The hearing on the SUNY

income that would be generated b)
tuit ion levied against the number

budget was held Feb. 8 in the LegIsla tive Oftice BuildiQj.
These hearing!!. used to lead to a
long sene' of closed door meetings
between thf! go' ern or and the

of students in SUNY' s projected

speaker of the A&lt;,.mbly and ma-

c:nro\\men\ p\an. ""Th&amp;.\ mea n s:· he

jorh y \eader of the Senate. from

:1dded...if the ne" tuition J ~ ,·el~
&lt;.~nd reduced aid amounts leave u ~.
'&lt;~). 1.000 s tu dent~ shon of projeered enrollment. we could face

which a budget agreement v.ould

The un iversity is finarfcially re sponsible for raising Lhe amou nt of

RBI~ I

UB students joined others in downtown Buffalo Feb.10 to protest Gov.
Pataki's proposed cuts to SUNY. In foreground: Herman Mattes. SA
presldent (with bullhorn); at right, Richard Ouodomine, SA Senate chair.

Where to write the governor and state legislators

another S4 mill ion gap that would

come out of our poc k et~ through
cuts on campu~ next year:·
Closing campuses is another
possible means by "'hich to add ress the c uts. but Wagner
downplayed the effec ti ve n e!t.~
that. ""The typical college ha' an

or

annual budget of $~7 million and

ge nerates tu ition income of SIS
million." he demo nstr•.ned. ··A,sumingyoucan"tJUSt shut the place
down April I . you would ha\e to
phase it out over ~.;e,•eral yean.. c;o
you save perhaps $4 or $5 milli on
ayearo\erthree)eaN. You would
ha\ e 10 close rar mare campu~c'
than we have to ma~c up a $290
million gap."

He_re are the Buffalo and Albany addresses of Western New Yortl's delegation to the state legislature. You can
wnte to them at these addresses to express your views on the budget.
The Hon. George E. Patak!
E.xecutrve Chamber
State Capnol
Albany. NY 12224

_y,_.llic:hard R.
Anderoon(R-142)

5555 Ma1n Street
Wrlhamsvllle. NY 14221
63&lt;1-1895 Fax 634-1250
Room 938. Leg1s1auve Ofl1ce Bldg
Albany. NY 12248
518-455-4618 Fax 455-5023
Assemblyman Arthur 0 . Eve
(D-141)
1377 Ftllmore Avenue
Buffalo. NY 14211
895-246&lt;0 Fax 892-7961
Room 738. Leg1slat1ve Off1ce Bldg
Albany NY 12248
518-455-5005 Fax 455-5471
Assemblyman Sam Hoyt
(D-144)
General Donovan Olftce Butlo1ng
125 Ma1n Street
Buffalo NY 14203
852-2795, Fax 852-2799
Room 656. Leg1slai1Ve OffiCe Bldg
Albany, NY 12248
518-455-4886 Fax 455-4890

-yman Richard Keane
(D-145)
1066 Abbou Road
Buffalo. NY 14220
&amp;25-6080. Fax 821.0SOO
Room 939. Leg1slai!Ve Off1ce Bldg
Albany. NY 12248
518-455-4691 . Fax 455-5238

_ y w _ , Patricia IL

- y m a n n-na. M.

Sen.tcwJeuJ . - ( R~)

McGee (R-149)

Reynolds (R-147)
36 Nonh Ma1n Street
Warsaw NY 14569
786-0160 Fax 786-0182
f1oom 448 Leg•slauve Off1ce Bldg
Albany NY 122~8
518-455-5741 Fax 455-586&lt;0

910 Hotel Jamestown Bldg
Jamestown. NY 14701
66&lt;0-4603. Fax 66&lt;0-2430
Room 503 The Cap1101
Albany NY 1224 7
518-455-3563 Fax 426-6905

Westgate Plaza
700 West State Sue~•
Olean NY 14 760
373-7103 Fax 373-7105
Room 458 Legtslatrve OHtce 81og
Albany NY 12248
518-455-5241 Fax 455·5869

Assemblyman Charles H.
Neobltt(R-137)

62 Nort Matn Sueet
Brockpon NY 14420
637-()()90 Fax 637-0145
Room 530 Leg1s1auve Off1ce Blog
Albany NY 12248
518-455-5363 Fax 455-5856

Auemblyman William L
Perment (IHSO)

AooemblyiNIIIRobln
Sc:ltlmmJneer (IH40)
3514 Delaware Ave Sune 201
Kenmore. NY 14217
873-2540 Fax 873-5675
Room 6&lt;07 LegiSlatiVe Off1ce B&gt;og
Albany NY 12248
518-455-4767 Fax 455-4724
Auemblyman P8Ul Tokaoz
(1&gt;143)

Room 809 Hotel Jamestov..-n Bldg
Jamestown. NY 1470l
66&lt;0-7773 Fax 483-0299
Room 828 Leg1slauve Olflce Bldg
Albany NY 12248
518-455-4511 Fax 455-4328

General Doncvan Off1ce Bu1ld1ng
125 Ma1n Street
Buffalo. NY 14203
852-2791 Fax 852-2794
Room 727 Leg•slatiVe Off1ce Bldg
Albany NY 12248
518-"55-5921 Fax 455-3962

Assemblyman Joseph T.
Pilllttere (D-138)
1700 Ptne Avenue
N1agara Falls NY 14301
282-6062 Fax 282-4226
Room 716 Leg1slauve Off1ce Bldg ,
Albany NY 12248
518-455-5284. Fax 455-5694

Aooemblyw......, Sandra ....
Wirth (R·148)
1500 Umon Road SUite 201
West Seneca. NY 14224
675-7170 Fax 675-1608
Room 718 Leg1slat1Ve Off1ce Bldg
Albany NY 12248
518-455-4601. Fax 455-5257

Assemblyman Franc:ls J. Pordum
(D-146)

Senatcw Anthony R. Nanula

3812 South Park Avenue
Blasdell, NY 14219
826-1878. Fax 826-0808
Room 837. Leg1slauve Off1ce Bldg
Albany . NY 12248
518-455-4462. Fax 455-5560

65 CO&lt;m Street
Bullalo. NY 14202
947-7939 or 40. Fax 854-305 1
Room 613, Leg1s1a11ve Off1ce Bldg
Albany. NY 12247
518-455-3371 . Fax 432-8826

(0-57)

Sen.tor M.ry ~- (-

)
5500 Ma1n Street
'Wilhams1lle NY 14221
633-0331 Fax 633-0830
Room 817 Leg1sla11ve Off&gt;ce Bldg
Albany NY 12247
518-455-3161. Fax 426-6963

Sen.tor WllllatljS-wllkl

t D-68)
r
2030 Clmton Street
Buffalo. NY 14221
826-3344. Fax 823-6372
Room 508. leg1slaltve Off1ce B&gt;dg
Albany, NY 12~7
518-455-2426. Fill&lt; 432-8839

s.n.tor-M. Vell&lt;er(R-59)
620 Ma1n Street
East AurOI'a, NY 14052
655-0993. Fax 655-2736
Room 708, Leg1slattve Off1ce Bldg
Albany. NY 12247
518-455-34 71 . Fax 426.0949

Note The 61 st Senate D•stncr.
formerly oecupred by John Daly.
and the I 39th Assembly 0 /Stnct.
formerly occupied by Ehzabeth
Hoffman. are vacant

OIR(CJOROF Pu8t.ICA110NS rwcmrt J. C:O.OY, EDt lOR e.llfUft V10Al. ASSOC•Iol[ £0110R JOAJf D4MZMl. .toRt OlR£CTOR "-N.CCA f.&amp;ltMIAM, A.SSOCIAI[ AAl DlR(CTOR , ........ OOWD, AOIIERTISING t.IANA(;[R IIICMA.fL.HAUIIIU

�3

Disputing
theory on
turbulence

__....,.

UB prof's theory questions
long.ecc:epted standard
By ELU;N QOLDIIAUM
News Bureau Staff

A

TURBULENCE theory developed by UB researchers

about how flows adjust near a
surface and disputing a theory
thatl.as been the standard for
50 years is generating interetamong me~
chanica) and aerospace engin rs.
During the next few week , William·K.
George, professor of mechan cal and oerospoce engineering at U B and director of
UB ) Turbulence Research Laboratory. will
deliver invited talks about his theory at the

University of Minnesota. Queens Univer·

..J

sity, the Univer.;ity of Notre Dame and the
Illinois Institute of Technology.
George's approach has received imJX&gt;rtant su pport from the work of OJ. Barenblatt
of Cambridge Univer.;ity, who uses different
methods to reach similar conclusions.
George' s theory, fir.;t introduced at a
meetingoftheAmerican Physical Society in
1988, addresses the way e ngineer.; think
about problems relating to turbulent Jlows.
including crucial aspects of vehicle design .
particularly calculations of drag on large
ships and aircraft.
'"The turbulent boundary layer has been
regarded as one of the few problem in
turbulence that was well-underslood. Our
work calls the fundamental assumptions of
that work in to question and offers a new
approach to the problem." said George.

questions I was asking to
solve that problem were
related to the ones that
feasor of mecMnlcaJ ..,d should be asked about the
classical model ,.. bt said.
.. People think scientists
encs-r~ng,
works In his
looL for the right answe&lt;s,
lab In Jarvis
but actually we' re look Hall.
ing fortbe right questions.
George and his students spent several years
studying the basic assumptions of the classi·
cal model. They concluded that von Karman
had staned with a faulty assumption .
George explained that the boundary Ia) er
has an inner pan and an outer pan
""You hove to model them d1fferentl). but
\on Kannan picked the wrong model for the
outer pan. so he gor ~A-hat 'fte thmk ~~ the
wrong an\wer." ht&gt; added.
George and h1s studen~ exammed the
character of the fundamental equauons of
the boundary layers.
They began by postulatmg an AS)'mptouc lnvariance Pnnctple. The idea behind
the pnnctple is that if a theory tscorrect. then
when taJ..en to it~ limns. it should eventually
satisfy Newton's Law or another equation
that deM:ribes fundamental phenomena.
"I concluded that von Kannan·s model
didn't have the right phystcal properties," he
said. "When you pushed u to Jts limit. it
~idn't g1ve the nght answers."
The fact that the classical model didn't
satisfy Newton·~ Second Law for bound~
ary-layer nows was not unknown. George
said. but the model had . for the most part .
been accepted beca use it seemed to gener·
ally agree with the data that 'ftas available
at the time .
" People had managed to bury their reservations about it.'' he said ...We realized the
tntellcctual inconsistency in it and found a
different way to do it."
George conducred his research with
Luciano Castillo. a UB graduate srudent. and
Pierre Knec ht. a fanner UB graduate SlU·
dent.

WIIIIMnK.

Georce.

Boundary layers are thin regions near any
surface where the now of gases (or liquids)
must adjust from the undisturbed airstream
funher away from the surface. Because most
boundary Ia ers of concern to engineers arc
turbulent, these flows are characterized by
chaotic nuctualions in velocity. which means
they may o nly be described in terms of
averages. according 10 George.
"'Boundary layers are a consequence of
\•iscosity-even air. like oil. has viscosity,
though far less-and the "no~slipcondition. ·
which results from it. '\.auses all flows to
come to a screeching halt at a surface." he
explained.
Turbulent boundary layer.; are part of
engineering problems ranging from meteo~
rology. involving atmospheric flows; lOmechanical engineering, involving flows around
aircraft and ins ide engines. to civil engineering, involving flows near structures. Regardless of the type of problem. though. all

use as a reference the standard turbulent
boundary layer, o r the so-called clasSical
model.
Fir.;t proposed in the 1930s by Theodore
von Karman. the legendary California lnstJ tute of Technology engineer. this theory ha.s
become the accepted standard against which
engineers test boundary~layer wrbulence
models.
eorge first re' 1sited this classic.al model
in the 1980s. when he chose it as the
subject of a talk he was invited to give at the
University of Minnesota.
"My concer-n s aboul th is model wenr all
the way back to when 1 was a student," he
said. "I never liked the classical modeL it
never made sense to me."
At the same lime. George was worlmg
on the problem of the ilmospheric boundary
layer.
""A' I worked on 11 . I reali.red that the

G

(ItO-

Wagner urges PSS to voice concern over budget cuts
RITE YOUR state representatives to voice your
concern about SUNY's
$290 million budget reduction. UB Senior Vice
President RobertJ. Wagner urged members
of the Professional Staff Senate at a generol
member.;hip meeting held Feb. 13 .
If the state legislature gets the message
that culling the SUNY budget by one-third is
··no big deal." Wagner said, "then this thing
will just happen. Your ability and willingness to do something to get the message out
is going robe very. very important."
With every area of the state budget facing
cuts. "we· ve got to get our voice above the
rest if we want something to happen.·· Wagner
said. "Advocacy is the key.""
SUNY and UB are in the initial stages of
sorting through devastating budget cuts that
Gov. George Pataki announced Feb. I , and
the impact those numbers will have on stu~
dents. programs and the respective institu·
tions. "We frankly hove a lot of challenge
ahead of us;· Wagner said.
SUNY Chancellor Thomas Bartlett has
made it clear that he will not opprooch the
budget by s impl y allocating tQ eoch campus ·
their fair share of the cuts. Wagner said, but
"it's way too early to know what thechancellorwilllarget and what impact it will have on
thi s campus."
One thing is for sure. he stressed. "This
change is not a one-year change. It' s not a
little dip in funding .... The assumption is that
this is a long-tenn change in the funding for
universities in the State of New York. It 's
going to be the pattern of the future."
One of the greatest concerns over rh e

1995-96 executive budget. Wagner said. "
the assumption that SUNY can overcome
the budgetary shortfall by raising $215 million of additional income. primarily through
increased tuition. Thal assumption could ac·

I

!-.honfall. Wagner noted. would be to cut
approximately 7.000posittonsacro"\S S NY
Or. ""the )'Stem moy have 1oloo~ hard at ho"
man) campuse~ are viable. The answer he'
somev.-here tn the m1ddle. ·· he said.

"Your... willingness to do something to get
the message out is going to be very, vel)'
important. We've got to .get our voice above
the rest if we want something to happen. "

tually lead to what the senior vice president
called a "secondary budget reduction."
"As a simple example, lei' s s'"ay tuiti on
goes to S4.000 (next year)." Wagner said.
"UB has an enrollment target. Let's assume
we have to make the same number in 1995·
96. but we don't and we miss it by 1,000
students. Multiply 1.000 students by $4.000.
We 've got $4 million in lost revenue."
In fact, the executive budget targets en~
rollment to rise slightly-by 375 student!-.
throughout SUNY-from 158.750 in 199495 to 159. 125 in 1995-96.
''How elastic is the demand curve for
higher education?" Wagner asked. "We'll
find out the a nswer to that question in the fall
of 1995 ."
Part of the reason SUNY hos taken such a
big hit in the executive budget is the percep·
tion that the system offer.; o good product
that is significantl y underpriced. Wagner
said.
An alternative 10 significantly raising tu~
it ion that would allow SUNY to make up the

ROBERT I . WAGNER

But if SUNY were to shut down both the
UB and Unive~•ty at Albany campuses. it
still would not save enough to close the
budget gap. ""It might help. but it won't solve
the problem. The number is simply too big.''
Wagner said.
o. while it 1s obvious that the budget
reduction will h:1ve a significant impact
on UB. it is difficult to predict !-.pecifically
what will be affected because"flo details are
known yet. But some assumptions are al~
ready being made. Wagner said.
"Particularly in the academic units, this
(lack of specific infonnation) will be a prob·
lem." he said. because departments tradi~
tionall y make employment offers to new
foculty and students in the late spring. al·
though this year not all the budget details
wil l be worked out by then. " We'regoing to
have to go out and take some risks," Wagner
said.
UB students also should expect to pay
much higher tuiti on in ihe fall of 1995. Pro-

S

fessional school tuillon~ also" illmcrease. "I
wouldn't want to be an incoming medical
student or phannacy student. or law student
or dental student in 1995-96."" he said.
Lilewise. "meeting our O\eratl enrollment target~ i~ vel) important because missmg tho'e target' y, ill mean further
reduction .... " Wagner said.
And early retirement paclage~ may be
propo'&lt;d as o means of offsetting the budget
reduction "We're spending 70 cents of ev·
ery $1 on people." Wagner &lt;aid.
Can SUNY -and UB-&lt;Iose the b!Jdget
gop without laying people off: "" I sl'mpl)
don't know ." although avoiding retrench·
ment is pan of the uni,·ersity's strategy.
Wagner said.
The university is going to have to C\'ange
the way it thinks about students. as the~ in
tuition costs bet\\'cen public and private U111i' ersities becomes smal ler...The treatment o(
students will have to change.- Wagner said .
""For students. it's going to be a plus.
We're going to have to direct a lot more
(resou rces} toward srudents," he said. ~·stu­
dent; and the supply of students has to play
a more imponant role than it has in the past
in how we make decision and how we
aJlocate resources ."
As budget iss uesaresortedout this spring.
uni"ersityofficials will be talking with peers
from the University of Massachusetts and
UniversityofCalifomia systems. which also
have suffered major funding reductions. to
ascertain what worked for them and what did
not.
"The governor believes he has a mandate
to reduce taxes. There has to be an ongoing
dialogue about what k.ind of higher education system New York State wants to have."'
Wagner said.

�4

--.. .... u.--.-17

-fDAboss says agency speeds approval process for drugs
ESPONDING TO recent public criticisms that his agency
moves t.oo slowly in approving
new drugs, Food and Drug Ad-

ministration Commissioner
David Kessler told a standing-room-only
crowd on UB's South Campus that the FDA
has dramatically increased access to promising new drugs for patients with life-threatening diseases.
Kessler. who deli ve red the D .W .
Harrington Lecture Feb. 9 in Butler Auditorium, said the FDA has sped up the approval

process for new drugs and it has also in·
creased patients' accessibility to new drugs
that are still in the clinical stages of testing.
Kessler, who was appointed by President
Bush in 1990, said the advent of the ALDS
epidemic changed the way the FDA handled
the approval process for new drugs offering
potential treatments for patients with termi·
nal Q.iseases. He said in toda)' 's world, it was
imporunt for these patients to have the right
to take a chance on a new drug when. seemingly. all other treatments have failed .
.. Experimental
=s of therapy, such
as new drugs. repre t a rare source of hope
for those people with conditions that have
seemed to outsmart medical science.·· Kessler
said. He said he realized the FDA must
address the unique problems facing those
patients who have nothing to lose by trying
experimental treatments ... In urgent cases
- where people are dying and no.,effective
therapy exists. something more i~ required
of the FDA ... he added.
The FDA is the federal agency responsible for enforeing the nation ' s food and
drug laws and for overseeing th.e introduc-

the " prime target" of conservative groups
which feel that government over-regulation
of drugs and medicine huns American
industry's ability to compete globally and
results in unnecessary deaths to people who
cou ld have been helped by therapie currently awaiting FDA approval.
Kessler. however. disagreed and said there
are widespread misconceptions as to how
long it takes for the FDA to approve a new
drug.
"For most drugs. the average approval
length is 13 month s:· he said. "not se \•en
years or 10 years like most people think."
Somelimes the ag-ency mo ves even
quicker. Kessler. a graduate of Harvard
Medical School and the University of Chicago Law School, said that in the past few

t.\onof new drug,~o\nto\he. mukctp\.ee . \t has

yean four new drugs-mos.\ notably a drug

been criticized heavily during the past few
months for being overly bureaucratic and
slow to approve new U"Catments.
TheN~w York Times reponed last Sunday
that full-page ads have recently appeared in
national newspapers declaring: "If a murderer kills you. it· s homicide. If the FDA
kills you. it' sjust being cautious.''The newspaper described how the FDA has become

called DOl. a possible treatment for AIDS
patienrs-received approval in less then
seven months. Kessler said thi s kind of q uick
approval of new drugs was one of the best
ways the FDA can address the needs of
patients afnicted with life-threatening diseases.
In 1992. he noted. the FDA also began
granting conditional approvaJ tocenain drugs

David
before the agency ha fiKessler,
nal confi rmation of direct
FDA Comevidence of their effecmissioner,
tiveness.
speaks In
If a drug manufacrurer
Butler
Audican indirec1ly establish
torium.
evidence,of a drug's effecriveness on a disease
that would make it "reasonably likely" the
drug would successfully treat that disease.
then it may apply to the FDA for conditional
approval. Thedrugthen would becomeavailable to the publ ic much quicker than normal.
essler said a drug recei vi ng condjtional
approval i&gt; still held to the same standards as a drug receiving full approval and
that the drug·s manufacturer must conducr
post-marketing studies of the drug to ensure
that it has the anticipated benefits. However.
he noted that '"the less time a drug is in
clinical trial s. the le ss we will know about it
and the more risks we will take When we
make it available.'' Kessler said it was ··not
enough for the FDA just to get new potential
therapies to people who need them." It is
also the FDA ·s responsibility. h&lt; said. to
··get answers" regarding the poten tial ben-

K

efits a drug may bring and the potential harm
it could cause.
"The challenge," he said. "is to strike the
right balance between access and answers."
Kessler warned that this challenge would
be tested some day wben a drug that was
introduced into the marketplll&lt;% before all
the scientific researeh had been gathered, is
found to be harmful.
"One day we' re going to make a mistake," he said. '' But the riskiest thing we can
do is to not take risks. Especially since patients have said that they are willing to take
tbe ri sks."
The magnitude of these risks depends on
the precision of the FDA approval process.
which. in tum. Kessler said "is only.., good
asthescientificresearehon which it is based."
Most of that researeh comes from the clinical
studies of the drug's effects. Drug manufacturers generally perform several phases of
clinical trials. sometimes covering a span of
years. Until 1987. for most patients. panicopation in one of these trials was the only Wa)
they could hope to obtain some experimental
drugs that could help in their treatmenL
Many seriously ill patients were precluded
from pan.i cipaling in these trials. however.
because they did not quolify physically or
they were limited by financial or geographic
means.
In 1987. however. the FDA opened the
door for tens of thousands of seriously ill
people-mostly AIDS patienl._.O receive
drugs free of charge while the drugs are still
in clinical trials. Kessler said the FDA had to
realized that while diseases such as AIDS
"have no geographical boundaries. access to
cutting-&lt;:dge medical technology often does."
He said. in 1992 this program was expanded to include even more patients.
"'Today. drugs that show promise are be·
ong made available to patients before the)
have received tina! approval from the {DA
and before they are marlceted to the pub\c ...
said Kess ler.
~
The D.W. Harrington Lecture Series~
established in 1896. Speake" are chosen
and invited by the faculty members of the
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

Problem-solving shake and bake
software package developed here
By w.EN GOLDBAUM
News Bureau Staff

A

SOFrW ARE PROGRAM that
has sol\'ed in h our~ or minute~
mol ec ul ar structu res ~o compleA
that other methods coul d not ..oh e
them is now available co mmercia ll y.
Developed by researcher&gt; at UB and the
Hauptman-Woodward Medical Resea rch
In stitute here. Shake-and-Bake-&lt;lubbed
SnB-has been incorporated into teX~an. a
software package manufactured by Molt!!:ular Structure Corp. that is one of the most
widely-used software packages for solving
the structures of small and medium-sized
molecules.
~sn B takes a whole different approach 10
solving structures;· said Beverly Vincent.
small molecule crystallography manager at
Molecular Structure Corp. " It works where
other approaches f ai I."
The software package is the first to solve
roulinely structures of more than I 00 atom s
and up to 400 atoms when high-quali ty
X-ray diffraction data are available.
"SnB has been able to solve structures
that other software packages have been unable to solve." said Russ Miller. UB associ ate professor of computer science. senior
research scienlis t at th e HauptmanWoodward Medical Re search Institute
(HWI) and a member of the researeh team
that developed SnB. "So far. it has solved
every structure presented to it."

SnB 1 expected to profound!) accelerate
the use of rational drug dc~.oign. v. htch t!. the
design of new drug~ based on preci-..e knov.ledge of ~.otructurcs or biologJcal molecule,.
Recent!). HWI re~archcf\ ha\e u-.ed 1110
-.olve 7-l..etochole,terol. an oxJd1zed chole~­
tcrol o,tructurc imphcated in ather~Jero~i~.o .
JuM four years ago. the Shake-and-Bake

"SnB takes a whole
different approach to
solving structures. It
works where other
approaches fail. "
BEVERLY ViNCENT

method was little more than an idea conceived by Nobel Laureate Herben Hauptman.
president of the Hauptman- Woodward Medi cal Research Institute and UB research professor of computer science.
.
Hauptman's idea for the minimal principle. on which the program is based. originated in an elegant. 18th cent ury
mathematical principle formulated by mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss about the
orbits of asreroids.
Jnitia ll y successful when it ran on mas-

sively parallel computers. the SnB program was then continuatly refined and
adapted by Miller and ChaJles M. Week s.
a se nior research scientist at the HauptmanWoodward Medical Resea rch In stitute .
SnB now solves complex molecules on a
standard computer workstation .
c~ording to its devel ope rs, the key
vmue of the software lies in its ability
to solve~omplex structures with vinually no
user ass1stance.
"Shake· n Bake solves molecular structures like a black box. with no human intervention. given data with s ufficient
resolution:· said Hauptman . "Scientists

A

should be able to get an answer Slide
just by collecting X-ray dif- shows
fraction data on a molecule and oxidized
running it on the computer.'' cboles-Miller said ... Based on ev- tarol
el)•thing we currently know molecule
about SnB . it should solve vir- SnB
tually any structure for which solved.
reasonable data are available.
Hauptman shared the Nobel Priu in chemistry in 1985 with Jerome Karle of the Naval
Researeh Laboratory for their development
years earlier of the direct method that allows
for the routine determination of molecular
structures containing up to I 00 nonhydrogen
atoms.

�5

Fascination ~th the Internet could make
Call for Nominations:
gabbing around water cooler thing of the past Honorary Degrees
Candidates for 1995

Deadline: March 17, 1H5
ABBING at the water cooler
or over the back fence may
become a thing of the past,
thanks to the information ..superhighway," a UB sociolo-

The Unoversny al BuffalO s Honorary
Degree Comnrttee tnvnes aH
rnerrt&gt;ers ol
unrversny corrmunny
10 nominate candidates lor the
conferral of an honorary degree 1n
1996 These cand1da1es should be
IndiVIduals who have achteved
excenence tn f~elds such as DUbhe
affaii'S. the sctences. the ans and
human11.1es. educatiOn bus1ness.
phrlanthropy and socral serv1ces An
honorary degree candrdale may enpy
nat01at or InternatiOnal prOI'Tilnence tn
one of rrore of tl'tese areas ()(' may
have gtven outstanding seMce to the
unwerStty the state. the nahon or
hurnanrty at large AJI norrNnees Stlou!d
be persons whose lrves exemplify the
un•versrty's asp1rauons for rts students
and whose acccrnpltstYnents are
wtdely recogmzed by leaders 1n '"""
respectwe f.elds of endeavOJ

t.,.,

gist says.
America's infatuation with the Internet is
causi ng many people lo lose the personal
touch in their social and professional relationships. say Robert L. Boyd. UB assistant
professor.
"With the Internet, people have inslanla·
neous communication o n a worldwide basis.
II' s the next step beyond the lel*hone,.. says
Boyd.

''As this network has ex anded. ifs
brought people together_ac.ros the country.
They are interacting frequent ly and more
closely than they interact with their neighbors. In fact, they may be communicating
much more frequently with people long dis·
tanee than they are with their neighbors," he
notes.
Boyd ·says the revolution in telecommu·
nications technology has created a phenom-

enon called community without propinquity.
where people' s interactions arc no longer
restricted by their geographic location.
Many professional s in "knowledge-in·
tensive'' kind of work. such as management
.. consulting or stock brokerage. are loeati ng
beyond the suburbs because they can keep in
contact with the major financial centers in

New Yo rk, London and Tokyo. he says.
'They can keep in contact with their colleagues without any loss of feedback . They
don' t have w wait three or four days for a
letter to amve. Since so many people are
doing work on the compu ter. they find it
much easier to send a message over E-mail
than picking up a telephone.
"They·re able to live a rural lifestyle m
places like Montau a with no loss of cont act
with the people the y interact with professio nall y:· he sa) s.
\
This dependence o n eleCtronic communication in the bus iness wo rld b. unfonu-

natcly. extending to social intcractiom.. Boyd
People arcn'1 gossipi ng over the back
fence anymore ; they're gabbing o ver the
Internet.
"The trend is that people increasing!) are
not interacling with their neighbors. or 1f
they are. il's only on a superficial le\cl
Theu close contac ts. and in many case~ thcH
friendships. a re continued mer te lecommunica tio ns
.. II makes people less dependent on thc•r
nci!!hbors forsociallntcractJo n. lt "!!-pus~ih l c
that as a result. the) justdon·t feci compelled
to get to J...now ttic people next door··

Visiting scholars at home in Guest Q~arters
Clement Hallls now a temporal) "home"
fo r visiti ng scholars. faculty. researchers and
lecturers from all over the world. The Office
of Intern ati onal Education is offe ring a new
service that provides low--cost temporary
housing o n campus for the visi tin g scholars.
Scholars from Egypl. Syria. China. Korea.
Latvia. Poland. Israel. Thail::md. Fram.·c and
NOT'\\13)' arc curre ntly living in the Universit y Guest Quarters.
An entire ninth-lloor wing Concierge
o f Clement has been reno- Monica
Hom man
vated. including carpeting. and
adjusts TV
fu rni shi ngs that include desks.
lor Latvian
am1chairs. color televi sion
scholars
sets, refri gerators. lamps. Leon Ids
double beds. phones. clock r•· Petersons,
di os and data connection.
left, and
Fifteen rooms have hccn Andrej
made available and can be Dzedons.
rented for periods of less than
a month. Other rooms can be rented for stays
offromonc mon thtoaycar. All nfthc room!;
available for Jong-tenn stays have already
been reserved for the first year of opera ti on.
The GueSt Quarters also has a fully
equipped kitchen with stove, micro"'ave and

Why the honorary degree?

Sa)s.

The un•verSfty wtshes to make pub liC

rts support lor acllvtnes and
accomphslnlents that represent rts
~

own h1g~st •deals ana that are
conststent with rts rrusg,ons espec•ally
the celebrauon oi human actuevement
ana humane values By gwtng such
prom•nent recognttJOn and VlSJbthty to
O&lt;JISlandlf1g rndMduaJs , UB hopes 10
develop valuable bOnds of respecl
Interest and nendsh•P With the
hOnorees and t'1ereby encompass
wrth1n the unrverSity corrmun•ty sane
of the ftnest exemplars o! acntevement
and seMce '"' the worta tooay
How to make nominations
Oblarn and complete a copy ollhe
nonorary degree nornna.uon term The
form tS avauab~ at me foltowmg on·

camous locations

• vtce ores•oe..,ts. o'f•ces
• aeans offiCes
departme~"t a:""O un•t o"'!rces
• otf•ces o' the Fac...,tty and
Profess•ona Stat' Senates
• ot',ce of The Spectrum

•

• ottrces o'

st.Joe~t

goverrvnent

ll poss101e a east Ofle ada1t1cna •tern
o' backgrouna rnformattOO-

a lounge with a TV. a VCR and a ~ t crco
system.
A multilingual concierge . Ml1n 1ca
Hornman . is on hand to welcome the visitors. help them get settled and become oriented to Buffal o and the univcrl&gt;it )

~.: nmmunil).

Help i!!- al.!ooO:.t\'ailahle forinitiat ·
mg phone or data !1-CT\ icc. cstabli!!-hing hanJ...
ac~..·o unl s and using local tran!o.pnrtation.
The ~c rvicc not o nl) helps the scho lars.
hut 1:-. abo a cu n,cnicncc w dcpar1mCnt!!:-.pon!!&gt;OTing the 'l!!&gt;itor~ .

Jamestown star among top football players coming to UB
.,.-cox
Cirbus signed several (){her Western New York studentReporter Staff

Tile UB feoiiMlll lluls wMI lulft several Western New York
high school standouts on their fall roster, including Jamestown
High School starrunningback David Hinson. lie and eight others
have signed National Leuers of Intent to auend UB next fall.
Hinson. a running back who was named the Buffalo N~sand
the N~ York State high school player of the year last year,
picked UB over rival Division 1-AA national champs YoungslOWn State aflcr meeting with UB's new head coach. Craig
Cirbus.
.
l..cd by Hinson's running perfonnances, Jamestown was 13-0
last year, winning the Class A stale championship. At S-fOOI-9
and 170 pounds, Hinson became the forst player in Western New
Yorit high school history to rUsh for more than 2.000 yards in a
seasoo (2.260). He also holds WNY sinaJe aea1011 reconls for
1OO.yardgames ( 12). carries (290),loudldowns (3S) aacJ.acoriag
(212 points).

athletes, including Amherst High quarterback Erik Rusin and
offensive lineman Tom BroVI'Il. Rusin bolds several Amherst
passing records and led the Amherst Tigers to the Section VI
Class B-1 championship in 1993. Depew running back Glenn
Jackson and Wesllrondequoil wide recci,·er !Cali Watkins will
also join the Bulls offense.
Coming 10 UB .from out of the area are quarterback Kevin
McGriff of Nassau County Community College. offensive linemen Joe Hauendorf of Gov. Miffiin High School in Shanling, Pa.
and defensive end Eric Campbell ofEiyriaCalhotic in Elyria. Pa.
Huge offensive guard Vinnie Card of Rome, N.Y. will be
rejoining former high school teammate Vito Daniello, a Bulls'
defensive back. Card,a6-5. 280-poundolfensivclefltackle, was
twice a f11'51 team all-star and his Rome Fnoe Academy Bhick
Kaiahts woathe Section 3, Class AAtitlc in 1993.
~will continue thtoup April I, the NCAA deadline
for sianiec hlab ldlool seniors, aa::on1iJ1s 10 Cid&gt;us.

biOQrapnteal statement from Who s
\1\/ho. ne" spaper or magaz1rte artrc .e
or other oescnpt10n o~ the candraate s
11fe and accomp hshments-shau 'd be
anacheo to t~e form A cumcwlum
v•tae or resvme •s espec1a!•~' use~u 1
b..;t not essent1a
A 1 nan•nattOn matena s St'IOuiO be
svbm&lt;ned 10
Honorary Degree Corrmnee
O'flCS of the Vtce PreSident tor
Un•verSity Advancement and (
Development
503 Capen Hal
Un1versrty al Buffalo
Buffalo NY 14260
Alumm ana commumty frtends of the

un,verslty also may WlSh to submit
nomtnatJOns. off-campus norTllnators
may oblarn fOrms by calling 645-2925

The nomination process
UB's Honorary Degree Corrmnee wr!l
screen all nomrnahons Th•s
corrm1nee . cha1red by Provost Aaron

BlOCh. compr1ses representatcves from
lhe tacuny . student body. professiOnal
staff. Alumn• Assoc1at1on. US
Foondatron and other key segments of
our unrversrty cornnunrty Follo\Ying Its
selecton ol potential candidates , the
conmrttee \VI II oversee preparatiOn of
matenals to suppon each nomnatK&gt;n.
rwew the f1nal dossters and then
make recorrmendat1011s to Prestdent
Wilham A Greu1er The pres1dent will
m tum select dossters to be forwarded
to the chancellor for constderauon. A/J
nomtnatiDfls of 1996 candidates must
be submitted by March 17. 1995.

�6
-YaAT4PWS
" PedrJ(Prv-. Wbat 'a tho
Differ-enft!,"' Douglas
Messerli . 438 Clemens. Nonh
Campus. 12:30 p .m.

COIIDUC'I.o-

Tho ........,..tioa of
Tomorro•'• Cood urton V.
Harriet Simons. orprnUr Ba1rd
and Slec Halls. Nonh Campus
1-5 p.m. Call645 -2964 for mon:
inrorrnation.

~~-­
lmmuoowpprasion witb U..
pooomal Mdllylprtduioolonr:
Ap ptk:atiooo Ia Conlia&lt;

Episcopal Campus Ministry

Tnn.sptaDtation, Dr. Elena

"Bri~~ng the Gap"

MIShina. CS08 Cook&lt; Nonh
Campus. 3:30p.m.

I'IIYBICS COLLOQUIUM

Tho Sutus o( tho Solar N'"'trino Pvale, Dr. Slephen
Parle. Fcnnilab. OIK:ago. 228

Every Sunday at 2 p.m.

Nat\ll'al Scteoces &amp; Mathc:m.t ics Complex. North Campus
3:45p.m.

The Commons Suire 100

l'ltUEJITATlON AND

Holy Eucharist Rite U

Every Wednesda)' at Noon

The Commons Suire 215

Student Worship Service

,...

..........

~­

~-r·oft'~•.....t•

j oH' I 16

...._.w.,_.... ... ,.ftdiNII

The Episcopal Coll•9• Ministry

l

The Re\' Bevcrl) Moore-Tas}

Um,·ersn v al Buffalo
The Commons Suue 21 5
520 Lee Entrance. Amher&gt;t. Y 14 228
688-4056

...........

... -..-

---~

..... a.. ... -

tiM

Ttlu'*!M'

...t:JiMtaR..,ort•~
~.

ua Croft&amp;, or E...tl

(repeal.~ .. .).

Out

Fu--...t.~ns.

16

THURSD AY

M &amp; T C lassoc Senes
THE BUFF ... LO PH I L H ... RMON I C ORCHESTR"

Bach at

UB

Saturday, February 25, 8:00 PM
Sunday, February 26, 2:30 PM
Kltinhans Music Hall
Maximiano Valdes. co nduce mg
Kyoko Takczawa, violin

5 "Reformati on"

Call 885-5000 or
645-2787 for tickets

BLACK HISTCHn' MOHTII

Dramatic Presentation. Educa tiOnaJ Opportunity Center. 465
Wa.&lt;ihmgton St. 6th Aoor Audt ·
tonum 11 : 15-11 :45 a.m
Free admtsston .

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Oanct Presentation. Educa·
!tonal Opportunuy Center. 465
~~a&gt;hmgton St. 6th Aoor Audt ·
ton urn 11 .4.S a.m - 12 J0 p.m
Fret admw1on
UBOOWHTOWH
Luncb &amp; Pane:l Di.scu.ssion :
Alternali\"H l.o l ncart"eratioA.
Paneltsl!i •nc lude : Supennten ·
dent or 1~ Ene County Holding
Cemer John J. Drdy, New Vorl
State Supreme Court Judge Barban Ho.,.,e, and Dt:put) Du~ct or
o r the Ene County Probatton
Depart ment M Mar8aret
O' Donnell . Chur• -s E Can. UB
Law Prof. Will moderate , H) all
Re8enc) Buffalo. Noon- l .lO
p.m. S I 0. S 12 Restn at1on.s AJe
requ1red. and rna) be made h)
coallint 829-2608
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Fashion Show: African Fashions. Educational Opponumt)

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Biographical Sketchn: of Afri -

Center . 465 wa ... htnf:IOn St. 6th

can Americans. Educat1onal
Opponunll) Center . 465 W a~h ­
ington St. 6lh Aoor Audllonum
F~e admiS!!.IOn. Call K49-()707

pm

ternoon of African Coutu~
with Fabrin: a nd St)les from
Kenya. ~ negal. Sierre U.One,
Zimba"' e, and othrr part.s of

Friday, February 24, 8:00 PM
UB Cmltr for 1ht Am

o.

Call849-6717 .

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Nu bian T runk Sho\o\ : An Af-

l'lu• BPO opnu II.) nt"w ~o n ct"rt S(' nt"!i .at UB Ctntcr for tht"
Ans. Th1s IS the fi~t of su. conccn s. s ponsort'd b) N ,Jt 1onal
Furl th:u w1ll bnng th(' BPO 10th(' Amhe-rst ;m·.1o.

Bach: Suit&lt; No. J
Berg: V iolin Concerto
Men~clssohn: Symphony

~~o"~::=n~m

Through the- Ages: A H i~"tory
of Song &amp; Daocr. Educatoonal
Opportunity Cc:mcr. 465 Wa!&lt;hmgton St 6th Aoor Aud1tonum .

angton St 61h Floor Aud1tonum
I 0 - 11 a.m. Frtt adm1sston

Africa. Educauonal Opportumty
Center. 465 W a~hinll-ton St bth
1-loor Audnonum. Call
&amp;49-6743 or &amp;49-6736.
COMPUTlNGi WORKSHOP
Jnt~rmf'dia t t VM . 9 a.m.·
Noon Call ~S-3540 for reg• s-

tratton mformat1on .

BLACK HISTORY MONTM

Bbck History J eopard y
Gamr:. Educational Opponunit~
Center . 465 Washington St. 6lh
Aoor Auditonum 10 a.m .- 2
p.m. Free admission. Call
849-6740.

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Qu ir./Game Sbow. Educational
Opponunit) Center, 465 Wash-

Guess Who's
Coming to Dinner
See Hepburn a~d Tracy
in thai famous film Feb .
22 in the Sludenl Union
Thejtter al 6:30 p.m.

Aoor Auduonum 12.30- 1 15
POLmCAL SCIENCE
COLLOQUIUM
t~o~ i gn Polic) l&gt;«hion Making, MaJor Rod ' "on Ltpscy. 425
Parl. Nonh Campo&gt; 12:30 p.m.

frec:JdtrU.ISJOD

BLACtl _.,_.,. ~
Skalina Porty. Sponsored by
the Black Student Union Thru way Mall Skateland. Sl Ute

rental : S4 entrance.

r£DIAntiC ...... _ , _

0..-dopmenlal Lunc Biolocl',
Jam1son Uwebup· Muk..tia.
M .D. Kmch Auditonum. 8 a m

8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Call 645· 296-1

p.m

ETHICS IN BIOMEDICAL
ltiEBEAJICII COLLOQURIM
Aalmal Raearc:b: Necasar}

n.. •...-rter ...,bltaN lhtille•

- TOin' MOHTII

lloskdboll T..........,.at. Spon-

sored by lhc: Nauonal Society of
Black Erigit\OeB.. AJumn1 ArerW
Tnple Gym. Nonh Campus

sransncs DEPART1HHT

Campu~ 4

IL's going LObe a joyful time in the Lord'
Come and see'

tiUCtl

CONDUCnNQ CONFEJIENCE

SOon) Broo• 106 Cat) Soulh

or Mdln S1 and
Nonh Forcso Bh·d l

{at Lhe co mer

17

DISCU._
Top Cun , M aJor Rod \ O R
L•pse:y. U.S .M C .• While House
Fellow 20 Knm. North Campus. 4pm
COUOQUIUII
EstiiiUiioo of • Survh-.1 Fuoc·
tioo with l nle:rval-Ce:MOI"ed
Doto. Dr Qoqing Yu, SUNY

Every Sunda)' at 6:30p.m
Unoverslly Prcsbylcna n Church

FRIDA Y

10 Humu Welfarr! A Debale:.

Ronald Alhson. M .D. and Dav1d
Tnggk, Ph.D Butler AudJtonum. Shennan . Sourh Campus
5. 15 -7 :15 p .m
UFE--

Fresb Start: How to Quit
Smoking. Power Ad,•ocates.
Nonh Campus 5 30-6:30 p m
Call645-6125 .
COMI'UTING WOIIIIS-

C ustom ir..al ioo of X-balsed
Ope11 WU.dows Envlroomeot.
6-8 p.m. Call 645-3540 f&lt;&gt;&lt; n:g ·
•&gt;tral1on anronnation
UUAB RLII SEIIIES

Whu Harry Mel Sally. Stu ·
dent Un1oo llleater. Nonh Campu' 6.30 p m S2. S3.SO. Call
645 -2957 .
UFE WDtlt(S-

TM Monl and Etbical Dimeo·
sions of l..eadership, PK&gt;tor
Roger Rurr and Fr Patnd
Keleher. North Campu.!&gt; 7 309 30 p m. Call 645-6125
IIOitTH AIIDIICAN NEW
MUSIC FUTIVAL
Ense:mble P«formanc-r, Tile
Nev. Vorl Mus1c Ensemble
Center ror the Arn Drama
Theatre:. Non:h Campu;. 8 p m
S5 . S7 Call 645 -ARTS

SUMMERfARE THEATER

Falsrttos. Pfe,rer lbeater 8
p m. SIO. Sl2. SIS Call
839-8540.
UUAB RL11 SEitiU
Speub~. Student Umon ~­

ater Nonh Campus . 9 p.m . S2.
S3.50. Call645-2957.

Tho Prepontioa or
Tomot"T'O" 's Conduct&amp;n.
Hamet Sunoas. orgaruza Baud

and Slcc: Halls North Campo!&gt;

--TOXJCCM.OeY,

~ALIIEALTH

Tbe Rc* o( Oioxio E.xposurrin '""

EtiolocY or Eado-

metriosis, Dtane Bofinger .

Ph D I 25 CFS Addmon Sooth
Campus 8:30a.m .

Ctllllf'tiTING-

lnlemet RtsOGrus-Plaas.
10 a.m .-Noon Call645-3540

for reg•sntaon mformaoon
Ctllllf'tiTINGl_n trodudioa to Madab. 1·3
p m. Call645-lS40 for rr:g1s1ra·
1100 mfonnallon .
IIOitTH AIIEIIICAN NEW
-ICFUTIVAL
N~ Chamber ldusic: Tb~
Role of Nnr Ttcbnolot:Y on
the- Ful u ~ Cond ucting,
Mor1on Subocn1ck. 2.SO BamJ
Nonh Campu&gt;. I p m.

or

COIII'UTEII SCIENCE
COLLOQUIUII
Gam~

Characterir.alions of

IA&amp;ic Program Proper1ies.
Howard Blau. Syncust Un"'
~ Knox Nonh Carnpu" l-4 IS
p m. Call645 -3180
ATHLETICS

Jrll-0 Wrestling. .\lumm
Arc:011 G) mnasllc-s. North U rn pus 6 :30-11 p.m
UUAB RLII SEittEr.

Speecbias. S1uden1 Umoo The aoer. onh Campus. 6 .:10 and 9
p.m . S2. S3.50. Call645-2957

BLACK IIISTOIIY IIOiml

Theatrical Performaatt: T" o
Trairu Run ning, Sarah Nor.st ·
Ptullips. du'CCtor, Lorna C H1ll.
anastac dan:ctor. Tbealert..ort .
545 Elmv.ood A'·e . 8 p m Sl2 .
SIS . Call883-0380.
IIOitTH AIIDUCAN NEW
JIIUSIC FUTIVAL
(UB Wind EDRm b~ Sarah L
M cKom. conductor: Dr. John
Paynter. guest conductor. Slec

�7

___,...,.___..,_17
Concen Hall. North Campus.
8 p.m. Free admission.

~y,
I'I.AY
Oleaa.DaA Power
David Mamet's play

·ng

Jim Francione and Mooica
Koskey. Centet for Lhe Aru,
Mainstage. No&lt;111 Campu . 8
p.m. Sl2. $16. Caii64S-ARTS .

-AilE 1'11Uftll

Fahettos. Pfeifer Theater. 8 p.m.
SIO, Sl2. SIS. Caii839-8S40.

UUUFILMSay Anyt ltin&amp;- Student Union

1beater. North Campus. II :30
p .m. S2. SJ.SO. Ca1164S -29S7 .

SATURDA Y

1
-

C ircle or Fa ltb- tbr Wnnb of
C h ief Suttle. Prr -~ormantt
talk. by Jamei VanDemark and
Allan Jamieson . Center for the
Ans . Nonh Campus. Call 829 2608 for mort infonnatton
AWMNIEYENT
Eagiaftn Nigbl a l ii&gt;&lt; Ba.ktl baU Game. Refreshments m the:
Bull Pon. Call 64S -2768.
WOllEN'S L.EADERSHIP

CONFEIIEJICE
Build in&amp; oa Our Lqac)': A
Vision for the Fu t u~ Rebecca
Walker, keynou: speaker, Tlurd
Wave Direct Action Corporation. Cali64S-612§ for mforma
lion and registratio n.
CONDUCnNG CONRRENCE
The Preparation of
Tom orTOw's Conducton,
Harriet Simons, organizer. Baird
and Slee Hall s. North Campus.
8:30 Lm .-S p.m. Caii64S -2964

SUMMEIIFAII£ THEAftll
Falsettos. Pfeifer Theater. 4
p.m. and 8 p.m. $10. Sl2. Sl S
Call 839-8S40.

WBFOHIGHUGKTS
NPR's BluesStagr.. WBFO 88 7
FM . 4 p.m.

WOllEN'S USKETIIAU.
Royals vs. \'ou ngsto"n Statt.
Alumni Arena. No rth Campu~
bp.m.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Tbr:atriul Prrformancr: Two
Trairu; Running, Sarah Norat·
Phillips, d irecto r: Lorna C Hall
aniMic director. Thc:atci"Loft.
S4S Elmwood Ave . 8 p.m SJ:!
~IS . Call 883.()380.
NORTH AMERICAN NEW

MUSIC F£SnVAI.
Songs a nd M usic f rom Tun itIsland : C ircle of Faith-thtWords o f Cbirf Seattle.
Allegany River Oancen. :md
Dan Hall . Cente,for the Art ~ .
Mamstage. North Campu!i.
8 p.m . S8. Sl 2 Call (&gt;.I S-ARTS
MEH' S B.UKET11AU.
BuUs vs. Youngslo"n Stat~
Alumm Arena. Nonh Campulo
s,15 p.m.

11r
ATHLETICS

YMC A District S" im C b am
p ionsbip. Alumni Arena Na1a
torium. Nonh Campu!&gt;. S a.m.
3 p.m.

WIIDTUNG
Bulls Yl. Hofstra. Alumm
Arena Mail\ Gym. North Cam
pus. I p.m.

-

==~
R eadia&amp;, Leslie: Fiedler. Ph .D

3n1 Aoor Rockwell Hall, Buf·
falo Stal&lt; College. 2 p.m. Call

North Campus. 6 :30-7:30 p.m.
Call 64S-612S.

878~S29.

UR-

- A l i i : 1'11Uftll

Ld'a Cd Crazy!, Brion
ScuddCT. North Campu, . 7-9
p.m . Coli64S-612S .

F~os.

Preifer Theater.
3 p.m . SlO, Sl2. SiS. Call
839-8540.

TIIE~TABU

COfRDICIUM
rop Dop aod Oluy M...._
Frec ooffee end free. mtthc.
H arriman HaJJ. South C.mpus.
8 p .m Caii64S-29S7 .

~--

c

-I'QTIVAL
Burrato Pbilbannoak On:heo1ro p.-..u Mlchaot
Ari.M, Maximiano Valdes, Music Oiredor, Jesse Levine.
Gues1 Conductor. VirJ,inia
Dupuy, Richard Este . Jean
Kopperud. James Winn, Joaquin
Valdcpel\as, Guest solo1m.
Center for the: Arts. Majnstagt..
North Campus. 4 p.m. S8. S 12.
Call 64S -ARTS.
III.ACK ~y _ . , .
Theatrical Pt:rf'Of"ID&amp;Dtt: Two

c...,....·

_ , CI.AUICS LME
Pi..a.oo, Sar-Sha1om Stron&amp;
Allen Hall. South Campus
7 p.m. free admiuwn.

Apple Prices

lllACa IUTOIIY _ . , .

DROPP'ED!

...........
"'"'aDdwaRt
Bftn
H~
Gonr:-N~

on..as"""

Otbtr
bnulas. WBFO
88.7- FM. 8 -p.m
M.M. -IIECITAL
Amy WiUiams. p iano, wltb

Performa 6115CD

J ooathao Co&amp;ovt:, cello, Will iams is I t:tudenl Of Prof.
Stephen Manes. Baird Rec1ta l
Hatl. Nonh Campu • 8 p.m.

W ED N E S D A Y

~~

Traias Running. Sarah Nora1 Philltps. di.~or. Lorna C. Hall.
an1stic director. llleaterLofl.

$2259

::::.:~w=Vampl.-..
Student Umon lbeater Nonh
Campu&gt; 9 p m S2. $3 SO Call

• 1s·.co1or Monitor

64S -29S7

• CO ROM

• 14.4 Data/Fax Modem
• Lots of Software!

T H URSD AY

=~·:::ious"- ~l

S45ElmwoodAvr. 6p.m Sl 2,
SIS . C a11883 .Q380.

60 MH1: ~ 801 ~Md proceuor, IUS RAM, 350MB
......
_ _ _ Sconl5'd_y._

s

Cha-

Erwm Segal . orgamz.er.

MONDAY

""-''IMACY SIEMINAlt
I D''eltipdng l br Novelty or
R tsplridone, Deborah Cleal)
2 48 Cooke. Nonh C ampu s. 8-9

~0

•

COIII'VTING WORKSHOP
Electronic m•ii/VMS. 10 am Noon C all 645 -3S40 for re gt~ ­
I rat.lon informahon
COIII'VTING WORKSHOP
NCSA Mouit on lhr Sun
'Worbtetion.
10 a.m -Noon
Cali 64S-3540 for regt ~trat1on
I nformauon

UFEWOIIKSHOP
\'our Po,.·cr 'eno.·ork- Tum
It On!, Gerald E. Murad •.
Cornell Umv. North C ampu)
6-8 p .m. Ca1164S-612S

ountEACH WORKSHOP
8«-oming a t..radr:r. Counsel ·
I ng Center. I45E Student Umon.
Nonh Campus. Noon-1 p.m

UFE WORitSHOP

So. .. You•rt Thinking of Taking a Crulst'! Barb H~s and
Patnce Mo m s. North
pus.

.

WEDNESOAYS AT 4l"WS
Ignoring Podry,"' MarleneNourbesc Philip. 438 C ltmen~
North Ca mpus. Noon.

6 :30-7 :30 p.m . Coli64S-61 2S
BLACK HISTOIIY

~

Speaker' Broth..- Dtlvid Ill X.
146 Diefendorf. South Campus.
7 p.m. Free adminKloo .

UFEWORKSHOP
Ballroom Dancing: S•·ing Into
Spring, Dr Ninua E.F Bo~u e
and Mr. BJo rn Bo gue North
4mpus . 7-8 p.m Ca 11 645-6125
for regts:tr.mo n mforrnnt1on

aLACK HISTORY MONTH
VIdeo Pruentation &amp; OiscU)·
sion: Jan Gd.s Blur Soul.
Educationa l Opponunll) Centcr .
465 Wa)hlngton St 1:! 30-1.30
p m Frtt admts~1on Call
8• 9-6132
ROSWEU PARk STAFF
SEMINAR
Molecular Mecbanis ms of
Apoptosis. Paul Anden.on
M D . Ph D Dana Farbc=1 C.:m
~.·er l n~lllute RPCI I :! 30 p m

UFEWOIIKSHOP
Countf') Western Dancing. Dr
Nimta E.F B og~ and Mr
Bjorn B~ve North Campu1o K9 15 p m Call bJ5-61 ! 5 fo1
regJs:trntion 1n forma uon

COMPUTING WORKSHOP
10~ 30 p m
Call 6-'5 -.1~ .1 0 for rephtr;JIIon
mfn nn:attnn

SA on Uni.\. I

GEOLOGY UCTURE
Somt' ThouRhb on Profh·
ltional Etbic~ in lndu.st~.
Acadt'mia. Hnd GoH•mmrnt.
Dr LarT) \\ nodforl.. \\'e,t \ '1rI ~ 1 01a Gc,,lug•cal &amp; Econn mtc
unt') 24i.:! C.ipen Nonh Cam pu' .'\ p m

T UESD AY

~1

I

PEDIATRtc CONFERENCE

Update-Thyroid DiM)rden in
Children, M3.rg.aret
MocGtlh\·r:ty, M D Merq Hth
p1tal Cafetonum A 8 :30a.m
COM~NG

WORKSHOP
Pin~ Mailu ro ... tbr s:unCiuster
(Un ix) . 10 a.m · oon and 3-.5
p.m Ca lll).15 -3 5.l0 for rel! l' trat1o n mfonnation.

.

BROWN BAG READING
SERIES
Wrd lock of the Gods. b) 7..ulu
So fol:. (Nil!C'na ). Centc1 for the
Arts. North Campo~. Nuon- 1 p.m
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Vid ~ P rrstntalion : Go Trllh
On t he Moun tain . Educational
Opportumty Center. 465 Wa~ h mgton St . 12:30- 1:30 p m Call
849-6721.
STAnST1CS OEPAJri'MENT
COlLOQUIUM
Estima tion for C u rrent Stat us
Data. Or. Anthony Rossini .
Penn State College of Medict nc .
106 Cary. South Campus,. 4 p.m.
COIII'VTING WORKSHOP
Unix Introduction. 4·-6:30 p .m.
Call 64S-3.540 for regisuation
information.
UFEWORKSHOP
~arn About Anorexia and
Bulimia. Debbie Abrumow)ki .

UNOE S£MINAlt SERIES
[\olulion of Mrmbrant' Trch noiOR.' Separation. Ra' 1
Pr.i~d . Pr:ai.:ur. Inc :!06 Fum.i'&gt;
Non h Campu' ) J ~ p m
BIOPHYSICAL SCIENCES
UCTURE
S"t&gt;lling and Dt&gt;gradation of
Cerlilagr-An NMR Approach, Or K.l ::~ u ~ Arno ld .
Unl\ of l..e1pz1g 106 Ca~
Suuth Campu' J p.m
PHILOSOPHY LECTURE
Can Thtre lk Ot&gt;finiti\e l nlrl"preta t io n ~ 1 Jorge Gr.ina bSJ
Baldy. onh C.unpu ... J p m

WEDNESDAYS AT 4 PWS
PMII")' end P rost" Read in~.
Funn) Ho\l.t and M :a rlcn~.·
Nourbcsc Phdtp. Center for tht"
Arb l&gt;C'rttnlnF- room Nnnh
Campus. J p.m
PHARMACY SEMINAR
Valprok Acid for the Treatmt nt or M a n k Drpression,
Jame' Na\l.•:an.kas. 2J8 Cooke
Nonh Ca mpu~ . .1 .:\0 -5 .30 p m.
UUU FILM SERIES
G ur:ss Who's Coming to Di n·
ner . Student Union Theater
North Cnmpus . 6 :30p.m . S ~.
SJ.SO. Call t).IS-2957 .

UFE WORttSHOP
Homropathy: Medtciue for the
U st C enlury, Jan Wolfenberg .
Nonh Campus. 7- 10 p .m . Call
t).IS-612S.
I

-==___;:::.__ __ _ __

AWMNIEVENT
G,..duate Mbool Alumni A~ ­
soeiation Annuel Dinner:
Wine Tastinc end Italian Cui)ine. Oaffochls Restaurant \25 .
S30 0.11645· 249 1

. . _, b u i t l - l n E - - I - 1 4 _ T . . . . . . . , . . _ I
Fu~Uodrwn, Syatem 7.5, •Wcwtd, AI EaH and MKI'**' PC
&amp;c:Nr.v-, Up to O.t~ o.taWOtttl 2.1 , OukUn 4,
Mo&lt;Gall«y Cli1&gt; Art, Spin OociOf
lolacUnl&lt; l'tuoiEny
Open Tran ...t0f11 7.S, aick Art Pltl"fotma Col*=tion, ~
Hertttga Ok:tior\llry, Spec:trll a.n.ngw F.mhy Ooecor. Around the

I
1

Woftd In 10 dllys.. tMw Groliet'a Mutllrnedlll Encyc~ . 30
Worid Attas. nme Almanac. KldSof'l CO.

Power Macintosh 6100

$1204

INSTJTUTE FOtt ADOtCT10N ,
STUOIES AND ntAJNING
Engaging the Latino Client In
Efferthe Akohol &amp; Otbrr
Drug Trutmrnl. John TOI'Tt'~
Ctntr:r for Tomorrow North
Ca mpu; \ 1~0 fc:c Call
645-bl-10
MEN' S SWIMMING
Mid-Coatinut Champion ships. Alumm Arena Natato·
num. Non h Campus. A ll da)
WOMEII'S SWIMMING
Mid-Continent Championships. Al umm Arcna Natato·
rillm Nonh Campu'&gt; All da)
EXHIBIT
Tht ~nior Sbo" {through
Marrb 9 ) o\n opemn{! recrpt1o n
~,~..,u he helu '\ -7_30 p m An
Dt-p::mmr-nl G;dlc:f) 1'\o rth
c .~m ru ) l il a m "i p m T Ut' \ d a ~ _ Ill J. m -I$ p m Wedne'&gt;da ) ·
Fnda~ 11 t1 m -8 p m Sat u rd.i~
C all bJ5-6t(78
SLAC K HISTORY MONTH
\ ' ideo Prrwntation &amp;: Discu~ ­
~ion : Blad. Music and thr Recordin~ lndustf')-Rh)1hm &amp;.
Blun. Educauon-al Oppon unll)
C'ent~·r .165 \\' a.:.h•n{! tOn St
1~ '0· 1 '\0 f" m Fm:- 3dm•~" un

Call S-19-673 2
COMPUTING WORKSHOP
lntt&gt;nnrdialt&gt; Sun Unix-Em ironme-nt Customizalion . ~-1
p m. Cull b-15 -35JO lor re~"tr.s·
ll( ' n mfunnat1on
COMPunNG WORKSHOP
Supen:omputer Q,enint. ~-.I
p m Ca116J5 - 35~ fnr re~ l , trD ­
tlo n mform.ihon

UFEWORKSHOP
l..,a)ting Memorie. : Retrntion
for Acadr.mic' EAc:ellrnct,
Bruce Cr.smer Nonh Campu)
.l . J IS Jl m Cal11).15-6125
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR
H~stt'rrsis Minimiz.alion b)
\Stem Analysi5 Approach: Is
it. \'alid:' M ... Hu1-Chong Ko
('50~ CooLe Non h Campu ...
) .\O p m

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
SEMINAR
The Drosophilia Gq alpha
Subunit: A Kry Compone-nt in
tbr Visual Transduction Cascade, Dr i)a, 1d 1-i) de. Um' of
Nntn: D:une . II ..I Hocho;;;tc-ncr
N.... nh C ompu!&lt;o . 4 p.m

MA TM COIJ.OQUIUM
Non-Linear PDE's a nd Financial De:rinth·a, Prof Marco
A \cll:.ncd::. . YU . 103
D1efendorf South C:unpu~. J p.m.
NUTRrTIOII SEMINAR SERIES
Nut rition a nd Pa tients with
Cystic Fibrosis. Dr. Orucy S .
Borowitz. Children ' "' Hol&gt;pital
306 ParLer. South Ca mpu ~
.1 -5 p.m.

•

Store Houra:

A non-profit IJnivefsif&gt;

P'0(1rOfTI for #I.Jdenf&gt; focutry 6 staff
The Commons • NOfth Compus • (716) 6C.5·35S. • fox : 6ol5·3&amp;&amp;t

Interdisciplinary
Views of the Net
New - . - - . of ~ on lhe
Internet are always welcome even lor experienced Cybemauts. Beyond books and workshops-and the tmernet ilseH of C91JrS&amp;-&lt;:&gt;Iher
opportunllteS for
I II Cl H&lt;&gt;NI&lt;
advancing Internet
expertise do occasionally occur
t:::J
One such event is
Convergence
of Science and the Humanities Internet Technologies and Scholarly Resources." a one-day
conference sponsored by I?UNY's Conversations 1n the Disciplines Prfgram with support
from UB's University Ubraries and Computing
and lnlormabon Technology. Academic SerVIces Division.
The Internet's 1mpact
scholarly research
and communication IS Jhe ubject of Jhls program, which bnngs Jogelhel=a
group of people
1nvolved in apply1ng lnlernet
nologoes and
resources to stud1es 1n the hu
ities. social
sciences. arts and letters, and lhe sciences.
Speakers include Postmodem CuJrure editor
John Unsworth. hnguist Susan Herring. poet
and critic Charles Bernstein, and mathemalician Neil Calkin.
The conference. which w1ll Jake place on
Friday, March 24, from 8.30 a.m. 10 4:30p.m .
a1 the Buffalo Marriott, will also include a Mosaic demonstration and presentations on
lnJernel radio, art and music as well as an
Electronic Poelry Center readirlg .

HiGH

·rhe

To registef for the conference contact
the Offl08 of Conferences and Sponsored
Events at 645-2CJ1a For more information on
the confefence, contact Nancy Schiller,
schiJierOacsu.buffaJo.edu (645-2946) or Loss
Glazief at loJpoetOacsu.bu!faJo.edu.
-Getrma DeV".mey and L05S AIQuello GlaDe&lt;•
Lockwoodl..lbrary

Conttnued on page 8

\\~)S

�••

_.._ .... _..,_17

CALENDAR
continued from page 7

I-~lUll
1I ICS .. ·-ALo.-

Wcdnc&lt;day-SaiUrday aod
N0011-S p.m. Sunday. Call
645.{;912.

rommiued to drawiftJ altention
10 the prob&amp;em of tcxual vto.
lence. Trainina about sexual
viclimir.atioo is: provided by a
volun~«r s:peaken bureau.

Runs through July 31 in lhe

CORSA 's programs reach com·
munity orpnilltiona.agencies.

Elbi&lt;o ol Exporialealal
§i&amp;ll, Dota
aad

Mauco-••
Aulysls, Elaine Hull. Ph.D .•

Lightwell Gallery. This site·
c:oowuctioo explores the intercoanections betW«n an and

Bruce Holm. Ph.D., Linda
Duffy. Ph.D. Butler Auditorium. Shennan. Soolh Campus.
5:1S-7: 1S p.m.

an:hiteaurt:. Admission is free.
Gallery houn are 10:30 a.m.-8
p.m. Wednesdly-Saturd.ay and
Noon-S p.m. Sunday. Call

UR-

645.{;912.

to loc•l high schools: training is

SOUND INSTAUA11DM:

,

Frub Start: How to Quit
mokioc, Power Advocates.
mfonnation.

BralbiHS (sublit.IH'). Student
Union Tbeater. North Campus.

6:30 p.m. S2. S3.50. Call
645· 2957.

Smith for ilS ..500lhiftJ, accumulating, almost hypnotic effect that heightens the act of
perception.- Oppenheim's recorded \'oiCC, repeating a sooth ing chant based on the chOf\ls

URWHalb.ll Yop: A.o Introduction, Paula Schank. North
Campus. 7-9 p.m. Call

~:~~Eib. Di·
mensions of Leade
tor Roger Ru(

ip, Pas-

of Brian Wilson's song, ""Sail
Do.
produa:s • piOYOal·

Sailor.-

. bve sound sculpiUJ'e. 1be uhibi1
contmuc:s through Feb. 25.

r. Patrick

Keleher. North CAmpus. 7:3Q...
9:30p.m. Caii64S-{;12S.

NOTICES

·LACI(~~

Tbatric:al Pt:rform.aMe.: ~ o
T,..ins Run.a.iq, Sanh Norat-

ATnl: FACULTY EDITDitS
In an efTon to keep pact w1th
new forms of jounutl publica-

Phitlips. director. Lorna C. Hill.

a11istic director. TheaterLort,
S4S Elmwood Ave. 8 p.m. S 12.
SIS. Call883.0380.

tion, the University Li"'raries
Hb faculry memOO:~o who
serve as journal eduors or ed• tonal boArd members to send
their names 10: Barbara \'On
W•hlde. Universily Librane ~.
Office of the Director, 432
Capen. Box 601625 . Buffalo.
N. Y. I426()..J625 . A stnesof
meetings bttwe&lt;"n mdn 1duals
In' ol\'ed in journal publica11on.
policy. and de-\ elop~nt and
lhe Lab~nes 1s planned to
broaden the L1branes' undel ·
standin~ of hov. JOUrnal :.dnon.
worl. as v. ell a!. enhance t~
editors· unders:tand1ng of t~
Ubrsnes ' needs and concern~ .
The un.on of these 1v. o group)
Y.all U) to mnuence future JOurnal pubhcat1on !rend~ and ck velopments ror the benefit of
!teholarly commun1cauon

Wd FILM SEitiES
lnte~w

With t.M Vampire.

Srudc:nt Union lllc:ater. Non.h

Campus. 9 p.m. S2. S3.50. Call
645-2957.

EXHIBITS
111M IIUMSEY WINNERS
Todd James Mariani and BenJamin Pond will e~~:hibnthc!ir
v.•ork through Feb. 17 in 1M An
Deparunent Gallery. Gallery
houn art: 10 a.m -5 p m Tuesday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednes day-Friday, and II a.m.-8 p.m.

Saturday. Call645-6878.
1H5 IIUMSEY CANDIDATES
An uhibil of 1995 Ru~y
candidates' work rontmucs
through Feb. 22 m the An Gallery (Second Aoor). Gallery
houn; are 10:30 a.m.-S p.m.

CDRSA VOWNTEEJI
SPEAKERS N£ED£D
CORSA. the Citizens Commut~

on Rape. Su.ual As!'o.auh

and Sexual Abuse, lnc ..

l'&gt;

a

not-ror·proftt organir..ation

C

H

0

I

CI

Conductl.., conr- ......

S

today

Break OUI those batons! The fifth
biannual conferen&lt;2 on teaching
conducting begins loday in Baird
and Slee Halls.
"The Preparation of Tomtlfrow's
Conductors,· a SUNY Cooference in
lhe DiSCiplines, will be held Feb. 16-18
and features conductors from colleges
and universities throughout lhe United States.
John P. Paynter, director of bends and professor
of conducting al Northwestern University, wiU discuss
"Teaching from lhe Podium· 813 p .m. today. Fonner
editor of lhe "New Music" column in Instrumentalist
magazine, he is an active compose&lt; and arranger
wilh more !han 400 worlts to his credit.
Considered one of !he leading
band conductors in America.
Paynter has been honored by
societies lhet include Pi Kappa
Lambda. Phi Ela Sigma. Tri-M
Modem Music Masters. Phi Bata
Mu, Kappa Kappa Psi, Illinois
Music Educators. Jolln Phmp
Sousa Foundation, National Band
Association, School Musician,
Instrumentalist. and lhe National
Association ol Music Clubs. .
In 1987. Paynter was one of the Inaugural recipi·
ents of the Northwestem University Alumni Associa·
lion Excellence in Teaching Award. and in 1992.
received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from DePaul University.
The Preparation of Tomorrow·s Conductors V Is
organized by Harriet Simons. director of lhe UB choir
and chorus and 111180Ciate chair of the Music Depart·
ment.
'
For more lnlonnation on lhe conference. call 645-

2921 .

--..

uuh. Students are needed 10
ptnenl prograrru on date rape

...

..-._11DM

sound and musk •~ they relate
to pc.nonal memories and expe rience. In Gallery I of the Cen ter for the Ans, she presents a
sound installation cited by New
York Times art critic Robena

Wd FILM SEitiES

education, CORSA advocates
dlt prevention or sex·ualas·

provided. Call 858· 7878.

-Kristin Oppenheim
Cll't'DIIIDM
IR\'Cstlgates

North Campus. 5:3().6:30 p.m.
CaJI645-6125 for reJ-hlratioa

busineues.. 5ef'Vice clubs and

schoob. Through community

TEC~Y

llus intcnctive introduction to
information technolo&amp;,y at UB
will be bcld 8:45 a.m.-4:45
p.m Thursday· Friday, Feb. 1617 1n the Center for Tomorrow.
The Information Technology
Fau offers demonstrations.
presentations and panel discusions on IT and rel•tcd sub,tects. No registration is neces·
sary. With the exttption of
keynote addresses, same pro·
g.r&amp;O}S are prese.nled both days.

f'LANS-..wt.Y-UOUP

1be newly·fonncd Lesbian •nd
Gay Faculty-Staff Association
seeks to raise awareness of gay
and lesbian concerns in the
uni\'C:f'lilty community . It aims
to create a supportive campus
environment that recognizes the
contributions of its k:sbian.
gay. and bisexual memben..
The group encourages suppon

for research and scholarly d•s·
cusston of gay and lesbian topICS The LGFSA m«ls monthJ)
10 diSCUSS the UOIVC:f"Sit)' Chmate
for gay.lesbian. and bise.lual
employees. Call 645 ~ 2546 for
more mfonnat1on. or E·ma•l
ulcug @ubvm.cc.buff• lo.edu
~ AMBICAN NEW
) MUSIC FUnVAL
Tile Nonh Amencan Nev. Mu ~·c Fest1 val opened Feb. 10111
the Center for the Arb The
ten-dn) fest l\·al feature~ pmgram"' 10\0iving Nall\C Amen·
can danccn.. perfonnantt an1s1
Rande Ecl:en. and ZodJaque
Dance Compan) among: tht
mus1cal ensembles and J!UCM
composers. Ched the calendar
ror mdl\ •dual performance~ or

ca11645-ARTS
MENSA TESnNG SESSION
Tile adm.JSStOn test for MENSA .
the H1gh I.Q. SoCICt) . Y.lll be
held Saturda). Feb 18 at I p m
an 208 Butler Labrarv. Buffalo
State College. 1300 ·Elmwood
Ave Thrff \lnll be a S25 fee
~regtslr.UJon IS appreciated.
call 632-8959 for an fonna11o n

JOBS
FACULTY
A.!iSOCiatr(Full Professor·Dept
or Patholog}. Po)&gt;tmg WF-500J
Assistaot/Associatr!full Profrssor (th l"ft positions a\•ail·
ab leH&gt;ep~ . of Patholog;. Po ... l mg MF-5005. Instruct or/
Assist.nt/A5sociate Professor
(tbrH positions availablt)·
Depl. of Emergency Mechcmc.
Posung NF-5006.
RESIEAIICH
Field Tracer-Psycholog)'.
P01&gt;11ng IIR·9.S007. Research
Support pedalist-Oral btology. Posung I!'R -95013. Secre-

tary Ill -Center for Applied
Public Affatrs

Studic~.

Postmg:

•R -95014.
PROFUSIONAL

Computer Net"ork Managu
(SL-l)·Univcrslt) Pubh at1on~.

Posung tP-4110 Cata log
Technician (SL-l)·L.aY. La brnry. Posting NP-500 1. Assistant Dean, Caret.r Oevr lop--

mrnt Services (SL-S, Intrrnal
Promotional Opportun ity)·
School of Management. Pm.ting

iiP·S006.
LAIIDR CLASSIFIED CIVIL
SERVICE
C le•oer (SG-S)-Uni\'ers•ty
Facilities. Line 1131597. Pla nt
Utiljtles Helptr (SC~·Uni ­
versily Facilities. Line 4'43145 .

To obtain

mor~

information on

jobs listed abo\•t&gt;, contact Pusonnel Sen•ius, 104 Crofts
Hall.

Leadership conference Saturday
will focus on women's issues
B WILL PRESENT a leadership
conference for women ... Building
on Our Legacy: A Vision for the
Future.. on Saturday. Feb. 18 in the
Student Union. The all -day conference will
cover women's history and the issues affecting women on campus and in their careers.
Focus will be on lhree major areas. lead·
ership. women's issues and women·s hislory. Among topics lobe covered are juggling
multiple roles. being a change agent heallh
care issues. harassment, feminism in the
2lsl cen!Ury. marketing your leader.;hip ex·
perience. asseniveness and self-esteem. risk
taking. motivation. women of color and
women as leaders.
Keynote speaker for !he conference is
Rebecca Walker. founderoflhe Third Wave
Direct Action Corporation. a national non~
profit organization devoted to cultivating
young women's leadership and activism .
Considered one of the most audible voices
of the young women 's movement and recently named by Time Magazine as one of
the 50 Future Leader.; of America. Walker
speaks on young women ' s leadersh1p and

the Third Wave of Femjnism a1 colleges and
conferences acros the U.S. and Canada.
Walker was born in Jackson. Miss., to an
inlerracial couple who married in defiance of
anli·miscegenalion laws. She was raised 10
San Francisco and New York City and al·
tended Yale Univer.;ily. where she graduated
cum laude in 1992.
A writer and contnbuung editor to M s.
Magazine since 198Q. Waller has also been
published in Haq&gt;er"s. Tile New York Daily
News and Tile Blacl Scholar.· Her writing
discusses such issues as rcproducuve freedom. domestic vtOiencc:. sexuality and civil
rights.
Sponsors of 1he conference are Division
of Student Affair.; Office of Student Life.
Student Association. SA Women 's Coordinator and Council for People of Color.
Tile agenda includesedlibios and resou=
tables. an address by Walker on .. Becoming
the Third Wave:· a luncheon. legislative update and a panel of menton discussing .. Re·
nections on Leader.;htp:·
For more information. call lhe Office of
Studenl Life a! 645-237 1

Honors for fqculty inventors

UB tacutty membe wbo have obtained patenta for new Inventions were honored at • reception hek1 Feb. 13 In the Center for Tomonow. From I~ D•Je Landi, David D' Andrea, Ull8n
Pauole . Robert C.tlpovk:, H&lt;&gt;Uun&amp; Func, Jerome Schenbte, Yonc-CI!ul Shin, John A. Boue&lt;,
Romollncam Srldor, Nady E. Nody-Molwned, Seokln Kim, Tlmotlly Murplly, Naldu C. R.
BoeJnert, Robert C. Oe.arstyne, Ablr Mulltck, Richard K. Fenrtch •nd Rocer W. Mayne.

By USA WILEY
News Bureau Staff

T

WEL VE INVENTORS on !he UB
facuh) "'ere honored at a recep1ion
Feb. 13m the: CenterforTomorrow.
Senior Vice Pro\'OSt Kenneth Le\ y
preo;.ented the a\l.ard~ to the facully mem·
ber~ . recognizin~ the1r achle,emenlf&gt; a .. m-

ventorsofpatentedde,ice'.t. matenaJ '\ordrug\.

The mventor'; arc author\ or co-authors
of II United State!!. pateno. that were re·
ee l\ ed m 1994. according to Kathleen R.
TeiT). direcloroflechnology transfer a1 UB .
In some cases. she noted. the UB faculty
members "''ere co-in' en tors with colleagues
employed by area companies. ··1 am particularly pleased:· Terry added ...wi!h the number of patents that have been receivedjoinlly
w1th companies in Western New York."
The UB faculty member.; are:
• Yong.Chul Shin, a research sciemisl
and project manager in the Center of Excellence for Document Analysis and Recognition (CEDA R). and Ramalingam Sridhar.
associate professor of electrical and com·
puler engineering. inventors of a basic-syn~
ap~e chip design with novel four-quadrant
operation. Seokjin Kim and Naidu C. R.
Bogineni were co. inventors.
Sridhar and Shin also were recognized
for inventing a specialized computer-chip
t mplementation for character recognition and
other general applications.
• Roger W. Mayne., professor of me·
chanica! and aerospace engineering, inven·
lor of a co-located · piezoelectric sensor/
actua1or for detecting stressor strain in a structure. Co-inventors were Jeffrey Dosch and
Daniel Inman. a former UB faculty member.
• Wayne K. Anderson, professor of
medicinal chemistry. inventor of a drug use-

ful as a fungtcade. bacterictdeand as a growth
mhibitor for sohd-tumor cancer.
• Abir Mullick, as&gt;istanl professor of
architecture. imentor of a sli ng apparatus
u"'ful for oran&gt;portong the mobdioy.-disadvanoaged into and out of bed. Robect C.
Deanayne wali 1he co- mventor.
• Sargur N. Srihari1 professor of com~
puter science and director ofCEDAR. inven~
tor of a computer algorithm that allows
machine~ to ..read"' human handwntmg. Ri~
chard K. Fenrich "as the co-inventor.
• Nady E. Nady·Mohamed. clinical as·
sistant instructor of gynecolpgy and obstetrics. inventor of a medical delvice designed to
provide shielding and/or gripping means during abdominal surgery.
• Joseph C. Molleodorf, professor of
mechanical and aerospace f,llgineering. in·
venlor of a neck brace that i aesthetically
pleasing. Robert M. Catipovic iiDd Lilian A.
Pascale were co-inventors.
•TimotbyF.Murpby.professorofmedi·
cine and microbiology. inventor of a vaccine
10 prevent ear infections in children. Michael
A. Apicella. a former UB faculty member.
was co-inventor.
• Jerome J. Scbentag. professor of
pharmaceutics, inventor of a computer-controlled "smart pitt:· which can be electroni·
cally !racked and inslnlcted to deliver a drug
loa predetermined location in the gastroinlesti·
naloraco. David T. D. Andrea was co-inventor.
• Ho-Leuog Fung. professor and chair of
pharmaceutics. and John A. Bauer. research
assistant professor of phannaceutics. invcn·
tors of a drug thai can be used in place of
nitroglycerin for cardiovascular treatments.
The drug's improvement over nitroglycerin
is lhal patients do no! develop tolerance or
experience headaches.

�9

Real weapons, not TV guns, cause violence,UB study says
By SUE WUE'ICHEII
News Bureau Staff

C

ONGRESSIONALpressureon
the television networks to tone
down violence is an ..easy fix"'
that ignores other. more perti·
nent social problems tbat con·

tribute to violence iO society, a UB researcher

contends.
··t don't think the answer lies in cleaning
up television."' says Mary Cassata. UB pro·
fessor of communication. "'I think it's the
horoelessness. the guns that are out there; the
people who are shooting each other are not
watching TV .

"Blaming the violence
on television for the
violence in society is an\
easyfix. There are mon/
important things to clean
up-more important
social problems-than
television. "
MARY CASSATA

·~Blaming the violence on television for
the violence in society is an easy fix.·· Cassata

says. "'!'here are more important things to
clean up-more important social problemsthan television.''
Cassata and colleague Barbar.d . Irwin of
the Department of Communication Studies
at Canisius College voiced thiS viewpoint in
a paper that was presented last fall at the

International Conference on Violence in the
Media. sponsored by St. John's University
and held at the New York Hilton at
Rockefeller Center.

The paper. which Cassata says ta~e s a
viewpoint that is the opposite of that of many
attending the conference, outlined a case
study of the 1977 trial of Ronny Zamora. a
then-15 -year-&lt;&gt;ld boy charged with murder·
ing his elderly next-door neighbor.
. The Zamora case-the first in which a
defense lawyer contended that his client was
not responsible for his actions because he
watched television-brought to the forefror.t
the question of the effects of televi sion '·iolence on subsequent behavior.
The trial attracted worldwide auention
and was televised under Florida's then-ex-

perimental mandate to use televi sion in the
counroom.

I

n preparing their case study. Cassata
and Irw in cons1dered previous research
on televi sion violence. an extens1ve exami nation and evaJuauon of v. itnesses· deposiuons. courtroom transcripts. offic1al pollee
records. psychiatri sts ' report s and exu~ns1ve
conversations with Elhs Rubin . Zamora's
auomey.
''This (Zamora case) JS the class1c example of the scapegoating of the media by
exaggerating Lhear innuence and masking
the real causes for violence m society."
Cassata and Irwin assert ...The defense placed
100 much emphasts on lelevasion as a cauu.
rather than as a conrnbu1ing facfflr. among

many otheno ...
Zamora had psychiatric problems.Cas""ta
says. noting that he came from a dysfunctional family in which his steprather beat
him and treated him differently from the
other children in the house. In addition.
Zamora blamed himself for th&lt; drowning
death of a friend.
Asayoungchild.Zamonthadbeenparl&lt;ed
in front of lhe: telev1sion while his parents,
who could not afford dOy care. wori&lt;e&lt;l As
he grew up. the boy contmued to watch
inordinate: amount of relevis1on-action/
detective shows were his favorit.e~o escape from his home life.
Rubin contended that Zamora ·~was suffering from and acted under the mOuence of
prolonged. intense. mvoluntary. sublimmal
televi sion intoxJcarion Through l.he cxcc~­
she and long-continued use of this mtOXIcanl. a menial conduion of msanuy .... as
produced··
The JUry d1d not bu) the argument. and
Zamora ~as sent to pnson.
Cass.aUJ agrees that televtS IOn djd not cause
the crime.
" It v.asn't 1elev1s1on that shot Mrs .
Haggart Ronny shot her because of his
mental problems:· she says "Television
was not to blame If the right defense had
been used. I" Ronn ) had been given (psychia tric ) help. thtngs mtght have turned out
drfferentl) ··
However. Cassata and lrwm. who al so
have been chronicling instances of violence
tn daytame telev1sion. ackno"" ledge that '1.ele\ &amp;sion rna) have sustamed Ronny m hb
estrangement from the mamstream of Ameri ~
can life."
The researchers suggest that the mediapanicularly teieviston-can play a positive
role by educatmg the public about guns.
alcohol and drugs. and thetr relation to violence.

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"Did you know we do poster titles?"

�__,...._.___..,_17
H 0 N 0 R S
PHARMACEUTICS

.._.,.............

to IISCEIW AI'A AWUIO:
professor of pharmaceutics
at UB, will receive the Stimulation of Research Award
from the
American
Pharmaceutical Association at the
association's

annual meeting next
month.
The award
recognizes outstanding
achievement in stimulating
others to engage and excel
in pharmaceutical research .
Scllentag, a
ber of
the UB faculty s·
1976, is
the director of the B Center for Clinical
Research afid the doctoral
program in pharmacy. He
also d irects the Clinical
Pharmacokinetics Laboratory at Millard Fillmo&lt;e Hospital-Gates Circle.
He co-invented the "Sman
Pill." a drug-delivery system
designed to carry a medical
payload to a specifiC site in
the gastrointestinal tract

An~n

s

Rural areas no sanctuary against violence
ar LOIS IIAIIDI
News Bureau Staff
HOME in the country
apparently offers no
sanctuary from physical and sexual violence
for rural women.
Re searc hers at US ' s Rural
Health Care Campus in Cuba. N.Y..
found that 40 percent of 120 pregnant patient who came to their
clinic for treatment said they had at
some time experienced physicator
sexual abuse. Moreover. only seven
women had followed up and taken
any legal action.
'This study indicates that violence against womeh occurs as often in a rural population as it does
in urban areas. and little is done
about it," said Geoffrey Markowski. UB clint assistant professor
of family me4i.:me and director of
the rural clinic. He conducted the
study with Patricia Krebs. a fourthyear UB medical st uden t.

A

Pregnant women wen: chosen
for the study, Markowski said, because they are generally healthy.
have few additional medical prol&gt;lem and come to the clinic regularly . The women ranged in age
from 14-39 years. and all had ad dresses wiah ruraJ zip codes.
Interview were conducted in
person. out of earshot of the physician. and were not part ofahe medical examination.
The data re•·ealed that:
• I 3-15 percent of the women
reported being raped. using the traditional definition-the use of
physical force to accomplish penile penetration.
• 20-28 percent reported being
raped under a broader definition
that included date rape, being incapacitated due to alcohol or drugs
and being threatened with physical
abuse.
• Sexual assaults on women in
rural areas are more likely to lead

to completed acts of rape rather
than to lesser acts, such as un wanted touching or fondling.
• t 7 percent ofthe women who
reported being raped said they haa
attempted suicide.
Result frommterviewswiththe
first 60 women in the study were
presented at the 46th Annual SCIentific Assembly of the American
Academy of Family Physicians.
where Krebs won first place among
medical students for original student
research. The study was reported m
ATMricm1 Family Physician.
Another 60 women have since
been interviewed, Markowski sard,
with nearly identical results. " I
think these findings arc quite startling," he said. "We tend to thmk of
rurallif&lt; as trdflquil and peaceful.
This is not the case for man y
women
He suggested th~ po sible ••·enuesof research to identify causes
of physical and sexual violence :

• Alcohol abuse among rural
men: Many of the incidents were
alcohol related.
• Cultural attitudes : ~ women
more likely to be considered secondclass citizens in rurnJ aetas?
• Geography: There are few
public places m rural aru.s and
homes are oflen far apart. Is this
isolauonleavingwomenatthemercy
of perpetratOrs. who tend to be family members or acquaint.anoes?
Ph) s1cians can play an important role in intenupting violence
against rural women. Markowski
.aid. One Signal that abuse may
have occurred is an increase in
chronic complaints. such as backaches. pelvic parn and depression.
h&lt; noted.
''These complarnts are often dismissed." he sa1d. ··Problems are not
identifiedsoonenough. Women who
fit this profile should be asked about
physical or sexuaJ violence and
treated accordingly."

MEDICINE

VICE.._,.OF

PIIORSS-'U. SOCIEYY:
. , _ P. llunllck, clin~
cal instructor in anesthesiology a! UB, was installed last
month as vice president of
the New Yorl&lt; State Society
of Anesthesiologists
(NYSSA) at the 48th Postgraduate Assembly in Anes-

thesiology. Involved in the
NYSSA for almost 20 years,
he is a former district director and serves as chair of
the anesthesia care team
committee.
Burdick, a graduate of the
UB School of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences, is
director of anesthesia ser •
vices at Millard Fillmo&lt;e
Suburban Hospital. A diplomate of the American Board
of Anesthesiology. he serves
on the board of the OffiCe of
Professional Medical Conduct. New Yor!&lt; State Department of Health.

-E:

CHAIR OF NATIONAL

John Feather, execUitve

director of the Primary Care
Resource Center 1n the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, will
chair the National Pressure Ulcer
AdVISOry
Panel's
Fourth National Conference this
month in Washington, D.C.
The panel's biannual conferences have developed
much of the primary literature on pressure-ulcer inci·
dance. prevalence and cost.
and have been the basis for
significant research .
One of its founding ~
bers, Feather has completed a seven-year term on the
national panel, a non-profit
organization headquanered
at UB. He joined the UB faculty as a professor of sociology in 1978. He previously
served as coordinator of geriatric nesearch in the I"'"'"....,..._~ I

of GeriatricsiGero in
the UB medical school.

DNA te~t aids research on periodontal disease
11J MAllY aElH SPINA
News Bureau Staff

D

ENTAL researchers at
UB are being aided in
the fight against periodontaldisease by DNA
test results. which are more frequently being used as evidence in
criminal .and paternity cases.
Researchers are using the DNA
RFLP ( Re stric t ion Fragment
Length Polymorphism) test to pin·
point cenain strains of bacteria
present in the oral cavities of patients with periodontitis and some
of their family members.

''To more efTectjvely i"reat the
patient, it may be necessary to prescribe prophylactic antibiotics for
all family members who are infected , even lhough they may not
have periodontitis," says Joseph
Zambon.UB professor of oral biology and periodontology.
'The bacteria that cause pen odontal disease don't appear to be
contagious. but they may be transmissible beaween people tn very
close contact such as family members." he says.
A UB pilot study of 15 famihes.
reponed in Comp~ndwm nf Con-

rinuing Education in Denrisrry,
suggests that the pathogenic bacteria imp I icated in a patient· s disease
should be eliminated in all family
members , using specific antibiotics on a shon-tenn basis.
In the study, Zambon and his
colleagues used the DNA RFLP
test to identify strains of certain
bacteria within the oral cavity of
the patients and their families .
The UB team found that parents
and children often share the same
k.inds of periodontal pathogen.
Several families are currently
bemg treated with short-term antibi -

otic therapy to eliminate the infection from the entire family, as well as
the patient with periodontal disease:
Teenagers and adults with the
culprit organism are given 250mg.
of tetracycline four times a day for
two to three weeks.
Children m the household who
harborthe specific organism found
in the patient receive penicillin.
Zambon: UB clinical insuuctor
Violet Haraszthy and researchers
at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill are conducting a more
extensive family study to verify
th&lt; results of the pilot study.

Baby knows his name-even at 4 72 months
ay

SUE WUETCHER

News Bureau Stafl

I

NFANTS AS young as 4- 112
months can recogmze their
own names. e'•en picking them
out from similar-sounding
name!ll. UB psychologists have
found .

Research pre~ented 10 June at
the Acou!lltical Socie1y of America
meeting b) UB doctoral student
Denise Mandel : Peter W. Jusczyl.
UB professor of psychology. and
Dav1d Pisani of the Indiana University Department of Psychology
suggests that in the first few months
of life. infants begin to build a
\OCabulary in their native language.
In the study. 24 infants sat on
their paren ts' laps in a three-sided
booth. Four names.
including each
child ' s o wn
name.
were
played throug h
loudspeakers on
bot h sides of the
booth. The infants
were scored on the
length of time they
looked tn the direc-

head turn of at
lem.130degree~ m

order to be
scored.
Two of th&lt;
names the infant s heard were
quite different
from their own
name. bu t the
third name had
th&lt; same rhythm
and intonation as the
infant' s name. For example. an infant named "Corey"
might hear .. Henry" as a name with
a similar rhythm and intonati on,
and ··Marie" and "Elaine" as names
wiljl different rhythm and intonation.
The researchers found that the
infants listened significantly longer
10 repetitions of their own names
than to any of the other names.
This fi nding has imponant implications for children's early vocabulary, Mandel says. "With their
name being one of the first sound
patterns infants recognize. it may
influence other types of sounds they
begin to pick up," she says.
Earlier stud ies by Jusczyk-

Mo~~y's e~lli"7

you!

published in theJouma/ ofMemory
and LAnguage and Child Dn•lop·
menr-indicate th at infanas as
young as 6 months start drveloping a sensitivity to the prosodic
qualities of language-such as
stress. intonation and rhythmbefore they develop a sensitivi ty to
the phonetic qualities.
Moreover. infants' reliance on
th&lt; prosodic cues of language help
them segment the continuous
speech thry hear around them into
individual words and becomes the
basis for developing a lexicon.
Jusczyk's research has found .

�__,...., .... _..,_17

flcul
&amp;Sian illboard
...........
F-=ultJ,~

Ctuz..aofY-

0

Two UB faculty members
and two others who have
devotod !heir time and efTons in
service to the university have
been named Citizens of lhe Year
by 711~ Buffalo News. ~ N~ws
honors ten citizens each year for
outstanding community service.
The honorees ate:
Lawren&lt;e Jacobs, neurology
professor at lhe UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. Jacobs heads the neurology dcpanmem and multiple
sclerosis center at Buffalo Gen·
eral Hospital and is chief of the
William C. Baird Multiple Sclerosis Research Center at Millaid
Fillmore Hospitals. His research
culminated in 1994 in a brealthrough in multiple sclerosis
treatment, a new drug treatment
that for the first time delays or
halts the progression of physical
disability in people who have
multiple sclerosis.
Alison L. DesForges, adjunct
as istant professor of history and
~ntrnl Africa specialist at UB.
who is a leading American expen

on Rwanda. DesForges as cochair of the International Com-

mission on Human Rights Abuse
in Rwanda and chair of the International Commission on Human

Rights Abuse in Burundi and

consultant to Human Rights
Watch/Africa.
Lawrence P. Caste.llani,
chai nnan of the Un.h•ersily at
Buffalo Foundation. Castellani.
president and chief executive of
Tops Markets, gives generous))

of his time and resources for
charitable and cultural eiTons in
Western New York. He is a board
member of the Greater Buffalo
Pannership and the Buffalo Financial Plan Commission.
Michael A. Battle, a board
member of tho UB Law Alumni.
Association. Baule, who was
director of the federal public
defender's office in BuiTalo.
recently was appointed by Anorney General Dennis Vacca to
llead his BuiTalo regional office.
A board member of the Cerebral
Palsy Association. Crisis Ser·
vices. the Lupus Association and
the Humboldt YMCA. he is cochair of the Leadership Buffalo
Vision for Tomorrow Project.

Moody to head Science
and Engl-rtng U!-'Y

0

Marilyn K . Moody has
been named director of the
Science and Engineering Library
and will assume her new position
at UB on March 2. Moody comes
to UB from Rensselaer Polytechnic Instit ute, where she had
served as head of Technical and
Instructional Services since 1990.
From 1982-1990 she held
publ ic service positions at Iowa
State University. including head
of access services, interlibrary
loan librarian, information ser·
vices librarian. coordinator of the
map.c:ollection and government
publications librarian. Her work
at RPI involved work with electronic technologies toward imple~

mentation oflhe Digital Library.
She also co-authored a grant to
develop a multimedia module for
Introduction to· Engineering Design classes at RPI. She is coauthor of the second edition of
Using Government Information
Sources: Print and Electronic
recently published by Oryx Press.
Moody holds an M .S. degree
in Library Science from the University of Illinois.

Buckle In Japan to
ln~estlgate Kobe quake

0

Ian Buckle, deputy director
of the National Center for
Earthquake Engineering Research
(NCEER) based at UB is enroute
to Japan as pan of a U.S. investigation team which will a1d Japa nese expem researc hing the Kobe
earthquake.
Buckle and four other CEER
ex pens are pan of the IS-member
team assembled by the National
Institute of Standards and Technology. Buck l~. who also mvesu gated the Nonhridge quake in
California. told The Buffalo
ews that '"The United States can
learn valuable lessons from
) reconaissance studies of damag·
ing earthquakes 10 foreign countries."
The team will be '" the KobeOsaka area for about a week to
study effects o f the Jan. 17 quake
on bridges.. bu1ldings. pipelines
and other infrnstructure.~ a v.ell
as emergency response system~
The o ther four NCEER membef"'\ are re~archers from Cornell
UniH~rsny. a state agenc&gt;. a
Scaule finn. and a commerc1al
mstrument company m California.

Individuals suffering
from panic attacks
sought for research

0

Individuals ages 18 and
older v. ho !tuffer from pan1c
attacks are being !»&gt;ught to participate in non-drug treatment
research being conducted at the
Center for A"'aety Research 10
the UB Depanment of Psychology.
Panic attacks are sudden
rushes of intense fear or anxiet)
that occur out of the blue. Symp·
toms may include racing hean.
shonneS!t of breath. sweating and
trembling or shaking.
Thote selected to panic1pate m
the research will receive a thorough assessment and free treatment. Ind ividuals undergoing
psychotherapy are not eligible.
For funher infonna tion. contact Gayle Beck at 645-3650. ext.
337.

Management alums
sponsor seminar on
power nagot~lng

Q

Roger DBwson, one of the

country's leading expens in
the art of negotiation. will present
a seminar entitled "The Secrets of
Power Negotiating" from 9 a.m.
to noon on Friday. March 17. in
the Holiday Inn Airpon. 4600
Genesee St.. Cheektowaga.
The semi nar is sponsored by
the Center for Entrepreneurial
Leadership Alumni Association
I

and lhe School of Management
Alumni Associalion at UB.
Born in England, Dawson
started his lim business allhe age
of 16. He senled in California in
1962, becoming president of one
of lhe state's largest real estate
companies, with 28 offices. 540
sales associates and annual sales
of more than $400 m11lion.
He has produced four succt!tsful casseue programs, the latest of
which, ''The Secrets of Po"er
Negotiating," is the best-selling
program in the history of business
cassene publishing.
Dawson also is the author of
four bool.s: "You Can Get E'ervthing You Want." "Secre~ of •
Power Persuasion.·· "Confident
Decision Maker," and 'The 13
Secrets of Power Persuas1on ...
He has been a full -ume
speaker for the past 12 years.
training managers and sales·
people throughout the Umted
States. Canada and Australia.
He has been a"arded the Certified Speaking Profe!t~lonah.
Award and the Counc1l of Peer-;
Award for Excellence b) the
National Speakers As'\ociatmn.
honors held joint]) b) onl) 28
speake~ m the world.
The fee for the &gt;Cmmar" S75.
For more mformauon. contact
Anne Caruana at 6-lS-3200.

Bro~n bag lunch series
features wortls by
women playwrights

0

You c;r t]O out to lunch and
catch a pla}-for free-at'td
for de'\~n. you can tour l\\0 an
gallene!t The Theatre Worl ~hop.
a ~tudent-run o rgan11.at1on at UB.
1' sponMlnng a Brov. n Bag Sene'
of ;~aged readmgs "h1ch began
Feb 1-l and ~ill contmue to Apnl
25 .
The readmg' "'111 tale place
on TueWays from noon to I p.m
'" the Rehearsal Workshop (B83)
m the Center for the Ans on the
Nonh Campus. The performers
"ill be UB students. All event&lt;
are free and open to the public.
The International Center for
Women PlaywrighiS. headquartered al UB. has pro' ided the
materials and man y of the scripts.
according to Joy Scime. the
event's coordinator The series
includes readings of the following
plays:
• Feb. 21. "Wedlock of the
Gods," by Zulu Sofola of Nigena. a tragedy revoh ing around
the ritual s of death and mourn ing
th::u identify the role of women in
traditional African societv.
• Feb. 28. "Frameworlt," by
Sandra Shollander of Australia.
about two women v.ho meet in a
New York Cfty an gallery and are
inspired by the an to deve lop an
intimate relationship.
• March 7, "Playground," by
Susan Anner, lecturer in the UB
Depanment of Theatre and
Dance. about a healing spirit that
visits a troubled woman and helps
her resolve issues in her past.
• March 21. "Emigre
Queen," by Kazimierz Braun,
of Poland. UB professor of theatre and dance. about the famous
Polish actress Helena Modjeska.
who renects on ~r life in the late

Gov. Palaki, left, and President Greiner attended
benefil Feb. 10 in Hyatt Regency for Roswell Park
Cancer Institute
19th cen tu l) .
• March 28. " Dial-A-Mom,"
by Diana Raz.novicb of Argen tina. about a 30-year-old v.oman
who attempts to figure out her
rt'lationsh1p to her mother b)
hinng a subsutu te mother to pia)
out 'anous roles for her
• April4. "An E.-ening
Walk," by Teresa Maricbal of
Pueno Rico. about an amb111ou:or.
\\ nter and a res1gned mother v. ho
challenge SOC1al stereotypes and
reappra1se ~1ety's values.
• April II. "In Conlidenee,•
by Margaret Hollingsworth of
Canada, about two former neighbors \\ ho explore the: isolauon of
muidle-aged women through
Ieite" and recollecuons Kathleen
Beto;;:ko. associate pmfe\'-Or of
Engl"h at UB. "I]( read the pan
that v. as v. ntten for her.
• Apnl 18. "Seven Time&gt;
Eve," by Bealriz Seibel of Argenti na. is a ponrayal of \ar1ou:or.
rol~s that women ha'e pla)ed m
lueratu re and throughou t hi,tol) .
• Apnl 25. " Intruders," by
Jan Maber oft he U.S .. 1s about
the relat1on~h1p between a woman
and a male mtruder m v. h1ch
questionll of realiry. 11lusion and
projecuon are rrused.
For more informauon. contact
Jo) Scime in the Depanmenl of
Theatre and Dance at 645-{;898.

Student conference
on sexual violence (
to be held at UB

0

The Fourth Annual National
Student Conference on
Campus Se&gt;ual Violence will be
held March 10-12 in the UB
Student Union on the Nonh Cam
pus. Theme of the conference is
Building a Tradition ... Reframing
the Anti-Rape Movement.
Sponsored b_ the Anti-Rape
TasL: Force. a division of SubBoard I. Inc .. the conference will
cover such topics as date rape.
dating violence. the dynamics of
sexual harassment and suppon for
survivors of stalkings.
Among the speakers are:
Katie Koestner. a magna cum
laude graduate of William and
Mary who has been a speaker at
colleges and universities across
the country. A founder of
SHOUT (Students Helping Others to Understand Trauma). she
was production consultant to and
subject of 'The Katie Koe tner
Story" a docudrama for HBO and
a consultant to Andrea Parrot' s

book ... Rape on College Campus-es: the Problem and lhe Solution

Rosemary Dempsey, Vi~
Pres1denl for Acuon of W Nauonal Orgamzat1on for Women
! OW) and a graduate of Rutgers
La" School. v.bo has been m' oh ed v. Hh femma t and Jesb1an
and gay movements for more
than 20 )Cat) A foundmg member o f --womanspace." a bauered
women·!; shelter 10 Ne\\ Jerse\
and ·· e\\ Jerse) Women Tal~
Back the N1gh~-- a political acuon
group. !he gained nauonal anentJon 10 1980 \o\.hen she won custod) of her eh1ldren following a
coun challenge prompted b) her
~~uaJ onentat1on
Jodi Gold, a l ' n,,e~U) of
Penm} h an1a graduate who. a~ a
~tudent member of Students Tog~ther Against Acquamtaoce
Rape JST AAR). coordmated the
first Annual Nauonal Student
Conference on Campus Sexual
V10leoce. She current! ) ad,·ises
ST AAR and speal.s nauonall) on
anti-rape activism.
· For regiscrauon or more mformauon. call 6-lS-2353

·--·--'*'
Safety-The followiJII . . -

to-.,.__
Feb. 2:

of-

of hbllc

J-. 2 7 - .

• A wallet contammg cash,
credJt cards and 1dentifteation
was reported m1Ss1ng Jan 27

lrom Hayes Hall
• A telephone. valued at $ 75.
\\&lt;as reported m1ssmg Jan. 28

'lrom the Natural Sc1ences and
Mathematics 8U1k:f1ng
• A Spauld ing Quadrangle
res1dent reponed Jan. 28 that
someone had entered h1s room
four t1mes s1nce Decemt&gt;'er and

used h1s long d•stance calling
card to telephone a sex line

• A laptop computer. valued
at $1 .900. was reponed m•ssing
Jan 30 from Bell Hall
• A student hang tag was
reported m1ss1ng Jan 30 from a
car parked '" the Governors lot
• A jacket and a wallet contalmng cash and a cred•t card
were reported m1SS1ng Jan. 30
from the ma1n gym .n Alumm
Arena

• A telephone and answenng
mach1ne. worth a combmed
value ol $100. were reponed
miss•ng Feb. 2 from O'Brian Hall.

�_.., .... _..,_1,
dynamic photo seria:

Photo
exhibit of
jazz greats

~g on jazz greau
fronl~, '30s and '40s

lighu up me Bull'alo
and Eric County H U·

tocical Society at 25
Nottingham Coun
until March 5. in ocl·

All that

ro-sponsos:ed
byWBFO

cbration of Black His·
tory Momh.
WBFO-FM , me
univ~nity's

National

Public !Udio affiliate,

J

is a co-sponsor.
·ronn.iu from tht
Golden Age of Jan"
by WiJiia.m Gonli~b.
called "The great jazz
phoiographcr by Mod·

"" PhororrgphJ maga·
line, points up the
contributions of Afri-

can Americans and
African cuhurc in shaping the courK of
American mmic.
Jan greats from

Dizzy Gillcspi&lt; and
Louis Armurong to
~Ia

Fitzgerald arc
indudcd in me 75

TOP Billoc Holloday, who

ponraiu: that penctr:ue

appeared tn Buffalo in 1939:

ti-e hean and soul of

ASO\"E· T)lelonoous Monk,

jan singers and musi-

FAR LI:.FT, Douy Gillespoc.

cians.

"Gorrlieb gives u.s

who m011de a number of

more chan just s1atic

appearanco

10

Buff;OII.]o

photos. He commuruates the lives of theK

bc"'·ccn 19&lt;40-55: LEFT·

world-famous musi-

Cab Callow:ay, who played

cians: ordinary prop1c

at least 10 engagemrnu in

who have: achie'\ltd

Buffalo

grcamGS. He caprurcs

their emotiom, vul nerabilities and

strengths-all of the
things within that
drive the1r mwic," the
Historical Sociery
notes.

Gonlieb. who left
thC' Jaz2 scene

10

1948,

retired in 19...,9 and
wrote rwo books. ,Sr,.

mu Farrs You

\f1on i

Brflrr1r (Franklin

Wans) and TJ, Goldrn

Ag' off= (Simon &amp;
Schusu:r, reissued by
DaC.po Press).
One ofGonlieb's
photos of Duke
Ellingaon was purchased hy the National

ABOVE: Lou1s Armstrong. who pla)·ed

Ponrait Gallery and
his images of Billie

Holliday, Mildred
Bailey and Jimmy

regular

Sund;~ y

datn in

~temorial

Aud:

FAR RIGHT Dozzy Gillcsp" at "ho)
corner in NYC; Right: Frank Sina1 ra,

Rushing are the basi.s
of three of che four
~nt

U.S. postage

sumps devored to ja.u
singers.

who made appearances in Shea's BufT011Io
and Kleinhans.

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                    <text>....,.._on

Sl

Entertainer and
humanitarian Harry
Belafonte to give
Martin Luther
ing Jr. addres~

ofllle

Tonpe·

Malnatage

Little kids make

them, same as

2

yoo.

,.10

Scientist and
Top Teacher

Technology
Fair

UB cliAical faculty
member cited as top
science teacher in
nation.

Your intro to the
world of informationJI
technology.
,.

Af
Fe brual) 9 . 1995 Volume 26. No 16

Grim news in budget released Feb.l;
UB faces major cuts, tuition increase
IIJ~VIDAL

Reporter Editor

T
Dr. VIctor , . _ In .,.,.,., !WI with ,_.
chine UMd t. JIM(orm Fisher M.m!OtMt.

Breast Diagnostic Center
offers non-surgical biopsy
11J IMa IIAIID

News Bureau Staff

NEW TECHNIQUi for analyzing suspicious breast tissue tbatelimirulles the need
for a surgical biopsy is oow being offered
at the UB Breasl~tic
•
fJiialed wilb the university's nitlonif Women's Health
Initiative clinical trial cenw in the School of Medicine and Biomedical ScienceS.
The UBcenteristheonlyfacility in Western New
Y orlc with equipment dedicated to perform the procedure, call~ stereotactic automated large-core
needle biopsy. The procedure is available to the
general public, in addition to women enrolled in the
· Women's Health Initiative clinical trial.
. Victor Panaro, UB clinical professor of radiology
and nuclear medicine and director of the UB Breast
Diagnostic Center. said the new metbod can provide
tissue samples of tiny caocen oo larger than a grain
of sand without requiring the patient to endure the
trauma, time, upense and disfigurement of surgery.
The procedure also eliminates problems asSOC!i·
ated with previous needle-biopsy methods, including falnling caused by the specter of a large needle
and the need for patients to sit upright and still for 2
hours or more.
Furthennore, the procedure can be done for onethird to one-hal( the cost of a standard surgical
biopsy. The UB Breast Diagnostic Center. housed in
82 Farber Hall on the South Campus, has been open
since mid-December. Panaro has perfonned 22 biopsies to date.
Tbe technique is designed specifically to diagnose oonpalpable lesions that are usually detected by
routine mammography. Only about 10-20 percent of
abnormal lesions tum out to be cancet'bus. Panaro
said, noting that some 700,000 women each year
have to undergo surgery. with its accompanying
risks, to get a definitive diagnosis.
Comparison studies have shown the new method
to be as accurate as surgical biopsy in determining
malignancy of oonpalpable breast cancers, he said.
Such tiny caocen are curable in 90 percent of cases
wbeo diapoted at this ..ty slage.
•
The teclmology and the modlioe used to perform
Ibis ......-gical needle biopsy--called the FISher
Mammolest-wu developed ill Sweden. The procedure is now offered at major medical centerS in the

In.

u.s.

To accomplish !he biopsy, the palialllies prone

- on a !*lded platform equipped witb a bole Ill acc:om·

modale the llre.st. Panaro said l¥io&amp; prone is more
comfortableforthe pMien~ decreases failure rare and
increases accuracy.
Continued on page 2

HE NEWS , when it came out of Albany Feb. I,
was far more grim than had been anticipated. In
addition to the $25 million cut to the current
budget. S UNY is facing a reduction of nearly onethird of its stale support in the 1995-96 fiscal year.
An analysi s of the 1995-96 executive budget shows a
budget reduction of $75 million and a requirement lhat an
additional S215 million of income be raised for a total
reduction in state suppon of nearly $290 million.
With the possible exception of the University of Massachusetts system. this is the largest s ingle reduction that an)
college system in the country has ever taken. Provost Aaron
Bloch said Tuesday.
UB ··is the most comprehenstve public university in lhe
state:· he said. one that is unparalleled in the ''b readth and
synergism of its programs.·· However. these budgetary cuts
could result in a devastating reduction in the breadth ofUB's
programo.
Faculty. staff. students and parents need to be "vigorous
in expressing their views" about the SUNY budget to the
state legislature and !he governor's office. be sald.
And while uni versity officials know there will be major
reductions in fullding for the system. they don't know what
reduction to expect forUB . Gov. Pataki has 30days to amend

the executive budget. and the state legtslature bas until April .
I to pass it. The system then will decide on distribution.
All told. the executive budget represents a 32 percent
reduction in support to SUNY. Funding for the Educational
Opponunity Program would be eliminated and other specialized minori1y access programs. such as the Liberty Partnership Program. are threatened. The budget also eliminates the
Tuition AsSIStance Progrnm (TAP) for graduate students and
aid for pa.rt -Li~ stud)' .
"SUNY cuts amount to half of the state opernung reduc uon~. so higher education '-"Ill be pa)ing for a lot of what
government is trying to do" m New York State. Bloch said.
"The expectation out of the governor's offices is that the
(SUNY) system "''" absorb a cut of approximately S75
mill ton in expenditureo;,.'' a~ well as raise about S21 5 million
in revenue. according to Bloch. 'That would translate IOLO a
massive tuition Increase a.r a Umt "hen they're reducing
tuition assistance for undergraduates and eliminating tuition
assistance for graduate students."
One of the fundamental problems with the 1995-96 budget. the provost sald, is that it is based on the expectation that
UB-;md all of SUNY-will be able 10 mairuainenrollment
in the face of these drastic cuts. Bur when an anticipated rise
in the cost of tuition is combined with reduced. or eliminated~
Continued on page 3

Petrie joins nation's top deans in call for
radical overhaul of schools of education
11J PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Bureau Staff

sue a clear challenge for reform. not only of schools of
education bur of the larger institutions of whjch they are a
pan."
.
Judith Lamer. presiden\ of the Holmes Group. underscored the importance of that message. sayi ng. 'There is a·
direct link between the substandard quality of America's
sc hool system and the system that prepares our teachers and
other education leaders ...
The repon. ''Tomorrow's Schools of Education." ~~~,for

UG H PETRIE. dean of the UB Grnduate School
of Education. h.as joined the Holmes Group in
calling forthe 250schools thai prepare most of the
natjon' s teachers 10 "get up to speed or get out of
the busi ness.''
The group, a consortium of 80 research university ~based
schools of education that is dedicated to improving teacher
education and the profession of teaching. issued the call in a
new report. "Tomorrow's Schools of Education." re leased at
Conunued on page 2
a press conference held in Wa sh~
inglon Jan. 27 .
The repon claims that the
nation 's education schools11J STEVE COX
those charged with developing
Reporter Staff
and upgrnding the skills of the
"lt'aahrays_for
_ _ t o . . , _ _ . . , . explained
nation 's education work forceGraduate School of Education Dean Hugh'Petrie.
are dangerou sly out-of-sync
That is why the introspective. seH-crit~ report "Tomorrow's Schools of
with the needs and realities of
Education." released lastweekbythe HolmesOroup, was nearly a yearovet'due
today's schools.
and drew cautious reactions from education professionals. According to Petrie.
Petrie said. ''The simultait was a classic case of 'We have seen the enemy. and he is us:
neous renewal of both sc hools
The report concluded, afier nearly three years of study. the! teacher educa·
and institutions of higher edution
schools needeG "more intellectually rigorous programs that oHered more
cation called for in the report is
meaningful f"'ld e•perience• and "blurred the d istinctions between teaching and
long overdue." A call for acadministration. in favor of developing teacher leadership roles,' says Petrie,
counti ng is welcome and"necesadding that the report is basically 'just a start that showed us bow much more
sary. he said. adding that
there is to be done."
"perhaps as many as half of the
Petrie was a founding member of the Holmes Group. a Michigan-based
institutions in the country that
education
schools think tank. nearly 10 years ago. The group brings togethe&lt;
prepare teachers are wholly illrepresentatives from 80 olthe nation's top research university-based schools of
equipped to do so."
education to examine ways 1o better prepare the teachers of tomorrow. Petrie
--colleges and universities
has served on the Holmes board of directors since 1986 and served as vice
can no longer stand apart in
presidenllor the group's northeast region from 198610 1991.
splend id isolation from their
Although the schools represented by Holmes only produce aboul20 percent
responsibilities for the often dis ~
of
the nation's teachers, Petrie pointed out that Holmes Group institutions
mal performance of our elementary and high schools," Petrie
Continued on page 9
said, adding that the report "is-

H

(

Give teachers stake in schools: Petrie

�_.,

2

... _..,_...

Belafonte is keynote speaker for King Commemoration
ARRY BELAFONTE. worldrenownedentenainet,humanitariaQ and civil-rights activist.
will deliver the keynote address at the 19th annual Manin
Uithu King Jr. Commemoration at UB.
A close friend, confidant and advisor to
King, Betaronte will speak at 8 p.m. on
Thunday, Feb. 23. in the Mainstage theater
in the Center for the Ans on the North
Campus.
Admission will be free. Tickets wiU be
required, however, and may be obtained by
calling the UB Office of Conferences and
Special Events at 645-3414.
Betaronte's address will be presented by
the James Fenton Lecture Foundation, with
suppon from the Office of the President.
Office of the Vice President for Public Service and Urban Affairs, Office of Conferences and Special Events. and Minority
Faculty and Staff A sociation, all at UB .
Also co-sponsoring the event are WKBWTV News Otannel 7 and The Chilllengu.

ay NAIKAN IIOLDeEIIQ
Reporter Contnbutor
"p

OWER BEGINS .on the le vel of
conception.·· K warne Ture told a
predom inately African American
audience last Tuesday evening at
UB 's Diefendorf Hall. "It 's bow you see the
problem and bow you understand your abi lities
to solve the problem that giVes you real power."
Known co most as civil ri ghts activist
Stokely Carmichael. Kwame Ture served as
prime mini ster of the Black Panther Pany in
1969: before thai, he was involved with the
Congress of Racial Equality. and was head
of the Student Non- Violent Coordinating
Commiuee. A member of the Commun ist
Pany at the time. Ture said he became diSillu sio ned with what he saw as the
Eurocemricity of Marxism-Leninism and
began searching for mon: Afro-centric ex pressions of socialist thought.
The program, arranged by UB 's Bl ac~
Student Union, featured Ture lecturing on
issues such as Pan-Afric.anism. African socialism. and hi s own All -African People's
Revolutionary Pany. which he heads with
fou nder Kwame Nkrumah.
A central point ofTure's lecture was that
Africa would be the fi rst continent to unify
under one sociali st government. This unification. he maintained. would already exist
today had Africa's natural evolutionary process toward unity not been interrupted by
European colonialism and the slave trade.
Speaking of thi s future unity , Ture tol d his
audience that , "I do not say that (Africa will

Harry Betaronte bas been called ''theconsummateentertainer"---i'rlCOr'dinganist;concen singer; an actor on Broadway, in movies
and on television, arid an Emmy-winning
television performer and producer.
He also has earned global respect for hi s
activity in the human-rights struggle.
Betarontehasdedicated his life to uniting
people for causes often considered controvusial. His dedication dates back to the
civil-rights struggle in the United States,
when he united the cultural community behind the marches in Selma and Montgomery,
Alabama, as well as the Freedom March in
Washington, D.C .. in 1963.
In 1966. Betaronte performed in Paris
and Stockholm for the first European benefit
concerts on behalf of King. He later was
named to the board of directors of the South-

gress, the NAACP, the Committee for United
Negro Relief. the City of Hope. Fight for
Sight. the Albert Einstein Award from Yeshiva, the Boy Scouts of America and the
Peace Corps. He recei ved the Dag
Hammankjold Peace Medal in 1981 and the
Manin Luther
King Jr. Peace
Prize in 1989.

Be la foote
bas opened new
cultural exchanges w1th
emerging Afri can nations and.
through
the
B elafonte
Foundation. has
aided many Af-

ern Christian Leadership Conference.

rican students

Betaronte, -who was named one of three

seeki ng an education in the United States. It
was Harry Belafonte who set the wheels in
motion that led to the creation of USA for
Africa and the "We Are the World" concen
to benefit African fami ne relief in January
1985. He also was deeply involved in " Hands

executors or King 's estate, has served as
chairofthe Maninl.AJther King Jr. Memorial
Fund.
He has been honored many times by such

djversc groups as the American Jewish Con-

1x the first''lmited continent) because I am an
African and that is my dream. I say this
because il is a simple truth.''
Ture assened that all national and social
divisions in Africa are the result of attempts
by European conquerors to split Africa into

fractious elements. making the regi on easier
to control. He described much of the present
leadership in Africa, especiall y the current
regime in hi s home of Guinea. as thoroughly

under U.S. or European inOuence and incurab' y corrupt. Ture maintained that only with
!.he implementation of Pan-African social ization cou ld Africa successfully force ou1
the corrupting influences that rule it today .
He claimed th is uniftcauon would be the
final. vWlent result of an innate desire for
solidarity among Africans the world over.
hen q uestioned by a Nigerian student
on the difficulties of unifying an Af·
rica rampant with tribalism and religiou s
conflict. Tu re replied that, '"'These divisions
arc not natural : they are created. and knowmg that they are created. the simple solution
1s to solve the problem through educa1ion.
and. of course. by keeping the external forces
outside." When the same student asked if the
Rwandan tragedy cou ld be considered evide n e of the imjX)ssibi lity of a totally united
Africa. Ture became impassioned: ''The
Tutsis and the Hutus speak the same lan guage! It was the French who did all that.
During colonialism. they ' re the ones who sci
up the regimes ...
Ture spoke repeatedly of whal he called

W

MAMMOGRAPHY

PETRIE

continued from page 1

continued from page 1

Under compression. the breast is x-rayed
from two angles. and the image is digitized
and appears on a video screen. The image is
enhanced until the abnonnal tissue can be
pinpointed. The computer calculates horizontal. vertical and depth coordinates of the
si te to be biopsied and positions the needle at
the point of entry . A tiny incision in the skin
is made. and a spring-loaded needle shoot.ointo
and out of the tissue in 25/IOOOof a second. " h
takes about 45 minutes, rather than all day or
overnight in a hospital , .. said Panaro. "Patients can return to work immediately. The
incision leaves no scarring." Results of the
biopsy are available in 2448 hours. ''Patient
reviews have been uniformly favorable,"
Panaro said. "There's no question tl~ey would
chose 'this option over surguy."

each o f the nation· s 250education schoolsschools that prepare both the facult y of all
the nation· s college-based schools of education and a significant number of the nation· s
K-12 teachers-to adopt reforms to improve
the quality of teacher and administrator training or ··surrender their franchise ."
It charges that highereducation must bear
the brunt of criticism for the lack of quality
and innovation in teacher education. and that
schools o f education exacerbate the problems of public schools by preparing educaton for a bygone era. It says that the schools
that prepare teachers should work with more
innovative institutions to help make teaching a truly intellectual profession.
"Tomorrow's Schools of Education"'
points out that universities treat their educa-

Clvll rights activist Kwame Ture
speaks In Diefendorf Hall.
the evils of all capitalist systems. fi nd ing at
the root of this evil the fact that in capitalism.
"Those who do the labor do not enjoy the
fruns of their labor." He went on to say that
there are only two economic systems in the
world: capitalism and socialism. Ture viewed
this duality as based upon economic as·
sumption th at in every society, ..either a few
will own. or all will own:· and tlfat'' in
America. the white upper class "owns everyt9ing. ·· Re ferring to the American ci\'il rights
fnovement as ineffective. Ture said that reformation laws are passed only to be ignOred.

ti~ schools like "poor stepehildren." penalizin them for direct involvement with the
public~ hools and denying them necessary
resources and suppon for innovations in
teac her preparatio n.
The repon notes. as well. that fewerthan
five percent of the nation· s uni \'ersityeducation faculty have taught in urban schools and
that many have not taught outside college in
decades. In addition. it says. too few institu~
tions produce quality research o n teaching
and too few help frontline educators apply
new research in the classroom.
Among other things. the repon commits
the nation · s top education school deans to:
• Developnewmultiracialandmulticultural
faculty and te:JCher-candidates reOecting the
diversity of students in K-12 schools:

Across America," a benefit to relieve hungu
in America thai was an outgrowth or " We
Are the World."
In 1990. in his role as UNICEF Goodwill
Ambassador. Betaronte acted as host for the
"World Summit on the Otild" held at the
United Nations.
His current projects lllCiude wor'&lt; on a
television mini·series based on the lives of
Nelson and WiMie Mandeb, and a production and development agreement with Nev.

Line Cinema.
Belafonte has received a numberofhon orary deg=s. incl uding an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Park College
in Missouri and a doctorate in the arts from
The New School for Social Research, whue
he once was 1 student. He also has received
an honorary doctor of mu.sic degree from
Morehouse College in Atlanta. an honorary
doctor of fi ne ans degree from the State
Univenity of New York College at Purchase. and honorary degrees from the Cit )
University of New York , Spellman Co llege. Tufts Univusity and BrandeiS Uno versity .

and revoluuon is the only effective way to
change a social system.
For the achievement of Pan-Africamsm.
Tun outhned three necessilies: revolution.
socialism and a m~s political party. When
asked about the apparent failure of social"m
in Russia. he responded that... Jus1 because
socialists betnly socialism. just like Chm·
tians every day betnly Chn tianity, doesn ·•
give you the right to condemn socialism ··
On this point he assened that Gorbachev .
··sc:um that he is."' and Yeltsin. betrayed the
people of Russia to It)' to move closer to the
U.S. Ture then gave examples of areas which
he saw as successfu l and authentic sociahst
states. such as North Korea. Libya and China.
As for the U.S .. Tureencouraged African
Americans to JOin organizations. telling hi s
audience that only when organized could
people effect social change. and work toward a common goal. He defied anyone to
ob.]OCitO his ideas unless they tbemsel~ were
organized and committed to ideas oftheir own.
He cited the " Rodney King rebellion" as
an eumple of the revolutionary potential of
an organized African American populace.
"What could American technology do against
th ~ unorga nized. undi sci plined mass of
people who rose up after Rodney King in
LOs Angel es? Do you know what will happen " 'ben they plan it?" he said. Ture told the
audience that the coming together of d ifferent gang factions in the wake of the Rodney
King verdic~ indicates both the capacity for

cooperation among Afrit!an Americans. and
the revolutionary power of that capacity.

• Partner researchers with teachers to
ensure research is targeted to teachers· needs
and so that new ways ofmakingournation's
schools more producti ve are disseminated to
teachers who can use them;
• Develop new standards of gual ity for
the professional schools preparing educators and bold them accountable to the profess ion and the public by strengthening both
market and accreditation forces :
• Take the lead on education issues and
work with education policymakers to ensure
a quality education for all students. and
• Collaborate with all quality institutions
preparing educators in the states to ensure
access to research knowledge and exemplary si tes and to promote quality and accountab ility.

�3
ReOOcq semester
holn ccdd speed

,._from
__

.,.

DB

Reporter Contributor

• ....... eo ...., stodents graduate
quicker. the FSEC's Educ:ationall'rograms and Policies Comnittee (EPPC)
recommended Feb.1 that the minin'Un
semester hours required for graduation be reduced from the current level
of 128 to 120 begiming with first-year
students entering UB in the fall of1995.
Professor Michael Metzger, chairperson of the EPPC, reporting to the
FSEC, said the reduction of semester
hours would apply to students graduating wfth a BA, B.S., or B.P.S. 00.
gree. He said allowing students to
graduate quicker would increase UB's
accessibility to others.
Metzger also noted that 120semester hours was the ,m inimum requirement for graduation at other SUNY
schools such as Albany and Stony
Brook, at a runber of private universities in New YOII&lt;, such as Cornell and
NYU, and at other large state universities, such as CaJnornia-Berl&lt;eley, Indi-

Double whammy for WBFO in proposed
federal, state budget cuts, Roth tells FSEC
and state levels. In New York, under G ov.
Pataki 's 1995 budget propoSal. aid to WBFO
U R ING THE PAST four years.
WB FO, 88.7 FM- UB 's own

public radio station-has witnessed unprecedented growth:
its audience, financial suppon
from listeners and presenoe in the Buffalo
community have all increased subsumtially,

the station's general manager told the Faculty Senate Executive Committee Feb. 1.
Unfortunately now. a~cording to station
General Manager Jennifer Roth. right in the

middle of this success and at a time when

from the state Education Depanment would
drop by almost 25 percent ($ 18.000). At the
federal level, the outlook is even more bleak:
Speaker of the House N ewt Gingrich has
repeatedly proposed eliminating federal support for public broadcasting altogether. For
WBFO, this would mean an additional loss
of about $200.000-25 percent of its 1995
operati ng budget, Roth sai d.

R

oth, who has worked at WBFO si nce
October of 1990, di sputed Gingrich 's

recent public remarks suggesting that finan -

WBFO is planning to more than double its
· gnal strength. the station may be unable to

cial suppon from the listenen; of publtc radi o

revent cuts in funding from pulling irs pro-

can make up for any cuts in go' emmcnt a1d.

rbial plug.
Operating out of Allen Hall on the South
Campus. WBFO is a charter member of the
National P~blic Ractio (NPR ) network and is
Buffalo's only full -service NPR station. Al -

" I just don' t see that happening," she said.

though the station boasts a diverse formatbroadcasting a wide variety of ethnic mus1c.
special events such as local concerts and
newscasts covering We tem ev.' Vo rlthe station· s main programming sta ples are

ana

and North Carolina-Chapel Hm.
One hundred and twenty semester

jau and NPR news. Yet. like the PR net·
work and public radio in general. WBFO "

hours is also the minimum level a oollege or university in the SUNY system
may require for graduation.

ban lin g a growing move ment to cut its gO\emment financial suppon .
Recentl y, this movemenl has culminated

Roth said contribuuons from hsteners currently provide for 28 percent of the stat ion· s

funding . Support from local businesse!'l account for an additional nine percent .
Most of the remainin g suppon comes
from UB. to who m the station is l ice n ~d.
U B contri butes close to 28 percent ($225.000)
of the stall on· s $800.000 budget. Roth said

Ho""ever. she warned. this figure could drop.
too. as a result of the large redu tion of \tate
a1d to the SUNY sy\lem.

in proposed budget cuts o n both the fede"')

While Roth sa1d the st.auon 1!&lt;1 makmg
conti ngenC) plans to attempt 10 replace any
lost sou rces of funding. if propo.;ed cuts. go
through. the station's financ1al \Uuauon

tuition assistance . ..probably these financial
changes are going to work toward lower
enrollments:' he said.
·•we need time to discuss internally and
wilh st3te gO\'emment and SUNY Central
administration just what the shapt of the
unjversity is going to be:· Bloch said...We' re
t3lking about an entirely different economy
and the expectation that this large a change
can occur while maintaining a constant en·

decisions that need to be made by the tru stees and central administration of SUNY."
Until the final numbers are in. "we'll be
making ou r views kno wn on the o ut side and
getting o ursel ves prepared for the decision~
we' ll have to make. I ex~ct there will be

broad panici pauon througho ut the university communaty in intense di SC\I S~io n on~e
future .o.hape of UB. " Bloch ~ 1d .
.. We need to p re~nc! a... much a' po~"ble
of the momen tum"'" ha\e been gathenng
O\er the past fe" }ear.. You cannot tum a

rollment, is probably unrealistic."
According 10 Bloch. the financi ng and

Here are the Buffalo and Albany
addresses of Western New York 's
delegation to the state legislature.
You can write to them at these
addresses to express your views on
the budget.
Note The 61st Senate 01Slf1Ct. fcxmerty
occupted by John Daly. and the 139m

would be "very perilOus.''
Any loss m funding for WBFO will have
a detrimental i mpact not only on the station,
but on UB and the Buffato community. Roth
added. She charaderized the station, whicb
currentl y is staffed by nine full -time and
e.ghl pan -ti me employees. as '1be major
public serviceofUB ." Besides airing awardwinni ng talk shows like " AIIllungsConsldered" (whose binhplace, incidentally, was
WBFO). the station sponsors Jaz.t. blues and

classical music concens on campus and promotes cultural t\'ents occumng off campus .
Roth sa id, in addition, WBFO tS a valu -

able resource 10 the unj versity because .. it
increases UB '!ri vts1bil1ty in the community.··
Bes1de auractmg high-&lt;ju ahty faculty, staff
and studen ts to U B . the Statton, she noted.

utilizes UB faculty as on-the-air personalities. hosting mu sic programs or using their
areas of expert.1!!.e to acr as news analysts.
Pre~ iden t Gremer' s call-m program IS broadcast from the stati On as well .
The stauon also 1s m lb th1rd year of
offen ng an "Jntroducuon to Rad ao·· course
through the Commumcauom Department.
she noted. and 11 rogularl} tales on s:tude11t
1ntems and \Olunteers Joolmg for expenence v.-orlmg an radio . Wh1le Roth sa1d she
1s sure the stauon v..1ll ha'e to bear some loss
of financ1al 'UpJX&gt;n . no final decisions ha'\e
been made a" to cutbach on programmtng
or personnel

BUDGET
continued from page 1

structure of higher education in the future is
in for " massive" changes ... We have to prepare ourselves as a community to deal with
those changes."
One of the challenges UB faces i s "to

umversU) on a dime. but we want lObe. more
efflc .ent. m&lt;M'eeffcctive. moreen~ ­

Jal. Jess dependent on srare support. mon: in
control of our own dcsun y," BJoch s.atd .
··w e need ume to manage the tranSitiOn 10
&lt;il l orde rl~ and reswnsi ble "-SY ..

HERE'S WHERE TO WRITE TO YOUR STATE LEGISLATORS
Assemblyman W1lham L Parmen!ID· t50)
Room 809 Hotel Jamestown
Jamestown. NY 1470t
664· 7773. Fax 483.0299
Room 628. Leg1slat1ve Offoce Bldg
Albany NY 12248
5 18-455·5284 Fax 455·5694

Assemblywoman Sandra Lee Wonh (R·148)
t 500 Unl()n Road . Sune 201
West Seneca NY t 4224
675-7 t 70 Fax 675- t608
Room 718 Leg1s1auve Offoce Brdg
Albany NY 12248
516-"55-4601 Fax 455-5257
Senator AnthOny R Nanuta (0-57)
65 Coun Street
Buffalo NY 14202
847·7939. Fax 854·3051
Room 613 LegoslallVe OffiCe Bldg
AIOany NY 1224 7
5t8-455·337t Fa• 432-6626

understand what a stable enrollment panem
would be under radically changed economic

Assembly DIStriCt fO(ITiefly OCCU{J.ed by
EliZabeth Hoffman. are vacant

conditions," Bloch said.

The Hon. George E Patakl
Executive Chamber
State Capllol
Albany, NY 12224

Assemblyman Joseph T P•lhttere (0·1361
1700 P1ne Avenue
N18gara Falls NY 14301
282·6062 Fax 282-"226
Room 7 t6 . Leg1slai1Ve OH.ce Bldg
Albany NY t 2248
518·455-4462 Fax 455·5694

Assemblyman RIChard R Anderson
(R-142)
5555 Mam Street
W1lhamsv111e. NY 14221
634-t695. Fax 634-1250
Room 936. Legislative Off1ce Bldg
Albany , NY 12246

Assemblyman Francrs J Po1dum 10·1 46 )
3612 South Parll Avenue
Blasdell NY I 4219
826· t676. Fax 626-0608
Room 837 Leg1slat1ve Offrce Stag
Albany. NY I 2248
518-455·4662. Fax 455·5560

Senato1 Jess J Present (R·56)
910 Hotel Jamestown Btdg
Jamestown. NY 14701
664.033 t Fax 664-2430
Room 503 The CapitOl
A!bany NY 12247
518-455-3161 Fax 426-6963

Assemblyman Anhur 0 Eve (0· t 41)
1377 Ftllmore Avenue
Buffalo, NY 1421 t
695-2464. Fax 692-7961
Room 736. Leg1slat1ve Offrce Bldg
Albany, NY 12248
5 16-455-5005. Fax 455·5449

Assemblyman Thomas M ReynoiOS!R·I4-J
36 Nonh Ma1n Stree1
Warsaw NY t 4569
766-0160 Fax 786.()182
Room 448 Legtslauve Offtce Bldg
Aloany NY t 2248
516·455-5741 Fax 455·566-l

Senator Mary Lou Ralh ( R-601
5500 Matn Street
W1lhamsrlle NY 14221
633·0331 Fax 633-0830
Room 817 Leg1sla11ve Off1ce Bldg
Albany NY 12247
518·455-31 t Fax 426-6963

ver the last two years. UB has worked
hard to try to optimize enrollments. to
structure its academic programs to allov.
st udents to complete their degrees faster.
and to find the best di stribution of re!\ources.

0

Bloch said.

··Now all our assumptions are completely undermined, and we will. in a sense.
be staning all over again."
The university community v. ill need to
be vigilant that the changes UB will face in

the future do not undermine the unity of the
institution , Bloch said.
"A stress like thi s can bring a community
together or it can tear it apart. We have to
make sure we work together. Facu lt y. administrators. students and staff cannot af*
ford to be divided. We are a heterogeneous
community. appropriately so. and we 'II have
to use our se parate strengths toward common goals."
In the coming weeks. the universi ty will
need to combine planning with patience. the
provosl indicated.
"Before v.•e stan speculating. we need to
understand how the budget plays o ut over
the next 60 days . We intend to be vigorous
participants in thai debate." Bloch said.
" T hen we have 10 see the SUNY distribution. We intend to be vigorous participa nt s

in that discussion. too. The re are strategy

Assemblyman Sam Hoyt (0-144)
General Donovan Off1ce 8UIIdtng
125 Ma1n Street
Buffalo. NY 14203
852·2795. Fax 852-2799
Room 656. Leg1slahve Offrce Bldg
Albany . NY 12248
5t8-455-4886. Fax. 455-4890
Assemblyman RIChald Keane (0·145)
1066 Abbott Road
Buffalo. NY 14220
825-6080, Fax: 621.{)8()()
Room 939. Leg1slat1ve Office Bldg
Albany. NY 12248
518-455-4691 , Fax· 455·5236

Assemblyman RObrn Schrmm•nger (0· t •
3514

Delaware Ave Swte 201

' Senator Wrlham Stachowski (0-56)

2030 Chnton Street

Kenmore _NY 14217
873·2540. Fax 873-5675
Room 84 7 Leg•slatlve OH1ce Bldg
A!Oany . NY 12248
5t8-455·4767 Fax 455.47 24

Buffalo NY t 422 1
826·3344 Fax 823-6372
Room 508 Leg1slat1ve Off1ce Bldg
Albany NY 12247
5 I 6·455-2426 Fax 432-8839

Assemblyman Paul Tokasz (0-1 43 )

Sanalor Dale M Volker (R·59)
620 Ma1n Street
East Aurora NY 14052
655.()993, Fax 655·2736
Room 708, Leg1slatwe Office Bldg
Albany. NY 12247
518-455-3471 , Fax 426-6949

·General Donovan Offtce Butlo tng
t 25 Ma1n Street
Buffalo. NY 14203
852-279t . Fax 873·5675
Room 727. LegislatiVe Office Bldg
Albany . NY 12248
5 18-455·5921 . Fax 455-3962

�-.

4

~--.-

..

Learn thy latest about electronic technology at UB fair
8y~VIDAL

Reporter Editor
ACULTY AND STAFF at UB
will have an opportunity to learn
about the newest electronic teChnology available at UB at the lnfonnation Teclmology Fair, to be
heldFeb. l6and 17intheCenterforTomor-

F
row.

This introduction to information technology is sponsored by the Division of Univer-

sity Services, and will include presentations,
panel discussions and interactive demonstrations focusing on infonnation technology and related subjects as they apply to
administration. research and teaching.
Richard Mandelbaum. president of
NYSERNet. will present the keynote address on Feb. 16Jnd Salvatore Belardo, a
professor at the upiversity a.t Albany will
present the keynol&lt;)address on Feb. 17 . Both
presentations-Wi1f'be held from 8:45-10: 15
a.m. in Presentation Room 1.
Mandelbaum. who also serves as director
of the Telecommunications CAT Center at
Polytechnic Institute of New York , will discuss "High-Speed Networking: Present and

Future," a look at the emerging requirements
for high-speed networking. NYSERNet" s
recent upgrade to the nation's premier regional network and future networking ven tures and players. His talk also will deal with
the anticipated economic benefits of highspeed networking.
Mandelbaum is considered a pioneer in
developing the data communications capabilities linking New York State universities.
colleges, schools, libraries, hospitals and
research laboratories to one another and to
the Internet.
Belardowil\ discuss .. Re-engineering Reengineering: Is There A Way to Ensure
Maximum Benefits from t.he Use of Technology?"'
A professor of management science and
information systems. Belardo focuses his
current work on the use of Decision Support
Systems to facilitate strategic planning and

.
8 :45

interVIEW, Jim Whitlock, Gene Martell.
Judy Applebaum. Mary Ann Stegmier,
Janet Mather. Tom Hurley and Mike
Rivera.

• Future or tbe IBM Mainframe, Kevin
Seitz and Rick Lesniak.

giving. He also has worked as an engineer at
Eastman Kodak, General Electric and the
Watervliet Arsenal. and served as a consultant to the Southland Corp., Orell Fussli.
Schenectady Chemicals, the U.S. Coast
Guard and the U.S. Department of State,
among others.
The lnfonnation Technology Fair will be
composed of a series of 45-minute programs
on the various technologies available at UB
and presented by members of the UB faculty
and staff. In addition. a Workstation Resource Room will offer participants an opponunity to see how to use. the electronic
technology that is available on campus.
Faculty and staff are welcome to attend
all or just a few of the Information Technology Fair sessions. Admission is free and
there is no preregistration requirement.

• Buffalo Free-Net, Neil Yerkey and
- James Gerland.

• WINGS: The Campus Connection,
Jim Gerland. Brandon Plewe.

• Advancement and Development System (ADAMS), Richard Lucas and Tony
Allison.
• BISON: Current and Future, Stephen
Roberts and Mark Ludwig.

• ADAMS Executivo lnrormation System, Richard Lucas.

UB, Jay Leavin.

• User Services: PPP, Data Explorer,
MOSAIC, Supercomputing, Web Page,
Help Desk, Departmental Computing
Consultants Program, Sandy Peters,
David Dudek. Weiun Tu, Geraldine
Sonnesso and Frank Rens .

• Administrative Data Access
(STARS), Joseph Kerr and Leslie
McCain.

•
CEER Information Service, Carol
Kizis. Dorothy Dow, Mi chael Lavin and
Nancy Stimson.

Topics..,.. --nterslnclude:

• Chemical Engineering Simulation
Lab (CESL), David Kofke .

• Vision '99-The CIT Strategic Plan,
Hinrich Martens.

• Electronic Main and Internet NewsCurrent and Future, Charles Dunn.

• Wings: The Campus Connection,
James Gerland and Gemma DeVinney.

• UNlX Support, Gretchen Phillips.

• Learning Technologies Prog.-am:
Peneus, lnteractivo Videodisk,
MaciMDAD ror Teaching Chemistry,
CAl Software for Matb=atics, Peter
Jorgensen, Leo Curran, Phil Yeagle and
Barry Shealy.

• CrT Timesharing Changes. Richard
Lesniak and Sandrn Peters.
•

Adaptive Computing Resources at

• Administrative Data Access: Data
Warehouse, Susan Huston and Crn ig
MacVittie.

• Client/Server Computing ror Administrative Services, Kevin Seitz and
aries Dunn.

• University Libraries (Computer 1):
Broadca&gt;1 News/Ethnk Newswatch,
Congressional Mastentle U, Compact
Discl05Ure, Computer Select, Lara
Bushallo w-Wilbur , Susan Dow. M ike
La vm and Nancy Stimson.

• HUBNet-HSL Library, Caro l
Lelonek. Amy Lyons and Sharon M•rphy

• Educational Technology Initiatives,
Richard Lesniak. Chris Sauci unac and Jim
Ande~on .

• Degree Audit: DARS. Shelley
Frederick and Cynthia Reyno lds.

• National Center ror Geographic In rormation Analysis (NCGIA), Debbie
Buffamant i.

• Local Area Network Support, Laura
Reist.

• University Libraries (Computer 2):
HUBNet, FirstSearcb/CARL
UnCOVER, Internet Finding Tools,
BISON, Carol Lel onek. Amy Lyon•.
Sharon Murphy. Don Hartman. Loss G la·
zier. Jerry Drost.

• Workflow Systems and Imaging Appli~tions, Joseph Kerr.

• Western Nrw York Health Sciences
Consortium (WNYHSC), John
Hammond.

• Full Text CD-ROMs, Lara Bushall owWilbur and Loss Glazier.

• WINGS: The Internet Connection,
James Gerland and Los•. Glazier.
a Voic~ Response Technology (BIRD),
Susan Eck and James Gorman.

The lnfonnation Techno logy Workstation
Resource Room wi11 offer panidpants ongo ing demonslfations of the technology
ava ilable on campu s and how to use it.

or

• Center
Ex-cellence in Document
Analysis &amp; Recognition, Ronald S.
Curtis.

Topics..,.. -

-nters Include:

• Career Planning and Placement: APS
Automated Placement Senrices

• UB Micro Sales and Education Program, Raymond Volpe.

• University Libraries (Computer 3):
BISON, Business Sources on the
Intern~ Government Resources on the
Internet, Jerry Drost. Mike Lavin.
Gemma DeVinney. Ed Herman. Mau reen
Stanko.
• University Libraries (Com puter 4 ):
English Poetry (CD- ROM). Loss Gla-

zier.

UB INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY FAIR SCHEDULE: Feb. 18-17, 1995

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Day 1-Dr Richard

Mandelbaum. president .
NYSERNet. "High-speed Networking . Present and Future·
Day 2-Dr . Salvatore Belardo.
professor. University at Albany
"Re-engineertng Re-engineer·
ing: Is There a Way to Ensure
Maxtmum Benefits from the
Use of Technology"
10:15

Break

10:30

V1s 1on "99- The CIT Strategy

...

.. .

.,

!

l P1

I

(

I
P1

WINGS ,-he Campus
Connect1on

I

I

I

Demo ClienVServer Comput1ng 1n
Ad mtnJstrat tve Systems
B

P3

'

p

Educationa l Technology
In itiatives

Demo

NCGIA

A
11 :15

Western New York Health
Sciences Consortium
(WNYHSC)

Noon

Lunch

1:15

Future of the IBM Mainframe

2:15

P1

WINGS The Internet
Connect ton
UB M1cro

Demo Vo1ce Response System (BIRD )

3:15

Electronic Mail and Internet
News-Current and Future

4 :00

De mo
A

P1

CSro Advancement a nd Develop ment De mo BISON: Current and Future

BuHalo Free-Ne t
Adapuve Computtng
Resources at UB

A

(ADAMS)

B

P2

Data Access S TARS

Demo Chemical Engineering S imuB

I
Break

Center of Excellence in
Documenl Analysis and
Recogn ition

'

P1

CIT Timesharing Changes

3 :00

P3

B
P2

P1

P2

UNIX Support

'

Demo
A

!a rion Lab (CESL )

De g re e Aud1t System (OARS)

P3

Data Access- Data Warehouse

Demo HUBNet

De mo
A

B

I

I

P2

Local Area Network
Support

P2

Workflow Systems and tmagtng
Applicauons

Demo Full Text CO-ROMs
B

~ ~emo
I

I

�_,.

...... _..,_ ...

5

i;~?en thel&lt;IP[~J~~~~~1~~~,~~
8
ureau
OW LEVELS of estrogen may
impair some cognitive funct1ons.
whole estrogen-re placement
therapy may help improve certain
thin)dng and biological brain processes, and also may play a role in elevating
mood,resulosofstudiesinvolvingpostmenopausal women conduc~ by researchers at
UB have shown.
A team of scientists led by Uriel Halbreich.
UB professor of psychiatry and gynecology
and obstetrics, and an expen in psycbopharmacology, hormonal disorders and behavior. has reported that the performance of
postmenopausal women on certain tests
measuring the ability to integrate several
cognitive functions improved significantly
after a course of esorogen-repla~meno
oherapy (ERT).
Another study sbowed that estrog im-

L

proved serotonin activity in JX)Stme-n--opausal
women. Decreased acti vity of the body
cbemical in the brai n is associated with depression, anxiet y, pa nic and other
neuropsychiatric disorders.
Resul os of the research were presented at
the annual meeting of the International College of Neuropsychopharmacology.
The study of cognitive functioning involved 34 postmenopausal women with an
average age of 52. and 24 women of reprod uctive age wbo averaged 34 years old.
.. We gave post menopausal women and
women of child-bearing age a series of tests
that IAC8Sure a wide variety of cognitive
functions,'' HaJbreich said. The tests measured integrative capabilities. reaction time,
mental aJertness. verbal abilities, coordinalion, dexterity and other capabilities.
•"'Jbe postmenopausal women didn't funcoion as well as the younger group on most of
the cognitive oesos," Halbreich said. 'Their

different from the younger women. Then we
gave them estrogen for 60 days. and then:
was a significant improvement. which was
correla~ with the plasma levels of esorogen.''
Results sbowed that integrauve abilitoes,
reaction times and shon-term verbal memory
of postmenopausal women improved after
estrogen therapy. but manual dexterity and
visual memory did not.
Halbreich theorizes that estrogen may
"protect" some functions that typically decline with age or menopause. Because there
was no improvement on some tests, the bormone effect may be selective, inOuencing
cenain neural circuits and no1 o1hers, he
said.
In the study of the effect of estrogen on
mood, Halbreich'steamtesoed II posurienop~usal women wbo were candidates for ERT
and 15 women of reproductive age, 10 determine if estrogen had an effect on serotonin.
a body chemical known ooserveasacentralnervous-system transmiue'r and to be involved in the regulation of behavior.
Halbreich said earlier research has suggested that postmenopausal women. who
have low levels of
gen. might be more
susceptible to the development of depression, and that this vulnerabilit y is thought to
be associated with low serotonin response.
Decreased serotonin activity has been associated with depression. obscssive-eompuisive disorder. aggressio n. anxiety and panic
disorders.
Halbreich · s team studied the'y10rmonal
rcsJX&gt;nse to a serotonergic agonist called mCCP. and found it was blunted in postmenopausal women. compared to women of
reproductive age. This blunted response. indic.a.tiveof adecreued 5Cf'OlOOe.rgic activity.
was "correc~" with ERT.
He also reponed that increases in the

were associated with the increase in plasma
levels of estrogen, a funher indicator that
ERT boosJ.S serotonergic activity.
H

albreich's team also tudoed the effect
of estrogen on the level of Alpha 2
receptors. a component of noradrenergic
activity and another neurotransmitter involved in regulating mood. Receptor levels
of the postmenopausal women were tes~
before and after 60 days of ERT.
"Persons diagnosed with depression have
been found to have eleva~ levels of Alpha
2 receptors;· Halbreich said. " In posomenopausal women. Alpha 2 receptors are higher
than in women of reproductive age. When
we gave estrogen. the level of these receptors decreased. When we stopped estrogen

1ncreased again.··
" lfadecreasemsomeserotoniniiCiivities
ts involved in Lhe pathophysiology of some
mood disorders." he saod, "then our findings
suggest that estrogen replacement ohenpy
may be beneficoal for preventing thesedisorden;.'' Estrogen replacement may be useful
in treating depression in postmeOOpaUsal
women, he said. bUt it is still unclear if
estrogen improves the mood of women wbo
are oot clinically depressed.
Both studies were supponed by granos
from the National Institute of Mental Health.
The investigators, in addition 10 Halbreich.
were Nathan Rojansky. Soeven Palter, Henry
Tworek. Francis Gengo. Sook· Haeng Joe.
Paul Hissin, Ke Wang. Lucille A. Lumley
and Colleen Manning _

Public Safety commends
employees who 'got involved'
Two UIIIYenftr Servs- I Yfl , _ exhibiled a willingneso to •get involved"
thai has broughtlbem a commeodalioll from ~ UB Departmall of Public Safely. Jim
WilCZak and Torn Doyle, members of the University Facilities stalT. have been
commended by Public Safety's Acting Director Jolmbrela fortbeirefforu in puJlin&amp;
a burning vehicle out of the way of Olber vehicles in Baird A LoL
The letter from Grela to Rlcbard Bohn, mainle!WICe superviio&lt; for BuiJdin&amp;
Services and Grounds, reads: "I would lite to coromeod ~ actions of two of your
employees, wbo on the IJ!OOlin&amp; of Jan_ 24, without regard 10 their OWD safety. polled
a burning vehicle out of the way of several Olber p8lked vehicles, preveutin&amp; the fore
from spreading to these vehicles in Baird A LoL
•
"lbetetwogentlcmeo were Tim W'JICUic oond T omDoyk. Tbeyaffoud atowllrap
to the burning vehicle and with their S we vehicle polled it into the ai le. Tbcir actioos
preven~ thousands of dollan in damqes to Olber vehicles wtriclu urely would 11ave
become involved due to their proximity to the fllmoe&amp;. Tbcir........,.-' willilopeol
iowolved ~ ... eumple 1111
Mr.
Witczak- Mr. Doyle." -

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.....-YUcn.E
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BLACII HISTOII"t'

•
~JAZZ

Jelly's Last Ja~ Maurice
Hine ·• Savion Glo,·er, Freda
Payne. Shet's Performing An..s
Center. 2 and 8 p.m. Call
8S2-5000.
I'MUMACEUtiCS SEMINAR

Day. Rq.iuntion required;
alumni, f ...-uhy. staff and 5l'U ·
dc:nls wc:&amp;oomc:. Ki in&amp; B nd~ .
Glenwood, N.Y. 8:30 Lm. Call
64S -2S31.

C-IST1tY ~lUll
Complues o( HF and HCI
witb Cblorometluones, Pmf.
Janel Dc:l Bene. Youngstown
Slate University. 2 15 Naaural
Sciences&amp;. Mathemtttcs Com ·
plu . Nonh Campu• . 4 p.m.

--

Divin&amp;llll'it..tioa. Alumn i
AtenJ Natatorium. 9 a.m.-S p.m

~·..­
WAUDMAII-.JCE

UUAB FILM SEittES

Clerks. S1udcn1 Union Theater
North Campus. 6:30 &amp;. 9 p.m.
S2. $3 .50. Caii645-29S7 .

Filly Yean o( lloballdo&amp; lb&lt;
Jewish Commu.aity. Baldy
Hoi I. Nonh Campus. James
Lodge. lteynole speaker. speal..s
at 2 p.m. Woricsbops 3-S 30
p.m Conference fee. S2. S6
Dmner. at Pistachio's, Student
Union S 45-7 ~ 30 p.m Dmner
COSI SJ. S6 To rcg•sler. send
checks payable: 10 H1llel Foun dalion to : 40 Cape-n Bh d .
Buffalo. NY 14214.

DANCE AIIO MUSIC

I'EitRIIIIIlAJI
Monument. Zochaque Dane~
Company. Center for the An.s
Nonh Campus. 8 p m S5 . SIO
Call 64S-ARTS
HOittM AMERICAN HEW
MUSIC FESTIVAL

0. W. HARRINGTON L£CTURE
Attt~rated

Approval or
Drugs ror Se.riou.s Llrr-tbreat·

~nin1

9

UFEW-.-

AIDS Update, William
Hammett and Brenda Hammell .
Center for Tomorrow. North
Campus. S60 fee . Call
64S-6140.

Casablanca.. Stu&amp;nt Unaon
Thc:tlt.r. North Campus 6 :30
p.m S2 , S3.SO. Caii645-29S7 .

:~~;~urn . Soulh CamP) .

ADDICTION snJDIU 6

~-

--ADDICTION STUDIES

a

Cliak:al Superrisioa for Practicin&amp; Su~rvison in AJeobol
and Other Druc Prog,..ms, Dr.
Nancy Smith. Center for Tomor-

row. Non.h Campus. S 130 fee.
Call 64S-6140.

"Brid~ng the Ga~"
Holy Eucharist Rite 11

Do Certain Epitopes of I he

Cal). South Campus. Noon .
BLACII HISTOIIY MONTH

Video Pre2ntatioo &amp; Discus·
sion: Early Jazz.; Dane• &amp;:
Black Music. Educl1ional Op-

Every Sunday at 2 p.m.

ponunity Center. 465 Washmg ·
ton Street -Librar)'. 12.30- 1:30

The Commons Suite 100

p.m. Free admission. Call
849-6732.

AND

Every Wcnesday at Noon

The CQmmons Suite 215

Student Worship Service
Every Sunday at 6:30 p.m.

University Presbyterian Church
{at the comer of Mam St. and
Nonh Forest Bh-d .)

It 's going to be a joyful time in the Lord!
Come and see!
j OHN

I 16

Th• EplscoP"I eon.,. Ministry
The Rev. Beverly Moore-Tasy
Umversi ty at Bu ffalo
The Commons Sune 2 I 5
520 let En1rance, Amhers1, NY I 1228
688-4056

UFEW-.-

UFE WOIII(S-

Outer Membrane Protein PI
of Htumophilus tu:gyptius Correlate with Brazilian Purpuric
ft,'t'r! Alan Lesie. M.D. 106

COMPUTING WOIIIIS-

SPSS on lBM/CMS-Part I .

So . .. \' ou Lo~·e Animals!
Valene Will and Wilham Palka
North Campus. 7·9 p.m Call
t'l5-612S.
SUMMERFARE THEATU

Falsettos. Pfeifer lbealt:r R
pm SIO.Sl2. S15 Call
839-8540
UUAB Fti.JII SEBIES

C ler-ks. SIUdenl Umnn Thca1er
Nonh Campus. 9 p.m 2. S3. 50.
Call 645 -2957

FRIDAY

I :30-4:30 p.m. Caii64S -3S40.
BIOlOGICAL SCIENCES
SEMINAR

Norwalk Virus; lruclu.rt,
nprt:SSion and aswmbly, Dr.
Mary Estes. Baylor College of
Medi ci ne. 114 Hochstcllcr.
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
HUMAN.-TS
CONFERENCE

How Should Human Rights bcConeeived! Tho mas Poggc:,

-

HOittM AIIEIIICAH NEW
MUSIC FIESTIVAI.
Monumt:n4 Zodiaque Once
Company . Center for the Arb
North Campus. 3 p.m. S5 . SIO
Caii645-ARTS.
~EBFARE THEATEII
FaiJtttos. Pfeifer "Theater. 3
p m. SIO. $12. SIS Call
839·8S40

HOittM AM-.c:AH
MUSIC FESTIVAl.

SATURDAY

11

ATHLETICS

Club Volleyball Tournam~nt.
AJumni Alma Main Gym. AU day
BLACII HISTOIIY MONTH

Fmi,·al: Arrican Otnee
Troupe Extra ~·aganu Spon
'iOrt'd b) the African 0:1m:e
Troupe/US Step Troupe: _SIU dent Umon Theater Nonh Cam·
pus. S2 50

EXHIBIT
Student Sho" Showmg
through Feb. 20, 1995 . Ccnler
for the Ans. Gallery 2 Nonh
Cam pulro Wed.- Sal. I 0 a.m -9
f·m .. Sun. Noon-5 p.m.

Pa)•ne Shea's Perform tng An.s
Cen1er. 1 p m. and 8 p.m Call
8S2-SOOO

~

Richard Gallardo performing
wor1u: by Gabriela Ortiz and
OCba-5. Cenlet for tht An •
Bl ack BoJ. 'Theatre. North Cam·
pus _5 p.m. S5: a dinner padage
1s also a\ allablc: . Call
64S -ARTS .
OIIUN IIIECITAI. SEittU
Pro-cram inc:luding works b)
Bach. B&amp;I'Tie. Cabe-oa, Franz
Schmidt, Arvo Part. and
Real~y Willa~ Jan Ovcn:tum.
Wilfrid Uluner Unl\ Slee Con ·
cen Hall. Nonh Campus 5 p m
S2.. SS. S6. S8. Call 64S - 29~ I
HOittM AIIEitiCAII NEW
MUSIC FESTIVAL
The Rank Ro~rts String

Trio: AV11nt Garag~ Jau..
Hank Roben.s. Paul Elwood.
Cory Combs. Ctn~er for the Arb
Screemng Room . Nonh Campus. 7:30-8:45 p.m. S5: a dmner
package 1s also available. Call
64S-ARTS .
COMEDY SHOW

Comed&amp;.n Mike

Kollmansbe...-ger. Student
Union Tileau-e . Nonh Campus
8 p.m .• doors open al 7.30 p.m
s~.so. SJ .50. Sponsored by Of.
ficc of S1udent Life:. UUAB and
Ph1 Eta Stgma Hooor Soc1et)

SUMMERFARE THEATER

Falsenos Pfe1fer The&amp;uer 4

SEN- AWMNI WNCHEON

Columbia Univ. 280 Park. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.
MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS

From Data Strudure Through
Topology to Hyptrbolic Ge-ometry, Prof. Jin· Yin Cai. 103
[);ef&lt;ndorf. Sooth Campus. 4 p.m

Questions and An.)""ers about
tM FDA, Da~· id Kessler. M.D ..
Fcx.d and Drug Admmtslr.U&amp;nn
Kinch Audtlonum. 8 a.m.

STAnsTJCS DEPARTMEHT

COMPunNG WOIIIIS- .

COUOQUIUM
Comparisoa or~qression
Curns Using Quasi Residuals.
Dr. K.B. Kulasekera, Clemson

lnlroduetion to Uni.:. 1· 3 10
p.m. Call 64S -3S40.
COMPUTtNQ WORkSHOP

~~~ :;s~J's~

UUU FILM SERIES

Heathers. Swdent Umon Theater Nonh Campus I I .30 p m
S2. $3 .50 Call 64S -2957

BLACII HISTOIIY MOIITH JAZZ

10

Payne . Shea's Performmg An!&gt;

Social Ball: Zeta Pili Beta. Th&lt;

Jelly's Last Jam, Maurice
Hmes. Sa\'IOn Glover. Freda

Government Relations at UB.
Molly Mc Keown. Cenler for
Tomorrow. Nonh Cumpu'&gt; Call
829·2608 .

Univ. 106 Cary. South Campus.
4p.m.

Cc:n1er. 2 and 8 p.m. Call
852 -5000.

Fal.seltos. Pfeifer Theater 8
p.m. S IO. $12. SJ5 Call
839-8S40.

~

Forum Panel DiscussionBlack Men. 147 Diefendorf.
South Campus. 7 p.m. Free ad ·
mission. Sponsored by the Blacl.
Stucknl Union.

10 a.m .- Noon. Caii645-3S40.
MIC-IOLOQY SEMINAR

SUMMERFARE THEATEll

New Goldn1 Nugget. 8:30pm
SIS. SIB

BLACII HISTOIIY

~JAZZ

JeUy' L.ut Jam, Mauncc
Htnes. Sa\·ton Glover. F~

Smoking, Power AdH)Cales.
on.h Campus. 5:30-6:30 p.m
Caii64S·6 125
UUAII FILII SERIES

BLACII HISTOII"t'

Mainstage. North C.mpus 8
p.m. SS. S8. S9. Sl2 Call
645-ARTS .

BLACII HISTOIIY MOIITH

lntemd Resourus-Placu.

w-.-

Judce.m£nt Day, Daamanda

Galas. Center for the An.s.

Frtib tart : How to Quit

Massage Therapy for Read.
Nec.ll; and Shoulden.. Dawn
Jordan Nonh Campus 7-9 p m
Caii645-612S .

COMPUTING

Episcopal Campus Ministry

Diseases_ Oav1d A.
J.D .. M.D .. Food and

K~ ssler.

Drug Admimstration Buller

1~

HI DAY
4tb Aanual fac:utty ol at ural
Scitoees aDd Matbe.matiet SIO

pedes Differeoct: ia Cuta~~e-­
ou EsltraR Activity. Kimiko
Tawada. C508 Cooke. Nonh
Campus. 3:30p.m.

THURSDAY

A froPop Worldwide. On
WBFO 88.7 FM . 8 p.m.

SUNDAY

Brennan, Wc:aem Onwio. 280
Pari&lt;. Nonh Campus. I:30-

Sp.m.

--

I 30-4:30 p.m

pm and8pm. SIO. SI 2.SI5

MONDAY

Call 8J9-8S-IO.
WBFO PltOGitAM
HIGHUGHTS
NPR 's BlursStagr On WBFO

88.7 FM 4 p.m.
DANCE AND MUSIC
PEJIFOIIMAHCE

Monument, Zodntque Dance
Compnny Center for the An ...
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. S5. SIO
Call 645 -ARTS .
HOIITH AMERICAN NEW
MUSIC FESnYAL

Idiot Variations, Rtndt' Eden
Cen ter fo r 1he An!&gt;, Bl acL. BoA
Theatre. Nonh Ca mpus. 8 p.m.
SIO. Caii645-A RTS .

ADOICT10NS STUDIES •

TRAINING-

Community Strategies ror tb~

Prnention of Alcohol and
Other Drug AbUR, Paul
Cun.in. Center for Tomorrow .
No nh Campus. S45 fee . Call
645-6140.

�_.,...__..,_

.

7

Apple Prices

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EMERITUS CENTER aGAltD

aLACK NlSTOIIY MONTH

5 Swiss An:hllecu S Bolldlngs:

Emeritus Center Address.

Pbysic:al Dimeuioo and Con-

Prof. !an Buckle. SOtnh Lounge.
Goodyear Hall. Soulh Campus.
2 p.m. The Emerilus Cc.n1er
Board ~I s a1 I p.m.

VId eo Pre:ttntation &amp; Oiscuss:ion: J au People.; The Black
Ionuena: in FUm and T heater
Educat aonal Opportunity Center.
465 Washmgton SL-LibtaT)
12:30- 1:30 p.m Free adml!i\IOn .
Call 849-6732 .

ceptual Embodiment.. Dyett
Exhibition Hall. 335 Hayes.
South Campus. Gallery boulli.
Frtt. Through 3/13/95. Call
829-3485. x32 I.
UFEW-

Tbe Ac:ademk Cboitt CarMr
Connection, J('h Ri §;kO. North
Campus. NOOft-2 p m. Call

645.{;125.
COMI'IITINO W -

lntermediaU CMS- Part I.
U0-3:30 p.m . Call 645 ·3540.
STAFF HMATE MEETING

Professional Starr Senate Genua! Membership Mft'l in.:.
Gues~

speaker US Senior Viet
President Robert J. Wagner. )
Butler Auditorium, Farber Hall .
South Campux. 3·5 p.m.

COMI'IIfiNCI WOIIKS-

lntroduction to GNU Emacs
Ed itor (Unix) . 6-8 p.m. Call
645-3540.
UFE-

Ballroom Daodn&amp;: Swing lnto
Spring, Dr. Ninita E.F. Bogue
and Mr. Bjorn Bogue. North

Campus. 7-8 p.m. Call
645.{;125.
UFEW-

Tbe Resurgence of Funda mentalism , Fr. Patrick Keleher.
Rabbi Shay Mintl. and Pastor
Roger Ruff. North Campus.
7:30-9:30 p.m. Call 645 ·6 I 25 .
UFEWOIIKS-

Country Wedem Danci ng, Dr
Ninita E.F. Bogue and Mr.
Bjorn Bogue. Nonh Campus.

8-9:15 p.m. Call 645.{;125 .

WEDNUOAYS AT 4 PWS

.. The Narratin Rel u ms: ~
peds or Contemporary Pott ·
ics, .. Peter Nicholls, Umvc.rsll)
of Sussex. England. 436
Clemens North Campus 3:30
p.m.
UFEWOIIKSPathways &amp; Possibilities-: Tbe
Student Activity T ranscript,
Jeny Godwin and Susan MaJor
onh Campus . 3:30-4:30 p.m.
STAnsnc:s DEPARTMENT

PHARMACOLOGY SEMINAR

COUOQUIUM
On Latin Hyptrcu bt- Samp ling a nd Related Designs ror
Computu Experiments, Or.
Wei -Lic.m Loh. Purdue Uni' .
106 Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m

Oligo nu c~lide Inhibition of
I nltrferon-\' ..Cha,-.ctuiz.ation
and Mechanism or Action,
MUrah Ramanathan. Ph .D. 307
Hc.chstt:ner. North Campus. 4 p.m

UFE WOIIKSHOP

Podry R~cun c.. Rae
Armantrout and Douglas
Messerl1. &amp;nter for the Ans
screemng room . Nonh Campu ..
4 p.m

16

T'ai C b i for Beginners. Ron
Ingal sbe. Class runs Tuesdays
and Thursdays through May I
North Campus. 5:30.{;:30 p.m
Call 645.{;1 25 .
UFEWOIIKS~inning Sign Lan gu age
Se:m ina r , Judy Ku.,.,·1ck. Class
runs through Apri l. North Cam -

pus . 6:30-8:30 p.m. Call
645.{;125.
NORTH AMEJIICAN NEW
MUSIC FUT1VA1.

Musical G roup P trformance,

The. Instrumenta l Fat·aor. Center
for the Ans Drama The:urc..
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. S5 . S7
Call 645-ARTS .

Free coffee and mu ... c .
Haniman HaiL SoUih Campul&lt;l
8 p.m Call645-2957

14

Diagnostic Dilemmas: Clin ica l
Cast Discussions, Man in
Brecher, M.D. Mercy Hospital
Mai n Conference Room.
8:30a.m.
BROWN aACI READING
' SERIES

Good N ight Desdemo na (Good
Morning Juliet). Ann-Marie
Macdonald. 8 83 Center for the
~Nonh~Noon- 1 p.m.
BLACK IIISTOIIY MONTH

Langston Hugbr:s: Voiu:s &amp;
Visions. Educational Oppon unity Center. 465 Washington SL
12:30-1:30 p.m. Call849.{;721.
COMI'IIfiNCI WOIIKSSPSS on VMS. I :30-4:30 p.m.
Call 645-3540.

WEDNESDAYSAT41'LUS

COMI'IIfiNCI WORKSIntroduction t o\ ~ 1Sclu.!&gt;1er
4.{;:30 p m Call 645-3540
PIIARMACY SEMINAR

Compliance and Burden in
Pa tients Receh·ing Lithium or
Val p roate for Bipolar Disor-der. Gat) M Lc\IR . Pharm D .
Alhan) College of Pturmac~
2-'8 Cooke. Nonh Campu-.
4 30-S..lO p m
UFl!WORilSEsstntials of Spirit ual \\ r ll ·
bei ng: A Ptrsona1J n,·entor) .
Ron ln,alstw: onh Campu ..
5 : 30 - 7 ~ .10 p.m Call b-15 -61 2~
ARCHITECTURE LECTURE

5 S" is:s ArchiiKts S Buildings.
Kc,•n A her Spons.ored b) tht"
School of ArchlltciU~ and
Planmng 301 Cro!&gt;b) South
.campu .. 5 30 p.m Free
COMI'unNCI WORilSCustomiution or Sun X II R6
En,·ironmtnt 6-8 p.m Call
645-3540.
UUAII ALM SERIES

Bird . Student Union Theate-r
Nonh Campus. 6:30p.m S::! .
53.50. Call 645-1957 .

UB AT SUNRISE SERIES

PEDIATRIC CONFERENCE

.

THURSDAY

The T ai ls a nd Nu rv Bro"n

Improving Science Education
in Ame.rica, Distinguished
Teaching Prof. Dr. Clyde F.
Herreid II . Center for Tomor·
row. Nonh Campus. 7:30-9 a. m.
S8. S9. Call 829-2608.

Signal Transduction in Malignant and Normal B Cell" and
its Applic-ation to Canar
Therap) . Ben Scon . PhD
RPC'I 12.30 p m

Elchtng by Ben1amtn
Pond. above . ts among
works of 1994 Rumsey
w1nners on exhibit 1n Art
DepanmenJ Gallery Show
opens loday. con11nues
lhrough Feb 17

COMI'UTING WORKSIntermrdiatt CMS-Part 2
1.30·3 30 p.m Cali645 -J540

THE ALGONQUIN TABLE
COFREHOUSE

TUESDAY

ROSWEU I'ARit STAFF
SEMINAR

Rumsey winners
to exhibh works

OI'US: CLASSICS UVE

PHARMACY SEMINAR

Enh a ncing Patient Compliance: Thr Nrxt Frontier in
C~1 Containment , Daniel
Wall~. 248 Cooke. No rsh
Campus. 8·9 a.m.
WNYniC SEMINAR
15 0..9000 Trur Litr StoriH.
Sponsored by the Western Ne"Yort Technology De\·elopment
Ctnter. Center for Tomorrow.
North Campus. 8: I 5· 1 I :30 a .m.
S60 registration fee . Call
636·3626.
COMI'IIfiNCI WOIIKSIntemd Resourus-People.
· 10 a.m.-Nooo. Call 645·3540.
OUTIIEACH WOIIK._
Making thr Transition to UB,
Counseling Center. 14 5E Student Union. Nor1h C:tmpus.
Noon- I p.m.

Erie County Wind Ensemb le.
Allen Ball . South Campus.
1 p.m. Fft'c. :admission.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
I'ROCIRAM$-WBFO

BHn Here and Gone-Black
Musit in tht Soutb . WBFO
88.7 FM . 8 p.m.
BLACK HISTORY JIIONTM
I'ROCIRAM5-WBFO

Just a Little Faith And Gra c-t
WBFO 88.7 FM . 8 p.m.
NORTH AMERICAN NEW
MUSIC FESnYAl.

Instrumenta l and Vocal Ptrrormance. The. lnstrumt'nt al
Factor. Richard Estes. tenor:
Virginia Dupuy . meu.o !&gt;Opr:mo
Ctnrer for the Ar1!&gt; Drnma Thea t ~ . North Campu . 8 p.m. SS.
S7 . Caii645·ARTS.
UUAII ALM SERIES

Spt«hless. Student Umnn Theater. Nonh Campu(O , 9 p.m. S2.
S3.50. Call 645·2957.

--..Jn_Globoi.._IUbpoT- 1
FuiModem, Sylltem 7.5, eWc:wld, AI
and~ PC
behange, Up to o.teiContaet, a.rt.WOI'b 2. t . OuicUn 4.
MoeGollory Clip An. Soln Doelof Chollon9o.-- Pluo/Eaoy
Open Tranalatora 7.5, Qk:k Att Petforma Collection, Amlrfcan

e..

--

Oietlonoty. -~·-·-· ""'"nd

W041d In 10 ~ve. New Grofier'• Muftimedla Eneydopedla, 30
Workl Au., TltM Atrnanee., KidSotl CO.

Power Macintosh 6100

$1204
•60MHz

• 8MB RAM

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

AfriCIIn American Rhythm
Thr ough the Ages: A Hi51or)
of Song &amp; Dan~ Educat1onal
Qrponunll) Center. ~65 W ~h­
mgton St 6th Aoor Aud11onum
Caii,.8.J9-6717
BLACK HISTORY MOHnt
Bi~raphical krtche:s of Afri ·
can Amrrican~ EducatiOnal
Opponumt) Center. ~65 Wa!&gt;h mgto n St 6th Floor Audnonum
Free :tdm• ....,•on Call 8~9 -6707

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Nubian Truna.. Sho" : An Aftr-rnoon of African Cou1urt
with Fabrics and St) IH from
Ktn)a, Sentgal. Sitrn Leone.
Zimba"t· and other par1" or
Africa Educauonal Opponun1l)
C~n1cr. -165 W a!&gt;hiR~ton St bth
Fluor Aud11onum C.1ll ~.JQ.
(l7J1l)r 8.J9 .67'\6
UB DOWNTOWN
Lunch &amp; Panel Discussion:
Alttrnath·e:s to l ncart'eration.
l,ancfl.,b ml'lude Supcnnlc-n dcnt of the Ene Coun1~ H••hJmg
Center John J Ora). Nt"- Vorl
Stale Supreme- Coun JudJ;e Bar·
b.:aro Ho \loe . and Deput) Dlre'Ctor
or the- Ene C()Unt) Probation
Depanmcm M. M ar~arcl
o·Donnc-11. Charle!&gt; E. Carr. UB
La" Prof. \lo 111 moderate H) all
Regenc) Buffalo. Noon -1 .30
p m SIO. S12 . RcloCnauun!&gt; are
requ1red : call 829-::!608
CONDUCnNCI CONFER£NCE

Tht Prrpa rat io n of
Tom orro" 's Conductors V,
lhmet Simon ... or~:tm7er . Ba1rd
and Slce 1-bll .. Nonh Cnmpulo
1-5 p m. Through Feb . 18 Call
b-15-29 21 .
COMPUTING WORKSlnttrmrd iate VMS 9 a m Noon . Call bol5-J540.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH

BlacL HiS1or) J eopard)
Gamt . Educauonal Opponun1l)
Ccntrr. J b5 Wa\hiR(!.tOn St 6th
Floor Audnonum 10 a.m.- 2
p m Fr« adml!&gt;'o iOn Call 84967.10
BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Quiz/Game Sho"' Educat• onal
Opponumt) Center. 46 5 W~sh ·
IO!;IOn St . 6th Aoor Auditori um .
10- 11 a.m. Fttt admiS!&gt;IOn.

Conl•nued on page 8

..

�_., ....

8
CALENDAR

Lener to the Editor

continued from page 7

=~&amp;lu-

Poet and critic
Rae Armantrout
reads from her
wort&lt; Feb. 15 at
4 p .m. in the
ScreE!ning Room
in the Cenler for
the Arts.

cational Oppommity Center.
465 Woshingt011 5L 6th Floor
AudilllriWD- 11 :15- 11 :45 a.m.

Frtt admission.
IIUCI(

.anMIT

~

Danct ...._..totloo. &amp;lucatiooal Opportunity Center. 465
Wuhin&amp;too St. 6th F\oor Auditorium. 11 :4S Lm.- 12:30 p.m.
Free admission.
lllACII.anMIT ~

F-..Sllow:Afrba&amp;lucatiooal ()pportunjty Center,
46S Washini'OO Sc6th Floor
AuditoriWD-12:J().J : I5p.m.

- Y S Af 41'WS
- ~,.,._, Wluot 's the
DilftftDC:C!." DoucLu
Messerli. 438 Clemens. North
Campus. 12:30 p.m.
.....-ames ...00111
imlllllDGAlppt'&lt;SiioG with
UP'f'O"U" MetbylprodllisoloiH:\~ Ia Canlio&lt;
lutatioa; Dr. Elena
na. C508 Cooke. North
pus. 3:30p. m.
I'HYSICS~IUII

Tho Status ottbe Solar N....
trioo Puulo, Dr. Stephen
Parl:e. Fennilab. Chicago. 228
Natunl Sciences&amp;. Mathcmarics Complex. North Campus.
3:4S p.m.
aiOLCMIICAL SCIENCE
HMINAII
mRNA Splidn&amp; iD Plants, Dr.
Mary Schuler. Univ. of Ulinoes.
114 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m.

--

I'WDEin'ATlONAND

Top Guo., M~ Rod von
Lipsey. U.S.M .C .. While House
Fellow. 20 KnoL North Campus. 4 p.m.

ar"nsnca DEPIUmiENr
~

Estimatioa or a Su,.,..ival
Fuoetioa wl.. lolen111-Ceo·
sored Data, Df. Qiqiog Yu.
SUNY Stony Brook. 106 Cary.
Soulll Campus. 4 p.m.
ErMICS IN aiOM~AI.
IIDEAIICII cou.oQUIUII
Animal Raeart:b : Necessary
to Human WcUa r"e'! A [)e..
bate, Ronald Allison. M.D. and
David Trigg.le. Ph.D. Butler
Auditorium. Sherman. Sooth
Campus. S: lS-7 :1 5 p.m.

Sarurd.ly. Call 64S-6878.
UH-..n'~ArD

An exhibit of 199S Ruriisey
candidales' wort continues
lhtou&amp;b Feb. 22 io llle .&lt;n Gallery (Secood Floor). Gallery
hours arc 10:30 un...S p.m.
Wednesday-Saturday and
Noon-S p.m. Sunday. Call
64S-6912.

-VEimCAI.
uiNIEJrs ltiD
Runs through July 31 in the
l.ightwell Gallery. This siteCOMUUCtion explores the intercoaliCCtions between art and
ardlitccture. Admission is free .
Gallery houn are 10:30 a.m.-8
p.m. Wednesday-San.1rday and
Noon-S p.m. Sunday. Call
64S-6912.

--NElli

SOUND INSfAUATlON:

Kristin Oppenht:im, daughter of
concepcual artist Dennis
Oppenheimer, inVestigates
sound and music they relate
to personal memones and elpe·
rience. In Gallery I of the Cenlr:r for the Ans, i.hc presents a
sound instaHation cited by New
Y ort Times an critic Roberta
Smith for its ..SOOlhing, accumulating. almost hypnotic ef·
feet that heightens the act of
perc~pt:ion . " Oppenheim' rt·
corded voice. repeating a sooth·
ing chant based on the: chorus of
Brian Wilson 's song. -sail On.
Sailor."' produces a pro'·ocati\'e
and intense sound sculpture that
mesmerizes and enchams e\'en
as it disappears. The utubu
continues through Feb. 25 .

n

UFI:WORKSFrub Start: How to Quit
S mokl n&amp;. Power Advocates.
North Campus. 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Caii645-612S .
COIII'UTtiMI
Customizatioa
of X-based
Opt:n Wintlo wt Eaviroamcat.
6-8 p.m. Call645-3540.

UU.UFILIISEIIIES
Wbea Harry Met Sally. Sludent.Uoioo lbeatc.r. Noeth
Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2. $3 .50.
Ca1164S-29S7.
UFI:W~

The Moral..and Et hical DIm ensions o r Leadership, Pastor Roger Ruff. Class runs
through March. North Campus.
7:30-9:30 p.m. Caii64S-6125 .
~

.... EJIICAN NEW
MUSIC FDTIYAI.
Ensemble Per1'o rma nce, The
New Yort New Music En l&gt;Cmble. Cemer for the Arts
Drama lbeatre. North Campus.
8 p.m. SS. S7. Call 64S-ARTS .

SUIIIIERfAR£ niEAfU
Falseltos. Pfeifer Theater. 8
p.m. $10. $12. SIS. Call
839-8540.
UUO FILII SERIES
Speechless. Student Union
Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m.
S2. $3 .50. Call645-2957.

EXHIBITS
UM IIUIUEY -NEilS
Todd James M ariani and Benjamin Pond will e :.;hibit their
work through Feb. 17 in the Art
DepannO:nt Gallery. Gallery

hours arc

10

a.m.-5 p.m. Tues-

day. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednes&lt;by-Friday. and I I a.m.-8 p.m.

_..,_ ...

NOTICES
"TTENTlON: FACULTY
EDmiiiS
In effon to keep pa~ w1th new
forms of journal publication.
the Uni\'ersity Libraries asks
tNt fac:uhy member-s from all
depanmeots who SCJ"Ve as JOUr·
naJ edjtOT'S or editorial board
member-s send their names to:
Barbara von Wahlde. University Libranes. Office of the
Du-ector. 432 Capen. Bol
60162S. Buffalo. N.Y. 142601625. A Sl'ries of meetings betwec:n individuals in\'OI\'ed tn
journal publication , policy. and
de\"elopment and 1~ Ubranes
is planned 10 broaden the L1 ·
braries' understanding of hQ,_w
JOUrnal editors wort. as well as
enhance the editors' understanding of the Libraries need~
and concerns. The union or
these two groups will endeavor
to influence futurt journal publication trends and developments for the benefit of schol·
arly communication .
INfUINATlONAI. FOUl
DANCING
All are: welcome 10 join the
International Folk Dancing
group each Friday from 8-11
p.m. in 2 Oi~feodorfHall on the
South Campus. These free ses·
sions begin with teaching. Pan nen are not nec:ded. 1bc: spon·
SOf" is the Gradual~ Student
Association.

PI.ANS--

NEWLY--P

1bc: newly formed Lesbian and
Gay Facohy·Staff Association
5eeks 10 raise awareness of gay

and lesbian concerns in the
university community. AliO. 11

aims to create a supportive
campus envirooment that recognizes the contributions of 1ts
lesbian, gay, and bisc:xual
members. 1'bt poup encour·
ages support for research and
scholarly discussion of gay and
lesbian topics . The LGFSA
ITICt:ts monthly to discuss the
univers:ity climate for gay. les ·
bian. and bisexual employees.
Caii64S-2S46 for more mformatlon, or E-nwl
ulcreg@ubvm .cc.buffalo.edu
~ AIIEJliCAN NEW
MUSIC FDTIYAI.

'The North American New Mu sic Festival, present.mg Aural
and Visual Contrasu. opens
Feb. I0 at the Center for the
Arts . Ten perfonnancti will
tab place during the t~n-day
festival. Roben Chumbley.
festival dnector, says "Our goal
IS 10 prov1de d1verse presenta·
tions all falhng under the broad
momker or ·new musK:.'""' Programs mvolving NatJve Amen·
can dancers, performance anist
Rindc Ecten, and Zodiaqoe
Dance Company are among t~
musical ensembles and guest
composers featured. The fesu ' 'al is sponS&lt;n:d by the US
Center for the Arts and the Faculty of Arts and Lc-uers . Check
the calendar for indtvtdual per·
rormanttS or call 645-ARTS

UFI: WORK~S FOR
SPIIING
The L1fe Workshops Spnng

program begms lhis month
Approumately 70 new and
ucittng workshops a~ open to
persons mterested in leammg.
dcvclopmg skills. and JUSt plam
having fun. Workshops CO\'C.r a
\'anety or is~ues r.ngmg from
beauty concerns. cntft:s and
hobbies to business and per·
sonal goals. 1be local commu·
nity is welcome to panicipate
Check the calendar for th1s
week's offerings, or call 645 612.!5 ror a complete listmg or
Spring workshops and ~giStra ·
tion 1nfonnauon.

JOBS
FACULTY
Ass~1:a n t

Proressor-Dept. or

Communication. Posting #JF.
5003 . AssodatrfFuU Prortssor-Dept . of Pathology. Posung
ltF-5004. Assistant/AsSOC'iate/
Fu ll P rofessor-Dept. of Pathol·
ogy. Posting HF-5005

R£SEARCH
Field T racer -Psychology.
Po.scing IR-95007 . Proju-1
Staff Asslstant -Ps:ycholog).
Posting fR -950 10. ReR;a~ b
Su pport Specia lis1-Rchabihta·
uon Medicine. Posung fR ·
95011 . Research T ec.hnicia nPhannauutiCS, Posting
MR-9SOJ2. Research Support
Specialist...Qral biology, Posting I R-95013.
Compukr Net·w or k Manager
(SL-3)-Univei"Sity Public.atlons.
Posting MP--4110. Cata log
Tec.bn.icia.o (S L--3)-Law L1 ·
brary. Posting IP-SOOI .

To ob10m mort' informatwn on
jobs listtd abow!. l"ontact Pnsonntl St'rvicts. /04 Crofts
Hall.

The proposal to
wilhdraw one-third
of the stale lax
dollars from SUNY
in Jhe state budget rs an unprecedenled attack on public higher education 1n New Yor1&lt; Slate. Faculty and sla«
who have been at UB for many years
have seen budgeJ reductions in the
past. bul never of such a magnitude as
we face now Such reduction s1gnals
thai the slale v1ews public higher education in ihe SUNY system as a low
pnority. A reduced budgel in conJunction wiJh aJ leasJ 12 previous reductions
of the SUNY budgeJ in recent years
canno1 help bUI have a negahve impacJ
on Jhe quality of our educational programs and on access of students 10
academic programs
The faculty and all constiluems of the
university commumty mus1 not be silenl
about how these changes Will affect our
umversity All members of Jhe umvers1ty
musl be strong advocales for the univers ity We need 10 !ell our elecJed
offic1als whal impact Jhe proposed
reduc11ons will have Qrl UB AIJhough
we are all shocked a1 the magmJude of
Jhe proposed reduc11ons . we musl conlact our elecJed representatives d~rectly
or through regular letters Addresses of
our elected oH1c1als are available

through the Senate OH1ce m 543 Capen
Hall. 645-2003
In addrtion 10 strong and regular ad vocacy for SUNY and UB. all segments
of the university need to come together
as a community Jo shape the future of
UB We cannot wait for the state budget
to be passed to plan our institUiional
response to the proposed budgel reduc·
t1ons Now IS the lime Jo reaffirm the
pnnc1ple of collegialrty. the essenlial
hall marl&lt; of the academy Senior umvers1ty adm1ms1ra1ors aJ all levels of the
umvers1ty must use existing governance
orgamzat100s to seek institutional soluJions 10 the reducJions . Faculty and staH
governance organizations will be severely tesled, but musl be given the
opportunity Jo par1K:1pate rn shap1ng Jhe
response I beheve that 11 rs appropnate
for governance Jo help to develop and
a«~rm general pnnciples of what is Important aJ UB and how Jhe process of
budgetary response should be handled
al UB
Through colleg1ahty, we have lhe
opportun&lt;ty 10 shape Jhe 1nsJitutional
response 10 !he budgelary cns1s so thai
we will weather the storm. survive and
rega1n our momenJum for the future We
can only do th1s 1f we come Jogether as a
untversJty commumty
I'E1D A. NJCUJISOH, CHAIR
Fscufty Senate

1994 Service Excellence AwardS'

A

T AN ASSEMBLY ofUn ivmity

Services employees on Friday.
Feb. 3, Senior Vice Presidenl
Roben J. Wagner presided a1 Jlte
presentalion of the division 's 1994 Service
E&gt;cc lfence Awards. He called thiS year'
three awards and one . ho norable mention
" indicative of the lind of thought and effort
that go 1010 Universily Services· worl."
Ronald Nayler. associate vice president
for untversity fac1lities. presented an award
to the um versity's CES/Way project t.e am
for work on a large-scale energy conservation program that is expected to save UB S3
million a year. Team members. all from
Uni versi ly Facilities. included Phil Cahil.
Tom Chatapka. Ru ss Devans. Mike Dupre.
Steve Englert. Chuck Hutchison. Ken
Kavanagh. Jim K orta. Dave Krawczyk. Herb
Lyde ll. OiffMartin.JoeMetzger. Bob Puleo.
John Russo. Walter Simpson. FredSmeader.
and Kevin Thompson.
V..onard Snyder. associate vice president
and controller, and Hinrich Manens. associate vice president for computing and information 1echnology. presented an award to a
team from the Offices of Financial Aid and
Administrative Computing Services for a
federal electronic data exchange initiative
that has greally improved the speed with
which students and their parents can receive
informa1ion about financial aid awards. The
project reduced waiting time from as much
as live weeks down to' 1wo business days.
Projec1 learn members included Andy
Sprague and Chris Tunon from I he Office of
Financial Aid and Frank Guzzetta. Richard
Papaj. and Paul Viapiano from Administrative Computing Services.

S

nyder also presented an award to a
projec1 team from UB ' s Stale Purt:has-

Senior VIce President Robert J.
Wagner concratuletes Jill Uebelhoer et
Service Excellence Awards, as Pauline
Eshelman and Don Erb look on.
ing Departmenl for developing a speed order
system that will allow department.s 10 expedite high volume purchase orders for items
costing less than $500. Speed order project
team membep. all from Jlte Purchasing Department. inCluded Terry Bell. Helen Gaiter.
John Grabowski. Judy Miller. Pal Nowicki ,
and Sandy Russo.
Nayler presenJed an honorable mention
citation to a BfOUp from University Facilities

for two staff training initiatives. one to improve worl:ptac\ skills. Jhe other leading to
the GED diploma."rhe workplace skills Jearn
included Don Erb, David Lylle. Gemma
Moell . Barbara Christy, and Pauline
Eshelman ; the GED project was the respon·
sibitily of Jill Uebelhoer.
Attheendoflheawanlceremony, Wagner
presented Associate Vice President Carole
PeLro with a UB 20-year service recognition
pin and a certificale of appreciation for her
accomptishment.s during Jbose 20 years.

'Flood' In Student Union.
The UB Student Union was evacuated Tuesday shortly after noon when
an emergency spnnkler went off accidentally. Several inches of water
cover~d the lobby floor, alter spewing from the sprinkler behind the
candy counter. Us1ng mops and wet vacs, maintenance workers
managed to clean up the area by 2:30 p .m.

�IHIIIJIIIII

9

~•. ~v..._..,..._u

Croteau speaks at Women in Sports event
The Royals are riding a three-game
winning streak thanks to their 57-48 win
over Northeastern Illinois on Saturday
Prior to their Feb. 6 showdown with Ch1·
cago State. UB is 13-5 overall and 8-2 in
tile Mid-Continent Conference. which
t1es them lor second place. Anne Gallagher scored 12 points and grabbed
eight rebounds in the victory while Kris
Holtz added 12 points with six boards
Earlier in the week. Brenna Doty's 26
points propelled the Royals past Eastern
Illinois. 57-53, in Charleston. Illinois to
complete their two-game road sw1ng .
MEN'S BASKEI1IALI.
Myron Banks scored 25 po1nts and
pulled down 16 rebounds to lead the
Bulls in a 56-52 come-from-behind win
over Nonheastern Illinois at Alumn1
Arena Saturday. Ban s was 12-of-16
from the floor and hit three-pointer.
sconng 17 points 1n t e second half to
rally UB from a-2 - hallt1me delrcit
Kelvin Rob1nson had 15 rebounds and
three blocked shots while Modie Cox
added eight assists 1n the v1ctory As of
Feb. 4, the Bulls were 12-7 overall and
7-4 in M1d-Cont1nent play
The Bulls fell just short aga1nst Eastern Illinois on Jan. 30 falling 72· 71 for
thetr second consecutive one-pomt loss
Jamie Anderson scored 26 po1nts to
lead the Bulls .

WRESTLING
UB dropped a pair of dual meets last
week at horne falling to Central M1ch1gan
36-9 and Central ConnectiCUt State 29- 13
In the CCSU loss. Bnan Dowdall ( 126
pounds), Rob Pav1s (134). Rennre
Cnsalulli ( 142) and George Chamoun
(167) scored individual v1ctones
MEN'S SWIMMING
The Bulls split a tri-meet at Cleveland
State Saturday deleat1ng Notre Dame
122-1 19 while fall1ng to Cleveland State
150-92 Buffalo's Kerry Miller won two
events. the 200 freestyle 1n 1 44 8 and
the 200 backstroke in 1·53 01
WOMEN'S SWIMMING
The Royals defeated Cleveland State
162-75 and lost to Notre Dame 135-97
at the Cleveland State tr1-meet Saturday

TRACK a FlElD
The men's and women 's tndoor track
and field squads traveled to Kent State
over the weekend. The Bulls lrnrshed
filth 1n the six-team meet with Fumu
Gakodi setting a school record 1n the
400 meters in 49 seconds to f1n1sh thrrd
Gakodi was also part of the 1600
relay squad that placed third Kns
Winkler also set a school record with
h1s 22.42 In the 200 meters
The Royals placed lrlth in a seventeam field as Julie Phelps won the m1le
run in 5:06.89. Jud1th Novak took the
3.000 in 10: 11 . Lisa Kragbe set a
school record in the 55-meter hurdles
with her third place lrnish of 8.49

II)'NATIWI~

RepOfler ContributO&lt;

J

ULIE CROTEAU. forst and only
womantoplayNCAA baseball. was
keynote speaker Feb. 2 when UB
noled the sixth annual National Girls
and Women In Spans Day at a breakrasa ceremony in Alumni Arena. For four
consecutive years. UB' s observation of this

day honoring women in athletics has been
the largest of any university's in the U.S.lbe
breakfast was attended by 350 athletes, students. faculty and guests.
Croteau. also the first woman to coach an
NCAA baseball team. currently is starting
'forst baseman for the Colorado Si lver Bullets, an all-female professional baseball team.
She made the baseball team at St. Mary';, a
Division Ill school. in IY89 after fighting an
unsucce ssful sex ual discrimi nation s uir
against her high school for "'fusing to allov.
her to play on their all-male baseball team
although she was well qualified.
Croteau $poke of the fear and intimidation she felt during the coun battle agamst
her high school. Despite the outcome of the
case. the fac1 that she did not back do"' n '"'a-.
of paramoum importance. she sa•d
Cmltau. who also describt.d her expen·
ences acung m the film. "A League ofThe1r
Own,'' urged more women to become actJ\'e

in spans. emphasizing rhat spons make
women strong. and that thJ!\ strength make~

their lives safer and more satisfymg. She
stressed the imponanceof assuring that Tnle
9 continues to be observed.
At the breal.fast. the UB recognrllon a"ard
for advancement m " 'omen ' s spor1 ""'as pre ~nted to Carol) n Thoma' Thoma\ pomted
out that the lessons offered b) athletic!!. are
'"' aluable to women. teaching them to diS CO\ er thetr mot 1' at1ons and their capab1l1tie~
for them!!.ch e~ . She spole optJmJ u caU}
about the future of women 1n !,pon~t , prediCImg that, "It" ill be fa1r. )OU wtll male u fa1r.
you have earned •t." UB ~" 1mmmg coach

Dors1 Reynold &lt; made the
pre~ntauon

Julie Croteau

•l&amp;ns auto-

Prestdent Wilham graphs for UB
Gremer tooL the pod1um women au..
to g1ve an 1nlp3S!!.IOned fet es following

pl&lt;a for U B students and talk In Alumni
espectall) athletes. to tale Arena.
an acu" e ro le m both
~hool and !!.late pol IlKs He !!oaJd Lhat \to htle
commmed to refonmng the ~te ·s budget
aJong "uh GO\ Patal1 . he wa-~t di stressed at
he prospect of t.he~ cut\ harmmg UB programs I!Le athleucs

TEACHERS
continued from p~e 1

produce most of the nation· s profes~ of
education. ''We prepare the future professon·
ate and these graduates of ours will be p"'paring the other 80 percent of the teachers."
Petrie said that a new , r-eal.world orienta·

tion to teacher education is needed. "Educarion schools need to become the reaching
hospitaJs of the teaching profession. blend-

ing university-based instruction "ith chnicalexperience."The UB Graduate School of
Education has made a good -.;tan m thJt
direction. according to Petne. pan1cularl)
with two unique program' BRIET and
LIFT'S
"Our nation all) -re..·ogm7ed Buffalo Research ln ~titute on Educut10n for Teal'hlnf!
CBRIET) Incorporate~ man) of tht" repon · ~

recommendations" ith tt,.empha'\.t."' on l'llnlcal faculty and teachers as researcher~ Y.'e

have a long" ay to go. ho\o\'ever.
''Our newly lau nched ··Leader!-&gt;hip lnltl:ltive for Tomorrow 's Schools" CLIFT'S ) is a
problem-oriented. field-based approach to
preparing teachers for tomorrow's schoob."
he says. "but we are only beginning to thinL
about how to incorporate the two programs
into an integrated approach to the preparation of outstanding teache~ for tomorrow's
schools.
LIFT'S takes teachers out of Lheir classroom roles. while still supponed by their local

dl,tnCtk and places them mto a two-)'ear
team-based inno\ ation and admmistrauon
traming program. Eight teachers from two
di~tncb are currently involved in ~igning a
"rnod&lt;l elementary school" for a troubled
d1o;;tnc1 ou1s1ck '-Piusburgh through LifTS.
"You ha' e to be a ve0 good reacher to
teach 10 an urban ~hool," explams Petne.
He belle' es the o;;pecia1 ~ hallengeo;; of urban
Sl'hooh requ1re spec~al attenuon from teacher
educatu:m \Chooh . Yet. fev.er than fi\e percent of profe~sor~ at educati on c;.chools have

actual expcnencc teaching 1n
urban ..etung~
"Wh1le 1he) can be placed
m the m1d.;;-t of a grue~me
nc1ghborhood. once )OU get
!Ol01de the buildmg. the) are
ver) much I!Le school!!. an)where else,'' says Petrie. "and
PETRIE
most of the k1d!&lt;~ there are just
as eager to leam.""lndeed. say~ Petrie. school
can be an "oasis·· for children of the inner city.
Petne c;;upports placing student teachers in
these more challenging setting as part of
the1r clinical education. And. he agrtts with
the Hol mes rtpon that urban teachers need to
develop professional network and suppon
mecha01sms.
Petrie recalled a recent reminder of just
ho" umque the challenges of urban sc hools

can be . ··we Wrrere asked b) teachers to help
with teaching t.hem how to mstruct students
10 grieving. So many of these students bave
friends and family members affected by vio\e:nce-b( it drive~by shootings or drugs or
soon-that they needtoleamho"" rogne\·e.··
Tornorrov. 'ssecondar} schoolscouldtal..e
oo a !!.trucrurallooL mo~ like Lha1 oftoda) ·s
college departments. &gt;a) sPetne "Career paths
that take )OU w adminl'~trauon ha" e classlcall) been thought of as a v.a) of getung out
of the cla.~t~room." Petne ex.plained "'Ho\lo ·
e'er. a college depanment chair 1~. ~sen­
uall~ . a teacher ~lec1ed b) h1s or her pee~ .
··College profe~tsors ha' c l01s of responSiblhllcs and leadef"hlp roles to fulfill m
go' ernance. departmental cha1nng or
mentonngJUnlor facult) We can male secondal) schoob hle that. We can g1ve teachers a sta le m thear sc hool. empowenng them
" 'ith broader respon sibi liti~ :·
Petrie. \o\ho came to UB from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. has
been dean of the Graduate School of Education since 1981. Along with his in\'olvement
in national education policy, Petrie has served
as p"'sident of the New York S\lle Teacher
Education Conference Board dnd was appointed by Governor Cuomo to the Special
Commission on Educational Structure. Policies and Practices in 1993.

"Did you know we do poster title ?"

�- •...---.-u

..........
---

. _ IU None. professor of
physiology at UB, has been
named a Distinguished Professor, the
highast 8C8·
demic rank
in the State
l.Jnive&lt;sity of

-

New Vorl&lt;
system.
The title is

awarded by

the SUNY
Board of Trtistees in recognition of an indMdual's reputation In his or her field and
contributions 10 the research
literature or the arts.
A UB faculty member
-since 1975, Hong also
serves as d irector of graduate studies in the Department of Physiology in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. BefO&lt;e
coming to UB, he was professor and chair of physiology at
the Unillersity of Hawaii.
Hong, whose research
interests lie in the areas of
renal and enviroomental
physiology, has autho&lt;ed or
co-authO&lt;ed nea~y 190 articles for scholarly publicatioos and more than 40
textbooks, monographs and
book chapters.
He has earned numerous
academic awards, includ1ng
the Stocl&lt;too Kimball Award
from the UB medical school
for excellence in research .
education and seNice, and
a special citation tor distin·
guishad service from the
Japanese Panel oo DMng
Physiology and Technology
of the U.S. -Japan Cooperative Program II') Natural Ae·
sources.
Hong received a medtcal
degree from Yonsei Umver·
sity In Korea and a doctorate in physiology from the
University ol Rochester.

Slips of.the tongue: we laugh at kids' errors
but they're not that different from our own
IIJ- wutnCtiEit

E ALL laugh

tongue. Jaeger says. One reason is
that a researcher must be very familiar with a child's grammar in

when young
children make
speech errors.
or slips of the
tongue: when a two-year-old says.
" Herrun isnosing,"insteadof""Her

order to be surr- that what sounds
like a slip of the tongue to an adult
is. in fact. a violation of the child''
current rules of productjon.
" It took a parent linguist collecting data daily to do thi s."' she

nose is running." Or when an im-

says.

• ·rm allergic to lasses glasses

J&gt;3tient three-year-&lt;&gt;ld. wai ting for
her mother to finish a task, says.
" Mom, when are you going to be

Jaeger has collected a tollll of
1.300 speech errors from her three
children and from 35 other chil-

• "Morn. let's go to a score store where they have coffee •
• 'I'm gen 1ng boom straws broom straws •

News Bureau StaH

dead? I mean. done?•·

.

Additional children'• tips of tile aloftCue ... ull, allps of
tile toncue ...,_-ded by UB n...-lat Jet1 .._,..,
• "I have a snore neck
· sore sneck ·(target sme neck)
• ·open w1ily 1de • (target Open really w1de)
• ·we saw the dead horse ol a bones · (target the bones of a
dead horse)
• "Yeah , clut. close the door ,' (targets close/shut)
• ~clean-up kmte. Clean -up t1me·
M

dren she observed in a day-care

Yet, it's these ldnds of enors

that suggest that the basic mechanisms for language production are
in place at a very early age and in a
fonn that is imilar to that of an
adult. a UB linguist says.

Once children stan making slips
of the tongue. usually from about
18 months of age. they show nearl y
the same language behavior as

adults. notes Jen Jaeger. UB assislant professor of linguistics. who
has put together the largesl existing corpus of children's speech

errors.
Jaeger's research. which

cen ter. All of the children were
between the ages of I 8 months and
6 years when the slips wett collected . She recorded the other
children ' s slips of the tongue to
verify that the kinds of speech errors her children were malmg wert
not idiosyncratic to childreq w1th

linguist parents. She found no dif.
ferences between the data collec·ted
from her chi ldren when compared

to the other children . Jaeger notes
rhat adults go through ~everal
''stages'' " 'hen organizing what they
~~oant

ha~r

been published 1n the Journal of
Child L.anguage and L.anguagearrd

Speech. is one of the first studies
that has been ab\e to document
children's mental mechanisms for
organizing and producing speech.
While adult speech enors have

been studied exlen~ively for the
Information they pro"ide about the
processes involved m the mental
organizarion nnd on-line production of language. little research has
been done on children's slipsofthe

10 sa) . First. they think about
the concept they want to express.
Secondly. they pick out'"" nouns.

"erbs and other grammar they need
to U'\e. Then they assign an intona·
tion pattern. Finally. they string
the words in the right order and
decide hm~ 10 pronounce them
"II' s a 'el) complicated and
10\'0I,ed process.'' Jaeger &gt;a&gt;~
" But are lidsdomg the same thing 'l
Or do the) ha'e a '1mpllfied pro·
cev•, 'l And 1f the) do. hov. doe' 11
match up with adulh. cognttl\e
proce'\~es?"

She compared the slips of the

tongue she recorded for the chil·
dren with the types of speech erron; made by adults. and found that

children make most of the ~me
t) pes and proponions of slip~ as
adults. The most common errors an
both ch1ldren and aduh• are pho·
nological-sound·based~rror

These eas ily outnumber le~ical ­
vocabu lary · based-errors and
phra,e-based enors .

A

mong the phonological errors.
children, like adults. make

more substJtutions ( uch as "hoo
hard" frx '100 hard"). than additions

want clean plants" for "clean
panL\''). omissions (.. me ad" for "me
mad"). movements ("my ummy
taches' ' for "my tumm) aches"). or
re' e""l' (" shoo! schoes" for "'\Chool

("I

'hoe&lt;").
Funhermore . a' "1th adult er·
rors . children·, errors show that
there 1~ a phonc:llc orgam1..a11on to
1he mental o,torage of ~peech
rounds. Sounds that :1.re more !!.iml ·
lar in pronunciation to each other-

such as " P" and "8"-are more
likely to be substituted for. or ex·
changed with, each other than
sound~ that are very differenl in
pronunciation. such as"?'' and "L."
Errors made b) adults at any of

the vanous stages of speech pro·
duct ion do no~ dasrupt any oft~
other stages. Jaeger says. noting
that these stages operate mdepen dently. "When adults make a speech

error. e\'erything else (in the speech
productaon process) works fine .
Each stage functions on us own
and feed into the next stage."
And that holds true for children.
she adds. "As in adult shps of the

tongue. when there is an error

10

one level. all other levels (of
ch1ldren 's speech production) func-

tion normally.'' she says.

'¥'"·

"The strikrng s1milanues
tween children ' s and adults ' slips
of the tongue suggest thai the

ba*

mechanasm for language processlOg may be in place at a very earl~·
age. 10 a form not much different
rrom that of a mature language
processor."

UB researchers study effect of music on restless patients

SOCIOLOGY
WINS- AWAllO:

u-1 Lewis, professor
of sociology, has been honored by tbe Gustavus Myers
Center f6r the Study of Human Rights
in North

Amertea,
wh1ch has
named h1s
book, The
Cold War
andAcaLEWts
demic Governance. an
outstanding book on the
subject of human nghts tn
North Amenca.
The Center in Fayeneville
AR., presents annual
awards for the best scholarship on the subject of into!·
erance in North America. The
award is riamed in honor of
the author of the History of
Bigotry in the Unfted sra1es.
Lewis, a graduate of
Washington University 1n St
Louis, received his M.A. in
sociology from Cornell Uni·
versity and his Ph.D. in sociology from Yale
University.

(The photograph thai accompanied an article aboul
Lewis in the Feb. 2 Reporter was incorrect. The Reporter regrets the error.)

By LOIS IIAKEII
News Bureau Staff

I

F MUSIC HAS charms to
soothe a savage beast. to soften
rocks. or bend a knotted oak.
as

pla ywr ight

William

Congreve "rote. mig.htn also ha\'e
charms to calm a re~tless patient.
or bring confused patients to their
senses? A UB researcher is attemptang to answer that question in a
pilot study of pauents hospita lized
for standard medical or surgical
procedures and subsequent!) confined by physical restraints.
lhhe answer is") es."the sound'
of M ozan. Duke Ellington or Dolly

Panon could replace the ~afety vest
and wrist ties as a means of indue·
ing restless patients to .;tay pul.
Linda M . Jane IIi. a clinical a~·
sistant professor in the UB School
of Nursing. i' conducting the study
with a grant from The Buffalo General HospitaJ Foundation. Genevie\'e
Kanski. UB clinical assoc iate professor of nursing. is co-investigator.
An expen in the use and abuse
of physical restraints. Janelli says
that 100 people died in 1993 and
300 patients are injured annually
.as a result of being physically re-

strai ned. Restraints are used most
frequently on the elderly. who are

apt to leave their rooms in confusion. show aggression toward staff.
or fall out of bed, she says.
Janelli is loo king for ways to
1

anfluence patients· beha' sor so that
they won ' t need to be 11ed to thear
hospital beds or chaars.
"Music is supposed to be a una·
ven.allanguage." Janelli say,. "We
have heard that II rna) be an effec·
11\'e substitute for restramts, but
there ha\ e been no intervention
studaes. All \\e ha'e ~~anecdotal
C\ adence.

"Music...can lower
blood pressure,
pulse and
respiration rates.
We are attempting
to see if music will
control behavior."
UNDA M. JANEUI

"Most st udie'\ using music have
been done with psychiatri c patients.
the mentally retarded or newborns."
she adds. "They all show that mu·
sic has an impact o n physiologyit can lower blood pre!o.sure. pulse
and respiration rates. We are at·
tempting to see if mu,ic will control behavior."
Janelli's study involves 30 pa-

uem s admitted to the med1cal or
surg1cal units of The Bu ffalo General Hospital who are at least 50
yea" old, alen. able to speak and

understand English. and have a
restraint in place.
To assess lhe effect of musac on
these patienu.. an in\'estigator obserYes panicipants for 30 mil)utes
an their restraints. The resfaints
are then remo\'ed, headphones are
donned. and patients listen to mu·
,;c of their choosing--country·
western . big band. j z or
classical-for up to 60 minutes.
lm e tigaton. look for beha\1ioral

· Janelh says-and if family members are aware thai they can refuse

restraints--they usually aren't.
Finding an alternative to physi·
cal restraint~ cou ld pay large dividends in patient comfoQ.
well·being. and lower hospitaffza.
tion cos1s. Janelli says.
Restrained patients "ere eight
times more likely to die during

hospitalization and were inore
likely to have longer hospitaliza·

tions than those who weren't restrained. a 1987 study showed.
Complications caused by restraints

re&lt;pon"'s-&gt;mi ling. upping. clap.

include infection. pressure sores.
con tipation and loss of muscle tone.

ping. humming: also for grimacing . sig ns of indifference.
twitching. scrdtc hing or agitated
behavior.

their bed or chairs in hospitals and
nursing homes reached 500.000 a
yearinthelate 1980s. That number

The number of people tied to

has decreased by abou~ 47 percent

W

since 1990. when a federal Ia~
prohibiting the use of restraints for
the convenience of staff or to disci·
pline difficult patients went into

faxed they fall asleep while the

music is playing. "Music can be
relaxing," Janelli notes. "and it may
help eliminate confusion and reconnect these patients to their lives.
We all can remember music that
was imponant to us at some point."

be used only w""n alternatives have
been tried and documented to be
ine ecti ve.
11le law does not apply to hos·
pitals. however, and Janelli says
between 7 and 22 percent ofhospiul patients are placed in restraints

The study also will determine if
panicipant know why they are

at some point during their stay.

re strained-they usually don'l ,

completed in a few months.

hen the music stops. the
in"estigatorreplaces there·
straints and observes the patients
for an additional 30 minutes.
Janelli says preliminary results
"Show some patients become so re·

effect in nursing homes, Janelli

notes. Physical restraints now may

rr

The pilot study is expected to be

�HUBNEr

.._ .. ,_ .............. ...,....,.. rr
~Is

Aulbroeone receives
R...-ch Awllld
Cbrlstine Ambrosooe,
research scientis1 in the
Department of Social and Preven. tive Medicine, is the recipient of
the Women in Cancer Research
Brigid G . Leventhal Trainee
A ward from the American Association of Cancer Research
(AACR). Ambrosone will present
her abst:niCI. N-acetyltransferase
(NAn. Cigarette Smoking and
Breast Cancer Risk, at the AACR
annual meeting in Toronto, Ont.,
Man:b 19-22.

0

be made to the Student Bar Association and to lntcmational Student Scholar-Services at 210
Talbert. ·

Feb. 15 Is delldllne

for ...-lcMion to
Pbl Beta Kappa

0

Feb. 15 is the deadline for
application for election to
Phi Beta Kappa, the national

honorary society for students in

Uberal arts degree programs.

UB aids victims
of Kobe quake

Chief sources for nominations
are depanmental nominations,
self-nominations and a com~uter
printout from Records and Regi stration indicating st udents who
meet the credit hour and G
thresholds. Send nominations
accompanied by the relevant
student transcripts by Feb. 15 to
Dr. Barbara Bono, President. Phi
Beta Kappa; Attn: Ms. Mili
Sidorski, The Undergraduate
College. 220 Talbert HaU.
To be eligible for election. a
candidate should:
• Be a senior graduating in the
liberal arts degree programs,
generally speaking, B.A. and B.S.
(but normally not B.F.A.) progouns in Ans and Letters, Natural
Sciences. Social Sciences and
Undergraduate Education (special
and individualized majors). A
small number of juniors in these
programs are also elected annually .
• Have achieved breadth in the
liberal arts (meaning, at a minimum~ satisfaction of the
university's current general edu·
calion requirements).
• Have a grade point average
of 3.75 or higher (with 90 hours
completed) or 3.50 or higher with
110 hours completed. For stu dents with transfer credits, the
UB average as well as the overall
average must meet these minima
and at least 32 hours must have
been taken at UB.

0

Conference to foc:us
on rebuilding

UB ftl-.ker will

Muddy~

JudP "

Award-winning documentary Jilmmaker Sarab Elder, UB professor of media study
and co-dim:tor of the Alaska
Native Heritage Film Center, will
serve as ooe of three judges for
the 17th annual Big Muddy Film
Festival, an international competition and exhibition sponsored by

0

Southern lliinois University at
Carbondale.
The festival , which presents
$3,000 in prizes, will take place
from Feb. 25 through Man:b 5 at
Southern Dlinois University.
Elder wi ll join Milcho
Manchevski, Gold Lion recipient
at this year's Venice Film Festival for hi s feature-length film.
.. Before the Rain." and a distinguished ntinois-based filmmaker.
in j udging a wide range of entries
in the categories of animation,
experimental, narrative and documentary work.
The Big Muddy Film Festival
offers independent film and video
makers an opponunity to present
works that challenge the traditional boundaries of the visual
media.

About $900 has been raised
by students, faculty and
staff at UB to aid victims of the
recent eanhquake in Kobe. Japan.
The funds were raised through
combined effons of Lisa
Dalfonso, the UB law student
who survived the Kobe eanhquake; Lisa Felix of International
Student Scholar Services; Hiroshi
lkehata, president. and members
of the Japanese Student Associa-

tion as well as the student bar
association. /
Felix reponed that a total of
$2.000 has been raised in the
community to date, including
amounts donated to Kobe eanhquake relief through M&amp;T Bank.
She noted that donations may still

OF

Jewish community
First- and second-generation survivors of the Holocaust will be among the speakers
at the ninth annual Anhur &amp;

0

newsletter.
Keynote speaker will be James
M. Lodge, executive director of
the Jewi sh Federation of Greater
Buffalo. He will discuss "Tbe
Future of the Jewish Community"
at 2 p.m. in the Kiva of Baldy
Hall. Benjamin Simon and Mark
Waldman will speak .for UB students.
Workshops will be beld from
3·5:30 p.m. throughout Baldy
Hall on such topics as healing the
psychological scars of the Holocaust, faith during and after the
Holocaust, and whether remembering the dead helps the living.
A room in which attendees may ·
meditate in silence or recite the

Kaddish will be reserved near the
workshop areas.

MIIJUigement profS
edit new volume
Hejamadi R. Rao and
Ramaswamy Ramesh,

0

associate professors in the School
of Management, are joint editors
of a volume on the theme. Inter-

face between Information System s and Operations Research.
'The fields of IS and OR have
advanced tremendously over the

years in their respective individual tracks~ however. the links
between these two U"ack.s are now

becoming increasingly imponant.
due to the rapid advances in information technology and the
growing outreach of OR to solve
practical problems in a variety of
disciplines ... Rao says.
"The vol ume addresses two

broad developmental

issues ... providing effective IS
support for practical OR applica·

tions and providing efficient OR
mndeling support in configuring
optimal informational systems.
The volume consists of four issues. with a total of 400 pages ...
Rao says.

UB's TCIE helps
~nidi!'.• ~In grant

0

Enidine Inc. of Orchard
Park has o btained an Eco-

nOmic Development Skills Train·

Louise Wasserman Conference.

ing Grant with the assistance of

to be held on Sunday, Feb. 12. in
Baldy Hall on the Nonh Campus.

The Center for Industrial Effectiveness (TC IE) at UB .

The conference, which will
focus on "Fifty Year.; of Rebu ild-

ing the Jewish Community" since
the end of World War 11 . is sponsored by Hillel of Buffalo. The
conference is open to the public
at a charge of $2 for students and
$6 for all others. Co-sponsors are
the American Jewish Committee.

INTEREST

Rose Weinstein Award Competition
nrne is running short for students interested in gerontology to
enter the annual Rose Weinstein Memonal Award research
projects competition sponsored by the UB Ementus Center.
Deadline for entering is Feb. 28.
The competition. which is open to students who have been
accepted in to a degree program. carnes a $200 award.
Further information and detailS may be obta1ned by contacting Thomas E. Connolly, chairman of the award comm1nee . at
839 -1073.

the Holocaust Resource Center,
the Jewish Student Union, Israel i
Student Organization and ARJ

Enidine. a manufacturer of
industrial shock absorbers, will
receive $6.050 under the grant
from the Western New York

Development Corp. and the New
York State Department of Economic Development. The grant

wi ll allow the company to improve the de ign and analytical

capacities of its engineering ser·
vice and increase its competitive
edge in the global marketpl ace by
upgrading its software.
TCIE is a program of the UB
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences that assists local
industry in efforts to improve
competitiveness and productivity.

UB to sponsor women's
'health conference
A conference designed to
provide an update on primary-care topics for providers of

0

! The

HUBNET (llolpltals and~ at euffalo

Reacuce ~). en extraordinary ·selectlon of ooaithrelaled informalioo reeoun:es for UB faculty, stall, and students as well as for those
I I I&lt; II &lt;: &lt; )''-J I&lt;
affillated with the eight local
188Ching hospitals and
olher participating organiD
zations ·that comprise the
Wtf'f Health Sciences Consortium.
HUBNET, a result of a collaborative project of the Ubrary
Consortium of Health Institutions in Buffalo. can b6 searched
on-s~e at the Health Sciences Ubrary. at one of the sponsoring hospital libraries, or remotely. The array of HUBNET
resources is truly impressive. HUBNErs core databases
which include MEDUN£. CancerLFT. Cumulative Index to
Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Health Planning and
Administration, AIDSLINE. BIOETHICSUNE. and Current

H:G~

.\~'!~

Contents: Clinical Medicine, Life Sciences, Agriculture and
Biology. provide citations to hundreds of thousands of journal articles.
Full text sources are also available, depending on your
means of connecting to the netwofk. These include journals
such as the New England Journal of Medicine, clinical
manuals such as the American Psychiatric Association's
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, and drug information
resources such as the Physician's Desk Reference and the
USP Advice for Patients.
Expert systems such as AMA Practice Parameters (which
provides standards fonnulatecl by medical e xperts to ensure
quaUty care) and Ouick Medical Referance (which offers
d iagnostic assistance in Internal Medicine) can also be accessed . HUBNET further provides an entrance ramp to the
Internet as well as an electronic mail component.
During the Spring semester the staff of the Health Sci') ences Library will be offering a series of one hour seminars
on accessing and searching HUBNET. You can register for
a HUBNET class e ither by stoppmg by the Health Sciences
Library's Reference Desk or calling 829-3900.
For more information on HUBNET and the HUBNET instructional sessions contact Sharon Murphy. Health Sciences library, 829-3335, &lt;hslscmOtJblan&gt;.
-{letrma DeVinney lind L06S PequeiiO Glazier, Lockwood Ubraty

health care to women will be held
on March JO.J I in 1he Umversity
Inn and Conference Center. 240 I

N. Forest Road . Amherst.
The conference. targeted to-

ward physicians and other health
care providers in the fields of
obstetrics and gynecology. int~r ­

nnl medicine and family practice.
is sponsored by the Depanment
of Gynecology-Obstetrics in the
UB School of Medi ci ne and Bio-

medical Sciences. in conjunction
with the Depanments of Internal
Medicine and Family Medicine.
The conference will cover a
" 'ide range of women 's health

issues. from contraception management to hormone-replacement
therapy to mood disorders.

It will feature both faculty and
staff from UB. as well as visiting
faculty .
The program, which has been
approved ror 9.5 hours of AMN
PRA Category I credit, was developed by Lawrence J. Gugino.
UB clinical assistant professor of
medicine and gynecology-obstetrics. as pan of a S35.000 fME
Demonstration Project Grant.
The grant wil1 provide re training for generalist ob/gyn
physicians in primary-care
topics that are of concern to
women.
The cost of the conference is
$120 for physicians and $60 for
nurse practitioners, physician
assisrant . other health profession·als and residents. Brochures
and registration fonns are available by calling Pat Prior at 8451834.

Cheerleaders place
second In nationals

0

The UB cheerleading squad
jumped. yelled and
pyramided it.s way to second

place in the all-female division at
the National Cheerleading Association Competition held tast
month in Dallas. The awardwmning performance will be
shown later this year on
Primetime spons netwon.._. says
coach Nancy Costantino.
Sporti ng red. white and blue
uniforms. the UB team competed
against 30 other squads.
The UB cheerleaders brought
home a 5-foot trophy and S750
from Cheerleaders Dance Team
Co .. a major supplier of
cheerleading equipment and uniforms.
Costantino. coach for the UB
cheering squad for six years. is
assisted by her daughter. Andrea.
The judging criteria for the competition included precision and
creativity. she said.

�__,..,,..._..,_

..

In~op Ten of Science Teachers
11J PA'IIIICIA -YAH
News Bureau Staff

SCIENCE TEACHER in Buffalo Public
School 18, who has dedicated much of
her energy to economically disadvantaged and emotionally disabled children,
has been cited as one of the top 10 science teachers
in the United States by the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA).
Elsa Salazar Cade of St. Catharines, Ontario. a member of the clinical
faculty of UB ' s Buffalo Research Institute on Education for Teaching.
was nominated for the honor by faculty in the UB Graduate School of
Education. Cade was selected as a finalist from among more than 85
candi tes nationwide for the competition sponsored by Shell Oil Company.
e winner. who will be announced at the association's annual
meeti g in March. will receive a cash award of S I0.000.

Cade"s nomination was strongly
supponed by member&gt; of the facultyofSchool Ill where she teaches
seventh and eighth grade science;
the Buffalo Board of Education;
several faculty in the Niagara Falls
and Will iamsville School Systemo
who have worked with her on edu~
cation projecls, and one of her
former studen ts. who said .. the
knowledge and values she taught
me ... will be with me forever:·
In addition to her full-time worl
as an eleme~lary school science
teacher and clinical mentor of sci~
ence teachers. Cade is a research
scientist in the field of entomology
and spent pan of the Fall 1994
semester ln Africa conducting fie1d
st udies of insect behavior.
She recently co-

authored a paper on cricket mat ~
ing, _calling and searching behav.
ior that" as published in the journal
Animal Behavior. Cade has also
illustrated research reports in the
Florida Emomology Joumal on lnrert Behaviorlll Ecology and in the
book .. C o mprehensive Insect
Physiology and Biochemi stry ··
(Pergamon Press. Oxford ).
She is the author of research on

the assimilation of students with
sever:t emotional disturbances or
behavior disorder&gt; into the general
education science classroom, an
analysis that developed out of her
participation in a recent ethnographic research effon by a team
from UB.
The researcher&gt; found that subjects with behavior problems scored
higher on thedisuict test than other
groups of students with similar
problems-a sign. they found. of
the integrity of the science presented to these students-and that
there was not a single disciplinary
citation of any of the students studied while they were in science class.

N

oted for her skill as a teacher
of students with emotional
disorders , Cade was nominated by
Buffalo Public Schools in 1992 to
be a science mentor for ··science
for the Handicapped." a National
Science Foundation project at
UB .

ence mentors to develop a series
of ..hands-on.. activities that

0

the project were Elsa Salazar
so outstanding Cacle Is
that her nomina - shown with
tion for the cur- her students
rent award was at Buffalo
accom panied by Schooi1B.
aleuer ofsuppon Top photo,
signed by her fel - from left:
low mentors and Prentiss
teacher parttci- Zlr\nerman,
Ms. Cade
pants.
In nommating and Yasmlra
Rod rituaL
her forthe NST A
,At left: Ms.
award. UB ProCacle wHh
fessors
John
Duane
Cawley
and
Blackwood,
Rodney Doran of left, and
the Graduate David Devers.
School ofEducation said that Cade ''brings a sensitivity to the classroom that reflects
her own Mexican - American
ethnicity and her own awareness
that students can overcome~ adver&gt;e effects of substandard economic conditions.··
Of the 685 students in School
. 18.1ocatedonBuffalo' slowerWest
Side. 72percentaremember&gt;ofan
ethnic or racial "minority-half of
Spanish ethnicity. The Aid to Dependent Children rate in the school
is 92 percent.
A native of San Antonjo, Texas.
Cade auended the Edgewood District Schools described in Jonathan
Kozl}l 's groundbreaking hook.
"Sa(age Inequalities.·· She said that
despite the disparity in the educational opporlunities available to her
aud to students on the city· s more
afflyent north side, "I had parents
and \:acher&gt; who cared" and that
they ffi¥le an enonnous difference
in herlili

0

ut her back door she
says, "lay the Texas grassland of mesquite trees, rattlesnakes
an•J grasshopper&gt;"-• habitat that
fascinated Cade and one in which
she f U"Sl met the Texas field cricket
she bas studied with her husband
for the last 10 year&gt;.
Cade graduated from that San
Antonio· s Memorial High School
and holds a bachelor of science
degree in elementary education
with honor&gt; in biology and Spanish from the University of Texas.
Austin. She taught elementary
schoolinAustinfrom 1975to 1980.
She received a master of ans degree in educational administration
from Niagara Univer&gt;ity in 1989. ·

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                    <text>Gene Clone
... First

All About
Snow

Rndings may lead
to new cardiovascular drugs., .

Research yields data
about snowfall
over last 11 ,000
years
'-

2

g

Mald~B

,,...,., Fltendly

Black History
Month

Jennifer Gottdiener
will smooth student
transition to UB., .

Calendar takes .note
of February events.

5
February 2 , 1995 Volume 26, No. 15

Pataki budget could cost UB
$3.7 million in midyear cuts
IIJ CHRISnNE VIDAL
Reporter Edttor
0 V . G E0 RG E
Pataki on Friday ordered the State Uni versi ty of New York

G

to cut $25 million
from its current budget by June 30.

which wouldequatetoanestimated
$3 .7 m illion from UB if a~stgned
o n an across the board ba~iis . and
university officials are expecting
even deeper cuts in 1995·96.
"Everyone IS anticipating a \ CT)
difficult budge t.'' satd UB Semor
Vice President Raben J Wagner
on Tuesday. "People arc lond of
wai ting. There·~ a lot of amKtpa·
ti On. probabl) mo re than 1·,e o,;ee n
in a decade."
Both Wagner and Provo\1 Aaron
N. Bloch send that while the m1d·
year eApenditure reducti on ""a~
expected. universi ty offic:1als were
not prepared for the mag nitude ol
the cut. And they are concerned
Jbout what thi s mean o,; for next
year's budge1 .

''The size of it was a surprise
thislatem the;academicyear."said
Bloch . With only five months lefl
in the 1994-95 fiscal year. il will be
difficult to make an adjustment of
this size. he added.
. " It 's a much more !-.ignaficant

already m progress. cull ing programs is probably not an option.
S1udents, Blochemphasiz.ed.are
UB ·s " higheSI priorily." And although the Jan. 30 Specrmm repaned thai SIUdem.., were prepared

number than we'd been talkmg

"en aces be elimanated mad -se me~ ter. "'that'' almo\t the last thmg ""e
would do for the current ycar.'.the
provo'! ~aid .
"Our ablitt) to '1gn1fi~aml~ m·
nuence C\pt..'nd1 tu re' re lated II) 10 ·
'o(fUC II On 1-. \Cr) 'ma ll. " ';.uJ
Wagner. ··we·n h;l\e to v.t,rlo. at
-.everal thmg..,·· 10 do\oe the gap m
th1-. year·, budgt'l. he addc.-d
The $1 million cut that LIB had
ani iC!pated .1nd hudgetcd for'' ··a
o,; tan·· IO\A.ard met&gt;t1ng the m1d·) ear
expen&amp;Hurt" r~ducuon . Wagner
-.aJd UB aho"JIJ h.ne IOC&lt;Jrefull)
man&lt;.~ge fill1ng' acant po\lt lnn-.and
00 both .10 IU.lolllUI.IUO...I.l and Unll
lc\cl "Ill hu\e to look at anth.:l p&lt;.~tcJ e\pemJIIurt•, to detcrmmc

about and budgeting for:· 'aid
Wagner
Accordmg to the -.emor ' 1Ce
preo,;1den1. SUNY o ffi cut l' were
esllmallng a one- half percent cut.
amounung to an $8 mllhon hudget
reduction ')~ tern ·\.\ Ide or that
amount. UB affina l' expected to
he re . . pon ... lble for abou t $1 mil l1on. Wa g ner .. atd Ba-.ed on
Fnda) ~ frgurc .... the total cu t at L1 8
could amount to mor~ than three
tJme1i that fipure.although ""eha't"
not been gn en a number yet:·
Wagner 'a1d . He anl!c1pate' that
UB ·~\ hare of the cut ""111 actuall)
he lower. but""ho" mul:h lov.er~Jr.t'
Jnn't lo..no" at th1.., po1nt ··
One th1ng appear\ fa1rl) ,,;er
tam. however Wnh 1he \eme-. ter

to protest s h ou ldcla s""Csor~tude nt

conttnued or page 2

Report asks bookstore expansion
ByS~COX

Reporter Staff

A

FrER NEAR L Y a
yearofstudy. 1he 17 member University
Boo kstore
Task
Force has released its
find i ngs. Re loca1ing l he Soulh
Campus store from its Main Street
location back onto campu s. closi ng
the Ell icott Comp lex store and expanding the square footage of the
Non h Campu s store were among
the task force' s top recomme nda·
tions.
A lthough book prices were a
major concern of the t a~ J.. fo rce. it
conc lu ded tha t UB · s textbook
prices ac tuall y were in li ne with
those at other coll eges and unive r·
sit ies. However. the task force felt
that was not we ll commun icated to
the ent ire campuscommunity. They
recommended the establishment of
a forum fo r an ongoing d ialog ue
be1ween bookstore officials. faculty. staff and students to seek creati ve ways o f keeping costs down.
Boo ksto re Gen era l Mana ge r
Gregory Neumann. who spoke 10
members o f the Facult y Senate
Execut ive Committee at a meeting
Jan. 25. said he was encouraged by
the repon.. would do wh atever he
co u ld to improve serv ices. and
would urge hi s superi ors at Fo ll ett
College Stores. Inc. 10 do I he same.
Folleu College S1ores. a division
of the Elmhurst. 111.-based Folleu
Corporation, is a privalely held
company that owns and operates
more than 400 university book-

store' nati onw1de
The taslo.. fon.·e conducted a -.ur' ey of more than 800 book -.tore
u-.er~ and exam1ned the operauon'
of other reg ional uni\ef'llly bool..·
SIOres. bolh by phone and through
on·site visits in drawing the1r conclusions. according to the ta~l..
rorce '&gt; publi shed final report .
One bone of contention the task
force had with Follett wa' ove r a
contractual obligation the com pan;
made . in 1982 , to provide UB wnh

a UOI"\Cf.,ll) hool..,lore OJX'rauon
"L""ompar.thle to the fine-.t hool..·
-.lOre opera11un 1n the L' n11ed
State'- ·· -\ccordlnf.lO the ta-.l.. fon:e
report. the :!O.Ouo .... quare · foot
bookstore ma) no longer be ad·
equate to meetth..., obl!ga uon. particular! ) \Jn(C ffii.JfC and more 0oor
-.pace 1o,; occupied b) non -boo lo.
merchand1~e

Fo ll ell. ""h1Ch

0\1. n~.o

!he build

cont1nued on page 2

mt 1Jices: heres how they're rauated
II)' STEVE COX

Reporter Staff

So y o u - - - - rs rrpprng you olf? AI $40 or $50
a throw. th e~e texlbooks mus1 be making someone rrch. rrght?
Wrong. Most evid ence poims 10 thai berng a mrsconceptron
"Our dominant sales are 1n textbooks: explamed University Bookstore General Manager Gregory Neumann. "but our
dominant profits are trom general merchandrse The company, which has a general retarl orrentation, would like to see
more of thai stutt- clolhing marketed rn all the wrndows- but
I have sort'of resisled that."
Here is how textbook prrces are calculated , and why
New textbooks used to come with publishers·' recom mended prices p ri nted on them. accord ing lo Neumann. but
most publishers have abandoned that practice Now, publishers generally c harge bookstores 80 percent ol suggested
retail price. plus the bookslores pick up lhe cost of shrpping
The bookslore sells texts at the publisher's recommended
rel ail price. Thai leaves less lhan 20 perc ent gross markup in
the textbook. After facloring in overhead costs. lhe bookstore
clears aboul two percent, according 10 Neumann . That's one
dollar profil on a $50 book.
The policy for pricing used textbooks is somewhat more
continued on page 2

Bartlett speaks to faculty,
staff via Satellite network
By CHRISn NE VIDAL
Reporter Eal!or

S

TATE Unl'er"Jt) of
Nev. Yorl... facult) and
staff had thear fip.• t op·
ponun!l) last ""eel.. to
··meet"Cham·ellorThoma' Ban lett
'1a tekcao;;t and to hear hi\ '1e" s
on. amo ng o1her thmg'i. Go'
George Patalo..t '..: order to cut
SUNY's budge1.
The chancellor addre \ed the
"inter meeting of the SUNY wide
Facult) Senate. held Jan _27 at the
Co ll ege at Oneonta andcamed live
to s late untvers1ty ca mpu ses
throughou11he Stale on lhe S NY
Satellite network..
"\Vhatl would lil..e to have done
was to visi t campuses. get acquainted "";th you. deve lop personal contacts .... That ~Jr.• as my plan.
except something came along in
Novembcr... and turned that on its
s1de." said Banlelt.
While most of the chancellor's
1.:omments foc used on distance
learning and the role oflechnology
in education. it also provided h im
with an opponu nit y to discu s or·
ders by Gov. Palaki that SUNY is
10 cui S25 million from its budge•
by June 30.
He alluded to a "sense of impendi ng doom aboul what is going
lo happen Feb. 1." while at 1he
same time pledging to answe r wi th
..the best respon se we can fo r lhe
people of New York."
"One constan~ y gets a sense of
foreboding and ominous ponent

about v. hat ..., gomg to happen m
the budget·· '-.:lid Ban len And ..o
far. the new' ha\ not been fa, or·
able 10 SUNY .
"Dunng th1s fiscal )'Car m ~orne
"'3) about S25 m1llio n IS gomg to
be pulled bacl.. to the ~tate from our
pre~nr budget.·· Ban. lett o;;a1d.
SUNY already has sustatned a
pattern of regular fiscal cuts. he
noted Since 1975-76. SUNY 's
"ork force has decreased by 5.120
positions. o r 18 percent. said

'
"What
we are about
to encounter is best
seen as a change in
rate.. rather than a
change in
direction. "
Bartlell. who called the long-tenn
trend ··significant." Likewise, there
has been a pattern of insti rutionco
shifting costs toward entrepreneurship and new ways of suppon.ing
themselves and of shifting costs to
students.
So. "what we are about to encounter is best seen as a change in
rate rather than a change in direc
conl rnued on page t 0

�2

--.u.--.- ...

"All peer institutions
surveyed followed the
same standard industry
pricing policy. "
the task force . Thei r repon stated. ··Most UB
srude nts a nd fac ulty believe that new and
used textbooks are overpriced and yield a
huge profit ...when , \ n fact. a\\ peer ; n s.titu-

tions surveyed followed the same standard
industry pricing policy.""
Whi le price gougi ng is a co mmo n complaint. panicularly among students who spend
hundreds of do llars a semeste r on texts. it
may not be a legitimate complaint. or at least
not at the bookstore level. says o ne area

booksto re owner. 'The rul e-of-thumb in retail generall y is that markup is I 00 percent of
cost.'' said Jonathan \Velch. manager and co-

owner of the Talking Leaves Bookstore. acros!&lt;.
the street from lhe South Campu s. ''The nom1
for tr.!de books is 40 10 45 percent. but for
textbooks. il is only 20 percent Basically. you
c3Jl't make money selling tex.tboob."
The ··memorandum o f understa nding··
which governs the contractual relation ship
betwee n the university and Foll eu College
Stores. Inc . calls for j ust th at: roug hly a 20
percent marku p o n textbooks.
Welch carries a li mi ted number of tex tbooks. largely because cenai n professors
prefe r to order th rough him. he says. bu t he
notes that he can' t afford 10do too much wi th
tex tbooks. " It bri ngs some student s into the
store, bu t J don' t want to be a ' textbook'
store." Tosomeextent."blame''l ies inthefact
that book costs have increased greatly. " In the
20 years I' ve been in the business. lx&gt;ok costs
have probably more than q uadrupled." he said.
Follett took o ver responsibili ties for provi ding uni versity books10re services in I 982.
Pri or to that , the university had operated the
bookstore itself. Foll eu ·s lease for the book·
store runs untj l the year 2020.
Alth o ugh the me mo ra nd um between
Follett and UB also prevents the un iversi ty
or UB Foundation from o perati ng a compel·
ing bookstore on or near the campus. the task
force vie wed rel ati ons between Foll ett and
the school as generall y posit ive. In the repon · s
concl usion, it c harac teri zed Foll elt as "a
student-oriented corporation that is trul y
cogni zant o f the vaJ ue of student input in the
decision-making process rel ati ve to its produc t and del ivery of services.''

BUDGET
continued from page 1

wha t can be .. reduced. eliminated or postponed."'
.. Is th at going to save .a lot of money , No
Are we going to have to make a maJOr effon'l
The answer is 'yes .... Wagner said.
Wagner admitted that it is difficult to
predict ho w much mo ne y UB ac w all y v. 1ll
be able to save by tal..ing a hard look at
expe nd itures a nd leaving job' \ acant . ··1
think. S I milli on to $2 million 10 add111onal
sa\ ings may be po~sib le ." in addition to the
$ 1 milli on thai had already been budgeted.
he sai d
There ,.., a c ha nce th at UB ''ill go 11110
the ne.u fi,cal )elr 1n debt. "v. hl(:h v.lll
all ow u' 17 momh s to ach ieve tho'e reduc ti o ns," \Vagne r said ... Given th e magmtude of the number. (i t · s hl..ely th at J ... orne:
of th~ Si~5 million will carry into fi&lt;&gt;cal
year 1995 ·96.
"In thcof). the enure $25 millio n could he
rolled into the next fiscal yea r. but wh)
would we want to?." especiall ) in light o ft he
additional c ut s Lh at are expected to be made:
to the budget . Wag ner said.
UB officials are expecting ~ignificant reduction s 10 the 1995-96 budget. potem iall)
the "largest reduc tion to the system th&lt;.~t SUNY
has had to deal with," Wagner ~a id .

To put it mddl). UB offi~.- l a l.., are antiCIpati ng "a vef) diffic ull )ear ... the ~mor '1ce
prest dent !o.illd. '" In the Ja,t "I\ :ear!o.. there
hone been 14 (b u dgcta~ 1 reduction.., We
we re able to do that v. nhout n.•trenchment ...
Wagner ,a1d . ..Cenam l) effon' v.1ll he mdt.k
to 3\0id retrenchmem. hut until v.c: 'ee thC"
magnitude of the reduct 10m. v.e'll ha'e to
lea' e that a po..,o;;ibllll) ··
us· .. academu.: program' J.J,o TllJ~ 'et'
'orne change .... a~ a re,ult of the budget
··w e can ' t J..eep reducmg tht• budge-t and
c:xpet:t thmg' to 1-.eep gomg the ~,.~, 3) the-)
ha' e ...... aid Bloc h_ v. ho d1d not ruk tlUt the
ptl,,lb l l l t~ that program' rna) hJ' e tn he t: ut
m the future
He added that 'peculatiOn reg.trdmg fu tun: mea~ures wa~ ··prematurt&gt;
"'There· ~ no pomt to th " l..md of gue~~ ­
"orl.. Th1 ~ ~,.~,hole thmg ha' happened ex tre md) fa,t." Bloch o;;:ud. '"\Ve do ha' e an
ong01 ng proce~s . We J..nov. 1n detail what the
dean~· budgetaf) pri on ti e' are .... We h~ne to
ha"e an intense d1 ~cussion about ou r mstit uuonal pn oriue~ and th ose e \pt:ndllure ~ th at
are most important to us
Wagner urged the UOI\'Cf!loliY l·om mun!l )
tu be patient as the nev. budget !lo itu allon
unfolds. " It may be that it v.lil tal.. e mort= than

'eve raJ da)..,. to get full mformat1on on the
e" 'ec ull' e budget. g1ven the shor1 amount of
ume th e~ ·,e had LO prepare 11 ... he satd
··1(, a v. hole ne~o~. ball game ." o ne that
will requ1re 1ncrea..,ed commumca11on and
di\CU..,,Ion among units. Wagner &lt;&gt;aid
dm1n1 . . trator' Jt UB ··do not mtend 10
~acnficc the forv. ard movement of tht.'
UOI\Cr~n:" J' a re,ult of budget cuts. '1&gt;31J
Bloch " We l'an't ,top 1n,eMmg m nev. Jnt tlatl"e') foruur futu re. e\ en at the expense nt
...ome of the thmg' that we do now"
The un1,enl1) "" Ill be loo l..m g hard for
effic1enl'1t",, 'a' mg ~ and re\e nues to le&lt;&gt;'len
the 1mpact o f budget cu ts "Th is ts a ttme
of ln..,t llull o nal stress a nd we ho pe all &lt;&gt;egment s of the universit) co mmunity-studrnts. faculty and staff--can pull together
to ma l.. e the d iffi cu lt adju stme nt s we v. til
be fac1ng." he said.
"ThiS IS on ly the beginmng. Well find
v. ay~ to live through the severe cut th is fiscal
) ear. But the shape o f the university rna)
well be determined by the deci sions we will
have to ma"'-e. a nd the way we conduct oursel\ es 10 making them. for the next fiscal
) ear and beyo nd ...

A

PRICES
con tinued from page 1

complicated. and only slightly more profit ·
able.
.. If a tex tbook has bee n ·adopted" (reor·
dered) for the-comi ng semeste r a nd we need
Lhe book to fill the numbe r o rde red. we pay
50 pe rcent of the t:urrent new price for the
book. That book would be reso ld for 75
percem of the c urrent ne w price ." The time ly
submiss ion of book orders by facu lt y could
ai d in geuing stude nts more money for their ·
books. according to Neu mann .
' The task fo rce recommended that fac ulty

members be made more a~,.~, are of " the Im pact o f their tardme'is 1n respondmg to ado pti o n requests o n th e pr1c 1ng o f used
textbook s." Te xtbook s that ha' e not been
reordered are normal! ) re so ld to ' te xtbook
wholesalers' at pri ce~ rangmg betwee n 10
percen t and 35 percent of the c urrent new
pri ce. However. Newma nn pmnt~ ou t. the
bookstore has no guarantee that it v. ill be
ab le to se ll all the used boob it re purchase s
to wholesalers. Losses from books repurchased but not reso ld are pan of the calcula-

The Repo1er .s a campus CO"mU'lity newspaper DUOirshed by the [)lvrsal 01 Untver$11)' 5ervGes State Urwer~ o1 New Yorll

a1 Buflalo Eo !l0t131 ottces are

11on of used boo"'- prices overall.
These pricing schemes are not unique to
U B. The used book .. fo nn ula·· is basically an
mdu stf)' standard. accord ing to Neu mann.
The actual percentages paid by wholesa lers
seem to have dropped. panicu larly in recent
years. according to Neu mann. because the
turnarou nd time for new edi tions of texts is
shoner. "'The average life of a pan icular
edition of a tex t is now three years:· said
Neumann:"bul some types of books may be.:e·
pn nted in new edi tions every yearorrwo .

~

located., 136 Crotts Hal, Atl'tlenl.. (716) 645-6969

DIFIECTOAOFPUEiliCATIONS twOTWT L C:O..OY, EDITOR ~v.AL. ASSOCIATE' [QilOA J0U D&amp;KD&amp;. ART DIREClOA llbKCA r~ .t.SSOCtA1[ AJH 01R£C10A Tuu.a.&amp;OOWO AOYERTISWGUANAGER ..c:t~&amp;A~

I

�3

UB biologists use D~A technology for
frrst time to identify new species of coral
. , EU.EII ~­
News Bureau Staff

Plexaura

ARIN E BIOLOGISTS - ao

Kuna, new·
cor.t
s pecies,

used DNA oechnology oo
identify a new species o

w as found
oft coast of
Panama.

coral. The work

demon~

strates that techniques developed in molecular biology lo look al mammalian sysoems
have tremendous polenoial for application 10
invertebrate systems. including aquatic species that could be the source of important
medicinal chemicals.
... We can answer questi ons with this technology that we otherwi se would never have
dreamed of," said Howard Lasker. professor
of biological sciences ao UB and collaboraooron lhe research wilh Mary Ali ce Coffrolh.
research assistano professor o r biological

sciences at UB .
In research in press wioh 'Lhe Bulk 1in of
Marine Science. Lasker, Coffroth and UB
graduaoe soudenl Kiho Kim used DNA oechnology to describe a new species of gorgonian coral. Called Pltxaura kuna. it is named
for lhe Indians o f the San Bias Islands' in
Panama. where it was found.
'The DNA analyses do noo provide lhe

only evidence that this is a new species." said
Lasker, "buolhey remove much o fohe diffi·
cuhy lhal has plagued work on ohese common coral-reef animals."
According to C offro th , D.J)IA technol-

ogy also provides a fast and accurate
method of classifying aquatic species. especially larvae, whi ch are not orious ly diffic ult to identify. That work is reponed in
a paper in pre ss in Limnology&amp;. Oc~anog ­
raphy by Coffroth and UB undergraduate
John Mulawka .
" When you coll ect larvae. they all look
the same." said Coffrooh. " You are pull ing
no ndescript samples up out of the water and
you mig ho lhink they all belong oo ohe same
species. but genetic a nalysis proves otherwise.
UWith these molecular biology techn1que ~.

you have a relatively simple and fa'\1 way to
find out what you have Nov..• when we collect larvae. we can say " ·hirh adult 11 ""'ill
tum into.''
That information~~ key. Laslere,.plaJned.
particularly for preserving biod iversity
.. Coral reefs. like rain forests. are tre as ure troves of potential pharmaceu ticals:·
he said. 'lhe key is to charactenze and
conserve ."

A

ccording to Coffroth. prese rvmg ma rine biodiversit y depend~ o n the abli it}
to distin guish be tween different ~pec1es
··we want to know whether a spec1e..,
population is 0\ustamable.'' she !;aid "\\'Jth
genetic analysis . ...,e ~n ov. v. h1ch o;;pec~t~.., are
down there. and how abundant they are
That'~ often not ea~) to tell 8) u\mg. DNA
technology. "'e \..nov. . for e'&lt;ample. that our

new ~pecaes IS not just a vanant of one v.e
already lnew about
While DNA analys1.., allows edenuficauon of spec aes still in the larval stage. 1~
conventiona l ~thoch often requ1re sam pi~;;,
from adul~
"Now the lar\'ae can pro\ ade u.;; wuh a
molecular sig nature ... sa1d Lasker
The ability to rapidly identify manne
JO\'enebrates has commercial application~.
particularly for development of new phar maceutical,. based on manne compoundi: .
"A.;; compound' are dio;;co\ercd an different organa!lom,. and a~ we mo\'t: mlo
har\'esung the ~e resource\ . the ... e !echnaquL"'&gt; for 1dcnllf} 1ng lar\-a~ and adulh
"ill be cruCial componenh tn undn..,tand tng .md dctermtntng v.h~1her or nul the)
OlOJ) r.ce,ploned .1" ..,u .. taan&lt;Jbh: rc ... ~•u r l·l',:·
....ud La .. ler

Devices to help Alzheimer's patients don't keep
pace with progress of the disease, UB study says
11J LOIS BAKER

News Bureau Staff

R

ONALD REAGAN'S posioion.
presrigc and economic resources
can't guarantee he'll have the devices necessary to maintain maximum independence as hi s Alzheimer' s di sease progresses.
The reason'? Most existing devices for
patients with dementia aren't designed to
remain useful as mental health deteriorates.
a UB study has shown. It is ohe first st udy 10
assess the use of assistive devices by elderly
persons with Alzheimer's di sease a nd other
cognitive irilpainnents.
Resuhs of the study. conducoed by researchers in UB's Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Aging, showed ohao
elderly persons with cogniti ve impairments
living at home were using fewer dev ices
after a follow ~ up at one year than at the
beginning of lhe st ud y. eve n though ohe ir
need for helpful devices had increased due to
declining health and cogniti ve sta tu s.
''Obviously we are not ma king devices
that are as useful as they should be." said
William C . Mann, direcwr of the ce nter.
professor and c hair of the UB Department of
Occupati o nal Therapy and lead researche r
on the study. "We need to de\'elop more
·smart ' device~ and devices that will remain
useful longer. as cognitive health declines."
Resul ts of ohe &gt;O udy were reported ao "
meeting of the Geronoology Socieoyof America.
Baseline data for the study came from the
center's Consumer Assess ments Study. an

ana l) !!ol' of the I) pe .. of a''"ll' ~ dt'\ ll·e.,
used b) !he elder!) . a.:..,embled from perso nal lnt crv aew\ "llh QO people and theer
caregivers . The st ud y reported at the meeling was based on a 31-person .. ubset of th1 ..,
group . all weth cogniti ve 1mpa1rments and
living in a home settmg. Mann and colleagues will follow thl\ group for five )ea,-..
to provide d1rection for ne" de' ice de,elopment and improvement of exi~llng de\ u:eo;;
At bao;;eline. thi s group was usmg an a\ er-

"We need ro develop
more 'smart' devices and
devices that will remain
useful Longer; as cognitive
health declines. "
WIWAM C. MANN

age ofM). dev1ces per ~ro;;on. More than half
were phy 1cal rather than cognitive aids. a
not- surpri sing finding. Mann noted. becau!&lt;.e
olde r people with dementia typically have
many di .. e;.1~s. and these afnictions can affect ph ysical abili ties and se nsory!!.) stem ....
The cogni tive \ devices tha t were uo;ed.
such as restraint s. doorknob covers. bo.~rn­
cades. wri tten schedu les and reminder ..,jgn~ .
rl'lated mainly to safety and mcmof) lm.~ .
inetecn person~ re mained in the stud) at

the l'lld uf lht' fir-.1 ) t'jJ Mo... t uf the olher I:!
h.1d mm ct.J mtn nuT\mg hofTk'' lhe-.t.• 14.1 "'ere
usmg 2.0 pen.:ent ll:"'·cr de\ 11..- ~ ... at folio"' -up.
Mann s.aJd
'11le u...e of a..'"-l!!ollve de' 1ce~ and home
rn&lt;xhfica.11on .. offe~ the po~enual for. greater
mdependcnce for older person' "ath ampaumcnl.... )et eldel"\ "'ith dementia u~ fewer
a'''~ll\ e de\lce' and ha\'e a haghcr rate of
da..,~tl!!.faction than elders v.alh other t)'pc\ of
1mpamnenb.'. he said.
He asserted that much more can be done
to adapt de\lces 10 patients· declmmg mental ..;tal us. ad\'ocatirf[! creation of more "smart
appliances.'' such a!!. the microwave oven
being developed b) UB andolhen. thao reads
the bar code on a product. sets cooki ng time
and power le\'el. starts when food is placed
in th e 0\en a nd ha'i \ Oace capa bility to de ·
&gt;tribe ohe food being prepared.
ll1e :-.tud) rt:-!&lt;.ulh also ~ h a wed that family
caregivef" need to knov. more :1bout using
de\'ICes and adaptmg the home to make hfe
easaer.
lnten 1cw.. md1c~ted thai. colh:ctl\ely.
caregn e~ had tried a total of 18 Interven tion~ . most!) de~per.~tc attempt~ to keep the
pcr'illn confined. o;;uch a!&lt;. removmg doorknob\ to prevent uno;upen J!!.Cd wande nng .
"'To u.;; .this reOecb a lack of cou n ... eling.''
he .. ait..l . "There are creatiH· v.ays to addrcs!lo
thc ...l' prublem!lo ~uch 3!-. ... camounaging the
duor.'' Thi!&lt;o could be: done. he expla ined. b)
placing a po!!otCr 0\l' r the door or painting 11
to blend wit h the wa ll and camounaging the
doorknob.

FDA Commissioner
will deliver
Harrington Lecture

D

AVID A. KESSLER. commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug
AdministTation. will deliver the
D.W. Harring1on Lectureat4 p.m.
on Thursday. Feb. 9 , in ButJer Auditorium in
Farber Hall on the Soulh Campus.
The lec1ure. "Acceleraoed Approval of
Drugs for Serious and Life-lhreaoening Dts·
eases.- IS free and open tO lhe publtc.
The FDA is responSible for enforcong lhe
Federal Food. Drug. and Cosmetic Aco and
-.everal related public-heallh laws. h also
cxarmnes the results of drug studies and
approves new drugs. and prolects lhe safely
or food . cosmetics and lhe nauon 's blood
supply. Dyes and additaves also come under
FDA scruuny , as well as medteaJ de tC~
such as pacemakers.
FDA comm1ssioner since 1990, Kessler
~crved as the medical d1rector of the
Montetiore Med1cal Center. hosp1tal of the
Alben Emstein College of Mechcane. from
1984-1990. Sonce hos appointmeno 10 lhe
FDA. he has been on leave from h" paso as
assoc aate profe!l.sor of pediatriC!;. ep1dem1ol ogy and soc1al medicine at Alben Einstem
and as a law lecturer an the Juhus Sther
Program 10 Law, Sctence and Technology at
Columbaa Un1versny School of Law
He serve!; as v1ce chaiT, «.x olficro, of the
U.S. Departmenl of Agncuhure Naltonal
Advtsory Commmee on M ICrobJologJca.l
Critena for Food. and as a member of the
In stitute of Medicine Forum on Drug DeveiOpmenl and Regulation, !he 1/lSLitule ofMedicone AIDS Roundtable and lhe Naltonal
Cancer Board. l!.r officw. He served as cha1r
of the Drugs and 81olog1cs Subcommittee of
the A.a....isory Conu:muae.

Oft

tt.e PDA. in

1990
A gr.tduatc of Amhe,.....t College. he reCCI\ cd hi"' mt"tilcal dt:grec from Harvard
Medtcal Sl·hool and Ia..., degree from 1he
l l nt\cr.tt~ of C'hacago School of La"'

Career workshops

to be offered for
graduate students
S.ven~--.,a tobegoven

th1s semester. will a1d graduate and
Ph D students who are planntng their
JOb searches
The worl&lt;shops, co-sponsored by
the G1aduate Student Association, Caleer Planning and Placemen~ a division of Student Affairs. and the Officeol
Teaching Effectiveness, wiJ1 feature
~s from several areas,lncluding
banl&lt;in;l. education, govetnllWd. nonprofits, COI\'1)UierS and business. They
willtalkaboutlhequalilies~Jn

these ftelds are seeking in .-&lt;eerufts.
'!Yorkshops on building teachlng
portfolios, the int81VfewW1g and t-iring
process lor PhD.s,and boAldlng people
skills will also be oller8d. AI wortcshops
are free, with seating on a first -«me,
first-se&lt;Yild basis.
The program Jncludos:
Feb. 2. ~in the Banking
Industry, 3:30-5 p .m., 14S'I. Student

Union.
Feb. 16,GovemmentandNoo-Prolit
Job Search.;3:30-5 p .m .• 145A Sludent
Union.
Feb. 23. DeYeloping a Teaching Portfolio, 3:30-&lt;1:30 p .m.. 21 9 Talbert
March 1. Ph.D. Worl&lt;shop: lnlenliewing/Accepting an Oller and Wh8t to
Expect the Rlsl Year, 4-6 p.ln., 222
Natural Sciences Building.
March 23, Computers and Business
Job Search, 3:33-5:30 p .m_, 145A Student Union.
March 29, Summer Jells Fair, 10

a .m.-2p.m .. Social Hall. Student Union.
April 6, Worldng with Peopla, 3:3:).
5:30p.m .. location TBA. · ·

· •·

�4

_,.a,.___..,_UI

milk

H

rna~tect

against diarrhea

j

EW ANDINGS by research teams
at UB and the Sbriver Center for
Menial Retardation in Boston indicate that a carbohydrate: found
in breast milk may provideprolectioo against
a form of diarrhea !hat poses a serious health
threat to children in developing countries.
lbeir study. published in the December
ISSue ofTh• Journal ofNutrition. shows lhat
fucose~naining oligosaccbarides can prevent a lo&gt;.in produced by the bacteria
Escherichia coli from initiating the biochemireaction in the small intestine thai resuh
dianhea.
ohn K. Crane, UB assislanl professor of
icine and lead researcher on the study.
Sltid the discovery implies lhat breast milk
contains elements other than matema1 anti·
bodies that protect against infectious organisms. " lflaboratory results can be duplicated
in humans, the carbohydrate cou ld be added
to infant formula 10 help pre
diarrhea."
Crane said.
avid S. Nt-wberg semor SCJentlst at Ibe
Ccnler, Crane' s collaborator
on the current slud) . earlier had idenufied
the human -milk carbohydrate that protected

D Shri\·er

again r the £. roli 1oxm. usang m1ce as a

model. but dod not determone its method of)
action. Crane's st udy was designed 10 find
out how the protective mechanism wori..ed
and if it occurred in human cells
Using a human intesunal-cell hne, the
researchers discovered lhatthe carbohydrate:
aas byblnd1ng to the receptors for the toxin
STain the intestinal wall, which prevents lhe
lox in from limulating guanylate C)da~ . an
enzyme that initiates the d1arrhea process.
They were able to m~sure how. much
was needed 10 block guanylate&lt;ycl= acllvity m response to the STa tOl-10 .
"The findmg~ md1cate that a bab) receJ\ong .8 1iters of breast mill a day lheorericall)
cou ld be protected agam';t a large Inoculation of£. cnll:· Crane ~a1d Infant!&lt;! not et;clu ovel) breast-fedlolel) "'ouldbeprotecled
m propon1on to the amount of brea~t m1ll
con,umed
" Funher punficauon and charactenLauon of the actJ\e mate.rHII may allo"' \.Cienti~t.s to sy nthe~ J/~ a'flO\el oligosacchande
antagonist for the lOAm. \\'h1ch could have
considerable uti lily m the lreatment or prc\tntion of diarrhea cau\ed by tOl.ln-producmg £ . coli." Crane stated
11le '40rl.. was completed wh1le Crane
was a1 the Universit) o f Texa~ - H oust on.
Investigators partJcipatj ng 10 the s:tud) . 10
addition to Crane and Ne"berg. were
Shabnam S. Azar and Annicl Slam from lhe
University of Texas-Houston.

Research team designs lightweight collar
to help patients with weak neck muscles
~IUin'-­
News Bureau StaH
UGH1WEIGHT collar that
provides head •upport and lability for those wilh weak neck
muscles caused by neuromuscular disease has been de signed by a research team at the University al
Buffalo.
The patented collar was de igned by UB
engineering tudentl..illian Pa~ and Roben Catopovic. a certified prosthetist and
onbotist. Joseph Mollendorf. a professor of
mechAmcal and aerospace engineering.
.erved as supervising faculty member.
A prolotype was designed for a local
patient 10&lt;ilh myasthenia gravis as part of
woti: for a course laugh! by Mollendorf and
funded through a National Science Foundatioo grant.
In the course, students are assigned to
design and dt'velop novel and assisth•e &lt;kvices for specific individuals who need de' oces that help them perform e•·eryday

Oft.

3CII'-IIICS

"Padded Pholadelphoa and other types of
ct:nical collars 'A ert not de~1gned for pauents With chron1cally weal.. ned, mu-,cle&gt;t
caused b., d1sea.'&gt;es uchasm)'aMhenlagra\1'
and amYotroph• lateral scleros1 (Lou
Gehrrg's Dosease )," loa)S UB neurolog) pro·
fessor Jerry Chutlow. the physocoan "'ho
requested that a collar~ des1gned for one of
h1s pauenas
Thest- pa11en1s. "'hose head~ !utomau cally drop forward~ v. tth 1he1r chms restmg
on their chests, need a dev1ce that comfon-

ably provod&lt; th&lt;m "'"h 'labolll) to hold the or
head' up
But the y alw
Jrt a de'\ ICe that gl\e'them motnlll) ""heneaungandtall.mg.lroOmelhong that" nol pro• oded b) the Pholadelphoa
collar
The UB pla,tor collar fealu"'' a padded
chm !ouppon attached to a unit that cune'&gt;
around both "des of the ned. and extends to
the tDf"''. ~A here 11 1' \CCured ~A llh a Velcro
su-ap
Loghtv.eoght and LJolored for the ondo ·

\lduai~Aearer

the fle ... h-cOIOred dt-\Ke l'30
unobtru\1\el)' under clothm~. "
ra~)' to clean. and 1\ IC'\"- bull) and mnr~
comfonablt: to v. ear than ocher cen seal n"'l
I"" A detachable head 'trap can easol) he
affili.ed to the- de' 1cc: ltl hold the head tmmohlle for md1' tduals v. ho ha\-t mcul'T'Cd temporal) necl IOJUOe\
More than ~Ooflhe prototype; ha•&lt; been
rnaM b) a Rochester firm u~mg fundo; from
UB's ln,·enuonCommen:aal•z.auon Enhancement Progrdm

br

~Aorn

Capitalize on pupils' fascination with television

to energize readin lessons, UB educator advises
Br USA WILEY
News Bureau StaH
----LEMENTAR) ~CHOOL oea&lt;h
e.-..-v. h o~ d.J'\.e' are f1lled "'uh
pupil -. dn:u .. tomed to tele\ l'\lliO.
mtendu .md rJdm- ,hould ..-.Jpt
tah7e on the1r 'tudc:nt' · aud1m 1'-U3l 'l..•\1,
"hen tea~.:lung reoidmg le,,on' d l 'B edu~.-a
10r )Ugge'''
MultJmedtJ progn.1111' l"Jn prm 1de mc:&gt;.tn
mgful 'uppo11 for rc:admg de' cloprnent ..tl
almo\t an~ le\c:l. 'J} Pegg) Hetti) Stc:-.Jm'.
adJUn&lt;..'l lec:turer m the UB Gr.u.Juale School
ol Educauon Although Stram' l.tment' the
media·, mnuen~.:c: .... hr 'U)' that educatl1r'
'"might a.., v.ell u~ the puv.er fif th~ med1a to
theu ad\ antagc ··
Teachers !&lt;!hould u...e mulumed1a pro·
gram~-mdud1ng '1deodt\C~ and CDROM,-nol becau"' the) are "gloll) :· buo
becau~ the) may enhanct" and ' uppon curn cular goal~. )3)'~ Steam~ . v. ho ha . . \A.Orled
wnh lmdergartne rs through college gradu -

E

to .50%

your

filii PICUIP a .uvaY
.. M IIIII .... LeoiiiiM
llltulill PI I J,--"'oll!l:a.~

............
..................

PEGGY HEALY STEARNS

thai 11 mot!\ .Jte\. \ 1'-Uall) re1nfor~o·e , and
empov.er' 'tudenh to become a..:tJ\e lea.m.

e"
\'1deoch~' repre-.ent a relatJ\el) ea\)
v.a) to mcorporatt" multJmed1a m:uenalanto
the cla~~mom. 'he \a)"' The\ 1deoch.sc pia) er
1' hool..ed up to the: tele\ 1~1on and rna) be

"Did you know we do poster titles?"
That's only part of the good news.
During February and March they'll only
~
cost you $5.00, completed, mounted
~~
and with or without
~
?
a UB logo.
~~.,pv

.......

[I

....................,.......... __.

.._.....,..,...t..,WWaell•
E 1111
2

Tc Technologies

Educators "might as well
use the power of the media
to their admntage."

u\Cd "1Lh a barcode reader or altache4 to J
computer 01\C pla)'er' lilt- the~ c0\1 be
l\\ten S600 and $700. v.tth d1..c' &lt;.."0'\tln~
•I&gt;&lt;&gt;UI S 195 &lt;a&lt;·h
CD-ROM pmgram' are the"""' popuiJt
fnrm of muhuned1a reachng progrJm' U'&lt;d
'" dav.rtKlm,. Steam' note\ . pro' tdtn~ "'nl
1ng and drav. 1ng HlOI!t. and offenng mort'
nppnnunll) tor mleractJon than ttK \ td(""l."'
d1 ., Prngram' IILe "\\'1ggleWorl'- ma~
!OL..·I ud~ tca..-her - m&lt;Jnage~nl program th.JI
J.llov. t~a~-.·her-. to create mdl\ 1dual pon.foiJ~,..
w '-lure puptl.., - ~Aorl.. CD-ROM program'
Jn erage 50 An enttre curTtculum pacla.g~
I.:'O' h a\ much a' .SI.750.
Budge.h. hov.e\er. are not the on I) fac1or
m dectdmg "'h1ch program~ to mtroduce 10
the cla&gt;\oyom .. A lot of teachers sompl)
aren ' t av{art of "'hat·, 3\'0.Jlable." Steam)
"")' In addouon. lechnology carries an "onltmtdation f:1 tor:· for many teachers .
"lbere' sa tremendou need forteacbertrain ong." she odds.

........-:~-(\J'~

'-

.................... , ,

ate' for more than lO )eat'. She frequent!)
re' 1e", nc-"' ~ftv.are for manufacturer\ and
educ:l11nnal JOUmah
The muhun&lt;"dla approa~o h ltl reo1d1ng ln ''ruliiOn m •.unt.11n.., dl'!ltlnc:t ad,.:~ntage' O\ er
tradllJonJ.I method, Jlone. 'ht: 'a)' nt'\lmg

(716) 838-2745

835 Englewood Avenue, Town of Tonawanda, NY FAX ~

Call 829-2945
~~~~_.....,.,"'
for details.
~~~;.,.•
~..,;f}And don't forget about our
1)tf-'~
other services; 35mm slides,
U
color ovemeads and those #"'o""!l
graphs that are hard to do and take up
too much of your lime. Call us, or stop by.
We're Art &amp; Photographic Services
342 Abbott Hall, South Campus

p..

;;.....-·

�_.......-

........

5
H 0 N 0 R S

.......-.
~

Making
strides in
transfer

Jennifer
Gottdlener Is
shown In
Capen Hall.

Latolle Fletllw. UB

gUtShed Prole59or Etnlrilus

of English,
awarded the
H\Jbbe. Medal by lhe Atnef-

ocanu.a-

lure Sectiorl
atlheModem Lan-

guage
Associatklo
(Ml.A) last
month in
recognition
of his lifetJme achievements in Amer-

1C8Alne!'alure. The MLA is
the natklo's principal assoCiabon of l~efaty scholars.

Fiedler, award-wiming
author of flction and criti-

Goudiener
br ught her articulation
s ills to UB in October.
Hers are not the type or

cism and a popular lec1Ufer
worldwide. has WfiiiM more
lhan 25 bool&lt;s and has won
numerous prizes and
awards lor his 111011&lt;. He
holds an MA and Ph 0 .
from the u~ of Wis-

articulatory abilities. however. that one would hone under

Professor Henry Hi ggins.
As UB's new Transfer and Articulation Coordinator. GoucUener
has the task or smoothing student
transitions from two-year. or other
four-year. insti tutions to UB and
improving communications between major fields of st udy here
and their counterparts at other area
schools. She is the forst person to
hold this post on a 'full -time basis.
and brings plenty of experience
with her from the University of
California at Ri verside.
..In a very broad sense, aniculation helps institutions of higher
education understand each other.-

explained Goudiener. Course arti culation, she explained. enables
students to take courses in the same
subject at area institutions. confident that the credits wi ll be accepted by UB toward the student's
degree. Faculty articulation encour-

ages the departmental faculty or
communily colleges in the area.
for example. to reach agreement
with UB faculty on what courses or
pedal requ irements are needed
by students from the two-year level

toward a four-year degree.
Most students at UB have .at
leas1 some transfer credits.
Gottdiener said. and students who
transfer from other instituti ons
comprise a large pan of the student

body. Last fall . 2.224 first-time
freshmen were eq,rolled. and 1.553
students transfered to the univer-

sity as well.
Computeri7..ed articulation information, development of new
articulation -agreements be1ween
institutions and expanded joint admission agreements are among the

consin.

ILIC1WD IY AllYS ......
tools Goudiener plans to usc to

make UB more transfer-friendly.
Since 1991. development of a
master database for aniculation
information. in conjunction with

the OARS system, has been under
way. "Very sodjl. this should enable students with transfer credits
to audit lheir progress toward degree requirements very easily.·· said
Gottdiener.
Articulation and joint admission
agreements-. Goudiener explained.
enable st udents at other institutions
who are considering transfer to a

a point in the future . prov1ded that
student maintains the academic
expectations laid out in the agreement.
The besl lajd plans. however.
are only as effective as the distribution system for the information
on olhercampusss. Goudienersays.
"'It is important to communicate to
st udents in community colleges and
elsewhere what is required of them
to gain admitance to lhe · department of their choice'1lere." she
~aid.··

Compared tot he California S) ~-

"In a very broad sense, articulation helps
institutions of higher education
understand each other. "
JENNIFER GOnDIENER

program at UB to beuer ascenain
which classes they will need and
what academic standards they need
to maintain to gain admission to
the department of their choice ... In
some traditional fields, like chemistry or physics. the requ irements
are pretty standard.'' ~aid
Goudiener... but inothers.likecomputer science. thing s are constantly

left Gottdien~r :.ee~
plenty of room for growth here .
..California i~ a much more centralized c;ystem. so articulauon b
considerably more developed

changing."

L

While articulation agreements
are basically just informative.
Gondiener says. joint admission
programs actually guarantee the
student transfer admission to UB at

tern she

JUM

there." &gt;he e&gt;plamed. S1nce 1988.
Gondiener had 'AOrled in the articulation and admJs..,ions office~
at Riverside.
ast year. she co-chaired the
California Intersegmental Articulation Council. a OOdy that de sig ns
coo rdinated
basic
curriculums for all state institutions. Only a year earlier. her work

National teachers council designates
UB alumnus as 'promising researcher'

J

o f Social Iden tity Formatio n ."

OY PEI-UN Chung. who
received a doctorate from
the Department of Learning and instruction in the
Graduate School of Education at
UB in 1992, was named a 1994
Promising Researcher by the National Council of Teachers of English at its annual meeting held in
Orlando, Aa. in November.
Chung received the award for a
summary of her doctoral disserta-

She concl uded in her study of a
clique of eight immigrant Chinese
students that they used the Chinese
language and culture to establish
and maintain a separate social identity in order to mediate their inte-

tion, "Language Socialization in a

gration into American uni versity

Clique of Chinese Immigrant Students: An Ethnology of a Process

life.

James L. Collins, UB associate professor of learning and instruction.
served as her advisor. Chung is the
second UB student to receive the
award.

The main implication of her

multicultural study is that educators need to understand tha( the
language sociali zatio n of im mi grant students is an active part of
their social identity formation. and
entails both American and immigrant cullures.
Chung, a nat ive of Tai -Pei, Taiwan, received her master's degtee
in secondary education from the

Southern Methodist University in
Texas and her bachelor' s degree
from Fu-Jen Catholic University
in Taiwan. She now works in the
field of international business.

in the ftelt! of articulation earned

her the Educator of the Year Award
from the Inland Consonium for
Articulation and Transfer.
While much of her work is with
area colleges. such as the communily colleges in Erie. Niagara or
Monroe counties. Goudiener says

a surprisingly large contingent of
transferstudentscome from Nassau
and Suffoll counties. The number
of area pri\'ate colleges that supply

transfer stutlcnts also tmpressed
Goudiener.
..Califom•a hac; a very large state
system.·· she said ... but there are
vef) few pfivate colleges. Wilhin a
50-mile radius of the Rher'\ide
campus. there were at least 25 .:;tate
community colleges. as opposed
to e1ght or nine here : · She said
most students in California start
their education at a community
college. Many students commute
between two or three colleges to
get the course~ they want. so articulation becomes exlremely imponant to them.
Gottdiener and her husband.
Marl Gotuilener. the neY. chair of

the UB Sociology Department. arrived in Buffalo last August. But
le3\ ing •mnny California after 14
years wasn't as difficult as it might
seem for the Minneapolis-born.

Brooklyn-bred Gondiener.
"'It was kind of like coming
home:· she said. "'We enjoy winter
spon . like cross-country skiing.

and I really don't think it's very
cold here."

C 0 R R f C 1 I D
In last week· s Reponu story
dealing with the potential impact the loss of federal funding for the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting might
have on public radio and t.ele·

vision stations, including
WBFO-FM . it was incorrectly reported that Congressman Jack Quinn
(R -Hamburg) sponsored legislation last year to cut off
CPB funding.
Congressman Quinn was
not a sponsor of that legislalion and. in fact . voted
against the legislation.

r,

....... Lewlloe, P!'atessor of Er1gfish, elected
vice president of the Arts in
Educatklo 1ns11tute .i n Westem New York. The instiMe
is a not-lor-profit- orgaDization ~ aflar Nt!W

YOlk's Lincoln Center lnsttMe. llll JliA1lOS8 is to establish art appreoiation as a
COfl1POOE!I1t d the educatiooal system.
LIMne Is a specialls1 in
Restoration and I
CenluU8 faaJity since 1963, he
raoelved a B.A. from Tufts
College and an MA and
Ph.D. from Columbia University.
SOCIOLOGY

110011 AWAIID:
u - 1 ....... professor
of sociology. has been honored by the Guslavus Myers
Centm for the Sludy at Hu-

man Rights
in North
America,

which has
named his
book, 7he
Ccld War
andAcaLEWIS
demic Governance, an
outstar]llflng book on the
subject of human rights in
North America
The Center in Fayeneville

AR., presents annual
awar&amp; for the best scholarship oil.jhe subject of intolerance intblh America 7he
award is Mmed in honor of
the aulhar ofi(he Iisby a/
Bigot;y in ttre \kli!ed Slal9s.
Lewis, a graduate at
Washington Univelsily in St
Louis, receill'ed his MA in
sociology from ComaiJ Uni-sily and his PhD. in sociology from Vale
Univwaily.

�__,..,

6

... _..,_ ..

8 p.m. $4 , S-5. $8, SIO. Call645·
2921.

'

-AIIIITIIIATEII
Fakdt.OL Pfeifer Theater. 8
p.m. Admission: SIO. $12. SIS.
Call 839-i540.

SAliJRDAY

CREAnVE CIIAFT CENTER

wPott~ry

ror Cblldi"'!D (agn 611)-6-"'eek program. Elhcou
Complex . North Campus. 10
a.m.-Noon and 1-3 p.m S~O .
Caii64S -2434 .
WRESTLING MATCH

UB vs. Central Connecticut
State. Alumm Arena North
Campus. Noon .

----............,_..~

..................
,.,......., ....' ...,__

~

S 12. SIS. Call 839-8540

CREAnVE CIIAFT CENTER
WORK-

- E N ·a USKETLUL

Jnnlry Constructioo-6Wftk procram. Ell icon Com·
pl~x . Nonh Campus 7- 10 p.m
Cali64S-2434.

6 p.m.

SUMMERFARE THEArdt
Falsettos. Pfeifer Theater. 8
p.m . Admission: SI O. Sl2. Sl5 .

Call 839-8540.

UB vs. Nort.beastern Illinois..
Alumm Arena. North Campus.
DANCE AND MUSIC
PEIIFOIIIIAHCE

Monument, Zochaque Dance
Company. Center for tht Arts. North Campus . 8 p.m SS. SIO.
Co1164S-ARTS .
M .M . D£GREE RECITAL
Cktvls de A.ndri, baritone..
Studenl of Gary Burgess. Ba1rd
Rec11al Hall . Nonh Campus.

ru ........... ....us.a.

8 p.m
MEN'S IASKETaAU.
UB vS. Northeastern Jllinoi~.
Alumm Artna Nonh Campus
8 15 p.m

COMPUTING WORKSHOP

SPSS for M'indows-Part 2.
9 a.m.-Noon Call 64S-3S.sO

Alumm Arena Mnin Gym .
Nonh Campus. 7:45 a.m.
COMPunNG WORKSHOP

BISON Demon~1ration. 223
Lockwood . North Campus.
I p.m. No pre~gistration
requ•red .
COMPunNG WORKSHOP

Generic SPSS-hrt 2. I :30" '30 p.m. Call 645-3540
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM

COMPunNG WORKSIntroduction 10 Sun XWiodo"'ing Systtm. 10 am.

Noon . Caii6-IS -3540.
COMPUTING WORKSHOP
BISON Demonstration. 223
Lock\o\·ood. Nonh Campu:.
3 p m. No pll!'reg•stf3tlon

requirrd.
CHEMISTRY COLLOQUIUM
Tb~

Microcrystallint Statt:

Direct Structure DeterminM tioo b) Electron Crystallograph). Dr. Doug. Dorstt. M~d1 cal
Foundauon of Bu ffa lo. 215
Natural Sc•~nce11 &amp; Mathem:u !cs Complex. Non.h Campu.!&gt;
4pm.

Collapst of tbe Wan Function
as a Physical ProcHS: Description and Co~uencu, Prof.
Philip Pearle. Hamilton College
454 Fronczak. No nh Campus.
NSp.m.

CREAnVE CIIAFT CENTER
WORK-

BIOLOGICAl. SCIENCES
SEMINAR

""'eek procram. Ellicon Com -

Regulation of Eucaryotic
Transcription: General Factors, Activaton: and Co-artiv».tors, Dr. Robert G. Roeder.
Rod::c::feller Univ. I 14
Hochstener. North Campus.

4p.m.
MA1MOIIAT1CS COLLOQUIUM

A Qualitath-e Singular Perturbation Theorem, Prof. James
Reineck. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
CREAnVE CIIAFT CENTER
WORK-

Basic Pbotograpby-6-week
program. Ellicott Cornplel.
Nonh Campus. 7-10 p.m. Call

-

645 -2434.

CREAnVE CliNT CENTER

B eginning Stained Ghw-6program. Ellicoll Complex. North Campus. 7-10 p.m.
Call 645-2434 .
\o\-"t'ek

fee. Caii64S-6140.

Suppl&lt;,...l to !he Theory or
Aucmenl&lt;d Sixth Chords,
Danid Harrison, Eastman
School of Music. Univ. of Roch ·
ester. 211 Boin!. North Campus.

~­
latU'Dd. Reaourca-People.

4

p.m.

WORKS-WORKS-

10 a.m.-Nooo. Cal164S-3540.

~­
SPSS
oo liiM,ICMS-Part 1.
I :)0.4:30 p.m. Cal1645-3540
COMI'UTlNG-

lntroduetion to VMSchutfl",
3-5:30 p.m. Cali64S-3540

lntrodudion to Sun
Mic:rwystems XII R6 II Open
WiDdo WiDdowing S ~ms.
6-11 p.m. Call 645-3540.

ALIIIIIII EVENT
Tho Pollllcs o( Educatioa,
1995, Prof. D. Bruc:e Johnstone
280 Pari:. Nonh Campus 4 p.m
Call645-2491.

Uf'E-

OUTIIIEACHFor Supporten of Abua Survivors., CounselinJ C~ltt
14S-E Student Union Nonh
Campu•. So30-7 p.m.

YS.
~

Nonh Campus. 6 p.m

BaiiM:IOIII DaDC:inc: Swine lnto
Sprinc, Dr. Nimtl E.F. Bogue
and Mr. Bjorn Bogue . North
Campus. 7-8 p.m. Cali64S612S.
UFE WORKSHOP

Country Westun O.nc:ing, Dr

Nimta E.F. Bogue and Mr
Bjom Bogue. North Campus
8-9oiS p.m. Caii64S-612S
MEN' a IASIIETaAU

UB ~C hicago Statt. Alumm
Arena Nonh Campus 8 · 15 p m

UFE-

Marlmiaa Youndfio
Today' Job Markel, Neme
Nitzbcr]!. Nonh Campus.
7-9 p.m Co1164S-6125
WIIIEIITUNG MATCH
UB vs. Slipprry Rock. A lumm
Arena. Nonh Campus . 7.30 p.m
M.M. D£GREE RECITAL
Tooy BUJ"ke. orpn.. Studenl of
Prof David Fuller. Slec Concen

Hall. North Campus 8 p.m

SUMMEltFARE THEATER
Fablettos. Pfe-ifer Theater 4
p .m. and 8 p.m. Admt ston : SIO,

~~.1M

NAT10NAL.GIIIU AHD
WOMEN IN SPORTS WEEK
Guest Spnkr.r, Julie Crouteau.

MUSIC LIC1UIIIE . . . . .

-UB Chbao
·sIIASIIEftALL
State. Alumni

Muhi-Mrdia ror Children
&lt;•en 6-11)-6-'-'·«k procram.
Ellicou Complex. N0t1.h Campus. 10 a.m.-Noon. S45. Call
645-2434 .

~-,_.........._

TOfTIOilOW. NorthCampn. $120

Introduc:tloll toiBM,ICMS.
6-8 p.m. Call 645-3540.

-...............,..._
........................

Trallaa Ju...UI&lt; Dnoa Dealon. &lt;llarles Wall. Caller for

p.m. Caii64S-3540.

COMPIITING

CREAnVE CltAn CENIDI

---........... ___ _..

~­
lotrodoctloo II&gt; Uols. 3-5:30

DANCE AND MUSIC
PEltFORMANCE
Monumrnt. Zod13que DanC"~
Company Cem~r for the An'
Nonh Campus 3 p m SS. S 10

Caii6-IS-ARTS .
SUMMERFARE THEATER
Falsett os. Pf~1fer lnc3Ler 3
p .m Admll&gt;"'lon SIO. SI2.Sl5

Call

39-RS~

Gruting Card Desigo-6plex . North Campus. 7-10 p m
Call 645-2434 .
CREAn¥£ CRAfT CENTElt
WORKSHOP
lntt.rmedia~ Potlery-6-"'·~k

program. Ellicott Compl~x
North Campus. 7- 10 p.m. Call
645-2434 .
DANCE AND MUSIC

I"£JJFFOIIIIAJE
Monument, Zod iaque Dancr
Company. Center for the Ans.
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. SS. S I 0.
Caii645 -ARTS .
IHTDIIIATIONAL FOU&lt;
DANCING
lnt~rnational Folk Danciqg
Group. 8-11 p.m. 2 Diefendorf.
South Otmpus. Seu:ions are free
a nd all are welcome.

SLEE/IIEETHOVEN STRING
QUARTET CYCLE
Muir String Qu.arte.t. Slee

Concert Hall. Nonh Campus.

6

ADDICTlON aTUDIES &amp;
TRAINING PROGRAM
Alcoholism Counst:lor Ethics.
Andrew O'Brien. Cenlt"r for
Tomorrow. Nonh Campu!io Sl-20
fee . Call645-6140
ADDICTION STUDIES &amp;
TRAINING PROGRAM

Treating Junnilt Drug Deal~rs. Ch:u'k~ Wall . C~nter for
Tomorrow. Nonh Campus. Sl20
ree. Ca1164S-6140.
CGM~unNG

WORKSHOP

SAS on IBM/CMS-Part I.
I o30-4:30 p.m. Ca ll 6-15 -35•0.

-_,_

~-·

Diopollq ~ .... Otllor

Dnoa ..-.James Sbipman

CeruerforTomonow. North
Campus. $60 fee. Cali64S6140.

- l o: la-o(Eoleroc:ott1U Soatcloen, Susan

Vo¢ . 248 Coote North Cam -

pus. 8-9 l .m.

COMPVT*GEI&lt;ctroele Maii/CMS. I0 o.m.Noon. Caii64S-3540 ror ,.,,..
tralJOG IDfonnal.ion .

UFE-

Proc:rutioatic&gt;G, UB Counsel -

In&amp; Cc:nf.er. North Campu

Noon- I p.rn Call 645-6125.

~SAS
oo IBM,ICM5-Par1 2.
1·)0.4:30 p.m. Cali64S-3540
LIFEWORK-

Fact and Fletloe, Bill Johnson
Nonh Campus. 2-3 o30 p.m Call
645-6125
I'IWIMAC-Y SEMINAR
Synapt.lr: and on..,...pti&lt;

Modulation by Crayfish N•u ropeptidH, A J ofT~ Mercier .
Ph.D., Brock Umv .. St.
Cathannes. 307 Hochsteuer
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

...,.._y_

Hypometabolism: a deJeo.R
acaia.st bypoda! John
Krunc:y. Ph.D 108 Sherman
South Campus 4 p.m. Call

829-2743.

7

ADDICTION aTUDIU &amp;
TIIAININGI'tiOGRAM

Alcoholism Counst:lor Ethics.
Andrew O'Bnen. C~n ter for
Tomorrow Nonh Campu $120
f~""Call645-6140

ADOICT10N aTUDIIEII &amp;
TRAININGPIIOGitAIII

- A Y S AT 4 P'WS
Pootry and Proo&lt; Readi.o&amp;.
Wekh E'·ennan and Maureen
Ow~n . Ceot~r for the Arts
screen1ng room North Campus
4pm

ADDICTION aTUDIU &amp;
TRAINING-

Ciink:al Supervision ror Pnclkin&amp; Supervbors in Akobol
and Othu Dru1 Progn_m.s. Dr.
Nancy Smnh. Center for Tomorro"'· North Campus. SIJO fee.
Ca11645-6140.

Come out, chHr and
watch the Royall play
Northeastern Illinois Feb
4 and Ch1cago State Feb
6 . Both games are 1n
Alumm Arena at 6 p m

�-y-

7

tour

Myoaonllol Imrctioa: Tbe

AIIC'•

ot-.,.,. .....,.,_

..--

Check Oil

---...._ Oayjd I . Kuierad.
i'twm.D. 248 Cook&lt;. Nonh
Campus. 4:3().5:30 p.m.

lEN'S IIASKE1'BALL

Bu!Talo WINGS: Locl&lt;wood
Style, Mau,..n Stanko. Nonb
Campus. 6:3().8 p.m. Call 645 6125.

OPUS: cuaaaca UYE
JiU Cogiola, clariaet; Caryl
Coacu, plaao. Allen Hall.
South Campus. 7 p.m.

.... _IIIEI:tTAl,l
fACULTY IIECITAL

Duane Saetvei~ bom. member
of the Buffalo Philharmon•c
On:bestra. Slee Cnncen Hall.
North Campus. 8 p.m.

HliRSDA"

9

~SlVDfES&amp;

TRAINJIIei'IIOCIJtAII
AIDS Update, William

Hammen and Brendt 1;bmmen
Center for Tomorrow.

onh

Campus. S60 fee. Ca11645 ·
6140.
~SlVDIES·

IIIAJIIIJIQ CliDk:al
Supuvis:ion for Practicing Supervisors in Alcohol
and Othn- Drug Programs, Dr.
Nancy Smith. Center for Tomor·
row. Nonh Campus. SIJO fee .
Ca11645-6140.

COMPI/IlNQ WOIII(S-

Intemet Resources-Placu.
10 a.m.-Nooo . Call645 -3540.

--

The Bulls raised their record to 1 1.£
overall and 6-2 in the Mid-Conlinenl
Conference wilh a split of lh-eir games
over the week.
UB firsl defealed Weslern lllinots
92-65 thanks to a big first half that
saw lhe club open a 46-26 lead allhe
tnlermission Freshman Mike Martinho
led UB in scoring wilh 20 points while
Rasaun Young had 19 and Myron
Banks 14
The club then hit lhe road and. in a
showdown for first p lace in the conference . lost al Valparaiso 64-63 Early
foullrouble and a sconng drought tale
tn lhe game were loo much for lhe
Bulls 10 overcome. Young led all scorers- wtlh 22 points and nine rebounds
Marttnho added I 5 poims and Modie
Cox contnbuted 11.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
The Royals also splil their games Jas1
week . losing to Western llltnors before
bea1rng Valparaiso UB is now 11-5
overall and 6-2 in the conference
Anne Gallagher led the Royals rn
thetr wtn over Valparatso with 14
pornls on 7-of-10 shooltng from lhe
floor Charissa Gardner and Brenna
Doty each had 10 pornls for UB . The
Royals ltmrted Valpararso 10 JUSt 29
percem shootrng for the game
WOMEN'S SWIMMING
The Royals fell to a strong lndrana
\ Untversity (Pa) team 133- 129 IUP
1 look firsltn the ftnal evenl of lhe meet ,
lhe 400 free relay . to posl the vrctory
Freshman Alexandra Barrera look
the 1.000 free in I 0 35 16 for UB She
also won lhe 100 back tn 1 01 11 and

the 200 back in 2.10.01 . Martte
Duffen was a double winner for UB.
taking the 200 breaststroke tn 2 30 71
and 1he 200 butterfly in 2. 14.21
BREAK 11tE R£CORD NIGHT
Break The Record Night ts comtng 10
Alumni Arena on Saturday, Feb 18
when lhe Bulls and Royals take on
Youngstown Stale-in a Mid-Conltnent
Conference basketball doubleheader
• All children 16 and under are
admtned free to the game when accompanied by a paying adull
• Tickel prices have been reduced
$2 to $5 and $7
• First 500 ktds 12 and under receive a free one-day pass to Fanlasy
Island
Call1he UB Ath leuc Ttckel Offtce a1
645-6666 lot more tnformauon or to
reserve your llckets
QUARTERBACK CWB MEEnNG
The firs! meetrng ol 1995 for the UB
Ouanerback Club wrll lake p lace on
Tuesday. Feb 7 al the Holrday Inn on
Ntagara Falls Blvd tn Amherst The
luncheon begrns promplly a1 noon
Newly-named Head Coach Cra tg
Ctrbus will be the feattJred speaker
Ctrbus wtll be torned by hrs asstslant
coaches along wtth Alhleuc Dtrec10r
Nelson Town send Cos1 of lhe luncheon rs $15 per person
To make reservations. please ca ll
645-3142 or marl a check, made payable 10 UB Drvtsron of Alhlelrcs. 10
Quanerback Club. Unrversrty al Buf·
falo, 215 Alumnt Arena . Buffalo. NY
14260. All Tom Koller
-$ports InformatiOn Offrce

SPSS on IBM/CMS-Ptu1
COMPI/IlNQ
- · - 1.
I :30-4:30 p.m. Call 645 -3540.

atOUNIICAL SCIENCES

Norwalk Viru.s; structure,

upnssion and assembly. Dr
Mary Esres, Baylor College of

Brian W ilson·~ song. ··sa1l On,
Sailor."' produces a provocative
and intense sound sculpture that
mesmenzes and enchants e\·en
as it .~:h sappears . The cxhibn
continues through Feb 25

mg MR -95007 Resurcb Tttboician 11-Medtcmc. Posung WR95008 Reseorch Support Speci.alist-Psycholog.y,

P~t n g

D.W. -NGTDN LECnJRE

IR -95009. Project Sian- Assistant -Psycholog)·. Postmg IIR 950 I0. Researt'b Support SJ*
daJb.1-Rehabl ltt.atJon Medktne .
Postmg NR-95011 Research

Attelented Approval of
Drugs for Se.riotH Lir~tbreal ­

Tttbnician-Phannaceutic!&gt;.
Posung •R -95012

eniog Diseases, David A.

PRDfESSIONAL
Associate Vice Prtiident for
Public Rebtions (MPJA )-Office of the VP for Umverlii Y
AdvanceTTK':nt and Development.
Po~ung ff'P-4100. Information
Systems T('(hnidan (SL-3)Dean'~ Office . School of Art'ht ·
tecture and Planning. Postin~
lfP-4107 . Computer Nehmrk

Medicine. I 14 Hochstetler.

Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

Kessler. J.D.• M.D. Butler Audi·
torium . South Campus. 4 p.m.
UfEW-

Fresb Start: How to Quil
Smoking, Power Advocates.

North Campus. S:l0-6:30 p m
Ca11645-6)15.
UfE WOIII(SMassag~

Therapy ror Head.

Neck and Shoulders., D:~ .... n

Jordan . North Campus . 7-9 p m.
Ca11645-6125.
UfEWDIIKS-

So ... You Lovt Animals?
Valerie Will and W ilh am Palka.

North Campus. 7-9 p.m Call
645-6125.
LECnJRE

Vico: Law and the Bounda.rirs
or Metaphor, Dr. Giuseppe
Mazzotta. Yale Univ. 930
Clemens. Non.h Campo!&gt;. 3 p m.
SUMMERfARE THEATER
Falsettos. Pfeifer The.ate.r. 8

p.m. Admission: SIO. Sl2. SIS
Call 839-8540.

INTDINAT10NAL FDIJ(

DANCING
All an: welcome to JOin the In ternational Folk Dan~o: mg group
each Fnday from 8-11 p.m. m 2
Otefendorf Hall on the South
Campus . 'J'Mse frtt sess1om.
~gin With teaching . Panners
art not needet.l . The sponsor I§
the Grndunte Student A s~octa­
tJon.
UFE WORKSHOPS FOR
THESP'RING

Tht' L1ft: WorLshops Spnng
progrc~;m bt:gms thi s month Approximatr:l) 70 nev.• and excu ing \o\'Ori:shops art open to persons interested in learning,
developing skills. and JUSI plam
hav ing fun . Wor~hops cover a
vancl)' of 1ssues ranging from
beauty con~ ms . crafls and hobbleS to business and personal
goa h . The local community 1s
welcome to pa.n.1c1pate. Check
the calendar for th1s week's
offering s. or call b45-6115 for a
complete lis11ng of Spring worLshops and reg1stratton infomla -

tion.

SOUND INSTAUATlON:
KRtSnN DPPENHEIM
Kristin Oppenheim. daughter of

conceptual anist Denm ~
Oppcnheirrer, i nvestiga t e~
sound and music as they relate

to personal memories and experience. In Gallery I of the Center
for the Arts, she p~senb :l
sound installation cited by New

York Times an critic Robc=nu
Smith for its ''soothing. accumu-

lating. almost hypnotic dfed
that heightens the act of perception ... Oppenheim 's recorded

''Dice. repealing a soothing
chant based on the chorus nf

fACULTY
Assislant/Associall' ProfessorDept. of Surgef)'. Posting •F-

500 1. Associate/Full ProfessorDept. of Psychiatry. Posting
##F-5002. Assistant ProfessorDept. of Communication. Posling MF-5003. Associate/Full
Professor-DepL of Pathology.
Posti ng MF-5004. Assistant/
Assoc.iate(Full Professor-Dept.
of Patho logy, Posting #F-5005.
RESEAIICN
Field Tracer-Psycholop. Post -

COMP'EmiYE CI..USIRED
CML KIIYJC:E

K•yboanl Spo&lt;ialist (SG~­
Psycholo!\1. un&lt;: 123662. K•yboard SpOc.ialisl (SG~-Office
of Graduate Meducal Educauon
and House Staff Affairs. Une

•28731. Keyboa nl Spo&lt;ialisl
(SG-6)-Surgey. Lme 04931
-.cOMI'ET1TtVE

CLASSIFIED CMI. SEJtVIc:E
General Mechanic: (SG-12)Dept. of Ps)·cholog) . Lme
N23679

To obta:n mo rt mformatwn on
)Obl luud abo\'t:, contact Ptr·
sonntl &amp;n·rct&gt;s. /04 Crofu
Hall

Manager (SL-3)-Umversuy
Pubhcatioos. Posting •P-4110
Calalog Tecbnici.an (SL-3)Law Librat)', Posting MP-5001 .

C

H

0

ICES

stock
.oeductiott

'" sll'-c:

.... • Hardware

• Softwere

• SuppiJ. .
• Ac:ceaaories

Sale
through "3ri 2/3!!

�8

--..a.s-._...,_ ...

Ads' impact linked
to the popuklrity
of radio program

UB 's Charles Bernstein edits first audio
anthology of influential 'language poetry'

By USA WILEY
News Bureau Staff

lly PATRICIA DONOVAN

=N=ews=-_B_ur_ea_u_S_ta_«_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~

T

HE MORE a listener likes a radio .. L
ANGUAGE POETRY.'' the beshow and is actively involved in the
deviling school of contemporary
program, the more receptive he or
poetry that has intrigued the literary world for two decades. has
she will be to the advenisements
been wrestledontoanewCDtitled
aired during the show. a study by a Uni••ersity at Buffalo researcher has found .
" Live at the Ear."
The results ofthe study by Kenneth Lord.
Edited by Charles Bernstein. David Grn)
UB assistant professor of markeling. are
Chair in Poetry and the Humanities at B. it
contrary to the resuhs of similar srudies on
is the firs1 audio anthology of thi s mcreastelevision ads. Those studies round that the
ingly innuential school or poetry.
more involved a viewer was with the proThe 72-minute recording, produced by
gram, the less likely he or she was to recall
Richard Dillon and Elemenope Productions.
the ads.
features I 3 four-to-six-minute tracts exThe Lord study-die first to examine the
cerpted from readings presented by major
'context effects or radio ads-was published
language poets at Manhattan' s historic Ear
Inn between 1974 and 1993 .
in theJouma/ofth•Acad•myofMark•ting
Scitnct. ln that study. 324 s1udents listened
Because it is intended for use m I he classto a half-boor audio recording of a radio proroom. as well as by poetry alicionados. the
gram---includingembeddedadvenisementsCD is accompanied by a 32-page booklet
in a norma) listening situation. such as at home
with textual excerpts from each recorded
orin a car. The "typical" fonnat includedshon
selection (often highlighting the authors·
news and music. The test ad was a 30-second
unusual typographies. spelling and usage).
spot fora fiCtitious brand oftoothbrush. Listenphotographs or each writer and a description
ers reported their attitudes and levels or in- that illuminates his or her personal aesthetic.
volvement using seven-point scales.
This back-up material is useful because
Lord said the st udy demonstrates that
language poetry io.a cryptic and highly theoprogram involvement and program liking
reticalliterary ronn grounded in philosoph ian: linked by a third ractor-&lt;:ommercialcal discourse. and is best approached by the
processingmotivation-whichisresponsible
initiated. Among its features are a celebraLion of the visuaJity of words through the
for enhancing the attirude toward the ad and
toward the brand name.
original use of space and typography. and
'The more involved you are in a radio
the construcrion of works that. like abstract
an. are usually devoid of conventional conprogram. and the more you like it. the more
likely you are to pay auention when a comtent and derive their "meaning" from both
mercia! comes on," he said. 'The deeper
the creator and the receiver of the poem.
you're processing the ad. the greater the
\ikc\ihood you will detect whether lhe message has appeal or not. .. He found that-Ibis
program-induced motivation to process the
message had a positive impact. not onl) on
the allitude toward the claims of the ad, but
also on its "non&lt;laim" elements. such as
background music.
Lord atuibuted the difference in involvement of listeners of radio and television ads
to a .. thre shold' ' phenomenon. Cognitive
~rousal-the activation of attentional resources-is enhanced only up to a cenain
ex tent , and then specta1ors reach a level of
distraction, where they no longer process the
ad. For e&gt;&lt;arnple. people beeome so engaged
in certain programs. such as intense football
games or cliffhanger mysteries like" Alfred
Hirchcock Presents," that they block out
commercials. Lord said
''Very high involvement will distract." he
noted. " Radio doesn ' t have the same visual
1mpac1. You don't gel thai same high le\el of
involvement." he added. noting that radio
By CAITUN KEU.Y
lisreners were never so comp letely absorbed
News Bureau Staf1
with the program that they reached the threshold leading to the distraction phase.
TORE-BRAND grocery products
Lord said the study suggests that adverare judged by consumers to be or
tise.rs should undersrand their target audilower quality than grocery prodences and cannot assume an optimal level of
ucts with national-brand names.
in~olvement for all listeners.
even when actual ingredients are comparable. marketing researchers at UB have
found . They attribute this widespread attiSE M I N AR
national brands are ofbetterqualtude-that
ity than private-label brands-to the ways in
The Professional Staff Senate Career
which both types or products are advenised.
Mobility Committee 1nvites all profesA study of 1.564 shoppers and live prodsM:lnal staff to anend a noor)time brown
ucts indicates that consumers will give two
bag seminar oo the
'different ratings to the same product if they
.....,...~,Felt.•-think that one sample is a national brand and
1p.a. .. 41.4-H811.
another sample is a store brand.
The committee will d escribe the
The study. conducted by Alan S. Dick.
program. Which is designed to enhance
assistant professor of marketi ng at UB; Arun
career development and expand the
K. Jain. chair of marketing and Samuel P.
staff member's understanding of him·
Capen professor of marketing at UB. and
self or herseH and the university. The
Paul S. Richardson, assistant professor of
Mentor/Protege Program tries to match
proteges and mentors based on needs.
marketing at Loyola University in Chicago.
skills and objectives. All those who wish
is to be published in the Journal ofMaricLting.
to become a part of the program as
The researchers surveyed consumer!\ at a
mentors or proteges. are encouraged to
large northeastern shopping mall. Packages
anl!~d.
or three different bran~ne national and
two StOre--&lt;&gt;f one of five different products

Among the poets featured on ··uve at the
Ear.. is Bernstein, a noted litera;y critic and
editorof '' L=A= =G=U=A=G=E."thejournal oflanguage poetry. He joins Susan Howe.
associate professor or English at UB . and
author or groundbreaking work in the lield
of poetics. Of the 13 poets included. I 0 have
taught at UB or performed here. in connection with the UB Program in Poetics and the
"Wednesdays at 4 Plus" literary series.
Bernstein helped piooeer the UB Poetics

Program. a unique one that reflects Lhe tenets
oflanguage poetry by exploring not only the

work itself, but the process by which it was
created. He says that ··uve at the Ear.. is an
excellent teaching tool for several ru.sons .
"First of all." he notes. "there an: few. if
any, commercial recordings by these poets.
That means that for many audiences. this CD
presents a unique opponunity to hear language poetry read aloud.
"The technical qua!ity of the recording is

superb.- he said. " pan•cularly considering
that the orig10al recordings were made in a
mghtclub dunng a live perfonnance. So the
listener has an opportunity to bear the work
as it was meant by I he writer to be heard."

•lion points out that the original live
recordmgs ha\e been digitaJJy remas~
tered by D1cl Ch&gt;rles. one or the most respected audto technicians in the busines". to
ens ure h1gh technical quality and the best
possible sound . " And or course.- adds
Bernstein. ··cos are easier to use in the
classroom than audjo tapes because specific
lf3ct can be located much more easily.··
Bcmslein points o ut thai there are few
recordings or contemporary poetry available with the amount oftexluaJ and reference
suppon materiaJ that accompanies this re·
cording, and vinually no recordings at all b)
the poets included here. despite their critical
reputations and recognition in their field.
" Live at the Ear" features the following
poets: Susan Howe. from" Speeehes at the
Barriers:" Ron Silliman. from "OZ;- Leslie
Scalapino. from " bum s eries: " Ted
Greenwald. from " You Bet:" Rosemarie
Waldrop. from "Reproduction of Proliles:"
Alan Davies. from "Shared Sentences ;"
Barren Watten. from "Under Erasure:· and
Erica Hunt. from "cold war breaks.- Also
included are Bruce Andre,;, • from " I Knew
the Signs by Their Tents:" Hannah Weiner.
from "Spoke:" Steve McCaffery. from "'The
Curve lo its Answer:" Ann Lauterbach. from
"Opening Day." and Charles Bernstein. from
"Dark City."

D

Consumers think name brands

are better, even when

S

~-

-~- --

-fl'rotee•

---=-o---=-----,-

Store
brands.even
quality

ones-get
a lower
rating
from consumers.

Is National Children's Dental
Month. The following lips on
Ctllldren's dental6eaittt are ollered by
e&gt;epens in lhe UB School of Dental Med;-

cine:

• _ , denbll , . . . . _ ....... while your baby Is stiR in lhe
womb. Protect your baby's teelh by
eating healthy foods duMg pregnancy.

........ _,_.....,

....

wftlt • Mttle filled with.milk or juice.
The sugars in lhese liquids can cause
"nursing-bottle decay." which can destroy tiny teelh.
a Y-chllcl'aflratllentalwlalt
should-take place by the flfst birthday.

....... ·~'*"*-to

twice a day when IIley are old
enough to use a tOOihbrush.

• .,.....,.-...,..tluofllfl loti,
were
to subjec1s. Some \.\&lt;ere shown
the packages that corresponded with the producls they were sampling; others unknowing!~ had the packages switched. The
researthers found thai subjects consistently
rated thoquality of product they ~li..••dto
be nationlll brands higher than the quality or
store bran~ even when the national brand
was secretly silbstituted with the store brands.
When both national and private brands
were presented as national brands. they were
rated as being or comparable quality.
However. even with these favorable results, private-label product sales account for
only 14 percent or total retail sales. The
researchers attribute this to the tendency or
retailers to market private·label products
based on low price. rather than quality.
"Consumers don't necessarily associate
store brands with high quality.'' Dick said.
Consumers an: driven by quality. not price.
according to the study. "Ingredient differences don't account for the difference in
sales of national and private brands. It's in
the marketing where retailers an: making a
colossal mistake." said Jain. " Retailers should
advenise the quality of their product. not the
low price."

make sure to use a fluoride toothpaste.
If~ Is, use only a pea-sized attrOunt. Too
much l1uoride can speckle teeth.

Diet . . .healthy
. --- · ·Umll
· · ....
in •developing
teelh.
your
child's consumption of stlcky, sweea
foods such as caramels and raisins.
J?rovida fruits. vegetables. pretzels or
popcorn onsteed.
aT-'t~ ....... as
early as possible and make il a l~elong
habit
• ABII , _ danllat . . ._.,
. . . . . . . 1o your Chikfs pam'llnlf1t
molars. Sealants are piBitic COBiings
!hal . . appied 8llllly lo fiB billng
st.n- of-" lo PR*Cl8gtllrlll bilelelia 11111-100111 dlcBy.

..........................

~~"'JIIIIIIft;ll~,-·
_.,.
CIII0-12. Tall~
...

...........

~wllh)IWc:llllcl.

•

~

brulhiiD........
......
-..,
.... ,...'ill**.,_

..................

lliiWi'IJIPQIII.

-u.~~o~r~r.~

......

�9.

__

_____

2222Public Safety'
s WeekiV Report,_...
.,_..._...

Fi
Greenland ice core yields snowfall data
~~~UM

C

OLD CLIMATES
generally are associated with large quanti -

ties of snow. But a
paper published in Scien« indicates that during the Holocene p:riod, the geological era cov-

GISP2datadonotsuppontheperception that the little ice age was a
period of suslJlined cold.
"The ideabehiodthepaperi that
asitgetscolder,accumulationlevels
go down because there is less moisture in the air," said Ram. "For example, even though temp&lt;ratwes are
muchcolderinMinneapolisiSLPaul
than they are in Buffalo, that city
gets less snowfall than Buffalo because the air is drier in Minneapolis."

ering the past II,OOOyears.snowfall
was lower in colder years than when
temperatures were more moderate.
That conclusion confinns what
had been assumed by geoscien-j
Lists. but not previously been dem-

onstrated over an extended record.
"This is the most accurate accumutation record we have of the
Holocene," said Michael Ram . a
UB geophysicist who is a coauthor of the repon .
The paper also demonstrates that
to some extent, t.he climate of the
Holocene perioc1 was not as stable

"As it gets colder;
·
ccumulation levels
go down because
there is Less
moisture in the air. "
MICHAR llAM

as was commonly thought. and was
characterized by shon-tenn nuc-

tuations. even during period~&lt;o
known ns the medieval warming
period and the little ice age.
Authored by scientists at the
Cold.J!,egions Research and Engineering Laboratory. UB and other

First Mep in the ~h w~ to
accurately date the ice. using several
sources of information, mcludmg

Ram's laser-light scattenng studie"
These Mudies have produced the
first continuous record of dust con-

institurions involved in the

centration measurements through-

Greenland l c~ Sheet Project 2
!GlSP2). the paper is based on data
obtained from the top 1.700meten;
from a 3,040-meter-long ice core
retrieved from Greenland.
The paper concludes that the

out the Holocene and Wisconsin
periods. which go back more than
I 00.000 yea". "When you look at
an ice core. you don't sec the accu mulations of snow from each year
because they 've been thinned

down," Ram said. " What you see
is the annual layer. which differen tiates individual yean;."
When laser light is directed at
an ice-core meltwater sample, the
dust panicles suspended in the
water scatter the light, producing a
pattern of peaks and valleys, which
correspond to seasonal dust
changes. The more du t there is in
a sample. the more light it scauen;.
According to Ram. the amount of
dust changes throughout the ia: core,
with the highest le\'els of dust corresponding to the spring and summer.
'1lle largest inOux of dust occun; in
the spring, which is when dust stonns
are most likely." said Ram . The dis-

. tancebetween successive dust peaks
corresponds to one annuaJ layer.
Informalion on these dust concentrations must then be combmed
with results from other techntques
to determine the annuallayerthickness and to date the ice core.
Once this data IS gathered. glacial-now models are used to reconMruct the accumulation records.
the meters of sno""' that fell at that
umc. By measuring oxygen isotopes
in ~air. which are enclosed in air
bubbles in the ice. the researchers
then determine the atrrlO'phenc temperatures at the time the snow fell .
By studying the nuctuation~ m
accumulation. they have developed
a continuous and detai\c.d climate
history for centr.JI Greenland during the Holocene .

- - • pat

,., _

_....,_.-.u_ U:

• A woman reported Jan. 13 that S110 was missing from a
desk drawM In Talbert Hall.
• A towel and ~ In cash were reported missing Jan 13 from
the men's 1oc1&lt;er room in Alumni Ar-.
• A man was charged With burglary Jan. 13 alter he allegedly
broke into Goodyear HaU.
• Sewn COs, valued at SSO. _,reported miS$ing J8n. 15
from Goodyear Hall.
• A refrigeraior, valued at $125, was reported rJ11$S100 Jan. 15
from Porter Quadrangle.
• A COUCh, valued at $300, was reported missing Jan. 17 from
a Dewey Hall lounge.
• Public Salety charged a man With criminal trespass and
possessJon of burglar's tools aftllf he was stopped Jan. 17 •n the
men's locker room in Alumni At-.
• A mountain bike, a telephone and 60 compact disks, worth a
combined value of $2.915. were reported missing Jan_ 171rom
Goodyear Hall.
• A backpack, containing cash. a tape player and nocebooks,
was reported missing Jan. 18 from the Unillersity Bookslore
• A wallet, with credft cards and doc:unents. was reported
missing Jan. 18 from the men's locker room in Alumni Arena.
• FJVe books, valued at $215, were reponed missing Jan. 19

!rom Fargo Quadrangle.

OBITUARY

Flora B. Dees, library clerk
A . .rvlce ••• held Jan. 24 '"Cah a f) BaptiSt Church for Flora B
Dees. 68. a reured UB library clerl. v.ho d~ed unexpecledl) Jan 18'" her
Buffalo home.
Dees W3S employc:d b) the Internal Re, enue Sen tee before comtng to
worlr.. at UB '" 1967 a.!&gt; an admt SStOO.!o and record"' clerlr.. in Ha)es Hall smserved as a clerl.. m Hamman L1braf') for ~'era! ye~ before JOlnmg the
libr.11) of the School of Archuecture and Planning 1n 1975
Survivors mclude tv.o daughters. Vemell and Opheha D.. two sons.

Michael ofRoche!:lter and David. four sister'!&gt;. Ophel1a Parrom. Rosa Hall
and Virginia Lav.ler. all of Cleveland. and Corena Tinler; six brothers.
Ernest and barles Beasley. bothofOlarl~ton. W . Va .. Richard Beasley
of Dunbar. W Va .. Vincent and Paul Beasle) . both o f Cle,•cland. John
Beasle) . and five grandchildren

HELP IMPROVE
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"Riretiug pl'l:frnmaucc"
The Prazak Quartet's performance of Jmacek's second string quartct, "'ntimate L.ettm."
here two years ago was so compelling !hat immediate steps were tal:en for a rerum
engagemenL This February 7, in Kleinhans, they're back. to perform favorites by Dvorak.
Smetana and (SUiprise) Rossini .
The anists wiU discuss the music at 7: 15 p.m. and play i1111 8:00p.m.
For tickets ($12.00. students $5.00) and more infoonalion.
please call 838-2383.

�_,..,

10

.... _..,_ ..
• Morrlll2
· Thur&gt;day . Fndays. Saturday

· at8p.m.
: Sunday M 6 p m.
. T'odeu or&lt; SIS J&lt;'Mnl odmt&lt;·

16

C'Oftlllflfnf

BLACK HJSTOfiY JEO,AROY
GAME

Educational ()ppor1umt)' Ccn
tcr, 46S Wutun~loo Sum6th Aoor AudJionum

10a..m .-2pm.
6HO
Spoo~

by Educatoonal Op
ponunJty Center. Blad, H1!&gt;1.0f)
Monlh Cornnuuec

DftAMAnc ..R£SENTA110N

EducatK&gt;nal Opportunity Ctn·
let. 46S Washington SLrttt6c.h Aoor Auditonum
11.15 Lm ·I 1.45 a.m
Free Adm.Jwoa
Sp&lt;trut&lt;&gt;n:d by Educauonal Opportumry Ct.nter, Blad. HtiiOf)'
Month Committee
BIOGRAPHICAl 5KETCHE5
OF AFIIUCAN AMERICAN$
Educatton&amp;l Opportunity Center. 465 Washington Strttl 6th Aoor AwSi1onum

Frtt Admsss:tOn
Tr11VIS, &amp;49~

6707
Spon~ by Educat""'"l Opponumty
Blact H1s;10f)
MoothCotn"llhee'

c..er.

DANe£ PRESENTATtON

.Educational Opportumly CrnlCr, 465 Washing1on SUttt6th Aoor A.udttorium
11 ·45 a..m - 12:30 p m
Frtt Adm1uion
SponiO«d by Educaoonal Opportumty Cealer. Blac:k H1s1ory
Month Comm1uet
)

·A-PERFORII4A.NCE

APe: A -.oy of . . . .
Educational Opponunily Cco-

: calhoc 11&amp;3.0380

ter. 46.5 Wastungwn Stred-

• aASKETBAlL TOUJIHAMENT

6th Floor Auditonum

. TBA

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Contact Debnt Thcwnpson. 8496717

Sponsored b) Educauonal Opponuntt) Center. Bbd. Huo1ory

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465 WM.bmgtoo Stren6th Floor Aud1tonwn
12.)().1 IS pm

&amp;a.

SponiO«d by EdueattOtUI Oppon-untty Cenkr, Blad. ~hs!OI)

Month Commuccc
,.RESENT A TIOtl

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An afternoon of Afncan C.ou(U~ ..,ttb (abncs and styk~
from Kenra. Sent&amp;•l. Stem
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pan$ of AfOCI
Educ:at1onal 0pp1Jf1unsty Ccn·
lC'r. 46~ Washmtton Suttt 6th f1o&lt;w Auditonum

ContiC1 Trudy Mundord. 8496743 01 Mary Robuuon. 8496736
Spon~ by EducattOnaJ Opponuntl)' Center. Blad. HtstOf)
Month CommiUtt

17
ntEATRtcAL t-E:RFORMAHC£

"Two- ....-.c"

T

HOMAS E. HEADRICK. a professor and former dean of the law
school. has been named 10 lhe position of Senior Counselor by Presi denl William E. G reiner.
Though he expects to have a wide "ariety
of projeciS 10 work on. Headrick says one of
his assignmenls will be "lo provide more
interaction for President Qrejner with the
faculty and the instilution. His responsibili·
ties require a lot of his auention outside lhc.
university, but he is very coascious of not
losing louch wilh 1he people here ...
Headrick, who has been al UB since 1976.
began his new duties in the Pre ident's of~
fice a little over two weeks ago. Last fall.
Headrick served as acling dean of lhe Jaw
school while Dean Barry Boyer was on sabbatical. Previously. he held the Jaw school
posiS or dean. from 1976-1985. and associale dean for academic services. from 19921994. He will continue to teach a limited
number of courses in the law schooL

• RcservattOn can be made b)'

Alumnt ArenaiTnpk G)m
Free
JX&gt;nlloOfed by lhe Nauonal SoC'ICIY of Black Engtneen
$k.AfiNQ PARTY

TBA
Thruwa) Malt Skatc:land

S4 enlflntt, S I s;btt rt.QU.I
SpooiO«d by Ill&lt; Blocl Student
Unoon

20

Before coming 10 UB. Headnck was ,·ice
president for academic affairs at l..a~n~
University an Wisconsm and assis1an1 dean
of S1anford
LawSchool.ln
1993. he was
named a Dis-

tinguished Ser ·
vice Professor
by the SUNY
BoardofTruslees. lhe highest academ1c
rank available
in the Stale UOI ·
versity system
Headrick re ·
HEADRtcK
ce1ved hi1\ undergraduale
degree from Fran~ lin and Marshall College
in Lancaster. Pa .. his law degrtt from Yale
University and hi~ doctorate in politic.-1 M'i·
ence from Stanford University. Headrick
was also a Fulbrighl Scholar al Oxford Universily from 1956-58.

·.a.u---·
~IIESEHT ATIOK

&amp;

OISCUSSION
~

1.er.

Opportuaity Ccn46S Wadnnctoa Strttt-

Ltbnry
12.)().1:30p.m

Free: Adrru HJCJ
Contaa ROillileWII W1rdlAw •
849-6732
SponiO«!d by Ill&lt; Educanonal

('}ppomlniiY Center, Black Ht •
tory Month Commll1ec

- - I I IX
I 06 Dtefntdorf Hall
7 pm
Free
SponiO«d by Ill&lt; Blacl Student
UntOR

21

Stm:~

6721
SponiO«d by Edueatoonal Op
ponu.mt)' Center. Blac.. HtROf')'
Month CommJtttt

., ____

~«. •M

Free Adrru aoa
CODbtd Rooscvch Wardla•.
&amp;49-6732
SpooJOf&lt;d by the Educauonal
Opponunny Censer. Black H1s

tory Mooth Comm1Uet

(~'mrs

w--

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pon.c•_.l

&lt;&gt;ppon-ty c ...

Ltbnry
12.)().1.30p.IIL

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fn:r Adml SIOQ
Cont.c1 R001evch Wanfla• .
849-6732
Sp&lt;trut&lt;&gt;n:d by lh&lt; E.dunltooal
Opponwtrty Cc...,, Blact Hu.&amp;or)' Monfh Commauet

28

Educational Opportumty Cen

rrn Jrffnes. &amp;49

CULTUIIAL I&lt;IGifT
Student UnKin 'T'htatn:
TBA
Spon..,..,.j by Alpha~
Alplla. Sororny lac

Qolla -r.. . . -·

- · -465 Wut\lng1on

26

&amp;cr. 46S WaiJunJWn Stmrt-

Un11y ll Un1f)' Among Other
Cultural Or&amp;anltaiKifls

12)().130pm

S,.....,...t by lh&lt; Blact Stucbl
Uo100

Ltbnry
12 .30-IJOp.m

SPEAKER

Cornact

SS~~~

VID£0 ,.ltfH'IUATIOII &amp;
DISCUS-

.__...~

-..Tell MO. -

ln.

6p.m

27

VID£0 PltfSEKTA TIOII &amp;
DISCUSSION

24

VIDEO I'RES£HTAllON

25
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FUN- CUU'UIIAI. aotow

___
..,_._. ._
23

....,.

Edu&lt;:atoonal Opponvnny Ceo -

Sl"f.Al(flt

Directed by Sarah Nont·
Ptulllps
Anut•c Dueaoc 1....oma C
Htll , UB Alumnae
Theaterl.oft, S45 Elmwood

Greiner names Thomas Headrick
to Senior Counselor position
8JSTEYECOX
Reporter Slaff

• 510ft. S 12 StudtnU/Senton

. Bot Off.cc open one hour
· before howttme

22

VI0£0

TBA

lfatlonal Socttt:) of Blad. En11·
noen

.... ....,,_
COMPETmON

..,.

HIITU1'Wl Hall. Blad So•

TM~

7 p.m
S3 Admtnt00
SponiO«d by Black Student
Uruon

·--·

VIDEO ..UOITArtON

Educat10111l Opportuntty Ceo
ttt. OM WaWAp&gt;a s.-6ch Floor A.tMbiOnWn
12 )().130p.DL
Frrc AdmtliDOII
ContaCt K...., Jdfne.. 8496721
Sp&lt;trut&lt;&gt;n:d by Edtot:oltonal Opponun••Y Ccaaer. Bleck H.taory

Month Commiuce

BARTLETT
contmued from page 1

tlon, " Ban leu said.
Despile whal appears 10 be coming in the
budge!, i1 tS critical !hal SU Y keep a sense
or gro .. lh and momentum. the chancellor
sa1d. "For40 years , we've been conditioned
10 1h tnk or growlh as success and 001 growing as stagnation or failure . Thai change has
10 be pan of oor response." Banleu said.
Banleu also discussed educational lech nology, lhe inlended IOpic of the Je)econference. "unlil other event!ii ~aned rolling over
us .
Acknowledgtng !hat he ongtnally was a
"'slepuc·· abottt the necessity of adding
"htgher lech" to h1gher educauon. Bartleu
said. ··r no,. am a conven.·•
··rfwedo nor uc;e the tools and incorporate
them. someone else will We'll go right on
maling buggy wh1ps ,..h1le others pass
We have no choace but to mak.e the
race .
The core I!'~Sue 1n adaptmg to educational
lechnology "til no1 be hardware , 1he chancellor sa1d. bul"human software. '" the ability
of faculty and staff to uc;e the new technology.
''The real constraint will be whether we

(
u"' the hardwarellw will beavailablelous.~
be said.
The lechnology dial len~ is OOL going 10
go away. Banlen S&amp;Jd. Higher cducatioo
cannol deal wilh lhe problem or lldopting lhe
new lechnology by preiCJiding llw everything is in place. 1be envif'Oiln)ent must be
sustainable.
ik.ewise, he indicated !hal lecbnology
is something lhal need to be available
lo all campuses wi1hin lhe SUNY syslem.
"I do no1 see lechnology and the usc of
lechnology as somelhing !hal some campuses will have and some campuses will
not,~ although he added lhal how lechnoJogical resources will be divided up has
ye1 10 be delennined.
Banleu also fielded queslioos from his
Oneonta and Jelecooference audiences on
lopics lha1 included studenl apathy. the role
of managed care on a Heallh Science campu~ . how to reward facully for innovative
use of technology in the classroom, especially as pan or lhe !enure process. and his
views on a tuition increase and differential
tuition.

L

�r .. b l

,

~ ~ ~ ~

0 ~~ u
~~~--

.

---

UB professors author new books
Eckert IIAocl.te ......
at ScMo~ or HNitll
Related Professions
BarTy S. &amp;kert, associate
professor of anatomy and
cell biology at UB, bas been
named associate dean for academic affairs and research at the
UB School of Health Related
Professions. He will be responsible for graduate and undergraduate academic programs and will
coordinate research efforts, including helping faculty procure
external funding.
A member of the UB faculty
since 197~
,
ert served as
assistant chair f the Department
of Anatomy
Cell Biology.
Author or co-author of more than
20 articles in scholarly journals,
he is principal investigatbr on a
three-year, $135,000 grant from
the National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism to study
early biochemical changes in
liver cells caused by alcohol.
Eckert is a member of the
American Society for Cell Biology. the Society for Developmental Biology and the Research
Society on Alcoholism.
He received bachelor' s and
master's degrees in biology from
the State University of New York
at Albany and a doctorate in
anatomy from ·t he Universit y of
Miami School of Medicine.

0

MFC

-s

Gingrich

aulst.nt dean

Larry R. Gingrich has
been named assistant dean
for summer sessions and market-

0

ing for Millard Fillmore College
at UB.
He will administer the
uni \'ersity 's summer sessions.
direct marketing for the col lege's
evening and summer programs.
and initiate programs that result
from these marketing efforts.
Gingrich also will wo rk with
local businesses to deli\'er on-si te
credit and non-credi t educational
and training programs.
Before coming to UB . he was
director of the Professional Development Training Ceoter at the
Harrisburg Area Community
College. where he coordinated
ed ucational and training services
to meet the development needs of
external agencies, including business. industry, government, pub·
lie service and not-for-profit
groups. From 1984-89. he directed the Division of Conti nuing
Education at Pennsylvania State
University, the Behrend College.
Gingrich is a member of the
American Association for Con·
tin uing Higher Education and the
Pennsylvania Association for
Adult &amp; Continuing Education. a
co-founder of the Continuing
Education Association of Pennsylvania. He received a bachelor's
degree from Appalachian State
University and a master's from the
University of South Aorida.

lloDklns serves as
·Goldwater VIsiting
Professor
L. Nelson Hopkins, professor and chair of the Department of Neurosurgery in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedi-

0

cal Sciences and chief of
neurosurgery at Millard Fillmore
Hospital, served as Sally
Harrington Goldwater Visiting
Professor for 1995 at the Barrow
Neurological Institute at the University of Arizona in Phoenix.
During his visit to the institute
from Jan. 18-21 , he anended
neurosurgical rouods, worked
with the neurosurgery residents
and presented the Sally
Harrington Goldwater Lecture.
Hopkins is a pioneer in the use
of endovascular techniquesworlcing within the blood vessels
with catheters--to treat cere·
brovascular disease and prevent
strokes. He chairs the joint session on cerebrovascular surgery
for the American Association of
Neurosurgeons and the Congress
of Neurosurgery.
He has published and lectured
widel y, and has been in vited to
teach thc experimental techn ique
in medical schools national ly and
internationally.

Breakfast series
to focus on
science education
Clyde F. Herreid 11 will
discuss ways"f' improve the
teaching of science )n America at
the next "UB at SUNRISE"' community breakfast seminar, to be
held from 7:30-9 a.m. o n Tuesday, Feb. 14. in the Center for
Tomorrow.
Featured in The New York
Tim~s and on CNN for his innovative approaches to science
education. Herreid believes that
one approach Ia making science
education more effective is the
use of case studies. long a part of
business and legal educa1ion.
Herre id. who has used the O.J.
Simpson murder trial to teal·h
DNA fingerprin ti ng to non-SCIence majors at UB. is academic
director of UB · s Honors Program. The recipient of a
Chancell or's Award for Excellence in Teaching in 198 1.
Herreid in 1988 was awarded the
title of Distinguished Teaching

0

Books by UB professors have been pounng out of publishIng companies in the past few months, on subJect maner
ranging from music to educationaf pohcymalung Among
the authot's arld their publications are·
Frank Cipolla, prolessor emeritus of mus1c . a new book
published by the University ol Rocheste&lt; Press, "The Wind
Ensemble and its Repertoire." Co-edited by Donald
Hunsberger. rt is a CQllection of essays 1n commemorat100
oJ the 40th anniversary of Rochester's Eastman Wind Ensemble.
Cflarl" Kell, prolessor of Amencan Stud1es. a new
book published by the Unive&lt;sity of Ch1cago Press "Music
Grooves· is a series ol essays by Ke1l and 1991 MacArthur
Fellow S teven Feld exploring the dual themes of musical
participation a nd musical mE:dia!Kln . SubJects range from
jazz, b lues, polka, soul, rock, world beat. rap and karaoke
to scholarly debates in musiC theory and popular -culture
stud1es. anthropology and sociology Ke111s also the author
of "Urban Blues.· "Tiv Song.· "Polka Happ1ness. • "Folk MuSIC and Modem Sound" and "My MUSIC "
Catherine Combleth, proJessor of learn1ng and Instruction in the UB Graduate School of Education. a new
book that exammes the complex a nd controversial Issue of
muliicultural polihcs and education pollcymak1ng It has
already raised the hackles of conservative educators and
led to much debate 1n the f1eld of education reform Titled
"The Great Speckled B~rd." the book was wnnen w1th Dexter
Waugh of the San Francrsco Exammer and takes readers
behind-the-scenes for a took at soc1al stud1es curnculum
reform a~ textbooi&lt; policy in Californ1a and New York
Irving
professor of Engl1sh. a new book published by Wayne State Un1vers1ty Press utled "Identity and
Community Reflections on Enghsh. Y1dd1sh and French
Literature tn Canada ~

Professor.
"UB at SUJIIRISE"' is sponsored by UB's Office of Alumni
Relations, Office of Conferences
and Special Events, News Bureau, Office of Publications and
Office of the Vice President for
Public Service and Urban Affairs.
The Bee Group Newspapers are
the official print sponsor of "UB
at SUNRISE."
Tickets are $8, Alumni Association members and $9 for all
othen;, Reservations are required
and may be made with the UB
Alumni Association, 109 Allen
Hall, 3435 Main Stree~ Buffalo,
N.Y. 14214, 829-2608. Deadline
ror reservations is Feb. 10.

Music Department
me....,.,_ In news

0

The UB Music Department
has been in the news recently, with words and music
written by faculty members performed nationally by orchestras
and di stinguished anists. Among
those whose works have been
recognized are:
David Felder. Birge-Cary
Chair in Music and a national
figure in the field of new music
composition. saw several of his
works performed b~ distinguished orchestras and anjsts in
November. The New York New
Music Ensemble presented three
performances of hi s Col~ccion
Nocrurm2 in New-York. B1rtti more and Syracuse; Novt!mber
Sky was performed at New York
City's Sonic Boom Festjval and
Benn y Sluchin of IR CAM
(l nstitu t de Rechaerche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique )
performed Felder's Boxman at the
Wein Modem Festival. In OciOber. the Buffalo Philharmomc
Orchestra gave seven performance !&lt;~ of Felder's Lmebad.er
Musil' to school children 10
Kleinhans Music Hall as pan of
the BPO youth concerts.
Christopher Gibbs. ~~:~osistant
professor of music. wrote the
program note!!. for the American
Symphony Orchestra concen.

M••••r,

"Schubert Orchestrated" presented in Lincoln Center in November. lbe notes will accompany
the orchestra-s CD to be released
soon by Koch International.
Shirley lrek. visiti ng associate professor of music. recently
completed a recording with the
Moran Woodwind Quintet of
works by composer Theodore
BlUmer that w3s named one of
the best recordings of 1994 by
Audophile magazine .

Nursing to offer
continuing education

0

The School of Nul"ing at
UB IS oiTenng a senes of
continuing·education programs
this spring designed to addres!&lt;l
the cenu al requirements of the
nursing profession. and the need
to redefine the practice of nursing
10 terms of kno"'•ledge and skill s.
The schedule:

An Internet Information Board
I II&lt;

HiGH

I H&lt;&gt;NIC

~ \\~)S

• Certiftcate Program iD
Gerontological Nursing, March
2. 9, 16. 23. 30: Apri l6. 13. 20.
27: May 4. II . Designed to promote a higher quality of nursing
care for older adults. Students
must complete at least five ses·
sions. or modules. to receive a
certificate. Each module will
meet from 4 :30-7 :30 p.m.: location TBA.
• Introductory Physical
Assessmen t of the Adult. March
7. 14. 21.28: April4. II. 18.25 :
May 2. 9 Designed to enrich
heahh care professionals' asse smem ~lil1s . Course will meet
from 6-9 p.m.: location TBA .

• Review Course ror ~Uni ­
ing Continuing Eduaith;m and
StafT Denlopment Certiftcation
Examination, March 8 and 22.
Course to mc:et from 10 a.m.-1
p.m.: location TBA.
• PICC Line Insertion, Care
and Maintenance. March 15.
Course to meet from 8 a.m.-5:30
p.m. at Radis'9" Hotel and Suites
Buffalo. 42431Genesee St.,
Cheektowaga.
For informatio n on costs.
registration. call Office of Continuing N un;c~ucation . 829329 1.
Ukrainian~

visits Buffalo

Leonid Kravcbuk, first
president of Ukraine. visited Buffalo th.is week under the
sponsorship of lbe Buffalo
Group (Ukrainian American
Busi ness and Professional Association). Kravchuk spoke Jan. 31
on Education and Democracy in
Ukraine at a luncheon in the
University Inn and Conference
Center. sponsored by the _UB
Council for International Studies
and Programs.
Kravchuk. who holds a Ph.D.
in economics from the Academy
of Social Sciences and taught at
Chemivtsi Technical institute.
was elected to the Parliament of
Ukraine in 1994.

0

�_., __ ..,_UI
7

·-y-----c.,.·
_.,... __,
Tll f 1CAl
I'EMO""'AHC£,

by James Olapman
Student Union 11le11re
?p.m.

SS SIUdeno. with lOIS I 0 General Public:
Sponoored by lhc Black Student
Union

OCIAL

8 :30p.m.
SIS odvanoe!SIB otlhc door
Sponsored by lhc z.e.o P1w
Beta. Sorority Inc.

11
A--T-

Student Union lbealtt

.

S2.SO
Sponsored by tbe African
Dance TroopeJUB St&lt;p TrooP&lt;

FlowwTtllllo
Student Union

Noon
Sponsored by lhc Block Student

Un.ion
10 "t.
"

E!t0

"81.- Cotolltry to City,
WMt Afrtaa

-.co•

Educational Opportunity Center. 465 Washington StreetLibrary
12:30-1 :30 p.m

Frtt Admission

14
' .........
"'-Catoll

y-·~·
Educational Opponuniry Ccn ·
rer, 465 WashingKm Streel
12:30-1;30 p.m.

Conlaet. Karen Jeffnn.
849-6721
Sponsored by lhe Edocauonal
Opponunuy Center. Black
HistOI}' Month Commit~

Contacc Roosevelt Wardla'~~&gt; ,
849-6732
Sponsored by the E.ducauonal
Opportunity Center. Black
History Month Comm1uee

15

9

• Juz P_..; n.. BIKI&lt;
lnflu- Ia Film-

f·

~

P8nol Dlacuaai-IKk
Mon
147 Ou:fendorf H'all
?p.m
Free Admn.!lton
Sponsored by the Blad.. Studem
Umon

--·

Educational Opportunaty Cen ter. 465 Wa~hmgton Slrtt-1-

Labrary

12.30- 1:30 p m
Free AdmiSSion
Contact Roo~\ eh Wardla\1. .
8~9-6732

Spon~d

\If

• Juon' a Lyric•

'

" J -' aL)'ric"
Student Union Theatre

9p.m.
S2 with UB Student IDIS3 .50
General Public
Sponsored by the Black Student
Union&amp; UUAB

"
:sr

~

&lt;'
"hlzz YocallaU, Go-1•

•EducationaJ
Splrttu••··
Opportunity Cen·
u:r, 46S Washington StreeiLibrary
12:~0-1 :30 p.m.

Free Admission
ConlDC1 Roosevelt Wardl•w.
849-6732
Sponsored by the Educational
Opponunity Center. Black
History Month Comminee

2

_,..

OAHC£ PER'f'ORMA.NC£

11811et

oCl

"brt)o J.u; D8IICO
Bl8ell: Mualc"

Student Union Theatre

-loftal Du

Center for the Arts
8 p.m.
S20 Front Orche$tra (Adults).
$ 16 Rear Orchestra ( Adu lls}l
$1 3.50 (Students). $ 12 Balcony
(Adults)ISIO (Students)
Sponsored by the Center for the
A ns
VIDEO HESENTATtoH

·-EM'aStrMt
T811t"
Educational Opportu nity Ccn·
ter. 465 Washington Street
12:30- 1:30 p.m.
Free Admission
Contact K.a:rt:n Jeffries,
849-672 1
Sponsored by the Educational
Opporlunity Center, Black
History Month Commiuee

9p.m.
S2 with UB Student IDIS3 SO
Ge~ral Public
Sponsored by the Blad. Studem
Union &amp; UUAB

3
"Juon' aL)'ric"
Studc=nt Union Theatre
6:30&amp; 9 p.m.
S2 with UB Student IDIS3 .50
~neral Public
Sponsored by the Black Student
Union &amp; UUAB
SPEAALH

"Afrlc8n&amp;Afrlc8n
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�</text>
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                    <text>-~

Jolin Molunrk

EduC.tton

Goodman gives
Council latest view
of undergrad
education.
,.

UB professor is
advocate for Native
Americans.·

3

.. 10

C.C•Se•onls

Short Kids

CrowHieaMr

-.....t

Winning basketball
pleases team, fans.

Treatment not
needed to build self-

esteem, research
shows.

.. 5

Janua~

26 . 1995

Volume 26 . No 14

__

Quake memories vivid; UB law
Geographers take leal ill
student works to aid Kobe victims .,information consortium
Uu
was really
loud It was Like a train
next to you head going
fast
an faster and
faster. I thought it was
theendofthe world and that it mtrst
be happening to the whole world."
Lisa Dalfonso is home now. but
the memories of the Jan. 17 eartbguake that devastated Knbe. Japan, arevivid. llle25-year-old UB
student is trying to put the di saster
behind her, but her thoughts keep
turning to the people she left haifa
world away.
A J.D./Ph.D. student just one
credit hour shy of graduating from
law school. Dalfonso arrive&lt;! in
Kobe Jan. 12 as part of a delegation
of students who planned to study
Japanese language and culture at
Konan University, Sbe returned to
Buffalo Friday night, tired and
shaken, but safe.
Now she is spearheading a relief effort to aid residents of Kobe.
" I feel really guilty that I had a nice
wann place to go home to, I have a
shower and food," she said in announcing the Knbe Disaster Relief
Fund, being conducted through
M&amp;T Bank. Deposits to the fund
(account NOI4266977) may be
made at any M&amp;Tbranch,eitherin
person or through the mail.
"It's very important that my
community do something forthem
because their community did so
much for me," Dalfonso said.
The magnitude of the devastation is almost impossible to imagine. said Dalfonso. who described
her experiences at 3 press confer-

Dalfonso,
wlloaurvlveciKobe
quake,
speaks at

J811. 21

ence at the Center for Tomonow
Saturday afternoon, hours after her

return.
" lt'sborrible: you have no idea."
she said
Awake early because of the effects of jet lag and trying to get
warm because the heat in Kobe is
turned off every night , Dalfonso
said she realized immediately what
was happening. 'The motion was
so violent that I couldn't get up,"
she Wd ... I was sure I would never
leave that house alive."
A~ part of her exchange program. she was living with a Japanese famil y. whose home. while
damaged, withstood th e earth-

quake. When the shaking stopped,
she crawled over toppled fumi t=
and began screaming as she ran to
the top of the stairs. Her Japanese
father-she said she considers the
Takabatake family with whom she
was staying her extended familywas bleeding from facial cuts he
received when furniture fell on him.
but was not seriou ly injured.
''Mrs. Takabatake was screaming that she couldn't get up , that
she was trapped by furniture,"
Dalfonso said. "It took us three
minutes to break down the door
and get her out"
Continued on page 2

Loss of funds for public broadcasting
could cut programming at WBFO
IIJSTEVECOX
Reporter Staff

HOUSE Appropria tions Subcommittee in
Washington held hearings last week that could
seL the stage for elimination of federal support to public broadcasting. Advocates say this could have
a devastating effect on area public
broadcasting stations, including
UB's National Public Radio affiliate, WBFO-FM .
Speaker Newt Gingrich made
clear in December that he feel s it is
time for the government to sever
its tie to public broadcasting. At
Gi ngrich's urging, the House he ld
hea rings last week 10 decide
whether to reduce or cQmpl etely
el iminate the$285 mi llioncurrently
given to public broadcasting each
year through the Corporation for

A

Public Broadcasting.
eluding ethn ic music. Housed in
WBFO General Manager Jen- • Allen Hall o n the South Campus.
the stati on covers a 22-mile radius
nifer Roth says that the stalion reof Buffalo with some 80.000 reguceives $200.000. about 25 percent
lar listeners. New ···repeater staof its overall budget. from the fedtions" now serve Jamestown and
eral government. The loss of those
Olean.
The WBFO News Departfunds cou ld, according to Roth.
necessitate ..cutting back our broadment has wo n national a"'•ards for
casl hours, reducing our local news
its productions. " Homicide on the
East Side" in 1993 and ''The First
and music programming and/or
Year" in 1994.
eliminating some NPR programs."
Another28 percent ofWBFO's
House Speaker Gingrich has
said
that he believes the Corporaoperating budget comes from UB .
Lion far Public Broadcasting should
The university itself faces an unbe "pri vatized" and that PBS has
certain budgetary future as Gov.
done too liule to generote its o wn
Pataki's first budget. due out next
revenues. "Big Bird makes money.
week. tries to close a projected
Barney make s money : · sa id
deficil and keep his commitment to
Ging
rich recently . "These are
cutting the state income tax. ·
profit-makingcenters. They would
WBFO- FM, heard at 88.7 on
survive fine. I understand why the
the FM band, broadcasts NPR
News, jazz, public affairs programContinued
on page 5
ming and specialized m usic. in-

News Bureau Slaff

G

EOGRAPH.EitS a1 UB have taken a leading role in lbe
formation of a national consortium of academic: and
research organizations dedicated to advancing the undersUnding of geographic iofonnatioo systems (GIS),
one of lbe fastest growing resean:b f~elds in the geographic and
earth sciences.
The concep1 of the University Consortium for Geographic
Information Science was developed by geog13phers a1 UB and its
siSler institutions in the National Center for Geographic Wormation and Analysjs.......{he University of California a1 Sama Barbara
and the UniversitJOOf Maine at Orono---u well as researchers at
the Ohio State University
and the universities ofMionesota, South Carolina and
Washington. This founding group extended invitations to representatives of
26 other institutions and
the Association of American Geographers. The enmonth in Boulder, Colo.
GIS is a generic name
'I
for various computer soft4
ware packages that store
and use data pertaining to
space and locatioO. Among David Mark ,......_._. U8
the operations are comat OfPIIz;atlonal - - . _
puler graphi~ drawing or superimposing of maps-and Statistical analysis.
GIS has become more than a $1 billion industry, with lbe
commercial side growing 10perceotto20percenteacbyear. says
David Marl&lt;. UB professor of geography and the university's
representative to the Boulder meeting.
eographic information became increasi ngly important on a
national level last spring when President Ointon issued an
executi ve order creating the National Spatial Data Jn{rastnJCtUre,
Mark adds. The infrastructure-a recommendation of lbe National Performance Review-will support public- and privatesectorapplicatioos ofgeospatial data in sucb areas as 1raDSp01tatioo.
community development, agriculture. emergency response, environmental management and information technology.
A major objective oftbe consortium, Mark notes,
be to
advise and inform the executive and legislative branches of the
federal government on issues regarding geographic information.
"We hope to influence science policy at the national level, to be
a collective voice for the basic research community,"" says.
The consortium also will advance the understanding of geographic processes and spatial relationships through im
ved
theory. methods, technology and data. ln addition to revie · ng
and seLling national research priorities in GIS and related spec ties. its objectives include organizing partnerships with the private sector, expanding and strengthening geographic- infonnatioo
science educatioo, providing an organizational infrastnlctw-e to
foster interdisciplinary research in GI~. and promoting the Clbical
uses of. and access to, geographic information for the benefit of
.society.
1l1e National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis-----of which UB is a member-already addresses manyoftbese
issues. Mark says. But the center'sadvisory board had suggested
the consortium be formed specifocally to pwsue this agenda, as
well as broaden the base of su pport by including other institutions
with interests in geographic information.
. 1l1e new consonium will be housed on an interim basis in lbe
Washi ngton. D.C .. offices o f the Association o f American Geographers. John Bossler. director of the Center for Mapping a1 The
Ohio State University, is interim director.

G

-r&lt;n

�--.---.-lA

2
DALFONSO
continued from page 1

Their attempiS to leave the
se were
frustrated by aftenboc:ks and debris. " I was
afraid to be in tbe house." Dalfonso said, but
cooditions outside were no improvement
1be second Door of the house next door had
fallen into the Talcabatakes' front yard. and
· they were unable to leave untiladownedtree

was removed.
Other houses were just piles of wood, and
two families that lived in tbe same courtyard
ofbouses were buried alive. As they began to
survey !be damage, Dalfonso said, "it all
staned to sink in-we bad lived and !bat was
what was imponant."

~home

Is aiK&gt;wn In photo
. blken 111 U.. O.lfonso.
Talcabatake, an executive at Kobe Steel,
bad a cellular phone !bat Dalfonso used to
call and reassure ber family.
Kobe. a city of roughly 1.2 million residents, Dalfonso said, was unprepared for an
earthquake of such intensiry, which she esti·
mated destroyed 75 percent of !be area. Res·
cue efforts were largely up to individual
residents. "I kept saying ' When are !be policecoming?' .. .Ambulancesdidn' tcomebecause !here weren't enough." Dalfonso said.
"The first two days you were on your
own. Lf your neighbor's bouse was collapsed,
It was up to you to dig !hem out." Normally
nor a demonstrative society, she said, '"to see
the community immediately respond to each
other was really amazing."

.Bookstore survey shows users satisfied
with services, PSS task force reports
HE UNIVERSITY community in
general is satisfied with the services being provided by Follett's
University Bookstore, according
to a member of the University
Bookstore Task Force wbo spoke before !be
Professional Staff Senate last week.
Phyllis Parisi, wbo represented the PSS
on !be task force, discussed the group's findings at the Jan. 19 PSS meeting held in
Pistachio's.
A user perception survey sent out to the
university community found that 80 percent
of respondents found tbe servioes of the
bookstore satisfactory' orexcellen~ she said.
A major area of dissatisfaction among those
completing the survey. however. was pricing.
Parisi noted !bat bookstore prices are set
according' to an agreement !bat Follett's ne·
gotiated with the university in 1982, which
gives the corporation '"the sole and exclusive
right to sell new and used te&lt;tbooks" at UB.
The agreement. which also allows Follett's
to mark up books to 20 percent over retail
price and to set prices on used textbooks ,

extends over 20 years, she said.
• Althoughtheaareementbetween Folleu's
and UB encouraged the formation of a student/faculty committee, none bad been appointed until the university was forced to
shut down a student-run bookstore in the
spring of 1994, becluse of the exclusivity
agreement
Among the recommendations made by
the University Bookstore Task Force:
• ShutdowntheEIIico« Bookstore. which
no longer carried textbooks. but had turned
into a convenience-type store that carried
chips and soft drinks.
• Expand services and square footage of
the University Bookstore, which the task
force found was smaller that !bose at comparable universities and offered fewer services.
• Move the Main Street Bookstore back
onto that campus and have it carry books
required for Millard Fillmore College

courses.
• Create a standing committee to address
ongoing bookstore problems.
The Professional Staff Senate also heard
a repon by Daniel Massi ng on PSS's
mentoring program. which is "designed to
raise the quality of woricing relationshifts at

".be said. Upcoming brown hac lunch
, lhrougb which proleges are IOiicare scbeduted for noon on Peb. 2 in 125
ddition on the South Campus, and
noon o
. 7 in 414 Bonner Hall on the
North Campuj.
Gendtue preIn· other business.
sented a tentative I'SS election timetable and
officers were c•Ued on to give a brief description of their jobs in tbe organization.
PSS Clair Rosalyn Willtinson announeed
that an Ad Hoc Comntiuee on the Effects of
Decentralized Classification had been
formed, and is chaired by Stacey Johnson.
Faculty Senate Chair Peter Nicl&lt;.erson
announced that SUNY Chancellor Thomas Bartlett will address the winter meet·
ing of the SUNY wide Faculty Senate and
!be address will be shown live at I :30 p.m.
Friday. Jan. 27 in 120 Clemens Hall on
UB 's North Campus and in the finn Ooor
Emeritus Center lounge in Goodyear Hall
on the South Campus. "This is an important opportunity to see what type of leadership we have," Nicl&lt;.erson said. He added
that videotapes of the teleconference will
be available to those interested in obtaining a copy.

Investment in alumni pays off, Evitts tells FSEC
lly STEVE COX

Reporter StaH

A

N INtESTMENT in alumni relations can reap imponant rewards, Will iam Evitts. executive
director of alumni relations, told
members of the Faculty Senate Executive
Committee at a meeting Jan. 18. Credited by
Provost Aaron Bloch with having a very
positive impact on the departmenl. Evitts
showed the FSEC just how much potential
· still is unrealized in tenns of finance.
ebruary is Japan ' s coldest month, when
"Seventy-five percent of outside suppon
temperatures bover in the 40s. " It's cold.
for higher education comes from three priPeople are Living in buildings !hat still don't
mary sources;· explained Evins. "'alumni.
have any beat. They don't have any water.
friends of alumni who are usually heirs of
Families with babies are living in tents or
alums. and corporate foundations accessed
viaalumni .•. That•s the reason that Evitts has
sleeping in blankets in the parks. trying to
find enough food for the children."
spent so much time tracking down the nearly
She and her Japanese family spent the
150.000 living graduates of UB and designfirst two days after the earthquake trying to
ing programs they would find attractive.
help people dig out and find food and water.
"We recently conducted a poll of our
They spent the first night in their car. which
alumni," said Evitts, "and we learned that98
was damaged, but driveable. The second
percent of alumni indicated that they were
night they dmve north of !be quake zone to
either ' proud' or 'very proud' of having
a friend's bouse.
graduated from UB. That's phenomenal."
On Thursday, theTakabatakes' son drove
However. Evitts went on to explain that
Dalfonso to the airport in 0 aka. normally a
those alumni did not feel very "'ell informed
35-minute trip that took them 4 1/2 hours to
about UB and they did not feel close to UB
complete. From there sh~ Oew to Tokyo.
any more.
where she exchanged her return ticket anCIOew home.
"To me the numbers explain (how severe
the earthquake was). The worst thing was
ay LOIS 8AKEit
wau:hing !be sheets coming out of the build·
News Bureau Staff
ings and knowing what it meant," she said.
Tm not planning on going back immediXPERTS FROM across the nation
ately because at !his point I'm too scared,"
will convene in Buffalo Feb. 3 for
Dalfonso said.
a one~ay White House Confer·
A second UB student who was in Kobe at
ence on Aging mini~onfc.ren cc..
!be time of !he earthquake is staying with her
"Maximizing Independence for Older Adults
grandmother in Yokohama. and probably
with Disabilities."
will return home in a couple of weeks. acThe event, to be held from 8:30a.m. to 5
cordi ng to Joseph Williams,directorofUB's
p.m. in the Hyatt Regency Buffalo, is sponInternational Student and Scholar Services.
sored by the Rehabilitation Engineering
Sakura Moriya, a 21-year-&lt;&gt;ld JapaneseResearch Center on Aging at UB and the
American fro m L.ong Island, is "thinking
Rancho l..os Amigos Medical Center in
Downey, Calif.
about a period of decompression," says
Arthur Neisberg, UB' s study abroad coordiRecommendations from the mini-confer·
nator, who spoke wi th her last week. "Sakura
ence, which will be included in the 1995
said on the way out it was like a movie set
White House Conference on Aging final
from Hollywood. lt took a day for it to sink
report , will help ' guide national policy on
in:•
aging in the 1990s

F

Evitts compared UB's alumni program to
those of 22 comparable public institutions
with alumni bases of over 100,000. to demonstrate that the' alumni program at UB is
"grimly underfunded." ' He found that the
average alumni program had an annual bud-

"We recently conducted a
poll of our alwrm.i and we
learned that 98 perr:ent'of
alumni indicated that
they were either 'proud'
or 'very proud' of having
graduatedfrom UB.
That's phenomenal."
81LLIEVITTS

get of Sl .9 million, compared to less than
$600,000 at UB. and, more importantly, the
average school's cash endowment was $3.2
million. In fact, endowments at these otber

universities ranged from S133 million at Penn
State to S550,000 at Aorida. UB's S9UXXl
endowment was far and away the lowes!.
Although the universitywide alumni pro·
gram lags behind its peers. many individual
schools at UB. such as law and pharmacy,
have well-developed alumni program , Evitts
said. "'Those programs that are already in
place get the right to finn solicitation of the
alumni." he said. "and some make membership in the unrversitywide alumni organiza·
tion either optional or mandatory with the
paying of dues to that particular scbool program."
Although he said the S12 million raised by
the alumni program last year was a vast improvemen~ Evins believes focusing on particular projects could improve that figure
dramatically. Just looking at Olher institutions
wbere Evins bas wori&lt;ed, such as the Uni\'ersity of Pittsburgh, which raised over S30 million and Johns Hopkins University, wliich
raised $75 ntillion, makes him optimistic.
One project !bat Evitts bopes will gener·
ate alumni excitement is the constJUction of
an Alumni House on campus. probably along
Lake LaSalle behind the UB Bookstore. " It
would be a focal point for alumni on campus.
as well as a major meeting cel)ler for under·
graduates," explained Evins{
·

Experts to meet here for mini conference on ~g

E

Pre·registration is necessary for this event.
which is open to anyone interested in aging
and disability issues. The fee is $30.
Co-chairs are William C . Mann, director
of UB's Center for Assistive Technology
and chair of the Department of Occupational
Therapy. and Bryan J. Kemp. director of the
Research Training Center on Aging with a
Disability at Ranchos l..os Amigos.

Discussion will revolve around two video
case studies on the topics, "Aging With a
Disability" and "Aging Into Disabilities.
Researchers making presentations at the
mini&lt;onference represent the New York
State Office for the Advocate, American
Society on Aging. Northwestern University
Rehabilitation Engineering Research Program and Prosthetics Research Laboratory.
University at Buffalo. Uniyersity of Illinois

at Chicago and the Universi of Southern
California, Center for AccessibltHousing at
North Carolina State University.
Also. the American OccupationaiTherapy
Association, American Academy of Home
Care Physicians, American Association of
Retired Persons, Nationa.l Institute for Disability and Rehabilitation Research. University of Minnesota, University of Rochester
and the Center for Collaborative Research at
Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.
1be mini-ronference is funded by the
National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, and the U.S. Departments of Education and Health and Human
Services.
To pre-register, contact Susan Panel! at
the UB Center for Assistive Technology.
829-3141.

�--.----....
defense in court

'Abuse excuse,~ty
wearing thin, UB law professor says

·~~=.,~

medical

ITORNEYS' USE of the
"'abuse excuse" and insanity
defenses . claiming circum·
&amp;tances beyond their clieniS'
control for their sometimes
violent criminal acts is beginning 10 wear
thin with an increasingly skeptical pubuc, a
UB law professor says. "Because these defense. are ari&amp;ing more often in highly publicized case&amp; of murder and those involving
extreme violence, there seems 10 be growing
sentiment that defendaniS should be punished
irregardless of their mental state at the time of

thecrime,"obselvesCharlesCarr, who~

criminal procedure in the School of Law.
Caller&amp; 10 talk radio and television
grams and ··person on the streel" interview
suggest an increasingly leery public IS viewing these defense. auempiS as a son of legal
"loophole," Carr says. "'These defense ••tempts are poorly underotood by much of the
public," he says. "as more defendaniS claim
diminished mental capacity for their actions
based on anything from overeating sugary
foods 10 being affected in urero by medications
taken by their mother&amp; when pregnant"

While there are
criteria forcertain dilgi!OSeS of ~ntal disorder&amp;, there is
alsoalegaldefinitionofinsanity. "A defendant s:ould be quite ill but still held legally
responsible for his or her acu." Carr notes.
lbedefinition for legal insanity may vary
from state to tate. In New York, for instance, a legal test for insanity asks whether.
at the time of the illegal act, the defendant
lacked responsibility by reason of mental
disease or defect.
lbe jury is instructed to decide if. at the
time of the conduct' in question. the defendant had the "substantial capacity to know or
appreciate either the nature and consequences
oftheconduct or that the conduct was wrong."
Generally, the prosecution hear&amp; the bur-'
den of proving each and every element of the
crime beyond a reasonable doubt. ''This is
true. even where the defense has raised an
•abuse excuse· or insanity.•• Carr explains.
" Because the defense has rai~ what is
called an alfumative defense, it will be required 10 prove the alleged mental infumity by
a preponderance of the evidence in tbal issue."
A defendant may bei&lt;Nnd legally insane
and as a result. be guilty ora lesser crime. for
instance. manslaughter instead of murder.

lbe difference would be tha~ for a murder conviction, proof ;..required of intent to
kill, which the defendant mightnol have bad
because of some mental disease or defect.
"It's also pos ible the defendant could be
acquitted by reason of insanity and would
have to be treated and/or committed until he
Carr points ouL
was judged to be
It is only because the defendant has raised
an affirmative defense-insanity-that the
defense hear&amp; any burden at all.
''Those who believe the 'abuse excuse'
and insanity defenses cannot or should not
he valid defenses ignore the need in the
criminal justice system to base the decision
to punish on broad social goals and noi just
individual retribution,'' he emphasizes.
ltde/ieslogic,commonsenseandempirical data to believe puni bing an individual
who is insane at the time of the crime serves
social prou•ction goals of deterrence or rehabilitation. he says.
"When we base punishment on retribution alone and ignore the defendant's mental
state, the damage is greater to us as a socie1y
than when we acknowledge therightto plead
' not guilty' based on a claim of insanity or
extreme abuse of some kind." Carr adds. -

·sane:"

Undergrad ed ~changing, Council hears

~~= VIDAL

:::::=:::::;:;;:.=-----.---.- -

T

ECHNOLOGY

IS

changong the

compl~xion of und~graduate
educallon a~ UB, N1colas D.

Goodman, VJce provost for undergraduate education, told the
UB Council Jan. 19. Reporting to the Council on the progress being made in undergradua te education, he described how
electronic technology is improving the way
registration , class scheduHng and student
advisement are handled.
ln addition, he talked about new scholarship programs, the new administrative structure in the Ans and Sciences and effons at
UB to produce better curricular cooperation
with other schools. "lf we look at all this. we

canseeavisionofwhatundergmduateeducation is going to be," Goodman said "I expect to
see an enormous di\'er&amp;ity of students. of program&amp;. of different educational experiences."
Among the new technologies benefitting
undergraduate education is Schedule 25. a
programtbalhelpsschedulecourses.Goodman
said. lbe new teChnology shortens the scheduling process by five 10 six weeks.
"In the past there was always a sense of
disappointment," Goodman said, when studeniS received schedules that didn't meet
their expectations. Thanks to Schedule 25.
instead of receiving their schedule for the
fall semester in July. students will know
their class schedule in April, he said.
A touch-tone registration system called
BIRD (for Billing, Inquiry. Records and
Drop/Add) also is functioning and is expeeled to be fully in place by spring. "About
4,000 students used the system yesterday
...and in April that will be the means of access
to the registration program." Goodman &amp;aid.
The system will allow students to com·
pletealltheirregistrationanddropladdneeds
by touch-tone phone. BIRD also will enable
students to have access to its information
..from their homes. from anywhere in the
state. anywhere in the country." he said.
SIUdent advisement also will benefit from
technology through a program called OARS.
expected to be up and running in the fall. It
provides students with a list of the courses
they have taken. as well as those they still
need to fulfill their req uirements.
'
"Some of the clerical burden of advising
,.·iU be eased," said Good man, who praised
the work of UB's academic advisors.
" UB' s academic advisor&amp; have typically

~o in those jobs many, many yearo." he
said. "The workload is horrendous. Th).)• re
seeing students all day, e\'ery day. Students
are stressed and it~s an emotional strain
dealing with them. There's a 1endency to
bumoutinajoblikelhis.U nderthecircumstances, they do an excellent job."
Goodman also told the UB Council that
as a result of the Triggle Repon. there is a
new admjnistrative structure in the Arts and
Sciences at UB, and more coordination of
academic activities iO the Arts and Science .
Among the changes is the formation of the
Council of Ans and Sciences Deans. Another
""ery positive de\'elopmenL'' Goodman said.
is the Ans and Sciences Program and CurricuIurn Committee. which has made recommendations on how to modify the program.
There aJso is improvement in access to
"service courses." prerequisite classes students
must take in order 10 enter more ad\'anced

sity also has signed a joint admissions agreement with Monroe Community College.
Goodman also told the llB Council that
students will have new scholarshipopponunities as a result of the recent $1.6 million
anonymous gift to provide Distinguished
Honor&amp; Scholarships. He noted that the full
four-year scholarships. which
ill be
awarded to 20 students entering UB in 1995
and 1996. are imponant to UB 's honors
program. "which has not always been able ro
compete financiallywitholheruni\'er ities."

W

hilc UB has been successful 10 eas·
ing the problems that undergradu-

ates face. there still are .. significant unsol\'ed

problems." Goodman told the Council. Access to programs is perhaps the most troubling of those problems. he said. Students
who have not declared a major are at risk of
losing financial aid. especially TAP. and at
ri k of needing more than four years to
graduate. In fact. only about 30 percent of
first-ti me. full-time s1udents graduate from
UB in four yearo.
At least pan of the problem. Goodman
said. is the "lack of fit between students
we· veadmitted and resources.·· For example.
demand for admission lO the engi neering
program is down. "Where we have the capacity, we no longer have the student deNlCOUISGOODMAN
mand," he said. The health sciences now are
in high demand~ bul there are limits to how
many students can be admitted. in pan beclasses. "Byandlargeweha,.ebeenableiOmake
service couroes available to students ... .lthink • ca use of the availabilily of clinical senings.
UB is looking at solving the problem by
the problem has improved sigoificanlly."
possibly admiujng studentsdirectJy inlo proAdvising also is changing in the Ans and
grams as freshmen. but "at the moment! don' t
Sciences, Goodman said. 111•ith depanments
feel confident doing tbal." Goodman said. or
providing advisement to majors and undeby pm,.iding provisional admission to majoro.
c ided students receiving group ad,.isement
''There aren't easy solutions." he said.
on general interest areas.
In his repon to the Council. President
Because articulation is a major problem
William Greiner said he is concerned about
for transfer students. the vice provost said.
the 1995-96 state budgeL ''The signs froofl
UB has hired Jennifer Gottdiener as transfer
Albany are not good." he said. warning memandan.iculationcoordinatortosolvetheprobbers of the Council that higher education
lem of ensuring that academic programs
could be entering a ·•very dicey period" in
among differenl colleges and universities fit
New York State. GreineralsotoldtheCoun·
together so transfer credits can be accepted.
cil that because of rapidly risi ng interest rates.
Articulation requires painstaking work to
UB williiOI at this time continue with its plans
make the programs fit together, especially
for a student housing project on campus.
si nce ..most students have at least some transIn other business. the Council welcomed
fer credits," Goodman said. UB is working
Roger Blackwell as a new member.
to ease the articulation problem through onBlackwell. a commissioner on the Erie
goi ng discussions with Erie Community ColCounty Board of Elections. succeeds Rose
lege, GeneseeCornmunityCollege,Jamestown
Sconiero. a 1973 UB law school graduate who
CommunityCollege,andNiagaraCountyCornservedontheCouncilfrom 1978to 1994.
munity College, Goodman said The univer-

"If we Look at all this, we

can see a vision of what
undergraduate education
is going to be. "

3
Cow bone grafts
maybeusedto

treat bone loss
ESULTS OF A ~~~~~~y.._

dooclod by _ . . . . . ..
1M liB Sdloel al DeNa!
Medicine have brooopt
deobl _..,.. one 011cp ~ 1o
usiD&amp; bovine .._ impllnls in humans lo help re~ bone 1o.t
tbroup periodonlaJ diJeose.
Tho .rudy showed lbala new booograftina IDIIeriaJ made from cow
bones- improvemenl over similar malerials leSled for nearly two
decades because it conWDS 110 bovine proteins-coused no ad\......, immune responses in Jaboratory
aoimals.
Tho results were reponed in tbe
November issoe of JoMrnal of
PeriDdtHOJoJoo.
~tal di.._ is the major
c:auseoftoolh lou in adults. Bacleria
infect the gums SIIITOUlldiQgand supporting the Ieeth and eventually erode
the bone lhal bolds them. The ultirtllle goal of periodontal therapy is
to rejuvenate the tissue attachment
and regenerate lost bone.
Clinical Sltldies have shown tbat.
in some Ca5CS, bone regenerates better with the help of grafts. but currenily available grafting l1l8lerials
all have umiwioos. said Robert E.
Cohen. associate professor of
periodontology and onl biolocY It
UB and lead researcher Oil the study.
'The podiml' I OWl! bone \rite
successful grafti.ag material he said,
but obtaining it reqoi.res additional
invasive surgery. PatieniS freqtleiWy
refuse~ from hwtWJ OOr.e
banks because of the chaoce. albeit
exceedingly small. of disease transmi&amp;Sion, Cohen noted Grafts of synthetic or Dalural hydroxyapetiuo. an
inorganic compound thai fonns the
basis of bones and teeth, are
biocompatible. but have little capacity 10 regenerate bone.

T

he purpose of this study was 10
determine if an improved form
of an experimental material made
from cow bones is saf~ for use in
human bone grafts, using the rat as a
model. ResuiiS showed 110 immUDe
response associated with the bovine
material. Cohen said.
Grafting tnaterials made from cow
booes have been tried experimentally for nearly 20 years. Cohen said,
bul early grafts failed because patieniS developed antibodies to ~

teins remaining in the bovine
material. New processing tecbniques
oow malce ;1 possible to remove all
traces of bovine proreins.
Cohen said thai if bo\'ine booografting materials are fouocl to be
safe and effective in humans, they
will provide a readily available, lowcost therapy for treating cenain types
of periodontal disease.
lbe study was funded in I*' by
Edward Geistlich &amp;. Son • L&amp;d. •
Wolbusen. Swit2.erland. Membenol
the research team. in odditioa 10
Cohen, were Richard H. Mull.arty ol
Biomedical Composites. Lid .•
Carpenterina.CaU[~Ber-niceNable.

u'B professor ofmicrobiology; Robin
L. Comeau, dental bygieaist in the
UB Depanmem o f PaiocloalolocY,
and Mirdza. E. NeideR, UB ....,.,_
sor al oral diagnostic aciences.

�___ .... ____

4
UB~gist

named adviaor to

Mexican group
lllvlsill&amp;

MeUcu ..,_,..

-•

a•tboritiea

oa

,..._,...., die ...,....
fir ~ Melico City.

ba __. Mic:Mel P.

--..,a

........... aDd dlair of tbe De~ of Oeolo&amp;Y ll UB, • u
--'espat.

...........,..bepnaaldi.epllale

ofllltlpliaace Dec. 21, a.d iJCOIIIid-

aed 10 be ioa a.....,_ coadiliaD.
Ia of . . . loleiiJl
f . Sllerid.. . . . . . . adYiaan 10 tbe
.•
be is the ODly • uni~. His cbief.,..,...,..
inleresl is ill the miliplioG ol volcanic risk.
He and colleague Hugo Delplo.
associate resemdler al the GeopbysicallnstiiOIC II the Nllionll Univer-

sity of Mexico City, have developed
tbe first duee-&lt;limensional COIIQ!Uleriz.ed models of Popocatepetl that
simulate tbe reach of potential eroptive phenomena. This nwb tbe first
time thai computec simulation models will be put to use for public-safety

PlanoioB·

The science commince named by
tbe Mexican government will prepate maps to be used for risk assessment to pinpoint areas that may need
to beeviiCIIated if a catastrophic erup-

tion occurs.
On Dec. 21.. ash blanketed tbe city
of Puebla, (population 2 million) and
villages near tbe volcano. Residents
who were evacuated following tbe
eruptions on Dec. 21 haY!' returned
and there have been no reports of
damage or casualties.
Until now, Sheridan said, the volcano bas produced only phreatic ash
(tiny pieces of the volcano brol:.eo by
steam explosions), which presents no
real risk. "However, the danger of
mudflows and floods exist if there is
a thick asbfall followed by heavy
rainfall." he said.
he computerized simul ation
models, which allow research·
ers to estimate how fast and bow far
flows from an eruption would tnlvel ,
are particularly helpful in effectively
communicating risk to public officials.
"'fficials can understand what
they see on the stn:e11 with a very
simple explanltion," said Sheridan.
"They can uodentand tbe value of
using this uimation to explain to
villageB wba1 could happen during
an emplioa, and wba1 they would
need to do'tO save tbernsdves."
Olair and professor of geology at
UB since 1990, Sheridan was previously professor of plogy at Arizona State Univemty.
A former Fulbri&amp;bt scholar, be is a
fellow of the Geological Society of
America and the Mineralogical Society of America. and a member ol the
scientific honors society, Sipoa Xi.

T

.. well .. ocher professional scientific poops. He bas been o visiting
sciealislal the University of Tokyo,
University ol Piso and University of
Aoreace. He also lw beld visiting
profeosor positions l l the Uni~
of-Bari, University ol Naples. University ol Rome aad University of

eat.bda. all ia llaly.

Grant to School of Management to expand
total quality management center in Budapest
and techniques of total quality management
to help Hungarian managers and enterprises
become more competitive in tbe global marHEUBSCHOOI..ofManagement
ketplace through greater attention to quality
is the lead institution in a $3-milcontrol and customer satisfaction.
lion grant to the State University
Under the grant, tbe oenter will focus its
ofNew Yorksystemtoexpandthe
activities of its Center for Total - outreach programs on companies outside the
Budapest
area-specifically in the cities of
Quality Management at the Technical UniPees, Debrecen. Sopron. Szeged. Vesprem
versity of Budapest (TUB).
and Gyor.
The grant, whicbwillawardUB$750,000
" We ' ve really formed a consonium of
peryeartbrough 1998,comesfromtheMan·
universities and colleges working with us.
agemenl Training and Eoooomic Education
It' s a Hungary-wide program," Thomas
Program of the United States Agency for
said.
International Development (USAID), said
Two imponant new programs have been
John M. Thomas, associate dean for internarecently inaugurated as a result of tbe grant:
tional programs in the UB School of Man·
• An intensive ""mini· M-BA" certificate
agement and the project's Buffalo director.
program. to be offered annually by UB fac1bomas said the SUNY grant was ob·
ulty, that will enable qualified TUB students
tained through the efforts of Ron Oppen.
to complement their technical training with
director of East European programs in the
a
background in management. School of
SUNY central administration Office of InManagement faculty conducted the proternational Programs. "We have worked
gram-a five-day. 40-hour program of inclosely and effectively with SUNY on this
struction-for a group of 50 third· and
andotherprojects,"1bomasnoted. TheCenfounh-yearstudents in the nJB undergradu·
ter for Total Quality Management, estabate engineering program for the first ti~
lished in 1993. seeks to promote tbe principles

IIJUSAwa.El'
News Bureau Stall

HE SCIENCE commiuee

"*-'6 -

....

T

last October. Faculty included Thomas; Arun
K. Jain. chair of marketing and Samiiel P.
Capen Professor of Marketing Research;
Philip R. Perry, associate professor of finance and managerial economics; Victor
Pastena, professor of acrou.nting. and James
Meindl, professor of organizations and hu -

man resources.
• Study lOUTS for Hungarian faculty and
business people to visit Buffalo and see
Western New York companies and other
organizations practicing TQM. The visitors
are linked with local professionals to learn
how the principles of TQM are applied in
practice. The first study tour, held Oct. 29Nov. 12, brought 14 Hungarians, who visited such ites as Praxair, Inc., and Buffalo
General Hospital. UB will host two groups
per year.
ln addition, UB bas initiated a new university-wide faculty/student exchange agret·
ment with TUB that allows nJB students to
pursue graduate studies in engineering and
managemental UB. while UB students study
Hungarian language and culture at TUB.
beginning this summer.

Don't fear professional fields, geology
student advises youths from inner city

~ E.l.lP -.DUUM
News Bureau Staff

ERNARD HUBBARD. a graduate student in the Depanment of
Geology at UB and one of the few
African Americans in the U .S. who _
is studying geology, has strong advice for
inner-city kids .
"Don't fear the professional fields," he
advises. '"There are more of us going into
these fields than you'd ever know . You ' d he
surprised at the number of people who come
from the ghetto who really make it to the top.
but you never hear about it. Your people are
there!"
While the underreprcsentation of minori-

B

ties in all the sciences has rettived much
attention latel y. many studie and programs
focus on biology and chemistry. and other

more ..popular.. sciences. But African Americans are especially underrepresented in geology.
The American Geolog•cal Institute estimates that out of 26,522 students studying
geology at the undergraduate and graduate
levels in the U.S .. only 362 are black.
The National Association for Black Geologists and Geophysicists estimates that of
the80.000workinggeoscientists in the U.S.,
just 0.4 percent are black..
Michael Sheridan. chair of the UB Geology Departmen~ said there are several possible explanations for why African
Americlllls have traditionally been so underrepresented in the discipline.
For one thing, geelogy has a lower profile
among students in general than do some of
the engi neering or biomedica1 discipline .
The downsizi ng in the oil industry, which
employs many geologists. in the 1980s also
discouraged some students. according to the
National Association for Black Geologists
and Geophysicists.
But the group notes there are some en·
couraging signs: Membership in the associa·
tion is up and so is industrial support for its
scholarship program.
Hubbard. who grew up in a public-housing project in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. doesn't downplay the
obstacles. But he is optimistic about hi s
future . He was passionate about planetary
and earth sciences from the time he was very
young. As a hoy, he maintained an impressive rock collection. which he supplemented

by searchmg carefull y throughout Prospect
and Central Parks.
AI A. Philip Randolph High School in
Harlem. Hubbard concentrated in the biological sciences. It wasn't until he went to a
citywide science: competition that be realized he should concentrate on geology and
planetary science. On the spur of the moment, he entered the Rocks and Fossils event.
He ended up winning third place.
"When I won. it made me think that this is
where I was headed," he said.
Hubbard was the first on the block to go
to college: but it had always been expected.
He laughongly described his family as in·
eluding ..three Moms:" His mother. his aunt
and his grandmother. all of whom helped
r.use htm and nurtured his interest in science.

W

ith loans and scholarships, and a 20·
hour-a-week job, he enrolled as an
Cornell University with a
concentration m earth science. He fell into
debt. charging textbooks and other necessi ties on _his credit cards and taking out loans
to stay'" school. a path he says is typical for
mner-clly k1ds who auend college.
·~at's one reason why few African
~mencans go on to graduate and profesSional s~h~ls ... he said. "'There's this need
to get 3JOb 1n order to replenish funds ."
After graduation. he worl&lt;ed for a year as
a custome.r-servtce representative forChemi .
cal Bank'" New York City. then applied to
undergrad~ate _in

graduate school.
Bernard
A key reason became Hubbard, a
to UB. he said, was the glliCistudent
availability of the SU Y In geology,
Underrepre ented Mi - Is optimistic
nority Graduay Fellow· about the
hip Prog['am . The future.
program features free tuition for minority graduate students. as long
as they do well in school.
Hubbard is perfom1ing research under
thesupervi i ofSheridan.doingcomputer
modeling of "'~jeanie eruptions to asses.
n ks to people li~g near active volcanoe .
"Some scienti get so focused on one
small problem," he said. " But you wonder.
how does that help people? Volcanic hazard
assessment helps people directly. The most
dangerous volcanoes are in the Third World.
where people grab land to live on wherever
they can, even if it's right on top of a volcano.
With this research. we hope to save lives."
Closer to home. Hubbard feels he has
some other lives to "save·· as well. His ex.·
tended family still lives in the projects in
' Bedford-Stuyvesant, and while he has fond
memoriesofhis neighb&lt;irflood, he dreams of
a day when he will he able to get hi s famil y
out. He said that to get out of the gheno.
people have to sacrifice and resist the urge to
make money in the short-tenn.
·'Beiie"e it or not. there are quite a fe\\
people like me out there," he said. ''Our stories
are just overshadowed by all the bad news."

�5
NPR
Continued from page 1
elite wants the money, but I think they ought

to be honest. These are a bunch of rich,

estimated 90 public television stations and
more than 200 radio stations. mostly in

WNED-TV. has also indicated that the loss

upper-class people who want their toy to
play with." The amount or money appropri ·

smaller markets already underserved by com-

of federal funding would mandate drastic

mercial broadcast stations. would be forced

at.ed to public radio stations amounts to

to close . Echoing a 1993 report by toe Twen tieth Century Fund, Carlson indicated that

cutbacks there. J. Michael Collins. president
ofthe Western New York Public Broadcast-

roughly 29 cents per taxpayer. according to
a National Public Radio fact sheet, andoverall support or public broadcasting costs the

average taXpayer just ove.r a dollar
Although congressional leaders say all

public television and radio would not die

broadcasting could be forced orr the air
before 3:30p.m. and after II p.m . Channel
23 and WNEO -AM radio could be forced to

smaller contribution to American cuhure.

close.

Carlson called claims that PBS caters
only to a rich elite wildly exaggerated. He
cited a Nielsen study that showed PBS tele-

effort by the Republi can-controlled Congress to eliminate federal support is public

vision viewers were only slightly wealthier
than the nation as a whole. More than half of
PBS opera \•iewers. for instance. ha\'e family incomes under $40,000. Ar some point
during an ave rage month, 80 percent of
Americans watc h public televi sion.

ing a liberal bent.
At last Thursday ' s hearing, CPB Chief

Executive Richard Carlson testified that he

ing Associalion. indicates rhal Dlannel 17

without federal funds. but they would be a
great deal less healthy and make a much

programs receiving federal funding will receive the same type of scrutiny. Washington
political analysts say lhe real target of thi s

affairs broadcasting widely viewed as hav -

The local public tele\'i s1on stalion.

Among local Congressmen. Rep. Will-

iam Paxon of Amhersl is a staunch opponent
or continued federal support [orpublic broadcasting. Rep. Jack Quinn of Hamburg. who
introduced an amendment to kill off federal
funding last year. i; officially undecided.
Rep. John LaFalce of Tonawanda and Rep.
Amory Houghton of Coming are strong

supponers o f public broadcasting

Basketban: winning season is crowd-pleaser
By STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

D

ON'TLOOKNOW.butthemen's
basketball Bulls have something

on their minds that hasn' t been a
consideration for them in recent

years: Mlln:h Madness.

More than halfway through the1r season.

Nursing class opens
first long distance
learning project

the crowd-pleasing Bull s are atop the MidContinent Conference. At 11-5. wi th 10

games remaining . the Bulls have already
won more games this season than last. nu s
is the Bulls' founh season since returning 10
Di vision 1-AA play f&lt;?r the fir.il time smce
!he 1970s. The team
has virtually doubled

R

ETURNING TO college took on a

the number of wins it
enjoys each season.
with record s s ince

But only 28 were 10 125 K1mball Hall on
th~ South Campus. wrt.h mstructor Mat)
Finmd.. The remamrng 14 'f'ere rn a class room at the Jam~ o;;town Comr\umt) College
branch campus m Olean. a.; th
B School o f
Nursrng maugurated the reg1on's first long dro;;lance. 1ntemctrve-Jeammg proJeCt.
Students an both classrooms "'ere able to
~and hear each o th~r and acuvely panlca pate 10 dl...CU,'&gt;IOn

before: an enthusia.o;;tic
crowd of 1.651. " I think the first half was the

best that we've played si nce I've been here."
said Coach lim Cohane. Playi ng strong de-

fense. the Bulls forced 13 turnovers in the first
half. while turning the ball over only once.

Mecca Cranle). dean o ft he U B School of

lbeir next test could be the season· s biggest

Nursmg. began

whentheygo to lndianatotalteonthe Valpar.tiso
Crusaders. The Bulls hold a half-game lead

Coach Cohane. who say&lt; he is happy for hi&gt;

players. but clearly not shocked. "This is the
natural progressio n of th is talent at the Division I level." explains Cohane. \vho is in his
second season as Bulls coach.
The Royals women's basketball squad is

looking for their fourth straight conferen~e
crown. A strong start has the Royals at 5-2 m
conference play. and 10-5 overall. one game
out of first place. Winni ng the conference wi~h

a strong fi nish would be particu larly sweet th1s
year as it would assure the Royals their firstever berth in the newly expanded NCAA

wom en 's basketball championshi p.

cia \is "uh a ''\lnual

lege. and Carol Scott. dean of the Olean

young '93-94 squad all returned thi s year.

M yron Banks. last year's top rebounder.

th~

nbbon cuttmg" at 5·30 p m. 10 Klmball and

"elcomed the st udent.;; in Olean to the unl·
\e~H) Judnh Cordia. director of the School
of Nursmg. at Jamesao;,r.•n Communrty Col -

over the Crusaders in the conference.
The stage wa!'t set for winning basketball
this season when the top eight players on the

They are joined by a couple new faces who
have had a big impact. including transfer
student Jamie Anderson and fr'tshman Mike
Maninho. who came off the bench to lead rhe
team with 20 points Monday night.
Although winning the conference would
not assure an automatic spot in the NCAA
toumnment. it would make it rather likely . lf
not, the team is a strong contender for a benh
in the rival NJT Tournament. according to

when 42 UB students began their
first class in Nursing 50~"'Theo-

retical Perspectives in Nursing."

1992-93 of2-26. 5-23
and last year's 10-18.
Monday night. the
Bulls easily handled
Western Illinois. 92-65

Returning sta ndout included small forward
Woodrow Williams. last year's leading
stealer. guard Modie Cox. a Niagara Falls
native who already makes the all-time top10 li st in seve n statistical categories after
on ly two seasons at UB. fof\-\.'ard Kelvin
Robinson. last year's top shot blocker. and

totally new dimensron Jan. 19.

campu s of JCC. responded from Olean.

SPORTSVIEW
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

-···~

The Bulls snapped a three-game losing streal&lt; Saturday night
defeating the University of Missouri-Kansas City n -£8 at
Alumni Arena. With the win, lhe Bulls equaled the total number of victories from lhe previous season at tO.
Woody Williams scored a caree&lt;-lligh 22 points in leading
the Bulls to lhe victory. Guard Rasaun Young . who had seen
limited actioo the previous couple of weeks due to an ankle
injury. added t9 points while Myron Banks contributed 1t
points and nine rebounds. Center KeMn Robinson accumulated 14 boards along with nine points. three blocks and
three steals. Modie Cox had 10 assists for the second time in
as many games.

w-··......_.

The Royals pulled into a three-way tie lor first place in the
Mid--Continent Conference with their 66-61 win over MissouriKansas City at Alumni Arena Saturday night. The win gave
the Royals a 5-1 mark in league play tying them with coleaders Western Illinois and Youngstown State.
Freshman Charissa Gardner led the team with 12 points
while Natosha Cummings added 1t . Nicole Blakeslee scored
tO points with six rebounds off lhe bench and ANte Gallagher
earned a double-double with 10 points and tt rebounds.

w_..............

The Royals lell at home to Comell166-119 on .Jan. t6.
Alexandra Barrera won three events Individually taking the
tOOO Freestyle in t0:24.11,1he 200 Backstroke in 2:10.0t and
the 500 Freestyla in 5:t0.5t . She teamed wi1h SUe Bohnel. r
Laura Herricl&lt; and Kristen Krenitsky to win the 200 Free Relay

in 1:45.42{f&lt;aren Lasky was a double winner taking the on&amp;meter diving competition wi1h 258. 15 points and the threemeter 91/ent wi1h 261 .00. Earlier in the week, UB fell to
Maryland-Baltimore County 160-75. Barrera was the lone
winner With a 10:31 .12 in the 1000 Freestyle.

........

,

,.

Coach Budil Termin's Bulls lost a close one at MarylandBa~imore cOllnty 123-114 oo Jan. t2 in their last action.
Jamie Play!~ Kevin Remaly~ Kevin Male and Darren Milun
caplured the 400 Medley Relay in 3:31.79. Individually.
Playfair took the 50 Freestyle In 23.34 while Milun won the tOO
Freestyle aJ 47. 76. Justin Monin was a double winner in diving
taking the one-meter event with 252.45 points and the livesmeter competition at 235.66. Korry Miller'!""' the 200 Backstroke in t :54.29 while teaming wi1h Male, Josh Pieczonl&lt;a
and Mark Horgan lor victory in the 400 Free Relay in 3:t5.01 .

WteetiiiC

_)hree Bulls earned All-State honors in lhe New York State
Collegiate Championships. Brian Dowdall linished six1h al 126
pounds. RBMie Crisafulli was lourth aJ 142 pounds and AAIhony Conte at t56 pounds placed fifth. The Bulls host Kent
Stale in a dual meet this Salurday.

lllllloorTMck
Furru Gakodi set a school record of 50.2 in the 400 meters in
a triangular meet at Hamillon, N.Y. against Vetmont and host
Colgate. The Bull~ were second with 114 points to Vennont's
126. Colgate finished wi1h 82. In the women's meet. lhe Royals also placed second with 109 points to Vermont's 134 While
Colgate was third with 78.

�6

'

G,....p Wof't. Skills wiUI Ado._.,tsud Adults, 0. Bat·
bara Rittner. Center for TomoJ ·
row North Campus. 8 ~ 4S
a.m.-3:30p.m. Sl20 CaJI
645-6140.

COMriiT*G
~..ric:

S.4S· Part I. I 30-4 JO
p.m. Caii64S -3 540 fm regastramformat•on

1100

CDIII'II11NCl-

lntrvdudioa to VM S. 3-5 JO
p m Cali64S-3S40 for reg•~ ra­
tloo 1nfonnauon
LLCTUitE
Reciprocal I attractions are
Required for Synapw f orma·
tion. Story Land1s. Ph 0 Cue
Western Restf"e Umv Med1cal
Center Butler Audrtonum
South Campus. 4 p m
CIIUnVE CIIAFT CEIITEII

WORKBas-k Photocrapb) -6-wttk
procram . ElhcOlt Compte a
North Campus 7 10 p m Call
645-24}.1
CREAnYE CIIAIT CENTER

WORKIC I"«.httin&amp; a nd Knittinc-6-"eek procram. Elhcon Com
plex NonhCampu .. 7-IOpm
Call b-2. 5-243.&amp;
CREATIVE CRAn CENTER

THURSDAY

~6

MIC-IOLOGY IEMINAR
may in-

nuence adberrna- and innsion or human bnt inocytn.,
Anlhony A Campagnan . Ph D
106 Cal) . South Campu" Noon

COMPunNG WORKIHOI'

An Enning with Eli Go ld,..u~
lntemauonally reno~med
S"pcakerfAuthor of '1'he Goal~
and ''It 's N01 Lud. ~ Sponsored
b) Games Metzler Knner &amp;
Company LLP. Cu.bank. aod
Bu smess Frrst Center for thr
Ans onb Campus 1 30-9 30
pm il0. 525.590 Call
636-3626 10 reguu·r
IUMMEJII'ARE THEAl'EII

Fa lw uos. Pfe1fer ,...,ea1er 8
pm AdmiSSIOn SIO. S\2. $15
Co li 839 -8540

Introd uction to Unix. 3-5 30
~10 Call645 -3 540 for

pm

regal&gt;tratt on mformauon

MATHEMATIC$ COUOQUIUM

Knot Invariants of Finite
T ype , Prof Chnsl tan Kassd.
C

RS . Slra... bourg&amp;IAS .

Pnnet!ton IOJ 01efendorf
South Ca mpu.!. ~ p m
NEUROBIOLOGY JOURNAL

ewe

SATURDAY

~~

WREITUNG MATCH
COMPUT1HG WORKSHOP

• bner cemer entrance l1 becroom 2 5 bolh~
w.fh boy windows 10 !JV.ng rex&gt;m &amp; d1rung room
• Coonrr'l ~ 25 ~ ld jerm(Ne d~l
wo•nscoo~ong

&amp; b:eo\..lw 00·
• Famrly 1oom w•th \-VBH' O'OCled r. Cotneero
t:e~ltng WTrh fon french dorJot~ IO ,. •ng f(X)fr,

• Fm.r flex, den

w11t1 i:xx&gt;lco~

2 phone

fiE'S

• CetomiC fOO •n ~ &amp; both~
• lotge

rT'CI~r bearoom ha~ colhedro .:e•hng /a.-

and 2 ......all,,n c~

• 2 bedr~

wolh

odJCYenr

~ago&gt;

nove drue•~ .....m bvolhru

• Centro! ou orr pvuloer hvmld·l~ &amp; progrom-

mobie rhetmome1e1
• ftnt!ohed bo)efnenl .

sheNed saoroge

reoeot.on rex&gt;m WOft.shop

r(X)m

• Goroge do:Jf openet Wlrh l.ey ood

IBM Lab Orientation. b-8 p m
SIO Call 645 -3540 for re(!l )&gt;l raIIOO mformatiOO

SUMMERFA.RE THEAttR
Fal.wtt os. P{erfer The ater R
p m Admrl&gt;sron SIO, !JI 1 St~

,. . ,
Call

M-aci&lt;'JC"'l&gt;l. l, R.N and AhC'e
I( a.m K1nch Audno-

.h. It,'"" .kt/rrmnhin" r&gt;
.. ,Z fi/~w/t' .~/r Y.:/'/lh.'r/·

COMPUTING WORKSHOP

Macintosh Lab Orientatio n.
1-2 p m Ca11645-35..SO for
regaMralron 1nfonna11 nn

Corel Kriege&lt;
(Ucensed Soles Agenll
839·9JOo olfoce
635-8251 ..oce mot!

_____.tQ:?\._

POTIER

I!IMMEIIIIKW1

CHEMISTRY COLLOQUIUM

Spin, Light , and Various
Trimtthy l~n~m ethanes: A
st udy of No n-Kr.kul~ MolK ula, Prof. Joseph J
GaJew!!o ki. Indiana UmveBII}'
Natural Scienc-el&gt; &amp; Mathemallcl&gt;
Complu . Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

~1

Group Work Skills witb Adolnctnts and Adults. Or Barbara R111ner Center for Tomor
rn" Norlh Campus 8 45 a m
J JO p m Sl20. C.ll645-6140
COM"'"NG WORKSHOP
Elttt ronic Mailf\'MS. 10 am -

Noon Call 645-3540 for
trat iOn mfonnatron

re~.., ­

CREATIVE CRAFT CENTE.R
WORKIHOP

Pott rr') -6--"' «k prog,..m.
Elllcou ((lmpln Nonh Cam
pu.. 10 am I p m Cull
645&lt;!.&amp;3~

BISON Dt.monst,..tion. 2 p.m
::!23 Loc L:~ood No preregt;tra ·
lion requ•red
COMft'UTING WORKSHOP

lntrodudion to IB M/C MS. 3-5
p m Call b4S -35JO for reglstrahon mfo nnat1on
STAniTICI DEPARTMENT
COUOQUIUM

Ana lysis of M ulth·ariat r Sur, h .. t Da ti Via Frailty Modrl~
Dr Oa\ld On le~. Unr' of

Roche .. ter 106 Car) South
Campu1o ~ p.m.
CREAnVE CIIAIT CEIITEII

WORKIHOI'

MONDAY

~0

SOC:lAl. WORK CONT1NUING
EDUCATION

Advanced Applications or

COMPI/T1NG-

SPSS for Windows-Part I .
9 am -Noon Caii64S-3540
for ~ts:trahon mfonnallon

COMI'II11NClW-Pilu MaUer for tM su nCiuS1rr
(Unir) . \0 am -Noon Call
645 -3 5.&amp;0 for n:gs~rauon
mforma1100

COMI'II11NG WOIII(I~ nuic

SAS-hrt l . I

}0---t

30

p m Call b-2.5-3.540 fOJ regtlotra
1100

mforma11on

COGNITIVE IClENCE
COUOQUIUM
Work-OriMt~ Syste-m Dt-sign. LUC) Suchman. 5) stem..
•nd Practices LaboratOI)', Palo
Alto 684 Bald) Nonh Campu ~

4-6 p m

IOCIAL WORK CONTINUING
EDUCATION
Ad\'I.Dttd Applications of

RESEARCH WORKSHOP

C ritic•l Pa ths. MtH)

1

l'ilms .. '~'be- Train Rolls On. ..
'"La J~t te, '"and .. Ldtu, from
Siberia... Center for the Ans
ief«ntng room No nh C•mpus

Introduction to Sun XWindo"ing Systrm. 2--' p m
Cali6-IS-3540 for n:~lstratton
•nfonnatton

f'a lwtt D!t. pfetfer Theater 1 p m
Sl O. S J2. S15 C_.;~ll SW-85.10

WEDNESDAY

WEDNUDAYIAT4PWI
Scrftn in&amp; of C bris Markr.r

COMPunNG WORKIHOP

~9

Qviltlnc--4-woolt PI"OJ.......
EJhcou Complex North Cam
pu&gt; 7- 10 p m Call645 -2434

IBM lAb OrWntat ion.. 3 J()
S 30 p m Ca11645-3540 for
re&amp;J)(r&amp;ttOn tnformatron

Falsrltos. Pre1fer Thealer J
p m and 8 Jl m Admm•on SI O.
S. l1. Sl5 Call83lJ- 5JO

~7 ~·--~u~

LaGr:n e:.

TUESDAY

IUMMERFARE THEAl'EII

SUNDAY

CBAYIW CIIAFT CIENTER

2 pm

Nonh Campu&gt; I p.m

I

pus. 7· 10 p.m C.II64S-24 34

COMI'II11NG WORKBHOI'

CGMPunNG WORKSHOI'
Gr n~ric SPSS- Part I. I "\OJ JO r m Call f::l.l5 -35.10 foe
regt s:tr.UJOn mform.:U10n

CB W ~ li ng \ 'S, 1\: r nt Stat~ .
Alum01 Aren:~ Mam G)m

8~9 - 85.&amp;0

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS

WORKIJHOI'
Wenin&amp;-6-"'·eea. progra m.
Eltlcott Comple:t. Nonh Cam
pu~ 7-10 p m S50. plu' SR
loom rental Ca11645-24lJ

Morris. Alumm Aren! Mam
Gym Non.h Campus 6- 1 I p m
I'IIUENTATION AND
THEAl'EII

1"M lipooUgosacxharide:s of
Ha~Mopllilu6 ducrr:~i

INDOCMt TRACK
UB Indoor t,..c.k vs.. Robcr1

Pottti')'-"-U PI"OJ....,.
Ell icon Comple&gt;. North Cam

w- --

IIUEAIICIIWBlSON ~nstrat5on.ll a.m
223 Lcd:wood . No ~reg•stra ­
tton requued.

-

pus. 7- 10 p.m Call645 2434

c-..nva CIIAFT CUfTEJI

Adnnct'd Color Photo-6" ft" k program. Elhcnn Com-

plc=a Nnnh C:~mpu!o 7-10 p m
Call t-..s5 - .:!.&amp;3~
CREAnvE CRAFT CENTER

WORKIHOP
Camtra Ust&gt; and Operation 4-wft"k program. Elhcou Com-

~:~~ ~~~~~~mpu!o

7- 10 p.m.

PNARIIACY IOIINAR

A Rt"'inr of CNS Toxicit)
Caused by Various Antilnftd ivn. S1ephen Pokz
24 Cooke Nonh Campu!&gt;
4 J0-5 ·30 p m
P'HARMACOUNIY IEMINAR

A Pouibl~ Nr• Func1 ion for
s- Ad~oosyl--homocyst e:in
drola.st~ Mum) J Eu1nger.

n, .

Ph D 307
Campus 4

Hoch~tener

r

No n h

m

COMP'UltNCl WORKSHOP

Unit lntrodudion. 6-8 30 p m
Call 645-3540 for regrstraucon
mformataon

REIEAIICH W - -

BISOS tnmonst ,..t ion. 7 p m
.:!~~ Loc L:wcxtd No prtt"e(!.l'ol rallon requm~d

CREAnYE CIIAIT CEIITEII

WORKAdnnced tained G lass-6" H k program. Ellscou Com pitA NoiJhCampu.!o 7- IOpm
Call 645{2434
CREAnYE CIIAIT CENTER

WORKBru:.ilian Embroid~f') -6wMk Jrogram. Elhcou Com -

w-

t':,~ ~~~i;mpus

7-10 p m

CREAnYE tiiAIT CENTER

~~:~-:!.o~~:tbl~,;;e~

North Campus. 7-10 p.m.
Call645-2-434.
CIIEAnVE CIIAIT CENTER

WORKI-

Crutive Photog,.. ph~ -6-"ff~ provam. Ellu:ott Com
plex NonhCampus 7- IOp.m
Ca1164S-24:U.
CREATIVE CIIAIT CENTER

WORKPottu)-6--"' H k prog,..m .
Elhcou CompieA. Nonh Cam·
pul&gt; 7-10 p m S20 Call
b-l5-2-U-l
OPUI: CLASSICS UVE

Buffa lo Philharmonic C bo ru.l&gt;,
Thomas s~an. Conductor Allen
Hall . South Campus 7 p m

Frtt
CREAnVE CIIAIT CENTER

WORKIHOI'
Cartooning-6-" 'f'fk program.
Ell icon Com pleA . Nonh Cam-

THE COOIUNG ICHOOL

lotcmational Veg~ta rian , Ann
l·b skell. UB English Profeswr
Top!' International Su per Cen1er .

�7
3980 Maple Road, Amhenl. 7-9
p.m. $8. Pmqis1n11ion and
prepayment are required ;

prt:tation of si-. fables through
illustration. 1be e-.hibit uncovers primitive passions thai rc veallhc: S1uk reality of life

:::."r

lhroulb metaphorical, rymbolic,
or allegorical illu trations. 1lw:
show opens with a recepeion on
January 26 at the. An Depanment GaJiery from 5-7:30 p.m
and runs through Fe-bruary 7
Houn are Tuesday, 10 a.m .-5
p.m.; Wednesday-Friday, 10
a.m -8 p.m.; and Saturday II
a.m.-8 p.m.

Central Michlpa. Alumm
Arena. Non.h Campui. 7:30p.m.

THURSDAY

~

NOTICES
A W A R E - OFFEJIS
ASSISTANCE

11le AWARE Progr1m offer)
free assastanct" an cuttmg dov. n
on dnnkang. The prognm. de
Signed for 1'1'l0dt-ra1e 10 heav)
dnnLers 21-55 v.ho are not aJ cohohcs, requues the anvohe: ment of a spouse . panner. or
fnend . llus IS an 8-wtt.k rt: ·
!&gt;Carch program that 1ncludeo; a
free medJcal eum. all panaca·
pants v.all be patd lnformata on
rema1ns complete!) confidentull Cal1887-2573 for mon:
1nformat1on

ltESEAIIaiWOIIKSBISON Drmonstration. I p.m

223 Lockwood. No prt"registra 1100

required.

COMI'VI1IKI WOIIIIS-

Generk SPSS-Part 2. I :304 :~p. m Call 645-3540 fO&lt;
reg• ra1ion informa11on.
C

TIVE CRAFT CEHT£11

w
-Basic Pbotography-6-wee.k
program. Ell1rot1 Complex
Nonh Campus 7-10 p.m . Call

-

645-2434.
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTDI

B qinnin1 Stained Glass-6" ·ee.k program. Elhcon Complex . North Campu !. 7-10 p m.

Call 645-2434
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTDI

w-

J~wel.ry

Construdion. Elhcou

Complex . Nonh Campus 7- 10
p.m . Call 645- 2434

SliiiiiEJrFARE ntEAT£11
Falsettos. Pfeifer llleater g
p.m. Admission SIO. Sl2. Sl5
Call 839-8540.

CISP' P'ttOYIOES FUNDING
Tlle: Counc1l on lmemauonal
Studies and Program iCISPI
pru\•ides hmtted financ1al suppan for a number of •mttau'e"
and proJect!~ thai funher m1ema
uonal e:ducatton and ~holar ­
sh•p C ISP anvne!l r~quellts lo r
suppon from facuh) and liiU
dent group!~ Plea~ hmu appeals to no ~ than tv.·n p~g~
of text plu ~ a budget page Each
request, 10 be scm -.1th a em er
leuer to the Chatr of the Councrl. clo Office of lntemattonal
Educ:u10n . 544 ~pen Hall . Box

601604 . should danfy proposed
101al budget amount for the
proJCl't or tnnraU\e, ho v. much
Coonctl .. uppon 1.\ bemg sought.
v.•hat other soun::es of secured or

EXHIBITS

prospecuvc &amp;;uppott. and how

the funds requested from the
Counctl wtll be used . CISP re
' 'tev.s apphcatrons monthl)
through lhe academu: year In
considc:nng requests. the Counctl 1) encourages reque§lers to
seek matching funds. 2) dis·
courages requests that seek to
defray tra\·el expenses b) tndt ·
vtduab of the payroll of the
uni\'ersity. and 3) seds assurance that any program that take!&gt;
place on campus w11l be open to
the unl\'ersity communny

TME CIIIADUATE SltOW
Come sec new and cuthng edge
•llu~~otration. patnllng.
pnn lmaking, communication

design. 5CUipc.urt, photography.
and mixed media created by the
An Department 's MFA candidates in 1"he Graduate Show"
at the University Gallery Gal lery hours are Wednesday-Saturday 10:30 a.m.-8 p m.; Sunday 12-5 p.m.
~'SFUUS

R£1NTEWHIEIEU
U8'§ IIJUSlration program JOinS
wuh Illustrators attht Massachusetts College of An tn pre·
"enlang " Ac:sop'11 Fable;
Reanaerpretc:d., .. a v1sual anter-

SPIIIIKIINTO CREATIVE
CRAFTS

I

Tbe Creatne Crafls Cemer ll&gt;
offenng ~spnng '95 Craft
Workshops;- starting 1he v.c:d,
of Monda) . Jan 30 Weavmg.

crochet10g and knitting. quilt ing, Brazilian embroidery.
greeting card de5ign. pottery,
tntennedi.att pottery, canoomng.
basic photography. camera use
and open~tioo. creativt phocog·
raphy. col&lt;&gt;&lt; phologn~phy. ad·
vanced color phocography, jewelry constructkm, begtnnin&amp;
tamed glus . .dvanced atained
glau. pottery and muhawrnedJa
for ch1ldren works~ 'kill run
one night a week for su. v.eeb .
e~~:cept children's clanes. whtch
run on SaiUrdays. Fee$ are SlO
for student$ and SSO for all Olhen; early sagn-up ts advt§td
Call 645-2434 or 645-6125
IHTDINA~ FOUl
OAIICIIKI
All are welcomt to JOan the ln temaiJonal FoiL Dancing group
each Fnday from 8- 11 p m '" 2
Dtefendorf Hall on the Sooth
Campus Tbe§t free SCS!!itOns
bcgm wrth tcachmg Panner;. are
n&lt;K needed. The sport!.Of •~ the
Graduate Student As..actahon

WANttD:: HEALTHY WOMEN

Health) females betv.ee:n 1M and
45 v.·tth P M S S) mptoms are
!&gt;ought for a stud) If elig;•ble
v. o men v.all rece1\e free lreat rncnl. af v.-arrante:d Call 898
5446 for mronnatton
R£ADINQ CUNIC OFFEIII
PIIOGIIAII
The UB Readml! Clime loet'L~
children v.'ho ha,·e ~nou1. read
'"!! and/or leammg problem!&gt; for
enrollment tn the cl mtc·, dta~
no!r.ttc and remedtul program
that bel!m ~&gt; Feb I For Sol~ lhc

progr1m offer§ low-coM d1a~ ·
nOStiC' !il!r"'I~S dunng two
mommg l&gt;CSSJORl&gt; follov.ed h)
one-on-one. 45 -mmutt
remed1a11on sess1ons that mccl
three= um~ a v.~L after school
O\'Cr one or two semester\ at an
ackhttonaJ SJ50cost Ch1ldren
rna) be referm:l1o the after
school program on!) b)-the: If
pat'CRt), v.ho are respon~tble for
ensunng that the children attend
ihe remedaataon sesston!&gt; For
enrollment tnformauon.
ca11645-2470

Sdtntb•-Family Mc:dtcane.
POllio&amp; *R -95005. Secrdary II
(part-u ... posltioa) -Upwan!
Bound Math/Science Reaional
Ce.n1er. Posting IR -95006. F'teld
Traf!f:r--"'ychology. Posting
i'R-95007. Research Tecbni·
e:ian JJ -Mcdlcine, Posting IR ·

95008. Reoeare~o Supports.clalist-Paycho4ogy. Postm1
fR -95009 .

..-u-.u.
At:lodalr Vkt Prtiicknt for
Publi&lt; Relalioos (MPJA)-Of·
ficc of the VP for Unsve::rsity
Advanctment and Ot\-tlopmenl.
Postrng IP-4100. lnforw.alioe
Sy lem.s Technician (SL-l)·
Dean' Office, School or Archt ·
tecture and Planning. Postmg
MP-4107. Compute.r Nrhmrk
Mana&amp;er (SL-3)-Uni'-I!TSII)
PublicatiO!li, P«&gt;iltng IP~ 110
Oh•ision I Head Coac.b (Sl..r-5)D• \l S IOR of AthletiC\. Postm~
•P-411 I C.ta.loc TechnM:ian
(SL-.3, par1-timt posilion,lnlunal Promotional Oppor1u·
nily)-Lav. Libr.tf), Postm~ ,;p.
500 I Associatr Dean for
F"tstal Managcme.nl (Sl-5.
lnltrnal Promotional Oppor·
Lunil) )-Dean·!&gt; Offict, School
of Engmeenng and Apph!'d
Sc aence!. . Poslmg NP-5005
COMP'ETITfYE CU.SSIF1ED
CIVIL SEIIYICE
Statt Unh·ersil) Program
Aidt (SG- 13. ttmporat') until
Aug. 31, 1995)-PeN'Innel Ser
vtce, , Lane •2704.4 Senkn·
Ty pist (SG·9. part-limt 5041- 10ffit'c of t~ Prmo.. t. Llllf
''0905 CakuhtliOD.\ ClerL 2
(SG-9)-Qffice of the Pro' l"l

Lone •30383 Cieri. I (SG-6,
ttmporary until Junt JO.
1995)-Records and Re:gllllr.llton .
Lmc "-46084
L.AaOR CLASSIF1EO CIVIL
HJIVICE
Clea.nt:r (SG-S)-Res1dentaal
Fac1hlte • Lane ~3050
Cleane.r (SG-S)-Unlvcnll ) Fa·
cthliC'S, Cuslodtal Sci"\ ICC1.. Lu-.e
• 3 1532

Tn obtam mor,- m/urmornmiJn
johs frs"d abo'"· ronlort Pn
m nn,-1 5,-n -w,-s. 104 Crofts
Ho/1

JOBS
FACULTY

Assistanl/Assor.iatt Professor·
~pt of Surgef) . Postmg IF
5001 Associak Profe-ssor/Full
Professor-Dept of Psych•atf) .
Postmg MF-5002 . Assistant
Professor-Dept of Commumca uon. Posung IF-5003
RESEAltCH

Le Ballet National
du Senegal
"Pangols ," expressong the
sp•nt of Wesl Af11ca. w•ll
be presented Feb 2 at 8
p m on lhe Center for the
Arts by Le Ballet Natoonal
du Senegal

tour

Check Oil

stock
fleduct!ott
5

A

r t: .

Hardware
• Software
• Supplies
• Acceuorlea

.,.~

Sale from
Wed 1/25
through Jri 2/3!!

__ __ I
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-----0

21nk~&amp;

aoblelnelucled

... _,. ,..
;.!_6?_!PI__

$375 ::.-..::J:::-

�_,..,.___.,_ ....

8
UB faadty, staff
to hear thancellor

speak Jan. 27
SUNY~Iorn.o..a.tlett will

address the winter meeting of the SUNYwideFacultySenateatl:30p.m. Friday.lan.
27. The address will be carried live on the
SUNY Satellite networ'o:. and can be seen in
120 Clemens Hall on the North Campus and
in the fust floor Emeritus Center Lounge in
Goodyear Hall on the South Campus.
This is the first opportunity for UB faculty and staff to see and hear the new chancellor.
As pan of his presentation. the chancellor
will answer questions from faculty senators.
Following his remar'o:.s. the SUNY Senate
will p_resent a panel and discussion on Distancef Learning from 2:304:30 p.m. The
spedf,c schedul e may be obtained in the
F~y and Profession Staff Senate office.
543 Capen Hall.

Old diet habits can be changed, study says
11J CAITUN II£U.Y
News Bureau Staff

I

TSNEVERTOOLATEtostarteating
heal thy . Researchers at UB have found
that intensive nutritional couriSelingcan
change poor dietary habits, even those
established over a lifetime.
More than 70 percent of subjects who
volunteered for intensive dietary counseling
met their nutritional goals. whic~ included
weight loss and reduction of saturated fat
intake.
The study. conducted by Marlene R.
Ventura. associate chief of nursing research
at tht: Buffalo VA Medical Center and clinical professor of nursing at UB: Frances E.
Crosby. project staff associat&lt; in the UB
School of Nu,.ing. and Mary Louise Grace.
a regiSJered dietitian. was published in the

Journal of Htalrh Education.
Goal of the study was to examine the

effects of selected behavioral interventions
on 170 patients at the Buffalo VA Hospital
affected with Peripheral Vascular Disorder
(PV D).
PVD. characterized by insufficient circulation to the extremities. may be caused by a
variety of factors. including cigarene smoking, hypertension. obesity and a sedentary
lifestyle. Patients may be advised to reduce
weight and serum cholesterol. and control
high blood pressure.
he patients were div1ded mto three
groups: an intervention group. a placebo
group and a control group. Eighteen of the 57
patients in the intervention group chose to
focus specifically on changing their dietary
habits. 1be researchers met w1th them on a
regular basis for 18 months to provide indi vidualized nutritional assessment . d1rect
counseling and follow~up

T

Diet.ary counseling can be complex m
PVD patients. the researchers wd. beca•s&lt;
of the numtxr of factors mvolved m th('
d1sease. In additJon. pauenl.s often are.elderly. w11h Iong-e tablished dietary habits.
Dunng counseling, the researchers helped
patients set achievable goal~ by cons1denng
each ind1v1dual ' s home environment. food
hkes and d•shkes. and financ1al paramet&lt;rs
'"The d1etary 1n1ervenuon employed m
thiS study was based on the prem1sc that
dietary hab1ts become established over ume.
and nutnuonal couns.ehng must be uulored
meet the needs of each ind1v1dual patient ~
they wrote
The mten.sol\ e counse hng program enabled 13 of the 18 patients to make gradual
dietary changes to tale control of their di etary habll5 and reach their goals. the re searchers sa1d.

Spring Fitness Fair set for Feb. 10 in Alumni
2222
___
11111----of-- T
Public Salely s WeeliiY Report

_....to-~of

s.r.ty - - ...... -12:
• About $36 was reponed mtsstng Jan 6
from a locked locker tn Alumnt Arena

• A man reponed Jan 9 that lour tocks

were cut off the freezer •n the Talbert Hall
cafetena , and $1 .CXX&gt; worth of meat was

taken.
• A snow thrower . valued at $350. was
reported mtsstng Jan 9 from a matntenance vehtcle parked tn the Helm lot

• Public Safety reponed Jan 11 that varoous ttems. mcludtng a tower dtspenser .

soap dtspenser and par1&lt;.mg srgn were
found natled to the door and wall of a
room 1n Clement Hall
• A purse conta1mng cash . cred1t cards
and personal items was reported mrssrng

Jan. 12 from Lockwood Ltbrary

HI NK FITNESS FOR 1995-and
do something about it ! Recreati on
and Intramural Services has a program to help you begin.
The UB FIT Faculty/Staff Spring Fitness
Fa~risscheduledforFriday.Feb . IOfrom 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Alumni Arena gymnas ticsroom(Room 175)ontheNorthCampu .
The Fa1r includes a health screening process to assess Individual cardiovascular
hfalth as well as 10 identify other pot&lt;ntial
risk factors. Fee for the health screening is
S25. which includes a UB FIT T-shirtThe screening. which takes about an hour.
cove~ cardio,·ascular risk analysis. cholesterol. percent body fat. resting blood pressure. heart rate . bod) mass index. he1ght and
weight, grip strength. submax 1mal aerobtc

capaCII) test and self~directed eAercase program handouts. where appro pnate. w1th
counseling.
The UB FIT program" destgned to meet
the fitness needs of andividuah who are
motivated toward the improvement
general health and well-being through exerc1s&lt;
The program · s options feature physical
fitness testing an&lt;! fitness programmJOg. in
addition to health screening. II is available to
all UB faculty. staff. retirees. alumni and the
Buffalo community . Choices range from the
highly structured to self-directed exerc1s&lt;
programs.
Individual!, found to be at nsk for card10·
vascular disease wall ~directed anto add111onaltesung opt1ons such as phys1cal fitness
testing. functional capacity evaluauon and

or

med1cal evalua110n
The program "JOintly sponsored by the
DI\'ISIOn of Athleucs. Department of Physical Therap) and Exerc1sc Sc 1ence. the Llv tng Well Center and the UB Sports Medtctne
lnstjtute
For more mformauon o n the Fitness F3.1I,
call Recreauon and Intramural Serv1ces at
645-2286 between 9:30a.m. and 4·30 p.m.
Appomtments w1Jl be made at 15-mmut.e
mterval s and regastrauon and payment can
be made at Recreat1 on and Intramural SerVICes. Room 130. Alum01 Arena. Those who
would hke to tale pan an the Fi1ness Fa1r are
advised to regaster earl) as -spaces are hmiled. Lao.t year. more than 100 faculty and
staff tool advantage of the UB AT health
screenmg opponun1Uer:;

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~~~

Ftu' 636-8468

520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

by Frederick Knott
directed by Fred Klng Keller
February 7 - March 11

This thriller Is a tale of Intrigue and revenge set against
the high-pressure world of professional athletics.

Call 856·5650

�9

Accenting the negative encourages
consumer recycling, researcher finds
''the detriments associated with
rejection .. of recycling. such as ex-

10

EGATIVITY isn't
always bad. In fact.
when it comes to encouraging consumer

recycli ng. advocacy

messages that are negative are more
effective than messages that are
positively framed. a resean:her at
UB has found.
And a negative message from a
personal acq uai ntance is the most
effective. Kenneth R. Lord. assistant professor of marketing. found
in a study in which UB students
were assigned to examine the con- tents of their neighbors' curb ide
\ recycli ng bins.
f Lord'sstudy of 140 households
throughout metropolitan Buffalo-lhe results of which were published
recently in Psychology and Mar- ·
krting-was the first recycling
study to include direct observati ons of recycling behavior: previous stud ies had only g &amp;:ged
recycling attitudes.
The UB Sludy. in add1tton to

&gt;urveying attitudes. loo~ed at behavior by .. sumg what people actually do. rather than just "hat the)
say they will do.'' Lord satd
Siudents from UB · s tntroducwry rriarketing cou ~ counted the

ceedi ng the capacity of landfills.
endangering the beauty of surroundings and bealth concerns.
The messages were delivered 10
the households via a letter from a
personal acquaintance, an ad attributed to a fictitious company
claimi ng to be a di stributor of envi ronmentall y friendly products. ora
piece that was described as having
appeared in a news publication.
A control group of "unexposed

"The negative
message talks more
about the
consequences of
failure, and may
have more of a
veiled social effect
than a positively
framed message,
which does not. "

other paper products-placed 10
c urbside recycling bms. Each stu -

dent kept track of three households.
collecting data for two consecutive
garbage pick-ups-one before and
one after distributiOn of a .. ~cy ­
cling message·· to the h ou!tehold~
The me s~ges ~ere either posl11\ ely framed--emphasizing Lhe
··relati ve benefits assoc1ated with
comp liance·· and focusing on envi ronmental benefits. sav1 ng the community and personal sat1sfact1on
ansing from recycling--or nega11\'ely framed-dra~ mg anenuon

T

househo lds·· rece1ved no me!&gt;sages
Lord found th at an ad' ocacy
message from a peNonal acquam mnceeliCited a sJgn1flcantJ) greatr:r
1ncrease 1n recycling beha' 10rthan
a comparable mes sage from an
ad ' enJsmg or ne~ ~ •murcc
And houo;;eholds recel\ mg negatively framed message' fmm acquamtance ~ sho" ed the greate''
recycling behav10r. recycling an
average of 7.68 add1t10nal 1tem'
after rece1 vmg the me~ sage than
they had the pre' 10u' \.\ed.. All

Andrew V. Tramont, physician

Frlcbty, May 12
Slee Concert Hall
Cenler for the Arts. Matnstage

Slee Concert Hall

Alumni Arena
Slee Concert Hall
Student Union Theatre
Alumni Arena
Center for the Arts. Mainstage
. Slee Concert Hall
Hayes Hall Lawn
Alumni Arena
Center for the Arts, Mainstage

Sunday, May 14

c---t

10a.m.

UNDERGRADUATES:
FacvJty of Arts and Letters
Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
Facuttv of Social Sciences (Interdisciplinary Programs)
Special and Individualized Ma 'ors
Associate 'Jeorees
2p.m .
School of Dental Medicine
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences 3p.m .
Inc. Roswell Park Graduate Division)
7p .m .
School of Social Work

Service• we.- held Dec. 24 for Andr,;,. V Tramon1. 74. a famtl~
prac tice ph))U:tan 10 Clarence for more than 40 )ean. a nd a chmcal
a ...... a...tant profe)~or emeniU&lt;&gt; of famll~ rnedu:tne at the t:B School of
MedJ ctne and 810med1cal Science' Tramont dted Dec ~I after a bnef
1llnes'
A founderofM1IIard F1llmure Suburban Hosp1talm
AmhersL Tramont ~ a' an attendmg ph)SJCJan ar
M 11lard Fillmore Ho,pltal for more than 40 ) ean. A
gnt.duate of the
et'&gt;ll) of Buffalo and Ne" VorL
Med1cal Colle~e 10 1 e ~ Yorl Cuy. he "a.~ an Arm)
\.C:teran of\\1orld \\'ar II \.\hO fought in lhe Baule or·

fi"''

Saturday, May 13
9a.m .
9a.m .
10a.m .
1 p .m .
1p.m .
1p.m .
2p.m .
Sp.m .
5 :30p .m .

stances_ 1be goal 1s to ulumatel}
reduce costs of rtmediauon '" Ne""
Vorl. State. hasten restorahon and
reuse of contarmnat.ea snes and
conlnbute to the state economy
through the commercaaliza.tion of
new and improved environmentalremed.tation tec-h.nolog1es.
Deadline for submiSSIOn of prehmt nary prc:&gt;posal&lt; for remedtationtechnolog) ptl ot-scale
demonstration projectS 1!. Feb. 17
No11f1Callon to submit full
remedtatton-technology proposals
"''II be made by March 17
The c~nter seels mnovau'~
re&lt;oearch and engtneenng proJects
that offer the potenttaJ to reduc~
the quantll) or toAJCTI) of hazard OU\ "astes generated 10 Nev. Vorl
State Oeadhne for s ubmt ~saon of
re!.earch proposah 10, 5 p.m on
Fnda)'. Feb 24 N01.1ftca11on of
re!»earch and de\-elopmcnt proJeCt
a" ard~ \.\.til be made 10 Jui)For more mformauon contact
the center m 207 Jan '' Hall or call

he study found that posltJ\'C
appeals yielded the most favorable levels of behefs toward
recycl ing . Those exposed to the
positively frctmed message exh tb·
lied a signifi cantly higher level of
be:ltef an the message · s .. rauonale
for panic1pauon m the communi!)
recycling program than d1d euher
lhe control subJ~ or Lho~ ~el\ mg negati vel) framed ~sage'
b-lS - 3~
"The poslll\'e rnes.!lage suggested
that reade~ could benefit soc1et~ ,
and t~ en' U'Onmem b~ rccychng .
an tdea the) could comfortabl) accept On the other hand. the negatl\ e
message !&gt;ug_ge!!.ted that b~ fallmg to
Service• were held Dec. 10 for Charle' J Tanner . 77 a cardw' a&gt;recycle. the) would be harmtng -.octcu lar ~urgeon and former president of MtrC)' Ho~p1tal. ~ ho d1ed Dec 7
tty and the em 1ronmenL an uncom after a bnef Jllne~~ Tanner. a graduate of St Buna,entur~: Cnt ' e~lt~
fortable thought that rna) make them
recel\ed hi\ med1cal degree from the L' nt,er,Hy of Buffalo and \.\a' a
defen!!.IVC ... Lord 53)-!o.
former pres1dent of the B Med1 cal Alumnt A'\~1at1on
Re..,ults of the 'itudy htghllght
A Hornell nat I\ e. Tanner rece 1ved the Camegte Medal tor hero1sm m
1935 after re..cumg VICtims of a Oood He ...en ed a-.;. a colonel an the Ann)
the need to attend to both per,ua'lon and behav1 or to mcrease conMed1cal Corps 1n 1944 and wa' commander of a m1l1taf) hoc;.p11al1n I tal)
\Umer complian e \.\. uh recycling
dunng World \\'dr II He !1-ened h1' ' urgu:al re"de-nc~ a t Ro, ,....eiJ ParJ..
Cancer ln'illute and became a lell n\.1. Jn ~o.- ardul\a"t.' Uid! . . urge~ at l'B
program\. Lord noted . addm~ that
~.:omhmtng the 'trateg1e' may offr:r
beg1nnmg ht' practu.·e 10 J 950
re,uJt, )Urp.lh•.Jnr rho-..c genuated
A g:ener.il .. urgeon at Mere). Sl,tc:r-... Our I...Jd) nt \ u.:to~ dlld Mtll~rd
hllmore Ho\pHah. he ~a' pl~nt ... urgc=on fur Bethlr:hem teel. Electm
b~ each of the &lt;iitrah!~tc:' alont"
RdraL·tone-,. Buffalo Bralebeam. Buffalo Hammer Mtll and tht- Penn
He ~toatd that m f uJUre ' lUd le'. hr:
Central Ra1lroad He -.ened on 1he board ol Trcxatre College and v.a ' a
~ould hle 10 e-,.amme hc!h3' 10r
memher of man) profe.....,tonal medt~o.·al . .ocJetlt'
o'e r a longer ume penod to chalSunl\or.. mclude h1' \.\lfe. tna. a daughter . Su...an Jaf'\J) . .t -,on.
lenge the ··,.....,ue ot durabll1t~ ··
Ruben. ofPonland ~1 a1nr:: a '"teT. Ruth Morn,nf Wlllt 3m~' 1lle and fi\e
The n~gatJ\e me"age rna~ . . ,m.
grandt.:h1ldren
pi~ ~ear off or~ forgollc:n If 11 ''
not rt"peated. he \:Jtd

1995 Commencement Schedule
. .

School of Health Related Professions
School of Nursing
School of Information and Library Studies
School of Engineerina and Applied Science
School of Law
School of Pharmacy
School of Architecture and P lanning
School of Management
Graduate School of Education

T

HE NEW YORK S1a1e
Center for Hazardou s
Waste Management_ head quartered at UB. IS sed.tng full proposals for iiS 1995 research-and-development program
and preliminary proposals for a
new remediation -technology pilOtscale demonstration program.
Sine&lt; it• establishment '" 1987
by the New Yorl. State legtslature.
the center has awarded 58 research
contracts to&lt;ahng lliOf'&lt; than ~ mil bon m state funds Tllc center IS aJso
supported by funds from tnduslr)
and panic1pa.t1ng um\e~1ues
The center al" ay~ has sought
research-and-de' elopmenl pl'OJX)\·
ah that ffiOYC \peCifiC. promiSing
methods or technolog1eo, toward
appltcauon Bul now. for the first
ume . the cente r aho " seekmg
prel1m1nary
propo!.ah
for
remedaatJ on-technolog) ptlot-~ale
demon~trallon' at )Jtes contaminated~ llh hazardous wastes or sub-

Charles J. Tanner, surgeon

KENNETH LORD

2p.m .
Phi Beta Kappa Induction Ceremony
3 :30p.m
Graduate School
Facuttv of Arts and Letters
Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
Faculty of Social Sciences
5pm.
University Honors Convocation

ltJ ELLEJI -.DUUII
News Bureau Staff

OBITUARIES

)

number of article~-lncludlng
newspapers. aluminum cans and

o&lt;her households on average placed
at most three more items m their
recycling bins.
'"The negative message talks
more about 1he consequences of
failure, and may have more of a
veiled social effect than a posi·
ti vely framed me sage. which doe&gt;
not.'' Lord said. adding that the
pe.-.onal contact plays on the fear
of social disapproval.
He di sco\'ered that a dichotomy
exists between what affects recycling behavior and what affects
attitudes toward recycling.

Hazardous Waste Center seeks
remediation project proposals

Alumni Arena

the Bulge.
Tramont. a hfe member of the Amencan Med ical
Association a~ the American Academ) of Famil)
Pracuce. v..a!t past president of the ene Count) Chapter of the Ne~ York
State Academy of Family Practice . \:ie was a member of the Medical
Society of the State of New York and ~ Baccelli Medical Club.
Survt\'ors include hi wife. Mary Dell: three daughters. Nanette and
Teresa of Clarence and Lynene Lorenzen ofMiam1: two sons. Andrew V.
Jr. of Miami and James of Clarence: four sisters. Rose Cavaretta of
Amhersl. Josephine Gerace. Lucille Chiannonte and Rita Gilliam; a
brother. J. Jerry of S1. Louis and eight grandchildren.

Justin R. Van Ness, student
Service• were held J..._ 19 for Justin R. Van Ness. 25. of West Falls.
a UB junior majoring in archeolog) who died Jan. 14 in a kayaking
accident in Cazenovia Creek.

Van Ness had returned from an an:heology dtg tn Greece

10

August

after spending six months o n the sue He had traveled to lnd1 a. ThaJiand.

'
Slee Concert Hall
Center for the Arts. Mainstaae
Slee Concert Hall

Nepal. England. Scotland and hal)
Van Ne s~ taught founh grade r~lig1ous educ3tion at St. George's
Roman Catholic Church in West Falls and ~a~ a vol unteer at the Cit}
Mission in Buffalo.
He is survived by his parents. Trevor R. and Glona Van Ness of West
Falls: two sisters. Treva Van Ness of Holland and Taylor Van Ness of
We st Falls and hb grandmother. Helen KusmierczyL of Harrisburg. Pa.

�H 0 N 0 R S
PUBUC SAFETY
IIONOitS FOit OffliCIItl:

Plslalities
Prof is advocate
for m.an causes
John Mohawk takes an active role In Issues that
affect Native Americana
11J STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

0

VER THE PAST 25

years. if the cause

has involved Nati\·e
Am eri cans or the
campaign has been
one 10 Protect the environment or
relieve an oppressed culture. more
likely than not UB's l ohn Mohawk
had a hand in it.
Mohawk. a Seneca lnd1an and
assistant professor of American
Studies. has been an outspoken rep·
resentative of Native American
interests in h i~ wriungs through
the media and at the grass roots . An
educalor. author. advocate. histo·
rian and tribal leader. Mohaw k ha ~
worn many hats- r:uher. head*
dresses--during hi s career
Mohawk is editor of DaybreaA. .
an award-winning Nauve Ame n can journal. and former eduor of
AkwasaneNoles . the natio n's larg est American Indian periodical. He
has authored countle ss antcle~ and
several booh. and has lectured
extens ive! )·. Mohawk also advises
the Grand Council of the lroqu01o;;;
Confederacy. the governing bod)
o f the Seneca Nation .
In 1992. he coauth ored Exiled
m tlzt- Land of rhe Free : Democran·. Indian Nations and the U.S.
Co~stilution with UB Professor
Oren Lyon s. Thi s book offe r~ "an
authentic version o f Indian hi story ." according to Mohawk. b)
examining historical relatio ns between the U.S. government and the
Indian Nations o n issues such as
sovereignty and spiritual freedom .
Last December. Mohawk wa~ a
featu red tribal leader in the three pan TBS broadcas t. "The NatJ\'e
Americans."
"Seven or eight of us gathered
MEDICINE

I'IIUmENI-EUCl OF
PEDIAIIIIC SOCIETY:

F ••.....,. Stapleton. A.
Conger Goodyear professor
and chair of the Department
of Pediatrics in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. has

l
STAPLETON

~:!~tdent-elect of
the American Society
of Pediatric

Nephrology.
Stapleton,

pediatriclan-

in&lt;hiel at The Children's
Hosp~al olBullato. will assume the presidency in May.
A fellow of the American
Academy of Pediatrics, Stapleton was chair of the SubBoard of Nephrology of the
American Board of Pediatrics
in 1993. He. iS a member of
!be American Pediatric Soc~
ety and a diplomate of the
American Board of Medical
Examiners. ·

,

at the Mohawk Valley ProJect rn
Canajoharie fo r about four hours
of filming for it." explai ned
Mohawk. Their segment centered
around boarding schools for Indians. al though. Mohawl says. a wide
variety of topics was discussed . ''It
was interesting that we were there
because it was near Fonda. where
Jane Fonda's {wife ofTBS owner
Ted Turner ) great. great grandfa·
ther was a \'Cry large landowner."
Mohawk believe he owes hi s 9
dtstmguished career of advocacy ~
o n behalf of at1ve American s to i:J
o ne man : Christopher Columbus.
In 1992. the U.S. observed the
SOOth a nn ive~ary of Columbus' 0
dn.covery of the ··new world." ~ ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
American lnd• an s. however. oblenn o n
to John Mohawk,
brought h•m to numerou\ \lie\ of
~rved a penod of moummg. Indi "hat he i..·on - educator, auclas he ~ between Amencan and Inans mea~ure th e ume a fter
'llJer' "a e n - thor, advocate,
dian c ultures. including the InCI ('olurnbus· am\ al a" a rime of culde nt at W o undc:d Knee. South
''~
among historian and
t~ral genoc1de. Mohawl au thored
10d1genOU'i tribal leader, In
Dakota.
a paper called "Looking for Co·
people
who his Clemens
During the 1980s. Mohav. I.
lumbus" that o ffer~ a philosoph!·
need capaCII) Hall office.
turned his effons to developmg an
ca l twist on the conventio nal view
burldrng and
IO!!.titutional infrastructure for In of Columbo~. He argues that. 1n
communll) economic de\ elopdian!\ M oha w ~ \t ill preMde!!. O\ er
light of Am erica·~ cla1m to be the
mcnt ·· Mohawk urge~ aneconom1c
the board~ of 1wo o rgamzallons he
world's melting pot. 11 1~ di.!!IOdl\ er... lfi catJon of sl1ll s and !alent'
helped found 10 promote 1ndJg·
genuous to ho nor Columbo". ""ho
among
Nat1\e Amen cans. and
enous
people"
·
ng
ht
.\
The
St'\'t'nth
so ught to ann1hllate the lnd1 an
doesn't belle' e the c urrent rage of
Genna twn f lllld. b&lt;.~sed 1n Cahpeople to make room fort he ··~upe·
ca!t mo gammg on Ind ian lands will
fomla. and the lndwn Lau Ren or" European cu lture
be an economic panacea.
sourceCenter m Washmgto n. D.C .
Although a graduate student and
He ha~ a l ~o 1.1. 0rked tirelessly 10
oha .... \.. I' also a foundtng
Ph.D. cand1date at UB from 1970repamt the pubhc perception of
member of the Amencan In 74.
Mo hawk ne\'er managed to
lndmn!oo. Also. Mohaw l has condian Ant1 ·De famat1 on Co unc1l.
squee1..e a d1ssertauon mto his busy
tnbuted 10 efforts by the State Board
wh1ch soug ht to oppose instances
schedule In 1992. he received an
of Regents to revJsecumculartreatof "mstltuuo na hzed racism" tohonoTal) doctorate from his alma
ment of Nati\e Amencan hi "ilOf)
Y.ard" Indi a n!&lt;&gt;. from the ce lebramater. Han wick College in Oneonta
m pubhc ~choo l s
ti On of the SOOth a nn~ versaf) of
College officials praised Mohawl.
Columbu••: arrl\ al to the Atl a nta
Today. Moha Y.k ·~ most confor
"s1gmficantl y enhancing awarece rned w1th the state of contempoBra ve~· "wmahawk c hop."
ness of the Nati,·e American experirat)' In dian life. Nauve Amencan~
"In Lhe ~v enue~. I was pretly
ence within. and contributions to. the
are dispropon mnatel ) unempl oyed
active on the poh tlca l scene wnh
historical record of American sociand undered ucated. according to
the Six- Nauon Confed eracy:· reety
Mohawk. so he has wmed his atcall~ Mohawl. "'hose activt~m

~

M

E-mail messages add to psychology class interaction
By USA WILEY
News Bureau Staff

E

LECTRONIC MAIL IS N'T JUST for amu&lt;ement o r busine ss interactions. A UB profess,pr has found a way to use it
as an educatio nal tool 10 sustain di scussion and reduce
alie nation in a 200-studentlecwre course .
John Meacham. UB professor o f psychology. added an E-mail
requirement to hi s developmental p~y chology course. He found that
by exchanging E-mail messages. a~ well a!l anendi ng class lectures.
students rece1ved both the benefit of the lec ture format and the
oppon uni1y for di scuss iOn of courl\e muten.al fo und in smaller
classe ~.

The students in the Psychology 22] cour»e Meac ham taught la~ t
fall were required to send one E-mail me-.sage by the ninth weel of
class . At the end of the se me ster. they had transmitted a to tal of 1.781
messages, or an average eight messages each .
"The flow of commu nicati on is similar to what normall y take s.
place in a classroom discuss ion." Meac ham wrote in a r~ cent l y
published anicle in the Journal of Gtn~ral £duca1ion .
To establish the electronic interact ion. Meach am crea ted an Email di sc ussion list (LISTSERV ) for the course . It distributed all
me ssages si multaneou sly to every s ubscriber. Any student could
reply to the first me ssage and rep li es we re di tr ibuted to all o f the
s ub scribers.

As the li st ow ner. Meacham decided not to control the public
d1scus"ion list. hopmg his limited presence wou ld encourage students to re&lt;pond more ope nly . 11le list helped meet the course ' s
mulu c ulturdJ goals. such as understanding oneself and others beyond stereotypes and gaming familiarity with alternative viewpoints
on 1ss ues ra1~ed in the course. including immigration policies. sex
educati on. binh contro l. marriage. divo rce. discrimination and tele' 1'10n violence.
He found that the E-mai l responses often were better in organiz.auon. logic and u~e of evidence than oral statements made during
clas~ time . In a few case~. students '-''rote thoughtful essays of 250350 words after reading and renecting on previous me ssages.
Studenh ~o:ud the y felt less self-conscious facing a computer
~o,creen th an wJth scores of eyes staring at them . .. I feel it has helped
me a lot in' o icmg my viewpoints about issues in th is class. h is very
ha rd for me t'J talk in a big class. a~ well as read t.he minds of others
who have the same prob lem. I always leave my classes wishing I had
~1d o;;omething m class. Thi s list not only allowed me to voice
opimons. butlo li sten to other., as well.'' wrote one student on a post·
course evaluatiOn .
Another reponed: .. It gave a personal aspect to a very large class.
It helped me to understand concepts and theories."
Meacham plans to include the E-mai l component when he teaches
the same course again next fall.

(

�_.,..,

Facul
Con,___ to,_.

on well-, dlveralty
Gregory Alan -Williams,
author and actor, will be the
keynote speaker at a well ness and
di versity program sponsored by
the Living Well Center of the
Division of Student Affairs.
The conference, "Making
Positive Changes: The Impact of
Cultural Understanding on
Wellness," will be held from 3·8
p.m. Tuesday. Jan. 31 in the Stu·
dent Union Theatre.
Alan· Williams has received
numerous awards and ci tations
for his heroism du · g the Los
Angeles riots, whe he walked to
the center of a viol t mob to ·
rescue a Ja
merican
tourist. He will speak from 3:304:30 p.m., and h is presentation
will be fo llowed by a half-hour
question ~and-answer session.
The conference will continue
with two concurrent woricshops
on anger management and bu ilding bridges among people of
various cultures. These sessions
are interactive and designed to
help panticipants better under·
stand the challenges and rewards
of diversity. For more infonna·
tion. call645 -2837.

0

Women'• dub plans
wine tasting, su~r
The Wo men'sCiub of the
University at Buffalo wi ll
have its fo unh annual VaJe nt ine's
Day wi ne tasting and hors
d'oeuvres supper Feb. 10 at 7:30
p.m. at the Center for Tomorrow
on the North Campus.
Win es from arou nd the world.
hors d'oeuvres, pate, cheese.
fru it. dessen s and coffee will be
fea tu red.
Kevi n Driscoll. wi ne manager
of the Prem ier Ce nter. will
present and d iscuss the wines for
the seated tasting.
The event.. plan ned by cha1r
Annie Blumenson and co-chair
Barbara Paganelli. is open to
anyone 21 or o lder.
Admi ssion is $25 pe r person
and reservations are necessary.
All proceeds will be used to provide scholarships for UB students.
To make reservations . contact
Annie Blumenson at 634-2902 by
Tuesday. Jan. 31.

0

Nonnan Mohlis chai r
of Oral Diagnostic
Sciences

0

Norman D. Moh l. profes·
sor in the UB School of
Dental Medici ne. has bee n named
chai r of the ne w Depart men t of
Oral Diagnostic Sciences in the
dental school.
The Depan ment of Oral Diag·
nostic Sciences. comprisi ng the
fo nner departments of oral medi~
cine. and stomatology and int e r ~
disciplinary sc ie nces. was created
during a rece nt reorganization of
the school.
A 1956 graduate of the UB
dental school . Mohl also serves as
program direclOr of a National
Institutes of Health-fu nded post·
doctoral research 1.r aining p ro~
gram. "Multidisciplinary
Research in Orofacial Pain and

Sensory-Motor Dysfunctions,"
and as a consulumt to the National Institute of Dental Research, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration and the American
Dental Association.
He is senior editor o f ''A Textbook of Occl usion." used in dental schools throughout the world,
and co-editor of the recently
published "Temporomandibular
Joi nt and Masticatory Muscle
Disorders." He has published
numerous art icles in professional
jo urnals. presented papers and
lectured extensively both nationally and international ly on subjects deal ing with clinical
·
dentistry. dental education and
dental reseanch.
He is a past preside nt of the
Neurosc iences Group of the International AssociatiOn for Dental
Research and of the Association
of University Temporomandibular Disorders-Orofacial Pain
Program . lie was the co-chan
and moder4mr of the First and
Second Educational Conferences
on Temporomandibular Disorde~
and Orofacial Pain.
In addition to his dental degree. Moh l earned master's and
doctoral degrees 1n anatomy from
UB. He served in the U'fi. Navy
Dental Corps. and operated a fulltime private practice in Buffalo
until 1968.

Lacture -rlea - t

on managing pai n

Asthma. the managemem of
acute and chronic pain. and
the re-emergence of tuberculost s
~· ill be featured top1cs at lhe
"Lecture Series on Disease State~
and Therape utics." to be offered
by the Division of Continuing
Education in the UB School of
Pharmacy.
The sess tons. whtch wtll Include a ·'back~to~basics" JeciUre
followed by audie nce participauon. will be held from 6-9:30
p.m . in C-248 Cooke Hall on the
North Camp u ~ . Par11c1pants will
receive three continuing education credits for each session.
The sessions are:
• • Asthma : A 1990s Per ·
spective," Thursday. Feb. 2.
Andrew W . Green. climcal a~sts~
tant professor in the UB School
of Medicine and BiomedicaJ
Sciences. will discuss appropriate
treat ment and therapeu tic options
for successful asthma care.

0

• "The Phannacologic

~1a •

agement of Acute and Chronic
Pa in," Thu rsday, March 2.
Terence Full erto n. UB climcal
a sistant professor of pharmacy.
will discuss the difference be~
twee n acute and c hronic pain
wi th regard to mechanism. clintcal presentation and trea tme nt.
• "Tuberculosis," Thursda).
March 23. David E. Nix. UB
cl inical assistant professor of
phannacy and assistant director
of the Clinical Pharmacokinetics
Laboratory at Mill ard Fillmore
Hospital, will discuss what is
happening with the disease today.
includin g mult i dru g~ re s i sta n t
strai ns.
The cost is S30 per lecture. o r
$85 for all three dates. The fee is
$25 per lecture or $75 for all

.... _..,_...

three for members of the Pharmacists• Association of Western
Ne w York. 1be series is sponsored by Gla.xo, Inc.; Marion
Mem:ll Dow, and The Upjohn
Co. For more information. call
the Office of Conti nui ng Education Office. 645-3931. ext. 247 .

Wai-M..t funds
scholarahlp In
~puter science
UB has been chosen as one
of 135 schools in the counU)' to rece1ve Wai·Mart Stores.
Inc. "Competitive Edge Scholarship" funds. based on the quality
of its tec hnology-related programs. The program was created
to assist students in technology·
related areas. with a larger goaJ of
strengthemng America's techno) .
ogy~intensive industnes. Wa) .
Mart plans to continue the
"Competitive Edge Scholarsh1p"
annually .
UB has recei\•ed a $20.000 gift
that is funding a scholarship for a
freshman studying computer
sc ience. The universuy will com·
pete with other schools each year
to receive additiOnal scholarship
fund&gt; .
UB freshman Ethan Sasiela, a
computer·stit:nce maJor. was
&gt;Clected recipient of the ..:holarshlp because of h1~ mten~ mter ~
est in modem technology. high
academic achievement. leadership skills and a commllmenr to
communuy se n ·1ce O'er fouryean~-. he will rece1ve a total of
$20.(X)() ro cover the co.,1 of tuII!On. boob. and help pa~ for
room and board

0

:11

Veronica: Fast Track
to Information
.tl

ftiN -

......,ll'alUS

on the 1ntemet

n - Clrt be imrnenMiy U88lul ..... when )'OU l&lt;now

wber8 to go tor lnforrnlllion. How!Mir, 1111100 allen you
• l&lt;now wf\111 you WWtl J:U you don'llcnow where ft ..
Enter VeroniCa, a lasti)IIC8d lealln lhal wUI cui gopher sllee worldwide and custom build you a menu based
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Veronica, an acron~nl lor 'Very Easy Rodeni..Qriented
Net-wide Index to Computerized Archives,· is easily invoked 1hrough WtngS. Fnt, type '!fleP
at your system prompt.
I I I
I H&lt; &gt;N IC: Select "Access the
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&lt;

HiGH

\\A)'S

r::J

an

&lt;-It·-=--&gt;

Phannacy museum

-Gemma DeVIflney and Loss PequellO

recognized by national

G /az~er_

Lockwood Library

historic group
The pharmaC\ mu-.~um.
mclud1ng the re('ono;truct•on
of IUm-of-the-cC"ntur) apoth·
ecan 1n the UB School of PharmacY. has been a"arded the 1995
Cenificate of Commendation b~
Lhe American ln~tttut e of the
H1 s to~ of Phaml3C)
The certificate recogn11e~
those who contribute .. ,gmficantl)
to the understanding and de\elopment of pharmaq through hlstonca l proJects or program~ 10
local or regiOnal hi~tOf) . \Vhile 10
past years cenificate~ often "ere
awarded to several individuals or
organ i zation~. the UB pham\aC)
museum i~ the !&lt;&gt;Ole re~o:i p1ent for
1995 .
Ann M . Triggle, l..·ltn~eal
mstruciOr in th~ UB School of
Pharmacy and Lhe director of the
museum and apothecaf). "ill
accept the award in March at the
annual meeti ng of the American
Institute of the Histof) of Phar·
macy. which is being held in
conj unc tion with the American
Pharmacological Associa ti on·"
annual meeting in Orlando.
The phannacy museum wa~
established in 1986 as a way to
commemorate the sc hool's cente nni aJ and ce lebrate the phar~
macy sc hool and Lhe special place
pharmaceutical manufacturi ng
and research ha ve had in Weste rn
Ne w York over the past century .
The a uthentic a pot hecary
reproducti on. funded ent irely by

0a

donallon-. from phannaq ·~hool
alumni. celebr.nes more than a
centul') of L:B pharmaC) gradu·
ale~. a.s "ell a!'&gt; the l'' .'Jagara
Frontier·~ long and 'aried hl')tOI)
a:. a reg.10nal bao,;e of pharmaceu·
tiCal manufactunng It wa" de &gt;igned 10 1993 b) FOII·Aiben &amp;
Assoc1ate ~. a Buffalo architectural fim1. and built by UB de~1gn
and construction staff members
working on pn\ ate contracl.

Summer re-arch
program to be held
fot minority scholars
The Depanment o f Oral
Biology 10 the UB School of
Dental Med1cme IS offering a
"Young Scholan. .. ~ummer program designed to pro,,ide mmor11)' high~school students with
hands-on research experience.
The eight·weeL commuter
program. which IS being funded
with a grant from the National
lnstllutes of Heallh. will take
'place from Ju ly 5 through Aug.

0

:!5 .
Eigh t m mority studenb enterIng their senior year of high
school wi ll be selected to partici·
pa te. a!!l "ill two in·service t each~
ers who are ei ther minori ties or
teach in a predominant ly mi nority
high school.
Selected partic ipants will
receive a weekly stipend o f $250.
Partici pants will conduct re ~
search in one o f the fo llowing

area-. connecU\'C'· Il\SUe phy stol~
og). bactenal molecular geneuc~.
\ tru c ture ~fun cuon relat10nsh1p of
macrom olec ule ~. cellular 3;nd
humoral tmmunolog). bactenal
ph) ~iology and Immunochemistry
Studenh and teachers will
\I. orl close I) " tlh an ex.perienced
UB researcher o n a projecl. and
\I. ill share research eKpenences 1n
V~.ed.ly seminan.. Teachers also
"ill pantc•pate in a course on
trainmg students ~ cellular-molecular biological techniques and
the application of their research
experience 10 the classroom.
The deadline. for applications

" March 22. Appijcauons are
available from high school principals or guidance cou~lors. or
from the UB Departmeut of Oral
Biology at 829-3827 .

�ost shon children are
we !-adjusted and
have o serious social or emotional
problems, despite assumptions by
some physicians and parents, a new
study by researchers at UB and
Children's Hospital of Buffalo has
shown.
The research htts at the hean of the controversy over whether to treat shon ch1ldren
who are not ddiCICnt an naturally occumng
human·growth hormone wuh a synthettc
vers1on of the hormone to make them taller
One rauonale ror treatment m the past has
been to 1mprovt psychOSOClal funcuonmg
"Shon&lt;r-than-normal chtldren =y b&lt;
~eased , and they =y b&lt; treated as tf they are
youngerthan they are, but , despue that , they
are domgpreuy well." sa~d DaVId E. Sandb&lt;rg,
UB asststant p~essor of psychtatry and pediatncs. and lea invesugator on the study
'"Prev10us re ns had led us to beheve
these children ere quue bad off •
The study •s published m the Decemb&lt;r
assue of PaJu:uncs lromcally , u was funded.
m pan. by the Human Growth Foundauon.
a nonprofit group that backs the use of
gro,..,'lh hormones
"'Th1s paper ts a lmle bu of a cauuon
agamst treaung ktds who are not growthhormone deftCient: Sandb&lt;rg noted "Results shown would be a mistake to prescnbe
growth hormone to shan children based on
the assumption Lhat they are cxpenen!..'mg
stgmf1cant hfe-3dJustments problems

The fmdmgs are based on data from ~58
children referred to a ped1at nc endocrme
clime fo revaluauo n because of shoner-thannormal stature Paremscompleted the Child
Bcha\'IOr Chec: ki!SI ' a Slandard W:l) or 3S5eS&lt;i·
mgSt."lCI31 compete no~ .and (htldren ll year!)
of age and older completed a comparable
qucsuonnam~

descnbmg 1h&lt;"mseh es

T

he researchers compared these responses wuh resuhs from normal t:hddren and from chtldren referred for mentalhealth serviCes
Earher studaes had reponed a vanety of
problems among chaldren wnh moderate to
severe shon stature , mcludmg soctahumon
accordmg Lo he1ght rather than age . sugmattzatton because of appearance , poor soc1al
sktBs, soctal ISOlanon, low self-esteem and
poor academ1c achtevement However , these
data were gathered pnmanl) from shon
ch tldren who had conditions such as underactive puunary or a chromosomal anomaly.
whtch can produce features that cou ld cause
adJustment problems
The UB stud)' showed that parents rated
boys somewhat less SOCI31l) competcm and

reponed somcv.:hat more bcha\'JOr prohlems than the no rmal sample butlhe resuhs
dad not reveal maJOr psychosooal problems
In addmon, the shari boys wrre ra1ed as
funcuonmgdasunctlv better than 1hr group

rderred for memal-heahh srrvtces
Bors· raungsof themselves marrored thc1r
parents' evaluauons o n SOC ial actl\'11}. but
they didn't rcpon havmg more beha' lOt
problems than :oecn m the genrral populanon In fan . shon adolesccm boys m the
study rated themselves better ath lrllca\lv
than other boys their age
Shon guls showed hule d1rfcrencc 111 so-

Cial funcuomng . b&lt;havtor problems and selfesteem from g1rls m the general population
mdicatmg they adapt better to the1r short·

ness than boys. th&lt; study showed The g•rls
also reponed bemg beuer at athleucs than
the companson group
Sandberg sa1d the results are pen ment
and relevant 10 3 Wide populatiOn or ShOrt
chtldren because the sample was large . nonvolunteer and ethmcally and SOC!oeconomtcally diverse. "lthmk these findings mdiCatr
wt. should b&lt; treating growth failure, not shon
stature." Sandberg said. "It would seem that. by
and large, these kids are fairly well-adjusted.·
Rtsearchers in involved in this study. m
addition to Sandb&lt;rg, were Amy E Brook
and Susana Campos, both from UB.

--.----.-

...

IN SOCIAL SKILLS, SELF-ESTEEM

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ConllnuMI on 119 8

Innovator
In Education

from Volcano

Volcanologists see
dangerous phase
for Popocatepet~

1o

Jacobsonrecogn~ed

2

for work in
educational
reform.
'-

lnfomudlon

The Art
of Barbie

.TechnoloCY
February fair to
focus on US's
technological
future.

UB artists help
define Barbie in
new book.

January 19, 1995 Volume 26. No. 13

a e
IIJSTI:VECOX

Reporter Staff

T

WO UB STUDENTS who arrived in Kobe, Japan only last Thursday have
reported to their families that they are safe. although shaken. after that city was
devastated by an earthquake early Tuesday.
Lisa M. Dalfonso, a 26-year-old UB law student, and Sakura Moriya. 21year-old junior, were among a delegation of American students who bad begun
classes at Konan University in Kobe on! y Monday. The students were to study Japanese
language and culture at the university this semester. However, some reports indicate that
damage to Konan University was extensive.
The predawn quake, which was measured at a preliminary magnitude of 7 .2,
devastated Kobe, an inland Japanese city of 1.4 million people. By Wednesday morning,
She described Lisa as unharmed.
but nearl)' hysterical. "She just
said there are dead bodies all
around her. She had to climb over
bodies to get to the phone. The

including one American. More

from East Setauket on Long Is·
land, is an An History major. Ac·

than 6,000 were injured and many

cording to Williams, her parents

more were still missing. Japanese
scientists classify the quake as one

had heard from their daughter and
she was reponed Iy fine.

of the worst this century.
AccOrding to Joseph Williams,
director of international studeOl and
scholar services, UB initiated an
exchange program with Konan in
1993. The students in the program
are housed with Japanese families

Though travel and communi·
cation may be difficult now, the
students are aware of the presence

home she was staying in didn't

of a U.S. consulate in Osaka. about
30 miles from Kobe. according to
Williams.

Although people have been able
to call out of the affected area of

at least 2,800 were known dead.

in Kobe near the university.
Moriya. a Japanese·American

Laura Dalfonso. Lisa's sister.
said she spoke to her sister around
2 a .m EST o n Tuesday morning.

come down. butshecalled it ' preny

mess-y .... Laura said.

southern Japan. it has been impossible to call into the region.
Political Science Professor
Claude Welch. Dalfonso's faculty

advisor. said she is in her third year
of a joint J .DJPhD program in law
andpoli&amp;ol""""""'- -~

cally planned ro study labor Jaw
mauers. including equal opponu·
nity programs. in Japan.

ndrea Dargush. assistantdi·

A

rector for research and edu·
cation at US's National

Center for Eanhquake Engineer·
ing Research. ellplained that Ja.
pan,like California. rests vinually
atop the edge of one of the eanh · s
surface plates. That makes eanh·

quakes more common there.
"The amount of damage caused
by this quake could be great be'·
cause the quake itself was rather
shallow," said Dargush. "Eanh·
quakes that are not from very deep
under the surface can cause more

San Francisco during the 1989
World Series. 11 still would pale in
. .,aa.J , a , . . _
suuckTol")'o in 1923. That quake,.
which killed more than I 00.000
people, was about 25 tim more
powerful.
The Japanese govemme"' has

been taking proactive steps 10 improve building construction standards. to make buildings more

resistant

10

earthquakes. said

Dargush. ln fact. the Japanese gov·
emment supports ongoing research

here at UB into state-of·tbe-art
means to make buildings more
eanhquake resistant.
However. Dargush said the l;&gt;rge

number of wood frame structures
in the city of Kobe, which could
weather the quake itself well. are a •

intense shaking on the surface ...

significant fire hazard in a quake of

If the eanhquake was approxi·
mately magnitude seven. as pre·
liminary reports indicate.j&gt;argush
says that would make ti compa·
rable to the earthquake that ·truck

thi size.
.--/
Reports from Japan indicate that
many fires were still burning out of
control more than a day after the
eanhquake.

New football coach puts
recruiting high on the agenda

restaned its foot·
ball program and
Cirbus made the
team as an offensive lineman. Although be doesn ' t

IIJSTI:VECOX

claim 10 have been
a star linema.n.

Reporter Staff

C

raig Cirbus had earned
his UB bachelor's de·
grce in civil engineering
in 1980. A promising fu·
lure as an engineer lay ahead of
him. but he was troubled by a sense
that something just wasn't right.
His hean was not in his down·

town engineering office. He had a
monkey on his back: an addiction
that had a firm gri p on Cirbus and
would not let go. He tried despcr·
alely to keep it under control. but
the need was overwhelming. Fi·

nally. it proved too great for him to

tor," says Cirbus of the

resist. He knew he could no longer
serve two masters. so he quit his

legendJry Paterno. " and

job, packed hi s belongings and left.
Craig Cirbuscould not live with·
out football.
That's why Cirbus is hack home
today. The new head coach of the
UB Bulls football squad has spent
the last 12 years learning the col·
lege football game under the guid·
ance of one of the best in the
business: Peno S tate's JoePatemo.
"I frequently call him my men·

Cirbus called those

twoyears·'anover·
whelmingly posi·
live experience that
generated a high

he really is. Both as a
football coach and as a
leader. He is just a great
human being." And. just

CRAIG CIRBUS

having been associated
withPatemoforsomany
years opens many doors forCirbu s.
panicufariy when recruiting. he
says.
A Cheektowaga native. Cirbus
had a standout high school football
career as a Light end and defensive

lineman forSt.Joseph 's Collegiate .

institute in Ke.nmore. But when he
arrived at UB to pursue his engi·
neering degree in the fall of 1975.
UB didn ' r even have a football
program. In his junior year. UB

motivation in me to
stay involved in
football ."
Cirbus went to work for Hatch
Associates. a Buffalo engineering
firm. after college. but served as
an assistant coach at Cheektowaga
High School in his spare time.
Continued on page 8

�_..,_

2
New Cluilcellor
tospellkJ... 27
SUNY Chancello&lt; Thomas Bartlett
will address the w.nter meeting of
the SUNY-wide Faculty Senate at
1:30 p .m. Friday, Jan. 27. The address w.ll be carried live on the
SUNY Satellite
networl&lt; and can
be seen in 120
Clemens Hall on
the North Campus
and '" the first floor
Emeritus Center
Lounge in
Goodyear Hall &lt;in
the South Campus.
This is the forst opportunity for UB
faculty and stall to see and hear the

newc~aellor.

As p
f his presentation, the
chancel will answer questions
from-f
senators. Following his
remarks, the SUNY Senate will
present a panel afl9 discussion on
Distance Learning from 2:30-4:30
p.m . The specific schedule may be
obtained in the Faculty and Profession Stall Senate ollice, 543 Capen
Hall.

Wagner is senior
vice president

R

OBERT

J. _WAGNER,

who has

served as senior vice president for

university services at UB since 1991,
has been named senior vice presidenl by
President William R. Greiner.
While Wagner will retain full leadership
responsibility for the Division of University
Sc.v~. '"• aew Wl&amp; ftl\ec\s \be. broedu

nature of his role as the university's chief
budget and operations officer. according ro
Greiner.
"Over the pasl two years ... his role has
evolved beyond his responsibility for the
Division of University Services to encompass a wide range of leadership functions in
general university operation. Bob provides
indispensable counsel. suppon and leadership for Aaron Bloch. for me and for the
senior officers in general ... Greiner said.
"Many of you. I know share my admira-

tion for Bob' s exceptional abilities. my ap~
predation for his exceptional service and my
great respect for his dedication to the university."

Lordi to succeed
Russo at CUBRC

A

NTHONY RUSSO. executive director of the Calspan-University at
Buffalo Research Center (CU BRC)
since 1990 and an employee of the Calspan
Corporation since 1952, has announced he
will retire Feb. 28. During Russo's tenure.
CUBRC sales have increased at an average
annual rate of nearly 20 percent and CUBRC
was awarded the largest single project in its
history, a SIO million contract for construction of a hypersonic test facility in Buffalo.
His successor as executive director will be
John Lordi, who has held a number of technical and management positions over his 30year tenure at Calspan. most recently as
manager of a depanment perfonning research
in hypersonics, rocket and gas-turbine propulsion, chemical defense. ballistic mlssile defense and environmental sciences. He has
worked closely with CUBRC . He holds B.S.
and M.S. degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from UB.

_..., ....
...
Computerized models show dangerous
phase for volcano,UB geologists warn
a, IUBI--.wll

thai magma is moving up into the volclno."
He noted that while anyone of these signs
by themselves is not a sufficient cause for
OLCANOLOGISTS AT UB,
alann, together they indicate that the volwho have been studying
cano is in a very dangerous phase.
Popocatepetl, a towering volIf the conduit (feeding system that leads
cano just 40 kilometers from
to the surface) of the volcano fills up with ·
Mexico City, said that its erupmagma. Sheridan explained, it could cause a
tion Dec. 21 is a sign that it is entering a
lateral bulge that could lead to wuctural
dangerous phase. ''The chamber is loaded."
collapse of the cone. Such e\·ents have ocis how Michael Sheridan, volcanologist and
curred th= times in Popoc:atapetl's history,
chair of the UB Oepanment of Geology.
the
last happening several thousand yean ago.
describes the volcano's status.
"Using our models. we can see where the
Sheridan and colleague Hugo Delgado.
movemeot of various types of materials,
associate researcher at the Geophysical Inranging from bot. pyroclastic nows to cold
stitute at the National University of Mexico
mudflows will be focused." said Sheridan.
in Mexico City, bave jointly developed the
Developed by digitizing paper maps of
ftrst three~mensional computerized mod the
area, the computerized simulations show
els ofPopocatepell that simulate the reach of
the volcano and the surrounding area. with
potential eruptive phenomena.
towns. villages and roads superimposed on it
One of the largest volcanoes in the world.
Using computerized simulation models.
it ' also is the founh highest mountain in
the researchers can estimate how fast and
Nonh America, a feature that adds to its
how far Oows from an eruption would travel.
catastrophic potential. Sheridan said that this
They feed that data into computer models,
latest eruption, which has blown ash into the
which in tum calculate the probability that
city of Puebla. (population: 2,000,000) and
sliding material wiU destroy towns and roads.
nearby villages, bears similarity to small ash
Because it is essentially a tqpographicaJ
explosions that shonly preceded the catamap that has been digitized. the three-di strophic Mount St Helens eruption in 1980.
mensional simuJation also shows the precise
"Ash came out of Mount SL Helens in
contours of the land in relief. The image can
April 1980, just .a month before it finally
be manipulated in any direction in real-time
blew," said Sheridan. 'This is just a font puff,"
so that eruptions on any side are visi'b le in
be predicted of Popocateped. "It means thai
three dimensions. "Tbe model shows you
other pn!jllOIIitory signs thai have been observed. sJch as increases in seismic activity and the same views you would sec if you were
in the emission ofgases from the volcano imply - Oying over the volcano." said Sheridan.
News Bureau Staff

"With alargeo«aae eruption. almost all the
citiesoothe.......,areindanger," said Delgado.
While there have been ~reportS yet of
damage from the latest Popocatepetl eruption. the scientists noted that even fallen ash
can be dangerous .~lf a layer of ash spreads
through towns and villages. and then there is
a heavy rainfall, there can be mudOows and
Ooods." said Delgado, who noted that more
fatalities are due to secoOdary effects like
mudOows than to erupti.ons themselves.
The simulations are panicularly helpful
in effectively communocating risk to poblic
officials_ "Officials can understand what they
see on the screen with a very simple explanation," said Sheridan. "They can understand
the value of using this animatioo to uplain
to villagen what could happen during an
eruption, and what they would need to do to
save themselves." He added that the · mplicityofthe animation oven:omes the diffiCulty
of communicating public-safety programs to
people living in small towns near the volcano.
some of whom may 1101 be able to read.
This marlcs the first time that the computer
simulation models wiU be put to use forpublicsafelyplanning. Delgado will use results ofthe
simulations in his position as an advisor to the
SecretariadeGovemacion.adepanmentofthe
Mexican government thai functions like the
Oepanment of lnlerior, and which is responsible for issues like monitoring volcanoes and
proposing evacuation plans. The simulallon&gt;
were developed under initial funding from the
National Science Foundation.

Supporting two-parent families, not orphanages;
~~ .~SI'I~elfare reforin, social work researcher says
News Bureau Staff

E

NCOURAGING and supponing
two-parent families and panicipation in family and community life
are key factors in achieving mean ingful welfare reform. a UB social work
researcher and educator says.
A much-talked-about proposal to revive
orphanages "would result in the wholesale
warehousing of black children," si nce a
higherproponionof African-Americanchil dren. compared to other groups, are involved
in the present foster-care system, says
Kathleen Kost, UB assistanl professor of
social work. '"This is not a proposal that
fosters responsibility in family formation. "
Kost says the welfare-reform plan proposed by congressional Republicans is a
rehash of many old ideas. some dating from
the early 1800s when assist.ance was provided to the poor through chariti es.
.. It's not known from where the funds
would come to plug 'holes in the safety net '
should the number of mandated services for
the poor be cut-:'" she points out.

She .also notes that ot seems as if the
Repubhcan proposal os attempting to address issues of morality more than poveny.
For mstance. she says. u appears the proposal to deny Aod to Famohes woth Oepen-

before age 19 is more likely to be poorthan
one who· delays childbearing until she is
older and married," say Kost.
Yet, while more than 40 percent of femalo-headed families have incomes helm•
the poveny level.less than one-third of their

"There is virtually no
disagreement on all
sides-including welfare
recipients-that there
must be a better system. "

eluding AFOC. she says. Funhennore. ~con·
trary to what the Republicans would have u;
believe. the circumstances for children did
not improve during the Reagan and Bush
eras." sbe adds. The percentage of children
under the age of 19 who lived below the
poveny level jumped to 20.7 percent in 1990
from 16.4 percent in 1979, says Kost noting
that many states and counties have had to
reduce prevention services to children due to
the loss of federal funding.
. ' There is vinuallyyo disagreement on all
sodes-mcludong w¢'1fare recipients-dial
there must be a better system." she says.
-·sur what we need nre programs that encourage and suppon two-parent families.
and as ist poor mer&gt;-not just poor femalehousehold heads-{o..participate in the life
of their family and corTipluoity."

incomes comes from social programs. in·

L\THLE£11 KOST

--------------dent Children (AFIX}-&lt;:urrently an entotlement based on the right of citizenshiptsbasedonthemoralbehaviorofthemother.
"Bearing a child out of wedlock is not
illegal. although it is generally accepted that
a woman who is unmarried and has a child

Report urges emphasis on environmental business

11J EUEN GOI.DIIAUM

News Bureau Stall

repon issued Dec. 13 by graduate
st udents in an urban-planning
class in the UB School of Architecture and Planning urges New
York State to place more emphasis on developing its profitable environmental-business sector as a way to boost economic developme01 , while promot ing
environmental protection. The report recommends that joint public and private-sector initiatives should aim at:
• Adopting a more market-based ap-

A

·

proach to envrronmentallegis~ation to unite

economic an~ envaronmental mterests.

• Expandong expon capabilities for this
, .
.
1
r.om to ;:;_ opong a busoness-assiStance pro1
g .
P companoes select pollution-preven.uon techn~log•es that best suit their
bu sonessesandomprovetheircompet'ti
1
• Establish·
p
.
veness.
11
Producfo Pr anga ~~lion Prevention and
to cond~c~~e:ess n ancement lnstit.ute
.
. arch and act as an extensoon
serv1ce to buSmesses.
The students 0 tl' ed th . fi .
Production-Proce u ;{;,h
eor ondongs on
s;s
ancement A ew

sec~o~

Strategy for Economic Development and
EnvironmentaJ Proreclion in New York
State" in a presentation at Baird Research
Park in Amherst.
The project. conducted for UB's ew
YorkStateCenterforHazardousWasteManagement was done for a class taught by
'
former Stlte Sen. John Sheffer, now UB
senior fellow in policy studies, and Ernest
S!emberg,associateprofessorofurbanplannong. The repon says New York State and
.
WNYarehometoacomparatovelylarge number of small, high-tech businesses engaged in
environmental pro~·ection.

�-... .---.-:u

3

.~.6 million gift funds Distinguished Honors Scholarships
President William IL Greiner said " UB is

T

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo has
received a cash gift of $1.6 million from an anonymous donor

specifiCally 10 provide20 students
in each of the freshman classes
entering the university in Fall 1995 and Fall
1996 with scholarships ro cover tuition and
all expenses for each of their four undergraduate yean at UB.
U is the largest cash gift ever received by
UB or any other college or univenoity in the
SUNY system in which the funds are immediately available for use.
The students will be designated Distinguished Honors Scholars. The gift will allow
them rocompletean undergraduate degree at
virtually no cost 10 themselves and wilhou(
the ne¢ 10 borrow funds .
The univenoity simultaneously is laun&lt;:hing a new initiative to actively recruit students from among the brightest high-school
seniors in the country, students olthe caliber
of National Merit scholars.

honored and delighted to receive such a
magnanimous gift in support of excellence
among our undergraduate students. The new
scholarships will make UB all the more
allniC!ive 10 the best and most competitive
students across the nation and help make a
significant difference in their lives."
Greiner said the scholarships fit well with
the major emphasis that UB is giving undergraduate education.
''We are a very good university; we are
nationally recognized for the high quality of
our graduate and professional programs; we
are often cited as a leader in innovative
public-service initiatives. And we think that
all of those elements together make for a

rich. exciting. varied environment forundergraduate education-exacUy the kind of setting in which the most talented tudents
thrive."
The recruitment of the most highly qualified students as Distinguished Honors Scholars will further strengthen the universi ty as a
whole, according to Greiner.

"Outstanding students challenge their
teachers 10 provide outstanding in tructi.o n.
They challenge their fellow students 10
achieve even more. Uld they become leaders
among our alumni and community frieods.
When you think of it that way, this generou
gift doesn't just promole one-time investments in bright students-it also supports
lasting excellence in all facets of UB 's endeavors."
Provost Aaron N. Bloch, whoanoounced
the gift at a press conference Jan. 4, said the
scholarships initially will be adntinistered
through the University Honors Program. "'Our
honors program already competes academically with the best honors programs in the
country," he added 11tis very generous gifi
will ertable it to compete financially as well."
Nicolas D. Goodman, vice provost for
undergraduate education. said, '1be Di.stinguished Honors Scholars will contribute to
academic excellence at UB. Their enrol lment_ in tum. will help the university auract
other highly qualified students." Their selection, he added. will take into account both

merit and financial .-!. A special effort will
be IMde lO rteruit students with signifi&lt;:lnl
financial need. Goodman saidthescbollrsllips
will cover tuition. fees, boob. pertoDOI expenoes and lnlvel between ochool and home..
In lddition 10 the sd&gt;ollrsbip, the Oistingui bed Honors Scholan will receive the
benefits provided 10 other students in the
University Honors Prop-am. Faculty members serve as menron for the prognm's
student,s. \Vho participate in special courses.
About one-fifth of the students in the University Honors Prognm successfully pursue
two or more majors. often in widely divergent fields, and many assumeimportanlleldership positions on campos.
Kevin Du.rt.in. assistant vice president foc
student services and director of admissions.
said the UB Admissions Office is planning a
comprehensive ouueach program 10 promole the Distinguished Hor&gt;&lt;n Scholarships.
UB faculty and staff, as well as distinguished
alumni of the university, will participate in
the recruitment effort. personally contacting
prospective students.

UB receives $1 million
grant from Markey Trust
8y .-D NIIDIItCI

Aepo&lt;1er Contributor

T

HE UB CENTER for MicJ&gt;bial

Pathogenesis has received a $1 ntillion grant from the Lucille P .
Maric.ey O.aritable Trust to expand
its research efforts 10 better understand and
treat infectious diseases. UniversityoCfu::i.ah
said the funds from one of the nation 's leading grant-giving organizations for fundamental biological and medical research will
allow this highly successful UB research
group to attract new investigators.
They also anticipate that the center, which
has studied such problems as middle-ear
infect.ions. pneumonia~ tuberculosis and
schistosomiasis. will expand its focus to
include molecular parasitology studies of
malaria. leishmaniasis and toxoplasmosis.
Announcing the grant yesterday at a press
conference. President William R. Greiner noted
that the Center for Microbial Pathogenesis is
among the best and most promising of several
highly successru multidisciplinary centers in
the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences. 'This imponant award indicates
the Markey Trust's confidence in. and suppcm for, UB' s work in crucial areas of biomedical research."Greineradded. ull will be
the critical ingredient that supports major
progress in the study of infectious disease."
He noted, "UB's medical school has already achieved national recognition for its
blend of c linical ln!ining and research. We
are comnliued to accomplishing even more
through the magnanimity of private foundations like the Markey Trust."
John P. Naughton. UB vice president for
clinical affairs and dean of the medical school.
said that in support of the award, the university will provide 30.000 square feet of laboratory and office space for the Center for
Microbial Pathogenesis in its new $54 mil lion state-of-the-art medical-research building, scheduled to open this spring on the
South C.:mpus. The school also is committed to purchasing new equipment and addi tional funding for new and existi~g
researchers, he added.
'The Maric.ey Trust's award will play a
crucial role in Ihe universi ty•s ability to seek
matching funds for infectious-diseases ·re' search from otherprivatennd public foundations and agencies." he said_Naughton added
that the grant also "will serve to strengthen
the preparation of graduate students and postdoctoral fellows."

Lawrence P. Castellani. chai r of the Board
ofTrusteesofthe Univenoity at Buffalo Foundation, Inc., noted that this is the third major
gift that UB has received dunng the past year
from a national foundation supporting medi cal and scientific research. 'These... gifts go
a long way in assisting the University at
Buffalo. and rdlect the

~

the

univ~ity is making in garnering the kind of
pri vate support that is essential to a major
public·research universi!y. They advance
UB. as well as Western New York."
John Hay. professor and chair of the UB
Microbiology Department and a principal investigator for the award, expressed the gmtiIUde of the centers researchers for this very
generous award. ' This award will allow a
marked expansion of the center's imponant
disease investigations." he explained. "II also
will gi••e a substantial boost to the national and
international reputation oTthecenter and UB.·•
According to Bruce A. Holm. associate
dean for research and a principal investigator for the award. the Center for Microbial
Pathogenesi s developed from a collaboration initiated in 1981 by three scientists in
different departments in the medical school.
Their collaborative efforts have since grown
in size and importance: The center now includes 15 senior investigalors, as well as
support staff. and input from five departments.
Philip T. LoVerde, professor and associ ate chair of the Department of Microbiology
and a principal investigator for the award.
pointed out that the center's future focus will
be significantly broadened as a result of the
trust's generosity. ''The center will begin
work on other important infectious--disease
problems. such as malaria. leishmaniasis and
toxoplasmosi s. II also will help aurae! additional medical scientists of the highest caliber to come to Buffalo." said LoVerde.
The Lucille P. Markey Charitable Truot
was founded in 1983 with a bequest from the
estate of Lucille P. Markey. owner of Calumet Farm. who instructed that funds were to
be used ··only for the purpose of supporting
and encouraging basic medical research .''
"The Markey Charitable Trust is pleased to
be able to provide support for the investigative.
program at UB," said Robert J. Glaser, the
trust" s director for medical science. '1be quality of the investigators augurs well for a&lt;h•ancing our knowledge of the causation of disease
entities with great signifx:ance_ porticular1y in
the developing world."

Rll..a

Nicolas Goodman. vice prO'oiOSI for undergraduate
education, foreground, was speal&lt;ef aJ Fcr:esl Lawn
Jan. 6 as llliversily marked 195th amillersary ol
birthday of its filS! chancellor, Millard Filmore.

Budget request presented
BJ CHRISnNE VIDAL

Aeponer Edolor

T

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo is
seeking .. a very modesf" increase of
$762.700 to bring its total budget to
S221.082.000 for the 1995-96 fiscal

year.
Senior Vice President Robert J. Wagner
presen ted UB"s final budget request to the
UB Council at a meeting held Dec. 8.
UB is holding the line. Wagner no ted. in
part because there are ve.ry few salary adjustments in the 1995-96 budget. "No new contracts were signed. so salary projections are
current amounts mo\'ed forward:· he said.
"The budget request is straightforward and
modest because of the salary issue:·
President William R. Greiner nottd that
budget calculations are more ··routinized"
now than they have been in the pas!. and
based on technical calculations. He added
that budgets in post-election years tend to be
nat. because ··a pre-election year tends to be
up and loaded. and then the next year you
deal with how do you pay for it." Gov.
George Pataki has until Feb. I to release the
1995-96 ew York Stale budget.
In other business, \V illiam J. Evi tts. eX·
ecutive d irector of Alumni Relations. pre·
sen ted an outline or us·s alumni program~
According to Evins. UB has 112.420 addressable alumni out of a total of 147.728

livi ng alumni. And wh1le alumni are '"'terribly, terribly proud·· of UB. ·-we have

eur-

work cut out for us in tenns of building our

emoJional bridges and communication
bri(ges· with alumni, he said.
Alumni Relations is working to strengthen
its ties with alumni through new programs
aed increased communication efforts that
inl:Jude tracking down UB graduates on the
lnt""",'et_ Evins noted.
In is report to the Council. Greiner
praised ice President for Public Service
and Urbu Affairs Muriel Moore for her
work incompihng UB"s Public Service Compendium.
He also discussed with the Council the
unive~ity 's mission statement which "bas
been kiclcing around the university for a
while." Greiner noted that the mission statement is "crafted to pick up major themes that
this university ought to be pursuing... .!! is
important to explain the difference between
UB and other SUNY institutions." Given
UB"s size, he added_ it's not possible to
emphasize in the mission statement e\'erylhing that the uni\'ersity does.
One of the challenges UB faces. Greiner
said, is to take the fact that one-third of the
university is post-baccalaureate and make
that benefit undergraduates. "1be trick is (ro
come up with) a statement that"s honest and
C3fJIUn'S a fnunewal&lt;." Gn:iner said.
-

�4

_,...,.__..,_sa

-l,1B will hpst Kennedy Center/College Theatre Festival
IIJLAAwan

News Bureau Staff

T

HE DEPARTMENT of Theatre
and Dance at UB will host the

27th annual Region U Kenned y
Center/American College1beatre
Festival from Jan. 17-22. The sixday program, one of eight regional festi vals
being held across the country, will include
wori&lt;shops, competition and scholarships
for talented theater students.
Co-sponsored by the UB Faculty of Arts
and Letters and the Center for the Arts. the
festival is ex.pected to draw more than 100
artists and performers fmm 50 inst.itutions
thmughout New York. Pennsylvania, Mary·
land. Delaware, New Jersey and Washington, D.C .
It wiU showcase fi ve of the finest productions submitted by these institutions. Tickets
to ibe performances. wbich are open to the
public, cost $5. All performances. except for
" Brother in Boston," will take place l n the
Mainstage theater in the Center for the Arts.
Performance highlights include:
• "The Chalk Circle, • a new adaptation
of Brecht's work. to be presented by students
from Buffalo State College at 7:30p.m. on
Thursday. Jan. 19.
• "On FinaJ Approach," a new script
about women pilots in World WOI n by
Phylis Ward, to be presented by Hofstra
University at noon on Friday. Jan. 20.

• "The Seagull," a strong production of
a ells ic, to be presented by Syracuse University at 7:45p.m. on Friday, Jan. 20.
• aOurCowttry'sGood,"a modem play
set in an 18th century Au trian prison colooy.
to be presented by Siena College at noon on
Saturday, Jan. 2 I.
• "An Odyssey," an irreverent look at
Homer's clas lc, to be presented by Gannon
University at 8 p.m. on Saturday.lan. 21.
• a Brother in Boston," to be presented
by Georgetown University at 3 p.m. on Saturday. Jan. 21 , Drama Theatre.
In addition to the performances, the festi val features student workshops, to he held in
the Center for the Arts. Highlights include:
• "Shakespearun Monologues, "3:305:30 p.m .. Thwsday, Jan. 19, Rehearsal
Wori&lt;sltop. From 'Et tu Brute?' thmugb ' The
Winler of our Di scontenl ,' Michael
MacCauley will present indi vidual monologue worl:: with a focus on the text and
specifici ty of language and sounds.
• "Stand-Up and Sit Down,• 4:30-5:20
p.m., Thursday, Jan. 19. Dance Studio 82.
lcOin how to curtsey in a corset! Tressa
Crehan. UB lecturer in theatre and dance.
will teach period movement for theater from
the Elizabethan era lO the 1960s.
• "ActingfortbeC.mera,"9-9:50a.m ..
Friday, Jan. 20, Black Box Theatre. Drew
Kahn of Buffalo State College will teach
students how to make the transition from the

stage to the screen by odapling acti ng techniques from the tage fortelevi ion and film
work.
• "Acting Out Drums, • 9-9:50 a.m ..
Friday. lan. 20. Rehearsal Worl::shop. Richard Mennen, UB pmfeswr of theatre and
dance , will teach participants how to manipulate dreams into viable solo perfor·
mance for stage.
• "Acting the F'~ght-Beyond Stog•
Combat,"JO..IO:SOa.m., Saturday. lan. 21.
Dance Studio 82. Barbara Burgess will teach
the basi"' of unarmed stage combat. Participants will learn how to ~put up their dukes"
and strengthen both sides of the performance.
• "Distressing on a Budget," 2 :30-3:20
p.m .. Friday, Jan. 20. Crafis Room. Janet
Susseman and Greg West will teach students
howtoachievethegrungelool:,demonstrat·
ing innovative techniques on how to age and
distress costumes and fabric.
• "Improvisation with • Scenario,"
3:30-5:20 p.m .. Saturday, Jan. 21, Rehearsal
Workshop. David Zarl:o ofC.W. Post will
lead a hands-oo session of creating scenarios. Participants will learn how to build a
performance through improvisation using
tradilional scenarios of comm~dia d~l/'arte.
The Kernedy Center/American College
Theatre Festival (KC/ACTF) was founded
to encourage and recognize the finest work
in American uni versity theater production.

Since the festival began, more than 15 million theltergoers have attended opproximately 8,000festivals nauoowide, with more
than 132.000 college ~er studen participating.
The best and mosHiiverse (le.formances
from the eight regional festival wm he
featured this spring at the national festival at
the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
In addition to UB. KC/ACFT regional
sites tnclude the University of Wisconsin.
Green Bay; University of ebraska. Lincoln; University of onh Carolina. Gteens.
bom; University of Oregon, Eugene and
Lane Community College; Universily of
Arkansas, Fayetteville; Regis College.
Weston. Mass., and Glendale Community
College. Glendale. Calif.
The regional and national festival s also
include presentotions of awards and scholarship . The M ichael Kanin Playwriting
Awards are given to student writers whose
wori&lt;s are pmdoced as part of KC/AClF.
The Irene Ryan Scholarship Award for Excellence in Acting is presented to outstanding performers at the regional festivals.
In addition, KC/AClF offen a national
scholarship in association with the ational
Critics Institute. One student from each of
the regions is nominated for the award. The

national winner will attend a playwriting
conference at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre
Center in Waterford. Conn.

2222
followiiiC--..,--. . Safety-Public Saterv s
Weekly Report

Tloe
• - .._tM
or .,.lillie

to-

Deto•Nov. 11-

• Pubhc Safety reported that a UB stu·
dent was found camping Nov. 18 on the
Skinnersville Woods. According to the
report the student. who apparently had no
permanent address, was advosed that he
could not love in the woods.
• A laptop computer, a carryong case
and a power cord, worth a comb1ned
value of $730. were reported missong Nov
18 from Baldy Hall.
• A Wilkeson Quadrangle resodent was
charged With possess1on of an a1r gun
Nov. 18 alter an air gun and a large bong
were confiscated from h1s room
• A snow plow pump control, valued at
$800, was reported mosstng Nov. 28 from
a vehtcle plt'ked at 220 Wtnspear.
• A Wilkeson Quadrangle resident reported Nov 29 that she received a tele·
phone call from a man she thought was
her boyfnend. Alter talking for about 30
tmnutes. the conversatton became vulgar
and the woman said she reahzed she was
not talking to her boyfriend. She was referred to the annoyance call bureau.
• An a nti-theft d evice. valued at $300.
was reported missing Nov. 30 from a ve·
hicle parked in the Main- Bailey lot.
• A leather ja ckel and leather gloves.
WOflh a combtned value of $275, were
reported missing Dec. 2 from the Natural
Sciences and Mathematics Complex.
• A Macdonald Hall resident reported
Dec. 8 that someone entered her room
and moved things around. Nothing was
reported missing.
• Pool sticks. 16 pool balls. a pool rack
and a sweatshirt. WOflh a combined value
of $130. were reported missing Dec. 19
from Red Jacket Quadrangle.
• A purse was reported missing Dec . 19
from Baird Hall. According to Public
Safety, the alleged suspecl later called
and wanted to return to the owner the
cash he had taken from the purse before
discarding it in a garbage can in the
men's room in Baird.
• A comforter and a book bag. worth a
combined value of $170, were reported
missing Dec. 20 from Red Jacket Quadrangle.
• A crystal desk clock. valued at $15.
an.d $20 in cash were reported missing
Dec. 21 from a Baldy Hall office.

Grad Student

mana Lewis,
left. helps sixth
and seventh
graders from
Hamlin Park

School learn
library skills,
including

Bison. on a
visit to the
Undergraduate
Ubrary Dec.15.

Executive director, curator named for _
Darwin Martin House restoration project
By PATIIICIA -VAN

NEXECUTIVEDIRECTORand

Robert Kresse. chair of the MHRC, an nounced the appointment ofMOik R. Hursty.
a businessman with exten-

a curator have been named to

sive experience in financial

oversee the full restoration gfthe
DBIWin MOitin House complex.
which ultimately will be operated as a housemuseum, the first 20th-century property in
New York State's historic-si te system.

planning. as executive directoroftheMHRC. Kresse
also announced that Jack
Quinan, nationall y recognizedan historian and Frank
Lloyd Wright scholar. will
serve as curator of the com-

News Bureau Staff

A

The Darwin Manin House is internationally recognized as one of the best exBinples
anywhere of OIChitect Frank Lloyd Wri&amp;ht' s
enormously influential "Prai rie Style" of
modem residential OIChitecture.
The restored property will be operated by
the Martin House Restoration Corporation
(MHRC) in cooperation with the UB and the
New York State Department of POiks. Rec-

reatiop and Historic Preservation.

plex. Quinan will continue
as professor and chair in the

QUIIWI

UB Department of Art History.
" The appointment of
Hursty and Quinan," said
Kresse, "completes the first

stage of acquisition and or-

ganization necessary for the development of
the Martin House project.
"We are now able to move forward on all
fronts to facilitate the full and
restoration of the Martin House complex. a project
whose completion will ensure the property's
role as the keystone of Western New Yorl::'s
OIChitectural tourism industry."
Hursty will plan and manage the major
fund-raising COinpaign to raise the S I 0 mil lion needed to complete the restoration.
Monies raised will fund the full restora-

proper

tion or the residential complex. w!'lich inc ludes the Ma.r tin House, its pergola.
conservatory, gOiagelstable and the George
Barton House. built for Martin's sister and
her family. A Wright-designed gardener's
cottage, pan of the original si te plan, is now
privately owned and adjoins the properry.

�_...,.__..,_ ...

__ _
T

5.

.,U;B 's technological future is subject of two-day fair
Reporter Editor

heDivisionofUniversity Services
will sponsor a two-day program
next month designed to provide an
interactive introduct.ion to information technology at UB .
The Information Technology Fair, to be
heldThursdayandPriday,Feb. l6and 17in
the Center for Tomorrow, will look at the
most = t technology-from BIRD to
BISON and ADAMS to WINGS-through a
variety of demonstrations, inleractive discussions, presentations and panel discus. s-ions focusing on infonnational technology
and "'lated subjects as they apply to administration. resean::h and instruction.

Hinrich Manens. associate vice president
for computing and information technology .•
and Carole Smith Petro, associate vice president fOr university services, are co-chairs of
the program.
'"OW" motivation for the fair is to stimulate an inte,.,.t and an aw=ness of how
much the university community is already
involved in the use and application of information technology," said Mancos.
Keynote addresses will be presented by
Richard Mandelbaum, NYSERNet chairman.
and Salvatore Belardo, professor of management science and information systems, University at Albany.
Mandelbaum will speak at 8:45a.m. Feb.
16on " High-Speed Netwotking: Present and
Future." A pioneer in developing the data
communications capabilities linking~ew
York State universities, colleges, schbols,
libraries, hospitals and "'search laboratories
10 one another and to the Internet ,
Mandelbaum will focus his talk on the emerging requirements for high-speed networking, NYSERNet's recent upgrade to the
nation's premier regional network and future nerworking ventures and players, along
with anticipated economic benefits.

Belardo will discuss " Re~ngineering Reengineering: Is There a Way to Ensu"' Maximum Benefits from the UseofTech.nology r'
at 8:45a.m. Feb. 17. A professor of management at the University at Albany, Belardo
teaches and does research in lhe general area
of Information Systems Management. His
curT'ellt work focuses on the use of Decision
Suppon Systems to facilitate strntegic planninB and giving~ ln addition.. be hauNork.ed
as an engineer for Eastman K*k, General
Electric and the Watervliet Arsenal and served
as a consultant to the Southland Corporation.

Orell Fussli. Schenectady Chemicals. the U.S.
Coast·Guard and the Depanment of Stale.
among others.
The Information Technology Fair is open
to all UB faculty and staff, and participants
are welcome to attend some or all of the
programs being offered. With the exception
of the keynote addresses, the same sessions
will be p"'sented on both Feb. 16 and 17.
'"'T'he {M( promiM::a to be an •y-e-opCaer-.
We think it is an excellent way for UB's
faculty and staff to peer into the technological furore of our campus. and begin Ia fathom

Conductors' conference to be held in February
II)' PATIIICIA -OVAII

News Bureau Staff

T

he UB Depanment of Music will
present its fifth biennial national conference. "The Preparation of
Tomorrow's Conductors," Feb. 1618 in Baird and Slee halls.
The conference is expected to attract con~
ductors. conducting teachers and students from
across the country for three days of lectu,.,s.
seminars. demonstrations and concerts.
The conference, co-sponsored by the State
University of New York Confe,.,nces in the
Disciplines, is organized and directed by
Harriet Simons. profe.~r and associate chair
of the UB Depanment of Music and director
of university choruses. Simons is the author
of "Choral Conducting: A Leadership Ap-

proach;· and has headed the 1987-93 conducting conferences at UB. all of which were
very well-received and auended.
The presenters include nationally renowned composer Monon Subotnick, a pio·
neer in the application of computer
technologies to music composition. and clini ·
cal psychologist Barbara Pollack of Denver.
who wi1J join Simons in a discussion of the
Meyers-Briggs Type Inventory (MBTI) for
conducting and conducting students.
John Stuhr-Rommereim of Grinnell College will present a leciUre on the Russian
approach to choral conducting and John
Paynter of Nonhwestem University will offer instruction to student conductors.
Other issues will include long-distance
conducting pedagogy, characteristics of sue-

cessfu1 conducting and how to teach them.
score analysis. the relationship between
conductor and ensemble, and conducting
children' s choruses. Panicipants will be instructed on technology in the conducting class.
There will be a screening of the film .
"Taming a I ()().headed Dragon." which features a discussion of conducting issues with
such world-class conductors as Artur
Nik isch of Hungary. Au ~ tria 's Eduard
Strauss and Felix Weingartner. also of Austria. who wrote a treatise on conducting and
on the interpretation of Beethoven' s sym.
phonies. Conference pankipants are invited
to auend concens by the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the New York ew Music
Ensemble. the UBuiTalo Symphony and the
UB Wind Ensemble.
-

what that future holds for each of us." said
Petro.
Among the presen~that will be offe~ i "Vision ' 99, CIT Strategic Plan," a
look at how the information t«hnooogy ooeds
of the uni versity will be addressed over the
nut five yean. "The prognun will focus on
the development challenges Information
Technology will face in order 10 meet rapidl y growing demand, to maintain currency
with changing and e volving tochnology and
to adapt Information Technology into the
wotkings of the university. The presentation
will ootline the five of the university' s most
imponant priorities in the field of information technology. and plans and approaChes
conside~ mandatory for addressing them.
The fair also will featu"' " Voice Re·
sponse Technology-BIRD," a look at interactive voice ,.,.ponse lechnology at UB.
BIRD (Billing, Inquiry. Records and Drop/
Add), which will be used at UB for the first
time for student registration in April, will
allow sllldents 10 complete all of their registr.ltion and drop/add needs by toucb-tone
telephone. The presentation will include a
demonstr.ltion of voice ,.,.ponse technology
as well as a look at what was involved in its
implementation at UB and other potential
applications for the technology.
The Information Technology Fair also
will include presentations on:
• Adaptive Computing Resoorces at UB
• Advancement &amp; Development Automated Management System (ADAMS )
• BISON: C~nt and Future
• Buffalo FREE-NET
• Center of Excellence for Document
Analysis &amp; Recognition (CEDAR)
• Olemical En'gineering Simulation Lab
(CESL)

• err "''tmem-z Support
• Client/Server Computing for Adminis·
rnujve Systems

• Data Access-Data Warehoose
• Education Technology Initiatives
• Electronic Mail--Current and Futu"'
• Full-Text CD-ROMS
• Future of the IBM Mainframe
• HUBNET
• LA Suppon
• National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis ( CGIA)
• System Table Access Reponing Services (STARS)
• UB Micro Sales and Educational Program
• U IX Support
• Western New York Health Sciences
Consortium (WNYHSC)
• WINGS: The Campus Connection ..-..(• WI GS: The Internet Connection
• WorkOow Systems and lmagingApplicar\O'ns.
For mort information 011 1~ lnfomtDJion
Tt!Chnology Fair, call Gmuna !HV'IIlTiey at
645-2817,/olgmunali!!ulnmcc.bulfa/o.edu.

=·

Save up to ~0%

your

FREE PICK·UP &amp; DWVERY

to All University l.oclltions

~.~u~~~Mm·~~
App~,

1111 and other

Laser Printers, Copiers

and Fu llllc:hinu
Laser Printer Service and Maintenance
FASt QUWTY SERVICE ·100% Satisfaction

G~

,{Iii..

"RIICyc... Don't Walle .._, and Landfill Splice• '6¢:

Tc Technologies

(716) 838-2745

835 Englewood Avenue, Town of Tonawanda. NY FAX 838-6995

lifAdvanced VIdeo Techniques
fH
5500 Haln Street
WIWamsvttte. Hew York

631-0515

1~221

�6
~­
Adap(lv&lt; Co.pulltlc 0.....

let' for the Aru. N - Campus.

8 p.IIL $5 dooltioft. Pan of th&lt;
Rqion II Keancdy Center/
Americon ColleJe ,_.,. Fesuval (ACTF). For ticl:&lt;t
tion. caii645-ARTS.

wlow. 2-5 p.m. For"'~­
information. call the Off~« of

-----

mrnnna-

DiubUity Setvioes. 645-2608.
~

COI.LOQIIIIIM

ow S)'lllbetk Mdbocloiopos
Usia&amp; Orpooiroa IUid

liASUTULL
llluttdboll douJ&gt;Iob.eadtr .._
- . ! -ItaCity. Alumni
Am1a. Nonh Campus. 6 aod 8

o..p._llllr &lt;;pda, UB Prof.
EdTuroo. 215 Natur11l Scicnt:CS
&amp; Math&lt;matia Complex. Nonh
Camp&lt;U. 4 p.m.

p.m.Call64~

ART~

Krlllla Oppoabdm'• Tb&lt; Spider an.d l, • sound iMtall.tion.
fmt Floor, UB Art Gallery.
Cent&lt;t forth&lt; Arts. Nonh CamP"'· Opening~ 1-9 p.m.
Thcrcaftcl'. pllcry houn. On
dUplay through Feb. 25. Fr&lt;e.
Call645-6912.

""'~
Simoa
Ua:pr's Red t..int Vertl&lt;al Ugbtwell Gallery, Centcl'
for the Ans. Nonh Campus.
Opening~ 1-9 p.m.
Ther&lt;allcr. &amp;•llery houn. On
display through July. "'= Call
645-6912.

SUNDAY

~~

-IIECfi'A&amp;.-

lMEAlEJI

n.. s.a,uu, present«~ b)' Syr&gt;-

M idul&lt;l Farris, 0rpD.
Easlman School of Mutic. SlecConcert Hall. Nonh Csmpus, 5
p.m. Admission ; $2, SS, $6, S8.
For information can 645-2921.

c:use Univ.: duuted by

Geraldine Clar\. Mainsugc.
Crntcl' for the Arts, Nonh Cam-

MONDAY

pu . 7:45 p.m. S5 donltion. Pan

~~

of the Re~ion II Kennedy Cen-

tct'IAmcricao College Theatrt:
Festi,•al (ACT'F). For ticket information. caii645-ARTS.

. . .,

SATURD A Y

~1

~0 ~··-~
-aented by

19

North Campus. Noon. SS donation. Part of the Region II
Kennedy Center/American Col·
lege Theatre Festh•al (ACfF).
For 1icket infonnalion. caU
645-ARTS.

I'KYSICS~IUM

An Uodulyiog Uok ror Sc:aling or Fluctuations in Growth
froots, Optimizod Paths Localir.ation.. •• Profeuor Mehran
Ka.rdar. Physics Department.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 454 Fronczak Hall.
North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Call
645-2017.

C

ART EXHiaiTIOH

I'HOMACYDINNEJI

Professionally Managed fJy

SIARA MANAGEMENT

H

0

I'KYSIOUMIY IIUIIIIAit

=::~:.b!\:'

Ha-. Dissociation Cu"""

THEATEll
Aa Odyss&lt;y, pt'e5ented by
Ganoon College (Pa.). di=ted
by Bill Doan and adapted by
Olerie Haeger. Mainstage. Cen

I

C

f

Hugh

'

'r:i.

Van Uew. Pb.D.• 108
Sherman. South Campu.s. 4 p.m.
Call 829-2743.

I'OETirY-

Jorie Gra~ Univ. of Iowa.
Center for the Ans Saeening
Room, Nonh Campu$. 4 p.m.
Caii64S-3810.

S

Organist Michael Farris, associatE!
professor of music ar the Eastman
School of Music. will perfonn..worl&lt;s by
Bach. Buxtehude, Franck and Uszt ar
5 p.m. Sunday. Jan. 22 in Slee Concert Hall as part of
lhe SleeNis~ing Artis! Series.
Farris. whom 1he New Yodc Times has called •an
organist of unusual brilliance and versatility.• previously was chair or the Organ Department ar the University of Illinois ar Urbana-Champaign. As a student,
Farris won lhree national performance competitions.
In 1976 al age 18 he won the MTNA Collegiate Ar1isl
Competition as wen as the A. Wayne Competition in
1985 and the National Young Artist CompetitiOn of the
American Guild of Organists in 1986.
He holds an undergraduate degree from Southern
Methodist University, and earned the Master of Music
degree and the prestigious Performer's Certificate at
Indiana Uni-sity. He received his Doctor of Musical
Arts degree and Performer's Certificate from the
Eastman School of Music. Which in 1986 bestowed
upon him ~s higllest honor. the Artlsrs Diploma
Farris performed before the lnlemational Congress
of Organists in Cambridge. England. In July 1987 and
in September of that year was among a number of
promising young artists in the field of classical music
featured in Musics/ America magazine.

~J

-.u.&amp;.I'AIIII STAFF
HMINAII
Cytoldaes aad bamu.H R.e5pOGStS to Vinnes, Olristioe
Byroa. Ph.D., Brown Univ.,
Hilleboe Auditorium. RPCI.
I 2:30 p.m.

COMI'VI'IIHIIDiroductloa to VMScluster•
~8 : 30 p.m. For' registration
information, call64S-3S40.

Orplllst . . . . . . ,....
...,.... ............ 22

Tbt' Graduatt Sbow, recent
work by MFA candidates in the
Art Department An Department
Gallery. Second Aoor, Center
for the Arts. North Campus.
R«&lt;ption5-7:30 p.m. Thereaftct. gallery hour.&gt;. Call645-6912.

THEAlEJI
'I'M Chalk C ircle. presented by
Bufralo State College and d irected by Drew Kahn.
Mainstage. Center for the Arts,
""""Campus. 7:30p.m. S5
donation. Part of the Region II
Kennedy CenterfAmerican College Tbcam: Fc.ti val (ACI'F).
For ticket information. call
645-ARTS.

val (ACTF). For licket infonna
tion. call645-ARTS.
THEAlEJI
Brother in Boston . presented
by Georgetown University.
Drama 'Theatre, Center for tbc
Arts. North Campus. 3 p.m. $5
donation . Pan of the Region II
Kennedy Center/American Col
lege 'Theat.re Festival (ACT'F).
For ticket information. call 645
ARTS .

niE.AlEJI
On l'ut.al Approac.b, presented
by Hofstra Univ.; written and
directed by Phylis Ward Fox.
Mainstage. Center for the Ans.

F. Anthony Del Nuovo. Cenler
for Tomorrow. North Campui.
Fee S 120. Sponsored by th&lt;
Institute for Addictioos SIUdies
and Training. Call645-6140.

-

wriuen by Timberlake

Update of Pediatric Resux.itation, Kathleen Ullis. M.D.
Kinch Auditorium. Children's
Hospital. 8 a.m.

ADOICT10fiS-

WEDNESDAY

Co1leze: di-

Wcnenbaker. Jr.1ainstage. Center
f&lt;&gt;r th&lt; Art~. North Camp&lt;U.
Nooo. S5 donation. Pan of th&lt;
Region lJ KenOedy Center/
Amcricao College Theaue Festi-

PEDIATIIIC UAND llOUNDS

The Process of Human Dne&amp;opmtot and lbt Alcohol and
Other Dn1g Abu!&lt; Cycl&lt;. 1ft.

s~

recaed by Mark Heckler and

The Profta of Human Drvdopment and thr Alcohol and
Other Druc AbuR Cy&lt;k, 1ft.
F. Anthony Del Nuovo. Center
for Tomorrow. Nonh Campus.
Fee S 120. Spon50tt!!&gt;by th&lt;
Institute for Addictions Studies
and Training. Ca11645-6140.

THURSDA Y

D rug theft and diversion in
the pharmacy profession,
Donald E. Bogardus, president.
Medical Management Systems.
Sponsored by School of Pharmacy and Pharmacists' Assoc.
of WNY. Buffalo M arriou Hotel. 1340 Millersport Hwy. 6:30
p.m. Call 645-3931.

IIEII'S A N D -··
liASUTULL
BasUtbaU d oubldleador vs.
WHI&lt;nl llliDois, Alumoi
A,na, Nonh Campus. 6 aod 8
p.m. Call 645-6666.

~-

la:troductioa to Sun X-Windowiog. 6-8 p.m. For rcgistration information, caJl645-3540.

'

OI'US: ClASSICS UVE

Jemes Ptbbry, trombone;
Uoda Mebry, piaoo. AJien
Hall . South Camp&lt;U. 7 p.m.
Fr&lt;e. Tapod for broadcast th&lt;
following Sunday at 4 p.m. by
WBFO 88.7 FM .

THURSDA Y

~6

COMI'UT.a-

latrodoctioll to Uai.L 3-5:30
p.m. For registntioo infomutioo. cali 645-3S40.

�7

_u,..__..,_._.
and odle&lt;IDIIerial.. For """"

inf""""'ioo· caii64S.2.470. '-

-.miCBATM

c:una

The c..ative Ctalis CeAter of·
fen "Sprina '9S Cn/i wor~; .
mops" swtin&amp; week of M ooday. Ju. 30. Wcavina..
crochetia.&amp;•od tnin.i.A&amp;. quilt-

ing, Brudian embroidery.
&amp;reetin&amp; card desi&amp;n. pottery,
intermediate pottery. canoocting.

basic pho&lt;OCf'll'hy. wnera uae
and opention, creative photoa~

rophy. color pholoanphy.ld·
vonced eolor pho&lt;osraphy, Jew·
dry CCIIitnJcljon, bepnoio&amp;
aoined &amp;lass. ldvonced Jllincd
&amp;lass. pollery and multi·medll
for childrea worbhops will run

one ni&amp;hl a week foe six weeD
from 7· 10 p..m.. uctpt
dukireo "s cia ses. which run on
Saturday momin&amp;- Fees are S30
for studeniJ and SSO for all odt·
ers; early sip·up is advised.
Caii64S.2434 or64S-6125.
~-TD

DI:YELCIP 1IUIIVEY COUIISE
The lnlemationa1 Gradul\e

Group in Neurosciences sc:e.b
5-6 volunteers to dc:\·clop a

course that pro,·ides a broad
O\'crvirw of neuroscience at the
graduatt: le\d, Ideall y the
COUI"Se WJII be I broad SUI'VC)'
cou.nc of about 2 ~Ted•ts. and
organizers hope 10 assemble a
dh-c:noe group of plannen; v.1th
ex.perusc rangin&amp; from genes to
behnior. F« more mformauon,
call Be\·erly B1shop at 829-2740
Of Dennis H1gcms at 829-3588

'

Color Stylewriter 2400
• 2 btlc c&lt;V'tridges di cable btdwded
• 360dpl

JOBS

....

. . . . . . . . .,. . . ,__.. . . .

.J60...._ .. . . . , . . _ ...... ........._ ... ,....,... ........ _
~

FACULTY

........

~...,..-f----

.,_....,.....,~

Assi.stan.t/AssocL.tt ProfessorSufJery. Posting F-5001 A.uo-

~JOO--

_

~,._

~--....--....--

................... ........

a.../tod

a-..tifv, Wldlo ~c..tl

ciate{FuU Proft":SJOr·Psychlatry,

COII~IBM Lob Oritotatioo. 6-8 p.m.
For registration information, call

645·3540.
SUM-AilE TIIEA'ID

Falseuos. Pfeifer lbeater, 8
p.m.. $10. $12. SIS. Call

_.

839-8540.

CISP I'IIOYIDES FU-NQ

1be Council on International
Studies and Program (CIS P.)
provides limited financial support for a number o f initia t ive~
1nd projects lbal fun.her intcrnttional education and se:holar-

slUp. CISP inviles requests for
support from faculty and stu-

,_

r X HIBITS
HINIIAPtiiED
UB ·s 11lustrat.ion Program joans
with illustraiOrS at the Massachu·
sens Collq;c: of An in pr&lt;&gt;entiog
"Aesop's Fablco ReinlerpiOted.·a
viw.al inrerpretatioa of si1 fabks
through illustration. The uhibit
uocoven primitive passion 1Jun
reveal the swt reality of life as
it is, not as it dlould be:, through
mct..,ooncat. symbolic, or aile·
gorical illustrations. 11it .show
opens with a reception from S7:30 p.m. Jan. 26 in the Art Department Gallery and runs
throogh Feb. 7 . Gallery hou"

ar.T.-y,IOa.m.-5p.m.:
Wcdoesday·Friday, 10 Lm.-8
p.m..; ~ Salwday I I a.m.-8 p.m.
lME GIIADUA1E SHOW

Come set: new and cutting edge
creations at 1'he Graduate
Show.. in the Univers-ity Gallery
throogb Feb. 3. An Depanment
MFA candidatelo' work in illus-

lnllion. painting. printmaking.
communication design. K ulp·
lure. phOlography, and mixed
media will be featured. Gallery

hours are Wednesday-Saturday.
10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. :md Sunday

Noon-S p.m.

dmt groups. Please hmll rt·
quests lo no mort than two
pages of ICII plus a budget
page. Each request., to be sent
wil.h • cover letter to the Chair
of lhe Council. clo Off•ce of
International EdUCitiOO. S44
Capen Hall. Box 601604.
should elarify proposed to&lt;al
budget amount for the project
or initiative. how much Counc•l
suppor1 is bcing sought. Olher

sources of secured or prospective support. and how the fund!&gt;
requested from the Council will
be used. CISP reviews llpplic•tions moothly through the academic year. In considering~­
quests. the: Council I )

encourages requesters to seek
matching funds . 2) discourage
requests that seek to defray
travel expenses by ind•vidual:.
of the payroll of the university.
and 3) S«.ks assurance that an)'
pror.ram that takes pia« on
campus will be open to the um·
vc:rsit)' communit)o .
FINANCIAl. AID AWARENESS
~

Free college financial aid ser''ices are nvailmblt 10 tudent!'.
and parents throughout Janual) .
The New York State Hightr
Education Services Corporation
(N YSHESC) and the New York
Sune Financial Aid Administra·
tors Association ( NYSFAAA)
are ponsoring. a toll-free
h~ lint

(1-800-689- 1669) noon·
7 p.m. weekdays until Jnn. 31 to

NOTICES

answer questions about finan ·

AN EVEJIINII WITH EU

cinl aid. including filling out an
application.
INTDINA,_AL FOUl

IIOUIIIAn

.

Internationally renowned
speaker and author Eli

Goldratl's program uses a
unique mix of presentation and
theater to get across his meJtsage
of clear communication. teamwon: and empowerment. He 'II

speak 11 7:30-9:30 p.m. Friday.
Jan. 27 in US's Center for the
Arts. Admission is $90 general
admission ($25 for spouses);
S2S for UB faculty and Lbcir
spouses, and SIO for students.
To register, call636-3626.

DANCINII
All are V.' Clromt to join the=
International Folk Dancing
group each Friday from 8-11
p.m. in 2 Diefendorf Hall on the
South Campus. 1llest free sessions begin wilh teaching. Part·
ners are not needed. Graduate
Student Association is sponsor.

u.aAJrY FINO
Effec1ive Jan . I. 1995. accumulated libnuy fine amounts of
less than SIO that remai n un-

Aesop's Fables
exhibit to open
llluslrallon show. "Aesop's
Fables Reinlerpreled,.,s
on v1ew Jan 26-Feb 7 .n
Arl Deparlmenl Gallery
pa•d

for~

lhan 30 days: \&gt;\Ill

result m s:us:pens1on of allli ·
bevy privilegc-s until past
amount as pa•d at the Ltbraries.
Attumulated hbm"y fine
amounts of S I 0 or ~ that
remaan unpaid for more than 30
days \lo •II bt transferred to Of.
fiCC" of Student Accounts for
collectaon Unpaid library
charges may result in the bloc~ ­
ang of reg.•stration. gntdu:tuon or
the receipt of 1ran'JoCripts.
NEUIIOIIIDt.DGY .IOURNAL

cw•

The Neurobiolog)' Journal Club
will hold an organizational
meeting at 4 p.m. Jan 26 in I :'A
Farber Hall. Soulh Campus.
Focus of the club 1s expected 10
be on cellular and molecular llS·
pc:cU of neural func11on and de·
vdopment In addiuon to helping
f:IC'Ult)' and J&gt;tudents keep abreasl
of the hla'ature. th1s JOUrnal club
I !I int~ to SCI'\ e as a forum for
explonng rommon rc'iearrh mler·
esas thai m1ght form for a program
project gran! . For mort infonna·
uon. call Otnm~ H1g{!in!!o. 829·

3588.
READING CUNIC Dfl'EIIS
PWOCIRAM
UB Reading Clinic setL.s children with serious reading a.ndlor
lc=aming problems for enroll mtnl in the diagnostic and ~mt ·
d.:tl program lh:Jt bc=gins Feb. I.

Children may be ~frn't'd to 1hc
low-cost, full -scniC"t. after·
school program onl) by !heir
parents, who :u-e responsible for
ensuring that tht children auend
tht renlC(hation seSSIOns. While
most children seen m the clinic
are age 8 or older. the chnic lw.
a strong interest in worling "' ith
younger children considered to
be at rid• of failing 10 learn ho\lo
to read. 1be after-school prognam will offer low-&lt;"OSI. diag·
nos1ic services during 1wo
morning st55ions for SISO. Dia,gnosis will be: followed by oneon-one remedial ion sessions at

an additional COSI ofSISO,
which covers books. supplies

Posting IF-5002.
-.utCII

Raearc.b Tecbaic::laa ll ·Lab

='~=~i:.'t~~n~

10-Medicine. PostinJ IR·

..

and. ••

95002. Director of P......,..l
RK:Ord and Research Adh·lties-Uni\tBJt)' De-velopment,

Posung •R-9500 1 S«mary II
part-timt position) ~U pv.ard

Bound Malhi'Sc•encc Reg1onal
Center. Postmg •R-95006 R~
search St~nllst-Fam•IY Meda ·
Cine. PostanJ iR -9SOOS.
surcb Technician

R~

11-M•crob•olog) . Posung I'R·

95003. S&lt;c:mory Ill-Family
MedJCIOC. Posltng iR -9S004
I'IIOFUSIOMAL

Dh·ision I Head Coach (S L-5)-

your

1"111-in-one
Power jV[ac
Solution!

0iYision of Athlelicl. Postmg

;P-4111 . Information Systems
Technic&amp;.n (SLo.JH&gt;ean ' Of·
fiC"C. School of Archuecturt and
Planning. Posu ng IP-4 107. Associate Vice President for
Public Rc:l1tions (MPJA )·Um \t:rsity AdvancemenT and De\elopment. Pos:tmJ IP-4100.

Cataioe Tecbn.ic::l.an (SLo.J,
part-timt position, Jnttn'lal
Promolional Opportunit) )-

La" Ltbrary. Posting tP-SOOI .
Assistant to the Director ( L·

2. Internal Promotional Opportunity).clinical OtniiSII).
Posltng IP-5002. Recyclinc
Coordinator ( lr l . lnttrnal
Promotional Opportunit) )-

Utiliry Oper.nions, Posting •P·
5003. Training Sp«ialist (In-

PerforWaa 611SCD

lerna! Promotional Opportunity) -Human ResourttS. Um \'tn.it) F..cilitie'-. Posting

•P-

500&gt;.

CDMPEnnVE CLASSIFIED

CIVIL SIEitVICE
Cam pus Public Saf~t) Offict'r
(SG- 12)-Publac Safct) . Line:

1140443. Libra!') Cll'rk 3 (SG·
"'l4)-Um\'en;ity Librlnes. Line

i2627 I. Data Entry Mat'hint
Operator (SG~·Unl,en;il)
Faciliues Administratl\t Ser' 'ices. Lme 143205. Kt')board

Specialist (S&lt;rll6J·Engli,h.
Line 12607 1.
NOIW:DIII'ETITIVE

CLASSIFIED CIVIL SEIIVICE
Janitor (SG~7)· University
Faciiilits, Custodial Stn•ices.

Line 134606.
To ob1~in morr i11{ormati011 on

jobs lis"d abo,~.

{'()11IOC'I P~r­

sonnt•l ~n·ir~s. 104 Crofts
Hall.

$2542

15" (!olor /IIIOititxw

I!Jwllt-g,. eo I«J/111 Drive

global VIHcr.gc gold 14.4 'jcr.Jt/Dcr.tcr. /lllod.,..
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8

Nt1W directions for North American New Music Festival·
SCHEDULE OF EVIN1'S
FIIIIIIJ, Feb. 10

North American New Music
tival at UB bas taken a new
direction this year-&lt;&gt;ne that weds
Latin. Native-American, jazz and
blues fonns lO contemporary mu -

• DIAMANDA GALAs, ~Jod.,emeot
Day"; Mllinslage. Center for the Arts , 8

p.m.. sa. s12.

Sllluidlly,Feb.U

sic of a classical vein.
The festival will run from Feb. 10-19 in
the Center for the Arts, Slee Concert Hall

• lUNDE ECKEII:T, "T'be Idiot Variations"; Blicl Box Thea~~e, Center for the
Arts, 8 p.m., $10.

and Baird Recital Hall, all on the orth
Campus.
Founded in 1983 by the late pianist Yvar
Mikhashoff, the celebrated festival explores
the relationship between musician, composer
and score through public discussion , master

.......,.,Feb.12
• ZODIAQU£, original work based on
compositions by Miles Davis.; Drama
Tbealre, Center for the Arts, 3 p.m. $S.
$10.

classes, intimate evenings of cabaret. or-

J

chestral concerts. ensemble performances
and solo recitals of new and old works.
Comp&lt;lser Robert Chumbley takes over

• PERCUS 10 AND TAPE SOLO
RECITAL , pcTCUS ionist Ricardo
Gallardo; Black Box Theatre. Center for
the Arts, p.m.
Dinner wilh performen and composc:rs
from boch coocens; Center for the Arts,
6:30p.m.

this year as festival director. and his first

program represents a marked preference for
new music rooted in many North American
cultures. This year's program also favors the
melding of new music with theatrical. oper·
atic and performance-art fonns.
Guest composers and perfonners include
Diamanda Galh, Michael Colgrass ,
Dominick Argento and Monon Subotnick.
Percussionist Ricardo Gallardo will perfonn
workbyseveralcontemporaryMexicancom·
posers, including his wife, Gabriela Ortiz.
Iroquois Nation drummers. flutists and
singers will join bassist James VanDemark
and tbe.Rackbam String Quartet in a perf"(·
maoce of "Circle of Faith," composer A! toll
Clingan's widely admired celebration of the
words and spirit of I 9th-century NativeAmerican Chief Seattle.
The avant gardt purloins history for a
festival production of Judith Weir' s I 3·
minute unaccompanied mono-opera about
1he adventures of medieval Norway 's King

s

• CONCEJtT,cellistHIIIkRobeiU.ex·
perimental jazz performance beclced up
by composer Paul Elwood oo banjo and

Cory Combs on bass; Screenina Room.
Center for the Arts. 7 :30 p.m., sa per
concertiS20 dinner and both concerts.
Chief Seattle: petfonnance to celebrate his wonts and spirit.
Harald the Ruthless. Mezzo soprano Vir·
ginia Dupuy will offer a solo perfonnance in
eight roles, including that of the Norwegian

army.

present the work of contemporary American
composers Colgrass. David Felder and
Chumbley, and there will be perfonnances
by the New York New Music Ensemble and

guest violinist Cunis Macomber. clarinet ~

A perfonnance of Dominick Argento's
mon&lt;H&gt;pera, "A Water Bird Talk," by the
distinguished tenor Richard Estes is on the
same program, along with several ope~tic
transcriptions by Mikhashoff.
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will

iot Joaquin Valdepenas. "boy genius" per·
fonnance-anist Rinde Eckert and many
others.
To obtain tickets. call the UB Center for
the Ans. 645-ARTS.

Davis Garlapo, fonner chair of the De·
panment of Fixed Prosthodontics. is acting
chair of the new Department of Restorative
Dentistry.
Changing the name of the Department of
Behavioral Sciences and redirecting its mission toward community-health service and
research also renects the current direction in
dental education. Goldberg said.
"Nationally, the emphasis on, and fund·
ing for. behavioral research has declined.
and we do not see th is trend changing:· he
said. "These areas in o1hcr dental schools
have been replaced by departments stressing
public health dentistry. communily denti stry
or health services research. In light of the
public health initiatives we have planned for

the future. a change in name and focus was in
order.··
John Eisner, associate dean for infonna·
tional resources, has been named acting chair
of the Department of Oral Health Services
and Lnformatics.
The new Depanment of Oral Diagnostic
Sciences will concentrale on teaching the
newest techniques for diagnosing orofacial
diseases and disorders and promoting re·
search in the field. Nonnan Mohl. professor
and director of the oral sciences program.
has been named departmenl chair.
Goldberg said the UB dental school is
working with state agencies and the area's
dental community to develop plans for several public-health initiatives.

DENTAL SCHOOL
continued from page I
• A new Department of Oral Diagnostic
Sciences, created from the departments of
oral medicine and stomatology and interdis·
cip\inary sciences.
• Remaining departments of biomaterials,
oral biology, oral and maxillofacial surgery.

orthodontics, pediatric denti stry and
periodontology.
Goldberg said merging the restorative
disciplines into one department, mirroring a
national trend, will result in a more cohesive
and integrated clinical teaching program.

'This merger provides us wilh an enhanced capacity to foster faculty develop·
meat, develop research programs and respond
to th~ needs of undergraduate and graduate
programs," he said.

FOOTBALL COACH

panel of national music critics; Center for
the .Arts.

Tuesday, Feb. 14
• CO CERTBYINSTRVMENTAL
FACTOR. work by UB composers Jef·
1iey Stadelman, Paul Elwood, Colt Uppe.
Soo Ran Jeong, Richard Bailey and
Jonathan Golove; Drama Tbealre, Center
for the Arts. 8 p.m., $5, $1.

WedniiUy, Feb. 15
• THE INSTRUMENTAL FACTOR
presents Contemporary Opcrolic Forms;
Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts, 8
p.m., $S,$1.
• OPERATIC TRANSCJlJPI'IONS
by Yvar Mikhashoff; pianist Amy Will·
iams.
"A Water Bird TalkM by Dominick
Argento; roonodrama perfonned by tenor
Richard Estes.
"Ki~g Harald's Saga" by Scottisb _
composer Judith Weir: a lone soprano.
without accompanimen~ iogseigbt solo
roles, well as the pan of~ Norwegian
Army.; Mezzo soprano Vtrglllla Dupuy.

p

11tunday, Feb. 18
• CONCERT BY THE NEW YORK
NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE; Drama
Tbea~Center for the Arts, 8 p.m., $5,

continued from page 1
"And, I wrote hundreds and hundreds of
UB's football program. Cirbus is careful not
to be unrealistic about the prognosis for his
letters to major college programs all over the
country," recalls Cirbus. Then one day, out
team. "Basically. whall promised them when
I interviewed here is that each week we
of the blue. Cirbus answered the phone and
Joe Paterno was on the other end of the line.
would be beller 1han the week before."
"'After I went for an interview. he offered
Since he ani\'ed, Cirbus say!'! a number of
me a graduate assistantship," says Cirbus.
the players have stopped by 10 make hi s
acquaintance. "They have had great ani" It didn ' t even pay anything. but I look it
immediately.··
ludes so far:· says Cirbus. ··and that make!t
From 1984-until earlierthis month. Cirbus
me lotally exciled aboul the allitude of thi &gt;
team."'
climbed the ladder on Paterno's Penn State
coaching staff. He was offensive line coach
A gold Rose Bowl watch adorns hi s wrist.
and hi s Championship Ring is on its way. ·· A
lhis past season. during which the Nittany
perfect season doe o't come along very ofLions were undefeated. including a Jan. 2
ten." saysCirbus. ''Thai made it even tougher
win over Oregon in the Rose Bowl.
The UB Bulls will still be looking for · to leave. even though I was coming home."
But the rest of Cirbus" mementos will
their first winning season this fall when they
remain packed up in thedozensofboxes that
enter their third season in Division 1-AA
fill his stadium office until there is a little
play. The Bulls were 1-IO, then 3-Siast year
more free time. Recruiting is high on Cirbus'
under fonner coach Jim Ward, whose conimmediate agendL as high school senio~
ttact was not rt:.newed by the university.
d~w nearer tq making decisions about what
While he is optimistic about the future of

Mol...,., Feb. 13
• PRESS COLLOQUIUM, SESSION
I, discussioo of critical treatment of cJas.
sicaJ new music by ans prus, feautring

school to allend.
·we have a grea1 story to tell here," says
Cirbus. "for a kid that wants both a great
educa1ion and a grea1 football program. And.
there is probably no bener facility to play
ball in anywhere in 1-AA."
Al&gt;o. says Cirbus. a kid hould jump at a
..chance IO play football in Buffalo. at any
leveL
"Thi~ is a gre3t spans town:· says Cirbus.
""'ith the electricity there has been hereo\'er
lhe past few years with the Bills. I have
former players from Penn State who are in
the NFL now who say the fans here are
exactly what e\•eryone says they are: fan·
atical!''
CliffScon. UB ' s aU -time passing leader.
will graduate in May, so Cirbus is in the
market for a quarterback. Backup Quarterback Mark Taylor is a candidate for the job.
" I'm look for leadership and aggressive,
hardworking players," explains Cirbus.

$1.

Frlday,Feb.17
• LECTURE, Composer Morton
Subotnick: "Conducting as the New
Chamber Music: The Role ofNew Tech·
nology on the Future of Conducting" ;
Baird ReciUl! Hall I p.m .. free of charge.

I•

CONCERT. UB Wind Ensemble.
Slee Concert Hall. 8 p.m .. free of charge.

• PRESS COLLOQUIUM, SESSION
U; Center for the Arts.

Saturday, Feb. 18
• "CIRCLE OF FAITH•; Mainstage,
Center for the Arts. 8 p.m .. sa. $12.

Sunday, Feb. 19
• CONCERT, The Buffalo Philhar·
mooic Orchestra; Mainstage, Center for
the Arts. 4 p.m.. sa. s12.

�'Wednesdays·at 4 Plus'
seri s offers lectures, fllms
11J PAftiCIA - A N

French poet. novelist and critic Christian
Prigent; British-poets Ric Cad&lt;lel and Peter
HE SPRING 1995 " Wednesdays at
Middleton, and Jose Kozer, oneoftheSpan4 Plus" literary series, to be preisb-speaking ~orld's most original and prosented l:&gt;y UB from Jan. 25 through
lific poets.
April 26, will offer a program of
Other visiting writers will include Welch
lectUres, readings and .films, pi usa scholarly
Everman and Maureen Owen. Laura
conference on lhe convergence of science
Moriarity and Charles Alexander, Lydia
and the h umanities.
Davis, Rae Armantrout and Douglas
Guest lectUrers will include Booker PrizeMesserli. Fanny Howe and Marlene
winni ng novelist and poet Michael O ndaatje
Nourbese Philip, and British literary critic
Peter Nicholls.
Most evenLS will take place on the Nonh
Campus, although a concen by saxophonist
Steve Lacy, a jazz songwriter who has collaborated with many poets in his career, will
take place on April 19 at the Calumet Ans
Club on West Chippewa St., Buffalo. Lacy
will be joined by vocalist Irene Aebi . All
evenLS are free of charge and open to the
public.
Jorie Graham. prizewinning poet. editor
and essayist. opens the series Wednesday
Jan. 25 with a poetry reading at 4 p.m. in the
Center for the Ans Screening Ronm . In
1990. she was awarded a coveted John D.
and Catherine T . MacAnhur Fellowshippopularly known as a .. MacAnhur genius
grant."
Her bonks of poetry include .. MaterialJorte Graham opens series Jan. 25.
ism," "The Region of Unlikeness.. and "The
( .. The §nglish Patien t") and celebrated
EndofBeauty ... andshehaspublishedwidely
American ,!Wvelist and translator Paul Auster
in the finest magazines and journals here and
(.. Mr. Vertigo," "Leviathon ... ' The Music of ) abroad. Her work has been commissioned by
Chance'"). They will be joined by Marjorie
the University of Iowa Museum of_.. n. the
Perloff of Stanford University. one of the
92nd Street Y and National Public Radio.
most influential critics of 20th-century poamong others. She has received awards and
etry, and poet Jorie Graham . a 1990
grants from the NEA. American PMrry R•·
MacAnhur fellow and widely published
view, the American Academy and Institute
writer and editor of national djstinctjon.
of Arts and Leners. and the Academy M
The series also will feature readings by
American Poets.

N9ws Burea u Staff

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FACULTY: Fer lea...., year nom on Rle, yea will be ~ftll a
F1tEE $25 VOUCHER (w oar
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:

Marek Zaleski, microbiologist
..... a. Z8IMIII, a.....,._ ef alilci'DthhO at W lmown here and ollrx* forbis
dedication to lhe Solidarity movement during a critical point in Poland's hiotory. died ol cauc:er
Dee. 18 in Millard Fillmore Hosj&gt;i1.1l. He was 511.
•
His tireless uppon of Solidarity earned him lhe
of Merit. .-of
Poland"s highest awards. in Oclober. In 1984, ZaJeslci and lhe !leY. &amp;a;-in
Fiore. SJ .. ofCanisi College_translaledintoEnglisblhe_ud_ys
of the Rev . Jozef IISChner, who llllpplied from lhe pulpit the GDdedyiag
spiritual philosophy of the Solidarity movemenL The colleetioa oliat was
referred to as the ''bible of lhe movemenL"
Zaleski also assisted in lhe English uanslatinn of Lecb Walesa's .......,..,..
ZA1DIU
raphy. Active in lhe laeal Solidarity and Hull)lll Righu Associalioa. IDe"
Zaleski interviewed Walesa and translated his Christmas message to !be BuflaloCOl1UDilllityfrom
198S-871hroughtheeffortsofWBFO.HewasnarnedanhonorvymemberoflhePolishA.cadomy
of Medicine last month in rt:c&lt;&gt;gnition of a project to provide books and journals to the Medical
School at Rzeszow. He served on lhe academic hoard of UB •s Center for Polish Studies and lhe
board of directors of Canisius College·s Permanent Chair of Polish Colture.
Zaleski earned medical and doctoral degrees from Warsaw"• School of Mcdicioe. He
immigrated to the U.S . in 1969 for political reasora. aided by Felix Milgrom. lhen chairof !be UB
Depanment of Microbiology. A Buswell Fellow, he was an assistant professor at UB for three
yean before joining the Department of Anatomy at Mid!igan Sl.lte Unaversity in 1972. He
returned to UB in 1976 as a faculty member in the Depanment of Microbiology. He coodacled
research in immunogenetics and taught microbiology to graduate. medical. and denial studenLS.
A member of several professional organizations. including lhe New Ycrt Academy of Sciences.
he was active in UB' s Ernest Witebsky Center for Immunology. He is survived by a - · Jan.

Cross

Max E. Chilcote, clinical chemist
Servicea • - held Dec. 2t for Max E. Chilcote. n. former director of lhe Eric County
Laboratory. who died Dee. 16. Chilcote. who was associated for many years with lhe School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, joined the school in 1948 as assistant professor and laJer held
clinical professorships._in Biochemistry and in the Department of Pathology.
Chilcote. who retired in 1984 asdirector oftheErieCounty Laboratory, had servedinthatpost
sance 1970. He taught and designed clinical chentistry courses at UB ' D ·y ouvill&lt; Collese; Rosary
Hill College (nnw Daemon). and the Sl.lte Agriculture and Technical Institute at Alfred.
Chilcote, who ~ived bachelor's and master' s degrees from the Unjversityof Minnescnand
a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Michigan. wasactJve in the American Association
of Clinical Chemists and had served as president of the Academy of Clinical Laborat:or)
Physicians and Scientists. the Amencan Society of OinicaJ Pathologists. State Association of
Public Health Lahoratones and Sigm• Xi.
He is survived by three daughters. Sandra Emser or Getzville: Sher) I A . Deanh of Grafton.
Ohio and Susan K. Chilcote of Los Angeles and five grandchildren

Charles H. Addington, ophthalmologist
Memorial . . . . hald Dec. 3 in North Preshyu:nan Church. Ambers~ far Quarles
H. Addington. an ophthaJmologis1. who ~ed as an associate clinical professcll" • US.
Addi ngton. 78. former head of the Department of Ophthalmology at Buffalo Genenl Hospital.
died Nov. 29 in Buffa1o General after a long illness.
A graduate of the Unh•ersny of Rochester Medical School. Addington was a physician in the
Navy during World War II. After his avy service he moved to New York City, returning to
Buffalo to continue his practice. An early member of the Buffalo Medical Group. he retired from
practice in 1988. He was an attending physician of ophthalmolog) at Children· s HospiLaJ and an
attending physician for the- Buffalo Eye and Ear Hospital-Wenlaufer Clinic and a consu1UID1 to
Roswell Park Cancer Institute. Survavors include a daughter. Judith A. James of Williamsville:
a son. John H. of Cleveland: and four grandehi ldren.

Lawrence R. Gocxlyear, civic leader

A memorial MfVIce ••• held Jan. 10 in Trinity Episcopal Ch~rch for Lawrence R.
Goodyear. 82. a founder of a prominent Buffalo law finn and civic leader who served on the board
of the University at Buffalo Foundation. Goodyear. 82. died Jan. S after a brief illness..
He was the last survi\; ng foundingiJartnerofHodgson. Russ. Andrews. Woods and Goodyear.
oldest and largeSIIaw finn in Buffalo. A graduate of Yale Uni,·ersiry and Harvard Law School
he served on the legal staff of the War Production Board in Washington. D.C. in 1941 aad saw
service as an officer in the Pacific during World War 11 for ~·hich he was awarded the Bronze Star.
Honorary chainnan of ForeSI Lawn, which he had served 'll' president, chaimwa ud board
member, he was honorary chairman of WNED- TV. where hejlaad also been chairman. A formo::r
direct.orofManufacturers and Traders Trust Co., First Empin: Corp.• Spaulding Fibre Co. and 0 Cello Corp., he was a hoard member for Children's Hospital and Albright-Knox An Gallery.
Survivors include hi s wife. Judy Benjamin Goodyear. two sons. Lawrence R~ Jr. ofBetbcsda..
Md. and Daniel M. of Robesonia. Pa.; adaughter. WeodyG. ~riswoldofGiyndoo. Md.;abrotber.
Austin, of Brooklin. Maine; three stepchildren: 12 grandchilclren and two great-graodchildmL

Ellen T. McNicholas, nursing_ teacher
A - - ' a ! .-vice • • loeld Dec. • in St. Benedict's Calhollt Church, Eggensville. for
Ellen T. McNicholas, who had been a faculty member and an adntinistrato.- f0&lt; UB"s narsiJ&gt;&amp;
school. McNicholas. 78. died Aug. 8. 1994. in Cocoa Beach. Aa. where she had lived oince ll&lt;r
retirement in 1976. The memorial was atranged by her former nursing studenu.
McNicholas, a native oflreland, came to the U.S. in 1934 and receivedbernursingdepeefnxtl
Faulkner Nursing College in Boston, Mass. She earned master' s and doctoral degmes from
Teacber"sCollege of Columbia University. During World Warll McNicholas had servedascbicf
nurse aboard an army hospital ship in lhe Pacific Theater. In 1950. she joined lhe UB ~
school faculty and later became a nurse-teaching administrator.

James E. Patterson, physician
.._.E. Patt-,114, a pll)'&lt;llclaa in the Buffalo area for more t!&gt;an 44 yean. died Dee.

Call or t&gt;lsit us _,. at the CommDnsl

520 Lee Entrance. Suite 105

"I &lt; I 636 -8440
1" .. '· 636-8468

24 in Buffa lo General Hospital after along illness. He had served as an associate profes;sout the
UB"School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. Panerson. a graduate of Ohio Universi!y tmd
the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University. came to Buffalo ia 1942. A
longtime.member of the Buffalo General Hospita1 staff. he was in practice until his retiremeat in
1986. He was a past president of the WNY chapter of the American Heart AssociatiooL
Su rvivors incl ude two daughters, Susan ofMaui. Hawaii. and Mary Jo of West ~NJ .;
three sons, James of Cleveland Heights. Ohio: John of Los Angeles, and Charles; and .toe
grandchildren.

�_.._
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s-t.pheft

J.cobeon In
. . ofllce In
Beldytblll.

'lifts'
school
reform
rec:ocntz••

Awerd
Stephen JIICObaoll IICIIdlmlc '-vlltor

INTERNATIONAl STUDENT
&amp; SCHOLAR SERVICES

11011011111 . . .
~--=

...... IL Lewl.. program associate in the Office
of International Student and
Scholar Services at UB. hes
been honored by the Councillor International Visitors
lor outstanding volunteer
contributions.
She hes been involved in
111e
ollnternatlOnal visitor and educslional exchange. as a volunteer and
as a professional. lor nearly
10 years. At UB, Lewis coordinates the International
Friendship Program. which
links UB students from
abroad with local residents
lor cultural exchange. Shehas also been involved in
community S9IVice through
Scouts. Unle League and
Meals on Wheels. She received bachelor's and masters degrees from UB.
ENGINE~NG

-RLLOW:

a-...._

professor
and chair of the Department
of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, has
been named a Fellow of the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME).
A gmduale of McGill University. he hOlds a Ph.D. and an
M.S.M.E. in mechanical eng~
nearing from the Univelsity of
WISCOnSin. Madison.
The Fellow grade is conferred upon a member of
the ASME with at least 10
years· engineering practice
Who has made signlfocant
contributions to the field.
Soom is recognized lor his
work in Yibrations. acoustics.
tribology and machine diag-

nostics. His work on t.nS!Mdy friction was the fi&lt;SI to
employ modem dynamic
testing techniques to clarify
instantaneous friction behavior in sliding contacts in lhe

presence of~

vibralion. He led a man of
mechanical engineen; thai
collaborlllad with electrical
enginaas to develop advanced Yib&lt;alion-based rnacline ciagnoslic techniques
lor ~ circuli breakels.

TEPHEN Jacobson
had been teaching
special education in
New York City public schools for seven
years when he was laid orr.
His 1977 pink slip could have
been a reprieve from the headaches
and hassles of working in a "600"
school. so-&lt;lubbed for the number
of extra annual dollars earned in
"combat pay" for teaching there.
explained Jacobson. Instead. it was
his call to arms. He decided 10 ,....
dedicate himself to fixing problems
that plagued public education.
Eighteen years later. Jacobson
is one of the leading academic in·
novators in education refonn na-

tionally. An associate professor in
the Graduate School of Education.
he recently was recognized for hi s
effons by hi s peers wi th the Jack
A. Cui benson Award. given annuall y by the University Council for
Educational Administratio n. for his
contributions to the field of educational administration . Jacobson
calls the award. offered by the group
of 52 of the leading educational
admini stratio n universities in the
country. "extreme!)• humbl ing."
The Leadership Initiati ve for
Tomorrow's Schools (LIFt'S ) is
one of Jacobson's innovations.
Born from concerns that Jacobson
and area school administrators
shared over the qualit y o f "new
school leaders," LIFTS is a cooperative project among UB and
seven WNY school di stricts to field

train tenured teachers as school
leaders and administrators, says
Jacobson. With lhetdpoUacobson's
colleagues. James Conway and
Roben Slevenson. LIFt'S redefines
traditional educationaladmieistration training by integrating course
work with field experience.
Eight teachers from area schools
are currently enrolled in the twoyear program. Selected by their
administrators to participate in
LIFTS. the teachers remain on paid
leavefrom their school during the
program. Currently. the teachers
ha ve taken on the task or designing
a "model elementary school" for
an_ynnamed. troubled school district ou t ide Piusburgh . Thi s
projec r. explained Jacobson, was
selecred from among a number of
proposals lur assistancr: submitted
lo the LIFt'S program.
'The community is 53 percent
black by population. yet this school
district is 99 percent black," explained Jacobson. "Of ISO students
who enter first grade. only around
50 expect to graduate from high
school there. Their last class valedictori an had a 2.7 GPA in high
school. but failed out of the University of Pittsburgh after receiving a full scholarship."
LIFt'S students have studied the
financial. labor-management. facilities and socioeconomic problems of the district for more than a
year. and will draft a comprehensive repon for the di suict ar the
conclusion of their training.

Another of the innovations
Jacobson has introduced to U.S.
schools sprang from his personal
pink-slip experience: a salary deferral plan for teachers that can
prevent layoffs.
Jacobson researched and wrote.
in 1992. about a program widely
used in Canadian schools thai allows teachers to defer a ponion of
their pay for a number of years to
earn a full year's "sabbatical" from
their district with pay and the guarantee of a job when they return.

•'For instance," Jacobson explained. "a teacher making $40.000
a year could defer 20 percent of
that salary each year for four years.
!hen take a leave at 80 pereenl of
full pay the fifth year." Jacobson
bowed that districts could realize
a small saving over layoffs by deferring pan of nonnaJ compensation
and hiring long-tenn subs for teachers on sabbatical. Most important to
Jacobson. though, is the plan's ability to combat teacher burnout.

A

fter leaving the New York
Cityschoolsy tem.Jacobson
spent four years as a drug rehabili tation counselor while earning his

master's in special education
through the SUNY College at New
Paltz. Hewentontoearnhisschool
administrators cenificate through
New Paltz. but. he confesses. "The
program was just awful. It was
everything I thought was w9&gt;"g
with these types of programs(' He
immediately appljed to Cornell

University. where. in 1986. he
earned his doctonte in educational
admini stration. He joined the faculty at UB in the fall of that year.
Invo lved with a Cornell University project several years ago to
assist rural school di trict consolidation. urbanite Jacobson visited a
tiny school system upstate. ~I figured a big city guy like me, what
am I goiog to learn bereT' recalled
Jacobson, "but, on my first day
there I noticed something I'd not
seen in larger districts.
" Every kid getting off a bus
had name. and every aduh there
knew it. They would ask kids who
didn't seem like themselves. if
anything was wrong, and they
wanted to know the answer. II
a very nunuring environmen ,...

a

Jacobson carries his imp~s io
of that visit over to h is vision for
the school s of tomorrow.
School buildings will be mere
structures. says Jacobson, that
house more venically and horizontally integrated classes. ''Education
will become more student-focused
and individualized." he predicts.
·..Focus on the program needs of evindividual. rather than on pro-·
gramming for a blocklike regular or
special education."
Thismodel,whichJacobsoncalls
the "inclusive school," willfe9ljire
a new breed of administratofS:like
those being trained through LIFI'S.
who are both administrators and
leaders. with talent for managing
and facilitating.

erY

1994 SEFA campaign sets record for UB, Western New York
. , AJmiUR PAQ£
News Bureau Director

11le 19M St.ta Employ. . . Federated Appeal (SEFA) at UB
has set records both on and off campu s. The drive nened a record
S642.434.raising ll3.1 percentofitsgoal. Nineleenorthecampaign's
23 units surpassed their goals. The campaign also set records for
Western New York. with UB logging 1171eadership gifts ofSI.OOO
or more and 291 pacesener gifts of between $500 and $999. Lead&lt;rshi p gifts added up 10$143.588: paceseners 16taled $174.334.
"The University at Buffalo is now the No. I workplace in Western
New York for leadership gifts." said Roben M. Bennen. presi dent of
the United Way of Buffalo and Erie County. "This speaks well to the
university's commitment to this community and to the needs of the
people who live here. No other workplace is within 20 percent of the
university in leadership gifts." Bennen added: " Western New York
continues to benefit in many ways from the ideas. the time and the
financial giving of the university. h is oreal asse1 10 our quality of lire.
Those who donate to the UB SEFA drive know full welllhallheir money
translates into programs and as istance for their friends and neighbors."
He had particular praise for Muriel A. Moore. UB vice president
fo r public service and urban affairs. who headed this years ca mpaign

at UB. 'This year·&gt; campaign at

was among the very best of any

workplace cam,,aigns that I have ver seen:· Bennelt said. .. II is
frequently cited as an example nol only to other workplaces. but
throughout the country as an example of what an institution of higher
education can do.•·
He added that for the second year in a row. UB also was a major
participant in the United Way's "Day of Caring.'' Last year, some 140
UB employee took time out from their work activities to panicipate
in the event. This year. ·nearly 200 signed up to volu nteer.
UB President William R. Greiner praised not only Moore and
membersofUB's SEFAAdministrativeGroup.buteachfacullymember,
staff member and student who contributed to this year· s SEFA campaign.
"Even though il is exciting to break records and quote statistics. none
of these is the real reason why we should·be proud and excited about
this year's exceptional SEFA s uccess." he said. "By ... raising more
than S600.000 for the health and human services agencies thai serve
Western New York, UB has sent our community a very loud, very
clear signal that we really do want to help ou r neighbors. and that we
truly au willing to give our best in order to provide such help. This
outpouring of compassion makes SEFA one of the most visible
ex.amples of UB 's commitment to community service ...

�_,...,._.

___

,..

Facul &amp;slalfBillboard
Nelooa TOWDOeDcl, director
of the Oivisioo of Athletics
at
has been named a co-chairpenon wilb Wendy T . Stahlla fo&lt;
the 1995 SisleriBrothertlood
Week of the WNY Region of the
National Conference of Ouistians and Jews (NCCJ). Stahlka, a
member of the Board of Directors
of NCCJ, is vice chair of the
Board of Directon of the Uniled
Way of Buffalo and Erie County.
Townsend and Stahlka will
preside over the 1995 Sister/
Brotherhood Aw
ncheoo
to be held Jan. 26 in
Hyan
Regency Hoael.
Among
ving Sister/
Brotberbood awards at the luncbcon are: D. Bruce Jobastone,
chancellor of the Stale University
of New York from 1988-94 and a
professor at UB, Leadership;
Anne Rogovia, aulbot and edu. eator and Mlltoa llocovin, documentary social photographer and
adjunct professor of American
Studies at UB, Arts; J. Warnn
Peny, dean emeritus and professor emeritus, UB Scbool of
Heallb Relaled Ptofessionov,
Heallb; Robert Kresse, cbair of
the Martin House Restoration
Corp. and a member of the Succes by Six Task Force, Community Service and Volunteerism:
Jenny Galante, a senior at
Hutchison Technical High School
and a participant in the STEP
Program at UB for three years,
Dr. Joseph Manch /NCCJ College
Incentive Scholamup.

-s

Law school
Olsen to new post

0

R. iJs Olsen, Jr., professor of law in the UB School
of Law, has been named to the
new position of vice dean for
academic affairs.
Olsen will oversee the implementation of the school's new
curriculum, designed to help
bridge the gap that has historically exisled between law school
and practice. The law school
received S 1.1 million from New
York Stale to begin to implement
the innovative program.

Olsen also will be responsible
for long-range planning, evaluation and self- rudy, enrollment
tarxeting. and faculty recruitment.
promotion and !enure. He will
retam bis responsibilities as director of clinical education and continue his research in federal
post-&lt;:onviction remedies and
environmental policy.
A 1974 gradua~e of the Columbia University Scbool of Law,
Olsen joined the l.JB law school
in 1978 ilfler serving as a lecturer
and clinical fellow in the University of Chicago School of Law.
Before that. he had been a clerk
to Cltief Judge Thomas E.
•
Fairchild, Sevenlb Circuit U.S.
Court of Appeals.

c-pbell retires
" - UMr SerVIces
Aller 31 years of service,
Roger Campbell has retired from the User Services
group in Atademic Services,
Compuler and Wonnation Technology. Campbell was a consultant
for bolh database and tape applications.
He began working for User
Services in 196 I as a student
assistant while he was pu~uing a
degree in electrical enginetring.
He beeame a professional computer programmer at the Computing Cenaer in 1962 and held
various supervisory positions
throughout his career. A gounnet
cook. Campbell continues to
moderate the "'DIEl.. Lisrserv
electronic discussion lisL
Campbell has moved to Richmond, Va., where he will work
for E.D.S .. managing a group of
Oracle database programmers. Email sent to his usemame on the
UB systems will automatically be
forwarded to him in his new
location.
Most of Campbell's duties
have been assigned to Richard
Kucharski. who also belongs to
the User Services group.

Preventing drug theft
subject~program

0

The UB School of Pharmacy and the Pharmacists'
Association of WNY will present

AtRAW81d

_,.,
,_left:
Scllool of
........ *It

a dinner program on the problem
of drug theft and diversion in the

phannacy professioof tonight in
the Buffalo Marriott, I 340
Millersport Highway.
The program will begin with
registration and a cash bar at6:30
p.m .. followed by a lecture at 7
p.m. and a buffet dinner at 8 p.m .
Donald E. Bogardus, president
of Medical Management Sysaems
in Phoenix, Ariz.• and a nationally recognized consultant on
drug diversion. will speak on lbe
motivations of people who divert
drugs from heallb-&lt;:are faciUties.
He will address the categories
and methods of nareotic thefi, and
different ways to moclify drug
handling policy to reduce the
possibility of thefL He also will
deal with legal and humanitarian
issues on the confrontation and
treatment of narcotic-diverting,
health-care employees.

Kennedy wins

book_....

0

A UB faculty member and
her co--author have won an
American Sociological Association (ASA) award for their critically acclaimed book, "'Boots of
Leather, Slippers of Gold"
(Routledge, 1993), an oral history
that documents working..&lt;!Jass
lesbians of the 1940s and "50s.
Elizabeth Lapovsky
Kennedy, UB professor of
American Studies and Women' ' -

Studies. and Madeline D. Davis.
chief conservator and head of
preservation for the Buffalo and
Erie County Public Library. will
receive the Jessie Bernard BooL
Award at the ASA 's annual meeting nexl summer. The award IS
given to recognize scholarly work
that has enlarged the horizons of
sociology to encompass the role
of women in society.
The book evolved from the
authors· 14-yearstudy of a mid century bar community in Buf-

falo. Its narrative was developed
from dozens of oral histories.
Kennedy ~A1 as one of the original planners and faculty sponsors
ofUB"s Women's Studies Program. A graduote of Smith College. Kennedy received her

BISON's New Look
As a result of a SUNY Office of Educational Technology grant and the generosity of the H.W. W~­
son Company, BISON (UB's online catalog) has nine new WILSON lhdexes to satisfy YOU&lt; informs·
tion retrieval needs. Instead of searching GENI. which had only five Wilson indexes . you now
select from the following databases: 8IZL (Index to Legal Periodicals and Wilson Business Abstracts}-, IIDLI. (Educatkln Index and Ubrary Ut6rature), OBM (Biography Index, Bool&lt; Review
Digest and ReaderS' Guide Abstracts). HUU (Art Index. Essay &amp; General urerature Index, Humanities Index and the Social Sci6nces Index) and SCII (Applied SciI I I I II &lt;( , ......., lc
ence &amp; Technology Abstracts, Biological and Agricu#ura/lndex, and
General Science Abstracts).
.... ~~ ,' ~ ~
These 14 Wilson indexeS, in combination wilh BISON's other indexes
which include ABI-INFORM. Dissertation Abstracts. ERIC, Newspaper
Abstracts, PsycUT. and Ouakeline, provide the UB convnunity with unprecedented searching power.·The Wilson indexes win be available lhrough 1995. They provide
indexing back to 1989 and are updatad monthly. II is importanlto read the introductory screens fO&lt;
each Wilson database g rouping as they provide Information on how to limit your search to a particular Index and will infO&lt;m you about the contents of each database.
To get to any of the BISON indexes all you need to dO is select subject area options 3-7 on tha
Database Selection Menu. (Option t is the ·us Ubfar:ies Catalog" and option 2 is "Other Catalogs"
including SUNY Binghamton. SUNY Stony Brook, and the Ce~ter fO&lt; Research Ubraries.) In O&lt;der
to search the Wilson indaxaS via BISON REMOTE. you must enter the bar code number on the
back of your current UnJvwsity at Buffalo faculty, staff, or studentiD caret
•
Future "Electronic Highways· columns wiN highlight indMdual Wilson indexes. For mtXe information on the '"New BISON" ccnract Mike Lavin, Lockwood Library, 645-0211, ~&gt;.
-Gemma aev-,.,. IJfld Loss Peque/lo GlazMr, Loclcwood Library

0...
Fredeotdc

Wlntr,

--Glick of
Pnwllr; David
Procaccini,
cllltlr of R AW81d
COftallt:tM;
BIU Thenten
of

Praulr.

UB honors Praxair for social awareness
For the second consecutive year. Praxair, Inc has recetved the
Rose Award fO&lt; corporate SOCial awareness from the UB chapter of
Delta Sigma Pi. the rntematronal business fraternity.
The award, conceived by !he students of the Alpha Kappa
Chapter. recognizes Praxair for rts three educational outreach
programs: the "Praxair Visiting Screntrst Program,· in which employees visil Holmes Elementary School rn the Town of Tonawanda
and conduct experiments to encourage science rnterest among
the young. a Mentorrng Program that matches up an at-risk student
with_a Praxair employee who meets With the student on an ongoing
basrs. and the popular Cryogenic Demonstratron, a "Mr Wizard"type performance ihal shows the effects of ul!ra-i:Oid temperatures, ranging to 32b degrees below zero. on vanous matenals.
Fredenck Winter, dean ol the UB School of Managemenl, presented the award to Steve Ghck. Praxair drrectO&lt; of adminrstration,
and_Bill Therrien, VICe presidenl of engineering and safety and
envrronmental serv1ces

doctorale from Cambridge University in England.

Vacco to speak at

UB~~InNYC

0

DetuUo C. Vacco. wbo
became New York State
attorney general Jan. l. will be
keynote speaker at the UB Law
Alumni Association·~ luncheon,
to be held Jan. 26 in the Unron
League Club in ew York City.
Vacco. a member of the UB
law school class of 1978 and a
former U.S. auome) for the

\\'estern District of ew Vorl..
will speak about his plans and
priorities for the New Yorl State
Department of Law. At the luncheon, being held in conjurn..-.:ion
with the New York State Bar
Association's annual meeting.
Barry B. Boyer. UB Ia"
school dean, "ill update alumni
on changes in the law school.
For more information, call Ilene
Aeischmann. aJumni association
executive directOr. 645-2107.

UB team second
In bridge competHion

0

Engineering students from
UB placed second in the
New England st ructural-steel
bridge competition held at the
University of Maine at Orono in
December. University of Massachuseus at Amherst took first place honors.
The competi tion was co-sponsored by the American Society of
Civil Engineers and the American
Institute of Steel Construction
The UB truss-bridge entry "~ 20
feet long. 3 feet wide and
weighed 170 pounds. Stuan
Chen. assistant professor of civil
engineering. ~·as student advisor.
Bridge team members are
Maria Balingit. Greg Ball. Blaise
Blabek. Ste\'C Bock. Patricia
BrodericK Sam Coggswell, Anthony Cypert. Chris Day. Jonathan
DePianche. James Elmer. David
Evers. Joseph Holm, Katherine

Kooistra. Michael Lamanna, Guy
Mason. Mike McManus. Man
Mroz. Niki Shute.
Also assisting in the UB
project were Did:. Cizdz.iel and
Dan Walch. affilialed with the
National Cenaer for Earthquake
Engineering Research at UB.
Tredo EngineeJS. Acres International and Jansen-Kiener Engi neers "'-'ere corporate sponsors.

36 Inducted Into
national _,aneertng
honor society

0

The ew York Nu Chap&lt;er
of Tau Beta Pi. national
engineering honor society. has
inducted 36 UB students into .the
societ) for distinguished scholarship and exemplory character.
Seniors inducled are: Timothy
Dunn. Gregory Hanchar. Todd
Heckleman. Peter HunL Soultana
Kotini-Stoltz. Eric Lia. William
McAllister, Brian Miller, Karen
o· eill. David Rimmeli. Robet1
Sanetick, Stacy Schl!lilacber.
Brian Sibiga. Lucky~enudjaja.
Juniors inducted ane: Jeffrey
Bornheim. Oebra Buns. Jir-Shyr
Olen. Richard Cyjjran&lt;l\'ich. Grant
Davidson. Paul DeMarco. Thomas Dougan. Carolyn~inger.
David Eyngom. Brian
gory.
Holly Gurbacl&lt;i. Chris
r
Hausler. Ke Huang. Natalie
Klompstra. Bun l..aFounlllin,
Joshua LaPenna. Foo K wang Lee.
Brian Maltbie. Jonathan
Railsback. Daniel Seider. Bren
Wehmann and Ju-Yeun Yoo.
Tau Beta Pi designated four
faculty members as "'eminent
engineers.. : Mark Karwan. associate dean, School of Engineering
and Applied Sciences and professor of industrial engineering; Eli
Ruckenstein. distinguished professor of chemical engineering;
Andres Soom. professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and Darold Wobschall,
associate professor of electrical
and compuler engineering.

�_,..,

... _..,_ ...

Will
the Real
Please
Stand Up?

100

artists.
including
three
from UB.
pay tribute
to Barbie
in a. new
book

UDE BARBIE sprayed silver and stalking Times
Square at midnight! Barbie sprayed gold on an
"Altar of Love"! A Busby Berkeley chandelier made
of real tan Barbies! Barbie Noir!
She's 35, built like a voluptuous ingenue. sweet and
sexy and dressed to kill. We can't get enough of her.
When Mother Man~ decided to pay tribute to its middleaged dollie. she commissioned 100 artists to produce their
take on the old girl.
No problem.
They complied in pen and ink. animation eel. gouache. sheet
meW. paper. paint, clay and prismaco\or, to name only a few of the
media employed.
The result is the book, "The Art of Barbie." a shiny. sparkly.
colorful and weird collection ofBarbie-art edited by Craig Yoe. a toy
inventor, graphic artist and prizewinning animator. Published by
Worl::man Publishing, ··a significant portion" of the book's royalties
will be donated to The Children Affected by AIDS Foundation.
Among the artists whose work appears are Alan E. Cober. UB
Distinguished Visiting Artist, (page 73, the surreal " Barbie with
Handy Horse," ink and prismacolor). and UB illustration grad Joel
Peter Johnson (page 108, "La Barbie Vergine." an oil on board
version of Barbie as Renaissance Madonna).
The work of UB illustration graduate student Quenby Chunko
shows up as well on page 36. Her humorous " Prehistoric Traces"
situates the mysterious and eternal platinum blonde on the walls of the
caves at Lascaux wearing magenta heels and carrying a handbag.
But that ain't all. There's a terra cotta jar from whose surface juts
a rhythmic series of naked. perky. earth-&lt;:&lt;&gt;lored Barbie-torsos. Vegas
Barbies pose in evening anin: against slot machines. Barbie shows up
•n camouflagt avu Beavis and Butthead (who've interchanged
Barbie'sand Ken's heads) and goes on to glow in gauze and net froufrou as the American princess she certainly is.
She's 'toon, Hogarthian icon, a churlish shoe maven a Ia Imelda
Marcos and star of a "romp in,' stompin' all-star blue-&lt;levil band."
Oddly (although there are outfits commercially available). she
never seems to congeal in the artists' minds as nurse, doctor. airline
stewardess, firefighter or Marine Corps lieutenant. Instead. they strip
away her pretense and photograph her recumbent on a sea of French
fries.
Then there are the puns. Rick Tharp. for instance. puts another
shrimp on the ...
And William Wegman sticks his Weimaraner Fay 'Wray in a
Barbie house, which she "breaks"-"Housebroke n"-get it?
Marian Jones photographs the doll as "Nude Barbie Descending a
Staircase," one of many works included here that parody artists from
Bouicelli to Edward Hopper.
Barbie isessenlially a fashion queen. however. and designers from
Amy Chan to Bob Mackie do her up in everything from silver skirts
to chest tattoos and razor blades. Vidal Sassoon does her hair and it 's

Artists' portra als of
Barbie. from botl&lt;1m
left. clock wise! Joel
Peter John100n's I.e.
Barbie Vergine; Alan
Cober's Barbie with
llandJ' llorse; Craig
oe's Planet Pink or
Barbie·ln the Sk with
Gla.......,; Isaac liZl'ahi's
Commuter Set 1959. At
lop leflis the original
Barbie. circa 1959.

~ot bad.

"Supermodel" Claudia Schiffer shows up as a Barbie wannabe.
Frank Lindow pickles the doll in one of those voodoo bottles. E.V.
Day mummifies ber. but lets her skinny little bare feet stick out of the
bandages.
And sadly, but not finally, Frederick's of Hollywood tries to tum
her into a ta11 but fails, proving once and for all that Ia Barnbolina
(page 45 by Guido Crepax), although frequently tamed into bridal
attire or tight capri pants. will never be mastered.

All '**"from Tk An of Batbic:.
cdtted by &lt;hiJ Yoc.

CopyriJiu 0 1994, Manti. l11r
'-llri,pl•~.

RepriMCd by pmDIUIOa ol

Wott.a. Nlliu.UI&amp;c:c.np..y. lac.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Interns get
an inside
view of
Buff-alo
City Hall

Six . . ....._.. - . . 17 ........_ from area schools
woriting this SCMe$ter in Buffalo City Hall as partjcipants in a college
internship program that is the fust of its lcind in the history ofBufTalo city
government.
The five undergraduates and one graduate student, the first participants in UB's "Inside City Hall Internship Program," are working 10
hours a week: for 12 weelcs on projects in the Division of the Treasury, the
Division for Substance Abuse, the Division for Youth. the Office of the
Mayor and the Grant DepartroeoL They will earn an bowiy salary. plus
three credit hours.
Mayor Anthony MasieUo, an entbusiastlc:..suppone.- of the new city
internship program, says it offers two major benefits to the City of
Buffolo.

"First, it involves young. energetic, talented minds in thesean:b for
solutions for our problems," bt IIOICd. "Second. it gives the studcou
ascnseofinclulilonintheworkofthi community. Weneedtodomore
of both of tbesc things in the City of BuffalO."
Muriel A. Moore, UB's vice president for public service and urban
affairs, .aid the prognm provides students with an opportunity to learn
pro~ sional worlc kills while still eopged in academic study.
"I believe," she added, "that this experience wiO timulate their
intellectual development and bcigbteu their awarmess of~ options in the area of govemmeotol relatiom and public experience."
The UB program is administered by the univtnity's Cora P.
Moloney College, which combinesresidentiol and academic propams·
to address the needs and concerns of inner-city residents and minoriContinued on page 2

Recipe
Winners!

H~y

Hoidays!

Everything from soup
to nuts in contest .
entries.

"-

8

Today·s 1ssue of the
Reporter is the final
one for the fall
semester The
Reporter will resume
publication Thursday,
Jan. 19, 1995. We
w1sh you a happy
holiday season I

:!«forld .
u~:J:~es

collection of 25,000
sci fi publications.

By USA WILEY

News Bureau Stall

S

T DE T DEMAND
:md the increa-.ing un pon;mce o l the Pactfil·
Rm1 to_ the cl·nnnm) of
the United tate' hao;; prompted
LlB toc ...wbli ~ h an A~ian Studie' program. The program pro\ tdc:' credenua)o., _ including
lanf!uagc pmficlcilc). 10 'tu
denh \\ ho "1\h to pursue: careers in A~ia .
.. All indicauon' are that a
Mgmficant number of l!B
graduates will deal directly wnh .
Asia- and particularly with the
countries oflhe Pacific Rimin the years ahead. There is
probably no area of the world
more critical to the economic
future oflhe United States than
the Pacific Rim.·· says Stephen
C. Dunnett. UB vice provost
for international education.
~·Asia is so crucial and bas
so much to offer," agrees Thomas W. Burkman. a mQIIIern
Japanese hi s1orian who was appointed 1he program's director
this su mmer.

'1bere is probably no
area of the wortd
more critical to Ute
economic future of
the United States
than Ute Pacific Rim."
STEPHEN C. DUNNETT
A background in Asian studies "could be the decisive edge ..
for grndua1es interviewing for
jobs with U.S. corporations and
government agencies that require staff who are fluent in
Asian languages and knowl edgeable about Asian cultures.
Burkman say~.
The primary focus of the
program. which has been in
place for 1- 112 ye.an.. i&gt; E:lst
Asia-China. Japan and Korea. Southeas:t Asia is a secondary focu~ . Two minon, in
A~ian !»tudies will be in place

Getting a Edge
on PaCific Rim

h) next fall. ~ propo..al for o.1
mtJJOr m A ... mn 'tud1e' I' bemg
prepared.
-\..,the \anct~ of ,pe,.;~dh't'
.tnd C&lt;lUP-e n pU OO'Io v. 11h1n A'lafl
-.tud le' grov...,_ ne"' mdJOf and

mmnrprogram'"' tit bedt-\ t~d
Foundauon grant' are betng
'ought to 'upplement ""'' er-. n~ budget rewurcc ... l
Whtlethe pro~ ram ,.,hou~d
.tdmmt\tratnel~ m the F.-c ult~
of Social ctenc..·e-.. 11 "' much
broader than I he u-adu10nal hu mamlle-. and
-.ocral ~tence ....
dra\\ mg from
\ uch dh ene fielcb as management. e ngi neering and natural
o;,ctence~ -

The program also has helped
all lB undergraduates. who
no"' ha'e more o ptions to
choo&gt;e from to fulfill the
umv el3t ty"s recentl) imple mented langua~e requirements.

n addition to Chinese. the
Deparunent of Modem Languages and Literatures now offers a full range of courses in
Japanese. Korean and Arabic.
Moreo \er. the department·~
World t.,&amp;lguages lnsmute offer s sJpen•ised , self-study
courses in Indonesian. Thai and
Vietnamese.
Korean is 1M newest language 01 the course ro te ... with
42 student§ enrolled in an introductol) con this fall . A seco nd-)ear \:,el will be
introduced nexl fall. " Busi ness
Japanese:· a third-year course
designed fo r those planning to
condud business in Japan. will
be added to the roster next fall.
" 'hile a .. Business Chinese··
course i~ being considered.
The demand for these
courses has soared as the number of Asian and Asian-Ameri-

I

can studenh-increasingly
conscious of their cplturnl heri tage-h., grown at UB. Since
the 1970s. a large portion of
UB"s international student
po pulation h a~ come from
China. Hong Kong. Japan. Korea.. Taiwan. Malaysia and lnConlmued on page 3

�_..,s-. ___ ...

2
~

H 0

0 R S

Senate discusses role in arts, sciences redesign

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

JtySTEVECOX

--S'IWY~
. . _ ............. as-

T

sociate professor Of biological sciences, haS accepted
an irMtation
to-aaa
member of
the Cellular
Biology and
Physiology
Study Section, Division
-of Research
Grants, for
the National Institutes ol

Health.
Members are selected tor
demonslraled competence

~=:.~
s review grant

appll-

ca

make recorrvnenrd
to the appropriate
NIH nationaladvisooy council or board, and survey the
status of research in their
fields of science.
PHYSICS
lO IIECEIYE .lEWD. Of'

!MilA:
" ' - L .lain, professor
of physics at UB, has been
selected to receive the Hind
Rattan (Jewel ollndia) the
India~

gcwerrwnenfs highest

award to norHesident
Indians. It Is given for out·
standing acllievements, COI&gt;tritliAions and service by the
NRI Society of India.
A UB faculty member for
&lt;10 years, Jain will receive the

award at the lOth lntemalional Congress of NRI's meeting
In New Oet1l this month.
R&gt;r the pesl decade, Jain
has been usilg heavy-ion
beams from !lrool&lt;llaven National Laboratory on Long
Island and CERN, the world's
largest particle accelerator
In Geneva. SWitzel1and, in
the ti8IWCh lor the Ouarl&lt; Gluon Plasma. the holiest n&gt;eearch 1oplc for high-ene&lt;gy
physicists In the world today.
His research al9o includes
work on a potential method
lor eatly detection and theraPY for breast cancer.
A fellow of the American
Physical Society, he has
been a Fulbright scholar and
the recipient of a UUP Excellence Award.

MEDICINE

-

'Jl) NDI SlUOY

SICIION:
P8u1 R. Knltlht, professor
and chair of the Department
ol Anesthesiology in the UB
School of Medicine end Biomedical Sciences, has been
named to the Surge!y. Anesthesiology and Trauma Study
Section of the Division of Research Grants of the National
Institutes of Health.
A UB faculty member
since 1992, Knight is a diplomate of the National
Board of Medical Examiners
a nd the American Board of
Aneslhesiology.
He has written 0!" co-written more then 60 articles for
schofal1y journals, and more
then 100 book chapters. He
also-has served as a reviewer for the jooolal Anesthesiology and has made more
than 40 presentations at professional conferences.

Reporter Staff

HE FACULTY SENATE examined its role
in redesigning the ans
and sciences at UB and
indefinitely postponed

action on a controversial mission
statement proposal during a meeting last month.
Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Nicolas Goodman
and Social Sciences Dean Ross
MacKinnon off=d the Senators a
progress report on the administrative and curricular reorganization
of the ans and sciences. The di cussion roamed from administra-

rive structure to academic advising
to admissions policy and access to

major departments.
Planning sessions have been
ongoing since last year, when the
Triggle Commission Report
singled out the arts and sciences as
the unit most in need of restructuring. Others involved in this process are Arts and Letters Dean
Kerry Grant and Natural Sciences
and Mathematics Dean Joseph
Tufariello.
" Basically," Goodman explained, "the three faculties (Social Sciences, Arts and Letters and
Natural Sciences and Mathemat-

ics) function as a single unit of
undergraduate education. but as
separate graduate departments."
Woridng together, he conti nued,
the planning group was able to

coordinate the implementation of
the univenity 's new genenl edu-

cation requirements.
MacKinnon said, "While undergraduate education is 1101 what
it could be, it's no disaster." He
urged critics to be patient with the
efforts that are underway. "I don't
know of any university where all
these thing5-&lt;"CSC8ich. graduate
education. undergraduate educa-

tion, academic advisement, work
perfectly," MacKinnon said.

M

athematics Professor Samuel
Schack urged early imple-

mentation of a ..democratic" form

of faculty governance of the new

ans and sciences unit.. saying that
faculty would likely better accept

the coming changes if they were
"not imposed from above."
President Greiner told the Faculty Senators he had listened to the
complete tape of an earlier meeting

81 which the mission statement was
debated aod valued theu candid

comments.
"Clearly. some of you felt the

document was imperfect,'' Greioer
said understatedly. The very next
day, Greiner met privately with
members of the Faculty Senate

Executive Committee to review a
brand new draft of the mission state·
ment FSEC members inane~
report the new draft , tentatively
titled "Vision, Mission, Emphases
and Outcomes," was very well received.

UB's 'best-kept secret' revealed to FSEC
•r STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

HEFACULTYSenateEx-

ecutiveCommittee learned
all about whot Vice President Muriel Moore called

..the university's best-kept secret·•
during a meeting last month.

people, served more than 1,600

students. according to Weems. including 300 student who went on
to college and 240 who obtained
job placements.

One in seven young people in

come of less than S500. said
Weems. Eighty-five percent of
EOC students receive some form
of public assistance. Fifty percent
of the students are African -Ameri-

can.

tum to EOC for help. Through a
program known as BRIDGE.
funded by the state Depanment of

Social Services, the center

offe~

specific job uaining and plae&lt;menl

services exclusively to recipients

,

the inner city lacks a high school

"We are talking about students

education. explained Weems.

for whom education is not a high

of Aid to Families with DeJl"ndent
Children .

Representatives of. the down-

The center is more than just a

town
'
Educationa_l Opportuniry

school, Weems said. It hosts an on-

Center (EOC), sponsored by UB,
explained thei( program and fielded
questions during an FSEC meeting
Nov. 16. The EOC, located at 465
Washington Street is o ne of II
such centers sponsored by SUNY

"We are talking about students for whom
educatiqn is not a high priority. At best it is
a means to an end. "

institutions statewide.
The EOC offers an educational
second chance to non-traditjonal.

SH£1UtYL WEEMS

economically disadvanlJiged students, acconding to EOC Director
Sherry I Weems. In operation since
1973, the EOC offers a five-stage
program that focuses on basic educational training, including English
as a Second Language, general
equivalency degree programs and
vocational or pre-&lt;:ollege place-

ment training. Last year. the center, which employs about 100

site daycare center and is now con·
structing a Head Stan facility, also

on-site. The center staff includes
social workers and coun~lors
Among the vocational training programs the center spec.ializes in are
library sciences. in conjunction
with the Erie County Library. which

Many leave school because of the

pressures of their personal lives:
the need to work, a dysfunctional
home life or the need to become
heads of households or family

caregivers. That creates a large
market for the se"ices offered by

the center.
The typical EOC student is female, in her mid-lOs, a single head
of household with a monthly in-

priority," said Weems. "At best it
is a means to an end." Almost all
have already failed at school at one
level or another, and many are from
the poorest of Buffalo's inner-city
neighborhoods, she said.
'They are just told. at some
point, 'You're not capable of doing this,"' Weems said, explaining
that many suffer from very low
self-esteem at the time that they

is next door to the center. and dental hygiene. in conjunction with
the UB dental school.

Weems conceded that last
month's election. which saw conservative George Pataki elected
governor, does not bode well for
her center. ''We are fully prepared
to defend our program," she said,
"and could be back again to ask
your support in defending our program."

CITY HALL

UB intem

Continued from page 1

Javier Sosa,
right,

ilies. Accocding to Curtis Hamm.

consults
with his
s upervisor,
Or. Rafael
Rondon, In
medical unit
o f Substanc e
Abuse
Program In
Buffalo City
Hall.

who coordinates the program for
UB, it has been of particular interest to students in the fields of city

government. economic develop·
ment, city planning, human services and community relations.
The new UB interns include
Daniel Gerena, a senior economics major. who is working in the
city's Treosury Di vjs io n helping

to set up a new system of treasury
checks and balances.

Javier Sosa. a junior chemistry
major, works in the Substance
Abuse Division with intake clients
referred from courts and elsewhere.
Under the supervision of Raphael

Rondon. the division's medical
director. Sosa expects to become
familiar with clientele and with
the medical side of substance-abuse
recovery programs.

James Lorimer. an intern in the
city's Grants Depanment. is a
graduate student in urban planning

Todd Kniazuk, • senior in the
field of urban political st udies, is

project developed in connection
with the mayor's office.

working as an intern in the Office
of the Mayor underthe supervision

insights and unusual enthusiasm to

AJan Holmes. a senior humanservices major. is imeming in the
Division for Youth.
Bonnie Russell. who coordi·

their tasks.
She noted that the program was
inaugurated to eQcourage college

of Matthew Brown, the moyor' s

liaison with minority communities.

whose research background is ex-

Jeff Levy. a junior acco unt ing

pected to be useful in helping to

major. is worldng in theCityComp-

adminisler the ciry's bJock-granl

troller Joel Giambra· s office o n a
large·commodities co mput~r

program.

notes the college internship program for the City of Buffolo, soid
thot the city departments like hav-

ing the student interns because they

require little training and bring fresh

interns to stay to become familiar
with city government and perhaps

opt for careers in government. a
goal that she says is important to
Masiello.

�~J..I.R4v......

'[~ profs, tw~~vf~~-~~!. ~!~~2,~~-~~.?!~. .,
eporter

L

8

3

-.. .... u

Unusual course
deals with financing
of higher education

IKE MANY political analysts
across the country, political scientistsatUBaredividedoverthe

majority of the House seats, a majority of the
Senate seats aod a majority of governors
(from this region) are Republican ," said
Mallei. " Before John Tow..-·s election to

supponed Republicans, whether incumbent
or challenger,'' he said. Reports filed with
the Federal Election Commission through
Oct. 19,the most recent reports available,

significance of last month's na-

LBJ's old Senate seat in 1961,there were no

demon trateamas iveinfusioooflatemoney

UNIQUE COURSE being taught

tional election results.

To Franco Mattei, an assistant professor

of political science, the magnitude of the
Republican landslide was far greater than
statistical analysis of pat election results
could ever have predicted . Yet. James
Twombly. also an assistant political science
professor, contends that national media de-

scriptions of the election as a major political
realignment are not justified.

The election. in which voters turned over
both houses of Congress. a majority or govemorships and numerous state legi latures
he Republican Pany. was "a story or
ry voters upset with the status quo,"
cording to Twombly. But. the election

l

results reveal a very directed voter angerdirected, be said, at scandal-ridden Qemocratic HouseandSenateincumbents. "Among
incumbents. 92.4 percent of Democrats seek-

ing reelection were reelected and 100 percent of Republicans were reelected." he
explained, "but the Rosie · ski s and

Republican Senators from the south, and

to GOP candidates. Also, for the first time

at UB thi•sernestertakesalook at

ever, there were more Republicans running

Twombly agrees that in the south the
"realigninent"isrealandcouldwellbelongterm.Nevenheless. Twomblypointsoutthat

without major party opposition than Democrats similarly situated.
·

one or the basic issues in higher
education-its financing.
Offered through the Department or Educational Organization. Admini tration and
Policy in the Graduate School of Education.
the course os conducted by those who truly
know the IDS and OUts of unl\·ersity budgets.
The ci&amp;S.\, OAP 507, Financing Higher
Education, is being taught by professors and
administrators with a wide range of university experience: D. Bruce Johnsrone. former
SUNY :hancellor: Roben Wagner. UB senior \ice president for university seiVices:
William Barba. assistant professor of EducauonaJ Organization~ Admim~rration and
Policy; and R•chard Wiesen, senior vice
presodent of D'Youville College.
Through case studies. the class offers students a chance to grapple woth issues they may
encounter during their careers as h1gher
educat1on admanistra1ors. ··A lot of learning
goes on because the discusYon ruses a whole
"''of fascinating issues," S3ld Wagner.
The class, which IS composed of a mix Of
docloral ar.d master's degree students, a.o;
well a a postd&lt;&gt; ~oral student who is a dean
at an area college, is intended to "teach them
'4'hy '4'e do it as we do iL," ~id Johnstone.

p

residentCiintonwilllikelybecomern&lt;&gt;f'&lt;:
or a centrist to deal with the GOPcontrolledCongress.accordingtoTwombly.
with Clinton returning to the moderate issues that propelled him in 1992. Howe\er,
Manei contends that the center could be a
very lonely place for Clinton.
"Newt Gingrich i · likely to be one or the
most powerful Speakers in history," Mallei
predicted. " More than 50 percent of the
membersofhiscaucuswereelectedthisyear

"For the first time since
the Civil War a majority
of the House seats, a
n'Uljority of the Senate
nfl
. . if
SeatS a a ma;onty 0
(fro h.
governors
m T: LS
region) are

or in 1992, and he is sidestepping traditional
seniorityconsiderationsinappointingcommittee and party leaders." To Mallei . this
"ill mean a more cohesive group or Repub-

R b/'
''
epu Leans.

licans in the House who cede great poVr.er to
FJIAHCO MATTtl

Gongrich. This. coupled with the fact that
many or the Democrats who retired or lost

were moderates. will produce a far more
polarized House of'R:epresentatives.

the behavior or Congress."
Mattei, whoisresearchingaplannedbook
on mid-term elections IO be published late
next y~. sees the '94 election as a unique
electoral shift to the righL In the south. which,.
he defines as the II states of the former Con-)
federacy and border states Kentucky and
Oklahoma, this election may mean that the
pany ofLincoln is finally forgiven. It marked

polls show more voters na•.ionally identify
themselves as Democrats than just two years
ago, and fewer identify themselves as Republicans. "In terms of getting his legislative agenda passed by Congress. President
Clinton had been the most succe sful President since Eisenhower," Twombly said.
Mattei says that the high number of retirements. panicularly among Democrats.

One maller both Twombly and Matteo
agree on is that 1996 is still a longtime away,
politically Speaking. It istooearly to predict
the impact that the recent election will have
on President Clinton's reelection chances.
"Dramatic shifts in power like this tend to
produce dramatic changes in public policy,"
observed Mattei . "It waits to be seen whether
voters will like the changes the new Con-

the culmination ofa 30-year march away from

created an interesting shift in election finan-

the Democratic Pan:y by southern voters.

cial support. ••where money has Lraditi~-

gress produces." Also. the last two midterm
elections to see such significant

UB 's public service efforts gain national attention
Reponer Editor

U

B IS BEING ViEWED through-

out the country as a role model in
the area of service to the community, according to Muriel Moore,

UB vice president for public service and
urban affairs, who presented an overview of
her office at the Professional Staff Senate
meeting held Nov. 17 in Squire Hall.
"President Greiner developed this office
two years ago to complete the third leg or

Educational Opponunity Center. UB's ma -

jor outreach center downtown that strvices
about 1.600 students: the Educational Opponunity Program, which provides academic
suppon to disadvantaged students: and the
Office of University Preparatory Programs.

an outreach service UB has been invol'"ed in
for 25 years.
Public Service and Urban Affairs also
includes Millard Fillmore College and Sum-

mer Sessions. areas in which ··you"ll see us

UB's triumvirate mission of research. teaching and service," said Moore.

begin to do some very different things in the
next couple or years," Moore said. Among
the changes that are currently being pursued

The Office of Public Service and Urban

is a new advertising campaign to "aggres-

Affairs was fanned to increase the visibility

sively'" try to rebuild Millard Fillmore College. according to Moore.
And UB's public service effons will con-

of UB's community service effons and be-

cause the university is committed to supponing the community that supports it, Moore
said.
"Public Service and Urban Affairs is growing and growing, and that's really good
news," Moore said. She added that UB is

receiving national attention for its public
service effons.
" I recently returned from a meeting that
focused on the urban agenda where all the
speakers referred consistently to William R.
Greiner. Nationally he is being quoted,''
Moore said. "The fact that President Greiner
established a vice president in this area signals his commitment to it. Bill and UB are
really being viewed as role model s."

Moore also discribed the units that are
pan or Public Service and Urban Affairs.
. Cora P. Maloney COllege. she said, "is
one or the last or U B 's old colleges system,"

and concentrates on developing intern hip
programs such as the Inside City Hall project,
and networking with other departments that

are providing student internships. The college is expected to expand some of its course
offerings in the fu ture, Moore added.

Units in the division also include the
Center for Applied Public Affairs Studies.
under the direction of Henry L. Taylor: the

Repone&lt; Editor

few members of the House.··

Foleys who were turned out of office send a
clear signalthatlhe electorate is angry with

ay C~NE VIDAL

-,~­

tinue to grow and change. Moore said_

··r

have been spending most of the semester

trying to get an assessment of where we are
(i n public service effons)." she said. A Public Service Compendium is expected to be
readx, after Thanksgiving, and will be used

millee has a prim~ purpose or addressing
staff morale. she said.
The Professional Staff Senate will sponsor a nominator's workshop to provide guidance and

suppon to those who wish to

nominate candidates for the 1995
Chancellor's Awards for Excellence in Pro-

fessional Service , according to llene
Aeischmann. chair of the nominations com·
miuee. The "'orkshop will be held at noon on
Friday. Dec . 9 in 545 O'Brian Hall.

PACIFIC RIM
Contonued from page 1

donesia. Asian students represent more than
70 percent or the total foreign graduate-

student constituency. while 10.2 percent of
the undergraduate population is AsianAmerican.
The Asian Studies program also encourages students to participate in study abroad

as "a base to talk about UB's major initia-

programs and internships, which offer an
opponunity for tudents to receive practical
training in technology and in the society

tives and to help us talk about what is public

with which they will likely be dealing in the

service in engineering, what is public service in the ans," according 10 Moore.

furure. Students in management and engineering are offered the option of internships
in Japan.

T

-An internship is where they really come
to grips with Asia in their professions,"
Burkman says.
' The universi1y has appointed faculty

hedeansalsoare in the process of trying

to determine what their public service
orientations ought to be. she said, and the
Faculty Senate has organized a committee
under Claude Welch to look at forming guide-

members in Asian comparative education

lines to make pub1ic service pan of an entire
dossier.

and medieval Japanese history to help meet
the needs oftheexpanding program. A search

In other business. the Professional Staff
Senate heard repons from senatorial areas regarding membership needs. Primal)' concerns
include professional development. supervisory
· training. morale. and how to increase awareness of the PSS among its constituents.
The Professional Staff Senate has recently

fanned a new committee on the quality of
work life. according to Rosalyn Wilkinson.
PSS chair. Chaired by June Black, the com-

is under way for a specialist in the Japanese
language-the fastest-growing foreign lan-

guage course at UB . perhaps because of its
perceived relevance to business and technology. Burkman says.

In addition to academic courses, the program has instituted an "Asia At Noon" baglunch series for faculty and graduate students,
and will host the New York Conference on
Asian Studies next September.

tudeots are divided into groups that
Wiesen called "a small microcosm of
what you'd find at a college.'" Those small
groups are pivotal to the learning experience, the instructors agree. "One of the pieces
of thi s course that we thought was important
was to put students into study groups and
give them a case study to do," said Wiesen.
"What you really want is group intentC-

S

tion," said Johnstone.
Among the scenarios presented as pan of
the class discussion is the hypothetical expenditure or departmental resources in the
race or several faculty openings:
"Your department has experienced four
faculty turnovers. Three individuals opted to
take an early retirement package, and one
colleague died. You are faced with the challenge or making replacements in these fac ulty lines. Some or your colleagues want tO
hire at the junior level; others want to hire a
'star' with a national reputation. lf you hire the
laner. several areas or instruction will be left
open. How do you decide who to hire. and
more importantly. how do you spend these
most valuable or departmental resources?"
Students are asked to make that decision.
acting as y&lt;e theoretical department chair, by
discu. ing who is involved in the process
and considerations that will go into making
their decision. A spokesman for the group
then pri:sents the decision. and the process
by which ·, was reached, to the entire class.
being a thought-provoking
In addi~to

exercise.. the

tructorssay.casestud.ies are

an important
s or teaching students to
collaborate with colleagues. -Half of the

poinl is they're working together on a
project." Barl&gt;a said.

The class looks al issues such as financial
options under periods of austerity, higher
education's eosts to students, theory or cost
sharing, arguments for high tuition and high
financial aid. and the rising relative cost
phenomenon. Sessions also are devoted to
federal and state funding for higher education,
including budgetary procedures and contextual issues such as the state of New York's
economy and public vs. private funding.
"How do you think about being equitable? How do you think about being comprehensive?" Wagner said. '1'he class spends
a lot or time thinking about basic issues.'"
Srudents also look at relative priorities, such

as balancing social service vs. other needs.

�· 181ddiiN

4

-........rs.,.s..MV.....ae..No. U

Bu~ofvests

wiU be issued
to Public Safety
II)' STEVE COX

Reporter Staff
Public s.tety Officers at UB,
who are now anned around the clock,
will soon be issued bulletproof vests,
according to acting Public Safety Director John Orela.
Orela said the officers began inquiring about bulletproof vests about
two years ago. "We haven't had any
incidents that prompted this," Orela
stressed. "It is simply an added measure of security forourofficers." Nor
is the purchase related to the recent
e in the policy of anning public
officers, he added.
is curreinly taking bids for 66
that should cost a total of
$20.000 to $25,000 to issue to each of
its Public Safety Officers, lieutenants

5.

and investigators. Twelve of these
vests will go to Alfred State College,
which will reimburse UB for their

cost
Police officers in neighboring do&gt;partments, including Buffalo and
Amherst are routinely issued bulletproof vests. Amherst Police Depanment Captain John Maslow said hi s
depanment began issuing vests sev~~!

:'!at's ago. The departmental

policy is to "strongly recommend"

that officers wear them. according to
Maslow. Although there have been

no incidents during which an officer
has been fired upon, be e•plained,
most officers do wear the vests whenever they are on duty.

O.J. Simpson case used in classroom study
II)' ELLEN - - . . . U M - USA WILEY

News Bureau Staff
S WAS THE CASE with his
televised preliminary hearing,
O.J . Simpson's mun4'rtrial is
going to be a legal classroom
for Americans.
According 10 a UB distinguished teaching professor of biological sciences, the trial
also will provide an opportunity to prove the
relevance of science.
Case studies have long been used in teaching law, busine and medicine, and now
ClydeF. Herreidsaysit's timetousethemto
teach basic science. Bycapitalizingonevents
that s~udents find interesting, he adds, the
method has the potential to boost scientific
literacy and make science education more
user-friendly.
Hem!id. director of UB's honors prog ram, already has capitalized on public interestintheSimpsoncasetoinvolvestudents

enroll.ed in 8 course for nonscience ma1·ors in

a lesson on DNA fingerprinting.
To set the stage for the classroom whodunit,thesaudentsfirstgalheredinfonnation
the facts. They used colored bead to construct chains of DNA and, ultimately, conviC! one offive suspects in a fiCiional murder.
Each color represented a different kind of
molecule. Based on information on the
IU!Ier's genetic code. typically isolated from
blood samples found at crime scenes. students pieced together a DNA "fingerprint"
to compare with those of the five suspects.
) 11tis models exactly the same technology
that will be used in the Simpson case," says
Herreid. "The case is a story, and stories-are
always interestingtopeople."headds. "Unless
we put material in context. what good is it?"

(toke the wolkwoy to Pori:

from the 2nd Aoor ol O'brian,
where it meets Baldy)

Metro Espresso
Serving Seattle Style Espresso,
ltolion Sodos, and Baked Goods

8:00 om - 4:30 pm
Monday - Friday

CLYDE f. HERRIED

learning and remember more, and attendance rates are as high as 95 percent, up
from 50-65 percent in lecture-format courses.
The cases Herreidseleatsinvolvecontrovc~iaJ, unresolved topics that have a solid
scientific core and deal with important socia! issues and public policy.
Cases, he explains, may be developed
from pre-existing materials that are cheap
and easy to lind, including newspapers, books
and movies. When instructors obtain cases
from familiar sources that are recognizable
pans of the students ' world, it is a fast.
timely . engaging and relatively easy way to

pique students' interest, he says. DNA ttth nology becomes a more appetizing topic, for
eumple, when it'sthe focus of a case study
basedonMichaeiC~ton's"JurassicPark."
Mtchael S. Hudeclci. • UB research lmOciate professor of biological sciences. has
used a smgle 100-word paragraph from Th~
N.-.• York Timts as the _basis for an enti~
class penud for students'" a freshman semtnar, "Origins of Contemporary Biology."
Slude.nts' vitalit! and int~rest lev~ls SUr·
passed hiS expectations a.ftenntroductng the
case. which was about memory los in mice.
"It sort of developed a life of its own."
Hudeclci says. By the end of the class. students were eager to read the original ··search article on which the story was based.
Hudeclciusesnewspaperarticlesbecause
of their ability, tn one or two shan paragraphs. to capture tudents' interest.
Case studies. he says, enable students "to
put on a scientific hat" and share "the wonder. the awe and lhe ex.citement of sdence ...
·
· have arHerreid notes that I rad .tltonahsts
gued that the case metbod cannot cover the
same amount of information as lectures.
maintaining that it may not be suited to
deliveramultitudeoffacts,figuresandprinetplc:s..Headds:"But)USibecauseyouCO\'eRJdit.
doesn't mean that the srudents understood iL"
While the case method is used most easily
in gcneral~ucation cou.r.ieS dealing with sci·
ence and society. it can spice up ach•anced
courses. lnstructors may e.periment with the
methodbyinsertingasinglecaseintoanormal
lecture ooun.e. Herreid, fore.znpl~. inoorporated a single case study into an evolution3r)
biology class of370 srudents and four-.:1 that II
stimulated clas interest and maximized student participation in a course that was otherwise entirely devOted to lectures.

Pickets protest independent custodial contracting
Reporter Ed•tor

Now Open in
Pork Holl Atrium

"The case is a story, and
StOrieS are a/ways
[
interesting [0 pe0p e.
r r [e
· [ ·
un SS we put matena ln
;~?,
context, what good ts· u.

ontheSimpsoncaseandwroteasummaryof

By CHRisnNE VIDAL

Attention
coffee
lovers!

l1le use of cases, or the "case method,"
involves learning by doing, developing analyticalanddecision-malcingslcills,andknowing how to grapple with real-life problems.
Herreid notestbat caseotudies have a strong
appeal for students turned off by the lecture
format of traditional science courses.
For the past four years, he and other UB
science faculty members have used the case
method with core material in the updergraduate "Scientific Inquiry .. course for
nonscience majors. llley have found that
when the method i used. students enjoy

A

BOUT75 MARCHERS gathered
in Founders Plaza O\. 17 as the
Civil Service Employees Association held an informational
picket to pro1est the contracting of indepen·
dent custodial services in four buildings at
UB .
According to Barry Kobrin. president of
CSEA loca1602, the purpose of the protest i&gt;
to call auent.ion to the use of non·SLate em·
ployees to provide custodial services in the
Center for the Ans, the new University Sta·
dium.the Natural Sciences and Mathematics
Complex and the Student Union.
CSEA employees check the buildings
each morning and CSEA cleaners are ex·
peeled to take care of the buildings and any
emergencies that occur in them during the

day. Kobrin said. and should be hired for all
custodul services in those buildings.
'These are state buHdings and on state
property. so why can't state (employees)
clean them?" Kobrin said. He added that
bet"'een 1983ard1994.thenumberofCSEA
employees at U B has decreased by "a couple
hundred," due to attrition.

According to Ronald Na) ler. associate
vice pres1dent for university facilities . no
current ~tate employee jobs are in jeopardy
because of contract cleaning.
··we controct for many. many. many ser·
vices at the university--elevator mainte·
nance. chillermaintenance. and other services
uch as managing our endowment. We Con·
tract our bookstore services. So contracting
out for services is not new and is something
that has been done since the university was
built." Nayler said.

The decision to contract cu todial ser·
\ icas in the new buildings was made in
response to the university's fiscal situation.
he added. "As we had our budget cut we
never laid a smgle person orr:· although
other SUNY institutions did. Nayler said.
'"So we needed to make decisions about ho"'
we could best utiliz.e our resources:·
Although the SUNY budget provided
money to construct new facilities, il did not
allow enough to maintain and operate buildings. "When we have inadequate resource .
we have to make tough choices,'' Nayler said.
The university can get buildings cleaned
by contract for about half of what it would
cosl to hire state employees. Nay1er said.
"We kept the custodial staff informed
throughout about what our intentions were.
and the decisions were made with the full
knowledge of '((• custodial staff."

Books and Lobsters, Too
In tile -..cl to line• In a - - without batlling the
holiday crowds? 11M Online - . . . . (OU) is a electronic storefront in cyberspace that actually inspires brows.
ing and lhen makes il easy lo make a
purchase electronically by credit card .
phone or fax . Many of their books are
shipped as conventional hardcover
and paperbound books while others
can be transmined electronically lo your computer.
Like a more lraditional bookstore the manag'ement posts
the weekly New York Times Bestseller lisl complete with
ordering information. Yet it also makes available eleclronic
books such as Royd Kemske's as yet untitled vampire/
business novel to be published in Seplember 1995. which
interested members ol the Internet community are ediling as
a group publication project.
Eslablished publishers such as Henry Holt &amp; Company
·and Globe Pequol use the OilS to make lheir Internet debut.
For example. Henry Holt offers an American Book Award
winner Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe comp lele with free Internet serial releases, Maze (an interactive
puzzle book), and the Mosaic User's Guide.

Many of the books on the OBS 9Qelves have sample
chapters that you are free to prinl or download. The 1995
National Job Hotline Directoryoffers its ·ca){ornia Job Hotline
Dtrectory Listing: Richard Dooling offers !he enlire firs I
chapler of his lalest novel White Man's Greve. And !he New
Riders ' Official Internet Yellow Pages presents the text of a
"Whimsica!Tourofthelnternet."Somewori&lt;ssuchasMcGrawHill's Paperless Publishing have their enlire leXI available for
browsing on your computer screen.
Finally, who can resist visiting a bookslore in cyberspace
that sells books, disks, files-even lobsters online? Yes.
lobsters. And as no. 0oo11ee ......._ reminds its customers, the crustaceans they sell and ship in high tech boxes
filled with seaweed are "real, nolvirtuallobsters. so immediate eating is recommended!"
To visil the Tllo Oallao 8ookatoro type 11opltor
~- at your UB E-mail system prompt and
then selecl "Online Bookstore: For assislance you can
contact the OilS by phone (508-546-7346), fax (508-5469807) or E-mail

&lt;OaS•-----&gt;-

-&lt;&gt;emma DeVinney and Loss 1'eque(lo Glazier, LoclrwOOd Library

�IHIIDalll·.

5

-s..~v--.-12

Football coach
isreassi~

OVERNIGHT PARKING

REMINDER

~~I

Jim Wwcl,
c08Cit at UB
since January. 1992 has been released from
his head coaching position and reassigned to
other duties within 1he Division of Athlea.ics
effective December 31. 1994.
In announcing this major change in the
Athletics Department. Nelson Townsend,
Director of Athletics. stated ...Coach Ward
played a vital role in the transitional stages of
the university"s footbaU program. Many
changes were implemented during his ten·
ure that will help establi h a solid base upon
which the university will build a highly competitive program in the future:·
Ward had been head coach for three years.

UB faculty , staff and students
are remonded that overnoght
wonter parkong regulatoons are
enforced mod noghl-6 30 a m .
Nov 15-Ap nl 15 Ove noght
parkong IS reslrocted to the
follo.vong lors

"''ith the first year spent as interim cOach.
The team·s three-year record under Ward
was 8 wins. 24 losses. He"' ill be reas igned
as academic counselor 1n the Arhletic Depan_ment for e remaining time of his contract (Dec. 31 1995).
A national
rch will begin immediately
to hire
ard"s replacement with plans 10
have the position filled before the peak re·
cruiting and signing peiiod.

Leaky pipe causes

theater flcxxling
A performance of Babes in Toyland set
for rhe Mainstage theater in UB · s Center for
the Ans Nov. 26 had to be changed to a

smaller theater due to noodtng from a sprinkler sy&gt;tem. A leah Nov. 22 in a faulty hot

water pipe joint had t,!Ctivated the sprinkler.
The theater will need repairs but they
could be completed in time for the next
scheduled performance on Sunday. UB officials said. Gordon Love. facilities planning
coordinator. said it•~ likel y that some of the
repairs would be paid for by the insurer of the
"iubcontraclor.

South Campus
(des1gnated area only)

Abboll (student lol)
Doefendort·
Main-Baoley
Mochael'
Townsend
Parker

S PART OF TilL Buffala N~ws' commitment to funher tbe academic exeeiiODCe of the University at BuffJtlo and its students.
News officers came to the UB campus Nov. 14 to present the
new paper·s second annual scholarship awards to UB students at
a special ceremony.
Shown, from Jell, are: Stanford Upsey. NA's publisher and president; Rochelle Jackson. "95. scholarship winoer; MuiTtly B. Light. N'ws editor and bior
viee president and UB President William R. Greiner.
A scholarship was awarded also to Hakecm Oseni, "96. editor-in-chief of The
S{H!ctnun, UB's student oewspaper. Rochelle Jackson i assignment editor for
The S{H!clrum. Jackson and Oseni were each awarded $3.000 as ~Buffalo News
Seholars."
~t year. TheN~spledged $150.000to the university to provide unrestricted
suppon for campuswide priorities aod...a scholarshi p program to encourage
students from groups underrepresented in journalism. to pursue education and
careers in that foeld.

North C11111pus
(enltre lor. excepr as nored)

Governors E
Baord
Cooke A
Furnas· (designated area only )
Governors B
Spauld ong , Rochmond . Fargo
(EIIocon Complex)

s·

"Faculty/StaN lots-student permns
not vahd 7 a m ·3 p m
Monday-Fnday

7th annual
Holiday
Open
• I;% off (non members )
20% off (members)

• Refreshments after 6pm

Charlie Keil
Wednesday, December 14th
5 -7pm
• UB Professor &amp; OCO member will
sign his M ....ic (/rooo1'" (U of Chicago)

• Refreshments · Come Groove, roo!

E.pmmc• y...,. LoccU, O...,..jilookstoo&lt;
INDEPENDEIIT BOOKSTORES
NOURISH INDEPENDEIIT MtNDS

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7TH - 8PM

•

~
,.)

·

,.

• THE HASSIDIC NfW WAVE
• THE BEJ:4 GOlDBERG Tiro
• THE KRAKAUER TRIO
Three Different Groups from New
Yorlt C11y, Borrowing Heov1ly from
Klezmer Music, Hossid1c Wedding

~ ~;

Th1s Generot1on's

~~

.:t.oi

lioN! ~

~~

~~=G';:~~~;aG
zz.
~~

Leod•ng Musicians in
Weaving Music from

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE
CAlUMET:
56 W. Chippewa St.;
New World Records on Elmwood
near Utico and at The Recon:l
Theatre on .Y,oin St , Williamsville
rdetPrice $15, Students $10

.ALl.JM'ET
• ,

1

1

The Po st Into. The
Present!
\

c , ' 1
--.:~~
~
S6 w. CHIPPfWA STREfT-15S.2220
~

..

�lllddlll

_..,..__..,_ ....

6

AIMrt Peutler
Prof~ssor

Depl. or Educatoonal

Organiza11on. Adm1nistra110n

and Pobr:y
GRADUATE SCilOOL 0~
EDLlCATIO~

PUMPKIN LOG
3eggs
213 cup pumpl.1n
1 cup ·ugar

1 teaspoon bakmg soda
112 teaspoon cmnamon
J/4 cups Oour
Blend well Grease jell) roll pan
or cook.ae shttt Line "A.·Ith \ltaJ:

paper.
Pour

!RIO

Jelly roll pan

Sprinkle "oth chopped nut
Bake It 375 degrees ror 10·15
minutes . Turn onto t0'4el
sprinkled with granulated ugar

Cool a few mmutes

'ly shares "best recipes " in annual Reporter contest

AWNG

2 tablespooru soft butter or
marganne
8 ounces crram cheese (sort
cncd)

3/4 teaspoon \'llnilla
I cup po-.'ckred sugar

THEY CAME BY CAMPUS MAll, BY U.S.

MAll,BY E-MAIL AND BY FAX-from every

comer of the university. And recipe submissions for this year's Reporter contest literally
covered

erything from soup Ia nuts. f rom a pear bisque-

Beatfillonguntol mooth S~
onto cak.e_ Roll up lik.e a Jelh
roll. Wrap in fo•l and refnge;ate. Ma) be made ahead.

verc;e Oettln&amp;er

one of the two winners-to sugared and salted pecans,

Colrulotion Clni II
PURCHASI G DEPT

recipes offered a gamut of choices for a holiday feast. They're

WINTER PEAR BISQUf

an inleres~ng and larle-temp~ng collec~on . We have tried

3 tablespoons unsahed butle- r
112 cup mrnced on1on
I l-ounce tum1p . peeled and
doccd
2 tablespoons mmced , peeled
fresh ganger
4 cups rich chicken stocl.
2 ~ In pound" firm. npe pear-.
(combination of AnJOU, Bose.
and Bartlett ). peeled. cored
and cubed
4 ounce~ dned pears. drced
1-112 cups hc:a\)' cre.am
I/3 cup dry Sh&lt;IT)
2_ tablespoons fresh lemon

Ia include as many as possible in toclay's issue of the

Reporter, ~nal one of the fall semester.
The contest winners are Albert Pautler, Profes;or
in the Deportment of Educational Organ iza~on, Aclministro~on and Policy (Pumpkin

Log) who shared ~rrl place with Versie

Oettinser,

Calcul~on Clerk II in the Purchasing Deportment (Winter Pear Bisque). Oettinger's

recipe far Cranberry Pear Chutney was a winner last year. Congratulations Ia both
the winners-they11 each receive a copy of France tne Beouti{ul Coolcboolc in the
Beautiful Cookbook series published by Collins.
Contest judge was Karen Noonan , associate vice provost for undergradua te
educa~on. Noonan wos o winner in a previous

Reporter recipe contest.

"Pumpkin is o nice twist on holiday dessert," said Noonon. who picked the easyto-make Pumpkin log as best of the many desserts that UB faculty, staff and
students sent in to the a M ual competition. "The recipe looks like it's
healthy, with not quite a.s much fat" as some of the others, "but I'd
submtute low fat cream cheese," she said. Noonan dicl, in fact, make the
Pumpkin log of home with low-fat subs~lu~ons . She also men~onecl that
she would suggest adding a bit more spice, "maybe ginger in the filling."
Noonan was attracted immediately to Vergie Oeffinger's Winter Pear Bisque "because soups
are my favorite." Noonan saicl, "I
like to make soups-1 make a
couple of gallons every weekencl." She chase the pear bisque
"because it's different," but added
that to reduce the fai content, she
made a low-fat submtution for
the heavy cream called for in the
recipe.
We've given you the two winning recipes ~rrl. followed by other submissions.

juice
I tJible&gt;poon firmly packed

light brown sugar
1/4 teaspoon frt"shl) grated
nutmeg
1/8 tea p&lt;M'n ground alh.pice
salt and ground while pepper
GARNISil

I

~mall

firm Bose pear,

peeled. ror('d and d1ced
I ~mall firm AnJOU peaT.

peeled. COR"d :md doccd
I small firm Bnnlen pear.
peeled. cored and doccd
juice of 112 lemon
heavv cream
frcsh.l) ground blacl pepper
Melt butter m heavy saucepan
over medium heat. Add omon
and tu rnip an9' cook until soft
st lrring frequEntly. about8 minutes. Add gi nger and cook 2
rrunutes. Add stock and bri ng to
boil. Add 2· 1n pounds pem
and dri.ed )leers. Reduce lout.
cover panjaJfl_ and si mmer until
very lender. j~ minutes.
Puree soup in(ood processor
in batches to slightlf gra iny tex·
ture . Return 10 saucepan. Mix in
1· 112 cups cream. Sherry. 2
tablespoons lemon juice. sugar.
nuuneg. allspice. sail and ":bite
pepper. Simmer gently 2S minutes, stirring frequently. Adjust
seasoning.
Mi:x di~ Bose • •"-njou and
Banlen pean: with j uice from 1/
2 1emon. Ladle soup into bo'oi.IS.
Garnish each with c~m . Drain
pears and divide among bowls
Sprinkle with pepper.
Makes about 8 cups ..

Lort WkWnsld
Rtsourus Ct'ntn

H~od, M~din

HEALTil SCIENCES LIBRARY

SAUSAGE STUffiNG
I 8-&lt;&gt;Z. pkg. Pepperidge Fonns
seasoned stuffi ng

�7
I pound (or 12'!n(nce packoge)
pork sausage (Jimmy Dean or
Bob Evans are best)
1/2 cup chop~nion
I cup chopped eel
112 cup milk
I can cream of mushroom
soup
I lablespoon chopped pmley
salt

Crumble and brown the sausage.
Drain. Add onion and celery,
cook until omon i~ transp~nl

In a separnte bowl, combine soup
a nd milk. Mix lhoroughly. Add

o;: tuffing. Add sau.sage mixture,
parsley, and dash of sail. Mix

together and pl ace in buttered
cosserole dish . Bake at 350 de·
grees for 20 minutes. Or stuff
turkey. chicken. Cornish ben ,
"' pori: chops.

NonnUtech
COMPUTING AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Churnbfto (Ditd I'm not sur~ of

thr s~ing} is Italian for
" 'rryth g lrfr in tM fridge.
,.,.r rri d it with hor dogs.
r tcbn. pork and lltrlc.r)
/lotion sausogr bid a 's best
with SC'imr 's drlu.xr sausagt
M'ith Romano chrur. )'ou can
nlso lra''t! out thr potatMs and
srn 't! O\'t!r your fumritr pasta.

CHUMBOTA
(llalian Slew )
I pound Itali an sau~age
I large onion
I large green pepper
2 tablespoons oli ,·c 011
I hot pepper (opt ional )
I cup z.ucchini. 112-inch cubes
2 cups sliced potatoes
2 large cans "hole plum tomaloes
112 teaspoon garlic powder or
2 cloves garlic
sa h and pepper
~plash of red wine (~~1\'C most
for the table J
hot, crunchy Ital ian bread

Place about 112 inch water in
covered fryin g pan and boil sauo;ageuntil waterdt s~i pates. Then
fry sausage until brown and set
ao;ide . Add oli\'C oil to frying
pan and lightly fl) onion and
green pepper. Add hoi pepper

for last couple minutes. No"
cut sausage into o;Jices and add
10

frying pan.

In a large saucepan, heat 2
tablespoons olive oil and dump
m sausage, omon!t and peppers.
Chop up tonuuoe-. a nd dump in.
Add garli c. salt and pepper.
Cook for about 3 minutes. No"'

add zucchini and potatoes. C&lt;llk
until potatoes arc tender. This
makes about 4-6 sen·i ngs.

Roberta Cemevele
St ud~m

MILLARD ALLMOR E
COLLEGE
Til is r«iJN f or Strt'us~l
K11rr:h~n hos bun h an d~d
dnwn through thf' g~nuotions
from my G~nnan M~nnonit~
ancutors, who ~mig ratt!d 10
\VNY in rh~ f'arly 1800s. (In
fact, Hoffman Station, which is
nf'ar Stt·ut Hom~ Road just
north of th~ Amhf'rst Campus.
is nam~d aftrr my ancestors.)

STREUSEL KURCHEN

dty ingredienlS (iugar, flour,
baking powder and sail) forbal ter. Add other bauer ingredients
(eggs. oil.. milk and vanilla): mi.x
lhoroughly, and pour inlo pan .
To prepare lopping: Muo
sugar. flour. cinnamon and bul ler. Us.ing a spatula, spread topping in a thin layer on top of
batter. lben. us mg a butter knife.
make a swirling motion while
piercing the bauer to aiJow some
of the topping to penetrate the
batter to the bottom of the pan.
Bake for 25 minutes. Use a
toothpick. to determine if the
slreusel is lhoroughly cooked
by insening a toothpick tnto the
center of the streusel. lfthe tooth·
pick comes out without crumbs.
the streusel is ready.

.Ge)'le J. Henly
A rsodat~

Librarian
LO&lt;;KWOOD LIBRARY

SWEET AND SAlTY
PECANS
Buy ~con holv~s. or if you
sh~llth~m )'OMrs~lf try 10 U~p
th~m in as larg~ a pi~c~ as

possibk

5 cups shelled pecan ~
(there are about 3-112 cups in
I pound!
2 egg wh1tes
3/4 ? sugar
1/4 cup (112 sucl,) mellod
margan ne
sail
Preheat oven to 350 deg~ .
Spray a large cookie sheet or
piua pan with vegetable spri)'
~uch as Pam. Pour mehed mar·
gllfine o n sheet (don' t melt the
marganne on the ~~ in the
oven becat..se the sheet often
...warps" when this i~ done).
Beat egg whites unti l they
are stiff as menngue . Fold in
ugar. Fold in nuts. Spreed on
sheet and sal t them moderottel )'·
Bake in 350.-degrec 0\'en for
about I 0 minutes until medium
brown . Cool on brown paper.
Store in closed containers. If
-you hide them , these wi ll keep
for many weeks.

Nancy StlmiiOfl
Assistant Libranon
SCIENCE AND ENGIN EERING
LIBRARY
I obtaintd this recipt' m·~r ren
)~ars ago from Al'"na Doyl~.
th~n h~od cook atthf' Bod~go
Mann~ lAboratory rn Bod~go
Boy, California. At one~ I
n otic~d hok' d~licious and
l'lrtually foolproof this calf' is.

NANCY'S WORlDFAMOUS RUM CAKE
1 cup pecans. chopped
1 package yellow cake mnt
I package vanilla instant
pudding
112 cup water
1/2 cup salad oil
lf2 cup Myers' s Rum (original
dark )
4 eggs
SAUCE INGREDIENTS
I stick buuer
I cup sugar
1/4 cup water
2 ounces rum

Spri nkle chopped pecans on
bottom of greased and flourBAlTER:
• dusted bundt pan. Mix together
3/4 c up sugar
cake mix, pudding. water, oil
2 cups fl our
and rum. Beat in eggs. one at a
2· 1/4teaspoons baking powder time . Pour bauer into pan and
J/4 teaspoon sah
bake I hour a1 325 degrees. Le1
2 eggs, well beaten
cool
I f2 cup vegetable oil
SAUCE: Boil butter. sugar.
1/2 cup milk
water and ru m 1ogetherin sauce2 teaspoons vanilla
pan . Pour over cake white in
pan. Th is will soak into cake.
TOPPING:
Le1 cake completely cool be fore
213 cup light brown sugar
removing from pan .•
4 tablespoons flou r
This rt!d~ was adapt~d from
2 tablespoons cinnamon
Jun ior Clulrity Lt!ag u~ of Mon ·
.t tablespbons soft buller
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. rrw, Louisiana. Thr Couon Country Coll~ction.
Grease a 9-inch-square pan.

To prepare b111er: Combine

R.. S.~e
Associot~ Prof~ssor

ELECTIUCAL AND COMPIJTER ENGINEER! NG
nus rs on exull~nt snack. It is
~xtrtm~Jy high 1n fi~r and
has no faJ. It suppllts th~
~nt:rgy bDost ne«ssary du ring
mid-nwrntng. It tal:.~s l't'l)'
lin/~ 11m ~ and i_s nor a rigor·
ous r~CIJH'. Any comOination
of dritd fruits con M uud.
This is o fa,•oritt of my son.
Go ruth..

SCRUNCH MUNCH
I cup flou r
teaspoon balr;.ing soda
114 cup nusi ns
1/4 cup dried fru1t) and nuts.
finel y chopped
'lt'llter or fruit juice for dough

Jn

Mix fl our and bak1ng soda. Add
raisins and dried fruits and mix .
Add water or frui i JU ice slowly
and make into dough. Pat into
s mall biscuit-sized rounds.
Cook on low heat on griddle
or frying pan. Tum over- and lei
cook for abou! I 0 minutes. Re·
quires no fat. Makes S· 7 scrunchmunches.

M_,. C8rubbe
Stud~nt

(st'ruorj
UNDERGRADUATE COMM UNICATIONS MAJOR
Many pt'o;Jl~ 1udg~ a parry by
thf' qualay and tast~ of th~
food that 's s~n·~d. nus ap~ ·
ll~r "''Ill bnng rO\·t rf'\'tt"lu to
am host or hosuss'

HOT CRAB APPETIZER
I 8--ouncc package cream
cheese, softened
(lower fat and nonfat cream
cheeses can be used )
I tahltspoon milk
6· 112 ounces flaked crabmeat
2 tablespoons finel y manced
onion
1/4 teaspoon sah
dash pepper
1/3 cup slivered almonds
Blend the abO\e mgredaent.!o
well , except almonds . Spoon
mto ovenproof da sh (pac plate
works well).
Sprinkle wuh almond.10 . Bale
at 375 degrees for 15 manutes .
Serve with crackers _ Yield : 16
seni ngs . If you don't haH
crad..ers. this \lo'Ould talite great
spread o n wann crust} bread

Areta Buchner
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTL"NITYCENTER

CANDY APPlf SAlAD
I cup sugar

112 cup red cinnamon candtes
J cupo;: water
4 to 6 medium apples, peeled.
cored and slicr:d

I cup cottage cheese
1/4 cup green pepper. chopped
1/4 cup celery, chopped
Lettuce
In a large saucepan. combine
sugar. candies and water, stirring occasionall y, O\'er low heat
until candies are d issolved. Add
apples: cover and cook slowly
for about J 5 minutes or until
apples are tender. (Be sure apples
don't get too sofl. ) Tum apples
occasionally while cookmg to
color them evenly. Drain and
c.hill for at least 30 minutes.
Comb ine co ttage cheese.
green pepper. and celery in a
large bowl. Spoon chilled apples
into mixture and toss. Serve on
leaves of lettuce.
Makes 4 to 6 servmgs.

J. Plltrick Keleher
(FathuPat}
NEWMAN CENTER
A gr~al sid~ dish for th~ holidays. I first com~ across this
ruipr JO years ago. Going
home forth~ holidays with a
dassmnt~. w~ had this fo r
dinner tit~ first night thf'rr.

Mn. Do•oh&lt;r, ril• morilu of
the housr, arousrd our ifllf'rut
an.d it morr thon mrt 011r
h~1ght~n~d t!XfH'dDllons.
Apporenth 11 ramr from a
rrstauran tth~ family had
dmrd in from umr to timr.
.Aftu s~l-t'roll·islls. 1h~.'' ta/J..rd
th~ ott·nrr into shannx it. Tht'
TM't'et~ss and warmth maJ.r 11
perf~ct for a M·rnt~r jt•ast

I

TOMATO PUDDING

degrees and conlinue baking
untillhc:y are golden brown with
no " bubbles" 011 lbe surface.
Removeand cool . You an make
lhese ahead of lhe hohdal rush
and freeze untH you want to use

1hem Just 1haw and fill
ALLING
I boll sugar-free varulla Instant puddmg, prepared as

dan:cted on box
112o()tJ.I:'l«WbofLueCool

112 hour before makioJ pie.

fuheat oven 10 4JS degrea.
Mix pumpkin 1n10 bowl. Ileal
eggs cweu; ~ubsmwe and add m
pumpbn. Add sugar and sur
Tbea add sptee, s.ah and stir.
Gradually add the mtlk un11l1t is
..liqu1d·y.. but not "-'l.lcry . 1he
null can be added or sub~J1cted
10 reach nght consastency.
Opeaptecru 1 pacugeand
pu1 ooe cruS! for each 8- 112loch pte di.sh or tan. Make rure
lhc:tt are no bolo by p1nching
cruM together 10 cover them.
Make ure crus1 is Oat q&amp;Jnst
the dub Add pumpk.m maxturt
evenly between both p&amp;e dashes
almosl up lo edge of pte dish.
Tum oven down 10 400 de:·
p-ees Add pu:s on each rack.
leavmg room 50 they are no1
dm:ctly below one ancxhe!-. Bake
until a knife or piece of stnv.
con be tn.sened into pit' and will
comt out clean ,.ithout PJC mix ·
ture on 11, It 1s: done.
Lei cool . Add chopped v.al nuts onto the 1op or lhe p1cs.
Just before serving. add
maple syrup to • bowl of Cool
Whip Ute and put all over t~
lOps of bolll pies

Whip
Mill the above mgrechents to-gelher. Shoe lops offcream puffs
I cup brown sugar
and fill . Refrigerate until rettd)'
1/2 cup mehed butter
to &amp;.!~semble .
2 cup br9d cubes 'Without
ICI G
crusts (packed mto cup)
Makt when ready to a semble.
Tum Ol-en to 325 degree
I 12-oonct: bag of semiS\\.- eel
Mix first three ingredtenb m chocolate ch1ps
med1um pot . CooL. for fi"·e mm1/4-1 cup of water
ute~~ . Add melted butter and stir
Melt chaps in macrowave or
Sur in bread cubes unu llhey are
double boder. Whis:lc in enough
all saturotted. Bake in 5mall cas·
water to make chocolatf' ..
se-role for one hour
easily. (If chocolate hardens up
dunng assembly, JUSt remelt .)
ArnyRehnlltrom
ASSEM BLY. Co•·er a I lGraduat~ stwtknt
inch (approx.) circle of cardDEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGI board wnh foil. Place a layer of
CAL SCIENCES
cream puffs on circle Drizzle
This r~ci{H! was in\•rnt~d 1n
with iang. Place another smaller
1980bymy mom, Du
carcle of cream puffs on top of
R~h.nstrom. wh~n our faml/_l
bouom la~er. Dnule wuh •c- Gerry R. Soeltner
g r~k tiud of standard mash~d
mg_Contmue thts proces form - Auociat~ 01r~ctor
potatMS a/ holidar 11m~. It has
lnga··cone.. shape. Thendnzzle LMVERSrTY RESIOE.-..!CE
s1nc~ bt'('om~ afamlh tradithe sades wnh the remammg K' ·
HAU.S
tion. nus diSh IS m cr~d1bh
mg and use your illUiglnaUOOIO
cou ~ ""'Y
~an lo mol~ and nne,- r r~am
decorate your tree CandJC) ~ 1"1111\
chus~. dip, and marxann~"
come:
omame
nl&gt;.
licorice
garcan of/ br purchos~d m /oM fat
land etc . For a e~· Year's or
• ·arf~ttn. aeon bt' part of a
HanuU.ab ce.lebru.hon decorau
2 tablespooos \egetable oil.
hraltln hol1da\· m~a/ 1
~ uh spnnlles, spun candy, rock
butter or marganne
candy, etc. Enjo) 1
3 tablespoons flour
I cup tomato puree

1/4 cup water

n.

now··

I

OlD STYlf

(HICKEN STfW

HIP HOP HAPPENIN'
HOUDAY POTATOES
I 2 medaum-Sll.C:pocatoes, peeled
8 ouncr:s cream cheese
16 ounce French Omon dap
1/4 cup margarine

garhc salt
Chll'eS

8011 the potatoes unt tl tender In
large muong bowl, add cream
cheese, French Omon dtp. and
marga nfl e t opotat ~( d r.unodJ.

Mtx on medtum speed \Uth a
hand held mu.er unul smooth

and cream~ Add garl1 salt to
taste. Pour maxture mto a glass
bal..mgdtsh. Gam1sh with chi\ es
and baLe at 350 degree11 unttl
heated through tabout 30 mmute~ l

Chriatlne Lee
D~ntnl

asnstant!Emngl'nn
Clm1c
SCHOOL OF DE~TAL
MEDICI!'IE

HOUDAY CREAM
PUFF "TREE"
I knok' th~ contul IS for
h~althy rt'cipn. and cr~am
puffs and hf'althy au O..t)'·
morons. This rt'cipr is a much
/ight~r ''usion du~ to usfillmg.
Also, M'f' all nud lr~ats to
J..np ours~l ~·~s happy.
, .,.~ bun mnking this for
fi• ·~ yta rs. Th~ cr~am puffs art
aiM·ays a hit by th~ms~J,•rs
(~sprcially at M'orl.:. th~y disappear quickly). As a ti«DraJt!d
tr~~ thf'y or~ a showstoppugrtatfor a u ntrrpit!Ct at a holiday party or family gathuing!
PUFFS:
I cup water
1/4 teaspoon sail
I stick marganne (find the
heahhlest you can)
I cup fl our
4 eggs
Preheat O\'en to .t25 degree!&gt;.
Bnng \loaler. salt and margarine
to a boil. RemO\•e from heat, add
n our all at once, blending in
quickl y, Cool slighlly, add eggs
o ne at a time, mixing each completely before adding the next.
Drop tablespoons of dough on
an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake
at 42S degrees for 10 minutes.
then lower temperature to 325

Krlate Hickok
UndugraduaJ~ srud~nt

CARROT CAKE
(with crt!arn ch~esefrosring}
3 cups flour
1-1/2 cups s ugar
1-112 cups honey
I teaspoon salt
I tablespoon balmg soda
1 tablespoon cm~amon
I 112 cups applesauce
4egg•
·
I table~poon \'amll:l
I· Jn cups chopped walnuts
1· 112 cups shredded coconut
1- 1/3 cups pureed cooled
w

C3fTOt3

3/4 cup dr.uned cru\hed pme·

apple
CREAM CHEESE FROSTING

8 ounc~ lo"' fat cream cheese

6 tablespoons "'eet butter
3 cups confect1one" · ~ugar
I 1easpoon \'am It a
Prehcal o\-'en to 350 degrees.
Grebe two 9-lnch pans Sift all
dry angredtents m1o bo\lol. Add
applesauce, eggs and \·amlla.
Seal well. Fold in walnuu.. coconut, carrots and pineapplt.
Bake SO mmutes, un11l edges
pull away from sides. Cool for 3
hours, then frost.
FROSTI G DIRECTIONS :
Cream together cream cheese
and butter. slowly sift in confectioners' uga.r. Mixture should
have no lumps. Stir in vanilla.

Kathy Grieco
UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE
HALLS

PUMPKIN-WALNUT
PIE
(Fast and low-choleslerol)
I can (29 ounce) solid pack:
pumpkin
I package substitute eggs hke
EggBeaters. or 3 "'hole eggs
3 cups skimmed milk
1-112. cups granulated sugar
pinch of salt
I teaspoon pumpk.in pie spice
I teaspoon nutmeg
4 tablespoons maple S)•rup
I I 6w0unce tub Cool Whip Lite
1· 112 cup chopped walnuts
I package Pillsbury All Ready
pie crusts ( 2 to a package)
Leave at room temperature for

I or 2 teaspoons t3J!.,tlgon
l/4 cup heavy crum
pepper
cut--up ducken
shced carrots
shced pota1oes
hah·ed onions br lee
I ca.n(l5·112ou~JCh lelcn
brolh
ba) leaf
U:~oeGnsoldfl

Dutc:hQ,·~n(Ju~r

k.addmg: use :any large pol )
Spnnlde chicken \lotlh pep-per (and salt af )OU must). and
cooL. tn hot \'Cgel:t.ble 011. about
6-8 mmutes per Sick Re.mol- e
chtd:.en and pour off fat
Put butter 10 pol . and add
\'egetablello Cook for about 8
mtnutc!lo . Add Oour. and ll-tlr for
another 2 minute~- Gradual!)
add ch1C'Len broth ~ bnng to a
boll CPerbap.., ll) somr "'inc
and reduCe !he brolh .l

Add I tcispoontalllli,!on.bay
leaf and ch1d:en. Reduce heat
and s-immer. Tum occasionally;
cook for about 30 mtnutes, unti l
chtcken 1 done Remove
c:htd.en and leep "'ann
Add cream. and s1mmer un ul thick . May need to thtcken
ith some flour or com Slarch.
aSie, and decide ifil needs""'"'
tarragon ~ if so. add I teaspoon..
Serve \lo'ith French bread.
.Associat~

Dirt!C'tor
SER SERVICES

lE&gt;W..f.AT PUMPKIN
RAlsiN CAKE
2 cups reduced fat buuennilk

baking mi.x
2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spi~
(or I teaspoon cinnamon.

J/2

teaspoon ging.et"", l/4 1easpoon
cloves. 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg)
112 cup raisins

112 cup egg substitute

I cup pumpkin
1/3 cup orange juice
1/J cup dart com syrup
Spray 9-inch squan: pan wilh
cool:ing spray. Combine dry ingredients and raisins in large
bowl. Comb1ne rest in medium
bowl; add to dry ingredients.
Mix well. Bakea1 )50 degrees for
35 minutes or unt il toothpick in·
serted m center comes out clean.

Cool on wtre rack..

�8

_..,aR4--.-u

-···-MEET

UB lavite. Alumni Arena Nat.al&lt;lrium. Nonh Campus. All day.

-

net. 201 Student Uruon onh
Campus II :30 p m S2. S3.50
C.ll 64S-2957

~AL

-AIIDICIIJICE

E lr;posurtC....-.ctvizalioo
Amonc Poplllatiom Ceasumio&amp; Contomlnated Fish rrom
tb&lt; Grut Lakes, Dr. John E.
Vena. Dept. o( Social&amp;. Preven11\'e Mechci~. 140 Ketter North

Campus. II a.m.
ASIAATSint&lt;e ror Educatioool R&lt;rorm iD Cblu-ln the Coat.en
of Eeonomic and Political
Cba.nct-. Nina E. Borevd:;aya,
lost. of the Far East. Rus ian
Academy of Sciences, Moscov.
2.50 Student Umon. orth Cam-

pus. Noon- I p.m Call
645-3474.

s~-­

RECRAL

Woocl111'ind. Ba.u-d Rttttal HaJJ
Nonh Campus Noon Frcc
LEC'TURE
Russia a and Amftic:aa CrcmCultural te:reotypes, Dr
Vladimir Ageye\, Moscow
State Un.iv. Sponsored b) Rus:~&gt;ian

Cl ub, Dept. of Mode-m Lan -

guages and Literatures, lnten 51\e English Language lnst . and
the Council for lntemauonal
Studies and Programs. 123
Cl.,..s. Nonh Campus.
12:30 p.m.

SATU RDAY

~

MEN' S SWIM MEET
UB Jn"ile:. AJumm Arm~ Nllt.a·
KlnUm. North Campu1 All day
- E N' IS-MEET
UB Invite. Alumn1 Artna a.ta·
torium North Campu All da) .
WOMEN' S .ASKET11AU
TOURNEY
UB Ro)'1lb: Tip-off Tourney.
Round 1. (Royals \"'S, M&amp;r} land·
Eastt:m Shore. Teus Southt:m,
Tennesscc-Man1n.) AJumn1
Arena onh Campui I and 3
p m. S3. S512-day pass I
ENIEMIILE IIEiliU
UB Pen:u ion En~mbk. Jan
Williams and Anthony Mnnda.
du·ecton; Mtchael Burrin. ma-

nmba so)oi" Slcc Conccn Hall.
Nonh C.mru 8 p.m F=.

LECtURE

Alcohol and Marital Viole:oce..
Kl:nneth E. l..eolwd. I'IID..

SUND A Y

Research Institute on Addic -

1100$, 1021 M1..1n St. I :30 p.m
Frcc. Call 887-2566

THURSDAY

1
What's an

interfaith
couple?

UB Jn\ilt. Alumni Arena N:~ta­
torium Nonh Campu.s. All da)
WOMEN ' S SWIM MEET
UB Invite. Alumm Arena at3·
tonum North Campu" All da)
CONTINUING NURSING
EDUCA110N

• Saturday, December 3- 4:30 PM
Family Chanukah Party &amp;
Latke cook-off
Temple Beth Zion

805 Delowore Ave;~ Buffalo

~if§
~"1~~

,

Coll886-7150

-for more information, or just come!
You'll be very welcome.

IIATHDIATICI COUOQUIUM
Split Orthogonal Arrays and

MatO.imum Resilient Systtm.s
of Funrttons. Prof. V.
Lrvc=:nsbu:in. lnst. ror Applied
Mathcmallcll, Ru~s1an Academy
ofSc 1ence~. 103 D1efendorf.
South Campus 4 p m
PHARMACEUTI

SEMINAR

Pharmacodynamic Studies
"'·ith Anti-Malarial Dru ~:J and
Cortico ·te:roids. Dr Adedlf!bo
A Fasanma.dc. Dept of
Ph.annactu11cs 508C Coo\.e
North Campus. 4 p m

Handling, Anger. Holida) Con-

GEROHTOLOGICAI. NURSING
CERTIRCATE PROGRAM

nic:ts. Eik"tn Tngoboff. Buff::~lo
P )Chlatnc Center_Deadline for

Ke:habilitation and Older

rega"-trution ~~ O\ B Radl !&gt;~n
Hmel and Su!ICl&gt; Buffalo. 42~3

Moybe you two ! If so, Temple
Beth Zion offers onBn-judgmentol, welcoming group once o
month for Jews ond their nonJewish spouses todiscuss issues
of concern. You needn't be o
member to join.

IIOLOGICAL ICIENCU
SDIINAII
TAT A-leu Promot...._ Dr.
Jane Az.iz.khan, Rosv.ell Pad
Cancer Institute. 114 Hochet.euer, North Campus. 4 p.m.

Gcne~e

St.. Chc:d.to"" .1ga 8
c.m.-3- 1S p m S55 f(C .ncludc!&gt;
bretti..J&gt;, lun~.:heon . ond conference m:neriah. Call 829-3291
for reg • ~truuon or mfonn:uion
ADDicnONS PREVENTION
WORKSHOP

\\'omen " i th Alcohol Problems: lntenre:o1ion Jssu ~ Dr
Chnst i~ Saulmer.
hoot of
Social Work Sponsored by In St itute for Addictions Studie11
and Trainm~: . Wick Cen1er.
Oaemen College . 9 a.m -4:30
p.m. Fee SSO. For rcgistr.1t10n
mfonnation. call 645-6 1-W.
COUOQUIUM
Immigration and lnte:rnal Migration .. Flight '": Toward ~&gt;to­
mographic Balkaniz.at ton,
William Frey,ll niv. of
Michigan. 280 Park.. North
Cnmpu.s. IO- II ::iOa .m. D II

Pror.

Adult&lt;i, Sharon S Dmmar.
Sl·hool of Nu~mg To cam C't'rufironc . nurK:o. must hone attended ll\e !&gt;eSMOn!&gt;. South
Campu11. -1.30-7 30 p m. S50 per
module To l't!!l\ler. C'3ll
8:29 -3 ~91.

AT THE MOVIES

Rear Windo"' - UUAB film
sc:nc!&gt; . 201 Student Umon
North Campus 6 .30 p m. S2.

S3.50. Ca11645-29S7.
URWORKSHOP
Tie One On, Shirley Cl~~n.
Scan·es. 7-9 r .m. C.ll645-612~ .
PIANO DUO RECRAL
NfV Piano Duo. Bamt Recst:d
Hall. Nonh Campu~ . 8 p.m.

Fn:e.
AT THE MOvtU

Atlantis. UUA B film srnes.
201 Student Un1nn Nonh Campus. 9 p.m S2. S3.SO. Call
IH5 -2957.

645-2417 .
STUO£NT NOIH&gt;EGRE£
RECRAI.
Guitar Concer1 , Studcms of
Joanne Castellani. Baird Recital
Hall . North Campus. Noon. Free
admission.
RNANCW. AID WORKSIIOP
Student Loan CouseUng for
Prosptdh·~ Graduatn. 109

Knox. Nonh Campus. 3 p.m.
ECONOMICIIDIINAR
Post-War British Uonomic
Growth and lht Lqacy of
Keyna, Prof. Thomas Cooley.
2 14 O ' Brian. North Campus.

FRIDAY

~

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR
Physiology Re:searda. Day.
Center rorTo morrow. North

3:30 p.m.

C.1mpus. Call 829-2743.

MANY IIODY/ITAnsncAI.
PNYSICIIEMINAII
04
Contiouum! Modtls of Slow
Granular Dtformation," Prof.

MEN'S -IM MEET
UB Invite:. Alumm Arena Natatorium . North Campus. All day.

MASTER CUSS
Violin, Pccer Zaz.ofsky. The
second m a series of four master
classes presented b) members of
the Muar String Quanct Slee
Concen Hall. North Campus
2:30p.m. fret .
COIIIPIIIEIIICIENCE
COUOQUHIM

Improving CS Edue~~tioo " ith
DicJ-taJ Llb.-.rics, EdwBtd Fo)..
Virginia Polytechnic Instituteand Umv. 228 Na1Ural Sc1ences
&amp; MathematiCS Complex. Nonh
Campus. 3-4: IS p.m. For 1nfor-.
mation. call ~S - 3180.

4

VOICE RECRAL
Juot Andenon. ~oprand . Part
of QRS ser1e,. Crnter for the
Arts. onhCampu~ 7p.m.SI5 .

S20. S25. C•ll b-15-6259

MOND AY

IENGINE£111NG SIEIIINAR

Mult i- Dimenslonal lmage
Anal)sls or Contocallmates.

Dr. l•gath Samanbandu. UB
Dept of 81ologu:al Sc1enct .
Kno~; 110. Nonh Campus 3 p.m
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
SEMINAR
TBA, Vc=ernbahu Shanmuguund.aram 121 CooLe North Campu!!. . 3 p.m.

PHYSICS COUOQUIUM

\\'h2t is Omtga., .~mos Yah1 l,
SUNY at Stony Brook. 422
Froncz.al. 3.45 p.m.
PHYSICI SIEIIINAII SERIES
TBA, E. Bru&lt;:&lt; Pitman. 205
a!UnJ Sc1ences &amp;. MathematICfi Complex. North Campu .
3:45p.m. Call 645-6314 .
CHIEIIIInrY COUOQUHIM
SurfMle- lnduud Dissociation
or Molecular loo.s: lmpulsin
Excitation, Surfa~ Damage,

and Cbargf' Trusfer, Prof.
Luke Hanky. Univ. of llliDO&amp;s.
0\icago. 20 I N:uunll Sciences
&amp; Mathemaucs Complex~ North
Campus. 4 p.m.
WOMEN' S BAIKET11AU
TOURNEY
B Royals Tip-ofT Touroty,
Round l. (Royals \ 'S, MarylandEastern Shore, Tcus Southtm,
Tennesset:·Manin.) Alumni
Aren:1. North Campus. 6 and 8
p.m. S3. S5 (2-day pass) .
WREITLING
UB Bulls vs. Drexel Uoh•.
Alumni Arc:M Gymnas~ics

Room. Nonh Campus. 6 p.m. S3.
AT THE MOVIU
Atlantis. UUA B film series.
201 Studem Union. North Campus. 6 :30 and 9 p.m. S2. S3.50.

Call 645 -2957.
SLEE/IEEniOVEN llllRING
QUAirTET CYCU:
Muir String Quartd. Slee
Concen Hall. Nonh CampuJ. 8
p.m. S4, SS. S8. SIO. For inrormation. call 645-2921 .
AT THE MOVIES

River's Edge. UUAB film sc-

a

ROSWEU PARK !nAI'F
SEMINAR
Signalling Genes from I be CeiJ
urfac:e: Th• JAK -STAT
Path"'ay, Dr Jamc.":s Darnell.
Rocldeller Um\'. H11lrboc Au ·
d1tonum. RPCI . 12;30 p.m
MUSIC LECTURE SIEiliU
Me:lodk El.ptetanC') rrom a

PS}chologial Perspectin.
Carol t::.h:ms1. Cornell Unn .
211 Bai . onh Campus
4 p.m. rcc.
RUIOEHT QUAirTET SERIU
Amb..-st SuophoD&lt; Quart&lt;&lt;.
Salva10r~

Andolina. soprano
Carerc. alto
Stephen Rns&lt;nlhal.
tenor saxOftit'one: Hany
fackelman. '\1ritonc saxophonr.
Slc:o Conc•n ll;ut Nonh Campus. 8p.m. SIO. 5.
sax~ : Rus
saxop~:

TUES DAY

6

IIIIOWIIIlAG ITAGID
READINGIIEiliU
Fdu ud He:r Friends by
Marie l_rene: Fornes. 883, Center for lhe Ans . North Campus.
Nooo- 1 p.m.
ENHMIILE SERIU

UB Contemporary Ense:mblt:/
Graduate Composers, Jeffrey
Stadelman, director. Erik Ona.

�IHidalll

9

_.._,___..,_u
conductor. Sloe Concert Hall.
Nonl&gt; Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

I'NYIICS~IUII

Oo 1bo S.pantioa or Matter
and Antlnuott&lt;r io the Early

W EDNE SDAY

7

nl_..., Prof. M&lt;ndel Socbs.
UB Dept. or Pltysics . 454
Fronc:uk. North Campus.
3:45p.m.

-

IIA-TICS~IUIII

Prof. W. B....,l LiDdqadl,
SUNY at Stony Brook. 101

~ALOUNIIC

--

Stresi Manaceme nt. llus is

cot.LOQI • •
Araumeo •ronns•Pattems•
Sc.bema•Ettttua. John
Con:oran. 684 Baldy. Nonl&gt;
Campus. 4 p.m. Call 881-1640
or 645 -2438.

I'OUT1CAL SCIENCt: L£CTURE

Chaaz.ing Models or Party

Orpniution., Prof. Richard S .
Katz.. Johns Hopkins Uni\ 280
Park. North Campus. 4 p.m.

also a Life Workshop. 210 Stu-

rHYSICS VISmiHI

d&lt;nl

SCIIOI.ARS COUOQUIUM

Uni~Campu;.

Noon-I p.m.

sn»ENT

QJlU .

II£CITAI.
Piano Recital. Students of Prof.
Fri na Arschanska Boldt . BaUlJ
Recital Hall. Nonh Catnpu.\.

oon.

-wn&amp;. rARK STAFF
HIIIIIAII
Martin Utmlff, Ph.D., DanaFarber L.aboratorie~ . Boston.
Hilleboe Auditorium. RPCI .
12:;30 p.m.
l"'fYSIOLOGYKMINAR
Establishment and control of
continuous: b rutbing at birth ,
Prof. Carlos E. Blanro. h&lt;ad.
~pt. of Neonatology, Dept. of
Pediatrics. UniverSity of
Limburg, Maastricht: The eth·
triands. 108 Sherman . South
Campus. 4 p.m.

645-3180.

T H Evolution or Plant One&amp;-.
on
Manifold LandS&lt;11pes, Dr. Karl
J. Niklas. Cornell Univ. 114
Bochstd!cr. North Campus. 4 p.m.

COUNHUNG CENTPI

ematia CompleK... North Cam·
pus. 3 p.m. For informatloo, call

lliOL08ICAL SCIOICU

opmeot : Acbpth'f' Wal

IIUSINIESS SEIIINAlt
~t.rkdiag With On· Line Data
Bases. New York St3tc Electric
&amp;:. Gas. Center for Tomorrow.
Nonl&gt; Campus. 8 :15· 11 am .
SSS fee . For registration information. cal1636 -3626.

~-~
cot.LOQI
••
Leah Jam5tsoo.. Purdue Untv.
228 NatW"II Sciences &amp;t Matlt·

1irtu~

Models (or Matcbe:d

Pairs, Dr. John lbOc:isch.
Dept. of Statistics and Dean.
Faculty of Mathematics. UruY.
of Waterloo. 144 Farber Hall.
South Campus. 4 p.m.
AT THE IIIOVIU
Sauge Nights. UUAB film
serie~;. 201 Student Umon.
Nonh Campus. 6:l0 p.m. S2.
S3.50.
..5-2957
MEN 'S UMETaAU
Bulls vs. Niagara. Alumm
Arma. North Campus. 8 p m.
$9. $7.
AT THE MOVIES
irt.ns. UUAB film seri~ . 201
Student Union Nonh Campus.
9 p.m. $2. S3.50. Call {&gt;.15-2957 .

Diefendorf B all. Soutlt Campus.
l p.m.
IIIEDICHIAL CHDIISTRY
HIIIIIAR
TBA,Gergely Makant. 121
Cool.:e. North Campus. 3 p.m.
CHDIISTltY

~lUll

Prof. Tod~ MiU..., SUNY at
S1ony Brook. 201 Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematic . North
Campus. 4 p.m.
IIIEN'S SWIIIIMEET
Bulls
iagan. Alumm
Arena Natatonum. North Cam·
pu . 6p.m.
AT THE MOVIES
Si~ns. UUAU film series. 201
Student Union . North Campu .
6:30 and 9 p.m. $2. $3.50 Call
645-2957.
ENSEitlal.£ SEJIIU
Copland '$ .. Appalac:hlan

Spring," URufTalo Symphony.
Charles Pelz. conductor. Slee
Concert Hall . Nonh Campus. 8
p.m. Free.
NOT THE SAlliE OLD JAZZ
An Enning witb Dave
Brubeck. Featu~~~ Brubed.: 's
ongmal J&amp;V compositions and
arrangements. and hts choral
work. "'To Hope : A Cclebra·
11on"; a benefit concert for
_Cathohc Campus Mmistl"). Tilt
Newman Centers at UB. Center
for the Aru. Main Stage. North
Campo;. 8 p.m. S20. SIS . SIO.
Call636·7495.

Readings (rom tht Fall "-sur
of Atmosphere. I 12: Cc:nt('r for
the Ans. North Campu~ . 4 p.m.
Free. Pan of Wed~ay~ en 4
Plus poet!)' and ~sen~
Co·sponSO«d b) th&lt; Dept. of
Mustc.

Student Union . No rth Campus.
9 p.m $2. $3.50. Call645·2957 .

THURSDAY

~

STUO£NT NON-OEGREE

RECRAL
Pia no Rfcital. ~.udents of
Shirity ln:k. Baird Recttal Hall.
Nonh Campus. Noon . Free.
CENTD FALL SEMINAR 11M
Role of Alrobol and Other
Factors in Estrogen Metabo-lism , H. t...eori Bmdlow. Ph.D ..
Strang-Cornell Cancer Research
Laboratory. Research Institute
on Add ictions. South Campus.
I :JO p.m. Free and open to the
public. Call 887 -2.166.

1~

AltCHITECTURE EXHiaiTIOfl
199) Student Award Winneno.
N:~t1onal lnsututton for Arclu tectural Education A"ards El.ht ·
bttion Oyett Exhib11100 Hall.
335 Ha)'es. South Campus Gal ·
lei) hours. Frtt. Through Ft:b.
3. 1995 Call829-3485. x321

Microsoft Combo Packs include:

..J Word
Excel
PowerPoint ......._._
Mail
Access

STUO£NT NON-OEGRE£

RECRAL
Iring Chamber Music. Bam1
Recital liall . OT1h Campu
oon . Free.
ENSEIII81.£ SERIES

UB SympbonK Band , Sarah

Wid!M~OKift

"""--~ ~o.lr

$113 $135 $143
Window

Macintosh

Professional

WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY

ENSEIIIIII.E SERIES

~ne!&lt;o . 201

MONDAY

RECRAL
French MeJodit Class., Stu ·
dents of Syl\'13 Dtmt7tam . Ske
Concf'n J·bll No nh Campu ..
8 p.m. Free

OI'US: CLASSICS UVE
Ly nne: Garrell, piano. Allen .
South Campus. 1 p.m. Free .

AT THE MOVIES

Harriel Simon , oonductor.
Patncia O'Toole. condue~or:
Lorrame Abbott. p~ano : Roland
Manm, organ. Slec Conttrt
Hall. Nonh Campus 8 p.m.
Free .

1~

AT THE MOVIES
Women on the VerJ!t' of a Ne rvous Breakdo"'l l. UUAB film
series. 201 Student Union.
North Campus. 6 :30pm S2:.
S3.50. Call645-2957.

Sirens. UUAB film

1..-uESOIES
UB Choir and UB Choru

Tlt-ESDAY

AIICHITEC1URE L£C1URE
Coterminous: 20 Years of Rt&gt;ttnt Work. Richard Cordt~ .
Sponsored by tht School of Architecture and Plannmg . 301
Crosby. South Campus
5:30p.m. Fm:.

UB Wind Ense1Wbl&lt;. Sar.~h
McKoin. conductor: Duane
Saetveil, born. Sic-&amp; Concen
Hall . Nonh Campus. 8 p.m.
Fm:.

11

McKom. conduc1or. Slet Concert Hall Nonh Ca mpu~ 8 p m
Free

I'OE1IIY IIEADING

T:tped for broadca~t the foiiO~o~t' ·
ing Su nday at 4 p.m. by WBFO
88 .7 FM .

SUNDAY

9

ADOICnON PREVENTION
WORI(SCrossing Boundaries: C ultur ally Compd.ent Human Se.r·
\'ices for Nath·e People, Or.
Hi lary Wea\'er. School of Socaal
Wor1:.. Sponsored b)' the School
of Social Work. Wick Center.
Dat:men College. 8:45 a.m.- 3:30
p.m. SSO: students SJO. For in·
formation. call645-6140.

ENVI-MEHTAL
ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE
SEMINAlt
Hollow Fiber Stripping Analy·
sis ror Detection o f Taste a nd
Odor Compounds. Dr. Amy
Zander. Dept.. of Ci\'il and Environmental Engineering.
Clarkson Univ. 140 Ketter.
North Campus. II a.m.
POUTlCAL SCIENCE
SEIIIINAlt
Finland' Decision to Join abe
European Union, Prof. Penti
Pesonen . renowned Finnish
election scholar. 216 Natural
Sciences &amp; Mathematics Com plex . Nonh Campus. 2 p.m.

Rear Window
Thursday. Dec .1 tn 201
Studenl Union. Nonh
Campus. 6:30p.m $2.
$3.50. Call 645-2957
AT THE MOVIES
Dazed and ConfUR'd. UUAB
film ~rics . 201 Student Union .
North Campus. II :30 p m S2.
53.50 Call ().15-2957 .

1~

SATURDAY

10

MUS. a . OEGIIEE RECRAL
J oel Wardt'n.. organ. Mr. War·
den is a sludent of Ro land Mar·
tin. S lec Concen Hall . North
Campu:!t . 3 p.m. Free .
WOMEN 'S 8ASKETIIALL
Royals vs. SL Francis {Pa.)
Alumni A~na. North Campus.
7:30p.m.

Professionally Managed by

SIARA MANAGEMENT
Continued on page 10

�_

CALENDAR
Continued from page 9

MONDAY

---

Center. 106 Clll)'. South Cam·
pus. 4 p.m.
I'IIY-.cMIY HMIHAII
Hypometabolism: a def'~ase
Opiost bypol&lt;ia! John
Krasney. Ph.D. 108 Shennan.
South Campus. 4 p.m. Call
829-2743.
LAW AWIIIII MEmNII

9

Law Alum ni AssodaUoo Bolld ay Dinn&lt;r ud f«&lt;lin&amp;- Buf-

MEN'S aASIIERALL
Bulls vs. Ce:otra.l Connecticut
State. Alumni ArenL North
Campu . 8: IS p.m.

falo Oub. 6 p.m. Caii64S-2107.
OPUS: CLUSICII UVE

Mathew Tworek, violin,
Adriolln&lt; -r.....-.k-Gryta, so-

praao, and J oe.a.ne Schlegel.
piano. Allen. South Campus. 1
p.m. F""'. Taped for broadcast
the following Sunday at 4 p.m.
by WBFO 88.7 FM .

T HUR S D AY

W ED NESDAY

11

:::!lSTAFF

1a

Mo lly Ku len.-Martin, Ph.D.
Hilleboe Auditorium. RPCI .
12:30 p.m.
I'IIYSIOLOGY -MAR

Cardiovascular adaptations to
mkn&gt;gravity (Space Lab Ufe

Sciences ex-periments), Barbara

INR~otmiOL

TILUHINII
Sout h Campus. 4-7 p.m. Call
the Office of Continuing Nurse
Education at829-3291 for regis·
tr.ation information.

Shykoff, Ph.D. 108 Sherman.
South Campus. 4 p.m. Call
829-2743 .

TU E S D AY

17
19
CONFEIIENC£

to "'Other Drugs..., Sponsored
by Institute for Addtctions Stud·
tes ~nd Training. Center for
Tomorrow . Nonh Campus. Fee
SSO. For registration information. ca11645-6140.

W ED NESDAY

21

OPUS: CLASSICS UVE

Buft'alo Pbilbannonic: Cborus
(lentative). Allen. South Cam pus. 7 p.m. Fr= Taped for
broadcast the following Sunday
•t 4 p.m. by WBFO 88.7 FM.

January
SATURD AY

W ED N ES D A Y

1~

- E N'S SWIM MEET
Royals vs. Cornell. Alumni
Arena Natatorium . Nonh Cam -

pee. 4:30p.m.

...

FAITH IN DOUBT"

Failh in Doubt: A ~ulatson
the Funclion of Humor in
Contemporary Art' ' continue~ in
Uni\'ersity Galleries I and II .
Center for the ArtS. North Cam p us. The free exhibit. which
runs through Dec . 23 and res umes Jan. 3-14. 1995. is open
f rom 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Wednesd ays-Saturda)'S. and Noon-S
p.m. on Sundays.
0n

JIM STONE: I'IIOTOGIIAPIIS
l i m Stone's exhibit of pholo-

graphs continues in the Art
Dept . Gallery. Center for the
Arts. North Campus. until Dec.
I 5: gallery hours arc 10 a.m.-5
p.m. weekdays. Admission is
f ree. Call645.6878 for more
in formation.
LANDSCAPES IN CAPEN
QAUDIY

7

.

pus. 2 p.m.

N O TICES

MEN'S IIASIIEDALL
Bulls vs. Troy State. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. 8: IS p.m.

The State Univer5ity of New

•

Landscapes 1988-1994 ... a
c ollection of works on paper by
ynthia Hand. con1inues
th rough Dect.mber during galle ry hours in the Capen Gallery.
fi fth floor.

c

MEN'S SWIM MEET
Bulls YS. Canisius. Alumni
Arena Natatorium . North Cam-

cALL FOR -!NATIONS

CAWNII ALL ENTEIITAINERS
Gener3l audit~s opc.n to all
UB students f&lt;, "Godspell"
presented by the Dept. of Theatre and Dance at t~ Center for
the An will take place on De·
cc:mber 7 at 7 p.m. in Room
883, basement level , Center for
lhe Aru. Performance of a short
song is required as pan of the
audition.

for Resc:arcb has announced a
new program. the Equipment
0\allenge Grant Program.
which has been designed to assist ftcUity with adding. upgnw:i·
ing or replacing research equipment (instruments) that are
necessary for their research. 11lC'
program will provide matching
funds (dollar for dollar) to faculty wtio will be submitting a
proposal to and have been
awarded a new grant from an
ex.temal government or pri.,ate
sec-tor source that includes the
purchase of research equipment
with a total procurerMnt ''alue
of SS.OOO to S50.000. Program
guidelines can be requested
from the Office of the Vice
President for Research. 516
Capen Hall. 645-3321 . Applications wilt be accepted at an)'
time.
f)HANCIAL AID FIX
The Offices of Financial Aid
and Student Account~ arc hn·
ing a presentation on loan counseling for prospecti\'e graduate
and non-returning students on
Thursday, December 1. in Room
I09 of Knox Hall at 3 p.m.

EXHIBITS

LESBIAN/ GAY FACULTY A
SUPI'OitT
newly formed lesbian and
gay faculty and staff group ~ill
hold a potluck dinner and meeting :at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Dec . 6to
discuss the situation for gays
and lesbians at research uninrsities throughout the country.
For more information. contact
Ellen Grec:nblan.
ulcreg@ubvm .cc. Buffalo.edu.
or Don Rosenthal. 645-2251 .
\'Oicemail419.

STAFF
The

GROUr

uaRARIES I'OUCY CHANGE
Effecti\'e Jan. I . 1995, accumul:ued library fine amounts of
less than SIO that remain unpaid
for more than .10 days will result
in the suspension of all library
prh•ileges until the past due
amount is paid at the Librnries .
Accumulated library fine
amounll of S I 0 or more that
remain unpa.id for m~ th.:m
days will be transferred to the
Office of Student Accounb for
collection . Unpaid library
charges may result in the blOcking of registration. graduation o r
lht receipt of tmnscripts.

Jo

-INATORS' WOIUISThc Professional Staff Senate
will sponsor a workshop and
brown-bag lunch, 10 be held at

format no longer wi11 be ac-

noon on Friday, Dec. 9 in S4S
O ' Brian Hall. to provide suidanct and support lo anyone
wishing 10 nominate candidates
for the 199S Chancellor"•
Awards for Ex.cc:Jience in Professional Service. Nominaton
for pre\iou award reciptents
will review award criteria. give:
in tructioru on puuing together
a successful nomination dossier
and explain how to move easily
through the process. The
Olance.IIOr's Awards provide
university-wick recognition for
s;upertative performance and
outsllnding .chieve.ment by
pro(essiooal service e.mpklyees.
1be deadline for completed dossiers is 4:30p.m. Friday, Jan. 6.
1995. For more infonn~tion . call
Ilene Fleischmann. Professional
Staff Senate Awards Committee
chaar. 645-2107.

The Office of the Viet President

CLASSES IIESUME

E.-ploriag Trtalment Approacbes for Clients Add ided

YoR is in vi tin&amp; nominations to
lhe rank of Distinguished Ser·
vice Professor. This pre5ligiow
rank recognizes ou~ng
service to the campus. State
University and beyond. The
Di tinguished Service Profes·
iOfShip is a rank above full profenor . his a tenured university
rank that is conferred only by
the State University of New
Yoric Board ofTrusteeSIO indi·
viduals who have aua.ined the
rank of full profeuor and who
have compkted at least 10 Yeatl
of full-time service in SUNY.
Nominations may arise from
facuhy. student body and .cJ.
ministration. llMJSC presently
holding thi.s rank include G .
Lester Anderson (Emeritus),
Claude Wekb, Robert H.
RO&lt;Sbcrg. Norman Solkoff.
James Coover, Dennis Malone.
Newton Gan·er. Kenneth IDada.
Virginia Leary, lltomas
He.cSrick and Alan Drinnan.
Each nomination should be K·
companied by a cumnt vita of
the nommec:. Self-nominations
are ncx appropriate. Please send
nominations by Dec. 2. 1994.to:
Joyce E. Sirianna. Chair, Distin·
gui hed Service Commiuee.
Vice Pro\·ost for an.,duate Edu cation and Dean of the Graduate
School, SS2 Capen Hall, Nonh
Campus.

=:-~E)

M ONDJ{ Y

-

... .__ _ _ _ _ :o.a

cepted.
For tboK within the university
community who ut.tlize $peed
catlin&amp;. call forwanlinc,. computer modems. FAX machines
and PBX's, it may be necessary
co reprocratn the stoml numbers. For more information. call
64S-27SO.

VOICEMAIL IN MATHEMATICS
The Mathematics Dept. tw converted to a voicemail sy11em.
Tile two numben lhat access t.be
sy tem are: 829-2144-Main
Office and all faculty otr.ces.
and 829-2148-Exec..tivc. sceretarial, and inner-departmenlll
(gB&lt;Iuate and undergraduate)
offioes. Dialing these aumben
will bring you inlo the correct
directory and a guide through
the individual e.xlensK&gt;ns.

-

~EOIWNII

North America is running out of
telephone numben. The everincreasing demand for telephone
numben for paging and cellular
ien.' K'Je.S has c.x.haus:t.ed the pool
of nailable numbers en 50f1lC
areasofthecountry . lnordc:rlo
t.COOI'Timodate the requarement
for additionaJ number combinallons.. change5 to the North
American Numbering Plan are
slated to take dfec1 Jan. I ,
199S NYNEX has scheduled
the following changes of which
the university commumly
should be aware:

J O BS
IIUEAIICtl
Pn&gt;j&lt;et Staff Assistant-Reha bilitation Medicint, Postmg IR 94077. Secretary 11 -Neurology,
Posting IJ'R-94100. Rtse:arth
Technic.lan Ill-Social and Prrventive Medicine. ~ing IR-

94097. Programmtr AoalystOccupatlonaJ lberapy, Postmg
IR-94099.
PROFESSIONAL

Programmer Analyst (SL-J,
Internal Promotional Oppor·

• Calling Card and Operator·
Ass1s1ed calls--both to and
from numbers in the 5aJ1le area
code-now require that the
c&amp;ller dial 0 + artll code + 7
digit telephone number.

tuoity)~omputing

• Starting0ec. l7, 1994, a11
Regional Toll Calls-both to
and from numben in the same
area c:ode-musa be dtaled by
either using the 7 digit telephone: number or 1 + area code
+ 7 digit telephone number.
Note that the d ialing of calls
within the 716 area code ustn,t
the I + 7 digit telephone number

and Information Technology, PosltR! IP4096. Associate Viet Pnsidcol
for Public: Relalioru (MP3A)Officc of the VP for University
Advancement and Development.
Posting IP~4100. Auist.ant
Vi« Praidcot for Budget and

P.rsonnel (SL-S, Internal Promotioa.al Oppor1unity)-Officc:
of the Vice Presidc.nl for Uni·
versity Advancement and ()e.
\'elopme.nt, Posting •P-4101.

meat, Posting IP~I02. A.nodate Dirtdor o( Major Gifts

(SL-S, Iol&lt;nlal Procootlotuol

Opportuoily)-OfTICO o( UniYC&lt;·
5ity Devdopment. Postin&amp; IP4103. Aaimnt lo tbo Dindor
(SL-3, 1ot&lt;nl01 l'n&gt;alolional
Opportunity)-Acade.m~

tolliDC.Dtal Realtb OfriCff 13
(MP-JB)-Envaronmental Health
and Safety, PostingiP-41~ .

_.-nmtE'CLAUIFIED
CIVIL SEIIVICE

Keyboard Spedallsl (SG-6)Public Safety, Une 131060.
~
CLASSIFIED CIVIL HJIVICE
Malni&lt;IWI« AsaisW&gt;l (SG--9)-

University Facilities F.cdalaes
and SySiems Maintenance, Lme
131373. Juilor (SG-7)-Rcsidential FaciliticJ, UM 143021
Mai.nte~ A.ssistaa.t,

Plumbor/Sieamlillff (SG -9)·
Univcn:ity F~ei l ities. LiM
131411. Ca.-pooler (SG-12)Resuknllal FacilitieS. Lane
J-43098. ~....1 Mec:bank
(SG-12)-Unt\lersity Facllltlei,
Lmc 134387.

LAaOII CLAUIFIED CIVIL
SEIIVICE
P.bintetaantt Helper (SG-6)Uru\·ently Facilities. Fac~bties
and Systems Maintenance. Une
134618. Po"--er Planl Helpe:r

(SG--6, fuli ··Hmt temporary
\J.ntil Feb. 16, 1995)-Un•versil)
Facihue:s, L10e 132052. Powu
Plaol Ret.,..- (SG-06, full -ti.,.

temporary until March 8,
1995)-Univers:hy F.cilities,
Mackay Healing Plant. Lme
114314S.

To olnout mor~ rnformotum ott
C'tNIIDCI p,.
sonnd &amp;n•Jl'U, 104 Crofts

jobJ listed Obo\'t',
Hot/,

Assistaot Director or the Aanual ~pal (SL-2, I nl..-..al
Pn&gt;motiooal Oppor1unlty)Officc of Umversity Develop-

-\
'lcssagc for

-\II facull\
'lcmbcrs

rlow is the time to put
your dass notes on me with us
for next semester so that over
the holidays you can rest in

BAC
By doing so you will avoid
the mad rush of the beginning
of next semester plus receive a gift
from us of a $25 Vouches- for our
fuU range of copy services.
Have a Happy Holiday!!

Makin' Cop_ies

·~·Fax

Tel 636-8440

Ad-

vasement Center. Poltin&amp; lfP.
41 Oot. Re&lt;onl Sp«lallst (MP6, lotUlUII PI'OIII&lt;Itiooal
Oppor1...Uiy)-Penoon&lt;l Scsvices. Posting IP4106. EDvi--

636-8468

520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

�1811011

:11

-S,UM--. ....u

Facul &amp;StaHBillboard
Med students teadt
AIDS-lnhll&amp;h~•

0

Students in lhe UB School
of Medicin and Biomedical
Science- bringing their know!edge out of lhe classroom and
into the community as they visit
WNY schools to in~se student
aw=ness and knowledge aholit
HfV infection and AIDS.
The Students Teaching AIDS
to Students (S.T.A.T.S.) program
features an informational session
on medical aspects of AIDS,
history of the disease. and how
AIDS is sp~ and p~venled .
Mo~ !han 150 UB medical
students. have participated in lhe
program, now in its lhird year.
By lhe end of the year. lhe
S.T.A.'f.S. prognun will have
reached mo~ than 10,000 WNY
teenagers, says Evan Taraganoa,
a second-year med ical student
who coordinates the p~ Ibis
year wilh fellow second-~e.ll'
student Jamie Murray.
The program, modeled after a
national project c~led by the
American Medical Student Assodation, works because high-school
.;;d middle-school students feel
~ comfortable discussing AIDS
and sex wilh people close to !heir
own ages, says AJbert F'10rello, a
fourlh-year medical student who
coordinated lhe prognun last year.
The program visited Maryvale
High School Nov. 30. Heallh
classes at West Seneca Senior

High School also hosted lhe prognun throughout lhe day. Medical
students will make ~ntations •
to heallh classes at Cheektowaga
High School Friday, Dec. 2.

NPR prealdent
toapeek.tWBFO

o

National Public Radio president Delano Lewis will he
featu~ speaker at a forum p~·
sented by WBFO 88.7 FM at 1
p.m. Dec. 12 in Allen Hall on lhe
Soulh Campus.
Lewis willlalk about NPR

news and information services,
andwillsh=

insights into new
communication
technologies.
Following lhe
speech. WBFO

Peace Corps in Africa. wilh lhe

of lhe offices of Student Finances
and Records and Financial Aid.
He holds a bachelor's degree in
computer science from UB.

Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission. and as an attorney
for lhe Department of Justice.

Attendance at the forum is

MBA students rank
No.1...u-11y
on CPA exam

limited to WBFO members who
contributed at least $60 to lhe fall
'94 membership drive. The pro·
gram also will he broadcast on
WBFO, and lhe general commu-

0

The UB School of Management has ranked first on lhe
May 1993 Certified Public Ac·
counting (CPA) exam among
candidates wilh advanced de~.
A tolal of 68.4 percent of lhe UB
candidates. all MBA graduates
with concentrations in accounting,
passed all four sections of lhe lest
on lhe fU'Sl attempt.

nity is invited to call in questions.
WBFO 's program service also is
heard in Olean on WOLN 91.3
FM and in Jamestown on WUBJ
88.1 FM. For mo~ information,
call WBFO at 829-2555.

Walker, Eldayrle named

to_"'! ataff po~OII_!

o

"h's the second time we've
been fi!Sl in lhe country in lhe
1990s," says Lawrence D.
Brown, Samuel P. Capen Profe •

rum of questions
from the audience and listeners.

Two appointments have
been announced in the Of·
lice of Student Finances and
Records.
Shirley J . Walker has been
named director of the Office of
Student Accounts. A UB staff
member si nce 1989, she has

Lewis has served since August
1993 as president of NPR. a net·

worked as an lFR staff accountant in Accounting Services and

work that provides news and

Records and as a member of lhe
Budget Office staff. She hold a
bachelor's deg= in business

our students are among the top in
the country." said Frederick W.

administration and accounting

Management.
Management students also
have been =ognized for indi·

News Director
l£WIS

Mark Scott will
moderate a fo·

cultural programming to mo~
than 500 public radio stations
nationwide, including WBFO. He
a'1f" serves, by Presidential appointment, as co-&lt;:hair of lhe U.S.
Advisory Council on lhe National
Information lnfrastructu~ .
He previously served as president/CEO of C&amp;P Telephone
Company in Washington, D.C.
Prior to lha~ he worked wilh lhe

from LaGrange College. Ga.
Elias G. Eldayrie has been
appointed director of lhe Office
of Financial Aid. A member of
lhe UB staiTsince 1987, he has
served as director and associate
director-&lt;&gt;f lhe Office of Student

Accounts. and assistant director

sor of Accounting and chair of

.

the UB Department of Account·
ing and Law. The school ranked
fU'Sl in lhe May 1990 exam among
candidates wilh advanced~-

.. lt.s ... the consistency that is
the most gratifying. Every year

Winter, dean of the School of

vidual excellence. Donald Cole,
MBA '93. a graduate of UB's
BS/MBA prognun, =eived the
New York State Gold Medal for
the highest sco~ in New York
Stale on lhe May 1993 exam. He

was lhe fjflh UB recipient of the
award since 1982. Cole also ~ceived lhe Elijah Wau Sells
Award for scoring in lhe top 2
percent nationwide out of lhe
field of 65,000 candidate!!.

......_, atudenta
..-lYe acholanh_!Pa

o

Two fourth-year students in
lhe UB School of Pharmacy
have been awarded SI .OOO scholarships by lhe Women 's Club of
lhe Columbia Universiry College
of Pharmaceutical Sciences.
The recipients. chosen on the
basis of academic standing and
financial need, a"' Susan Stein
and David Taber.
To dale. 29 UB pharmacy students have ~ived lhe Women's
Club Scholarships since !hey we~
fU'St awarded in 1978.

Women'• Club sets
lundleon Dec. 8

o

The UB Women's Cl ub will

have its annual Soup's On
Luncheon Dec. 8 at II a.m. in the

Center for Tomorrow. Guests are
welcome.
Following hors d'oeuvres, wine
and juices, throe soups and ~
will he served, followed by des·
serts. The menu was planned by
Katrina Wobschall and Cannella
&amp;nley. Poinsettia onlers will be
distrihuled at !he 1unchoon. ~
go 10 the Grace Capen Scholarship
Fund. RJr reservations. caU Cannella
Hanley, 6334216by Dec. 6.

e
•

(

Sign up for cellular service at the Center for Tomorrow on

* Equipment offer applies to a new activation with a 24

Friday, December 9th between Sam and 5pm . low monthly

month contract. Offer expires December 31 '· 1994.

rate of $12 .00 for all State, RF, UBF and FSA employees.
Contact:

Paula Omicioli-86 1-9680

C ELL ~LAR ONE

�·181@1111
v--.-. ....u

~1.....,.

Arecent donation of 25,000 science-fiction, advenrure and pulp-fiction books and magazines
has added a new dimension to UB's libran•
holdings.
·
·
According to Judith Adams, director of
UB's Loclcwood Library, the collection donated by B alumnus George Keney hos
nnde the university arguably the world 's
l~ading repository of such works.
"'Anyone doing research into popular culture in America will
find our collection to be a treasure trove" said Adams. "This
collection is remarkably well preserved and in superb condition.
It is the finest usoble collection of these materials
anywhere."
.,u.£Xfl PA)SHIW·
Kelley, who earned master's degrees from UB in
business adminiStration, library science and English
(and is working on his doctorate in English), believes
that scholars will rum to UB as the authoritative
source for science-fiction research materials.
"'] predict that in then~ 10 years or so, we're
going to see a growing academic interest in thjs kind
of literarure," he noted. "That's because science
fiction is historically important and we're lo ing
many of the great authors, such as Asimo\' and
Heinlein. Researchers are going to find that a l01 of
material is unavailable or lost because most libraries
ne\'er bothered to collect items like these."
The collection began simply because Kelley, a
profc'isor in the Bu~ine~s :\dmimstr.nion Department at qie CommunitY College. enJoyed reading
t.hesc rypes of literature.
" I started collecting the;e books and maga7Jne&gt; simpl~· heca use lhe\' weren 't in mv locallihran·;· he said ... , v.a\ collt-cnn e
for my O\,··n reading plea"~ure .., .\ self~dest·ribed "'pack rat.""' •..:.die;·
said his collection grew quickly. becoming ~J rnohs1n: that ~~
"'eight began to damage the floor' of hi-. house.

r f!

Thefeabnd
books 31!
!rem the

coleclion
donated to
UB.

He ~\·cnrually dcnded rhat th e best way to gi \-e the puhhc
acces~ w thc many rare and unusu.1l pieces he owned v. ould he 10
place the entire t:ollcction at L' B. lie knew the Ulli\'Cfbl~ ·,
libraries \'ere already n::,pected by researcher;-, and that h1"'
add m un~ \.\ Ould enhance the breidth of the owailablc hf1ldm~ .
\\'hal e his friend s "' ho ,·ollect llilf11Jiar m a tcnal ~ tncd to persuade
him to ~ell the uni4ue items. t..:.clley stood finn on h i~ decision to donate.
The masshe l'ollcction is in nc:trl~ pristi ne l·ondition hct&lt;~u~c of J\.dlcy·~ careful prco;;:erYarion \\ a rk. Stored m a library holdmg
area awaiting funds ,uf-ficient to su ppo rt an in\'cnto~ and cataloging. a Jil k to the bnm cardboa rd ho xcs stacked\\ ell m·cr 6 fct::t
high along an entire 40-foot wall.
The collection contains nearly I 0,000 mystery novels, as well as a vanet)' of sci-fi story anthology mapzines. many dating back
to the 1950s. For example, there is a complete set of Gala.l)' .\Iagaum- from its first issue in 1950 until it ceased publishing in the
1980s. Galaxy is beSt known as the magazine that first published the classic short
. . . . . 1967
story "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury.
Another component of the collection
arc the "'fanzines," semi-professional publications produced by fans of science fiction . These range from simple photocopies
to complex, art-filled publications. The
most famous of the fanzines-Loau-is in
the collection. including
its first mimeographed
edi tions from the early
1970s. Locus is one of
today· s top science-fiction publications.
But the largest pan of
the collection is the paperback novels. Among
them is Kelley's most
val uable book: an original copy of Junkie by
William Burrough s
worth about $500.
Kelley also has do·
nated the rare British editions of the Richard
Bachman books. the collection of shan stories
written under Stephen King's pseudonym.
These editions, according to Kelley. are different from their American cou nterpans and
WIUI LEY,
are vinually unknown to American readers .
There will be a special celebralion in the
spring to honor Kelley and the first exhibit of
the collection· s materials.

...,. ..
....,s

AIIDII.UI

"I started
collecting

these
books and
magazines
simply

because
they weren't
in my local
lilny,
I was
~

for my own
readiJg
pleasln."

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                    <text>Legacy of
National Debt

COIIIpllter ••

'Microecope'
Med students use
interactive

-ynology.

p_.

VieWpOints article
discusses
impacton
ourkids.
p_.

10

2

A Sense of
Neighborhood

Toys That
DoM9re

New building brings

Playthings adapted to
help children with
disabilities.

FNSM departments
to one site.

,.5
November 17 . 1994

Volume 26 No 11

AYmr
Older,
AYmr
Wiser
STUDENTS IN WBFO SERIES "THE FIRST YEAR"
TALK ABOUT CHANGES IN THEIR UVES

I,.._......

"At home,
pretty spoiled. Here,I IICblall)' hava to Co Cat 111J mall
end Co end Cat my food. I hava to, Uka, ba true-~ ... lt'a pretty Uld, really."
-Jessie~

Voorbtc:s, a UB freshman.

10

'""'The Fmt Year" by WBFQ..FM

J

ESSICA VOORHEES. A 17· YEAR .OLD UB FROSH from Long I land. was one
of five freshmen whose feelings. fears. discoveries and adventures during their first
year of college were captured by WBFO-FM. UB 's National Public Radio station.
in last year's four-part series titled "The First Year.··
This year. the students are a year older, a year wiser and. ready or nol. national
celebrities. Public Radio International (PRI) acquired rights to an edited. hour-long version
of '"'The First Year.. and bas distributed the award-winning program to public radio stations
throughout the country. Many stations will be airing the program during the week of
Thanksgiving. according to PRl.
Vincent Shum of Flushing. Queens. thought that 500 miles between himself and his
parents might be enough to cut the cord. He was mistaken .
''Once, I didn't col/ my mom fora wt'ek, and lhtm she senr my aum
around to campus. She was knocking on my friends ' doors and
calling them. Now, I have to call my mom every day . ..
Produced by !an Aronson. news and public affairs producer forWBFO. '"'The First Year.. has received awards from
the Council for the Advancement and Suppon of Education
in Washington D.C., and from the Associated Pre s in ew
York. For Aronson, the program was his second news documentary to be released nationally. National Public Rodio
carried his series, .. Homicide in Daily Life .. last
year.
Treotice Bolar of Rochester planned to
major in aerospace engineering. He came to UB intent on getting an education.
"Her~. lik~. th~ Prof~ssorsdon 't car~ if you come ro class or nor. Th~y get paid
either way." observed the intended aerospace engineering major.
'Tve had people try to pressure me into skipping a class, but not for what
I'm poyingforthis. l don't pay S70 fora book and then not use iL That's
stupid ...
Roommates. race relations. academic expectations and social
diversions were among the topics the students discussed frankly
· with Aaronson during seporme tapingsofthe four segments: 31
Continued on page 10

TOP:

Jeulca

VOO!Mea

In

bloloCY lab.

ABOVE: Suzanne
Mendez In the
Spine.
LEFT: Tmntlce
-Bolar In Porter

Quad.

�2

........_ ..

,, ~......_-.

Computer is 'microscope' for med students

_.. ,.

aj~WIUY

distributed a questionnaire to as-

lSTOLOGY-lhestudy
of minute animal and
planttissues-nonnally •
may be a dry subject,
but putting lab work on the computer screen may spice it up and
sa""students large amounts oftime,
according to a scientist-at UB.John
R. Cotter, as50Ciate professor of
anatomy and cell biology in the
UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, bas designed an
interactive computer program to
create an ac1jve. self-instructional
learning environment for his course
"Anatomy 504."
switching baclc John R. Cotter
interactive as possible.''
UB is one of a small number of
and forth be- Instructs lim
The simplest form of interacmedical Schools nationwide to inyearmeclstJt.
tween numertion involves "hotwords," undertegrate computers into histology
lined words that may be clicked on
ousrnicroscope dents Clayton
courses. Cotter introduced four
Polowy
ltlld
with a mouse. The botwords conslides
and
computer e~ercises as part of the
nect infonnation provided in the
searching all Pamela
fU'St-year histology course at the
te~tto hidden graphics or text that
over for spe- Dlamantl1 In
m&lt;dical school. Medical students
cific details, be .... of comuse ffiM computers to work on overlay the images.
puter procram
Students also may respond to
notes.
programs for epithelium, muscle
The
ap - he designed.
questions or attempt to identify
tissue, blond and connective tisproach has
components of the specimen by
sues-topics that ordinarily would
been well-received by students and
clicking on it. Their responses may
be studied using the microscope.
"Overall. it seems to be doing
be confirmed without rai ing their ' faculty al ike, winning first prize in
the exhibit program at Spring Clinihands and waiting for a lab
the job," Couer says. "Students
cal Day last April.
instructor's approval. Other interreceive the same feedback as in the
~He (Coller) has done an excel·
actional features include magnifi regular lab,'but they don't need
lent job of using what intenlCUve
cation of specific structures.
someooestandingovertheirshouJ"You didn't need to wait for a
technology has to offer 10 advance
ders. The bollom line is that they
the educational process," says John
T.A. (teaching assistant). The anare earning what we are teaching.
"We don ' t want students to be
SWI:J'S were right there." says firstLoon k. director of medical computing at UB. Students find the
doing this passively, but in an acyearstudent Prashanl Parashurama.
Students can examine e~amples
computer approach more interesttive fashion," he adds. "We try to
faster on the computer instead of
ing than microscopes alone. Cotter
develop the exercises so they are as

program' s and found the computer
wort was i•very v.-cll sz:cejved.He began de""loping the program nearly two yean ago. The
prooes includes photographing the
original slides at different magnifications and then electrOnically digitizing them. Once digitized. be
handles them with Pbolostyler and
uses a software package,
1'oo1Book." to create the eaercises.
Cotter does DOl anticipate that
the computer will completely lAke
the place of the microscope. The
analytical approach would be lost
if microscopes disappeared from
labs, be said. But for some students. wori:ingonacomputer helps
the transition 10 microscope w&lt;&gt;ft_
~Foo- some students. it's a difficult adjustmeot to work with a microscope," Cotter says, explaining
that oot all medical students are
biology majors who have had frequent contact with microscopes.
Daniel Yawman, wbo had no
prior hi51ology experience, says
that the computer exen::ises were a
good introduction to microscope
w&lt;&gt;ft_ ~ It gives you the basics of
what you need to know. It boils it
down. On the microscope, you can
spend a lot of time just being
clueles for a while."
Ariel Hotchki found the computer e.ercises worked best as a
review and study tool. '1bey helped
connect ~pis with irr_ages," she
says.

News Bureau Stall

Two UB dental r~
~honored lor their contributions 1o the field ol periodontology at the 80th
~ ollhe American
Ac8Ciemy of Periodontology
(MP), In Sen ftanc:itloo_
. . . . . . . . . . I n4,
.... --.~lnlle
UB School al Dela!U8clcine and • DiiDlgulllwd
T8KI*Ig~...
ceMid lhe Wlliam J. Gies
Pel iodootlofogy Awlrd, given by lhe Wllilm .1·Ollie

Fourtdltllall .,. . . ~
..... al Dlnlilly. h Clllltn&gt;

J

.... u

llan~AN'.
A-a.&lt;lor~QDMtt.l

25yen,he. . .....,
nrnlbln 1008CIIrt lfti.
c:lee and lhnle-. A II"&gt;'
t..lr of paiodclb and
IIII80dllle dean a i - m
and ldvanoed aduallllon In
lhe denial achool,
editorial conaAtanllo lhe Jourfilii of Onll Pttlltdogy, . .
.ltxrntll d Pafodoltlclopy

he.

....................

and Petlodoral ~

proles8or and chair of the
Departmenl of Periodorttics,
receilled a special citalkln as

editor of Periodontsllnslghts.
A/&gt;Ps .._publication.
Ciancio is former president of AAP. and nationally
recognized as an authority
on pharmacology in dentistry Editor of the newslelter,
"Biological Therapies In
Dentistry," he is a past winner ollhe Gies Award, and
lor. more than two decades

...,_,,tnn!Mibe&lt;"l)l!, and
consuhant to. !he Ameiican
DemaJ Assoclallon's Council on Dental Therapeutics.

sa.vtd T. Shew, professor
ol electrical and computer
engineering, received the
1994 International Aerosol
Fellow
Award, considered the
most presli·
Qiousgiven
by the Inter-

national
Aerosol Re-

search As·
sembly
(lARA) and the American
Association for Aerosol Re-•

search (AAAR).

The award was presented
in Los Angeles, Calif. during
the tnternalionat Aerosol
Conference Aug. 28-Sept. 2
at UCLA. h honors Shaw's
dislingoished contributions
in 1'8588fch and service to
the 1nlernational aerosol
community.

Shaw, Who is executive
d irector ollhe New Yor1&lt;
State Institute on Supercon·
ducltvity, was recognized
lor his ~ing cOOtnbulions in many experimental
llek:ls. His current wor1&lt; on
high temperature superconducling mate rials is also
widely recognized.
He was founding president of AAAR (1982-85)
and served as an editor.jn
chief of the Journal of Aerosol Science and Technology (1 982-1993).

the cffcctiveneu of lh.e

States restrict nllrse practitioners, study shows
Alabama, Michigan. Massachu-

of each state and the District of

setts. Maine, Arkansas and Loui i- ' Columbia. which enabled them to

B.ECTRICAL &amp; COMPuTER
ENGINEERING

-~
AWAIID:

c

URSE

ana.

praclitioners are

The least-restrictive states were

considered part of
the solution to physician shortages, many states still
place restrictions on their practice,
according to a study by researchers
in the UB School of Nursing.
The UB study is tbe first to paint
a geographic picture of nurse-prac-

Wyoming, Arizona. Oregon. North
Dakota, New Hampshire. Alaska,
Washington, New Mexico. West
Virginia. Montana and Iowa.
~Many studies have shown that

titioner concenlration and sketch

Bums. Ph.D., head ofUB' s nursepractitioner program and director

out the harriers to practice which,
if removed, could stimulate these
primary-care providers to relocate
in areas where they are needed

most.
It showed that nlinois and Hawaii, the most restrictive of the 50
states, do not legally recognize
nurse practitioners as a group.
The study found the U.S . had
33.178 nurse practitioners as of
last spring.jt also showed:
a Only 5.5 percent work in rural
areas that historically have had a
physician shortage.

• Seven states-Illinois, Louisiana. Mississippi, Nebraska. Ohio.

West Virginia and Wisconsin-

nurse practitioners can provide
quality care at substantially lower

cost than physicians,"' said Patricia

pinpoint the location of each nurse
practitioner by county.
Their analysis revealed major
concentrations of nurse practitioners on the East and West Coasts.
with a scarcity in the heartland.
California and New York had

that nurse practitioners are cosleffective for improving access to
health care, especially in rural re-

gions and in other areas where there
is a scarcity of physicians. How ~

have five or fewer nune practitioners per 100,000 population.
a Onlyfivestates-Aiaska, Ari zona, Montana, New Mexico and
Wyoming-grant nurse practitioners full authority to prescribe all
medications, including controlled
substances, with no additional directives or written protocols.
The analysis identified the tO
most-festrictive state~ LO be Illi-

ever. the c urrent legislative environment limits the effect nurse
practitioners may have on the

nois, Hawaii, Wisconsin, Ohio.

had access to the licensing records

nation's health--care crisis.··
The research was funded by the
Federal Office of Rural Health
Policy and conducted under the
auspices of the New York Rural
Health Research Center at UB.
To collect inf&lt;1rmation on all

nurse practitioners, the researchers

nurse practitioners can practice independently. Bums said.

"If nurse practitionen are re-

quired to practice within a struc·
lured physician relationship,
the most nurse practitiooersindependent practice is legally im5.770 and 3.062, respectivelypossible.~ she stated "If they are
while some western states had
not able to practice independently,
fewer than I00. Eighty-five pertheir usefulness in solving the shancent were located in metropolitan
age of primary health-care providers is limited."
Additional statistics showed that ~
41 of 50 states have a specific definition of nurse practitioner in their
at
( laws; 20 states allow nurse practitioners 10 be reimbursed directly
by third-party insurers. and central
and western states allow nurse prac·
PATIIICIA titioners more latitude than states
east of the Mississippi.
areas, 9.5 percent worked in less
A third phase of the study, curpopulated surrounding townships
~tly under way. is a nationalsurand only 5.5 percent were located
v~f nurse practitioners to assess
in underserved, rural areas.
job satisfaction, scope of practice
and barriers to practice. Research ~ develop a proffie of restric·
ers will compare responses from
uveness. researchers analyzed
rural and urban participants. Inforeach state's laws regarding the prar·
mation from all facets of the study
tice of nurse practitioners. Restricwill be made available to state and
tiveness was rated in nine national health policymakers for
categories: legal recognition, stantheir use in improving the delivery
dards of practice, prescriptive au- of health care 10 rural populations,
thority, educational requirements,
Bums said.
cenification-examination require·
Other members of the research
ments. contilluing--education reteam were: Thomas Nochajslci,
quirements. temporary practice,
Ph.D., of the Research Institute on
grandfalherclauseexemptiog nurse
Addictions, and Edward Pristach,
prictitione.rs from new regulations
Ph.D., and Melissa Fingar, both of
and pri vale-insurance reimburseUB.

"Many studies have slwwn that nurse
practitioners can provide quality care
substantially lower cost than physicians. "
ofthe tudy.
"'Thus, an argument can be made

ment.
Prescriptiveauthority, legal recognition and standards of practice
all determine the extent to which

T

�3

'Bru;gein of century' scientific equipment
benefits students, faculty, researchers
TUDENTS, postdocuxal associates, faculty and researchers
at local finns ""' benefiting
from more than $1 million
wonh of very specialized scientificequipmentlhat the University at Buffalo recently acquired for only $440,000.
Tite top-of-the-line research instruments,
available to Western New York ftnns and
UB investigators, ""' also providing students with added capabilities in new tech·
nologies.
Tile equipment was purchasedearlierthis
year from Novon, a company involved in
studying
developing biodegradable plastics. W
r-Lamben, of which Novon was
, sold ~company and offered
ua ment at a significant discount
Tite Western New York Economic Development Corp. helped to facili1ate the deal.
"It's the bargain of the century for UB,"
said Dale M. Landi, vice president for research. "We bought world-&lt;:lass instrumentation and paid less than SO cents 001 We
dollar for it."
O .T . Beachley. Jr., associate vice president for research. and Louis G. Henry, director of research facility services, managed the
acquisition, matching specific items with
appropriate faculty members.
At Novon, the equipment was used primarily 10 study how plastics biodegrade, but
at UB, the new hardware is being used to
make extremely precise characterizations of
chemicals and materials ranging from simple
molecules 10 plastics, from sewage sludge to
tiny fragments of bone from patients about
to undergo a spinal fusion.
of the equipment are aJ.
Several
ready up and running in the instrument center on the South Campus. Other pieces have
been assigned to faculty, researchers. and
instrument and research centers in the departments of chemistry, biological sciences,
geology and environmental engineering, and
to the School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences.
Peter Bush. who directs the instrument
center. said the NOVON equipment will
suppon and stimulate cross·discip1inary research.
'Through this investment." he noted. "the
university has been able to help its researchers, while providing an important service lo
local companies:·
Landi noted thai "the cost of scientific

Pieces

instrumentation is increasing so rapidly that
to stay at the frontier and provide worldclass research facilities is becoming more or
a problem for universities everywhere."
He also noted lliat providing students
with the opportunity to work with the newest
technologies is an important ingredient in a
quaUty education. Students at UB now have
that opportunity.
Rini Georgekutty, who will receive her
master's degree in biornaterials from UB
next month , landed a job as a medical imaging scientist with International Imaging
Materials, Inc. (iimak) as a direct result of
ber expertise in operating one of the new

instruments while employed in the
university's instrument center.
She explained that the imaging fteld is
fairly new and most people in it have tradi-

tional electrical-engineering degrees,

"Through this
investment, the university
has been able to help its
researchers, while
providing an important
service to local
cofhpanies. "

whereas her degrees are in biomedical engineering and biomaterials.
This past summer. Georgekutty learned
how to use the Quanti met 570, an advanced
image analyzer, 10 conduct oolor detection
and image processing of pieces of bone for a
histopathologist at a local hospital.
limak managers. who frequently use the
instrument center's facilities. noticed her
work and were impressed with Georgekuny · s
proficiency in both image processing and in
understanding the hardware. She started
working full-time at iimak last month.
AI UB , the instruments are being used for
a broad range of research projects. They
include:
• Scott Weber. associate professor of
civi1 engineering. is using respirome ters to
measure oxygen consumption by organisms

as they break down organic contaminants.
"Most universities do not have instruments
Uke this," be said. 'These are a vast improvement over what we had before. Now we can
run as many as 48 different tests at the same
time. whereas with our old equipment. we
could run only one."
Tbe respirometers can help determine the
composition Of variOUS forms Of Waste, providing a potentially valuable service 10 local
wastewater treatment plants.
• Laurie C. Carter, c)jnicaJ assi5Wll
professor of oral diagnostic sciences. and J.
Malcolm Carter, associate professor of
biomaterials, are using a state-of-the-an
image analysis system 10 get a better picture
or the quality of the bones or spinal-fusion
candidates. When tbeboneisnot very strong,
alternatives 10 a conventional surgical approach may be preferable. "We ' re trying to
develop a more cost-effeclive, more. efficient way to detenninc the nature and extent
of metabolic bone disease in patients than is
currently available," said Laurie Carter.
• Paul Kostyniak, director of the UB
Tollicology Research Center in the medical
school. is using a high-tech. laboratory
composting system to tud.)' bow materials
degrade. Each reactor in the system can
measure metabolites, identify volatile products and provide detailed information on
bow quickly chemical compounds are broken down .
It also looks at chemical , uch as PCBs,
10 ftnd out if they can be made Jess toxic
through chemical and biological degradation. Kostyniak is using a high-temperature
gel-penneation chromatograph 10 determine
the molecular weight of polymers and aruo1)'1!" difficult sample matrices.
Community f11111s may use the equipment
for a fee. Interested firms may oontact Bush
at the ins•.ru ment center. 829-3561.

Projects focus
00 hazanlous
waste reductioo.
IE NEW YOIU( s-e-for Haz.anloa Wue

w

0

hM;

..td

aua,._ ....... _._

$400,0110. f...t ..... _ . . -

cleM;

-

Tltc.-;ecufoc:wa. ....,... ....
......._ .. toxicity of llaurdou
-beiaa~«*"""'in
New y ode !IIIIo tbroooah ..s
illlpnMdtJedlllolosic:S-..S
remcdil6oL
AD p1IIIClUb ~~~~derwent iolallive
peer review llld evaluation by !be

~·· tedlaic:al advisory &lt;DIIIIIit·
lee befono.......,.... by tbe euculi.-e
'-rd. Pourprojecla _
........
UB . . _ _ . _ Oilier tecipiaD illdude reaeardlen from Conlel1 Uaivcrsil)', the New Yodr State
~of Heallh..., tbe
University of New Y ode at S1o0y
Brook.
The four UB projects ore:
• Treataat .r c • lorlaated
a--..
tntr.oaK
lml6daL
JamcsN. Jc:atcn. associole pro(essar of civil ~g. will illvestigate the feasibility of desli'Oyinc
cbloriDaled orpnics in pate solulion
llld io ..-us mi,xtures usinc ullJ:a.
took: imdiMioD. Tbecealt:r'l COIIIrib'!lion ro tbe
it SS3.327.
SoaicStar tiiteroauona , D.C. o
JamesiOWD will be • poll1ner io !be
project.

s...

w- .,.

1!!!'F-

· • A Ml&gt;alonae Rudor for

Soiuu itedadioa ofW-.
Carl R. F. Lund. associate professarofcbcmicalengineering. wiDSllldy
!be possibility of n:ducing hazanlous
waste at its source usin&amp; a membrane
"""""" designed 10 remove desired
end-products from the manufw::turiog process. Tite oentet' s rontribution tO the project is $52.960.
• Evalatioa of Su!faetant-Ealuutced Aquifer lteiiMdlatioa! Pft..
d i&lt;llon of Lenis of Residual
ContamiJuotion.
Jobn C. FounW., ao.sociate professorof geology.llldAlan Rabideau,
assistant professor of dVll enginreeriog, will extend !be development of

President~

Associates
honored

Nearly 200 President's
Associates. individuals
who provide leading
philanthropic support to
UB, attended "The
-1hreepenny Opera"
Nov. 4 in conjunction
with the opening festival
for UB's Cenler for the
Arts. Among the guests
were (from left) UB
President William
Greiner. William Clark·
son. Andrew Clarkson
and Nan Clarkson .

su rfact.ant-en;anced
aquifer
remediatioo (~) by detaminin&amp;
the degree 10 which SEAR can achieve
restonllion or cotttamina!ed groundWater to cllinking-water standards.
The center• contribution to the
project is S64,\S7. DuPont Co. and
Sun Micros)'SieftiS will be industry

pannon.
• . _ fiatlotl . , Mdai-Or1 . ...
.,,... AcW l:atndle• 11104

..,c-

..-c

s..rr..-w......_

Joha VMihuchtell. usociMe
praleaor of civil . . . - - . . . Michael R,.._-*...,ca-of
cbentiall ~will Slaty die

aseot..r-..aacidic:a.5U..Sio_if_.....tor..,;c ....

~ C8D - e.tncled ' coalMiiilllllod . . . illa__....,pmcess. 1'ltit poGjec:t is • .,.~of
won CIIITelllly IIIICier way. 'l1le
c:eatcr's coattibutioo to tbe pmject is
$58.6112. ladaday pannon wiD be
Niapa lilrollawk I'Dww Cerp.-'

Dtol'lwl.Co.

~

�................... .,...... .........
UB's Intersession Curtailment Program: Dec. 23-Jan. 3
4

~.~.

'{-As PNviouaiJ -..cecl, the University at But'flllo will be implementing

Fflday. December 23
Saturday, December 24
Sunday. December 25
Monday, December 26
Tuesday, December 27
Wednesday, December 28
Thursday, December 29
Fnday. December 30
Sal!Kday. December 3 t
SUnday. January I
Monday, January 2

AJI univmhy office:s will be closed md telephones will n&lt;M be: inswered except by departmental
answering machines from thecloseofbusinesson Friday, December23, 1994 until the be&amp;inning ofbw:ineu

on Tuesday. January 3. 199S. This willapp1y lO theuniversity'1i Nonh, South. and EOC campuses. ote:
A number of critical library. computing and campus mail fu.nctions will be sustained during lnlerseuion

Curtailmc:nl. See de-tails below:
• Tc.mpenturcs in buildings thai are dosed will be
reduced 10 SO'F and hoc water will not be avail·
able.
• Nocmal university 5ei'Vices. $liCh as food service
and campus busing. will not be available.
• Boilding5 will be locked for security I'CI.50Q.S.
• rn lhe event of no...,fall, only roadways oceded
for emergency access and a few selected parking
lou will be plowed.
• Public Safery and Univcrs.ity Facilities staff will
provide neceuary campos and building ufety
and securi1y.

•

EXEMPTIONS
In 3CC'Ordance with the lntersession Curtailment
Program Policy and Exemption Procedures, the
following university flcilitieslactivities have been

..---................
,_·.-c. ,..._ ..,till.
• All laboratory animal facilities
• The Dorsbe:imer Greenhouse
• All emergency clinicalltreatmenl facilitiel.

• Alumni Aten tE; ~eduled intercollegiate athleoceventson1yt
• AJlresearchbuild1ng v.herethc:reu;a~1gnificam
percentage of "'Wt'l-laboratory" facilities in the:
buildm,:
The f&lt;lllo.n.., Mlldl"'o wiD - . ,
curt.llment

.....,...ely- dllrt"'-

a. Bonner Hall
b Cary/Farber/Sherman Hall$
c. Cookc/Hoch!.letlt'f Balh,
d. Fostt'r Hall

)

e Fronczak Hall
f . Furnas Boll
g. Jarvis Hall
h. Ke.uer Hall
i. Natural Sdencb and MAthematic~ I
j. ParU.r Annel
1.:.. Squire Hall
PLEASE NOTE: R~qu~srsfora btlildmg ~~~mprion
ixymul 1h,. program1/fadlill~s list~d a.bo1~ wue 10
h.tn~ lw~n r«!-il~d by Not~mlwr 7 in o procrdur~
prt'Vfou.rly Ollllined

UIIIWII£S.--£Jteaopted
1be: following libraries will remain o~o during
curtailment:
a. Science and Engineenng Library, open dunng the
cutt:a.ilmc.nt from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on December 270ecember 30. providing acces~: to those collections. No reference service available.
b. Health Sciences Lilnry. opc:n from 9a.m.-5 p.m.
on December27-Deccmber 30. providing acceSi
10 those collections. Reference service available.
(Soc: UBRARIFS for adclitional detailL)
COIIPUTING CENTER
The miChine room and suppon.ing offices only of
the Computing Center will be open. (See COMPUTING for additional details.)
RESIDENCE HAU.S
Sele&lt;:t residence halls will be open to internatiOnal
students during the curtailment.
IEIIIPLOYEE Of'llONS

-.wort&lt;stt•

Employea who wish to wort on any or all of the
four regular wort: days. but who~ 001 employed in
areas that will be open as 1 result of an aemption.
or who can DOl make alternate arrangements. will be
accommodated at the alternate work site, which is
Lockwood Library on the North Campus. TN.t site
will be heated 10 the normal uni\·er3i ly winter temperature. lndh•idunls ulilizing the alternate wort
site must bring adequate work supplied by their
depanment or will be supplied work by 1he site
supervisor.

PLEASE NOTE: Suu~ t'mp/oyt&gt;u "·ho clwost&gt; thiJ
option " 'ill r«l'il"~ a m~morandum in rarly !Ncrm#Nr that prot•idt's spt&gt;cific innr~~c1ions on proudurf!s go..-crning th~ alr~matc "''ork si,.

STAlE IEIIIPLOYEES
S,!ale employees who choose to take time offduring
the curtailment can utiliu accumulated vacation.
personal. or compensatory leave accruals or can
choose 10 take the days orr without J&gt;3Y· Employees
who plan to make use of the latter option should
write a lener to their supervisor indicating the: specirtcdates they wish to take wilhout pay. Sick leave

3CCJ\Ia.ls may

no1

be: used.

For those employees who do no1 hiv~ four days
of vacation and/or compensatory accruals. but who
wish to be: off with ll3Y during this period. the
univ~rsity will a&lt;lvancc up to four days of vacation
iMXJ\Ials. State employees who choose: to work on
any or all of the four workdays thai f:~JI within the

curtailmenL. and who are 001 employees of a dcparl~
men I that has been gBnkd an uempeioo. or who are
unable to make alternative arrangements. are 10
ootiJy tbeirsupervisor •nd DavidTrumpfbel~r. Sr.
Employre Relation Specialist. at 645~2646, ext.
116 of !hat fac1 no lalerllwl D&lt;ualber 1, 1994.

/Nnt&gt;fits. Mott'rial "'JJ/ IN St'nt

d~rt'C"Ih

to all Rl'·

uarrh tmpiO)'t'~S rt'gordmg dot~s. limn and loco·
t10ns pnor to lht' n~rtallmt'ni, "'ht'n pt'rTOtUI~I staff
M-ill IN OIYJil4bl,. w assu1 with hrollh .nJ-urnnu
chang~s.

PUBUC SAFETY
Public Safety will operate full sbJfiS throughout the
cwlailmenl penod Se\'l~nd steps v.·1ll be: taken to
guard ~nst theft and pt'O\'tde pe.rsona.l protection
for the limited number of employees and ~udt'ntson

&lt;.-ampus.
ACCOUNTING AND PAYROLL SERVICES
Wednesday, Dettmber l8 IS. a State: and UBF
payday. ln an effon to provide serv1cc: to university
employees. all State: and UBF paychecks and dircc:t
deposit .sutemenlS will be mailtd to State and UBF
employecs(including !.hose working in local hospi ·
taJs) via first class mail. They will be mailed 10 the:
eddrus that appears on the employee· s rsaycheck/
direct deposit statement. o paychec , d1rect dt·
posit stalemc:ots will be obtainable on Clmp!n. Paycbccksldircct deposit statements will be delivered
lO the post office oa Tuesday, December 27. wttich
should ensure local dehvery by Wednesday. l)e.

ccmber28.
Please note: thai for the: State Stude:m Assistant
payday oo Thunday. December 22. 1994. pay·
checks will be distributed by Campus Mail as usual.
Employees have been reminded of the necessity
of an accurate mailing address on their paycheck/
direct deposit $lltement. a.s well as the: ad'lantagc
of enrolling io the Direct Deposit Program . Change
of address forms ue a'la.ilable in the Univt:r$ity
Telepbooe Directory or in Penonnel Services, 104
Crofts HaJI , 64.5-2646. extensions 101 or 102, for
Swe employees. UBF employees can change their
address by advisi ng lhe UBF Personnel Office in the
Center for Tomorrow, 64S-30 1I.
h is criucal tha.t univenity dep:artments notify
Payroll Services by Friday, Oeumbu 16 if il is
ooceuary 10 'A'ithhold any State employee 's December 28 paycheck. or 10 stop their direct deposit.
Payroll Services will notify the employee by mail if
hislhc:r pa)•checlc is withheld. UBF must also be
notified by December 16 and will notify the employee by mill if his/her paycheclr:: is withheld.
During lntersession Curtailment. Payroll Ser·
\ices will have a staff member checking its telephone ans\\oering device and responding 10 any
quest1ons. The telephone number i$64.5-2600. UBF
will have staff a'•:aitable on Tuesday. December 27.
through Friday, December 30 from 9 a.m. 10 .S p,m.
to answet questions. The telephone number IS 645·
3011.
Questions rega1ding ~procedure. fordistribut·
mg paychecks during lntt'rseuion Cunailrntnt
should be add~ssed to Joseph Kerr. Acting Payroll
Director. for State Employees. and 1osephine
Zcnosky. Payroll Supervisor. for UBF employees..
111AVEL AND PETTY CASH
Complete re.imbursemt'nt re.quesas are due in the
Travel and General Ltdgeroffites by December 16,
1994 in order to insure payment prior to cunailme.ot
Incomplete paperwork cou ld delay p:~ymen1 bt'·
yond cunailment. Documenu received after De·
ccmber 16, 1994 will conlinue to be pfoce.ssed,
howe,·er, lhe:re is not any guttrantee lhat payment
will be recci,•ed prior 10 cunailment.
CAMPUS MAIL
lbe.Campus Mail Services Center will bc:opcn each
business day (December 27-Decembe.r 30) to !iOn

·~

AtUonded 5 p m -MtclnogN .

ClooedSpm
Clooed
Clooed

Unattended

Closed

Closed
Closed
Clooed
Closed
Closed
Clooed
Closed
()pen 8:30am

--

Unalt8ndecl
Unattended
Attended 8 30 a m -Moclnoght
Anended 8.30 a m -Mldnighl
Attended 8 30 a m -Midntghl
Altended 8 30 a m -Midnight
Unattended
Unattended
unattended
Anended

Tuesday. J - - 3
Any mqutred schedule dlwi(1B wit be IJmounced on sys1em starus prones by Dec:«nber t6.
1994 (IBM and VAX 645-3525. Unnr 645-396:?)

IIESEAIICH BIUNDATION EMPLOYEES
Research Foundatioo employees may be rcquiftd to
wort aU or pan of the curtailment. de:peodin&amp; on
v.'belher the unit io which they wort will remain
open. Employees who are not required 10 v.·ort. but
wishtodoso, maybeauignedto thealtemat~wort.
site in lhe: Libraries (see EMPLOYEE OPTIONS ).
Employees who do not work. and v. ho do no1
hi\'C' wffidenl accruals may request lea\'e without
pay or ao advance up to four day~ Reqlk':SIS for an
advance. or for lea\"!! without pay, and requests for
alternate work 'ite muii.1 be sent to Todd Saylor.
Sponsored Programs Perwnnel , in writing b) De·
tt.mbt'r 1. 1994.
NOTE : O«t!mbn IS th~ Rt'st'arch Fouf1dutwn ·s
dt'sign.aud month for optn t'l1rollm~nl for hl'alth

-

COMPUTING CENTER INTERSESSION CURTAILMENT SCHEDULE

an Interses ion Cun.ailment Program. As in previous years, the savings to be
realized through lower-energy consumption and other features of the curtaijmem will assist the university in operating within this year's budget.

incoming FedetaJ mail includtn&amp; Jetter mail , ~ ~
tered/cert&amp;fiedlpnorhy mail. and parcel poog..
Tile Campus Mail Strvie6 Center will be dosed
on J2126 and

1n.

Although there "ill no1 bt! any mall dell\'ettes
during the cun-ailment , Campus Mail Serv&amp;ccs Will
load ll!i deh\·ery trucks for rli'St da) baek delh·ery
ofall accumulated mail Expect Tuesday. January 3,
1995 to be :a ~\· ier than usual day.
AU accumulated Parcel Post will bedel!v~ on
January 3. 199S
Dcpanments that WI h TO rttel\e dlietr mad
dunng the curtailment lhould contact tbc: Campo~
Ma1l Seo·lCt'S Center no later th.tn December 16.
J994 ~~ 64.S-J743 to mat..e the neces~ arrange·
ment to p.ct.. upthc:arma1latlhe MJJ!Ceote:r TbPrt'
"'·ill~ no difOtribution of maillo indh id~t~.lS ( I .e ..
mail can be pid..cd up for dc:panmenti onl))
Hou,... of orerauon v.ill be 8 a m to 4 p.m each
businc:s.s; da)
UBRARIES
A• 1101cd abo-.. th&lt; Health Sdell&lt;ft Librat) (HSL}
and the SeWn~ and Engiattriog Library (SEL)
wtll be open durinJl: the curtailment from 9 a.m to
5 p.m. on Dect:m~ 27-I&gt;e«mbt:r 30, providtng
ttCce 10 t~ collections Refert'.nce ~· u.'e$ v.i ll
be provided at HSL only.
BISON w•tl not be available dun.ns the &lt;:urt.aJI·
Q"'enl at lheo~n libr.lnesdue toromputer upgrade .
Howe,•er. HUB NET \\'Ill be available at the Health

Sc1ea«s L1braty and \ 'il d1al-up.
All other UB hbrary units ":ill be closed dunng
curtailment.
NOTE; As rn lhl' past, ~mugtnc)' rrmn•al of mot~­
nals ...ill br prot·id~d 10 UB ja('ulry by staffbas~d at
i..Dc'kk·ood Lib,.af)'. this ,~ar·J allt'nwlt&gt; 'll'Orl.. sitt'

&lt;=

EMPLOYEE OPTIONS).

Faculty who need known items from the closed
collections (Lockwood. Muste. and law) can call
645-2816 to place rtqucsti. Journal anicle:s will be
copied for pic:k--up at Lockwood or fued at no
charge . Books will be charged for pick-up at
Lockwood dunng curuHme:nt hours. Two hour.
~me-day response owill be provided for calls made
beforr 3 p.m
All Libraries will be cl~d on che two cunail·
ment weekend : December 24-0ccembe:r 26 and
Dece.mber 3l·JantW) 2.
COMPUTING
The Computing Centef will dose- 1Ls central facii.JtJes and all public ilkS during the cunailment.
During this period, one operalOr will be on duly at
the: Computing Center bet&gt;A·een 8:30 a.m.. and rrud-/
ntghl wed:.days, except Ouistmu (December
and ew Year's E~"C': and Day (December 31 aod
January I). to monitor thc: computers and nct&gt;A'Or'b,
do backups. and handle a limited number of requests
for tape mounts. No output wiU be printed, di.stnbuted or delivered from the Computing Ceoteroranl
of iu n:m01e facilittes.
From midnight to 8:.30 a.m. weekdays and all
d3) on weekends, the i)'St~ms will be left in operalor·unanended mode. meaning that no tape mount
requests will be possible. Also, dunng unattended
times, should either the' i)'Slc.ms or necwOib: be·
rome inopen:tti\'t for some reason. restoration will
no1 ocrurunttl the next scllcduledopc:ralOr-attc:nded.
~hif1 . ( Plea~ sec complete Computing Ce-nter
lnterscs:sion Cunailment Khedule below.)
Outs1dt' of provtding access to mainframe com·
puters. there will be: no other services available
during the: curtailment such as consulting. computer
repa.ir or network services.
Due to the limited disk pace on thelBM li)'Siem
for electronic mail and print fil~s and the: Comput·
ing Center's inability to moni1or usc of this space.
Uki'S art cautioned that some E-mail messages and
print filescou\d be lost iflhe ipacealloco~~tcd forthi~
dllt&gt; beromes full.
As wa the case last year, lhe Computing Center
JttOmmends _that o~~U critical data files be backed up
before powenng down yourromputerequipment on
December 23. 1994.
If there are any Spet"ial concerns relating to the:
effects on computing during cunnilmc:nt, plc::a.st

25r

conlael Or Hmnch Mant;ni at64S~3S80 Of Dcnnt.i
Henneman a1 64S-3S04
SPONSORED l'ltOCIItAMS
All Sponsot'Cd Procram depanmen~&lt; wdl becloood

durinJ the CUrtailment.
Sponsored Programs Admtmstrat1on will be

__
--

dosed dunng the cutta•lment. However, anyone
oeec:bng ass1stancc from • member of the Sponsot'C(I
Programs Admims:tta11on staff to handle urgent
bus.tness should leave J ltkpboae mhsage: at 645 ·
2980. A member of the staff..,tll recurn thtc-a\1 and
~......,_
make arrangements to pro\·tde needed assim.ncc .

Ttllvel

~mbun.ement \'OUChe~

and advance rt·
tJc reco'ed 1n Grants and Cootractsoa
De..ember9, 1994 forpa)mcnttobemadt:
b) December 23 . 1994. llus also apphes to peu&gt;
cash re1mbt.uvmenb and other p~yment requests
Proj«t Oareclors w11l be conucted by a staff
member rqardiDJ; proJCCIS tenninalmg llect'mber
3 I. 1994 to provuk assmantt m complettng propnor to Doccmbc:r 9. 1994
scrssmg
__
,.....,_.Payroll
quest~ mu~
orbef~

Folio-wang are

daie~

for

iiubmlll~on

of houri) tum

sheet \"OUC~rs fru the la&amp;ged p:tymU:

HOURLY nME SKEET VOUCHER (Lag Payroll)
Nov 26 · Dec 9
Dec. 10 . Dec 23

Dec t4
Jan 3 Noon

Dec 23
6

s-l'ltOCIItAMS~NIEI.

Following aft' tht dates for submissioa orEmt&amp;o)-ec
Appoinuneot aod Change forms:

P!J!!II-

Dec tO· Dec 23
Dec 24 · Jan 6

-Dec t2
Dec t6

ParDec 23

Jan 6

SPONSORED I'IIOGIIAMS PURCHASING
Requisiriom for materials and upphe:s needed durtn,g the cunailmc:nt must be: recei,·ed by Dec. 9,
1994: Vendors 'A'lth pending ordc::R will be contacted lO reque: 1 delivery prior 10 December 23,
1994 or after January 3. 1995.
·
~ES

A rediK"Cd scbedult. of tel~ operator St.rVicrs .,
v.ill be provided. Operators • ·ill tJc on duty Decc:mber 27~Dc:ct:mbcr 30 from 8 a.m. to S p.m....At aU
ocher times. calls lO the univei"SSty •s mit£ number
will be handled b) the telephone answerinascrvice.
Foremerzencies in Pbysal Plant caU Customer
Serv1ce at 71 or64.S-202S andemerJeocies in Pubhe Safety to 645-2222. No moves. adds or changes.
orroutioe repain; 10 the universit)' tc.~pbone system
will be: dooe during the arrtailmeot. Requests for
rq&gt;airof &lt;I!ICllencyorwcntial services 1elepbone5
shoukl be: direc:ted to campus operators durin&amp; the
day cx 10 Public Safety after bours.
Dreparune.nts that have an!iwering machioe:s are
uested to reprovam lhr:m to furnish an appropria meuage relatec1to the cunailmenL If the rna·
c:h1ftle i not associated with a department's main
listed phoot. number, call forwarding could be used
to direa the calls to the machine.
FAX MACHINES
Fu messages sent to t~ uoivenity's listed fa.x
number (645-289S) wiU be direc\ed to the Campus
Mail Office. Messages • ·ill be placed in campus
mail and delivered after January 3.

FACULlY.stUIIENT ASSOCIATION
The FSA opc:nliom wiU 1101 be ouffed. All Food

Sc:rvitt [lcilities will be dosed. No vending ma·
chines will be serviced. All lobby COW'Jiers will tJc
closed. All retteatioocentcrs and the CrutiYe Cnfl
Center will be dosed. CFr Catering, toe: .• will nol
provide any service.
CAMPUS CNtLD CAllE
The center will be dosed durif'l&amp; the curtailment.
IIANION8 MACHINE$
All banking machinn in campus buildings v.ill be
tumed off. All funds stored in the machines will tJc
removed before the cunailmc:nl.

�5

State-of-the-art building brings sciences, math to one site
a,Jit4tory
complex,
far left,
hM128
labs 'Wittt
aUt.....

Natural
Sciences and Mathematics Building on the UB Nonh Campus
seems a contradiction in term .
Its futuristic lecture halls allow
professors to transcend geography, to instantancou. ly tap into remote databases via
the Internet and use the infonnation superhighway to bring a world of previously inac-

tiMHut
equip-

ment. At
left .. Profeasor

omner.

cessible material and graphics into the
classroom.
Yet the complex also provides a strong
sense of neighborhood, and its opening this
fall is the first step in an effon lo bring the
depanments in the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics to one site for the
first time in years. Researchers in different,
but related disciplines now only have to go
ac~s the hall , not across town. to share
ence. now in Bell Hall on the Nonh Campus.
disc veries and ideas.
and the Qepan.ment of Mathematics, cur128 silver ventilation cones on its
rently on the South Campus.
roof-which provide each lab in the eight"I am delighted with the completion and
story building with outside ventilationoccupancy of the beautiful, new 280.000
make the building look like the largest
gross-square-foot lecture ball. classroom and
binhday cake on campus.
research complex," said Joseph Tufariello,
Yet its emphasis on utilization of natural
dean of the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
light and mixing of dark- and li -&lt;X&gt;Iored
Mathematics. "The new eight-story building
brick on its exterior represent whal one UB
is a well -&lt;:quipped. modem facility that will
official calls "a change in the campus archiencourage the research development of both
tectural vocabulary."lbenewcomplexconchemistry and geology," he added. "When
sists of a two-story lecture ha!Vclassroom
the second-phase science building is comfacility and an
pleted. all ofthedepanments comprising the
eight-story reFaculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
sea rch buildwill be located on the Nonh Campus. in close
ing.
r,xirrury. for the first time in many years."
The research
The two-story classroom/lecture hall fabuilding is the
cility has five lecture halls, with Seating
home of the
capacity ranging from 150-350 seats. and five
Depanment of classrooms. each with a 9()..seat capacity.
Chemistry, forAlready. the new complex has changed
merly housed
the ways that UB students learn, professors...
on the South
teach and scientists do research.
R-arch building has
Campus. and
Students have hands-on O?ponun.ities to
glas,..nclosed study
theDepanment
do scientific research with the same state-ofalcove on each floor.
of Geology.
the-an instruments that their professors use.
formerly on the old Ridge Lea Campus.
Classrooms and lectu~ halls are out filled
However. it's only a temporary home for
with equipment that includes cuslom-dethe Depanment of Geology. which will move
s-igned teachjng stations housing microcominto a new building to be built adjacent to the
puters or computer workstations.
Natural Sciences and Mathematics Buildlarge-screen. ceiling-mounted projectors and
ing. once a second stage of construction is color video-camera platfonns. Also stancompleted in 199g.99, That building also
dan! for lecture halls are CD-ROM and VHS
will house the Depanment of Computer Scivideotape capabilitie and a color visualizer

Beaehley

Jr., In or-

canon-

talllc
cflemlatry
lab.

that can project three-dimensional images.
Lectures are no longer limited by the
availability of equipment or the four walls of
the classroom; the world becomes the learning space. Professors can access a me through
the Internet and then project the image of
that file, including charts and graphs, on a
movie screen for the whole class to see.
Three-dimensional models of molecules can
be made to rotate on-screen. Video cameras
can transform laboratOJ¥demonstrations into
larger-than-life experiences. even for students who opt tO it in the last row.
The sophisticated computerfacilities also
are expected to help UB become more active
in distance learning. Tufariello said.
ew scientific equipment that will be
housed in the research complex includes new spectrometers. featuring nuclearmagnetic~resonance and mass spectrometers,
and electron-spin·resonance spectrometers,
which aid in the derermination of the struc~
ture of complex molecules. There aJso is a
cleanroom for de\•eloping sen!titi\e,
photonics materials.
One of the most imporumt benefit&gt; of the
state-of-the-an complex 1s decidedly and
deliberately low-tech. 'The biggest single
change is rhat the depanment as no longer
1solated,.. said Jerome Keister. cha1r of the
DepanmentofChemistry. "It makes for much
better interacuon§ for facuhy and students ...
Michael Sheridan. chair of the Depanmem of Geology. couldn ' t agree more.

N

"Forthe first time in 25 years. the Depanment of Geology is on the main campu of
the university. in modem facilities, with
everybody working together." he said. "'ur

new labs are giving us efficiencies we've
never seen befon:.··
Features of the eight-story complex include a main senice corridor for resean:h
labs. so that servicing can be done with a
minimum of disruption to scientific wort..
To enhance safety. each of the 1281abs has
its own dedicated fan. exhaust and duct system. corresponding to one of the Sliver ventilation cones on the building' s roof.
lbenewcomplextakesadvantageofnatural light. Labs. classroom and corridors
have large windows: office doors are marked
by ponholes, and each
bas a glassenclosed study alcove with built-in seating.
''The natural-sciencts building is pan of
a change in the campu llrchitectural vocabulary," said Ronald Nayler. associate vice
president for university facilities. Ht s~ud
that like other new buildings on the campu .
such as the Stuck.nt mon and the Center for
the Arts. the sciences building. featuring
dark- and light-colored bricl on its exterior,
is a change from the standard brown-bricl
design lhat rna.ri::ed earlier construction.
The building was constructed by FrankL.
Ciminelli Construction Co. of Buffalo and
its joint-venturepanner. Walbridge Aldinger
Co. of Detroit. h was des1gned by the architectural firm Davis. Brody and Associates.
Construction was completed this spring.

noor

UB students teach job search
skills in Buffalo high school

Study says government regulations can
cause more deaths than they prevent

By SUE WUETCHER
News Bureau Stall

II)'
- Bureau
WUETCIIEII
News
Staff

M

ANAGEMEI\'TstudentsatUB
have moved from the classroom

into the community to test their
skills and help more than 400
students at Seneca Vocational High School
compete for jobs once they graduate.
The high point of the effon is thi s week.
as Seneca Vocational students panicipate in
mock-interview sessions conducted by the
UB students.
The success of the Resume and lnterviewingSkillsExperience(RAISE)program
designed by the UB undergraduate and MBA
students has prompted Seneca Vocational
Principal Mark Balen to urge that the program be implemented at high schools
1broughout the Buffalo Public Schools.
Goal of the three-pan RAISE program is
to assist junior and senior students at Seneca
Vocational in resume writing. provide them
with infonnation on employment interviews
and increase their oral· and written-presentation skills. Sessions and content, integrated
with English etas~ material, emphasize communication skills.
Wh~le Seneca Vocational has an internhip program with several local companies.
it had no program to provide job-search
skills to students. says David Ryder, the

school"s assistant principal. Likewise. most
Buffalo school s have few. if any. programs
devoted to enhancing these skills. he notes.
Ryder adds that Balen and Joseph
Salamone, UB adjunct associate professor
of organization and human resourt:es and the
UB students ' facully advisor. a~ so im·
pressed with the program that they are preparing a repon for Buffalo Public Schools
Superirllendent Alben Thompson. urging
implementation oft he program distri ctwide.
"The benefits are found in the name of the
program;• says Salamone. "For the Seneca
students, it"s raising their awareness of what
they need to do to be more competitive in the
job market. For our students. it's raising their
awareness of their academic studies and actually putting their studies into practice.··
Several UB tudents from the student
chapter of the Society for Human Resource
Management and Salamone kicked off the
program Oct. 27 at a school assembly with a
presentation on careers. resumes, interviews.
work behaviors and job performance.
During Nov. 7-11 program phase, UB
students delivered presentations on resume
writing and interviewi ng to seven junior and
five senior English classes. The last phase of
the program is this week. with UB students
conductjng I 0-15 minute mock interviews
with about 150 members ofthe seniorclass.=

_,pv..---t.l~de ­

signed to pcot«t citizens· health and safety
actually cause more deaths than they prevent, a study by a UB economist has found.
Private sector compliance with these
expensive regulations lypically reduces income and increases poveny through layoffs
and/or taxes. said Govind Hariharan, assistant professor of managerial economics.
Since poor people have shorter life spans
than the rich, duetotheinability to purchase
proper medical care, these regulations often
result in more deaths than are saved, he said.
In a study published in the Journal of
Risk and Uncertainty, Haribaran and coaplhor Kenneth Chapman, associate professor of eoonomics at California State
University at Nonhridge, determined that
regulations costing more than $12.2 million per-life-saved are likely to l:ill more
people through increased poveny than
they save.::BiUions of doll an are spent in
regulating exposure to different types of
chemicals and other substances."
Hariharansaid. "The risk. in tenns ofbow
many days of life are saved for the average person, has been shown to be infinitesimally small. Poverty, on the other

-~

hand, bas the biggest impact (of all variables) ocibow long people live. A decline
in incoll'll&gt;--tbrough such factors as lost
jobs-will
some people to die early.
"For instance. the Environmental Pro-

&lt;f'se

tection Agerq Superfund cleanup of bazardous-sitesisestimaledto&lt;XlSibillions.
while the btndi~ in life days expected to be
saved, is ~mal Thus. such regul.atioos
that rypically reltiJII in more people in pnveny.
tould kiD more~ liB! they save,"be said.
1be study ~J.ed dati from the RetirernentHistorySun-eycollectedbetween
1969and 1979bylheU.S. Censu Bureau.
1be survey questioned about 11.000 males,
aged 58~2 in 1969, every two years oo
financial. demographic and health topics.
To determine the "an-off point" in 1crn1s
of expendirure per--life.saved, the researchen estimaled the effecl of a d!ange in inrome. as measured by....,._ Social Security
and savings. on the age of death while cootrolling for initial heal!b status. While some
studies have c:onttolled for extreme beallh
problems such as disabi~ties. the UB SlUdy
was unique, Hariharan said. because it estimated a specific cut-off level for expenditure and controlled for initial hettltlt using
gene:ral measures of sdf...-eponed health SillIUS and

medical expenditures.

�6

............................ u.
UB Scbool of~ in

_..;oo wilh tbe IRS aod

New Yoot S'* Dept. ofTua·
tioft and FUIIDCC. SheratOD IM.
Cl&gt;eebowap. 9 a.mA:4S p.m.
$90 fcc ux:lodcs luncb aod
handout maleriab. Call
64S-3200.

--

Nonll Campu . I p.m. S:S. S7.
SIO.
ATT!.-MOv.s
1'11111J Spinal Top. UUAB film
Stria. 201 tudcn1 Ullioa.
Nonh Campu . II :30 p.m. S2.
S3.50. Call645· 2957.

-AL

-AND

All 0.-eniew of tht
State or Lake

Cbamplaio, 0... Lyn
Mcilroy. SUNY
CoUc~at

Plan.sburg.h 140 Ketter
Nonh Campu . II a.m.
ADIIIC1»HS SEMINAII

Ass&lt;sADHI and Motivation
ror Cbaap: Computtriud
U!ostylo Auessmt!ll~ Han"&lt;:y

A. Skinner. Pb..D.. Untv. of
Toroo1o. Sponsortd by !he ~n­
&amp;er (01" the Otmcal and MedJcal
Ep.dcm&gt;Oiogy of Alcohol. R&lt;·
starch Institute on Addictions.
1021 Main St. 1:30 p.m. Free
Call 887-2566.
COMI'IIT1EJI 5CIENCE
CDU.OQUtUII

Comp&lt;dt l.. Onlloc Alco·
ritbms for Dynamic ~xlmum
Bipartite M.atchiag. Min&amp; Y.
K.ao, Duke Univ. 228 Natural
Sciences &amp; Mathematics Complex. Nonh Campus. 3-4: IS
p.m. Cali64S -3180.
I'IIYSICS SEMINAIISOIU
Pbase TrauitioDs ia Fiaitolzod Systtllll, Roj K. l'alhna.

THURSDAY

17

AliT EX*aiTIOM

I.AadK8pes 1988-1994. Works
on paper by Cynlhia Haod.
Capen Gallery. fiflh floor.
Capen. Nonh Campus. Gallery
hoono. Throuih_lle&lt;cmbcr.

Whai'saa
·iaterfaith
cou.pleY
Maybe you two! If so, Temple
Beth Zion offers o non-judgmental, welcoming group once o
month for Jews and their nonJewish spouses to discuss issues
of concern. You needn't be o
member to join.

--

MEDICINE AHD - A L

lmmu.ae Complexes aad
RHumatold FKton in St~
IO&lt;OC&lt;IU-loduced Nepbritis of
Rabbits, Boris Albini. M.D.
106 Cary. Soulh Campus. Noon
nuoEIITNOtWIEGJt&amp;
IIECnAL

Percussion Recital SttKknts of
Jan Williams and Anthony

Miranda. Baird Recital Hall.
North Campu~ . Noon. No ad -

mission.
UaATANRtSE
Dyln&amp; in America. Or. Richard
T. Hull. UB Associate Professor
of Philosophy ond Assistant
Professor of Medicine. Center
for Tomorrow. North Campus.
7:30-9:30 a.m. $8. S9. Call
829-2608.
IIAIIAIIEIIEIIT IIOUNDTAIILE

• Sunday, November 20- 7 PM
at Temple Beth Zion
700 Sweet Home Rood, Amherst
We'D talk about the
upcoming holidays.
• Saturday, Detember 3- 4:30 PM
Fomi~ &lt;honukoh Party &amp;
Lotke cook-ilff

,.,

Tem~e Beth Zion

805 Oelowore Ave, Buffolo

~"l~&gt;S
Coll886-7150

for more information, or just come!
You'll be very welcome.

Tho l'copk Sido or Total Qual-

ity Manacemeat, Thomas J.

Dixon, Joan M. Horrigan, Roben W. Milkr. aod Robert K.
Freeland. Fanny's Rcsu.r.uant.
3500 Sheridan Dr. 8-9:30 a.m.
I'IIYSICSaEIIIIIAII

Dissipative Quantum TuoneliJIC ora Sin&amp;k Defect in Bl,
Prof. Nonn.an Birge. Univ. of
Michigan. 454 Froocz.ak. Nonh
Campus. 3:30p.m.
AliT L£CTUIIE
Jim St-. pholognphtr. 112

Center for the Arts. North Campus. 4 p.m. Free:. Cali64S·6878.

-

. - A L SCIIJICD

S urftnclntera.al W•ves:
lll&lt;atbi&lt;-Pdqie Cooplinc ill
tbo Gulf of Maloo. Dr. Mut
Pan.erson, Vir'Jinia lnstitule of
MariAC ScimcC". 210 NmtW"ll..
Sciences &amp;. Mathematics Complex. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

---HAlt

htff!Clion Control Traioing.

Soulh Campu•. 4·7 p.m. Call !he
of Continuing Nurse
Education at 829·3291 for rcghl·
trntion information.
PHAIIMACEUTICS SEMINAR
Ofli~

Capillary Eloctn&gt;pbonsls ,.,.
0... Luos Coloa. Dept..of Chcmiwy. S08C
Coote. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
CliDicaJ Aaalysk,

I'O£T1IY DISCUU\uM Portup.l aad Olhitr

h diot. 990 Ocmen . Nonh
Campos. 4 p.m. Free Pan of
Wednesdays al4 Plus pocll}
and pros.c: seri(S.
CIUONTOLOGICAL NUIISING
CIEII11FICATIE l'tiOGltAM

Univ. of Wau:rloa. 20S Nanual
Sciences a Matbenwics Complex. Nonh Campus. BO p.m.
Cali64S-6314.
~

COUOQUtUII

Tho Mtdwtism or AsaiDt Oxidatioa by Cytoebra.,.. P-450,
Prof. Joe OinDOICaW&gt;. Univ. of
Roc:hciter. 201 Natural Sciences
&amp;. Malhemoltics Complex. North
Campus. 3:30p.m.
ATTHEMOVIU
pttd.

~xuallt y Among Older
Adults. Linda Jane IIi, School of

SATURDAY

19

-.n-

IIAKM81N WNY U.....

Scre&lt;aincand !'and DloauJioaorWortu&lt; fadoorTr&amp;Mmiued al WN£0.17 and IllCAM, Bulfalo Com .. unMy
T~ J MICha&lt;l Collm •
Lynn Coreonon. O.rald
O"Gr.dy. Paul Mec:&amp;an. Hono&lt;able James Pllt . Sharon

Mooney. Annin Heunch. Tooy
Conrad. ~nter for the ArU.
North Campos. 7 p.m. $3.50
event: S7 wetkeDd. Call
64S·ARTS.

uunuu.
--··~
Oftldal pan. Alumn1 Amla.
Nonll ~ 7:30p.m. 54.
DANCE~

MoeUJDtat. Zodaaque Dance
Company Dtr&lt;Cied by Uoda
Swaniuch. Drama 'Thealre, Cc:ol&lt;r f0&lt;1he Arls. Nonh Campus.
8 p.m. SS. 57. 510.
MUSIC

flddlo, ll«tl&gt;&lt;&gt;ftn's ooly optra. The Greartr BuiTalo Opcn

Company. Gary Burps~ will
prt5ent a pn:-performaDCC" talk II 7:30p.m.
Center for the Arts.
Ml.lnstage. North Campus.
8 p.m. SJS. $30. 526.50.
S22.50.

Nursing. To earn ct:n.ificatt.
nurses must hnt attended five
sessions. South Campus 4.307:30 p.m. S50 pcunodulc To
rc~i rer. call829·3291.

OFBEAT CINEMA

I

AIITEXHI&amp;~

Jim lOH, Photographs 0~ ­

ang rttcpOOn. lberufler gallery
hoono. Throu&amp;h Dec. IS Arl
Depanment Gallery. Center for
the Arts. North Campus S- 7
p.m. Free:. Call 645-61178
ATTHEMOVIU
8 1/2. UUAB film scncs 201
Student Union Nonh Campus. 6:1S p.m. 52. SJ.SO. Call
645 -2957.
'
DANCEPE~ANCE "

Monument. Zodiaque Oancr

Company. Dirrcted by Linda
Swiniuch. Drama Thau't. Center for the An.s . onh Campus
8 p.m. SS. S7. 510.
MUSIC
Fidelio., Bet1bo,·ra's oaly op-era.. The Grt:attr Buffalo Opera
Company. Gary Bureess ••til
prucat a pre-pt:tformancc taU,
at 7:30. ~nter for the An •
MainSiagc. North Campus. 8
p.m. SJS. S30. 526.50. S22.50
ATTNEI(IOVIQ
Spttd. UUAB film scnes. 201
Stl.l&amp;nt Unioo. Nonh C1mpus.
9 p.m. 52. 53.50. Caii64S -2957.

PLAY
Brill.iAnl Tra~n. Dtrect.ed by
Genld Finneran. Black Box
1beat1t. Ct-nter for the Aru.

Nq))l Campu•. 8 p.m. SS. S7.
SIO.
UUAB film scries. 201 Swdent Umon North Campus.
6'30 p.m. and 9 p.m. S2. S3.50.
Caii64S-29S7.
INDEPENDENT MEDIA
MAIUIHIIII WNY 1 M SC':r'ftoiog and Paoel Disau·
ioa of Works Ma&amp; or Sbown ~~~~. . . .~,
at Media Srudy (Bulfalo),
Albrigbi-Knox Arl Gallery,

RaiiWlllls, Squeaky Wbffi,
Gerald O"Grady. Douglas
Schultt. Chnstine Hill. Cheryl
Jacltsoo. Ccnrer for !he Arls.
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m. 53.50
t\·ent: S7 Wtt.Uod. Call
64S-ARTS.
Mot 'S ElUalnOtl
tlAHETUU
Bulls vs. U.S.D.B.L Alumni

Arena. onh Campus. 7:30p.m.
55.
DANCE-..cE

Monument. Zodiaquc Dance
Company. Direc1cd by Linda
Swiniuch. Drama lbea.tre, Ccn·
tc:r for the Arts. North Ca mpus.
&amp; p.m. 55. $7. SIO.

FRIDAY

1~

INTEIIMAOONAL FOtJI

DANCU..

All levels, aJI wekome. Pannen
001 ne&lt;dcd. 2 Diefendorf. Soulh
Campus. 8-11 p.m. Free:. Sponsond by Goo ua~&lt; S1udcn1

AsiOciat.ion.

PEDIAT111C UAND IIOUNDS
How lo ldeatj(y Adolesttnts
._·itb Mtnlo~ ia. Raben
Wt:lli\'C.r, M .D. Kinch AudllO·

rium, Children's Hospital.
&amp;a.m.

-

TAX I'IIACnnDNERS'

Changes in Tu La~ and

Other l ssu~. Sponsored b)' the
I

Cidua Kaat:. Beatniks
from WKBW-TV"s popular bow will hosa. Center
(ex l.be Aru Screening
Room onh Campus. 8
p.IJ\. Fn:&lt;: Cali 64S·ARTS

CIFBEATCA Ni&amp;bl at tbr Opera. Bealnick
charactcn of.WK.BW-TV ' s

popular show will host. Center
for the Ans Sc:rttning Room.
North Campus. 8 p.m. Free. Call
64S -ARTS.
PLAY
Brilliant Tracrs. DirtttN by
Gerald Finnegan. Black Box
Theo.tre. Center for the Ans.

SUNDAY

~0

~­

--WNY~
Scnaaiac
and ! ' a n d s1oa or wortu&lt; Dovdoped m
AIDitria.a

c...m•Dkies

"l'llrauP NEA/NA.LAA Arl

~-iJID&lt;pert­

of Media Study Artists,
Matlhew M&lt;EIIigotL Dooald
Bernier. John Harripn. Ccnrer
f0&lt;1h&lt; Aru. Nonh Campus. 7
p.m. $3.50 e~nt : $7 "'reekend.
Call 645-ARTS.
IDtDI

DANCE~

Mooume:ol. Zodiaque Dance
Company. 01rected by Linda
Swiniuch. Ornma The:urc, Center for tht Am. North Campus.
8 p.m. SS . $7. SIO.

�7
I'UY
Brilliant T . - . Oirecled by

Q&lt;n.ld Finoe1an. Btocillllo:::

Theatrt, Cenler for lhe Arti.
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. S!l. S7.
SIO.

Valerie Heywood-Howe. viola:
Suzanne Thomas. harp. Allen
Recital Hall. South Campu .
7p.m. F=.
-

: CLASaiCa LIW

~~~m~!;":h.~iow-

. .,

ing Sunday at 4 p.m. hy WBFO

SOCIAL W- CONTINUING
.

EDUCA~

Solutioo-Foaased Tbf.rapy
"itb African Amukan Cli~nts. Dr. M.ark~ Watson,
Hllhnemann UntY. Sporuored by
the School of

1al Wort.

Wick Cenler, xmen College.
8:45 a.m.-3:30 .m. S60; st~­
dents $35. For form:at1on, ca11
645-61
LEC1VIIE

~~~"
·6

women's roles in JudaiAn, including ..Jewish Mllrimonial
Llw in the Middle Ages... 280
Park. North Campus. 3 :30p.m.

F=.

~

Sl6. Sl2; children: SIO. S7, S5.
Call645-6259.

Mercy Hospital. 8:30a.m.

c~

Pbilooophi&lt;allbeorits or
Logical Co.nsequence, Josi
Saguillo, Univ. of San1iago de

Compostela. 684 Baldy. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m. Call881 · 1640
... 645-2438.

...

·sawwMEEt

c~~­

Preventative Respite: Proi.nm
and Gattway Voulb a nd Family Sc:rvices: An Overvinl'.

a-.tYSICAL KIENCU

EDUCA~

-

Donald Bain. Oearviela.- Treat-

ment Services. Lewiston. Sponsored by Institute for Addactions Studi~ and Training.
rcgistmtioo information call

645-6140.
IIIIOWIIIWISTACIED

~­

(h-er Nothioc at AU by

atbalic: Sarrautc. 8 83, Center for the Arts. Nonh Campus.

Noon- I p.m.
COMIIIUNICATION DESIGN

LECnME

(dapbic Design Discussion,

&amp;1 Gold, award-winning publi-

DESIGN

L.ECTUIIE
Graphic: Desicn: Th&lt;r&lt; Go«
tbe N&lt;i&amp;hborbood, Ed Gold.
award-winning publication designer. Center for the Arts.
Drama Theater. North Campus.
6:30p.m. S20, SIS. SIO.
Royals .._ Colpte. Alumni
Arena. North Campus. 7:30
p.m. S4.

Mecha.nosensili~•

Cbanotl of
E. 01/i: tbt Msd. Protein and
il&gt; Gene, Or. Ching Kung.
Univ. of WI$COCUi in, Madtson
106 Cary Hall . South Campus .

4p.m.
MUSIC
New Am~ricaa Songs. Ben

Yarmoli.nsi.:y, composer. wath
Stephen Kalm, baritone . 990
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

Ck~mns

Free. Pan of Wmncsday~ at 4
Plus pocuy and proK. series.
Co-spoosor&lt;d by the Dept. of
Musac.
PIWitltiACY SQIINAII
Rs to OTC S•itcbes., Karen
Doal:. 248 Cooke orth Cam·
pus. 4:30p.m
AT THE IIOVIU

Bad Behavior. UUAB film
series. 201 Student Umon.
Nonh Campus. 6:30 p.m. S2.
$3.50. Call 645-2957.
OPUS: CLASSICS UVE

BiM.r, Passacaglia; Ginastc:ra,

Piano Sonata No. 1; Jvrs. VioUn Sonata No.4; Krrisltr,
~bts(reud . Shannon Nance.
violin : Paul Rumrill , piano.
Allen Recital Hal l. South Cam-

pus. 7 p.m. Fn:c:.
OPUS: CLAUICS UYE
Cristt.n Crqory, sopraDG.

....J

Access Wo-...u......

Wilh Miawoft ()ff!a,

Pn&gt;ftsalooal Packas• Only

$113 $135 $143
Wmdows

Macintosh

Professionai

Handline Anger, Holiday Con·
ni&lt;ts, Eileen Tngoboff. Buffalo
P~yehaauie Center. Deadline for
registntion i$ Nov. 23. Rad1sson

Wmdows

HOtel and Sun.cs Buffalo. 4243
Gene5ee St .. Cheektowap. 8
un.-3:tS p.m. SSS fee indudes
breuks'":"luncheon, and confer-

w-

ence materials. Call 829-3291
for ~gistr.uion or information .

ADDICTIOIIS I'IIEYEN110N

Womea ,.·ith Akobol Prob&amp;t:ms: lnttn-eation Issues, Dr
Ouis1tnc Saulnier. School of
Social Worit. Sporuored by In·
stitute for Add.icuons Studie
and Tmrung Wick Center,
Dacmen College. 9 a.m.-4 :30
p m. Fee SSO. For ~s1strataon
anformation ca11645-6140.

ANATOMY AND CEU.
. - y SQIINAII
The dTccu or thiamine drficic::ocy OD tbr dt.ndritit

l l"ft o(

ttrebell.ar Purkinje cells with
and witbout concurftnl akobol trealmcnt, Rosanne Ciccia,
Dept. of Anatomy and Cell Biology. 306 Farber. South Campus. 12:30 p.m.
a-.«:AL KIENCU
SQIIIWI

"0 Come,

Let Us
Worship ... ''

TATA-Jess Promoters., Dr.
Jane Az.izkhan. Roswell Part.
Cancer Institute. 114 Hoch·

stetter. North Campen. 4 p.m.
Allen. South Campus. 7 p.m.
continued
on page 8
Free. Taped for broadcast the
ro11owing Sunday at 4 p.m. ·~~~~-........._
bf WBFO 88.7 FM .

Buacon. piano a.od
~-­

....J Word ....J Excel
PowerPoint ....J Mail

admission.

-

PEDIATIIIC COMFEJI£IICE

SEIIIMAJI
A L.arce Conductuce

....J

Joanoe Castellani. Baird Recital
Hall. Nonh Campus. Noon. Fn:c:

UB lavite. Alumni Arena Nautorium. Nonh Campus. All day .

-·s~~AAEBAU

,S......,.d• for flut&lt; &amp; Harp;
On• addiUooalwork TBA,
Oleryl Gobbetti, nute:

STUDPfT HOM-DEMD

Microsoft Combo Packs

=AL
Cooeert. Students or

Hochstencr. Nonh Campus.

COMIIIUNICA~

OPUS: CLASSICS UYE
Debussy, Trio for Flutt, Viola
&amp; Harp; Porsecbd.le,

AliT EXHI8moN

Lanclsaopts 1981-199~. Worb
on paper by Cynthialiand.
Capen Gallery. fifth floor.
Capeo. Nonh Campus. Gallery
houn.. Through lhii month.
MDI'a aWIM IIIUT
UB lavitc. Alumni Arena Natacorium. North Campus. All day.

4p.m.

Campus. 3:30p.m. F=. Call
645-ARTS.

'

kar)olic DNA Rq,liallion, Dr
Brutt Stoll man. Cold Spring
Barbo&lt; LabOfatol) . Hilleboe
Auditonum, RPCI. 12:30 P m.
ANUTHQ-Y LECTUII£

Sites. Mulchand S. Patel. 307

cation designer. Center (or the
Arts. Screening Room. North

::~:~·

&amp;EIIINAII
Mec:han m or Control Eu·

Rqu.l8t.ioa of Humaa Pyruvate Dehycfrocenur: Rolt of
Multiple Phosphorylation

9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Fee S50. FOf

ndervadu..te Composrn:
Seminu. Baird Recital Hall.
Nonh Campus. Noon. Fn:c:. Call
645-2921.
BUFFALO LOGIC

ART EXHISmON
Jim Slone, Photographs.
Through Dec. 15. Art Deport·
meot G llet}'. Center for the
An
onh Campu . Gallef)
hours Calll&gt;lS-6878.

South Campus. 1-2 p.m.
aiOCIIDIICAJ.
- y &amp;EIIINAII

Wick Center, Oaemen College

MUSIC SEIIINAII

l . ..,

Noon-I p.m.

~~~S~= ~~~..

2!f

Alla•t.is. UUAB film serart.
201 Sludent Union. Nonh Cam·
p.m. S2. S3.30. Call
645-2957.
pus. 9

: = : = l i o n hips. I•SE

M.O .• Univ. of Pennsylvania

AIIIIICTlONS PIIEVENTION

SyD&lt;Opo In Child....., Joseph
Orie. M.D. Cafe1orium A.

0

9
~-'-

WEDNESDAy ·

Eifert of AdmosiM R.~tor
Compounds on Ac:ult Lun1
lajv.ry, Constance f. Neely.

Cannabis Dependency,

[,'aluation of Cbese Palo and

Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. Call
64S-2921.

IIOSWEU. PAJttl STAFF

MUSICAL
Babes in Toyb.nd. Ccn1er for
the Aru. Mainstage. Nonh
Campu . 8 p .m. adults: $20.

David Zapfel. Jessie ~y,
Gateway Yooth and Family
Services. Cafetorium A . Mercy
Hospital . 8 :30a.m.

PEDIATIIIC CONfDIENCE

Atn.--..

Baird Recital Hall.

Student Uruon North Ctmptn

Jewish Reli&amp;Wus Tbou&amp;bJ in
the Modem and Postmodern
Workl, Ze' ev Fa1k, Hebrew

Universily. FaU: aulhored •
dozen books on Jewish law and
thought. Israeli family law and

onfonnatiOG, eall645-2921.

di~or.

Laura MuMOO ad K.arcn

Wlelaad, ....,...._ ood
S...'H Tboauts, piano. Allen

pus. 8 p.m. S4. SS. $8, SIO. FOf

~8 Jazz Combo, Sam Falz.one.

AfRKAN AMI.RKAN STYlE
SwoENT WoRSH IP SERVICE
SuNo...Y AT 6:30 P.M

n\'t:

winds. Worts of Moun. Weber, Barber. Poulenc. Roussel.
Slee Coocert Hall . Nonh Cam-

CHuRC.H
3334 MAJN ST.
FROM UB's SovrH CAMPUS

UNtV£RSITY PRtsaYTIRIAN

AcROSS

Sponsored by
Episcopal College Ministry
Diocese ofWN.Y.

�8
~~~ge7
IIA-ncs~­

Split Ortboc&lt;&gt;uJ Arnysii.Dd

taxi.mum Resilient Systenu
or Flladlons, Prof. v.
Levenshtein. lnst. for Applied
Mathematics. Russian Academy
of Sciences. 103 Diefendorf.

Campus. These f-ree sessions
begin wilh teaching. Partner~ are
DOC ~- The sponSOt is the
Gndum Sludenl Association.
-~TDRIAIIE

,..._MEAL

1be UB Offu:c or lnt~mational

South Campus. 4 p.m.

Students and Scholar Services
seeks individuals or families
who v.'OUld like to 5hllre their
'Tha.nksgiving meal with one: or
l1lOf"e U8 foreign students ·in tbe

--.v11CS SEIIINAit

Thanksgiving~meal

Pbarmacodynamk Studies
with Anti-Malarial Drugs and
Corti&lt;oslrroicls, Dr. Adcdigbo
A. F:uanmade, Dept. of
Ptlannaceutics . .508C Cooke.

Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
IIDIOfiTOUMIICAL NURSING
CEllTifiCATE-

Rehabilitation and Oldt-r ·
Adulls, Sharon S. Dittmar.
School of Nwsing. To earn cer-

tificate. nurses must ha,•e Itt·
tended fi~ sessions. South

J..,._..

pus. 4:3&lt;1-7:30 p.m. SSO prr

ule. To register. call

3291.

.

Rear WI.Ddow. UUAB film

5eries. 201 Srudent Union.
North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2,

$3.50. Call 645-2957.

Uf'E--

Tte One Oo, Shirley Closson.
Scarves. 7-9 p.m. Call645-6125
10 regiSier.
PIANO DUO RECITAL

NfV Piano Duo. Baird Recital
Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free
admission.
Af'I'HEIIOVIU
Atlantis. UUAB lilm series.
201 Student Union . North Campus. 9p.m. $2, $3 .50. Call
645-2951.

EXHIBITS
GRAND DI'ENING FEmVAl
CDNCWOU
The Center for the Arts Grand
O~ning Festival roncludes thi"
..-.oec:k in the new S5()..miJiion
Cemer for the An.s gallery. The
g.allery will present .:1 year-roUnd
schedule of temporary exhibiti ons and shows. Caii645ARTS for event infonnation.
"FAifH IN DOIJIIf" SHOWING
- Faith in Doubt: A Speculation
on the Function of Humor in
Contemporary An- continues in
University Galleries I and II .'
Center for the Am. Nonh Cam·
pu!&gt;. The free exhibit. which
runs through Dec . 23 andresumes Jan. 3-14, 1995. is open
from 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Wednesdnys-Saturdays, and Noon-S
.p.m. on Sundays.
JIM SfDNE: I'HOfDGIIAI'HS
Jim Stone , photographer.
teacher. author and editor. opens
hi!~ c~it of photographs o n
Novc:mber 17 in the An Dept
G:sllery. Cen1er for the: Arts.

NonltCampus. "ith .:1 lecture
and reception. In 1993. Stone
publi~hed a book of his phOto~raph~.

Stwnger Tholl Firtion.

Stone says of his work: .. My
photograph:. are :JboUI asking
questions, :~bout ambiguity .. .!
uy to recognize life's oppo·
sites-the good and e\•il. com·
edy and tragedy-present in
each of u . and try to render it
with delicate irony.·· The exhibit
continues until December 15:
gallery hours arc 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
weekdays. Admission is free.
C:lll 645-6878 for information.
LANDSCAP£5 IN CAPEN
CIAUERY
.. Landscapes 1988-1994.'' a
collection of works on paper by
Cynthi a Hand. bpcns this week
in the Capen Gallery. fifth Ooor.
The show continues throUgh
Oecelllbcr du ring gallery hours. ·

NO TICES

'

INTERNAfiONAl FOLK
DANCING
All are v.orlcome to join the: In·
temational Folk Dancing group
each Friday from 8- 11 p.m. in 2
Diefendorf Hall on the South

program.

The host individual, couple, or
family must be able. to provide
their gue5t( ) with transportation
to and from the mul. Some
students are single, while others
may ha\'C a spouse and/or young
children: every ~rron is made to
match studentli with hoi:ts who
share similar intc.resu.. All of tbe
students. many of whom are
enrolled in gnduate programs at
UB, ~ Ouent in English. Those
intereclCd in volunteering for the
foreign student host program
should call645-2251!.
LUTCAU_..._
TESf
'The Student Association is conducting free hearing-:;5Cfetnings

~A~~~:~~o~i~:us.

1lle screenings take about five
minutes. and are open to students and all memben: of the
community. Hours are Mondays
from 1·5 p.m .• Tuesdays and
Wednesdays from 3:3&lt;1-S p.m..
and Fridays from 12:30-3 p.m.
For information. caii83S-8382 .

IHI'EJIIIA'IlDNAL MEDICAl
CDNNECnONS I'ANR
Speakers from UB. the business
community. and health--care
field will discuss Buffalo's international medical-supply, hospital-care, arMl research net·
works at the 4bth annual
luncheon of the Buffalo-West·
em New York Council for ln!eroutional VisitOJS, Inc. at noon
on November 18 in the Rendc.z·
lt'OUS Room of StatlerTowen.
Part of the event proceeds will
benefit Doctors Without Borders
USA. Inc.
INTERNAnDNAL FILM
SCREENING
The English Department Program in Folklore. Mytholog)
and Film Studies will prt!oent
'"Shoot for lhe Contents:· a f1lm
by internationally ucclaimed
filmmaker and critic Trinh T .
M.inh -Ha. A look at modem
Olin:t and the position of
women, filmmaking and the
revolution. the lOt-minute film
m color is descnbed as a brilliant, poetic, witty look at dragons and society and where we
all arc looking at each other in
film . The screening is at 1 p.m.
Tuesday. Nov. 29 in the Center
for the Arts Screening Room
112. and will be followed b)
audience discussion and questions with Diane Christian .
Stephanie Onega, Carrie Tirado
Bramen . Sheila Uoyd :md
Juanita But
SfUIIENf ASSOCIAnON
ACCESSIBLE
The Student Association "'all
pro,•ide an Accessibility Booth
on TueM!ays :md Thursdays
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m . in the
Student Union . The boOlh will
featu~ Student Assooi.ation rep·
f'C'SC:ntath•es who will be present
to answer student'i. quest1ons
about the Student Association.

Anatomy and Cell Biology,
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Posting fF4109. AisisWII Proi'....,..·Biological Sciences. F.KUII)' of
Natural Sciences and Mathemat ·
ics, Posting MF-4110. Assistanl/
Associate/Full Prorrssor (rour
positiom: availabk!:)-School of
Nursing. PostiOg ;,F-41 t I.

IIUUJICII

Resean.b Assodate-·Family
Medicine/Rural Health, Postmg
MR-94088. Data ColleetorPsychology, Posling MR-94090.
Information Sy,.1ems Specialist-Family Medicme. Posting
fR-94091. Resear&lt;h Labot'll·
tory Worker-Biochemical
Pharmacology. Po~tmg IIR94093. Edutation SpecialistEducational Opponunity Center,
Postmg MR-94094. Edue~~tor·
Educational Opportunity Center,
Posting -.R.94()9S. Resa~rch
Tecbnida.n 11-Mtdicine. f'osl·
ing •R·94096.
,._..IOHAL
Tr&lt;hoi&lt;al Support SprciaUst
(SL-4)-center for Educational
Resources and Technologies.
Posting MP-4070. Asslstllol
Dean (SL-5)-Unh'tnii!y Devel ·
opmenl, Posting MP--4086. SJ'5'
l.e ms Analyst (SL--3)-Accounr·
ing and Payroll Services.
Posting MP-4092. Machine
Shop Suprrvisor (SIA)-FNSM
Dean's Office. Posting IP-4093.
LAN Systems Programmer
Anal )'SO (SL-3)-Computing and
Information Tec:hnology. Post ~
ing IIP-4095. Programmer
Analyst (SL--J. Intemal Pro-motionaJ Opportunity:K:om·
puung and Information Tec:hnol·
ogy, Posting fP-4096. Associate
Dirrctor (SIA, I nlemal Promotional Opportunity)~fficc
of Student Accounts. Posting

NP-4097. Assislllol Director
(Internal Promotional Opportunity)-Center for Industrial
Effecti~ness, Posting 'fP-4098.
Senior Sta.fJ Assistant (SlrJ,
Internal Promotional Oppor~
tu nit y)-Sociology, Posting IP·
4099. Associate Vice President
for Public Relations (SLMPJA).()ffice of lh&lt;: VP for
Unh•ersity Advancement and
De'•elopment. Posting MP-41 00.

Snow Announcements
-winter walltller

COftdltl--..,

M Y - that the
University cannot operate effectively. an announcemenl to-that
effect will be made over local radiO stations . includ1ng WBFO·
FM 88.7, Which may broadcast more detailed informa!Jon The
initial announcement w1ll be made by 6 a m and will be repeated frequently .
Before this decision can be made, we must determine local road conditions , the ability of our bus' service to provide transportation Within and among
the campuses. and our ab1hty to keep the campus roadways and park1ng lots
open. Once the announcement is made , however. only essential serv1ce employees are expected to report to work Heating Pianl. Chilled Water Plan!,
University Facilities. Security, An1mal Care, Food Service. Health Serv1ce. and
other employees who are essential to maintaining the Umversny's VItal services. to providing food for dorm1tory residents. and to cleaning the parking
lots and roadways should make every effort to get to the Un1versity. In order
to ensure that !hose in your area Who should come 1n know who they are, h IS
advisable that they be notified agam (or imtially) at this time each year so that
!here is no misunderstanding if and when a snow announcement has lo be
made. All others are expected to stay away from the campus for the duration
of the announcement period.
Those employees who work on these days should , of course. be marked
present. All others must charge the time to personal leave credits. either va·
cation. personal leave or compensatory time Anyone Who does not have
sufficient accruals. may borrow from luture accruals. Only the Governor can
officially declare that the University at BuHalo is closed and only he can au·
thorize employees to remain away from work without use of leave credits In
all other cases, a UB employee must charge th is time not worked to vacation.
personal leave or compensatory time .
Notwithstanding the above. no person who is able to and does get lo work
will be deprived of the opportumty to work. Furthermore, 11 it is determined
during the course of a work day that the Umversity cannot operate effectively,
no employee should be required 10 leave at that moment. employees should
rather be permitted to leave then or any time thereafter. Only the 11me !hat
they are absent should be charged to leave credits.
We cannot guarantee that those employees who get to the campus or those
Who stay after a snow announcement is made will be able to work at their
normal work places. Adequate supervision may be unavailable or it may be
that the building in Which the individual normally works is not open Provision
should be made for alternate campus work locations and alternate work for
those Who do get to the campus but who cannot go 10 their regular work
places or cannot perform their regular work ass1gnm:nts

-ROBERf J. WAGNER, SENIDR VICE I'RUIIIENf FOR UNIYERSifY SERYICU

COM~EnnVE CLAUIFIED
CIVIL SERVICE
lnformatioO Processiag Spec.ialist (SG-9, Temporary until
January 16, 199S)·Pel'$0nnel
Services, Linr: M-43192. Keyboard Special~1 (SG-6)-Academic Ad,•isement Center. Line
M26782. Calcula tions C lerk
(SG-9)-Student Accounts. Linr:
'f30401 , Campus Public Safety
Offittr 2 (SG-12)-Public
Safety. Line ff32308 . Keyboard
Specialist (SG-6)-Computing
and Jnfonnation Technology•
Line Ml4832 .

NON-COMI'EmiYE
CLASSIFIED CIVIL SERVICE
Janitor (SG-7}-University Fa cilities. Custodial Servicn. Line
#31494 . Janitor (SG-7)-Umversit) Facilities. Custodial Ser·
lt'ices. Line ~31525 .
LABOlt CLASSIFIED CIVIL
SERVICE
Cleaner (SG-5)-Univr:rsity Faci lities. Custodi:ll Servic-es. L•~
#34360. Cleaner (SG-5)-Unive~ ity Facilities. Custodial Services. Line M34359. M34382 .

To obtain mort' information on
jobs listt'd ohm~. c:ontac1 Pt'r.ftHJ ·
. nd s,n•ias. 104 Crofts H(J/1.

SPECIAL

J 0 B S
FACULfY
Assi~1an t/Associate ProfessorComputer Science. Posting #F·
4103. Assistant/Associate Professor-counseling and
Educational Psychology. Post·
ing MF-4104 . Assistant/Associ·
ale Proftssor-Counse.Jing and
Educational Psychology. Post·
ing. #F-4105. Assistant/Associate Professor-Education!! I Or·
ganizntion. Ad.ministrotion nnd
Policy, Pm:ti ng #F-4106. Associate Professor-Learning and
Instruction. Posting lfF-4107 .
Assistanl/Associale Professor·
Learning and Instruction. Posting #F-41 08. Professor and
Chairma? ('tbdicine)-

Call or visit us soon at the Commons!

Tel 636-8440 • Fax 636-8468
520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

�9
-

1994 SEFA Campaogn A
- -DEAIIIIEIIIaEJtS

Me~~age

-

from

-

Pre~odent

Greoner
-- ---

-

~

OF1ME~:

S WE CElEBRATE the resounding """""'of the boggest and best SEFA
campaign in UB' hi tory, each and every one of you who paniciplled
desetve• eongratulations, commendation and than . Yoor generou commitments to ohio year's campaign have taken uo farther over our SEFA goal
than the university has ever managed to go be:(ore.
11lan to yoo. UB not only surpassed its overall goal, we abo achieved and surpalled the SEFA Administrative Group's fondest hopes of doingju 1 a liule better
than goal. Thank oo you, we have broken (in fact. d•mo/ished) the UB and We tern
New York record• for Leadership and Paceseuer Gifts. And, than to you, many of
our depanments and units have broken their own previous SEFA records.
Bu~ even though it i• exciting 10 break records and quote tatiWco, none of these is
the real rea100 why we should be proud and excited aboutthi
year' exceptional SEFA sua:ess. By moonting a major campaign
and raising more than $600,000 for the health and human services
agencies that serve Western ew York. UB has sent our community a very loud. \'cry clear signal that we really do want 10 help
our neighbors, and that we truly an willing to give our best in
onder to provide uch help. Thi ldnd of ooopouring of compaosion
makes SEFA one of the most visible examples of UB's committo community service.
congratulations and thanks arc unquestionably due to

S'EFA Chair, Dr. Muriel A. Moore, Vice President for
.&amp;:lolola;;;•--' f'ublic Service and Urban Affairs, as well as to all the members of
the SEFA Administrative Group and the depanmental ha1sons
who worked long and hard 10 make this campaign such a ~real one. They, and we, can
take enormous pride in their fine effons. Our especially generou Leaden&gt;hip and
Pacesetter Givers-we do not know ~· ho they are. but they do-also deser"c our
thanks.
Buolhe remarkable accomplishment that the 1994 EFA Campaogn represenlli lflll)
has depended on every faculty member. staff member. and •tudent who made a goft or
pledge. To all of you. my own personal thanks. You make me ••ry proud. I look forward to 1elling local leaders and friends about this year·!!. oubtandmg C\ldcnce that
each one of you really does care ahouothe health and well-being of our community
That is v.'hat SEFA. ultimately. hall about.
Sincerely.
WIWAIIR.UEINER

Foolbltll

Noagara on !he home finale
Alter droppong !he torsi two games to
!he Purple Eagles, 9-15 and 13-15, the
Royals ralloed to take the fonal three 1512. 15-9 15-12
UB finoshed !heir season woth a trip to
Syracuse 10 take on !he Orangewomen
and Seton Hall The Royals dropped
!heir matches to Seton Hall in three
games, 15-7. 15-9, 15-12 and Syracuse
15-5, 15-4. 15-910 wrap up !he year woth
an 11-21 overall record

The Bulls fell to 3-6 woth lheor 49-7 loss
at Western lllinols Saturday afternoon
before 3.961 fans In Macomb, llhnoos
Western lllincos got on !he scoreboard
on lheor first drive as Gunnard Twyner
caught the first of his four touchdown
receptions from Rob St Sauver to gove
!he leathernecks a 7-0 lead JUst 1:39
onto !he game. St Sauver threw for love
TDs in !he contest
The leathernecks made !he score
14-0 al9.53 When Kendall McDonald
scored on a one-yard run before !he
Bulls scored theor lone TO of the day On
thud and goal from the WIU 12. Cliff
Scott hot Chns Behan for !he touchdown
II was Behan's second thord-&lt;lown catch
of the drove as he suslaoned UB's possess•on w•th a 29-yard run off a screen
pass earlier Western llhnoos took a 35-7
halftime lead thanks to three more
touchdown passes from St Sauver
In the second hall. the Bulls wen! to
the rushong anack but could not punch
the ball1nto the end zone Mauroce Perry
led UB woth 45 rushong yards on seven
carnes (all•n the forst hall) Wolhe Ford
and Derek W•cks gamed 35 and 40
yards respectovely
Behan and Anthony Scott paced the,
Bulls receovong corps each woth four
recepuons Chff Scott was 8 of 17 passong for 125 yards on three quarters Mark
Taylor played the foul1h quaner. passing for 20 yaras on three complet10r1s
Delens•vely. the Buns were paced by
Sunnol Motley's career-best 13 tackles
Motley was also credoted woth hall a
sack Pete Conley regostered 10 tackles
1ncludong one sack
The Bulls close out theor season thos
weekend w1th a lnp to the Flonda Colrus
Bowl in Orlando to meet Central Flonda

.................

The Bulls split lheor mee s Saturday
ahernoon. lalhng lo LaSalle 141 whole
defeating Sl Bonaventure 138·92 Mark
Horgan won !he 1()()()-freestyle ~ton
9 46 70 Darren M1lun fonoshed forst on !he
200 freestyle woth 1 44 50 and Kevon
Remaly took the 200 IM on 1 56 97 UB"s
record 1n dual meets os now 2-1

WomMt's Swlmlnlng
The Royals downed N•agara 133·97 ao
Alumno Arena on Nov 9 Alexandra
Barrera brol&lt;e her own record in the
1000 freestyle woth a 10 27 07 f•nosh to
lead !he Royals Barrera also won the
500 free 1n 5 16 64 Megan Connolly
was also a double wonner lor coach
Dorsi Raynolds club ta~•ng the 200 IM
1n 213 61 and 100 butterfly on 1 00 89
Connolly also teamed atasha Heosel,
Sue Bohne! and Kelly Sharl&lt;ey to take
the 200 medley relay on 1 57 02
UB dropped lheor two meE:ts at home
over the weekend fallong to LaSalle 154140 and St Bonaventure 170-135

Wrestling
Coach Charlie Cheney's team fell to D•voSIOOIII power Brockport last Tuesday 2413 1n theor first dual meet of the season
The Bulls tOOk the forst four we•ght classes
onclud111g Rob PaV!s · 7·5 overume won over
Alt-Amencan Ron Vosburg at 134 but
were shut out the rest of the way Bnan
Dowdall. Jason Coi!Jns and Renrue
CnsaMh also won their matches

Volleybal
The Royals closed out theor season woth
three matches thos w k •ncludmg lheor
thrilling corne-from-beh•nd won over •

2222 Publicof----•Safety's Weekly Report

no.,..._.._-

l"ubbJc: ~--Oct.

19,503
9890
11 .046
19.392
3.850

1206
1167
113 3

8200
9.460
17.113

11t.4

S5117,7D

2a- HoY. 3:

• Compact d•sks and a walkman, worth
a combined value of $604 , were reponed
moss~ng Oct. 30 from Fargo Quadrangle.
• Underwear valued at St20 was reported missing Oct. 30 from a laundry
room in Dewey Hall
• A mountain bike valued at $750 was
reported m•ssing Oct. 31 from 1n front of
the Health Sc•ences library.
• About S100 on peny cash was reponed m•ssong Nov 1 from a locked
drawer •n Nonon Hall
• A drill motor. valued at $150, was
reponed m•ssong Nov 3 from Mollard

._ted to the Dap -

Fillmore Academoc Center
• A personal notebool&lt; computer valued at $t ,500 was reponed m1ssing Nov.
3 from the maHroom 1n Hayes Hall.
• A backpack conta•ning textbooks and
notebooi&lt;s valued at $90 was reponed
m•ssong Nov . 3 from outside the racquetball courts on Alumno Arena.
• A cellular telephone valued at $ tO
was reported mossong Nov 3 fr~
Acheson Hall.
{
• A watch valued at $125 was reponed
rnissong Nov . 3 from Baldy Hall

Save up to ~0%

your
The Yong Quattct. Tunothy, J~ David. and Phillip. will petfonn quaneu by
Mozan. Sbostakovicb. and Dvorak at Kleinhans Music Hall on November 29 at
8:00p.m. ,

.............,........

Filii PICK..W a DIUYIIIY

...............
. . . . . . . . , . h ...

W"lllllm of tho prestigious Nauml&gt;wg Olamber Music Award in 1993, tho Yong

--~"l:!!!~;;!

Quam! has woo aitii:al acclaim for us fresh and vital pcrformanctS.

..............
.....,. ...,..... ...., ................
.._ ........ c..-s

.................. ,

I

~-.rYYIIIMCI·

I

. _ lull

tOKW'

Tc Technologies

(716) 838-2745

835 Englewood Avenue, Town of Tonawanda, NY FAX~

At 7:15 p.m., prior to their perfoanance. ontmbc:rs of tho quan.et will discuss tho
music and their wraoalinlry life.
For tickets (SI2.00. sruden!s $5.00) and more information please call838-2383 .

7lst Season
1: 11 11 .1 I ',

1

11 .1

:n

1, 1

of

\It: , , , ' , ,

1,

11

�•

Viewp

The Legacy of National Debt: Our Kids Deserve Better
ar WaLlDI S• I'SOII
OR YEARS I WAS un sure. TI&gt;en. at 40, I took
the leap and became a

American family. With continued
deficit spending, thi s debt is only
getting bigger.
Looking at the future, it's easy
to imagine a aippled economy
dad. My wife, Nan. and I
with fewer decent jobs. Given the
chose to become parents through
need to pay ever greater amounts
adoption. We did this for a variof interest on this burgeoning
ety of reasons including our
debt, one can also imagine a
• concern about world population.
future where important govern·
Our first child. Jay, a beautiful
meot services will be eliminated
baby boy. came to us from Koeven while the overall tax burden
rea. Two years later, we were the
increases.
proud parents of a beautiful baby
I recen~y heard an interview
girt, Skye, also from Korea.
wi.tb
an economist talking about
We've never boen happier or
"intergenerational equity." He
more exhausted!
noted that members of the genPrior 10 bocoming arents,
eration which is now retired paid
both Nan and I were active in the
approximately 25 percent of their
peaCe, environmenllll and animal
income to taxes prior to retirerights movements. One might
menL My generation is now
think that the time-eonsuming
paying about 33 pereenl of its
re ponsibilities of parenthood
income to taxes.
(accompanied by daily doses of
In contrast, the tax burden for
sleep deprivation) WOIJid produce
our children will increase 10 50
a muted social conscience. But
pereent or more thanks to higher
the opposite has boen the case.
interest payments on the nationaJ
Parenthood brings everything
debt coupled with higher Social
into sharper focus. Thinking
Security COSIS when baby
about my children's future has
boomcts retire. I get sick think·
provided me with a more personal
• ing about where thi s leaves our
perspective on the next 75 years.
children. We have no right to
I feel a greater responsibility to
impose such a legacy.
fight the ills of the wortd. I also
Parenthood involves more
have come to see that there are
than meeting the basic physical
many more things 10 worry about.
and emotional needs of children.
While most of the social
Kids need more than that. They
causes l'\'e been associated with
also need more than new bicycles
are considered politically liberal.
or rollerblades or swimming
I recently became concerned
about the federal budget deficit
pools in backyards.
Being a good ·parent today
and national debt. The U.S. national debt is now over S4.6
means working for a better world
trillion or more than S70,000 per
for our kids 10 grow up in and

F

live in. Responding to the national debt is pan ofthat equation.
Cutting wasteful pending is
the first step and it won't be easy.
We must grapple with entrenched

"America :S children
dese111e and need
government leaders
committed to
decent, futureoriented policies.
Moreover; they also
deserve and need
parents who will do
what must be done
to protect the future
) for their kids. "
do-nothing programs as well as
entrenched do-n(){hing politi·
cians. We must challenge long
standing subsidies for everybody
from ranchers to miners. loggers.
farmers and nuclear power plant
operators.
We can no longer afford fed ·
eral funding for nice but not

THE FIRST YEAR

necessary special events like the
World University Games held in
Buffalo last year. This is no time
for sacred cows. All savings
opportunities must be considered.
The military budget is still full of
pork and should be subject to
major cuts.
Health care will have 10 be
addressed with cost cutting and
efficiency in mind. The prevention of illness and disease, which
is the most cost-effective way 10
spend health care dollars. will
have 10 bocome a lop priority.
But we will not be able to cut
enough until we begin cutting the
"entitlements." Everyone \mows
this yet there is no action.
While I am all in favor of
going after the welfale cheat, I
am more concerned about the
even larger sums of money which
are now providing '"welfare" 10
the comfortably middle clad· and
rich through unnecessary entitlement payments. For our
children's sake. it's time we
reali1.ed we can't afford that any
more. Congress must seek savings in lhis area while insuring a
reasonable safety net for those
who genuinely need help.
In the end, even after all the
necessary cuuing is done, the
budget probably sti\1 won ' t be
bahmced . 1llcre is only one solution to lhis awful mess and thai i
10 abandon the credit card mentality and .,.gin paying as we go.
With a debt in excess of '
$4,600,000.000.000, we should
be honest and admit that taxes

Keith

conllnued from page 1

San~

ers

the beginning ofthe year, just after Thanksgiving break, at the sian of the second se·
me.ster and just before exams.

makes
a little
music
In his
room In
Dewe y
Hall.

Suzanne Mendez oommutes to campus

from her Amherst home. where she values
her "big room. all 10 myself. and home·
cooked meals:· Neverthel ess. she noticed
the difference college made in her life even
while still at home.

"To an &lt;xrtm. /think myfathu frrlsl got
IHing in L·oll~g~. Mcaus~ h~
says things w.~ 'Oh. yo11 ar~a c1ing mort! lik~
a woman now'' and I 'm likt. ' Gt!~. thanks. ' ..
mnr~ malltr~

Keith Sanders. from the Rochester suburb of Penfield. intends to go into computer
scie nce. He and a hometown friend even
already have a name picked out for their
software company, Blackout Universal. Bu~
Keith admits, things could always change.
...My dad Mgan as a civil ~ngint~r a1

Purdu&lt;. Naw, h•isaphilosophyproftssor."
As different as the students' experiences
were from each other. so, too, were their
parents' outlooks.
Shum's mother. a self-&lt;:onfessed ''Chi·
nese m(){her. which is just like a Jewish
m(){her," recognizes that she is the overprotective son. She was taken aback by modem·
college life'during a weekend visit to campus
in the fall of last year.
" Twtll·~ o'clock in tht afttrnoon, I mtan

quitt. £1•uybody sluping. Th•n. I think
around fiw o'clock, six o'clock. ~'·nyont
u-akts up: thtnoiu! That is whtn lift IN gins
on tht wt~kt!nds.
"How do you adjust yourbiol~gical clock
to go to sehool? I don' t remember any of this
when I went to school. They never aee suolight. Sunlight is good. They do everythi11g

in the dark."
Although Mrs. Shum works as a bilingual
guidance counselor in a Queens schooL
Vincent's joining of a fraternity deepened
her skepticism of college life. She expressed
concern over Vincent's academic performance, which was apparently borne out by
hi s first semeSter grades.
.. Tht!)' hal't mt-ttings at un o 'dock at

don't know what sht is capablt of btcaust
sht has aln·ays surpriud mt."
Sanders' father, Jack SandersofPenfield,
so enjoyed his college days that he has remained in the academic world ever since. He
had a far more laid back approach to his
son's success in college.
" If I sow a consisttlll pauem of bad
grth.'~!. my rt.Jction would IN not so much
'Try hardtr &lt;IS it would bt 'Gtt out of that
major and /i!:d ~·omtthing mort inttrtsting

night. Eltvtn o'clock, """'""o 'clock. you
can 't g~t him ln.caust h~ is at mtnings. I
think it inttrftr~s with his gradts."

IO)'OU• •

Voor!tees' mother brims with confidence
in her daughter's abilities. Jessica. who graduated from h.igh school a year early, has de·
signs on becoming a mechanical engineer.

'Tm confident thai if he is not enthusiastic (about UB) it is because of the paucity of
wbat he is offered. It's really a tesl of the
school more than it's a test of Keith."
.
Today, four of the fi ve students are in
their sophomore year. True 10 national trends.
two of them have new majors and anothe-r
remains in hi intended major. but is ambivalent about it.
Voorhees has abandoned mecha nical en-

"Sh• r~ad 111'0 hundrtd books /Jtfo" sht
wasfil't. Wt 'rt talking unabridgtd 'Aiict in
Won.Jtrland.' Wh•n tht)' ttsltd htr for kin·
dugart&lt;n. sh&lt;ttrttd4th rradt math and 6th
grtU!t rtading l~ls. Ar• my txpu1atio11s
too hith? I don 'I havt any aptrtations. I
I

must go up. While I don ' tlike
taxes any more !han the next
person, I have no sympathy for
the demagogic coiiSCn'atives who
call for tax cuts while bemoaning
the deftcit They ignore both
logic and the fact that the fedcnil
debt tripled during the Reagan·
Bush yean.
I love my children. Like children everywhere, Jay and Skye
are inooeent. They deserve the
best possible life in 1 peaceful
and just sociely on 1 bealthy and
thriving planet. II angers me to
sec them victimized by our short·
sightedness, greed and apathy.
When nuclear power plants
were the rage, we argued •gains!
these facilities by pointing out
how many tens of thousands of
years nuclear waste would be
deadly. But the legacy of nuclear
waste is just one metaphor for
in lergeoerational victimization.
The damage to future generations
includes cancer from the thinning
ozone layer and forever lost
opponunities to experience the
glories of nature in an old growth
forest. Sadly, our children are
also being saddled with an impos ible, crushing national debt.
America's children deserve
and need government leaders
committed to deccnl, fuwre·
oriented policies. Moreover, they
also deserve and need parents
who will do 1\'hal must be done to
protect the future. for their kids. 11
Walter Simpson •s UB's energy
olftcer

gineering in favor of biochemistry, she reported. as she enthusiastically dissected a rat
in the biology lab. " In high school. I used to
dissect other people's frogs forthem, lliked
it so much," she explained.
Although she says she will have to work
to raise her first yearGPA. Voorhees would
like 10 goon to medical school after graduation. " My grades were okay for a mechanical engineer. but not ror a doctor,"
he said.
Bolar repons that be stills plan 10 earn an
engineering degree, although perhaps n(){ in
the aerospace field , but he ha also raised his
sights. He, too, now hopes to go to mMicaJ
school after grad uation.
Bolar has moved from the South 10 the
onh Campus. and that. he says, hos con·
tributed to an improved social life. A~r
advanlllge, says Bolar; " ow. I can g up
for an eight o'clock class at, like, quan
f
eight and still make it"
Sanders corltinues to pursue his degree in
computer science, and his philosopher-father continues to doubt whether he sbould.
'This semester, ! have a couple great classes
and a couple of duds," reports Sanders, "and,
of course. my dad says 'I don't know, Keith,
you sound a lot like me in college. Maybe
you shou ld change your major.' But I'm not
likely to." However. he admits that an introductory linguistics course has really piqued
his interest.
Sanders is planning to spend his junior
year studying computer science: in Gennany.
"That should be real interesting, but it may
mean it takes an exua semester lO complete
the degree here," he says.
Alas, for Sbum. the pressure of disappointi ng a "Chi nese mother" may have
proven too much.. Sbum did not return to
Buffalo this fall.
0

�21,·

..........,s:r,a.-.v......-. ..... u.

Facui

SlaHBillboar
in the first evening session, which

0

The legendary Dave
B rub«k performs jazz and

sacred music at a benefit concen
for UB's Catholic Campus Ministry/Newman CenteR 81 8 p.m. on
Friday, Dec. 9.
The concen, featuring the 74year-old Brubeck and his reconstituted Quanet, will be held in
the Center for the Arts on the
Nonb (Amberst) Campus.
Many of Brubeck's fans know
him best for his Quartet, which
was;·
handed in 1967, and for
his' est Coast Cool Sound."
Feat
at the concen will be old

l_av.odre.s. as well as compositions
Brubeck bas written in the past
two decades.
The UB Newman Centers,
which serve both campuses, pro-

vide worship, education, service
and counseling.
General admission to the concen at the door, or through any
Ticketmaster location, are $20
and$15. The cost for students is
SIO.

Hebrew y. prof speaks
on rell.-~s thou&amp;ht

0

Ze' ev Falk, professor
emeritus of law at Hebrew
University, will discuss "Jewish
Religious Thought in the Modem
and Postmodem World" at 3:30
p.m. on Monday, Nov. 21. in 280
Park Hall on the Nonh Campus.
The event is free of charge and
open to the public.
Falk is the author of a dozen·
books on Jewish law and thought.
Israeli family law and women' s
roles in Judaism, including "Jewish Matrimonial Law in the
Middle Ages," published by Oxford University Press.
Editor of Si'ach Mesharim , a
journal of Judaism. law and state,
he is chairman of the Israel Interfaith Association. He is also
founder and honorary president
of the International Society on
Family Law.
Sponsors include the UB Depanment of History, UB School
of Law, Hillel'and the Council of
European Studies.

lEU offers new
evenl.._ prol(ram

0

The Intensive English Language Institute at UB has
established an evening session to
serve the growing number of
foreign professionals living and
working in the WNY area.
The evening program was
created to accommodate students
with full-time work schedules,
said John K. Fitzer, the

is geared toward advancing communication skills and making
students more nuent and confident in the English language.
Three new courses, with a
maximum of IS students, are
aimed 81 specific language needs
and goals.
" Accent Reduction" is geared
toward helping participants break
old pronunciation habits and
speak EngUsh more like native
speak=. "Living and Working in
English" emphasizes nuency and
American phrases and idioms 1o
belp students communiCate in a
variety of busineSs and social
situations. "TTEFL (Test of English as a Forei,gn Language)
Preparation," focuses on grammar, vocabulary, and listeningand ~ing-comprchension inSiruction. Students must take this
teSI to apply to a U.S. university
or college.

For more information. contact
Fitzer at 645-2077.

P_. to discuss
medical networks

0

Speakers froni UB. the

business community and

the health~re field will discuss
Buffalo's international medical
supply, hospital care and research
networks at the 40th annual lun cheon of the Buffalo-Western
New York Council for International Visitors, Inc .. to be held at
noon on Friday, Nov. 18, in the
Rendezvous Room of the Statler
Towers, 107 Delaware Ave .
More than I SO people arc
expected to attend the event. of
which pan of the proceeds benefit
Doctors Without Borders USA.

toward community membe~ and
business professionals, said
Stephen C. Dunnett, vice pro-

vost for international education.
Students from Japan. Syria.
Poland, Indonesia. Korea and

other countries are participating

Robert Kalb, clinical professor
of dermatology. Pregnant women
and nursing mothers cannot participate.
Tbe 28-week study, which will
begin in January, will provide
_participants with a free skin examination, as well as the medica-

tion.
They must use the ointment
twice a day for 16 weeks and
make 10 brief visits between I 0
a.m. and 2 p.m. on Tuesdays to
Buffalo Medical Group, 295
Essjay Road. Williamsville.
Anyone interested in participaling should call 631-000 I, ext.
465, belween 9 a.m. and noon.

Women' s Club has
polnsettlll ....

0

The UB Women's Club is

holding its annual poinsettia
sale to benefit Grace Capen
Scholarships for academic e&lt;cellence. The plants, in red, pink and
white, make excellent holiday
gifts and decorations.
They range from a 3-inch pot
at $1.50, 6-inch pot at $550,
6-112-inch pot at $8.50 and a
hanging basket at $13.50, and
may be ordered from Chairman
Winfred Doran. 171 Parkledge
Dr.. Snyder, N .Y . 14226 (8399710) now-ihrough Tuesday.
Nov. 29.
You can pick up your order at

the Center for Tomorrow Thurs-

I II c

ll'f )"'-.,;lc

.

~.:

Bruce A. Holm, associate
dean for research and graduate
studies at the UB School of Medi-

cine and Biomedical Sciences,
will speak at a panel discussion

on ..The International Business of
Medicine: Buffalo's Links to the
Marketplace."
Others on the panel include:
James Karr. chief of the Office of

Scientific Administration at
Roswell Park Cancer Institute and
chair of physiology. US-Roswell
Park Graduate Division; Samuel
Baker, senior manager, international division, Gaymar Industries;
Donald P. Quinlan, retired president of Graphic Controls. Moderator will be Cynthia Schwanz,
director of government and external relations, Roswell Park

Adults are souatrt

to evaluate

psortals medication

0

Adults over the age of 18

are needed to help a UB

dermatologist evaluate a medication for treatment of the skin

condition psoriasis.
Panicipants must have the
condition over at least 5-20 percent of their bodies, e&lt;cluding
face, scalp and groin areas. says

'

" pertlculw poems tM cmlllins lhe lull181Ct ol ~ poem

in lhe dalabase!

Beeides the current use ol the term ("As wben a Vampyre.
hot for hi-men blood. /PieroeS with lharpened tongUe the
turgid win"). you would fmd the tenn in other contem
such as "with terrific eye," •on vampyre wings," and Thoma Hood's a.-:lalion of "vampyre· with gin. In addition,
you would 11018 its use by "minor" poets as well as authors
such as Robert Browning and Robert Bums. Bums wrote:
Vampyre booksellers drain him to the heart,
And scorpion critics cureless venom dart.
7hose who are familiBr with Wllldows software are free to
request a key to the ....... ......,.,..._,...........
searching room at Lockwood Libraiy's reference desk.
Non-Window US8fS shOuld contact Gamma DeV'IIllley.
Lockwood UbrafY, at 645-2811, &lt;' V
to
arrange an appointment fOf brief insJnJction In /he u~
the database. For more information about the scholarly end
pedagogical USBS of the ....... ......,.,..._,... ..,._
._. contact Loss Glazier, Lockwood Ubrary. 645-28 I 7,

•••W&gt;

•fa._a

r••••&gt;.

--Gemma DeV.mey an:l Loss Pequeflo Glazier,

l.&lt;lc:l&lt;wt:&gt;ob Utnty

day, Dec. 8 froiT\..!0 a.m.-3 p.m.

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS FOR CHANCELLOR ' S AWARDS FOR EXCELLENCE
OMINATIONS ARE NOW being"accepted for the 1995 Chancellor 's

individuals presently serv1ng m full-lime professional service capaccties with more than 50 per-

Awards for Excellence in Librarianshlp,

cent of the ass1gnment 1n non-teachmg serv1ces.

outstanding achievement by facully and profes-

disaster and acts of war.

~

Fa~- il you WW118d to idenllry uses olthe word
~· "delem1ine If ft generally had the 1081116 associetiontl u 11 ctoes today. you could _.en lhls database.

is the largest. independent voluntary emergency relief organization providing medical aid to

millions of civilian victims of

·.

The ....... ....., .........
. . . . . . . c8ersmany apportu. . . . . . ....,..llld -=t1ing llld, beeides MSisting in
~ ladlwldual poems and Uhonl. alowa searching
ftlr ptw-. f1rol.tgtlcU fils body ollilarlllure ( 1,350 poe!$).
'lllllll ~ uaetU for idenlllying uses ol apecifiC
IIOCibullry In ~ " hlalorlcally a.nine the uae ol an
exprwlion for bcllh major and rrWnor IUihors.

Professional Service and Teaching .
These preslig ious awards provide university-

hardship, cataStrophic natural

. . ,..~
English
L.iterrrtJn.8iogrrlplly
h not myofguides
)'OU

··---

Inc. This worldwide organization

institute's assistant director for
llcademic suppon services. The
new session also will help meet
the needs created by the business
community· s "increasing trend
toward globalization," he said.
The program is directed more

Searching English Poetcy
._....,. • . _ • ..... from poecry runo111g through
your head yvt are IIIJSiraled because you can1 exac1Jy
piece it? Ouoialion books have let you down and you have
paged th&lt;ougl1 your own books endie881y.
Now, lhele Is • CO-AOM dalllbelle you cen ~.a that
oonleinllhe 8I1IR body of Bl1ttlh poetry from 800-1900, a.a

wide recognition of superlative performance and
sional service employees. Recipients are individuals who embody SUNY's highest standards and
who ins p~re and serve as role models for the enlire
UniVBfSIIY community.
Criteria for nominations are as follows:

Excel.....,.lnU..........,ehlp
Nom1nees for the Chancellor's Award for Excellence in librarianship must have held a full-lime
appointment as a professional librarian at UB for a
minimum of three years . and must possess an
M.l.S. degree.
Criteria for selectiOn include extraordinary performance in skill in librarian ship. service to the
universily and to the profession, and scholarship
and continuing professional growth.
Nominalions must be received by the local
Chancellor's Award Selection Committee on or
before Jan. 6. 1995. A nomination package musl
include: a cover leiter from the nominator summarizing the candidate's credenlials, the candidale's
current curriculum vitae , lhe candidate's wrilten
statement of "philosophy ollibrarianship," and
letters of suppon from within and/or external to the
university.
Nomination packages should be sent to : Judith
Adams. 237 Lockwood Library. 645-2816, E-mail:
unljudy@ubvm.cc.buffald.edu: or Susan Dow. 632
Law Library, O'Brian Hall. 645-2347. E-mail:
fwlsusan@ubvm.cc .buffalo.edu.
For more information concerning the award or
preparation of a nomination package or for a copy
of the official "Policies and Procedures· tor the
1994-95 awards, contact Adams or Dow.

Excellence

In~

Service

The Chancellor's Award fOr E&lt;cellence in Professional Service was created \O recognize ex-

traordinary professional achievement and to
encourage the continuation of excellence.

Nominations for the award must be drawn from

Nom1nees must have completed at least three
years of contmuous full-lime professional (not clasSified) serv~ce 1n the pos1tion tor wh1ch nommated.
Nom1nators may be any members of the university community . and are responsible lor preparing
a suppon l1le to 1nclude: a current vitae on the
nominee's prolessional career. an updated pos1t1on descnption, a maximum of f1ve letters of sup·
pon (with a I least one each from a supervisor, a
colleague. and a constituent) and the nommator's
summary letter of suppon ,
Deadline for completed dossiers is 4:30p.m .
Fnday. Jan. 6. 1995. For more Information. nomination packets and detailed guidelines. conlactllene
Aeischmann . Professional Staff Senale Awards
Committee chair. Schoorf Law. 310 O'Brian Hall .
645-2107.

Excellence tn

r..a~nc

The Chancellor's Award tor Excellence in
Teaching is intended lo recognize superior teaching at the graduale. un
graduate or professional
level.
All full-time instruclors. ~dless of academic
rank. are eligible. provided t
have completed at
least three years ol full-time te hing a.l UB prior to
the fall 1994 semesler. All members of the universily community are enCOUfaged to nominate deserving candidates for this important award.
The primary criterion for the Chancellor 's Award
for Excellence in Teaching is skill in leaching although consideration also is given 10 sound scholarship and service to the universily and lhe
community. Detailed guidelines and selection criteria may be obtained from the Office of the Vice
Provost for Undergraduate Education. 549 Capen
Hall. 645-2991 .
Completed nominations, including a presentation slatement. an up-to-date v~ae and letters of
support must be rece1ved in the Office olthe V1ce
Provost for Undergraduale Education, 549 Capen
Hall. by the close of bus1ness on Thursday. Dec
22. 1994,

�Toys are
ar USA WILEY, Newa &amp;Yre..a St.rr
hlle most people may
nk of toys only as recreal items for children, researchers in the Earty lntel'\ll!ntion lab of the Center for Assistive
Technology at UB see them. and .
other everyday Items. as a means
to help Infants and toddlers with
communicate, move

"The parents call the shots:
Mistrett says.
Therapists begin an Initial play
assessment With a

new cltent by

determining the parents· 1mmed~
ate goals for the child and gather·

lng back&amp;found Information. The
center then lends out toys, ac·
companied by a list of suggested

exercises and an evaluation
sheet.
"The wJZardry is incorporatlllg

ent eye than a lot of other folks,·
says Susan MlstreJt, an educational specialist at the center,
Which Is affiliated with the Depan·
ment of Occupational Therapy in
the School of Health Related Professions .
Through assistive technology.
everyday objects and toys are
adapted to suit

"Play is

specific needs-

how a
child
grows"

to help children

play, communi·

cate. move. control things and
hear or see bet·
ter. This 1rteludes

SUSAfll MISTRETI

Item s that

make things easier to tum on.
hold objects steady, and help a
child be bathed, dressed or fed .
The Early lntel'\ll!ntion Lal&gt;also staffed by pediatric occupa-

common sense and knowing
What's out there ," Mlstrett says.
She stresses that technology
does not necessanly mean compulers . Com·

Top _ __

merc i ally phototJ ohow Milt·
available 1tems. ttoewDeRotJa,
aalatecl by Shelly J.
lMM. He Ia "Ktlvely
snack positioned" . . . , •
trayS and Fisher· ri~~C altt.,. called U.e

such as koosh

balls.

Pnce toys, often
are

used .

hppy·-·"-

table. He talks to
aftd rnoutha the toy,

Tabies or trays •-~~Caab:lt ' o
may be adjusted actlvlltecl by tou~h
or-.ouncl.
to restnct play
to a specific area. Velcro str1ps

may be attached to toys to help
stab1hze movement.

V1brat1ng 'bumble balls" and
battery-operated toys that make
noise are especially useful for
blind children. Attaching switches
to battery-operated toys by In sen·
banery~ nterrupters

tional therapist Shelly J. Lane

lng

and physical therapist Ellen

some toys more tnteractrve.

Kroog-serves children ranging

makes

For example. Mistren rigged a

re-

in age from binh to 3 years who

switch to a Fisher-Price tape

have significant physical, sen·

corder for a non-verbal15·month-

sory and cognitive disabilities.

old baby to
press While In In mhlclle photo,

The lab is a one-year pilot
project

funded

by

UB's

Multidisciplinary Pilot Project Program and the Offic.&gt; of the Provost.

A total of 10 children with dis·
abilities and their families will

Matthew enJoy•

her crib . It playinCwlthltoe&amp;Ym
played, "Good toy.-...M can IJy to
night, Mommy. I grab theta beeau. .
U.eyhavelove you.·
•dend~ finks to
The message meet bla reKh
established the heiCJIL

participate in the pilot project,

end of a bedtime routine., for the

with their experiences providing

mother. "It's the little things that

mult~

can make or break a Whole d~:

the data necessary for a

year grant application. Frve

chi~

Mlstrett says.

dren from Niagara and Erie

She notes that "babies use

counties have panlcipated to

their senses to find out things

date. and five more are being

about their world. We 1fY to en-

recruited.

hance that ability to keep them

The lab offers a ·family-cen-

stimulated and motivated ,·

tered" approach to intel'\ll!ntion,

Mistrett says. The key Is to give

Mistrett notes. Person~! exam-

the children a sense of empow·

ine the child's home and day.care

erment or control over the ir en·

environments to see how tech-

vironment. she says, adding that

nology may assist them. she says.

through the asslstive techno!·

The team also may address ways

ogy activities, "the child Is con-

to get healthy siblings to interact

trolling the play more and more.

more with

the disabled child.

The pediatric team WOJ1\s with
families on a c.ase-b)'Casebasls.

"Play is how a child grows;
these activities must be fun for
the child,· Mlstrett says.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1403210">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451926">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403193">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1994-11-17</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403196">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403197">
                <text>en-US</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403198">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403199">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                <text>2017-07-27</text>
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                <text>Reporter</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1403203">
                <text> LIB-UA043</text>
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          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403204">
                <text>v26n11</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403205">
                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
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                <text>United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403207">
                <text> New York</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403208">
                <text> Erie County</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1403209">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                    <text>IIOdaA 1:.
AI._.

..First,.
ar.nts

UB studies shed new
light on how

NIH research awards
go to six faculty

~ections
jlevelop.

2
p_.

members.

.,. 4

Giant Step for
Architecture

Companion

Vital step taken to

They serve as friends,

restore Wright
masterpiece.

Does
helpers.

,.4
No•ember 10. 1994

Volume 26 No 10

Public Safety: on the B e at
Around the Clock
HEN the UniversityCouncil
ed recently
tomodifyUB's
Public Safety
policy. allowing •inually all offic·
ers 10 be armed 24 hours a day. it
pul the stamp of appro•al on a
policy that is already being followed on other SUNY campu~ .
The re•ised policy. which riquires approval by President William Greiner. will add Public Safety
officers working during daytime
hours. between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m.,
to those who already carry their
sidearms while on patrol, explained
Acting Public Safety Director John
Orela.
Orela pointS out. howe•er, that
officers assigned to the academic
spine will not carry weapons and
officers assigned 10 crowd-&lt;:Ontrol
events. such as concerts or political demonstr.uions. will be unarmed.
Public Safety Officers have been
armed since 1987. The policy
implemented then. promulgated to
cope with staffing cuts. allowed
officers to carry their weapons if a)
it was not between the hours of 7
a.m. and 6 p.m. and b) they were
patrolling alone. However, Orela
explained. vinually all patrols have
been one-person patrols since thai
time.
--sack in 1974. we had as many
as 54 patrol officers:· noted Orela.
--sy 1986. that was down to 38."
Orela does not expect the change

in policy to result in any meaningful change in Public Safety activity ...To my knowledge. no Public
Safety Officer has ever discharged
a weapon:· he said. --and weapons
have only been drawn twice or
three timesayearoverlhe past few
years."
Durin g daytime hours, an
officer's weapon has been carried
in a lock box in the patrol car. Orela
explained that pan of the rationale
for making the policy change was
that officers who were away from
1heir car on a routine call could
receive a crime call and have to
return to the car to get their weapon
before responding to the call.
Also, the additional handling of
the weapon necessitated by insening and removing it from the lock
box and the officer's hol ster increased the possibility of an acci-

dental discharge.
Armed with a bevy of statistics.
Orela explained that. while UB is
in no worse shape than comparable
SUNY institutions when it comes
to on-campus crime. he hopes the
new university weapons policy
will mean an added measure of
sec urity.
..Statistically.·· explained Orela.
..the Nonh and South Campuses
are safer than either of the communities they reside in ... Of course.
one of those communities is the
City of Buffalo. In 1991 . the latest

year for which final FBI statistics
were available. UB reponed 15 violent crimes and 681 property
crimes. By comparison. the Uni versity Centers at Albany and Stony
Brook. each of which has about
I 0.000 fewer students than UB.
reponed 17 and 9 violent crimes
and670and 1.049propeny crimes.
respectively.
rela pointed OUI thai IWO Of
the officers on the Public
Safety force are firearms instructors at the Erie County school for

G

police officers and that every Pub- .
lie Safety Officer is recertified on
his or her weapon twice a year.
Responsible for both UB 'scampuses. with 85 buildings. 25.000pl~ s students and 60 miles of
roadways. Orela calls his depanment .. lean and mean."
Today. Public Safety employs
40 officers, ni~ lieute~ four
investigators and three support
staff. There are 15 patrol cars, six
10 eight of which are on patrol at
any given time. said Gre\!1. Though
smaller than many other aop town

Crime prevention high on agerula
IIJSftWCOX
Reponer Staff

peraoneltlllllllr ,......._ poalble. 10 , .

with someone. or in groups whenever possible:
he said, "and avoid dimly IH areas." Grela urges
people to report to Public Safety any areas on
campus that are poorly lit. -we walt closely with
facilities and maintenance people to tal&lt;e care of
problem areas:
The PersanaJSafetyCornnlttee, which includes
representatives from Public Safety and from Stu·
dent Allairs IIIOI4lS including Sludent Housing,
the Studanl Health c.nter and 1he An1i-R11P8 Task
Force, ~8COIIIP'-1Sill8 safety~ brochure ,..... tips on ~ Jrom lira
safely 10 II8IIU8I _ . . ~ The l l l l l l l y - - bluclue and Worma- .
lion abaul ~ _..... on sMaly
--may be olll*ed bV ~ Pl.dc Sltlaly

oocelhe lllltOitlecll"**g a lllcllmolam.. "WWil

• 2212tram .... c.!1JUI.

, . , . . 1 - , 8lt • is a lot more than just cops
on a beat, according to Acting Public Sajl!ty
Director John Grela.
Keeping the public awara of potential crime
problems. as well as crime preYention training
and victim counseling ara al part of the Public
Safety agenda Ill LIB. Public Safety sponsors
semnars on topics such as rape prewntif:n
pramiee aecurily and alcohol and drug ness, according 10 Grala. Alao, two of the

depiWtmanl's olllcera . . ntruc1on1 ol 8811-d&amp;fanae c:1111.- avalllble on D8mP(JI:
ar.1a
people on campus 10 practice

urv-

police forces. he added, UB Public
Safety is usually among the 10
busiest of the 28
po lice forc e s 10
Erie Cou nt) .
Last year. Pubhe Safe ty reponded to nearly
11.000 call of one
sort or ano th er.
Tho ugh most were
not serious. 1.71 4
v.·ere ··crime calls.··
according to Orela.
becau"' they fell
into o ne o f 72
criminal categories
tracked by the Bureau of Clime Stati stics. l ost of ·
these are robberi es or assau~. Of
course. these lig ures on ly
ect
crimes that occurred o n the mpus itself.
One o f the area· most noted
cri minal cases, the 1990 slaying of
UB student Linda Yalem. occurred
as she jogged on a path o ne mil&lt;
nonh of the onh Campus. so it is
not reflected in the campus 's statistic • notes Grel a. Nt venbeless.
the depanmenl has poured hun·
. dreds, if not thousands. of manhours into tracling down leads in
the case.
--suffaloandAmherstP.D.con·
tinue 10 hare inronnation with us.
and we as ist in track:~&amp;J&lt;iown
information whene\·er possible,..
said Orela. Yalem·s l::iller. wbo is
still at large. is asuspect in as many
as eight other rapes. according to
Orela.
Jurisdictional restnctions also
come into play in the Unh·ersity
Heights area just south of the South
Campus.
- university Heights is located
in the Buffalo P.O.' s 16th precinct. which is always the first or
second busiest in the city.'' explained Orela. -we have had talk.s
about joint patrolling in that area.
among other issues. he said. -but
it is simply not possible. from a
manpower perspective. for either
of us to do anything more at the
present time. •·
The rest of the II ,OOOcallsU!ken
last year. according 10 Orela. in. elude nearly everything you could
imagine. --unwelcome guests. domestic problems. noise complaints.
emergency respo!15eS. even fre·
quent complaints about the bats in
Hayes Hall." Orela shrugged. "'We
are the only people around here
open 24 hours. We bear it all."

=

�2
H

....
J

',

0

P:

S

---~~~-

.._........

MEDICINE

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . pmles-

o1 medicine at usn
heed ollie OMsion olln-

-

lectioul Dis_ a t the
BulfaloVA

Medical

Center, has
~named

~
olthe year
by the

American
Federation of Clinical Re-

search--Eastern Region.
I.Uphy, c:hc1or ollhe
Microbilll Palhogeo I8Sis

Gt-.. Group at UB,
~...., fiw.year research
projecl&amp;~~

lhat cauae middiiHiar lnfeclions In children and ad&lt;*
kalg lnlections. He Is co-dellaloper ol a vaccine soon to
IRiargo trials to del8rmine ff
~ can prO\Iid9 protection
against middle-ear and lung

infections.
DENTAL SCHOOL

1'0 IliAD IIIIII'IWIIn'

~·

. . . _ . . , . . . . _, aclinicallnslructor in the UBv School of Dental Medicine
and dental director olthe
Wyoming Cooectional Facility In Attica, has been elected president of the New
York State Academy of
Gene&lt;al Dentistry. The
stetewide organization has

some 2.500 members.

A native of Sierra Leone.
ate of the UB dental school.
He is an attending dentist at
Suflalo General Hospital.
Nylande&lt;. who setVes as
a dental miSSionary to Haiti
and Is a dental consuttant
at St Croix Hospital in
Leogane, is a fellow of the
Academy of Dentistry International and the Academy
of Gene&lt;al Dentistry.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
--FACULTY
AWAB:
....,.. • ..._. assistant
professOr of chemical engi~ng at UB, has been
selected to
re~the

1994Ameri-

can Society
for Engineering Education Dow
Outstanding
New Faculty
Award lor
the St. Lawrence section.
The award Is g iven to a
young engineering educator in the upstate New York.
Lake Ontario or Quebec
areas to recognize e xcellence in teaching.
A UB faculty me&lt;nber
since 1989, Koike is a 1990
recip ient of a Presidential
Young Investigator Award.
His research interests lie in

the areas of thermodynamics, statistical physics and
molecular simulation.
Koike, who recently received the SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence
in Teaching. earned his
doctorate at the University
of Pennsylvania.

UB1'rofeuor
ofPedlmlcs

Kids

Howard Fllllen

examines a
)'OUIIC P8tient

&amp;Ear
Ailment

8t Cblldren's
Hospital for
study on
m~ar

Infections.

UB study eheds IIIOtt on
.........._Infections
By LOIS IIAIWt
News Bureau StaH

Three recent st udies conducted by
pediatric researchers at UB in conjunction with scientists from Japan
baveshcdnewlighlonhowmiddleear infections develop in young
children and point to a possible
target for a vaccine against one of
the causative organisms.
The researchers report in
October's Journal of lnf~ctious
Diseases that the frequency ofotitis
media-mjddle-earinfectjons-in
young chi!dren is related d irectly
10 the p resence of nontypeable
Haemophi/us influenzoe bacreria
ill, their nasal passages and the
amount of antibody to the bacteria. s
P6 outer-membrane protein secreted by the nasal mucosa.
The findings indicate that many
middle-ear infections originate in
nasal passages. !hat a strong local
antibody response to the organism
can thwan subsequent infections,
and that the H. influenza~ P6 protein may be a likely target for a
vaccine ro prevent initial infections.
Research poblished by the team
in The Journal of Ptdintrics showed
!hat children who consumed breast
milk with high levels of the anti-1'6
anlibody had fewer H. influ•n:.a•
colonizations than babies whose
mother' s milk had lower concentrations of antibody. These findings
suggest that the !mown protective
effect of breast feeding against infant ear infections may be due. in
pan. to the antibody's inhibition of

H. i'lfluen=colonizmion in the nose.
Another study by the team in ~
Joumal tflrrf.aious m-resshowed
a close assoc:ialion belween otitis media and nasal co1onizmion by 8!IOih&lt;r'
aganism--Mororel/a COJarrilalis.
Tile curren1 publication repons
results of a study of 157 chi ldren
followed from binh to 12 months.
Eighty-two percent of children
from whom H. influ~nz.a~ were re·
cevered developed othis media.
compared to 56 percent in whom
the bacteria were not present.
Children in whom H. influtnUJ&lt;
were colonized were four times as
likely tobe classified as otitis prone
t:han noncoloniz.ed children. Those
developing recurrent oti1is media
were found to h&amp;"e lower levels of
antibodies specific to the bacteri·a'
in nasal mucous than children who
had no infection or only one episode.
Howard S. Faden. professor of
pediatrics at UB, co-director of the
Infectious Diseases Division at
Children's Hospital of Buffalo and
lead U.S. investigator on the st ud ies, said the results suggest that
otitis-prone children may have
immunologic abnormalities that
prevent them from producing antibodies against the infection.-caus-

ing organisms. He said these children do not respond nonnally to the
P6 prolein. considered a promising
target for an otitis-media vaccine.
~·Previous studies have demon·
stmted widespread seropositivity
to P6 in the general population,"
Faden said, "but otitis-prone children do not recognize P6 in a normal manner and fail to develop an
age-related rise in antibody concentration. Given this fact. normal children likely will respond favorably to
a P6 vaccine. while otitis-prone children wiD respond less well."
n the study on human-milk anti body, Faden-s group followed
68 children who were fed human
milk for the first 12 months oflife
to determine if anti-P6 antibody 10
H. influenl.JJ~ in human milk could
protecl against nasal colonization
by the organism. 'They measured
the amount of anti-P6 aolibody in
the milk and lested the infants for
colonization of the organism and
occurrence of otitis media. Results
showed that human milk fed to
children who were not colonized
by H. influenUJt had significantly
higher levels of antibody than milk
fed to children who had multiple

I

colonizations. Frequency of colonization by the organism was directly
related to episodes of otitis media.
'The researchers theorize that lhe
human-milk antibody prevents the
bacteria from all aching to the nasal
lining or, once altached, inhibits
growth of the organism.
Therelalionshiphetweenthebac·

teriaMoraxel/acararrlralisandotitis
media was established tluoogh a
study of 120children followed from
binh to age 2. They were tested for
colonization by the organism and
evaluated for otitis-media infection.
Results showed that while the bacteria were present at some point in
more than lhree-founhs of the children by age2, colonization increased
more than twofold during episodes
of otitis media. Researchers COO·
eluded that a high rate of colonization by this organism is a risk factor
for developing otitis media.
'The research team also included
Linda Duffy, Judy Wolf, Deborah
Krystoflk, UB; Yasualci Harabuclli.
Sapporo Medical College, Japan;
Nob.oru Yamanaka. Wakayama
McdicalCollege,Japan.Theprojects
were supponed by grants from the
National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development

Research shows bacterial resistance to antibiotics --~
By LOIS BAKER
News Bureau Staff

T

HREETYPES ofbacteria
responsible for up to 90
percent of middle-ear in fections in children have
develope!! significant resistance to
commonl y prescribed antibiotics.
a study by researchers at UB and
the University of Massachusetts
has s hown.
The data. reponed recently in
Pediatric: lnft-ctious Direast- Journal, provide a clear warning that
an tibiotic resislance is becomi ng a
significant problem in treating the
ailment, said Howard Faden, UB
professor of pediatrics. a specialist
in chi ldhood infectious diseases and
lead researcher on the study.
Otitis media-middle-ear infection-i s one of the most common
infections of early childhood. accounting for approximately 30 percent of visi ts to pediatricians.
In fectious-disease researchers have

identified three bacteria type-Streptococcus pneumoniat.', nontypeable
HaemopiJilu s influt'n:ae, and
Moraxt-1/a catarrha/is-as pathogens that cause 50-90 percent of
these infections. Studies in the past
four years have reponed that standard antibiotics used to defeat these
organisms were becoming less effective. because bacteria were developingresistance to the medicines.
To assess the extent of bacterial
resistance.the researche~collected
nasal mucus specimens from 216
infants who had not received any
prior antibiotic therapy. Researtoh has
shown a direct connection between
nasal colonization by the organisms
and development of otitis media.
The researchers identified the
pathogens and subjected them to
antimicrobial agents commonly
used to fight middle-ear infect i ons-amox ic iII in·clavu lanate.
ampicillin. cefaclor, cefpodox.ime.
cefprozil. cefuorxime. P.,nicillin. and

trimethoprim-s ulfamerhoxaz.olr
(TMP/SMX).
Results showed that:
• 96 percent of M. catarrha/is
strain were resistant to penicill.in,
90 percent to ampicillin. and ~
percent to TMP/SMX.
• 32 percent of non typeable H.
influenza~ strains were resistant to
ampicillin and 17 percent did not
respond lo cefaclor.
• In contrast to some reports of
strong resistance of pneumococci
bacteria to penicillin-more than
30 percent in Kentucky and 26
percent among Native Americans
in Alaska-this study showed penici11in and its derivati\'eS remain
highly effective against this pathoge n. Only 1.2 percent of S.
P"eumCtniae were resistant and
another 4 .7 percent were somewhat resistant. However. 20 percent of the strains were resistant to
TMP/SMX.
Faden said rates of bacterial re-

sistance to antibiotics vary widel y
geographically. and are related to
patterns of antibiotic use in anY
given region . " We learned from
this study lhat there are some com·
monty used drugs that are no longer
valuable." he said. " For example.
it is clear from this study that
~methoprim ·s ulfamethoxazole
sh~»uld

not be prescribed for Olitis
media. and lhat in our community.
amoxicillin is still very effective
for simple ear infections.
"Surveys of resistance .&lt;hould
be done on a regular basis to keep
up with changes in susceptibility
pauems." Faden said.
Gary Doern. University of
Massachusetts at Worcester, conducted the resistance testing. Judy
WolfofUB and Michael Blocker.
University of Massachusetts. assisted in the research. The study
was supponed by a grant from the
National Institute of Child Health
and Human Deve lopment.

�....
...
receives national accreditation

3

~--.-

Child Care C~er

Mlltllda
HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo
Child Care Center has been ac' credited by the National Acad- emyofEarlyOlildhoodPrograms.

covemor,
t.lka to
children Ill
UBChlld
care c.nter
duflnC • visit
Nov. 4

. Accreditation recogniz.es out-

standingearly-&lt;:hildhood programs that meet
national standards of quality.
To become accredited, programs mu 1
meet strict criteria. including having trained
and qualilied staff, opportunities for pareot~l involvement, strict health and safety standards, and a developmentally appropriate
program for preschoolers. The accreditation process includes an on-site study of the
program by professional validators and a
linal review by a three-me
panel of
commissioners who are expe s in lhe field
of early&lt;hildhood education.
"Accreditation helps a
r the question, 'What is a quality' child&lt;are center,'"
says .Marilyn Smith, executive director of
the National Association for the Education
of Young Children. the nation's oldest and
largest association of early&lt;llildhood professionals, which sponsors the academy.
"Most parents want to find the highest-&lt;jual-

recoCJIIzlne
Its national
accredita-

tion.

ity program for their young children; however, few parents know how to assess wbether
a program meets more than just the minimum standards req~ired by state licensing.
"Accreditation helps parents recognize
the varied components that should be present
in a quality program," she said . The
academy's standards were developed over a
three-year
iod using input from thou-

sands of educators and administrators across
the nation. The first program was accredited
in 1985. Since then, more than 2.500 childcare programs have received the designa·
tion, including 17 at SUNY campuses.
The UB center on the South Campus
serves youngsters ranging in age from six
weeks to five years old from 115 families,
according to director Vickie Log.hmanieh.

Mission statement, safety among FSEC topics
Faculty Senate Executive _Committee concluded. at the Nov. 2
meeting, that the best policy regarcling a university mission statementmight
be to simply continue with no policy.
Greiner told the FSEC that. although he
had submitted a draft statement to them for
commen1. he did not foresee it becoming a
divisive issue . ''I suspect you are going to
bum a lot of calories trying to come to
closure on this. and that's really not neces-

sary;• he said. ""'There is no institutional
imperative that you take a position on this. lf
you want to simply 'receive and file' it.
that's fine with me:•
The FSEC and the full Faculty Senate had
struggled with languageofthe mission statement in several meetings during the past
month. The Middle States Association, as
pan of their reaccreditation process last year.
mandated drafting of a mission statement for
UB. which has been without one since the
197~. Greiner drew the current proposal
largely from a speech he gave to the Voting
Faculty last year. but said he sympathized
with the FSEC's frustration over it.
''A mission statement should be ~ccinct
and focused, and I think that works at the unit
level," said Greiner... But9at the inst\lutional
level, that's vinually impossible. Weare too
rich and complex a university for that."

Greiner reponed that he had invited and
received wriuen comments, which he had

onlineof"Schedule25." All classroom space
requests are factored into the new program.

taken into account in redrafting the statement He repeated his invitation to Faculty

he said. with Lhe goal of matching class size
and space as closely as poss-ible. Claude

Sena1e members 10 subnj1 their comment
to him directly. Nevertheless. several FSEC
members took the opportunjty to raise their
concerns with Greiner directly.
Feeling that the statement contained too
many goals, John Boot of Management said
thal "People can comfortably count to three.
not to Is.·· He urged Greiner to cut back the
number of issues raised by the document,
focusing instead on UB's commitment to
"serve the citizens of New York State."
Judith Adams of Lockwood Library, told
Greiner that 'This statement says more by
what is left out." The omission of a referencetotheansandsciencestroubledAdams
the most. she said. claiming it adversely
impacts morale of arts and sciences faculty
and opens the door to external forces that
could use the omission in threatening ans
and sciences funding.
In other business, FSEC membersquizud
facilities personnel on problems with class·
room space, traffic flow and safety. Voldemar
lnnus, senior associate vice president for uni·
versityservioes, and Ronald Naylor, associate
vice presid~nt foruniversity facilities, fielded
complaints of inadequate class space and unsafe lighting on the South Campus.
Classroom assignments, Naylersaid. have
entered the compurer age with the coming

Welch of Political Science chided that it may
not be up to Pill' yet. noting that a class of
fewer than 50 students thai he is to teach nexl
semester, is scheduled fora lecture hall seating 450. Mehrdad Hadighi of Architecture
and Planning agreed. noting that he is s&lt;:hedu\ed to teach one etas- in two places at the
same time next semester.
BerniceNoble ofMicrobiologycomplained
that she could find no room i\n the South
Campus large enough to hold 80 students and
that she and many of her colleagues see their
productivity drained because of unsafe tighting conditions that prevent worlcing after dark
"A few years ago, as pan of a conservation
move. evety other light was removed.'' said
Noble. whoseofficeisinCaryHall. "Since then.
other lights have burned out. It leaves many of
us afraid to walk through our own corridors."
Nayler said that he would be happy to
inspect the corridors to which Noble referred
to ascertain whether light levels there meet
"nationally accepted standards."
Samuel Schack of Mathematics replied.
" If you are telling us that. if the light levels
meet some arbitrary standard, you won't do
anything, then that is a completely unacceptable answer. Wbenaprofessorhastold youshe
does not feel safe going to her place of work.
we have aserious problem."

Council OKs 24-hour arming. of Public Safety

8y CIIIIISTINE VIDAL

Reporter Edllor

T

HE UB COUNCIL approved a measure Nov. 3 that would allow Public
Safety Officers to carry sidearms 24
hoursaday.Themeasurestillrequires
approval by President William Greiner.
Under current policy. Public Safety Officers were allowed to carry weapons only
between the hours of 6 p.m. and 7 a.m. The
proposed policy allows officers to carry guns
during daytime hours, with the exception of
officers assigned to the academic spine and
crowd control events such as concens and
political demonstrations.
According to Roben L. Palmer, vice president forstudentaffairs, other SUNY campuses
that allow 24-hour armi ng inclbde Al bany.
Stony Brook, Oswego and Buffalo State.
"We' re trying to the greatest extent possible to police ourselves on campus," said
Greiner. "Our Public Safety Officers need
this ki nd of protection."

In other business, the Counci l also reviewed a policy on the temporary suspension of students. Palmer noted that the action
is ··not a reaction to a problem, but a proactive
step," one that does not represent a change in
policy. but rather "a strong commitment 10
maintaining an appropriate living-learning
environment." Under the policy. if a decision is made to suspend a s1udent. he or she
wiH be notified immediately and can appeal
the decision within 24 hours. Previously, the
proCess could take as long as I 0 days, according to Palmer...What we're doing is puning a
liule more teeth" in the procedures, he said.
In his repon to the Council. Greiner praised
effons ofthose involved in.this year's SEFA
campaign, wllich as of Nov. 2 had reached
I 08.6 percent of its goal. "Together. I thi nk
we've done ourselves proud," he said. Campaign pledges totaled $61 7,000, including
114 leadership gifts of$1,000 or more.
Grei ner also indicated that SUNY trustees
have forwarded to the !itate a budget request

that "holds pace" with previous budget and.
if approved, could lead to "a good solid year"
for SUNY.
The Council also heard a report on UB's
intemarional ac1ivities presented by Stephen
C. Dunnett. UB vice provost for International Education. The Office of International
Education is responsible for all of UB's
international agreements. DUnnett said. including 54 programs in 23 countries. The
office receives UB 's international gues-ts.
advises the president and provost on proto·
col, he said.
The office provides ua·s international
student and scholar services; academic ex·
change and study abroad programs, including academic year programs in China, France.
Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom
and summer programs in France. Japan. Poland and Spain; and sponsored overseas programs in Cambodia. Latvia and Malaysia. It
also assists with the development of alumni
chapters abroad, Dunnett said.

Grant to help
UB expand
digital library
ayuu WI&amp;.EY

News Bureau Staff

T

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo has
been aw•.rded $640.000 as pan of a
$4 million grant to the National
Cen"'r for Geographic Information
and Analysis (NCGIA) to develop a distritiuted digital library system with comprehensh•e services for images and spatjally
referenced information.
The "Alexandria Project." named after
tht first library in Egypt, will allow users
from across the country to electronically
access collections of digitized maps, images
and pictures. For example. school children
may find maps of Amelia Earhan's last night
to print out for a project repon; a business
executive may obtain a map of parlting availability in a certa.in area of town, or a scientist
may retrieve satellite images of weather maps.
The S4 million grant is one of six. fouryear awards totaling$24 million being given
to unjversities to enhance ~ffons to digitize
materials in university libraries so they can
~ accessible on computer networks. Tile
goal of the project. funded by the National
Science Foundation. the National Aeronau ·
tics and Space Administration and the Ad vanced Research Projocts Agency of the
Depanment of Defense, is to pioneer new
methods of collecting, storing, organizing
and retrieving information on computer networks .

The grants repre se nt the federal
government's largest commitment to date to
aiding the construction oflhe ··vinuaJ libraries" mat an expected to be popular servtces

on the information highway of the future.
UB's Alexandria PrQject. which began in
early September, involv~ the other two
members of the NCGIA consortiu m-the
University of California at Santa Barbara.
the lead institution, and the University of
Maine-as well as several library and indus·
trial partners.
he project's chief product will be a distributed database that "ill allow users
from across the country to \'iew and retrieve
items that were previou..;ly difficult lo access. according to Barbara Buuenfield. UB
associate professor of geography and the UB
team's project director. The goal of the
project's founh year is to put the Alexandria
database on the Internet. she says.
The Buffalo team will evaluate and finetune a design for the gmphical user interface
that will facilitate library access. This _interface, which is easy to learn. will s6ppon
simple access to each of the library services,
with browsing functions and textual and
visual query.
From a user's viewpoinl. tbjs interface is
the most crucial pan of Alexandria's our
components. The other three are an electronic catalogue-the core of the library
that will allow the system to search for
requests from users; an ingest component.
which permits librarians and systems managers 10 incorporate new items into the library collection. and a storage component
for large collections of spatially indexed
items.
The team at Santa Barbara will build and
place on·line a prototype system using software developed for geographical information systems. UB' s interface will be based on
this prototype. This digital library test system will have components a1 Santa Barbara,
UB. the Library ofCongress.tbe U.S. Geological Survey and the St. Louis Public Library.
Industrial partners working with the
NCGIA consortium include Digital Equipment Corp .. Environmental Systems Research Institute, Conquest Corp. and Xerox
Corp.

T

�4

_...,.___..,_"

Apartment purchast}vital step in Martin House restoration
. , PA'I'RICIA -

OVAII

News Bureau Staff
OBERT KRESSE. chair of the
Martin House Restoration Corporation (MHRC). announced
Saturday that th-e not-for-profit
corporation has acquired title
to three apartment buildings at 135 Jewett
Parkway, which will allow the organization
to restore the entire Darwin D. Martin House
residential compound.
The MHRC now holds title to all of the
property that compri~ the original compound.
The compound, designed by Frank Lloyd
Wright. originallyincludedtheManinHouse.
the George Barton House at 118 SunurJt
Ave .• which was donated earlier this year to
the corporation by a consonium of Buffalo
businesses (The BuiTalo News. Rich Products and M&amp;T Bank), and several outbuild. ings that were demolished in the 1950s to
make way for the apanm~nt buildings.
A national historic landmark since 1986,
the Martin House is being restored as a house
museum by a consortium oftbe University at
BuiTalo, the MH RC and the New York State
Office of Parks. Recreation and Historic
Preservation~ When conservation/restoration

work is completed, the house will be operated by the MHRC as part of the New Vorl&lt;
Stale historic site sysrem.
Kresse announced the purchase or the
apartment buildings at a press conference in
the Martin House allended by Joan K.
Davidson. state colilmissionerof parks. recreation and historic preservation, and Bruno
Freschi, dean of the UB School of Architecture and Planning.
"It was essential that we acquire title to
the entire property, in order to realize tbe
vision of a fully restored Wright masterpiece
and raise the balance of the funds necessary
for restoration," Kresse noted.
"The plan 10 fully restore this magnifi-

cent work: of architeciUre to its original glory
offers a great incentive to both government

and private donors to help us raise those
funds ."
The apartments were purchased by the
MHRC for approximately $700.000 from
owner Juliane Bukaty. Kresse said that developers Otto and Stephen Day and Donald
Clark originally held a contract to purchase
the buildings and tum the 20 apartment units
into condominiums. but"'generou.sly allowed
the corporation to take O\'er the contracL"
He said the corporation will continue to
rem the apartments until the restoration of
the main house is complete, a process ex-

to take several years.
Once the main house is restored, the
MHRC plans to demolish IWO or the BJ&gt;8!1·
ment building's and reconstruct the conservatory, a covered walkway or pergola. a
garage-carriage house and stables. Elaborate gardens that once graced the grounds
also will be reestablished.
The Barton House, built fm Darwin
Martin's sister and her family, also will be
restored and reincorporated into the residential complex.
' This effort," Kresse said, "is directed

House "'insures our grand vision of completing Wright's masterpiece."
He is directing a UB graduate architecture studio in the development or a feasibility study for the adaptive reuse or the third
and smallest apanmeot building as an interpretive center, gift shop and offices. The
redesigned building will reOect Wright 's
design principles, he said, and will be architecturally compatible with the rest or the
compound.
"Our architectural heritage enriches the
quality of life in Western New Vorl&lt; and

"It wai essential that we acquire title to the entire
property, in order to realize the vision ofa.fully
restored Wright masterpiece. "
toward restoring the Martin House as the key
element in the development oind promotion
of \Vestem New York's architectural tourism industry. which. in tum. offers us new
opponunities with which to advance our
regional economy.··
Davidson cited the purchase of the apartment complex as ··an imponant step in the
restoration of the Darwin Martin property:·
"The state parks agency_.. she said, "looks
forward to the time when we can invite the
public to see this arch itectural gem in its
o ri ginal surroundings as our first 20th-century state historic site."
Freschi emphasized that the acquisition
of the apanment buildings and 1he Banon

could also enhance our economic base."
Kresse said.
··we've waited a long time to be able to
tell the world or the rich trove of architectural gems located in Buffalo and throughout
Western New York." he said, citing Louis
Sullivan's Guaranty Building and the main
buildings at the Buffalo Psychiatric Center
designed by H.H. Richardson. among others.
'"Now lhat the title to the las1 section of
the original Darwin Martin property is in our
hands ," Kresse added. " it' s only a matter of
time before the Darwin Manin complex is
established as a keystone of our architectural
tourism industry."
He also pointed to current effons to re -

store the late 19th-century
Roycroft Inn in East Au - Houae
rora as an important firsl compound,
step in the creation of a s hown In
Western New York "as- 1908 photo
chitectural heritage trail ." from
The inn was buill by Eiben University
Hubbard, who had impor- Archives,
tant connections to both nowc.n
be fu lly
Darwin Martin and to the
restored.
international Ans and
Crafts Movement, which greaUy influenced
Wright 's work.
Darwin Martin was the business pro«!ge
of Hubbard, who, like Martin, worked for
the BuiTalo--based Larkin Soap Co., then a
major American mail-order firm. Hubbasd.
an iconoclastic author, editor and publisher.
later founded the Roycroft Community of
artisans in Western New Vorl&lt;, which was
grounded in the principles of William
Morris's ans and crafts community in England.
Kresse pointed out that at one time, the .
Rovroft Community employed more than
500 artisans, and its ptbducts-llandcrafted
furniture. books and an objects-were sold
throughout the world and were featured products in leading upsc.ale American depan ment stores.
The inn. now being restored to its unique
ambiance. will reopen in the spring of 1995
to celebrate the 1OOth annh·ersary of the
founding of the Roycroft Community. A
major exhibition devoted 10 the Roycroft
Community and Hubbard opened last weekend at the Memorial An G"llery in Roche&gt;ter. II will be followedshonlybyanexhibition
titled. "Roycroft Desk-top," at BuiTalo'&gt;
Burchfield-Penney An Center.

Six faculty receive NIH grants recognizing young investigators
By USA WIL£Y

News Bureau Staff

S

IX UB FACULTY members have
received FIRST (First Independent Research Support and Tran....
sition) grants from the National
Institu tes of Health recognizing young investigators who show promise for future
scientific achievement in the biomedical sciences.
Those receiving the five-year awards are
Kathleen M. Karlin ski Boje; John K. Crane;
Mira Edgerton: Thomas J. Langan: Deborah
Leckband and Pauleue Tempro.
Kathleen M. Karlinski Boje. assistant
professor of pharmaceutics, has received a
first-year grant ofS 111,000. She will examine blood-brain and blood-cerebrospinal Ouid
barrier permeabi lity. Her studies may identify therapeuric strategies to prevent permeability changes in these barr ie rs in
neurointlammatory disease states. -A memberofthe UB faculty since 1992, Bojegraduated from Duquesne University in Pittsburgh
and received a doctorate in pharmaceutics
from UB.
An assistant professor of medicine, John
K. Crane has been awarded a first-year

grant of$ 104 .000tostudy the mechanism by
which £. coli bacteria cause diarrhea. especially in children. The research may lead to
methods to preven1 and treat the toxins that
produce diarrhea. panicularly in developing
countries. Crane joined the UB faculty this
year and serves as an attending phy ician at
the Erie County Medical Center. He received a bachelor's degree from Cornell
University and a medical degree from the
University of Virginia.
Mira Edgerton. clinical assistant professor in the departments of prosthodontics.
biomaterials and oral biology, received a
first-year grant of $99.000. She will use the
money to study s31ivary hislatins. shown to
be active inhibitors or yeast cell growth and
germination. A betler understanding of this
molecular mechanism may lead to the creation of synthetic peptides with enhanced
function and methods t'o deliver histatins to
selected oral sites. A member of the UB
facui\Y since 1982. Edgerton began her
Williamsville s pecialty practice in
prosthodontics in the same year. She earned
a bachelor's degree from Ohio State University, a master's degree from UB, a doctoral~ .
of dental surgery fro m Case Western Re:,

sen·e University and a specialty cenificate
in prosthodontics from the UB School of
Dental Medicine.
Thomas J. Langan . associate professor
of neurology and pediatric~. recei\·ed a firslyear grllnl or $97.000 10 explore the link
bet ween astrocyte growth and recovery from
bmin damage. His research focuses on astrocytes. the star-like cells that are the most
numerous type found in the br.1in. The grant
will all ow him 10 study the biochemical
control mechanism by which the cells function. and determine how th is mechanism
applies to brain injury and reco\"ery. Langan
is an auending neurol ogist at The Children's
Hos pital of Buffalo. He received his
bachelor's and medical degrees from Brown
University.

A

n assistant professor of chemical engineering. Deborah Leek ba nd has been
awarded a first -year grant of$103,699. She
conducts fundamental measurements of the
molecular forces controlling biological recognition. Her work has been the first to
verify the impact or external protein surface
structure in the control of protei n recognitjon events. She ttl so is investigating how

biological membrane composition can modulate recognition at cell surfaces. A member
of the UB faculty since 1993, Leckband has
held pre- and postdoctoral fellowships from
the National Institu tes of Health. She graduated from Humboldt State University in California and earned a doctorate in biophysical
chemistry from Cornell University.
Pau lette Tempro, associate professor of
periodontics, has been awarded a first-year
$96.000 transfer grant from the University
of Connecticut, where she sen1ed as an assistant professor before joining the UB faculty
in 1&lt;)93. She conducts research on adhesins
or capnocyrophaga gingi••alis. a gram-negative oral bacterium. Adhesi ns are surface
molecule that allow bacteria to stick to
surfaces and play a key role in the attachment and colonization of pathogenic bacteria. Research into the structure of these
molecules may lead 10 ways to prevent the
attachment of bacteria that cause periodontal disease.
A graduate of Pace University, she received a dental degree from the State University of New York at Stony Brook and a
certificate in periodonto logy from Columbia University.
-

�- ....---.-..

5
WBFO tops fall

A Message to the Umvcr~lt) Commurut)

--

--

;;;:;;r

T

he AITs and Sciences
Council is an experiment
m interfaculty cooperation. Three of the IB!gest faculties in the University ere attempting to IOOrlf togelher in
e common purpose. We think it is I'I&lt;Jrl&lt;ing well, but 11
is B challenging task. Not 011/y is it important the/ the lhree
Deens end the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Edo c lion
worlHogether, but we must communicate these activities to
members of the three faculties so thet Bit who went to can
become involved In en informed way. The following s!Btement
is the first in 8 number of communications direoted primarily
at the members of the three BITs and sciences fecutties. It may
Biso be ol interest to the broader Urnverslty community.

-··------

THIS NEWSLETIER IS INTENDED as 8 way to apprise
faculty members in the Arts end Sciences of the coordinated
activities of the three Deans of Arts and Sciences and the Vice
Provost for Undergraduate Education. As the year progresses,
we anticipate that subsequent issues will be circulated to
update faculty on our deliberations.
Late last spring,~iggle Committee on the Arts and
Sciences presented its
to the Provost. Based on its
recommendations,
Bloch, the Provost, recommended
that the Faculties,-of
and Sciences, at least for the
purposes of undergraduate education, begin to act like a
single unit. To this end, he fonned the Council of Arts and
Sciences Deans, composed of the three deans of Arts and
Letters, Natural Sciences and Mathematics and Social Sciences and the Vooe Provost for Undergraduate Education. He
charged this group With coordinating efforts to improve the
elfecliwness of undergraduate education. This CoonciJ began meeting in June and has been meeting on a weekly basis
ever since.
At the group's first meeting, Ross MacKinnon, Dean of
Social Sciences. was selected as the Convening Dean.
After appropriate consultation with members ol their faculties, the three deans appointed an Arts and Sciences Curriculum and Program Convnittee. The members of the Committee
areFredSee,AssociateDean,ArfsandLetters;LindaSwinM:h,
Theatre and Dance; Michael Frisch. American Studies; Steve
Dyson, Classics (Chair of Convnittee); Alan Cadenhead,
Associate Dean, Natural Sciences and Mathematics (CoChair); ian Baldwlll, Biology; JerryKiester,Chemistry; Michael
Cowen; Mathematics; Charles Stinger, Associate Dean, So-

''"'.

cial Sciences; Peter Hare, Philoaophy; and Wolfgang Wolck.
Linguistics. This Committee is charged with evaluating and
recommending changes in the general education program for
the Arts and Sciences. It is also to consider and evaluate
proposed changes in other matters d~rectly affecting the
academic progr;wn of arts and sciences Students. It is currently evaluating Arts and .Sciences' general education requirements. When the Commitleecompletes Its consideration
of this complex set of issues, any proposala it has develOped
to change existing requirements will be submitted for vote to
members of the faculties of Arts and Sciences.
We expect that the Curriculum and Program Committee wm
hold hearings or open meetings as its wor1t progresses so that
it can get a sense of all the views of interested colleagues in
the arts and sciences on the issues it is considering. All the
AITS and Sciences faculty are encouraged to commt.nicate
with the members of the Convnlttee concerning general
education or other matters of importance lor undergraduate
education.
The General Education Curriculum Convnitlee and Its Area
Subcommittees will continue as before to assist in the evaluation, extension and revision of the general education curriculum. Much of the membership remains unchanged from last
year, but some new appointments have been made.
Another topic ol consideration over the past few months
has been the advisement ol undergraduates at UB. Ways in
which the faculty members can be more effectively involved
in this process are being studied. The subcommittee on
advisement, chaired by Dean Tufariello, has consulted With
several relevant groups ol faculty and stall to determne how
the advisement to undergraduate students can be improved.
Ongoing subjects of intense study are student recruitment,
access to majors, access to COUiloBS needed to graduate,
articulation agreements with two-year colleges and other
matters related to transfer students.
All indiCations are thet this structure is working. It provides
the University at Buffalo with the framework for needed cooperation between the arts and scierooes, while preserving the
a tonomy that is more appropriate for graduate degree pr~
grams and research initiatives.
D. - - . Dean of SocJaJ Sciences
.....,.. - . Dean of Narural Sciences and Malhemalics
...., - . Dean of A1Ts and Letters
- - - . VICe Provo&gt;! for UndetgradUB/B Educallon

'

membership goal,
raises $100,670
_.YeNIIJ'•

W.FO, tile
ational Public
Radio news and jau station. has surpa sed
its SIOO.OOO fall membenhip goal. wtth a
total of St 00.670 in new member pledgrs
and renewals. This is the highest amount
ever raised by WB FOduringanon-airmem bershi p dri ve.
"When the successful drive was completed
Sunday night, Jennifer Roth, WBFO' s gen-

"Everyone at WBFO is
truly grateful and honored
by this tremendous show
ofcommunity support,
which includes pledges
from many UB faculty,
staffand students. "
-IIOTM

eral manager. said, ·'Everyone at WBFO is
fht ly grateful and honored by this tremendous show of commu nity support_ which
includes pledges from many UB faculty,
staff and students."
Roth lauded the WBFO staff, vol unteen
and interns for their tireless efforts during
the II -day campaign. " It was just grca1 to
hear from-.o many ~steners-from the Buffalo area, from Southern Ontario, and from
our ,epeater station communities, WOLN·
Olean and WUBJ -lamestown." ROih said.
""'T1leir genen&gt;5ity represents a resoundi ng

vote of confidence in WB Fo.-

Atrention, Cooks!
H's Holiday Recipe Contest nme
Go 1- It u - that favon te hol1day
rectpe , the one that family and fflends
· clamor for because tt's sooo
good. It can bring you fame
and fortune-JUSt by shanng
11 With your UB colleagues.
you could have it published
• '" the Reporter and Win a p nze

bestdes .
Our annual rectpe contest beg1ns right now-it's
open to faculty, staff and
students
W e"ll judge 11 for taste ap peal.
ease of preparatton, original1ty, and its
contnbution to a heatthy d iet Winner
of the rec1pe rudged the best will
receive a handsome coffee-table
cookbook as a prize .
P lease TYPE the rec1pe in
cookbook style with ingredients first ,
direcUons following- and put your
name, add ress , department, your UB
t1tle and phone number at the top of
the page. If there·s a bnef "story•
about the rec1pe---how you created it,
What kind of traditions it represents,
how many years you've served it to
rave reviews. etc ., 1nclude that, too.
M a1l or fax to:
Reporter Recipe Contest, t 36 Crofts.
University at Buffalo. Buffalo. NY.

14260. Or E-mail to
reporter0pub.bu1fafo.edu

·

_....for r-apt of -I• Nov 17.

Call or visit us soon at the Commons!
Tel 636-8440 • Fax 636-8468
520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

�6

-aa...---.-u
F RIDA Y

'

n..c-

11 ___
---

DioC-

-.andl"rotltlii&lt;Dt,Manin
Hoffmon. M.D. Kind&gt; Auditorium. Olildml"s Horpitll.l a.m.

.,.,.a••u1AL

n.. Zobnt M - and . . , _
Food Wdo Dyaamlalla cbo
Groat Labs, Dr. Edwin! Mills.

Camel! Uoiv. 140 Keller. North
Campus. II a.m.
ASIA A T J a - St¥diol ia Poled:
S4ale. Barrlen, ud PoMbiiJiloo, Prof. ~mund Mydcl.
GcocnJ&gt;hiatiiiiSI. of
Ja&amp;ie:Uoaian Ulliv•. Krakow, 653
Boldy. Nonh ea,..... Nooo-1 pm.

n..

--

.,.._sc.wnar
Moleaolar Detenaioaats or

Ctitiwml~byG~Ic:

~ CllaaD&lt;k, Dr. ll&lt;n
Salarwut. Mn Plonc:k lost. of

Medicol Reseorc:b. Butler Auditorium. Forber. Soutb Campus.
3 p.m.
~SCIENCE

I.ECTIME

C. Carte. Univ. ofCahforma.
Bcttdey. 210 Notlnl Sciences
&amp; Mothematia Complea. North
Campus. 3:30p.m. Refre&lt;h ·
meols J p.m., 24.'5 Fronczak,

LaL
RUSJJI Memoriol L«twWtip.

sponscnd in part by Moti

aNIUMIICA.l SCIENCES
SEIIIIWI
Rqulalion or C hloroplast
mRNA Processinc and Stability, Dr. Wilhelm Gruissem,
Univ. of California. Bmeley.
114 Hochaener. North Campus.
4p.m.

What's an

interfaith
couple?

Maybe you two! If so, Temple
Beth Zion offers a non-judgmental, welcoming group once a
month for Jews and their nonJewish spouses to discuss issues
of concern. You needn't be o
member to join.
• Sunday, November 20- 7 PM
at Temple Beth Zion
700 Sweet Home Rood, Amherst
We'll tolk about the
•
upcoming holidays.
• Saturday, December 3- 4:30 PM
Family Chanukah Party &amp;
Latke cook-off
Tem~e Beth Zion
805 Delaware Ave., Buffalo

,.

Coli 886-7150
for more infonnation, or just come!
You'll be very wekome.

10

SEll- AWIIHI WNCHEOH
A'\·oiding Biooclbat bs: Lessons
from Bosnilland Rwanda, Or.
Oaude E. Welch, Jr. Center for
Tomorrow . Nonh Campu!i. Call
829·2608.

I'HAIIIIACY CONFERENCE
R~iew or Antimkrobial
Agents. Hyatt Regency Buffalo.
8 a.m.· 5 p.m. S55 full dAy. S30
per Stssion, plus S I0 after regiS·
trataon deadline . Call645·3931 .
S11JD£HT H0M-0£GREE
RECITAl.

Pi.ano Rtc:ital Students of Prof.
Fnna Arschanska Boldl. Baud
Recital Hall. Nonh Campus.
Noon. No admission charge.
ART EXHIBITION
The Faculty Sbow. Through
No\'. II. An Depanment Gallery. Ct.nter for the Arts. Nonh

Campus. 10 a.m.-5 p.m .. ThundAy and FridAy. Call 645-6878.
MEDICINE AND BIOIIEDICA.l
SCIEJICU SEIIIIWI
S.Un-Baderium lntuactions:
MKhani.sms and Ea.logic Implications. Frank A. Sanna·
pieco. D.M.D .• Pll .D. 106 Cary.
South Campus. N -.
ANA JOllY AND CELL

._YMMIIWI
Motor Control o( Rbytbmk
Jaw Movements, Louis
Goldberg. DD.S .• PII.D.• School
of DentaJ Medici De. 306 Farber.
South Campus. 12:30 p.m.
ANAJOllY AND CEU.
•

-y-

SdtDC:e ud Df:Dtal Educatioa.
Loois Goldberg. D.D.S .• Ph.D .• .
306 Farber. I p.m.

1'11\'BICS COUDQUIUIIII

Hip Tc Suponondu&lt;tirily,
Squicb ud Bn1ias, Prof. John

LOGIC COLLOQUIUM
n. .... Proof. Th&lt;oroti&lt; Pro....., to Afbtotl&lt;, George
Boger. Canisius College. 684
Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m.
MA-.nc:s~

Gttlois Models and L-Func:tions. Prof. George Poppas.
lAS. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campu . 4 p.m.

sunancs CCIU.OQUIUM
Rruat On-tlopmmls ia
Mrthod

th~

or Back-Ca.kulation

for Eaimatlac HJV lafecdoa
Rates and ProjKtiac AIDS
lncid~oct:. Prof. Mitchell Gai l.
President. A~rican Statistical
Assoc . and Otief. Biosuti~tia

Branch. NationaJ Cancer lnsc..
144 Fazber. South Campus. 4 p.m.
VISmNG AJITlST I.EC1UIIE

Visiting Artist Sptake:r Mries,
U ncia Robbcnoh. photographer
and miud media artist. Center
for lhe Ans Screening Room.
North Campus. 4 p.m Fr«. CoII
6-15-6878.
CERTifiCATE PR0GRA11 IN
-OLOGICAL NURSING
Quality Managemeat Issues
for Long·Tfrm Care, Mary
Finnid... SchooJ of Nursmg To

earn ttn1ficate. nu ~ mU5l
ha,·e alttnded fh·e ~~sions.
South Campus. 4:30-7:30 p.m.
SSO per moduJe. To register, caII

829·3291.

Hturicuo: u ()pontia&amp; Sys..,. for Scalablo Sbarod
M""'O&lt;)' Mubl.,.._...,
Michael Stumm. Univ. of
Toronto. 228 Natural Sc:.iences
It Mothematic:s Complex. North
Campus. 3-4: 15 p.m. Call
645·3180.

·--

El&amp;CT1IICAL AND COIIPVTEJI
~CAI.BPAN

Pbolooic: Swllc:bin&amp; Ia 1'llrft
Dh'lsioas: Space, nm., and
Wa.........b, Prof. Ridtard A.
Thompson. Univ. of Pittsburgh.
110 Knoa. North Campus. 3-4
.Call645-2422 x2135.

p.m.

-

DV-OF
-ICBHIIINAII

A Ullif"ood Tbeo&lt;y or Coo.... plioo SmDCJthiac and As5ltt Rrt1ll1U l.a a.a Etndeat
Mtubt, Thomtts Cosimono.
Univ. of N01.re Dame, 280 Part.
Nonh Campus. 3:30p.m.
I'IIYBICSHIIINAIISimulatlac Qua.atum Aotlfrrro.ma.pd.s, Dr. Mart. KvaiC.
McMaster Univ. 20S Natural ·
Sciences and Mathematics Com·
pl~x . North Campus . 3:4.'5 p.m.
Call645~3 14.
CHEIIISTIIY COUDQUIUII
Wboa C.. foleallar Modelia&amp; Be TnlSI&lt;cl! Esamples
Str&lt;OCibs ond Pitfalls, Prof.
David Pearlman. Vencx Pharmaceultcal,, ~tunl Sci·
t.nce5 &amp; Mat
ics Comple:r..
North Campus. 4 p.m.

or

AT THE-VIES
The Blue Kite. UUAB film
series. 201 Studen1 Umoo.
Nortb Campu•. ~~and 9 p.m.
S2. $3.50. Call64 2957.

CENTEJI -THE ,..rs
-I'UTIYA&amp;.
Sc:.-....iap-Zonu I.e rna;
Razor Blades; Tho flid&lt;tr,
Hollis Framptoo: Paul Sbsrits:
Tony Conrad. Center for the
Aru. North Campus. 7 p.m.
S3.50 event: $7 wcdc&lt;:nd. Call
645-ARTS .

AT THE IIOVIU
Utile Buddba. UUAB film
series. 201 Student Union.
North Campus. 6:30 p.m. S2.
SJ.50. Call645-2957.

-

DnDIIIA-.-.u FOUl
AU Jevels. all welcome. Partners

ROADS- IHEATEJI

Mouatai.n Tales and Music.
Ujima Theater Company. 8 p.m
Sl5. Sl2. SIO.

not needed. 2 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 8-11 p.m. Free. Spon·
sored by Graduate Student As·
sociatioo.

. -AilE-

SILVDIIAN READING
18th Annual Oscar Sllverm.a
P..try Readiac. Richonl
Howard. 2SO Baird HalL North
Campus. 8 p.m.
AT THE IIOVIQ
Tho Blue Kile. UUAB film
series. 201 Student Union.
North Campus. 9: 15p.m. S2.
SJ.50. Caii64S-2957.

....

- T i l l s oM Millie.
Ujima
~. 8 p.m.
$15.$12. SIO.

_._

ADHD: CoalnMnleo Ia

---1111-

Bulralo Pbilhanoonic Or&lt;JJG.
Ira and lbo BPO Cborvs. Preperfonnance talk by Maximi100
Vollies 11 7:30p.m. ~nter for
the Aru, Mainstage. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.

PLAY

CBJnD
-I'UTIYAL

~-a-rnded

Flolth, Henry lesioob. C......
for the An&amp;. Nutb Campus. 9
p.m. $3.50""""' $7-......
CaJI645-AitTS.
AT T i l l WIDy w-and 111o
laic: l'lldo&lt;J'. UUAB film oeriel. 201 Slltdent Unioo. North
Campus. 11 :45 p.m. $2. S3.50.
Cal164l-2957 .

a.--

SATURD4Y

1~

_.TLAIIUNIIIIIAII
lavadon oflbo Groat Laktr.
Zobnt Munok and otbor Uo....,...,. G...u. Speaken from
Cornell Univ, BuffoloSta~e
Colleae. U.S. Filii It Wildlife
Service. Ontario Ministry of the
Environment. and the New York
Sea GranL Advanced rc:serva.
tions are required. 104 Knox.
North Campus . Doy-lon&amp;. S5 fee
coven colTer blab. Call
645-2088.

---a.a-

Loanal.o&amp; to Lovo Your Body
(N"rll). Women only. 415
Capea. North Campus.
1~11:30a.m.

--LaSalle.

IIEN'S._IIUT

SL
Alumni Ar9a Natalorium.
North Campus. Noon.
-'8-IIUT

SL ~LaSello.

Alwnni Arma NllMOrium.
North Campus. Noon.
-TliEATEJI
MOillllaio Tales and Musk.
Ujima Theoter Company . 3 p.
and 8 p.m. Sl5. Sl2. SIO

CBJnD - , . , . AltTB
-FUnVAL

~Salt;

n.. Art or MotDO&lt;)';

Plu.rhva, S&amp;eiu Vasulk.a;
Woody Vuulka; .Peler Wcibet
Center for the Ans. North Campus. 7 p.m. SJ.50 event; S7
wcel::end. CaJI645-ARTS .
PLAY

Brilliaol Tracos. Di""'t&lt;d by

GeraJd Fmoe1an. Black Box
Theattt. Center for the Ans.
Nonh c.,.,..._ 8 p.m. S5. SI O. $7.

,-..r

CEXTEJI TltE AltTB
--A.l
Scroatiap-Waterwavos:
Time Horizon; Temple; TV
Tubn; llllprovbioas; Rejuw--n:atioa; Solst.iee; Coacurreou;
NLeops; Every Month a Lu·
..... Coot; Maya. A.odrej
Zdravic; Vibete Sorrnson. Cen
ter for the Ans. onh Campus.
9 p.m. S3.50 &lt;'"Cot; $7 weekend
Call 645·ARTS .

1l

_,_,__

a.,_

Fodmtaaa, William

s , . -, udlmn&amp;

FddaaL Pan or Wednesdays
at 4 Plw poetry and prose series. Screeniag Room. Center
for the Ans. North Campus .
3p.m.froe.

CBJnD- TltE AltTB
-FUnVAI.

Brilliaal Traces. Di-..t by

Scnoala&amp;-Tho Iavisibie City,

Gerald Finnegan. Black Box

James Blue. Ccn~er for the Ans.
North Campu•. 7 p.m. S3.50

Theo~ Center for the AIU.
Nonh Campus. 8 .m. S5. SIO. S7.

�even&lt;: $7 weeteod. Call
64S-ARTS.

----.---AliTa

Scnabop-VIo Olo!; Cn&lt;t~--AI.

iap ,._ Old ....... Julie
lando: Ellea Spiro. Center for
lhe AJU. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m.
Sl.SOevet&gt;~ ; $ 7 -- Call
64S-ARTS.

I'UY
BrilliaDI Trocos. Dir&lt;C1ed by
Gerald Fi11.1epn. Br.clt Bol
Thea~. Ceacer for 1hc AJU.
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. SS. SIO,

-

-~

y _ , ll'o All Abooot
Powor, leo Hayden. Secoad

tcss:ioa Nov. IS same time.
Sponsored by lnstiwce for Ad-

dictions Su.cfieo and Training.
Ceaca for Tomonow. Nonh
Campus. 8 :~S a.m.-3:30p.m.
IU $100. For rcaJIImioo informotioD eaii64S-6140.

-""-... _
Non.b Campus. Noon- I p.m.

~ EIJ«ta Ia S.per....lld.... Prof. Denno!

correy. 219 FroocuL Nonh
Campus. 3:4S p.m.

Aalatenlowor'a P&lt;np«~J ..

tM1 tM ltttcniew, A. Marie

Bulaer. 7-9 p.m. Call64S-61 2S
10

rc&amp;Jsce:.

-Ll~Cn.

TUESD AY

$7.

I,_JoloaW. C_,....DIItlo.
IMt1lro Se.ria: tlot CnollelllotSIIoo-

...- vwo.a

.......~_,-,c-

1a

ON DA

14-

PIDIA~C-NiikE

o..n-1ew orcbu.o.-~ Ar-

lhritls, Joan Calldos, M.D.
Main Conference Room. Mete'y
Hospilal. 8:30 a.m.

-~

S olulioD-FocaJ&lt;d Tbenpy,
witb Afrlcaa Am&lt;ricaa Clitllls, Dr. Marlene WIWOft.
Sponsored by Social Wort Coa-

tinuin&amp; Educalion: continues oo
Nov. IS. Wick Center. Daemen

College. $60, S3S
ID). Cai164S-6140.

n1 wilh

~-­

NICfTAL

Vok:t Recital Susdeots of G ary

Burgeu. Sylvil Dimiriaoi, and
Daniel McCabe. Baird Rc:c:ital
Hall. Nonh Campus. Noon. No
admission c:!wF-

--

-ueatMIID

Moa Wltbout Doles by J ....
Willis. B 83, Cenler for lhe Arts.

7

...

JIOpilor, Heidi B . ~

~~~51

encea It Mathemotica Compla.
Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. Free.

- - A I A e l t o i Modlo AmMudalllllty. Paneliau
include Slephen Bell Brian
Meyer, Jacquie Walt&lt;r; leroy
Smith will madenue. Sponsored
by the UB Alwnoi Astoc:Wioo.
Hyau Re&amp;eaey Buffalo. Nonh
Campus.I 2: 1S-2p.m. SIO.
............. $12. ....members:
Includes lund&gt;. Call 129-2601.
--.&amp;.PABatAW

-

D r• ....,_., M ltdodL Univ. of
Nonh Carolina. Chapel HiD.
Hilleboe AudiiOI'ium. RI'CI.
12:30p.IIL

-Ll~Cn.

, , . J . . w. c-por p ldonl Vloltlac '-«tare Seria: the CnoU ., .... .,w,..~_,-

' c - ..

Jopkor, Heidi B. Hamsne~
Ph.D .. Mmaebuseus IDsL oC
TochnolosY. 201 S1udeo1 Uaiool.

WEDNESDA Y

16
---u..a

CEinDI
O .V.Ioplaa lladal I&lt; ElluUc
ldeotlty. I~SE Studen1 Unioo.
Nonh Campus. Noon -I p.m.

Nonh Campus. 2 p.m. Free.
-YLIICn.
Cen-datioD el AD&lt;Ieat Vok:aoic.uba: A~Ap­
_ . , for the Solutioo olTKIODic: Problosu, Dr. Soo11
Samson, Syracuse Univ. 210

Microsoft Combo Packs

Natural SciCDces and Malhematics Compla. Nonh Campus.
3:30p.m. Caii 64S-6&amp;00 &gt;6100
for information.

--./ Word --./ Excel
--./ PowerPoint --./ Mail
--./ Access-.... u-

..__AL I'OETIIY ~
ADDo Portopl aDd Olivier
Cadio&lt;. New poeu from Frana:.
112 Crn~er for 1hc Aru. Nonh
Cam~ . 4 p.m. Free. Puc of

Witb NiaotOft Office
1'1-ofeoalooal Pacbc&lt; Ocly

wedftesllays at 4 Plus poelry

and prose scne..

LAW COLLOQUIUII

Mallroat....,llldac.d Cbildbood l'atalitios: lmplic-atioDs

for Prevratio~ Mu.my l.c't'lnt,
Cheryl Compaao. and Jcnrufer
F.......,.. 280 Part. Nonll CampuL 4 p.m. Sponoor&lt;d by ""'
Research Centu for Oiiklren
and Youth, ond lhe Baldy Coo ler for Law and Social Pohcy.

$113 $135 $143
Wmdows

Professional
W'tndows

Macintosh

PIIY._Y._

Hlgb Altituck Cerebnl
Ed.- John Knsney. Ph.D.
108 Shennan. Soo1h Campus.
4 p.m. Call 829-2743

I"'IUMACY SEiliiWt
Karme.o Jeuea. 248 CooU.
Nonh Campus. 4:30p.m.

l

[

1

•

i

[

s

~LEC1UIIE

R...., Worit, Andrea Lecn
Sponsored by lhe School of Architecture and Planning. 30 I
Crosby. Soolh Campus
S:30 p.m. Free.

ATTME-VIU
Maoballan. UUA B film senes.
201 Student Union. North Campus. 6 .30 p.m. S2. S3.SO. Call
64S-29S7.
OPUS: CLASSICS UYE

Works by K.aufmaa. Loy,
Lutoskawski. Robe-rts. aod
Berpmo. Chiron New M ustc
Ensemble, Ithaca. New mu10tc:
group from Ithaca. Allen. South
Campus. 7 p.m. Free. Taped for
broruk:ast the followang Sundl)
a1 4 p.m. by WB FO 8&amp;. 7 FM .

FlUTE D4EUDII£CRAL

flute program reatllrinc
"orb by Copla..ad, T~mann,
Mour1, Debussy, B&amp;ocb and

Bolling. Gretc:hen Rowe. student or M arlene Witnauer. BaJrCt
Recital Hall. Nonh Campus.

8 p.m. Free.

ATTME-VIU
Spood. UUAB fil m serie~. 201
Studcnl Unioo. North Campus.
9 p.m. $2. S3.SO. Call64S-29S1.

. . . . . . . . . . . . WOik ......... .....
Arl exhibit of wOO&lt; by Endi f'o&amp;kollic, an lnslructor of art at UB, will
be on view Nov. 12-March 19 in the Qurchlield-Penney Art Center.
.r!llad "Europa Serle&amp;-:Aiter Crux m; Poekollic's site-specific
instaltalian incWdes painting, llthographs and IOW1d objecla placed
In alcoli8s and on the walls, each &amp;eMng as a distinct gathering
place or altar.
' • ·
·
A native of Boenia. Poskovic's i05lallalion deals-wi1h 1he Impact of religious
ideologies on his heritage, as well as other cultures of 1he world. He uses symbols of 1he four rel'cgions ofhis homeland-Islam. Or1hodox Christianity, Roman
Catholicism and .I!J(Iaism--juxtaposed with architectural fragments 1o under·
score !he idees of coexistenCe and diwrslty.
f'o8kolllc studi8d 111 the School of Applied Arts and lhe.Acadsmy of Fcne Arts
In Sarajello and at Nordmore Folke Hogh Skole in Sumadal. Norway. Hereceived his M.F.A. f(om ljlB In 1993: •

17

AIIT-

Laodoeapes ~lJN. Worts
on paper by Cynthia Hlftd.
Capeo Callery. fifth floor.
Capeo. Nonh Campus. G allery
boun. Througb Dec:ember.

Continued on page 8

Minority rights of smokers
bein d!!_nied, writer says
UB's admomstrat1ve decision to become a non-smokong
campus IS bolh unfaor. onsensouve and repress•ve The
monorl1y rights of smokers are
· bemg denied on the vague name
of pubhc health and alleged ·
safely.
If Jhat decosooo IS rauonal then
the admon1s1ratl0fl should also
1 ) Have the health C~ SUS·
pend all students from cl&lt;iss
anendance and campus pan•c•pat•on 1f they have an
onfluenza or)'Old
2 ) Admihister disciplinary not1ces to any student
who coughs or sneezes in public proXJmity wittioul
covercng up their mouth
3 ) Prohibit the sale and d 1spensaboo of calleoned
coffees on~ampus , Jhe example of hospitals who know
that caffelne.,egallvely effects both the cen1ral nervous
system and CII!Jses h1gh blood pressure
4.) Contract ~I food service operauons wllh a company that will gu~ntee complete use of 'hte· foods,
polyunsaturaled Olls and 100 percent organically grown
fruits and vegetables. In this 1nstance we combat heart
d isease and the poisoning of lakes and walers b y the
use of pesticid es. local natural food CCH&gt;ps would
g ladly supply food service .
What rational p ublic health and safely does a campus w ith two nuclear reactors really represent? A
legacy of nuclear wasre, perhaps b y the waters of Unle
Valley. where real pub lic health and safety are jeopard ized.
The Bulls football team had b igger attendance on the
libertine. smoking atmosphere of Rotary Foeld days. In
the fresh air, no one was hurl, damaged or offend ed b y
the breezes that blew away some occasional second hand smoke.
Unless the administratiOn amend s its policy, my las1
homecoming has been had. and I will simp ly not anend
any future g ames.
A.J.~

�8
miH;oa doll"' gallery. wtudl

CALENDAR
continued from page 7
uaATDyJn1 In Amorica. Dr. R,ochard
T. Hull. T"ocket orden mUSt be
received before ov. 14. CcnlCf
for TC&gt;II10&lt;n&gt;W. North Clii"Rpus.
7:30-9:l!la.m. S8. S9. Call 829·
2608 er write lo UB Alumni
Association, 109 Allen Hall ,
l43S Main Street, Buffalo. N.Y.
14214 for tickei'S.

MAIIAIIEMEHT IIOUNDTUUE
The People Side of Total Quality Manaaemeo~ Thomas J.
Di&lt;O&lt;I. Joan M. Horrigan. Roben W. Mille.-. ond Roben K.

_ Freeland. Fanny' s ReslauranL.
3SOO Sheridan Dr. 8-9:30 a.m.

Sn.GIY--

IIECfTAL
Puausioa Rtt:ital. Stude.nts of
Jan Williams and Anthony

Miranda. Baird Recital

Hall.j

North Campus. Noon. No ad-

mission..
I'IIYIIICa -IIIAII
Diuipative Qu.ao1um Tuna

inc or • Slllcle Orren In Bt,
Prof. Nonnao Birge, Univ . of
MiChigan. 454 Fronczak. Nonh

Campus. 3:30p.m.
AliT IJECTURE

Jim

Stoa~

-

photogmpher. 112

Center for the Art . Non.h Cam ~
pus. 4 p.m. Fr«. Call645-6878 .
aiOLCMIICAL SCIENCES

l nt:eroal Wa\'H &amp; Secondary
Production in 1M Gulf of
MaiM, Dr. Marl: Pattcnon.
Vil'linia lnstituiC oJ Marine
Science. 114 Hochs1ener. North
Campus. 4 p.m.

INRCTIOIH:DNTIIOL

TIIAININII
South Campus. 4-7 p.m. Call the
Officr of Continuins Nur5e
Education at 829· 3291 for registration infonnation.
f"'WWIIACEUTlCS SDIIIIAII

Capillary El&lt;ctr-ophoruis for
Clinical Analysis, Dr. Luis Colon. Dept. of Chemistry. S08C
Cook North Campus. 4 p.m.

PO£TRY DISCUSSAnne Por1ugaland OJh·iu
Cadiot. 990 Oemen.s. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m. Free. Part of
Wednesda)'S at 4 Plus poetry
and prose seric .
CIEfmffCATE l'ftOGIIAII IN
GEJtOHTOI.OQfCAL NUIISIIICI
Sexuality Among Older
Adults, Linda Jarte!lli. School of
Nursing. To earn certificate.

nurses must ruwe anended five
seuions. South Campus. 4:3Q7:30p.m. SSO ptr module. To
register. caJI829-3291.
AliT EXHtaiTIOfl
Jim Stone, Photogr.aphs. Open ·

ing reccpLion. Thereafler gallery
lloun. Through Dec. 15. An
Department Gnllery. Center fo r
the Ans. Nonh Campus. 5· 7
p.m. Free. Call645 -6878.
ATTHEMOYIU
8 I(Z. UUAB film series . 201
Stu~nt Union. Nonh Campus.
6: I 5 p.m. $2. $3.50. Call
645-2957.

DANCE P£RFOIIMAJICE

Monument. Zodi:.que Dance
Company. Directed by linda
Swiniuch. Drama Theatre, Cen ter for the Ans. Non.h Campus.
8 p.m. SIO. S5. and S1 groups .
MUSIC

Fidelio, Beethoven• only opera, 1bc Greater Buffalo Opera
Company. Gary Burgen will
present a pre-pc.rfonnance talk
at 7:30p. m. Center for the: Ans.
Mainstogc:. North Campus. 8
p.m. $35. S30. $26.50. S22.50.
ATTNEMOVIU
Speed. UUAB film sc.ries. 201
Student Unton. Nonh Campus.
9 p.m. S2. $3.50. Call645-2957.

EXHIBITS
CEUMATE TilE AIITS
Thc Center for t.hc Arts Grand
Opening Festival runs lhrougb
November 19 aod features
something for the artist in everyODe: an exhibits, dance. thea&amp;.cr.
music. lectures and film screen ings. An ambitious new SSO-

wiU ~· yeac-round schcduk of~~nhibitioo .

makes its debua durina tht festival Call 645-ARTS for event
information.

"fAmiiN _ , . . . ..Faith in Doubt: A Speculation

on the Function of Humor in
Coottmporuy Arf' continues 1n
Univenity Galleries I ond II.
Center for the Am. Nonh Campus. The free exhibit. which
rum through Dec. 23 andre-

sumes Jan. 3- t4 . 199S. is open
from 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Wedoesdays--Saturdays, and Noon-

S p.m. oa Sundays.

NOTICES

throogh Nov. 18 in 199 P:trl:
Hall on 1he orth Campu The
screc.nina tab about five mtnutes. and are open to studc:n
and all mt.mbe of the community. Houn are Monday from
1-5 p.m_ Tuesdays and Wedr&gt;U·
days from 3:30-5 p.m., and Fri dlyli from 12:3()..3 p.m. For in·
formation. call 835-8382.

-

~ASSOCIATION

The Student Association will
provide an Acces ibility BOOlh
on Tuc.sd1ys and Thursdays
from I0 a.m. to 2 p.m in 1ht
Studen1 Unton. The booth will
feature Student Association representative who wiU be presat
to answer ludcnts' questions
about rhe Student Association.
ZDIIAS INVADE MEAT
LU(U

-TDSI'EAII
ATW
Hcicti B. Hammd. 1'!1.0•• princi·
pal resc.arc:h scienti51 at MasSI·
ehusc.tts lpst. of Tec:hnoJogy and
leader of the Hubble Space
Telescope team that investigated
Jupiter's atmospbtric response
to coiJisions, will give two lectures this week as pan of the:
1994 John W. Cowper Distinguiibcd Visiting Lecture Series:
a public lccwre at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. IS. in Room 225 of
the Natunl Sciences:&amp;. Mathematics Complex and a technlcaJ lecture: at 2 p.m. on Wednesday. Nov. 16 in Room 201 of
lhe Student Union . Both are on
the: North Campus and are free
and open to tbe public.
AWUE l'ftOGIIAII OfFERS
ASJISTANCE

The AWARE program ofTen
free ais.istaoc:e in cutting down
drinking for moderate: to hea''Y
drinkers ages 21-SS who arc: not
alcoholics. Participants will be.
paid for compleling the 8· 10
week sessions and will receive a
free medical exam. The program
requires the: involvement of a
spouse, partner or friend. Call
887 -2573.
EIIPIRE STATE I'UIIUC

~­

ASSISTANCE

Otildren of union represented

ond ManagemeniiConfidenlial
State: employees in lhc: Executive Brancb agencies who have
graduated from high school or
received a GED diploma and
plan to attend a college or uni venity in New York State arc
eligible for tht 1995 Empire:
State. Public: Employees Scholarship Program. Up to 12 scholarships. each equivalent to around
S8.800. will be awarded on the
basis of academic e-.cellencc .
Awards are conting~t on legislative funding made available by
the 1995 session of the New
Yo rk Stale legislature. Call
1-800-836-6731 for an applica·

~';;~~~~':ea":',~!~~o;:~:;·
16. 1995.
llllblNAnoNAL FOLK
DANCIIICI
All are we-lcome 10 joi n the In ternational Folk Dancing group
eac:h Friday from 8-11 p.m. in
2 Diefendorf H aU on the South
Campus. Tbesc: free: sessions
begin with teaching. Pannc.rs
are not needed. lbc sponsor is
the Gnduate Student Association.
~

IIOUIIIIT TO SIIAJIE

11IANKSGIVIffCI MEAL
1bc: UB Office of International
Students and Scholar Services

seeks individuals or families
who would like to share their
lbanksgiving meal with one or
more UB foreign students in the
Tila.nksgiving-meal program.
The host individual. couple, or
family must be able to provide
their gucst(s) with transportation
to and from the meaL Some
students are single, while others
may have a spouse and/or young
children: every effort is made to
matc:h students with hosts who
share similar intrrests. All of the:
students. many of whom are
enrolled in graduate programs at
\m, are fluent in Engl ish. Those
interested in volunteering for the
foreign student host program
should call645-2258.

-·Y--?

1be Swdent Association is con ducting free hearing-scrcening1

r

U.bnl mu sels. d.c spiny water
llca and Olher unwanted g~ts
arr the: topic of a day-long Great
l.akn Program scmanar to be
held on Saturday. Nov. 12, in
104 Kno• Hall on the onh
Campw:. A S.S fcc eow:rs coffee

breaks: advance reservations arc
required. Cali 645-2088 .
WANTD: HEALTHYUB seeks healthy women between the •ges of 18 and 45
with premenstrual syndrome
symptoms to participate in a
study. Those eligibk will receive free trealme.nt, if warMinted. For more information.
call 898-5446.

JOBS

~~~te

ProfessorComputer Scieoce. Posting IF41 03. Assislani/Auociat• Profe.ssor~Meling and
Educational Psychology, Posting MF-4104 . Assislani/Associ·
ate ProfHSOr...Coun~ling and
Educ:ationll Psychology, Posting MF-4105. Assista.n.I/Associ·
ale Proli - r-EducationaJ (),..
ganiz.ation, Administration and
Polocy. Posling MF-4106. AssocU.tefFull ProftsSOr-l..eaming
and lnstruclion, Posting tF4107. Assistant/Assodate Profcuor- Leaming and lns:t.ruction,
Posting ftF-41 08. Profuser and
Cbainnan (Medk:i.ne}Anatomy and Cell BtOIQ!y.
School of Medicme and Btomedical Sciences. Posting IFF4109. AssistatU Professor-B iologkal Sciences. Faculty of
Natural Sciences and Mathcmattes. Posti ng tF-4110. Assistant/
Associate/full Professor (four
positions available)-School of
Nursing, Posting IF-4111 .

The Chronicle in Cyberspace
Fer-- .r- ..... tM ...._.. to 1he ChroniCle of Highef
EdUCBtlon you might be Interested Ill their Internet publicalion Academe
This Week (A TW). Though riot the lulllext ol 1he Chronicle, A 7W, whictl
is published every Tuesday at noon.
presents summaries of its articles,
deadlines for fe!Jowshlps, grants, Institutes and workshops, notification of
upcOITllllg academic ,_~ngs . and a
listing ol best-selling books in college

ElECTRONIC
!Jir_ll

Mlur

.
\\" \''
.o=-~~)

bookstores
A 7W also provides you with the opportunity to look up poslllon openings
:
worldwide both in and out ot academe. You are gr19111he choica to
search the listings by categOry such
as "facuny and research positions· or
you can put in your own search word. For example. by entering the
word "dean" in the Nov. 2 A7Wone obtains 149 job listings.
For those who want facts and statistics related to higher education at

=

their flllQ8rtlps A 7W offers "Facts and F~gures on U.S. Higher Educa·
tion." Based on the "Almanac Issue" oi1Jle Chronicle, this section presents general U.S. demographics. numbers of colleges and universities
by lype, facully salaries, student enrollment data, and educational funding statistics. The source ol each statistic is given at the end of each

category.
The Annenberg/Corporation for Pu\&gt;fiC Broadcasting Project. whictl
has been supporting programs that use telecommunications to improve
the qualily and accessibilily of higher education since 1981 , contributas
its own menu of informalion to A 7W. Menu Hems include grant program
updates. inf()fTil8tion on the American Cinema S8fies { cOO-.plete with the
opportunity to enter a movie trivia contest). a flsmg of educationalllideodisks and cd-roms, and a description of the "New Pathways to a Degree Program."
To r§ad A 7W, type . . . . . at your campus E-mail sccount system
prompt. then select "Faculty and Staff lnfonnation, • then "Acacleme, 1he
Chronicle of Higher EductJtiotb • Those who want to gopher directly to
A7Wcan use the foflawing address&lt;~.
---Gemma

DeVi'!ney and Loss PeqtJeflo Glazier. Lockwood Llbraty
~

1"

RUEAIICH
Informal ion Systems Sp«ialist-Family Medicine, Posting
MR-94091 . Re.search Labor.tory Worker-Biochemical
Phannacology. Posting MR94093 .
f'tiOfEUIOIIAL

Ttchnical Support SpeciaUst
(SL-4)~ntcr for Educational
Resources and Technologies,
Posting MP-4070. Assisbiut
Dean (SL-5)-University Dc\'elopmenl, Posling MP-4086. Systems Analysl (SL-3)-Account·
ing &amp;: Payroll Services. Posting
jP-4()92. Machine Shop Suprrvisor (SL-4)-FNSM Dean 's
Office. Posting MP-4093. LAN
Systems Progr.mmer Analyst ·
(SL-3)-Compuling &amp; lnfonna .
lion Technology, Posting NP4095. Programmer Analyst
(SL-J, Internal Promotional
Opportunity)-Computing &amp;
Information Technology. PostingNP-4096.
C-PEmiVE CLASSIFIED
CML SEIIVICE

Caleulalions Clerk I (SG~­
Srudent Accounts. Line 130426.
Inrormalioo Processing Spe-ciaJist I (SC-9)-Personnel Services. line 143192.
L.AaOit CWSIRED CIVIL
SEIIVICE
CJeaner (SG-5)-University Facilities. Custodial Services. Line
01574 .

To obtain more informotion on
jobs listed obove, contact Pusonnrl Srrvices, /04 Crofts
Hoi/. "

R!ll
SM

~·

�_..,.._._..,_ ...

9

~turesbips,

exhibitions, honors put
English Department members in spotlight

I)' PATIIICIA - A l l

lUred recently at Alfr¢ University and
Brigham Young University. He spent a good
EVERAL MEMBERS of the
deal of time thi s summer working as a story
UB Department of English
consult and writerforactorDustin Hoffman.
have been honored recently
In connection with this, Jackson worked
with invited readings. exhibiundercover in a Los Angeles hospital emertions. distinguished lecturegency room.
ships and noteworthy literary prizes.
• Updated versions of lectures delivered
• Charles Bernstein, David Gray Chair
at Johns Hopkins University by Jackson and
in English and a noted poet. editor and critiDiane Christian, professor of English. apcal theorist, recently gave readings and lecpear in the current issue of the journal Visual
tures at a conference on contemporary
Sociology. Christian 's lec1ure is titled, "'"HisAmerican poetry at England's Universit y of
tory and Film;" Jackson 's "New Social HisSouthampton, at Cambridge University and
tory and Documentary."
in London. He also has made recent presen• Susan Howe, professor of English and
tations at the international Association for · one of the country's most innovative poets
Philosophy and Literature in Edmonton,
and literary critics. has returned home after a
Alberta; the Academy of American Poets in
year at the University of Denver. where she
New York. where he read with UB colleague
held a visiting endowed chair in the an.s.
Susan Howe. and at the Kootenay School of
During that time, she was the keynote speaker
Writing in Vancouver.
at the Southern Atlantic Modem Language
News Bureau Stall

Bernstein 's professional appearances in

Association Convention in Atlanta. and one

the last few months also include presentations at the Center for Book Arts in Minneapolis and at Miami Uni
"tyofOhio at a
conference on -rhc ReUUn of the PoetCritic." He soon will head for the University
of Pennsylvania and the University of Virgini a. where he will dcliverthePeterRushton
Lectures on Contemporary Literature.
• Victor Doyno, professor of English and
nationally regarded Marie Twain scholar,
was' Disti ngu ished Academic Schol"!" in
Residence at the Elmira College Centel for
Mark Twain Studies Spring, 1994 Lecture
Series. Doyno is also president of The Marie

of the readers for "The Republic of Verse: A
Marathon of 19th Century American Poetry
and Song" at the Unterhcrg Poetry Center of
the 92nd St. "Y" in New York City.
She also read or delivered papers at the
Iowa Writers' Workshop, the University of
California at Berkeley and at Santa Cruz..
She read her poetry at UCLA and was keynote poet at the annual meeting of the Ameri-

Twain Circle. a national association ofTwain
scholars and enthusiasts.
• Broce Jackson, SUNY Distinguished
Professor of English and director of the UB
Center for Studies in American Culture.lec-

can Comparative Literature Association.
She was visiting Brittingham Scholar at
the University of Wisconsin, Madison. and
was a visiting poet for the -University of
Arizona creative writing program.
In May, she read with Charles Bernstei n
at the Academy of American Poetry in New
York City and was one of four writers who
read their work and lectured at the ninth
annual Spring Literary Festival at Ohio Uni·

versity in Athens.
Two of her books. "The Birth-mark:
Unsetting the Wilderness in American Literary History" and -rhc Nonconformist's
Memorial,'' were chosen as 1993 International Books of the Year by the Ti~s Uttr-

ary Suppl•mmt.
Last month, Howe read her poems and
conducted a literary workshop at George
Mason University
• Joan Copjec, associate professor of
Engli h. has an architectural project designed
with noted architect and critic Michael Sorkin
on exhibit at Ohio's WexnerCenter for the
Arts, through Dec. I I.
The show, titled "House Rules," teamed
theorists and architects who produced draw; ng and a model of a house based on a
theoretically and politically articulated notion of social grouping. A special issue of the
architectural journal. Assemblag•. was published to document the show. The journal
includes photographs ofthe designs and theoretical and polemical essays that defend them.
• Ray Federman, SUNY Distinguished
ProfessorofEnglish and comparative literature and Meloijia Jones Chair in French,
received the 1994-95 Pushcart Prize for his
story. "The Line." which was published in
the Alaska Review Quanerly. It will appear
in the "Pushcart Prize Anthology" to he
published this month. The Pushcart Prize is
awarded to the best contemporary poetry,
fiction and essays from the small press world.
Federman, an internalionally recognized
poe~ fiction writer and critic, also published
two pieces of fiction. "Stepmothers" and" A
Story About a Story Within a Story." in the
last issue of The Iowa Revitw. These works
also were published in the "Iowa Anthology
of Innovative Fiction."

'J

Pearl Primus, dance
pioneer, fonner director of
Cora P. Maloney Q&gt;Uege
-dancer, r-.
• ........, 'I} known
c:IJor!o&amp;rapher and anthropolosilt. doed
a her home in New Rochelle, N.Y.
Primus, 74. was director of Cora P. Moloney
College a UB from 1982-84.
Following studies in Hunter

Oct. 29

College..Columbta nivasity
andCityColtectof ew Vorl&lt;.

where
IIC

me nmcd her doctoo--

in educauonal oociology

and ancbropolof;y. Primus did
e:x:tensive rnearch in Africa.
She lived
!he people of
African vJIIages and sc:udled

""h

thear custom s and d.anceL
"Movement is language." me said in a 1983
R~porru 11ticle. ''In Africa. you're tested 10 see
00.. you ar&lt;, how you move When I teach 1
danct class. I can understand more abou1 you
th3ll you do · A native of Trinidad. PriJT~US
fouoded the Peart Primus Dana Language lns.irutr in ~w Yod. Cily wnh her husband. dancer
Percival S. Bonle. Pnmus. "'-110 loured with ""Show
Boat. .. danced m opera and on Broadway.
Performance was pan of the dancer's plan to
itreu the ans 11 UB as a means of communication. "P&lt;ople who remove themselves from other
wolid peoples are selling lhcmselves short." me
told !he R&lt;porru. "Through !he uu. people can
understand Olher people...
'Wh1le at UB . Primus li ..·ed in the dorms . to get
in touch with the audenUi . ··r feel u if I'm
surrounded by life."' she said at that time. ''I sleep
well in the midst of stereos. I wouldn 't want an
off-campus opanmen1 now. I'd be 100 lonely.·
She wore t.raditionaJ Oowi•g African dress made
by her adopted sisters in Nigeria. " I don ' t study
culture.- Primus said. .. I become a pan of it...
One of Primus' s best known workJ: was
'"S1nn.ge Fruit... , woman's reaction to lynching.
Two of her ~ "The Weddinf' and
"fanga." based on African ceremony. were performed in Lincoln Center by !he Alvin Ailey
Dance Company. "Fanga"liso ~·aspetfonned a1
UB. with Pnmus herself dancing the ballet with
Depanment of Theatre and Dance peBOOncl. -

1n.July199A. ~of~P/Shoemol&lt;er-~9
plunged into Jupiter , _ a period of ...-a! days.
Dr. Hammel, a principal research scienijsl at the
Massachusetts lnslihtle of Technology, led the leom
that used the Hubble Space Telescope to image Jupiter
before, during, and after
impnds to search foootmospheric phenomena cr8Died during the a&gt;llisians.
AI balh lectures, Dr. Hammel · shaw and explain the
spectocular images of the camel'• impnds token by the
Hubble Space Telescope. 11-.ese images include the fiery
plumes the ielesoope deleclod, oame of which reached
heigh!&gt; of A,OOO lcilomeien. Pictut-M of Hying debris,
frogmen!&gt; of the shattered camel and other otmospl-ic
phenomena that oslr""""""' are sliU trying to under-.l
will be shown. The NaYember 15 lecture wiU be suitable to a
generol audience and the NaYember 16 lecture will be mot-e suitable
foo- a leclmicol audience .

..................c
Siegfried Company, Inc. ond lho On-in FOSler l.edure Fund

�_..,..__..,_SAl

•

Vi

Sports
F'ootblll

The Environmental Impact
of Urban Transportation
8J - D F. ZAJUIZEWAI

lhe system. Tbe indirect impact

of energy we can remain COCJ:~­

T

is: I) The consumption of energy. 2) lhe acquisition of land
for highways and parking lots.
and 3) lhe water pollution caused
by constructions of the Iauer, and
by the augmented water runoff

petitive with other indu&lt;trialized
countries only by keeping the
cost of energy low. As it is now.
lhe cost of energy considers

O BEGIN WITII. let

in

mOs1

us review brieOy lhe
historical events that
led to the recent status
of urban transportation
American cities, includ-

ing Buffalo. The introduction in
I908 by Henry Ford of lhe

Model T put America on wheels.
Whereas before, automobiles
were: expensive toys of lhe
weahhy, they became now easily
accessible to many. Yet, the
newly acquired mobility of ordinary citizens dill not affect the

transponatjon system in American cities. There were clecuic
trolleys. mostly operated by

electric utilities. and there were
suburba trains. One could get

almos1 anywhere within the city
or to the suburbs by using public

transponation.
It was not until !he mid-1930s
that the desire for more profit by
a few greedy corporati ons lead to
the dismantling of th"\well-func-

tioning public transportation. ln
1935 the U.S. Congress, acting to

enforce the Shennan antitrust
law. requested that elecuic power

companies divest themselves of

from paved surfaces. Since. we

neither the environmental damage caused by mining, transportatjon and burning the fuels. nor

depend for energy almost exclusively on fossil fuels. lhe energy
efficiency should weigh heavily

lhe damage to our health. It is
estimated that in the Midwest !he
crop losses due to ozone drifting

in decision making. In addition
economic and national security
reasons, there are also environ-

about $5 billion annually. The

mental reasons for saving energy.
For once. the amount of air pollutants is directly related to the
quantity offuel burned. In addi-

tion, mining and transportation of
fossil fuels have also a negative
impac1on the environment.
The amount of air pollutants
emiued by a light rail, a bus and

bus business. Now their goal was
achieved; the public's depen-

dence on automobiles was assured.
Ever since. three generations
of Americans ha ve grown up in
the era of automobile culture:.
There arc: some who firmly be-

lieve that there is no other mode
of urban transponation but a
private automobile. With the
destruction of viable public transponation began the demise of

American cities. First the

GRAMS OF POLLUTANTS per 100 pa••enger-k llometer.

-·-xi-

-

rr.._.tat~ot~

Rail (55 passengers)

2

- 169
934

The inefficiency of an automobile in urban-suburban setting
becomes apparent when one
compares lhe energy efficiency
of these three modes of urban
transponation . Whereas a light
rail requires 640 BTU per passenger per kilometer. a bus and a
car require 690 and 4580 BTU,
respectively. At the same time a
light surface rail is able 10 transpon 50,000 passengers per hour
whereas a bus can handle 30,000
passengers. and a car only 8.000
per lane of traffi c. The data published in the Stott of tht World
1990 indicate that only 29.7

percent of our driving is for recreational purposes. We may
assume that pan of this is urban
driving, such as going 10 a show
or a game, the rest may be a

weekend ouling or vacationtravel. The remaining driving,
that involves commuting home to
work (35.5%). shopping
( 12.75%) and personal business
(22.05%). is all i n cities and/or
suburbs.

weal thy moved to the suburbs.
Then the businesses f ollowed.
The suburbs began to grow at the
expense of valuable farmland.

(except for Canada) the U.S.A.

and the inner-cities were left to
the poor and minorities. Apart
from social repercussions of this

leads the industrialized word in
the per capita use of gasoline.
Whereas Gennans and Japanese

polarization, now we are paying
the price in lhe excessive con-

consume 2 15 and 125 gallons per
year per person, Americans use
485 gallons. Our heavy depen-

sumption of energy, in the environmental despoilment, 3nd as a
result of the latter. in our health.
When comparing the environmental impact of di fferent modes
of urban transponation one has to
consider the direct and the indirect impact. The direct impact is
the amount of air pollutants emitted in the process of operating

spend taxpayers' money on conrather than on much less ex pen-

spiracy of General Motors, Stan dard Oil o f California. Philips
Petroleum, Firestone Tire: &amp;
Rubber and a bunch of minor

was completed, they divested
themselves of the unprofitable

planners. business leaders and
politicians remain bli.nd 10 these
fac ts. Why do tly:y prefer 10

in the table below.

Car (1 passenger)

destruction of lhe electric transit

American Lung Association
estimates lhe annual health cost
due 10 air pollution caused by
motOr vehicles at between $4.5
and $92 billion .
II makes me wonder why our

struction of expensive highways

Bus (45 passengers)

opponunity 10 augment their
profits. Gradually !hey bought
out the transit system. city by
city, and under the pretexts of
modernization. they tore down
the installations and replaced
trolleys with buses. When the

from the cities to rural areas are

by a private automobile is shown

the transportation business. So,
the systems went on sale. A con-

companies saw now a golden

10

Therefore. it is no wonder that

dence on automobiles is also
reflected in the overall energy
inefficiency. The energy consumption in the U.S.A . is 6 met-

ric tons of oil equivalent per
S 1,000 of the GNP. In Germany
and Japan the corresponding
values arc: 3. 1 and 2.9, respectivel y. With such inefficient use

-·

-....

V-Ie
~lc

~-

43

02

95

12

126

130

sive, and environmentally
friendly rapid transit? Why don't
they learn from the California

experience? Road construction
solves transponation's problems
only temporarily; new and wider
highways invite more traffic and
after a few years we are again
where we slaned. Why do we
have to wait until a CaJifomiatype transponation crisis arises
before we smanen up? Many
ci ties in the U.S.A. already woke
up 10 the reality, and arc: rebuild-

ing their public transpon.ation
system. Why can't we in Buffalo

rebuild ours lhus preventing the
crisis ahead of time? It is time
that we emerge from the

non sustainable automobil~ cul-

rurt and step into the 21 Sl century with new ideas of
sustainable living.
Sigmund F. Zakrzewski is professor emeritus of pharmacology,
University at Buffalo Roswell Park

Graduate Division.

The Bulls wound up their season wrth a loss as second ranked
Youngstown State continued its quest for a lourth straight Divosoon
1-AA championship, defeating the University at Buffalo 27-3 in the
rain Nov. 5 in University Stadium
The Pengutns, who extended their unbeaten streak to 14 games.
held the Bulls to - 10 net yards rushong to raise their season record
to6-0-1 .
Buffalo (3--6) lound themselves traoling 21-0 with 9 ·17 sbll on the
clock in the first quarter A fumble by Bulls quarterback Cliff Scon
sel up Youngstown's lorsl score, a three-yard run by taolback
Shawn Penon only 52 seconds onto the game .
Patton. who had-139 yards on 21 carries. pul the Penguons up by
two touchdowns with a 21 -yard run at 10:56 of the quarter.
Less !han two minutes later. defensive back Chris Jones recovered a blocked punt on the end zone. The punt by BuJjelo's Gerald
Carlson, which was blocked by defensive back OeWayne Thompson. marked the fourth lime that the Penguins have blocked one
against Carlson in their las! two games against the Bulls.
A 37 -yard Paul Massaro field goal on the second quarter gave
Youngstown a 24-0 halflime lead.
·
The forst quarter proved a ll that the Penguins needed as the only
score by Buffalo was on a 44-yard field goal by Mark Mozrall in the
third quarler.
Bulls senior quarterback Cliff Scon had a tough lime in his final
home game, completing 10 of 28 passes for 100 yards in the bad
weather. Scon also had -29 nel rushing yards. Penguins signal
caller Mark Brungard d idn11are much better as he was 6-16 for 76
yards .

Men's Soc:cer
Under sustained wonds of 30 miles per hour. Central Connectocut
Stale scored a 2-0 voctory over UB on Sunday's M id-Continent Conference men's soccer championship al UB's RAC Field .
CCSU 's Everton Barrington scored the first Blue Devil goal at the
37: 18 mark of lhe match while Chad Hendricks connected on the
second on an assist from Gareth Butcher at the 57 :47 mark. Centra l Connecticut outshot the Bulrs 19-11 as both teams p layed in
wind and rain showers lhat made the muddy condotions of RAC
Field even worse.
UB head coach John Astudillo said after the match. "I think the
condotions dictated a lot of the p lay. It was a very basic game. JUSt
gel the ball down the field aS quockly as we can and they d od tl
more often than we did . We hung in toght, tried to come back in the
second hall. I thought there were a couple of things we could have
done beHer and we dodn't but on any case it was a good season. a
Vf'ry good season."
\
Bl!ffalo goalkeeper Jay Palmer stopped eoghl shots the match
while Anthony Sardo tallied four saves to record his se~d shutout of the tournament.
With the victory. the B lue Devils advance to the Play-on round of
the NCAA Tournament against lhe champion of the M idwestern
Collegiale Conference.
CCSU's Barrington and UB's Ediru Okpewho earned co-MVP
honors for the tournament. Four Bulls-Okpewho, Palmer. Charles
Kadiri , and Solir Tanevs ki all earned All-Tournament recognition .
Earlier in the week, Astudillo was selected as lhe Coach of the
Year. Okpewho. Palmer. Jure Abecic, and Joe Mercik earned First
Team All-Eastern Division honors while Kadiri and Dan Ciolek were
selected to the Second Team.
The Bulls advanced to the Mid-Con finals with their 4-2 victory
over Missouri-Kansas City in the semifinals. After trailing 2-1 )ate in
the second half. Anlony Wright lied the match with a goal with 13
m inutes remaining . Less than two minutes later. Ugo,.ekpewho was
taken down in the M issouri-Kansas City box. Brotfiei' Ediru
Okpewho took the penally shot and scored whal proved lo be the
winning goal. ~tir Tanevski iced the contest with a goal with two
seconds left. (
UB finished their season with an 11-7- 1 mark. thi!ir best since
moving to Division I in 1991.

"r

Volleyball
The Royals trSI(eled to Troy. Alabama for their Mid-Continent Eastern Division clu~er matches. UB dropped the opener Friday night
to host Troy Stai!Nn three games, 15-11. 15-12. 15-10. Candie
Hirst had 12 kills , 11l digs and rove blocks to lead the Royals while
Candi Sims added 21! assists. The following day. UB dropped
matches lo Central Connecticut Stale 11-15, 15-10, 15-7, 15-12
and Youngstown Stale 13-1 5, 15-7, 15-11 ,1 5-6.

Wnastllng
UB opened their wrestling season at the Easlern Michogan Open
over lhe weekend. Anthony Conte, at 156 pounds look fifth place
with a 5-2 mark while George Chamoun was 3-3 at 177 to take
sixth p lace.

Men's Swimming
The Bulls opened their season with a 153-84 victory over Edinboro.
Kevin RemalY. led the way with a victory in the 200 IM in 1:59.61 .
Remaly also teamed with Korey Miller. Kevin Male and Josh
Pieczonka lo take the 406 Medley Relay in 3 :36.22.

Women's SwiniiMC

.

The Royals also downed Edinboro, 146-75, to open the 1994-95
season. Freshman Alexandra Barrera set a school record in the
1000 freestyle fi nishing in 10:39.72. Megan Connolly won two
events for the Roya ls. the 200 IM (2:17.66) and the 200 butterfly
(2:14.02).

�-

...

Facul &amp;stalfBillboard
Nov. 18 conference
will focus on

ener&amp;Y..ntclent office

0

Energy efficiency in the
office will be the subject of
a conference co-sponsored by UB
and Niagara Mohawk Powec
Corp .• to be held from 7:45 a.m.noon Nov. 16. in the Center for
Tomorrow.
The free conference will explore ways that companies and
01her organizations with large
numbers of computers-as well
as telecommuters with home
offices-&lt;:an help reduce consumption of energy and perating
costs, while boosting p uctivity.
''Office equipment is
y
ing comthe nation's fasle$1mercial energy-user," said
· W alter Simpson, UB's energy
officer and a conference coordinator. "Simple changes in compuree-operating behavior and
Pl!rt:hasing practices can resuh in
significanl energy savings," he
said. Among the speakers: Dennis
Elsenbeck, manager of marl&lt;eting
&amp; sales for Niagara Mohawk:
How local utility companies can
help companir &lt;" maximize energy
efficiency and productivity; ~
Cyane Dandrige, computec ex pen
and program designer, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency:
Enecgy Star computecs and other
efficient additions to modem
offices: Bruce Nord~ senior
re~h associate, Lawrence
Beckeley Laboratory, Berkeley.
Calif.: Ways to reduce paper use,
and effects of paper use on office
productivity and efficiency.

lnvestlg.tor of Jupiter
comet to speak

0

The crash of the Shoemaker-Levy 9 comet on
Jupiter last summer will be the
subject of the 1994 John W.
Cowpec Distinguished Visiting
Lecture Series on the Nonh Cam·
pus Nov. 15 and 16.
Heidi B. Hammel, the astronomer who led the Hubble
Space Telescope team that inves-

ligated Jupiter's atmospheric
response to the collisions, will
give two lectures, one geared to a
popular audience and ooe for a
u.:bnical audience. Hammel became familiar to national televi sion audiences as she explained
the comet crash in July.
Sbe wiU show and explain the
spectacular images of the cornet's
impactS taken by the Hubble
Space Telescope. They include
the fiery pl~mes the telescope
detected, some of which reached
heights of 4,000 kilometers.
The popular lecture will be held
at 8 p.m. Nov. 15. in Room 225.
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics (FNSM) Complex.
The technical lecture will be
held at 2 p.m. Nov. 16, in Room
201. Student Union. The lectures
are free and open to the public.
Hammel, a principal research
scientist at Massachusetts lnsti·
tute of Technolozy, received hec
undergraduatedqpee from MIT,
earned her doctorate at the University of Hawaii in Manoa and
completed a postdoctoral position
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena.

Entrepreneurial alumni
··-~lp )

0

Michele Miller, president
of Western New York Family,lnc., is the first recipient of
the Tayl.or Kew Scholarship,
presented by the UB Center for
Entrepreneurial Leadership's
(CEL) Alumni Association.
The $500 scholarship was
designed to benefit an entrepreneurenrolled in the CEL's core
program that assists entrepreneurs
operating medium-sized companies. Miller is a 1993 graduate of
the UB Entrepreneurial Development Program and is enrolled in
CEL's core program for 1994-95.
The scholarship was established in memory of C. Taylor
Kew, who was a volunteer instructor for CEL's core program.
Miller's publication, Western
New York Family Magazine, has

----.-

...

grown from an eight-page newsleiter produced on her kitchen
table into a respected IXImmunity
resouroe. The magazine, now a
monthly newsprint publication of
32-56 pages, focuses on needs
and interests of parents with children ranging in age from newborn to 12. Distributed in Erie
and Niagara counties, h has a
readership of 70,000.

Grellt LllkH 'Invaders'
topic of seminar

0

Zebra mussels and other

unwanted guests in the
lowec Great Lakes will be discussed in a day-long seminar
Saturday, Nov. 12, in I~ Knox
Hall, North Campus. The conference is geared tOWard environmentalists, concecned citiu:ns,
anglers, boaters and students.
In addition to the u:bra mussel. other so-called non·indigenous aquatic species, such as
ruffe and "B.C." -the spiny
water Oea-wiU be discussed.
Sponsored by the UB Great
Lakes Program and the New
York Sea Grant Program, the
seminar will feature lectures on
the history of non-indigenous
species introductions, the ecology
and population dynamics of B.C.
and ruffe in the Great Lakes,'the
ruffe monitoring program and
ecological impacts of u:bra mus·
sels in Lakes Erie and Ontario.
The seminar also will discuss
efforts to mitigate the impacts
that these non-native species have
had on the ecosystem. as well as
effons to slow the spread of these
aquatic invaders.
Speakers are from Cornell
University, Buffalo State College.
U.S. Fish &amp; W ildlife Service.
Ontario Ministry of the Environment and New York Sea Grant.

Mce-11 named
chlllr of
y

0

James E. McConnell,

professor of geography and
director of the Canada-U.S. Trade
Center at UB, has been named

. . . . . . . .......... . . .
9 • 118 irMI8d 10 enter 1he
~lor lhe Aoae Weinallllin Memorial Awwd, sponsored
IJV lhe 1)8 EmerilJs
The NMl honoring lhe memory d 11-e . . Aoae Weinstein, a
fculder allhe cenlef, calls lor a -.ct1 projact ralaled 10
8IUdieB on aging. his open 10 .-.y UB ~« gradu•IIIUdent in good standing who t..
eccepted madegree program. The annual~ &lt;31taa. $200 . - d.
Entrias rrust be wriiiBn or C1'N8d tnitlr lle!L4p8Msion al a
UB I8Clily member and must be aecotna lded in writing by
1hat facully member to lhe Enwjlul-'-11 Carrnittee. Thomas
E. Comolly is ciWmtwl allhe NMl corrmlllee. The wrillen
reconmandalion must be IJI.tllrillllc&amp;by lha last day al Febnlaty.
The flK:olty supervisor allhe project, in ~ wilh the
rules, ·shall testify 10 lhe IICienlilic or tectnologic.al validity allhe
project. or to lha aesthe!Jc or artistic value allhe project, depending on lhe category into wtlich il fils.·
~ed projects must be SIJbmiUed to !he Emeritus Center
Award CormVttee, South Lounge, Goodyear Hal, South
pus, Buffalo, NX 14214.
For further informalion, oontact Connolly at 839-1973.

een.r.

*-'

c.n.

chair of the univecsity' s Depanmeot or Geography for a threeyear teem. A member of the
department since 1968, he
served as chair from 1983-88.
He will continue to direct the
Canada-U.S.
Trade Center,
which has
conducted
resetrch on
the economies
ofNonh
America and
MCCONNELL
has provided
trade-related
assistance to small manufacturing estabUshments within the
Niagara region. He has served as
dirnc:tor since the center·s inception in 1988.
McConnell received the
SUNY Chancellor's Award for
Excellence in Teaching in 1976.
A graduate of Slippery Rock
Stat&lt; College, he earned a
master' s degree from-Miami
University of Ohio and a doctorate at Ohio State University.

TCIE helps company
obtain state grant

0

Exolon-Esk Co. has obtained a state Regional
Economic Development Pannership Program Train ing Grant to
implement employee-training
programs with the assistance of
the Center for Industrial Effectiveness (TCIEl at UB . ExolonEsk. a manufacturer and
distributor of aluminum ox1de.
boron carbide and silicon-carbide
abrasive, me1allurgical and refractory products. will receive
$53.365 under the grant.
TCIE conducted a trainingneeds assessment and created a
lo ng-range lrllining plan for the
company. which wiU implement
these recommendations with the
grant fund . The center "ill
continue as the program's administrator. providing quaJity man·
ages.
"TCIE has made available to
us the type of consultants who
will help improve our competitiven"'ess on a worldwide scale. •·
said Roben Taylor. director of
operations at Exolon-Esk.

Media Study stars In
November series
.For the first time in many
years. a retrospective of
works of representative facuh y.
student and alumni of its Depanmenl of Media Study and the
former Center for Media Studyo:nany of them legends in film

0

and video an-is being held at
UB.
The exhibition, ~Explorations
of the New Media Technologies:
Film, Video, Digital, Center for
Media Study, Univecsity at Buffalo, 1970- I 985." will premiere
Friday through Sunday in the
screening room (Room 112) in
the Center for the Ans. It wiU
travel 10 Europe next year and
then to U.S. museums.
The works are by Hollis
Frampton, Tony Conrad, Paul
Sharits, Steina and Woody
Vasulka, Peter Weibel, and'arnes
Blue whose contributions to film
video and digital media technologies helped to revolutionize the
visual arts in the
All events are open to the
public. Admission is S3.50 per
day. S7 for the entire weekend.
To obtain tickets. call 645-ARTS.
The program begins with
''Zoms Lemma." a film exploration of the alphabet in relation to
iconic forms by the late Hollis
Frampton, pioneering filmmaker,
on the UB faculty from 1973 until
his death in 1984.
It ends with "Greetings from
Out Here," a popular 1993 video
by UB alumna Ellen Spiro. It was
presented at the 1994 Margaret .
Mead Film and Video Festival
sponsored by New York's American Museum of Natural History.
The series includes Tony
Conrad's 'The Ricker." famous
1966 minimalist film described as
a "mathematical and rhythmical
orchestration of black and white
frames" and former fac)lhy member James Blue' s ·'Theltnvisible
City" (1978). a film of his invented~ citywide panicipation in
the construction of wtl.at was once
called "the documentall':' plus
"Summer Salt" (1982) bjo Steina
Vasulka and 'The An of
Memory" by Woody Vasuli.a.
The Vasulkas both taught at
and a retrospecti\'e of their work
opens at the Museum of Modem
An in San Francisco in January.
ine shons produced between
1975 and 1993 by UB media
study graduate Vibeke Sorenson
will be shown. A double projection of the late Paul Sharits' eerie
double film. " Razor Blades"
(1965-68). will be presented. A
filmmaker and video artist on the .
UB Media Study faculty from
1973-1992. he received more
than I00 awards and grants and
had exhibitions at leading museums. galleries and universities.

u_s.

00.

�-----.-..

J2
·

~ion

Dog, Crystal, opens doors and picks

J,p objects for hu owntr, Chris Broclcltbank.

:J ·

I. 1115 IIIEI. 1!1s lmu Stall

12 months than those who had not yet received theirs.
Scores of the second group rose significantly at 18 months,

USING SPECIALLY TRAINED
companion dog rather than paid
health-care providers to assist persons with di&lt;abilities in their daily
routine can save $13,000 a year per

person and significantly improve the
owner's quality of life. a UB study has shown.
Karen Allen, assistant director of UB's
Center for the Behavioral and Social Aspect~
of Health, and lead investigator on the study,
said the results show that companion dogs can deliver a
considerable saYings in heallh&lt;are dollar.;, in adPirion to
improving the lives of their owners. and that in urancA compa-

after five months with their companion dogs. and were on a par
with tbe first group at the end of 24 months.
'These dog fill a need in the lives of persons with severe
disabilities," said Allen. 'They help their owners accomplish
tasks, but they also give emotional suppon. The dog takes care
of tlje owner and the owner takes care of the dog. People need
something 10 care for."
Allen said she hopes insurance providers will be take note of
I he savings that resull from using companion dog and agree 10
cover their costs in the fuiU.re.

nies should cover their costs. Medicaid. the insurance provider
for most persons with severely limiting disabilities, currently
covers only human health-care provi ders, Allen said.
Allen. research assistant professor of family medicine.
presented the results of the research Oct. 15 at the annual
meeting of the Delta Societ). a professional organization that
studies the rel ationship between people. animals and the
environment. James Blascovich. UB professor of psychology.
wa co-investigator.

The scientjs1s conducted a prospective two-year 1rial involving 48 persons with spinal-cord injury, muscular dystro-

phy, multiple sclerosis or traumalic brain injury. Panicipants
were divided equally and randomly into two groups. One
group received their compan-

1be d~ lahe; lJie of lhe
IIIIll\ei arullhe n•lahei
lJie of !he doq.~~ nml

!illlletbinq to lJie lor.•
KAREN

ALLEN

ion dogs one month after the
trial began. the other at 13
months into the study. Members of both groups were assisted by family or paid care
providers, as needed.

Companion dogs are
trained individually to work

with a specific owner. The
dogs perform a wide variety
of tasks. depending on their

owner's needs-from carrying backpacks, pushing but-

tons on wheelchairs and elevators and removing food from the
refrigerator. to helping their masters out of a bathtub or
swimming pool. Companion dogs costs about $5,000 to train
and about Sl,JOO to maintain annually.
All study participants were assessed for psychological

well-being. self-esteem. community integration (panicipatidh
in aclivities outside of the home) and the amount of control
they could exen over their lives at five points during the 1wo
years.
The findings showed that self-esteem, well-being, commu-

nity integration and sense of conlrol increased significantly
during the two-year study in direct proponion to the amount of

lime spent wilh a companion dog. ln addition, the number of
hours of paid assistance needed dropped 78 percent, from an
average of 44 hours per week initially 109.8 hours per week at
the study's end.
The researchers estimated that Ibis red uction in the use of
paid assistance resulted in a savings of $272, per week or
$14,ll4 per year, per person, based on an $8 hourly wage.
Subtracting the esti mated $ I, l l 7 annual cost of maintaini ng
the dog netted an average savi ngs of $I3,027 per year.
A comparison of assessments of self-esteem, well-bei ng
and community integration showed that the scores of study
participantS rose dramatical ly when the companion dog became pan of their lives. Those who received thei r cani ne
helpers at one month had significantly higher scores at 6 and

L

S

0

N

K

U

R

E

K

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                    <text>AVIewF•
Into Future
Genetic researc;:h
has long-term
goals.

Jean Harris discusses
crusade to help
inmates' childre;:.

5

,.2

M•rlage of
Cultures
Mat!lla sees Anglo,
Hispanic cultures
merging.

November 3. 1994

Volume 26.

~o .

9

The Virtual University: It's Up and Running
BJ STlEVE COX

Reporter Staff

G

raduateengineeringstudents at UBnow have

access to the best engineering faculty talent

the state university system has to offer. Their
big que Lion: Is it live, or is it Memorex?

SUNY's ··virtual Unive.-.ity"' is up and running. '"Engi et:·
as it is known. is a cooperative project, between the engineering
&gt;ehools of UB, StonyBrook and Binghamton. and the Electrical
Engineering Department of the College at New Paltz. The

project allows students to take graduate engineering

cou~~

offered at other network schools via videotape:. Robert S ames,
director of e.temal affair.; in the School of Engmeering and
Applied Sciences. says it represents a radical departure (rom
university teaching as it has been known . In fact. it is just the
lmest of several UB entrees now served up on the information
highway.
EngiNet courses are administered and tested through
electronic mail by professors at their schools of origin, according to Barnes, yet
they count toward degree
requirements just a.'i a UB
cour.;ewould. By next year.
the four schools hope to be
able to feed the courses
.. live:· to each other and to
BARNES
ROBERT
other students in industrial
or remote locations.
In fact. if you are nipping cable channels in the Binghamton
area some evening, somewltere between " Barney" and
"Baywatch" you might stumble upon a lecture on "Artificial
Intelligence in Manufacturing." The Binghamton Engineering
Depanment has arranged for broadcast of S?me of their courses
on public access cable channels to serve students in outlying
areas, reported Barnes.
The EngiNe! is part of SUNY 's Strntegic Partner.;hip for
Industrial Resurgence (S PlR), a $2 million statewide initiative to
cooperntively share SUNY's engineering research and talent
with the state's industrial sector to spur economic development.
The concept for SPIR. and EngiNet. was developed by UB
Engineering School Dean George Lee.
The nursing school has undertaken a similar project, with
plans to begin beaming courses to Cuba Memorial Hospital (see
story at right). Supporting the nursing school and other healthrelated sciences is HUBNET, the Hospitals and University at
BuffaloLibraryResoun:eNetworl&lt;.Acooperativeventureamong
UB's health-related schools, many major area hospitals and
Roswell Parle Cancer Institute, HUB NET lioks and manages the

"EngiNet extends the
classroom beyond
the brick nl mortar."

InC---to

The cameras are on
library and research resources of all the member institutions.
Trtentalllll» Mourrtzlatts
giving practi ti oners throughout Western New York computerizedaccesstotheequivalentof6.5 millionpagesofmedical
tn 1.20 a e n - , "EngiNet extends the classroom beyond the brick and mortar,'" said Barnes. Although it now offers only graduate courses.
- Camlolon,. UB'•
Barnes hopes to expand to offer undergraduate cour.;es as well.
tile
For now. the emphasi is on outreach. ··when we are able to offer
a graduate level cour.;e to someone,'" Barnes explained. "it C3ll ~be the start of a relationship that could be cultivated into a thlo - ·
matriculating st udent."
Triantafillo s
Mountziaris. an assis~
tant professor of chemi., ~.a..­
-Bureau Staff
cal engineering , is
teaching UB 's contribuA - . . , . . _ .......... bylhe UB School of Nurstion to the network lhis
ing will make ft possible lor nurses in rural Southern roer
semester: " Materials
counties to become nurse practitioners specializing in
Science and Corrofamily, women's and children's health by tal&lt;ing courses
sion." The four departat Cuba Memorial Hospital via interactive video originatments try to determine
ing from lhe nursing scllOOI.
what would be most
Goal of lhe program ls to increase lhe number of
useful or potentially inprimary-are specialists praclicing in underserved arteresting to the induseas. Graduates will earn a master of science degree.
trial market they hope
The project, called lhe Distance Learning initiative of
to reach. in selecting
lhe Primary care Nurse Practitioner Education Program,
course offerings. For
is funded by a $250,000 grant from lhe New York State
Department of Health.
continued on page 9
If lhe dif;tanc:e.leem initiali'ole is ellactMt at Cuba
Memorial. OUfSing school officials hope to 8Siablish

data.(

school to offer Distance Learnilg

continued on page 9

�2
H0

~

0 R S

CHEMIS1RY

_.....,_

................ Pholonics Sctence ProiBSIIOf of
Chemistry at
has bee'l
named a felloiOI in the Optical Society of America. He
was horl0!1Id in October at
llle society's amual rM8IIng
in Oalas lor his~
oontribulions to 1he development of e&lt;ganic materials
tor nonUnear optics.
An intemaliOnally recognized leader tn the field of
optics and spectroscopy,
Prasad jotned the UB faculty in 1974. He serves as
founder and director of the
UB
. Resaarch
La atory, considered one
of
most advanced and
ehensive facilities lor
ics In the wortd.
Author of more than 250
articles. he co-authored,
wllh David J . William, "Introduction to Nonlinear Optical
Effect in Organic Molecules
and Polymers." only monograph-textbook In the field.

Linda Hall-

us.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING

- . v D ACS AWAIID:
Rl a•.-win, Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering at UB, hes
recei11ed the Langmuir Distinguished
Lecturer
AwaJd of the
DiviSIOil of
Colloid and
Surface
Chemistry ol
~;:a:;;.-r cenAmencal Society.
Ruckenstein recently received the award at the society's nattonal meeting in
Washington, D.C.
tn 1990 he was elected to
the National Academy ot
Engineering. the highest
protesstonal dtsltncltOn an

a

engineer can achteve tn the

U.S .. in recognition ot his
outstanding achievements
in surface science.
A member ot the UB faculty s•nce t973 , Ruckenstein has been honored by
the American Institute ot
Chemical Engineers with
the Alpha Chi Sigma Award
and the Walker Award.
MICROBIOLOGY

Looking Far
Into the Future
With • speci-"J In g.-tic engJneerlnc,
professor ....,. In long-tenn gNIB
11J STEVE COX
Repo&lt;ter Staff

N LINDA H~l's world, work
and science fiction are close
neighbors.
A professor in the Biochemical Pharmacology Department since 1989. Hall's specialty is genetic engineering. a scientific discipline that dissects.

I

e1.amines and clones genes. the
m.ost basic units of chromosomal
makeup. That means at times there
can be a great similarity between
the topics of her research and the
latest sci-fi thriller.
Hers is a dedication"to goals that
are very tong-tenn. Although it
may be h&gt;nt to see today. Hall'
research into) how calcium channels (which transmit electronic i mpulses through muscle fiber)
function in fruit flies could yield
c ures to heart disease or

Alzheimer's 10 years from now.
'lbe gene\ic research she does can

take years to bear fruiL
In fact . advances in the field can
come from quite unexpected places.
Did you lnow. for instance. that if
you heat a fly to a cenain temperature. it will simply keel O\Cr. vinuall) para I) zed? Not on I) doe
Hall" s research team lnov. thi~ .
they have identified the gene in the

ny·s chromosomal scheme that
causes it. Their research on temperature-induced paralysi§o wa~
submitted for publication just thh.
weel.
Hall recently recei,ed a longtenn financial commitment of clo~
to S I million from the National
Institutes of Heal th. The ' IH '&gt;
Method to Extend Re~arch in Time

(MERil) Award, which virtually
assures fuoding for 10 years. is a
pre tigious and coveted prize in a
time when research fu nding generally is harder and harder to secure.
" During relatively good times.
only 30 percent of research grants
were ever funded," explained Hall.
"Now. only 10 to 15 percent of
approved grants receive funding.
That means a lot more time is being
spent writing grant applications and
a lot of quality research is not being
funded."
During Hall" s professional lifetime, she has witnessed what she
calls an ··absolute revolution in
molecular biology." For instance,
nucleic acid research. a fundamentaltool of contemporary molecular
biology reSI'arch. used to scare
graduate students away. Hall recalled. '"It took so long to do gene
sequencing in the early '70s that
you might never earn your degree;·
sh~ explained . ..,.c:Krby. we can do
in a day what entire labs used 10
dedicate years to.··

A

llhough genelir engineering
conjures images of radical
alteration to humans as v..e no"
kno" them. Hall points out that 1.1
genetic researchermo' e~ ,·ery cautiou 1) ... The stronge"-t ~pecies we
know of right now i~ Homo sapiens. The laM thing \\C want to do 1S
tinker with it;· she ~a) '1. .
Often. the rea~n for a pan1cular genetic characteristic is not
dear. even to re~earche~. "'Tale
sickle cell anemia (a hereditary
blood di~ase thill i~ mo!)t common
among African American,). for
instance:· HaJJ sa.id . .. II i~ con-

trolled by a gene that. in one situation is considered a defect. causing
this disease, but in another situation is a survival tool. providing
African with a resistance to malaria.··
Of course. Hall does get out Qf
the lab Occasionally . An avid runner. she is a member of the 'iclel
Cit} Road Runners Club and h"" a
musical pa"ion for the Appala chian Mountain dulcimer. a flat .
"'nnged.zither-like tnstrument that
"plucked. She disco' ered it "hen
&gt;he li\ed m New Yort. Cit). and
fonned a dulctmer pla}ers club in
Buffalo "hen she arri\ed.
\\' hen Hall vacations. she geh
about a!t far from a laborato1) a
one c:m . A frequent panicipant in
Sierra Club .. ad' enture tra\el .. excur!tion~. she has gone kayaling in
Baja. Mexico and hiling in the

Sinai Desen. something that. ..he
explained, "people ttll me i&gt; "hat
the Israeli Arm) does for tonu"' ··
This year. her travels too~ her n~ar
tbe top of a 13.000- foot m&lt;&gt;untam
range in the Himala) a&lt; near Ttb&lt;t
Before coming to UB 1n 19 9.
Hall spent I 0 years at the Alben
Einstein College of 1edi ine 10
ew Yorl. Cit} and. before that.
six years at the Ma sachusell&lt; lnstiiUle of Technolog) m BO&lt;ton.
Her summer. " ·ere spent at the
Wood, Hole Marine Biological
Laboratol). of "Ja\1 , ·· fame. on
Cape Cod. Her fiN pnstdoctoral
position was
.a felloY. in the
nh ersit) of Brni~h Columbia at
Vancouver Zoology Departmenl
under the gu1dance of Da\'id
Suzuli. \l.'ho is now a well-lnown
scientist and celebrit) on Canadian
television.

as

IIONOR£D BY POLAND:
Two UB fatu ity members,

Marek B. Zaleski and Felix
Milgram, have received the
Cross ot Merit. one ot the
highest awards presented
by the Republic ot Poland.
The presentations to Zaleski,
UB professor ot microbiology, and Milgram, internationally known irmlunologist and
Distinguished Prolessor ol rricrobiology at UB, were mada
Oct. 20 in New York City.
Both are natives of Poland.
Milgram. chair ot UB's
Department ot Microbiology
from 1967-85, is known tor
his wort&lt; in human organ
transplantation. autoimmunity, renal immunopathology
and tumor immunology.
Zaleski, who came to UB
in 1978, co-translated writIngs ot the Rev. Jozet
nschner into English. The
book was publ ished in 1984
as "The Spirit of Solidarity."

Prestigious MERIT award from NIH provides Hall with $893,000 in research funding
By ELUM GOLDBAUM

News Bureau Staff

L

INDA M. HALL. PROFESSOR of biochemical phormacology in t~ UB School ofPhannacy. has received a pre&gt;tigiou&gt;
Method to Extend Research in Time (MERIT) Award from
the National Hean. Lung and Blood Insti tute of the National
Institutes of Health. The award provides Hall with a total of$893.000
in resea.rch fun ding over five years. with the possibility of funding for
an additional five years.
The MERIT Award provides long-tenn suppnn for principal
investigators who have consistentl y demonstrated an outstanding
record of scientific achievements through their NIH grants. ijllowing
them to work for up to I 0 years without having to submi t a new grant
applicati on. The grant suppon s Hall's work on calci um channels in
the model system Drosophila mt!lanogaster. the common fruit fly .
Calcium channels arc of interest in pan because they play a ley
role in muscular and hean runction and are largets for numerous
ca rd iovascu lar drug . In addition. neuronal calcium channels arc
potemialtargets ror neuroprotecti ve agents for use in treating strole.
ischemia .. head injury and other brain trauma.
·
Hall"s research has applications in a variety of potential producb.

including production of novel bioter.:hnology-based insecticides and
cardio,·ascular drugs.
B) analyzmg at a molecular level the gen that code for specific
pan or subunits of calcium channels. Hall is le to use single gene
mutation~ as preci~ "surgical tools.. to functi ally inactivate one
calcium channel subt) pe at a time 1'0 define its pecific role in a
panicular organism. Hall has discovered evidence that one of these
calcium channel subunits is crilica1 to the fruit ny·s sun•ival during
embryonic development. Her research on other subunits in the fruit
fly has demo nstrated they are. similar to those in mammals' brains.
A UB faculty membersince 1989 and fonnerchair ofthe Department of Biochemical Pharmacology. Hall is the director of the
Oligonucleotide Syntbesis and DNA Sequencing Facility run by
UB"s Center for Advanced Molecular Biology and Im munology.
Hall earned her doctorate at the University of Wisconsin at
Madison. A McKnight Scholar in Neuroscience. she was also the
recipient of the JacobJavits Neuroscience Investigator Award and the
Monique \Veill-Caulier Career Scientist Award. In addition to serv~
in~ on the editorial board or the Joumal of Nt!llrog~netics and as
executive editor of l m·t'nt'brlllt' Nt'urobiology. she has authored
numerous "-Cient ific papers and has presented many invited symposia.

OIRECTOROfPUBLICAlfONS nMOtln' J. COMR01' ,(0 • T~ CtftttltlN(vtOAL. A.SSOCIAT[[[)I l~ JO.ut OAJUMl, AAT OIA£C 1~ IKIIICC4 ,.~ -'SSOClATtARl DIAI:CTOFI 't'AMMA . . . . .. AOYEATISINQMA.UAGCR .c:MULUUIIU

�-a.a..--.-·

3

Educational technology topic of Faculty Senate debate

Ae=:x

DUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY" is the _int&lt;:gration of~temponuy h1gh-speed, bea~tly
networkedcompullngpowen~to
.
the leam_mg process. UB admmlstrators say 11 IS lilce~y to be ~ budget
battle~ndofthelate 90s forpubh~ h1gher
educau_on. The Faculty Senate const~ a
~soluuon on Oct. 25 to prepare the un1verSlty to wag~ that battle.
.
More m1c~mputer staunns, better access to compuung power and more support
staff should be the rewards of ~Ill e. However. the $25 per student computing fee and
free access to computers by faculty conductmg
sponsored research wiD likely be casualties.
The Faculty Senate considered and debated a resolution calling for initiation of a
J?islributed Information Technology (Din
approach to computing on campus . Wayne
Bialas. an associate professor of industrial
engineering and chair of the computing committee that drafted the resOlution. explained
that DIT involves close scrutiny of how
computing dollars are spent. It represents a
shift away from centralized computing. toward specialized rampuling in academic
units. but assures !bat all units get reasonable
access to computing facilities and that each
unil contributes to the development of the
campus' computer infrasU'Uct.ure.
In addition to the draft resolution on DIT.
the Senate also debated a draft University
Mission Staleme.nt. Resolutions on both topics will be voted upon at the neX\meeling in

November. Senate rules requirf two readings of all resolutions prior to action.
SUNY Central's budget request for the
coming fiscal year will include the first installment of a five-year. S20 million educational technology initiative, acconiins to

Hinrich Manens. associate vice president
for computing and information technology.
In fact. it is the only new initiative SUNY is

proposing. Martens says. an indication to
him just how important this issue is to SUNY.
"Computing spending on campus will
increase by about SO percen~ from $20 million (per year) now to about $30 million over

8yUSAWILEY
Reporter Contnbutor

0

BTAININGCOLLEGEdegrees.
setting career goals and main taining triballink.s were the main
messages of Native American
professionals and guest speakers at
Onkwehonwe. the fourth Native American
Educational and Career Opportunities Conference. held at UB Oct. 28-30.
"This is what your charge is-go outside
the logic that is now housed in the leadership
of all the six nations. They do not have the
answers. Our people are split more than they
ever have been in the hi story of the
Longhouse:· said Lloyd Elm. principat of
Buffalo School No. 19,the Native American
magnet school. at the keynote address Saturday evening in the Student Union.
"Onkwehonwe" means the "The Real
Peopleffhe Original Beings" in Mohawk.
according to conference co-chairs Roland
Garrow, a senior counselor in the UB Educational Opportunity Program and a member
of the Mohawk tribe. and Michael Gendrue.
an· academic advisor in the UB Office of
Vice Presitlent for Public Service and Urban
Affairs and a member of the Seneca tribe.
Students need Native American role models
to talk to and motivate them, Garrow said.
Representatives from all eight tribes in
New York State. including the Onondaga.
Mohawk. Seneca. Oneida. Cayuga.
Tuscarora. Shinnecock and Unkechaug. attended the conference. Students came from
nearly 30 school districts throughout New
York State-approximately 14 from West-

five years," explai~ M~ens. "Ninety~""';'t o!that growth Wll! go t"!o the academ1c
unlls. Richard Lesruak. director of academic services, ~xpecu the campus to have
nearly 10,000 rrucrocomputers, up from the
current 5,000, and 120support staff, up from
the ~140, when the upgrade is complete.
Lesn1~, Mane_ns and Associate Provost
Sean Sulhvan outhned five potential sources
of revenues to finance the computing upgrade, all of which. they said, would likely
be called 1nto play to some degree.
~ The Mandatory Student Computin_g
Fee. Currently $25 per ~tudent ~r
th_,.
fee has not mcreased s1nce_1ts 1~puon m
1983. Most comparable umvers111es charge
an average of $1 SO per year for computing

Yea:·

Eac:!' _ru

~ices.
increase in the fee would
ra1se an odd111onal $500,000 per year for
computing. Theyindicatedthatafeeofabout
$100 per year would not be unreasonable.
• Reallocationofdiscretionaryfunds:The
campus annually reallocates about two percent of its overall budget. Over time, they
indicated. funds could be shifted toward
educational technology without hurting current academic unit funding.
• Sponsored research: Currently. faculty
members have free access to computing and
databases for pnnsored research projects.
~se sponsored _
p rograms will have to begm assumm~ thetr fair share of the cost of
that computmg. they explained. It is more
and more common. they added. for grants to

service&lt;.

include funding for computing
so
grant writerure going 10 have to start adding
thi to their requests
• Discipline~ Computing fee: This
would be a new, unit-Speafic charge that is
"gaining wide accepWtee at olber univcnities at a hundreds of dollars level. It could be
a big new wurce of revenues." they said.
Part of the attraction is that Ibis money
would be levied and colleaed locally. and
would not be Wk money.
• Capital Investment from State/SUNY:
The new educational technology initiative
would be the source of most ofthi funding.
However. it islilcely 10 be restricted to capital money that can only be used to pun:hase
equipmenL

No agreement on mission statement
F YOU LISTENED to the Faculty Senate debate a proposed
~niv_ersity Mission S........,nt at their Oct. 25 regular meel·
Ill&amp;· 11 would be easy to see why the university bas been
without sucb a sta1emen1 for over 20 years.
Described metaphorically during the debate as suffering from
"intellectual dyslexia" and "severe adverbial d)¥ntery.~ the
proposed one--page mission Stat&lt;:meot. which already has been
edited several times. appeared to draw JiUle support from the
senators. It was al~ernatively aiticized as being too simplistic or
too brief.
Dennis Malone, chair of the Academic Planning Committee.
which considered early drafts of the document and brougbt this
ooe forward. urged that something be done. because the Middle
Stales Association in part pttdicated its reaccreditation of the
university last year on the promulgation of a mission statement.
Pres.ident Greiner, who may irnplemenl a 11\ission Wlement
unilateraUy, bas defem&gt;d ~on it since last spring to allow

was being hlpe recorded. Canyina aoordleu microphone durin&amp;
the debate, Nickei'IOII resembled Pbil Dooabue, scurryia&amp; from
ooe side of the semi-&lt;&gt;ircular meeting room 10 the olber as
question aroseClaude Welch. of the Political Science Department. aiticiz.ed
the document Cor i omissions. Athletics. campus COIISiniCiion
and relations with SUNY CeotraJ were among the topics Welch
felt needed to be addressed 1n a fuU-scale mission Wlement
Also high on his list of COf1'CC1ions to the document as well as tbat
of olber Senators who spoke, was a lack of emphasis on undergraduate education.
Managerneru Professor John Boot called the statemeDt simply "grim.~ BOol adamantly called the proposal an "embarrassment" and said be planned to completelydissociate himself from
iL 'TO wr:ile my own," said Boot Judith Adams, of Uoivenity
Libnory Services. warned of dire c:irc:umslanccs the omiuiOG of
any reference to our "ans and sc:ienca miloioa" cooold ....._
"If retrencbmeut becomeo 1D iuue, -..bal IIIFI- 1 0 - .wl
scienoes if it is ooleveo ill lbemiloioa - ' ! " ..... A.talas

owevcr
ect may
Uooe
1t 1 R1 a
prelly good "'*'""''L" He beJd out little hope that the Senate

~-""'
even pan of their missioo; wby.., we lpCIIdiac en.,.....

would be able to draft a betl&lt;:r document. "Getting faculty 10
agree on somelhing lilce this.~ h&lt; ~"is lilce herding cats. •
Fearing that minutes alone might not adequareJY convey the
group's feelings abouttbe document to President Greiner. Faculty Senate Chair Peter Nickerson announced that the discussion

on

I

em New York-and Canada. Garrow said.
A total of 300 people participated.
Elm. a member of the Onondaga nation.
told students several times during his address to look beyond the " habitual logic" of
today's leaders. who are faced with problems on reservations such as tax-free cigarenes and casinos. -~weare caught in a strand
of habitual logic that is tearing at our hearts
right now. Don' t limit yourselves to what
you know right now." he said.
"One of the vehicles to solving those
problems is having a degree;· Elm said. He
a1so noted that students must recognize that
they will soon become the new leadership.
Nath•e American professional s from major career areas-including law. business.
education, engineering. science, medicine,
art and communication-shared information about their careers and educational preparalion at panel discus sions during the
Sawrday morning session.
"I felt like I had won the Miss America
contest:· said Nancy Johnson. ducribing
her reaction when she received her acceptance leuerto UB Law Sehool. The Onondaga
member and recent UB law graduate shared
her experiences with students who attended
the law and business panel. Her daughter.
July. a 16-year-oldjunior at Lafayette Hi gh
School. anended the same panel.
Will she follow in her mother' fOOtsteps?
"She won't let me:· July said. "She's
going to be a genetic engineer," her mom
said.
"If you know the rules. you can help

... ..,.

itr.'

Due to lOCI in November, the Faculty SenMe.could-..,
lukewarm resolution of """"'-'&gt;t. or simply . , . copizance" of the document, basically recognizing its exiSieiiCe
without oommeoL

communities, you need to know how to
articulate whal is expressed in your language;· said the member of the Lakota tribe.
"I want you to become. indigenous engi-

neers and scientists of Native descent." ,
Valandra added
" Right now is a really impo~me in
yourlives. Youbavethepowerinyourhands

to change whatever situation you are currently in;· said Bebe Curley. a technical
analyst with the Bank of ova Scotia.
" In order to achieve what you want, you
have to set goals. Set your goals high. so you
have the ultimate choice wben you enter the
workplace." Curley. a member of the
ohawk nation, told her audience.
Curley also described the fulfilling and
change them. The Jolene Rickard,
bard part is knowing UB assistant
what the rules are. professor of art
Fundamentally . history, speaks
that 's what lawyers to students at
live. eat and breathe."' October 29
said Robert Porter. an wort&lt;t.hop.
assistant professor at the UB Law School
and the attorney general for the Seneca Nation.
"I think anyone i capable of doing it.
There are second chances which you can
avail yourselves
said Poner. a graduate
of Harvard Law School. who grew up on the
Allegany reservation.
Edward Valandra. a UB graduate student
in American Studies. spoke to students about
the imponance of obtaining a culturally
relevant education. during the engineering
paneL "If you are going to work in your

or:·

re arding aspects of her career in computer technology and why she chose the
field.
Students said they were inspired by the
speakers and also met other Native Ameri cans who sha.re: similar conCerns about the
future of their people.
"This year. it' been a really big plug for
college." according to Mary Abrantes. 17. a
senior at Henninger High School in Syracuse. A member of the Mohawk nation who
auended the conference last year. she echoed a sentiment she said she had heard many
times throughout the conference. "Get your
degree. Theycan'ttakethataway from you."
she said.
Self-esteem workshops were held Friday
evening. The conference concluded Sunday
with summer. precollege and financial aid
workshops.

�-

4
Cq,uonium to .
develop strategieS
for biotechnology

.

~--.-·

UB scholar predicts 'marriage' o~ Anglo,
Hispanic cultures in North Amenca

:&amp;:--..=:-

LFREDO MATILLA. Pueno

IEUMVEaSITY • Buffalo's
.........,./Univcnily It-a.
Caller for Bioowfa:es is _,_

ilia up willa the New Yew\ SIMe
CoiJc&amp;e of Ccnmia at Alfred Uai ....lity and tbe Univcnity of Memphis,
TCIIII., to t.o.dc1l its reocarch hue and
impro.e oavic:e to the biotedmology
illdullry.
The acw c:onoclctium wi U wo&lt;lt wi th
componiea to develop new ~ into
viable technologies, panicularly in
mMU!acluri• lln8qies for biOICCbnolcJsy. A lUi• objective is to improve

tbe JlOIIIplllitl- of biolodlnolo&amp;Y
ad rd-.! Cdllf*licl iD tbe three rc-

Jions where the ..,.,.... lites ore Jo.
CM&lt;&gt;d: w_... New Yoot. New YoR.'s

-men. tier- tbe Milaiuijlpi Delta.

UBwillecnusMmillislrMivebcad~ of lbe COllier, which is
fuaded by a $2S0,000 JI1111t from the
National Scieace ~
To belolla to tbe c:c.oortium, each
achool RICnlit local aad DMioDaJ
.,.,.,...,.,. •ladullry - - . ..
"Bcauue or t1en:c c:ompeQ1ioa for
IIJIIIIOft,ociealific..,.,...c:eatcnmust
eilhec .,.,.,.._ a DalioDal ..-Ia. or
wilber and clic," said Robert Bai«, exiculive director of tbe UB IDdusl(y/
Univers it y Research Center lor
Biosurfaces a nd professor o f
biomlllerials. During the past fi ve years,
the biosurfaces cenl&lt;:r bas conducted
resean:b with Procter&amp;: Gamble, Bausch

...

~----.-.a.--.

olhers.
"Wilb this new consorti um. n be
added, "the centa becomes a truly national performer.~

C

enter research projects now under
way by UB investigaton! include
the stiidy and si mul ation ofbiofilms that
build up on arti ficial limbs and dental
and medical implants. use of a glowd iscbarge treatmcalto make tissues more
aa:c:pting of prosthetic devices and the
study of mechanical forces in biological
systemS for applicalion to bioremediat.ion
or hazardous waste si1es.
The New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred will bring to the consorti um its renowned research capability

in bioccramics. particularly in
bioresorllables, matecials that are necessary temporarily and then dissolve
harmlessly in the body. "We want to
grow ourbiocernmicscapabilities, bringing to them all of the things we know
about traditional ceramics and to complement what UB and Memphis do," said
Alexis O are. site co-director at Alfred
with Gary Fischman. who directs its
Bioceramics Institute.
Tbe University of Memphis (UM)
will share its research in cardiovascular
flows and the biocompatibility of various implan t materials. So far. UM has
brought o n board Smith &amp;: Nephew,
Schcring-Piough. Wright Medical Technology, the Center for Retina Vitreous
Surgery and Sims Deltech.
"The Mississippi Della is economically depressed. but this center is pan of
an effon to make Memphis :m international showcase i.n biomedicine." saiC!
Sri kant Gir, UM 's corporate liaison for
the center and director of technology
transfer. Site director is Vincent Turri to.
chair of biomedical engiocering.
Center funds bave also been allocated to support minority undcrgradu3tes in the sciences at the three sites.

Rican scholar and professor
and chair of the Depanment
of American Studies at UB,
predicts a marriage "in flesh
and bone" of North America's Anglo and
Hispanic cultures within 50 years.
Hispanic groups from throughout Latin
America and the Caribbean are expected to
comprise 30 percent of
the U.S. population b)'
2020. but Matilla says
the merger will produce
more than numbers. He
predicts the emergence
of a ...new U.S. cuhure."
one di s tingui s hed by
new ways of using and
understanding the English language and ofexperiencing the world itself.
In addition to manifesting the European
Zeitgeist. Matilla says. the new America will
deeply reflect the world view ofthe telluric.
or earth-&lt;:entered. traditions of the Western
Hemisphere's Hispanic cultures. which in-

corporate Indian and African sensibilities
and values.
MatiiJa made his observations in August
as one of the principal presenters at the

summer university program held at the
Universidad Complutense de Madrid at El
Escorial, Spain. His com~nts. which attractedconsiderable anention from the Spanish press. specifically predict the evolution
of a "vast. new U.S. culture with a different
world view--one that melds the AfricanH.ispanie-\.ndtan rural . agricu\tura\"'\radition
wjth that of America's currently predominant Ang·l o cuhure."

Enormous changes will result. Matilla
said. as ascendant Chicano, Cuban, Central
American and Caribbean cultures begin to
enrich American life through language.
''Language encodes culture. and so each
language offers a different cultural perspective-each language. if you will. opens a

different window from which to consider the
world."' he says. ' The United States has a
constitution Lhat is nmable for embracing
different points of view. But the country has
one major language. and so Americans look

out upon the world through one window. To
speak or write another language is to cornprehend things in a different way. to see the
world and its people with a fresh understanding. This doesn't guarantee peaceful coexi lence." Matilla says. pointing 10
multi-lingual Europe and its ongoing wars.
..It takes centuries for cuhures to accommodate one another. but thai process ofassimilation or amalgamation or whatever we
choose to call it has already begun and we
wi11 be 8 new nation because: of it."
He says important Latino and AmericanLatino writers already are producing works
in English tbal reflect this change-works
thai show that they understand and use the
Er\glishlanguageinentirelynewwa)s, works
that "open up"the English language in a way
that augurs the "opening up" of the American culture.
There are writers who write within the

"Language encodes
culture, and so each
language offers a
different cultural
perspective. "
ALAIEDO MAnUA
- - -- -- - - - - - - -- English tradition, bul with a Hispanic frame
of mind, says Matilla. Their work has earned
critical acclaim and public popularity. This.
he says. represent an acceptance of both
their ideas and their ways of using language
into the mainstream body of literature in
English. They are forging a new AngloHispanic consciousness.
·
He calls poet William Carlos Willi.ams
one of the founders of this tradition. Tbe son
of a Spanish-speaking Pueno Rican mother,
Williams' fresh. clear. discrete images of the
sensuous world drama1ica1ly influenced
American writing in this century.
More recently. Matilla cites the 1990
Pulitzer Prizewinning 'The Mambo Kings
Sing Songs of Love" by Oscar Hijuelos. and
"Bless Me, Ultima." a trilogy by Chicano
writer Rudolfo Ana) a. as examples of the

new Hispano-Anglo consciousness.
" Mendoza's Dream" by-Pueno Rican
author Ed Vega and "How the Garcia Girls
Lost Their Accents" by Dominican noveli 1
Julia Alvarez also arc cited by Matilla as
examples of this new way of aniculating
American culture.
·~rc is also Colombian '\Writer Jaime
Manrique's book, 'Latin Moon in Manhatlan.''' says Matilla.. ..and Pueno Rican poets
like Pedro Pielri and Victor Hernandez Cruz
have attracted the attention and critical admiration
America poets like Allen
Ginsberg and Rober! Creeley."
Tbe Chicano writing is panicularly richly
imbued with this telluric sensibility. says
Matilla.lt is based in an u'ldersUinding of
agricultural labor and the helief in the possibility of the myth of Aztlan, which says the
Aztecs occupied the American Southwest
long before the conquistadors anived and so
have an ancient connection to that place.
"Like the other Indian-Hispanic-African
cultures of this hemisphere." Mat ilia sa} .
"Chicanos tend to consider all of the Ameri-

or

cas as one continuous space and have a veT)
fluid sense of political borders.
"The peoples of Central and South

America and lhe Caribbean have moH:d
back and fonh into and out of various natiom
in this hemisphere. including our ov.'ll. for
many years. without regard for borders."' he
say ...but now they lll! staying in largu and
larger numbers. bringing their culture vmh
them. and because or this. in the next fe"
decades , we will become a different nation ··
Tile week-long Uni•·ersidad Complutensc
event included among its speakers Rafael
Hernandez-Colon. ex-go• ernor of Pucno
Rico. and Antonio Colorado. former Pucno
Rican secretary of the interior.
Matilla. a Pueno Rican literary schol
and former Fulbright fellow. holds a doctorale magM cum laud• from New York Um versity and has conducted research in the

field of Latin American literature. theater
and cultural studies for more tban 20 year.
He is the author or editor of a number of
books. as well as essays. criticism and trans·
lations of work by Pucno Rican poet/pia) wright Pedro Pictri. James Joyce and other&gt; .
Matilla 's shon stories. plays and poe11J
ha• e been ahthologized and have appeared
m distinguishciiliterary journals.

Space research focuses on cardiovascular function
By LOIS BAKER

News Bureau Staff

R

ESULTS OF TWO NASA Spae&lt;
Lab 2 research projects on cardio-

vascular functioning and decon-

d iti o ning in microgravity.
designed by scientists from UB. have confirmed that blood pressure in flight i regulated by a decrease in vascular resistance in
response to :Jn increase in cardi:Jc output
induced by microgravity.
This phenomenon was first observed in
UB research conducted o n Space Lab I .
Findings in the new st udies also showed
that the ability of astronauts to perfonn work
when they returned to
Eanh. as measured by

pc.rfonnan c on a specific physical-exercise
regimen. was decreased.
and thai there was a relation ship between the
FARHI
ability IO perform work
and time spent in space.
_
Astronauts on Space Lab 2. who were in
flight fo r 15 days. performed less well upon
the ir ret urn to Eanh and remained limited
longer than their counterpans on Space Lab
I. who were subjected to zero gravity for
nine days.

Both in 1.ero gra\•ity and in readjusting to
Eanh's gravity. the astronaut.s' bodies were
able to regulate their blood pressure b) expanding or constricting their blood vessels in
Ihe presence of increased cardiac o ulput the
resu Its showed. a phenomenon not observed
prior lo the two UB Space Lab experiments.
The experiments and equipment used on
both Space Lab experiments were designed
by Leon E. Farhi. UB Distinguished Professor of Phy iology.

B

arbara E. Shykoff. UB research assistant professor of ph)siology and a lead
researcher on the studies. presented the results of the UB Space Lab studies at a oneday NASA symposium in San Francisco
Oct. 23t hat followedameetingoftheAmerican Society for Gravity and Space Biology.
UB's Space Lab 2findings have resulted
in a new thr~- year, S600.000 grant to the
univcrsily from NASA to study the ph) sio logical mechanisms behind thi s observed
cardiovascular rcgulatol) phenomenon. Researchers will conduct the research at UB
under simulated 7.ero-gravity conditions.
" I f we find something interesting through
these Eanh-bound experiments:· said Farhi.
"we will go back to ASA for another innight experiment."
The UB studies report data collected from

e~periments involving $-ix astronaut . 1hrec'-..
from each flight. Measurements of ardiac
outpJll· heart rate. blood pressure. OX) gen
coq'Sumption and othcrcardio\rascular \'ari·
ables were collected atfi1 e intervals during
the six months prior to the flight and at five
points during each mission. Measuremc.nts
wcllre taken while astronauts were at rest and
whi'l!r they exercised on a cycle ergometer.
Eal(hbound research on cardiovascular
functionf(lg in simulated weightlessnes has
shown th~ when gravity is eliminated. t.he
hcan pumps more blood initially. whi h
roquires an increase in blood pressure. but
the body eventually adjusts to this increased
output and brings pressure ba k 10 n~rmal by
eliminating some blood plasma through
urine.
However. result.s from the first mission.
and now the second, showed that during
space night. the cardiovascular system regained its balance by readjusting the •·ascular tone. and tbat both blood pressure and
blood volume· remained table.
pace Lab 2 was launched Oct. 14. 1993.
and remained on space for 15 days.
UB researchers involved in the project. in
addition to Farhi and Shykoff. were ChriSIOphcr Eisenhan: Richard Mori n: Alben J.
Olszowka: David R. Pendergast and Mary
Ann Rokitka.
I

�5

r

Chinese officials here to renew exchange
DELEGATION of scholars
and administrators from China
visited UB Oct. 21-28 a&gt; part
of the renewal of an academic
exchange agreement between
the Univeraity at Buffalo and lhe Beijing
Municipal System of Higher Education.
Actual signing of the lhree-year renewal
agreement was held May 5 in Beijing. The
exchange renewal agreement provides an
opportunity for UB students to study Chinese language and culture, Chinese history,
international trade, engineering and medi·
cine.
The exchange agreement also is intended
to strengthen ties between the respective
universities' faculty members. As many as
six faculty members will havo the opportunity to participate in lhe exchange each year.
Members of the delegation lhat·came to
UB included: Pusheng Lin, delegation leader
and vice pre ident. Beijing Municipal System of Higher Education; Shaopu Cai. president, Beijing Polytechnic University; Peili
Lin, president. Capitai-Nonnal University;
Jinxiang Du, vice president Capital University of Medical Sciences; Shuzhen Zhang.
S&lt;Crelllry general. Beijing Municipal SystemofHigherEducation; YimingShen. vice
president. BeiJm Polytechnic University;
and Zhiqing Yin, director of lhe Foreign
Affairs Office. Beijing Polytechnic University.
Also as part of the October visit. a. new
agrec:ment was signed between Beijing Polytechnic University (BPU ) and UB's School
of Engineering and Applied ~iences in order to renew and expand their ~lationship in

Reif scholarship
fund will benefit
athletics program

Crime begins in the crib, Harris tells UB audience

OUIS R. JtEIF. former chair·
man of National Fucl G
Nancy.
have made a $300.000 chazi..
tableremainderiJUSI cift to UB'1 Divi·
ion of AlhJetia; 10 cslabllslt The Loois
R.and!UoqC.ReifSeholarshipFund.
The fund will provide panu-in-aid
10 deserving studen """' participiiC
in the university's iolereollegiale var_sity athletic program.
MUB's lllhktic (lltiii1UJI is becoming a vital rallyiac point for the scbool
andswdears,"saidReif.a 1948~­
of UB. "A llnlllg sportS program
beneli the unhrenity in many ways.IJ
~ ~ feelings .and Crea1eS a
more complel;e university. A solld alhlelics program wilb widespread pbilanlbropic Sllppo&lt;l wiD aurw:t a student
body wilb greater cultural and FOgrapbic diversity than we have now."
Rei( noted !hal "UB alhlclic:s is commined 10 quality. bringing in JCbolaralhleteJ wbo have the rigbt balance of
intdligeoce and albletic ability. UB is
1101 necessarily strivillg to produceprofcssi&lt;li".al athleles. bot gt1lduale5 wbo
have mtdligeoce lhrough a fiDC educatioo. and llhletic still."
Nelson To.......end, director of the
UB Division of AlbJeti&lt;:s. said 1be
university is very pleased 10 be the
recipient of !hiS cift from the Reif family. We are especially proud to oalize

Br STEVE COX

........

Reporter Staff

EAN HARRIS" LIFE is a tale of two
starkly contrasting realities.
Before 1980. her Saturday evenings likely included posh social galherings with some of this country•s highest
social elite. After 1980, her Saturday evenings were usually spent playing Bingo on
the psychiatric unit of Bedford Hills Correctional Facility.
Her rapid social descent and reemergence
has led to her CUITent calling: becoming one
of the country's leading advocates for the
rights of infants born to incarcerated molhers. Harris spoke about her cause and her
celebrated imprisonment during an appearanc&lt; at UB"s Slee Hall Oct. 25.
An inmate at Bedford Hills from !he spri ng
of 1980 until Gov. Cuomo granted her clemency in December. 1992. Harris says. " The
most compelling lesson !learned in prison is
how connected we all-are. The problems of
one of us are the problems of all of us."
Very low self-esteem is characteristic of
women in prison. says Hanis. Hopelessness,
ignorance and ill heallh are also rampant
among women in prison. "Generally. they
are poor.lhey are angry and they are sil;k. ln
Bedford. one in five is HIV positive." she said.
Many are " mentally damaged." a result
of years of being beaten about the head.
according to Harris. but few receive treatment. "For I I years. I played Bingo on
Saturday nights with ladies from the menial
ward." Harris said. "and some of them came
in nightgown'\ that were so fihhy you
wouldn ' t use them to wash your car.
· " Here is something that just blew my
mind." said Hanis. pleading for a change in
socil:ty·S attilUdes: "up to 76 percent of
women who commit felonies are first ar~
rested for prostitution. What do we do? We
incarcerate them. fine them and throw them
back out on the street. .. Meanjngful intervention after prostitution arrest.s could pre\'ent many of the felonies . Harris believes.
The separation of a mother and her young
children due to imprisonment concerns Harris greatly. She believes thai man)' of these

J

Company. and 1u

..me.

*

lhe areas of faculty exchange. joint resean:h
and business and industry development.

In addition. another agreement was signed
between The Center for International Economic and Technology Cooperation ofBPU
and the U.S.-China Cooperative Technology Development Program of UB 's engineering school. The agrec:menl outlines how

the two institutions will cooperate in tech·
nology and economic development in order
to promote the intemction of business and
industry between New York Sial&lt; and lhe
Beijing area.
This year, UB is hosting five visi ting
scholars from Beijing: a scholar who specializes in teachi ng Chinese language; two
scholars in residen~ in the An Depanment

who are teaching a studio an
class with the

assistance of a
translalor; a
scholar engaged
in medical resea rch and a
scholar engaged
in eRgineering
~search .

Since its es-

Beljln&amp; scholars and
administrators meet
with UB officials,
from left: Stephen C.
Ounnet, Jlnxlan&amp; Ou,
Pelll Un, Pushen&amp;
Un, President and
Mra.WIIIIamR.
Greiner, Shaopu Cal,
Ylmlng Shen,
Shuzhen Zhang and
Zhlql11g Yin.

tablishment in
19 0. 82 Chinese and American students
and 98 Chinese and American faculty. as
well as 27 staff. have participated in lhe
.xchange between Buffalo and Beijing.

childre.n win be problem children later in

The judge -h..d \ears sue&amp;miftS'down b\s

life ... As Irving Harris (a Sociologist) said.
' Infancy is not a rehearsal. it's the main
show.'" said Harris. '"When you see a child
who learns 10 laugh when he h killed
someone; that is a tragedy."
Harris. a teacher by trade , laughl parenting
classes to other inmates throughout her internment. Many of her inmate-students
lacked the most basic unders1anding of how
10 be a parent. she said. Some had more than
a dozen children. olhers began having babies

face when he sentenced me to I 5 years ...
Harris recalled. in the only reference to her
crime during the hour-long. speech 10 more
!han 350 people. She took the opponuni ty 10
deer§ mandatory sentencing laws. saying ··It
is just cookie-cutter justice. Why ha\ ejudges
1f they can't judge!"
In December. 1992. Cuomo granted Harris clemency. in recognjtion of her work with
inmatesandlhelfchildrenthroughherparenting
and because of a heart condition. At71 .
Harri'\ shows no sign of slowing do"" non her
crusade. She has authored thre&lt; books about
prison life and prison babies. "Babie,," explained Harris. "don't have a lobby in Congress." So 'he has picked up their mantle.
Shonly after her release. Harris and her
fonne.rv. arden testified before a congressional
conuniuee considering the federal crime bill.
on lhe needs of children born in prio;on and lhe
children of incarcerated mothers. Ultimately.
lhe S40 million program !hey sought was re/
mo'·ed from the bill by Rep. Charles Schumtr
of New York. who requested " hard proof !hat
this would work" before he would support it.
" I thought that was a strange positioll to
take. considering thai it wa an experimcn~l
program." said Harris.
··violence '\tans in childhood . in the
home." she said. ''Crime begin'\ in the crib. It
is Americn'sgreatest failure. For young children born 10 the violence and hopele sness
of poverty. crime becomes a rational occupational choice .., Harris noted that I 0 percent of all violent crimes are committed b)
children between IOand 17. "Over one million teenagers arc raped. robbed. assaulted.
'hot. &lt;tabbed. beaten or killed by their peers."
Harris says building more prisons and
incarcerating more women and mothers than
ever before. is not the ans wer. Pre- and po~t­
natal care. and public policies that support
keeping mothers and children together. e'en
in prison. are needed. she says. For women
already in prison. Harris has lhrec: suggeMions
to improve their lot: program the inmates to get
10 work on time. take part in group parenting
classes. and make federal and state legislators
take pan in parenting classc~ ~ "'ell.

Jean Hanfs at the podium In Slee Hall.
when they were only 12 years ol d.
"'Not hilling your child in the head is
something we talked about constantly in the
parenting classes." said Harris. "because a
·good smack in the head· is the discipline of
choice among most of these people.
"When J arrived. there were five pregnant
inmates:· she said."On the day I left. there
were 64. I've written to the Sourc~book of
Crimitwl Juslic~ Statistics for 12 year~ asking why there i no menti on of babies in
prisons anywhere in their book. I haven.,
gotten a response:· Best estimales. Harris
indicated • .are that more than 9.000 babies
are born in prisons e.~ch year.
A teacher for 30 years. with a master" s
degree in edu ation. Harris was headmistress of the exclusive Madeira School in
McLean. Virginia. In 1980. her 15-yearlove
affair with Dr. Hennan Tamower. :iuthor of
the "Scarsdale Diet ."" ended. She confronted
him in his Westchester County home. allegedly to commit suicide there. When the
evening was over. Tamower was dead and
Harris was charged with his killing.

cl""=·

-

program is
becoming a
vital rallying
p~intfor the
school and
students. "

ol-

mitted sup-

porters ...
Townsend
added, "we
will continue
to build the
kind of competitive program !hat l'be
university and

community
win point 10

with ,.J!!idt- I,
and the student-athletes
of our program. thank !hem for lbeir
generosity."
Reif, who has supported lhe university io manywayso,..,lhe years. joined
tbe University a1 Buffalo Fouodalioo
in 1973,andserved !be foundation's
chair from 1977-79. He still is a member of !he foundatioo"s board of directors.
He also has served as national chair
of the UB Annual Fund and has provided gifts to 1be UB libraries. Mr. and
Mrs. Rtif have long provided leading
upport on behalf of lhe unh-ersity's
alhletics program. and are mcmben of
the Presidents Associates and UB
LOUISL-

Founders.
A Buffalo native, Louis Reif joined
the legal staff of National Fuel Gas in
1952. He was elected vice president of
lhe utility in 1958. In 1966, be was
elected a director of National Fuel.
and. in 1974. was named presidenL
He became chief executive officer in
1975,and,in 1987. was elected chairman. He retired from National Fuel in
1989.

�--.-----·

6

-

-~FOUl

IDIUUIIoaal F. . Duclaa.
Alllevela.lll welcome. Partners
... 2 J);e[enclo&lt;f. South
Campus. a- ll p.m. F-. Spon·
50ml by Graduate Studtnt

Associauoa.

rtiDIATRC UAHD IIOUNDS
CT of l'&lt;dlatrk Tl&gt;oru, Jerald
Kuhn. !'1.0. Kinch Audjtorium,

Oilldren's Hospiut 8 Lm.
_.,SICAL ~

ll&lt;e&lt;al AdvaDCOS Ia Sla &amp;le
Cbatlod Anolysls and l alt'l',.-tloa: Eumpla • Hb tb&lt;
NMDA ll&lt;coptnr, Or. David
Colqubowl, Univ. Colle&amp;&lt; London. 106 Cary. South Campus.
10:30Lm.
-

Df'DI HOUSE

Sc:bool of orsl111 Opon

HOUK. lnformatioo about bac: ·
calaureatc, mas-ter's and doctoni progn.ms \lrill be: available
825 K1mbaiJ Tov.u. South
Campus I :30-4:30 p.m. Cell
829-3209.

lll8/IID1*)VDI mtDiG
QUAIImCYCU
Muir Striae Qu""- Sl&lt;c Conc:en Hall. Nonh C.mpus a p.m.
SIO, sa. S~ . S4. Cal164~·2921
TIIIA'I'ft a D Tbo 'l'1lr&lt;qletllly Opon, 0.rect&lt;d by Soul Elkin_ cboftop&gt;phed by Lynn&lt; Kurdz~ei ­
Fonnato. musically d1rccted b)'
QWiel Pehz. Dnlma Theatre.
Center for thr Arts. North Campus. a p.m. SIO ond S5.
ATTIIEIIOYIES

salndler's LiiL UUAB film
smes. 20 I Student Umon.
North Campus. 'r.l ~ p.m. S2,
SJ.50. Call64~-m7 .
AT THE IIOYIU

0.. 5tnut&amp;&lt;lovt. UUAB film
se:ncs. 170 Fillmore. El1icou.
onh Campus 11 :30 p m S2.

SJ.SO Call645-m7.

IIASTD CUU IEJtiU
Mast..- Class, Michad
RtyDOids, cello. Muir String
Quanet. Si&lt;c Concen Hall.
Nonh Campus. 2:30p.m.
COM1'111'111 SCIENCE
~lUll

Michael Goodrich, Johns
Hopkins Univ. 228 Natural Sci·
Hall-intectr nux Quanta aod
tbe S)'llllllftr'Y oflbe H l&amp;b-T&lt;

Supe:rcond uctinc Onkr h rameter, Prof. John Kirtley.
IBM. 4~4 Fronczak. Nonh
Campus. 3 :4~ p.m.
AliT LECTUIIE
Slick loetu.-.. Cart Ost&lt;ndarp.
Center for the Arts Screening
Room. North Campus. • p.m.
Cell 645-6912.
.IOLOQICA1 SCIENCES
auaiMAII
Rqulation of the Rbc:S Gene
FamU)' Durin&amp; Tomato IH'\"d-

Dr. Thia.nd.a Maru..ara..
Univ. ol lllmois. Oticago. U4
Hochstctter. North Campu~.

opmf'.nl.,.

·~·""
ADDtC110NS alUDIU
WOitK._
Unmasking the Self In R ~' •
ery, Janet Elkins Sahafi. Sponsored by 1~ lnst . for Addictions
Studies and Training. McAuley
Auditorium. St. Jerome 's Hosp• tal. No\'ember 3 and 4. $100 fee
for both days. Ca1164S-61~0.

AII'TEXHIBmON
Landscapes 1988-1994. Worls
on paper by Cynthia Hand.
Capen Gallery, fifth floor ,

Copen. Nonh Campus. Gallery
hours. Through December.

A FRICAN AMERICAN STYU
STUDENT W ORSHIP SERVICE

SUNDAY AT 6 :30 P.M.

U NMRSITY P REs smRIAN C HURCH

3334 MAIN ST.
AcRoss FROM U B's SOUTH CAMPus

AII'TEXMteiTION

Tbt Faculty Sho"·· Through
Nov. II. Art Department Gal lery. Center for the An.s. Nonh
Campus. 10 a.m.-S p.m.. Monday throogh Friday. Call
645-6878.

GDIOIITOLDGICA1 NUIISING
H e~~l lb

Fuoctional A..ssaisment

of Older Adults, Jamcc Glosc- .
De Graff Mcmonal Hospital. To
cam cenific:aLc. nurSeS musr
h:l\'e attended fi\•e SCSS"IOOS.
South Campus. 4:30-7:30 p.m.
S50 per module. To regtstcr. call
829-3291.
ATTM£MOVIU

Tbt Wonderful Horrible Lift
of L..eni Riefenstal UUAB film
series. 201 Student Union.
Nonh C.mpus. 6 p.m. S2. 53.50.
Call645-2957.
CRAFT WOIIIISBeginning Stai ned Glass. Six·
week cou~ . 120 Fill mort:.
Ellicou . North Campus. 7· 10
p.m. To register, call 64S-2434.

•IDCNDIICAL
I'IWIMACOLOGY SEMINAR
Probing the Bind ing Site of lhe

CRAFT WOIIIISOarkroom Techniques. Si.~~; ­
week roursc. 120 Fillmore.
Ellicon . Nonh Campus. 7- 10
p.m. To registe-r. call645 -2434.

Nicotinic Actt,-cboline: Recep-

CRAFT WOitKS-

tor Using Unnatural Amino

In1ermfdiate PoUtr). Six-

Acid Mutacenesls, Mad
Nowak, Ph.D.• Catifomi11 lnst. of

wed: course. 120 Fillmore,
Ellacou. North C:l.mpus. 7-10
p.RY.To register. callb-SS -2434 .

Technology. 307 Hochstener.
North Dmpus. 11 a.m.
UFEWOitKSCarCare 10 1, Hov.ard Hanl..c
and Peter Evans. 1-2 p.m. Call
64S-612S to rcgi~er.
COM1'111'111CUNIC

Sponsored by
' Episcopal College Ministry
Diocese ofW.N.Y.

VJatniHI SCHOI.Aita
Cou.oQUIUM

Some W uH in 1be Analysis of
C linical T rials. Prof. Morton 8 .
Brown. Univ. of Michtgan. 144
Farber. Sat.nh Campus. 4 p.m.
camFICATE I'IIOGJUM IN

"0 Come,

Let Us
Worship ...''

4p.m.

Internet C linic: The Basics.
223 Lockwood. North C;~mpus .
2 p.m. Preregistration required .
U.ll Gemma DcVin~y. 6452ai7.&lt;LOLGEMMA@'U8VM&gt;.
I'IWIMACIEVTICS SEMINAR

Dr. Deborah Leckba nd, O.pt.
ofCh(Jllical Engineeri n~ 50SC
Coolce . North Campus.
3:30 p.m.

,lwvsiCS CLr&amp;J.OOUJUII.

CRAFT WOitKSHOP
J ewelry Casting. S•x-weel
cour!oC. 120 Fillmore, Ellicou
Nonh Campus. 7-10 p.m To
re~1ster.

call 645-2-H-'

UFEWOitKSAn Introd uction to Mfdit ation. Paula Schank, Himalay:m
l n~lltute . 7-8:30 p.m. C:11l
645-612~ to register.
AT 'AlE MDVIES
Sc: hind ltr's U st. UUAB film
!oCries. 201 Sru&lt;knt Umon.
Nonh Dm pu~ . 9:15p.m. S2.
SJ.SO. Ca11645-2957.

eoces &amp;c. Mathematia Complel.
Nonh Campus. 3 p.m. Call
645-3180.
IIATIIEMA'I1CS~IUM

---~
Wonch. R.N.. Tena Garu R.N •

Dynamics or tb&lt;
Tubuloclomenllar Feedback

C cmtilluin.&amp; Eduml.ion. Det

Patbway, Prof. Harold Layton.
Dulce Univ . 103 J);e[cndorf.
South C.mpus. 3 p.m.

and Marietta Stanlon. Ph.D.
Buffalo Marriott Inn. Nonh
Campus. 8 a.m.-4:45p.m. 56~_
fee includes conferc:nce mateo -

MEDICINAL CHEIIIIITIIY
HMIIIAII
Jla Zhao, 121 Conk&lt; Hall.
onh Cempus. 3 p.m.

---

Wby Do A&amp;~nts Hold Mooe),
and Why Doer it Mau er !,

David Laidler, Univ, of Western
Ontano. 280 Park. Nonh Cam·
pus 3:30p.m.
ctfEIIIaTWY Cou.oQUIUII
Proassin&amp; a nd Propert ies or

ffigb Temperatu re Supercoa·
dud .o n: A Microscopic Per·
spective, Prof Dean Maller.
Argonne National Laboratory .
201 Natural Sc1en«S &amp;: Msth ematics Complex. North Cam-

pus. 4 p.m.
AT 'AlE MOVIES

Tbe Wonderful Horrible Lift
or Leni Rit:feostaL UUAB film
seri«. 201 Student Union.
Nonh Campus. 6 p m. 52. S3.50.
Call645-2957.
CEXT'EJI FOit 'AlE AII'TS
Df'DIIIHI FUTIYAL

Screeoings-SmaU Happi·
MSJ: Womeo lo a Chinese
Villoce: A U tt lo for My
HotU1 and a Uttlo ror My
God. Canna Hinton and RIchard Gordon: Bnta Landoff.
Center for thr Ans. North
Campus. 7 p.m. SJ.SO event:
S7 v.ttk&lt;nd. Ca11645- ARTS .
CRAFTW-

Groet illl Card o..ip. Sixweek cou~. 120 fillfl)()a.
Ellicott. North Campus. 7-10
p.m. To register. caii64S-2434.
CEHTDI FOit TM£ AII'TS
OPENIIHI FUTIYAL

1Concer1 : Blue Rodeo. Crnter
for the Aru. North Campus.
8 p.m. Sl8. Caii64~·A RTS .

Pick of the Crop 1111

Fam• Frilllls

It's repertoire dance on
Mamstage, Cemer for
the Arts. Nov . 6 a1 3
p .m . by Ptck of the
Crop Dance
Company and a
hos1 of famous
pertormers. Prepertormance talk
at 2 .30p.m.

�als. breaks and lu.ncheoa. Call
1129-329110rqi '"'by Oct. 28.

==:-cunur

--..---.-·
C

r

r

I

;

f

S

Datliel McCebc:_Baird Reci&amp;al
HaiL North Campus. Nooo No
admi ion clwg&lt;. Call
645-2921.

---

l..ftmlo&amp;to Love Voar Body
(Part 1). Women ooly. Part 2

-IIMR-

ov. 12. 415Capen. North

R - 17C by R- lyo
Drnlor. B 83. C.nter for the
Arts. Nonb Campus. Nooo-

Campus. 10-II:JOa.m.

CIIAfTMultt-Medio for Cbildr'Oil.
Six.-week coune. Ages 6-11 .
120 Fillrn&lt;&gt;&lt;e, Elhoou . North
Campus. 10-Noon. $40. To regISter, call 64~- 2·434 .

1 p.m.
-cunu~
Images or DipHy lo ltaliao
Rr oalua- Art, Prof. Charles

H. CIUIIWI. South Lounao.

Clt.U'TPott~ry for Childrea. Six·""'eek
cowse. Ages 6- 11. 120
Filfll)Of'e, Entcou. Nonh Cam·
pus. 10-Noon. S40. To re&amp;iiler,
call645-2434.

Goodyoar Hall. South CampuL
2 p.m. Call 876-9085.
I'O£I1IY U:c:naE
History's Rrtu m: Tbe Politlcs
or R•ptu rr a nd Roprouloa 1o
M......,ism, Susan Stanf..-d
Friedman., Univ. of Michipn.,
Ann Arbor. P1n of Wed.nesdayrt
at o1 PSu~ poetry and prose te.·
ries.. 436 Clemens. North Cam·
pus. 3:30 p.m. F...,_

CIIAfTPotte:ry for ChUdrHL. Sil-wec:k
coone. Ages 6-11. 120
Fillmore. ElliCOCL NOittl Cam·
pus. 1-3 p.m. S40. To n:gister,
ca1164S..2434.

--

-CEIITEit

FOOTUU.
~
UB Bulb vs.

uapto"" a
SIJit&lt;. UB Star!' m. Nonh Cam ticket inforpus. l :30
mali~

7

M ainlainiD.&amp; Self ia hlationbips. 415 Capen . North Campus. 5:30-7 p.m.

call 645-6666.

SCIIIIJIING
G utiwaar, Ousmant Se.mbane
Center for the Arts Sueemng
Room. North Campus. 6 .30 p.m.
Freo. Call 645-6902.

'IME AIITS
-FUIIVAL

CEWTDI -

Screeniop-VIcloo in tbe Villages; 1'be Spirit or TV;

Wartpiri M&lt;Ciio Assoc. In c... ·
tral Desat Abori&amp;lnal Community of Vueadumu ; Tht
Drums of Wlo1er, Vincenl

-

Wmdows

Olarles Pelu.. Dramalbeatre,
Center for t.be. Arts. North Cam·
pus. 8 p.m. SIO and S5 .

.USIIIUSSDIIIIAJI

COUNSWNQ CENTER

WOftiiS-

'IME ARTS
OPENING FES11VAL
Tb~ Tb.reepeaay Opera. Direaed by Saul Elkin. choreographed by Lynn&lt; Kurdti&lt;I Formato, musically directed by
Charles PeltL Cenler for the
Ans. Drama Thea1re . North
Campus . 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. SIO
and SS. Cali645-ARTS.

CDITEit -

Onrroming Sh y n~s. 11m ~~
allloO a Life \\'orl.ihop 145E
Student Umon North Campus
Noon - I p.m.
ROSWEll PARK STAfF
SEMINAR
Ce:li-Mediatrd Immunity lo

-Rrspiralor') Viruses. Peltt C
Oohen). Ph.D.. S1. Jude Re!iC'&amp;rch Hospllal, Memphis
Hilleboe Auditonum. RPCI

I'O£I1IY IIIEADING
Dennis Tedlock, C ba rtes
Bernstein. and SUJao Rowe.
Part of Wednesdays at 4 Plu ~
poetry and prose series. Screen ing Room. Center fot the Arts.
North Campus. 3 p.m. Fre.·

I 2:30pm.
ENYIRONMENIAL
EJICliHEEJIING AND SCIENCE

MONDAY

Danco Company. Joffrey balle~

OIIGAN IIECRAL
James Johnson. Slee Concert

Hall. North Campus. S p.m. S8.
S6. $5. S2. Call 645-2921.
POT WCI( DINNIII
Lesbi.au a.od Gay Fac.uhy a nd
Staff croup. S p.m. Contaet
Ellen Greenblan,
ulcreg@ubvm.cc.Buffalo.edu.
or Don Rosonlhal. 645-2251.
voice mail419.
CEIITEit IME ARTS
-FUIIVAL

Scremiap-Raocb: on thl'
Verdict: 1'be 1992 Los An ~cl&lt;s
Upris!Dc; Not Cbanod Zero

ru7:~~~~~ ~:=~ro-

ductions. Center for the Arts.
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m. S3.50
evrnl ; 57 v.reekend . Call
645-ARTS .

Macintosh

Professioruil
W'mdows

Open Mon. &amp;. Tues. 9:30- 5; Wed.- Fri. 9:30 - 6

Pollution PrneaUoa : A CoR ·
Etrrctln Apprcta(b to Meetlnc
Enviroame:atal Cba.Jknccs.
W(5:te:m New ork Tec.hnolov
[)e,·elopmenl Ccn1er. Center for
Tomorrow. Nonh Campus.
8: I 5-11 o.m. SSS f~ For rcgJS·
tration mform.atton call
636-3626.

mencc:s at 2:30p.m. Center for
lhe Arts, Mainstage. North
Campus. 3 p.m. Sl6. Sl4. SIO.
Call 645-6973 .

WodcsW!ooU.,.,...

.l

_M
______

=ted by Saul Elkin. cl!orcographcd by Lynne KurdzioiForm.ato, musically directed by

ISO, Paul Taylor. Alvln Ailey.

_/

"'I n.CCess
With Mlao10ft Offi~
Proleuional P.Kbs• Only

$113 $135 $143

T he l'llr«petllly Ope.-., Di -

A pre-performance talk com -

~ Word ~ Excel
~ PowerPoint ~ Mail

S1UDENf ASSOCIATION

IIDIAIE
Seaate meetlna- 330 Studefll
Union. North Campus. Op&lt;n to
any srudenu .,.ho would like 10
como and speak. Caii645-29SO.

Con:lli. Saroh Elder. and
Leonard KammerlinJ. Center
f..- the Arts. North Campu . 7
p.m. Sl.SO e.ve.ru: S1 weekend.
Caii645-ARTS.

IIEPEIII- DANe£
Pit.k of the Crop a ad Fa mous
Frif:nch, Pick of the Crop

Microsoft Combo Packs

7
S1UDIDIT

-QIIEE

IIIEcnAL
Contemporary E nsembl~/
Graduate Com posen' Coo·
cut. Jeffery S tadelman. director. Erik Ofia. conductor. Baird
Recital Hall. Nonb Campus.
Noon. No admissioa charge.
Call 645-2921.

----

Workln&amp; CruliV&lt;Iy wilb Addicted Cli~nts in a Group SdliD&amp;, Michael Kennedy. Hudson
Mohawk Recovery Center, Troy. Sponsored by Institute for
Addictions Studies and Training. Center for Tomorrow.
North Campus. 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Fee $50. For registration information call645-6140.

SCREENING
Xala, Ousmane Sembc.nc. Afri can modem no\·eliSI and filmmaker. Center for the ArtS
Screening Room. North Cam,... 3 p.m. Free. Call
645-6902.
.IDCIIDIISTRY SDIIINAR
Structure-Based Design of
A.nli· Pneumocyslis AnliFolates (Viriual Reality), Dr.
Vi,•ia.n Cody, HaupunanWoodward Medical Research
Institute. 1348 Farber. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

·~··.,
snJDENT NOIW)EIIIIEE

IIIECRAL
Voice students of Gary Burgess. Sylvif Dimiz.iani, and

SDIIINAR
Anaerob k: Trntmenl Possi·
bilities., Dr. Anthony Collins.
Clarkson Univ. 140 Ketter.
onh Campus. I :30 p.m. Call
645-3446.
GEOUICIY LEC1'UIIE

Old Structures. Neotectonics.
Powtr Plants, and Politics, Dr.
Joseph Wallach. Atomic Energ)'
Con1rol Board. Ottawa. 210
N:uural Sciencert &amp;:. Mathe mat·
iclrl Complex. Nonh Campus.
3:30p.m. Call645-6800 x6100.
CHEMICAL ENQINEERINQ
SEMINAR
Tbanuis Panagiotopoulos,
Come II Uni\1 . 206 Furnas. Nonh
Campus. 3:4$ p.m.
MUSIC LECIUIIE RlltU
Structure: aad Repre:seratation
in th~ Coocerted Madrigals of
Mootevr.rdi's Fi.ftb

Bookt

Massimo Ossi . Uni''· of Rochester. 211 Baird. North Campus.
4 p.m. No admission charge.
Ca11645-292L
PMY--.oiiY SEMINAR
Non-lnvulvr Method fo r Esti·
mating Anacrobk Threshold,
Brydon Grant. M.D. 108
Sherman. South Ca.mpus. 4 p.m.
Call 829-2743.

conlinued on page B

A .non-pfOIIW
?he

.t 6laff
,., ........,.,... • Fcuc ............

~ pn::!p'I:JI'n 1tlr ~ ~

eorrwnon. • Note'~~ .. 0

Attmtioo,UW!
H's Holiday Recipe
Contestnme

Go- K up

- thai
favorne holiday recrpe. the
one thai family and frrends
clamor for because il's
sooo good II can bring you
fame and fonunE!--JuSI by
sharrng rl wrth your UB
colleagues, you could have
il plrblished in lhe
Reporter and win a priZe
besides.
Our annual recipe
contest begins righl nowil's open to faculty, staff and 1rJudents
W e'll judge il for tasiBappeal, ease
of preparation. originality. and il contribution
lo a healthy dret. Winner of the redpe judged
the best will receive a handsome colfee table
cook book as a prize.
Please type lhe recipe in cook book
style with ingredienls firsl , direclions
following--and pul your name. address.
department, your UB lille and phone number
at the lop of lhe page. If there's a brief "Siory"
aboullhe recipe--now you created rl. what
kind of traditions il represents. how many
years you've served illo rave reviews, etc.,
include lhal, 100.
M ail or fax lo:
Reporter Recipe Conlesl. 136 Crofts. University
al Buffalo. 14260. Or e-mail to
reporter@pub.buffalo.edu

- f o r receipt o f - Ia NoY.17.

�8
CALENDAR

Goldberg, D.D.S.. Ph.D..

c ontinued from page 7

F~~·
I 2:30p.m.

POEIIIY IIEADIIKI

Eliz.abelb Willis and Ted

Purson. Part of Wed~!Ways
1:11 4 Plus poetry and prose series. Center for the Aru Screening Room. Nonh Campus.. 4

p.m. Ff&lt;C. Call645-3882.
PHAJIMACYHMINAR

Statlstkallssuts for tbe Initial
Human Safety Study, James A..
Bolognese. Merck R&lt;&gt;earrh
Labor.uone.. 248 Cook Nonh

Campus. 4:30p.m.
ARCNfTEC\'UIIE LS:TURE

~ntal Medicine. 306

5?'lh Campus.

PNY~

COLLOQUIUM
Hi&amp;b Tr Supermftduclivity,

Squids and Brains. ·Prof. John
C. CJarke, Univ. of California.
Berkeley. 210 Natural Sc.icnc:es
&amp; Mathematics Complex .

--

Nonh Campus. 3:30p.m.

· - A L SC:IEIICES

Regulatioo or Chloroplast
mRNA Procasbig aod SU.bil·
ity, Or. Wilhelm Quissem. Univ.
of California, llcl\;cley. 114 Hoch·
Sl&lt;llcr. Nooh Campus. 4 p.m.

Bohlin Cywioski Jackson:
Recent Work., Peter Bohlin.

-__. --...__ ___
- · TNo praoagiaut- ._.....-.ding
servic:etolllo ........ Siale~and~
The lliolinguiohed SeMae P t - l l i p • • rank

- ..

~····-~-thai
T,._IO-

Tbe New lloslc:s or SkiD Caro,

~~-on~rt,~~~os...Unive&lt;OIIyaNawvortt

Board ol
w11o have alllllned 111e
rank ol full prtllel8or and""" have~ .. least
10 )'MIS CJI lui-time- in SUNY. Nominations may
anM from facul!y. BIU&lt;Ienl body and~
Thooe pre-.rty holdtng 1t11s rank lncluclo G, ~
Ando&lt;aon (Enaftuo), C1auCie Welcl\, Aobe&lt;l H.
Aoosberg. Norman Solidi ,James Coow!J, Deonis
Malone, Newlon Garver. Kennel~ lnada. Vwginia Leary.

oPuS: CLASSICS UVE

AU-Chopin programt Eric
Hachinski. piano: Joel
Schoenhals.. piano. Allen. South

Campus. 7 p.m. Free. Taped for
broadcas1 the following Sunday
ao 4 p.m. by WBFO 88.7 FM.

Thomas- and Alan Drinnan.

VOI.I.EY&amp;UL
UB vs. Niagara. Alumni

EliCh nomination should be accompanied to, a

North C.mpus. 7 p:m.

14231-9070.
Ua MUSIC DEPARrMENT
SHOWCASE
Th.t UBufralo Symphony, UB
Wind Ensemble, UB Perc.us·
sion Ensemble:, Uniwrsity at
Buffalo Trombone Choir, UB
Contemporary Ense:mble. and

and instrume;ntal cbambe.r. Center for the Arts.
Mainstage. Non.h Campus.
8 p.m. No admission durge.

'\'OCal

AT THE MOVIES
The Blue K.ite. UUAB film
krie$. 201 Student Union.
North Campus. 9 : IS p.m. S2.

S3.50. Caii64S-2957.

_

current curricut..m VIta of the nominee. Self-oominations
are not appropriate. Please send nominations by Dec.
2, 1994 to: Joyce E. Sinaml. Chair, Distinguished Ser·
-vat COnYnfttee, Vice Provost fOf Graduale Education
and Dean ol 111e Gradual8 School, 552 Capen Hal.
NorlhCampus.

)

LD4IIC COUDQUIUM

1'bret

Proof~Tbeortlk

c::tsSc:S

in Aristotle, GCOfgc:

Pro-

Boger. Canisius College. 684

Baldy. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
MAn.MAnca COl UMI'MIIII

GaJo.is Modds and L-Functioos. Prof. George Pappu.
lAS . 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
VISJniKI ARTIST LECTURE

Visiting Artist Spea.krr Series, Linda Robbe.noh. photographer and miKcd media anisl.
Center for the: Arts Screening
Room. North Campus. 4 p.m .

Free. Caii64S-6878.
VJSmNG SC:IIOURS
COLLOQUIUM
Re«nt Dc:velopm ~ots in lb ~
Method of Back-Cakulation

PHARMACY CONFERENCE

Review of Antimicrobial
Agents. Hyatt Regency Buff~tlo. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 555 full day.
S.'\0 per session. plus S 10 after
regi ... trntion de3dline . Registration deadline is No\'. I: c..'OIII

M5·3931.
ART EXNIBITION
The Facul1y Shov.. Through
ov. li. ~Art Department Gallery. Ccmc:r for the Arts. Nonh
Campo . 10 a.m.- 5 p.m.. Thursd:ly and Friduy. Cull645-6878.
STUDENT
RECITAL

NO~EGREE

Pia no R«ital. SIUdents of
Prnf. Frina Arsch.an:&lt;oka Boldt
Baird Reci talliall . orth Cam pu-. . Noon. No admi~ion
charge.

NOTICES

&amp;ERONTOLDGICAL NURSING
Quality Management ls!!'Uts
for Long-Term Care, Maf)
Ftnnick. School of Nun.mg. To
earn certific:ne. nursts must
ha"e attended fi"e sessions.
South Campus. 4 :3()..7:30 p.m.
S50 ~r module. To register.

cn11829·3291.
AT THE MOVIES
Little Buddha. UUAB film
senes. 201 Student Un ion.
North Campus. 6 :30p.m. S2.

S3.SO. Ca1164S·29S7.
ROADSIDE THEATER
Mountain Tales and Music,
Ujima Theater Company.

8 p.m. SIS. Sl2. SIO.
SILVERMAN READING
18th Annual Oscar Silverman
Poetry Reading, Richard
Howard. 250 B3ird Halt Nonh
Campus . 8 p.m.

AT THE MOVIES
The Blue Kite.. UUAB film
series. 201 Student Union .
North Campus. 9 : 15p.m. S2.

S3.50. Caii64S·29S7.

EXHIBITS
CEIITIJI -

T1IE ARTS

FESnYAL UNDERWAY
The Cen1er for the Arts Grand

the. New York State LegislaIUre. Call 1-80().836-6731 for
:m applicatjon pac.ket or more
information. Application dead·
line is Jan. 16., 1995.
IIITEltNATIONAL FOLK
DANCING .
All are welcome to join the
International Folk Dancing
groop each Fridoy from 8-11
p.m. in 2 Diefendorf Hall on
the Sooth Campu . These free
session begin with teaching.
Pa.rtnt:rt are 001 needed. The
spomor is the Graduate Student

Auociatioea.
HOW'S Y-IIUIIOIGt
Tbe Student Association is coo·
duaing free hearing-5CI"eenings

through Nov. 18 in 199 Park
Hall on the Nonh Campus. The
screenings take: about five min·
utes, and are open 10 students
and All member$ of the. communily. Hours are Mondays from
1-5 p.m.. Tuesdays and

Wedoesd.lys from 3:30-5 p.m..
aod Fridoys from 12:3().3 p.m.
For infDI'll\lltion. caii83S-8382.
AIST SAY "NO"

Coach Jim De Fuio. Jr., president and founder of the Greater
Buffalo Sports Bocmc:.rs, invites
entries for the Be Drug Free!
writing contest celebrating the
Boosters' 20-yc:ar battle: against
drugs. Students of all ages are
encouraged to send a one 10 10
page leuer describing their
thoughts on drug abuse or sug·
gc:s tions for fighting drug abuse
to De Fazio at I SS3 Henel
Ave.• Buffalo, 14216 by Dec.
25. 1994. Prius include: SSO
and $25 gift ccrtificatet: to de·
pllllment stores 4nd restaurants
as we: II as movie passes and
coUege basketball tickett:.

WANTED: NEA[JNY WOMEN
UB seeks healthy women between 18 and 45 with premen·
strualsyndrome sy mptoms to
panicipatc in a study. Those
eligible will receive: frcc...trut·
ment. if warn.nted. lnteres1ed
part ies can call 898-5446

WIIITEJiaTAUIIOTI!
Sellio&lt; undcrgnd"""" at UB
may submit original creative
writing entries for the Gre£ory
Capasso Creative Writing
Award up until Nov. 20 10 Student AffaiB. S42 Capen Hall,
Nonh Campus. A Studenl Af·
fail"5 committee: and student

editon of campus newspapers
will judge the contest; the win·
ner will receive a cash a ward
and rccognilion on a plaque
located in the Studenl Union.
Only senion, are eligible for the
award, created in memory of a ·
US student who was killed
aboard a Pan Am Ojght when a
terroris:l bomb exploded over
Scotland on Dec. 21. 1988.

JOBS
FACULTY

A.ss'stant Profeuor·Statistics..
Postill£ ff-4088. Associal&lt;/
Full Prof~Stati stics. Post·
ing fF-4089. Asloclatt/FuU
Pror....,...Psydliauy, Posting
fF-4090. Msislaol ProreuorSociology. Posting IF-4091 .
4092. Mslslant Pror.....,.. (two
positlooJ avallabt.)-Psyebol·
ogy. Posting IF-4093. Auoc:l·
at&lt;/FuU Proreuor-Psycbology,
Posting NF-4094 . .U.Jstaol{
"'-late/Full P..rossor-Psy·
cbology, Posting IF-409S . .U.
sistaot ProCessor-Modem L.anguage:s and Liln'llures. Posting

MF-4096. Assistant (GFT)/
Associat&lt; Pror&lt;ISOr (GFT)Pediatrics. PoSijng tF-4097.
4098. Auistani/Associatf/FuU

ogy. Posting IF-4104 . .U.istaol{"'-lat&lt; p,.r....,..
CoonscUng and Educational

Psychology. Posting *F-4105
Asslstaai/Auocial&lt; Prof........
Educational Organization, Ad·
ministnttion and Policy, Posting
IF-4106. Asoioc:latt/Full P...,.
fes:sor-·Learning and lnstrvction, Posting IF-4101 . A.ssil~

tani/Mso&lt;lato p,.r....,..
Learning and InstrUCtion, Post·

ing tF-41 08.

RESEARCH
Resea.rc:b Tc:cbnkilo-Biologi·
cal Sciences. POSting IR·

94083. Research Tc:chntelao
U-lab Animal Facilities., Post·
1ng IR-94084. Sr. Research ·

Support Sp«:lal'-1-Civi l Engo·
neering. Posung IR -94085.
Secretary 1-Scbool of Nursing.
Posting tR-94086. Education
Spedali5t·Rehabilitation Medi-

cioe. PostinrtR·94087. Data
Maoaaer/Stal'-llcla•Family
MedicioeiR urol Heal lb. Posting
IR·94088. Reg'-ttred .,.....
Soc1al &amp;; Prt-venaive Medicine.
Posung fR·94089. Wonution Systems Specialist~Family
Medicine. Posting •R-94091 .

-

FacUide.s Proaram Coordiaator (SL-5)-D&lt;sign It Consuuc·
tion, Posting IP-4080. ADif..

tant 0.... (SL-S)·Univ&lt;rsily
De,•elopmenl, Pos:ting IP-4086.
lnstructiooal Support Tc:c.bniclao (SL-J).Computing It In·
formation Technology. Posting

tP-4091. Syst&lt;ms Aoalysl
(SL-3)-Aocou nting &amp; Payroll

Services. Posung IP-4092.
LUOR CLASSIFIED CIVIL

Profasor-Biochemistry, Post·
ing ,tF-4099. As:sistant/Auoc.iate Professor-Social and Pre·
\'tntive Medicine. Posting
fF-41 00. Assistant Profe:ssor-

HlrVICE
Claner (SG-5)-Uni ,·e:rsity
Facilities, Custodial ServtCCJ,

Dennaoology, Posting ff-4101.
AnistantJAssoc:iate Profes50rOphohalmology. Posting IF·
4102. Asmlatti/Auocia.. Professor&lt;omputc:r Science.
Posting lf-4103 . .U.Istaol/

ctea..... (SG-5!-~ilknoiaJ

Anodate Proressor&lt;ounsc.l ing and Educalional Psychol·

Lone: 131614. Cleaoer (SG· Sl·
Uni\'c:rsity Facilities. Custodial
Service:s, Line 131784, 34356.

Custodial. Line 143211 .

CleaMr (SC-S)-Res•dc:ntjal
Custodial. LtM: lf4318S.

To obUiin mort informauon oo
jobs li ted abo\'t: , cont.c:t Per·
sonnd Semce:s. I04 Croft10 Hall

on the Function of Humor in
Conttmporary An" i showing
in University Galleries I and II.
Center for the Arts. Nonh Cam·
pus. 1be free exhibit , which
runs through Dec. 23 andresumes Jan. 3· 14, 1995. is open
from 10 a. m.-9 p.m. Wedoesdays- Salurdays. and Noon·
5 p.m. on Sundays.

CRAFT WORKSHOPS
CONTINUE

ANATOMY AND CELL
BIOLDCIYHMINAR
Motor Control of Rhy.tbmic
Jaw Monments. Louis

~~.~~ ich!.~sm,;.;~~

on legislative funding m1de
available by the 199S session of

..FAITH rN DOUar" NOW
OPEN
'"Faith in Doubt: A Speculation

President. Americln Statistical
A...soc. and Chief, Biostatistics
Branch. National Cancer lnst.

144 Foroer. Soolh CamfMJS. 4 p.m_

10

level of the Center for the Arts
on the North Campus. condudes Nov. II. Gallery hours
are Monday and Wednesday.
10 a.m .-4 p.m.: Tuesday and

for Estimating HlV Infection
Rates and Projttting AIDS
lncidenee. Prof. MiJchell Gail.

CERTIFICATE PROGRAM IN

THURSDAY

. . . . .SOR

,

Brenda Romanow. 7-9 p.m.
C:ll) 645-6125 to register.

ch3sc). Tickets av:~ilable at
J&amp;E Instrument Ser"ice. 5273
Transit Road. Wi11iamsvi11e ~ AI
Herner Music Corp .. 4109 N .
Buffalo SL On:hard Park;, or
by malllhrough Gary Stith,
Williamsvi lle: Cent raJ Schools.
415 Lawrence Bell Drive. P.O.
Box 9070, Williams,ille, N .Y.

Oepan~nt' s .. Facuhy
Show." in the Art Depanrntnl
Gallery located in the lov.oer

~IBVICE

Ufii-

M aynard Ferguson and bis
Big Bop Band. Sponsored by
WBFO 88.7 FM and the ·
Wi'llin.ms\•ille Music Boosters.
WillinmsviUe South High
School. 8 p.m. SIS. Sl2 ao door
($2 discount for advanced pur·

WUit
n.e An

MU8II1' FOit

5:30 p.m. Free.
AT 11IE -VIES
Fiorik!:. UUAB film series. 201
Student Union. Nor1b Cam:J
s.
6:30p.m. $2, $3.50. Coil
645·2957.

-

"FACULTY SHOW" IN FINAL

_.'........,
liONS
.. . ....,._

• Sporuor&lt;d by I he School of
Architectu.re and Planning. lOt
Crosby. South Campus.

A~na.

Opeaing Festival run through
Nov. 20. and feat urn somethiDg for the anist in everyone:
art uhibiu. dance, theater.
music. lec1ures and film 5Cf'tt.n·
ings. An ambitious new SSO
million g.aUtry, v.1hich wilt
present a year-round schedule
of temporary uhibitic;m .
makes its debut during the festival. Celebrate creativity
through the Center for the Aru!
Ca11 645-ARTS for event informalion.

The Creative Craft Center 's
Fall '9-4 Crnfl Wo rkshops continue through the ~eek of M onday. Dec. 12. Workshops in
·wea vi n~. crocheting and kn itting. quilting. Bro1i lia n embroidery. ~rc:etmE card design. pol·
tery. intermcdi:ne pouery.
cartooning. basic phologrophy.
camern use and operation . creative pholograph)'. color pho·
tography. advanced color photography. darkromn techniques.
jewelry casting, beginning
stained glass. advanced stained
glass. pouery for children. and
multi -media for children run
o ne night a \lt eck from 7-10
p.m. (except children 's d:u.se~o) .
Fe~ are S30 and S50: call 6-45·
6125 from 8 a.m.· I p.m .. o r
645-2-B.J from I -5 p.m. o r
7-IOp.m.
EMPIRE STATE PUBLIC
SC:IIOUUtSNIP OFFERS
ASSISTANCE
Children of union reprcsemc:d
and Management!Confidenlial
State employees in the Executive Branch agencies who have
gradua1ed from high school or
recei\·ed 3 GED diploma &lt;Jnd
plan to au end 11 college or university in New York Stute art
eligible for the: 1995 Empire
St3le Public Employees Schol·
arship Progrnm. Up to 11 schol·
arships. each equivalem to
&lt;~round 58.800. will bt awarded
on the basis
academic c:.xcellence; A wards are contint;ery

or

Conveniently Locaid
Ar the UB Commons

Call or visit us soon at the Commons!
Tel 636-8440 • Fax 636-8468
520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

�9

_.,,_"--.-·

Emmy-winning screen writer
Alan Zweibel to visit UB

A

LAN ZWEIBEL. the Emmyaward~winning screen writer, producer and comedy wriler. will be
on the UB campus Friday and
SaiUrdayconducting student workshops and
taking pan in Center for the Ans Grand
Opening events.
Zweibel. a 1972 Phi Beta Kappa graduate
of UB. recently co-produced the comedy
"Nonh'' with Rob Reiner and i the author of
Bunny, Bunny, a memoir of his longtime
"'lationship with the late comedian Gilda
Radner. Royalties from the book a"' being
donated to Gilda's Club. a f= suppon center for cancer patients and their famitiCs.

Zweibcl was producer. writer and co=toroflhe"h'slheGaryShandlingShow"
and bef~ l l, spent five years as senior
writerforthe 'gi nai"SaturdayNightLive,"
whe"' he c ted the character Roseanne
Rosannadan with Gilda Radner, co-developed· 01 Necessarily the News," and contributed 10 the ta le John Belushi's samurai

act.
He began his professional ca= selling
jokes to the ''Tonight Show" and "Dick
Caven" while still a student at UB. He later
wrote for many comedians including Ste\;e
Man in. Rodney Dangerfield. Chevy Chase,
T J m Hanks and Dan Aykroyd. He was a
recent guestonthe"David LenermanShow."
Zweibel 's workshops on ''The Making

of a Ca=r in Hollywood" will be held
Friday at I p.m. and Saturday at 10:30 a.m.
at 246 Center for the Ans.
His Friday schedule includes a taping ef
a brief interview for UBrrv at 2:30p.m.: a
tour of the Center for the Ans
and a campus
tour with Dean
of Ans and Letters Kerry Grant
and Center for
the Ans Director
Robert
Chumbley from
3:30-4 :30 p.m.:
at '.endance at a
Grand Opening
Reception with
President and Mrs. William R. Greiner at 6
p.m. in the Center for the An s as well as a 7
p.m. ribbon cutting ceremony. Zweibel will
at~end the 8 p.m. performance of "The
Threepenny Opera." presented by the UB
Depanmenl of Theatre and Dance and the
UB Depanmen1 of Music in the Drama
Theat"'.
On Saturday. following the workshop,
Zweibel will be a guest in the President's
Suite in UB Stadium. at the football game
pitting the UB Bulls against Youngstown
State.
o

Football Bulls score important victory
satd after hrs team won rls lh11d game 1n
tiMe, tllere . . . - · - ..........._
four starts
l1lla

No breakdowns. No excuses
The Universrty at Buffalo scored rls
most rmportanl vrclory Stnce re1urmng to
Dtviston I wrth a 24-2 t win over Matne
on Saturday night before 3.787 at
Fitzpatrick Stadrum m Portland
II avenged a bther 30-27 loss to the
Black Bears 1n the tnaugural game at
UB Stadtum last year
In that game, UB look a 27-24 lead
wtth 54 seconds left, only to see Matne's
Robert Tubbs return the ensuing ktckoH
78 yards The Black Bears scored two
p lays later.
On Saturday, the Bulls (3-5) held the
ball lor the ftnal three minutes of the
game. Maurice Perry's 40-yard run wtlh
1:30 left allowed UB to run out the clock.
"This is the first tune we 've been able
to put four good quarters together on
both sides of the ball,· coach Jrm Ward

Defense was the key IO&lt; the Bulls,
espectally •n the second half wnen they
held Maine to just 33 yards rushing The
Black Bears of the Yan~ee Conlerence
tell to 3-6.
Quarterback Cliff Scott replaced Marty
Barrett ( 1980-83) as the most prohfic
passer tn school history . breakrng a pall
of Barrett's old records
Scott hll hts brother AnthOny wrth an
11-yard completron 1n the first half to
eclipse Barrett s tota l of 513 The seniOf
from Grand Island now has 523 compteIrons
Later. Scott established the marK IO&lt;
career yards wrlh 7,014 , bestmg
Barrett's 6.956 Scoh completed 19 of
34 for 282 yards and a pa11 of scores
UB hosts Youngstown State, the defendrng 1-AA national champions, Saturday at 1.30pm
o

HEALTH STUDY
continued from page 1
under the age of 40.
Smoki ng, alcohol consumption, asthma
and diabetes""' major problems in this population in which conventional written health
information is n't panicularly useful because
mo"' than a third of the nesidents did not
complete high school. And when members
of the Hispanic population go to a hospital or
doctor's office. as many as 40 percent can't
communicate with the English-speaking staff
and physicians. the study showed.
The results also indicate that. contrary to
early assumptions. mo 1 residents of this
low-income neighborhood have a place to
go for health ca"' and most are covered by
some type of health insurance.
Bilingual interviewers went door-to-door
from January-April 1994 , contacting every
seventh house in five census tracts. They
completed interviews al 826 households ,
representing 1.873 individuals. for~=ponse
rate of about 78 percent.
The study "'port homes in on findings
that Ja~n says have a major impact on the
health status of this population:
• One out of four liispanic adults. or 25
percent. has les than an eighth-grade education and 50percenidid not finish highschool.
The figunes for African Americans are 13
percent. and 41 percent; for non-Hispanic
whites, 12 percent and 26 percent.
• 41 percent of Hispa nic respondents
repon their health status as fair or poor. a
generally accepted indicator of illness. The

. .m poverty nauon.
num ber )o f peop Ie I'avmg
ally who rate their health status as fair or
poor is 20 percent. Ja6n said In this study. 28
percent of Africa n-Americans and 23 percent of non-Hispanic \1.1\ites considered themselves to be in fair or poor health.
• 15 percent of Hispanics, 14 percent of
African Americans and 7 percent of nonHispanic whites have: been diagnosed wilh
asthma.
• One of five Hispanic or African Ameri can residents 40 years or older has diabetes.
• 47 percent of the men "'poneddrink.ing
alcohol. with 52 percent of male drinker•
considering themselves problem drinkers or
alcoholics. Only 28 percent of the women
drank alcohol. bul within that group. 15
percent reported themselves to be prohlern
drinkers or alcoholics.
• 47 percent of men and 33 percent of
women 18 ye:ars old or above arc cigarette
smokers. The national average is 26 percent.
The survey also reveals unrealistic anitudesconceming the dangers of AIDS . Sixt)five percent of Lhc respondents said the)
have no chance of gelling AIDS. )CI 39
percent said they have a friend or relative
"ith the disea;c . A third of the respondents
did not think condoms arc useful in protecting again l AIDS.
The study. which includes data on many
additional health issues. was fu nded by the
Margaret L. Wendt Fo undation. a private
Buffalo-based ofgani1.ation.

ENGINET
continued from page 1
instance. Stony Brook' ~ contribution thi s
semester. a course called 'The Manufacturing Enterprise." i ta ught by a \'tsitingscholar
who is a high-ranJ..ing vice president with the
SONY Corporation of America.
Three times a "'eek. Mountziaris·s class
meets in 120 Clemen~ . a room specially
outfitted for audiovisual needs. Two orthree
camera operators capture both hi s lecture
and student reactions. explained Barnes. Tile
camera feeds are edited together on to o ne
"idem ape as the class proceeds. so little or
no ro~t-produclion editing is necessary. and
the finished product can be shipped to re mote class panicipantsright away.lbeequipmentand talent costs nearly S350.000 a year.
which was funded through SPIR.
Teaching such a course: can require somewhat different P"'P"ration on the pan of the
instructor. ··vou need to learn to project and
to talk into the camera once in a ""hi1e."

explained.Mountziaris. who auended a training session at the Albany headquanersofthe
ew York Network. a public access network. to learn how to teach under talk show
conditions. He also has one teaching assistant who prepanes the visuals for the course.
"Blackboards and O \ erhead projectors don't
wo rk well with thts medium. so I had to
dc,•ise a whole new set of visuals to suppon
the course." Mountziaris said:
Barnes hopes to have the capacity to bave
li\'e intcracth·e courses operating by next
fall. Even " 'hen that occurs.thecourseoould
still be distributed on videotape to companies or individuals who have a scheduling
conflicr. Since instructors are responsible
for testing and grading all their students.
C\'en the ones on the pngiNet. the courses
don't have a shelf l(e. -we only use each
course once." said Barnes. -and compile
new offerings every semester...
1

to .50%

NURSING
continued from page 1
other classroom sites in the Southern Tier.
Recruitment will begin immediately in
Allegany, Chautauqua and Cauarauguscounties for up to 15 nurses with bachelor·s
degrees to enroll in the program. The first
courses will be offered in the upcoming
spring semester.
Classes will take place simultaneously at
UB and Cuba Memorial. Dual video screens
and aud iocapabilitiesat both sites will allow
full interaction between the on- and off-site
classrooms.
En rollees 'also wi ll have access to
HUB NET, the medical informa tics network
established betwee n the UB School ofM edici ne and Biomed ical Sciences, itseightteach-

ing hospitals and the UB Health Sciences
Library. HUB NET provides the equivalent
of6.5 million pages of medical information.
including computerized instruction and diagnosis databases. extensive medical-literature resou rces and client-management
programs.
Students will receive instruction in computer-assisted learning and ingaininga cess
and use of the HUB NET resources.
The project is a joint cffon of the UB
Nurse Practitioner Program. directed by
Patricia Bums. and Cuba Memorial Hospital, headed by Marc Subject. MarshaMarecki
and Mary Ann Ludwig of the UB nursing
school. a"' co-directors of the project.
I

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FAIT, QUALITY SERVICE • 1011% Salllfadioll

~

"RecJdeo Don't ..... ......, .... a.-~~~-...-·

C Technologies

(716) 838-2745

835 Englewood Avenue, Town ol Tonawanda, NY

FAX ~

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Oct. 14-20:
• Public Safety charged
a man with criminal trespass
· Oct. 14 after he was found
sleeping in a lounge In Clement Hall.
• A mountain bike, valued at $150, was reported
missing Oct. 16 from the
grounds outside Crosby Hall.
• A book bag, containing
four textbooks and personal
items worth a combined
value of $200, was reported
missing Oct. 16 from Red
Jacket Quadrangle.
• A cellular telep
valued at $500. was
missing Oct. 17 from
phone booth outside
Hall. According
tic
Safety, the complainant
walked away from the telephone booth for a minute and
when he returned. the cellular telephone was gone.
• A telephone, valued at
$50, was reported missing
Oct. 18 from Park Hall.

061TUAR i fS

George L. Sheehan,
91, physician
_
Services • - held Oct. 4 in St.

John Neumann Chapel of St. John
lhe Baptist Catholic Church, Town
of Tonawanda. for George L.
Sheehan, who served as an associate
clinical professor of medicine at lllc
UB medical school for many years.

Sheehan, 91, who practiced medicine until four years ago. died Sept.
30 in his home after a long illness.

A 1928 graduate of lhe University of Buffalo School of Medicine.
he was associate chief of medicine at
Roswell Park Cancer Institute for 31
years. He was a specialist in the
lreatment of leukemia.
Sheehan. physician for the Town
of Tonawanda schools for two decades, was director of medical education at Deaconess Hospital from

1961 -1968. He also served on the
staffs of Buffalo General and
Kenmore Mercy hospitals.

Survivors include his wife, Mary ~
a son. lbomas G. of Mount Prospect. Ill.: two daughters. Sheila C.
Drexelius of Clarence and Mary
Kathleen Pepe of Centreville. Va.:
nine grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.

Warren M. Swager,
94, engineer
A IINHIIOriel Mrvlce will be held
at 4 p.m. Nov. 26 at Nonh Presbyterian Church. 300 N. Forest Rd .. Williamsville. for Warren M. Swager.
94. who died Oct. 22 in hi s residence
in the Presbyterian Village.
Williamsville. Swager joined the UB
Engineering Depanment in 1949and
served on the facuhy until his retiremen! in 1970.

A graduate of the Univel1iity of
Michigan, he worked as an engineer
in Pennsylvania. in the steel industry
in Youngstown. Ohio, and for the
Arm!&lt;r.1rong Cork Co. in Lancaster,
Pa. HC earned a master's degree in
business administration from UB in
1956.
Survivors include two daughters.
Mary Alison Hopper of Williamspott. Pa. and Julia LouiseofModesto,
Calif.; tWo sons. Warren M. Jr. of
Sheridan. Mont. and Alan R, of Orange Park. Fla.: a sister. Clara Day of
Youngstown: 10 grandchildren and
nine great-grandchildren.

A New Generatio~ of Designers
. , IIILL K*SEII
Reprinted wilh petmJSsion of Srep·

by-Step Graphics, copyright 1994.
Volume 10, No. 3, 6000 Nof1ll Forest
Pari&lt; Or.. Peoria, llllf&gt;Ois 61614, (BOO)

~-

1

WROTE the broadsheet,
not as a manifesto, but as a
re ponse to my students'
wort: what they are doing,
how they are doing it, why
they are likely the tim of a new
generation of designers.
For one thing. I feel they have
more respect for words than
previous generations of design
students had and the present
generation of designers have.
I've found that most of them
aren't fond of, for insuince. designers like April Greiman who
began using computers rather late
in their careers. My students
don ' t particular! like their worlc
because, accordins to them, the
words are unreadable and illegible. Also, because they are so
adept with computers. computer
tricks simply don't intrigue lhem.
This is certainly not an aiLICk on
Ms. Greiman by a bunch of
snotty-nosed. arrogant stude01s.
They all can see the qual.ity of
her work.
I think that the students respond this way panly because
lhey have given up on the fine
ans, indeed on the visual ans as a
guide to design. as they find their
own way. Perhaps il's a more
conservative way. or perhaps
lhey are simply returning to older
conventions. when de igners
were hired to stage words rather
than to obscure them in favor of
visual drama. If this is so. we do
have a new set of designers, one
lhat might intrigue you.
I don't know what these
changes mean. Maybe you do.
We are, however. developing a
unique curriculum. a new way 10
teach-&lt;&gt;ut of necessity. perhaps.
rather !han out of any genius on
our pan .
Well, here we are again. trying to make sense of. find fonns
for, and discover a useful theory
for a new communication tech·
nology. Like Jenson in 1465.
Aldo Manucci in 1488. William
Morris in 1890. El Lissitzky in
1920. and William Paley in 1930
and 1940. we're still stumbling
around in the dark. But, just for
now, try this.
In the mid '80s. some of us
predicted a design revolution
driven by the computer. We said
re\•olmion. but we meant evolu·
tion. With hindsight, we can see
that what is happening now is all
perfectly logical. and obvious.
and that it'sjust the beginning.
One of the things we should
have expected was the shift from
an emphasis on visual an to a
new kind of writing. albeit one
that includes- visual communica·
lion. This is the beginning of a
new kind of design because computers demand digital logic. not
analogical logic-the detailed.
linear. step-by-step logic of
words, nol the sensuous. spatial
logic of the ani st. And the new

media-hypermedia and
telematics---&lt;lemand a knowledge
of scripting, an affinity for programming languages, an affinity
for lhe logic of language.
In lhis postmodem world.
computer~ucated designers
return to the logic of writing as a
primary process, a way oflhinking instead of looking to the
visual arts. And I consider our
present design students the first

pencil on layout paper. lhe mall
joys of a well-uecuted felt tip
comp or beautifully kemed type,
our delight in a pres proof on
Kromecote, the smell of the ink?
And from lhe beginning we
direcled our attention toward the
final, perfect, finished, visual
object. We worl&lt;ed from sketch
to finish , from general shapes to
&lt;:ompleted shapes: like an artist
at hi s canvas, we moved around

They choose. erase. move,
crop, paint, step forward and
back. They scan and click and
drag and rubber stamp. They do
· it in the precise onder demanded
by the machine. Some wouldo't
know aT-square from a hammer
except for the requirements of
one production course. Manual
skills are redundant . So our best
students tend to be !hose wilh
intellectual. abstracting, prowess

"In this postmodem world, computereducated designers return to the logic of
writing as a primary process, a way of
thinking instead of looking to the visual
arts. And I consider our present design
stuLients the first generation to practice
what we think'of as the new writing."
tiiU.IUNSIEJI

genera1ion to praclice what we
think of as the new writing.

Writing can be defined a the
invisible process by which writ ers string words together to give
meaning to the world. and as the
fonnal marking of words (read
ideas) on paper (now on screen)
for lhe purpose of presenting
them in other places and at other
times. In the past. words were
sometimes complemented by
images chosen to clarify or illustrate in concrete form meaning
left vague by words alone. This
is in contrast to the notion many
modems entenain--that visual
statements are primary (pictures
being wotth 10.000 words and all
that).
Communication 1echnology
chooses the communicator, not
vice versa. As we think in our
spoken language. we define reality one: way. And as we think in a
technological communication
language. we define reality another wa)'.
There is a kind of "Ia" of
least resistance" at work here.
We will ..vant to do what the
language in which we think
makes it most comfortable to do.
On a simple level. we will design
what is easiest 10 design today.
'With today's tools. and that will
be acceptable design.
The old, an-centered design
methods will necessarily fall by
the wayside.
Most designer,; working today
are sensualists. We love object .
We love the shape of an o ld car.
the glint on the edge of an enam·
eled tin. the rough. pebbly surface on a piece of watercolor
paper in the glancing sunlight of
the late afternoon.
Like fine artists we were al·
ways involved with objects:
paper. pencils. colors in different
lights, textures .... We were anist~
because we had to be and because our tools demanded it.
Remember how it was in the old
days? Remember the feel of a 2B

the pad. refining this. touching
up that. Even those gray lines
represent.ing type were just visual
elemems, never actual words.
What we did was all physical . all
hand-eye coordjnation.
To the computer-trained de·
signer. the objeca is a temporary
event. no1 the goal. Looking at it
through his or her eyes. all those
beautiful objects look so-well,
so decorative. so refine4. So
much labor devoted to realizing
an object. which. after all. is only
one of an infinite number of
variations. Printing. film. and
' 'ideotape are objeclifications of
thought. If tal lUng is like writing
on water. then using compulers is
like writing on air: the designer's
thought doesn ' t exist as objects
unless he or she wants it to. The
computer encourages infmite
flexibility. and more than e..-er
before keeps the wort in the
realm of thought-as it has always been for writers.
For our student designers.
nothing is finished until it is set
in type. or recorded on tape. And
e ..·en then. what is finished today
still exis1s in ahe ephemeral space
of the computer's memory. It
exists. no1 in the tactile. objectified sense. but almost as a theoretical work-an idea halfway
between gnosis and praxis. on
one edge or the other of completion. waiting in pieces to be resurrected and modified tomorrow.
a&lt; print. as tape. as hyperstack.
So what if the type isn' t perfectly kemed. It' s a temporary
condili on. Someone will develop
perfect kerning tables someday
~oon . Tomorrow i~ another day
and another revision. And who
can afTord Kromecote in these
time~ of rolling revi!!lions and
replacements?
Out students begin and end
their college careers in front of
computen.. They si t in front of
that barren blui;h glow like
clerks in a typing pool or monks
in their cells.

rather than anisu c skills.
or course. we are in a stage
here at UB that's a little ahead of

most schools that teach design.
We've been working with com-

puters since 1978 so maybe we
see results that are a little different lhan !hose produced elsewhere. Computers are completely
integrated into our program.
From the first course to the last.
our studentS work almost exclusi\'ely on computers. They take
courses in Freehand. Director.
Photoshop. Supercard. and
XPress. This year we introduced
a course in telematics. 1bese are
not software training courses, but
courses in which technology is
integrated into the design process.
Electronic calligraphy might ·
be a good metaphor for what we
are doing today: ephemeral,
personal. idiosyncratic-some!hing that contradicts the very
idea of standardization and mass
production. Like early calligraphy. much of our student work
tends to give word.s the stominant, and images lhe s\fOOrdinate.
role. This i because computerbased design begins wilh content
and meaning. as defined by
words. ruther than wi~ a visual
idea. to be embellished ith
words. But. of course. mll!i.h of
their work still resembles "'\old
design-e\'olution is never instantaneous. Perhaps the next
generation will completely break
free from the old. And in some
ways. that's too had.
Bill Kinser is associate professor
otana1UB.

�--..---.-·

Facui
~to-UB
AluiMI Association

0

Sarah M. Anderson has
been named president oflhe
UB Alumni Association. Coordi·
nator of transfer relations at Buf.
falo Slate College. Anderson
received a doctorate in educational organization. admini tration and policy from UB in 1985.
The other officers are: Leon
. Henderson. Ed.M. '63. Ed.D '88.
a consultant for the Buffalo Public Schools, presideoH:lect. and
William E. Cressman. B.S. '64. a
corporate finance officer. lrea·

su~~wly elected v
· ce presi
3nts
are Jonathan A. Dandes. B.S. '74:
Nicholas J. Boccol
·
. .
'92: Roben Rakoczy. B.S. '70.
M.B.A. '72: Donald C. Robens.
B.A. ·'93: and Maryheth Cullinan,
B.A. '80, L.L.D. '91.
New members of the board of
directors are Jay Friedman, B.A.
'88: Susan Grelick. M.L.S. '78.
M.A. '80. M.B.A. '82: and
Conway Porter Ill. B.A. ' 72.
M~Ferguson

to perform Nov. 9

Jazz great Maynard
Ferguson and his Big Bop
ouveau Band will perform at 8
p.m. Nov. 9, at Williamsville
South High School. 5950 Mai n
St.. Williamsville. Sponsors are
WBFO 88.7 FM. UB's NPR

0

news and jazz stat ion, and the

Williamsville Music Boosters.
Ferguson. a Canadian-born
trumpet player. played in bands
led by Boyd Raeburn , Jimmy
Dorsey. Charlie Barnet and Stan
Kenton. He formed a band in
1956 for New York's Birdland. It
disbanded in 1967. but he contin·
ued working in England and
India.
Tickets at the door are Sl5 for
adults and $12 for students and
senior citizens. If purchased in
advance, they are $2 less. They
are available at J&amp;E Instrument
Service, 5273 Tran it Road.
Williamsville; AJ Herner Music
Corp., 4190 N. Buffalo St.. Or·
chard Park. or by mail through
Gary Stith, Williamsville Central
Schools, 415 Lawrence Bell
Drive. P.O. Box 9070. Williamsville. N.Y. 14231 -9070.

UB artists' works

In "Cracow '94"

0

The works of two members
of the UB Department of
Art are on exhibit as part of the
International Print Triennial
Cracow '94 exhibition in Poland.
Harvey Brevermao, UB
professor of art, and E nd i
Poskovic, lecturer in art at UB.
representing the U.S. and Bosnia.
respectively, have a small group
of multi-rolored etchings and
lithographs on display. The inter·
national exhibit. which represents
a comprehensive survey of current printmaking. began in September and is a Polish
government-sponsored event.
A member of the UB faculty
since 1961. Breverman bas part
ticipated in international biennials
in England, Norway. Spain and
Taiwan, and has recei\'ed awards

from many foundations and mu·
seums. Poskovic's works have

been exhibited in Norway,
Budapest, Liege and Havana. A
native of Sarajevo, he received a
master's of fine arts degree from
UB in 1993.

Alumni forum looks at

media IICCOUnt.blllty

0

As the OJ. Simpson trial
continues to make head ~
lines, the power. of the media is

also a target for debate. The UB
Alumni Association will sponsor
a luncheon and panel discussion,
"Whose News? A Look at Media
Accountability," from 12:15-2
p.m. Nov. 16, in the Hyau Regency Buffalo. It is open to the
public.
. Panelists will include Stephen
Bell, city editor of Th~ Buffalo
N•ws. Brian Meyer, managing
news editor of WBEN Radio and
Jacquie Walker, WlVB -TV News
broadcaster. Leroy
i!h. UB
lecturer in English, will modemte.
The registration fee, SIO for
association members and $12 for
all others. includes lunch. Reser·
vations must be made by Nov. 7
with the UB Alumni Association
at 829-2608.
)

Norman Mohl receives

dental alumni award

0

Norman Mohl. chair of the
UB Department of Oral
Diagnostic Sciences. has received
the UB Dental Alumni Honor
Award. A 1956 graduate of the
School of Dental
. Medicine. he is
nationally recognized for his
research in dental
anatomy, occlusion and
MOHL
orofacial pain
disorders. He
received a master"s degree in
1968 and a doctorate in 1971 ,
both from UB .
The author of more than 90
professionlf articles. he also co~
authored "A Textbook of Occlu·
sion," and served as the editor of
several other textbooks.
Mohl. who served in the U.S.
Navy Dental Corps from 195658.joined the UB faculty in 1959.
He is director of UB 's m"' ter' s
degree program in the oral sci·
ence .
Mohl is a fellow in the Inter·
national College of Dentists and

Get Caught in the
Postmodem Web

listed in "Who's Who in Health
Care Education," "Who's Who in
North America" and "Outstaod·
ing Educators of America." He is
past president of the neuroscience
group for the International Association for Dental Research and
Association of University TMD·
Orofacial Pain Programs.

I l l - . . . . , . _ . . . . _ we lookeclllleome of lhll different
itllllfecee ~can UM ID connect ID . . Jnlemle. Not sur·
prisingly, -'Dialnlllmlll dn
geered to
~ . _ . _ .. Pblllmod11111 Culture (PMCJ ta an ex·
M!ple of _, ~n~~~m~~• buii1!)11Cific811y to maximiZe lhe
benefils ollie World-Wide Web Through hypeftextual

••ll)eCificalty

lilb, one can -llraugll VWious PMC prOjBCis and

I I I c

TQior participates

HiGH a

In lJ.S./RUasiM

edu~ conference

0

Henry Louis Taylor, Jr.,
associate professor of
American Studies and the director
of the Center for Applied Public
Affairs Studies at UB, partici·
paled in the
1994-95 Citizens
Ambassador
Program held in
Moscow Oct.
1-9.
Topics ad·
dressed at the
U.S./Russia Joint
Conference on Education included HI VI AIDS education:
mu sic and multicultural education:vocational and early-child·
hood education. and reading,
languagc-ans, history and linguistics education. Taylor was invited
to attend the program's history·
education session.
The Citizen Ambassador Pro·
gram of People to People International was developed to arrange
tcchnM:al and educational exchanges overseas. It was founded

by President Dwight D. Eisen·
hower in 1956, and became a
private organi7..;ation "-hen he Jeft
office in 1961.
A member of the UB facult)'
since 1987. Taylor is al&gt;o an
adjunct professor in the UB De·
partment of Planning and De&gt;ign.
He is the founding director of the
Center for Applied Public Affairs
Studies.
A graduate of Tennessee A&amp;l
State Unive111ity. Taylor received
hi s master's degree in clinical
audiology from the University of
Tenncs~. He also earned
master" s a nd doctoral degrees in
urban hi story from UB .

Noonan to judge
holiday recipe contest

0

Send in your best, UB. Your
best holiday recipes, that is.

for the annual contest now under
way and continuing until Nov.

17. Karen Noonan, associate

CONFERENCES

Pharmacy to present antifungal conference
The UB School of Pharmacy's Division of Continuin g Education will
presenl "Review ol Anlimicrobial Agents," to be held from 8 a .m .-5
p.m. Nov. tO in the Hyatt Regency Buffalo.
The program for pharmacists. pharmacy sludents and olher
health professionals is designed as a review of several classes of
anlimicrobial agents.
Among the speakers: Mary Pasko, clinical associate professor
in the UB School of Pharmacy; Charles Ballow, director of lhera·
peutic drug moniloring at Millard f'illmore Hospital and clinical
associate professor in the UB School of Pharmacy: James Fenner .
clinical coordinalor of infectious diseases al The Buffalo General
Hospital: Joseph Palad ino. d itector of pharmacoeconomics and
outcomes research at the Clinical Pharmacokinetics Laboratory a1
Millard Fillmore Health System and clinica l associate professor in
Jhe UB School of Pharmacy.
Registralion deadline is Nov. 1. A $10 late fee will be added
after that date. The cost is $55 for lhe full day, or $30 per session.
For more inlormation, call645·393t

r~

I l { c ) "J lc

\\~) 5

wilh

ease.

Not only does
PMC ~ rurrent
technology to rts lullest,
foremost is its electronic

journal permuiBtlon.
through which many
distinguished contJibu.
tiona to ICholanlhip are made on the Net. 1t is a pe«.of&amp;o
viewed journal that does not publish on paper at all, yet Is
held In high esteoo1 by lhe academic COfTVTlUiloty As an
ind'ocatlon of its success, PMC was recenlly purchased by
Oxford University Press. though it con1inues to publish
electronically and be disuibuled for tree.
When you use lhe Web to get to PMC~ are presented
with a link to the current E-journal first. followed by back
issues. These contain articles on culture, literature, and
postmodemlsm, and are noted for being wide-ranging and
engaging. But PMC as a Web site oilers rnuct&gt; more. As
~continue down lhe contents ~will see that ~are
able to browse "special colleclioos" including PMC "prize
pieces.· popular culture eolurms, reviews, fiCtion, and
poetry. The "PMC-MOO: A Text-Based Virtual Reality Envi·
ronment• Is the next oplion, offering a simulated
postmodem "meeting place" where visitors (that's you')
may "speak" to others in the Moo.
Most interesting, perhaps, is the final selection of this
menu, lhe Institute lor Advanced Technology WWW Server.
which offers access to a number of interesting electronic
projects by noted scholars. These Include Jerome
McGann's "Rossetti Archive," John Dobbins' "Pompeii Forum Project" and Hoyt Duggan's "Piers Plowman." emong
many others.
A.
to
A«: can
- the perlect place to give the Web your first ·road test!·
To visit I'IIIC log on to your csmpus E-mail eccount and
type lyrvr http://JeHefto~Lifll..... ~
com.m...ll.html at your system prompt Those with
CMS accounts wiH type www instead of tyr11i. For mfor·
marion on campus E-mail and/or logging on to the World·
Wide Web, contact the Computing Center Help Desk at
645-3542 or send an E-mail mquiry to &lt;consult&gt;.
-Gemma DeV.nney and Loss Peque/!o Glaz~e&lt;. Lockwood UbrMI)'

''ice pro\'oSt for undergraduate
education. winner of a previouc;:
contest. will be the Judge this
year. She's all set to look at your
tastiest. most intriguing. fa\'Orite
recipes for appetizers. main
dishes. dessens and part) goodie;
from faculty. staff and tudents.
We· d especially like to see ones
in the healthy eating category.
The winner will receive a
handsome coffee table cookbook.
and the Reporter will print as
many recipes as space allows in
the final issue of the semester. so
everyone can enjoy.
Mail or fax (645·2313) the
recipes. with full directions,
including ingredient list and
including your name, phone num ber, UB title and department, to
Rtponu, University at Buffalo,
136 Crofts Hall. Buffalo. N.Y.
14260. You can E-mail. too:
reporter@pub.bulfalo.edu is
the addreJis.

Bessette president

of medical alumni

Russell W. Bessette has
been elected to a one-year
term as president of the Medical
Alumni Association of the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedi·
cal Sciences. Also elected were
Frank T. Schreck, vice president,
and Margaret Paroski, treasurer.
Bessette, a specialist in plastic

0

surgery. IS a 1976 graduate of the
UB medical school He also
earned a dental degree from the
UB School of Dental Medicine in
1969 and completed a two-year
postdoctoral fellowsh1p 10 oral
biolog) at UB in 1971.
A clinical associate professor
of surgery at UB and former
director of the medical school's
Division of Plastic and Reco;·
structive Surgery. Bessette{s a
urgical investigator for Dow
Coming Corp. in a project to
develop a specialized plastic joint
implanL
A fellow of the Americall,
College of Surgeons. ~se~
holds surgical staff positions 31
several Western New York hosp•·
tals.
Schreck, graduated from the
UB medical school in 1979. A
pediatrician affiliated with
Children's Hospital of Buffalo.
he is also a clinical assistant professor of pediatrics at UB. He
maintains a private practice in
Orchard Park.
Paroski. a 1980 graduate of the
medical school. is director of
neurology 31 the Erie County
Medical Center. She is an assistant professor of neurology and
physiology at UB .

�-

...... --.-·

UB opc:-n('d 1U sparkhng
m•· Ctnrrr for tht Art
l.as• wt"tkend,offtring a
IUU pbrt of pufomuncts,

ex-hibits and tours to wtl~
com&lt; farul&lt;)'. salT .,d
srudtnrs as weU as W
We:stt"m tw York communi-ry·. TM mthusiuoc
crowds gath&lt;=:l under &lt;h&lt;
so.anng amum uplored tht
optn spacts as wtll as tht
nooks and crannies of thr

rM 2n facil•rr to rhc
publtc. Among th&lt;
ucitmg offrnngs
last Wttk.

Wat'

p&lt;X'£T}' prt:SC'nta-

tions, conctrts,
drama and d.ancc

(

pnf~nn.t.ncts,
mdudmg ap~n­
;mcn: ~r Bruer
Cockburn, rhr
Canadtan Br.tSS, rhr
Amherst Saxophone Qu•nrt .,d
Tanzfabrik. B&lt;rlm
Danct Co. Among
tht coming "'ttk's furures
arr pla)'S. storytelling
rheurc. ,·idro scrrmings,
and ., appearance br thr
Buffalo Philharmonic

Orchestra.

�</text>
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                    <text>Ulnry
Pioneer
Taking it easy? That's
not Ubrarian Helen
Lyman's style. , .

2

Domestic
VIolence
Panelists discuss
newlawatUB
law school
convocation.

,.3
October 27 . 1994

Volume 26 . No 8

New facity is showcase forthe arts in WHY
.,~­

Reporter Ed~"'

he facility is ready, and magnificent. The
events are adventuresome and diverse.
The stage is set for the grand opening of
UB'sCen rfortheArts.
A full slate of activities will kick off tile
Center for the Arts' Grand Opening Festival,
which be~s tomorrow and runs th.oouah Nov.
20.
It signals a new era at UB. wbcre for the first time in the
univcrsily's hi story, the departments of Art, Media Study and
lllcatrc and Danoc all arc under one roof. And what a roof it is.
covering more than 225.000 square feet of spaoc. 500 rooms.
700doors, 220,000 bricks. 420.000 concrete blocks. and 9,000
glass blocks.
According to Raben E. Chumbley. director of the Center for
the Arts, the facili ty is "a house for the eJ&lt;ploration of all an. its
relevance to our time and our future."'

With its wide array of classrooms. offices and studios. as
well as arts-production and exhibition spaces, theCenter fort he

Ans will not only serve as the center for ans activities on the
Nonh Campus. but will fill a niche among Western New York
arts-presentation spaces.
Wilh its soaring atrium. which runs the length of the facility.
tilt Center forthe Ansoffers a spectacular view of Lake LaSalle
and the Ellicoll Complex. But that's just lhe beginning of the
building's charms.
The center houses four theaters: the 1,800-seat Mainstage.
the 400-seat Drama Theatre. and two state-of-the-an "black
box"thcaters. These are supponed by facilities for every aspect
of stage production. from costuming to set design to 68 dressing
stations for performers. There are two spacious dance studios
with maple wood floors engineered for maximum pliancy. 12foot minors and upper-level observation rooms and sound
systems.
There also are three media screening rooms. editing and
television studios, one of the fi.ftest foundries in exisrence for
the creation of large metal sculptures, and two galleries: the
University Gallery with more than 6,000 square feet of exhibi-

E

vent include performances by Tanzfabrik. Berlin Dance
Co .. and the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra: Off Beat

Cinema and A Tribute to the IOOth Anniversary of Cinema:
Roadside Theatre and Brilliant Traces.
Among the performances that tomorrow night will kick off

the festival are:
• The Canadian Brass. five wood instrument players known
fortheirexuberant mix of music. performing both classical and
popular works ranging
from Boch to Fats Waller.
Presented by the QRS
Foundation. the 8 p.m.

performance

~OQE

A1M CUPS

tion space on two floors. and a second, smaller gallery reserved
for Art Depanment usc.
But the month-long series of events that will kick off
tomorrow night in the Center for the Arts is the cornerstone of
this grand opening.
·
The Grand Openir.g Festival is a generous mix of the visual
and performing ans, featuring traditional ;md contemporary
performances, local and international artists.

on

the

Mainstage is preceded by
a 7:30 p.m. pre-perfor·
mance talk by Ralph
Turgeon. QRS president.
• " Projekt X." based on lhe book A Voia in tht Closn. by
Raymond Federman. UB Distinguished Professor of English

and comparative literature and an award-winning novelist..
essayist. poe~ and critic. Performed by Tanzfabrik. Berlin
Dance Co.. the dance work revolves around the author' s
childhood experience as the only member of hi s famil y saved
Continued on page 10

�-117.---.-·

2

...

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three-dey &amp;yllliXIIIUn ...

recent nallonal ..-lng ol
the American Chemical Society. Organized 10 recognize Nanoollas'

manv

.......
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Lyman:
library
•
pioneer

a ' - lit
home,.-ys

........

-'books...
hiMI Cl1lat
potential for
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contribution&amp; 10 biom8lerials
and lndulllrilll 11Cienca. the
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fellow in t h e - 8CienOe
section 111 BF Goodrich. was
8 j)()llldcQcral.-t:her at
UB 1n1Br Nlnxllas from
1971H9.
Nancollas. al8o a prot.,...
sor of urology In lhe UB
School o1 Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. Is
a fellow ollhe American
Aseoclalion for lhe Advancement of Science, the
Royal Society of Chamlstry

and the University of Wales.

PSYCHOLOGY
011 MliOieAL_,
nio&lt; ..-ell sdenlist at
the Research lnsbtule on
Addictions (RIA) and f'lto

TAN
many would retreat
to the solitude of
their garden or be
content sitting in a
rocking chair on the front porch.

Helen Huguenor Lyman continues
to actively follow a career she has
pursued for more than 60 years.
The 84-year-old librarian. an
adjunct faculty member at UB since
1982, teaches at least one cour&gt;e
each year in the UB School of
Information and Library Studies
(Sll.S).
In addition. Lyman, described
by Sll.S ~an George Bobinski as
"a pioneer" in the adult library-

services field, is working on a new
book on adult library services. The
book comes on the heels of the
more than 80 articles Lyman already has published on adult services and aduJt literacy.
''She's such a dynamic person.

saarcll associate

She doesn ' t look her age. She
doesn't act herage,"saysBobinski.

professor in
the UB De-

who believes Lyman is the
university•s oldest active fncuh y

panmeolof

member. ••students have been very

Psychology,
has been
appointed to
the National
Adllisory
Council on Drug Abuse of
the National Institutes of

Health (NIH). The appointment, through November,
1997. was made by Donna
Shalala, Secretary of f1e
Depanment of Health and
Human Services.
The 12-member council
edllises the Director of the
NIH, reviews grant applications, and recommends action to Stimulate additional
research on drug abuse.

~

.._.,..,_..,...,
~T.........

clinical assistanl prolesaor of
pedialric&amp;, has ' - ' 81ect-

ed c;halr ollhe AnQAalory
Pedialrlc Associalion's Special lnteraet Group on Medical Student Educallon.
The group p!Oio4dela nationallorum for medlclll 811ucaiOIS lD 8lCChanglidaes

and make raconllaldationlon~--...
and ta.:IWig ~

gies lor rnediceiiiUdela.
A UBiacully llleiTCer
since 1981. S8lldn Is diractor ollhe TBM:hlng Blac~ Program in lhe UB
School olloledic:N end Biomedical Sciences.

fortunate to have her:·
This past summer, she taught
the UB graduate seminar. ''Resources and Services for Adul ts."'
"We do a great deal of discussion... she says. explaining that her
teaching philosophy is that students

have a lot to learn from one another and that she doesn't want to

burden them with tedious lectures.
Those who have been lucky

enough to be in the classroom wilh
her are unanimous in their praise.

"She •sa real jewel,·· notes Gwen
Kistner, a librarian at the Audubon
Public Library.

Lyman maintains"'&amp; very strong
service ethic.. and ··a noble view of
what librarians can and should do,"
adds Timothy Robens. a member
of thi s summer's class.
"She created a great enthusiasm

in me," says Elizabeth Higgins.
who also took Lyman's class this
summer. ''She let us know that we
have a great potential. She'son top
of things~ I would love to have her
chann and wisdom."

Higgin

occasionally visits

Lyman's Orchard Park farmhouse.
where they meet~or tea. The house
is surrounded by three major gardens "both for n owe"' and food ."

explains Lyman. who u'iCS leaves
from her herbal garden to brew tea.
The she Ives of her reading room
are lined with the works of the
Brontes. Coleueand Genrude Stein.
among others. "I di scovered that I
have quite a collection of women
authors." she notes. "Nowadays we
talk so much about women.•·
Born in Hornell. Lyman was
raised in Niagara County. but hesi-

before they were bom," she laughs.
Lyman. who graduated from UB
in 1932, earned a bachelor's degree in library science in 1940.
"She's been a very loyal and
deYflted alumna" who has contributed to the S!LS 25th Anniversary
Campaign and an nual appeals.
Bobinski says.
She neceived the UB Distinguished Alumni Award in 1987.
Lyman began her caneer at the
Buffalo Public Library, where she
worked from 1932-52 as a circulation assistant. the co-head of the
readers' bureau. an administralive
assistant and the head of the adult
education department.
She then moved to Chicago,
where she served as the adult-services librarian at the Chicago public Library from 1953-59. She
directed the "benchmark" study on
adult library services in public li braries. published in 1954.
'That was mo,•ing to the un-

known.'' Lyman says. noting that
hers was the first research t\•er
conducted in the field.
She moved back to Buffalo and
worked in UB's Lockwood Memorial Library. serving as refer-

tates to say that she ··grew-up''
there ... We are growing up always.··

ence-depanment director from

she adds . "That's part of li ving."
Books have always been a pan
of her life. "We al"ays reud in my
family,'' she recalls. " I had a grandmother who read to her children

1964-65. From 1966-77. she was
on the library faculty of the Uni\'ersity of Wisconsi n at Madison.
u. hich named her a professor
emerita in 1978.

Lyman describes her research
as "one thing leading to another."
While serving as poblic libr.lt)
specialist for adult services in the
Library Services Branch in lite
Office of Education in the U.S.
Department of Health. Educat;on
and Welfare from 1965-67. she
obsel'\·ed a need for adult literacy
programs. Her research prompted

the publication of instructional
material for adults and two landmark books: " Reading and the
Adult New Reader" and "Lit~
and the Nation' s Libraries."
'') take a pers6n~riented vie\\
oflookingat the library's mi ssion."
says Lyman. whobelievesthe rno&lt;a
exciting part oflibrarianship is cr&lt;·
ating programs and teaching librar·
ians how to make their institution
more proacth·e through program·
ming. She has been recognized for
her contributions by the Margaret
E. Monroe Library Adult Services
Award from the Reference and
Adult Services Division of the
American Library Associalion.
Lyman is not o"""-helmed b)
the increase in eJectronic information. nor doeS she fear that books will
go out of style. "I think librariesba,·e
a great potential. In the future. they
should not be written off. I think
we're going to need more assistance.
not less. We talk about the library as
the 'history of man.· but it· s also the
oenter of the future."

Jonathan Dandes named to UB Council
lly ARI'IIUR PAGE

News Bureau Onector

J

ON ATHAN A. DANDEShasbeen namedamemherofthe iOmember University at Buffalo Council, the university 's local
governing council. by Gov. Mario M. Cuomo.
Dandes is vice president/general manager of Bison Baseball/Stadium Services Inc .. a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Rich
Products Corp.
A former president of the university's Student Association, he
currently serves as vice president for athletics with the UB Alumni
Association Board of Directo"'. He received his bacheler's degree
from the State Unive..,.ity of New York.
Dandes joined the Rich Products Corp. Food Service Division in
June 1986 as product manager and was soon appointed director of

ver Island State Park on Grand Island, Pel'libones Grille at Pilot Field,
the Broderick Park Inn on Niagara Stree and the Glen Iris Inn at
Letchworth State l'lt{l&lt;. Saki's Restaurant.

Rich Renaissance

tagara and Glorious

Foods.
Immediate past president and a current
member of the state board of direct""' of the
New York State Restaurant Association.
Daodes is a member of La Chaine des
Rotisseu.... Les Amis du V'tn and the National

Association of Concessionaires.

In December t 987, he was named vice president/general manager
of Stadium Services Inc .. which is responsible for all non-baseball
operations 011 Pilot Field. as well as at Lawrence Dumont Stadium in

He is vice president of Buffalo Place. Inc ..
a member of the board of directo"' of the
Greater Buffalo Convention and Visit""' Bureau. a director of Amhe"'t Lillie League Football and chair of the
Western New York Council of Food Service Associations. He serves
as a memher of the board of directo"' of Temple Beth El of Greater
Buffalo.

Wichita. Kan .• and College Stadium in Jamestown. Dandes also
oversees the foodservice operations at Kleinhans Music Hall. Bea-

designated by the National Rest3urant Associalion.

restaurant operations.

Dandes is a cenified foodservicc management professional. as

�.........,.............. -..
~-law alumni honor Gardner, Volker
Reporter Stall

LUMNI OF THE UB uw
School gathered Saturday,
Oct.22,tobestow uponSUNY
Trust«AmoldB.Gardnerand
State Sen. DaleM. Volker the
uw School Alumni Association' s highest
honor: the Edwin F. Jacckle Award.
Some 200area attomcys.jurists, law faculty and st uden ts gathered in the atrium of
the Center for the Arts to attend the Jacckle
Award Luncheon, whichcappcdoff the 19th
Annual UB uw Alumni Convocation. Earlier that momi~g. the audience had been
treated to a detailed discussion of the state· s
new domestic violen~ laws by their author,
State Sen. Stephen M. Sa land, and a distin•
guished panel of local experts.
Gardner. a senior partner in the Buffalo
law firm of Kavinoky &amp; Cook, was recognized for his legal work and his years of
oommilmentto publ ic education. He Sc:rved
brieny as president of the Buffalo Sehool
Board and has been a member of the State
University Board of Trustees for 14 years,
now serving as vice chairman of the board. A
graduate of UB and Harvard uw Sehool
Gardner becomes lllc Jirst recipient of t~
Jaeckle Award IlOilO have been a graduate or
former dean of the UB law school.
Acting Law School Dean Thomas
Headrick recalled fondly an opinion anicle
Gardner had wrinen placing the.
Shakespearean line "first. let's kill all the
Jawyers" in contex:L
"The line, from Henry VI. was s)oken by
Dick the Butcher. surely Shakespeare's most
gruesome character ever. Arnold wrote,"
said Headrick. "Heal so called for the re lease
of all the prisoners. You see, his motive for

L1110UGH s-d~J'•
dUals ioo of New
Yort't aew c1omaric
vialaoce law M the UB
Law Sebool Alunai CoRvocMioe
may ha~ sbcd- IiCht .. a CODtemporary social prohlom for ...,..
lltonaeya, lhe iuueol'domestic vM&gt;leace i£ far from 10 UB law
IIUCkau.
Tbe .... ocbool is.._ 10 bodl

!be Doaotatic VioleiiCC Clioic,
of ahe state university." said Gn:incr, .. is one
of the toughest volunteer jobs in the country."

Volker, amembcroftheUB Law class of
' 66, was elected to the Staie Assembly in
1912 and won a special election to his current State Sen81e seat in 1975. A former
police officer in the villageof Depew, Volker
is known for his knowledge of criminal justice issues and has annually led the light in
AlbanytorestoreNewYork 'sdeathpenalty.
He is chairman of the Senate Codes
Committee.This year, Volker and his Senate
oolleague John Daly secured a $260,000
appropriation for the law school to begin
implementation of its ne\\1 curriculum.
Introducing Volker as hi s onetime colleague and mentor, former State Sen. John
Sheffer, now a UB law professor, proclaimed

is seeking his II th President Greiner,
term in the State center, w1t1t Amolcl
Senate . He is B. Gardner, left,
squared off against ..,d Sen. D81e M.
another UB law Volker.
alumnus, Jame s
Kelleher. However. Greiner reassured him.
"historically. any Jacclde Award recipient
running for public office that year has won
overwhelmingly."
The late Edwin F. Jaeckle was the fm;t
recipient. in 1976. of the alumni award thai
now bears his name. A graduate of the UB
uw School, he was a foundingpartnerofthe
Buffalo law finn Jaeckle, Aeischmann and
Mugel and was instrumental in negotiating
the merger of the then-private University of
Jaeckle was a state and national leader of

kiWng all lhe lawyen: wu to protons the

that ""few events win afrce1

report a!

anarchy and keep them from restoring law
and order, which he knew they would."
President William Greiner, in presenting
Gardner with his ~ward, oommended him as
not o nly an outstanding lawyer. but for his
ded icated service to SUNY. "Being a trustee

into the pony
state In
university
system.
· Buffalo
the Republican
ttle 19405
ind ·~ .

dramatically as !he daY Dale Volker decides
to leave public service.··
Volker said he was "extremely humbled"
by the award. Gaining h is lirsttaste of
ttical office when he was elected Student Bar
Association Pre ident at UB in 1966. Volker

He served as Erie County Republican Party
chainnan. then as state pany chair when
Thomas E. Dewey was elected· governor.
"He once eJplaincd to me." recalled Gardner,
..how Dewey would have beaten Truman if
he had just shaved off that darn mustache."

d't!!

Panel discusses domestic violence laws
LTHOUGH THE NAME
never came up . Buffalo's
fallen football hero O .J .
Simpson was likel y o n the
minds of the 200 area attorneys,law faculty and students who gathered
to study New York's new domestic violence
laws at UB on Saturday. OcL 22.
The 19th Annual Convocation of the UB
Law School Al umni Association fea tured a
• morni ng-long panel discussion on the coming changes in the laws governing persons
charged with domestic violence offenses in
New York. as well as the rights of their
victims. The event took place in lheatrium of
the Center for the Ans.
State Sen . Stephen M . Saland, ( R:
Poughkeepsie), who authored the new law,
detailed its legal provisions. including a law
that mandates that police arrest vinually any
suspected perpetmtor of domestic abuse.
Sa land, a graduateofUB who no w represents Columbia County and pan ofDutchess
County, has served in the State Senate since
1990. Before that, he served for I 0 years in
the State Assembly. However. he explained
that his interest in the issue of domestic
violence goes back even funher. 10 hi s days
as an attorney with the Dutchess County
Depanment of Social Services. "As soon as
I realized that the first case of spousal abuse
1 dealt with would not be the last, I b,ccame
very interested in the cause," said Sal811d.
Other panelists included State Supreme
Court J ustices M. Dolores Denman and
Vincent E. Doyle. Erie County District Attorney Kevin Dinon, Buffalo City Coun
Judge Hugh B. Scott. UB uw Professor

Charles P. Ewing. Buffalo Nrws Editorial
Page Editor Barbara Ireland and matri monial anomey David G. Stiller.
As chainnan o f the Senate Commiuec o n
Children and Families. Sa land expanded the
j urisdiction of hi s commiuce to include domestic violence because no other Senate
comminee was dealing with the issue at the
time. And. it wa sheer fate that the O.J .
Simpson arrest which made domestic violence a household word. coincided wilh the
stale 's new legislatio n.
"'My committee held seven hearings on
the proposed domestic violence bill across
the state in 1993," explai ned Saland. "I believe the bill drafting commission finished
their work on the bill o n a Thursday and the
O.J. story broke the next day."

he new domestic violence law. most of
which goes intoeffectonJan. I . is among
the toughest in the country. Rather than
forcing victims to choose between crimi nal
prosecution or family court action, bolh now
have concurrent jurisdiction over domestic
violence cases. And. the bill sets aside
SSOO.OOO so that police officers statelldde
will receive training in how to deal wilh
perpetrators and victilll5 of domestic violence. acoordi ng to Saland.
The State Police will. for the first time.
construct a statewide. computerized regi stry
or orders of protection. court orders that
prohibit an alleged abuser from further contact with his estmnged spouse, making it
easier to identify order violators quickly.
The state's new mandatory arrest law.
also sponsored by Saland, gocs into effect on
July I, 1995. It is significant in that it removes a great degree of officer discretion in

T

domestic violen e incidents. by mandating
that poli ce officers immediately arre:s1 alleged offenders and inform 'icaims of their
rights. including the ri ght to relocation to
safe haven and the right to ha\'C the offender
immediately removed from the home. ac·
oording to Saland 's legislation.
Tho ugh supportive of the new legislatio n. Dillo n. cit ing one of Salarufs legislative memoranda. said it was foll y for the
legislature 10 say this new law has no fiscal
implications. " I am asking the County Legislature for an additional $200.000," he said.
··for two new auorncys, a social worker and
support staffing for a new domestic violence
unit in the District Anomey' s office."
Many of the cases created by the Ia"' will
land in already overburdened ci ty and town
courts. Dillo n said. "We have II assistant
district attorneys handling 3 1,000 cases a
year in Buffalo City Court_ Without additional
funding, it would be impossible to meaningfully effectuate the intent o f the statute."
Ewing, nationally known for his research
and wri tings on the ~bauered woman syndrome."' felt it was not clear whal the overall
benefit of a manda!Ory arrest policy would
be. Althoug'h it would cenainly reduce the
number of calls to homes of repeat perpetmtors who are arrested. he.:xplained that the
same psycho logical factors that keep some
victims of domestic abuse from leaving the
abusive situation could serve 10 chill the
number of reponed cases of domestic violence for fear of the mandatory arrest policy.
"Psychologically, it is known as ' learned
helplessness," Ewing explained. and it means
repeat victims of domestic violenoe, through
fear or depression. can become unable to
exercise control over their situation.
D

........... 'liolcoce ...... ........... lllto...ii:V'•

......................
.............
~'hl*'-,a..._....._

. ....,,....,..........
, . ...... k

........ . .

of . . . . . . . . . . _
. ..
.,.,.. "CCI66IIittci'Biject.
itcto Taalt R1noe Co-C •

...,..._.....,..._
...... od.r_.....,.

A ......

.... ..a.LfteJiftl!lec:tiOeb•
laaof~~---­

tile_, .....
a....'"""*
v-. ......
_

.......

• o.-ic

·t~~~~~~~~~~i~~~r
violcac:e or lbeir rn.:.k at r..;..
lies.SomearepUolcd-,...ty

by the victims themselves. Tbe
Clo&lt;hcsliliC will be OD display M
Harrimon Hall tonighl during "'take
Bod: the NigbL" Following their
display, the sbin.s are sold to raise
money for victim support groups
like the local Haven House. a shdu:.- for bauercd women.
This fall, the clinic, "tUeb is pan
of the llw school's legal advocacy
program. received a three-year,
$276,000 grant from the U .S. ))e.
partmeotofEducation. Oinical programo offer law students hands-on
experience working in real
legal itiWioas. R- Nils Olsen, a UB
law pro(euoc aod dircclor of clinical programs. said the financial infusion made a fuU-1ime director
poaiblc: for tbe domcsric violc:Dce
elillic. aod eollrJed the cliaic' 1 fc&gt;.
CUl 10 whal be called • "booistic:
approKIL"

'1ofool

od.r . . .

scbool dioicol

)(op. ooly provide clira:llepl

~IOibc~" saidOioea.

'"W~re lryioc 10

"""'Pia ... 6e

problem of clomostic violc:Dce . . .
bcyl*tbll. Wholer..illol--pacletl by dlis bdla.U. . . j.victims; c:llil*a 11e impacllld loy
this."
Salobla c.Diad ill lbc dillk
DOtooly aid viclimlwillt .... __
tal,

bul

!be.......,

lldl ....... of...--.

~

.....u.r willa

lo-.
a "JJII--

Polioc ~

clcvelopmenl of

cl..s..,.
- -·~
...,
..............
policy.· wbidl will -

1111 -

a..r~~~~~~ct.u.-,"1

.... lliCitll...a....-ta
.........

0

�....................... .
'Think regionally,' Greiner tells area business leaders

4

~

HAT SHOULD govern·
meot and individuals be
doing today to ensure that
New York State 's
economy is strong in 10
or20 yean?
This was the basis for an Oet. 18telecon·
ference featuring a panel ofeconomic devel opers, business executives and community
leaders from Western New York and South·
em Ontario. Titled "Agenda for Growth,"
the program was sponsored by NYNEX Corp.
and co-sponsored by the Business Council
of New York State Inc. and the Greater
Buffalo Partnership.
UB President William R. Greiner pre·
sented the keynote adjlress at the three-hour

teleconference. held in the WNED Broadcast Center in downtown Buffalo. The program will be condensed into a one-hour
show. which will air at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov.
ll on WNEQ Channel 23.
"Our region has enormous potential for a
strong economy and an exceptional quality
of life, panicularly ilioNe begin to think and
act regionally." Greiner told panelists and
the audience of area leaders. But "that effon
requires a very deliberate collaboration on
the part of every sector of the community.
from education to government to business, ..
he said.
Western New Yoot is a terrific place to live
and wort&lt;. Greiner said, populated by "highly
skilled and well-trained people possessed ofan
excellent woot ethic, a sophisticated. well·
educated genernl populace which values ex·

cellence." There is a down side to the region.
however-taxes. he said.
• A great many people in our community
assenthat it'sbaddpingbusiness in Western
New York because of taxes. otbCT publicly
imposed costs, and state and local regula·
lions." Greiner said.
Referring to the January issue of For/H!s
magazine. he quoted an article that claimed
"thar 'the dead hand of taxation and execs·

sive regulation' weighs heavily enough on
New York businesses, especially small busi·
nesses, to drive out the very firms 'that could
dothemosttomaintainthestate'seoonomic
competitiveness."

T

he secret to the region ·s furure, Greiner
concluded. is to stop "drawing lines.

and arguing O\'er where to draw the lines.
and getting our lines crossed in the proces ...
We need to rethink the region. he said.
The city and the suburb need to woot together bener, and Western New York and

Southern Ontario need 10 join forces to create an innovative regional economy.
"We need to think like Western New
York, Inc .." Greiner said.

exccuuvevtceprestde_"t. Stovroff &amp;Herman
Inc.: Andrew J. Rudntck. presule~t. Greater
Buffalo ~1p: Henry Louos Tayl.or,
foun~and.dorector, UB CeotCTfor Apphed
Pubhc Affaors Studies.: Edward F. Vohoril.
pres1dent and CEO. Wilson Greatbatch Ltd.:
and Peter K. Wendel, prestdent. The PetCT K.
Wendel Group.
.
.
.
. Western New York IS do1ng a good job,
satd MackenZie, but ~ ~r the I~ u~stood ass_eu '!flht ~g•oo ~~ItS ~XImlly to
Canada. "Thts frontier you o:e on IS ...?ne or
the m~t dy~am•c econom•c areas In the
world, he wd.
Tourism could be one means of boosting
the region' s economy, the panel S81d. aJ.
though they dlsagreed on the role the devel·
opmentofBuffalo's waterfront hould play.
Development of Buffalo's waterfront
would provide a tremen&lt;l?&lt;'s boost to the
area, especiaUy ..if it's a mega aura""tion.'"'
said Rudnick. Such an attraction could bring
to Buffalo the II million who visit Niagara
Falls each year. which "exponentially in·

creases the economic impact .. of the waterfronL with visitors potentially staying in the
region several days rather than several hours

That spirit of cooperation was a continu-

Others felt. howe\•er. thaJ it is more im-

ing theme as a panel discussion followed the
keynote address.
Moderated by Lewis B. Kaden . a partner
in the law ftnn D3\•is Polk &amp; Wardwell and
adjunct professor of law at Columbia Uni·

ponaot to Buffalo's future to develop the
sunoundinginner-cityneighborhoods. UB's
Taylor noted that without support for those
neighborhoods. ''he outlaw culture and the

\'ersity, the panel, in addition to Gr~.iner,

same way thattourisos have become a target

included: James F. Anderson, president.
James Management Co. Inc., JRC Realty
Co .. and JATAC Development Co.: Mark E.
Hamister, chair, president and COO. Na·
tiona! Health Care Affiliates, Inc.: John D.
Hoffman, president and CEO. Warren·
Hoffman &amp; Associates Inc.: Judith Ann'
Kossy , prestdent, Western New York Economic Development Corp.: Patrick P. Lee.
presidenL Enidinelnc.: RobenB . Mackenzie,
consul genenol, Canadian Consulate Gen enol, Buffalo: Di31)C J. McMahon, owner and

in Miami. Buffalo needs strong, stable neighborttoods in ordeTtornovepositively into the
future, Taylor said.
Other issues imponant to the f urure of the
region are the relationship between Erie and
Niagara counties; improvement to the area's
transportation network. particularly Buffalo
International Airport and developing the lead·
ers or the future. The leaders or the future
"are not identified yeL" said McMahon. "and
are going to h.ave to
from future gen-

viet. or crime will ruin that waterfront .. the

erations ...

It was 'mission impossible' for document at FSEC session
BJ STEVE COX

FSEC chair Peter Nickerson advised the

Reporter StaH

T

HE QUEST for approval of an offi·
cial US mission statement turned

into mission impos ib\e for the Faculty Senate Executive Committee at

a meeting Oct. 19.
'"The University at Buffalo: A Mission
Statement, 1993-2003," a one-page docu·
ment drafted by Presideno Greiner, had al·
ready been edited once b y an FSEC
subcomminee. Yet. it still met with opposition from FSEC members who felt that.

among other things, the document paid too
little attention to undergraduate education.
'The first sentence," assened Matbemat~
ics

Professo r

Samuel

Schack .

.. mischaracteriz.es the university" because
of its ..singular awareness of our graduate
and professional character." The draft state·
ment opens with the sentences, "Established
in 1846asamedical scboolanddevelopeilas
aclustCTof professional schools. the Univer·
sily at Buffalo has a distinguishi ng, charac-

teristic, and central mission or rCsearch.
scholarship. and creative activily. These endeavors shape the university' s programs of

graduate and professional education.·•
Although the university has been without
an official mission statement since 1970, the

accreditation team from the Middle States
Associati on , which evaluated UB for
reaccreditation last year. stipulated that one
be developed as a condition of their

reaccreditation. according to FSEC member
Dennis Malone. "Not that it is that impor·
tant," Malone scolded: "our students could
merely become ineligible for any fedenol

financial aid.. if the lack of a mission statement caused Middle States to withdraw its

accreditation, which he admitted was a remote possibility atbesL

group that, while discussion or the statement may yield recommendations for
changes, it was " not our (the FSEC' s) pre·

rogative to change thi s." President Greiner,
who withheld the statement he was prepared to release last spring in deference to
the Faculty Senate. is already impatient
with their pace, ick.erson explained. and
could certai nl y issue a mission statement
unilaterally.
In theend.the FSECdistanced itself from

the document by watering down the Jan·
guage or their own resolution. forwarding
the statement to the full Faculty Senate.
They recommended. by a 12 10 3 vote. that
the document be promulgated as a mission
statement solely for the Middle States As-

sociation rather than for general dissemination.
The room was also divided over whether
the eight-paragraph statement was too verbose or too simplistic . Rosalyn Wilkinson,
chair of the Professional Staff Senate', said
she felt it "looks like a vision statement~ In
fact . we need a simple. repeatable statement:·

ing maturation as an undergraduate center."
And. Claude Welch. of the Political Science
DepartmenL found the document full of"high
platitude and glittering prose" bul listed si•
issues it l&lt;ft unaddressed: athletics, alumno
relations, our relationship with SUNY Cen·
Lral. cuhure, cam pus construction and, most
seriously. the centrality of undergraduate

Computer Science Professor Wayne Bialas
agreed. saying. "I am troubled by any mission

education.

statement that begs a table of contents."
Law Professor Louis Schwanz.. on the
other hand. considered the statement too
much of an .. advenising pitcT" calling the

Management Science ProfeM' John Boot
wanted to completelyJJ.isassociate himself
from the statement:""arfd called for renaming

the document ··a Presidential Mission State-

document " unashamed puf~ry and exag·

ment." He urged hi s colleagues not to lea.e
the full Faculty Senate the impression thai

geralion." Judith Adams. director of

~we

Lnckwood Libmry. called foradditionallan·

statement was due to be presented to the full
Senate on Oct. 25.

guage that spoke to the university's .. reach-

stand behind e\;ery word.- The mission

Biochemistry proposalfor Y1£lrfle change is tabled
BJ STEVE COX
Reporter Stall

T

HE TIMELESS QUESTION: ''What's in a name?"
came before the FSEC on Oct. 19. Their answer.
plenty.
A poyposal by the biochemistry depanment to change
its name to the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology was tabled fora second time by the FSEC amid charges
thai faculty in other departments would be ad\'ersely impacted
by such a change. A week earlier. the FSEC had tabled the

resolution in order to receive wrinen confirmation from Vice
Provost Kenneth Levy that these other departments did not
object to the name change.
Mathematics Professor Samuel Schack called the request

..very peculiar." At a Lime when the university is striving to
develop interdisciplinary fields of endeavor. these departments
seem to be fighting over who can lay claim to molecular
biology. Other FSEC members added that they feared the

change could have a big impact on the "recruitment potential"
of other science departments.
Levy explained that similar reservations were expressed by

various science de.panment deans over a year ago. when the
proposal first surfaced. That is why. b'especulated. theproposal
was killed. Several months later, the chair of the biochemistry
department asked that it be reconsidered.
Biochemistry chair Mulchand Patel told the R•porur that

biochemistry departments nationaUy were moving toward recognizing the molecular biological components of what they do

in their names ...Even the national association. 1he American
Society for Biochemistry is changing." explained Patel. "to the
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology."
Patel added that "changing our name will not change what we
dn .. .we already do molecular biology."
The FSEC referred the proposal back to the faculty council
of the medical school for their approval before reconsidering
the change at a future date.

�5

HUD gtant will fund community development
assistantships at Applied Public Affairs Center
-

level course wort; in planning, housing and
public policy and development planning at
lhe University of North Carolina, Cbapel
Hill, and'lhe University of Minnesota. Twin
Cities.
Serina Ting, who received a bachelor's
degree in legal studies from UB in February
and, while in Buffalo. has been active with
the Community Action Corps, Habitat for
Humanity and the Gloria J. Parks Community Center. Ting was vice president of the
UB Asian American Student Union for two
years.
Kimberly E. Johnson. who received bachelor degrees in both English and history
from UB in May, has done considerable
research into the writings of lhe historically
marginalized, ignored and destroyed. Her
worit has included a collaborative student
effort to revise the syllabus used in a popular
women's studies course and work as a family-life educator for the Girl Scout Council
of Buffalo and Erie County.
She will work toward a master' sdegreein
social sciences with a concenlration in ap-

PAllliCIA - A N

News Bureau Staff

T

HE UB CENTER for Applied
Public Affairs Studies has been
awarded a $150,000 grant from
lhe U.S. Depanment of Housing
and Urban Development to fund

five community-development graduate-

study assiSiantships for 1994-95.
1be award. made under HUD's C?mmunityDevelopmentWoritStudyProgram, will
fund five graduate assislants for this academic year.
Felicia R. Beard. who holds a bachelor's
degrOe in legal studies from UB and plans to

pursue a career in human services to children
and families.
Salvadore Roman . Jr .. ,who holds a
bachelor's degree in geology from UB, and
has spent lhe past four years worting in lhe
field of teaching, vocational counseling and
job placement for Buffalo's Clarkson Center
for Human Services.
Mary Anne Coyle, a Buffalo State College graduate who has completed graduate-

plied public affairs studies in preparation for
professional and administrative work in a
public agency or institution.
1be UB Center for Applied Public Affairs Studies, direeted by Henry Louis Taylor, Jr.. associate professor of American
Studies, is one of three interdisciplinary
graduate programs in lhe UB Faculty of
Social Sciences.
It offers rwo master of science degree
programs and promotes. develops and coordinates interdisciplinary research and education in urban tudies and public policy.
The center's activities focus on economic
and community development in lhe central
city and ciry neighbortKlods. as well as on a
metropolitan level.
Researchers arc developing a bndy of
knowledge with which to inform lhe design
of public policy through lhe study of problems encountered by discrete social groups
with special needs. Among them are lhe
elderly, women, African Americans, lhe
working poor, Native Americans, Hispan ics. the disabled and lhe homeless.

Jac bson wins outstanding pr9fessor award
-

PAllliCIA -VAN

News Bureau Staff

S

TEPHEN L. JACOBSON. associate professor in lhe UB Graduate
School of Education. will receive
lhe 1994Jack~. CulbcnsonAwanl
from by lhe University l:ouncil for Educational Administration (UCEA) OcL 28, during the council's annual meeting in
Philadelphia.
Tile UCEA , an association of 52 leading
research universities with programs in educational administration, presents the award
annually to an outstanding junior professor
of educational administration of the nat.ion.
It is named in honor of Jack Culhenson of
Ohio State University, longtime executive
director of the UCEA. who lhe council says
"inspired many young professors during his
tenure."
Jacobson is widely published in lhe field
of educational administration. His research
into Canada's innovativedeferred-leaveemploymeot policies has generated great interest among an international audience of
educators.
He is co-editor of the book, "Educational

Leadership in an Age of Reform." in which
more than a dozen authon; challenge notions
of racial and ethnic divemty in lhe U.S. edu-

cational system.
Among his

current projects
is a collaborative elTon between UB and
seven WNY
school districts
to pi lor an inno-

vative, fieldbased program
for preparing

ten ured teachers as school
leaders. with emphasis on the training of

mini strative leadership. saiiU')' distribution.
teacher recruitment and retention.
Jacobson joined lhe faculty of UB's Department of Educational Organization. Ad ministration and Policy in 1986 after
receiving his doctorate in educational administration from Cornell University. A
former teacher of special education in New
York City, he holds bachelor' s and master's
degrees in psychology from Brooklyn College and a master' • cl'egree in special education from the State University of New York
College at New Paltz.

PATRICIA -OVAN

News Bureau Staff

T

HEDARWlNMART!NHouseRestoration Corp. has announced that a
single-panei''Tree of Life" window
that originally graced lhe historic
residence designed by Frank Ll&lt;!yd Wright
has been returned to Buffalo. The window
was owned by the late C. Donald Cook. a
Toronto librarian who died earlier this year.
Cook was a collector
of first and rare editions. including a great
manybooks byorabout
Frank Lloyd Wright.
The bulk of his
Wright collection was
bequeathed to lhe Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal.
which Bruno Freschi,
dean of the UB School
of Architecture and
Planning, cites as ..the
most important center
for architeCture in the
window
world." Cook had expressed his intention to give the window to
•

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Tile Blllfaloa-.1 JlalpilaL
"UB•SUNitJSE"ioa........;.y
breMfMt laieo ..,._.;! loy UB'a
Office.o( AJ.-i lt.elolioDa. Ollicctlf
Confereoces ud Spocial .EvclliS,
News Bureau, Office tlf~
atld Office ., lbe V'.ce Presldonl for
Public Savice - uro.a Affairs.
Tloe Bee Group Newlpopen ....
lbe official priDI ..,..._ of "UB Ill
SUNIUSI!."

1kbts- S8 for ........ tlfdlc
UB.uu.i~..tl!ltar•

JACOBSON

women and minorities for these roles .
In regular surveys reponed in E.xecuti\·e
Ediror. a journal of lhe National School
Boards Association, Jacobson has discussed
how women are being .. mommy-tracked''
out of managerial positions in public school
education. Additional publications include
articles in refereed education journals, book
chapters and monographs on effective ad-

How can you h elp
your students su cceed
at no cos~ to you?
The
answer

'Tree of Life' window returned
to Darwin Martin House
-

~~a.L~~~·~-~~~
a
- ..,..._.

the Martin House Restoration Corporation
(MHRC), however. and was in the process of
doing so at the time of his death.
RohenJ . Kresse. president of the MHRC.
said that although Cook's heirs were not
legally bound to do so, they "graciously
agreed to honor his wishes.··
The window. with a value as high as
$22.000. has been received by the AlbrightKnox An Gallery on behalf of the corporation and will be stored until such time as it is
reincorporated into the restored building.
Jack Quinan. professor and chair of the UB
Department of An History and a Wright
scholar. said the window can-be identified as
a second-story window by the box at the base
of the tree's "trunk," or stem.
Freschi said. " I hope that Don Cook's
generous example persuades others in possession of Martin house windows. doors and
others architectural materials to return thest
items to the house. We need their help to
insure as complete and authentic a restoration as possible."
1be Martin house is being restored as a
museum by a consortium ofUB, the MHRC
and the New York State Office of Parks,
Recreation and Historic Preservation.

is ...

Yow Copy
New flill
S.roke
Center

V """"""""

'::!::rf:'~esth!5st~:!;'LSt:n~~~:e
l..d us put your class noLc:S on file and

Loooted

At the UB Comnwns

We offer p-eat c:w,tom.er
oenice IDclucliDC:

we11 make It easy for your students LO
obt.ain them.

~I«
Easy AcceSs on Campus

~~~:lea~:t o~~r r:Ucu~o'cT:'~

Conuenleru Hours

serviceS.

alftll

FACULTY: For luylq yoar ...tea Oil Ric,,.... wiD IN
a
nEE $25 VOUCIIEil for oar fall .....,,. of C1lll1 ....-.tea.

520 Lee Entrance. Sutle 105

�8
Ellicou. North Campus. 8:30
Lm.·3 p.m. Spomored by llnAcademic: Servic:cs.
IIATMI,._AII

dcrcnd~~a~&lt;

ccu

...

Oakwehn•n•-.: EAI-ioaal
and C...... Opponoaitles
Coofen:Dee. Three-day conference features a craft ahow from
10 a.m....41 p.m. and 1 dinner at 6
p.m . .., Saturday, 0&lt;1. 29 at !he
SAC. Uoyd Elm, Ph.D .• will
provide the lceyn&lt;&gt;IC speech followin&amp; the dinner. UB Student
Activity C..tcr and SAC lobby.
North Campus. Call 645-6014
for iofonnalioa and on-site in-

S4TUROAY

~9
---

R.oyabo Bhx 6 White Swim

Mtd. Alumni Arena. North
Campus. 9 ......

-- terviews.

I.A.bomo&lt;y Stnd~&lt;s or Dnoc
ElfecU 011 Agr&lt;alonla H•DWII, Snwt P. Taylor, Pb.D.•

UT-

Faltlt Ia Doobt pead dia&lt;ulioa, with attisu fcaturt&lt;l iolhe
"exhibit Center for the Aru
Sc:r=ioa Room North Campus. II a.m.

Kent Sta&amp;e Un.iv. lteseatttllnst.i·

tuLC oo Addiaioos, 1021 Maio
SL I :30 p.m. Free.. Call
887·2566.
COIIPUTD SCIENCE

COUOQC .. III
Wlhoe Gruthatdl, Gn•ubau:h
Gcn-Aid l.Jd. 228 Natural Sciences&amp;. Mathemat;cs Complex
orth Campus. 3 p.m. For information, call645-3180.
EJIQINEDIING SDIIINAit
lodividuaUxing tbt Mu ltk:ast

Commtrnieation Pa,..digm,
Prof. Mostafa H. Amm.ar, College of Computmg, Gecqia
Institute of Technology. SponSO&lt;ed by .... U8 Dept. or Electrical and Computer Engineerin1
and Calspon Co&lt;p. Kno• II 0
North Campus. 3 p m.
I'IIYIICI SDIIIMAJI
aiOLCHIICAL SCIEHCU

IEIIINAit
Sipalin&amp; In Drosoplrilll Pboto-

rea:ptors: A Molecular (;e.
ndk Appi"'at'b. Dr, William L
Pak, Purdue Univ. 114 Hoch sletter. North Campus. 4 p.m.
MATMDIATICI CCIU.OQUIUII

Thermodynamics of the HysMAHAaEMENT IIOUNDTULE

TIH: ew St.aadardJ of Excek_
Jence ia Customer Satisf•c·
tion, Michad J. Billooi , Buffalo
Bisons VP. Fanny's Restaurant.
3500 Sheridan Dr. 8-9:30 a.m.
AJn EXHI81T1011
1'b&lt; FIICUity Show. Throogh
Nov. II. An Department G3.l 1ery. Center for the Aru. Nonh
Campus. 10 •~m.- S p.m .. Monday through Fnda) . Call
645-6878.
aooKSALE

Loc:k•ood Library Booksalr.

LATE FALL SEMESTER PROGRAM
WIDHUDA'n
Bible Study lt Supper ia S.Ute 21 S
Th&lt; Snody of &amp;.J...
S:OO p.m. Bible SNdy
H5 p.m. Supp..

I41VIIDAY, OCTOIERl-t
A 0.,. Trip to tbe Ondand MUKUJD o1 An
"An a 1 Rc.ource for De¥dopina: Pcnoaa! Spirituality"
7:10a.m. Lc:r.omg from Tbc Conu:noas
10:00 p.m. Rerwnift&amp; to The Commons

__

,.,._,

r.......-~ - c.ntJD

CWrtr,.,...~·-.w--t:.. u.d,-.J.S..,.W.

UFEWORKIBody. Mind &amp; Spirit : Waylli of
Healing. Marlene Cerulla.
12:30-2 p.m. Call645-6125to
register.
PO£TitY LEC1VR£
FalliDg lktwee:a Tv. o Stoob:

Charles Ranikorr and Jrwish
Ame.ricaa Modernism. Stephen
Fredman, N()ttt Dame. Pan of
Wednesdays at 4 Plus poetry
and prose series. 438 Clemens.
North Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free.

·-y

AIIATDMY AND CEU.

"-",_
SUNDAY, OCTOalR )0
............ Wonhip I&lt; Oloobafa&lt; Supper

K&lt;cJe. Room. J.fon-1
S:lO p.m. CclcbriDna" die Luthenn Rclonnation

Th&lt; J-

M.n.t.riw),....t{Vrl1n- ..... c:.nk
a-dD.raH~C....,, LbM-JI, IJI 7

6:20 p.m. Olctobcrfest Supper
AGw..s.,.trt(lftrs.~,.-uMI....,._,..J"'-n.

MONDAY, OCTOIIR )~RMAnOH DAY
"The Land When Ludoo.- w.Jbd"

,_..__,...,.Dr.

A ltJ_ ...

~.__

liolr u..-.,

Shown ill Suict: 21S, TheCommom. It 12:15 l :IS ) :IS
5A1U&amp;DAY "SUNDAY~LUCI UCAPI N.lc;HT
~ll&amp;IJ

Colko&lt;_E:-p&lt;
Aa-r.,.,_,.
_ Nip!

,.,._..._,,_,J-,..J~.W

T~,.,_,c.-,......-......,r..NY.

S.rwday

Hardco\'en sell for S2. paperbacks SO-cents each. Lockwood
Library Friends' Room. Nonh
Campus . 10 a.m.-4 p .m.

•c 9:00a.m. LcarinJ from Tbc Commons

s-s.,. .. 2&lt;)0 p.m. """"'"" .. Th&lt; Common.

,...,..,a.r;.;.___.,.-..........

,._"'.,__._..._.,~f.

IEIIltiAII

Time Lapse Ca·' i maging in
Rat Hippocampui UsiDg Con·
focal Microscopy. Ann CornellBell, Ph .D., Yale Univ. 306
Farber. South Campus. 1 p.m.

COMI'UTEJI WOIIUS PSS for Wlndows, Part 2.
Continuation of Oct. 25 workshop. I :30-3:30 p.m. Call
645-3572 or 645-3560 for
registration infonnalion.

UR-

n.. World or E-Mail, J;m
Gerland, Academic Computing.
2:30-4 p.m. Call 645-6t25 10
register.

CCMIIIITIVE ICIEJICE
-.u!CH-

Automatk Vocabulary Expansion through Natural Laoguace Cootuts, Karen Ehrlich.
224 Bell. North Campus. 3:305 p.m. Call 645-3794.
I'IIYIICI CCIU.DQUIUIII

Origin of HiJb Euorc Cosmic
Rays, Prof. Thomas Gaisscr,
Bartol Research lnstitwe, Univ.

teretk: Materiak, Prof. Par
Kloucek, Univ. of Minnesota.

I03 Diefendorf. South Campu .
4p.m.
VlSmNG SCIIOI.ARI
CCIU.OQUIUII
Rolbvst Multipoint Linbge
Analysis Using Relathe Pairs,
Dr. Jane Olwn, RPCI. 144
Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m.
CIERTIFICATE

P'-

~LDCliCAL

IN
NURSING

Health Teaching Self~re
Practices to Older Adutu.
L)'nn Manger, Buffalo VA
Medical Center. To earn certifi cate . nUrsti must attend fi\'e
sesstons. South Campus. 4:307:30 p.m. S50 per module . To
register. call829-329t .
AT 111£ IIOVIU

Naked in Ne"· l'ork... UUAB
film series. 201 Student Union .
North Campus. 6:30p.m. S2,
S3.50. Call645-2957.

UFEWORKI-

So. You Love Animals?
Valerie Will aNt William Palka.
7-9 p.m. Cali64S-612S to regis-

ter.
lUll, D£QR£E II£CRAL

Lornine Abbott, piano. Slee
Concert Hall. North Campus.
8p.m. Free..

Quantum Tuondi.n&amp; in DiJordered M.W., Sue Copper...Uth. AT&amp;T BeU lain. 205
Natural Sciences &amp;r: Mathc:mat ·
ics CompleK. North Campus.
3:30p.m. Call 645-6314.

-1'111' COUOQUIUII

Floor"tSCf'~ Mic:rostopy l ovesti&amp;atiotu: of Dom.a.io Struc-

tura iD La.ncmuir Monolayers, Prof. Keith Stine, Univ. of
Miuouri. 201 Natural Sciences
&amp;. Mathematics Complex. North
Campus. 4 p.m.
QIIAND OI'EMING FUTTVAL

Rtttption. Atrium, Center for
the Aru. Nonh Campus. 5:30·
9p.m.

DAHCE
Projelcl X (Surrell work based
a DO\''fl b}' Raymond

OD

Feclf:rman), Tanzfabrit Berhn
n.e company from Berlin wu
founded 10 1978. Drama Theatre. Center for the Arts. Nonh
Campus. 6 p.m. Pre-performance talk at 5:30p.m. S5. S8.
AT TME IIOVIEI
Wolf. UUA B film series. 201
Student Union. Nonh Campui.

6:30 and 9 p.m . S2. $3 .50. Call
645·2957 .

=~ II£CEI'I'ION/
Faith ln Doubt: A Speculation
oo tbt FuDCtion of Humor io
Contemporary Art, William
Davenpon, Sylvie Aeury, Jim(
lsennann. Tom Moody, Carl
Ostendarp, Jennifer Silitch.
Aaroa Parueue, Alex

AT THE IIOVIU
W olf. UUAB film 5eries:. 201

Pearlstein, Lily van der Stokker.
Exhibition runs lhroug.h Dec
22. UB An Gallery. North C...pus. R=p&lt;ion, 6-9 p.m. Call
645-691 2.

Student Union. North Campus .
9 p.m. S2. S3.50. Call645-2957 .

CIEHTEII F01t T11E AJnS
DI'EMINGFUTTVAL

P rejetl X(...,.... warlt booed

.., • .....t by Rar-ond

Fedenaaa), Tanzfalrit Berlio.
The company from Berlin was
fouaded ln 1978. Drama l'hc-

•~. Center for the Arts. North
Campus. 6 p.m. Pre-performance talt at 5:30 p.m. $5, SB

CDITDt-,..; AJrTS
-FUTTVA&amp;.

Saftnlop-Ead.....,rcl
tuybridgt::

Zoopraxoc,..pber; F.ad•eard
Muybridct': Motion Stud~
Thom Anderson; James L

Sheldon, Cahfomia lnst. of the
Arts, and Ptuhpti Acedemy, req:uthtly. Center f« lhe Aru
North CampuL 7 p.m. SBO
event. S7 weekend. Call tHSARTS.

SUN04~

lO

VCIU.IYIIAU
UB va. Loyola. Alumni Arena..

orth Campus. I p.m.
PO£TitY~

Mac Baaunoad.. Robut
Cra~y. •nd Carl Dennis. Pan
ofWedneidays at4 Plu podiy
and prose senes. Scrcen1ng
Room. Center for lhe: Aru..
North Campu . 3 p.m. Free

CDITDt FOit THE AJnS
OP'EIIIIIGFUTTVAL
Amberst S..xopboDt Quartet
CoDtett. Cc.n1er for t.hc: Arts

Drama Cfheatre. North Campus.
7 p.m. S5, SIO.
CIEHTEII FOit T11E AlrTS
-FUTTVAL

The Maltinc or Muybrid&amp;&lt;
Lasudil&lt;: n.. Old Techaolo-

cies and the N..,. Tedulolocies
and tbe Study and Teachln&amp; or
Cllltunl H ist..-y; Panel disaa &amp;oD on Many aod

MulbridJI&lt; follows lect....,
James L ShcldOft, Philips Acad·
emy. Center for the Aru. North
Campus. 7 p.m. S3.50 event S7
weel:end. Caii645·ARTS.
CONCIEII'I

Bnoco Cockbano ln C........_
Ccorer for the Arts Mainstage.
Nllr1h Campus. 8 p.m. $15. Sl7.

&amp;..1. Maroy: Mo.....,.nl, Modernism, and Motion Pictures.
F R104Y

~~

I'EDIATIIIC GltAHD IIOUNDS

Mol«.ular ~odic Buis of

S.IOc:t.d M;dlln&lt; O.fects,

Luther Robinson, M.D. Kinch
Auditorium. Children's Hospi lal. 8a.m.
IIULTICULTUilAI. LEC1VII£

Multicultural Skills in Academic Advising. Prof. Paul
Pedersen. Jane Keeler Room,

Marta Braun. Ryerson Polyt.ec:hnic lost., Toronto. Center for the
Arts. North Campus. 7 p.m.
S3.50 event, S7 weektnd. Call
645·ARTS.
GltAHD OP'ENJHG FESTIVAL

Caoadiaa Brass. Pan of QRS
series. Ceuter for the Ans.
North Campus. 8 p.m. S 15, $20,
S25 . Call645-6259.
IIITEIIHATIOIUL FOUl
DAIICIIIQ
All levels. all welcome. Partners
noe needed. 2 Diefendorf. South

Campus. 8-11 p.m. Frtt. Sponsored by Graduate Student As·
sociation.
AT THE IIOVIU
The Mad Ma(ician. 3·D.

UUAB film series. 201 Student
Union. Nonh Campus. 11:30
p.m. S2, S3.50. Call 645·2957.

MONDAY

ll--

The Applicalioo or Experiential G.-p lbenpy1rilh Aleobol and Other Drvc Abusing
Cli&lt;nu, Dooald 8ain and Joan
Shippey. Sponsored by lnstiwtc
for Addictions Studies and
Training. Center for Tomorrow.
North Campus. 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Fee SSO. For registration infor·
matK&gt;n c:all645-6140.

�--CUM ---liT-

Cdlo. c..-,ud o...._

q. Bob Rurman.
Tanzfabrik Dlnce Co.• Berlin.
Ins and OUIJ of steel cello, bow
chimes. and Tibetan overtoor:
sincina,. 8 - 1 Slce. North Cam-

pus.. Nooa. Frce.
vou.naALL
UB VL Robert Morris. Alumni
Arena. Nonh Campus. I p.m.

CILVT-

C...... U..ud Opmslloa .
Four-weekc:oune. 120 Fillmore,
Ellic:on. Nonh Campus. 7- 10
p.m. To ,.giSier, caii64S-2434.

CILVT-

Crocb&lt;t... ud Kalttlq. Sixweek courtc. 120 FiUmor..
Ellicon. Nonh Campus. 7-10
p,m. To rogiSief. caii64S-2434.

CILVT ·Weova.,.. Six-week c:oune. 120
Fillmore. Ellic:on. Nonb Campus. 7-10 p.m. S4S plu S81oom
rental. To re&amp;isler. aii64S 24l4.

1'lloao by Laooloo Pqo. B 83.
Cen!cr foc the Arts. Nonh Cam-

pus. Nooo- 1 p.m.

POOII'la
Dopy,

_

TAU!

Cfoolro, Anatsd,
Oaytoo Eshlemao. Eu1em
Michiaan Univ. Part of Wednesdayt at 4 Plus poetry and prose

series. 990 Oemeu. North
Campu •. 3:30 p.ll). Fr.c.

.....
A

s.- or u......... Makes

7

F~ld

ouuidt Alumni Arma..
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.

~-­
T rio Foa&amp;euy, Wolf Harden.
piano, Micbad MOcke. violin,
and Niklas Sdunid~ cello.
Wotkl of Haydn, Schumann,
Brahms. Slee Cooccn Hill.
l'lonb Campu5. 8 p.m. ~­
conc:cn lecture at 1: 15 p.m. ).
S4, S.S, $8, $10. For information,
caii64S -292 1.

--- ~
S.S..., Ed Broclka. ShMient Life.
4-S:30 p.m. Caii64S-612S to

regi51cr.

W E DNES D AY

Buylaa or S.W..ao a..._
Edwanl Hutton and Sidney
Finket Fint of a series of sc.miaan; Tuesday evenings throu&amp;h
Dec. 6. Sporuorod by the Scbool
of Management. North Campus.
6:30-9 p.m. Caii64S-3200.
Adntaced Color P'tloto. Six-

-HIIUWI
Compassion Fatlgut: The
t.r us of C.rinc Too Much,
Mary Lee Sul kowski, R.N., Buf·
falo VA Medical Center. Registrat•on dead line is Oclober 26.
120 Clemen Nonh Campus.
8 a m .- 12~ 30 p.m. SSO fee
includes break :tnd material.s..
Call829-3291.

-WEU.

PAIIII aTAfF
HIIIIWI
Lymphocytic Acth·ation and
th&lt; Cytosk&lt;l&lt;too, Eliubcth

Repasky. Ph.D. H1llehoc Aud1·
torium, RPCI. 12:.30 p m
·-ICAL
I'HARMACOLOCIY AND
SCIEIII:U HIIOOUI
Strurturr-Activity Relalion·
hip hl the AcetykboUne Re~tor: From the Bindill&amp; Site
to tbe Channel G•te, Steven
M . Sine. Pb.Q.,_ M ayo Foundauon. 307 Hoc:hslelter. Nonh
Campu . 4 p .m.
UFEWOitl(aUsing Credit Cards \\'iwf),
Rose M . Banks. Con~umer
Credit Counseling St:n:icc of

Buffalo. 4-6 p m Call 645-612S
to reg•ster.
P'O£TIIY READING

C layton Eshleman, &amp;item
M1chigan Um\ . PartofWednes·
days at 4 Plus poetry and prost
liiCries I 12 Cen1er for the An~ .
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m. F~
PHARMACY SEMIIIAR
Dangerous Ua.isons: Does An ·
tibiotic Ust In Animal FMC~
Han an Errect on Resistance
in Humans. Shirccn Khaliq. 248
Cooke . Nonh Campus. 4:30p.m.
ATTHE-VIU
The Nasty Girt. UUAB film
series. 20 I Student Union.
North Campus. 6 p.m. S2. $3.50.
Ca11645-29S7.
UFE WDIIK._

1'be Job Search: A Recruiter' s
Pen:ptdive, Jrv Towson. 6:30·
8:30p.m. Caii 64S-6125 to
register.

CIIAFTW-Advaoted Staioed Glass. Six week course. 120 Fi llmorr..

--

Ellicon. Non.h Campus. 7-10
p.m. To reg ister, call645-2434.

T IJE5DAY

1

AGIN8C~

14th Annual Nttwork in Aging
Meeting, Robm Blancalo.
Bonnie Ray. Buffalo Hilton.
8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. S30. S3S fcc
includes lunch. Ca11690-2278
or439-7831.

CIIAFrPottery. Six-week course. 120
Filll'llOfe, Ellicon. North Cam ·

pus. 10 a.m.-Noon. To register,
caii64S-2434 .

week course. 120 Fillmore ,
EJiicou. North Campus. 7-10
p.m. To register, call645 -2434.

CIIAFrW-Buk: Photography. Six-week
~- 120 Fillmore, Ellicott.
Nonb Campo&lt;. 7-10 p.m. To
register. caJI645 -2434.

CIIAFTW-C.rtoonin&amp;- Six-week course.
120 Fillmore. Ellicou. North
Campus. 7- 10 p.m. To ~gister.
call 64S -2434.

c
:UnPottery. Six-week course. 120
Fillmore. ElliCOIL North Cam·
pus. 7-10 p.m . To regiSier, call
645 -2434.

CILVT-

Qulttinc. Six-week course. 120

Fillmore. ElliCOit. North Campus. 7-10 p.m. To register, call
645-2434.

-··aoccEII

UB Bulls vs. ColpiF- RAC

Brazilian Embroidery. Six·
week COUJK. 120 Fillmore.

Ellicou . Nonh C ampus. 7- 10
p.m . To register. call 645-2434.

CIIAFrColor Pbototrapby. Six- week
course. 120 Fillrnc:n. lillicott.
NonhCampu•. 7- IOp.m. To
register, ca11645-2434 .

CIIAFTW-Crutive Pbotocrapby. Sixweek course. 120 Fillmore,
Ellicott. North Campus. 7- 10
p.m. To ~gister. call 645-2434 .

CILVT-

Pottuy. Six -week courSe. 120
Fillmore, ElliCOit. North Campus. 7- 10 p.m. To register. call
64S-2434.
.

DrUa: CI.AUICa UYE

Coatemporary Etbnie Music,
Alison Bert. guitar, Syncusc:
Univ. Allen. South Campus. 7

p.m. Fr.c. Taped few broodc:ast
the followin&amp; Sunday at 4 p.m.
by WBFO 88.7 FM.

-

POOII'l.,._

P ror. RoyiiiODd Fed..,..._

The lmemationallnlti tu~e, 86C
Drelawarc. 7:30 p.m.

__.._,.,.

·~-

Worka by Flldk, Lo "'-~,
Byrd, BolA, JO&lt;Ob, Gralo..,-,
G&lt;nhwla, v..poa-ww~a.m
Sarah Mc Koin, conductor. SJec

Ge loolt It "1'-thal

Cooccn Hall. Nonh Campus .
8 p.m. Free.

faVO&lt;ile hohday recipe , lhe
one that family and fr.ends

ATTM-.

clamor fO&lt; because 1rs

Sc:IWtdlor'a List. UUAB film
series. 201 Student UnioA.
Nonh Campus. 9 p.m. S2. l3.SO.
Caii 645-29S7.

tHUitiDAY

~

ADDICTIONS STVDIES
WDIIKSUnmaskln&amp; the Stlf in Recov·
tr), Janet Elkm Sah.afi. Sponsored b)lthe lns:t fOf Adchct•on~
Studtes and Tnainma McAuky
Aud11onum. St. Jerome's Hospt tal, Batl\la Nov 3 and 4 SIOO
fee for both days Call

64S-6140.
ART EXJIIaiTIDfj

Laacbcapeoi9U-1994. Worl.s
oo paper by Cynthio Hand
Capen Gallery, fifth floor.
Copen. Nonh Campo&lt; Gallery
houn. Through De=nbcr.
lUIT EXHtaiTIDfj
The Faculty Show. Through
Nov. I I. Art Oepa.rtment Gallery. Center for the Ans. North
Campus. 10 a.m -5 p.m .. Mon·
day through Friday. Call

sooo good. ·It can bnng yoo
fame and fortune-jus! by
sharing it with yoor UB
colleagues, yoo could have
1t published in the
Reponer and wm a pnze
besides.
Our annual reCipe
conaesl beg1ns nght now•l's open to faculty. staff and studenas
W e·llrudge II for taste appeal. ease
ol prepara110n. or•g•nahly, and tts conar1bU1oon
10 a heallhy d 1e1. W1nner of the rec1pe judged
lhe best w1ll rece1ve a handsome coffee table
cook book as a pnze
P lease type the rec1pe 1n cook bool&lt;
style w1th 1ngred1ents f~rsl , d~rectJons
follow1ng-and pul your name. address
department. your UB 11lle and phone number
at the top of the page If ahere·s a bnef ·saory"
aboua the rec1pe-tlow you created '' whaa
kmd of trad!ltons 1t represenas, how many
years you've served It to cave rev1ews. etc .
1nclude that, too
M aJI or fax to.
Reporter Recipe Conlest.136 Crofts . Untversrty
at Buffalo. 14260. Or e-maJi to
reporter@pub.buffald.edu

---..

- ~ - i.~-

&amp;-IS-6878 .
.IOCHEIIICAL
I"M.UUIllACOLDGY SEMIIWI
Probi.oc the Bi:.~dinx Site- or
the Nieol inic Act'tyc:bolioe
Re«ptor Usin&amp; Uanalural
Ami no Acid Mutaxentsis.
Marl. Nov.·al. Ph D .. Cahforn1a
lnst of Tedmolog) 307
Hochslener Nonh Campus.
I lam
UFEWDRKS-

Car C a~ 101 , Howard Hartke
and Peter E\-an~. I -2 p.m. Call
645-6125 to regi tcr.
PIIARMACEIITICa SEMINAlt
Or. Otborah Leckbaod, Dept.
of Chemica l Engineering. 508C
Cooke. North Campus
3:30p.m.

I'HYaiCS COLLDQUIUII
Half-integer F1ux Quanta and

tho Symmetry or tbo Bicb-T&lt;
Supercooductin&amp; Order Paramfler, John K.tr11ey, IBM.
4S4 Fronnal:. Nonh Campo&lt;.
3:4S p.m.
AliT LECTUIIE
Slide kctu~, Cart Osttndarp.
Center for the Arts Screening
Room. North Campus. 4 p.m.
Call 645 -6912 fOf additional
information.

IIIOUIGICAL SCIIDICU
SDIINAII
Rrculation of lbe RbcS Gene
Family Durin&amp; Tomato ~nl­
opment~ Or. Thi andaMan:r.ara.
Uni'&lt;'. of Illinois, Chicago . 114
Hochstener. North Campus.

Microsoft Combo Packs
-,J Word -,J Excel
-,J PowerPoint -,J Mail
-,J Access Workatalofon u.,.,...

4 p.m.

With Mim1110ft Office
Prof&lt;Uional P~oOnly

vtamNG SCIIOl.AilS
CGU.OQIIIIIM

So.,.lssu&lt;s;, tho Aualyals or
Clillicol Trials, Prof. Monoo B.
Brown. Univ. of Michigan. 144
Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m.

CEJrn'ICATE- M

~AL­

Functioul Asstssmeat of
Older Adults. Janice Glosc, De
Graff Memorial Hospital. To
earn certificate, nurses must
have aue.nded five sessions.
South Campo&lt;. 4:30-7:30 p.m.
$50 per module. To register. call
829-3291.

$113 $135 $143
Wtndows

Macintosh

Open Man. &amp; Tues. 9:30 - 5; Wed. - Fri. 9:30- 6

l]jDJiiiJiiM

A-~.,_omforllucWJII.focully4-

11weotnmone. Noflt\Cornpua.

continued on page 8

Professional
W'mdows

(116)~.

Fax: .........

�8
CALENDAR
page 7

jlfn..-

SSO; early sian-up is
odvisod. Call64~12.5 from I
Llll.-1 p.m.. or 645-2434 rrom
_..T
_
1-S p.m. or_
7-10 p.m.

$30 and

, . W - Honiblo Life
ol L e a l - UUAB film

series. 20 I Student Union.
Nonh Cuq&gt;us. 6 p.m. $2.
S3.50. Caii645-29S7.
CIIAFT-

JieaiJulU&gt;&amp; Sla'-l GluL Six·

p.m. To r&lt;gister, caii64S-2434.
Darltroom Todlolq..., Sixweek course. 120 Fillmore,

Ellioo&lt;L Nonh Campus. 7-10

p.m. To register, cali64S..2434.
late~

week

COUBe.

PotlH'y. Six- ·

120 Fillmore.

Ellioo&lt;L Nonh Campus. 7- 10
p.m. To r&lt;gister, caii64S-2434.
.-try c.saJJoc. Six-week

I 20 J=!llmore, EUicoct.
Campus. 7·10p.m. To
er, call64S-2434.

dueling free hearing~screenings
throu&amp;l&gt; Nov. 18 in 199 Part
Hall oe lhc: Nonh Campus. The
sc:reeniop take abou1 five. minut.es. and are opea to students
and all memben: of the communily. Houn are Mondays from

1-S p.m., Tuesdays aod
Wedneadays from 3:30-S p.m ..
and Fridays from 12:30-3 p.m.
For mronnation. call ns-&amp;382.

-~-A llan: welcome to join lhc:

International Folk Dancina
group eadl Friday rrom I -ll
p.m. in 2 Diefendor{ Hall on

lhc: South Campus. These free
leUiom begin with teacbinc.
Panncrs ...
The
SpooiOr i' the GIWiuate Student
Associatioa.

An l.alrodKtioo to MecUta--

Uoa, Paula Sdw!k. Himalayxn
lnstitule. 7-8:30 p.m. CaU
64S~ 12S to r&lt;&amp;ister.

ATn._,..
Scblodlor's Llsl. UUAB film
series. 201 Studenr Union.

NonhCampus. 9:1S p.m. S2.
S3.SO. Cali .64S-29S7.

AJSTUY•NO•
eo.ch Jim De Fazio. Jr.• president and founder of the Greater

Buffalo Sports Boosters, invile:S
enlries for the Be Drug Free!
writinc coatesa celebrating the
ten' 20 year balule •sainst
dnlgs. Students of all ages are
encouraged to 5end a one- to
l~pagc Jeucr dcscribinc their
thoughts on drug abuse or suggcstioos for figbtirlg drug abust
to De Fazio aJ I SS3 Hertel

Ave., Buffalo, NY 14216 by
Dec:. 2S. 1994. Prizes indude
NEW UUDY EXPANDS

AliT-

The Center ror lhc: Aru Grond
Opening Festival begins Oct.
28 and runs through November
19. 'The festival features somc:\hin&amp; for the artist in every~ :
an eU\ibits.. dance. \healef,
music, lectures and film iCt'C'enings. An ambitious new SSO..
million dollar gaJJery which
will present a year-round
Khedule oftempon.ry exhibi·
tions maJ::es its debut. Ce&amp;ebrarc
creativity through the Center

ror the Aru! Caii64S-ARTS

FAITII·--·
for information oo events.

IIAU.IJrY
'"Faith in Doubt: A Speculation
on l.hc. Function of Humor in
Contemporary Art.. opens Oct.
28 in Univcnity Galleries 1 and
II , Center for the Arts, North
Campus. 1be free uhibi~
which continues through December 22, is open from 10
a.m.-9 p.m. Wednesdays-Saturdays. and Noon-S p.m. on Sunday,.

-

•fACULTY SHOW"

1 be An Dep.anment ' s "fac:ully

Show- continues through Nov .
II ln tht An Depan.ment Gal lery located in the lower level
of the Ce~nter for the Aru on the
Nonh Campus. Gallery hours
~Monday and Wednesd:ly.
10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Tuesday and
Friday, 10 :~ . m..-6 p.m.; and
Thuisday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

NOTICES
CIIAFT WOIII(S- IIEIIIN
1be Creative Crafl Center at
120 Fill~. Ellirou Complex.
North Campus offers Fall ' 94
Craft Wod:shops starting the
week of Monday. Oct. 31 .
Workshops in weaving. crocheting and k:nininJ. quilling,
Brazil inn embroidery. grttting
card design. poctery. intermediate pottery. canooning. basic
photography. camera use and
~ration. creative photogra-

phy, eolor pholography. ad ·
vanccd color photography,
darkroom techniques, jewelry
casting. beginning suained
glass, advanced stained glass.
polte,Y for children, and multimedia for children run one
nic,ht 1 week for six weeks

rrom 7-10 p.m. (eaoept

children'' classc:s). Fees are

Soc:ioloaY, Pootin&amp;IF..o91 ,

4092.- Prol-(The: St»dent Auoclatioo is coo-

--- -- 1101.... _
week coune. 120 Fillmoft:,
Ellicott. Nonh Campus. 7-10

4089. "-&lt;lote/F•U Pr-oles- -Psyc:hialry, Postin&amp; ff4090.Pr-ot......

SSG and S2S gift certificates to
department strlrl!s aod restaurants u well ulmovie passes
and college basketball tickets.
UIIIIAJIY . , _ cotnUT
"''be Science and Engineering
Library is sponsorin,g a graphic
aru conle:St for the desi&amp;n of a
logo to represent the library and

appear on irs

publications.~­

ativiry is encouraged in tbe
graphic representation of the
library and its mission. function, holdings and facilities. A
winning logo will be. selected
from all enlries received by S
p.m. Friday. Dec. 2. and its
designer will be awarded a
SIOO gift c:ertifiaue redeemable
at either the Boulevard Mall or
Lhe Univenity Bookstore. The
COOlest j, open to all UB SIU·
dents, faculty and staff. Entry
forms and coolest rules II'C:
available at the SEL Reference
Desk 00 the 2nd noor in Capen
Hall.

1 1 - . u &gt; LIIIIIAJIY
-S&amp;.A'ID
The Uodergr&gt;duate Libruy
Worbhop, ..Eloploymc.nt Sites
on the ' Net... takes place on
Wednesday. Nov. 2. from 3-4
p.m. in Room 127 of the Un dergraduate Libflllf)'. Register at
the Undergraduate Library Reference Desk or E-mail
LBW@ub\'m.cc.bufflllo.edu.
WJmEJIS TAll£ NOT£

Senior undergraduates at UB
may submit original creative
writing entries for the Gregory
Capasso Creative Writing
Award up until Nov. 20 wStudent Affairs, 542 Capen Hall,
North Campus. A Student Af.
fain; commiuee and student
editors of campus newspa~rs
will judge the contest; the winner will receive a cash award
and recognitioo on a plaque
located in the Student Union.
TilC award was created in
memory of a UB studem who
was k.illed aboard a Pan Am
night when a terrorist bomb
exploded O\'er Scotland on Dec.
21. 1988. Only ~niors are eli ·

gible.

JOBS
FACULTY
Aaistaot Professor-Economics, Posting IF4087. Assistaot
Proteaor-Statistics, Posting

fF-4081 . Asoodato/Ftoll Proreaor-Statistics, Posting IF-

pooitiMs ·-)-Psycboi"'Y· Posting tf-4093. Aloodalo/Fd Pr-ol_...Psyc:hology,
PosUng tF-4094. AJolstaal/
AosodakJI'UU Proi--Psy-

c:holoaY. Posting tF..o9S. As-

sislaat Pr-ol....,..Modern Lan·

guaacs and Li&amp;eraJUr&lt;S, PosUng
IF-4096. ~at (GF'I')/

Asoodate Pr-ot.....- (GF'I')-

Pediatric:s. PosUnJ tF-4097,
4091. Aaslstul/.u-lato/F..U

Pr-ot_. (IWG posltloas
..allablo)-Bioc:bemisuy. Post·
in&amp; tf-&lt;1099. Asslstaai/Anod·
at~ Prof'eaor-social and Prr·
ve.ntive Medicine. P&lt;Ktina
fF-4100 . Asoistut ......,....,..
Demwology. PosUng IF-4101.

Aaslstui/Asoodak Pr-ot-

-

Ophthalmology, Posting tF-

4102.

I,OU_ID_

tw

.111101111~\lllU

llooearcb Support Specialist·

dallst-Family MedK:ine,
Posting IIR-94071. hsearc:b

Toc:bnldaa 0-Piwmac:ology
and Toxicology. Postin&amp; •R·

94079. Raean:b Support SpeclaJist.()ra] BiotoaY, Pol:ting
Educator~ln tema ·

tion.aJ Education, Posting IR94081. Pati&lt;ot Can Todulidan-5ocial &amp; Pre\·entive
Medicine, Posting MR-94082.
Rtsearcb Technician-Biological Sciences. POSiing MR94083. Rnarcb Tecbnician
U-Lab Animal Facilities. Posting *R-94984. Seoior Re--

searc:b Support SpoaallstCivil En&amp;ineering. Postmg
IR·9408S. Soc:mary 1-Sc:llool
of Nursing. Posting If R--94086.

Educatioa Spodatlst -~habm ­
tation Medicine., PoR.iq lfR.,_
94087. Dllta MaftiiiO'IStallstidaa-Family Medicine/Run!

Health, PosUng MR-94018.
Registered Nurw-Social &amp;
Preventive Medicine, P~1ing
IR-94089.
I'IIORUIOIIAL

FaclUU.S Procnm Coo&lt;dioator (Slr5)-Design &amp;! Construc-

tion. PosUng fP-40110. SWT
Auoc.. ~ (Sl..-4)-Univenity
DeYelopmenl, Posting IP-4083.

Senior Stall' Assistant (SlrJ)University Development, Post-

ing fP4014. Seaior Starr M.sodat~

(SlrS)·University
De\·e~nt. Posting "P-4087

Senior SWT Asso&lt;Lato (Slr5)Uni\·ersity Development . Posl ing IP-4088. Assistant Dean
(SL-5)-Univen:ity De\·rlopment. Posting IP-4089. In·
stnact:ional Support Tec.bnician (Slr3)-Cornputing &amp;
lnfonnation Technology. Posling IP-4091 . Assistant Dta.n

(SL-5, Internal Promotional

Opportunity)-Faculty of Arts
and l..rtters, Posting IP-4094 .
Lead Programmer Analyst
(SL-3 lntemal Promotion•!
Opportunity)-&lt;:omputing and
Jnfonnation Technology. Posting IP-409S.
~OIII'ETITIVE

CLAUIFIED CML SEIIVICE
Supervising Painter (SC-14)·
University Facilities. facilities
and SyS1ems Maintenance. line
131281 . Mainttnan« As it·
tant (SG-09)-Universily Facilities. Utility Operations. Line
143116. Grounds Workt.r
(SG-M)-Unive.rsity Facilities.
Building Services and Grounds.

Line 143137.
' - ' - CLAUinED CIVIL

HIIVICE
CleaM:r (SG..OS)-University
Facilittes. Custodial Services.
Line 1131787. Cleaner (SG05}-Resldential Cus todial. Line
143061.

To obtain mort&gt; informarion em
jobs list~d obo1~. contort Personnel Scn·kcs. 104 Crofts
Hall.

.,_..Wi!lll

tmlugh II Wolfd.llllflcll Wllb1rtlillaila. 'lilt Wllb t11J1n \lllU ecce.ID ..,_

lllllllla tiling~ Mill .... , . . . . . . . . . . lwlllllllno c:tllllt*

IIIIICI_,._...
•tnGapher. ~---~...., ........ GI ....

~-,.our-·(GI~IMI'-ronlllt

18Mn.. lia_,ID,... . . . .8GI~hiR . . _.181diD,.._.

Walmlllon.

School of Nursing. Poiti"&amp; •R·
94069. Seaior Edoc:atioa Spe-

•R-94080.

-

.....

BcitiGapherandthe~WIIb . . . . . . . . . . . .

to~.tlo-·~---

l..clal1ldllllllill

on carTIPUII GJIIIIOUgh modlln OlllaiiCIIIinllllom hamii or ollca.
Where doell Ma8llic • In thai?
Mosaic perfolml muctl a . . WariiJ.Wide WIIIIIW .... llrilong dler·
enc:es. First, IIi&amp; allfilllhk*....,.,. ~ -tllllliDI or'lylalel . .
paars on yoor ~ bul imlgilla MI . ~·--- such •
double-cllcklng,llimg windows, and .-.g pul-dcMn ,_,..are fully functional on ~ - Text will 111JPeW in dlllefwnt ten~ and 1WJ11 tlizes.!IIIMig
it appew much mont like 1\'.-et l8l&lt;l u.ing Maalc you might not ~
find ln1onnllion about .., eulhor. lor . . . . . . bul you mighllllso ~ •
photograph o1 his face diteclly In front o1 you an lhe _ , ,
The Ol'ly drawback with Mouic IS lhat II i&amp; pr.-1lly Ol'ly llvailllble
lhrough computers d&amp;ec:dy connected the malnlrwne Uling an~
connection. If you do not hiiVe an Ethernet OOIWI8CiiDn or Hyou are 11 ~
dem user, Mo8aic is Ullllllllillble. But help ill on the M¥1 A,_ proiOCOf il
in testing thai should make Mosaic aYIIillble 10 dia141- wilhin a ~Keep in mind that regan:lia. ol the interface yo1.1 chooee, the inforrnlltion you will lind on the lnlllmel is baical1y the - · ...._ ihlerfacee.
~er. offer- ol use and Pf--.1 intonnalion In lomlllllllhat ere lntendec110 be iiiC:ttlslnQiy lllledlve.
How wiT/ you "fiJCe"lhe lnlemBI? The cholt:fl i&amp; )IOUfll/ For t1IOifl infamalion on using any of U.. lo'lltSions of WINGS
Campuling c.tter Help Des/c at 645-3542 or S«&lt;d an E-mail tNIIIIliQIIID oonsun.
-&amp;nma DI!Viltney llfld l..oSII Pequeflo GMZ;.,, LDclcrt1ood l.boty

to

c:m11et,.

2222 -......

of--.,.._
of . . .

Tile followl. . . . . - ·

.... ..._tedtolc

s.tetr - - Oct. 7
-13:
• Public Safely reponed Ocl 7 that a man
was found 1n the air duct
beh1nd Baird Hall. According to off1cers. the man 1s a
mounta1n climber who
dectded to climb the bUild Ing
• A man reponed Ocl

10 that someone entere.::! a
Fronczak Hall office and
shook a compuler , damag·
ing the hard disk drive.
The complainanl spen1 awo
days lry~ng lo restore losl
matenal on the computer .
accordtng to Public Safety
• Four steel drums,
valued al $1 ,375, were
reponed missing Oct 11
from a truck parked at the
Wende Hall ioadtng dock
• A man reponed Oct
1 lo that while he was on
Pulnam Way . h1s wallel ,
conta1ning cash, credn
cards and cash , was taken
from the backpack on the
back of his wheelchair .
• A man reponed Oc1
12 that lhere was a naked
man behind Hayes Hall.
According to Pub lic Safety.
the man was gone when
officers arrived.

• A v1deocassene recorder . valued at $800,
was reported missing Oct.
12 from Rllmore Hall.

O

BilUARifS

Russell C. Pease former librarian
Prtv.te ......,._ • - loeldthis week in Olester, Mus. for
Russell C. Pease, S6, former UB libnrian. A memorial service
will be held in Burlington N.C. PeaS. cfied Oct. 15 in Buffalo
General Hospital after along battle with canc&lt;T.
A native of New Jersey, Pease grew up in North Carolina. He
came to Buffalo in 1982. From 1984-1986. 1le
assistant
director for public services aJ Lockwood Memorial Library.
A graduate of Davidson College in Nonh Carolina, Pease
earned 11105ter' s degrees in German aod library science from lhc:
University of Nonh Carolina at Olapelllill. He taught Gennan
at the College or Charleston in South Carolina aod wori:ed IS a
libnuian at the University ofNonh Carolina aa Wilmington. the
University or South Carolil.a aod the University of Georgia.
In 1986. Pease began a new career as a b'a\-'el agent and was
employed by the American Automobile Associatioo aa the time
of his death.
Sun•ivors include his m~. Bertha. and a brother, Roben..
both or Burlington.

was

Bernard Wakefie d, oral surgeon
loeld for 1lemard G. Wakefield, 94. a
Buffalo oral surgeon wbo was a. professor of oral surgery at the
UB dental school for 30 years aod a formerchainnsn ofthe Oral
Surgery Department. Wakefield died Oct. 4 in Blake Hospital,
Bradenton. Aa.• after a sbon iUness.
He also served for many years as chier of dentistry at The
Buffalo General Hospital. and as a consultant forothcrhospilals.
A ronner member or the UB Council and lhc: recipient of a
Distinguished Alumni Award from the UB Alumni Association
in 1972, Wakefield was honored in 1993, when the Oral Surgery
Clinic at UB was dedicated in his name. He ret"'eived many other
:awards during his career.
He was a past president of the EighlhDistrid Dental Society,
past chairman of the New York State Board of Oral Surgery; a

hrvk:n 1111\'e -

founding member of the American Board of Oral Surgery and a

former member of the Hospital Dental Service Council of lhe
American Dental Association.
Wakefield attended Cornell University and graduated from

the UB dentlll school in 1924.
Survivors include a daughter, Barbara Baxter of Bradenton; a

son, Dr. Bernard D. ofNiag~m Falls; seven grandchild= and I 0
~t-grandchil~n.

�........ .,.................. .

9

1994 SEFA Campaogn

Variety of programs, services offered to Amherst youth
of the Amherst Youth Board. '1lte writing
was on thew~ll . We knew we had to inaease
RESIDENTS of
Amherst, especially those
with children, are familiar
with the programs and services run by the Amhem
youth Board. From musical theater productions for starstruek kids and transportation
for disabled children to activities for
preschoolers, diversion program for limtime offenden and employment referrals,
the Youth Board offers programs and services that deal with the needs of young
people of nearly all interests and age groups.
It wasn't always this way. Back in the
1970s, just as the town w~ beginning to
e~perience dramatic growth, a group of parents in Williamsville decided that teenagers
needed a place outside of school or home
where they could gather. Carol Greiner, wife
of UB PresidenJ William R. Greiner, was
one of those parents.
'"Town and county services were not as
u.tensive then as they are now." she recalled. "1bere were numerous athletic programs r young people and the schools
provided extracurricular activities and athletics after school. but there was a real gap
regarding activities and gathering places for
teenagers after school and on weekends."

our fund-raising from private sources.""
Perilap5 the most vi ible service the board

provides is its operation of youth centers
throughout Amhersl. Currently. the board i

assisting in implementif'lg recommendations
toest2blish a new youth center in Eggertsville.
1be recommendattons resultod from a sur·
vey conductod by UB prof&lt;&gt;sors Mumoy
uvin&lt;! and S1mon Singer.
The Youth Foundation suppons and enriches the lives of young people through

organized programs and, occasionally ,
through effons that help individuals. "One

the fund-raising arm of the Amhersl Youth
Board. Greiner is a founding member of the
board's Youth Center Ad visory Committee.
'"l'oday the Amherst Youth Board pro- ,

vides a broad range of services for young
people," Greiner said. '"!'he Amherst Youth
Foundation raises fund for the board and

The PTA~ of which Greiner Was a mem-

also supports other youth aclivities in

ber, joined forces with the Amherst Junior
Chamber of Com~. the YMCA. and.
with some help from }he town, set out to
develop a teen center. They got together and
took over an abandoned schoolhouse on
Nonh Ellicott Creek Road. They scrubbed
theOoors.paintodandrehabilitatedtheschool
so that it could be used as a community
center for Amhersl youth. Out of that group
emerged the Amherst Youth Foundation,

AmhersL The main beneficiary of our work
is the youth of Amherst.
"As the motberoffourchildren who grew
up in A.Jnhet!it. and as a volunteer active in
many youth-orientod agencies,! have learned
a great deal about the needs of young people
for suppon from their families and other
caring adults. Shat:iog that knowledge and
experience with the other members of the
foundation has been a most rewarding way

Children's Center: it couldn't
happen without SEFA funding
NY SET OF PARENTS
whose child has had to have
major surgery knows the an-

guish that accompanies that
experience. When the surgery
1 successful, the relief is almost tangible.
This summer, Joseph Gardella. Professor
of Chemistry, and his wife. Carol Kizis.
Database Coordinator of the National Center for Earthquake Engineering Research
Information Service, went through that cycle
of fear and. happily. gratitude when their
three-year-old daughter. Claire Seung Hee
Gardella. successfully underwent spinal sur·
gery at New York
City's Hospital for
Joint Qiseases and
Orthopedic lnsti·
tute. Following the

operation, Claire
underwent rehabilitation at Pittsburgh's Rehabilita·

tion Institute. Not
long after that .
Claire was back at
the Children's
Center in Cheektowaga. playing with

her favorite toys
and charming her teachers and classmates.
Claire is one of the estimated 500.000
individuals in the U.S. who has cerebral
palsy. Each year in the U.S .• about .5.000
infants are born with CP and an additiOnal
1,500 acquire it as young children. The op·
eration Claire had in New Vorl: City was
pan of her treatment, but there is nocure_for
the co ndition . Still. Claire is maktnf

progress all the time.
"Claire has a smile and a personality that
not only inspires her parents," Gardella said.
grinning. "but also all the people she comes
in contact with. She' an extremely popular
kid over at the center ...
Operated by the United Cerebral Palsy
Association. the Children's Center offers to
developmentally disabled children a comprehensive set of physical. occupational and

continue helping The Amherst
young people, and to sup- Youth Board
pen a community that proVIdes.
was so good for my chi I· broad ranee
dren during their forma- of services to
tive years." she said.
meet the
The Amherst Youth needs of Its
Foundation. a donor- youth, bed ...
option agency of SEFN nln&amp; with the
United Way. has been very younc.
partly responsible for the
board's increased funding from private
sources. incl uding individual s, especially
during a time when government cutbacks
restricled the board's activities.
"From 1990-91 . the board e~perienced a
45 percent cutback in government funding.•·
said Joseph E. Bachovchin, ~ecutive director

10

SEFA Umt

Goal

10,199.ll0

113.3

9 .033.65

116.2

7,774

Ans end Letters

28,515.10

81.8

34,821)

Denbstry

17,02607

63.5

26.801

Ellucabooal Stu&lt;lies

14.25'7.45

98.3

14,500

Engineering and Applied Science

23,489.50

86.9

27.003

8,552.50

110.2

7.759

1,432.00

68.8

11,056_67

85.0

Oilier PrOIIOSI Areas
Architecture end Planning

~alth

Related Professions

Law

Medicine
Nalural Science and Math

" When we told peo ple about the level of

services that we get at no cost from UCPA
and that it's income-neutral. they told us

'

tnlormation &amp; library Stullies
Management

Center is.

I

(

Gardella.
According to Gardella. those conversa·
lions brought home to him the fact that New
Vorl: State, and especially 'Erie County. offer a very aggressive program in early intervention for children with developmental

Total Goal

s

9 ,00J

2,ll79

c

13,00J

26.809.81

113.9

23.528

117,369.67

93.8

125,00J
27.000

25,448.55

94.2

Nursing

6,117.85

76.4

8.00J

PharmacY

7,947.10

70.3

11.297

3.514.41

64.

President

Social Sciences
Social Work

UB Fowldalion
Studenl Alfain;
University SeMces

Emeritus Center

5,453
33,900

26,722.39

78.8

2.593.50
2Sil.50

64.8

4.000

10.6

3,00J

27,659.43

8-C.S

32,8(12

109,951.06

94.5

118,250

8.200

16.497.00

Sponsored Programs
_ , Dowlapm8nl

8.548.71

1()4.2

6 ,080.74

642

1 ..0

PIJbfic Service &amp; Urban Af!an

16,35•1.110

95.5

17,113

850.00

.....

Mlf,,.

...............

Student Orgarizalion

that in Pittsburgh, we would never lind all

of those services in one · ptace:· said

the board helps young~ who find them·
selves in trouble. "Our divenion program is
designed to step in wheo a case is being
beard that involves, say, a kid caught shoplifting." he said. "We'll tell the judge that we
would like to take charae of this youn&amp;S'£&lt;,
involvehiroorherinourprogrwns. demonstrate
positive rofe..model.ing and hopefully, di ven
biro or her from the criminal j · system." =

Current Level

after-school program for working parents.
··As a result of her condition. Claire has
reduced motor function and il's nol certain
she'll ever develop functional verbal communication;· said Gardella. "The idea behind the center is to involve Cl ai~ and
children like her in these different therapies
as early as possible." The earlier the children
stan getting help. the better their chances of
success. he added.
From Claire' s first day at the center. both
Joe and Carol have been impressed with it.
They note that it is very well-staffed and that
at three years old. Claire has both a pre·
school reacher and a special education
time in Pittsburgh after Claire's surgery that
they discovered how special the Children's

medical Sciences. who serves on the
foundalion' s board of directors. notod that

· Sumnwry Report of SEFA Unit RHUita

speech therapies. The center also runs an

teacher. But it wasn'l until they spent some

of our youngsters had an opponunity to
panicipate in track events m tbe lntemational Deaf Olympicli being held in Cbrist
Chun:h, New Zealand." said James C. Bailey.
president ofthe Amherst Youth Foundation' s
board of directors. "He was unable to raise
enough funds by hm1self to go. So we helped
him raise some of the money he needed in
order to anend and compete."
Foundation money has been applied toward the purt:hase of playground equipment.
libraries for parenting skills workshops, and
vans, including one equippod for disabled
children, to take youngsters on field trips.
Richard Jones. clinical assistant professor in the UB School of Medicine and Bio-

disabilities, and a significant ponion of the
fundingforthoseservicescomesfromSEFN
United Way.
"UCPA couldn' t run the Children's Cen·
ter without SEFA/United Way funding." said
Gardella.
He added that having the services ofSEFA

agencies like UCPA available in Buffalo
makes fora higher quality oflife for families
than it might be somewhere else.
"SEFA/United Way is such a sensible
way to give to charity," Gardella added "It
comes right out of your paycheck and you
can give 10 any organization you want."

-=

�........ a-................. .

GRAND OPENIN8 EVENTS
continued from page 1

Affirmative Action
in Action
--

,.... Tlwl •••..., otMn. with direction
by Saul Elkin. choreography by Unda
Kurdziel-l'ormato, and musical direction by
Charles Peltz, 8 p.m .. Drama Theatre.
Saturday, Nov. 5

IDifOII:

The • •

The fieporter reports that President

Wootds, screenings of "Vldeo in the Villages· and 'The Spirit of TV: Vincent CoreiN;
'The Drums of Winter.· Sarah Elder and
Leonard Kammefling, and diSCUSSKlrl by Sa·
rah Elder, directO&lt;, Alaska Native Heritage
Project, 7 p.m. Screerung Room.
The~' Opera, with direction
by Saul Elkin, choreography by Unda

Greiner received a letter which charges
thai there was ·an element of (reverse)
racism· in a recent appointment in advisement
He will not deign to respond to this letter. That is
a pity, for affirmative action poses difficult Issues both in a generic sense and in specific applications.
It is not below the dignity ol Cornel
West. in Race Matters. or of the Supreme Court, t~ address these very
issues.
The uncontroversial
tive action tells us to c
The old boys' network is
that the best person
position will
be identified. Thu , openings should be
widely advertised in a wide variety of
Outlets.
Affirmative action is more. It prescribes that hiring decisions be based
on merit, but with special consideration
for f(linority status (of race and/or sex).
This is to some extent in reaction to
discrimimitory hiring practices against
the very groups now singled out lor
special consideration; but there is also a
positive motivation, in acknowledging
that minorities have something extra to
offer by way of role models and examples for others to emulate, and by
diversifying the human experience in
education and the work place.
. It is this 'something extra' that will, on
occasion, result in an appointment of a
minority candidate even if that candidate may fall someWhat shy of the merits of another applicant This other
applicant will then feel discriminated
against, for it is not his tau~ he is a white
male. Race matters. That is the mandate
of the affirmative action law.
In the instant case five candidates
were identified by the search committee, which included students, as meeting the qualifications for two advertised
advisement positions. They were
ranked, and the two (temporary) incumbents ended up in \he two top spots.
One of these. a minority woman, was
appointed to the permanent position by
the administration.
The frontrunner . a white man , who
had held the temporary position for I -1/
2 years, to everybody's satisfaction and
sustained applause by the advisees,
was not appointed . Instead, a black
male candidate on the lis\, with impres...sill&amp; credentials and even more e perience, got the nod.
On the evidence, this successful
candidate is arguably the most qualified, period. It is also possible that the
"extra· provided by affirmative action
considerations tipped the scales. If so,
there was indeed an element of reverse
discrimination. That would not imply that
the decision can be faulted. It would
imply that affirmative action works the
way it is supposed to.
Having said that, let me end with two
tangentially connected asides. First , it
would appear that truly stellar advisement staff is hard to get, and a plausible
approach might have been to free up
the resources to create an additional
position. Advisement is most assuredly
understaffed as it is. (Yes, I know about
opportunity costs.)
Second, part of the frustration the
students feel is that, while in the loop to
advise, their advice is peremptorily
overruled. A bit more diplomacy would
have been useful.

-~
October
13. 1994

...,.,.

. Zoclaque

o-

CompenJ

F--,_

.._.

-

T--..,...- Ace-

to-~- T1llrd,

parfof-

dultnC

Gnnd
OpeniRC
Festival.

Kurdziel-Formato, and musical direction by

Charles PeltZ, 8 p.m., Drama Thealre
Sundiry, Nov. 6
PICk o f - Crop &amp; F - Frl..,da,
dance and music ensemble. 3 p :m .•

Mainstage. Pre-per!O&lt;mance talk. 2:30 p.m.
Poetry
ProfeSSO&lt;s Susan
Howe, Dennis Tedlock and CharleS
Bomstein, 3 p.m .. Screening Room.
The New Tac,.oologloo- Aceto-~T1llrd,
Fifth
Wootds,
screenings
of •Hands on the Verdict: The 1992 Los Angeles Uprising." Elizabeth Canner and Julia Meltzer. and ' Not
Channel Zero Premiere," Black Planer Productions, followed by discussion by T0&lt;n
Poole. Blacl&lt; Plane! Discussions. 7 p.m..
Screening Room.
The Thaap•nnw Opera, with direction
by Saul E · • choreography by Unda

--1-.

F--

Kurdziel-Formato, and musical direction by

Charles PeltZ. 2 and 8 p.m.. Drama Theatre.
~edn.aday,Nov . 9

w . - - y o at 4 Plua, poe!ry reading
by Ellzebelh Willis and Ted Pearson. 4 p.m.,
Screening ROO&lt;n.
llualc Dep,ertment: Showc•... featuring UBuffalo Symphon~ and UB W1nd Ensemble, 8 p.m.. Mainsi&amp;ge.
Thursday, Nov. 10
R-deldo TheatN, Appalachian

perfO&lt;mance inspired by the WO&lt;k of Miles
Davis, 8 p.m .• Drama Theatre.
Off - t C - , "A Night at the Opera,"
8 p.m., Screening Room.
Saturday, Nov. 19
ltril~ Tracea, critically acclaimed play
directed by Gerald Fonnegan, 8 p.m .. Black

Sunday, Nov. 20
......_ T.-coa, Clil1celly acclaimed play
directed by Gerald Finnegan. 8 p.m • Black

Box.

EXHIBITS
Falthln-AStteculatl_ _ _

Fldello, BeethoVen's only opere. bO&lt;n in the
spirit of the new age and ushered in by lhe
French Revolution, Harrier Simons. conducIO&lt;; Gary Burgess, directO&lt;. 8 p.m.,
Mainstage, with pre-performance talk al 7:3ll
p.m.
M - , Zodiaque Dance CO&lt;npany
perlO&lt;mance inspired by lhe WO&lt;k of Miles
Davis, 8 p.m .. Drama Theatre.
Off - t ~. "Cilizen Kane.· 8 p.m •
Screening Room

Box.
..- . Zodiaque Danae Company
perfO&lt;mance 1nspired by the WO&lt;k of Miles
Davis. 8 p.m . Drama Theatre

F-of-ln~_....,

Art, fearuring WO&lt;k of nine young artists.
Unhlersity Art Gallery Through Dec 22.
The F~ .....,., newWO&lt;k by UB's
faculty of professiOnal practicing artists, photographers, lllustratO&lt;S and deSigners, Art
Department Gallery. Through Nov. 11 .

.lim St-, Pilot........... Nov 17-0ec
15. Art Depanment Gallery.

Storytelling Theatre presented by UJtma Theater CO., 8 p .m .. Drama Theatre. Pre-performance talk, 7:30p.m

Friday,Nov.U
C.lebratlon of Independent Film,
VIdeo and Digital Alta, 7 p m., Screen·

ing Room
Brllilant Tracao, critically acclaimed play
directed by Gerald Fmnegan. 8 p m .. Black

Box.
Buffalo Phllhannonlc Orcheotra and
Cttonaa, conducted by Max.trrUano Valdes .
8 p .m .. Matnstage.
Roadside Theatre, Appalachian
Storytelling Theatre presented by U1tma Theater Co., 8 p .m . Drama Theatre Pre-performance talk, 7:30p.m

Saturday, Nov. 12
Celebration of Independent Film,
VIdeo and Digital Arta, 7 p.m , Screen-

mgROO&lt;n.

Brilliant Tracea, cntically acclaimed play
directed by Gerald Finnegan. 8 p m . Black

Box.
Harlem Spiritual En....,ble, 8 p m •
Mainstage.

Roadalcle Theatre, Appalachian
Storytelling Theatre presented by Ujtma Theater Co , 8 p .m .. Drama Theatre Pre-perfor-

mance talk. 7·30 p m.
Sunday, Nov.13
Poatoy .,...ntatlon, Raymond
Federman, William Sylvester and 1rv10g

Feldman, 3 p.m., Screening Room.
C.lebratlon of Independent Film,
VIdeo and Digital Arts, 7 p.m .. Screening ROO&lt;n.
Brilliant Tn~cea, critically acclaimed play
directed by Gerald Finnegan, 8 p.m .. Black

Box.

Wednesday,Nov. 16
Wedfteact.ya at 4 Plua, btlinguat poetry
reading by Ann Portugal and Oliver Cadiot , 4

p.m., Screening Room.
Thursday. Nov. 17
Fidelio, Beethoven's only opera , born tn the
spirit of the new age and ushered in by the

French Revolution. Harriet Simons, conductor: Gary Burgess. director. 8 p .m .,
Mainstage. with pre-performance talk at 7:30

p.m.

Friday, Nov. 18
lartlllant Traces, criticalty acclaimed play

directed by Gerald Rnnegan, 8 p.m., Black

Box.
llonwnent, Zodiaque Dance Company

Among Center fo&lt; the Arts events: "Citizen Kane" In the ScreenlnC Room Nov. 19.

CENTER FOR THE ARTS

(

continued from page 1
from death al the hands of the Nazis. The
work will be performed at 6 p.m. Friday.
Saturday and Sunday in the Drama Theatre.
and is preceded by a talk by Federman at
5:30p.m.
• The Grand Opening Festival also will
celebrate film as the Dcpanment of Media

"A house for the
exploration ofall art, its
relevance to ou; time and
our future."
-CHUIIILEY

inOuence on international and global ex.periencc. The Dcpanment of M •
Study's
tribute to the origins of cinema is o~ of300
taking place around the world. and takes
place in conjunction with the depa~fs
25th anniversary of the establishment ortbe
field at UB.
Other performances scheduled as part of
the festival i ncl ude the Appalachian
Storytelling Theatre, the Amherst Saxophone
QuaneL Pick of the Crop dance ensemble
and The Threepenny Opera. .
The Center for the Ans Grand Opening
Festival also will include an exhibit featuring the work of anists from across the United
States and Europe, all of whom offer pen-

eLrating views of our infonnation society. as

well as an exhibit of work by UB's distinguished an faculty. The festival also will
Study presents "A Tribute t6 the tOOth Anfeature poetry readings and multimedia preniversary of Cinema." A medium that is
sentations.
undergoing some of the most rapid and draThe festival runs through November 20.
matic change. the IOOth anniversary of cin- . Ticket are available at the Center for the Arts
ema will look at what many consider to be
ticket office and at all Ticketmastcr locations.
the an form of the 20th century and its
For more infonnation, call 645-ARTS. D

�Duke reee •• cller Ia

w.u-e lecturer

Robert M. Bell, acting
director of the Duke University Cancer Center, has been
named Wellcome Visiting Professor at UB and will give the
Wellcome Lecture at 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28, in 114 Hochstetler
Hall, Nonb Campus. The lecture,
free and open 10 the public, is pan
of the School of Pharmacy's
PharmaceUtical Sciences Day.
Professor and chair of the
Department of Molecular Cancer
Biology at Duke University
Medica~nter, Bell will speak
on the "R e of Lipid Second
Messen
in Cellulir Signal
TJ11nsduction Pathways."
He will spend several days on
campus, teaching and in discussion with students, staff and faculty.

0

........

Pulitzer Prizewinner

~--

Ridlard Boward, Pulitzer
0 translator,
Prizewinning
critic
will present
poe~

and

the

18th annual Oscar
Silverman Memo~rial Poetry Read ing at 8 p.m. Nov.
10. in 250 Baird
Hall. Nonb Campus. The event is
HOWARD
free of charge and
open to the public.
Howard won the Pulitzer Prize
in 1970 for his collection of poetry, "Untitled Subjects," published in 1969.
A professor of English at the
University of Houston, he is the
author of two works of criticism
and 10 volumes of poetry. A
membet of the National Acadetny
of Arts and Letters, Howard is
poetry editor of the Paris R•vi•w.

Women playwri.,.U'
work llhowcaaed

------

UB will present staged
0throughreadings
of plays by woljiCn
Dec. 7 in the Rehearsal
Workshop Theatre in the Center
for the Arts. The "brown-bag"
readings will take"'lace from
noon- I p.m. and are fra: of
charge and open to the public.
The events are sponsored by
the Department of Theatre and
Dance and by the International
Women Playwrights Center,
housed at UB.
The series opened OcL 18 with
workshops and a performance by
Australian playwrights Sandra
Shotlander and Sue Ingleton.
It continues as follows :
e Nov. 1: 'Ttssue." by British
playwright Louise Page, a series of
brief scenes articulating a woman· s
experience with breast cancer.
• Nov. 8: "Room 17C," by
American playwright Rosalyn
Drexler, a comedy-fantasy inspired
by Kafka's "Metamorphosis;"
• Nov. 15: "M.en Without
Dates," by American Jane Willis.
oomedy Sd in a country-weskrn bar
addressing men's oonfusion 10WMI.
and dqlcndcnce on. """"'"'
• Nov. 29: "Over Nothing at
All," by French playwright
Nathalie Sarraute, exploring the
relalionship between two men;

--..
I na

• Dec. 7: "Fefu and Her
Friends," a critically applauded
play by American Marie Irene
Fornes that speaks to "the mysteries and shared hallucinations of
the female experience."

Author v.. Sertlma
!P811ka~

0

Ivan Van Sertima, internationally known author and
anthropologi~ s~ at 7:30p.m.
tonight in 148 Diefendorf Hall,
South Campus. The even~ free
and open 10 the public, is sponsored by the Blacl Student Union.
Van Senima. a professor of
African Studies at Rutgers University, is author of "'!bey Carne
Before Columbus: The African
Presence in Anci~nt America,"'
published by Random House in
19n and now in its 16th printing.
Editor of the Journal of Afrioon
Civilitt~tions, he is also a visiting
professor at PrinceiOn University.
Van Scrtima has lectured at
more than 100 universities in the
United States and has spoken in
the Caribbean, South America
and Europe. Born in Guyana.
South America, he holds degra:s
in African Studies. linguistics and
anthropology.)

Mcl.eer IIMied chair
of Pay
S....... V. Mcl.eer, an expen in disorders of sexually
abused children and battered
women, has been appointed chair
of the Depanment of Psychiatry
at UB. McLecr was formerly professor and vice chair of the Department of Psychiatry at The Medical
College of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia. and director of its Division of
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
A member of the American
Medical Association's working
group on domestic violence. she
has testified on the battered
woman syndrome in several trials. She has published numerous
anicles and has lectured widely
on domestic violence against
women and children,
Principal investigator· on a
four-year study of symptoms and
psychiatric-disorder persistence
following child sexual abuse. she
will continue her research at UB
in this area and in post-traumatic
stress disorder in children.
McLeer earned her medical
degree and a master's degra: in
psychiatry administrati n from
The Woman's Medical College of
Pennsylvania. now the Medical
College of Pennsylvania.
Following a pediatric internship at Strong Memorial Hospital,
Rochester, she did her psychiatric
residency at the Medical College
of Pennsylvania. and completed a
fellowship in child and adolescent
psychiatry there and at the Eastern
Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute.
She joined the faculty of ber
alma mater in 1976 and built her
cara:r there in psychiatry and
pediatrics.
A fellow of the American
Psychiatric Association and the
Philadelphia College of Physicians, she is a member of scvcraJ
professional societies, including
the American Academy of Child

0

and Adolescent Psychiatry, Phy-

sicians for Social Responsibility
and NatiOnal Coalition of Physici4ns Against Family Violence.

Network Ia ~to
..._IIINctor-of'lftlte
lloaeeontw.ICe
Robert Blancato, incoming
0
executive director of
White House Conference
the
on

Aging, will give the keynote
luncheon address at the Network
in Aging of Western New York,
Inc.'s 14th annual meeting, to be
held from 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Nov.
I. in the Buffalo Hilton.
Blancato will focus on issues
facing the elderly, such as housing and coordinalcd services,
older persons as community re-

sources. retirement. crime and
nutrition.
He will gather information
from participants to present at the
national White House Conference
on Aging next May.
Based at UB. the Network in
Aging is a not-for-profit educational organization of individuals
and institutions in lhc: eight WNY
counties involved in aging and
long-tenn care .

Golden Key Honor
~ety

0

Inducts

Four faculty members and
543 juniors and seniors

were inducted into the UB Chapter of the Golden Key-Nationol
Honor Society at ilS seventh annual induction ceremony held
Oct. 17.
Honorary members, nominated
by members or Golden Key. are:
Shahid Ahmad. professor of civil
engineering; Kulbir Arora. lecturer in computer science: Dean
Millar, assistant dean, School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences. and Joseph Williams.
director of International Student
and Schohtr Services. Millar
presented the keynote address.
Donovan Gow. a junior majoring in an history. and Ashok
Sehgal. a senior majoring in
chemistry, received a KPMG Peat
Marwick/Golden Key Scholars
Award.

Receives award

for dissertation

Kathryn A. Foster, assistant professor of planning
and design in the UB School of
Architecture: and Planning, is one
oftwo winners or the 1993-94
Association of Public Policy and
Management (APPAM) Dissenation Award for the best doctoral
dissertation in policy analysis and
managcmenL
Foster will receive the award
at the association's annual meeting in Chicago Oct. 27-29. '
Sbe received her doctorate from
Princeton University. where she
was both a Wilson Fellow and a
research fellow at the Princeton
Center for Domestic and Comparative Policy Studies.
She graduated from The Johns
Hopkins University in 1979 and
holds a master's degra: from the
University of California at Berkeley Department of City and Regional Planning.

0

dUn. The
ID 10a--8111tllllr

wlllnk1g .....
llla.,...,.'T-0.

......,...,_ ... br~c.laaG.n~Y•IHe

.-rut

~P-*'11 and 121 . . . rult*lg, .-dill
oe-..10 ecorelhnle 1tJUcllclcMN In IW tnt Ql*llr. Each
one- on a ClrM!thlt --.cl.._ 11w1 IWo ll'iiUetL
The~~. whohacl 42010111 yards of~.
8COI8d on lis first drive in only 1:08 on a 25-ylwd drving catch
by raceiWr Michael Wright Alter " nWiaed the eJCira point
attempt, Hofstra came right back and added to thetr lead
when Garay capped oil an 8G-yard 1:53 drive wrth a 12-yard
~up the middle. Severin Comelrus' two-point conve&lt;sion gave Hofstra a 14-&lt;l lead.
Hofstra completed ils first quartef dominance as Garay hH
Wayne Chrebel W11h a 15-yard pass with only 30 seconds lefl
in the quaner on a drive thai lasted 1:14.
In the second quarter, Buffalo (2-5) put up fts fnsl poirrts.
Aller a 53-yard catch by Keith Warren, Cliff Scott hil brother
Anlhony wtlh a 16--yard scoring pass. The Bulls' extra point

attempt was blocked.
A JO.yard Flying Dutchmen field goal made the score 24-6
at the half.
The tl'ird quarter belonged to the Bulls. Buffalo put lhemselves back in the game when linebacker Terry Morgan
picked oil a Garay pass and returned il 74 yards for the
touchdorwn. After a failed two-point oonve&lt;sion, the Bulls
added a 27-yard foeld goal to put lhe game wrthin reaciJ at
24-15.
.
In the fourth quarter, Hofstra put the game away wilh a 34yard field goal and anolher scoring pass from Garay to
Chrebet---&lt;an 18-yarder wflh 8:34 to play.
Buffalo, which was held 10 only 34 yards rushing, added a
late IOUchdown on a 24-yard pass from Soolt to Warren.

-··Soooer

The Bulls clinched the Mid-Continent Conference's Eastern
Division crown over the weekend thanks 10 their 1-0 .nctory
over Northeastern Illinois on SaiU&lt;day in YoungsbM\, Ohio.
Sophomore forwwd Edlru Okpewho IICOied lhe ot*'f goal
!he Bulls
need In the
~ !!Lh c;.ontaat:
OkP8Wfll5
the learn wt
goaliind 18 pointS. UB
goalie Jay Palmer earned the shutout ~just lhrae saV"eS
in !he match as lhe Bulls had 18 shots on lhe Northeastern
Illinois goal.
'Mill the win, the Bulls earned the right to hoslthe Mid-Continenl)ournament on Nov. 5-6.'The winner ol the tournamenl
advances to an NCAA Play-In match to lace the winner of the
Midwestern Collegiate Conference championship.
The Bulls completed the sweep Sunday afternoon wilh a 3-0
shuloul of Valparaiso. UB is now 10-5-1 and 5-0-1 in the MidContinent Dan Ciolek. Fredrick Al&lt;osa and Ugo Okpewho
each scored unassisted goats in the win. Palmer earned his
fofth shutoul of the season slopping just lhree shots.
Earlier in the week, lhe Bulls downed St Bonaventure 2-1 .
Jeremy Brauer and Chris Adams each scored as 9hris
Barletta made his first slart in goal for UB.

·-··Soccer

The Royals defeated Niagara 2-0 on Oct 19 for their second
victory of the year over the Purple Eagles. UB, now 5-8-1, got
goals from Melanie 1-iieri and Jennifer Devita in lhe win while
Nikki Piltaro recorded her second shuloul with nine saves. In
their lwo matches lhis season, the Royals outscored Noagara
7-&lt;l.

er-c-.try

(

Nilam S!l[jda was the individual wimer as the Royals breezed
to victory Saturday at the Albany lnvitational. UB scored 85
points lo teed the 26-leam foeld. Shukla crossed the finish line
in 18:14. Julie Phelps was sixlh in 18:45\ Gretchen Welcll was
12th in 19:19 and Amy GrinneU fonished 3Ith in 19:38.
On the men's side, Charlie Moynihan liniWied 19th In 26:13
10 help the Bulls to a severllh-place finish at"-~- Bolli
t81W118 will be in action again CNer the weekenllatthe MidContinent INBI. The Bolts and Royal&amp; won East 'Coast Conllrence lilies 11111 ~ and hope 10 COil1lnue with Mid-Con t111ea.

......,.....

The Royala -llair eight-malch winning lilr8ak enapped bW
St. Bona-*ft 9-0 on Oct. 18. UB's reconlls now &amp;-3. T~
Gabriel, at runber six 81nglea, lcrced St. eor-u.'a
Becky Arnold 1D tine l8la belonllalliog 6-3, :wl,
Globrill
Mel Amt Cohen. 81 runber- doubles, also dropped a
llwM-Wt match, falling 4-6,6-0, 6--1 .

e-..

_..T.....

The BUts .ra a! the Duquesne Un~ Man'a Tennis lowitational 0\181' the weekend. The doubles of Sleile Dlhm
a'ld rm Buell 8dYIInced 1o the finllll of the Flight B CQ1'111111tion wll8f8 the learn was forced to retire with a 4-1 laiMf due to
an injt.fy ID Buch. Wadi Kow.- won the Righi B singles consolation defeating Greg Peluso of Robert Morris In the finals 6-0.
3-6, 6-1.

�,,

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Recipes,
Recipes

Peneverance
Cho met obstacles
on road to
education.

Reporter's annual
contestnaw
open!

AS;r

,.

7

Serial
Kl

1hankYou
Words of
appreciation for
Day of Caring
volunteers.

UB prof says they're
not what they're
cracked up to be.

,.8
October 20. 1994

Volume 26. /No 7

Refitting UB Will Cut
Energy Use, Save Millions
Complex project could free up $50 million over next 15 years
IIJ.UWCOX

comes inro the building.
.. Put si mpl y. heat recovery recycles warmth... S1mpson said, "w we are

Reporter Staff

B

Y LATE NEXT YEAR, UB WILL BE A FAR "GREENER" PLACE
THAN IT IS TODAY.

That doesn't mean the grass will look any healthier. Rather.
explained University Energy Officer Walter Simpson, the campus
will have undergone some major energy efficiency refitting lhat will
resull in using less energy. paying less for it and emitting less pollution
generating it.
The university is in lhe process of implementing a comprehensive demand
reduction energy savings st.rnteg)!_ developed by energy service consultants CES/
Way. in conjunction with Niagara
Mohawk. that should cut energy usage on
campus and energy related air emissions
by 15 percent.
Associate Vice

using as much free heat as poss1ble in Hochsteucr to cut down on the amount

of acrual healing we will have to do m that building tn the winter." Another
component of t4is heat recovery S)'Stcm is the underground chJiled water
sys tem. Yes. you may read that aga1n. It ~ms 1hat. dunng the dead of
Buffalo's windy \o\.Jntcr. the temperature of the 'ol. atcr 10 these p1~ s. 10 feet
undergro und. stays a steady 60 degree s . ... Ru nning this water through heat
recovery coils transfers that heat to the: air going into a building ... explained
Simpson. Since tt requires shutting down the \'Cntilation sys1em. most of these
retrofits will be done on weekends to mintmize: disrupuon to campus acti~ttles .
he noted.
Be fore this retrofitttng . CooleHochstetler. a laboratory scienc: building
with plenty of cbem.i&lt;t.ry rume.hoods and
~

P~C,.

~

_____

.........-_,....

versity Facilities Ron Nayler called it
).umerofeoergy oa cam pus. costing nc:arl)
''the largest energy conservation project
$2 miUion per year. Post-project estimates
ever undenaken by an American uni say the butlding 's energy costs"'"' be
versity." He e xplai ned that it became
down 10 JUSt 0\Cr S650.000.
feasible to dQ when SUNY Cootral
Another substantial portion of the
agreed to modify the budgeting process
project wtll be the retrofitting of v.nually
every light fixture on campus; 50.000
for energ y
"You could call
fixiUre&lt;and 100.000 Oorescent light bulbs
costs.
wtll be replaced 10 e' ery office and classthis a win-win-win Instead of
room throughout us·. 0 butldings and
averaging the
program for all
past three
eight millton 'ieluare feet Dcstgn -...orl..
be~an thts week. accordmg to Stmpson.
three entities: UB,
years' energy
and the ltgbt10g phase should be com•
M 0 h k bill s. which
N •agara
aw
would lead to
pleted v.uhtn 15 months.
and CES/ Way."
a decrea se in
Not on I) are the ne'A hght!, more energy effic tent. perhaps cunt ng the number
W A L T E R S 1 M p S 0 N funding if a
of walts of energy used 10 half. but the
conservation
program \\ere succes ful. SUNY will
ltght produced b) these tnphos-phorous
allow the campu s to re1ain all savings
vanety lamp~ more closely s tmulate ~ actual sunlight. ··Most people should pr&lt;fer
r&lt;alized by the program. This will free
the color amplifying qualit y of the new
up S50 million over the next I 5 years.
lighting. e\'en though it wtll not actuall}
which could be all ocated 10 other un ibe any brighter{said Stmpson.
ve rsi ty needs.
"You could call thiS a win-win-win
f course. th is v. ill also produce
prog ram for all three entities (U B.
I00.000 used light bulbs todoav.ay
Niagara Mohawk and CES!Way)."" prowith.
Simpson said that tbe bulbs. a well
claimed Simpson. The universit y. he
as the ballasts ~at fire them up. will be
explained. will produce a "po itive cash ~
extensively recycled. - we budgeted the
flow from the sa vings generated in the
recycling right int lhe project.'' he exfir.t year:· CES/Way. which has spent o
plained. -because of Our concern for makmore than two years worki ng with campus ~
ing
thi s project envinllllll&lt;ntally proper:·
facilities personnel preparing the project.
L---------------'-'.._-'
will earn more than SJ.7 mill ion in fees
Kurt Schmidt of Quackenbush Co. replaces a ventilation system. Small amounts of men:wy foond in the
ballasts will be distilled and reused.
over the next I 5 years. And. Niagara
En vi ro nment a l reo;;pono;; ib iht y was import ant to the team designing
Mohawk is still sure to collect more than S 15 million a year from UB .
1hese upgrade s. sa1d Simpson . By shi fting energy production to cleaner
Spottings around campus of electrical workers high in the air in "cherry
burning and more efficienl boilers. Simpso n esli mates that 70 tons of
pickers." replaci ng ex terior lights is just one sign that the$ I 8 million project
"'
s
ulfur di oxide and 107 to ns of nllrogen oxide emi ssions per year. prime
is under way. When com pleted. it should shave S3.2 millio n off UB"s annual
com ponen ts o f acid rain. v. ill be eliminated. Other project s on I he horizon
S 19 million energy bill. cut air emissions of undesirable combustion byproduc1s
inclu de a heat re cover~ system fo r Alumni Aren a. repla cement of electric
by 15 percent and improve lighting and indoor ai r qualil)'. accord ing to
wilh gas boilers in se,eral build ings . new variable ai r volume bo'es in
Simpo;;on.
Lockwood to better regulate temperature there and installation of variabl ~-speed
Last weekend. workers labored day and night to refit the fir. I of six exhaust
fan
morors and carbon dio,.ide sensors to manage indoor air qual.ity.
fa n systems atop Hoc hstetler Hall with a new heat recovery sys tem . Simpso n
Keeping a local profile on the project was also a high priority. ··we contracsaid. The process involves installation of sever01l coils near the end of the
' tuall y maintained a lot of control over approval of the contractors and products.··
building's exhaust ai r strea m. The coils recapture heat from warm air leaving
Simpson said ... so most of the subcon tractors are from Western New York and
the build ing and transfer it. via a liq uid cond uit, to similar coils. which will
area suppliers had adequate opportunity to bid on supplies we needed.'' 0
be ins:talled on the bu ildi ng's seve n int ake fa ns,warmi ng ou tside air as it

0

J

�2

. . . . . . . . s . . 4 ,............ 7

H 0 N 0 R S

-----·

~

War, danger

~·
....._.L . . . . . .. re-

search professor of lntemal
medicine in the UB School
of Medicine and Biomedical

Sciences and a native of
Hungary, has been elected
a foreign member of the
National Academy of Sciences in Hungary.
Ambtus, a UB faculty
member since 1955 and
professor emeritus at
Roswell Pal1&lt; Cancer Institute. also has been named
president ol the Catholic
Pl1yslclans Guild of Buffalo.
The IIUihor of mora then
500 proleuiorJal jcunal
publicdans, AmbrvS Is the

edltDr-irH:hlef of ..loiiMI of
Medicine end ,....... of
HetrllltoloQr. a n d - on
the editorial board ol Hosp/1111 ForrrUary.

~:.==of

the Departmenl of Experlmenlal Plllhology end direc·
tor ol cancer research.

~

iiiiiii•ii.-aiii;; 80CIIm'

iiia

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . pro-

...,. ol geology. " prwldenl ollhe Clay ........
Soclely, ., orgenlzallan .
willl 1,000 rnembe&lt;8 from
&lt;49 &lt;XUllriel, ~
~ in Europe, Asia. Soulh
America end the former Sovial Union. Giese 8MII8d 88
vioe
of
.
~ .-chers, g&amp;ologisls. sedimeulologisls.
agronomists. chemicai en~- anvirorwnenlalists,

. ceramic8 ~- chemists interested in catalysts,

soils scientisls, paint and

Ink formulators, and oil

company and clay mining
employees, all are inte&lt;est·
ed in the origin, procasaing,
properties and applications

of clay minerals.
PHARMACOLOGY

URTIME SERVICE
AWAIID:
Enrico lllhlch, UB research professor of pharmacology and chairman of
the Department of Expenmental Therapeutics el
Roswell Pal1&lt; Canoer Institute, has received the 1994

Lifetime Service Award from
the Institute of Advanced
Studies In Immunology end
Aging , an international nonprofit medical research end
education organization.
Mihlch was honored for his

contribulionS 10 e&gt;cpertne1'el
1herapeob;s, particUarfy for
his groundbreal&lt;ing wor1&lt; on
biological restXJI'IS8 modifien;
(BRMs). His research, which
enhanced scientific under·
slanOOg of the basic properties of certain~­
apeutic agents and their use
ln treating cancer, led the
National Cancer lnstiMe to
delll!top a national BRMs

program.

UB
Professor
KMH~yunc

Cbolse

marked start of
Cho's career

~eac~•nc
.choler In
pile~

enoloCY-

Philosophy professor, now lnternri-'l:r known,
foul&amp;ht perilous odds to continue educ:don
11J SnYE COX
Reporter StaH

I

N 1968, KAH-KYUNGCHO
was completing his assign·
ment at UB and preparing to
return home to Seoul, South
Korea.
A visiting Fulbright professor
from Seoul National University.
Cho had spent two years worl&lt;ing
in the philosophy department with
his personal and intellectual hero.
the late Marvin Farber. Just as his
scheduled departure neared, the
Nonh Koreans capt ured an Ameri can naval intelligence vessel. the
U.S.S . Pueblo, which had strayed
into Korean waters , and took its 82
crew members captive. Tile international incident. which went on lO
last for a year, sparl&lt;ed fears of
rekindling the Kotean War.
Fearing forCho' s safety. Farber
insisted he not go back.. "But. I told
him K.cwea has been \i\.c this fOt"
4,000 years." recalls Cho. "I' m really not worried.'' Althlrugh exchange professors were supposed
to return to their university of origin. Farber was insistent In th,.
end, his persistence prevailed. Cho
has remained at UB.andgoneon to
succeed Farber as one of the leading American scholars in the philosophical field or phenomenology.
Phenomenology. a philosophical school of thought that grew out

of the teachings of German philosopher Edmund Husser!. explores
the development of human consciousne~s and self-awareness as a
preface to or a pan of philosophy.
The journal Philosophy and
Phenommological Rnearch . the
most respected mtemauonal joomal of
scholru1y wor1&lt;s in this f~eld. was pub~shed at UB for 40 years by F-..-ber.
who himself studied under Husser!.
''It is as much a presupposti on
as a philosophy grounded in sub-

jectivism." e~tplained Cho, "which
reflects upon the act of consciousness rather than the object itself.
You can lhink of il as examining
the way things would appear to our
consciousness: a fonn of pure see- ~
ing." Hussert's theories would reveal a "completely 1ransparent
consciousness." Cho said. that ~
could break down conscious acts
into their constituent influences. 0
Clearly.thisisnotthestuflmost ~
of us would muJI over a couple of
beers on a Monday night. But for
served. in the '60s, as cultural adviCho, it has ~n the foundation of
sor 10Gen. Park Chung Hee. who wmt
a 25-yeareareer whose accomplishon 10beoome South Korea's president.
ments have brought him internaIn 1989, Cho was keynote lectional recognition. In 1990. Cho
turer at an international meeting in
was honored with a SUNY
Japan on " Nature. Technology and
Art." What was unique about this
appearance was that the entire symposium focused on a s;ingle sentence in one or Cho. s boolfs.
From Oto' s Cort.zcit'.HlSn~ss and
NaJure, published in German and
Japanese. came the Saarland Artists Association symposium theme;
"In this age of modem technology
and ultra-modem technology. it is
all the more urgent to rethink how
the origin of the Greek term r.chn•
was closely intertwined with what
later has beeome separated from it
as art and the uthttic."
But before enjoying hi s current
fame. Cho had to overcome more
IU.H-«YUHG CHO
than his share or obstacles. 1be
Korean War. which ~rupted when
Chancellor's Award for Excellence
Cho was an undergraduate at Seoul
1n Teaching andearlierthi~ year. he
National University. left mo 1 of
was designated a Distingu1shed
South Korea' higher educational
Teaching Professor. the highest facinsti tuti On!!. in ruins. " Most school~
ult) ran~intheSUNY system . bythe
were c lased down and there were
SUNY Board of Trustees.
hea''Y casualties among young
Cho. who has written four boo~s
people in South Korea:· Cho said.
on phenomenology. recently bc··Of the students in my depanment,
cameoncofthreeeditors of a world25 were killpd or captured by the
wide phenomenological journal.
North Koredns. I was one of two to
Orbis Phaenomenologicus. He also
finish the program."

I

"Of the students in

my department, 25

were killed or
captured by the
North Koreans. I
was one of two to
finish the
program.

Cho's dream of continuing h1s
education meant he would have to
reach Japan. where universities
were thriving. Tile only way to get
there was via a black marl&lt;et ferry.
But Clio was not about 10 let
anything like a war stand in the way
of his education. ''On my forst attempiiO get 10 Japan, I had a 22-day
odyssey trying to cross the frontline,"
besaid..Hewucaptutcdmanytirna.

and ultimately had to tum back.
A second anempt saw him get all

the way 10 the~""' being intercepted by the .S . Anny. '1 was
pided up by the
Division." Cho

said. noting thai tae far prefared this
10 being recapwred by North Koreans. "But they needed an interpreter.
so I was itlt was safe. but it left me
tittle hope of getting to Japan."
Finally, after the U.N. occupation
ofSouth Korea in 1952 calmed things
down. Cho was offered a scholarship to the University of Heidelberg.
in Germany, where he became the
first Korean nation:. I in all of Europe
to earn a Ph.D. in philosophy.
Ironically. Cho'&gt; UB career came
about because of ~ war. " In
1966. seven_~ing scholars were
selected by Ftilbright but I wasn' t

''Hal&lt;"',..·"""

among than." saysCho.
of the scholars. who was from Viet-

nam. could not get OUI of the rountty.
I was selected to replace him."

Grant to med school will fund training opportunities in primary care ·
IIJLDISSAX£R
News Bureau Stalt

The School of Medicine lind Biomedical Sciences at UB has
received a S500.000 grant from the New Yorl&lt; State DepanmentofHealth
to fund projects to encourage students to become primary-care physicians. The grant will suppleme nt programs already under way and
financed through a $600.000. three-year grant from the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation's Generalist Physician In itiative.
The stale funds will be used to increast training opportunities for
medical tudents in communit1 offices and clinics. with community
physicians trained as educators and role models as their teachers.
Specific projects to be funded by the new grant are:
• Curriculum revision to integrate basic science and clinical educati on. introduce patient-centered learning in the first two yean. of med ica l
school and shift third-year clerkships from hospitals to community
settings.
• Expansion of the number of community academic -practice site~­
clinics. private offices and HMOs that are approved to function as

medical-sch6ol teaching centers-from 9 to 12.
• Worl&lt;sholto' and seminars to help full -time and community-based
faculty improve thfirteaching techniques and become bener teachers and
mentors.
• Two programs to increase exposure of medical students to primarycare physicians-a paid summer extemsbip program and a primary-&lt;:are
club that sponsors a variety of programs and offers chances to meer
informally with primary-care physicians.
'This effort is a critical component of our comprehensive program to
restructure the health~ delivery system to one emphasiz.ing primary
care." Mark R. Chassin. New York State commissioner of health, said of
the grant.
John P. Naughton , UB vice president for clinical affairs and dean ofthe
medical school. sai d the school is proud to have competed successfully
with the state's other medical schools for the funds . ..The award reflects
the quality of the effort that exists in Buffalo, and recognizes UB's
position as a leader in the needed effort to participate in health&lt;are
reform:· he said.

�3

Greiner outlines 'state of UB' for PSS meeting
DDRESSING THE Professional Staff Senate for the first

timethisacademicyear.President William R. Greiner outlined the state of UB on Oct.
I L covering topics ranging from the ongoing plans for construclion on both campuses
to November's race for governor and its
possible impaet on UB.
Greiner. speaking in the Sludent Union
lbeater, downplayed the outcome of the
politieally charged race for governor and its
effects for UB, saying the problems that face
the SUNY system-and the state as a
whole-are not panisan issues. Any econoinic impact on UB. Greiner added. probably won't be caused by who wins. but
instead by the fact that post-election years
are notoriously tight fina~ially.

However. Greiner was quick to point out,
UB's financial outlook isn'l without its bright
spots. As state funding dries up. Greiner
said. this university has made a concerted
effon to focus on finding alternative sources
of funding-namely alumni and philanthropic contributions. These sourcesarecritical. Greiner said, if UB is going to continue
to excel as a .. major public research -i nten sive institution.
~·we're making a tremendous effort to
improve ourselves in the areas of University

"We have the ability to
create the core of a great
academic health center: "
WIWAII GIIEINU

"'Whoever wins:· Greiner explained.
"New York Stale must go through a struc-

tural reassessment of itself. Whoever is
elected is going to have to look at critical
issues involvipg taxes. cutting the si1..e of

government and the costs of Medicaid.··
Greiner did say that the recent appointment
of Thomas Banleu as SUNY Chancellor
"sends a good message to the legislature and
to wh
er is governor that Y~c ' re senous

about soh mg our problem~ .
"The SUNY system needed to &lt;elect
someone with national experience and na tional exposure," Greiner added .
Greiner said that . economiCally. UB may
have 10 face "a huge squeeze·· JUo;;llike man)
other branches of o;tate govemmenl. ··our
expeclation is lhat ~~te suppon or thi!!o university will go down in the near future." he
said. Thi s year alone Greiner noted. UB
already faces the problem of replacing S40
million in '!tate etd that ~temmed from a onetime-only state-funded initiative

Advancement and Development," Greiner
said. "Some of these effons have already
begun to bear fruit . We've received a major
grant from the Howard Hughes Foundation.
and we· ve also received another major grant
which has yeiiO be announced publicly:·
he cond1tion of facilities and the
future of building on both campuses
also tool-. prommence m both Gremer' &lt;;; address and the questions from the Senate that'
followed . Gre1nersought to rea!l.sure severdl
South Campus Senate members. empha,i7·
mg that the buildup oft he South Campu~ . 1n
panicular. was "of the bighest priorily ..
He uid that UB ·~Health Scie nces School'
will be a focal pomt of reno,ations on the
South Carupus. Due to the c han.ging face of
health care in this country. he said. "a greater
need exists for additional clinical pace for

T

the Heahh SCNfco$ Education Oepanmenls. •

"More and more of the health

c~

ser-

vices offered in lhi country \loill be taling
place in areas out ide of the hospital."' he
said. "Having more space for clinics would
be an invaluable asset m preparing UB students for the future." In the future , Greiner
added, UB will try to persuade tate health
agencies to share space on or near the South
Campus. " We have the ability to create the
core of a great academic health center ...
Additional space already has been created by relocation of the Chemistry Depanment to the Nonh Campu~ . Greiner said . In
addition, all of the Ans Depanmentsarealso
on the Nonh Campu as well-the ficyt time
that"s happened in school history. be said.
On the Nonh Campus-a campus he
called "the best in tbe SUNY systemGreincrsajd the next maJOr bu1ldmg projects
would be a s1udent services building and an
apartment-style student hvmg complex . An
arrangement with the umversily's construelion fund has already been reached for the
financing oft he student services building. he
said. AI a proposed 60,000 square feet, this
building will be located in thec1rcle betw~n
Capen Hall and the Hamilton bus loop. ac cording to the preSident It will pro\'ide students." ith a kmd of"one-stop shoppmg'' he
sa1d. hous ing a \anety of student sen.1ces
such as a health scrv1ces office.
Gre10er al!'.D said that accordmg to US's
researc h. man) more ~tud~nts v..ould choose
to h\e on cam pu 'ii 1f affordable apanment~t)le hou!!.1ng unll' "ere constructed Plans
are 10 the "orl~;, for the construcuon of
-.evera I apartment' 10 the non hem pon10n of
campu!!.. near Lal-.e LaSalle. he s:ud.
Funher on down the ll~t of pnonties.
Gremer sa1d. 1!!. a nev. bu1ldmg to hou!.e the
Ia" &lt;ehool While O ' Brian Hall, the law
!t&lt;.·hool'!l. current home. would be "a super
pla'ce for undergraduate education. it's not

Leners
NSEP Fellowships
are available
~EIIITOII,

The Study Abroad OffiCe
would hke to 1nlom1 students of the availability of
Na1!0081 Securrty Educatoon
Program (NSEP) fellowships The NSEP enables outstanding
undergraduate and graduate students 10
pursue spec~ahzatoon rn area and language study or to add an nnportanl lllte&lt;natJOnal d1mens100 to me" educatoon
The program funds students JXXSUIIlQ
study of languages, cuhures. and world
reg100s outside of Western Europe.
Canada. Australia and New Zealand
NSEP was des1gned 10 pr0111de American
students With the resoorces and encouragemenl needed to acqwe s1&lt;111s and
expenence 1n less commonly studied
languages and cultures
More mformatoon and apphcatoon matenats are avwlable at the Study Abroad
Office. 211 Talbell Hall, North Campus. 9
am -5 p m dwty. 645-3912 Deadline for
apphcatoon 1s Nov 15. 1994
~-san,

Srudy Aoroad OffiCe

-s:uch 'll Yiab\~ place fur tr taw '~\."

s:ud

Baldwin, Kennedy speak at UB
lly .STEVE COX

Reponer Staff

A

CTOR WILLIAM "'Billy"
Baldwin and environmental activist Robert F. "Bobby'"
Kennedy. Jr. , son of the late U.S.
Senator from New York. brought the Cuomo
campaign to UB last week in an effon to
drum up suppon among college voter!-..
Speaking to a standing-room-only cro""•d
in the lobby oft he Student Union on Oct. 12.
Kennedy explained that he \lo'a~ stumpi ng for
GO\'. ManoCuomo. de pite the fact that fi,e
members of his ov.n family are running for
public office. because "he i'ii one of the few
poli ticial leader.;; out there who shares the
vision my father had of what thi~ country
should be."" Kennedy and Baldwin jotned
Christopher Cuomo. younge "J son or the
governor. at the m1dday mil)
"Mario Cuomo knov.' that '-H' '-' 111 be
judged by future generation~ ... Kennedy continued. ·· not ba~ed on the size of our armies
or the wealth of our corporation,, but on how
.. well we care
for the least
fortunate in
our soc1et y.
Urging his
listeners to
register and

v o

t

e .

Kennedy explained that
polls show
the "student"
vote. young
\-OleN generally between
18 and 30. as
being
the
..sing le most imponant voting. bloc in thi s
electi on." Young voters are hi storically notorious for slaying away rrom the polls.
Ironicall y. Kenned y's father.., a U.S. Sen a-

10 reducmg. the
tor. was a significant for
voting age from 21 to 18.
Bald"·in. younger brother of actor Alec
Baldwm and no\1.- one of Hollyv. ood'r; mmt
recognizable lead1ng men h1mself. ha' ~tarred
m movie(, mclud10g Flatlmus. Bac!.draft
and Slil't'r A Democratic pan) actn i"l. he
worked on MTV cable netv..orl-. 's " Roc lthe
Vote" rega~trauon dn\e andcampaagned for
Senate cand1date Roben Abrams tn 1992 .
Baldv.in told hi' aud1ence that he made
this trip because he 1 ~ a lifelong Ne"' Yorker
who !&gt;hareo., with Go\ Cuomo a "pasMon.
love and commitment to Ne" Vorl-. State ··
Baldwin. who gre\1. up on Long l,Jand. feeb
he ov.'es a great deal of hi\ o;ucce..,s to the
acces~ to a college educatton the State Umversit) system ga\C h1m
·•J v. as the founh of !!.IX ch1ldren to go to
college,'' sa1d Bald" 10 . ""ho graduated from
State Univer ity at Binghamton in 1985.
"My dad v.ao;; ~o far 10 debt by then that he
could do little to help me I would get a note
from hun when I was at Binghamton "'nh
$40 in it. then another a couple wed., later
''Then. 1 got a 15-page letter explaining
how there simply wa~ no more money: H
made me cry.'' said Baldwin. "Wi thout the
affordable acces~ or the ~; tate univer.1ty and
the Tuition A~~i~tance Program. whach
George Pataki voted to gut , I would not have
made it to "here I am toda) ... Bald"' in abo
tool a jab at GOP cand!Pate Patali", ·n,pOopping' on the abonion issue. calling him
··more multiple choice than pro-choice."
Kennedy. a faculty member and director of
the Environmental Litigation Clinic at Pace
Univer.;ity Law School in White Plains ib well
as general counsel to the environmental group
Hudson Riverkeeper. call~ Pataki's record on
the environment among ''the worst in the coun·
try." Kennedy condemned Pauil:i for his opposition to plans to build filtration planLS for
Putnam County reservoirs that supply much of
the water for metropolitan New York.

'\

How can you help
your students succeed
at no cost to you?
The

an~wer

~

......_.,_ F...A...

lS . . . ~~

Mtlfdt!'~Y= N.., Fu/1

"'"QmvenWuly

Se-

Copy Center

tst th~
n~eds of both th~ stud~nts and ~ulty .

Makin ' Copies 1s read) to a

Let us put your class notes on m~ and
w~ ·n make It ~asy for your students to

obtam them .
lnqutr~

a \·:u labl~

about our Fac-ulty Discounts

on our fuU ran~C' of copy

Located
At the VB Commons

We offer pat customer
Krriee lnclucliJ:lt::

~-~~·for
Easy

A~

Cort.oenient

on Campus

H~

~rvittS .

.lveo

FACULTY: For luviq your nota OD m~. yoa wlll be
a
FREE $25 VOUCHER for oar Fall raq~ of coiP)' Mn&gt;lca.
Call or visit us soon at the Commons!
520 Lee Entrance , Suite 105

Tt'l 636-8440
F.c, 636-8468

�4
Campu• II ,30 p.m S2. S3.50
Call645-2957.

FRIDAY

21

SATURD AY

-TIIIC ---

Spiao Blllda aad llelakd Spinal Coni AbGorauolltios, Matt
Dias.·M.O. Kinch Auditorium,

OUldren'' Hoipital. 8 a.m.
~PopuWioo l'bu­

mocolda&lt;tks aad the llelatioOJhlp ..........
Al~

Drua Espo-

aad SurTOpte Marker

R-

I o HIV-l ofoctod

---

Outpoti&lt;au, John Adams. 248
Cooke. North Campu•. 8 a.m.

(D Sardo ol the Smpl««&lt;•r
P:Jf'P"" FibroMCtln JlettP"
tor. Pb)'lkJioclcal Properties
o( a Strcptoeocc:al FlbroMCtin
Bind in&amp; Protdn. Ms. Zaira E
Juarez. 223 Sherman South
Campti$. 2 p.m

COIIPIITEII SCIENCE
COUOQUIUM

C~nttr

for Law and Soctal

PohC) . 280 Part; Hall North

Campus. 4 p.m.
MATHEMATICS COUOQUIUM

How ot To Coulrud All
Fiberf.d Knots and Linki.
Prof. Lee Rudolph. Clark Unl\
I03 Otefendorf. South Campu!&gt;.
4 p.m
PHAitMACEVTlCS SEMINAR

Molecular Biology and Gene
Regulation or Hepalk Drug
Mt:aabollrlng Enzymes:
Su1fotrand'ernes, Dr. Ah -N,:
Ton) Kong. lboma.i Jefferson
Um \'e~ll) . 508C Cooke North

What's an

interfaith
couple9
Maybe you two ! If so, Temple
Beth Zion offers ononiudgmentol, welcofllinQgroup once o
month forJews and their nonJewish spouses todiscuss issues
of concern. You needn't be o
. memberto join.

• Sunday, October 23 -2 PM
at Temple Beth Zion
700 Sweet Home Rood
No~onolly-known

Rabbi RachelCowan
will lead our discussion

• Sunday, November 20- 7 PM
at Temple Beth Zion
700 Sweet Home Rood
We~ll tolk about the upcoming
holidays.

~MP.M"

'~1W

Coll886-7150
for more information, orjust come!
You'll be very welcome.

Ca:mp.a' .a p.m.

THURSDA Y

sunsncs couOQUIUM

20

ART INSTALLATION

Blank. Paulo Buenno1o Throu ~h
Ck·t. 22 Atnum. CC"ntcr for thc:
Art!. Nonll C"ampu!. Call 64S ·
6M78.
ART EXHIBrTION

LandscapH 1988- 1994. Worl ..
on paper b~ Cynthia H:md
Capen Gallel'). fifth n oor.

Capen North Campu.\1 Ga.IIC"I')
hours. Through D«embcr
MANAGEMENT SEMINAR

Lessons in Lead ersh ip,
Stephen R. Cove-y. Sponsol'('d
by the Center for Management
De'•e lopment . School of Man ·
agemem . International Agn~nter. 5600 McKin ley P:uk Y,.ay. Hamburg. 8:30 a. m.- 3:30
p.m. 5249 fee . Caii64S-3:!:00.

ST\JD£HT NOIWI£GREE
RECITAL

Guitar stude nts of Joan M
Castellan i. Bau'd Recital Hall
North Ca mpu~. Noon. Free .
tNTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
L£CTURE

Tht Middle East: ls II a Real
Peace or a Cold Peace'! Ambassador Colette A vital. ConsulGeneral of l !..r.~el in Ne..., Yorl
Student Union Theatre . North
Campus. 2 p.m. Free. For mformation, call 645-2368 .

Power of Ddrcting tbe ErrKt
of a Continuous Prognostic
Variable in a Cox Model, Prof
Roger L Prtore . Sc D 144
Farber South Campu!t 4 p.m

I

CERTIF1CAT£ PROGRAM IN
GERONTOLOGICAL NURSING
Duling ,.,·il h AggrHsh·e Be-

haviors of Older Adults. L) nn
MangC"r. Buffalo \1 A. ~kd!cal
Center To eam cen1fi..:att .
nuJ"SC' .. mu .. t attend fi, c 'loC''&gt;~IOn !.
South Campu!. . .t:)O- 7..\f) p m
s~o per module To fC'!!I~ter. rail
8:!9-3291
ART EXHIBmON

The

Facult~·

Sho" , Throu~;h

Nov II An Depanment G:tl ·
len, Center for the Arts. North
c:~mpu" Opemng reception S·
7,30 p.m. Call 645-6878

AT THE MOVIES
Serial Mom. UUAB film sene"
20 I Student Umon . North Cam·
pus. 6:30p.m. S:!. S3.SO Call
645-2957.
UFE WORKSHOP

Needlepoint Holiday Or·
na men ts. Beryl Wans
Contmues Oc1 . 27 and
No''· 3 7-8 :30 p.m. Call
645-61 :!5 lo regrsler
AT THE MOVIES
Four Wedd ings a nd a
Funeral UUA B film
senes. 20 I Sludl!nt
Union . Nonh Campu~ ..-9 p.m. S2 .
\~.50 Call ~5 2957 .

Buildi.Dc an loterlingua In
Practise (If Suth a Thing Ea.ists), Edward H Hov). lnfonnataon Sciencc5 lnstatute , Una\ .
Soulhem Califom11 . Re«ptaon
follows an 224 Bell Hall 228
Nalun.l Sc1ences &amp; Mathemat·
acs Complex. North Campu" 34: 15 p.m. Ca11645-3180. ,_113
HISTORY SYMI'OSIUM
FamiM in Asian and African
H~1ory:

Caw Studies or 18th

Century China and 19th C-t.o·
1ury Mata"i . Prof Ltllian La .

s. . alhmore Collet!e,;uKJ Prof

Elaas Manckla. Unl\ of Rochcitcr. wa(h Profs. All!&gt;On and
Roger Des For~;ao 280 Par\: .
North Campus 3· 15 p.m
ECONOMICS SEMINAR
SEJIJU
Gfoneral Equilibrium ModeL.

or Polyce.ntric Urban Land
Use- with Endogenous Coo~·
lion and Job Agglomeration,
Alex Anas. UB Dept. of EconomiC!&gt; .l4() Parl. Nonh Camptb
3.30 p.m.
CHEMISTRY COUOQUIUM
Antisense Oligonucleotide
C hemist~ &amp;: Biolog_\ Target -

ing tbe s· Cap of Mrssenger
RNA. Prof Brenda Baker.ISIS
PharmaccUIIL'ah 201 Natural
Sc1ence~ &amp; M;sthemauc:.. Complex 'orth Campus .t p m

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR
O~ey~tn

Traospon b) St.abiliud Bubbles in lht Blood: A

Substitute for Hemoglobin?
liu{!h 0 Van L1ev. . PhD lOt!
Shennan South Campu1o 4 p.m
ARCHittCTURE LECTURE
CANCEUS&gt;
T he Arc:hi tttlu~ or [\'ents
leclu~ by Bemllrd TSC:hum1.
scheduled for 147 Diefendorf at
5:30p.m.. has bttn cancelled.
v.-a~ sponso~ by Alumni College of School of Architecture
and Planning.

1't(

AT THE MOVIES

Serial Mom. UUA B film s.ene~ . 201 Student Union .
North Campu~ . 6:.30 p.m.
S~. S3.50. Call b-15-~957
fOU(

DANCING

l ntem ation.al Folk Dancing . Allle"el ,., all welcome.
Partnef'ii not needed . 2
Diefendorf. South Campus. 8-11
p.m. Free. Sponsored by Gradu ate Student A.~osociation

,

cludes • mcwninc-tonc symposium on The: New Domestic
Violence Law: Facti and Anal)'·
sis. Center for the Aru Atrium.
N- Campui. 8:30 a.m.-2 :30
p.m. Call 645-2 107.
~-£

What 't Good About Stutterin&amp;'! John AhJbach. Exccutivt
Di~or of the Naaion.al Stuu.ermg Project. R.eg.istratwn deadlane is October IS . 280 Park.
North Campus. 8:30 a .m.--4 ·30
p.m. SIS studenls. S35 others
Call 645-2153. 838-3999. o1
645-3410.
$ARTY FOR IUDS

ID Booldets for Kids. ProJect
KtdC= and UB Dept. of Pubhc
Safet) . Fret all ·m-onc- photo 10
book.let!. fat UB pare.nli and
lluard1an10 ~ lads will be phoco·
graphed. finge:rpnnled whtle
parents; fillm booklet mfo .
Bt siell HaJI . North Campus
l-4pm
UFEWORKSIIOI'

Tb• ABC'• of Boo~ Collect In&amp;.
Timoth)' J. Conroy. Office of
Publications Second session
NO\ . S. Off campu!. I 30-3 p m
Ca1164S-6 1 2~ to register

FOOTUU
UB Bulls \ "S, Hofstra. UB St&gt;idlum North Campu1o 7 p m For
ud:o. tnformauon. call 645-6666

CONCDIT
High School Uooors Cborale
and tbt Uni,·en:it y Choir, Or.
Hamel Stmons. Dept. of Mustc
Slee Concert Hall orth Cam ·
pu1o 8 p m Free

SUNDAY

2l

WORUI"S LARGEST
.uao.ICSCLASS
Timu Fitness We-ek Arrobic1o

Mantbon. Alumni Arena. 10
a.m.-Noon . Preregister at Room
130. Alumni Arena. phone 645 2286, or regiSier u.me day from
9:30-10 a.m.
FACULTY RECITAL

Anthony Miranda, percussion.
Slee Concen Hall. North Cam·
IP"-'· 3 p.m. S2. S5. S6. S8.
""DEAN MUSIC

~~~: ~~~~~::;:;11~('a.nd WBFO 88 .7 FM . Allen
Hall. South C.mpw. 7 p.m. S 10.
For mor-e infonnatioo. call 871-

4095.

Four Wtddings and a Funeral.
UUA B film series. 201 Student

Union. Nonh Campus. 9 p.m.

M OND AY

S2. S3 .50. Call645 -2957.

Optical a nd Management
Properties of Nanocrystals.
Prof. Sara Majetich. Cameg1e ·
Mellon . .t54 Fronczak. Nonh
Campus . 3:45 p.m.
C urrent Issues in Domestic
Viole-nce, Or. Jeffrey Fagan .
Ru1gers Univ. Sponsored by the
Research ~nter for Ch ildren
and Youth and the Baldy Hall

1994 J _ A....... Loodt&lt;oa
ud tfllt Aooul eo.._uoa
, ... Law Sdlool ..... tbo
Law Alu.aai A..aodlitioa.. In-

AT THE MOVIES

PHYSICS COUOQUIUM

EDUCATION COUOQUIUM

22

LAWAW-~

1'11UMACYLK111M

Guitar students of
Joanna Castellani
perform tOday tn Baird
Recital Hall al noon . The
event is free

24
--

STUCTUIIAL aiOlOGY

S tnlcturaJ Biology or lnlra.ct llular Sicnal Transduction, Dr
David Cowbum. Rockefeller
Univ. 114 Hoch~tener. Nonh

�_ _ &amp;-. _ _ _ ?

5

and prtMC series. •n Oemens

Nortb C.mpus. 12:30 p.m. Fret

_

~­
SPSS
ror Wiodows, Port 2.
Continuatton of Oct. 25 wor\ihop. I :30-3:30 p.m. Call MS 1572 or 645-3S60 ror ~&amp;iltnl ·
tiOG inforn'Uilion.

.....

'l'llo Worid or E.-Moil, lim
Gerland. Aadcmic C&lt;&gt;mpoting.

--

2:30-4 p.m. Cai1645-612S 10
reais&amp;er.

~­

A o t - v-bol~ary-.._,..
lllrMp Notaral Lao-

-

C..luls, Komi Ehrlich.
22A Bell. Campus. 3:)().5
p.m. Call 645'3794.

-

or -~--­e-x

I'IIYSICa
Orial• HIP EMtv

llo:rs- Prol. Tbomu Gi.,...,
Bartol Research lnll .. Univ. of
Delaware. •S4 Froocz.ak.. Nonh
Campus. 3:45p.m.

-

IIIOLOIIICAL SCIOICU

S ipoJU.ci• Drosop~W. Pbotol"'eftpC.on: A Molecular c~
odic Approacb, Dr. Wilham L
Pal:. Purdue Un1\ 114 Hochstetler Nonh Campui 4 p m

IIIOC-.ntl' SDIINAit
ConJtituliw Artiv.tion o(
Rhodopsin u • Molt&lt;ulor
Mt&lt;honlml or Rotinol ou-...
Dr. Daniel Oprian. Brandeis
Univ. 1348 Fart&gt;er. South Cam ·

pus. 4 p.m.
llniAMYAill aGCIETY
CLASSICAL ll£CITAL

P'r'Hludium and AUqro, Duo
Sooata in A Major, Potmt..
Op. 25, and CarrMn FaDtasie,
Op. lS. Eli~ L..tt Kok.konen .
vtolinist. and Roben Keontg.
ptanist. Sl~ Concen Hall North
Campus. 7 p.m. Ca ll 689-4980.

SAFETY FOR KIDS

WEDNESDAY

26

COUN&amp;nJioa CIENTU

w-.-

Time

Man~m~nt .

11m

1:1.

aiM»

~~- ~~~~d;.:

,;315 .

NASPA IIITDACTIVE

T UESDAY

TEL£COHF'EIIEHCE
Look Wbo's: Coming to College: A New Undemanding of
Today's Students. 330 Student
Union. North Campus. Spon·

2J

PEDIATitiC CONFERENCE

Common Problems in Gastrcr
enterology. A.)uncto n Ramo~.
M .D Cafetonum A. Mere)
Ho,;p11al. 8:30a.m.
STAGED,R£ADDNG

Tbco Fairif'S ArT Thin1), b)
Dem~ Boucher. SponMlred b~
the Women m Theatre Forum

~~:~~~~tc~,:~cr~ ~::~~~~
Nonh Campu!!. . Noon
COMPUTER WORKaiiOP
SPSS (or Windo·"'~• Part 1.

Pan 2. Oct. 21 1·30-4:30 p.m
Call 645-3572 or 645 -3560 for
regist~tion information .
UFE WOIIIISIIOP

Financial Planning: TheCaf"ftr or tbe ' 90s. Thoma~ Toppe.r and James Espostto. 6:30·
7:30p.m. Ca11645-612S to
register.

Marketing \'outRI( in
Today'• J ob Market. Nett1e
Nirzberg. 7·9 p.m. Call 6456125 lo regi11ter.
UFE WOIIIISIIOP

What Everyone Should Kno"
About Fitness &amp; Excr"l'ist. 7-9
p.m. D1164S-6125to register.
L£CT\Jit£
Jean Harris. Her experiences m
Bedrord Hills Correctional Fa·
cility form the ba!ois of her talk.
Slec Conccn Hall . Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. S5. SIO: studenu
free . Sponsored by Graduate
Group on Justice and Democracy, and Bu ff:llo League of
WornM~ Vocers .

sored by the Office of Student
Ufe 1: 15-3.30 p m. To regiSIC:r.
call 64S-6125 .
GEOLOGY L£CT\Jit£

Remediation and
Hydrogeo\oc·. Dr Suu nne
LeSage. RI\'«S Research
Br.1nch Nat1onal Water lnslll ute.
BurhnJ!ton. Ontano ::!1 0 Na1urnl
Sc1ences &amp; Mathem• ucs Com pleA orth Campu ~ 3 30 p m
Cai164S-6800. &lt;6 100.
CHOitcA.L ENGtN£ERING

aEMINAII
Air Purincalion b' Thermal
Sl'iog Adsorption: Marl.
Ad.le) . Prautr Inc 206 Fu m a,
North Campus 3 45 p.m
BtoCHEMICA.L
PMAMACOLOGY SEMINAR

Models for tudying Srnaptic
Transmission: Drosophilia
and Crustaceans. Harold L
Atwood. Ph.D .. Unl\ of
Toronto. 307 Hochsteuer North
Campo!&gt; . 4 p.m.

K1ds were photographed
and fmgerprmted for
photo 10 booklets Oct t 5
10 81ssell Hall under a
safety program d ~r ec l ed
by Protecl KodCare and
UB Oepl of Pub lic Safety
Aoolher sess1on of the
program, free to UB
parents and guardtans •s
se1 lor Oct 22 from 1-4
p m 10 Bossell Hall. North
Campus

Voci d 'Amorr Duo. wilh
Crist en Gregory. soprano. and
Bryan Eckenrode, cello. assisted b) Doroth) Linu! pi·
ano. Mu\lc b) French and En f:ltsh comJX.l"Cn. Alle n So uth
Campu:-. 7 p m Frer Ta~d for
broadca!&gt;l the folio\\ 10 ~ Su nda}
a1 ~ p m b ~ WB FO 88 7 FM
VOU£YBA.U.
UB vs. Canisiu Alumm
Arena on h Campu:o. i p m

l'tWIIIACY SEIIIfWI
1.ssuH in Pediatrics and HIV
Infection. Wnda Elbers. 248
Cooke. North Campus. 4 :30pm.
ARCHITEctURE L£ctURE

Tbr Need to Stand Up for
Modern Arcbilectu~, Peter
Pn.n. Sponsored by the School
of Architectu~ and Plannmt
301 Crosb)'· South Campu.!&gt;.
5:30p.m. Free.
AT THE MOVIES

E1 Mariachi. UUAB film sc·
ries. 201 Student Union . Nonh
Campus. 6:30p.m. S2. S3.SO.
Call 64S-29S7.
UFE-

Ballroom Daacing: Polbs.
Rbeinlandrn, Obereks &amp;
Wales. Ninita and BJorn Botue .
6:30-8:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 to

UFE-

Campu~

103 D1dendorf South

4pm
VlstnNG

UFEW_._

Tips. Tricks &amp; Techniques for

...J Word ...J Excel
PowerPoint ...J Mail
...J Access w_,;.., ucon ..

sc-..us

Robust Muhlpoint Llnlatge
Analysis Usinc Rdath·r Pain
DT Jane OlloOII. RCPI 144

Farber South Campus 4 p m
CEIITmCATE PIIOGRAM IN
-~ICAL

NURSING

Health Teaching s~tr-Carr
Practit'H to Older Adulu.
Lynn Manger. Buffa lo VA
Med1cal Ce.ntr-r To earn cen1fi·
c11e. nurse ~ mu111 an e nd fi ve

With Microsoft Offi~
Profes:sion.a.l Packq:r OnJy

$113 $135 $143
Wmdows

Professional
Wmdows

Macintosh

sess to n ~ South C ampus 4 30
7 .30 p.m SSO pc:rmodul e To
reatger. c all 829 -3291

I

AT 111£ MOVfiU
NMke-d in Nf'"' Yorl. LIUA B
fi lm sene, . 201 1uden1 Un1on
North Campus. 6 30 p m S2.
5.3 50 Call 6J S-295 7
UF£ WORKSHOP

So. \ 'ou

Lo\f' A-nimal s ~\

alenr

Wt lland W tlham Pall.a 7- 9 p m
Call 6-J~ - bl:::!i 10 reg1~ter

MM O£QR£E 11£CnAL
Lorraint Abbott, piano. Slet"
Ctmcert Hall "onh Camru:-. ~
p m Fret

WOMEN' S SOCCER

AT THE MOVIES

VB Royah 's. Cani~iu ~. R &lt;\C
Fteld OUh lde Alumn t !\ rena
North Ca mpu~ 7 p m

SJUdent l 'ml)n Non h

\\olf. ULA B ftlm ..cne" 201
~ p m

C'am ru ~

S2 . 5. :\ 5U Call bJ5 -:!Il5"'

AT THE MOVIES

Wolf. UUAB fi lm ..en e:. 201

Student Un1on . No n h Campu:o.
Y p m S2. S ~ "iO Ca ll

~~ - 295 -

EX HIBITS
BIENNIAL "FACULrY SHOW•
TO OPEN

THURSDAY

27

MANAGEMENT ROUNDTAIIL£
Tbr NN· St a ndards of Excel ·
knee in C ustomer Satld'action. Michael J. Billoni. Buffalo
SISOn!&gt; VP. Fanny · ~ Restaur:lnt.
3500 Sheridan Dr. 8-9 :30 a.m .
ANA TOllY AND CEU

·-YHMINAII
Time Lapw Ca*1 lmagtng in
Rat H ippocampus Using Con·
rocal Microscopy, Ann Cornell Bell. Ph.D., Yale Un1v . 306
F:utocr. Soulh Campus. 12:30 p.m
UFE WOIIIISIIOP
Body, Mind &amp; Spirit: "ays or
Healinc, M:arlene Cerulla.

12:30·2 p.m. Call645-6~25t o

Th.C' An Depar1 men1' • "Facuh)
Sbo \11. .. open:-. Oct 20 w1th a
recept1on fro m 5-7 30 p m m
the An Depanment Galler) lo cated tn 1~ lower le\el of the
Center for the An.s on the Non h
Campw. Tlm )'ear' ~ sho\11. .
v. hu:h I.!&gt; held e,·ery other ) ear.
1 nc lude~ ne""' \ii.Orl. b) facul!) .
and l..'O RIJnues through No\ I I
There 1s p.:unung. phoco,raph) .
1llu:.trauon. and de 1gn b)
Sheldon Berlyn. Kathleen
Campbell. Alan E. Cober.
Manon Faller. T)•ro ne
Gtor.[:.iOU. Willard Ham~ . Adele
Hender.tan . Kathleen C. Ho• ·ell.
Wilham Km~r . Paul McKenna.
Jolene R1c kard , Anthon) Rozal..
and D;J\ id Sc h1rm Galler)'
hou~

I'OETIIY LECTURE
Falling Bd•·era T•·o Stools:
Charles ltn.aikotf and Jewisb
American Mod~Wn . Stephen
Fredm:an. Notre Dame:. Pan of
Wednesdays at 4 Plus poc:tr)'

(
AFRICAN AMERICAN STYlE
STUDENT WORSHIP SERVICE

SUNDAY AT

6:30

P.M.

UNIVEl,SITY PRESIYTtRIAN C HURCH

3334 MAIN ST.
AcRoss FROM UB 's SoUTH CAMPUs

arc Monda) and Wednc:,.-

da) . 10 • .m . ...S p.m., Tutsda)
and Fnday. 10 a.m -6 p.m .: and
Thursda) . I 0 a.m -8 p m

NOTICES

regis1er.

CuiU &amp; The O«ull, PhilliJn
Stevens. J r.. Ph.D. 7-9 p.m . Call
645-6125 to register.

...J

STAnS1¥S COLLOQUIUM

flal'·less Makeup. Bre nd.J
Ro m a no\~. 7·9 p.m Call 6J Ci -

LOGIC COLLOQUIUM

Theories or lbe Continuum.
Barry Smith. OepL of Ptulow ·
phy. 684 Baldy. Nonh Campu~ .
4 p.m.

Thennoclynamia oftbr Hyttrrd.ic MateriaJ~ Prof Pelr
Kloucc:k.. Un1\ of M1nnesou

6t2S to f'C-!IRe.r .

OPUS: CLAUiC.a UVE

Microsoft Combo Packs

MATHEIIATICS CCIU.OQUIUM

HOW'S YOUR NEARING'

The Student Association :an·
noui'ICt1o free hearing - scr~nin~ ~
Oct . 11 through No\'. IS in 199
Part.; H4111 oo lhe Nonh Dmpu ~ .

Coounued on page 6

Sponsored by
Episcopal College Ministry
Diocese ofW.N.Y.

�6
CALENDAR
continued from page 5
~nings tak~ about fivt

minutb. and arc open 10 5tu-

dents and all rnemben of lhc
community. Hours art Mondays from 1-S p.m., Tuesdays
and Wednesday• from 3:30-S
p.m., and Fridays from 12:30-3
p.m. For information, call 83S8382.
HIJ(-SlUOY

P.umc•.uns

UB is scd.:ing .Wits between 18-

UEAJIFASTAc:e NotiooaJ ldentifiCIIion J&gt;ro.
grom Breal:fasl Seminar pn:oents
llcnuod;ne Butlcs,l.D. opeokinc
on " A New Orpnizolional
Model: Using Coosensus Decision Making"' Nov. 4, 8:30a.m.
11 Doemeo College's Alumni
Loong&lt;:, Wid&lt; StudenoCen~&lt;r.
Fnr 1&lt;5CTVaoions, phone 8398212orfu 839-8S t6 by NO¥. 2.
Admission:S8, poyable 11 door.

65 with akoholtc: cinilosis for
study eu minin&amp; Cholesterollowering dfc:cu of an investigational medane. Partic:ipanu

spend
lhroe16""""
"'" days
and make
visiu and
10 Oinical
Res&lt;aJd1 Caller, M manl Fillman: Hospital-Gates Cin:le.
They r=iw: • free plfysical,
dectrocardiogra liver function,
blood. and urine leSIS. aod .$700
for time and lnlvd.. Jnlef'CS&amp;Cd

nome, -

parties caii887-4S84 and lea\o"C
zip code, phone
number and lhc wonls "study
I I l l ..·m answering madline.

UB is also Sttting adults with
gum disease or a history of oral
canker sores for two studies. 1bc:
9-mooth gum disc~ study re-

quires adults between 3()..80 with
sore. inflamed gums untrea.ted in
lhe pasr year. lht r"·o-mooth

canker sore study n:qures adu lb
belwern 18~ with a hiSIOI)' of
oraJ c.artker sores in ~­
good heaJlh. Gum diseasr putic.-1pants recei\&lt;e $200 for time and
tra\'C)to \'isit South Campus sia
times for l«&lt;h ctc:aning and topt·
cal gum medication. Canker sore
partk1pants musz keep a diary of
lheir di.sordtt and rcai\'C SSO for
time and tnvclto make three
visits to the UB dt'ntal school or
Erie Coumy Medical Center.
l nt.e~cd

-

parttes ca11829-3850

W'Cekdays from 9 a.m- 4 p.m.
CALUNQ

ALL IMST1HGUISHED

S UNY i ~ ~!s t'IOtriin._tton'l.~ fb.OistmguishC'd Si&lt;h-ill Pn;4J: ,
sor, 1!1 tenured uni\-ersily rank

abo\'e full professor that
n izt~ outs:usndin~

rt:CO£: ·

SC'r\'ice to tM

campus. Stale Um,er..ny. and
beyond. Individuals wi th full
professor stat us and 10 years of
full -11me sen•rce to SUNY •~
l:hgiblc . Faculty. stuMnt.s. and
admtmstraton may ~nd nomt·
nations vmh nommec's current
''ita to Joyce Suianm. Chair.
Oistins;uished ~rvice Committee. Vice Pro\'OSt for Graduate
Education and Dean of tht
Graduate School. 552 Capen
Hall . North Campus. by Dec 2.
t994 .
AWARE PROGRAM OFFERS
.USISTAHCE

The A WARE Pmllram offe tll
free asw;;tancc '" unm~ do"'n
on dnnkmg for modc:nue to
hc:av) dnnkcrs bet.,., ceo 21-55
who arc not alcoholics: . Panic•pant!&gt; .,.,.,11 bt patd for compkt ·
iQ£ the 8-10 "'eel. o,e,!lmn' and
rccc:r'e a free medtcal nam
The program rrqu're' the •ni"'h·emem of a s:pou\tc:. p;~.nner .
or fnend Call 887-2573

r '

Auod•tr (SL--4)~U oiven:ity

Dc:v&lt;iopmenl, I"'sti ng fP-4083.
Seoior SlaiT Assistaal (SirJ)Univcn:ity OeveJopmc.nt. Posting IP-4084. Assislanl Dean
(SL-5, lntemaJ Promolioo.al
Oppor1unity)-University Development, Posli.ng JP-4086.
Senior SlaiT Anociat&lt; (SirS)Univen:ity Development Post·
inJ MP-4087. Sertior Starr Associate (SJ.,.S)-lJniversity
Development. Posting MP-4088.
Assistant Dna (SL-5)-Universiry Development Posting IP·

Thank You to the Day
of Caring Volunteers1

Aakta.o.I/AS!Iodai&lt;/Foll ........
f~plfy , Posting IF408t. 4082 . Assistaao rror...
Postin&amp;

IF-4084. Assistaall'l'of....,...
Communication. Posting I F~
408S. ADoclat&lt;/Fulll'l'ofeo..-~School of Law, Poslina
IF-4086. AssistaDI Pr-ofessor
(two positioas availabJco)~Eco­
nomia. Posting •F-4087. AJ..
sistant Professor-Statistics.
Posting IF-4088. A&lt;sodole/
• FuU Professor-Statistics. Posting IF-4089. AHociatefFull
Profeuor-Psychiatry. Posting
IF4090. Assistant ProfessorSociology, Posting IF-409t .
4092. Assistant Profea:sor Psychology. Posting •F-4093
Assoc:iat~/FuU Professor~Psy­

chology. Posting IF-4094. Assista.atfAssodate/Full Professor-Psychology, Posung
MF-4095. Assista nt Pror~~ r·
Modem Languaies and Latera lures. Posting fF-4096. Assistant (GfT)/Associatt
ProfeifOr (GfT)-Peduunc!l,
Posting" MF-4097 . 4098. Assis·
tant/Associate/Full Professor
(t"o positions a vailable)-810chemastry. Pcr..ting MF-4099.

&amp;: lnfonnalion Technology.
Posting I P-4091. Ltod Programmtr Analyst (Sir3,Internal Promotional Oppor1unlly)-Accounling &amp; Payroll
Services., Posti ng IP-4092.
IMtrvdioaal Support SpedaUst (SL-4. 1nte:rnaJ Promotion•! Opportua.ily)-Faculty of
Natural Sciences &amp;: Mathematics Dean 's Officr. Posting IP4093.
COIII'ETITIVE CI..USIFIED

CMI. IIDIVICE
Secretary 1 (SG-J 1)-Architecturt. Lint 125041. K~y board
Spedali.sl (SC..o6)-Anatomical
Scaences. Lmc 125867 Keyboard Sp«ialist (SG~ -&lt;&gt;not
Boology. Ltnc: 127188. Ktyboard Spt&lt;ialist (S&lt;rli6)-R&lt;·

5touuivc OeniiSII) , Lmc:
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cinr. Postin! IF-4100 Atsi&lt;J·
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Posting MF-4JOI . .Assistant/
Assod a tr Professor -Ophttulmology. Posting MF-4 102
RESEARCH

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MR-94074 . Research Ttc.bnicia n 1-Qral Biology. Postmg
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Reponer Murray Lev•ne was
1dent1f1ed as a professor ol
law Hts pnmary appotntment at US 1s as professor

#R -9~082

ol psychology. he also

PROF'ES510NAL

serves as an adJunct
professor of law

Facilities Prognm Coord ioa -

TtJ ohwm mnrr mformarwn

1H1

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Campus Coordinator:
Carole PelJ'O
Afrtcan Methodlllt
Mini liters
Team Uader:
Phyllis Burgio
Volunteus:
Elizabeth Heyden
Roger McGill
Laurie McGinn
AIDS F8tnlly Service
Tt'am Uad~r:
Connie Holoman

Volumeen:
Shannist~a

Bagcho-Sen

RaJan Baua
Chris Holoman

Jim McConnell
Ann McElroy
Da•id Mark
Laune Rhodebecl
Beverly Sanford

Fr.ml.. Zmm
AmeriCiln Dl•betes
Aasocllrtlon
Tt'am UtJder ·

Karen Tauriello
\'oltmtN'rs:
Sallyannc Catalano
Mana Ra mero~

Dorolh) Sa") er
AmeriCiln Heert
Auocletlon
Team LLadu
D~nm o;; Kosmala
\ 'olumeer.s
Stephen Adam\
Chri sttne Barden
Ellen Goldbaum-Kolon
Joe Helfer
Debbie Lo•c
Buff•lo Federation
Neigllbortloocl Centers
F;rsi Tt'am Leadrr ·
Dolore' Holl ub
Vulmrlt't'rs:
Barbara Boeh nke
Ton1 Canaz11
Audrey Duboel
Carol Hoffman
Cind~ Kloss
Patt) Kona
Sus;Jn NeumeP.ter
Doana Randall
Claire Shea
Janice Whne
Mar) Williamc;;
Kathl~en

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Au,.

31, more than 150 faculty and staf~rolled up their
sleeves and said "we care" by contributing &lt;heir time to various
Western New York agencies.
All those involved in the 1994 SEFA campaign would like to
say a special thanks to the many UB volunteers who took pan
in the Day of Caring. Their efforts helped many agencies and
made this expression of community support a tremendous
success.

On

4089. lastructionol Support
Ttduolcian (SirJ)-Compuung

FACULn

sor~UnguiSiiCI .

tor (SirS)-Design &amp; Con&lt;uucLion. Posting IP-4080. Staff

Zalo" ,l.,.,

St•cmrtl Tt•trm U·ada :
Bruce Koleo;;ntcl..
t'oluntel'n:
Manon Dtgutlio
Su~anm a ne Fon11

Pegg) Loon&lt;
Gemma Moell
Enc Schu ~ 1er
SheiT) Someo
Pao Staebell
Bc:tty Willtam'

A

R

I

II

8

c.np A-.,
T~am Uad~r:

c..., Fl..

Kathy Leoda
Volunteers:

Renee Bush
Donna Cross
Colleen Green
Mary fdzior
Joan lmiolo
Ema lseppon
Michael Kank.Je~ tcz

Barbara See
C•mp Fl,.
Tt'amUadt&gt;rKathleen Brown
\loluntur:s.

Wendy Baldur
Damel Bentson
Laro Bushallo,.- Wilbur
Mart) Colgro"e
Ron Ingalsbe
Lon LtVignt
Cllllci-F8tnlly
T...tment Services
Voluntu rs:
Jackalyn Hu1re11er
Bill S1oberl
Mary Stoberl
City Mlulon

Team uader:
Peoer Gold
Voluntt'~ry;

Anna lsom
Athalie Jo)
Cleri&lt;Mn Center
CuiiiUU)' Institute
\ 'o lunft't'rs:

Bruno Frescht
Kerry Grano
Munel Moore
Hugh Petrie
Fred Seodl
Girl Scouts
TeamUadu:
Geraldone Kogler
Vulmllt't'rs:
Kathy Berchou
Cindy KonO\ '('
Jim Kona
Mary Jane Smith
Habltet for Humenlty
Team Leadu:
Laurie Bragg
Volumeers:
TeiT) Case)
Maureen Faulhaber
Frank Guzzetta
Sue Hu ton
Hani Rizk
Dm·e Smith
Colleen Wei ngartner
Steve Woodward
Rob Wrigho
International Institute
Volumurs:
Donna Ball
Eliubeoh Cumming
Jean DaU.. ey
Chnstina Ehret
Eliwbeth A. Hayden
Theresa Kruse
An netle Pyszczynski
Shirley Schnelller
Shari Wilson

........,...._.
lnf--uo. Center
Team l.Lad~r:
Donna Rice
Vo/unturs:
Susan Burkard
Carmen Collado
Aries Liu Helm
Jane Hendnckson
Wenlang Lin
Geraldone Nydahl
Jacl..Je Szc.zublewsli
Nolttlwellt Bufblo
Community Center
Team /.Lader
Montca Moshenko
1
\ olunteers
Mary Gr&lt;,ham
B ee ~) Land)
Jody l.at\IS

Laura Manhe..,. )
Gail Parl..tn!tOn
Mary Rooh
France' Sansone
foil.,. Community
Center
Ftrst Team Leader.

Lois Baler
Volu nt~t'rs ·

Tomm1e Babbs
Rebecca Bemstem
Arlene Bro'-' n
St'cnnd Team l.Lodu.CasS3ndra Walker
WhJtestde
\'o lumt-~N :

Franctne CJcc1a
Susan Da\IS
Dayan ne Dougla~
Tern Dunn
AI Ennanovics
JeiT) Godwin
Julie Hallbauer
Ann Hicks
Susan Major
Sandy Pooter
Momque Robichaud '
Denose Scheig
Toby Shapiro
Irene Spen er
Ruth Toedman
Regona Toome)
Joanne Walleshauser
Schofield Residence
Tt&gt;am Lt'adt'r:
Sandro Faukas
Vo/untt!t'rs:

Linsey Baker
Rochelle Cohen
Linda Dobro
Diane Gayles
Marl Komdao
Da\id Krau~
Be!S) O' Brien
Scoll Piel
Pat Rease
WNY United W•y
Tt&gt;am Uadtr:
Rosalyn Wilkin,on
Voluntt't'rs:
Denn i~ Malone
Ruth Poehler
Elizabeoh While
Tom Wilkino;;on

�7

Facul SlaHBillboard
N..u-.1 rec:opltlon
f o r - · fllculty,
elu~,

students

A number of facuhy,
olumni and students of the
UB Department of Music recently
have received recognition for

0

their work in music composition.
Robert Mols' Thru Miniatur~s and o Coda. a work for
piccolo. three Outes and alto
nute. has won th~ National f1ute
Association priu for newly publis~ music. 1be composition
was performed at the association's annual convention in Kansas City in August. Mols is ,an

associate professor emeritus.
David Felder has had compositions performed recently by the
BBC Symphony Orchestra in
London, the StO!'kholm Royal
Philharmonic. the Ensemble for
JnterContemporain in New York
and the New York New Music
Ensemble. He also has received a
new COlD' ssion from the American Composer's Orchestra for a
I995-96 season performance at
Carnegie Hall. Felder is a professor of music and coordinator of

the program in composition.
Roland Martin has received a
commission from the University
of the South, Sewanee Tennessee. for a choral work to be premiered on Dec. 4. Martin is a
lecturer in music.
Richard Bailey, a graduate
student in composition. is one of
three composers to be offered a
position at the Atlantic Center for
the Arts.

Jonatban Golove and Amy
Williams, both graduate students
in composition, were two of only
15 national winners of the prestigious American Society of Composers. Authors and Publishers
IASCAP) Awards to Young
Composers.
Composers Vince nt Hammer
1"90) and Michael Zajonc ('94).
both of whom studied here under
Charles Wuorinen. have received
~ng-tenn anist-in-residence
appointme nts at Canada· s renowned Banff Centre.

of coronary hean disease and
osteoporosis: the effect of a low
fat diet on the risk of brea.&lt;t and
colorectal cancer-and hean di sease, and the effect of calcium
and vitamin D in reducing
osteoporosis and colorectal cancer.
Freudenheim is active in rh is
research. as well as a number of
other projects concerning breast
cancer.
~ement-'dlls

course Is for nurses
A course designed to help
registered nurses improve
their management skills will be
offered this fall by the Office of
Continuing Nursing Education in
the UB School of Nursing. The
course, co-sponsored by the
WNY Chapter of Nurse s House.
Inc .. will be held from 8 a.m.4:30 p.m. Nov. 3. in the Center
for Tomorrow. The program will
include a -workshop focusing on
skills needed to enhance the supervisory process.
The course will be conducted
by Georgia M. Burnette. former
director of nursing at Roswell
Park Cancer Institute and Buffalo
Psychialric Center. Regi stration
deadline is Oct. 27.
For information, call the Office of Nursing Continuing Education, 829-329 I.

0

Louis ZJcert to direct

~for HezardiiUs

Wate Center
Louis P. Zicari, Jr. has
been appointed director of
lhe Business-Industry Affiliates
Program of the New York State
Center for Hazardous Waste
Management at UB. He is the
program's first full-time director.
The center conducts research
aimed at desuoying. 1reating and
reducing ha1..ardous waste.

0

The Business-Industry Affiliates Program was organized to
expand the involvement of New
York State industrie in lhe center. Zicari has more than 10 years
of professional
experience in
project managemen1 and business development. One of h1s
first duties will
be to incru.se
industrial participation in the center.
A member of the American
Institute of Plant Engineers and
the American Planning Association. he: is a graduate of the
SUNY College at Brockport. and
has completed course work toward a master·s degree in the UB
School of Architecture and Planning.

HiGH

More than ~00 Nati"e
American high school students from across New York
State will anend the founh annual
Onkwehonwe: Educational and
Career Opportunities Conference.
to be held Oct. 28-30 at UB . It is
the: first Onkwehonv.•e conference
to be held at UB .
Michael ~ndrue., academic
advisor with UB · s Cora P
Maloocy College and co-chair of
the: event. says speakers ""'ill
include Nalivt American lav.'yers.
engineers. scientists and educa·
tors.
Also on the program. v.·hach
will be held in th(' Swdent Umon
on the Nonh Campus. will be
representatives from local colleges and speake""' on pre-college
summer program" and financaal
a1d. Lloyd Elm. pnne~pal of
School 19. !he Buffalo-bao;ed
Nall\e Amencan magnet !&gt;Chool,

\\~)S

scnpts as covered by CNN are aiso avaliable

AIDS , caprtal pun1shment genetrc eng1neenng, homelessness . religiOUs cults nght-to-d1e , and women 's nghts
When a current 1ssue 1s selected, not only can you OQta1n
transcnpt crtat100s. you can read a chronology of events
related to the top1c and 1dent1fy pen1nent bool&lt;s JOUrnal
and newspaper ariJCies
Broa~at Now• has twa search modes "gUided- for
beg1nners and an advanced mode It IS searchable by top1c
keyword . show, network, date host. and guest Transcnpts
can be pnnted or downloaded to a formatted d iskette
8roadc•at Nowa IS ava1lable on CD-ROM 1n the Undergraduate Library , Capen Hall For further 1nformat1on on
8roadc•at Nowa contact Lara Bushallow-W1Ibur UGL
645-2943. &lt;lbwOubvm&gt;
-Gemma DeVmney and Loss Pequef)o Gtaz,er LOCKWOOO L1t&gt;rary

w11l be keynote speaker at a dmner at 6 p.m on Saturday. Oct
29. in the Student Union. The
public is invited to a ative
Ame.rican cnft show from 10
a.m.-4 p.m. Oct. 29 in the Student
Unioa lobby.
'
Sponsors are the Offrce of
Native Amencan Affairs al
Potsdam College. the North
Country Sc1ence and Technology
Entry Program. and the UB Office of the V1ce Presu:lent for
Pubhc Serv•ce and Urban Affam.
1be host is us·s Center for
Academic De\'elopmental SerVICes.

Ashwlll researcher
for math, science study
Mark A. Asb,.ill, drrector
of !he World Languages
ln,tnute. Depanment of Modem
Language' and Literature~ . ha ...
~n im ited to sene a.., a primaJ)
re~archer for the Ca..,e Stud)
prOJeCt affiliated v. ith the Thud
International MathematiCS and
Sc1ence S1ud) CTIMSS I Datu
from TIMSS w•fl'be u-.ed to compare the mathemaucs and science
achie\ l!'ment of American students to their counterparts in
more than 40 C'Quntrie!l.
The Case Stu~ component of
the project. sponsl!red by the U.S.
Dept. of Education.'\nd conducted by the Center t.r Human
Growth and De•·elopme11t at the
University of Michigan. involves
schools in Gennan;,. . Japan and
the U.S. Ashwill"s work will
focus on national standards. including curricula. examinations
and the transition to post-secondary education.

0

Student Alumni
Boerd elec:ta

Suzame Cristo {and helper)
was among 50 UB law students workiQg on Adams Street
houses Oct. 8 as volunteers
with Habitat lor Humanity.

20. PnmeT1me IJve.
World News Tomgm.
Larry Kmg L rve.

With each update Broadc•at Nowa hrghhghts ·current Issues - The most recent d1sk hsts such tOPICS as

0

0

D

Moneyfrne All "ff11ngs
Considered. and Washmgton Week m Revrew Tnat tran-

Native American
conference at UB

Freudenheim
to discuss research
in women's health
Jo Freudenheim, UB as..,ociate professor of social and
preventive medicine, will discuss
"Research in Breas1 Cancer and
Women's Health in Wes1em New
York," OcL 26 at the meeting ol
the Buffalo Chapter of the Association for Women in Science .
For lhe meeting at 8 p.m. in
134 Farber Hall on UB's South
Campus, attendees should enter
the medical school complex
through the main entrance facing
1he construction site.
The presentation will include a
discussion of Buffalo's role in the
$625 million National Wo men's
Health Initiat ive. for which UB is
a vanguard clinical center. More
than 160.000 post-menopausal
women in the U.S.. including
3.600 from WNY . are bCing recrui led to rake par1 in the siUdy.
The study will investigate the
effectiveness of hormone replacement therJpy in reducing the risk

Broadcast News
Do you 11o to ...... 8t the ..,.. of ABC 's Nlghrlme and
wake up to NPA 's Mommg Edmorfl Have we got a database for you'
••-~•t Now• 1s a CD-ROM product that conta.ns
the full transcnpts of the news and current affans programming of ABC. CNN. NPA, and PBS llroadcaat Nowa IS
updated monthly and
prOVIdes free transcnpts
I I I &lt; I H&lt; &gt;N 1&lt;.
for approx •mately 60
programs such as 20/

The University Student
Alumni Board (USABl at
UB has elected the following
office,-,; for the 1994-95 academic
) car: Jason Kane, a senior majoring in psychology and minoring in sociology. president:

0

Weody \\'estbrook.. a JUnior
majoring in management and
minoring in 11\81keting and financt, vice president for committees: Michael Cbicarelli, a
junior majoring in speech pathology. vice president for rr,embuship: Matthew Weill, a JUnior
majoring in business management. treasurer: ~E.
Hastings, a senior ~oring in
speech therapy.
tary .
\

Attention, UB Cooks:
It's Holkllly Redpe
Contest nmel
Do you have a favorite
holida) recipe. on&lt; that
your family and friends clamor

0

for becau~ it's sooo good? h can
bnng you f~ and fonu~-just
b) shanng n v.uh your UB c("llleagues. )OU could..l;la'-e 11 published in the Rrporrt-r and v. in 3
prize besides
Our annual rec1pe contes.t
begm~ right no~~i'·s open to
facuhy . ..,taff and students.
We'll JUdge u for tasl&lt; appeal.
ea't" of preparation. original it).
and its conlributton to a healthy
diet
The winner of the recipe
judged the best will rect:i\'e a
handsome coffee table cook book
as a prize.
Please type the recipe in cook
book style with ingredients first.
directions following-and put
) our name. add~ss. depanment,
your UB title and phone number
at the top of the page.
If there· s a brief '"stOf) •• about
the rec1pe--how you created it.
what kmd of traditions it represents. how many years you· ve
served it to rave re\•iews. etc ..
you might want to include thac
too.
Mail or fax to:
Reporter Recipe Contest. 136
Crofts. Universit) at Buffalo.
14260. Or E-mail to
n!por1er@pub.buiTalo.edu
Deadline for receipt of entries is Nov. 17.

�Mad, Bad,
Dangerous
But UB prof aar• they often don't fit public ,..._..

By PATRICIA DONOVAN, NnDs Brtmm Suiff

researcher at UB says that the public identifies less with the victims
of serial killers than with the killers themselves, and that this identification is served by lurid, often inaccurate depictions of the killers
and their crimes churned out by the popular culture.
David Schmid, a scholar of cultural representation and lecrurer at UB, is the author of a
forthcoming boolt, the working title of which is "Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know: Serial
Murder in Contemponry American Culture."
The book lboksnotonly ot who serial killers are, but who we think they are and why we may need
to hold specific assumptions about the killers and their victims.
The serial killer, a cboncter unhcard of 20 years ago, is now pan of our social mythology, says
Schmid. While serial killers are real, he says, the publicly held "idea" of the killers often is noL It i5
a creation of our popularculrure as represented by tabloid television shows, horror novels, true-&lt;:rime
books, newspapers, news magazines, television mo,-ies and talk shows.
These vehicles grossly-and erroneously-generalize obout the
moti••es, proclivities and psychological mokeup of seriol killers,
Schmid says, and, in doing so, concentrate on crimes that are
particui.rly perverse and hove odd sexuoiiWists.
He also has found cases in which the body politic and the popular
press opporently crcated serial killers out of the whole cloth, refusing
toex:amineevidence ro theconrrary, and then pitched the story mthe
public.
After re:~~ding reams of popular accountS of this crime and watching hund~fds of hours of television ond film depictions, Schmid says
it seems very dear that although the pubiLc and the authors in
question claim to identify ..-.rith the vkrims. they actually 1dentify
very strongly with the l:illers.
He says this may be bec:3use we can enjoy a vicuious expression
of our own rageful impulses through the l:onst3nt r,texamination of
such aces. In order to help us accept these feelings without guile,
however, we need to reassure ourselves that .. we" are nothing like the
killers themsekes.
Schmid says this is where popular culture steps in agam, raking
discrete pieces of information from many cases and .. constructing"'
serial murders and serial murderers as a unique phenomenon . It
describes characters not like us, but like a phalanx of cannibals who
------,,.,.
wander the landscape randomly snatching young ,
attractive \'ictims.
Such terms as .. sex-crazed," .. mamacal ,'' .. sadisti c
loner" and .. tortUrer," he sars, descnbc onlv some of
the country's serial killers. Ther don 't describe mun dane and often more prolific mem()(:rs of the group ,
like Donald Hon•ey. the health-ca re worker who
smothered 57 elderly patients, or Dorothy Puente of
Sacramento, who kmed many o f her lodgers.
"Actualh•," says Schmid, "scriol killing has the
same causes as other forms of \'iolence. It's on the
e:~:treme end of the se~-ual \·iolencc: continuum, it's
true, but we're all on that continuum somewhere:,
and so arc our fanl&lt;lsies .
.. Lurid terms and gTOSSovergeneraliz.ation paint
the subject in tenns that promote feelings of
helpl essness and fear, bu t give us a certain
ameu nt of release fo r our own craven urges
toward our fellow man."
Schmid's bOok looks a1 historical and sociopolitical aspects of serial murder, concentrating on popular culture representations of
four sensational and parricularlr disturbing
cases. They are the Aileen Wuornos case (which he calls "a
railrood"); the Atlanta child murders (Schmid does not ,
believe Wayne Williams is guilt)•, but a victim of class bias
and Atlanta's loss ofconvention business );jeffrey Dahmer
("called a sadist but was much kinder to most of his
victims than.many male heterosexual serial killers"), and
Ted Bundy ("a principal model for our populor cultu re
construction o f the serial killer").
Nobody knows for sure how many serial killers there arC,
but estimates are down from what he calls the "wildly inflated"
figures reported in the popuJar press just a few years ago. Nevertheless, Schmid expectS to see an
increase in such killings because an increase in vulnerable groups like runaways, rhe homeless and
itinerant workers has increased the population of available ,rjctims.
~ •

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>UB professor
leads trials of
newdru~

first to slow

MSprogress

IIIIa,.....-..lllple
ledbya.---...,UB.......,......,,._.,...

A ............
oclenlois,

111811be drv&amp;. •lilml ol ~ is lbe fine 10 low lbe prosredion or
the dioeueto diAbilily.
J....,.praented lheresults oflhe blindcdclinical lrial ofrecombiJWN
interferon beta on Oct. 10. 11 the annual meeting of the American
NemoJoP:al AAoci8lioD ill s... MuciKo.
Raalll or the rour-yar audy ~ lhll lbe dntg lengthened lbe
time oNriDa wlticb MS pltieRis maitlwaed their level or functioning
witllola IJecomin&amp; IDCft diubled by 1S per=ll, C001lpARid to potienu
noceiYinJplocebo. Tlle*"&amp;ahodcaasedlbenwnberofcxocert&gt;atioo .
w~ollbedi~by~.
•
11le lria1 ..,._,red by lbe Nllioall Institutes of Health and
Bi&lt;&gt;Fn, a bioteciiDolaiY company itt~. Moss.

l'llleab willa ICIM tdlpsina llllllliple scleroUs u~ •
IIIICvetl pellml o( d i - procreuion. chlnlclerized by periods of
AM!ility ~by flareups of lbe di5rJI!e, after which the pi1ICIIl
10 1 new buclinc of functiooin&amp;. In the $Uidy, teeambillllll
inlcrferon beta inctnted l.be time 10 propeuioo of disability-the
lenllh of lhe period during which active rdapsin&amp; patieniS suSI&amp;ill •
_po.rticular bueline4y 7S pen:enL
11le trial also fillowed • 3 1 penlefll reductio~~ in relapoe rae 111&gt;011&amp;
pl1ienl5 uperienciiiJ lbe painful and debiUIIIJDg CJUICefbolioas
chanocleri.u lbe d i -. and showed a ignifiCIIII reductio~~ .. l.be
numb« of active brain )e,ioo measured by Mapetic Reson.nce

"'*"""'

lmagiiiJ (MRJ).

BK&gt;sen's recombinant inlelfcron bell is • &amp;eoetically encineered
COOilnued on page 3

Trading Barbs

They Know
SEFA's Value

Mclaughlin Group
captivates crowd in
Alumni Arena .

Gengo family
tells a SEFA
success story

eommunL
Servi;;;J"'z

A Welcome

and a Win!

UB professors help
Amherst address
needs of youth.

Win over Colgate
htghlig hts
Homecomtng/Parents
Weekend

,.3
October 13, 1994 Volume 26. No. 6

Law School revisi11g curricullrm
to accent 'practicallawyeri11g ~
TOP-TO- BOITOM REV ISION of"' aca·
demic c urri culu m is on the horizon for !he
UB Law School. Thai will mean ple nl) of
changes over the nex t few yea rs as 11 ~o,ee~ ...
to build o n its inno , ati\e leadership among
tav. schools nationall). predtct5 Acttng LJv.
School Dean Thoma~ H eadnc~
The re v.tll be more facult). more ~our-.e
offerings. more hands-on tr.unmg. ll"v.er
trJditional exa m'\ and possibly fe\\'er ~IUdent~. But v. hether the
ne v. cu rric ulum, more than two years m the ma~tng ..... full~
im pl e mented. i ~ still large I) in the ha nd\ of SI;J te and unt\ ~r,tt~
leaders. ca tions Headrid •.
A recent Bar A sociation ~ t udy. t he MacCrate Repon. , ...... ur:d J
strong plea for law schools to ··get more prJctical "
Wh ile that repon may have hastened this process.
said Headri ck. even be fore M acCr:ue. the lav.
M:hoo l fac ulty had sought a c uni cul um th at
shifted emphasis to ward teac hing stude nts " to
work like lawyers. not just think like them ."
The law sc hool faculty gave final approval to
the first-year pon ion of the curric ulum a t a full
faculty meeting Sept. 30. h will be implemented
w ith ne xt fall 's entering class. Gradu ates of the
new curriculum will rece ive degree s that ieature
specia lization in one area of law. a full pon fo lio of
work -prod uct produced during law schoo l that in cl udes written as we ll as audi o/video materia ls. and
prJct ica l e xperie nce as a worki ng lawyer through
school-sponsored legal clinics.
The law school received a one-time infusion of

$260.000 from the stale legislature for upgrading com·
puter technology in thi s year's budget, and an O\erall
increase. from SUNY Cenlr.ll. of$875.000 10 its ba'«'line
budget. which was around $5 mi llion. This increase wi ll be
phased in. half at a time this year and next. according to
Associate Pro' ·ost Sean Sullivan. It wil l mean seven or eight
additional faculty meml-.; for !he law school, Sulli\'an said. and
an additiooal $200.000 per year for lhe law library.
However. Headric k says thi s is still shon of the amount

needed for full tmplemematton of lhe nev. curnculum He pegged
the total co\t of the destred re,tructunng. e'en ""tth reduced
enrollment. at n trl) S 1.5 mtlltOf\-O\er the (.'UTTent budget. or about
S6 S million per )ear Effon' are alread) under v.a) to beef up
prl\ ate de\Clopmem at the ~t· hool and re\ource . . could be reallucated from other areao;, ofthr: unl\er\11~ to do\e th1o;, re,enue gap.
. . atd Headnd.
Sui It\ an and Headnd.tndtcated that cart:"tul con .. tderJtton "ould
he gt\en to ratl\mg facuh~ ,aJar) le'r:l'. curreml~ ~omev.hat belov.
... alan~' at other tn ... tuutton .... to attract the be't po~o;,1ble 4.:and1date~
The cia ... .., enrollmg m the falll'f '95 "tllltl..el~ be- mul.'h ... mJJier
thJ.n 1t\ prede~e"or... all hough no firm number hao;, heen ...tgreed Ill
~et. accordmg to Hea:dncl.. The entenng ~.· Ja..,.., of ' 9) . 'om~ ~bh
'ltrong. V.J'\ the large" ' '" recen1 )ear~ ~e\1 ~e.tr'' entenng •.:IJ..,.,
Continued on page 2

�-u...---.-·

2

Wit and wisdom from McLaughlin Group

LAW SCHOOL
rinued from page 1
oould be down 10 200. 'This would allow us 10
divide the first-)'car class into two sections.
r:uher lhan three." Headrick said. ''o fn:c up
more facully for upper division offerings."
Headrick hopes thai any neductio n in the
number of newly admiucd first -year students cou ld be partially offset by recruiting
between 30 and 40 second-year transfer stu dents each year. This. he explained. could
still hold O\•crall enrollment in the future to
around 680, d own from its current 760.
Some c hanges have already come: to the
law school. This fall . incoming first-year studcntb found a new. comprehensive research

and writing program. Five full -time instructors were hired over the summer. under newt y
named program dircctor Lucinda Finley. and
the research and writ ing component of first year schedules grew from four to six credit
hours.
···Each o f us teaches two sections on re-

search and writing,'' explained Christine
Farley, one of the new instructors. -so the

sections contain no more than 25 students."
The smal ler class size and the integration of
research. which had been taught separatdy.
into the legal writing course. bcucr prepares

st udents for the broad range of writing re-

quired in the legal

she continued.

Nex1 year. academ ic and class schedules
will be modified. The class "hour" will increase to a full hour. up from its current 50
minutes. and the school year. which wo n't
begin until after Labor Day. will be bro ken

down into seven four-week bloc ks. Trad ifirst-year courses will run t2 weeks
(three blocks) with a four-week }January

~tional

''bridge'' course in between .
New students will stan off with a one-totwo-week ..orientation:· tentatively called
Introduction to Law and Law Studies.Then

students begin traditional studies and pick

up a required course, Perspectives. featuring
legalproblem-solvingtechniques and group
discussions. II will beoneofthe few o ffered
by any law sc~l in the country to teach
client relations. as well as legal ethi cs and
professional conduct.
In addition to three years of law school.
the actual practice of law has trnditionally
required a great deal of on-the-job training .
Headrick explained that employers want new
associates to be able to learn new fields or
legal skills independently.The new curriculum will teach this skill by offering courses
traditionally taught 10 prepare students for
passing the state bar exam. such as eorJX&gt;rations.commereial paper. evidence and c rimi nal procedure as independent self-s tud )
courses.
Utilizing med ia sul.'h as book!;. \'ideotapes and computcri7cd materi als. st udents
would receive -·a ~ood m crvic"' of a subject
with about 50 hours of stud):· according to
the Proposa l for a C'-' Curriculum . Thi ~
contrasts with a nonnal three-credit course
requiring 42 hours or class time and about
120 hours of outside study.
Second- and third -yea.r course!t "'ill have
enrollment caps of 40. according to the proposal. ensuring greater panicipation b} "'
class members in course activities. Written
exams at the end of these courses may be
replaced by more written and/or oral projects.
With the law school already nationally
known for its clinical training programs. the
new curricul um will expose even more stu dent s to practical lawyering siiUations
through clinical experience. Headrick said.
New upper division concentrations would
require a clinic-type practical experience for
third-year students. Headrick said that selfstudy and clinical experiences arc both being dc\·cloped to better prepare graduates to
have fundamental skil ls of successful
law}cring from ''day one on the job.':
Because space is at such a premium in
o·Brian Ha ll. negotiations arc under wa~
for the law sc.:hool regain control of sccondnoor classrooms and the Moot Court rorun
on the first noornow used by undergraduate
dcpanment s. ac:cording to Headrick.
1

. , a1SVIi cox
Reporter Staff

G

EORGE PATAKI topples
Mario Cuomo. The Republican s ~take control of the
United Stales Senate, possibly
even the House. Thi s. and
more,driveBiiiCiintontostepdown in 1996
to make room for AI GoreCor mnyhe Hill ary)
atop the Democratic ticket.
So go the predi ctio ns of the Publoc
Broadcasting Service's panel of pungent
po litical prog nosticat o rs from o n the
Potomac: the McLa ughl in Gro up. More
tha n 2.000 turned o ut to sec them perform
in Alumni Arena Oc t 5 for the Disting uished Speakers Series.
Seen weekly o n local PBS affiliate
WNED-TV. the McLaughlin Group brings
together someof\Vashington · s most knowl edgeable journalists for frank disc ussions of
current events. John Mc Laughlin tossed out
the topi cs, from Haiti to upcoming elections
to President Clinton's potential primary foes.
while his panel ists took shot s at answers. and
at each other. in a vigorous. two- hour round
of intellectuaJ table tennis
Known for his caustic wit a nd bullish
prodding of panelists. longtime Washington
insider McLaughlin is the group's creator.
executive producer and host. He is a fanner
specia l assistant to Pre si den ts Nixo n and
Ford . as we ll a!i fom1cr Washington editor
and column ist for the National R~ d~h '
McLa ughlin was accompanied b) t'-' O
group mainstays: on the (political) nght,
Fred Barnes. sen ior editor of n,~ N~w R~­
public. and on the left. ElesnorCiifL. contri buting editor and fonner congressional and
political correspondent for N~wsw~~k . They
were joined by Josette Shiner. Washington
Timt"s managingeditorand Hm.~o· ~ Fineman.
N~wsw~d 's Washingto n bureau chief.
Only Eleanor Cl ift dissented from the
co nsensus that Democrats would suffer a
sig nifi cant setback at the polls in Novemt r.
losi ng contro l of the Senate . Clift pointed out
that only five Hou se incumbents have been
defeated in primaries thus far. com pared
with 15 at thi s point two years ago. Barnes
retoned that th is year· s voter unrest "is not
an undifferentiated anger voters are angry at
liberals." He claimed that nl least 12 U .S
Se nate scats held b) Democrat!!. are in dan ger, but that no GOP incumbents arc behind

1lle GOP needs SC\'Cn new senators to
ta ke control. and the clear consensu among
the group was that this v.ould happen . A nel
gai n o f 40 seats by the Republicans would be
needed for Newt Gingrich 10 become Speaker
of the House; panelists held out at least some
likelihood thai thi s would occur.
Turning to specific races . in California.
despite his spending a recond S20 million.
much from his personal fonune . Shiner predicted Lhat['1ichael Hufiington (R l will probably not unseat Sen . Diane Feinstein ( 0 )
rcsh from a week in M assachu~e u s.
Fineman suggested that .. unless he can
tum things around in the first 20 mmutcs of
h1s first televised debate with M it Rom ne).
Ted Kenned ) is in big trouble ." II would be
big news. indeed. for no Kenned y has ever
lost a general electi on. However. the consensus was that Kennedy' s 32-yearSenate reign
would continue. albeit by a slim margin .
Elsewhere. said Mc Laughlin. look for
GOP upsets in Ohio. where Ll. Gov Mike
De Wine (R ) leads mega-lawyer Joel Hyau
CD ) in the race to succeed Hyatt 's father-lOla"'. Howard Met zenbaum ; in Virginia.
\\here Oliver Nonh (R ). on hi s way to joining the body he was convicted of lying to.
appears to be beating incumbent Sen. Charles
Robb (D) : and in Tennessee. where both
seats could go Republ ican. The onl)' question. accord ing to Barnes. i~ whether it "'ill
be a small landslide o r a b1g one .
Other " McLaughlini m, .. offered up b)
panelists·

F

a O n H aill. Clifl Sharln&amp;barlls
warned that " If thongs go onat-ce at
sour there. Clinton will Alumni Arena,
pay a t the polls." and from left:
McLaughli n said of the John
size of the troop conun. McLauCJtlln,
gent thcTc . "It is time to Joaette
Vr.·elcome Haui as the 51st Shiner 8ftd
Fred Barnes.
state
• On former and
soon-to-be-agai n DC Ma)or Marion BarT) .
M Laughlin observed. "H&lt; "ill he the on I)
politician in America to arrh·r at his inaugu·
rauon in a limousine who~ license plate!;
"ere made b) himself.''
• On being a DclllOCTaii C cand1date th1~
}ear. Shiner reponed. "Sen T om Harlon COIowa} said to me 'h's IJJ...e watch~ng mice
scurry for the comers--candidates don't want
10 be associated with Clinton."
• On New York gubernatorial cand idate
George Patili, Clift ca ll ed him "the closest
thing there is to a generic ca ndidate: no one
kno ws who or what he is." 10 Vr.•hi c h
McLaughl in replied. " He is vinual realitf'
• On the 1996 primaries. Fineman rnj·
dieted. "Clinton will have a challenge from tho
left LhBI will be more bodoenome lhan
Buchanan." to which McLaughlin added. "possibly by George Mitchell. possibly by Jesse
Jackson, and Clinton will step aside to male
room for AI Gore."
• And. on host John McLaughlin . Barno&gt;
told the audience. "Now you canS« why. in
Washington. they sa) ada) without Mc Laugh lin
IS like ada} without hemorrlloids.''

Pa't

Conable gives inside view of Congress
By STEVE COX
Reporter Staff

C

ONGRESSANDOURdcm&lt;&gt;&lt;.··
racy rna) not he pcrfec.:t. bUJ
before you bcxo mc too q meal.
consider the altt: rnall \ es T hat
'-''3S the message brought to a
class of UB la w stude ms b) fonner Congressman Barber Conable dunng a ~.:ampus
appcararocc OcL 3. Conable =ne 10 UB 10 share
his insights into the wori..ings of the House
Ways &amp; Means Commincc with law students in
a l3X polic} seminar focusing on that bod} and
its role in the 1986 ovahaulofthe U.S . tax rode.
Conable was ranking minoril)' member of thao
tax-v.•riting conunittce for eight years.
He repreM'nted pans of Rochester and rural
WNY in the House of Representatives from
1967 until he retin:d in 198-1. Se,cr:~l lP"'
later. his fonncr Ways &amp; Means colleague.
President George Bush. dn:w him back 10
puhlic service for a five-year stint as president
of the World Bank. which tina nee)) devel o pment projects in underde veloped nati on)).
"When llcfllhe Housc.''recallcdConab k .
"it wcu he!.' .a usc discnchanlmcnt "' a..;; :tlrc;ld)
growing in Congress. It "'as not a h:tPp)
place to worl.. any more." Al so l'Ontrihut ing to hi s decision to retire was Conahk' !t
n:lati o n ~h ip "'i1h then \Vays &amp; Mcan l!t Chairman Dan Rostcnkowsl i. Unl ike pre\ iOU!t
chain. with whom Conablc had '-' Urlcd .
Rostcnknwski felt he had "a m:tndou~.: to
I

repre~nt 1he majOnt) pan) exclu~I\CI) ...
Conable ))J!d. " He stacked the commillec and
cut dcab "'ith hi~ subcommittee chainncn
that \ iriUall) closed out minorit) members
fn.•n meaningful participauon:· Conablc said. " I
ck"Cod&lt;:d. :Ute,- a while. thai I might as well be
somewhen:" hen: you can make n:al decision;.''
Ho"' C\ cr. carl} on in their relationship
Conahle recalls ha\'ing an upper hand on
Rostenlowski. "He had to spend the forst couple
of) ears leammg the tax C"'de when he bcca.rnc:
cha innan." chuckled Conable. "because. unti l
he"' as chai nnan . he never came to committee
meetings." As a result. " Rost}" suffered SC\•eral emharrassing defeats on the House noor at

''Compromise is the
enemy of simplicity. "
BARBER CONABLE

th~ hand!' of th~ bctt~r·pr~parcd Conahle .
Rostcnko" ~ 1.. 1 stepped dov.·n as ~o:hai mlan of
that commilh.."C thi s year. when he was indicte-d
tlfll.'hargc!oo of :1busi ng 1~ JXlWcn. of hi!t office.

t"' a~ \\ nh some tn:p1dJ tiun Conab lc !t3id.
that he acc.:cph:d an appmnt rnc nt to Way s
&amp; Means. He had aslcd Gc:r.tld Ford for Appropriati ons or Forei gn Affair~. hut Ford
:1slo..cd himto tr)' Wa)s&amp; Means. ··wcalllncw

I

Wa)!t &amp; Mc:ans "'as a real ~sure cool er."
Conable said. -and Appropnations v.:as.Ahc
glamour job-those gu)" alwa)~ got all lhosc
honOr:lf) degrees." The first Ways &amp; Mean,
.fuir he worl.ed under. Wilbur Mills. had ··a
blcidoscopic kno\&lt;·ledge oflhe tax Ia" :· he said.
Mil ls' style was one of consensus, Conablc
said. " He would seck out Republican input
iD that a bill could be passed nearly unanimpusly." M ills bills were rarel) amended
o n 1he floor. he said. "Tax legislotion is
heav y influenced by per.;onnlilies of the
Ways 1lt Means members:· said Conable.
who wor\ed on seven major tax reform bills
while in Congress."The siren song of tax reform is simplicity.'' he said. "but after each
major 1.u re:fonn was enacted. the tax code was
more complicated than it was before. This is
probably because of the amount of compromise required to strike an accord. Compromise is the enemy of simplicity."
A lifelong Republ ican. Conable has 001
always been mainstreamconservati\'C. He suppons a progressive tax policy. which places a
proportionally higher tax bunden on the wealth) .
"We already
said Conable. "that nus·
sivc Ia.'( CUts fuclconsum~ion . not S:J\'ings. It Vr.i ll
just drive up the dcfocil and fuel inflation." His
World Banl experience has cominced tum Lhat
tlUr lcl"' s:tvings ratc- is a major economic
prohlcm. ''Our savings rate is something like
3.8'K.l'Oillpan:d "ith II 'k in Canada. 25'K in
Japan and am. investment rme in China."

sa":·

�Patterns of genocide in Rwanda likely to
continue, DesForges tells 'UB at Sunrise'
·J~VIDAL

Reporter EditO&lt;

E LET RWANDA happen,
says Alison Des Forges.
An in1cmationally recognized expert on the crisis in
Rwanda and adjunet assistant professor of
history at UB , Des Forges spoke at the Uni-

versity Inn and Conferc:nce Center Oct. 7 as
pan of .. UB at Sunrise,•· a communi1y breakfast series sponsored by UB .
. Despite the public attention that focused
last summer on t~ brutal atrocities occurring in the: African nation. things are a long
way from returning to nonnal. And the patterns of genocide~ likely to continue. Des
Forges says.
She! discussed the siiUation in Rwanda in
front of a silent crowd, tell ing of the deaths
of friends and or unimaginable horrors.
''Nowhere -have I seen a mother with a
baby on her back killing another mother with
a baby on her back;' she says. But that is
typical of the connie! that has embroiled
Rwanda.
It i1 a ituation that 1s "enormously complicated," she says. one brought about by
grinding poverty in a nation where the
struggle to survive becomes very bitter.
Geographically about the size of the state
of Connecticut, Rwanda was described by
Des Forges as overpopulated. ib land ex hausted and lacking i(l any mineraJ resources.
It is a nation where 6ne-third of its population is ··permanentl y undernourished" and
"where in some houses the o nly piece of
furniture is a simple wooden bench," she
says.
"In (lhe United States). if you Jose the
elecrion you can always go back to your law
firm," Des Forges says. But in Rwanda. "the
(govemmenl) is the only avenue to wealth

and power. If you lose the Alison Des
election. all you cando is go For&amp;es
speaks at
back to the hill side."
Composed of two ethnic breakfast
groups. Tutsi and Hutu. the series In
country has suffered under University ,
centuries of tribal hatred and Inn and
Conference
civil war. with the Tut si rul Center.
ing fo r four centuries. But
w~n that govemmenl was overthrown b)
the Hut us, the new government began 10 II')
to rebuild solidarity among the tribe by discriminatjng against the Tutsi. That discrimination soOn amplified . and a campaign of
mini-massac res began. Des Forges said .

A

Rwandan tradition of each citiz.en offering one4ay of service each month
to hi s or her country turned unspeakably
ugly as the new government encouraged
Hut us to turn against their neighbors. 'The1r

work for that month was to go out and kill as
many Tutsi as they eould." Des Forges said.
The .. killing machine" also included
Rwandan radio, she said. which was used to
broadcast mcuages that were "explicit and
vitriolic... to reach a11 Rwandans that the
Tutsi were evil and rich. and should be
killed.
.. Rwanda has the di slincu on of be:mg a
place where genocide "a made a cottage
industry." Des Forges said.
"In the end you have perhaps 100.000
people who have killed. and you have perhaps a mill ion people who have been killed ."
1be carnage did not end 'A ith the: assass ination o( Rwandan Preside nt Ju v~ nal
Hab)'arimana and the: new TutSI go' cmment
that replaced the Hutu one. And the world
has do ne nothing to stop Rwanda' s genoctdc, Des Forges said
·1ne reaction of the rest of the world was
astonishment horror and raptd retreat. The
United States led that retreat.'' she said. " Because the American public had no interest. the
American government had no interest."
The massi ve outflow in Jul) of two mtl·
hon refugees in1 o Zaire: caught the world's
anent ion. but "' ill not stop the killings. Des
Forges said. 'The humanitarian response
has sa \ed the lives o f man y people. but al so
has allo wed the genocidal (Hutu )officials to
begin to plot a OC'-' campaign." she said.
"The Rwandan ann) is re-formi ng in Zaire.
It is being resupplied with weapons and ts
preparing to anack again ."
United Nations intervention is e~ntjal
to ending the unrest, but although help has
been promised, none has yet been seen in
Rwanda . •Things are a long way from returning to nonnal and what I find pan..icularly disturbing is the pauerns of genocide
that conti nue:· Des F~rge s said .

Football Bulls are on a winning streak

W

ITH A 23 - 10 WIN ov er
Colgate before 6. 761 homecoming fans on Saturday afremoon. UB earned its second
straight win and first against an established
Division 1-AA opponent.
UB took the lead for good in the first
quaner and never looked back as Chris Behan
hauled in a I 0-yard pass from Cliff Scon.
The score was set up when Bulls' linebacker
Terry Morgan reco \•ered a mishandled punt
return .
Colgate got on the board with a 21 -yard
Steve Franco field goal with four seconds
left in the first quaner to make the score 7-3.
With 9 :45 left in the first half, the Bulls
increased their lead 10 13-3 on Tyler
McDonnell's JJ .yard run . The score was

costly . ho wever. as the freshman suffered a
broken leg o n the play and is expected miss
the rest of the season.
Late in the second quaner. the Bulls were
driving when Derek Wick s' reception was
fumbled and picked up by Colgate's Tom
More lli who raced 58 yards 10 the three-yard
line. Two plays later. OJ. Hough scored from
two yards. cuning UB's lead to 13- 10. That
was as close as the Red Raiders would get as
UB 's defense dominated the second half.
Brad Bess scored his second touchdown
oft he season on a one-yard run on the Bulls'
first JX&gt;Ssess ion of the third quaner. UB closed
the scoring with I :22 left in the game o n a
Mark Mozrall 22-yard field goal.
The Bulls defense st iOed Colgate' s passing game. all o wing just -W yards as Red

Raider quanerbacks were six of 28 passmg
""ith o ne inte rcepti on . Colgate's Dana
Farland gained 169 yards on the ground with
30 canies. with the rest of the Colgate rushing auack accounting for 10 carries and a
total of minus five yards.
The Bulls rushed for a season-high 215
yard and were led by Cliff Scon and Anthony Swan, who gained 65 and 63 yards.
respectively. McDonnell accounted for 47
)ards before leaving the game.
Scon was I 0-of-20 passi ng for 98 yards
and o ne touchdown while brother Anthony

Scou had three receptions for 45 yards .
Defensively. Pete Conley le&lt;f{he Bulls

"'1th 12 tackles, one quar1erback press ure and a fo rced fumble . Craig Gue st
pitched in with II stops.

MSDRUG
conttnued from page 1
drug identical to the natural mo lecule that
occurs in man and aclS both as an antiviral
agent and as an immune-system booster. lt is
administered intramuscularly once a week.
The trial was the first blinded trial to be done
on a recombinant interferon identical to natu·
raJ beta interferon and the first to demon·
stra tc a stati stically significant impact o n the
progress io n rate o f the disease.
Only modest side effects were seen in the
study . They included occasional a nd tran sient nv-like symptoms (fever. fatigue a nd
achiness). Treated patients experienced flulike symptoms an average of eight days over
two years. as compared to two days am_ong
the placebo group. Injection-site reactions
were minimal and not different between
groups treated with study drug and placebo.
Nine percent of recombinant interferon ~ta
patients stopped treatment. half of wh1ch
were attributed to side effect!..
1

The stud y. which began in 1990. involved 301 men and women with active
relapsing multiple sclerosis who rcceh·ed
either recombinant interferon hc:la or placebo intramuscularly once a week for periods up to two years.
The study '-''as conducs,ed at four clinical
cen ters in the United States: UB's Baird MS
Center: Mellen MSCenter, Cleveland Clinic:
University of Oregon. Port land; and Walter
Reed Army Medical Center/Georgetown
University. Washingt on. DC . The MRI
scores all were analyzed at one laboratory at
the University of Coloradq in Denver.
Muhiple sclerosis is a progressi ve neurological disease in which the bOdy loses the
ability to transmit messages among nerve
cells. leading to loss of muscle control.
paralysis and. in some cases. death.lt affects
between 250,000 to 350,000 Americans and
is believed to affect more than I mi11ion

people world " ide. Although it was firs)~i­
agnosed more than I 00 years ago, there: i no
prevention or cure for the disease.
More than I0.000 Americans arc: diagnosed with MS each year. After epilepsy. it
is 1he second most common chronic neurologtc disease of young adults. Onset is unu~ual before adolescence. then ri ses in
frequency from the teenage years to age 35.
and declines gradually thereafter. h is approximately twice as frequent in women as
in men. More than 100.000 patients in the
U.S . suffer from the relapsing form of the
disease c haracterized by acute attacks. followed by partial or complele remission .
Recombinant interferon beta is still an
investigational drug and is not available on
the market. Earlier thi s year. Biogeo announced plans to file for licensure in the
United States and regulatory approval in
Europe in the first half of 1995.
11

3
UB professors help
Amherst detennine
needs of its youth
., ·WAU.ACI:
Reponer Contnbulor

T

WO UB PROFESSORS. one in law
and the other in sociology. have been
help1ng Amherst Township bener
unden&gt;Wld the needs of its youth.
Murray Levine, professor of law and codirector of the Research Center f01"Ch1ldren
and Youth . and Simon Singer. professor of
SOCIOlogy, have been worl.mg with Amherst
town officials and the Amherst Youth Board
on statislicaJ Sludies to determine youth needs
in Amherst, as well as on
another U&lt;Vey designed
to assess the need and
potential for a Youth/
Family At -Risk Centeno
sene the Eggcru"ille
comm unity. a section o(
Amherst Townshi p.
Levine and Singer began the1r work for
Amherst with the 1987
Amherst Yo uth Board
Needs Assessment Survey. which was admin iste-red to high sc hool
st udents in the school districts of Amherst. Sweet
Home. and Wmiamsville.
SINGER
That sun C). as well as a
secondonedonein 1990.
asked students to answer questions about behavior. and looked at such issues as teen delinquency. alcohol and drug use. and sexuality.
A 1993 s..-vey, funded by a gn1n1 awaded 10
'the Aml'asl Cclllral Schx&gt;l Disuid by the NYS
E.cb:alioo D&lt;povncnl.looked. faa&lt;:n ouch ..
ch3ract&lt;ristics of the popllation and inleleSIS of
community members. II delamincd lhal "a community ccnu:r of the l)pe ~ has a SII'Oilg
pot&lt;:nlial f&lt;r serving. preservi~ and enhancing
the quality of life in the entire oommunity as well
as preventing social ~ in the future. ..
The communny and campus pannersh ip
has advantages for both Amherst and the
resean:hers. Singer says. " By looking closely
at Amherst, I can describe th ings much more
specifically than they can 10 national surveys. There are a 101 of federal government
surveys on suc h things as delinquency, but
t~y don't account weU for local variations
and so can't get a feel for local communities.
1get unique. wondcrlul data thai can lead melD a
particular sense ofwhal's imponaru locally. It's
gratifying lD get imrnediale local fc:edl6ck."
The advantage for Amherst. Singer says.
is that the community ge:rs1hcexpertise to do
state mandated assessments more accurately.
and an such a way that results can be compared o ,·er time. The town also gets 10 work
with its own statistics rinher than national
o nes, and so has a beuer sense of the dimen sions o r its own pan.icular problems. he said.
"Amhast responded to our repon about
alcohol use in the 1987 survey." Singer says.
"They had discussions and presentations. and
received money 10 sponsor alcohol awareness
programs. Then when we did the survey again in
1990 they bad spocifJC e-.idence lD say that tec:nagen; rqxxted !hal drinking bad declined.''
Levine agrees with Singer on the importance o f earnpus-eommunity partnerships. "To
me it seems self..ovidentlhat UB should work
cooperativelywiththeoutsidecommunity. Such
a partnership provides cooperative access lD
material of mutual benefit," he said.

Provost'• Adclreu
In Reporter
Extended excerpts from a
transcript of Provost Aaron
Bloch's second annual report
to the Faculty Senate wiU
appear in the Oct 20 issue of
the Reporter.

�4

'

rei Hens, Buffalo General Hospital. To cam certifiCate, nu.rsts
muse anend five:. sessions.. South
Campus. 4 :30-7:30 p.m. $30 per
rnoduSe. To rqiSU:r. caJI 819)291 .
ATT'IIE-VIU
My Dituter wi.tb Aa.drt. UUAB
film ~Cries. 201 Studenl UntOO
North Campus. 6 :30 p.m. S2.
S3.50. Caii64S·29~7 .

.._.._

Sear Defeasr aDd PffiOilal
ProUctiotl, Dove Chemc:p and
Kllily Zysek. 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Call64.5-6125 to register.
ATT'IIEIa the lliPC' of' the Felber.
UUAB film scnes. 201 Student
North Campus. 9 p.m
S2. Sl.30. Caii64S-2957 .

uruo..

--

Bonon1 110 Kno1. Nooh Cam
pus ) p.m
a COMPUTER

II1ICT1IICA1.

Tapics Ill EloctrMic Mal&lt;riab
ud O..icft, Prof Woyoe A
Andcrloo. 110 Knox. North
Campus 3 p.m.

-INA&amp;.
~•

CtiOIIeTWY

SbiAo, Dept. of Me.

dacinal Chenuslr)" 121 Coote
North Campus. ) p.m.
-.nrv~

Fuodamelltal Stud;.. el Prop-

.ru.., S&lt;ructon aod Ractio1J
Dpwaic:s e1 BloloJical Molroles I• 1M Gas P'b..ue. Prof
Jack Beauchamp. Calirornia
InstdUic ofTecllnolocY. 20 I

NIIUraiSc......s.t:~O&lt;S

-

Complex. North Campus. • p.m.

~~­
N ;pt 0..1! Foondcn Piau
North Campus. 6~30 p.m. -tl a m
S20 in ipOn.SOnilup donattons
Informal ton available al.lhe

CAC orfiCC, 370 Student On•on
AT n. IIOYIES
lntbo-aftboFIIhor. UUAB
film series 201 Srudent Union
Nonh Campu . 6 :30 and 9 15
p.m S2. S3.50 Coli 645 -2957
FAMILY MEIMCIHE
CONFEII£NCE

Campus 12 .JOpm
I'O£TRY TAU!
Palimte:rts: Modernif) aad
Material C uUun-, M1 hael
Oa\'ld.son . Part of Wedne~a) ~
at 4 Plu~ ~11') and pn&gt;§( St·
ne .... 438 Clemen Nonh Cam pu) 1230 p.m Free

A.RTINStAU..AnoN
Blank. Paulo Buenno-. Through
Oct 22 ..('mum. Center for the
Arts Nonh Campu~o Call ~5 6878

Episcopal Service
Holy Eucharist Rite II

"COME AND

SEE"

John 1:46

\it
"i)

Eve1y Sunday
a/2:00p.m.

7be Commons
Suite 100
"Come Worship with us"
Episcopal Campus Ministry
at the University of Buffalo
The Commons
Suite 215

688-4056
Director/ Chaplain
The Rev. B.A. Tasy

ART EXHiemON
Chinest&gt; Conlt.m po r) Traditioa.ai.Stylt. Painting, Worl b)
32 anasts from tv.o BeiJing unaversltles Through Oct 16 Um
vers1t) Gallef) . Center for thtAm Nonh Campus Galkt')
hours Fret Call645-6912
ART EXHiemOH
Paulo Buuoos: Tbt. Same and
the Other (MFA Th~is).
Through Oct 17 . An Depan·
~nt Gallel), Cen ter for the

An.s Nonh Campus GalleT)
hours Recepuon 5-7 p.m Call
645 -6878
&amp;OCIAL WORK WORKSHOP
Ell'ploring I be UH or lmaginalin Pta,· and Pup~t Play

Therapy " ·itb Child ren, Nan c ~
Wohl. Nonh Tona"·anda Cn)
School~ Sponsored b) the
School of Socaal Work Wtcl
Center. Dacmen College 8·45
am -3.30 p.m S50. stll&lt;knb S30
For infonnauon. ca..ll645-6140
INTERNET CUNIC
The Basics. ~rega!otratton re
qUI red 213 Lod.. " ood North

Campu!o 10 a.m Call645-2817
FAMILY MEDICINE
CONFER£HCE

UFE WOIIIISColorings: How to C hoose &amp;
Use, Cmd1 Jacobs , manager of
The Bod)' Shop. 2-3 .30 r m.
Call 645-6125 to reg1~1er

MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM
Prof. C hris King, Nonheastem
Um\ 103 D1efendnrf South
Campus 4 p.m

of Human Pharmacolog) SOSC
Cooke. Nonh Campus . 4 p.m.

MICROeiOUIGY ~INAR
Papilloma virus DNA Re:plication: What Else is Nruled~
Thomas E. Melendy. Ph .D ..
Dept. of M 1crobiology. I 06
Cary. South Campus. Noon

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR
Decompression Pby iology
and Application from Halda nr
to Muimum Likelihood, Rich ard D. Vann. Ph.D., Duke Umv
108 Shennan. Swch Umpus. 4 p.m.

STVD£NT -.c&gt;EGREE

sunsncs COlLOQUIUM

LECn1t1E ON JUIW'AUL
IIARTII£
Ua Eop&amp;e:.me:nt avec: Sartre,
Michel Corltat. Centre National
de 11 Recherche Scientifique. In
French. 930 C lemens. North

O£HTA1. SYMI"'SIUM

Amhersl Hobday Inn. '1agara
Falls Blvd 8 •~m --4 ~ 30 p m

s155 fee for- dentist.s. $9.5 for

Slaff For mformauon. call thr
Office of Conunumg Denial
Educa11on. 829-2320

PHARMACEUT1CS SEMINAR

Industry Clinical P-ha rmacol-

ogy: A Fh·r Year Reti"'Sp«th·e:., Dr Oan 1el Salazar, ~pt

Bayrsian Hypothesis Testing:
Procedures Derived Via thr
Cona:pt of Surprise, Prof.
Michael Evans. Umv. of
Toronto. 144 Flfber. South
Campu.s. 4 p.m.
cumFICATE - I N

IIEIIONTOLOIUC.U.
-Caring ror the Neurologic:ally

lmpoirod Older Adul~ Mllfla·

SOCiatiOO

SUMMIEJIFARE TKEATRE
Gyps) . Pfe1fer Theatre, 681
MamS1 8pm SIO. SI2.SI5
For 1nrorma.uon . ca ll 839-gs.w

AT THE MOVIES

ydJo._,. Submari.ot. UUAB film
senes 201 Student Unton
Non.h Campus II 45 p.m
S3 .SO Call 64.5 -2957

S~ .

I'£DIATWIC GRAND ROUNDS
Diabd.es Control Complic!atioo Trial: What Does It
Mean'! Teresa Quanrin, M.D
Kmch Audttonum. Children' s
Hospi1.al . 8 a. m

COGNmVE SCIENCE
RESEARCH QROUP'
IIIIEAI&lt;FAST SOIINAR FOR
A Cocnitive: Uoguistics Approach to Natural Lang:uac~
. -y·a HIQHEJI EDUCATORS
Robut Berdahl. Univ. of
l,;nd.erstanding, Eli ssa Fe1t 224
Maryland, College Part.. Contt Bt:ll. North"Campu~ 3 30 p m
nenlal breakfast at 8 a.m. SluCa11645 -3794
dent Center. Camsius College
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM
orth Campu 8:30-9 30 un.
What Is Re:.norma.l iu.tion,
S5 . Coll645-2491.
A.n)""'ay'! Prof. Peter Lepage.
NURSING SOIINAR
Cornell Un1\ 454 Froncz.al
Ad"\-'I.OCfS io ~ Tn-atNorth Campus 3 -l.S p.m
meat: Implications for NunART L.ECTUIIIE
in&amp;. Sponsored by the Office of
Anita KuiU. Kunz IS a Canaun.e Contmumg EdocatJon
daan 1llustntor whose v.orl: h.u
Htlleboc Audnorium. RPCI
appeared m Graph1s. Mother
8 :30a.m --4 p m S5S (includei
l one!&gt;. and Commun1cauon Ans
lunch). Call 829-3291 .
120 Ocmens. Nonh Campus 4
P'HYS-Y WORKSHOP/
p.m. Call 645-6878
SYMPOSIUM
810UIGICA1. SCIENCES
Bubbln in the: Circulatory
SEMIHAR
System , Grea1 Lakes Olapter.
Activation of lon Channe:.ls in
UHMS.
OCIEM. Nonh York.
Antbidopsis by Light, Dr
Ontano. 108 Shennan . South
Edgar Spaldmg. URI\ of \lh sCampus. 10:30 a.m .-5 p.m CaJJ
ronsm . 114 Hochsteller Nonh
829-274)
Campus 4 p.m
LECTUIIIE eif JEAIW'AUL
INFECT1011-CONT1tOL
SAJmiE I
TRAINING
Lt Spect.rT de Sartre., MJchc:l
South Campu.s _4 -7 p.m Call the
Rybalka. Washington URI\ .• St.
Office: of Contmutng Nurse
Lolus.
In French. 930 Clemens.
Educa11on at 829-3291 for ~i!IS ­
Nonh CaJvpus. 12:30 p.m.
tration 1nformat1on

Family Medicine in lhe '90s,
Alumm and facult~ of UB .
Um' of P.nsburgh - Hershc:~ .
phys1c1ans from MontC \'hta and
Jones Memomtl Hospitals
Sheraton Hocel, Cheektowaga
Reg1s trauon ~gms at Noon
Call645-2018.

II£CRA1.
Piano students of Prof. frin a
Arac:banska BoldL Baird Recital
Hall. Nonh Campus. Noon. Fme.

Family Medtcin~ in lh~ '90s,
Alumm and faculty of UB .
Um\ of Putsburgh· Hershe) .
phrs 1c1ans from Monten ll and
Jooes Memonal Hosp111b.
Sheraton H01el. Checl.IO\l•aga
Call 645-2018.

INTDMATIONAL FOUl
OANCINQ
All levels all welcome Panncr'-'
001 nttded 2 Dtefendorf Soulh
Campu~ 8- II p m free Spon
sored b) Grad~tc S1~nt A ~

PIIARIIACIIITICS SEMINAR
Sustained Rtila.se: Formulations in an Ou=t.S-Oricnted

En\·ironment:
·n Criteria for Tbrir lnd · o in
HMO Formularies, &gt;Or.
Gerhard Levy. Dep1. of

Pharmace-utics . .508 Cooke
Nonh Campus. 2:30p.m.
COMPUTER SCIEHCE
COLLOQUIUM
A New Switching Mecban.ism ,
Short Reconfigurabl~ Buses.
a nd Fast Computalion

-

FAMILY llmiCINE

fa.miJy Meclici.M in tbe •90s.
Alumni and facuhy of UB ,
Umv of Put burgb-Heahe).
phys.•ctans from Mon~vtsta and
Jones Memonal Hospitals.
Shenton Hocel. Chedaov.-aga.
Call645-2018

I'ROJECT IUDCARE
Kids ._,.;n be fingerprinttd and
photographed. and lheu UB 11
pan:.nt5/guardians prov1ded v.1th
a fme ph01o 10 ~krof lh&lt;
ch1ld 10 a1d law enforcement 1f
thr children arc rcpon.ed lost or
m1~1ng m the futurc . Sponsored

by IUdCan: •.-.~us·, Depan -

ment orPubhc Safety. Bissc.l

Ha.JI. North Campulo. 1-4 p m
SUMMIEJIFAII£ ntEATRE
Gypsy. Pfe1fer 'Theatre, 681
Main St 4 a.nd 8 p.m. SIO. Sl2.
SIS For mformahon. call839-

8540.
FOOTUU
UB Bulls vs. Illinois State:.. UB
Sladium. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.
For ticket mfunnation. call 6U·
6666.
MEN' S SOCCER
Valparaiso. RAC
Field outsidt Alumni Arena.
North Campus. 1 p.m.

UB Bulls ,

Scbemos, Roog Un, SUNYGeneseo. Reception follows in
224 Bell Hall. 228 Natural Sciences and Malhematics Complu . Nonh Campus. 3-4:15
p.m. Call645-3180.

---

El£CT111CA1. a COMPUTER

Computatioaal Photonics,
Prof. Poo-Lo Uu. 110 Knox.

--Nonh Campus. 3 p.m.

El£CT111CA1. a COMPVTD

latroductioa: to Transpan:a1
Oplkal Networi&lt;s, Prof. Alben

SUNDAY

16

-aeocco

ua &amp;Us..._ NortbeasUm
llliDoiL RAC F.c ld ouuide

�5

--

Alumni Arena. Nonb Campus.
I p.m

Music:..,._ Cbl.., Zllou Looc
and Susan Oxma. music dtrcc·
tors. Cbinesr ensembte performme u.dittonal Mel contemponry
mus:k:. B&amp;trd Reci1al Hall. North
~- 2 p.m.
Coincide•
with ckl&amp;iftl m:ep~lon for the
exhibitioa. of Chinese painlin&amp;
in &amp;he Univcnity An Gal~.

m:..

-MEniUTIIIE
Gypay. Preifc.Thcaue.611
Main Sl 3 p.m. $10. $1 2, SIS .
For informasion. call 839· 8S40.

UFE-

Fonn Syupses., Jod'lua R.

I'll-•

Sanes. Ph.D .. Washinaton UniY.

Howto
Mlcro&lt;oao puler, Mark Winer and Kern
Cabana. 6:30-1:30 p m Call
60-6125 to rqi ter

MedK:ol Center I Ill Shennan
South Campuo. • p.m
Wl'a.T~

Seardtlac Ubrvloo .u-nd
!be Worid. 2231..od&lt;...,..._ 7
p.m. Prete&amp;iW'Mion required
Contact Gemma Otvmney. 6452117.

1.11'1-......... Spirit &lt;Md.,.ILIHI
Youl, Fraa Calandrdli. 7-10
p.m. Call 645-6125 to rccaster

1.11'1Spocu Cards Collodor'• .,.,.

.....

645-2957 .

NM&lt;IIepoiat Holicloy 0....-

msu., Beryl Warts Conttnue:s
Oct. 27 and Nov. 3 7-1 30 p m
Caii64S~I2S to r&lt;&amp;ost&lt;r
AfniE.ovJD

Four Weddlftc.s ud a Fuan-al
UUAB film scnes 201 Studeat
Unton North Campus 9 p m

four Weddinp and a Funeral
UUAB film .senes. 201 S1udent
Umon North Campu!i 9 p m

sz. n .so

UFEWOIII&lt;5-

ndem.od \'ourself and Enhance \'our Relat ionships ~ith
the MBTl. EJien Chns-tensen.
Se~~:ua1it)' EducatiOn Center 3-5
p m. Call6-15--6125 10 rcg1s:tu
5CIIEHT15T

SDIIICAII
Prot~D-Rrt inoi d lntenctioo:
The trvctw-al Basis for
ReUnoid RKogoitioa.. Or
Mareia Newcomer. VandertHII
Uni\ . G26 Farber Soulh Campus. 4 p,m_

un-.Lie
in Modero
~tectioa

Times., Thomas H. Feele) . 78 30 p.m Cai1645-612S to regt:.ter

v

1~

f'IEDIAntiC COIIFER£NC£

Tuberculosis in tbr 21st Century. Ruben Welh,er. M.D.
Cafetonum A. Men:&gt; Hosp1tal.
8 30a.m.
GRADUATE 5CHOOL MEETING
Autumn Gradual~ Faculty
Meeting. 201 Student Umon
North Campus. 9-11 a.m
MU51C COIIVOCAflotl
Makinc a Caru.r in Music:
The Touring!R«''rding En~mb l e. Stephen Rosenthal.
Amherst Saxophone Quanet.
Baird Recital Hall. Nonh Campu!!.. Noon. Frtt .
COMI'IITDI W0111&lt;50rientation to CIT Public
IBM PS[2 Microcomputer
Labs. 3-4 p.m. Ca1164S-3540
for registration information
DOMATOLOQY L£CTUII£

Cutaneous Melanoma: Pathol-

ogy Relevant Prognostic Indicators and Progrusion. Prof.
Mmin C. Mihm . Jr.: Albany
Medical Co llege:. CMHC AudiIOrium, Buffalo Gcnentl Hospital. 80 Goodrich. 3 p.m.

-~
How Ax.ons ~Heide Wbu-c to

S2. S3 SO Ca1164S-2957

Microsoft Combo Packs

Call 645-2957

19w-•- 20
AIIOICTIOH5 I'HVOITION

I

Usl ng Action Techniques with
Ado~ts Who Arc Abusin&amp;
Akohot or Other Drugs, Janet

Ellms Sahafi Sponsored b)
1n~tltute for AddtctiOnS Su.witcs

ART INSTAU.ATION

and Tramtng W1d, Center .
D~men College 8.45 1 m · :\ "0
p m F~ S45 For rcgt!&gt;tr.tllon
1nfonna11on call b45-6140

Oct 22 Atnum . Cenler for !ht

145ESn&gt;d&lt;nl Unoon

Nonh Campus. Ncm-1 p.rn

houn. Throu!!h Oea:mbef-

IIOSWIEU. PARK &amp;TAIT
SEMIHAII

M*N'OIMFMI SDIUIAil

Post-Transplantation

-

Lymphoproliferath-e Disor·
dtn: Cli~tic::al and Biolotica1
Aspt'dS. Dr Dame! Knov. le,..
Ne'tll Yor\. Hosp•tai..Comell

Mechal Center H1lleboc Audt·
tonum. RPCI. 12 30 p m

I

l..cssom in Leadenbip,
S!ephen R Covey Sponl&gt;Omf
b) t~ Ccn1er ~ Managtment
De\eloprMnl. School of Man
a8emtnt lntemauonal Agn
Cent
5600 McKmlt) Pari.
v.a) . Hamburg 8 30 a.m.-'3 .30
p m 5249 r., Cal1645 -3200

£IIVIIIOfiMEHTA1.
ENWNEDINII AIIO IICI£NC£

STUODIT -1111££

&amp;EIIIIIAII
Watn- Quality Modelinc or
Non-Point Sourcft. Df Stc\en
Otapra. Unn of Colorado 206
Fumas Nonh Campus I p m

G uitar studt.DI or Joannr
Cast~llaoi. Batrd Recual Hall

Call 645-3446
UFE W011115Ho" to RttOgniu and Hel p a
Friend Wbo Has a Drinkint
Problem~

Barbara Umtk.er.

Ph.D .. Student Counseling Cen -

RECnAl.
North Campus Noon Frtt
IIITEJtiiATIOfiAL AFFAIH
L£Cf\MI£
1'bt! ~Uddlt East : hi It a Real
PeacT or a Cold Pet~«'! Am ~s!&gt;adot

Coleuc A\llal Coollul

General of lsrat-1 m Nt"- Yorl

ludenl Umon lllea1er Nonh
Campull 2 p m Free For mfor

ter 3·5 p.m Ca11645-6125 to

mauon . ..:all b4S-2368

CHEMICAL ENGINIE£RING

f'HY51CS COUOQUIUM
Optic:al and Manacemrnt
Properties or SaDOCI')~ab .

SEMINAR
Nonl Adsorbcnts for lndu!otrial St-paration~. Norman N
L1. Allied S1gnal 206 Furnas
North Campus. 3 45 p m
a&amp;OCHDIICAL
~COLOGY

SEMINAR

Rqulation or Gro"1h and
Fund ion or Kidn~) Cells b)
Hormones. Mar) L. Taub.
Ptl 0 Coffee- a1 .1 ·45 p m 307
Hochstcner. North Campw. 4 p.m

lAW COUOQUIUM
Sub.busin Corporal Punishm~nt

in Chikt-rcaring: Data
from 320 Middlr S. E. S.
Families, Anthon) M.
Gra1.1ano. Jess1ca Hamblen and
Wendy Plante. 280 Pari.. Nonh
C.mpus. 4 p m. Sponsored b)
the Research Cenlc:r for Ch1l·
dren and You1h. and tht Bald)
Center for Lav. and Soct3l
Pohl') ·
PIIAJIIIACY &amp;EIIINAII
A Nt'\'' Effieaey Measure for
Clinical Trials or Preventive
Jnterveatioas. Dr. Harry A.
Guess, Merck Research La~­
tone,.. 248 Cooke . Nonh Otm·

pus. 4 p .m.
AfniEMOVIO

Serial Mom. UUAB film

I

ART DHI.nlON

Und"'l"aprs 1988· 1994. V. url"
on pape-r b) C) nthta Hand
Capen Gallef') . fifth Ooor.
Capen Nonh Campu ~ Gall~ I)

w-.Errertin Communication In
R~

Ca ll~~

serie.~ .

201 Student Union. North Cam·
pu ~- 6 :30p.m. 52. SJ.SO. Call
645 -2957 .

Ca~gte ·
Rcfrcshmenl.lo 111 3 30 p.m ..

Prof S:tra Majl'"t&amp;ch.

Mellon
2--'5 Fronc1al.. 454 Fronczal..
Norlh Campus 3 45 p m

EDUCAflotl COUOQUIUM
C urnnt lssun ia Dom«tic
Violt'n«. Dr Jeff~)' Fagan.
Ru1gen. Um' 2 0 Pari.. onh
Campu11 4 p m
MATHDIATtCS COUOQUIUM
How Not To Construct A.ll

fibercd Knots and Unks. Pruf
L« Rudolph. Clarl.. Um' \0~
Dsdendorf. Soulh Campus. ~ r m

I

OFFICEI

I\ p;tiRIInt. ph&lt;Mognph~

tllustn.uon. and dc ~•gn b)
S~ldon Berh n. Kathleen
Campt'C\1. Alan E Cobcr
Manon t--allt:r . T~ rone
0c-OI'"f:IOU. Wtllard Ham , . Addt'
Hendtt\&gt;On. Kathleen C Hov.t&gt;ll
V. tlltam Ktn!iCf . Paul McKenn.t.
JoleOC' R11..l..an.1 AntMn) Roral.. .
and [n, td Schtrm GaJien
hours lrt Monda\ and W~ne ..
da) . 10 am -4 p fn Tuesda~

I

~:::y 1 ~~~~i~p,;

Wmdows

and

HOW'$ YOUR IIEAIIIHG?
The Studenl Auoctauon an ·
nounce!i frtt heanng -Krttmng!&gt;

0..:1 11 through No' 18 an 199
Pari.. Hall on lhe onh Campu\
Tht' scf"C'C'nmg\ tale about fi,e
nunutc\. and are Opc'n to 'itU
tknt' and all mt"mbcn. of thc.o
communu~ Hours atT Monda &gt;~
from 1-5 p m , Tue:sd•&gt;s and
\\ ednc-wla) ~ from 3 lO· 5 p m
and Fnda) s from I 2 lO- 3 p m
For tnfonnauon . ca118 ~ 5 - 83 ::'
A .~o 't~:..all lln

\Iolii b( UII..IRJ 1b :mnual "tntf)
Tnp to Frt&gt;dont.1 on Oct 15.
lea'IRJ!-111 103m and mummilatt' tn the afternoon A lOUr ol
'tlllftC-f) :md \tne):~rd ... d1nnn-.
and tran ponat1on art pan of !he
pacl..age Ttdets at 10 are on
ule m 221 Student Umon

un£RNA.T10NAL FOLK

DANCING
All :ue 'tllelcomc 10 JOin lhe ln tt'mallonal Fnll.. Danctng gmup
each t--nd3) from 8- 11 p m tn 2
01dendorf lhll oo the Sooth
Campu .. ~ f~ SC'SSion);
bcJm v. 1th 1eachmg Panner.. llfe
~nee-ded Tbc l&gt;'J)OO:IOOf" 1 - the
Gradwuc tudenl A.,.!&gt;OCllhOn

Assistant Profrssor-P )·cholog). Pos.unr; ~F-4093 AJsoclatcfFuU Professor-P ) cholo&amp;)
Posunr; •F~ Assistant/
Associatr(FuU Profenor-P:s)
cholog) . Posttng WF-40'15 /u.·
Aslant Professor-Modem Lan·
1-uag!!'io and Lnerntun:-§. Pos.ltng
•F-4096 Assistont tG fT)/As·
10eiatt Profasor(GfT)-Pechat·

I

nCio ,

PQSUnf. IF-4097. 4098

AssistaatJAssociat~ull

Optuhalmolog&gt; Postmr: •F
Jl02.
IIUEARCM

SKrfl.ar') 1-ChemtStf) , Pehunr;
t;R-9-'059 Sec-mar) l ·C ...-cupa.
ttOR.31 Therap) , Posttng•R9-W73 Tecbnk-ian 11-AnalomJeal Sc-terK't' . P~XttnJ rR-94074
Researtb Technician l ~t
81ol0f.&gt;. Possmg •R -9-'075
~reb XWatist-Oral Btl)! -

~~~u::.:~.-~:,h';:!;'
Med1dne. Postmg fR .C)..1077
P'IIOFESStoNAL
Fadlit ~ Prof:ram Coordinator ( L-S)-Dntgn &amp; Construt"tton. Postang_ •P-J080 taff

Roger L. Pnore. Sc .D (Coffee
"hour" at 3:30p.m .. 253
Fa~ ) J44 Farber South CJm ·
pus . 4 p.m.
CDmf1CATE - . u l l l l
MIIOWTOUIIIICAL . . . . _
Da.lin&amp; witb A.gressln Jk.UYiors ofOkltr Aduhs, Lynn
Manger. Buffalo V.A. Medical
Center. To earn ttrtifica1e.

B
FACULTY

As istant/AssociattfFull Profaosor-Geogr.aphy. Post•nJ ftf.
4081. 4082 . Assistant Prorrssor-Lmgu tsttc:s. Post1ng
tF-4084 . Assistant Prof sorCommunicatton. Postmg ff.
4085 . Associate/Full ProfessorSchool of Law. Posttng
IFF-1086. Assistant Professor
(two posilions available)·Economics. Posting IF-4087. A.ssls-taDt Prot'euor-Statis:lt«. Post·
In£ if-4088. Aaociate(Full
Profnsor·Statis:tics., Posting
fF-4089 . Aslociot&lt;/f\oll Profeuor·Psychiatry. Posting fiF-

I Lnd Pro-

( L-l,latunal
Opportuni1J)·Accounlln&amp; &amp; Pa~rol l
SeT' ICr'S . Pail tag ,p..J()92 lo5lno&lt;tional S.ppon Sprc:iol;,t
ISlA, lateraal Promotioa.al
Opport-uait) )-Facull) of Nalu ral Sc1enttio &amp;. MathematK"!I
0ean·~

Associate (SL4)-Unnenn)
lk\eklpmeflt. ~ung IP-4083
Setlior taft' Assistant ( L-3)Unnenll)' Dc\."tlopment. PO$t ·
tnf!. lfP..J084. Assistant Dean

(SL-5, lnl&lt;rnal Promotional
Opport•nity)-UmversU) Dt·
'elopmenl . POSitng ,p-1()86
Satior Statr Auociot• (S I.-5}Univen;•iy Dcvelopmem. Pos:t tng iP-4087 . St-nior Starr~
date (SL-5)--Uni\'ers.tl)'
Ot\'dopmeru. Posring IP-4088
Assistant Dean (SL-5)-Umver,.ity Development. Poslinr; IP40119. lnJtru&lt;tionol Support
Tec::hakian (SL-3).Computing
&amp; Information Trcttnology.

Offi,,:e. Posone•P-4.QQ3

I COIIl'£fmVE
CI.AHlRDI
CMLKIIVICE

Secrttat) I (SC- IJ )-~chuec ­
tUtt. Line •2SOJ I Ke)board

Pro-

fts:sor (t'Mo position auil·
able)·B•ochemtitr') P~ttng •F-1099 A islant/Anociatt
Proressor-Soc•al and Pn\cntt'\f'
Medu:me. Postmr WF-1100
Assistant Pnof....,.. (HS)-D&lt;omatoiOfY· Posung.*F-4101
AnistanljA.ssodaJt- Professor·

Molecular BioloiJ and Gen~
Regulation or Hepatic Drug
M~taboliz.:in&amp; Enr.ymcs:
Sulrotransferases. Dr. Ah -Ng
Tont,Kong. Thomas JcffeNm
Un1' 508C Cool..c Nonh Cam pus 4 r .m

Power of DdKtin&amp; th~ Errm
or a Continuous Progoost ic
Variabir in a Cox Mod~l Prof

Offu~r

Profes ional
Wmdows

Macintosh

PHARMACEUTICS SDliNAR

STAnSTICS COU.OQUIUM

Access

With Mic:nMOfl

$113 $135 $143

4090 Assistant Profnsor-So..·•
olog~ - PO!oltnf tF-'091 .iOQ:'

TASTE OF ITALY
1llC hahan Studt&gt;nl

Word
Excel
PowerPoint

~

Th1); 'ear·, ~&gt; ho ~o~.
~o~.hKh • ~ held ;'-t:f) other ~ear
mcludt:., ncv. wor._ b ) facull )
and conunucs through No ' II

Campu~

Tl\er'c

8 1anl4 Paulo Buenno.. Thwu gh

An' 1\!onh Campu!&gt;
6878

&amp;l

ai£NNlAL •fACULTY SHOW"
fOOI'DI
The An lkpanmen!'" .. Ftteult~
Shov. " open~ Oct 10 v.uh a
rca:puon from 5-7 30 p m tn
the An (kpanmc:nl C.lk:l) kl
..:ated m 1ht lov.-er le' tl o f tht
Ccnler ft'f the Am on the 'lr(orth

IJ

COUIISEUNG C£NTEII

_

p.m Call 645-61178

Serial Mo.. UUAB film 5en«•
201 Student Unioo North Cam pus. 630 p.m $2. Sl SO Call

U B Wind En..mbk, Saroh
Mc K01n. conduclor. Wort s of
Jves. Milhaud, Gtnaslera and
Dd~ Sle&lt; Concen llall.
North Campus. I p.m Free

WED N

IU£N L£CTUitE
lb!iil':n 's Rebellious Women.
Vt$:dt'li Y!&gt;lad. Unt' of0s1o
Balcony Lounge¥"enter for !he
An~ Nonh C3m~., 1 p m

S D

AfniEMOVIU

AT THE IIOVIU

AtmiROPOLOGY L£CTUII£
'i.o~ or Cooperation in
I he Evolution of Intelligence:,
Dr Aleunckr H. Harcoun.
Um,•. ofCalifomta 261 MFAC.
Elhrou North Campu.\
11 :30a.m.

~

OPUS: CUUICS UW
Bu-aadette DIDo. pluo.. Worb
by 8oc:1hoven, Tatcmtt:w,
Brahm•. Alkl'l. South Campu
1 p m M&lt;e. Taped roc- broodcut
the followmc Sunday at: • p m

-

Orli baham, piuiJL Sle&lt;
Concen Hall. c.rnpu.. 8
p.m. Fn:e. QRS 1!Jsm1 S.. Scncs.

AJICIIII"IC1IME ~
Boll lin Cywbut&lt;l J oclaon:
IHl .U.A. Firm Award Winners Ex.hibitioo. Dyen El.hibttlon Hall. 33S Hayes South
Campus Gallery houn. Fret.
Throuch 1212194 Call 829·
3485. x321.

~15HED

All'f~

TM FKVhy Show. Openana
re«ptton Throup NoY _ II An
Depanmeno Gallery. CeAler foethe Aru North C""'j&gt;US s. 7

by WBR) &amp;8. 7 FM

PINIOIIRITA&amp;.

17

829-3291

-CUIIIC

Seardliq Ubnorla A,....nd
tho Wortd. 223 l..od&lt;wood. 7
p.m. PrereciJinlion n:qui...S. Call
Gemma Devmney. 645-2117.

,..... Dave Silver nd Adam
M artin. 7-1:30 p.m. Caii64S·
612.S 10 register.

MONDAY

nursa must anend five: scntOn
South Campuo. • ·30-7 .30 p m

S.SO per module To ~~1tJtt. call

I

Spt'ciatiJt '(SG--e6)·ADDtomtc-al
Sc•encn. Lmc •2S867 Kt) ·
board ""';.u,. (SG-G61-0nol
8 1olog)". Ltllt' t1)188 Kt)'·
board Jl"'iolist (SG-G6)-R•·
i!Onlt' e.J)enuSU) .

Lane

•2?-f1J.( Kt,.board Sp«iaaiSI
{SC~-URI\t~l)

lk\tlopmcnt. Lt~ •29135. 298:.3
Head Jaaitor (SC·I S)-Um,er•" FX'IhtJ~. Custodtal Ser·
\l~ci. Ltnc: •31476 NurK I
(SG-14)·Stw:k'nt Health Center.

Lmt

*-160~0. ~602.3 .

460:.8

K&lt;)board Sp&lt;cio l;.t (SG-G6 1·
Plulosoph).I.On&lt; ~0

-f'£nf1VE

ClAUIFIED CIVIL KJIVIC£
Janitor (SC-07}-UnJ\t'f'\lt&gt;
Facthtlt'~&gt;. Cu~I.(ICIJ.al Sen·1ces
Lint .fll529. 31646 DmLal
Assistant (SG-e7)..CIIru..:al
OtntJSU'). Lmc: fll40790
Plumlxr and Steamfitter (SG·
12)·Unl\t'1"Sit~ Facilitt~ . Uttht)
Opc-ratKHl , Ltnt lt43127
~

CUUIFIUI CML

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(SG-{t5)-Um,en•t~
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Fac1ht1e . Cus-tod1al

Un&lt; 131513 ..1153!. 31558
Po•·rr Pbnl Helper (SG-06)Unt\tntl) Fx-1llt1o. U11ht)

OperatKWI • Ln\C

13'2052

To obtOIIt mnrf'" mformauon on
JlNlJ lisrrd af)fWt', romocr Pt&gt;r·

sonul'l Sf'"n ·l("t'J. 104 CroftJ

HD II

�6
Tfte U11 l¥ ers1ty •t

Gengo family knows the
value of SEFA frrsthand

l •ff •l• p r esents

AMBASSAooR CoLETTE AvrrAL
CoNSUL-GENERAL oF I SRAEL IN NEw YoRK

lly EU.Ell ~AUM
News Bureau Staff

T

HESEDA YS. nine-year-old Mike
Gengo looks forward to the day
when he'll wear a Stanley Cup
ring . He "s already tried on the
ring that belongs to has friend.
Craig Simpson of the Buffalo Sabres, and as
far a he's concerned. he 's headed for an
NHL championship career to parallel . tf not
surpass. Simpson's.
Dreams hke these may not be uncommon
among nine ~year--olds. But ifMikeGengo's
struggle to overcome leulemia is any indicauonofhisperseverance. he mayv.ell be headed
for the million-dollar NHL contract he talks
about signing one day. The son of Francis
Gengo. associate profe;sor of pharmacy and
neurology at UB and hiS wife Ann. Mike was
diognosed with leukemia at three-and -a-half
..When he was first diagnosed. we went
through a period of shock. followed by what
I can only describe as a pcnod of chaos." sa1d
Dr. Gengo. During thatume. Gengo and hiS
w1fe were handed piles of informatjon about
leukemia and about what the future might
hold for !heir little boy. Included in the pile
"'as some information from the WNY chapter of the Leukemia Society of America.
'"The tone of it was something like, 'Wei~
come to the club. sorry to have you on
board .... Gengo recalled.
The~ were invitations to meet other pa~
LienlS and their parents. as well as other
suppon material. ··Perhaps the most impor·
tant thing we received from the Society at
that point was a coloring book that wt were
encouraged to go

''The Middle East:
Is it a Real Peace?''
Thunclay. OctoMr ~o. 1994 at ~ P·"'·•
St.....t Union ThNte&lt;, North Ca"'f"'•

AMBASSADOR COLElTE A\1TAL" ls•ul's h•gh&lt;St·r.uoong
"'Oman dtplomat. Shr

15

\Tr)' tm'Oh-cd m rhr Mtddlt' Eas1 pcacr pro-

ass and has sought):-o dr-rpm publ.c undrnunc:hng of 11 through a
"''ldt--rangmg tducatlonaJ mtu1on. Amb.u:u.dor A\·tuJ has hd~ a \'3net)' of~- Fomgn Mtntsoy posts. Htt dtsrangUishtd rtton:l of forttgn post:mgs in Brussels. Pans, M o :--.~i\1 and Boston rulrmnatrd tn

ha I 988 appomtrnml as lsnd's Ambassador to Porrugal.

through

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,

with

learned about hockey from Mike Gengo
his new friends. the more with hockey
he wanted to pia} . But
star Craig
there were more obstacles
Simpson.
Chemotherapy contln· Mike wears
ued aft&lt;r he left the hosp• · Craig's
Stanley Cup
tal and because the
treaunents made h1m more ring.
susceptible to mfections.
playing hockey wesn "t in the cards. M•ke sat
on the bench. watching the other kids play.
dreaming of a da} when h1s chance ""'ould
come.
Final!)". he was through wtth hts chemotherapy. and he tmmediatdy JOined a recreatiooal league. ""Once he staned playing he
becamequiteanaccomplishedhot'keyplaytt."

said Gengo. " But 11 wasn ' t enough for him."
Mik&lt; ... Gengo
Mike decided he "anted to play 1.\the
says. "becau se
competitive leagues. " I told him tt was a 1&amp;g
while all .this was
shot. the kids in these competitive leagJts
going on, we had
had been playing sine&lt; they were four and
to explain what
Mike didn 't stan until he "as nearly eight.""
was happentng to
said Gengo. ··sut Mike wasn ·,diSsuaded: he
Mike. You ne'er
was focused on making a tra\elteam ...
think about how
Last spri ng. tryouts for the compet1ti'e
you would tell a
league "'ere held. Mike Gengo IS now a
you ng child he has
center
on the Buffalo Saints' nine- and 10cancer and what
that will entail.
year--old team.
At ni'ne~and~a~half. M1ke Gengo now has
You really find
the same aspirations that other nine ~year~
yourself wi hing
olds do. with the possible exception of his
you had a road map. something to guide you
through it. This colonng book was it."
friendships with a couple of Stanle y Cup
As they worked through th&lt; book -.ith
winners. "Mike doesn't see h1mself as a vic~
urn ... said Gengo. ··He~ is a kid who came
Mike. the book broached information on the
disease in a way that Mike could understand.
rhrough a perilous " 'aik through helr.Dbt not
only did he come out o f it unscarred. he is. if
"The book wasn't just a 10y. it was a
genuinely well-thought-out tool for explain~ pything. m&lt;ntall) stronger."
ing the disease ... Gengo says.
(
Gengo noted that it a 1Ually wasn't until
the crisis with Mike had abated that they
Soon after diagnosis. Mike was hospitalized for chemotherapy treatments and once
realized how much the Leukemia Sociely
again. the Leulemi:J Society provided the
had done for them. o". borh Mike and his
family help the Society raiso fuods .
farm!) " '"h suppon . The Society pro\'ides
families of leukemia patients with up to S750a
Gengo is currently ' ' ice president of the
year for expenses nOI CO\'ered by insurance or
Y chapter of the Leukemia Society.
prescription plan!&gt;. or for incidentals that fami~
'"Gellj.ng involved with the Sociery was a
lies cannot ha\e anticipated. such as hospital
way to..givc something baclto an organizaparking and special food for patients.
tion that we feel gave us so much:· he said.
One of the th ings that made an indelible
According to Gengo. 25 years ago. leukemia
impact on Mile wa!ot the Leukemia Society's
would ha\·e been a death se ntence for his
effons in getting members of the Buffalo
son. ··Now. 75% of childhood patients of
Sabres to come and spe nd time with the
leukemia come through unscarred because of
children in the hospit al. At only three , Mike
the research this organization funds," he s::aid.
dido"t l no" much about hocL..e}. but accord"The results of that research are clear every
ing to Gengo. being around the Sabres
time Mike puts on his skates:· he added.
changed rhat \'CI) quick!) .
""This is the thing no one realizes when
"Da\t.~ Andreychul would si t in the hos·
the) see the list ofSEFA orga nizations:· he
pi tal"" ith Mike and \\oatc h the games on TV.
said. "It's a fearful thing to thmk about ever
and" hile they "ere v.atching he'd~ teach~
being vulnerable to any of these diseases.
mg. Mil..e all about the game." Gengo said.
And the Leukemia Society is no different
" Mike v.ould tum to Dave and say. ' What's
from any of the other SEFA organizations
icing?' and Da\'e would tell him. At the time.
that support research on disease. You want
Mike didn ' t realize that th is was a profes·
to suppon these organiz.ations. you want
sional hockey player: he was just a friend he
them to make progress because. there could
was watching the game " 'it h ...
com&lt; a day. and you hope that day never
Friendships with Pat LaFontai ne and Craig
comes. when one of these diseases may
Simpson ::.(so developed. and the more Mike
knock on your door."
L

�- ----.-·
Facul &amp;StaHBi lboar

7

....

F...._.publl.....
nlntll_ poetry ~lectlon

Irving Feklman, a
MacAnhur Fellow and
Distinguished Professor of English at UB. ha published hos
ninth collection of poeuy. "The
Life and Let·
ten:- (Unl \'ersily
of Chicago
Press. October
19941.
A member of
the UB facult y
sonce 1964. he
teache creati vc.
writtng and modern Brili hand
Ameriean poelr) . drama and
fiction . He is an alumnul\ of tht
City College of New Yori:. and
holds a masters deg""' from
Columbia Universily.
In 1992. Feldman rettived the
MacArthur ""genius gran~· · whoch
awards creativity. He is also the
recipient of CitJigenheim and
Ingram Merrill fellow•hops. the
National lnstitute of Ans and
Leuers Award. a grant from the
National Endowment for the Art ~
and the Fellowship of the Amen can Academy of Poets.

0

nme m.nacement luru
..,..UOct.~

Stepbm R. Covey, author
of what has been called the
best personal development book
of the 1980s. will discuss his
principles of time management
OcL 20 in the International Agri·
Center. 5600 McKinley Pkwy .•
Hamburg: More than 1.000 persons already have registered for
the seminar. to be held from 8:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The ""Lessons in
Leader.;hip"' program is sponsored by the Center for Management Development in the UB
School of Management.
Covey will present a new way
of thinking about time manage-

0

ment that concentrates more on

effect.iveness and relationships.
rather than just erficienc~ and
schedules. These principles""'
outlined in "First Th ings First.''
Covey's most recent bool.
He also is the author of ··The 7
Habits of High!) Effecti'e

People." which has sold more
than 4 million copies rtnd has
been on Th~ N.-..• York Tim&lt;S
best-seller list for three years.
Covey. who recei"ed an
M.B.A. from Harvard University
and a doctornt&lt; from Brigham
Young Um\'trsity, received the
1991 McFeely Award from the
International Mana~emenl Council for significant contnbuuon to
management education.
Cost of the program is S249
For mort" infonnation. contact
Marianne Sullivan at the UB
Center for Management Development at 645-3200. or Lessons in
Leadership at 800-873-3451

Family medicine
conference under way

0

""Family Medicone in the
'90s... a conference covertog ossues for primary-&lt;:""' physicians. is being held Oct 13-15 in
the Sheraton Hotel. Cheek.to..., aga. to btghlightthe 25th annoversary of UB"s Depanment of
Family Medocine
Presenters and moderator\
include alumm oft~ Family
Medicine Res1dency Program and
fanner facult) . tncludong the four
physicians who ha"e ser"ed as
chair. Raben Seller. head .,(
family medicine at Millard
Fillmore Hospitals. chaor from
1976-82; Herben Joyce. private
practitioner. interim chair from _
1982-83; David Holder. head of
family medicine at Long Island
College Hospital on Brooklyn.
chair from 1983-93. and Thomas
Rosenthal. chair sonce 199 3.

Scholar to lecture on
Mrebellloua women"

0

Vigdis Ystad, a professor
at 1M Umversity of Oslo
and chair of the Center for Advanced Study of the orwegoan

Ac-ademy of Sc1ence and Letters.
will lecture on "" Ibsen· s Rebel lious Wo men ... at I p m Monda).
Oct. 17. in the Balcony Lounge of
the Center for the Ans on the
North Campus.
The lecture. •pon&gt;Ored b) the
Depanmenl of Enghsh. the Depanment of Theatre and Dance.

Leners
Help Soviet emigres with their Eng lish
TO 1ME EDITOR:
1would once aga•n hke to mvne members of the
UB community to help new emogres from the
former Sovoel Unoon practoce lheor Eng hsh
People of a ll ages are comong to Buffalo allhe
rate of about 100 per year Many have studied
English belore and are studyong it now. but they all have dtffocully
understandong the spoken language and need pracuce on conver·
sational Enghsh on order to gel JObs and partocopate on Amero can
ltfe
If you ltke people. have your own transponauon and can spare
about an hour each week. the Jewosh Famoly Servoce of Greater
Buffalo can match you up with an •nd•v•dual or fam• ly and w111 g1ve
you an onentat•on on how to beg•n
Many Buffalonoans have found lh•s type of volunteer work very
fulfilling and have enJoyed the lroendsh ops they have formed wllh
these famohes . If you are onterested. call Juhe Lewotsky at 8831914

~~ ~ of Russsan

Otr8Ct01 RuSSJan Program

and the Program in Women·
Studies on the Depanmconl of
American Srudies. ts free of
charge and open to the public
Ibsen was the 19th-cent ury cn:alor of modem realistic drama.
which among other thongs. anoculated the " ev. Woman;· a soc1al
constnK'liOO that challr:nged
c/ichis. &gt;lereotype• and myths
abou1 a sof1er. v.eaker. more
delicate s.r:.. .

Institute honors
Hert»ert Hauptman

0

There' a new name for the

Medocal Foundation of
Buffalo--11 is no"' known as the
Hauptman-Woodward Medocal
Research Institute. Inc .
Reason for the na~ change?
To better identify it role in the
medtcal commu·
nit y and to recognou: the
contributJons of
Nobf;l Laureate
Sctenu ~t

Herbert
H a upt man and
Helen
Woodv. ard Rl\ as. anstilute

founder. Hauptman. research
proftssor of btophys1cal sc•ences
at UB. recei'ed the 1985 Nobel
Pnze in Che.mtStf) .
"Through Haupttnan •s ach1e' ements. the insutute has developed
an iotcmal,jonaJ icientirw: reputation.... David Cristan~llo. tnSiitu~
spokesman SOJd. The nonprofit
institute, at 73 H.igh St., conducts
bt
dJcal research

1..--11 diplomat
to~~20

0

Colet te Avila!, consul general of Israel on Nev.
York City and lsraers hoghestrankmg woman diplomat. v.1ll
\'I it UB Oct 20. An elpen 10
media relauons and culturaJ affaJrs,
&gt;he v. til doscuss "'The ltddle East
Is 11 a Real Peace'T' at1 p m 10 the
SlUdcm Union lbeater
Other C'\ ents on her schedule
1nclude a meeting "ith Jev.1 'ih
emplo) ee!l.. 'tsnmg scholars and
students at II a.m. m the Jeanetl('
Manon Room. 567 Capen Hall.
folio" ed b) a reception for mvtled guests :11 II :45 a m. A v1tal
w1ll speak at a noon luncheon
hosted b) President Gremer in the
Uni ,·e:Ntt) Archives. Capen Hall
Avttal. appointed to lead the
Fon:agn Ministry's effons to
upgrade women · s status in dtplomatic service in 1986. was named
Israel· s ambassador to Po nugaJ in
1988. She has held le) foreignmonosuy posts. including deput)
chrector-general in charge of information and media communication

Gli'ntner, Volker to
receive Jaeckle Award
Arnold B. Gardner and
Sen. Da le M. Volker, RDepew. will receive the 1994
Edwin F. Jaedde Award at a
luncheon Oct. 22 in the Atrium of
the Center for the An~ .
Brea!Jng from trachtion tJu, year.
the School of Law and the Law

0

Databases Galore
1lle . . 1
., ... _
II . . . loltycU
FirstSBerell. lhtt Cadilec of~ .-vtCel The Online
Computer l.Jbfary Center (OOl.C) hu ltl8de
ex~

any user froendly prodUCt ........,.. 10 the~ • no

now through Dec 31 .
•
Log on to VOU! E-ma ~and olf vou got The ..-ray
of databues 1a magrtlfiCIInl OOlC prod\Jcea three o1 •ts
own OUistanding dalabases WorldCa!, till
I I I ( I H&lt; &gt;N I&lt;
ftegship database. con27 millton
records lor books. fOlK·
nal
. a-v matenal.
charge from

-over

HiGH ~ \\~)S

maps, manu&amp;CrtplS
musical SCO&lt;es, and
computer programs ArtlcleFitst os an index to artocles in
11.000 magiiZlr18S and ]0Urll8ls
penodtcaJs
are searchable by table ol conten "' OOLC's
Coo entsFifSt
OCLC also makes available products from OCher datAbase producers. U8 &amp;IUdents, faculty and sWf can - c h
more lhan 35 of lhese lncludtng; An lndeJ/, Atts &amp; Humani·
ties Ssarch, Biography Index, 8/0SIS, Book Revttew ();gtt6l.
Consumef Index, Disclosure Corpaate Snapshots. EnQi·
neerln(J lndeJ/, GPO(~t docu~Twtt.s). MEDUNE..
Mlcrocoinputer Abstracts, and Wilson E3uslneu Abstnlcts.
Rl'$lSsarch IS easy to use. Aulhor. bile and aJbjec;t
searchong os avaiable If vou get too many "hits" "' response to your search nqulry vou just type ....,. and vou
are prompted to restrict your search results in most of the
dalabasas by publicabon year. type of publicatoon, and
language. Also K the University libraries do not own the
joomal artictes that have caught your eye. RtstSearell gilles
you the option to order them lor a fee.
To beQin ~log on ro )QII' ~ E-mal acCOIMll and type . . . . . IJt your system prorrfJ(. Se.tect 1J..
txary and LibraJy Resources· and then "Cavlecli'lg 10
RrstSearch. • You wil be asked for an IIUihorinltJon ~
and a pessworri If you IIIMint ffiOtlivfld a flier*" ~
I7IBl tWh ttn ~on it. c:cw-=rDon HemWI
&lt;fMLII DIJI . .'*&gt;. (f.JS . . . . . _ t.cu«y
on/)',) Fa"""* lrlfanNiion lilt~---­

n- -

and_,

laolr!; l~. ~11.
~-

~~-I.Ma~-.~

Alumru Assooallon will pn:sen!IWO
Jaeclde Awards. the school's highest
honor l'resldent Gmner will make
the presentali&lt;m
The award. named for UB Ia"'
alumnus Edwm F JaeckJe, IS
g1'en annually to an mdJ\1dual
.... ho has dJsungu1shed h1msdfor
herself and has ma&amp; stgniftcant
contribuuon!r. 10 the la\4 school
and Lhe legal profession.
A public-!.panted pn' ate an orne). Gardner has ser'ed on t~
Sl.JNY .govemmg board s•nce
I980 He ts a s.entor panner tn the
Buffalo la\Oo finn of Ka)'nok) &amp;
CooL v. here he has p(.lcuced sina:
1953. He recel\ed a lav. degree
from Harvard Lav. School in 1953
and a bachelor"s deg~. summa
cum laud~. from UB•n 1950.
Volker. a member a( the UB
Ia w school Class of 1966, and a
New Yor\. State senator. t an
expen on criminal-justice iSJ&amp;.)e!i.
energy mailers and mental hygiene. having served for 12 years
as chainnan of the Senate Subcommittee on Alcoholism.
The law convocation. v.•hich
~· ill begin at 9 a.m. in the Center
for the Arts. woll address the

state's nev.• Family Protection and
Domesuc Violence Intervention
Act of 1994. Sen. Stephen M.
Saland. principal author of the
legislation, will be among panel ~
ists. Vincent E. Doyle. a supreme
coon justice in the Eighth Judi cial District. will moderate.
Other panelists are M. Dolores

Denman. presoding JUSUce. Appellate DiVIsion of Stat&lt; Supreme
Coun. R&gt;unh Department; Ene
County District Attorney Kevin
M. Dillon: Charles P Ewing. UB
lav. professor. Barbara Ireland.
edttonal page edllor, "1"M Buffalo
N~s: Hugh B. Scot~ Buffalo
ett) coun JUdge. and Da•id G.
Sttller. attome). Stiller &amp; Poen
The con' ocatton program as
p,...nted b) the Ia~ school and•
the Lav. Alumnt ASSOCiation tn
conJunctton v. oth ManAt M1dland
Bank; Harold C Brown &amp; Co
[0\estment Servo=. Snyder
Corp./Hyan Regen&lt;) Buffalo, and
Commonv.·ealth LandTitle Insurance Co. For mon: information.
callllene Fleischmann. 645-2107.

University Ubrarimake appolntmenta

0

David M . Boou has been
named senior staff assistant

on the Directo&lt;"s Offiee. and

Christine Ritea appointed library conservation technician~
Center for Book Preservation. the
Unh·ersity Libranes have an nounced .
Booze. mos1 recently a legislative assistant to NeY.. York State
Assembl) Deput} Speaker Arthur
0 . Eve. holds a bachelor's degree
in applied public affairs studies.
Ritecz holds a bachelor's degree in art from New Mex.ico
Highlands University and mos1
recentl) worl.:ed for Steck-Vaughn
Pubhshmg as a project manage&lt;.

�8

IHIKilRII~
Octoat.

Flo

1a. 1..,.

Yotw~ No.

e

-,

folks, face painting, football, &amp; fun! Oh, and WE WON!

HJ 1 4
'A1fCncrous dose of sun
gave the UB fam1ly extra reason
to celebrate Homecoming/
Parents Weekend, Oct 7-9 The
UBI Colgate game (we won!)
brought Joy to both athletes and

the enthusiaStiC crowd of
revelers R1ght Debra Palka
applies face pa1nt; far nght, UB
cheerleaders perform, below far
left, Com1c Steven Wnght
entertains 1n Alumn1 Arena,
below left, eng1neenng students

Photos by Fronk C.sorlo

~

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Musical

Mlulon
J. Terry Gates links
musical expression
to rich cultural
values.
,.

........

2

Weekend
Parade, football
highlight
Homecoming
Weekend event~

Architecture profs
prize-winning essay.

5
Octobe r 6 . 1994 Volume 26, No. 5

WORLD

LANGUAGES
INSTITUTE
The Accent is on Public Service
Cle men ~

UN KIRK RADIATORS, a manufacturer of
home heating boilers located about SO miles
south of Buffalo, began promoting their
products in the developing markets of Asia
shortly after the former Soviet Union collapsed. As the pace of sales picked up, management
realized there were new hurdles to cross, including the
fact that none of Dunkirk's 140 employees could speak.
let alone write, Russian.
Enter UB's World Language. Institute (WLI ). Contacted for help by
Dunkirk Radiators. WLI Dire&lt;:tor Mark Ash will delivered Maxim Bujakov.
a graduate student in civil engineering who hails from suburban Moscow.
He spent some 200 hours translating installation instructions and techni cal manual s for boilers the compani' makes. into Russian.
" We had some help before from
companies we work with in Russia
with translating shon sales pieces
and the like," said Carl Mayer, di·

rector ofengineering...but had never
attempted anything like translating
a 30-page installation manuai." This
year, with translated manuals in
hand.Mayerexpectstosellbetween
600 and 700 boiler5 in Russia.

For Bujakov. it was a heartwarming opportunity to contribute
to development in his homeland.
"Where I lived," he explained.
"very few homes had individual
heating boilers. Most were tleated
centrally with larger boiler5 that
failed often."
Translation and interpreting services are just pan of the public
service work WLI does for area
concerns. explai ned Ash~ill . "We

have offered non-credit courses like
Spanish for Medical Personnel. to
help Children ·s Hospital staff deal
with non-English-speaking pa·
tients, and Spanish for Business
foremployeesofPraxair,'' Ashwill
sajd, "and we even supplied an
interpreter for (Buffalo Biso ns
owner) Roben Rich when he had a
Russian visitor in town.'' Other area
employers who have taken advantage of Institute programs include
Computer Task Group. Conax Buffalo, Ecostar lnlemational, UMAK.
the Marriott Hotel and SUNY Research Foundation.
The Institute , which Ashwill
characterizes as the "service unit"
of the Depanment of Modem Languages and Literatures. specializes
in less commonly taught languages.
Now located on the second noor of

Hall. the ln~utute offen.
Arabic. Danish. Modem Greek. Hebre\1.. Indonesian. Ukr~un1an. Japanese. VJetname~ . Tha1. Korean
and Swahih .
The staff mclude&gt; 16 facult)
members. many of whom are pan
time; they teach classes as well as
searching out and developing selfinstructiOn materials. Approxi mately 300 student s per semester
are enrolled in WLI courses. accordmg to Ash will. Although none
of the programs have degree status. he pointed out that Japanese
will soon be available as a minor.

aking a language th rough WU
is not for Lhe faint of heart.
"Japane se classes. for instance.
meet five times a week,'' explained
Ashwill. "with a team teaching
approach that has students work·
ing intensively with the oral and
wrinen aspects of the language."
The rigor requires a "highl y motivated " student. he added, and instructors know how to ferret out
"native speakers looki ng for an easy

T

A ."

Students are drawn to the Insti tute for a variet y of reasons . " With
Korean. many of the students are
Korean but were born in the United
States and never learned the ir na ti ve language," noted Ashwill. Students o f Arabic may be interested
in reading the Koran or planning
on careers involving the Middle
East. and Japanese. the Institute's
most popular program. is taken for
both practical and academic rea-

sons. Ashwill explain .
Although the focus is

ming

~towardclassroomstudy, some

languages are still made available
on a supervised self-study basis.
"We have five students taking a
supervised self-study course in In·
donesian. some of whom are graduate students in anthropology who
will be usi ng the language in the
field." said Ashwill. "The author
of their textbook. from Cornell.
comes here to admini ster their examination when the course is completed."
The success of WLI in attracting students from a variety of d isci plines to its courses has also
fueled the growth of the Asian Stud·
ies program in the History Depanmenl. As ian Studies Director
Thomas Burkman said that "Large

enrollments of Kazue
engineering Masuyama
an d manage - teaches
ment students. class In
for instance. in Ja~ln
Wlllanguages Clemens Hall.
evidences the
interest the~ is among students for
courses in Asian Studjes ... The proposed minor in Asian Studies will
include a significantlanguage component, according to Burlanan.
Most incom ing freshmen receive earl y exposure to the Insti tute. though they may not realiu it.
An early s uppo rter of th e
university ' s new requirement of
intermediate proficiency in a foreign language by undergraduates.
WLI plays a large role in adminis·
tering the Foreign Language Placement Testing, Ashwill said.

�2
H 0 '•

0 R S

COMPUTER SCIENCE
~~

..._.c. .......pro-

"'alsU8
sorandCCfl'4lUW
science
chaif of 1118 Speof

ciallntere&amp;t Group on Mlfi·
ciallntelllgance of 1118
As80cialion lor Computing
Machinery, haS bewl elect·
ed a fellow of 1118 Amllrican
Association for Mificiallntelligence, a nonprofit, ldenllfic sociiiiY - e d to
1118 adYancernent of artifi. clallnlelHganca.
Amen'berd I.B's~
si'IC8 1977, he S8Mid as chair
dthe~rJCarp.Cer

Sclenoe trcm 1984-90 IW1d as
acti1g chair lrm1197S-7!. He
has 8lAioed nue 11an 100
Plblcalians and foLf books.
lncU:ing 1he Encyctlpecia

d Millcialin181igonce."
named Best New Bock in
Tecl'nologylrd Englr-ng
in 1967 by the Associalion d.
American F'Ubish9rS PlolesslonaiiWld Sd1olal1y PltJiist1ng
Oiv.

CHEMISTRY
IIICBVDIIEIIAL:
S~llnock-eln,

A. Conger Goodyear pro- .
lessor of chemistry at UB,
has been awarded 1118
Faraday
~by
the Electro-

chemistry

Groupol1118
Royal Society of
CherniWv
is given ev·

ery two years to a distinguishad electrochemist who
is working outside the United Kingdom. Bruckenstein
accepted the award Sept
12, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
A UB farul!y men'ber since
1968, he was chair d cherrior
tryfn:m 1974-83.AlA!uorco8Llhor cJ 200 research
lll1icles, he receil/ed the Society tor Elednxra• istrys
Char1es N. Reiley A-.1 n
1991 and ·~Certen­
nial Medal in 1900 fn:m the J .
~Cerdemial Con-

gress on Polarography.

NURSING
NAilED FEl.LOW:
.ludlth s. Ronald, asso-

ciate professor of nursing
and coordinator of nursing
Informatics in the School of
Nursing, has

J.Tel1')'

A
musical
•
•

~.

new Music
o.p.rtment

cllslr, Is

u.o-ln
Baird Hsll.

IlliSSlOll
a.tes links mu~l
expression to .tch
cultul'lll values

•YSTEYECOX
Reporter Staff

I

N MANY WAYS, J. Terry
Gates' proressionaf lire has
mirrored that of Professor

Harold Hi II, who, or course.
rode into towns like River City on
the Wells Fargo Wagon urging
young people to drop their pool
cues and pick up band instruments.
A professor in the Music Dcpanment since 1986, ror 36 years
Gates has made it his musical mis sion to 1each high school and college students to val ue music, as
the only one orrercd in the SUNY
well as to seek out and train music
system. will be able to accommoteachers of tomorrow.
date more srudents and offer more
Nowchairofthe Music Depanstudent teaching placements. said
ment at UB, Gates se(:S great things
Gates. CurTCntly. aboo1 hair the
ahead as several long-vacant posiI 30 undergrads in the music detions have been filled, departmenpanmcnt are pursuing music edutal enrollment is on the rise and the
new Center for lhe Arts greatly
expands the types ofperfortnances
the depanment can offer.
"We slwuld value
..Wehavetwonew facult) members." Gates said, -i ncluding a DIour live musical
rector of Bands. which we have
been without si nce I 988." This
will enable the depanment to offer
a widcrvarietyofpcrfonnance venJ . TERRY GATES
ues , such as jazz and wind ensembles. he added. Also, the Center
cation. he said.
ror the Ans will allow the departGates' inOucnce m muSIC edument to offer full orchestra and
cation extends well beyond Bami
large chorus perfonnances, someHalt. He IS very active 10 the Mu s1c
thing there simply wasn't room to
Educators Nati onal Conference. a
do in Slcc Hall. said Gates.
1be new center will enable UB to
national organization of music
strengthen its relationship with the
teachers. and leads a cuniculum
Buffalo Phithannonic Orchestra.
reassessment study l..nown as Operation Music: New York State
Gates explained. "Many of our pantime raculty arc members or BPO, (OMNYS), sponsored by music
and BPO will be able to hold several
teachers statewide. through the
conccns here in the Center."
New York State Music Association.
OMNYS is a statewide curricuThe music education program.

atnwsphere."

tum assessment process that will
inventory the resources of music
depanments statewide, then promulgate recommendations for improving the quality and scope or
music education in public schools.
Gates says the goal or OMNYS
is ..to raise awareness of music in
public schools. New York has l'1lOrC
world class mus1c resources than
anyotherstateand we feet strong!)
that students should rccetve intelligent exposure to music:·
Born in suburban Chicago,
Gates has an affectiOn for music
that is deep-seated. " I remember
being three or four years old," recalls Gates. -enjoymg how music
sounded and the effect it had on
me." By high school. he alncady
\\as planning a career it:~ music .
!though ht s performance in
discus throwing shattered local records and earned him a college scholarshiporrer, Gates chose
the performing arts. attending
Nonhero Illinois Universit) in
DeKalb. There , he earned a
bachelor's de~ in instrumental
music educatfon and a master's

A

degree in compos1tion and musiC
education supervision . He subsequently obtained his doct ora te m
education from the Universny of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Prior to coming to UB. Gates
taught at Muskigum College and
Ohio State Universit y 10 Oh10 as
well as lhc Universit) of Alabama
1n TuscaJoosa. M~h
of h1s cxpenence was as an in
mental mu~1c
conductor. with o
tras or -...md
ensembles. Gates also taught music in elementary and secondal')
schools in rtlinois.
Linking musical exprei. ton 10
rich cultural values. Gates cautiOn\
··we should value our live musical
atmosphere."
-lr it hardens up. people stop
hearing each other. the culture sufrcrs." Besides. he adds. "the great
thing about music is if you don' t
like what you hear, you can simpl)
tum the dial."
,
Gates' first book. Musir Etiuca ·
rion in th~ Unitt!d Starts: Conttm porary JssutS:"Was published b)'
University of Alabama Press 1n
1988. He has another book in the
works on music teachinf:.

been named

a fellow in
the Ameri-

canAcademy of

Nursing.
Recognizing
outstanding
contributions
to the field , fellow status in
the academy is one of the
highest honors that can be
conferred upon a nurse.
Ronald is a pioneer in the
field of nursing informatics,
which applies computer and
information science to infor-

mation management in
nursing. Her work led to a
monograph, "Guidelines for
Basic Computer Education
in Nursing," that is the primary resource on the topic
for schools of nursing.

The human touch is still important in libraries, DeVmney says
II}' USA WILEY

News Bureau Staff

While the electronic revolution has meant wonders 10 rererence librarians, it has been bewildering 10 many undergraduate
students. lt is now more important than ever for librarians to maintain
personal contact with their patrons. says Gemma DeVinney. an
academic reference librarian in Lockwood Library.
Bookstores. which truly encourage patrons to bro-...•se and linger.
are maintaining the appeal once reserved to the reference stacks.
DeVinney writes in the Journal of Acadtmir Libraria11ship. ''We
should try to maintain that atmosphere as well. and not just focus on
computers." she says. Librarians must provide the same personal
assistance patrons receive from their fa vorite bookstores.
DeVinney says that it has never bee n easier for her. in hcr 20 years
as a librarian, to hone into research on a specific topic, but students
have ne ver been more overwhelmed and confused. with many more
choices fori nfonna tion retrieval avai lable si nce card catalogue days.
Libraries are rapidl y moving toward the concept of ··virtual

libraries.·· replacinc electronic products for human contact The idea
of substituting machipes for librarians alanns her. It "doesn't really
help the average student:' DeVinney says. "Computers have lheir
place. but the human touch is stilt imponant."
She says writer Raben Gerloffs description of reference librarians in a ··blind ru h toward a futuristic Emerald City:· in a recent
issue of the Ut11t Rt!adu. struck a chord with her.
Librarians mus1 recognize that what works for professional scholars may not be the best for student neophytes. Student anxieties
related to infonnation retrieval stem from their lack of conceptual
groundi ng in the information infrastruclurc:. DeVinney notes. adding
that most systems f'C'quire learning different search commands.
Librarians should be available w approach and worL: with students on OPAC and CD ROM terminals, she says.
And although electronic mail is effective for answering simple
questi ons. the best method for infonnation dissemination is still
face·to-facecontact. where librarians can read .. non-verbal clues."
she adds.

�. ---.-·
Scope of committee on student life is
subject of lively debate at FSEC session
N EFFORT BY the Faculty
Senate Exccuti ve Committee.
at their Sept. 28 meeting, to
revive a dormant committee
on student lifesparltcd a lively
debate over whether student life, beyond
academics, should concern faculty at all.
Despite an hour-long discussion witll student and administrative leaders in student
life, including Vice President for Student
Affairs Robert Palmer, Dean of Students
Dennis Black and Brion Scudder. student
representative to the FSEC, tlle FSEC was

unable to agree on a f90iution giving fonnal
operating instructions to the new commiltee.
The djvision centers on the scope of
iss ues a Faculty Senate Student Life Committee sltQuldconsider. Several faculty members. including Mathematics Professor
Samuel Schack, felt tllat the resolution was
too broadly drawn and that the committee's
focus sltQuld be limited to a student's acadCIIII:: life.
..(We) should focus in on what can in~
crease bonds with students academically,
such as departmental clubs and speakers,"
argued Soback. ··we have no business worrying about bus shelters. atllletic facilities or
entcnaining students on the weekends.''
Others, inch~ing Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Professor Joseph Mook.
believe the new commiuee should not be so
tightl y constrained. Mook. who was tapped
by FSEC Chair Peter Nickerson to chair the
..resurrected" Commiuoe on Student Life,

feels tllat "at least some aspects of nonaa.demic student life can have a great influence on academic performance.·•
Mook, who said he was "a little disappointed" in the discussion tllat led to tabling
his committee's proposed instructions. added
"My experience has been that the better job
I did of teaching undergraduate classes, the
better the crop of graduate students we had a
couple years down the road."
Scudder called tl1e issues pnescnted a

"(We) shouldfocus in on
what can increase bonds
with students academically,
such as departmental clubs
and speakers. "
aAMUn SCHACk

'"brainstormed list" and conceded thatJ&gt;Crhapssomcofthem would be better dealt witll
byothercommiuees. Howevcr. hcexplaJned.
comminees under the Division of Student
Affairs are merely advisory. Scudder urged
continued FSEC involvement with item such
as cli ni cal programs. internships and student
lendership. He also offened to coordinate
student representation on committees and
suggested making better use of student publications to improve communications between students and faculty .

Palmer said he was "delighted" tllat tl1c
faculty governing body was again expressing an interest in student life. and offered any
assistance they would be interested in.
Black described the undergraduate studen! body as composed of tllree distinct and
almost equal pans: students li\•ing on campus. off-campus students who live in the
University Heights neighborhood. and students who commute from homes in Western
New York. Each oflhesc groups has signHi·
cantly diffenent needs. he explained.
1lle (j,·e proposedcommiu~ instruclions
presented to the FSEC were:
I) Explore is ues related to student neten tion and recommend appropriate policy to
increase retention of students. 2) Revie"'
and recommend changes. if any. in University Rules and Regulations promulgated by
the University Council. 3 ) Review curren1
programs for regularizing contact outside of
classes for students with faculty and administration 4} Examine and evaluate effecti\ enes s of current program s fo r student
de\'elopment. 5) Explore ISSues of currt:nt
anterest to students (lncludmg): smoking
policy enforcement, bus shelter for Lee Loop.
recreational faciliues on South Campus, differential tuiuon proposal by SUNY Central.
student internships. co mmuter co ncerns and
organized weekend entenai nment for students.
return to tlle
The tabled proposal
" v1nual Senate." acomputenzed E-mail net work through which FSEC members communicate between meetings. where it will be
redrafted for funher consideration when
FSEC meets again. Oct. 12.

'"II

HUGHES GRANT
continued from page 1

. interest in the life sciences:·
Greiner added . .. It also will enhance the
university's existing strengths in biology
and biomedical sciences, and make tl1osc
science programs more accessible for undergraduates who might not otherwise pursue
careers in these disciplines ...
Specific initiatives to be funded by the
grant include:
• A program to attract and retain students in
the sciences . including those from
underrepresented minority groups. throu gh
faculty mentori ng. laboratory experie nces.
research colloquia and other activities.
• Upgraded teaching laboratories in biochemistry. genetics. organic chemistry and
molecular genetics for nonscience majors
emphas"z.i ng interdisciplinary instruction and
scientifi c exploration .
• Summer research training for teachers in
high schools in Buffalo and Western New
York. including pro,•isions of kits of ex peri·
mcnts. supplies and eq uipment for the schools
to enhance classroom science teaching. A
total of 55 teachcn~ are eKpeetcd to panicipate through the four years of the grant.
• strengthened interactions between the UB
depanments ofbiological sciences and chemistry. whichTufariellosaid will be imponant
as they devel op courses "t o meet the evolving needs of undergraduates preparing for
careers in bi omcdical fields."
Edward Brody. professor and chair of
biological sci ences at UB and principal investigator on the grant. said some of UB ' s
existing biol ogical sciences equipment dates
from the late 1960s. He added that besides
being obsolete. some of it doesn' 1 work.
which frustrates and dampen s the enthusiasm of students working and st udying in
laboratori es.
"If we were depending solel y on state
funds, it would he very difficult to make
these improvements." Brody noted .
A major thrust of the grant is to attract
more undergraduate students to the life sci-

cnces and . once the) begin their sc~nce
studies. to retain a higher percentage of them
Gerald B Koudelka , UB associate pro·
fessor of biological science and a member
of the Hughes project co mmittee. said that
like other universities. UB has had difficulty
retaining students majoring in biolog)
'111is grant gi"es us the resources that
w·u allow us to support and retain good
students," Koudelka noted.
"We want to make students understand at

"Our hope is that if kids
are actually doing
science, not just reading
about it, they'll be as
excited about it as we are
and they'll want to do
more.
EDWARD BRODY

a vcryearlyage"' hat a career in biology is all
about and what science i · all about." said
Brod y.
··our hope is thatlfkidsarcaL·tuall) doing
science. not just reading about it. thC) 'II OC
as excited about it as we arc and they'll want
to do more."
Undergraduates recruited into the ne"A
Hughes scholarship program will be exposed
to the research process in numerous "'ays.
They will be assig ned faculty mentors and .
to help them unde,.,stand the importance of an
open exchange of scie ntifi c ideas. they will
panicipate in small colloquia with fa ulty
and ot her universit y researc hers.
These undergraduate scholan; will conduct independent research projects begin-

ning in the junior year and continuing through
the summer mto their ~ni oryear . They "'ill
be paid for the1r summer work and get course
credit during the academic year.

E

nhancing sc1ence educauon fo r
non majors through the development of
an upper-level course for nonmajors in advanced human molecular genetics also is an
objective o f the grant. The course Yrill include lectures on the ethical and political
imphcauons of geneti c engmeering. as " 'ell
a~ labs that emphasi7c firsthand e~pcrience
o f advanced tcchmques. such a~ DNA tech·
nology.
··A lot of people "'ho arc not scientists.
but "'ho go into fields such as business or
Ia" . arc going to find themsehes having to
mtcract"' ith docto~ and scier{ists and male
decis•ons aOOut SCientific ISSues." said Brod) .
··With this new course. UB "ill be giving
students not majonng in sc1ence a hands-on
opponunit) to use reallaboralory techniques
and to put their e~perien ce iiUO their own
context
According to Brod). what set UB apart
from other institutions rccci\·ing ughes
grant~ arc the many strong connec1ions the
univen~it} already has with the communit} .
Existing programs that will be instrumental
in helping achieve the goals of the gran1
include the 24-year-old Western ew York
Science Teachers Forum. which brings together leading scienti ts and local science
teachers. as well as efforts targered at
underrepresented students by the UB Office
of Public Service and Urban Affairs. such as
the Science and Technolog.} Enrichment
Program. and a National Science Foundation·fundcd science summer camp.
The UB grant was one of 62 totaling $86
million that was 3"-•arded to research and
doctorJte-granting universities through the
HO"A'ard Hu ghes Medical Institute' s Undergraduate Biologica l Sciences Education Pro·
gram.

3

Greiner speaks
with FSEC on
advisor issue
lly STIVE COX
Repotlef Staff

F

OLLOWlNG RECENT assenions
of racism in the appointment of a
new academic advisor. President
WilliamGneiner expresscdhisfrusU"Btions to the: Facully Senate Executive
Committee at their Sep1. 28 meeung.
The issue stems from a Sept. 19 nepon in
the nudent newspaper, the Spectrum. tllat
Michael Kustrcba had no&lt; neceivcd appoint ment to the academic advisor post tllat he
had occupied on a temporary basis for nearly
two years.
Two academic ad\·ismg positions were
filled over the summer following an extensive search. The successful candjdates were
an incumbent blad female and a black male,
formerly a counselor with us ·s Educational
Opportunity Center. Kustreba is a white male.
"'When a person of color gets appoonted
to a position: Grt"iner said, "that anyone
'400)d argue that his race IS the: main reason
for the appomtmcnt. "'ell. I JUSt find that
really appalling "

remer had rece1 ved letters and phone
calls from studenl5 d1sappoantcd "uh
the loss o f Kustreba AI least one letter
charged thai thc:re v.·as - an element of (re.verse) racism .. 10 the appo10tmen1 made by
V1ce Pro,·ost for Undergraduate EdUCBlion
Nicolas Goodman. " It's the first lencr I've
received that I simply 'WOuld not respond to:·
Greiner said.
The controversy was further fueled by
another published report in a student pub1ication. Generation. that quoted anonymous search committee members saying
that they had rank-o
red the candidates
and unanimously selec d Kustrebaaslheir
first choice: .
~
A five · member search comminc:e
screened 23 candidates before producing a
list of five: finalists , sa1d Goodman He and
Karen Noonan. associate vice provost for
undergraduate education. inte"·ic:"ed the
five finalists .
"Legally. if the search "as broad enough
to ensurt" minority reprcsentauon 1n the pool
of candida1es considered. then my obligauon "'as to S(lect the tv. o best candidates
recommended b) the ~art'h committee."
explained Goodman. -or return the whole
list to the search commlllee saring 'none of
these candidates are acceptable: please search
funher. Mike: Kustreba "'auld ha\e been a
good appointment. but I had to S(lect whom
I thought was besL"
Goodman ha strong!) denoed an) racial
implications in the Selectio ns he made. but
accepts someofthc blame for miscommuni cations in the search process . " II "as too
informal a proces ... he said. - and we did n01
communicate clearly that there was not to be
a ranking of candidates."
Goodman added that 11 was also unfonunate that Kustreba had held the position for
18 months through separate six-month temporal) appointments. ''Til is creates a son of
incumbency which can st..e"' the search process:· he indicated.
Goodman added that the tran:iition of
employees in several key posts in the undergraduate edu ation depanment during
that timc. including his own new role as
vice pro\'OSt for undergraduate education.
contributed to the delay in the search pro,·ess.
As a result o f the co ntro,er~) . Goodman
indicated the administration "'ill be devel oping a student e\ aluation fonn for academic ad\ isors. similar to the SKATE fonns
for profcsso~. and "'ill seck to integrate
them into the search and appointment process in the future .

G

�- . s..--.-·
$?.~.~~~~~~~~~~.~'::~~
4

Yort:. Board of Trustees have appointed Thomas A . Bartleu as the
lith chief executi ve of the 64cam pus university system.
Bartleu, recently retired chancellor o flhe
Oregon State System of Higher Education ,
will assume his new position effective Dec.
I , 1994. He comes to SUNY with a d istinguished career in education and an in lema~
1iona1 reputation that incl udes experience
wi thin New York, Washington. D.C .. across
the country and overseas.
..We an: trul y fonunatc 10 have a person
of great experience. maturi ty and unbounded
energy to heaO the State Universit y of New
York.'' said Frederic V. Salerno. chairman
of the SUN Y BoardofTrustees. "Dr. Bardeu
is a man who e njoys overcoming the chal·
lenges of naw re and work. whether lhat be
.climbing a mount..ai n for recreation or redefini ng the Oregon State ystem of Higher
Ed ucation. The Trustees of SUNY belie'e
that this trait wi ll be evident to alia he lead~
us into the next st..age of oUr development to
become the foremost system of higher education in the nation."
Will iam R. Grei ner. prestdent of the Um versi ty at Buffalo. noted that 'This is a
superb appoi nt ment for the State Universit)
of New York. Dr. Ban leu is an ex.traordinarily skill ed, experienced administrative offi cer w it h bac kg ro un d at a range of

reputation.
'The SUNY uustces moved forward we ll
and quickly wi th the search. It is a high
qual ity outcome. All of us in SUNY appreciate their good lead'ersh ip," G reiner said. " Dr.
Bartleu is a good person for S UNY at an
interesti ng and challengi ng ti me in our history."

B

artleu·s selection came after a na tion
wide search rhat considered morr than
150 potential candidates. The search commiuee. chaired by Salerno and including
trustees and representatives of all SUNY
constit uencies. began its work in March af·
tcrChancellorD. Brucc JohnslOneannounced
he was stepping down for health reasons.
Since that time. Joseph C. Burke. Provost
and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs.
has served as mterimchancellor. Salerno has
expressed hi~ gratlludc to Burke for guiding
SUNY during Jo hnstone 's illness and si n~
ha s depanurt.
Bart leu will shepherd the largest comprehensivepublicunivcrsirysysteminthccoun try. SUNY educates appm~~:imatel) 400.000
students on lis 64 campuses. Since ib ereation. SUNYhas had II chancellor.;orpre~ldenu, . four of whom have served in an acting
or interim basis.
The 64-year-old chancellor sencd at Or·
egon from 1989 until Jul) of thi!! year. Be·

as president of the American University in

Cairo, Colgate Universi ty. the prestigious
Association of American Universities and
chancellor of the University of Alabama
system. Prior to h&lt;&gt;lding these positions. he
served as Advisor for Political and Securit)'
Affairs wi th the United Stares Pcnnanent
Mi ssion to the United Nations.
Ban lett a native of Salem. Ore .• received
his undergraduate educatjon at Williamcttc
University and at Stanford Umversity. where
in 1951 he received his A.B. degree: under a
ewhouse Foundation Scholarship. gradu·
:lling Pht Beta Kappa. As a Rhodes Scholar.
he oblained an M.A. degree in 1953 from
Oxford Universit)' and his Ph D. in 1959
from "tan ford University.
He ho ld honorary degre~ from fh e 10·
~tnutions in the U.S. and o ne from Pu an
National Uni\'Crsit~ in Korea He current! ~
M:rves a~ a member of Workfor e Qual II)
CounciL World Aff&lt;nrsCouncil; U.S -Japan
FoundatiOn; Busi ness H1gher Education Forum : Council on Fore1gn RelatJ om.. Ala·
bama Acadcm) of Ho nor, and Ph1 Beta
Kappa He 1!1 a dtrector of Farst lnter,t ate
BanL of Oregon. and a tru stee of Amen can
UmversH) 1n Ca1ro.
Bartl en and h1s wife. Mal) Lou I 'C . ha\e
three grvwn sons. ThomM Glenn. R1chard
Allen and Paul Hanson, all of whom " ·ere
born in Nev. VorL Cit)

Juanita Hunter: reaching out to help community
~~~:'c:O~~o~

J

)

UANITA HUNTER'S invohement
with the Nursi ng Centerforthc Home·
tess is j ust another example of a UB
pr-oter.~ -ho \ • w ~\ ng \.obetttt l.he

lives of people in Western New York.
The Nursing Center fo r the Homeless. a
project sponwred by the UB School of N ursing. has been providing health scn•iccs 10
homeless persons at shelters in Buffalo since
1988.
Hunter. a cl in ical associate professor at
UB . became involved with the Nursi ng Cen·
ter in 1987 when a grant to establish the
center was submitted lothe Division of Nursing of Federal Health and Human Service ~.
which funded the center from 1988-1993 .
When the grant was received. Hunter became coordi nator of the center. a posilion

she holds to t~is day.
"The Nursmg Center for the Homeless
exemplifies the imponance of communit)
and university pa rt nerships around a current
health-care problem," says Hunter.

The ad,antage to UB of the urs1ng
Center IS that faculty become acli\d) in·
\'OI\•ed in the health care of the communh) .
which create s man) research and other o p·
ponunities for them in that community.

H umerhas been instrumcn\a\ m \he man)

Hunter says . A\ so. s tudent nur'icS d o volun-

posili\'~ resuhs o f th~ Nurs10g Center She
helped mtroduce the 1dea of a nati onal con·
feren eon the homeless 10 the first two ~car-.
o fthecenter. andworkedv.iththcdm: )rof
conunumg educatio n at UB to deH~Iop a
nati~nal conference for nurses and ot her
provlde.rs for the ho meless.
The 1r_nponancc to Western Nev. Yur~ nf
the Nursmg Center. Hunter sa)::.. 1~ that .. the
center has opened up an avenue from UB to
people who feel that ~hey share the health
carc:bu~cndlspro~monately-hcalth-carc

professiOnals. SOCial workers . and 3dmma::.trators of agencies...

tcerwo rl for the.- ce nter. " h1 ch puts them on
the c u t t1n~ edge of health care and pro' 1de
them "uh research opponunwcs a .. "ell .
she ::.aH
In herO'-' n career. the Nursmg Ce nter ha!!l
been the culmmat10n of combmmg her communlt) health background " 'ith her concern
fordisad,antagcd populations. Hunter say~.
..The Nursmg Center for the Homeless il!l
a perfect example of ho" the uni versuy can
!&gt;~hare II!- health-care knowledge. and ho "
health care can be impro,,cd b) pro,·1d 10g
that Lno" ledge to rhe commumt) :· Hunter
Sa) !'1 .

Crisis in Rwanda, Burundi is topic
as Des Forges speaks at UB at Sunrise
I1J AR111UR PAGE
News Bureau D•rector

A

LISON DES FORGES. internati onall y recogni zed as an
expert on the crisis in Rwanda
and the potential for a repeat
of the nightmare in neighbt.lring Burundi. will be the featured speaker in
the second program in the 1994-95 "UB at
SUNRI SE.'' a community breakfast seri es
sponsored by UB.
"Expla ini ng the Unexplainable: Rwanda
and Burundi" wi ll be the topic of Des Forges.
an adjunct ass istant professor o f history at
UB. in a program from 7:30-9a.m. Oct. 7. in
the University Inn &amp; Conference Center.
2401 N. Forest Road. Amherst. The program
is open to the public.
An expert on the history of Rwanda and
Buru ndi , Des Forges is a fo undi ng member
of Human Rights Watch, an international
o rganization for thc defenseofhuman rights.
Since 1990. she has been serving as the
organization's pri nci pal poin t person o n
Rwanda and Burundi, and organizi ng a network of human rights monitors in Africa.
She is the chair o fthe International Commi ssion o n Human Rights Abuse in Burundi

and the 1993-94 co-chair of the International
Commission on Hu man Right.s Abuse in
Rwa nda.
Since the crisis in Rwanda began in April.
she has presented briefings 10 members of
the National
Security
Counci I. top
dip l omats
and Ho use
a nd Se na te
s ubco mm ittees. She has
been feawred
o n ~NN .
" Nig htli ne.''
"60 M in ·
utes." and NaALISON DES FORGES
ti ona! Public
Rad io. and has been interviewed by n1e New
Yorku. The New York Tim es and n1e \Vash-

inglon Post.
In an opinion piece that she authored
which appeared in USA Today o n June 13.
Des Forges urged international intervention
to end genoc ide in Rwanda.
'The United States, along with the Uni ted
Natio ns, must save the threatened and mu st

demonstrate to the criminals that what v.e (
learned from the Holocaust still ounts," she
wrote.
"E\'en in Rwanda ...
. ~Forges was the co-author of an opinIOn p1ece published on Aug. I I in Tht Ntk·
Yorl.. Times that warned that Burundi will be
the next Rwanda.
The article concluded: "Historically vio~ence in R':"'anda.has been echoed by k.ili ings
1n Burund1 and YICC- versa. Given clear warn .
ing sig na1s. the U.N. should act now to
prevent an expensive disaster later."
· us at SUNR ISE" is sponsored by UB 's
Office of Alumn i Relations. Office of Co nfere nces and Special Events. News Bureau,
Office of Publications and Office of the Vi ce
Pr_csident for Publi c Service and Urban Affairs .
. The_Bee Group Newspapers are the offiCial pn nt sponsor of "UB at SUNRISE."
T1ckets are $8 for members of the UB
Alumni ~ ssoci at ion and S9 for all others.
Reserva.uons. which arc required , may be
made wnh the UB Alumni Assoc iation. 109
Allen Hall. 3435 Mai n St .. Buffalo, N.Y.
142 14 . For more informati on call 829
2608.
.
-

u

.,

__

Reponer Conlritulor

AWRENCE P. Casldl.ni,

preaidcnt and chief cxa:utive ofli&lt;:u o f Tops
ket • lac.. h as been
re8pp0inled chair of the Booonl of
Trustees of the University at Buffalo Foundation. lnc. Castellani has
been lff~ialed with the foundation
SiiKlC 1986.
The fou ndation promotes the activities and programs of the University at Buffalo by providing support
and advice rqarding fund-rai ing .
managi ng gifu and granu on behalf
of the univemty. providing a wide
range of financial services for vari.
ou univcn;ity units,devclopingand
managing real property on behalf of
the univcrsity,andprovidingabroad
base of private-sector support for
UB through the foundation 'slruilces and dircct.on.
The board of ln1Stces is responsible for raising the C!XJ!munity 's
aw......,.. of the need for private
support for UB. soliciting gifts on
behalf oftheuniversity and managing assets received by the founda•
tion.
Castellani joiDed Tops Friend I)
Mari&lt;ets as a stack clerl: in 1962.
After balding several managerial
pocitions, he was appointed director of operations in 197S. In 1991 .
he was named president and CEO
ofTops Marla:u, Inc. The company
employs 16,000 people and operllleo 64 Tops Fricodly Martets.
Wi lson Fanns Neighborhood Con
venieiKlC Stores, 10 B-Kwik food '
stores and nine VIX Deep Discount
drugs tore s thro ughout C entral.
Western and Southern New York
S1.1.te and in Bradford, P L

0

ther offtcers appointed by the
fo und ati on are Jo h n L.
Hettrick Sr., chainnan and CEO of
WSF Industries, loc., vice chair.
Richird E. Heath ofHodgson. Russ.
Andrews. Woods and Goodyear,
secretary; James M. Wadsworth of
Hodgson, Russ, Andrews. Woods
and Goodyear. assi£tant occn:Lary.
and Donald A. Ross, presidcni'&lt;Sf
Rand Capital Corp, treasurer.
The fOIIlldatioo also reelected
several lnlslees forthn:e·year1CI'IDS.
They are Sal H. AlfJCro, c:hainitan
and CEO of Mart; N Industries.
loc~ Robc:rtT. Brady, president and
CEO of Moog . Inc .: Burt P .
FlicODtcr Jr. ud John N. Walsh
chairman ud CEO of Walm
~ Conlpaies. lnc.
The followiq dilecton were rcelecled to ..._year rams: Brent
D.Baird.•limiledJ*!D&lt;riiiTrubee.

m.

Colliaa

a:

Co.; Joaatbaa W.

Reyaolda. dlief a . - officer
of M.iae MidleDd :s.t; .Jeremy
M. JIICOba Jr., _ . executive vice
presideet of Delaware North Companies, lnc:.; William G . G isel Jr "
executive vice president of Rich
Products Corp.; Louis R Reif, rctiredchainnanaadCEOofNational
Fuei, ud WiDiam I Schapiro of
Jaeckle. Fldachmann aad MugeJ.
Walla' E. Kempa Jr., a pllrtDCr in
Ernst and Y011111 ILP. was elected
a dircc:lor for a
term-

..._year

�5

... v.-r.a,Na.a

~-.s.

Gala events highlight Parents &amp; Homecoming Weekend
..,USAWLn
News Bureau Stall
PARADE, A FOOTBALL
game between the UB Bulls
and Colgate University, a per·
fonnance by comedian Steven
Wright and " Hollywood
Comes to Buffalo" will highlight Parents
and Homecoming Weekend '94, to be held
at UB on Friday, Oct. 7. through Sunday,
Oct. 9 .
1be weekend is co-sponsored by the UB
Office of Student Life, Office of Alumni
Relations and Undergraduate Student Association. Corporate sponsors are Campus
Tee's &amp; Sweats. and Ri se, Inc.
Check-in for parents will be held from 49 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 7. and from 9 a.m. lo
noon on Saturday. Oct. 8, in 1he Studenl
Union Lobby on 1~ Nonh Campus.
Alison L. Des Forges. UB adjunct assis tant professor of history , will discuss "Ex·
plaining the Unexplainable: Rwanda and
Burundi" at the "UB nt Sunrise Speaker
Series," to be held from 7:30-9 a.m. on Ocl.
7 in the University Inn and Conference Center on Nonh Forest Road. adjacent to the
onh Campus.
tudents are invited to meet seven UB
uates who have become successful in
the Hollywood entenainment mdustry . as
pan of" Hollywood Comes to Buffalo" at I
p.m. on Oct 7 in the Screening Room of the
Center for the Anson the Nonh Campus.
" Physical Activity a~d Cogniuve Function in the Elderly" will be the topic of the
six th annual J '.Varren Perry Lecture. to be
held at 6 p.m)on Oct. 7 in the Katharine
Cornell Theater in the Ellicott Complex on
the Nonh Campus. The free lecture, sponsored by the UB School of Health Related
Professions. will be delivered by Waneen
Wyrick Spirduso. Mauzy Regents' Profes-

sor of Kinesiology and Health Education at
the University of Texas at Austjn.
A Shabbat service and kosher dinner are
scheduled for 6 p.m. on Oct. 7 in the Hillel
House on Capen Boulevard in Buffalo, adjacenl to the South Campus. Also that evening,
the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences will honor the classes of' 54, ' 69 and
' 84 at an Alumni Reunion Dinner at 6p.m. in
the University Inn and Conference Center.
"Kickin' to the Beat Coffeehouse," featuring The Sam Falzone Jazz Combo and the
UB Undergraduate Library Society, will be
held from 8-11 p.m. on Oct. 7 in the Studenl
Union Lobby. Free coffee and desse n s will
be provided.
A homecoming pep rally and bonfire.
sponsored by the Undergraduate Student
Associatio n. will be held from 7 p.m. tn
midnight on Oct. 7 '"Goodyear Field on the
South Campus.
Football will no1 be the only featured
spon of the weekend. The UB women' s
volleyball team will play St. FrancisofPennylvania at 7 p.m. on Oct. 7 in the Triple Gym
of Alumni Arena on the Nonh Campus. The
UB men 's volleyball team will face St. John ·&lt;
University at I p.m. on Oct. 9 tn the same
location. The UB women 'ssocce rtea m wtll
play lhe University of Michigan at II :30
a.m. on Oct. Son the soccer field nea rt~e UB
Stad1um on the Nonh Campus.

Two movies are scheduled for Oct 7 m lhe
Student Union Tileater. ''Romeo 1S Blecd1ng.··
an AIDS premtere film. al6:30 and 9 p.m and
'"T'he Adventures of Bud.aroo Ban7J Ac ~"
the 8th Dimension" a1 II :30 p.m.
An Earl) Bird Workoul from 7-10 a.m
will ki.ck off activities on Oct. 8. Parents and
alumni may u~ the indoor track and co-ed
weight rooms in Alumni Arena for free .
Educational events on Oct. 8 willanclude
se\ era I lec~re s on the Nonh Campus that

The Unl" ers lty • t B ufhl o pres•nts

AMBASSADOR CoLETTE A\1TAL
CoNSUL-GENERAL oF I sRAEL IN

E\\' Y oRK

HThe Middle East:

are free and open to the public. 1be topics,
speakers, locations and times an::
• " AnAoti-sensibleApproachtotheCure
for Cancer," Janet Monow. UB a sociate
professor of chemistry, 10 a.m .. Room 205
of the new Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics (FNSM) Complex.
• "S tudy AbroadOpponunities," Anhur
Neisberg, UB study abroad coordinator, I 0
a.m .. Room 330. Student Union.
·• "Changing Lives." Diane Gale, director of the UB Counseling Center. and UB
students Theresa Fulcher and Rebecca Von
Holtz, 10 a.m., Student Union Theater.
• " Watch Your Language," Wolfgang
Wolck. UB professor o flingui sucs. I J a~ m ..
Room)30. Student Unton
• " Pitfalls in Choosing a Mu!Ual Fund,"
Charles Trzcinka, UB profe,;sor o f finance
and managerial economiC\. II a.m .. Srudent
Umon Theater.
• "Organic Gardemng ""uh Superconductor..:· Michael Naughton. UB assoc1ate
professor of physics, II a m .. 205 FNSM
Complex .

F

ret tours ""111 be cond ucted of the Fisk
Organ m Slee Hall (10 a.m ). the Center
of Excellence for Document Analysis and
Recogmuon (CEDAR)( !Oand II a.m .). the
Nauonal Ctnter for Eanhquake Engmeenng
Research(! 0, I 0 30. II and II 30 a.m.). the
Cen ter for the An!!! I 10 and II a.m .) and the
FNSM Complex r 10. !0:30 and II am.).
Rudolph A . Marc u\. the 1992 Nobel Prize" toner m chemi'iitr) and Anhur Amos Noyes
Professor ofCheml 'itf"\ at the Cahfomia ln'tl tute of Techno log)·. w1ll lecture at the
Depanment of Chem1SU) o~n house for
undergraduates from noon to 5 p.m. on Oct.
8 m the FNSM Complex Tours will be given
of the new bu1lding.

by the Undergraduate Student Association.
will take place 81 9 :30 Lm. on OcL 8. It will
depart from the South Campus. proceed north
on Bailey Avenue to Grover Cleveland High·
way,' and then follow Grover Cleveland/
Millerspon Highway to the UB Stadium.
Aoats will be displayed at the nonh end of
the tadtum.
1be homecommg football game at I :30
p.m • in which the UB Bulls take on Colgate,
will be preceded by a tent pany sponsored by
the UB Office of Alumni Relations near the
south entrance of the stadium. Highlights
include the Twelve Eight Path Band,
face-pamung and a rally with the UB cheerleaders and UB Pep Band.
A postgame pany. sponsored by the In ter-Greek Council, will be held in the Student Union. A jazz band will perform. and
ente.naaners will include the Step Troupe and
the Afncan-American Dince Troupe.
Alumni of the UB School of Nu,...tng "tilhear Joy Feldman. an alumnus of the UB
nursing and law schools. speak at a homecommg dinner at 6 p.m. in the Center for
Tomorrow on the Nonh Campus. Her topic·
''Tal..e Charge of Your Health- Treatment

"''II

Choaces Are Your Choaces Comedaan Steven Wnght-..Thc man
w1lh the monotone··-"" '11 perio nn a1 8:30
p.m. on Oct
10 Alumm Arena. Any re maanmg ud.e~ may tx purchased at the
door Wnght has performed on "Saturda ~
tght Ll\e:· the former " Late Night Wtth
Oa\ td Lenennan·· a nd tht- ''Tomght Show··
wnh Jo hnny Carson. He receaved an Acad em) A-. ard for vtriling and slaJTing m the

shon film. "1bc Appomtments of Denms
Jenmngs" m 1989.

The homecoming noal parade. sponsored

The weekend closes with a brunch from
10 a.m.-noon Oct. 9 m Pistachio· s in the
Student Union. Reservations are limited lO
325 people on a first&lt;Omc basis.

How can you help
your students succeed
at no cost to you?

Is it a Real Peace?''

~
F...A...

The

Thuncloty, Octob.r ~D . 1994 at ~ p.m.,
Stuclftll Union TM•ter, North Campus

an~wer

...A...~
lS ... ~~

Mttldn" gppjes
Y=

N~ MCenter
S.ruire vCon~nimdy Loc&lt;ued
At

Copy

.\lakin' Copin
nrt"dl'

the UB Commons

IS

n:Jd)

or both Ihe st udr-nt s

1

a.S.'"I"I

lhe-

and fa c-u lty

We offer great cu.-tomc:r
senice lneludiJl&amp;:

l...c-1 u .. put y o ur rl.:1ss nOIC"S on rih· 3nd
\lot" II m.:1ke- n t'.:ll'\" fo r vour -.1ude-nts 10
obt.:un l ht'm
-

fhcot· " C'k up S.""'K"••Ior
ToJIQC'h.-r .. \ ot~

JnqUJrt' .1bt&gt;tll o ur F".:1cu lly OlS&lt;"'OUnts

E;ru.t~ -\m-o--. ' on Can~p~ ......
Coru't-'fllf'nl Hoon.

.wadabl(' on our full r.:l.fll!f' of

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"~f"\1C't"S

AMBASSADOR COLETfl . -\\' IIAL ,, lsur l":. h•~lw.. , -r,m km~
¥o'On\an dtplom:U. SJw I~ \t"r\ tmoln--J 10 d11• t-.!,JJJ,.. E..N JW.l,-,. rrnCn!&gt; and hlS sough1 to Jl·rrc-n puhh.:- un.lcnr:anJm~ lll 11 thmu~h .t
""dC"-rangmg t"duc&lt;toonal•m~s•on. Amh.u~dor :\\'!tallu:r. l'k; IJ :a.·~­
n&lt;'f)'Of kfy Forl"•gn t-.1•mMr~ posts. Her d!.)lmgtlt:r.hcJ n·..-tlJ~ ,,j II)! ·
t'Jgn JlOStlngs m Brussd .:r.. P:am. M ontrt'.ll .md Bos1on ,-ultnmJh"oi m
hn 1988 appomtmrm as brad's Amh.ts).ador to Portugal

The leclure 11

fr••

•acl open to lhe pub li c

FACULTY: For leavint your notu on file, you ..m be Jllven a
FREE $25 VOUCHER for our fuU ran~&amp;• of copy servieea.
Call or visit us .soon at the Commons!
520 Lee Entrance. Suite 105

Tt'l 636-8440
F .lX 636-8468

�6

.......

MIDICIMAL CHDIIaTRY

FRIDAY

' 7

ua AT SUNRISE BPEAKEII

HIIID
Er:plaiDln.g tM Uner:p.laioab~:
Rwanda a nd· Burundi. Alison
L. Des Forgt:i. Unavenity Inn
and Confm:.ncc: Center. 7:30-9
a.m. Calll29-2608.

I'EIHAT111C _._
Adioo for Cbiklrea 's Health.
Ehe Ward. St.att:widt Youlh
Ad\'ocacy. Kinch Auditonum,
Ould.ren 's Hospital. 8 a.m

1\foloallt lA&gt; 1\fart.d: TM Rolo

or ......... CM.;.,,. u.

Today'• Pba.I""IUCNticallDduJtry, Dr D1ne5h Gala,
Scherin&amp;· PiouJh Retearcb lnsta·
tute 121 Coote. North Cam~

3p.m
l'tiUICs COUOQUIUM
ot AuJC.. witz and
Blrosb.iiDA on SdntJftc: Calturt. Prof J~ph Aps.st. Vorl..
Univ ., Tel A\'IV Umv C22
Fronc-u.k. North Campus
3:45p.m

'I'M l mpad

C-.nrY COUOQUIUII
1\fecbani.ai&lt; Aoalysts or ElK·

tron TraMfer and R.dated
Pbt:DOmH.II : £kortronic CouPiiDC and MeclfuiD Reorpn tz:atloa, Prof MarWII Newt(. n,
Brookhaven National Laban·
tory . 20 I Natural Sctenee:S &amp;
MAthematiCS Compkx North
Campus. J JO p m

-

REVNIFICAT'ICNI

CCIU.OQUIUII

Jewkll S.bbatb SC':rvke. Rabb1
Shay Mantz With a meal and
dascuuaon to foUow . HaUel
HooK, 4() Capen 81\'d, 6 p.m

J. WARREN I'QIIIY LEClVIIE
l'bylrical Acth•lty aad Cocni·
tM Fuoctioa ia tbe. Eldt:rty.
Waneen Wynck Spuduso, Unav
of Tuu. Au.st1n Kathanoc
Cornell Tbt.attt, Elhrou. North
Campus . 6 p.m Frtt
AT Ttl£ MOVI£8
Romeo I&gt; Bl«din&amp;. UUAB

film SCneJ 201 Student Umon
Nonb Campu•. 6 JO and 9 p m
S2. SJ.50. C.II64S-29S7

·--

Royals Alumni Swim Mtrt..
Alumna Arena North Campus

6 cl0p.m.

VOIJ..niiALL
UB vs. St. Francis (Pa. ). Tnplt
Gym. Alumna Arma North
Campus. 7 p.m Frtt

It'• the Bulla
va. Colgate

at UB Stad1um
Saturday at 1 30
p m For t1cket
Ch\.DCM Cont""'porary Traditional-Style- Painting. Wori. b}
32 anasts from l\lo'O Beajmg um\'ersities. Throu&amp;h Oct. 16. Umven;aty Gallery. Center for the
Aru. North Campus Gallef)
hours. Free. Call 645-6911

ART EXHiall'lON

L.and.scapa 1988-1994. \\'url ..

"0 Come,

Let Us
Worship ...''
I)

on paper b) C)·nthaa Hand

Capen Gallel') , fifth flOOJ
Capen Nonh Camp~ Gallet')
houn. _Through l:kcember
COMI'UTEII WORKSHOP
Pin~ ~bil

on tbc sunCiuster.
10-Noon Caii64S-3540 for
rcgastnnion anformata on
STRUCTURAL BJOLOGY
SEMINAR

Mol« ular Re«tgni tion by
Calmodu lin, A Joshua Wand .
Univ . of llhnoi!l.. UrbanaChampaagn 13-tB F:u'bc:'r. SoUih

95 I&gt;

Campu.!&gt;. Noon
POETRY TAUC.

Larry Eigner and Ihe Ta.!&gt;L.. or
American Lcllen, Boh
AFRICAN AMERICAN SlYU
SruoENT WoR~HIP SERVlC E

Gremer. Pan of Wedncsda)., a1
4 Plus J&gt;O('U") and p~ ienC\

438 ClcmenJt. onh Campu.,
I 2;30 p.m. Free
ARTL£C1"URE

SuNDAY AT

6:30

P.M.

UNIVER~IlY PRHBYTE RIAN CH URCH

3334 MAIN ST.
AeRO~~ FROM us ·~ SOUTH CAMPu~

Artists a nd Printtn in Col laboration, Prof. Donald Robefts. Ohao Unav I 12 Cenaer for
the Am.. Nonh Campu~ 3 JO
p m Free For anfonn:1110n . call
645-6201.

COGHmVE SCIENCE
R~,- i\"ion.

Ne:~l Goldberg. 224 Sell. Nunh
Campu!. 3:JO p.m Call 6J5-

J794.
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

SEMINAR
A Transgenic Approach to
Disstd the Regu lat or) Eltmenls or Plastid Photosynthetic Genes, Dr. Pal Mahg.a.
Rutge-rs Unav. 114 Hochsteue-r
Nonh Campus 4 p.m.

Sponsored by
Episcopal College Ministry
Diocese ofWN.Y.

MULTlCULlVIIIAL WOitltSHOI'
MATMEMAncS COUOQUIUM

The Cantor.Cieason-Dilworth
Theore-m , Prof Rich Wood.
Dalhousae Unl\ 103
Dacfendorf South Campu!i.
~

pm

PHARMACEUllCS SEMINAR
Permeability Changes in Lbr

Blood-Bnlin and BloodC~re-bospinal Fluid Barrien
During Ex~rime.ntal Menin-

gitis : Is The.re a Rolr for Ni ~
tric Oxidt'! Dr Kathleen M K
BoJe. De-pt of Ph.::annaceuw.-..
S08C Coole Nonh Campu'
4 p.m

CERTIACATE PROGRAM IN
GERONTOLOGICAL NURSING

Ethics and Aging. lkm-..c
Han lon, School of Nun.tng To
cam c-cn•ficatc. nur""!i. mu ~tt
attend fiH ~!."IOnlt SctYLh C.ampU !~ 4 30-7 30 p m ~50 per
module Tu regbter. ca1181~ 3:!91
AT THE MOVIES
~o

Mikes Don't Malt.r a

W r ight . UUAB film !&gt;encl. 201
Studenl Unton Nonh Campu'
6 .30 p m ~1 . 5.3 50 C:tll 6H

2957
UFE WORKSHOP
Hat ha \'oga: An I ntroduction.
Paula Schnnl. . H1mal.::a):tn In'' '
tut~ 7-8·30 p m C.::all bJS -6 1 ~5
I O rC{!:hl~r

RESEARCH GROUP

Natu ral Belief Spacr

onlori'!Tat&lt;Jr\, call645-6666

EDUCAT10N L£CTURE
E Pluribw Unum : Is II a Realistic' Aim for America 's
Schools'! Ellioc Eisner. St :mford
Univ. Cemer for Tomorrow.
Nonh Campu!.. 4 p.m. F~e .
Spon!&gt;Dred by the Gr:tduatc
School o( Educat ion .

GERMAN REUNIFICATION
COLLOQUIUM
Hu man Rig hts in Gtrman,
AO: r-r Unincal ion : The Staiu.l&gt;

or Fo~ig n tr!"a n d Et hnic Mi norities a nd tht Confrontation
with Racism in lnmocratic
Societies. Prof Geor!! G lggC'".
modcr.a1or. Depl of Hi!&gt;IOJ)
Room 109. Hor3n O ' Donnell
Sl:1encc Bualdang , C'ani!&lt;IU!. College . 7 30 p m. Free
AT THE MOVIES
Romeo Is Blefll i n~. UUAB

film ~ ne !. 201 Stu~m Un•on .
Nonh C;~mpu.!. 9 p m S1. ~3 SO
Call 645· .2957

Dr. Paul Pedersrn. One .day
1rammg exercise on sl..alls dc:)el -opmtnt 120 Clemen!O North
Campu~ 8 JO a.m .- 1 p m Call
645 · 2988

GERMAN REVNIFICATlOH
COUOQUIUM
Re"·riting Grrman BisiOf)
ARe.r Unif..::ation. Mnehc-11
Ash. Ph 0 . Una\ of Iowa 2 0
Pad, Nonh Campus 9 30 3 m
Free

ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE
SEMINAR

Mobilization or Contaminants

in Aquife.r Mat~riaJ by Bactrrial Extrac:rllular Polymtn,
Or Leonard W. Laon. Cornell
Una\ 140 Keuer Nonh Cam pus. II a m Call 645-1446
COMPOSERS SEMINAR

Baard

Recat:~l

Hall Nonh Cam -

pu) Noon Free
HOMECOMING WUKENO

Holly'''-ood Comes to Buffalo.
ScrttmnJ! Room. Center for tht
Afu Nonh Campu:r. 1 p.m.

COFFEEHOUSE
Kickin' t o lbe Bat. Gumshoe
Jazz and poelr)' readangs by UB
Luerary Socaety Student Unaon
North Campus 8 p.m
INnltNATIONAL

FOIJ(

DAJICING

l.s:rat:U Line Dancing. l)oro(h)
Lev.1.s. ,guestleachcr. AJIIt\el~.
all wco:lcomt Pannen not
needed 2 D1erendorf South
Campus 8-11 p.m Free. Spon ·
iared by Graduate S1udent A.s·
SOCIIIIon

SLEE/U£Tlt(IVEN STRING

QUARTET CYCLE I
Muir trin&amp; Quartet. Program
Op 117. Op I , No. I. and Op
S9. No 3 Sl("'!' Conccn Hall
North Campus 8 p m. S4. SS.
S8. SI O For mformataon, call
645.:!921
SUMMERFARE THEATRE

Gypsy. Pfe1fer ~atre. 681
MaanS1 8p.m SJO.S I2 . SIS .
For anfonnauon . call 839-8540
AT THE MOVIES

TIM- Adnntures of Buckaroo
Baaqi' Across I be 81b Dimen sioa.. lJUAB film stnes. 201
Student Umon Nonh Campus

II clO p.m 52. SJ .50 Call

~S -

2957

ADOICTIONS SEMINAR

Alcohol and Brain MMha oisms or Aggression, Klau.s
M1c1.d . Ph D . Tufts Unl\ Re·
~:tn.·h ln!.t llute Qfl AddactaOn.l&gt;,
10.21 M.un St I 30 p.m Free
C:tll887-.256o

COMPUTER WORKSHOP
SPSS ror Windo"s• Part 2.
Conunu:tt1un llfOct 5 .... ort.
'hop I ..,().J 30 p m C;~IJ645 '\S72 or 6-15 -35b0 for regaSlf3·
taon anfonna1aun

GERMAN REUNIRCATION
COUOQUIUM

Un irication: Gt":rman Con«ptions of National lde:ntity a n d
t b~ Status of Eth nic Minoritin:, La~ E. Jones, Ph .D ..
Cam!~ aus College . 280 ParL.
Nonh Campu!~. 2.30 p.m. Fttt .

COMPUTER SCIENCE
COUOQUIUM
El~ ron tc J ournals- Schola rly Invariants in a C hanging
Medium, Mich:lcl J. O'Donnell.

Uni \ . of Ch1cag:o. 228 Natural
Sctence!. &amp; M at hem;~tic!l ComNonh Campus. J p.m. For
infonn.: a 1ion. ca11 645 -3 180.
pie~ .

SATIIRDAY

~

HOMECOMING WEEXEND

LECTUIIE
An Anti-&amp;nsible Approach to
I be Cu~ for CanC'r.r, Prof.
bnet Morro'ol.. lkpt of Chcm• )tf)'. 205 Natur.ll Scaences: &amp;
Mathcmaticllo Complex . onh
Campus:. 10 a.m.
-COMING W£DmiD

LECTURE
C haoc:ing L i\·rs, Diane G.alc.
Counseling Center. Student
Union Theater. No nh Campu&gt;.
IO a. m.

�__

~

--

Study At.r-.1 Opportuoities,
Arthur Neisberg. 330 Student
Union. North Campus. I0 1.m.

~

Orpak Gardtnin&amp; with Su pn'CODd ud.ors. Prof. Michael
Ntughton, Dept. of Physics. 205
Narural Sciences&amp;. Mathemat -

ics Complex. North Campus.

--

infonn~tion.

For
call 829-2608.
..__,.,._,.

3540

Tho ll.ole al Molecular Arclll-

ror rqittntion infOilT\a!lon.

Akobol ODd l bo Epld&lt;taloloc
a1 c....,...ry a.... DiRtie,

tecturt la Protei. JaterKIioDS, Dr. Deboroh Lcc:kbond.

Lewis H. Kuller, M.D .. Umv. of
Pittsbur&amp;h. Sponsored by 11w:
Center for the Oinicaland
Medical Epidc.mtotogy of AJco.
hoi. Researc:h lnslltute on Ad·
dK:Iions, 1021 Main St. 10:30
a.m. Free. Call 887-2566.

Dept. or OtemicaJ Engineerinc.
1348 Farber. Soulh Campus.

4p.m.
-LECT\111£
Motart: A Compo~e.r'a: V;ke,
Maynard Solomon, Yale Univ.

I I a.m.

211 Baird. North Campus.
4 p.m. Free.

COIIPIIID-

~

ART~

Caii64.S·lS40 for registration
information.

-WEEKEHO

Pitfalls fa Cbootinca Mutual
Fund, Prof. O.arles Tn.cinU,
Dept. of Fmancc and Managerial Economics. Student Union

--

Theater. North Campus. II a.m.
~

Watib Your La.aguace. Pror.

Wolfgang Wolck, Dept. of un·
guistics. 330 Student Umon.
North Campus. II a.m.

-·aiiOCCDt
UB Ro)'llll VL Mk b i&amp;an. RAC
Field ouLSidc Alumni Arena.
North Campu•. II :30 a.m.

C-lalll\' LECTUII£
Theory and Ex.perimtol In
Scleac:e, Rudolpll A. Mar&lt;:u5.
California Institute of Technol ogy. Pan of Chemistry Open

Intermedlate UN IX. 1-4 p.m.

Paulo Bum.oos: '1'k S.mr and
tb&lt; Other (IIIF A Tbesis).
Opening reception S· 7 p.m.

EMEIImla CIEJfTEJI
Elderbostei-IJ 1t for You'!

Roben and Mary Spon=. South
Lounte. Goodyear. South Cam pus. 2 p.m. Monthly meeting

1berufter gallery hours.
Throogb Oct. 17. Art Depart ·
men I Gallery. Center for the
Arts . North Campus Call645·

--.oNALIJTAF'I'

6878.

MNAn:

IIUaiC
Ambent S.xcpbone Quartet..
Premiere or Allen S1gel't "'Rapper En Dances ." Slee Concert
Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m . SS ,
SIO. For information. cali64S 2921.

Gtatral Mrmbu-daip Meeting.
106 Student Union . North Campus. 2-4 :30 p.m . Call 645-2003 .
OINlANII.UnltCLUS
Slcc Conctn Hall North Campus. 3 p.m Free.

I'IIYaiCS HIIINAJI
Chemic:allleodioosoo
Fullerones, Prof. James F. Gan•ey.
Dept of&lt;l&gt;enUslry. 219 Fronc1.al..
Nonh Campus. 3:45p.m

TU ES DAY

LOGIC CDU.OQUIUM
PhUosopbkal ~of Defi nition. Wojciech Zelan1rc,
0cP' or Philosophy 115 Baldy
North Campus . 4 p .m

House from II :30 a.m.-S p.m.
Natura) Scieoces and Mathematics Complea. North Campus.

1:30p.m
F001L\U.

UB Bulls VL Colgate. Hornecomin&amp; game. UB Stadium.
North Campus. I :30 p .m. For
tickets. cali64S.6666.

11

AWMNI WIIUlUNG MATCH
Alumni Arena Wrestli ng Room.
Non.h Campw;. 4 p .m.
SUMMIEJIFAII£ TJIOTRE
Gypsy. Pfeifer Theatre. 681
Main St. 4 and 8 p.m. S 10. S 12.
SIS. For information. call 839·
8540..

NURSING ALUMNI DIN NEll

Take Charge of Your Healtb:
Trutme.nt C bok.u Arr Your
Cboices, Joy Feldman. Center
for Tomorrow. North Campu~
6 p.m. Call829-3291.
COMEDY NMIHT

Stnrn Wrigbt. Alumni Arena.
North Campus. 8:30p.m. SIO.

S UND AY

9

YOUEYUU.
UB vs. St. J obn's. Triple G)m.
Alumni Arena. North Campus
I p.m.
SUMMERFAII£ THEATRE
Gypsy. Pfeifer lllcatre. 681
Main St. 3 p.m . SIO. Sl2 . SIS .
For information. call 839-85-lO

MOND AY

10

ART INaTAUATlON
Bla nk. Paulo Buennos. Through

Oct. 22. Atrium. Center for the
Ans. North Campus. Caii64S·

6878.
SEN- ALUMNI WNCHEON
Sheila K.. Kee.. Kec: is Erie
County Budget Director. Center
fnr Tomorrow. Nonh Campus.

C

UFE WCNtUHOP

h

D

I

C

f

S

.... ca.-tet to perform

Slee/a..thoven Cycle

The 1994-95 Slee/Beelhoven Cycle
will open Friday i!llth a pertormance
by lhe Muir Siring Q!Jartet, ~ group
acknowledged as one of lhe world's
mos1 powerful and insightful ensembles.
The concett, 10 be held at8 p .m. Oct. 1 in Slee
Concen Hall on lhe UB North Campus, will feature lhe
Oualtets Op. 127; Op. 18, no. I; and Op. 59. no. 3.
Again this year, lhe Muir String Quartet wiH
presenllhe er.lire Slee/Beethoven Cycle, which •s
sponsored by lhe UB Department of Music.
The quartet, which appears in major chamber
music COl1certs throughout North America, includes
Petlll' Zazolsky, violin; Bayle Keyes. violin; Steven
Ansel, viola; and Michael Reynolds, cello. Crilicelly
acclaimed for their perlormances of three complete
Baelhoven String Quartet cycles in Boston and Provi·
dence. as well as last year al UB. the Muir Is the only
quartet in 20 years since the Cleveland and lhe
Budapest to be invited for baci&lt;-Jo-baclt performances of lhe complete Baelhoven Slee series.
WinnerS of lhe 1981 Naumberg Chamber Music
Award and lhe 1980 Evian International Siring Quartet Competition, the Muir Quartet firsl appeared in
1980, 'Nhen one of lhetr pertormances was greeted
wilh rave reviews and a teaiUre in The New Yorl&lt;er .
The q uartet, named for the founder of lhe Sierra Club.
John Muir, also was featured on Jhe PBS broadcast,
In Performance allhe White House.
Tickets for the concert are $10, $8, $5 and $4 For
more infonnalion. call645-2921 .

Daly and Dal~ M. Volker" ill
be honored for tht'ir suppon of
higher c=ducation. Cenaer for
Tomorrow. Nonh Campus . 8
A.m. Sponsored by lhc l....egtsla11\'e Action Commiu~ and UB
Alumni A~sociation .
PEDIATIIIC CONFERENCE
Nudur Medicine Rou nds,
Joseph Prc:t.io. M.D.. and
Shabb1t Hal:im. M.D. Main

Conference Room A. Mercy
Hospital. 8:30a.m.
AIIDICTIOfla WORUTbe Thera~t ic Relationship:
T ransferr:ocr a nd
Countertran.sferr:ncr, Dr. Tedd
Habberfield. IkpL of Medicine.
Sponsored by Institute for Ad ·
dictions S1udies and Training.
Center for Tomorrow. Nonh
Campus. 9 a .m.-4 :30p.m. Fee
SSO. For regislf3tion information ca1164S--6140.
COMPIITEJI WORK~
FJectroo.k Mail and Nrcworks
for VMS. ll(Noon. 0111645·

c-.naN&lt;twurlt a-,...,._ 10-Noon.
Caii64S-3S40 for registration
informatioa.

-

C~CPITDI

T est Anx.idy. llus 1s also a Ufe
WorkdlOp. 14SE Student Un1on.
North Campus. Noon· I p.m.
-WELL PI'JII( aTAF'I'
NIIINAit
Eliub&lt;th R&lt;ptiky, l'h.D.,
Dept. or Molecular lmmunol ·
ogy. Hilleboc Auditorium.
RPCI . 12:30 p.m.
COMPUTElt

WORII~

Intermediate UNIX. 1-4 p m
Call 645 -3540 for n=guotrataoa
infonnat1on
I'OETRY IIEADING

Micbat:l Dnidsoa, UmY . of
C.lifomia. San Diego . Pan of
Wednesdays at 4 Plus poetry
and prose senes. Screening
Room, Center for the Ans
Nonh Campu~ . 4 p.m Free
I'HARMACY aEMINAII

Cootrovrn-it.s in Clinical Toxicology. Jill Dolgm. Pharm.D .
WNY Regional Po1Mln Control
Center. 248 Cooke Nonh Campus. 4:30p.m

.:watt$1698

0

•= ~R~:

• 14" Color Monitor
• 8MB RAM
• CD-ROM Boous

HUCL£AR MEDICINE QUNO
ltOUNH

Flurorod~xnlucosr

Communication and l,.('adrr·

POUI1CAL LJEC1VtiE

ment Cenltr. Center for Tomor·
row. Nonh Campus. 8 15· 11 :15
a.m. SSS . For information. call
636-3626.

Cornlalivt SludiH of PET
and SPECT Usin&amp;

COUNSEUNG CENT£11
WllltUHM
Anrr1innrss. 415 Cape:n
North C.mpus 5 30-7 p m

DemOCI"M)' &amp;Dd Human
Rigbt.s iD C hina. Wang J~~tao.

Talk in Chine5C, with sim'¥ta·
neous interpretation fnr nonOline5t: speakers. 5 Diefendorf.
South Campus. 2 p .m. Free .

7

a.....r, .... ,.............

._

sh ip Skill~. Pauleuc Q01nn .
Jul u:llc Lobo. Warren M&lt;~n:u ...
UB Tohtmaslen.. ~ - J~ -7. 15
p.m. C011l b-!5-6125to reg1~h." 1
UFE WORKSHOP

Losing Weight and to.: E't'ping II
orr. Ron ln~a l~be. LI\IR}1 \\'d l
Center 7 -9p. m . Ca11~5-61:!5
10 reg1 :.ter

(F'DC):

Technical and Cllntc.l AJ.
pects, Manm Sandler. M 0 .
Vandetb1lt Um\1 Med1cal Cen·
1er 105 Parler Soulh Campu~
6 p.m.
AT THE MOVIES
Tbr Snapprr. UUAB film ie·
nes 201 Student Umon North
Campus. 6:30pm S2 . S3 .SO
Call 6J5 -2957
URWORKSHOP

Good Eating: An Introduction
to V~getariaoism, Walter and
Nan s, mp~n. Off c:ampu'
6 l0·9 30 p m SJ Call 645 ·
6115 to rt"gno1er
COMPUT£11 WOinlSHCW

Internet CUotc : The

Ba ~ics.

~23 L..ocLv.ood 7 p m Pre · rt~
l)lr.tiiOn requared Contact
G~mma IkVmne) , 645 ·2817

COMI'UT£R WORKSHOP
Orientation to CIT Public

IBM PS(2 Microcomputrr
Lobs. 7- R p m Callll-&lt;5 JS~O
1m rtgl)trauon anformallc'n
UFE WORKSHOP

Homt- Rrmodrling. J 1)t Chn'l
Ht,mc lmpro ,ement Counul 7
q p m Call 645·6125 10 rt{: l'ter
OPUS: CLASS ICS UVE
Annabelle Jimrntz.. ,·iolin ,

Ronald Gardiner. crllo. and
AnJ:rla Kim. piano. W('tfks b)
Monn and Kodah Allen
Sou1h Campu~ 7 m Fr«
Tape-d for broadca-lol the folio~ ·
mg Sunda) at J p m b) WB FO
88 7 FM

"CoME

AND

SEE"

John 1:46

P

CONCERT

UBuf1'aJo s,mpbOD). Charln
Pdlz. rondue1or. ~·1th Anc
Llp)L) . cello Slec Concc-n Hall
Nonh C.ampu) 8 p m Fre~

AT THE MOVIES
In thr Namr ofthr Father.
L' UAB film ...e ne) 201 Student
Umon Nonh Campus 9 p m
S:!. SJ50 Call b45 · 29~7
ART INSTAUAnON
Blank. P:~ul o Bucnnu) Throup:h

Sunday
at 2:00p.m .
n:1e Commons
Suite 100
El'el)'

Oct 12. Alnum. Crn1 er for lht'
Art' Nnnh C.1mpu' Call M!6R78

THURSDA Y
WEDNESD AY

12 1l
auatHUS SEMINAR
Small Business R&amp;D Fun ding
Oppor1unilies. Sponsored by
the WNY Technology Develop-

Episcopal Service
Ho ly Eucharist Rite II

ART EXHiaiTlON
C hinese Cont~mpo rary Trad itionai·Siylr Pa.inling, Work by

Conunued on page B

" Come Worship with us"
Eptscopal C::lmpus 1\linistl)'
Uni,·ersity of Buffalo
The Commons
Suite 215

a1 the

688-4056
Director/ Chaplain

TI1e Re,·. B.A . T3sy

�Find Out How to Get There

32 artists from two Beijing
univcnilic$. Tbrough Oct. 16.
Univenity Gallery, Center for
the ArU. Nonh Campus. Gal·
lery houn. Free. Call645~ 12.

o.clded It'• t l - to at8rt explori!W thdlnformattorl Hrghway after

AlrT_,_

halo a -: The s....
aDd the Other (MFA Thesis).
ThrouB)l Oct. 17. "" Dc:pan·
menl Gallery, Cen1er for the
ArU. Nonh Campus. Gallery
houn. Re&lt;:q~~ion 5·7 p.m. Call
645-6878.

---Esploriac the u.. oru.q;.

. .u .. Play ...... Puppet Ploy
Tbenpy .,;th Cbild.....,
Nancy Wobl, North TOI\I.wanda
Cil}' Schools. Sponson:d by the
School of Social Work. W'odc
Center. Daemeo ColLege.. 8:45
a.m.-3:30p.m. SSO; tudents
S30. For information, all 6456140.

)

.......... Cliak:
TheBuies.
COIIPV'IEit
223 Lockwood. Pre-reaistratjon
required . Conc.act Gemma
OeVin~y. 64S-2817 .

tmmEJIT--

IIECITAL
Piano Jtud~o ts or Prof. frina
Arsduaoska 8oktL Baird Recital
!WI. Nonh Campus. Noon. Frce.
POEntY TALII

Palimtuts:

Mod~rn ity

and

M aterial C uUurr. Michael
David5on. Pan of Wo:tnesd.ays
at 4 Plus poct.ry and prose~ ­
ri~. 438 Clt-ltlens. Nonh Campus. 12:30 p.m. Free

Musicologist Maynard Solomon.

one of the foremost musical biographers writing today. will present a
lecture titled "Mozart A Composer's
Voice· at4 p.m Monday, Oct. 10 In
21 t Baird Hall on UB's North Campus Adm1ssion
is free .

Solomon's lecture wrll explore the orrgrns of
Mozart's personal creattve v01ce . concentra11ng

on worl&lt;s from tne composer's Salzburg years.

t772-75.
In addition to hrs landmark biography on
Beethoven. and a forthcomrng study of Mozart.
Solomon has wrinen articles on Schubert and
lves, and edited a book on Marxist aesthetics An
tndependent sc~ar. he has taught at Columbia
and Harvard, and this year at Yale
Sokrnon 's unique combtnalton of psychoana-

lytiC and cultural approaches to mustcology has
yielded startling ins1ghts and somettmes sparked
heated controversy .

URWOIII(SSelf Dd'e.D51t a nd P~rsonal
Protection, Dave Chemega and
Kathy Z)sek:. 7:30-9:30 p.m
Call 64.S--612j to rcgJSier

AT THE IIOIIIU

In the Name oftbe father.
UUAB film «nes 20t Studt=nt
Union. North Campu~ . 9 p.m
s2. S3.50. Call 645 -2957

URWOIIUCo&amp;oriogs: How to Cboost &amp;:
UK. Cindi Jacobs, Manag~ of
The Body Shop. 2·3: 30 p.m
Call 645-612.5 to register.

EXHIBITS

COQHJTIY£ SCIEJIC£
IIEKAJICM IIIIOUP

AlrTIIEC~·

A Cognitiv~ Llngui!tks Approach to atural Languacc
Undt.rstaocl.ia.&amp;. Elisu FeiL

The ti~ or the recepHoo in the
Center for lhe Arts for Paulo

2'24 Ben. N orth Campus. 3 :30

p.m. Call645-3794.
PHYSICS COI.UIQUIUII

What Is Ruormaliulioo,
Anyway! Prof. Peter Lepage.
Cornell Univ. 454 Fronczak .
Nonh Campus. 3:45 p.m.
AJrT LECTUIIE
Anita Kunt.. Kunz I.!&gt; a Canadian illustr.uor whose work: ha
appeared in Graptus. Mother
Jones. and Commumcauon
Aru. 120 Clemens . Nonh Campus. 4 p.m. Call 645-6878.
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

HIIIMAJI
Activation or Ion C ha nnels in
Arabidopsis by Light , Dr.
Edgar Spalding. Univ . of Wi sconsin . 114 Hochstctltt. Nonh

Campus. 4 p.m.
INFECTIOfi.CotmiOL
111AJNING
South Campus. 4.-7 p.m. Call
the Office of Conunumg Nurse
Education at 829-3291 for rrgIS~ion information .
MATMEIIIATICS COI.UIQUIUII

Indust ry C linical Phannacology: A Fin Ve:a r Retrosptc:·
tin, Dr. Daniel Salaz.ar. Dept.
of Human Pharmacology. 508C
Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
STAnaTICS COLLOQUIUM
Bayesian Hypothesis T est ing
Procedu res lHrivtd Via tbe
Concept or Surprise. Prof.
Michael Evans. Umv. of
Toron to. 144 Farber South
Campus. 4 p.m.
CERI'IFICATE PIIOGRAII IN
~OI.OGICAL NUHING
Caring ror tbt Neurologically
Impaired Older Adull , Marl-are.t Hens. Buffalo General
Hospital. To e;am certiftc;ate.
nurses must attend five ~s­
sions. South Campus. 4:30-7:30
p.m . SSO per module. To register, call 829-3291 .

~y~n::And~
UUAB film series. 201 Student
Union. North Campus. 6 :30
p.m. S2. S3.50. Call645-2957.

HiGH o

\\~)'S

&lt;LOLGEMMAOUBVM&gt;
-Gemma DeVmney and Loss Pcquefto Glazter Lockwooe1 Ltbrary

INSTAU.ATIOH

Buennos· thesis show. ""'1lw:
Same and !.he. Other,- has been
changed to Oct. 10 fmm 5-7
p.m. m the Art Dc:panmeot
Gallery. 'The rettpt1on now
coincides with the: openmg that
day in lhc Atnum of the center
of Buennos"s mstallat1on called
-Blank_"" Tile thesis show
opened earlier lhis week m the
ce nt~ on the Non.h Campu.!&gt;.
and 1s up through Oct. 17.
"'Blank"' will oceupy the Atnum
lhrough 0&lt;:1. 22.

STE£1..: A PHOTOGRAPHIC
EXHI&amp;IT
An eJthibit of phot ograph~ of
Bethlehem Steel CorporatiOn "!.
Lackawanna plant by Patnc1a
Layman Baz.elon \ol,•ill conunue
through NoY. Sat the Anderson
Gallery. located on Manha
Jad:son Place off Engle\ol.ood
near the South Campus.
Baulon. chid photogf"3pher at
the Brooklyn Museum m Ne\1.
York. taught at the UB School
of AKhllecture and Plannmg 1n
1987

Pror. C h ris Kin g, Northeastern
Univ. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
PHAitMACIEUTICS SEMINAR

4. the date of a planned S .. 1
Expo 'The club would whet
appctlles m announcmg ~x c ur ­
SIOOS nOt only tO KIS.SIIl,G
Bndge and Ho liday Valle). but
to the far !tUlles of Vermont.
Montana. and (in the spnn~ )
Flonda Last day IOJOin IS Ott
2. For membersh1p fees (\ol.hlch
arc a link less on or before
Oct 14 I and other mformauon.
call tht dub at645-3t00. or
stop 1n at the club"s locauon Ill
the: Student Umon Tht\ ·u ce r
tamly bC' glad t~ .. i ) OU

reading countless magazine and newspaper artrcles on the Internet? Both
Lockwood Library and the UGL will soon be offering 1nstructtor1 on bow to
get gorng Their Internet Climes wrll offer a varrety of rtrneraroes for Net
travel
Perhaps you desrre a general overvrew of the Network. would like to
learn about libraries and other sources for up-to-dale informal tOn . or drscover the endlessly abundant world of governmentrnformation on the Net?
Or maybe you 'd like a taste of What the Buffalo Free-Net IS all aboul?
Lockwood Lrbrary is offering a serres of one-and-a-half hour workshops rn
these areas over the next few weeks
The UGL has facilrtres for hands-on
I I I &lt;"I IH &gt;N IC instruction and 1S offerrng one hour fall
semester workshops on the follOwing
top1cs· Internet basrcs. gopherrng. eleC·
tronrc drscussron groups. and employment sources on the Net
Finally. for those of you who are sea soned travelers, but would like to learn
more about locatrng resources on the Net. Lockwood's "Find1ng Tools"
Internet Clime may be your llcket
All of these workshops are free and open to the un1versrty communrty
and public Let the Unrvers1ty Lrbrarres ' rnformat1on professionals write your
trip-Irk to the exerting world IUS! beyond your system prompt'
Lara Bushallow-Wiibur . 645-2943, &lt;LBWOUBVM&gt; . w rll be happy to
send you a schedule of UGL Internet Workshops For a schedule of
Lockwood Internet Workshops contact Gemma OeV1nney. 645-2817

NOTICES
CR£AnVE WRIT1NC AWARD
Deadline IS NaY. 20 for entrie!'l
for the fifth annual Grt:gory
Capasso Creattve Writing
Award offered in memory of
the studem Killed in 1988 when
a terrorist bomb c"ploded in the
plane carrying him m·er Scotland. Seniors only arc eiltpble
for the cash award gl\'l!n for
ongmal creatl\'e wntmg of uns pecified length. Judging l!t b~·
a committee composed of
membc:rs of the Office of Student Affairs. and student edl ton of campus pubh allons
Send subm1ssions to Student
Aff:ans. 542 Capen Hall . Nonh
Campus. The phone l!t 645-

2982.

-·
THEY

HOP£ n

SNOWS AND

'The Schussmeisters Ski Club
invites faculty and staff and
their families to join them for
the coming winter season,
which begins as early as Nov.

JOBS
FACULTY

Assistant Proressor/Associate
Prores50r/FuU Professor-Accounung and Lav.·. School of
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Posung tF-4080 Assistant/
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•F-4082 . Assistant ProfessorLmgulstlcs . Postmg fJF-408-1
Assis1ant PrortsSOr-Commum-

CIIIOn. POlliUng #W-4085 . Associatt/fuU Proressor-Schoolof
Law. Posting ftF-4086.
IIESIEARCH

Secretary 11-Buffalo Maten ah
Research Center, Postmg MR 94011 Postdoe1oral Associat.~! 81ology. Post mg •R ·
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•R -94074 .

Runners push off at start of
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PROFESSIONAL
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sions Ad"·isor (SL-3, lnttrnal
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Technology . Posting #P-4091

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9

Research shows right music may
improve surgeon's perfonnance
LAYING MUSIC
during surgery may

help some surgeons
relieve stress and im-

prove the ir performance, a study conducted by researchers at UB suggests.
Onl y mu sic selected by th surgeon had a srrong positive effect
during a laborat ory expenment
designed to mim ic the s tre !t~ of
surgery. however. Results showed
that music selected bv the research -

ers. and known s~ificall} for it!.
calming influence. resulted in onI)

slightl y decreased cardiovascul ar
ac1ivity and no impro\ ement m
perform_._
The study. conduc ted by Karen
Allen and Jim Blascov ich ofU B",
Center for the Study of Biobeha ' ioral and Social A spects of Health.
appears in the Sept ::! I issue of the
Journal of tht Amutcan Mrdu·al
Association.
\
Various studies have'bee n done
on the role of music in reliev mg
am.iety and pain in patients before.
during and after various mech cal

procedures. including surgery. And
while many surgeons are known to

lt'ten to music in the operating
room. Allen and Blascov ich said
their mvestigation is the fir t to
s!Ud)· music's therapeuti c effect
on these physicians.
To assess the influence of mu!r&gt;tcon surgeons' c ardiovasc ular reacti vity-blood pressure. pulse rate

and skin conductanco-and performance. the researchers enlisted
50 male volunteers. all mus 1c en thusiast who li "iten to mu sic dur•ng surgery . In a laboratory setti ng.
the 50 surgeon were asked to perform mental arithmellc tash. a
standard method for measuring ps) .
c hophysiological '\tress. to m1mrc

SWJ;eonsperformed suiNan-

"With their own
music, the surgeons
were less influenced
by ex.temal things
and were better
able to concentrate
on the task and get
it right. "
KAREN AUEH

the stres!t a &lt;&gt;urgeon might expenence in the operatmg room.
Each part1cipant performed the
taco.l!r&gt; twice under three co.ndttl ons-mus.i c of chorce. mu&lt;s1c ~­
lectcd b) the re!!oearcher ... Pache lbel'!!. Canon m D. a "ell~nown cla"!&gt;ical orchestral p1ece
often mcluded m comme rctall~
produced "s t re~!t-reduc.·llon"
t.lpes-and no mustc. Basel1ne car·
d1o\'asc ular readmgs. \\ere ta~en

Beast feeding may cut
health riskfor 'preemies'
By LOIS BAKER
~s

Bureau Staff

A

STUDY b r UB re searchers ha s shown
that breast-feed ing pre mature infant s durin g
the first 3-4 weeks oflife may help
protect them from developing
necrotizing enterocolitis. or NEC.
a potentially life-threatening bowel
infla mmation.
The findings show that prema·
ture infants who are not breast-fc:.,d
have about a three-times greater
risk of developing NEC during the
first four weeks than premature
babies who receive any amount of
breast milk. during that time.
Risks were nearly the same for
breast- and bottle-fed babies at
two weeks . the result s showed,
with the protective effect beginning to appear during the third
week. when the ri sk of NEC for
b:Jbies who had received no breast
milk was twi ce th at of breast -fed
babies.
Vivien Carrion. assistant professor of ped iatrics at UB and lead
investigatoron the study. presented
the fi nd ings at a meering of the
Society for Pedi atric Research.
Necrotizing enterocolitis is an
inflammatio n of the large and sma ll
intesti nes that can be brought on by

~fore and after each task.
and readings were monitored during each task and
music condition. Performance was rated for speed
a nd accuracy b)' a re!.earc her blind to the stud)
conditions
Re&lt;ults showed that the

lack of blood flo"" tot he 1ntesunes .
emeral feeding. bactt:rial proliferati on or intestmal d) !&lt;&gt;func t1 on. Be-tween 5 and 12 pe rce nt of all
premature mfants de' elop the condition. which ca rrie s a monalit\
rate of 20-40 percent
.
The purpose of Carrion·~ researc h was to determine if an 3l!ISO·
ciation exists between the type of
feeding a premature infant recei\'es
and development of EC.
The retrospective case-control
st udy involved 100 premature infants admitted to The Children· ~
Hospi tal of Buffalo between Janu ary 1986 and December 1992 who
developed NEC. and a random
group of 100 infants from the same
neonatal inten ive care unit who
did not.
Babies were matched for age.
weight-all weighed le ss than
1.500 grams at binh- and other
significant factors.
An analysis of feeding method s
from the infant s' medical records
showed that breast-feeding was signifi cantl y more prevalent among
the babies who did not develop
NEC than among those who did
develop the conditi on .
Babies in the control group also
were breast-fed longer than infants
in the case group.

'

llall) better \\ he:n listenmg
to thetr ow n selection than
when h~1ening to the control
m~1corwhen no music was
play ing
" Wuh the1r own mU\JC.
the surgeon~ were le""' tn·
nucnced b) extemalthmg-.
and "ere benerabletoconce ntrate on the task and get 11 nghL"
Allen ~a1d
CardiO\ a~c ular re,pon'loe al'o
\\a\ "'tgmficantl) lo" cr dunng the
l'.elf-~elected mu sic segment than
dun ng the other two cond itions
A\crage pul se rate when performmg the stres~ful tas ~ s \\aS 78 beats
perm1n utedunng the self-selected
mustc.comparedto IIOdunngboth
the Pachclbel !!.election and " hen
no mu'loJl' "'a' pi a) tng.. rel'.ull""
!!hO\\Cd.

.

B

oth"'~'&gt;toltcanddl~htoltcblood

pre~sure fiJ\t&gt; ,lgntficantl) tn
re':lpono;e to "'tre!!o~ dunng the no.l.u"'ic and Pachelbel 'egment... but
rema1ned ... uble dunng I he: ph: "&gt;1CIJn•: c h o 1 c~ of mu,u.:
"U'1ng the1r own Olll'-ll' . lhl'
. . urgeon' 'hew. ed nnl) ,mall

changes m blood prt!t"&gt;Ure o' erthetr
ba...elme. e\en "hen under strt"s,:·
Allen sa1d
No ~pec1fic category of surgeonselected mus1c w~ associated w1th
favorable phystologtcal response•
and 1mproved perfonn~ The !i.e·
iecuons. all tnstrumentaJs, 1ncluded
\\ orl b~ Count Ba s1e. Aaron
Copeland. man) clasSical composers and tradlliOOal Cehtc harp mus1c
"'flus expenment lends credtble suppon to 1he 1mponance of
mdlvidua\ \as\e and se\octlon of
mustc." rhe author"" state . "Jame'
Gal"a: and the Ch1eftans playmg
ln;,h mu..,tc complete "uh drum'
and un "h1stle ... had a more po!&gt;t·
tiH' mtluence on the surgeon than
the ~oothmg Pachelbel U"'ed as the
l'Ontrol"
"To the exrent that wrgeom·

performance and cardJO\B ular
~ponsc!t dunng a standard laboratory psycholog•cal "'trt:'-S gener·
ahzes to the surg1 cal sun.e. one
"ould expect benefictaJ effects of
the same mus1c on bolh card to' ascular reacU\ II) and performance
dunng surger: ." Allen stated
The authors emphasized that aJI
Mudy pan1c1pants v.ere mu s1c enthusiasts who believed the) funcuoned better under m, mfluence
Result~ may be differe nt for sur!con'!l who Go

n&lt;M hs~ t.G

1"t'MH.\c.

dunng surger: or "ho arr nor de ' oted to the genre. t e~ 001ed
Allen '' a MK" Iateviu·ector and
research a-.soctare v.1th the U B
Center for the Stud-. ot 810be.havtnral and Soc tal AsPect-;; of Health
Blasco\ tch IS a UB assoc1ate profe~o;;or of p"lycholog~

Study gives weight to early exam
By LOIS BAKER

News Bureau S1at'
U B re~earcher ha s
sho" n that phy~u.:1an~
ca n idenllf) mo"l of the
premature!) born children among their patlentliri "ho "1 11
expene nce senSOr) and/or motor
defic us at 4 10 5 years of age b)
refernng to the results o f a stand:ud neurologic examination admini stered routinely to premature
babi~s at age 18 months.
The research showed that 89
percent of the c hildren who tested
in the lo" range at I 8 months also
tested lo" in a foli o " -up ex am
administered between the ages of
3 and S.
ShellyJ . Lane. UBas istantprofessor of occupational therapy and
lead author on the study. said the
findings indicate that the neuro"' logic exam at 18 months can bt
used as a rati ona le fo r referring
ch ildren to earl) intervention program!~ . "These re s ult~ indicate that
among children born prematurely.
IS-month neurologic status ... is
sig nifi cant ly predictive of se nsorimotor deficits at four years."
Lane states.
The srudy was published in the
American Joumal of Occupariot~al

A

Th~rapy.

Many studies have shown that
babies born prematu rel y are at risk

for neurolog ic and de ' elojlmental
problems mere!) b) 'm ue ofthe1r
earl) btrth. The S-1 S percent of
theo;;e children with spec1fic. Jden ufied deficits. o;;uch as ce rebral
palS). hydrocephal us. or' isuaJ and
hearing deficns. ~ i ll like!) rece1'e
earl)' intervention and folio" -up
se rvices.
It 's the childr/n "hose deficu s
are more subtle and less "ell-defined. but capable of causing learn ing and behavior problems by the
time they reach hool age. who
often get no early te.rvention and
follow-up services. nesays. Thi s
is becauseno relation 'phasbeen
firmly established bet
n earl)
test results and problems at school
age. she adds .

I

n an effort to establish such a
relationship. Lane's team fol lo"·ed 30children born prematurely
who had been tested at 18 months:
20 who were designated neurologi cally normal and 10 who were assessed as neurologically suspicious.
and tested them again between the
ages of 3 and S "ith a standard pre-

school assessment device.
Result showed that 8 of9 children who tested neurologically suspicious at 18 months continued to
show neurologic deficils as they
reached preschool age. One child
was unable to comple te the test.

Lane pomb out that ch1ldren
born premature!) "ho ha'e serious neurologic problems are idc.nufied early and rece1 \e a vanety of
li.pecial en 1ce~. and that chndren
\\ ho test firmJ) m the normaJ range
at I months end
holding thc:i.r
o" n as a group.
""It 's the kids 10 the grn) area
that "e·re concerned v.·ith in this
stud)'-l:.ids whoSe parents notice
several areas in which the child is
progressi ng different!)' than o&lt;her
kids." she says. - Physicians tend
to take the global ' 'ie" in these
cases. because the deficits ofteo
are subtle . They may advise parents that these. children will grow
out of their problems.lt would be in the best interesl
of the child if physicians would be
sensitive to the concerns of par·
ents. she says. and more willing to
~fer children who fall into a suspicious categol) for funher evalua·
tion. She recommends evaluating
these children every 12-18 months
so they can get help as soon as
possible.
Addressing deficit s early has
several advantages. she says: The
s.ervices have more impact. health
professionals have more flex.ibility. and correcting problems before chjJdren enler school saves
them from ~ing stigmatized as
developmentally needy .

op

�- ..... --.-·
1994 SEFA C,,nlpaogn

-... ""'"""".........

SEFA AT WORK
Leool8 J , Sct.ltt ..

.,_-*

a

•

••••• -

'I am grateful that SEFA supports the great WOI1&lt; that
Hospice does . Termonal illness is an almost ove!Whelming experience. The support of Hospice is an important
element in our support structure for the patient and the
patient's loved ones:

_,....

,~

..__
-.a,,.,._.
,_,of__

...... ..........
~

AM~~r••aa.o .

SM....,.. •

to- · ·~

'I thought you might enjoy knowing the reason behond
my dooation Her name is Katoe Ruth Dugan. age '3 and
1/2 and a little,· she'd be proud to tell you. She arrived
prematurely in June of 1990 At the time of her borth.
Katie appeared to be in perfect health if a bit on the wee
side However. while on the recovery nursery her breathing stopped and she had the first of what were to be
many dusky spells. I've never been able to thank the
alert nurses who noticed my baby gorl in distress , and I
guess 1 d idn't adequately thank the ICN nurses who
helped Katoe (and me) through that rough , scary first
week of Kalle's life
So il l can g ove a little back to Children's , it's my pleasura. I've recently been dovorced , so the donatiOfls may
not be as large as I'd like lor a while But you can rest
assured. if I ever won the lottery. Choldren 's Hospital woll
benefit greatly!'

- . . . . , _ .. _ _ o f _

' My life was touched last year by Day of Canng When I

wenllo pock up my daughter !rom her day care center.
and saw DOC volunteers on her classrvvm. I doscovered
that the center was partoally funded by SEFA Thos was a
real eye-opener for me I was under lhe ompressiOfl thai
SEFA only helped people who were senously oil or had
expenenced some terrible tragedy What 1 realized was
that while SEFA org&lt;lnozatoons make a world of doffer ence to these lndovoduals. they also make gentle omprovements on the lives of people who are more
fortunate . In some way large or small. SEFA probably
touches the hfe ol every person on campus •

av..-........-.....-_,.._,
..vtcae,
_,.ott....... - ...... -,.._,_.
llut

to -

atpublic. Do you have a story
you'd like to share about how an organizatiOn lunded
through SEFA has touched you or someone close to
yoU? We'd love to hear about 11 Please send your Slones to . Rebecca Bernsteon or Ellen Goldbaum. Touch a
Ufe. 136 Crofts Hall. North Campus Fax 645-2313
E-mail touch_a_lrteOpub buffalo edu
to toll -

Make a difference
withSEFA
HROUGH SEFA. UB EMPLOYEES have the opportunity 10 make a difference by tooching the life of someone
in need.
SEFA. the State Employees Federated Appeal , a fundraising campaign directed at UB faculty and staff and to
employees of related university organizations. SEFA makes il possible for you to contribute to a wide range ofnon-profil and health and
human service agencies or to only a specific few of your choice.
Yourcontributioo may be desigt111ed to help those in need in areas
thai include servi= to the elderly and handicapped. child care, child
abuse pre vention. drug and alcohol abuse prevention. family-wpport
services, youth services. national and local bcalth services and
research, international services and the environment
Muriel A. Moore. vice president for Public Servo~&gt;' and Urban
Affairs. is chair of UB"s 1994 SEFA campaign, and Rlck Winter.
dean of the School of Management. is co-chair. Other members of the
1994 SEFA administtative group include:
Rebecca Bernstein. Kathleen Berchou. Ruth
Bynon~ SandraJ . Faz.ekas. Owles M. Fogel.
Mary H. Gresham. Consllm~&gt;' C. Holoman.
Kenneth E. Hood, Zubeda Jalalz.aJ. Richard
A. Jones, Charles J. Kaars. John G . Kaner.
Bruce Kolesnick. Michael F. LeVine. Roger
R. McGill . Ellen McNamara. Susan E.
, McNeoll , Donnell G. Mueller, James
Nadbnuch, Karen K. Noonan. Carole Srruth
Petro, Barbara J Rlcotta. Stephen M. Robens. Kathryn A Sawner, Louis J. Schmin,
Edward P. Schneuler, Kevin R. Seitz. John
H. SheUum and 'Myron A. lbompson.
SEFA 1s an effective. convenient and de·
pendable procedure for supponing nonprofil human bcalth, welfare and recreation services. Its purpose is lo
reduce administrative costs associated with charitab~ fund·raising.
and to encourage generosity among people in state institution s.
Beneficiaries of the appeal are the 177 agencies thai make up the
_ SC"veral United Way programs. 34 national health agencies, 31 intema·
tional service agencies and 61 independen1 non-affiliated agencies.
The advantage of the SEFA program o'er the United Wa y alone
IS the availability of a broader spectrum of services to which you may
contn, te. Your gifi may be shared among all participating federations , or it may be earmarked for the agency of your choice. All you
have to do is indicate that choice or cho1ces on your pledge form.
SEFA also allows you to contribute to an agency through a payroll
deduction plan: deductions for the 1994 SEFA campaign begin Jan.
I , 1995, and end Dec. 31 . 1995

IMAGiniNG the CITY
continued from page 12
where SimCity is never destroyed no matter
how many times it is blown up. but instead
always returns transformed into new and
improved versions.··
Most imponantly. crossing betwee.n the
elusive boundaries of these parallel condi·
ti ons provokes questions about how to teach
and learn in ever-changing multi -conditions.
conditions in which technological advances
will cloud the current physical and telev1sual
boundaries. merging them 10 produce }et
anOlher set of conditions.
How do designers make intelligent dcci·
sions in these many shifting labyrinths? And
how can design education equip students
with the tools to actively panicipate in.
change. and adapl lo our rapidly changing
urban environments? Empowering students
with the ability tomal::econsc ieni:ious moves
and connections in somewhat unpredictable
futures requires shifts in our mindsets about
learning. Pedagogies framed upon linear.
isolated, and absolute methods of learning
are becoming less valid and useful. The
ideas of "good" and " bad," "righC and
" wrong" are blurred. As a resul~ the ability
to understand issues from as many points of
view as possible is becoming crucial.
Equally imponanl is an abili1y to understand the "connectors" between those van·
tage points. In thi s Iigh~ merits of the " band'"
versus the "machine•• as methods of del ineation and expression are dependent upon the
set of inquiries and contest within which a
designer is worki ng. Understanding bow
various media can be used to express. affect,

----

.. ~~.. '"'"··

""'~·~

-pc.-cl~~

IY1DI'*'D In l1lt1Y COIICMoraal

Allton filii f'wi( ID dellal . .
\JriMniiy of w..n Onllrte.
The Allwlla dllleaiMIIhe . . .

tenga2&amp;-33 VINe
lUI won
27-30.
111 the wmwll race, ue·
Juc:WI Havill frilhed tlrlllrl
18:30.411
in . . nutJr

e-.
__ ,.-.;....,.on

~oflwcxu-., Nallk'*

t h e -· NIMI(a lime 111 ...;24
• the courw I800!d . . ..,.
monlh.

Buftalo'a -.n Sl'ddelout1h, . . _ , . ; U8 ......
wllh. ,.,_,., belll19.01.88
_... S..C.,. Stlol'll•• on enw.d

81d11n 18:211.118 to riU1d OUIIhe
Aoylle' top ..... ...,__
U8'1 et..1ev Moyntw1 'Mlll
the men's race in 26:56.7 .khl
Syrolynlld- tlird in 27.03 and
Chris ac.-t abdh in 27:08.
The Royals improved their
recad to 10.0 in dual meets. The

......

Bulls .... 4-5.

.,_

The Royals ai1UIOUI vlsit¥lg
Gannon s-o 1n a driW1g rainstorm

on Sept 28. o.ne Tlllerlco
acqed 1M&gt; goeiiiO lead UB.
Joema T~ and Kelly Slarchck
eed'l added II gQ8I and
in the rout of the Lady Knlfll*.
Goeikeepet Nield PIIWo ~
just 1M&gt; - 1 0 rflllia* her fnl
shuloul of the _ ,_
Ons..dlly, ... ~llill·
home to a tough Penn Stale '
8QUIId 4-&lt;1. UB's
44-1 . They
lace
.
1n
their I n ! _ , Ill
.•
IOCCer lhia Sa1urd8y ~
• 11:30 a.m.

.n--

an:-

_.......

The lUI '*opped II pair of
ll18liCNs lllst week 1D make Iheir
record 5-4. On TUNdily. U8
lnMIIed 1D Cenielus where they
,. . 10 the Golden Grifllns 4-1.
Fredrick Al&lt;osa tcored the Bulls
lona goal in the loa.
Friday. the Bulls rettmed home

to host Long hiland lJnNa'slty
k*1g to the 8lackbirds ~2.
Ediru ~was instn.r'nenlaA
on bolt! UB goals ecorin:Q.one
and assllling on the ISIWer. Soiir
T11111Mk11allec:l the second U8
goal. while goaikeepet Jay
Pamer made nine saves
~

and possibly enlighten the issues of a project
becomes critical in the dccision· making pro.
cess. Understanding the fundamentals of
moving and linking concepts turns into a
primary abilily necessary to effective!)• ac1
in the multiplicity of physical.and televi sual

environments.
The makers of urban fonn and culture
must be able to transform. translate and
travel between various modes of representa·
tion if they are to challenge the meanings o f
design in situations where traditional com.

ponc.nts are broken down
SlmCity
and reconstructed along
2000, hom
other axes. Facility of an ad In
these ~ic moving and
Wired,
linking concep!S affirms
February,
1994.
possibilities for positive
action in new structural
modes of non· linear or non-scquentiaJ space:
sugges1s possible structures of thinking and
experiencing in such open--ended worlds ,
and allows design to tal.:e place in a state of
continual transi1ion.

Coach Bob Maxwell's squad
picked up a five.garne vtctory on
the road WedM8day al Niagara.
The Aovala rallied from 11 ~
gamaHo-one deficit to deMel
lhe Purple Eagleii1S.13, 1~15,
14-16, 15-5, 15-9. Candie Hirst
led the Royals will1 25ltitls and
24 dig&amp; in the match. Laurie
Sanlalli added 16 kills and 17
dig&amp; Willie Candl Sims lllllied 46
asaisls and three Mrvice - -Kalhy Brinkwol1h had 14 Ieiiia and
10 bloclca.
Sl!lurdey' the Royals drtlpped
a 111r--o-ne dacllion at Cornell.
SIWIIeli IICCOl.l1llld for 16 digs
while Hnt had 13. The Royals
are now S.12 as they begin 1helr
second homestand a( the l8jiSOO
at Alurml Ar- . hosting Sl
Francis (Pa) Friday night at 7
p .m . and Sl .khl's on Sunday at
1 p .m.

�- . a..--.-·

Facul &amp;SiaHBi lboard
c.n.l .. vice ......
for sdllllnlsbsllon
at law school

Alao S. Carrel, associate
dean for external affairs in
the UB School of Law, has been
appointed 10 the new position of
vice dean for administn1tion in
the law school.
In his new position, Carrel will
have authority over

,.....,=._..,

non-academic matten. He will continue to dirccl
alumni affairs. career developmen~ fund-raisi ng and public
relation~. and now also will oversee student services, expenditure
controls, space allocations, personnel matters and student disci plinary problems. In addition, he ·
will represent the law school with
university officials concerning
finances and faci1ities.
Carrel, who graduated from
the UB law school in 1967 pnc·
ticed law in Buffalo for II years
and was a panner in the:: flflll of
Rosen, Yasinow, Robens. Rich &amp;
Carrel when he joined the law
school staff as associate dean in
1978.
He is a member of the Bar
Association of Erie County,
American Association of Law
Schools, New York State Bar
Association. Council for the Ad·
vancement and Support of Education. National Society of Fund
Raising Executives and the
American Bar Association.
An alumnus of Hamilton Col·
lege. Carrel is a direCtor of the
Legal Aid Bureau and past presi·
dent of Jewish Fed&lt;rntion Housing.

Chemistry holds open
houM In new building

0

UB's Department of Chemistry will hold an open
house from noon-5 p.m. on Satur·
day, Oct. 8, in the Facuhy of
Natural Sciences and Mathemal·
ics Complex o n the Nonh Campos. 1be open house is pan of
Homecom ing W eekend.

Keynote speaker will be
Rudolpb A. Marcus, Arthur
Amos Noyes Professor of Chern·
istry at California Insti tute of
Technology, who received the
Nobel Pri ze in Che mistry in 1992

for studies in electron u-ansfer
processes. Marcus will speak
about "'Theory and Experiment in
Science" at I p.m.
A reception and poster display
of UB research projecl5 will he·
gi n a t noon. Welcoming rern.arks
will be made by Jerome B .
Keister, chair of c hemistry. and
Joseph J. Tufariello. dean of the
Facul ty o f Natural Sciences and
Mathematics. A demonstration
and talk o n the multi med ia fea·
lures of the lecture halls will he
given by Robert D. Allendoerfer,
assoc iate professor of chemi stry.
The eight-story, $45 mill ion
science complex, which opened
this fall, houses UB 's depan·
menl5 of Chemistry and Geology.
1be Depanmenl of Chemistry
had been headquartered in
Ac heson Hall on the South Campus since 1958.
To make reservations for the

ChemiStry Open House, call 64S370S.

Chinese ..sslclent
tospellkOct.8

Wang Juntao, a chief
player in the 1989
Ti ananmen Square pr&lt;Hiemocntcy movement, will speak at 2
p.m. on Satwday, Oct 8, in
Room 5 of Diefendorf Hall on the
South Campus.
Wang will speak in Chinese
and his presenl.ation will be simultaneously translated into
Englisb. The presenl.ation is free
of cbasJ!e and open 10 the public.
During the infamous
Tiananmen Square demonstration
of 1989, Wang and his associates
were forced 10 flee Beijing.
Tracked down by the governmen~ they were captured and
brought 10 trial in 1991 . Due to
the effons of his wife, Hou
Xiaotian. and friends throughout
the world. and U.S. diplomatic
pressure. he was released from a
13-year prison sentence earlier
this year on the condition that he
leave the country. He is now at
Harvard University.
Wang's presentation is cos~sored by the June 4 Memoriill Fund; the Graduate Student
Association. Multidisciplinary
Discussion Group, Oainese Literature Club a nd the Chinese
Studenl5 and Scholars Club. all at
UB. and lhe Buffalo Council on
World Affairs.

Symposium Mt on
c:lln~l_dentlsby

0

State-of-the-an research and
treatment of oraJ and maxillofacial infections will be the
focus of a Symposium in Clinical
Dentistry. 10 be held from 8 a.m.
10 4:30p.m. Oct 14. in the
Amherst Holiday Inn. Niagara
Falls Boulevard.
1be program will be dedicated
to fonner UB dental Dean James
A. English. Speaker&lt; will discuss
current research advances and
how they can benefit patients and
dentists in clinicaJ prnctice.
Nonnan D. Mohl. UB professor
and chair of the Department of
Oral Diagnostic Services. will
moderate a panel of speakers.
Cost of the program, which
incl udes lunch and refreshments,
is $155 for dentisl5 and S95 for
staff. For more infonnation. call
829-2320.

Educ:stlon alumni
head universitie s
Two alumni of the UB
Grad uate School of Education have been named presidents
of universities.
Artbu r Elliott Levine. recogniz.c:d as one of the nation ' s bestknown commentators on
educational trends, has been
named the preside nt of Teachers
College at Columbia Univer&lt;i ty.
He is the ninth preside nt in the
college's 107-year hi story.
Harley E. Flack was appointed president of )\'right State
University, a metropOlitan un iversity in Dayton, Ohio, with an
enrollment o f more than 17,000.
Levine, who recei ved a doc-

0

toral degnee in higher education
and sociology from UB in 1976,
was named the school's distin·
guisbcd alumnus of 19&amp;&amp;.
He co-authored " Reform of
Undergraduate Education," with
John Weingart, which won the
1974 Book of the Year Award
from the American Council on
Education. Levi ne's ..Handbook
on Underglllduate CWTiculum,"
published in 1978, stems from his
UB doctoral dissenation. The
author or editor of nine books
and more than SO articles, he bas
ad vised more than 2SO colleges
and universities on curriculum
and other academic-affairs
issues.
Aack received his doctorate in
counselor education from UB in
1971 . He held numerous posi·
tio.ns at UB. including assistant
dean in the School of Heahh
Related Professions.
He served as the founding
dean of the College of Allied
Health Sciences at Howard Uni - ,
versity from 1974 10 1987. and
became vice president for academic affairs and dean of the
faculty at the State University of
New York at Old Westbury. In
1989, he was appointed provost
and executive vice president of
lfowan College of New Jersey,
fonnerly Glassboro State College.
Flack has published numerous
articles and books, including
''AfricanzAmerican Perspectives
on Biomedical Ethics," and the:
upcoming "Case Studies in Allied
Health,'' co-authored wllh Roben
Veatch. director ur the Georgetown Universit) Kenned y In stitute of Ethics.
He has scr\'ed as president of
the National Society of Allied
Health and as founding editor of
tiS journal. Flack has composed
more than 25 works for piano and
vo1ce. and recently published
'The Goree Suite:· pieces for
voice and African instruments.

Gift funds study to help
asthma sufferers
Rohne-Poulenc Rorer Pharmaceuticallnc. has made a
gift of more than $35,000 in suppon of the UB Posilllln Emission
Tomography (PET) Imaging
Center. The grant, which will
fund a study of the penetration of
widely used asthma medication
into human lungs. makes the UB
PET Center the first facility in the
cou ntry 10 perform lung imaging
of a drug's distribution in lung
tissue, said Edward
Bednarczyk, the study's princi·
pal investigator and clinical in structor in the UB School of
Pharmacy.
A multidiscipli nary researt:h
team will create! a safe, radioa(::tive fonn of the drug used in
asthma inhalers. Six vol unteers
will be given the medication, and
its penetration into the lungs will
be tracked with the PET camera.

0

Mlc:bael D. Randall

....-clto~~post

Micbael D. Randall, director of the Office o f Financial
Aid for the past seven years. has
been named associate d irector of
the Office of Instituti onal Analy-

0

0 EI ' U ARI f S

sis at UB.
Randall, who joined UB in
1979 as a glllduate assistan~ has
been an inSIJUCIOr in the Center
for Management Development in
the UB School of Management
and the assistant director for
Financial Aid Systems, where he
worli:ed closely with the University Computing Center 10 implement a new mainframe computer
application for the financial aid
office. He also was assistant
director of student finances and
records.
He received a bachelor's degnee in psychology and a master's
degree in business adminisl:J'ation
from UB .
He is a member of several
professional organizations. in·
eluding the New York State Financial Aid Administrators
Association, the New York Stat&lt;
Organization of Bursars and
Busi ness Administrators. and the
National Association of Student
Financial Aid Administrators .
Elias Eldayrie, director of the
Office of Student Accounl5, will
serve as interim director of the
Office o f Financial Aid.

Sax Quartet premieres
Flapper Ent Dsnc:es
The premier performance of
Flapper Era Dances. a musical composition by Allen Sigel,
UB profc:a&amp;OI" c:mcrilus o( music,
will be perfonned by the Amherst
Saxophone Quartet
at 8 p,m. Oct 10'"
Slee Hall.
Inspired by the
musical milieu in
America during the
SIGEl.
1920s. Flapper Era
Dances has four movements:
tango, fox-Lrot, hesitation waltz
and Charleston.
Sigel. a member of the UB
facuhy from 1960 10 1992. was
principal clarinetist o f the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra prior to
thaL He is the author of five mu sic books. numerous articles and
commercial recordings as a clari·
netis1. The Amherst Saxophone
Quartet is a resident faculty ensemble al UB.
Tickets for the concen are S5 (
and SIO. For more information,
call 645-2921.

0

W. Donald Leslie,
medical director

- w -..tee wu held
Sept. 2B for W. Donald Leslie. a

A

former Erie County medical direc·
who ICfVCd as an usislant profeuor of anatomy at UB for more
than 20 years. Leslie. 86, died Sept.
2S in the Erie County Medical Center.
Aft.aancoding Canisius Collqe.
.Leslie graduated from the University at Buffalo Medical School in
1933. He conducted a privau: prac·
tice for 43 years and oaved u plant
physician for American Op&lt;ical and
Prau &amp; Letchworth for many yean.
He became Ene County medical
director in 19S2. after serving as a
welfare mediCIJ invcsaptor for the
county. He held that position for 20
years. woridng10 promo&lt;e construe·
lion of the Erie County Medical Cenu:r.
Surv1von include two sons,
Donald R. of Amherst and William
R. of San Diego: lhnee brothers. Dr.
John of Merrin Island. Fla .• Dr. &amp;,.
gene of Will iamsville and Dr .
Malcolm of Los C.tos. Cahf . two
si slers. Iren e Kei se r and June
Jemeson. both of Los Angeles: and
four grandchildren
LOr

Hany Suprinick,
engineering prof
A

- w -"-

was held

Sep&lt;. 2B at the Beach-Tuyn Funeral
Home m Williamsville for Harry
Suprinick. profe ~so r emeritus of
mechaniclll a.od aerospace engineering. Suprinicl: died Sept. 2S _a1 the
age of6~ .
Suprinicl: rece1ved his B.S.M.E.
and B.S.Met.E from Mich1gan College of Mining Technology and hJs
Ph.D . from Lehigh Umversiry.
He came to UB as an instrucror
for four years before going 10 Lehigh
for lhe PhD. in 19S6, and upon its
completion in 1962, reiUmod to UB .
He was promoted to associate professor in 1966 and held that rank
untillus retirement three years ago.
He served with lhe Depanmenl
of Mechanical and Aerospace Engi·
neering for almost 40 years. porsu·
ing teaching and research interests in
materials engineering. Suprinick..
who supervised the undergraduate
materials laboratories, did research

on dental materials in the '60s. His
specialization in metallurgy wu t.he
behavior or iron silicoo alloys. _.__,
Swvivors include his wife. Marie;
1wo daughters. Mary Catherine
O'Connor and Valeria A. Maving; a
sis&amp;:er, Sophie Bodnaruk; and IWQ
grandchildren.

,.,____ .,..=e::_,_. .
.. . . . . 1
,.,......
- - - - .. - • A man was charged wllh crininal
· Sept. 16 for dis·
charging a fire extlngutsher In the MFAC Sludenl Club.
• Two pair &lt;A Ice slcates. wcnb a combined value &lt;A $400, - .
reponed missing Sept 16from Spaulding Quadrangle.
• A claelcal guitar, valued at S700, was reponed missing Sept
19from Slee Hill.
• A"*' .-parted Sept 20 lila! 3,250 copies of ~
magazine - . mistling from - . 1 loc:llliona on the Nollll C....
~
• A pliir of jeans. a ..-en and a ring, worth a c:ombNd ...,. o1
$320, !1lpOflad ..-...lng Sept 20 from the , . ,.. IDI*-in Aklrmi " ' - . In 811111181818 h:ldent, a qlllll COI1IIIII*Ig asclf

=lion~ peqonal papers- I1IPOftlld. mistling lrom . . •

she-· ......

A woman NPQitlld Sept 21 thai S21 -llllt8n from her

sa.nc..~..~ary.
A CocN Hill~ NpOriMt Sept 2111W a ----~t
lwolllca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . _ , .................
--a.
he -.-Jdlda21Hna11...,..vf'*IIM.JID.
cording to a..._ . . .,....., _ _ MCNIIIHII.
Ollicers _ . unable to 1oc111e aiUipeCl
..t1ile

•

�____ ..

- . ..---.-·

,_,_
------·8fllril-fw'
P------..........
-·--___

ICIAHI.._ . . . . . .

"'ne could argue
!bat we aeai!Jlbese
new technologies to
satisfy tile desire for
new representation
. and new ways to
represt!nltlle desire
to step outside
ouJSelves and look
back in onler to
undeJStand and
extend."

....., ...

A second -year archit.cc1ure
student showed me an ad for the
updated version of SimCity. an

...urban... computer game. The
text n:.ad like a trailer for an
upooming thriller:
~Beneath the pollihed facade
lies a eeething cauldron of angry
taxpayen, broken water main
and other challeng.. that will
take you uptown. downtown,
even underground. Now enterin~:
SimCity 2000---U&gt;e~
· ate city
simulator .. .. You gel to rraform .
your landtcape. You ~ total

;:~~s:;~~::.·:~ I
of

we. can ex.poct lo lll~oend

mort" time with and in

trdulOiogies that mimic. varudy.
anJ expand our everyda y li\'CS.
These 1echnolopes chaUODj;e
rve~1hin g we consider ··rea~.·•
our increasing suc-cess at imaging.
modeling. and replic.11ting has
imbued our ··reality·· with the
potential for not hcing -real'" and
has bestowed tl1e possihilitiet; of
... reality'' on our representational

technologies.

My stud ent proudl y admitted
that he was addicted to SimCity:
that it taught him more about
urbanism and how cities work
than any t.:oursc he had C\ 'er
taken : that il was "" real ~ to him ,
different than a ... real .. of
hanging out in Times Square.
hur " real. .. nonethelt:ss . He Hi,.
e\·idf'nce that
ways in wh.i(·h
the images of
the lele,•isual
world are
perceil'ed have
chaUenged the
sra tus of
..city,•• have
chaUenged the
....... SlmCtty
status tha t we
have a ttriLuted
to cities in the past, and have
done so far more powerfully than
any othe r medium. They have
beccune primary mediators of
..,·itics." And that televisuaJ
mec:lia tion implies. at the least, a
s..lf-rcfet~ntial cluality which
inclmles the ..represented and thl'
representation, a duulit y that
uses clis la ncing ami image ry to
sc.ncl its messages. One of the
rrsuhs of such mediation is that
o ur current society is one in
whidt c•itit.."M nn&gt; now support
t

the
structures designed to \'alidate
images and to sustain the
authoritati,•r status of the image.
e.g., the ciJy i's becoming one cif
many modps to affirm our heliif's
i'n ceUuloid, in pixels, i'n th.e
represented wor/J-1he big
busineSs ofi'UusWn.s.
ln addition, these mediated
modes are sclf-rcff'..N&gt;ntial , and.
therefore , always on the outside
commodifying (and possibly
generating) other mod es of
represent ·
ation. As
such. euch
city representa tio n

reinfof"tts the
other,
commodifie!

the other. and
moves in and
out ofiuown
form in the
process. \l'hile certain as1:teets of
each mode are maintained, the
_collCt!ptuali:ation of the city
changes as it movfil through the
various kinds of representation .
Most df'.:Signers have lea rnt.od
to li\'C with (a nd some ha\'e evl"n
thri"cd upon ) the explosiw·
ln creaset~ in tct·hnologicaUy
driven modes of representation.
One couJtl argue that we create
tlu..-se new tt.."Chnolopes to tWtisfy
the desire for new representation
and new w.ays to represent, the

uoe
whatever
teehnolngi..
we have
•vailahle to
fulfoll lh.....

det.ireo.
Adap~to

new

technologit"S
is the

required
pauive
re~pometo

survival.
~

I)· queotioniJ&gt;&amp;and
-ETHTAUKE
desi¢ng
the. is.
way to determine where we go a.s
individuala and as a species.
Certainly~ as critical makers
of the built environment, we
need to examine the poui.hle
consequences of televit!ual
technolngi"" and th•
repre8entational 5tates the)·
foster in relation to the notion of
-city ... Crossing the Ouctuating
boundarie~~ between tht' hand·
bu.ih ph y!ical r nvironment and
the electronically huilt tdr,•isuaJ
environment poses manr
qutstioru, threat s. and
poosihilitieo. Aln:ady il clta&amp;nge.
our concepts of spa~ and time
offering us the possihilia y of
instant muhipk translocation. It
erodet~ our security in physical
a rtifaru a nd plare. ~us to
float through &amp;omf' wa.lls
(constructed o f eli"(·troniC'ally
activ~ materials) while• bumping
into others tmacl(" of concrete}. h
I:M!nneatea; our privacy and
instantl y duplica tN 1111i th Buch
ea.-.t" that notions of o~rdllp
disappear into infmite rq»eating
patterns. It erases traditional
boundariN with fUw r-optic
tnn·el. and repla c-es them with
nt&gt;w oscillating boundaries of
infonnation &amp;l"Ct"SS. h shakes up
the status of archih-"f'ture as the
analog of our world and causes us
to wondf'r whal vlace the built
environment ha~ in its COf"xiJilf'nee
with clr.ctronic t t"("hnolo~es.
It reconditions .... reality.·· by
presenting th~ pos.sihipt-y that thr
telt"\'isual is a substih.ltt for tht
phys.icaJ or l.hat " ·hich we
consider ··real. .. Jt re-conditions
...being•• by seuin~ up situations
in wh.it·t1 we art" t&gt;IN trorricaUy
eonnecle-d. but physically alont,
thu s confront~ our cu~t
notions o f ...citi.ze.n ... and
...community."" lt rt"f'omlitions
··cntieism- by inOu e n f'in~
questions about how institutional
,·alues are questioned or
maintained. h asks what is found
and what is lost. who wim and
who loses as modt"S i.nf'rease. and
opt&gt;ns inquiry into notions about
habi ts and changes in our senses.
perceptions. ancl s ta h -s of being.
It asks if ••then• a.n&gt; any
consequenC'eii of human
signifiram.'f" in a pnrf&gt;ly artifiria l
"'orieL if Bn)' artnalliving can
take vlace in u world ... wheN' the
luws of gnn•ity anrl tlecay ca n lw
atljusted to our ron\'enienrt".

imploding 3 D."
AA the ad demomtrates.
televisual technolngy has
changed our world s into muh.i dimensionaJ, -contexted, -modal
environment·s where we can "'be'"
~irnultaneou sly in many different
" places" and in the various
times, scales, and distances that
attend them . We now spe.nd ,_on
the average. more t1tan six hours
per da y pa)ring attention to the
images of television and
L-omputer screens. As electronic
int. rfaces. nelwork s. and ' 'irtual
t•nvi.ronments become more
~\e.

dettire to 1tep outside ounelvn
and look back in order to
undentand and extl'nd. We 1111iU

zooo.

Photo ahowa • 8Wclent project by Tricle H.a.

continued page 10

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                    <text>William
Fischer

................... _
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Bflocli~ Nov. I. a
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wilb clcaas aNI . , . _ ciMin 10 provide advice. ....,.,., ... 11'11"&gt;"
priMe IDeiiiOriaa 10 . . . ~ faculty alike.
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named
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A priliCipal ...m-10 lbe , . _ , lbe vice po¥011 will ~clcvile.
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- - wilb iMua lllmlUIIdiaJ lbe tp'OWiiiJ diwnity of lbe
fac.lty .

urs UB I'I'CMIII A1rw Blodl.

'"We mlllltuppon individual Cawky........&amp;&gt;en' _....,...,......,
lbeir diaciplinea, pro(~ aDd life' I WOI~,W Aid UB Preaideol
WiJJiam IL Gre~Mr. b will be lbe IIIII&lt; of • vice proVOII for faculty

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be added.

Music
Man

PROVOST

Bob Rossberg shares
his love for jazz PIII

mADDRESS

2

FACULJY

SENME

Do You KnOw
Football Risks?

Provost Bloch
gives second
annual report
Oct. 4 at2 p m
1n 250 Baird Hall

Survey shows
gridd(:lrs' parents lack
information.

September 29. 1994 Volume 26. No. 4

)Beating '~e Squeeze' at Lockwood Library
8y CHRimNE VIDAL
Reporter Edttor

The

should be roughly one-third empty. and
there .should be empty shelves at the bot·

stacks In lodlwed just ll1!l't Wlllt IIIey ll5ell tD be.

They 're full to-the point of overflowing. And while a well-developed
library collection is importanl .to the mission of a university, a library
that 's too full isn't as useful as 11 should be. When 11 reaches 80 percent
capacity, experts say, a library is consielered dysfunctional.
The capacity of Lockwood Library is at I 00 percent.
According to Judith Adams. director of Lockwood Library. the facility houses 1.4
million volumes. and more than one million people use the library and its resources each
year. "Libraries become dysfunctional when they're that full because you can't make
room for new books. can't shelve things because there's no room . Therefore, the people
who use the library can ' t use it well," she said.
But things are changing.
In an effon to address the space

short ~

age. the Redesign of Lockwood Task Force
was fonncd last year to develop plans for
the facility and the reorganization of the
Lockwood collections. Members of the task
force include Loss Glazier. Will Hepfer.
Cindy Seitz. Karen
Senglaup. Karen Smith
and Maureen Stanko.
Built in 1978. the
Lockwood collection
has grown each year. but
no serious renovation of
the facility has e ver
taken place. Adams said.
The task force " planned
a reorganization of the whole building so
material will be easier to use and will be
more accessible," she said. The reorganization also will make the library's electronic
resources more accessible.
'"The library ha been in bad shape for
four or fi ve years because of shelving capacity. but it's now reached thepointof 100
percent capacity and it's hopeless unles
we do somethi ng," Adam said. "We don't
have hope for new space so we have to deal
with it within the confines we have and
there arc things we can do, obviously."
Ideally. shelves in the library stacks

tDift. ~~~~. ----~

shelves in Lockwood are so tightly packed.
addiuonal books are piled on top of the full
rows .
To free up space 10 the stac . Adams
sajd. a section of the basement ormcrly
occupoed b)•Canadian documents lind some
microfilm files has been convened into a
storage facility. lbesc: "closed stacks"" woll
be used to store low-use materiaJs on 6.600
linear feet of shelving. enough room to hold
53.000 vo lumes on double-wide shelves.
Only lo\1.-usc. older volumes will tx selected for storage. and no j ournals w1ll be
JllOVed .

Materials 10 the ··closed stacks·· sui! \It ill
be available for use. Adams said. Library
staff .. will retrieve volumes 1mmediau:l)'
upon request so there will be no waiti~g a~d
you won ' t have to come back to the hbrar') .
BISON "ill indicate that boo~ is on stor·
age. .. she satd . Request fof 1N:x&gt;ls in the
closed stacks al so can be made b) E· mail.
..If we guess wrong and put materials in
(the closed stacks) that are rcguested more
than once. we ' ll take them out of storage
and put them back on the she(\'es."" Adams
added .
Library staff are in the process of select·
ing materials that will go into storage . .. AnythingusedinthelastiOto 15yearsprobabl)
will not go down (into storage)."' Adams
said.
Materials in the closed stacks also will
be available to researchers on an as-needed
basis. "lfthere's a need to browse in some
sets of materials. we will allow them 10 do
that," she said. ·"TTK:re · s a lot of material
that doesn"t get used that has some potential research use. Research interests on campus c hange as facuhy come and go."

"The library has_.now reached the point of 100
pmen! capacity .wl it's hopeless unless we do

somethir-q:."

-

JlltTI

••••s

�2
H 0 \

--

----

~

0

S

- -

UNIIIIRII1'Y \aWl&amp;

--.

................ cu-

rator cf the UB Poetry/Rare
Books Collection. has been

awarded a senior lectureship by the Fulbfight Commission to teach American
Studies at Hacettepe University in Ankara. Tur1&lt;ey
during the fall '94 semester.
A member of the UB Program in Poetics, Bertholf
wiU teach courses in 20th·
cenluJY American poetry, a
field closely related to his
15-year tenure as curator of
the UB collection, which
·houses one of the most

complete collections of
20th-eenlufY poetry in EngUsh in the world,

Bertholf, author of numerous books. has published
widely in scholar1)l journals ,
and seryed fo&lt; eight years
as editor of the presliglous
ine&lt;aJY journal Credences.
He also edhed Northwest
Review. and is former
American edhor of the Ausan journal New Poetry.

CAREER PlANNING &amp;
PlACEMENT
_.,AWAIID--.:
The UB Career Planning
and Placement OffiCEI has
received an Ay.-ard fo&lt; Excellence in Prdgrarrrning
from the SUNY Career Oelleiopment Organizatlon Inc.
The award recognized the
office's Automated Placemen1 Service. created to

placement services to students and alumni, and to
improve office managemem
of employer informatlon.

.....,.&amp;........, associate dean fo&lt; research and
graduate studies in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, has.
been appointed to a twoyear termon
the edhorial
board of

American
Joumaf of
Physiology:
Lung Cellu-lar andMolecular
HOLM
Physiology,
a journal o f the American
Physiological Society.
An associate professor of
pediatrics, obstetrics and
gynecology, and pharmacology at UB, Holm also
has been admitted to the
Perinatal Research Sooiety.
A UB facuhy member
since 1989, Holm has published more than 60 articles
in p rofessienal journals on
pulmonary d iseases and
lung-surfactant therapy. He

is principal investigator on a
fiVII-year, $820,000 NIH
g rant and a $365,000 NIH
Research Career Deveiopmen1 AW81d to study p ulmonBJY oxygen toxicity.
A g raduate of the Univershy of IOwa, he rQCeived
maste ~s and doctoral degrees in toxicology from the
University of Rochester
School of Medicine.

Lifetitne
Love of
Jazz
RoaberC ..._.. hla
expertise on WBFO
lly STEVE COX

Reponer Staff

Y

O U CAN' T really
call
w hat Bob
Rossberg does with

his spare time a

hobby. He puts more
time and energy into his a vocational
interest in jan music than many
people put into their jobs.
And, now that he's officially
retired from his teach.ing position
at UB. he can spend even more
time with his music .
On Sunda) mornings belween
10 a.m . and Noon , you can share
Rossberg's loveofjau with back·
to-back programs on WBFO-FM .
"111eSound ofSwing,'' on between
IOa. m. and II a.m .. was first broadcast in the I 980s-on the American
" Big Band era" of music between
the 1920s and the 1950s. Each
weekly program focuses on a dif-

performers, he was acaually quite
relieved .''
Just what is jazz music ? AJthough jazz is uniq uely American.
Rossberg says its true roots can be
diffic ult to trace. Tum-of-the-century performers in the southeastern
United States, panicularly in and

Sho w with Ja y Leno. top today'•
jazz elite, according to Ross~rg .
Many universities. like UB. now
feature jazz ensembles and vocal
jazz among their music department
o fferings. This is producing a sizable crop of trained, taleoted new
jazz performers. said Rossberg. in-

fef'Cnt band ororchestra.&amp;nd exam -

llf'OUnd New Orleans. reflected in-

cluding Buffalo's Bobby Mi1i.tc:llo

ines lhe music in the context of
i:he evolving an of jazz." accord ·
ing to WBFO Program Director
David Benders.
Between 11 a.m . and Noon .
WB FO airs Bob's latest adventure
in broadcasting called 'The Jazz
Singers." This new series. which
began taping lhis summer. focuses
on vocal jazz performers of the
same era.
Last Sunday 's show featured tht
works of Jack Teagarden. notable
in lhe jazz world as one of its more
famous whi te performers. ''Mu si ·
cologists have always been fascinated by Teagarden ' s tale nt for
jazz:· explained Rossberg. "Yet.
Teagarden himself remained an
enigma. confessing at the end of
hi s life that he really never understood what the music he performed
so eloquently was all about."
Growing up in Ntw York City
in the · 30s a nd · 40s p laced
Rossberg in the hean of the thenju..zcapitalofthecountry. " Harlem
was coming into its own. Jazz
played a big roil in what was call ed
the ' Harlem Renaissance' hosting
some truly great nightclubs like
the Apoll o Theater a nd the Cono n
C lub," recall s Rossberg, "and the
clubs of Greenwich Vill age were
incubators for all sons of new jazz
talent." As a teen. Rossberg hung
around a nd snuc k into enough clubs
to see almost every big band. soloist and si nger o f that period.
"Once, when I was 13 or 14.''
explained Rossberg. "my fathe r
confronted me and wanted to know
what 1 was doing out on the sti"C(ts
until midnight every night.
" Whe n f e xplained that I was
sneaki ng into cl ubs to hear these:

fluence from many types of music.
" Jazz really grew out of a
confluence of cultural. political and ·
historical fOI'ces that came together
at that time,'' says Rossberg . .. and

among the big young talen!S in the
business. ''Unfoounately.·· he says
regretfully. "there are fewer clubs
·or venues that showcase jazz talent
today . Making a living as a working

"Once, when then-President Robert Ketter
approached me about becoming vice
president for Academic Affairs I said there
was just one condition: I wouldn 't have to
give up my radio show. "
reflects traces of West African,
Caribbean and French grand opera
rhythmic music. the Blues, slave
and sharecropper field songs and
even European c lassical music.''
Jazz was refined and popularized by performe rs like King
Oliver. Jelly Roil Morton and Louis
Armstrong, whom Rossbcrg ranks
as the "geniuses of the genre."

R

ossberg holds to the less than
popul ar beliefthat jazz is less
improvisational than it appears.
·~some purists argue that written
jazz is an oxymoron," he says, "but
much of j azz music is bui lt from a
c horus slructure with some, usuall y well rehr.arsed. improvisi ng in
between."
Jazz has been sporadicali y popular over the years, e njoying a de·
voted although small aud ience of
e nlhu siasts and occasionall y be·
coming widely listened . Wynto n
Marsalis and brother Branford. who
performs nightl y on The To night

jau musician is very hard."
Rosst&gt;eJ:!j' s broadcasting career
began in I '(16, with a show called
" Big Band Sound." In the early
I 980s.the program developed into
'The Sound of Swing." After producing the first 13 weeks of "The
Sound of Swing," WBFO offered
it as a "syndi ted" series to other
public radio stations arou nd the
country with at ~~ modest success, recalls WBFO Program Director David Be nders.
" It was neve r a money maker
for the station, •· reca1ls Benders.
" We used to charge $5 per show;
j ust eno ugh to cover the marketing and satell ite upli nk time to
djstribute it." A t any given ti me.
up to 50 stations in markets from
New Yo rk to Alaska would air
"The Sou nd of Swi ng." In all.
Rossberg prod uced · 170 shows
over fo ur years.
Though deepl y involved in jazz
m u s ic, Ross ber g made h is
professional mark lhrough a dis-

Linguished career

Bob

as a professor of

Ron berg,

In WBFO
co unseling and
stvdlo,
educational psygets
ready
chology at UB . A
for his
professor since
Sunday
1956, Rossberg
sllow.
served as chair of
the Psychology
Department. dean of the Facult y of
Educational Siudies, interim dean
of the Scboof¥&gt;f Health Related
Professions and vice president for
academic affai . ln 1990. he was
named Distinguished Service Professor by the State University of
New York Board ofTrustees. Today. he continues to teach o ne
course. Foundations of Counsel ing lbeory, which he has taught
for four decades. And he almost
never let his avocation get in the
way of hjs career.
··once, when then President
Robcn Ketter approached me about
becoming vice preside-nt for Academic Affairs." Rossberg remem·
bers, -1 said' ·there was just one
condition: I wouldn't have to give
up my radio show.
" Kener just laughed and uid
'No problem,' but if he had answered differe ntly. I probabl y
wouldn 't have accepted the ap·
JX&gt;intment..,
A grad ua te of The Cit)' College
of New York with a bachelor's
degree in psyc hology. Rossberg
obtained a master' s from Columbia University and his doctorate in
psychology from New York University without strayi ng far from
his music.
"Col umbia is not far from '
Harlem and NYU. of course. is
near G reenwich Village.'' says
Rossberg.
Rossberg has authored two
books on counseli ng and has served
as a consultant to the U.S. Veteran s
Administration. the U.S . Civil Service Commission and as an advi sor
to U.S. District Coun Judge John
C unin o n integrat ion of the Buffalo Public School System.

The Repor1er 1s a C8ITIPJS c:omrnu'1(y ~ publiShed by me 0.111&amp;0"1 d UtwerSity SeMces. Stale l.llwer5lty ol New Vc:ri;. at Buflalo EOIIOt•al olfiCeS 8fe loCated en 136 Crohs Hal!, A.mrM!rsl., (716) 645-6969
OIR£CTOFIOfF'V8UCATIONS 1WOTWT , . c:a.oT, EDITOR

~v-.u., ASSOO.t.TEEOITQFI

10M DoUW&amp;, AATDtAECTOR

...ocar--.ua, ~T£.t.RTOIRECTOA

t .t.I&amp;UAOOW. .t.DVEATISING t.Uo.NAGER ..cat.al .,.;....

�------·
UB, Monroe sign co-op degree program
.,Aa'niURPAM
News Bureau Staff

Prnlclent
Greiner,
left, .....

FFlCIALS OF the University
at Buffalo and Monroe Community College in Rochester
have signed a COOpenltive-degrec program designed to increase the number of students transferring
from the communi ty college to the UB School
of Engineering and Applied Sciences and
UB School of Management.
Under the agreement.. Monroe Community College (MCC) will recruit for the UB
program . High school students will complete one application for MCC and UB. be
accepted by both si multaneously and be guaranteed lTansfcr to the UB programs as juniors following graduation from MCC. 1be
document also calls for regular communication between MCC and UB faculty. and
panicipationofUB in training MCC faculty.
Signing the agreement for UB. the largest
and most comprehensive campus in the 64campus State University of New York sys-

tem. were President William R. Greiner:
Provost Aaron Bloch; Mark H. Karwan. actingdean of the UB School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences, and Frederick W. Winter.
dean of the UB School of ManagemenL
President P~tcr A. Spina; Frnnk Milligan.
vice president for academic afTairs. and R.

lbomas Aynn. vice president for student
affairs, signed on behalf ofMonrocCommunity College. one of 30 community colleges
in the SUNY system.

Greiner noted at a press conference that
.. UB is commiucd to dev;,oping mutually
productive working relationships with community colleges throughout our region.
"'This new affiliation ," he added. ''will
allow both our institutions to enrich the
academic opponunitiC3 and seTVices that we
canoffer WesternNcw York st udenls. We' re
delighted to enter into this partnership with
MCC-it will open a lot of great possibilities for the people we serve.··
Spina -said the agreement is the lmt be-

Monroe
Corrlfm&gt;.

....

nlty~

Prealclent
Peter A.
Spina
alulke

han.

at
Sept.15
aiC~~InC.

tweenMonroeCornmunityCollegeandoneof
SUNY's four university~nters . " We are especially pleased to enter into this coopcrstivedegrec agreemenL" he said. "Many hundreds
ofMCC graduates have gone on to study at the
University at Buffalo. Formally easing their
transfer to such a respected university helps us
realize ourcommunity-&lt;:ollege mission to place
student success above all else."

G

reiner noted that the agretmcnt ad·
dresses the access goals outlined in
"SUNY 2000: A Vision for the New Century;· which call.-for facilitating transfer of
students among campuses. panicular-ly from
SUNY two-year colleges to other SUNY
campuses. MCC students participating in
thecoopen.tiv~e!"'Cprogram'Wi''

receive

1bc: philosophy behind the agreement is
that students pa.nicipating in the program
will be more likely to trnnsfer to UB after
completing the progrnm at MCC. although
they can transfer to other schools. Stude:llS
wQI be aware of UB's grndi ng policies. and
supplrt systems wiJI be developed to assure
retention of students transferring.
UB has had a trnnsfer agreement wtth
Erie Community College for several years
for st udents transferring into UB's liberalans progrnms .
The uni versity has developed a scholarship
progrnm in recognition of the outstanding caliber of transfer students now applying to UB.
and this fall awarded 20hooors scholarships to
tranSfer students from community colleges.
TO fadliDI!t:

me CXJ&gt;III""Ied

cmptu.oeo

on

information about UBS programs and be
contacted by UB while at Monroe. Special
progrnms will be developed-at UB and
MCC-to involve them while tht ) arc en·
rolltd ai the communit y college.

transfer students. UB will appoint a uansfer
and articulation coordinator to work with community colleges and UB faculty to improve the
aniculation of degree: programs and the: trans·
fer process for undergraduates.

Bloch said. Tile v1ce provost for faculty development is intended to provide precisely that.
Bloch believes that UB is unusual . and
perhaps unique . in its appoinliTlent of a vice:
provost for facult y development. While other
universities have tried to fill the need ...,,ith
someone such as an ombudsman... , haven' t
heard of exactly thi s before." Bloch said.
.. Help wilh career and the human issues of
faculty developme nt is not often addressed .··

Faculty Advosory Cornmmce.
''A very impressive group" comp:&gt;sc:d of
about 20 non·tenurcd faculty from acres~ the
discipli nes. Bloch said. the Junior Faculty
Advisory Committ« meets with the provost
several times each semester to provide feed ·
back and a fresh look on what is happening
at UB from the perspective of its youngest
faculty . Calling the group outspoken "in
constructive ways." Bloch said he intends to
rely on it heavily in shaping the activities of
the vice provost for faculty development.
Closely mon itori ng the needs of fac,wlt)
will continue to be critically imponant id the:
future. Bloch says. lfUB is to move forwand.
it must ensure that its people feel fulfilled .
'The institution is entering perilous limes
but it faces some very special opportll(lities ... he said. Among~ perils and appclltunities is the turnover that will result from
the "grnyi ng of the faculty." a phenomenon
facing colleges and universities across the
nation. In UB 's case. OOwevc:r. lhe trend is
exacerbated by the rapid growth the universi ty experienced in the 1960s and 1970s.
when U B became pan of SUNY and the North
Campus was built.
Because so many faculty were hired to·
gether. they also will retire together. ··rve
asked the deans to be planning for that."
Bloch said. And likewise. the vice provost
for fac ulty development will be asked to
bring "direction. imagination and vision" to
the changing face of UB .
That changing face will include greater
diversity of faculty. an area in which UB has
made considerable progress in recent years .
" I'm not sure how much of that reflects the:
changing national pool (of candidates) and
how much is due 10 our own efforts. I'd like
to think it's both," Bloch said .
t1

VICE PROVOST
continued from page 1
Because it is new, the role of the vice
provost for faculty development is not fully
defined. Fischer says. And that in itself is
part of what makes the position a trc:men·
do us opponunity for both Fischer and UB.
Says Bloch. '1llc most important resource
at the university is the human resource. and
we' re wa Ling that resource unless we help
people get the most out
of their careers."
"Weneedtobegivinga
lot more thought to how
we nurlUre those re·
sources." Fischer said.
Working in tandem
ASCHER
with the deans. the vice
provost for faculty deve lopment will develop and supervise sys·
terns for training department chairs. or1enti ng
new faculty members. mentoringjunior fac·
ulty and counseling senior faculty at critical
junctures in their careers. He also will work to
build an environment that values and actively
encourages diversity through initiatives that
address the spcci fie needs of women and
underrepresented minorities.
That emphasis will begin with a
candidate's "first impression of the universi ty.'' said Bloch. " Women and minorities in
particular should feel welcome and valued.··
"Since I' ve come here I've been engaged
with the question of ethnicity and diversity.''
says Fischer. who taught one of the first
African American courses conducted at US.
US's faculty is in transition from a predominantly white male culture to one that is
more diverse. As a result ... there needs to be
a broader understanding of the needs and
special contributions that people from different backgrounds bring to the institution."

"The most important
resource at the university
is the human resource,
and we're wasting that
resource unless we help
people get the most out of
their careers. "
ln developing the new position. Bloch
said it was important that us ·s unique needs
be expressly considered. and the appointment of an internal candidate was imponant.
Sixteen UB faculty members applied or were
nominated.
"Rather than the conventional Search com·
mittee. we used the constituents with whom we
knew the new vice provost would have to be
dealing.'' Bloch said. Final candidates met with
theFacultyScnateExecutiveCornmince.deans.
chairs. an administrative group from the
Provost's Office and with the Provost's Junior

3

Three are
inducted into
HaltofFame
NASAISirOIIIUt,af"""""
(oochall eaptaiJI and a major booAa of UB sports
were iDdt.ocled iDio tbe UB
Alwnni Auociatioo Alhletic Hall or
Fame at a diucr Sqlc. 23 io tbe Ccalafor TOIIDI'OW. They - - . ia&lt;b:lal by
s..ttAncblon,ptaidr:doffleUBAUrai
~ IIIII NeloDo E. T~ ciruurLtbo Divilim rL AHelia.
New manberl arc Ellat SbulmaD
&amp;ka-, a 1974 UB pwluate and 'star
swimmer, firot UB womu 10 place in a
- . ' lllliooal championship; Mattbeor MMatty• Ferftlltiao, a 19.SI
graduale and foolball lilalldout who
comedAD-Anaicancleoipllillllin 19:50.
and.....,. A.ltachlla,co-founderrLtbe
Prc:aidcnl's~and lcnglimeSU~&gt;­

port.cr rLUB Mltldics.
Blka- pUced 8th in tbe I 00-rncta
lieeslyle and 14th in tbe S&lt;Hneter
freestyle at the Wome.o's NatiorW
SwimmingandDiviagOwopioosbips
io 197G-71. Sbe...,.. tbe .SO freestyle in
tbe ' 7G-71 NYS Women's Swimming
and DiviD&amp; Cl&gt;ampionship&amp;, and placccl
tbe toi&gt; 12 ill three cvenu at tbe '7 I72 Eas1Cm Womao' s Swimming and
Diving Ownpiolllhip&amp;.
Sbe canoed a t.o:helor'a dcp= in
&amp;colosY from UB iJII9741Dd a medical....,.., from Conodl Uaiwnity ia

m

cal olf'IOC&lt;. Sbe wa DOmed an UlrOalllt
eandidau: ia 1984, with herr.~·
to
space aboard AUantis ia 198 Blka-,
who served as a miaioe speci
oa a
1992 Columbia Oighl.
be
naut 011 a Speoe Lab Oiglol io I
Fmmtino. who played football for
the UB Bulls from 1947-.SO, won Little

wm

m.

Mt-Amcrieao designation io 19.SO.
wben be was oo-&lt;:ap&lt;ain and led tbe
team to its ftflh stnight winning sc:a6011. He played baseball and basketball.
. and was a professional boxer and
b,owler. He earned a bacbelor's degree in pbysical education from UB in
1951. He recently retired as a productioo manager 11 tbe Ford Motor Co.
Ruchlio was honored for his oignifi-'
cant finaocial donations to ~vision
or Athletics. A rtiiCUiber ofme Athletic
Advisory Commilll:e sio&gt;cc 1987, be
was altmmi represc11Wive to the UB
Athleticlloonlio 1992-93. [icn:ceived

a botbcb's dc(!n:ie ill lUsby IIIII a dcoaol
degree 6IJm UB ill 1967.Since 1971, hebao;
Jli1ICliccd or1bodontia in Tonawanda.

�--.----.-·
PSS begins year with planning session

4

Matfes is elected
SA president

IIJUM-.n

ReportO&lt; Contributor

-,.atn5cox
Reporter Staff

I

N1ER1M Undergnduate Student Association President Haman Malfes kept

his job by easily fendingofftworival s in
a special election held Sept. 12 And 13.
Matfes was elected SA Vice President in
the spring. He took over the helm of Student
Association several weeks after the eleclion
when his running mate, President Karen
Hillary, resigned.
A sophomore planning 10 major in Inter·

national Studies or Poli1ical Science. Matfes
i~ a native of New York City. He got his first
taste of student governance as a freshman
when he became involved in the Latin Ameri can Student Association.
Malfes and oth..- SA qfficers asked Public Safery to investigate irregularities they
noced in student govcmmenl finances.
Hillary was lAter charged with third-degree criminal possession of a forged instru·
men t. a misd~meanor, after it was alleged
that she forged signatures of other SA officcnon Student Association vouchers tota1ing
$467. Tbe unauthorized purchases. allegedly for personal groceries. were made May
3 and M.ly I 0 at an area Wegmans.
A routine audit review of Student Asso·
ciatioo purchases discovered that the funds

wae missing.
Hillary resigned her post on May 23. She
pled guilty toone count ofthird-degree criminal possession of a forged instrument. and
rocei ved a sentence of 60 hours of community service from ~rst Town Coun Jus·
lice Mark FIUTCll on Sept. 21.
Hillary did n01 enroll in UB for her senior
year this fall.
Another special &lt;lection will be called
ahon.l)' to fi\\ \he v\ce pres\ciency Ma\fes

vacated.

0

S

TUDENTS AREN ' T the only
ones to receive a welcome on the
UB campus this fall. Professional
Staff Senators picked up a tOial of
46 welcome packets to distribute to new
staff members at the Professional Staff Senate (PSS) briefing and planning session held
Sept. 13.
Tbe packets. prepared by the Welcome
Lines Committee. are part of the policy of
having experienced senators individually
meet and greet new staff.
••J think that we have accomplished a 101
and I hope you're proud of yourselves." said
Rosalyn Wilkinson. PSS chair. who reviewed
PSS policies and senator responsibilities at
the openi ng session.
Approximately 49 senators are elected to
represent the 1,200 members who come from
live different areas of the university: Health
Services Academic units; Core Campus
Academic units; Student Suppon Service
units; Universiry Suppon Service units and
University Administration &amp; Operations
units. All professional staff members automatically become PSS members.
1be PSS seeks an active role in uni versity
policy decisions and maintains liaison with
other organizations concerned with unjver~
sity affairs to promote the general welfare of
its members and the university . ..Sometimes
it takes a 101 of work and detail in order to
make changes." says Wilkinson, who is beginning the second half of her two&gt; year appointmenL
In addition. the PSS provides a forum for
information exchange among the professional staff and encourages the consideration of issues related to the university
adm1nistrat\on and makes necessary recom mendations in ttl&amp; areas.

Ill UIIVIISI" AT IUffAlO AID TtU DOl DAYIS AUTO WDilD UCTUIIUIIP fUID
CG-SPOISOITIIIIn4-IHS DISniGUISIII SPlAIIIS UlllS

Tteket{)puons

-~~
Ulfmlly~lo*~lt!

McLaughlin ·...........

' - ' I - SIS
Ttektu Ava•l•bk·
OFFCAMPUS

Group

Wednesday, October S, 1994
8 p.m. Alumni Arena

1.182 Hcnc:IA~
874-55SJ

::::ol:' c.lop
s.uoa.. u......

1300 Elmwood A•-e.
878-5531

Doo-lhrl4 ....

zzn Naagara Falls

Boub-onj
691 · 78l0

~.!"'"~

CampwCentet
67.3-3502

llowW.W....n
51Z EJmwoodA''t:

88Z-0004
ON CAMPUS

c-.t. ... Am

1iiUI Oflco

IOlCcntc far

""'""'

b-t.S.ARTS

:==:-

ZZ I Swdent Un1011
64.S.Z3SJ

(MCNISAot

=~

ZOO l.cc Enaancr
645-3131

IT ILUl COl 1m
(MCIVISA. 0\eck Of
Money Ordet Onty)

:::--.-.

537 Capen Hall
Boa601602
• UruvenU)' •t Buffalo

Buffalo. NY 14260
(716)645·J.414

FAX(716)64S-Z801

.... _....
li'

...

Last year. the chair, vice chair, secrewy
and past-chair met with President William
R. Greiner several times. Tbey also participated in a joint meeting with the top officers.
initiated by the president's office.
In November 1993, the PSS passed a
resolution urging the administration to ""ban
smoki ng in university-owned and -.operated
buildings." one of the campus-wide measures that led to a change in univ..-sity polic)'·
Tbe "Smoke Free Campus." which prohibits
smoking in aJI university-owned an4 operated buildings and vehicles. became effec ·
tive Aug. 29.
Last year, PSS Executive Committee

" The more you become
involved, the more you
laww wlwt 's going on in
your office. "

members reviewed and commented on the
university 's Self-S tudy Repor1 and the
Middle States Association site visit team
later inletViewed them.
Tbe Senate passed a resolution last year
requiring senators to serve on at least one of
nine standing committees, in an effon to
encourage involvement. l"he more you become involved. the more you k:oow what's
going on in your office." Wilkinson says. All
PSS members may join committees: they are
not limited to senators.
An elected senator may not miss two
consecutive meetings or three meetings all
year without an adequate: reason. Wilkinson

says. That bylaw. which was not observed
previously, is currently enforced.
Committeeo offer "a beautiful opportunity" for n&gt;embers of different departments
to connect with one another. Frequently.
participants realize that their situal ions are
very similar. she said.
ne of Wilkinson 's first-year goals
was to better undastand professional
staff morale The PSS mentoring prognun.
Welcome Unes Committee, and a new SUitT
committee created this year.called the Qualny
of Work Life. provide constructi\'e opponumues to enhance: networking and university un ·
d..-standing.
PSS promotes the professional development of mdividuals commined to higher
education careers through the Professional
Staff Senate's Outstanding Service Award
and a Chancellor's Excellence Award . Last
year. the Senate conducted a survey that
identified computer literacy as a lop professional development need for classified and
professional staff.
Tbe Senate represents "a 101 of people
doing a 101 of wort.. people who really care
about the university ... Wilk.inson adds.
PSS recon:lsdate back to 1972. W ilkinson
says, but one of the items on her agenda thi s
year is a project that traces PSS history.
Tbe PSS and the United University Professions sponsored a "Quality Through Dt·
versity" workshop Sept. 28 . Highl ights
included recognizing prejud ices and differences in personalities. improving communication styles and specifiC ..-npowerment tool s
10 become a constructive factor in the UB
community.
President Greiner will address a PSS gen ·.,.., membership meeting to be held Oct. 11
from 2-4:30 p.m. in 201 Student Union on
the North Campus.

0

Faculty gifts aid UB programs
ar JED NITDEIItl

Reporter ContnbutOf

F

ACULTYSUPPORTforUB. Iike
suppon from alumni and friends
across the nation. is growing.
'"UB is fonunate to have many.
many faculty who are deeply committed to their work and dedicated 10 the
universily-pcople who keep us strong b)
making ongoing contributions of lhc:i.r time
and talents.·· said President Will iam Greiner.
''More and more, some of our leading
faculty are also making and pledging gifts of
their own resources to UB . Faculty gifts
mean all the more because they come rrom
colleagues who know the univC!Jit y's programs fi rsthand. who have seen tl(eeffectsof
dwindling statesuppon. and wboare willing
10 go above and beyond their professional
responsibi lities to help k.eep UB growing:·
Each of these gifts has a special story.
Here are three of them:

The Matt-Tyler Endowment-Fund
J. Anhur Mattern, associate pro~ssor
emeritus of chemistry at UB. and his wife.
Elizabeth T . Matlern , established The
Mattern-Tyler Endowment Fund to meet
changing needs of the chemistry depanment.
ln creating a fund toen su.re excellence in
chemi stry education at UB. the Mattems
ho nor the memory o f their parents. Dr.
Manem' s father. Earl , was a teacher and a
school superintendenl for several Ohio towns.
'"The stan of my whole career in science was
rooted in the books he brought home:·
Mattern noted. His father also became a
successful business owner and county al.ldiu.-.
Ada Maucm was ··a walking book of lmowlcdge about trees, plants and shells and an
extraordinary gardener until age 85."
Harvey Tyler. Mrs. Mattem·s father.
worked as a fanner. builder and teacher
before finishing engineering school in Iowa.
His wife. Bessie. taught in Iowa schools.

The~

EINio.- Fund
An enthusiasm for inspiring future students to learn and to explore led UB Profes·
sor Joyce E. Sirianni to create 1be Sirianni
Endowment Fund for the Department of
Anthropology. "I've developed intellectually here and my other talents ha"e been
nunured here. I know that many of my colleagues share my feelings about the univer·
sity. This is my way of saying 'thank you' for
all I've achieved because of UB ." she said.
A leading member of the faculty and a
prominent anthropologist. Sirianni desig nated UB 's Anthropology'Deparunent as the
beneficiary of her S350.000 gift. Future administrations may choose 10 use the funds for
such projects as scholarships. pun:ha&lt;es ~equip­
men~ research materials: or Olher resources.
The Wlln.n Ell.- Memort.l
~pFiand

Even though they never met , the late UB
Professor William Eller is influencing the
education of UB Student Poonam Arya.
Arya. a 26-year-old doctoral candidate
from Delhi. India. studying in the Graduate
Sehoul of Education. is the first recipient of
a S 1.500 award from the William Eller Memorial Scholarship Fund . The fund . established by Eller's wife. Betty. and her aunt.
Kathryn Rieder. honors the lo ng. distinguished career of the professor emeritus in
the Graduate School of Education 's Depan·
ment of Learning and In struction.
Mrs. Eller nOicd that gi"ing S25.000 to
stan the scholarship fund was a way to help
future generations of students . "My aunt sa1d
that stBrling a scholarship is like the rippling
effect from a pebble dropped in a pool-it
cn!ates an ever-widening circle of i nnuencc."
said Mrs. Eller. Rieder made a gift ofS I0.000
as pan of the Eller scholarship"s stan-up
funding . Those interested in learning more
about making a gift to UB can call the Office
of University De"elopment at 645-3312. '

�---------·
HE UB School of Architecture
and Planning has been awarded a
$91 ,000 Project Implementation
Grant from the Getty Grant Pro-'
gram to help fund conservation of
the Darwin D. Martin House on Jewett Parkway.
Bruno Freschi. dean of the school. called
!he gran! "a major symbolic step" in the
eventual restoration of the house, which is
!he principal component of a residential complex designed and buill from 1903-06 by
architect Frank Lloyd Wright for Buffalo
businessman Darwin D. Martin. 1be complex is consideredoneofthe finest examples
of Wright 's enormously influential"Prairie
Style" of modem domestic architecture.
A national historic landmark si nce 1986.
!he Martin House is being restored as a house
museum by aconsoniumofthe University at
Buffalo, the Manin House Restoratio n Corporation (MHRC) and the New York State
Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic
Preservation. When conservation/restoration
work is completed, the house will be operated by !he MHRC as part of !he New York
State Historic Site system.
The Getty Gran! Program supports a wide
range of projec1s involving scholarship in
the history of an. advancement of the under-

standing of an. and the conservation of an
and architecture. The Geuy Grant Program
is part of the J. Paul Getty Trust, a private
operating foundation dedicated to the visual
ans and ~ humanities.
The Gehy grant is o f panicular signifi-

cance, said Freschi. "because it is the project's
first major grant from a private foundation
recognized worldwide for its support of major
conservatjon projects. The Manin House is
truly among !hose great buildings worthy of
timeless conservation. and this grant offers
further public recognition of that fact."
Freschi said he was "pleased and delighted to thank scores of volunteers. architeclUral sc holars . elecled o fficial s.
representatives of the business and preservation community. the university and state
government for their faith and diligence in
supporting !he Martin House project from its
inception."
This 2-for-1 match grant, funded through
the Getty Architectural Conservation Grant
Program. funds only the conservation-that
is. the preservation and protection-of original architeclural elements and not their rep~ cation or replaceme nt. In keeping with thai

slipulation, the new grant mon- G.....t will
ies will be combined with about lund COI&gt;S 182.000 raised from other MtYatlon
sources 10 help conserve spe- of Mllltln
cific external building elements HouMon
enumerated in Phase I of !he Jewett
Martin House Restoration Plan. Pwkway.
These include !he original ceramic noor tiles. cast stonework, brick masonry walls and !he roof support structure.
The restoration plan was outlined in the
Martm House Historic Preservation Report
presented in 1990 by !he Chicago restoration
architecture firm of Hasbro uck Peterson
Associates. At !hal time, !he estimated !Otal
cost of restoration was $5 .2 million. Phase I
o ft he plan calls for the stabilization, restoration and conservation of the outer shell of the
Man in House over two construction seasoas
at a total cost of $1,276.000.
Freschi said that those associated with !he

5
restoration. including project architect Ted
l.Dwnie of !he Buffalo firm Hamilton Hous-ton and Lownie, are dedicated IO!hephilooophy ofconserving existing materials through
stabiliution whenever possible.
The Manin House itself has been owned
by New York State and UB for 2!5 yean. The
UB School of Architecture and Planning,
which has had custodial responsibility for
!he house, has overseen !he task of maintaining !he slnleture through Jean ftseal years.
The project, said Freschi. offer&gt; a fullscale opportunity for architecture students at
UB to be involved in ""living courses" in
preservation in one of America's great buildings and to meet and engage the hundreds of
international Wright scholan; and disciples
who are expected 10 visit !he house during
and after its resaoration.
The MHRC recenlly acquired !he Barton
House, a smaller but well-preserved residence adjoining !he Manin propeny. lrwas
designed by Wright in 1903 for Martin' s
sister and ha- husband as pan of !he original
complex. The house was purchased for !he
MHRC !his month by three Buffalo business
firms. 71~&lt; Buffalo Nnvs, Manufacturer's
and Traders Trust Company and Rich Products Corp .. and donated to !he MHRC.
Besides !he Geuy grant_ current funding
commitments for the project total more than
$1 million in pledges from !he U.S. Department o f !he Interior through the office of
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. !he State
University of New York Construction Fund.
Manufacturers and Trader&gt; Trust Company.
!heAndyWamolFoundation.DominoPizza/
Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation and UB. 0

1994 SEFA Campaign

Building homes for 'Habitat'

E

ACH YEAR. THROUGH Habitat
for Humanity, UB architecture students help build houses for lowinCome families in Buffalo. The
experience provides the non-profit organization with sophisticated volunteers for
projects. while giving students hands-on experience.
The association with Habilat began in
1992 when Ri chard Veneer. instructional
suppon tcchn ician
in th&lt; School of
Architecmre and
Planning and a
vo lunteer with
Habitat since its
crea ti o n, heard
from recent alumni
!hat they fell the
architecture curriculum would
benefit from training in ..real-world"
construction.
"Th e s tudent s
had no idea how
bui ld ings and houses were put together in
real life," said Veneer. 'They didn't ha ve
hands-on experience ...
That first year. UB student crews built
two Habi tat homes in just three weeks. Last
winter. they installed plumbing. wiring and
heatin g systems fo r a house and put in drywall and painted. This past summer. a ne w
UB crew built most of a small. thrce·bcd room house.
Students' rca~o:tinn:-. ha' c been cxtraordi·
nary. So me thought the con~truction project
sho uld be a required pan of the degree.
Many said the y had a new respect for construction V.:orker:-. and for the difficulties
they face working with an architect's pla_ns.
The y note that nn an arc hitectu ral drawmg
cvcrythin£ is pcrfc.:-cl. but that 's not the case
at the site. The'' needed to find ways to make
the project w~rl.. in the field. even when it
I

meant invent in~ new devices to solve problems. The experience also required the stu·
dents to become familiar with a neighborhood
they probably would not have gone into
otherwise.
.. Here 's an example of UB getting directly in volved in the city to make it a better
place," sa id one student.
Pan of the experience involves understanding how Habitat for Humanity works.
Veneer explained. including the social impact of the program .
Habitat provides houses for low-income

"Heres an example of
VB getting directly
involved in the city to
make it a better place. "
StvD£NT VOWHTEER

families, who. in ordertoqualify. must themselves do 600 hours of work for the organizatio n. Families who qualify for the program
receive a no- interest mortgage from Habitat
Ben Pollard. a student. explained that in
addition to providing families with sound .
affordable howses. the constructio n of new
homes through Habitat provides the city
with taxpayers and more stable neighborhood!'&gt;. A New York Cily native , Pollard sa id
the project has inspired him to stan a nonprofit architectural finn to huild low· income
housing in the Bro nx .
Habitat also.bencfits. Jack Neitz. a Habi·
tat supervi sor. said the architecture students
arc a little more mature and educated than
!'&gt;Omcothcrstudents that volunteer. "They ' re
able to read the drawings and get to work.''
he said. 'They' re great workers and they' re
getting good. practical experience."

llonorable Mentiona 1n the contest were awarded to Laune McG1rr": Na11ona1
Center for Earthquake Eng1neenng. and Erna lseppon. Center !or Advanceo
MoleculaJ BKJiogy and Immunology.

�6
7:30 p.m. $50 per module. To
re&amp;ister. call 829-3291 .
AT-.--YID

II&lt;RM'Oir Dop. UUAB film
series . 201 Studenl Union.
North Campus. 6:30p.m. $2 .
$3.50. Call645-2957.

LIFIE-

Babil.ol: Tht Theory It Tht
~ Roben Hendenon.
Habitat of Buffalo. Second session Oct~ 1, 9a.m.- 1 p.m. 7-8
p.m. Cal1645-612.S to register

IIUU1C:U1.1\MAI. UctWIE
Mlllticalhlral.ina •t UB, Prof
Evelyn Hu-DeHan. UniY . of
Colorado, BouldCT. Woklman
Thcaler. 112 Nonon. Nonh
C.mpus. 7 _p.m. Sponsored by
Uodergraduate Acadennc Service~.

AT '111£ MDYIU
Jurusit Park.. UUAB film
series . 201 Student Uruon .
Nonh Campus. 9 p.m. S2. S3.50
Call645-2957 .

~w­
Cu.stomizatioD
of Sua Ope:n
Windows Eo\oi.roOibe:DL 10-1 2
p.m. Cal1645-lS40 for reeisu-auon tnformatton.

FRIDAY

T H URS DAY

~9

103 Diefendorf. Sooth Campus
4 p.m.
l'ti.UIIIACEUTICI IEMINAII

LiposomaJ Formulatioo or
Taxoi-A Biopbysiall Approac~ Dr. S. V. Balasubra mania.n. Dept of Pharmaceulics.
508C Cooke. Nonh Campus.

4p.m.

_ . . . . .,._,._
Summer ia Butralo Exbibi·
tion. 'Studenl wori: under Prof
Him Hata . Dyen Exhibition
Hall , 33S Hayes. South Campus.
Gallery hours. Free. Through
Oct. 7. C.ll 829· 85. 1321.
ARTEJUII·~

Cbinest Cootemporary
Traditioo.ai-Style Painting.

STATIITICa COIJ.DQUIUM
On tht Estimation of HJV Infection. Prof. W. Y. Tan. Univ.

lO

I'EDIAT111C IIIIAIIO ltOUNDI

Al:OS to AdolacmlJ in Wrst-

ern Nnr York, Dalinda ~
Condino, M .D .. and Jenny
Sagen. R.N. Second annual
BrauMctuede:l Adolescent Lee·
tun: and paMI discussion . Kinch
Auditorium. Children' J Hospi-

Lal.. 8a..m.

of Memphis. 144 Farber. Soulh
Campus. 4 p.m.

MU&amp;.TICUI.TlaAI. U CTURE

CEimF1CAT E - IN
GEJIOHTDI.OIIICAI. ....aiNG
Fldtt Abuse, Katherine K.
Beiler, Chautauqua Coun1y Of'fice for Aging. To earn cenifi ·
cate. nurses must attend five
sessions. South Campus. 4:30-

Studrots and Ac:ade:mic Ad\o'isinr;. Prof. Evelyn Hu-OeHart.
UniY . of Colorado. Boulder. 120
Clemens, North Campus. 8 :30
a.m -Noon . Sponsor-ed by Uo ·
dergraduate Academic Serv1ces.

As:ian ud

Asian~AIDericao

nc
-·~

Tea. Appt'Mdlto MaJ..
liplt Sdoroola: T............UOC

o - l e 11'-. Sponsored by
tbe Offw:c of Continuing Education in the School of Nuninc .
Cca~er for Tomorrow. North
Campus. 8:30 a.m.- 3 p.m Ftt
S60. To re(iwcr. call 829-3291

-

--.vac:AI.ICIENCU

Dr. FraDdtco Mmcla., Unl"'
of Konst.anz. Germany 106
Cary. South Campus 10:30 a m
Call829-2328.

ANA lOllY AM C£U.
.aLOOY UCTURE
Chanc:tnizatloa of outer arm
dynei..a aod modubtioo or be:.l
r~ by r't'ftrsible phospboryl.atioa in M'Wt lu.nc ns-piratory cilia, Gerald Rupp

306 Farber South Campus.
Nooa.
-.mc:AI.ICIENCE UCTURE
T'bt O!:mocratk GOVU'D.I~
Alftlda ID l.aiiD Ameriea,
Prof. Gabriel MuriUo, UniY. of
Los Andes . 502 Park... North
Campus. Noon.
JUIIMCTIONS I EMINAII

Childhood Victimlz.alioa. A.l·
oobol, aod VIol--, Cathy S
Widom. Ph.D .. State Unt\ . or
New York a1 Albany. Research
Institute on Addictaons. 1021
M_a,n St. 1.30 p.m. Free. C1ll
887 -2566.
Wm
' e Tut.ifll,. A mum. Cen1r-r
for the Arts. Nonh Campus 2
10:30 p.m Dona.110n. C1ll 64 5
6259.
COMPUTER 5CIENCE
~

A Muumal Priacipl&lt; ID X-Ra)
Cryslallovapby. Hemen A

Haup1.man. H•uJMmanWoodward Medical Resean:h
lnstHute . 228 Natural Sc1encrs
&amp;: Mathemaucs Complex. Nonh
C.mpus. 3 p.m. Call645-31 80

-

STATIIT1CAL I'MYSICS

Statistics and Scalinc of F'ractun aDd Bl'ft.kdo•n. Prof.
PaulL. Le1th. Ru1gers Umv .
205 Nawral Sciences &amp; Math ·
trnatics Comple Nonh Cam·

pus. 3:30p.m.
CIIEMIITRY COIJ.DQUIUM
Reactivity Patter-us of
Nit.rooium Ions, Mikt Noval. .
Miami
201 N~1ura1 Sc•·

uru . . .

Work by 32 artists from two
Beijing universities. Through
Oct. 16. University Gallery.

Center for the: Aru. North Campus. Gallery houri. Free. Call
645-0912.
I'OE11IY UcnJitE
Celan and J aWs: Tbe Poetry
of Hope, Andrew Benjamin.
Uoiv. of Warwick. Pan of
Wednesdays at 4 Plus poetry
and prose series. 438 Clemens .
North Campus . 12:30 p.m. Free.
ANAlOllY AND CEU
IIICILCMIY SDIINAII

FALL SEMESTER PROGRAM

Cellular substntes for interactions betweeo opiod.s and
moooamines in the rat cenln.l
ne:rvous system, Elisabeth Van
Bockst.aele-Veznedatoglu.
Ph .D .. Cornell Univ. Medical
College. 306 Farber. Soulh
Campus. I p.m.

JUN DIII.YW'CHUHI I'

5:)0 fUll- lbt:jme Keder- Roam
Elliroa Compia. b.f--1
a.;u,,,w~c-..,
fr~Hm.UAhrwall

MONDAY

OtiUmAH JT1J P£NT l.lAOlkSHI I' SU.UNAA

) :lOp.m..-S:lOp..m.,SuiteliS

IIIF""""nil1""'
Topics lodode Le:adc:nhiptnd ~
Oanctc:risrics of Ouisaan Leaden, Goal
Sernng, Use of Tune, Commurtic:ttion Skills,
Gender l.ssucs of l..eldcnbip. Problem Somna:.
l...caming to Plan and Lead a Mccrin&lt;
~with BuffaloAJuOaria:im

I..cadc:n from dte World tX Potitia.. BuADc.s.
Educ:atioo, Heab:h Scrnca &amp; 'The Cbun:b
N• Cwt-bn/1 6y Pbt!Utg 6ll...f064.U spu!

-P.-11....-bff, s...;.,c-u..-.
s,.a.JI_ f o r _
WIPH~Y

IIIU STUDY ANt) f.U'"-a

S:OO p..m. S~g tbe Book of Ezodus
,,., p.m. Soppu
SaittlJS, TbcCommom

COIIPUtDI WORKSIIOP
Usiq SPSS oo tht l BM Mainframe. Continuation of Sept. 27
class. 1:30-4:30 p.m. Call6453540 for registration infonnation.

EHV-MENTAI.
~NEIIIIIHI

AND 5CIENCE

SDIIN.UI

Applicl tioo of Environmental
Dtcisioo-Maldng Ttc.bniques
lo Eoviroo.mental En.gioee:ring
Problt:ms, Dr. Aaron A .
Jennings, ~Western Reserve
Univ . 140 Ketter. Nonh Cam·
pu s. I :30 p.m. C•ll 645-2088.

1110L081CAI. 5CIENCU
HMINAII
Diversity in tbe Gating Prop-

trtics and Pt rmeabilities of
Gap Ju.nctioo C ba nne:ls, Dr.
Richard Veenstra, SUNY Health
Sciences Centei. Syracuse. 114
Hochsteuer. North Campus. 4

p.m.
IIA'IIIDIAT1CI C~IUM
Quui-Stabllity ID Qu.aolum
Mechanics, Prof. Roger
Waxler, Dept. of Malhemalics.

Cilia Arl wn 111 View
Work by 32 artisls from two Beijing universities is on display lhrough Ocl. 16 in lhe
University Gallery. Cenler for the Arls.

�enc:es &amp;. Mathematics Complex .
North Campus. 4 p.m.

~=nutilt.Siee

t::.,~HaU. North Campus. 6
p.m. Free. For infonnadon. call

645-2921.
ATllfRMOVIU

Jwuslc: Part.. UUAB mm
~t:ries . 201 Studenl Union .
North Campus. 6:30 p.m. and 9
p.m. S2. $3.50. Ca11645-2957 .
•N•saocca
UB Balls .._ Lon&amp; lslaad. RAC
Field outside Alumni Arena .
North Campus. 7 p.m.
INTDNATIONAL UNE
DANCIN8

All level$. all welcome. Panners
not needed. 2 Diefendorf. South
Campus . 8- 11 p.m. Free. Spon SO«d by G.S.A.
SU-IIIFAIIE llfEATRE
Gypsy. Pfeifer Theatre. 681

Main St. 8 p.m. $10. $12. SIS.
Cal l 839-8540.
ATllfEMOYIEa
llepo Maa.. UUAB film series.
201 Student Union. North Campus. I I :30 p.m. $2, S3.SO. Call
645 -2957.

--.s-.--.-·
-u

UfE--lilT --AIIEniUTIIE

Gypry. PfeiferTheaue. 681
Maio SL 3 p.m. SIO. $ 12. S IS.
For information, CIH 839·8S40.

brad Klbk.. Cbolr. Slee
Concen Hall. North Campus.
7:30 p.m. SS. $1 0; Free for
Hillel rnemben. Call 835-3832.

MONDAY

l

free. Caii 645-612S to register.

T'al Clll rar llqlaners, Roo
Ingalsbe.. Tuetdaysand Th:UBdays throucfl Dec. I. 5:30-6:30
p.m. CaU 645-61 25 to register.
Boyiq or S.W.,. a Baa-,

Edward HuROil, CFA. and
Sid&amp;ey Finkel, Ph.D. Fint of a
series o f seminars; Tuesday
f.'\·enings through Nov. 8. Spon·
send by the School of Manage·
menL North Campus. 6:30-9
p.m. Call 645-3200.

......_"CCO.NYIIDIIIIAII
How Do&lt;o Vblqalllll T......
ror Dqraclatloa! A

Proteloo

su-~- Study,
Cecile M. Piclcan, Plt.D., Dept.

of Biocheml wy. 307
Hoc:hstctter. North Campus.
4p.m.
~TAUt

Til&lt; F'"tnl Rale of Retioo, Su san Huck. Univ . of Miami . 684
Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m. A
Dutch rreat dinner will follow
the talk.

POETRY.,._
Bob Grntitr, Capen O!.air
Residency. Pan of Wednesdays
at 4 Plus poeuy and prose te·

ADDICT10NsMotivalionallotuviewln&amp;
Techniques. Kurt Dennen and

.,
MT

Jeremy Skinner. Sponsored by
lns:tiwte"for Addictions Studies
and Training . Wick Center.
Daemen College . 9 un.-4:30
p.m. Fee: SSO. F« regiW'Ition
infonnation ull645-6140.

Microsoft Combo Packs

CONFUIENCE IN lifE
DISC..UNQ

SATURDAY

1

WINE COUNTRY TDUR

~

Bus trip to the F'mger Lakes
Regioa.. Sponsored by the UB
Alumni Association. Tours o f
Fox Run Vineyards. Prejean
Wi nery. Lakewood Vineyards
and G lenora Wine Cellars with
dinner at Glenora. 8 a.m.- 10
p.m. $50, Al umni AS$0Ciation
members. $55, non-members.
Call 829-2608.

ART LD:TURE
Chinese Contemporary Traditional-Style Painting, Pan Fei
and Sun Zhij un. 112 Center for
the Ans. Nonh Campus. II a.m.
For infonnation, ca11645-6912.
-CDUNTRY

UB vs. Westem Ontario.
Akron Parle II a.m.
WSF08END1T
Vinyl Madness II. Also. bands
and 100 balloons. Allen. South
Campus. II a.m. S2: WBFO
members free. Call 829-2880.

AVIATlON DAY
How Aviation Helps Peoplt in
Distress, Prof. Joseph
Mollendorf. panel moderator.
Dept. of Mechanical and Aero·
space Engi neering. Helicopter
arrivals at I p.m .. panel discussion at 2 p.m. Amherst Museum
-Colony Park. 3755 Tonawanda
Creek Rd . 1~5 p.m. Free. Call
689 -1440.
WOMEN 'S SOCCER
UB Royals vs. Ptnn State.
RAC Field outside Alumni
Arena. North Campus . I p.m.
SUMMIIIFARE niEATRE

Gypsy. P!eifer Theatre. 68 1
Main St. 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. SIO.
$1 2. S IS. For infonnation. call
839-8540.

;) Word

;) Excel

;) PowerPoint

l

tion and Library Studies. and
University Libraries. Center for
Tomorro.,.,-, Nonh Campus. 9
a.m.-4 :30p.m. S3S includes
lunch ; studenu no regi stntion
fee, lunch SIO. For mformatmn.
call 645-2018.

OFFICE!

SIOCNEMIS111Y SEMINAR

;) Mail

Workstation Licm.se

;) Access
With Microsoft Officl'
Professioru.l P&lt;~ckagl' Onl y

$113 $135 $143

Oxidanl-mcdiatcd LuD.IInjury: Mechanisms a nd Inter-

n otions, Or. Bruce Ho lm.

sawa1 of Medicine and Bio-

Wmdows

nJdical Sciences. 1348 Farber.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

Macintosh

Professional

Wmdows

UFEThe ABC 's of Investing, Ren~
Tucker. 6:30-8: 30 p.m. Call
645-6l25 to regiRcr.

UFEWORKaiiOI'
Improvisational Comedy, Robert Fiorella. Mondays througb
Nov . 21. 7·9 p.m. S25 ; students
SIO. Catl645~125to register.
UFEWORKaiiOI'
Undentandia&amp; the Grid Pnr
cess, Iris Rosenberg. 7·8:30
p.m. Calt645--612S to register.
UFE WORKaiiOI'
Writing &amp; Performing Stand ·
Up Comedy, Roben Fiorella.
Mondays through Nov. 21 9-1 1
p.m. S25; studenlS SIO. Call
645-6125 to register.

~to lhe Q)tiOCift 16 free to it~.~ members, IS tar lilucllnls. and $10 for gellllnll admlssion.l"ha COli tar1h08e who -..oold like to be fisted
on the fliOOI"Ml as patroos Is s1a
Fot additiOnal inlormation. call,t!IHel a1835-3832.
6:30-1 :30 p.m. Call645-6125 to
register .
UFEW~

Tb&lt; New llooicsol Skin Car&lt;.
Brenda Romanow. Also New 9 19 p.m. Caii64S.612.S to regiSlc:r

UFE WORKaiiOI'
Adaptin&amp; to a OiSIIbility &amp;/or
A1i q , Toby Schoe:llkopf. Liv·
ing Well Center. 7:30-9 p.m.
Ca1164S-6125 to register

TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY

4 ~

FJectronic. MaU and Networks
forCMS. 10-Noon. Call 6453540 for regisu-ation informa tion.
IEARTIIQUAKE SEMINAR

Seismk Repair or Multi-Siory
Coocrde BuUding.s, Dr.
Michael Rojansky. EQE International. 140 Ketter. Nonh
Campus. 3:30p.m. Free. Call
645-3391.

AltTEXHI~

Paulo Buennos: The Same and
tb• Other (MFA Thesis).
Thro ugh Oct. 17. An Depan·
ment Gallery. Ce nter for the
Ans .. Nonh Campus. Gallery
hours. Opening reception Oct. 6.
S-7 p.m. Ca1164S-M78.
UFEFrted.om from Smokina, Mary
Jo 8etTCuini. Tuesdays through
Nov. 8. and Thursday. OcL 20.
5:30-7:30 p.m. $10; students

8USINEM SEMINAR
Business aod tbt lntemet,

MCI Telecommunications Corp .
Center for Tomorrow. Non h
Campus. 8:15-11 a.m. SSS fee .
For regisu-ation information call
636-3626.

-WEU.

nes. Screening Room. Center
for tbe Ans. Nonh Campus 4
p.m. Free.
PKARIIACY SEMINAR

A L..ook at Pbarma coe-cooom ~
ics: Applications and Coot nr
~·ersies. Eric Klein. Phann.D.
24&amp; Cooke. Nonh Campus.
4:30p.m.

ARCHITECl\IRE LECTURE
Rettot Landscape An:bitcc:·
t.u re Projects, Michael R. Van

PARII STAR'

SEMINAR

Milton Weiser. M.D.. Buffalo
General Hospital. Hilleboe Au ditori um. RPCI. 12:30 p.m.
-N' S TENNIS
UB vs. Nia&amp;ara. Ellicott Court s.
Nonh Campus. 3 p.m.
-EN'S TENNIS
UB Royals vs... Niagara. Ell icon
Courts. Nonh Campus. 3 p.m.

-

CIIDIICAL ENIIINEEIIINQ
The En'ect or Phosphorus. 00
the CorTOSioo Resistaoce or

Episcopal Service
Holy Eucharist Rite II

"COMI AND SEE"

John 1:46

Valk:enburgh. Harvard Univ.
Sponsored by th• School of AI·
chitOClure and Planning. 301
Crosby . South Campus. 5:30
p.m. Free.
AfniEMOVIQ
Short C uts. UUAB film series.
201 Student Union . Nonh Campus. 6 p.m. S2. $3 .50. Call6452957 .

COMI'IITEJI WORKaiiOI'

Non-Variational Approach to
Impurity Stales in Quantum
Wires, Jiann·Feng Jan. DepL of
Physics. 21 9 Froncz.ak. Nonh
Campus . 3:45p .m.

In memory of Linda Yalem . UB
student assaulted and murdered
while running near the campus.
Alumni Arena. North Campus.
10 a.m. Sl4. Runners report
8:30-9:30 a.m. For informati on.
ca11645 -3 141.

.

lnfonnatioo Aa.xiety: A View
From Both Sid es of tbt Rerercntt ~ School of Informa-

PHYSICS SEMINAR

~Unda Yalem Memorial Run.

7

AT lifE MOVIES
Schindler 's List. Sponsored by
Olabad H ou~ of Buffalo.
Katharine Cornel l Theater.
Ellicott Complex . Nonh Campus. 7 p.m. S2 . Call688-1~2 .

UFE WORKaiiOI'
U\i nglslam, Hanif Khala.I...
Cora P. Maloney College. Seven
sessions: lhrough Nov. 16. 7-9
p.m. Ca11645-612S to register.
UFEWORKaiiOI'
Why Diets Don' t W ork and
What Does, Dr. Frank
Stumiolo. 7-9 p.m. Caii645612S to register.
OPUS: CI..AUICS UVE
Robert Hausmann, cello, and
AICred Fnnnin&amp;, piaoo. Works
by Bach and Rachmaninoff.
Allen . South Campus. 7 p.m.
Free . Taped for broadcast the
followi ng Sunday 11 4 p.m. by
WBFO 88.7 FM.

DJanNMJJSHED U'EAKEJta

Dectrol ... Nlekd ia 50~

HIIIQ

NaOH, Robert Zelle&lt;, Occidental Olemical Corp. 206 Furnas.
Nonh Campus. 3:45 p.m.

affairs commentaton John
Mcl.augblia, Clarmct hge,

McLaucblia Group, public

Conlinued on page 8

(

Every Sunday
at 2:00p.m.
'(he Commons
Suite 100
"Come Worship with us"
Episcopal Campus Ministry
at the University of Buffa lo
The Commons
Suite 215
6ss-4056
DireciOr/ Chaplain
The Rev. B.A. Tasy

�------·

8
ALENDAR
ued from page 7

Football Bulls Vzctorious!
the

M011oeK~Fnd

. . _ - - C l i f t . Alumoi
An:aa. Nonb Campus. 8 p.m.
ss. $12,$15. Series lickeu
$7.50. $18.$22.50. F« infor·
malion, call645-:14t4.

-.na-

SPSS lor Wbldows, Part I.
P1ln 2. Oe&lt;. 7. 9-Noon. Call
645-3572 or 645-3560 for n:aiscratioa i.nfonnalioa.
ATn.-

a - Ia lll&lt;oclla&amp;- UUAB

film series. 201 Student Union.
North Campus. 9:30 p.m. $2,

$3.50. Caii645-29S7.

THURSDAY

6

I'OC1IY TAU!

Lany Elpor aad tbe Tut of
........................ Bob
Grenier. Pan of Wedncs.M at
4 Plus poetry and prose se:nes.
438 Clemens. North Campus.
I 2:30p.m. Free.
AliT L.IIICTUft
Artlllll aDd Prioten io Collabontlloo, Prof. Dooald Robens. Ohio Univ. 112 Center for
the Ans. North Campus. 3:30
·p.m. Free. For infontllltioo. call

--AI.
-

64S-6201.

KIEMCU

A TraDS&amp;eok Approa~h to
DISI!KI Ihe Reaolatory El..
ments or P\utid Pbotosyn-

thdlc.atoa, Dr. Pal Ma\iga.

Rutgers Univ. t 14 Hochstenc:r.
North Campus. 4 p.m.

~Anofl

LECIUII£

E Pluribus Uaum: lJ It a RtaJi.llk A.lm for Amuia 's
Schook! Elltoc Eisner.
Stanford Univ. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 4 p.m.
Free. Sponsored by the Gn~du ·
ate School of Education .
11AntiEIIAT1CS COI.l.OQUIUM

The Caolor-Gteuoo-Dilwonh
Tbeorom, Prof. Rich Wood.
Dalhousie Univ. 103 Diefendorf
South Campus. 4 p.m.
PIIAAMACEUnCS SEMIIWt
Pe.r1Deabllity C h ances in the

Blooci- Braio aacl BloociCerebospinal Fluid Barrien
Durio&amp; Ex~m ental Mminaitis: b Tbert a Role for Nitric: Oxide'! Dr. Kathleen M. K.
Boje. Depc . of Phannaceuucs.
5(IIC Cooke. NMh ~ 4 p.m.
CERTIFICATE PROGRAM IN
.-TOLOOICAL NURSING

Ethk:s and Acing, Denise
Hanlon , School or Nursing . To

earn cenificate , nurses must
attend five sessions. South
Campus. 4 :30-7:30 p.m. S50
per module. To register. call

829-3291.
ur EXHtaiTKIN
huJo Bueonos: Tht Same
and tht Other (MFA Thesis) .
Opening reception 5-7 p.m.
lbereafter gallery haul'$.
Through Oct. 17. An Dqlartmcnt
Gallery. Cezuer ror the Arts.
Nonlt Campus. Call645 -6878.
ATntEMOVIU
Two Mikes Don't Make a
Wri&amp;bt. UUAB film series.
201 Student Union. Nonh Cam-

pus. 6:30p.m. S2. S3.50. Call
64S-l957.
URWORKS-

a. ............ •
The linda Yalem Run to benefit rape
prevention through the Linda Yalem
Memorial Scholarship at UB will be
held at 10 a.m. Sunday. Oct. 2 outside
Alumni Arena. The 5-l&lt;ilometer run, now
in ~s fifth year Is named in memory of Linda Yalem .
a UB student ~ was assautted and killed While
training for the New York City MarathOn.
Wah the race now patt of The Buffalo News Runner
of the Year series, ~is expected to attract 1,500 run- .
"""'· says race director Nan Harvey. Cost of the r"?" IS
$12 for comm..rrity runners and $14 for anyone regrstering the day of the rece. Participants will receNe a
tong-s- T-shirt designed by Custom Tee.
Check-in for runners the day of the race will be .
held from 8:30-9:30 a.m. in the main lobby of Atumru
Arena . Awards will be presented to overall male and
female finishers and lop three female and male fin-.
ishers in various age catego&lt;ies. Separate prizes Wtll
be presented to top UB finishers in various categories, including race walkers for the first time.
Participants in Wheelchairs are encouraged. Registration forms are available at Alumni Arena , the
Student Union and Harriman Hall.
mc:n~

EXHiaiTS
AliT~

Pauio Buennos's M.F.A. thesis
exhibit. "1be Same and the
Other." opens Oct. 4 in lhe An
Dep.a.rtment Gallery located in
Lbe Center ror lhe Arts. 'The
ooeling reception is Oct. 6
tior/. S 10 7 p.m. 1be show runs

tltrough Oe&lt;. 17. Also. from
Oct. 10-22. Buennos·s "Blank"
wilt be inst.aUed in the Atrium
or the center. For inrormation.

call645-6878.
"'Con\~

Chinese TT'adi·

tional ·Siyle P&amp;inting... reaturing
work or 32 raculty members
from two Be1jing unh·ersitte.S.
IS showing through Oct. 16m
the University An Gallery.
Center ror the Ans. For mformauon. call645-6913

NOTICES
PIIUC-._ R£QIST11Anofl
The Early Otildhood Resear&lt;:h

Center is accepting Fall registrations for its preschool pro·
gram ror children 2-5 years old.
For inronnation. ca11645-2379.
EMERITUS CEHIO AWAllO
The Emeritus Center announces
the Rose Weinstein Memorial
Award or $200 for a project
that fit s the category "Studies
on Aging:· The pro.JCCt (paper.
an fonn . ClC.) must be: wntten
or created by an undergraduate
or graduate student under the
supervi sion of a member or the
raculty . Deadline for the award.
to be: given annually. is the last
day or February. For inrormation, contact the Ementus Cen ter Award Co mmittee.. South
Lounge. G~year Hall . South
Campus.
AUSCHWtTZ, HIROSIUMA,
AHDSCIEHCE
Proressor Joseph Agassi rrom
Tel Aviv University wilt deliver
a lalk. '1'he Impact or
Auschwitz. and Hiroshima on
Scientific Culture." at the Physics Colloquium Oct. 7 at 3:45
p.m . 1n 422 Fronczak Hall . Pro·
ressor Agassi also is associated
w1th the Dcpanment o f Philosophy at York Umversny 1n

Toronto.

Ha t ha Yoga: An l nlrod uc-

tion, Paula Schank. Himalayan
Institute . 7-8:30 p .m. Call 645 6125 to reg1ster.
AT Ill£ MOVIES
Rom~ l.s Bleeding. UUAB
film series . 201 Student Union.
North Campus. 9 :30 p.m. $2.

$3.50. Call 645-2957.

~w-­
Pi.oe MaU on tbt sunCiusttr.
10-Noon. Caii645-3S40 [O&lt;
registration inrormation.

JOBS
FACULTY
Assistani/Associate/Full ProfHSOr-Organizauon and Human Resources. School or Man agerm-nt. Posti ng F..a076.
F-4077 . Assistant ProrrssorFinance and Managerial Economics. School or Manfge·

Posting F-4078. Asoio-

laiii/Aaodale/hll ProiAccountin&amp; aDd Law. School of

M ..........~ Postin&amp; F-4079.
Aoliolalll/~1•/f'llll

Pro-

reaor-Finance aDd Manq-erial
Ecooomics, School of Management. Posting F-4080. AJAttaai/~U/f'tiiiProl....­

GeoaraJ&gt;by. Posting F-4081.
F-4082.

~~Prof....,..

Unguistics.. Posting F-4084.
AMi:ftant Professor-Communi·

cation. Posting F4085. A.Jiociatt/FUU Proi......-School or
Law . Postinc F-4086 .

-..Smior Co.D.Wiot=:Psychology.
Posting R-94070. Secretory II·
Buffalo Maltrials Research
Center. Posting R-94071
Postdoctoral Assoc:bttHJ&lt;

B1ology. Posting R-94072.

lheir firs1.6ver

win 1n UB Stadilm last SeUday with a
36-1 vic1cly ~ the Wolves of
Cheyi'Wy ~.snapping an
eight-game lo8lng streak.
UB scored on H'&amp; opening posse&amp;s1on when treehman running back
Tyler McOonnef1 scanpered 19 yards
around left end. capping a nine-play,

o

~'*"'right back Wl1h a 17play, -llftllll drive which
aullllclln a 31-yard lill1d gael, culling
UB'a n.g~n to 7-3 with 5:22leflln the

on Satu-day followed by 8 2-2118 With
Siena the next day. Coach Ron CaM's
squad is 3-3-1 .
Melanie Hierl and Amamaria
Gasbarra each scored lor the Roya1a
in the Siene match. Siena lied !he
match at2-2 with 12 minuteS left 8&lt;ld
na1her team 8COI8d In the two 15

ftrlt ...,.._

mirUe oYIIrlimes-

65-v-d diM.

re:

A M111c Malnll27.,..-d field goal
and a 2SotWd 1C0rinQ ..,... from ae
Clift Sail to b1a1Nr f/ll'tkJrry gave the
81* a 17-3 hall1lme ~.
FoiiiMing a UNlle ~by UB'a
T - Fllhllr to open the second
hal Mc:DomeiiWIIDI his second
olthe allalnDOn. 1hla lime fran
e1g111 ~ OUI to r;ve the Bulla a 24-3
lead. Cheyney QOC back in the game
when~ Jonltlhan Aym 1811
lor a abt-yard tiOOI'8 with 10:23 remaining, butUB scored lhree plays 1a1er

eocft

on a on&amp;-)W'd Brad Beaa roo, giving
the BuHII a 30-10 advenlage. The
accn 181 up by Rahe(s second
foolbla r~ on the day.
UB caad hi acamg when Mark
Taylor ac:ored Ns thtaweerTO on 8
ooe-yard rush with 2:151eft In the game.
McOonnelf IUIII1ed lor a game-high
113 yards and two TOs, While linebaCker Pete Conley lad all 1aCkfers
with 20. The junior also recorded a
aac.iulnd two quart.arbal::k pr...,....es
In his finest outing In a Bulls' unlfonn.
The Bulla retum to action on Octobef 8 in a 1:30 homecomifl!}show-

down apalnst longtime rival Colgate
University.

~

lnfon:utioo Tt:ebooloc S~
dalisl (SL-3)-Computin&amp; &amp;
lnronnation Technology. Post·
ing P-4071 . Communiatlon

Syst&lt;ros En&amp;ioe&lt;r (SL-4)-

Compuung .t lnrormat)on
Tcchoology. Postine P-4078 .
Fac::Uities Pro&amp;nm Coordinator (SL-5}-Desien &amp; Construction. Posting P-4080. Sllll' A5sociatt (SL-4, lnttmal
Promotional Opportunity)·
University Development. Post·
ing P-4083 . St:nior Staff Assls·
lint (SL-3, l ntrmal
Promotional Opportunily)Unlvenity Oevt.1opment. Postmg P-4084 . P-4085. ANstanl
Dean (SL-5. lnlt.mal Prom&amp;tiooal Opportunity)-Un1ver·
si ty De\•elopment. Posting P4086. Seu~r saarr Associate

(SL-5, !.,.mal Promotloaal
Opportunity)-Uni\'enity Oe' 'elopment. Posting P-4087. P-

Ciolek are all !led for
leiWn scoring
lead with ten pomts apiece. CIOlek
leeds with four assists.
. . _ .• . . . . _
The Royals -'&lt;end saw than falling
to a strong New Hampshire SQUM 4-'l

· · .Kadiri
. . .scored
.
Chal1e&amp;
two goals to
lead the Bulls to a 3-1 win at Siena
Saturday, September 24. The Bulls are
0011 5-2 011erall.
Kadiri, a jiXIior from Kogi, lmye,
Nigeria who played on the N'tgerian
World University Games soccer teem,
got his first goal of the match with less
then two minutes remaining In the f!rSI
han on an assist fran Chris Adams,
tying the match at1-1 at halftime.
The Bulls tallied a pair in the final
half as Ediru Okpewho netted his team
leading fifth goal. Kadlri followed nine
minutes later with his second goal
assisted by Mike Bongino and
Fredrick Akosa to UB the 3-1 edge.
Goalkeeper Jay P8lmer stopped 17
Siena shots to lead the B ulls.
Kadiri , Okpewho and freshman Dan

liB outshot Siena 37-22. Goali&lt;aeper
Racllel1e Galipeau played the enllre
match cof1ecting 15 SIMIS-

Earlier In !he week, the Royals teA al

eam;ua 2-1 . All three goals were

scored wl1hln the final three minutes.

C.... c..11y
The Royals won the learn competilion
althe 20111 Amual Western tnvillilional
Cross Country Meet al Western

Ontario. us scored 92 points to second place McGII's 1161n the t~team
~thai included squ&amp;ds from both
the United Slates and Canada.
Eestem Michigan's Adele Rankin
.,.;on the indMdual competi1ion ·flnlsn1ng the 5,000 meter COIJI8e In
17:..0.56. US's Jbdilh Novak fed the
Royals fllliShlng ~thin 18:35.39.
Stacey Slrolhmann's 18:55.38 was

good lor 12111 and Nilam Shukla's
19:06.-47 was 16th overall.
0n the meh 's side, the Bulls finished
the 1~1eam rMet ninth with 258
points. Central Michigan won the team
competition with 58 points.
The Bulls' top finisher was Clvls
Keenan who firV&amp;hed the 10.000 met
course in 33;31 .17. Charlie Moynil-ian
was the next highest ftnisher in 36lh at

y...,...

33:38.69.

Coach Bob MaxweH's women's volleyball team started the_.. off with 8
tou--gema win CN9f crosstown
Canislus altha Koessief Center 15-13,
13-15, 15-13, 15-13.
The Royals then headed for
Hamilton, New Vorl&lt; and the Colgate
Invitational Tournament. On Friday UB
lost a four-game match to Manhattan
and ten In three to Princeton. Sat\6day, the Royals rebounded to down
Fordham in four games, 15-11, 1
•
10-16, 15-6, before falling to the host
Red Raiders in three games. UB I~
Ailed fourth In the five-team roundCrobin event. Candie Hirst was ~
to the AIHoumament team for her
8C()Oflll)lishmts.
-5potts Information OffiC8

4088. Assislaol O..o (SJ...-5,
lntem.a.l Promotional Opportu.nity)-University Developmenl. Posting P-4089. Admlssions Advisor (§1,3. lntt.rnal
Promotional Opportunlty)AdmiSSIDnS. Posting P-4090
Communication Systems
T echnieian (SL-3, lnlernal
Promotional O pportu.nlty)Computing &amp; lnrormation
Technology. Posting P-409 1.
COMP£11TlYE CLASSIFIED
CML aorvtcE
'
Cle-rk 1 (SG-06)-AdmiSSions.
Lmes 46061-46065
IIOI'M:OiiiPETmVE
CLASSIFIED CIVIL SEJIVICE
Carpenter (SG-12)-Resldent ial
Facilities. Line 43091 .
I.AIIOR CLASSIFIED CIVIL
SERVICE
Cluot.r (SG-(}5)-Cusuxhal
Serv1ces. Line 31571. Cleaner
(SG..OS)-Custochal Suvices.
Line 31573.

To obrain mou 111/ormatton on
jobs Jist~d abo1·t'. rontoct Puson n~l s~ n ·ius. 104 Crofu
Hall.

Buff alo Chamhn \lu'iL

~oLitll

··········7··························
t ($
Series ticket $50.00

g#~~e~n:!~~~-~-~~~:g:l;:tr~=~

Ymg Quartet. ........................................... November 29
Pnuak Quartet... ........................................February 7
Carmina Quartet... ........................................March 21
The Lydian String Quartet with
Sanford Sylvan, barilone ... :.........................April 18
Mendelssohn String Quartet with
CbarlesNeidicb,darinet .............................. .May 16
Tu&lt;sday "-enings ill 8:00p.m. ill Kleinhans Music Hall.
Prt-&lt;011001 talks bv !he artists :u7:15 p.m.
Call 838-2383 ror our brochW. or !llOft in[onnatioo.

.........

�--.----.-·
Parents unaware of football risks, UB researcher fmds
ARENTS OF high
school football players are not aware of
the risks of severe
brain injury from playing football. a UB researcher has
found.
Most parents incorrectly believe
that wearing a football helmet
eliminates the ri sk of brain injury.
says Gerald M . Goldhaber, UB associate professor of communication .
Moreover, parenrs are not aware
oflabels on football helmets warning of these risks .
In a telephone survey of 1 ,00~
parentsofhigh school football players who either were currently playing or had played within the
previous five years , Goldhaber
questioned respondents about the
types of injuries associated with
playing high school football , their
beliefs about football helmet protection and their sources of information about the risk ofhead injury.
- 1be results of the survey were
pubHshed in the winterissueofthe
Journal of Arhlttic Training .
Less than I percent of respon dents mentioned severe brain
tr.luma as being a type of injury
associated with playing ltigh school
football, despite the fact that the
National Operating Committee on
Standards for Athletic Equipment

(NOCSAE) has warned that "head
injuries traditionally have been the
source of greatest concern in the
game of football, accounting for
65 to 85 percent of all fatalities ."
Football helmet manufacturers
for years have put warning labels
on both the inside and outside of
helmets advising of the risk of se-

I

vere brain injury and that a helmet
may not prevent such injuries.
Yet 80 percent of respondents
believed that wearing a helmet
would eliminate most of the risk of
severe brain injury. About onethird of respondents knew about
the warning label on the helmet,
but unprompted, less than 20 peTcent of those could correctly identify at least one piece of information
from that label.
Only II percent of parents surveyed had received information
from any source about the risk of
head injury, with most of it coming

from written notices or permission
slips from their cltildren's schools,

or from a newspaper anicle or television documentary. Less than 5
percent of these parents had rethis information from a helmet warning label.
"lt is imponant that safety infonnatioo be communicated to
those who must make decisions
about bow to use a product safely,"
Goldbaber writes. "If parents are
indeed an important audience for
the infonnation about this risk (of

brain injury) and are expected to
make infonned decisions aboul
granting permission for their chilo
to play high school football. it is
apparent (from the survey results)
that they are making these decisions without the appropriate infonnation ."

~ivod

~ical parental consent fonns
- · from high schools use language addressing general, rather
than specific risks. he notes. Since
the survey results sbow that parents a..n:-.more likely to associate
football injuries with knee injuries
and broken bones. ra1her than head

How can you help
your students succeed
at no cost to you?

~!er .6..~.6..

injury. general language is not adequate to warn about the risk of
brain injury. he says.
Another source of information
for parents about these risks-the
football players themselves-is
inadequate since most players are
teenage males who are likely to
take risks and ignore warnings. he
adds.
Goldhaber urges helmet manufacturers-who have access to the
available scicnlific li terature ,
NOCSAE tests and standards , and
information about the risk of brain
injury- "to lead a concened effon
to provide parents with the infor-

marion they need tomak.e in(ormod
decisions about matters of safely
concerning their football-pJ.yi•&amp;
children:'
Manufacturers could ru:ommend. via letters. brochures aad
·fact-to-face meetings with sales
representatives. that coaches and
athJetk trainers meet with pare11ts
and show them a v1deotapc: contaimng risk and safel) informa tiOn . Goldhaber suggests The
companies also cou ld provide written info'1Tlation Ia distribute to parents attending these meetings. or to
others by mad .
Athletic tramers. both individually and through their group orpnizations. should ex en pressure: oo
helmet manufacturers to make
safety data available for study aad
analysis. he continues.
Moreover, trainers are in ., kbl
JX&gt;Sition to initiate and ope:r1111e tbeir
own nationwide networt: to coOect
information concerning incidalu
involving head trauma in pncrice
or game situations and the particu-lar helmets worn . This inforrnarD
could be anai)Ud and made ovailable to the public and otherlllhldic
trainers.
In addition. trainers. in con;u.ction with coaches and other LC81D
officials, 'should actively pon;cipate in the process of infOillliaz
parents about por.ential risks Utvolved in playing football,
Goldhaber says.
n

The Unlwenlty •• luff• l o pr•t:•nts

AMBASSADOR CoLETIE

AvrrAL

CoNSUL-GENERAL OF IsRAEL 1 • NEw YoRK

''The Middle East:
Is it a Real Peace?''
ThunMy. Octob« 110, 1994 Ill II P·'"·•
Stuclent Unioft ThNwr, Horth C."'pu'

lS ... . ,
.. .

Mllkin'~~
Yo~ New""' Seruire "'0"~
Located
At the
Copy Center

M11kin' Copies is ready to assist the
needs of both the students and faculty.
Let us put your class notes on file and
well make it easy for your students to
obtain them.
Inquire about ou r Faculty OtscounlS
available on our full range of copy
services.

VB Corrunons

We offer peat eutome.r
oerriee IDclu&lt;IID&amp;:

~-:ro~]O&lt;
Easy Access on Campw
Conuenien..! Hours

FACULTY: For leariq your notes on file, you will be •Inn a
FREE $25 VOUCHER for oar full raqe of con aervleea.
Call or Pistt us soon at 1M Commons!
520 Lee Entrance. Suite I 05

Tt·l 636-8440
,-,,, 636-8468

AMIIASSADOR COLETTE A VITAL " lsml's h•ghrst-r.mlung
woman dtplomu. Shr ts w:ry tll\'Oh"Cd m rht M•ddlr East pt.aa' proctss md has sought to drtptn pubhc undcrslandmg of tl through .a
wtdr~rmgmg rdua.tlon~ mtsston. Ambass.ador .'\\"tU.I lus hdd .a \"01·
nrry of kr)· Forttgn Mmtstry posts. Ht'r d•snngutshr-d

ITCOrd

of for-

postings in Brussds, Paris, Monrrnl .and Boston culminart'd m
hrr 1988 appomanmt as lsrad's AmbllUdor ro Ponugal.
ttgn

�______
--------·___
_

----.........
-----.
__
--·---.,._t
....
............
_
__
___
-_
....................
--...-----F.....
--.
...........
--------______...
__- ........

....,

-...-~­
(1) ....... - -

_......,

IN COMPLIANCE WITH the requirements of the federal law, and in an effort to
promote the perscnal safety of the academic
community, the following information has been
prepared for campus review. The information is
updated on an annual basis and is available to all
·current srudents and employees, and to prospective srudents and employees on request.
This report focu ses on University programs
and properties and facilities owned or controlled by the University. UB has campuses
located within the City of Buffalo and Town of
Amherst, and each municipality has law enforcement agencies and maintains crime statistics-for information on safety and crime in the
local communities, contact the D!;;partment of
Public Safety.
The University is concerned about crime in
the community and works with local EIW enforcement agencies to promote safety awareness, in an effort to reduce the number of
incidents and assist in the investigation ot
crimes.
1he followlnC clncrtbM
current.......,..• policies

••CardlnC procedure•
..... fllcllltle• for .tuclents end OU... to r•
~criminal Ktlons or

-

cumncemerl•ncle•
on Clllllpu• .....
policies concemlnc the
lnstltutlon'•-to
.uchre~ .

law enforcement units.
emergency health care agencies and prosecutors in res po nding to reports of
criminal activities or emergencies.
The followlnc . . 11M cur-

___--

Nnt policies concern
in&amp; ·
eecurltr
and

-.-....

dencee, and

The Depanmcnt of Public

Safety is the: University' s law
enforcement agency It has

an office on the Nonh Campus (Bissell Hall) and a substatjon on the South Campus
(Clemen! Hall ) 10 faci lilalc
the reponing, prevention. and
investigation of criminal activities and tQ. provide for
prompt respon se to other
emergencies.
Members of the academic community and visi tors to t he campus arc
encouraged to report crimes
to the Department's dispalc her by 1elcphone (6452222) . In addilion . lhe
campus has a "bl ue light "
direct line sec urit y tele phone system located at strategic loca tion s on the
campus for emergency use .
Thi s dispatch office is operated 24. hours a day. seve n
days a week and dispatches
pa trols to emergency calls
and repons of crim in a l activity . As appropriate. the
Department in teracts with
loca l crisis service agencies,
I

.,._

-to_.teeu~

aecurltr

_oil_,.

dThe campus has a Personal
SafccyTask Force which conducts facilities audits from a
safety perspective. Deficiencies are identified and correeled when rep orted.
Campus community mem bers with facili1y -n:lated security co nce rn s should
contact the Depanment of
Public Safely direclly .
Most campus facilities are
open to the public under ex isting campus policies. Residential areas are limited to
residents and guests. RC'sidential rooms are lockable
and exterior doors on the
Soulh Campus and lhe North
Campus Governor's Com plex . and lhe Joseph Ellicou
Complex are controlled
through a card reader system .

-

The followlnC .,. cu...m

.,._....

~·policies­

••nt lnclutllnC
the
.-..-,.oil
...curtty--.(I)

P ublie Safely Depanmenl
campuslawenforoemenlpersonnel have lhe full Sl&amp;le authority to enforce and
investiglle all laws and regulations. The Oepanmenl is in
daily con~ae1 wilh lhe Cily of
Buffalo and Town of Amhetsl
police deparanents. lhe Erie
Counly Sherifr s Office and
lhe New York Sl&amp;le Police.
The Departmenl mainlains 2A
hour a dAy radio and 1eletype
contact witharu law enforcement agencies.
Jurisdiclionofcampus law
enforcement personnel as
peace officers is limited to
lhe campus and highways !hal
are adjacent to or uavel
lhrough lhe campus. Person nel may engage in "hot" pur·
suit into the surrounding
community.
Department personnel
conduct crime prevention and
awareness p/ograms for the
campus which encoun~ges lhe
reporu of crimes. The program includes distribution of
materials. prescntaljons to
student, faculty, and staff
groups. newspaper alerts. and
panicipation in campus-wide
events.

__

........,...

The-....---

type-'--Yoilto I _ _ _ _

plo~--­

Ufeconductsoricnl&amp;lion propmminl oneampus, whic h
ioclude aecurity information
in printed 5tudent guide
books. dUtribution of a per
sonal safety brochure, and a
scxualusaullprevmlionbrochure. and relaled presenlalions on these 1opics. The
presentations are: conducted
by S1uden1 Life. Publ ic
Safety, and lhe Universil y
Counseling Cenler.

_oil,.., .......
...........
.,

..,.

__....,..,

.,...._

The campus complies wilh
stale and federal laws regarding 1he possession. sale. and
consumption of akohol and
illegal drugs . All Sludentsare
provided wilh an annual Drug
Free Schools and Community Act compliance statemenl, which delails campus
policies, treatmenl and COUO·
seling prognms. and education effons. Faculty and staff
members receive this statement and the campus Drug
Free Workplace Policy.
For addition.aJ copies of
these policies. contact S1uden1Affairs(542 Capen Hall )

_....,_......
-........,.......,
.......,.
.......-~---­
... "" - . ...,..._
11M-..... le UB

----

tto.. wltb off-ce•pu

•

Local community Jaw en
forcement agencies are en
couraged to monitor an d
,.

'

\I

I I

I I

Ill

I

C c"' lc ndar Ye m s. 1991 9 3

..

'

I• I

These sta\Jsbcs reveal the nature and frequency of reported cnme
on the UmverSJty at Buffalo campuses In accordance With the
oC sexual
reVlsedCampusSecurltyAct. the more tndUStve
offenses has now replaced tha t of rape ' In the category o1 burglary.
IOfced entnes 818 rare the rna JOrrty of IOCtdents are thefts from
umocked student rooms One o4 the most challengtng tasks we
have •s to educate students to lock men rooms al aU times

cateoorv

1"1

un

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0
10

0
6

0
7

5
148

3

2

156

27

29

210
40

,M urder
Robbery
Agg1ava1ed Assaull
Burglary
Molor Vehicle Thens
Arrests for

CIIrlty procedure• and

LIQuor law VIOlation

1

0

...-.cttc:- to _ , . .
... 8tufenta - _..,..

Dr~g

2
2

4

- to ...MCUiftJrioepoo..11M
for

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IIMirown
Meurftyoii-

_..}'
-oilA

deKitptton

oitol -

,..,.. delliCMted
forM
atudente

iJ&gt;.
and

The campus has an acuve
crime prevention and awareness program . The Depanment of Public Safety
conducts a series of campus
programs on topics related to
sexual assault. self defense.
personal safety and general
crime prevention. Presentations are made in the residence hall s. at employee and
student orientation programs.
campus activity fairs. and for
campus bargaining units on
request. To make arrangements for a group presentati o n . call Public Safet y
direc1Jy .
The campus Personal
Safely Task For&lt;:e prepares
an annual repon on campus
security for review. The Task
Force also conducts open forums. distributes printed infonnation. and arranges for
appropriate campus safety
related ~ignagc. The Director
of the Depanmcnt of Public
Safety serves as chairperson
of lhe Task For&lt;:e.
In addition. safety and security programs for students
arc offered by Residence Life
ar.d Student Life offices.
Residential students discuss
safely issues at mandatory
noor meetings and are provided with sec urity related
printed materia ls. Student

'

abuse vtalat1on
Weapons possesstOn

1~ \

5

Heallh Services. lhe Studen
Ufe Departmen~ and byn
ben ollludenl JTOUPI incI
inB !be Anti-Rape Tuk
and !be Sexuality Ed
CenlCr. Residenl lludents at
lend mandalOry floor , _
ings on !his topic. and !be
is covered in the University'
orientation sessions.
SIUdenlsare informed lhaI
the Universiry will impose
maximum disciplinary unc
Lions and advise the victim o
his/her righu 10 notify Ia w
enfon:ement authorities and
the UmveBity ' s willingnc:s
to assist in doing so. lf vic
urns wish to press charges
t.IY University will arrest and
cha.-ge lhe acc.used offender
oo campus. Disciplinary ac
tion could include dismissal
!rom !be Universily. The ac
cuser and lhc: accused wi I
have their legal rights main
l&amp;ined and holh will be in
formed of the outcome of an
in ~&lt;mal and ellemal proceed
in&amp;'- The viclim is notiliedo
available counseling. mental
heal !h. and other services both
on campus and in the communily . Public Safely and
University Health Services
will PfO" ide a crisis services
sexual assault advocate and
female officers are available
to assist at all ttmes. Victims
also have lhe righl 10 change
their academic and living situations and will be assisted in
doing so if lhey choose. Information concerning the
University's sexual assault
protoc:ol and prevention arc
available in a numbero(Uni·
versily brochures which rt: ·
ceive wide disuibUiion on

2

IH.ft-

.1..2-

7-U-H

U.U-H

1•s

4

7

0

3

3

Rape
Sexual Offenses
Forcible
Non-lorc1ble

oos

The

followl.., deacrllle•

c:u...m policy
..
pnll..,
tiM ·
po...
Mion,

...._ . __
---_ __ ..
to--~

__
__
......,._
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..._....to _ _

' For the annual repon due Septemoer I 1994 lftStltutiOfls are asked
to reporr statistiCs lor raoe trofn 8/119J-7131/92 and for f01C1ble and
non-forcible sex oHenses f01 per
of tlfTI8 rnereaher Beg1f'lllll'tg 11
1193. star,srcs on sexual offenses are giVflfJ for calendar years The
category of lorc1ble sexual offenses mcludes the felonJ6S of rape and
fOICible sodomy as weflss misdemea nors such as sexual abuse and
sexual miSConduct Non-forCible offenses mclude slatutory rape,
InCest. and certa1n cases of sexual mtsconduct

respond to off-ca1_9pus student and student ortanization
criminal activities. Tile campus participates in a neighhorhood advisory board 10
monitor student acti vily in the
area surrounding lite South
Campus. Law enfOJ\ement
personnel and community
leaders are invited 10 n.::et
annually with student organi zation leadership, particularly the campus fraternities
and sororities.
Students are advised if
lhey an: apprehended for a
violation of law of the com·
munity. state. or nation it is
the University's position not
to request or agree to special
consideration for the student
because of hi s or her st udent
status . Students who violate
a local ordinance or any law
risk the legal penalties prescnDed by civil authorities.

campw.

11M followfoiC Is UB'e -pollcy·-.r~

or Personnel Services ( 108
Crofts Hall).

The-....--ilo.
_.__policy_

...... to..,....._

lbe University conducts a
number of training and infor·
mation programs to familiarize facully.slaff. and Sludents
wilh lhe procedures lo follow
should a sex ual assault occur. These programs are con·
dueled by lhe Public Safely
DepanmcnL the Universlly

--~cuoft)' or tecat law . . , -

...

qencl••· Sacll

reporb

_,._

-

wll aid ... t i M - -

tlonoil--

The Deparunenl of Public
Saffly publishes a weekly
listing of crime on campus
lhat detajls the date. rime. lo-cation and offense of all campus criminal incidents. "The
listing is circulated to campus off ces and is summarized weekly in lhe campus
newspaper. lhe Rtponu.
In add ilion. Public Safely
uses the scudent newspaper.
Thr Sprctrum . telephone
calls. poslers and local media
to communicate more urgent
security infonnation and can
provide bulletins 10 depart·
mcnt.s and units on crime activity as warranted.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION . CONTACT:
Deparunenl of PubliC Safety
Othce ol Sludenl Ute
Office of Residence L1fe

University Counseling Center
Sludenl Affairs
Personnel Serv1ces

645-2222
645-6125
645-2171
645-2720
645-2982
645-2646

Prepared by Olf1ce olthe V1ce Pres1dent fo r Student AtfaJrs and
the Department of PubliC Safety m compl1ance With the federal
Student Right-to-Know and Campus Security Act (Title 11-Crme
Awareness and Campus Security)
•
9!94

�Gl I

FacuiiY&amp;SiaHBillboard
Avtlltlolt Day

to be beld Oct. 1
A model-airplane flying
contest. priz.cs, videos,
helicopters and other d isplays
will he featured Oct. I on A vialion Day,to he held from 1-5
p.m. at Ambcrst Museum Colony
Park. 3755 Tonawanda Creek
Road, Ambcrst. The event begins
with a panel discussion on bow
aviation belps people in distress,
modemted by UB Engineering
Professoc Joseph Mollendorf.
Representatives from groups
including the N.Y. State Police,
Mercy Aight. 91
Airlift Wing/
U.S. Air Foree R
e, N.Y.
Anny National G
, Civil Air
Patrol and
A Airt:raft
Rescue Flrefi;:hting unit. as well
as Eric.County Sheriff Thomas
Higgins, will make presentations
from 2-3:30 p.m.
The model-airplane flying
contest will be held from 4-5
p.m .. with free rubberband-powered kits to the first 75 entrants.
Competitions will be held in two
categories: 12 years old and under, and 13-18-year-&lt;&gt;lds. Admission is free. For more
information, call 689-1440.

U.S. News IWika UB u

'beatv....e'

0

For the second time in a
month, UB has been ranked
by a national magazine as being
among the top universities in the
country offering the best val uequality education at a reasonable
cost.
UB was ranked No. 16 nation -

ally and No.2 in New York State
among national universities,
based on its stated. or "stic:W'
price, in U.S: Nn.s &amp; World
R•port's flrst-&lt;:ver ranking of
schools that provide the best
values. The rankings will be
published in a section on financing college in the magazjne's Oct.
3 issue. Last month, UB was
ranked 27th in MonLy magazine's
annual ranking of the Top 100
college and university best buys.
"To place in the top 20 of this
(U.S. N.ws) poll, along with the
finest public universities in the
country, says a lot about UB.'s
quality," said President William
R. Greiner. "And the top 25
placement of not only UB , but the
three other SUNY research university, says a lot about State
University't quality in general."

Sistine fresco Ia
au
of lecture

n. unveiling of the Sistine
Chapel's newly restored
"Last Judgment" fresco by
Michelangelo will be the subject
of a slide lecture Oct. 2 by Wal ter
Persegati, international coordinator of the Patrons and Riends of the
Vatican MUSCU!llS and f"'.""" secretary g&lt;n&lt;ra1 of Vatican M'useums.
The lecture, "The Unveiling of
Michelangelo's Last Judgment in
the Sisti ne Chapel," will take
place at 2 p.DL in tbe AlbrigbiKnox Art Gallery auditorium.
Free and open to the public, it is
co-sponsored by the UB Departments of Art and Art ffistory and
the Art Conservation Depamnent
of Buffalo State College.

0

Meet Eric
The Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) database ill rtaN available on BISON (the Universily Ubraries computerized catalog). As the largesl educallonal database in the
world, wilh close to one rTillion records, ERIC has somelhing
for nearly everyone from p rofessors and students on campus
inlerested in doing research to teqchers , parents and olher
citizens concerned with the slate of
I I I c II&lt;( )~I(
education today.
Not only dOes ERIC help identify
y
c::; ', I,~', ~ articles of in1erest from approximalely 800 edUcation journals, it
leads you to the sometimes hard-lotrack down literaiUrlt of education such as conference papers,
speeches, curricuh.m g uides .. privale and goverrvnent sponsored research reports, eiC. Mosl of this "fugitive literaiUre" is
made avatlable as ERIC OocumeniS on microfiche in
Lockwood Ubrary. (One also has the optlon of ordering a paper copy for a reasonable charge from the ERIC document

c-

del~

service.)

You name the educalional topic-day-care worker salary

compensation, slereotyplng In textbooks, multlcullural education, the role of parents In the achools, high IChool dropout
prewntion, asbe&amp;tol .,__,1 in IChool buildings, AIDS
-~education, whole language learning, programs for
the acadamically gifted, mualc eduC8IIon. eecond language

instruction, a-oom management~.. lind~
in ERIC!
To log on to ERIC ellhar on c:ampUa in one ollhe I.Jrltv.sily
Ubnlries or via BISON REMOTE type- • BISON's dalllbase se1ec11on menu and
fl you WMI 1991+ COIIefage o r - Wyou want rnaatellrom 1986-1990. As a
community
to Weslam New Yor1&lt;ers not allillllled wilh
the um.sily, ERIC Is alao IMIIIable on Buffalo Free-Net
For futthBr inlonrlalion on ERIC con1act Wiil Hepfer, Education Subjsct ~ Lockwood Ubraty,
.
· ~&gt;. 645-2817. For lnlotmelion on abiBining a Free-Ne/IICCOflt OOIIMCt Nel Ylrilly. School d lnbm&amp;tion and Ubrary Studies, ~&gt;, 845-3069.

!hen-

-w:e

~DoV/nneywodL.oa~-- ~Ubtwy

u

~

1.

I i ,

Rena Browne Jackson, library assistant
~ • - llelll AltCo U for Rena Browne Jackson, who
served 26 yean; as an assistant in the Health Sciences LibrarY .
Jackson died Aug. 9 after along illness.
A member of the UB Emeritus Centei. Jackson devoted many
houn to volunteer wad on campus through the Rev-Up program.
Special tribute was paid to Jack.son by!.« Baker, coordinotor of the
Rev·Up progBm, in a newsletter sent to Emerilus Center members.
Baker recalled that Nick l..eihovic, professor of Biophysical
Sciences, asked if Rev·Up could usist in his lpcciaJ need to have his
lecture noteo--about SO bani! written pages-typed for use during the
July 5-29 Cognitive Science Institute. "Tbe one penon I knew who
could fulfill this request was Rena." Baker wrole."Wben I told Rena
about tbe typing request," Baker continued, "mainly to cOn finn my
respect for her skills and intelligence, sbe agreed to do the work at

............ to . . .
Oct. 21

Jean HartiS, educator,
author and prison reformer

Who was granted clemency in
1993 alter 12 years in prison for
murder, will lecture at UB Ocl
25. Her talk at 8 p.m. in Slee
Concen Hall is presented by the
UB Graduate Group on Justice
and Democracy and tbe Buffalo
League of Woman Voters.
Harris will discuss ber experiences in Bedford ffills Correctional Facility and the work she
did there counseling inmates on
how to care for their children.
The former Madeira school
headmistress wrote three honks
during this period, and many
newspaper articles on subjects
ranging from abortion to prison
reform . With ber earnings. she
established a foundation for the
education of imprisoned mothers
and their children.
Tickets are S I0, general ad mission. SS. students and senior
citizens. and free to UB students
with student identification. They
can he purchased at the door on
the night of the event, starting at
7 p.m .. or in advance at the UB
Ticket Office. 221 Student Union.

home .

"For tbe next three weeks, she received the notes in the mail and
returned the completed typing. II was an exercise in perfection and
pride, of being needed and responding despite overwhelming obstacles.
" Knowing Rena," Baker concluded . ..uuly ennched my life .··

Donna "Sydney" McCarthy, 50
Donna "Sy. . .y" McC..uoy, 10. who had been a computer
programmer and consultant at UB. died Sept. 22 in Buffalo Genera l
Hospital.
McCarthy, who attended US majoring 1ncomputer sc•eoce. worked
in the User Services Group of Academic Compuung Serv1ces in 1M
Computing Center from 1967 until 1992. when illness forced her to
go on disability.
Initially, she ran the library in the Computmg Center and subse quently becamf a computer p~~ - ~ighly regarded as a consultant. she was the staff ex pen m dec1phenng magneltc lapc data for
many years. In the late 1970s. &amp;he was in charge of student consultants, who usually referred to ber as " Mom ."
A lifelong resident of Eggensville. sht: was an antique collector
and naturalist

Survivors include a brolher. Brian McCanh)' of idaho ~ a nepbc""
and two nieces. all of California; siA grandnephews and gnndnieces
as well as an aunt and cousins in the Salamanca area .

Hollywood Ia Olf Its way

to Buffalo

Among the UB alumni
returning for Hotnccomihg
Weekend. Oct. 7-9. is a speciill
contingent from HollywOOd.
entertainment luminaries who are
staging their own speciaJ reunion .
They include Robert
Liebennan. UB '71. awardwinning director of more than
J,(XX) television commercials and
producer~irector of feature ~
length films, Lelevision films and

the series "Gabriel's Fire." He
received the UB Distinguished
Alumni Award in 1990. Married

to actress Marilu Henner
("Evening Shade"), he was the
first participant in UB' s Distinguished Alumni Visitors series.
Others are: Sbcp Gordon . ' 68,
president of Alive Enterprises. an
agency representing Alice Cooper, Teddy Pendergrass. Luther
Vandross and well-known chefs
including Wolfgang Puck and
Paul Prudhomme; Barry
Gutterman, '67, now an attorney
specializing in entertainment law;
Eric Isralow, radio producer and
actor known as "Dr. Rock," who
holds a bachelor's degree in sociology and a master's in student
personnel management from UB .
awarded in 1966 and 1970;
Uuda Phillips Palo, a casting
direetor who graduated in 1972
in sociology and went on for a
master's in American studies in
1975. Her casting credits include
feature films produced by Francis
Ford Coppola, Alec Baldwin,
George Lukas, Mel Brooks and
Norman Jewison; Richard
Lawrence '67. a talent agent and
partner in the Abrams, Rubaloff
and Lawrence Agency, which
handles Jonathan Winters, Zsa
Zsa Gabor, Dick Clark and oth·
ers; Steve Sunshine, ' 71, who
became a New York playwright
and director before writing and

producing TV series and feature
lilms with his wife, Madeline.
Among these are ''Webster," "The
People Next Door." and "The Julie
Andrews Show" for ABC. They
received the People's Choice
Award for Best Comedy Series and
the NAACP Image Award for
Comedy Writing.
The group will be guests at a
breakfast hosted by Arts and
Letters Dean Kerry Grant in the
Center for the Arts Oct. 7. Later
they will engage theater-anddance students in informal di scussions in the center's smaller
theaters. Alter lunch Gordon will
lead a panel discussion for students in the Center for the Ans
Screening Room. They will get a
look at dance and acting rehearsals and the work of media-study
and an studenb.
That evening. the group will
be guests at a dinner hosted by
President William R. Greiner. On
Oct. 8. they'll attend the homecoming parade and visit the
alumni tent pany before watching
the UB-Colgate football game
from the president's box.

Expert on aging,

fltne. . to lecture

0

Waneeo Wyrick
Spirdu.so, an internationally known scholar in the field of
the aging of the human motor
'system, will present the 1994 J.
Warren Perry lecture Oct. 7 at 6
p.m .. in the Katharine Cornell
Theater. Spirduso will speak on
"Physical Activity and Cogni tive
Function in the Elderly."
The Perry lecture is sponsored
by the UB School of Health Related Professions. Admission is
free and open to the public.
Spirduso, a Mauzy Regent 's
Professor of Kinesiology and
Health Education at the Univer-

sity of Texas at Austin, holds a'
joint appointment in the College
of Pharmacy. Cbair of the Department of Kinesiology and Health
Education for 14 years. she also
served as interim dean of the
College of Education.
Her career has centered on the
effects of aging, health and fitness on the information process
involved in producing and controlling rapid movements. She
has lectured widely and has writ ten three honks. I I book chapters
and 42 papers. Spirduso l)as
served as president of the North
American Society for the Psychology of Spon and Physical
Activily. and of the American
Academy of Physical Education.

Leners
Article :S assertion
missed the mark
TO T11E EDITOR:
The'erticle •AI
FSECAfeedback
fromtha
Presiden 'sTalk"
(issue of Sept. 22.
1994 ), asserts !hat I ·crilicized"
the Prestdent's speech as "jawboning that doesn't amount to
much." What I aclually said was
that the facully is well aware
!hal the reward system here
focuses almosl entirely upon
research and thai. as long as
this remains so. the vast majorily of the facully may lhus be
expected lo vtew the repeated
exhortations for more anention
to teaching and public service
as just "jawboning thai doesn 't
amounl to much.Sincerely,
aAMUEL D. SCHACK
Depanment of Mathema tics

�------·

12

lWO UB PROFESSORS

1

and two alumni are exhibiting
their work as pan of "Consuming Passions: Food, An,
Culture," an exhibition running through Oct. 30 in the
Castellani Al1 Museum at Niagara University.
The exhibit, in collaboration with Hallwalls
Contemporary Ans Center, represents the ftrst
opponunity for the Castellani Al1 Museum to
include both folk and contemporary an in a single
exhibition. It reveals our changing relationship
and anitudes toward food as expressed through
an in works that explore the complicated connec-

2

CELEB
lions between food, an and culture.

The works of Marion Faller, associate professor

of an and director of the photo program ar UB, in
collaborntion with the museum's curator, Kate
Koperski, a UB alumna, and jolene Rickar
lectUrer in an history at UB, are mcluded in
show's folk-art
componem .

Faller 's work
includes co lor

New exhibit at the Castellani Art Museum Is a feast for the eyes

phoro documenra- tion of African -

American gardens
and ethnic food
markets, such as

the Broadway Mar·
ket, a local Italian
market, and Indian

3

and Asian rTYrkets
1. '

in Rochester, which 81\'C

h. •.,, rH
-\\ RIAl

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""

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3.

I

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ll

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I ''d
4,1/'\A(d \l l,'''
!

Hlll'- 'H, \L '\
I"

"h llRU\AJ
\\lDDING

BlliAD.\1r:-. ..,1cplunm
ChJcll.r

markets are more than places of business; they a
an integral pan of larger community life-a place
where neighbors go to exchange news. Her work
also depicts St. Joseph's tables, Vietnamese altars,
Indian poojas and Polish Easter traditions
The folk-ans component also features decorative breads, cakes and cookies made by members
of the local Ukrainian, Greek, Polish, Italian and
Indian communities. FalJer's photos and Jonathon
Rosen 's photo documentation of supermarket
displays serve a:, a segue berween the exhibn 's
folk and contemporary components.
Rickard, a member of the Tuscarora Nation .
focuses on lhe culrural importance of traditionaJ
varieues o flndian com in contemporary 1\J.scarora
life. This section includes black and white photos
of farmers, crops and an annual cornhusking bee.
Much 0{ the contemporary an ex-plores decJd..
edly m~ issues surrounding food, olilen with
a playfuln ;-or irreverence. MThe l.aSl Supper:- a
6-foot-by ·
1 photo mural b)• Bill' Kea$f1,

5
By liSA WILEY. News Bureau Staff; PbOios by

___ ,

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Looking for
'Nuances'

New~on

Infertility

Drinnan asks dental
students to
use artist's eye. p_.

Researchers
d1scover new
effects of brain
chemical
p_.

Dialogue with
Faculty

Let the
Madness Begin!

Greiner opts for a
conversation instead
of a speech.

Vinyl Madness II to
take over Allen Hall
on Oct 1

2

,.5
Septembeo 22, 1994

g

Volume 26. No. 3

Hi h 1ve for Ath e ics
New programs benefit entire community, build acclaim for UB, Townsend says
By CHRISnNE VIDAL

Reporter Editor

H

e began by threaten·
ing to tell his audi ence

~,·~rything

about the UB foot-

all program-al l

100 yea" or it. But in the end.

Nelson Townsend, director of ath·

letics. presented UB's more recent
athletic hi story .
Townsend spoke Sept. 13 at ··us
at Sunrise.'' a series of brcal.. fast
programs of topical and,. intellectual interest to the comm~nit) .
He also made two announcements-that Athletics officials are

it i.s making a responsible but Significant investment in the broader
experience for the st udent population . This "'·as no t always an cas)
declaration ." T ownsend sa 1d .
"Many facull) v.clc omed the
univcrstt) 's emergence into th~
major unl\'ersll) commu oit) of
spons. but some saw 11 as an irresponsible in,es trncnt ofuni,ersny
resource!, .
When UB hcgan its Run to DI vision I. To v. o~nd no ted . "we had

in the process of finali1ing a plan
that would take UB student athletes
into local school!&gt; to work with high

school students. and that UB wou ld
someday have a first-rate marching

band to accompan) its football
team-~ well as a promise-that
the Rull s would be victoriou) over
their Homecoming opponent,

Colgate. on Ott. 8.
''We're very . very apprcciati\e
for what you have done in suppon·
iog us. but we can usc: more suppon. forourcrro n is a great o ne and
we need you to go v. ith u:, as v.e
ach ieve what we have set out to
achieve." Tuwn send said.
When he arrived in Buffal o in

1987. UB' s athletics program ""'
corr'lpcling in Di' i!!!ion Ill. operating at ":,light!) above club level:·
v. ith so me athletes inves1ing their
ov.'Tl mone) for equipment. To wn .
scnd:,aid. "'Thing:, liJ...c hu) ing their
own !!!h~)C , , and hu~ ing their nwn
helmet) for fomball and mou th·
pieces for other o;;pon... Di' 1,100
III ... is considered our lov.c!!!tle , cl
of intercollegiate athletic parllci pation. low on!) in the lc' el of
suppon rccci,cd from univcrsitie!'!."
Toda y. UB competes at th e
NCAA Division I level agai nst
sl· h oo ls s uch Lehigh. Colgate.

Nelson Townsend discusses
plans for UB athletics.
three major goal) ...
The first, hc~id . v. ash,broadcn
the athletic. recreatio n and miramural experience for all UB students. "Many at that lime thought
of usa~ bcingquite crat) or at lea!&lt;! I
a bit phony in our intent." One
professor who '-'3{!Cd an anu-athletic campaign maintamcd 11 v.ru.
impossible to build a !,lrong recre ational program "h1lc aho bUilding a !,lrong athlellc!!! program
"bccau~onc l~diamctncall)
oppo~ed

to the o ther:·
Town.o;;cnd said.
"But it is possible
to bui ld both of these
programs at one
t1mc . How do I

Buck nell. lafa yette. Rhode Island.
Massac husetts. New Hampshi re .
Connecticut. Delaware and Maine .
Townsend said.
" Remember. we're no t talking
about whether Di vision I is better
than Division II or Ill. We ' re talk ·
ing about a philosophical difference between the instituti ons" and
the ir respective missions . he said.
" In Htking on thi s Division I
philosophy. we have a lso take n on
a major responsi bility. W.c. have
expressed to the academic world
that interco llegiate athletics is an
integral pan and a very major part
oft he uni versit ycx pcriencc. To the
faculty, thc un ive rsity is Mating that

n

e

weig ht
training
equip·
ment

that is available in three locations
in Alumni Arena and has upgraded

the facilities in Clark Hall.
lncseco ndgoal o fUB ':!. Run to
Dl\ 1~ion I v. a\ to bu1ld a program
based on academic intcgnt) and
\OC ial rcspon:,ihilit). Towno;;cnd
\aid ... We would not requ1re the
un1vcrsit) to &lt;.'hang~ 1ts h1gh aca·
demic standards 10 meet athlciiL·s
demand~ ... he said 'Th1 s ''a pure
philosophical difference hccau'&gt;&lt;.'
sam~ bclic\c that "C muo;;t aggrc.;,sivcl) rccru11 some- nf Lhc bcuer
known athletes and sec ourathlcuc
fonunes rise quid.. I) "
He humorou s!) ad.nov.lcdgcd
that the phtl o~oph i cal difference
can be difficult to v. o rl thro ugh .
''There are. days w~ I am tempted
to go out and do !.hat I' H. had
ahout a lithe lo~mg foothall game'
IL·a n talc Bu t ~ou ha'c ILl rc:memtx· "hat 11 ' ' )OU arc domg and
v.hat )OUr nll!&lt;r.l'IIOn ~a' lnll1311)
"UB ha~ c ht,,cn hl rcuull h1gh
qual it) litud cnt .. that happen Ill tx·
athlete' If 11 tool u.., 100 )Cars w
get tn th1:, pomt. I hope you l·a n
gl\c t"o or three more hc~.:au-.c I
thml v.e an:: on the road tn mot~mg
th1.., program cxa ..· tl~ v. hat \I.C "ant
111 0 be.'' Tov.no;;cnd \a id
U8 '' th1rd goal Y. a' IU 10\Uhl'
~ tudentl!l.
alumn1

of the athletic program'~ dfonl!l.
he said.
"When v.c ,laned th1' plan 10
1987-88 our \tudcnt\ v.erc supponmg the program on a ,oJuntaf)
bas1s,and they v..crc gi' 1ngu:,wmc
$300.000 a )Car Today our students ha\C adnpted an athlcuc fcl!
and thas )Car v.JIJ t·ontrihutc more
than S I 4 mllhoo to. our intcrcol·
leg1ate athle:u program " In return
'&gt;ludent~ recel\C frtt admts'\lon to
UB athlcuc e'cnh
The mO\C: to 01\ as10n I athleuc
(.:Ompc tmo n also ha5 ra1sed UB ''
'lstbilit) because: scorco;; arc published nauo nall) 10 the clcct roni\.:
and print mcd1a. T('lv. n...end noted.,

~1d "UB'~ arhlcucs program In tends to become iln mtcgral 'UP·
port S) \tern for the na11onal
de' elopmcnt and recogn111on of an
Jlrc:ad)' great um,ero;;ll) ..
In rc,pon:,c to quc\liOn'
To" n'Cnd ,atd tha1 L' B mtend.!t 1o
hne a "h1gh quallt~ man:!'uog
band" to au~mcnt 11'&gt; athlct lcli pru·
gram "It' :!I going t nta l..c ~mc tl mc.
though. and 11·~ gotng to talc ~orne
mone) ··He estimated thalli "ould
co!tt rough!) $500.0(X} to put a
marchmg band on the field
Local rccru111ng. Tov.n~nd ad·
m11ted . 1s not at the le\d B y,.o uld
lll..c 11 to he A) a result . L'B •~
finahTtng a ne" program tha t
...,ould bnng student athlete!'! 1nto

B 's ath\ehciproQnUllahohu

w~~.cbools~.owork

Ouo;;l~~rom­

a' o.tucknr aide~ "One oflhc' thmg '
1 to tell) oung
people hov. 1mponan 11 IS 10 pur"oUC an educauon for •" hat 11 t!lo
reall)c v.onh and not JUjt he hangmg the~r "hole lt\'es on hccomm¥
profe~sional athletes ... he s:ud
"One ol thC' reason' v.c don ' t
h..t\C 'UCCC\\, (rccrUttiO£-) IOC311}
' '")too mln) ot the :,tudenu from
\\'c.., tern ·c" YorL. e..,pt('lall) 1hc
Cit) of Buffalo. d o n't ha\C the
grade' And that · , tmponant You
~.~m · t g_c.·tmhl UB v.uhout mcctmg
the a"adcmu: rc4mrement' .. The
pwhlcm 1\
o l the !!!II U3ttlln

an 1mpa&lt;.:t on the
U
mumt) "In
. .,., c held
1993 - 9~

tn

Alumm Arena mort than 150 athlcu"· event!'. ... ~me of v. htch brough1
m more than I.&lt;XX&gt; pantclpants m a
s mg_lc v..eclcnd "We arc making a
trcmcndouo;;. lnlpal't on the lt-.calrommunity." Tov.n-.cnd .....ud
LiJ...e" ~ ~.t he hu~;,mc~!!l cnmmunlt) "ha\ mg a tremcndLlu:, 1mpact
on at hletics In September. corpornllon ... pro' 1dcd UB "lthmon.·than
$~::!5.000 10 '&gt;Up(Xm Q, cr. a I:! ~ear pcnod. from 1~75-19 7.
To\&gt;on!tend :,ald . UB re.:cl\t:"d on I)
ahout $63.000 of uppon for 1ntc:r·
collcgtatc athlcttl'"

v..e v. ant to do there

throu;h o ut

the

�2
H 0

~

0 R S

----·-·~

....._ L o.lldll, pm-

teSSOI' of geology 111 us.
has ~ eleCted 1994
chair of the~ Geology and Geomoo phoklgy
Division of the Geological
Society of America (GSA).
The glacial geologist seoved
as the d ivision's fiost vicechair ln 1993. A UB fact.ll1y
membet' since 1965. Calkin
has been a GSA membe&lt;
since receiving his doc1orate fr6m Ohio State in 1963.
Calkin was honored in
February·at the Buffalo Ambassadors' Ball for his wort&lt;
in attracting the GSA's
Northeastern Sectional
Meeting to Buffalo in 1996.
He will serve as chair of the

meeting .

--

~
~__.,

............... dlstin-

guished prdlessor of pharmaceuticl V18 UB School
of Phannacy. haS~ selecled 10 niC8Ive the 199-4
~I.Jialme

Achlevemenlln .... Pharmaceulical Scienceii/IJNald
from llelnllamallonal Phar~1 FedelaliOn (AP)
lofEduq&lt;lion andRe-

search.
AUBiacullymembe&lt;
8ince 1958,

levy
honors, inc luding AP's Host-Madsen
Gold Medal, the organization's prerrier award in 1M
scientific field.
He also has receilled the
Ebert Pri28 and 1he Research
.l'lclislllmert - . J d the
!&gt;merir::al~As­

soc:iallon. the McKeen Callel
Distilgljshed .l'lclislllmert
AW91d In Oilcall'ham'ecolo'J'I db !&gt;merir::al Colege of
Clrical Ptena:obgy and the
American Soc:iecy for Pharmeoology and Therapeutics' ()s.
car IUEr IWr.Jid for
~ Aclliewrner« In
E&gt;perinental Therapeutics.

Alan

Looking
for the
'nuances'

Drinnan
In •
Squire
Hall

dental

clusroom.

Drinlum bmovative In
teadling, public servlc:e
BY MARil WAUAC£

Reporter Slaff
HE WAY Alan Drinnan
sees il, being a good dentist requires more Lhan
know ledge about oral
problems. It also requires being
able to recognize all sorts of other
bodily conditions that can cause
oral problems .
'1 train students to see every
nuance of a patient's condition,"
Drinnan says ...I teach them to really observepatienls, to capoure all
the subtleties of their condition,
and to see if there is any evidence
of olher kinds of disease !hal may
be manifesting themselves in oral
problems."
Drinnan, a professor and longlime chair of the Depanmenl of
Oral Medkine who came to UB in
1962, recently was named a Distinguished Service Professor by !he
SUNY Board ofTrustees. Overhil_
long career, Drinnan's consistent
interest in developing new ways of
looking a1 all sons of problems has
led him 10 be on lhe cutting edge of
many areas of oral medicine and
community service.
Born in Bristol. England,
Drinnan attended the Bristol Universily Dental School before being
drafted into the Bri1ish Army in
1955 and serving 1wo years as a
dentist in Gennany. After leaving
the anny, Drinnan received his
M.S ., Ch.B .. Ihe British equivalenl
of an M .D .• from Bristol Universily Medical School in 1962. AI-

T

though his specific training was in
oral surgery, Drinnan realized he
also needed a medical degree, panly.
he says, because il woyld better enable him 10 understand his specially.
Drinnan came to Buffalo just
one month before UB became pan
of the SUNY sys1em. "AIIhallime.
lhe dean of the School of Dental
Medicine. James English, was interested in building up dentistry,"
Drinnan says. 'There were lms of
opponunilies. In lhe 1960s. the
exciting lhing aboul UB was a lithe
growth taking place. Those were
the Rockefeller years, money was
being pu1 inoo the SUNY sys1em.
there were new people and famous
people coming alllhc lime."
Dri nnan says he ,became involved in university and community affairs primarily because of a
UB-sponsored community television program called "Dialogue''
which he hosted every other week
from 1964-70. alternating with
Roben Ross berg ofCounseli ng and
Educational Psychology.
.. It was a very involved and interesting time ," Drinnan ~ays .
'Those were the years of the riots,
when police were frequently on

recently concludi ng six years of
campus. The program was a preservice on the Scientific AdviSOI)
sentation of all walks of life. and all
Board of the Armed Forces lnstiou1e
of the issues relevant to the limes."
of Pathology in WashingtOn. D.C
Drinnan also has been involved
Drinnan is as innovative in hill
in several other public servi:e teleteaching as he is in hi s communit)
vision programs. and served as chair
service . .. I have a collection of sevof the Board of Advisors for WBFO
eral hundred slides of painlings 1n
from 1986 to 1992. His involvewhich anists have unintentionally
ments in other types or community
d6cumented evidence of panicu tar
service have been on the local, nadiseases in highl y specific deoail.
tional, and international levels. In
and I use them in my classes to leach
1972 he became a founding memstudenos how 10 observe.'' he says
ber of the still highly active Eric
In addition to authoring countCounty Sheriffs Depanment Sci- ,
less articles, Drinnan ha s co enlific S1aff, a group of scientists,
authored the book. Physuol
physicians. dentists, and specialEvaluation of th~ Dt*nlal POiitnt
ists wbo aid the Sheriffs Depanment and olher polioc agencies in a "Sherlock Holmes w"\ 1he ultivariety of' situalions. Drinnan has been
maleobsen'er." Drinna"f'Y'-"He
could tell a grea1 deal abOut some·
chair of the staff since its ina:plion.
one just by looking at the.h. I want
Drinnan also served as presito teach my students the same kinds
denl of the American Academy of
Oral Pathology from 1979-1980.
of observational skills
" I use an as a method of leaching
and in 1993 became presidenl of
observation, because when you lool.
the American Board of Oral Palhology. From 1990-92. he served
at a painting, whao you look a1 is all
as president of the Internati onal
the detail." be says. " In looking al
Association of Oral Pathologists.
anything. whal 's crucial is ho•· you
which sets standards for oraJ. palook al iL By using an. I make the
thology around the world. He
process of teaching students how
has consulted for a wide variety of
and where to look for problems more
other agencies and universities.
palatable."

Enrollment, bufiget, Public Safety on University Council agenda

PHYSIOLOGY
-I'IIU.OW:
L F...._ d isting uished professor a nd
former chair of p hysiology
a t UB, has been named a
fe llow ol the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering. Farhl, who
has authored o r co-authored more than 100 scientific articles a nd abstracts,
has served a s -edhor~n
chie f of the Journal of App lied Physiology: Respiratory, Environmental and
Exercise Physiology. as well
as an editor of Undersea
Biomedical Research.
A d irector of the Biomedical Engineering Society, he
has served o n review panels for the National lnstiMes of HeaHh and the
Council of the American Physiological Society. He is

a.-

the ~ ~c:Jtwo

NASA-&lt;;ponSClfed research
projecls to study cardiopulnonary h.nclion In IT1crog&lt;avily.

II)' CHRimN£ VIDAL
Reporter Editor
199~-95 academic
year taking a look at enrollment statistics. the budget. and UB · s policy
on anning Public Safety officers. as well as welcoming two new
members to its ranks .
Jonathan Dandes of Ric h Products and a vice president of the UB
Alumni Assoc iatio n. and student representative C hri s Castallo were
introduced to the Council at its Sept. 8 meeting.
UB ex.pccts to meet its overa ll enrollment targets this year.
according to Robert L. Palmer. vice president for student affairs, and
have ··a very strong freshman class coming in."
The academic profile of incoming students shows a mean grade
point average of 90 and a mean SAT score of 1095. a 30-JX&gt;int
increase over last year. Pa lmer said. And although UB has sec 11 "some
modest slippage in (the number of) firsHime freshmen and some
slippage in tran sfer students." whCn the final numbers are in the
university expects to sec a marked increase in student retention .
Palmer also reponed o n the "extensive discuss ions" that have
taken place on campus regarding extending the number of hours
Public Safety o ffi cers will be armed .
"Between the hours of 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. officers arc anncd only
o n spec ial occas ions and arc required to othcrv.•isc carry the weapon
in a locked box'· in their patrol cars: Palmer sai d. The new policy
would enable officers to be anncd 24 hours a day. c:ttcc:pt under

The University Council started off lhe

special circumstances.··What we're moving toward is something that
is the: nonn at most qrt'lege campuses.·· noted Greiner. Officers atlhe
three olher SUNY University Centers and Buffalo State College are
armed around the clock. as are officers at vinually ..every other public
university" in the: country with a few exceptions. he added .
The 1994-95 Net~• York Stale budget showed " no budget reduclion
10 SUNY for the fi
time in eigh1 years." said Roben J. Wagner,
seni or vice presi dent fa.: university services. Among the highlights of
the budgc1 were: openin\foperaling funds for the new Naoural Sciences and Malhema1ics Coluylex: $700.00010 address library needs;
GRI capital and operati ng fllods; funding for the new Educalional
Technology lni1iativc. and $500.000 in suppon for the Law School
Initiative. which will be used for needs such as facilities renovation.
computers. and expansion of the faculty and curriculum.
UB st ill faces a number of financi al challenges. 'Wagner no1cd.
including a significant number of onetime funding sources and the
state·s "diffic ult fiscal future.'' UB must continue its effons to
diversify it s resource base, especially its non-state resources.
In hi s rcpon to the Co uncil. Greiner di scussed hi s plan to fonn a
Board of Visitors. which would serve as both an ad\•isory and
ouLrcac h board imponant to UB 's political and philanthropic effons.
He also discussed military recruitment o n campus. He noted that
he has instructed \Vagncr and Palmer that "we will assiduous!)
enforce" the State Supreme Coun's order. but that the order ... if
interpreted too widely. would step on the righlS of students:·

'The Reporter IS a campus wnmunlly newspaper puollsned bv lhe OIYislon cJ Lln!verSt!yServiCes Slate I.Jno:vefSIIy ot New Yen at Buffalo Ed1tcxl81 offiCeS are loCated 1n 136 Crotts Hall. AlMerst. {716) 645-6969
OIRECTOROfPUBUCAliONS, ~ J. ~T, EDITOR ~ VID&amp;a., ASSOC\AT£ £DnOA IOU DoUmii, AAl DIRt:ClOA -CCAF....... ~IATEAAl DIRECTOR TAIIMADOift. AOVERTIS»o'Gw.NAGBI ..culL~
I

�_IHIIIlalll
---.-·

3

......

Military recruiting: an issue with wide-ranging effects
11J CNIIIS11NE VI DAL

search·funding roller coaster for Lawrence.
who was norified in May that his breast
cancer research proposal was ratell one of
the most promising by top cancer specialists

Reporter Editor

T

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo
finds itself walking a painful line

between the federal government
and other people whom it serves
over the issue of military recruit·
ing on campus.

who screened the 2.800 proposals that were
~ubmilled.

Lawrencc·s grant was pan of total appropriations ofS21 0 million, the first funds that
Congress ever has specifically eannarkcd
for research on breast canter. Because the
money was allocated under the 1993 mili·

At risk is $885.000 in research funding

for breast cancer research, and possibly mil·
lions of dollars of additional funding that the
Department of Defense (DOD) has threat-

tary appropriations bill. it fell to the milital)
to allocate the funds .
However. a statute passed in 1973, in the
wake of the unrest of the Vietnam era. rc·
quires the DOD to deny grants and contracts

ened to withhold if it is detennincd that UB
does not provide military recruiters with ad·
equate access 10 campus. However, UB is
under a state judicial order that enjoins the
university from providing the services and
facili ties of UB 's Office of Career Planning
and Placement and to any employer who dis·
criminates on the basis of sexual orientation.
And wh ile the funding of research is an
issue critical to any university, the broader
issue could be even more devastating. Also
at risk is the intellectual and creative energy
that drives research.
Research does nm thrive in an atmo·
sphere of uncenainty. says Dale M . Landi.

to college and university campuses that do not
afford military recruiters access to campw.

goes. the greater the conscquen1ial costs UB
could face."
Concerns over funding could affect the
quality of graduate education by furthercompromising the stipends to graduate student.s
involved jn the projects. And that could
make recruitment and retention of OOI.h faculty and graduate students difficult.
"UB receives $50 million a year in feder~l funding for research . The quality of
graduate education here is very much determined by that research support." Landi said.
Likewise. diminished research suppon
could spin off into the local economy. UB's
technological innovatio ns , many of them

arising from federally funded research. are
utilized by Western New York industries to
develop new products. improve current prod·

ucts and improve produclion processes.
Economistsestimatelhatevcry S I UB spends
on research adds $2.50 to the local economy.
Likewise. for every two people UB employs
witlr federal research funds. another three
jobs are added to the local economy.
..What tends 10 go unsaid in thi s debate
and tends to get lost is. what we arc here to
do:· Landi said. ·lhc traimng of future fac ~
uhy who will be teachmg 10morro""' · s stu·
dents and hopefully advancing kno-.Jedge

in areas of scien e that arc imponant to
improving the qutjhty of life-tho~ funda·
mental considerations tend to be lo~1 m th1 !1
kjnd of debate. The debate 10\tead tend.' tO
focus on dollar amuunL\ of awards . .,.. hether
the recruiters can come on campus. and
whether 1hey should or not ··

And in July. the DOD announced that it

was delaying La"'-rence ·s grant because of
the uncertainty of the military recruitment
issue at UB. or on any other SUNY campus.
SUNY trustees decided not to appeal 3 State

Supreme Court ruling. That ruling supported
a lawsuit by a fanner UB taw student who
charged that pennitting military recruiters
on campus violated an executive order by
Gov. Mario Cuomo prohibiting state agencies from discriminating on the basis of
sexual orientation.
Then in August the DOD indkateQ that 11
wou ld release the funds beca use there wa..,
no evidence thai military personnel were
unable to recruit at UB . Ho.,..ever. the) rc·
tained the option to tcnninatc funding in the
future if it is determined that recruiters arc
being barred from campus.
As of Sepl. 16 Lawrence still had not
recc!ived funding for his research. '"It is my
understanding that the check is in the mail.
but Sponsored Programs has not officially
received the check from the Army," he said.
So DaW Lawrence waits. In the meantime. the delay has ..completdy disrupted
the research." he says.
··r had four graduate students who had no
means of suppon a.) of Sept. I:· he .said. " I
had no "''ay to supJX&gt;rt them and neither did
the department. and their future was at stake .··
In the meantime. the university has put monc)
into an account that will suppon the studenb
untjJ the grant money i ~ received. and will

"The uncertainty may
make it difficult to recruit
new faculty, make it
difficult to retain faculty if
the statUs of research
awards remains unsure. "
DALE M. LANDI

UB vice president for research.
If a resolution is not reached by the end of
this month. David Lawrence. UB associate
professor of chemistry. may lose his Am1y
Medical Research and Development Com·
mand funding for breast cancer research.
A member of the UB chcmislry faculty
since 1985. Lawrence is among the nation· s
leading scientists in bioorganic chemist ry.
an interdisciplinary field that involveschcm·
istry. molecular biology and medicine.
Lawrence's grant would fund his research

then be paid back .

A

to develop inhibitors for a specific type of

post·doctoral fellow ai:,{) has taken a
position at another university as a re-

sult of the funding delay. "Now I have to go
lhrough lhc process ofhiring someone elsc .. to
work on his breast cancer study. a process that

protein kinase. an enzyme that has recently
been shown to be highly ac tivated in 30
percent of all breast cancer cases.
And now the funding for that research is
at risk.
..The whole thing is absurd,'' Lawrence
said. '"More than 40.000 women dieofbreast
cancer in th is coun try every year and Con·
gress is telling them. we can't cure your
cancer because the mi litary is not allowed to
rec ru it on lhis campus ...
The past four months have been a rc·

will Lake six to eight months. Lawrence says.
The uncenainty that Lawrence and other
researchers face could cost both the uni\crsity and the \Vcstem New York communit).
says Vice President for Research Landi .
'The un certainty may make it difficult to
recruit new faculty, make il difficult to retain
faculty if the status of research awards rc·
mains unsure,'' Landi said. "''The longer it

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A Letter from President Greiner
Editor's Nola: FolJow;ng is an Aug. t lenBf by PresJdenl. Wtlliam R Greinst' to adminiStrators
and deans on the Wbject of military recnJttlr&gt;Q at UB

As Y'* luoow, SUte UniYenlty is operating under an Injunction handed
down by the Supreme Court of the State of New York. in and for the County of
New York. in the case of Doe v. Rosa et al.:
"The State University of New York is erljomed lrom providing services.
including but not limited to allowing access to its recruitment facilities and
servtces. to any employer that discriminates on the basis of sexual oroentation."
As a consequence ol the court judgment and acting under existing federal
law, the military services have formally inquired whether SUNY has a policy of
barring military recruiters from its premises or property.
Interim Chancellor Burke has advised the Army and the Air Force that the
State University of New York does not have such a policy. Dr. Burke indicated that, although SUNY is prohibited lrom providing the military with access to employment recruitment facilities and services. the judgment does
not alter general access to public forums, to campus facilities ~Alder SUNY's
use of facilities policy, and to student directory Information as defined by the
Family Educational Rights and Privecy Act (FERPA). Dr. Burke has also distributed a memorandum to SUNY presidools which prOIIidea lurU1tet' guidance
on such access. As suggested1n that rnll&lt;'\oranc!um,t am""''"''\'"~~
ing supplemental guidelines.
SUNY and UB policy calls for us to maintain a campus ~n to all ideas
and behaviors which are not unlawful; State and SUNY an
B policy calls lor
us 10 treat all people on the basis of their performance. and
I on the basis
of characteristics such as race , gend!!r. or sexual orientation. I believe that
all members of our academic community embrace, endorse , and vigorously
support these policies. Personally, I bel,i eve thai the Governor's Executive
Order 28 is entirely appropriate policy for the executive branch and is entirely
consistent with the values of our academic community.
To some extent, however, the injunction intrudes on SUNY and UB policy,
and on academic values. insofar as ~ extends an execulive order of the Governor to constrain the behaviors of others, and specifically the military services, by limiting certain of their access to our campus corrmunrty. We will
observe punctiliously the injunction. but we will work wtthin ~s lener to also
preserve access to our corrvnui&gt;ity and free expression on our campus.
I read the injunction to require that our Career Planning and Placement
services and facilities not be made available to third party employers who
discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. Accordingly. Dr. Palmer will
see to it that we are in compliance with that mandate. However, Career Planning and Placement will continue lo provide directly to ~tgjimts all services to
which they are entitled. including responding to their requests for information
regarding career opportunities in the military services. and we will provide to
the military services,iuch infonnation as individual stude~ts ask_be p_rovided .
and which is normally prOVIded at student request. We wtll prOVIde dtrectly to
the military services any and all information, materials, or services which state
or federal law requires us to provide.
Mr. Wagner will~so see to it that we are in compliance with the injunction.
However. upon req~st from the military services, including the recruitment
commands. he will~ to it that they may have such access to the _campus,
including its buildings ·1\{td grounds, as are normally provtded to thtrd parttes
under SUNY and UB p&amp;~es.
1 do not read the injuncl!pn to require us to censor or otherwise impede
first amendment rights ol any person or institution. Accordingly, we will make
available to the campus corrvnunity, on the same basis as is done for any
other third party, posters, databases, library materials, and any other print or
electronic media sources ol inlormation provtded py lhe military services. for
any purpose.
In general, then, and except for our career guidance and placement facilities, the military services and members of the military services shall be accorded access to our campus and ils buildings and tacililies consistent with
SUNY and Stale policy. on the same basis as access is accorded to all other
third persons who have legitimate reasons tor being on campus and using
facilities such as classrooms, libraries, and public spaces.
If you need further guidance on this, I will be happy lo assist you, but
please proceed inmediately to implement these instructions.
Sincerely,
wauAIIILPreskkJnl

�4

Birds Over Everest to be topic
of Rahn Memorial Lecture
ETER SCHElD, an
expen in the field of

E

tory physiology, will
present the fourth
Hennann Rahn Memorial Lecture
Sep1. 27 at4 p.m. in Butler Auditorium in Farber Hall on the South
Campus. The lecture is free and
open to the public.
Scheid is professor and chair of
the Depanment of Physiology at

• For C8111pGoodandSpeclaJn-.raisedS350atthecamp's"l'ourdeTeddi
Bike Ride." Volunteers also sold hot dogs and soft drinks at the Grand I sland '94
Show of Homes to raise nloney ror the camp.
• For the Red Croas. took apan and cleaned the dummocs used during CPR
rraining.
• For the Food • - of Wast..,. New Yortl. collected more than 400 pound,
of canned and other non-perishable food.
• For Haven HouH. which provides sheller and serv1ccs to bauc:red women and
children, hosted a University Facilitoes Hot Dog Roas1. A total of S350 was
raised. Also ror Haven House. volunteers arc coordi~
nating a "Bills ror Bills" day-panicipants v.'ho wear
Bills auirc pay a dollar.

Ruhr Universi ty Bochum. in
Bochum. Germany. where he also

serves as vice: president.
He is renowned in hi s field for
hi s quantitative cx.perimcnts and
thcmatical model s of gas cx-

nge in insects, amphi bians, tish.
mmals and birds. In his lec ture:.
rds Over Everest: Extreme Hy-

• For Cenlna Helpers for the Handicapped. coordinared a "dress down " day , rai sing $104.

a..,..

poxia Tolerance."' Scheid will dis-

cuss the ability of these creatures to
thrive and exercise in a low-oxy·
gen cnvironmcnl.
Scheid holds a doctoral degree

in ex.pc:rimcntal physics from the

Editor's Note Through SEFA arl(j other ~unteer efforts, UB's mlluence ts feh througl"'oln
the weslern New York reg!Ofl Following are some of the IndiVIduals who are otfefiOQ their
ttme and talenls to help then communjfy The campa1gn cont•nues through Oct 28

MPLOYEES of University Facilities' Administrative Services have been
pooling thcirvolunteereffons. ~in~ th~ spring, groups within Admin_i'Strative Services have been ··adopt1ng vanous Western New York c hanlablc:
agencies. Activities they've undenaken so rar include:

comparative respira-

J

The 1994 SEFA Campaign

Peter Seheld will lecture Tuesday, September
27 In Butler Auditorium.

University of Zurich. and a medJ cal degree from Georg August Univcrsit) in
as vJccprcsJdcntofthc European Soc JCI) for
Comparali\C PhysJOiog) and Biochemistf) .
Gottingen. Germany. He came 10 Buffalo in
1971 to work with Nobellaureale Sir John
He is ediwr of R~spiration Physiology. one
Eccles in neurobiology. a nd spcnl two years
of Ihe precminenl journals 10 the field.
at UB as research associale professor of
The Hermann Rahn Memoria l Lecrurt is
physiology.
sponsored by the Ph)siolog) Depanmcm of
Returning 10 Gcnnany in 1973. he joined ) the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical
the Max Pl anck Instjtute for Experimental
Sciences. It honors 1hc fonncr chair o f the
Medicine in Gottingen and moved to Ruhr
department. a distinguished profCssor of
University in 1982.
physiolog) . whose pio neering research in
Scheid is a member of the Intern ational
environmental physiology helped provide
Un\on of Physio\ogica\ Sciences Commis·
the foundation for today's aerospace and
sion on Respiratory Physiolo£y and serves
undersea mcdic mc.

IMf UNIYUSITT AI IUffAlO AND IM( DOW DAVIS AUtO WOilD U&lt;lUUSM IP fUND
CO·SPONSOIT"f 1994· 1tfS DISTUIGUISHlD SPlAlfiS SUilS

McLaughlin
Group

Wednesday, October 5, 1994
8 p.m. Alumni Arena

Ttdt~l Opuun~

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Robert
Ia diHH:tor of external affairs
and an acQunct aasoclata
of lndu•
trlal a~naarinC In the School of EnCJneartnc
and Applied Sciences.
I haw• a son and a daughter who are both 1n scouting.
and 1/Nfte,•t in supponmg mr ch;Jdrtn tqually. so I'm
an offic-ial bO\' {COW li'adtr and gtrl scout ltad~r I
t\'i'n sp~nt Fathtr 's Dav last \'tar at Girl Scow camp.
washing dishes.
What I lik~ about scowing is that it d~'·elops an
tnttr~ dimtnsion ont ofli'n doun 't get othtr placn
such as srhoo/-likt tht tii)O.wntm of and rtsponsi·
bility for. th~ outdoors. And my children tnjO\' hawng mt around as a scow
leadn. .. as long as I behao•e mvu/f.

prof••-

Marcarat O'Connor Ia axacutlva diHH:tor for UB'a Community Action
Corps, Which coordinates volunteer . .rvlc" for the UB,communlty .
She Ia a junior m"'orlnC In payeholoty.
Tll'o years ago, I u-as a t•olunteerar Hoptl•alt Reside11ce m Hamburg. It 's a \ear
round residenc~ and sclwol for metttally, physical/\ and UAtwlh abustd teemt.i.f f
grr/s. \'ollmtet'rs spend timt uttlt rh ~ g1rls. befriend tht'm. and gtn~ral/' l..rrp
thmgs calm.
I 'll llt~er forget one of rhe grrls. I had noticed that sht wouldn't Itt am·bod,
near hu lfrou rami' nt'ar her_she rrmged. She drdn't want am·bodr to touch hu
Shed1dn ·, rrustnnyboch Ari.J. she lladjusr sten and bttn tl1rough so much. Om
da_,. she told mr l1u stun
She hnd bren uwalh ahtued h\ hmh her father and brOiht'r. \\'hen sht- jinalh
rold htr morht•r ahow 11. ha mmhrr drdn ' t belie\'f' hrr Sht bnam~ ~.\lr~mel\
wrxn ami ,-rrbalh mradt•d ht•r. Wa h nnonr to rum tn. 1/us grrl keprlt~rprnblem '
m.Hde. and lilt' srnned t.:t•run~ m rmuble. She eflded up"' rh ~ d~tnrtum cemrr m
Jltl emir hall a(rer 1duclr she was pur in a_fm terhome In rhe fmrrrhom~ . till' jmrn
fmher· /Jt'gmr sewaiJ, alm.Hng hrr and rhe IJrnrhu u·w brntinf,! l~t•r up. Shr ran
mnn thrrl' lim e\ and ~· mh wne she no.~ rrrunwd to the same iitumwn
Fuwllr sht· wrnt to court cmd rnld hn \Inn Sh~· um put m Hopt•mll•. ,,/u·rr
sht• swru·d rn rert•tl't' .wmr help Lnsr \Nrr, I uonrd I"Oitmtet'rmg m rht• Frremi 1
of the 1\'tghr Pt•oplr loup J..uchen on A/leu S1rret, cmd lom~bod\' railed nn ncm11·
IT was her. orth nm1· she u·as' olwrrrrrrnt:. wo. nlon~ w11h l't'op/r frnm tht' lwlfinn
/muse she d mm·rd rmo She lonJ..rd beaurrful
At Hnpc1·alr she had final/\- stoned tn rerm·er. Slrr had gotte11 the p.wclwlof!t·
cal help she needt•d. I 'm a pn-rlwlog,· sllldt·m. and J,lhought. oh. /noJ.. lt'hat yott
can htlpsnmeonrdn. I J...nou that you ran 'tdo itforllltm. but \'Ou can guidt thl'm
and gn'l' thrm some hope. It showed me thr powtr of th~ human spirir.

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FAXf71f.IM~·~I

As. part of the Day of Caring activities, Colleen Heldlncer has her face
paonted by Debra Palka of Alumni Relations, as Judith Schwendler, also
of Alumni Relations, looks on at the Girt Scout Council of Buffalo and
Erie County Service Center, 70 Jewett Pky.

�5

_a. .... --.-·

Greiner has dialogue with voting faculty
IIJ STEVE COX

Reporter Staff

RESIDENT William Greiner

broke with tradition this year

when. instead of delivering a
speech to the annual mee-ting of
the voting faculty, he had a con-

versation with them, instead.

ing discussion with
the faculty, Greiner

Sp.Jke of increasing

UB 's service com·
to

the

Western New York

community,
of
Washingt o n ' s
President Greiner

threatening political

climate
talks with faculty.

sion of the land-grant college, capable of

leaders in their fields, but were without the

extensive research as well as meaningful
contributions 10 community and public service in this region . ""We are the only public
institution of siz.c with this professional pr~

usual quantity of rc:feru publications." llte
university, he concluded. needs to look at
tenure qualifications with an eye toward
formally recognizing true public service and
commitment to undergraduate education.

On the subject of public education, Greiner

Greiner spoke with more than 150 faculty
members at the annual gathering. held Sept.
13 in the University at Buffalo Art Gallery in
the Center for the
Ans. In a wide rang-

mitmcnt

ous valuable patents. others were recognized

toward

higher education

said. " Education is the difference between our
society continuing to progress and becoming
an also-ran." He jX'Oj&lt;ctod a renewed emphasis on improving K through 12 education and
challenged UB's education faculty to take respoosibility for "doing the things for science.
mathematics and critical thinking at that level

that we have done here at the univcrshy."
The national political climate is now reflecting puhlic skepticism over the value of
.. large. rcsearch-intensi\IC universities" like
UB. Greiner said. This will translate into a
higher degree o f scrutiny by national politi-

cal leaders and st ill tighter access to valuable
research dollars, he said. However, Greiner
stau nc hly defended UB as the modem ver-

file of graduate schools-medicine, den-

tistry, law and business-in thi s part of the
country," Greiner said. Yet , not muchofwhal.
the university docs do is widely known. "I
. think we have to do a better job of marir.eting
oun;elves, and I will wort on that," he said.

'This was bener than giving a spc:ech,"
Greiner sajd after the meeting ... because J
wanted to use thi s forum to open meaningful

··Among the young tenure candidates we
reviewed this year."' Greiner snid. "'we had
some real rhk takers . They went at thmgs an
new wa)S. Some. for instance. h3d numer-

lier in the R~ponu. so the faculty members

chaJr of the Facult) Senate Computing

Commttlee. that \II&lt;OUid. O\'Cr tune, gave
compuunga"" holene"A look. \ll&lt;ilh l1lOfC
computer acce~ a~dsuppon in the: van *
ous departmenu. and a Jc,elang out of
resources that are nol4 \ 1cwcd as some-

said. 1'his is not necessanl) ahouttradeoffs
or priorities. it"s a simultaneou~ cquauon . A
great univershy must do alithe~ thmgs. and
has thr resources to do all these thmgs"

At FSEC: feedback from president's talk

T

HE DIALOGUE THAT PRESIDENT WILLIAM GREINER sought to begin With
h1s address to the vot1ng faculty Sept. 13 con!Jnued the fotlowmg day With a
meeting of the Faculty,Senale Executive Corm&gt;tnee.
Faculty Senate Chair Peter Nickerson opened the meellng by asking for
reactions to Greiner's address. Several FSEC members took the opponunrty to report
that they had received poshJVe feedback from many ol their colleagues and that they
feh the address was well received, ooe describmg 1t as "ext1emely pos1~ve . '
William George, a professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineenng, ap·
ptauded Gre1ner's move to reexamine tenure credentials. Noting that he knew of
outstanding faculty members Whose tenure was threatened for having earned too
tittle in grant money, George urged Gre1ner to "state categorically that research,
service and qualny undergraduate Instruction would be considered equally."
However, Mathematics Professor Samuel Schack crttic1zed the speech as "jawboning that doesn't amount to much." Schack. unmoved by Greiner's call br
greater emphasis on public and comm.Jnity service, urged the president to not
chattenge "the primacy of research and scnotarship" as the rrission otlhe university.· If Greiner wants faculty members to change their W&lt;rling priorrties, Schack
suggest a carrot-and-s!Jck approach. "The faculty kpows what the rewaras system
1s," he assertE-d "There are reasonable. fairly obviOUs. tncentives to mprove teach-

ing and serv1ce that have never been put forth •
Dennis Malone, a professor of Electncal and Computer Engineeung . called rt a
•good dialogue· and attributed Its success to Gre1ner's move to publish h1s remarks
in advance In the Reporter
-STEVE COX. Reporter Staff

T' LL BE -·no holds barred" a; memhcr~ of the lively . entertaining
M cLaug hlin Group take their ~how on
the road lO UB Oct. 5. as the first
prc~cntation of the 199-t-95 cd1t1on of
the Disting ul!&gt;hcd Spca~cr Sene~ .
The McLaughlin Group v. ill appear at 8
p.m. in Alumni Arena on the North Campus.
Now into its eighth )C3r.thc Di ~tingui.!ahcd

I

The ne""

loo~

ofcomputm g serv1ces
in computing circles ~
D1Mnbuted In formation Technology
(DIT I. "'11l mean closer scruUn) of reM&gt;urc.:c alloca11on. hut \Ioiii) ield greater
accc~~ 10 and l untrol O\er computmg
rc!JOurc.:e.., h~ Jr.:adem1c unus. pantcu larl) areas that arc undcrsen cd hy l'OtnpulcN no"" ~a)~ Btala~
8Jala.~callcd thccurrenl ~tate of computing on campus "frJ:gmentcd. ··Some
dt\ 1S1ons ha\e their O\lo n. modern17ed
cornpuung S) stems. ""hllc othcn. lan~ulsh. he C:\pla1ned. "hke SCIXrate Information fiefdom~ holed by an
Ethernet··
··It"s not really a change \loC: choose
to male.·· explained Bialas. "1&gt;ut rather
new technology thru~ls it upon us and
~nown

we muu. Oectde bow be&amp;\ to pf.art. roc and
mana,ge u ... \\'h ile the unJ\Crsit) "s large

mamframc C&lt;\T'putcn, used 10 suppon
ns re...earch ac.\i\JLICS. thai compuung
po""er can moJl. effiCJcntl) be dch\ ercJ 1oda) 10 de~top l40r~stauons and
local area nel\lollr~' fLANsJ. he ex plained

FSEC member"'~ v.clcomed dl ... cu~­
'10n on campu~ computin~ need~ Pro'o .. t Aaron Bhx:h pointed out that II
\4 as an 1mponant i~c.;ue to grapple "uh
becauc.;e 11 had huge ftnanr.:1al •mphcaIIOn'&gt; fort he future of the un1\'en.11~ UB
nov. spend-, hct\l.ecn $18 and 20 mil han annuall) on compuung. acrordtng
toA-,~ocUlte Pro\O..,l Scan Sulll\ an . and
costs arc e,pe ...·tcd to "~c The hul~ of
th1s mone) ''spent on ccntralilcd computing now .-be u.plaincd. "" ne" pmpo:-.ab to emplo~ mor: v. orbtauon~
and LAN ""ill mean .. pcndmg more out
in the dcpanmcnt.:-..
To meet· 1hesc increasing finanl'ial
demands. the proposed resolution calls

able for groups of 15

McLaughlin

Central on computing. rcallocaung
funds curre nt!) administered h) the
uni\'crsity Budget Comminee and a ree\'3luation of funds currc-ntl~ spent on
··functions no longer deemed appropriate'' to a DIT -dri\'encomputingsystem.
The formal resolution \4135 tabled for
funhcr work by committee members.

or more by calli ng

Group, from left:

FSEC Chair Peter Nickerson hopes to

615-34 14 .

Morton

Ticketscanbcpurchased at The Book
RevueonHenel Ave.;

Kondracke,
Eleanor Clift,

bring the resolutio n to the full Senate
for consideration in late Ocrober.
Betv.ttn meetings. members of the

John Mclaughlin,

FSEC will work out kinks in this pro-

Don Davi ~ Auto World Lcrturc hip Fund.
The appcaranccof1hc McLaughlin Group is
provided with the ~ooperation of WNED/

Channel 17. which airs the PBS program at
8:30p.m. on Fridays.
The McLaughlin Group h._, llcen de-

I

whal lops1ded.

for seeking new spending by SUNY

Speaker Series" sponsored h) UB ond the

appear; o n CNN' s "Crossfire;" EteanorCiift.

FSEC by Wayne Bialas, an associate

at UB .

McLaughlin Group opens Speakers Series

a liberal who ~crvcs as deputy Washmg10n
Burc:Ju ch.icf fo r Neu-swrt/..: Mo rton
Kondr..1dc. a moderate and executive editor
and columniM forCapitol Hill" .!1 twice-weekly
new;paper Roll Call. and Clarence Page. the
J989 Pulil?cr-Prii.C winner for ,-ommcn tary.
liberal columnist and mcmhcrofthccdi toria l
hoard of71te Clticagn Tribunt .

T

HE FACULTY SENATE Ex-

ecutiveCommmeetook a peek
into the future of computing
service delivery systems campus-wide at then Sept. 14 meeting
A rcsoluuon was presented to the

could be readytopepperh1m with questions
Questioned about the lenfth of his ~&lt;ish
list of items to accomplish. the president

By MARY BETH SPINA
News Bureau Staff

scribed by flu.' Nrw York Timts as "five
barking. sq uawking. ideologically split pundits who argue national and foreign af1airs in
a go-to-hell fashion ."
Appearing will be modenuor and some·
times referee John Mclaughlin. former
Was hington editor and columni st for Th~
Narimwl R~vit .... : Fred Barnes. conservative
se nior editor of Thr New Republic, who also

Reporter Staff

professor of indusuial engineering and

of elementary and secondary education.

)'Oung professors feel tc -·pubhsh or pensh."

IIJSlnECOX

dialogue with the faculty ." Greiner's prepared remarks had been printed a week ear-

and nbout contributing to the. strengthening

Leaving lhc podium aside. G~iner. in
hinslecves. took a relaxed posture atop a
stool in the front of the room and 10ld his
o;udi encc of faculty. depanment chau'S a nd
deans that. to get the most from the un iversity. UB needed to get the mo~t from its
talented faculty . That means. Greiner ~aid.
being "daring.creat~vc'' and balancing UB ' s
obligations to public and communit~ service. qualit) undergraduate ln!'otrucuon and
valuable i'\tensi\·e research.
Facuh) fncmhc~. in tum. told Grc1ocr the}
were confu~ hy mixed messages coming
from a system of tenWl! that still values quantities of published n.~scarch above all else.
""Every young fac:uhy member we lose is
a failure o n our pan.·· replied Greiner. He
called for forging more creative way~ to
bring people into academia and promised 10
reexamine standards b) ""hich tenure decisiom. arc made. pcrltaps reducing the prcs.~urc

FSEC looks
at computing
·resources

The Distinguished Speakers Series will
continue April 27. at 8 p.m. in the Center for
the Arts on the North Campus with a presentation by schoh•r and journalist Garry Wills.
A Pulitzer Prize win ner. Wills is the au thor of "Lincoln at Geuysburg," ··under
God."" ··Reagan 's America," "' ln\'entin g
America" and "lhc Kennedy lmprisonmen1 .··
Tickets for OOth programs in the series are
$7 .50 for student; $18 for UB faculty, staff.

UB Alumni Association members and senior
ci tizens; and $22.50. ge neral admission.
For one event. prices are $5 for students;
S 12 for UB faculty. staff. UB Alumni Asso-

cialio n members and senior citizens. and
$15 for general admission.
Twenty-five perce nt discounts arc avail-

Buffalo State College Fred Barnes,
Ticket Office; Don Clarence Page.
Davis Auto World I nc .. Niagara Falls Blvd.;
Fredonia State College Box Office; New
World Record on Elmwood Ave.; Center for
the Ans Ticket Office; 22 I Student Union.
and the University Bookstore. They may be
purchased before Sept 30 by mail from Di sting uished Speakers Series. 537 Capen Hall.
Box 601602. U niversity at Buffalo. Buffalo.
II
N.Y. 14260-1602.

posal. as they do Olhers. via the ·•vinual
sen3te... a computerized electronic mail
network that allows them to discuss and
modify resolutions and exchange views
from their own computer terminal s.
··FSEC memllcrs need never play phone

tag.· · explained Nickerson. -we usc the
E-mail system to keep in constant touch
with each other and ci rculate meeting
agendas."

�8
ruts. Philip La. KiDCb AudtlO·
rium. Children's Hospital . 8
a.m.

SUNDAY

IIULnCUUUIAL W - -

Aiia•A.aericu aDd Alia•
SI:Ddeots, Evelyn Hu-DeHan..
University of Colorado. Boul der. Abo, Javan«e: chnce per.
(onned by Emma-Kristina
Supnpto 120 Clemens Hall.
onh Campu~o . 8:30 a.m.- 1 p m
Call 645-2988.

-

ENV-MIEHTAL
-~AND

SCIENCE

5 d&lt;cUd Topics in Studa&lt;
Mana-••uProccsses, Dr
Mohammad Abu-Orf. 0&lt;pt o[
Civil E.ngtneering . 140 Ketter
Hall North Campus I I a m
For anformatton. cai164S -3446

2J
-All£

ntEATRE

GYP")'. Pfeifer lbeatrc. 681
Main SL 3 p m. Ticlcu S 10.
512. SIS For 1nform1L1on. caH
839-8540.

M OND AY

ADOICT'IOHS SIEIIUWt

Family Mtlllben:' Polydruc
UM u a Risk Factor la Famil}
Violeott. Glenda Kantor·
Kaurman . Unlvenat)' of Ne-..
Hampshire. Durham . Research
lnsUtut~ on Adchcuons. 1021
Matn St I lO p .m Fret Call
887-2566
COMPUTER W - SAS on tbe VMSdu~tu. I :304:10 p .m Call 045 -3540 for
reg•stntton tnfonnation
LAW LECTURE

Tht: C aoadi.ao EKptrieott io

__
__ .._..,_.

-lleporhr . . . . , . _

..........,._

,._. oe ~ or,_ off.
ca.pqe....U ...... UB

eon.

LJatiiC.e . . . . . . .

l8tertllallnoot~Ottthe

ThurwdaJ...-.,,...bllcetlon. Acldrese entrtea to
w~... cae.....,. coon~~ ...
\or, 1M Crofta, or E..,.al

trepcetepub.buftato.eclu).

OUr FAX

""'"ber I• e.4.5-ZUS.
D A Y

--.-cAL IICIENCU

Stru.ctu.ral Studies oa tht8-UU. Ddta IUI&gt;ozyme, Dr
Gail Ointer-Goctheb. ~acl
University. 114 Hochstetler
Hall. onh Campus 4 p.m.

MAntEMAnca COUOQUIUM
Angus Macintyre. Odord Unlversily 103 Otefendorf Hall
South Campus _4 p m.

"CoME

AND

SEE"

John 1:46

BctJ;n g um,cr~;u•es Thre&gt;ug.h

Oct 16. Umvct\lty Galler).
Center for the Am Nonh Cam
pu!o Galler) houn. Free Call
0.5-6'112
ART EXHIBinOH
UH Painten.. Through Sept 29.

An

Eve1y Sunday
a t 2:00p.m .
17Je Commons
Suite 100
"Come Worship with us"
Episcopal Campus Ministry
at the University of Buffalo
The Commons
Suitc2 1S

688-4056
Director/ Chaplain
The Re\'. 13.A. Tasy

Depan~m

Gallet). Ccmer

UFE WORKSHOP

Thcsi.'i/Oi..'iist"r1ation Suppon
Croup. Barbara Um1~cr. Stu
dent Counsc.!hn$: Ct'Pil'r
Through No' I? ~ .30-5 _,(1
p m Call ~5·6125 to reg1Mt'r
AT THE MOVIES
Cin~ma

Paradi!iO. Ul!AB ftlm
'•(m:., 20 I Student Umon
North Campu., 6:30pm S!.
H50. Call 645-2957
COMPUTER WORKSHOP

MANAGEMENT ROUNDTABLE
Pnu a nd Lam~rt and tbc
Qua lity Ad n ntagt, Julic M.
Graffeo. Prau and Lambcn.
Fann) 's, 3500 Shendan Dr 89:JOa.m

UF'E WORKSHOP
Tic- OM On. Shtrle) Closson
Creath•e scarf tymg 7-9 p.m
Call 645-612.5to rrgaster

POETRJ CONYER SAnoN
John Taggart. Shtppensburg
Unl\crsny Pan ofWednesda)!&gt;
at 4 Plu ~ poetry 1nd pro'&gt;t S(&gt;nes. 43M Clemen!&gt; Hall. Nonh
Campu~ 1130 p.m. Free
COMPUTDt WORKSHOP
Genrr ic SAS. Conunuallon ol
Sept. 20 \\Orl.\hop _ I 30-' 30
p.m Caii645-J5-'0 for regt,tra
uon mfonn:Hlon
CAREER FAIR

B iosyolhab: o( Aotibioti.a i.D
StrTptomyc.es, Or. Ben Shcn.
Umvenitv of Wi sconsin. Mad1
son 121 Cooke .. all . Non.h
Campus . 3 p.m.

AntLETlC IIAU. OF FAME
Dinne-r and Induction Cur-mom. lndUC1C"C"., arr Ellen
Shulnian Baler. Mallht'v.
Fcrrcnuoo. and Bam A
Rochlin Cen1er for Tomorwv.
'orth Campu~;. 6 f1 m o\lumm
A.,o,(..._ mc:mt)t'n 25. non mem
t"leP. S2 For mh1rmaunn ... all

Introd uction to UNI X. 6-8:10
p.m. Cal1645-3540 for regiStra tion 1nformat1on.

Ao Enginttring Auack on
AIDS, WIIM&gt;n Gre.:ubatch. Dept
of Elrctncal and Computt=r Engtnecnng . 106 Cary Hall South
Campu~ . 12 p.m.

MEDICINAL CtiDIIS1ltY

CERTIFICAT£ PROGRAM IN

for the An!. Nonh Campus
Gallery hour. Free _Call ~56878

MICROIIIOLOGY SEMINAR

-

CHEMIS111Y COUOQUIUM
Some Chc-mistt")' and Biochemistf') of the- Cold Drua
Myocb ryrinc-, Cohn Lad..
McMaster Um\'f!TSII\ 201 Nat
raJ Sctcnc~-!&gt; &amp; Malh(.maU~o:!&gt;
Compkt 1\onh Campu!&gt; 4 p rn

I
ART EXIUBrTIOH
Chin~ Conttmporal') Tradi·
tionai·Stylt Pain ti ng. Worl.. b~
th1n\ - t~o an1~1s from two

COIIIrUTDI COUOQUIUII
Storage and Reuie... al of Con tmuou Media Data. A\i Silber
Khatz. University ofTexu.
Austin. 228 NSM Complea 3
p.m. Caii64S-3180.

PMARMACEUnCS SEMINAR
General Labontor') Saftty
Practicrs and H aurdous
Wa~1r Management. Gent
Monacell. En ,tronnicmal Health
and Saf~·•' SOSC Cool.t Hall
"'onh Ca~pu., 4 p m

GEROHTOt..OGICAL NURSING
C ulturt' and Acing. Benha M
Bradk' . Grace \1 aoor t\.ur.mg
Homr ·Tll earn c~mfu.ate .
nurS(&gt;., mu\t attend ll\t' -.c''tun~
Snuth Campu' ~ 't)-1 30 p m
50 per rtk~uk To re~1ower -.:all
S21.1 32~1

Episcopal ·er\'ice
Huh· Eucharist Rite II

Pluralism and TranscuUuralism, Dr. Launer La.Pierrc . 106
O'Brian Hall . North Campus
1:30p.m. Free Call645-2102

5UM ERFARE ntEATRE
Gypsy. Pr~if~r Theatre. 681
M:un St. 8 p m. SIO. $12. Sl5
Call 839-8540.
ATntEMOVIU
The- House or the Spirib.
UUAB fi lm ~ne~ . 201 Student
Umon. Nonh C:ampu!&gt; . 9 p.rn
S2. S3.50 Call tHS -2957

FRIDAY

2l

Trchnical J ob Fair. Suc1,jl
Ball. SIUdcm Unaon onh
Campus. 2-5 30 p.m Spon ..nrcd
by Career Plannin~ &amp; Place ·

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS

mcm . For •nformat•on. coli 645 ·
2231

l.ab DeiKiion or Cocaine- E~ ­
posui"C' in Prr-gna nry a nd In -

"

:29 -260~1..

AT THE MOVIES

The HouSe" o f the- Spirit!!o.
UUAB film '&gt;C'nc' 201 SIUden I
Limon Nonh Campu' 6·30
p.m and 9 p m S1 . S3 .SO Cal I
045 -2:957
5UMMERFARE ntEATRE
Gypsy. Pfetfer Theatr~ . 68:1
Matn S1. 8 :30 pm Tu:i..et\ SIO
~ 2. S 15 For mformat1on. cal I
/'39-8540.
AT l'ME MOVIES

Midsummer Nicht St'x Com
cdy. UUAB film SM~~- 201
Student Union. Nonh Campus
J I:30 p.m. S2. U50. Call 645
J!l57.

SA T'\J R D A Y

26

- Y/
-YLECTURE
Mll&lt;nlpbaa&lt; C&lt;ll Cyd&lt; Rq:ul.atioa : The llole

or th~ c-f'Cil

and lnlai&lt;ukln~ Mory
Cat.herioc. Reidy Ki.rchhorer
Conference Room. Roswell P
Cancer Institute 10:30 Lm

-

- A L IEDUCATIOII

Eq&gt;lorina Teachin&amp; aDd
Lunalac ia Meclk:aJ Edua tioCI, L..uric Grccnberc. MD .
George Wastlinzton Untvtnll)
School of Medactne. Llppschut1
Room. t 2S C.ry-Fort&gt;crSherman Complct Soulh Campus. 1:15pm. SJO Formforma
uon. call 829-3176

co.ouTEII-

I ntenaf'dialt CM Pan I.
1 30·3 30 p m Call 645-l5• n
for rcg1w-auon mformauon

PMILOSOPMY LECTURE
Is Statistics. Mort llluminatm
1hao L.og~n Pbilosoph ) or
Sc~!
lcolm FOI"iotC'r l n
\t':fSII\ of
On!&gt;tn. Mad 1~1r,
6114 Bold) 11)11 . i'orth Cam,.,
Jp.m
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
SEMINAR
S\nlhesis and Hiolo,&amp;c.l
E·,·a luation o f Tuol Analu~ .. :
S«ond Generation Anaht2!1
W ilb lnt'ru~ Pott"nc~ . Or
John M Runoldt . \ 1rgsm• p,11
IC't·hnll.: fn~IIIUIC' and Stat~· l n
\cl"\11) 513 Cool.c- H,.ll ' ·lfll'
Campu., 3:-'S p m

aiOCHEMISTJIY SEMINAR
Ct:Ddic Anal)·si~ of Colon
CaO&lt;'f'r Su.sttplibilit~ in Mic
Dr Rosemary Elhon. Rt'h"C'II
Pali. Cancer Jnstuurf I '-'B
Farber South Campu!&gt; .J p m
MEDICAI!EDUCAT10N
LECTURE
fadlita.ting Probltm Soh ·inJ!_
for Medicall.Hroers, Larne
Greenberg. M.D .. George \\ a
mgton tJnl\erstt)' School of
Medic1ne Butl('f Auchtonum.
Farber Hall South Campu~ S
p .m Fr« For anformatton. l·a
29-3176

TUESDAY

24 27

WOMEN' S TENNIS

8 Royals ,.._ Loyola (M d.)
Courts nc.ar Elh..-Oit Complet
North Campus . II a.m.
FOOTIIALL
UB Bul l$ ,.s. C htyn t:} StateUS Stadium Nonh Campus
I ~30 p.m. For tldC"tmfonna IIOn. call 645-6606.
SUMMERFARE ntEATRE
Gypsy. Pfeifer Theatre. 681
Mam St.-' p.m. and 8 p.m T 11.'1..·
cts SIO. Sl2 . Sl5 . For mform 3·
tton. c..·all 839-M5-'0.

P£DIATRIC CONFERENCE
Clinial Debalt: M anagc-UIC' nl
or loraut and C hildhood f'f' '
Wilbout Source-. Mtchacl
Heimer1. Ste\en Lana. Anth\1
Vemano Cafetonum A. M~rl·
Hospital . 8:30a. m.
ADOICTIOIIS PREVENTION

·--

The.rapt-utic Crisi~ ln tt~ rn
lion Tra in in~ ror U:!ot' "tth
a nd Adolrsttnh.
Dale Eustice. AI ..a Sept 1h
Spon §l.&gt;rC'd b~ lnsttlUlt' tur -~
dil1ions tud1es :and Tra1mn!_!
Ch ild~n

�- ... WR-...-·

7

..--

Counlry Wtsten Daodnc,
Nini1.1 and Bjorn

Bocue

Coa-

tinue•Oct. 5. 12.1 9. 8:1 5-9:30
p.m . Caii645--612S 10 reciw:r.
AT T11E M0V1U

Jllnl5!ik Pork. UUAB film
5eries 201 Student Union.
NonhCampus 9 p.m. Sl.
Sl.SO. Call 6&lt;15 ·2957

THURSDAY

~9

AJrT EXHJaiTIOfl

C bi.De:se C~tem pon.rJ Tradi·
tioaai-Styk Polnlinc, Worl. b)
32 artiSU from 1.,...0 Beijing UOI\'efSltiCS Through Oc-t 16 Unl\efSII) Oallct'). Center fCH the
Ans. onh Ca mpu~ Galler)
hours Free Call645-69 11
I'O£ri!Y LECTURE

Cdan a nd J aMs: Thr Poet I")
of Hope, Andrev. Be nJaman.
Umvenny of Warv.1cl . Pvt of
Wednesdays at 4 Plus poelt)
and prost scnrs 43 CJemcns
Hall NonhCampus !2:30pm

Fra:.
COMI'UTEJI WOIIKSHOP

PhOiographs of Bethlehem Steel Corporation's l.acJ&lt;awanna
plant by Patricia Layman Bazelon are on vtew through Oct 22
at the Anderson Gallery. Bazeion is chief photographer at the
Brooklyn MuselXn on New York and taught at the UB School of
Archnecture and Planning in 1987
Her large-formal color phoiO&lt;fraphs. taken between 1987 and
1991 , powertully depict the defunct and abandoned steel molls along the Lake
Erie shoreline, just south of Buffalo Constructed at the turn of the century , the
Lackawanna plant was acQuored by Bethlehem Steel on 1922. and operated unto!
1983 when the primary steel-making facilities were closed permanenlly.
·The thou&amp;Cl_nds of workers--men and womer • of u~n .courage and
skill-were long gone, but they had tefl therr marks .ndehbty" Bazelon sa1d •The
abandoned buildmgs evoke these workers '" s•ngulaJ and unexpected ways and

resonate . Wlth then energy.Sokl eKhlbrtrons of Bazelon·s work have been held attne B .:"''reta-Pe"lney f'Jt
Center. Ballenford ArchrtecturaiBooks Tororuo and the Buffa lo Sem•nary where
she served as the Colby Lecturer rn Art . WorK by Bazelon also '1ave been •ncluoed rn group exhtblllons at the Whitney Museum at Amencan Art. EQuitable
Center. New York Ctty. Berland Hall. New York Cny; lnternauona Museum of Prtotography. George Eastman House . Rochester and tocaPy at Artspace. tne
Albroght-Knox Art Gallery and US's Capen Gallery
The Anderson Gallery IS located on Manna Jacksor P.ace. ofi Eng~ewooa one
block sout of Kenmore Ave near the UB South Campus Gallery hours are 10 30
a.m. Ia 5 30 p.m Tuesday tnrougn Saturday and adm•ss•on •s lree F01 more •nformatoon. call 834-2579

Usi n&amp;SPSS on the IBM Main·
fram e.. ContinuatiOn of Sept 27
dan I :30-4 JO p.m Call 64S·
3540 fCH regtstration mfonna tton
ENV-MEHTAI.
ENQIINEDINCI AND SCIENCE
SEMIIWI

COMPUTER WORKSHOP
Usi n ~ SA on thr IBM Mainfra me. Th1' cia,, conunucs
Sept 29 I 30-' 30 p m Call
6-'5-3540 for rt'~.l'•trauon tnfur
mat10n.

Ufl: WORKSHOP
Creath·r Wri ting for Begin·
ners, Benamar hc!l . Conunuc&lt;o
Oct 4. II. 18. -'·b p.m. Call
6-15-bl25 to rcgaster.
UF'EWORKSHOP
Uurfalo WlNGS: Lockwood
Style. Maurttn Stanko.
Lod,v.:ood Mcmonal Librar) 67:30 p.m. Call 6-'5-6125to reg-

biC:r.
UF'EWORKSHOP
Stress b us tcrs. ~on lngah.t)C.
U\'ing Well Cenu:·r. 7-9 p.m
Callb-'5-6125 to n:g1ster.

MUSIC/ DANCE CONCERT
Sun&lt;~ M usic S•c rf'd Da nce.,
perfonnance b) Tibeta n Lama~
from Drtpung. Lnscling Monot'Otel) . Co-sponsored by UB Dept
of Amencan Studies. Villa
Maria College Auditonum. ~-'0
Pine R1dge Rd. 7:30p.m. S6.
S IO·S I5 . Call M%-0700.
VIStnNO ARTIST SERIES
M a urH.n fo~1er. cont rail a.
v. ith lkreL Bampton. p1ano.
Son~c;. of Bnucn. For.rth. Pen .
A. Scarlaui. Wnlf Slcc Cuncen
Hall. Nonh Campu., R p.m . S-' .
SS. Stt SIO. Fur mlurmaunn.
call6-l5 -2CJ21

WEDNESOt.Y

~~

MULnCULTURAL WORKSHOP
Qua lit y Through Dh·t,...,it).
Prufeu1onal Staff Senate and
Unned Unt\t'nll) Profrsstons
Center for Tomorrov. Sonh
Campu!o . 8 a.m .- 12 p m
MASTER CLASS

Maurttn f o rn sh.·r. cont rail a.
Sit'(: Concc:n Hall Nonh Cam pus. 10 a.m. Free For •nforma
11on. call 645 -:2921

CHEMIC AL ENGINEERING
S EMINAR

Cala l)1ic H )drocrac-kin~­
Thf' Jlroc-n:!l and the Ca tah 'il.
11.1Khal"l Ba1rd. Pnhburg.h Te~.:h
nnlug) C ~nter :!06 Fuma'
~onh Campu~ ·' 45 p m

BIOPHYSICS SEMINAR
Di\•rrse Cooductant:'r, l ook
a nd Dye Permca biJit) Prnpt'rtirs of Connuin Sp«ifk Gap
Junction C ha nneL-.. Rtchard
V~ens t ra. SUNY Heahh Sci ence~ Center lOb Car) 4 p m
Call 29-2328

NUTRtnOH SEMINAR
Oirl and Fluid lnta kr in the.

Epidemiology or Bladder Ca n·
cer in W NY. John R Vena.
Dept. of Sonal and Prt'\~nlt\('
Medtc me 306 Parl..er Hall
South Campus. 4 p.m. Free
WOMEN' S SOCCER

UB Roya ls

~-

Gannon. RAC

Campu. 1 .lO p.m For

uon.

~·all

o:as-.\4-:lb

100

Power Point
Mail

Workstation Ueft\W

OFFICE!

--.1 Access

With Mjcrosoft Offi«
Profeuion.a.l Package Only

$113 $135 $143
Wmdows

Professional

Macintosh

,o.ronn.a.

t"r1i~ and IJ~nnubilities or
c;•p Ju nnion Ch11nneb.. R11.h

.trd \ t'r:nt.lra. Sl ' ' Hr:alth
..,.u:n..:e .. Ccntl'T. S'tal·u,c II ..I
Hno..h,ll'llt'r H.J\1 'nnh C'iim
pu, 4 p m
MATMEMATICS COLLOQUIUM
in Quantum
ll.l rchani". R ~~t!" "' a1ler.
D:pt of Mathenldtk..' 103 Dlckn
dorf Hall Suuth C"Mnflll' ~ p m

IQua,i·Siahillt~
Tnoi-A

nioph~""ical

LUTHERAN
CAMPUS
MINISTRY

Ap·

proach, Dr S V Bala
\ubraman1an. Dept ul
Pharm:tleUIK\ 50KC Cuol..cH;tll Nnn.h Campu' 4 p m
s r.ansncs c OLLOQUIUM

FALL SEMESTER--...PROGRAM

On t br Estimation of HI V
lnfrc:-tion. W Y Tan. L'mH·rllll~ of Memphts I""" Fa~r (
Hall South Campu!o. . 4 p m
CERTIRCATE PROGRAM IN
~TOLOOICAI. NURSING

~~:J(1lorC..­

llvR.r. ~OR.ff.C..,.,PI#rl&gt;
IM:Iilf...._ Suff""-

...........__.

fUHDAY

Elder Abuse. Kalhenne K
f1ct for Agtn&amp; To tam crntfi·
c-ate. nuf\ot's must attend fiH
~s"ons South Campu~ -' 307:30 p m S50 per module To

MO H DAY

Topia l ndt.Hk: Lc-sJcrstup and tht-Chnsmn.
Ou.ncu·nrun of Chnuun l.bdc.~ Coal
~lnf:, UK of Time, Corntnu.ntaoon SLJII,.
ti&lt;nc:kf- lnun uf Ladttdup, Probkm SotnnjE.
Lt-urunj!: tO Plln mJ Lnd a .\th"On,;

Dogs. UUAB film
:!0 I Student Union
Nonh Campus 6:30 p.m. S2.
53.50 Call 645-2957.
R ~r n·oir

Practice. Robcn Hen&lt;krson.

COMPUTER WORKSHOP
l nte nnedi•tt C MS. Part 2.
I :30-3:30 p.m Call ~5 -.1540
for rcgistratao n mform:Uion

Habuat of Buffalo SC'C'Ond ~­
,,on Oct. I. 9 a m.- 1 p.m. 7-8
p m Callb-'5-6125 to rtg•ster.

COMPUTER WORKSHOP
C u."tomiu tion or t ht Sun
XIIRS \\'ind o"' Em·im nme nt .
2-' p.m C'all 6-'5 -3 5-'0 fur re~·
1\II'OliiOn 1nlormat10n

AT THE MOVIES
Th r Killer . UUAB film ~nc!o.
201 Studem Umon Nonh Cam
pus' 6 :30pm S:!. S3 50 Call
6.15 -2957

UFE WORKSHOP

UF£ WOflKSHOP

U~

Ballroom Dancing for Sina lr&lt;i
&amp; C ouples of All Ages, Nmna
E. F. BoiiUC and Bjorn B o~ uc
Conunuc:s Oc1. 5. 12. 19 td0-8
p m. Call 6-'5-() I :!5 m rcg,,ter

ATTME MOVIES
Ju rassic Pa ri;:. UUAB film
!!(TIC S. 201 Student Umon .
Nonh Campus. 9 p.m. S2.
SBO Call 645 ·2957.
COMPUTER WORKSHOP
C u~1 o m iu l ion

or Sun O pen
Windo"' s f.n\'irortmml. 10- 1:!
p.m C:.JI 6-'S-35-'0 for
t•on mfonn!lt lon.

re~l "&gt;lrJ

Contonued on page 8

CH IUfT1..tlt.lol nvDli'IT l(AD[IUHI P Sllo\IHA.a

MonJm•. ~nn1n~ SqJI IQ
J \Op.m -S JOp m. Swtc' JH

!oC'fiC!o

The USf' or llraronuolr in
Aspergillus l n fe&lt;t ions. Ang.l"'a
Kashuba. 248 Coo l..e Hall
Nonh Campu3 4 30 p m

c-,•mn

r-- '"

AT THE MOVIES

Ufl: WORKSHOP
Habitat : Thr Thc.or') &amp; lbc

1~1

Btul.im~ • Ufnlotpp•"'
~
u('rt ...-{'--J

rcgtster. call 829-3291

PHARMACY SEMINAR

fUHP#.YWOMHIP
5.10 p.m Tlw: J•nt h.cdn Ru.xn

EUu:oo Complo,

B eller. C hautauqua Coun!) "'-"

Field outside Alumni Arena
'onh Campu~ 4 p m

tn rcgi'Otcr.

Word
--.1 Excel

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
SEMINAR
Oi\f'rsiiJ in thr Gating Prop-

Ufl:WORKSHOP
Procnstination. Coun..cllng.
Ccntrr staff. 12- I p m Call 6-'5
61 25 to regh.ter

Your- Memory: Hr rr '!o
How. Arlene Sul\1\ an and Marl.
Mecca 2-3 p.m Call 6-45 -6 1:!5

- ,.,~t

Applic• tion or En~·iroo me:atal
Decision-Maltiac Tu:hnique:s
to F..awironmenta l EnJineering
Prohlems, Aaron A Jcnnmgs.
Ca!&gt;e West~m Resen e Un.vcrSII} 140 Kener Hall North

PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR
Lipoo;omal formula tion or

Cc:mc1 for TOml)fTOV. ~onh
Campu~ 8:-'5 a.m.-:'-:.'\0 p.m
Fer 90 . For rtgl'&gt;tronmn mformatJOn callb-'5-61 -'0

Microsoft Combo Pack~

Con''Ct'AtioM with Buffalu ,vn Ouuru.n
l..a&amp;n fnwn !:he \\orid of Pabon.. 8~
Ed~uon.

H"-hh ~~ &amp; '1""k O.u.n.t.

P.b.""

, •• Cwt-E..nll bt
611-HHrf .u ""}
tnd• P~tnw RIJ"' R-tf. ~'*" c-Jnu,.,.
s,tnvJ 1.-rlfmvfor &amp;roli•nu
W( DNlJDAY

818U fT\.I O Y Af'IO SU,£1t

S-OQ p"m 'l\Kh&gt;tni! tht' S..tol uf f-.-DJJ~

HS

rm

~UJtt

!,upper

:1 ~. 1"hc Corumoru

\\~ ,

\qlc 1-f,jOI:nJn,: '-'~min
Communm fut );uPf'C"r O~SMJn 11
S IOJim m);u.Jttl()Q

�8
CALENDAR

OEITUARifS

continued from page 7
Academic Exchange Service)

scholarships for graduate ,.udy
and/or research ia Germany for
lhe ocadcmie year 1995-96. The

EXHI81TS
AliT~

"UB Painters,.. work by M.F.A.
candidates and undergraduates

in tht Dept. of An. is up
through Sept. 29 in the An
Department Gallery of the Center for the Ans. For infonnalion. cal1645-6878.
""Chinese Contemporary Tradt·

program is open to citizens of

the U.S. or..Canada. or five-year
residen1s of this country. bel ween the ages of 18 and 32.
who have a good command of
Gurnon. Conuct Geocg G.
lggers. Departmeol of History,
562 Part Hall. For information.
caii64S-2181. ex1ension 562.

For information. cali64S-.6913.

NOTICES
YAU:M MEMORIAL RUN
Deadline is Sept. lO for ad'"ancc registration for ttw: Unda
'nil em Memorial Run to be
held Oct. 2 at Alumni Arena.
This is thC': fifth annhersary of
the fivc:-kilomt:ter race held In
memory of Linda Yakm. a UB
~tudcnt who.,., as murdered
.,., hilc runmng ncar the C'ampu~
atthl) umt of )Car m 1990
Advance reg•strauon •~ S I.:! ~

other fees IU"e S1-'. day of the
race. and SIO for stu&lt;knts For
mfonnation. call 6-a5-3141
READING &amp;ANN ED BOOKS

The Um,·c:rsity Bool..stQf'"e at

Lee Entnnce .,.,,11 note 1\:monal
Banned Q.ools Wecl. Sept 2b·
30 with rfadings at noon and .J
p.m. daily from books that ha' rbeen banned. Som&lt;": of th&lt;":
booh 10 be sampled arc Th~
.ltutobiograph) ofMokolrn X.
Maya Angelou's I Knoll Wlu
th' Cog'd Bird Sings. Toni
MOITison'li Song ofSolornon.l
D . SaUnter's ("m('htr In rht
R\,, John Slcmhcd. ·~ Grapn
ofWrmh. ~b rl. T\431R.\ Ad'''"
turn of H11cJ..I,bnn I mn. :tnd
JDSq)h Heller' ) Cmc h-:!!

STUDT tN GERMANY

Apphcauons ~~ be.ng

~ac­

cepted for DAAD 1Gcrm3n

Couotdor-Psychology, Post·

ing R-94070.

_._..
lnfoniUIIioa TedlooiOI)' Spo-

ellllill (SL-3)-compuling &amp;
Information Technology. Pose·
ing P-4071 . Communiadoo

S)'llloms Ell&amp;i ...r (SL-4)Compuling &amp;. Information
Technology. Posting P-4078.

FacUitler Procn.a Coonliaa-

lor (SL-5)-0esign &amp; Con·
struct1on, Posting P-4080. Se--

tionai-Stylc Painting... featur·
ing wort of 32 f.culty membc:n from two Beijing

universities. is s:howmg through
Oct. 16 in the Unh·ersity Art
Gallay, Center for the Atu.

S&lt;crdary 11-Family Medi·
dne. Posting R-94068. Sealor

nior StaiT A.smtant

(SL-3)-Vic&lt; Presidenl for
Student Affairs.. Posting p.
4081 Senior Steff Anistaot

JOBS
FACUUY
Assi5tlnt or Assoc:Ute or FuU
Proltuor-Orpnizai!Oil and
Human Resources. School of
Managemenl. Posting F-4073.
Assi!Unl or A.ssociate or Full

PrortsSOr-Organizalion and
Human R«ourccs. School of
Management. Posting F-4{)74
AssiJca.nt Professor-M athematics. Posting F-407S . Assistant or Assoc:iatt or Full Proressor-Organization and
Humin Resourt'es. School of
Management. Posting F-4076.

istant or Associate or Full
Profr:ssor-Organjzation and
Human Ruourc~. School of
A

Management. Posting F--4071
Assistant Professor-Finance
and Managenal Eronomics,
School of Momagemcnt. Postmg
F-4078 Assistant Professor or
Associate Professor or FuJI

Professor-Accounring and
La"'. School of Managernen1.
Postm8 F-.J079. A~istant Proressor or Associate Profeswr
or Full Professor-Fmance
and Managerial Economics.
School of Management. Pos1mg
F-4080. Ass~Unt or A.ssodatt
or Full Professor-Geogra·
phy. Posltng F--40&amp;1. Assistant
or A.aociate.or Full p;,.fessor-Geo~r3ph) .

PO.!iolln!! F-

.J082. Assistanl ProressorLm~utsucs. Postmg F-4084

(Sl,J)-Linguisticl. Posting P4082. Statt AssotUtr-Uni ·

venity Development. Posting
P-4083. S...ior

wr ...-..

taoi-Universily Development.
Post in&amp; P-4084. SMior Staff
As:!dstant-UniYersity De' el·
opment. ~ing P-408S. Assistllnt DHn-Univenily OC'\'dopment. Posting P·4086.
~nior Starr A.ssoc:U.tr- Um·
"ershy Dcv~lopmcnt. Posting
P-4087. Set:lior Staff Associatr-Universll)' Oevelopmtnl.
Posung P· 4088. Assistant
l}nn- UmYeTSII)' 0e\'C iop

mcn1. Posti ng P--4089 .
COMPETmVE CLASSif1ED
CIVIL SERVICI: '

Clorl&lt; I

(SG~-campu•

Parking 1nd Transpon.atton.

Lme 34833 Koyboard Sp.cial·
isl (SG~-UBF. Lon&lt;411'
Koy'-rd Spoclalisl (SG06)-P ychology. Ll~ 23662
Kty!x.rd Spociolisl (SG06)-Asum Studie~ . Lmc
25509
NO~OIIPEnnVE

CLAUIFIED CIVIL SERVICE

Carpeottr (SG-12)-Residcn t•al Facihlles. L1nc 43091.
LASOR CLAS&amp;tnED CIVIL

FooiiNIII
Lehigh Un•vers•IY scored the
game·s first 21 pomts and crUised to
a 48-19 viclory. SPQlhng UB·s 1994
home opener Saturday mght Eng•·
neers· quarterback Bob Aylsworth
threw for four f~rsl half touchdowns
to open up a 35-13 lead at the rnterm•ssion. A Tyler McDonnell threeyard run and a 44-yard pass from
Chff Scott 10 W1lhe Ford produced
us·s tone points of the half
Anolher Aylsworth io Klingerman
TO str~ke opened lhe third quarter
and an 1 t -yard run by Raphael
StJihngs gave Leh•gh a 48-13 advantage . The Bulls closed the scor•ng
wrth 7 24 rema1n1ng on a 23-yard run
by Scott He compleled 18 of 36
passes for 272 yards woth a touchdown whole Aylswonh was three for
332 yards and frve TDs Withe Ford
fed the UB recervong corps With SIX
recephons for 115 yards Cra•g
Guest and Pete Conley comb•ned
for 15 tackles and two sacks

Women's Soccer
Shannon Haskins· goat 12 m1nU1es
omo the second half broke a 11e
game and propeted the Royals to a
3-1 vrctory over St Francos Saturday
aflernoon lo g•ve lhe Royals lhelr
thord stra•ghl w.n and a 3-1 overall
mark
Hask•ns got the game-wtnner at
57 05 off a pass from Kelly Slarchol&lt;.
10 beal St Franc•s goalkeeper Kate
McGon•gle The Royals added another goal 10 m1nutes later on Jenni-

fer Devola s header off of a UB
corner ktck
The Royals oulshol lhe Red ~lash
t6-5 Rachelte Galipeau played lhe

SUI'Vtc£

hrst haH making one save wh1le

C~anrr

N1co1e Ptnaro stopped two shots tn
lhe second half
Earlr.er rn the week. lhe Royals
shut out N•agara 5-0 Sophomore
Lon Penllo scored four goals tn the
rout olihe Purple Eagles Tower also
nelted a goal for the Royals

(SG..OS)-Custodia/

Lm~ J I 571 Cleaner
(SG~S)-Custodta l Scf"'.u."C'!io.

Sen •ccs.

R£S£ARCH

l1nc "57:\

Resurch TechnidanfR.e-search Support Sp«ialisiBiochemtstl'} . Postmg R ~06:\

To obtmn mor' rnfonnallon
on Jnbs lu"d abtn "· c om1rrt
Pf'r&lt;~&gt;Onnd ,'), n ·tus ln.J C'rofu
Hall

Men's Soc:cer

Poetry on the Net
WINQS (UB'• own Cwnpua Wide lnfonnatlon Service) presents the Electronic Poetry Center, a pioneering effort in the field of poetry and poetics. The
Electronic Poetry Center offers a focused . readily accessible selection of poetry and poetrcs materials.
Fl LC I RON JC
For example. would you like to read the
latest poetry appearing •n R/F/T(UB ·s own
electromc poetry journal) or read poetry from
a number of related electron•c poetry journals? How about reading the latest poetics
essays such as "I Don·l Take Voice Ma11"
(Charles Bemste•n) or "Ohio Zen· (Michael Joyce)? You can even check out
the latest reviews of avanl-garde poelry in prinl by looking at selections appearing in TREE: Taproot Electronic Edition. wh1ch Includes reviews of hundreds of works of new merature (often not reviewed elsewhere).
The Efecfoomc Poetry Center is adm•nistered by Kenneth Sherwood and
Loss Glazier. in collaboration with Charles Bernstein of the UB English
Departmenrs Poetics Program. The Cenler also provides access to: the Poetics Archive (a library of poetic texts not available elsewhere on the Internet). a
small prpss alcove, news of related prim sources, and a range of electronic
poetry resources on the Net.
The Electronic Poetry Center also encourages the UB community to take
advantage c.f the many poetry-related events on campus. For example. it lists
the following gala poetry readings to dedicate the new Center for the Ans:

HiGH ~~ WAYS

ao

c.t.,..,.

n
t
t ~.- ..__.,
-·~Howe, C~M~~M--, DeoooliaT.._

Oct.

-.U ...

,,__,~-..,w.-.,....._

(All readings are at 3 p.m. in CFA 112.).
UB E-mail account holders can log on to the Electronic Poetry Center by lyping
wlnas at the system prompt. Select "Ubraries &amp; Ubr.ary Resources: then
"Eiecttonic Journals." then "E-JournaiS/Resources Produced Here at us: then
"The Electronic Poetry Center." For further information on the Electronic Poetry
Center including how to submit poetry, contact Loss Glazier. Lockwood Ubrary, 645-2817. &lt;lolpoe.....,.,&gt;.
-Gemma DeVIMOy snd LMS Pl&gt;que/lo GIBZiBr. Lockwood Library

The Bulls pulled off an upse1 last
Wednesday when they downed B•g
Easl power Syracuse 2-0 on Buffalo
Freshman Dan Ctolek was tnstrumenlal '"bolh Bulls goals. scor•ng
the hrst one t 6 3 t onto Ihe match
and assost•ng on the second. a tally
by Edoru Okpewho Jay Palmer
slopped seven Orangemen shols on
hos fors1 shutout of the season
Coach John Astud•llo·s squad
headed Ia Annapolis over the weekend to play 1n the Navy Tournamen1
The Bulls fell to lpe Mrdshopmen 5-1
rn lhe opener Salurday with Charles
Kadoro nellong the ione UB score On
Sunday. the Bulls relurned 10 knock
off lhe VMI Keypets 4-1
The Bulls are now 4-2 overaUand
1-0 •n the M•d-Cor\inent Conference

Volleyball
Coach Bob Maxwe~ Royals trav·
eled to lhe Roben Morr'~ Volleyfest
'" Coroapohs. Pa over the weekend
UB pocked up theor f~rst w1ns of the
season wrlh a four -game v1c1ory
over lhe host Colonials and a fivegame w•n over Marshall.
Candre Hirst was selected to the
AII-Tournamen11eam. The Royals
now sland at 2-8

Women's Tennis
The Royals arel - 1 after a seasonopening voctory over Sl Franc•s 8- t .
and a foss at P•llsburgh. Tonya
Gabr~e l won bolh her malches over
lhe weekend lakong each 1n three
sets. Gabr~el and partner Amy
Cohen defealed bolh theor opponents in doubles competition.
-Sports tnformatoo Offtce

Vrrginia K McCarthy,
70, MFC secretary
Set'Yicea were held Sept. 1 •n S1.
Paltick's Catholic Church. Lockpon. ror
Virginia K. McCanhy. rormer secretary ar
Millard Fillmore College. where she worked
rrom 1965 until he&lt; relirement in 1986.
McCanhy, 70. died Aug. 27 in Buffalo
General Hospital after a long illness. Survivors include hers1ster. Jean Marie; a brother.
Robc:n (Bud): meces. nephews and cousins.

Isaiah Meggett, 45,
health care pioneer
_ . . . . . ......... Sept. 10 in Prince or
Pr:acc TempleOIUrch orGod ror Isaiah Meggen.
45. who saved"' a clinical assis&amp;ant proFessor or
ramity mr:dJcinc: at iJB. Meggcot. a ramily physi·
cian who was on thesaafforseveral area hospitals.
died Sept. 5 in Sislas Hoopital.
A 1974 graduateorlhc UB mcxhcal school.
heeamedhisbachclor.sdegnxat Fisk UniverMty, Nashville. Tenn. He served on a committee to rttruit minorities for the UB School of
Mcdtcme and Biomedical Sc1cnces and suppaned many community health care programs.
including lhe Genc\'a B Scruggs Communh)
Health Care Cen1r:r. "ttich he helped roond
Meggc.tL\4 hoscr\'edon se,craJ boards. "'a.'
medical director and consultant ror People.
Inc .. and n:ccnlly ~ an adm1ntsuative
program physiCian ror the Chetmcal Dejxn·
den&lt;:) Unil at Sheehan Memonal Hospital.
Sun ivor include h1s wife. Karohn : a
daughter. Momca I. of Nashville. two sons.
Isaac N Meueu and Carl A Milsap n : rour
SISters. June Glenn. Deborah Meggen .
Cyn1hia Meggeu and Lornme William s or
Charlouc. N.C .; and four brothers. Andrew
Jr of Philadelphia. William of San D1cgo
and Joseph and Russell. or Charloue. N C

John 10., Quinlivan,
plastic 'urgeon
Servlc•• were held Auc. 31 1n S1
Benedict·s Cathohc Church. Eggensv1fle.
for John K Qumli\an. 73. a plastic surgeon
"'ho served as clinical ass1~nt pmfeswr of
plastic and reconstructive surgcr) at UB .
Quinlivan died Aug 27 1n Sbtcrs Hospi_tal
after a bnc:f illness.
He received hisbachelor'sdegree in 1942
from Canisius College. and graduated from
the UB medical school '" 1945.
After serving suwical residcnCIC:!! at
Ros\\ell Park Memonal Institute and Wisconsin GgJ£._r.al Hospital he served in the A1r
Force for two yean.. Beginning m 1956.
Quinlivan was chief of plastic surgery at
Mercy Hospital; he was head or plastic surgery
at Kenmore Mercy and Sisten. H pi1als an&lt;f
was on the Slarr or 13 area hospitals.
Quinlivan was president of the Society of
Plastic Surgeon or Upstale New Yorio In
1971-72. and presiden1 or the Burfalo Plastic
Surgery Society in 1974·75. He was a vice
presidentorlhe Mercy Hospi1al staff in 1979
and president in 1980. Before retiring in
1986, he served as co-direc1or or the Residency Training Program or Plaslic Surgery
at Mercy Hospilal and following retirement.
served on the governing board or the UB
Medlcal Alumni Association.
A retlow or the American College of
Surgeons. he was a memberofthcAmerican
Society of Plastic and Reron truclivc Surgery and the American Society ror Aesthetic
Plastic Surgery. He also was a membcrorthe
Erie County and New York Slate medical
societies and the Catholic Ph}'sicians Guild.
Survivors include hi s wife. Ann Mane:
two son . Dr. J. Kevin and Timothy of
Eucnsvilfc: rour daughters. Colleen M .
Dengler and Maura Shepherd. hmh or Hamburg. and Sheila and Susan. both or
Eggensville; a brother. Dr. James J.. or Albany; a sister. Mary Driscoll nf'Snyder: and
five grandchildren.

�9

UB study could shed new light on causes of infertility
~~: =

aff

u
ESEARCHERS AT

UB have discovered
that anandamidc, a
human brain chemical. produces the
same negative effect on fertility in
sea-urchi n spenn as deha-9-tctrahydrocannabinol (THC). the active ingredient in marijuana. by
prohibiting the sperm from fertil izing the egg.
Thcfindingcouldshednewlight
into the causes of infertility and
01heressential o rganicfu nctions3t
thc cellular level .
Herbert Schuel. professor of
anatomy and cell biology at UB
and head oflh~research team. said
anandamide may act by binding to
the sperms• cannabinoid receptor.
If so. the chemical. known to be the
natural link. o r ligand. for the cannabinoid receptor in the human
brain. also could be: the natural
ligand for the cannabinoid rcccptor in sea-urchin sperm.
lfanandamidc is the body'sversian of THC, fun.her research may
show that it also reduces secret ion
of human sex h o~ncs and rcduces spem1 count in men, effects
known to be caused by THC.
Resul ts of the study arc reponed
in the Aug. 2 issue of Procudingsoj
rltr National Acadl'my ofScienuj.
The findings ~ill help scicntist!lo

,

understan..1 the fuU biological role
of this receptor, which has been
preservedthroughmillionsofycars
of evolutionary history.
..Sea-urchin spenn are an ideal
model system to determine how a

reason 10 believe that anandamide
andother cannabinoidsregu1atecellular functions in the human nervous system and in organs outside
the nervous system."
Scientistshavelongbcenaware
that a cannabinoid receptor was present in human
brain cells and that when
THC binds to the these
receptors. a variety of
physical and neurologicaJ
effectsensue_Schuel said.
He was the first to report
the existence of the cannahinoid receptor m seaurchin sperm and to sho~
that when THC linked to
the receptor. the spcnn
were unable to fenili1e an
egg.
While M:icntists learned
more about the receptor.
they continued to question why the receptor existed a1. all. when THC
does not exist naturally in
thebody . Partofthequcstion was answered in 1992
when researchers at The
Herbert Schuel with a sea urchin.
Hebrew
nivcr si t) of
Jerusalem discovered the
cannabinoid receptor operates at
brain· !:1 natural ligand for its canthecetlular level,·· sdtuel said. "We
nabinoid receptor-a chemical they
think these receptors play a gcnnamed anandamidc. from the Sanera I role in regulating how cc1Js
skrit word meaning .. internal bliss."
work . In thi~ case. they inhibit seW i 1 h t h c disco v cry of
crction by the sperm. But we have
anandamidc. Schucl repeated hi s

THC sea-urdUn sperm research using the naturally occurring bram
chemical. producing his current

findings.
He showed lhat anandamidc. like
llfC,p-cventcdspermcell~fromundergoing an essential SOCTdory process of fertilization called the
acrosome reaction. During this process. sperm respond to a substance
in the jelly-like layer surroundmg
the egg , causing the spenn acrosnmal membrane: to be: ex)X&gt;Sed and
allowing the sperm to auach to and
pcnc:trale thee&amp;{!.
'These findmgs pro.,1dc addlt1onal evidence that the cannabiooid receptor in sperm play!ta role
in blocking the acrosome reactiOn.
indacatc that anandamadc or a rclated molccu.e rna) be the natural
ligand for the cannabmoid receptor
10 ~-urchin spenn and s.uggc~t
that binding of anandamadc to the
receptor modulates stimulus-S«rction--couphng m ~penn .. .:· Schucl
stated.
Schucl noted that anandamide
and THC rna) regulate spcnn fum:tion prior to. as well ib dunn g. fertilization
"If anandamide IS present m
~minal plasma. then it may help to
keep the sperm quiet until they arc
diluted b) sea water after spaVvning," he sa1d . .. Anandamide' also
may be produced h) the egg during
fertilization w pre,cnt e&gt;;c~s..,

spenn m the v1ciniry from undcrgoingtheacrosomereacuon Sperm
that fail to undergo the acro..ome
reaction cannot fenifizc eggs
.. If this hypothesis proves correct, ana.ndam1de may be one of
several dcfenK mcchamsms that
act togelhcr to ensure that on!) one
sperm penetrates the egg during
fertJ!I£aUon Penetration of the egg
by more than one spenn. called
JX&gt;Iyspenn)". rc ult!lo in death of the
embl)o ··
he gene for thl" ~anna bm o1d
receptor 10 the human brat.O
also 1s expr~~ an the human te.-,tcs. Schue! noted . ""'h1ch po1nts to
the possibility that mature hum an
.-,perm also rna) contam a cannabmOid receptor
-J( th1~ proves to be accurate.··
S..:hucl:&gt;ald. ··then ourob~'3liOO"i
on the effect.-, of anandam1de and
THC on the acrosome rear.:t1on and
spenn-fenih7Jn~ capac1t) 10 sea
urchms could be rcle' ant to human
reproduction"
Schuel's \A.OrL. 1~ funded b~ the
Nauonal Institute on Drug Abu'C
Researchers on th1s project. 1n
addition to Schue!. "'ere Elame
Gold&gt;tc•n of UB. Raphael
Mechoulam of The Hebrc"' Una\CTSH) of Jcru~altm: Anhur M
Zammcnnan of the Umvcrsit) of
Toronto. and Selma Zimmerman
of YorJ.. Unl\ero.,H). Toronw

T

'

'

HOSPICE BUFFAL O PRES ENTS
T h e Second Annua l

''Festival of
Fine Wine &amp; Friends''
Western New York's Premier
Wine Tasting Festival and Silent Auction

- ..J

fcatun ng seleClcd premium win~ that have been rated as
"best buvs "]rom The Wine Spectator and other noted wine critics·

Friday, September 30, 1994
5:30 - 8:30 .(&gt;.m.
UB Center For The Arts, Amherst Campus
$30.00 donation per person.
For reservations, please call 838-44 38.
All proceeds from this event will bcnefll Hospice Buffalo's capital project.
The new Hospice Mitchell Campus. scheduled to open in the spnng of 1995. will meet
the special needs of people l\'ith adl'unccd illness and thnrfami/i,·s f•H years to com,·.
Sponsored by

THE PREMI ER CE:-&lt;TER

�The
answer
is ...
)

\

Your New Full Service
Copy Center

Conveniently LOcated
At the UB Commons

Makin' Copies is ready to assist the
needs of both the students and faculty.
Let us put your clas5 notes on file and
we'll make it easy for your students to
obtain them.
Inquire about our Faculty Discounts
available on our full range of copy
services.

We offer great customer
service including:
-·-...'

Free Pick-up Seroice for
(Teachers Notes
Easy Access on Campus
Convenient Hours
\

\

FACUL1Y: For leaving your notes on file, you will be given
a FREE $25 VOU~HER for our full range of copy services.
Call or visit us soon at the Commons!
520 Lee Entrance, Suite 105

Tel 636-8440
Fax 636-8468

�facui Sian illboa d
E l - to lecture
on Ollis trw sct.ols

0

Elliot Eisner, professor of
education and an 01 Slllnford
Universily, will delivenhe 1994
Charlone C. A= Lcclure, sponsored by !he UB
Grndua1e School
of Education.
Oc1. 6 a1 4 p.m.
in !he Cen1er for
Tomorrow.
The lcciUre, "£

Pluribus Unum :
it a Realistic Aim for
America's Schools?," will explore ~ronn policies that have
emphasized the CTC3tion of uni -

form goals roc schools.
Eisner has lectured worldwide
on Ihe developmenl of ~lhelic
intelligence and the use of critical
me1hods from 1he ans 10 sludy
and improve educational practice.
Aulhcr of 15 books, he has received
numerous awards • j,dudjng lhe
Palmer 0 . Johnson Metrorial Awsd
from lhe Amorican Educational
Roseart:h Association, Guggenheim
and Fulbrigtu fellowships.
Trained as a painler a1 The An
Institute of Chicago. Eisner sludied design at Dlinois lnslitute of
Technology School of Design. Ac
earned a doclorate in education at
the University of Chicago, and
has received honorary degrees
from Jhe Maryland inStiiUIC College of Art. Hofstra University and
lhe Universily of Oslo, Norway.
He is a member of lhe Roya.l Society of An in the U.K. and lhe
Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters.

Greenberg to speak
on medical education

0

Larrie Greenberg, director
of medical education at the
Children's Nalional Medical
Center in the George Washington
University School of Medicine.
will presen1 the 1994 Distinguished Lecture on Medical Education, ..Ftcililating Problem

Solving for Medical Learners,"
from 5-{i p.m. Sept. 26 in Butler
Audilorium in Farber Hall.
Earlier 1ha1 day. Greenberg
will conduct a faculty-dcvclopmenl workshop. "Exploring
Teaching and Learning in Med ical Educalion," from I : 15-4:30
p.m. in the Lippschutz Room. 125

Cary-Farber-Sherman-Complex
on the South Campus.
Greenberg has authored "or coauthored more than 60 researeh
anicles in scholarly journals. and
has made more than 80 presentations at national meetings. Chairman fO&lt; 199:1-95 of the Northeast
Group on Educational Affairs of
lhe Association of American
Medical Colleges. he is a fellow
of lhe American Academy of
Pediatrics.
The progrom is sponSO&lt;ed by
lhe Primary Care Resounce Cenlcr
and the UB School of Medicine
·and Biomedical Sciences and sui&gt;'
ported by lhe Upjohn Company.

"Information Anxiety"
prol(rllmset

0

A program examining 1he
"information anxiety.. that

can be experienced as a resull of
the often-overwhelming volumes
of information now available
through technology will be held
from 9 a.m.-4:30p.m. Oct 3, in
the Center for Tomorrow on the
North Campus.
-A View From Both Sides of
the Reference Desk." the program
developed by facuhy and staff of
the UB School of Information
and Library Studies (SU..S) and..
lhe Universily Libraries. is designed
for librarians. researt:hers and olher
mfcnnation professionals.
Funded by the State Universi1y
of New York Conference in the

Discipli nes program. it is jointly

sponsored by the UB Office of
the Provosc. the Office of the
Vice President for Research, the
University Libraries and SU..S.
Keynote addresses will be
given by Roma Harris, professor
and acting dean of 1he Gradua1e
School of Library and Information Sciences at the University of
Western Ontario. and by Jane
Keefer, resource services librarian at The: Johns Hopkins University. Panel discussions will be led
by Edwin Conez, Leo Curran.
Karen Downing. James Gerland.
Loss Glazier. Thomas Jacobson.
Dennis Mike and Neil Yerke)' .

Corinne Jorgenson
joins SILS faculty

0

Corinne Jorgenson, who
has been serving as a refer-

ence librarian at Ham ilton Col-

lege Ubrary, joined the School of
Information and Ubrary Studies
this fall as an assistant professor.
A graduate of the M.L.S. program a1 Syracuse Universily, she
is completing a Ph.D. degree in
lnfocmation Transfer ac Syracuse.
where . he has been teaching in
the M.L.S. program. At UB she
will leach Introduction 10 Ubrary
and lnfonnalion S1udies and
Science: Information Sources and
Services.

Hilda s. Koren to
receive Newman Aw.-d

0

The Newman Award will be
presenled 10 Hilda S.
Koren Sept 25 during 1he Mass
of the Holy Spiril 10 be celebrated
a1 St Joseph's Universily Church.
local ion of the Catholic Campus
Ministry for lhe South Campus.
T1le award is presented annu ally to a member of the communily who has worked strongly 10
..humanize'' the university community. Mrs. Koren has ~n
involved in volunteer effons
serving lhe university for many
years. Her husband. the la1e M.
Roben Koren. was a longtime
member and chair of the UB
Council.

Msgr. J. Pauick Keleher. di rector of the Catholic Campus
Ministry al UB noled that "When
the commiltec was trying to decide on lhe honoree for lhe
Newman Award, Hilda's name
kepi coming up as that ran: person whose presence and grace.
inlelliger&gt;ee and joy brought the
strength of humanit y wherever
she goes al UB ."
Facuhy in acadcm1c garb and
students in everyday garb an:
invited to join the procession. to
gather at II : 15 a.m. The service.
which will include mustc. will be
conducted by Dr. Jacob Ledwon.
pastor of St Joseph· s. and a
member of the UB Campus Ministry. with Msgr. Keleher as
homilist. Presiden1 Greiner will
make remarks and help in honor-

ing Mrs. Koren.
A reception o n the
follow the service.

Ia~ n

will

Newcomb named to
International board

0

Carol L. Newcomb, executive direcror of the Center
for Management Development in
the UB School of Management
has been named 10 lhe board of
directors of the Nario nal Universily Continuing Education Association (NUCEA ). NUCEA is an
international continuing education association with more than
400 member institutions and

Ed Michaels.
left, and Robert
Palmer watch
William Di
Stanislao work
out at refurbished Fitness
Center during
ribbon cutting
ceremony held
Sept.1 4 in
Alumni Arena.

2.000 professional memOCrs.
New~o mb

is a member of

numerous professional organi7.ali ons. in luding the American
Association for Aduh and Con tinuing Educarion. the American
Socic1y of Training and Development. and 1hc Con1inuing Education Assoc· iation of New York .
She reCeived a bachelor's
degree from Iowa Wes leyan

College and an M.B.A. degree
from UB. She is working on her
doctoral degree in education
administration at UB.

Schlnnaw.-ded
Fulbright to Sri Lanka

0

David Schirm, associate
professor of an ac UB. has
been awarded a 1994-95
Fulbrighl gran! to travel to Sn
Lanka. where he will create drawings based on people's life experiences. During his I 0-month
stay. he will work: in conjunclion
with the University of Kelaniya
and a Sri Lankan literacy program. He will base his drawings
on interviews with program participants.
'1'he mix of cultures is going
to produce a really curious combination of images.·· Schinn says.
He will ask his subjeciS 10 describe pan.i cu\arly treumatic o.wonderfuJ events in their lives
and any personal 0&lt; cultural experiences they would like to pass on.

The second component of his
Fulbright work will include en gaging the Sri Lankans in creal·
in¥ their own artWO&lt;k by
employing the sa.rrte teachi ng
techniques he uses in his
intermedia courses at UB . He
hopes to create a dual exhibition
of his drawings and their work
when he returns to the U.S.
A UB faculty membc:r since
1985. Schirm a.lso has taught a1
Carnegie-Mellon University, the
University of Southern California. the Otis Art Institute and the
Parsons School of Design.
He has exhibited widely
throughoul the U.S. and a~ .

Philip Szabla heads
management alumni

0

Philip Jobn Szabla, a panncr in the law finn of

Albrech1 Maguire Heffern
Gregg. P.C.. has been elec1ed
president of the Management
Alumni Association at UB. William A. Hamilto~ vice president

of finan ce at TAM Cerami cs. was

elected president-elect.
Newly elected vice presidents
are Judith A. Rucki. director of
public relations and development
a1 Sierra Research. communicalio ns; Lawrence J. Zielinski.
\'icc president of ancillary and
supJX&gt;n services a1 Children· s
Hospi1al of Buffalo. membership;
David T. Hore, an audit manager
at Price Waterhouse, programs.
and Lee M. Grunert. presiden1
of Focused Markeling Associates.
student rela1ions.

Others clecled: Richard R.
Tesmer, Jr., vice president of

Tesmer Builders. Inc., direcoor of
development: Teresa M.
M_urpby, a senior tax manager at
KPMG Peat Marwick. secretary;
Michael J . Murray. a partner
with Ernsc and Young, treasurer.
New members on the board of
directors are Michael Jakubik.
manager of ..:coonting and firmnce •
Basicnc:t. Inc.; U.. A. McKigney.
trcasura o( Ecos!a.InlanOiional.
LP.; Paul E. Sl&lt;imle. an associace
aprr.oiscr wilh Nathcas1em ApJr.Oisal Asoociales,lnc.; &lt;huies c.
s-..kamp, panner, Sap=on &amp;
Day; Dounis P. Szywala.IXIJlOr1lle
&lt;XlN1011er, Grapoc Controls Corp.
•Re~Jected to the board were
Bamil.toa; Tesmer; Zidinslti;
AnD Buntriu eoa-, assislan&lt;

professo&lt; of accounting ac UB. and
Cynthia M. Sbore. assistant\'itt
president and investment offtc\r.
Aoet Investment Services.

UB Women's Club
begins 49th ye~

0

The Wocnen's Oub ofthe
University at Buffalo opens
iiS 49th year Sepc. 24 with a
membership luncheon al II :30
a.m. in the Center for Tomonow.
Guests and nev.. members are

wdcome.
The program will feature information aboUI and sign·up for
acti\ity groups and service pro-

grams. Groups and their chairs
are: Activity coordinatOI'S';'i6sie

l.apetina. Pa1 Bcrexa; Antiques.
Judith Baumer. Kauina
Wnbschall; Books. Kristen
Milbraith, Anne Brody; Bridge.
Pal Addelman. Nicki Yeracaris;
Bridge Aight. Marie Schillo;
Bowling, Rhoda Sll&gt;rr. CrossCountry Skiing. Joan D' Arrigo;
Dinner 1neater. Paula Nisengard:

Couples Gounne1. Nicki
Yeracaris: Evening Gourmet,
Romaine Rustum; Gounnet Tech·
niqucs, Sun-Mi Fung. Barbara
Paganelli. Barbara McCarthy;
lnlcrnational. Kathie Mogensen.
Zelda Feldman: Italian Conversation. Angela Pellegrini. Julia Masetti;
Needlework. Joan Ryan, Elianc
Knopp; Tennis. Marie Schillo.
Membership is open to any
woman interested in service to

UB and purposes of the club.
Activities sponsor the Grace
Capen Academic Awards and lhe
Financial Aid Scholarships.
For infonnation, call Judith

Baumer, 632-6470 0&lt; Lucille
Gasparini. 634-{;502.

�-- .---.-·
....

Let the Music

'
•

One penon'• traah Ia

~
~
........
~

another'• treaaure,
. . the . .yl... · - - Oncr again If's rune ro

addto)ourcollecuonof

vtmage vmyl-'or drop
off your CD casuways.
WBFO

IS

bnngmg back

Vmrl Madness.

comrdy and somethmg wr
called ''plU5h." says l~·doa
Kulboda, WBFO musoc
dtHC t or.

"'Pl ush \cm·nrd en·rrthmg from f-'lawauan mu.stc

to JackoeGiea'&lt;&gt;n's 'mght
ofroman«' ·type album&gt;.
f:,·eryonc had a balllookmg through t.h,· 'plush' ptle."
Vinyl Madness II will
be held Saturday, Oct. 1
on the first floor of Allen
Hall on US's South Campus.

More than IO.O&lt;Xl re-cordmg~. as well
as posrers and n"'a~az.mC's. will be natl-

able. D'!n.~.uon lr\'els stan at Sl.25 for
records and tapes. S5 for compact dtscs
and 50 cents for 45;. \\'BFO program
dorcctor Davod Benders agaon wall be~:
mng the "back room:· filleJ wnh \'IOtage
78s.

WBFO members will have a free
sneak preview of \'any! Madness
starting

at 10 a.m. Oct. 1; the

fundraiser opens to the public at

11 a.m. and will include a $2 admission

Prize a1bums,lrtcludlng

charge. local bands, including Blue Fuzz,

Grease

the OuttTCtrclr Orchestra and the Binrr-

WBFO
staffers
sortlne
vintage
Yinytlr&gt;clude
Lydia
Kulblda,

swect Rose Blues Band, will provide live
music, and there will be free balloons for
the first 100 choldren.
Much of the success of last yrar·s
fundra1scr was dur to listener donations.
combined with a selection of vinyl culled

front;

from WBFO's library. The station is still

David
Benders
and Klm
Buckner.

:accepting contributions to this year's Vin)'l Madness. For more information, call
829-2555.

and The
Duke, are

amone

treasureo

waiting In
Allen Hall
lor music
lovers.
Photos by Simon Tong

��p

A

e

Whi[h librarq to us~1

E

ACH OF TilE ten UB libraries has seiVices

. __
--

•

discipline, you will do most of your research

_,_ _

in one or two of the UB Libraries. An

-

exception

--··-·-·-···· 6

. . , . . . FltEUiet -~- ···-· 8

CI&gt;IIOMs ···----------·-·· . I

LO

this is the Undergraduate Library

(UGL). l11e UGL collection has general works in most

·--

------- 5

l1ectnNik ~ ------

-

----·-----1

---

..... ---·-··--······-· .. ,,_, 7

........

______________ z

-

--- --·-----· 6
• c.. ···------·-·-- 6

__,.._

SUBJECT SPECIALTY

•
•
•
•
•

•
•

•
•
........... --·-·-·-·--- 3
•
=:::~~:=1 •
, _ , _ ........ ---·---· 3 •
•
- ----------- 8 •
_......, ___........... 3
•
•
........ ............... 3
.........
.. ....... 4 •
.......... _____ 6 •
•
.... -.----------------- 4 ••
•
......__
........ ·-·--·······-·- ... 6
•
- ------------------------·· •
s
•
.....
•
IIU.I ---------·---·- 7

~

-

---·--·---·--- 7

__
-.:..

.... _______ ,.. 7

LIBRARY

Architecture and Planning Library

Art, Art History

Lockwood Ubr.uy

Bus loess

Lock·wood Ubrary

Chemistry

Science and Engineering Libr:uy

Classics

Lock-wood Ubr.uy

Dentistry

Health Sdences Library

Educadon

Lockwood Ubrary

Engineering

Science

Government Documents

Lockwood, Law. and Science and
Engineering Libraries

a~d

Engineenng Library

Health-Rclat&lt;d Profcssiom

Health Sciences Library

History

Lockwood Ubrary

(~

CAIII'US)

-

.............. 8

Health ~[ien[eslibrarg IHm

He21lh Sciences Ubrary

Languages

Lockwood Ubrary

.uaon 11AU. I&amp;OUI'll CAIIPIIS)

Law Library

Circulation!Reserve--829-3335 (Fax 829-2211)

l.aw

Ubr.ory Srudlc:s
Uter.nure

_J.ockwood libr.uy
Lockwood Library

Management

Lockwood Ubrary

Maps

Science :md Engineering 1Jbr.uy

Malhcmatic:s

Math Ubrary

Medidn~

Health Sciences Library

Music

Music Library

Nnrslng

1-tealth Sciences Library

Natural Sciences

Science and Engincenng Library

Pban:Jucy

Health Sciences Library

11....-c:ll &amp;bwteC~ea -----

Polish Studies

Lockwood Ubrary

......

Poetry

Poetry Collection and
Lockwood Library

________________ ;

---·

.......... 6

_

....... _________________ 6

· --

.....- .. 4

_.__ - ·-·
---liBRRRV
~
......, _____________
3

......... ....... 7

(Wioklo-

to ... , ... ________________ 2

---------.. -

. ......, __________

.... 7

•
•

• Preservmg the Unt\·ersity Ubraries colleaeons has lxx'ome more challengmg
in recent yea~ due 10 the increasing variety, age, and heavy use of· library
m3tt:.riab.. In response to tJus challenge, the- Center for Book Pr\.-servatton wa s
de,·elopt.-d within the Unh'ersity libr:mes 10 maximize the availahiht~· of llbrJI")
collections. A g03l of 1he Center lS to preserve materU!Is for future gt:.neratK&gt;n!lof scholars.
Since 1lS incepcion in 1985, the Center has created a progr:tm of conser\'a ·
uon treatments . including archival ph01oduplication of brittle books, llfld a
heightened .!&gt;oCnsitivity to faaors which speed dett•norJtion Worktng with the
circulating collections. the Center staff has re-juvenated thousands of books.
constructed protecth•e enclosures for fragile matenals. and upgr3ded storage of
special format items.
In addition to the physical preservalion of library m:u.enals, the Center
also fosters sta.fT and pubhc awareness of conservation issues Instruction regarding the proper care, handling and storage of the collections. and food and
drink restrictions within the libraries emphasizes the importance of C&lt;X&gt;perallon
\\•ith the university community 10 achieve an effective preservation progn.m

History of Mcdlclne

~

-

[enter for Boob Preseruation
645-2255

Architecture. Design Stuclks

......, _ _ _________ 2

_

in Ha)'es Hall , which houses 1he School of Architecture and Plannmg APL's
collection includes books, journals, consuuctwn produC'I catalogs. maps, arctutcctural dr:nvings, vidt."'Olapes , cassettes, and microfomu . Master's Tilesc..~ of the
School are also housed in APL. APL provides swdy area!&gt;, \'.'Ork tabl~. a ryptng
room. an AN room. and photocopying facilities. 11lere is also an extensive
slide collection in the Visual Resources Center as.socaated wilh the School in
Hayes HalL

______ ........ 2

.,_
_ _ __ 8

-

APL has a collection of over 22,000 volumes on ARCHITECTl.JR.E ARCHI-

UICIIWOOO U8ltAIIY aUIUHNII

subject areas. Below is a guide to the subject
- - ------- 8 specialties of the various UB libraries:
(_
___,_,_____ 6
_

MAYD 11A1.L (&amp;OUI'll CAIII'US)

829-3505
VISUal Resourres Center 829-3485
TECTURAl HISTORY. DESIGN TiiEORY, ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN , and
PlANNtNG .. APL is a branch of the Lockwood ~emorial Ubr:lry 3nd is loated

that is, you will fmd that for your major/

-····--· 6

Rr[hite[ture and Plannin~ librarg lRPll

and researchers in spe&lt;.ific subject areas.

. . _ . . . . . . , ________ 2

- - --

liEIRAHIFS

and collections specially tailored to srudents
Generally, library collections do not overlap-

1 1·"ih11111

TH[

BIOMEDICAL SOENCES. f&gt;ENI'AL MEDICINE. NURSING. PHARMACY. and

Soclal Sciences

Lockwood Ubr:1ry

•

Social Work

lockwood Library

UB History

Archives

•

Theatn: and Dancx

Lockwood and Mu.!&gt;u: L1branes

Uniuemty at Buffalo THESES AND DISSERTA nONS are j01md in tbe
library of the discipli•w.

.. 3

_ , .........

Reference -829-3900
Media Resourres Center (MRC)- 829-3614
History of Medictne - 829-3024
Infonnation Dis'iemination SeJVice (IDS)- 829-3351 (FaJ1835- 4891)
Interlibrary Loan -829-3337
'
+ HSL, founded 10 1846. contain.!&gt; ma1enals an the fields or MEDICINE AND
HEALTii-RELA TED PROFESSIONS Combined books and journals in HSL total
over 300.000, and subscriptions to journals total over 2.300 titJes. The MEDIA
RESOURCES CENTER (MRC) in HSL contatns over 2,000 audiovtsual titles 10
various fonnat.o.; , including computer-assisted mstructton for self·instruction.
review. and classflXlm use The: ROBERT L BROWN HISTORY OF MEDICINE
COll.ECOON houses J 2.000 volumes of rare and hastorical materials as well a.s
am1que medical and dental mstruments
Computerized literature sear-chang 1s offered 10 the heath sc1ences disoplines \'ta HUBNET-Hospital and University at Buffalo Libr.u-y Resour-ce
NETwork. HUBNET prov1des computer access to bibliogra.ph1c data~s. full
text journals. clinical manuals and texlbooks, drug anfonnation resources, and
expert systems Instruction on the organization of biomedicalihformation and
other special topics as provtded by arrangement with a reference hbra.rian
Interlibrary loan servicys are- also nailable m HSL.
Health care prof&lt;f;sionals. 13w firms, businesses, and indi\·idu3ls n01: affiliated with UB or lcxottcd ofT C3mpus can obtain biomedical and health information through the INFORMATION DISSEMINATION SERVICE (IDS). This
department of HSL can pro\"idc, on a fee -for·service basis, photocopies of ;ourn3l anich:s. books a11d audiov1sual loans , tnterlibrary loon refeTT3ls. computer
searches. and refcren tnformatao n

~~ ---····-------·····-- ~

Dlr.ct.r'a

orne. ·--·--· . 4
______ , ___ 8

WINQS ........ _

-

H~UR~

llblwy unit - - . . Ita own hours af

_.uon. -....

. , . _ - ClrcuiMion . , . _ _ a f - unit to -

-

hours for- unit - I t a ..me.~- hours v.oy

--Pltntedoa.-ycled

_....,to _ _ _ asw.u, • .,._callwUI help
y o u - - - - you to piM your ......a. bette&lt;.

[harles B. ~eaffiiam librarg llRIDJ
O'UWI MAU. 2ND T&gt;IROUQH nH FL0011S
(NOinH CAMPUS)

Circulation!ReseiVe!JLL (2nd Floor) -645--6765
Reference (2nd Floor) - 645-2047
Audiovisual Dept./Koren Center (5th Floor) - 645-2045
Documents Department (6th Floor) - 645-2084
Fax - 645-3860
•

The Ulw colle&lt;.110n

C0\'1.:11&gt;

a w1dC' \"3ric:ty of materials on LAW and ..LA\\"

RELA TEO SU BJECI'S .
Tiw library offers studt-~nts. f:Ku lt y, alumn1, and the commu nit y full rese3rch

fadli tic.!&gt;. mduding profc:!l-.!&gt;ionallr staffed n:ft.·rencc, documents. and audiovisual
dcpanmcnt.s.
Till: COIIe&lt;.1iOO of nt.';trl)' 270,00() volume.., :10d 425,()0(} mit'rofonll~ incJudt..~

I

FEDERAL and STATE COURT CASES . STAlVfES. CODES. and REGULATIONS;

TE:\'TS :md TREATISI::..~ on .:a w1dc: \'Jriety of h:gal topics; coiiC'Ctions of lflfl'ER·

�NATIONAL and COMPARA11VE LAW: and a snu.JI rolle&lt;.1ion of FOREIGN
LAW. The MORRIS L COHEN RARE BOOK COu.EcnON of the Law LJimry,
"'h~eh C'Ofllatns ENGU H AND AMERICAN LEGAL SOURCES from the !6ch,

l..,th, l&amp;h, •md 191h centuries. provides backgroUnd matenals for research m
the c:~ rly fou ndatio ns of our legal tradition 1be papcrs of John Lord O'Bnan,
th ~ dastingui,;ht.&gt;d lawyer and prominent public servant for whom t~ law
-.chool building~~ named, are available for the use of researchers
The AlfDI~L DEPARTMENT maintams a collection o f audiota~,

\'adcotapt.."&gt;S, and otjrer non -book •ruuen:ds to support the Law School cumculum. L3w students may pr3ctice their oral advocacy or cou rtroom skills using
the \'ideot3ping equipment in the KOREN CENTER FOR CLINICAL LEGAL
EDUCATION .
The DOCUMENTS DEPARTMENT houses United States and New York bills,
United tates Congressional He:uings and Rcpons, New York Legasl:ni\'C Doc\1-

mems, the Congn."SSional Rt.."CCrd , 2nd a variety of go\·emment-produced
ma tcn:~ls Documents of the- United Nations and other mtergovcmmental org.~­
ni1..111o ns are also IOC'3ted in 1his collection.
LEXlS E&gt;..1S and WES11.AW/DIAL.OG , compulerized legal research syslems. :ne ava1bble only to rurreruly t_·nrolled law StudentS and full -lime Ia\\
fucuhy. Searches of NEXIS, a newspaper and wire sel"\·ices cbtaha.se. and LRS
(New Yo rk '~ tegislatl\'e Rctneval System), are conductt:d by hbr.mans on an
appointment-only b.1.s1s.

lo[hiUood m~moriallibnug (lffill
L.OC1IWOOD UaiiAitY IIUILDING

(~CAMPUS)

Circuia
JOn - 645-2815
·
Referen - 645-2820
E-M . eference- UNLOCK@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU
~(on IBM,VAX, UNIX plalfonns)
Interlibrary Loan- 645-2812
Government Documents (1st Floor)- 645-2821
Reserve- 645-2144
Fax- 645-3859
+ ART, BUSINESS, EDUCATION . H UMAN mES . LIBRARY SCIENCE. SOCIAL
SCIENCES. and SOCIAL \l10RK collections are located in lockwood Libr.uy
along with GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS. POUSH and EAST ASIAN matena ls.
and the JUVENlLE books collection. Holdmgs include O\'e r 1,400,000 books
and toumals, and 3 million microforms, making Lockwood the largest llbr.ary at
UB and in the SUNY system.
Reference;lnstmC1ion, imcrtibrary loan , and gr.~duate reserve are some of
the .services pro,'ided in L.ockwood A full r.mge of ~caron1c daubases 10 the
social sciences. humanit~. and business is available on dedicated computer
stations and via net:work access. A full-text database of all ENGUSH POETRY
publisht."&lt;i lx.•tween 600-1900 is available in the main Reference area. Students
and faculty may search lhe extensi\'e NEXlS/ LEXIS system at four computer
stations. Lockwood also provides a fee-based computer .search service.
The BUSINESS/ GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS REPERE..NCE CENTER ~ a
depository for U.S.. New York Stale, and Canadian Govemm~ru Pubhcattons,
and it contains reference resources in Business and Management. The Center
provides access to hundreds of electronic resources related to census, trade ,
business/industrial firms. finandal data , etc Geograph1c lnfo rmat1o n System
(GIS) sohware is avail:lble, such a~ ArcUSA and Arc'«1orld , for the creation of
customized maps depiC1ing social and economic indicators, natur.1l and infra·
structure features for are.as and regions.
The POUSH COLLEcnON is an extenst"e research collccuo n of Poh~h
language books and ;oumals. Lockwood h2s SC\•eral exchange agreements wuh
Polish uni"ersities and scholarly associ:mons which asstst With the acquts1110n
of Polish language materials

ffilflll librarg
IIUILDING I (SOUTH CAMPUS)

829-2165, 829-3278
Fax -829-3913

+

A branch of lhe Socnce and Engineenng L&amp;br. uy. the ~bthemat•c!t Labraf)
houses resea rch matenals 10 m:n hcmaucs, mcludmg books, profess1onal JOUr·
nals. reference books, mdexe~. abstracts. and reserve ttems A full range of
library se rvices are available. tncluding reference. IOterl tbrary loan. database
searching, and pho10copr facihties

ffiusi[ librarg lffill~l[J
UIIIO 1tALL, FIRST F\.OOR (NORTH CAMPU5)

Circulation - 645-2923
Reference- 645-2924
Director's Office- 645-2935
Fax - 645-3824

+

The Mu!)tC Library ho lch. brood -baSc.--d rcSt."arch colk'&lt;110 nc;; wh1ch ~u ppo~
not o nly thc program.!&gt; offered by the Dcpanmcnt of MusiC. hut also those 10
OANCE. ALACK ;TUD IF.S. AMERICAN ;TUDIES. ANniROPOLOGY and LIN ·

GUIS11 CS Tht• c:~ t :llogucd colle&lt;tion .. com pri!)C' over 60,000 scores and perfmm:tncc p:trt~ . 26.SOO volume!'&gt; of lite rature about music. IS,OOO pcnodk."31 ~nd
scri&lt;~ l \'olu nu.:.!&gt;, hundred.!&gt; of pho tO!'&gt;, 6.000 nucrofonns , severa l hundred Vldc..-o
~ape~ . and nclrly a tho usand m~sic-rdatc&lt;:' posters : l11c recording colk"&lt;.'tio ns .
numbering nearly 27.000 itemc;; mdudc JAZZ . FOL.K, UTURGI CAL., POP~L6.R,
CL6.SSICAL. and i~ cspet;ally rich in tht• AVANT-GAR~E Th~ c:Jn be hsten~
to at any o r 24 listening stauoru. (17 of which are equ1pped wtth compae1 d1sc
playcn,). Sc\' cml CO-ROM product~ a re available for reference, as are over
1 800 sep:~ratc microfiche containing images of over 925.~ catalogue cards
~presenting hooks and scores in the Paris BibiOih{-que Nattonalc and the
Conscrvatoire.

Special strengths of the hbr.uy mdude 2011-f~'TIJRY MUSIC, JAZZ ;~nd
JAZZ DISCOGRAPHY , OPERA, MUSIC SCORF.S IN FACSIMILE, MUSIC BIBLIOGRAPHY. ELEC!l!ONIC Ml IC, and REFEREN E MATERIAJ.S Sp&lt;"C1al collections mcludc d05e to a hundred "FAKE B&lt;X&gt;KS," th ou~nd' of MUSIC
.
AN!lQUARIA AND AllcnON ALE CATAI.OGUES, 2,000 MI:SIC ICONOGRA·
f'

PHY SUDES, o ng10al m.:uenals documemmg the IIISTO RY OF U.S MUSIC
l.IBRARIANSHIP Cindudmg oral intel"\·iew.!&gt;), the :~rchtves of the CENTER OF
TiiE CREATIVE A D PERFORMI NG ARTS and the

DE~ARTI.1ENT

OF MUSIC.

as well as what l"i probably one of the largest collecuons of SOLO SONGS m
the U.S (JO whtc-h all of the au thon. of texts are aru l)'zed )
Many special mdexes, cata logues, and ocher aids assLSt 10 find10g works
by Buffalo musicians, Buffalo residents , progr:~.ms and rev1ev.·s assooated v.tlh
the Deparment's events srncc 1962, works 10 o;ever.al manuscnpt collect lOrnt of
composers· works. and •n the archi,•e-s &amp;1' en to th&lt;.• ltbrary hy 1ndl\'1dual faculty
members

~[i~D[~ and In~ine~rin~ librarg l~UI
CAP£11 ltAll, 2HD AND MD FU101tS

(~CAMPUS)

Reference - 645-2946
E-Mail Reference- ASKSEL (on IBM,\1\X, UN IX plalfonns)
Circulation/Reserve - 645-2944
Generallnfonnation - 645-2946
Fax - 645-3710
lnfonnation Technology Center (lTC) - 645-2747
General Microoxnputing!BISO Corlrm Stw&gt;rt. call Help~ - 645-3542

+

Sl:lt~ located on the St."CCnd and thard nooN. of C..pen, ~11h t.'ntr.mtt
through the first floor of Capen 10 the l!ndergra duatc.~ Ubrnry SEL -.cn.es the
faruhr and students of NATURAL SCIENCES and MATI-iEMATIC~ . a' wdl a"
ENGINEERJNG and APPL.IEO SCIENCES Collect10ru. tnclude over 41~.000
books. 1.800 prof~c;;•onal roumal~. I 5 m1l lton m1&lt;.·roform..c;;. and \anou~ .. udt0\1~ual collen•ons SEL ha.!&gt; one branch. the MATI-t URRARY . luc-:ned on the: South
Campus
SEL. o ffers nrculahon and rt.'~"r\ e sen 1&lt;.e~ t&lt;nntl) wrth l"Gl. The Cuc.·u J...
t1o n Rt:&lt;,t'f\t."" l"k.~k IS located o n the first floor C1n l 'GU Other SEL M."'I'Kt.~~
mdudc: rcfen~ncc-. tnterhhr.~n loon . and fthr.u-y JO'\tn1&lt;110n Computer sc=trrlung
JS abo :J\'31lahh.• on SClc:'nC't" and c-ngmt--enng da tah35t.*s h) ad,ance appoint·
ment CD- ROM tcrhnology tn SEL affordc; the opponun1t)' to search &lt;.t&gt;n.Hn
dauha.;;es at no cost
The 11'\FORMATION TECH Ol.OGY CENTER (lTC) offers audtOnsual matt&gt;·
nab and v1ewmg equipment an addrt•on to mtcrocomputer access The lTC
mamta&amp;n., a \'a nety of stand-alone miCrocomputers m con1unctton "1th two
networks. a O\'ell network of IBM·PC's and an Apple Sh3re nt'fwork of Mac's
The Cefiter also offers la~r pnnting, medta ronversK&gt;n eqUipment. an Opttcal
text sca nner. and a '"anety of .software
The MAP ROOM is o n lhe thtr'C! noor of SEL. The coUec11on of over
200 ,000 maps andudes TOPOGRAPHIC. GEOL.OGICAL. LAND USE, HISTORI·
CAL, POUTICAL. FOREST . WORLD AND CJTV MAPS , .and ATI.ASES £rocn
around rhe wond
Also o n the thud floor 1S the EARTHQUAKE CEr-ITER INFO RMATION SER -

VICE The lnfonnauon Sen·~ee staff h:as de\'doped an toremattona ll)• accesstblc
database on earthquake- ~urces called QUAKEUNE. avaalable as. a n MDAS
file on BISON They a)~ , pronde specta.Jfu-d reference :i!t~tSrantt 1n ea rth ·
qu2ke engmcenng
SEL offers 3 fec·ba~d t·ompu ter search :md documt.·nt dell wry sen 1ce, the
TI:CHNICALINFORMA TION SEARCH SERVI E ITISS&gt;. for local busmesses and
any othe-r rcsc..--archer;. lntereqed 1n packaged mfonnatton Pncc -.chcdulc:!lo and
other mformat1on ahout 11SS are avatlahle at the Reference.' llt.""ik or by calhng
64~·29&lt;6

\'A..'X tt:rmtnal' connt.'lted to l"nt\·crsll\ Computtng ~n tu·!lo an: avaalable on
the thtrd Ooor Abo. mlC"rocomputer m.struct1un for the unl\'er'Sit)' communtty ts
prO\ 1ded m 21.2 C:lpcn 110 'lfU ArrangcmenL"' for th1" computer tr.unang arc
made through l 'nn en.1t) Computmg Sen·•cn

~S[ai R. ~ilu~rman llnd~r~aduat~ librarg lll~ll
CAPEN ltAll, GROUND AND FlltST FUIOitS (NORTH CAMPUS)

Circulation/Reserve (1st Floor) - 645-2944
Reference (1st Floor)- 645-2945
Fax - 645-3858
E-Mail Reference -ASKUGL@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU
(on IBM, Vt\1., UNIX plalfonns)

+

(

The.• L'ndcrgraduate L&amp; brary, commonly oiled ·l'G l ·. M:"ncs as ln entry
t5 des1gned espec1a lly for undergradua1e-s It 1.!&gt; the only undergraduatt.' hhrary tn the Slll\1).
system and I of o nly 34 undergraduate llbranes 10 Nonh Amenca. l!G l. lS a
great place 10 begm )·our rcsc:arch and leam more about the l'B library system
Loc:ucd o n thl' ground :tnd first noors of Carx.~n Hall. l!GL fc::uures scn·1ces and
matcnals deMgnt."&lt;.i for thl' re!)t;"arch and study needs of the undergraduate
L1hrnnan:- at Llll· l'G l Reference.· 'lnfom1at1on J)e!)k can help wath :til aspects of
rour rt:~arch·from o;ell"C''mg an 1nterestmg to ptc to locat&amp;ng tht.' best lnfo nnat1on :thout u- and wlll..tt.':tl"h you the ~k1 l b you need to be · jnfoflll3tion htcralc ..
UGL's t'"O!Ic:t110 n of IOS.OOO hooks. 600 tournai .!&gt;urn.t·npuoru.. SO.OOO microforms. and ,·a m·t y of ..tudy areas will help you do the beSI wo rk possible for
rour course~ Otht•r resc:an:h !:&gt;Ourt.-es art.' 3\a tl ablt: o n c:omputer wo rkstatio ns in
the Rderenet: arca-mcluding full-screen im:tgL-s of antdcs, full -text news and
roumal services. collcg&lt;· and universiry profiles. and much more The Circul3110nJRe..-.ef\·e Dt.~k o n tht.' first noor IS where )'OU ca n charge and return library
mat~ri:tls :md loc-ate re:idings placed on rcsen·e by professors. Finally, when
it's time to write your paper. the Information Technology Center, IQC:lted on
the St.--rond floor 1n the Science and Engint..ooering library. offers a variety of
computers, sohware and printer...
Visit the library electronically by using your E-Mail account to ASKUGL.
ASKUGL is an electronic reference service available to anrone with an E-Mail

pomt to the larger LIB hbrary system Founded tn 19- 3. L"G l.

A 8

E

�accou nL Reference questions a n be sent to UG Llibrarians via ~lect ronic mail
from thto IBM , VAX, and UNIX systems and are a nswered w ithin twent)•-four
hours. E·mail reque515 should be sen1 10 AS!.'UGLeUBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU.

P A

e

"[l[
U
The UB Ubrane-s a r~ a m~mtx!r of the Onhne Llbr.ary Computer Cen1er &lt;OClC)
the world 's larges1 organiza tiOn ofTen ng computer based .Soe1V1ces 10 hbr.mes
a nd other users The OCLC online network links more than 17.000 Lbrane~ m
52 counmes and territories. IL'i central da~b:ISC' . th~ onhnc umon catalog, consists of O\'et 30 million au log records with atuched holdmgs mformatton (){
only l.!i- thJs file ::1 ~l"C'e that the Ubranes use m cataloging the matena.b. we
acquire, but it is also a tool used 10 locatmg materials requeSied rhrough I merit ·
bra.ry Loan . OCLC also offers onhne reference sen tee to hbr.H)' u"!terc: through
ilS Fir.tt Search D talog whkh prov1des online acress to nlore than 60 d.at..a ·
bases . mdudmg WorldCa1 hhe OCLC onhne- umon ca ta~ )

E

420 CAPEN ( _ , . CAIII'US)

University Archives · 645·2916, 645·2918
Poetry Collection · 645·2917
Fax- 645·371 4
• Special Colleaaons mdudt"' the llnivcr.,at} Art hives and the Poctr)'.l RJn.•
Book.!. Co l lt..~ion . Materials 10 th~ coiiL'CIJons do nCM circulatt&gt;. howcH·r
materiJis from the SJX"'C'ial CoiiC'C110ns e2n he used m a l:lrge, comfon.ahlc
readmg room. Photocop)•mg &amp;cf''IC't:'S arc abo ava.table
University Archives: As the offil"t.JI repository of histonC3ll) SlgiHfu:ant
umversit)' records. the L'ni\•erMt)" Archivt..-s contains m:llenals c:kx:umemmg the
HISTORY OF TI-iE UNI\'ERSin' and 1tS swdents, alumm , f:lcultr and Jdm•n&amp;~ ·
tr::nors Tile collec1aon, rompn"t--d of ovt'r - m•lllon •terns, mclude~ UIU\"(:'1'SII)'
rt.."Cord.) , pc.'rsona l and prof{S.'i"lon:al paJX"r:, of merntx:rs of the.• liOI\'c.'~ t ty ':om·
mumty, offictal universtt)' pubhcauo~ . and more.~ than 2SO.OOO phocograph'
:~nd 2.SOO recordmgs
Spt.""Clal roiiL"Ct tOm mdude m:uenab rela tmg to the.."' archttc..--o FRANK
LLOYD WRIGHT and th(' OAR\\7 1N MAR11N HOU E. Titc Archl\'t:~ ai.!&gt;O m:un t.atns a sm~l local h1story collection and prm id~ mfomlalton ahout IOc.-al
sour~ 3\'ailable for research m th~ Buffalo nea
Poetry/Rare Books CoUcctloru De\·o&lt;&lt;d 10 lOTH CENllJRY POETRY IN
ENGLISH ANO ENG LI H TRANSLATION. the Poeuy Collecuon conums 90,CX)()
\'Oiumes b)• f:'\'e r)' ma;or and many minor poelS \\'Tltmg 10 Engli~h Recordmgs
.of poets readmg from thc1r O\VO works. poet.s' nowbook~ . lener-. and manuscript!~&gt;, and a w tde \'ariety of liter.uy magazines are a lso 1 ndudc..~ 10 tlu'i collen ton Approximately 3.SOO hnle m.ag2;zm~ titJes. 1.200 current ~ubscnpitons
and a number of portralL~. sculptures. and pho10gr:~phs round out the rollec·
tion Th~ colleaion •s mtem:uionallr known for 1ts s•gnificant h0ld•ngs on
JAMES JOYCE. ROBERT GRAVES, DYI.A ' THOMAS. WYNDHAM LF\l:~S . and
\IC~WAM CARLOS WlWAMS
Tite cornerstone of Lhe Rare Books Collec110n 1.s Thomas B LockVt.ood's ,
collection of first ediuon.'i of 1he works of Engl1-l&gt;h language author:-. from 1he
16th through 19th centunes

~ther libraries on [ampus
In add1110n to th~ UB Llbr.J.nl~. thNc an· &lt;M her collcn 1on' on campu~ Smlc.·
the-st." cullectton., COmplcmenl tJw n:.-o;.eart h of f~Kuhy and or dep.ir1mcnlal 'fX"
C'i.JhZlllons. then• ma) he CC"rtaln n..~nt.,IOn'i un the1r u-.c.. Con .. nlt lh&lt;: ..tafl .Jt
t&gt;adl loc.o111on for 1nfo nnauon conc..-ernmg lht-..e hbr3nt"""o
ART HISfOIIY &amp;UOE cou.ECl10N

(8)' appotntmt!ttl only)
SOB Clemen' Hall &lt;Nonh Campu .. l

lw'; -J·~ -~..,

&amp;ltOWSIHG U&amp;llAJtY
(()pf!rt 24 bours dunngfinal extlmJJ
167 Fillmore Center. Elht:ou Comph.~).

(~onh

Carnpu .. t64 1- U·tH

CAR£Dt "-ANNINQ UHARY

2S9 Capen Hall ( North Campu'' 6-tc;-1131
CUIIIIICULUII CENTDI

17 Bald)' Hall (Nonh

Campu~)

tH'&gt;·.NSH

EDUCA1'101CAL fECHNOLOGY SEJrVICES IIEDIA I..IUIARY
24 Ca(X"n Hall (North Campus) 64S-l802
HU-N II'ELAfiONS AREA rnD • (HilAF)
11AR1AN L WHITE RESEAIICH LJeltAIIY

260 Fillmore Ccntcr Elhcon Comph.·x fNon.h

Camru~l

64.:;-_\t"H9

LEAitiiiNQ COlfER u•RARY

103 Talbcrt Hall (North Campu .. J (Hc;· l394
SOU11I LJeRARY

(Study area o nl) , opt'n 24 bou n dun11g eum~)
220 Filii more Center. Elhcon C(lmplcx f Nunh Umpu .. I(&gt;.;~. ~&gt;-t~

llni~ersity li~raries Director·s~ffice

VISUAL lt£SOURCU CEHTE:R
School of Archneaur~ and Plannmg
.332 l·byt:" Hall (South Campu'i) HN-1486 ext 31-

432-434 CAPEN HALl.

General 1nfonnation · 645·2965
Fax· 645·3844
The Ouedor·s Office suppon .. thc- admml'tra\lon lJ[ ")"lem·\\H,k- hhr.m. -.c.•r
\"icc:-~

The

OtT1~c

uf \he A:...'ooOl.i.ate

V1~e

Prc:,.ldcnt fnf \ ' nl'•er.•ty

Lihnn._~.,

,.,

/cx";Ut:d m f j j C:lpen H.11/ 'K&gt;mr: other fune110n!&gt; " "htrh opt~ r:Jit" 11111 u / lfh ·
Dm:.' t.lor" Offit·~· art" lthr.lr) Pc..·r-.unnd , Bud~~·r . Bl'\01\' Fn~·nd-. uf rill I n1\ l'r
'&gt;II) l1hrJnt'' .1nd \ c..·nd.tC,Ird -.c.·n •tc..·-. If \·ou hJ\ c..· prohlc..·:
\\ llh "fX"r.tllnJ.!
rour \ 'c-ndJW rd o r 1f , .m nc.."t.'f..IIO c..n·du \c..·nd.JC..4rd-. \\lth .m lnterdc..·pJnm('"n
IJiln\"OJ(C". plc..•.J-.c.• ~0 c..hn.·nlr to Room 4.\·t C.Jfl('O ll.lll rrn·nJ .. nlt•lllht·r-.lup ...
..rc..· :t\';UI.Ihlt.· m Roo m ..!!1 C.t1x·n IIJII

local libraries
TI1is is a shon list of other libraries in our area you are likely to se
BUFFALO AND ERIE COUNTY PUBUC UBRARJES
Downto wn l..oca t.io n s

-\ud" '' a.. u;ll 0-t·p:mmc..·nt

k~toi - -JI"i.

ll.mJa~.•Prx·d 'X·n ·lt.t.'' lm&lt;tude..·-. h~--J nng unpJirc..·dl

~-~~~ - - /hi

Info rmatio n Services
HL..,tnc..'"' ;tnd Wlx)f
Ch1ldrt·n
Dlt.Jha-.e -....~ardung

The Research libraries ~roup
Tin.· l"B l1br.mco; lx·long to tht.• Rc..·~:uc..h LlhrJ.ne-. (;r,.ur I RLGI . .1 tCXIJ"k'f'311\t·
nt."'1work of tht" n.Jhon ':-. OUJO f unt\t'f'iltu.:-. and rc-.carch tn!'!lllut 1nn .. RLG pro·
\ •des ek""C"tronic acce.-,:!'1 to a maJOr pon1on of the collrntons ol memhc.·r 10 , 111 u.
t1 on~ Many of 1he L!B L1bram.• , ha\·e raptd compu tenu&gt;d ac..·cc..· ..~ 10 3 large..·
range of l'Oik'CtiOn' through RUN , the Rc.·~a rch L1brano lnfom 13 t11)n Nct\'Ork
UB l.ibrancs 3Lso ha\'c phys1ca l acccs!'! to re-.e;an;·h ma1enab b ..tcd 1n RUN
through lnterlibrnry Loan Sc"·•ce Fo r more mfo rmat10n on horrowmg rc..-..can.h
matcnals. consult Rdcrcnc..·c..· f) l" lntcr11bra'1 Loan Depanment pt.·rsonncl

A~·-li'·.H'
S")~V'ICJ ."'I

tull 1nd1\ •dual dc.·p1-. 1
8SJVIII

F.:duc~unm

F•num
Gt·neral Rderc..·nu·
lhHon
Hours
Leamtng Ct.·nter
Utc..T.Jturt&gt;
Mn; rofonn!:&gt;

R58 - - l.!~

RSS.. ~10 .~
8S8-"'10j
8';11-8')00

Mu~IC

Patents
Rart.'" Rooks

Sc1ence &amp; Tc..--chnolog}
Telephone Directories

__
__
......._
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Branc h Locations
Amhers1 Mam Lthr:tn· (Audubon)
Clc..·arfield
Eg~wnsvllle-Snyd~r Hranc h
"~
Fa1rlidd Br::anch &lt;Amherst Slrc..·c..•t)
GR,·nha\cn Brandl (Ton:m.mda)
Bnghto n Hr.tnch fTona\"\ :tnd:a)
BUFFALO STATE. COu.EG£ (l.iufk•r Uhr.Jf)')
CANJSIUS

.,.....,._

..__ _ _ _ _ a.-...y

-...- .....
._,~

COU£CE UBRARY

DAEMEN COLU. QE UBRARY

O'YOUVILl.E COLLEGE LIBRARY .
ERIE COUNTY COLU:CE U&amp;RAIUES
Ctl\ C:em pu-.
Non.h Campu ..
"o uth Ca mru ..

,.. _ _ . . . , . _ _ . . _ .. _ _ _ _ loot_

. ....- .... -..... ,.. .... - - . ,......

HILBERT COLLEClE UBRA.RY

. . . . , _.... -...y _ _ _ _ _ _ .... ..

NIAGARA COUNfY COIIMUNifY
COU£GE UBRARY

....

NIAGARA UNJVERSJTY UBRARY

77 ....

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858-"290
8511-"111
858-8903
- llSs-- 121
858· '1 01
858·'118
858-7101
858-' 103

689-4922
688-49'i'i
839~'00

83-t- " &lt;;00

694·2111
832· 79.11

lr8.Q313
886-!9)()
839-&lt;!21.1
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286-ROJ';

�Ifs~nt There ~omemhere
r

ldentihj and lo[ate Boobs &amp;
Hndiomsnal materials

f' A 8

BISON

0 FIND THE library mate rials you want,
you need to fo llow a "ga me plan" a nd
allow yourself some ti me. At each ste p ofthe research process, you may use bmh
general and subject-related re o urces.
These a re in a variety of fo rmats such as
paper, audio-visual materials, o r compute r
databases. REFERENCE LIB RARI A S ARE

AVAlLABLE I

EACH UB LIBRARY TO HELP YO U

Buffa lo t nfo mutton Systt~m ONline is the l.ibrades' computer "i)'~&lt;'m. offenng
access to the UB Ubr.. n es catalog ( UB) , cat::&amp;log.or; of selened lllm.rn..-s ouv.ide
UB (CATS) . and :,elected mdexes to a rt1des from nugaznlc~ and ,ourruh
(INOX). BISON may be sea rc-hed from tenninal.s 10 tilt.· Ubr-an~ or h)' modem
from your home or offic-e computer If you pla n to search RISO from your
home or office compUi er. as-k for the BISON REMOTE gu1dt' from an) rC'fer.
e n C't' desk m the Ubn n es
TiiE l'B LI BRARI ES CATALOG ( UB) ,., tht: largest and rno .. t mtportant B1
SON dataha~ Usc tl to !dCnt 1fy books, audiO\ •sua I matcnal-.. nuuofonno,
mus1c M'Ore-5, tou"ma lt•tlcs. gm·emmem doc-ument\. and och&lt;-r matl~nal ... :no:ul
able tn, a nd on order for. the UB l.Jhrane-. Lkta1!t."CJ Jnstructton" are .n a•lahl~..~
o n tht:' scn."en. from pnntt:d matenalli n{"Oir the BISOf\ tenmrul~ . or from a
reference hhranan Typ? help &lt;return&gt; or c:xplaln &lt;return&gt; from almo'l. ,."'
SCI'l"Cn to k•am more about the system or ASK A REFER£NCf LIHRAftl~r'\ tu J!:l'l
help at any roinl 10 )'OUr ')C"JTCh
TO SEARCH THE Ua DATAII.UE FWOM A TDMlNAL lN TME LJaltAlllU:

the DATABASE ~[LECllO

•

Tnx.· st a rt &lt;return&gt; to

DECIDE WHICH RESO RCES TO USE. The

•

Type ub &lt; ~tum &gt; to gt..-1 mto the L'B LIBRARIC&gt; CATALOG

~ ll owing

•

Type )'Out sean.h Slatcment and tht·n pr~S\ &lt;return &gt; Se:lrt..h b)
111U (o•). AIJTlmR (a•). SUBJECf h•J, MEDICAL ' l JljECf ''m• '·
or KEY\t'ORI) Ck•) Example: t-doublr h ellx &lt;rrturn&gt;

•

Follow the d !rCCttOn'\

"Research tra tegy Flm\1 Chan " uggests

____9le path· you sho uld ta ke :

:H

c;e('

Mf'"\1

!he OOuom of tht.· ~l."Cfl 10 hro't\ '-1..' thnJUJ.:h

the rc"&gt;uhc; of rour -.carch
RESEARCH

STRA

TEG

Y

FLOW

CHART

Look at the RECORD for each nem of IOtcr~.."''- rhcn pnn1 the -,c:n:c.:n •&gt;t
makl' a note.: of th(• LOCATION CAli NUMAER. and ST.a.n ·"

To locate the ma t t.'nal~ you adenttf) m UB go to tht.' hbrary 1ndu.:att.-d m the
LOCATI ON hne. y.•here )'OU Will find the matenals org.an•zcd h) CAU Nl \1-

SELECT A TOPIC

R£AD AN OVERVIEW

IDENllFY K£Y TERMS AND CONCEPTS

'

IDENTIFY AND

IDENTIFY AND

AND AUDIOVISUAL
MATERIALS

ARTICLES

LOCA~

LOCA~BOOKS

•

IDENT1FY AND LOCATE USE OTHER SOURCES
Biographies

Gov. Documents

Manusc~pts

Statistics
Book Reviews

Associations

Mlcrolonn Sets

Dissertations

Bibliographies

BER The l.JhranC!o uSc: dtfTerent call number o;chertl(_~ o;,o he '\UTe 10 ask tf yoo
need help mtcrpretmg the call number or dt--tenmnmg 11~ lontton 10 tht.&gt; h·
brary Be sure to check the STAn.JS me.:;sage 10 the UB record 10 see 1f tht.&gt;
book l!o 10 the library If the ll('m .... not on the ... ht'l\'~ , a... k at.tht! c.rc.-ulatton
Desk I tem~ w h 1ch are cha rgc...-d Out ma) be REC.~LLFD or plact.-d ON l(QU) for
you (st"'t.' the " HOLDS .a. NO RECALLS. !oeChon of tht.\ Gu•de)
If tht• Item you need " not \i'it{-d '" UB. rC1um to 1he Oauh&lt;bot' Wlt&gt;l'trOn
-'1t.-nu b\' tVptng s tart &lt;rrturn&gt; and type CATS &lt;return&gt; to 't."t' the -,ell't'ttlln
of other caulogo, a\·a •lahle throu~h BISO' If UB and CATS dn not hg tht.·
ma ll'nal&lt;;; vou nt.·t"d , cOn'\ult 3 ref~.."rCncc lihranan for 25'i1!)13net.· "11h \'our
-..e3rchmg te'-hmqu~..· or J t.hcck of other ~urc~ Matt."nal" not OY.nt..-d h) t.lu·
UB Ubrant:" nla, tx- 3\'atlahle from otht.~r local lihran~..· ... or throu~h lntt:rhhral)
loan Cfnr more mfonnaunn . C'on ..uh lf\'TFRUBRARY lOAN ~ 10th.., GutckJ

~~~~~~.~. a~~n.~~'~"~t"~"~~~~.~~~.:.,

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\\ill nt.·nl!tl u...._· .1 0 tndl''\ 1)r ,lf...,1r;Jl1JOg ,.,.,! lndl''\l'' ;JnJ ;Jh-.tr.tn-.lt.·.td }OU 111
Jrlilil- lii.IIJt'"' ,,, .. uhw~t -\h.,tr.u._t., d•tt~..·r lnHn •ndc.·\'-'' tn lh.lillh.'\ lfiOIJIO .1
hnd dt.''I.Tif'IHm ol tlw t.tlnh'l11 .. I If tht• anlllt.· nw I 01\t.'r'll'- lihrJfll•' ... uh..... nlx·l• llt unt.lred .. t)f tndt.''\l'" ,1nd .dhtr.ut .. Ct)\)..,l I.T .\ RFFFRE,CI' UBK..-\R IA~TC)..,l"lf&lt;.TTilii"\\C) t )t~TIIRrt

\llhTI..,fii\1'\Df\.l-.., C)R

-\B"\lllACT\ FOR RI"'•F-\IH If!'{ ~ YOI'R P-\RTH I I.AR TOI'I&lt;. In t.on,ulttOJ.:
"1th ;1 l•hr.1n.10 ,-ou "til fmd thJt •mlt.' '\1..''- .1nd .• h,aracL., are J\ Jtbhll· '"a '-an
t."l\ollnmut-.
RESEARCH

STRATEGY

~ele[t aTopi[
Sek-ct mg a n mtcrt."sllng ~ workahlr~ topu.:

•
•
•

J&gt;nnt~..·d 1huo~ hJmlJt l •nt.k-:\L., .llhtr.Jt.l'
X"lt't1l·d r~..·t·t.·nt L·nmputt."fiZl'd md~,t.~, ah ... tf'3l'h o n til ...Or'\

Computem~..·d IOdl·xt.~'l :aiNrali., on CD-RO~I &lt;Cnmpa&lt;, O N· Rt.·ad

O nl\' Mt•moryl
•

the cruoa l lll"!\t '&gt;ll'p m undcrt.Jkmg
a project invok ing s1gn •fkomt libr.uy rt:scarch Your top•l· .. hould not be &lt;,o
hro:~d that you arc O\'crw he lmed w1th n::te:Jfl"h matenal or ~ n:Jrro\' that vou
are struggling to fi nd surtinent mfonn::nion. Most 1mponand). you "'ant 10
M:'k'"&lt;.1 a t o p 1c th:l t wtll hold your l nll"T\.''t duoughout the- rcse:uch and \\TIIInlo!
rroces~. Re fc renl"'C hhr.anan~ can lead you to a V:lri("l)' of :.ou ro:!&gt; to help
you ge ne rate to p ic 1dc:a., II ,., a good 1dc:a to nm.,ult " '1th the: m~Hl.u..1or as""•gning the rer.ca rch p a(X'r to m:1kc: ~..-~..~n:un th:u rour •dea., for top•c., arc rcad• lr
n:searc ha hlc and h;n c ,uffiCJL'Ot focu'
I!&gt;

Read an ~ueruiem
Afkr M.'k-l1mg :1 IOpK, the next 'tcp 10 tlw n..·-.c.·;~nh pmn•,., ,., to idt.'nllf) ;md
read m:'ltt.•rwl \\' Inch ~J\'c' :10 0\'cl"\·ic\\' of the topic Till' l lnl\•er.ll\' l•hr.tm~,
own hu m.lrc...-u ., of ...nurn·' '-' lu d1 p ro'- ide h;Kkground 1nfunn .Huln on thou':aml ~ of rc"Ca rch topic., Th'-''t.' mdud~..· ... uhJt.'l1 cneyclorx•t..h;J ... h.tndhook ..
rca rhook ... ~t;J tt.·-ol-t h~..·-.•n r~..·,·•c"'· m:tg;Jz.m~..· ('1)\t.'r ~tun~.· ... .1nd t~.·xti"'M)()k' .1'"''
:1..,k a rdercnC\" hhr:m.tn for .J..._.,,.,t;~nc:c 10 clt.-tcrmmm~ th~..· hc.·'t pl;:u.e to .,t:an
1
ftn d iO~ mform:.JIIOO f)O }'C)ll f torm

Identi~ Reg Terms and [on[epts
lk.td th'-· ovcr\'it.''-' :t rt ide t.-a rd ull )' a nd ~o:nuca ll )' w 1denu fy tht.· kc..·y te rrm. a nd
c:·onccph of you r top•c l lsc d ~t1iona ne~-both .g~..·nt.·r:tl a nd ~UhJCC1--Io dc.:ftnc
the kc..· r tern" l l ll' Uhraric:o; c::10 a .. ..,,~ 10 th1' af('a of n..·-.card1 " 1th hu ndrt.-d.o.
of " l'O('i.l l a nd "fk'c.·ta l!z ..:d d~&lt;.1aona ncs A.o.k for hel p if rou nt..~-d 11

Computt.·nzt.~d unhnc mdt-&gt;.t:~ ah ... tr3Ch '-'lmh u.,ualh 10\Uin: l

-&lt;lrt.'hlnJ.: ft..'t'

[ompnterized Databases

(

11l~ L1 hi.ln~' puh)!,h a l...t ~nt tl k•d ~eomputenz.t..·d Oataba~ for Rt:"Search-

'' lllch ,, J.\':u lablc 10 l~ ach hhra ry BISON ('OmputenZL"CJ dat:~hases Jnd CD· ROM
da taha!te."' .lrt.• quilt.' u-.er-fnendly , and lh~..~r~..· '' pnnted nlJtenal ,,, .a, lable nel(( to
ea,-h computt·r ~t.·munal 10 hdp you "tth the searchm~ prOCC-.:&gt; (Of Coun.e 1f
you haH· am qul'~t•on' l-oncemmg ~~Jn. l nng te..·hmque.., rdercnre hb'htriam
Jre a,-a ,)ahlt.- h&gt; help you dunng rc-gubr rdcrencc hours l Onhne dau~ a~
t\'PIC:llly 'L:a~dwd h\ ;.~ rdc.·rc..-nct" hhr;tn.Jn If you Jr~..· mtc...·n:,tcd 10 parm~ "\"
thL' tnx· of t.·omputt.·n7t'd "&lt;ar~..·h (u&lt;;;lJ,Iih h~..·~..·au~ I her~.· an~ no .:lppropnate
HI ...Ol\ or \.11-ROM d .naha-.c .. .1\;.tiiJhk· lor \'OUr topK or \"I)U \\.lOt In urcbte 3
CI&gt;-ROJ\ 1 ur BJ&gt;;O ' .....-:Jrch)_ con .. u h J rdt.·r~..·nct.· hhr3f1Jn
t-. l o~t JOdi..' XL'" JOd ,lh!&gt;tr.Jt..'t., (')HI\ tdl.' \ Ull \\!til .:l l..ll:t tllln (I l' JU thor Uf thl"
.Jnidl'. n;Jflll' ~)r till' .mll'll·_ tttk of th~..· Jtlum.ll , 'nlunw numhcr of th~..· JOUm.JI.
d.Ht.· ol th~..· tuum.ll ;1nd pJ~t.· numlx·r nl tht.• .trt•~ ld Ynu muo;t l"Jk~ t h t:' Jdd•·
IUJn.tl 'll'P of....dt:tl·mHnmg If tht.• l 01\ t.'r-.11\ l.il"lrJfiC'' 11\'\ n thl' tournJf 1!&gt;.:-Ut:
nmt.unmg tht.• ;JO!llt.• nm nt·t&gt;d Tn du lht .. J.:U to JO\ Bl"\01'&lt;1: lt.'fllltOJ:\. 1\'J&gt;t"
sta.n &lt;return &gt; ;and ,,-,x· UB &lt;return &gt; .11 tlw I)Jt.th.J"-t;' Sdt.·~11un .\knu Tilcn
t\'pt.• t•&lt;tla·l!llt.~ of tht• l~n•rn;JI&gt; &lt;ret urn &gt; !not the.· ,1n1~k lltklrhat nlu :tre
hK)kiO)..: lnr

1ben• an•un~ mtiJc'r e.n t'filll ll l\ to llw alx•tV pn" flu• for lu~atutp,]UUnuJil

'"

tbe

l',lll't'r.itt_r I.OJra n e&gt;s

1. 11ll'n..· .1n· "--''-CrJI ~ompu t enZL·d full· ll' '\1 md~..·&gt;.t.~, .Jh'&gt;lrJLh. 'liLh a' GPO
fGt•rt t•ra/ Peno(/ u.als 011 J)fsc J m tht.• l 'nJ~..· rgr.Jdu:ltl· l 1hr:11), w lut'h gl\ '-' ) ou

tht.· o pacit) to pnnt 1111..' Jt.,ual a rt Kk l t 3 l'omputt.•r h:m1mal

2. Til'-" BISON int..k·-.;n :1h,tr3,,, (I) pt.' index &lt; ~turn &gt; from the BISON Dataha--.c Sc.·lt.-o ton Me n u a nd then .:-elt.'C1 .1 d.1tabJ '&gt;t' from the \i,.t) h:l\ t.' thc l-:t pabil~
ny to g1 \'l' rou thl' nll''!'oag'-" •He ld h )' lihr.Jr') - If you M"l~ th i' !'&gt;13t\."ll\l..•nt .11 tlw
bo nu m of the ARTICLE RECORO :.cn •cn. type h o i &lt;.rerum&gt; to n '{'t.'l\'l' prcn:.t.·
IOc.-atirJn info rmatio n .

\

I
/

I

�/
/

..

Ifyou ascerrnfn tbat tbe Unlr~rslly Ubraries do nOI ou.•n a joun~altbat J'!'u
,et&gt;d you have IUJO optlotl.s:

1. Submit an Interlibrary Loan Request (see section on · rNTERLIBRARY
LOAN- in the Guide) or
2. If you are unable lO V~"att the one 10 three weeks it often l&lt;ilkes 10 get an

artiCle through lnterlibnT)• Loan and you are wilhng to tra\·el to another 1•brary. consult the Western New )'ork Ut~lotr Ust of Serials Iosee if the journal
issue you need is owned locally (a list of local libraries is provided in thtS
Guide).

ldenti~ and locate ~thei ~omces
TI1e Unwersity Ubr-..ries are a treasure trove of useful research materials heyond books, ;oumals, magazines, newspapers, •md audio\'isual materials Reference librarians kwe the expertise and tools to help you idenlify and locate

peninem associations, government documents, statistics. ronfcrenC'C' proceed·
ings, book reviews, dissertations, biographial matenal. manuscrapt.s. macroform sets, bibliographies. etc. , etc. JUST ASK'

B

0

R

R

0

W

IN

G

Bormmin~ libiarg IDateii~s
Wilh len libraries and millions of book and journal n.:~u~ . there's &lt;iOffit&lt;rhing for everyone at UB. When )'OU wan1 10 rakt&gt; hbraf)' marcrUJb OUb1de of

the l1br.try, follow these

step~-

1. lde~t ify the call number of the.~ needt..'-d nem from a BISON tennmal

2. Find the 1tem on the shelf
lihr.~ry 's C•rcul.:uaon Desk fl'nltersityat
&amp;tflalo S1l1DE/I.'l'S, FACULn : tmd STAI-"F may borrou· library matfflals J Eh-

3. Present your UB ID Card ar 1he

e non-UB borrowers must obutn a UOI\'Cr.ill) Ubranes Special Borroo.en.
C.trd from aulhonzed library s1afT Fo r el•glllthty requuemems. see the ·sPECIAL BORROWERS• sect10n

4. ~you Jea,·e rhe tibr.J:I)', you w1ll (Y.l'i..'&gt; through a book de!ectaon S)'Sicm An
alann will sound if libruy matenals have nOl been propert)' checked OUI at !he
C•rcula11on Desk Be sure to check out maten:~ls .a1 1hc Cirrulallon Desk \'\•hen

you plan

10

leave the hbrary

Eligible non~TB bom;wers nmsl oblam a llnfuer~ily Ubranes Special &amp;Jm;uters

Card from a&amp;lborized librOTJ' s/aff For elfglbiliiJ' tl.'t{Uiremum~. see Ibe
"SPECIAL BORROWERS" st."CiiOtl

~mmminq Peiinds

ICM!HTIFICA~

Reserv~ borrowers must prescm LO ID C3rds Non-l'B llorro"'er. o,v1th a 1 m·
\'ersity libraries Spen.al Borrowe-rs Card nuy use R~f\'C matc.."'al'\ (hul 10 the
library only)

-

B ecluse of the htgh demand for •telll.!t m Resen·e Collet"11Un.'i. kJan pcrtOd&lt;. .m.•
rclati\'ely shan All borrowmg pn\'ilcges wall be qopped for a hhr31) u.-.er 10 Jll
UB Libranes one day after :1 Reserve 1tem 1~ not('(! as O\ erdue Tile fme for a 1·
hour k&gt;an is S 0., per m1nme CS20 fll3xtmum) for 3-&lt;by and --&lt;b~· loan.., thefine tS SS per cby ($20 maximum) fine&lt;. accrue e'\:en when the." hh'"'l)' 1'1 dosc.•d
on weekends and hohdly~

~tudent lD [aids
Studenl 10 Cards are ISStled by the Office of Record\ and Regl ...ttaiJOO for a r~
of SIO. A SpeoaliD Center oper.ues on exzended hours (announced 10 the
curre-n1 Oass Schedule) at lhe- hcginnmg of each tt."rm Aft~r that t1me- ID Urd.,
arc issued at 232 Capen (Nonh Campus) :11'\d Hayes 8 CSouth Campu~). Mon·
doly through Fnday, 8.30 am tot; pm Stuck·nt~ who art."' v.Jlltn,:t for rhe1r perm.t·
nen1 TO card an olxa1n 2 temporal)' L1br.t1)' Card upon pfe"'o{"nl3tlon of
:1 ~me-da)· d'lled rt:C'Cipl from the Office of Rccordo; and Rt'~l ...tr"3ll(&gt;fl plu' l
photo 10 Th1s ord 1s vahd for 1he day of 1ssue only
Students who dtd n01 oblam a pennant:nl c.ud bc.:fore the r-nd of the Drop
2nd Add penod and are noc ho;1ed m the &lt;btab2.se may ohum a ont:-dav l.Jhr.n)
Urd upon presentat•on of the :JIXI,·e ~uonc.~ proof~m adchllon 10 a ~me ·
cby l'iSUed Semester Record Fom1 and Addre'i'i RC"&lt;''td Fonn from tht.· OffiCC' of
Records and Re~a~ratton
Summer St:hool siUdenL&lt;-. v.11houa a permanent l 1B II) «:a nJ ma) ht' 1~ut.-d a
tt:mpor.try l.Jbr:lf) Card upon pR•'-("ntauon of 3 current 'JC'hedulc c.·ard and a
photo 10.
Student ID carcb are non ·tran~rt."rable , lcndmg and or horrowmg of c-ards 1S
a '10latao n of the.- '\Jud~.·nt Rule-r; and Regulauo-ru&gt; and " pumshahle 1hrough 1he
'\1udent· W1de JudiCiaf) ~'i of a card shou ld be.- reponed 1mnl('tf1att.'ly "'' the.~
Circulation De.!itk of any LTB labrary Replan~·men1 cuds c.-an he.: oh!.um-d 31 a
cas~ of S 10 from the Office of Rerorcb :md Rcg1'ilr.U1on

facultg and ~taff lD [aids
L'B Faculty and Staff ID Cards arc aulomatlcally 1.ssued by lhe Pen.onnel De
p;mmcnl los5 o f a card should ~ reponl:d lmme&lt;h.atelt to the C•rrulauon

Desk of any UB I...Jbrary Replaet:mem card5 can be obta1nt..-d from the Pe~n·
ncl Dcp;~nmcnt (645-2646)
Faculty and Staff ID Cards are non-tr.lns(erable UB Farulry may obta10
proxy cards e 1ther 10 person or b)• ad\ a nee mail requt:St

Renewals

Art, ............. SO. AIUI 1M&amp;. UIIIWIIU

4 weeks for all borrowers
IIUSIC U8ltAitY

4 weeks for all UBstudents and Special Borrowers.
LAW AND LOCKWOOD UBRARIU

4 weeks for UBstudents (except doctoral) and Special Borrowers.
16weeks for UBfaculty, staff, and doctoral students
journals and reference rn:ucnals u~ually cannO{ l"k' taken oub1de of tht.· Uhrary Check w1th Circulation Depannwnt personnel 1f you have .any qucst10no;
\l:1hh I he exccprion of Rcsef\·c . lnterl1brary Loan. and Spc.:•&lt;.·ial Loan llt.'Ot.'i.
libr.uy marenals may be returned at the C1rcui:Uton Dt.•"k of any UR L1hr-.uy
Rcce1pts for returned mah:nab may bt: ohtamed at any ilbr:uy C1 rrulat•on
De~k upon rt:quest.

Reserue [ollections
Rt.:qum:d read1ngs usc.:d 10 conn("("tiOn ""11h cia~ a~1gnmcnl'o art: rt'st"f\'t.-d for
da~ use m speCial area:-. of :-.orne of th1.· B Ubr:mc.s Rc:,.ef\e Items an: avalltO all ~tudcnts cnrollt:d m a pan1cub r cia.:-.~ lk"C:Juse these ~mall c-ollcr·
110n~ an: 10 such heavy demand . the followmg 'Jx.•nal rult.•, for ust• an:.• stricti)

ahlc

Sludenb and most special borrowers ffia) rene9.' 1tems three umes unless 1tems
a~rt: m •erdue or have been requested by other patrons UB and Open Access
faruhy Staff may renew three limes unless Items ha,•e bet."n reques~ed br 01her
patrons
Renew:1ls C'.&amp;n be made '" person or by ma1l , but cannot be honored o ver
the phont.' Renewals can be made upon presemat1on of the ae1ual1tems or a
list of the barcode numbers (located 10 !he back of library nems) For
Lot kwood , Sc1enct' and Engmeenng. and Undergraduate Ubrane'. renewals arc
acccptcd b) elec.1ronac m~11l \'13 L'NLOCK ASKSEL or ASKl'G l

Holds and Recalls
Borrower&lt;&gt; c10 rcquc.!itl thai a HOLD IX' placed on any hhrary 1tem already
cht.-ckcd out of the l!hr31)' A HOLO msures thai the mate nal will he 3\':ulahle
to the rt:quc ...ter upon the re1um of the 1tems to the hhra1)' \l:'hcn the 11ems are
returned to the library, a not1ce t.'i St."nt through the m:iul to the HOLD requ~.
tht&gt; HOLD reque,1er then ha.s 1he opuon 10 borrow these llt.."tru A HOLD chm 1nate' wasted 11me c heck10g on !he locauon.. statu.o; of e~rcul:mng mate-rl31s and
mc;urc:s that 1he 11em will t&gt;e ava1lable /
Books may be RECAU£0 from bclrro\ver.. upon the rt."'que-..t of :mother
harrower or •f nt't"ded for 3 R~l"e CoJiea,on A Res&lt;'1"\-e reques~ '-''til h:~,·e
precedence m ·er all HOLD

t:nforced
HOW TO BORROW RESERVE MAT'ER:tALS

Rt:!ooef\C h~b. org::m 1Zt.~ by th(* mstrut..., o r·, n&lt;lme, are kt'pt at the Rt.~n·t.· De~k
of tht.• hhrary where the matcn :t l'\ h:tvc been plan-d Borro"'·en nul'! r&lt;-qut."'''
llt.'m'i hy al!lhor and title and may tx~ rt.•qt~~rcd to pn.~se m 3 Rc!&gt;t:'n·c Rcqut: ... t
!'tlip to obta in material:,
·n,c numbt:r of items that m:1y hc.• chaq..:cd o ut to :my one p:.~tron at o nt: tmw "
reMrict(_-d as 'pccified L1w , 10 !lem'i, 01h1.·r t ln1h , 3 nt-m'\

PAYMENT IN I-ERION:

Fine:-. (.":In he paid in rer-.on at
BISON Bdhng/ Borrowing Offic-e
114 Cap.:n Hall. Nonh Dmpus
64)-)9&lt;;0

LOAN PERIODS

Entt'r the l ' ndcr~r.lduatt: l.Jbr:uy on Ihe first noor
IOr IO~!dc hhr.ll) to ~0 10 lht:: ~·t·ond noor

• 2 Hour, Library Use Only
Out: at hour spcofk--d

Duc I hou r after lihr:tf)' opc.·n' (law 2 hour) after

10

Capc.:n 1-lall :lnd u~· eiC\'3-

1-AYMENT BY MAIL:

• 2 Hour/Overnight
opt.·nm~)

• 3days

Makc.- cht."Ck!. payable to
S t.:u~ Unlvt!rsity of Nnv York at Buffalo
'x~nd ched o r m·.lney order. '''llh onginal BISON not 1ct..· to

Due on d3)' :o.pt."'l'lfit:d

• 7days
Due o n day

Bl~~n Dillin~ and Bonomin~ ~ffice

~pt."Cificd

All rcscf\•c matt.·rials must be rclUrnt.--d to the Re!&gt;t:r\'t.:' Dc..-~k of tht.· libra ry from
which the y we re borrowed Fines w ill be as...cs.scd fo r items rctu rncd 10 an ~
ot her lib rary .

L' n~Ver ... ny l•br:~nt.~~
BISON B•llmg/Borrowmg Offil't.:"
SUtc Uni\'Cf'Sit)' of N1.'\\' York at Buffalo
114 Capen 1-bll, Buffalo. 1\'Y J.$16Q.J62S

�P A - A T - ant: LOCA(noo r tbe Circulation Desks at tbe Lockwood, Ulu•, Heallh Sciences and Undergraduate Ltbm-)

+

~pe[ial Borrowers

fill in tl"2ns:lction slip.

•

Ret2in bonom copy fo r your recorcb No 01her receipt will be ISSUed

+

Insert payment, top copy of lr2nsao.ion slip, and original BISO
en\·elopc and put 10 DROP SAFE.

""

""e

Persons not ~ ffiliated with UB rna)' still be: abk- to bo~ hi,..Jry m.nerub
Consult libr:lry staff at Circulation Desk.\ 1n all UB Librane.:t for more tnforma tion TileSe categone.s of Specia l Borrowers incluck

in

• Faculty and research staff memben. and proresstonal sw&lt;k·nl't of mMJtutfOru
affilia ted wtth the Western New York Ubrary Re'IOUrres Cou netl and pan.1upat ·
mg m the Ubr"21)' Acces.o; Pro,eo ClAPJ who ha\'e ohumc.·d a n Infopa..--. nwrt:"
b no fee

F~ crediting of your account, UBRAJIY FINE NOTICE OR BD.L MUST
AccdMPANY PAYMENT. PAYMENT AT DROP SITE LOCATIONS IS AN
OPTION AVAIL\BLE ONLY DURING UBRAJIY HOURS. Sec lihr:uy
schedule available 31 a ll Ubr:uy Cirt"Uia11on Desks.

• F~rulty, students, and suiT holding current val1d 10 Urd-. from an) St ' ro.')
mstttuuon , mduding Emptre State Collegt-. or from an)· rommumt y collegt&gt; m
Nev. York State panilipatmg m th~ OPE ACCESS Progr.tm Tilt're "no fe't:'

lllit(llama~ illaffilials

•

facuhy and doctoral ~udemo, frnm SyraruS&lt;- l nn·c.·r.1t\ and the.· t nl\t:-f"'tll). ,[
Thl'rt" 10, no fee

R ochL~ter

0\·erdue chargo, repla~em cost:., and a processtng charge wtll be ll'\'IC'd for
:til l o~1 or damagt."&lt;i m:ueri3b
I'IIOCESSIIIG CHAIICioES:

$25/item
REI'I.ACDIENT CHAIIGU:

In-Print-Current cost of item
Out-of-print-Average current item cost b)' unit

•
••
•

AI'USSO

MATII ISJ OO
H .l.ISI OO
LAWIS70

•
••
•

LML S50
MUS lllookJ .

HE UB LIBRARIES offer a number of

~r; , ( ~cord S.40

SEL S100

special serYices which make the research

I 'GI. S30

process a liule ea~ier. Whether you acce;,~

fines
F3ilure 10

infom1ation electronically. or visit the
Libraries to conduct you r re;,earch, you will
p.:ay fines may rcsuh m the

los~ of horrowmp: pnnlegc~ . su-.pt"m 1on

find special seJVices available to help you.

Of r egi.stra110 0 , and 3)SO SIO S the diSinhUIIOO of l r.J.O'&gt;&lt;.Tlpb

Claims rega rdi ng retum of hbrary matenals \I. ill not be honort'd Without a
hbraty-issucd re«"ipt Fines accrue at tht.• ratt:o o f S.SO per day ( $20 m.axamum)
for each dar overdul·. INCLUDING day.;; the librdl)' IS do~ . such a&lt;;; WL.'"'t"k·
e nds and holicb)·s. Papnent should bt: made cather m pe~n at or hr m.a1lto
the BISON Billing a nd Borrowing Office

Interlibrary loan

microcomputing facilities, photocopying
and electronic mail reference service.

1

Researdt nuteri.als ~·h•ch are not owned b)• the UB Ubrane~ may be borrowed
from Olher libraries through Imeriibrary Loan Servtces
A minimum o f two weeks should be allowed for receipt of materials More
llmc shou ld be allm~."ed as the semester progresses. the number of lnrerlibr:ll)"
loan requesas inc-reases dramat ically as deadline.~ for te rm papers and cia~
3.\Signments approoch To speed the dehvery proces:t , a SUNY EX"PRESS ~r ­
nce has been inllaated among the four SU'f\.'Y Centers Buffalo, Binghamton,
Albany and Sto ny Bt:&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;k If the desired matena l IS available .at any of these
un 1\'crsity centers. the request is automa11call) routed and filled prompt!)
Cenam restrictio ns apply to Tnte rlibrJI)' Loan requL"SlS . Only matenals nOt
3\'ailable at UB ITU)' be borrowed Futhermore, cenam typt.-s of mate nals which
no rmally do not c1rculate (such as rare books. manu....cnpts, fragtle matenal\,
reference books, etc.) will n01 be ava1 lable th rough lnterlibrnl)' Loan 1-lowever.
photocopies o r chapters and a n•clcs from non&lt;Jrcul:umg nutenal~ C3n htobt.ained , prov1dcd that the reque!t1 d oes not VIOlate copynght \39t'
THE UBIIAIItES INTERUBilAIIY LOAN OFFICES ARE:

G£JrtERAL uaRARIES: Avail3ble to faculty.

Tile Gcner.a l Ubranes (lockwood , SEL, and UGU now on·er elC'CU'Omc matl
refen:ntt .sn'\'~ for infornu.ttOnal quenea; and book renewals (~\s m\1.!1\
liicludt- patron 's barcode and bucode from each book) Our c..,eclronte m.ad
referenre a ddrt"~sc.·~ art:" UNLOCKO UBVM CC. Bl1FFALO EDL
ASKSEL0l'BH1 CC BL'FFALO EDt ', ASKIIGLOL'BVM CC BL'FF.UO FDL' (on
IBM . VAX and UN IX pla tfonnsl

Tgpin~ fa[ilities
TI1c L' ni\'Crstt) Uhranl:""'&gt; offcr a \"'3ru,_'fy of (aqu •pment and fauhttes to pn:p:He
te rm plpers, rescart·h rq&gt;O"-'&gt;. and other documents Along trad!tiOOJI hn~ \\t:o
offer the foll owm~ typmg f:Jnhucs
•

A.rchltecrure and Planning Ubr.l.f1• - 1. hec..:k out kc~· at the
nrrula uo n dt"Sk

•

H ealth Sde o~ Ubrary - s1gn up at the.• re~J"\·c dt."-.k

•

Law Ubrary - st~n up 111 Aud1onsual Dep:utmcnt ( )th floor)

•

t.ocP·ood Ubrary - chet..-k out key at tht:o current pc:nod1cal ..
re..c.·rvc de~k

rcg 1 ~er&lt;.-d ~udcnh,

lnd st.1fT \lo'ho are
nom1ally served by a ny of thl• Gencrnl Ubran~ (L.\tl. El. UGL APL. Math )
and the Music Library TI1e GenerJI Uhr::mes ILL office •~ loc.:ucd 1n Lock\\ood
Ubrary, second ftoor. south side l'be phone numbt.-r t!'t 645-28 12 For patron~
:,crved by the Gcnt.•r::tl Lihr:mes. a n E-M:u l :teJ"\'ICC-LIALOAN- •~ 3\':lllablt· for
~ubmitting n.--que~ts ek-ctrontcall~· At the sys1t.•m promp1 1n F.- Ma•l. typmg
LIBLOAN bnngo; tlu: loon request fom1 to tht:o M"Teen A :tt.•nt:"•• of ca ... y to folio\\
din:t:'ti on~ ma ke:.· thi 'l -.c:n.·Jcl:' ron\'t..' nicnl to U:K.'
~W

Amo ng 4lem are ryping and

UaRARY: A\'31bhh.· to Law School [acuity ;~nd studt..· n~ on/\

HEALTH SCIIENCU UBRARY: Av:ub hlc to Ht:oahh S&lt;.1enn.·:, faculty and srudcm...
o nl )•. Health can.:.• profcssJo nal .... law frm1~. bu~mc:ssc.:.~ . and md1nduJb nOI
as:,ociated With lJI\ ~houJd COnl3l1 the lnfoml3 11 0 n 01.•,.:,.c.: mina11on Scrnce 31

829·335 I

829·3339

illi[fD[Ompntin~ fa[ilities

(

Ad\ lncL-d tt.-chnology h3~ ea:t-l.-d tht" chores of typmg and the l B Libranl."S,
along WJLh llnt\'Cn.lt ) Compuung Scn.·1ct.':t. are pleased to o ffer microcomputmg
faclht!CS a t the following l oca tt on~
1

~CAMPUS

R[[ess to ~ther libraries

+

lO lA Capt..·n Hall tn SEL Mao nto:th
207 Ca.pt:n Hall 1n SEL Madntru.h &lt;classroom)
21Z Capen 1-tall 1n SEL: IBM PS 2~. Sl' N Wo rk.-.t.at1oru.

UB 'itudcms. f.teulty. a nd staff ln3)' borro"' ma tc n ab from tht.· hbrant.·-. of Olht.•r
t.--ducationalm!t1i!Ution~

an

cw Yo rk Sta te. w11h l'C"-310

prov,..,. o n~

Tht:sc m-

cludc
• All SUNY ln,t!luuon.., ~nd :1ny commun1ty t•ol ll•gl' 1n N"'" York !'liJtt.· pa nl l'lpating in the OPE ACCF..."iS p ro~r:lm-a\a ll ahll· to l! R ~tudcnb. faculty and
staff: TL'qll lfl.'~ a trB II) l-a rd
• 'X'c:stcin NC\\ York m ~UIUIIOn-. partll' 1p3tl0~ 1n lht.· I.Jbr.uy An·t:·'"' Prott."t1
ClAP) a\'ailahk· to ll B f:teuhy :md rt.:."&gt;4..'3 rc h staff a~ we ll a!'&gt; ~radu3tl' and proft.-s·
~io nal studenh '' ho h;l \'1.' nht:lint.-d an lnfo pa'~ from a l113 L1hr.i T)'
• Univt.·r&gt;ll )' of Roc:ht.~tcr and Syr.aCU!&gt;t..' llnl\'t:r-.ll)-.t\'31bhk tot 'R fat·ult)
;md U0&lt;.1or.ll ')(lldt:nt-., n..-quirt.''&gt; 3 U B /0 Card 3nd a lt.·llt'r of IOtrodU{'(JOn rrom
a UB lihr.JI)' n rn• l :tll~ 1n tlt.·partnu: nt -.upt:J"\'i'&gt;Or
JJuffalu rcsldt•lll!&gt; (U/d nomt-slt.t'lll stmJe ,;l,\ ami stuff un• t.41J;11Jit..' lo apply for
, boTTtJu'hlJ.!. pnl'ii£1-W'Sfrom tb(' Buffalo ami En''-' Cmmty Puhlic Library·. a library•
,·arrl ll'lll h&lt;• ;_,'S/IC'tl up(m ptt'Sl'llltlliou uf proof ltH.:a/ aml'or f&gt;t.'n'lam•ntaddrr.-s.s

Information Technology Cen&lt;er (ITC)

•

UCS Clemens Computing Facility
1.28 Clcmt.·ns Hall IBM I}S/ 2s , Macintosh

•

CIT Baldy Computing Center
202 .Baldy Hall IBM Jh; ' 2"

+

Music Ubrary
Batrd Hall f\b nmo~h

sounl CAMPUS

•

UCS Crosb)• Microcomputer Facility
)1: S'; Cru!&gt;oh) Hall IUM llS .Z:--. Manmn... h

+

Hcalfh Sciences Ubrary
kduC':.tt1ona l -.oftwaa• only)

'(Hs-r.6&lt;-;.z-. fHS·33ll&gt;

,. A •

a

�IDinqs
'

A

e

Wings provides electronic aettSs to info nnalio n about campo and commumty
research. classes, catalogs and more You will find almost all aspects and departments of UB represented . as well as resources that are a\'ailable across the
U.. and all OY('r the world . Electronic d.ata available through this gatev.•a)
continues to grow o n a daily basis.
Through this Campus-Wide Informa tion ystem, you can connect to
BISON, UB departmental informatio n . a nd databases and catalogs in Ausrr.alia ,
Europe, South Americ-J. . The list is endless' For more informatio n o n how to
use W1 GS contan the Academte Services 1Computing lnformauon &amp; Technology CASCID Hel pDesk at 64S-3S42 o r send E-MaH1o CONSUlT

E

Buffalo fREE-Ret
The Buffalo FREE· Net pf'O\'Ides 3Lcess to a broad range of rommunsty-focu~
on·hne information to computer users across Western ew Yo rk In par1tcu lar,
the FREE-Net pro"ides a means by .,.,.h,ch area students " "d teachers ca n becomt: acquainted wtth t:'Omputer-based information rewurces and tool.s such aos
the INTI:.RNET The Buffalo FREE- et and l'B- \l:'angs an: hnked SO 11 tS COO\'~·
mcnt to m ove from o ne to the other

Photocopyin~
Photocop1ers are I&lt;X."alc.."&lt;i th roughout the lihral) .!&gt;)''&gt;tt"m Copte"&gt; c..·o ..t S 10 each
Photocopiers also a~pt Sl bills Mactunt"'i :ne operatN:t h\' ca .. h :.nd
\'endacards
The Vendal..3rd Sy'item ft-alun.•s re-rnnxl.i.hk ca rd .... \\luch ha\r d om• tmw
charge of S 60 and can bt.• purcha.!JoCd for Sl ( tndude.!&gt; S 40 ropy t•redtt) from
encoder de,pensers located m the He:.hh 'ic1ence&lt;~. 1-1", Lockwood. Under·
graduate. Sc1ence and Engtneenng. a nd Matht:mat l~ lJbr:anes. AddtliOnal
tnst:ruC11ons for usc: of the e n~r d&amp;spenser"l are pnmed on each macfum:
Venda Cards purchaSt.&gt;d :I I UB Will opctatl' onlr at the l rs Ltbranes
NOTE: VendaC:Irds can be ,..,sued to faculty or staff mcmhe~ through an lntt·r·
depar1me ntal lnvo1ce chargmg a dcpanml'nta l account or gr"3nl These l":: rth
are t"iSued a.!&gt; requested to mc.."'t."l the tndt\ tdual.., or depanmt·nt s pan1n.flar
need For more mfonna110n. roman the UbrarY Admtnt'ltratwe Offiu: fwC).
2974. o r go to Room 43-4 10 C:tpen H::~ll

Pn..du.nJtn tht&gt;lr~m'lllll ttl
Huffulu OjfKro{ Pllhi!Catn•m

:-;:~~~~ \oT

)

CI0 7'~~

1
OSCAR A. SILVERMAN
UND£RGRADUAT£

UaRARY:
U lf&gt;t. 'll //all R"•tlmf rmd
fq}lt•or ·

SCIENCE AND
ENGINEERING
UBRARY'
Lapc•lll/tt/1 -~11/m.t

{r.(

flU(}"
SPECIAL

COUECnONS :
·UOUtpt•rJI/a/1

2
CMARL£5 B . SEARS

LAWUBRARY:
0'/Jmm 1/ttll .!ml

thnmgb -,h floor-.

3
LOCKWOOD

MEMORIAL UBRARY

4
MUSIC UBRARY:
HmrdJiall htfl•"''

1
:~=:M.~~~:=~;
llflll" lftllf

2
MATH UBRARY

3
HEALTH SCIENCES

UBRARY:

A11hoitl/all

[hanqe machines
There -are do llar b1ll change mach•ne.s located 10 the UndcrgrJdu;U&lt;." and
Lockwood Ubrario on 1 ~ 'Non.h campuo; Addn•onally . there 1o; 21 five dollar
bill dunger located m the- \·cndmg area outs•de of tM Student AC'C'OUnts Offic&lt;.·
o n the Znd Ooor o f Capen !tall , Nonh Dmpus Occaston211)'. these nu.chn-.e-s
run out of cha ng~. 11 lS always a good tdea to bnnJt cha n~ (dml&lt;:'S. mckd~
quaners ) o r rour vcndaC3rd wtth rou when you kno\\' dut rou II he photocopying Our photocop1ers al.;;o ac&lt;-cpl S1 bills Sulf at the Ctrcu l.auon De!&gt;k~ uf
L1B Ubrari~ canl\01 make change for you-so be prepared'

librar~ ~emices tor Persons DJith Disabilities
Tile l 'mvers11y ltbrancs pro,·1de ;mx ll tan. ~rv•n•,, faollllt:-. . and equ tpment for
hbnry users w&amp;th a d153h&amp;hty Uch '-t.'f' IH.' ,.., desagned to nuke Lthr:ary nuten·
als readtly accessable to all
Sen IC'C"i are a,·at l.ablc for any tndl\ tdual n:g_&amp;:Mcred v.tth Oto;abtlny St:n·~
Capen 25. Nonh Ctmpu ... (l4c;·l608. Tn' (~c;·26 16 Regtstratton v.1th OOS l5 not
requirt."d . but recommcflck.•d. for an mdl\ &amp;dual "1th a quahfit:d dto.ab,lity to
access se'I"\'K'C~ and eqUtpmcnt E2ch ltbran· mu't supply tnform:Uton roncemtng !&gt;pecifk servict:s and f:Jnht1es Contact per..annel should he nlled rn ad·
v:mce of 3 \'l'itl to the hbr.mes 1f any "ipt.XI.ll arran{ilemeots are requtred

•
••
•

•
•
•

•
•

Archlltttw'e and Plan ning Ubnory

?9-~';0S

Mathcmat.k:s Ubra.ry

829-32'13

Heahh Sclencxs Ubnory
Sharon Murph}

s29-33r

Uw U b rary
Marcta Zuhro"'
Lockwood M.emoriaJ UbraJ")'

6-&lt;~-2160

K2rt.'n \cnglaup

C&gt;l~-2815

Music Ubnory

C&gt;lS-?92\

Sclentt and Engineering Ubnory
Mtchad Kanku:w•cz

C&gt;lS-2946

Special CoUectlons
l.ihonnu: Fmnegan l Ardm c..·.. I

Rolx·r1 Eknholf f P0t.1" R.ue Book .. )

645-29 16
C&gt;lS-291-

Un&lt;krgraduaiC Ubnory

Gl('ndor.1

J oh n.~&gt;n -Coopc:r

645-l'l-&lt;:1

7itlf' .lH uf the• Uttlc uf hdrml Rt'Rukltlmu. rm~llftR Tltk' II cj tlw Amf'n(.QJt~ 111tb J)u
u~lm~ Act of 1990. tii:{iii1'S a (/rspi:Jktfl persrm mont' U'bo /xu tiJ a phrf&lt;k.al Or' mentoltmpat,..
nWtrt ub1ch mb5um/uii/J ltmll\ onP ur mon• ma)O,..Itft' atllt"llli!S. (2Ja f'f'Ct.ml ofsucb an
tmpu tmU.iltl Ur' I _il /.l n-ganli'tl a~ htlt1"R such an tntpotnrtt'Fll, u ba um uoflh M uofthout
n'tiS(HWblt' act-·omrrn•lrJII••II pt'Tjr~TPt tht- t'!Ul'nlltll/11nciKJtU of a JOb or mff'fliK' t'SSl'ntvd
rrqwn..,rwrlt$ for f'C'CMpl f{ u :&gt;l'fnet~ ur pnrtit:I/Xllkm m a J1"C'Rmnt

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>Aid for

au.......
Grant funds UB
high-tech aid to
business.
"-

Beautiful
Brat .
See 'em in new
Museum of
Neuroanatomy.

er Access A ead
~~rFast-Gro i g
alo Free- et
Seeking Federal Grant for Expansion
w.,. ;. ..w--. "'

\

or Western New Yorkers, armed with personal com·
pulers and modems, have discovered that job prospecting, planning an
evening out on the town or chatting with fellow hobbyists are all as close
as the push of a button.
Buffalo Free-Net is a cost-free, publicly accessible, community computer information system. lt has grown at a fast and furious pace since its
inception several years ago, but the best could be just around the comer
if Free-Net is successful in securing a large federal grant for expartsion.

lbousands

tiD of

• A. NEIL YERKEY

Word is expected "any
daynow"onagrantapplica·
tion submitted in tbe spring
to the Department of
Commerce's National Telecommunications &amp;
Information Administration,
according to A . Neil Yerkey,
a UB &amp;SS&lt;X:iate professor in
the School of Information
and Library Studies. The
grant initiative is 10 insure
that everyone has access to
the developing inform.ation
highway, which is becoming increasingly commercialized, explained Yerkey .
·weliketothinkofFree-

Net as our onramp to the
inform.ation superhighway,·
said Yerkey, one of FreeNet's founders. Buffalo's
Free-Net is ooe of about 45
such comrmmity-based information systems in the
country, most of which are
centered around large universities. It is tbeonly ODe in
New Y orl&lt; Slate, although
Albany is eapectincto bring
one 011lille sholtly. Hotaaed
in a large Sun miaocomputer at tbe UB Compulinc
Cenrer, tbe Buffalo Free-Net
bas bas grown eoormously
in popularity durin&amp; tbe pal

yera.
The most important fea-

ture of Free-Net is "the
wealth of local information
we're providing to organizations and agencies in the
community. We're giving
people an introduction and
access to tbesuperhighway, •
Yerkey said.
.. We have issued more
than 25,000 account numbers so far.· Yerkey says,
·and of those, probably
8,000 to 10,000 arc active
users of the system." In Jul y
alone, according to statistics
that Free-Net tracks automatically. 3,180users logged
onto the system more than
45,000 times. And, the aver·

age user stayed online for 41
minutes.
"This means thai tbere are
times of the day when it's
getting quite bard to get
through,· Yerkey said. 'The
computer is equipped with
only 16outsidepbonelines.
Added to direct connections
available on campus. and
those interfacing with FreeNet through other services
such aslntemet, as many-as
SO people at a time could be
usiJoc Pree-Net.
A pant from New York
Stale belped 1"1 tbe current
cquipmelll in place, but ev-

e:rytbiuc ebe about Free-Net

is strictly volunteer. Volun·
leers from campus and the
contmunity share the tasks
of keeping up
with the system
and constantl y
updating the

pUoce

pubtie acceso terminals in its
member agencies for broader
community access to the network. ..

If you've never traveled
the information highway
before, even the novice compuler geek will find Free·
Net a pleasant journey. After
dialing in through your computer modem, a f lf'Sl-time
userneedonlyenrerthepassword "freeport" to access the
system's main menu.

·

Keeping a community-

infonnation it
contains, as well
as searching out
new informa tion to place in
it. lllat is why
this grant would
beso\·aluableto

Free-Net.
Yerkey projects
thatpaidstaff.as
weU as upgraded
equipment, will
be needed in the
near funue for
the network to

con tinu e to
grow.
The grant
appticatioo was submitted by
a large consortium of local
institutions
including
WNED-TV , W BFO-FM,
The Buffalo News, United
Way and several school sys·
te:maintbearea. Yerkeysays
the br&lt;..s community suppan for the Pree-Ne1 bodes
well for the graDI's ~
"tf we ""' succeasful, for
inswM:e," be noted, "United

based theme throughout, the
main menu lists 16 "buildings" you can go into for

information or dialogue.
Each "buildinc" contains •
sub-menu listing all the
"rooms"availableiniL MOSI
have several types of infor·
motion sources, an area for
the user to astq.-wm and
continued on page 6

3

�- .. ---.-:1

2

FSEC proposal on advisement calls for freshmen to choose majors
llyaUVECOX
Reporter Staff

U

NDECIDED unden:lassmen, beware: your days of indecision could

be numbered.
A proposal was presented 10 the
Faculty Senate Executive Committee at its
Aug. 31 meeting to revamp academic advisement 11le plan places substantial advisement responsibilities in the hands of
faculty members and requires all incoming
freshmen to declare an "intended major."
The proposal seeks to "provide lower

division students with a curricular home, ..
~d

calls for:
I) Incoming students to elect an "intended major," with "undecided" no longer
being an option. Responsibility for academic
and curricular advisement will rest with the
department selected by ihe student.
2) To the extent possible. departments to
admit all students who apply to the major
and conform to university standards for acceptable per{onnance.
3) Possible enrollment maoagement, by
limiting the admission of students pursuing
high-demand rnajors, to be considered if it
appears retention is affected by failure to
gainoauytothemajordepartmentofchoice.
It was developed by a committee appointed to study the subject after passage of
a Feb. 8 resolution that says, in part, that
"every student be assigned a faculty advisor" and that "the provosts "lind deans are
strongly urged to implement a campus-wide
advisement system ...
Nicolas
vice provost for undergraduate education, Joseph Tufariello,
dean of the Natural Sciences and Mathematics faculty ; and Janina Kaars, director of
aca.demic advisement. presented the p\an to

Goodm"¥.

the FSEC. describing it as thoroughly researched though "preliminary in nature."
"The intent is to gel students into departments early ort, • explained TularieUo. Research conducted in developing the proposed
policy indicat&lt;s that "60 percent of new
students know what they will major in,• be
said, "and we lcnow roughly how this will
break down by department." Of the 17,000
undergraduates currently at the university,
7,500 bave not been accepted into majors,
according to Kaars.
Kaars explained that while the proposal
places substantial advisement responsibility
on faculty members, she envisions utilizing
the current staff of professional advisors as
"gatekeepers," directing students to depanmental faculty members. Currently, each
professional advisor in her department is
responsible for advising approximately 800
students, Kaa.rs added.
The plan met with a cool reception from
some FSEC members. Dennis Malone, of
the Electrical and Computer Eogineering
Department, questioned a portion of the plan
that would require mandatory counseling for
students under a certain grade point average,
tentatively pegged at 2.3. "I understand that
currently, 12 percent of students have a GPA
2.0 or lower,"' be said. Since an even larger
number must fall at 2.3 or lower, Malon\,
questioned the ability &lt;Jf faculty to meet this
obligation.
amuel Schack, of the Mathematics Department, questioned what the plan 's
call for easier access to major departments
would do_to the "degree of competence"
represented by graduates of the department.
Brian Scudder, representing the Undergraduate Student Association, urged the com-

5

mittee to move cautiously in changing the
advisement policy. "In mye&gt;perience. mosl
freshmen and sophomores do not know what
they want their major_to be," Scudder said.
"and many that choose a major change their
mind later."
Seudder said be fears that departmental
advising could be too "one-sided,· not otTer-

"The intent is to get

students into departments
early on. Sixty percent of
new students hww what
they will major in, and we
hww roughly how this
will break down by

department. ,
ing students sufficient exposure to other
areas of study available. Scudder said also
that professional advisors deal with far more
than academic advice, helping with problems ranging from parents to alcohol.
Goodman warned that the unusually large
freshman class of 1993-94, some 3,000 students, will create a strain on advisement this
spring, as they apply to majors. Earlier intervention by faculty advisors could cut the
number of students who leave UB after failing to get their ftrSt~hoice major.
In other action, President William Greiner

told the FSEC that be has instructed senior
officers, including Senior Vice President
Robert Wagner and Student Affairs Vice
President_Robert Palmer to abide precisely
by the n:cent state Supreme Coun order
banning direct rectuiting activities on campus. but not elltend it beyond the actual
requirements of the order.
Calling the university campus a place that
should be "open to ideas and behaviors that
we don't like," Greiner said the decision
places UB in the uncomfortable position of
having to explain why it would allow&lt;XlDiroversial spealcrts on Clll11jlU5. but 1101 the military.
TheSupremeCounorder,however, "can001 transceDd the Fust Amendment,. Greiner
said, so placement offices oo campus will
still SIOCk literature and other information on
military careexs and will provide information to any student on request.
He also cautioned that moie controversy
could be on the horizon as conservative
Congressman Gerald Solomon pursues enforcement of federal legislation that exists,
to cut ofT research funding for institutions
that do 001 allow military recruitment.
Solomon. a Republican from New Yor!.,
has pursued effons to insen language to cut
ofT funding in the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health appropriations bills.

No Reporter Next Week
The Reporter w1ll not publish
next week due to the Yom
K1ppur holiday The next 1ssue
wdl be published Sepl. 22

HOSPICE BUFFALO PRESENTS
The Second Annnal

.
\

''Festival of
Fine Wine &amp; Friends''
Western New York 's Premier
Wine Tasting Festival and Silent Auction
fea lUnng selected premtum wines that have been rated as - ,,
"best buys"}rom The \Vine Spectator and other noted wine cri!lcs

(

Friday, September 30, 1994
5:30 - 8:30 p.m.
UB Center For The Arts, Amherst Campus
$30 .00 donation per person.
For reservations , please call 838-44 38.
All proceeds fr-om this event will benefit Hospice Buffalo's capital project.
The new_Hosptce Mitchell Campus, scheduled to open in the spring of 1995, will meet
th e spwal needs of people wllh advanced illness and their families for years to come.
Sponsored by THE

PREMIER CENTER

�_.,

__

$1.5 million federal

3
•

to aid business
Rep. John
J . LaF81c:e

.........
.,.....

T

HE UNIVERSITY at Buffalo will
receive a SI.S million appropriation from the federal government
to lead a demoosuation project to
help area businesses develop new
products in cooperation with regional re-

COIIfenMtee

s.pt. 6

-

InC

fede..a
funcllnC fot

search universities.

The two-year project-US Greater Regional Industrial Techoology Program, or
UB GRIT-is expected to serve as a model
forsmall -business product development, and
job creation and preservation.
The money was included in the HouseS&lt;2&gt;ate conference agreement on the comfnerce, justice, state and judiciary
appropriation bills at the request of Rep.
Joho J. LaFalce.
UB GRIT, to be d~ed by George Lee,
dean of the UB School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences, will help small businesses
make incremental technical improvements
in their commercial-industrial products, particularly products with existing or prospective export markets.
UB wi ll be the lead institution ina consortium of universities from the Buffalo-Rochester-Syracuse region that will help these
&gt;~nalllGlDufacturers-with the assistance of
the Western New York Economic Development Co&lt;poration (WNYEDC)-incorporate
the latest tcchoology into their products.
To survive in intense in~mational com ~

..,_,

UB GRIT.

petition, small businesses must continuously
develop and improve their products or risk
losing DO( only export opportunities, but
domestic markets, and, ultimately, Ameri can jobs. But for most small frnns, the cost of
maintairting research-and-development operations in-bouse is prohibitive.
UB GRIT will help those fmns improve
their current products and develop new ones,
thus allowing them to stay competitive in the
domestic and global marketplaces.
"Weare absolutely delighted that UB can
catalyze and coordinate this partnership program between small businesses and universities,"said UB President William R. Greiner.
"We are eager to help create a better fit

Day ofCaring a giant effort
- - 1 7 1 Univeroily • BullaJo employ-

. patllcl~··pated Aug. 31 In Day of
de

betvreen university resources and the needs
of techoology-intensive small businesses.
The development of those businesses iscriti·
cal to our state "s overall economic health,"
Greiner said. "Whatever support and assistance we can offer through UB GRIT represents a long-tenn pub1ic investment in
ccooomicdeVelopmeot. Weare deeply grateful to Coogressman LaFalce for his vision
and effon in getting UB GRIT the resources
that will make it happen."
LaFalce praised Greiner and his col·
leagues for putting together the proposal.
" I am convinced that this project has the
potential of playing a major role in improvingtheeconamicconditionsofWestemNew
York and erthancing cooperative efforts
throughout the region, both within New York
State and beyond,· he said.
UB GRIT will complement and enhance
Gov. Mario Cuomo's regional economic
development irtitiatives, noted Judith Kossy,
president of WNYEDC.
"We are exttemely pleased with the initiative or UB and Congressman La!'alee In"
securing funding for this program,· Kossy

said. "It will strengthen the concep1 of,_
gional partnerships for economic growth.
and can result in the development of D£W ond
more competitive products thai are made in
our
and sold around the world. Theoe
products can mean signif"ICanl job c:rea1ioD
and the development of companies that will
drive the regional economy in the future."
The consortium, with the ...isaoce of
WNYEDC, will solicit proposals from small
businesses for product-developmmt projects
based on the match of university e&lt;pertise to
product technologies; market and COIIlpetition considerations; company willingness to
participate and share costs, and overall economic benefit and importance to the region.

regioo

W

NYEOC also will assisl participating

coroparties in implementing the program by coordinating ecoqomic-developmeot agencies and providing access to state
and local programs for fmancing, lrlining
and market development.
During the course of the project, 7-15 product-improvement projects will be amducted
by the oonsortium. Individual projects would
involve, but- be limited to, product-focused,
multidisciplinary teams o( faculty-led graduate students and advanced uodc:rgnduates.
Lee stressed the suoog educational com·
pooent of the project.
"Faculty, staff and students of the engineering schools participating in the consortium will interad with techoology-based
small industries in the region,· he said. "The
schools" faculty and students will gain invaluable experience by working on realworld industrial projects that involve a
multidisciplinary team approach to product
improverneot and developmenl."
h
e
In addition,~
involved
wlllbcbr:£11 _ . .of
. .t
..
...
, ._

orpnlzed
with them by the consortium, he added. -

cot1on an&lt;1 certl.ncate -

Caring activities at 18

dillerent sites.
I'd Clarl&lt;son Culinary
Center, feu deans and
a vice president, shown
here, helped prepare
food. pitching In with
chopping, peeling and

clear&gt;-up chores.

TMI UIIYUSITf &amp;T IUffAlO UD TMI 001 I&amp;YIS AUTO WOILI UCJUIISMir fUll
CO·SPOISOI TNI 1tt4· 1ttS IISniSUISHII SPlUliS SlllU

t::ssOp&lt;oonsc
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McLaughlin ·--c.lop
Group
- - - SIS

Trleu A~""aJbbk

OFFCAMPl'S

n.w-

138ZHcndAYC
.,..ill.!

rScudem
.... - l lruon.

Wednesday, OctoberS, 1994
8 p.m. Alumni Arena
(

IJOO Elmwood Ave.
1!711-5.\.ll

c...rw:....
W.W.ta.

U17 N.apra Fans
Boulc,&amp;Jd

__

,...._c.lop
tfli-78Xl

c...l lu -

._

Cam,...ee67l-1SQZ

51Z fJmwoodA'"e.
882-4004
ON CAMPUS

YEAR ROl:IND DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE

c- ........
lkbtIOJCcmato.

&lt;he""'

64H.RTS

:::=:-

221 Swdc:nt Union

64S-Z.)Sl
(MCNISAcw

SECOND HAND • COLLECfiBLE BOOKS
OLD PRINTS, ENGRA YINGS &amp; AUTOGRAPHS
BOUGHT, SOLD &amp; APPRAISED
3124 MAIN STREET (Near Highgate) • BUFFALO, NY

836 .. 7354
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.- 7 p.m .
OTHER TIMES BY APPOINTMENT

:::..~
200 L« Emnnce
MS-3131
n ua ~e~Wl

....
... __ _

(MCJVISA. Chcdt or
MoocyOnbOnly)

~

SJ7 Cape. lbll
&amp;o..60l60Z
Univenacy • Bufhkl
Butrolo,NYI42160
(716)64&gt;-3414
FAX (716) 645-2801

r;

�4

_...._

rutioa contac1 Gcmnui

o.v;....,. a1 64S.2117
ua ... SI. ........._ Ellicolt
c.m..-. 3 p.m.

Comp1u. Nonh

_.STIIY

COLLOQI••

JllaaoPa&amp; .... ..._,. "'

s....,.

Ntodeor ...........,, WootoTioolbafoniSIU
T...U. Dr. AI Sandbe&lt;Jer, Loo
Alamoo National Labontory.
201 NSM C&lt;&gt;&lt;oplea. North Oom·
~4p.m .

-STUDYWori&lt; by Media Slucly Grad•·
at·e Studeats. Tim Ointon,
Ghennifer Dennis. Jonathan
Glaza, John Harripn,
Aleundef Kon. and Robert
O"Kane. 286 Center for the
Ans. Nonh C.mpus. • p m.

SATURDAY

10

caGSSCOUNTJIT

UB lovitationaL Alaon Park.

TBA.
..SPAIIIC IIEJIITAQE

----

..................
...........
......_..
......................
.........-.-....
_..... ____
_
............

.............
-----

p.m. Coll645 -3s.&lt;O r.. reaistra·

COMPVI'EII-

•,............ ff'le+e)..OW

tion information.

fAX ........... ....a.u.a.

THURSD.AY

~

w--

Iotrodudioe lo VMS. 5-7:30
p.m. C.ll645-3s.&lt;O for registra ·

COIIPVIDI
t.trod~ to SUN. 8 ~ 10 p .m.
Call 64~ · 3S40 for n:gbtntion
information.

SUNDAY

11

.. SPAIIIC NEIIITAQE
FUTIVAI.

FRID. AY

CONFEJI£NC£ ON

SUI'IIICONIIUCm AND
.&amp;PPUCAT'IONS
Buffalo Hillon. For more mfor-

mation conlac:t Mjc hael J
Naughton at 645-2019 or David
T. Shaw at 645-3114 .

w-.-

COMI'UTER
Eiectronic ~hiland Ndworks
tor CMS. 10 a.m.-Noon Call
645-3540 for registration inforDEMONSTRAnON
223 Lockwood Library Nonh
Campus 2 p.m. FOf mOfC' infor ·
mation contact Gtmma
DeVinM} at 645 -281 7
LOCKWOOD TOUR

223 Lcxkwood Library Nonh
Campus. 3 p.m For more mfor ·
mat ion contact Gemma
DeVlnn~} at 645 -281 7
BIOLOGICAL SCIIENCU
LEC1Uft

tRNA Directrd Tran~ription
Antitumination. "&gt;r Tina
Henlcin. Dept. of BiochemiSU')'
and Molecular Biology. SUNY
at Albany Medical College. 114
Hoc:hs1&lt;Ucf. North Campus. 4 p.m.

I'MARMACJEUnCS SEMINAR
AntiepUeptic and

Neuroprotec:tiw Properties or
lb&lt; NMDA Aolagonisl.
~ta~uamkle:. Or. Gene Pal met,
-x.. beod. l'lwmocology.
Fissoos Pharmaceuticals. CS08
Cooke. North Oompus. 4 p:m.

AIIT-

SIARA MANAGEMENT

~­
lotrodudioe ll&gt; CMS. 5·7 .30
tioo infortn.~tiOD.

...._

- s - -.....

Professkmally Managed by

FDTIYAL
Hilpaak food, culture. a~ter­
tala.meat. aDd music. Father
Belle Comrnuruty Ceutor, 104
Maryland Ave Noon- 10 p.m
Co-sponsorod by PODER.

UB Palnlcn. Art Department
Gallery, Certt..- foc the Ans.
North~ 5· 7 p.m.

~­
latroduction to SUN. 5-7 p.m.

9

I'EDIA'IItiC IIIIAfiD ROUNDS

Team Approac.b to Growth
Problemsi.a

Mtuincomyeiocele. Oebn
Rotcnstein, M.D. and Judy
Henry, R. N. Kinch Auditorium.
O..il~' s HospitaL 8 a.m
IIREAKFAST SEMINAR FOR
WHY'S
EDUCATORS
U. Gov. SUD Ludi.M. Center
for Tomorrow North Campus.

-Ell

8:3()...9:30 a.m.
CONFEII£HC£ ON
~VITYAHD

AI'PUCATIOIIS

Mercury-Based Suptrcondu(tors, C. W. Om. Teus Center
for Superconductivity and Applications. Buffalo Hilton 8·45
a.m. For more information cont.CL Michie! J. Naughton at
645-2019 or David T. Shaw at
645 -3114.

BISON DEMONSTRATION
223 Lockwood Library. Nonh
Campus. II a .m. For more in·
formation coni.Jict Gemma
DeVinney at 645-2817 .

LOCKWOOD TOUR
223 Lockwood Library. North
Campus. Noon. For more information conlact Gemma
DeVinney at645-2817
MEDIA STUDY OPDI HOUSE
Meet with Media Study Fac: ~
ulty. 286 Center for the Ans.
North Campus. 3 p.m. Free

EI.EC1111CAL AND COMI'UTER
IENWIIEEJIINQ L£CTUR£

Semi-Vmorial Finite Oitrerto~ Modtltioc of Pbnar Optical Wa"q:uides, Prof.
MichaelS. Stern, Univ . of
Sheffield, UK . 110 Knol. North
Campus. 3 p.m.

Utq,anic food, cultu~. mt~
ta.inment, and musK. Father
Belle Community Center, 104
Maryland Ave . Noon -9 p.m Cosponsored by PODER

MONDAY

1~

COMPVTEII W GoMri&lt; SPSS. I :30-4:30 p.m.
Call 645-3540 for regisr:ntion
infonn.ation.
I'IIYSIOLOQY s/.INAR

Composition or 1M LatuaJ
lottrcellular Spaces of Epithe-lia. Kenneth R. Spring, D.MD.,
Ph.D .• Orief, Section on Transpen Pltysiologyubon1ory &lt;&gt;f
Kidney and Elt:CIJVlyte Metabolism NHLBl, Natioul Institutes

&lt;&gt;f Health G-26 Farbo(. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
\
COMI'UTER WCIIIIISHOP
latrodudioa to UNIX. 4-6:30
p.m. Call 645-3s.&lt;O roc registra·
l1on inform.~ lion.

COMI'UTER WOIIXSHOP
introduction to SUN. 6--8 p.m.
Cali645-3S40 for registratioo
infOf"Dlltion.
-DEMONSTRATION
223 Lockwood Library. Nonh
Campus. 7 p.m. For more infor·
marion conact Genum
DeVinney It 645-2817.

COMPUTEII-

IIItroduction b&gt; VMS. 7-9:30
p.m. C.ll645-3540 for registnt·
lion information.
DEGREER£cnAL
Kim Flores, nutist. Slcc. Con·

TUESDAY

1~

LIB AT . U - K
Ao

poblo: UB Athlotics,

Nelsoo E T.............!, UB Dinx
tor of Athletics Center for Tomorrow. North Oompus 7-30-9
am Ca11829-2608 to makr

rescrvauons.
PEDIAniCJouroal Club Q/A. C.fetonum
A. M=r Hoopital. 8:30 a.m

~­
Pioor.t.iloollooSOloCiustor.
10 a m.-Nooo C.ll645· 3s.&lt;O
for rqistration infonnatioa
·--TIOII
223 Lockwood Library. Nonh
Campus. II a.m. For men in·
formation conltCt Gemma
DeVinney at 605-2817 .

~-

223 Lockwood Ubrary. North
Campus. Nooo. For more: information rontact Gemma
DeVinney at 645-2817

~­
lalenl&gt;odia~ VMS. J·JO...&lt; 30

p.m. Coll645-3s.&lt;O r.. reaistra·
tioa information.

~­

Jatroduc:tiH to SUN. 2-4 p.m
CaJI 64S-3S40 fc. rq:isttation

irifonnation.

_...

ua-.nusCDITEII
G...... witbbt a Day'' Drht
ofBuf'fUo. Carl &amp; Bel:ty WaJter .
c:alifiotl- pnlt:ncls. Erncntus
Cmor,Scuhl.ourtgo.~

- ··nN-

HaD.Scdt~2p.m.

UB Y1. CalliAus. EIHcou c;om

pie• . Nonh Campus. 3 P-n\

BIOC-STIIY -NAil
E&lt;.,.....;o. of Muutoaliu \
Na+{K+-Al'PaR ill Yeast Rf-.
,,ea15 aa Eae.tiat Role fCX" tb ~
B ubullit ia F.azyautic A('th •
ily. Dr Robert Farley, Dept of
Physiology and Biophysics.
Un iv of Southern California a1
Loo Anaeleo. 1348 Farber
South c.m..-.• p.m.
COIIPVTEII-

Introdudioe lo

NIX. 6.30-9

p.m. Cal1645-3S40 for reg.L«;Ua·
tion information .

WEDNESDAY

14

IIAMWAC1VII!Nil AND HIQH.

_T_NAII
Tho Hip p..r..,..... won..
place: Slra!.p. ror lloo Fu·
ture, Nlap.ra Mohawk Power
C«p. Center for Tomorrow.
Nonh Oompuo. 8:1S.II a.m. For
rcgisuatioo information call
636-3626.
COIIPVIDI-

Ekclroole Mall aod Notworb

ror VMS. 10 a.m.-Noon. CaJI
645-3S40 for registration infor·
matioo .
BISON-TIOII
223 Lockwood Ubrary. North
Campus. 1 p.m. For more infor·
rnation contact Gemma
DeVinney at 605-2817.

COIIPVIDIGoMri&lt; SPSS. I :30-4:30 p.m.
Call645-3540 for registration
information .

~-

ccn Hall . North Campus. 8 p.m.

223 Lockwood Library. Nonh

LOCI(WDOD223 Lockwood Library. North
Campus. 8 p.m. For more infor·

Campus. 2 p.m. For more information cont.d Gemma
DeVinney 11 645-2817.

�5

_.,.__..,_a

......
__.,--=---··
n..~oluAal­

FRIDAY

. . . Moold for ... Stody ol

-·· - 16
- · - -··-·8RAJIDa... ~ CardMma,

Elizebdh A. Roposky, Pb.D.,

Molecular lmmUIIOIOO, RPCI .
307 Hochstetler. North Campus.
4 p.m.

UB .._ S r - Behind
Alwnni An:ne. North Campus.

7 p.m.

UB n. Nla..,._ Behind
Alwnni Arene. North Campus.

UB lavitatioa.al. Ellicott
Courts. North Campus. rnA.

PIIIIIATIIIC

Short Bowd Syodrome, Jon
Vonderboof, M.D., Crei&amp;)uon
Univ. School or Medicine, Dept.
or Pedielria. Omehe. Netnske.
Kinch Auditorium, Otildn::n'1
Hoopiu.l. 8 a.m .

7 p.m.

_,_

FACULn/IITAFF FAU.

Healtlo Scroaoin&amp;· Alwnni
Arene 8)'RIDI'1ics room. North
Campus. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. For
more lnformatioo call 64.5-2286.

~-

___ _,_

S PSS for VMS. t :3().4:30 p.m
C.U 645-3S40 for rep.tntioo

infOI'mltioo.

·~

TIIAIMM

South Campus 4-7 p.m. Cell the
Office of Contittuin&amp; Nurse
Education at 829-3291 for registration information.

...

CIIII1Pit:Aft- Ill

Poslthoo AP-I. Lynn Meneger,
R.N.. M.S., &amp;eriatric nurse practitioner, Buffalo VA Medicel
Center. South Campus. 4:3().
7:30p.m. Cell the Offie&lt; or

Continuing Nwx: Education at

829-3291 for rqistration information.

)

COMPVI'Eit-

lotroductioa to CMS. 3-S p.m.
Call 64.5-3540 f« registration
information.

CIIIMIIIT1IY COUOQUIA
S pec:troscoplc: Studies ol Moleaolar Compluos, Prof. William Kle:mperu, Harvard Univcnity. 201 NSM Complex_
North Campus. 4 p.m.

-

TIM Oatol&lt;&gt;o ODd Epltt•moi-

OIJ' of Re:latioDS. Center for

Tomorrow. North Campus. 6- 11
p.m. For registration information contact Kenneth Barber at
645-2444 .

...._,_

Coli 645-3S40 for reciWlltioo

COi6'MAIWR: ........

information.

-

t...ocka1 F-, Rdotioaal Order, ucl t.M NatarT ol Rdalioao,Hc:r!Jat l-locl!berJ,um...ily

of Texas Center for Tomorrow.
-~7-9p.m.

SATURDAY

- E N'8ftMNIS

-

8 lnvitatioul. EJ iicou
Courts. North Campus. rnA.
MAIIYIIIFAnEit
~

Ontolou and Epi5t~moi-

OCY of RNtions. Center for
Tomorrow. North Campus. 8.30
a.m.- IOpm
IIAU)WIII PIANO 8HOWIM
Atrium, Center for the Ans.
North Campus. 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Freo. Coli 645-6259.

- E N'8 80CCEII
UB w.. St. Frw05. 8dlind AJumnj
Arona. Ncnh Campus. I pm.
RIOftAU.
UB vs. Lehi1h. UB Sllldiwn
North Campus. 7 p.m

SUNDAY

Square.
Known for their mellow vibes. subpop record ing
artists Combustible Edison have recently released a
new album, "f , Swinger." Grammy Award-winning
artists Inner Circle are a rE~g gae group with style.
Their h ~ "Sweat (A La La La La La Song)" gave the
band long-overd ue recognnion, and their new song .
"Games People Play· is reaching a d iverse group of
radio listeners.
The Washing ton. D.C.-based group Velocity G!fl
blends unique guttar riffs with lead singer Sarah
Shannon's upbeat. versatile lyrics , and has been
noted as subpop 's biggest seller since Nirvana's
"Bleach."
FaiFest's headliner. Public Enemy. will complete the
show with their dramatic, socially motivated, cunuratly
aware hlp hop. Wllh Chuck D., Flavor Fav, Terminator X
and SW-1s, Public Enemy's new albt.m, "Muse Sick-NHoLr Mess Age. with the silgle "Give It Up," lives up to
the standards set by ' Apocalypsa '91" and "Fear of a
Black Planet. • Public Enemy also will test their mettle
against the UB Bulls in a game ol hoops at 1 p.m.
Sept. 10 In the Main Gym ol All.mni Arena.
Sponsored by the Student Association and
UUAB admission to FaliFest is free to UB students.
and 3
presale tickets are available to the general p;.blic for $10. If the event remains outside.
tickets also will be available at the gate.

0oo

COIII'IIlDI
- Network Resources.
10 a.m .
Noon. Call 64S-3.S40 for reg•stration infonnauon
COIIPVTEII WORK-

C....rlc:SAS. t ·3().4·30p.m
C.II64S-3540 for registration
information
~ ' 8TENNIS

- A Y 8 AT 41'WS
Ledu..re. Jaruoe Krught, Um'
of OUcago ·NatJve Amencas
and New World Nativtt)' Conquest and Convcnton an cw

1~

W-

~

~i]

a

Word

Excel
PowerPoint
...j Mail
...J

Worbation Uttn.M

OffiCEJ

...J

Access

With Microsoft Offitt

$113 $135 $143
Wmdows

Professional

Macintosh

COIIPVTEII
lntrod udioa to VMS. 4--6 30
p.m. Call 645-3540 for reg•stra·
tioo infonaation.

rnA

TM Ontology and Episl ~ mol 01.) of Relations. Center for
Tomorrow Nonh Campus 9
am -12·30 p.m
IIAU)wtll I'IANO SHOWIIIO
Atrium, Center for 1M Arts.
North Campus Noon-6 p m
Free. Coli 645-6259
OIKlAH II£CITAL

Dnid Fuller. Slet: Conccn
Hall Nonh Campus 5 p m
Tit-kclS S8. S6, SS, and S2 For
information call 645-292 1
CONCERT

J ason Vit:aux., tcuitari.st. Buffalo and Eric Counl)' Ht&lt;toncal
SoctCt) 7 p m

M O N DA Y

19

SOCIAL WORK COIITIIIUIIIQ
EDUCAnONOiagnosis and Treatment of
Children and Adults witb Act·
in&amp;O ut Behavior , Dr. Susan
Vi nocour and Dr. Virginia
Wohllman. Center for Tomcwrow . North Campus. For registration infOOnation call 6456140.
COMI'IIlDI w - Uiinc SPSS on the IBM Maiofram e. I :30-4:30 p.m. Ca ll 645 3540 for registration information.
EDUCA,._ U:CTUIIE
Tbt- Sutrraci.Jt j.n the Shri ne.
Barbar1 Finkektein, professor.
dept. of educationaJ policy.
plann ing. and administration,
Univ. of Maryland, College
Pork. 280 Pork. North Campus.
4p.m.

COMI'IIlDI

....

Microsoft Combo Packs

En81.md.- 436 Oomens North
Campus. 3:30 p.m.

MAIIVIIIFAnEII
COHFEREJICE

Ei3

PDNATIIIC COWEJIDICE
ActUu.lar Pmussis VKdnetiAD Upcbte aod lbeir Potential
UK u ln.fant l auauniutioos.
Michael Pichic:htto, M 0 , Divi·
sion of Genera] PedLAtrics and
Infectious Disease, Strong MemoriaJ Hospnal. Rochester
C..Jetorium A, Mercy Hospual
8·30a.m

UB VL St. Boo.aveature..
Ellicott Complex North Cam pus.. 3 p.m

Coons. North Campus

After a semester's delay, ~ ·s b ack.
FaiiFest returns to Baird Point on Saturday, Sepl
10 with aline up thai includes rap artists Publoc
Enemy, Velocity Girl. Inner Circle, Combustible
Edison and Hypnotic Clambake.
The annual fall music-fest on the shores of Lake
LaSalle will be held from
1:30 p .m. to midnight,
weather permitting. In c ase
of inclement weather , the
concert will be held in
Alumni Arena.
Back by popular demand,
Hypnotic Clambake brings
to UB their zany style of
music, which has been comPublic ~J takes pared to a "bar mitzvah on
the etace Saturday. acid ." Headed by ac cord•on
player Maury Rosenberg .
they last performed in Buffalo on July 21 in Lafayelle

TUESDAY

17 20

WDMDf'S TENNIS
UB l n \'ilation.al. Elhoon

Muslc&gt;fest .t Bltlnl Point Sept. 10

~-

..trod- te XI IRS ood
OpoaWiodo,... W iodowia&amp; for
Su.a M icrolyReaes W Of"bta..
liotu. 5-7 p.m. Coii645-3S40
for rqistntion information.

w-.-

GNU Emacs/liN IX. 5-7 p.m.

~It

WORKSHOP

Introduction to C MS. 7-9 p m
C..ll64S·3S40 (m

~giSlriUoo

mfonnauon

WED N E S DA Y

21

Episcopal . en ·ice
Holy Eucharis1 Ri le II

"CoME

AND

SEE"

John 1:46

SENIOII AWMIII WNCHEON
How Long is You r Warrant)?

Mrchanical Re pla&lt;'emt nU for
Bod) Parts, Dr Roben E
Baier. UB Professor of
Biomatenals Center fot Tomorrow North Campus Noon Contact Judnh Schwc:ndler for more
mformauon at 829-260
ROSW£U. P'ARK STAFF
SEMI MAlt

Molecular Gt-neti() or Breast

Euen • 11 11day

a nd 0\arian Canttr , Dr JOt'
Gr1y, Dept of Labora1ory
MediciM , Div1s1on of Molecular C)1omclry, Um,·c:rsny of
Ca lifonua at San FrancuoC"o
Hilleboc Audtlon um. RPCJ
12:30 p m

at 2:00p. m .
17Je Co mmons

Suite 100

COMPtiTER' WORK5HOP

Usi ng SPSS on the IBM Mai n·
fra me. I :lo-4 :30 p.m Call 64 5·
3S40 for regiSiration information.
COMI'IIlDI WOIII(Introduct ~n to UNIX. 3-5:30
p.m . Call 645·3540 for tegistra·
1ioo information .
BIOCHEMICAL
I'NAJIIIACOLOQY SEMIIIAit
Transeripttooal Regulation
Associated with Musd t Cell
G ro•1b and Oitrere.ntiation.
T .-C. LC&lt;. Ph.D .• UB Dept. of
Biochemistry. 307 Hochstec tn .
North Campus. 4 p.m.

WEDIIUOAY8 AT 4 f'WS
Poetry Reading, John Taggan .
Shipptnsburg Univ . 11 2 Center
for tho Ans. North Campus 4 p.m

Continued on page 7

"Come Worship with us"
Episcop;~l

at

Gmpu&gt; ~linistry
the L'ni,·ersity of Buffalo
TI1e Common'
Suite 215
688-~0'&gt;6

Director Chaplain

l l1e Re,·. B.A. Tasr

�-

6
FREE-HET

. ..---.-·

continued fr6m page 1
receive answen from a Free-Net expert in
the field and discussion groups where ust:IS
convene l ive via the network.
Your flrSI stop in Free-Net should be the
Administnlion Building. You need only
enter the number I and a new Administntion
menu appears that shows you which room to •
go to for setting up your own account, for
asking questions about the software or your
hardware, or for volunteering to become
more involved in the operation of Free-Net.
Helpful hints along the bottom of the
screen show how to get back to the main
menuafteryou'redone. From there, you can
head over to the Arts and Cultural Activities
Center for information on what's happening
around town, or to the Business, Industry
and Employment Center for the latest job
listings from the NYS Job Service, or to the
Government Center to check out census data
oo Erie County, or; to Legal Center to download a ropy of recent decisions of the New
York State Court of A ppeals (if you're having trouble sleeping, for instance.)

lfyou ha vesomefreetime,runover tothe
Hobby,and Recreation Center and join in on
a conversation wilh other area ama.teur radio
buffs, photographers or tJeklcies. Each main
menu item is numbered, LS are aU the
submenus, and one need only enter that
..,bet to be instantly transponed there.
'"The Internet is 8 very powerful resource. •
Yerkey said, "but if you are not 8 regular
user, it is vety difficult to learn bow to use
iL • That's why some of the more valuable
features or discussion groups of the Internet
have also been linked directly into the FreeNet's menu selections. You need only enter
their menu n~ber and Free-Net will make
the Internet connection for you.
"Under Teleport,· says Yerkey "you can be
connected dit&lt;dly with the Internet of Finland. But you'll find &lt;&gt;nc&gt;eyou get ~thai all
the menus and instructions are in Finnish.• c.

FooiiMIII
The Bulls opened their 1994 season at James Mad1son
where they were defeated by the Dukes. 35-Q.
After a scoreless first quarter, James Mad1son opened
the scoring on 20-yard TD pass from Mike Cawley to
Macey Brooks and took a 10-{) half-time lead when John
Coursey added a 37 -yard field goal.
The Dukes capitalized on two UB mistakes in the second half. JMU DT Lamont Gooding recovered Anthony
Swan's fumble at the Bulls' 131ate in the third quarter.
Three plays later , Cawley tossed a four-yard scoring stnke
to TE Ed Perry to give JMU a 28-0 lead early in the fourth
quarter. Late in the game. Ou1ncy Waller intercepted a
pass from Bulls backup q uarterback Mark Taylor andreturned it 35 yards for JMU's last touchdown.
Freshman running back Tyler McDonnell led the Bulls
with 26 yards rushing on just six carries. Swan had 23
yards on 14 attempts wh1le OB Cliff Scott rushed 13 times
for 16 yards. Scott was also 12 of 24 through the a1r for 77
yards WR Keith Warren led the Bulls with 37 yards on
three receptions . TE Chris Behan and WR Derek W1cks
also collected three catches.
Defensively, sophomore LB Craig Guest led the Bulls wrth
15 tackles , seven solo. Pete Conley turned in a solid effort 10
tackles including eight solo. DB Everett Anthony garnered
seven tackles with two passes broken up.

Men's Soccer
Sotlr Tanevski scored the game winner with 1 56 remaining to lead the Bulls soccer team past Central ConnectiCut
State, 2-1. in the season-opener. Central ConnectiCUt was
14-3-1 last season and won the East Coast Conference
UB got the go-ahead score lifter Central Connecticut's
Chad Hendricks tied the match at one when he beat Bulls'
goalkeeper Jay Palmer with a shot w ith 6:22 left 1n the f1nal
half. The Bulls. after a scoreless first half. netted the first
goal thanks to Antony Wright's shot in front of the net e1ght
minutes 1nto the second haH lo give UB a 1-{) lead UB was
outshot by the Blue Devils (0-1 , 0- 1) 13-9 Palmer collected
eight saves in earning the victory

-c.-Counby
Junior Judith Novak shattered the course record 1n leading the UB women's CfOSS country team to victory 1n the

season opener at Akron Falls Park The Royals scored 19
points to Colgate's 42 and Robert Morns' 148 111 the threeteam meet. Novak, who sat out last season due to an InJUry.
COfl'4Jieted the 6K course ., 18 31 7 The record IS 33 seconds
faster than the mark set las! year by us·s Bndgel Niland
Buffalo's Stacey Strothman f1mshed second 1n 19·06 2
while Colgate's Betsy Cunmngham was th1rd 1n 19 32
UB's Amy Gnnnell and N1lam Shukla rounded out the top
five f1n1shers w1th marks of 19 45 and 19 46 respectively
On the men's Side. Colgate scored 26 pomts to hold off
the Bulls w1th 32 Roben Moms was third w1th 66 UB's
Chns Keenan won the 6K race f1n1shmg 1n 26 33 wh1le
Colgate's Enc Garson was second 1n 26 38 Charley
Moyn1han of UB f1n1shed th1rd 1n 26 42
Both squads are back 1n act100 Saturday when they host
the UB lnvrtational at Akron Falls Park begmnmg at 1 t am

Volleyball
The Royals opened then 1994 season With three home
contests falling to Cmcmnau. Duquesne, and St
Bonaventure over the weekend In then five-game match
w1th C1nc,nnat1, sophomore Candle Hnst led the Royals
w1th 19 k1lls and mne d1gs Jumor Laur1e Santelli added
mne k1lls and 11 d1gs.
Agamst Duquesne. coach Bob Maxwell's team fell 1n
four games 15-11, 15-12. 14-16, 15-12. H~rst aga1n was
the spark plug for the Royals . tally1ng 20 kills along With 13
d1gs while sophomore Candi S1ms also added 20 kills.
The Royals dropped a heartbreakmg five-game decisiOn
to St Bonaventure Sunday at Alumn1 Arena 15- t 1. 6-15,
10-t5. 15-t t. 15-12 UB was led by Santelli'S 17 killS and
14 d1gs wh1le Hnst collected 14 kills, 14 d1gs and five serVICe aces Kathy Bnnkworth regiStered seven blocks for
the Royals S1ms and Sheryl Felegy each had 20 ass1sts

w -·•Soccer

Melan1e H1er1 tallied a pa1r of goals for the Royals 1n the1r
season opening 4-3 loss at St. Bonaventure H1ert added
three goals 1n the Royals' lops1ded 10-2 w1n Sunday at
Robel1 Moms to even the1r record at 1-1 Ron Case's
squad also got a pan of goals from sophomore Lor1 Penllo
and JUniOr Joanna Tower Penllo also earned two ass1sts 1n
the match UB outshot the Colomals 32-13.
·Sports Information Off1ce

\

A SOLO
PIANO CONCERT

'
How can you help
your students succeed
at no cost to you?

THE SUMMER SHOW

The

Co-presented by

an~wer

BUFFALO STATE COLLEGE
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

Rockwell Hall Auditorium
Thurs &amp; Fr~ Sept 15 &amp; 16 • 7:30pm
All Seats ResetVed, $18 and $16 BSC Community and
Numni, C hildren and Seniors at Rockwell Hall Box
Office {1300 Elmwood Ave). Charge By Phone

716-878-3005 (TDD # 716-878-3031).

IS . .. ~~

!fllkin'' Cop_ies

Y~ N"" Full Sero&lt;e V
Copy Certter

Makin ' Copia 1s ~ad~ to asstst tht'
nr-rds of both the SIUde:nL and faculty .
Lt-t

u~

W&lt;" II

Look for George's latest

album, Summer, at your
fa vorite music store.

~
r...A...

......_-,_

put your das.,
mak&lt;" it t"3.!"}' for

nott"~

\'OUt

on fil~ and
-;tudents to

obtam th&lt;"m

lnqUitt" :ti&gt;Oul our FaC'Ullv Disc-ounts
:wa.Jiablt'" on ou r full r::uiee of ropy

Cmwenienrly Located
At the UB Commons

We offer p at c ustomer
s ervice lnelucli.nt:
~f"P

PlC'k·up s,..n..,C't' /or

TPOchtTS Not~!&gt;
Ecu~ :'\C'("t~:-

on Campu....

Cont.."fUt'fll Hour!'

~t\'1C'f'S

FACULTY: For leavlnt your note• on file, you will be tlven a
FREE $25 VOUCHER for oar full .-ante of copy aervlcea.
Pl ease join u s in suppor t of
City Mission/ Cornerstone Manor
by b ringing a d ona tion of can n ed
food to the co n cert.

call or visit us soon .at the Commons!
520 Lee Enlrance. Suite I 05

.:

'

..

F &lt;~-" 636-8468

�_.,,___.,.. __

7

CAUNDAR

-

continued from page 5

~---

To&lt;loJobl A..,..u oiSomotootatbo Jaocboa. Rodney
Oettow, Technical Application
Specialisl, Mallinckrodt Medi cal, Inc:, St. Louis. MI. lOS
!'orb&lt;. Soulh Campus. 6 p.m.

-.nil-

lntrodll&lt;lioll to VMS. 6-8:30
p.m. Call ~S·3S40 to reaister.

-

~--CJJalcol A..,..u ol Ocmo.caa

ud Poptldo llupaa, SW\Iey
Goldsmith. M.D.• Dept. o(
Nocleor Medicine, Memorial
Sloon-Ke&lt;lcrin&amp; C&amp;nctt lnsti·
tute. New Yark City. JOS
Parker. Soulh Campus. 6:30 p.m.

isl, Enviroouncntal Health omd
Safely, UB. GOB Coote. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m.

_..._

CIII'IWICATE-111

U1JCft1. to attcod orientation and
complete enrollmeut fonn . Call
l'&lt;noonel ScMa:s. 645-2646
for information.

~-

Colt-oft oad Aciaa. Bcrtho M.
llndley, R.N., coordinator o(
..,......., aervioco, Gna: Manor
Nlrlin&amp; Home. Soulh Campus.

4:30-7:30 p.m. Call Cnnlinuin&amp;
NUI"'iie Education at 129-3291
for registration information.
latrocl- to UNIX. 6-&amp;:30
p.m. Call 64S...3540 10 register.
-AIIIETIIEATIIE
G1PI)'. Pfeifer Theatre. I p.m.
TICkets SIS; $12 for...UO..
and audents with 1.0.; SIO UBi
0aemen stiff and SCudc:nl5 with
LD, omd fa- childrea 12 or
under. Call 839-8.540 for more
information and to order ticb:cs.

THURSDAY

EXHI.ITS
..AIIm...

em..

Jo•s

22

........n ltOUHDTAaU
Prall Lam bat aad l.be Qual·
~y Advuttqt.JulieM .

Graffeo, quality advantage coordinator, Pntt and Lambert.
Inc. FtMy "• R&lt;:stauran~ 3SOO
Sheridan Drive. 8-9:30 a.m.

WEDMUD.Ua AT 4 I'WS
Convenatioll with J obn
Tau~•38 Clemens. North
Campus. 2:30 p.m.
COMPVIEJIGtn&lt;ric: SAS. I ::10-4:30 p.m.
Call 645-3540 for registntioo

mformation.
PIWIMACEUnea &amp;EIIJMAJI
C..eral Labonlor}" Softly

Pnctkts and Baz.ardous
Wast~ fanaccmen~

Gene
Monaccll, environmental chem -

PWUC .aYIC2 NnATIVES
The Office of Public Sc:rvioe
omd Urbon Affairs is J"lblisbin&amp;
a compendium of public service
initiatives (including vohmteer
commtmity sc:rvice and uncom·
pcmatod technical assistance or
coosultin&amp; semceo) by UB
focully ond aaff durin&amp; the
1993-94 ocademk year. If you

hive not 5llbm.iued lhi5 information and would like to be
included in the compendium.
contact Mai T. Lunoa at 64S2097 by Scpl16, 1994.

ATTEJmOfiiiAa AND TAo
A benefits orieoution for eligible GAs and T As who wish
lO enroll in Student Health Employoe Health Plan is set for
Sept.. 12 ll tbe Studenl Union.
Room 20 I , North Campus at
9:30a.m., 12:30 p.m., md 3
p.m. To avoid 1 gap ln your
health insurance coverage. it is

Asoislaai/Auociatt ProC.....-M1n11gemeot Science omd SysPoiting IF-4071 . As5i5-lani/Auocialt/Full Prol....r
(lhreo pooiliolu availablt)Mana&amp;emen~ Pootin&amp; IF-4072
AaiSiaDI/AuociattfFull Prof.....--OienUstry. Pooling IF4070. Assirulnt Prol.....-Olemistry, Pootin&amp; IF-4064 .
Auociale/Full Pr-ofessor in
Stratqy-Monogernent Science
omd Syaems, l'oslin&amp; IF-4069
A5:5istant Proft5SOr In Slratqy-MJ.nagement Science and
Syaems, Pooling IF-4068 Mfiistani/Auocialt/Fall Profossor-Ocpartmern of Organiz.alion and Human Rcsoun:cs,
School of Management. P~ing
IF-4077. Assistaai/Anociatt/
Fu.ll Profrswr-Oepanmcnt of
Organization and Human Resources. School of Manage~
mmt., Postina•F-4076. ~•
taat Proressor-Oepartmenl of
Finance and Managenal £co.
nomics. School of ~hnage tetn$,

Poolio&amp; IF-4071.

Doca Maaaa&lt;r/SUtlitldaa-

NeuroloC)', Poot.in&amp; IR-94062.
R........ Support SpodalitlOcx:vpotiooallbenapy, Pootin&amp;
IR-114064. s.cr.tary 0-0ffJCO
o( the Controlle&lt;, Pootin&amp; IR9406S. R.aearc.. Tecllama I
or II· Medicine, Poot.i111 IR94067. -..~ T&lt;duoldaa
rt or DJ-Medicine, Poolio&amp; IR94066.

--

~

"Cootemponry Otinese T111ditionai-S1yle Painting,"' features
wort of 32 facuhy from two
Beijing universilies: Capital
NonnaJ U.UYCtSity and Beijina
An omd Dcsi&amp;n School. Show
rum Sept. I(){)ct. 16 in um..say
All Golkry.
fa-lhc Arts.
Ftt infonnoOOn, coli64S$12.

FACULTY

NOTICES

men~

Flldlities Equ-r-M«...;u.
cal (SL--5) (lal&lt;nlal Promolloo Opportnlly)-Dcsicn omd
Construction, Pootin&amp; IP--&lt;0110
laformalioa Toc:~noJoc Specialitol (SL-J~putinJ and
Wonnalion Toc:bnolozy, Poolin&amp; MP-4077. Coauauic:ation
Sy...... Eacia&lt;a- (SL-4)Cornputin1 omd Wormation
Toc:bnolozy, Pootin&amp; IP-4078
Ad...UUSU.tor (SL-3)-Pediat ·
rico, Postinc tP-4067. Procluctioe MIUIOJI&lt;r (SL-3)-&lt;:mtc:&lt;
for the Aru, l'oslinJ IP-4072
COMPa'IIII VI: CUNIFIED
CIVIL SEJniiCE
Ktyboard Spocialiot (~Linguislics, Une f34809 . Calculatiou Clerk I (S&lt;rll6)Oinical Dentistry. Line
127384. Ktyboard Sp«ialiJI
(SC--06}-Uruversity Facilities,
Human Raources, Lme t26906
Ktyboanl Sp«ialiot (~Sociology, Lin&lt; 121938. Kt) ·
board Sp«ialit;t (SG-06)-Ad ·
nussions. Line 126319
Ktyboard Spocialit;t (SG-06)AdmiSSions, Lme •267M
~YE

CLUSIFIED CIVIL aEJIVICE

Motor Vdtic:lt Operator (SG07)--Univcrsity Facihties. Line
040737
LAaOit CLASSIFIED CIVIL
llllllYICa

Cleaoa- (SG-OS)-Un iversity
Facilities, l....i.ne M316.Sl Uborer (SG..o6)-Univrrsuy Facilities. Lint .. 34673

Get Psyched
~ ... ,

--•-aowweBISON

I

-=

(the Uoi"'.&lt;f11it.y at Buffalo'1 Ubnri&lt;:s oo-UnecaJalos)
Psyclwfo, the CCllllpUI&lt;ri... eqllivolau ol
~AJiorroca.J... typeiNDXat BISON"a
Daabue Seles:tlon
lll&lt;"ffH)Nf&lt;
Menu and lbca type
PSYC or PSYO doCJ
peodiDJ on wbetber
JOU want 1991+ CO¥·
enge or 1967-1990
OCIYetal" rapectively.
10

\\;)5

HIGH

l'qcbJfoi1Jdu.aoVf:ll,300inltm•lion•1joumals

ia the rtddf of fll)'dlolocy a poydlialry a pnr
videa ciWioa5 8Dd ~ for uticles 011 1 wide
ranee ol subject.,_ illdudiag llDOII&amp; Olbots: oomlllllllicatioG, ettuc.lion, ~. liapistics, litentun:, marlrdiag, orpnimimollheory, penolllld
miN,........, ~' .G social work. Of
COIIIIle, all upocu of peydlology aDd psychimy givea exteosive OO¥aap:.
By usin&amp;k.eywordfeaturesop&lt;eificd in.~ the
BISON CIHUI«tiD~t: PSYC tJNI PSYO Sarclru,
Psycllf/o uscn can 6DC-{uae !heir searchi'CIIIIhs. For
eumple, -.:Ia can be limltecl10 a specific yar,
jownal title, or laJ&gt;&amp;ua&amp;e. Sean:bco can also be limited
10 a number of publication types socii ae: conf........e
proc:eedings, sovemmeot reporu, litaalure teviews,
aDd tnnslatioua. One can even restric:l -.dJ results
10 specific U'ealmml types ouch as bdlovior lbenpy,
group aDd family thenpy or dnlc thenpy.
And, of &lt;XJU1Se, the facf that PsychVo io DOW a
BISON dalabase means thatyoucan-.dl itnotonly_
at BISON taminals, but for tt.c.e with Vlllid Uoi..,.-sity-et Buffalo IDs, Psyclll{o is available via BISON
REMOTE from yourbomeorofficeDIOOI bouts ofthe
day or night!
Foro copy of "Making the BISON~ •
on4for a guUk to logging 011 tD BISON REMOTE.
'COfti&lt;JCf Geouna Delli_,, ~ Libror}, IWSUn &lt;WLGEJtiiiAeUJJVJI&gt;.
-Gemma 0..1'/mey 11/Jd Loss PlllqUa'lo GiazW,
l..ocla«1od Lltx"'Y

3 DAYS ONLY
.~ppomtmmts

nrffptrd for Fndnr c!' SnturdO)·

F RI., SEPT. 16
2 - 9

SAT., SEPT. 17
IO.:Z
CEJ\:TE R FOR THE ARTS. A\IHERST . :" .Y.

SAVE

up to

40%

(

on

BALDWIN
GRAND PIANOS
AS LOW AS $5,995

BAL DWI N DI RECT FACTORY F INANC ING
Special Ra&lt;cs &amp; Terms For This Sale Only

10-7
SALE PI.AJ'\0 In thi s
Special once-in-a-life time
e\'ent will be on display at
The Center for the Arts in the
Atrium on the First Floor.
Take the Coventr,• Entrance
ofT Millersport Hwy.
Foil ow the piano signs.

~

ALL SlZES .. .4'7", 5'2", 5'6" , 6'3", 7'
and 9' Concert G rands. Also CD
Player Grands, Spin ets, Consoles,
Digital Pi anos &amp; Stu d io Pianos. Big
Savings on used pianos (other brands).
Also Avai lable Tanglewood Music
Ca mp Pi anos.

SUN., SEPT 18

z

lc::-.:1
,..
...a:z

c

:I
Cl

z

:I

111\lf'l!~

~&gt;,..,
........

.....

Q

c
Q
a:

...

ii

~ cz

a:
~.,o""
"""'' ...
ta\\.\.EJ'
N

Roger's Pianos
O RC HARD PA RK, N.Y.

/A.

�_.,..__.., _a

8

•

s

~

human brain,
m t:he U.S., opens

officially at
The publk ls mv1ttd to the dt'd.Jcatlon ct'ranony, which w1lJ ~ hdd &amp;om 4-6 p.m.

111 Room 360 in the Cary-Farber-Shmrun (CF

Build111g on UB's South

c.mpus.

The UB Musturn of Nruroanaromy contains no unsavory lookmg masst:S of gray

and w!Ut&lt; rnatt&lt;r slosh111g in 1ars of cloudy. odorif&lt;ro~s fomuldehyde. Harold Brody.
prof&lt;SSOr of an•tomy and cell biology •t UB for mor&lt; than 30 years and the
museum's crator, wanted

1t

to reflect chc dcgancc of 1CS subJect.

"The brain IS so fundamentally be•utiful," s•1d Brody. • 1961
gndu•« of the UBmed,c.U school. "I wanrrd rh&lt; dtsp!.ys also to be •rtnctiv._
I knew that if they didn ·t look •ppeahng. it would rum people off."
Some 70 exquiSitely dissected specimens r&lt;S&lt;mbling dehcacd y
wrought sculptures lung suspended in crystalline liquid 111 111dividual
Pluig!.s boxes. spotlighcs dramatizing therrclunctenst~c folds and contours.
Handmade pins topped in blue, orang&lt;. grttn, Ltvend.r, red, and loght blue
identify uch specimen's fe•tures.
Lining the walls arc color photographs of the brain, along with a

series ofX-rays, computerized-tomography (CT) scans. rnagnetic-resonance-U"D&gt;g111g (MRI)
scans, and positron-&lt;rmssion-tomogr•phy (PET) scans.
The musnun has bten a spark m Brody's mmd rver suta he saw a sumltar in~talba on
in Copenhagen, Denmark. whil&lt; scudymg ther&lt; on • Fulbnght fello ~·shtp m 1963.

Medtcal scudenu m Europe mdmonally learned
rhct.r aru.tomy &amp;om such ~nr ~xhtbtts becaust
of the scarcity of o.d.avers for d1sst"ctJOn, Brody
S2id. He hdpt:d to 6tablish a succr:ssful donor
program •t Th&lt; Umversiry• of Copenhagen, and
brought back

''The l1ra111 is SQ

fl 11 ~tim IIC/1 tal{v
l1eautjful. I wanted
the displt~vs also

~ 1dea for a nruroanatomy museum.

Thtrty y&lt;ars Ltrer. thanks to 30-yeac reunton

tl1

gifts from hiS Class of 1961. the medtc.tl school's
Oass ofl962 md pnvau indnoidwls. h1s &amp;dr:a has
~en transfonntd IntO m uteru&amp;ve collt:ctton of
spe::cunens deuihng tht structurt of the human
brain from mmy v&amp;ewpomts.
O ne dtsplay re,·eals the mcdsa.l surface of chr
nght hrmasphere; another IS dtl&amp;catdy d&amp;sst:cted co
re:veal each layer of the bratn. Other dtspb.ys show

the crantal nerve supply. th&lt; bram's blood suppl)'.
md the path of nerve ampulses m the bram rhat
ulnmatel y product VISIOn.
These and St\'t:ral dozen addHtonal sptCimms
fill I0 glass d,.pt.)' cases. Each spe&lt;~m&lt;n IS
accompmaC'd by a wntten dt:scnptaon keytd to the
color-coded pins. Ua,·mg no dnails to chance,
Brody. along wtth h1s asstsunt, Thomas Wletchyan anatomy ma ster's·degree cand1date-and
Katenna Smath, a semor htsrology tt:chnactm,
made the pms thc:msdves from dental w&amp;n dipped
in acryhc pigments and epoxy. The spe::cimr:ns
RESEMBLING DEL ICATE
SCULPT URES, THE 70
SPECIM E N S IN THE MUSEUM

ARE SUSPENDED IN CRYSTAL-

LINE LIQUID IN INDIVIDUAL
PLEXIGLAS BOXES .

were diss&lt;cted by Brody, Wietchy and-sevual medic.tl scudencs.
M&lt;dic.tl, dental and nursing scudents, occup•tional-therapy and physic.tl-th&lt;rapy
students, doctoral candidates in psychology and speech communicaaon, and hospital
residents in neurology and neurosurgery have bttn using the exhibits as study aids for more:
than • yur. But Brody wanted this ex!Ubit to be used by &lt;vayone--l&lt;indergutna. and
neurosurgery srudmts alike--as a way to Itam abouc the grandest and most mysterious human
org= H&lt; is pan:icularly int&lt;rest&lt;d in bringing in srudcna &amp;om area public schools. Groups ofbigh
school studcncs and srudma on campus for rh&lt; summer, alr.ady haV&lt; tour«! rh&lt; museum.

be.attracttw:.

I knc\\' tl:,7t t(
.f. in/

',','k

(
)/;' 'f+
HAROLD

BRODY

NEUROANATOMY MUSEUM lr.l 360
CFS BU I-LD ING INCLUDES TEN
DISPLAY CASES WITH SPECI MENS

INDIVIDUALLY SPOTLIGHTED. CO LOR

Brody wlll add specime:ns and additional marc.ri~s as rime and money permit. In
the: meantime, he: hop6 to establish re:gular hours when the mweum wlll be: ope:.n to the

PHOTOS OF THE BRAIN , AS W ELL AS

public.

LINE T HE WALLS .

0

X·RA YS. CT, MRI A. NO PET SCANS

�_.,

.... ___,.

PEC I AL REPORTER IN EIT

Imperatives ofChange:
The Mid-·'90s National Environment far Research Universities
and UBs Place Within It
Colleagues:
Rather than

of

pie_,t an

eclclnla at thJ. ,.,.....
!Meting

our YOtinC

to

... fT)he university today .. .faces its new role [in society] with ... little but
plaiitudes to mask the naRedness of the change. Instead ofplatitudes and
nostalgic glances backwards to what it once was, the university needs a rigarous
look at tlu reality of the world it occupies today.

faculty on September 13, I propoae

Initiate a dialogue on
cunent national Iss.-

and o u r - t o
them. Pleaaa

read

the ~

to

. . publlahecl

here and plan

IN

ClARK KERR'S TIME, universities' "new role" included responding to the growing Cold War emphasis on American R&amp;D supremacy and the arrival
on campus of the first waves of Baby Boomers. Today both trends
are winding down. In the mid-1990s, universities-especially large
public doctoral institutions like UB-must respond to a variety-of competing demands from students, sponsors, neighbors, and political and social leaders.
Thanqj~ to mcusiY~:

attend the mMt·
lng In the Unlver·
alty Gallery at the Center

for the Arts next T.-.
day

at 2:00 p.m.

WILLIAM R . IIREINER

national and

state in\'esunents during a thirty-year period of

growth. higher education toda)' is a key plaver
in shaping American sociery and a primar\' developer of national r

urces--humao . infor-

mational. and technological. American higher education
accounts for a significant shan of the nationaJ econom) .
with about a g% share of gross domestic product (Figurr
1). And nov.', li~ so many major American institutions
and industries , '"~ an pr6Sed to meet a ""ide- r.tnge of
needs more effecth•ely.
Th~ now-familiar fact5 constitute a message not so
very different from Kerr's message lhrtt decades ago: d~
velop productP.~ responses LO cum:nt national impe,..._
lives, or lose soci&lt;ty's interest and suppon. UB is alrcad) m
th&lt; proc= of creating such responses, and "ith good results.. In our pioneering approach to our service mission, in
our innovat:i\'e multidisciplinary research. and t$pedall)• in
our re:ne\tt'ed attention to undergraduate teaching in th earts and sciences. \'o'C! are making great strides. We need to
k&lt;ep up
of energy.
Still. we can and must do more in addressing our in·
stitutional priorities. Together, we as faculty must under·
take these tasks in a way that is, at every tum , sensitive to
the \"ariegated "'big picture" of our national and global
environmenL And we must be ready to prove that 'n'C'
earn C'\'ery iOla of our supporL

this'"'"''

During the last three decades, state and federal resources
for research ha\'C': enabled research-intensive universities
to build extraordin ary strength. Just within the past fif.
FOOD

FOR

teen )'OJ'S or so. for example. fundlng for unl\'erslty re-search through such federal agencies as NSF. the lkpanmem of Health and Human Senices. and the lkpan·
mcnt of Energy has roughlr tripled.
For UB, state imoesunents in research mfrastructure.
t
especially through UNYs Graduate Rt.-search lnitiativ&lt;.
have also been crucial-both for faculty and departments
that have direct1)· recei\'ed this support. and for o thC'rs
that ha~ grown as the mstitution has gTO'ftTI 0\'eT the past
rwo decad~. State and federal infusions of resources, tar·
gcted largely lo research ,
have represented over
50% of public high«
education's rt"\'C'nues.
PICI'URE OF A MATURE ENTERPRISE:
This much said, gO\"em men t sponsorship for
research (and for higher
education in gt"nt:ral) has
reached a plateau and 'ftill
likel) remain there. Thert~
lO r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - may be less suppon for
what some call
Mcuriosiry-driven" reseych.

'

..

,,,,,.,

~EQI

'ilaap,_ i

Gras Old"'*' (1959-1913)

~ ···+--/~......................-~~
=----

\Vhile Scima in 1M N~

110M! /nln'est professes the
Oimon Administration's
commitmem to basic re-search. the documenlalso
quotes U.S. Senator BaJ..
bara A. Mikulski: 1'hose
do ing this research must
recognize there's anational purpose: for their
work..·

'

·t-~~-------------------------

J ''t/---•-•+--------------------------------

-e.-·---

v. .

THOUGHT

__
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Some Pertinent Questions for UB

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�PEC I AL REPOR TE R I N ERT
Senator Mikulski would have scant reason for this admonition if there "'"ere not a national climate of skepticism
about the \-a1ue of fundamental research. \ \'e in researc.himensiYe unh-ersities know and belit\'e tl1at fundamental
research is the foundation for technological anq economic
de\'elopment, and we ha\'e many excellent examples here
at UB. Our research on neurochemical processes related
to Parkinson's disea§(:; our stud)' of our nation's many cultures; our work on applications of superconducting materials-aU of lhese clearly ser\'e a national interest Bm,
accuf'3tely or not, many observers oulSide the academy
percei\'e the uni\'ersity-ba.sed research and scholarly enterprise to be self-indulgent and overreaching. The saga of
t11e n~'-defun c t superconducting supercollider is one recent example of the effects of such perceptions.
So how. in this context, can UB gain a competiti"e
edge in research and scholarship? first and foremost, we
must bring greater visibility to our faculty's ongoing ~'Ork
in prima.J)' areas of national concern such as health care,
tochnol&lt;&gt;g&gt;• transfer,-economic de\'elopment. emironmen·
tal management. and social bcttcnnenL TI1is task requires
administrati\'e effort, which I (on behalf of our senior officers) pledge to continue and re-emphasize; it ¥.ill also de-mand t11at faculty serve as spokespeople for our research
and scholar!)' en terprise. not onlr in the academy and disciplines but also in public forums and in Lhe media.

*''¥"·'**

Derea Jllid illfill Sllta II Pb.O.s, J.O.s lid M.O.s
(1988-1991)
~.-----------------------------------------~

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Year
We ~n also do more to facilitate the multidisc.iplin~

work that It takes to address complex concerns and brea.L:.
new ground. Part of that endeavor, again. will require all
~f.~ ~o rethink basic administrative procedures; ongoing
tmuauves to decentralize many such functio ns can help us
do thaL In addition. all of us must actively seek out new
ways to learn from each other and get beyond the departmenral and decanal boundaries that are less and less
meaningful in defining fields of knowledge.

Since research and postbaccalaureate education are inuinsically linked, th e past half&lt;entury of invesunents in uni\"ersity research h as also created a doctoral engine that has
produced large number.; ofhighl)' trained and specialized
scho lars, ph~cians. and'attomeys (Figu"' 2). Now, however, Ph .D.s face an academic market in wh ich even a
record of refereed p ublications and good teaching experience does not guaran tee a junior facuhy position.

WORD ON THE STREET:

Recent
Comrrients on
Research
Universities

ln some fields, one posting rna)' attraCt hundreds of
qualified applicanlS. Tile facul&lt;y tum&lt;»"e&lt; that has been
predicted in conn&lt;etion with the !O&lt;alled "graying of the
professoriate" has not yet materialized in fuU; when it d~.
there may ~·ell be a surplus of candidates waiting in the
"ings. Similarly, the marketplace for J.D.s seems saturated ,
and the world in which M.D.s and other health professionals practice is undergoing extraordinary change.
According to 1991 data from the National Academy of
Sciences, at the time of degTee coo ferral , more than onethird of all doctoral m:ipients in all fields had neither definite postdOCtoral appoinunents nor definite emp10)menL
How~r. among th~ who planned to seek emplorment
rather than pursue postdoctoral ~'Ork. three in five intended careers in educational institutions {Ftgum 3 and 4).
Th= data suggest that a substantial number of)'&lt;&gt;Ung
scholars who hope for academic careers ha\'e not yet found
tl1eir fir.&gt;t jobs b)· the time they receive their credentials.
Such constraints on opportunity can discourage some of our
finest young scholars from pursuing promising academic careers. In some c::ases. they seek careers in industn•. an ~na
for which their training may not have fully prepared them.
Gh't':.n this situation, are we doing the best we can b)·
Lhe advanced students we mentor, whose work is so often
integral to our work? \\rtl at is happening to the ones who
don't get jobs or postdocs, and how can we do beuer by
them? If we are to continue to tum out new Ph.D.s at the
currenl rate, how can we l.f'3..in them for a broader range of
possible emplo)ment? Can we use UB's unique suengtru
to set our Ph.O.s apan from those trained elsewhere. so
that we both ser\'e enrolled students better and attraCt
more prospective stu~ents?
Again, multidisciplinaJ)' approaches rna)' be an •mport.ant pan of the answer. Multidisciplinary doctoral training
not only helps prepart' students to participate in
cutting-edge research , but also makes them mo~ \iable candidates for emplopnem in academic departments which.
"'ith limited capacities to h ire, might be especially interestL'Cl
in flexible )'Oung scholars and teachers whose apJX&gt;int.ments
can be shared "'ith other areas. And it mak.es them more \'iable candidates for jobs in industry, where the ability to work
across fields and sectors is increaslngiy \et.lued.
Some of UB's professional schools arc taking leadership roles regarding broad-based training marked by curricular inno\~ation and responsiveness to national contexL
For example, both the law school and the medicaJ school
ha\l·e den.·lopt.--d multidisciplinal) . increasingly pragmatic
~un 1t.. ula to help prepare their grddualt&gt;S to meet a growmg demand for skilled generalists.
Some schools are also setting !ugh stand.anh for pr·ogr.uns that combine research and l.f'3..ining opportunities
\'o;th outreach. Examples include Managt'mcnt\ new E&gt;..ecutive M.BA program; the Graduate: School of
Education ' s public school partnerships: and the Strategic
ParU1.crship for Industrial Resurgence in SEAS. \Vhat's
more. a nf:\\•joint initiati\'e. the Forum for lntegr.ued Pn:r
fessional Education , Research, and Service, prO\ides unprecedemcd opJX&gt;rtunities for our professional schools to
de\'C lop such projects together. And the Cl!mer for Ad\dnced Mo lecular Biology and Immunology connects faculty and students across a wide ldnge of biomedical
?isciplines, enabling US to prO\ide trul)' interdisciplinary,
mtegrated doctoral training and research in molecular biology and immunology.
~n order to attract advanced students of the highest
quahty, UB must con~nue working to make graduates of 1
our Ph.D. and professional programs national leaders with
unique credentials. As "''e consider new strategies for resear~h and teaching, meeting the needs of this next generauon should and must be an item that is high on our
agenda.
~Education,

Teaching,

end Student Dev~
During the past year, a facul&lt;y ad1'sory group carefull)' consadered the appropriate structure of our t11ree ans and sci-

---[UniversiJ.ies). --lcho:nge] as the public's expectaJjqns change, as new sfudents enter; and
as lmouJledge alters and expands___ And be~ofits i~ngfy central role in aTUJlyz·
tng and fostenng change, the university has a

more important role than ever as a mcorder, olr

server;Sand
aiJic ofsodety arid ofits directiun.s.
_
U i n ' _ D_ _ _

But

program struc-tu rt·

teaching is the rin,{UO 1wnt
ate srudcnts in an disci pli11t"
111 fact, teach superbh -\1 tl1
professional standards ~ ull r
dccpl}· engaged in li.md.atm
even more to r~mph . a ,l/t
w1thout de-emphasilm ~ \!1t'

NC'\o\' approaches to

un&lt;

the disciplines and the- pn'!
know that an undergrad u.u
pare a srude:nt for a cart"t'l 1
psvcholog) or an. histon t n
professional training m tilt~
aLes in such fields ";11 go m
only tangentially relatt.--d to
als.in th~ fields-and «"'i{ll
baccalaureate training.
We must therefore t'll~
curricula for undergradu:-tt'
true generdli5t training for
scrap the discipline-based 11
1.o deliver the ideal of a t.rul
the professions, we are con
nonn of at least some post~
necessary condition for efft
sional practice. Simp!)' pul
and reconstruct our unde11
\\'hethe.r \\'e arC" teachi
introducing writers to calct
\oenity is an unmatched en1
pe.rspecti\&lt;eS into a com pre
tion. This is one of the key
'f'laces like UB from the m•
feges. paid workshops, edu
dent can also learn some b

--.[Universities] have ballooned into ·
sophisticated megabusiness machines,
staffed by hundreds of thousands of
men and women who call themselves
professors and [pay] themselves very
well for what they do. ·

.......,....,._,......,
(SIMON I&lt; SCHUSTER, 1992)

SlJNY 2fXJO: A VISION FOil THE NEW wntJRY (1991)

ences faculties and theu n·L
ate College. \\'ith tht&gt; cou1d
dergraduate arts and 'iCwno
hands, the thret" f-aculu t... .tr
ensure that their program ...
sive. Their efforts so fa r .U't'

__ _

�_ , .... _..,_2
SPECIAL REPORTER

l 1'.111. 1111111: C'AJli£ctive leadership is a great part of the aduiemu heri~y s ;;;;;;
agw1a demands collegial ef!(!Tt.
ences faculties and thci1 relationship to lh ~ Undergradu·
ate CoJiege. With the coordinating ~nsibility for undergraduate ans and sciences education now in the deans'
hands, the three facultit~ are working closel}· together to
enNre that their progr.uns are complementary and cohesh~. Their efforts so far are promising.
But program structure is only half the bat~e . Superb
teaching is the si, qua 11011 of senice to o ur undergraduate students in all disciplmo. By and large, UB faculty do.
in fact, LeaCh superbly. At the same time, disciplinary and
professional standards .;ull requirt" a uni\'e.rsiry faculry to be
deeply engaged in ft.md,unrntal research . We must do
t."\'Cn more to ~rnpha,i Jt· great and innovati"e teaching
without de-emphasizing ~rt\"':ll and innovati"e scholarship.
Neo.o.· approaches to undergraduate education in both
th e disciplines and the prnh.."Mions are required . We all
know tha t an undergr.ulu.lh' major cannot adequa tely prepare a student for a career m the disciplines. Majoring in
psychology or an. histOf\ 111 economics may pro,ide preprofessional training in tllne fields, but most undergraduates in such fields "'ill gu on to careers and lives that are
on ly tangential I)' related to the acti,itics of true professionals in th~ fields-and t"'J)l·cially professionals with postbaccalaureate training .
\\'e must therefore either reconceive the function of
cunicula for undergr.tdttate m&lt;tiors in the disciplines as
true generalist training for life after the baccalaureate, or
scrap the discipline-based major and find another ~hide
to deli\'er the ideal of a tru~ liberal education. Similarl)', in
the professions, we are coming closer and closer to the
nonn of at least some post-baccalaure-ate ~cation as a
necessary condition for efft"Clive paniciparion in professiona1 practice. Simply put. in all fields \o\'C IJlUSl reconceive
and reconstrucl our undergraduate degree programs.
Whether ~ are teaching Shakespeare to scientists or
introducing writers to calculus, the research~ntensh..: university is an unmaLChed environment for combining varied
perspectives into a comprehensive undergraduate education . Th is is one of the key capabilities that distinguishes
places like US from the many other venues-business colleges, paid workshops, educational television-where a student can also learn some basic skills (and often at less cost

~ ballooned into
usiness machines,
of thousands of
.o call themselves
themselves very

..

·-

and in less time) . We must continue to intcgr.lt.e our
teaching dforu in ways that satisfY both the highest aca·
demic standards and the needs of contemporat) undergraduates.
The natur} of our institution also gives us the opponunity to use advanced tools in undergraduate educatien, providing students with interacti\'C'! on-line lessons or \ideo
projection or broadca.st study groups. \\re ha""e moved in
this direction in the classroom, as weU as in certain administr.ilth-e processes like course regi.so-.u.ion. The technologies
that make such teaching and senice possible have alreach transformed the way srudents perceive the world and cun
out dailr tasks; using tJu :m w best adva.mage-r.uhcr than
rel)ing on persistent but medievaJ lecture and seminar formats--is one compelling way to encourage students to
come to UB and stay at UB.
SUNY is now developing new iniuati,•es to mlprm"t"
the system's educational tcchnolog) infrastructure; when
funding for these initiatives becomes a\'a.ilable. we must
appl)' it wisely and well to dC\-elop inno,-ations m teaching
technologies that befit a research institution. Our national
peers are making great strides in this area . In order to
compete:, we must do so as well.
We in contemporary higher eduOttion-and espe-ciall)' in public higher education-are increasing!} reliant
on students' contributions to our supporL For all institutions, public and private:, tuition is a major source of economic suppon for the: enterprise. Students and their
families and other sponsors are truly our dient'i. Thq are
major stakeholders in our enterprise and must be recognized as such. M01U)' magazine has recently endorsed UB
as one: of 1994's 4Jest buys'" in undergraduate education:
if we continue to offer academic integrity, inno"ar.ive
teach ing, convenient services, and a high quality of campus life:, we will gamer an even more cruciaJ endorsement-that of our students.

We are not yet full y contfortable with th e notion that put&gt;lic service is an endeavor integnlto U S 's mission , not just
a function supplementary to research and teaching. just as
research and teaching art interde:pende:m. both interr~

[American] higher~ [can] ... am-

tinue doom ihe research path to the detriment
of [undergmduates,] who most support the
enJire SjSiem. .•, (!Tfaa the reality that the .system can 1W Iunger afford to.. .rel.egaJ£ t£aching
to the status ofan unux.mted
orphan..._
Collop__,_,..,...
_____
REPORTBYnfE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES SELECT
00MMITI1!E ON CHilDREN. IDUTH. AND F.AMIUES
Ouir. R.epramwM Patricia Sduo&lt;dcr (0.-Colondo).
102"' ~ Scplerobcr 199! •

I~

ERT

latr closely with sen.;ce.
Insofar as UB has bttn examining and rc:concei\ing its
se:rvice mission for sa..:r.tl years ntM', we hal--e in fact anticipated trc:_nd.s in the nationaJ em-i ronmenL TI1e Ointon
Administration 's argument for scit-ncc: ..in the national interest" is, not surprising~) , a service-oriented approach to research. A \ision of teaching as senice is reflected in the
academy"s eurrent emphasis on ~ing both tra&lt;blional
and non-traditional students through multimedia and computer-&lt;~moen teaching technologies. The eonoept of students as "primary clients"' also originates in the notion of
senice tlu'Ough teaching. All of this comes in response to
the imperame-panly othical and partly marl&lt;et-dm=-&lt;&gt;f
seeking to satisfy societ) as much as ~'e seek to satisfY our§IC'!h&gt;es and our academic pttrs.
B has Laken an cspeciall' inno\'ativf" approach to ou r
public s:enice mi sion through tllt&gt; establishment of a Vice
Presidenq for Public Senicc: and Urban Affa1rs. That office is not )'et cwo years old, but iu incumbent and her
staff. aided and supported b) the senior officers, deans,
and a gTeat manv faculty and sLaff. ha'-.: made: great strides
in reimigorar.ing the Mland-grant'" tradition at UB-not hi.s.toricallv Ont' of the land-grant institutions, but increasingh
a leader in reo-imagining their defimtive missio n
Under the Public Senice and L1rban Affairs umbre lla
fall such initiati\'es as the Go\·emance Project. whtch is c-rt."ating resources to help Erie Coun[} 's locaJ gm"C:mments
analyze their 0\'erlaps and eliminate duphOtuon of the1r
functions. This project is directed b\• facult) in architecture. urban planning. law, and t11r social SCiences.. It ·~ a
great c:xamplr of interdisciplina" and professtonaJ COO J)c:ration that both dr.t\o\ on and reinforces the Leaching
and research expertise of the
participating facull)·.
A number of other programs d&lt;eply e ngaged in re·
g.onal sc:r.ict" have the ir
homes in the d ecanal
units-for mstan ce, the National Center for Geographic
5%
Information and Analysi s
and the Canada-U.S Trnd&lt;

*''!"·' **

Pills II ._1111111

-·.-

Center. ""·hich (OC\D. .u1 arrA\

of research and tr.lining progrAms on demograplu . g&lt;·ognpluc. and econom•c
ISSUes throughout our cro's-bo,, ier xr.-g1on . TI1e~· and
oth er curren1 L' B ~n1n· 1m·
uauves d1renh meet tht" social and economtc IH't'd-"' or
our n:g10n a.... a whole
L'rban neecb, 111 panKular, h il\'{' bt.""rl1 and COIIUIIUt'
to lx: a t_rB pnorir, t\ursmg .
Soda.J \·Vorl. and othen ~u-e
in"o lved m 1mpro\1ng munmg for urban senicf' pronders. The law school opera t~ a
low-income housing clinic for
neighbors who might not
othe~ise be able to get legal
assistance. A.nd a great mam
indi,idual UB faculty members volunt.et:r time and rC"sources for local
Orga_Jliz3tions that SC:f''C
people in BuffaJo' s urban
We: are going t.o continue to talk about and stress
senice initiatives, whether
they represent service to our
students' to our neighbon '
or to future beneficiaries of
our n5earch and expenise.

___
...

--.

_.,
., .............,.

Pf10'1UN SC1Dia (1995) 12

PostBtnl StiJs ~Ph.D. _ .

core.

Although the perception of an academic welfare state [that supports esoteric research at taxpayers' expense] is
unfortunate and ... [historically] insensitive, universities now have to
make changes in response to this turn
in public thinking.

_...,...,

EHEfii·IM&amp;

Only universities that can prove they
are grappling with [sod.al and urban
problem.s], with sclwlarship and
cummunity outreach that get
dernonst:ro.ble resulis, wiD. have a
CTf!dible case f(!T a large share of
tJJ.xPayer resvun:es.

..._...__

rille~ A - I I I Q o o M t i o e , - -

(THE (IWEICH. NC} NEWS 6rOIISEI!I~ SEYI"DOIEJll995)

�- . ----.-·

PECIAL REPORTER I ' ERT
From economic development to health care, such
issues demand attention
that researctH.nttnsi\re uni·
"'ef'Sities can pro\'ide. What
is more, the)•demand att.en·
lion that we OWl!' lh~ citittns
of our state and nation,
who ha'"' high ""J"'&lt;U'
tions--and quite reasonably
so-of institutions like UB
that they have helped to
build.
While I am confident
that the 8 community
has done: lxuer than many
of our pttrs in upholding
our universi ty's obl igations
to our publics, we. as an in·
stitution, led by facult y.
need to become much
more serious and much
more structured about the
"'~d)'S in. which we produce
for pcopl~ outside our
relatively small commu·
nity. This wiU be a significant change for both faculty and administrators, and
we must all ""·ork together to rPSpond.

lhe Development of US's People
Learning to meet the: nation 's changing expectations "'ill
require us to try new approaches-and we academics,
among the members of all professions, should be more
apt to .experimcm and learn than ot.hers. But we will need
inccnti\'es and support. We must support i~dhidual fac·
ulty members' new approaches to their diJ4plim..-s, prt&gt;fessions, and life's work.; we: must make: experimc:ntation
worth our collecti\'e while. US' s facult)' and senior officers
are alread)' talking about the W3-)'S in which these issues affect tenure and promotion criteria and processes: it is
time to bring more focus to these discussions. We are
about to appoint a V\ce Pro\.'OSt for Faculty Dc\-c:lopment
whose wk it "'ill be to pi"O\id~ support for the C\'Oiution
of faculty careers. We: .,.,;Uieam from this effon and extend what we Jearn into likr efforts for our professionaJ
staff.
·
One important part of a facult)•and staff support system must be an emphasis on developing and cdebrating
dh-ersicy. This past )'ear Universiry Senices dC\'eloped se•.-.
eral successful programs for classified and professional
staff on understanding and managing di\'ersity. And over
the past five )'ears, Uni\-ersit')' Se"ices has been exceptionally good at affoT4ing opponunities for members of
underrepresented minorities to join our professional and
cl.asslfied sen -ice staffs.
On the academic side:. we ha\-e had exceptional leadership from the: pfO\'OSt, deans. chairs and senior facuhy.
0\•c:r the past two yea.rs we have appointed more than
twenty outs~anding faculty from underrepresented
groups. The quality of our faculty-bolh in absolute

terms and in terms ofbeu.er representation of gender,
race. and elhnicit)'-has been gn:a~y advanced by lhese
appointments. We are especially grateful !hat our efforu
ha'"' been supported by State Uni-.-ersity's central administration through SUNYs undernpre:Jented facuJty initia·
tive.
In particular, 0\-er the last decade ~-e have maCe
great suides in affording opponunities for ~'Omen to play
a full role in th~ dC\-elopment of an academic enterprise.
That is especially true ,.;th regard to the numbers of
\o\'Omen retthing advanced degrtts in the disciplines and
professions. We also haw- brought numerous women inlo
tenure-track positions in the faculty. These gains are not
)~I fully visible in terms of \o\'Omen in the: se-nior ranks and
in senior academic and administrati\re positions, but that
change: "'ill happen quicklr O\'er the nc:xt decade. TI1e
newly constituted T;uk Force on Wom~n at UB \o\ill help
us focus our efforts here. and "''111 work to improve the
campus climate for "-'Omen in general
Despite our gains in all matters regarding div~rsity.
we: cannot become bl~ about our successes or inst"nsitive to areas of omission. The quality of our students' uni\'~r5ity preparation depends on our forging ahead , for
the demographic profile of our student population hfU
changed and ischangingdrastically. lf"" fail to teach
ouT studems and suppon them in a fashion that helps
them become leaders and scholars and professionals; if
we fail to reflect the di"enity they see aU around them
and the importanc~ of that diversil)• in their Ololo'n lh-es; if
.,..-e can offer them f~· role models from thei.r own cultures and communities to help them dC\-elop indilidual
and collecti"e presence "'ithin the academy-if we do not
worl \"CI)' hard on resol\ing the continuing disparities of
race and ethnicit) and religion and gender that plague
the academy. we "'ill h:t\'e failed in our responsibilin· to
our society. f.speciaJiy at a time when our nation needs
e\'C'I)' person, C\"t'r)' talent it can muster and train. offer·
ing that u-.Uning to all peopl~ is the most ~mial sef\icr
that universities GUl and must do.

In this mes.sagr-, I ha\''e r.ai~ ~am· quotion~as indl:'r'd
our societ)•asks many questions of us in higher education
toda)-and, some "'ill sar. offered ft""' anS\\~rs . I am often urged to state the Mshon list .. of priorities that ...,.e as
an institution are to address. bu l tm con tention is that
Mthe realiry of the \o\'Orld we: occup\' todav .. (to paraphrase
O ark Kt;rr) is too complex for an\ brief set of simple: pre-scriptions to suffice. Nor, for that matter. is it m\ job as a
leader to prescribe: rather. I am here to diagnose-. and to
mal~ it easier for )'(JU to formulate remedies.
For you are the ones who do t.ht&gt; work. and do it be-st .
each in your 0\\'n indi,idualterms; and, in your O\\TI indi\idualtcrms, you know better than I what it is you need
in order to do )'OUT worl better. You collecti\rely-wt collecti\'ely-must balance ouT effons to accomplish the
tasks on a sizable agenda that is shapc..-d h.. man\· de·
mands.
Over t.he past three \'Cars UB has. as a communi().
madt!- great progress in o ur dti"e to be and be recognized

as a gn:at public research-intensive university. In 10 doing
we ha"" asserted !he uniqueness of our graduate tnining
and research mission; !he primacy of our obligation to

pi"'\ide a first-rate teaching and learning environ..ment
for all students. and especially for our undergraduate students; and the tremendous and growing signiftcmce of
our public service mission and its symbiotic relationship
to our research, teaching, and training missions.
But thue is much work still to be done. First and
foremost. it is time for w, all of us who hold faculty rank.
to rethink our understanding of relationships berwe-en
the bculty and the institution, an understanding that has
it.sclfbeen shaped by our social context 0\..,.lhe past 6ft)
)'&lt;an.
Since the end of World War 11 and the onst't of major federal investmem in uni\.'ef'Siry research. rese:archintensi\'e uni\'ersities hoi\'C evol\'~·d a faculry-baMd
culture that ~fleets an overriding commitment to advance faculty ca~en by rewarding indhidual diJCiplinary, highly specialized re~arch and service to
di5Ciplines. R.t!wards came to those facull) who achl~'ed
the greatest recognnion from their peen, and especi.ally
peers in th~ir respective disciplines...o\nd in this context ,
institutional re\o\'art.IS accrued to those insti tutions thou
accumulatl"d and advanced the largest numbers of such
faculty. Put another way. most research-intensi\'e univer·
sities derived rt:&lt;ognition and reputation through the
dt-\'dopmem of a highh indhiduaJisuc faculry cuhu~
and enterprise. In such a culture. support for indi\idual·
is tic facuhy efforts became an institutional imJX'rative
and a facult) entillement.
As I read the signs of these times, m the closing d~
cade of this centun . those imperauves and ~ntitJem~nts
ar~ challenged b)· changes in the nature and con ~.txt of
knowledge and inquir)'. such as the blurring of disciplinaJ") boundaries and the les.scned relf!\-anc~ of support
structures defined according to discipline~. such as de.
panments and schools. We also face challengts that r~
suit from our defining our cnttrprisc- \ren hea,i.l)· ~- the
interests of faculty, and less b).· the interests of other constituems and stakeholders.
TI1ese challenges will not go away' an)' time soon; nor
arc: they irreiC'\'ilnt or misguided. nor should they be di.Y
misse-d as such. \\'e are and should be p~ to find a
proper balance betWttn support for indi\idual faruln ac·
complish,nem and suppon for faculr.•commitmenl to institutional gQals and imper.u:i\~ Simp!)' put, the time is
now for faculty to accept and assen th~ir rfiponsibility
for the: wc:lfa~ of the: academic institution and forth~
needs and aspirations of ilS clienlS. stakeholders. and constituenlS.
Such facull) leadenh1p is also • great pan of !he
hc:ritag~ of academic institutions. Historically. it has aJ..
"''3.)'5 been a major responsibility of faculty. I beliC\'e that
UB's faculty acc~pts thai responsibilit) . perhaps more so
than th~ faculty of aJl)' other major public unh-ersiry. I expect that this call for dialogue "'ill fall on ~epth-e tlf'S.
and thai our faculty "'ill continue on thr- course that I bcliC'\'C thC) have been on-not just during the past few
rears. but throughout US's nearly 150-year histon· of academic distinction and sc-f\ice.

WORD ON THE STREET:

Recent Comments on Research Universities
... [T]he message [universities] are being given from
the world outside ...emphasizes our obligations to care
well for our students, to provide the kind of education
that will produce leaders and not followers, and to be a
shelter for new ideas and a force for social improvement.

·----~~~-··--·.utr.·- Ke-,

D.'ltD.U.ut FAU. 199!

American a&gt;/Jeges and research universities are unmatched in
their ability to f!ruvitk advanced education and to enrich it
thruu.gh fare.frunt research.. . . Our goal is to maintain this exceJJence and to encuu:raf!! the-anguing reexamination ofad' varu:ed education in our rolleges and universities.

-----

U.S.OmCEOFSCIINCEANDTEOINOl.OCYPOUCY. EXECUTIVEOmCEOFTHE

PRESIDENT, AUCUST 1994

By {proposing to cut 1995 DaD universi(y research appropriations in lwlj], {RejlresentaJivejohn P.] Mt(rlha wanted to say,
"There's not enough '/1W1'I£j in the !Judgd, so.J7l hit at a gruup
that will scream loudly and get the attention of Congress, the
Defense Department and the White House."
• Mftlo&lt; Pent.eon offtcl81
AS QliOTEO IN ERIC SCHMnT. HOUSE BATI1.E THREAITNS BIC tt£SEARCH l'N!\'ERSITIES

' "mi l.OSSOFMIWOSS.- Tfl£ .\ £U'I'ORJ\T1MES(.-\UCUST 17. 199-1}

[The proposed House cut] was a shot across the bow ....
Congress has put us on notice that [DoD research funding] is not something that will continue in perpetuity
unless there is value.

Pro,_- S. WrtcM-, M.I.T.
T11F. .\ 'f.W 1"0RK17AC1-::S. AllCUST 17. 199-l

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45

5

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a.-a.. wiUbe" •

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~onpege3

Giant Strides
for Opportunity
George Unger looks
back at a career
devoted to equal
opp&lt;:JtLrily.
...

'~~....,.,_

.

""* ........._call

-

Better

on • uttle Fat

=diet 9
Studysto.w

2

rmderate in fat ...

New Home
for the Arts

Red Carpet
Welcome

Festival to inaugurate
reN $50 million Center

for the Arts. .

September 1, 1994 Volume 26, No. 1

)

•
'private

11J - . E VIDAL
Reporter Editor

•

offices,

Snuff those stogies! Put out those butts! Effective Aug.
29, a new policy prohibits smoking in all tmiversity-owned and
-operated buildings and vehicles.
That means no smoking in doorways or on loading docks-those are
considered part of the building. And there's no smoking allowed in
outdoor stadiums and at outdoor events.
UB is smoke free.
"We' re all going 10 bave to understand that
this change for smokers involves a transition,..
said Roben J. Wagner. seoior vice president for
university services . ...We all suppon individuals
wbochoosetounde~smobng~tionpro­

grams. We all need to he understanding and

"We're all goiiiC to
luove to unclersUnd that

thla change for amokers
lnvoh·- • transitpl ...
We all need to be under-

sUncDng and t.,.,_ ..
we

go to a amoke-fMe
environment."

• o•

R •'

J •

•

• • "

1

•

tolerant as we go to a smoke-free
environment. This is lbe direc·
tion in which the university
chooses to go. It's our intent to
move as quickly as possible 10 a
smoke-free environment.·
The only exceptions to lbe
no-smoking policy are for se·
lected residence-hall bedrooms
and !he Commons. Wbile smoking is prohibited in all areas 1ba1

students use in common, or to
which lbe public bas access,
smokingwillbeallowedindes-

ignaled student bedrooms on '
designated floors, but only al lbe request of stu·
dents. And lbe policy does nol apply to lbe Com·
mons hecause that facility is not considered to be

university owned and operated, said Ellen
McNamara. assistant vice president for hwnan

resources.
. Cigareues can still be purchased on campus in
the Inter-Residence Council Business (lRCB)
stores located in UB's resideoce halls, according
to Clifford B. Wilson, associate vice president for

student affairs. Although UB
stopped selling tobacco products
at its candy cowuers two years ago
and no longer has cigarette vending machines on campus, it was decided that ..since the
resideoce balls are home to lbe students ... lbe
stores in those facilities could func·
lion with a different policy (than
stores in other campus locacions).Wilson sai~ . The Faculty-Student
Association (FSA), which now runs
IRCB, will decide Ibis month whether 10
continue selling cigarenes in those stores.
ln the meantime. ashtrays are being removed
from the doorways of buildings, and a new beanhealthy. no-smoking logo has heen posted on
building entrances.
hile some smokers are up in arms about the
new policy, McNamara said. others are US·
ing il as an incentive 10 kick lbe habit. And smoking
cessation programs are an imponant pan of the
policy. according 10 McNamara. Smokers who
wish 10 quit should be granted reasonable release
time by their supervisors to attend smoking ce:ssalion programs. A list of programs is available
lbrougb Personnel Services; students are encour·
· aged 10 conlaellbe Living Well Cente~ a1 UB.
The smoking ban at UB bas heen on its way since
March 1990, when UB implemenledapolicylimiling smoking to designated areas, which included

W

s e c tions of
food ·

service areas marked as
"smoking areas," resideoce
ball hedrooms and specially designated "smoking

rooms ...

;::.s:

~

tile effects

~· ~
s moke

A smoke-free environment at UB was recommended
by lbe "i""PUS labor/management health and safety
commiuee in its 1992-93 annual report, and en-

dorsed by the various university governing bodies
throughout !he 1993-94 academic year.
The Faculty Senate passed a smoke· free environment resolution in April 1993. and the
United University Professions Buffalo Center

Chapter endorsed the resolution in June 1993.
The Professional Staff Senate passe&lt;! a smoke-

free environment resolution in November 1993.
us ·s Environmental Task Force passed a
resolution calling for a smoke-free environment in January 1994 . And the University
Council unanim ously supponed the proposed
policy in June. Negotiations with local campus unions began a year ago and were completed in March .

�_

.......

2

George
........ Unger
........ retires
C . . an

81UB.hla

t.n~

--tam

ed.:lhon-

~

UrWerslly In s.eden.l.wld
. . ......,
the ... of docD of odonlol-

-·

...,21'.

OiliiWI*IIC8'elll oer-

--n.nber

..., 1117111. Balar

- ........... CIIII'*II»
lionaDtheiM :1 ill&amp; dog
of r.-lalllklcallpellbll
8lld the role of tiUiface
pnJpellias.
A IDinling .....-nt&gt;er and
........... oflhe Socl-

. . . . . . . . . . . 118 isa
tourdV ...... of the Amer·
lean lnllllula of Medical
8lld Biclogical ~

.....
-..................
COMMUNICATION

8IS80Cille professor of communiclllian .._ UB. 8lld his
wila. . . . . . . havereceMid the 1994 Humanitar·
ian Award lrom Hineni ol
Aaridll, h:.
The Goldhabers - e
recognized lor their finan.
cia! support of Hineni, an
inlemalional,

--.-~

0011-jl(olit ()(.

ganlzalion dedicaled to locating children who have
been kidnapped 0! W:lin!zed In ...... - - by cults.
The group works wllhln the
law to lc:c* lha ohldnln,

.... !rom the cuts.
clapi1VWn OWn 8 l l d llwntGIII!irflnllias.
A larmW c:hlllr of the OepednB1l of Comrnlricalion
81 UB, Golcllllber hla writ·
.... 01 adlled 11 books In
the field of corrmricalion.

---..-.

NUClEAR MEDICINE

__

21~-- dewot&gt;MI

., to ........ - .
....... apportulllty

Reporter Contrlbu!Of

T WASN'T A specific inci·
dent or turning point that
sparked George Unger's in·
tetesl in the anea of equal
opportunity and affumative
action. "I've been intenested in
equal opportunity aU my adult life,"
she says .
Twenty-one years ago, Unger
brought this interest to UB, molding not only a successful and ful·
filling career, but a legacy of
advancemeot for women and minority students at the university.
On Aug. 31 , Ungernetired asdirectorofUB'sOffjceofEquaiOppor·
tunity/AffinnaliveAction. She was
nesponsible for ensuring that the
university maintained compliance
with aU state and federal civil rights
statutes and regulations, as well as
SUNY policy regarding equal opportunity and afftnnative action.
EO/AA also is charged with
developing programs that will analyze employment patterns within
the university, identifying andre·
moving impediments to equal employment~establishing

timetables for afftnnailV! action,
and pursuing a commitment to
equal employment throughout the
university.
It's been a challenge, but an

extremely satisfying one, for
George Unger. "There have been
many highlights," she said during
the last few days of work in her
Capen Hall office. "Oneofthemost
intenesting was Operation Access."
Operation Access was a program designed to identify college
graduates with physical disabili ties and place them in regular University positions. All Opetation
Access ..alumni"' have remained at
UB as pennanent members of the
professional staff.
Another aspect of her UB career that Unger fOIJJldorewarding
was the organization and administration of a five-year J?iiOt summer
research program for scientifically
talented ntinority students interested in careers in the biological,
natural and medical sc.i ences.
George Unge:r is not a native
Buffalonian, although she has made
UB and its surrounding commu·
nity very much her home. Shegnew
up in New Mexico and Texas and,
hefone moving to Buffalo in 1972,
was affiliated with San Francisco
State College, whereshespenteight
years as an education advisor with
an overseas program in Liberia,
West Africa. There, she worked on
a Unit ed States Agency for

lntematiooal J.Jeveloprnent (USAID)
contract to develop a school system in the Liberian capital city of
Monrovia.
In 1972, Unger moved to Buffalo and "thought I \Ollllted to be a
housewife and I was for a year."
Then she realized that her calling
to education bad not changed wi th
her move east. At the same time,
UB was in the process of consoliw
dating its Cooperative College
Center and Urban Center to fonn
the Educational Opportunity Center. Unger served as the Educa-

statewide Employee Assistance
Program Committee, and the pre·
sentation of classroom guest lectures and local, national and state
workshops and seminars.
She has worked oo mone than a
dozen university committees includingtheProfessional Staff senate, the Anti-Rape Task Force,the
University Committee on Student
Retention, and the Distinguished
Service Professor Selection Com·
mittee. ln addition, Unger has been
advisor to the Campus Chapter of
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, an

"I'd like for this country to reach a point
where there'd be no need for any
institution to have an office ofequal
opportunity and affirmative action.
That may sound idealistic, but we have to
have ideals. "
GEOIICIEUNGD

tionalOpportunityCenter'sfounding director and later went on to
become coordinator ofUB's affir-

mativeaction prograrnsWlder Jesse
Nash, then director of the Office of
Affumative Action and Human
Resources. Under the direction of
Malcolm Agostini, affrnnative ac·
tion officer, Unger was associate
director. After Agostini netined in
1990, she was named acting afftr·
mative action officer and, ooe year
later, was appointed to the position
on a pennanent basis.
Among Unger's numerous con-

tributions to UB have been service
as coordinator of the university's
observance of the International
Year of the Woman, organization
and chainnanship of the campuS

examiner for qualifying ora1 examinations of candidates for classified service positions, and an
outside hearing officer in grievances processed on other SUNY
campuses.
Unger's commitment to equal
opportunity and affirmative action
has ex tended beyond campus
boundaries and into the Western
New York community. She has
been active in the Buffalo Urban
League, the YWCA Board of Dinectors, the Buffalo Foundation and
numerous other civic groups.
Ren ecting on the past 21 years,
Unger sees UB's progness in expanding its programs for women
and minorities as .. very exciting
and fulfilling."

of the most satisfying
things I've seen is how the university has evolved in the equal op-

portunity/affirmative action
sphere," she noted. "This is very
hearterting. UB has made gneat
suides in access for minority students and women to the entile university experience. Emphasis has
been placed on the netention of
these students, as well as on the
netention of minority and women
faculty and staff."
As she steps down from her
full-time position, Unger plans to
remain at UB on a pan-time basis,
working on a project under Ronald
Stein, vice pnesident for advancement and developmen~ to bring
scholarship necipients into closer
contact with their dooor.;.
Leaving work behind-at least
temporarily-George Unger has
serious plans for nelaxation during
the early months of 1995. She plans
to spend January, February and
March~ St. Thomas, on a beach."
She also hopes to have mone time
to play bridge, catch up on her
neading, and attend Buffalo area
theatrio,al and other cultural events.
As she closes this chapter in her
life, Unger catries with her an optimistic ai&amp;ude and a hopeful
dneam about~ opportunity, not
just for UB, but for American society as a whole: she'd like to see the
need for her old job disappear.
"l'dlikeforthiscountty toreach
a point where there· d he no need
for any institution to have an office
of equal opportunity and afftnna·
tive action," she says. "That may
sound idealistic, but we have to
have ideals. An ideal society would '
be one in which it's a

�3

- a , S M 4 _ _ _ ..

Money magazine
ranksUB(lS
a 'best buy'
HI! UNfVI!RSITY AT BUFFALO bas been ranked 27th . in
Money magazine's annual ranking of the Top I 00 college aod
university best buys in the United
States.

UB, which moved up four positions in the
national rankings this year, is listed sixth in
a separate listing of best buys in the northeast

u.s

.

Among large comprehensive universities, UB ranks among the top I 0 nationwide
on Monty's list o f the 100 schools that deliver the highest-quality education for the
tuition they charge. The magazine caulions
that the listing
should not be
"~stem
interpreted as
indicating that
the schools included are in
thesameleagut
academically.
.. We· r e
proud to see UB
place among
the top 30
institutions that
Monty considers to be best
) buys for undergraduate
education, and
proud to see
four other
SUNY schools
high on the list
as well," said
UB President
William R .
Greiner. "The
rankings say a
lot about
SUNY value
and quality.
Noting that
therankingsactually "fold together a Jot of
different kinds
PtiE.-r - of institutions,·
Greinersaidit's
important to look at the annual compilation
in terms of bow UB, the largest and most
comprehensive campus in the 64&lt;ampus
SUNY system, compares in the ranking with
other major public universities.
"Among all of SUNY 's campuses, only
UB is considered nationally to be a peer of
institutions like Rutgers, Dlinois, Michigan,
Wisconsin and Nonh Carolina," be added.
.. So when you consider UB 's place in that
company, the Monty Jist shows us as being
among the top 10 of our peer universities in
terms of the val ue we deliver.
""'
"In other words, Western New York's
major research university not only maintains
the classic traditions of American education
established by places like Michigan aod UNC
and Berkeley, it also happens to be a great
bargain.
"That's the kind of deal we think you can't
beat. UB takes a lot of pride in being that kind
resource and value for our community.Mon ey's annuallisting, based on 16 measures of education quality, is designed to
provide a guide for students and families
looking to get their money 's worth when It
comes to higher education. The magazine
notes that "toearn a high score in our valueoriented analysis, a school must charge less
ill tuilion and fees than institutions that offer
educations similar quality.0

New
York's major
research
university not
only maintains
the classic
traditions of
American
education
established by
places like
Michigan and
UNCand
Berkeley, it
also happens
to be a great
bargain."

or

or

WHAT'S NEW
continued from page 1
end of campus will also fmd a brand new
or
eatery serving them 011 the first
Talben Hall. According to Wilson, several
rooms u.en. were renovated this summer to
create "Bert's,·a Putnam's style food coun
featuring fast food f01e like pizza, sandwiches ancfburgen;, highlighted by a Taco
Bell Express. Ben's seats nearly 450.
Ronald Naylor, associate vice president
for univen;ity facilities, reports that efforts
arealn:ady well under way on PhaseD of the
Natural Sciences construction project. which
will bring the mathematics department, the
last natural science slated to leave Main
Street, to the North Campus. The architectural finn of Mitchell Giurgola, from New
York City, bas been selected, according to
Naylor, aod conttact negotiations are under
way. This building, to be built next to
Fronczak Hall, will be borne to the Mathematics, Computer Science aod Geology
Depanments by the end of the decade.
The university's librarysysternbasmoved
its chemistry collection from Main Street to
the Science and Engineering Library on the
Nonh Campus. Acting Director Renee Bush
said her staff bas completed the process of
integrating more than 18,000 volumes into
the &gt;etence collection. The SEL, located on
the second and third floors of Capen Hall is
accessed through the entrance to the Undergraduate Library on the first floor .
The chemistry move also predicated construction ofa new Volatile Substances Building-on Service Center Road next to the Helm
Building. Nayler explained that because of
safety regulations, uansportation of these
chemicals back and fonh from the current
storage site on Jhe South Campus was not

noor

completed on the interior portions of both
buildings, so disruption should be minimal.
The glazing aod finishing work in the walkway itself should be completed by November. Nearby, the Center for the Ans is almost
fully operationa.l, with the grand opening
celebration set to begin in October.
Four new buses shuttling studenr. aod
staffbetween Ellicott Complex and !4Loop
now run exclusively on natural gas.fBusing
Director Laura Miller said corn~ints of
diesel fumes in the tunnel at Elli
aod in
the offices above, prompted her to ook for
alternatives. Blue Bird purchased the buses
to meet the specifications or the ne ... busing
contnlct. According to Miller, the compressed
natural gas is clean burning and is less than
half the cost of diesel fuel.

Other projects in the off. Walkway
ing for the orth Campus. between
aooording to Nayler, include a Student
campus-wide ""'"10' savings Union and
program and plamingf&lt;ra new the ComStudent Servioes building.
mons nears
Annual energy costs at completion.
UB should drop by 25 percent when the current energy conservation
project is. completed, according to Naylor.
Financed entirely by UB through n:bates
from Niagara Mohawk aod projected enersy
savings, the enersy consulting fum CES/
Way bas developed a camf&lt;JS-wide enersy
consbvation plan. "We are replacing virtually all the lighting, retrofittirlg meclwticaJ
sys1em5 and converting hot water bearers from
electricity to gas.· explained Nayler. He expects to save more than $3 milli¥ a year.
Nayler bas also undertalcen study for
design of a new student servi~.center for
the Nonh Campus. "Undergraduate services
such as the health center, financial aid aod
student accounts~ now in 'tempxary' buildings on the South Campus would be located
in this new facility," said Nayler. On the
South Campus, be repons, a fum bas been
retained to design a new steam/electric cogeneration facility to replace the current
·power plant. He says the new facility wiU be
more efficient and have adequate. capacity
for the anticipated needs of the redeveloped
South Campus as a health sciences center.
TbesteeringcommitteeoftheSouthClmpus Master Plan bas interviewed Qepartment
beads aod inventoried resources(Naylersays.
In September, a reueat will be held to develop
specific goals and objeclives. He expcciS a completedplanbytheendofl995.
0

D

Bert's Ia new dlnlnC area In Talbert.
feasible. The new structure houses bulk supplies of potentially hazardouscbenticals used
by the department, as well as waste created
by the department.
On the east end of the Nonh Campus,
work continues on the pedeStrian walkway
linking the Student Union and the Commons. Wilson explained that work bas been

AV~._....,..

orm rooms in Ellicotl_Complex and in
Goodyear Hall got facelifts over the
summer, according to Joseph Krakowiak,
director of university residence halls. Crews
painted more than 500 rooms. and doors in
Red Jacket and Goodyear were sanded,
res~ained or painted and varnisbed, some for
the first time in 38 years, he said. New metal
lofts are on order for many dorm rooms, he
said. More versatile than wooden structures
now in some rooms. the lofts are popular,
Krakowiak added, because they offer students an additional 40 square feet of living
area. State fire codes preclude students from
building their own lofts, Krakowiak said.
Work continues in Goodyear Hall,
Krakowiak points out, where a balf-miUion
dollar project is under way to replace the
cabs and controls of all five elevators ansJthe
roof is being replaced.
(

......,_..._,.._ ....

....._._,..,
....................
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....... twe ..................... - . ....
~.

"'-lRIIilll•ll ................................
1beae sips ..._,'t beeD plaslered Oil billbc.rds arouod
campus yet, but they could be comiD&amp; SOOD. lteoicleDce Halls

admUiistrators .... actively &amp;eeldng ways to mala&gt; oo-campus

liviD&amp; more .ar.ctive to upper clua111Udea1s, wbo tnditiooally

mipteto..-:
six-pecpl6-per-..... lleq;iuaquantrsmay DOW
exist ooly at the Erie c.-ty ~ Facility. siiKle they
bave beoa dlminatetl from the doma. Ill lbeir piKe, expWns
CJifford B. Wilaaa, --we vice preoidellt fGr atDtleal atr.ln,
are ....--~~~oo 8UIIeo ad lliiWie- wltido aMid C8lice
J-lda ........ tollay aleiiii*L

For--,

_...

__..............

Wliloac:.lltle

.................

preview of the fulure of clormilmy c1esip. ID the Red Jdzt
Towers, six-person rooms bave beeD lllililllltl to .....,.
with two roomy&amp;uble bedrooms,
ad!, ..Sa
sbmd liviD&amp;~ The Ooor is serviced by • .__.. ........
featurin&amp; ~ ~ waltZ, • microwave, - ~
stoves and siDits.
ln Goodye.r Hall, doors were added
dlreedoablea;
the ex- area of the middle room was repiKed widlaldlcba&gt;eue, and tbat room wascupdcd and f1amiobed• ativiq-.
"Coaoumer daDand.• r&lt;xplaias K1aJoowiK. "We- Jookiq b
-)'$ to Jaoep SIUdeals ia
DieDce and aafely ~also ~ ailfria for.....,.. wbo
.,..,..., to Jj.., . . CllllpUs, ... adds.
Ill relaled - . die arc:biteclalal lima .a..illca
Lowale ofBodfalo- beoa adecllod
llyle

for two....,.
to.,._

oa-eampul...... eao-

Ill.........
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,......_..Naylor: De

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..... 41 5
~

�4

-s.a-.--.-s

Fellowship to
ftmd study of
tuOOlligation
11J LOIS IIAKIII
News Bureau Staff

G

ERMAINES. BUCK. assislant professor o r social
and preventive medicine
at UB, has won one of two
fel lowships sponsored annually by
the Merck Company Foundation and
the Society for Epidemiology Research.
The $190,000, three-year award
will allow her to begin a loog-tenn
study of the safety and effectiveness
or tubal ligation. The study will in-

volve 3,()()()..4,000 women who wiU

"Most of
these awards
inthepast
have been
for cancer
andcardiovascular 1
research_
Its a real
coup for
UB to
get it."

befollowod
for 10-20
years.
Buck

was one of
40

r e-

searchers

considered
for the fellowships.
which are

News Bureau StaH

of collaborat.ive interdisciplinary ventures
by students and UB 's many nationally re-

pendent

sity in the ans-the zenith of which was the

scientific
advisory

era of the Creative Associates and the legacy
of which is the North 'lroerican New Music
Festival and June in Buffalo Festiva l for
emerging composers-will be enhanced by
the programs of anists-in-resi .V.nce and the
commissioning of new works. which are a
key element in the diverse mission of the
Center for the Ans.The center will be directed by Roben E.
Chumbley, former director of the Lied Center for the Perfonning Ans at the Universit y
of Nebraska, Lincol n. Chumbley called the
center .. a house for the exploration of all an.
its relevance to our time and our future .. and
said that several collaborative interdisciplinary music, theater and media-ans productions involving students and arts faculty are
already in the planning stages.
AI Harris F., who formerl y headed the
Center for Research in Contemporary An at

ner s

commjnee

confer·

U

NlVERSITY AT BUFFALO
officials have announced the
grand ope ni ng o f tbe
university's Center for the Ans,
a vast, $SO-million structwe
designed by the award-winning New York
C ity architectural team o f G wathmey and
Siegel
The SOO-room bui lding, which contains
more than 2S0,000square feet of floor spaoe,
houses teaching and administntive ~as
weU as performance and exhibition spaces.
'Those spaces. including a major regional an
gal lery, 400-seat and I, 7s&lt;keat theaters,
two experimental theater spaces and filmscreening rooms, will be inaugurated with a
Grand Opening Festival, to be held from Oct.
28 - Nov. 20. 11 wiU include dozens of danae,
theater, music and literary performances by
regional. national and international artists.
UB's departments of An, Media Study
and Theatre and Dance moved into the facility last September, although performance
and exhibition areas were not complete. With
the center fully opened, it is the ftrsttime in
UB history that all of the university's arts
departments are housed in close proximity, a
fact that is expected to lead to a broad range

lion. Wina re
selected by
an inde-

through a
national

competi-

.......

IIJPAmiCIA-oUI

nowned arts faculty members.
The Department of Music and its major
classroom and performances spaces, Baird
Hall and Slee Hall, are next doortothecenter
ootheNortb Campus. These adjoin Clemens
Hall, which houses the remaining depanments in the Faculty of Arts and Letters.
Kerry S. Grant, dean of arts and letters,
said "The national importance of this univer-

awarded

that considers the
accomGEJIMAINEBUCII plishments
of the researcher ,
the soundness of the proposed research project and the commiunent
of the researcher's institution to the
applicant and the research.
Buck has won national recognition for her work in human reproduction and fetal and early childhood
health .
She said she is particularly
pleased to receive the award because it is the fi rst Merck/SER
Fellowship devoted to research fo cusing on reprod uctive epidemi ology.
"Most of these awards in the past
ha ve been for cancer and cardjovascular research.· said Bu&lt;:k. "It's a
real coup for UB to get it.Norman G . Courey and Jean
Wact.awski-Wende of the UB Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, wi ll collaborate on the
project.
The Merc k/SER fe llows hips
were inaugurated in 1989 to promote clinica l epidemio logy research. The fi rst fellowships were
awarded in 1990.
Past fellowshi ps have gone to the
Uni ve rsi ty o f Virg in ia. Joh ns
Hopkins University, Dan mouth College, Un iversity of Washington,
UniversityofCalifom ia at San Fl'1lllcisco, Harvard Uni versity, Boston
University, and Stanford Uni versity.
The second 1994 fellowship was
awarded to the Unjversity ofMinn e-

SOIB.

Festival to inaugurate Center for the Arts

the University ofTeus, Arlington. is director of the University Gallery located in the
center. Harris F. said the University Gallery,
which has scheduled a year of major exhibitions featuring such major international artists as Victor Burgin and Adrian Piper, also
is developing interdisciplinary programming.
One example he cited is the Curatoriallnitialives Program, which invites UB faculty to
publ ish research in the form or curated an
exhibitions. He noted that the Burgin exhibit

-Auc.
25-

1-.ced
GrMd

C)penlne
ofc.rt.r
for the

Alb.
From left:

DHn
Kerry S.

Gr.nt,
President
Gnolner,

c.rter
Director

Robert
Chumbley.
will be produced in conjunction with the UB
Center for the Study of Psychology and Culture. and the Piper show wiU involve the Department or Philasophy.
With its large array of classrooms, offices
and studios, as well as ans-production and
exhibition spaces, the Center for the Ans wiU
1101 only serve as the center for arts activities on
the North Campus, but ftll a unique nicbe
l""""8 WNY arts-pnesentation spaces.
n addition to being a setting for a variety
of distinguished performers and exhibitors from here and abroad, the oenlel{s publ.ic spaces will be used as rental faci}lties for
community arts organiu.tions.
The building houses classrooms; admin-

I

"The national
importance of this
university in the arts...
will be enhanced by the
programs of artists-inresidence and the
commissioning of new
works. "
KERRY

a. GRANT

istrative o ffi ces~ a student gallery; a television-production studio; a foundry; two dance
studios; sculpture, computer-design, paint ing, video, audio-recording, etching and
prinunaking stud ios, and 1wo 50-seat screening rooms. It has seven dressing rooms;
costume. prop, scene and set shops; elcztric.
audio, paint and storage shops; m.tFhine,
assembly and finishing shops, and a variety
or state-of-the-an darkrooms.
The Center for the Arts is also one of the
most environmentally friendly build'mgs on
UB 's twocampuses. ln many rooms, se~~s&lt;&gt;rs
tum lights on when th~ room is entered d
tum them off when it is vacated. Photo la
~an acid neutralization system that filters

chemicals from water for disposal. Air and
water temperatures are controlled by computers. and air in the an labs is exchanged
40 times an hour, dispelling fwnes and dusL
The public presentation spaces include:
• The 1,7SO-seat Malna~e theater.
which will serve as a site for university
productions, conferences and Olher events.
It also will be available for major theatrical
productions by outside groups. as well as for
operas, conoens, musicals, dance concerts
and major lectures. The stage has a full,
moveable proscenium that allows a IS-foot
variation in the height or the stage opening.
A four-story-high custom-built orchestra
sbell is 6eing consttucted for this stage.
• The Unlvenlty QallerJ, with 6,500
square feet of exhibitioo space on two floors.
will present the work of national regional
and local artists; faculty and student work;
commissioned work; traveling exh.ibitioos.
and selections from the UB an collection.
• The first-floor AtrllnBI..obb)', the length
of which is spanned by a specl.'fular vaulted
skylight. serves three theatet'Sipn the fli'Sl

level and offers a sile for receptions and
dining. The atrium capacity for'a standing
reception is 2.000. It can accommodate 600
seated guests for dinner. lt also houses a cafe
that serves lunch and intermission refreshments, and a second-floor balcony lounge
with wet-bar serving the Mainstage theater.
• The 400-seat Dr-. l"beatn, which
serves as the principal performance space
· for the Department of Theatre and Dance
and will offer intimate performance space
for plays, musicals, charnberoper3s and performances by touring companies.
• The 200-seat ScreenlnC Room 6Upports programming by the Department of
Media Study, and public .pcesehtations of
film, video-arts productions, panel discussions, poetry readings and press conferences.
• The a.- Room with full kitchen and
an extensive paging and video system.
• The Black Box Tha.tro and R•
heanal Workabop 1"beatn eacb will
accommodate I SO seats. Higb-tensiao grids
in one theater and catwalks in the second
give flexibility in placement of lights, drapes
and speakers, providing space for experimental theater, music and multimedia productioos. -

Two university divisions are restructured
Pr11III1Bt . . . . _ - - II I Citll the restructuring of
two university di visions.
On the joint recommendation of Robert J. Wagner, senior
vioe president for University Services and Ronald H. Stein. vioe
presidentforUniYersityAdvanoementandDevelopment, WBFO
and the Oflioe of Publications bave been transferred to Uni versity Services, as has the Oflice of Trademarks and Licensing.
Acoording to a mem&lt;i issued JWJe 22 by UB President
William R. Greiner, "Development initiatives continue to be a
aitical institutional priority, and it is increasingly important that
the vice president for University Advancement and Develop-

ment be able to focus his enerpes on stren&amp;tJiening this programs. Ron Stein's moot significant n:spoosibolities, in this
regard, are as the university 's leading fund-raiser, frimd-raiser
and spokesperson_"
In conj unction with the reorpnization. Carole Smith Petro,
former associate vioe president for University Advancement, has
become associate vice president for University Services. Bolh
Publications and WBFO remain under ber supelvision and she
continues as co-chair of the Sesqulcentermial Plaoning Committee, The Oflice of Trademarks tmd Liceosing is UDder the
supervision of Leonard F. Snyde&lt;, university COIIIroller.

�-~.---.-

5

..

Sinette Wmfield is EO/AAacting dit;ector Directors named

. .,nn~~cox

at Public Safety

nmt '&amp;)fAA director will beappoinlediOIDC&gt;time after January, Wagner said.
Winfield's years in personnel have exc:lll'ron L ...... .....ac:iole vice presi·
posed her to many of the issues the &amp;)fAA
dent for &amp;tUdent .traits, has named Jobn
otriCC deals with. "Wben I began," sbe said,
Orela acting director and Jolm Woods acting
"my first challenge was to fmc! ways to
assi&amp;tant director of UB's Depanment of
effectively recruit (minority candidates) in
Public Safety.
classified, competitive positions." With a
Grell, a UB employee oince 1972, previmission statement and candidate oearch proously served as associate director of public
oeduresalready in place, Winfield found UB
safety sioce 1991 . He earned a t.cbelor of
already commiued to diversity in its em·
science degree from UBin 1974 wbile5CtVployment when sbe arrived.
ing as nigbt manager of Nortoo Union. and
A Buffalo native, Winf.eld began her · joined the Department of Public Safety as a
career at UB as manager of employment and
patrolman later that year.
personnel. Sbe bolds an undergraduate de·
In 1977 Grela was named assistant to the
gree from West Virginia State University
director in charge of all business operations,
and a master's degree in urban and environ·
personnel payroll and budget, and in 1981
mental studies from Rensselaer Polytechnic
bis duties were expanded to include supervi·
Institute. Before coming to UB, Winf.eld
sian ofthedeportment 'sseven investigators, as
worked as a minority recruiter for the state
well as all major and ongoing investiptioos.
civil service department in Albany.
He is a member of UB 's L.abor Management Health Safety, Parking and Traffic
Safety and Handicap Accessibility committees. An arbitnttor for the Better Business
Buruu of WNY and the National Arbilnl·
"*"-· e1ec1tor0c jco.rnals pmdoced on """"""- aUnri ectMties,
tion Association, be also 5CtVes on the Erie
~ dolaba9oo- ...... ~ Lilraa.County Tralfoc Safety Committee, the lnttma.,...,.,.~ such •tw . _ I ' C U we haldr1g in 'PI
tional OtiefsofPoliceAssociationand the Erie
lwallllhls~""'""""'
County Judges and Clliefs Association.
The t.MJiy d WINGS lo that not only-~ gMI I'CU a
Woods, who joined UB in 1974 as a patrol·
-~ ..........."'.. . .,.,..,..(hctandspicytobell.ft~
man, was pRJIOOiedtolicwnad in 1980.1n 1989
llilo~I'&lt;'Ui'IID~BotweWI-elhal
be
IICCCpled
a position as iulerim directa' of
to flan ........_ You alao find that WINGS can lock

serve in her new capacity. The university has
liDdenaken a comprd&gt;ensive review of responsibilities and openotions in the Affmna·
live Actioo office, under the direetion of
E. "Sy"Wmfoeldactingdirectorof Senior Vice President for University Serthe \Uliversity's Equal Opportunity/
vicea Robert Wagner. "In reviewing our
Affirmat ive A ction (EO/AA) program .
mission, J&gt;111P05" and programs," Winfield
Winfield, currently associatedirectorofthe · said, "we may bring newer issues to the fore
Office of l'er.;onnel Services, assumes her
such as the ADA (Americans with Disabilinew duties today.
ties Act)."
The EO/AA office is responsible for en·
Winf~eld explained that the overall opsuring UB's compliance with all federal and
eration of the office has nDI been reviewed
state laws regarding-civil rights, equal opsince 1980. The study will involve examin·
portunity and discrimination, as well as the
ing the current respoosibilities of the office.
SUNY Trustees' equal employment oppor·
comparing UB's otriCC to comparable of·
tunity poucies. Winfield, a 15-year veteran
fices at Olber AAU and SUNY institutions
ofthe~departmen~sucoeedsGeorge
and assessing the role of the office in meet·
D. Unger, wbo retired Aug. 31 after three
ing the university"s diversity commitment.
and one-half years in the post and 21 years at
A fmal report is due to be submitted to
UB.
President G reiner in December, according to
Winfield calls it an "exciting time" to
Wagner. A search commiuee for a perma·
Reporter Staff

RESIDENT GREINER has anIIOWI&lt;:ed the appointmentofSinette

A WINGS weiC01118 to the Unlva'8lty at Buffalo
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Thelilla1CIIftlll,8,__.••...,.._onan:ton
an:t-.-:l'ldc..._,....__
_ _ -1'1'..

l-*'i1 c-.

~

on group~~-

..

..

N&gt;licSafetyaSIJNY~Paltz,wbm:

WINGS
-~--~-~-welliClCIITWTlllthll
~
cwt with the........-._
-.ion."' UB E-

in ~~an......._ Bot~DC~o¥.1or
begQ1ers,
I'CU
~.frianclyGophor

he!JCn'lldfar.U!I&gt;Illihsbefm:......,;,gtoUB.
He received bis undergraduate degree
from N~ Louisiana Stale, and bolds a
master's degree in sociology from UB. Alr
the past five reus, Woods bast-. in c::boqe
of UB's crime prevr:otioo prop1t1DL He is
re;pon51'bje for COIDIIUiiry policiog propms
inm;D:meballs ondontbeljliae.Heiumotnber
of the WNY Clime~ AMocialim and

mol""""""uaera,._,todolotype . . . . .et .... S)'Siem~

aetect..., ~menu optiona.

For lnlormiJiion oo oblsininQ Ml E-msiii!ICCO&lt;A't or
to WII'&gt;GS. CXQUJt the ~ O!nlrir Hst&gt; Desk •
3542. lf,wt.wlnlormiJiionaaSflnllce )'OUwakilbiD._
IOIWI l'le 1.B CXllmllllly WI WII'&gt;GS, oon111ct the WlfloGS 1111111 lit

tbe--

~ecl.lor~.
~-u-..--~tbwq

Enforoe:meot Officials.

da..p. LaW
c..

·Donate $20 to Ronald McDonald
House® and Get a Free Phone*
From Cellular One®
Available to all State, RF, UBF and FSA employees.
Special airtime rates $12 Monthly fee and 22¢ per minute
(

I

f you've been wondering if or when you'll
buy a cellular phone ... h~re's an offer that'll
make you feel good about owning one.
The program is called Hear The Call,
elp The Children, and here's how it
works. Your conrribution of at least
$20 helps fund Buffalo's Ronald
McDonald Housee, one of 160 faci lities
. .
around the world, each providing a
home-away-from-home for families of seriously ill
children being created at local hospitals. At the same
time, your donation also ge[S you a free NEC PliO phone

from Cellular One. Simple as that.
Now, owntng a cellular phone from
Ce llu lar One never felt so good. To
contribute to the Ronald McDonald
House®and get your free cellular phone, visit
any Cellu lar One store or participating dealer
or call86 1-9680. Bur hurry, though. This
offer expires September 30, 1994.

CELLULARONE"
861,9680
contact Paula Omicioli

�6

-

-WB.L PAB~-

--

p.m. Call 64S.3S40 for rqioua-

doo infCJniiOiioD.

ModwololiciJooiCioll lalo
TGFII-M«&lt;IotOII G, Cell C,.X
Anal, Morlt Ewm, PILl&gt;.,

-- -DoDo-Farber ca..... c.atc&lt;,

Harvanl Unlv., Booooo. Hilld&gt;oe
Allditorium. RPCl 12:30 p.m.

- -ear-

-

.. VMS. s-7:30

p.m. Call 64S-3S40 for......,._

lica iafonnatic:JIL

iauWoctloatoSUN.I-IOp.m.
Caii64S.3S40 for n:cbttarloo

Naripllac 1M
' - ud l'lwUis. C&lt;atc&lt;

information.

for Tomorrow. N- Compos.
6-41 p.m. Sponsored by the UB
Alumni Aleociltion.. Call829-

EXHIB I T S

2608 for more information..

PAIIITIII8

~

"Con1ernp01111)' Chincoe Trodi-

THURSDAY

~

~ON

~AND

APPUCATIONS
Buffalo Hilton. Fof more information contact Michael J.
Naughton at 645-2019 or David
T. Shaw at 645-3114.

COMPUTDI-

Ekctroait: Mail ...d NdWorb
ror CM S. 10 a.m.-Nooo. Call
64S -3S40 for registntion information.

--TRAT'IONAMD
~TOUII

FRIDAY

WEDNESDAY

cOm/ni.

tratioo required. Call
DeVinney, 645-2817, fodnore
infOI'TDIItion.
I
COMI'U!DI_._

Orit.Dtatioo to CIT Public
Maciotosb Labs. 4- S p.m . Call
645-3540 for registration infor-

PqliAntiC GRAND ROUNDS
RJ!f&gt;ld Viral ~.. Using

-ON

M ot«ular Technjq ucs, M arie

Arf'UCAT'IONS

AliT 0P£111HG

Ricpenhoff-Talty, Ph.D. and
Mary Jo Evans, Ph.D Kinch
Auditoriwn. Children's Hospl·
tal. 8a.m.
CHEMISTRY COLLOQUIA
The Strudu~Burd AnalysU
oftM ~orCltil!i A Rlactamasos, Prof. Shahriu
Mobashtty, Wayne Stale Um''·
20 I NSM Com pi"" . North Campus. 4 p.m.
VOlUYUU

Ultrathin Films and
HnerOstructures, J Grorg
Bednorz, IBM Cmp and Nobel
Pnu:winner Buffalo Hilton
8·30 a.m For more mform.~tton
contact MJchlel J Naughton at
645-20 19 01 Dn1d T Sha"' •t
645·3114

UB hiottn. Art Depa.ttmem
Gallery , Center fort~ Ans
North Campus. S- 7 p.m

SATURDAY

l
S U N D AY

4
SIARA MANAGEMENT

brary tour. 2 p.m. demoostnn.ion
iD l..oclcwood room 223, fol-/

~~ G~~Na:~ps-

2 7

Professionally Managed by

BISON clcmoosmatioot and li-

UB vs. SL Bonaventu re.
Al umni Arena. North Campus.
I p.m.

~VITYAND

matioo.

H

w-

COMI'U!DIWOIIIISHOI'

·us

FAUIUTISuc:a
On Sahlrcloy, Sept. 10 student.S
will celebrate faU at Baurd Poun
from I :30 p.m. to midni&amp;fn.
Public Enemy will headline 1M

day '• 5bow. Hypnacic Clamb&amp;ke, Combustible Sdi5oo, !nne&lt;
Circle, and Velocity Girt will
also appear Tbe show is free for
all UB lludcnts. 3,000 ticlcets
will be offered to the. Jenerlll
public at $10 each; tiekc:u may
also be sold at the p.&amp;c.

AWAIIE-Th&lt; AWARE~ offers
free asslsunce in cutting down
on drinkinJ. h is designed for
male and fcma.k moderate to
drinltas, .,.. 21 '" ss.
who •~ NH alcoholic::&amp;. PanictpanlS will be: peid for complet lflJ the 8- 10 week SCSSton:.S Pro~ gram requiru the involvement
\i,( spouse. panner . or fnend For
mformation, call887-2573

Introduction to SUN. S-7 p.m
Call 645-3540 for regiSU'Ition
mformattoo.

ANNUAL MIEEIIHG OF TME
YOnHG FACtllTY

COMI'U!DI

coounun.iry an' inVlted to atLend

0

I

"Navigating the '90s-Career Passages
and Portals,· an evening of career exploration lor UB graduates. will be held
from 6-6 p .m . Sept 7 in lhe Cenler lor
Tornorrow. ~ evening will include
networking ~portunh.1es with community leaders, employmenl spec1ahsts,
counselocs and fellow alumni.
Alurmi may lake pan in lour of t 1
roundiable discussions Topics 1nclude:
' Autornale&lt;tl'lacement Services at UB."
· An Emp~ Perspective on lhe
SUccessful Applicant,' "Developing a
Seli-Matl&lt;eting F'lpn,• "Healthcare is a
Healthy Career ~- • "Be a Volt.nteer
and Accelerate YOtJT Career: "Career
Issues lor Women and Minorities: "Atlractive Careers In Small Business,"
"Employment Opportun~ies al Your
Alma Maler." "Nuances in Your Resume
and Researching Employers." "International Jobs
and the Skills You'll Need."
and "The Hiring Climate in
Weslem New Yor1&lt;."
The
registration fee
includes informational
literature and a networtting
receplion. Mal&lt;e checks·
payable lo
Alumni Association."
and mail lo Olllca of Att.mni Relations,
109 Allen HaU, Buffalo. NY 1421 4-3003.
Deadline is Sept 5 . For more information. call 829-2608.

·ss

N O T IC ES

heory

All

lntroductioo to CMS. S· 7 30

C

tiooai -Scyle J'aintin&amp;, • feotUTCS
the ..n of 32 faculty memb=
from two Beijioc Universities.;
Capital Nannal Uni.....Uy and
Beijing An and Dosipt Scbool
nus exhibiltoo repnlittCilS the
bq.inninc of u e.xcban&amp;e propro in lhc arts and humanitJeS
betwu:n the UB and these UJU·
onnitits. The sbow opens Sept
lb and conurueo tlvouP, Oct
16 in the UrUwnity AJ:1 Gallery,
Center for the Aru For infor .
mauoo. ca11645-6912

C

members o( the untYUSII)

E

S

�7
we;p for their
•&amp;e. and have one puent willing
o auend weekly treatmatt
meetinp with his Of bcr cbikl.

!han the ideal

the onnual mcdill&amp; of the VotiJIIFoeu[ty at 2 p.m. n-lay.
Sept. J3 in the Univcnity Art
Gollery, CD!« for the Arts. The
meetia&amp;
feature • clialope
witlJ the CIWrofthe Votin&amp;
Faculty, Professor WiUiam R.
Grdner-. In oddilioa, Vice OWr
af the VotiJII Faculty, Profr.osor
faa" A. Nickmon, will JII&lt;OCIIl
• SUIIUIW)' of IIOCCIIIIjliish
af the Faculty Senote for the
post yeat llld plans for the 199495 oc:odemic yeat.

f......,.

wm

'

Pooinformotion coll64S6316 between 8:30 ..... one! s
p.m. Mondoyslbrougb Fridoys.

YIICA CII&amp;JI CAllE
The YMCA isofferin1 bef...,.
one! oftc&lt;-ocbool Cbild c:ore for
children ages S- 13 acna: Weat·
era New York. operatin&amp; appro~mately 22 convenient litc5
au1 of five of the usoci.ltioa's
branc:bes.. Theprogr~m is designed 10 provide chlldren with
supervision and abo to instill
oelf-&lt;:OIIf'ldenc:e, reinfon:e pooitive volues, provide ooc:iol iolerICiioo, md promote pbysicol
f i - . Olildren will portic:ipate
in orts ond cnfts, pmcs, md
sports~ and al10 hive quiet time
to do homework or reod. Foe
rqislratioo information, oontad
the locol YMCA.

CBA11WCIIAnCIIIII'D
The Creative O:aft Center is
offCO'iJII fall '94 cnft woRshops
swtina the week af Mondoy,
Sept. 12. Worbbopure ochodulcd in weaviq. ~~and
kninina:, quilting. BruiHa.n embroidery, srceting con1 dcsicn.
ponery, conoonins. ~­
pby. stoined gluo, md jewelry

construction. All worbhops run
one night a week for si.-. weeks
from 7-10 p.m. Fees are $.30 for
studcrlls md SSO for Olbers.
Call Julie IWiboUCO' • 64S-6125
«the Cnft Center at S-2434

-for

l1lCR

JOBS
FACULTY

.

Institute will offer a new pan- •
time evening English program.
The JI'08TOfD is designed for
professon, scbol.,., profcssioools, one! spouses whose firs!
language is not English. Courses
are offered in accent reduction.
living md working in English,
md TOEFL preponotion. For
more infcwmation. contact John
Fiuer •• 64S-2071.
FAU.-FAIR

The Division of Athletics and
Rc:c:rt:~~tioo and lntramunJ se,.
vices will bold the UB FlT Faculty/Staff Fall Fimess Fair from
lOa.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, Sept.
16 in Alwnni Arena room 17S.
The flir includes a health
screc:ning proc:css to assess indi vidual cardiovascular health as
well as to identify ocher poccntial disease risk fltdors. M:c for
the he.hh screening is $25,
which includes a UB AT t-shin.
The health screening takes approximately one hour, and covers cardiovascular risk analysis,
cholesterol KDL ratio, percent
body fit. resting blood pressure.
bean rate, body mass index,
height and weight, grip strength.
subrnaxialacrobic capacity test
and self-directed exercise pro-gram handouts, where appropriate, with counseling. For mort
infonnation, call 645-2286.
WEIGHT~PIIOMAM

Overweight children ages 8- 12
are being sought to panicipate
in a free, four-month weightcontrol program conducted by
Leonard Epstein, PhD., one of
the country's leading expertS on
childhood obesity. The Stoplight
Diet Program is !be only program in lbe country to document
success in children over a tOyear period. To be eligible for
the program. children must
weight at least 20 percent moi't

2222

Assistani/Associott Prorcnor-

=~:,:~ ~~~~-

season-opener.
Entering tts second season at the Division 1AA level, UB wm rely on depth and experience
to improve upon its 1-10 record from a season
Senior qu8rterbacl&lt; Cliff Scott returns for his
final season to lead the Bulls' offense. Scon,
considered one of the top 1-AA players in the
nation at his position, completed 166 of 320
passes for a career-best 2,263 yards and nine
TDs last season.

UB remains on the road next weel&lt; at Towson
State before returning to UB Stadium lor the
(th..,. positions a..Ulobl&lt;)horne opener vs. Lehigh on Sept. 17. Kickoff is
=-~;~~
slated for 7 p.m. The game will open with a sper.....--Olemisuy, PO!Oing MFcial jump by the Mighty Taco parachute team,
4070. AsWtonl Prof....,.-.
and continue with a chance for fans to meet
Chemistry, Pooting tF-4064.
Buffalo's newest celebrity, the UB mascot. The
Assodolt/Full Professor iD
first 1 .000 fans will get special commemorative
:"~~~~~
centennial posters. as well as UB schedule
Asmf•ot Prorasor in Stnl~
magnets.
tgy·Monagemeru Scieoa: ond
Plenty of excitement and numerous p romoSystems, Pooling IF-4068.
l ions will highlight all six UB horne games in
1994. Events planned for each game include the
R.,..reb Assodott Ed;lor·
food tent, where you can listef'Ho the toe-tap=~ ~,:.~ Postinj~L---1--/--ntnn sounds of Dixieland jazz while enjoying
the Prov051, Posting MR-940SS .
I Burgers. hot dogs. or sausages with pepPrognunmer/Anllyst-Scbool
pars and onions. While the music plays (the
or Nursing, Pooling •R-94027.
Outer Circle Orchestra kicks olf the season on
Sspl. 1 7), jugglers and clowns w!U also allofl
through the area, entertaining the· young and the
AdmiDi5lnlor (SL-3)-Podiattoni/Assodot./f'ull pror....,r

rics, Posting •P-4067 . Produc·

~;:':~;!i;:!;=.:;~~Printmoking Tecbnicion (SL2) (port-time)-Art, Posting MP4065. Sculpture Technic:ian

(SL-2)-Art, POSiing MP-4063.

fs~~~~f.:'J:.C.:"O:.'::

Reso&lt;m:es md Teehnologies,
POSiing IP-4070. S.oior App~cation Anolyll (SL-4)-Comput·
iDglnformation snd Tcchnology. P0S1in1 IP-4068.

Fans can be winners of some great prizes iusl
sitting in the stands watching the game. UB's
world-famous six-foot slingshot returns to hurl Tshirts, submarine sandwiches and other sur prises into the crowd. If you're not in a catching

mood. answer trivia or Name That Tune, and
play Let's Make A Deal during in-game promolions. For season ticket information. call the UB
Athletic Ticket Office at 645-6666.
Enterlnt1 Its first _ . _ in the 10-member Mid-Continent Conference, UB's six other

=~SOVICE

fall sports teams will kicl&lt; oft their season this
week as well .

~!l!:~~~:!!4l~~~)~ri&amp;·

Voae,bal

University Focilities, Une
4131302.

Bob Maxwell's Royals open the 1994 campalgn w ith three malches in three days at Alumni

~CLASSIFIEDCML

Arena. UB. 18-17 in 1993, starts the year Friday.
Sepl 2 against Cincinnati beginning al 7 p .m.
Saturday at 7 p .m. the Royals host Duquesne
and Sunday beginning all p .m .. UB entenains
St. Bonaventure .

saMCE

Cleaner (SG~SJ-Univcr.;i ty
Facilities, Une MllnS .

Public Safety 's Weekly Report

. . . U:

• A ring and a watch. worth a combined value of $600,
were reported missing July 11 from Alumni Arena.

• A book bag, with a pager. cash and two packs of
gum. was reported missing July 13 from Clark Gym.
• A bicycle. valued at $230, was reported missing July
19 from Porter Quadrangle.
• A tackling dummy, valued at $150, was reported
missing Aug. 1 from a football sled in the UB Stadium.
• A tO-speed bicycle, valued at $450. was reported
missing Aug. 2 from the second floor hallway in the Commons. According to Public Safely, the bike was taken by
maintenance for safekeeping , and returned to the owner.

• A four-by-three fool tapestry valued at $250 was
reported missing Aug. 3 from Squire Hall.
-• A man reported Aug. 5 !hal 148 gallons of gasoline.
valued at approximately $90. was missing from lhe Helm
stockroom.
,
• Two five~gallon coffee containers . valued at $250.
wererreported missing Aug . 16 from Norton Cafeteria.
• Two cases of coffee. valued at $60 , were reported

missing Aug. 17 from Hayes Hall.

$995

• 14"' Color Monitor

• 9600 Fu Mockm
• Pallium Upgradcablc

~

~

ISIOh.._SI~ t.llllb.llt. ICDII-.....__ ........ at._.._, ~.......,.lllrioc.

9600'2......, fa-n-....,_•_......_cDrlllkll..,._.._.&lt;"-f'llll-.l,_._

*l,..,_..,......,..,

li

P&lt;rfocma 636

$1698

witbCO-I.OM

old.

Janitor (SG-07)-University

,.. followlolll . . . . , _ . _ - ....
~-- D t p - of PMbllc ~ - ...., • -

........... .,..... ........ welcomes bacl&lt;
44 lettermen end 15 ll8fterS from last year's
squad as the Buns open the 1994 season this
Salurday at James Madison lJnMirwily in
Harrisonburg, V8. The game marks the first-ever
meeting between the two schools.
James Madison, 8 memper of the Yankee
Conference, finished the 1993 season with 8 6-5
record end returns 39of its top 44 players making the Dukes 8 solid test lor the Bulls in the

~go .

infOflJlltion.

~MSmV!I!
The IntenSive ~glish Language

Bulls toqJen~

......._

The Bulls kicl&lt; olf their 1994 season on Salurday Sept. 3 with a 1 p .m . match against MidContinent rival Central Connecticut Stale at the
Rea.eation and Aihletics Complex Field. Coach
John Astudillo's club was 8-8-31asl season and
1-1 in the East Coast Conference .

·-··--

One of the biggest surprises of 1993, Ron
Case's women's soccer team begins their 1994
season on the road with a pair of malches. The
Royals, 10-7-1 a year ago, travel for a match
Saturday afternoon at St. Bonaventure and complete the road swing on Sunday at Robert
Morris.

C... eo-by
Both of UB's cross country squads get under
way this Saturday When they host Colgate in a
dual meet at Akron Falls Par~. The meet begins
al 11 a.m. with lhll women's 5,000-meter race
followed by the men's 8.000-meter race. Coach
Dicl&lt; Barry's teams brought home East Coast
Conference Championships lasl season. tt was
the Bulls' first tiUe and the second by the Royals
in three years.

-Sports Information Office

Episcopal Sel'\·ice
Holy Eucha rist Rite II

"COME AND SEE"

John 1:46

~ (
Evel)' Su nday

at 2:00p.m.
The Co mm o 11S

Suite 700
" Come Worship with us"
Episcopal Campus Ministry
a1 th&lt;." L' ni,·ersity of Buffalo
Th&lt;.' Commo ns
Sui1e 211
688--!0)6
Di rector/ Chapbin
The Re,-. B.A . Tasy

�-s.----.-1

8

to .50%

...........
.....,_
...................
_....

.......... . . . a f
~

......., I ·--~~lliiii:l

...... _......

........,..,,,....,..........,............_.
................. ¥11

I

FAIT, tu1UTY lllmCI· t~ lllellltl..fr.cttion

C Technologies

(716) 838-2745

A'1911Ue, Town ol Tonawanda, HY

835

FAX~

John Orela of Public Safety presents 20-year pin to Ollk:er David F,...k •

Rot&gt;-

ert Palmer and Toni Schunke look on.

Service honors presented
··········~··························
JJ-tJI
Series ticut $50.00
~~IJO·
Sing/eticut$12.00

s~

&amp;01(

=::~~~-~::: : : : : :N:::

Y1111Quartet. ............ .............................. November29

)

Prazak Quartet...........................................February 7
Carmina Quartd............................................ March 21
The Lydian String Quartet with
Sanford Sylvan, baritooe ............................. Aprill8
Mendelssolm String Quartet with
CharlesNeidkh,dmnet ...._ ........................May 16
Tuesday evenings at 8:00 p.m. 11 Kleinhans Music Hall.
PI&lt;-&lt;ODCtn lllb by lbe artists II 7:15p.m.
Call 838-2383 for our bmcbun: or !DOlt infonnation.

........,. ..

A SOLO
PIANO CONCERT

" - • - to A eteiJ .,._...... in
the Division of Student Affairs Aug. 17 at a
Service Recognition Breakfast in the Center
for Tomorrow. Among the speakers were
Donna S. JUc:e, associate vice president, Division of Student Affairs; Oiffonl B. Wilson, associate vice president, Division of
Student Affairs, and committee eo&lt;hairs,
Toby Shapiro and Dewey Bush.
The honorees, presented by Robert L.
Palmer, vice president of the Division of
Student Affairs, along with division directors and supervisors, were:
Tbiny Years: Jean Gray, Kathy Grieco,
Nancy Srubbe;
Twenty years: Edward Bush, David
Chernega, Thomas Covey. Ronald
Dallmann, Jean Frainier, David Frank, Diane
Gale, K~ George, Lee Griffm, Roy
Guarino, James Guercio, Judy Ja.slcier, John
Jordan, Joseph Krakowiak, Janet Mather,

How can you help
your students succeed
at no cost to you?

THE SUMMER SHOW

Co-presented by

The

Thurs &amp; Fri, Sept 15 &amp; 16 • 7:30pm
All SealS Reserved, $1B and $16 BSC Community and
Alumni, Children and Seniors al Rockwell Hall Box
Office (1300 Elmwood Ave). Charge By Phone
71 M378-3005 (TOO# 71 M378-3031 ).

~
F...A.

an~wer .....
.,.
lS ... ~~

BUFFALO STATE COLLEGE
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

Rockwell Hall Auditorium

David Parobek. Kenneth Penski, Michael
Reinig, Donna IUce, Odell JUc:e, Michael
IUvera, Sally Sams, James Smith, Daniel
Walgate;
Ten years: Michael Aris. Frances
Bernstein, Tony Berrafato, Dennis Black,
DebraCorey,MaryDahl, JackDalton,Ricbard Dischner, Daniel Domon, Art Dory.
Kevin Durkin, Larry Feger, Joe FISCher,
Gertrude Gerlach, James Golembiewski,
Hazel Greer, Diane Grieco, Chester
Jankowski, Camille Krawczyk, Donald
Kreger, Barbara Kwandrans, JUchard Unde,
Virginia Maurin, Ursula Meier. Tom ·
Minnuto, NiclrDiena Moran, Carolyn Neuner,
Ann O'Connor, Ann Odenbech, Rita Pollock, Mary Ann Prentiss, Helen Regan,
Dolores Repschlager, Lynn Riley, Thomas
Shine, Mary Skapinski, Gordon Storms,
Donna Strzelczyk. Marcia ~erud, Daniel
Walsh, Jean Winkler.

Mtddn'~·

Y~ N"" 1'\ill s.ru;, ~·ConreniffitlyCommons
Located
Copy Center

IS rtoady to assist
~
of both tht: studems and facu lty.

Makin' Copits
n~~s

Lt't US put you r c-iaf's noi~S on file and
we'll make II easy for your students to

Look for George's latest

album, Summer, at your
favorite music store.

At the UB

obtaJn the:m .
Inquire about ou r Facuhy Discounts
available on ou r fuU r.:m~e of ropy

We offer pat cu.tomer
oerrice IDclud.ID&amp;:

fnoe l'ldc-up Seruic&lt;• for

Teachtn No!PS
Easy Acces on Campus
Conuenienl Hours

SCJ"\1ces .

'ifta

FACULTY: For lariq your notes oa file, yon will lie
a
FREE $25 VOUCHER for oar full raqe of con .oenica.

Please join us in support of

City Mission/Cornerstone Manor
by bringing a donation of canned
food to lhe concert.

Call or visit us soon at the Commons!
520 Lee Entrance. Suite 105

·1 ' I 636 -8440
l'.t' 636-8468

�-a.----.-..
I

I

I

I

9

I:

Runners perform better on diet moderately high in fat, study shows
JGHL Y TRAINED

runners lioping to improve their performance by dashing fat
from their diets may
be heading down the wrong nutrition~.! path, a small pilot study by
UB researchers implies.
Six members of the univet'Sity's
!rack team were able to run 20
percent longer and achieved higher
maximum oxygen consumption on
a diet moderately high in fat than
on a high-arbobydrate, low-fat
regimen, results showed.
•our data are consistent with a
number of investigations that have
shown muscular adaptations to a
high·fat diet which result in increased eodunnce," said John J.
Leddy, associate director of UB's
Sports Medicine Institute and a ooauthor of the study, reported in
MediciM and Scienc~ in Sports
and Exercis•.
.. Funhermore, our findings
present evidence that severely restricting dietary fat may be detrimental to endurance performance.
We would not advise fat intake in
ex~ of 30 percent of total daily
calories, but athletes who limit fat
oonsumptioo to well below this
level, especially without adequately
compensating with other energy
sources, may adveraely affect performance," be stated.

Historically, researchers have
agreed that a high-carbohydrate,
low-fat diet is preferred for maximum eodwance during moderateto-high-intensity exercise. Many
of tbe studies supporting this view
have used untrained or moderately
trained subjects, Leddy said Those
results may not apply to tnlined
runners because trained athletes
metabolize fats more efficiently
than untrained persons, he noted.
Previous studies using a highfat diet often severely restricted
carbohydrates,aswell,Leddysaid,
while carbohydrate levels remained
at 50 percent of total calories even
on the increased-fat diet in this
study.
To compare performance levels, UB researchers placed subjects on three different diets for ~
one week each, and couducted ex- ~_
ercise testing at the end of each
week. The three diets were:
• Normal-the diet regularly
followed by the athlete, which was
determined to be composed of 61
percent carbohydrate, 24 percent
fat and 14 percent protein
mills after each week's diet to de• High fat-composed of 50
percent carbohydrate, 38 percent
tennine maximum oxygen con·
fat and 12 percent protein
sumption-a measure of the
efficiency of one ·s oxygen-trans• High carbohydrate-compa;ec[of 73 percml carbohydrate, port system and an indicator of
IS percmt fat and 12 percmt protein.
aerobic capacity-and endurance.
To eliminate any canyovcr efSix male members of the UB
traek team took port in the study.
fect from the carbohydrate "'Bimen the runners consumed and
The athletes-were..leSled on tread-

were tested on the higher-fat diet
before the high-arbohydrate diet.
Results showed tbe athletes ran
20 percent longer on the high-fat
diet than on the carbohydrate diet,
and 32 percent longer on tbe high fat diet than
their nonnal diets.
Maximwn oxygen ooosumption
was 11 .4 percent higberon the high·

on

fat diet than 00 tbe high-carbohydrate diet, reoults showed.
Leddy said the study design Will
actually biased apinst the f11 diet.
"'ne ofthepurJXBSoftheotudy
design was to deplete JIIUSCle glycogen to observe the effect of presumably higher inlramuscular fat.
If the study design caused muscle
glycogen depletion suffiCient to
oegatively affect performance, it
should have affected the higher-fat
runners more than tbe higb&lt;arbohydraterunners,becausetheystarted
with lower muscle glycogen.
"In faet, tbeoppositeoccurred,he said. "The only difference between these two groups was the
higher amount of dietary fat consumedoveraone-weekperiod. The
total daily calories, mining regimen and tnlining response were
identical."
This small study shows that ath letes who severely restrict the
amount of fat in their diets may be
sacrificing some endurance, Leddy
said. He suggested that researcheTs
do further studies on the role of fat
as an energy souroe during beavy
exercise.
Authors of the study, in addi tion to Leddy. were Deborah M.
Muoio, now at the University of
orth Carolina; Peter J. Horvath
aud Atif B . A wad of the UB Deportment of Nutrition, and David
R. ~ of.,_VB o.:p.nment of Physiology.

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SALE PIA:'\OS In chi
Special once-in-a-lifetime
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ofTMillerspon: H'~"YFoil ow the piano signs.

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ORCHARD PARK,

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... ----.- ~
!

,

Thomas R Beam, Jr., 48,
professor, researcher

MarpretA.ofOulfpon,Fla.,ElizabethSpauldingofTaroma,
Wash. and Martha M . Richards of Buffalo; a son, Battoo C.
ofTucaon, AriL; eight gl1lD(Ichildren and 1 great-grandson.

n..-11. a - , Jr., • , . . , _ and researcher in the
UB School of Medicine and B iomedical Sciences and consultant to the U.S. Food lk Drug Administntion, died unex-

Louis Judelsohn, 89,

pectedly Aug. 17 in ius office in the B uffalo VA Medical
Center. He was 48.
Funeral services 'l(iete held
Aug. 30 in Calvary l!piscopal
Church, Williamsville.
Beam was an infectious diseases expen known internationally fDI'his wDI'k on drug-nsistant
bacteria and viruses. In 1989, he
was appointed to direct a tw"'

year innovative project estat:
lished by the FDA and Infectious
Diseases Society of America to
speeduptheFDA'sapprovalprocess fa&lt; oew antibiotics and to enhance its mooita&lt;ing of
drugs on the market for early warnings of adverse effects.
He also chaired the FDA's Anti-Infective Drugs Advisory Committee and in 1990, oversaw hearings focusing on
proposals for modifying the FDA ·s guidelines for approval
• of new antimicrobial drugs.
He was chainnan of the Antibiotics Use and Clinical
Trials Committee of the Infectious Diseases Society of
America. He was the editor-in-chief of two national medical
journals: Jnf•ctions in M&lt;dicin&lt; and Absrracts in /nf.ctious
BEAM

D~a.u.

A professor in the UB Department of Medicine and an
associate professor in the Department of Microbiology,
Beam was chief of the Buffalo VA Medical Center's infectious diseases section for II years, and was seoving as associate
chief of staff fa&lt; education at the hospital at thetimeofhisdeath.
Beam received his bachelor's and medical degrees from
the l{niv~~y of Pennsylv~a in 1968 and 1972, nspective1y He JOined UB as an msuuctor m the Department of
Medicine in 1974.
Beam was featured recently in stories about the mounting
problem of drug-resistant bacteria on CBS-TV's "4&amp; Hours"
and in a CO¥C':I' story in N~w:nw~t.
He was espec.ially concerned about the ~ing resources allocated for developing new drugs in ~ fight
agajnst disease-causing organisms at a time when drugresistant organisms appear 10 be proliferating. Beam voiced
his concern that half the pharmaceutical companies in 11 ..
U.S. and Japan bad gotten out of the antibiotic business
because they "thought the fight against bacteria bad been
won."lfthedrugcompanies began full-scale research tomorrow into new antibiotics. it would still be seven to 10 years
before we might be back in good shape,· he emphasized.
A prolific researcher, Beam authored or ~authored
numerous textbook chapters and articles in professional
journals. He was a reviewer for many profcssionaJ publica·
tions, including the Journal of th• Am&lt;rican M&lt;dical As-

sociation, Journal of

lnf~ctious Dis~as~s.

Annals of

Phanrulcoth&lt;rapy and Am•rican Journal ofKidney Diseasu.
Beam was a fellow of the American College of Physicians and the Infectious Diseases Society of America, and
was" member of many professional organizations.
Survivors include his wife, Janice; a daughter. Nancy V.;
ason, Thomas R. "Todd", fV; his parents, Tha&lt;nas R., Sr. and
Lillian of Sarasota, Fla. and a brother, Jeffrey, of Paramus,
NJ.

George Hayes Marcy, 89,
orthopedist, professor
M-ulee{YI_w_hekiAuC.2 fOI'GeorgeHayes
Marcy, 89, a longtime Buffalo octhopedisl whn served as
assistant clinical professor of Ol'thopedics at UB. Marcy died
July 27 at his Abino Woods Farm in Point Abino, Ont.
A graduate of Harvard Medical School, be joined his
father, Dr. William H. Marcy, in private medical practice as
an orthopedisl. In World War U, he was an orthopedic
surgeon with the 23rd Gene111l Hospital. He served in North
Africa and Naples, Italy, where he perfa&lt;med pioneering
work with penicill in. Marcy served also in France and
England, where he was chief of orthopedics for the !60th
General Hospital.
Marcy was chief of staff at both Millard Fillmore Hospital
and Buffalo General, where be was an otteoding surgeon.
After his retirement, be took up a career in farming at his
Abino Woods Farm.
Be was a member of the American College of Surgeons,
1be AmericaD Orthopedic Asllociation, tbe RosweO Park
Medical Club and the Medical Union.
Survivors include his wife, Elizabeth; three daughters,

pediatrician for 50 years
Looola Judelaollft, n, • llutflllo ~ for SO
years, whn serv~ as clinical associate professor of ~at­
rics at UB, died Aug. 14 in bis home in Buffalo. Servtces
were beld Aug. 16 in Delaware Park Memoria.! Chapel.
Jude\sohn, a native of England, attended McGill University in Montreal and graduated from Unioo College in
SchenecUdy. He graduated from Albany Medical College in
1927, when he came to Buffalo serving as a resident in
pediatrics at Children' s Hospital befa&lt;e opening his private
practice.
During World War n be served in the 103rd General
Hospital in England, and U.ter in France and Germany after
the Normandy invasion.
Jude\sohn, clinical attending physician in pediatrics at
Children' s Hospital, also served oo the staffs of Sisters,
Buffalo General, Mercy and Millard Fillmore hospitals.
For many years Judelsobn was director of newborns fa&lt;
the Salvation Acmy's Booth Hospital and medical directa&lt;of
Lutheran Adoption Services. He was the WNY pediatric
director of Head Start and medical director of the Mother and
Child Care Center, 1 model well-baby clinic.
He was a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Medical Association, the medical societies of New York and Erie County and the Buffalo Pediatric
Society. Het:eceived thefust "Compleat Pediatrician" award
from the Buffalo Pediatric Society in I 979.
He is survived by his wife, Clara; two sons, Richard, whn
joined his father in what is now known as Buffalo Pediatric
Associates in 1972, and Arthur; and five grandchildren.

Eleanor S. Golder, 73,
biology labs supetvisor
....,_. • - held Au&amp;- 11 in St. Gregory the Great
Catholic Ouuch, Amhcn;(, fO&lt; Eleanor Stanton Golder, 73,
fanner supervisor of the biology labOI'atories at UB. Golder
died Aug. 16 in Millard FiUmore Hospital after a brief
illness.
A graduate of the former Buffalo State Teachers College,
she worked at American Optical from 194 7- I 960 and then
became a claims examiner for the state Division of Employment. In 1970, sbe earned a master 's degree and took a
position at UB overseeing the bio logy labs, where she served
until her retirement in 1988.
She is survived by her husband. Bruno; three sons, Dr.
Bruce of Aiea, Hawaii, Patrick of Rochester and Dr. Daniel
of Snyder; and a grandson.

Jane A. Schnell, secretary
at Newman Center
Servlcea • - held AuC. 17 in St. Joseph 's Catholic
Church for Jane A. Schnell, who was secretary to the
chaplain of the Newman Center at UB from 1975-1984.
Schnell, 72, died Aug. 14 in Erie County Medical Center
after a brief illness.
/
A graduate of D •Youville College, she had sdrved as a
secretary for General Motors Acceptance Corp. and as a
substitute teacher in Buffalo schools.
Survivors include her husband, Richard; three sons, Richard, Jr. of Hammond, La., PeterofKenmono and Dayid; three
daughters, Gretchen Rich of East Aurora, Jane ofllelld, Ore.,
and Karen Hoffman; and II grandchildren.

J. Richard Sentman, 68,
institute co-director
Mamort.l -.Jcea • - held Jul)' 18 at First Presbyterian Church, Oarence, for J. Richard Senbnan, co-director
of the Institute for New Teachers of Regents Physics in the
Graduate School of Education's Department of Learning
and Instruction. Sentman, 68, died July 15 in his home in the
Town of Tonawanda.
A graduate of Hampton Sydney College in Virginia and
the University of Virginia, Sentman received his doctorate in
physics from UB in 1989, continuing at the university as a
guest lecturer and bead of the physics institute.
He spent 37 years as a physics teacher at Oarence High
School, retiring in 1985. Sentman spent two years in Nairobi,
Kenya, in 1967 where be instructed student teachers. He also
lectured at the Buffalo Museum of Science.

He was named I&gt;istinguished ScieDce T~ by Sip&amp;
Xi Calspan Oub in 1981 and by the Americaa Oaemical
Society in 1980. In 1991 be received the DisliJJ&amp;uisbed
Service Key from Pbi Delta Kappo and in June, wu """'1nized by the ScieDce Teachers Asoociatioo of the Niqara
Frontier fa&lt; his many years of service. He was a member of
the Niagara Frontier Science Supervisors Asoociatioo and
the American Association of Physica Teachers.
Survivors include his wife, Ruby; a daughler, Debra
Sorenson of New Brunswick, N.J.; two lOllS, John .of
Wheatfield and Cbarles of Town of Tonawanda; his father,
Harold, of Winter Park, Fla.; and five grandsons.

Robert H. Gwntow, 64,
master teacher
~ w-IMidAIIC- Sln W e a t s - fO&lt;Robett

H. Gumtow, assistant professor of Pharmacy and
Phannaceutics at UB. A revered and respected teacher in lb.
ScbooJ of Pbarmacy fa&lt; more than 30 years, Gumtow, 64,
died July 30.
Ho-Leung Fung, chai r of

Ph a rmaceutic s , d·escribed
Gumto w as "truly a students· professor. A masterteacber,hetaught
thousands of pharmacy students
and provided endless hours of
personal guidance," Fung said.
"Many students are indebted to
him f.,. their success.
"Over the years, the School of
QUMTOW
Phannacy yearbook recognized
him three different times,· Fung
said. "Students loved and respected him.·
Gumtow, a registered pharmacist, graduated from UB in
196.2 with a bachelor of science, and began a teaching career
at tlie UB School of Pharmacy. In 1970, his colleagues
petitioned the university to grant him professorial cank. In
1981, he received a SUNY Chancellor's Award fO&lt; Excellence in Teaching.
, Gumtow, who served in an engineering battalion in the
KOt'eaJl War, oven::ame many obstacles before cmbarlcing on
his teaching career. While in the service, he contracted
tubercular meningitis and fell into a coma. He was left
partially paralyzed and ~ his memory erased. During a
five-year period, he ~~ rehabilitation, working to
recover movement in his limbs and to relearn all that had
been blotted OUL
During his career, he was the author or co-author of
numerous papers and held memberships in the American
Pharmaceutical Association, the American Association for
the Advanc:&lt;mem of Sc:ieoce, the American Alax:iation of
Colleges of Pharmacy and thePbamtaceutical Society ofJapan.
Survivors include two daughters, Mana C. Kilian and
Lies! R. Gumtow; a son, Kurt L. Gumtow; two si$1etS,
Joanne Raymoodjack and Sharon Richey.

J. Curtis Hellriegel,
obstetrician, gynecologist

~ •- ~H

fO&lt; J. Curtis Hellriegel, a
Buffalo obstetrician and gynecologist for many years, whn
served as an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UB. Hellriegel died July 22 in Millard FtllniOie
Hospital after a long illness.
A graduate of the UB medical schnol, Hellriegel interned
at Buffalo General Hospital and served residencies inobsletrics at Kensington Hospital for Women and University of
Pennsylvania Hospital, both in Pbiladelphia. An early adv"'
cate of natw-al childbirth, he was the John Goodrich Oark
Fellow in gynecology at University of Pennsylvania Hospital HeservedoothestaffsofBuffaloGmeral,MillardFillmore,
Deaconess, Sisters, ChiJdrm 's and St. Fnncis hospitals. In
1966, he was elected chief of staff at Millard Fillmore.
Retiring in 1987, Hellriegel was honored Hi 1983 for SO
years of service to the field of medicine by the Medical
Society of the State of New York. In 1991, he was booored
for his SO years in medicine by Millard Fillmore Hospital.
HewasamernberoftbeBuffaloGynecologicandObslefric Society, American Medical Association, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American Society
of Abdominal Surgeons, Canadian Fertility Society, American College of Surgeons, International College of SWJ!eons,
Pan-American Medical Association, and Royal Society of
Physicians.
Survivors include his wife, Dr. Pauline Hellriqel; a son,
Dr. Jobn C., Jr. of Amherst; two da.ngblen, Dr. Paula H.
Dumont of Franldin, Tenn. and Lois A. of Egertsville; and
five grandchildren.

�-s.---.-1.
Facul
of Amherst and the WiUiamsville
Ccn1ral School District Board of

Lt. Gov. Slaa Laadlae and
llobert llenlahJ, pror.....,..
of higher education and director
of the IDstitule for Reoearch in
Higher md Adult Education II
the University II Maryland II
College Park, will speak this fall
IS port of the Breakfost Seminars
for Western New York's Higher
Educa1oni series. Bolh seminars
are open to the public.
Luncline will speak Sept. 9 in
the Cenlo&lt; for Tomorrow.
Benlohl will speak Oct. 14 in the
Fireside Lounge in the Canisius
College Student Cmter. The
seminars are sponsored by the
Deponment of Educational Organization, Administration md
PolicyatUB.
Lundine is oven;eeing the
state's "Cal= Pathways" educa·
tion n:forms that will help prepare young people for the
2lsH:mtury workforce.
Benlohl has seJVed on the
faculties of UB, San Francisco
State University and the Univer. sity of Maryland. A political
scientist, he specializes in the
study of relations belweeo higher
education md governments at the
national and state levels. -

The Office of the Provoot at
UB has made two appoint· meots in the area of undergraduate education. K.area K. Noonan
has hem named
associate vice
provoot for undergraduate education. Janina
Kurshashem
appointed director of academic
advisement.
Noonan will
ovenee the operations of university
undergraduate
academic secvioes, including
academic advisement, the
Thomas J. Edwards Learning
Cmter and the University Honors
Program. She joined the UB staff
in 19851S assistant to the dean in
the Office of Graduate and Professional Education. She also has
secved IS assistant director for
admissions in the School of Den• tal Medicine, director of the Office of Research in Dental
Education and executive assistant
to the vice president for spon-

sored programs.
Moot recently, Noonan has
secved c:oocum:nt appointments
as interim dean of undergraduate
academic services and director of
academic advisement.
She is a member of the American Higher Education Association, the Soci~y for the Study of
Higher Education, the National
Academic Advising Association
and the New York State Transfer
and Articulation Association.
She has hem active in community service IS a member of the
Development Council of Studio
Arena Theatre and IS a trustee of
the Unitarian Universalist Otureb
I

Education.

Noonan m:eived ber doctoral
degree in .Ugher education and a
mas&amp;er's degree in anthropology
fromUB.
lo ber oew position, Kaars wiU
oversee the effectiveness of the
undergraduate academic advisement program and implement I
system of faculty advisemenL
She rrceotly seJVed IS interim
director of academic advisement
and previously was a senior staff
associate for resource management in the Office of the Provost
and assistant to the vice provost
for undergraduate education.
She began her career at UB
more than 20 years ago IS a research assistant in the Department
of Physiology. For almost I 0
years, she was an instructor in the
Department of Biochemistry and
coordinator of the undergraduate
program in biocbemisuy. She has
bad a particular~ in building faculty mentoring relationships through undergraduate
research opportunities. Kaars was
a co-investigator on a $50,000
National Scieoce Foundation
project to integrate the use of
microcomputers in teaching laboratories.
She m:eived a master's degree
in science education from UB and
a bachelor's degree in biology
from~ Stooy Brook.

..,..

....,_..

~

Two of the prinCipal discoverers of high-tempera·
ture superconductivity, Nobel
Laureate J. Georg Bedoorz of
the mM Corp. (Zurich) and c. w.
(PauO Cbu of the Texas Cmter
for Superconductivity aod Applications at the University of Houston, will participate in the
Seventh Confetmce on Superconductivity and Applications, to
be held in the Buffalo Hilton
Sept. 7-9.
Sponsored by the New York
State IDstitute on Superconducti vity (NYSIS), located at UB, the
international conference wiU
focus on methods of developing
high-temperature superconducting materials. More than 200
researchers from across the
United States and more than 10
foreign countries are expected to
attend.

W8FO ...Umusic
fur
......_.

0

$2 admissi&lt;m fee. Free balloons
will be banded out to the finlt 100
children, and live bands will
perform IS llleodoes search the
boxes for tbll perfect bargain for
their record, tape or CD collection. Kulbida says more than 500
people combed through I 0,000
records, tapes and CDs at last
fall"s Vinyl Madness.
·

llpJ ofhNdlll

r''Tt~
The UB School of Nursing
is offering five full scholarships to the graduate program in
nursing rehabilitation to nurses
wbo have completed their
bachelor's degrees. The scholarships are funded by a $98,000
grant from the U.S. Department
of Education, awanled to UB to
promote rehabilitation musing by
attracting qualified people to the
field.
For more information, contact
Sbaroo Dittmar, project director
for preparation of advanced practice nurses in rehabilitation. at
829-2088.

0

~

--

......_nell_

0

A group of local aod international business executives
have hem named to the new
Dean's Advisory Council at the
UB School of Managemeot. The
council has hem assembled by
School of Management Dean
Frederick W. Winter to assist the
school in its goal of achieving
preerni.M:nce in the areas of man·
agement education and research.
Tbe council will be chaired by
Sal H. Alfiero chairman and chief
executive officer of Mark IV
lodustries. loc.
Other council members are
Tanri Abeng, managing director.
Wisma Bakrie, Jalwu , lodone·
sia; FrankL. Ciminelli, chairman.
Tbe Ciminelli Companies; Janles
H. Oeave, president and CEO.
Marine Midland Bank, N.A.;
Frank J. Colantuono, president
and CEO, lodependent Health

Asst:x;iation. loc.
Also, James A. Eskridge,
presidenL Fisher-Price; Gale
Fitzgerald. president.f.&lt;&gt;mputer
Task Group, Inc.; &lt;4thony H.
Gioia, chairman, Gioia Management, loc.; Patricia L. Higgins,
group vice president, NYNEX;
Edgar G. Hotard, president.

Pruair,loc.
And, Luiz F. Kabl, president.
The Carborundum Company;
Victor A. Rice, chairman and
CEO, Varity Corporation; Paul L.
Snyder, Sr., chairman and CEO,
Snyder Corporation; William M .
Steul, vice pmAdent for finao&lt;:e
aod c:bic{ financial officer, Digital
Equipment Corporation.

fill

«

November in Fanny's ~
3500 Sheridan Dr~ Amherst.
The sc:bedule: Sept. 22, "Pratt
and Lambert md the Qu&amp;lity
Advantage," speaker: Julie M.
Graffeo, quality advaota&amp;'C coor·
dinator, Pratt and Lambert, Inc.;
Oct. 27. "The New Standatds of
Excellence in Cuslomer Satisfacuon, ·speaker: MicbaelJ. Billoai.
vice president, Ric:b Baseball
Operations; Nov. 17. "The People
Side of Total Quality Management, • speakers: Thomas J.
Dixon, manager of hiDDAD resources, A.lliedSignalloc ~ Joan
M. Horrigan. vice president of
compeosation, Marine Midland
Bank; Robert W . MiUer, human
resource and TQM manager for
Weodel, an architectural/eogioeering consulting design finn,
and Robert &amp;.. Freeland, interim
superintendent, KertiDOrO-Town
of Tonawanda Public Schools.

n - Roll ...... Ia c:t.lr
.......

Thomas C. R.....,tba~
associate professor of family
medicine at the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical S&lt;;ieoces and a 1975 graduate of the
UB medical school, has been
rwncd cbair of the Deponment of
Family Medicine.

0

Rosenthal had
secved IS interim
cbair for the past
year. A member of
the department
since 1978, be was
~
instrumental in
establishing the division of rural
health, the medical school's rural
health campus in Cuba, N.Y., and
its resideocy program in rural
health. Through his initiative, UB
was named a New York Rural
Health Research Cmter in 1992,
and in 1993 hecameooeoffive
U.S. universities designllt:d as
national rural health resean:h caurs.
Ra;entbal also W1S founding
director of UB"s Primary Care .
Resource Cmter.
He is project direct&lt;4of a Sl
million Generalist Physi~an
Initiative grant from the Roben
Wood Jolmson Foundation, coprincipal investigator of a S 1.1
million federal grant to investigate rural -health policy issues,
and co-principal investigator of a
$250,000 federal grant to document rural health services for
persons with HJV .

111NerecehreAI61

A..-rw

0

Howard Wolf, professor of
English and a member of the
UB English Department since
1967, has returned after"Spending
two years as a visiting professor
at the University of Hong Kong
and lecturing in Japan this year as
a Fulbright Scholar in· American
literature and culture.

HOUSE FOR SALE
H1 s 1Jmca l ' Country in the
Cil) • · Universill' Hrights
district
CO\ ered rront porch.
In- Ia~· setup. A · must
see· . One or thr original
rarm houses in the area.
Has bern nicely
maintaint'd.

11\'---y

IUS

._

1bn&gt;e individuals aftiliated
with UB md wbo helped
save Jews and Clhen from the
Nazis c1urin!r World War D ,.,.
ceived The Righteous Among the
Nations Humanitarian Award
from the Buffalo chapter of the
American Jewish Committee.
Honored were Card J . van
Oss, professor of microbiology;
Krystyna Kielao Rybicka, senior researcb associate in the UB
Depanment of Physiology; and
Doris Sormseo, lecturer in the
World Language IDstitute at UB.
Sorenseo was among the m.aoy
Danes who aided their nation's
Jews to escape to Swedeo,
smuggled aboard flSbing boats in
1943; van Oss, a teen-ager in the
Dutch Resistance during World
War 0 , saved Jews, downed Allied pilots and other citiu:ns II risk
by forging identiftcation papers
for them; Rybicka and ber family
saved rwo tem-eged girls by hiding them in their borne in Poland
aod are credited with helping to
save many other Polish Jews.

0

Wolf rwblnls from
lec:tllr!!llp llbrolld

WBFO is looking for playable records, tapes or compact discs for its annual Vinyl
Madness fund-raiser on Oct. I.
Station music director Lydia
Kulbida is looking for all types of

music-from jazz to rock to
"plush• or "night of romance··
type music.
Donors should call 829-2555
to arrange for a convenient dropoff time belweeo now and the
event, which will be held in Allen
Hall on the South Campus. Donations are tax-&lt;leductible. WBFO
members will be admitted to a
free, sneak preview of the sale
beginning at 10 a.m. All others
will he admitted at II a.m. for a

The Cenlo&lt; for Manopmeat
Development in the UB
Sc:bool ManapDCIII bas
ocbcduJed I "Mmagement
RouDdtable,- willl seasioao from
S-9:30 a.m. monthly 111roua1t

0

r ll roor &amp; balhroom: glas
block cellar l&gt;.'i ndo~ s:
coppe r plumbing.
Aprro,imately 314 acre.

(716) 835-4179

�IHIKIIIJIII

...........,J..s.eMv....... H.No.1

hauled boxes and rrunks imo dorm
rooms as others put their energies
imo strenuous Outward Boundtype games. ~The partying
continued with a Welcome Back
Bash Wednesday in the Student
Union, sponsored by the Undergraduate Student Association. ~
And the fun's not over yet ... plenry
of activities remain in the offing
under September Wt;J~ ~a .

FROM TOP: President and Mrs. Greiner dish up
barbecue: Crystal Shirley leads commuter tour; MBA
students try Ourward Bound games; ic~ breaker 'It Tag'

PilOT

at Alumni Arena.

��lllltder&gt;loommunityiD..-II&gt;aldo-hnolvea.-ottloe-.a.., _. 10 be ""-1 by floe

AITIQII: DefinitWns

TAIU Of C0111'B1TS

for tiK SuJl~ UlliwrsiiJ of New Y«i Gl BM/falo

ptlg&lt;'

1. 1bo ...,. "u..i..ni1y" _ , . Stalo lhli..nlty of New Yort at
Buffalo.
2. n.. ..... ._.bodudooollpenoulllido&amp;...,._altheu..iv..-lity, both run time..., pon time,.,...,..;.,~ pduale, or
rn&gt;fe.ioaai oaodics.
l. 1bo...,. "IO'Jd oc:oclemic: ooandin&amp;" is "A...,.......;..- is iD
IOCJd ooandin&amp;" i l d only II:
ol t h e - · · cumulative pde
(le.. lor both wult
daDe at this University and at another iastitution) is 2.0 or above;
Wthe,_., pde paimaveraae lor the- ~Y campleled
semester is 1.0 or above..l.lld;
c)the ot-baueoolinuod"""'"'of_,;q75-ormoreof
thec:rodit hours lor wbic:b the ........,,nonnally rqillen 10 oatisly clopoe

Article 6: Adminislntive Regulations

ptlgt 6

~

Article 7: Alcobolic Bev.,.g&lt;S, Ak:oholic
Bevmage Cootrol Low

page 7

Article 8: Drug Ftet S&lt;:bools and Communities Act

page II

Preamble

ptlg&lt;2

Article I: Defmitions

ptlgt 2

Article 2: Judicial AU1hority

ptlgt 2

Article 3: Proocribed Conduct

ptlgt 2

Article 4: Studont Orpniutioos

pagt3

Article 5: University Stondards
lbdtsofrlw Boord o{Trdns
s.ppkiWJIUJllbdn for tlv Moilll~ttaltCt of Pwblic Onl.u

ptlgt J
ptlgt 4

Article 9: Parking and l'Talrtc Regulations

page II

Article 10: otrtce of Student FtnaneeS and Records

pagtll

Article II : Approval

pagtll

PRWUIJ
uNIVERSITY DISCIPUNARY PROCESSES t..U approprialt action whtn snuknl conduct directly and signijicalll/y
illlerftres with tlrt Uni&gt;'f!nity 's primary educational rtsponsibility of ilfSilring aU mem~r:s of its commWiity tlrt opporlllllity to ano.in their educatioruzl objeCJives in consofVI.IJCe
with the institution's mandou. These regulations gowrning
ent ~lravior ira&gt;'f! ~tn fomrulmed to ~ rtasonablt and
realistic for aU Sf!Uitnts.
Whtn a snukllllws ~en apprthtndtdfor tlrt vio/mion of
a lawoftlrt community, tht stau, or nation, it is tlrt Univasity 's
position )ot to requut or agree to special consitkration for
tlrt stwhlll ~=of his or lrtr S1udelll Slati&lt;S. It should~
untkmood that tlrt Univtnity is not a law tnforcemelll
agency. At the samt: time. the Univtrsiryd.«s not conctivt of
itself as a "sancltulry "for law breakers. Tht University luJs
always Men and shouqt continue robe concerned thmwhtn·
tvtr snuklllS art involved in ILgal probkms flrty ~ adequatt/y advised and reprtstlll&lt;d by qualified counseL
A Wliversity, tsptcially a Stott University subject to
constitutional requirements, must guaran:u srutkniS the
riglus that tht society and its laws prottct. An American
uniW!rsity gu.aran.Jt:U its stucknts th~ riglu:s on a cmnpus.
StudLIIlS who violatt a local ordinance, or any law, risk
tht legal ptnalries prtscri~d by civil authorities. Howtvtr,
violation oflawfor which tlrt snuk111 pays tht ptna/ty will not

paiDI•-

A ...uor swdenl is iD aood ooandin&amp; if and only if in additioo 10 a, b ,
andc, the..- has boon accoptod by a clepartm&lt;Dt or popom offcrina
a major prior so tbe fmt ICIIXIAer ol theaaior felll· StudtJul wboare noc
in IO'Jd ooandin&amp;""' 011 probotioo and IUbjoc:IIO ....auaJ ~
4. TheiCml "1acul1y mcmber"""""'""Y penoa oooductinac~uRocm
.ctiviticsaiUB.
S. The...,. "Uni...,.;ty ofl"ocial" includoo any penoa cmpio)'od by the
Univcrsity perfonnina assigned admiaistraLiveor profesDonal ~ ­
bilities.
6. The 1erm -membef of lhe University community"' inc.ludes any
pe:r500 who is a studcot. fK:ulty membef, UnJvenityofficial or any othtt
penoo employed by the Uni..nlty.
1. n.e ~am ·u.uw:nny pranises"' includes .n land. buildlnp. f.Cli·
tics. and other p-openy i:n the poaes&amp;:ioa of orowoc:d.. used., or controlled
by the unJ...,.;~y or afllliateo.
L Tbe term ""OI"pftization'"' tDea115 any awnber o£ prnons who ba\lt'
complied with the formal rcqain:mc:Du for uruvasity recopilioo.
t . The tam "judicial body" ....,.. aay persoos au1horiz.ed by the
Director o( JudiciaJ Affairs 10 determiDe whctbc:r. studeot Ms viobled
the Studeot Code and to ............., impooitioa of oanctions.
10. Tltetc:rm '"'Appellate Boud"meamany pcnoaorpc:rsoasaulborized
by the Di=t« ~Judicial Affairo IO c:oosi&lt;l..- aD appeal from a judkiaJ
body's cfctc:nniMtioa that altUdc:nl bas violated the Studmt Code or from
the sonctioos impoood by the S--W"1de Judiciary.
ll . 'lbo Vu PreaideDt lor Studmt Atrairo and the Dean~ S&lt;uden1&gt;.,.
the penoudesi'""""' by the Univusily Prt:Adeol to beraponsible r..
lhe admiaistratioo of tbe Srudent Code.
IL TheiCml "policy" iodefmed as the writ~&lt;~~ reauJations of the UniYCJoity as louod in, but -limited to, thec...duct StaDdank, Reoicleoce Life
HaaciJook, and Gnduat&lt;/Uod..-poduate Caalop.
11.. n.e rcrm "academic intqritypocoodina" ...... the proc:eos defmed
m both the UodnJrocluate and Gnduate Calalop I&lt;&gt;&lt; dcalin&amp; with oucb
tnl.tterl (su also Arrick $: #]).
\4. Tbe term "'c:btatin&amp;" iaclYdcs. bur. is QOII limited co: (a) UK of uy
unautboriu:d asdRaJx:e in talciag quiz.us. tem., or euminations; (b)
~ upoa the aid of ..,...... beyood thooe ai.Cllorized by the
inltnactor iD writina papen.. prepuina repons. sofvin&amp; problems.. or
c:orryina our other...;,......., or (c) the ~riou. without pcnnission., of 1esu or other ac:.demic m~~taUJ betonailia10 a member of the
UDivasiry facu.Jty or aaff.

Code. AD ~ _...,.. 10
decioioe with . . riP of--'"

l.'lboOeJ&gt;or-olPubllcSofetyollioonare-"'""'l.-..ollic:cn
und..-tloeEdocotioouwdtbeOimiiiiii-Low. l"oeyllavetloe

autborityiOmaa...-..-lare.._....oo..r"""'-....-

1111.._ *'"'

omd oil opplicable lawo
aaoy _.;.ooweod, -..s,
or leoood by tbelJoivenily. 1bo ~of Pa1J1ic Safely ollic:cn
boveoimilar autllority to ll&gt;al of~"-- adolod..,......
io-a.lividualo,and the..,-10 _
_
_

....... _IO_ .......... _IO_,ido!olify...,
Vktills' Rlglds

Wbell appearioa or l..utyin&amp; bdoro a . . _ jadicial body, the follow -

in&amp; principloo •PJ!Iy:
• lkri.pl:ofa victint to ~.e• penal m~ofberorbisc:llloict
........,.y b..- or bim .-_-the~ beorioa.
• The ri&amp;b!IO nmaiD pr-.1 durin&amp; the a11JR ....,.,.....,.
• The ri&amp;ht. a catablisbcd iD swe c:ri.miDal codc:a. ..a10 ba~ hill or
b..- irrelevant ....... uaJ biolory m.cu.odduriq !be~
• The ript to make 1 ""ric:tim impecl ~· ...t to IUIICM a
appropriate peaaby if the ........s io louod iD of !be code.
• n.eripr robe mr.......s immodialdyoftbe-oftloe bconna

s.ctiou
1. Sanctiom wn be"' the dioaelioa of the judicial body..., u..n be
limited only by the rules ,........, the tlni..nlty diocipliury bodieo
(For all&lt;! of opecif&gt;c: sonctioos ll&gt;al ""'Ybe inYOI&lt;ocl, COIISIIIt the po«dura for each _,uic Uni..nlty DiocipliDaty Body. CopiOo of lbe
~of the Jkarina ~foe t h e - of l'lobb&lt;
On!..- and the Stucleol- Wiele Judiciary .,. available io the Offic:o of the
Di=t« of Judkial Affairs, Room ~ Copea Hall. Nord! Campuo )
L The judicial bodico have tbe . . , - 10 inllitut&lt; and/or......,..,.,.
lhe loiJowiD&amp; ......, of 5a11Ctiaas:
ol WU11q.
~I R.ori!Dlioa.

&lt;1 Couasdina.
~

Loooofprivilep.

(II Rm&gt;ovallrom Univusily bouoina lacilitieo.
(2) Looo of oucb privilep as may be....;.._ with the offenst
comminod and the td&gt;abilitatioa of the •I DiscipliJw)' probotioo wido or the " - of deQcoalod
privilep r... ddinile p&lt;riod o1 time. n.e vioiatiooo of the ...,;, of
disciplioary probotioa or the inlnoctioa ~my u..ivusity rule durin&amp; the
period of- cliociplinary probotioo may be poutlllo for ouspensioo or
upuloioo from the Uni..nlty.
Q Suspcmioo from the Univenity t.. a defillile or iDdefinite pcnod
of time.

I) ExpuJo;oo from the Univenity.

111 Communily Service.
0 Soc:h other anc:tions u m11y be approved by the Un.iYeni.il) 's
judicial bodieL
•subjec:l to fiDal review of tbe Pn::sidcDl., a~~ .mao tbal is mandatory If

~~~:=~:;clflduct

ApplicaWe Laws, R-.s _, Reglllltioes

IS. The tenn "plaJiarism" includes, but io 1101 limited to, 1be use, by AD tuleo ~the Boord of l'ruol&lt;eo of SUNY, d oil the lawo of the Cuy
panphrue or direct quc&lt;atioa, ~the publisbcd or unpublisbcd wult or of lluffalo, the T""" of Ambenl. the sure of New y orit. and the United
aDOihcr- with&lt;M run and clear-~ It also iDcludts Swco of~ apply oa the campus tmd are caooidcn&gt;d put ~ lbe
the unacla&gt;owledpl usc of materials prepared by aDOihcr pen;on or
Studmt RW.. d Regula-_ The State of New York laws include, bu1
•&amp;me&gt;' ea.paed in tbe seUiq oftttm papcnor otbc:r academic: m~~a.c:riah. art: ootlim.itcd 10, tbe New Yort State PaW Law, u.e New Yort State
Vehicle and Traff'tc Law, tbe New York St.alc Educalioa Law, Md tbe
1.. The term "n&gt;copdzod otuden1 govemmenr· means Studcot Asoocia·
tioa (SA), Gtoduate Student A5oociatioo (GSA), Millan! Fillmore Col ·
Alcobolic: Beverage Cootrol Law.
Jece
Studcm Aooociatioo (MFCSA), Polity Student Coomcil, O..tal
AD ~ lhe tu1eo and '"JIU(atioos iD theoe cbaptcn o11a11 be C&lt;JaSidcrod
necessarily involw a violation of acatkmic standards or
Scbool Studcm Aslociatioa (DSA), Student S... Aooociatioo (SBA), · as~and~the"''f"''Oriai.tuleooftheBoord of
ruksoftlrt Univtnity. Tht Univtr:sitycannot ~ htld respon - Gnduate Management Aaoc:iatioo (GMA) and otber swdent aov=· T!USiees and city, llale.and ledcnllaws, dollall apply tooll-1&gt;.
sibiL for off-campus activities of its individual snuklllS bur men1&gt; that may be oflkially .-.cognized by the Uoi...,.;ly durin&amp; aay
lnadditioa,sinceaudenrswiU bepo..amod tobave-ao,""""""
year.
sbould luniliarize tbemsdveo with the lollowin&amp; Uni..nlty RegulamaiiUD.ins an inurur in all ~havior, wMther on or off17. The tttm •suspension"' mt:an5 removin.a from a studenl some or all ticu: Academic d Deportmm~al, Uai..nlty Library, Uni...,.;1y Mocampus, which may advtr:se/y affect tht University. In casts privUeaes offered by associatioo with the University for 1 specifaed t« Vehicle, Rosideuce Halls, Uni..nity 11&lt;61tb and Sofety, Studcnl
Activity Ceulcr, ComputerCeulcrcoaditioao o f - - and otber
involving violations of rlrt law which occur off campus, tlrt period of lime.
rqulatioao ellabliobed by Uoi~ unito iD purouil of their missioas.
University may~ conct,.,.,d with tlrt incidelllS that by rlrtir 1L The tenn "'expulsiom"' meaos pennallt1atly removin&amp; from a Rudeor
all privilege5 offtted by usociation with the University.
All .....oc:oclemic reauJations &amp;boald be .....uy to the
llalllrt advtr:sely affecttlrt Univtr:sity 's edl.cational mission. lt. The term ""clear and present dancer"' mcam immediate serious vio- v-tce Ptoaideot '"'student Atrairo r.. rev1ew r..-CIIIIIistal&lt;y ..., .......
~
"''ffiival.
~
pootiDJ
and/or
1
0In any University disciplinary procedure ont oftht high - lence iri expected or put conduct fumisbcd reason to betiqle such
affected by the '"C"Iaticu io the ......."bilily of the iadividual isouing tS1 priorities of tht Univenity is to safeguard tlrt stwhnt 's oondoct is""""""Plated; also, pocential of imtnodWe futun: rqbtiooof cleponmeot_
.
prohibited cooduct. i.e., AI&lt;/~ of cWp, deviaat oexualbehavriglu to due process. Due process is not an ~vt' kgal kx,etc.
Ally off..,... arioin&amp; OUI of aay of the l a w o - above ohall be
concept buJ rmMr simply requires tilL rudimentary ekments 20. The ..... "t=ponry ouspensioo".,.... UDderccrtaincin:umstanceo coaoidcoed pop..- maacn lor adjudicatioo bdoro the appropriate Uoivusity
cliociplinary body.
of "fair play • in an administrative proc..ding. To this ~nd, 1 itUdc:Dt m11y be dcc:med 10 be 1 a...EAR AND PRESENT DANGER to
the UlliverU1y communily and may be..._.- immodiately ...,.m.1
aU Univtnity ~iplinary proc~dures will at kosi afford tlrt a timely hearing oo the c:buJeo.
Ally otudmt fouod 10 have committed the lollowin&amp; miocooduct is
y oubjocl to cliociplinary sonctioos:
tkftndDnt a ciLar S1atemtnt of tht charges and rlrt llalllrt of !I. The lcrm "beorinp" meaas incidents~ Role Vlolatioos will
cause I student to be •summooc:cr to answer before I UtUveratr
tlrt tviknce upon which tlrt charges are based. Secondly, t1rt
saac:tioaod Judkial Body"' Judkial Officor. Sanctioood bodieo include 1. DISHONESTY -Aaoof~,includin&amp;but-limitediOthe
tkftndimr shaU ~given a fair lrtaring, ~ alwwed to con- Commiuoe for the Maintmmce of Public Ordtt, Studcot-Wide Judi- foJlowinc:
ol C...ting. plq:iarism, or otber formo ot oc:oclemic ~front and cro.ss-e.xamiu wirn.essu, and pr~nt his or Mr ciary, Rosideuce Life, Cornmuni1y SW&gt;dards Panel, aay authoriud
~~ Furoiobioa falae inloruwian 10 my Uni..nity official. faculty
Grct.k Letter Pmel, Arbitn.tiOO/Mecli.tioa hnc.ls:, and•utboriu:d boclie5
own position, evitknct and explanation. i..IJstly, no disciplin- within University academ..ic: divisions.
member or office.
&lt;IPotJ..-y, altentioa, or miouse ~ aay IJuhoet.ity documm~-.
ary action wiU ~ taken Wl1ess tlrt charges are substantiated
ARTICU Judicial Authority
or imlrvmem midt:otiflCalicD...
by tlrt tviknet. Tht couns have indicated that if these.
~T""""'""'wilbtheeloctioaolmyUni...,.;ly-~lludclll
Ullivwsity

Ge.eral Coact Riles _, Replatl.s

2:

minimal eiLmtlllS of "fair play· are fulfiliLd, tlrt tkftndimr
will ira&gt;'f! ~en affortkd due process untkr tht law.
In summary, tlrt Univtnity exp&lt;CIS and asks for its mem~rs no greater or no less fr..dom or liberty than uists for
otlrtrptr:sons in society. Tht Univtnity 's position, tlrtrtfore,

is not to request or agree to ~cia/ consit:kralion becOJLSe of
tlrt stwhnt' sst.atus. Tht Univtnity will not illlerfere with law
&lt;nforcemelll and otlrtr agencies. As port of its educational
mandat~ it wiU ~ concerned about snuk111 rtlrabiliJJJtion
and constitution to campus and society now and illlo tlrt
re.

Jll'is4lctiol of tile

I. Uni..nlty jurisdic:tioo and discipline ohall petUiD 10 coaduct which
occurs om Univen:ity premises or off campusmd which adversely affects
the University community, inc1udin&amp; uy of its members. and/oc the
pursuit of its objectives.

orpaiutioa.

• Tbe Director of Judicial Affairs sball over5et the devdopment of
poticieo lor lbe acbninistntioo of the judicial pn&gt;g1&gt;m ..., procodurol
tuleo lor the conduct ~ bcarinp.
• Decisioas made by a judicial body and/or Judkial Adviloro.ball be

L DISRumON - DionopOoa or obo1ructioa of teac:bia&amp;. ._...:h.
adminislratioo, disciplitwy pocoodinp, otber Uni..nlty activitico.
includina its pubtie-savice fuoctions oo or off campus.. ex otbt:r authorized aon-Uniwnity ac:tivitia,. wbc:a tbe act ocr;urs oo UtUvasity JR"
...... The u..lvusily .._... the riab&lt; 10 delcrmiDe wbero ..... of
disruptioa ~public order sbould be ..r=u~.
l. PHYSICAL VJOL.ENCI!- Pbysical violence or abuoe (mcludin&amp;
loequaintaDce rape), vut.1 abuse, thtalx, iolitaidatioa. J w - .
ooc:tc:ico and/or other c::ooduct that tiuulem or cndangen the !:ulth or
saletyofanypedOII.
4. 1liEPT - A penoa io auii'Y of thdl wbea be or ohe. lo&gt;owin&amp;
property DOl 10 be his or her~ t:akel: such propc:rl)' far his m ha" owo

final, peudin&amp; the """""' appeal • A judicial body may be desiiJI"'od as ubittt ~dispute&lt; within the

5. RUSHING/PLI!DGING ACI1VI11ES - Ally mcb activities lllido&amp;

Z.. TbeDirec:tor of Judicial Affairs in c:onjuoc:tiom with theStudc:Dt-Wide:
Judiciary, omd acodomic cleponmcrus shall delcrmine the compositioa of
judicial bodies and Appellat.e Boards..., delmnine which judicial body,
Judkial Advioor and Appellate Boord shall be authorized IO bear each

.....

-

pleasure, ... ...,.....;...; and, thdl o( ..me...

•

�~~ ...... ......,~ I!J ftl ll ..........

'SioleUanalily.,--Yad&lt;lll-

placeia the Reoiclmce Halls..., beappi'OY&lt;da miDimlDD oftlnedays
bdaro the dole of !he activity.

l. HAZING - llazio&amp;. dtfiDod u ao ICIIhat ......... the.-.! or
pll)'licol bcaldl or af"7 of aotudeet, orlbal-..ysor.....,...pablic
or pipropeny, for !he..,._ ofiDitiatioe, odmiloiaa iato, olliliatioD wtda. « • • CODditioa fc. COIIIlinoed nwmbersbip ta. 1 a:roap or

orpllizolioe.
1. KEYS- Unauthorized~ duplicaliooor""' of keys to any
University paniseJ Of aaauthori:t.ed eatry lo or uae of University
praniocL
L RULES -

Violotion of publlshod u,;....n,. policies, ruleo, or

..Jlllations.
t. LAWS -

V'oolarioo of feclml~ state or local low '"' Univasity
premilcs or at tmivcnity~ or -cupervised activities aball be a

vM&gt;Iatioo of Uni....n,. Cooducl Rules md RqulaliOOL A fiDdioa of a
violatioa under this na)e doel DOl require proof of CODvictioa in I DOO-campuolepl ~IL SUBSTANCES- U... pooocooion or cfistribudoo of narootic or
odie&lt; ccotrolloci~~Ubotuccs u - u uprasly permittccl by low.
II . ALCOHOL- Uoe,~orclislributiooofalcabolicbeva-ap
.._ .. upesoly permittccl by !he low md um....n,. lqlllotioos. or
public inloQcatioe. ~ 10 Ja'Ve alcotaol must be obtained by
applic:atioo 10 !he Alalllol Review Boord, &lt;OS C.pell Hall.
II. IMPAIRED DRIVING- OpcntiJ1aa- vdnclc while uuclcrthe
infl....,. of clnpor alcabol (S« &amp;&lt;:rio• 9of!N
P"'*"'' aNI
Tnrjfic ll&lt;fodDii&lt;&gt;OS) illc:luclin&amp; but - limilccltc.
I) operatinaa mot.cX vehicle while his/her ability to do so is impaired
by the improper or ille&amp;al use of drup: or the ccnsumptioo of alcohol; Of
•1 operatiaaa motOf vehicle while in aa i:o1o1ic:ated cooditioo.
11 WEAPONS- lllcpl orunautboriz.cd_...;onoffueanns,upJo.
si~ other weapons. or dangerous chemicals on Univasity premises.
(&amp;~ S«ri011 .SJ6.5 Sllppk1fC~ntD{ RMia for th~ Mairtl~Mtta of Public
Ortkr.)
14. DEMONSTRAnONS - Participarioa in a ampus demonstration
that disrupts the oonnaJ opentions of the Univcrsil)' md infrinp oo the
ri&amp;bls of other members: of tbe University community; lead in&amp; or lAcitinJ
otben to disropc ICbcdu1es and,'cx normal activities within any campus
buildin&amp; or area; inteotional obstruction that unreasooably interferes
witb freedom of movemeat
IS. TRAFFlC- Obstruction of the free flow of pedearian or vehicular
traffic on Ua.iversity premises or 11 Univtnity--spoosored or -supervised
func:boos.
ll. DISORDERLY CONDUCT- Conduct that is disonlerly,lewd, or
indecent;. breach of peace; or aiding. abettina. or procwin&amp; another
person tci breach the peace on University premises or at functions
spomored by, or penicipeted in by, tm University . ...
17. COMPUTER ABUSE - Theft or other abuse of computer time,
including but not limited to:
t) Un~utboriuld entry into a file. to use, read. or change the contents.
or for any other purpose..

em.,_

~ ~== :n;;~~v;dual's ;dcotification:....,....
word.

4) Use of computing facilities 10 interfere wi!.h t.."ae work of ancxhc:r
srudc:ot. f,acuhy member c:w Uniwnity official.
t ) Useofcomputingfacilities&amp;Dd&amp;mailtosendobsa:neorabusivt

n~

of computing facilities to interfcn wi!.h nonna.l operation o(
the University computing system.
All provisioosof Article IS6oftbeN.Y.S. Penal Law (Offenses Involving Computcn) apply at the Univcnity at Buffalo
lL INJURY TO UBRARY PROPERTY - A persoo is guHI)' oi U.Jury
to library property wbm be or sbe inteationaUy injures. defaces, or
-..ys any proptrl)' beloocing ID, 0&lt; cicpos;ted U., the Univemty

ubrarico.
lt. DETENTION OF UBRARY PROPERTY - A persoo is gwll)' or
clc:taUUng librvy property ......., be or obe willfully dcWns University
Ubraries property for more than th.iny days following writlen DOlice
from the librvy.
21. UNIVERSITY G ROUNDS - Uoe of Univ.,..;ty space and grounds
by an organization or persoo without reservation of the space or proper
autboriuti&lt;n
21 .1UOIC1AL SYSTEM- Abuse of the Judicial System, including but
DOt limited to:
I) Faihn to obey tbe summoos of a judicial body or University
official.
~~ FalsifiCation, distortion. or misrepresc:ntation of information befocujucficial budy.
c:J Disruption or interference with the orderly conduct of a judicial

proc:c&lt;ding.
~ lnslitution of a judicial proceeding knowingly without cause.
e) Attempting to cliscourage an individual 's proper pa.nic-ipation in.
use of, the judicilt system.
fJ Attempringtoinnuence the im.-,n iality ~f ~ ~berof •.judicial
body prior to, and/or during the course of, 1M Judioal proceedmg.
s) Harassment (verbal or physical) and/or inti.mi~tkm of a ~ber
of a judicial body prior to, durin&amp;. and/or after a Juctioal proceeding.
k) fai lure to comply with the sanction(s) imposed under the S~t

Of

C&lt;&gt;de.

.
0 tnnuenc:ing or anempting to innuence another person to corrumt
an abuse of the judicial system.
ANIMALS- Animals are not permitted in any U~versity bu.ilding"
at any time, ac:epC labontory animals or animals .trained to ~lSI the
disabled (refer to Resideocc: Hall Rules and RegulattOOS for pet tnfonna·

n.

~~PUACA

TION - Use of amplifteation/audiovisual equipment
in any of the: reservation facilities must receive adv~ appro~\ from
the Rcservalioos Offace and. if pntcd, m~
mterf~ wtlh any
public, offi ce. library, classroom, or other Uruvers:Jty ~· Requests
for reduction in volwne by Reservatioos stiff and/or designee must be
complied wltb upon notiftcarion.
.
24. AlTEMPT _ A person is guilty of an anempt to VIolate~ St~t
Rules and Regulations. or to commit a crime, when be or she. wtlh lilleot
to violate or commit arne. enpges in conduct that ~ ~~ effect the:
violatioa of such srudent n de or regulatioo or the c:onumss.ton of &amp;UCb

"?'

~MPLICITY
_
.

A

person is guilty of complicity when be or she
I

aida, bdpo O&lt;ocherwioo-- m violatina aay role apPicoble 10
thoUni....n,..
2i. ASSAULT- A penoa a,.UC,.of -tilt wbcaloe« lho ioladioa·
ally slap&amp;, ki&lt;b,- or ocherwioo
penoa.
21. HARASSMENT- A penoa;. pill)' o f - wbat beorll&gt;o

lllritol-

iDteodooally:
t) tbreatcDI or intimidates a penoe creatiaa a rational far witbia
lhatpenoa; or
W eopacs iD acoun~e~ c:orduc::t or~ commits aca: cJireckd
ot.-ltcrpenoathotwolllclliOrioolslyiiiiiJO)'a-penoa;O&lt;
t) ....... a c:ooocHtion that.......,. or tltn:at..,. the health, ..r..,.
or welfue ~another pei"ICIII
21. ARSON - A penon is liable if, by any .ct. be or she commita anon
by e~usin&amp; a ftte or ea:ploac. alii any University buikliA&amp; ot propaty.
2t. CONVERSION- A penoa;. pill)'ofconveraloa ....... beorobc,
after haviD&amp; lawfully olluinod ~ of the propeny of .-be&lt;,
wrun1 runy tronsren. cleWns. sul&gt;otaDtially c:luop. clamap. -..,...
or misu5c::5 the property without the pennisDoa d 1M OWDrJ'.
Jt. MISREPRESENTATION- A penoaa,.uty of ............totioa
wbeD he or 5bre intcnbooa.Uy perverts tbetrutb for penonal pin or favor.
31 . POSSESSION - ~property lalown by
be
stolen roc his « ber own usc. benefit or p1euutt.. or to impede the
recovery by the owner.
S2. DESTRucnON OF PROPERTY - A penoa is ,Wlty of destnoc·
rion of property when he or she i.nlenliooally:
I) destroys. defaces., materially alten or oc:herwist darnaJCS propmy not his or bet own; or
~} autcs a cooditioa that endangers or threatens property not bJs &lt;X
her own.
3l. FALSE REPORTING - A persoo U. guilty of falsely repc&gt;nm&amp; an
incident whee be. or she conveys information known lo be false or
baseless to any University official
14. ARE - Fire alanns and fue fiahti.ng equipment. mclucbna but not
Umiled to fire extinguishers. fire bo5es. beat and smoke: ddcctors.. and
sprinkJer f)'Stems. are ror the procectioo of buildin&amp; OCCU):*Ots. Any
Wnpering wi!.h Of mi5use of this equipment is prohibited and may be
punishab~ in ~University coun and in tbc appropriate c1vi1 Utdlor
criminal cowu. Any time a fire alarm is activated. all people: are required
to follow tbc evacuatiOn procedun:5 f&lt;X their puucuLu buiktina. Occv"""" must comply wnh the ""luesiS of liousu&gt;&amp; staff, Public Safety
pc:riOIU)Cl, or emtrCeDC)' per5Clllne] . Any violation5 will bt refltfftd to the:
appropriate Uoivcnity and/or civil judiciary.
3S. REASON ABLE REQUEST OF A UNIVERSITY OFAOAL - A
pet50b is guilty or faillft to comply when br 0( she. knowing Of haVlDg
reason to know lhat the rcqoc:Ring person is a Ulliversity official, fails to
comply with a reasonable request. For 1M Jl'UilM)&amp;It of this &amp;eetion. a
Universuy official shall include, but oot be limited to. an incbVldual
instruct in&amp; a class. a librarian or designee in a library. a Public Safety
Officer, and any Resident Advisor, Resklence Hall Direct« or RUden1
employee. and memben of the Ulliversity 5taff catTYin&amp; out tbeiJ dutia
and respon5ibilities
36. GAMBLING - No Student sbaU gambk for rnoory or Olhc:r valuables on University propeny or many Umversuy f.ciJity
ST. MJSUSE OF UNIVERSITY SUPPUES OR D&lt;X:UMENTS - A
person is auilty of,.misuse of University supplies and documents when be
or sbe f«&amp;C:S. alters., ~ without authority, receives wtthout authority.
or posse$5CS without authority any University suppltes or documents
(University supplies and documents include, but are noc. limited to. the
foltowm1 · supplies. equipment, ktys. records. ftles, documents. all
fonns of computer dar., and other materials.)
SL FALSIFYING UNIVERSITY APPUCA TION CREDENTIALS Students fCJII.md to have delibentely falsified application information art
subject to immccliate disntissll from the University.

.........,.to

39. FALSIFYING GRADE CHANGES - In adctitioo ID any sanc:t&gt;C&gt;m
that may be imposed by an academic dean, other penalties may be
assessed as a result of a Student-Widr. Judiciary hearing or plea agree·
meot.
40. AL TERJNG A STUDENT'S CURRENTREGISTRATION OR STU·
DENT DATA - Considered a violation of the Studeru Conduct Code:.

ARna£ 4: Student Organiwions
1. REGISTRATION OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Students interesaed in organizing a club on campus may inquire about
registration through the appropriatt: student associatkm. Appliea~oo
forms and thr criteria for registratioo .are avai~ablt: at lbt: ~ve
student association offices. For geoeral informanon about st~l orpniutions and the club registratioo process.. COOlact the Divisioa of
Student Affairs, Office of Student Life. I SO Studeo1 Union. For infotm.~ ·
tion on the regisaation process for ftatemitie5 and sororitk:$. contact tht:
Office or the Umversity Liaison for Greeks.. ISO Student U.UOO.
2. CONDmONS FOR REGISTRATION OF ALL STIJDENT
ORGANIZATIONS
a) Whenfunctionsngoncampus. allregisterulstudenlorga~
·
·oos
will ~ bc:ld responsible by tht: University for abiding by ft:dera.l.
e.
and local laws.. as well as all University regulations. 1bt: University
not become involved in the off-campus conduct of reglslered student
organizations uc:ept when such conduct ls determined to have a substantially adverse efTed on the Uni"·ersity or upon individual memben of the
Univenlity community
~) No organiution with rest:ricti\•e membership clauses discriminating on the: basis of race. religion. sc:x (except as uempeed by feden.l
regulations), physical handicap. age. or c:reed shall obtain &lt;X maintain
University registntioo. HownC'T. special consideration wiU be given to
the merits of groups founded for the purposes of religious practice.
c) Only cum:ntly t'C'gistered studenlS shall bt digiblt: for activt:
membership status in student organizations.. excepe for thost: adviscn
from the community necessary for proper functioning of the: OCJ&amp;niz.arion. Only full time, officially regislered students in good standing shall
be eligiblt: to servC' as appoink.d or eiected officers in registered 5tUdent
orpnizations. ucepe f« Millard Fill.mott Collt:ge in which case pvltime students arc eligible. Other persons may bt admiued to associate
membership if the orpniz.ation 's constitution or by-laws permit. A.ssi::J.
ciate members may not hold office or preside. As5ociatt: members may
have limited vocing privileges if the organization's coostirution or bylaws permit.
Candidates for elective or appointed office must have Kadernic good
otandmg and ,..,._tion el;&amp;ibitil)' c:onfinncd by the
of Student
U fe (Student Union, Suite I .SO) or otber University o frtcer, as designated

orr.,.

by Slullcal Life;,""'-'&lt; of.....;...

41

The porpooe or parpcaea of a -

.,....-- -

-

willa t h e - r-::oor. or cotalotillood policiol of dte
Utti-,.. 1! ................... ay _paeootitoo&amp;..,....,.todte

....ruct

appicolioafor.....,_.or.....-ofa.,....--toltdle how ud iD wbllf ........a tt.e .....,_.or~ afdlall
.........,O.Owolllcl....mc:twidathootlocaDoul.._or....,._
policies of the l:!ai...U,..

•l No orptlization will be puood ,..;otered ..Ptaial orptlization- tltot Its .......... -

if tho

ad/or

func:tioasclaplicoc.-ofan alreedy Wolia&amp;~--­
oiratioro. - · DO orpaization will lie ,.....- 10 ..,;.tcroc~- if the ........... orptlization-- tloot b iofulfillin&amp; Its OOIIOtitutioaally
ad/or11 ltqioocroci1111C1cottorpnialioalmay DOteapcelaloulaaacti'"·
ties. Ha:.r:io&amp; is dcfmcd • aD}' actiaD or .U..X. tt.l ~y or
U!tcntioDally .....,..,. the . - . I or pll)'licol llealdJ or ud"7 of a
ltlldcDt or that wiDfDUy dalroys or~ pubtic or priYMt property
(Of the pwJIC*: ~ initiaaioD or admillioa iD&amp;o or atrtliatiml with, or • a
oooditioa for OOI'Ibbued membenbip in. ay ,..;otered ~ orpaization. Hazio&amp; iDcludeo, but 1$ DOl limilccl to, bnolafity of a pll)'licol
...._ such .. ~ beotin&amp;. "'--in&amp;. f......S caliRhoaica, ..,...
,... to the elements, lor&lt;:ocl.....urnptioo o f - food, Uq.., dN&amp;. or
oche&lt;...-...,oranyoche&lt;for&lt;:oclpll)'licolactiritylhatc:oodd...tva.ely
affect the pll)'licol health md
of tho incfi.-J, md sball boc:lade
a:ny activity that would subject tbe indi;:tua] to utreme meatalstrca.
ouch .. ikep cleprivation, for.oocl exdusioa from ...w for&lt;:ocl
c:onduc:t that could result iD u:tn:tnt c:mt.rnssmeut. or any c6er fort':ltld
activit)' thot could aclvonely affect the .,.. .., bealth or clipil)' of the
Individual, &lt;X any willful cksuuctioa or removal of public or privale
property. Any activity u daaibcd ill ttDs de:fi.niboo upoa wbidt tbe
initiar)on or~ itHo or affiliatioo with or c::oDliDued membc:rsbip
in a reptemd studcal orpnizatioo il directly or iDdircedy cooditioacd
shall be preoumod 1D be "for.oocl" activit)', the willlilpteuof 1D incfividual
to putid:pate iD 5UCh acuvity DOtwitbstedin&amp;. Any rqistttcd studcot
organization tJw commim ba.zm&amp; is liUbjcct to clddpliDary acticn
1 RELATION OF TilE UNNERSITY TO STUDENT
ORGANIZATIONS
R.ea;istratiob or srudalt organ.iu.ooos WJI oot bt OOb5CniCd • apumem.. 5UpPOI't. or approval by lbt Univasity, bul oaJy as recopiborl d
lht rights of the orp.nizatioo. to eusa at thr lhuvers~ty • .subjca 10 lbt
cooditioos enumerated brrein.
4. RJGifTS OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
.) Rqislered srudent orp.ni.utions rna y use tbe Dlft'IIC of tbe UlliYas:ity m t&amp;eir official titks to indiate kx:abon. DOl ~ (xl'
Aruck 6. S«aool V711).
~) Re,;.tcrocl student orpnizallOIIS may use Univasity lac:illties
subject to the: duly eaablisbcd wriUeo rult::i JOVU1linl such use.
c) Registered srudc:r:u orp.nizat:iola5 may peti:tiat. for tbc UK ~
uwfdatOI'}' stucient activity fees subjcc:t lO University rqulal:icxl&amp;. studrenl
orpn;urloo ,.culatioosmd student_..,_....-.

stated-

..r..,.

ARTia£ 5: University Srandards
I. f1tEEDOM OF EXPRESSIOt
A. Acodnlctc Frt'.,._doirl - The Diversity supports the pmciple of
academic freedom as a coocept ·
to tbe achieYemcDI ol its
U&gt;Sritutional 1 uo~s. 11us principle ~ a tnat
the ;.qrity md
respoosibilil)' of the members of tho ilcaclcmic c:ommuml)'. Samuel P.
Capen. fcxmer Clwlcelloc- of the Univcrsil)' of llaffalo. wbo;. .........,.
bored for the tradition of ICIIlcmic lroedom lie implcmcDted cluriDf his
1eade:rdlip of tbe University, said in 1935:
• A=pW1c:e by an msritutioa of the prmciples of acocleauc lroedom
implies that teac.bc:rs in thai iDstitutioo an fra: to itnutiptc a:ay subjcc:t.
no matter bow much il may be bcdced aboul by taboos;; tbatlbc:y are fra:
10 ma1o: -.the....,... of their mw:stiption md their ..rloc:boa by
word of mouth or iD writing, bdort t1xir classes or dsewbcn:; that ~
arc free as citizens to taU pan in any public CQiltrO\'erSy out5ide lbt
institution; that oo repressive measures, direct or iDdirccl, will be applied
to them oo maner bow unpopular they may become throuz.b oppodna
powerful interests or jostling esaablisbed prejucticc:5, lDd DO mauc:r bow
mistakt:a they may appear to be in the eyes of members and frieDds ol tbe
institution; that their continuance in offtce,. wiU be iD all iostaDoes
governed by the pr&lt;vailin&amp; rules of teo= md !hat their ICIIlcmic
advanc:emeo~ ,.;u be c1epeoc1mt ~f.'&lt;;, sciemifoc: ~ md _will
be m no way affected by the pc&gt;liUiml)' or uopopularil)' of their opuuoas
or uttennccs; that srudc:nts in the iDstitutioo are free. insofar as tbe
requirements o( the sevcnl cwTicul.a pennit, to inqu.ift i:nlo any subject
that interests them. to orpnizc disc:ussioo ~ or INdy ctut. for~
considen.tioo o( any Abject. and to invite 10 addrca them any spe:a.ker
they may c1tooo&lt;; that"""""""" of stvdc:u pablicolioaolhall be boscd
on prcc:isc.ly the: samt: ground:s and shall exlelld 110 further than that
a.ercised by tbe United States Pa5tal Autboritics...
I. NONlisc~n - The University at Bu.ffalo is COIDIIlincd to
f05lering a poPtive euvironment ror learninc. and to eosurin&amp; lbe safety.
rights. anddigniry of every member of the Univcnitycommunity. To that
end lbe Univc:n;;ity encouraces ead:l and every member ol the academic
community to as:sumt: individual responsibiHry for rcspectinJ the riJbts
and d;pil)' .. othen and ror belpina to prumotc the !Toe and opal
uchangc: of ideas in an aunospbtte of mutual n:spcct..
C&lt;rtam types of cfisc:rirnination an: prohibited by low. For eumple...
c!iscrinUnatK&gt;nonthebWsofrac:eisexpesolyproiUbitedby-fcdenl
and state constitutions and by a wide range of federa) aod state SUituiCS.
Other state and feden.l laws prohibit particular forms of discrim.inatioa
based on such factO!'$ as sa, religion. 01tiooal origin. qe, disability,
maritalstaiUS.&lt;Xveteranstalus. Furthennore.GovemorCuomo't:Eulcutive Order No. 28 . 1 prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation in employment and p-ovision of sc:Mces by aate aceacicL
Students should be aware lhat anyone who violateS laws proluDitiq:
specific forms of disc:rirninatioo may le.d 1ocrimiDal prosecuticm or civil
penaltics.
Tbe State University Trusaoc:s hi~ adopted a policy (Trustee's
R&lt;ooluricxl 83-216), which cfirects that judpnmts about and actioDs
toward students and employees within tbe SUNY system be baed CG
their qualifx:ations. abilities and performance:. Tbc Trustee's polic:y JOCS
on co say thatattitude:s., pncrices. and preferences of individuals that an
essentially personal in na~ such as private exprc:ss:ioo or sexual
orientation. are u.nrelatcd to performance and provide: DO bais for
juclpnmt.
Fmally, it is the poltcy of the UniverRty at Buffalo to prohibit
invidious categorical discri.mirwioa bucd oa 5UCh ~ •

u.

~-~~-

�race. ~ tauaJ oric:Dtatioa.. ace. oaticmJ oriJin. religion.. vetcrm ex

marital status or disability in all matters affcctin&amp; cmploymc:ol oreduc:a·
tioftaJ oppo&lt;tunities wit!WIIhe IJnjversity itself. It is !he fum beUcf otlhe
Cooocil, lhe fac:ulty,mel lheadministJation IIWjiJd&amp;m&lt;Dllabout persons
within tbe IJnjvonity should be baed on !heir il&gt;dividual merits, liCCOIDplishmeots, aptitudes, mel beba.;.,, mel that iDYi&lt;fious categorical disaiminltioa is wholly i:nappropiate to lhc Univasity 'a missKJa and
values. Students wbo violate this policy shill be suQjcet to smcti005
witbiD lhe Univasity, up to and ineludinc expulsion. Any violatioooflhe
ruks thlt is motivated by bias may be prosecuted and/or smctioned as a
more serious offense.
·
Complaints reprdin.c any violations of nondiscrimination laws or
policies should be made to the Affirmative Action Office. Room S 17
Capen Hall, 645-2266.
(. PttiriOt&amp;S. INlividMOJ- Every student has the right to petition or
d.issemiDate information on campus. In the residc:noe balls, tha6e intend·
in&amp; to circubte petitions mUSl identify tbemsdves to the appropriate
Building Director before aay lnd.jvidu&amp;J or group petitioo is circulated.
(Noce: The intent of this rule is to respect the privacy of the residents. and
is noc intended to deny the individual's riJht to petitioo.)
L STATEMENT ON SEXUAL ASSAULT AND ABUSE
Tbe University at Buffalo wiU not tolente suual assault or abuse.
• SeXUII Assault: Any .crual or auemptcd noo-coosensual sexual
activity inc::lud.ing. bpt no~ limited to, forcible anaJ or oral sex, auempted
intt.:rooui"SSC:, sexual toUChing. by a peooo(s) lmoWD or unlmowll to the
victim.
• Jt.pe: Tbe perpctratioa ofan acr of sexnaJ intercourse with a person
apiDsa lbeir will and consem.. whether" their wiJJ is overcome by force or
f - .....wtin&amp; from 1he threat ot f..... or by drugs odminislered without
cooseot. or when the petSOO is unocmcious or otherwise physically
unable to communicate wiUinpcss.
Reportina Options: Incidents of sexual usauJt may be reported to
Depanmcat ot Pubtic Safety, municipal police, resideDce hall officials,
or Studc:ot Health Center by a victim or prm:y. Immediate rcportina: is
t'DCOIIlJIJCDdc A disciplirwy complaint also may be filed with the
Studeut- Wide Judiciary for action against the assailant if they are a
ltUdc:nt. Thi5 may be dooe iD conjunctioa with or instead of criminal
prcoocution.
1 ACADEMIC DISHONESTY
Tbe deYelopment of iDtelli....,. and st=gthening of moral responsibility are two of the mosr. important aims of educatioo. PundamentaJ to the
ac:complishmeftt of thc:se purpose&amp; is the duty of tM stUdent to perform
all of his or ber r&lt;qUired wor1t without illegal belp.
tJ The fo1~oos constitute major forms.. but oot uclusively
aU forms. of
· d.ishooesty amooa stucknts: (I) submission:
submittin&amp; ~teademically required material thlt bas bc:ea.. previously
submitted in whole or in subscantia..l pu1 in another course. without pior
and upr&lt;SS&lt;d coasent of the insuuctor. (2) pJa&amp;iarism' oopyina or
1't!Cieiving material from a source or sources and submitting this material
as ooe's own without acbowlcdgin,g the particular debts to the- source

~~~!:::(~~~~~~':

soticitiq information. from another student or other unaulhori.r.ed 50lii"Ce,
or Pvin&amp;: information to another studcrlt, 'Wi.Jh tlu illl~lll 10 dt~iw: while
completins an e.um.inatioo ex- iodividUII assignment; (4) falsificatioo of
aeadmUc materials' fabricating bboratory materials, notes, r&lt;peru, or
any forms of computer dal.l; forging an instructor's name or initials;
resubmitting for n:evaiWitioo an ex.aminatioa or assignment that bas been
altered without the instrudor's authorization; or submitting a report.
p&amp;per, materials. computer data., cwexam.inatioo (or any ooosidenble part
tberool) prepared by any person other than the srudeot responsible for the
assignmeot; (S) procuremc:nt, distribution or aoccptanoe of euminations., laboratory results. or c:oofidential ac:adem.ic materials witbout prior
and expressed c:oosc:nl of the instructor.
All .Uepl cases of academic d.ishooesty .,. adjudicatod iD accttdance with 1he Disciplinary Pn&gt;oodures for Academk lnfnlctioos. Copies of tbr: procedure ue available fum the Office of tbe Vice: Presidc:ot
for Studem Affain, Room 542 Capen Hall, Nooth Campus.
Ill UnUzwfid S4le of Diss&lt;rttUiotu. 1'lwu oNi T&lt;r"' Pap&lt;n
No pc:rson sball, for financial ooos:idc:ntion. or lhe promise of fiDancia1
c:onsidcratioo. prepue. offer to ptqJUt. cause to be preparc:d. aell or offer
for ale to any pcl'8!ll1 any written material that the Idler kDows, is
informed or bas reaoo to believe is intc:nded fOI' submission as a
diaacrtation. them, term .-per, essay, report or other written assi&amp;llJDCDI
by a student in a tmivcsity, co11qe. academy,IICbool or other educational
institution to such institution or to a course. seminar or degree program
beld by IUCh iDstitutico.
No penoo shtU sell or offer for sale to any pcnoo earoUed in the State
IJnjYonity ot New Yorlt at Buffalo any C&lt;liJlllUIO&lt; assipmeot. or any
..uumct in the prc:pcatioa. research. or writina of a oomputcr assipmc:nt
intCDdcd for subr:n.issioo in fulfillmco1 of my .adem.ic requjn:ment

4. DRUGS AND NARCOTICS
~

without pre&amp;Criptioo of any oarcotic:, barbiturate, dangerous

dru&amp; or ot.- oo-ca11eot1 "pep pills" mel "trmquiliun" is cootrary 10
fodenl md/or state bw. ADy IIIUdent found 10 be iD illepl poosess;oo of
drup must be reported to the appropriate civilautboritic:s and may also
be subjoc!IO diaciplirwy a&lt;tion by lhe Univonity .

S. SMOKING AND POOD STUFF
Smoking is probibitod iD all UniyerRiy facilities ex- as pooted. Tbe
poasc:ISion of bevrnges aDd food stuff is prohibited in all areas so

desiJII&gt;Oied by 1he 00115(ricuous pooting otappropriate signs. These.,...
include, but are DOt limited to all classrooms, lecture balls. laboratories,
hallways, tbe Katlwine Cornell Theale&lt; and .U University Ubraries. All

trub mel gubage should be disposed of properly.
6. SOUOTATION

tl Solicitatioo in ~ buildinp. including residence balls. or on the
grouods is strictly prohibited. No occupant is to use his Of her room, or
pc:nnit his or ber room to be used. for any commc:rciaJ pwpose whaiSOever. Any and all door-to-door solicitatioo is regarded as an unnoc:::c:ssuy
invasion on tbe privacy of the residc::ou or occupants. and is lherefoa
prohibited . This restriction applies to both commercial and
noo~al · solicitatioo and to distribution of written materials as
well u peniODAI conlacl.
•1 "'Noauthoriz.atioo will begivea to private commercial enterprises
to operate on State Ulliverdty campuses« in facilities fwnisbed by the
Univemity, or in aay Resideace Hall, other than to provide for food. legal
be........ campos booltstoro, •C21dina. IiDen supply, buodry, dry cleaniDa. bu&gt;tiJI&amp;, bube&lt; m e l - -.ices mel ....... This
....Jutioe sball- be deemed 10appy to Auxiliary Service Corpor.tioo
actlvities_.,...tby 1he Uni..,.;/y." (Bconl otT,...... R&lt;solutioo)

7. POSTING POUCIES
Desigoatod bulletiD bauds iD Nort&lt;m, Capen, Talbert mel Studeal Unioo
are I'C':Itriclcd to campus activities lt1IJI« Un.ivenity at Buffalo related
func::tiom. Nty noc.-for-pofit orpnizatioe outside the Univenity muse
ba .. "Pfl'1"'al before pootin&amp;. Coo&gt;men:ial (fO&lt; profit) promodoaal
materiak are not allowed and will be removt!d mel discarded..
• Campus-maypoot """ pooteror~pcreventpcrlxlllcbo
board area. The sb bulletin board t.ra5 are: Norton Cafeteria, Ticket
Of!'tce, Capen Lower lobby, Capen eleYOt0&lt;'5 {Jrow&gt;d. fU1l mel"""""''·
a Poitcn or flyers may DOC eJtceed ll incbcs by 17 inches.
• Use masking tape only.
• Posten or flyers are restricted to bulletin boards. (No painted
surfaces, glas$, pilW..
0&lt; walls.)
• Flyen or post.eR in another language must have an English trans-

authorized,.. by ocheR;

nwitholu IUlhorizatioD.. remain iD uy buiJd.ina tX fecility llfu:r h is

......Uycloood;
11 n:Noeto lea.. any buildin&amp; or focility aft« bein&amp; roquired 10 do

so by 111 a.oori:z:cd .ctmiJ:U.saatiye off.cu;
Ill -lhefroe..........,.otpersonsmeiYdDc:lesin ..yploce
to which tbesc rules "fll''y;
Q delibenldy disnlp&lt; or pteV0111 tbe peacd1ll mel orderly cooduct ot
cW..., loc:wn:o mel mcednp or delibenldy laurlero with tbe fn&gt;odom
of any penoo to expre15 his. views.. includi.n&amp; iDvitfd speabn.:
p I:DowiollY ba.. iD bl5 -ioo UJXlll ""Y pranises to which
these rules apply, any rifle, obollim, pistol, teYOI-, or other tireann"'
weapora without the writtca authoriutica of tbe cbief administrative
offa:r. whether« t1101 a licaJie 10 ~ tbe same bu beea iaued to
IUChpenoo;
lation.
ij willfully iDciteothcn 10 commit anyotlheactsh=in prohibited
• Flyers or oodoes must carry the name or \ojo of the UniveRity or .
with specifw: intent to ~ them to do.,; or
University-related sponsoring organization (&amp;ovemment. depm:tmc:nt,
Q take any actioa. aeare. or participate in tbe creatioo or. any
office. agesx:y, etc.).
a Group5 may not remove or cover current notices or posters of ocher situation wbidJ rccldessly or intc:ntioDal)y e:nc:faD&amp;e:n mc:otaJ or pbysical
bea lth or which iavol ves the forced COilSUIDJ.1tion oCliquoror dn.tp fc.- tbt
campus groupl out of courtesy and rcspcet for others.
pwpose o{ initiation into or affiliatioo with IDY orpDiz;ation..
• Bulletin bou"ds wiD be checkod and eleared of inappropriate
535,4 ,...... of.,.... ....
I
fiilloos.
material throughout lhe week. Boanls will be stripped ot all pooled
I) No st:udeal. faculty or ocher aaff member or autborizcd vU:itor
materials late Friday ni&amp;ht.
• Sales. rcntali., employment and servic:u announcemeftts will be shall be wbject 10 any lim.itlltioa or pcoalty solely f« tbe eaprraioa of
hi!: views oor for ba vin&amp; asaemblcd wilh otbln for such purJJ06e
f&lt;Siriacd to clesignatod CLASSIFIED ..,...go botuds located left oflhe
Peaceful pickdin&amp; and Olher orderly ill public .,... of
Capen Lobby Sales Counter, Capen elevators. and Norton Cafderia.
ground and buildi.Da will DOt be interfered with. T'boae involved in
AnflOI.IIJOeiDmts may not exceed 5lncbes by 8 inches. Forms avtilabie at
picbtioa and demonstrations may not. however, en,p.ae in specific
Capc:o lnfOI'llUition.
condUd iD violatioo oftbe provisioal of !he f"'I'COdiDIIOdioa.
Request for special coosidcratioo for es:c:eptiooal situations and/or
•} lo order to afford maximum procectioa to the J*tici.pants and to
unique material Clll be directed to tbe Division of Student Affairs Office
me institutiooll community. eac:b Statc-oprntlld iDstitutioa or tbe Sutt'
of Student Ufc. I SO Student Union from 8:30a.m. lo S p .m. weekdays.
UniYUSity
shall prumpcly adof&lt; mel promulpb!, mel tben:oftorcootin"'
&amp;. SEXUALHARASSMENT
Ses.uaJ barusmeDt of employees and students. as deftned below. U. in effect as revised from rime to time, proc:edurts IJ'Pf'OP'i.ate to such
institutioo
for
the Ji vin&amp; of reascmable advuce notice to such iastitutioo
cootzvy to University policy and is a violation of fcdenl and state laws
otany pWmod uoembly, picJ&lt;etin&amp; o r - upon lhe pounds
and regulatiaos.
ot such institulioo, .. propoood locale mel iDtendod provided,
Unwelcome se.xual advances, requests for suual flvono, and other
howevtt, lhlt tbe givinJ of AJCh DOtice ldW) DOt be made I oood1tJon
verbal or pbysjc:al CODilucl of 1 sexual lllture constitute Kxual harlss·
~to any IUCh - y . pickclinl or demonstnotioos and promeot wbc:n: (I) submissioa co such coodUCI is made either explicitly or
vided. further , that this provisioa shaU DOC suprnede oor prec.ludr tbr
implicidy 1 term or condition of an iDctividull's employment or acadc:mk
proc::ectw-es in effect at suc:b institulion rorotuining pc:rm.issioo 10 use tbr
ad.........,.; (b) su!Jrniss;on 10, or n:jcctjoo of, IUCh conduct by an
facilitiestbc:reo{.
individual is used as the btiis for employment or academic decisions
affectin&amp; IUCh il&gt;dividual; (c) •ucb conducl has lhe JIUfPOI"' or cff&lt;Ct of 53S.S P......_ A penoo wbo5ball violate anyotthe pruvisioosof thes&lt;.
rules (or o( tbe rules or any individL&amp;Il institutioo supplemeoting or
UDf'CISOillbly ioterfr:rin&amp; with 1n individual's work or ICIIdmtic p:rfor·
implcmcntin&amp; lhe$e rules) sball '
mance, or creatW,. an intimidatina. bo&amp;tile. or offeosive eovironmenL
I] If be is a licensee or invit:ce, hive bi5 1utbori.zltioo 10 re:ma.iD upon
No University employee of either su shaU impoee 1 requircmc:nt af
tbe
ClmpUS or other property withdrawn and shall be dircctc:d to le.&lt;we 1M
seJ.L&amp;II c:ooper11tioo as 1 cooditioo of employment or academic advance·
prernisc:s.. ln the event of b.is failure or refusal to do 110 be sball be subject
ment. or in any w1y contribute to or suppor1 unwelcome physical or
toejec:l:ioo..
verbal SC.J.UII behavior.
~~ lfbeisa trespassc:rorvisitorwithout specif.c license or iovitauon.
Any member of the University community wbo requires ldd.itiona.l
be subject to ejoctioo.
infonnation. wishes to make 1 complaint. or lo receive 1 copy of the
cJ If he is a student. be subject to expulsioc or sud:llesser disciphnUniwnityprocedurestobefoltowcdforcomplaintsarisin&amp;fromm~uen
relai.Cd to the polic:iea outlined abo~ sboWd contact the Afftnn~.ti¥t
ary action as the facts of the ease. m1y wasnnt. includi.ng suspeDSJon.
ActiOD Office, Room 517 C.pc:n Hall
probation, lOG of privileges.~ warning.
4) If be is 1 faculty member" hi~ tenD or c:ootinuin1appotnt·
9. RULES OF THE BOARD OF 'ffiUS'ffiE.S
r:nenl, be guilty of miscoadua: md be su~ to dismisal « term.inauoo
(Part 535) Stau Univqsiry of N~w York
of
his
employment or IUCh lesoer diacipllury action a lhe !IICU ""'Y
Soctloo 535. I Slot- of po!JIOM. Tbe following rules .,. adopted in
wurant includin&amp; suspc:nsioo witboul pay or ceosure.
compliance with soctioo 6450 of the Education Llw and dWJ be filed
e}
If be ls 1 staff member in tbecl.asiificdsc:rviceofthe civiliCIVlCt-.
with the Commi:ssiooc:r of Education I.Dd the 8o&amp;rd of Regents OD or
bdore July 20, 1969, as required by lbat sectioo. Said rules shall be described in.,..;, 75 ottbe Civil Service uw, be IUiJty ot miscooduct.
mel be subject to the pe:na)ties prescn'bcd in said K:Ctioo..
subject to amendment or revision and any ameodmmta or revisions
I} If be is a.wr member other than ooedescribed iDsubdivisioos (d)
lh&lt;=lf shall be filed with lhe Commissioner of llducation mel Boanl ot
Resents within 10 dlys after ~on. Nothin&amp; berein is intcoded., nor mel (e)ofthisl&lt;Ctioo, besubjeciiOdismissal, suspc:nsioo without poyO&lt;
sball it be construed. to limit or resttic:r. tbc freedom of spcecb or peaceful
assc:mb1y . Free inquiry and free expressioo are indis:pebslbk to the 535.6 ...........
objectives of a higher edueatioo.al institution. Similarly, expc:rieDce bas
. a) Tbe chief aclminisuoti . . officet' or his dcsipce sball inform OJ&gt;Y •
dcmoostrated that tbe traditional autonomy of tbeeduc:atioGal institution
lic:eDIIOe or invitee who shall violate any p:oYilioasof tbcie ndc:s (or of
(and tbe accompiDyin&amp; institutiooal raponsibility fc.- the mainte:o.aooe
1he rules ot any iDdi vidual imlitulioo oupplaDeotina or implemcntin&amp;
of order) ls best 5Uited to achieve these objectives. Tbc:se rules sball DOC these rules) that his license or invitltioa is wilhchwn mdlhalldircd bim
be construed to p-evc:nt or limit communicatioo between and amoo.1
to leave tbecarnpas or ocher property oftbe iDstituticm..ID the evaat of hi!.
f•culty, students and administration. or to relieve the institution of its
failure or rdu:sal to do 110 such officer $ball cause lais ejcctioo. &amp;'IXD such
5pOCiaJ responsibiHty for 5df~gulation iD lhe ~ation ot pubtic campus or property.
order. Their purpo&amp;e is DOt to prevent or restrain c::cm.trow:n:y and dissent
~ ln tbe cue of ay other violasor,wbo is DC:ither a studc:al nor
but to pn:vcnt abuse of lhe rights of odx:n: and lO ma.intain that public faculty or other llaff member. b ~d adrnibis:rrwtive affioc:r or bis
order appropriate to 1 college or university c:ampu~o without which thc::re
dc:aignee aba.U inform him lbal be is DO( aUiborimd w ranain oa the
can be no intellectual freedom mel they shall be int.erpreled and applied
campus or Olhcl' property of the iDstitutioa and dir!ICt him to aYe sud!
tothlt cod.
(
prernisc:s.. In lhe • ...,. ot his failure or refuaaJIO do ao ACI!officet' sball
535.2 .......... of..._ 1beoe rules sball apply 10 .U Sta~e-&lt;&gt;p&lt;ntod cause his ejcctioo from IUCb campus or pvpcrty. Nothia&amp; in this
institutions of tbe State University except as provided io Put SSO as
subdivisiao shall be CCIISin!ed 10 authorize tbe ~"'*""" ot any IUCh
applicable to the State Univers:ity Maritime College. These rules lillY be penoc at liD)' time prior to such violatloo DOt to affect his Liability lO
supplc:meotod by additional rules fO&lt; 1he maintenance ot pubtic orcl..- prcoocution f o r . . _ or loilaina u preocribod iD 1he P&lt;ml uw.
ben:tofcn or beteafter adopted for any il&gt;dividual imlituticn, O(lliooYed
&lt;I In lhe case ota ltUdeol, c11tqea for violatiollotany ot tbeoe rules
and adopted by lhe State University lnl5loc5 mel filed with tbe ComOais(orotlherulesotany il&gt;dividual iDstitutiaoaupplemeutin&amp;or impkmel&gt;tsioocrofEducatioo mel Boanl otRegents, but ooly 10 lhe .,...,. that sud!
iDg these rules) sball be (ftiC8It:d mel sball be hoonl m e l - in
additiooal rules .,.llOiiDcoosislmt ~&gt;=with. Tbe rules ben:by IICic&gt;puA the
provided i D - S35.9 ot this Pan.
5hall gOYen&gt; the cooduct ot srudeots, fac:ully mel other .wr. licemce5,
tO 1n the cue d a faculty mcmbc:r baviQa a c:a:~tizuaina or term
i:Dvitccs. and all othtt persoos. wbdhct or oot their presence is lutbo- appoinlmml,clwges otmisoooduct iD violationottbeoeruleo (oroflhe
rized.. upoo the campus of any i.nstitutioa to which such ruJcs are rules of any il&gt;dividual imlitutioa oupplaDeotina or implemeoting lhe$e
applicable and also upoa or with n::s;poa to any other premises or
rules) sball be made, bean! mel detem1iDed iD ~with titleD ot
property. under lhe cootrol of Jucb instirutioo. used in its lelchin&amp;.
Put 338 otlhe policies otlhe lloonl o t T - =
research. administntive. service. culnn.l. rec:reatiooal, 1th1etic and other
~ lD the cue of any staff member wbo holds a pc:Jiitioa_ ia the
programs and 1c:tivities; provided. however, that charges 1pinst any classified civil service. dcicnDcd.iD sec:tioo 75oftbe Civil Senic:e Law,
studc:ot for viobtioo of these rules upon tbe premises of any such clwges of miscondUd ;, violation of lhe$e rules (or ot tbe rules otany
1nstitution ochc:r than the ooe 11 which be is in attc:ndancc: sba.ll be heard
il&gt;dividual imlitutioa supplememing or implcmcnDII&amp; tbeoe rules) shall
and dc:term.ined at the institution in which be is enroUed IS 1 studeo.L
be made. beard and detem1iDed as prescribed iD that 5el:tioo.
535.3 l'roiiiWt.. ..-ct. No person. either singly or in coocm with
I} ADyo&lt;herfac:ultyor5taffmemberwbosballviolateanyprovisioo
otheR, shall'
ottbesc rules (or oftbe rulesotany il&gt;dividual imlitution supplementing
.) willfully cause phyt&gt;ical injury to any ocher person. nor threaten to
or implememing tbeoe rules) shall be dismis5ed, RISp&lt;Dded or cmsun:d
do so for the purpo&amp;e of compelling or inducing 5UCh other person to
by the 1ppointinx authority prescribed in the policies of the Beard of
refrain from any act wlticb he has a lawfuJ right to do or to do any let Trustees.
which he has a lawful right not to do;
535Jblor- .......
· ~) physically restrlin or detain any ocher penon. nor remove such
I) The chief administrative officer sba.U be m;poosible for the
~ from any pl1c:e where be is 1utborit.cd to remain;
enfora:mc:nt of tbc:se rules (or oftbe rules of any individual institutioo
d willfuUy dama.ge or destroy property oftbe institution or under its supplementing or implementing these rules) mel sball designate lhe other
jurisdiction. nor remove or use such property without 1ulhorization;
1dmin.istmive officen: who are authorized to take actioa in KlCCII1iance
4] without permission, expressed or implied. enter into any priv1te with such rules wbc:n required or appropriate to carry tbtm into effect.
office of an administrative officer, member of the faculty or staff
It is - intmdod by any provi5ioo bereiD to curtail the rigbl ot
member;
Sludeats, fac:ully or 5taff 10 be beanl upao&gt; any ma11&lt;r affectin&amp; them iD
•J entc:r upon and remain in any buildina « (aci.lity for uy purpose their relations with the instit.utic.. ln the ease of any apparcot violation
other than its aatbori.ud USC$ or in sucb manner as 10 ob8lrud: its

coun..,.

...w,; flkbtiol ..

I!W1Del'-

•&gt;

�~Cooolod ·-llohonlly~ ~·I

I

I

...........

s...·Uaiw:nity.s- Yart• Bo6lo

aft.baoe n&amp;lcs (or of the n&amp;icsaf ony iDdiricluol imtitutioo supplemcatin&amp;
or implenlemiDc t.baoe n&amp;ics) by lOCI! pcnoos, ..-bich. in the~ o(
the cllid ocloUniltrodve offi&lt;:cr or hit deli..-, doe&amp; "'" ony
immociUole lhroot of injury to penoaorproperty,such offKU m1y make
reaooable effort to learn tbe elute o( tbe ooaduct in qucstioa and 10
penuodo tbese eopaod th=in to dooitt mel to reoon to pennisoible
metboclsforthe...olutionof ony issues which may be .,.....,tod.lncloiDa
shall"""' oueb J&gt;CI'OII' of the~ of persioteuoe in the prohibited cooduc:t, including their ejections from ony
premises of the iDs&amp;i1uUoo where theirccntinucd praeooe anda:Jbduct is
io violation d tbc:8e rules (or of tbe rules of any individuaJ institution

110--

supplementing or implcmentin&amp; theae rvlcs).
c1 In ony cue wben: violatioo of tbeoe n&amp;lcs (oro( the ruleo of ony
iDdividual institution supplementin&amp; or implcmcrttina tbese n&amp;ics) doe&amp;
DOC ceue afu:r such warning and in Olber cues of willful violation of such
rules, the ebief ltdministntive officer or his dcsipce dWI e~use the
ejccd&lt;m of the violator from any premises Wt be occupies in such
violation and shall initil.te disciplinary Klion as hereinbefore povided.
oil The chief IOdminisuodve offiett or bis deoic- may apply to the
public. authorities for any aid which be dee:m5 nccasary in causm, the
ejection of ony violator of lhese rules (or of the n&amp;lcs of ony iDdividuol
institutioa supplc:meotinc or implemc:nting these niles) and be may
request the State University counsel to apply to any c:oun of appropriate
jurisdiction for an injunction to restrain 1M violation or ~tencd
violotiooofsocl!ru)es.

SJU C
' llw. ln matten of the SOt1 to wbicb these rules are
addresled. full aDd prompt communiclltion among all compooents of the
institutional community, facWty, 5tUdmJs IDd adminiRnrion. is bipty
To the extent that time and circumstances permit, such com-

desira~

munication should precede the exercise of the authority, disc:retion and
respoilsibilides gnontod ood impoood in tbeoe rules To tbese ends eocb
St.lte-operated institutioo of the State University shall employ such
procedures aud means, (OI'Tnl;) and infonnal. as will promoce such

llolb,.....,. 10111 MI......._ oldoorps .,.mt

communication.

m .t
tJ

\

s~Woots.

lbetennchiefadministntiveoffioer, asused in the:se rules., shill I

be deemed to mean and include uy penon authorized 10 exercise the
powers of that office during a vacancy lherei.D or dwin&amp; the absence or
disability of the incumbent ood for JNlllO&lt;CS of this lieCiion shall also
include any designee appointed by said officer.
~) WbeDever a com.pbint is made to the chief adm.ini.stratiYe off"teer
of any State-operated instiwtion of the Univc:rsiry of a viotatioo by a
studc:nt or stuclcots of tbe rules prescribed in this part (or of aoy rules
adopted by u indjviduat institution supplementing or implementing
sucb rule5) ~wbmever be bas: knowledge that such a viot.tioo IJ:UI)' bave
occurred. be Shall ause an investigation to be made and the statc:mcnu
of the complaints. if any, and of other penons hlvinJ k:D6wledge of the
facu reduced to writing. If be is satisfied from sucb investigatioo and
statements that tbtze is reasonable ground to believe thlt there bas beeo
such a violation, he WIJ prepare or a use to be prepe:rcd charges against
the student or students alleged to have committed sucb violation which
sboll SUie the provisioo prescribing the offeme ood sboll specify the
ultimate fam alleged to coosritute socb offense.
c) Sucbchargessball be in writi.Deandshall bescrvedon the student
or studc::ots named therein by deli vc:rina the same to him or tbem
penooa.lb•, if possible, or, if DOl, by mailing a copy of such charges by
registered mail to such student or students at bis or their usual place or
plac::a: of abode while attending college and also to his or their borne
8ddtess or addresses., if different.
tO The notice of cbargcs so served shall fu a date for bearing thereon
DOC less thaD IOor more than IS days fn:m tbedateof &amp;d'Vicc.. which shall
be the date of mailing where neoessuy to effect service by mail. Failure
to appear in IUpOr'lSe to the cb.t.rges on tbe date fixed for bearin.J, unless
there bas boca a continuance for good cause shown, sball be deaned to
be an admission of lhe facts SU.ted in such cbarge5 and sball warn.nt such
actioa as may then be appropriate tbcrcon. Before lakin&amp; sueb actioo tbe
beariq corm:niuce, bere:inafteJ referred to, shall give ootice to any
student, who bas failed to appear, in tbe mumc:s'"preecribed insubdivis:ioo
(e), d its prt'IPOISII:Id findings and recommeodations to be submitted to the
chief ad:ministrative officer and shaD so submit such findings and
rec:ommcndatioo 10 days thc:reaftet unless tbe srudeot has meanwhile
ihowD &amp;ood cause for his failure to appear. in wbich case a date for
bearing sboll be flXod.
1) Upon demand at any time before or at the bearin&amp;. the student
clwJodor bis '""""""'"tive, duly deoignotod. shall be fumisbed • copy
of the JlatetDcnts taken by the chief administrative officer i.D relation to
such c:barJ:es and with the names of uy ocbet witnesses wbo will be
produeod at the bearing in 5Upporl o( the clwJeo; provided. however, that
this sbal1 oat preclude the testimony of witnesses who were unknown at
the time of tnldJ demand.
f) The chief administrative officer may, upoo the service of charges.
suspeod the siOOent twned therein, from .U or port o( the institutioo 's
prcmi.ses or facilities, pt:Dding the bearinJ and detetminatioo thereof,
wbcnever, in his jud~ the continued prc:sence of such studeot would
coostitute a clear daogtt to himself or to tbe safety of persons or property
on tbe premises of the institution or would pose an immediate lhreat of
disruptive interfermce with the oonnal conduct of the institutioo 's
activities and functions; provided. bowever, that the chief administrative
officer shall grant an immediate bearing on request of any student so
suspended with respect to the basis for such suspension.
t) There shaD be c:oostitutcd at each State-open.ted institution a
bearing committee to bear charges against students of violatioo of the
rules for maintenaooc of public order prescribed by or refermd to in this
put_ Such eornmiueeshall c:onsistoflhnc: membersoftheadmi.nistrative
staff and thrt:c membc:n: of the faculty , desjgnated by the chief adrninis~
trative officer, and three students who sbaU be designated by the mem·
ben: named by the chief adminisU'ativeofficer. Each such member shall
serve until bissuc:c::essororreplacemc:nt bas been designated. No member
of the committee sball serve in any case where be is a witness or is or has
bcc:o dircct1y involved in the events upon which the charges are based. In
order to provide for cases where there may be such a disqualification and
for cascs of abse:nce or clisability,the chief administrative officer shall
desipateanaltematemanberoftheadministrativestaffandanaltemate
member of the faculty, and his principal designees shall designate an
altematcstudentmcmbeJ.toserveinsucbc:ases. Anyfivemembersofthe
commiaee may conduct bearings and make findings and rccommeoda·
tioos as hereinafter provided. At any ~tution where the chief admin·
istntive officer determines that the number of bearings whicb will be
required to be held is. or may be. so great thatlhey C&amp;DDOC othc:rwise be
mspc..~ o( ,..jth .....,..ble speed. be may ddermine that the bearing
conuniU.ce,shall coosist.of six ~embers of tbe administrative staff and six

memben o( the foeulty to be deoipotod by him ood o( .U liiUdeaU who
Wll be deoiJDOiod by the memben 110 deoiJDOiod by b i m . l n - the chie( ldm.i.rdstrative officer shall da:i.pate oae of so:h mcmbc:n as
d1oinaon who moy divide the rnanbenhlp of the COCIIIJiiaee inlo three
dh"iika: each to c:oosisl of two members oftbe administrative staff,two
faculty membcnud twootudetrta ood moy uoip clwJ,. """""such
dirisions for heari.Qc. Any four members ol cedll ACb diviAoo may
cooduct beorinp ud malte recommeodatioas .. povided.
~ The bearing oornmitt..e sboiiii&lt;Jl be bound by the tcdmicol rvles
of evidc:ncc: btn may bear or RCCive any testimony or eYidenct that is
relevant and material to the issut.s presented by the dwps and that ~U
oootribute to a full and fair oonsideratioa tbercoC and detcnninatioll
tberoon. A IIUdenupinst whom thedwaesore auodettUiy appear by ooc1
with represe:otatives of his chok::e. He may confroot and examine wit·
neAeS apinst him and may produce witnesee~ and doc::wnead.ary evi deoce in his own behalf. There may be pacot at the bearin&amp;: the srudcol

:r~::u=ti==~~~i
reques&amp;acJoscdbearin&amp;,iUclJOihc:rmcmbcnoftbeiDstitution.alcornmunity or otbe&lt; penons, or both, u may be odmiaod by the beorinc
committee. A tnnscript of the J&gt;rocoodinJs sboll be made.
Q Within 20days aftcr the close of a
tbehe:arin&amp;comminee
sb.alJ submit a repof1 of its findinp of fact and recommc:nclarions for
disposition or the charges lO the chief administrative ofrx:er, cogether
with a transcript of the prooeed.ings. and sba.U at the same time tn:nsmit
a copy of its report to thesrudent concerned or bis representative. Within
10 days thereafter the chief administrative officer sba.JJ make his determination thereon. Final authority to dismiss the cbarges or to dc:tennine
the: guilt of those against whom they are made and to expel, 5U5pCDd. or
fJlherwi.se discipline them 5ha1J be vested in the chief administrative
officer. If be shall rejea: the findings of the bearing oom.mittee in whole
or i.n put be sball make new fiDdings that must be based on subslantial
evideoc:e in the record and shall include them in the notice of his fan.al
determination that sha1J be served upon the student or 5:Udents with
respect to whom it is made.

bearina.

535.10 ..... '• Orpolutloos.
1) Or-gtlllit.Dtioru. Organiz.atioas that opente upoo the campus of
any State~tcd ~tutioo or upon the property of any State-opentcd

institution used for educational purpose5 dLall be prohibited from authorizing the conduct dc:scribed i.n subdivision (I} of Section 535.3 o( this
port.
.,, Procr.dMn.. Tbechid'administrativeofficerateacb State-open.ted
institutioo shall be responAble for the enforcement of this 5eetioo, and,
as used herein. the tt:nn chief administn.tiw: officer shall include any
designee appointed by said officer.
(1) Whenever the chief •dmi.nistrative offK:Cr bas deletminod on
the basis of a complaint or personal knowJed&amp;e that there is reasooable
ground to believe that there bas been a violation of this :secticx:J by any
organization, the chief ..tministnltiveoffioer shall prepare or cause to be
pn:pared written dw)es againsl the organizatioo that shall sute l.be
provision pro5Cribin.g the conduct and shall specify the ultimate facu
alleged to coostiMe such violation.
(2) Such written charJessball be served upon tbc: principal offtcer
of the organization by repstered or certified mail. return mceipt re·
quested, to the organization '5 cwn:nt ~and s.baiJ be accompanied
by a noti~ that the organiution may respond in WJ;iting to the charges
within ten ( I 0) day5 df receipt of said notice Tbe notice of the ch.uge so
served shall inch~&amp; a statement that the failun: 10 submit a n:spome
within ten ( 10) da'f5sball be deemed to be an admission of the facts stated
in such charges and shall warrant the imposition of the penalty described
in subdivision (c) of this sectioo. Tht response sbaU be sub:niued to the
chief .dministtative officer and shall constitute the formal dr:n.ia1 or
aff"umatioo of tbe ultimate facts alleged in the charge. The chief .ciminis~
trarive officer may allow an extension of the len (10) day response period.
(l) Upon written request by an •utboriz.ed representative of the
or&amp;aniutioo., the chief admini.stntive officer shall provide tht representative organization an opportunity for a hearin.&amp;- A bearing panel designated by the chief .dministrative officer shall bear or receive any

testimony or evidence that is relevant and material to the issues presented
by the charge and that will c::ootribute to a full and fair consideration
tbereo( and dete:nninatioo thel'eon. The orpniution 's representative
may confroot and euminc: witnc:s:ses against it and m1y produce wit ~
De5SC:S aod documentary evidence oo its beba.lf. The bearing paneJ shall
submit written firdinp of f•d aod l'fJCIOIIllnC2KtiODS for disposition of
the cbarJ:e to the chief administrative. officer within twenty (20) days
after the clo&amp;e of lhc: bearing .
(4) Final autboriry to dismiss tbe charges or to make: a final
determination shall be vested in the chief adm.ini.slratiw= officer. otice
of the decision shall be in writing; sbal1 include the reasons supporting
such decision; ood sboll be served on the principal off~ett of the orpnizatioo by mail i.n the manner described in paragrapb (2) of this subdivi·
sioo within a reasonable time after such decision is made.
c) Pr.NJlriu. Any orp.n.iz.ation that authori.us lhe prohibir.d coaduct described in subdivisioo (I) of Sectioo 535.3 of this port sliall be
subject to the rescission of permission to operate upon the campti&amp; or
upoo the property of the State-operated institu1ion used for educatiocaJ
purpose$- The penalty provided in this subdivision shalt be in addition l
any penalty that may be imposed pursuant to the Penal Law and any other
provision of law, or to any penalty to which an individual may be subject
pumwttto this Part.
4J By--laws. Section64SO( I) of the Education Law requires th.at the
provisions of this pan., which prohibit reckless or intentional endanger·
ment to bea.Jth or forced consumpc:ion of liquor or drugs for the pwpose
or initiation into or affiliation with any organiz.atioo, shall be deemed 10
be pan of the by-laws of all organiuttons that operate upon the campus
of any State-operated inslitution used for educational purposes. The
sta.tute funher requires that "eacb such organiution shall review these
by~laws annually with indi.._iduals affiliated with the Dl'ganiution.
1) Distriblltion.. Copies of the provisions of this pan, which prohibit
reckless or intentional endangennenllo health or fon:ed consumpe:ion of
liquor or drugs for the purpose of initiation into or affiliation with any
orpniution, shall be given to all students enrolled in each State-operated
"insritution.
Fikd Octobu 14. 1969
AM~Nkd: A.pri/1970, JatUUJry 1970, S~pumbu 1980, Ckto~r 1982

10. SUPPLEMENTAL RULES FOR THE MAINTENANCE OF
PUBUC ORDER FOR THE STAlC UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AT BUFFALO

•536.1 .........
A penoa it; guilty o( disrvption when be or she, by action, by thrco1,

or otberwise.:
I) interfere~ witb university ac:tivitica; or
obRruc:u univenity .ctivities.
University 1Clivitie5 include, but are DOll limited 1.0:
oeordl. oclrninimotioD, public ..moe hmctioo. or activity or procram c. u:Nversity premiacs.

w

\eadJ.ina, rcaUibori&gt;od

SlU Uooolloorlu4 &amp;dry
No penoo sbaU break into or iUepUy etuer any university buildm.c or
roon1; oar shall any penoa c:oter or remain in any privare room« office
ofony-foa&gt;ltymember,oclrninimod .. offlett,orocba-penoocm
uniYetsil}' property.,..._ the exprao permisoioo of the pcnoas aOJtbo.
riu.d to usc or live in lhat room; DCJr Jha1l ay aa.utborized penon~
or remain in any univc:rsitybuildi.D&amp;;orfac:iliry at a timewbe:u lbal fadlly \
tlllfiDolly is clo&amp;ed or .ru. the focility bas beeu doood beeo1110of ttpociol
or uuuual c:ireums&amp;.anc:e. Uaivers.ity facilitic5 i.ocludc., but are DOt
limited to, the lollowinao buildinas. porlatt&amp; lou;, atbkoi&lt; fldtls ODd oil
compusueos

S3U 1Wt _. Doslrwdloe of Pnporty
ol Nopenoosbolltolo;JUOI, bum,destroyorotherwioeclomoJeony
propeny not his or her own. on the- Umversity campus or oo any
University property _
.,, No person. in any lJlaDl')tt what:soeYtt, shall def.ce waJ.ls of any
~ of the University, either oo the: inside or the outside of Rid
suucrure. Tb:is include$ the use of paints., poster~., liJd actvertisements
aff"u.ed in any areas other than those desiCJ'!Icd for such pu:rpoec5.
.,d No penoo shall knowingly bubor or poooess oto1a&gt; property
while: oa or te5idinaac the University campus..
"'Appf'O'Vrd by Uttivrrsiry CtHUtCiJ

$qu•~r.

/975 Board of Tnutus

A6f11Ul I. /976

"'•Approw.d by rlw. Cot~ltcilaftM Suu~ UNV~rnityofNtw Yortm &amp;JftJlo
o" M ay 28. 1981 Glldcppruw.d trytM BotudofTrw.suu. Stpu•~r 23.
1981.

536.4 Pltyllialf Alone ... """"A penoo is pity of physical abuse ood banwnenl wheno

I) be or sbe inlelrti001.Uy assaults. Wi.kl::5, lhrea~ or mt:imidall:S
any persoo~ or
.,, be: or sbe enp.ges in a course or cood~ over any period or tune.
or repeatedly commjts .as that aJa.rm or seriously anooy a.ootber peniO[I
and that serve oo legitimate purpose; or
c) be or she aeatcs a coodition that llnll0Clt5Slri!y eodaqc:rs or
threatens tbe bc:alth., safery, or ~U·bei.ng of other persons or of other
property oo University property .
•

536.5 0..,...

w..,... ... u,losiHs

1) It is a violation of New York State law and/or Ua.ivet'Slty regub -

tioos for a per50II to possess a nne. sbotpn. firearms. ammunitioo.
firecrackers. or explosives in or u:poo tbe build.inp or grouods of the
University without app-opriate written autboriz.atioD frocD the appropri·
ate UtU• ersity official. This ioc100es roman ca.ndle5 or similar combustibles or expb;ives...
~1 No penoo, eithetc sin&amp;Jy or in coocen with otben.,
and carry , many pvuDd5 or in any bui\dins ofd»e U.Uwnity. a air pn..
or other inscrumenl or weapoc i.n W'bic:b tbe propeJlina force. is air. Iatife.
dirk. stileoo, ..btt. cudlel. blud"""' dub, slinpbo&lt;. or otbe&lt; ~
adaptable: to the~ of a~· -~luding betao:s, c:mcs or similar
articles, excluding only orthopedic: aids, 'lhletic oqWpment. aDd project
or cooscruaioo malerials and tools oo ~of a JWOPtt specific use or
purpose oa the day in quc:stioo.
c) No person hired for purposes of enforcin.g sccuriry, whether in
lieu of or in .c:Sdition 10 Depanmenl of Public Safety officen., may bave
in his or her po5$C:$Sion in or uport the buildinp and pounds of the
University any firearm or otber deadly weapoo witbout speclfte wriucn
autboriz.atioo from tbc: Univem.ty official empowe:m:l CO gi¥!: such
a utboriz:ati&lt;XI.

sboJI-

536.6 l'ldtotiot lOIII o-stotllloos
.) In reprd to oo-campus studc:nt actions and demoostrations tbattc:Dd to endanger life, public or private property or to violate local, state
or fectemlaws, each studeot will take the ooosequence of his or bc:r own
.cti005 as J.D individual before the law, as well as being rderred to tbe
appropriate Univen:ity disciplinary body. Tbe C05l of any damace to
public or pri ..te property must be borne by tho¥ leplly n:spoosible.
.,) All members of a Univcniry community mUSl share tbe respa:asibility for maintaining a climate in wbjchdiverse vieW~ can beexpre:acd
freel y and without twassmeot. --c) Tbe State University of New Y ark at Buffalo bas traditioaally
supportod the rigbt of its studeots. foeulty ood staff to peaccfol plOltSt.
Always implicit is the aoderslanding that demonstrators will oot interfere
with or violate the ri&amp;bts oC others.. -It is the obliptic:xa of all to as:mt in -....
maintainin.&amp; order and to assure councous rec:eptioa of any campus
spea.ker or visitor.
4) The following pertoios to the cooduct of thaoe members o( the
University community who fed compelled to express their dis&amp;cot
through picketina ood other forms of dcmonstrotiooo
(1) Picketing ood dcmoostnting mus: be onl&lt;rly at oil times ood
should in DO way jeopardize public order or safely or interfere with tbc:
U.Uversity's progmns..
(21 Picketing or dcmoftsrrating must Dot interfere witb entraDCeS
to buildin.p or the normal now of pedestrian or vehiculu traffic.
(J) Those involved in picketing or ~~ may aot inter·
fere by mingling with organized mccrings Of other assemblies for the
purpose ofba.rassment., ~ lhis inv.cies the rights of others to assemble
liJd the rights of speakers to free e.xpn"£sion.
(4) Pickc&lt;ing or dcmoostnting may not obstruct or physically
interfere with the integrity of the classroom., the privacy oftbe resi4eDoe
halls. or the functioning of the physical plon1.

536J loltoriot lOIII Trespossltot •UoiYonify Gr.IOIIIs •11
UoiYonityllttiNiop
I) Any person not a student, employee, gues1 of a student or an
employee, or Ihe parent or legal guardian of a srudcot in anmdance at the
Utiiversity, who loiters in 01' about any University building or any put or
Universiry grounds without written pennis:sion from the president. cus-todi.al or other person in charge thereof, or in violation of posted rules or
regulations governing the use tbertof, shall be guilty of tresJ:-$S- Regv~
lations on each campus shall include the manner by which campm
visitatioos by noo·studeots sball be developed in accordaoce with tht
Penal Law.
W Under New York Penal Law, Sectioa 240.35, Rlbdivisioo 5, a
person is ,WJty of loiterina wbc::n bt. or she loitcn or reDIII6ns in or about

COIII.a--

�o ocbool, a&gt;llepor..uv.r.ilybaildiD&amp;or .....-, IIOl bovill&amp;ony , _
or . . - ; p iavolvill&amp; caooody ol or ......-bility for • pupil or
- o r ODY opoclfic, leJitlmote....., for beiDa !hero, ond IIOl boviq
ODY penaa lllllhorioodiO .,-doe....._
cl llode&lt;New Yort"-l low,sedioai40.0S, openaaisauiJtyol
.._mawbeabeorsbelaJowinaly-.norr=oiDIImlowfullyiaor
upoo ~,.,_is • ""ioiotooo" punisbobk by • fino, or impris·
ol Ill' 10 15 doys.
• ~lode&lt; New Yort PalO! Low Socrloo 140. 10 • ptr1011 is aWJty ol
iD tbe lhird doJn&gt;o wbm be or she knowin&amp;Jy enters or
...,..;, ul&gt;lowfully iD • baildiDa or upoa reo! propeny lhol is fCIIOCII or
ocbcrwile c:ndc:.ed in a m&amp;nJICr dcsianccf to exclude intruclen:. This is a
C.. B- .

---from
c:rimiDol53US......

Tbe judicial bodies established to consider cues iJJvolvi.n1 lillldent
vM&gt;Iotioos of lhe pnMsioos 510101! in lhissedioa ""'the Student-Wide
Judiciory ond lhe COIIUJUI!ee for lhe mobu......, of public order. These
judicial bodies have the power to institute• the foUowin1 rm1e of
snctions:
tl womin&amp;;

wnotation

"

41

Oil

reccrd;

...,;rution;
-olpiviqcs:
(I) dclliaJ of use of an automobile on campus for a desipated

time;

(2') removal from dormitory or other Univet5ity bousinJ;
(J) Jo. of s:ucb privilqcs as m~~y be consistent with the offense
committed ond lhe r.hobit;wioo of l h e o) ctiodplilwy probotion with or witboultos. of dcs;anatod pi vi·
Jeac:s fc. a derm.i~ period of time. Tbc: Yiolaticxl of tht: terms of
ddciplinary probltion or the infraaion of any University rule dW"in&amp; the
pmod ol disciplinory probolion may be ..,...SS for susponsion or
apukioD from tbe University;
f) suspensioD from the University for a deftnite or indefmitc period
of time;
tl expulsion from lhe Uni..,.;ty;
WSldl other sanctions as may be 1pproved by tM UrUvenity's
aibu:nals.
• Sl.bject 10 fiNJI rn'i~w Of tM presiLJLnt. 011 DCIIOtl tltiJI
~1Ui011 or uplllsiofl u recommeNkd.

U mtJndaJOry

if

1. A student will be subject to involunlat)' administntive witbdnwaJ
from the Univcnoity. or from Univenity homing if it is dete:nnincd, by
dear and cooviDcing evidence. lhat the srudent is suffering from •
psyebolop:al. emotional. or medic.al ooodition or disorder, and as •

~c

iJ engages..orthreatenstoenpge, in behaviDf that poses a danger of
causin&amp; physical hann to self or others. or
~) mpges.. or threatens to engage. in behavior lhat woo.ld Cluse
sipificam property dama&amp;e. or directly and wbswuially impede the
lawful.aivities of Ol.btn.
t. Tbtt;e statt4uds 00 not pn:clude JUDOval from the University, or
University bousin&amp;. in ac:cordaoce with provisious of t1ii" resideoce ball
ooc:upucy ageement, or other University rules or regulations.
1 A s:rudml accused of violatin&amp; University disciplinary regulations
may be diverted from the disciplinary process and withdrawn in accordaoce with tbc:se sundards, if the student, as a n::suJt of mental disorder:
tl loeb !be capocily 10 respond to peoding di&gt;ciplinary cbarg&lt;s. or
~) did DO( know the nature or wrongfulness of the condoctat the time
o(""' olfeue.
4. The Vtce Presidcm for Studeru Affairs or designee may also coovene
a Behavior Eva.lua.lioo Comminoe, to consist of as nway of tbe foUowin1
as arc: appropriate and ava.illbk: 10 serve: member of Counseling Center
I"Ofessional staff, member of Studeol Heolth C...er I"Ofcssiooal staff,
• member ol Rcsi&lt;leD&lt;% Life professional Sial!" (if studeol is dormitory
n:sidcut), a member of Ac:ademie Advbcment professional staff, member of Public Sofery profeosionol staff, ond ODY otber individual(s) wborn
tbe Vtce Pn::sidem believl:s can provide siplificant input reprd.ing the

-

'The Beba vMx- Evaltdtion Committee will meet to review the student's
situation and recomrneod that :

tl oooctioobe!Okeo.

~) advisement of student about services available., on campus or
within the c:ommuoity, to resolve psychological, emotiooal, or medical
difficulties.
d advisement of srudeot on voluntary withdrawal from the University udl« residmce halls.
IIJ invohmtary administrative witbdn.wal process be irtitiated.
S. Tbe Vtce Presidc:ot fcx- Student Affairs or dt:signee may refer a
student forev&amp;Jua.tion by • Univcnity psychiatrist, psychologist, ex-other
appropriate health-care profcssioo.al if tbe Vice President or designee
reuouably believeslhat the student may be suffering from a psychological. emoli&lt;mal. or medical oooditioo or disorder, and the student"s
behavior poec:s a danger of causing physical bum to the: studeDt or others,
causing propeity damage, or impeding the lawful activities of others.
6.. Students refem:d for evaJUitioo in accordance with this part shall be
so informed in writing. either by petSODil delivery or by certified mail,
ond sboU
giveu a copy of lbese Sland.uds ond proc&lt;dures. The
evaluation mDSl be initiated within five business days from the: date of the:
refenallette:r, unless an extension is granted by the Vice Ptesideot or
designee in writing.
7. Any pendingdisciplinuy action may be withheld until the evaluation
is completed. at the disctt:tioo of the Vice Pksident for Student Affairs.
I. A student who fails to c:ompletl! the evaluatioo in ~~ with
these standards and procedures may be withdrawn on an interim basis., or
refem:d for disciplinary action. or both.
9. An interim ad:rninistn.tive withdrawal may be implemented immedi·
atdy if a student fails to complete an evalua.tioo. as provided by these
staDdards and procedures. Also, an interim withdrawal may be implemented immediately if the: VK:c:.Presideot for Student Affairs or designee
detennines that a student may besufferin.&amp; from a mental, psycbologic:al,
cmotioDal, or medical rondjtioo or disorder, and IS a result. the student 's
behavior poses an imm.inent danger of:
.. c:a~g seriou5 physic:a.l ba:n:n to the student or others, or,
W c:ausing sipific:ant propatydamage,ordi.rcctlyandsubstantially
impodUta lhe lowful octivitics of oCheto.
11. A litudeDt IUbjcct lOan interim withdrawal shall be given writtea
IIOlicoofdoe wltbdro....U dlher by pcnoaoJ delivery or by catified mail,

be

-.-be~~-· copy r

--...sprocedurea. , ._ ,

aboiJ tbcoo be p..., .., ..,...,..ty 10 . _ pcroonolly bef""' lhe Vice
Pteoidoot for s. - AIJoin or •-......
lmm&lt;dioldy

lhe Pomily Educatioool Rip ond Privocy Ad Olf"ICO (PERPA) .,...
"'"""' ollepl f.Uhms by lhe lnotitulioa .. comply wid! lhe Act.

ofter"lhe ;...,;, - w o l , iaonler10 ,.,.;.wlhe fe&gt;llowiq -ooly:
tl lhe"'liobilityoltbeillfonnotloo.,._,.,.the-.'sbobov·
ior;
~I wbelhc&lt;oriiOlthe-'s bobo&gt;iorpooesodooleroleousina
....,-.oeriausphysicolbonaiOtheRUdcnt oroCheto, eousin&amp;siplfi·
com propeny domoae, or diJoclly ond sublunJiolly impodUta lhe lowful
octivibcs ol Olhoft;
c) wbctber or ,.. lhe . . - boo compteud on evoluotioo, iD
occon1once with , _ otondonls ond procedures.

Tbis-'•policy-forlhoPomilyl!docotioooiRI&amp;)a
ond Privocy Ad ol1974 aploiao iD ckWI doe ............ 00 be followed
by lhe imli1uliaa for ..,...,u-ce with doe pl"&lt;&gt;"'isioaa ol doe Act. A copy
ollhe policy is ovoiloble iolhe Olf"tee of doe V i c e , _ far AJr.irs, Room 542 Capca Holt, Campua. Ra:udolbot""....;..
IOiDOd by tbe lhliversity ond lhe olr.ce ;. which !hey""' - . "" ..
follows:
ADMISSIONS - OJ!i« of Ad&gt;oi.ssiolu
CUMULATIVE ACADEMIC - Records 4 ll.eli3lraliDo
HEAL111 - C~1t11rfor Stlltklll HUiblt
FlNANCIAL - Sl»tJtltl ACCOIUIU

upon"''-.

ll.A student subject to interim withdnwal may be aaisted in the
appearance before die Viet Pruident for Srudmt Affairs by a family
mcmba, • liccmcd pa:ydtolocisl or JIIYChiatrist. • beau.t.~ profcssiooal. or a member ol the campus commwrity. 'The ltudr::nl. may be
occomponiod by lepl counsel, allhool&amp;b lhe role of """"""! wiU be
limited 10 providing q.l advice to the ~tudeal..
12. An informal bearin&amp; will be held withltl five busiDCII:5 days after the
student hu boeo evoluatod by lhe appropriole . - . ! beoldt eon: pro(...
siooal The student will remain witbdraWD oa an int.crim basis pc:oding
completion of the informal bea:rin&amp;. bul will be allowcd to enter upoa the
campus 10 anend the: beari.n&amp;. or for Olhcr occessary putpOIC5. as authoril.Od iD writ:in&amp; by Vice Ptesidc:ot for Studc:nl Affain or designee.
tl. Students a~bjcct to an iovoluotary withch.wal shall be accorded an
informal be:ari:q before the Vice PresideGt for Studeot Alfain., Of •
designee. The following guldelmeo wiU be appllcobk'
tl Students wiU be infonnccl ollhe limo. date. ond loation ollhe
informal bearinc. m writin1 • eltber by penolllll delivery Of a::rti.f'ted mail.
at 5east two busiDCS5 days in advance.
Ill) The entire case file, includinaan evaluatioo prepared pu:rsuan1 to
lheoe IIWidards ond proc&lt;d..-.., ond lhe nom&lt;s of pro&lt;pOCtive bearin&amp;
participaotl, 'WiU be available for inspectioa by the audenl in the Vice
Presidc:nt for Studenl Affairs' office durin&amp; normal business holm. The
file. which should be available at Jeut two bu:sinas days befcn the
infonnal hearing, need not include the personal andconfKienti.al ootesof
any i.nstitutiooal off'tcial or participet in the evaluatKw:l process.
d Theinformalbearinasballbecoaver511tioaaJ&amp;ndnon-adverunal
Formal rules of evideDc:e will DOl apply. Tbe Vice Praoideru fOf Student
Affain or designee shall exercise active control over the proceedinp to
avoid oeccUess coosumption of time and to achieve the orderly completion of tbe bearing. Any pc:n;oo who disrupts the hearing may bt
excluded.
4] The audent may cboose' to be assisted by a family member and •
licensed psychologist or psychiatrist. a heallh-care profcaioaa.l, or by a
member of the campus community. The audent may be accompa.nicd by
legal counsel, although the role of counsel will be limited to providing
legal advice to the RUdent
t ) Tbr;aassistin&amp;t.bestudeot.eacepC forleplcounsd. wiU beJlven
reuoo.able time to ask relevant questioos of any individual appearing at
lht infonnal bearin&amp;, as well as to preKDt relevant evidc:oce.
fl Tbe informal bearing may be ooodocted in the absence of •
student who fail&amp; to •ppear a.ft.cl' proper noric:e.
tJ Tbe be&amp;Jth~ professiona.J who prepand the evalua:tioo pwsuant to these 5taDdards and procedures may be expected to appear 11 the:
informal beanng, and to respond to relevant questtoos, upon ~uest of
any party. ea.cepe ror legal counsel.
.., The Vice President fc. Studc:ot Affairs: or designee may permit
University offtcials. to appear at the informal bearing and to pre&amp;cDI
evidmce in support of any withdrawal rcc:oaune:ndation. if the Vk:c
President or designee delermi!JC5lhat such prartic:ip~~tion is essential totbe
resolutioo of the case.
Q The informol beonng sbaU be tape t=~rded by lhe VK% President
for StudeDt Affairs or designee. The tape(s) $hall be kept witb the
pertinent case file fOf IS IODJ IS the case file is ma.intaiDed by tbe
instirutioa.
P A wrinen deci.sioo 5ball be reodered by the Vice President for
Studcot Alfaino or dt:sigoce within five business days after tbe con\p&amp;etion ollhe informol beorin&amp;. The"'"""" dccisiol1. which wiU be moiled
certified or pctSCJIIally delivered to t.be audau., sboukl coo.taiD a state·
ment of reasons for any determioatioo lcadina to involuntary withdnwat
'Thesrudc:nt should also be advi5cd as to wbe:n • petitioa for reinstatement
would be cons:idered. alan&amp; with any cooditions fOf reinsu.ttmenL
kJ 'Thedecisiooofthe Vice President for Studc:ntAffair5«desigoee
W.U be fmal and cooc.lusive and not subject to appeal.
14. Reasonable deviations from these proccdutC$ wiU not invalidate •
dct.isioo Of procec:dina unless significant prejudice to' student may
n:sulL
(

ARnru 6: Administrative Regulations
Sodioo L VIOLA llON OF LAW AND UNIVERSITY DISOPUNE
A. University disciplinary proceedings may be institvted against a
student charged with violation of a law t..bat is also a · tion o( this
Student Code, foreumple. if both violations result from thf.ume &amp;aual
situation. without reprd to the peodency of civil litigatK. in coun or
criminal UTC5I and prosecution. Proceed.i.ngs under this Sttlllent Code
may be c:anicd out prior to, rrlmuhancousJy with. ex- foUowio civil or
criminal proceedings off campus.

L When a saudent is charged by federal. state or iocal authorities with
a violation of law, the University will noc request or agree to special
considentioo for t.hat individual because of his orber status as • student .
If the alleged offense is also the subject of a proceeding before a judicial
body under the Student Code. bowever, the Univc:n:iry may advise off.
campus authorities of the existence of the Student Code and of bow 5UCh
maners will be handled internally within the University community. The
Univetsity wiD cooperate fully with law enforcement and other agencies
in the enforcement of criminal law on campus and in the conditions
imposed by crim..i.nal courts for the rehabilitation of student violators.
Individual SNdents., facult y and st.aff members. acting in their personal
capacities, remain free to inlcnla with governmenl.al representatives as
they deem appropriate.

Sodioo IL FAM!L Y EDUCA llONAL RIGHTS AND PRIVACY ACf
(FERPA )

A. The State University of New York. at Buffalo complies fully witb
the Family Educationa.J Rights and Privacy Act of 197-' in its treatment
of student cduc:atiooal records. This Aa was intended to protect the
privacy of educational records. to establish the right of 5tUdents to inspect
and review their educational records, and to provide guidelines for the
.,..,.,.,.;.., or deleboo of inoccurote or mWeoding datalhrougb informal
ond formol bearingo. Srudents oJso have lhe rip110 file a&gt;mploinls with

PLACEMEHf - C4rr~r PltvuUn&amp;/Ploc~Mnll
OISOPUNARY- O.u of~

L Srudenu who " ' ' - ..,.. 10 !heir c:ducotional rooonla ahould
fill out a tequc:sl form at Studedl Aff&amp;ira. C..pea Hall. Tbe staff in thil
office will !hen' (I) clewmine if the rooonla ~by l h e exist, (2) clewmine wbelber lhe Sludeol boo tho rip ol ocaa oo , _
rooonla under !be Act. (3) ......,. ony q.-ioas !be IDIIY hove
about the Act, and (-') make~ for the stadeDl10 COillact a
spccif.c: penoa in tbe appropriate depm1meo:t or off'toe to -.e hil/bcr
rooonla. The..- wooldtbcooorrooae .. ~-lhec:omoct
pei'S(m in that area to review hiflher rue.
The obove proceoluno will W.. place wilhia a -..aoble pmod ol
tim~!. bul oo later than -'5 dlys after the filin&amp; of a wrinea. rcquell.
C. Studenrs may obuin copies of their educat.K.al rooords.. to wtUcb
they arc: entitled UDder the Act. Of pMioDs tbc:reol, wilhiD -'5 days
foOowin&amp; their writtcD request. as tbe COlt of reproducina suc:b copiec.
D. The University wilJ respond to all reasonable rcqut.:IU from
studenta for e.aplanations and intcrpreutioos of CODtents al their educa·
tioool rooonla.
L Stucloms will be notified ......Uy of !heir FERPA ri&amp;bl&gt; by
lfimiburioo of lhe Sludcnl Coaducl Rules.
f. /hfinuiortS

I . "School Officials," fill" lhe I'"'J"lR olllm Att. ""'def'med by
the Uruversity as •uy empioycc5 who hive official deali.o.p with
srudenu for k&amp;itimate educ:atiooaJ inle:re5ts ..
2. •f.ducatioo.al Records .. means informauc:Jm or data defined as
diTcct.ly related to srude:ms for educabonal proc:rams and wtUcb is
maintained by the Uoivrnity or a person actio&amp; for the University
By law,tbr fol~winc: informatioa bas beta e.ac.luded fiom educatJODal rcoords:
o) finoncio1 of lhe porenu ol the - • or ODY
informat.ioo contained tbcreio;

~) security ond docwnenla, which "" """' oeporale
from cduc:.atior&amp;al records., are used OD.Jy for aecurity pwpoliCS, ud which
are aYI!ilabte onJy to oc.ber officials responsible fOf security at tbt: State:
Unive!Sity al New York at Bufftio;
I) -

ol physician5. poychiolri=,

Of

otber rocoplud

-con.

P"Of'CS5ioaala. or~- whicb are used ool.y in the provisioa
of treatment to tbt: audent and wbicb are ooc avai.lable to myoae otber
how·
!bon lbooe persons providin such trealmeDL (lbeoe
ever. be reviewed by • ph •
or other appropria.Le profes&amp;:ioi:Lal o( the
student ' s choice);

onl

il """""' ,....
rocords ol teacben or adminiarollli"S,
which are DOl available to any third ~;
•l coofidentiol ten... ond ........... ol roe&lt;lmDieDCI&amp;tion.
which were placed in the: cdocatiooal ru::ord prj« to Januasy 1, 1975if such \etten and a.atemenU are 001 used for purposes other than those
fcx- which they ue spccifically inte:nded;
f) ernploymeblroconls otber lhon lbooe aatod os o IUUII o1
employment due to ooe 's status as a sruderd;
llahmmimx&gt;nisaeotodofterlhepcnoa isooloop o srudenL
sbaU coosis1 ol"tbose in·

S. "Legitimote EducotiotW

In-·

official.,

terc:sts within the llCOipC- of the school
duties that fu:nber &amp;he
iatelleclual, oc:odemic, physico!, emctioaal ond morol devdopneol ol

lhestudeol.

G. RLI~CJ.U of EdMctuiONJJ kcords
1. Tbe UtUYCBity will not:pennjt ac:cess to, or the rdc:aeof.aoy
portion of a student's ec:bx::atiooal records.. or any Olhcr penoaally
identifiable informatloo ochu..llwt diTodory informatica lhe
wrinen ccosem of the: st1ldellt. to any .-ny otber thaD tbe followin&amp;:
" -..~cited in !be Fomily EdueotloooJ Ri&amp;blsond
Privacy Ad of t974 ...s corrupcudjnaooctions o1 the Code o1 Fedenl
Rqu1atioas
fcdenl.aate, or Iota! officiols 10 whom such informa·
lion miJII be reponed by law):
"Jappopiate persons in a po6itioo to deal with Ill c:mc:JIC8CY
(ex- which web infonnatioo is occessary to protect tbc bcalth and .a fety
of !be RUden• or other ptriOilS.

&lt;•·I··

1. The......,. ""!uirod for !be '*-olonyeducobcnaiiOCOrds,
otber lhon diTodory infonnotioo if lhe 10 - . aboiJ be in
writing. sipecl ond datod by lhe ...... ond sboll include:
•l • specificotion of lhc: lt&lt;Oids 10 be released;
~) lhe ....... fiJI" such releose; ODd
I) lhe pony Ill" ponies 10 wham sucb roconls will be releosed.
S. The University will include with uy information released a
written statement infonnina lhose to wbom the: infonnatioa is being
ttonsftrTed lhotlhey CODDOisuJ.cquendy '*-11&gt;&lt; data, Ill" ony port1oo
thereof, without the writtCD 0CIIl5C:Dt of tbe student.
4. Upon request. studccts may obtain a copy of the record
releosed. providing !bey""' materiols !hal the studeol bas o riz!u (or hu
noc waived the right) to see or copy.

H. SlMtkll/ /Wcords Policiu tutd ProudJUu
1.lnfonnation about a student., iDcludio&amp; any pc:rsooally identifi·
able information, records., ex- ftles., may be re1eased without the student's
wriuen pennissioo in tbe followina c::ascs only:
e) upon request. the University will release the following
directory information: tbc: studem"s name, current addrt:a. telepbooe
number, major field of study, dates of attendance., dqrea.. and awards.
The University will release the above information oa.Jy if the studcol
~c:ates oo his or her latest studcot d&amp;l.. form, under the appropri.ue
Item, that beorsbe wisbc:s to be listed in thestudent.di.rcclory. Tbe ltUdent
may at any time rescind his or her permission for tbe rdeue of diroc:k:lry
information by DOiifying,;. writing, lhe Office oiRoc:ords ond Registm-

-

~) upoo request ol University of!'tciols, •including foculty ...S

�S.... c...t ....... UohonllyS..... ll ...................
SIR UDwnilydNew Yort• 8tt&amp;lo

-who

~~a... lcgjtimale oducatioaal inleroot;
din oonnec::tioa with a atudem's apptication fw, or rcoeipt of,
linaDdal aid;
t1l upon req.-or authori.ted __.....; .. or (I) tbe Compuoii«Oeoenl ortbe U.Utcd SlatC$, (li) tbe Secrotaryor HEW, (Iii) SU1e
IJDMnity or oda ...,. oducatioaal authorities.
2. ID .U oda cues, no infonnatioo about .,udmts may be

rdeued in any form unless:
I) !here is wrineo ..,...,. from tbe stuc1eo1 spec:ifyina !he
"""'""tobe..,leased,lhe........,forlherdeue,mdlheftdpiallorlhe

records; ud a copy dtbe records is made available to the audent, unJea
tbey are c:oofideDtial~ or
lot sacb information is fumlshed in c:omplimce wUb a judicioJ
on1c&lt; or punuanl 10 any lawfully iamed subpoeu, upon ccoditiort that
!he studeol is aOOfiod by tbe U.Uvcnity or all sueb orders or subpoenas.
S. Nothing contained in this oeaioa shall pndude authori.ted
repn:oent.ttioa or(a) tbe ComptrollcrOeoenl ortbe U.Utcd SUIC$, (b) tbe
Socr&lt;Wy or tbe u.utcc~ s..... DeponmcDI or Health. Education, w
Welf~ (c) an administrative bead of u. educatioo aeenc:y or (d) State
edacatiooal aQlboritics fra:n bavina access to student or other recorck
that may be ncccssaty in ooanection with the audit and evaluation of
fcdenlly supported educatioo programs. or in cooncction with the
eaforcement or tbe federal legal requiraneol$ that rdale to ouch programs. provided tha~ ..cep&lt; wbea collection or - l l y ideruiliable
infCJr1Dition is specifictUy authoriz.cd by fedcn.llaw, any data coUectcd
by sueb officials shall be -octCd in • .....,.,. that will not permit tbe
personal ickalificatiooor..-andlheirporm~~by onyoneodathon
lhooeofficials, mel sueb ~Y idcolifiabledata shall be destroyed
wbc::n no longtt needed for RICh audit. evaluatioo, and enfon:.emc:nt of
federal legal requirements.

4. With rc:spcct to these sections., all penono5, ap:neies. or «&amp;•·
niutims desiri.Daaccess to the records of a student
be required 1o
sign a written form that shall be kqJI pc:rmanen.tly with the file of the
SIUdeDI, but ouly for inspection by the-~ indicating spociriCIIlly tbe
legiti.Jnate educ:aliooal or other interest that each penon. agency, or
orgui.r.atioo bas in liCCkin&amp; this informatiOD. This form will be available
to the ~Cb~Jcl.Dfficials responsible for record maintebi.DCC: as a means of
auditing the operation of the 5)'5lem.

w.u

S. Students shall halve an opportunity for a bearing for the
purpooe
c:halleaging tbe ......, ..
their records. Thls proced=
allo-'5 studcntr;; to insure that records cootain only appropriate data that
are oot io.ac:x:urate or misleading. Furtbcr infortDitioo ClOOCICI'1liq the
bearin&amp; proccdurcscao beobtaiocd from tbe Office ortbe Vice President
for Srudeot Affairs, Room S.2 Capett Holl, North Campus.
.. Records Tegudiog the clt.uoctcr or disciplinary records or
studeots are maiDllined in lhe OfflCt of the Vice President for Studmt
Afbirs.. It is c:ommoo practice for both employers and graduate scboot.to seek aod review this material .

or

or

7. The Univernity &amp;1so complies fully with the New York State
'"Freedom of lnformatioa Law"' (Article VI, Public Officers Law, as
amem\cdeffectiveJanuary I, 1978), which wuenactedtoassurepublic
accountability of stlte &amp;Jc:ocies while protedinc individuals agaiDit
W'lwarranted invasions of personal privacy .
Pc:noos seekin.g access to records kepi by tbe State University at
Buffl:lo are advised to contad the Records Acces:s Officer, ()ff.ce of the
Vice ~dent for Student Affairs. North Campus at 645-2982.

5odloo •. CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Eacb student is required to keep the Office of R.econis and Registratioo
informed of his orhercum:nt mailing address and local address. Failure
totdbcre to this requin:mcn.t is a violation triable before the Student· Wide
Judicwy _In addition, wbeo charges are broughtaga.insl any student.. the
judiciaries sba.U use the address listed iD the Offtoe or Rocords and
Registration for service of process. Service of process for disciplinary
purpoec:s shall be deemed complete wben notice is mailed to a student at
tbe address fumisbed to the Office of Records and Registntion.
5odloo lY.IDENTIACATION CARD
A studcot ideotificatioo card (ID can:l) will be issued to a student at the:
time of his or her fust semester of enrollment. This is a penuneru, foot
(4) yeu 1D can! mel will be validated for each academic semester (fall
.,t spring) after tegistration bas '-a successfully comple&lt;cd.
The lD card R~Va as officiaJ identification as a State University of
New York at Buffalo student and entitles the owner to library privileges.
The validated ID card will permit admission to home athletic events and
campo5 cultural events, participation in studen:t-spoosoredactivities, and
special off-eampuli student di sco unts . 10 cards are
NON-TRANSFERABLE. Cuds that .,. used illegally ..;u be confis.
c:ated and turned over lo the Office of Records and Registration. Students
~ o{ Je:oding cards to othcn or
another's card will be brougbt
befc;.n tbe S1udem-Wide Judiciary and charged with violation of the
appropriate aec:tioo of the Student Rules: and Regulations. As official
idcntif"JCatioo of student status, lD cards sbould be carried at all time5.
Upon request by a University officlal, students are required to presenl
their University ID card. to case of 1055., a student should obtain a new
card from tbe Office or Records and M.egistnotion, Hayes B. A SIO.OO
charJe is made for replacement.

usm,

5odloo V. STIJDENT REPRESENTAffi'E TO THE COUNCIL
Elcctioo rules and regulations, pursuant to State Education law, shall be
provided to the Vice President for Studeut Affairs no later than February
1 ofeach year. Tbcserv.Jesandregulationsmust be mutually agreed upon
by the various student covcmments and will serve as the (Wde for
elecrio&amp; the succeeding years representative.

5odloo VI. ABSENCE DUE TO RELIGIOUS BEUEFS
1. No person shall be upelled from or refused admissioo to an
institution ofhigber education for the reasoo that be or she is unable, due
to relipous beliefs. to attend classes or puticipate in any examination.
.wdy, or waR mquiremeots on a particular day or days.
2. Any student iD an institutioa of higher education wbois unable to
attend clas8es on a particular day or days due: to religious beliefs sb.aU be
excu:scd fronl any examination, study, or work requ.iremeots.
11 shall be tbe TeSpOIISibiliiJ' or tbe faculty and ttdministrati ..
officials of each institution of higher cducatioo to make availabk: 1oeacb
student ao equivalent opportwiity to makJ= up any eumination, study, or
wort.requiremcalts that be or she may have missed because of absence on
any puticular day or da)'5 due to religious beliefs.. The institutioo shall
make available to the student ao equivalent opportunity to register for
claaaes and to ccmplete the work required without charging the ttudent
afceofanyldnd.
4.. If classes,e.uminations, study, or work mJUirementsarebeJd on

s.

I

Fridly after4 p.m., or anytime on Saturday, similar Of make up classes.
eu.mi.nlltions., study, or work requirements shall be made available on
other days whenever it is possible and p~acticable to do so. No special
fees dWI be charged to the student for these make up classes. eumina·
tions., stUdy, or work requiranen(S..
S. ln effectu.~ting tbe provisioos of this section, it shall be the duty
of the faculty and administrative offtci.als of each institutioo of higher
education toe«reise the tuJJesa mea.sureof &amp;ood failh. Students shaiiiXM
experience any adverse or prejudicial effects due to t.hc: utiliu.tion of the.
provisions of this section.
6. If any facult y or administrative officia.l fails to comply in good
failh with the provisions of this section, the aggrieved student is entitled
to maiotain an action or proceeding in the Supreme Court of Erie Comny
for the enforcement o( his or ber rights under New Yark State Educatioa
Law, Section ll4-a.

Sodiott YIL ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND SAFETY
Health-related aspects of the environment and maners of personal and

geoeral safety are the fimction of tbe Office of Environmental Health and
Safety.

1. Assistance is offered and cooccm is exercised in the areas of:
r~d.iation safety, l.aboratory biohazards, occup~tiona.J bealth and safety,
academic programs.. extracurricular activities, housing, fire drills., food
service sanitation. fu-e proc.ection. eye safety, insect control, accident
investigation, emergeocy practices training prognms, public assemblies
and student assemblies.

2. Environmental Health and Safety rules. Rules and Regulations
are noc reposed in a single documeot.., but consisr of: policies and
procedwu promulgated by the Enviroomeotal Health and Safety Com·

from tM appropriate University official and musr p-ovide it upon r.be
request of a Public Safety officer or an area supervisor.
All administrative buildings shall be deemed closed at thr md of
oormal business hours of the administntive offices kK::a.tcd. iD those
facilities. All ocher buildings. ucept residence b:alls. shall be deemed
closed at II :30 p.m.. unless otherwise posted, or Obe--half hour afta the
complctioo of an aulhoriz..ed univrnity event. the closin&amp; of a blnsy, or
the ckwoing of • food sc:rvicc: operation iD that buildinJ;. Persous who
remain in these facilities after the closin&amp; hours must have authorization
and musa be able to demoostnte such authorization to a Public Safety
officer or an area supc:rvisor wheo requested.
Atlyooe remainina in any University facility after thr cklsina, bow
wilbout proper authorization will be escorted outofr.be building and may
be subjeQ to arrest..
All n:Adeoce ba.lls are locked and only a~,lJDiversity pe:rsoonel, residents and their pests are permitted to enter.

SocfiooL RESER VA TIONOFUNJVERSITY SPACEANDGROUNDS
The
=ognizcd studettt orgoni.utions, tbe academic c~cponmeo..,
affiliated cqan.iz.ations and the administrative units of the Slltc Uoi ver·
sity or New Yart at Buffalo may ....rve poutldoi 0&lt; nondcponmcuw
space for eK.uacunic:ular activities.
Academic classes shall be scheduled firsl iD University DOildepart ·
"""'l"l spoce, and inten:ollegiote and innmtnl athletic e.-. shall

F

:~..C:'!n.U:~~~~::s:.=~~
~lion

forms are available from tbe Fac:il.itiea Coordinator,

~n::~~~':t~~:;.:=::s!

mittce; rules adopted by the St1te University at Buffalo; laws of fedcn.l,
standards published by professiooal and teclutical aocietics that represent a conse:osus of nation·
w;de, and often worldwide, opinion.
No persons shaU intentionally n:fuse to observe health and safety
proc:cdun:s or regulations esablisbed for the protection of pr:n.oos or

FK:ilities Coordinator, Office of Confe:n:Dcc:S and Special Evad:s.. S.-ce
under jurisdiction or tbe nsidence balls is ...uvcd through tbe Rcsi·
dence Life Office.
Residence ball space is rese:ved dircctly through tbe Offtce or
Resideoct Ufe. Only recogniz.ed resideoct ba.]J &amp;roups lire eli~J'ble lo
reserve such space.

P"'P"''J'.

ARna£ 7: Alcoholic Beverages, Alcoholic

state, and governmc:ntal sulH:iivisioos; and

-

l. Information. Advice and assistance on mauers of environmental
health and safety is available to all Sludents from the Office: of Environ·
mental Health and Safety, 302 Michael Hall.
5odloo VIII. USE OF UNIVERSITY NAMES &amp; SYMBOLS
R.ocogn.iu.d student organizations may use University names and sym·
bois incoanc:ction with their programs and activities but the use mt.tSt be
iD ""good biSle. ~Use of names and symbols on merchaodise or products
is prohibited. eXcept by arrangement with the c.oordinl.tor or Office: of
Ttodenwb and U...Sing.

5odloo IL BUD.DING HOURS
All University academic or research buildings sbalJ be deemed closed at
J I :30p.m. unless otherwise posted Facu1ty and staff who remain iD lhese
facilities after closing boon must show proper idcntificatioo to Public
Safecy officers or area supervisors wbeo ~ Studr:nb: who remain
in these facilities after closing houn must hne written aUlhorization

Beverage Control Law
All provisions of the New York State Alcobolic Beverage Coatrol Law
and all rules of the Stale Liquor Authority apply to the Staat University
of New York at Buffalo. Specialanenticcr should be paid totbe following
regulations:

1....Any penon wbo mistqnsents tht ·~of a per500 under the age
of twenty-one years for the pwpo5e of iDducing the sale of any akobolic
beverage, as defined in the akobolic bevera,gr: COI1b'OI law, lo such
penon, is guilty of an offense and upon c:oovict:UI tbm:d sba.ll be
punished by a fmc: of oot mon: tb.an $200, or by imprisooment for not
more thaD five days or by bolh such fme &amp;Del i.mprisoomeDL.. (A.k:obolic
Beven.ge Cootrol Law, Scc6on 65--a)

2.. .. Any pen:oo under the age of twenty~ yean wbo pftSCDIS or
~-lit . .

�offers to uy liceosee under tbe alcoholic beverqe c:oouol \aw, ortotbe
age:ot «employee of such a Ueensee, any written evidence ol qe m.t is
false. frludu.lent or not actuaUy his or bet OWD., for the purpoee of
purebuinc or auemptinr;to purchase 1117 alcabolic bevaap. may be
..,...odor~ ODd be c.umiDod by a ma&amp;~sttm bovina jariodic00. 011 a cbarge o( illepUy purdlasina or altelllp&lt;iDa to illepUy
purdwooe any akobolk beven&amp;e. If a cleocnninatiOD io lUcie -.bl!q
such c:lwge thec:oun or mapstnleshall...._such pcn011011 probotiOD
ror a period of not e.a.oocdin&amp; one year, and may in edditioD bnpo.e a fiat.
- uceodina SHIO." (Aiecbolic Bevuaa• CODtrol Law, Socdoo 6S-b)
S. "Except u beteinafter provldod. no persco under the age af
rweoty-one yean shill poacsa any &amp;k:oholk: bevence. as deftnod iD lhis
c:bapter. with the intenttoc::oasume IUCb bevc:raac. A per1100 under the •ae
of tweoty-oae years may poeaesa any alcobolk bew:nte with intent to
CODIU'IDe if tbe ak:obolk: beven&amp;e is &amp;iveD:
.) 1o a pcnoo wbo is a ltUdeat in a curric::olum liceased «
~by the State Educatioa Doportmcal ODd t h e - • io rcqtWod
to task: or imbibe alcobolic bevcrqcl iD COUf"'e5 wbicb are put of tbe
rcqtWodcuniculum, prorided such alcobolic beventl""""' .-only far
~ PUJPOSIS durinr; ella cooducted pursuant to aucb cunicu·

tum; or
~) 10 the persoo under twenty-one years of age by that penoo 'a;
parent or pardian..'" (Aleobolic: Bevenae Conuoll..aw, Secriem 6S-c.
subdivisioas I and 2)
4. "'Wbc:never a peace off"K:er as defmed in subdividon lhirty-tbtce
of ~ 1.20 of the crimiDaJ proe:ectw-e law or poJ.ice officer as defined
in subdivision lhiny·four o( section 1.20 of the c:riminal procedure law
sball observe a penon UDder the •&amp;e of twenty-ooe years of age openly
in possession of an alcoholic bevc:ra&amp;e as dcftned in this cb.lpter with the
intent 10 consume such beV'CTI&amp;e in violation of this section, Aid ofTlCet
may seize: lhe beverage, and sba1l deliver it to the custody of his or ber
clcportmcnt. (Aicol&gt;olic Be,..age Control Law. Secticn 6S-c, oubdivision S)
S. ..No per500 licensed to sell alcobolk beverages shall suffer or
permit any gamblift&amp; on 1M licensed premises. or suffer or permit such
premises to become disorderly. The usr of tht lic:enscd penises, or any
put thereof, (Of' the sale of lonery tickrn. playing of bingo cw pmes of
cbanee. or as a simulcast facil ity or simulcut theater pursuant to the
racln&amp;. ,_..-mutual wagering and breeding law, when duly autboriu:d
aod lawfully cooducted thereon, shall noc constitute gamblinc within the
meaning or lh.is subdivision. (Alcoholic Beverage Control law, Section
106, subdivision 6)
w

ARnCLE 1:.Drug-free Schools &amp;
Communities Act

their award c:ertirtclle Wbeo lhU: 15 daDe. the studeot may cioduct the
amount oflbe awlltd from tbe amounl due the Uttiversil}'. Tbecornbined
New Y ori: S&amp;a&amp;e Sdaolar5b.ip may not eu:eed l:he amoun1 o( witioa

S. HANDICAPPED PAilXING PERMITS (I&lt;"''''r"'Y)· Studeoll wba
apoclal partiaa .....;dcrarioo clue to a ~ baottic:appin&amp;
condhioft m1101 apply forapoclal pamiloioo from theOfficeoCI&gt;isability
Uvin&amp;/l.&lt;amin&amp; Serviceo, 2S Capoa Hall. North Ounpo&gt;s. A modicaJ
cortificotioa o( dioabillty IDUII """"""'""1 the appljcatiOD.

cbarpd. eac:ept iJI oome c:ues for apoclal ocltolatslupo. Roe;piatu o(
Rep&amp;s ScholaBIUpa wbo are DOl c:li&amp;iblc. ror TAP ~ m• ai.IJ
CO&lt;Itj&gt;lete a TAP applicatlm to be eli&amp;ible far the ReJ&lt;81A Sdtolarsbipa.

-

L PAJU(JN(l POUCY. A-.obile parldna 011 dtecampua ioconsidered to be: a privi&amp;qc ganled b)' tbc Uaiversity. The 8drninimatioa it
awaro that then! may be a abort.aae o( CODvati.,. porkioa opaces cluriJt&amp;
pe.ak periods and io attontpWt&amp; to kocp up witb the loea¥)'- of the
student and focuhy populatiOD .. eflic:imtly. r....... and land .........
~~toma~parldnau~leU~b~Mio~tokocp

"'"'blions ...............

parldna
arictly atforcod. Eodo "
expected to work out I KbcduJe of arriYaJ•Ilhe campus that will allow
him or htt tilDe to fuod alepl parldna ploce. l........,.o(the rqtdatiODa
is not considt:rcd u excu:~e for a violaDcxL
7. Parlo;iaa ioprobibitod at aU time&amp; Oil theRJOdways(Uc:ept U .-..tJ,
oidewalks,lawns,grouado.laneo,ondtbrou&amp;hwayso(parldna.,.... The
University may have iJJepUy J*bd vebic:les towed aw•y at tbeowocr' s

expense.
&amp;. PARKING FINES AND PENALTIES A Uoivasity porkioa .....
mons is issued ror any non·rnovin&amp; viobltion lbat occ::unonlhc:c:ampuscs
o( the State Univasity o( New Yort at Buffalo Payment of dte fuoe
associated with such violalioa i5 re:tumabk lo the Off~« o( Studc:nl
Accounts within tbe lime period spec:irlCd on the summons
A plea againsla Univen.ity parid.qsummon5mUSI be: retumcd in the
manner described on tbe 5WllmOGS morder to requeR • hearing before a
hearinc off10et . An appeal oflht bearina officer·s docis1on is JMdc: to a
three·member review panel.

t.

LlABlLITY Tbt University acttptS no liabiUty for loss or damage
to a mocor vehicle or it5 c:ontents.. This lncludei any dam.ag~ caused by
moving or towing.

ARnru 10: Office of Student Finances and
Records
L RESID~
Students who t-Y tuitioo as tUHe5idents o( New York may apply to bc:
rcoogniu:d u residents. AD applicatioo form and a itltement of the
circ:wnstance&amp; that permit a stUdt1:ll to be rec:opiu:d as • residenc are
available in the Student A&lt;:COLmts Off.oe at 232 C.pen Hall and Hayes
Annex B.

lD conjunction with the Drug-Free Schools and Commlmities ActAmmd1989, the Unive:Bity at Buffalo and the Student Health System
are &amp;xnrnitted to dear and concise policies on substance abuse and a
strong program or counseling. treatment. reha6"Uitation. and reentry.
StudentS should be aware of the foUowing informarioo:
• Studem rules and regulatioos prohibit the unlawful possession. use,
or distribution of illicit drugs and alcohol on campus propc:nies or as pan
of its Ktivitics. All provisklos of Stale Alcohotk Bevc-a1e Control Law
and all rules of the State Liquor Authority apply on caD'IpUS. No perwn
under lhc age of twenty -oM can possess any alcoholic beverage _,th thl
inl~fll to c-onsM.m,. State and federal drug and narcotiC laws also arr:
enforced oo campus.
Alcoholic bevenJes may br served on campus b) groups and
aniz.ations provided the bevenges are noc sold and that such service tS
autboriz.ed by the campus Alcohol Re v1ew Board. For information.
contaCI Student Affairs (645 -2982).
• Alcoho l and other sub:sl.ance abu~ counseling. rehabilitation. aod
reentry programs are offered in the rommunil) Fret. confidential mror·
matioo and assessments are available 11 the Student Health Cemer an
Michlel Hall by calling the Student Heallh Access Une (829· 2789) for
an appomtment . Referrals will be mack 10 community treatment programs if indicated. lbt: Student Counseling Center offers a number of
pr'OIJ'am$and activities designed to assist students. In addition, chapters
of Alcoholics Anonymous and Adult OUidren of Alcoholics meet
regularly on campus. Fmployees are served by an Employee A.ssiS1an~
Prognm (829-2155 "'645-3166).
• ~University will impose appropriate disciplinary sanctums on
students and employees. Student conduct violations are considered by
the Student-Wide Judiciary or the Committee for the Maintenance of
Public Order. Sanctions may range from warnings to eJ.pulsion for
violation of Uniw-rsity standuds.
• Local , state, and federal laws for the unlawful po&amp;SeSSion or
distribution of illicit drugs and alcobol are enforttd oo campus. These
include the State Penal Code provisions on the possession and sale of
conuolled substances and federal controlled substance possession and
trafficking sanctions.
Violations of state laws can resuh in fines and up to lif~ in prison. Federal
sanctions are similar.
• The use and overdose of illicit drugs and alcohol can lead to
physical and psychological dependence, behavionl changes, phys1cal
and psychological damage. and possible death. Even low doses may
significantly inlpair judgment and coordination.
A complete copy or 1M Drug Frtt Schools and Comrnunuies ACI
statemeru is available for student review Direct inquines to The Living
Well Center, 223 Student Union: 645· 2837.
~or

ARnCLE 9: Parking and Traffic Regulations
1. VEHICLE REGISTRATION. All racuh) , staff and studentS are
required IO register molor vehicles annually with th~ Parking Office on
the North Campus. All faculty . staff and Sludents shall be bound by the
posted and published traffic regulations
2. A copy of the complete State University of New York It Burfalo
Vehlcle Regulations may be obtained rrom the Department of Public
Safety, Bissell Hall, North Campus or Offtce of Campus Parking and
Transportation Services, Diefendorl AnneJ., South Campus or Ellicou
CompleJ., Spaulding Quad .. North Campus.
1. PERMITS. All faculty, staff and S1udents will be: issued

- . Stucleo with permanoot baoclicappin&amp; conditioos 6bould ,._
.,.... munk:ipll pormita from their !tome.,.. pollee deportment or from
the New York State Doportmcal o( Moo.ar Vehicl...

Vehicle
Registration Permit upon the completion of vehicle registration and the
t-ymeot of the required fce(s). Tbe Vehicle Registntion Permit must be:
affixed from Lbe rearview minor. It will be the responsibility of the
I'DOiorist to keep the permit visible. Other permits ate to be: affued or
displayed in ac:c:ordaooe with the printed instructions issued with the
1

pcnnit.

4. HANDICAPPED PARKING PERMITS ~miQMnl}. The Univer·
sity recopiz.cs only state· or m unicipality·issued handicapped parlcin&amp;
permits as valid foe use in designated handicapped parking areas: on

In ~ event of 1 studc:nt who has ru:eived fmaocia] aid based on
nou-resident ita IUS. and is theD gnmed New York. State residmcy. and
the fmancial aid received as a non-rcsidem is p-cau:r than lhe permissible
amount for a residc:Dt student, said IIUde:a.t is obHptcd to return lht:
ctiffe=&gt;c&lt;.

0. rumON AND FEES COVERED BY WAIVERS. GRANTS. OR
GOVEllN}'(ENTAL AGENCIES
There.,. a variety of tuirioD waiWft ........ by the Uoivasity. Tbeoe
ioc.lude c:mployce cui:tioa waivc:n. Graduate Studeat tu:ilioa acbolanb.ipa.,
and coopcntiYe ac:bcr tuitioa waivers. /usy tuidoD waiver received in
dte OfftOe o( ScudcDI Acoounu by the billilla dale will be rdleaod 011 the
- a ( '""""""ODd will beiacludod iJithecalctalatioaofthedtle. ODe type oftuitiOD achalanltip, the~-- &lt;dtol-

anbip, ~be fully.,..,.._, tmti1 poof that t h e - boa fiJod far
a T u i t i O D - Propm A wont (TAP) io pnMded to dteOif"tOeo(

St- Accoua1L Proof of filiq ....UO.o( aTAP A wont Catificole or
-ooaTAP,..... . lbia~cloeoa«applytotheother

c:aaqoriesdtuitic. .-aiven.lf aaudem i1: rcceivi:q a twtD waiverud
it does not appear em tbe Slllc:mc:Dl ol.ct:Oimt, the studalt 11111111. provide
the OfT""~ee oiSNdenl Acx:ounts with proof of rcoeivi:q tbe tu.itioe waiw:r
before ~ tuition waiver can be dcduca:ed tn.n the IIDOUDt ®e. Tuition
waiV't:l"' do not. Cll)'\lel'" fees aod tbey, therefore, must be: paid by die clue date
in order \0 avoid a late ree.
Stuclenb ~by"""'" and ..,.........talageocies ...... proVIde documented proof to the Off10e of Stude:ot Account~ before deductIll£~ .mounts from their amoun1 due.
Where lhere are two or men means of relieVUl&amp; a grldu.tt: student of
hi$ or her tuitw:m charp, the U11.1vrnity wiD .Jways t1D'b to the tuition
wa1ver budJet last. For eu.mpk. a
a:ssislant appointed to 1
research ~ip also is supported by his or her sponsor The
U11.1versity will bill the 'JliOilSOr even lhoug.h tlus m;earch aaistants.tup
position provides a lWtion WII Vet

cract.we

L snJDENT FEES
The CoUece Fee is • 5la~.e assessed mandatory ree. Tbe Student ActiVIty
Fee is a 5lUdent usc:s:sed nwldatory fee . Student Health J.nsur.nce ts
mandatory for full-t:ime and rune-bour pdua&amp;e Audenu IDd all forei.p.
students It CUI be: waived by providin&amp; proof" of adequate exisunc
covengr to the Studeut Health lmun.nc:e otr10e prior to ~ deadline
date.

F. rumoN AND CREDIT REFUNDS
When • student rqisters it is s:pcciflcally UDdttstood that be or she will
t-Y in full for all cbarJes I$5\II:DIOd at rqistn.tioo.. Failure cw lhabiliry to
anend class does noc cban&amp;e the t-ymenl due or eutille die srudeat to 1
ref\lbd... Students who officially rcs:ip.. chan&amp;e from fu1J t.imeto pan time.
or c. • pan-tuDe t.sis reduce their IICbeduk will be cbarzed 011 ~
followinabosis:

I . PAYMENT OF rumON AND FEES REGULATIONS
The University bas a stUdent invoicing system that provides specific and
comp\et.c informacion about all cbar&amp;cs. t-ymmlS, and .utbori.ted defer·
ments. It also displays the various A'Udc:.nt sta.rus information used 10
determine the bill. Highlights of the sys~em are ootJlncd bdow:
I. Srdnts will receive up to four itllemt:nts of account each
semester 111c first statement v.iiJ be mailed to your permanent address
approumately ~ month before the stan of the semester Tuiuon, fees
and other Un'ivers1ty chatgesuse5Sed oo the ftra account Statement v.,l l
bc-due upon rettipt a nd are considered late if not t-id by the penalty date
appeanng on your statement (stu&lt;k:ots who anempced to regtster full
11me. bu1 did not recdve all theiT courses are stall hable for the balance due
on t~ account statemenl ). lbr remaimng stat'rments will be sent at
approJ.Ima tely one-month totervals during the seme:saer

2. Eac h account statement ..viii lisa the amount due the Uruversny
An~·

unpatd charges from 1M prevtous statement will br brought forward .

2nd week

30"

100"
100"
100"
100"
100"
Seven! excepuons to the ~ted refund scbedu.le do eust. Stude:ats
who offiCially resign from_ ~ and provide the docwnent.ed proof
hSIC:d below wiU rece•ve. a ful l adjustment of their tuition cbarces for t.hc
courses mvolved.

3rd wce.k.

4th week
Sth week

10"

1. Medical reasons that ocrurdwingthe first half ofthe&amp;e:rnc5terand
prohibit the Sludent from completing the semesu:r Documented proof
must br 5Ubmitted from a phyPdan. on the pbysici&amp;n 's wtionery, stating
the beginning datt of illness and that the Sfudent IS unable to atteDd class.

2. A change in the srudent "s workscbeduledunng the fusa ba1f of the
semesaer that makes u impo5Sible ror the student to attend da:sses.. The
A letter
must be'Ubmitted from the employer em compu!y staliooety, itarin&amp; the
beginning date or emp~t plus the date o( change ln the work

and additional charges, payments and credits will be shown. The state-

JOb m~ be: ooe that the student bdd when be: or me rqist.ered_

ment will also include in thecakulation oft be amount due any authorized
deferments. These include T AP/SUSTA and tuittao waivers. Students
must provide lhr Office of Srudtnt Accounts wsth proof or the receipt of
such an award prior to the penalty date to order to deduct the aWI.fd from
their amount due

schedule.

3. Rrruming students that do not successfully re.gister and. there.
fore.. do not receive the ftrst bill of any &amp;emeS~er will be charged 1 $30.00
late payment fee plus a $30.00 late processing fee for aloeaJ ofS6Ci.OO in
late fees. These fees are DOD-negotiable and must be: paid.
4. A $30.00 late proc:cssing fee will be charged to any new orrransrer
student attempting 10 register for the first time oa Of after the fU$1 day or
classes. This fee will apply to all studentS including
who rettive
tat~ admission to the University.

thof'

S. Failure to pay the amount due by the penalty date wsll result ln the
automatic assessment of a late payment fee of $30.00 each time ~
account is billed. This ree is non-negotiable and must be paid.
6. Students lhould apply early for any fmancialaid
to usr to pay their University bill.

that they upect

1. University bills are sent to the pc:nnanent address ~is on file
with the Office of Records and Regislnltion. his the student •s
ponsibility to keep the add.ress correct.
Failure to receave 1 bill wiU not be accxpeed as a reasoo to waiv tM
late payment fee
All paymentS should be made by check ormoney otder p~ yabletothe
Stat~ University of N~\1,· York at Buffalo Personal checks are accepted
SUbjeCt to dr:posit. Ma£1erCard., V1sa and DiscoverCard payments are
accepted. SIUdents m~ comple1e lM credit card authorization form
mcluded with the bill if paying by Masaere.rd. Visa Of' DiscoverCard.
Payments forwarded by mail should be: sent in the return envelope
provided. The top portion of the account statement sbouJd be included
w1th yow payment to insure timely and proper credit to the student ' s
account . Students should include their student number on lheiJ cbecks.
Students arc urged to pay by mail in order to avoid lines in the Office or
Student Accounts. Postmark date does not constitute receipt of payment.

C. NEW YORK STATE REGENTS AND/OR TUmON
ASSISTANCE PROGRAM AND STATE UNIVERSITY
SCHOLARSHIP TUmON ASSISTANCE
The statement of account sent to students will include all New York State
Regents and/or TAP/SUSTA amounts that are known to the Off10e of
Student Accounts II the time: of biUing. These amounts will be: included
in tbec:aJculation of the amount due. Students receiving New York State
Regentsand/cwTAP/SUSTAawardsthatdonoc.appeuontheiritatemcnt
or •cc:ount must provide the Office of Student Accounts with a copy of

3. Entering active military servt~ - You must submit a copy of your
military orders.
4. A documented proc:essinc error made in any Uolversity office
Letter oo University statiooery is~
A student wbo is entitled to a.refund has one year &amp;om the date or the
overp~yme:ntto request l.bel'efund. cw it is forfeited..

NOTE: AUfe.uo.nd ~IISt.S au swbj~CJID cluutg~ v.;thoMJ Mriu 01 tM
ducrnitHI of~~ UtU-wn•ry.

F. UNPAID UNIVERSITY ACCOUNTS
A saude:nt with an unpaid ahd overdue University account will not be:
permitted 10 register for the. following sc:mestt::r. Nor willa ltUdcnt be
entitled to receive a statement or transcript of his or her credits unl:i] his
or her tuition, fees and all other cba.rJ:es aUlboriz.ed by tbe St.te Univer·
sity, including but not limited to cbarzes for damaging rcs:idc:oce baU
propeny, have been ~id. The UDiversil)' does not act as a oollectioo
agency for commercial outside groups or individuals.

G. PENALTIES

No student is eligible to ~ive a degree. c:ertificate of accomplidunent
or honorable dismissal until a.ll clwges due to the University or to any of
its related divisions ate paid in full and all University property has been
returned in aettpllble condition.
The University reserves the right to change or add to its fees at any
time. Official information c:onccming tuition and fees and their payments
should be obtained from the Office of Student F"manccs and Records
(829· 2181) or (645-309S).

lf a student is dismissed from the University or any of its related
divisions for causes other than academic defiCiency. all fees t-id Of' to be:
JMid shall immediately become due and payable.

ARnCLE II: Approval
These Rules and Regulations have been approved by the Council of the
Stat~ University of New York at Buffalo em Aprill4, l994 and can be
made available on cassette tapes for the visua.lly impaired in the Offtce
of Services to the Handicapped, 25 Samuel P. Capen Hall. North
Campus. These: RuJes and Re.gulatioos sball remain in effect until
supet&gt;Cded by legislatioo 0&lt; ameDdt:d by the Council af the State
University of New Yod; at Buffalo.
Questions, commenta and ,.gptions !dated to Stucleot Condoc:t
Rules, Uoivcnity Standard&amp; and Adtninistrative Regulations 6bould be
directed to the Office af Judicial Affain/()mbodsmltn 405 Capen Hall.
- snJDENT AFFAIRS, ApniU. 1994

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1402978">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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              <text>Microfilms</text>
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                    <text>...........

•.-.r.ct Job'

RetiTQ ~ Deal
Erk: Stram tai&lt;S

aro.Jt Ns

aner; . 2

A ~ aoo.tr.

Pllll II'J C..
Meet sdiool. grant
~~ etb't 1D roease
li'U'fCa" cl prl'ruy

care physk:ms.,

3

Careers Center helps open doors
~
to heal -related jobs
degree and a
m~mal

position,

40-year-old William
i.tg1ta Falls wsll begin nursing cl
• in lhc Call.

t.Jdwict. I

OIISIOIMr-cavioe maD·

ogcrat on abrasives .m anufarouin&amp;
company
!9 1' bas been dissalisfied with his job boca
oi
corporal&lt; dowmiil.lng utionwide.
His real inlrns~ "lll bean," be
.. ys, bas a!Wl been bealtb eare.
He received a bochelor'.sllegree in

.u-

biology Crom UB in 1977, bul &amp;dded •noliOIIl.eftd 'ntedk:aJ school.
Ludwicl&lt; i cbmacteristic of
·mostoCthecl.ie:nls8arbonCas&amp;aro,
eucutive direclor ofthe Healrbearc
Careen; Ccoter

oi

Wes~&lt;rn

New

York. Inc., &lt;OUIISds oo • daily
Tho: Clelll&lt;l, iD 135 Cay Hall in
the UB Sdlool oCM&lt;diciuo and Bx..
medico] Sc:ieoa:l,has Jli'O"ided DXlle
tbaD 400 iDdMdlaok wilb inCODDItion about lteolrb-rdaled jobs,
Cossaro Slid. Thefloc:ility matted its
firsr annivc:rsary Jllly I .
Cassarosaya mos1 oi the inquiries cpme from oootJ:a4ilioDol atudenrs who have been displaced
from jobs in business or wbo are
cbanp.g .career fields.
l.udwicl&lt; wanted 10 enter the
medical field, ·but dido '1 know
whicb pml:ions 10 consider. The
center's job-profile sbeets ·bclped

'him narrow his choices, and be
.bopes 10 bocoooe • IIW'R pnuitiol&gt;"' or .,.,.. anestbetisl.
Hmy A. Sulu., UB prolmo&lt;of
soda! and preventive medicine,
&lt;'&gt;!1M "",.jth the idea 10 ae.ol&lt; tho
-lcr 1 lliOIIlh5 ago. 1be center

inCOrmatiool.lbe cemcr,aimiiO d ·
pd many or lbe my ....,.,..red
will&gt; Cbe cvrreut ioollusuy. ~!'4011
people reallJ don"! boor whll ....

, _ opportuaifies .n availabl~ lm
the health-are mdUSUJ: .....
'""' te&gt;llet' i jOO-pro6le 5beru

Sllpl)lty lnfarmai!Otl aboul gfmes
and specific lnlllll\B progrann..
Tilt facilil~ kttps tract of 16
cclltl!"' and 1wo-) ear !ocl!oo l•
wj1h be•ltk -cat·e pr('gram•

IIW sapply and deman.d olllp&lt;Cifii:
W'OIUr C.U..ro pl.ans 10 ........,U.:
a regrsuy of health-cane j(lb , _ _

in Wc- stcro
and olt•matel

,...,u ..

t--. York .

,.Ill ,.orl.

altempls lo
serve three udieuccs: tbe

bealliK::are indu.stry. lndi\1iduals and

::~..t

SU:Itz.. adding

cic;s and tHu,.. of qw.bf...t

mibvtdual to Y. esten
Yort. ..
OD&lt; dcwltO« be umber of
rep!itrOII and gradu.,.,. of llpC·

to educate

a:foc uaioiosleducatJoD pro&amp;ramS
., doa'J ... nl ~"' 81'
mto 1 program only 1 r..J d!at

b1gll
aud b1gb
scboot itru -

they can'l ~~ 1 JOb.- ..,. oays.
nOIIDJ tha1 hcaltlHOarc re[1 rm
J 1
JliCIUliC tht' need

JObiOr

'

I&amp; 1111 dfon 10 cmm•l&lt; ;be ac~

"'""Jd

ror

bealtb-att p!O\'odtr!.
Th~

ill
in !lome care, am-

futu:rc caregl\1-c.n:

!bat be bopes it

be

willh~pbrld~

bohtory·&lt;::ilft centers, kul ·lerm

the gap be-

emplo~ed

car&lt; {actlilies. di.nies and prim.a.r}' ..care ec ter.s.. ratbc:r lba• in
bospital lite ... y •nump~oymuu. 1• !Mal care a
.

'

t-.·ee.n -t.nroll-

me:nt - drivell.
i:oititu:tloPs and
market--driven

fro looopiula..,_,ockrw.•-

employetS.

•• . Tlle refOfllt Jy!llem will
focus on preYelllion oaclpriuwy&lt;are ~rvi«s fot 111 Amcri&lt;:ul. •
be adds
Susan Apo51ola
, 26, of
Tonawanda, also found bdp ia bet
job search tllrouP tho UB CZJJJer.
The Ma nlminc school croduale
eDOOUJII&lt;red a ~ tr.c:r.. i• the

" M o s I
people, when
they lhlnt oC the
bealtb-are iDdusby, ibinlt oi
doctors and
DU1"SCS,.. CasM
soro says. Yet,
the induslry includes o wide
spean~~~~&lt;C,ats.

&lt;qingfromdiellry derli:s 10

nurse mestbe·
lisls.Asa"dcar-

c-xperieace and
iolereiiS, witb
jobs dlat range
from lbe very
tcdmi&lt;:altotho

more lmm&amp;nlsticand compas-

hospilal """"'"' . silt ,..,.,m...c~ '
ttaininJ Cassaro poiared out ctba
employment qpponwritieo., and
Apostolal&lt;os · -R:i~~&amp; iD a DIIJ$ing borne. "She has 1 toft of mtaratioa,- Apostolal&lt;os ""Y' of
Cassaro, odditl&amp; that •tbe cmteris a
" pell. SJ'Olll fac:ilrty."

�2
I

I

r

I,

1

I

~I

I

I ~~
I

I

MFC
dean to
retire
....
tt . . . lltM20

,.....~

are eouooleu ide ud
iuuc:o 10 be illtCI'CIIIed in. &amp;ic
Stmff uys be,_ ,.,.....,.,
•10 '"""" ""jU$1 one pranlcular
area of &lt;:l&lt;li&gt;CCI:II . lh!tl's v.lhf. be
uyo. bein&amp; dean of a cootinui~~&amp;
oducalion Jll'(ltrllR wrned OUt w be
the perfect job for him
Streiff, dean orMo!lard Fillmore
College si""" 19 2. will r&lt;Cire Ill '
lbc end of July lifter 20 )'elt$ of
"""-ice 10 tbe Un.,ousity at Buffalo.
'"!lei •&amp; ._ dean of coounuUI&amp;
edueation is DOl the sort of jdb lhll
one vows up bopin w haoc,•
Wboobda ' tt
.....:hi ac!WI
lldocals Ut I wide lriety o f Somlhays. -rbal'o problibly100
dc:IU.- SttciiT
He l&gt;ccamc
'SUJII dcaa ucl
W bocalse it's n:ally one of lbc
director of Miii.wd ,PiJlmoR: CclUB baS lllways ...... "" · it•
nicc:st jobs Ibm: is.·
tioll oommiuod 10 iu rqloe. udl
kge in 191J, ajobwbidoprleedy
S!n:iff was o:aised oa a horticul·
more oo ~two maay oCbc- uoiwniIUilccl hi• closire DOl 10 be confonod
Wtal farm 'n lbc lillie ~,. of
10 011)' liagle . , . of.,.,..,.,...,
lia, Stteiff' say~ And Millard
Rowley.
. -lib f"MJ.Thtrd F'dl111&lt;ft College of·
fillmore College " a ·g pon of
wu • londSCIIp! ardlitcd ....-dl
UB' 1 COIIIIIlitmo::D 10 W
N&lt;'w
fers I""'J'J'M for ......t:l~~&amp; adulu
as • flntlef. "I grew up ....rkiog""
Wbo WIDIIO &lt;akc ~II niJbt."
Yori:.. be says. "'Millard fillmore
!he farm." Streiff says. "Lol;e many
Streiff ~a:ys . ~c: run out own p:rcr
College is unique nationally on its
people whogru.. upon rorms. whe~
I goo older I wuled to get a far
a .. ay from farms and •R'Iallwwn.
.. I CO&lt;Jid AI !hat ume, I ,.•._.
probably the flnil pe...., in R""'k)
who C\'CI" V.'eftllO Yak ...
At Yak, hos manyintcmoumadc
i1 clifficuh to cboose one area to
to
foc:m on. Streiff says. EvenllUIIy
he chose comparatiY&lt;: li1enuure
beeau it allowed him such a wide
fioldof tucly. H&lt;...,.,.ivodbis l'h.D.
from Yale in 1969, tbn:lt yearo af.
ter be had begun worldng as a profcssorofEnglisbondComporlllive
grams in telecommunications . nmge of &lt;&gt;ffcri~·re ooe of
Utc:nllure a1 Washington Univer- ClllltlpUti:l1g. ~c:ngi-­
very rew pbca ·wbcre people
sily in St. l.oun. MissoorL
in&amp;. beal!h-c:are adrruniSimloo aCid ~ CIIBiiiCli'A'i¥ aod ""'hiHowe-. S~n:ill' say• lhat. for a,c,hitecturat admin1nration . t=ure ~ 1111 nipt," be aays.
him, the ....,., was ultimately DOl
amooo&amp; ocbcrs. So I was able 10
baS been • """""' c:haacc for
fulfillill&amp; enough. "In !he laoe ' 60s
....n: in a number of disciplines ~cl.peopieinihisoom1111l·
aCid early ' 70s, I began 10 feel !hat
with many illlaatiJ!g people.""""'
nity. IL has touthcd IMIIY l i -. It
whall was doing was DOl asmeful
of whom ......., 011 tbe UB faculty
needikl be preaa'\'Cd and llllftllrCd
u I lhougb1 il would be.• Streiff
and ocbcrs who worlccd looc:ally in
and I' m sure it wlU be."
says. ~1 began looking for somevarious profcsoions.
thing thai fell mon: U1Cful ro me.
~. you wa1cl! adults lfaclu·
~rr. """'p1aas fur o.e IiiSo I qjrit as a facully member, aCid
tun: ..., ....n..t. He IIIII his
ate. aodlllk waur Jfacluates or our
for • time l'1lD a food co-op wiob my
student.. you can really see what
wifeCaol..;,-.to~D~WeiOMoitle.
wife."
education means w Olbcr pc:q&gt;lc:,
-obey plan 10 rebuild. house.
how
it
changes
lives,"
StreiiT"'yo.
One Sunday. S1n:iff "''"' an ad
""' lhlrd such house rd&gt;uilclin&amp;
in !he Sunday duoirJCCI section of "At the Millard Fillmore College
project they ' •e uJMicnat.... t&lt;&gt;!be St. Louis Posi-I&gt;Upalcl! for u
lellchin&amp; a '""'P of people
geober. "I'mr&lt;Cirin&amp;youn)!~P
administr&amp;ti\lt- position at the
lhlll havetimeoo&lt;loolbcr ·
•
who really value whal obey're dooewly-a'CIIed MCI!DP&gt;Iitan Coling, ucl in a c:onsiclered way. It
S&lt;reiff says. "' migbt ....,., qllio
lege of Saint Louis Unii'Cfliity. "I
may or may 1101. get them a belt« for a college Of uni•enity, or u
international aervice agency. or
applied for !he jdb. ucl got it. .00 job, But people change so mooch. in
termS of their social mobility aCid
it wu ""' mwteot min&amp; I CYCI'
maybe SW11. wbol1f cli!Terc-111 oedid.• be oays. Somff ...--1 .S u penonal development. And obey
cupation--&lt;naybe ludscape ardlisociaoe dean aCid dim:1or of acareally enjoy bei~~&amp; in college. clelccture or borticutr-, like my
f~.
.
clemic prognms for Metropolitan
spioe !be fact !hat Pill 011 • !*\·
rime baSis nieans il may tlll&lt;e some
College from 1973-75,-isti~~&amp;in
"Whll r·ve learnod abouo UB in
of
them
10
or
IS
yearo
to
finish.
my
time
bete
is
!hat
it'
s
u
iastilu!be cle•elopment of !he college"•
tioa with a very_cpen future. in
clegra: jliOimiiO fornoo-uaclitional
"' ne- met o faculty member

"When you watch adults graduate, and
talk to our graduates or our students, you
can really see what education means

--

other people, Jww it changes lives. "

"'t

"""""-

....... betec. pill)'

on:kiloWIII!II il~"

11.ys. "To me ibe e:adliJII

mmtwtlhalllbecnmrmmitoes.pro-

l'eulonalaod (ll(ho:no'ise,
esAml
New Yurt. Aftd rhe M •llard
fi I~J~~RCollege boo ad&lt;lep
u
of$URKJI'I ,..,
UB , If u uaiqllc
uutituoc:. ta Ito. SUNY , , . _
and -iotlally

'Twp -.yfntndsbcrelhll
it' I coiiiJIObeblrd 10 !elM.." Slreilf
says. "So IIIUdl Ill
_ , life ,.
11m: A/IIJ roe
ys hod a gmoo
liedia&amp; for New Yori:. Sla,IOD.
"'Whoa I wao a tid, my &amp;mily
also had abooroe ia B'
1o
R""'ley, lbe lldlooll-'10 ..-.
made al
and {lllliq do-.
BllllB' p.o..-Nda-ydlow
m.:t .......... _, my llolhor
would~-.,~ .clllll)'. 'Sie,Jb.
YadcSla!lr ...... ~."" o

S

we·,..

,n.""'"""'··-----.. . -.. ._--,_..,. ___. . . ____.

"'

lbolll.uyiaibolioot is fho~
dull il outa.. Ever)'lbiq
UB
...,. _ . . , il pios &amp;ooa.
"'' ve had a lot of opportuaity oo
clo tbiaas blft (hall couklll't have
clone ..,.,..t.:n dae," Stmfl' "'Y'
"UB is 1 major il~S~itubon whicb
1ooo befure I came bcre aload)
had a JTIIId lndll""' ol ""'olvc·

,_o...s _ _ (r. . -

�$600,(XX) grant funds med school efforts to

increase number of primary-care physicians
.,~ ,-­

'"-' s..n.J Sill!

HE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE ond
iornedicaJ Sc:a.a • UB
...,.
ceiveapproxi
y$600,000 o.u
Ibree ~ •&amp;om the Robat Wood
Foundaliae 10 lllfiiJOd the medical
srbool'adl'oru IOredcsjp iu INidical....sucaion oWricaJ
Md 10 ~~ lbc
ber of ~~ ptr)'1iciou il
.
llllbree yeon, ofla- 1 - . ! I l l evalualioe, the fou~ will cuotieue 10 111pp01t
UB ' primwy-coreC&gt;dloailioDdforu tJwoocb
a ~vecbr&lt;c.-yew
UB iJ ._ or 14 ICIIoOis ia lbc lllllioa 10
ive a GeAcnlist Pbyaic;ian laitilllive

cr-.

preaklmt for cliaial .a
. ecbooll811thbcirkldu halpilala llaoedonemuch IUoce Wotld Ww D to
imptM: doe qulity cl pMicnt care -.1 to
~anblediscMes. Today, thedloJ..
· ~ is to proYidt qaalily, COIII-dfidive,
COIUIIt')''l d d -

dlidcal ~ 10 all cl

Ia o ....,... lrietyor
·IY 'toll ea •
a. Thia can be da.e oaly if mare
·pbysiciona are .,..,.,...t 10 .....crt i o - •
llllthofocuaoe--yunmet-.11
"llB II proud 10 toe iM:IMded .._, ,t he
ICIIoOis tbll wiU ~ the -.led leader·
forc:bM&amp;e lathe,...... abead., • beuid
Tbe •p utt wiD lllfiiJOd lbe followioa 81:·

tivllla;
irnple:rneauOOapaDt. Tbe _,-wiJ~J a 'llec:ruitiD ~ODdnnJ U·
lbc uaiwnity tocwry out-..dltions
clenu
developed durin an IS-moe plonninc pe• l'1liri1la pomloinabiJI&gt;odoool student~
riod.wbidlwasfunded ial992bya S I
awwd from the fOUDdatiott.
The Gcneratisd'hysician Initiative,.....
will eaablc the INidical tchooiiO bep iu
primary-&lt;:arc recn litmcat effortS ie high
achool. ODd 10 develop prlljccu ond programallwwiD(ivemedieal·achool tudmu
cwly bands...,., experieoce ;., primary care.
SII&gt;dieshave hownlbllcwly.,..Wveexpoaure can iafl~~a~Ce studenu10 select primary
care u their life's wort..
"The foculty andlareelatod by lbedesiallllioD from the Robert WoodJohnSOII Fowtduion to patticipa1e furlbcr in lbc Gcoc:n.list
Pb)'licianlnitiftive.."llid JolutP. Naughtoo,
deaa of the medical ochool and UB viClC

with~raa.y

· .,.........,

• lteantewrio llllmC..,.._IOiachode
more
· 011 prinwy&lt;atrecliait:allp.,...,..,t.ea, .. wdl•~ ..,....,.,..._
• TeCbiaa iaformlllioll- maoacet"Aent
' Jia 10 m&lt;dical tilUCienu
• Traininc mediul "udeaiS 1n

multidiocipliury tcamo

.-..e p11Cti-

tionen.ptryAt:tlll's~tbenpbuond

ooc:w worlcal

• Movie&amp;
c~ out

prlmory-corc

medico!

or t..p;ws ud i1lfll ctwcs

and doclor'a ofLces ill lbc oommunil)'
a lfirill&amp; 1 dii'CCtOr of cduc:atioft deveiopmeDito hltlpdesip new courses Mil~
......,., ODd a mcdocol~uc:ation apecial1st i:&gt;

traUt faculty ..
• Dndqpi

the '

-

.

'"""""- -

als for primwy .-e..
"'Tbc Robert Wood JohMoa GnM oCiien

~ oppartUdy

Ul I

10 -

the

or lbc prinwy&lt;atre~-10

produc:eb"

• yd" '

will be 1IICift

•

-s 1'llomM
~

or

......

dy 10 a a ...-.,.. c.re,"
• dutir or
UB
F .,, Modicitttc aod

........ project din:aor. "'tht.e
..... ,
ea.,.. primwy care wiU t.vc a beac:t .....,...
cl lhr.
face io

cbal..,.. ,...,._

-

bealth care

,..acm.•

UB mcdocol tchool .... oct a .,.. or
ha""-c
ofiu........,. evco-

so.,.,...,....

luolly proctici ;. pri
&lt;are li
UB U. SqJterJib« 199llouadtcd 111 owo
pnmary.- "dotive,
m&lt;dical edueaboo, wlleo il vc:ilcd • s.s

devoDnd"'.,......

r1111JX. ~project I

¥0Jvioa li11

Baffalo leacbiaa ·
•
Medocoli&lt;t. f.-w
privu belltiH:we ;...,.. IIICI the New
York Suu ~ oi ·Heahb.
Thot effon ~ on
medical-ocbool ~ ..... primory-care
residcaclc:J, improvi (8CUlty Md ..........
teachina. oc:t1i up community ...,..._

""""'tie

p1ICticlt 'liCI ud devdopioa primary.ruean:h oppommilies
Tbe Robat Wood loiiiiJOII Fouodotitoa,
heodqUJII1CRd in
NJ , is the

Pli-.

notion·, 1arJC11 philanthropic orpulltion
dedicated "' improvin health core

l

SPIR
.,IUD
__to link SUNY engineering progfams, industry
-S......SIAIIf

RUS1'EE!o OF THE STA'ffi Uni YCnOity of New Yart have approved
the ew Y art State l...qislature •s
allocation or s2million for a coop. C"11tive effort by all the engineering proaroms in SUNY to help improve the state''
economic base by sharing resources in educot.ion ond research.
The Strategic Partn&lt;mlup foc lndustriol
Resurgence (SPill) linki with each Olber,
ond with indu try. all of SUNY's enginee.-ing prognms. including t.hlt School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at UB.
Highlights of S PIR are expected to include o "virtual university." ,.'hose lectures
will be beamed 10 other SUNY campuses
and overseos via satellite. ond the development of pan.nersltips between companies
wo&lt;ldng with S UNY enginccn. Initially.
SPIR will fOCUJ on four criticol regiocs of
the stale: Long Island, the Hudson Valley.
the Southern T"ter and Western New York..
The ideo of developing comprehensive
partncrship .programs between S UNY en i-

necrin&amp; procnuns and New Y art Stale iDduSII')' oripoatod willt Georce C. Lee. deon
ofthecnpnccnnc school at UB . SPill wu
developed durinJthe past 'JUII by Lee. ..-..ricins witlt thedeamofthe JChoolsof cnpnccrina • the SUNY univemty tlCnt&lt;rS at Stoey
Brook and Bin&amp;haml.,.,, and doe chair the
electrical cn&amp;inccring deportment at the
SUNY College II ew Paltz.
They met July 8 11 UB to be&amp;in impl~­
meoting the partncnhip, wltidt will be ovcr5CCII by the proOOSI
the SUNY system.
Propam IClivities will be odmini tc:rcd by a
net ..-..ric of SPill cenu:n on thlt eampus&lt;:s.
C8Ch of which will be guided by a Regional
lndllSifill Advisory Board.
Lee Wei that the key objectives of SPill
ore to help revitalize New Yort Slale industry by creotin&amp; ond relainin&amp; jobs, and 10
facilitaae defense tt:dlnolo&amp;Y ooovcrsion in
the tale.
"With litis funding, the ~nginccring progronu of SUNY are now rcody ond oblc to
promote ond develop the transfc- of knowledge and slcills to suppon industry in the
state," hit laid.

or

or

Condominium for Sale

SPill is intended 10 din&gt;ctly "'flPClrt lhc
of the Job OrcllliOD ~
Initiative. developed with the New York
Stale Oeportmcnt or EiCionomic De elopmcnt.. hy odding """""""' depdl10 lbe
jnitiative.
The UB enpneennt school lw 1 lon&amp;
hiSIOI)' o f onvolvcmcnt wtllt 1Ddustry Lee
Wei SPill will bnr~g 1 dramatic streu&amp;then·
1ng of those ttes.
"'Engineenng ,. the kty d1sciphne 111 1
research unoversity to deYelop lnlt )Wtller·
•hips with industry." h&lt; SIJd. "becattsc it I
all oboul putting scoenttfte k:nowlcd&amp;e to
prxtical usc .•

pi

~ noted lbll Since many companJCS...,
downlizin their ruearch and development effortl, they wiD be oble 10benefit from
shari nil !abo. cquipmen~ ills of wotld-class
researchers and oth&lt;r rell)&lt;.n:CS wilb UB ond
the oth&lt;r SUNY en&amp;in=ill&amp; pmpams
To corry - lbc SPIJl pmgram. lbc UB
School of Engjneenng will be ·t a • 1 odvuIIJe of the I"CSOIIrCU of The Centc.- for lndu trial Effectiveness (TCIE}, the joint

H

VCDIUrebel....,..lbeUB ScboolofEqJ_...
1""" th&amp; Scbool or Meaa
"""-'l
in 1917. TetE is ~ 10 help lcx:ol
COII!pMia ,...,.._their CIOII!pdili .........
SPilt will develop )Dial ~ •"Ill!
'-le· ud maJium..&amp;&amp;z&lt;d
. 10 ..,_

"''uipmmt""" burna retOVICa 111 teKhiq
and .-on:~~ ond deoeltlpmnl. prq&gt;II"C .....
uruw:rsaty4nduslrypropclUbtofodenl.,.....

cia. ond traio pc:nonnel and hltlp

· tina them in attriCtlnJ fundi 1 from
federal liOUI"CCI. II will enoouraac catrepre·
.-rialoctJ•itybyfacull)'and imulaleponncm.ips betwcca New Yart Stllecomponics
in on:ler 10 develop """' producu and cnla·
priKs
It aiJo will aeiiiC EqJNel. I "•·irtuoJ
univenuy" tbll Will COttncc:t SUNY eusineenna fiCIIIty, staff-' otudeniJ with C8Ch
other and with iatlolstry dwoupout tbe ...-.
Throop EngjNd. ~ • focull)' ODd i•
dustriaJ ponoc:rs ,. iU have equol oa:cu to
counea and ICChnical iDfortnMion ovailabk
11 111y or the porticipalinz " ~e&lt;.

Save up to ~0%

40A FoXUUY - Minutes from the University, spacious 2 bedroom,
1 bath condo for sale. ewer gray C3Cpeling, ligh1 and neutral
colors, with elegant brass door knobs and handles. There are
on-site laundry facilities, personal storage room, &amp;
swimming pool accessibility. All appliances and
mini blinds are included in this afford2ble
condo for $64.900.
IF JNI'EUS1'£D OONI'AC'I':

laJby Tzeao
10.\ Foxbeny DriYe
Gt.mille, NY 14068
Dome 636-4125 (Sun, Moo A~)
Work (Tim) 877-0800 (Moo-Sal 9 am .. 6 pm)

· Old

mcdium-lltcd ~by acuq • thear
resarcb and devclopncaa ~ Md

Tc Technologies

(716) 838-2745

135~--- T-aiT~ NV FAX I3HI!IIIS

�4

--

• lbo C!nill Coole&lt; OCI14S·IA34
...-~ ,J- •J- 10-

_ _ ,.,.,0,..

-

. u ....... ,..

--

•ct"FF

I

--Dt"""

dl.

l'ordo " - l.--9, ...

,_,..c-.a.u

-f.

~-dooC..

- . w- •Giolfto. wiill
RD-Fdld.-uiP·

llllly
2p_..
ill Slccc- Hal. l w Cllll&lt;l&lt;llcd.

TIIURSDAY

2
---

a.ldy .-~. 5-7:l0

pa. CaJJ the JICIIde:ac lil.iiOfl 'II
645-ls-41 r... rq;....uo. mr.,...

-loo.

Food ............. l'odlltlrs,
lndus.lr}Jllah'cn~ry

Cooperatt\'C

-Ccldetfor
BioourfloileS. Cet&gt;IC'Ior Tomor·

"'"" Nortb c..,.,... 6.JO..I:l0
p.m. Clll645-201&amp; ror rq:•an·
tiQn

$2·6 18
Power Mac 7100 includes: 1
• 15" Color Monitor
• ClarisWorks
• CD ROM Bonus:
Microsoft Bookshelf
fo6MHI..Pi!W.JII!fCellliOSC.-tlued~ ....l

lltAM, lSOWeNidctnue."'-'-toc-.tS"
d..lpay. ~~lu.JI:...,&amp;hrrMt.,
N.aro...O..:.\IIIIarbll..Mddw-J\P~
~SIII~~n.~~c...,-...~.u..nw

~'~loobhliW. n.~O&amp;e~tD!IIfiCI"OIIilwtiOpurctaiir·loiWDCtl\lf
CD_,....S.OilrJ161199S~IJIOld-12:4.StaP9filt

• 15" Color Monitor
• Pentium Upgradeable
.,.,Wlb.tti60JC~$ARAM.~fttw'd

MW..SYCA IS ClllkY~JSfk~Ji!rr......,, till

Ad-l'oltery.l!ll
!Fillmore. Ellioon Complu
Noni&gt;Canqxot. 7- IOp.m. For
rq~S~ratioe mrormaUon ,ptc:ue
call ~une 116CS-6I2S bclwceo 8

---

a..m.-1 p..m.. or dw: Craft Ccmcr

11 64.S-24].( betwr:ca 1-S p.m. or
7-10 p.m.

ll&lt;aillalot&amp;sw-1 G'-willl

trio. 120 Fillmore. Ellloou
Complel. Ncrob C•mpus. 1-10

&amp;

SboR, ..........0 . . - . 2

.....

lcJO

Punc:.AIIT - A L
Mdodlo. Baitd R&lt;dtal Hall.
-~. 2

... p .11Lftce.

4--..........,..120

cdlc.mpu..1-10p.m. Fo&lt;
iofonnllioo j&gt;k.uc
coJJ lui,.11645-612.S bdW«ft
&amp;.m -I p.m. or the Craft Cuter
at 64S -2414 bet~ 1-$ p.:tn cw
~

7 IOp.m

pl&gt;y.

ll!O Fillmore. Ellicro CC&gt;rl1jli&lt;J.
N&lt;nbCa_.. 7- IOp.m For
rq~urauoa infornwioa p~St

call Juhe at 645-.6115 bdwc:ea B
a.m.- I p.m. or til£ Craft Cauer

at64S-24l4 between l -S p..m . or
1· 10p.m.
P-ANYIIIIICITA&amp;.
Jo:pldr, anlorio..,.
CarWiaal. Sl« eo.-t Rail.
Campus. • p.m. s 10, ,...

cu.:-

.......mi...,., u ...- .
with 1.0

p.m. For rqisntion informa·
tiooo plene coJJ luli&lt; 11 645·

612Hx:t:weee 8 a.m.-1 p.m. or
do&lt; Crall c.-r 11 645·24.1-1
bc:ca·ea 1·5 p,m. or7- 10p.m.

Nonh Campus. 7 ·I 0 p.m. For
rqistmioft iafCinnltioa pk:ue
calllul1&lt; 11 64S-612.S bdw= 8
a..m..- 1 p.m. or-tbcCnfiCentcr
at64S-2:434 bet..veen 1-S p.m . or
7- IOp.m.
ZONE !~

on••

c:au..tal..,

--

AlumDi Arena Divmg Wd l
onh C11mpU1. 7 Lm.-9 p.m.

ALSO ...
(11~

Cllloolool ....

Od.e. Nonll~

rnftnnall(}n.

-~ OEU..SyMnn~. OOSt. .l.
.,...,._1--.,C.)

~llvllla

-1J'Ioerwpyla

IBJV ltoifedlooiJ...... -

J.-try &lt;Juioc wltlo 'Rc1bla.
120 Fillmore. Ellloou Gomplcs

$2358

~ J,,udS

-----~
0 \MI'
' IMpU

Fillmon, El-l c...p~c•.

a..-c-s.m.... ror

•

·- --y.-

-- --l'
l
lot
.
.
--~- .. VMS. I'Q2

1

Tucker. M.D. I:Jncb Audi--.
Cllildrar'dlcopilol. • lUll.

COMPAQ

Maltl-M..U. for cu.t...._ 120
Fillmore. Ellic:ou Clomp&amp;«.

Non:h CIUDIJUS. lO a..m.¥Naoa.

NOW AVAILABLE!!

For rqistraticla informarioa
pleuecalllulie et 645-6125
bclwt::eD 8 &amp;.m.~ I p.m. or lhe
Cnft Cea~tr ll·64S-24:W be·
~wem I -Sp..m. 0!'7-19p..m.

----·- =· W.IIJ II•

AmiiDMll&amp;Wdl.
Nonlo Campus. 7 l.ftl.·9 p.m.

_.........,Jdliq .

.........,. r... Clolldrn. 120
!'ill more. EUiooa Complex.

Nonh Campus. I oun."Noan
lnd l·l p.m. For "'CiSinlioo
mr......1oo p1eue call Julie 11
645-6115 bdw= 8 \UIL· I pm.

_
.....
-

..,

~

..... - .Di·

.-by-EIUI R'*Gor·

-·

""'- Doll R Par\:. lO pa.
Call 112-1164 fO&lt;-olffor-

, •••• y

2

�-II'

--_,-y

.. WHV! -Ginkl

wiU play f._ 4--1,......

""'&amp;}or. N.D. .... Jedy . . . - .
MS.CAC,
NCAC *looclo

~--­
All-&lt;(~-~

a.-··

~

~-iulood
.. tloe-.1--.oltloeVOlloa Foaolly• T.......,., Sep

----lfolpibl.

.........
.................
8 ......

1), ll"K• 2 p.oo. Cto&lt;

WiUbe ,-~,..- -

~

....ilo-w.a...- ..

-_

!HJV--..sn.

'"'""' ...... __.......

H._ -.o. -. ~

ordi C'-

.....

al'lltit F'o&lt;ul!y- ...

--·
""---

..... GloW-c....._,_........,_
_....
,..__no.w

for lhe 1'94"95 ..,.
----~~~-

- - - -CIIWl.ut

'"""*"*"""'
v-.

Kr:itOo(J1..._
M--.
Oolif
ROSMII I'wt c : - 1-

_

orillf
o&amp;o..._.. •
wlluotrd*VIllilt~­
ll«~'llllomlt.GR:ilw. lo
.,._ y~ Cllairollllo \1...
~fC,•:t•¥, .....
hlerA.
..... Will_ a __

~ o/Cinooliooiioo

&lt;piactdli•-...c

.

IZ:lll .p.m.

MOIIOAY

1

1

.....,..__

v.....,.w-·o -..bau

~ SIIIB_li.. UB
Royals Head Cooc:lt. "lumn•
A.r-. li&lt;lnll Campus
iSU:Itioo UfonnatKJG all

Oo

For,.,.

64S-3143.

v_w_
.. .._ u
~·­

Oo ~Sal ~ia.UB
ltoyol• Heod
~ atfiiC.....,..IVr&lt;l-

Coocb.-

islnlioeinfORII8tiooc:all
645-31 43.

UI 'U aSDAY

1~

·~,r. ;·a :.;r._
...-...
Global
~ SuSIIIA.

....
_
. .Sllet
. - atld Morket·
· Lcla&gt;mo&lt;i
I'IIU

ill&amp; II.GcacnlEk:ruicl',..•s-

-Ooy
~
­
Y••'
"'o.aa'
• 8asltdbaJI
Camp, Sol Bu..,..lra. UB
Royili Had Olodl AIWDIIi
Arena. onh c._. For rqis&amp;ration inform..t.tbl aU
645 -3143.

ponation Syacm1. F•nn:y·t
Reaauralll. 3500-On\o"C.. Antta$L 8-9 ;10 a..m

v-w-·.-u

Fat DAY

19
-

4

IIASUTUU.-

Yo.ac w-'•.._boo
Day Cuop, Sol Buoc:qlia. UB
Royall Had c.-. Alwnai

Anna. NonhCOmpus. For .-.;·
isntioa informatioe call
645..3 1~ 3 .

TAX.._. oi'·Coectra to 1"u ~Prw-­
titioMn. Cenltt forTomom&gt;w.
Nonh Campua. 8.:30o.m.·,2145
p.m. Spot~..,..... by lhe Oenu:r
for M........,t l)evdopmenl

reporting bins-related incidents

1•-ianll

c.:- fo&lt; the Study
of EdOCIIIioo 1'101

~

andc:on~O. Iiheilepef

of u.s. f - l o o · - - ·" "'
lecture. tD be lhekl at •

fiJI!l,

Monday. Sept. 19 io 210 J':od
H 11. is pon al' die Gail ..
Kdl) Memoriol Lecwre s&lt;nes.

-'-""'-'--.

~or Edua-.'""....,.

\ersJI)'. Wi'iJI preseDI-E Pluribu
Unum. h k a JtahJhC A 1m fer
Americl ' §
Tht leclUK. pan o( tbe Clwlot,te C
Attr e..cso-'MCnt fCK CoUoquc~a

Scbool•.,...

ooUrl&gt;uEduatiolo• .OIIbo
heklll 4 p.m. Thurtdi) . 0&lt;1. C&gt;
n•lht:CC!n!ffforT~

•o••
FACULn
.....- ~ .

Focuhy a( Natu.-al

~

WEDNESDAY

24

-~--

1Ne.rtGraduta Orieautioct..
iRosv.odl iPad: Cancer h1:stiMc
!2:30p.m.

atld

......... ....,_.a.cm;suy.
~acuity ot Natural Scoenocs atld

-.. ........... ,...... .,..._
M-l'oolill&amp; IF-&lt;1050.
lioBI a..a.blo}-Sdlool al' Social Wod., lf'otlDI&amp;tF-4009.

PIIOfaSIOMAL

Prod- Maaapr (SL-31-

Publlcall-. _ , &lt;ll'-40S7
1
-~ ri....,.....,...lalioBI
Spcdatit&lt; (S'L.l)-Off~ ot the
Presidem. PoRio,g t P-40S9.
AAiJI.onl lVI« ror
Fadlltlos (MP-381-FII&lt;ilitie•
Ptann.inJ: llftd
PMtint:

f.?esip.

fP-4060. 01.-orof&lt;C&amp;JIJpas
S.fdy ( MP-lB)·I'ublic Safety.
Postin' • P-4043,

--:rmvE

~-­

N O TICES

MUior IVdrick Opon....- (SG07)--Uni"cnily Facilirie&amp;. Lint

RSnVAL10-AID

•lUllS. MOlar Vdliek Opontor (SC-'17)-UIIM:nity Facil~

-

T he 6111 AMulll B uddiesSum!JDCr Ftslh--.110 iBencfit

AlOS
Coorumlllhy SeMce a nd AIDS
Alliance w ill like pllct- on Sal·

unlay. Au, . 6 and SIJllday, Aug
7at 3J Jobo""' 'Pori:. The OUt ·
door fc:stiritieowill fleaineath
&lt;llly"OI """"· Oo Saturday The
Sa1ums 1per{onn from 7~31 p.m.
and oa Sunday llteiBoumen

s. R.ioc, &lt;:ammitl&lt;le c:D-&lt;ibair lind
vice prcsidiclll l'or llllent offoin..
laid K-.J CIOtlll* affic:es. illduclinc ,. .,
llcpwlmmt of Plltllk Safely - die Office
o1 '" "' Vu l'rr:liiatal for Uai-.ity AdOon!ll

atldH......,VIIIues •
.011 ell_.. "11he Sl&gt;ffrot·
Ill 1ir1 !he Shrioe.." a Jeot.n

M - PoRto,g IF-40Sl .

N-

JIIURS ID A Y

u~ develops guidelines for

""""'o!the

Elllol

onhc..mp....l p;m. F,.,.

Ooy CaSal Baoc:qlia. UB
Royak Head c.-. Alllnmi
AmlL
Cao.pus. fer rc&amp;·
istraliofl infannaioo ca1t
645-3 143.

m.iiUSIB·

Un1vcnuy
of Mlr)'land,
O:lller,&lt;
Pork.-IUid dJ.

cwoe atld An a1 SIMforO Um ·

S azUi Quartet and Cla....her
Etio•bi&lt;L Sle&lt; Coooett Hall

-~­

..........

-

ties, U ne M40403.
..-~-

. ..........,. (SG-06}-Um,'C:nity
Fadlitie&gt;. Une UIS37 . La·
lbor'er (SG4)-universil) Fa~

ailitic:s.l...inc -.l096.
To tJbuJitt morr inforrnori!."HJ on
jobs.liJrcd tl".IHiw. ct:H'tllJCI '~r­

'"''""'1S.n -la!•. IIH Crr&gt;ftr HaJI.

N AN AlTEMP:r TO ~ owdents IO lq&gt;Onl&gt;i.a -&lt;datcd locidcnQ thai
""""' oa campuo;, U8 11M &lt;le"Cloped
opecifac guideline• for studcau to ooasula when rqJOrtin&amp; such incidents.
One: thou and copies . of the •ix-page
manual. developed by the
universny·s Comm.iucc:
for the Promolioo ofToleran~ and Di\"crsiry.
v.e«- diitributcd cam-pus-wide in lau: May.
While no spec:tfic
incident prompced 1
all&lt; creation of the •
policy. commiuee
lllClmbers wanted
to put in place a
system. similar
to those at other
unh1,e:n•ties ,
that would en-

courage &lt;t.u·
dents

wella lhe
Off10e oflh&lt; ""' Pn:sldeal l'or Stucbt M foirs. .., tmplemetMi
lht policy . Olho:r
~"'UPS· liUCb a lht UDivcnil Cowsding
Geatc:r and Campus Manaarico Assoeiat:ioll. will be: led 011""' if appropriate
Probk:ms auributed "' '"'iAscnsilh•c acts .. are beiaa
lw!dlc:dbt IN una.-a1rily' •OffJCC of Equal Opsxanu.oi•y and
Affimw.iveA«aon.
11le pdlic) 'lllti I'&lt;VIewed by
SUNY lo:pl coomscl bd""' diSiribulioo, Ilia: ..,.•.
The !4-mcmbcr Commiltoo (..the l'nlrnolx. ofT~ md Di...mty. oamposcd of foculty .wr_
and swdcn , -as cstablistJt.d as a resultofa~submincdby

to

report all types of
bias-n:lated incidents, ..,_
cording 10 Michael A. S!Okes. comminee C&lt;H:hair lind di:ra:tor of the Offtee of
Studcat Multicultural Affairs.
The formal S)'ltem now provides a mechanism for rcc:ording the ft"'!Quet&gt;cy of ouob
incidents on campus. SIDkes Slys.
The policy separa!CS an IICl of in10lenncc:
fmm other fonns of intimidation or atminal
behavior by its morivatioo. ll ckfines an intolerant act as ··anyauompttolnjurc.hannor
hlii'OS• a penon ~&gt;cause of """'- religioo.
colO!'. natiooal origin. handicap. ~e. oe~ or
sex.ual orientation ...
Such acts. the policy says. ore "motivated
· by haued of the characteristics or beliefs of
the virum. Acts ofintolcrancc orc conscious..
deliberate behaviors, in contraSI to inscnsJ--..
live acts. which may be: the rcsula of laclc of
awareness.:'

rooedures for responding to spccif'~e typeo
of incidents. ranging from physical injury 10 bias-related vaodalism, ~li. posters. mail aod flyers. an: outlined in the
guidel ines.

P

- • D&lt;""*'P-. •

"Acts' ofintolerance
are conscious, deliberate
behaviors, in controst to
insensitive acts, which
may be the result oflack
of_....._.
awaroness. "

__
_
.UJD-·--a

l.be Task For:ce oo Ounpuo lnlolcnnc:e
1989, Rice say•. bl llddilion .to dev~
l.be nr w guideli-. lhc c:omminc:e also
aims lO OOIIDscl stcodeo&gt;IS &amp;ad encourage
the:m to ,take advantage of dae •u nivemty' •
rich cultural divenity, w i.otes.
StoC$ SI)'S ibc: hopes tbc ~~~a~~ual will
serve a proactive fUDCtion, a well a a n:active one, by CO&lt;IveyinJ the mc:sso,ge 1tbal the
utrivenity will 1101 tole&lt;ale bias-n:laied

actions.

0

�-----.-Greatbatch speaks to future

•

;;c• cc.=-::-...cc.-..:c.-

_,__. _...,

Sl.OOO I'NVEShtENT
-t)'l$,_. . . . . .
~·
• dollllr~

....................... _lut

.

•&amp;am
ol
-~P~ialhe-laii'IIIJta v l - , 1
11lldy ~ b)' ..-dla'l 01 die UB

lhac 1M!,_ .... _

•Cia

ElliyO\lldhoocl R-a.Ot.lcr
COllOid.
• n..lllldy, published Ia ~ ~
o1 Day en~ &amp;rl7 ~
......., lilll bolh aida' 1811 ~ c:bildra
may lana &amp;am-=bodw:r Wbca Mwiqlhe
-c~M8oom.

a-docnoe--1 ~ Sl
cbildn:a -ated . . . . _ . .
dlriaJibeC.U 1991-.~d!e
1-,ar-dd dau 1811 lhc l4o-S.~-old

l.be=
·

road
11w 181111 -aac
~
par illlen&lt;:lloM aad
.
Oklorcbildn:a hood .. oppdiiiijaity 10 Vlllidalt wbol Iiiey Dew b)'
• • ,..,.......
c:blldrea bidilfcn:ot.xivhiol. said~ c:o..ahor. 8c:uy
I cloQonJ CMdidlle
ia _.,. cblldhood odDcllica. They alto
leanled tD ..... lbeir spcecb 10 • JOUIII'I'
ulialc:ewillllea-dovdopod..... .
Mercado added. 'I1Ic )'OUIIJCI' cbllclrea
leanled &amp;am iDicr8cliloa wi aida' cloaIDII&lt;S llld
. I~ ~
cbildn:a ..... dfa:livdy &amp;am lbcir
peen."lhosaid..
........__ dlildn:a with c:aui• '-"'""
llyles may ..., IID'e radily &amp;am older
c'-nlla
8duiU. Mercado said.. bo . 1ypc of eevironmeall. tho: llal::'- u
moreol1 f8Cilltalor, lidded Dctlcnb Scbria'.
lhe IiNdy's Olhcr C04UIIIOr llld 1 doc:llnl
andidalt;,-'&gt;' c:bildhood educaioe.
lte$can:hr:n found !bat ~IIIII dfec(jve_ multi,.,.: caviromnent takes planni11g .
Ylt'~ ... ooaoi
proctSI .. lemll ol addn:a•
ina childrca's needs." said Sc:brio'.
o
dasMs.
poupi

n..y

moddi

3~

Cllll--·
li

fbdy llllltrfor ..,
Boa ilproCuil yowp,;_, pl. 1 .,.,_
• ·~ problbl ilaoclbc lidd
for )'011. . .,..
OrarlboKh. co-lalOr ol the
-- ~

1811dleill-ollbll •.
-y..,probobly..,.•t
alotol-,
• • ..,.qwtaua, boll
bavc a lot ol
r.,• 6lid Gtcadlllda. wilD opokc a UB Jllly
ol ~c-

,..·a

l,.....

.

Tbcilllli
··-~
. . . . . .,_
dcaipcd
10 providt
UB
dCDu
• IOC COWftld ia I t,.pc.l
ac:adanit propam. Wbilc IIUdcall' ...........
at - -fOOd wlhcll Iiiey ...--. COID.,...;c. that hire them
lookilla far I
hiah ~eve~ or _.tee:baiCal ~

1ft

• .,._,......,.._

oraalllldc:naoediaa

olbuic ~ Md

•

"'*'"""'

ThciDotilult,dcvdapcdb)' UB's ScbDOI ol

llllai-rioa llld
. Sc:icnca ja ..,.
.......... wilh .....)'.is illlaodad 10 fil dial
PI' wiJh
dial
..S
ac:minan ... IOpica IIICb • -IIJ"IIIelia.
the CIOI'pOia
llld ~
"&amp;ci-n.c il
"' be JDDI'e aad

I...,...... iacludeo...,.._

"Never avoid doing
something because you
think it might not work. "

----·

-~.- -GrcalbOicb.Who

,..,a....t I - · · dcJniC Ia daclrieal ad
.,.,...,._. celinecri., &amp;am llB1" 1936.
The 7S.yca-dd io......,, Wbo is 1 ID&lt;IDbc:c oldie Nllloeal b o - . Hall ol Fame
IIDd the National - ~ Hall or Fame.
holds thaD 1~ jlllt:ll1&amp;. incluclllll tho:
impl.tatablc paccmab:r Md reccotly, I
poaiblc ewe for AIDS.
"I have never oa:epiCd &amp;C""""'""" fundiQclor.ayllliqldo.~-~'Which

....... Cbewartd."
He '-dod
'-1

~

..

,.
.....raa.. ... .,...,.. a-a
~-· ... ~ ,....._, .......
...,_""""*-Ciearle
~- ..,.~no .

..
.......... .

ol

.atillibe ...... Md

~...-otila

otT~

C...
..
for
....
.........
...._
pocScu 1ft......,,_
it .
...
O.Cbeodta'
~~~c

~

is probobly
We p:tarou.l b)' ~clap."

Greall.-:ll
............. bil f.a
iqJiaUible-- ,.,.....ta ia 1960.iJ11S2,000ia ~ rv.dl...,. ,.. ..w
....,...,.,.. lbcbanai•badcor ..,..__.
be said. "(A dociOr) IOid me if 1 could mae
it.. I could U\'e 10,000 UYCS 1 ~....1.-t
year, 3~.
wen: in1plal&gt;tal Ia pOiiclou

'-l,...,...c:nve......,.._llllloaeld bc•IICI
olloft. ,..dolt...._il'uJIOOd · 10
do.. CirealbaldJ IOid lllldaols.
"(f )'OU 1'1111 .... I probla:D that' I I n:aJ
problem. 1811 ,_ oohe il ia - emi.ady
SIOIUfacoory ...,.. ~-, ......,. 8boul the
aa...Peaplt . ~die COlt.. he aid.
0

Available to all State, RF, UBF and FSA anployttS.
Special airtime rates $11 Monthly ftt and 20~ ptt minute

f you've been wondenng of or when you'll
buy a cellular phone .. here's an offer that'll
make you feel good about ownmg one
The program IS called Hear The Call .
elp The Choldren, and here's how n
works Your conmbuuon of at least
•
$20 helps fund Buffalo's Ronald
McDonald House , one of 160 fact hues
. .
around the world . each provtdtng a
home-away-from-home for farruhes of senously oil
children being treated at local hospitals At the same
urru:. your donation also gelS you a free EC PliO phone

........ )'OO.lfchedc payobk 10

-.w--

· Oia~.---~~~..a-...dor*ilfiiPIO"'II

~lt.,P

&amp;o......_...,._.

A~ld,...loft .iet ~

from Cellular One Stmple as that.
Now, ownmg a cellular phone from
Cellular~ never feh so good. To
comnbute to the Ronald
Donald
House and get your free cellular phone. VISit
any Cellular One store or parucipaung dealer
or call861 -9860 But hurry. though This
offer exp1res September 30, 1994.

CELLUlARDNE"
861-9860
COIItaCI

Paula Omidoli

~Orw_,U.~ ·=--r·.~tw:wYcft.ra

&amp;rutP-nlconliiiLU_. ,_,...__._,.

I

Md

Donate 20 Dollars To o a d
McDonald House And Get A Free
Phone*FroiD Cellu· ar One.

I

Lad...

.._.......... ._..for..,....._
0

c.:,_.,.. ...

UWuOM

~...,

�-

7

c.e.r .. ,....

..... ...,.
--~-·
~

df'ICC .

llll1ICd

..........-r..-• UBCaucr r..-

che AJIL Sbe will.,..,_ ell of

-tioes,
- indodiq
·· ,ticlr;ct-&lt;lffite
opcnothe
iq ~aad
-&lt;lffite i - .

distribution o(

tbei~aad...._..

nance of~

aad

tic:tcWia l)'ll&lt;ml. bclr;ct salc:o aad
~-the

. •

s.lnidor

l1lpOI'Viliall f!kbal.«&lt;ice ~
Evansbal-~ 16)11*1
of e.q,crieDce ill bclr;ct-olfa
~ C\"CCIU c::oon1iDalioe
and rda...S fields with Tocb:lroe,
Tteb:Unaslcr. Anpal\: and Sla'r
BuiTtio. She IIUelldod Eric Communi\)' Collqe and Buffalo Stau

Wdloomt. R-.dll..obonloriel
ill &amp;p.nd
il i.......u.-lly
for his p;.-c:ri ltlldlco
·of llilric oxide aad its clinical
IPPilcllliooii. will ddh-.:rthe
D W. Hlrrinp;&gt;~~ J..ecmre • •
p.m. IOda ill Butler Audllorium
in Falbcr lUll .
The lecture, "Nilnc Oxide
Physloloay. Pa!hoph~ and
.. 15 1m:
Therapeutic lmplj
and open lO the pu
" fellow in London· • Royal
Soc:oety of Ph)'S&gt;CWIS. Mcncada
i&gt; • member of the 8liOMI
l.cademy or ScCNlcr ond tbe
Royol College of Phytician ;..
London. He bls bcc1l • CCII15U'Iwlt
to the Latin American OITICC: of\
the World Health Orpniulion J
for more lhan 20 l"*'·

CoUcccAtteell c D..... I.CI

• .!:!!~

·o ... or

JobD A. Maduua, profespwycholocy, and
, _ M. Ludwl&amp;, aosocialc

profcstOrof modem~

and litentUII'tS, will ~pate in
a 10-doy summer ' nstiMeoo
culunl diversity and democracy'
10 tqia July 29 • Williams Collqe. The AuociadoD Americla
Collqer aad Uai...W.S . splll·
llllrilla the ~ _.... _. , _
&amp;om che National Eildowment for
che Humanities. c:o..fcrenoe momben will diJcuss bow cti'W:&lt;Iily
and democ:rllcy In the u.s. should
bo dealt with ill the classroom.

or

1~\'\

" Jl'lduate or lastitulo

Nocicul oa San Sal odor, El
Sal vidor,~ mleiw:d Ills
medical and surgical dqrecs
from the Ulli...-.ity El Salvodar School MedJcifte. He
camcd two odditional cloctoraJ

or

\..., \J()Rl&lt;.\(,1
! l

: 1&lt;

1

...,.

-a. dita:lor fOI' The

"""

I I ll

&lt;() . .

IZ I 'I \ IZ ( II I t l IZ \

or

dear- from u.e u.u

.

or

Loedoto . . . . _ .
has lectured 1e u.e
Am!ri&lt;:a.lhe Uniood ~Jopm.
_...,. edil:lnll

us.. a....._.

c~-~jounak­
..._.,~...,~~

,... . . . . . diRta

lllteM

NASA.....,_

Four UB lllldcau on:
ASA-opon-

ollen&lt;b I 1

somcl. si•-......et !*"'Life iTrain• ProJrom • 1be
Kmnedy Sp.cr c-.. i Florido
They on:: Aud~ Y. Chu,
o liOpbomore in che Univcaity
lioRor&amp; ......,_ and ... i1lleadcd

bio&amp;o&amp;Y JUjor; .......
~I oophomore mojor·

iq ill cftcmiJuy; . . . . . Olda,.
jvalor ia 1be Ulli¥tnlty Hollan
Jli'OIRIII wmo wiU be o.sfcrriq
10 Yale Uaivcnity to IIUdy molecuUr biqph}'lia ond bioct&gt;etnistry; Sou. yo ltaydludhuri, •

DmdM.a- ....

......, - - lllaff---

in lbe&lt;lin:tclor' s otra, aad
CluistiM IUua appoild&lt;d blnry~~
Gen1er for
Prc:acrv......_
U.U....,..y l..ilnncs have .,..
O&lt;lUI&gt;CQl

rcccntly • qwatoNewYorl&lt;
"-nnbby Deputy peolra- Anbar
0 E e.
1 t:.:hdor'a ......
ia ..,pied ~ otrain ltlldlco.
Rilocz llolda • blddor'.
clt:Jrcte ia., f.- New WuiCO
8ooz,c, -

uve

'*

·

ftisbiMdta Uaivenoty . . -

rcccntly WOit.al Jar Slld-

v..,.f'lltllisbia&amp; .. • ......-..
ckvelop&gt;- pujecl __,...

I Ill .
&lt; l

I

Don't have the time or desire to call every
mortgage lender in search of the lowest rate?
Let the profeuionals at Banas Mo~ research all of the
~ optio111 and 6nd you !he Jim program ,.;lh the
~ :~ Through our ner..'OI"ks wilh """r a dozen large
lending institutions, we ha~ the information )'OU need
at our 6n~ps. And becawe""' arran~ loans lhrough
third party lenden, ,..,, l&gt;tst in~Lmts an Dllr l&gt;tst ; . . -.

Surrmec~ps

are In full swing at
Crea!Ne Crafts
Center. Right
Moira Upton
shapes a bowl.
Below.: Carolyn
Murphy displays

pottery.

CALL BANAS MORlCAGE FOR TMLOR-MAD£ FINANCING
AT THE LOWEST AVMI.ABLE RATES!
!70.0AY RATE LOCKS

JUltOIO LOANS AT CONFORWING RATES
CONSTRUC110N LOANS
NO INCOYE VEIUFICA.110N .L OANS
J:ESS.'J'HAN.,PERF'f. CRF.Drr PllOGRAMS

STEWART &amp; BENSON TRAVEL
A DIVISION OF NIAGARA FRONTIER TRAVEL 5EJMc::Es, It«:.

FOR 11E lEST MORTGAGE OPTIONS AVAilABLE CALL:

~633-5888
MORTGAGE CO .. LTO.

5888 Mo1n 5noi·~-YOI1L 14221

Your Full Service Travel Agency
3820 Sheridan Drive, Amherst

837-5000
Niagara
FrontiEr
TravEl
- - - --

"---.

�---------

8

HOSB WAL lNG
Buffalo.. South
Elmwood A"'"""" dislrict
th " ........,.. ba\le an opportunity to help I0 ardlifC&gt;C:IHn~ *re-imqine" tht neipborhood
vil.allllld ..ned public
realm.
Tile dislrict is bach site aDd
jccl of a very public piiCiuak f~eld
5tudio in un- clesign and plan- ~
nin&amp; tauPt by Hiroaki fWa, . .
socialepm(esoor
of arcbitectwe
iD tht UBScboal
ol Aldrilcclure
and f'Wrinl.
Students
•tudyiac the
area bordered
by Chippewa
H~ Hata Street , Elmwood A venue, Main Slreet aDd
Tupper Sa-. They are talkia&amp; to
its resideD about their needs
and perceptions, loolda&amp; at bow
buildinp aod pace are used or
t10t used and developin&amp; propoa-

•a

aJs for n&lt;: bowitnz, b inC$$e$
and adaptive reuse projecu to
reviwitt the nei&amp;J&gt;borhood.
Thelllldio, OD tht pound floor of
tht Root Buildina. 68-860uppewa.
is tht finl ~ foeld srudao m
tht bi!mry o( tht school Studio-...... ..tJich btpl May 25, are be-

inc

held from 1-4 p.m. Monda.

~Frida

UllliJ July 29
AI vuious timts c1urinz tht period, tht Sllldents' dra .
models and Olberwork will be uhibited
in the buiJdin&amp;'• otordront and
public CCIIIIIIml is in viled.
The otudio .... developed wi
tht asislance of a Dei borhood
associatioa and a downtown de~ CIOalpaDJ .

The Rooc • • is ""'lied by
City CeDire o.vdopmeot Company of Buffalo. which ..... year
will bezin adapt" tht stnldUre
forrc.uoe • middle-iaooome COIJdo.
muu
One ol the City CeDire
panDm..i)oQ&amp;t. Swift. wttobolds
a IJ1IIIuak dqree in ~
from UB,- ~by the
South Elmwood Beautirteatioa
Commillee, a newly formed

. , _ _ . ciliUliiS""""
TheCICIItllllia«-~iD

Hila·· plaa Ill aiJer aa ardlitoc:oft

IIUdio ..... would op&lt;nlt iD tht....,
""""'utu.d for
tht CUI&gt;mitt&lt;Je- Silllic:ibQc ~proposals. They knl!wthe ROOI . '
- avalable. pr1Mllically eow d
t.er.a,oi~iMerellinlll

OWII

rip. - t ...ly IICCII:IIibJe

will. a f....,... llUdoat o1 lbta·s.
lllauzbt tht plln..,elC&lt;ltUatl oaeaod
• offem! (roe .... d tht buil4in&amp;
)
"I .... deliPled that the beauti""" IDd City c-ue waNed to belp. • Hata aid ·A
loc of peQpk have~ inter·
es1 in UB uchitecture ODd planrun ut1ena1 earning dowatowa 10
""""- - t projoas likt Ibis
10 bidF the ppbetween 1beory and
jDdJ« in an::hilct:llft - t ....
d&lt;.i£11. Ourjob."liellllded, "iolll&lt;bw
upa""""""""pillllhaa willmolletbe
. . . IIJift ~ We iavile qu

rocation

ODe......,

£rom ... IOiidoals. • ..... .. £rom
Buffaloaiano from ada ar:ipborboock. We """'to bear.....,. thty
lhmk dtht ..... -td the icb&amp;devise for · novitalizodoa.•

We_a_

leod o( ca.c:e-from
'-"' .........
dley've heeD klld by the 14::JmiDiolralbL.

�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1402954">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>1994-07-21</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1402942">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1402943">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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  <item itemId="86263" public="1" featured="0">
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                    <text>SPECIAL: New Administrative Struc.tute ktt Arts &amp; Sciencrts Farulries

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Johnstone to receive Norton Medal at I48th Commencement
ORMER SUNY c:::blncdkJr D.
Bmce J~ wiD receive lhe
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AlfbecenenJ-I~y.

UB Piresident Willlam It Gfto.iJ:Ierwill coafer
!iqree$ Oil pd ' llelli&lt;&gt;R from ·* Paoolty of N.wra! ~ ~Malllcmmc:a.
the FOII:!Illty d AIU otnd Letu:rs aod lbe Rl&lt;&gt;ulty of So&lt;ill ScimceL
President Grdner ..,., liiiXbtl

Addnwl "' Buffalo wiD .adilreu
tbe gnd.twoll.
1'bendpielllsof
lbe three Dean••
A'IIIIWdswillbeTh:&gt;tniS H. Sblrp, ....
.ciaJ ~; Matt
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scio:o::cs IIDd maibI:ID8Iics, IIDd William D. Sooa, IllS
IIDd lc:arn. Ricbard
L. Wdxr d' BufflloW:ill n:aivetbe
lcadi:IShip ........
lbe P!esideot's
Medal wiD bepre-

Buffiolo and the qualJty of life in tbe UB
community.
,

Ros5berg• • profess« ofrounselin£..,.,
educatiooal psycbol"'JJ. bas been 011 tbe UB
faculty for.....rty 40yean. Durin&amp; dlalliple.
hehu bdd a number of odmlnistrative poilu,

induding auoc::iatr dean apd. dean of 1be
~ Sd&gt;ool of~ viee ~­
dent for aoadcmi.: atrairs. interim dean cllhe
Sd&gt;ool of Health llellled !P mfcWcm 8lld
actina dean of 111e Faculty ot AIU and LetIUS.

In oddmoD m hi. dillies .wt UB, R.ossberg
bu been.~ lD. Olllllber ot'fcclenl
qeocies apd iMitulions. inclodiJI&amp; tbe u.s.
Civil Serwico
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Office of
Ell-roe.
District Olun 8lld &lt;he CJiy
University cl New YM.

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senudiO'RobatH.
Rossbeq.UB Dis&lt;inpitbed!lavice
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Presidenl Wollam G - Ellen SIUrnan !lll&lt;er. .....,_..._
UB.......,_

lnaddil.ion,bmorary~

-

will
be conferred on
Burt P. Flic:kinger,
Jr_ Western New

Yorlt busine"
leader 8lld dWr ot
lbe 1993 World Univcnity Games; RObert V.
Poond, a UB ~and pioneer in magn&lt;tic resonance imagiQg(MRI).IIDdacclaimcd
Buffalopilologropberlna odjuna UB faculty
member Miltoo Rogovin.
Jolmstooe. SUNY cbancellor from 1988
untilbisresiJDIIiooe.arlierlb.isyearforbealtb
reasoo5, will r«:eivelbe prcstigioos Cbmcellor Normo Medal. It will 'be presented by
Pbilip B. Wets, MD .. cbairoflbe University

CounciL
lbe Nonnn Medal is preiCI'lted annually in
public recognition of a pe.tSOO who bas. in
Nonoo' s WOlds, '1pcrform&lt;d some greai thing
wbidJisidmtffiedwilbBuffalo•• .agreaicivic
or political act. a greai book, a greai wort. of

SATURDAY MA\' 14

• Health Aetaled Prolessions

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Al..-miArena

Provost Aaron N Bb::h

Slee Hall

Dean Maoca S. Cranley

&amp;Jo, WesiCI'll New ¥ 01i: and New ¥01i:
Slllt, he has WOit:ed YiJarously 10 maintaiD
lbe SUNY s)'5k:m's llleDgth.
A former president of 1he Slllt University College 11 Buffalo, 'be was
first
SUNY campu$,p residenuo beod tbe sysmm.
Tbe President's Medal will be 1presa&gt;ted
to Rosobe&gt;;J by Greiner. Fust presented in
1990, it is pven in recognipon of *sigJW
8lld ex.b'll!ll'dinuy .service to theuniversity."
It i• pn:salled for outstanding scbolady
or lltislic ocbievemeru.s. humanillriiD ·OCU.

9 a.m

• lnloonallon and Ubrory Studies

10a..m

S udent Union Theot"'

Pre51denl G -

• EnginMring and Applied Sciences

I p.m

Al..nni Arena

Senior V'oce Provost Kenneth J Levy

-dN!ning. ~
Dean lor~ Cclurnl&gt;ie

U.W..slly
Joan~

Vloef'r-IO&lt;

"""'*""' Nlllirl. Cenislus College

. Phatmacy

1 p.m

Slee HaM

ProvostBb::h

Dean Dllvld J TJiggle

·• Architecture and Plannong

2p.m

Hayes Hall Lawn

Presidenl G&lt;-

e.lflllo Mayor Anii1Dny M. Maolelo

• Management

Sp_m

AA.&lt;ml Arena

f'reS.Jer.A ~

Ft- J Ccl5wono. 'Presidenl end
Chief fJcec:IAMI Otlicef.

• Graduate Educalion

Sp.m.

Slee Hall

ln&lt;lepef&gt;dent
Heallh andUB........,...
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Provost iBb::h

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'Mayor Maoielo

SUNDAY MAY 15

Presldenl ~- ~
·K arenLAdalman
Class all~

• Law

2p.m.

AlurMi Arena

OSYid A. PaleBon, ._YO&lt;\&lt; Sl8le
Senator. 29111 Olslrict

• Dentail Medicine

2p.m

Slee Hall

Allan J Foornioolll. Oean. Colu'nbla
UrMwsily Schocl ol DwUI and

• Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

6p.m.

Al..nni Arena

Provost Bloch

• Social WOII&lt;

7p.m.

Slee Hall

Oean ~ w. Seidl

me

conaibutinos oflime or,treasure, exemplary
leadenb'ip or any OCher IDI!Jor cootribulioo
to lhe development of me University al.

lMng eer-·rS

Terry T. F..,._, Ame C

·• Nursif10

art, a greai sciemific ochievemmt. orany&lt;&gt;tber
lbir)g wbidJ in iuel.f •• auly j!mlt and enoo-

1bling and wbidJ dignifies lhe performer 8lld
Buffalo in tbe eyes of lbe world.''
As dwloeUor. Jobnsrooe was a-edited
with .innovative Slrllegies for increasing
SUNY'sdiecliveDC$5 in edu&lt;:atin&amp; 8lld serving lbe ,citiz.eos of New ¥ od State.
A W:sighled. deeply committed leader:
whose extraordinary efforu benefited Buf-

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Senior Leadership Awatd to be presented
OUR
UB UBprot-j.r~.
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Scott, Dun 's Aca&lt;lemk
Adtie~~m~~:U~Awanlfromdle

Paoulty of A1U. and 1...&lt;111=;

and 'l"bbmu E.Shal:p, Owl"•
Academic Acbievemcml
Awud froo1 lhe FoaJIIy of
Sooill Sciences.'
Ricbanl L. Weber will ~
·ve tbe Senior l.eodcnhip
A wan!.
Milt B. Bwbnla senior
a1 UB who srudie.s dec:&gt;Om·
preuion
in tbe UB
0eporuoen1 or Pby~.
wiD ....,.,;ve bi award from
Josc:pb J. l\.dllridlo. dun of
lbe No::ull)' M Natunil Sci·
ence and Malhematics.
Bw1card, Who bu a 3.93
gl"'lldt·point a......ge a1 UB,
wiD reed~•• badlelorof sd·
ence &amp;p:e in matbematical
phy'ics ..mh a minor in •b ioi·
ogy. He will enroll in lbe fill]
in tbe M DJPbD. prqgnun at
lbe University of Roc:hesta'.
If&lt; is. rnc:mber of Phi BeUI
Kappa. lhe Golden Key Nalional Hcaor Society ond lbe

majorin !?.liP ollil •
pby . l:le ~u mainu.iu&lt;l
~~·~or3;9

in boch or hii ma,ion Milo
takillj gnduale du~es. lie
bu been KlCleplod
0 die
~UIIIe procrml 0{ CIOIII·
parotivc litcl'ltwe 11 Comdl

Uniwnily, wheR be will ..,.
cei&gt;.., a$12,

telld:liJI&amp;fd-

lowohip. l'r'ed See. ISiOCiale
dean or lhe F..,..,., of Arts
md LdUn,dcsaibesScoa''
WOI1t .. -e~q.... and profound. If&lt; (Scoa) bu ~aka&gt;
a uncommonly diflicult""
o( COOISel and ~&lt;louling

work in ibtm." ~ ..y .
Sharp, wbo •ill
mx:iv&lt; hi oward from
RossD. M~~t:Kinnon, deonof

tbe Pacull)' of Social Sci·
eooes., i• 1 member elf Pb.l
8d;a Koppa wbn bu.~

be .... IWII'dallbe
NabonaJJ\:.lundoOoii"Mi&gt;ll. VaJu.
able: Sll&gt;dent"' A word and
~ a Grace C.,.. Memona! Award for academic
~

Slw:p, .,..11oh

.....,..,for

two yean u rice I'"'

i&amp;::ntof

tbe UB Und&lt;:rgnailo:lle f'bi.
losopbyOub, illsolw Sttved
u 1 llUdo!m member of lbe
c::urriculum commilll:le and
lhe pncnl assembly of !he
UB Ulldergndwa~ Goll~ge.
He also bu been active in
acti . .. of lhe ~

in philosophy and a minor m
polilic:al ~ . H&lt; bas an HOI'IIlfli~Fromlonu·
o•'etall grade-point average ary 10 M.ay 1993, Sharp
or 3.966. He will anmd law worl&lt;od ... reoean:b intcnl
liCbool81 Ville Umven&lt;ity.
for tbe Wasbingron bureau
SbarpenlmldUB till'le!o· of nw. B'4falo n&lt;'s. Lut
Pbi.EtaSp~Hcaor
Society. ond • rtcfPem d lhe dentiill Honors Scholar in &amp;ull&gt;lllel'. be Sttved 15 o law
clerl&lt; in an attorney· • otf~tt.
Merdt Index Award for &amp;l:d- 1990. The L'B Deportmml d
Ridwd L. Weber. wbo
lo:nr:einO!ganic&lt;llemtsttyond Philosophy awanlod him lbe
1ht Gtace Capen Award for Mary C. Whitman Sdlollnhip will ....,.,;.., bis award from
forlbe 1993-94 ocadomic~ Raben L Palmc:r. """' presi·
Aaldemic E&gt;.c:dleoce.
As senior rueareh assi•· for being lbe outstllllding ,.... dent for RUdeot affllini. is 1
mcrJi!ilosophymajor.ln 1993. member of die llngl:1&lt;b boolant 10 Hugh D. Van Liew.

on Jli'OI1'II1I and lhe Goldal

Key Nabooaii:Wnor Soclety
If&lt;
I joial major ID En·
psb and P'YcbolorJ and an
ovc:nJJ snde1'0iDI IV~
or 3.5.
Weber upcrvtw:d I SO
&lt;llllployee$ and a Sl mill""'
~durin&amp;biSimi!U\U

pn:sideDI of Sub-Doard I. I
UB ltlldens.-....1. St:n'ICt
Ol'pllotion.He pined Jli'IIC•
ticilllepl ClpOI'ItOO&lt; br """ .
ing u IWOCiia:tl: justl&lt;le of lite
Smden1 -Wi&lt;le JudJcU.t'}.
UB "• stlldel'n~ rc

VICW board oUrlll&amp; his JOD ·
ior year, Weber IUS the
pmadenl of die Uodn'gr:aduate p &lt;:bolosY ADociation
Webcrs;penthis flrSl tbrc:Je
IIWIIIDEr vacations from college ia til&lt; Fon Onuno
Goard, on inlap'otiw Will
(bat recrellleS tbe drilb..
emooies and daily d\'JUC:&gt;
d ool4ien 011 I military post
in lbe surtlmCl"'o f I

=·

Scholarship winner aims for Physics PhD.
.a, CAITUII KD.L Y

in Pby&lt;ics at Washirlgwn
Uah'Uiity mSL Louis. He'
particularly interUted in

News Bureau SlaH

MARK
Wi ec:r.oret earns
his PbD. in Physic . be: v.•ants tQ

open a resl3.uranl or maybe a

l'fr/asloNiJly Man4gl!d by

SIARA MA.NAGHMENT

movie dw::aler so be can hire
aU bi frieuch .
If&lt; speW wilb iDrm::&lt;t 00
lbe subduclion .. lhe Pacific
1'112. wbypeopleshouldtravd.
and haw poeuy is. fiii'Oe if you
take it 100 seriously.
W'li:C1.&lt;lftl&lt;. ;_, • gradual:irlg
senior 81 UB in 1be Oeponments ofi'byaa; IMGealogj•.
He has worke-4 with
NASA.. interpretingdalafrom
lhe Apollo 17 mission and
lhe Mage!WJ mission to Venus. He lrliVelod 10 Alaska to
decipher radar image.s of sea
ice. Between NASA gigs be
mainuins e1cellent grade&gt; 81
UB, assisu John F. King. a
nationally recognU.ed prot...
sar of gc:Oiogy with his researob. ~ filmJ; and
~fH!ebJ·

lbis spring. Wieczorek

was awarded a $10,000schol·
arsbip by lhe Nllinnal Space
Qub, on organiz.ation o{..,..,.
space~

wor\:ing 10
foster 'JliCO exploration. A
"J'(ll&lt;eoman ror lhe N llinnal
Space Club Scbolu•bip
Comminee, S1&lt;ve Dwomik,
desaibed W'aeczoret 15 lhe
"Olear choice" for lbe award
outofdle IIOapplicanufrom
aU over the country.
Nexi S&lt;:Il!e5lt:r, Wiecmrck
will emcrlbe PhD. program

•&gt;isual experiencr mber than
a mrdiwn to COIIVO)' infor·
mation,~ be liAYJ.
lillldyq lbeplllllldsbetweat
He -..Tires poems.
His poem5 deal •'idl real..nlta&gt;d olber plmeu.. Plale
l«tAJaics, . . . , . . _ . of •lbe ity-plain and simple. Lili
his poems .... not
plllla tbll.makeuplbeeonb'' bii
ausa and mande and reraoce iolendl:d 10 ~ -'Ysi&lt;.
u:min&amp;.lllfivedor IW!arsi&amp;- They espkntbe ci&gt;Yious and
aals fromspa:ecnfhhatpe record oo!bal is common. rd) .
illfOI;IIII!ioo about lbe com- iDj onlbe obared ~
po$itioll cl •t be ,sm:face o( • cltbe oulbanandlbis re:oders.
pl-.an:twaareasoo wbidt
Last year, be placed SOC·
be intmils to eonoentrlte.
oo4 ia a local poeuy conteSI
wi:lbbispie&lt;:e. - .-.lf&lt;!UiionAU
iecwrek plans 10 Library USCI'S":
travd extcruiivdy • .be
"The 'library
be dos·
WIDIS to see the IIIICOOilJIOII,
in&amp; in lS minulea at ,..hicb
om.of -!he-way plal::es-like time aU penoru IJI)lSI ~
ewfoundlaod tbU sum- die buildin&amp;- If you have DOl
mer--;ICihaps Iceland .nexl ~ so at Ibis time, pJeas.e
rummer. He do&lt;sn't lbink -.maD ref"""""' materials
be 'U ever settle down for 100 and periodicals to lbe c:imlIODj.
latioll desk. .• Film classes in tbe M&lt;dia
"Yoo can't take youndf
Srudi"' Oc:pan:meot inspired 100 seriously: Wieczorek
Wieczorek's bobby or IJillk. explains.
illg animoled 6Jms includi:tlg
Eveoru.Uy. be says, be
"Cooterus.- wbicbdeals with will 'bJ CIIUIJlllll'&lt; auimarloo
the pbyliical c:ompos;ition of ond~sibly51.Udy0ognitive
0
film itself. '"I - fllm I I 1 Sciebs. ..

W

...m

�Adelman to emphasize the importance of
~in university commencement speech

.......
"-

~

..... ""
.........
......

USAB honors four
winners ofJ. Scott

Aeming Awards

-.dl

-·

a 5UCCe5S as a UB under·
lfllduile. 11 bas Wo been a
k:eycomponenl ol her desire
to funher her education.
Adelman. Who uyo that sbe
"'really loveo bioloJY. and
I' m fascinated by genetia."
will remain at UB after sbe
gnduales toswt in lhe PbD.
PrQ&amp;l1UII here in molecular
bioloey and genetics.
Adelman grew up ln lhe
Boston, .Y. and aru:nded
Ham b urg Hjgll. School ,
where sbe was class p&lt;Wdem in 1990 and Cllll1lpCted
in Vllt5ity swillllDiflg. She
continued ber intaeSt in stvdent aovemment at UB .
v.·here sbe wasinvoiYCd wid!
•'lrious campos clubs and
served rhil: year as opeaur
of !he Student Aucmbly.

~atd·

year•

ddmarl 51)"&amp; w ...,u
lhe iqotance of
diversity II her ~
ment ..-:JL "Siner r ~ ._,
met people from
all oorts ol different
lUreS.

A

• us.r •.,

'11ike the fact thll for ony
intcres1 you have, UB bas a
dub you con join.· A4dman
'"Y'· " And wodnna WJib the
Studem ADaxlbly was nice.
because ~ llliiiii&amp;CIItn sa
our COIISiitulioll ~ for
thefir&gt;t timtinaboutoix ~
I really feb like ~ """"""'
pllshod somethin&amp;-"
But Adelmt.n ' • main
love. uodoub&lt;edly. " science. She .,aduating as a
member of the University
Honors Progrlm with a B.S.
in biological lciences. and
bas panicipeted in honon
researcb under Or. Edward
N . Brody. chair of the Departmenl of Bioiopcal Sci·

ences. She
leaCiwlg assistant in ewlull&lt;l!!W)' boolor,y.
her ron"""' f« ~UC~unr
miJOr
part of her deoire to become
a research professor.

u•

"When I'm teacll1118. I
lin 10 be able 10 brnlc down
a """""J''SO that anyooecan
undentand H." Adelman
y ., enjoy oeein&amp; bow
happy it makes studen
when they finally feel like
they omdct5tand SiOlDedun .
I respond better to teachen
Who lead! wid! enth ·
and I lin to llliM that my
~ enjoy lhe lab they
take w;th ""'· that I crea~e an
IIIIIOSpbe:re where they can

OOWIII"'IS,and~.-

uyo. '1 learned a lot here,
and I p a modi bluer poe·
wre ol ,.11at llfc
really
J' &gt;t ieam&lt;d bow to b
tell to,
lo, and leom from
otben;, and that '• extremely
lmport.d.
"I want to tell people
tbcy •houldn ' t sequester
!h&lt;:msdveo.· Adelman'" .
'1 want to ~eU !hem
remember that diven1ty ex·
isu, and to keql lhe open
nrind that colqc foroeo you
to bavc. I doll ' t mu:nd to
Slop learnm&amp; from other
people. and no one elK
d&gt;ould. enhet.•

an

Gtwlonl Gray, Karft T.
T.
E.adl...._,. ,.,...-..sa
for~
and aa eQCBYCd pUquo. Thar .....,.. are
engra&gt;Cid on Jbe
w p&amp;eq.e
all
I'R"'k- ~ ainct I
n-.n Burr. a ......-d«triaoo ~ mal"'· '"""""' as dot I
94 praiokoll alT• Bela PI
-....JI!.Itpneamc ·Ft&lt;.or Soc:o&lt;ly. He ..
selected • UB's Anck !01' the • ·
tional Col!&lt;,pllt ............ Awent. lk bas hem
fll'l&lt; c1an-.st ..., Ole UB Wtnd Ens&lt;mble IIIOd
UB Civic S -mp1tony and
taken 31 credt of
musac: "bile a&lt; the - · en.ty "As ., encmecnng
mal"' 1101 put5111 a mu · mmor.- Burr~ "I
lder

' .. C'XIraCUD'ICIIIectmty r.. ""'
•~ ' - ' 1Jc11uPt
•• to &lt;ngiDemng •

My ~""""'l&amp; penpcctJ
m

. and

GJU!ord Gray. a 11m101' bu
oon llllJCit W1tb a concemraoon rn

. ,.

the I 993· 94 preoidenl of the
men1 Soc:tet) . To enbaDce
&lt;JAIOrtlllll·
_oro and studmt bfe 11 UB. he " " " - atriliar&lt;d
w;cb the -....1 Auocult&gt;cll of UIMD Banken.
1D or&amp;aniutlon of
profess.iouah. and
helped ntake pouiblt • RIXIeat lliOIIIbenlup program wtth that orpaizalion. }k is aiJo a member
of the Goldea Key liaDor Soc:o&lt;ly and • studmt
.-larlheF"ne-•' ~ ......,__
He bas also~ II B..tfalo' s City
·
and hdd
poariom iD CJibc:r litUdmJ
~Wen Hillar) • • junior obelmca1 ~
mal"'. is the 1994--CJS Studonl ~ ,
.
dent. the 1\n.t African AIIJtt!CIIII
to be
elected to that office and the._,..., Afncan Amaicao """"' 1964. She was sA·• liiUdent ac:uvi
dt~ in 1993-94 and~ of dot Ann·
Rape Task Force m 1992-93. She b the """"al
prestdenl of the UB chapter of the '&gt;lional Socaely
of Black~ and a member of dot n:Jiona1
executive baud. o•cneein&amp; 10 cbaplrrs in ·
area.
Mkhad Smith. a saoor With a double I!!IJOI' m
business ,_.,...,..,. and poycbolocy. bas beaJ •
member of lhe UB Ctew Team f&lt;X the past four
yean.. 'boldJng posit:iom .. trcasmer. vicoe-presi·
dart and co-&lt;:OidJ of the ......,., &amp;eam. He
aJoo beaJ very atdve m AIESEC Buftakl.
posiOOI!S as
resouroc dim:~« and de&gt;'dopmeal
•
and, &lt;:wmldy. Sll!denl ctireaor,
Northeut Repxr. 1k sDJdiCid in Cny Uni..mty,
laodon ill 1991-92 and was I member of ftJe
Student Auoc:iabon
from 1989-91 .

f....

May 17
TRAV!L AGENCY
CORPORATE TRAVEL DEPART~ENT

Tbe &amp;ol:me Sl!ittc Qanl jail
the 1993 Gommy Alld fu
the best dwaber music n:conia&amp; mthe,_ - &lt;
I ta rom
Otft:s lves Qa111et Ntmtber I. ~fer 111.111iey'11 pt.)' tilt
lves wbr.D they pcrlorm II ~Way 17; lhey'U lllo pt.)' a
cllssicll qwrld 117 Haydo lllllall!Odtn- 117 ~

.u-.

lu I bola these
wiD discass tilt IIIIISit II 7:00 p.m. befcn
pcrfarmiDJ it • 8:00 p.liL

For lich:U ($12.00. IIDIIrm SS.IX)) .S iaf0111111icm, pleat call
838-2383.

�Work as ·regional director ~f ~C
helped develop business ki1I:s mtth ys

btml.lll.ll'llt ···

'Ill

mm-.:blpl
"' b&lt;!l:ome

-ben fiN
abrQid "'

...a

pn»

doe~

II!Wii!J
uonal crairu

a:IDfi2EIIIln.

The orJ..UuOOn ""'
all ~- becawle - - '·
it~~ to muh• • _,..,_ can
bmdil b)' ckvdopinc .......
' ) ."ltdoein'ltmllti:r
Wlm 6dd you. get into The
)'Oil '"' ........ of and
ondentond 1he bo$iftH
""XXIl 11M: ben..- alf you'D

For COli CIOIQPI'(iti.., priciq and reiUibilily, call now for
~qUOIIt:

691-0001
4 0 - l l r i... -NYI~

Meta....

--.-!lUI&amp;
...... ....,.Mil

be."Snu

u
I
odminiJanand P')"CIIolol)• cblble
....;... lllilb
lira. pr&lt;&gt;pdled ialo 11M: UB ~ df
l\IE'iEC ilfia- "" oornploled
/Is

000

,_.-lint

jllnior~filull&lt;le

iiOllool of Cily

• 11M:

Uruvenity in London. En-

pond.

Ibm I came t.lt, I

for~in
1ht .-..-..alll'tm ~·
COiild I""'P'c from oO&gt;c:£
- 1\lBSBC .....,..j
110 be !be .....-.r.

BecomiD&amp; 111&gt;0:!1:1ibtrin 11M:
Fall of 1992. Smilh ro.e
lbroogb AISErC'• peruiJI&amp;
nJIIIi in I vet)' du\ time: b)'

eulrqioo.
tb oaya 1hlll -'Jaa m
AJESSC hlsOJICIII'd ~
aibaforhimuwdl•ci•,..
ltim leadenbip ,_... .,.,

AJES6C. • ~...,
..., .... 10"" 11M:,.,..

aroworfot
IIO'II'hetpi....-dl . .

j(

.,.,.-.Tk-tnum

lo8dcrs. I loot 01 11M: •
a ,.ilok IIIII -..oily. I
xntlle""'*of"""""'ronf...
....,.,. we U., kx:all)', and
.,_y tbr ~ .. 11M: "'
..,.. lbal pooploe loolr. 10 f&lt;l'
hdpand ad...,._
. "Bee
ill cbarl-&lt; of Ul
Olp~

00'

commiru:c

where you' re me wdn'dop
yow·
Coal , Y"" flJid out
along lh&lt; way U..t sornc
~~un&amp;s wed: and acme ' p
..... itb.....-y lnd .......
up 10. I pmed a cliffamt
penpectlYO 0C1

doiocs.~

Dille
_111C1111............,..

)'&lt;W..-ound,
llOil

A• hu111111 reoourtl0'10 dt
"""""'· Smith acoomplubed
a.IIIC&lt;lt!IOfW recNIUiltnldnvr
u one o( 1m flrst
H
dfOIU bolped 1\JESOC pm
20 mecDben. up fi'om
!be prev;o... ,......i mombet.
iilup of aboul tight .............
He i• U.O
·
(or
. . 11M: rqKinOI...:!
~:MEC: (M.,II&gt;bc:r

6du.:.ti01&gt; Cycle! confer.

op'1tll

IJ'If. m "''""' 12 10 IS """"
llddedto
~k

S!mlh'•-.

....._

Heplmltn

end"ut~

11111-f·•

,. ...., COIIII(l6de •
02lliOeSblp ..,_, liom.lj;h
A!IESE!IC. Hell.llllloalltCipll:lll
&lt;i£ the I. Sc:oll
Mint
Awad. ,.... b)' k U..a
lily s..... ,.._ 8oolll "'
• )'ell' -

.......,.
life on

.......

Native of Poland excels in English plans
career as professor of comparative lireran.u:e
.,....,. ••• aawa
Aepclr-. Sial!

fi"'OlJ11III. Braun iJ l'OCiplall
d.-Artt.tLeaors........,-

USTYNA BRAUN

ina~.....r.ond

badoo~of

,... ., ~ V. Ml:iOoa
SchoiiiiShip ill H umani.UC

EAgliSh when sbeani-

lltied 10 tbe u.s. 01
• n . hot lbat rw not pre~ berfi'om excdling

as

an EAglish major m UB .

·Born and raised in
Wroelaw, Poland, Braun
IIIOVed with ber family 10 lhe
U :S. iu 1986 wbcn ber falheir
Wlli offend I uoadhin,g job II
S...lrtbmore Colq... PL
Altbougb ibeuyo llbepresented • trea:lelldous cbal-

lenae to bcr bigb schoOl
le*lbcn. Who had rarely dealt
with ~ opeaking
!ltUdents, today Bra1111 is Ouentin-~(ln

llddiban "' ~ Mlib
lllld EQgtislt, ""' apeot .....

junior,_ of~ OIIIM:
Sori&gt;anne in Pori.. wbich""'
aayo "brought my """""" U&gt;
pafJxltion.") Sbc's aiJo an
mot ltiktt. and eojoy5 fencm, ........ free limo.
A ttDdonl in liB 's boaon

Studieo. Sbo bas applied to len
gr-aduate Oid&gt;oolt. toc::lodiD£
l'riDa!toll ...:! Jalmo K&lt;p:im.
IIIII bas ....., acx:qlled 1D tbr
Uni•enlry of Califontia,
!Mne.tlerfuttftp.n. indude
becolnin«. prof..- o(com.....,r.e li1rntJm: and uavdin&amp; ID ttaly , Sootiabd, and

&amp;tdandQ. YousoidlhoutioryourfJm. • • ._..__.
1
~)'W_,_,
• ~- dbi,gb ldJtds.
..,.,..,. every time )'011: lillhrr.

,K mni&lt;rzBno.m,pa._ ap..,....,._ Has )'011: elluc:olion
oulliftd ......... dftio?
A- I thin cenai.n aspecu
ba..... BUCh .. hiswry -liM:
~ TheiCitool&amp;.alllllot

such different appro.cbca
that I &lt;X&gt;Uidn ' tlillin !be ppo.
8 !be opportBnity to trl¥d
and U&gt; ·try oomma~
wilhpeapleinlbcir ..........

�....
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Applied Sc:ien&lt;a.

GRADUATE SCHOOL
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HONORS PROGRAM

Osborn&lt; ( 1''1CiwiOJ) 1. Daria Pllpolaa
( l'qdoulovJ. R.ammlth Sanwb t0...-

UN UIIIYEIISITY-

P"''SA"iae&lt;),Gord&lt;.•Sayrt(C_,.,.4.
till-t' Li•rr•t•rtl , Valerie SbaJer
(U.r•o.orinj, Krislma Sm.J.inpmtC...·
~""" Scino«J, lOft Slaulr (Hino')).
Sivapnbwn Sunder {C-.r Sd·
"'""· llllltll F. 1bmber (AoJhTOp&lt;&gt;io.p'), Hailier Weber(Goolrll,(&gt;llyJ, and
Zinno w.. t C - r Sd&lt;oa&lt;)
Recipieou ofU~ Minor·
ny fellowship&amp;. a-....rded lD enwre ibe
oulnlnl cb¥aliry oflbe ~-·
populatiao and ill """'J''iDoo of ....,..
noriiCidt:mic promi.se.,ue'Emcnolt B.a.rr
tl'oltli&lt;a/Sci&lt;'ocej. YVOGII&lt; Oioe-Buf·
Wo ("""'ric"" Stwdia~ Ndocla Dona
(I'OJ&lt;ItolovJ. Lydia Gol (~

Uu,.,.,.j.Rcococllendmoo(H--uri«), &amp;lidll.opet.l Pty&lt;lwlory). Mansa
lope! (AJnn1•rican Suuliu), JaaiucSam:i:q:o (Amtricalt SllldirsJ and Lynn
Taylor (AIIw'ncGtl St~e.t I

HEALTH·RELATED
PROFESSIONS
MEDICAL-Y

·-Mohr(C'Iv:mi.Jtry) andDoorid Wol
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donuc

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l..ai Bar au. Tbomao Fnncis Ouc&lt;y.
Rasbmi H. Gw&gt;ciecia.Sbirley 1\. Keenan.
lelfr&lt;y ....... l..aOuca. SusanMaeMmoo.
O.UU.lk P&lt;u-uudl&amp;. P&lt;i Yao Tang, Jo~epb

'M ichael Webb and Donn•
Wlodarzyt bavebo&lt;n iDclllded in Who '•
WhoAMGJ&gt;r Sntd&lt;rus br.._rial&gt;l Ct&gt;l-

kpt aNl URi~s.

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Fe~Jow1bip, do-

OCCW'AJIOIIA&amp;.II'IIIIIAPY

bas .... . -

of ......... abilily

'David R. . A.d&amp;l!lson . Su.r.ao:oc M ~
Oebrucqoe. "'ory M. o.-. N'ocole

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,_,_i[)isa110iao I'd-

0 . Sd&gt;midl. Kama Ana Shalb,Xolbryo
T. Sodma' and Les1i Wallbavt .....,.;.,.t
Ouutaodiq A&lt;:ademi&lt;: Achievc:ment

ANdlca~F"*"' o:&gt; -

8&lt;1.b&lt;l H . Bal..,.., Sur.mme M.

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K.am&gt;LAdelm.u&gt;.IWI'l AJI!er.Da''id
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Jos&lt;ya~Bnua.MartE.BUtbrcl.
Ktvm M. Blllf. Raben L BUIIdl.lohn l
Byrne. 'Ri&lt;:banl T. Carlmult. Mi&lt;:bad S
Onanello. Jlelen C Chuon&amp;. Maria A
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Danod A .
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Garner. Rot..n Gerslenblulh. CoQptt E.
Q;tben. Ccur S. Glmma. David L
GuJ!ielm~ Bry10 T. llaaypoiat. Usa M.
Harringtoo~ Dn«1 C. Hoff~i lrT.
K.oll&gt;kea Hoii.Comc L H......,.,kanioe
M. Huber, !Moo 0 . IIIC&lt;lbl.. Deaise M.
lW'OO. Laun l . K:Jncbom, No-.. P.
J(kin, [l;aaa K.oc1&gt;. Gregory H. Korw&lt;.
Lori Hui ·Pn'* 111:....., Cyodua L.LextidL
Davids Leooe. Danai. Le&gt;il. "'dindl
L. Loefl:&lt;. ~M. Marcdlo.lulieD,
Murphy. hhcb.arlecn L Parbolski.
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Patel. lobo R
Frw&gt;k A. Pdlqnoo. luloc A. lladlbun.
Cbrntopbcr M. Reo. Stevu M:.
SanFilippo. leosi&lt;a Stabury, K.am&gt; A
Shal e. Tbomao E. Shart&gt;. Jeff"'l' M
Simon. Raben S.,.....U.Ury. Kuol&gt;erk)•
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Tomancws.ki . K.atbleu A Va..n
Emmenk. ~ C Va&lt;rtl. Scan 0 .
Vttko, BrianT. Wabn. OtanaL Wbtpple.
Andrew "-tang. D.av.d J. Yl.#tC'I kJ.
Knsnn L Yonker

mr.uson.

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Jutyu .raUJI and WW.. D. 8t'ett
""'recipooouof ~W. "'ddoo Fd.....!Ju.,. m HUJDaDiJ!jc S!Ucbes. Fundo:d
by lbe Alldmo W. Mellao floundatioo.
lbe fellow&gt;bi.,. ... ini&lt;IXIcd"'ucepriMally promisJq ......,... .. prep!U'&lt;for&lt;OJocnoft&lt;ad!in&amp;and!ICboilar·
SlOp ill b.....w.tic: by providint
UJp-le.,.., oomp&lt;litivt. ponable ecwanls.
and ._ , . C&gt;lllltribuiO 10 lbe cootinufly
of o.:acbiq and .......-d&gt; of Ill&lt; biJbeoo
order ·i.a America"• colleee- aDd uaiwr-

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Scieno&lt;-

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Fellowlbip.l'dlowl-&lt;lll'&lt;""&lt;dO&gt;.._.
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Alo Mlro (M,Ii•M bas won • FuJbri,ght
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Tecbnology f'rocnm.
In tht NuckarMedion&lt; Tochool&lt;&gt;gy
~ Maoia l..oolis&lt; Augustyniak
bas beftl bonored for Ouuw&gt;cbng Aca-

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G - T~ (WOO.m Lan-

excepioo&gt;al -

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Outstanding Academic Adueve:mrn1
honor&gt; en 10 l..ai Bar QU, Slrirl&lt;y R.
Kcenon. Jeffrey P&lt;u:r LaOuca. Dln&gt;clio
P&lt;tru=tla. loooph Michael Webll and
Donna wtodan:%y\. all m tht MO&lt;bcal

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talwt W01L iW&amp;A

Michael Ort.i1, Frllnk Antbony
Pdlogioo, To&amp;! M. l'loho:. O.vid lobo
Rccbct!Wih. Kevin P. Roe.~ Tod6
Ruucll. M ory lotqlhine SalaDr, S...ts~

MU)' Jo IOrkiU. a juoior majorin1 io
c1Yil ea.gineerina. and Jill E.
:Ienior majorlnJ. 1ft avil
..~ ,~~a.. _.,..., 1994 l!ol'·
-"111 A'IUIIIDi Scholanlhips from 1be

'li'..... ~'Oi-flldlo!:
~C-A-.IidiiiiA

Aot! .....

...............,.

Mill«. Brian Joooph Nu!&lt;'llo llcnD&lt;a

~ .~

oliodplio&gt;o

_ _ .... Sc:boolof..._.
---....,~

J.am« -J obn
Bcy•n A.
Luk....W. David Scoa.Leoo&lt;.X110 Wd
Lm. M'IChlel c. Unbarilt. s""""" o.
LiiL lvu M. Lowe. Olristopber N .
M~L 1'bomi&gt;.R. ~.Ilnc J

Webber, Mk:baell . Wohl1cmudl. Scoo
K. Wood. Andrew Xi1f11, O.vidll,...
Yagiellikl. Eldar FIJ'&lt;hod Yul!basM.

~'\"Gd OJe

Tho:~""*"""-A­
-oo~II. G..,IIa&lt;-

'""!
LaPenna.

Dak Ricbard TycW. Melisu Anne
Vas-uno. Scott D. itko. Ouu k .

....

MaRirittt

...,a..o.

Stevonlosepb .Seelmon, Sllrim SO!diqui.

......... -

t

Kaloo .._.., A.-.1 for
MBA - . , .
Salol .....

llo)k.LaunlL)&lt;IIJIButlcof,y. k - "1.
Butr. • - J. 8ym&lt;. R.idbud Tucm
Cartnwt.. Cbltles c._ c.y. wmc·
T
~ O...ROOort H. Dio·
moad.JiDEiiDbeQII)!T...,_,,Domel
Milt 0..1)0~ Adam A..._Gittl&lt;r. Dlvid
l.ouili Ou&amp;liclmi Ah•am H. Fkrnlmdu.
OavidC.Hol!meister, lobnl'redH&lt;&gt;!I..,..
IV, Wd floqJ. S..-..11 . ly..-. '"""' 0 .
Jl«&lt;bs. AmbroR M. Kam. FTaacts c.
l(oem. Bum s ' Klm.
anditl Kohh.
1!ogtt W. Ko&gt;'ll&lt;:lld. Scott M. "'-&gt;.
l'ool XaJ1 ~.
Gory Looda•.

lustinM.Smilh,Anc!mo'DavidSzoluny.

n

Sldoey

, ...... -jamiillorrrlll.o...ldl-

- · Saal'iliJIIIO. Despina Cui-1
~ Mdd&gt;el 1. Sd&gt;edll«, id&gt;c&gt;lu J. S.bmiu. J&lt;ffr&lt;y PlluJ Sclmluer.

--..---·Q6l A.... $ a

Jo&lt;oplt

Eqju•rl &amp;).

w..,.a.-s.oww.-;.

tntol &amp;1in&lt;m•1 ), Marr

...

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l!ld-Sc:t1olll

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llolbNipi&lt;plioi-

-M. -

' - -... ~~~~-

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-~--

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aall'ulllllkilt,ta,..__~

.

.._.._._ is ........ oflbe

.

Gr-.. faoolt)' Awanl for O.JIJCOI
~- ...-..,a~-

...::.::

.......

pdeplioi-

tclnl

MEDICINE AND
BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES

T~IWO...-gr-Oiu­

denls !rom UB have'~
the G{ace Capen Momori.!ll
Award from tiJe Unlvam!~
Women's Club ., rec.ognllion

IOCML~~

--=Pnn--.
dent Prtto Paper

l o: -

PILO_ .,... !be Sot-

A- at

dhlgh~

Theewardwasestabllsl&gt;ed
In 1975 by lhe Women's Club

annul.-;., of!be Sacir:ryfO&lt;P&lt;Itdl·

"'be-

ric~ llntaroll,
, _ 14-1$ in "'lomi- Tbt -

and, since lhe!),tlas~""""'

·
"S-feuoldeadllllm.ioaoo
'I""' full """"""J''i aoll PCB e&gt;;pa.,..e,·~ berOocanl-

to~e.....:lel:oraduales

"'*"'

who hew ODIJli)IMIId a
mt.rnd -'Shoo.rsof cour-'&lt;
atUS-an..-_d3.9or

....
J- . Bomheim.
Hieu T
&amp;.iJellrey
Leah
E Oole,LeahR.OA!gan.AiCJ&gt;.
ard C ~ Gtart J
0a¥i&lt;lson. Sorebl1 Ollar .
Rommel R Frandsco, Brian P
Gregory, Hcly......,Gu'b8l:l&lt;l.
Reshma C Katlra. Burt 0
Lafountaon. Ol&gt;arles T•eng
Lau• .Jooleph J. Le"""""" Doo·
glas J. Pepe, Jonathan 0
Rosen , Oamel A Rube .

A1UR.M. SGIENCE.S AND

MATHEMATICS
Finalitu ford!&lt; "-lty o f - So·
.-ad-O...'sOauamcl·
in&amp; Smiao- A•·II'CJ . _ ~ 'Mar1l L
••rUnt .
wtre: Gari•
M.

of-

T--*l.aa~.

illtrymajorwlw&gt;..WallelldwUBand lliomeolical Sdoocn:
Sidtiqul. a computet ida~«
major and ........ d Wapdo We Col·

-

iq&lt; in l'lomtu. ....... plans "' """"
IOWird • di:Jaoale ia c:ornpalel' ~
and Tndcl A. 'Ftluliaer, olriotop:al od.,_ major .,bo wiU attcod dl&lt; UB
SdloolofMecbcillcandBiDIDeilia!Sa-

-.

~ Yoe Sill, Sam Teng

Soon E

Waga1 and I&lt;Sirin J Walloon
dentwhobao~­

..c:dleoce .. cliaical ........ p-aai&lt;le.
Lon
is wilmer of Ill&lt; 11.u111
G. Elder E.mollenc:e • .__,........_
...-..;.pc~
-.a&lt;~oon..

w..-

S&lt;!Uor Award

~ an: Gonld I .
l'du:rly, AmY K. Fwncnl, J001111&lt; M .
l...asbr. ll..W M. l..awy&lt;:r. Jtffr&lt;y R.

Noaemd.er. Brett T. Olkowski.
Mic:badeea L Poobolski. ltiobanl T.
Sp:ina. !dory s. '""- and Garia

M. Tomauewlld.

Abhilasha(Abby'~Siogh . Vema

•

JUDiorAwii'Cis-IOS......M.
Davis. ~ 'L Gostkowlld. Dotlera&lt;.
M. JolmoaD, Woa Hee IGm.laa J. Mac·
Ooaald. ......,_ E. ....... o.Del A.

Rubeaads-JW. S'Doia.
Leal! E. Oole. ldJr&lt;y ll. ~
Wlio A . Kamo., S0Dc Woot Xim,
CIJarleaT. J.-.l\lex~. 'file&gt;.

....

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oatsliDdlnt bo&gt;oile4B&lt;
A . - .... .-iffil lbe
Di.laittllolembenbip A-_New Yart

-

SlUe N.....,. AaociaQoo(NYSNA).

Tbe Willonl Fillmore S&lt;lloolanhip.
110 a rqissered na:ne wbo 'h=u

aw..W

__ __

..- doe Miltanl Fillmon
Hcopilal SdooOI ofNoDiaa ... i s -

ia&amp;,.._aMJ•UB. ,...oo&lt;::lart.-

-f'lrnl&lt;7.

,_ _.

Tho: Nuaoe ,
, _ Award io F- • - L:ra~,_

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aft

I

ca-..c•TMI.u.-=-ca

~C&gt;-oooll,.

Gndaaooot--

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o..er- A

R.-.1 L ~ U.O. W

8M

a-c

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rllllb~).T.,. MMw c--

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0...2. O...a}'ll&lt; A Gordoo. o...fool

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All

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lamaA W.-r

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tLI$. Mutanl Bu (l'r-.:tHI~• ~.
l.ualoe Benly 1111-•J _.._,,..

t!lpr«~ • H..,.,, Scin&gt;&lt;&lt;l
Odf"')' 1~1- s....
fJI.-dUr SW.. L 8""'7' Boy

r.....--•tJ.ayu ar-tFmril

&amp; luAI. MJdlod Bnecble tl'ol•lloNIJ
Snnw-&lt;). c....lyo 8001lnasb tS.S.US.

.-,'1. lcruufet- a. . ll'rwlwJior&gt;J.
- -l&amp;zluioJ.o-ta.(Histtt')'II'IJrl••*f'lt) 1.

Oalb

(thlf&gt; Dutmc:uoe.

Hilh !Ionon)

~-

wid&gt; 111c1-1 Hoaon .,.
8fWI A. Mikdbanl:. Aatbooy V audo
and GoorJo Vienl.
Biela Bo•ors 10 1o Jcffny
AndnoidYo. Maria A. Dcroc:s. Sll!plleu
L Kbmjock. Doin1re -1 . Sbcridao and
W~lwD T . Sbider.
GnduMinc wid&gt; u_.. .,._Art&gt;en
A Adalm, Amblr llhlqava. Russdl
Boaa...,on. Alld&gt;ooy P. Fou. Andr&lt;w
R Glabe, Davtd M . Loibowm. y..,....
T t.e.......,_ lolm T . McCI&lt;az). Da.-.d

~

F lpocb. Corrie C. Riohanlsand S..,..
Yeh

IIIS10in
F'tnt l'loc&gt;e foc m. 1o1m HonDa Undefcraduatt Euoy -10 ~ s.
lho-yu- for bis eosoy &lt;Oti11cd "Calvary
RaM!uta Scnoqy: AI lllowalc4 by cbt

"""""""Civi! Ww."For1h&lt;Sefi&amp;Adler

Ma.a an,J•

(lhDk&gt;pv/.sn...r.,,_

Clutse(St.t/&gt;OAn~

Hdoo

AI)'Ma

a...... (8 -

*YI!Wo:rs(SSJ~s:...l­

llcobi , Mehua Jacobs. Anthony
Jtrritano. S&amp;dante: Jonu.su. Cb:mulpba"
Kanz. RoDdl Kaplan. Kmulle IWper&lt;t.
8naa K&lt;bo&lt;. Manha Kmney. ModotJit
Klons. Diana Koch. SbeUa Koacryasti.
Tanuoy Kormu. GRJ:Or)' Korvnc.
Lau-m~ Kramer . MKbel1t: Kubanl. Scoa
Kuc.bn . Meline M Latcllo. Abb)
LAufi!wo. Sarooo&lt;l Loe. l""&amp;-Hee L«.
Phihp Leone. Bedl 1---. Slqlbouoi&lt;
Lovme. Came Llberwue, Came Liftcoin. Enca Llpowslci. Micbld Luick.

........-w. Lynn.loilieomi-Robon M........ TO'K)' Manko. Enca
Mann,Cana Mub. LeeMartio. adJ.ae
MastroJeo~ Jeanene Mater. Jenniftr

lc:DIIiferMoneBaffi. Ryan

' Evatoon,

Go-epy H K...,.. . ...-,Bcq~.ovy,
De•I'Ci.re Joaa Sbend.an. Jet~nifu L
Stroo&amp;. 811'bano Bttao~ Stna~W.
Vuibol Tasitu.

STUDEh'T AR'AIRS

S.l/
I.Lp/Sboiooa}.Nic:hadC..:II,lr(l'n-

..,..,0..-.d(l'~l~

Dec*er ~~ Gwea D&lt;tttowc
(£oorL.doJ. -Dc.o.(~Sn­
-~II'~J. Bnl ·

. . .- -.Tod
ia~ K.a -

1&amp;6/ult), -

F&lt;szu- l&amp;,lufll. - .-A~

{11o&lt;anw), VltloO&lt;IIUI

-(/.m-).J!Qbcn~

;. ekctrical and"""""""'~
be
cbt a...-.lliom UB Deae ol
Swda&gt;u llmn"' Black duruo&amp; • April

llanyplllllt(ll~~~

.....,,-..!

26eemDOOiy

IE&lt;~t..,.•J.

No
M&gt;doellt

w•..rue.-ocr 1S.S I I.

Mom; 11'~1111..,..-ol S.,.,m).

,_..

tSSI.II''*Ol'vl S&lt;v-vl

n

·-

1/M.W,. S.W./. , _ - tS.S I 1.
0.•-.!
0.(1'~1-­

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-

PaJ.a-

ri'~&gt;I.Partocf'lntllll'
Sci~)

l&lt;'!mll'lnnca/
Tloi . . . l. IJuo _ , PloM ll'obiMW
s----ri. Kn-rof'apla.
INI I I - c.l l'ln or11. a - """'- (l'&gt;w-iooloOI'I- S... -cll IS.SJ I•
•1'~1- lMa a _ . (l'ohtJcfll
SnrMI'}. Jultt: ltllb'
(I' nk"I'J,

..._yo--

...-R-.el rM.-s.w.,_lotdlod
- · afroei,_.J.aon.-~ ~ (I'

ord(Gr-.
.... Sonoc&lt;l.

nrl'......,.,oJ.~

~ (l'ol.--~

._,. (

'lr

Sc~~-

M1dlad

S&lt;pioo-ll'lnwa ~ ~­
(~p/N•hi"'J'#o&gt;l. lloladMo&lt;l

flli¥Ste 1'~1- Jo.ifer
Sa.tlo IS.S.IA.t•aJ Scd•uJ. b&gt;i

s,...._.... 1-IP&lt;no' Saodtt•J. ~

IS..s.tl. ~t.a s..._ rc..L.MI. r.das.otoutrM
~-

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II'Jr-ma).lc:DIIifcrfloRio:l~l.

Ry.o Guildols.SJ.II.IIa/Snodi&lt;•). 8rylll

EIIP-in&amp;. wu

MrC-'""

Maytt (,.,....,..,•J.

Snf'IICrf# J.-M Men wr tS S I J.
I&lt; M&lt;._ I I'.Wtaol 5&lt;-H- n
8 - M"'loal&gt; IC..,Ia 1 So..Mteato•dn (IJ~~nr'l~ 8na11

Scartq

Atiei"' MJr~ \'lnJlutt.cbdar'a~

meal and CaDpusa

.....,......,,

l&amp;tlu•J .k~)'

-J.II&lt;ay- 1&amp;,:/uloJ.~ /S.S l.ll'ollbciJ -~s-ty
Sotano IC-our 5cu-o&lt;YJ. Darid

-....tasSU&gt;deoiEmployeeold&gt;o Y...-.

clenl........,.oncbt~ol'Eioc­

tC

-(1'~1-~Ftrbcr-fii- -

llliol&lt;&gt;l"'*' Sc....c.. }. T..- Go(l'loyr«d. Cooper Gillen 1~­
nayl, O.ud Glabo ( 1'~1. Jooo
o..-. 1 1'~1. Ooio&lt; Gollbd&gt;
IS.S-11 Stacey Gnffi
I I'~).

Dolt R. Tyab.~..t­

JlfiJIICeSJ

.-~,c...r~~ kffn:-y

......~ - DoAor (1'~1-

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Bdbaay

Goal n..n-(11~ ~·· .....

~scmeca

ay

tc---1.

ltncillll.S.t ~-

n..

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caiSctenceota

Lo
II'~J
Da•-.IIA&lt;b&gt;
L)-ll'l)rlodior:II-Ciion)IL)
II'"
cloolov 1. LorY.... Wad..ood (H._., 1

pojt&gt;n;. -

•-

Gnffuhs. Edward H1n. Gla-dy~
llerunde&gt;. l eff"'Y lla)'ft&lt;'. Moc:bdlt
Hcrbowy. Kathleen Hoa:u. Phd

...-y

I
.........,.__, (1',,.,.,
....,._,.,,
_ __

s-.

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Wd!b. Str"ea M. 'WetS\. WC111fy
WbHUlJ. D•ant: Wiesula.. G••~r
Wlleul.. Tift lao Wilfeani. AAoldaN.
Wilbs. 01or1es B w ~ 0auoe t...tio
w.aact.. Palnaa W'&amp;Wllt'W'Ib. Robert
Zac:ber, M.tc~ 11c ZearoK. Laua
Zoqltt

Hollcnkd. Hen Hong, M on•c•
Hornmall. Paul Howanl. Wendy Loe
Huryn. Deudr&lt; HUSJey. Jooepb Joluo

t ~-...-.t

~ SdnKr• J,IUiilkeo Cole 15

fer ft'TJUSOA. Urson Fum. StwJa
Fo!._tm. Alcuode1" Ford. E11u.hnb
Franco , Dnod Fredlura-loll fr)'U&gt;Wolci.
K.arn Ganey. U:nda Jeane Gec1rcoa..
TOCII Gee. Jeruufa-- Gen;oo. l:&gt;oNlid
Goll,.., Davod Glahe. J..,.. Gnftdr.
Wendy Qn, hn. Jeomfer Gny. Sucey

folio"'"'--....._
for-"' ~·-­

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l..bn

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llncbOn), Patricia Glenna Tra:ut•.-em

In I

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ltlldewbi a..p..
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o( Pbo

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Allie&gt; IS.S //1'~1•1. Adnua

(Dtibnction), ~Cam&gt; M . Neulek (1&gt;1&gt;-

~·&amp;~&lt;101."-'&lt;&lt;&lt;Ka•..... f&amp;

Mard&gt;al IS,..O.I s-.,1. AMr&lt;•

Beu~l-AIIelo !Hoa&gt;nl

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Jwuo I£A,Iu41AN::fuRrlW"~' t.l.wtc.

1lult1. 1\h..,.. Do. t~fll Sco
nuc.JI. lbcha:r4
1/ftnc~rt
,~ SAnw-f't sa.ru.
1'
,,..~ •. -l.ntt Il l -

PH1 BET A I:APPA
Tbt f

tOt.tmct.oa~ Roncfi MMwGmdrou(Du·
Unctl&lt;lrl), Collom Mori&lt; Kecnaa (1&gt;1&gt;llnCliOft), Bnd&amp;el Fa ye Leun1
(Di"'ncbOft~ Mdisa Robia L&lt;vcmoo

S(·,I'IICOI.

ra.....r-.., o.-..

Dao1Ht Julio,..

iooloe
_ , . (I'Diiliaoi-J. llarloo&lt; Hilbat (l'sydtmnay). McUa R.......,.
IS.ll~ .looepbi-(S.SJ.A4o1Stwl­
.._.J,Jodkool-(III"""S""'Y~O..id

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(lllotu-:ic&gt;~

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T-11'~~-..-~

fl'ndwioc:rl- ~ ... -

I I'~). Gooort&lt;
l.c.-IC'SI. TN::~~ T \lo (Hr~J.
Vtetona Wablao (l'swliool~·l. Jeff

....... l~l l...pto
Wa-.nyo1al. tPf)cAolt16'f}. Nteolc
W&lt;Bit (I'~~ 0..... .........

1£oorL.MLo.- W'_.ls.SJ-L y.,._

a...,

w....,

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~(l'ndoo/or:rl

NIC&lt;Jie

�.

Provost Responds to Triggle Report on Arts and Sciences

TouchaUfe.
y Iny of Caring volunteers
on August 31 and touch the life of IICliDeCXlt: less fortunate
than you are. 11 you !haven't already mailed In your regi:sb:a!ion form.
oornpiae and send in dlis form by jDor 1.
join hundreds of UB SEFA/Unlted

~------------------------------------~-----------------------------~

Add!as _ _ ___;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

~Phone,......

Avatlab/e to all state,
RF, UBF and FSA
employees.
Special atrttme rates
as low as S11 per month
and 20¢ per minute.

___________________

...
,......,... ...... _...,.,c.IIC' o v.. 0 No
........... , _ . , . _ _ _ _ _ _ .._ D Yes

With instant access
0 No

!0

.. __ _

1/JtS,,._Iadit:IIIP~------------

,_
0

"""'*

emergency

phone numbers,
you're safer with
a oellular phone.

will a pbrsial or meral d!sabi1ly 0 Senior Ciliztn5
0 Mulls 0 llrtfOtr wbo oe&lt;ds my bdp

__
---· -..----..-.·----·

·-...--..0 &lt;llil&lt;:ftn/YOIIib

_. ____..__

0 Fhy!icaJ llbcr{......... 111.1!1 br in pd pbysial beah) 0 Indoor wail
0 o..doorwat 0 'l'b:alr¥er is taded

.,.,.....,.
..... --~· .. ~' or.. ,o
.-.
...............

~ :~

.

ONE

No

._ , _ . , . _ , _ . , . _ _ _ _ _ OYes 0 No

... ____..________ _
---.....-------·
... _...............-___--_ ...

.. . _

....,...

OYes 0 No

.

....

... .......

861-9680
Paula Omicioli
• ()Cfa- CO IIi gtll It 4Xlfl reN aclNetion -.Mih ·24-m::rdh COl till I IEICII.

�Goodman's Role Central in Coordinating Undergraduate Education
~:.-::-:-

-rile bope IS 1bal

. _ CM

•

ll&gt;illllbe

1'1 NlCOLASGoodman'a view, UB can
lab: pride in moc:t. of_iu uocle:rJr-dwue
nducalioG: "'~'bert are wooderfu1 probote, lhe "'-le$t J1lllle offered
• aay pubiJc: univerdty In ew Yod:."
Bot Goodman, whose appomtmeat 10 a
dlree-)'C8MIIml u V1ce Pro"'* for UoderIIIDOJIDCed Tuespw:luale EducatiotJ
day, .....,. wi lhe Tri&amp;IJe Commtllee's
receol n::pon rerommcndiQC tbllundotpldulle ndualtioo noceive UI'JCZII ins:tillltiooaJ
emplwiJ • !his - "We have a number at_,. chal have
10 be IIISdreand l'8lber q
y." Goodman
Slid in aa inllniew on MOI!dly. He cited
ISSUeS aboul ~ CCJICrll nd...,.
lion. a clisappoiolin&amp; \lllderpd
meotioa
rate. studeots havin&amp; trouble &amp;ettin&amp; into lbe
majors. and ouffi for ~
•oisemeru. "My responsibility ; 10 uy to ooordilllle activities thai will soh-e somt at
dlese problems."
Goodman. • professor of lllll.bemancs and
f""""" chair of tbe FICIIlty Senile, has been
seniog u Vice Pro\'ost in an interim capac·
ny since September 1993.
iclt has done an ucraonhoaty job as
interim Vice Provost." ProvO&amp;! A.aroo Bloch
said about lbe appointmeoL "H~ has tacklnd
problems ltw ba"" needed ltlentiOD for many
YeaB. widt great energy.
"Under ordinary CU'CWIISiallceS the appointmeot pnx:eU mizbt have been more
lengthy. but lhe problem I'm aslciog him 10
addJus ore ton urgenL iclt 1s 100 good, and
the momentum he
&amp;"""""""' " 100 grut.
for us to wan~-

Goodman is well swtnd on a set of oom·
p&lt;dteniO•e changes for uodergradulle education II UB. Wortiog ..;th tbenewiyformed
Council of AlU and Scieoca Deans (KCIT)I
S. Grant. AlU and Letters; Josq&gt;h TufaneUo.
atural Scieoca and Malbematic•; and Ross
D. MacKinnon, S&lt;lcial Sci....,..), be and the
odlers art cutre~~dy discussing advisement.
the general education ctUTiatlwn. and undergraduate access 10 ooun;es and programs.
The oouncil has . - four times and ..;u meet
weekly througb lbe IUiliiiOf 10 resolve a large
number of i.ssueo conoeming the ooordina·
tion or \lllderpduate nducalioo among lbe
llu-ee aru and llCier&gt;oco faculties.
The OOWicil is clevdoping a SUUCtUre for
lbe admini tnltioo of Jlllderaradua1e general
ecllation, preserving lbe curriculum deveJ.
oped by the u~ Colle&amp;•·
)
"All four of us me committed to see 1tw
program WOJic more UDOOibly and 10 make it
aVII.lable 10 u many stndenu u possible,"

f

-Goodman we!

"limo"• 1bett has been
&amp;nllt'l) ctw
lbe wodt of !he U~uate Cottqe wtll
be lost. bulllu is defiruldy not !he cue
e
will be buildin&amp; on ctw work.·
Goodman cite lhe oev.• requ~tement th11
fiHhmen eotcrina 111e un"en~ry beamning

He call UB ' ~ educauon cumcu·
lum m 1aC11Ce ..,..,.,.. lhan
tD lhe
Dillon and paru&lt;:Ularly inocwati"" 10 lhe upper-diviSion rcquiremm . - e are oommll·
led 10 IDDIIDllDI !bose upper-dJV151011 aeneral
telJC!'couneswidllhe 1-offiCUity
from 501110 at lhe profewooal ACbool .•
Whik be "'Y lbe genenl ecllation cur-

('AJljourojus (on thuoun-) ;!_.., ~-~~~ !~
an!Jci.pale 1110]01' dtanges «TIIIn lbe
cil) art committed to set that doesn't
near future .
- ·- 1_
fhl..
The problem of """"'' to
and
prcgram
more smoo ~ progmns was eucerbated by lhe enroll·
and to tnake it available to as meot. last year, at"" unusually large f:reob·
man cia
e made DI&amp;JOI' ~ffon
~l.fe.
that W lf'll&lt;'OP&lt;We courses w= IVIJJab~
many students as yv»w
for all srudeors last yur," be wd the
COI1I'!;O

W\777{

1

10 -

JJ

-

-

OOWicil ...ube tllkiog aboul bow fund lhe
courses 10 ea:ommodlte llu class
during 1 sophomore year -

necessat)

lhi fall demonstrate an tntermndi~~e profi·
ciency in a second laogwtge before !bey gradu·
ale with bachelor'$ deaJ'ee$ to lbe .vts and
scimces, u carrying on lbe opirit of requir-e·
menu ID lhe 11US of World Civilization and
American Pluralism ltw broaden otudenrs'
awarenc:ss of the world and irs Vlliery of
peoples.
"We have found lbe resot~JCCS 10 support
1tw requirement. with newfoculty and tel&lt;:b·
ing assistants in 1be [)epu1mcnt of Modern
l..aogua&amp;es and Uteratures and with additional belp from lbe Departmmt of Clsssics
and the World Lallguage Institu te , "

Goodman said.

Statementfrom the Deans of Arts and Scimces
Tile..._ fit Alta .... ~ (AIU and l..etler$, NIIID'II Scieoca and
Mlthematies. Social Sciellces) have already begun 10 worl&lt; closely ..;th eacb ocher
and lbe Vice Provost for U~uate Education 10 eohance the quality of
\lllderpduatenducatioo It !be University 11 Buffalo. To this end, lbe four of us are
meeting rqularly 10 c:oordinlle our activities and initiatives in undergraduate
ecllatioo (general education cuniculwn, IICCeS5 10 and quality of inslruction
provided 10 majon in the aru and sciences, recruitment, advisement and retention
of otudenrs). We will bring to bear lite full weigbt at our budgewy authority in
tackling tbese Iona-SWiding problems. Ueping in mind lbe ocher important misoioos ofourfaculties-gradualenducation. .-.reb and scllolanbip. and public and
University service.
The Deans ue commilled to wort widtin lbe &lt;XIIllelt of lbe existing general
nducalioo curriculum. address problems of implementalioa. and cleYdop fiCIIlty
SIJUCilU'CI tbll allow for lite modification, improvement. and enension of lbe
cumculumto a larget audeot popull1ioo. We plan 10 continue \0 use lbe existing
struc:aJreS of curriculum oommitt&lt;a in Scieace. American Pluralism and World
avili.wioo. Others may be a'CI1ed u deemed ...,.,.,...., .
We will m.ake ._,- effort to ensure that stndenu In lbe aru and ocieoces are
property advised; ue able to enroll in lite courses !bey need 10 fulfiU University·
wide, aru and sciences. and depanmeolal rcquirr:meDts; ..., able 10 gradua~e in •
timely fubion.
We encourage all fiCIIlty, espccially dtose who have alJeady devoted consid..-able eoetgies to improve~ ndocllion.to worl&lt; widt us widtin this llu-ee·
faculty cooperalive stnleltUe.

..

O

&gt;a-all,GoodmanbeltevestlwlbeCouo·
cil of AlU and Sciences Dean 1S Dllk.

ing gond PI"'P"·
A second piece of Goodman' coordtn&amp;l·
ing efforts involves briQI!Dg toceJherrepre·
seotative of all the vice pre idenu•l
areas-Student Affairs, Uruvenity Savtoes,
Advancement and Developmeot. and Public
Sen'ice and Urban Aff~ debver savices to Ullderp'adlllleS. Goodman chain 1
newly constituted Student Services Coorclinatiog Commiaee, composed of repesenta·
aves of !bose four •ice prestdenrs and lhe

provost •• offtee.

Facultt adnsement 1 at g-srandtttt tn·
for Goodman: "I ' '~ been punwng lite
subJOCI or ad\lsezncnt for I Jon&amp; bme. The
idea ofha" f
lty 10 Soel'\e audvuon has
passed the FIICUit)' Senate and been endoned
by f'r=dent 0n:mer OW. ID lite Council or
Am and Set....,.. Deans• ..., •re
aboul

teres~

10 implemm1 II .On anocher 1 we. Goodman reportS 1tw
the Uru•~ty Honors program "
eq&gt;and.
havtn added 1 staff member Its admJDJ •
trauon and sectmJd from the l'nMiot addJ.
uooal fundt for lite scb&lt;ltllrtibsp&lt; t1 offers.
• Aldtoogb resean:b and gnduale educa·
oon art centra110 UB 's 1111 • ..., ore lite
WJc:st~tDStitutioall!llteSUNY

syQem," Goodman Slid abollt lbe emerpnse
be oow ooordmllcs.
"Our exa-dinary variety of speaali.ted
program both in 1be .vts and liCJeoCe$ and in
lite proli 'onaJ Aebools, pronde
oeopportunitJes for our ~'"Studeou """"' to us ,.,111 hl&amp;b hopes for
tbeirfutwu. Ourjob isiOmakeliDIIeqntdu1te education .....t: for dtem "
0

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                    <text>BniYo,
()pend
Gary &amp;r-gess sees
opera gaining favor

.....

with younger
audiences.

,.

2

Aw_.

Honors presented
byUBAiurmi
Association,
Law Alumni , .

1o
Ma) 5 1994

Volume 25 No 27

Marine Fund to
Establish Illtemational
., __ ~adership Center
-au.... Dwee1o&lt;

HE CREATION OF mE Center for International Leadership in the UB
Management has been announced b the universJty.
ThecenterwascreatcdwiththehelpofaSI nullionendowmentfunde tabli hed
by Marine Midland Bank that will fund educational and outreach activiue in the
areas of international bu ines and corporate leadership.
The creation of the new center was announced yesterday at a pres conference in Capen
Hall on the UB North Campu .
A ~k represenuog chebank'
pled~ wa presented by James H.
Cla\t, Marint Midland ~dent

and CEO, and onhrop R.
•·
clainnan of MariDe•s board of directono, 10 UB !'resident William
R. ~mer and Frederick W. inter. che new dean of che U8 School
of ManagcmcnL 'The bank will
honor che S I nul!Joo pledge with
10 annual payments of $100.000.
"We are deeply gratdul-and
proud---lo be che recipient of this
gift." Greiner said.

"It rq&gt;reSCDU I signif1C&amp;I11 in·
vestmeot in the future of tnanagement educatioo at UB at a time
when our commitment to cultural
diversity and our oneotioo to che
global ecooomy have become inc:reuingly important."
Greiner acknowledged the long
rdationshir berwem U8 and Marine Midluod.
'Thi partneJSbip berwem the
bank and our school of tnanage·
mcnt is just ooe addition.al facet of
1 long and muwally-bendicial relatioru;bip between Marine and
U8 ," be noted. "We share commoo goals and aspirations for Wegem New Yark, and look forward to
many years of continued colbab&lt;&gt;ratioo on this and Olber projects to
serve our community."
Cleave said thiJ through the
endowtDeot, "Marint Midland i
making acommitment to the future
excellence of tnanagemenl educatioo at che Univemty at B uffalo

School of Management
"B&lt;ause Mmnt 1 pan of lbc:
HSBC Group. a ,.·oridwl&lt;lc finan cial orpniz.auon. the tudent at
the Center for lntemaoonal Lead ·
erslup -..;n ha' e aa:e&lt; to lndJ ,.IduaJ and Idea&lt; \I tal to promoong
busi.nes.s in tnlemluonal Jll3l'ket .'"
Clea' &lt; added.
Winter &lt;1pi11Ded that the Center for intematJooal l..eadership will
be dedicated 10 fostering che ad·
vaooemern of tnanagtmcDI in che
global business environment-an

'We (Jlf! deeply
gratefid-and
proud-to be dre
rrripienJ ofthis gift "

--

impOrunce to
Marint Midland and its paten~ The
HSBC Gmup. beadquanered in

issue of recognized

London.

"Marine Midland's gift is especially usdul in that it allow che
center to use the funds in creative
ways as its mi&lt;Sion changes and
evoiVC$." be said. "A&lt;. the funds
build, we f&lt;RS&lt;~t conferences that
are sponsored, student support of
various l&lt;inds, and perhaps teaching caseo thiJ are developed and
disseminated."

Wuuer adde-d

·111n ,, 1 'tgru.fi-

cant £1ft to the Scbool of M~
mtnL St~rufiCIJII both 10 the SIU of
the
and what II .. all "'to
do. but al&lt;o gnificaot 1n terti\.\ of
the '01&lt; of roofldeOO&lt; by &lt;uc'h a

'1ft

-tu

re~pected tn.Mltutton A.!i the center
mm e ahead_,.'t e•pcct that con~ and rel11100slup&lt; that Mannt
M1dland will help u 10
e WID

be 1n•aluabletoche §Cbooiofmanagement
He said thiJ the center will be
headed by James Meuldl. professor of orglllliZIItion and hWlW'I reI&gt;OilfttS. Man~~~: Midland will have
octJve mpot IJI che de.-elopment of
the oenter' . propams
"JUD is. m my mind. the completeprofCSSOI"." Wmtersa.id. "He'
acu ve in research. IICOO&lt;Ilpbshc:d
io che classroom. and respected by
all in the Scbool of Management.
He i a recognized leader "' che

leaderslup field."
To belp creatt the Center for
lnu:maoonal L..eadership, Manne
Midland established an endo-..-ed
fund within the Uruvenity at Buffalo Foundation, Inc.
W1th $17.5 biUion "' assets.
Manne Midland is 1 ew Yort
State reponal bai:Wng instirutioo
and I wboiJy-ov&gt;'Ded and incbredJybeld ubsidWy ofHSBC Holcbnp
pic. The HSBC Group, with 0\&gt;tt
3,000 offices in 65 countrieo and
assets in e1cess of $300 billion. .is
11000&amp; the world's largest banking

organiutions.

0

�2

~

antidote
to TV

elpencnctn&amp;
~ """

difficult) fi

hn'&lt;~financulprd&gt;­

lems. Gary BUfll"U A) dt.otopen
'ntbeUmtedS!llleOi dln'UII: 1be
open C&lt;&gt;CIIpOI7)' be foonck:d .. ti•IJI&amp; proof of hiJ poml.
U)' opt:nl I clc.od
1D dus COIIIII1V. bullher&lt; ""' more
opera compuues '" tbr Uruted
1oc1a m... lher&lt;
so
yan _,...• AY 8utzcu,
mprofesJorof'Oic&lt;llldopenat
UB. """ lbe fowoder """ lf'IUOC
diiCCIOr of lbe Greater Buffalo
Open COII1J'&amp;IIY · '1"oda)' e•err
(major) aty in tbr United s~

"Some""""'*

-=

s.-.

• opt:nl composay.
1 ol
d.u&lt;clorof
UB 't Open Worbbop llld of lbe
Vocal AJU l'nstitutr at UB.
born on Bnmuda. H1 mother
ployed piano. llld so tbett,. al way a pano on lbe bouse. But
ollhough BUfFS' .wdJed piano llld
\'()t(X in high school . ..tule grow'" up be
l.boulbt be
ld
mot&lt; D1II50C lu c:an:a. "'faa. wbcn
be•enttoCentnl Ul'ltColl"l:•in
Wilberforoe. Ohio. be enrolkd a o
Jn·med .ruck
~1 ung solo. •mh
..:hool
ctooru. from
moment I went
rolle£0'. and I qu
y found M) ·
oclf m lbe mu.oc buildong more
than m M) science I .- Burge
.. ys
I
m my second

has """· tf rue."B

B~. "'

"'*'

""'er

w

,,.,Idled

year 1(1 M&amp;JilnOg ID \ '01« "
After c:ollege. Silfies&gt; mo&gt;&lt;&lt;l
..... y arlo: Cil)'. """""' be studled vooce lll the luilhard School of
Music wub Sergiu.
He soon
received a fellowslup to study at
lbe Saint Ceciba Academy of Mu"" in Rome. Buo e'en !ben lu
future as a ·nger remained uocer-

c:bard ........

flnladelpiu .nd
-..utcc1 W1 lbe Curti 1ft
M
, ponlybe&lt;aaebe
tecr RIICiytJI&amp; Wtth Kon:brw

~-

._.,.baled oa

at

poelll by

to

0.:.

w-.we• •

B
AtAnf*t
tbe GBO piMa • do

"M) c:uur • •ncer a:tlincd"'
f'luladdplua.- B~ uy "1
mode m) ckbut ..... in o p&lt;rfllf·
Wllb tbe s~ Fraoa
Op~.-.-1 ,. a 1 IDttllber o( theor
for U'll yean.B
• Ewopela doebul ~amr
1D 1973, W1
tbe Gterk aliOniJ
Open m A
Over tbr .,.,......
o( bu ~.......-be bu SUn&amp; Ill
at
tbe IDIIjOI' open boiJ5e&amp;ID Eurtope.
be ..y

- -act

•
lbe

-

opt:n~t 1

.........- -

.....,....,. at
Voc:al AJU 1D l'tli1addplua.
at
wbJdo Barceu

Mtwll'l ' l

""""*'

opcft.

t

~uaru&gt; .

a........,.

cbrull 1

.,..rr.-t• Ani*\·

•
-&lt;JIMdl oa July l,l.J Ma&lt;14twlhllttrfl
be p&lt;rfOI'IDIOCI
•lbe Anptort tiJoe-.' "" lllit
.9.10

"The budget for music here at UB had
been CUI, and so one of the reasons I
fowuied the GBO was tho! I had to have a
place for my students to sing. But when I
decided to tart the compan}~ Buffalo was
also the only city of its size in the whole
cowrtry that did not have its own opera
compan . We are rww a nationally
recognized regional company. "

to

oain.
"Wben I came back to tbe U.S _
after being m Italy. I didn' t do
much singing for a,.-bile, .. Burgess
says. "I taught choral mU&gt;IC at
iagano Wbealfield Hil!h School
foraenople of years. But I beg1111 to
feel &lt;tagDIIDt. and so I went back to
school:'
'B urgess went to l.ndtana Uni versity for his graduale education.
where be studied WJth Muguet
Hanohaw. who had been a famous
inger at tbe Metropolitan Open
for yean. and who taught many
other impor'IIIDI •ingel'$. Wbeft
B~ finished bls graduate de·

He came to UB as a member of
tbr ' 'otec faculty on 1976 On ho
first sabbatical on 1984. Bllfl
uughl as a '1soUn« scholar 01 tbe
Poulenc CoruerYo1otre in Toan.

Fran&lt;&gt;O. He also uughom Betjtng.
Quna UI\Utttng scholar"' 191!&amp;.
tbr oecond UB IDtlSIC loculi)' member 10 be m\'Oived m • ltlclnng
Uchan£1' '"1th China.
U&lt;JeSS fOUJidcd tbe Greater
Buffalo 0peno Company tn
and has been i arti!ilic cb rector ~•er Since. '1"be budget for
muSt&lt; bere 01 UB had been cut."
Burgess ..ys. "and w one of tbr
reasons I founded tbe GBO was
lhu I had to bne a place fur my
&lt;tuden to sing. Bot wbcn I ckctded to start tbe company. Buffalo
WIS al&amp;o tbe only city of ' size in

81986.

Albanese. Maureen Fon-esler llld
Maria

Pelli~ruu.

IIDd ratO'Oit&gt;ed

"&amp;£&lt; d.trec:blo Jonet Bookspan.
At UB. BUfFS' InChes 1111 opera ,.orkshop fllf both ~
and underuacbates, and w-ort:•
v.1th lhcm on 5uch or..u as """"
craft. interptetlttion. bod}' IDO\'C•
ment, Rngmg. and otberoox:e&gt;sary
pans of 1 career"' opera. He meet&gt;
"'1th uudents indmduall} for 1111
hour each week. tudenu m
graded on bow well tbey do tn lbe
open ..tueb tbey perform 01 tbe
eod at ead!liCDle$ICI', BUfFS' lOY
"Many at our graduate smccn
goon to ing in~
ona1 opera
companies." Burges A _ ~
or eogbt of our graduate smg professionally m EurqJe."
The Greater Buffalo Opera
Company .-..-dy performed R.i-

.,..,..... •• ~~,..,....,..~brt..~d~..C~s--~ot.._.Y&lt;IIt•llUtiiiO~~-~~~~lJBOollitHIII ........ (7 . . ~
Olfl:1::fOftOif'Ua.ICAl'ONS _ , ...

._..EDr«!" ----- ~TtfDITOil ..- -. NnOIIIECTCJIIl -...,..., ~ Nll't

tJIII'IR:1(M ......... _

~~ - - - - - -

�_ , __ ..,_n

FSEC hears presentation on '94-'95librnry budget·
--·~

Aepcnlr Sial!
M

llicbord Lee tdded
1TU11
17,
eos~ ot li
"""""""' u beiDa l&amp;eu far p1IIIICd. - '
lblll's
· -.Focul!ymaybo""
10 take aome
· in 6DdJ fv
for
!he Li
.~
ProYOSt AlltiG Bloch said"* money r...
h'brary reoou:rces · - . - . bwlt imo
IJ'Ill . 'But Lee said it
imp&gt;nam for
focuby lo fmd - . ........ thel' Je' a ,..,., if
theY c:.n get .-e money for library ,.,.
soun:es throu&amp;b tboll puL
and COCIIJaCU 10

'Jl{(NJ{ IT'S IMPORTANT !hat you
I
« bow lhr tilnly buc1ge1 put

," Riclwd l«. dllir o( lbe
FlltW!y Seoa
' liCe-On Jnfor·
and Library lleloun:ei.IOid lbe
FSOC lui ....U in ' &lt;lftSCIIUtioa of the
University Utnries 1994-95 BI&gt;Ciget Summary. "Some people ~ upset that lbe1r
oreu _,., ~."
Lee said
wbile hi ~ lookrd
11 isoues o( 6JIIIC" and maintenance in UB ' •
librari6, library budfiCl I
seemed c:eno:al lo underswldill&amp; the · tllalion of the

-no.

Utnries.
Slcphen Roberts, assoaau: din:clor for
Univenit Utnries. said !hat the btJdrtt
summary presented 1o the FSEC
"'n
outline of what we lhi on: ow major approaches. c:hal~ IJ1d direcdoru for the
ne.~t scoveral years. W e'rt moviJl&amp; illausin&amp;f towaros "" outomaled enviroament
wbile trying to maintain ow print-baJed ,.._
$001'0C$, and !hat' causin1 problems wilh
our budget." h&lt; said. A !he ClOSt of •nfonnatioo and the number of resouroes produced
oonliintes 10 go up, UB • libraries ..,n de·
pend moreoa cooperanoa with Oilier sc:bools
in !he SUNY sy~RaD. ,Roberts uid.
Wbilr the avenge yearly subsaip1ioa OOiil
forUB' bbrwles" Sl80andlbelw:rtgcC051
of an intcriibrary loan tranSaCtion is
pb&lt;&gt;tooopying matmAI5 (mm olhrr &amp;cbools in the

ru.

SUNY system CO!U abou1 SS a ~
Roberts uid. 1be situaoon it boil down 10
simple.· Roberts Slid. "WWw do we bo,.., m !he

suw: systan lhal can meet people· s needs'
"If we can shore aoccs 10 uruque rnaten·

at . we can do it ftiiCr, better, and cheaper
than !dying on th&lt; ll'aditional interlibrvy
loan sy tern." Roberts wd.

r

u~ 're moving... t.oward an
automated environmenJ
while trying to maintain

our~(int-based resources
.dhtit's causing problerru
wirh. our budget . "

Oenn•sMaloneof~nemng
sort of dl1it1nct1on wos being made

ber""fJCD

!he Ulil! oflitnry resource. '" @enmol and the
u.c of oomputer ~s
Stephen Rcbtru ansWC&lt;Cd that !he Uru
versity Ubrarie
dropped oot of wor·
ryutg about !he number of volumes webo\e ,
and are oooceru:noling onstcad oo getll"l faculty the ~!hey need."
William George of Engineering said
"Gtven that th&lt; library bos muluple source
of financial support, th&lt; quesuon .,...., should
h&lt; asklng is wbetber the .,....,..uge of that

"bo'"'

...ppon ..'ludl i Sllte

ppon i

~

10 flllllla bbntry ymm of the type ooe
Geolp
if(btfi
""mdl ~....e aVIilallile
Ridlord Lee tdded lbol if " elsd llllpO&lt;·
WM to
II !he pilyllll&lt;:ll . . , , , . _ ot
the l.ibnnel. "Do people waul lo
lo the
Libnones and use !he lftClUJOel dill .,..
~r Lee
e
torset
abo« this in the WJe ID diJpene ;.,
· &lt;for-troa
elecuonically.V ICIOr 0oyno of Ellll.i said tbor lD the
flltWty quality of life
1he btnr..o
......,...wdluhiJjll ~
"It
probolbl
be wi.z ro od -..use tblol

- r.

DOIKJnl of bbrary l&lt;lCC

....

•wltchma..

Doynosud
Pro\
Aoron Bloch pointed out
!he Lillnl'1a need
'le e&gt;-erybody
DWe money , the WIJ !he budset fall OUI I
that
£&lt;11he 6bon end DeaM don ' t
ucgest 10 me lblll the.r 6nanaal ~
should £0 to the Libnne•. c• en ro lbe1r pet
of the- u~ We' rt doquenl m
D
about lhese 6nancial noedJ, m tsolall&lt;'&gt;n. but
need 10 under.;aand th&lt;m p tglln I each
olher Moo of lhe budgC'I cuu tn ream •tan
hod fallen oo som-1&lt;% uruu. Blodl sud athat lhe bud ct ptCillR
1mpro\ cd """'
money bos gone 10 ocaderruc uon b&lt; sud
"Weba•m'ten q:edtheproblemofbowto
get money back 10 !he sc:n&lt;itt umb." Bloell

u....._

"""W11l1om Goo&lt;ze

of EllglDCC'lng wd dw
1D resuucrunng the faculty
should
ai&gt;O eon 1der restrud.\lnn lhe hbrary )'
IS well " It
es some ""'"" t (l al1gn
librarie With paruculot dcc:aoal
i.

.Ill&lt;""''

blhues," George wd.
In Olbct busmes . the FSEC dl
·o;e()
dlotgUig 1 ...,.. Facull) Sen&amp; Comnutlee
oo Pubhc Sen-.ce_ 1be reasorung bdund

Oeai•

....

uacl
t.laJoo&lt; .... dlat 1be
tier ....,...
ooosider W&lt;lfbD&amp; '~rid! Mllrid Moore. ncr
puident for pcabl li&lt;ntClt -.1 ...,_ of·
flUS. oe
~
I 411:1 base thof WOiifd
tdl pcennat pub) sen ice
&lt;bol n petti&gt;elhe UB {IICII 1111$. and til wblr oreu
theY ...., wlllill&amp; 10 """"- Th&lt; &lt;IOIIInlitt&lt;e
ld alio COIIOOer
JmCI'II IISUC of
.'bll. cocllbi~JU&lt;• pul~ oen'i«, Malo.
AliOCbtr U1I(XlrWll qUC1ll&lt;lrl for !he c -,.. -hoof 10 &lt;IICOUI'IIIC f
10"""""'
111
~-.oe. M 1.- UICL
M urid M """' Slid thot fklllty often "'
h&lt;r for ~ 011 how
defme
sen~ and ,.hat " means m a partlOllar
di&lt;Cipbnt h IS 1mpcrum1 10 undenwld
publ1 &gt;en'ICC ' ued 10 researoh. M_..
S&amp;Jd.
b IDVOI\H recopillft hovo ...,_
search Inform public sen~ and 11001' web
!len itt leod!. to further~
The moo1 unporunt part of a d1aiQ&amp;W
aboutpubll(:&gt;er&gt;lCtwou:Jd\.elOdiSC'II to~ the mr.anl proct
for pubiJc
~ i ()(IR sud Th&lt;re I 1101 l1l4Jdl te ·
;eon;h on how publtc sen ~a affecu faculi} Moore .,.."' II 1 al difficult 10 define the
facult} m .agem pubiJc servttt. Moore
S&amp;ld. n&lt;:eth&lt;deftrutoOtluoften&lt;bfftrml for
dlfferet~t facult} .
"'n tntnsoffacult} Senale m•'DIH:ment
)OU !ohould f&gt;&lt;lp tiS promul.pte publ
&gt;en•ICC. and IO belp foculty tJu
til and
estabbsb mocld• for 11.- Moore

,.,.&gt;

Azko Salt funds study to find cause of mine collapse
Wll)

WO UB geologisu have h&lt;gun a
pil&lt;)( Study fvnded b) A.kzo Salt Inc.
that wiU look 11 fl3Cillres tn !he euth
abo•e A.kzo's salt mme in Retsof
1be tudywill bopcfullypnmdedues about
what caused !he coi!Jpse of 1 portion of !he
mine roof and insigh into an)' po. ible
further subsi&lt;let:l&lt;%.
On March 12. !he mine. located wuth·
west ofRoeh&lt;ster. aperienced a collapse of
a360.000-square-f001 area in the 6.000-oert
mine that initially was mribuled to an eonb·

quake.
Robert Jacobi. associate professor of ge·
ology, aod Joltn C . Fountain. professor of
geology. will use geological tt:ehniques to
tty to identify and trace fracwres in !he eonb
near wbere th&lt; collapse occum:d.

" ... We need all the
infonnation dUit can
possibly be gathered "

e Wtltlt to cbff=tiate the local frac·
ture nerwort that was induoed by lhe eof.
lapse from the regiOillll ncr..'Or'k of fractures
in the
said Jacobi "We ' rtloolong fO&lt;
clues. ttying to see whetber or noc !here art
some ooomalous structures above !he roof of
!he mine dw made those roc ~ susceptible to oollapse.Jaoobi said !hey will tty to detenrune
whetber !he regiooal network. WIS in some
"

area:·

part of !he cau.c for !he roof eol1apse

" If !here were a suffiC'l&lt;t11 number of mter"""'ng fractu=. 11 could ha\t made !he roof
'CT) weak. compared w el'twbert 10 the
mme.- b&lt; e&lt;ptamed
Ha.riu!Jt M1Ue.r. 1 et.-'n~uhant fot Akl:u
Salt. Inc andresearchdll'CCtorallb&lt; Um,er·
Sit) of M""'"'" at Rolla. &gt;Old that "'n order
to under&lt;tand !he m•ne rollapse. ,.. need all
the mformauon that Ctltl po•&lt;~bl) b&lt; gathered."
Jacobt and Fountatn also hope to detel'nuoe -. h&lt;lher !he fracture&lt; ot&gt;ser- cd at !he
&lt;urf81Je on: path"'JY' for !he natural gu that
M!ep&lt;ng into !he mine after !he roll apse
from !he rocks JU I b&lt;Jow the euth 'S urface
They w•ll al;.o fly a small plane O\erthearea
•o rae 1nfi'1U'ed photograph&gt; that theY ..,u
analyu for surface fearures that may iodi " IS

c:alc

fTICtllTCli.

NOTICE

Date.s announced
for lntersession
Curtailment
To~

energy. lhe

~

• llQM'I ~an~

CurlailrTe'lt. '" etfecl from lhe ciOie
ol busir-. on fnd3y Dec 23.
1994
lhe begi'lning ol ~
en T..-!ay, J8\. 3. 995

There are onlv loll~
workdays inckJdtMj in lhe
~ peripel.llnoe
Dec 26 lind Monday. J8n. 2 . .
~&lt;D"*--.ry
o.iled pin! tar . .
~
be CIIMioped
cUing . . . . . . . . . . ..

NACUBO
continued from page 1

it cOOJpared to oth&lt;r campuses.
"Some lhings bove really &lt;:banged os a
result," Miller tqlCllted. ~In Purobasing. we
were surprised 10 - the higb pc:n:enlllge of
our purcbase orders 1h11 were under $SOO. In
response. we are implemerning a speed order
process. It's 001 that we badn 't tbougbt of
usingspeedordersbefnrt. We bad. But it WIS
seeinz the data thatspumd us 10 take action."
'In analyzing th&lt; 1992 remits. UB look:od
at everyday campus functions and !heir respective costs: processing purchasing rtqui sitions t.nd invoice payments; hiring a new
employee aod produciug a student grade
report. for instance. The goal says UB Controller Leonard F. Snyder. is 10 search for
"best pnctices."
":In orderiO get there," says Snyder. " we
need 10 clearly IIDCienland our IIJllli'OICb and
!hen compare and contraSt that with oth&lt;r
institutions' 'best pnctices ....
"We (II UB) bove been talkiog and thinlt •

an ongoing way." says Robert Wa.gner. We

Of the HXl&lt;XlllqeoaoduniversitleSpartlapaling in the 1992 sun·ey. 37 were pubhc

participated last year ( 1992) aod again this
ACUBO bencbmarlring. Last year
was ow exposUrt aod learning phase IS
opposed to using !he data for analysis."
lmporwrt to no&lt;e. uys Wagner is !he
cmpbosis plllced oo business functions that
cross depanmenw tines in improving such
procedures as putting someone oa payroll
producing grto&lt;b. or pn:x:essing invoiees.
Snyder notes that in !he case of !he
NACUBO ourvey. "tbe peer group is really
defined based upon the function that you'rt
loolcing IlL In some cases. tbe peer group
might very well be olhrr AAU-schools or
major public research universities. In oth&lt;r
cases it's really in'elevant, as it may be a
function o( size. and saiclly size. In olher
cases. you may be looking 11 very specific
ftmclions that on: affected by swe policy or
the regulations of a given university system."

msean::b U1Siitutions.EighlwertSUNY sc:booli.
indudmg Slooy Brook in addition 10 UB.
' This university and bigh&lt;r educatioo in
general." says Wa.gner, "areplayingcaiCb-up
in an area that businesses bove focused on for
some time 10 improve their operations."
- As we lool:. at this university wid! its
mu:Jii..funds SIJUCIUre." says Snyder. "the way
in wl&gt;idl ""' oooduct business needs lO h&lt;
carefully refined and siropli.fied utms~Yely ."
"'This is a new way of doing business."
Wagner concludes, "tbll will be ong&lt;Jing IS
opposed to a ooe-tirne set of projects and
~-Atx:ording 10 Collaeo O ' RourU. lilaff
associate in !he Office of !he Controller.
results of the 1993 survey, recendy receh·ed
from ACUBO. "wlllbedistributediOf'unc·
lional managers on campus wilhin !he next
few....US."
c

ing about bencbmarlring since May 1992 in

year in

Applications are open for a 20hour -a week position writing for
the Reporter. beginning with the
semester. Graduate students are urged to apply. The
position may cover graduate
tuition as well as a salary. Applicants must have excellent writing skills; newspaper
experience Is preferred but not
·
required
Applicants are urged to mail
res~.rneS immediately to Ann
Whitcher. Reporter Editor a1 ·t he
Publications OffiCe. 136 Crofts.

tan

�AH DOllcmfY DOVE
been
opendi11 dli yew-ben: uncltr lbr
R e d)er Fou tioo Humanoin
, Fellow5hi ~
I
llunlllld fonal year of operation ... UB.
One of!be ~tODd- prestigiou pam
progn~~D&lt; ia the fidd. the Roc:kefrller program i one of lbr ~., humanitit:o gran
inUB ·
I t - poaliJilld 10 lbr unn"CNty fo.- "nlcJe.
fi . 1br Olllllext ill wtuc:ll Am&lt;ri1::an So.tcheo
'" c::onclllaiod.- _, has fillldod r-.. fdJow!illlpinAmencanllldAfriam.-AinorianSwdics • UB in eacto of l1ne rcsidmcy ~
As loflOd...- ,IUChor.IICOidemiCWI and found·
i memberoftw&lt;&gt;Aftican.....,.,lm&gt;dtdtool
bad COIISI&lt;Imble inab Dorod1y Dow
nuoace on the edualoon of A.fric8n children
intheU . ODd inhernlliveUrutedKoll(dom.
Oovr, wbo rcceoved ber doctoral&lt;
Am&lt;rican Stud&gt;es from UB. 'P'ft' her
childhood in Africa ODd nmmoed to lhe LM·
doct ora •-ben doe '
lx.
Havin&amp; g.- ~ Englllld' publ '
scbool
bmdf, Dove sayubelmew thai
her own dtildn!ll mq;bt
the &gt;arne ractlll
obQaclcs thai she expc:rienacd. Fol
'Ill( tbe
1970s pormt/leacbcr IDO\-mtenl in England.
"' bepn her own dforu II &gt;-"
b)
~g ODd runnil1( nwnerous bUd parentll&lt;:acber a ~ groups on London.
'The aimoflhegroul" was to "'nl'"' awtorencssofnocism ondsboll how to deal ,.ith n.says Dove. Teachers., in particular. were
aslced to focuS'ba wbat lhey were ldliqg lhe
cbildn:n. "Tc:a&lt;:l&gt;ln muSI look insode tbemseh-es ODd examine what it mean to be 1
t.elcber." she say . Often lhey do 1101 look II
thematerimmticaJ.Iy. Doveuys. Andwben
"udents feel lhey tore being forced mto a

r.,.,

Pigeon control
issues in review
. . . . . , . . t o - from"".
ck:ms ODd mtr. Univerttry Facilitie&gt;

$tllf ODd tbe En•iroomeotal T

Fonle""'oowrcviewin&amp;tbe
of
piceoo contrOl ond tbe we of
Aviat!l. a pesticidtt: applied U&gt; whole
com for !be concrol of fen! pi
A¥io:ol basll't been mcd a tbe
uaiv&lt;nity liDce June 1993, UB offi.
dais lqiOIL •.Aity IDDltlilily of .
litlce .... lbat a... beal.-ed Clll be
penally aurlbute4 to aatural

,........._.,......,_1101

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. . .... .............. ioolo . .bollld,.
.... llllolp *lultldlill&amp;
. . . . «bblettiA\Ii
iabqe
_ , . . . . . - llelld out fioct...... .
lipllslbal .
J8le . . ..m. .fkd llld
the
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..

'*"'"

. . . . . . . . . . . . . &lt;&gt;OIII •

.ued..nth

_._~......._

ystcm which excludes them. tbey restS~
" My efforu were 1 polit:ocal
vny. reall) .
These school arc pan of •
hi&gt;t.ory of
resosunce :· •be .ay
l&gt;uru1!l her ldlool reform 1Cb&gt;1ues from
1983to 1989. she was also apoon-&lt;imeloflOd...of blaclt lust.ory. soaal .IIU&lt;bel.. malh,llld English ot th&lt; Kuumba Summer School for Asian
ODd Afncao c:luldren. ODd also II the Winnae
Mandela Supplementary School m ~
wlucb she helped co-(ound tn 198S' l o children who .._ abulicd by the oy&gt;&lt;em."
Dove uy sh&lt; founded tbe Mandela
Scbool tn an eff01110 resist tbe &lt;hscnnnnatory pn&lt;:UCe\ she ODd ()(})en bad expen-

ellll&lt;:d tn th&lt; publtc school rum
" We bad to bave - own

od&gt;och:·

school ) P""" 1 value on
human wtril based 011 ractlll c:barac:tm.sttc
Teacbon .... trauted 10 put
Jdren tniO I
soaal haontrdty _.. Sbe .aid thai they al.o;o mrs-

say

"'(The lotltt

~bythellllOWit of tnfonnaoon

tbll ' tmrmbcr'ed. not a'l

ly "'aJtWild

.• n Do&gt;r' " teo. , tlu bnd of ttacbin pro. D&gt;OteS"non-dtinkin .• Thr Afncam "' tbe
U.K. ha&gt;'C alu&lt;&amp;or)' ofrntsumoe.
..y.. box
lhey arc tougbl 10 memonz.e tbtnt not 10
~ tbem. v.'luch all
rrund coocrol
Do'e satd tlur.t tn onScr 10 herter fight

may pro&gt;-e
Dow
p•-en
racum and educ:llJoo ind
._,
Bear.n of CUlture ODd
of Sacul
Otan~- pnn fortbe 15th Utban ~
plly Re&gt;eticb l'anlm conr.,.,.,.,. 11 tbe Um
•Cf'SII)' of Peon
• t.llll•n February
CWTelltl) D&lt;roe ts wOitin&amp; on 1 !""'
~
cnutled "Afrik.an Molber
Beartt&lt; of CUlture ond
of SocW
Otan e." wblcb wtll feature·~ ••th
23 modttn tn lbr U
ond th&lt; U
children tore mrnlled "' "culwr:ally atftsm
Ill&amp;" rdlools
will 'tr) to reveal tbe per
woal tran formmon eacb .,._
bee
of tbe
shot ..y ond ... u
ernplw;tze tbe .-hen' roka .. ""ollll.t
..... or tbett pan in the rc:. oluoon

Speaker accents diversity, interactive
learning in lecture on effective teaching
•r-WAUACE
Repone&lt;Stal1

INVITED PEOPLE -..ith progn.mrrun~
tn\'oh ement becau I want to cbal
lenge Y"" to de\·elop p&lt;ogrdlll• to !\" e
these •tudents a beaer leamong expertJonathan Collett told UB educators
who bad gathered tn Capen Hall April27 for
hi presentation • Learning From Student.&gt;
about Teactowg on tbe Multicullllnll Cllli
room: A Home-Grown Video Pro]0&lt;1 Wlth
African Amencan Studonts...
"If you go home from tlu only with 1
personal n:spon"" to wl\11 I've done. that ' •
not enougb." said Collea., who is profe"""
of c.omparanve hteraturc and f*"'lry coordi nator of tbe Teaching for Learning Center at
tbeSwe UnivenityofNewY~Collegeat
Old Westbury •
CoUett'• presentabOn was not runply a
ICC'IW't on diveniry i&gt;sues and tbe importance of interactive learning techniques tn
tbe classroom. lt was also a demoostration of
interacti,·e learning. Ratber than lecture.•
Collen enrouraged audience members to
respond to a ,;doo he prodooed of a conversatiOn with African American studen at
Old We&amp;tbury called ··1 Had A Linle Run -In
With My Professor..." 'The lively nature of
audience response to Collett's presentation
illustrated the value of tnteracth-e methods.
~How do -we best •uppon teaching and
teacbingeffecti,eness?" asked Collett. "E erything f'm going to uy about African
American sruden" today is true of all stUdents." But Collen abo a.slted tbe audoence
to consider teaching i&gt;sues "in working with
student&gt; who I believe very strongly tore not.
getting a fair shake in tbe classroom."
l.n tbe \!ideo, a group of African Am&lt;riean
students discussed their own ~ of
higher education. 'The students discussed
classroom structures, rylbbi and paper&lt;. as

once:·

well as tbe need tbey felt for Afrocerunc
cou:rse. ond the inclusion of Afncan Amen can content tn rcquored counes. Btased a .
signments. lack of college I'"'J&gt;VOtion for
&amp;tudents from inner-city schools. and grading expecwioos were also discussed. Thr
Sllldents clearly favored chances for dtscu •
sion ond intencnon with profesS&lt;lf'S and peen,
rather than lectures. .. lliken ..'ben tbecbain
tore in cudes, or you can move lhe desks
around,.. one student said.
'The snuggle of getting to college, the
pride ODd pressure associated with being
there, bias agains1 Afncan American males

-in the classroom ODd problems wi (IC\llty
"appeasing" majority otudenu were al disrossed in tbe \!ideo.
As pan of bii ~ Colleu provided tbe audienc:e with a l.isl called "Tbe Ten
O:tnunandmenu for Teacbin&amp; in Culturally
Dtverse &lt;lasvootm," Wbich included sud!
things as mating stllllenU respo.,.ible for
leaming by gdlina •rudencucti\'dy involved
in sharing 5&lt;lllle olllborily fo.- wiW blppem in
th&lt; dassroom. Collett pointed out ..... thot
~ is a lot of -eudlml writtal tDIII&lt;rial
availabk on how 10 bandle di..,..;iry and
intlnclive learning in tbe classroom0

�Cho, Drinnan named Distinguished Professors

L .U:::.:,"~

AH-KY\ G mo. profe$S&lt;!J"
of philosophy .I I UB. and Alan
J. Drinnan. profeuor and dWr
oftheDcporunentofOrai Medlin thel JB SdlOOI ofOental
Mtdidne. hal&gt;'eb&gt;m named a Di&lt;tinguished
!'roll ""'"· thellighest in the State Uru~~n;ity
of New V odt •)'$11'111. by the SUNY Board of
Tl'llSU:C:S.
Qbo has been named a DI.Ungui.Sbed
Teaching Pro essor, 1 deslgt&gt;l!ioa awarded
topcrsonswhoboveclt'monstrttedoouund-

ing INdnJ!g c:ompe&lt;ence 111 the gradua1e.
UJldersraduale or profeoSJonalleveL
Drinnon
elevated to the rank ofDistinguisbed S&lt;:rvice Prof....,.-, I rank ...,..ded
for oumondin~
' &amp;
itt 10 the community,
"""' or nation
h the applocarion of
intdkaual kills
wn froo:l sctdarly and
rcsardl in
issues of public OOilClem
Kab·K:7u Cboha• been affilial&lt;:d with
UB for mon: than 2S years . A vtsinl\g
Fulbright ·Professor 11 the uni•ersiry from
1967-&lt;&gt;8. he wauppomted Hisitin as'-OCi·
au: professor in 1970 and • year larer wl5
promoted to the rank of profe&amp;sor. ln 1990.
Ow ...,.,.;veda SUNY Olancell"''' Awan1
for &amp;cellenoe in Teaching.
He has been a ,;smng profe «&gt;&lt; 61 other
unj,-enitles including Vole Uruven;ity, the
Uni~ersity of Texas 111 Au•nn. Rutu- Univer.
sityoffiodhum. Germany. and Japan ' sOsab
University, ,._-he,.., he lectured Ill a felkno of
the l a,pan Soctety for the Promoooo of Science. Obo also was a cbstingwshed 'isiting
professor at Soong Sil University in SeouL
South Kama. tn 1991 .
The alllhor of ''Pbilosoplly ofExi&lt;k'.a"
(Pali: Young Sa.. Sooul. K.,..,., 1961) and
"Bewusstsein und orursein(Oonscioi.,.,....
and Being of Nontre)" (V~ Karl Alber.

Frobuq, Germany, 1987), he
i the &lt;»-eUihor
of "Ontology"
( M iner••
NbliohlJI&amp; Co .•
Seoul, IKoru,
196S). He is the
oditor of "Phi ·
losoplly
Sciiooce on !'beno~ nologicol
.Pcripcctivc""
( M irtinus
Ntjhorr. The
Netberlood •

--QW._

L·-----------..1
·-

)984) and I

the
gmentl editor of

tbe prestigious inl&lt;:matiooal pubbcatiom ...,..
~ ''Odlis l'baenomenologi&lt;:u

; writb:n by

theworld '•lelding~oc:bcll­

ors. Cbo h.as Authored more than 60 article
on phenomeoology, exiSimti I phllosop.ly

and bmnmcutit: philosoplty in GemNm. E.n-

glil&gt;h, Japane.e ond Korean.
A native of Kon:a, he i• a grad..- of
Seoul N ationa! Unhemty and balds a doctl'll'llle from the Universil) of H.eiddberg.

I.ID J, DrinDan has been on the faculty
of &lt;he UB Scbool of Dental Medlcinc
Stnce 1964 and an assistanl dean since 1978
Cl&gt;ief of dental service 1The Buffalo General Hospital since 1967. he ts dinoctor of the
hospital'. general p1ICilCe ~ (li'U@l'W'II
and !he UB QivtSIOO of Hospital Dental Ser-

A

\"10tS.

)

Drinnan is 1 J&gt;l5l presidem ofthelnu:rtll·
tionol Association of Oral Pothlilogisu and
the American Acodemy of Orall'lltbology. A
member and pw president of the American
Board of Oral Pathology. he is a member and
f&lt;&gt;nner chair of the Council oro Hospital&amp; of

CAPITALISM ,R EIGNS
SUPREME

.l.IL!il* __ - - - -

the~ Aslocio!ion ofOental ScDn&lt;ll
lnlmJ;IIIiOI'IIll~ tno-A'll for luJ
m
forensx: dentistry. he has ~ed lec1urn

.....n:

mdental sooietteo in numorou ooumoa H•
"'"' a member of the sa&lt;mnfJC odvtsory
boud ol &lt;he Armed Fon:es lnstmne of Pad!ology from 1987 -9} and m 19Sl ,..~ a
oonw.ltant rome
Arabwl gm
00 the developmrlll of curm:ulum r.... the
Scbool of Dentistry 61 Rl)-..db.
Drinnon I d&gt;ainnoD and fouacling IIIICIIII:t&lt;-t
of the l!rie Cow&gt;ry Sbcrifr• ~ SCIentific Staff, and I fomJSIC denial CXIIJIIUhma to
the dopa1menlllld !he Ene Cooney Medical
Examiner'•OffJ&lt;Jt.HeuapostdtaJrmano(the
baed of "''BfQ
7 FM. !he ' • •
oonal Public RlldJo alftbal&lt; ~by UB.
A fellow of the lntemattonol Collqe of
Denti.su. he lw outboftd or co-authored
"""" than 60 .scmnif,oc articles.
Hets a gradu.ate of the detJW and medical
!Gbool&lt; at Brililol Univen;i.cy in E.nglm:l. and
also holds dental degree&lt; from the Royal
College of Su~ in London and the UB
Sdl&gt;ool of Omul M edtcine

Saud1

''"'Ill'"'"

"""SilO)'

STEWART
A DIVISION OF

&amp; BENSO

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TRAVEL

FRO :T'I£R TRAVEL SElMCES, INc.

SHOP! In the name of L.OVE

Your Full Service Travel Agency
3820 Sheridan Driv.e, Amherst

837-5000
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ANNUAL. STOREWID£ SAL.£
MAY 5th • 14111
IM8Ibers 25% oft
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UPSThiRS CLEARANCE CENTER
30.50% off

The f.mcnoo Sttitlg Qoarta jus! WI dx 1993 Gnmmy Aw1rd { (I'
tho beo1 dwliber music rec:on!iJ11 &lt;t dx l'elr -lbeirCD of dx
&lt;::batit$ lves Qtwtel wnbcr I. f.ommaldJ f&lt;l' us. tbey'U1play dx
lves w1Jen dxy f!cdcnn IIIOeinbaas Mly 17; lbq'U Un play I
classical quartel by Haydo llld I moclem one by Sboslltlmdl.
As I boous dxsc wiJinm will ditcuss lbe mmic II 7:00 p.m. bef&lt;n
perfonniog il ll 8:00 p.m.

For licttls (S 12.00. studeds $5.00) and
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quality, dependab/.r, professioNJJ mtJintt!IUIIIU
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0111illf-

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Pbarm 0 . Clllldliblt
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c!:!"fbll~= )~ -~- ~ .....

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llal1 ~-C-..Bp.m

U BS~IIand. Loo

Vnrno and Todd M¥00... oon-

d.....,... Slc&lt;c.-.rtllall
Nonh Campu~o . 8 p.m

M - . . "-""ol~

--s-.Mcd.

-M-.,D&lt;p.
............of~
o.t....

cal UIU• ofSoiol&gt; Clro11, . IO&gt;l

MONDAY

~- -a...-.12..10
p.m.

FRIDA 'I'

·Pifi'SCS-

M -: fobri&lt;at.ioo
T~-......c-­
_ . . . , . - O..riot -rn-. 0..
S. Arney. AT.t.TIIdl ....... ~54

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l ol..mr-lladiesudDrw&lt;&gt;l.arnla&amp;. 0.. Rooald L
o...;s, Dopo . of C.ll BIOlogy
and Dopo of N"""""c'. Bayloor
Uaiv. Collep:ofMedlanc. l21
onh Campus. 4 p.m.

IIAniaiAnca~
A4apd..: MA'Ihods ·lor 1'11111l&gt;ollc:l'anlol DllJ&lt;natlal
ll&lt;!ua.-, Prot. Joe Fbheny .
RmsseiiC't Pol)'leehnu~ lnsumtt
I 03 Ditl..,dorl. Soudl Carnpu•
4pJII

~-

1 - o iO i n l a l t!Dtll&lt;:s Gil Netmlopd&lt;
'111orapJ' Ia Sdlhophroak Potlmts: E~ E•id..,..,
Kamal K. M.dha. Ph.D .. D.SC:.
Dopo. oll'lwmacy. College of
Pb.nnacy. Unh'_ of
Subwhewan. S.wtoon .5011
Cooke. onh Campus. 4 p.m.
-~utiVIIIE

Aft Thoro Thilop Whldt W•
Sboald Not~! ,o,g,.;..zu
Lelb-Kowalik. m;n,g schol.v,
UB l'lulcooplty Dopo. from Uruv.

ofNeuclulld, Swjtzatu.4. 6S3
·Baldy . Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

,.D ·rr•u•

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lllld
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llistrilletod s,..._Prot. ld·
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• aKqo 101 Baldy. -

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Campus. 3 p.m. IEEE C&lt;&gt;mp&lt;il:r

Sooety O."'n~ Vilotors
fnlcram Scmioor Series. CJo.
spocliOI..t by Oraduate Group ..
Applied Amlicalln,.mren&lt;:&lt;-

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SI'AtW'IICA&amp;.NYIACS

l 'llur Tr.11:1itioM in Poi"'U5
Media. Jaya:.ruh R.. 8aonar. •
hnn. tate Urtiv. 454 Fronczak
on.b Campus. 3:30p.m.

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C tiJtj ISikK) at a · .......
Lot.. Clrilloplo ~. . w.

Jw..- ODI&gt;. lSl Farner.

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- F o l k .llooadoa. 2
lli:dadort:, ~· &amp;-I I

J&gt;.ltl.E&gt;"'l'FriiloY:""-

Gloas. Opliaol

...._Prof. Jeffrey l21ink.liCLA.

· onhCampus. 9un.·

4;.30 P""" f!or inl.........., call

Hllt S eAY

UI&gt;!O.

17

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M-. Hdlcbo&lt;A-Rl'C'I 12:30 p.a.

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Sloe
Concen Hall Nanh ~ 8

p.m

TNURaDAY

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0.. Tedd Habbcrfodd
Ceru&lt;r- for T""""""' Mil
Campus 9 o.m -4 )() p.m FU

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Rdbinlda&amp; lloo Ulli..nll}
Gallory, AI Ham• F. tbo
gallory'• tint director Ceote&lt;
for Tomorrow Nanh Clrnpo».

7:30-9 a.m. Tdeu for &lt;h&lt;
brukf- ODd talk .,. $7 for
mcmben of lh&lt; UB Alumno
Alfocialloa. S8 foe all clhen
1nf01maboo ocr resen..uottS ma)'
be obtained by caD ins ""' us
Offtee of Alumni Relarioos ..

829--2601. ()readlifte for f'C5iC'V8w
toonsiooMayl6.
..... _,.II(MJieT.MU
Tho h-~ol dot
Corpondoo ollbo FRhJR,

Campu~ 4

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-ATIIIUIS••tb

• An ln.sc.aJ1anon
Lop.·
MFA shov. b) Karl. A Wtunn~o
C'OOtJftUCS throue}l Ma) I 3 ID 1M

An D&lt;parur&gt;&lt;m Galler) . 84~
FulC Arts Cmter. North Cam
~ For anf~uon. call 645 b878 bhibtl ...,.mr&lt;d b) tb&lt;

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24
----

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eJ.hJO.ooa of
wcri. b) VB areb.ttecture and
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umx:s lhroq:b May 16 tD tbr

_ , Wobl.

Marianne Poou. Dona
Holl'man. ODdloonne Krdlcf.
Wd Ceol«. 0ocmen Coll&lt;ge
&amp;·4$ un.-3:30 p..GL For informotioo caDMS-6140.

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Softnrell&lt;llpor L4,'--1-0,..
#P-4047 -

AloloiHI

s.r-u."""""'IP
Qtoollly . _ . . , _ c--6-

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0e&lt;q&lt; Sdocna,

(MI'.)JI~

PuwoJIP-404)~

..
_Eol_ (SIA,
()ppw·
olaiaial

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Cary Fund

la.oonll.. A~ to
........ ............... Dr

Oiro&lt;ttJrol~­

Safely

-c

Robcn M ule&lt;. Oopo ofl'l&gt;ysool·

oey. Uru' of M tnnesota. 108
Shennan South

I L·l!-CIT. """""'""'..001

I..,.. Dy&lt;tt'&amp;bibwon Hall .
llur&lt;l floor. Hayes Hall. South
Campui. 9 Llh lO S p.m. Mooclay

d!r'ouJh Fnda) . There ....

adii'USSIOII

cbuJ.t

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8

WFBOcited
formusic .

programmmg

"Despite d~e importance of
dU! diagnostic proces we
spend precious little time
trying to wuierstand iJ. ,

on
II hdps
ladt
lbat an certain ~ 11
ma he ~ 10 slap .mund. to 5Uit
front laborotory daa. or. m tit&lt; cue of "'P""
probl
- to i lerrupc oormal ~ of
tnformauon.
....,__ f'untaor. Sllld&lt;:nb
can he
co ....t oerum ~ lhll

B

ill retearcb

can lead

error

T~ 1he .,_...,"'

""""*"'
comiJmm&amp; ctJnoatl cilia. .. -u ..
tit&lt;
precornpoled
fiW'-.
10
o(

can abo he trnpro'-.d
tiCS.

spottl\c." '

wd''Allhls§IOF.hYJXIIb·
m apet:Uharson of way -

...,....,,ntenmngled

a"""''"' for

Aller cbeloptne
undenland·
mg why one has come 10 lhesr liUtW bypolh...,._ tit&lt; problem-soh,. ~ tit&lt; SlaCIO of
hypocbesi&gt; reftnetn&lt;IIC.
W&lt;1 At lba
stage. VlnOO'l 11}-pocbeseri An' deiel&lt;d. addod..
or made more speafic. n... phase t damtnaled by probabilistic ~ .. tit&lt; prol&gt;lem-oolver IIYs 10 determine ,.
of tit&lt;
g&lt;:ne&lt;anqg h)'J&gt;Od&gt;eoe&lt;- JD0511ikdy anoct.
he Wd. By asing p-eoompilcd rub and tnformarion aboul tit&lt; ""'-Ute of \-.rious problems.
tit&lt; problem--soh,. "'"" 10 """"""' a hypocb.,. m.thas.--""""""Y, heillld.
When one byplllbest clearly begm to
domtn 1&lt;. tit&lt; problem-soh...- ha noached
the stage ofhypacbesi• venficauon. Ka arer
oaid. Tht hypacbesi• has to he 1eSted for
cobetmcc and accuracy. and to - wbetber

~

.-arch ""

he SOld.
rerb&gt;U&gt;dbtiac pnllC1pie&gt; for~

mocal Jl'OI&gt;ImHoh-m&amp;. mcludu!c
~and~~
......... lbrm Ill ~*~~apR ..

lk st=s&lt;d tit&lt; tlllpOrUl1Ce o( .....,

tal case. Ill rc:fka ...... be atllcd "fie
o( dnal modtane."
Oherprwqliai IIICiulle

.,....... ...................Slid. .. ...,.

i&gt;
. x.irer
10 Ra:b by ....
'""""- Sludons lcmt ......... bylll&lt;q
reaslllll. he Slid. The c:littial .-w pr&lt;tCeSS
can help..........,. crrnrs • 1111 pclllltS 111 diacno.is. andCinhelpO\'Oid
of

mar asclelayo m - . """"""""e.pc&gt;sure of potieuls 10 Vlrious teSU. ~
- - and tit&lt; omiecy
raWu front
lhe&amp;t~heAid.

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storefronts with adjoining warehouse space
On Bailey Avenue
Near UB School of Medicine
and several major hospitals
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T01111 ol TOIWWllla, NY FAX 83&amp;al5

�~reast feeding may protect child against cancer later in life
~-­
-SWI

1Toml986-1991.~

IDd.
rJ' neseardlen colleclal
daa OD M lin)' rJ' ..-ulaJ

wome:n who ... ere
-fed as iulan

mayexpaitncea
...-edpr-aii!Ciiollapms~ bn:asl C&amp;Doer loler in 'life. Tho UB Sl!ldy. m-

"''vinl

1.130 from two
&lt;&gt;JUIIIi£s in w-New Y.n, indJCIU:ld lbal womc:n wbo wore bn:asl-

fed bid a lS~ceu·
~

Caotors from 21...._ .....,y di-

....,...s...

I
I

bn:asl.,...,.,..,and602 15

womem •"Jib no cancer •
were
sdectcd rondomly from lbe ......
popuJ.bm and mal&lt;ibed for . _
The women l""tt """"""" lbe
0(40 and IS at
~~meoflbe ltlldy .
A1ier oantrolh for . _ education, • • ........mo.••• firu

for

"'&lt;llllm

v.-bo ......., bclti&lt;&gt;fed ..
.
The stlldy ~ in
Moy
I lie of Epilhlfti
V'1bere i ~ mt=sl in
exposures in early life. includ1
diet. and lbeirn:lauon5bip 10breasl
cancer ri ·said Jo l'r-eudenbrun.
UB astociale professor of socill
and preventh·e medJCtne and Ill&lt;
study· • principol in&gt;-estigator.
""Tbere bas 10 be some envunn
mental compooen1 10 explain Ill&lt;
geographical varuuon '" bre.a-'t
cancer notes. R.a fiOCIDni relaung
to e&gt;.pOSw-c:&gt; in adulthood don-,
e~pl11n all lhc variauon we ~
Tlus finding of a possible protecuve effect from ba•ing been breaSIfed could be tgnificant. and it ,.
certainly wonb looking at further "'
Freudeobeim cauOoned lbal Ill&lt;
finc~ia,sarepdiminlry.and .-lm
be n:pbcaled in Olhrr populaOOm
beforunyoonolusionscan bednoa'TI.

· "This finding ofa
possible protective
effect from haVing
been breast f ed
could be ignificam,
and it is certainly
worth looking at
further. ..

JO-

pregnancy. number of months lhc&gt;

nuned lhcu own children. number
rJ' pregnanoes. family histllry o(
bn:aslc:anoer,luS10ryO(bemgnbn:asl
dlsea.~body-ltiiiSS lllllex andhetghl.
Ill&lt; reoeard&gt;en foundtbalooe"""""
ofeorly~a""""*"

•= James

assoa~

..,lh • cle&lt;n:a5e 1ft rut..

R Manball

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Gnobam.ll~ t..ghlm.

BreaSI-~ditf&lt;l'5fromborlle­

f"""""

in .-era~ wwys. an~ or all of
wbodl oould inllu&lt;nce- cmcer
n
Freudoenhetm ..-1.

the

"'-ometl

in the itudy

-..~ ID

fanu. lbe mlll: and formula fed 10

Vena, Eht.a Bandera. Ta.
NcmolniDilMya.
framUB .
Poob MUll from UB and lbe Nm.-a
c-a-~osu~uoo.

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emp loyees.
Special airt;1ne rates
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onals ~• S....a. longage r~ h ~u of the
mong~&lt; options and find ! OU ,..., ~ J&gt;I"'Olf"lrll wnh th~
~rates. Through our nt'n&lt;
•itb """"a dor~n l&lt;lrgtlending mstnutions, "'"C hal tht- mformauon ~'OU nerd
a1 our finget"tips And ~""' arran
loans through
thu-d party lendffs, _,.,.., heJt inJtmU tm .,., heJt ifiJLmtS.

top by

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May 5 · 6,
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�m

Eight to be honored at UB AlwnniAssociation annual dinner
HE H 'ORABLE M. Dolores
Dennwl.
j . of tbe
Appella&amp;t Dtvisiool of Sale S.preme Court. FooJtb Deponmenl.
will n:cave tbe
P Capcu
A wan!, the UB AI
. As&lt;ociatioo., most
p!Uii&amp;JOUS awad.. durin« tbe uOOC!imoo'
OIIDUal a ants dmn&lt;:r .c 6:30p.m. t.o day 1n
Cen1er for Tornorro.,..
t:lenmNI • amonc
1ndlvidual ;t,o
will b&lt; booored OJ tbe di, _.
ThtCapm A .....d ....,.,..._ ooubl&lt; and
meritorl
caolribuuons to the univer&lt;ity
and 1 fanuly
lknman. who rt&gt;C:Cived bochelor' s and
law dqn&gt;e$ from UB , exemplif.es tbe btghcl of liCr\lCC to B and to tbe Judicial
uruty. amed 1993 Jwt&gt;lofthe Year
Erie Coonl)l Bar A~on.
hu
cd a ..'IRI from the UB School of
Law. lht W omen ' Bar A
ation of tbe
Swe of ""' York and tbe New Y
Swe
""""1atJonof omm· JU&lt;Iges S ..,...e.
as al&lt;cturer and jud~ rn tbe UB law school' '
MOO( Coun rornpetlllOO
1lbam H Puree. pres1&lt;kn1 (l(Pcan.-c &amp;
P~ Co .• Inc _ and a .....nbtt tile: Marine
Midland B · e.tem Region oeoior advt oory boani wdl recc1\'e the Walter P. Cooke
A ward reoogru.n~ noooble and mentonous
oantributiom to UB and iu fllllily b)' a nonalumnus. Pearce·' oonlribubon 10 UB 'f'l" 33
years. Most r=m.ly. he and lu. company
..ubbsbc.d an endowmcnliOiiiJilllOrt a YJ&lt;illn&amp;
mnc m de.lgn for lhe School of Arctuloc:lure)
and Planning. Pearce is. memheroflhe bo8nl
oflhef'riendsoftbe School of ArduleCIUttand
is a UV&lt;tec of tbe UB Fouodallon. Inc
James W . E\'IM, a pt011CC0Dg researcher
in bnnging malbemat:ICS and eng~necnng
tecimolog) in proceo• mctalluq,y. will re·
eel\ • rhe Cbfford C. Furno Memonal
Aword. Tht Furnas A,.·an:J 1 g1ven to a
graduate of tb&lt; School of ~gtneenng and
App11cd ~ or tb&lt; Faculry of otural
Sciences and Mathematics who has di&gt;lin-

j§

w

pnshcd lumsdf or lx:nelf rn lhe field of
"'""""'· therd&gt;y bnngin booor to tbe UJI1•erstry. A profeuor of meuliWJY 01 lhe
Um•wsrty of California llBert.eley. Evan
earned a doctorate 111 ct.emical ellgtJ'I"mng
from UB '" 1970. lk is a four-tu'Die a.. vd
winner from tbe Amencan lmtitllll! of Mer·
allurgical EngineeR and tbe audlor of more
than 160 joumaJ artiCles
EUJIJl S. Agai. a partner and •'ioe presldenl
of Ammann &amp; Wbitney. one of lhe na11on ·
leadm consulti n engineeriq
,.'111 '"""'"' tbe ~ W . 1bom Awvd
hononog a UB graduate under the age of 40
for oo..w&gt;di~ contn'buuon to lu or ber
career field or academtc aru Agai •s compan is ootcd for us wort. oo sud! proJOCU u

""""*'

...,.;vcd a.......,.. dectu in c1\d engrneer' from U8 ID 1983. sen
prWdelll of
lhe American Sociel} of Ch"ll Engineen
M euopol.itan Secuon and i an adjunct fac·
ul member1n trarl&lt;pOIUbOD~Iat

Columbia Um'""'''Y
Four UB ,-..1
will ,.,.,.,,_. Dtsun·
gu1shcd AlUIDIII A •'IRis. Thty 1ft.
Micbad Al!dn-=cio (B.FA.. '74, M F .A.
'76)..S-Casldl.af8FA.. '74. M.FA..
'76). 1D0111bers m011e of
W&lt;llid '• fonmoa
guda' dwo. Thty - CUI1ftMI Ill ,....:
dcnle • UB. Feaumd an brcadc:l!n oo

BOC.COC. PBS. Radio~CiboriiiOiia
audcu.lbey ...,.,...s "" AaJr Dr Soo Jbicards..

UB LAW ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AWARO WINNERS

:;r-c"

11A11Y Hnl
ews Bureau St
HE UB U'.W Alumru A sociatlon
will bold iu 32nd annual meeting
and awards dinner at 7:30 p.m. oo
Friday, May 13, in tb&lt; Hyan Re·
gency. P=ident Wilham Greiner and Barry
Boyer. dean of the Law School. will speak 11
the e vent.
William F. Savino. president oftbe Law
Alumni Association_ will present O.stingui5hcd Alumni' Awards 10 tbe followrng
gradualeS of tbe liCbool:
Hon. Vincent E. Doyle Jr. ('56), ew
Yorli: Swe Supreme Court. 4th Oepan:ment.
8th Judicial Disttict, b&lt;ing booored for cooscientioos and diligent performance in the
judiciary. Doyle is a fortner president of tb&lt;
Erie County Bar Association and tbe New
York State Association of Justices of lhe
Supreme Court. He ;. presiding member of
tbe Council of Judicial Associations and
dllinnan of lhe continuing legal cducatioo

T

committee for the New Yorli: Stott Bar A.sociation. Doyle abo lectwa at tb&lt; UB Law
School andfortbeOfficeofCOW1Administratioo. ew YorkSweBar Associatioo and
the Erie County Bar AsOOC!iation.
T........,.M. Conn&lt;n('7 1).asc:niorpllllain
the fum mConn&lt;n and Vilardo, tang hoacnld
far his lead&lt;rsbip b)'~ as a piva p¥11tioner. Conn&lt;n is a fn:qualllottum- and ILIIhor
ootrialprllelicefortheNewYodcSaoeandF.rie
Counry Bar Aisocialim&lt;. He is a fellow of the
Amttican Co11eee &lt;I Trial l...awym, is Jigaj in
"The Besa Lawyers of Am&lt;rica" llld..,.., as
cbairofBtd&amp;lotday&lt;rAdbmyMasidlo'sbWl-

GomUIIX&lt;' Advilory Council and tbe Amencan Baola!n&gt; Asoocaaaoo.
James L Mapvem ('S9), member of the
fum of. Mapvem &amp; Map•-em. b&lt;ing booom! far his many contributions to tbe bew:rmeot of the community. Mogavero 1
secnory aDd • member of the boanl of
Buffalo Prep Inc. the board of direcun of
the Buffalo Specc:IJ mel Hearing Censer, and
for1ner oo-dlair of the Ci.tiz.ens Council 011
Human Rdalions. He is a former ,pnsidem
mel boanl member of FrieodSbip House, a

sition rcn.

counsel to TJCOrl'itleGuaranteeCo. b&lt;inc
bonorcd for his exemplary perfcnn.aoce in
busioess. MangOD is a member of tbe ew
York Swe Bar Auociation. co-dtairman
of itS Tille and Transfer Comminee and 1
member of the Erie Coomy Bar Association. He ..-u formerly in private practice
with tbe finn of Saperston, Wiltse, Day,
and Wilson.

Cornell law professor Winnie F. Taylor
('1S), b&lt;ingboooredforcommi1memtopul&gt;lie service. Taylor was formerly 011 tbe foeuhyaltbeUniveniryofflori&lt;k•Gainesville.
Her special interests are consumer law, COD·
tracUandacditdisaimination.Shehasbeeo
a legal consultant to tbe Credit Union alional Association. tbe Federal Reserve 8oanl

and dud" eux:unvc officer ol ~
H
A &gt;OCaatJOD. Inc .. """ mtbe 20 IIIIJ ·
est ~th - - orpD1ZIIIions
notJOn Colanluono .. .

"'*"member ..

oflbe
Unncd Way of Buffalo mel Enr CoWiry and
tbe Gtt01er Buffalo
a.! V
Heworltsdo5d)WJ
-.1
faculty 1n lhe UB Scbool of M _,.,_...
Franklyn G.
(B.S ,' 9. MDJPIID.
'65)cloan of !he Mayo Medical School,
esta. Mmn.
x ,. a fom...- prntdenl of
tbe Amencan PhystOIQIICal Sociery, a rcsea.n:hcr 10 ASA ' l.Jfe Scoence1. OJ,'WOft
· mel fom...- bo8nl member oflbe Am&lt;:rian
Heart A$&gt;0CW10n and lhe ational
Foundation.

Coo,._

a-

,.,... .......

DistinguishedAlwnni awards to be presented
:

.,_colantuooo&lt;M ss.·n)prnodalt

tbe..........oonofthe u.s C.tpuol. lhe urue
of l.Jbeny and l...ulooOOt Cemtt. l\flai,

Lacbwanna-based CCllllJml!lity c:en1er.
O...en Manprn ('56), vice president and

Jamal JOOnson took lhe men s 200
mew dash and was a lso pan ol
lhe Bulls' Wlrlfllng 4x100 relay
squad in 1he UB Open Track &amp;
Field Meet held at UB SlacfiUITl on
Saturday Aprl 30
Johnson noeec1 out Allred Slate s
Lorey l.ofd 10 take lhe 200 1n a tme
of 21 67 l.ofd fintshed second ...
21 .73 Johnson also anctlored lhe
relay team's win&lt;wlg nsh ol ~2 oA6
Mike Spilz to&lt;* seoond in 1he
pole vault with a matk cf 1-4 ·feet to
finish behind Ket1l Slate's Jame
Clymet's 1iiJII of 14-6.
There was no team 6CXlOI1Q .., the
open meet as us faoed still COlT&gt;- .
petitton from Kent Slate and Detroil
Mercy as W'!llt as Canlsius. f!obens
Wesleyan. Erie Cam1fJilily College. Allred State WICI1he Univer·
slty of Toronto.
On the women's side, Tonya
Reid won a pair ol for the
Royals to lead 1he team. Reid took
1he 100 meter dash in 12.54. She
also won lhe 400 meter event with
a tme of 58.25
Aimee Mann finished litsl in lhe
800 meter IU'1 in a lime ol 2:2-4.9
while Claudine While took lhe triple
jump at 10.36 meters (34 feet).
Rachael Relemlat won the harmler
'how...., a ·mao1&lt; ol100 feet.Mchele
Berger was 9BCXlnd a 99 feel
The Royals also took the 4x800
relay with a WIMing tme of

933.32
-Spans~-~,.,

�OOillilliX.,...,

OOIIIllie.

Cal'!*'
clled for
I'IOCNJUlll UB ~for full·
time and
. Paul
Marrone. vice JftSI'knt for ex·
penmm\11 reteatd&gt; • Calspan.
Ad•-.nced Tecboolo&amp;Y Center.
r=ivu! """''"ioon far his wort
•• clocton1 job-lean:h
Dole IL Tyc:U:a. 5tlldent US&amp;&gt; ·
rant in 1hc l)eponmrm o( Electn·
a) and Olnlputa" ~.
10-.s honored u 1hc Stlldent Em·
ployce oftbe Year.
A c:el1lfiC81e of reoognillOO far
worUhops and efforts working
with ~ 5tlldent orpnit.a·
dons and ftlculty was prescotcd to
Hal Gr=&gt;ey Jr.• oollqe rccnntt:r
from EDS in Hemdcn. VL
Certil\ares o( ~
were preoenl&lt;d to The Ene Coum)
Wr~ZS Autbority for-·- """"'
1hc Depanmenr o( Geopphy ond

SIUdcots. The I'Ndenballnsur·
ooce Co. of America far support of
UB through i Minority Swdmt
l'rllplm ond to Bab.rn Tool Coot·
ing Co. far suppon of resean:b in
1hc Deponmmt d tec:blnicol ond

liS

uf

I ..

1 [ R[

2tO ... dallta Ill EOP
to

be.._...

Frank G Pogue. Swe
Unnersll)' of "'Y&lt;rl
,;., cbancdlor for .rudont affam;
and specW program . WIU be
ke)'tiOtt speaker 11 an 110ard

sI

DlvWon of AtiiiMics .... fooCblll tlc:bt polky
11oe ......... fll AtloiMk:a has amounced 4s 1994 US Football
tiCket policy far UB students
• Only UB lXldefgraduale students are et.gible lor free football
bckets, all Olher SllJdents rnJSI ourchase t ets at regular
pnoes
• UB undergraduate students may secure thetr season llCkels
by showing a valid odentlficaoon card (valid far Fall '94) and
f~llng out a regiStratoon tcxm at the tocai10nS and tmes listed
below
• The season iJCkets will not rdude the Homaco'" 19 game
against Colgate Students ..no
haw parents attendmg that
game may oblain tiCkets through regiS!ratoon packets mailed to
parents by the O!fice ol SttJder1 Life Students attend~ the
game wfthout a parent may pock up bekets at the UB AthletiC
rdlet office trom Sept 26 to Oct 7
• No free student tickets will be iSSU9d on game-day
rdlets wi" be available at the UB StadllJ11 rtOket OffiCe the
Alt.mni Arena rdlet O!fice dunr.g drop/add regiStrauon and at
the Student Uroon (dates and ~ to be determcned)

SbldeMtlc:btchb....._
•

MOl-DAY, AUG t5
Sludenl ....son IJCI&lt;BI dtslribc.(JOn beginS

•

FRIDAY, SEPT 23
FintJI day lor 91JBSO&lt;l tJCirBI dlsrriiJuDoo

•

MONDAY. SEPT 26
Start /ssUiflg HomeconM iQ QBf119 tiCkers ro D U E SIIJdentS

.
•

FRIDAY. OCT 7
FintJI day lor Hon'I9CorTIIflg QBf119 tiCket diStriiJuiJOn
,... _llliifue .... DB, ailltM W Alliiletlc 1kbt omc.

.....-.

It' • "tbonk you• llmt ot
UB'•Emtntui
AI iu May 10 mc&lt;UD&amp;. lhc cen ·
..,. will honor vdlllll.een
boon o( YOiun
rontributcd 3.
._ wort related to UB projccu
ond even during 1hc pest )ur
About 75 members will re·
ceove reoognitioll far •"Oiuntt:e&lt;
sen'ICe through 1hc .,...,.,.., ~·
Up pro£fliDl. v.iucb i odrnuw·
trred by leila (Lee) 8att:r
O&gt;ores camcd cu b) UB rebr·
ces w:h.ded IS$I5IaDCe ..1111 nwl
mp. ml&gt;mng for UB .,._,_
ISSlSWXX far beallb prograrm.
assembbnc ID*r1AI&gt; tor rncetlQgS
ond
......,.. and morutmng
on~ e.eri!S ro dJssonnnale
mformiiJOO tO 1hc pubbc
Wilbam E''itts. UB diteaa of
Alurml Rt:latlcns. will gue&gt;t
..,.a.r a !be .,_q. 10 be ronducllll• 2p.m. ill ibe Emontlll
in !be Sodb l...olql- o(
Good)oear Hall.Sodb ~

c.....

.........

Public: Invited to

u• to

Buffalo ..;u be 1hc
plocr tn tbc U.S 10 be
Tuesday. May 10. if you're 1
solar ccbpses, 5I Gilbert Brink.
UB asuoncmy professor. A solar
eclipse will begin locally 11 I :22
p.m. reachillg op&lt;imal viewing ot
I :25 p.m. EDT. It will JUCb 94
pen:mt IOiality--W amount o(
sun chat wtll be blocbd by tbc
mooo as it passes between Ear1h
ond sun.
0( until 2012 will
1hcre be anocber tor:al eclipse as
,.;sible in Buffalo,- says Brink.
He warns against loolang
directly 11 tbc sun during tbc
event with tbc naked ~ or
througli binoculars or a telescope
-n.e only safe way to ,.,...,
1hc event witboul possible eye
inJury is to bold a large piece of
paper three 10 6"" indies in frool
of 1hc eyepiecle of binoculan or a
celescope.- Brink explains. -n.e
eclipse willlhcn be projcctcd
safely onto 1hc paper for viewing.-

The public Is invitaiiO ,...,..
the event from 001&gt; J p.m. 011
1hc m. 1a of w-se Hall ""
1hc SoudJ Olmpus.
.. be provided dunn&amp; 1hc afi&lt;:r.
110011 by 1bera Jaz:dleards.-

u,.., -

V

-.na ID Wende Hall"0 gXJI&gt;.

floor ob!c:rvato&lt;y.
bas been
refurboibed far 1hc ecbpse by
Ulldeol •"01..-...n. wtll also be

pem!Jaed 011 I bmital basi The
obsen-atory wtU al

be open 01

p.m on May 10 f'&gt;r

-sw pz:u~~ . -

John A. J . . _ bas been
appomtcd eltCtV!i&gt;&lt; direc·
10r of tbc

Off"""' far """Cf"Sil)'

Preplmory l'ropams (OUPP) ot

UB OUPP offers a'*"" d cduabOGal ond I1IDllnl p:ocram&gt;
c!cgpcd impro•e 1be ability d
Sllld&lt;:nU to SIIIUDlm ooiJqe. The
office 5pOIISCn lheoe procrMI5 ..

roopcnnon with .... ~ sd&gt;ool

ond COIIIIDIIIII)' .....,... 10 moU

!up ""'-ion-~
espoaally 10 mmority ond cligd.

VWitilfiOd

JoiiiJODII""" 2S )'OilS cxpmalCI'
in buiJw&gt; seMccs WJibin ibe plillid

""'- non-pafiiiiOCDS.
!'lllldly presidiD dV...,..S Coi&gt;~IIIIITDiinmg.be

t.

~ .. spocill &amp;lllistld far

a.e

............

IEJIIploJ- ........_
CCMif •

.....

The~.......,.

Pftpn

ooardiar
oonlilknlllil
IIMsor avaiWik . . . R&amp;_... Fouadotloaond UB ~
11011
ond their 6nJilies.
EAP coordina:n..
.....e • a
lir* lletMal ~ ondk
CXlCIIIIioJay 15 I

!i:;)lod~ OOllllldirJc.

llllllicallllllalliod

.......

!be QIJIIIdlllilily. rq&gt;OI'IIO dJe EAP

Commilloo.lllll.....n ...
... mcr:~Dni0111Crel15e ........... d

~ adtuini&gt;tt. . IIIII qianal
ckug ooardiar far lbe
o.p.t..
~ dfloosirc ond lJibm ()eyd.
opmiD. He was Erie County

EAP ..,.....,.,._e&gt;:pm~~ odcmlaer,...,. ond~ EAP aaMiies
,.ilb...,..UB

c:ommi oaer of youlb services
from 1980- and cbrcc:tar of
crimmal jwlice plannillg for 1hc
coobty from 1973-&amp;0.
JoiiiJODII is vice presidiD d

doplic; !be JD*ID rapua 2S
JI&lt;IC'ftlime.._ ~

u.s.

CAO-Connunily &amp;lklprise.lnc~
. - presidiD IIIII dlail" far 6md
~ farlbe c.bnlicCenlni
SciJool BoW: aDICIIIber ond farml:r
choir dlbe Uoill:d Nqpo Olii&lt;F

UB~ond,_..,.ae

--~farlbe

indi&gt;"iibil' ......., lliiJC: .........

..,.,.,;..,a ....a aipD1 lboaeilaresaod sbcUd

.

ond kiRr

d~IID ....... J-.3,

lfM 10a.ir. EAP s..dt Otmala·
.... doSponacd~,..._..
ad.. 416 QUI&gt; Hill, North c.mp..

�,.. .. .,...v..._u, ...... ,

Uladvanced

in a

students deliver a ~ ol striking

~how~

at Capen Glllely. They are

Looking in
of

.wo I

binlng two and three dimensional,

.,. ANN WHITCHU

disparate elements and material$).•

EMERGING

In making their art, the artistsDebra Steckler, Todd Mariani, Usa

writes Auodate

Sante, Heidi Waterman, Grace

. ..... .., ..... byU..

Sinte: ol on canvAs,

olM Sheldon

Bickel,
Paul~n

Jim

so· • n·.

and Sophia Chatov-use a vari-

"The students rep-

ety of materials, Including oils, spray paint,

resented hereereemerg-

wax, wood, sand, copper, and other

ing artists who are

natural and man-made materials on can-

rchlng to find their own voice, • Says Berlyn. "Their art

vas and wood . Berlyn adds that "Tex-

Is personal yet it Is lnforTTied by recent and

t.rend.l.

tured brush strokes and natural materials

Influences are apparent, but~ excellence ol their ad\ieve-

and physicality suggest haptic experl-

mentis their own and reflecu 1s well upon those who have

ence, (while) conceptually the works em-

contributed to their university experience. •

brace concerns for personal cu ltural

ptil

The worlu, he adds, draw on traditional as welt IS

experience, the environment

experimental approKhes to art making. "In thein, ~

·-...M
..
lolls"
Oobr1

comment on

MII·

by
Stecklel: oil on
unvu, 16' • 10•

viewer is made

rendered,

well."

su~nal

The works will be on view

form, expressive

through August.

realism and assemblage (com-

art and life as

"T1oe- et- T..... by lim,.._,. oil
... . -. 411 /l' . 251 /l'

Witerm~n ·

. .... Jrlotool'• y ...... by
CtKt Bkket; oH on unvas,

ctn"•-' wnh doon, 45* • 4.8'

24' . )6'.

" VIew Into My World" by Heldt
oH, twig~ s.~wdusl on

l'hotos by SIMON TOHC.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>................
. . . . . . Old .

UB reaches out to
Southern r.er through
oowWBFO
repeater

stations.

5

,. ·

T........

Excelence

Grad students
recognized for
excellence in
teach~.

,.

5
Apnl 2S 1994

IVERSITY is
preparing a master plan

for the South Campu

So

that will entail a massive review and rudy of
the complex measures
and structure needed
for a campus devoted
mo tly to health science study, care and

research.

""'mow:d fi~ aru, ""'will
f t he moving a.emistry this
~ummer and we· rt: in. the programmin~ process for Natural Sciences,
Phase ll which would move Math
to the North Campus." Naylc:rconlinu&lt;d. '1'hc ge~l plan bas aiW:t) h«n that the South Campus
should be the health sciences camBul we haven't bad a master
pl.m update for a decade, maybe
t"·n. Thi i an appropriate lime to
c'l!' h so thai '¥. e can .actually replan
the c:~mpus for revitalization. syn·
theSJ of the operating needs for
!he Snuth Campus. and provide the
pmrer en\·ironmcnt for accom~
rli,hing our mission. both through
r~,._~\'ation of the ex.isting facilities
:tnd expansion of spaa: for our

llt''·

f'"'!!rams Ihal are defiCient in SPOCC·

Campus
aster Plan

Process to involve UB community in
charting future ofSouth Cilmpus

r,,..,....

...

2S flio 26

UB to :Deve~ o~

TilE

Ronald ayler, ..sociate vice
prc&gt;idetlt for f.:ilitieo plllllling. •
co-d•:tir of the master plan proc:css
"i1h Bruce Holm. HSOCiate proand dean for ~ and
pr:&gt;.luat~ studies in the UB modicaJ
srhonl . "We're underutio this
J'MC'CSS." Nayler says, "bccauJe
we' re octually implemenlina the
, onh Campus master plan. cuur·
in!' !hal ,..., bring all the UI\Cia~r&gt;duate octivitieo to the North
C.1mpus.

Volurn~

~

_
-----·----

--__

SOUTH CAMPUS MASTER PlAN STEERING COMMITTEE

c.c

•

...,....

..........

---~

,,, ,

~

Qx.nci-cm-~

~­

Mlurizio TreviRn

_........,

-~
Olllcoeotlw-

Ootclll-

-Sorw:erci.A't.'!Nt...

-lollm

----.,;,p
Moly Ann Shonow

Nnli1g

Scoll Oonlard

F.aly-

(-~~1

"Wealsowllllt to create a patia1
oohcsivmess for the South Campu
and to provide the campu community with acohen:n.t understanding
of what future dtvelopmeot of the
South ~mpus is likely to be."
For his pan. Bruce Holm notes
that '1'hc master plllll proccu. in
addition to the struCtural changes
and mapping acth i1ieo lhat go on.

"We want to get people
involved, -get an understanding
of what we're trying to do. "

Horwy L

r_,., ·

JomllorRafl
t-.ry~rc

~

V--Irna

~-

CiillordWioon
F.aly Sli.daniAsaoc&gt;allorl

is also a framework b} "'hoch we
arc able 10 articulate and pul Into
dfcct the academtc mis oon for all
the programs !hat CWTCiltly e~'"'
on the South Campus. iocluding. in
pa.rti.:ular. the hcallb science•
school . h also provtda us ..·uh

-a....

,_,.,

--Cheal...........
--

~ot-

_,.,

()rvlto (Teel) 8Notola¥
~

Mlnque lldtttctatd

a.u--.

~-·
Otwtci-ScttooiJ

the opponunn) to dctcnrun&lt; the
goals of each of the ondi vtdual
school and come up wLlh both a
theorellca1 and a funaWN~I plan 10
pu1 those goals mw effect durin1
the dccad&lt;"
Th&lt; 21 -membc:r SlCenng com·
mtltcc reportS 10 an advisory com·
miuee comprised of President
Grci- and his c.caolive staff.

"The

JOb

~

._, - •

~

ly .... doe
proaeM
- ... report . . .
tolhudviooryt'OIInllleC.•
lc:r
says. 'The "'ccniOJ """' ICC. he
•

""'

.,... • .,.,~~r~.s ... v....t

rcpraetiUilOI\ from all ~

of &amp;'livltla • UB IIIII • the
Campur.."
llolacno the effort will be
seven
ttlCOI cln-.1 10:
tdocatiOII of u
• aaldcmic spoc~ n«dd-' ..............

equipmem up:raclc;
montity
bcallb edtlcaootl clsaocal facihly;
·Wldc oe1ivu&gt;cs and acr·

"tees. caupH circut..ioa.
.
safety and 16the1ics. houwla/
IIC!p.bo111ood. ond ca
1 fn.
~bonldip

artciDJ -~~·the UB """"'..,
Gtfford. dm&gt;c1or. - ter p!Mrua&amp; ccxwdiuli.. for the

W

~ SUNY~Fund.andt

....rr mc:mbcn:

.,..._,..-.....,.,_.._

c.olya Mocrmw
...Sc.otSwen.

Naylu, "lhe ......,, ol whdt ·~ r i l l t c : . - pl»dontmml.
6oe't loot ao
the doc:ltmc.tU • the ..,_, impor·
Ia 1*1 of .. lUI _ • .., ..~

"""""''· we

o lt'sreallytheprocess w~ ...
togctpeopleonvriva:l.(ha,-ethc1l'll
gcs an understanJrnr of what ,. t · n:
tryon to do. IOiocu opto
nd
11) 10
of" hall be
pnonty plan an: for the dorectiOD
of the South Campu&gt;
"As paon of I hal raub . we boJlt
IO get I re:soiUUtlft of I number of
propamman ond 'I"""' ulih.ta·
uon · and .,. undeTstandtftl!
of fundtnJ! commit menu from AI·
bally We sec lhentm: Jln'tt&lt;' ~'
cnuca1 to the flllysical dt'c:lopmcnl of the Sou1h Campus in 1he
n&lt;XI le1l years
Pia call f&lt;t&lt;"publicationof the
lioal master plan docwnetu on f'cb..
ruary 1996.

reach.""""'" •

"The Master Plan._. provides
us with the opportunity to

determine the goals of each of
the individual schools_ "

�-------

2
H 0 '•

---

-

0 '

'·

A career built

on trust
'-- Gll'ltftla'a ........ec blldltl.a••
eoutt.sy,
COIIf'lllla c• •Ill C8IIIIP'IS MCIIIfty

0 from a
loog UB e~UUT •n
A~giiSl. Oitedor of
Public Safety Lee
· Griffi11 like• •ith
om a deep ID--e for lb&lt; campus and
o plain-.q&gt;elktng low. of the: lrUltL
"Speoldng my mind hoocoot me
opponunitia over the Y'*"·" sayo
Griffill, So4. "Tal:tnJ I fum P"'i·
tioo, andr&gt;Othei~amoreconccmed

.. ,m

proc:cs• than product. doe$
1101 ol"'a)'li enhonct ooe'o poo
*•than an orgaruution I can. ho•·eve&lt;, get up on the l1lOnllftJ and
Jool; on the morror and li
"""'-' I
oec. I lea'-e """' with peat pndc
It' heen a peat upcrieoce •
Dtrcc1LY olthe universJt) · 53·
member pohee force inee 1977.
Griffin ]OJ ned the foroc in 1971
i.unt doi'CCIOI' after near!) 10
&gt;·earsa 1 ewYodStateuooper
He came 10 UB 11 o tome "''hen the:
"""""'ity was SUfi reeling from
anu-•• nou and the a::companyin liOCIII upheaval
After earning his a social.c •
degree from v.hat rs now Erie
CountyCommunot) Colltg~. Griffin studied nights 11 Buffalo State
C&lt;&gt;liete for bu. B.S '"poloce sco-

ARCHITECTURE

.,.._.
--.ft.ACE
·- T-.,

c~nteal asst.

1an1 pmfessor ol arehllec111&lt;8, was one olrwo firstplace reciipjents In the NatiOnal Insti-

tute fer
Archlleclural Education
1994 Facul!y&amp;say

Con-cletltion.

T.WU

Theoort&gt;-

pelibon on
·Representatoons olthe
City, Hands. \IS. ~·

asl&lt;ed par1icipants to address the cp!Siion of how
archllects cen artloulllle a
position an the relatiw merits of the "hand' vs. the

"machine' as me!hods oC
deliMmion and expreulon
in ·the educallon of an arch!·
!act.
Paniclpants were asked

to locus lheif a~ on
the usa of these tools Jn
represenllng the city, IK·

banism and cMc...truc:~Ure.

Tauke

~her-~

"IMAGiniNG the Oily" It lhe
1994 annual mee(lng of the

Association ol Collegjet
Schools 01 Archlleclura In
Montreal.

ence. "'hole holding do"·" 1 full ·
tome JOb ond servtng as a Single
parent to 1
young daughtc:n "I
reall) didn 't see eotlere life. other
than ma)'be a qutck dnnk tn the
student club
fellow student&gt;
in law enfORlement I didn't thinL
oerious crime happrned on campuses . I didn ' t think they needed

"'''h

"""""""'k frono those wbo ba•e
left Pllblic Safety for CIU'CCR else"'tim: In Ia eaf~ iadJ·
cole thai •the bond, 1hc
c:amanodcrie heR' cSoesn'l ui at
ocher law cnfQrocmml "Fffclc:a.
We putolot ofemphoslsoa ltlli•
in&amp;- We ha-eah•lyt ltied to ll:ld&gt;
OIKpc:&lt;ll!le..--ol"\he-lftiMIC·
11110n1 ICdlftiQUCS New VoR II I
hiJitly unionized eavlronmmt. BOll
despite that. we've "'-ned lo ,.1lri,
-u IOgCihor We ·mopr:c~ ooe ..,.
ocher ond wort wothia lb&lt; 0011RmOU of the COIIIniCL"
He conunueo 1"be lhrill of
.. · ng heR' iJ the dJ 111:nll) of 111
peoplt and lb&lt; obili1y 10 "'oiL
II'OUnd aow ond lb&lt;a and tool ll
same olthe mind.
noseatd&gt;
and lb&lt; noce focull) who will lake
ume ll1_.,.pwn """'-' lbey'redot
At the slune rune, reoPie doinc thi
researeh and wntina.. ore themselves I link bit unaw.,.. Of .......
going on about them"" o 24-hour
basis
"Mter aU. Ih&lt;trmergy IS totally
cba.llcn,ed 1n&amp;O their hfe' \\'Or
And sometom&lt; 11 ·, dolfocult for

"We expect everyone
in our organiZJJ/ion
to treat dU! public. ..
with COUT1eSj and
dignif)t"

arms a1 that pou&gt;L"

Arriving on lh&lt; UB campus in

the: early '70s. Griffin saw drug
dealing. weapons on the nudent
union ond 1 gcrocral lack of confidence in campus security as an
effective proiCCIOf of it&gt; dtizeno.
What follov.'ed, he said, ,.... a
gradual establishment of order and
a sen itive protection extended lO
the community, which Griffon SO)'li
is lh&lt; office's hollnwt !Oday.
"It's hard 10 poont out ooe ingle
thing thlll you're most proud or
oft..- lb&lt; period of time I've heen
bere. But! would say that very few
law enforcement agenci&lt;$ eon say
they've had a 23-year period withQUI on allegation of police bnltality. We expeet everyone in our
organization totreatthepublic as if
theyWet-ememhenofthcirfamily.
with c:ourtc:sy a.nd dignity."
De.pite whlll Griffin terms a
'"slruggle" on lh&lt; pan of SUNY
Public Safety direaon lo obeain
the: oWus, equipment and tools th&lt;y
need. "lh&lt;pcople(inl'llblic Safety)
haveperformed,.ithout tho&lt;etoolo.
10 deliver o quality product 10 our
community."

Ln-

them to see .,.'hat we' "' ronfronted
with Ill 2 o' clock on the: momtng.
and the problenll of the: 24-hour
populouon of lh&lt; nudents on lb&lt;
dorms. There is always 1
mispereep&lt;ion of what O&lt;:&lt;'UI'S heR'
and the lcindsofthing .... do.
w
that we're embaotced on community policin! ond problem-oriented
policing. we're getting aothing but
p&lt;J$itive feedback from the: community ...

recalls some: of lh&lt; uudenll he' s known over the:

G riffin

years . ~, porticulartyrcmembc:rlh&lt;

corty years whea there was lot of
strife, the effec:u of the riots~
still bciJ!g felt. Society was going
through a lot of c:honre. sos, Iii&lt;
U.S. Labor Party....,., at OW' UJ!ivenity. I look back with respea,
quite frankly. ot some of Iii&lt; lead·
crs of thole grouJX. even though I
may have disagreed with theirpnctic:es and ceehniques.
"AI least it wasn't the: apathy
that you~ in society !Oday. Poople
tool: positions and they spoke their
minds. Society oeeds people ehoJ.

loWICe

A&lt;ked toenurncrlll&lt; some ol the
caperuoh~ on olongaorea, Grif-

fin recall the lh&lt;ft Of I tradivon
qofm on the 1970&gt;. A member of
lh&lt; Oe•eland String Quortd. on
res&gt;derttt heR'. had left hiS
onstrument on the had. 101 ol hi&gt;
ear parked on Unner.ot} Plar~

sso.ooo

-ooc of the s.tudtnll -. ho
worl&lt;ed for u . ......,.. dod ran a
downtown pawnshop. heanlus tall. ong lh&lt; r&lt;p&lt;111 We kroew """""'cr
uole it di&lt;ln ' t Lno"' they had a
Suadivanu The uudmt eolled
do"'DIOwn 10 ht dod '• pa"'ll.shop,
and his flllbc:r wd, 'Yep. oomcone
JU5l come tn and pav.'Ded oL ' We
got it had. for the S 15 11 had been
pawned for ·

0

liter copen on ""' "oof,ed"
column include o 1970s otudent loan ocam and thc 1980s thcft
of 600 pairo of Womtll'o uaderweor fmm donn dryers os a pledge

requiremenr for o fratcmity.
Sometimes, Grilfta poiDts out,
evea low enforeemt1tt officials

have difftCUlty in .wting out lh&lt;
diffcrenceo between crimo and
prank. For insunce, some el&lt;arieol engincerin&amp; odeDII n::catdy
rigged the eltv11o:n in thcir buildill£ so that 1ft elevator would come:
10 thcir floor iiiii1!Cdiately. upon
requeot. bypusiag ocher requeots.
Thi ..... deemed 11101 • c:rime beCIII5e of Iii&lt; llbsea&lt;i of illjury,
pbyUcoJ damage, or fuwocialloos.
"Had they clamqed thc circuitry or
eadangered somebody. it would
have 'been a aime,• Griffin ·u yo,
And be eon recoil aehievemcn
in oolvma JCriouo crime: the sut&gt;ountiol role the offJce'had ill oolving a aeries of rapes in the
Univenity Hcights district, for in-

BULsay Goffin , the greateot CMI
plea5ure bes •• the 23 ,..... "'
re"'ards of truSI U8 Pubic
and afl'ec:tJoo from Selety.
OWl)' o( W SIU·
dent&gt; he and fclto. olfoc= ha-.

OttVed

·rn ne-.r forget o )OUDI
........,RAfmml..oft I
.rout
20 ,.,..., on . who saod to me
·vou J.noy. •-e really aprorcci:~~e
your olf&gt;&lt;as •• the dormolones II
mpn. They' re the only adult ligures ,.no are heR' ,·

"When udrnl art depr&lt;s!.ed
or00...'11 or dnn~on
mucb or 11
hecoo&gt;eo ol»iou to theolfocc:r 1
there's somethinz wron~o they ' re
sitting up aJ.J mght and not •leeptng. they \II ....th them and dwt·
net them ·
some bad of help
&lt;lllcdina,if' cri) ..............
d lbt clay ... thJoe .
ba:om&lt;
CltMouo. b&lt;l::aK they're -* ID bide
the dik:mma and~ in the clay
'"!lull bnd or~~ and..,...;.
llvlfy iJ 1neuleal&lt;d ' - the depal1 ·
IDCD1 eel thaf 's wbal
differa~~ from a tndirional
enforc:ernm~ agency.·
~ piiiiS indudr golf.

I•"'

lncding rare li

eJ;pelt

,.;r,...

wtd: ill low · C'OCICa'II1IIJ crimes
011 CIIDpuS. ll1l:ondaoc:e • jaz:t ODd
ocher c:ubwal ....-.. ODd • bool:
far pweets of c:oiJeee-bo&amp;lnd Sill·
denls. Wtdowed ill I 992. Griffin is
Iii&lt; fatbcrofKdl A1U1.. a UB pd.
Noel Fotus ol iqJn Folio. and
LeeJr~ 1 Clwtnd 2 Foundiq JJRSideal ollhe SUNY
PllblieSafetyDircc:BoAslocialioa.
Gri(fm io pos1 jliUidmt of the ID-

t&lt;:mlllioaal ~oiCampu$
Low Eafon:cmcnt Adminismofors
He curn:ady "" the: Eric
County Traffic Advdary Boonl's
StqoDWJ~

The~ •ecaTtp~Aoormw..nlly ......... p.diltleGbytw~d~~~ S..~r:J,_,. VM.•&amp;.Illllct ~cAolli . . ~.,_ t31Cn:IAIHII. AMw:a.(7

..s-aBI

~Of~TlONS , _ , . ... _ . ,,EDfTQit . _ _ , _ , ASiiiCJCIAT(EOrfOIIl .......... IIID~ _ , . . . . . _ , AS!IOOot.T(NtJDN!Cl'Dk - - ~---~ --

�ight Out raises cash,
awareness of plight of
Buffalo's homeless
rai ' ngaw.renc:ssll weD as
RIOfte)'.

OREntAN 60UB Sll.ldmu

e ,..... people 10 CO

srm•~~stFridaymp4leep­

away 'llritll an impreuloo that
le.lds ro action." say Mary
Edwards, CAC execuovcdt·
rector.
Thr C\'CAI did leave an

;a1 itt cardboard bo

nden Piau

to

c:s

111

ralse

rooney and .,....,_ for
homeles
Thr &gt;tudcn ,. ~ lal"lli pen in the u·
dNII ~run Comlllllnily ActJOn Corps 111nu.l
i~hl Out! benefi1 for Frkads of the iaN
P."'flk. a
p kt1chcn in Buffalo' Allen·
ln~&lt;ndislri&lt;.'L Tlu year, CACrabed$1400.
"We' re fiaJ&gt;ting a war-a war on .,,,..
eny.· said Lc:s Blllllei. deputy din:clor of
Friends of tht igh• People. ~until ,..., get
li e tbe kids II CAC invol•'ed.
il ' ll ncvc:r be won"
As 1empcnotures dropped into lbe 30s,
~~ danct.d. SIIIJ. wavod 11 TV cam·
rro&lt;. played Jame• . ale piz.:r.a, and
mlkrbladcd..
e'n:rcallyglodrobehere. We' •emn
comm&amp; for the pas1 five year~. We' re happy
10 mppon a good
said Oulo Yang
president of lbe Lambdl Pbl ~ilon
fr:llc:rnity.
Aaron Sn)derman. CAC executi\'e du-.c·
tor-elect. •tressed the impanonce of Gred.
orJaniz.ali
for tbe sU&lt;X~C&lt; of lbe event.
··r ra~emities and sororities raise oo much
n•-.eyforrhis.-'enl. Thrycomcevery year."
Thr CAC puts lbemselves into lbe t.hoes
of tbe bomeless for lbe nigh I. hoping thallbe
demonStn!lon would have the illlpiCt of

"''"" people

ea•.

cause:

l11l(II'CS$100

"*VIt' re rold. but we c:aa

just CO IMide. If a borndeu

stoc:s
.

p
.
enon

locl.:ed ou~"
nucr DeC

m.,.

'de. they get
· udent Jen..
' "When this ..
10 home ro our

··~want people to go away llilh
an impiession that leads to action. ''

beds. For lbem. rbere' • no

end.. she 811ded.

Patty Farvc:r. a

fre~tunan.

has been a volunteerfor fC&amp;'·

Hennow: fromnnl Ml)"'ille
•• Chautauqua County ro
Buffalo, has inspued hc:r 10
j!Ciinvolvod 'llritiiCACtobelp
lbe bornelesl.
"Some people think if• wcinl thai I give
money (ro homeless people) But I •ant
hclj&gt;4hey ' n:JUSt people."
CAC is a grassroots. rudent·Nn orgtnl·
z.atioa that places morr than 200 volun.-.
each year on Buffalo area bolpitais, scbooh,
coun&lt;eling oentas. borncless sbeltas. and
ouroring programs, ro name a f..., .
Members qree lhao voluntecrin&amp; u beneficial for all involved. Students can pin
CJ&lt;perience 1ft lbeir fields of &gt;tudy IO'hlle

Top ...... ,_Wt: ........_
...,_
.......... o.cory. PllttJF.- ...... ....

St. w... ......... tAft: . . . . . . (. . . ~ .... ....
"Pmple.....,. 10 get on•'OI•-..1 If !bey...,.,.

munity

Jon., ""

""'*'"&lt; they
ltlrr&lt;.•
ltUff to do." 11ys Sn)'derm:tn. ..tto Jll- oa
ac1ivdy
membcn ..... ,.....
""'llltft arc eo many lht
•~tailabk' ..
says CAC PubliC!ity Ot oor-Ekco, as&lt;")
'Ny&lt;. "UB u .. awcaomc ptoc&lt;
10 10
school '"
Aarr-•........aedm volunlco:nn;t~
thec-..ity o\aion
....,..,._ mt
off10&lt; •n 370 Studeru Un
1&gt;4S-23n
~ d .•

~

people ..of&gt;o haYC JOil"'l tD•olvod
or&lt; so happy they clid--ih&lt;) realize tt tate.
no~ all. You &amp;~'~•lo&lt; and you &amp;&lt;1 hac~

• lot.. says 1ldwanls
Lei Barna ouled lbe ornportall&lt;% of
CAC vol~~~~~«n 10
Ol'pllll.IOOn and lbe
comnw.onny. 1'be CAC is a good p:qo be·
CIUI&lt; !bey pronl&lt;lle ............. of poveny issues They we one dodJcal&lt;d poup of lad&lt; "

recruib.-

Johnstone to receive Norton Medal at Comme cement
a, IIAa'Y IIE1'II ·P IIIA
News Bureau SoaN

F

OIU&gt;IER S
Y Chaooellor 0 .
Bnoce JohnSlOOC will mleive lbe
Ch~~~ttllor Charles P
anon
Medal. UB 'o highest lribuJe,during the uni~oemoy'• 148111 gen·
cral oornmencerncno ceremony, 10 be held at
10 a.m. on Sunday. Ma) IS , in Alumni
Amna on lbe onh Campu .
Approximatcl) 6,500 IUdents will be
candidates for degrcu
from UB to be awanled
during 14 separale com-

mencement ceremonies to
be beld May 13·1 S.
At the general com·
menoementc:eremony, UB
Presidenl William R.
Greiner will confer de·
l'""" on graduating 5"·
niors from the Facuhy of
Na1ural Sciences and
MalbematiCl. the Faculty
of Arts and LetJeB and tbe
FacullyofSociaiSciencc:s.
Presidenl Greiner and
uudenl Karen L Adelman
ofBuffalowill addoessobe
graduales.
Thr recipieniS nf tbe three Dun· s Awards
"ill be n.omas E. Sharp. social sciences;
Marl. E. BurUnl. na1ural sciences and rrutlh·
&lt;m&gt;lics. :uod William D. Scott. ans and letlen;. Ridlan!L. Wehc:rofBuffalowillreccive
obe leadership awanl.
The President's Medal will be pre~Cnted
10 Robert H. Rosshc:rl. UB distingui.toc:d
•cr"'ce professor.
In addition. honorary degrees will be con·
ferredonBun P. AickingerJr.. Wes~ernNew
y,.-l business leader and chair of lbe 1993
\\'o~tiJ University Games; Robert V . Pound, a
gn&gt;duate and pioneer in magnc:tic .......
nance im3l'ing (MRI). and acclaimed Buffalo

ua

phocograpber and adJUnct
UB facully m&lt;mhc:r M1lton
Rogovin .
Jotm.lonc. SUNY chan·
ccllor from 19 until his
oesignation earlier thiS year
for beallh rea&lt;Ons. wall rece.velbe prestigiou Chan·
ccllor orron Medal from
PhilipB Wels,MD.. chair
of lbe University Council
The. onon Medal 1s
presenled annually in pul&gt;lic recognition of a per50&lt;1
who has, in Nonon·swords.
"performed some great
thing which is llientified
wilhBuffalo . a great civic
orpoljtica) act. agreat book.
a great wort of an. a great
scientific ochievemenL or
any other lhing which m
itself is tnJJy great and CD·
nobling and "'hich d•Jni·
lies the performer and
Buffalo in lbe eyes of tbe
world."
As chancellor. Johnstone ,,., credited
with innovati\·e strategies for incrusing
SUNY' s effectiveness in educating and serv·
ing 1be citizens of Ne,.. Yark State.
A faroighled. deeply committed leader
whose e•traordinary effotts benefited Buf·
falo, Western eVo• York and e"' York
Slate, be has worked vigorously lo mainUlin
lbe SUNY system 's Sb'&lt;'ftgth.
A former president of tbe State University College al Buffalo. be was the firs•
SUNY campus presidenl ro bead the system.
The President's Medal 'llri II be presen1ed
to llossberg by Greiner. Firso presented in
J990.ilisgiven inrecognilionof"signal and
e•traordinary sen&gt;kc to the university. h is
presented for outstanding scbolarly or anis·
lie achievc:rncnts, humanitarian acts. conlri·

but ion of umc or ~m~sure. &lt;•emplary lead·
ersbip or any 01hc:r moJO&lt; contnbutJOn ro lbe
development o f the nl\·ers"y ao Buffalo
andthequ.l ioy ofhfe1ntbe UBcommunlt) "
Ros berg. a professor of coutL&lt;ehng and
educanonal psyct&gt;olog) . has boen on the UB
facull) for neari) 40years Durin&amp; that time.
be has beida numberofadrrumstraa"e pool ,
includJng as§()C'iate dean and dean of lbe
Graduate Scbool of Ed lltlon. v...-e .,...,.,.
deno forocademi affairJ.inte:nrndeanoflbe
Scbool of Health Related Professions and
acting dean of lbe Facully of Arts and Letters
In add1tion to hiS dutieo 11 UB, R.os$hc:rJ
has been a conmltantto a number of federal
agcncieo and &amp;nititUI.IOnS, including lbe U.S.
Civil Sen-icc commi ion. U.S. Offi&lt;X of
Education. .S . Oisnic1 Coon and the City
University of ew York.
The weekend of graduation ceremonies
will begin when the UB Graduate School
bolds its COfJIIIIeDCCIJit II 2 p.m. on May
13 in Alumni Arena. Thr speaker 'llrin be
astronaut Ellen Shulman Baker. a UB alumna.
Pres•dent Gre•ner ,.;u confer degrees

Eight di••isionol commelll'"""'nts ~ttl b&lt; h~ld
on Sa11mlay, May U . TMyart :
• School of Heallh Related Profes io : 9
Lm.. Alumni Arena. Douglas U iak. ..ecu.

tive director oftbe lndependcntl.ivmg Cen·
ter of Western New York. Inc .. wdl speal.
Provost Aaron N. Bloch will confer degrees.
• School of

ursing; 9 a.m .. Sloe Concert

• School of Enrooecnn~ &gt;nd Al'f'loed ·•·
ences. I p.m.. AlumAo Arena. l'rrs1deftl
Greiner v.i ll confer degrtt'i
• School of l'llannac)

I p m ..
Hall
Dean Da•ICI J. Tnuk .. ,n dd&amp;•tt lbe addres . Pro
Bloch ..,n
ferdrtr=

• School of AtrbliCICturc and Plannu•r 2
p.m .. lltu of Hayes Hall UB South Cam-

pus Buffalo Mayor Anohony M 1a~l
"ill addl-es graduate Deaa Brvno B

,uconfer degrees

Fresclu ..

• School of ManaJem&lt;nt. S p.m , lumn1
Arena. Fran J. ColantiiOCIO, pesodeao and
chidcueu~~•eotr..,...ofllldependettt Heallh
iation. Inc., wbo received hi MBA
UB in 1971 . ..
peak. Prestdcnt
Greiner wiU confer dqrees

rrom

,n

• School of Graduate Education: S pm ..
Slee Hall Mayor ~llo will speak and
""""- Bloch will oonrer degrees
In additlOfl 10 tJ.t gtMml .-llwHv-..t.
M Mid OH SIUlda• , Mll'r 15

ctrtml11Uts 10

arr:

• School of La": 2 p m _ Alumni Arena.
Da•'id A. Paterson. senator representing New
y ark •• 29th Oistnct. .. ill oddrus padU&gt;lrs.
Pro&gt;ost Bloch will confer degrees.
• Scbool of Denial Med1&lt;01nt: 2 p.m.. lee
Hall Allall ~ Formicola. dean of Columhla
University' s School of Dental and Oral Surgery, ,.ill deliver the address. Pluident
Greiner will confer del!rees.

ale dean forres&lt;:M'Ch

• School of Medicifte and BiomedlC:II Sci·
cnces: 6 p.m .. Alumni Arena. eil B.
Shulman. associate professor iD lbe Oivisioo
of Hypertension in lbe EniOf)' Uni•wsity
School of Medicine. will oddress gnduates.
Provost Bloch will confer deptcs.

• School of Information and Libraly Studies;
10 a.m.. Student Union Thcaoer. onh Campus The spc:ab:r will be Joan Connell .X.:
president for academic affairs at Canisius Col·
lege. President Greiner will confer dcgrec:s.

• Scbool of Social Wori.: 7 p.m., Slee Hall.
Elleo Grant Bishq&gt;. Eric COUIIly mental
health commis ioncr. .. m spea . Dean
Fredrick W. Seidl ,..ill confer degrees.

Hall. onh Campus Tony T Fulmer, Anna
C Maxwell professor of nursing and associ·
ao Columbia University,
will address gradwu&lt;:s. Dean Meccas.Cranley
will confer degrees.

�I~

\ '\. \ '- \ 1&lt; ll·! ! &lt; • \ &lt; • I c c '
',·I

I:

l

''

l llt

I

!

'-,j

•'

I

II

I I lJ

I I II
\.

1(

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FSEC hears committee view
on university reorganization
0 prinlll)' .atiCnllll i - lOll "l'U"&amp;ll)' ,_,.....
,.;o,dioaaucdia the Tri
Rqlan. fOC1diJII 011 the ,....
en! ~ fbr the deli....,.
of omd•••~P-"..,"'"'.....00.. tile Fllallty Sealite Acadc:mic l'lllmilla Commi11&lt;1: pn:fcn
~ofwt..lheycalllbe "Coor·
dmaliOII Model." DeMit ..._, cblir or
the romm~uee. IOid the F
ty ScftMe £&amp;.
ccutlveC«&lt;II!!ittce WI ...a.
The Cnnnlo...UOO. Model
ld f•Jnll..,
inlamedollle Slnlttllrt .,.. islin of lbnoe
ocparote FICillnes ift lbe AN and Sactlca
"'hiCh ..,..ld fiiiJClioa ,.. 1 si"'le untt, ~

CELl__ LARONE
Where Everything$ In Reach

861-9680
Paula Omicioli

pomuliry

--

c-

"""* .... of

or

6dllc8bc..t ap.
llbol if ... CoorctUo.ed

lbeiiiDddor,_....,_Pro.... B
..,....sed . . '1 do ha.-c
aome
i A'-F........,of
the Tnule
f.-eol full COIIIOhdaiJOII My .-ioa ~ be 10 Pill lbe
CooniJAIICdModd •• fll-. lf.o.-crnmr.. ~
WCII"b. thlr'' Jrl'll.
of-. thea doe C...
oohdaled Model cooold be p!ll •• f'l-.•
On lhtaobjecl of ...tdlcrlht
pul ron.-.nJ I rcoolllliOII reprdia,a the proJI'*d dwl
""""'*- Gmncr Aid

lip&lt;JCl51blc:fortheoumculum ndthedehvery

~ybc

M - wd
The sy em would tbols n:wn the present
dttiJW ltllCI=. and odnuni-i•e authorIty for the uOil would
iotof acomrrutt«
of the lbnoe dcaM and the Vi« """"""' fOil
Ulldergrodlllllt ~- Malont .aid
Tbt .,_..IW prinaple o(
RniCtural
chanf" WDIIld he thallht llllCOUIIIIboht)' and

I"CIIOivtloa f""'·ord. ta ...,t - ' sec v.bal
hoppcDo- After lmstbY ~ lbe FSEC
Withdrew ....aaJ PfQpOOCd rcoot-. al·

o( underpadCiaiC ed"""tio&amp;,

authori!yfOI!u~educaliOII

he on the faculty cooocmcd Ill the deli....,.
oflltlderpdllll&lt; reqvin:mentl. Malont llid.
The nlbo:r poqible IIIOikt for I"COrJiltlWI·
lion. the "Coatolidllioa Model" would form
the lhne seperate C..UWC. IDIO a Ingle
Colle!" of AlU and Scicucea whic.tl ....,.,ld
hive 1 •lillie do:aa.
uid.
Tbt Academic Planai Common"" he·
heves thallbe ad anllgeof the Coordinatioa
Model ttlhat in retainift thepresentdcc:anal
I\ICIUJe, 11 leaot for the presea1 ume. lbcrc:
will he leu ompoa 011 faculty CODCa1IS about
possible: cffeeu 0111be promnbOII and tenlft
procc:u. Malone said. The Coanl•aauoa
Model also ~n lbe already ui&lt;ting proc:eucs within the lhree Faculties with respect
10 administrallve RniC!UtU. and budget and

personnel processes. Malont ujd.
The Commiu"" feels. tbcrdore, thai the
Coordinauon Model represents a leu "sc·
vc:re" &lt;11\lCwral chlnge than lbe Coruiohdauon Model. and affOI!dJ an opponunity 10
determine •hether lhio new Ol!gao&gt;iution
can effect an improvc:mcnt in the deli....,. of
undergraduate education, Malone saod But
Malone un:ssed the intcnnc:&lt;bate nature of
the Coordination Model. sugcotin&amp; that
should this son of coosobdotion prove liUC·
cessful. further consolidabon might follow
Roger Burton of l'ry&lt;:boiO&amp;)' asked
wtoat •~tent lhl rc:O&lt;"Janozation ...msol cthe
problm&gt;S cum:ntly auocialed with undcrgroduate educat.i011.

M no guarani&lt;&gt;CL We think this propou1
a~ responded by

top by The Center For Tomorrow
May 4, 5 &amp; 6,
from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. for details

-

lily f01!118dapliCiowe
""''~libi"ti"ry fOil•

'"ying "There.,.,

i more lilr.ely 10 sua:ccd."
Provost AJroo Bloctl added thallbe fllllda-

mcnlll problem with ~ educanoo "thalcurriculumdce..ionsanddcc:Wons
about rcsounx:s arc currently mode in differ·
ent places. Thus lbcrc: tt currently no 1ocanon
.."hcncoonpr&lt;:bensiveplonningofiiJIIbogradu.
ate education i possoblc, Bloctl said.
Maureen Jameson of Modem Languages
and Literatures saod that it .. .. undeor 00..
the new Coordinated Model would he.JiiiTcrent from either the currently elistiDg system
or the Consolidation Model. Jameson said
that if lhcre wc:re 1 ~-enlnll governing body
that had control .,..... the "lrade-offs" involved in mokong decisions about uncJa.
graduate education, then thai seemed like
consolidation. whaeas iflhcre were no such
body. theft the proposed chlnges woUld be
li ttle differen t from the currents)'Slan.
Pruidcot William Greiner responded thai
"There are any number o f woys 10 reorganiz.c:
the Atu and Sciences. The difference in the
new system. he Slid. would be tbat lbe lhne
Atu and Sciences FICU!ties. bo..ever organized. will be told oollcctivcly tbat lbcy will

isolimcfOI!theSalaio:IOputno

tboup ...... of

""""' VOitd
1ft od!cr FSOC
~ Y~.
cNdr nf the Foculry Sma eon- na

llacaldlandc.-.. Actrvil).and D*L-.

ror,.,....a,.""'"'*""

...,.preVc~ent
1h&lt; FSOC
1 draft of lbe ~ 011 "fllobcy on
~Coeduam~ ano!CK-

'll'llll

.,.., AcuYily•• wl&gt;icll

for biDdlmc
flict of

will dc\dop • procou

..........., ~

"*""' .-• UB

and

eoot-

"There are no guarantees. We think this
proposal is more likely to
succeed. "

---

"Tho• I I poOCf thai docsa't JUS! med
fcdcnl regublioM. wh:icb ""'
do. ""'
thai olso defines ow own ~ u 1
umvenity." Londi said
"Wc' •c: created a &lt;locummt lhlt c:aables
us 10 keep the procni on our OWil campus
and DOt hive it taken away by fcdcnl JUrtSdiCUOil." Lando Sl.lcl. -n.c fcdcnl govent·
ment can 11ke such c-.. out of our hands
ony umc they want, ond it's -....y fOil
u.s to cnoft 1 6ocumc:ntlhat """"'t au~~e lhlt.Landi wd that it .. u al iJllPOilWII tlw
l18 ba&gt;-e a procc:u lhlt is flir and thai proI&lt;:CU its flculty.
Phillip y~ poiDted OUl thai thecum:el

dooumcnl deals only wiih -=adcmic miocoe·
duct caoes. and DOl COilllict nf ~ ........
bccawelbe fedenl ~is l1ill dtbot·
. 00.. to dcfmc conflict or intaea.
'"We hive to wait for the fctlmll JOV&lt;rn·
mmt deci ion ill order to respond." Y.,.Je
said.
"We hive collected onfllnllal.ion 011 oonma of illlA:n:ll. and the oomminc:e · thinkin~ aboutlbcoc iSSUC$. so obe grc&gt;UIICiwori&lt; os
tbcrc, but attbis time 11 woulda't be fair to
hive the oomminee write aaythin&amp; obout
a&gt;nOict of iftterc:st ~"be said.
1

......,..............____
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.............
_..,.
--............
.............
.....,
..........
_.,,...
........
..-.........................
............... .
._............WE WAN'fto HEAR

Y-VGICE
,..,...
._.....
..._

...._

LIIMioa . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

.....------........ ......

c..-...., ..... &amp;.,.-..
--..!---·~-"'

�·Grad students honored at
Teaching Convocation
IGHT GRADUATE nudcnr•
wcrellonored April IUar·la&lt;!bing e&gt;.a:llenoe at Che first Graduare Srudtnt E•ecllencc in
TeachiogAwardConvocationin
Addreuing 1hc convocauon. Jo~ c
Sirianni. dean of the Graduate School and
Distinguished Teaching Professor of An·
u..up&lt;&gt;lovo. said tht 01udenb were sel«::ed
nn •he basis of&lt;'riterialbat rnclude teachlns
•IJII•. 'mentcnhip. ilcM&lt;:mic otandards and

•3uat'

requi~.
rna nee and pro~

ohrudenr perfor·
Jtowth.

"Aeademrcsc
lpandteaciunawlr.
ore tiA'(I impon.am
ponenu of rcaching
""cell""""·" Striannipoin~edou:t. "'but "'ilb0111 menrorship or &lt;:anng, the pcrurc WI·,
quire cot1!J:dete. • lr's also rmporunt, ,;'be
said,
"To e!lpf" m disru..which
would enricb thc learning nperiCOCie, to
exp11nd the intellectual lhon!Q!Io of a narrow! focused tudeoL to ad•ise them beth
academically and personally. To be: a role
model."
The teaching awards "'""' esrabhshcd by
the Gradullc School and the Graduate Student Associarion to rerognitt graduate &lt;tudaus who ""' commiued to teaching and
who have developed an exceptional compcteftee in teaching.
Honorod were: Sinkwan Cheng lllld
Mauritz Royce Kallcrud. EnglW.; Grelchcn
Knapp. HiSIOfy, .ldbn Erruaand Erica Sargcm.
Psychology; Sie'len Dixon. Educationllnfonnation and Ubrary Studies:Niloufm(Nil)
Mac'-"y. ~ter Science, and Lornjnc
lncardorut. Biological Sciena:s.
Sinkwan O!eng was cited for hcr erudition in a wide array of critical theories ud

lnadlh of li!&lt;tfw)l undmtaading. "Siilt 011
!be ocademic sa:ne. briUiance and le.wltin
""' .....rhlc:A ..,..,.. ~ can ..,;,..,niale
wnh od!m and !*'litUiat1y 10'i1h rt.o.e f.leu ven&lt;d in """· • foeld." *Tale !be IIO!IIi-nator. Her ubderlfad
51udcn "51.1)1ed
will! berev&lt;ty ep ofihe "'"t and,..,.... {lJJcd
wid&gt; a rare cnlhuli m and ddifht in thtir
....,, powers 10 thltlk 011 their kel "
Citedforhla "cuetJ)ri fli"CSCJJCC"iathe
Enghsh Oepartmo:nt. tallritt~
!crud
"'U
for "his classroom praotia: o(
ea!ensivc IIOUJ' di
ioG and "'fXX''illl
wort. hisoomtanldialogue wirllhis udew

pnu""'

oo pop&lt;T and tn conl'emllce. his '""'~
that thcy reOcct bod ooouniiOUIIy on their
own wrltill£ lhrotijlh rewriting and the nwn ten1li&gt;Ce
lhdr portf!llios. •
"Anel«ptionA.. indi.tdual with theinlcllectual ~ly and 1111inl11£ 10 be: an euell¢:nlscholarand 1 wpetbtcachcr," ~
to the nomitlllina krur, Grachen Knoq&gt;p
wu honon:d for hcr I~ of lustory and the
Wl)
r:ommuni&lt;:atcsl.hat love lOber stu-dcniS. As a gDduate tiPnant in the World
Civitizalionoourse. ohc sho.....JgiQ~ imagination in CIOO•tying matenal, for instance.
ocganiring discussions and deha
about
historical fig&gt;ftS and iruc:rpn:wions.

or

J

ohn M. Ernst 11:8Chc5 three regular departmenlal ~COUlSC'i Psy o~~o~ogy "'nt ShlliaK. wruing of Ernst's
"Raa: and R1ci m" cbss, WI'Oll:. "'f all !he
classes I ha"" taken It (UB~ I have never
c:xpcricoced • lex:her capliVIlina and car;~8 as John Ernst. His class wu al"' ays fuU
and no one.,_ lei\ early. John's otr- dooF
,... alwoyo open and be made hi"""'lf available 10 talk aharn any problems or cona:rns."
Etka Sargen1 C&lt;&gt;lrtbincs, .ay• her nomirunor. "1 rigorous empuicism and a gencr--

u.

"Without mentor. hip or
caring, the picture isn ~

--

quite complete. "

ow hwnanlsm. her wad lll8l'lcd b)• 1ft
unw uaJ son of I"'Cle and wannth." ~
af hcr qualilic1. U I teaOhcr. Erica SorBCDI
.... chosen to be: a ovbstilllle inSlnlCior for
two...., ....,.,.. liCCOOilS of lliU'OdlJCIOr)l psycholqgy wbc:n a facuiJy member become ill
"These seroon.. rae~! lit&lt;:tally hundR&gt;do of

,..rot.._ 1"hcy ore
and the inwtoc&amp;or m\ISI be: able

5tudcn1S," hcr nomialllOr
team laUj:ht.

10 bOld her OW1I with a •&lt;ty experiencled and
"""""'P'ilihed full professor .... Sbc perhcr ·~peeled dutia. but"'" baa abo
deaigned 1 YCI)' aalive 1I}'Oiem o( undc:rgraduale peer COOIIJdinJ for the course."
StcY&lt;:n Di~on il enrolled •• !he Gra&lt;hlau:
School of Bducauan inlbc Cooperative DocloBI Program10" atdo ~ D~ •• Soci.J Foundacions with 1 special•:r.al.loo rn h1gber

f...,.,.,

eduoca~JoWJadcmtc

llhnru.nSblp I rcadli~ IWO ""'&lt;)' Jll'lll1lrllS io !be
program, O.x011 "pcrfcrnn. supcrl&gt;l ~ 1n the
dauroom. G
"bk IO.aaimu beyond
tbed
&amp;Dd . I cariftt.appmo&lt;habk:
i !IITUdDr 10-ho SCI hrp sland.ml flY his
itlldemll ad ,.'ho rs OCiilpllloudy faJr inlbcv
e'Valuanon Acc:ordrng to her "''""naiDr. N ilouf.cr
Macke)' ha rnf«tiOU cntbusitun u a
rcacber of &lt;'OnlpUI&lt;Ir '"""""" and IS "a Cl •

traord.n.-, e•posllor • Ont "'udent rcfcmxt
1D llcr "owmal chans.ma." "rntdhgtn&lt;r" and

"ilhn~rohelprnlft)'"'&amp;) " "H&lt;-rfl&lt;"'"'-

caOOa (or das- "corcful he undcr'OI:and•
wben a srudem 1 un!Am' and IS wilhe&amp;IO
bdp and 10 nplaJn on a 1- 1
H.er
grad! ! I thorouch and farr ."
lomiftt lll&lt;:ardoo.o doh ..... ~10&lt;1·
thai- "dew, CXIIICOO&lt; ad dfcdl~.... ~ka&lt;r Stude:nti- p'lliKd
llcr~ltdjH-llbilit} ..
"&lt;01&gt;\'ey icJis in I"'*)' _,-10undo:nJL1nd. In lht

lootJ 112)&lt;'1n.lht:lw--•-.

-

;, ..._ dltrcmo~ . - - -

very~

BIOIQv
,....,.ani

111

She is. ~tta. fKIUII,\ rn&lt;:rl'll!cr. "a
inslru;:n .

WBFO repeater stations let UB reach out to Southern Tier
HESEDAYS.UB isreachingoul.
through radio, 10 more of the
Southcm Tier than ever bc:forc.
ThMia to manydedicared publjc radio listeners wOO Hved lOO
f:v-awoy from ButfalocohcarWBR&gt;.Iheonly
full service national ,pubh radio affililue in
Wes~cm New Yor\. is oow,.,..mi~g people far
nu!Sidc the boundaries ofitsoriginal broadcllsl
si~ . With the help of rq&gt;eatet Slllions thll
pick up lhe original SlDiion signal and rebroadcast i1.cxlending irs range. WBFOnowreaches
as rar as nonhwcslem Penn ylvanlL
When lh&lt; new repeai.CI' SlDiion WUBJ. 88.1
FM. locared in 1he JamestoWn area. comes on
line in lbe next few months, WBFO will have
three rq&gt;eattr 5ll1tions lh81 enable its broadca.&lt;t&lt; 10 reach a larger and much more "'idely
di'l"'f'ed populati&lt;~a. Tbcother"''Oare WOLN
r9 1.3 FM) in Olean and 96.1 FM on lbe All
&amp;nd FM of AdelPhia Cable in P,nsylvania.
Roquests ...,..,;ved by WBFO from many
indi\'iduml ,.ilo wanced access 10 public radio
arc direc:tly responsible for exlending the
stru~&gt;n's signal. says Jetmifer Roth. general
mannger of WBFO. "MOSI of the roquc:sts
came from persons familiarwilhStandatd NPR
fare a•·ailable in larF markets. such as 'All
Things Considered' and 'Morning Edition."'
Roth says. "Many others expressed interest in
WBFO'sjazzandetlmkmusicprogramming."
Douj! Carr. assistanr professorofjoumalism and mass communic.ations at Sa.
Bona•'e!lturc and a member of the WBFOI
WOLN ad\Osory hoard. was instrumental in
working with WBFO 10 e5tablish WOLN
and bring•p ublic radiototheOiean area.Uke
othcr repealer 5talion._ WOLN has no employees. Cartsays. ll'snOlhlng more than an
clcclronic box on an antenna lbat picks "Jl

the original signal and repealS il insllllltly .
·AI 70 miles south of Buffalo. we· re too
far away 10 get the original broadcasl sisiiJll
dearly," Can says. He call the reach of
WOLN "amazing in terms of geograph) ."
Tbc: signal reaches ]()or 40 miles to the eas~
of Olean, abour 25 miles sou1h ln10 a region
lh81 cxu:nds bc:low Bradfonl. Pa~ 20-25 miles
WCSIIO ~o( AJqany Staief&gt;arl.andnonlt
IOibe-.,o(Ast{ooJJiollolo,Ca-rsays. 'WOI.J"
sen'C!i approdmately 75.000 peoplr in ••

"71tis will be of... benefo not
only to the region, but to
New York State in.general "
area thac includes three New York State
coon1ies and two Penn ylvania counties ...
Repe"'ersUilioos need different call letters
and a diffen:n1 froqiiCIICy from WBFO because if !he repealer signal was rebroadcast al
88.7, the signals would caned each other out.
Carr .ays. The FCC requires a new callleuer
for cv&lt;cy differern frequency. be: say .
"This is the only way we could ha••e had
access to 1he bc:st news and informa1lon
sen-icc in the country." Carr says. adding
lh81 WOLN also reaches the faculty and staff
of Sr. Bonaventure. "II' s also the only jazz
station that we have m lbe rogioft. .. he says.
Anothcr major benefit for Olean is that.
with WOLN as a repeater swion, WBFO
now has 10 pay close anentian to things thai
happen in Olean. including school closing
ropons and SL Bonaventure sporu. Cart
says. "Stories for Olean now reach ev&lt;cybtlllf who lisltll$ to WBFO. which in tc:nns

ofel&lt;pOSurci&gt;t~s."Carnay• . "Buf-

falo IS a primary ITW'kct for St.lloo.,.enture
Bul a lot of people in Buffalo IDlY JIOIIc..,.
where Olt.an i&lt;. despite the fac1 1bll we're
the rna:rk'Cl ce1uer for a number of counues...
As a member of 1be WBI'OIWOLN
soryboord. Can'• function is 10 keep lbc board
a"'arc of issues n:gartting WOLN, be sayo
"We tal~ about WOLN as 1 scparare bltJiln."
Carr says. "Our lisl&lt;:oln lhi · of illbat way
'"When I came hen: in 19 7. we couldn''t
hstcn to ·All Things Considered' and the
'Morning Edition,'"
says.
01 ha,;,g
public radio was a defining ~of how
remote we were. So ,..., began workiJig on
v.·ays to get a signal down hen:. Jennifer.Roth
of WBFO wanred to eucnd !be $lllion '•
range. and we wanred il e~tcnded . She did
much of !he leg wort-geningl!"'niS. wori:ing with the FCC and wilh cagineen.
"Now !hat we have WOLN, we' rem:ninded
of lbc many plc:asures of public radio.- em
says. "Wcdon'tlaia:ilfor~·soneof
only foursr:ations in Olean. andwt: rcall)' lwsiJo
during our rnembc:rship drive."

*"1·

c.n-

amie 0 ·Brian. a rrc.Jancc writer in lbc
tov.-n of Coudersport. I'll. was inslnlm&lt;n,.l in bringing to Pennsylvanio the
WBFO repeater otation on the All Band FM
of Adelphia Cable. Primanly o c-able tekvision broadcasting company, Addphia also
broadcasts through radio, O ' Brian .ays.
"We'rein the Allegheny rtiOWllainl. where
radio""'C!J&gt;lionisn'tverygood."O'IIrian.ayo.
"Until ra:endy, wt: were tht largest orcaeas1 of
lbeMississippithlldidn' u.a:ivepublicradio.
Our connection in !his pan of Pcnnsylveia is
very much with New ¥011&lt; Stale. Mosl p&lt;0p1e
around bert do ,lbcir .sbQpping in Olean.The IOW!IS of Coudcnport. Austin, Port
Allegsny, and ~ wid! allllal popui.MiDo

J

ciiii1JUDI!JO,OOJ""""""aswdl•~r
111'eaS.r=iveWBFOifwourha..,....~
hyCouderspon~) ~il!lJb,;dayof

Adolfb:a Calile. 0' BNo 51)1&gt;- Subrcrihers' to
AdoiP&gt;ia cable get hooked iruo ~- ...

clio 9!Moe. hy ~-in an extra cablc book.ed ur
for 1*110. lbc:«' • no &lt;Xlrll
for~~
Ill A&lt;lelplm"s radio terYion.

he sayo.
"'When II'DCMd bd.r I f1IOIIIbo otn I """'
~""""'had..,
mdia."
O'Brian ays. Mer an *"""1'1 Ill J!ICIII ~

.,.,.,....,public

Rllion&amp;omPtmS.r.ilod.O'Brian~
WBFO,and.bepn~"&lt;iihAdcilpbiac.tlle.

'WeJd.""'*"J4L11W)'md...oJdios.,lnd~

p'08fllll'l1ing ow:r
~ " O"Brion says. '1lul:
now ...,.,.,Fljazz.rqp&lt;.....t lrisil
.roo.
AndweJ!Cl ~EcliWI.· 'AD~Cm­
sidmd' ad 'W&lt;d;cnd Eduian.' ltioop.1h:ll""""'
........ IIC'IK &lt;1oesn 't F )'OIL"
The $31,000 CXll.1 of insmbn:ion for the
new repearer collotion WUBJ mJamcotown is
being pri'•Oidy funded hy four JamestOWa
fOUlldations. the Gebl:»t Foundation. the
Slleldoe IFoondaliool.lhe Carnahan-1"""Foundation and the Rulqui51 Found.ai&lt;m.
Milcslas!&lt;:r,oSUNYII'USI&lt;ead..,.__

raidml.saysWUBJ ..ili~CII1phasi..,thc
.hismric. ecoaamic. and ......... ~ o(
dle~rqpoa !DBid'liloand l b' Yai:
on! willkals -ion o n -·rommer-

s-.

cialdcv&lt;:lopmmiiii1JUDI!ihcR1.11~'11)'.

"'Thillwilbc:clgeabcno:fitrotonlylOihe"''!ionlu !Dib· Yai: Slain grnm~.~ l...aosersays.·
Je110i£cr Roth poinn out lbal WBFO' s
localion on tht UB COilpJS • jllll1 'Of 'lo!ha
makea the station &amp;!tractive to lioteners.

"'lbrooogbouralMCCtion "idl UB. wc'110Aiille
dr:aw 011 c:xcclleut I'CSOUJtU ill ..,... tiki:
news and public afJails proji»tDuirtjl.~Redo
ays. • And 'havma !be rcpeaiiCr . . . . . helps
us gd ...,-dOUitoplacestikclameaown lllxllill
Wbll's happcninJ II UB."
II

10

�INrotb.cittl .. .

OA_S STE
ERVI
qwality, depoulobU. proftu;;;.ru mainlntatt«
trvia• desiped for the
nl
ty fit
w \' orll: at .8

ffiM

OOMPA11BLE PC's

OVEIL LAN SUPPORT
APPLE MACINTOSH PROD crs
Also: PRlNTERS &amp; TYPEWRITERS

---

•

Fer cost compeliiJ~ pnc11111Dd rehilbohty. coil now

ror

yourquocc

691-0001
M&lt;Diioa fb

ad •nd

ruei••

labor oa our lint

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_,__

w-

T.....,._.._
......

--~
-~c-r..

.-, o.. Loos .uo
ee... Ooomca Coliq&lt;

...-- . :45 ua.-3:30 JUII.

~~.. . . ~De
l ....
w..._Dq&gt;LoiH_A_y

~-- ..­
-..-""- U l i. - - C o l-

ndMocbcol~.

q..~~Bolflllo

Tau AAM UoJ.. 306 l'otber

-

y Col·
.....Cdlqe....
o.--. 210 l'lrt&lt;.

-~- ~~P-"'­

PIIY'IiiC:a CCII' • • •

...,.__
70--- -

. _ LleW Saunoc ..

~c:oe·-.·=

n..~-...-..

.........,.
ea, n a ....,,
~--­

De. A. Piocmt.. AT•T Bd1
!.Abo. • 54 ""-a:U.. ortll

---

ICddo Mall'.. pral-. Uol¥.

~3 :45p.m.

-~ o.. J.._

-,....
-

w.,..·.w-ILu-,_,c.o.p._

LAW--POUCY

T lot C)'do o t v - . , l'rof.

A~oViowol~.

~- GoldJ&gt;cr&amp;. 7:»9:30 p.IIL
&lt;:.1164~12510 rqjtla'

~~~.!7.

_.._.
w--. -· w.,_'l
W-IL

-~8p.m.

CodU'
SpoLt
Hioddool
Oiooiool- Ro-

- C . . .,SUNY•A-y.
2101'1ft.-~4p.111.

St-

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9p.a..AAIIIIiloD: I 2 . - .

SJ.50.oll-

-.....; u.so. oil ua~ ....... uaa..-.

_ b r _ S _.

Slcc c.-.n Hall- c..
I"ILip.a

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Didaodaof. -~
p.a. E_,-

Friday;.,-

- , .. All

0 ,...

ore-.

...,.,.......

....... a.y . ..

KeY**~··­

~

6:30ood9p.a.-=n.

1.1111-

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_ _ ~ Aleeeoo

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SpriooJOioioaiDo . . ..
-byUBM&lt;dicaiA-

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-..&amp;.oLI*C

Qo-;11!-le
~ Michod Scoolao.
Orqoo SlaM: Uol•. 120 Baldy.
-~·p.m.

------· --...--- -..----n.e-r.--____
----no--·
----c..

por, Dr.
Pbytia [lq&gt;L 454 F r - .

~ [lq&gt;L otCdl 8101oo.UIII•. o t M . - .
Medal Scloool. w~ 121
Cooke. Campus. 4 pIlL

--~
..... r.-wJaak,Dr -

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1

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IHalt! f.m.
Adm.-·16. $4. Sl.

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_,Copillves.:kecco, MIT.
'101-....oo:r. """~

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-

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..

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'floe ......~ ",..... ol
- - . . T4,Dr fA.
ward - y.' UB 0q:x. ol lholosical s.a-... 1 c'"l

UBW
PloiJoolP!y
fnn·JIJV
Neuc.tlllel.llqa_
~•
61311al4y North c--

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M O NDAY

u . ,...... ,- . Luoo

GPUS:CI.AU4CS '- A L

- -..-.,
.,..
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~

J . . .- - . _ . . . . ;

Vodlo uod Todd M..,.• ..,..

-.s~eec-Koll

NorthG-.Ip.m

Wloik, ..........,.... _ o {

l S. Rldi. R&gt;meoo. Atoe ud
C,..W Sooa.. !Ukollll.cclbl Hall
Sood!Compm.7p,m lilqoiO
lh&lt;pobl' .

.·-

-..-

COHCIIIY

{ ...............,.N-

IFA·

-ll.alnllt&lt;:&lt;loaiHall
~ttl Campul. oo. Free

A_.,. So_.,_

COHCIIIY
Tlw
Quand. Sl« Con&lt;:&lt;n HaU
' ·wth Campus p m Admu·
U •&gt;n t.IO.S5."'

· ewr,
).........,.
ud ...
lWwrllty
O.wlei
Ptlu
oil Hornet St
&lt;;Daduc:""'
Sl« C""""' H11l Nonb Compus 8 p.ftL

.., _ _ .fO_

-

Tlo&lt;F'SA-o(Ootoaon

r•"'

winmcrt•MI) ]all
I 4 S O - U -. llonh

)

UES OAY

~

tXttlatT5

-ANA--

N -!Uid c , . - . 1

STIIDIMT IIECftAL
UB 1o.,t. !PiaeoSt•·
dftots. Bllinl Reciool HaiL onh
C'arnpui NOOIL
tiOUIIANILECTUII£

SERIUIII-

Monl ll&lt;:colatloo la tloe Sod-

.., ., , ... ,...• ..., Prof.

Alexander Ruin. clepoly head

Oq:x o{ Motrow
~late" Uru" . 684 B.aldy otth
C•mrm. l p.1n.
of oh&lt; blooa

-

~IMUIIY

s..,...,...

Ino..- ainl&lt;:
look L&lt;ld:wood Ubnory.
~-Campo ·

t11&amp;1tftn requ:i.red~

I p.m. Pmeps·
ptct •lilP •ron:n ..

~A-)'iact ...
M llriM~Dr

~ R"Vic-• . ('1htbtlt0a o!
WOf'l by lJB arcbtltttutr: and

I'I!IUMACY-\EC'I'UR£

w...u~ corpono­

dlraufb Friday 1"tt«n. " no ad~

I &gt;IS p.m.

__

A ~ioa oe Sa:DC1111lf'Y

lioo, ROS&lt; Mori&lt;: Shannoo. pro
duoer. Sandv'"l Wood Molu

mc:dia ·Corponooa.. TOI'llDIO
1149 Fine Am c..-. onb
Compos. I p.m.

ic&lt;: Fobricalioa

_..... c-.
_..,._om..

'Toduliq....

Typos. Dr
S. Arney, ATkT Bell lAbs. 4~
liroocz;lk. North Campus.
) ,4Sp.m.

-

~­

~

Leanolq, Dr. Rould L
Drovis. Or:pl. o( Cell B.iolozl'
IJid Oep.. o( Neurolot:l'· Baylor
Uoi•. College &lt;&gt;f Medicine. 121
Coole&lt; N01111
p.m

c._..•
IIA_,_
couOQI••

MoptMMdlooob
for JVabOlit ParliaiDill.,...oial

-

WIIT-Y

~CGI'IDI

D.bl ud 'E4-i'Y Capitol
s....-iaWNY, WNYTecb·
no1ozy Ondopmeal Cenoo:r,
Inc. CCMCr for Tomorrow.
. anh Compus.l; 15-ll u n.
Fe&lt;: $SS. To
WN Y Tc:clmolorY DeYdapmcnl
~. lac.. 6]6.1626.

-

rqiso.,."""'""

~P-RAEF

o.-. l'll'llip llllodi,Ocp.. o{

Ana1omy, R•vanUJai ~. Medi·

o l SdiOOI. -

Hilldlo&lt;

Auditorium. 'RPCL t 2::30 p.m.

2 and coatli!UC$

floor , Ha)'« Hall Soulh Cam
pon. Th&lt; hall .. """" 10 .........
f.culsv and lhc: commuru~y from
9 un" to :5 p.m. M.t.WK\ay

M ..,_ llodios aDd 0...•·

4

plannllS,C cndiJ.II( s:t.wdenn.

Cooke. Ncnb Ornpn- 12 45

·-

WE D"ESOA l'

-·

opeM ~by

PIIYSICIIU...
IJ)-auola lal'wbuood s.,.r-

3 4 5 p..m

c..,
_,_TMUIS

trkPol&gt;o--lia
Sidd&lt; Cell~ Linda
Eiben.. l'bann 0 c:andldal&lt; 5&lt;Jlj

...,

y._...,..n••......,.

Gatlery. 84S FiM Am Cenr.er ,

• \18 0q:x. ol
Mtdocal TC'duiOI&lt;lgy 306
F....... SoonhC"""'"'
12.l0p.m.

St&lt;:pbcll

l..ocl:wood'a referenoe desk or
E· mall
ILOL.OEM MA.UBVM).

............. Prof. C. Mi.
S-yrxmc U.AiV. Ph)'ltn Dept.
219 Fmncz.olt. North Campus.

- wrtb Lop."
"IIFA
Aoto...nMFA - b y KJ11l A. Wl:llfmg.
Of)lmS with a ~ today at
~ p.m_ and OOM11J.ue$. thtougb
h4.1)' I) ri111 the An tllepartment
on11 Campo• For mronrut!lon.
"'11 Ms-61!71 . E.xbi... 'I""'·
oor&lt;d by tbe
Fund.

~~'""""""' ,Dilf&lt;nolialioa o(

See Mrke MyeM&gt;
and Oana Carvey
cavort as Wayne

aJIId Garth on
Wayne's World 11.
Apni2S and 291n
Sluden1 Unaon
Theater

.......... ., .,
. ...............

~ . ,...

lllfOOglo Moy 16m Ill&lt; I...,.

Dyat E.Ahib:ntoo Hall. 1btrd

rnttliOfl

dw'Je.

..,.__

...,ALOWA-AND

A ibo'W of Horill)OS Wae:rltODt
Commiuioa plut for lht B.uf·
f&amp;lo wotedroooond ·- r o e·
tinUICI throu,lh April 29 m 1lbr

1...,.. Oyen E&gt;:bibitloo Hall.
lhinl floo&lt;. Hoyes Halt Sooth
Camputo The hall iJ opca to
.....,...._ faculJy ud me com·
rm;ady from 9 a.m. to 5 fUll ..
td&lt;lndayohroolpmday ........
II DO .dmju;loa

dw:J.t'..

OIVIIISI1Y- _,,.
UB'o lkrilqo .,_....,
...,....-.s.-.,11915 u~ Utnry
(opoa-byUm-·
.;oy AR:hives~ ohroOIJI&gt;

olfoczn.
· 1«111&lt;
pusiti&lt;wd
................
.,...-... _,..,, uod ua
5Wa'".fibouldbc'IICfiiiOII:MI:r
dw&gt; s p.-. rodayaotl&gt;f!Wll
aoo. ot 3Sl h&lt;p&gt;Qulll. EJI;oon
Coo~Pk•

tru 64J.OII 4l

IIUD'ftUST~&lt; ..,,.. r.,. lh&lt; 199'

s.nn

mer~s~~rt...,...d:ut

Fomu. are •~labk: ll. .U lle
Jen:~ t:lesb of lht: Un1¥tnll)
i..&lt;b&lt;an« Froculty *"'kl-&lt;
ohc - - fu&lt;Falll'l941k
.stnt-U$1$•tA."'. I

LOAICTho: Otf- o{ F i - ""'

...~~utha"\ ·

lA&amp; a ptt:teDliOOII 011 loa cou•

w-

"""'' roqwo_... ""
'l'lmr1!bry. Apnl n"' 3;30

pm iolll
HaD. Soodo
Compus. 00 Friday. """' 29 11
3.l0 p m .. 109 Koo&gt; HOIL Jlb1h

-

Compos.
UR-~

.r S......., Life-"'
ondivKillah williJt&amp; 10-lhcir '

lbeOtf~C~C

opc:cial-~­

or • oo lull Ufc Woob!q&gt;o
ito lbe faiL Warbklp ~ ·

oiesiecludtuy~aqpic

)'OU c. dolark ot Woo'blqrlopc:oao....,.__lodudia&amp; UB
-~.
110!1'.
-·
oily
.... _ , _
_
-

----·-lOCI

Ill&lt; OtfJO&lt; ...

s..- Ute •

645-4125.

Continued on page 8

�8

t£W I'Kl IMPORTANT

•OI.D lONaS •IN A NEW
CAR
BY ROBERT JAMES WAll.CR

tw..--sre!I5J

Old 5onps in a New Celt IS
a oolleaon 01 essays by
~ Jarres WilNer on love
and lOSs end Jhe p111ees end
anrnals lhlll Jhe au!hor has
cored- From l'ls boyhood ... Iowa 10 !he loss 01 •

9"""' ~ w!1o IS,..,.._
ong ~am tune. lhls os a.,...,.
ong book ol e&gt;cpeoenoes !hal
we must al lace

-1 --·
2
3

-

4
5

..,.,_ 10 I!PI)OII"'I ... outsllrldtng , _ facUIIy

.........
----

~AllhOugh
~. appar•I
led tibrar.... ne11tw 01 . . ccndtatxMI hM t»eo mat
Firlt. !here haa ~no u.ch and the libranan
oositiOO toes nol _ . . bean posted And, 01 CXK.rM
rmative .:liOn hU bean corrclletely ~ AI a
timed lhor1.1rge ci jObe lor librarla'w, IIUOh 1801&lt; 01 ramal procedure IS parllcUatiy rt!P'ehenslble
Pethaps mere &amp;~gnificart. . _
the UB
libraries
thou Ill many r-.rch lll'll\ler&amp;o
.-a
CCII"IIic»rable I'ILITtlar d pal'l--trme tibranens mMlly u

who

An IOCI'eaaiflg

_
_ $17!15)
~Aecf.old

•

by-On::ibl
(Krot&gt;/, 1241

4

(Ool~.llll!l5}

SarnGIJmes a book """""'
along thai makas us truly
care lor Jhe Characte!s and
le&lt;liiOSs...,., the book
M'is Lealllflg CckJ Sassy IS

rt~.m

• Publoc Safety reported

Apnl 10 that someone !lad
1om all the stalls off lhe
waus In a rest rocm '"
Goodyear Han Dama,gas
were estrnated at S200

body problem Chat IS the lllJJIIIIOn where
m ordet' to twe one ci a couple, • jOb
must also be lound tor a SI)OUM or "810·
roficant other" (her after $UI)SUrned under "spo~ae")
When both spouses are academiCs, the problem be-comes espeoal ddhcu~ for UIV...,I • ~
beea.-e the two halves of a couple are elmtlllt _ , .
equa deSirable horas Unrvers1tlft should be ser~~~l
to lhts problem and make every reuonable ellon to
hnd a posfbOn lor a spouse When a department or othef
unrversrty orgarliZlllron warns ve&lt;y much 10 twa the
Olher ""~ ol the couple
The problem IS rhal "' 11y1ng 10 accommodate a
spouse. the unM!rsrty must be sensl
not 10 d.scnmna agalt&gt;SI.more deSerVIng appbcan AsslA'Tlfng , es
we must. hat a spouse •s qualified tor the lob 'Mlrch
he or She IS 10 be appo!nled, at least two condltrons
should be sausfred be1ore !hal appomtmentos made
1
'IOrmai search shouro be made and the SPOUse
8DP&lt;l' ted only rf no clearly supenor appiiCa!'lt from
oots•de the Ut&gt;Mir
•s found dunng the search

11le ·t - • I I C - - f l f • An oil-duty tm'llgraoon
offiCer reported Apr,! t 1
.._... .. _ o.-t-

• A purse &lt;:MI!lln!ng cred•t
card nd $50 was reported mtssmg APrrl 8 from
the Alumru Arena natato-

problem at

to

2222

-.-·-14:

pre-~atent

urn-.rbes and tsewhera is the t-..o-

BYCIUVEANN~

_
----

that while she

· come arly ~ 1hil ~ ·~

•I!Drar-

en

}?'~.~

LEAV1118 COLD SASSY

_.,, _,,...

"*"'*
gown •

~
J:sJI·~·

__...,

was •n a

M11lard Fillmore Academtc

Center rest room. she
dropped her purse conta•n•ng a 22 caUIM!r p1slol,
wtl!Ch discharged upon
rnpact No lfljunes were
reponed
• PubliC Safety recel\19d a
report Apnl t 4 that a caidboard recycl111g bin m the
Student Union was torChed
causrng SSOO damage

2 When a current urwersrty employee os essent.a ')'
as qualrhed as the spouse and applres lor lhe poslfJOn.
the spouse should not be appoonted both on the •nterest of fairness and because seriOUS morale problems
are hkaly 10 ensue n qualrhed unrversrty employee$ •e
passed over Just ., enable a spouse to be appoonted
When etther oflhese conddions IS not sallsfied,
spouse should no1 be appoonled Howevel , other arrangements are possible For example, some urwersibes gtve a spouse olftce space lor srx rronths or so
WI h telephone, ~bra&lt;y and OOI'r4l&lt;Jier priVileges to help
the spouse search tor a JOb Or on lieU of a tanure-trac~
posrtion, some k•nd ot temporary posruon moghf be
found

A currant sttuahon at UB •s ,nustrauve of the abOVe It
1s' our understanding that lhe Department of Geography

CALENDAR

a COSI-se~~~ng - . e (~ ~- lllld no or r.
benet ) ~ . . ,.,. d
poiicy gat&gt;Mal
the resuft IS to twve on lhe lUll! e c.onalderable number
01 part-lime libr...... 01 whom. Ill teut. woUd
prefer lull bme poeitiOrl$ In lhe IWO depanmaols .,
Utx-arlel which are beong urged ID hire lhe ~
there has not bean a prolenoonellibrllr*1 vacancy lor
posooon has
a ' - years Now rrwac~Aous~y •
rnalen8ltzed lor whoch lhe ~ d lhe orerner&gt;boned proposed , _ tacu member IS 10 be n VIeWed
We are boltt oii!Cefs Ollhe UUP Chap! «seems
''
to U6-bol no1 cenalfl--that whel - ~ out·
lined abOV8 os not 8 vtolallon 01 the UUP contract WI
the Slate But lli!Yef1heless we beloeYe ~ IS 1t&gt;8xcusable
rt not IXlOOflsaonable to
such 8 per&amp;orl no
matter how qualrfled , wrthoi.C OMnQ cur&lt;enl slafl an
equal shot at lhe job I
s rs not done lhe effect on
the morale ol stall ol the urvvetSity hbranes can be
easily Imagined We ca! upon our COileagt.rea to express theor outrage at Ita procedure. partJcularly our
cotleagw5 111 lhe Faculty 01 Socsal Scoences and mo&lt;e
pattocutar1y lhOole m lhe Oepaf1menl 01 Geography

--VIc&lt;t

,_""-...a

(,UP~

-IIAUTOII

..,_,.,.,

~

*" _,.,.,. (A.f'o_.e,

77le Fl#lponer -'&lt;xlm9s letters /rom readers oc:mme&lt;~l·
l'lg on ItS stones IJfld conlenL LBJt«s shOtAd be tx.el
tmd msy be edited for styte and length Becaase of
space I r.na!JoriS, 1t1e Repotlsr oa/lflOI publlsl1 alt lellers
receNed

Con~ f~om page 7
AlnOMATD C.AJIIDI
PUCEMIIITSUMCU
Caretf P'llmulll and Plaeemt:al
nnw ofTen lt"~cral sta~t4...fhe·
~ :lUioma&amp;ed

\. tees.

plaa:mc:tU set·

1'1leK i:ndude • JOb \ •·

COliC) hothn&lt; (24~bour Touch
Tone ~~ M'CCU wiU.
r~tnl drop for fuU-11~ posa
tklft!ol and -compklt M11np for
pa:n··hme. tn&amp;etnslup and .mmer opportuniticL RikurM « ·

fcrnl and traioana:tn Resuml
Expert Plus sofh•'art: Oet.a.tls tn
2S9 open. Nonh Camp~~ .
~IIARTT

COIIWT1U
11lc 12-member Personal Saret.,

Commutee. COftJIShDJ of rae- •
uh)' . ~udents and staff. meets

on 111&lt; &gt;«&lt;OId Tuesd•r of e;eey
month 1n Bissell HaJI. North

Campus., 10 Mldress campus
safety tad security iuues. Mert·

u1:p arr open, ud aJI memben:
of lht univen:tly community an:
c:ncoun~:p!S to brina: thewr safety
roncems to lhe comnunee't
lllcotKlft. For tofonnacioo. call
645-2228.

~c.trolct.n.

().

J~Caouot.Polbnc

ft-94029. -Aedlolo-

aJoCIII....u.a Sd&lt;atioi-Hctri•c
RC'SCWd&gt;~.Polbnc

................

fR-94030.

~~ Coonll­

oat«(Sir2. ' - - ' -

----.....--~aily)-Studeol

Hcal1hC...... """iDtfl'-4040

Sdlloal or lAw
Dr\'ef.
"'Y~·"'*"'ifl'

4012.-..o...,s.....-

s...lc.. and Mari&lt;diec (Sir
5)-MiD..-d FlU'"""' Collea&lt;.

PoWncfi'-&gt;4033. - C o a ..-~(SL-J)­

eomp.u., anclll1fotma11011

Tcdti!OiocY. PoWog fP-4038

,O.Ioo. -..or~ Plob6&lt;
dy (MP-JII)-l'loblic
SafCIJI. Poolioc tP-4043 ....._
taat Den r.- ~Mart­
. . . - ( 1--5, ' - - ' .......
...ar-J()ppartaiIJ}-~Polbocfl'·

4027_S.:.. SlqJ F..-.(SL-l, IJit&lt;nlol~

Opponuii}')-Fine ...... Ccmer.

l'ooti1!Jt tP-&lt;1044 . - D &lt; ........ of t'1aaadol ,O.irl (SIA,

--~­

-

ally)-Poaioc tP-4045.

..-~cML

a.a-~al

Services. Lil&gt;c t3 15TI, 34303.
Jaollor (SG47).01storlial Servic:n, Lil&gt;c tJISOI!.

--

..-.nn¥11~

~ Spedallol (SC~
Safely, u .. f349l0 ,

Public:

~~: .,-... Spedallol (SG4)~ Sdloal. Lil&gt;c 122701 .

MOIICD

Zhlh'l

~-­
vices, Unef31529.

J- ~iaJSer-

Football
The Bulls coocluded the1r 1994 pring football drills wnh
the annual Blue/Wh1t.&lt; game held a1 old UB S1odium Satunla) afternoon The Bh"' defealed the While 20--7 in a
modified sroong sys~em
Offensively. quanerback ChiT Scortled the wa) passing
for 97 yanls and rushing for 4S yards including a 26-yord
scramble for the only rouchdown on !he afu:moon. Scou
completed 5C''en of Ius ren passing altemptS playing only
the fii'SI quarter
Wide rcc:civer Dad&lt; Wicks had three coiChes for 66
yanls v.nite right end Tony Carroll picked up a pair for 3

yard.
Craig Guest had a fumble n:covery while Evereu Anr.hon)' tallied an interception to lead the Blue squad.
The two teams were dn'llled wilh the Whne squad consiSting of offensrve stoners and backups raking alllhe
snaps. The Blue learn included lhe Bull 'starting de!...._, _
In the modified scoring sysrem. the offet1se (While )
earned poiniS in the normal manner. The defenK {Blue)
earned two polniS on each fumble rcrovery. int=eption
and by holding lhe offense 10 three plays on lhe lim series
of downs and forcing a punt.
The Bull&gt;. 1- 10 in lheir ftr,;t season of Division 1-AA
competition last year. open the 1994 schedule on lhe road
Sept. 3 at James Madison. UB Jakes on lehigh Sept. 17 in
the home opener.

Zuwtyya. aloo seeded second i.o tbe 11umber .;, n1iecompetio011, raDied from a Sd down 1 defe.~ onheaslr:m
Illinois' Juan Manes in r.hrce seu, 6-7, 6--&lt;1. 6--0. The chMDpion ip nwdt pined :z..,.;yya .gaiast Troy Sta~e' Tony
Fernandez. the flight'• number one S&lt;led Fernandez defeated Zuwiyya ia lhe final 6--0, 6-2.
The BuU aloo lOOt second pl110&lt; in lbc number three
doubles competJtion. Top seeded Da.;.;J Monkarsh and
Miu Prouht dropped lhe f rn1 Sd 10 Canral Coo~U:v.­
Crai&amp; Pbillipo and Brian MMcalo but rallied 10 odvanoe 10
the finals Mlh theiT J-..6. 6-J, 6-2. ~..... lhe duo fdl in
the champion ip Troy Swe's Cbri Conea and
Fernandez.

Women's Tennis
The Royals COIIJI)Ieted their spring ..,_,. •ilh a S-2 VIC·
wry al i...... fi • . tbe 1994 c::amp411!8 with • 2-3
n:cord.
Coach Joe Davis' squad did IIOIIooe a Sd with null'lba'
one leed T011ya Gabriel cruising to a 6-l. 6-1 ,.;n o•..r
Bcclcy Ben.L Gabriel abo aeamed with Coo~ Hemaade7
at number one doubles 10 down Bent and K.criann Davi
8-3. Hcmaode2., Lori Wales and Meliosa Martin al5o toOl
singles victories for d.e Royals.
Earla in the week. the Royal rlrtJRlcd a 5-2 decision 10
Y oungs(own Slalt in J - . Carolyn Fonler picl:ed up

bc:r fii'SI oollcgiak: Yittofy de!eatia&amp; Kristi Zapllli in straight
also rqistcred •

lids 6-2, 6-2. Marrin. Ill number sil singles.

Men's Tennis
The Bulls finished tbinl in lhe live-team fteld at the East
Coast Conference Tennis Championships held over the
weekend in New BritAin, Connecticut. UB scon:d 8.S
poi niS. oac shy of sa:ond place Hofstn's 9.5. Troy Srat.&lt;
easily woo lhe tournament scoring 27 poiniS.
Wam:n Polakoff and Rami Zuwiyya led lhe way for- the
team with each pii)IU advancing to the finals in their rospcetive fligbiS. Polakoff, 11 number four si.ogles and
seeded IICCOIId. de!c:aled Northeallcm Dtinois' Tim
SerantoDi in lhe semifinals before falling 10 top seeded
Fred Oslwsson ofTroy Swe 6-3,6-2.

win downing JiU Honiford 6--4, 7-S.

1'rllck • Field
Fumu Gakodi wonlhe 400 in 48.42 liOCOD&lt;Is and Eric
Flschlcin finished second in the 200 itt a schooii'CICOI'd
21.8 seconds to lead lhe Bull&gt; i.o the Kinto's lnviwiooal
Meet Km1 State. On the women's oide. Toaya Reid took
tbe 400 mctcr race i.o S7 .6. Reid aloo 101 a ICbool rocord in
the 200 event finishing in 24.710 place 5ttOIId.

*'

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cm~r hi &gt;lor}' nd CIIITe1ll chiJiatJes foced
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Dr DySOII WU
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membcn had fund dmes 10 aid Booruan
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from
ature

"Oral health is genero/ly good among the
Rendi.JJe and Sambwu nomads who call the
Kaisut desert of northern Kenya home. "
.men

benefit of ane&lt;tbes:ia.
tribe
members reach their early .....,.
Aflcr the extniCiions. maJcs receive
1

during two visit to Kenya. J&gt;rac.

licing ~eeside dentistr)'.. and
annod with very bas1c dental instrumcnll&gt;. Carl rollected in formalion on the oral health and diet of
the wandering population. ttlnleling dise&amp;!ed teeth when~ -An appointed village elder routinely extracu the mandibular central incisors, or tVrO k&gt;wcr front
teeth. of members of these tribes in
order for them to Ill e nourishment
obould lockjaw (tetanus) develop
later in life," he IIOl&lt;:S.
The ritual ispaformcd. without

row or camel; women .-e re·

warded with a jloat.
MJS"'ak stic IIOl only serve
natural toothbrushes when used
llOITCClly, but they contain oral
health pmmolC1'S uch as chlorides.
Oooride. 1hca. Vitamin C and
Oavenoid$
Carl says it's important to IIOle
that oral health is 110( equal throujlhow the Third World
'"Members of the Mende tribe in
Siena Leone. for exarJlPle, gcoaally doo't have the...,.,.., high level
of oral health and require- CX·
u.ctions due to a decay-causinr diet
and loci; of nawralsouroes to dean
tedh and gurno,- he points OUL
Amons the more than 100
Kenyan nomads Carl examined, he
randomly selected and persuaded
37 to allow him to take ploque
samples from around key !Mb.
Placing the samples in sterile roo-

tainen. Carl brouJbt them to the
UB dc:mal idlool for analysi by
Jooepb Zambon. an oral btoiOJIII
and periodontilll.

Z

ambon ' oomparisoo of

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terial samples from the

Kenyansand31Wesu:m~York

adnl11 in a cootrol grooop mowed
virtually no diJT"""""' m the k.inds
of dtoeue-aousing oral bllcSena.
Porp~ gil!grvolis and
Prri'OI&lt;'IlD im.-I'PMdiD ..-ere thep-e.donunantperioclontal~­

ing orp:nim~S present ill both
grou . Amoeg the roottol """""
62 percent ..... found to have p
gingi..Uis, as cppoocd to 64 per·
a:t11 of the norna&lt;k; 81 perceat of
both sroups exhibited p.
irutrJMdia.
However. there was a sneater

incideftce of Fat.sobacuriu•
""clellllOII-JS f'CR'C"I-~~
the norna&lt;k . 22 percent in the
rootrol~.

While this is believed 10 he the

thcoe aomadic tn
olKalya. .......
Zambon
sa1d lUck •
odlor risk fll&lt;tOn
tlw COIIIributc:
periodoot.aJ d •
cue. a major CllllSe of ad It tooth
lou, could 1101 he~
..,.... transient lifestyle of lh&lt;
nomads met bet of 1 srrrea en
which to do refined SCICIOlifiC udieo impain ow abibty to do con·
trolled resc:arOh.• says Zamboll
c.1 cmpbasiics llw WCSI&lt;TII
dmt.u.u lllould lUI try 10 fllljiO'iC
1mpc-..:t1Cal soluu011 1n Tb~rJ
World ILtl.ioal. but in.ucad sllould
CtiCOUI'liJC the ~ of -..ral re IOUI'ClC$ for JOOd oral heaJm. AI ·
t~ to fon:e WCSID'II product•
forpi'C'OIIivedall.ll health . . poo&lt;
or1RDSienl popubli&lt;as are doomed
to fatl
yclill
are shon Of$UJ"
plies or are ""'-cd in rural areas.
mila from many of the people
who .....,..ld Ulili'lC their !i&lt;1VI&lt;l'S.he says
Carl has recei....t tine: mknla·
tioftal JerVic:e owardo from che
American llc:Aul AssocUboll .He
u a ~ vaiiDIIeef io dental
projecu thai have lakea him to
iernL&lt;&gt;one. Haill and Hoodurao.

in adcfitloa 10 ·K...) L

I I

International conference will bring hundreds to campus
arnLDI--..uM
News Bureau Staff

UNDREDS of professors. researchen and studeniS working in
a lie" discipline called cosnitive scie""", will be living at UB
thi ummer. auending classes. workshops and lectures. The
university will he hose to a major. f.m~f-iu;-ldnd international
event when the Firstlnlemational Sommer l:n.stilutc in Cognitive Science
is hel!f from July 5-30 on the North Campus.
Until now. most cosnitive scientists, e•ploren of the human m1nd
drawn from the ran of many social. health and technical sciences. ha'e
neva had an opportunity to formally learn lllout orher, related areas in the
disciplioe.
-rhis is an historic opportunity to bring abouc a convagenc&lt;: of all the
different approacheo to studying how the mind works.- said l..eooard
Talmy. the center's director and a professor of linguistics at UB.
Hosted by UB 's Center for Cognitive Science. the institute will
provide all level of researchers, from 51Udenu; to senior professors, and
industrial and sovc:mmcnt scientists, the chance to take intensive, int.roductory and advanecd c::ourses in ~ field from world experts.
·we want to provide people with a full grounding in cosnitive
science," explained Robcn D. Van Valin, Jr., dtairoflinJlli5tk:l at UB

and a c:o-directorof the iiiSliMe. He-..! that copith'&lt;' Kience a a f ~~~:ld
is now 1.1 the le"CC d\111 liagllistlc:o was 11 iD the 1950s
Cogaitive scitnti
who srudy inldli,gent proc:c$!CS in both human
and machiDOS, come from n\UI)IOI'(IUS U'lditiOllal disciplines, such 11.\
linguistic., psychology, COillpUICI' science. thropolosy and philo5oplly
Institute counes ·wiD meet every day, wilb guest opeak.ers deliverin,
leetures in the cveaill&amp;'- Worbhops on rognitive scicn«: ......m. wiD he
held during the final week.
In ·addition to UB, institutions to be represeatcd by lecturcn will
include Harvard UaiYCrSity. Rutgas Uniw:rsity, Stanford lfnivasily.
Unjversity of California., Berkeley. 'Mu Planck lnstirule for
Psycholinguistics, McGill Univcnity and Massaclwscns Institute of
Technolosy. Speaken also will represeat Apple Computa and Xero•
PARC.
·
Among the subjects co he covered are: "Foundations of Cogaiti,.,
Science." "CognitiveScienceio the Wort:p!ace,- "ReasoniAs in ArtifiCial
lntdligcnce.• ·Lans"*llt Di50rllers io Children- and- eunopsychology
of V isioo.• ~ are 34 counes being oiTeted.
The Institute has received fUDdin&amp; from C~span Corp. and Apple
Computer, as weD as fmmsevenldeportmentsll UB. Additional funding
is hein&amp; liOUIIht 10 StlppOrl ,fdlolllrlhipund cover blsic expenses.
11

�Electronic Highway :
Wo ld o Electronic Boo
york Sulc. The 46 •

-~-IIUCb
!bey
..,; • lellll 4
feel obove

•

poclucer from the ToroftiO

or 5anm1ry w

a

l m.,hllrnedia c.upontioft t.c.liqu•·
B.C.. will 1ive a
lr!rr"iC:IIUIIloft May S II l p.m. in
Fine M Ccftter, .....,OOC. or
tho Com
· ' Deoip pn&gt;or the uu An [)epanmcru.
uary Woods makeo wcs
S
..r Mllcin compu11:r1 u the
&lt;1-.,.,.lopment piMform fori

r.rnm

IDh'r.&gt;Ctivt multimedia~ ·
soft,......, allows the firm 10

.,,,..• intcndi¥e multimedia
Jl&lt;Ojc&lt;'t for IBM PCs
.
......""""' . "Our .....t .. I'OUIIded
""' through the ·use or
\ odro e.quipmell IOUnd equip""'"'·and large"'""'* 111011lton
t~ holh prodUoCC and display client
1"'')'-cl&gt;." according 10 procn&lt;&gt;tioftal material provided b) the

company. Ill addttlan the main
olfu in Victcria. Sanctuary
Woods has offiCeS in epean.
Ont. and Richardson, Texas.
Sancluar) Wocxls, Which plans
additional studios
thrnu!hout North America over
the mmin~ decade, nctes that thr
us;c ofentcractive multirnc:dil t
n('t'Cled to become a mulh·
htlhan d&lt;:ollar bu..iness in thr next
li\c \cart. as~COI'I'Ie to-under·
•tand u cap;abilit.es and appltea·

""'f"''l

I tonS.

aea level, and ,... put is ftO less
!baa ll• or a mile from a

boriJII ~ t:luriaa thr

or June aadJ

.

I ud Bae

"*""' 10 hike .. .....1 or the

Hip Peab u
'ble. bop; 10
rcui""
· 011 a peak by
peak buis for up to 35 pcab All
~ions will
directly toward
rcae.orch llld . - for ebildren
l'e&lt;lei\o'Ull&lt;n:almeDIOI
well
Pari: c - lnstitwe.
Anyone mlerCSII:d ia
"I
an up-front clonalioa
ld send

• d,&gt;ccl: (payable II) the

wdl
Pari: AUiana:) U&gt;
f&lt;W Peds.
3901 Maul St. 119C, Sn)lder. Y
14226. For IDOI'e informouon. call

35·8

~fund

TheUB wo...,.'aCiub
holdi its annual pnng

IS

flower we 10 benefit the Grace
Capen Srbola.Vup Fund Ola~
Barbara Mcenaghan and loan

Spro"l are now t tng orders for
gtranturm and impalien . Pt.~ up
. da) 1 Wednesday, May II , from )
to 5 p.m at thr Center for

TOITIOITO" • ort1t Campu 1emhm&gt; (the un"ersit) communny
are urged to plaa their &lt;&gt;&lt;11&lt;n
no,., to SUppor1this schol.,..htp

fund.

Medical .tuclenb
to hike fell' pedllltrk:

cancerc.re

0

r .. o for51-year UB medteal

51udcnt._ Greg IWoel and
Jean Bae, ..;11 he hiking in thr
High Pea re~ion of Ad!mnclark
State Park this summer to raise:
m.•nt.; for pediatric c.ancer ~
&gt;nd ~at RMwdl Pari:
Con..'&lt;!' lnstllUit. Roswell Pari:
Alhance, a nonprofo" volunteer
·~gontl.llion supporting the lnsti·
tute. ""-• officially sanctioned the
P'''Jl.'Ct
The High Pealo. region of
Adomndacl State Part is located
on the northeaStern part or New

Th&lt; Vami.JNd Truth Tru1h
T&lt;lling tw1 Dum tng 111
Ordiltary Lf/•. • boo!. authored
bt Ibvid 'yber&amp;. professor of
education at UB. has been named
to the liSt or OutStanding Acad&lt;mic B
of I 99-1 b) Chow.
magazine. The liSt honors 611
utles selected from ~ than
6,500 review • approlimately 10
percent of those pubh&gt;hcd in the
1993 issucsofCitoict.
Truth telling, arrordtng to
Nyberg. is morally ovcnated
Lying. 011 the other hood. whik

0

OB ITUARY

TheOOore T. Jacobs, surgeon, former BGH president
Dr • ..........,. t . ........, fanner president of The Buffalo General Hospital and a fanner clinical as istant
I'" '-"'sor ohurgcry at UB, died April9, 1994 in a Clearwater, Aa. ~tal after al011g iUocs
Jacob, 82. bad lived in Clearwater siiiCC his n:riJement in 1975. He was associated Mtb Buffalo General for
"""" tlwt 35 yell$ as medic&gt;d stuc1cot. intern. raidcnL 5taff surgeon. dtrOCtor of the Outpatient Ocpartmcnt and
to&lt;v.Jinator or house staff education.
lie was named din:ctorof the hoopital in 1971. after sen tog as associate dirt:etor for nine years. In 1972, he
became presidenl. overseeing ·planning for expansion and modcmiution which led to the constNCtion of thr
hospital' • 13-slory tower on ffip Street.
Jacobs received his medical degree from the University of Buffalo in 1938 and served during World War U
in the !Jnl AnnyGeneral Hospilllhn Africa. Italy and FraiiCC. He developed aprivatepracriceas a general thondc
sur~r.&gt;n after the Will', performing sorneoftbe early hean operatioos 011 "blue babies" in Western ew York in
19~K•nd 1949. He left hispracrice in 1959 wben he wasnameddirectO&lt;ofthr Buffalo General Hospital Outpatient
ikl'onmenl
bcobs . .whowas a trusiCe or the forma Comprehensive Health Planning Couodl of Western e"' York. Yo' lS
a diplomat&lt; of the American Boetd of Surgery and of the American Boetd of Thoracic Surgery. He was a ret low
of the American College of Surgeons, a former president of the WNY H pillll Associallooland a member of the
Association of American Medical Colleges aod the Ameriean College or HO!ipital Administnlors.
He received the Amc:rican Red Cross DistiJ~gui&gt;hcd Service Citation in 1975. in honor of hi outstandi11g
'"l'f'&lt;on of!be Red Cross ud its programs. Wheo tropical 5tonn Ago&lt;$ Struck the SouLhem Tier in 1972. he made
&lt;mergency supplies available to the Red Cross and sent them to flooded areas at no COSL
Sutvivorsinclude his wife. Mae; twodaughu:n. Al iceCarlesofM ountain Lakes. NJ .. and Marie Kent Bclcher
orw..,.1 Hanford, Coon.; 1000,'Thomas ofBiiss; a steps&lt;&gt;n, Geoffrey Du11on; a sister, Evelyn Lutfyofl...aJEo.Aa.;
m~het-. Joseph of Pasadena. Calif.; ud four grandchildren.

•

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us

reQuesung them
Fa rnlomvtJJOfl on obl.a"""Q an EofMI IICCOUt'll. ccn&amp;JII

Flo ....... to benefit

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�</text>
                  </elementText>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Periodontal

research
center

receives
$3.5 million
grant

I
•of
Comrnu lcatlon
Judith Duchan's work
is at cuttJng edge of
speech pathology

issues.

Ev

,, _

eat~

2

I

,..
New book maps way

World's cognitive
scientists will gather
a1 UBinJuly

to WNV scentC
wonders

Apnl 21. 1994 Volume 2S. No 25

It helps keep UB
running smoothly
., -

WALI.ACE

Reporter Stoff

Students make up a crucial component of the
work force that keeps UB running, day in. day out.
Tirrough a variety of opportunities found in administrative Wlits and academic departments all over campus, as
well as through the Federal Work Study program. more
than 3,000 students look to UB for employment as well as
education.
According to the Tolal Work

Force Rc:pon produced by Perlion-

or

nel Services, OS Mardi I , 2,037
Sl1ldcnts were employed in positioos at U8 that wen: 1101 Work
Study. The Office
Student Finances and Records rc:pons that
approJ&lt;imately 1000 audents currently bold Work Study~·
"People don't realize the extent
to Which U8 utitizes students to

or

their likills and knowkd.ge. they
benefit from work experience."
StudeniS frequently dtc a convenient 1oc:ation, the impor1llnl% o(
poxtical job expcnence, and the
nexibilny of employers with SIU·
dent sc~ules as reasons wby UB
isan exc:elleut place to~ a student
\li.~( .

Altbougb Pet'SONICI Services
hos a general

providt services,· says Robert

Wagner ,

senior vice president for university services .
"'ne or the grea1
things about university life is that
students have the
opportunity to
utiliz.etbeirskills
and talents in direct ""'"' experience
that
hopefully will~
usefuiiO them as
they move oo in
their careers.

.. lt" s a win-

win situation, ..
Wagner says.
"Webeoefu from

policy for "udenl""'"'atUB,
for the most pan
the hiring of
studeniS is decentralized. Differeru IIIeiS of

the unjversity
handle Lhcir st.udt:nt hiring in
different ways.
Peter Hanks,
supervising hu-

"I could apply very
spedflcally the
things I leamed In
my dasses, and
working and going
to school at the
same location has
been helpful ...
JOHN...OADU

man resources

representative
for University
Facilities., says
that eac:b area of
Fadlilies bas iiS
own budget for
student assii LIDCC.
advertise in Tht
Sp«m&lt;m, inter-

·w.

,ojey,.peopleandbirc wbo we need, •
Hanks oays Such hiring is paid out
of temporary service funds. Han
says .
obn Rhoades,. 38-yea.r-&lt;&gt;ld reruming Sludenl wbo came 10
UBaftereamingatwo-yeardcgree
at Erie Community College. bas
been working in the Uoi verslcy Facilities Budget Ofrtee. There ~
got. bands-an opportunity 10 practice the skills in accounting and
informatioo oystcms mmlgc:meot
that ~ bas learned at UB.
"Since I'm a business student,
it' been very convenient, ina number of ways, to do this kind of
wed." says Rhoades, wbo gnduates this spring, "I could apply very

J

speciftally .~ thin£&gt; I learned ill
my cW...S,and ..-orkingand •
to school at the same loc:alion bas
been bdp(ul.
Rhoades got b. job by lookin&amp;
at the posrings for on-campus jobo
in the olr&gt;ce of Career l'lanninl
and Placement. and In 1M Sp«-

'"'"'· "I just l&lt;qJI !loeting resume..
andew:nwallyoneoltltemstrucl&lt;, •
Rboedessays. "I had c:oougb t.ckground to ep into the job and
know what was JOing oo-1 already knew the generalities, I just
bad 10 get soroe o( lbe putic:ulus. •
Wllile scbool is in session.
Rhoades can ""'"'no IDOR:Lhan 20
bouts a week, but ~ worUd full
Lime for University Facilities last
ContliiUed on page 1o

"I'm allowed to
work around my
schedule. Work
Study gtves me a
break, something t'o
do that's cllffennt
from Just taking
dasses.w
~ClAB

�2

•

On the

cutting
ede
Dllld.- ..... ..
~~

'~1111111 ........

........f/1

• .....,

UDITH DUCHA has
beeD io¥d...S with opeedl

J*holocY olmoollrom the
fOUDCI&lt;&gt;d .. a
time it field ill the 19SO.,and ..,.
011 the CUllin&amp; qcofopeedl
.-boloa issues~ . day.

Dudwl, ..11o boc:.,., c:bair of
the ()epmuDonL ofComnnmicati\'e
Disorclers and Sc:ieDces
year.
came 10 UB in 1978. Sbe bas received numerous puiS for her research.. mel is the oo-autbor of the
book. A.ssu.Jfl!l Clrildror 's l.mtg~ ill NtuJUtJ!istic ~
u seven! Olber ~
•
¥dumo:s. 1Jer'work011 wbatiscaJiood

MATHEiooiATICS

wen

a-=18 aY IIAYII

....,._IL c.wtor,
MIOCIIA'IIOMI

as-

IOCiale prolessor of melhe-

l'l't8llc&amp;. haS been elected ID

• ~~v-v- lerm . . QOII&amp;r•
nor ofThe~

As8aci8tJOI1 of America The
orgwt!Zatlon, wfth
30;000

"facilitated communication,· a
method which allows autistic
people 10 COIIlJDliDicalr wtth odl.... ;. • the .,.._ of. c:umlll. coo_ , - wbiclu:.....qmmOIIuhout
the ...,. -...e of oommtmialrion.
Dullhan~ liP in. professional
family, with a (Miler ..11o """" a
pbysiciao. 111 a time, &amp;be says, wbm
ID follow the somecar&lt;Jtr poilus 111121. "In
my c.tli«'s fomily, mm became
cloclors. .......,...became.odal""""-·
Dullhansa
"So becomin&amp; a ~ palholocist
,............,. • mild n:bdliOII. Boa
many of my cousins., bclh male mel
female, became academics- Ill=
WIIS limn&amp; family appeal and IUJ&gt;'
port for Ibis kind of....-.~&lt;.·

""""""-....... not'""""""""
....,_,._&lt;JrlJUifCI,·

SOCW..WOAK

-Ar-.
UB eoc:ial Mll1l educaloi'

..... ' - J _tmong
tl¥lee hancnld llllhe Women
Helping~ C&lt;ltrty
National Orgarlzalian lor
Waner~ di1ner held Aprt 20,
In Marygold Maner Laury, an
8S80Cial8 dean and chc:D
ollield educalian In lho LIB
School ol Social Work. was
t-alored lor her Mll1l in lhe
pr--.tion ofleenage preo-

nancy.
A UB faculty•~
si1ce 1972, Laury frequandy
speaks at n8lional oonlaron lhe growing prcb.lem of_, Jli1VW1CY and
fln'ties headed by--.
She has I8Mid on nuneiO(JS
·-taensedvl!lary
ClCIII1rillaa&amp;
on
and pr1VOIR:Y.
Nield

i!Oalllon dnlctlr lor:hl8
Schlol d Soc:illl Weill. she

~ pllas200 adera

in&lt;*'iall ............ ~

&lt;Uh-

Dullhan """"' an EIJ&amp;Ilsh 1c1m
~ ill high oclloct ... the juslcmoqjn&amp;...,. of spcoc:b pllbolocy.
mel then majored ill !be field at (llio
SIMe. After gnduMillg, ... camed
her -

~

At Buffalo

sweeone,e. ......,.

sbe """"""' from 1973 10 1918,
Duc:hansaysubecame iDiernlrd
ill autism, whidJ u deocribes as
"adevdopmeutal disability that bas
beeD tnditi....Uy lbollgbtto cause
difficulty wtth iOCial iDiftxtioo.
severe ~Jearnin&amp;problems,
and .ureocyped behaviors that illelude a variely of physical mo~­
ments. Autistic people ..., also
lhougbiiO be committed 10 keeping tbinp the same, 10 be upoc1 by
cbange,• Ducban says.
In 5llldyin&amp; the languaae of autistic people. Ducban disc:oveml
that, in fact, lhe sotmds they mad&lt;
were attempts to communicate.
"When you 1.\lk with them, they
ec:bo back diffc:rall sotmds and

r.-wodt tb8l allowed me
vealed by fldlitated
c:abla,• Dudlan ays.

'The wlmlefiddofpil)'dJolinguis
was !llll'tio&amp; tben, •
says. "This
wOs durin&amp; the time of the CliOinsky
"'volulioD mel ' transformational
grammar' --tbougbl:the.-im-

*

portanl pet oflangw&amp;c ..... S)'DIU.

"" -

-..cllludonls 011 llCIIIt:DCe
if they said and
blew them. Some peq&gt;le Sllldied
typical c:hildrm; I Sllldied chiJdrm
wbo bad language &lt;lioordr:l3..

SUUdllreS, ID -

..

die............,...

IIIIAiiadon. "Firsl,asr.:ili181o&lt;, ,.,..

-.....;a,

lbclulbtbeT'"'....,_.,-. . .ys.

"Sccaldd}. ,.,.. proride CIIIOiiaBal
support. You say '1 know ,..,...,..
able to do Ibis, 1 know,.,..·...- ..
Thinly, )'011 proride them COIDIDU·
nicali .. suppon _,..,.. ..... them "'

coomntlllicaR with you ... a level
that 1h&lt;y can, a a d - thec:iboias
far dDcusoion oo )'011 coa 6od ccmm&lt;Xlground-aa:hassayq, 'Do,..,
liloe "'"':ts. ar Pllto lbe """'-s?'
"LasiJy, in facilita!ed COIIUDU·

"What if communication is like a dance,
something shared, rather than something
done by two isolated participants?"
words for differenl situations, •
Dudwlsays. 'The words they soy
dco ' t tdl you wbat !bey mean, but
you can tell whot lhe wads ..-..
by lhe way they' re said."
uchan •• approacb became 10
look at what wulhougbl of as
symptomS and see how they wori«d
far specifiC individuals. "In many
cases we miss the meaning ofthese
tbinp when we treat them as symptoms rather than .. inle:r]lreW&gt;Ie
bebavioa,• &amp;be says.

D

lt wasthisaailudetbatledDullhan
in r..:iJiwed
( IOIIl!DUrriCOri&lt;W!, she says. l.o facili.
tataicxwmnunic=atjm,maulisticperf&lt;Xl and a facilitalor mmrmnicllle
with eaciJ ada I!Jrou&amp;b typina OD a
lr.eyboonl or usia&amp; ada OOIDZbtlllicMiondevices. '1lecause lwasloolting for COCDJ&gt;'"OIIICe. I was in a
10 see lbe poosibilities

. . , . _ .. ....... ""'""""' _ _ br . . ,.,_, .. _ _ _ _
t;JIIIEC'TOfllf7-NaJCA~ _,

ac-

un.i-

Mconliooc to DuchaD. there ....
four bMic: pal\5 of ra.:w.-1 CXIII&gt;-

--

·· while ill"""""""
• a
palbologil;t
Cincinooli's

public ocbools. E..uually u .,....
hired in Madison, WIOCDISin u a
langw&amp;c tbonpill. AI. that time, langu~Fibenpy was a brand new field,
Oucban says . " We looked at
cbildrm •• acquisition of lanauage.
and did clinical """"- with chiJdrm
wbo didn't acquire language ocrmany, • &amp;be says.
AI.the Univr.rsity oillliDois, where
&amp;be received her Ph.D., Dullhan was
one of the ""'Y fUSI gmr:ratioo of
langw&amp;c spccialisls ill psycbolocy.

10

ctjlC the~...........,.,.

._..EIJ"ft"-___ ASICQI.Jt BJJTOit: . .

nicalioo you pnMde plryslcal AlP"
pan through IOUCb.• Ducban says.
• y ou hold lbe &lt;:omt~H~Dicalor'o
hand and provide physical .....
laDce in a way that gj- orpaiza-

tion for their movements. As
communication ~ over
time, you slowly f..te beck the
physical support..
A bq issue is wbc:tbe:r !be..,.,._
l1lliDicator can become physically
~ . Ducbansays.

-some

peq&gt;leooily belie¥efacililaredcomIDIIDicalicxtllas ~if yoadco't
IOUCb !be .,.._,..... says.
l.o faa, the physical CODtacl in
facilitaled txmDllmicaticm is Che
source of the CUDall &lt;XIlllll&lt;wasy,
Dullhan says. "A faci1iqu,r ca iD0~-iftbey'renoiCOJr&gt;.

* says.
aslr:iQ&amp;
wt:.&gt; "'""Yoffa:ing themeasqe..

ful, •

"Critics .,..

is
Sucb critics bave developed

valldadoD
DadiiD says. m
wllic:h the facililalor
canJIIIIIIica&amp;or attliboololl dill-picwboae .......... lhey dial uy
10
to cadi odw
Study re:sa11s hive
dwll'bil
acrt of OOIIIIDIIIlicad ...Uycan- be perfCinl&gt;l!ld, Ductoaa says.

...s ..

E\'eD wone,iii~~~C~De~of

ca&lt;SibeOOIIIIDIIItl&lt;:.typea"""'
the facilitator- ..tUdlio ca1kd
facilitator ill{luoacz, Duclloa u ys.
Critics are ' sudt reoubs to
say !bat facilliated COIIDIIluaicabon
isn't valid. Ducban says.

ilbout dcayin&amp; tbal flltilillllcd .._mirwtiog ilsubj&lt;d 10 p&gt;ICDlial problr:als, Doacbml
poiiiiS out dw - - a b o u t
bean&amp; leSied. ac1 r..- of the .,...
sihle resulu of failure, play an importaDI role iD -

~Duchan~

"""'*'

fail !be cum:Dl nlida. 1 because the uch tesu
mlsuadenland die -:r of
that

tioa -

s umpliou behl.ad
CIOCII~

if~

aicaDoa is lib . dace,
. doDo
lhlred,·
by two bolated puticiJIGISr
Duchan ...... "I:Ditead of cammuDic:atiaa beinc~ IWDsq»­

...., people ......till&amp; _,.,., it
would that be about people col-

labaralia&amp; 10 make'Tm...,....IDbelpocbaramolilJe
dlltif~

·+- ·.....

•
juotaomobocly puobilla tiOIIIObodr··
filii"'• then developmeat aod
c:b.oqes m the communicaticlll
.,..,..., be .. cuaplcx," Daclam
says. ., Clllmlllly lave a PILD• .,._
doai,.Rae&amp;
"' • .....·• ...nqto~·~ .............

"A 1Jia pmblom io
doe media
ads up beiac doe piKe """"" !be
dr.beleptocmiodoui,..Stbot'snol
anlidwayiD~ 'ou:ally

......... Ducilm aays. "UDMnitieo ""' r.al1y !be piKe wb&lt;re suc!l
isaa ·Dood 1D be ...alva!."
0

. _.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .. . . Oolll . . _

(7111- -·

-. NI'J DIIEC1'tll --- ~li: NfftMECfall ---. ~~---

�u ~ ~JiUl4. il!i!l! rl~lt·rf~i!i fit !l!liiii~{t~f~ lt llllllli ff

rii~~i~f~[ ~u lU1 f-'i· 8I~I lrt·it~J!: ,U:ifl.i· U: ~

-, l

lj(;a[lft'

~~··i·~rj. l ii· ~ll· ~~~a~q

f f f~~!l

2' ~11 i.i Ut.~!;!t ~lJfi~~:j!~~~ "'

0 ~ r i~~J~UiU t~

;;;rll~J~Ut· at· ~~. ~sa. r},. (/) r ""r 1 i~~~~~

I

h dJuH,Jf J h~Jn HnhHIH i~hl t,mm.HI [ 8 iHhdli i

i·lirU

it

II! ~

fi~h~ ~ ~

a~

i~~"'li]jt

tH~h,t.§ i

Jmmuuuunmmuum rm mnnPmimP~ ~ mmmmmmt Jtnm~;·r
aJllii!J i·f[jiii!

f~JJJ.i{i J~~~~lffp [J.ftfi:J

ift iliil ~ ~ rliJiliiitfiJfi(jli!''JJ!IJ ~·flr•

1

�4

Niagara Mohawk,
UB join to design
master sprogram

--aur..J

.......... ........ ..
tMn
jail lip tonice lbrovcb • .,.rmeabip
farmed b)' UB ud 11\PD Mohawk PoMI'
Oorp.,CbelorpM udlityasvina
Ort.
AllDod at fOII&lt;rilli. tiii:Ciqa' oriallaliaa
10Wald .-amer.-ppon ud pnMdirla-widl rec:biDc:aJ
ia allrw:tlaed

..-New

'*"'-

...... ~ • .._•• dEDF-ia&amp;

prqpm .... ._, doeipod by poaf-. ia
die US Sdlool d~ ud App&amp;lod
Sdeaooulldcampalll'
~
Cot 11\PD Mohawk.
Tho JX01181

tidlt&gt;dolflbill~.

widt30NiopaMabawlt~

.. "Prq;oc1 ............... olfmd
.
. • Nilp:a Mobawlt'•
llaL
"1'1lb Ia 11otb.i111 abon of 'cultural
~ ·~ aid Damis E1senbcc:ll,
Niapm MobaWk'IIIIIIIIF d """"'Y utilialba IIIII 0110 ddleprqpm'a ~
"We .a eedcd to put Into 1'1*"' a oauc:tJR
dosipod forCOIIIpCdtion.ll roquireda c::baQae
Ia ihe way -did tral1!i:Qg. •
Citilla iDaeued CCiftiPO'Iitioa l!loeGbeclc
said lh.ol employeel aeedcd to Am\
•
about new -YI to bclp cusiOIDels. "We
.-Ito understaDd ! b e -· pnctlc:&lt;s
.............. be Slid -r..dltional uailli.al
doiSII'tpravidelh.ol."
Ellellbeck became illreraud In • proafter boariDa aboul die "Universky""
~1s· propua. ~US pro(..u deliver ~ counoes oo lite a1 """'

snm

Distinguished alumni visi or
to lecture
kidlwy...
.. ........ _.
....

dude~

c:mployeea to OCliiCellll'ale"" • COIIIbiMtioa
ol ~e IIIII skills thai could be .,_
plied 10 their jots.
recocnized 11w......t
IIIII asUd bow h could llCCOII!rnodate us.
while preoe:rvin&amp;au ocademicaiJy soaod program.• said i!lsalbeck.

·us

A

ndn:s Soom IXlOed llw UB IIIII its c:ngi·

...,.,.qiiCimolba...e'-&gt;lntPo&amp;coono:o;
10 CXIIIIpllliea as pmt olmeffort 10 rea:b -10
iolbuy. "Componiel ba...e typically aelomd
from """"" .,.. IWidanl .,..._, oiJeriass,
but in this ~ ...., aeedcd lo""""' up widt •
differml awe-h." said Soom. prd&lt;saor IIIII
dairdlbe UB ~a/~11111
~ ~ "PIRiy becauoe it is
so imcnlis:iplinor, this Is. prqcram ~~ao~

......

oliU individDal clcponmmls olf&lt;r.•
Orgardzecl II'OWid !be theme ol energy
coosulting,the MESA (Mau:hill&amp; Educatioo
with Stmegic Adv~~r~~a&amp;e) l'rop1ml consists
of rqullr tedmical OOUDieS, several oantedmical offerings Oil engineering manage.111&lt;111.11111 a few $p&lt;ICially cbipcd courses
on eneqy coavc:raion IIIII utilization, IIIII
legal IIIII cnviroomco!al isoues.
UB faculry wbo teach their SUDdanl
COUJSelto N~ Mobawk employec:a adjust lhem 10 ~ topica of iDicrc&amp;L
Project wodt for tbe counoes iiJ'eiOeS company applicalioos.
Every MoodayeveniJI&amp;this..,_.,., UB
dvil eogirleerillg professor Salish Moban
has traveled to die udlity ·s BufhJo offices 10
teach "Project ~· 10 30 Niagara
Mobawk.employees.AsimilarcounetaQ&amp;bt
on campus i5U'CSSel tbe c:onstruclloo compm&gt;y point c{ view, Soom explained. but h
ta1cea a project-plallllin.&amp; penpeclive wben
taught a1 N~pra Mobawk.
"Many aJStoi:DI:rl ba~ specific pow&lt;r ....
quinmr:ols,• be added "To- them well,
the CCllllpm)' oeeds 10 uodrDiaod thcoe ....
Cjllil...-fromtbealslomtrlspoimd view.•
Eacb
is 12 ....,..... """- The complele 'a prcpmrcquiresthest&amp;Ddard
30 credit bourL Employe5 ill die C&gt;mCill
c:1us ""'e:q&gt;ecta~ro complete their depeea
by AQ&amp;U111996.
0

"""'*'

• Ia
roa allda
cal C . .. Jk
do&lt;~ • I
after ............. ~• die
·
~ alllllllllidDe • ,.,. ....
197(, .. _... . . . . ......_01
Ttlftttllli

+

~-""""

..

•...seal.._,_

Teodllaahalldt.-..iaaii."Cbe

""'*"'

10 ...... 300 pbyeic:Ua&gt;o
6om ..,..._ the United Sl&amp;ltS. "Meclk:al

EdualliOII IIIIo die Neal ea.wry· is the
tb&lt;:me of the day's eYeDIS, wbic.il wiD In·

r-.
Jorclaa Pn&gt;-

s-

1974-T7. fk

·-01

Me:

..or ..

• Paola L .

,-d

iheday' l pop-. atiiOOII ill . . balboootd
die Dul'falo Marrlocl.
Spiaa Clilllca1 O.y ldiviliea. illcludiltt
die...,._,- opal to all bMaled pbyeidim - reaideal pbywiclaal.
TheS!oc:ll:roaiGmball ~ecto;reaopoalbreoday .wt 10 Bul'falo b)' lta~Wer. lk wiD be
boDored aallillillpilbed ahmmi vloilor a1 a
.pn:aidallial dlaner Oil lbunday. April u.
IIIII at a US Alumni "-'&lt;:iatlon breald.. •
die Albrip-KIIru&lt; Art GaJiely "" ftiday,
April 29. Tho breakfall.lllhoduled 6om 7:309 a.m, is opal 10
Spine Clnical O.y, d i e - ' ptbt.riD&amp;
ofalUIIIIIl dthe UB medical acbool, io a -

.........,.

~{)/

. . . . chid d . .

UB Sdlool d Medicille all4 ru.-tiall
Sc:laocel ill I 9S1.
HewiDoleli-«be 1994 Siloc"-tlt.ID&gt;ball
Memarlal Lecuare. "CCinical 11_,.,:

.

l:.loliiftr

r... 1911-91 .

,_,. .•

~d

..

H-~~fi/Moolldlwal991 .

A..,..llit ........... _

rido&amp;la

OaDep

Jll-....a,_....IIIIOla--laR~

o( Hamp•on

. . . . . . . . . . He
~lO..s.adaJaiDdlo
,..,.. up../ J.--1 qf
Oil
jedt ....... ta.. ........ _..,__
.... to ftul !illlle ,...,...,. ..... ia ...

·a-ss. EMiml
vqiDia"""""-1
Sdlool,
V1., who will
cliac1a ..,. u.e d SlaDdanlized PatieiU

farT-=biqud-."
• Ricbarcl Sodl:iD, coordiularofdle Teeclt. Elfeca-l'rc&gt;pm ill doe UB medicalecboal ..... clindor of pediltric medical
student odoocatioo, who will .uac- ..,.
Science of l...amill&amp;-.
a 1om~ W. l..oaDil. UB diteacr d medical
ClCIDipltiDa ..... _._.. pror_,. d .,..,.
..,...,.. acic:ncel., Who
"War·
matlon at Clilllcal FUIJerli
Movinl
8eyonddlePromiaeafMr:dicallaformotlca.tta.irer, • apec:lalilt in
of doe

a-

f'rot:1ke Oil dialc:&gt;ll Jll' ' I

~

BJa

ud "'-&gt;n ia&lt;:laodo 10 0011-

I

tadliD&amp; ~...,...,.doc­

=-·

-&amp;c..dloUni.....,.ai'M
at Worcater, ud L 'UiliO'G'SiU Jlne
Deoanel ..... f'ratlcr.;tbeDiMinpilbeAf
Medical A t - A.....S rr... US. .S die
Am&lt;ricu
.
~·· 6dlocaticmal ~ ""'-'adoa Awud.
Far ioofarmatiao .. Spilac CliDical
O.y, OOIIIad doe US Modical Alomni A...
c:ialiara •1:29-2111. Far ......... Oil die

·...-..........c..,callm-

·At UB: a nlilestone event in cognitive science
cloDe by the 35 l:aculry """"""" aflib-

•

MOdwithlbeUSc-for~Sc:ience:

WblkiW&gt;ISatd~IDOIIt:rS' pro-

plUDIII:IId tobe..--cb-&lt;llienled IIIII &amp;Uiy

10.-dl

l!lt
1'. K.ASSDlEit,
ditllddleNf'W~J--.Jqf
. • -lqjdy •
...scal joumalialllelllliled
wiDbe . . . d .......
$7
- ' Spillt Clilllca1 O.y Oil Saturday,
April 30, ..,..._. b)'
US l!oWical
AIDIDIIi ~ ICMiirer, I 19Sl UB

~

s-J ia aanrre. N..,.... MoboWk aeedcd

.

8111-.. Sllllf

HE S1'UOY OF the human miDd
io DO \oDprdleiiO!itary, -.lemk
eu:rcile it oace ,....
Pudy ua ...Wtcf advauasill
tecboologiea lbat require infc.omotioo aboul bow the milld proceasca informoticll. .a-isu at UB 's Calu-r for Copitive
Science and I bandful of ocher Clt:D1a$ ill the

u.s.I t t CI'OIIiD&amp; discipwwy boundanc5 10
make ...... of die b.WDIII miDd.

a unique point ill biaory,"said
L&lt;oDard Talmy, the UB cc:utc:r's direclor
11111 IISIIOCiale pro{....,. of tin&amp;uisticL
are oow able to study Uae n&amp;IUre of the mind
6om many diff.....ot ditciplineo. wbaoe filld.
inp are CODVUJill&amp;.•
this IIUIDIDO&lt;, UB wiD be the sile of a
milealme ,._ ill this develqpina acieooe.
Prcm July 5-30,""""' cfthe masteaeomed
CQCIIitive oc:iemlou 6om II'OWid the world
will be ill Buffalo 10 llllald the FIISIInlem&amp;·
ticma1 SUIIIIDC&lt; 1.ns1itute In Q,pitive Sdeo::e, wbichhas the theme, "M1lltidisc:ipl
FouDdaliODs of Copiti¥e Sdeooe..
"lntenctians between the diff..- disciplioea ClCli&gt;Ca!ICd with meatal activhy bave
'--incn:asiD&amp;ovc:rihelasll5 yems."Talmy
Slid "'Ilris is die ri&amp;bt Lime In bistory 10
c::ryetaJJlu these~.
Tooomeexteoi,CilUlpllll:IS bave prtJIIIpiOIII
this coa-zeoce of differan fldds. • Anifi.
cia! illldligcnce is CODSWIIIy m..mved with
bow human ClOIJiitioo wod&lt;s,• be aid AI tb::
same time, be added, c::etaio elt:meals in traditional disciplioea bave '-- in=asin&amp;Jy
cooccmed with Uae D&amp;lllte of die miDd. Co&amp;nitive scieoa: llrin3s "''!f!Cbc&lt; thcoe elt:meals
from linpistics, idbiupolocy, OOUI'06C:ieoce,
"We·~ a1

·w.

psycbology.~IDI~........,_

T&amp;imy D&lt;lOedlbat the UBCCill&lt;ris mtusual
among these celll&lt;irS in tbat h also draws oo
participetioa from researdJtts in medicine,
commuoicatioos ac:iCilC&gt;es, geography and
iD&lt;bttiol~.

UB'sa:::i&lt;mlisasbavel-.pcticuladyldepl
al aoooin&amp; cliocipliDary l&gt;oundari&lt;s to imooYer
tbemyolailsdtbemilld.Many&lt;Jf~

are acMaciDa ~.while • the some
Limedeop:aiD&amp;~ ofbowb.lmam
~die 'MIIId ..... bcba~ io it.

Tho followiDa is1 o:ampliDg of die reoea:rd&gt;

...........

~ ....... - - . . . . . . . . 1
Deborah Walt=, --=iale pro(eaor cf
oompule&lt; aciCilct, is ayiD&amp; 10 understaDd
bow humans peroeive imap iD anler 10
make possible die dottronic ~
ol IJna&amp;es. Ooe pJ is to 6114 001 ....... 10
a&lt;ftlllllumsmil CXlaiJlUil:riud ima&amp;eslll&lt;ft
eff1Ciently, lalowledge llw is key 10 the
development of an information
·p..

way. Experimelllsillvolvm&amp;bllllllllsubjecu
IIIII
sc:ieDOe tec:1miquts are uoed 10
understalld visual proceasma.
·we are ayiD&amp; 10filld- wbalaoeaoo m
the bWIWI visual system IIIII uoe lh.ol aa
iDspiratioo in clesipiD&amp; aJ&amp;arithms for impi'I)Villa Olli2IJlUiet visioo... w allers Slid

"""""*'

.........

_____,

Robert D. Van Valin. Jr., pro{euor IIIII
cbair of linpistica, is tJyiac to pinpoiJII. die
pans al tbe bnin illvolved illlaopaae proOOIIIIin&amp;-Topbrrwith Alall Lockwood, professor cf -.rolocY IIIII nuclear J1ledic:iDe,
IIIII Jeri Iaeger. asiswJI profaaor of lillguistica, be uses a PET (poliuoot &lt;:a&gt;lssiaD
""""'PJ~by) 1lQIIIIItZ 10 Uy 10 imace these
processes In die human lnin.

__ ...,........ __
...... .... _.....

......

Valerie L Shalill, ltSiistaul pro{essor ol
illdustrial ~ is illreraud iD .......
people·· pedClr'IDIIl&lt;:e m ihe wor~q~~ace is
inll"""""" b)' the informatioa. lbat is available 10 lhem while IIIey ..., wortin&amp;T&lt;l cleaip belter display paoels for aidiue
pilols, sbe uses a flip limulator IIIII local
pilau to deennJne wbat information is
1-'cd durin&amp; fli&amp;ln. To Wlllersland the'inflUCil&lt;leoftedmoloc' IIIII ......-1 inu:nttiaas on ID&lt;ZIIal wart:1oed, sbe YicleoQpcs
cloctors .. IIIey wort In inteml~111lits.

----

...................... ...._
......

Jefliey Higginbotham, assistanl pro{ea-

r;crc{ oommunicativedioordersudsci&lt;Dcles,

stucfiea bow illdividuals with ..now.~
dioorders usinl oompul&lt;rl to communicale
orpniz.e their discourse to ..,.,......, with
lhooe wbo do DCt bave sucb dioordea.
"Coovc:rsatiom between a 1i11mer IIIII a
penarl usinl .... of ~heat devias .... very

diff- from llllllll'al COli
....
Slid "We're li}'UliiD ~ dlo dlttec:bnlcal factOd .....

- proc:eaea-

U'ibuliQa:IOCbeCOII~~tD
~!be.....,.......,

ciCbeir

c:atioas."

_....,

.... aat ......... ..,.......... . . ,
Loo.oam Getltm, aailtatd ~ of
~- is inlelaled ........ dlildreo
leamilt&amp; 10 Iaiit: acquire delaeals of Jaa.
~ lkr wort foc:uoeamore Clll
tb::y
do - II}'. llwl Oil wballbey do aay. "If.
YOUJ1I GtWd a drmk, be or a. oflal
saya'W•drilllt' inlleadd'l.,..ackillk,'"
sbe explailled. lW ,_...,a abows thai evea
tbouP cbildree may DOl . ., tbe wardo 'I'
IIIII 'a, • !bey ""'
. dian.

. ,.

"'l'ldilfia*fardtillha~

......... boboooa aatlat
.,..,.,. •
' IDI"""*aralilo:'a' md'lbe.'
l'••-d.,...lbem,tbmanq••-"

._.«. ·
,. _

O.vidMarl&lt;, prcl-.01 ~ aud
... associate with us·. Natloaal Cal&amp;er far
Gooppbic lllf0l111adaa Allalysls. Ia 11todym, die waye tbll poop.. pen:ei¥e ad_,..

,....,..._ "'*iaJ

.

.

Ill .... projoct, be is laoldlla ........ Loo
Aqdel driven bave c:banpd Cbeir CCID.~bebavlar.U.C.tbe.....,.,..~

"We'reJookin&amp;•bow poaple 'siiiCillal"""'"
of Loo Alladea baw c:ballaed all4 allow&lt;d
than to cioadcClll ~--"be aid.
How ibaoe
iaf).....,. IDUIIdalle deci·
siamiUICbaa ~ IOsbapCllldle"'''J bamt
is also bein&amp; eumiDed.

n. ....... ., ...... _

Doaald Po1Joct, ....._professor of
aDihropolocy, loob • :bow culture inllu·
CllOel bealtiJ..c:are . , _ . • AccardiDI lO
our culwre, llloeos is SCllliiOibiD&amp; located In
!be body ar !be bnizo. • b.esM '"11115percq&gt;tioa. ;,_,.,.die wide
daocial. cultural
IIIII paliticaliuoesdlaabape 'lllbodw:rariMll
you are CCJillidc:red ill."
He has ................ palitms hospilalimd
for my medical,_ ore oftcll ~
with "teactive clqlreaaioG" afier !bey have
'-- ill tbe bospiraJ far 1 loD&amp; p&lt;riod, a
diapais thai be aye ....,. be ldlective d Cbe IQpilal u a aoc:ial eaviraameat
Oum anytbilla ~ to tbe paliml. 0

�•

Knox, Wtlmers honored
for service to university
~ Bur..., Stall
ORTHRUP R. KNOX and
ert 0 . Wilmtn ha~ hem honored by lbr Unn 'ty 11 Buffalo
fOf c.hrir '""""""'Y ond oom-

lllltnlelll IO lbe uni,o

I)

, who served
mtiona.l ~
PathWIIys to Greatnes&amp; capital cam
paignfnxn 1917-92,rca:ivedtbe~·
Medal for • 'goal and utroon:lrNr) s&lt;:rYicc
to the untv.-ml) • Wilmen; ,. .. recognil:ed
for h· chstinguished ocnlcr and philanthmpi&lt; 50pport of UB for nearly a dc!atcle
Kno Wilmers and mttnbers of the Uno·
ersit)
an hooonry
o(

"""""Y

•ndi~idu,al$

who e
pbilontbrop c com·
mit:ment to 8 UJta1s
$50.000 or mor~ in
cumulalt\t Hfrtlmt
gh i~ were bOI1ored
II I droner bdd Asril
12. 10 tloc oe,. Fone
AruCentl:'f
, . , President. s

Medal fiJSI owarded
m 1990,

for

I

rnsmted

-outstanding

)Chotarly or artiStiC
achie\ ~mtnu•• hu manttanan Kts. con

tfibuuons of liRlC' OJ
tna ure. ra.t'mpla.r)
ludershrp. or ony
othtt nta)OI' conlribu·
tion to the &lt;l&lt;\·clopmem oftbe ni•·en&gt;it)
at Buffalo and the quality of life in the UB
communrtyAs thechi~r ,olunt&lt;erleaderofrhe Path·
"'~. u G_,_ camporgn. K~&gt;&lt;» spear·
bea&lt;l&lt;d the fJJSI capital fund-raislng dmc m
1M history of UB as a publi universll) and
the largest e er conducted by a college or
UniVersity in the Slate Uni\&lt;rnill) or 't'A
York system. n,., fi•e-~r. S2 rnilhon

-

efTon finished '"'o ononth, ahead of sched·
ule and $4 millioo over goal
In addJuon to ht role in tbe caprtal campoign. -Knox has ""'ed UB rn several capacities. He iso directOf of the Unh.,...ly at
Buffalo Foundation. Inc., and Ita:. ser&gt;&lt;ed as
a member of the foundation's executive and
fn,·estment committeeS 'He .. as ont of the
original architectB of 1M pohco.,. gO\ emmj!.
UB Foundation in•cstment procedu= n,.,

foundation's investmaot portfolio's !(}.year
a,·enge total return now riJtl.s m tM top
quanilt or American universities
Meml:ocrs of the Knox family bavc hem
generous bend'actors of UB o,·er the years
In 1988, the ~ymour H. Kno• Foundation
pledged S l million to endow programming
in the unh-ershy's new Fine A.ns c~nt('f

Seymour Han« Kno Non.brupKno•'
fllber, ,.IS one of w anginal mtJIIbtB of
tbe Univers~ty of Bufl'alo Cou.nctl "'JJOI ·
reorpnizatlon in 1920, and
chan.
man of tbe cuuncll in 1949. At
time, be
also ,. IWn&lt;!d chairman of w
ivustt)
Committee an Gtnoml AdmiJUIIrll-.,..,...
inainlhol.,....until
merJ!UofWunrver5itywithlkiUt~
t:111 •in 1962 Up:&gt;nl
merger, be became """' of the fJM m&lt;tt
of Ibe Council of the !At~ Uni •&lt;nny of
w York and remained a ......,.,. untrl h'-

..

detth '" 1991
In 1916, Gr- ' x. orthtvp
~~- C&gt;llbltsbed the ffl'll
mont to""""" the futurr net'~ len« of the
tben..,.w Depanmmr of Aru. and Scien&lt;n

,

II

the Uni&gt;.,..ity of ·Buffalo
Otaimwl of the
d ofMatm(: Midland

S..U... I ., onhnq&gt; Kno• also """' u
l'f&lt;'Sidcnt, ·~uurer and drrector or the
Seymour H Kno• Foundaooo and M •'l&lt;'r
president and drrcctDr ofthe Buffalo Fmr
"-codcn1) and w Hitchoocll'&lt;lund.tlon ~
a duenor of lariM Mldland Banb, Inc,
hnne Mldbnd Ban N.A: HSBC Hold
liltS pic: H""l' KObf Ban ofCanada. and the
G~~er Buffalo Partn=lup
Wi)mm;, ~r&lt;SI~I nd ch~f ~MCUU\~
offi=ofFt...,Empue toteC"'l' andcbarr·
manof!M board L"ldchtd t&gt; UJheolft=
of liS pnncrpal sub!.l&lt;bar) . M &amp; T 8a
§&lt;n~a&lt;c

imW&gt;oltbeboardof~of

the UB f-ouildatron from lui) I. 199ltolu
30, 1993. ·In hi, po rtron a cbaormao,
Wilmen enhanced ·gruft&lt; ly 1M pubUc·
pl'l'OIC panner.hrp thai I &lt;TiJicaJ 10 tbe
growth of UB and 11&gt; acht&lt;•emen"' "' a
leading pubhc rcsearcllonsututoon

Durin«

h1s tenUR". totaJ (oundation ~\ ­

enoes atld gift ""PJ'Jr1 from alumru. par·
ents. frien&lt;b. corporation&gt;. orld ocher pn\11&lt;
Sj)(lnSO&lt;&gt; ~record lnd and rhe IlL-&lt;
"as lald forcontmued plulanthropk gro...th
Wilmen; led the foundatiOI'I through 1 Sl.rllC·
tural """'l"'llzotion desrgnod to sumgthcn
tit'S bel ween the founda11011 and 1M llni•cm!}
and reahgn 1M r~ibilitoeo of 1M '"'o
Wilnl&lt;'l5 abo has croated th&lt; Robert G
Wolmc:rs Endo..nlC!lt. "hrdl provules gen·

erous """""" ed suppon of &lt;lltlpus-wode
priorit•n
In addttJOn to b"' .,....toon. "''lh Fi..., Emprn: and M &amp; T Ban!., Wil"""" ..,....,. IS I
dir=or of Flf'SI Empue ·s othe&lt; bomking subS&gt;dllf), The East N.-w Yor\. Sa.-ing. Banl.
He rurrently rs chatmW&gt; of The Fund for
Musoc and co-dlairman of the Buffalo Fi·
n.anciol Plan CommiSSion. Hr senes on the
board of drroaoo; of the Albright -Knox An
Gallrry, the Buffalo Phrllwmonic Ordoes·
tra. the Busin&lt;:sloCouncilofNew Vor\.Sutte.
Inc . n,., Fedenl Reocn"' Bank or ~
York. and the Greater Buffalo Partnership

2222 Public Safetv~ Weekly Heport

no.f_wiiiC _ _ ,., _ _ _ _ _
l"1obblc s.tety - · - Aptll1- 7:
• Publoc Salety recetved a report Apnl 2
lhat ttres were slashed on a veh•cfe

parl&lt;ed "" the Hochstetler 6 lot Damages
were estomated at $112
• Two camcorders valued at St .700
were reported mtss1ng

Apn~ 4

from tne

Fone Arts Center
• PubliC Safely recetved a report Apnl 4
that $400 was m1ss+ng !rom a des~ drawer
on Pari&lt; Hall
• A VCR and remote conuot pan valued
at 5200. was reported rT!lssmg Apr~ 4 lrom
Talberl Hall
·• A wallet contatnrng credrt cards ano
identrfocallOn and a Walkman valued at
$120 were repor1ed missing Apnl4 from
Fargo Ooadr angle
• A telephone and answenng ma.chone
were reported rTliSStng April 4 from
Spaulding Quadrangle

..._t.c~to-~or

• A purse c001a•nmg a crec:t t caret and
personal papers .. as reported mrss-ng
Aprrl 5 frorr the Conputrng Center
• A purse COr'ltatn,ng car M,eys credit
cards and •dentd.cattOn v.as reported

rrwsstng Apul Strom FaJber Hall
• Public Safety oeported someone threw a
smol&lt;e bomb rn the MF"C Student Center
Apnl5
• Two pteees o1 mall were reponed m1ss
ll'lQ Aprrl6 from a Red Ja.c•er Quadrangle
res•dent·s ma1tbox

• A 500-pound hydrauhc press. vaiiJed a1
$500, was rePorted mossrng Apro 7 from

the Statler Commrssary
• A set ol ~eys was reportec mrssmg Apnl
7 from Baldy Hall
• A purse w1th crec::JJt cards was reported
rTilSSIOQ Apr~ 7 from the Health Scoences
Library

�.--(

Older editions of
The Buffalonian are sti~
available at discounted pnces!
T/v ~" is 1M Unckrgradu.a;Js
\
.
&lt;he on ""nual at UB. Olrrmd)' in our 6 • ft'&amp;r
of publication, &lt;his book i a ._,
·w
collection of &lt;he put rear·· l1lfti&gt;C&gt;Able
"'""" and mom&lt;:l)
All of UB"• und..rgraduotr
dubs and organlutlon oporu. atudentlife, and
of CX&gt;\lrae, graduating So:nion ...., included m &lt;his
unique an&lt;ho~.
1984 cdlc&gt;on
1
~
19!16 edidon
1987 cdidon
,
edic&gt;on

$10

s1o

1989 edltioa
1990edilioo
11191 edilioo
19921m edJdon

$10
$10
$1 S
$!0

ns

If.,. UI&lt;IJil ~ .dll $5,. tJw 9.1, 92, 91 6' 90
IJdibMu. All oiNT l!dibtms iJuiJuU ~199f onlm .:mlU.o~- c.Jl6-fJ.2969for-¥
Smd a check or money
order, payable to n.

Un~"Y"' Buffalo
n.~­

h~wlth)'OUr

Suu.e m Smdern Union

-.addreaand

Bolt 60!100
Amh......_ NV 14200-2100

~numbertcx

...................
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Nanb~1~9a.ra.$1

forldumni~­

btn,

aUGOhcrll;nlducloo

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calli29-UOI

_.. .............
8-_,.,--.;c.
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IU"M'WNTIIOUICriAaLE

Uala.

plOIIclcal "' An-y . _ _.
tDul Carp. F.my's R..._...,
3lOO Shrridolo Dri ...............
l -9:l0a.tll. s_.., by lh&lt;
ea...r..-~o...~ ­

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Dnuwpllu: A Nood Treal.e.c r..- S&amp;nkc! Matteoe w

""' 6.JO p.ID - - .......,
u~. .not~oers

Mocli. PU&gt;.ciLIII&lt;al ..........

........... Dt:pt. o( Cluticol .......
macolocY. Hoff....· Lall&lt;x:W
loc: • olloy • NJ !101 Cool.e
-~•pro

~Bi~ fer

M.ujon&lt;
p.m Coli

A

,....

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llrid&amp;n. &lt;W1Jlrool.- plars

.....-~-­

arod &lt;Oillbas,- - ·

~Sl.50. olloch&lt;n

--

.......tb)'UBit-.
n..wMdiooa....,-. Boan......,n.Ansc--9pro.Adntlooioll.
lltuoo- -Cam-~ lp.a.Gtaenl
$2. ...-

JlUblic-......: 510; SA.

- . boolty/Aafr ODd-

cmz...l'or-.earf-.

FRIDAY

ALII/MrSIEIIIU
1loo 1L D. TrilocY .-_ l..orr}
Jonloo.. ........... 216 Fine Arts
C.eotet Nanb ~- l p.m

call6&lt;'-6191

-Voyqo,A-.....

Malodoo. A.o ~ ..
Owl Croft Bridr,ot.-

u.....n-a

orQ~

ll.lO
_
_ p.lll~
tl.50, aU&lt;:IIIton· $2.••­

-nne--.
"""idlac
r..-

1 p.m.

l'ftlialri&lt; Cart
Twitu, Debonh llaika&gt;, M.D
Kmdl AuditoriYm. Oilld:rcu.a
HoopUaJ la.m

-.nit-

MUL11CUI.NIIAl

Q4 Boldy. Nanb ~-

10&lt;
C.-Ip.&lt;ll

WMFILM

Balrd Rocital Hall Nanb Cam·

" * - Y U:CTUM
1loo Monl c-,lo;d&lt;y ol Deuplioe, Dorid Nybcra. UB
Oqlt. olllducarioooiOrJ..U...·
tioft.Admlnisuotiooond l'ohcy

·
- - f'. . o..dol- 2
O.detrdor!Soud&gt;~J.II
p.ru Eoar fridoy;
--.ry Alltn ..........

n o.w.a-o

----ll- 22
-Stalllvao 01 6&lt;S.l200

$2,

WMFILM

Lrtur .. - . .... . Studmt
Uaioll~.. -~
6.:lllp.art.A--.,.S2.stvdeou, $3 ~. aU others

--.Forinf--

-c..

A I - ~ . ~ .:Ill
6&lt;$-612~ to rept&lt;r

- . UB Scbool ol "'-&amp;•·

MerTA&amp;.

no.w--......,__s..
- u..... Tbeola

Por1ldpociaa 1o Collalronu...
~-. v.- A - . Stodeots,
Dia'Expert~

...... Prd. Sandn Orrberty.
Dt:pt. ol Computer ODd lnfonna·
~ Uoiv. oll)da..

......,....s
oloidDa..-RcscarQprof-.._,
iro
&lt;:.op;tM Sc:loot.,. Univ. o(

PnA

Alme llamet;-Hortlcrl,
Kcot Sta!elloi.....uy 120

Ccmats. Campuo.llO
a..m -I p.m..
SOCIAI.U.PBVDmYIE
ulritiou.l R1A Fac:ton: i•

~'

CWA

w-~,_

• ...._,

Cart. Ritll ~
"'~ llalfalo. l:lO a.m.-.5:30
p.m. $S, iDducloohmoh. Far

�-

,......Dit.c-.. ur.

('olioiMr, .... c-.. 4'0t).
......... llfVlil&gt;l7~­

-ue.Tioooo....

--

Qoaop&amp; 7 , ....... ........, Sl,
~ $3,io l l - Eilclllll

I M...Jiopl.~-

~ lllird lltdtll
-~- 'l p.JJL

Hal,

IU.aaAY

2
=--=j.i:

--....-...Or--...

!t~~~..~J

---.._Jd&amp;:ry 1"od&lt;ct,N.D

r ..... Ati4 u.v. ~ ~ ­

Mobr~A, Mercy

8oopitaL uo .....

-~. 12~ ......

~~.:;.::.~

~--F"""-

ioc~ Caefor
T""""""" . l'iolth~IJO

Ull -

645-!J.t26.

. _ , fiiT.--.:IpdH

-~
Dr­
~
Dep.
ciCdl BtOI"'Y· Uol• ol M-. Modacal

For infcnnatioo. 001

--o--· $1625

.-r-=rtN.

Sdoooi.W-.121 ~

\IIMtoolt Do;pL - · Sbo....... IBoirdll!«iu.l Hall NCXlll.
GompuL For additloall
iaf01'1110111oneall 64.!-ML

Nonll CiurlpiL 4 PA

-

CCILUIQIM.

Tn6-f-)oad

-PAIIKSTAW

w-....-., Mic:llod Scanl....

Dr. s.r. .... Oeou1aeidJ&lt;. &amp; -

Orqao

--

muy. Hilleboe :A.udiJorium.

LAW -

ucna.

__

---~
Belqud

Cathy Spou ...- . -.

-~CI'imiotol-­
c-.r.SVNYI~2JD Park. orth Campa, • , .....

~-Chi-

-~- ..........
•-or
...-"'"",__

,.,

llr0!\1- Iwth&lt;~

liu M..W..oad Wllooll'• AT·

""-Dr. Sjmon Sil-, Dept.
d MlaobloloJy and lmmunoi-

"'Y· Univ. of Dliuois It Ou·
aogo.I!J.tBFIUbcr. SoulhQuu..
-lp.m . ~bytbe

81-..nbnnes Grodualc OJoup

PIIII..O.-Y ,LDmlft
A Quos&lt; for lbt Uohmal:
Cloorc&lt; T""'bWI's C..0..plloD
ol.c.bt IP .mtiac, Masahiro
Hamasbita. Kobe Col lore. lopon; Univea:ily o( E.dinborJh.
Z80 Pori&lt;. North Campus
1

3 p.m.

-MJUS

Fon~talati~~t ModliM Search
Stratqles oo 'B UJINET. 821
Health Sci.._ Ubmy. South
Campus. l P"'- No Jqisrntioo
rcquiro&lt;l.

PIIYACSCritical Taapen.11ln' of
B - . . . . . - afbin1
Fil- Wd Lol. UB Dept. of

Pb,.;c., 2 19 Froncuk.

3:45
p~m . (Refres:luneor.s at 3 :.30 p .nt
in 245 Fronu.ak.)
STAmmc:s-IIAJI
Tho O lklo ,..... Rllhin 1%2
~ofWisluort

I&gt;Uirlboltiom aad d10 Mod&lt;rn
n..o.,.ar ~ Fanti·
llos. Prof. Gomd Lcuoc;
UnivCIJi.ilC: Paul S.batier,
Toulouse. FraDc&lt; and
of
Toronto. 242A 1Farbtt. South

Uni•·.

Carn-4p,m.

-RAt•rws
LITUWIYAIIIU
""""Y Roadiac, Aaron Sburin
and Darid Levi Strum.

--

HIIIWIIIs Cootemporary Am
Oenta-, 4lh Floor-, Tri ~M. in

Center, 2495 MaiD Sc 7:30 p.m.
~llioi T.W.. StoclcnJ

IIIli.... I-ll p.m.

&lt;lalnpus.

.

IIA-DCIICOI I~M ·

pi&gt;J,lmel!risu&gt;I, Pb.D

~­
P-lypo A,.,.._ llW

IIOCIA&amp;. POUCY

n..c,....,v-,,.,..,

IU'CL 12:30 p4.

andidote, UB llopt. d Pbilooc&gt;pily. 656A Baldy. Carnpos. 2p.m.

- u -. 120 Boldy .

-~·p..tL

lotckadar
8iolocY
ulx:n""Y
. lldddbea-t.
Ger·

-

....

-.-~

-

U BT......-Citoic.SI«

Cona:n Hall North~ 8
p.m. Pur additionaltnfom:wioo

001645-2921 .
WITI1UIIY - . u .
LECm.IM

........ . . . -... b1 y...,...

rorw.iac G"""".,factor,.Beta..

Thomas B. T..,...;, M.O,,
Pb.D, pRSklcul and thief ••·
ecdtlve officer d Ros•'fll Part
Cancer lnst~ UB p&lt;d cl
mkrobioloc-. and head o( ....
Oin1cal lmmunolo&amp;Y Division.
UB Scllool of Mecficine S..~cs
Auditonum. Forl!er. South Cam·
pus, s p.m.

£DJI£ ·S :DAY

27

l'tWIIUC'I~ok Spiul Card I,Yury :
Ca.Jnm Status aad 'F utan~-.. o( Pbannac:colopc:
l'rntmeat, Eric Klcin.
Pblnn.D. ClllldXIott. 248 Cooke.
North CaD1pus, 8"9 1 .m

-

-uuus

l otrod!Odioa lo HUBNEl'Uoopilals aud VB Library
- , . . . !lo-O&lt;k. 821 Heolth
Sclenas Ubnory. South Cam·
pw. 10 un. No rqimltion
required.

.-Y-

l tt eo... n.. MadoiDe, Dr
Moyewsl&lt;\, dm&lt;sor,GISPII
Science M.uloJema&gt;l Offi&lt;e,

Paw

DonmouUt Ooll&lt;l"- 10)
Dld&lt;r&gt;Ciurf. South Compa$.

...._._
• p.m

-LECTWE

)ol•l~--e.niii•s

GLKier Rc9eatdJ Orwp. Uru~
of ~w Han&gt;p.hm:. 4S.
Froacuk. North Campus
):J(!p.m
~ALIIJf8INEEIIIM/

~-­
·
-Oi&lt;t0&lt;1loto,........._An·
eiT-.IAy..o...tnWoot
dttw Krymak, N.c.Master Unh
206 Furno$. ·North Campus. 3 &lt;!
p.m. """"" by the UB Cbemi -

-

c:ai~Depl .

~­

D r. •l lobon Rani. UB Dept. o(
-South Campus.
Scicuces
106 em4 p,m
•

- T S A f 4 f'WS
UfDWIY.,_,. ll.oodlaJ' A A-'io&amp; of
'Wri fnHII tbis l 'ear"s Af:ao.
.,...... Poeoty/Rare Room. 420 Capen Non.h Cam·

pus.. p.m

UUAIIFU.II
So I Marrried •• A.t:: Murden.!r. Student Unioft l'btAter
orth Campus. 6 30 p.m Ad·
mi&gt;sioo · sz. Rucioms, Sl.50. oll

oth&lt;n.
OPUS: CLUSICS IIECti'Al
!UMy Md'arla.Ad G•lt'b, "to.
lia, ud Eucco• C..ub, piaoo..
Alleu Redtll Hall. South Cam·
pus. 7 p.m. Frtt lO lhe public.

UFE~

Plaaoia&amp; Forum.
Paul Eben. 7-9 p.m Call

64HI2.5ton::giJat"T

Maatoa: New

p..._;-.s.....Pirioi,

Uni• o( Lo.m.Uie 211 'Boinl.
North C.mpus 4 P""-

No.dTl'1lllsporienlr..

l'odoesid"'-'-...
ia Ctoono;d ""'"''

~

K.otblec:o M GiacoooJJU. Pb ,D.,
Dqoo ' cll'lwmoq. School o(
Pbmnac.-y. Um\1 . of California,
S.n l'nncilico - CooU..
orth Campos. 4 p.m.

-n ...ll

k of IUrtt Wblt-

ia&amp;- An J:l&lt;parunont.Gollc:ry,
Fine ...... c..... pus. 5.J0-7:JO p.m

Cam-

So I Manried M .b Mu,...

ilen:r.u.u.. no.:.....
North Campa. 6 :30 pJJU. Ad-

UR-

misAoD. $2, "udcuu;; $3..SO, all
otbets.
A Stor,u8or'• V"IOW el A.apr,
loan Goldber&amp; 7:30-9:30 p.m.

Caii645-612S 10 rqj!:rer.

c -t....,....,-yM•*Ea·

-blo.llaird R.t:ciul HaiL
North
8 p.m. Faraddi·
ticmal infonn~non all

c:--.

645-2921

WAIII'IUI

wa,.. '• WoridU. Unioo Tlocaler, North~
9 p.m. Admisl;ioo: $2, it~

u.so. .u ........

LR·
Tio 0... 0.. Bret&gt;do Romo"""' .
7-9tp.m. Clll64S--61lS to regiSltt.

liEDIASTUOY~

n..won.ar&amp;llis

Fraaqotcm, BrialiHeaderson.
choir, UB llopt. cl Mcclio Study .
2116 Roe Aru. North Campus.
I p.m.

--··---

EXII 'I8 11 TS .

1\-ai'HooioonsWatctfrool
~pluaf«tbeBuf·

&amp; l o - .... bu!&gt;or CODContinued on ,page 6

~MaNigtldby

SIARA MANAGEMENT

�Dean's plan see closer
ties to bus~ community
msms

-•

by~-

~oa

DEANotibeUBSdlool

.... 4erieed •

ol

....

e.w, 'II('- II)'S- "Boa lt'a IICII
•-.....stodoldoolld)'
. - . . oa the r - a.. jeaol a
Jll(llllldi... -.·beays.
• Cillaqe doe.
• « .. ~"'
,..,. proli
·
llhoul the car•
~ watld ....s ill poblotlm. "Sddobrty
ia.-y,boalt'•. •
WilliG- Tbe~..,MBA .,....na.
Ia whic:lo fiiCU!ty
_ . . , pnoctldaiJ

lolla-...,.lll'IIICC)' ror-. odoool ...,._

....po.oiri... ckwt...... ibe""""'• 10
Jlllpl
0.. Sellool ol ........,_ ibe

.......,....,• ........,..
lllli&gt;enlly o1

Yen

s-

· we -.1 ~ u much • -

hope they .....S -.• 11ytl'n!daicll: W. WillI«, who olficUIIy
doe .,..wo. ol
cleaa
~

.!:.":"....-..~~

,

md.

.

~wn.ww~~~~~
ly dwd,"lit U)'L

Ill
•
be
10 ..aoblllla • tallllituc:DI:y IJ'OUI*, lzdud. ...... ~ fcDowsbip for C.CIlky lb which~
aca.aJiy. 0111 •
p!berlna olalwmd oa April 19
lk ...,..,.,.
put one put ol
ploD tht """1"1'11" watld" and 1lri"' '-d: llllni
iaio . . _ with 0.. cn:olicm olthe ~Iecutl ... cose lbXIleo and other iaf~ doer wiD
be able to ..... ie
MBA pr&lt;)II1IIIL 1M
tbrir
rutJ.dme popm.
• CrnuD, and
which will btJlD
corporations
. fall, Is llimllor

"l* need

10 pi"'JUUSoffercd
Ill the IDp buoinoeo&amp;

"""'"" ,....

as much as we lwpe
they need us. "

schools in the OOQD·
try .
Fkalaoblsput
tocelbcr 1 "fil'llrale·
ad,·isory
Dean 'aCoupo::iiCilCDpOIIIOC!ol p:cm.- buA, _ eoecudvea. botlllocall and nationally.
ln addition 10 ibe tl&lt;COIIti"" MBA prozram, Wiater bas ideruiflcd I 11U111boJ ol
priorities 10 be~clurin&amp; the...,•• fi""
yean:
a Elllablish a Caller for lkalth C....
MIDagemenl. Winter uys he would Ukr 10
work witb the School ol Medic:mt IDd Biomedicll Scirnceo, the other heai~~Micieoces
ICbools oo campus and the mp.nal bolpitals todevdopa bealtb-cammiDarwithin the
MBA-dope program. This propm would
11\K\eul$ from all .....,. the c:ouatry
and wwld Jll-.audenu in health-cue D:WI·
lC"'""'D' pooit:i&lt;lm nationally, os well os m
W&lt;:otan New York.
a Establish a Caller for Team Productivity 10 support faculty maearob in tz:ambuilding. With the "'lat1ening or middle

Sport ie

m emu

aineuma ...11o

High winds and laflrlo ~es
forced 1t1e cancellallon of mucll of
lhe
lrrvilalional Track &amp; Field
Meet. Many oflhe foeld _ . . -

us

teceure,

will become

. • their fieldl; Tlaeoe II&gt;Jdmu
ablt 10 fulfill-ortbeir _ . .

on:luor

manasen

waDI 10 hetht,.....nc ~""""""
c&amp;mpll. •
IDter }'I

• er-;oo or. Corporate Center ...ilhm
the scbool to llllqnle ~alumni,

cominuing eduooriorl ....S pllocrmcn! arovtti&lt;s. ·w~ rw:ed 10
all the ti1Jqs,.,.
doc.xtemally and flmctioo os a team." WiNer
A)'S. A udsfied "CUIIlO!IIft" for ooe type a(
propm will bocomt a "C\ISI.OIIIr.f" far another procnr.m, he add&amp;.
W'mt«'s plan for the ocbool abo iocludcs

intqn••

~and formali.WI&amp; ... ~-­

!'ellld&lt;:Dce propm and improvi.nc tht c-er
for E.nlrq&gt;rencuria l..eallonhip, which be
calls ·a cem that can be poW;bcd and mlwlcccl."

_.•,......

Judith Novak took the 1 ,500 meter
oompeiJtion with II tme ol 5: 10 15

r-.

MlcMrJI (17~ llld JMne

The Bulls conclude their spring
drills wilh ·! tie annual Bluef'Nhlte
Serilm)IIQ8 game 'ID be hek:f Salurday allimoon 811:30 p.m. In Old
tJa S1adiLm The acrirrrnage is free

There was ro mm scorW1g 1n lhe
meet held al U8 StadUn SeiLrdsy
tlftarrmn wllh lillan1a from f'ennsyMlnia. Ohio, and New Ycrt ~
US's Tom Ducey IIWln ll1e men's
1,500 meter race in e1k1'18 of
~ : 10.21. Ron Donadk of Cenislus
tinlshed second ~ 4:18.41. Ernie
Klefllf took !tie 3 .000 melllf steeplechase lor lhe Bulls ln 10'.28.71 .
The Bul 4x1 00 relay team of
Them Kaye, Eric Rschlein, Fumu
Galuldi and Jamal Johnson finished
second In ~-800n the worrien's side. UB took lhe
1Cp lhree spoiS \'llhe 5 ,000 meter
Nllam Shul!la won lhe event in
18;45.44. Mrt Grinnal finished
eeoond in 18A8.27 and sr-y
Sllolhmlnn waa lhird in 19:00.00.
The~ took the lop three apeD
In h 1QQ high~ llllh .........
~ wtnn«lll ln 15.9 . Sue
,....,._.w.~y,

be

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The Bulls defeated rMII Niagara
~ 7-0atNiagtnmw.t..
Clay, Aprl13" ralae lhei' rec:oro 10
3-2.
Head Coach Russ Crispel'a
aquad did not lose a single 68( with
Wamoo Potakafl (nurrtler bolo
singles) and Orrin Pridgen (number
lol.f singles) reoord'ng "double
bllgtil" victories delea!log their opponents by identical 6-0, 6-0
scores. Malt Klein, Mike Proubc.
Rami Zwiiyya, and Brandon Michals
also recorded singles wins for the
Bulls.
Following ee additional
matCheS during the week, the Bulls
head •for c-al Conneclicul State
for 1he East Coasl Conference Tournamenllhls weel&lt;8nd.

~. however.

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an.G 11-IIAI.-..a,. WIIAIEVIII

BY DIXI' LEE AAY WITH lOU GUZZO

0 ~orpor~W., .W. I !2J
A •avllb-d look a hi

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bome lifter the tu. doy &amp;ad aial. To
mab up for il, I illn!l.cbed oad proaic:e4
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Introducing ...

P

T IN C

5

L /\ N N I N G

/\ NO TR/\Of

OASYS

Sl VICI &amp; -··-·~-

quality, dependable, professional
maintenance services designed for the
STAn UNIVERSITY OF

M t f

NEW YORK A T BuFFALO

Y IBM &amp; Compatible Pes
Y Novell &amp; LAN uppon
Y Apple Macintosh Products
Also: Printen &amp; T ypewrlters

• Full Ma intenance
• Time &amp; Mareria.b

. 2-+ Hour Priority Respor~~~e
· Remote 0..1-ln Support
- Low Cost Educational Rates

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APRIL 27, 1 884, 3 :00 P.
F I NI!:
1

CI!:NT~R ATIU U M

'T

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UB's QDice Q/ ~erences and .Spec:Oal &amp;lenls.
'""' Creat.er BlQ7G1o Cclrwention land Vlsiton; Bun!au.
and tl'lll! BlQJGJo Atnl:lczs.sada$ ~ UOU 10 atU!nd t1v!
semnd annual Nt!~!'!tr~Q Aann1r1Q Sy"1PPSftm
and Trode fbt:

Great food. unique ideas. btformative
exhibits and exciting prizes you'll like.
Tour of the Fine Arts Center.
Learn and discuss the benefits of becoming a Buffalo Ambassador
Ol!iCO"er IDtemaJ and external l"e$0Urt:e5 and serviCes
AUend worll:shops on P:ubllcat!ons, Food

ScMce. 1!1:

Media ·R~:sources

\lls(t with 35 cxh1b ton. from UB and Western _ cw Y&lt;rt

Netwcdt wUl1 collequl'S. ambassadors
and ahlbttors during the free reception

Win (Rat prl2ies

For cosr competitive pricing and reliabllity,
call now for your quore.: ·

~69' ·000 1

Olt

1·800·333-0940

40 Hazelwood Drive

Amherst. NY 14228

' •

,

AllrTII
H I"_.

-

Join us and benefit by seeing bow we
can help you bring your organization's
conference ,o r event tD Greater Buffalo
. and the University at Bulfalo.

Resen-e :rour place by caJHDa tlle
omce of CoDfel'elleeS anct Spedal bents
at 645-3705

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�An Electronic Garage Sale
. T~togive

Wrtebsky
Lecture
a

..,_. $presidonl
ol

.

will

, _ - ibe loclure II p.m. In
Bl&amp;ler Audiloriiam iD F'arbrr Hall,
So:Uh Campus. His pamblliOil,
Rqulalimby Tnms·
fanllng Growib IW:Ior•Baa.. will
discuss • prolein ~m o
family ol biologicol elf~ moj .
ecules known .. c:yiOIQDcs.
Prof....c. ol microbiolocY at
UB aod head of tho OinkallmIIIUIIOio&amp;Y Divitiioa mtbe
wti..mty"• r:Jq.rtmelll of Medicine, Tamasi bas 'beaded R"""""U
Park siDoe I 986. He was formerly
chaimum ol tbe Dcpanmenl of
lmmiiiJOiogy .. lbc Mayo MC.dic:ll Sebool in Rochester, Minn.

·1mm-

Phannacy
school sponsors
lecture series

0

tbl;!

Apii27,"R~·

.. _, Jolm A.. Pie;pu, cibair

A -.Dy IXICIIDirJ&amp; potballafl.......,. • DDF
d'bloc:bemicol, Jmmuoo..
loeialml~ po- i n tho biiiDUl body will be
tho. oltho 24111 OIIIIUil Emesl
W"noilliiQ&gt;Momoriol ~"'be
bdd II UB April 26.
and dlid exA&gt;CUtiwe
IIDswdJ Pod&lt; Olaa:r

or.-...,

Tbe....,u.na...-.-.

Tbe UB School ol P!wmocy is ·spoosaring • •t..cllft Series 00 Disclsc
States a Thl:rapeulics,• desigood
to provide. "back"' basX:s" .,..
pooc:ll fer pborrnacisls wbo wish
to retn:sh their kDowleclge t.se,
and ·learn about new qJedS of
various cllseue Tbe fust
~Oil "bcbemk Heaa1 Dis...... was beld April 20; tbe SCII:ies
oootinues oo April27 aod May II
mdl8.
Sasions lake place from ti:JO..
9:30p.m. in c,m Coob Hall.
North Caiq&gt;us. Rqislrotior&gt; a a
Ugbt deli meal tqin at S:30 p.m.

ollbc Deportmeot o(ll 'bormacy
•Pbtt1oc.. Scbool oll'llann8cy.
u .&gt;mOily of Oolaoodo Br.allb
Sclmcoa Ceruu.
Mq ll, "Seine Diootden..
'-ucur. Terenoelf!lallodon, UB
dinicol--. ~olamor­
rmcy~--.._ot

~ Divioioooltbe
0... ~'lnolibR.
May 18, ~Rheumatoid Arlhritis.. lnsttuaor: Rlllblea&gt; M.
UB IS5islant pror_,..
ol pharmacy.
l'or more iofonnation, COIIIallt
tho UB Plwmacy Conlinuin&amp;
Educ:atioo &lt;&gt;ffia: 81 ~S· 3931

T-,

Scholars will
discuss nuclear
weapons
Wayo to derer tbe prolifendon of nuclear """"1"""
will be llddlaBed I&gt;)' •
pond ol distinguisbod idxllani
from 9:30 a.m. 10 5:30 p.m. 00
Sanmlay, April 23, in 106
Hall on tho Nonh Campus.
A lecture, "An Overv;ew ol
tho Nuclear Problem Toclay, • will
bepa:solllled from 9:)()..1l :30a..m.
I&gt;)'~ lirmke.l, edltor of
Socwrity Studiu. Jerome Slota.

\&gt;'Briall

pmfaoo&lt; of politicol ocimce Ol
UB, Shibley Tdbami of CorneD
Univend\y, tiDd Phil Williams of
tbe UniVendty of Pittsburgh will
be panel members.
Williams willlectur&lt; on "The
Nuclear Probl&lt;m in E!urop&lt;" from
1-3 p.m , with Slater, Tdbami
and fmlkel serving .. )&gt;Onelists

From 3:J0..5:30 p.m.. Tellwnl
will IJI"SC!l1 "The Nuclear J&gt;roi&gt;.
lem in the Middle East,· with
Slater, Frankel tiDd WIIIWl&gt;s as
dlscussonts. Tbe propm is free
aod apeD to the public.
Sponsors are !be Oepan:tnenl
ofPolitil:al Science, tbe Noclcaz
War: Prevmtlon Sludiea Groduat&lt;
Group, PhyskilliS for Social

--•100_.

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ar,.... Butpedllpl,.,..............
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the7 biiiJ&gt;
. )'0111' lWI!ldllef•
OWII ~ fU
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............ 111-'lO-..bo~
hldalaMr~....,.
~ ..,,_.., tobdp
UB........t.mfldlor ........ a
drug fa-IOI.I!dt lii*'IJI&amp;. The~

nwloolby~ra-20,_.,

. bcinacudiodto~ ..
e:IJiodive &lt;ble lhll &lt;Wid be lllministm:d in ihe ,.._ tbmugb an -=r·
~lllflbim.
Those..,~

must have bad
alower..t.ck injury oa more iban
!Me do yo prior 10 collin&amp; obool
61&lt; Sludy. l'aJ:tic:iponts be
able to spend dmie ClOIIR!CIIIive
doys. from 1 un.-1 p.m., in
Millard Fi!IJnole Hoopilal~
Citele. Tbey will recrive a ....,....

\ o c l c - rriofto t'llllt!rin&amp;

lbc IlDdy . .. weU .. $400
"""1P'etion of tho study . 1bole ~ iD poniciporinc
sbaUidcall~·
·Dqx. • Millard~

Circle, 887-5281 tiDd leove
addl'ess """ .p~w:~oe tnllllba:.

0!11D£,

UBgroupsare

via_,..,....._

... )'U!II.ui~

GLIO'll&gt;

0

fair, will ~ place Oil
Satmday. April 30 in from of tbe
African-American Cultur&lt; Ct:ou:r
oo MasteD Avenue, Buffalo.
Blacks ·in Health and llelaled
Professioos (B.H.R.P.) at the
tmiversity will baitlbe evc:ol.
Tbe bb::l&lt;deoiH.lp will nn &amp;on
10 un.to 1J1X11; lbe- 6oir runs
oDil s p.m.,.., will be nuic; 'no,

Tara Zandien. left. models 101' fashion show sponsored by Career
Planning and PlacementApril13 in
the Student Union. Show spotlighted male and female careerwear
101' the interview and corporate
world. IBelow, Oh. 2's Laurie
USGWskl Is commentator as George
Mathew models.

•

liA.bao&amp;,CD

~&lt;aiOO, entnl

.•

.."Z.cra,~·~·-

"B.cktollle . - "YOOI
-.ofilllhdef«appliaao:a,
r.-,plaa:ilformlllllld.......... well • ..... ........,.
ads,
•patticubr &lt;rideo,.,... ...... _ _ liltailtc.lborek
.,..... il&gt;quiry~~-lbc
Mllique d&lt;;pbanl ;_, cue ball!

olalCI07C*&lt;Ild

s-,D,/Rlllkir~W...,Ilr~-.....t-~

~ ~· ""' 06 ~ £.
_........ f41&lt;r
illwikdtllrlN.,..,pnH~jpf&lt;rf,..,.MOti-;OtJ
doe (BN, I)P' llllr, ""IN Ji'&lt;U, 't ]'pe........, MN"' trlffl 010 dw U
'»"'~ '"' orn.. l'oor ...aJ ~~•railpt&gt;SJd~tlltdA&gt;

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,_... i~
64S. JU2.

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Oe.wr Hdp l)(a 1111

...a.mm. ~- "'-Pooqc.wo!IO-

'

......_.._1\xxt, olona widta
Ylri&lt;rydotla-a:tivilios.
~-SA. tbe Blaclc
Studenl Union. UB Step Tn&gt;ape,
tho stDdenl c::blp&amp;er d 1bc
AACP, Buffalo Coundlman
David A.. CelliDs u¥1 61&lt; Afiicol:l.
American eww..: ea....
l'or mare irlformatim &lt;DmOCt
1),., Afrialn Amerlam Cultw-e
~ "'11'.4-2013.

800 expected
for annual

co-sponsors of
' Oozfest:"
Project Pride
Project Pride, including •
block clean-up aod street

U8clcro-

' 9caic
At the
of nrid)o
a writiea,
_:J'IIi
_ tilae
_ .,_,
oi"-

·._:

Adults with
lower-back
injuries sought

Olllilple,loj- ,_.£...~~ .

')".II

0

Oo s.mday, April23, UB
will be !be sitr ol..tlal il
bel'i&lt;ved 10 •be tbe nalian'•

largos tiDd dirtiest omi......,""-1
voUeyboll ~in !be mud.
~• ,.ioich willrm lim&gt;
9 a.m.· S p.m. in lbcfield - Sl.
Rlta '• Lon:
LaSalle 00
tbe North C:aro:Jpus, ,.,;]J pit ma:e
than 100- lim&gt; tho Ncribeast
""" c....a. in !be rounot-robio

"""lalcr

r-.,;.q .,...,,_q"' dlo

tt:rtD "ssippeey Uape.. M&lt;n than

aoo...-s-e&gt;;pec:Udto-.1.
l'loc-ss oltho lOCh 11DDL111
"()od;s,• ...,....t by lbe 1Jni.
........, Slud&lt;at AJmmi Baanlol
UB, will baodil ibe J. Sooa
FkmiD&amp; Merit A.wmk. 'the "Pr;s.
ploypound" will be pi"JJIft!d ·aJIIf·
"'"Y ollbc u.s.Anny Caops ol
~ aod ibe GettviDe v.....
-liire Dq:Jertmal.

Seminar .set on
valuing closely
held stock
'the Ceolcr fer MmqeDew:lopmallM UB
is IICIClep&lt;iD&amp; Iqisu lllioos
fer a six-week oemiur"" "The
Valuarlaa ,o f ac.ely Held Com~~seminar wiii..Jdft:os
Slldllopic:s .. diffeftlll .,..
.,..,.a..s 10 vo.luatiOII, including
mt!lizt-l:uod, ~ aod
caot-baed; .tppr-.bes to pn;ptr·
ina • ft!uatiOil n:pcrt, and IIJ&gt;Piicaboas ol diacauol5111d
pr.:miums. 1 b e - will be

taupt I&gt;)' &amp;!ward Huttao, vice
poaideDl ol dol!lely held busilxo&amp;
scrvloes for MAT a-t.
Scs&gt;- will be held from (HI
p.m. oo T....toya from May l

d!roucb '""" 14, eu:kofin&amp; May

I 1 ~ deao:lline is April
25. l'or mare • ormatioo COili:ICI
the Ceolcrfer ~()e.
velopmmt. 11645--3200.

Confereoce to
study OjXioos of
WOIIlffi 00ctrxs
~-&lt;Iotas

-mboaw:C..lbea
p;n.y....,pl&gt;)'oio:iiDtlltd
!me a fnily7 C..
differ·
...,. in bedh em.! C.. I huletbe
job
n.:.e &lt;p!!iimsond
o:dns
ala...,...,.
~ "Wcmml'ltysioionoiD. ·
~ c-,"10bebdd &amp;mli:30
a.m.-5:30pm. ... s.u.diry, Apilll,
• Ritb~Niop:am
BulflhA $5 ,-CXMDdCIIII:Ifa-...,. ...... iacludia&amp; llon:h
is apan!ltll&lt;ld by
The
tbe UB School ol Medic:IDe Olld
lliamediall Sc:ioox:a, ibe UB
Primlry Oft R.ca&gt;ulce Ceolcrtho GhduMe Medico! Daalal Edu...... &lt;JcnoiarUiaD o(Buftalca, rib
suppan lim&gt; Miles .l.abaral:ies.
Batt.&amp; L. Sc:lnaer. ctiroCiar
ol !be Primary Catt l'lroglam in
lmmlal Medicine 011bc Uni"f!r·
sity of Roc:bcitt:r Sc:bool of Mediciot tiDd 'D mlisay aod • member
af Presidont Oin!m's Task Fa:t&gt;&lt;
""&amp;a.16l Catt Reform, iolteyopeU:a oi '9 :Uun. m
'1kallb Caze Reform: 1be :tmp.cl
oo Toclay 1s Medial Studollls."
'lbe -.:aiD&amp; aeosiaa oloo will
feob:lro:. ~ clist:assiOil """The
lmpKl ol c.-Odoe ...
Lifeolyk.. Aftmloco ......... will
adcftss .,_,.,.fer Wort~&lt;~~ of
COlor," ~ Skills fer Raii- dcao:.y," -sm.~
Tedmiques fer Your PllialiS lllld
you; "MMrrllciil&amp; Diabela:: A
l'rimory Care
St~x~y; a
"Lifeotyye OIDica: ·~
'c.-IODd&amp;mily."l'oriafootutliatl, call 'tho UB Primlry
Oft llr8cuao Ceala- •1129-31 76.

I""*"•

u--.s

.....r.:.a..e

o-

�-

-------

............
-a...•.... - .

_,_.
---------JJ,

.............

Yotl\

~

naturtlllreMU~eS

.,. llllnQUrllQ

.......no Chern

.,., 'etemal lllme'!Wing Dl.t of a
cliftawatetW.,.~
tumaonancloll.llt'ldalOO-Ioot·
high oce YOk:&lt;llno

· UB gradoale Bruoe
udenl
.., educabOn
al'ld
aY!dnaturallll _._.....,
olher scenoc gems .., Sectel
Places SceniC rreas.aeo 01
W6St8m New Y¢&lt; Mt&lt;1 SoultJ..
em Ontsroo pubhshed by
1&lt;....-;unt and avadable on
ITIOSl

aree

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-----__

,....
-. .......
....,.._.....,.
.
. .,....__
-.,_.....,

--··

-fll-&lt;0#

~es

K.ersnner .,., envotO&lt;Ynen181 soentllll and Iarmer ed&lt;lor

of 8ulfalo PhysK:&lt;8(}. maga
Zlleollt'eUBmedocalsc:l'clOI
oilers ~ - maps an.::
talied dorecoons on how 10

c»-

19 81

gel 1&lt;&gt; more 1tlan 25

10

We5temNI!Io Yorl&lt;endSO&lt;Ail·
em Ontaro He alSo ra:es
1he de&lt;,jree of d'~ooolty el'ld
oilers safety hPI lor -

......::ed-sand""""""'
ahke Included Me 'WOOd s
Most Porlecl Place for Skippong flooks' ooar Dun!&lt;
tl'le Ononoaga 'necldace of
waterlalts.' and tl'le hauntiOQ
t-.lllop 10 Ganondagan SIBle
HIStone Srt.e south of Aoche&amp;ter . -elhekOQOOISNaoon
wasbom

He atso

wr~,es

of the

Aetnsleon Woocls Slate Pie·

serve on Cheeo.towaga. an
area blessed ""
lot ·
est end histone car.mgs dal·
lng bacl: to lhe md· 1800s.

""0"'

,___

.u
Left;.-........,..•

.
........,..
__......,. __
~--·

--Off-.u

and the 52-acre Walton
Wood$ . only 8 shor1 walk I'(JI'n

.u

-__

__........_....,..
.....,_
......

-.....-&lt;0#~

,......,.,.
v...,.c:..,-~

.......

...... - z -

tl'le North C4!mpus
A nalM! of Slalen Island
ershnef wrote Sectel Places
aher years ol explonng West·
em New Yotl\ loolong lor watet1alls, caves al'ld lhe last
anaent forests Froends regularly asked twn for dwectons
to YISll the Sites he so had
compelltngty descnbed
K.e&lt;shner says he appreCiates the oolemma ., publlcaIOQ these no lorlger 'secret
places • ·u more people know
about them. the&lt;e IS the concern lhat their seclusion or pnsune quahty could be
d ........shed OntheOihet hand .
Wllhoul a ccwe ol people wto
have fallen ., love
tt&gt;ese
spec131 ~easures. there os no
consmuency to watch out and
care abOUt Ulem.•
Kersmer holds degrees 11
enwonmenlal SCIMCEI from lhe
U,_Stty a1 Btnghamlon and

UnrverStty ol Comec1Jcut. He
wor1&lt;e0 as senor enwonmenlai!SI and sctenust for Great
Lakes Unned and EOOiogy &amp;
EtMronmenl. Inc He leaches
atEmptreStateColiege, chaws
lhe Frtencts of Allegany coaJ&gt;.
ton. and co-dlarrs the Weslem
New York Old Growth Forest
Survey
~

---..
---_..,_
---------.u

lW'•......,.,

. v-,.~-.

�</text>
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                    <text>PaMicPolky
It's expertise of
Senior Fellow
John Sheer.

Nebraska's
Chumbley named

Director of Fme
Arts Center. , .

3

Triggle Commission Delivers Report
Jlh Structure of Arts arid Sciences
IEIIITOit'l ~ foi1Dql"ttlr ...u'stnr lo PrtlWJ!R Aar011
Blodt 011 Apn.1 7, /994 by DistJngiiUMd l'ro{usor aNI Dtm; Da•'lli
Trigglr, Cliairma11 ofTI" l'rovo!R 't AtM&amp;ot) Committn 011 Thr
Smu.-r~&lt;rr

&lt;&gt;fThr Aru oNf S&lt;:irnca.

Dear Dr. Bloch,
On behalf of The Provost's Advisory Committee on The Structure

orn.., Ans and Sciences, I am etiC'Iasing for your considentioo ow
report. This it&lt;ler will 5UIDJIIariu our findinp and oonc:h.isions and
should be read as an integral component of the report proper. ~ i
a diverse inst!tution with • corresponding di•·ezsi!y of oponions You
will oat. tbt:&lt;d'ore, bt surprised to lcam ihat we Jld not arrive at a
unanimously aoa:pted set of coodusions or recornmendations nor
did we oddm;s all of the issues to a oorx:lusion Our ITport atte~t~pls.
however, to represem fairly both the diversity of opinions ihat the
Commiuee holds and d~e dwtges tbJn we believe overall are ..,.,..

sary.
The fundamental issue that the UoiVCI'Iiity &amp;ceo is bow 10 e illi ltjpartite missiolll-tea&lt;:b:iJI&amp;, scbol..m:ip ond service against •
badcgrouod of .major changes in public expecW:ious, Stale and Fede:ralsuppon. and disciplinary boundaries. We have llbanpted to ccnsideJ the otruoctUieS. functicas ond priorities that will best aid the
execution of our mission in the context of the obarge to the Commll·
tee-the organization of Ans and Scieoots. We ha"e discus!;ed the
issues eat.ensivdy in oommilke, wi!b our colleagues, through the
existing litcraiure, with oUJside coosultants and we ba .. visikd otbe&lt;
Wti versities. Critical areas have become dtfinod and dinx:6ons ate
india ted.
The Conunillee bas discussed extensively the issues of undelgrsduak educatioll. II()( in the context of whether it IS more or less
important than sdlolan;hip and SClVi&lt;%, but rather in the context of
the functional complementarity that must necessarily exist berw&lt;:&lt;m
all of these compor~et~ts in me.sua:essful eucurion of the Univm;ity
mission. Witham a oommitted and respoosible approacll to undergraduate education by the University both sdlolarship and semce
are 00Dlp1011rised. The ftiCOitliDtlldatioos lhat follow focus on the
organization of Ans and Sciences ond the delivery of unc!cr:groduate
educatioo-issuts defiocd in the charge to the Conunin.ce.

Recommendation 1.
'IHE DELIVERY OF GENERAL UNDERGRADUATE
EDUCATION
Tbe pi-"C, -

· responalblllty- ac:countahlllty for

~· ect-uon must be In the lllculty or r-mles that

deiiYef the

c:onopoc-t coureewotk.

In the pn:sent organization, the delivery of undergraduak edocation.
partiouW!y, but not exdusively, its general component, is seriously
dysfunctiooal. As outlined in the accompanying report and materials.
this dysfunctionality bas several origins. including lack of faculty and
administrative oommitmellt and acxountability, absence of linbge
between respuosibitity andresoon:cs and iU-deftned and extended lines
of communication. 1bese deficiencies are compounded by the decision
to mandate a curriculum without regan! to resoon:cs.
A variety ofstru&lt;:tu= may, in principle.= the implementation
of our lust mcommendation-our present struCtUre moot a.""uredly
does not. The majority of the Committee, but with strong dissent and
reservation by a significant minority, favored the fonnatiao of a Faculty
of Arts and Sciences headed by a single dean and composed from the
existing faculties of Ans and Letlets, Social SciC:n&lt;:es and Natural
Sciences and Ma.tbematics. This Faculty would 1b e responsible for the
geot;nl compooent of undel-graduatc educatiao in addition to the
education of its own specific majors. This is 1 model sham! by many
institutioriS that we regard as our pccr.i including the University of
Indiana at Bloomington. visited by two members of the Committee. It
is certain~~ · possibletoconsidel structures other than a single Faculty of

AJ:ts and Sc:~ but alt.enwive c:ombiiUllioo$ of emiting Faculnes
found link J'avor with the Cotm:niu&lt;Je.
The issue of lllldr:rpaduate edlalioa " also bd..,ved to be solwbk
within theeltistinc Faculty liti'IJatlte provided that the tenets e.&amp;pltJCt! in
r~numberoneareinpi.....,.. Jnpani&lt;:War. thetmplana&gt;wiotl and cooabn.atioo of the delivezy of ~tt eduatlOII
would become 1 opecif'l&lt;' ~liry of
~ faculues Th ' 1
also a model adopted by Olbers of our peer mstti:Ullom,. incbadltlg Ob10
Swe Unlvm&gt;ity at Colwnbus ab;o visited by ,,.o membenl of tbe
Conunin«. Tlus organi;r.ation ooa1d set'V&lt;! as m mu::rmediat&lt; to the
formation of 1 single Faculty of Arts and Scien&lt;:eo and
permit
..,...., funbt&lt; rime f&lt;lf detailed analysiS. In rither model. responsibtllt~
and OCCOII!llabiluy for the lllldtqpdWitt C\lmc:ulum, ~with th&lt;
attendant
mUSt be present in the prizlcipal Ft1C11lty or Facul ·
1.11$. A vjoe,proVOSt for Undergraduate Eduarioo ,.·ill sen·r w ..,.'\ft
thai tbe responsibiUty for courses in parocu.lard.lscqJimcs is housed m
tbeCICliTe$JXIOd'mg Faculues and depiu.tmems, manltor the ooordina1&gt;011
of courses ,.;lh sttadcm demand and """"""" reo:pons;hility for !be
a d v i o e - -.
In either mOdel !be role of the exl5ting UndtrgradUIIle Colkge bu
been effec:rivd.r ossUIDtd by the...,,.. struc:ture. nw. Is"""""""*' and
oc:msistent with our reoomrr..OO.tiorl.
Regardless of the model adopM. several tnan.1£emmt dwlges
should be roosidered bach within and without the pttneipaJ FacultJ&lt;S w
relic,•e thewrrent problems in uwlergraduo.te edocatioo..lbest cllanges
should indudt::

"""ld

••lh

a. Reexamildtion of the ex~sting undt:rgnuluak cumcu:lum
IT·
spec1 to its appropria1&lt;11CSS for our nu ·on (i.r., IS ~ def'tned
currlculum that does not IICOOIIlJtl&lt;ld.te student cboioe m !herr best
interest"), edoca.uonal obj«:tives. resoura: •••aiabil ity. qua.lity and
outcome. Scl'naltMtnbers of the Conuninee no4ed that. the ea.isting
curriculum appean; to be 1 c:ausal fliC!or in our cum:nt problems in
undctjgraduate education.

b. Enrollment management to better fit enrollmm! slle and demands
to available""'"""""'·
·

c. The creation of flexible l"t:5&lt;&lt;IJ.treS to permit the implemc:ntauon of
the ~Wile ewriculum.
d. Analysis of COWlit size, rontml and availability lD elimirlak minimally occup;ed, duplicate or rnely g;....,.. c:oorses.
e. Examination of ex.istmg •depuuncnl size and fuoclion 10 delerminc:
whether the existing StnlClUreS are appropriate both in
of size
and number.

' ""DiS

Considt:rationand~ wbt:renoa:ssuy,ofdlesedlanp

should ba ve sySI.elll benefits lhat exknd w and beyond Ulldt:rgraduate
education.

Recommendation 2.
!MPACfO GRADUATEEDUCA'l10
PllCJALLY IN l'HE SCIENCES

ANDRESEAR.Cl'IES·

Tbe proposed Ch8nea In ~ numbef one wll
llkeiJ not Impact craduate education and ftaUI'CII IIn any of tbe
dt.clpii-.However, we I'IICOI'NMnd ~study to lOcus
speclflcaiiJ upon tbe tllrectlaas of C)'Miuate education, Ita
responalblltlea 80CI ~. lind tbe nile of lrrterdladpllnary groups ....sua depMtments and the auemb!J of allied
disciplines Into new Faculties.
A fundameruaJ dilt&lt;nma faced by the Comminee was ,.iJethcr in
cqaniz;ing for lltldcQ;radua~ education, struCWI'tS tt .processes are imj)(Rd that impede intml.i&lt;rciplin activity. grodulk eduallioo and ..,.
search. On balance, bul with sttaJg diS5elll or ~ from some
members, portioularly tbaie from theexperimmlal scimces, the Commit·
tee doesoot believe that implemcotation of the pnMous ~tioo
in either fonn will ~y negativeily affoct gra&lt;luak educatioo and
Continued on page 4

�2

on
Policy
Studies
......,,.._.....,.
....,.. I'

expertiM ....... of

OHN SHEFFER SAYS
1bat lbcrc ,.. .., ooc !*'·

!

i

ticubr when he
decided 10 deVOl£ bunlelf 0
to pubhc ..,-vice. But
pow111 up •• a fanuly wbictl bon·
orcd the 11011011 of rcspoo&lt;ibibty.
bolh IOOOC another and 10 the community, played a major role U. Jad.
-IJII She!T&lt;r 10 ck:v&lt;~CC bit hfe 10)
serv1Dg the ......u of people.
.,.ve ah..-ays bad aa .......,.. ••
commwmy ' 11e1 and a belie( tllll
we all ahare a re ponsibility
IOWardsour IIOC&gt;ely,• aays Sbeffc:r,
who became a Scllior Fellow at UB
in 1993, with a d\lahppoiiiUI1CtllU.
the School of uw and the School
of Ndnlcclure and l'lanniJJ&amp;. afl&lt;r
opcudiDJ the last. I~ yean in the
ew Yon: talc Senate IDd As·
""""bly . ., eajoycd foiJOWIOI poli·
lies but nevecn:aJiy intended IOND
for office.
"Be&lt;idea. I'm a firm believer
1bat lbcrc arc all k.inds of models of
public service othet thaD elec1cd
off'JCC." Sheffc:r aays. -rbough I
takt peat pnck: •• my publiC ..,..
vicc,lolao r«:ogniu the fact that it
is dtousanck and thousaDds ofboun
by voluntccn and professional staff
woot&lt;ra that make our govc:mment
and sociely won:.Sheffer
grew
up
10
Williams,ille. •'here he served as
mayor from 19TI· 78 He reccaved
his law decree from S)'111CUS&lt; Uo1·
v&lt;r&lt;ity U. 1973. He then bepo pn·
vate pncuce in Williamsville, Mth
several Olltcr lawyers, evenll1olly
formiog Mth them the f~rtn that 111
present i5 kao"·n as Sheffer,
Murphy. and Wbtte.
"Building my law practice was
my primary goal when I lim went
back 10 WiiiJMtt ville," Sheffer
oays. "But I also had sonw: int&lt;reat
in park and IIDd is ua in the vii·
loge, and in hiatoric preservation.
Ln 19761 was asked to run as vii·
!age IJUSt&lt;e by sonw: people with
whom I'd wo&lt;ked on various
projec:fl. lt was a difficult deci·
sion-lwasrai ingayoungfamily
and building a practice. But I de·
cidod to do it. and won."
Sbe:'fer ran on the Civic Pride
Pony Line b&lt;cause, be says,
W'tlliamsvill• gov&lt;rnment does I10l
opeme on the traditional Democratic/Republican party system.
"My g:randfatber bad oliO been io

i

-___
ART HISTOR'f

..CW.N-AI.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . proMeorol811~• ..a·
,_,._otlhe
lecUII1

ue

-~w•.,_~..,..

ed • Cowdlor ollhe
eva! h:ademv ol ~

.,.

tora~terrn.

The.....,.ol_..

on
~and
Golhle ~.G-.
Jane and~~
SeMJr ~F.-a
Nllw YOlk Cllfa ~
lan Ml-.n ol M and
Claill... tor 1 1-82.
She ,_ NC80ied. , . _
ber oltniP~ancl
gr-.lnc:Ltding. 1~
~~R.gionll

~~

Sl-"'Y a.ncelor's Awwd tor
Excalenca .,_ T~ lfld

mnehen.m:.-

lln o.b Cenlar tar~

W. Skdasn:lh
.
Co.n:t ol1.aM'llld SDcila.
.,1 985.fl~

..

A:ml f'lva. trdld ~
Nelllanll End:Mmer111ar
""'·
mn theRome.
.Americln
Ac:ederr¥.,

__

,

ENGH:ERING

lOee . . , U... • wnlor
c::l&gt;en'bli ~majOr
at ue, n.. been awarded
lhe Cormlandar Mlu E.
Pocie Scholarship ~ lhe
New YOlk City polll ol
Soci8ly ol American MiiUiy

~Th&amp;$1.110
S""'t.I.E.~ilglwn
anrua~y loan~
..-.~on ldlalllr·
~..Sinn:III..C

Un,

who,_. 3.a.

gr~-.ga.

received . . Amllncall
Mil ol Clwr*:lll EngirwM'5
Adtd tor Schclallc:
~Heila~TW~&gt;­

ber ol the T., Bela A Na-

lional ~Honor
Socialy, . . Odden Kav ....
lianal Honor 5ocillly ..a ..
A1
Honor Socialy.

Ba--

lhe~icl'ndef'lrty," Shetl'cnays.
f*1ies are indepaldent. not

"The

bed up in partiWI i
It the
COUJlly and aotional level One yeo&lt; lalcr,
r:Jt bccanv: "

mayorofWilliomJrille. -my
expcrieDceiD loCiol ,.,.,....,.,..._,
lhe many fruslrotioM I CIIC:OIIIIIaed
while working with New y ootS&amp;alc.
tllllled me 10 run for Sc.e AJiem.
bly.· Sbd'C&lt;r aays. "Raahcr than
betn1 a helpful J*'ID&lt;r, I fell New
Yon. State wu an obnoltious,
Orwellian Bil Brotbac tn reprd 10
thewueooftheviiJace"
Sbeff&lt;r became a member of
the New Yoot SUI&lt;: Aslembly from
the I Und NIICitlbly Oislrict in
1979. lk served u u uscmbly·
man for I 0 yean beftn becoming
a ew Yon: State SenaiOr from the
60th Dtstrict illl989, OIJO'IUOD he

P'*" votioctofaotionalreoourcoa."
One of the po&amp;ibve thiap about
the dillnCU Sbdfer served
lbc
ll!lpOI1MIX
en- clistricu o(
eduell,oe,. ot every levd. he oays
"UB impar:uthe~com'ty 1D maay ways. ud ·
p&lt;rtaiain 10 the tmiYei'Sity "''ere
IICCC$IoWIIy 1 major faaor of the
day-I&lt;Hiay opc:nlions af m lqislative oti'JCC,• Sheffer oays .

with a wide range of

11

ues.

Sheffer's won: in state government
focused primarily on what he call
the"3E's"-4hecnviroomcnt.edu·
cation. and economic ck:vdopmcnL
"Myoonccm fardteeavironmeut
may be OOIIIidered • liule lllllllllol
toramemba-oCdteRqJubticalll'lny,
but I mongly bdicvc tltot eaviron·
mcnW stewordsbip ll1lltiCt:IICh ~-

11111llabds.• Shelfc:rsays. "We rnuot
pay attention 10 the vitality of our
reaources. OrJC of my Republican
heroes is Teddy Roosevelt. Even
· in the 1990s. he preseoc. a model
of a reform-minded Republican
who was oliO t::&lt;lCICer1&gt;ed with the

..,..y primary mocivabOOI uo
iJ a&gt; ...,., "

l b i s -. Sbdfer• .......
aooune8flc School oC Ardtilcaure
- , . , . . . . Clled '1-s Uae lAw
-~-Nc:xl-he

be--.NoO&lt;:OIInr.C "l.cplotrve
l.zw ltld l'l:tlicy" io ... School o(
l.zw. ..cl~l'llalilt&amp;
ltld l'l:tlicy" iD Ntttilac:llft IIIII

....

'"The~ofmylqtsla­

bdJ&lt;r • ..,... etlucoto! • ••

S fcctiDa

Ylr1UIIIyeveryodai5-

IUC IIIII piority o( New Yoot

"For ma-ce. in ICmll o( IUiib ....

pin&amp; IIIII e:apenstve p'Oblcml •

en- we have W1tb Medicaid aad
social services. dte ..............
educ:otioa. from pc-ldudcapw

11

lltroucb a lifetime,• Sbdl'er oays.
"We need 10 YJ&lt;W edUCitltlD as

"I take great pride in having served in
government and the political arena. But I
also believe that a stronger coUaboration
between govemmenJ and higher education
is essential in the 1990s and the 21st
century."
held unul he came 10 UB lasl year.
Although legislaton CODtc:.td

aayL

"""'"" 10 UB

--

a cootiouum over people'a 101Iok
lives,· Sbeff&lt;r says. "This · nee·
eaaary 801 jUSI in Ill a:a:lallicacnae,
but from the aaadpoinl o( lbc ceonomic 5lrenJlb of our ~ta~t. SUNY
is a genuine ealine of CXlOIIOCIIi&lt;:
ck:vdopmeat and we need 10 pay
ltiCDtioa 10 JbaL.
It was the c:1wtct 10 be funber
illvolved with cd-x.a thot led
Shelf&lt;r 10 leave public office and
accepc a pooition Ill UB. "A terrifoc
opp&lt;lnunity wu preseoled to me 10
continue: 10
in the arena of

llve bot:qJowtd lind my dual appoiatmut teacbia&amp; law ud
plaDaiDJ iJ ....,.___. """"
moe de8omi111t0r 11 pobcy srtJdiea." Sheff&lt;r U}'L "/\$ a fideS of
Jeamiaa. pobcy atllltia is ial&lt;:rdisciplia.y, - my appoi- 10
t
£aaaltia iadi&lt;:Mel thai a.ry
Bo)u, de. of the Sdlool oft-.
ltld Bnmo Frescbi .. . . o(
I&lt;ICI1II'e ud l'laoaJoiq. have beell
utracrdinarily mpponive •
Olbl:r di.alalsiou o( Sbeff&lt;r'•
ptll1tiall iDCiude .....-bn&amp; .. CSUJb.
a PhD. in Plllicy Stlldies ot UB•
ltld latin&amp;.- Ia • ~ effon that foc:ues 011 l'ruidcat
~.cbqeiOiheUDiwniryto

have a bqer..S -bdplul pns....,. ;. WCSiaB New Yort.
'1'!:Didy, I""'* inco a
vcr·
llity wi IOIDCandc:cy,bavin&amp; lpOIII
dte1Mttwoclrades8~"

Shetl'er aays. "&amp;I the IIIICmben oC
tab fa::ultica.
evuyhody ot UB
rve had 10 deal . have bc:eto
moat CtlldiU. The fact
Prc:adaol Gn:ia&lt;r, l'ro..- BJocb. IIIII
- y odlon • UB are
· a
delibenlive,llllfCSIIiveelfon ia lhe
..... o( poticy lllJtlic:a is • ...,;fie
. . tbcl
ltldi ...... IObe
. - o( lhol dfOn.

-s

"~*.,..pidciD

... aova- """

. ...-!
the political

......- Sbdl'er says. "Btal
believe lhot • llrtlftar:Jt cdJabanljon

public policy and policy SIUdica
that have Interested and mocivaacd

bct.............-ltXIIJi&amp;hercdu&lt;*ion is caallial in tbc 19!101111111
the lisa catiUI)'. I llnlii&amp;IY IIIJIPOI1
UB'a inilillivea y,ftcb
011 tltot

me my whole life. but 10 do it ia a
wbolc new ICiting that allows me
10 woot with ltUdc:n " Sbeffc:r

coJiabonDon, ltld I look ........- 10
Wlll1&lt;ia&amp; wi1tt my aJIIeot&amp;ues • UB
towm1 tltotead.•
r

won:

hAiparw••~C!QimU'IIy,...,._,.~bW' . . o...ar.d~and~- .......... - ..... .,ot..~~~

.. ~.,lliO.ttii.Awlllra.(7·~

~t71"\&amp;JCATIONS ._.., ~., _.,,mnOil. ---. A.IIOC:IATI£J:Ifltlll . . . --. NnDIN'Cl'Oft -..__ ~TtNnCJIIIECTot . _ ..... ~.......aat -..-.

�FSEC discusses teaching effectiveness programs at UB
.,_.M.Ua
iolm:sll .. . Cht ~7 achn.lniwo·

~stall

BASIC GOAL (I{ !be Off...,
(I{ T~ .£1Jr,c:d- ;. lo
promc:le one! eabancd~dty pu,fOQIIII1Celn~,pdu­

,• .._ ond ,proremc:mal to.oclli!la

' " llll'ians

throuch ~ &amp;culty develop-

ment ~ frank ScbimpfhallS&lt;'I,
illlerim&lt;lbeclor Or lhc
told lhc ~
$malo llxecorivo Committee last wee:k.
~,..Y
ln1nn clb:e&lt;:t« bas been
• positi~~eandac:iting.u wellt~JO:Iberlni and
~ - SchimpOiaustt uld.
Scbimpftlauoersaidlbatbobasbcea Mld. &amp;wilhflCIIIly'wboatecloiaamanyucit·
ina 'thiQc$." l5liCb oa the w· 1er :reacb:lna
Confete~~CeiJI..tlldll2 UBf-'ty dcmol&gt;stnolt&gt;il melhods of .ai~ 1CIIIl1lq lhal dwy
cmpl.oy bllhe dasvoom.
The OlE's adviaory board also bas beta
CJIJ:t:mely helpful, s.himpfhauser Did. But
be also sa'id that "The sobming,l ide ofloacblng eiJoctlv- is thald&gt;erear~ n that
De&lt;:dli&gt;Omatlelltioo at a major I'OIUJ'Cib institution like UB.•
Schimpfhauscr listed sev&lt;n pankubu
goals of tho: OTE, including inlqrating new
facull)' ond pduato teacbirl&amp; .tSSi:stants into

om.

,.,.,

theuniv=ityculture,c:reatingfacult)' ........
ness or c:urn:at insuuc:tional methods, .e·
RArch and issues, """ P'Ovidin,g &lt;lllloin&amp;
disuibutioo of facUlty developmem informatiOD, i:ncludin&amp; iDsuuct!ooalt&lt;&gt;Cl!&gt;niques.
O!bcr om goals ~caosultin&amp; w:ith
foculty ond departments to improve university lnslnocti011, mainuiDlslg • network of
individuals that suppans the activities of the
OTE, suworfing ongoing faculty develq&gt;-

tiOil, and~- ...nioa WI uni·
w:nlty lll:aCio:mle unilS ..., edmilrlis
' lnlll&lt;c..
011 ......,_;""~for
'versity ln~Gff.

.rr ......

Norma Hendcnon,
.,[tho:
lllal •. .mral-bop""'''~in
Clll1all li1elanft Olll&lt;aCbin&amp;
dtoctiv....,.. iDctade 1be role !1f li:!IICb.ina
portfolioo, wblda me ck:CIIl&lt;ld u a cilwiCJe for
facUicy 1o Jft*:D1 evidmce of tbr:ir ~
&amp;blllly. Olhtr: iul.a in tbe&lt;::lllmlllilenotwe
include lhcimportlllc:e (I{ pccre.-ahwioa, as
a tool ond procaos ror ~ tet&lt;ihlDc,
utlliz:iai &amp;oolty tal
ond In promorion

om.

"Pe~ple go away from
~rogramsjeeling

gOOd-! don t know if
that s.a measure. "

~_.._of~ to""-inaovo.dcve 111111 dfoctlve ·c~ ...,.,...,.11""'..
""" •10 e.pand IDinlna ond pro{.-oa.ld&amp;""lopmcat ..:tmties for T.U.., &amp;t.o curttntly Ullllld. UB, ~ sai4 Odlrr
CUiftlllly aeedo iJdade dlr GtJed ID
devoloj&gt;a.l IIIJlPIII1 new dM&amp; In w.IIID&amp;,

tolupport and~ good~ to
expand OTE COIIIW!Wve lltMca, ond to
ln=ase collqia.IJty by talldn&amp; abooll ~­
in&amp; ond II:Udcnt ieoonJ.in&amp;:, ~aid.

iooLu GoociJMn, imai vice pramsr
for~ edDctiOOn, said !bat
CICSIIIal to his oodmlDiolntivo CllDC&lt;il'lll l:MI !bat it · "• diffi.
c:ult laoue. Being proeiR is impor!.ent 1o me,
ond I dou'tlhio ..., know wblt teacbitJ.c
dT=i-ls,. Goodman said, ...-kill&amp;
of lhe OTE, be said •"How do 7"" impro,'C.
pnx:e$a""""' you doll "tlr::now ....... il'5for'!'"'
UB is 1101 pn&gt;dloe about wbalthe pis (I{
~ are, Oooclman said. "'What «Jm1i-

tead&gt;ina eflocti- ·

MeSI~If1lduatc-· •'batllibouldlbey

lcnawrGoodmao osbd. "lf.wec:ould oc:hit've
ammsmonsud! issu&lt;s,Chm wcc:ould~­
surt r.tudmt pafC~R~~~~~~~Ce. But it's "" es-

ond t.....,.. proocdlll"t:S- Also im
issues are menloring to cnbauee the productivity of~"' and e~ fiiC'Uhy, and
active lumlng proee$SC$ that belp students
develop critical thinking •kill in their
classes and disciplines. Htndersoo said.
A number of imponant ~~ 1.-h
are &lt;llll1mtly unmd at UB, Henderscn said.
The ntJC:d to maximize student leamlng ..,
that StUdall n:tmrlion is improved and students progreA in • timely IDAJIIIft is or crucial impar111DCe, she Aid. ....Js to havo

11tmCiy diffkwL. tiJoe.moounting process.·
Goodman said be u-,hl it was imporWll 1&lt;1 aJIIDOCt Clllldlmcnt 10 the I:Ju&lt;l8ct ......
c:ess 110 !bat 01uCleut oourso I&gt;O&lt;do could be
met. But potential probl~sucb .. inves~ ­
in&amp; majcx n:&amp;OW&lt;:eS 011 wllal turns outiO be
tetiiJIOI"I1)' demand, mt:aDS !hot ouch I IXIO·
. o n .....uct have to be cloiely combined
&lt;loo&amp;taJ said
Omni&gt;Malone~oaid
it
was possible to be "almndy precaso ond
llli&amp;Uy inoccurote It tho: samt time." Malco&lt;

""*' ...,..,..,_,

Mid-~
&amp;.lnlhlcllldu

, . ~-0111-

s. Mob.

w•~P•·Cht arB w &amp;.

..-d!IM;ir
l'tulk Sdl'
"l'llople .., ._,.

-...-

~.....,...

~

~ ..

.....,.,..... .......d......., .
~

~if-·u- Tioo:ft

I' IIDI_1hll...,..dlito::li - - b e
.-;6ecl-l CblllltiM'
..............
......:t'm:IIDIIIII!O_.__ .,.._
dllm• pecilrO.....,....,.. __•
Chides

t"nc:ilr.b

of ..... '

• Mid

-~·-~-d

IIIU'Iciadofdf...U-. "'fdle-io

...... ,...,.,.._ .... t.c:.da!cdw ..........kb.

~~w:re..,

..w.les,N.If otba:..._..,iiCIOII&gt;Id
be _ , btlpful..
s - l Scbad&lt;ofM.otllemoliau&gt;d"My
belidis lhot ~ ium-diDomy ·
clplb&gt;t o;pedfic. I .......Jd likt 10 iaocati .,. "" depol:lmoenls lo ~ tadtin&amp;
wit!WIIhc deponmenl.
'Kamedl 'fakeudsl of Cbom&gt;stry, speakin&amp; as a DJelllbc:f of tbe OTE~ baed,
said !hot tbe hoard had~ prob6ems
of rnlullin&amp; ~- ... c:ftyq 'IIJOIIey

iso~wi

10 """""""·
But lhc bomt had &amp;cided lhot ~
cffccti~~

wu clifflellll to qiiOIIIlify,

Tab:o.t&lt;:bi aid

-so we cbaie 1o Jl"" fiiCUhy

-

ID I

wide varidy d ~in

lennS o( Wli.YI to IUC~" Tak~Ndli Aid. "1

thinJo: tbe

pl'OITim

is dfu:ti"". The ........

why OTE'5 ll&lt;llivities """"'oodiverx is lhot

Ibm: is 110 """ ri
good caddo&amp;-.

wu .., ..... makl:s

Robert Chumbley named director of Fine Arts Center
ERRY GRANT, DEAN of tbe
l'oclllty of Arts and Letters at
UB, bas ll1lDOI.Il1Ced tho ap-pointment of Robut E.
O.umbley as director of tho
UB P'me Arts Center. O.umbley cum:~~tly
serves as e~ecuti ve one! anistic dircc:tor of
the Lied ·Center for the hrforming Arts at
the UDivasityofNebraslca, a positioobo bas
bold since December, 1989. He will begin
work ben: in mid-May.
O.umbloy will be tho fm;t director or lhc
$50 million UB oemer, whi&lt;lb houses tho
university's D&lt;-partmenls of Tboltre and
Daneo, Art, ond Media Study, plus a number
of public perl"Gmllll&lt;le, presentation andesllibition venues. lbe lat1erineladeao 1,800seanbeater, a 400-scat drama ·thcater, black
box tbe:alers, scn:eo:ing rooms ond two Clbibition plleries. The ce:ruer's public perl"ormance ond presentation spaces will open
officially this fall.
In his new position 0111mbley is expected
to develop lhc&lt;:eoter'olong...-ange dim:tion
thrnugh broad•based, comprebensi YO CDOsu}tatioo with lhe ens community both on
and ofT c:ampus. He will be n=spor1sible for
cOllaborative and interdisci;plinary progmnfTiillg !hot enban&lt;es and augments tho aw.-ities of the unive:rsity"s performing ans

America, the Americ:aD Stri!ll Quane~. lhc
Nonh Carolina Sympbony one! other groups.
'In ccnjunctlon with bls •ppointment,
Ommb1ey will din&gt;ct 1 majcx u.w festival of
oonternporary music 11 UB, ~be will be
1 termred associate pmfessor of ens ond
letters. Ris wife, Shirley, on assi.stont srofessor of music at NebraSb -'Liooolo. ' - accopt.ed a position as .-isitlng associate
professor ar music at tho univemty.

'L

~Healoowill.,.,..,.,.lbc~a!d

IJI'SI'dlllionda&amp;le~~- ....
CDleS Van lbc$.II(UII)ing &lt;XIImUiiry.

entirely by !iOUJ"Ca outside the Univcmt} or
ebras:l;a. is largely dep:odenl on at.dience
~for itsoponorian.a fact that Ouunbley
says · reBerud in its~ ·
He oces his primary mission here to be
diffetenl from his role at tbe Lied Center. At
UB, be apecu 10 .,.,..,_the tdvancemem
of various an forms by commimoning and
presenting oew work, establisbing reoident
pafOfll"lll:lCe oompanles, promoting iolerdisciplin&amp;ry P'Ojects wit.b arti5IS 011 ond off
c:ampus, and other efforts in support of UB's
ocadom.ie programs in the fme ans.
'"Ibc synerg;sm !hat arises from g&lt;Jiting
UB'o ac:adaoic arts units togclb&lt;:r on cnecampusandin"""buililin&amp; is&lt;IIOitDOIISand palmdally very produaivo,' Cwmbk:y says."By
wodcing with the campus community 10 brio&amp;
important artistic R5ic1oncie5 m !be center 1&lt;1
advanolt the education of students," 'be 58)"5,
._ wiU 001 only expand our oppon:unit)• to
pr&lt;:Sr'lll unusual work tovariousaudiclla:s, but
strenglbm the likdibood that campus mists
will producle iropon.ant oollaborati-e work..

As t.be fi!SI dim::la- a( the Lied Cenn::r.
0111mbley devised an eclectic progi3IIIIIIing

Owmbley'sadditionalduliesinc:luile~

tnix·that,initspremiereseason,ineludedinter-

nlsingandaudierlcedevelopm&lt;nt,edueational
OUin*:h. and thec:oordination of centeracdvities with !bose.,[ othercommunity arts J!TOUilS·
He will .supervise the center Slllff, including
direct supervision of its business manager,
...rus c:oordinator, facilities tna~~~~ger, ond
marlcding ond tedmical dircclors.
.
'In addition 10 his 12-year can:or in arts
administration. O.umbley is a romposer and
associate pmfessor of music compooition at
the UniverSity of iNelnsb at Lincoln. His
wotkbasbem oommissioned by the Omaha
Sympbooy, Piedmont Opera 'l'beaterJOpera

national cciCbriries such as Isaac Sl= and the
Pbi.ladelpbia OrcbesiJa, local talena lib Opera/
Omaha's poduction of"Madame Buttcdly,'
classical dance, a produdion of the Broadway
musical "Les Mlserablcs• and Japan's exotic
Grand Kabuki and Kodo drummers.
Tho Lied's varied programming has continued with an emphasis on elassic:al forms.
orcbestnl and ensemble presentations and
weelteod perl"onnances that, for lh&lt; past few
seasons. havo drawn lmge a.udielllle&amp;, includingmanyfmmoutsidelhcUnc:olnuca.
The Lied Center, wblcb is funded almost

!let: lhe residencies, new artistic oommissions,besays..,.,alsolikdyto.nmulate cnoatlve activity among studaJts and
faculty, and pedlaps focus greater national
aUt-.ntion oo UB's f= arts programs.
·we will, ar CX&gt;UTSe, aloo present ...ork that
appoa!stoabrood&amp;Jdienoe," be says. '"but I'd
lib this audicoce 10 be introduced to ON'
work when they oome to the center. I'd lib
them to meet and beeon&gt;e comfortable with
an forms tbcy might 001 upt!NIO enjoy.·
Grant says t.be new Fi.ne Arts Center 'wiU
fundamental~ y alter the future or the fine and
perfCimling ans programs at UB. N01 only
will t.bc:rc: be BD integration or omter programming with lh&lt; academic programming
of Ol.lf artsdepanments,"besays, '1lut !I is ow:
e1pectation that lhccenter will draw its suppori from arts students ond hculty. frnm those
at US outside the campus arts canmunil)', and
frnm the Jl"''l"r Buffalo COOilDIIIlity.
'"That, "be says. "islhcessentialjustific:ation for lhe existence ofthe F'me Arts Center
on lh&lt; Ambelst Campus. The investmmt

.:bould- ond I thinJ&lt; alrady '--yielded a
clnunatJc enha........_, to tbe ~ and
qualuy of an acti,.,;ties at UB.
'Tbccmtc:r"senlarged~ has
a distinctivo mission· topm;enta public
for the ans ond llumaaiti&lt;S ~- Mlldb of !be
worL dial wili be pRS&lt;IIled here will be
esoteric ond 'eumng-«&lt;ge',' Granuays.
O.wnbley balds a master's «Jree from
the Juillianl Scboolol Music md wu director of cultlltal affainllll Appelacbilm Stale
UDivenily, a DJelllbc:f iDstitutioG !1f the Univastty of North Carolina. from I~- 1k
sen-.d as cbid ~ one! promotional officer for tbc ·univr:mity·· Cdlege or
Fme and Applied Arts and its Scbool of
Music. While at Appladrim, be .........t as
-fll'SI artistic director of !beans festi&gt;'al. • An
AppolaobiaD Summer."
Prom J982-8S, Owmbley - ~
dindorof !be &lt;lqJin Famdalioa.ol' the u.s~
bw:.,. prlvatr fCilll&gt;dobon that supparll young
Am&lt;ric:aJ musicians in !be Jl"riod·botweentbe
CXIIllpletian (I{ lbelr l&lt;:llldcmic: prepmaDoa ond
the laUbdJ ai lb&lt;:ir pdessiooal "*'-S-

c-

As~·iD"II'eSidc:ooe wit.b• theNcrtb

Caroli!la Symp'bony from 1987-91,
Owmbley fulfilled two otdleotta1
.
sims for pmniere .by tbc Oldle&amp;ln md advised in lhc ~of 20ib C&gt;lllbll:y
music. He~served as~-bl-.-..
deocr with • An Appa1adhian Summer,·m.
NesiJe Musical i!ncowllem Festival """
Frux:e 'j; MANCA Feslival for Coolemporary Musie and ~ux 'f iStival.
From 19'8410 t.bepres&lt;at.be basllel:"\'edas
anistk director of tbc 8roybill Clbamber
Ensemble, which be~ (ouoded.
Owmbley is the recipicuof. Rockd:dler
FoundatiOD grant and a ~ Fellow
Prize from both the Nonb Carolina Alb
Oouncil.oncl the Nebno*a Arts Couocit He
was a panelist for tbe Nllliooal 'llndocno-metll
for tbc Arts in 1991-92..
He is a member of lhc Aaocialioll (I{
PerformiDgA!ts~thelntemaJiaoal

Soc:ieql of:PaformiDg Arts AdmiDisuators,
Opera Amrriea, Owxlbcr MliSilc America
tmd 1be Ameriom MusicO!mco-.
D

�4

....

.-rc:IL IMdeoae from Cilh« unl...mtin

!11111~·
--tobethe
primaty izup:ws b: iDicrditciplinl......rt
and lhll the fomudioe "'~
&amp;"'OOppora:ou:ndcrivce from extm&amp;lnl&lt;:tlnl
COIIIidentions, 1'h!se .-en dial do not
•hi"" J&gt;FIIWI&lt;IIII - s i n c e lhey
...., witll c:hanr;es illlodmdiOCY, •- o.ul demandandintacluand
• ~llhe Camnittee rec:opius In :t.g oqlOI'I
dull graciQate tducatloo and ......,..,., ""'
UDder It Buffalo and dUll c:han&amp;ing
disclplinoll. luodin8 putemS and e.qwx::talions•make fanber chanp both probable and
cbilable. We believe dw fanber ooosidet-

noc:tu-

aliollofthea;pniulilllnof gaduatcedUCI·
tioo is both &lt;delitable ed ...,.,.....,.. Suc:b
c:cns dienllicns mowd ~·
lude · follow-

nativewilhthe·f ormadoaolaPoeultyolAJU
and Scieoees.. The Commlnee ouges~&amp; that
furtbet study of mo&lt;dels of III\PI)Clft and cqaab:adoa at Olbar universities is ~­
This caD be done •itile oc.b&lt;s'._-prW;ationl
are lalc:itql place. ~. tbe Committee
~ tbe need for IIO:'ell
•
rbil
com,poneol oCtbe Uni...-.ity, repldless of

priori-

ties.

b. T1le ,pduau. student as a student and
employee.
c. Gnoduate educarlon, the roles of depanments and disciplines and intenfiscipli1&gt;11)' JI'OU!l&amp;·
d. ~ofdisciplint:sintonewmuc­
t:ures-Faculties of 8~ Sciences,
a...nical Sci&lt;nces etc.
e . The role of the Oroduate School as a
cenual focus or a paper..processing enlily.

SUPPORT OF FINE ARTS
- ·1'111 formlltlon of a ...,....rta
¥IAal Mid PetfonnlnC AIU Mould be~ without futtflw atudy.
Fonnltion ofa sepl!ll!e Faculty of Visual
and Performll)&amp; Ails is 1101 cenualto either
~ lllldoqvaduatceducat!ooonopduale edUCitlon omd rese~~eh. A variety of
models exist •nation......, for tbe b:atioa of
Fme Arts in univasity otruetwes. The Committee heard and beld miAed .opinions. Critical to any decision are the issues of adequate
Univasity suppon. for the new Faculty, the
ne&lt;::essity ror geoeratingatc:mal iUJIPClfland
the ilDj&gt;lld dJil tbe aation ofa new 'Faculty
would bave on lbemnalnin.g components or
Arts and Letters.

faculty;,

Oa.od J. Triggle (Cttalr)
Oistinpllished Proi9SSOI' and Dean.
School at f'hBnrutey

Disllngui$hed Teaching Prolessor.

English
Jorge J . Gracia
Professor. IJepan.menl at Pllilosopl&gt;y
Thcmas E Headrick
Disllngui$hed SeMce PtaiBSSOr,
School at Law
George H. Nanoollas
t:JI$/ingui$h8d Pta/e&amp;$0( and Chslr,
IJepan.menl at BiamaUfrials
John J. f'e&lt;adollo

~~Professor,
Robert H. Rossbetg
~ SeMce PrdBSSOr,

==~ and

t.!lchael F. Sberl!lan
Pmlessor and a..Jr, Department at
Geology
J . Si!lr1ll)' ShratJger
- e n d c::tJU. Oeptutmsnt at
~

.~Of'TIIeetnl.llndo..oe

,offbe ~··
., .

..,m.

~~--

.ClOIIIIIIialot,

· ·lJ!thep.-~tbe
deli-rot~educat:iall,porliclli­
lldy,~­

&lt;llusiYely, ill

,._.aJ&lt;Uap&gt;DI!IIL, il weT!·
1

dyt·

the Jli'Oil'll"cd orpniutiooal c:~uu~&amp;es dw we
do 5UppOI1 W1ll beoefu. diftlCI.Iy and indireetly. !be bUD1.1J1~ •in« they will
strengthen undetpaduate ediiCIIIion and ....
tiooaliu resource allocatillft.
com·
miuee members noced the merit oC!ncludil&gt;g
the humanities in i.ncreasingly reropiz.ed

.... B u t - ....... illlpode l'lllldiall.

..,...is~lbe--b~

Se""'*'

inlerdi.sciplinal;f .,.;~
FINAL COMMENTS
The iMues before

on not primarily
suuctural, rather lhey an: flllldional . Ulli·
&gt;"e&lt;Sities in Nor1h Americl hi.., lldopc&lt;:d a
vuidy or stiUCIUI'eS with ...tlicb to fulfill
!heir missions. Many different llruCturc5
appear to be c:omp.rible wi liUCCeSS and
lbere is oo oin&amp;)e "best sdlurion or magic
5lnlc:ture."
it is cenainly true tbll
suuctures may impede function and they
may dissipate energies into nonproductive
patbo. This is cen.tinly the a.., for undtt"
pduareeducationiiiBuff~. Thebestfllrue·
ture will be one 1bat opli:mtu:a commitmc:nt.,
reo;ponsibility and aroount.ability for the
Univ=.dty-.00. mission. I hope tbll the
deliberationS of thi$ Committee will be ..,.
ganlcd in this light.

Howe-.

Rupet:tfo.Uy SJJ.bmirre&lt;J on bdr4if of ~
Provost '• Advisory Commirru 011 ~Or­
g&lt;mharioo of A rts Qlll/ Scie..u:r b)•,
Oevld J.

TJWe

• a..rt:ato.. be ClllDCiaaCios. -n.e

Sl!lphen L O)'SO!l

~~~Pralessor.

Joyce

Department

Sirianni

Depanmenr at An!hropology

bed&amp;oooa.~
oommiiD-......-"bftayand~t-

"1llr

f.-..d our anm-

r..m, !be

~-e

IIIR oC lbeae fiOCIIIIies," ~
10 Blcx:h.
is.Wlth deans.
PacvltySc:aate~CboU~­

looaled "in the faculty or flladlies that de·
~~- ltbe CCliJIPOI!Cill·.

"We bave piled new struc1me upcm okl
with too Jiult ibooJ111! for their orpoiur.ion.
~.-Ritlbili!yorSUSleDIIIIOe,•
the commiaee's report sta1os. ~ the
need to link W11Clure and flmcti&lt;a "'ur
underpaduate eunicula demand bod!. .....
eral and specif&gt;e ~ yet muc:!b of
the fOI'IJW de£""' clear linea of re•pansibilit)•. authority"' """""""· Resolution of this
issue Is importaDt both to tbe quality of
tmdcrJmduate ec1ut:atioo and 10 tbe faculties
R!SpOI!Sible for its deli &gt;~tty.·
On the lblllle1 ,of wbat kind of Ans and
Scieoc:es faculty Sl11l&lt;:llJno would best "'1)&gt;pmt this recorDII1£0IIat a majority of the
committllt: fa.,.,....S the formation of a Foeulty or Ans arul Sc:H:nic&lt;s COIDJllisin&amp; the
lhn:e •xlslin&amp; Ans and Sclicnca facuhies,
bcadod by a single dean. A &lt;ipifiCilll minority favored .......00.. ofthe pmlt&amp; ttipertite t.culty SJSI&lt;:m but with tbe addition of

AnsoadScita:za~

t'.IW&gt;d our

Either model would effectively IISSUIIV!
the resp&lt;lllSibilities and role of the Ullda-·
graduate College. "This is oea:ssary aru1
consistent with our recommendation ..
Triggle's SWilDlal)' scates.
'
"Tbe """""""'of the Undcrgraduote College have ""l'\edhardand oreteSpll~Sibk for
impMant curriatlar innoYation,. 8lodl aid
about tbe ftiOCIIIlltleDdtion. "Tbe best
to
SUSt.ain wbattbey 'vc&lt;~Chiewd is 10 fmd .,..)'5
10 llrirlg tbe ~home totbe Faculties that
provide support for its mission.•
Tbe report .llso suggest&lt; coosidentioo of
a number oC ~ changes-in lbe

areas of curriculum, enrollment,

I'OIOUI'Qe

naibility, analysis oC OOUtlie nfferiup. and
depanme:nl liize and fUiliCtion-dw could
relieve 1problems thai now aist in undttgraduate education.
In • secorwlset of RIClOIIlDlendadoao, the

•

abooa opiJous for the fu-

-'tin&amp;

ate c..ollep. and ll!bu affected I"JUPS. He
pi- 10 IDIIOIIII&lt;:e ,pl'&lt;ilinainaJy llqlo 10 adlid•l.!·on~
educmaa wllhin
au~
.....as.

draltbe•,..······ me

r...-

"We lun-"t! piled new
structure upon old with
too little thought for their

organizPtion,
responsibilit..
,_.,J'•

accountability or

sustenance. "

formal responsibility to ooordinlletbe deliv-

ery of Wldergraduate education.

FACULTY-n:
Dennis P. Malone
CM!inguished 5eMce Pralessor,
Department of Electrical and Computer

·~-..lolemilaion..

~baa

tion oa die ..... ..,... Jlftlb1cm

-r

l\1111~

~

Wl1be..,.....
a'l!ili(yand IC·
counaabilay for

educ•lloo be

aocM

~llrlnali ­

ull7-iD

reeommen.dt

adequately and bas

...........

--~ ,... ~edlbat
dM:re art. ird!cd. • ~ ol~ fac-

ily ror

n... Committee did not scudy !his issue

•

~' Tri&amp;&amp;Je'•--:roC~WOXllllDiiaee·.
....... p:linllk--lhey~

- ~.
me eotlllllillR

lfUM&gt;\.N1TIES

V'""" F'roi'I)S( for G!lldiJBte Education
and Distinguished re/JChlng Professor.

Charles tl-11. Eben

lhla H. Swinluch

Ill._,.

Trigle, wrklnr 011

.....

-.I and Perfonai..c

Ana ......... hdallllid)'.

1:.--

Depal1m6nl at Googrsphy
William c. Fiacher
- a n d Chslr, IJepan.menl of

~":· Deparlmefll at

Associat»Prrifrlt;ga:and~

oftbe~1

fuDo:tionaJ..
To ruii&lt;Ody

=

Bisson

c.,.,. "'

-s

Ilea rorl'llbftunivmity.....uiede~

INS11Tllll0 AL IDENTrrY 01' THE

Dean atllle1Jnd1Jrgr&amp;c1uam
Col/ep&lt;P and Professor and Cl&gt;aJr.
/JepiJJ1menr at ClaSSIC$
Nlcolas 0 . Goodman
Interim Vice Pl'CWOSI for UndiJrgrltdusre

FAQILTY

aiW fQr flldber llildJ oC lbe
~pa~~~oe~ . . . ..

-uml dwl&amp;&lt;s·

Provost 's Advisory Committee on the Structure
of Arts and Sciences

Mary A.

lbae _ , "'""-w ilatfect pdlllle edll•
taboo~ and ..-..d&amp;l Wbat - ita ~­

no specific: recommen· for · dations to off..-. We believe. however. lhat

in&amp;:
a. The n:spoosibilily of the Uni
gradoate educlllor!
·

II decision to""'*"' a tepU*Ie Pcu!t1 of
Visual and Perf«min&amp; Ans oboWd be .-le
COlly aftet tbe issue of the ~ of
Ana and Sc:ic:DoeB baabec:a dcc:iclcd. A liOpl·
rate Facully """""-. plaw;lhle all..--

"Thisiud,.,.ID~

e will be following up
&amp;OIIIleeori'IY.""
For his put, !Dean TQJ&amp;Se aid doe com·
rnilllle wan..! ban! to .......-e tblll a wide
vlridy oC opinion was beard and beld fn:·
quem ~ • ...noo.s leods and with
enema! ClOCISWwlts. &amp;ad c:ommittl:le Olaf{
m&lt;mber Dr. Mary Wurm Schur of !'bar·
macy traveled lo Ohio Slllle Umw:niily and
Indiana Univetlity in~ to StUdy
them.lf," Blochaid.
dzmucucowlafi!116

oc.b&lt;s'
models oC OIC8deJ:aic ··
The grnqp bad four IIIJb.ciommitb: tbll
addn:aoed aepotated&lt;meuts of!be provoot'•

cbarze. 1'beft """"' about 25 ~ inc:IDdin&amp; opeo bearinp uod llrge and su!&gt;group mecdnp with a wide range of
univasityoona:itlxaD 'Ibeyteceivedabolll
60 lctla1l or docwneols ltld eoonled carefully tbe eolire de!libentlw: JII'CIC"'IIl, makin8
for wblrt Triule called ~ very good record
oC Cbo pmpss oC •lbougbt..

A m rrican A.n-oriat.ion oft n i~ W omm, .-lmlt._BNtllch
pramrs

Eng~

Lt. CoL Eileen Collins

--'U.STAI'F-n:
Marlene t.!. Col*
Assistant Dean. School of Law
_n:_,_

NASA A$_tronaut &amp; Pilot

w.

Kenneth
Sherwood
English Ph.D. Candidate

8 p.m. Thun;day, Aprii1J, /99J
£!Pton Hall. Buffalo State College

·-···n:Oonna t.!. t.!anioo

TJ('kets: SH

English Major

RockweU lfaU Tkket 8 8-lOll

:arron~ buflet . upp« 81 6 :JO p.m .

SfAI'FT01W-.m&amp;
H. Laraine Oalc
,D flputy to the .l't&lt;wost Office at the
Prow:Jsl
Mary Wutm Schaar
'Coordinalor ofCtlnical E11ucsJkJtl.
School at PhtJrmtJcy

( .audeU lla'U. lluffalo State CoUeg
Tkkets: S2S 633-2130

'j

Sponsors
Buffalo State CoUege ."'fuseunr of Science
America~' . lirlin.es .lJorriott llotel

�_,....

____...

Affirmative Action: fostering diversity

ou--

........

--~,

., . . ........,. .. ...,.... ...... · -tor lhe"""""'nge and -.ngd Ideas.
• Pll&gt;llelnslilulicwl whoM &amp;eMce to ..
man... ond • ~
-IMIQ!lle 111111 """""'*''e to cle"*'P to lhe
r J - poW1Iial-lf - areiO
.aiM~ high aranderdt11181- '-"' . . tor CIUI'IIelws.- musl ar::tively lo$ler

land celoll&lt; OB:S dNnlly.
We allleatn, · .00 grow to lhe e&lt;l8nllhel..., el!J)kn our d
...,.,... Wid
altow~ to be c:l'lallenged by ttwn. We,.. a~ Cll&lt;l1rTIJ!1il; are OIX!Ynltted to lllis principle: lhe broeder lhe range d ~ and lnlluenclel we can
recDQ!1!m .00 consider. lha gru our lndMduel and co!ledive progress 11111 be
tn Intellectual terms, this pnnqpie unclellles lha ocn:ept rJ IIC8democ 1.-n.
•WI&gt;ieh UBitil!y and )'lgorously supports. In legal, IOCie!, """"""""'· 8l'ld-&lt;nolt .._..
lanUy-morll! terms, our C&lt;IITW1'lllment 111 d~ty ~ 08 '~ potley ol equa!IICC.fm
to all eclo.ocallonal end~ oppartlnllel
The urn-s~~y at 8U!Ialo upholds me stale onc1 18derai ea... lhel -...e ouc:n
..,._tor aJ! AAlencaM, reg&amp;rdleso of age, reloglon Df creed, OCllor, physicaiiO!I!y
nallonal origin, race. elhniclly. geode&lt;, and mental or -an staiUS UB alao subscribes 10 Govwnor Cucm:&gt;'t E.x8cutMo Order Number 28. """"' p&lt;Ohlbil&amp; diSC&gt;'.....
nation oo l!le be&amp;1S ol se
·Ot1eJ'IWJon. further . this ~ ....,,...,.. the SONY
TruStees' policy thai no j
ment ~any member of our~"""""""
nity slla1 be .based on
matters, such as sexual orieoUIIlon and P"~ ...
pressiOn, tflal are ..,.. t 10 performenc:e
tn add11J0n to
carrn!lmenus, UB hal atao pledged to develc&gt;p and mainlaln
en l!nVI&lt;onn&gt;enlln Whlctlelthe- dour
~
®Ill)' those Nllhoi&amp;e 8CCe!1S to apport\l1'liOOS for education and priJinslonSI advaAC&amp;rnent !'las NotOtlcally been hmlted-&lt;m! weloomed and eooouraged 10 grow !&gt;.
number ol ourTent nll:ia!ives we d~ected toward aa-.ng t"hos Q081. inelud~ng these
a PrO'o'OSI Blooh nas cteated the , _ paoillon o1 \l'oce f'r&lt;M&gt;ol kl&lt; Faculty Oewelopment. and a search to fill tillS paoi!Jon is now under way, t ·• new oftlCe&lt;'t respoos~
bil~""' wtft ~ a signi!lcant ~ha$1$ on lliPP&lt;Jrl fdr -nand memben o1
underr-e&amp;ented groups who are .among UB s facUlty;
·a 'the Underrepresented Faculty tnlliabve. another l&lt;.ey component of lhe f'n:M&gt;st '&amp;
faculty development strategy. allows ue to .._age SUNY funds ., recru«ing and
retaining f8CUIIy members from underrepresented groups, and IJ&lt;a.Q$tal evaluabons
cf UB schools' and f!ICU!toes ' pertormance and budQets wo'M be II'ICf""""'V'Y hed-to
these areas' !&gt;.fftmlllll\le Action accomplishments,
a Senior Vlee President Wagner has established for Untvefllly Servtces untts a
focus en how 1t1e 101rengfhs that divefsily brings our ecademic com,..,.,ity aan be
used in Improving quality and pr&lt;MdJog S8NI08 excellence;
I
a 1t1e OMslon cf SbJdenl Affainl has recently created a new Oflica cf WUIIIOUIIIJfal
!lltalfS and will place renewed emphasis on the value of &lt;fiVIIf&amp;ny in Is summer's
SIJJdent arienlalions;
a Student Allairs has alto made trainng in drversity issues for PubliC Sal~ offiCers a dMsionet priority;
a campus constituencies are represented on the UB Committee to&lt; the Promolion cf Tolerance and Oiversify, a collaDorllllYe effort to develc&gt;p 1ong..-ange str&amp;Jegoes
tor measing understanding c1 dNO&lt;Sity issues tiYoughoul our academic community
in O&lt;der to p r - t lrnola&lt;ant behaviors; and
•• a campusw!oe Task fOrce on w,_ is now being fonred (the chlll'ge 10 thtS

aca-

_.

Task Force appears ln the aocompanylng oldeber)
Moreover. UB's Equal Opport\rily/Affirmat•ve Actlcn OO•ca 1S avalab!e to addoess
questions and concems regarcf10gthe um-slly's Slatlllory oornphance With po!IC18S
and """" perllllnlf\11 to equality cf access and ~ The EO/AA Olfice Wh•ct&gt;
reports directly 1o the pr85ldent. is located in 51 7 c_, Han (645-2266)
The UnM!rsity at Buffalo has done and is daing much to ensure and explore the
diversity our our academiC conliTlllrlity-but there ls &amp;tid e great deal far us to t10 In
order kl&lt; tho unl'lerslty as a to achlelle lhese crudally important aims, """'Y one
olus ITVJSt mal&lt;e an indillidual OCJI\'W110tmerl to help preserve 88Ch Olher's ngi'I1S and
dignity. As we accept.los1s&lt;, and draw new strength lrom the """"rl&lt;ably nch Mr'irf cf
differences that &lt;XlOSiirutes our U'li\lerslty. we will become all me more urnversaJ . and
ai the better prepared kl&lt; the 2tst-&lt;:entury world that IS just around the comet

........._

Wo~M~mUB

7b.roi:F-

~

Wl'l'f:IQolONl!YEAR,~Tasll!Qce

onw-.sua.m-

CimJIIII-cllmllt rar-, uam1ne
~

ilola,aod ld'rillie 'lbol"n:ii£.

&amp;:ntoa:
J..~polldua11(J~

lro . ~~tJNI
pt~..

'11/#o~Jty,

•

t141tW!-

~_,.

:t. strauztu for ll4dreul

_,

~;
I.~ IN Olll'lpU ~for

fidl~tf'

-

Wl!p«illlMalrfl{divvJ!II~;

.. -Ntlrod$ft»'~l!l4 ~
m~ t1tm lsfru &lt;1{sa&gt;A4l
~:

.. l8lfl'llo4s for liklllif) . ' • ...,...,...
qrll.f, OJJd Mw.ltrpiltg ,..,,.e~
'-krs.&lt;Uid,
.. ~ 4 pt'O«$S

II{...........,_

4bilit)· "' all lewis ~ tloe
progrus ~IJII mah r&lt;&gt;word
aciiiMng &lt;tqltilyfor_,..._

lliE TASK FORCE lholl be compriloed oi fi~ f..::ulty membas, tine
proiessianal sWf ID&lt;IIIbas, twoclasllifled .wr m,ombers, Uld tine otudeoll (~ pduale .and
profeaional). Tbt Prasldcnl sball

1J¥!iD1 '-- co-chairs from

~

this poop.

~

1lll! I'RBSIDBt'T Sf!AY,.
tDembeai Ol the T "l&gt;aiCe
•
pool of DDmiDees papaliCid by the
Provall, Senior y-..,., ~ Vice
Pr&lt;sidcms, Deans,lilcullys-tebecutiveCcmmluee,.Pt:oiessiooal Staff
Smale ExoeuliveOommitlee, Health
Sclmccs aod BWhlo Ceatcr &lt;:::baptt:rs, Unikd Uni..mty Pmfessi&lt;m,
UB Local 602, Chil S&lt;:rvioe Emp.loyeeo Association, Cooncll 82,
Locotl ,Di&gt;4siob 358, Public Eqlloy- Fedewlon. Student As$cxWian,
Gnduate Studom ~ and
ar.duate Stodml Employees Unioa.

William R. Greiner

Wllt.... a.a...-

Apri/1994

Pilf!SIDENT

University policy prohibiting discrimination
__
fn_..__tlle_l,..
__
the_"""""'_
. ___

The loa-InC~

policy--

~~-executl.. -

:

8DIIItAI. POUCY

IN ACCORDANCE wilh federal and state
laws, oo person. in wbatever relationship
wilh the Slate University of New York at

Buff.Uo, Sh&amp;ll be oubjec:t 10discriminatioo 011
tbe basis of age, religion or a-1. color,
disability, natimal origin. race, ethnicity, sex,
marital or veteran &amp;latus.
Addltiaoally, Governor Cuomo's Executive ()nle,- No. 2!, IS amended. prohibits
disaimination ""tbe basis ofsexual orienta-.
tioo .in tbe provision of any services or benefits or in any matter relating 10&lt;mploym&lt;:nL
The policy of tbe Board of Trustees of tbe
State Univemity of New York also requires
•that persooal (111'femx:es of employees and
students which are unrelatecUoperlonnan&lt;:&gt;e,
suCb os pri\'llte expressiClll or .sexual orientation, Sh&amp;ll provide oo basis for judgment
relating 10 suCb individuals.
IIXIIALHAUISEXUALHARASSMENTofemployeesand

otudc:nls, as claf'ined below, is oontrvy 10
univenrity policy and is a violatioooffedenl
and Slate laws and regulations.
Unwelrowu suualodwmcu, nquestsfor
suruzl favors, aNi odrer verbal or physico!
ronduct of a SHlUl1 Mllln' con.stintk! SUIUl1
/uu4SS1r1Qfl ~n : ( 1) submission to JJl h
roNIMcr is .m ade either uplkil.ly or uop/idi/y

a term or condirion of aa indivit:bu:JJ 's ~m­
p/.oymlllll or aaulemic adwuu:"""'111; (2) submission 10 or njtcrion ofsu.ch contbu:.t by 411
indiWbull is ..ud as 1M basis for emp/.oym~rll

or aa:llkmic d«isions afftcting SMelt
indi&gt;-idwll; (3) SMelt tx&gt;ndlu:t lias 1M P"'J'OS"
or efftct o/lllll'ellSOMb/y Urterftring with an
indiWbull's ""''*or aca&lt;kmic puformDnce,
orcr~atingaJI "illlimidming, lwstihoroff&lt;~~ ­

siw ~rrvironment. •

or

No university &lt;mployce either sex sbaJI
impose a requimnent of sexual cooperation
IS I cxmditi011
employmenl Dr ac&amp;demic
advan=nent, or in any way contribute 10«

or

suppon wrweloome pb)'Sical or verbal sex.ual
beluovior.
•Adllpted from "GtddeiiiJU o• lllicri..Urtariolt

&amp;.,_,_ofSu, 29CFTpan
1604. 11.4$FR7~76. •

-T0~1IIEIIIELVD
· ·- · wml DISAIItU11EI
FEDERAL REGULATIONS defme a dis-

abled person IS 00&lt;: ll&lt;ho bas (I) a physical or
ID&lt;IIII.IJ impainncot wbic:b stibSiantially limits """ or more tife octivities, (2) • TeCOI'd or
such impairment, or (3) is regarded os bavillg
such an impainncot.
Under secrioo60- 7•1 ,4 or tbetepllalions
implementing SecUon S03 or tbe;aebabilltation Act of 1973, all empi"Y""'S wilhdisabilities wbo would lllce to be coosidered UDde:r
tbe university affmnativeoction program are
invited 10 identify tbemselves by ldttt or
tdepbooe call.
Information will be handled on a confidential basis, and peniCli&gt;O may call far further infcxmation without having to identify
tbemselves by name or deportmeoL
Any member or tbe university oommunity who requires odditiaual ..informatiao,
wishes 10 maklo a oomplainl or to R&gt;Ceive a
copy oftbe universily proceduns 10 be followed for com,plaints arising from mattas
related 10 tbe. policies outlined above sboold
ClQIIW:l: - . . .

o. u.c... -

AI&gt;

t1ac1 otllcer, SU ~ IWI, ~.

�8
lfiiTOd¥cing ' ' '

OA SYSTEMS INC.
SERVICE

REPAIR CENTER

quolity, ckpettdable, profU4iortol maintmance
5trvices duigl'lt!d{or '1M
Sta U n1 erslty of New 'fen at Bufl'alo

WM &amp;. COMPATIBLE PC's
NOVElL&amp;. LAN SUPPORT
APPLE MACJN110SH P&amp;ODUCfS
Also: PR.INJ'BRS &amp;. TYPEWRITERS

•

...._,.u.:n.a

.,J...,._ ..

n.. ...
tat--~
For&lt;Xl51 &lt;:ompetitive_pricing and ...Uabifil)', calf

DOW

~ Wojciedl2.duoioc.

for)

your quore:

--

~f . 6H llolay. Hanh
"'· \IB Dopt. at
j&gt;.IL

c:!aapooo. •

691-0001
.OOHud-o.;....~

....... 142:1$

M...- tlaio ad •nd ....,ei•e DEE labor"" )'0111' lirst
,.,,~~~rm

_,.~

_,
p . . _ - · •.
'
--~-·
1-,~Collqe. flO

~-­
IJJJion~ -~-

6:3(1p,a , Nlmisoion: 52,...,.

4ooa;Sl.50.•U-.

u.-

Clemens. North CUapa&amp;. 10

n.r--.at-C....,

at Modem l..anpal&lt;" ODd Utlind Africao-

COIICIII'I

..... s_..s ~ Dopottmalll;

-

. .-..a'Y-UI-

l'be l.llo. .lll\&amp;ltll TecluiOiop

"..,... .. u......,. __

, • • ~ ~ot!Md

fti~..._K..,.,., ,

~ projccls -·Cornell

U.Uv. 120 a ........ Cam10: l5 un.-Nooo.
STIIMJITMJ:n'A&amp;.
~ - . _ IIBMuoic:
Dept. Site c.:..c.n Hall . North
CUapa&amp;. NOOL For lnfont~~~lion
aii64S-2llll.

645~12510

. · 7-9p.DLC.U

traJ-c-loo,duocted ~

San Falzooe. llobd Redial
Holt Hanh
a11.111.

c.u.,...

uuu ...

no FocitM-- Ullioot

Tbcora. North c-pa. 9 p.IL
Adnuuio!o.
llllldeoa; 13.50,
.Uochea.

n.

__
---__,

~~

•• -

attloo-y, OuDeJ
Ratfman. bead at olio An:hiU&lt;-

Dept. .. Mic!bipa'•

CnDiind A~ at An ODd

1be Williom ODd Elisabo&lt;h
·~ V!oitioa 01ait in A:s-

d!i........... ~ .

uo

OIOsby
3:30 ,p .m.-~· l:l0·-AftSTIIMJIT
IEXCIIUDICEIII,.,._
AW-

-1'111C-......_ .. c~

~~ ~..o..n.s.~~u, M.o~

Shidey Amin. M.D~ 01111 Malt
0..., M.D. KiDcb Audilorium,
Childral'alloopiul I om.

Sioelilll. Nonhc...pu.. l-5 p.m.

_,.._

MJ:II'AL

c«LLOIIM•

-

Aidoolf 7..1aoq, llepl. of Cam·
plii.OrScierlcc, Puriluellaiv. 14
Kma. 01111 Campus. 3:30 p.lll.
~ ·COU.OQI­

&amp;p.riat&lt;tllld St.llts elAn-

u. craaa~or Maurials, Prat. Mk.lalel Brett. llaiv.
atMic:hipn. 450 Fron&lt;zak.
Nord! C&amp;mpuo. 3:45p.m.

-

--.u.-

A ddeliltad.....S Elnatloa ol
a Gutrk. ~ATPuo Ro- - la tbe Gilloud
~ o1 Aquatic Vert..
...._ Dr. Jeff Demarat. Dept.
at BlciQcial Seic1Jceo. llaiv. &lt;X
. . . . - . Faycaeville.. 121
Coolre.- Campus.. p.m.
IIA-TICIIUIU.OQIM.
Do&lt; ........,.,8rporb01k
~ frat. Mlaclm .BeorYina.

~G.ItarR&lt;dtai.Bolnl

Noaa.

Hall. North CuDpus.

·=
=='-'a._

........... C-.rti&lt;~ol
Pyrwvort•Oolu'...,.._

-,Dr. Muklundl'&amp;ld.dlait·
man, UB Dept. ol~­
Km:bbofer c...r........,~~oam,
R....U I'IrllC....... 'Iool:iwle..
12:30-1 :30p.m

---NE\'DI1M!
--

-

. ... Actlritiet mOho

,.-"-1,J.....

BuelL diroctor&lt;lf!&gt;WmUtc for
lnfannatlon ODd priJnuy....,
ta'ViCe$., Health SJ.SU:m:S

-A-"-'r ofWNY, t.._252

F.rbor. South CuDpus. 1.2·. ]0.
1:30p.m.

•Diauoico vepal.liualllor 1
,polltko: .... 4odan poleo-

�7

_Call.,.

dlcUB r. ..._,liJCil.al!o-

tUI.DAY

lllllar .......

otlcJ

l

-Ml

__.PI

i!

If

......._~w...u..

,·~--...,...
.. iA.IIiodoor~~.
~..-olbyWot

-c..,..

,... . 20 .

6:J0p.a.

IUUMCCI-10-

•THURSDAY APRIL 14TH

~·filok $4Ualaoo. -c..,._ &amp;.II

I

at
Techniad Fair • 9:30 - 5

p.-.

M"' \bolowllqlofr- ...._liM.~.
6' Worn~ ..... Niw~·""'
T~O.

Wl&amp;i~A-.-

0,.0 -

.'

Prrsentaticms

Klyeo-' c::n.obJ

iH.ollo.-~IOIUII.• S

BJI~. w..w~ s- ....,..,

-111.-

p.a. Qpoo 10 die ,.__

VThvrs

IIIIICJM*
.......,.,l•tA-to.

~---Dovicl

~~~.

llmoild Su.loooict, IIIII

""-""-&gt;~

llooal, 4lO
IO:JIOUIL

-

..,.,.....,la..:aa
I I llin'NM.
Tlllb• ~ Mlloi&lt;. Clho

w....a..,.IUcbonl T -

-

Do-.1&lt;1 ftl4or, .......... 'Boinl

,1 Drawings

Rodoolf\ali.Nmh~ I ·S

.......

Cr••d Priu: 10 ~fl. MDtad:•i• Bihf

_ , ,.-Ill.
c - t . - J!riChl

• r,....C\:J«p,...._...udrf•
C..l"f l&gt;lo

by

Mao _ _ _ , _
~g:~b,~~a:

-·p.lll.
-

RedW f\all.

~.-._.,.

., UBMim&gt;

Tetris Face-Off
Gd U..lusJt-st ...,,. a( U.. by md u.•~
SuptT Tctns fu&lt;

w,.-.,,

-Cam-

Test Your X-Ray Vision

1- M . O f ' _ r_
......... Nadl.m&lt;rib,

Cu.., th&lt; IXIm'fl nu...,... af .tl&amp;l:s ml!tt /om OTr4
c....puta Surmwl I:Jt'
E. 'II ..... "'sur uo...... ~ 1511&lt;.

a.•• •

Roymoaol ,.,.,._, Da-.ld

Madia. a;. Mura. 1.-mJ'

M&lt;Calfa)', 1l&gt;ditb )almsoa,

-wansmiiL
Subalc:t.
111111 ......
uan...ns
e-n-

Arts a....... 2.(9S MalD
St *p.m.

-

WEDNESDAY

P'lllliUI11VI· -c,.,...,r~~~

.-.Jotm A

---.

co•n••-aa.
c-biooill
,....,._
_ ...._.._w_..
Clll-

~

tuac;~......,.

-~Wb by

u.

Zboo
Eric lAi. - Nmhtivcly. Bairdad
lt&lt;dtalllall.
&lt;AD~pus. 1-3 pn.

••-~
a_..,,..,.
-

M I . _,
pianislllllll UB par....,. ol mu&gt;i&lt;. SleoCclaoat Jhll . Nonll
Campus.2p.DL

-

~for

Vnr, (QJCCI1

hoaorioz tbe late Y YW

Mikb.asboft. HaUwolls Cenw
for Ooa!emponly Am, l-'9S
Main St., Buftllo. 6:.10 p.m.

...

Sioidd PmWWllsan, Plo.D ,

~rcllaw . Doplof

Econoaua;, Uoiv. o/California,
Bcrbler. 2.lU. Fari&gt;or South
Compa. Nooo-1 p.m
- . prdcaa ol mcdiciDe,
111111 din:cl«, " " ' - ....
Crirical
Oiruiao. IIUffolo
Oooenil Roopillll. 106 Cary

1-

c..

Sowh Compa.-

PIIIWJmVI:·I'Odter'll?.da&lt;alloa, hmrial

~----

Slat ia , _ Adallr.
Smeldaa
n..
CARDIA Stwly, Kun l .
Greealuad. PIID., - £cllow,Dept. ol!'m&gt;cotioe
McdiciDe,. Nortbwatem Uni•.
ModiaJ SchooL UZA Fuber.
Sowh Campus 12;»1:30 p.m

-

-wa.L

P'Aitll tn'AFF

S inlclDn: •ad Mechuism of

u Adlnt&lt;d H&lt;t&lt;nMriJixric
G-........... hul Sialo-. MD,

l'lh.D., D&lt;p. of Mol&lt;cular Bio.pbyslcs and Bioc!&gt;cmistry,
tlowonl Hu&amp;JI&lt;s Medicallnsli·
oute, Yale: Utriv. Hillcboe A..Ji·
torium. R.PCl l2:30 p.m..

_......_.

- lo8&lt;altlaSd-

...,..l..lbnry Seni«&lt;"""
- 8 2 1 H&lt;olth Sd·
...... Ulnry. SowhC.mpus. 2
p.m. No .~ rcquiJed..

....

l.oc:kal&gt;r, o. A. Pamebeke:r".s
film · - tbe 1911 ...nd pre·
miere iD !Buffalo~. oae-dw·
ac~erplay by Samuel-..
286 Roe ...... c...;.,.. North
Campus. 3 p ;m.

-YSA.T41'WS
UtiiiAIIT-V-•hdry,AM
La...-._ 60S CJicmcuo; Nmh
Campus. ll:lO p.m.
-TOUMIY UC11IM
-Ad......,.iaUod..-......siaa AJopoda ,........,

v... H..~M .D, ~

olclinbldomudoio.cY. Uaiv .
ol California. s.. Ft&gt;ncisoo. 80
Goodrid&gt;, CMHC Auditanunt,
Bllffalo Ga&gt;enl tloopitaL 3 p.m.

AUI/ M I ' S -

fllml an Fnulk !Jiord Wrig)ll.
-""'by Jodt QuUw&gt;. UB
profcooor dan bi&gt;lory oDd
DOI&lt;d Wop aUiborily 286
F- A1t5 Cerntz. North Campus. 3 p.m.

-

-IIULU

F """"latiq llhdliM Seardl
Stratqia .. IIUBN.ET. 821
Health Sciences Ubmy. Sowh
Campus. 3 p.m. No rqislntioo
roquired.

_,..,....._

Rep1atioo o/Cdl Sloapo aad
RNA Soniq ia Syaapatbe&lt;k
N....,.u, Dr. l:lcnoi&gt; Hie&amp;ins.
us D&lt;p. oll'twmocoloc.
I:WB Farber. South Camp.s. •

.-- -~-M.oucia&amp;
Au'lely, McpTd Dlmdao. 1·9

p.m. CaD 64~12S to rcgi&gt;ter.

p.m. .

Sib)'l J......, UB Plo.D. gradu·
aoe, will lip c:opieo ol bet new·
.,. boot. Tlte NMfOJMn• of
s- ,w......._ TaJkia&amp; LeaV&lt;:S
Boob. 31-14 Main St. • p.m.
(I...,.. will aJoo appear toclay at

~0

_,_
-Man-owT~

Jt...

DoRa..,.....,, .. Eu-..c -,
&lt;v&lt; llllorJliP

AlioonMeqher,
Pllatm.D &lt;andldale.l43 Cool«.
mh Campus. l-9 arm.

-

-IIUUS

_

latroduotloo lO 'I IUBNETHoopllals au UB Ubrary

lt._....N........tt. B21 Health
Sciences
Sowh c.m,.... IOa.m No..psomi&lt;Jn
""'lri..d.

...

u--,..

SU....~LN- ·1
p.m. CaD 645~12S 10 rqjste&lt;.

fiLIIVMI'S-

-

..... e~w.u...­

n..ur.u&lt;~r

t:....,~d~
~by Scdao l'oby, """'

willdiscusalhc film- tbe
"""""""'· 2ll6 Roe AttsO:ni&lt;Z.
North Campus. 3 p.m.

fiEOUial'-

.......

.............

FioricliaduioM ... Applica~

Dr.rll&lt;hnnl T. c.s_..
Dept. d GoclocJ, llJdv. ol
Toromo. •~ l'rooc:2;ak. Nonh
Campus. 3:10 p.m.

--~
Ari&lt; o...-,-, ~. ci-·
·
Continued on page 8

PrrfGmaiJy Mana{Jt!tJ by

SIARA MANAGEMENT

�..

8

Memorial concerts

CALEND
nued om~7

honor~ashoff
ua IM.rauor of
ud a
and"""""*" of intc:mat-.1 repaation . .,.... a"""'
lno"''ll forbls many and deep lies 10c:omposers and perform.,... around the world.
Mi
died hm: •• Sepember 0.. UDday, Apnl17.
tu frimds and c:ollcaJUC$ will
qether m B fli from
far .....y 0&amp; Europe and J1p111 10 pres&lt;ftl I CODCCIU ill
ccl&amp;ntionof..
· Roba'IBlactcal '1li pia)'
Yv• _,..11'-ooff,

r' '"

and

. ,hi ~·tyof
JOYOOS inleliSIIy of&lt;

~

" 8olh conca1S are fra: of
open the pubhc.
&lt;rt, •y var

~and

n.. !ina con

A Cdr:boooo ., MuP.,. • l p.m. in Slot
liCCXllld. "PPononmm b'
_,. ... 6:30 p.m. • Hall
~Ans.2495

Main

Buffalo PafCJnlltl'&gt;

wm

lud&lt; 8
Poul Ruden. tis
Vtgocland. Alt T akahaslu. Anlbon) de ~- lub&lt;ll&lt; Ganz.
'lllomas lhlpul. Wa n&lt; Crouse.
U. ·, Stophen Mln&lt;S. Mdtld I'UJhesc, ~ Mane Unu.
Paul hnudl. Amy Wilbams. Jan Withams and Am~ Winn
The Slee Hall c:oncert •1U open wtth a rccordtng of
I.UtashofT perfonnang Charles hu' 1914 composnicwl. "1lx:
Alcom.- and
lose
a m::admg of Ius perf""""""" of
• I'184 Olnlon lnCatl'(Wo tm~ The progmn willtndud&lt; a
rerfmnance b) Manes of Mikhashoff ....,..,, transcnpbOO of
T il.ovsky' - Appariuon Seen&lt; from ·Pi&lt;jue Dame·- and
I..'&lt;'UOII from MtUwholf 1974 ....n_ "1lx: Wmd,.1fc.."
perfC'onll&lt;d b) an ensemble c::onducled b) Erik Ofia. Also onlhe
Icc~ .... worl.s b) 1o1m Cage. Christopher Fo&gt;. J.vn&lt;S
S&lt;llaro. tl Vtgdand. Loui Andn&lt;uon and Poul Rud&lt;n
11&gt;&lt; Hall .. all roncen will be presented in two pat1 11&gt;&lt;
fir&lt;t reaum:• I mall 5Cicctioo £rom Mikbasholl's "Tango
Cotlccuon." a IJO'lll of 12S .non 1a11
..,uea for bim by
an illustriou.l hSI of c:omposers. The ic:cond pat1 onclud&lt;s
"Rcrordando a Y•ar" b) Spani.tl oomposcro....r Muiloz. a
B alumnus "'ho ,..101&lt; the ptett tlu year in rtlC'I1IO&lt;) of
ltlhashofT ftlhasholl's ""'" wen. "MiiJiachc:lle" per·
ftmned by T
hi. and David Felder'• "Rockel Summer," performed by Maneo. are al on the program. alonE
"oth SC''CI'al Mtl.hashoff collaboraoon .
lolhashofT dehghted audtenees hm: and abroad for more
than ,,...., dcc:&gt;dei wtth his v ortuoso piano perf0fl1\lnee0 and
«&gt;mf'("Uions of new mu ic for ptano As a performer. he
held tnu::rnational tature and ht colleagues and collaboraton ,..,.. among some of the ,.orJd· most dtSttngwsh&lt;d
mU'\k.&amp;a~ He ould count among h1 former uden SOt11C
• f the fi&lt;ld' fine&gt;1 ptantM and composer&gt; of"""" musiC
Through the ...;,.u, Amcnan Jl;e,. Mus., """"al. whtt.il
he l" unded nd du.:,1ed.. Mt lwhuff promou:d bundrcch of
1

,.;u

,.,th

mu... , ·alaru t reprc\C:n110f:av..ldcran,eofaeW1ct iotn 1~h ·
nc H 1\o ff:\ll\a.l tn.:ted ··orne ot the fJ~ an1
1n lhc
world-Cage . "nJ~..ron. T.uhaslu . Jame Sellar&lt;.. Fredcn&lt;
R.1~~" 1 and Joe l Ch.ahadt l o nAJTIC .a "Cl) ft~A

UUMnua

Fa...-Jl. Stulkat UatCM~

p..lll. Ad.llu
aoa
$3.30. all ........

eo.-. 6)0.
"*"•

by~SA...,c-SA

Although five onches of snow Jell on Western New Vorl&lt;
on Apn16 , coach Joe Davis ' women's lemts learn
opened then spnng schedule Indoors agaonst local nval
Sl Bonavent~.&lt;e UB dropped an 8-{) deciSion 10 lhe
Bonrttes The Royals traveled to New York Coty 10&lt; three
maleheS ovet lhe v,oaekend UB defeated Manhattan
College 8-1 Saturday allernoon. Eartoer on lhe day, lhe
Royals tell 5-4 at Wagner. UB was also scheduled to
face Fordham but the match was canceled due to ram
The Royals are roN 1·2 on the spnng season
Lon Wales at number tau- Singles and MeliSSa Marlin
at number six each look 1WO VICtortes on Saturday

--..-~117

lh&lt;l!BOft't«oiT..-1
IIIICII..K:cui"" ....,_.
dlroqll Ap-11 2l io .... -

u._.

~l'

"11ocT-oiSI.Aa
-yA~"a-..

til eollq&lt; 117 •Bufti

.....,

\\'es Otmtled.. •• • '""'

......... "-ftnn )0 ..... "'-&gt;'!
Rart

_

c..,.. Hall

...,......_. ......

~---oltb&lt;

pnocq&gt;k _ _ . , hamn

-

125torq.~

Olc:aaara.. ' toltntY
Sloe Coocu111&gt;11 Nonh CamflUS pm Sl :t $6

UUAII FIUII
-~ Dltanu Loft lor tlo&lt;
Eut. Sua:Seat UntOO Tbcatcr
"'onh Campus 9 p m Adnu&gt;·
100 S!. lludt:nl
Dlhcn

S3.50. all

THURSDAY

Lrte Wor1&lt;shop on Btkong
lor Fotness Will be led by
Marprte Allshouse Apn!
2t from5~30pm
Call 645-6125to regiSter

..,.,_,.nca COI.LAIQI••
Local Milllalzers .... Tt"'l44Jfoo ·;.,.., Prof Job•

Ufll-

A• Updal&lt; oa , ... Horizoas
Wourl.-1'\Jul, Thome&gt; D.
Blanchard. Jr_ prutdatl o( 1bt
~lor.- WJIIO'froat Comnus·
POG, li'IC. Cader for Ton'O'TOVt
- C.111'U•· 7:3().9 ...... S7
for Atunuai A.Poaac.ioa mem~
ben.
all ochen: ill(:ludel

sa.

A-of....UII70..

_
lknti&lt;r_
-ani....,...
ltitt M.F.A.dco2l

.. dJe An~ Gallery.
F',.. Am ec.. Gallery""-'
~- TII&lt;Odoy.
..S Fnda). tO .... to6p.~
'l'hunday. 10 a.m 10 p.m.

v.-..-

S.ll. liencx-Wau Un1v 103

Ddcndclf -~·p.m.
D utro&lt;ploaa: A ood Tretl•tet for h'VIr.e1 Maricnc W
Moch. 1'11.0 .• dtmcal.....,.dl
tc'lltftiiJt. Oepl o( ctlrucal

Pharmac:oloc. Holfmu·
udey. J S08
Cool.&lt; Nonb Compu 4 p.m
LIRochc Inc..

21ua--

....__

Md....._al ... l o l Readu•c ~ i opea 9 ...... 10
s p ...... ~ dvoqlo F'ndo)

la\.~C

Oppor1writies.
AIM V..e.eberf 1-9 p m Can

1'11&lt; OloMiod ......

....... lluclly collqood ....

HHH llntoddinc. Jot CbnSl
1 9 p m C•l16AS-61lS 10 rq

.....

Col- 420

p.ecceoH~mr:Afow6 &amp;4 '

UFii-

..................._......................................... ..... _... ______.............. .
-Socrrslr&gt;/otrnMJon Office

-.y

--~l'
"no
u-O..." oUB"'

Ta.o~Uro

w- · • Tennis

Liln&lt;y
OMnilyelllto.........,..
~ Looboocll.il&gt;nry
..

bt.S

Track AField

~-~~~~~

Allelt Rcc:ual Hall St:uh &lt;'.am
""' 7 p.ftl. Fro. 10 tb&lt; polbl.:

-OF-KCITAL

Coach Dock Bany s men's and women s ttac and foeld
squads headed south agaon last wee!&lt; The Bulls and
Royars sent squads to Dlrtlam N C IO&lt; lhe Dul&lt;e lnvttatJOnal on Apnl ~ 10 JunlO&lt; dostance rurtner Jud•
Navar. who se1 a school record IO&lt; lhe Royals •n lhe
5.000 mete! event fiiiiShed second m a tome of 16 56 4
The men's 4x4()() relay squad placed etghlh lor lhe
BuUs Enc Ftschlem. Furno Gakodt, KeVIn Wtnkler . and
Kns Wtnklel clOcked a trme of 3 15 02 UB wtRhosl lhe
forst ol their 1WO meets at UB Stadtl6t1 on Saturday With
lhe UB lnvttatoonal

lliwnll)' ellloo .............

: CUUICS -A&amp;.
..._..~·-·Sar-Sitolo.
.....
-

llilciac lor no- MII)Ofl&lt;'
Allsbousc:

645~ I 25

5 :~ )0 p.m Call
10 rq:tliiCf

uuunua
............ -

.Studeol

u•.,. Theater -c....,.

6.:10 p m. AdnuHOOO : S2. ....
O&lt;DIS: SJ.SO. all Olbcn.

UUAIInua
l'llc Woddiso&amp; lluq..._ Stu·

-u-.n.e-Nonh

Campus 9 p.m. Admi"""' $2.
studcnu; D-'0. all Olbcn.

----NOTICES

- Anu..A ..ufAY
A-..1.-lorAiillo

BUpoay . ~ol-­

-·tlte-whodted
IOI&lt;ejtloa:oo

Fd&gt;. l

Wcclococloy. Ajril 27. N&lt;K.
I .:10 p.ra. io dJe J.._l&gt;yal
~Hall. tbwdlloor,
Ha)'&lt;S Hall.-~

It«·

o t - . b y - oodcol·
Jeocu&lt;s ol Bllptay'slifc aocl

· bcr.oo...ct117u:ol·

~
lec~. lbt)llll&gt;ti&lt;...,lbe
U!Uva'IC)' comauucy .e dlvikd

--"'""'""'

UBirisiiSA-Iritlt
·Fnd.wy, April IS •• St.
JC&gt;Oqllt's Oadt, lltol(alo, I
p.m.-2

a.m. A -. a..

elits Cotho6c Cltaribel aad

-

- ....-...or.J

lloolor:&gt; """"' fit

921 0 l

-··-~·
--.o.r.·
~
-~L·

- 1,--

"--a..o-._-~-yO..

- . - . . ....~ll

--

Heoldtec...-..
-~-

cou Lilii't'l ClAiaiND

~

Spodoliol (

Fiii&lt;Anttec... t - •ts7

..__CIVIL

�pboce. You - everyoe It borrible. Every
~~-my desk; we wooald &amp;d

A. It '• •
thiDa

011, oome

~oflbemfromevery~

oftlcle.The e~dd"lllildy ll(lllmldme
on 10
law. I do ho"" Wtb IbM !be
)'llml tiD ond does W&lt;lF it' lbe people
who malr.e k do good tlu

Q.Didr-llad ... _......
-·
wtoe. deellq willl ,.,.,... .. potitibl!
A. h 's ob&amp;oiUiely ctudal. We recei....S hun-

neat um.mer be
cleot.ed in 1 private
law office, a d - wcrb pan time for Erie
County Pre-Trial Services in downtown
Buffalo. witb plmo to anmd law sdlool
Ten owarded 1D Empire Swe Rtpts Sc:bol.atshlp ODd lbe El Scbolorship
Heoloorecei....StbeGraoeM CapenAwvd
ond lbe Mary Wbilmln Sd&gt;olonhip o( Excell~ from lbe l'llilo5cPiy Oepanmr:nt.
He bas been ICICOpted iniD law propams
11 GeorJewwn, Columbia, Horvud. tbe
Univtnity of Pennsylvania, ond Yole; be
_..pions to llllmd yak nut semester.
Q. Bow bas )'Oilr (aadly rac:led to your
dool expaieoca!
A. Tbey' •-e been zencn.lly supportive I am
lbe yClUI!p of live siblings. ond hove two
brotbers ODd two ·
mos1 of tbcm marned ond ebblisbed.
Q. What attracted oa to UB!
A. At !ina 1 - not even imaeslcd in JOin£
to oollege. The whole thin&amp; -=-red meeven though I paduatcd 15 valcdX:torian of
my hiP ocbool, I just didn't WID&amp; to go

dreds of
me.- from
- . all
· tbeir own
ohie . You had to
stq&gt; bod: ond try to see
lrulh m it. In
JOYC1111liiC:Dl, !be abtloty 10.JUdce pcca is V!:r}
You'"' dealoro~ witb Ill least S36
Jlt'lO!lk,
all ho e on .qmclo or ulterior
mad.., that you m be 1wve of
Q. What IIIOAIIIrpr'iacl
duriaJ our
Ita hi W
Jloa!
A. The .
.,.,.. allowed to reporters. Ev"')''hin&amp; -l•terall jUSII pbooe call
IWIJ . While RWII&gt;IOt:IS)'IO j'*call up ond
people would Jive you lbe ODSW&lt;n )'OU
waoted. I CO' !be dd"1111te 11C:111&lt; that people
-.n afraid of repanen. Peaple were over lbe pbone. appmmtly cautious of !be
power lbe medJo wid

Q. Do J'OU ree~ 1M mec~~ 11as too ......
.....-U.tbdomoaUoaolpubtic:opi
?
A. I'm not ayina that t:ncdul bos IJIIdue
power.. The people need tbe media. Rrpon ers are trained to look for inoonsi5tmcies·
it·· anolbo:r form of lbe system ·s cbec ond
balances.
There i5 such • ~ amounl o(
informaiJOII. tt 's &amp;IIIIl.inl bow little is ••-a.iloble to people. When lbe Tailhook report
it waslbe siz.e oflbe Buffalo phon&lt;

book. When tbot

aeas c.uno 20col

in a newspe,per,
table-the repor1ef
eatm&amp; tlunp

Q. BoviaawOibdiloU..~el ....U'IliMJltal Ktlvily, lltld ... tllle ErW
Cou ty COIIrt
llow would r llf'P'"I'Ioo Idea o( "Low J...ab.,
A. J . is obvioutsly "' tbe eye of lbe
bebokler. e 've attuetured tbe )'llml to
prot«t. liiSle8d, lp.iDot Jor&amp;er evils. I .
it mi&amp;ht need fuoe
but 1 ~
0\lftl&gt;aul of th£ ~ wOO&gt;Icl I&gt;&amp;~

u..

acd~

came.,...;

Q. 'l'ou _,tlooed tbot }"OU •
iatialdated by UB J'OUr nne,_. ...s ~

Crucial to imJrovirlg
1-IOreconl
will be sbcrin uptbe kic:ldouame.. avoiding
inJuries, acd lbe ploy o( lbe offensive line,
Ward said. "We •re coio&amp; to spend 1lotof time
OD lbe kicking pme in poctice.• he said. "Jo
terms of injuries. last yeor ,... ......, "'uk in

lbe ~ov,..,. part o( the body Aod - a~
cecd hnemen-everybocly m lbe COUIIIr)' IS
loobnr;for linemen. But we have same )'0111'1
guys on lbe hoe "00 have Jll0"'11 in strenllh
ond are more IDIIUrC tlus yeor.•
lMl )'CI&lt;ddDid)' will hem
r--'.
lu ISil ........ tool tbot will be oad IOIDIIoe .
)Ut 's team betler, Ward aud.
Max Bowmlln. oew a:ssocilte bead coech
wbo bas been bead coech o( Greenville College in Illiaois for lbe loa...-... :rears, ...-IteR
be oompiled a 4~1 S- I m:nrd, Slid !bat tbe
Bulls ......, )'QUill md Slill need maturity.
"But that •• aln)'5 tbe Cll!i&lt; in
.
from Di.waa m to 1-AA.• Bowman said.
"We've cot """"' very lllenlcd JUYS. We
l:now we·..., IbiD on tbe JiDc, but everybody's
thin there., acd-•..,
ger. ow !be guys need 10 pul out lbe e&amp;n...

.....,..

As lipltiiC tniiiiiiC

C8llllp for lbe UB

Bulls football team bepn .... W&lt;dt. Coach
lim Ward reponed tbot lbe camp would be
de&gt;otcd to teachina IDd mastering lbe bosics.
"This spring. - want to teach. teach.
teach,• Ward said. ·we ·u hove oome contact,
bo.c tbe empbasis wt1J be OD tbe good bosic
techniques that bdp you win ball games. •
Spina trainiQa carql is abo'-' to evaluate
Mia p&lt;qJie will be JUying ........... Ward said.
• At tbe md o( sprioc boll. tbe guys will know
wbr:re they'll be oome Augusl.• be said. "Righi
now oil pasiticns are open, md tbe guys l:now
tba. Wllb oil our bon! W&lt;rt over tbe win&amp;a,
we're bopioa lbot this )Ut we'D tum things
COI.IId,• Won! Slid. "This )Ut we're gciD&amp; 10
bed&lt;h.-.lllllmucbSllOD(I'r~·-

the-...·.

last,_..,

........
..-..tllle ...... ......,._!I
A. n..•a _ . . 1' ,... ......acd .
...

chitt:JrtD is iDevi-piclt out doe ..,._

""""'big«--

. ..

~

car--.

lbotot &amp;ivina
""'"' "' one
I tiJouPl, who 1m I to be
rllowiQc tbeot people aouad •ben tloett ••
been so
I ltaven"t been expc.:ddropfodd ltoe.s
time. But

Q.

·~~.--uw

• pbllo.plly •
A. Sttqely, I doll 't hove a Sd pllilooopo
Sometimes t co orOOIIOd ~ lllld

--..y,-._ ...... _ _

~ ond Ali-A.mocnatu candidale
Odf SCiott Slid., hope
call
spina
ball Md doliOIIIIe
-elida 'I do
ond ;,po.. on ......, &lt;# tbe ...... dJot we
ab..tydo
Our ....... ,..... _.to to

co..,

last,_..

more efliciclll-ifa ..,., - ·re 1101 I'Jiac10
very
Aslr::ad!:roltbe-..,l .... tobetbe
type of""'""" wbocmi&amp;s ... _ , .
-Coocla Ward AJd lbot tbe
80hcdule
will be very simiillrto la!a ,-:.They wiD plo
lllllltdiffaa.-...-=ll.. J..eblcbllld.lamrs
Madiooa,as
• . . . , _.
YOUD&amp;SweO.)Ut'sOivioioal-MIIIIiolal
~), CeatDI f1arida, IDd
. s-.
"We're PI&amp; 10 be 1 good- but it
time, IDd it tlltt:a work,. Wild aid.
"'ar . I C1D tdJ )'GU is lbot - ·.. p 1
"""'-=-c~U~r;Wardsaid. "'omeout.md
...a...,.,..'boealotoC-=-c..._..,_

18,000 square feet suitable for offices or
storefronts with adjoining warehouse space

Near UB School of Medicine
and several major hospitals

'TRAVEL AGENCY
CORPORATE TRAVEL DEPARTMENT
Did you know that AAA - 'l7N Mon

Tr~tSkJ N.&lt;t-

;,. Trttwl . aloo

provides businea tnvden q...lity, coot dfectiw seMc:r?
• Gu&amp;r&amp;nte&lt;d 1 - t.irf.,.,

• ·m.. cloily ~ ddi......,

Ideal for Medical or
other Professional office

CAu RoN BRESS AT 633-9627

~ .

I love ~ laJkia&amp;, md c1ea1iot8 widJ
people. I ..,., 1 need for tbom, Md I eaia7
fi
need.

PRIME OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

On Bailey A venue

,....

• F.... purport and ,.U. pl&gt;otoo (.,. the bwi- un.kr
andmuchmo~

�m
~e~tSaxophone~t

begins two-year

A..'-A.7J·l__'"'......" '

A.nesthe ia procedure .reduces
cardiac complications, study how.

~

Sill!

oo-

'HE AMHERST$&amp;&amp;

(~..-ofw....._·•-cd·
dnl«jj .00 crh. ly ~

l!lllllic:II~IIIIIJCII8ttwo-

yo;• n:sidc:lwlym 111o uu

·

redol&lt;e
IIOI'INI" .
af""-t

~
n.r~.-aollafor JI'OIIP

...

to lft!iC .. - - ..,.,...llll'ia.plwOII!cr
~otrJOr-· " ' -

amru

A......, or-ilbci~PJb
dt~­

ond
die
Millie OeJ!M1ment;pcrfono
b)'tht UB~
tioa focuh)•:
•
o&amp;nt m llid.au io
~'
p1!1{&lt;:Aionll ~llld rq&gt;~ UB lhl&lt;lup ~ • -fcrmi."&lt;S:

ofmusocieas

IINS1bo1.11lkl11.

faOoft;d !he
pMiieatudmilllod dar·

arty,._.,., C&gt;f 1

iaa- ,._- liO llolwdl 1'111\ CM&lt;a'I....U·
l-(Rf'Crlfar ........... .,._ •
Oae J10IIP o(
pollliCIIU roui~ed - -

Mdllllllk§E

., Sloe
•
duriDa i I
telllitlOl.but KmyGaodl,dallo(•UB...) lhllthebu ofthe...-a's..m
,.,.., the uni&gt;usily ill
pbocr duri"J •the
1994--95 ortd 1995-% lllldomic )'ttl$
Tho Qllll'ld-&amp;l•iodore Anddlma.

dtlnt ce-at -

C ....,., , Stcpht n ROS&lt;'nthal and Karr)

deaden$ • locoiiQ!cd ..,._ Aller
lheWIII:
~b .... ~

petfoonod in

Thr ASQ

raorpuaefor' ·

&lt;en Hal ;cvera1 •

iR&lt;mlo

........, ......

llli:ll'pbine.U~IlwmU..ao

lhe -

~~-16111~

:on 11111
or*'-...- ..,...mnr
...,.-inthe IKllld.llaiod mMt&gt;mr.lbr"""'
...... lhe u.s ___.,,11111 .. 1993 Ubi JJpM
co iu
pcritmlft1t ..........
ASQ
!Jia&lt;k~•nC......
Hall. diC l&lt;enncdJ•Caner ond U.,.,OO,C.cnl«.

""or

"" Naiooll PubliC
RMOO. VCJior of Am&lt;rica Md die 11 •IJ:hl
Slx&gt;w Oil NBC. b ,.;n perfurm ,.ill&gt; !he Ck•e·
land miJiiQuana&lt;lurm!lhr 199S-96-.
and bal. """" -

Membo-soflhequam~CIOfiSidcrlhe~

a lah:nlory for lhe el.plt:nooo of ...,,. mu·
m . Many o the ln&gt;lldmb &lt;&gt; composiuons
..-nuen or the ASQ ...-., nc&gt;w '" dJt rq&gt;er'"'"" of quJI14U- lbr •counlly. lbc
~"'""-

..llid!........,......,.,

J!1liiU lium Olarn!a-

l"m

~

. America - ' ""'

lAin._ blllt

Anodla .p ql d 110 ...-. recei
-~
~

1

IJI('hodoa 1
af new .0....-.can
mu oc, aii-Boch albllm; ., all-&amp;ble 8
d• • a cullabonlioe wilh Lubs Foss. lind•
ltKlSl n&gt;&lt;ntly. • ja1 mcordln
Thrir IISI UB perf
of lhe ocason
"ill h&lt; Oil! p.m. Ma) 2, 111 Sial Kall Titled
"Sax, Hlii'Jl a fluor, • rhe pro£Rm .. mahio
reanu-r
Bc:Uo ""'" B~ ond 0111j., Rhonda Scilwaru..
)
A.adobna. Roomlhol .-1 li elrnu ""'
w:nai of llw! UB
' Dep.tmenL Clrcft
!iludiod m
• UNY Collqe • """""""Thrqu.onc~ mx:i""* ~ from rhe atlonail Enduwmem foo- lhc Am. N.Y. Stole
COW&gt;Ciil "" lhe """· l1:rit eou ~. the c~ ~ or
Dulfalo and from rou..s.oon and~
lfiiiiJ and ll:ldi&gt;idwol donaa

"*""'"

'n1 I\IIIILJ 10 ~ l ilt U 'oRI\ \ IIVI'

o, ...

IT he University
And The
Environment::
How You
Can Make A

Difference
FI D OUT:
~

How the University$ environmental
policies are changing

'M

What 1s going on at the student and
administrative levels

~

What ~ can do

to

make a dliference

Tuesday, Aprill9, 1994
3:00-4:30 p .m.
North Campus
CaU 645·6125 £or registration
Sponsored by
Environmenlal lilsk Force, Admmistrauve
Processes &amp; Procedures Subcommittee

......,._

........ _..,.,"""
ae... _....,.
1--edmia-

an

~

'a.: 'il""*'

&lt;Old IbM

IXJIIIinolcd II) be - - . . 1 by epdunol. All

,.......bod.............b"'"")'llhius
lor """'"do)lllolborinJaqoryt&lt;&gt;detrD...-.:
~ Raulls*"""llhll,.......iDthe
cpQdl~bod!il,...,... kwer ...... cl
)Clll'dla.ori'JII'Id'-t.__l2.-ba'
qlllil.'ldl:l tflilicbomiot--a """¥oflhlooa IOir
hw\--s oul1(nd no toe.!....._
~-&lt;d.oled bcatl pnlllkms - .......
QlleOI, hfc·l'btealellllll ;ompl 1-1 of
~ _....,. Fony pcii"C&lt;:ftt of ho,p.n.t.
poo~oeru.. oufkf itdoemia. de
Olid, ond to 20 pa-rmi IVfltt I my.,.,..-dtal
infllfC:tiOft, or bcatl atlae:k. ofler surzcrJo
When _...,... 11 Roo..-.:ll ·PaR c-ou
ID.tiiVIt r&lt;:portod a ol
roc..... drop tD heart

..._-C_.

attacl:.s followi.IIJ! rm~}OI """"" .........,..

.......... -

"*

........d

..........

~... toe.t . . Mid

Mod ...... ....,.
Tbrt........ n:sululad ~ ...
lbcorillc diM !he epidurlll _....,. dlleJ
lhc'.......,blood
helpOIIO~..,..
........ 1lq ... ...-.- ..... adlliJis
illl::idolla:d

""""'*""'""""

pr&lt;:WIIb lh&lt; _........
IJIIII'"O"C'pllll
.,.......
from ,.,....._, lhol ao~
blood_.. 10 .,._....,. •• ~

.....,._

. """"1113'...,.,._,

'"T'hefll:llm.all ~ ........ lhc
Jr&lt;IUp *UC UIOCIILed ,.Hh

q&gt;l&lt;~llnll

UICb)Q&lt;dJa.""" -blood-~ ~-

. tJl
hr.ofto

-pMimDhi "" """""""'I the
cf.

fa::t."llllddt~

• ...,

meet·
An1o::rJca. Sonety o( 'R c:r-1
~ 1111111 tqJorUd "' ~~....-..,..,
~~au~~o.....,,_.,

..., of

N-•
...dilaooodr~--.
at ...,_,_J:loalbnlbola...._Hirrioao
llld ....... L.cmo.. d liB_,

IIJICl

�Asian music
to be featured
at festival
Tbe Propam iD Composiliao iD the UB ~
of
- will .,._m • festival of
music by COIIImlpClnry OUno:a
axnpaoas Oft Apil 16 lind 17 iD
Boird lllld Ice Hallo Tbe fesuval
williDclude~~
lec&gt;tuml,opeD~IInd
~Aile

~ ond opeD

ll'tlfmeol

the public

~thef~s;

cnltlelldina the festival will be
o.ouw~~
~ • Columbil \Jniver·ty """ the r... Asian c:ompoo..to be rococnizt&gt;d for lui wad by

the ........, music .....,.w_R.icbard
T
011e of the 111001 influcmial
fip-es in AsiaD
will be
here u
oloQs wtth Zhou

-n.

Lao&amp;.• major~
oompooer wbooe wad hu been
()liN lg;Mwwt by major e:nom&gt;blel, foundations and ort:ber;-here and am:..L
Otbe:r COIDJI'*'S whose wor1&lt;
~iD be performed durin&amp; the
festival .... Brigbl SJ:len&amp;. filii
runner-up for the 1991 PuJit:u:r
Priu in music composition; Chan
Ka- in, winner of the Bela
Bart6k IDiematiooal Competition
and Ale.lim Louie, named 1986
Canadian Composer of the Year.
Work by Cban Win,&amp;-Wah,
1..-ard-winnlll&amp; COI1lJIOOCI'· inn:sidc:oce with the HooJ Kong
Pbillwmcnic Clrcbestn, also will
be potfonned, aloo&amp; with compoticns by Alice Ho, whose
•irtll05ic marimbe/xylopbone
solo, "Rain Forest,. is 011 the
program, ond HWODg-Long Pan,
professor of composition 11
Taiwan's atlooallnstitute of the
Ans.
•yI Y&amp;," I wori&lt; by flOICd
mainland ClUnese compo!iCI' Qu
Xboo-Song, will be p&lt;rlonned
~ os well u "Two oc:tumes"
by Olen Mao-Hsuan of Taiwan.
Tbe UB M . Ubnry in
Baird Hall is makinc scores and
recor&lt;lings of wor1&lt; by cootempomy ClUnese COIIlJXIOCIS available
for h'bruy ..,.,... through April 17

Hoffman is
fifth Clarkson
ChairatUB
Critic and desiper Daniel
Hoffman hu been selected
as the fifth William and Elisabeth
Oarlcson Visilirl&amp; 0Wr iD Arch.itcaureand
Planning.

0

Hoffman,
wbo 1151
lectured
ben: during
the fall 1992

semester,
beads the

Arch.itcCNre

..

l)epartment

Micbigan's Cranbrook Academy

of An lind is orchitcct-in-residence for the Cranbrook Eduatiooal Canmunity. He is a former

IIW:IIIbo.- o{ lbe orchitcaure faoc:ultlcs • the Uniwnlt} of TOI'Illll.o
aDd doe Univaslty o{ Detrait.
wad r~ "" lnbabitotiOII,
_....,

Ia

oc:aJe b e t - body lind bull
Hoff- . - olboaar d...
ina aart... 0Wr W Apnl
11-15, pr--.1 the 1994
(]arbon Lectun: Mondoy .. the
&amp;ffalo It Erie County Hilttrlcal
SocieJ:)' Audttorium. Tbe ude ol
Wk "Louis Kahn lind the
SIJ'UC:tUnl Frame."
Hoffman also is present
two
~ iD 8ufWo
Tbe fl111t, "Pnlcc.:tJoo aDd Lamematioo,.
o(
tbou&amp;ht5 011 tbe worit of the
Cnnbroolt Archilectme Swdio,
wosliWJ~ Tlle8day iD en-by
Hall. Tbe lflClOIIIl, "In SeatdJ o{
the Body •• foa.Jn&amp; 011
"""'
work, tal;es platt IOday from
1..30-3.30 p m. ia 150 Croiby
Hall

In COCIIlClCtioo with
vtS1\,
Hoffman · wcrkin&amp; with UB
SIUdeats 011 the CXlDRNCIJOII ol an
mstal.lation that expkns the
pbysical inhabiwion of spac:e.
Their activities will culmmale in
• publiC opcnirlg and preiiOIIl&amp;tJOII
at 3:30p.m. 011 F'riday, Apri115,
iD Hayea A 011 the South Campus.
AU ""ent5
with the
Oarii:soo residency ll'tl fmr: of
clw-ge and open to the public:.

""""""*"

UB faculty in
'Mind Over
Myth'program
Olild se1ual abuse will be
the topic iD the April 16
"Mind OYer Myth,· the !D&lt;ll1lhly
public offaits televisioo propam

0

proclooed and moderated by Ilene
Fkiscbmonn, director of alumni
and c:ommuniations in tbe UB
La School
Tbe show will air 011 WKBW •
Owmel7, at 12:30 p.m. Susan
MaJI&amp;old, wbo leaches c:ourses 011
Oilld Advoc:ac:y and the Law and
E•-idence and the QUid Victim,
will discuss new suategies and
~""sen-ices. os well as the
Center for Olild Ad"""*') due to
open next month in Buffalo
Before comiD,&amp; to UB,
Mangold was"" attorney for Tbe
Juvmile Law Center in Pbiladcl·
pbia. A 1987 gradua"' of Harvard
Law School where sbe was eA •
eeutive director of Legal Aid, sh&lt;
intcmed for Tbe Olildrm"s Defense Fund in Waslungton, D.C.
loinin&amp; them will be Diane
LaVallee, a 1983 UB Law
alwnna who is "" ...OSWU district aaomey and &lt;:bid of the En&lt;
County DA 's Assaul~ Abuse and
Rape UniL
Otbe:r g.-s ...;u be Dr. Jack
Coyne and Ann Marie Tucker
Dr. Coyne is 1 Catholic prie5l of
the Eastern Rite and the medical
director at Memorial Pediamcs.
iagara Falls Memorial Medic:al
Center. He is also a clinic:al professor of pediatric medicine at
UB and at &amp;ffalo Olildren 's
Hospital. He will also serve os the
medic:al director of the Olild
Advocacy Center.

1\Jcllzr direaor of Cili.a::as
Commlltee Oil Rape, Sel.ual A.
li&amp;Uh ond Saual AlluRe CORSA
A 19110 IJ"tduoiU{ UB Law, ee
is the l1llhor o{. ac:bocl"'-ed
Jft'U'Uoo curricu1
for chil·
cftrl ill Jrw.ies K tbnJucll
reco.-..1
8 Hoyt
for ber cootri
lield o{ famil} vlolence

1 .....,.S

to lbe

Multicultural
development
workshops set
Tbe Mull1Cilltural Prcli -

olooal De•-elopmaa Propam for fKIIIty, profeaiooal aDd
ouppon llaff,lpCJmClRd y UniAd . ' Council, conun...,. with a live-pan wor1&lt;sbop
senea beginftin&amp; ApnJ 22 wtth a
praiCillaiJOII 011 Afric:aa Amoricu Studm by Aleoe BomeaHatdr:n of Keol Suo"' Univer&gt;ity,
(rom :30a..m.- l p.m 111120
Clemen&amp;, ortb Campus
teacb&lt;5m Ka&gt;~ SUitt'•
Pan-African Studies Propm.
Tbe pros:ram will featlR 1D Afn-

IJ"'~IO
opcnlloOII o{ lbe ........

vers~ty

Amencan m

· perfonnance

lilUdmt parucipouon.
Tbe PfOII'IDIS in · """""' are
paid for. m pan, by a gram from
the ew Y orit Stat.&lt;/UVP Affll'mati"" Aclloo Comminee. Tbese
funds w&lt;R liven to...,.. in
profeasicnal ~~ tninm&amp;
for~

&lt;:CJUDllelin&amp;

ond advisin&amp; o( l~
swden at the unl\-ersity
Otbe:r programs in the smeo
.... Hlspllli&lt; Americaa aDCI
Nath-e AmericaD Sludmb,
Alfn:do Matilla, c:lwr and profes·
sor. American Studies, and Ban)'
White, duector, Undergra&lt;lum
Studtes, and lecturer, Amen&lt;~~~
S!Udtea Departmenl, Ma 9. 120
aomens, 30 a.m.-1 p.m.
Ufeotylos aDCI T..........
Mary GnSwn. assoaate '"""
pnsident for Pubhc Semces and
Urban Affairs. wbo ..;u speak 011
religious and racial to1eranoe, gay
and lcr;bwl cultures, and iieXuaJ
disc:nmination and borossmml
within a wthersity scninl. June
17 , 41~ Bomer,830a.m.- l p.m
AAon Americaa aDCI AAon
Siuda&gt; Evelyn Hu-DeHan,
professor of bislory and direaor
of the Center for Studies ol
Etbrucity and Race In Amen&lt;&amp;,
Univ= of Colorado, Boulder,
Sept. 23, 120 Oemens. 8:30a.m.1 p.m
FoUow-up, training exercise
011 skills dtvelopment for the
General UAC group, Paul
Pedersen.. Oct. 7, 120 Clemens,
8:30 Lln.- 1 p.m.
For l1'&gt;Cft iaformation &lt;10111ac:t
the Division of Uodergnduate
Academic: Semces, 645-2988.

Olazowy rec:a.-..1 doe Gold

Research grant
program
to be presented
Univmily fiiCU!ty and llaff
wbo ""' 111&gt;'01.-..l ill reond
pam adminiolntJOil, are in.-llt&gt;!
an mfOI'Dladooal pi'OII'IIII.
April 26 (rom 8 30 a.m to '
m the c-er for TOllllllroW,
Campus ~ .... tbe
orr- s...,....,....s Pmpams
and the Ceala (or the Study of
BKJbeho- and Social AopecU
ol Health (IW AH)
f'ol)o.-m, • -'come from
Dmd W. S1wean1, 8ASA.H
dJrector lOCI professor of oewoi"'Y· pechalria and poydtolac-,
Dale M. Landi, '""' prea&gt;deal for
reaean::b.. will discus "S...,....,....S
Propams-Missloo, Stnl&lt;lllUe
and Funding Oppammitiea • lbs
talk will be followe4 by presematians 011 Spoosor-ed Proput
Admmisttation, 01lllea K....-..
assiSWll vioe presodent; Sponsored Pmpams SeMcea, Eluabetb Kopn, lSSlSUid ,-;.,.,
presidml; and Tec:ftno6ocy Tt11DSfet SeMcea, Kadtloen Teny,
duector Also spealdna wtll be
Edwonl Sctmcider, eUICIIIive
director of the UB FouodatiOil.
FoiJowiJ1I the formal propm,
paniciponts Clll1 &gt;isil boochs set
up by eadt Spoasored P10pm
office. to meclllaff ODd olltain
addiuooal inf011D11ion
lnlar:saed p&lt;DCIII5 ll'tl ubd to
rep.ter by Apil 21 . Send name
and clepanmem to Olrisla
Gr&lt;.enber&amp;, BASAH. 316 Put
Hall, ortb Campus, 64S-3426..
(E-&lt;Diil.

.....-cbpm

oe

BASAHCIMGOUBVMS).

UBstudents
win top prizes
for
designs
WomensOub
William
international
and Mark
0Ola.owy,Cb&lt;omc
senior-S iD the deaigo
socials planned program in the UB School of
JUDD

A !D&lt;ll1lhly social to give
wives of international students, faculty and scltolaJs an
opportunity to discuss aosscultural odjustments, improve

0

' '

Arch.it&lt;eture and Planning, ba""
been awarded the top prizes ia the
student divisioo of the 1994 New
Ptoducu for Moture Matkels

Design Coonpditioo spooscxed by

"'- ...-an~ for W. ESA-Ptoc.e, 1
prototype o{ I pubbc pi)' .,.,._
b&lt;ao redoligood to .....

po....y
..
Tbe pltax .. ~ 011. pole
•
10 • bootter&lt;ltlir t.e . .
the .... to adjUia tilt
~ Po,.- io faaliutted
tltmuclt I creda anf sJol lOCI l

.-. .olot-,. .I....,.. . . the__.

c:ltooF
...., qled

bom ~
11om

10~-­

u.ea l&lt;liYIR l dial.._ by lllp~tilt--"bomoacatilt

~pbctae ~---10

........_ _ _ li-_,.,.

IDI.dtthe~~-­

n.. ESA-l'loaae allo 1too ..,_
!qed lleypod bulloas widl .

defll-.--.

CX1111J'U111111Dbea. Wliea tilt tilt
relayed ~)' lnllnlctioalare
displayed 011. v t d e o n.. UB iiliCblo .......t..l uadathe dtlecbm ol Abir
UB
prof...- of~

l lSI IHfft
C'rt'IJ'

L..._,

asslslanl profeaor, Dept.
ol Political Science,
discuss 1he "TI'IlUbied
f'a1ner'sNp" ~
U S and Europe lila
tM8Iing ol 1he Americln
Associa
ol UniwlfSity
Women, April23al9;30
a.m. ai Colon&amp;al Grove,
1200 Wetwte Of.,

w.

PlFllCAl'[~'

• "LiDear lime A1loridtms Ia
Memory ffitnrdtiea,• pop« by
Kenoedt Rqaol~
s.:ieotce, acceped 10 doe !PIP
Wortd~a.cr- ia
Hoonboq, Gamuy. Aut-- aSept. 2, 1994.
A paper by James Coo¥er of
Music, enlitled "Musical Epbcmera= Some T'bougbls Aboul
Types, Controls, Aa:eG,• appears in MIUic 1/rformn Senoic&gt;u
Qwuurly, Vol. 2,
3/4, 1993.

•

AileD Sigel, PralesscJo- EmeriMusic, bas bad bis 1110110grapb, -PqJular Soaa" publisbed
ill Facu &amp; /lind tlw $ofiiS by
GoriiDd Press.

•

tus of

�-u.----.-..

12
SA YOUNGSTBI9JO'!"ing up ln
~ MidiMIIuob00
011&gt;« :W . taunted
him ln 97"' dau by pretending to •ploy" his ribs
• IC)'Iophorle.
It WAS 00 humill.lllng that he sent -.y for
the bodybul1ding RCn!U of ~ mon
Chilies Atln, whose ads ~Mel inc""""
boob.
f« • ~- S_l.!BJ luob lamed the rudimt!llts of ~ng. Atld Alia$,
ony
wfly ""~· llso peddlod on kinds of
l'l8t stuff WO&lt;JicW&gt;o ~- could purc:Nse
to spef!d them to mer goo(.lhing1 It e higl&gt;protein powdon. borbels and othef supplies
that pnwnlsed !hot toithful ,.....,_,. , _
would be coiled •51c1nny- ogoin.
On Mon:h 26, oher I long hiiM from those
~ Alllos doys, Burl&lt;e. .ldjunct IISSisUnt
proleuor of organ ond din!ctor of student
Jl1091'W"'"'theMulito.p.tment. -named
"Mr. Buffoio• in the .,_.so dau ~
held at MMyvlle High SdlOOI md ~
by the ~ ~ of the """"Aihletic Union ond Gold's G)'"'. AI 57, he wos
the oldd. person in the 11-doy""""" tho! had
- ' at&lt;!gories ol competition.
~~lder i1efl·

thusUstically malntMntng his ~. en·
tering ..tdition.Jl bodytluildlng contesu .met
hope to write • boolc !ipUrring othen to
sirm1ar~L

Since winning the conteo~. 8urlle bubbles
with .. dteme.und pride. On Pillm Sunday,
hb putor at SL john Lutheron Church of
Amherst-who hod wi~ Burl&lt;e'• win
thenightbefore-.1nnouncedthenewslrom
the pulp;L 8~. up in the choir loft tn hts
Iongo~ pmt of org.nlst and chotr dtreetor,
iiCknowledged the heorty o~use.
T 0 win the competition, ~ WAS required to pe&lt;form eight mondltory poses,
along With .-.1 •Uf&gt;Pien-tal positions
thot ;udges an ""'ui"' ot ony point in the
preliminory round, which counts for 90 percent of the Hnal mort.
"You,_ rt!lax, • says Burlle. "You t&gt;o....
to do all those poses and you hi to co~
out ~rotely and you how to be ready to
do these s~tal poses. They might
ask you to
do a call

raise. which
IS not easy.
You' ( e
stand1ng
with your

back to
them; you
hoY&lt;! to step
up on your

c

,a I

ve s

quietly and
tense. Your

-

-bodyis

.......,_..attheor,-ln 1916 pootn11t.

• 8 e .

tween the
mandatory
po5eS, they say, 'RelaJ&lt;. gentlemen,' but you
, _ cl9. We-., on stage 1S minutes alo
stretdlduring the pn!ftminaryjudging, whidl
is a long time to be constantly flexed . And
then they all you back to do your mtnut~
ond-a-llalf posing routine IIane on stage
without music. They want to see as much
striation in your muscles and the vascularity.
It's very st,..,.uous, it's like going through a
two-hour worltouL You walk off stoge ond
you're absolutely breathless.•
The night 5how contains routines done
with music and has more of an armtk quality, Burke explained. "Your presentation is all
part of what you do, how you present your
poses and how you move from pose to pose.
It's almost like balleL ~ iudges want to see
the muscles at their best deYelopmenL In order
to do that. you hoY&lt;! to prKtia! posing in front
of a mirror and with pe&lt;&gt;p1e looking at you.•
8urke, who also serves as orgonist and
c;hojr d irector at f emple 8eth Zion, credits
his initio! interest in getting fit to UB's lac·

pt'Of

Lilly/staff fitnes.l progr.m dir«ted Ill' jack
....... professorofphy11C111herlpy
and ~ selena. But the rat puih 10WIIId~t.eg.n aft« mooting Robert Go$ch, Mr . ~ 1986 .nd Mr. USA
1989, naw ot the lulfolo A
Ollb ·on

Troruillld. Goscl1. 33, whopt.mtocornpt'U

in the Mr. urn-s.. compl'titlon EnglM1d
in October, begMI.....,_..,.,. training with
·Burke, who was~- his artio::lbt
com&lt;Nnd ol nutrition ond ~ principles. Then come • moment of truth.
"' asked him a t co&lt;lld by lor a physique
compdltion, H it wn I'Nkstk: for someone
my oge.. lurte recoil&gt;. ·He .... 11 you · ~
~ then I want to loclt ot )IOU..'· Wt&gt;.t

f o l - - · a _._-Kicing lew doys as
Burke onxlously prepaMd lor the reYiew.
"Tho! momong I wake up With butterfl101
as II~ to g!w my first redtal. You
think
's goong to look at )IOU' body.
He~· ·
melor.t&gt;outanhour,brought
'"" '
where there .,.., mimln.
~ '"" pose, punching my sldn,
testtng to ...., what my body was
li e. I WIS real embarrassed I
must ha"" been beet Mel 8ut
he g.,.. me the thumb 's up
'You're going in the cornpetition and you're going 10 win."
Burke began tratning for the competitton
with
d1ily
workouts of two-ond•-half houn plus cardtovasntlarwork. Go¥:/1, whom
Burke regards os one of the
country's leodtng bodybuildmg tritiners, also n:,..,ssed the psychological dtmension, With "'odongs from Stephen R. Covey's
~~HobitsofHtghlyEffectiwf&gt;eople .

llestonng the Character Ethic.• 8urke also
kept. daily log, ~~tbnng wh•t he had
eaten in terms of protein. fot groms and
calories. •t was a very good .tuden~ I dtd all
!hot he asked me to do to the letur.
•My diet chlnged drasbcally, •
Burke,
who c o n - a moximum ol }0 grams ol
fat daily ond "tries for less. • He olso tnes •to

saYs

Nl

cle•n foods,• i.e., those not prepared

with ..uces, ond OYOids canned food ~
cause of the '"It contenL He eats unlimited
quantities of fresh vegetables, plentyolgr""",
fresh fish, .met restncts meat consumptton to
chicken breas~ turlcey breast. pork tenderloin, .met Mel meat only twtce o month.
Over the nine months of competiuon
troining, the S '11 • 8url&lt;e went lrorn 21 9 to
17S lbs.; hi1 waost WaS dnched to 32• from
38- 1/2" . HIS doughters, Jennofer ond
Kathleen, both of Cleveland, saw th"'r dad
about six months into the compebtion troining. "They couldn't befiew it. • he soys.
Burke, who holds moster's and badlelor'•
degrees from the Cl~nd Institute of Mu·
sic. did haw to cut down on concertizing,
but is planning a faculty ,..,Uta] Coino&lt;len·
tally set for March 26, 199S, anniversary of
the big win .
•peopte have asked me, 'Why dtd you do
it. what motivated you?' Probably beCAuse I
love chollenges. I thought. 'Oh my God, will
lever be oble to do this?' I ;ust wanted to do
iL I had an incredible desire. ~ I wait until
I'm S7 )'earl old to do fi at this leYel.
"What it has done lor my pe&lt;forming, "
quite amazing. I'"" always felt prepoMC! for a
performance and fairly confident. but never
with the confidence the last time I played.
People say you'll get musd~nd and it
willolfect your (l&lt;eyboard) techntque. If any·
thing, it mokes it better because you are
much more d isciplined. •
Buri&lt;e '"Y' he 'd li e to wnte a boolc about
his experiences and then "to wor1&lt; with older
people, who are afraid to get into this. I'd like
to show them that It's not impoulble tor
anyone, unless the doctor says no exe&lt;cbe. If
a person is generally healthy, this kind of
exercise can't do anything but imprt&gt;'o'e their
lffe. I'"" ,....,.. felt so good; I feel like I'm 2S
years old.•

Aboft: ........... _

at the ...,... AIWIIk
CW.wttltllh,..._..
tn!Mr, . . . co..dL

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Campus
events
to mark

Diversity

Month

Couch potato estyle

f:~deadly,
llldJCales

10

.. .

"""
He changed

'

~.' .. h

UB
faculty

direction from
motorcycles 10
math.
1. .

on view ·

4

7

/

I

in Br~ 1 • r'
e..&amp;ubft.

~

Aprol 7, 1994 Volume 25, No. 23

and 202 Cltmrn&lt;, 111 Ccobo; 354
Fill!rJcft; 1._ and I I I K.tmball; 14,

109, and 110
210 Nonm, ond
440 PiiR. In the "beaom ..... column .. 101 Baldy (theKlv.o). 246
Cory, 322 Clomtos, 1'10 fll1m&lt;n..
4541'ronczak, tnK.imbdl., 104 ODd

=

Faculty/Staff
group oversees
Introduction of
state-of.the.art
instructional

equipment

S CLASSES RESUME lhis ......tr
followmg spring
llmlk, • group of

UB facuhy and
oWf is OVCiliCOing
the phased 'inlroduction ofthe •laus
ll:allhins t.ec:lmology into UB classrooms. They are also mulling results
ai a ""'""' facUlty """"')' oo classroam oondilloos, oslhey COillinue to
evaluate and upgnde classroom
equipmeol, ligbting, cleanlinoss and
Olb&lt;r fiiCI&lt;IIS.

The univen;ity's Oassroom
Quality Assessment Group, cb.almd
by Frulk Bartscheok of Comput·
ing and lnformatioo Tedmology
(Cil), and Ridwd Noll, direaor
ofplaoning·and progmnmiog, aims
fareffeotiveovenightofUB's166
cenU..:lly scheduled classrooms on
'both campuses. The 12-rncmber

group mcessmoolhly andtepn:Sai~S
bod! faculty and areas of administnltico most coocemed with classroam upktq&gt;."Thcoeareiodividuals
wbo care, • says Bartscheck. "lt 's a
really good group in terms of getting things dane."
According to its mission SIB!b- . t b e - t group "di!t:cts
the provision, mainlmance and bet·
of c:entrally-scboduled instniCiianal dassrooms and support
5!"""'" which are coosi&lt;left:d university-wide.~andtb=forenot

the rcspoosibility ai any ooe dcpartll also func:tioos os an ombudsman for user!! of instruollonal

IIIOOI.. •

iJlll&lt;% v&amp;i-visa wide raJ'13L'ofclt:ss10001 issues.

According to Riclbard 1Asniak,

""'-of-'cmic-w:.:sfurOT.
the~ for

the uoi....oty's Bdu-

cationa.l Technology Equipped
Oassmom (ETEC) ...... done 'bert
at UB OYa'tbe !lSI five years. These
an:cum:ol.lycallcd ta:hnciogyclassmoms intbenatiooal """"·They can
ba&gt;e di:Pn&lt;:e learning rooms. or be
• lab full of lllic:rooompula.
"lu Ibis cose. """" lalkiQg aboul
~ the fioculty in. ~
baD .. cla!i5room situalian. ~·s a ooe-&lt;IIHD8DY leaure ball
model. The HJB: classroom is c:mtmodoooninsiNaor's~­

what we call a podium---'Wbk:b bas
intqpllld no ;, a
d ec~uca­
timal tedmology deYioes.
"Two that me primary are; 1 highpower ~ worbLation
ClliiMCUd 10 the . , _ lbrough the
campus commuoicaticos ............
Tbe Olb&lt;r impananl """""""' is I
V'IS&lt;Jali="', • vid&lt;o-based over-

..netr

~Siandprojeotion

device that will displly wbatew:r is
put oo its stage on a Wleo projec:tor
IDOliD1ed from the ceiling." TI'IIlS-

.,....,.,.:iesare unnt:&lt;lesSUy using this
device, which allows displly of
mops, illustrations, materials in
color, etc.
The mos1 n:&gt;cently rompleted of
f nur ETEC clossrooms is I I I
Kimba.UTov.-er. T•runoresuchclassrooms are included in the atural
ScieooesComplu, Wbichopmsthis
SlJ!IUDOI'.

"Tbe ideo behind the podiwn,says Umiak, "is that focully requiie
00 tochnic:al support. As SOCII1 . . tbe
dcnisOf"''l, all devices are~
up. A VCR isioduded in the podium;
~'s a campus tdepbooc so the
instructcr con gel campus suppcit
ditedly in for poblerm. Some ba&gt;e
~ puj&lt;cliondcvioes.AII

bavekeyboardsandmicef,.comput·
..-s. Tbe instruclor con """ wbatever
theSillde:its are seeing on the saeeo,
i.e., lhemonitor in the podiwnsbows

Wbal is being projeaed "" oa:cen.
Wbat makes this "'""'" is that ~ -.
inlfpted ...1lb • singlr.. ooe-bullon
~Abop.-uineochoftbeoeclosorooms.. says Umiak, is • dSribu!ed
S&lt;lUil&lt;l .,._., that's ODII'lCCIIed 10 a
too, so the instruc-

"""""""'
sysli:m,
tor con use CD-ROM orWieodisc 10

eolrmoe c:la=xJm ~
The aauaJ E1EC progl2lll ..,..
developed by Educational Teclmology Services, Wbich Lesniak headed.
oow pottdAcodanic Servi=within
crr -we currently tour ll"'PP&lt; from
Olb&lt;rCIIl'tiJ""&lt;S' bo1b SUNY and nonSUNY sd!ools.." be said "These are
U5Ually fiii:Ulty and odmirtisaators
tryling to make decisi&lt;:n&lt;; .abo&lt;o classroom inno\'111ion and &lt;Xl!l..&lt;lffccti~
app:&lt;lOChes like oms.-

W

ith the introduction of the I0

""""' ETI3C classrooms lhis
20 pcreent of UB's oena.llyscheduledclassspoce will be
so equipped. Tbe goal. say Frank
Bonscbcclt and Riclwd Noll, is 40
pcn:ent&amp;&lt;SOOIIISJ!O&amp;'l'bie, thea vailability ai funding being the ddmninanL Meonwbile, the group is
using the ..,...]ts of • faeulty sun-ey 10 improve the
less glamorOus-but still vi- I
tal-class -ings.
According 10 l'eler Gold, associate dean of the Undcrgtadwur
College, UB foculty """" asla!d &lt;10
assess the suitability oftheir assigned
cJas.rooms in a survey disa:ibuf&lt;d last Ocwber and
SllrllJDe£,

~y tabul.md and...,.
leased. "Fromtbe list of 166
centrally-scbeduled cti.SS1001115," says Gold, "we901caed 58
cla!i5rooms"" the basis of~
cation, type, special
feoturos,ondsimilarityto oihcr rooms in
the building..
Faculty Wtte asJct,d lo
corntDOOton soood, lighting,
belting, sealing, AfV maintenance, etc. Many foculty provided

.&amp;:litiooal &lt;XlllliDOI1IS

and-.-.

209 O'Brian. n 10 Talbctt.

lllbulllted. Each !iel&lt;:ber 115-

TbeOX8frequl:a~m­

sianed "' • lleloda! elassmom ..,.

""'W!dii&lt;JilDd, ~lalq.alld
Olll:riDICes.. while the ..,..., a{ olcowlines:s and A/V ~ ......,,""'"""""'
._ _

~

oeived a ~ Gold says
he •• pleaoed with the....,.,..... ralle:
SO pcn:ent or 373 OUI of 7SO foc:ms
distribulci, ~ I'!JIW:llod_

"While ....,rmdno 'perfect· ct.a.s-

roam in our sample,· said Gold,
"tber&lt; are a substanlial m.mber that
pr$llll goodCllVironmctafa1eacb-

ing. Tber&lt; are, 011 the Olb&lt;r band.
clossroomsthatc!X:m. ttwt) romplaints. M001 r~ of mcst ct.a.srooms tte satisfactory to mos1
prof~.

"ThaiUB's~CW.

room quality impori3DI is shown b)•
the higb ''"" of rttom for the q"""tioonaire,thoirfamiliarily,.jthdassroom ronditions, and the large
number of wriru:n OOIIImi!OIS that
were filled .,.ith ddail D1M than
vogue oompblms..
Amol:1g the best:
Acbeoon A 17; 97
Alumni; 126 Bald , 10
and n2 Capen; 6. 19

llli:Rf'a~ ,

lilidGcld

vey bas resulled in lS """"" onlers
far lqlOiirs ond upbq&gt;
Oth&lt;r.............,. poup attl&gt;ilie,
include· OOIXinued n:view d dasr
room )Jiimin&amp; IIIXllls, and 1 srudy d
~cla!i5room .-Is os mare
oc:od&lt;mi&lt; ..,....,. ""'~ from the
s.uh "' Nmh CEnpus.
In od4ition 10 Lc5oiak and Gold.
assessrnr nt group members are .
Sall) 'mliO: Olta1aoo (Confi::rmces
and Special Everas), Rm Ocbocki
(Convnunic:alion&amp;Engioeenog Sef.
' """' •S&lt;:att Danford (Faadty Smarr Faciliti"" Commit,.,.), ltieh
l:lootbewicz (Cuslodial 'SerYit:esl.
Prof. Todd EV8DS (Oral Biology).
Susan McNeiU (Millard Fillln&lt;ft
College\, ~ l'lf.mb:a(lteoords

and Registtation}andAsst:!oiolltf'lo.

-Sean

.....

-

�..

2
H['\rrs
~

~

-

.._..IlL ........

clriLow 11&gt;-

c8fncuuclllrln

cxme Hol.slng o...top.
menr Clric "'
ue

Schoal of t..w. &lt;eceMid the
Canlaa Med811rom Noegera
~on~28The

- d . pre..-d Ill Noagara'aiiMIHII ~end
_ . . OOt1YOCIIllOn. os ooven
.en ve-to aw-n New
Yorl&lt;er whO has rnede a ,._
jcr oonlrtlulion 10 build..g •

Multiculturalism
not a new issue
to Maxine Seller

juoiiWld ~lA ecaety

§1==
..no- honored b-

.,..,. 1

\Ohch .-allCJI-.b--poll
ClCltiXIt*""' .... d~M!*Jp­
mert ond nwot~QMie. d pot·
.....-ttoJai'lg b- ....
lm1aliB. disiiJiod ond lownccrre ....._Belote o:m~ 10 lll. he walled b- ....
o.v.icln d ltuo1g cl Catdc
Owtiec d BJialo

SOCIAL WORK

~·y­

UNIVIIISifY:
........... Seldl ltle
kill...-.gf10 of the
School of Scdal Work al UB.
has receM!d !he Slgn!1C81'11
~f4.wardlrom

Ohooi.Jr.-SIIyb-t.
~

ondac:tlalarly oor1tibutms IO!he

fteld The
-d•pnoSEIDI.

lL'J'IO.Lt\.IIW.,

1-'a &lt;liNida ....

~&lt;*lc.

10 an
IIUl1nuli or

-

tnend oflhe College of 1\ns
arc! Saences for l.nJ!lU8I
ad1ioMlmerl.
f4. Pfofesso&lt; and dean at

UB $1t1Ce 1985, Setd IS nabOnalty known "' socoal

--«luca!Jon Circles and
lhe WI'N corrmunily as a
foi&lt;-Sifl08' who has renewed lhe !radibon of IOCI8I
c::omrnet1la&lt;y through song
He reoeNed a bechelor's
degree In 1962 fran Olio LH-.ersly. a.no'10 a ,._.s In
aoclll- fran UB h 1964
ll'lda~frantleLH­

-atyoiWi!ccral"' 1970.

--tii*AL

PH'tSICS. GEOLOGY
U'ACI:
CU..KIIIM'aWP:
ll..tl: Wit 1
a .senD
sludyi'lg physics ll'ld geclc&gt;gy at UB, has~ awarded
a $10,(XX) schcllnhip from
lhe National Space Club, .,
organization of aaaspace
~ watdno to foster
space 8lCpknilion. Wl8().
ZOt1ik was chlsan from 1 10
8PI**ts from 8Chools 1118!
inciLded M.I.T. and Callornia
lnstiii.Ait d Tachnology.
SleYe o..arnk. a merrber
oflhe Nalional Space Club's
~ COITIT1illee. says
1hal Wiecmrek was the clear
choice for the lfWflld. b&amp;-

.a.

cauae ol his exteniiMt""""

inlerpreli1g data from the
Apolo 17 ,.....;oo and the
Magelan mission 10 Verus;
his~ grades. -his

""""'wtlh Jotn F. King. a

nalionely fiiOCV'iz8d proles-

110&lt; of Qodooy at UB.

ISMaodclr.-&lt;n~ty

inldlectulls • the
Civil
War, ohe A
butwu!Gid Cbal sbe
......ucs bo..e 10 10 E&gt;anJs&gt;r 10 do
ba- n:aan:IL SeJiu morrled and bad
....... •
)'5,1111!..,
wil&lt;:bed
bc:r field to Ammcan Jewish
IOr)',doal&amp;bc:r~ ... ~auc

moybe hot '
..,Americancamthe 1990&lt;,
bot 10 Ma.dDe Sell&lt;:r they .,. the
Leooer,alnnsh~leador
ISSUeS ohe' been dealm&amp; ...ub all
in 19th c:aJI
PWiaddpltia.
!Ghfe
Tbat U'itd&gt; ....,.,., bc:r ... the
•ve beco 1&lt;:0iCbiD,z IIIUilic:uln.nl
path"'
udyin&amp;
dhnlc "-1 lltid
""""'*UBsiooel975,"fiii)'SSela,
a proCC~WDt in the ~ "' dhniccommunities m the U
Educatior1al OrpnmitiOR. Adnun- conttnU&lt;II to tlu day, S..ll&lt;:r A)'i
"Sintt tbea.,l've lllO\'ed.., toCXJIJI·
islnitioo and Pdicy (EOAP). "I bad
ODly I bondfuJ ri ~thai. but
pare immipaot""""" tocaoloruzcd
'ties likr Nati..e Amr:rinow I ~to tum lhl:m .,.-.y
cans, AfriC&amp;D Amencans. ud
"A lot of my~ in minority
is;ues, in how pc:Pplr iclcntifylhl:mMcxac:aa Amalauls, • ohe Yi·
Ill the We '(l()s, at a..cb County
oel•es and integno~e thcir diiT....,t
1dentiUes C&lt;liiiCS from the f-=t !hat
un ~(DCCC) near
Pbiladdpbia. Seller taugbla coune
I'm JC'Wish lUll! ~"' up m
called ~ OIDal In Soaely" lbal,
Carolina in the I
"Seller soy•
"My father wos
&amp;hesays,tbecol• PoUsh lm.DUqeadmimalrabOll did DOll
grant. Jun Crow
-n.: ...........
Ia
,....., .WI
fierce 11 that
movemenl
da.......Jirld .....
ume, and I alto
bod to contend
..,yin&amp; thinp
that I bad
wnb Southtrn
to
arutudes toward
tbougbt for a
womtn So I
lon&amp; time ,·
tbi
I alway•
Seller U)S
boda5m5eof
'"The admmiswhat it meant to
u.uon wouldn't
be tnargiDal "
pay for the
Selie r • •
course. so we
mocbcr ..... from
cbd it for fnle,
the orth, and
and they
Sell&lt;:r- north
wouldu 't &amp;i ve
10BrynMawrfcr
US I dasoroom
..,...,llillgblit
collqe. "I bad a
mealotin hislory
in the cafeteria
tb.e re-tbougb
afu::r the lunch
hour. A local min.is1c:r evea ..,_
we didn't uoe the word mentor
thea-named Helen Taft 1\IL"Jin&amp;. ruscd of cousin&amp; di¥&lt;Jl&lt;)OL Bur
wbo ..... the da..P.:,"' ~.... &lt;ideo~
eventually the courw was rqularTaft, and wbo sbowed me !hat a
ized, and we evm ....,.,., a daycare c:coter ...
WOOW1 muld be a iidlolar and have
a life, too," Sdlcr says. "Havin&amp; a
At UB, Seliuc:unaWy teliCbes
rolemodd is extremely imponanlCOUl$CO 00 the History of Educait was the fust time in my life thai I
tioo in the EOAP Depanmmt as
well as special history .,.,..,_ in
lboolgbll mipi do 50ir&gt;l:thirt&amp; other
cthnkity and education, theeducaa family.However,bynomeaDSdidSellcr
tioo "' ....,.,.., lUll! the educatioll
get a feminist educatioo at Bryn
of minorities in the U.S.
Mawr, •he ay•. "We weren't
Her ooutSeS empbasiz.e studytaught much about women, and
in&amp; what .:br calls informal as -u
ootbinc about minorities or Jews,·
.. formal educotion. Sellcr 51)'5.
SeJiu Sl)'i. "I was u-ained to worl "I'm interested in the role of
with historical doc:uments, but not
women 'sclub&amp;, labor unions,"""""
in theCCIIlten that lata became my
papen, parochlal ocbools ud
focus. I try to deal with my stu·
senlemeat houses in educ:atioo. I
dcnJs in I .... y that recognizei !hat
look at all the diffcrmt environthey, too, may take what I'm doing
ments in wbkb people learn,
lUll! go off in their own dirt:ctioos."
whether tho6e environments come
Seller earned IG Ph.D. in hisfrom outside, llkr public educatory at the University ri Pennsyltion, or from within the pnup.•
vania . She planned to do a
Sela istbemhorri. number &lt;I
dissr:rtatioo 00 the role of Fn::Dch ....,.__bcolisana.cbiMatyriOib:a-

.,.....,n

"Multicultural
education is only
onepartofa
program make
our society nwre
just and open, and it
is not a subsrituJ.e
for other kinds of
change."

!han""""

.

lUll! .. ......,. eel cdlnic:ity,
mcludin1 To ~d:A.,..ncL A Hutory t1{ Etlutic Lift U. w UIUI.ed
Slaus, •11iclo
wrooe. abe )'5.

IIOD

Oilier

"'lOC1oll,.,.

form~
inch•diac
better fi-

wben ohe realized tbc:re ""
tutbool&lt; for ba- minorities cot.trOe . DM&lt;ilt&amp;for
iidlools lUll!
.... Polley.
11 BCCC and .. IJV&lt;II I &lt;XIIIID&lt;t
to ....-ile ... She bas,.... fllliobed
JObopponu£Jw:atcn u. w UNUti nitaes for ..._,ties
Sunu. 1no-J99J.
·u be
• llkiculbnl cdacatJoa IS only
published ' """"' lUll! is. ibe
one pan of a prop-am to maliz our
51)'5. I book lhat iDoarporales di$0CidyllllftjuMedcpe~~,IUII!it
YttS~Iy and dolails doe life
...... a tlllbolitlu for other lr:iDik ri
of 66 in&lt;:l
l1ive c::banae.. Sd1cr says.
Amenaon., Puerto Rican, lUll! kw"UB bas 10 take I IUIId,
to
.............. -u ............ ftclln maliz am.-a.ive aCti&lt;a a reality,•
......,. other eduUc IJOUJI5.
SeJiu ..,... ., ~ ••• i
UB dido 't take allaad
·
ell&lt;:r is the eo-editor "' tbe bote speed! wben Xhalitl Abdul
forthcomiD.&amp; series from
~
~llaadfor
SUNYI'Ra, Votet:Stl{l~ diWISI!y, but.
..... speed!
well as r1
aboul ... spet:ifit: poop. ...
tawbois
.•
Drlfu•ocu: DilL
c{ldomty,
c-..uu.uy, tUtd Pbuuh.stic Sod~tile- &lt;idle curtlJ ill rk UIUI.ed SrDra, a bool&lt; .:br ,_ Dlllicalunl ~ Sdl&lt;r
is ....-Jy .....tiQa ... . UB
&amp;do
lJer aeademic life profcst1015 Willian! Fbdlor- riEa- beenpatly-=a. "My expe&amp;lith. David GcrberoCHistory,aad rience at UB bos lleraap&gt;d ,. ..;
l&lt;qcGuiwtofMotlem~
ohe uys. "Like m a y - . I've
and~
had • dleckt:red aad lon-e
SeJiu is llso adiveOUIJiide UB. 1altlbt •lots ri plac:a. At UB l'vt
She is one of the foundin&amp; IDOibea been .r - lo lcacb wboll ..... to
ritbel'n&gt;Oo:liccNecwultiD. w.... lcacb, aad bave had .,...,. support·
em New Yor\, lltid is vice praiive~·
8
deol "'tbe local Burau "'Jewish
Educatioo. "1 fed .... impartaat to
be IDvolved in cliff.,_ CXJIJIIDIIIIi- '
ties,· Seller says. , enjoy politics.
altboup I doa't aiW1t)'i get climctly involved. But I'm hopeful
that one can ·maliz a difference.•
Sell&lt;:r .... multiclulturaleducatioo as atn:mdy impcnaD1, becauoe the United States · a diw:ne
country, lUll! because .:br believes
that multiculturalism is a pcUtive
value. But ohe 51)'1 ohe hopes thai
a multicultural curriculum de-. 'I
become 111 excuse for a&gt;Oidlac

w-•

S

w- ..

eo.-

(WII'Cf'Qftfl#f\aJCA'f'IOHS. ._., A. _,..EDI'JCII .--. AIIOOo\l(EOnCM .----., Mr~ -., ....... ~liMtOftl:l'a.. ...... -. ~ ......... - . -

'

.

�..
-

3

UB joins 61 other institutions preparing to
Senate reopens
take part in new CAA peer review program d!scussion of
=Eddor
-~certltladoa·-10·-m--aside a171ZS use
doe

CAA' o f~ . . . , . ; _ t o

iarqriryill~lllhletlc:s,-.,..,.,_

Hl! UNIVERSITY 81 Buffalo is
one o( 62 aol
and ual~
tia aet to partlc:iJ*e Ia the finl
IOGIId o( a - NCAA peer._

lavol_,. Ia the '-OIVtioa 'a ..tf«&lt;leey.

viewPRlPDL'IbeWiivenily._

A.cc:ordillciOdleNCAA,tbeaelf...-..dyo(-

formed a--u.
.
toprq~Uefaa
mquired &amp;clf-«udy oC adlldb iD doe r...
five:re-olthe~aadtoaollthe

tolbe

·

•

wide~

oelf-«udy ID -

teomwill~tbe

o(

~with

tecnlitiJI&amp;,

'

6 opel'llliaa priDclplcs
ill-=11..-•
otaldudl&amp;, lllbk:ua'

~aclr:pe.bebavi«o(coecboa

md playm, pdolllioo ..... UB and aU ils Division I CllliUIIIel'pGI
must s-rticlpeu In the.new peer...eview propam. The Ia« J"'UP wiU tqiD tbc proa:a
In the 1997·9hcademic year.
J.,.,.C."-.,pro(_,..o(COIIIIIdiDc
aad ~ poycbolocy, dlain tbe UB
._q committee for tbe NCAA &lt;:atificatlon aelf«udy, wboK lllallbru are lisled at
rlJbt. Four&amp;Qhmnvnitt«s wiU ........ - rials as1JOCialed with tbe four ....,.. 10 be
eumbledas""''lired bylbet!CAA: They art
Gcwemance aad Rules Cornpfiance dlolred
by Demis P. Malone., J&gt;iaUn&amp;uisbed SeMc:e
Protesaor o( Electrical aad Compulcr EoaillllOllin&amp;; Academic IDiqrily,cbalndby Alfred
D.Prioo,diroclor, J'lamia&amp;and IJai&amp;II,Sdlool
o( Aldliteaure aad PlaaDlnJ; FiJcallnlc&amp;rity, dlaired by JobD O . ltJan:r, dimctor, Selldeal Fioancesand Reconls; and Cammitmmt
10 Equity, cbaim! by Mary Arm Sharrow,
~ clcaa, Sc:bool o( NIJISina.

puaatlllltihMapo!IIIO-be"~y

raa......-.. oppxtlmllyiObdorm.....

aboul the
""" .....,.... oC
adolelic:a.....-.lbecortillcaliaoproc:cu

-a

tiacly • pat o( ay
ill5titotloa '• oeif-

ltlldy; tbo: baDdboolo:
reads." AI Cloeac pi'Obl&lt;ms00111e 10 JiP&amp;, tbe

tian. TheyarePIJI"""'""-..t..etberartiOiwt
n:portis ...... to .... lbedalasbow."
According to the NCAA, llhldicsoertilication was approved for Division I institutioos at tbe 1993 0011-w.. as a key pan of
tbe orpnizatlon 's reform ageoda. Certification ...... oriJinally introduced i.a 1989 and
lested in a two-year pilol propam.

FK-

..S tbe

s-

The lllli-.1ty-

&amp;df
proa:awill
offor a forum for oua-

1

from lndlvidu&amp;ls with a wide
nnae ol espc:ria&gt;cr.. •
Ao:lcordilt&amp; to ., artide ill the Mm:ll 23
TJttrc::.ltrottide&lt;(Trll)vr
~ "The :r-Joac ~ a~ ol
spec:ialiud ~

• eMir:, a..,._ o(

llllivenily

a -··......_.....,a

.....,.,.

AifJ,od D. Pike

~a.
~

"'"""*

hlya....,
..uMolia
~

Dmd

Adolab

c.

HE UNIVERSITY WTU..bostacoofen::nce, "Voices from Tuttle Island:
Issueso(Contemponuy Native Identity" on April 8- 10. Free of dwge
and open to tbe public, It wiU cover issues
pc:nincot to Native Americans and tbe gm-

H. . .

eral publk. AU events wiD takr. place in
Room 170, Fillmore Quad in the Ellicott
Complex. witb tbc exception being • Saturday social &amp;cl&gt;eduled for the Buffalo Room
in the Fargo Quad of the Ellicott Complex.
The conf......., will open at 7:30p.m. 011
Friday, AprilS, with a rcceptioa and saeenin&amp; of an wledited vasica of "The Broken
&lt;llain,• a 1993 TNT film about Mobawl:
leader Josepb Brant and the effCJCts o( tbe
U.S. revolutiooary war 011 the Iroquois C&lt;lofedcncy . A discussion will follow led by
Tuscarnnn R.id&lt; Hill, UB lecturer aad coosultantto tbe film's proc!ucers.
Ovcrtheoext twodays,semilwsand warlc-

ducletheimpcrtanoeolindica&gt;&lt;JUI'lonpaJCI.

A

IDCIIIl tbe other inviled guesu ue .Jdm
Mobawk, aulhar, SeDoca nqotiaiiJr md
a locturer ill American Sludics at UB; JIDel
McCloud o( tbe TuLa1ip tn'bal r;roup in Washington Stale, a well-known arpniza' fa Native American rigbls; Tom Porter, lladitiooal
5Ul&gt;-&lt;:bief o( tbe Al:w&lt;sasne Mobawl: llllioo;
KG Cook, Mobawi:Ktivis lDd fonncr edilor
o(

..u....a.- Notes, md odas.

"Our goals,• said ooe o( tbe conference
organizers, "IUe to aeate awareoeos of Native American issues witbin tbe university

........ ,._.,..._

~
policy o( Public Way otlian •

UB,
and .....S IIIII coron.iaa . _ .........

...,.procedlln:al...cr-..1 _ . . , . . , .
doe lW:IIIty
I.
llltF8cultys-W .....
I to~propc.ed ...... la doe
policy Willi dot f.-- 191'1 poliey. tbey hlld
oted to support tllat 1917 policy.

....,.,. ill tbe

a coerti-

PubiM: Safety Officer Jom

........ . . _

~. -

fial

-

....., die

dlftic:ldoa; ~ ..... the bMck

ill
wllicb Pubbt Safdy oB"..... -lock tbeir
~ wbile. tbeir pmo~--.
.•
~~tbe-­
wapaa 0111 o(

""a ...-w
Be...,.._._......,

"'1 ecciv1liea requited 110

._

tbe bo1_
doe
daDJasoln:tr-mathar .......... fn:adoe
bor.-Public Safety otlian- .... .,...
iD&amp;iclt tbei.r vdaide&amp;, f~
to .....,

-~
lhtlftnitJ-

spans pqJ'IIIDIM iDdi-

tbe c1isempowennctl o( women, U.S.-Canadian ~ bordezs and native ..,.....;gn~y.
A traditiooal Iroquois social oa Satwday,
April 9. will Include a dinner by ewtown
Loogbouseand a performanc:e by tbe Seven
Clan SingCfl of the Tusc:arora Territory.

.........

have 10 ccx.ider -

tbeir CJCI olf IIOIIpOdL

S

rev;e,.. oeam in June 1994
TheNCAA~

~tbr~qo~

aodtbeartifiabon~tbMampus...S

dial ...- ils own report fa 1be NCAA 'o
Colm!iDee Oil A1blotics ~
Ac:c:ordl to tbe Cluoluck, "AD mstilu11011 may be oertifled, cerufied
cooditions, meanin&amp; that problemt ideutifled by
the iDstitutioa or lbe peer-rev;e... oeam ~~~e
OCIII5idcred oc:rious enou&amp;b for full c:at~fx:a­
tion to be witbbeld undllbey art dealt widl,
or DOt c:enified, meaniD&amp; that problemo re~ in the procoos IUe CCIII5idrred by tbe
ocmmituoe to be · very aerious or pervasi~ •
md must be com&gt;c:led witbin a specified
period o( time..
"By ....,. l!m - wil fl'(a ""fUll-*
flam tbr ,_....,.;, CXIIIIDitlee,"llid
"'n ~ 1995, we.,.. maloe
to

n.-..

a"""""""'

&amp;.M,cibonpt..~~a.u..ycillirr

from ..... - . " HeUied: -we-...e
-·reia~wilh~"

u

Conference to cover Native American issues
.,

.......·----

n-..c~-..._..,.

.soe.ne..lbot ...... beea pul f.......-.1..

~ot~q~

AJ.wJ~.c.--...

sbopi will be led by ~ from .;,..,
American oammuaitics in New York, Washington Stale, Onwio and Quebec. Topics in-

~oiNew-Yort:•

s-.

"AI ..,. laM~ -bad DO . . . .
ftoaa~~ .- lcb:r.aeald. -we

..,.,.. 8ci&lt;IOCa
o.ilo
Alll/cdco

catific:olico pmcelll bepa Doamber
3, 1993 witb a vloit by two NCAA staff
members to orient the UB ClOIDIJ1iu&lt;e to the
purpoae md format o( the oertifiCalim propm. ""They explaiDed eut:tly ...tw lhis
was about md darified any ~ that
we bad,· aaid Hansm. "So ..,ilea that was
over, they hlld a cood llllderstandiDg o( this
univ&lt;nlty. We hlld a bea.er UDdersaaDdin&amp; of
the proa:a ahead o( us.The lleering c:ommittee wiU isoue a report on aU four areas beiDa ilUdied. the fiDaJ
vasica o( wbich must be bmioed by October 1994. (Moot o( tbe clala is DOW gathered, H.mseo reports.)
Canmittee md subcxJrDmilees iuclucle

ao.....,. ne UacoC

a-aid.

a.tooL,._,_

tlon for lllbletics, ......,
doslp:d to inllure thai

... ol . . ....,_ "ffcclidca

-w.

~-u.•~
~

~

s-.,..,.,....,.---

NIClD!II.SON, dlalro(lbe

10

-m.lbellatcll9...-;aJ peer·
rev;e...'aed by Ooe
NCAA.
....tobavc
u oC""
· · prda.bly • tbe
~- eald
"Tberc
be a

J - c.~ CHAa

WIJIICI!I&gt;IIIIIbauld~tobeia~

..,end tbleecloysbere, p.g owralllbelnfcama-

~

all, is 10 cenify. aad doe aelf
proc:cu lllbledca. aeaior
will reveal _,. ...,..,.. o( the 8lllldica
r-hy
. ~Ye aad J11011U1 wmhy o( pniae.
.-from tbe f - ' a l - . • Tile _._.y
•£...,. aa ~ J11011U1 caa be wiU Item tbeCal ""ap&lt;'&lt;itim o(tbe
bea.er, aad probloemo
will be ideoaf'Jed roo&gt;Self-Study Steertng Comm11t"e

vidual oo1Jc:sos are kepi
In proper perspectlve
aud Wldtt CODtrol . •
Amr:lllcotberd&gt;oolui-lllllllaaooooaly lftl*in&amp; for Ibis proc:as are
Ari11xa S1a1e, ~the Univasity o(
"WewiDaamiaecup-opmill~ · ~ Mlcbipn Slale, the University o(
to tlae 16 principeo," Slid 1-lmal. "If we boNorth Carolina md the lJnM:Isily o( W'IIOOOIievcwe're ia ~ wesay10.1fwetbiat sin.
-wiD
pllll tbM wiD , _ tbM p-iacipe.
We""''"""itoe8ChpmapewilluiiiLMany
imdve finmcial or ac:acbnic: ~ Alwaysweare......,orewe..,tollllldald?Oowe
,_Ibis pmape1 We a llzqiac ampy o( all
lhe dala thai we..., boc:alle 11011 Doamber we
wiD bavc a .... from a _,. tbM will pmollly

s-·o

budbook.Xey

feu December 1994 Yilit by a peer..-eview . i&amp;"OCIIIICiiediadoeaflilmalhoe-ilsaba,afta
CCIIQPC*d o( ~ bi&amp;ba . ..
cation aad 8lllletla ~11utt lcUD will....nfy that UB's aelf-«udy
is...,...md~-t.d~

adiDill-

·
fiMDce.doeadllodic
..tty

community. aad to Jln:D&amp;Ibea tbe rd.atiooship aJD01t1 atlve American UB Sludmls
aad other native llll&lt;lcnl populations and
local aati YC COIIIIJIIIIIitl"
Orpniz.asoaid tbey hope 10 reach Native
students from other Wesiaa New Y orlt colleges, the reservation communities of

Akwesa.sne, Ooond•&amp;•, Tonawanda .
Allegany. Cattaura11...., Tulc:arora and Six
Nations, and the non-I'Cia'VIlioa communitics in Buffalo aad N'.agara Falls.
·we cspecially hope to llttrac:l Native
higbocbool studentsbealuoe .. )"'OIII&amp;adults,
they ue facin&amp; maD)' questioos about tbcir
identity as Native people md eoukl beDctit
rrom .....,ortbe isoueo to becliscussed "'lbc
confen:ace,. tbc orpnim- aaid.
Theconfc:ralc:eisspanoared by tbeeo.mcil
o(~ OradololeSmdaaol UBand
tbe UB Noli&gt;-eAmeriam ~·Alliance. I!
.. CC&gt;-5pOIIIDied by tbe DeaD o( Ans md LeiltD, tbe i)qlatlmeal o( American SIIJdios md
tbe Native American Studies Ptognan.
0

mjtb poi-.! 0111 cbar tbo: black box
8CIUaUy ..... otlian handlctbeircfn&gt;queuly than If tbey
y kqJI
them o1 their Alles. "It's ~ potict
pocedure that tbo: .,. )'011
your"""
doe beacr olf )'011 - - Smilla IIICI.
Williolao ~ o( f.lt&amp;ineerUI&amp; asked
wbetbe:r tberc
Ia wllicb Public
Safety ollicm ........ 10 ...... ..-..p&lt;lll bul
...... ...-ly DOt ..a.ori2ed to cany them.
lee Gnffill. cliJedar o( Pui&gt;bc Safdy.
aiel, "The bigaa claD&amp;a 10 a pollee aft'icer
i&amp;tbeunbaown, ....t.el.beryou '~ ~.....,.
&gt;dDclco or wbMevcr You cloa 't know Wilen
a problem is goiD&amp; to occur."
James Lawler of Pllilooopby asked
....t.el.ber tberc were situatians 011
iD
wllicb it illlpaNM for PubUt Safdy
oB'ICUI 1101 to bave c-. md if ao, ~
tbe bMck boa wu tbe tx. -Y 10 boep

were-

.,.............siD111oac~

R&lt;Jben Palaa, vice preUdcat for IIUdaa
affaizs,oaid
tbeblllctbox.._. . .
a compiCIIIIIiac for baviq armed officen . .
caDipll. "The~)'OII'.-ebeeazi­

poticr officen aeed 10 be
armed • aD lima,· Pat-t aiel, "We are
talldD&amp; aboul • a leadeabip role in

llle . - . -

~policiac..·

8ecauae o( tbe compie1 lllhlre o( tbo:
propc.d cbanaes in tbe ar'lllin&amp; poliey. tbe
Foadly s - vt*d to poilpOIIIt funber
dehale Oil cbe topic undl oac:b time liS ils
.memberseouklbemaretbarouplyiafor:med
about tbo: panicullor'dew!.ol tbaae .,...._
R&lt;Jben Pa1aa poinled OUI that be - ' d be
,p.~ 10 wort with faculty members to clarify
cbeisoueosunouocliD&amp;tbciJIOPC*d~

in ocber busine:so, tbc FIICUity Sea.Je

1-' a ..-..alutioo propc.d by doe ncvJty
~ Slandin&amp; Committee.., T""""' ..S
Privilqes. The two-put reoolutloo -...,!
that ~ cbairs lbouid povide tbe
framew&lt;rt aad ~for tbe dewl&lt;&gt;piiiOIII o( tbe """"""' o( each jaDlor faculty

memberia thol~iacludin&amp;c:ltoc»­
ing an appropriate IDCIIIor iD c:oasall8lioo
witb tbe facalty member. It .._, SWlOd tllat
cbe e\'aluatian of chain for reeppoimnrmt

iibould COIIIain llrOII&amp; ClOIISidenozior o( tbo:
chair's Ktivities Ia facWij ~ •

�4
lllJ~· ·ooly­

....
OB iBUS(){ tJ( MJ&amp;IIepon 11 I
~ ~baden~. ihe
..,.
-.A~
old IDOlorcycle edwll~ ­

,,._.14

-loraly-....1

10 . ., ekiltHboveu lor wr a

.

,... .....,... ..,.,.... ...........
...........
.......,.,
..,.. J011 dedltoa&amp;foe op•)olb

.

'

A. Alia:" ..... dlrolfaltcrado~1 worllnl
diffi ·
for
tll&lt;1fldaala ~ ljull
'9 ..t
"'hal"t WqWic
Be
dill,...., """"1P of
• That,day I Ci&amp;1lilld Gaw:eee
wlduBA.fal
c.omm..dry
ad oWd If theyIll liiX&gt;qJiiDa
•
The- ......
~of the
l p 111 iJ:IIervlew.M-~ Byihe
M*'l' w. MoiiJa&amp;u
1919, 1 - i l l oc:bool.
A-.ifarOIIIJblld.. .
1 aot my ........ from
!1om
q !hlnS-)'ftl per· fmed 10UB.~cboulb ,..,.... ilan:publ·
fomna ce ill lbt
piniliJ1&amp; freobm&lt;n IIIIo l.iUie llloooty
Math Departmau.
I piWd math """--Iliad mjoyocl k
lie allo is. -ber alqthe way. rm r-imlod widl abiiDc:t
Key 'sOdcty and l'bl Btu
alpin. rm 1ia love with k.
II ls;titrKU!t to put lilt.., bold 10 &amp;able
bas applied 10 • ~ of "dream
IOJICibool.
dJen: are JU'Wdo.
sdlools• for padol1c .wdlel ill~ ­
Q. Wlud do ,... bope
.............
ics. 'libey Include H.INml, .MIT, ihe Ubi-·
be? ADd ..m It haw lien wwtll - Iii)' of Wilcx:milt at Mldisan, \J"B, ar&gt;d .
ed...UO.!
f 11"111-dloic:e. Comdl.
A. IIUJ!P'&amp;i!""""" bttheRononCoo.,..
Afu::rlhal,~plans oo•each ~
oatlon 011 May I 3 Tht ~of the put
;,. • junior co~~qe-_, hopes ~oe·n stlJJ
few years is aU ob on~ day.
bn" timt 10 play zoiC.
You' w ,p that oooklt: b ism eclw:ation,
Q. MaaJ y
I people tiDe! ~~- md oo anr;au~ldz it away from you""""
0
hamb....,..... bdon ~You
you haw it. I'm tooldna at~ at •
, _ repJKiaa moaom' •
"" Hartey- junior con., e. ~ ""
~ .a otorqd&lt;s. How clicl dlllt Job
tlll1l out. I mip 10 on ....t I'll my 1'11.0 .
-about?
You' rr CODSWI!ly
yoousdfolf it'o
A. Afu::r biJb oc:bool1 went to a trlldt &amp;ebool
......U. iL) Ycu are a «uderr. 2A boom of the
ailed AMI (Amcri&lt;:on Motorcyde Insti- day. I clidll'l -.il the
Bowl, I dido \t
tute) In Daytona, Fla.., for four mmtbs. We
"OiJI'Ildlod the OI)'UQ!iCII and lllaveo'il"""'' I
..,...., in dasseo for 40 hours,.., it was 'YaY 1110\'ieiin&lt;:eBaltma Dc:ameout. My family
;,....,... They ...'ODI&lt;Id 10 1&lt;1 )'OU 0111 ofdJen:
thilllcs I have m "ottiWde.• It's · P'*fl&gt;le
and into • jot&gt; quiddy. This ..... oot the 10 put Into ......rdii-tbeft '1 DO eJtp&lt;riOIIO.le
olfiCial fxtory&amp;ebool. wbere they moh you
like iL &amp;if~~ o cbnxlk ~ ill 1
cut your .hair.
t~sword.
Ht fets &lt;*t hi:s dnV&lt;r'1 li«lo.st. IJt dt.t
Q. Do you dri 1 Horley now!
plaun, lu! sportS "" impraslw
a
A. Oh yeah, I still """'both my bikes Rigb.l
~~&lt;ry4ifformt looi&lt;[rOiftllis ...,.,c~m...5ftava
nowl'mborrowingooeofmy parent&gt;' Cll'l
f=.
for the commote (from M!ddlqloft). I baYe
AMI was allundl of I"Y$ with lou&amp; hair
oe•er owoecla four-wbot! •ebide. Yoo ·...,
and leather jac\:t:l5 ttyin&amp; to make • Uving
doing What they enjoyed. Somebody OQCe aot 10 £&lt;1 your prioritia wai&amp;bL
Q.. Did yoar eq&gt;trtlst ill
motortold metbatthot was a good idea (be~ 1
&lt;ydts belp you ln lat.,. punuill!
Q. WileR's tho beard DOW!
A. at in any"""""'"" 11111y. I W&lt;'DI from
A. My p-andmother lec:turecl me regularly
c:anyin&amp; a toolbox to c:arrymg a book bq i:n
about it. Sbuaidshe'clpay me·S tOOtowve
litftaU) """' wotk. llbal'• beeo 10ft of my
it ofT. li-lly did In the 5UIWI1CI' of 1992,
tnJuble aU akic!&amp;: !'Ye had so many diverse
wben I helped "ith a fund.talto&lt;r for d••
Math Deponment (I tboogbl it micbt hdp intemols- llikt wor:lcht&amp; witb my 'bands. but
matb by nallll't is a solitary mental ensales, b!l1 it bad oo eflect atoll). But when I
ttlmt&lt;l· sa.atMIIIa.tkian,
•
ll'lllllfli'mlil., !be liBIIicllllcn pqram tft.er
~ .. _,.,_,. dqmc in
.
. . ~ o.:.- c - . i t y

,_,.·In

... .,-.·a .

,......_lnd

,....

c:one.

ran m

ooc.

tioo1,.

-yean.,..,...

1

&amp;.wr. I\DII I
uJ of"""'* May limeo you
IlDdy ........,.... 10 ~ for Delli , _ . ,

cmly by.

"'"'d.

cw.-1

Q.. Wlud
o(
......t oboal -

ypoo lone J011

-Jon! How
tnR 11ft tbeJ?
A. For matb ~ h 'a the "coek"
type. 1bett are limes wbeu it '• uue. Afu::r •
wbile, we I:Jr.Pt ro (eel -l•cbociol wU..
A friend of mint ome criticimd me far

•m:o-

alwayspu~matfwnancalteno5iMo-c:on­

.....ations. suc:b aa: -~ X lOOk C&gt;OOJrlle
Y.• Afta' that. l boc:ame YaY awue of bow
I said th'
MDit people go t~troqp life With a . _
SjiOilJ&lt;' attitude." There art ....... """' look
11 life diiJ.,.,..Uy. lf their shoe is untied..
maybt
because they ·,.. tiUJU:lll&amp; about
oamet.hirJg lllllCtllarger and men imponant
lo thelll. ...loldli&amp;eul jiCIOIIIe ..... ....,. .,...

it·,

Professor Raymond Federman is named to
universitys Melodialo.nes Chair in French
AYMOND f'EDERMAN, SUNY distinguisbecl
professor ucl a manber ol the U8 facultieo of
1:qlisb and OOIIlpU'lli~ tiletllture, bas ,..,.,
named Mclodia Joocs O:tair iD l'reDdl iD ihe UB
Dc:potlmt:nl.ol Modem Forei&amp;D ~ and Lil.eratur&lt;s.

Be willlloldd&gt;ec:bairfromSqlumbor,l~ ~pMay,

1997.
Tbt ~~ wfs for FcdermaD to
offer one graclllate -oeminat per - . . : in
Fn:odl.llblclles lobe COOIIol:rcd in flre:ol:ih, and
U&gt; coardiDaied&gt;e..., of lODeS Cbalr flmds for
earlehme,nt proau.ms in P~ench and
I~ JJitenlure, ~ mJd ,CIJitum,
He o1ao will actively )lr&lt;liDDCe botb oclvancecl
studies i:n 'Freodl at UB md ihe ...... -term
developmcot of ihe iF'micb sec:don of the
Depm:UDeDt of Moclcm fl&lt;nicn Lqua&amp;es
mel 'Uielalurea.
Mote .dwt so ol the-~

J'inD;b...mrn,~andlil&lt;nrtadlol­
- d ibeir tD have held !he 10111:1&amp; Cbalr

oim:e 1932. AliiDQ&amp; lhom ate A.odre ~ (lll40-41).
Micbd Bator (l96l-63), l.lliCJCIUC&amp; ~~...... (l96U9), Mic:td
l'ollawh ( 1970 ud 1972), JflllqiJO&amp; t&gt;errida (1'J7S). Mic:td
Sc:ms (19BU6} ...a1DCIIIt ftiCallly ,likmy lliCIIoblr Rolm4
Le~ (1 986-94) .

The PratdHiom f1ed&lt;mw1 is • pioaoaiDa bi1inpal
oovelist, poc1, c:ritie ODd lntzJslliiDr 1llbo bas JPIIblilbodlbaD 20 boob or ·rl&lt;lri&lt;Ja, ji'OI01cy au4 l:ridcism

.oa _,.,

-ysand~Hls ....... ~~

bemtrmslalodimoa~~""joy

• wide audieDI:c, ~yIn Euzope.
'Ills most ~ boO~ wCntlflctioa:
l'oslmodem l!s6oys" (SUNY~ 1994) II
an-ofmeulk:tiooor~·

1'hiCh ~be &amp;:sen'bes as a fldional fOnn thlt
..,., 30)'fllA&amp;&amp;OiDAioc!rk:I.UtinAmeric:a
m!~o:sasim~ll:lip&lt;JOSetolhe
I

tum&gt;oil olthe times.
The Melod.ia £. J0oes I'Jafesaridp
'WU ell&amp;blished~ J929 by Melodi.a lcoes,
·~ thald&gt;e eb.Wbe bdd by •a
llallve of lbnc&gt;r. of high lchOiulieauain-

menlS."

0

..... thelrpullllldlio.
Wluil's,_,.aillipe oflJB 111,........r.
A. U8 bas to warlt bard Ill 'b til!l"* of.,
~ ·10· peopk wbo clea 'I _.a..y men
~ I ........ people
- llhort ol
~ ibeir llllllorpld dope by jail Oil&lt;
cl-, bullbe
IIIey ~ r....

as~tum
offfroaa ....,COIIIiaa
bod.
lallothiDk it""""' bdp~
if lbt two
Wlft uuif'liiOd.
of
myd-....,aotd&gt;eMaia Sttoel ~ l
clea '1
maay Clllber JICillPie I
ba.., ..... bad il boea llirnpl¥ • of
INililinp imaelld of zip .......
Q. w. ............ ,_......,,...._..

._...how

_,

A. If you' te IDOl (ltboul ............ 10
Sill. you ba"" • bi&amp; pat .. Jdlilll ]i&lt;liiiiKif
llttoqh II. WOI'i bani But o1ao uy bard "'
g&lt;11 0111, uh lhe time to enjcry life alilde.

Parking lots
to be added on
orthCampus

n.. ..._...., wil balk!·-~

lot U&gt; ·~ ..... 160 CIIIS iDGpl!lll

part:ID&amp;IIIllthof~ 'Raiidatce Ballo
Cllllbe ordl c.mpa. ~ mo.!d
l:qiD · · • few &lt;ooeeb ud will be..,.,.
plooecl prior 10 lhe sun d lhe fall I~
~accorcli.q-t.o.u..cia Vio::el'n:si·

dent for SludaJt ABma Ctiffom a
W'llaaot Aid
llllifti!Sity
o1ao daoiplle a ponioD. dlhe ~Blot b
fal:ulty/lllft' &lt;lilly .iD
ill • ll1llkDl
lot.
'"1'llis procoa wiiiRODIIiD a lid ina:eose
in .,.. Iii*"" (for r-IIJ• . . and dcai$) ...,_ ibe NOM Catlpll," Wilsoll
said.
There is a DDOd, ..,.. WibaD, 'for m:n
lou for fll&lt;lUity,lstaff Wbo will be ccmill&amp; to
theNortb&lt;:':aqluswith .
ill&amp; of ...... Natunl Sc:ieacos Ola:qlio:L Also
pWmed is A!IO(ber "".,. pu!kin1 lox oo
Aupbuqc:r It&lt;*~ lieS! to die Cll.mpus ~
buiJdini; Ibis is ... re!ieveCJOII&amp;"'IIiaa-atecl with pu11:i1ra iD IMI.,... of lhe
eampus, Wilsan · ~
0

-··open-

�-~. ---- '"*

E!Cl.AJUNG CANDIDLY !bat
"I
IIOUII optimist ...boa I • priaJner of bopt." • natiooally ~ ll1llhor and.,._
pen 011 nee rdalioos 101d a UB
ud
mekeytoeolvina
Dillion'•
lieo; 110t ill..,.,.... · , but in
economlc puity and etnllr1iidDa
which rd'uoes 1o ClCI&gt;CeCie lbol
rKia1 wtlty is an Ullllllainablc goal.
pealdn March 24 in Alumni A1eoa., •
Comd West, dlair of l'rinc:eiOo 's Afrc&gt;American Studies Department, and the .....
thor of the '--oclling boo Rae• M~rs.
prsmU!d the Buffalo Federation of ·1hborbood Centers In&lt;:. CemmntaJ
He told a near-apecity crowd that "biston·
cally. democnlcico; are WJCimnined by economic despalr and po ttty " This da;p&amp;ir.
Wes1 argued, l...ts 10 &lt;hstrust and paraliOUI
between groups and impe&lt;ko any efforu 10
achieve racial equality
For West.
SlrU&amp;&amp;Joe for rac~al equality
is wapi primarily in the economic market ·
plac:e,and it is a struggle maD)' minorities are
losi . West said OOCI&lt;:I)' • moviDa c~
andc~IOIIJI= "matkdcuJwre" -•ilcn
manipulative mass .dvertising breeds the
selfiSh llllitude lbat il'a ·e....,. for
themselves" and where tekvision provide&gt;;
dl-..iOIIarY outlets that "let pecple feel like
tbey'rerea!Jywve."ln • marlcd-dominaU!d
culture, WCSI uid, eoapes bl&lt;e drup flourish and imponant oon-rnarlcd values like
loyalty, friendship, love and commllllity are
unclerminoed.
"It is these oon-mark.et valu&lt;s which are
at the core of the black freedom llrllgg:le."
West argued. "If they go, the SU\Igak goeo.·
H o -, West uid, even ,.;th a solid
foundation of these core va.lueo. many
people-especially ebildm!-stiU may fmd
it difficult to cope and suca:c:d iu today's
divme &amp;Odety due 1o a deterion.tiOII in their
SlaDdard of Iivia&amp;- He ooced that 20 pm:ent
of all drildren, and Sl p&lt;:r&lt;:e01 of black childrm, cum:ntly live in poverty. Mon: tba.n
four ofiO Americans, Wesudded, are IDOY·
ing downnrd """""""ically.
West rec:alJc:d bow, u a third grader in
Sacnmento, Ca.l., be was expelled from
school and placed in a opecia.l educatioo

"If this is the fut= of our"""""&gt; : Wesl

"Having a sense of
your own history all.ows
) ou to recognize the
interconnectiollS and
irt¥rdeperuiencies we
allshare."

program after be "beat up" a teacher "And I
bod IIOVUigand""J'P(Prtlvefamil) environment' 1lult'• wbyi,.OII't gi•• upon anyone
else- I' ve bad too much Jove, upport and
caring ever 10 give up," be &gt;aid.
Speaking with 1 Slyle that alternated be·
t"'een that of the dlstin uisbod academician
be i -carefully cboooing each word-and
that of the BapttSI preacher
grandfather
"'U-hmet.tcally liril\g off senteott after
sentence ..;thout pa~ for a bn:tib - WtS
said the oombtnatiOII of 1 marl&lt;d-&lt;&gt;rienU!d
culture and the debiUtatin&amp; ecooonnc te
of many minorities hi$ Jed to anlllltiClSphcn
of "spiritual impoverishment,• wbert public
problems like poveny and unernp)oy,_
are saddled onto privote individuals, namely
me poor.
Lao Angeles. a modem-day "~City."
loCOOidina 1o West. perfectly aemplif""such
Ill atmosphere. "When the riou happened.
pecple's attitude was, Til get my gun, you
get Y"""'-'

....--1. "then- are all m deep trooble."

AIJboup be ednutted be IS oot 1D opumiSl
w

dlcl y be.,-oresa,. a soaal
m tb&lt; I
Similar to the one
w!oob """"' at tb&lt; I
durmg which l!""'l
SIJ1def. ..wid be mad&lt; toWard riC1&amp;I equallfy
by l\IUire,

lllOVaDMl

est said this JD(&gt;Vetnelll ...,;n be keyed
to when peopk of difft:m~t
ures
they need toha&gt;'e a - of their owa
h1Sior} and a ...... of odla Jl'l'(lple •• bioaory
"Ravin&amp; a
of your _ , · Ill} " " " you to m:oznju the ~ and
~ - aU obare," be aad
·And havinc a of &lt;lOber pecp1e •• Justory all0"&lt;1'5 one to develop a"""""' of empo·
thy for thooee pecple "
Heci•&lt;"d the Buffalo F&lt;denuOIIofNe;pborbood Centers, In&lt;:. (BFNC). ,.iUciJ ,....
itself CCJW&gt;CI&lt;d m the nud-1
as a.n embodunenl of his bdlt'fs in . 'c:ommunity
deve\opmenl to implement social dw!
'"There ·• sometbmg happertina iD Bulhla,West proclaimed proudly "It (lb. BFNQ
ohould be a model far the rest of the natic11o.."
Today. the BFNC pro.-ides pport oervices
til&lt;e daycare, housing and \ep.l odvict IO
n:sidenls of Buffalo ""'gbborboods.
It's organiz.atioos like the BFNC. West
uid, that give him hope thai the black
elom 5tnJUie will triumph oomeday iD the
near future, And for West, wbme out ~&gt;Dol.
tentatively titl&lt;d Kupi FairA, will foc:us
oo Bllck/Jewish relatioos,bopc is what
spur Ibis triumph. '1-lope.. Well said, "is
what p.lvaniz:es others 10 believe iD cbem"'"'- and 10 believe thai the fWJre is .......
ended. eva&gt; during tbe&amp;e diiTtadt
~

W
te.nu

1

'

c--

....rn

Student with yen for Homer wins NEH award
8J PAIMCIA ~All
News Bureau Staff

HOMAS DIETZEl., a.n undergradu-

T

ate classics and &amp;!glisb major It UB,

is the recipiml of I 1994 National
Endowment for the Huma.nitieo

Younser Scbolats A ward. one ct me most
bigbly compdi!M oollege awmls in the humanities fteld. The •ward money will be.......:!

wfuodaSUJ~J~D£rprojectonA&lt;sc:bylus' Ore!tia

tmdertheilirection of John PeradcUo, Andrew
V.V. Raymood Prof...,.. of Classics II U8.
Pondoao calls Diead "one cllbe na lriJianl guyd'veeYCrJD:l. Tom isaboolutdy in love
with lbe c)&amp;;ics, and in pottiaJiar Mh liouB,•
be says. "He'J one d lbe best majors we've bad
in many years. He's made greot ·JlRl81""5 in -..
guogesvery.pddyandnow is&lt;lcJin&amp;anindop:Ddrn study in Hamer and Herodotus. He wriles
poetry himself, and bas ., iqmJsive abilily .,
lnll5iate dllll oootinls !dloltwly skill """' a
bJilliUpspoflbemaive ..... cllbeUitor."
Dieud's original plan ...... to ..::quire a
, •

,

¥ •":

•

'J 1 ,•. I

,. ~ ~··"., •

doclarate in EngJisb and tr.adJ in a uni-asily.
His a:- ill lb. classics bepn when be..,..
OUI to satisfy the ~ ~ 1&amp;quirements associaJed .,..;u, bis EngJisb program. ., .......m...d my dod ..yq ,...,. ..
"'"' no 00: Ulldt:lsmls Weslem aaltiR widna
IRIIIsmding lbe RaJnm and Grid; dviliza..
liens,· Diead says. "So 1t1Ja.oP rd try Grid:.·

Ani!lbeinllumt:leflowsbaib
Hio~
..,. DictJd, bcpa IIUdying anci&lt;D Grid: -..
£U11F and 1i111:ntuJe 'fOilm bio IIIlO did and they
. . . . in "'-long phone~ abod
11tucydides and his hisloriclll cob:ns.
Tom Diead's sideline is me rock " - ' ill
wbich be Js the ~gui...... l:lil p&lt;lllp is
aboul to ""' a .,.,..._ disc, wbic:b, be says,

has deYdcpod an . _ in Lltin. Sm;krit,

lll1ll&lt;:bed JP thai idc2 of...,..,.. ill
field a
all." It wouldbegre~~.beadmits. ifblslltlllic:
could further fund blseducatioa,..........,., and
writq. In any cas&lt;, be expects 1o .......Uy
explore the ricb meqpltorica1 COI1IItJCiioos
amOIJg tbe tell I:$ or a.n.ciut cultureo.
In tbi&amp; trpd. be .... IOJme!{. be says, ..
lllllJidhing d a pn:IJiJet."''m on 1be only one
lroliJd,• bCsays. ~ arellWJ)' of m cttb=
a-..1 in kdit:t&amp; • old JellS in,_~ I
think my role ill hi Jqpld is to~ ibole
hQb~tboull ...... topoint-.dlbe
-~tbe1Nbi&lt; ..........1belicNhE
no-.lbeaa of IIIDiinB i&lt; iaoffalie."
c

n.. .....a~artwo..,_Sincetben.b&lt;

f'«yptian.Copicand~and

has lddod a aajar in ciassical lilll:ntuJe ., his
~ ......... He"'""""'bls..aings
in Grid; JDiooapby, ~ and bisDy """'
lbe wort&lt; of.......,._ and other e-m Jlbilo!oPas. and • study d lbe Kmtn and the Old and

NewTIf Dieud's Jove ofthe Attic:ln way bepn
with bis father, William Diead, who onoe

taucJtl European bislory, be owes bis success
to both para&gt;ts. Boch bis father and mather
~y....,.,....ptbimlonaleverythingbe

oould when be was giOWin&amp; up.

"oouldbe~ ~becmoel'm.,.

I
I

�-

6

~T

. ~Jlll

lntrQducin . ..

OA SY TEMS,

C.

ERVICB &amp; REPAIR CENTER
'quality, drpendablr, profasional maittt('natter
seNias deslgmd for llte
Sta Unlversity of Mr York at Bu'llalo

___ ll.dllo._......

-. .,. . _12._
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...
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repair!!!

THURSDAY

7

- - C i d o p a . 5·
6~•s

p..m

all &lt;!Ilion

,...._..._c_,.,.
...,.w..

,... .......,.: Ole

-ofO..'&lt;A
_ . , . , . _ , 0.. J""""

sum.. a...-u PDO..C..

~0.. -.uo.. UB M.AA cao-

- 1 1 4 -. Nanil

An DepL Gollo&lt;y. Fine
Ans c..-. Campul
S.JO. 7:30p.m.

Tile llooip- ol

--YFU"IIYA.I.

UIIUNa

-W".ru-J . ~­

Slpt 'Ra o 4 l a t - a d
SolldiN: Sep.ntlqM)'Ia

f'"aiofOoo ...~---

--a.E-

1'- l.talil)',llloile Korni&lt;h.
R&lt;cltal Area. Boird Hall. Ounpua. NOO!!•I :&lt;5 p.m.

- -....
pmfof~y•
SUNY
a1
New Poltt. 849 Fine Ans ea.ocr. 'N&lt;xth Campus. 1 p.m. f1«
infonnolioo call 60-61178.

T.... lorllqla--. Ron
lnph;be. 1... p.JII. Call 645-

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- ~ FDnYAL

Lit........,,.,. Piuo-Josc:ph Rails UJCI Eloioo

I

KonDc:i!&lt; . ~Aru.Bmd

Rail. Nonh Campus 3:!0-5:30

p.m.

Vt..-.umar·-

....,_Sis, Uiuouata&lt; 195
Alumni A.n:na. Nonh Campul"
3:30 P'm. Fot mfomwion &lt;all

60-61171.
PHYSICS COLLOQ!,. . .

l&gt;yaUJic UcM s..u....,
Sta.U..5 tb&lt; GwaT,...;..
-Prof. c. "'" s....:...:a. Ku$1$ SJJile Univ. •s;. Fronczak.
North Campos. 3:45 p.m.

- E~­

l!q&gt;oriooeolal
Utili&amp;
cw..,..._....,
o.. Gnham

&amp;II. ·BiolorJ Dep&lt;., McGill
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.... -.-......... c.......
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..r..-c:aii631-0J67or
1.17-1111.

....
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MUt25oo,..-

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~o~..-ya:.,........,

....

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~.-- u.ioo n...

...-,
$1,..-. suo.
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c..p..up-.

Sintlqloo-­
• 'lltJSNET. 821
~

SU NDAY
Clolvod Higgs, lacul!y member •
the EamW1 School ol Mo.lolc: Wid
atreqpent pertomw Wllhlhe San

f'rllncijco S¥mPhany.
play
warl&lt;s !rom - a l ~.... Ap-1 10
• 5 p m ., Slee Concert Hill
Hos program
lealure
Bwdel1oJde's ~.., G M&lt;ncx

...

FlftloAuu!C. .

c--

....
~

onh

u.uc.

J S. Bach's SoNuo.., C. BMV 529, Meudelnolvo s
SoNuo "'F, Opus 65, DaVId Conte'a Pastor* and
Toe::.::.~&amp; Wid OunAI6'a Sulle, Opus 5
Hoggs m.de hos debut
the Sen FWoci8CO
Symphony.., 11187 Wid now perlorma
lham
regularly The ,...., Yorlr Tmes called hm 'one of
the bf1g111811. 111011 prormsing young oonoe&lt;1 organIsts to haYB appeared on the ~ IT'USIC
scene in years • The Cleveland Plain Doll fer offered
lhos assessmenl ·A gdled young ITOJSICI8n who
oornrno.r&gt;ocates warm alfecuon tor the pope organ
end tis literature. Hoggs met diffiCUlt tsclncal ctoa•
lenge5 Wl1h ease and p4ayed hos repertoore Wllll an
trfeSISbble tee~ong or Jill' •
A native ol New Yorlr City Hoggs held tvs lorSl
j)06IIJon as a church organiSt Ill age 10 As a leooage" . he loured
. - a l rocl&lt;/g&lt;l61)811soo.Hnusoc
groups as~ aod snger He eamed a
M .M degree at !he Manhallan School ol Mutt.
wt.e l1e was appoonled 10 the organ facu1ty upon
graduation In 1992. he joined lhe organ facu1ty at
the e-nao School.
Sponscn are the Oepartmenl of Music and the
Amertean Guild ol ClfganiSts

9a.a-7p.a.Sp.
ooml 111 Ill&lt; UB Stntqills md
Jlole.l'loytn ~For
onf......-caD631~3670f

37-1121

-BCITAI._.
Dori&lt;l H
Hill

-

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---

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_

Slo&lt;Coaoen
Admil-

-eo-.' ,...

..... S6, S4, Sl.

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645· 29S7

~ua o-:.r. ·

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--~I
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Admisoa:
$4, fac:Uky,llllf.

IU&gt;CI lllldoau; S I0, aU atb&lt;rs. For
....n infCli1Dilliaa call M.S-61911

--IIIUU.a

MONDAY

Uoc, lloj

~

)30

..

J

-~

lleioeii'AI•-tal Expc&gt;......... tloo EtJoloceiCioild·
bood A&lt;-aw lltydoW Lnb•la. Mkbod Slciobuc:h, 1'11.0 .,
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The Bub tennoS squed. undef the o.-.ctJOM of coacn
Russ Cnspel ventured 10 Hillen He8d 5 C lor a P&amp;l&lt; of
matches dumg the spmg b1'eak
UB crUI58d 10 a 6-1 VICtory ov. Margan Slate on
March 29 US won hYe of the
ll1'1g!eS matches as
tile Bu4ls onoreased
sp&lt;tng record 10 2-2 Ed
Wfqlflli defealed Marc Bane 6-1 . 6-2 in the nlrnber
one SlflQle5 malch to leed the _ , The &amp;Ms also
swepl the dlree doUbles malaThe Bulls~ earned a second victory dunng the
Utp WJ111 8 lorlei\
oYer Howard I.Jo'-S1ty US r&gt;t:Ni IS
3-21hiS spnng.
, Mtke F'I'Oulx leads the team
a 5-1
lndMd
record this semes1er On the doubles stele. Proulx and
Dave Monkarsh are •-2 at number lhree wt1lla WIIIJf'8'
and Kewt 1-bnphrey • • also 4-2 at runber one.

...... . . . . _•• Tr.c:k
The outdoor trad&lt; and ield $88SOO klc:ked off down
srulh as US had -81top-10 ftntShes in the Raleigh
Relays at Norlh Carolina State lJnMwslly on March 26
About 80 schools CQn1l)eted
US set two school records both in the &lt;Cx200 meuw
relay. The women's team of Tonya Reid. Sarah Wwd.
Terry Schome, and Claudine Watte fontShed eigi'Ch In
1.46 3 The men's team of Jamal Jotlnson, Fumu
Gakodi, KeWJ Wirl&lt;ler, and KttS Wtnlder was sixth tn

1286
The women's team placed II tn the •x400 relay
and ntnlh in the •xeoo ret.ay Jucfilh Novak was 10111 in
the 1,500 meter nro with a tme of • 37 3 The men's
learn was ninth in the 4XAOO relay
The squads conmued tt.- SOU1hem SWVlQ last
weekend at tile Colonial Relays m Williamsl:ug, Va.
Seventy schools CQn1l)eted in the --.t hosted by the
College of Wtlbam &amp; Mary
The men's 4x400 relay SQUad of Enc: F1Schleln, fumu
Gakodi, Kewl Wtnlder. and Kris Winkler placed lour1h
tn lhw event 111 3:11 5
Spitz was US's top indtvtdual ftnisher With a sotlh plaoe in the pole vaull (14
feet 6 tnehes)
For the Royals, Amy Grinnell's fourth place tme of
4:55.6 in the freslvnan 1.500 meter run led the team.
Ward, Scheme, Reid, and Jaime Hirschman fmished
seventh in the 4x400 relay In 3:59.53 .
---Spc:wm k1li:lnnolbt Ollioo

�.
Needed: cultural understanding as well as economic
diplomacy between the United States and Japan
:.~~CUI--·
HE Ello'D OF lbe Cold
w..... broupt wilh il

......, c:blu&amp;cs. Oae o(

lbem is exanplified by
the faiJIR ol
Unhed
s - J . - a:ade lolb durin&amp; the
aa--Hoo.c~at-IIIIDIDit. As
Prcsidaol
aid, eccnomics

of§}.

am-

became 1*1
atiobal _,.,;ry 00 longer

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impartara.

Slmilady, ~are woefully
ipoqal ol JapooL
.......
S....f...t~

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--""""'In
for bani! critidlm, wbiJe Ouodl or
British i n , _ oa no
problenw; Repeniaa 011 Japen is
&amp;aJODIIy ..
llld
lftldo 10 reilllorce *"""&gt;'JXS
Dllh&lt;r tblo build.............,
We ncod lo n:dlkll&lt; 1 bolf-«noyola&amp;lrunlllld ~

.......

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JIJIUI* llody
T"" tloou- triiWilllied

in lbe Uuil&lt;d
land diJTm:at

....,..ioricated

-ny £rom EacbllliDIDJ........, wbile .... ,

so .... u..latrd

1o dew:lop • ""' ol
wbral r&lt;fmcinllbol will """"""'
besic ........col two CXllllpla
adtula 10 lbll policy C1R be mod&lt;
0111 fum t.e ol ~ llld
lbol publo: opiniaa in bolh .,.,._,.,.
is ..ul-iolormod. As
tween~ llld
I . Staleo
powmott~thencodf&lt;I

""""lmowl«&lt;&amp;e and~
ispa.

1berr · on unpra~Sm' k;no..J.
edge base. Moiii~J!U~* ltUdmls

study En&amp;lish. altbough few have
opportunity 10 ..., it, and feo.-er )
still ....., tbe llxlil)' lo speak h
with ony niiCDCJ'. n..... k • c:oosidenble literarure ~
bolh countries-..,.,W liCimtt
lltlldi&lt;$1bound and small """"'
of ICIIdemleo; in eac:b oounay
know I good deal . MIDy boob
ow trlllSiated n..... arellso
gmfiCaDI imbaJan&lt;:o:s in this
~base Fer e&gt;ample,
vuy few AmenCIIlS srudy Japa-

lbol,..,..,

IJOIIIII..,._....__

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American J'OIIrl&amp; peoplr, bul rda-

Uvel)'fl'W~~

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climate, it seems as

...s

if educational and

£rom other
y Clalllaie

....-....s=-ly

~~o......,.

tier&gt; m J._ is to .......s.r wbethe:r
thin ,. ""}'}biD&amp; more tblt r._
can do 10 ~ atudyiD&amp; In lipiD
more lltlnldi.., ~

cultural reltuions
are taking a back
seal to hardball
economic and
polftical
maneuvering. "
£rom~ iDf,o

ol Saaace to . . . . . forelp
labonlo110L Tile~ """-&gt;cd
~take ilae
• 1 payt.dt for the baodi it boo
recdwd iD .... ,_ rn.. the u
• Jli'3IDM ...s other biaol'llele J.bOD

.........aers. J. ..

....,

"In the currenJ

..,...__ ............ w• .-!.
onbodl •

CIOIIIIIrics, his became mucll""'"'
llOI!Iplex. Tbt w . 011 , _.
in&amp; albowed thai domestic polnJcal
rtqllirtmmls and continwn&amp;
frictJon 0\o"U a:ade - the lrey
f.,..,... II preoc:nt. This" unfonunatt if one tabs 1 kxl&amp;-4&lt;ml per·
spective. Whit needed is
cultural dipiomocy,or beutt yet,
culnnJIIIlllk:rsulndi IS I lrey
~for aU rdationsbipo
~the""" countries
Consiclc:Dhle lgncnnoce per·
sisu. lust look at the in"'ses portrlyed 011 television or in the
~ ol one CDUniJ)' c:ooocmiJt&amp; the other. Tbt Jlj)MC5e
pubtic ..... I coioosal misundorS11ndin&amp; o( American oociecy and
Ameriam reality porttlyed even
by the bict- offKills. Radii
and edmic _ , _ - .....
demic.. Few in Japen have • dear
undmunding o( the complexity
of American culture and soddy

ll the
ID
~. n..re..-er
2,000 ~ llliCiems ID l~J*.

IIIIOie-&lt;lllly lbola 27,
-..darylcwl aod 46

.........

yes, tberr .,.,

other_...,. thai I

EnaJuh. ~

bas beaa ~ pacress. bul
there rs
1 lela&amp; way 1o 10
Durin&amp; tbe 1960&amp;, aJapon'o
""""""'Y bubblod...,....) nrw
initiariv&lt;s """"' launched. lncludin&amp; the Mmislry of Educaoon 's
p1lm to IX* I .
by tbe year
2000, and tbe p1mo ol groupo ltU
tbe Japon Soo&lt;ty f..- tbe Promo-

DOWID_,

can

tblt there IS I
for kDowiodtlt
llld ............,.., .... ...,...,.

"""""""' AI. the-~ level,
more IICUft- uac:mationa.l e-J.~ offiCCIIIId beeef" ~
~for for&lt;:tp llUIIenu
would be belplul. Tbe
ol
Eduaolion could , _ .....-.dna,_ rul&lt;s for U.S u a i - 111
lipiD. ...s cleYdop ....,.. Oeu"ble
for for&lt;:tp
Tbt
ol Forrip Affaus mu1d
. _ visa rqulluono.

or counr. 1a1ow1ec1et does
always 1t.ad 10 ............. boll
rs • bosoc _......,r for ,.,..
formed ~-rlrllkin&amp; Funllr:r
peoplr • aU 1n&gt;elo oliCCICf)' -.1
10 have-~ llld
lllformed ..•• • • cdex
~ ol the r.afJC R.iall"'**llld lbe Uoilod
1101
d

.........aers.

n..-.-

....,_
u.s Hicb

worth~ iD the

5doool JOCiali!Uda&lt;s &lt;lOUI!I&lt;S r;bould
.,.,.. ~ """''lJllfD: olthe
&lt;hlrcJnc v.orld """"""Yllld ol
Asiro' oamn'buiJon. botb ~and

PhiliP G AAt&gt;ecti iS prrJ#IIIua
wtd r:J&lt;rect01 oflhe ~­
Educatcn Cent«. Wid W'IWm 1&lt;
Cumrrw&gt;gs
IS.prafessor
of......,..
tJon wtt1 a__
or me Asloln

Stua.es Progt'M'I bam Ill U8

Did human activity trigger earthquake near Buffalo?
mecbarusm belund other eartbqulko; lblr
also may have been tnggered by human
N EAR1llQUAXEtlwsbook
CII)'Jerville.N,Y ,umllltown
aboulonhour~olBuf­

falo. bas geologists wonder·
ing whit triggered it.
Centered near the llrgca salt mine in
orth America, the uea where the March 12
earthquake wu felt bas experimccd previous seismic ICfivil)' In 1929, I 5.2 eanhquak:e was centered in
Del1by Auica, dose to the
Oarendon-Linderl fault.
But 1 coUapocd roof in
tbe mine, about I 00 51&lt;&gt;ries bmeath the eanh 's
surface, and related fractures 11 the surface have
raised 5cicotists' suspicions thaJ it W1S hllltllliS,
1101 lllture, lblt prompted
the quake.

activity, such IS the filltn of _..lleys wnh
water for dams, and salr or coal nurunc
JI&lt;:Obi added lhlt the proposed udres
also are De&lt;leSSil)' to dt:lermint hov. the
mine, which bas been closed since tbe temblor, could be reopened.
"Because water bas been flowmg inoo tbe
mine at 1 rate of several thousand pl1&lt;&gt;m per
minute. and because dangerous level&gt; of
roclhane have been detected in the mine, III&lt;U
infonnltioo is required in
order 10 evaluat&lt; tbe IDOiil
appropriate sttalegiCS 10
rruupte lw:ard, • JICObi
slid
Eattixp.oal&lt;eo induced by
hUiliiD activity are 1101 Ill

"We have some
evidence that

points to a nonnatural earthquake

source for the

"The question of
whether the ncent collapse of I portioo of the

Cuylerville evenL "

Alao Slit mine resulted
from the eanhquake, or
induced it, bas still not been resol...cl.. said
Robert Jacobi. usoc:iate professor of geol·
ogy at UB. "We have some evideoce lblt
points 101 oon-llltural eanhqulkesource for
tbe Cuylerville event.·
Toftndoutjust what triggered the quake.

Jacobi and John Fountain, associate profes·
sor of geology at UB, along with LeoDudo
Seeber, 1 sei•mologist II Columbia
University's Umoni-Ooberty Earth Obser·
vatory, have prcpoacd 1D invesl.iptioo.
Tbe reoean:b could shed light "" the

_,.-

lhlt

uncommon.

Seeber

slid
A """"" example

curred

on

Ashtabula.

1987

meclwucll effec~S, • be wd
A common practiCe an nu:nes is toremo"e
ore whil&lt; leavmg ptllan os supporu for the
roof In Cu}lerville, 1 600-x.(o()()..fOOI por·
tioo of tbe mol II tbe """"' colllplcd Tbt
nune is about 1,000 feet deep 11 this locaboo

'l'odctcrmine wbelber theCII)'Ierville,_..
I mk event ,.,.. naturll or wos due to the
mol colllpoe. ..,.-en~ types ol &amp;l.udios are
bein&amp; proposed Tbe ceoJoci5ls WID! to de·
tc:rmioeeuctly the ue&amp;O\'er which tbeeanhquakewufelL TbeynoteiUiarod&lt;collapse.
lil.e a landslide, t.eodsiO produce vibratiort II
low frequencies, rathr:r than the high frequencies thai c:hara&lt;:leritt eanbqulkes.
Tbty will eumme existin&amp; ocismograpb

records 10 5eelftbe se
,...ve ~
rs typtcal of Dllural
c eYel]lS, ond they
will udy tbe fra&lt;:tutes • tbe ....r- ·~
tbe colllpoed root

Ftactures- ol prtrtJcul.ar imaest.lacobo

...d. trecou- tb.y may be providiD&amp; pathways for the gu and ......,. 10 flow ihrou&amp;h
In Weolem ew Yark. they are diff'tatlt to
delecl ~ tbere are DOt IDIIIY roc:b
e.xpooed.
\JstQg I proced..-e developed by ""-"
tlift and JICObo, the reoJoctsts hope loaok
·he fractures by studfin&amp; tbe COtCelltnlioa
of methaDe in tbe ooil Other~ lUI
may be .....S iDclude freld m&amp;Jllllll and .e.
~ lJaiSlD&amp;. iDcl
low..ttitude iDfratt:d pbotoppby

to~O%

your

ocm

oruo. ...~

was~e Ouids wm: being
cbspor;ed of in I doq&gt; well.

"lbett., mooy things
thai we do 10 tbe earth, such os aeating m;crvoils, drilling oil wells, ... digging coli..- iroo
out of mines OS doq&gt; IS I mile UDder the
surface. lblt can weaken the eanh ' s c:rusa
and triager "" earthqulke..- said Seeber
He pointed out lhlt old coal and iroo
mines are commonly fOW)d in the eastern
and midwcstcm United Stites, particullrly
liang the Appalachian Mountlins. "Siooe
these mines and other moo-made structures
below the eanh 'a ....U.ce are widespn:ad
occurrerx:es. we 5bould be &amp;l.udfin&amp; their

Tc Technologies

(716) 838-2745

835 &amp;glfiiDod '""'- TCIMI al T-m, I(( FAX 83H!I95

�- T, Sa4 _ _ _ _

Architecture's
show. n' tell:
it's Atelier '94
VERY SPIUNG in 1D d,plasiOII or •-d~ mthu&amp;sm..•udea~s In the UB
S&lt;:bool of kchit=ure
aodl'lanningpqmtAUli~r. a pta
exhibklooondopenbouselhllttells
the Western ew Y«&lt;&lt; ClOilUIIUDity wb8l the lidJool ja aU llbout.
Aldi~r lnditiallally {c:allm:$8 major·eo.hibltioa orlllldr.tpclua~e llld
grac~uatc work. rnxn !be &amp;ebool's
design, wban ~ llld 8lebiICCture JliOinliW.

This year, 1be lihow...nd•lell
opens at aoan 011 Friday, April 15,
In the lobby llld emlbitioo
In Ha~ Hall ·011 the Soulh C&amp;mrus llld 061 door Olllby JUIJ in

"*"'"

u.

JOroomsondadjac:r.ntballwoJL A
puhllc open bouse will take pl:.ce
from S-9 p.m. lhat day.

s.unloy, Apil 16, - """"
"""""fix high !dlodl ......llld lbt:it
f:omili&lt;s will be bdd in bcih blilllings
&amp;om tO a.m. 10 3 pm. e......""' fme
.. c:~Jot&amp;eandqm II) lhejUU:.
Saturday evening. architecture
SIUdeDis and aJwmj ...ill bold their
annual OlliiWJie emwvopnza, the
BeauxArts Ball, Oil the IIOOOallcry
m 11pr11 Sired in Suffitlo. Tbe
""""'is opm lo the aduli~pull&amp;. FCJr
infOillllllim c:aJIGary Day,829-3485
ext. 308 &lt;luring business bours.
Atm.r '9f exbibils '""""- oev,&lt;nt CXlmlnUIIi1Ypujeas. Ooe is. pa&amp;sible Bufalo "Cd:illcsme DSia"
IM~""'YS IDIIdaptand""""'
in&lt;lsrial buildings adjaa:rliiD tbe silt
d lbe Oc&amp;&lt;;roods Arena pojocL
()a

lhen; indud&lt; SIU&lt;Ient waterfront design projects lhat will
be shown in Hayes Hall, along wiJh
a tdated exbibitico or Horizons

O

Commission plans for the Buffalo

!wbor and aquarium.
Gciduau:~will make sev-

eral distinctive pm;emat:ions. They
include a series or collalxnrive

design and p1mning projects tlw
"rcinveru" lbe City of Lackawlllllla
by attacking ll141jor issues related to
a ~ve wban redevelopmen! plan for lbe city.
Elllibitorsalsowill pm;eoue.rtS

and COilSI:nJctioos that e~plare surfaces and boundaries in architecturaldesign. For light mavens, tb=
wiD be a "cube farm• consisting of
dozens of cubic structum; devised
to capture ligirt in unusual and effective ways. Studenls also will
mount a small displ~y introducing
dcsigus for a new generation of
U.S . embassies lhat reflect lhe
cbang1ng alignment of world, political and economic bodies.
Original furniture designed and
c:onstruc:tod by undergtaduatcs can
be seen (and perltaps) carefully sat
upon in lhe Parker HaD shop, within
a few feet of Hayes IUU. Student
designs nominated for lhe annual
WESTNY /PElLA Award for aeative use of fenestnltion will be
sbown, as will desigus nominaled
for lhe Maubew W. Del Gaudio
A word, Directms Awards and the
Architectwallnstitut.e of America.
Atdier '94win reatureaspecial
memorial exbibit of work by Atilla

Couch potato lifestyle can re deaRy, study sho .
'

·~·
•i

Ulll
Bur-.&amp;aH
UB STUDY m 1bie
~bel........

...._

moruliry provides
newevidoncedlallifo

, .\

f

. •

~
~e

II)

,..~.

~

,..

li&gt;rsi-

bod • 60 pat&gt;entloM:r-risk. ordyiq
fRllllbcan dlaea....,, and. 41 pat&gt;enl

eellaad P,ysica:l ecdW!ia

lziduded tbe . . . . . of

..... -tty
....JI as

.._.,risk~
- ·fromeycause.

irlc.

"• .

than sedentary

.
.

allllidaedoax:ir,~Dd
n1
_ r. ...,trx I;Jpllt ol
llllldUiia or vddcl&lt;s 11111111. dljods
lil\ood, ek., a11o....,.. dtacn'bod.

f

caUy ocDYetnm ,.1Jo""'"" DOl obese

Body~

Wihidc;
- - __._. · or • .
.~vy-..,
____ -::::::!'-··~
or
- k ~ 11ary

Jin1;

.,

1

as oc:oudt potiiO may lxinaeculy

aa pnloaiQa or Wllllaiq tbe em,
and ~ Types ol 0111&gt;Cib1nos,
lpOdl and oCb&lt;lr .......... ...,.

important ,. .
The~ as found 1 overweight or obese
mm Who wore u ..,.;.., u their
sllnlm&lt;-z ooDeaguea ~ved oo

proOod io delail
lbiRJII.IIIhowod dlat hiaher ...,_
e1s ..Uvizy
wilh

or •

IDOitality Olatistics.
R=t!IS of the ,.,...,c:h, oondueled by a team beaded by Joan
Dom. roseardt insl1uctor in lhe UB
Depanment of Socialllld Pte¥....
tiveMediclne, appeared in the February issue of Circrdalimr ind were
pr""""ted MarCh 18 at the AmenCOD Hean Association's f4li&amp;miology Council eonr.........
'!be goal or the 01udy was to
cletenuine if physically
..._ less lihly to die of bean
disease in paniculor, and lh..: looget
in genem,lhiD men who took part
in littl• physical activity.
n.: bendiis exm:ise, per se.
have been dacumentod previously.
Tbe UB study ealoulaiU! the effa:t
of • """""' •• normal pbysic:al routmemlongevity and mmaJity ,rather
than focusing (I] spaciflC ect:i vities
sucb as walking, climbing SOlliB,

&amp;c:ti"""""'

or

l!:

s'
~

~
~

~

doing yardwotl&lt; (I' playing spam.
The !otudy partici- ..'ele in~ewed originally in 1960, after
beill&amp; selected randomly from the
general population of Buffalo to

take pin in 1D epidemiologicotudy .
Theoriginalsamplewasoompoo;ed
of866mm """""""the•gesof 15
and 96. The mlearebea were abk
to follow up on 632 of the men, at
an average interval of 29 years
after the initial iolet'lo1iew.

DIVERStn'
oontinued !rom page 1

care needs, sexual oricnmtion, or tbe diff"""'&lt;lt bet ween lhe academic and
administrative sides of lhe university."
A shuod interest in tbe at1S led MCiNmJara and Broo11m 10 the April
prqgwn, as they saw a nann! &lt;XII1nllCiion brtween the IRS and tbedi,..,.;ty
theme. "Ctealive ~ is as uniqut as we ore as individuals, • said
Bmckon. "Our focus was lXX ooly 10 clarify that managing diversity is pan of
Univ_msity Servi&lt;:es' mission, but also 10 make people within University
Services feel pan ofthe gteateruniversiJy, Yo-bich is a di-.e&lt;:WIIJIUDity. We
also wanled to showcase our Fme Arts Ct:nter and tbe talent we bave•hett. •
Those needing more infD1111Alion, may call Brockcnat 645-2646, &lt;::&lt;1.
!05. Selected eventS (all al Fme Arts Center unless otherwise noted),
mclude:
OpM to tM Uftll'entty eo-AJty
VIDEO PRESENTATIONS, AprilS, 18, 22, 25: 1-3 p.m.
EXHIBITS: 77rrouglwut April
• Stamp Display, Sciem:e and £nginuring Library
• Diversity of the Libraries CoUection, Health Scienas LJbran
• US's Heritage of Diversity, Ulllkrgraduau Librarr
·
·
(sponsor: Uniwrsity Archives)
• Divmtity of the Libraries Collection. Lod:wood Library

P.._,..s.mc..

GAlLERY EXHIBIT, April 7, 8:30-a.m.-Noon; Tour, II a.m.
Student~

were_,.....,

or

piOir&gt;cb ... d'fect.

Tbe project is the fustlD itudy.
random sample
general populatioo and iiS total physical activity
dwing wor.k and leisure and its

..Uvtties

lil1&amp; I~ clcowa, ....,_
. ··~pla~

1f1011$,otberltiadool~-s

lcrbean

81111 Records

GALLERY EXHIBIT, April7, 1-5 p.m .
~ (liBA), Food Festil'Ol (Ha~s Annu). Irish Dancers. Tour
University FaciUtiM
Aprill3, 8:30un.-4 p.m.; 8- 10 p.m.
Ellmicfood and music. Plwwgraphic and poster contat on diversity

CNoputtnf 81111 lllfonnallon TecllnoloC
SPECIAL AS5affiLY, Apil26, 9 a.m.-Nom and 1-4 p.m and
April27, 9 a.m.-Noon and 1-4 p.m.

Bilgutay andJohnArcbea, UB pr:ofesso&lt;s of archileeluJe wbo died
lhis year. Tec.bnical course work
by Bilgutay 's srodeniS also will be

.......

exhibiled.

1'hllnk Yau to Arts DqxutmefllS, Arts DepartmefllS Presentacions

;]

' t ..

..

~.OOvity and

dealh. Roroults Sbowod that

. : ,...

PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS, April 28

W'tthin the follow-up group, 270
bad died, 97 from """""'0' bean
~-

Outing the Of\ginal int.en-iew,
lhe m.en provided complete medical hislories and doWis of their
Ufeszyles, including a detscriprioo
of their work and le.isun: physical
activity. Puticipants reponed the
number or work-day bouts ~
sitting at 1 desk. tna&lt;&gt;bine, car, bus,
!rain or other vehicle; drivin&amp; o

0

B

I

'

a 41 """""""""""' ril:k or dealh
from ""Y and • 60 pen:eG
~ower risk or dealh from bean dis.,_ in tnell wbo
- oba&gt;e.
No lOCh rd.tliobshi,p- fOUDd
in ..__;p. md"""'- ....... implyinslhat o hiP booty weipa may
mdlify IDY bmeflcial effeccs or
ptlys'ical Ktlvity, ~con­
cluded. Similar llmdo """"' sem
in .,_ 65 llld over, who wen
studied oeparatdy.
"A li'Odeatary lif•yle is • habit
we COD dilage •IO bdp~ our
Dun. "CattiDiy bother
lifestyle Clum&amp;a !hal &lt;lfteD -

,,_-Mid

civinc up&lt;llljoyd&gt;&amp;e habits, iJiatu..

ing your level of l&lt;:tivity l'l:p'e·
• pk2sant way 10 ..,....., lbe

-

of~deam.·

Addltional mo:mbers of the rt·
searcb team were Mauri;r.io
l'novisan.JobnP. augbJa11, John
E. v .... and Prml: J. Cemy, aU
from UB, and Wam:n Winke.lsteio
from the Uaivemty or California
&amp;!~ley.

U

I

F

y

Daniel H Murray, 76,
former UB Pharmacy dean
Daile! H. ~· 7a, former dee of lbe us Sc:hool ofl'barmat:y,
died Mm:h 26 m Lakes Regiea Cla&gt;enl HC6pital, Lacooia, N.H. l:le bad
lived in Gilford, .R. Qnc&lt;: hiu..Uranc:ot in 1984.
MumywaslargdycrodiledwilhclevdopinJibtSdbooloCPbartnocy'o
lilrollg roseardt orientatioo, which contin
1o Ootaisb U&gt;day .The 8&lt;:bool
is regularly ran.ked &amp;IDOl\&amp; lhe top 10 In the 'United SlateS.
as dee twice, from 19S4-69 and &amp;om 197&amp;-84.
Mwny was responsible far doobq the ad&gt;ool's cmollment and
quadrupling lhe Dumber of f'aodty. Durin&amp; the 19601, under hisdirectioo,
lhe Scbool of l'barmaey led
olbezs in lbe number of researCh pws it
received. The school also actlOUIIIed far 2S pr:ra!:lll all~
research pap= published in 1966-67, During his tc:mwo, be helped~
a1 UB lhe fiiSI dcpanxnmus of medicinal chemislry, ~and
bioChemical pharmacology housed in.
sdiOOI of plwmacy.
A. native of FonJ'wK:es,OnL, Mmny earned a baclldor'sdegrce in
pharmacy from the University of Toronto. He also received o bodldar's
de&amp;= and a master's~ bolh in cbemislry, from the Univomity
Saskatchewan. He received his doc:tora~ in biocbo:misuy from the University of Toronto.
A.itOwing
Force.World Wax ll, Murray wasasquadrooradaroffiocrin the o
_,_
-•

He"""""

an

or

u.s.

or

In !950, _be l:Jec:ame Ill assio1ant profi!ssor ol pbannaceutical chmtistry 01
the Umversny orTorontO, and in 1953, came 10 UBase assis&amp;attl prof...,;oand asmtant dean. In 1969, be was named deeofUB ~• ClnduaSc:bool and
acting vice pn:sideot flY ac:adcmlc oft'aim.ln 1971, betookalea""ofaba:nce
10 bcc:omo prov051 for gmduate ednc:atiOD and .-arc~! for the Slate um-sityorNewYorkCmtn!AdtninisiDJionatAJbony. HemumedtoUBiotaloe
over as dean or lbe Scbool of Pilar._, in 1976.
Survivors include his wife, M. Dorltll:ll of Gilfmd; a 5011, Randall
Gardner of Gilford; a daugbta, Juditb Bliss of Ann Arbor, Mich.; a
brother, BruceofFon Fnna:s; Ont.; a sister, Joyce Tilbury of Abbocsford,
B.C~ ODd lhree grandchildren.

�"Johnny
Biosp ere ' to
appearatUB
viromnenW

. dl-

IICilealloitlld. -.lleetfW,

..u "J&lt;JJinDy Biarp&gt;ere•• ,.;n
d~Mos the

lnlmwion:al Joinl

C&lt;lonlnlssimls ~lion
llmeubks- woold
"tbr --al~~
10 ~

~ .. ioduo;uW

00111&amp;

(ocdoloc:b, April I 2 II t ,p.m. ill
\-40 IKeaer Kall on !he Nctth

'

~

Loser
da • II 'J:IS p.m. m
tilt
• 'torilllnlll
W' iiiiiim!le Sooth H\ch Scbocl,
va11em,... ...npreaea~ • MllllMr

00

..,,·irorl..-1 isslii:S m.IA:Id "'

tile G.- U

ec:ol)""""

for

..... ..o..-toc:bon.
Both lccmreo ""' """""""" by
lh&lt; Great Ukes l'ropm ..... tile
c.nadian·American IUdies
Comminee,bolh m UB. and lh&lt;
c.nadian Emhu&amp;y The ~
York Sial&lt;: Sea Gnni and tile
Wesu:m lic!&lt;:Oo&lt;l al the Scimce
Teochrr5 As3ociatioo of Ne•
Y&lt;lri&lt;Stateue~ the
WillWDSV11k SoUth
A popular~ and author,
V-.ll&lt;ntyn&lt; is 6cientisl emcrit at
tile c.nada Cent&lt;~ ror Inland
Waun.,. Burlingtoo. Om

l'"''"'""oon

MLT.deanto
~oncb;ign

studio of futme
WUU.mJ . .t
dan
allbc Scllool al Anlhit&lt;e""" and Planning II tbe Mlssacbusens Inslirw cf Tedmol&lt;:v.
will present a lea""'- "1bt o,.
Sign Studio a/ !be Futun:- atl :30
pm. on Friday, April 8, ill 147
Didt::ndod' H-.11 on the South
Campus. Mlu:hell wdl address
the applicatioll of Clll'mll c:ommuniaotioos t&lt;d:mology 1:0 the aJ'tibi.
tectural design and plaDning field.
The talk is r..... or~ ond
"""" to the public.
Fie notts IbM cumru ledmol·
ogy is already leading to the
or "virtual design
swdillli." ~ ue c::ornput&lt;r
networked fadlities !hat provide
I&lt;X:eS5 IO the orpoizarico 's dati
bases and COIIIJlUialion resourms
to projoc:l ponicipams who may
be widely dispersed across Sf*"'
and time. Tbese new owdios also
provide dTlCient messaging and
data e:a-cbonge and scpbistic:atod
..Jdeo lelccoof=nci~Jg in • b:igbly
integlaled !asbian.
M'ndldl's talk also will look
dosdy 11 bow enabling teclmolo-gi&lt;s, research issues and pbyUcal
SjlO&lt;le design. in rdllionSbip lD
otbcl tt&lt;ods in design and planning practice, inform unh·ersity
ti!IChing ,progmns.
Ooe idea be proposes is lh&lt;
developmcru of inlensive, susll.in&lt;d, long-tem~ teaching and
resean:b c:dlabomions """"'~!
universitieo via liD "electnluic
Rod LiDe, • a rd...,.,.,., to the Red
Line aubway CXJiliiCClioo betwecll
Ha.wrcf and Ml. T.
A Jli'OIOI)'pe of sucb a collabo-

0

'"""'lopmcru

nlli~ ~is.

199] ¥irtual
lo pit«~ coodiiCiellliJtlillll tlldlito:o:t
tK.olty
lllld Mlatlent.a MJ.T., Harvud,
WUb
Ulll~, the Unl~ alBritiob Oolumbia .....
tbe Ulli-.i!y o( lba Kong In

desicn.

April 20, Rclswefl Parit Cancer f
For~-~

usln&amp; blleroa ... p-itMry-

May 6. Ce ter for Tomorrow
.......-: w
New'\'01'11 AllgioNt1 ~allht

I·

un~coouon.

Amenc::llnCounclon ~ ldltrdt:4111iC)I1

Archivist from Dean to~
Cornell to talk simplifying
on preservation ~tre

0c-o um......nr...

ADM Ketuiey, di ltal
projecu dul&gt;&lt;:tor far

ill dla-us

'"The u~ or DigiW T~
lor tbe l'teoerv...,.. or and Ac·
.,_to Ulnry and Ardunl
Collecti&lt;:C$," April 14 ot l 0 15
in 120
Hall, orth

a........

c-~. The

School o( lnfonnatron and Ubmy Studi&lt;s H. spoo SOfU!&amp;tlle~
"-~or tht:

Socit!ry ot

American An:hi•ists. Kftv!ey ;, •
tJ&gt;cmb..- or the Cornmiosion on
~and Ac:ceo:s Joint
Ttik l'oo&lt;!~ on'fat and Imago:
Thill group ..!.plclnrla tht: USt of
cilgitalleobnolacy for "'("""".
llD&amp; illustrated IIJalerials. Curn:ntl). sbe is dimctiJ!a tile
"M.Uing .. Amcia" ProJI'Cl
w'bi.cb ..;n eli~ oppn&gt;lWNlt~ly
I JXX) vollll11&lt;'S dlronicling tbe
dr••elopmeol or~

rommunicatloos. and butldlnf&gt; on
America in 1800-1960 Tlus
tibrory cwld then be rtmo~ely
accessod (or display on a comp.as ~ or rq&gt;rimed oo de-mand Mauy of the origin&amp;!
are on doteriorat.mg and
bnttlc paper.
l'reregiSUli!Jon IS requ&lt;S~.ocf

For rr10tt infonnabOD. contad Dr
Joseph w. Pal..-. 3(1) Baldy
lUll, NMh CamJI&lt;IS, 64S-3068

Games events
to beheld at
UB April8-1 0
or

The Siege Waslringtoo, •
"Babes ill Muncbbnland"
and "Eggs in lh&lt; Aroti&lt;:" ""'
llllOil&amp; tht: IDOI't! !han 120 pmes
lD be pt.yed April S-10 ot the
Wliversity's fifth IUlllllal pming
can-emicn. UBCoo '94, lD be
held on tbe North Campus.
The e..m · c.qoectod to dnow
IDOI't! !han 800 afiCionados of
roic-1&gt;taying and board pmes and
miniatures c:ompoti:tions. from
beginnezs to expcns.
Competitions will be held
(rom 8 p.m. tD midnigbl on Fnday, April 8; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Saturday, April9, and Sunday,
April 10. Rrgisuation and infor·
marion COWileni will be locared
oo tbe fim floor of tbe I,JB Stu·
dent llnioo. Gamin&amp; eY&lt;IJIS ,.;u
be held in the Stud&lt;nl Union and
in Ckmens Kall. 00... Otll'IC·
lions include -rn:kkk • e•ents,
new games and paraph&lt;:malia
from~ 1 discQunt au&lt;Uoo
and""""UBCoo '94 is~ by

0

e

~ParkCencw

o.hidlllll&lt;knlawor'ked~
011 • two-wee\;
problan

or

o,..,. Gll:q) ll1d

.,_... YB

0

Pfpgram

...,..._ vtgi1la L ~.
IJI1I$Idant aC SUNY Calege •

As lwh-~o!•SI.:M'cdllpt.wtdtwb
IIOTWI~,.,..._

"*illill8l'*il. ..,._

..a.~.,.,.,"'
.w:lrrcldlim
iiOC!Iely She 0. --.orciilol:li&lt;I'OI ~ W Elz.lblll\ Blmt
~--··co-.10""*-IWld~

y,willw-a-

tcdlmloc UJ&gt;OI'll!d lD make
usinc oompollerS easil:r for noa-

......._

o:lpens dW'UI(. tal a:bedulod
for J ~ 45 p.m. on Tladay,
April 12, m Ilk Studml Umon

~ hall&amp;lgfi o r - 11 ""r--lllon~ a

Cdluwe. .-.:1 ~ • ........,
0 lind"' lrom Sjor- u.-., ... .... ""'
~d Roc:~-* an:! B A. IWld L HJ) frcm R.Juel

~S.Colege. ~

areaor~r~and

He abo will dascuso tht:
"'lga" ~ rompul... .......
product •"~"'Clod lD be on tbe
mar:l,c b)· 1999, that sOOold be
capable ol pmormmg ooe bl "'
opmotl&lt;llllo pet 5IC&lt;lOCid. At~.
0111)' tbe RIOSI 1""1'-..TuJ !1111·
cbiDCI-&lt;naSS~vdy parallel com·
putm;-cao main lhto:&gt;c !IJIC"'ds,
and then ool) "ith dltflOIIJy
Toda) ·, ,.ar~o;touans ond Po.
~- ot!iJl"'''dstbM '""-!"bet•·ee:n -~ 10 ooe-lwndreciU!
o( tbe Giga PC..
Rtlddy 111ill addrtss bow tlus
...... trdJnolocy will affect tht:
- of aliiJ1P'II1'ni by 11011-u,pertS
and"""' oewly developed illtm·
lila:$ will l'!ldz cortlpOJteB man
...,.,..;hie.
A recepliao will follow the
~ in 224 Bell Hallm tbe
Nonh Campus.
For funber infOI'IDalioo, c:ontacil Jin- Yi c.i, UB associate
profesoor of mft~PU~or scimcJe, at
64~:1006

s

She holds.

SocW Hal~ !loom 330 allbe

Ulldoma.andma

Sooge C&lt;*ue- For ~ CO'IIIICI Or Manr. ~·

ear-. Oalege
kfl&lt;:r ~
'""

.

lnlei""""""B

•

-

~gliiUaDOn fM Ito
Allmo.i AssociaDan

IIIII

plan

sso ror

$1S. ~ Torqiom 01
for """" mf&lt;JI'RAIJOI~ ..U 0..
Alurrmi Offocr • 82').2008 Rq""""'"" 1$ 5tnctl y

'""""" to l.S

Two students
receive Jarvis
SchoJruships

0

UB lil\klcals KJ.borf) L
VaD and llromdlaa P. Bi1n:r
ba"" been .....rood 1994 Clrepxy
8 Jarvis Mmlariol Sch&lt;lllushlpo
..,. tbe uo SdiOOI or~
and Awliod sa........
vail, • _jarucr -joring in
IOMl6pliCr enc-:in&amp;. &amp;lid Barty,
• junior IMJOI1DC iD t:ilcciDcol """
c:ompub:ir~.,...

R:Ceiw: all,
~ Tk
5Cbolanllip f.-!
~
from individual and~
Plio inm&lt;lll&lt;ll)' or,....... 1 1967
UB ~ • dcolrieal eaci·
.,.,.,.,. """' diod ill lbe l9116 CJbol.
leil&amp;&lt;r Iii*"'......., eqJiooiooL
The awards bne beal p¥tD
lllllllllllly llincr 198:710 .......

Reemployment ,..;m
• oaodemi&lt;:
die
workshop set
J&amp;r\'is had ror eaci-ma-·
forabnnni
n...
or
Blanchard is
off... ..,_
0 Rdatioos
speaker for
cemly llll&lt;lll)&gt;loyod lllumol, May
S p.m. in
Swnise Series
orth
..,..,.,.

, _ eumplify

ent~n~sttsm

UB Off~ee Alumni
will
employment ~for re-

2(}-23 from 9 a.m. to
TbeCommans,
~n... workshq&gt; will be .,...,.
sen1ed by N'oc::bolas J.
Boccolucd, PU&gt;., a 1992 UB
groduale and managing dinlc:wr
of Right Associates, an intema-_

ricoallwman resoun:eo oonsultillg fum spocialiJ:ing ill career
tnnsitimr IDliDOpD&lt;DL Partidpa,nl$ ..;n be guided tbmugb 1be
steps ala systaDatic job oean:h
iDcluding resume prep.talion,

...

of 1-=tw.g . . . . . Ol/lt!(f .wtd

...,._,. ~ , _ . . . . ~___, ~Wiih11'D11
11Wl30 ~in hgt.- ecU:Iilion.
,_ ...-.tuwhc:lld

-~Mdlonu.i--

.......tl011nrw'i~i:nthe

o!C«wrt Lied...

eoope~•oeed,..,....,., . . -

llaj ltNa ....... oflbe
Sthool c( c...p.- Sa-

Studml UniCIII on the North Caoo
~ n... tal is free and"""" 10
the pulrbc .
RLdd)·, wbo o. Httbe:n A
Stmon prof.....- of CXllfi!AA«
..,..,.,.. and~ .. CarnegJe
teflon. Will t.lllo: aba!lt bis ,.,_

. edwolllor; lormlr

0.0..00

no-

0. I -lucUnl,
Jt~ pi\'Sidml cl die Hori-

zons Watc:rlTont Commission.
lnc .• will provide- updale &lt;liJ
the orpnizatioa •• .......mn plan
during ibe UB Sllllri!e ,Series, set
far 7::»-9 a.m. on 'llniiSday,
April 21, in the Cent&lt;~ far Tomoaow. Tbe series is Sjl&lt;lllSOred
by the UB Aluioni Aslociolion..

I

BIMdwd .. .-.od ill 191!9
., lliCid do&lt; ....t.adlay ol dar llrt&gt;m ~Corp. ..,_
~fordlr~o(

-erma
-~
....... Ol:iln'ioer.. lk ~l

I

bat:lbenl.-oe~prrUkm

or

ar.....-

tbe
Ncrl
Corp_ ..
orpmz.oll&lt;lll cl mq&gt;IJ&lt;IIR ,..,..,. .
- ri•-.:s drdlcalod 10 tbe .,..._..)
IIIII ~ de-¥dopmoE cf

Narfolk. ..,.._
Cost ol die prot;IUI, ...mdl
tnducb brealcfMl. ~ $1 for
...........

~

IDmlbers and

Sl for ibe p:ncnl ,.....k Raa---~lll\d.,.ybe
rr:Jidrby~lbeUB

Alumm

.

109A11m

Hall. M3S llbla St:. Buffalo,
y 1(214, CaB 829-'l«lll

�:12

IRIKIIIJIII
... v.....,..-. ....

~, . s.

z ...

AMILIAR FACES
of
UB faculty 1n cast

LUT rNitiJ Ftom 1c11, Jock
l'credollo, 'I1M&gt;met .....,,

A

\I \ft11' I XI IIIII r I\Y of'""'"' on
paper by UB An Pmf&lt;&gt;"'r I hrwy
Bn-vtmun, M1 rnrrm&gt;trnn.Uy rrg•rdrd
paintn- and pnnmr.krt. wtU b&lt; •hnwn rn
Bu/Talo's Nina FrtuJrnhrtm G.Jlrry . •'100 Orl•war&lt;
Avt., 111 Apnl and M•y
Thr •bow, hUn! • Artrsu. \Vrurn. Mwtrroru and
Otbtrs: Work&lt; on Poptr." tndudr&gt; tnrnt ofthr mo&lt;r
dr&lt;ttngutJh&lt;d oamn tn tbc .trU and humanr!to• f.rld. tncludmg r~nrlry .nd
'orrntr f•culry a! LIB. h optns wtlh a
pubhc r&lt;etpuon Sarur, by. Apnl 9 and
run• through May II
Gallrry houn art T uud•y·S.tur·
.Uy. IO-S p.m. and Mond.Jy lw •rromr-

Wtwd Wlll'-mson, P'llyillt

Sltel, ,.,_ Gui!Mt, l.nllc
Rcdlet,IUchMd Fly, G&amp;Of9&amp;
i.AtlltM, Hcnty SUt~m~n.

~NnL

DW4t C._.STIAH

lltt work! ro b&lt; •hown tndu.Jr brgr
dr•wmg; '" tnk. warm-olor and mrx..J rnt&lt;lJ.t rlw WQ!'ktng drawmgs. alt«&lt;hts and nouoom. ltkr 00&lt;' of mut
Ftonc!s Bacon d..&lt;hod off on hotrl•r.auontry MOll hovr
not b&lt;m prniou.ly ah.brrtd.
Among lhr old famrh&gt;r facts art 'io&lt;nh AfTtCM&gt;
•

y

,

c

A .T l

'·

A

novrlr&gt;t john c~. who h.., b&lt;on • UTI .,,mng
profmor; Fr&lt;nch hrrrory ..-hoi.,- Mrdxl Sm-r&gt;. "ho
hrld rhr

h••

Mdod .. Jon.,

&lt;'h•tr tn rr&lt;nch
.r LIB; porr Rol&gt;-

tn

Dunr~n .

whost archl\·rs

m btiJ btr&lt;. ocr a,.onal

vt&lt;t!Or.

J(,j(

~\Li,r-;8 ~

J

novrlut Tom IAAC~
Wolfr .
and
fonntt UTI Engltsh profutor, novrlut jolxn Barth.
Al"' p.......,t •nd accounr&lt;d for .,... kmgttmr UTI
f•rulrysuchascnuc l..nltt Ft&lt;dltr, prttt Robtn Crrrl&lt;r

and novrltst R•pnond Ftdmnan. A. rn pn-v•OU'l
tnc&gt;rnanon•. rhc- faculry cnom ~ my&gt;ttn&lt;&gt;&lt;~&lt; ttnnog.
that Br&lt;vrmun ..ys advanct hu ~ron .... th lht
human charadt.
I( rh&lt; faro an f•mtltar. mo&amp;t of U... work.. lhtmwlvtt an nrw. A c..., m potnt •• a 4-by·2 I· foot l""ll
p..trl rnptych furunng 26 mrml.,..n of the currmr

DOHOYAH

"

•

w

characters for Breverman exhibit

foculty, whtch "mtngurnwJy tttlcd "Cab.tl IL •
Hrr&lt;, thr cut of charactm--ptoftsJOn )ad
P~o. HcrwySw.m.n. )c:qt Guiun, UzKtnrttJy.
Carol Jambs and ~ ag:un occupitt • com·
rnon 'J'K'· apparm.rly rnYOI..d 111 ~ coUTaJ
actrVIty Nrvm.h.lna. 11m past llrtwmw! r:rntmmta.
they rar&lt;ly &lt;ngajt lht .,.....,. or on&lt; :ooochft dmctl
•nd. by Br.vmnan's own duc:npaon.appur mstud to
he aboorhcd tn a pnntr nru.V of a mysrmouo natutt.
In a l:&gt;rochurr •ccompmytng lht r.th.ibn. port
Robrrt Crrtlry wntro: " Ha"•Y 1
Br&lt;vtnn.ln Ius
hcrn r he dtft and
pt«&lt;pltvt ncordtrofout nnous prn·
rnrr. ""'"II us both u one •nd 11
many Htt ratnordinMt.!yquiclr. rakn.
h.. gmrrous rudmg ofhobtt and prurncr. h,. accwnultrcd dtplh of tt·
•ourcr and comnutmmt-Il managr
• ....guUr on tndtcd. a-!y h.o,.,.. 01
lht world" anchornl rn what ht 10dttply ~ m
hu fdlows. ...tuch ., ro u.y, thnr own -"'a of dwmlvn Nmi
Ukt they ur-"

lana

W.....,,....

•

u

•

•

u

I

•

10m.

-

-left,

-~

,,_._,~

1"'-~. 01.-

........
c...u... . ,..

.ua .IACIIIOt4

1

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>1994-04-07</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1402779">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1402780">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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--.,UY..
Alan L.ock'MXld's
career inllolves
medicine, nlUSIC ,

2

social issues. . . ·

Sf .
Coovnittees begin
work on plans !of
Sesquicentennial

celebration.

..

4
Matth 24 1994

Volume 2S No 22

Two psychiatric centers become
universitY clinical teaching s·tes.
~

HE BUFFALO PSYOiiATRJC Ccnl&lt;r lmd
!he Westm~ New Y art
CtuldrCD '• P ycbiatnc
ec.- 1D WCil Scrlcca
hccamefmnol c:iinicallaebingsitoo
of thr Uniw:ruty • Buffalo ill a

........

,_

.....
........

-~
........-.

Olfocc m MeDal lbltb """"" new
~
~ a lhe .,...,.. for U8
foculty.SIUdcntsandrnodocali'Oiidau,
and~

ac:as 111 UB'• fa:ully and .-.m
(;
· Ca&gt;ltnlalruwohocd in~
inj! U8 SIUdcnts and axxdirlaiQg ..,.

cbronrcally tU •
The affiliaooa olfers a model
tba1 daierveo repbcauon rn ocher
ol lh&lt; stall:. CommiSPOOCr
Surles staand 1lUs ..,.-ecmeat 0111) creiiC&gt; OlllSlalldon1 cdua-

sc:I'C!t ..ilbn:sidellsand~
~p­

inr agnx:ment. As a reoult

&lt;» "'"

3j!I'CCRlCil~IIIHnombc:rcommiuce

""h rcpresentati...eo from the llree

in&lt;ritutioos will be formed 10 over&lt;;«lhe nducalionallmd racarch pr&lt;&gt;rrnms cpenlled b)' the facilities.
The new conlrW:I opens df oco-

' bU.:.

••cluoa a.td
1'beOJ'I'Il'1 r .
the crern-t Jft·
oeats for uucnlr .
~
ClpiiU&lt;} research
ead 1n ov11'' t
learnJ81 an" C-001'·
mou Tbt onclunoa of lhc e
fiiCllll~r theuru •enrt) f-1)' ,.111
llo&lt; Clllle8l
odd gnrfocaatl) to
our nduc:atooul opponualltt . par·
'-'&gt; .. the orcas o( pcchalri.:
psyduatr} and on lhe ~ o( !he

TheiM&gt;)'&lt;OriQIC'O~

orr..,.

~f

Stat.
WI HMitll

tdwa::n UB and lhe New Y&lt;llt. SlllC

Participating in the signing .. ere
UB President William GreniCI:
Philop B. Wels. chair of !he UB
Council; Rlchanl Surles, commissioner of the stale
of Mental
Health; John P. aughton, UB vice
JW'&lt;"ident foe clinical affairs and
dean of the UB School ofMedtcinc
and Biomedical Scicncc:o: George
MC'Inar, exOilUlive dU'C:Cioe of !he
Buffalo P ychiatric Cen1er, and
Allen R. Mocganstein, linical dircctoe of lhe Wcotern ew Yort
Children •• Poycbialric Center.
UB. primarily lhrougb its lb
portmcnl o( l's)d&gt;ialty, bas used the
two psychiatric facilities as trainin
!'fOUnds foe students lmd raid&lt;Dts
fo.- """" time. bullhe llree institutions have never had a fmnol wort-

..

. GNIMr;

.

conti'IICI-oigninJ ceremo&lt;~y held
MtliCb I on lhe Nonh Campuo.

fellows will rccci...e UB fa::ulty
pno11111lCrG.

cea1cn are vcr)

...--wt.
,_...,
_.,.,.,._, ...,.......

ten' doon 10 the U8
of dental mndicmc. Dur$111£.
pbarmaey lmd heallh-n:lated
professions. as well as 10 faculty""" gnoduate and undc:rgroduate students in clinical
psydlology and ooetal wort.
Tbt centers will pro•idc
cquipment.lccbrreroomsand
1a1xntorics, in adduion 10
facuky. far teaching and joint
clinical rcoean:h activities.
UB students will be ossigned
10 ibeccntero' clinical facilities by !he univemty.
"Coolabontion with local providers bas already
proven to bean outstanding
model foe clinical trainong
in UB •s School of Medi cine and Biomed'rcal Sctences.- Greiner .uted. "We are delightnd li"ull thr
Buffalo Psychiatric Center and !he Western New
Yort Olildrcn's Psychiatric Center will join UB's
group of clinical affiliates." The poruaen;hip. Greiner
oddnd, will olfcr great opponunitico for UB f
lmd

"The opportunities the
agreement presents for
interdisciplinary research and
innovative learning are
enornwus. The inclusion of
these facilities in the
university famil will add

_

significantly to our
educational
_,opportunities. "

uudalu m a ""'Fe( · phoc
-comm~ tOJIC'r
Swbofthe
y or1t Sllloe
()ffic:c oOkntal Health
fully and
ly
~ . c:ollabaraoon.

and '"" ..,.,..,.....,
fortS U8 " piealal

efto br
obleiObdpiiUJlPOI'Itheclintcal ..urt o( the physictM&lt;
and s:Wfolbochcoars. This
""' o( joial effort o( tbc
.,_,local povod&lt;:naad tbc.

uni' .:aityean domucb bolh
tocnricbUB'....SUC..O.and
traiiUD&amp;p-ocrliiJI$ and IOeohanee cano delivery for our
fell&lt;&gt;w cotern Nco. Yarlers.- hr said.
aughtoo.

"'"""ill be

UB's pniiW) IWSOII with
!he centero and was instrumental in nepwin&amp; the
agrccment. said the relationship i • "eloome tcp in
UB' • cfforu toexplmd opponunillCS forchaical teaching
reocan:h foe its udents and faculty.
""'ltio c:oruract c:oalinns IbM tbeK two psychillric

IIOI\al """ ~h """"'"
forun.. erslly udell a.dthrps)·
duatnc cn&amp;en. • staff . tt pnmde.,
!he IJCtl") """ a formal role in
academic trarAml-a first for the
SlMC OffiCe of C1ttal Haith.• •ho aholft
au: pro!:
of poyctua&amp;r} • UB.
$1111 !he ButT Po)'dliatri&lt; Ccn1er
i \'CI')' pleased 10 "" • r.dl partner
in the unr"tnil} coramunil) .
lhrou 111 .,reementlhat is mutl&gt;all) beodictal "'We"""- forwatd
tnmaoynewopponunttic:o for joint
teadtm lmdreoearcbacti~itaand

10 UICI'Cti&lt;ld
labcnuon .dt the
ua,.ersrty' $Cbool lmd departmen - hr saJ&lt;l

~-1ltis~

.. "" bc:acficial "' tht ...........,. •
well as 10 tht w._, New Yarl
Ottiat's ~Cere. ., pro,-.:~q opportunJiics b rrofcssional
poo.'ib d aall
• . will
filler 00..-n "'the &lt;Dm'DLWiily.bJ
vidiac
cllriaol""'ias." n

�--.---.-

2
~

c \

-

0

~

---

...

s
~-

Man of
Many
'Lives'
..... elM, ..-:, .. ....
............ AI-.
Loc:lnrood'• ~
IJ-WAUACE
~Slalf

LAN LOCKWOOD
can 'I really say wily
be bec:amt I doctor.
He juol lmows !bot

· lifebewanled
lo beooe.

Locl&lt;wood, 1 pro(eMJr olneurol"')' aod nuclear medicine 11 UB,
is director ol PllT ~ for

lbePosllroa1!milsi TClllllDpllhy
Ceala" otlbe VelaaDS A.dm.inisu.-

tiollMedicalea.r.:r, wbetebeaveroces the operalioo ol !be moot
lldva.DC&lt;&gt;d medial leclmoloJy in
use fare;ymininlcbe humaa body.
He's also!tbe director ol UB
far:m.io&amp; A.J:tisu OiDic, where be
cloaJs primarily with the modical
poblems ol musicimo.
A£ if !bot were 1101 e:11011gll, in
Jaouary Lock:wood became oational piUidenl ol Pb)'lliciaos for
Social R£oponsi'bili1y, 1111 argaolution wbicb since 1961 bu
stn~uJed to eliotiJWe nudeu
weap&lt;liiS _ , basn&gt;eeDI!y bnncbed
out 10 adclrea eovirorlmeDI.al is..,.. _, iolu:s ol viola&gt;ce and
violence prewDiioD.
Locl&lt;wood noceiwd both his
!.cbdar'sck:pleoodbilM.D. from
Comdl Uniwnily. "My inlerelil In
!be """""" l)"llaD ood !be tniD
bepo io my lint ,.,... In IIIIOdical
sd&gt;ool,. Loclrwood Slys. ., w.....s
to be • ......:olopf and do ro:scard&gt;
011 bow lbe tniD ~.
Afttr ....,.,.,... Gibe&lt; plOiti&lt;m.
Loclcwood ....... yean .. lbe
Uniwnily olTeus Heal1h Scimce
Calla io Elou&amp;loo. He was ~&gt;roup~
10 UB ood cbe VA Medical Calla io
1991to bead !be PllT""""" beca....
be bad gained exporieoce Oil bow to
.,..,._ !be openliaD ollbe PllT
Syslem in his previous jobs. Tbel'£1'
Cc:otcr bas two prinwy roissioos,
Loclrwoodsays-mJ'I'O"ideclioical

·,Per-

IIOn'icel&gt;loplli&lt;lllspredocninldlyio
Weslem New Yor\, bodl w:I&lt;DIIS
and 0011-WUDns, aod to do"""'""""
011 I wide varidy olropics.
"Putting !be PllT together took
a major COID.IDiiDlellt both from
UB and !be VA Medical Ceala", •
Locl&lt;wood says. "We've also bad
strorJ&amp; support from the surrounding community, and we're trying
1o ar.ttact more such support 10 develop and SUS1aio oew programs.
"I'£TisiD~)'COIII·

p1u device !bot R&gt;qUires 1 t.e1m or
acieotisls, pbysidaos, and tedmic:iaosiOopeniC i1,·Lockwood says.
"U. week wbeo we bad a job in
proc:a;s we bad sis or eigbt people
.......mug OJ'DUDd, trying 10 work
togc:lber and 1o do lhiDgJ abso-

lutdy""""""y IO!be wide project
didn 't go dowll the ll4ls.
"1'£1' . ""'"'
aod lleJ.ibleCbaoaoy olbe&lt;modical ......
device,. Loclrwood .,... "()pominc it «quires •••• -line bow
lbe . . . . is made .. well .. ~mow.
inc lbe ......... pbywiolaa:y tbot ....
dedics proclucDon o/111111 .........
Aloo&amp; with research in
Loclrwood's specialtyOIIIbet:tr..cu
lblt liver m.e- bas 011 tnia funcOcas, Gibe&lt; .,..,... """'"""" .. lbe
PIIT Calla involve~ lbe c:ffa:u ol
tniD injury, Loclcwood ays.ln~·
tic:ular, lbe Calla is doiac ..-.dl
(Jil minimoll:nia injuries tbot Iller
.,._ problems with such dliap ..

ill&amp; Artislo OiDic, Lockwood suys
CODIIIICICd to aoatber lifdooc ~
ion-musk. "When I ,..11
)'OUIIC"''. I moiatallled I . , . . _ . .
1D UM~eur~; be Slys. "I've
al .....ys been illl.ere:ot&lt;d In music.
A£ a doctor, I ' we WOI'Iucd ""'tb
raocial from famou1 CCIII·
ducl.n mel perf'OI'IDID to - --

OOIICeDIJ:abcn aod """""'&gt;'.

lo lbeO:olr:r• IIDil ola.........,.

""""*"

""""'*

teumwbopb.ypiaoooaMCkaldo. •
His """"' Oil the modical heollh

problems ol Jlllllica
• lbe
Uniwnily oiTeus Healtl! Scimce
Calla••• lime when Lockwood
aod . colloac-beame~
in briop&gt;c IIIUiic ..t oCia- do
lbe!Ht. . . .p:aleovimnmeololibe
"We Wlllledtobrioclbe-

c...-.

"Industry releases billWns oftoxins into
the environment every year. The fact that
mortality rates for cardiovascular
problems are falling ... but for cancer
they're going up, could be related to ~e
being legaUy pumped out by industry. "'
The PIIT Calla is also ~
..,.,.,.,., 011 bow lbe brain pi'OCIO&amp;III:$

~ I.oc:boood says, "'Ox ol
lbe- fuodameolal aspedS olbeinc human is aJIIIDliJIIic:a wilb
r:acb Gibe&lt;." TC!ilin&amp; plli&lt;llls wilb
bcoriu&amp; kaisiiiDibor....-poject,
be says. "There are~ periods in
tniD clevdopnr:al.llld if your tniD
doeso., am bow to proa:ss.,..,.;,
typeSoliofO&lt;IDIIiao in that period, it
may DOt be able to proa:ss illlk:r,•
Loclrwood says. "When JlllDille ore
deaf, cbe part ollbe tniD that pro.
CCS9!S bearinc may got~
Then, if 901Dl'l011e's """""a is lalrr
restored, 8CJIIIdimls !bey am '1 pro.
""""80liDd ioformatioo. •
As Dindor oflbe UB Perform-

lllllidate.. be
I

'"Ultimoldy ..
doaar )'011 ·~ cblina with buman

~ .m !be CIS are 1011110 olibe

~""* ~ ollbe human
imlplolioD..

I.oc:boood aod bisc:dbJues introduced I J11CFm1 tbot lpOIIIORI!
oome'lO-•JQrin..t.....S
!be ""'"' 62S-acre ~ ollbe
lJr Reallb Scimce Calla, be IO)'S,
iacludirJ&amp; I -..ioty o/llalllif:al pet·
rom...:.s,pomy...tiQcs,..toibo&lt;
~ '"lhepaJIDI!Dd...,..
"""ol ibe Hou!laa Sympboay Or·
~ wbo pve Olle ollbe finl
pafOI!DIIIICieS, said to me that. wbile
!be ordJestno ...... Jl'2farminc in lbe
middle ollbe largest IIIIOdical """""
in !be world, !bey aiD bad lo aeod

tbdr IIIIISiciam to oCia cities to"'
!be kiadol opec:ial medlc:alldpthe)
.-led,• I.oc:boood
• A yea
..... - '-! I bo:ald&gt;..-. .,....,..
tbeldar lbaD.• ,
Of his - - appointment ..
preoideat &lt;tf Pbysiciaos far Soaal
~• ..tddl held its Dl ·
lioDII -"'&amp; Man:h 11-21 m
Bc:tbesda, Muyland, l.ocllwoocl
says, '"The tbiDp tbaJ - bd~eve
are~ from a medial pet·
specllioe ba-.e political overiOOC5,
bulweapknlbem from tbepo5i·
tioa &lt;t( medical -..s aod pubhc
llraJdo poblt.mo..
Nanbca ollbe PSR hi"" been
iavolwd .. ..... ..,.,.
....
oltbe&lt;miowllld.....t&lt;nafery
• .....,._ pocluocliooa facililics ..
UaitedS...S. "'Sud~ plaas .......
c:laobd in ......cy. aod ibal alloM:d
ibemtoDatheJlllD!llewbo~

• the public. ia !be
JWDe of Dational oeeurity:
.Loclrwood says. "W'IIb ...,.
riesaJIIlliD&amp;lofi&amp;h!aloc snch .
• """'"""" pmjecu in wbidl pocple
iojeaed wSb pi
.
out . . . ~ it~wbldt .....
1owslbe IJMic .......:!~ priociplr ol
lllere, •

...,.._.tbia-..

inf&lt;mledCO&lt;I!II:Ili-)'OU&lt;*L

bow

is."

'Iho PSI. is ·ioMJhood will! ,.,.
llimia. pdiems ... CICMf • 'lrir:le
....oloocial ..... l..ooboood.aya.

"'oda!ary ......,_
II _,....
into ibe ......,.,.. CWI:Y year..

l..ocbooocl.,... '"lber.ctdaiiiiDitlli l y - b......,._,.. probkms
arefilirwjn.........,.,tula'alltl:f
tbey'le.......addbeldediO'Ibe •
boq llplly pmped .,.. by
inlbay. &amp;dl. -aol..s 1D lirdl
~-10~.,_.

lllllitialiatbelaiL

'"llot-UllqyiCIMiilswilhtbePSR
wilh all !be ....
· 'IDY

.. cucdy

in*"

d:liaptdoaa~
...aq.....t~,..tdiaical

,..,a,.

~'"lhefocosiom~

~ dapllalliiiM ~be­
inp. ....ttillbey ..,, do when dley
...&amp;rfram.-......·
~

tt.Aipcrwlile~~~~b'ftwOtrMionci~and~S..~dNwYOft:•......,_&amp;a:rili~ . . b::lllld\'\••OciiiHiii.M'IIWit.(7~~
~OF~TIOHS _ , . ,. _ . ,,BJilOR - - - . , ASICI(:UI.q:fDff(IA .......... ARlCJIIIECtQIIIl·-.c;a ........ AS8CICI.t.lfNO~ a.IM . . . . ~MltHilrGBl - . - ,

.. .... -......... ..................... .. ..... ...... . -. ................... .. .

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ICO

�4

Committees formed to plan.Sesquicentennial celebmtio
......u.a dot

WAY FOR. A c::EL£BRATOllY YI!AJl
' .,
pduotb ill May, I

LANS ARE
,.._,.,...

~•r-~~~«•......,'" e
·,1991.
n..~l'l8lllui&gt;&amp;Coanillee'-idmtif'oedoewnl ·

ODd

rcrdot

~
lbealtxr
Ill UIJ'o roll...- o -.Jor ~ tutd ~l'rtllliDMJ lllflwml}' tutd ~Ill
-u-1 tutd ~-~ ,...,.,.Udmt tutd ~
• FOCJd rw fort $uJulfP01tW~mty 'sU,rollt ...-dw..fl4pltjp ~qfSUNYtutd
• wuroJ pltryr.r.,. rJw. ~- qf.,.we tutd Wareno rw Yort.
• R«opiu tutd 1ttmM rJw. ~ qf UIJ fooJly• ......_ tutd oJMJUI .,..., IW flU

• Ri6

150~an.

•

•

Symposia, exhibits, publicatinnS
to tell hiWry ofmedical school

....,w,...,.'s ,_,

u. • ..,_, _,, tM:
tllfll 1M~ It rna to rJw. ftaMnf:ltltalta J1ri1k i1t UIJ ""{'U11 rJw_ totiwrdty c_ _ ,, coordntau dw. cddrrotltlll Wlllr

EsD&amp;iM.

dew/op&lt;a~lfl tutd frutd..nwi

rJ!oro.

The
' Commillee boaorpnizzd 1.1110 ~~~~ IOde'ldop \IW\OIIIdrmenls
ol dot celdntioll. M doe flrll propam IIIII ocbool &lt;:otabllSbod at the uniomrlty, the medic.al
celdnles ~· l~97.(&amp;t#OI}'tltn Ill.)

...ICIUic:.atenna.l ............ CoauDittee
Dr. f'tllltl B. Wela
Hononry Cboir
Co""nl Clwnr
............ , _ E.IIMdrlcll

u•

Co-Oiah

1JtstuJ8IIUIIM ~,.,.... Professor
~lw&gt;olof/..oY.

Dr. Cerole Smltlt -

Co-Oiah

A.ssroc~Glt

Vcct l'raldtlll /M Ulllvti'Sity

Adwvtt:Ywuttt

Committee Members
............ f'tlllp Cl. Dirtt:torof~w .EdacaJIOfl Ctltll!r

Ediu:onoltoJ ~" AdwrurutnWQfl
Oltd Policy
Mr. E. Baldwin
AlsociaJt DirtctOT
OJJict of Co rrnten tlltd Sp«1oJ Evtrus
Or. Ronald E. Batt
D&lt;pAI'IIIl&lt;lll of a,...co~ogy tlltil Obsltrna
Mr. Dennh R. 8l8clc
AlsociaJt JCt l'rauklll Oltd o....
of St"""'"

............ ..,.,.J. Bono
l)q&gt;GTUftLIIl of fAglult
Dr. llarokl Bnldr
O.ptJTtiOtltl of AIOaiOIIUCal Scii!IICtt
Sclw&gt;ol of /lltdJCIM tlltd &amp;omtdlctll
Scioocu
Ma. a.yt Brown

Ma.-.J. F....._
F"IM Aru Cnur £_,.. c-t~uvttor
-...M . ~

............

18mFtMhllnl

Lodwood ~of A - - HIStory
of HIStory
Dr. tbry H. Cl........
AJ:soncW Vi&lt;x Prd&gt;MIIIfot f'oblu
StTW&lt;.1' tlltil u,.,_ 1\Jf&lt;un
~Ill

Dr. K--J. ~
Vl&lt;'t " " - . .

OJJict of tilt PrOW&gt;Jt

Ma.-A.~

M1uor Sl4ff Assi.ssa4

Off&gt;« ofIM Prd&gt;MtU

~s-o. ~

~It( ofl'llysu:s tlltd """""""'-

Mr. R-~
AJ;ronote YIN Prt::Sidorl for Uruwmty

Fariluii!S

Mr. _ . _ J. Rec,M
Diuc:ror
OJ!ice ofCol{&lt;rew:u tlltd Sp.cl&lt;li fVOlU

Ma. JC-,.. A. Eucwnw A-..z ro tilt l'raukot
OJJict of dv l'rt::Sidorl

............
c:. SNiplto
l)q&gt;artJKIII·
ofc_,.r
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Undergraduale Student

Dlr&lt;ctor

Ms.

Offiu of l'abb.cano~rs
Dr. Wllll8m J. Evltta
E.:ucanw Dinctor
Ahuruli R&lt;lanoru

fl(AJu/IM F1ilrt 811- ....... clinaary.

Ulli""""Y A«1tnur

A.ssroc~Glt

Yl&lt;'&lt; Prtsukot for /Nwioplw111
Mr. T1moth)' J. Conroy

A

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Represen.uuives
Nicole.....,_

C:.. Mlllonzl
Ma.s-R-

T,_,.

Chai~rsons

~

....... . . . ,, N.D., IJILD.

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l'rtl{e~Mr, ~ ofH.-ry

Reception honors Mary Salatino; served university for 39 years
About 125 frteftds .... cofleiCu.. gathtml March 9 foe a rec:epti&lt;lll ill the FiDr
AJU Centt:r Atrium, 10 salute the oontn'butions of Mary Salatino, I 39-year university
employee wbo retires this liiDDih_
A native ol Oaytooo Beach. Aa., Salatino came 10 UB in 19SS when bc:r husband AI
eruolled as a gnoduate 5tUdent in cducatioo. "I lhoogbt I'd ~AU 1 temporary job at the
university 10 belp him out. II IUmcd 001 the lllmp&lt;lnl)' job extc:ndcd into 1 Jon&amp; aDd
~career," Salatino told dot Reponer.
MOSI recadly secretary 10 dot diredor ol the Fme AJU Ct:nter. reporting 10 AJU aDd
1..cat:rs Dean Kerry S. Grana, Salatino began bc:r career as secretary 10 the late Milton C.
Albrecbt, dean o{ the College o{ AJU aDd Scima:s. She tbeo worked .. secretary 10
Ooolglas Surgeoar, dean o{ the medical school aDd ..... also secretary 10 dot late Oocar A.
Sil vaman, wbo doubled u diredor ol the Ubnries aDd chaired the English ()eponmmt.
This ,.... followed by bc:rloo&amp;tenurussecretaryiO Vice President foe Academic Affairs
Warren Bennis (later president of the University ol Cincinnati aDd DOW on &lt;D&lt;iow&lt;d
cbaisbolderat u sq, &amp;Dd then!Nvicepresidc:niS wbofoll""'·cd. Thisincludcclon ll·year
lllint with William Greiner as PtovooL
" When Mr. Greiner became President, I expressed on interes1 in working in the FiDe AJU
Centt:r," Salalino rccaiJcd. "My ooe wish would be !hat the Fme AJU Centt:r aDd the arts
receive the kind o{ financial supper! !hat they require to grow aDd f1ourisb ~they
serve 10 enrich aDd humanize our lives."
At the farewell n&gt;ecption. Salatino Slf" sbe enjoyed '1he overall warmth aDd friendliness oltbepeoplewbom i 'veworkcdwithover1heyears.hwaswaoderfultosee&amp;Ddgr.et

qain people like retired V'~ce Plaident far
Finance ODd
Bdward Doly. relin:d Dira:lor o{~ Barty Poppey, and
Mr (Cbldeo)Focd,~prd-and
wdl-knownretired~, whom I fmt
mew • clin:octor ol Gaao:raJ IIIII Tedlnical
Sludies, bder MR:. I
met widl oCber coltea,_ ODd fiiellck I' e DOt - in 10 or 20
years.
-~-overwhelmed &amp;lid IOIICbed wbcn Dr.
Gonlall Silber, fonnorchair ol tbeDq..u.,..
o{

Modem

J...oncuo&amp;eo. ODd Prof....,. E.rneri-

tuo, ponduced an offer lelk:rS&lt;IIIIO han by tbeo
Dam Mihan
Albredll ODd typed by IIIIDC 35 yean "1Q.•
Concludes SUalino:
full ~l&lt;
in 39 yws.l'ddoitallover .,.U. bul 1101. in Ws
lifetime.l'hio cateer. the uni..,..;ity has comt
10 I cioore. II'S Umo 10 p&gt;. bul ['m glad because
DOW I C&amp;ll sit in the shode, . I pss ol wiDe
aDd watch aU the OChers dance..
.
SbeplansiOscriouslypurouellifdonJ Jo\oe
o{ flower gardening aDd is q ein&amp; lhe signs of spring from bc:r Akron home. Also pllnDcd
are "1lol ol llllvding aDd n:ading."

c.

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Poll h-b mJ

B

IGHT

AT THE

B

FFALO PHILHARMO

PoPs
Thui"Sday, April 14, 1994, 8:00 p.m.
Kk.nha.n. Mu... !Loll. 7 J

S~mpl.ony ~uri. Bulf.k. N..... ).,.\,

~

Elizabeth = . Conductnr

"Cla sics of the Silent Screen"
,

exw

1

f'e1'CUB810n

Ensembk

Follc.terng a smash l.rt P"r/onru:mc~ w:rth thr BPO /,s1 !f"''• NEXl.'~
I'Ctums u:ith a s1Jiar "~"' •"-. "From Rags to Rid.u" tehicl. ;,..JuJu
clips /rom lh• greill siknt ,,.,,,,.,.. prof«''.J """' t4~ Orclrutro

--

s,.._..;.]l'R roteo ....,J.Y. ..,tl, val..! L1B ID

T'.,l,.t

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Sectioo A
Sectioo B
Section C
S..:tiDn D

Ph.JI..m.oooc Pncr

l 'B SJ. ~

$20 98

$26 00
$22 00
$15 .00

$1 562

$1 200

.. $34 10
$27 80

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6
Introducing . ..

OA
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qua/if)•,
tat

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proft! iOMI mainuno
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York at Buffalo

lso: PRINTER

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TYPEWRITERS

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For COSI CO!IlpCUUI'C pnc1ng and rehab! hi) . Call now f..
)ourquot&lt;

691-0001

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Call 6&lt;S~I:B lo rq~-

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645-3705

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645-3200

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...._ Dr ICbolu K. TOOU.
Cold Sprin&amp; H - Lob, Cold
Spriloc H.t.or, NY 121 Cool.&lt;
NanhCampus 4p.m.

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TUESDAY

;wfll~

Obotrwliv&lt; '&lt;pllnopo..y,
Robcn L a.c..Joer. MD ..

G&lt;nc:oocch PmfcuoriUid 0...man. Dnclor ol Reor.otd&gt;,
Oukiml's ft.Wacal Ceatu.
Uru" of v..pna. K-=b Audaonum.Cbddrco'• Hoopcal 8 UIL

--

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c--s.-, .....,._

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..... Aif&lt;cri.......... ot

c.tar, Davlll Halui-Baku.

prtStdenl. lDSJde.otOu1 PoiJhtaJ
Coosuhuu. In&lt; :B2 F -.
Soulh ~ 12JO.-Ll0 p.m

.... ....__

~AIID~AL

....,__otRdia.bitiayiUid

~,

c...
for~ Rcoourta, IH.

otaT-•aalc:alloa d won. f'nl(_ K. K. Aaprwal,
RepooaiiJa&amp;~ Colle&amp;&lt;.

SOli C«*.&lt;. Nonll Campus.
4p.m.

-~- lp_.._

~lodoa20Kooa.

J

f'OIA!We -UIOOCI'

THURSDAY

l1

J__. a.b. Cof_,.., A
Mc:tq

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SlUDDIT...::nAL

l'luo-.otiii&lt;M

o..--. Baanl Rcc1U1
Hall.

~

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I'Oiillc:aoiOW.ielleuia: Tio&lt;
w._,...,~.Pn&gt;l

Akuador ~ Oc:pooay lleod
ot diC Eolucs llqJa ot
..
S... Uai•. 614 BaldJ' arab
~- IP-"'-

�'7

lD-.JOam- 2:30pm

--

-IIIIIII.U
.·_

StnottpsOII IIUil ET. 821
Heal lit sa-. Ubnry . Soulll

&lt;"'ampus. J p.m. No revsc:ntion
rrQUIJUI.

W A l l -.
Al-•lo Tobie. Student
I '"""· Nmh Campus. 8·11 p.m

6

-_...

Photography pro! Ann lcwert's ·Schemallc Diagram 4-year.Qd Plunges 10 Death· IS
among worl&lt;s betng shown In 649 Fine Arts Center, Apnl 6 a1 7 30 p m

m.....
c-. ea.np... s-9
andJda!&lt;.

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r-eotlft M- q o

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lluwllt ' " ' - _ ,...,...,_
tioa,J""""' •R ...,._ Zll B.aird
NorthCampu...IO-Il ;JOo.m
Mild
- loBUBN:[T~

WEDMESDAY

Clemen lnform~tion
Technology Center,
120 Oemens Hall

.... UJI~

~tAsouru -""- 8 21 o.. bh
- s U i n r y . SoutllC1111
pus.. I 0 •~m. No regiW11ll0n

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Coii64S-6125U&gt; r&lt;;t

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...............(;......... Coua-

tria. DoJbr'vb Ojuric. U8 f'nct.
ics Pr-Fellow 08
0......._ Nonh Compos N0011

orth~pus

..............
_,__ .........

RSVP:

-~

645-334 by 3128/94

'"'-~ ·

--Sipol~Dr

For Mor' lnfontUlliott C4U 645-3348

F P. Orw:.._.,, Depo..ol'

MediCal 8 iopll)'lict. u... of

u.---

Toron

Hi:odlor Ataebtonum.

Rl'CI I LIO p .m.

Q l - -lllltlliiiV
--·oi'ColloiCIIII
f'--. Dmnls C Prie""Canq:tt Mell011 Unl'o 2:05
Funlol. Nonl!Cmip..,. HS p.m

-·

..-Ya
Bonooo.olo.doeolntiooo ol
Bfta"*• Ed•ard A Kta\•"Z.,
PhD. DepL ofNeurdltoloo .
HarvJnl Medtcal Sd!ool 307

Ho&lt;h&lt;l&lt;tt&lt;r Nonh C - •
p.m SponSOftld by \be tmerdi'Ctphnary Gra4u.au- Group Ul
=O&gt;&lt;ieo« ond til&lt; Dept of
B-l'lwmlool05)

....

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Goocl flotlo1 r Alolatl'Od.lctloo
"' \l...,uriaaloa, ... ond

Wolttt SuJIPOOn. onb Compos.
6;30 p.m. 011116&lt;~12:110-

UUAIIfiLM
~...ea.s
a. Student UnKM~lbt·

..

Nonb Compus. 6.30 P·"'Admlmon- u . studenli. u .so.
•11 otben.

11er

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S;pt
R&lt;lldiJoc ~
IUid
Sola.-: Sep.nu.., Mydt
rm. Rmlit ·• Botw "
c
Reeflll Na. Burd Hall Nonh
C.mpu~ . ooa- 1 45 p m..

----

F - - - prolessor

ofl'ho&lt;op&gt;llby. SUifY Coller&lt;

M Ne- Pa1U. at.llbor of Ltfo

R""'"

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ll&lt;t&lt;&gt;L 71w
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md: Ptlp\·rw.s and A Gtnk ~
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lngal&gt;be. onb

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FUTT\IAL
Uteratllft
Pia:Do o.a..
JOS&lt;pb llalts ..., Eloo&lt;

rer

-----.oaiCA&amp;.---K«ni(fkL.

'llccltal Area. 8au"d..

Older editions of
The Buffalonian are still
available at discounted prices!

NonhCompu Jj()..S:.!Opm.

-CLASUCS IIIRITAI.

Mtuk..,. w- c.-_..,
._... R.dcUnb, a....

S c k - A•r -.IUid
-

AdrienD&lt; T,..on:k.(lryta.

50p'UD: Mll.bevr TworeL.. vic).
liD, and JoanAt Sohloe:Jel. pt.IDO.

Allee Recilll U.n. Soulll Compus, 7 p.m. """' ID lite pubhc.

A mt '""'-.tt. associate prole&amp;50&lt;
ofpbot.....y,SUNYCollq&lt;
l:f Nev.' Paltz. crnlor 0'1' tbe te·

-

rie&amp;. "Monol Dongen.· 8~9
Fint Ans- Center. North Campu&gt;. 7.30p.m.

illuStniiOf ftOOI
Clecbosb\"Jdtia. .mo mustratiombne_.,.swt&lt;lrly. l95
A.luuvu Amta. Nortb Catopti.
J:JOp.m,

Clolaoo,__

E q.crianttal £ olatialt Olboc
Dr. GnNm
llell. B;oJQcy Dept. M&lt;Oil1
UruY 121 Cooke North Cam·
pu5. .. p.m.

..WAUI.LOeiC

COIJ.OCII••
Loci&lt;
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Kallclllleio-Larodo- Robit&gt;5oo
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Kalldl!lll'lo.-- Joj -

pus. 4 p m.

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...........
Prof Ab KumJ•u. Uah. of

--Lartilo ud Cli!IIUISharoa
~). proenm of worb
by Hoydn. Shostokovioh ond
Tdwlo•sty. Slec CODCetl Hall
onh Ounpui. 8 p .m. Tldceu
an: S&amp;. $6 and S4. For rnJonna00. can 645-291 'flJa ol th.t

ort.lll Sta't. Studeoi

Union '11talc'. orth ~··
9 p.m. AdmiWon: $'2. IOI:Udents;
Sl.SO. Ill oth«s.

Nevllda!Rato. IOJ

[);d-.

Soulll &lt;:omrpu.. • p.m.

Trpo Solppaliloriol far
Fahw......... .ftl lteca:I ,Drq
~la Maa ud llal&gt;­

blu, Yoohiaki Molsumoto.
PhD. Dept. of~.

SboWI Coller&lt; of~­
c a l - . Totyo S08 Cool&lt;!:.
Nord&gt; 0unpu&lt;. 4 p .m .

Continued

1

:rltL BuJla.bmMu&lt; iJJ 1M Undergr11du.ne Yea.rl&gt;oo
8
the only annual at UB. Curn:ntly in OW" 61 )...,.,.
of publication, this boo!&lt; is a comp~
colrection of the past ~Car' lTIO!Il memorable
.,...,nts and DlOIIK'Ilts. All of UB's undergnduall'
dubs and organizations, 'f&gt;«tS, swd~tH life.. and
or cou.....,, gndu.ating Senion :u-e included in thi•
unique antl&gt;ot&lt;&gt;gy.

on 1~ge 8

1984.cdilion , . .If&gt;
1985 cdiOOo
r
1"986cditioa
1987cdition
$10
1988 edition
Sl 0

1f'fDU -

1989cdilion
1990 edition
1991 cdiOOo
199!cditioa
1993 cdilion

so""

$10

s10
$ 15
$!!)

S2S

~ tJdll $5
93, 92. 91 &amp; 510
4lditiD!u. Ml ,........... i..a.uk~.

1·m """"' ...

11&gt;11..,.--. c.B64»969Jor-¥

Send a check or- money
Ol'da", para!&gt;~&lt; .., no.

Unh.'e:risty at Bul!ato

TN~"ith)OUT

Suit.&lt; 3!3 Student Union
Bos602100
Ambcnt. NY I Uft(h2100

name. addt:e~~ and
ph~ numborm•

Tit&lt;~

�....__.
-YIIWIYGSCALENDMI

Cllt1linoed l!lllll page 1

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"'""'' Monday, Toesdoy.
W&lt;diiOodliy, Friday. 10 :un-S
p.m" ~y,IOa.mAI

p.m.

-ALCGU.WEGII
...UY
"''b&lt; T-iolu of St. AJs·
thony ...ltafpie«.- • !OOCIUD&gt;&lt;n·
raJ collage by BuffDo lAiR
\o\ ~ Olmsted. is Oft view
lhmujlll April .lO i• rile Poeory/

It= lkd•Collcdioa.C20
Capoo H•fl. Tbc: 01.,.... alt.vru~e ~lhts of' four 6' 1. 4'
panels th:icltly ooUaged • "ritb
pte1uru represeDling i;i, hal
Otms\ed coa5Jdal !POme of the
rnM:lpie temptatJOns, horton
and h\es.iin,p of hit tifcr.ime.
R oi.·o:Mtir~;g room is ope.n 9 a,m 10
5 p m. Monday lh.,..jlll Friday

l 'ENFANrS PIAJCS WAS··r ' F.nfut"s 'P\an: Vision• of
\\;o&lt;biqgwo,l191·1991 ."de·
"'• rned by the Olatles Sumner
S.·hool Museum and Arch•

m ~ .astungtOo. D.C .• on v~-~o·
thmu~h March 25 l.o hmcs.
~cu EltublltOn Hall, thard
11,"."" Hayes HaJI, Soulb Cam·
pm. Exhiblt.. fTCC of cl:wtt and
'~ 10 tilt pubUc. can be seeu

-.,-16... . .

-~~~~~Pooriq fF.
COI7. , _ 1' " " -

(-~.-......s...

dOl Worll.l'olli"C &lt;IF-tOll.

~-­

~-"""hll fF-4019 .

-'S

fr•'fll 9 a.nL to S pAD.. Monday
thmugh Friday . For morr inf«·

m:auon, call829-·l4&amp;S. ul. 317.

OISPI.AY.

HISTORY-

.. \\'omeo In Med..iciDt: Earl,y
W-omen UB Grad~ '18fr6..
I Yt~., Health Sciences Li·
....'} South Ounpus.
.. ldt•ats aDd Poui.bilities:

""""ld!onnalioo.- a

• p.m Spoaoored by~..... 0(

-

,.....w...-.--....P\abli&lt;
5«¥1&amp;..,.. u"""' Ati-.
Pooliq 'ft ·!IC019.
~

,..,..,.., Spodlilloi,P'Jdlol·
OSY."-iJJc lll-94017.

-~

Biology. l'oobq tR-92101
. _.... 1J'eduoldu 1-Biolopad Sciellc:c:s. Posti~l fR-

. ..-.,_ ,_

Tbc: ........_ ~of the R&lt;--

ocordlFout!odo!iooi.I021Mam

SL. ofl'en fret usi.llaftCt- i•
eUUin down o. driO:Itine.. "''he
_ . , is4osipod lor model'·
ate lO bea:vy drink.ers. a&amp;eJ. 21

SS. Who art DO( lkobotia.

Tbc: pn:ocram reqglm the ill·

volvementora_..._.,..,_

or fTteod. 11 i:nduc:iet. a free

94023.-

-

s._..

~(put-}-ltdaa-

0-JI'IdlW&lt;- Ser·
,;.,._ PosliD&amp; •P-4019. a..i.......... lbU

~

(SL-Z,

-.....-·~­

PI"" wiU be poud up 10$120
for lalang pan io 1110. cljlllowcet program. All in:fQI'miUOC'I

6. .......... . . _ . Op.

--

rernain1i eot:r:Pctely cooCiden-

A hmi.ted number of ,.endor
~remain fOI' MayfeSt
Cnfl Shc.w.- :&amp;Cheduk:d for Mn
21 .22 erom to-.JO .a..m-s p.m.
J

.n

v.·m

benefu Ot·viuoo of Athkun'
Scholarsbip Fund Marumum

hooch s.izt l$ 6 fee wtdt by 12
lee&lt; doep Tables, cilaii'S mel
dectnc will be supp.Ued upon
request. No bnut on booth uu
Men- than ·90 vendors h.ave
been aa:cpto:l so spac:c is lim·

hed For marc infc.'lnn21l0fl. or
to receive a rqistrattou form.

call the 0.\'ISIOG of Athletics a:1
64S-3141 . Deadline ts April I

AUIIITJH41 FRAUD tEMINAJI
SOliD

Tl!e ln...-nat Audu l)oparun&lt;na

walcl1 and S 10 were repor!ed moosng
....ell 8 from • loci&lt;lof "' Alumni Anona

missing Marcil 7 rrom Alumni Ar• A IJ)Im bag conlllintng car l&lt;eys was
reported rriissing Match 7 trom OU15Jde
me racquetbaJ courts in Alu'mi Arena
The owner'6 car also was reponed mss"'0 from the Slee loL
• A purs8was reported fTliSSinQ March
lrom a ctlalr in O'Brian Halt Aoc:or&lt;Jang 10
Plib1ic SafBty, lhe purse was le&lt;l&lt;J'&lt;'e&lt;ed
later oo 1he bulldong's grounds. cash WB$
mossiog !rom the purse. tlUt the owner's
cred~ cards and personal papers st•!

• A t3Cikst and a walla! comalnlng orcards end cash we&lt;&amp; reported msso'1Q
..._ell 8 from Alumni Arena.
• A ·us Emerii'J"CY Medocal Serw:es'
sogn was reported mossmg March 9 lrom
Pooer Quadrangle
,. Public Salary Charged a man
pelll
laroeny. possession ol biJrVIary lllOI$
~ moschlef and lcll8rng
SICqJed March 10., lhe- parloog lot
• E i g t l t - and 12 COs. WOflh a
corrboned value o! 5630. we&lt;o reporled
m.ssvog Match 10 lrom l#Vnan Haft

combined value or S130. ""'re reported

a

wereinil
• A wonter Jacket pams two shirts, a

allar.,.,-

MIS s,s- Aul)'ll (SIAl·

ideatW Ufe. Postiq f P-4020
SeDiorllir«::Gr, o..-dop....t
, _ ..... Openu.- (SL-

d.al. For mor~t raformation. c.1ll
887 -257'3 Oft)'llm&lt;.

• Jeans. a beft and a wa1ct1. WOflh a

blliWioo Modldac., """"''
rR-9402C.

t

mcdaJ euminmoa. PUOCI·

Alumni Art:aa.. Proccod.&gt;

-spon. ~ Oepartrnenr

--P&lt;dC02C. 4021.

....,. ...... ~5-20'-1 -~
p.m..cr645-612$-8l.lll.·

10

porale S{lOilSOish•ps are available W'llh a lalge benefits Plld&lt;89e offered Olnnel
at S 100. also available 100' ,t !Qe unable 10 play golf f'looeeds ollhe l!'ll'llnl
go dnectly to lund scholarshlli&gt;S lor Ulrs lrte&lt;oolleO'are al1lleles
The organiz•ng commottee
planned lhe day to lflCiude lunch. Climer cockt&amp;ls
.before and aft diMe( , golf pnzea. and a lee gdllor atl c:ompelllorl The MlrTv'nad&lt;
w.h be a scramble eYMI of1efing good ll.m lor goiters a1 eny
level
Rlursomes mJstenler by ~,pot~ t Payment W!Ul the r~ can be made
throtJgh 1/osa or MaslerCard. or a cheok made payaae 10 UB OMsoon ol A1hlela For
reserva.ticnS or fuf1tler inlormatlon. pleaSe call the U8 OMsoon ol ~ a1 64~3178

-~i&lt;
Saqer).

-.clwlloll,ond..._

""""""'*'..-Yuclmulli·
Foehcadl

fbr.........-...........,.S20'
P).

~fal:uley.-uc~-..nr

- o f worb by'""""" Dena

GOlf Cl-*

Uhold tile ~ &amp;l1l1lUIIl Edward F. M.rrrnacl&lt; ..,....,.,.
Golf ClassiC at lhe OOW!y-renc:waled Brookfiek:f Oc:MJtry Club on Monday. Ane 6
The cost lor the outing Is $265 pe&lt; golfe&lt; or S1 ,0Ei0 per folnome In aadlbon. rot·

-~

Ellicoa C&lt;npb.-

-·-- .----00' ----""'*1dia Gailory ho&lt;n: M&lt;Widly,

da .10 0A11.-S p....: Tl!......y,

Hold......._.

UB to
The U-slty Ill BU!Ialo

Stlrpry. ............ fF-4015 ......

Oalho&lt;OIIft 0...... ll()

-

Junior lh larc:us Hut:OI\InB rep-.flhe t.tnr-v &amp;I Bul!aJO al !he NCAA O....SIOil 1

Wletltllfll ~held In Cha;leJ ift , NC DQ~-n.,
.
Hutchins, wrestling at Hl7 pounds. was defMted 1n the ll'$l round by
Norttrwesrern·a Rohan Gardner 1().7
lit was the second 1l!'t'l8 tnltwee S5SOOS that Hulchrls haa rep-*&lt;! lhe Bulls al
lhe National Tournownel'll As a lreshman, HUICilww '0101'1 1111 weigh! clan In lhe Ell I
Coa&amp;l eSiliiiQ AssoctatiOn ~ips to actvanoe kittle ·NCAA's
F« lhe - " " · Htkl1nl was 17..( ondMduiiiY ~an 11-ma!d'l
streak

001~,

•o••

- .., .... .....,;,y-.

-:- -ud mi.xod t'Ot·

..... dacir -...lllllllll pt... l
C... is S69S. A lOIII OC 22

-.Til
Tl!e 1 1 - ...._..Sat"')

!C11111111loa, cau ~S- 222&amp; .

aa.~oa des,.

10

_..., .,.-Jooo!lraud
~~-­

ea..nw..............,orr.....

&lt;&gt;OIIIIIIila:&lt;' . onemloo. For ill-

..,..~pc..,.,ru..-.-­

....

o( !nlld ..... -

-

~

rile&gt;

. . - poiiKiJla. ~y.

ba---.·A ....

-lbc-1111 .

AlvmoiAmii.Seoicnwllo
wi IObc"""'idmdiDIHI

momlty ....

... howotan ......tl&gt;y_,
majori ill the AA ~
me"~ coatinues dlrou&amp;b March
15 on theUDi..,..;cy Glllory.
Fu.e Aru Ct:am:r Wotb 1ia·

~s...-maaMIST~

F!raud. Pin- Deooc:tiooa
ucl Clow&lt;il." ,,_ l-10 ...
h
d p _ .........
_
_
ll&lt;dt&lt;:'-.
l"""'*'*la

portllnii)'}-Uaiver&amp;il)'" Dcv-t-1-

-

· l'l&gt;slin&amp; fP-40 32
Dinetor of o..-dopODent.
Sdaool or ...,...., &lt; L-~
Uai\-'tfi1t} Ot'-elq:lment POSl

-

---

a&amp;.OWWAllZ .. _ _

1 b yJr6951
--by_,Jomosw--2twamor

•

(MP-38)-Public Setviale aDd
Urban Affairs. f'osun&amp; 11'-4031
COMJimTIVE CLAUIFilD
CML •HIIVM:E
Cakoolatiom Oork I (SG-86)Swdeno Aa:ouol&lt;, ~.. .. 031120

-

t.AaOII ·Ct.AUIRED CfVIL

l

A WOIIAH'S WOiml

$16 95)

NEW AND NOTEWORlliV

4 - .. - - - 5 ..,...._IJIO_
by
e . - Delanv
AMtiYIL
by John Berend!

(Random""'- $:23)
MA--SAY,·1111DGANY
Sanm and
wilhAinyHII

(Koaansha $201

C a..,. (~).Custod,.l
Sen~ Ln~t

wr.un

A oollecla&gt; rJI moslly ~ -'&lt;s by
a pee~ and """QWtller IAal had a lasting .,.,
paa on sooety "' the !910s i:'OudO!Id .,
1tvs 1110'1&lt; are p1101os by Rotler1 Maplett&gt;orpe
.hJdy Ln&gt; ano Olhers

1ng •P·3099 Acl.mi.aht!,..tlw
O..o lillardFII!JII.oro ColqoUICISuiDlll&lt;rSesoioos

BY PAm SMITH
(Norfon St8 951

.,

(Wamor,

COUICI'Y

EARLY WOM,

6Y IAARIAN!IE WlLL.IAMSON
(&amp;alfem..e$10)

Williamson ~es me v!tal """ol womeo
in lodajl's worid by &lt;Iawong Jn:m her """' ex .
aro U5tng hal WISdom and canpe!ong ll!lioe10 ~ Oll'lefs "'the realfirmaliorl or women ,.., a male doml'laled se&gt;cie!y

134383

~VI

CUUIF1DI ctVIl. SDIYICE
LaboniAlf)• Ml!duanidaa
(SG· Il~lo!:y
Llboramr~ .

Ltnt t204S2

l't.lauy Btair· Mood,y,'UB'r
IFirot Woman Graduate,"' Un ·

Here con1e the Brit~~
In 1966 four yooag Eog1isttmm foondod lbc Lindsay Siring Qawt
lbc Royal Aademy of Music. Londoll.

d{'rJ.-nduate Library, Capen
H"U. North CAmpus.

31

... rp Wclllftl iA the '90s,'"
""Gn\ 'ft'IIUMOt Docll:mmts

"' l.nckwood Ubnfy lhrough
M::wch 31.

Now known as " A Quartd.of Masltrs," ibey'U oome~ Kkinbans
ruew.y. M:ardr 2910 play a new piece ..-ntle!l cspec:ially ror lbem by
Sir Michael TIJ'PCI! plus "orb by Mozan ond Borodin.

NO 'TICES

Our visitors ..;u play 31 8:00p.m. and oor own S1r111011 Rlwson will
give a ptt-&lt;XXI&lt;:M !all:: J1 7:00p.m.

{'oon~millc

" llultalo'r

Womftit.• and

-olD FaODUy.•

Tick&amp; 512.00, students $5.00
Far more inf011!lalioo. call 838-2383.

UNDEJIMAIIIMTE

c-IPlAIIDI
sot*tT
All('ntioa

~grwluates

~ ~~lk:lwingliCUlties:

i.n the

Arts and

Lcnm. NuuraJ Scicaus and
M"IIe""tics. Social Scicaus.

A concert April 6 brings the celebrated KalichsleinLaJ;~obinson Trio 10 Slee Concert Hall.

'BuffaU1 CliamDer 9tWsic Society

:1111111111111

�--.a..._...,_.,.

computer networks need ethical guidelines
aniJ"*Ihe~o ·Jlii'MilfiiiDdl,bla-

~-

PWBARBirOTAKE~

_, ,IIIL'r..htkllfecoa....,.Yirlullly~

....cr._•

·~ COII1pller nrtMllb ~­
!Ia _ . . . . , ... rd!ic:ll pidellnes
wl!idl will-ln1slwarthr inf.,.,..
don. Kwe ckm'l, !Ia il fhoWd &lt;lilly be
....rrQI:'IIQII..,..,..jiUIIIIIils,llllidDr.Dobroll
JabaloD. •• ~ Sc:iCIIce llqwu&gt;at
OoDogaium Mln:ll 17 ill ·Knox ltall
JobDoon,. prof- at~. sdMICC mil 'lil:dmohlcY studies at ~

..U. 1111i1os p;_,.iD ~- irnmi11o:a

,..,.,....-tyai~OCii"flly II._.
......
ia
fa uodetet:uil* ~ "'!!bool ........ II
lioltn()D
olf-....nt).)Willlliceilall&gt;....,.. 'W'IIb . . on-linr - * l )W - oapy

. .lutb-..~ot-.....,

PolyuduDc IDsdtute,spokeoboullhe IJOW·
in&amp; IIC&lt;Id 10 defme proper cxxles of conduct
for oomputer -won: IIICI$.
"On4ine pdblr:nB VCI}' much mim:w !he
wcdd olf-lint. It'• nee a Ddlcally endeavor; lbe raid. "We tbould try 1o do bella
on-lint lbon - . •, done olf-

..
§:E
lio&lt;,• . ,

eat. and

•

~

Individuals ""' lie,

."We-~,.._

~,ID.,.. .......
· ·.t.s~

Io_...,

sr-no......

.._..,-~

OHille&lt;mW!onicstirll ollows.-s10~
main~ldmloooald.nil
h

......... a"prinoippeat...,...,.....at ...
0 ""etill6ftJaaat

..,_.,rm .....,.,....,,.,.-"""' 'lh&lt;

JcD.a ll1id,

licm•o•,;

owner ever knowing. n

--

t. •

•

CliO

IOIS, jplilli&lt;:

..,....,_...w.CIDdlm

Clllllilullly--in~...,....,.,_.
"'Il fiil. ..., l1dy 01&gt; JIOOl* IIIII ~

.

-mtw&lt;ll!al- .....a,....,.,...

l1lod, aviD&amp; 1hlm ~ ., .,._ by
•...........,.lbciiCwbo~~.,...s

iDptiic . . . a101i1

,.............._lt»IIX

ot~lub~' Lif)'CliiCS

'•

oaiOIIo do IIX ~ 1lplll ft, fl&amp;hs o(
kdlail~ ......... -pilqlltis
....., folboalby- ......,...._..,..

easiorlo~ocberpeople and~ saeal

· a .•
to.._
willll...,.
....... . . n.:,

..W.. 1bo de 111m II

"""""""1bila.....,.._ncm.cr....,..

die.,.........,

"""~~-"**"'-

you can copy something
and steal it without the

.......,.

• ........_

judy...
by
ibltil:ir.....-••~ dllll~htlbe)
.., ..,. • • ~-by
tbowia&amp; lbe IDoplds iD ......,.,_. 0...
at · ~-...-

ond ..a I ......

"'Mth the on-line world,

\*_,

..._,l~atWaiDJliM&lt;Y."
·~

......

r;i&gt;emo p&gt;d....,..tlr!'&lt;JII.,...oialllemy
0.. Ill&lt;
. . ., lll'&lt;q

.,.... fiat.

Jdaoo~aCliiiiClrllllhl

-

.,..
"'*-'s, !lld:lallmna. wil ~
ond be .... .,_-by
axaa ID

. . iDcoo....uence ocbm
.,.... . Mll!l!!!llliahouondtooh.,dhi·
cal principles and Vll:ues ""' at Slllz, .aid
~ "II sbould beccme a pUblie issue."
1'hree d!ooa::trri!lics at orHine &lt;OiliiiUiiattiooltl8kt it ~IDnxnJ allusc:l;..kinol
said. ScqJe. onmymily. a~ nat

informalion. Al1!lou:8h llllllllymity faciWI.es
COOI!DIJOir:o!kD, it ol8o mol&lt;llS it difliajl1 ..,

Instruments
measure bone
regeneration
,,.....,

Earthquake info on Quakeline database

__

News S.Xeau Stall

ONE REGENERATION after pe-

rioclont.al SUIICIJ can beaceurately
ltSSeSSCd -Mtboul additional surgery
by using X -roy mel two insuumen1s
deYeloped by UB deat.al .-an:bers.
~ft:Sllltso(..,.,.,a,onlhe..,..mea­

suringmdbodMart:b12•1beFJIDI~ol'

dlelnl&lt;:maliolaiAaiociolionfarD!ftal ~
Ollmwm Sbiblcy ltpOIII'd ~ b boncJ,held in-

S~Mn~Dsambeused•lheliroethc~
surgery is port'onmd ond Iolloowiog ~
lralq six mcDhs 10. ,.,.,. - . .. Shibley, lJB

dinicll-sart pn:S&lt;.&amp;;a at periadonlics. said ir.
is~ 1D l&amp;ll5&lt;9i booe densily 1brw,rJ1 &gt;dume • !he lime at ugery IDd ef1.cno&lt;'ll'll 10
~ifi!IL'ugery wasiiJCJC&lt;SSful in.....,.,_
q boc2Ciia ond ldaJiby 1iwr..
X'ft)' alone does nat povide an oa:ural.e
~lbe~lldliewlcl

ows time. 0.. CXlDlbiood wilb X'ft)', Which po-

..,.,.......,..,...,. ,_, ...,_

'1 delib!naciJ lock my door llmcloo it 0111
be brrA&lt;mda,bul I ""1""11ha )'OU willlllll bn:ok
inlo it. ll's my ti&amp;IJl., prMo:y • .Jdbnoul Slid.
-e.... a)'OU pi&lt;:k""' 1oc11...,..
illido« if,.,....., a cnda:r, )'OU ""'-k no mr .,_.,

Cllleibimpet&gt;OiiiiOISandr.-peopleiO"'fllmc"

(bsy. impoli1e responses whicb""' 1101 ....nlbougbt-&lt;JUI a mar ol'l'ead Ol.bcr ~).

00n',

- Amn)ml)•""""""'" ... inqriryo( ......a.,.
.kJino:JD air:l. lo!lrad. lift llJWP'
be

*"""'

sosm:..QUAK!EUNlloffersteclmialJ'IIl"'S
ondcxdmnce~.,.,....Uy-a•'OII·

ROM SEISMIC BUilDING rodes
in Memphis 10 anide51hat dcoo&lt;nbe
howloliedown yourbot-woJertank
beforr ao eanllquala: saril=,1hou- ADds of ref""""""' to maleriJo.ls CIOilCet1liog
eanbquake5 mel earthquake e~~gineerin ane
now uailable for free tbTOugh tb&lt;:
QU~daLObose to any""" who bas
_..,lhe~.

QUAJCEL.INE is !be da1obase of 1bc In·
fonnatioo Serviceoflhe N•tiooal Cmter for
Ea.nhquakeF.nglne&lt;ring~headqU&amp;T­

tercd at UB.
lt is avoiW&gt;Ie 10 lntemel users through
BISO , lhe computerized information system of lhe UB bbr&amp;ries Prior 10 loading
QUAKEU.NE oo BJSON,lbe daLObose was
ooly available for a fee on BRS. a commerci.J networ1&lt;.. The UB commomil)' can""""""
QUAKBLI.NE directly oo !be BISON sys·
1CtD. -Mihoul having to log on 10 lhe Internet.
Ouc of only • handful o( dalabases in tbt
world lhat puvidcs information mcanbqualr.e
eoglnceriog, earthqua""' IDd Ol.bcr na1ural di-

ablellllOugb olb&lt;rinformatimsoun:es. .. ......0
a.J!II'IDC'1Il-illf&lt;Jllll0tion,.sua.........
PIP'I'....,..;.,. about eanbq
'rt liedng an explosion in infonna·
lirll availability: said P1triaa A . Cot} .
mmag&lt;:&lt; of !be Information Suvioe
She 001.cd !lull by putting QUA.KllUNE
oo 1he l.nu:rn&lt;:l. 1he infcrmation wiU have a
miJCb wider tad&gt; ~y.
AkeyadvmnageofQUAKEUNE . 1hat
the UB libwie&lt; .,...,. all of !be tll8terials
indexed in tbe d&amp;LObose
"'lb&lt;prcbbn wilbcloing~~"
!bat you""""' ~ wilb ~ ata1ions. bu1
then )W can '1 gt:~llrfiill plllG"becollt!eitmay be
_ , &lt;tmulr,. said Carol KlJio;, daaitBoe' andtnalilrf&lt;rdlelnformotioos.Mce "'lh&lt;llBli:nrie&lt; oWD all of tbe materials tnde1cd w

·w.

QUAKEUNE. we will~. war"-:~
drMtm IDonymc~ bm•
Materials in !be da1obase also .,., available through lhe ink:rlibnry laao sy&gt;U:m.
omin.tol r - may be cbargcd to users ftom
profit-m~lting organizatioos 1oam:rlbe lotw

lose,_..,...~

CXllllll-ai.....,..,.., .........

..OO~W~dmli.. "&amp;l.t~i·,.-.m_

ltll&lt;lf&lt;U&amp;imiWIObowdr~ond11111iP"

:rinem..y &lt;id," obeaid. "Somt.lft-.clomJ..
Ual,
71ot,..,. YodT-,.ftie&lt;JIIeslft
tibml.lUdlas71ot E'Aqwrtr.•

of «naU. ma......m. ~oUCh a slide &amp;dS.
In addition to informot- an buildin
suuct re. to ,., ilhstao_d e:anhquakes; ,
QUA.K.atNE mclodes a:rtiCb and papcn
"" buard nutip~m.
and....,... op·
erabons. IDd llWI} Olber IISpec1S of eanbquakrs tmd IIIIIUl'al d&gt;$aslt:rs, indllding 1beir
soc:ioec:al&gt;omic and jlS)'chc&amp;ogical cc:1L

-rm

users

may

O QUAKEI..INE lhtoup lbe
rf ~ eampu s

r-.

""at 645-3317

vidos a 1DCII!lllalliU o( ~ !he DCW devices
add-otbc¥unddl¢,~
~Jigtals Whonll1llliplied.thcse

me

figl...s povide. _....,...at
vob.mc ol'
bane cblsily. Tccl:laiqucs now in ""' mpre
additional ugery "' ........
o( bane
reg&lt;:IIC11I1ioo by~ banecblsily .m.me.
The firs1 in.strumeat designed by 1bc UB
ra;ean:bers bas on angle of 1..5 mm al 'lbc tip
10 caleb uodco' 1bc roof of 1bc furcatioo-lbc

u""""""

space between 1he roocs of a multiof'O(J(Cd
1~ such as a molar 1hat is filled wilh bone
if DOl eroded by gum disease. This probe
IDCISUR$ ftom 1bc roof 10 lhe free gingival
margin. The seeood probe. which is curved
boriz.ootally 'wilh I mm incn:ln&lt;niS, measures
lhe borizooJal di.unce of tbt furcation.

n a .rudy 10 dd.erminc lhe effedi&gt;'mcs&amp; of
!he- measuring melhod. measumncms
o( booe dcnsi1y ......, IWo! from 11 potico1s
before 1beir gum surgery using lhe oombination of X-roy IDd _.., probes. ODd again at tbt
lime of 1beir gum surgery using I S1IIIldard
ta::lmique. There_., oosignillcant diff.....,.,.
in l b c - o(bone-donsity volume.
Since 1be new me1bod invoMs m SUI:J!'")', it
ambo useclpmooically mrneasure~
oafcly, axma1&lt;'ly and tliDl(llllicall. The cali·
1n1m, lJB.&lt;b1gl1cd devices am be ...,.;ily su:riliml a included mlhe irsrulntO ny.
Ol!rr rncmi:Jm; at 1he lJB ..,..,.,m ...., are
SdJI9ian G. Oaocio. JWf&lt;Si&lt;J' o( pc:riodcn1ics.
and Sawsan Tabllea. ..,..,.,m ,..._._
;::

accC$S

~by

follo,...jq these steps
!Joe lhe t&lt;ilnor mmmand IO COili&gt;OCl ,.;w
u!mn.oc.buffalo.cdu. ScJoc1 BlSON from lbe
:ETMEJ-'U Coot IXIIIII&lt;IOcd. cboaoe INDX
from dJe Dlubost SdecuoD Menu md !hen
or.iectQKLN.l'omt,l)'pe STOP atony screm.
QUAKB.u.'E also ma) be ~ oo dJe
UBS IN1CRNET ACCES SOFIWA.RE.
""' t1w QUAKEUNE is ao l.nu:rn&lt;:l.
Information Scn&lt;ice staffers ane ""'t'tcicig lo
produce !be daLObose "" CD· ROM . They
hope 10 oompletc on initial CD 1hi5
For ""'"' i.nf&lt;lrmallon.. OOIIUid Patricia
Coty or Carol Kim at lhe lnformat&gt;oo Ceo-

I

Women' s histOIY month exhibit in 420 Capen features wOO&lt;s by
20th Century women poets. Shown with the exhibit are Cynthia
Kimball, e&gt;Chibit organizer, and Michael Basini$ki, assistant curator,
Poetry/Rare Sooks. Which provided ma erials .tor the show.

�Hong Kong: looking into
the past and the future
HoM'aid Woif will IN anllnln&amp; "' UB as
Pr&lt;:lfts-of&amp;glish ajkra rltrrt· ..,.

ll('"'"'·

Unl~nily of
Hont: Kon1. His ninth boot. Llfr m t~
Top of~ BoltMR: A Tobltou ofp,.,.;,..
rio/ Uft in"-""'· is now in pr~u. A

ltor't as Visitint:

""'"L B~y St!rtnodt. w.ill "'"" ~
ptlbllslw4.

.

it~

fur tbeir own bves, and it lruthe ondiwdual work for !be Llllnily. Can }011 thl '
of. tug~~er ed\ic ror • au..... ~'

WouldJ'(IUprcfi:r~u:ioism?"

My ,..jndow view i also o puinl of
view. The ,..calber is "'siblcr, weq&gt;l111
mist and rain, u rally from Wost Ill East
(reversing the ude of cook:mporary ht ..
tory t in OO&lt;lSlllnlfy ifiillg pllltCtiU
and probabilit)' ""' plated out in the
ky beyond my ..-;,oo..., on f Clrin1 of
lliliOSphcnc &lt;*tiny
Tbt p410CtiU remind us of hunwr a.nd
biSIOI'Ieal mutability: and as I looil. ro the
hill beyond. to th&lt; u:ail of lights follo..,inc
the line of lbe KCR (Kno,.loon
Railroad) beyond Beaooo Hill, I wondu.
"'''h cvcryooc elst in Hlill'lg Kmg. about
the future of this ( .. hal shall ""'call ir•t
c..,..n Colony .Terrilory ... Speciol AdminrstratlY&lt;: Rcgron ... Siillbom
R.cpubhc . entrep'Jt . rollechon o Hong

a.....
will rdnu&amp;ioe llwmo point
in the near future: ,.'hat pro~;,.., rell"OiipllCtive igbu.

·~- """""'"'
words (lome sound
of the OOOSlitueniJ
of knowledge) will hawu m&lt; during long IUld oo!d
winter nights in 8ulfalo. New Yor\ where
th&lt; flow of '111l11plight in the hollow of
~rrat nowdrifts provides a WM&lt;Itr-ful
re&lt;ting plaoc for tu•torical n:vene.
I "'ill reim~mc ilning a1 m) computer
st•rren (loyal, oonst&amp;nt OOOIP"DIOn, and
lnuil.rng thr-ough the sliding g.t..s doors of
m) high-tis&lt;: apartmenr beyond MI. o.,;.
ond OCI'OS&gt; the harbor ro Ko..,loon, the New
T&lt;r'l'irories, and. on a clear da)'. Chioa
Tbe harbor itself is a Slud) of compo&gt;Ur&lt; and molioo. -hundr&lt;:d$ of •liU slup&lt;
I) in, -to at aochor and hundreds of others
in """""-"' and seeming!) random motion.
th&lt; '"yin" and -yng" of comroen:iallife in
H &lt;&gt;n~ Kong.
The harbor, tn this doubleness. 1 an
emblem ofliong Kong's !&lt;'lcnrk:ss enter!'""' and its ability , despite itS rclentk:s&gt;
np&lt;•nditun: of mercantile energy, to pur'~ a su:acly course. 10 rruunl.&amp;io a ~ of
I dan: t ..y Confucran?) calm rn the. mrd"
&lt;&gt;f • rlefOC! marlr:.el -d.ri ven c:toOOOITitThis doubleness is ~isibl~ in rh&lt; ladder" rc&lt;h leading down 10 Kennc.iy T""' n
and th&lt; thousands of "walls in till: holes'"
"trcre till: small openuon bav~ found a
nrche fOI' th&lt;mselves: carefully cat'\'ed out
ond protected oomrnercial s,..ces "rhioh.
onlle&lt;:tively. cry out against the Second
of Thermodynamic.
When a politieally comect colleague in
Buffalo asked me befon: I cllJllC our 10
Hnng K&lt;&gt;ng why I wanted lOgo to such a
&lt;"enter of "predatory copitalism." I should
hove said. but didn ' t ~enough to lil.y,
" Because it krs people accc:p&lt; rcspoosibil -

l.,,,

c.n1011

Kontpoopk ....
No onc can pmirOI rh&lt; futuro: of Hons
Koog-any IDOJ'C or les lba.n
Kremhnolog® were able to see beyond
tbefallofthelronCunar:nrn 1991- but
1h1 much ·is clear· after Jol} 30. 1997,
Hon¥oog will be cut off from ill Brili!&gt;lr
oolonJa! pas! and rejoined, in !iOIIJe CasiJ. _
ion. with o mctberl.tnd (dominated h~
male "panunouDl" leaders) whose future,.
~and unpmiJCUble.
E~ out ·rde of Hong Kong asks.
-wtw will happen to lioflg "'""g aft&lt;~
1997?"' But lbe question reall)• should b&lt;·
"Whal "111 happen to and in China after
1997?"' Future-gazers and prognosucat&lt;m
n&lt;x:d ro looil. rnto the n@ht cry tal ball fO&lt;
&lt;tart=.
In this sense. Hong Kong i.s an embkm.
ag&amp;Jn, of our hve . •• .,.., looil. bod. to p;&gt;st
h\'Clo w~ cannot retn.evc and futures ..,e
c:anoot predict. But those of u~ v.ho h\'t as
more c:w len free lnd1\·idual m nations
whi~h embroce &gt;Ct'Sions of Libert)' wrll be
able 10 make choice&gt; aboot rh&lt; krnd of
future \L'e' v.oold h:kt to male ror ourseh·es. but Hong Koog poople-4hosc: v.-ho
stay (most!-will b&lt; playtng 11 the gaming
table of history.
But . of course, Hong Kong people lil,e
to g.ambk o~ nal.ion' '!. EJ )' tan Fidd_ i~
another's Happ) Valle~ race course.

Obiluar
Stanislaw Dabrowski, history
professor, dies March 17
Fu.n eral swvlces • - held March 21 in Corpus Christi Catholic Church for
Stanislaw Dabrowski. 67, a history professor and IC&gt;Cilli'CTOn Eastern EuropeAn history and
rnlitks, who died March 17 in Hospice Buffalo, Alden. Dabrowski taught hi...ory at UB
:tnd several other uni•ersities including Kent State in Ohio and Allianc;e College. a
PC11nsylvania school sponsored by the Polish National Alliance.
Dabrowski , a native of Poland, came 10 the U.S . in the late 1940s . He earned a
nachelor' s degree from St. Manin 's College, Olympia. Washrngton; a master's degree
fmm Fordham University and his doctol'lltc from Kent State University. He moved to
Buffalo in 1971.
He published ·n umerous articles including many in Nowy Dvtnnik, a oewspaper in New
Yo~ Ciry and kept a journal of his experiences as a Polish immigronr. Tbe journal, which
numbers 90 volumes, ..;u be donated to Jagiellooian University in Poland.
A former president of Polanie. a Polish social club,l!ld a vice president of the Poli!&gt;lr
Cultural Foundation, h&lt; was a member of the Paderewski Polish Singing Circle. the Chopin
Singing Society, the Polish National AJiiance and the Polish American Congress.
He served in the Army during the Korean War.
Survivors include til= daughters. Isabella of Texas; Dorota of \Van;aw. Poland aod
KrystynaofPennsylv.ania; rwo brothet'S, Jozek and Rysek, both of Poland; and two sisters.
Pelagia Rozek and Zofoa Soltysik, both of Poland .

. , _ ........ Oil
W''"'tem Nc•;Yon'1 om com
I(ICS, alatofhHn.
Area pll&lt;ries, the-.we COII1Jlllnies. duw:re
bta"ary cqmizabOft!, and
mu""u
are eftdll'llC and inowo.., in ~ a murkabk orny of
0!1J101111nRie$ for ente~Ummcnl.
· • an6 inaplnnioll. Ortr rqion' cviIUIZI instrrubonslll'ee~pcdal.ly dose
hearU of many UB f lry. 5taff.
.tnd · tilden who lwn rrom and -*bbar~k WI ~ 11'1.1 ts. pcr(ooncn. and
'ATiten .
l'h&lt; Buffalo Pbilharmoni&lt;-Cln:t~Nn~
luna berecl• rruc hcan.of OIU'atU
communiry. and
~
ll'e imporalll pattnen .tnd ~ fO&lt; UB
mwJCJ
Vet, as 11101.1 ef u are well a"""'· ibe BPO has Wl\ll]b:llll maoin
ulmled players and main&gt;ain tU pcrlormano::e od!oedulc oYt~ ibe pl.'l few
seasons. lt' u •itualioo all too fomiliar to many of America· • foncsl orohewa&gt;
11be BPO's budge&amp;ary diffJCU.Itifi are, 10 put it imply, due. Even tho: bcSl
erroru of the loc:alr,~ and orpntt.Itions lbo&lt;
hll'C pnwioMI)' helped lo fvod the orebestra, combrned
,..;It! cooperative endtav·on b} rnu iclon. and lldmiArr
lrtllon w l'l:iU'OOJ:ure and redirect tho: Orcrhan. anno1
~re !he Ptulbarmoru&lt;'s future All of u """"'ha•e
lotC IteM .. the apprectaled the Buffalo l'htlbannonrc over the )Ul'ib'uellutrt . t - and indeed all of"' ,.ho place o l»gb value on the an rn
.n. -ullftr, W'&lt;$1CmNew Yor\.---mu;r$Upporl tho:Ord&gt;escr;r5b'l&gt;ngly
ond aoth el} tf it i• 10 SUJ'\'ive.
..S Ita.....,_
In onkrtoC'tiOOU&lt;ap: ud1 upport.lh&lt; um&gt;c:rsot) and
~
lh&lt; BPO .are jo~ntl) sponsonng UB N1ght uthe B~ffalo
~ .....
PhilhatmonJC on Thum!a) . Apnl 14 at KleJiilutns Musrc
....,_.,... ua 'Hall "Cbsst.'S of t:h&lt; Silem Scrtlnt... the ..,.tonm8·,
-*'--.
l'f'Ollranl, will fr:a~ure ttl( NeKU$ Percussion E.o-.tmhle
and •nil be ronduaed by EUubelh Sd1Uiu l'ac-uhy ,
staf£. Sllldooo, and alumni can purd1ase ud..et at a
dL'oCOUDI" rthavalrd IDtbroughtheUB T1c o0ffrce(64~-23S3 ,

~Hall I

and Klemlu:n Music HMII. lid:.cu *&lt;ld group ra~ rnf&lt;trmalion are a•'ailoblc
throogb the UB Offict of Conferences and Special Event; in Crofls Halllb45 J105) ar C.,.,n Hall (645-J-4141.
n..:n, are se•cral Olha ...,.. m
tnten: led f~a~lty *&lt;ld raff an help
leq:r tbe BPO oJr&gt;e. A5soeiare Professor Rrclwd Hull of lh&lt; ~ of

""'ictt

Philosophy, "ho iscooniinatiqg a funddti-c on camP"" fortbe BPO. '"'ould no
dottbt be happy to hear from anyone "'ho would lilte to conlributc to the
Philharrnomc • annual fund . A notl:1c.- optton rs to pur~ subscrip;:ioo hc~ets.
eitha' for personal use or as gifl for fnends v.'h&lt;r CI"IJOY lh&lt; Orc:hestn. Clrll' way
or
ocr. however, it is oothiO!l &gt;bon of cructal thai any of u wbo truly cares
ahoul preserving lh&lt; BPO Lake ACtive
r10-. 10 alTo our ...,,;unce
O.er the COUl"SS: of the pa 1 year, I ha~r n:cei•·cd a number of lcttc"' and phone
call from B faculty and U1ff as "'•II as our netghhors in the romrnunny ar
large. urgint thai the uni\'Cf'Sity assN the BPO. All of u "ho belieYe lhatth&lt;
Philharmorric os an important par!I10' for UB aod a 'Cf') . pccial pan of our
~ornmunity' life mu&gt;t be a pan of tho effon. Please jOrn me in makrni! a
personal commitment to the future of We.'lern ew York'&lt; onb - and much
lov&lt;:d----professional orchestra.
•

'"'f'l

Wtw•M R. GRHNu

7RANK
Continued trorn page 1

joins tbern in the Top 10 ranl..in!J$
- we arc vay pleased lobe ranked"' lugh.

and 'ro rise in the ranllngs so d:amatieally
over last year.~ sald John P. augb1011., UB
vice president of clinical affairs and dean of
the medical sdtool. "'Thi&lt; indicate&lt; thatare succeeding in ourwivin~ to be,_ of the
leadi~g C'Omfli'Cbtnsivc medical sd&gt;ooiJ; in
the nation. and we ..., grateful tO our foculty
for bel ping 10 make this .PJ'0!1l"CSS pouib!e.
"'UB bas continued to ,pro,'ide both ~
,.-ide ond nalional leadership in cducoating
more physicians in lbe fields of family medJ-

cine, pediatri.a . a-nd internal medicin-e ...
augluon added.
"In !be past year, we 've boen fonurur~ 10
win grantsto fund two major centers-Sll
million for the national Women's Health
Initiative Vanguard Center and $8 million 10
co-found the notion 's (11'$1. Center for lbe
Clinical and Medieal Epidemiology of AJro.
t.:ol. These awards ,..jfl belp us w do our job
better. SCJVing our students and !be public."
In 1992. lbe UB medical s.chool boearne
OI1C of th&lt; lim in lh&lt; nation 10 embarl&lt; on a
major primary-care initiative, with the goal
ofbaving 50 pe=nt of;u residents entering
the fields of family medicine, pcxliatrics or
in!Urull medicine by 1994.
~ initiative in\·alve.s recruiting and R~
taini n,g studcnrs most likely to enter primary-

can: foeld

~abhsltrng

mon: cut-&lt;tl~­

ur.l primary-care train'~ 'res. i

rea.si~~
prirnary-c.e~fundi:n.&amp;,providJDg in·
creased tclldta"trainiJI&amp; for faculty. and e5·

Ulbllshing alcadcnh!ptl'liCtioprinwy-care
medtcineto..U..the vJSibilit ofprimary &lt;are
poysiCJans in the beai~~Kft oammomily.
T1he ranki~g• bf U.S.. Nt•i• &amp;. World
Rtp.on are based on th&lt; JoiW..;ng criraia;
• Stodem sdecti&gt;'ity. as delcm1ined by
gradc-puilll ··~ of the 1993 auerin~
cl
a erage~ontheMedicaiColkge

Admissions Test and the pm:u~ta,e of applicanrs aa:rqxed:
• Facul1y re$0U1tleS. as determined by the
modicalschoof'sfull-time faculty~r
ratio;
• Rq&gt;utation, .. desmnined b) medicalocbool dc.lon • Sl.'nior CIIC\llty, and 3.000 di....,..,. of inrcm&lt;residctlcy program .
Tl1ose ranked ahead ofUB in this year'•
survey""' Orqon Health Sciences Uni-oity 11 o. I, followed by George Washing·
lon University. ThomasJdkrsonUni\iersit) .
University of California-Davis. The Ohio
State Uni•ersity and Brown Uni-crsity.
Tbe UB School of Medicine and Biomedieal Scieu&lt;;es is followed in the Top 10
by the Univet'Sily of ~lliCicy . IN: Robert
Wood Johnson Medical/Denial Sd&gt;ool. and
the IUni,'Ciliit) Clf Kansas Mc&gt;iical Cellltt. 1

�_..,&amp;-. _ __ .,.

Women s Club Quarterback
plans Chinese Club ltmeheon
Banquet
is scheduled

0

lheUBW&lt;liDtll'sC1ub
wiD bold a C1ai1wa Banqoaa 011 Sunday, April 10 at 6:30

j

p.m II Dynuty 0 iD SouthJate
Plua, ClloeWowap, ID bmdit
the dlalanhlp fund. .
Seatq is limited for the 12·
oouriiO bonqiMs. to Include Pddna
duck. c.. is su per penon rmeludes lax, tip and caocribulioa)
S&lt;Dd cbec peyoblt 10 The
w...-·saubbyApr. IIODor·
ochy 5&lt;xma. 2.49 Wdllngwood
Drive, 1!.- """""-, N.Y 140S I..
For addllloaal infamatloo, caU
""""Brody at 1134-5.596.

GrndSOOent
~ectedfor
natiooal~

0

CUrios Apl, a SCCOIJd..
year~ JIJidmt In
phocqsrapbyJcliaital imqing 11
UB, bas been 11tltaed IS a I 994
fellaw of lht Am&lt;ric:lal flbotocraphy lmtitutr NatiooaJ ~
Seminlr.
He is 81110111 20 fellows lllelected from 93 fillalisu IJoDIIIi.
nated by S I ltbools across the
lllrioa 10 participete in 1111 imeosjyt rM&gt;-......t JliOII1Im June S-18
at New York Uni......tty's l"ISCb
Scboal of lht Ans. The seminar

"'"'ecablisbed 11 NYU to aeaae
1111 aonua1 forum for the discus·
sioa of~ issutl

UliCII&amp; OUISll:lldiD&amp; plum
stwlen1s, atbolars and artisu.
Pattic:ipeDis wiD and
study wilb oCber IIUdeall under
the luldace of atbolars in lht
fldd. Tht of lht8t ltSSicus
wiD bt coiJecud into. ~
iDp joumallhat wiD bt clislnl&gt;uted to pbDiograpby programs
OCIOIIO lht U.S.
Agel .......uly bas bad wort
IICCltpiCd in the 1994 Wtllem
New y art Eshibition lllht
Albrigbi-Koox An Gai.Jery. His
fJtSt exhibit outside the country
will lake place in Apilll the
NatiYrlndian and Inuit Pbccogra·
pbea Associaticc Ga!.ltry in
Hamilton, Omario. Agel balds a
bacbelor's degree in studio art
from tbe Univ. of Maryllllld.

0

The fual--.., of
newly fomaod UB Bulla
Quane.t.ck Oub io at1 for l'uaday, April 5 II I 1· 30 a.m. at tbe
Holiday Inn m Nilg:ara Falls
Blvd. In Ambcnt.
Head Coocb Jtm Ward and
..-ly appoial.td Allioc:iaae Head
Coocb Ma. Bo..1DIIII wiD bt ""
band to dlsa&amp;., 81110111 oCber
topes, tbe retnliUn&amp;- and
the upcoming sprinc uainiDa
camp. In addlticol, flllll wiD meet
the chal1er pnsidtoJ of the Quar·
tabock.Oub
The Quarurback Oub ,...
fomaod to Jive flllllllll iDiidr: look
at UB foochall and to bella- p:otbe propun. It is boptd lhat
11 wiD brine IOg&lt;:tber r-. "-"·
... 8lld membtn of the ....... and
staff for luDcbeans lhrwgbout the

""*'

-

C.. of the April 5 lundlCOII ·
Sl s. Olecb ibould bt made
parablt to UB Division of A1hlet·
icslmd mailed to 104 Alumni
An:aa, Buffalo, N.Y. 14260,
AlleDtioa: Quanerblck Oub.
Tboae wishing to RSVP c:a11 call
Tom Koller 11645-3178 or 645·
3141.

0

Tht Otpcuncot of Tbcatre
and Duct at UB wiD bold
a climcling worbbop this summer
desigotd 10 iDstnlc:t participmJts
In the basic motbods aod skills
oeedoclto cliJtct ~beater produc·
t:ions, community evtnts, lbow5
and CCJDCaiS.
The worlatbclp, to bt btld
durirlg UB's secood ......,...
sessioo from lome 27 lhrwgb
Aug. S, wiD bt led by K.uimien
Braun, UB professor of tbealer
and claDce wbo bas 30 years expt·
rieDce ... cli=lor. Major topics
to bt addressed in the wor1roshop
include devdopment of tt:11;
procluctiotHipact. design; the role
of the cli=lor wUh the cast. crew
and c:ommuoity, 8lld auclitiooing.
..auitilJ&amp; and rehearsing.
The worl::sbop is geartd

Smith taug ht ~ime_ss. compf!ss.f.on
IDmlll:

Thank ~ for your profile of Lee Smtih. the jOUma!Jsm instruc1of celebrating 25 years of teachtng (Reporter. Feb 24.

1994).
As ednor of UB"s Prodigal Sun (1988-90) and Reach
(1990). 1 had the privilege of getting to know Lee and ben·
efrted immensely from his expertise.
Lee's journalism class. and his guidance at The Spectrum.
showed that there's more lo our profession than reporting .
Lee taught his students values such as falrness and compas·
sion. which are all too often los1 in the press these days.
B.A. MedJII Sludy '90. New Yorlt N Y

-...uon

a.- ..

Sttmtts win

enviroornental
Jaw fellowship;
T-

fint.,_

SlUdoal$ or
the UB Scbool of I..ao.v
bavtbemawardod &amp;V\TOIIIIIeDw lAw ·MiJJarlty FeDowshipo by
the ew Y art State Bar Alloocia·
IJOtL Xrilln B. J - ud Graul
w. JoMI.Iwl ..a. will rtctl"" •
lbp&lt;llld of ss.ooo While lpl'lDdmc
tbe
wortillg mmvvon·
IDCOtal .,.... for JOVm1lll&lt;lll or
IIIII&gt;-Jl&lt;oljllaw omca
-Joa&lt;S WIS a&gt;ediJer of the
"Biact lAw Sluclenls Asxia·
tioa" DtMioaa. Sbt bas w&lt;dtd
..... iDtem wUh tbe .._ Smatt

lllldAaembf) .

JO!IIIban • a member of the

Directing skills
to be taught
at workshop

Leners

-unuso

IOWan:l ...-.ity ~~~~draa; ,..,....
clasi.-s ud-..;
~and iMiruclanof ~
ud
adoool"'*- willla
bockpoullll ia dtata _, draa.
It wiD t.oU p1ace r... 9 ....
12:30 p.a. .. 1'.-tays 8lld
Thunoloys durinc tk eecoad
iDtbe .........
llUdio Ia tbt FiDe Ani c:::a.w
For
iali
or
tiUOII, oo-.ct
64S.
61 • .,.. .
l'iiJm,cn Col·
......
. ,_lbt
.
II 829-2202

T - -·•-O...Ke

bas atrved a ao illfan wi(b the
otme I:lepenmmr of &amp;vinxlmcow~

The fellowWp JliOII1I"' is ro5p&lt;III9Clftld by the Associoltioa of
the Bar of lbt City of New y art.
Funclin&amp; is provided by tbe lllale
and city t.r ....,.,;atioos, tbe
Mary fla&amp;lo:r Cory &lt;l&gt;aritable
Tn~~~. the Edward JOOo Noble
f1oundatioa and tbe ~
PorlciDs Memorial FouiJdalion.

PSS Outstanding Service Awanl:
Call for Nominations
Non •-...:.• •• now being IICOOIIMd lor the t994 ~ S.V.C.
A,.ards IJnlb lhe ONnoelor·s Awwtt w!&gt;oc:tl iS ~ "' fliClOgl1tiiOn 01
•aordvwy ~
one 1 pro~eM~cna• .,.._,.,., , _

-·d&amp;~

Cl

to 11M' recogroiiDn to mernt&gt;er$ ~!he ..........

who go~ tne norTTllll scope ollheof r
ID
OUIBiand&lt;ng ~ serw:e CXX"'IibuliOna These • e ..
..-oortant appor\Unll~ lor us ID ac~ !he .,.,., ~
members ol UB s ~lUll who ma1&lt;e . - . , . _....,. CO!Iri:IU1"""'
benelc lhe ..,.._511y .,.,.., communoty
The~ Setw:&gt;a .....- • .,._, annually b\f !he f'l'ofa&amp;.
...,.,.., Staff Senete ~ lhe UntYws.ty. S..flalo Fund.no •llftMdlld b\f ...
l.lnrvers&lt;ty at B.Jff1llO Fo.tnda!Jon. InC end made ~ ~~'trough ltle
gene&lt;OS&lt;tyol...,_llly alunn end froend!o w..,.,. ollne
$ 1.000 end per..,.; certJflcAileo ol rec::ogno~a&gt; at lhe PSS ~
Luncheon. Wednesday, May 25 tlllhe Cent• lor Tomorrow
To be elogoble lor the - d . "" lnd&gt;Yidual mutilbe a Q.l'tW1I ~
p r o l - ""'" omp4oyee olthe ~Sl!\1 at s.A!alo. lhe ~
Founc:latlor&gt;, tile UB Ru&gt;danon or the Facutty-stuoont Aa1oc1o111on
Nc:Jnw-. ,.,_ have serwld .., a t.,..tme c.apac&lt;!y lor a oonllnUOUI
,_o
not be e1tgtD1e to
periOd ~ a! least two yeers WfiYV!JCS ~
receMI this awwd ega.n lor • - e years
Past r~ ._.lhe last INe yeers - • John Bos. J.,_GeNnd
Els.e Pactleco. Nelson T.--.d Oar-. Humnwt Ct..nes Somtag
RlAtl Br,ant. Merle Hoyt
Bamo and Ronald _,

-d-

Criteria

for~....,._,

s.n.ce-

the scape a'ld depttl o1 lhe ro!VOdual 1 pasa _,.,. to the
find/a ID ltle communoty a.t 11 d!tom s.w:e 8lC;leCIIId
., hts or her tab ~. Thos ..,.y onclude reoogoous c:harable.
ur'M!tsrt)

scoentlfiC, educaiJonal WIIIIIC.Ioterary or CMC IOYOiwwnants lt..r...-.hwtcle
lhe qual«y olltle
Excellence- opec/lie evtdence ndocllllrog !he ~ual 1 exoellenoe
.,...., nos or her P&lt;oleslonal sta" po1100n
GrOU"Ids tor dosbnc!Jon COUld tnCiode btA. •e not lomtted ID evdence
of teadonhp. COI IOI'* I*tl. a ea!Miy 8 '1d , _ . . . . ~- tiUPf)O&lt;IIng
!he tr&gt;divldulol candldale lftJS\ n:lude clear end ~ 01
boch _,.,., end ...~ e.cellonce
For further rlormebcin. norTWI8!Jorl pacUis and QU!d*ws.

OClrllaa lheProl-.ai&amp;.IISenateAward&amp;Cc:mn-.cr- Fredencl&lt;
KWI8Clen. 342 Abboa Hall. South Ca-npus. 829-~
.,....,. for . . . . . .doaalen .. ~. ....... 21 ,

--

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Re.t all about ill

Music Dept
to hoot piano
festival

0

The UB Department. of
M . wiD boa a Plano
l'eda80C)' Feotival April ~
rea~ world.......,....,. poup
piano~ Jooepb Rezits
lllld Eloix Komicl&lt;e.
Under tbe clircc:tioo of I. Tmy
Galt:s, clcpertmeal cbair. and
FriDa Amcbansb Bol~ i&lt;.ty·
oo.rd coordinator. UB's music
clr:penmerJlhas t:1pelldtd iD the
..... of piano insbuctioo t o - .
growing eorol1meul iD tbe....,..
oodary piano division. l'bt cur·
Jeol curriculum, ~ &amp;triQrall in
its piano profic:ieaO':y reguilements, indodes 1111 added empba·
sit; 011 music cducalion.
Rmts, profeaor &lt;mtritus at
the Indiana Univtlliily Scbool of
M ~ is an in•mwtim.tlly·
latown clinician and lecturer.
K&lt;lmicke is 1111aildxlrity in the
field of clus pima using ccm~ .......... 5yotbtsizers aod
electroaic: keyboerds.
AD events, wbic:h will bt bcld
on the Nonh Campus, are fret
aod opeD to the public.

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�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1402768">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451907">
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          <element elementId="44">
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          <element elementId="51">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1402757">
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                <text>Reporter</text>
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                <text> LIB-UA043</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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                    <text>aur.
Literature helps
people make

sense of lif • prol
says.
..

2

Full-time student
owns and runs a

.

Ccmmons store .

TaskFo ceto
·lm ove oo
17-MEMBER TASK force has been farmed
the quality and service of the Uni.ty Boolc5tore on the onh Campus, part
of Folleu College Stores, headquartered in
Elmhurst. m.
Chaired by tee President for Student Affairs Roben L.
Palmer, the task force will recommend way in which the
hoo tore can "maintain and impro e there
nsi
of its services to the needs of the university community."
According to Prc•id:tnt
r.reiner's c!Jmct~•e, the: taSk force
""" be asked 10
• idonufy thole
penainin: to the Uai,..,..;cy 8ookstorc t11ot
... n( ll'lljorC011Ca11tofacully, lil&amp;ff
ond
amclll&amp; all

cnn&lt;titueacicaintheunioa1iitycomrnunuy and IOiiciting m!Onnaboa
frm'lliOUI'Ca."" and otr ~
• ideooJytherangeohc:rviCel
rrndtrodandtype:Sof~

nwleted by the Follett Corpora11001. paniculariy with recard 10

mco-chancfuc: exclusiVIty:
• invcotigate the """"'" used
b) the Follett Corpora&lt; ion IOdeu:rmtne fair and rompct.ttive pieing:
•
eticaa satdb~e and
S.lUthc.npusbootsloreopentlions:

• provide II8IJOIIII mort.ct oon"''t forthe_,...tofUnh....,ty

!lnoi.SIOO: opcnuoes. consultin&amp;
v.ithochcr'F olldlC«poration.trib"'"' and oocqxsing
l:took'"..., • UB'' peer insllbllions.
• estabhsh an ongoing Bool-

'*"""'

'tore Adviso&lt;y Comminee.
11&gt;e task foroe will summanu
'" findtnp tn a final rcpon 10 President Greiner due tn July.
AccordinJ:IO UB llookstorcOener.tl Mllllj!CI' Orqory Neumann.
1'h&lt; tas1: force,. a good rncdlantsm
•• dclamintlhe te.'d of servia: and
l"'f'ds we provide 10 thr campus.
You are always !ICCI&lt;ing 10 improve
yourself. I feel thai our sclec:tion i
""'"""Y pn:tty good for a lilore our
i;.c,: 22.000 10 25.000 Iilla mour
tr.&gt;dr l:tooks section. We also procc:oo
"f'CciaJ onlcri---&lt;his is • pmty sub.......ial pin of our busi"""'-'
. According 10 Neumann, a subo&gt;mmilliOCplansiOJUM:Y bootslore
""""' from all qments of the univer&lt;ity community. He adds: ·As a
1:1"- force, wearegoing10beloolirtg

.. comporablebool&lt;si&lt;Ks in !his pan
of the country. opc:radons thai ha~
&lt;llnilar demographics. Dr. Palmer
h&gt;&lt;dioawed visiting campus l:tookSlr«&lt; not only in Westan New Y orl&lt;.
hut J'OSSibly in l't:nnsylvania, cenl1al
New Yori: Sta1e and Ohio.
111= was a boolcsiOre advioory

COI'WIIillccll:lupoixua,......,,_
ma a few 11
but dJsbudtd,"
Neumann
-a.aly, i
upoffm*y """"""'...."""'..
nDaD ..t fllllf-.: 001 , . - 1
"""- ha.., • .,00 ........... of
b: .,.,..,..._ I view thr
bee a
~me Willi., OJliiOI1UIIIIY.,
ldor......_ourqxnaoa..toame

.., ...., ....,.. emanceand....,..,...
""""""' - pi'OVIdc 10 thr an....,
oommunily."
Bernice oble. profeuor of
mlc:robiolog)', represtnll lhe Faculty Setwe on lhe l&amp;S force '"It
SCCitlj 10 me thai the boobtore ll a
•cry imponaDt componc:nc 10con
mbutin&amp; 10 lhe qualny of unt&gt;er"'Y life n.a-c """"' 10 be on the
pan of lhe faculty , a fairly htJ:b
level of diuott factioo. It ~
thai a great many faculty do nee
feel thai the Unt&gt;erslly Boobtore
rnccu their pmfes iooal and personal need for booU. And oome

p&amp;iblc."
NoNe says
Cllallll'lll"d thr
&lt;OtmJiDce 10 lllllke ... ,...._ "'thrr...... poop~ehavef.....,.or undcft:o..
Rlr a lot ofc.DI)
IUrvw-d Coq&gt; l!oobo-e ... b: lOp
ofr-y-•·suqjtcmc.ll&gt;e
bne .. thlll .,00
ral)
import.n. b mnlc. • tollliC of CXIIIIrwnily ..t CJJUid be a lqc b:m for
~ iniCIIocsuol ~
""'julia ploa:., picL up a
Follen Cotqe Stoou • c!JVI...,.ofthr Follen Corporatton. '-1-

.,_......,.,here

bolit..,.oftheU•-yBooblon:
and the
~ willl putting up tharbuildift&amp; bd: ia 1982.
was lhll they would hove elldu-

si~ """' 10

011 cantpuS 1M
~1Mcl:

opcntiou
1*1 of the
•

-

.. tbel97

~
OOicc of Oosabiltly ScMca.
~

........ thr
~of

-from

-~-lbe-

wilb Dout1i1toica Ad "'Wc'n:
• •
-.1 ..,...;t,iJioy
tdl ...,.,.. ia and
buikl....
llco,antiL -n- • Dilly

"The task force is a good mechanism to

ODC~pRJociPII-.!ool)'
OIICIIIIIp tlw is l8llly CXMRd .,...,

detemzine the level of sendee and goods
we provide to the campus. You are always

Olll:r)OUFf&amp;

seeking to improve yourself "

faculty don't even like 10 order
tatboola for their Sludc:nts from
the University Boolcstore, and use
Olbc:r boobtores in IOWil. 11&gt;ere is
I

whole Olbc:r problem

rm SCII

I·

--

quancnxl tn Ri- Grove. 01. 11&gt;e
UB llool:saoR is ODt of abooa 400
........ tllotdivilion.uys
11&gt;e ~ Ml..co&lt; lftr-..ce hos
about 20,
square fed d ~

live 10 as a medic:al &amp;ehool faculty

"*"'- Rlllclt qx:nod hcre in t982.

member: the fact that there is no

According., 6dwwd Schneider.
dircaor of the UB Fouondalionanda tasl: loroemember,1bc
lease e:xpm:. liOrtiCiime in the next
CCIII\try. There is (also) • ......,.
be&lt;wcai the UBF and Folldl relative 10 thr off-ampus booblort en

South Campus boob;tore at aU .
1bc JUpotiCofthe"""' bee is 10
c~&lt;:ocrnW~c ttr f... &amp;om a11 t1rae pcrcqn,ns. On&lt; thing it will trytodo, is.,
ICI'lW.r.:ts-.fia:noiss4' ,. , .. •115-..'hidJ
may""' aaually have811)'bosis in 6r::t.
n:atlling&amp;omprr;j&lt;D:eormiot:oncq&gt;bon. ~isiOtryandidcnlify
areas llllOding ....,._,..._and lllllke
specific hXOIWtttiidalions kJ aooomplish thole inp&lt;M&gt;ta• .. C8lliJy.

CJ&lt;CCUUve

Main SlrceL Tbcre

rangc:menl

also "" ·-

relative to the EIIICOII

bool:slore.

1bc condition of Folleu ac-

ccpcing the managemcn1 rcsponsi-

-

1l&gt;tx . . .., ,.,......

and

. . . . . . . . . . . ..,.

*"""'

Thc~•

'-"~•-oftcp
·-b:
folks are V&lt;l)' Ulla'CSI&lt;Id • tryia&amp; .. ......., ~ bcnc:r ~
~~..,.,..._..

...,

llndcrp'adua
..,.,.....,
,.......
....,.,......
..

BeiiJaml• sa
'1' ve lllleOidcd
ocher u8ivcnttx:s widt bigocr _.

... ~ ., - """" ""-aes

wide ........ ., .... ~
....,.10
pmoa. ~or

~

fer boobton:a. Tbcrc - dtffCI'Clll ocaleo of 'b clobktrcs. from
the pandtOK. sucb

Young, .,t.icb
51Dt'CW1

As-

. . tbe

a

as

~

~

···~.

•

SCCIIOII
here you CU browse
ltrouJb the daily P"f"" _. - . - jcauls. The Uaiwnity of
Utab boolcslore hu
levels
TallareOIItbefloort.qJQairs. The
lower area hos a combinalioo o(
specialty. dry &amp;QOds. •
ccater, oollege wear. My feelina os
thai ours ts reall too
I for the
oavi&lt;u Creel..
Oifford B. Wilson. assoaate

vice president for ilUdent affai.rs
aod task fofce member. said,
have bcc:n a number of OOIICCI1II
principally from studeutr., over all

-n-c

e'n: ~

..ty 111011

udcoa-.1 fllallty

li

of
~ rigN
now. We'n: pdla'ing ·
·

!hey

• how

., proc:a:od -.,.... .,

icbtlil)•-.II oftbetJB c:tOIIWI.-ity.

lbcacaredillift.l -.would
•
Oda ... fofce ............. Doana S. Rice and James S .
Ndnu&lt;:b (Studcnl Atrllir$); W'dl.... Milkr(Facully Saiiii:);Carol J.
Xol!rio(a...ifiod SlaiJ); Pltyllis M.
Parisi (Profc:saooaJ swr Sa.c):

.-.Bia 10

Bimall'lld(U~

AsoociMiOII): Rlo)'llllllld D. Volpe
(UB
Asaoc.):
TIIIIOCby J. Coaroy (UB Pl.tlliao-

eoa.m.-

tions); AmiD K.lliJbl (F8c:ulty
doni Aaocialioa): and Gany R.
).
f

Soct.cr (Jtaidenoc

�2
c
r
-

'

•
•

r

r

~

r

.;
-

~

Making
sense
of life
HE WAY Robcn Daly
...,. iL htcnlun: I lboolt
life. """ when }OU lead!
pocple how 10

··~

literature. you·rc al10
leaelun them how 10 better 1nter·

prec tbctr hve$.
"'l'eople tr} 10 maR liCMeOUI of
tbcarb-llldbteratun:gi
litem
lh&lt; opponuDity
rue! lh&lt; ~
ohomc&lt;-whol
uys Daly, who hu bceJt lD lh&lt; UB
locMcd..SJOiforme E...,.
Dqwtment of&amp; h
ll&lt;X 197 J
"'J"""JftUf""' i dOflc by C~· I ,. tn a .....U 10W11.l bad a..,_
o( lhe ...,... """""-onr. c•cty doy," Daly uys "Ut·
Ill ht lliCbool. Daly.. .....,.,.,
eratur~
help• upaad our
Dllft for ht mathemobcaJ ahiiJ&lt;y
ontapreth-.: 'Us-the llrltCJteO
than
ytluq doe. he uys. Jn colof """''nizina llld r£sponclin 10
le&amp;e-attheUni•'Cnlt of Abotl.he
lhinp thai peopk: do all the time "
majort.d m e~~gmec:ring - " pl&gt;ys·
'The dc5~~e to teadl i"terpn:ta·
· until · jwlior year. "Thll year.
tioa 10 everybody, 110( jull 10 u·
dents training to become experts In
llllnlure. " one of the nwn ru·
..-that Daly hu bc:come onvolvetd
with tit&lt; ational &amp;do"''IDCnt for
lh&lt; Humanities Sufl'ltntt Semonars
for School Teacben fln&gt;IJ'UO In
lh&lt; program. cxpcru on a vancty of
ftclc!s rccetvc puu todcvclopllld
conduct iC1111Mrli 1ft wtuch lh&lt;y
" ' - lhelr k:IIO'O'k:dge wath high
to
school teacha5 from around the
cnw.uy llld college leacben from
other countrieo. Daly' scmtnar,
• alhantcl Hawthorne. In Detail
llld In CoatcaL" which nuiS from
July 4 10 Aug. S. i• lh&lt; fourth liUCh
seminar for ..inch he has rcceo vetd
anNEH erant
I ,...,., to ICC lOme people ..
1bc ponictpMU tnlh&lt; ocmi
were actually ......n..t~&amp; ia mibtary
take tit&lt; informaoon back 10 lhc:ir
owo class&lt;$ in Y&lt;ry dtmct ways." cnpnccrina. llld I rcaJJZCd thai I
d&gt;da' t want to do iltat ,.ilh my
Daly uys. "Saying bow lh&lt;y'rc &amp;&lt;&gt;bfe." Daly 5lys. "1 llllral Wld! ..
anglO ux thaltnformaoon is~ of
advuer,
0&gt;at1eo Sumner• .,.'1\o had
thr •whcarion prooc:u.•
taken
a Ph.D. in chernilltry before
Daly has always lov&lt;&gt;cl reading.
he realized tbat he bated cbenu ·
he ..,... llld &lt;ndi 1\is porcn~ ..
tty . He told me that I had 10 llliak
wc1J as a particu'- lilnrian in Ius
about all the subjects tau&amp;JM iA colhomeW..'ft. ,.ilh....,.,...gin&amp;himiO
k:Je. llld decide v.1llch I fouad
read. But it wasn' t until he went 10
IDOQ intcrc:stift&amp;- So I decided 10 JO
college thai he decided 10 devole
into lit&lt;:nlure. bccallsc I rcali...t lbll
life 10 tit&lt; studyoflit&lt;nllJrc,he uys.
I'd never oomc 10 lh&lt; end, thallh&lt;rc
Daly was born in Doylestown.
would always be I'IIOl'C 10 teat:h.Ohio. population 1800. a IDWII. he
Daly rc&lt;:ei•ed hi Ph.D. from
says. "that had more cattle than
Cornell in 1972. He 1\as pUbliohed
people. But my panmts
JIUI
numerous
artieles. llld the book
book lo\·ers. and we made weddy
trips 10 lhe library." he say
, God's Aluu: Tlu World aNI 1M
Fkslt U. PuriiDII P-.y. He
His childhood read ing wu
rc&lt;:eived seven( tcachin1 awards
eclectic. he uys. 1101 lh&lt; etas acs as
including lh&lt; OaanceJior's Award
much as anytl\in~ he could gel ht
for Excellence in T caching. llld
hands on. "I soon moved pa51 all
has becu the recipient of numerous
thr books for my age ca1cgory," he
eranu. 1ncluding lh&lt; four EH
says. "llut Mi Brouse. thr librar·
grant 10 dirca ultll'ner seminars.
ian. couldgc:tacopyof any book in
Along with variow undc:rgradulh&lt;wl\olelibrarysystcm.Anybool ·
atecoursa. Daly regularly taches
I heard of llld asked about. &gt;he

-oc."

.~...-..a.lhe~

..SIOIOlha' anadu* COlii'IC called
"Defi- o( Am&lt;nca" thai. he
says. IDmlplli 10 deal witlllhe tradntoo of Amcricaa I~ as a
-

of "rcoc&lt;:urTeloc of

ofnued
"'K of the

P r - ' A-ds from !he
Heallh c.re lndl.tslrles ,..
sociation
(HCIA)
-Nobe4
· IQsentlld t.Wch
2 10
LaurNIII ....._.A.
........ a. f....::h pn&gt;
lessor, biologiclll &amp;Ciences,

tit&lt; IJB ~of Eqli

••

andiO . . . _ . . . . _

-a. edjln:l prolessar,

elec:triQI end &lt;Xll11liA8r enQI~end~d
thetirst~hean

paoemal&lt;ar, for their cation to !he association
and lor !heir COI'IIIIbuloons to

the '-ltll care Industries of

Wesuwn New Yor1&lt;.
,...... ~.adjunct
associete prolessor,
Roswell Pall&lt;. received !he
Technc&gt;Dgy/Oisoovery
Award for excellence m
Western New York Heeltl1
Care lndustrie&amp;. This IIW8Id
IS co-sponsored by !he
Medical FoundatiOn ol Buffalo and HCIA.
The awards
~at
a cmner held in the Slatle&lt;

-e

Tower.. Keynole speal&lt;e&lt;

tor !he ,_,. was UB Presineot William R. Greiner.

,.=

_,M&amp;.Y
JC in every
o.Jyuys1bc~

that n' • plural

aDy .......,.a !he~ . . .
NEli ....... "Ia
..... ...,.""
had tooadlen from
Spete.
Olile. Pl&gt;land.
and Olher
" Daly uy5 "lbv;.,

s..r-.

litem iD tbc ....... II wo.ok:r·

ere- thUtJS - -

"High sclwol students ask the same
questions about Literature thaJ college
professors do-M haJ s the use ofthinking
about it? YoWtger students are jusr
beginning wonder if the United States
IUls a culture, and if it does, what
difference thaJ makes. "

HEALTH CAREAWM'DS·

eoiJetc IC8dtcn ,.,._ .,...,.._ re-

"'IY."
opea

10 almost an}'ltltn&amp;. as lora&amp; as }OU
caa dcfeed ..hoi )'OUdo. So tf)'OU•rc
tnlercoled in mon: than ODe
)'OU b..e room here 10 do
bul:
arc abo subject 10 Cl1lJCil&amp;."

y'• ,....,..... ~ llld
ocbcr -..art ia thr ~
of En&amp;!'
IS very diff.....,t from
wtw he does in thr NEli Summeo-

Semi...n, he .., .. "In lbosc ocmintn. I don '1 teach CODICII!pDIVy

lheorctical jli'JOll, bul: I do teach all
lhe i UCI tl\al propel Jitenry
theory. tbat informatioll ca get
to studen~. Daly .. "l£1&amp;h llchool Sludenu ask the
...,..questions aboullitaature tbat
colie&amp;e professan .so--u·s thr
""" of tbi • 1 about it1" Daly
uys. WVOUJI&amp;U Sludcau arc just
bczianin&amp; 10 Vo'()ll((a if lh&lt; United
States 1\as a culture. and if it does.
v.l\at difference tbat
.
Aa:orcling 10 Daly. the miJt of
American htgh schooltcacbcn llld

fuf..-.thq bt.- tbll tht UIUiil:ld
StJII&lt;:I "- .. tdaohftable ........,_"
Allolhr:r bcDd'tt of lh&lt;
IS 11\at lhe oDidlcctual frieadllhi
formed thrre otiao
.... after
lh&lt; c::oune iudf ioover. Daly oays
yoflbcsaa
~
ha~ ouyed I , _ ...;dJ me.
and ....U. cadi ocbcr," be says
"Their arcen CM become rcvitaJ.
JZCd by thai contacl. A~.

• wtoole. " -

-.--. ~lt,Dft1;1'01l

J*·

""' . . ,.,... "' Hawthonlc .• wort.

pccplc
cbaD&amp;e thr c:tlleJOria
tbat lh&lt;y' ~ 1"'1 ia """ aaurwr
will\ their liws, wtule pocple who
doll't. oftca come 10 harm.
"'lbcor')'
adiffC!'C11&lt;eoal)
when it's put itm practice," Daly

NEli Summer Scmi1e1 me tal about Vo'l\11 r~
le8rncd ud ..)' ...u diffc:rencz.
11'\lUs in tbc lives o( people ,.'1\o
do DOl study literllurc for ali•;•zT~ w.tltout jargon helpo me
v.bc:a I ..,;.., about tbcsc ideas llld
why lh&lt;y maru:r. 1be semi...,
wtrl:-Ute tooadlen arc 1\appicr for
baviq taken lbcm. llld lh&lt; studcnu fed tha lh&lt;y'rc being taoght
better than·- before."

..)'1. . . , .

Mn

TheAiporW ••c::M~PA~,....,..p.A:MhldDt'No..-onrl. ~&amp;"CC ~ 91-. ....... CII ....... YGI'k• ......,_ ~af'iee . . toc*-1 .,

ON!CTQflaFP'UIUCATOIIIS. _ . , .L _ . ,,EDITCJII; _ _ _ _ ASIQC\IIIlT(BllfroR ..... --. NnMIEC'tQIIl

M)'

Ia iAdiVJdual ia 1L 1'hcre CIA
he a II'I2DCIIdous npple cffCICI 1f
you aan lheK llka pcrrolltutl&amp; tn
all
o( b...--..o-e dauc:s.
'1 teach Hawtbante lS - CX ·
omple o f . . . 's awfllll)
&amp;ood • iniCIJir&lt;li ~ hft
£rom tlllldc lhew
• o.1 y oays
-van
a local
llchool
teiJcher iavi~
10 her
clasllabo&lt;a H.rwtbante' s110vd 7Jw
Scrlrl.t• uorr. 1 asbd 11w: lllUIIeou
&gt;Oily Hawthorne called the IIO¥d
thai. llllld they C8IDC up
subdc
llld uscflll -....
t.bciU.,
-" ........... ud ..... yoa""" do
lbout lbc
11\at other pcapk

....... _

edt Hill, ~(ttl)~
~.........oe. ---

�-

u . . . - --.

3

n

FSEC hears report pointing up needs of faculty, staff
... IIA8 WAUACE
Ailpona-&amp;alf
HE UB PROFES JONAL rafT
Senate rq&gt;rncnL aboul 1200
people. 1,."0-lhlnl, of whom reportiOthePro-jUlll r..... lry
do,
lyn
..-. cllair of
!he Profeulonal tafT Stute. 10141be F.c-

uh) Senale &amp;ecuti"" CommlllCIC lUI .....t
In 1 report IIVhicb poinl&lt;d up Lbe almilw
11=1 of bolh f"""ll)' and pro(eosional lUff.
AcoonliiiJ 10 Wi ·
people like 10
10'011.: at UB for a number of key rt:ISilGS.
"UB is ooe of !he biCF"~ cmplo)'CII in
Wcs1em New York. and we have a lot 10
otT.,.- worb:n &lt;n terms of lipCICial scrvioes,"
Willin.tonuid. Sbe]IIU"idcdlbefSECwilh

·ID term of i~ lbo 'O'OI'kpllce,

leadcnh\p""&lt;'fb beut:rchu~aad

teamworlc and anpowm~~tm wort beat:r
lhu ltl
'!Irian rule.
aald. ~
yllalf
mcmbenfccllhallbc:ycanl'lllk.etood

p:stioolsaboull•owiOimpro.oe

· ~...-....

lllldlhei'SOCmembcn.Fiexlbleworklloun.
Vlhidl hl\le
bea! UJed ia pri..,..
""" and • ..., a fiOIIle areu or !he SUNY
oyott:m. wouldalsobebelpful.sbtaald.And
like faculty, profi •
beDdit from
de\l'tlopmc:N.mcDI&lt;lriiiJ.iolctMblpandaetwo:ld oppommities, sbt 8ddod.
CcotraiiO.Uihe:sepoisi ' litiel,obeoaid.

.wr

" TI ji
.
te rst Step IS fO gel
a&lt;elec:ti\l'tlisto{UBCacuhyandstaff§_t
.
fe .. -..1 - and
,itts_inc:ludin&amp;chtvmou mcdJcalclin.ics,
0p . (0 uruu:rst
·.
• otional~ic bdiowtioeandavaricty
hat fhPU have in

ofnewsscrv..:u.woricshopand~
possibllili.es. and Divisionlolhletic C\'en

mnng O!hero.
UB also has • better ph~ical ':"~"""rncnt than 111011 5111&lt; -:enciCl, WtlkiD5011
53id. Good employee bcnefi are another
rc:o.&lt;OO for ,.ming 11 UB,
repol1cd.
AlthouJbmanagcmrnloflenset$jobsecnn1y as lhe thing thll worlten want,
Will..intoo oaid. worlen often .pbct per·
'1131 respect, ethical mana,gcmmt.and JOOd
communicationbefortjobsecuriry. Sbesaid
lhot having a wann and caring general environment, a productive ond supportive wort.pl&gt;ee. and COIJ1I!Clitive, uscr..friendly
hentclit and senricco would make UB a
k11~r instilution.

A

uni venity· 'ide oricnwion would definitely improve the environment ofUB,
Wilkinson ..id. -'Many people don 't lr.DOw
"ho •• who, and have never...., any son of
orgonizational chart 10 help them know how
thmgs are worting." sbe said. Social and
nc1"'011.:ing possibilities such as the CllmpUs
Cluh and the Women' s Club are also good a1
hringong people 1ogetba. ilkinson oaid.
Workers should also be automatically en·

titled -to career change.s preparauo n.
Wol~intoo saul. "Prople need 1he option of
&lt;honge," she ..HI.

- J

common. For instance a
'
universi"•-wide
- J
orienta/ion for both
facu/ty and StajJCOU/d
greatly help in fhis area. "

I' ve IIOiia:d

latJ:e Wllriabtlrty

in lbo hippo·

-of~t~n . Andi~beIW«D ..,,

otiiOl

very JOOCI-

" We cu ctn.aioly be ome muc h
heM!hicr." Wil ·respoocled. "And I
dunk lbal
10...., .. home, widnalbe
dtpanm..us, unirs, dirilions, and rhea lbe
,.1oole uah..nity."

Joba

Boor or~~ Sclo:at;x and
wd tbol Wil .._. repo11"'as

1110n:IIIC&lt;lCI&amp;ful

ahstof"dellrabkualll"

lban 10 a policy docu"-1. "A$ policy,
uhonl' andlbc:nwecouldaolvo:IOIIIeol
l1ue poblemf.," Boor &amp;ald. 8111 ~
Woolridae o{
· aald lbal r.
on

ooeortwoitansdoeoonoqredude~n
lowardlbeotberi~mo. too

lhealbePSS

~&lt;XSIOihePreoidc:nt, weusuallybriloathonp
upooe81aumc,ahbou&amp;hwc ' reworbaaoo
lhta:orfourthinc: " Wit ·
wd.
Mauteen Jo--ofMudem l..al1
and Ureralllra oaod tbol there •,.u probably
roomforbeuerJJII&lt;:raCIIOIIbo:IM:c:nlhtProfeo510001 SlalfSenaor llld lbo F.culty Scrlllle "
Wit ·nsoa Jfl'l'd. oaytng tbol "The fiRt
otep u 10 get peopltiO undenand v.·hol !he)
ha•ttncommon Forit~SUt~a .o unmnlly·
wide onenwion for bolh f.cult ) and
COUld &amp;JUdy help Ill this area "
In OlberfSEC bornneu. Voldemar lnnoa.

.wr

_,.,.

'*nee~ for

IICI'ricn, llld

a)ior. ~noc

praideal, UAivcni be . , """""""'
!he
lbaiUB • mati.,
ani
ialoCOIIIIif.-.ewidlrborcqoircod

oho:aaibilaryforpeoplewithd
. •
Naylor ou1 11&gt;11 UB .,_
cdiOlbo _ _ ,
_._, F
fir
codes ill
c:aea "We fed 001aforW:ol«
lbal our..,.., r. · , · mcc1 ...,lcacr or
law, llld tbol o u r - ,£
JO be&gt;'&lt;*!
lbelttlcrollbelaw," ayloraid. .. _ o f
1be 1Qp eo
pnolritioea tbo1 UB bad idaoc.ofJCICI
for .......... ,
• lily for people •
di ·
..-have beea r...xd or...,
already 1llldc:r ay, Naylor ou1
e' •t. rnediOiidolrnlrhemajoriiOCCS·
. uyauuea," ayloruid "We' w:-yel
beaoableto .tdtasaloln(-ne.-dloi
WHaa'l beowweof~ourtbcre,
hut- ' ref!OIIIIIOdou
tnlallbuildl.,.
thlll wo ll iackodt cht isaut of
• icy .
lD n:sp&lt;JMe 10 1 ~ from Cbaria

Tttt~nka of ~aboullbel"*"tral
IIJJIJ o( ua·, c:omnntment 10 ICXlCOii hry.
Voldenw' Inn wd tbo1 "I prill&lt;'ople. wt
ohould be
bit But ~-· caa be
raioed 1n pan.ocu
cases
10 •'hdhcr 1
partocular pmblem our nell , _ ompor·
IIIII pnonty." Thol cloc:osX..
ld need IO
be made: by rete• aatcommi!ICICO. In Wei.

_,..,. , . . . _ . _

open:

is
1 way commuruc•ioo. "To ~
frank and honest IS \oCr)' imponant." she
Slid.
illunson also outhned a number ofbeaelits and services 01 UB tbol could be addod
or improved, including booblorc:o. librwies. """'PWa" _.....__clay care. beollh core
availabolily, the possiblccrc:al.ioo of adnvcby tocket booth for campus events. campu
parting and &lt;hultle bu&gt;eo, and convmient.
private and pleasant dirung fllcihucs Ont
maon difficulty w1th service&amp; 11 UB " tlw
people don ' t know aboul the facihues tlw
the uni•ersiry already has. sbe pointed out
David Bank of Anthropology wd "I
ha&gt;e tbis gnawing fe&lt;ling that Illest reoommendllion Sl) tbal UB isn' t healthy now

Faculty Senate resolution commends
Johnstone for service as Chance!kJr
At Ita lhrcb 1 -une, 1be UB Faculty Senate ga•-e unanimous approval
10 the following nzolutioo oonunending D. Bruce Johnstone, who has resigned as
SUNY O.ancellor bcc:ausc of poor beolth:
"Be it resolved tbatthe Faculty Senate. on behalf of all the faculty of the State
Universi1y of ew Yort a1 Buffalo, ••presses its gratitude to Bruct John tone for
bis yean of service as rhe&lt;llaocdlorofthe State University of ew York. We JOin
Presidcnl Gre&lt;ner in utcoding a warm welcome to him. should he decide to join
us as a colleagut."
1bc SUNY Trustec:s on Feb. 24 named Johnstone to the SUNY faculty upon ho s
return 10 Buffalo. President Greiner has invil&lt;d hi m to join the UB faculty .

BenJamin Tolh, grand prizew· ner
in John Pierce tangs Compe1itjon

held March 12 in Baird Recital
Hall, is shown with instructOf
lirieda Manes.

Pssst. . . word's out on the L ivi1'1g T#ll Center's POWER program.
The facts are as follows:

Peers O ffering Wellness Education &amp; Resources (POWER J\dvocates) are
trained to deliver one hour workshops for your group in the following areas :
Fitness
HI. V. &amp; AIDS
Stress(Time Managemtmt
Communication &amp; &amp;lationships

Div~ty

A lcohol
Self &amp;teem
Nutrition &amp;

~!gh t Ma,tagement

�_ . _ .__ _ _ _ A

Rev-up volunteers offer time, talent to help University
~. '"&gt;" Blbr.
Formed in 1990byRooal)'ll'llo'i
in
\iuOC'!tOII •lib the Uru..,._,l)' Erocritu
Cen~n. the
-up Jli'OCTIIII fin a wnque
1\ICibe bel-..-een lhe unn-entty' retan:d em-

47 '--" 011

rusr SEVEN MONTHS
Dol:lattlor d.lall )Ca. 2.11

-

dbt .... OUihllf.

leacn.

Ulh:ndie~d.,.....d.lhc.u.
Mad lloJnchd&amp;d.
f-.~

d. lrlifau. ond peofarrncd
,..,.,........,.
. Sua I
lht indt\'l&lt;belbt ~ _ ,
10 lh&lt; uoiwnil)''•
pm1ucb~ -.:poidMI- thin
..,., on: ~-up ............... ond )'011 .......
&lt;&gt;) 1110) '""lln:ad)' poid flft'cluco. War\ia( Wllh
Ill&lt;' ~E'ml:nlwa:.-ondlb&lt;l'monnd

ols "

10.

pt&gt;ducod -

"""" d. a-

~~

..._,ua......,.

ln.rort-imn ........... .....,.....,.. in ......

•

do:pnncnblhl-.1~ AIXmh!l@
- . lh&lt;
may
. """' ......-

k 'I" 'CI"D """"""*« lA:

r.lri!!C lium larJ!C ~

nl3ihnpcnsbcnncMJ
I•·"'~"'!JillgyO!dciMn

~pui&gt;-

.. mo:niOrUIJ

pi )&lt;ICI ond dqwtm&lt;:nU Ohat .:eel IU(&gt;Ille·
rntlllal Olalffor prDJCICU ,.tlic:h IDIIY _,.)
fy
lunq lll!Oiber IL&amp;ff rnetnber.
..,. myr thrull of the pnlll'll1l 10 lei
reureea
10 feel COIUieCOIId to dJe lllli.....uy To be I*' of lhe •i......n fauily

JIO)'Cixllocacall) UIIP'JI'IMI.. uad w. """"'
Their
f t id. .. 10 f\DIJ .-led
CllJO)-.blt for dJe YOiu,_.., llld
"'""' lhtm feel IIJlPCCIIlCd ... addruon 10
(lfll of .. land ... the \!NY JY tt!l&gt;-&lt;lnd pos I
In the C_,.,OII), .. ld
WiJ nsou. surtinga voluntoct procnm "'-hldt
e.,)
suppll1 from lite mired llClOimUIIlty
..,.. """"&gt; eaoy" ~it .,.,.,fiu ew:ryoac: · The ftfUr&lt;' .oow m
wnut
~
10 ~W:er. the: nuni:acr a ,.ua~
~'D &amp;am 12 .......... lhefinr)Ca
10-'l'
....,_.lA 11194 ~'""" J2!
hotr.. of i&lt;r''lllC lhe fa tim: mtll!llhl d. lh&lt;
prt:apan.thc:•Y&lt;I'IICI'"""'"abot.l
hot.na
""'1CC&amp;
.Ba.crpn:dta5 ... 3
hotr..will

""*"' .,.

gm"''"*

~-lbe

199:l-1994)Ca

I

1•• also &lt;aSICI' oo rccnm former UB employees because they're famtliar .,.,"' lhe
personnel ond la)'OIJI of lhe UIU..nd)' and
""J')' rcwnun on an
formal ..... .
.. lllll tlu .... been .. ..,.,.,uonc f........-.
espcctall) f..- projects '""' dJe unt...,.;ry-nm
Rod C
Bloodmobild. '1'hm: '• no fuu
,.....,.. IbM • ~." llhc &gt;"· ond ter
tbcJr yars of productl.iry for lhe uni...,.;oy,
the program "exklld their usefulness "
R&lt;llurning 10 tho unm:rsity allow reur·
... 10 maintata COilll&lt;JCiiom 10 lbcir [riendJ;
and rol~ v.ilhout lite committmenl &lt;&gt;f
a full-lime schedule Sine&lt;! some proJC'd
requueanumberof""'Oluntecn.. 115Cf"\CS as a
ial _net'AM, as -11 "'f'ht) gel 10 IDler·
mlnfl&lt; and """'"' stones It's • p&lt;nOd of
ronrconaluy and ..oc1abtbt) . as ..-ell ..,. get·
ung lbe worl.. done." &amp;aJd Baker
Bob Hunl. fonncr Eroernu Center prnl ·
deru and f&lt;JI'I'Def dtn:ctor of lhe Oqwtnxn1
of En vuonmental Health and Safety say•.
"We' d be there anyway" for tho fuocuons at
.,hich be ond hts wife usher. Hun1 and hts
~~&gt;ife seated f
111 UB fOOtball games all thos
&gt;COSOn, and be· s helped monitor the R.um..:)
exhibu aothe Fine Aru Center "My wafe and
I really enjoyed lite fOOtball game . And 111
lhe Distinguished Speaker Senes. l.. ""'"&gt;
of my past collea£ueo II help!&gt; me keep an
couch wilh old fi"'CCICh "

Clll

Photocopylrlt Is one of Marie Cott's
jobs for Dental Alumni Auoc:IMlon.

'" ..... Fine Arb Cmo&lt;:r pl.....,.
Some YOiuntecn. suy 'Ailh a parucular dcr=meno on a regular wed.ly sch&lt;duk. ond
'"'Y thar lliSls from plooe 10 ploc:e.
orne engage m proJCCU that ""' sumlar 10
oh.·tr former """"""'- "'ne woman sons ond
filc-. antfOCIS a1 lhe Anthropology museum.
Ol\flthc:rOO.. bool.~&lt;:qllng in lht Studenl Hcallh
hu'1"""' offoce. one worls at lhe Spr.ccll ond
ll&lt;aring Otnic. and lhc:rc' • one woman ..no
u..cd 10 wort tn lhe Health Sciences Ulnr)
"hn edited • manuscript f..- a professor'" lhe
Phol&lt;osophy DcponmatL She put in a orul of

••tim.

Program held in Luxembourg
Brockpon last yar. The siu: d.lhe grnubtion
"ill """" bod: ond fonh each year from
SUNY-Broc-tqnlooLu~Eaglasaad.

lnlvdcd 10 Laxcmbourg ovc- winter break 10 participale in a simublion a lhe Etropean Union (Ell)
dc-.."i,ion-mahng .,...,.,ess Jbal WIS conduaod
J:m. ~9 ond inYOived lboul200 51uden from
"' York State ond 12 European &lt;XlUIIIries.
The New York Coruaniuro f..- Model Europcan Community Simulation
YCM6CSI
and lbe lnsti1u1e for European and lniN'Ill·
IM""'I Studies (lEIS) oi Luxcmbour&amp; orga nllod the simulation. which as known a
NY LUX ( ew Yark State-Luxembourg)
FOcus of lhe simutlllioo wti on the ereauoo
oofoncwEuropeansysiCmofmonetaryin"''lJ''I·
'""''halcouldbelpEuropcinitscum:nlreces"""'· &lt;ays DoraaJd Eagles of Political ic:nce.
llll facuhyad.isorf..-obeproject. whoaccomP'"i&lt;d lhe snadents 10 LuxembourJ!.
"I had an enormously positive reaction 10
lbe whole process." Eagles said. "'The SIU·
&lt;k'n" gotachancx:toplaylberoleofdeci ionm.,ka,andiOmcctochersrudenlsfromaround
c" York Swcand I'Dt.ICtl of Europe."
ccording 10 Eagles, !he simulation pro-

Eagle&lt; saad thll tho 51mulauon had '"o
major beoetits for UB Sludcn , tho fi1'51 of
~&gt;hicll .... simply gelling. chance 10 Yi$11
Europe. "Being 10 Luxembourg. mceung
Eul't&gt;J'UIIS and betng surroondod by people
commiued to lbe European Union v. as a
..·ooderful opponunny for 1be soudenl$,"
Eagles said " II ~&gt;tigrcat fortbemtobcthcre
in Europe v.oth an acadcmac mission All but
one of lhe students &lt;ta)'Cd on afu:r the simulauon 10 ora vel an Europe."
Bul st udcnts also lcaroed on a haghl y
occhnical le•el how the EU operates. ~les
.. id "'They larned about the oncrc:dibly
complc:• del.ails of the ts.ue of monetary
mtegrauon," Eagles &amp;aJd
Marl' Fishbadl. Muusla d. EdUCIIIOO for
l...ux.emiJ&lt;u&amp;. and
M&lt;:r&gt;Ch.

v-

Damcloralhe

TreasuryaLuxcml:xug.Wereamong thc:lcadm; who adcRssod the: Sl\ldcniS, Eagles said.
tudcnts whoauendod !he simulation were
Tomi&lt;lavDjurdjevich,PelerSoukas,Shawn
Bradia.NancyPellegrini.MinCban, Vasilios
Tasikas. James Domz;alslci. George Sroolen .

.•.·.·~~~--~·-~-~-~~~~~~: .. - ~~!~~~;..........-.·.-.-.-.·.·.·.·.0

Aaillt Aml:n::lll

... """""'""'-~-n- ..

Chua ..
Enlll

a....- retirees continue to

~·. . . 10"""'
10 _...........,

"'l'•

""'* ........

.~

"The major thrust of
the program is to let

b

Koreaa. laponev. llfld

CM

""""'0uneae "Sam&lt;

u

denu Ita~ e~ea COI'IIt ilo ..;lh • a n d ~ One caK dtffi It bcocolu5t
..., c:oulda 't tr1IIIUau: ·.-ne deviCe.

feel connected to the
wtiversity. "

.,... '"" ~ tbol out.'-""
• The ..._... on: ...-..,r 10 ID\Cnll)
. . , . _ ..t'ldt.., liharHtllliod. """"' Cat
bastearne•81kmdJeDm&amp;aiAlunn

....
Thorl:sa Court. • pcdumclan klrmcr1y •
Otildrm'• Hospilal. """'dJe Rev-up Jll1lii1ID.
an "''P'J'1l'NN) ., add aquala) 10M wort ..uch
\\'liSll'tpoos;bie••full-limc: ~ .,.._
1v.'lnKid 10 ~.&lt;q~ ...rtmc."
oars
ha&gt; been """"' ,....,., • the: Sndcnl
Heallh ~ on Mlclw:l H.all &lt;"'&lt;~)' """"'- unoe
itt ....... ""'""""'"" in 1987 "Smac.ulms
cone: in "'ilh ~ pnlbkms. When I ,.
""""""'full
.... t.liO- aU the: prq&gt;le in
the Wlliltngroomand au9a ~c:ach.-.1'""
dcaded now 11:.- 1 ,.;u .a.: • n'Aidl lime •
needed wuhc:achcaoe,eYCn~a~pmeaa
I ""'only one or
a day ....,..I an
&gt;pend lime wilb lh&lt; ltlldc:I1IS. "-'10 lbem. and
......, diem lhlll an. I can
i1 in ...... r.:.,.
when thc:y laM. Tha'. ""'Y
yq 10 mr. .
Jcaa lmmiolo. ~ assi5lanlm dJe
Scudcn Health office ....tlcn Cbun ...,..,_,..,

two.,......."'

SWbac:h. .., oaardonou oi lh:
..,... ., , . . • •• IOOidaful .......

~

IDOihcr . . d.

10 help -call

up

made.....,.

....... ~ ~ &lt;b'tlltM)'O

taXlpibOII. • •• ...,_,. 10 "'*--lcqr
~

The--

ltaJqptilaanand~ll .. li:Jr

...,._ speab:r.

It.

TWo .. IJ alai I .. ..........
•
ill dJe()ftlaeo(dlePnsidtlll.
Carla ..... 8au laasboea UIIICd ~-ltlle~.--ll.
dJe Olf10e a dJe PreaidcaUiDCe 1913,
ilr
daily f-=tloao
. ~ Grcitoa'. ~ · · ~
......., . . .
.
Bcu
..,..
cqJtudrdor~
.,.,... &gt; ·
1011, ...,.,;~~calls, lllld odawiae

help"""'
- .
Joia

.B&lt;m io

will be Dt..

w.

the

"

a.... wppon efforu

. • ~to dJe

l'luiclear's Clffice. A . . spoa.&amp;nt . UB ~ PqnmsAdmia·
istralioa &amp;lr ,_. ,_s.
.
sened ill 'Wirioul ~ Md deriall capacities at Roowdl hit Cano::c:r ltilitute for 16 ,an.. Ill her··
,.-m
schedule appoinlmelllS llDd a-nJ!y bandle dJe dcWia ol Owella' c:aleldar,
arrange lhc logistics of meeting. .00 travel, llDd u:Ast wilh dJe pnxusin&amp; cl
~
"Wbere Carla'• fimct.ion ,.,in beprimar;Jy10 faciliaotecacb.ta)"•e:
• dle1
happea." ~said, "DW&gt;oe will be the 'ad-~· for....,
evento. The brevi!)' of dick dcscqprioos bdle&amp;,~ tbo ~ llDd .W:
o~ tho t.tib lhll
ond DiaDoe will lll&gt;doruh 1ba"" ~ coafidtac:e tbo1 both
will pafarmlldmiobly llDd will ,gladly ~ ..... w.._.,_•Wilhlltiaalli« totbo
beatohbeirability."
, _ ___.

or......,

c:am

... .... . .. .. . .. . ... .. ..... . .... ..... ... ......... . .
_.

~

IO.v.'lth
Evils. diila:o d. Alunft i!dllloo&gt;.a&gt;

"'

Benz, Wtlliams are named to support
posts in Office of the President

~

.'

tqr.dpa......-~~,_

IULIIIdli:Jr aeon-. ob:
lh:
..... t.:hcr. and n:pii:ICd
~u.: Bll..cr. .. ~a the: ~
~" ... CXlCildit8&gt;d ~""'
I
""""" lriCI:. d. each indt\'idual'1 -.Is ond
to place lbcm •1Jere thc:y .,;)1 ..;oy ""'
prtlJOCI. .o.lcq Wlllh a IDillllbly _..,_
""""" Re--&lt;~p pnc;p..s up«&gt;&lt;&lt;llo "" .. ·,
done """' llld II'OI&lt;ldua:s """
............. yadyr=piliOIInxaill&amp;li:Jr .....

.._

.

�Businessman,
student: Marc is both
s..lorlsooe..... orc...p.er... .-s..-.
ARC ROSENTHAL, 22·
year-old co-ow....- and manIF of Campus T- IDd
WCilS in Tbe
millds hi own bllll
.
And whee he's - num II lhc llarcwllich he doeo; about~ houn • """""~ io
a full-time lldcot Who bas mointaiood a 3.0
G.P.A.
""*"in Juclait

A. When I was 191 bcc:anltUPIWII c1Jrecwr
of a summer
in AII()IIIIVill, Canada.
For lhll p!XItioft.l "as ia char&amp;• ofiiO other
&lt;XJU...elan aced 19 and ..... and 220 lids
from 1 10 16 yan old. It pve .... hMds-011
e..,mcnce. Tbe camp Rllllly uup me how
to handle pc:oplc Who wen: ............_ much
older thalli was A wnmcr
is otoD a

'*"'

bustaea.

lll(~wru;:.~iamsvilk~

•HJgh School.
Q. Bow did you
'*-.,. eotre-

,..,....,.,.,,

...-ruaudla
A. I hod my lim
"burineu" wheA I
•as in hi.gh ldlool. And I only call 11 a
~~I made rnoocy. For I
yarsl orpnizled a ski bus. including serung
up the bu.l and oollc:cting the mooey. l would
sa) I mode about $1,000 from it.
Tben in the W\JlJ1lCI' of 1990 I heard about
The Commons. Originally my falhcr and his
col~ gue were inteiUIIld in starting a business there, but my dad dropped out of it and
moved to florida with my mom. He lhoughl
• t - ond~weaubin obop was a @ood ;dee. so
I opened it witb his colleague. My falhct
helped fillll!Ct it.
Q. You . . - a lllatrolftwand.......,.

'*"'

Q. Vou'w ...,.,lioneel tbal you- c:any
two jiOI1IIbk
and ........ .....,_,..
DU!Io tloo fu~ .....U.. WCNid you
. , you aft" • .. .u.-"1
A. (He~pa.)lambMic:allytype-A 1.-1
to fed lite I'm succeeding.
ily mokina ,_Y. If !here is"" place for me
10 advaoce, tducve and auceced, tbc:n it's a
plateau lhll cloc$n 't Ati fy me
Q. Jl you doD 'I .... _ , - from a WD·
lure, is i1lllll •
"1
A. When you use good busu&gt;c:u ills, c c:ntually it •ill result in a profi ..ble
company .. ..And profu doeoft 't ocod 10 be
cash. If you 'n: proVldl a service, tl could
be profU for pcaplc. I try to utilta the belt
skill I " -'· and I'm definitely on the bri
of having a @ood business.
Q. At tloo caanp, your otatr- 80 lli"OiliJ.
Now you .......,. rewu- u- to poople.
Bow- ooar.........,.W ltYio-..,.s!
A. It's no1 a ooncretc lucnroby here I try to
upon my staff thai although they

but---

wor1&lt; for me. Chey alto •-ort wilh me._ Once
lhll c:otablilhed. it became .., dfccn ~
anddfJCieatCII..- Forc:umple.aa
lhouJh I pn:tty much org•tua "'""" ps 011
here, I doo ' t ju write a for """""""'
dse to unpack a DC"'~ I'll don wtt:h
tbc:m
Q. Tht·~~w~ ........
as a wlac&gt;le ol
apMbdlc
abooal ~Do you
toda ••
you111 pi!Cipk tin p 1o !Miabd ~ ­
tioo X"!
A. Wdl, ldoo 'toceas!DIIIy:Z0.23y..-olds
JOi out. scninc financed and opm up
the cloors to their D"'ll
V.'hctbcr
or no1 11 ' • the:ir notutal ambttioa. tbc:y ....,
speodi mort ttme in ~ ldlool aad
end up sc:d&lt;ioa ensplo)1111001 !rom IOIDCOOt
doc.
Q. What do your hlhlrt plans ia&lt;tudo&lt;!

UB

A. r d lite ., OOIIWiole . . _
OeveloputaC....,..T- .........

.....-.w

vlll:llit'oa-a-.h
-,-&lt;Mker for me 10 ......e.l*t 1111
btrr..._IONa ll. * - I l l
OK of Ill) idcao is oo

n. c -.

oww - factunaa and supply .ae •• Buffalo r d .uo
I 10 opal other
.,. other uaivCI$1ty
.,....,....,.. pertapo otfer a francluK I doa "t
bowtfd'll tllrJIOUIIOhe ucchip
but
csubiJ&amp;b

.,.·uscc

For the 1o1ta t&lt;:rlll. I •Utld ltU to go bael
to pad
for c:orp&lt;n1t low
ltmaybc:aatlllmllJII'epl. butl'dliteoo
dobc:UerU..my~ .- .My ·~haw

dono _.,. wdl for them11ehu. They ha""
always beta !here for me, me ...-y
e v a y - - 1 - I L I' dl ltc10p""

111 Net. (He

1atJbo I

I satd

them moeey ~...., moi.tb..

IGHT

AT TI-lE

B uFFAW PHILHARMO

c

PoPs
Thursday, Aprill4, 1994, :00 p.m.
Kl..nl,..., ~1 ....... Ball. 71 ~rb""1 Cu&lt;le. Bulf.lo.. ·.., Y

....,.._
EJ,zal ...-tl, :: ·lml&gt;:e l'nmlud.•r

" lassies of the Silent Screen "
'ext~&gt; !'hcuo.;ion En mhlr

J=oflou&lt;i'lp a smasl1 J,;t pcr/ormam:c u.ilh t/,c BPO last !f"d'· NEXU
n:turns oc,tJ," stdlar P!Cit shou; "From Rags to R;d.cs" ....J.,;J, induJCII

--

dips /rcom tf,&lt; 9=11 sibt moc-ii:J' pmjcctcd - .... the Otd.cs~T-a.
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1.um 0

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}03 Fu.w 1\.ru \ ~~Utft
orth C£mrt" (~~.hl.·c;()

UB T .d...&lt; Of(;.,.
221 Studmt ltnio."'
North C~~mpao 1&gt;45-2353

t:ll r•te. •¥;ulabl. ...,t}. .,.J,J UB ID
l'luO'-&gt;nnOOo&lt; Pnt't'
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$ 2600
$:!2 ()()
. 1500
.1 200

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qlllllllJ, tk~ndable, profr ionaJ mailrlmancr

un:1a6tk · rtaforthe
ol
t ot ew Y
lit Buffalo

Also: PR.INfERS

TYPEWRITERS

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l21 C~ lll!jonJI Cam

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pui4pm

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APPLE
POWER

Coii64S 12SOD .... -

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ortllCampu 111111
10r "' llld7-1 .30p.m Colt
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C.•IIl-rg.~IAL

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'loaD-. Coi64S-J70S

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Now Available!

I 0 Dep d Molecular ood

Older editions of
The Buffalunian are stiU
availahle at discounted prices!
1M~· ts lht Un~ua
'
lht oa annual at UB. U.rren in OUT 61• year
of publication, this boo u a compre~
coll«uon of 11M: past ynr' moot IM'IDOr1lble
.-..enu and I'DOD'I&lt;!Ilts. All of UB' un&lt;krgraduatr
dubs and orpruz.nom, oporu.. studtnl life, and
o{ ClOUI'It, graduating Seniors ort included in lh~&gt;
unique anthology.

-u--...- ----1.1lular BK»oo. Rowell Pat\
•n..cr lnsti1u&amp;e H1llcboc Audl·
tum. RPCI 12.30 p m

I IOPJIYNC:AL5£111l1Wt
olay, Tra.asitioll ud Protein
ih lUI IIlia, IX. G. Ptuk.o.. SINC·
•I B\Oioo Labontory.
tn.kts u.. v. 106 Cary - Soutb
•"'f'Ullp.m
CAII&amp;JI ,.___AMI

~"•"i&lt;tdt•rol Dlvtnlty .......

o....

1\,~ J30St'• wth Compo~. ]~.30 p.m

CKE..cAL . , _

l•wne.l Drift mecu •

II/

Do5lp Tlooory,ll&lt;vetty Wtlh•.

ardui&lt;CI aod tbcon&lt;l 30 I
Croob) Soolh CAmpus 5 lO p "'

.....

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orth Compo

mu H&lt;rlJnana

b p.m. Call 6-45-612..5 lc:w
tnlJOCI

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!tt.lliM!L Studeol UnKMII Tbe
a1«
orthCampm 6 . ~p.a
Admis"""' S1. ltildcnU. Sl~ .
aJIOihen.

.....

...rc:UU&amp; A Slap Fuoily

H - . Pete M......-. North
~ 7p.m.Call64S.fii2S
for rqjsuadoo iafonnatioo.

Uvt: II the T ooawuda Eft&amp;I.Qt
Plan!. F...y·s R -. 1500
Sbcndan Dn&gt;e."""""" &amp;-9 .30
un SpooJor&lt;Cf by die Ceota
f o r M - Devc~.

us Sc~KD or~ For

1nfonnatl08l"'rttael

Mlnarmt

1964 edmon
I

1
edition
1!18'1 edition
I
~-

~tion

S10

1990 cdtl&gt;on
1991 ~tion
199% edition
1993alldon

SIO
SIS

I

~tion

$10
$ 10

lf1""- ~ .u $5"' dat 9),

$25

91, 91 6' 90

SuJhvu tt6CS-3200

£XH181TS

~-·­

AJhowolart-"hf ........

l_...lm_..., ....,.-_ ~60-Z'I69J-r-n.fo.

""""".,..lhrotoP Mardi 2S ,.

Sendacb&lt;dormoner

T HU..-F..w.t

~n: Wo.m Ia ArdUt«tan:, With ~y VfiJbS..
FAIA. 10&amp; Haya Soulh Campus. 10 Lm.- Nooa.

...,.... .. ~~w ..... ~.
the \Jloi-y Galluy. ~;..

AruC-.Norlll~

Wofb 1odud&lt; poiJihtl&amp;. pl&gt;ooosl'llplly. oculpt\ft.llluJin1JoJI.

Continued on page 8

~ A4Mlttrltbtioes~~-

order. pa)'Obk

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n.

~wilh,.,...­

UnMruly 01 8uiTalo
n.~
Sw~

'!S Student Utrion

name. :oddras :and

llox602100

phooeoumbo&lt;m:

Amh&lt;-nc. NY I 4!60-21 00

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h~t liredmc. Tlx: reedaa, room
tJqJn9a.:m . &amp;o,p.m•• Mc.
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dutd !ka, Hoya Rol ~ SoudJ
Cwnpus. The &lt;dtibil. ..

tree o( dlarp: aod op&lt;a oo lbe

pubbc:. ... be - - litlm 9 ....

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~orC-.oll'ly·
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The 12 PenooaJ
S•f01y Commi&lt;k&lt;. OOOSISil"l

of lat"'ol)l)'. Rudcab 1nd IWT.

,....onlh&lt;JCCOfldT_,
0( t'"Vef)' monlh 1:n Blltcll Hall ,
"'""" CllftPU'• ., lddreso campus safet,.- •nd li«'&amp;..f"it.)' u.sun
Met·unp ~ open. and all
nrmtw:no of the un1Yef'Sll) eom
mutUI) an encoura~ 'o bnnJ
then" ~fesy ronccms to •~

_.,. mnain for lh&lt; Mtyf.,.
Cnlt Sllow. ocbeduJed f~r May

·--Opportwo,...._
vices, Postia&amp; tl'-4019. S..
Lik ~(SL-l,

hnllly)-Su.detoo Ufc, Poolina
IP-4030. . . , _ _ _ . ,...._
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M'-4015. 4016. BoD
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C'Ommtttl:t's l.tlrnbon For •n
f&lt;'l&lt;mJiloOII. cali64S-Z221l

HEU' WAJITD ADS: UU.
Joh !iee._e:rs can DOW read lhou &lt;iand!&gt; of •'«L.t)l job opponun•·
tac' ad\·en.iscd in Sunday nrwsp;l(ltTS from across the country
TI1&lt; Undergnduate Ubnu)
C'.npt':'n HaJI fCCUit'l y subscf'il;l('.d
In a service, .. Help Wanted
hSA.'" that (!Ompdei tht "'help
"'·.an1td"' ads from 6o4 C:lheti snd
puhi1~

----

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ur.. Po5tina W-4026.

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K.,..._.!&gt;pedolisl (SG4)Su.detoo Ufc. u .. 1:!05.20.

645-3141. Dadfinds April I

~c....-

T he lnu:nW Audit llcpanmeno
i.s spcxuu1nc • MIS T'ran:~ine

H

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IS

s-~tsiA)--U.­
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21 -ZZfmmiQ-.lO._., ooSp.m.
ia Alumoi Area. North Cam
puo. Pro«edJ wlU bca&lt;ftllh&lt;
O.vi»M al Atblc:tJc:s' Scbobr
llhip Fund. MRumuno boodl siu
.. 6 feet . . . by 12 fed docp.
Tabb. u.un ..., cloari&lt; will

C

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CuiiDdW, Uno: -1143003.

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, __....., . . ..,..,,_ I lfl l't
ce&lt;laWv donl .--liO pay...,. I!IMnliDn 10 the secono

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~
JA.Ut
The twO .-tv reglslraticns are ·~-· If \IOU didf1'1 get any ccxx- dunng me

-·_open.,.,....

first regislnlbon , - MD di&lt;!ICI you 'IG those pl;oces
iS ora j)OS'Ied ""
mat yoo,~ ca, selecllmtn CIOU&lt;se&amp; where you
have a ctlanc:e lor a ~"' fegiltrll·
tion Vou
IIIII- one llppCl&lt;ltJ!'Oiy ·10 register before !he semester enels. an&lt;~lhafs
one more than I'IJU !lad before
As 10 yoor Ol)lions \IOU didnl 11.1rn ., lorms a1 lhe first regiltl ton Of, lor elQimllie. you
had a CI'IIICl&lt;Sl&lt;lp thai you dldrl1 !esolwe belofe 1118 reg~StretiOn, you - t h e same •one
more owortunily' n anyone else 10 prepare lew the second r8Q'S11ellon In May So I
_ , maner D)IOU parlidpale ., lhe fnl.the fwsl and secono. Of JuS~ the second regostraiiCIO~You are welcome 81 eilt&gt;e&lt; Of b&lt;Jihl

«

........... ,......,. . .........,

You
be assessed late reglslraoon pena - s d. by lhe firs~ bolling Oate. you 11811'8
lered no holn because rou rNde no allSI1PIID .-.goster Of ~ you altefi1Pied 10 rego~~«
ano had a cl1eCkslop o1 some kind We hape lhal you, as an urder(IT8(!UIIIe, lllllllhat
you·....,. 10 tum on op«:an lon'n6 JUsllo help~ create a reasooabie ~of
coun;es lor lhe neXI ...-ester In this COITPIIiiMI r~abon a1 UB But ID . _ ¥00&lt;
Quest&gt;ons aboul money. ps, you
..most assureoty getla fa. if you don1 partJapaJe In lhe op-acan regiS11atJOns

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We
most
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be~

dldnl..-.end lhalltis I)'P8 Ct ragiolrallon •process IOICIUid
- - SIU08nls' , _ (or~e) to adjust- schedules atl)rq)(Md So ..nan rou dOni
OOI'fOI&lt;IIe your ragilllration _ , lhe ~ &lt;egislrlilllln,
lew Drap(Md ID oper&gt;

We 11811'8 ptaoed a bubble labllil!d ·omp' at lhe bonom o1 e-v r - - bo• 0&lt;1 the opscan to&lt;ms If )IOU on os bubble. tne ~
undenlland lhal d IS 10 cl!'OI) the
COI.Ifse wnose registratiOn IUI1be&lt; is contatnild lllere. ~ you dOni IOUCih 1his bubble. lh6
COJl1liA8f - s lhal you plan ID add lhis course. IllS~ lor rou to unoerstand
ltlal. no maller - e you place tne COIJJ'Se you
lo dr&lt;JI), the OClfT1IliAer
read a:
your requesiS ana perform lhe "drcp" acltonS before I adds the Olh8l' requests on yoa
pa,ge(s) So. l 's n&lt;X 1t1&lt;e OropiMC - e you say 10 lhe person behlno lhe c:anpu!e&lt; ,
'Oon1 drop Ilia! unless )IOU can aod this •

So....,

lloll't -

,... .. ... llrap/AIIJI ,........ ., ..... , . _,

We're 1oo1ong lor a shorHBtm (twO semester! implullemBnlCNerlhe ""'Y ""''"" prOOided
regoslrallon .,the pal Mding 11 Or~Add period lo the eoO ol this seme:sler MJUidn
be an improvemenl allhls tome , n&lt;X lor )IOU wtlo woUld t..velo slalld nlong lone$ wnen
)IOIJ should be preparng lor llnalr.. lllld not 'lor our offide Whose moll should be a ~
10 degree audll and graclong and transcripts businesa. In April 1995, we
oease early
regi&amp;'lranon and op-&lt;Sean entirely bllcause TouchTone ~i&amp;'lriiiiOO will be~

..

_,.,......,. _ ,._.,........., ,..,

forev~ -

.... . . . .

tiDawadla lf -~............................... ..., ... ..

CIVIL

0..._~

I

Claa S&lt;ihadule&amp; aoo j10Urcp-ccan toor.

S

......-:.,

.... 1 .,
We actually had p1aMed lo have lhts ~w&lt;&gt;-registration pr&lt;&gt;Ce$$ irl place at leaSJiwO years
ago. bu1 CJiher changes 111 our compuling sys1llm5 prewrced thai. Now !hal we haYe !be
ledlnocal abilily lo P'it*Sil our class schedule akrosl a month ,N fller 1han wnen we !lad
to dO e11'81)'1111ng by hand, we wanted 10 mal&lt;e good use ollhe lime belweeo """' end
next year""""' everyone can regoster by TouchTone telephone And we !lope you'll
agree lllal this IS not a bog change . IUSI an extra chance to lea cat'J1)US llllhe end ol a
semester With poS$1 more coorses 1han you had after pasl op-scan regiSiraliOns

to 50%
.
-...~"""'""
J~ your

u.:u. ....

.... J....

lhe:m oo mt(lf'Of~

sc~cd forl~ir bi,eh rating u1 ovenll de...u"ll~lc living conditions: and

&lt;&gt;peeled job IJD"-th. The ads
llfC c:ornplc:~ and unedu.ed aDd
:trt ddt~ weetJy 10 tbe

Unde&lt;gnoduol&lt; Ubnu) _ Help
Wanted USA rs lbeh'Cd in the
m•CTOfscbe c:oUcaion in lht
""~ an:o of ohe UGL,
oretl from 8 a.m. lD t I p.m..

M&lt;&gt;aday throu,cll Tbun&lt;by; 8
a.m. lO 9 p.m.. oa Friday. Noaa
9 p.m. S.lllf1ily. Noon to II

10

p.m. Sunday ,
Alt~·.c-

.....

[

1994

'l"t::c fM CillO were

--..D.
The

'

-

s~

Cen..... •l'loollatt IP-4011.

A limited 11WJ:Dber of vendor

lu,.cb&lt;aiiCIOCpl&lt;d rorohe
~. 10 1J11a iJ. Hmiled. F&lt;wmore infonnuion., cw ta rece1V"'t
a rcgiarotioo form. p1&lt;u&lt; c:all
lhc Diviliorl of Alhldio' at

. . , . _ UI'ET'I

-92101

T- ~
Am&lt;=-.l'llolloc
-)1)63
-- (St.-~
F;.Aruc-.l'looliat&amp;*"·

also be oupplled- - Tbctt ts. no 1imit Oil booth Slr.c..
Todoliemor&lt;llw90&gt;mdon

HOTIC 'ES

-~

Poooiqft-94019 ...,.....

Fo&lt;Uioy- Auoc:U·

,
up~~~

Good lor you 1n lllllt case. you
...-tv reg;siralbl

............La .l'osd!oaft'.4012. A _ I_
·

f a r - o. l'«,.,_ol•·

--

:

. ..................

WlllltWI_ . . . . _

...,...,, Brazitioo ~.

For""'"' lafoomaioo. call
2S73011yu-.

[

110-

oiqdle...,.o(-y,

Ajri4. Warbllap&amp;- &lt;liedio_.._..&amp;.

---

~

l'lto4ttcn imtllt«-tHrh

• ..... t 4-1S Tum ln yoa ~ ~ lorms at ouo: ol!ooa
• ...,. t ..u ~ up lhe tchedule card rnots aC yoa fnl ~lllion 81 Ha'f8S B
end the Sluclenl Uroon ICIIlby
• - , M Tum In yoa seooncl ~ loon K you
ID IICid more O&lt;liJI'5el or
drop tome
• ..._. ...,. e . our ol!ooes prinl ~ carels lor .,..,. wt1o A:lPI by ano asks.

Flll-. Eilil:alo~.

o...... oiStudeld Atfalnaad

..,nod by die Cllol'leo s.........

•.

• for F:

•et!Uollioes
_.. _.,,Picl &lt;

1110

""""' c....,.._ ..-;u o(f..-

lh&lt;

.

·~-- - ~

Spnq&lt;nft ...........,..,..

~y

:

_..,ltoan

lllid-poio&lt; ......
'
Wod&lt;-loe.,._...,clonlll
io lbe Mll&lt;iJo!M lcrmM
-~.er.r.o.au..

;

gcW1g 1D p!'O'oliCie you
b ~ lo Hd ado:Miooal ClOlniiS and CliO!)
ClOOIUII as
. Idler the ClllldWO ~{"bUbble III'MI'"I ~ 1!1111 ... ' - ' 10
call ~lsh:allon We OM do llllitbllc!luR Wll'ate ROW ablle 10 stel1 ....... U , I)MI
lhe CHIU ·~ almoilal afi'IC&gt;nlh
we UNO '10

-------··-01-- ---eiW...S.

c - . Gallerr-Moodily, Tlotlday. Wed"""""J·

•

w.·,. ....... .., .....-.-a.-:

oflbolr-dellp""""plo••

Dolla-M""'h 2$ iodie......Dqwi·
...... •(la[Uery, ffin&lt; ....,. Cttn«.

'

Two Earty

fer--~­
!!':!.\~~oe:C~o ... Fuoe
...,. Caller, a- 141. AWl•·
...... _,.. """'. poodi

A....,..dwcrbby-

'

for Ulllkrrraduu rw1.Btu frm1t floe OJ/I« of

'l'echno.logies (116) 838-,2745

1135 ~ 0Wenu8. TcwnoiTonaMIIICia,NY Fi\X83&amp;e!S

�Lewis addresses academic freedom issues in new boO
FAMOUS CASE on the his-

lht...,

of aa•lank frted&lt;xn it
of 1lw ODld War
tW! IIC&lt;Idntic Gtm!""""";
n.. l.otti,_.,. Ca.sr tUioluu
HQpldlu, a booltl.\)' liB ~ pnl(esaor
LionelS.lMs!'C:CmllyJIUblishodhy SUNY
l'ress. Tbc ease &lt;lDDUoU&lt;$10 hive inlportano
lOr)'

for hip &lt;dtutioft. Lewis uys.
()well l.anim&lt;rc left Jolin&gt; Hopkl
in
1962afta- rq&gt;eated run-ins -itb a uni"""ll)'

bu""'ucr.cy that , u ,incrcasingly bootHe to
his presence. But v.ilen in the early 1950(be
"• lloGIQlled by Sen. Joseph M&lt;:Carrhy and
many olbon of bei:n&amp; a Oornnwnbit sympaohi r.cr if 1101 o OUiltsbt Soviet spy, Lattimon:
,.., dd~ enough mtemben of lohru;
Hopldnt 'that hci ,.,,.. n:inst,tkd there aCta- a
leave of a
-.ith pay.
With
e-w exceptioos. most of thc
118 facuhy .::eu&gt;&lt;:dofanti-Amcrican octivitia; durina lhe MeCarlby c:no - . , ~precipi­
•oosly ~ved~ from 1heir academic
J105i1ions, Lewisuys.uwis' P""'iouo book,
71tt O&gt;td War "" Campu.s, addreosed the
issues raised by diose: cases. But in writiog
that bOOk. Lewis says be became onten:oted
on why the Uouimore ·cast was differenL
Whll hedilico•·ered. heuys. has significant
implications foranyoomen.,anry undo:nJand..
ong of iss"'"' sunoundin&amp;IICIIIIemic &amp;oedom.
"Many of lht adminiolrators at Johns
liopl&lt;itu wete aim ~ic5." Lewis says.
'1'oday more and ~ llllminislr'OIOrS arc
prnfeniooal adminbitraton. 10-ho hive no1
1nu:maliz.ed ocadernie llOI11lli sucb as lhe
••luo of academic freedom and the tire of the
mind. oflcaming for its own sale. They may
nr•even koow what !hose values are."
The history of highe:r education &amp;bows
thnx hasicmodclsof univenity covomanoc:.
Lewis ..ys. These include the collegial

·model. ill ..-hidl lhcre i • pal deal of
faculty c o - and eoat:cr11 fore"""'·
leace i IICademic 1111t1cn llldb .. IUCbing
and raardl, the bureaumlit; model. in •
..
t Clll:illhyuj1151.-hcrhicnrobym
ID adminllilJ'aljvc Syst&lt;:lll. od d\e political
IJIDIIiol. in whk;b obifii~~t~ polilical power

calb -a..lari6c: oploaoioa. illt
. •
,_...,._

til~

--.a-

ill
. . . . . . hc&gt;-

1.975 ..S 19IS, Ihe.....,.
il&gt;crcall:d
yS.K .

lheiiiJIIIbr;t-o(~..-;.;...

.,..,..,, and~ !
'..ioalt•
~11 •.,.,. ............ 01

.,...__.a.l....-.icc:atfl&lt;oa-'
61.1...

"Today more and more

"Aa~vccta.hlsdc'od·

administraJ.ors are pro-

oped . '
dbti:!-leanllt&amp;..
L&lt;:wil
tome placer
,it'• """"~ m. ,u. ochers."
Prol'c:s&amp;loolal admWIInton ....,. be
,.,.., ~· to IJIIIIide . n......,.,.
• ftll freedom of .,...,.,., lllld academic
freedom. Lewis sa --n.ey 101 fed
!hey IIUiCl 10 ...,.a!ID ~ poliucal
ftpreo, pmmi- Ol:pllizaliou.. 10
"""commuaib&lt;5.~ he..,.._
utic ' umport11'111bll
iiUSII'MDI'S tdl dlra
....... ....,....,)' •• rail) about. .. they did ..
lohn• Hopkiou "

"Of-·..

fes ional administrators,
who have not intemalized
academic nomu such as
the value ofacademic
freedom and the life of rhe
miJUJ, oflearning for its
own sake."

""""*..

L

ew·

"'&gt;may
" thllhave
maay IICaCiomic lll!miJIU..
"DD .won of &amp;ba'

tnton

and may tbin oC thac OOIIICCr1lS
primailya.......,n.L "lbn...,notii!M)'
admiai.......,... "''ho ..,.a 0011 on IICaCiomic
iSSU&lt;:Ii," Lewi• ..ys. But he a1oo addl that
tbeoe days !heR ..-e DOC!-Y l"""hy Who
- ,..lhnc to ape.ollout oa ~ ;.....,.
"'iu C. VIIIID Woodw.-d, a
killory
professor thea. did for Larumone • Jolms

ediiCOIJOD~

cnangC$ who controls die univenity.
"The ootlegial model which lhey bad ao
Jollno Hoplcin• during the 19~. is row
l'llOSIIr ubingoflhepl5L"Lewis uys. "But
;n general, the more presti£iou the univcroity. the ~ tilt collegial model otltl holds
oome pow1y.
·At .!obits Hopkins, focully oould ldJ the
adminiSU211011 wlw to do. od that' v.'hy
Lanimore ,.,.. oot fired," Ltwis uyo .
'1-animore's CIISe was dl.ff..- than Olber
easeo bciclfW~C Joons Hopldns was a pnstl gious university wben: lhe faculty bad~
power. md it was the norm there that the

faculcy'• opinion eountcd."

Aooontin&amp; lo Lew ... UB wu one of lhe
few universities that prooectcd ots facully on
the 'Mc:Ciu1hy era. when William T . Parry of
Philo$ophy. who lat..- became c:hlir of lb&lt;
department, wu- removed from hi• posi·

lion dcf,pite premtrC 10 do JO ,
"For o 111118 lime. UB lbowed the iallucnce of lhe Satnuel Capca ttaditlon,• Lewu

~

....

1'be collegjal ttaditlon may hive loil

oomc of Its fOR:e wtd.l Ucllhy," L&lt;:wil uys

Gi)ll

"When Capca was p&lt;eSidenl. he wu •
VCaJ ad\'OCOU: of Uculty zoveona;t&gt;oe and

"Fawlty thcaedays may be""'"'~
willh ~ thltl •ill&gt; ~~ - about
&amp;ueb iSS~JtS . Maybe Mu: wa- was rigbl.
od bureiiiCnocy iJ&lt; I f'&lt;lm&lt; that Cllll'l be
R&lt;&gt;pped. SoU, ..-.nic frmdom
meant aliamt to do Dlllhing •

aeodcmic freedom •
But aeailemic :life i• CIOl1lpler. and cnanr·
i ng. Lewis says. and he pot IllS 10 ~o:rics
publi hed by the u .s Equal EmpioytnC&lt;II
Opportunily Commi..ioathat sbow ...t&gt;at he

1

Women's History Month Exhibit

~~~~- -.-or~4tbctlllljorityoflhetwry

ofii!Oii&gt;edicol~ofihcUni-.i~Yofllufl'alodccidediD
favtnbly OOilSider on~ ....X some,.,.. bcf&lt;R by •

-moidemdlbcil\..,..city,IOpumtetbco:tudyofmedicille
in lhdr classes oo the some fOOling a the male SIIJI!Iena."
MorJ~-Mili!P&amp;•tbeilmloflhea:nlury~
~ aihc only
_.,g 34 IDCIDxndihc modicol

-of-........-.:r.....

Ia" 0'118 &lt;lftice ill BariL Sbt: OlDiiBual ., ~. lbe

~--­

llqlliY. ~b}'•........,t..l.lodl&gt;ia"dollltlootllll.

~of 'l
tteMII•alia•
diofdfftid111900.~~·'""'-'~:~~.-..
Jllllili::illeiilNew~~&lt;ladiiiL929la2..tiioimk '

w-··of ...._

M. LMIIe Bwrd ( a or ~~e ~

1902) .... Ull-0 a

. . . . .ihc . . _
'l&gt;. . . . fmllttiB ..
~tioii!Nc.wlilna;Oona,.Biair~

r.-,-.&amp;-. Hclrclfll!e-'.. . . . . . . . .

~ben'c:pott .. alot!B~ WIICIIhts'pir.c"'•
~·IB76plllaliallam:nooicli, -ulialcpn~in

~
'h eir-*· .852 ~-...,.,.
farmediii-...SobllfDIOIIIhl;tbe* IKlldedee..-

....... lhopizoillritlrqx:niM....-r ..... ~dbt

~lllillc!Y'"*""'ID~-'Uhetimcol'bor~ .
Maoib'•.,ICif;oe Pl)'liciailllri ocierlli!l ~ ...,..,.._, «lal themodl:rdl',..,L'IIidree.
.
'ihe~'buticJDiofBbir-Moody .,.recalled in acurreftl "
qbibiriill ihc Uadcrgradu·ott: Ubrary, auspices of
'University ArChi\'CII. The
e•rubit, w'bicb marks
WOIDCII'S

Rlstocy Monlh.

..-~)1)20.1100111-&lt;XIIlof'...

~ b , .

&lt;Jberflb~

u.it 1. •
.
St...-.....

i!• _, ............ica.

She

...s

pa1ornood ..u•CIIIk4ibc"'nlpld-

'

fiR"~...,

~ r~--------~--------~ ~
't'ldoWI

~Himdl

tee:allcd

h~

WOil:..Dor:ror'•
•lbQok.
1111~

~

cornplemcnts an exhibit of

..... .,.....

lt.hed ia 19'20 ia

O!bc:t early female me4lcal
graduol&lt;:s, in me Healdl
Scie~~Ces Ubrary, orgaNud by Lilli Sentt. .......
u, History of MecllciDe
Collcctioll.
Alulie Ma,J CbeoqSpofton1 (Class of 1898)
wu also the class poe!
wboecWO&lt;i&lt;IIJlllC'II'S in tbc
J898 /.U. UB 's fin;! year-

direaor

&amp;a Alwin by

1110...,.......
5loe&lt;lied ill 1942

a!lct

ll"l•l

~ CIIDd&gt;c:iaeiiiOI!t.olhelr

life ill'~.

'New York. 0
,efA'IWCI A.~

·

• .

"--' ,

boot. ~poffud began her care« as a ~)'IICI'Ill at ..... u.r •

Womea llllil Olildten •5 Ho6pital, ..,...,Ung to New Yot1t Swe to opc:a

.

�:Der .......... y ..........
,. ..., l.eNgh al1d Ccloabt IJnMIRIIy

Ngllljght the home portion 01 ihe \ 994 UB
lootbaiiiChed\Jitl, relealed Mond.ey br ihe
DMsion of Allllelics.
The Bulle open ihe 1994 ~with
~UIM!
oonteBts at J.,_ Madison llfld T_ , Stale. then reiLm 10 new
ua StadUn 101 five ·strelght ~ .against
Lenlgh. Cheyney State, Colgate ~
coml&lt;lg), '"'""'" SWe and Holllnl. Folloooing a road enc:oun!er Willi Maino, ·llw BlAis
1e11Jm 11ome IOIItle -ton's marqUis
ma1Cilup agllinst Youngstown State, last
year 's OMSIOO 1-M National CNimpoon
U8 tl1ell closes ihe seesoo 81 Western
llllnois and Central Ronda
'We are oer1ainly lclciP1g lolw8rd lo our
secood yeao in 1he 0!\118101'1 I wars.· saod
Heid Coac:n Jim Ward "t..MM!I'I* was a
lllUgh onaugu:al season. but k was one !hal
was WfKY rewardng n r&amp;klrenoe lo ru
IB!Im'a 10181 eflon in playng l!'f! ~
schedule in UB tvstory. Tl-Os ~s schBdUe
afbds U$ !he opp&lt;lfUlily 10 play lou' learnS
ranked in 1he Top 20 final OMsoon 1-AA pelt·
Ten a hi Bulls' 11 opp;&gt;:ll!rCS ~·
lhe o...sm f.AA e.; I R l - d lhe _.,'$
six
wtlealt • 7 pm. U8 opens ihe 1994 season
. . . ._~ Clf1Sepl3 The
Dukes. 8 member at ihe Yanl&lt;ee Conference, finished last season Wlltl a &amp;-5

'*

llcme"'""""

at, _

record, 4-4 in league play
The Bulls wtlhen ........ ., T - . . _
ra:nalch Wlltllhe
Se!X 10. Le
dropped 8 38-1 4 dool&amp;ion lo TOWliOil S!&amp;le last
October 1n lhe ......... heme ~re~e. ~ron
sre &lt;X1fW1Q of! an 8-2 record, lhE* l1lolll SUI&gt;oessiJ OOIISCI'IIn sdlld tislory.
AllllDugh Towsm State dod not receive a

ua

ron""

... ...

~andhetton lo ~t.e. :!ll-ro.

The Bulls ... ,_, tilt thell*l b l'efirat
tme ., _ , ....... lo bodllhe u.illlw. . , .ef ...... on Oct. 29 The Blaek
li1ilher:l1 993 With a 3-8 record. ~
. . . . . . . tD and the - '· Mane
opoiled
l993home .,..,~
opener 'Nith a lasl second 00-ZT M1 n lrori

a-s

ue·s

ala~t 4, t79fans

ua olo6es its home slate ...,. 5 'Nith a
tOOp.m..- ... t9931M,_,...,..

Chempm , . . , . . . _ ...... The
Penguins tinished thew~-­

""" With a 1:1-2 r80011d lll'ld ihe tean'l's 9010ond nalional crown In lhl'ee seasons
Y~. with a 4V..e.t ~ ma1&lt;{81'1
833 wiYiing paClEll"'l!!QQJ). has liteocrne the
"wmingest" team in ihe decade af the
I 990&amp; tn bolll OMslon ~A and ~AA The
Penguins defeaiBd U8 38-121asl.ason
The &amp;lis close the 1994 ca-npa;gn with
OClOS8ClUIM&gt;
81 ·
-.........
(Nov.
12) andc:onleSI5
c.nlnol
......
(Nov
19)
Westem Illinois, a merrlber olthe Gateway Conference. ftn!Shed the 1993 season
Willi 4-7 reoord The lealtlemecl&lt;s l1nistled
"' a seoond-place tie Willi SouthWest M~&amp;­
soun SlalB
a 4-2 league mark, the
lhird &amp;tralgt!t year the t81Ull ftmst&gt;ed as
conference runner-ups.
Central Florida frished 1993 as !he naliJn 's
lob. 12 nw1&lt;ad _.,, fnefwlg te _,., .....,
a !&gt;3l8XI'CI TheKngcs. whowil make lhe
~lot-M'"I

~IE

OMlll!lf

1M

Sal.. 3

&lt;11 .limes _
Madison

T8A
T8A
7:00pm
1:30 ·pm

Sat.. 10 at Towson Slate
Sat, 17 lehigh
Sal,2.ol Cheyney State
OCTOII£R

Sal., 1

Open Dalll

sat.,8

Col~

1:30pm

sat. 15 Illinois State

7:00pm

Sat ' 22 Holslra

T;OO ,pm

loolloY~SI:a!e

II lhe first rtllllCf d lhe 1993 pla)ds.
UB footba" season bol&lt;ets, just $SO 101
all SIX heme garne11 , are now on sale by
visiting the UB Etadturn Ticket Ofttee or b ,
ca'fing the UB A!hlebC Otf10e at &amp;45-6666

_.•.......,..

The BuUs partterpated 111 the Eastern
Colleg..,te A!t1lebC Conference (ECAC) at
Rutgers where they hruShed t3ttt scomg
134 p(Jir11s tn the 44 team evant James
Madison Unlver£rty tallied 515 pornts ro
win the overan title lndtllldua!ly, Dave
Sittler fintshed sevenlll irl ihe 100 backstroke compelllton 111 52 04 Bonler a4so
oornbtned witt1 Jarr~~e Ptayfa• . Josh
Preczonka, and Chris Brady fo- ihe 200
free relay in 1:24 70 to p.l ace sl&gt;&lt;ltl.

w-··

In a M8ftlh 3 ariiCie !IOU 11:1~ Clr John Wodlnllci wtr.o has recendy ~ IIIPpoonll!d ReMatch Pl'cffillof In 1he School al Socoll Wodt I .-n not~ lillllh Dt.
Wodll!llld's ..-arCh ootsode Ill wlilll I read In the .nlcle, llul!hlelts - • - q u a l M
ldlributad 10 Nm. Wllil:lh 1cannatlillt peu wtlhoul cornt'lllllnl. He lllaleeltllll'illl -'&lt;
has~ ITIIIII'IfY In fliSaiii'Ch •on Ill the IOOlai ,~ al ~ wlh a 1oout on
children and .oolaiiCel'lll. He llKlOUillll
~ oo-11 01 our cuiiiP and
emphuil!ftltli WTible eflliCl upon l!'le ~ l~~g~W '
~. but I di&amp;110f88 rMifl'/ wdh 1t1e obvlaus and ~ canc:ll*onlwe must drew from two
lurther Statemlnlll First he .ays
"t.ty - ' c h . bUicalty ~may
not be produCIMI to analyze tOtry some P11CJP1e beNft the
y .,.., do .. We have
to leech them to liwe In lti$ srociet)' • Aod a
't unhel on '1 don't Chilk lhe family is
Q0W10 to be the same I
!honk - &lt;e QC*111 bed&lt;.·
These viewS 11111 clewly linked. and~. wldespfeed c:ounMI 01 daperatJOn and bewildeln181• agalnslllilhich I rrust prote5t. No WT1000l of etla1 expended
on the trealmenl of ~Otl'l$ can - CC ·
r~ the prokAwldly
iCull and
CClll1Pie causes o1 tt&gt;os •rt&gt;le d:sease wtuch Dt Wodlnid ao eloquerll1y de$crl&gt;es.
1must ateo say that d we are to reach a QllleciJve decision to lblrtdon the Wn1v
and ~~ prinolpal funct~ we are to take lnls inSIItWOn lrom our cl1lld!llrl and
g&lt;andchildreo--e are obligaled to shoW wha! we shaM gMIItwm n · a p l -. Vthat
ooold ~ be. that has not already ~ tried and foon&lt;ltotelly tnadequa e, or - .
eotually destructM!J o1 the mos basic human valu!ls? 'I litaVI! no Idea. Bull oo know tt
would be far bene&lt; to deVofe our et~ergy 1o d!SOCM!r the aehalogy Ollhe ~
which.. icts the f8f1"01y and its youngest $0 ~- and to try tD eftect
a regenerauon or restOMbon ol the larrlly as the central instltllllcn 01 our cMiizabon
What we see belore us so mamec1 and dlsftgUred Is our fulure. We can eilhef aco:eplllS crushing -doct upon us. or we can lry by al the ~ we possess and
the creal
rasponsrb'
we can rnLIIile&lt;. to do somettmg aiXIUt II.
Or WoOarsld describes the symptoms _., wel-lerrific self-ebsorpOOn comboned With setf-este«Tt at a VfMY low etltl; the SIOicnesS of addlciMt and irresponsible
behiMor, ihe orgasmic metaphor and all 01 its surrog
ruling 10 a world wiChou!
past Of future. where the most inlenw and tnSillr'llaniiOO$ pleasUre becomes. 10 1
landscape of the eternal present, the hi9ll8St cnterion 01 fUdgment and action "01
Wodatskl. when I killed thai fi!Lf. • was the higheSI rus-h •
Of course, the troutlle '' that the family. or Indeed tJil'f inclmdlon ·WhiCh has as ltli
ln!OOIIOO the driiWing 1Qgelhef ol pas! and tuun. ~meaningless and 1\.nc!Jonless rn .a society WltllOUI any past o- lulure, Whlcll e
ONly wilhln an~
presem It seems obW~US that unless we can restore e r.aal and VItal of our

dOn'

position both as the c:ulminaoon of an ancient Pf000$8 of growth and~ .
and at ihe same time as the 61arting polnlb U. ure of t-.Jmanity, - Sl1all , _
be llble to escape the l&lt;ingdom ol the eternal present. and the rManlnQiessoess and
helplessness of II$ 9UbteotS
Tills strongly tmplles that there extsl.s an flduoatiOt&gt;al lfi'IP!!fii/MI to reslore lo!
oursel\fBS and ou s!Udents an awateness ol how our pest waOO; lhr&lt;:l~Jgh us. ol our
tradJIIOns 10 the large sense. and 01 OU' capaciy to translorm and lransmit them to
the future This ts the begnning 01 a process by Which we IOOend the dmansians d
our experoence and oreatM\y deeply into the past and deeply Into the luture, so that
by our dehbera: e imentoon and our work, we can summon that fulure i'I10 our P"ftenoe It seems obvious to me lhalb the prisoners 01 a limeless ~ our radisoovery of both ihe pest and the future is essenballor our t800AStrUCOOn ol a society
with lasllng values; a society consiSiing 01 adults Who can 81CiP'eSS ll&gt;eir highesl erealive responsibility as parents Ollhe future.
h also seems jUSt as obvious thallhe only way to displace the orgasrnjc metaphor
as our Judge and master IS to create 1o! OUISe!Yes a PI thai IS greater and builllrom
bme. durable. en&lt;Suring. incf811S1ng . unsetflsh. 1J8F18fatlng'lhe future It can be dooe
The roodels are ~e. But we must first :ant lo do !his, and to move ~
mere cr.sls response and darnaQe oonlrO!.

SwllnnllnC

NOVEMaat

1:30pm

Sal., 12 at Western Hlinois
Sal.. 19 a! Central Aorida
bid to the 1-AA plavofls, the team set 46
school records and cracked the Top 25 for
the f~stlime in ltle history of the program.
U B returns for its heme-opener Clfl Saturday, Sept. 17 vs Leblgh at 7 p m .• the
f~rst of five S11BJghl games at UB Stadtum
The Engineers fintshed last season wrtn a
7-4 reco&lt;'d and captured ihe Pauio!
League trtle wtth a 4-1 league rnar1&lt;
The BuDs close Septerrber w\th a 1·30
encounler against ~ State on
Satl.O'day Sept. 24 ~ . a CIMsion II
member ol the Pemsytvanla State Alhletic
Conference. eatllled a 3-8 rnar1&lt; in 1993 and
finished fifth ,in 'the PSAC East DMSIDrl
The homestand COOimueS when
Colpt e Invades UB Stadium for a homecoming l)'latchup Oct. e. The Red Raiders.
also a Paltio! league member. finished
with a 3- 7-1 .,_au record last season. 13-1 in c onference play . Last season 's
htghllglil for Colgate was a 13-8 upset of
leag ue riVal BuckneUin the season f~nale
Wa-d SlaleS, "Home~ With l..f:ll9l and
Gagale ,,. rel&lt;i1cle the eodsmert lhallhooe
teams t DUQI11o Weslsn New Yorl&lt; in lhe
past v
looiQng a-d 10 being part Of
that a
'TU1I on Salutlays before scme al
!he m ~fans inlhe OOtJ'llry.·
UB
·..es 1ls o
homeSiand With oonsecvtive 7
klekoffSoiJQaloSI Mllnols State :

..-e

and ti glstra on

--... l1liooil Stale 8lllt)ed 1 11-4-1 record
In I 993 and '!Wshld lllUr1h in lt1e Ga1ewey
Conference with a 2-4 m.tll. lliiW Sla1e
detealed _,_uaii-M National Cham,pioo Y~ Sla1e 13-10 in~ year's
reguW M880I'I !iNie.
1-ta!snlll caring ~ . &amp;3-t-uln tRI
andwiltlaf&lt;b~IO!n&amp; ... ho
ill* .... .-:rl, hholl flloino DLicl1rtB&gt;
cx:nld 21 ~pcha h htwl:l

Oct 15 .and 22. respec-

The Royals also sent a squad to the
ECAC ChampiOnSOips tn New Jersey UB

placed 12th with 13 1 pornts. OomectiOUt
was first Wf 446
AM Mane Gorski led !he way ICI' U8
finislltng third .. the 400 individual medley ..

4:31.28 With tearrmale Martie OUifetl ptao.

ng &amp;bdtt n 4:39.34. Gorsl&lt;r was also fifth in
the 200 tndMdual medley i'l ~.26 . Megan
Oonnoty finlstoed lllf'lth .. lhe 200 lndMdual
medley in 2:09.21 and also placed 111h i'l
the 100 butterfly in 59 65 Gorst&lt;! and

Connolly also teamed With Sue Bohne!
and Kelty Sharkey in the 200 free relay to
finish ntnlll in 1:40.56
Men'slndocw Tl'lldl. Reid
The men's Indoor ltacl&lt; squad uaveled to

a

Prince!on for the lnteroolleglale American
Assooalion ol Amateur Alhlebcs (IC4A)
, __In the trials. US's 4 x 400 relay squad
of Eric Rschlen FUnu Gal&lt;od1. Kevin
Winkle&lt; and Kns WIOkler ftnished second '
behind nallorlal power George Mason. The
Bulls' firush was good enough to quality
!hem tor the finals. UB won their heal ., the
finals and placed eighth CMll'all tn the meet. .
the hiQhesl frnish the Bulls have ,_.
achieved 10 the IC4A CJOrTl)elition

w-··

~r~c~o« rr.c~~ a Reid

The Royals traveled to Yale, v.t.ere IIley ·
parucipated in the ECAC Championships.
Judith Novak set a sot1ool record ol
17:34 .12 in ltle S,()(J()..meter run In ihe
race, Novak finished seventh and sliCed
14 seconds off her previous bes1 time
~h had been set a week earlier.
-5pMs lnltlm1alion OeparlmwJI

OBITUARY

Atilla Bilgutay, professor ofarchitecture .
Atala.......,,U, a membcrcltbe UBarcbiltx::luref8eullyslao::e 1911 ,4ied ~7

Feb. u in a.anma, Florid~ cl rma1 faiiDJt. BilcutoY. wt~o .... .., ~ rrom ·
umvt:fflity position • Cbe time or rus dea!h. buried in bwJbol, 1'llrke7. He wm be
ranembelrtd Ita memorial service to be beld • UB .a tbe tlld c( Ap:i1.
Oiinlber Sdunitt, professor cl~Aid Billular'sdeath is a pill loris to UB, m
in:stitution to wbicb be wos ""'l' loyal. • Atill:a was on ttlnmdy f'me leldler,• Scbmit&amp; said.
"fie WE dedicalbd, Oornpcilmt in his c!lscipliDe and full c( enthusiasm in ilbe cbssroom. He
was a pedagqgue of IUJ!b SWidards. demanding of ·lllld&lt;ms but ~ patia!t in
doafulg with them as illdiriduals. His
~ sld1ls bdpcd SIUdcols ~ ,me gap
betw..,., m:hitectural ima,gilllltiClft and llttUctural reality. • OthasRCI!Ied ~y as·a ""'Y
pri vate pe:ll'OD, ~and well-lim! by his ccillequos. Tbey noced as · I his dewJtioo
lo bis field, poi.ntillg - tlw he had dectal to leach in m:hil&lt;ldural 'ecbools all . lite.

"'*

Alllliveof1stn•IU!ilp.cayl.:la&lt;imgllishedocadtmic:&lt;::mtlrinfbeMiddleEiolllol'at~

ID the U.S. to lab: l!Pbis!JOilM liB. Bilg\Qy-...bmlr..... cltbeScb:d c( ~ hfidole
Eosl TcdJnic:a! ~ (METU) in Aribra IIIII.,..... •
pedoil S!Mid _, e pa:ia!or cl
!ilrUCilRs, p.sidelllllld baling..,., c( I'WO- MBrll &lt;::IIIJlllll!ll flam 1913-1980 be
cbain:d tbe Dq.nmt.ot.cl Ovil ~ • Goryaris lliM::Isily Li&gt;ya.lllll- fbeotniCilnl
~ clb:lb tbe Ada-. &lt;:ar!piS cl 1\nbD ~ IIIII fbe ~ aq10S c(MEJ'U. A
~in1be~~infbeU.S.mi~betqlabrldlyin.fbe llmi
ld &lt;ho State IJnM:a;ily aWiti!gtDnUni...,;ry, &amp;.l.wis.
He ~~
in his f.aeld et Michigan Slate Univrrsi.ry, tbe Univt:fflity cl Waks,
the ~l'US!ty of y.'ISCOilSin and MEl\1. At UB be 111ugbt a Dumbc:r: c( Sllbjeds, _primarily
technical ~ m -.:tural design, &lt;XliiSirueti&lt;m c:odes ond spe&lt;:ificatiaas.
Bilgut.ay belc! a bedlclor's degree in civil ~from Robens Clollqp:.lslanbul, and a
masta:'s degree in civil enginecril1gfrom tbe Uniwlsi!yofMiobipn. &amp;.tso bddcertificot&lt;:s in
~ desi~ from the U~ ofWiscoosin,MlT and tbe UniYC!Sitr clBcmiL
He 1S surv1~cd by his wife, Sevp; •two da'llhtcm. AJ. Yilmaz of &lt;learwatcl:, Florida;
Ayda. of Buffalo; .mel a son, Arda, of Buffalo.

n_,..,.

res:-t

�LeDuc speaks
on Canadian
election

0 ......._.

A Workshop on
a "gatingthe

...-.
... ..................
-

LoDooc, prof...

-ofpolllical~•
lhe Univers.o1y ofTonw~ W111

lhe efJcc:u ud 1
l.lons of lase year's ea~
fcdcnl detbon in Cauda • a
preaoentatioe be held from .307 p 111. on Fridoy, Marcb I , II
lh&lt; In~ lnshw1e, 864
Dela,... Ave., Bull'
Tbc ptUCnl.tbon, "'Cauda.'
Political Ecthquake (and i
A~
s) Tbc 1993 c.n.dou
Federal Election,. 1
sorcd
b)' the Curada-U
Sludoes
Centre in the UB School of u.,.,
on conjuDcuon ..,tb lhe Buffalo
Council on Wor1d Affain and lhe
. Tbc
lnl&lt;tnlllonaJ I
and wine-and&lt;tlccse reception
.... fn:&gt;c and opeD 10 lhe publi&lt;:
Tbc 1993 elccuonlcd 10 a
dramauc ovubaul oflhe Cma·
chan polluc::al sysacm. Tbc JO"·
eming ~"" Con.ervaa.rve
Pony. led b)' Kim Umpbell, kill
168 ,_. in Plfrtiamcoot, tot...
from 17010jUIItWO. TbcJOYemtnCAt is now lo;l b)' Jean~.
held o( lhe L.ibcraJ Pliny. M&lt;fre..
&lt;WU, lhe malo CJ!lPOiitiOOI party
now is thc liCpOrllia Bloc:
Qua&gt;eoois.
l..d&gt;uc is a frequent oommenwor and analyst on Canadiaa and
"""'P'fD'ivc poliuc::al bcha ior.
political patucs and elccoom for
Radio c.n.da lniCmlltJOtlal. lhe
CDC and tbt BBC.
A prolifrc ,.ntcr, be has coauthored "How V Olcr$ Owoge,"
"Polillcal 010tCe in Cauda" and
"Absent M~le. " in addltiou 10
runncrouo boolr: cbapttn and
articles in Canod!an. U.S , Briush
and Ellropcal1 joumals.

LeiaJ

. . . . . . , . ........ chair

and professor. Oepar1men1

of Corm1unocatrve Orsor·

defs and Soences, LJ-

......., cos doctoral

student and assrstant pro.
lessor. Pennsyt\18018 Stale
Urwersny, and . _
I
'u• CDS doc·
toral Sludent and Cllnocal .
mstruc:lof. are editors of
"Pragmatrcs· From Theory
10 Practlce .• Publrshed by
PrentJoe Hell Wllh a 199-4
copyrrghl dale, n rncludes
chapte&lt;s by leadJng ex·
pertB l'l chold language
and language drsorde&lt;s
The bOOk ~s , _ theorelleal approaches and
Clrnrcaj methods 10 ~I

learnong, lhe organaatoon
of COfl\lefS81lonS, narraiM!
understanding and productron, and aspeciS of
ilte&lt;acy

I selbaecher
will not seek
re-election

0

Bruce Wayne ls!cl"-ber,

suJdcnl repesenwil'e 10
th&lt; Uni veni1y Council. an·
March 3 lhal be is wilh·
drawing from the dectiou for
1'194.95 rcpreaeowiw:.
In I prepared stllemenl.
I sel"-ber dcsaibcd his year on
rh&lt; Council as "'very productive
and a grealleaming eaperience."
Ho desaibed his role in a number
or measura lbal will improve
Sludenllife on ampus. induding
the upcoming TouchTono regis·
tntlion, lhe roove to build lpll1·

"'''"Ked

mcm-style bouoing on campus;
&lt;ITnns 10 improve lhe Univtnily
Bookstore, and vllrious safety and
acttSsibilily pmcrams.
"The responsibilities and lhe
'&lt;Ope of lhe Univenily Council
Roprcsmwive an:: ISIOUnding
nnd 01 lhe least, endlcu," Aid
h&lt;clbaecber-. "I hope lhallhe
Universi1y Council Rqretcnta·
live . . . exercises his/her elforu in
rc:aching into as many an::as of
Sl udenl and universi1y concerns
as possible. It is long hour$, !remcndous pcnooa1 socrifiCC. chal·
kn£i ng, no recognition. tiring,
aggravating. bulto me, well
wonh ila ~fold. "

Museum to
show photos
byRogovin

0

'"Los Mioeroo MexX:anoo
(The Mexican Miners)," an
exhibit by Mil1011 Rogovin, UB
American Studies adjuncl facully
manbcr, alumnus and awardwinning documenu.ry photographer, arc on VIeW through Juoe 26
II lhe Mexican Fine Aru Cen~et
Museum in Olicago.
Far more than 30 )'QB.
Rogovin has been photographing
wortcn around lhe world. Hrs
wort has been WtdeJy published,
exhibiiCd tn many museums and
galleries and won worldwide
acclaim. His series on phot&lt;&gt;g_raphing miners began m WeSl
irginia. As a result of Winning
theW. Eugene Smilh Memorial
A ward for Hunwustic Photogra·
phy in 1983, Rogovin ..... able 10
expand lhi senes. He has since
documented minen in Scotland,
France. Gennany. Spain. China, '

Cube, Zimbabwe, Cmchc&gt;slova·
kia and Mexico.
Tbc O!icago exhibtl foc:uscs
on silver rnioc:rs in Mexico. ••few
of us an: privileged to see what I
call 'the Olher Mexico,'" "'Y'

lf.lllal ...... of .... , . _ ,
AniWIIefilra
~

I I I c

I I

..

~~

~·

t

1 ' '-

1&lt;

.'. ~

\

Vln ' B)tb lmeaa
· ofthe ...t.napoopit·
!heir bomea, !hear fQJI. lhesr
placea of wort Tbc exhibit is flllldcd b)' lite
~ r&gt;c:p.tmeDt o( Cultunl

Arr..,. and lhe llhliOi Aru

Council

Felder work
to be presented
in Stockholm

0 ..

'"'!!Ia.s
on:bc:sual
CCIIIpOOitioot b)' O.dcl Felder,
Btrge-Cary Chair in M rc • UB ,
has been oelcdcd for perfC~Tn~M:e
duri the In~
iety
of Coow::mporwy MlUiic {ali o1
rn SIOOkholm in ovembcr
Tbc wad. oneioally oornnu
aoncd by lhe Bufl'alc Pbilhar·
monic: Orcbcslra and lhe 'ew
Vorl: Swe Council on lhe Aru.
is tbt only on::besual prece by an
"'-lean compoocr lhll ..
ochcdu1od 10 be performed duntl&amp;
lhe feslrval
This oornposiuon ' an ea .
!ended lbree-........,.,..,.1 wort for
full orcbesua based on poems
from "Alturu de Maccbu Pia:hu"
b)' Chilean Nobcllaurcale Pablo
eruda.
Felder directs tbt UB Music:
Oepattmmt P'OIJml ia COOlpOOI ·
lion and serves as ortistic cli=tor
of UB ' annual JUNE IN BlJF..
FALO. 1-k is currmlly lhe Meet
lhe Cornpoocr compooer-itKaideoce with lhe Buffalo Philharmoruc Orcl&gt;esm.. the
Buffalo Opera
and
WBR:l .7 FM, thc National
Publro Radio affiliate operal&lt;:d by
UB.
He has received many a.....-cb
and grantS for his wad. which
has been performed 11 major
from

'Aituru,""

an:.....
c:on.-y

10~ YC:nUCI

for new

music and rommiss;ioncd by

orc:bcslras. ensembles. individual
musiciiJIS and institulious of
unusual distinction.
Aroong his many graou and
awards an:: six NEA fellowshjps
ID composition. I 1992
K.ot.t!osevitsl oonmission and •
1993 ~fellowship.
Felder holds a doc:torate from
lhe Universily of California 111
San Diego and has taught there.
atlhe Clcw:land lnSliiUie of Music: and 11 California Swe Uni·
versily. Long Bach.

Fulbright Grant Competition

n. u..... ..... lllfw r

,.,._,&lt;USIAl. lbe 1
Fon:ip Scholanmp Bo.d (BFS) ad the
lnstituiC of '"""'-&gt;out E.dooc:olaoa (liE) the officul

William Fulhn

opc:niac.,. May 1. 1994 of lh&lt; 199s.96 ~ for

Falbri&amp;IJl

Gnnu for IJ1Idullle Sludy or reaearcb *'*I •• -=-k:mic fidds
and for professiooal ....,
ill the cnalive ..t performiag - ·
Tbc purpoae o(
10
~
•n&amp; bctwceo tbt people o/lb&lt; Unilcd SW.S ud 01ber D11U111ries
throulb lhe ~of .......... lalowlcdp... . T1ley ....
funded undor doe muiDII EdlrcaliorW and Clldtlnl ~ Act
of 1961 tbrou - - ' * ~ madebJ c.o.,-10
USIA. Particlpcilc ......,.,._.ODd holt iul' ·
ia maay
rouutries alto~. Flllllr1PI ar-...., anil.abk fortllldy
or reaearcb Tbc BFS, c:a"1lpOicd ol I 2 cducaliaul ad publoc:
leaden~ b7 lhe Presiclarl of lhe Ullitcd Suacs, ~
'
cri...U for lh&lt; sdectiou of C8fiCildlles and ba lbe lioal
audkri1y for lhe ......t.na o1 crau.
Far all ....... ~- be u.s.cili:laa. fie timed
...,uc.;a. llld bold a baddor's drepee or;.. c:qtli"** bJ
lqiaainc diiC o/.,. .,_. Cralivc llld p&lt;rformiow
rcquinld 10 have alrUrdor's dqrce, bul they .,.. bave four ,....
ol "*"-~or Sludy. CalldioWis ia rncdiciae- have an
M.D, orcquivaleal (e.,e.. DD.S~ OD. « . ) •lbc ~m~eoflfRllic:a..

eta.,_. .. IDCI'CaR--

aniiD....,.,.

11011.

All applicanu IR rcquintd 10 have sufficienl proficiarcy ill lhe
o( lhe holt ..,._.,. 10 C8IJ')' .,.. dar l"'lP*'' Sludy «
rcoearcb.
R&amp;right FuU Graa
IOO.Uid trip ............, lnlvd.
moilliCOIRO&lt; for lhe 1a111re of lbc
a ........:11 .oaw.c., llld
lllition waivon, if applic:aNc. Fufbricbl Traw:l Gr-. provide mo.d
lriJl,lnlvd 10 lite COUIIII)' """"' lbc lllldenl will ~ Sludy «
reaearcb and are i.-led 10 ~ ........._,. IW&amp;I'Cls from
Olber JCllln:X$Ihal do .,.. pnl\'ide funds for u..n..ionlllnlvd or 10
supplemmt lbc appliao&gt;l's per--' funds. AD p-. iacfude btsic
beaJih and accidmt i.............
~.....,...and lpplicalioo inli:Jrmoooa is alDIIi-s ••
lhe lro&lt;:lloft. '"F\dlroighl and Odw:r Granls for Cinrrlua Sludy or
Rao;arcb Am.d, 1995-96.SludeniS curra!lly enrolled • UB lllould COiflaellhcir Clll-C8II1piS
Fulbright Prognm Adviser. 8artJan B. Buakr:r. 3621'11rk Hall
Nonh ear..., for broc:hures., lpplicalioo fonno llld funhcr infur.
mabon. Tbc ~deadline for~ is Ott.l, UM,
These grants IR ClpCD 10 1994 BAs- iD padua Jlftlll1mS •
well as gntdultiC swdcnls for tbesls reaearcb « lbJdy obroad.

"""* "*"'

�·ant to ~ee~
....

..,..,. ,....
Ill

llt{l

•criJtoaf€rt«•C'o,.• r••• ·
B#Kruottfl~t J. rqtll••
aad

....,.._,..,.,..,...d-.___......
,~~ '

'~

.

u

o(

T1loe Olllldy !It a.-., UB """"''
of oar.......,., o( 1.361 1111ar
...,. ~.,.. 1'.-.td&gt;M.
••
...........
loa .,..,.,r to:dh.
_ . . . . fJoaor Hllplic:al:iq it ...
.....
f.cb' Geco rq&gt;ana1
~from .:W 10
7.35 t'
~r- for liJ:Ill
mbioa11)'-*'&lt;n
......... o(lhoUBn:·
..c~~- ""'Sin Orolli., _.,.

~
.bfottfl at~

IMidfillcl
Smcreetr. tlYdy miuce ~of two

bi&lt;.Wiia""""*cd ..ilh

gum an.:-~ manually
held ooeo. UB del&gt;tal re-

rc:p:nro Manlb
lllll 1ho ..........,.,. Auo-

~

~~E.E.~.U­

. . _....~AbW

ctlban f&lt;&gt;&lt;Dmlal ~

HI&gt;. .-.::hAWlr!lipCdalill;IIDI&gt;en [Udood.. ....,..
pn-

..,.,_.r,.

.-ing.

....-..or::.-...,_ AI

Siotty-&lt;~Joo

palienu; U'i&lt;d
""'"'"" brusbc:o ~V&gt;i&lt;r daily for a
wccl Thley then ""'"' OYCllly

an: lllfw..:t
4bc UB ~
-o(Onl B"*'s)

di\&lt;daJ ;RIO srouP0 and £1VO'Il
rl..'«nc brushes 01011!lf*""""" ·b)
61 h&lt;r Tdcd}'DC., ,JnJaplal: 0&lt; Braun
111 Jl«! b: lilt remaining fiw ......U

••f '"" oix-weck swdy.
Alllln&gt;e clcctrk brusla -

, rl be moo'*lld to

•~-ccssflill~ ~II&gt;&lt; ba:t&lt;ria

p.,lplr,_ tingA.ooliJ and

6Ju tbdriOdh,.

P"I'O&lt;rlla iiiU'.....-dia than II&gt;&lt;
m:ml131 brusbel.. 1..tvels of II&gt;&lt; I
nocn&gt;&lt;&gt;rganisms. among 1he maj&lt;..C111(lrils tn causillt' aduh 10011&gt; loos
~) dc&lt;troying sul1""tin&amp; bone..
wm: measured
hc@inrung of
the "udy and at .eguliw inl«\'11$

.......t Jft"C''llll&amp;

at'""

""'"" wed: lh&lt;:reahc:r.

l..&lt;•ds of p. tnJ~~Ja de........., during th&lt; W&lt;»kof manual
mi.Jting a&gt;d in II&gt;&lt; lirot
afu:r
111.• electric brushes _ , IDUt&gt;dooc-cd. P. rillgW..Iir i~
dunng II&gt;&lt; manl131-brush phase. but
Slorted 10 dc:&lt;n:ose once: eloaric
m..&lt;~~es ...., used ., 11&gt;&lt; end of me
so:x-«ndwedi:.
But .,....II&gt;&lt; remairung foor
"MS. p. gingiva/is kvdi bepll10
nse in groups using ln""JlJalt and
Braun brusbes bul ronti.nued
do"'11 wwd in ,the Telcdyoo """"·
In addition, men oonsistenl redoclinn&lt; in plaque soon:s wen: foond
amonJ!Ihe Telcdyneuscn.
Usor:s of lhe lniOI'plak brush
'"'.pcric:ocod oonsislally less bleedin~. "tlilc: all suiJjocls hod asilnila'
d&lt;.'lll3S&lt;in in1lamnlllioo ~
d..- udy. Whill: ITlli!IUIIIOOd&gt;lmitlcs
mbx: t.aamallcw:ls oliply. eb:lfi&lt;
maybcabcllc:riJM:slmont ror patimls ..ro want to ....,
11&gt;.-ir ........ ICdh. """""""'say.
Membm of 11x: n:searm 1ea01
""' 1aryannc: L. M.olher. clinieal
n-&lt;cart:h c:oordinalllr; t.foohelle
Bcssingc&lt;. n:searm assi-..;
Sch:ISiian G. Ciancio; Micl1od
Klvmien:l.ak: ldcx W . Ho. tt&lt;e:II'Ch support fl"'daaisl in lhe
ll&lt;:partmentofOnl Biclogy. and
RI.KScll J. Niseogard.

"""'*

Me)'t

- - . • ._.--()1
Oldlolltoolb . . . IJB-.l

.-.dasa,.
Durin

ltM-..,._..
a.crMt•tVJ&amp;. Qftft
toothtottf~

til tiWl

..,.lho:: ......

~tun,ies u~

lhe risk or

man)' hc:alth probl&lt;n"
But~lficra

simple 10011! CXITaCII&lt;lll

UB oental

"""''' among lhem. Sll)'
UBdc:nl:al~

In I swdy of 41 3
pali&lt;:niS •i&gt;o hod • --"
ettno&lt;:l1Cd. lhe rescan::hcn
idc:ntirltld 74 v.i&gt;o apcneoccd c&lt;lft1Piicauons. l..ooking 11
the daiJI by age group. however.
they found oo &amp;ignificant i~
in COOI[lli&lt;oorions rdal£d 10 age
Similarly. nsk ,.._ 1101
with the reason for an cxnacbon.
or .,;th lhe number of ledh re-

""'"'""'cd

moved.

'!'h. s.tudy includod 156 pouenb
.,.,. 25-44. I~ ages 45-64 and
107 paticnls 65 and older.
1. C. Vogler. fanner gaialric
ttaining fellow '" the UB School of

Dental Medicine. rqxx1cd the
.-..catCh Man:b I0 at lhe American
Association for Dental Research
genenol..-ing.
Others 011 lhe ra;earoh lean\
were Jurgis KaNza. n:&gt;eardl pnfC$SO&lt; in me UB School of Medicine and Biomcrfical Sciences. and
W .A. Miller. professorof

msearcners

~i~lo clues to
savm~ ~our

teeth

~

a&gt;d mladi,.,tpl11!81)'
oOeiiCII$ in II&gt;&lt; UB &lt;lc:nul sdJooL
The stud} ..... funded by II&gt;&lt; 0...n:au of Health Prof~ ;. lilt
u.s Deponn:I&lt;JK o( tk:abh _,
1-iumM Savi&lt;:G.

,.--ur~n&amp;

rune~wa:

d

....-e~

............

&lt;JIIho:

............_..........._bDaital

~
domly

-u.-~--.,.,.., ........ ~

()roc: li""'P iii!!Od I ......:d llylon fka
&lt;loilyb .. -*'.bii~ ID

Qidc,a~A»
(PTf'E;I far
... lira:""""'"

of..,

....ty.1'hcw.ll:ald~h::P'IlE

leldOIDtCIIWil
dlftGI•

. ....,.UIIId -...d btloioe.
Each pecm \qlla d:llly J&lt;L'IJld rJ
.....,._, ifito-r.-d. udqpot

b

Se~
smoldnJ · a ·ey · bcw in periodoalal.me-.,
• ,......., of ldulloooch •
bs. UB denial n:seart!l&gt;-

1!11

en uy Raul

•

o( &amp;epa-

nne QDdics f.'lOOC!u&lt;'«:d by

Joscpb Zamboa ad Roben J . ae-&gt; have fouad
that smokca expericDc-ed
Ieos ltUIChrnent of IOOlb m " ' and mO« " ' - loss lrOIIIId t«th

than oon-smol&lt;cn
In p&lt;riodoniJll diliell!iC,IOOib loss
IS caWlCd by unciJeo\ed infectioo

d diooontbl ~ ...... """"
lloillq. 'Tbe.....mc:a
lhll
lJ&lt;IIl* ............"""" lhe llooo ...
olo.uttd.S.~IICpOIIiOddis­

--

aubtJallt:III'&lt;O'ilza~ ·

..........

~
• iD bolb poapL

PI1'E

lltidul&lt;f

..........

~diaiatlinsN:I&lt;ritllbc

UB~~....,;J

-~loa&amp;-

mm: lit;dya:&gt;-llo:s ibey liaii!XJIII-

.bulble. "'be')''ft:-lilldyiOql&gt;lallyJil~Jicoolttchotil

dcDial plaque if die ftooo .. - --

froon one or mono bactena that de-

liiendly; ~~

"'"'Y undc:riying bone.
The resuiiS o(' •lhe .wdteo wen:

Oihln on die ....,..;t, _ , '""'
s.t.iaD G. Oiool&lt;:ii&gt;.UB poli:ooorof
pajo1b1tia; Malylme L ModEr.
olinl:&gt;i[......,..;.andioll&lt;:r. Middle
BcaioiJil'...-dl. . . . . lllllt.ko
lh .....ttl "'A"ld spc:aaiS in ...
UB eq.m.:. fJIOnil Bid!Qgy.

prc:scnted ·1oreh !Odurin£1hega&gt;-

cnl meeting of the lntmuuiooal
Association for Denial ReoeaKh.
In a sllJdy of 1,426 .tults "!!"
25-74, Zamlx&gt;o found that 1he loo6
offiber arudullCIIt of IOOth m bone

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1716550">
                    <text>..... ,.,

,ceJo
need for irmovation in
higher education. he
hinted at a career of im
passioned advocacy for
learning and ambitious
ways to achieve it.

l•·a-aae~

con
do.JCla ""'""'"""'-en or

· or

UNYTrusuxuaod.

l ohn tone lcadc,...hip on
education bccamc R:COg·
n11ed nationally and 1n1emataon~
all) He stimulaled bothdiscussoon
and oction on what higher educ.oho~her

tlon lOUSl do40 be~ prodUCU\·~

~'"$!eM
• a w.. ., ~!:t ana
st..ae'11S """ cne ~ ot
·ror,. are QUite fort.

"•-e.t.

nate 'O
ha;o(,Joo

statesman, Dr.
Jofmsrone'
leadership in higher
education became
recognized
nationally and
international/ . "

in the future ...
SUNY 2000
Johnstone's "greatest lcgaq," the
Trustees .aid, .... the on ogha of

SU/1/Y 2()()()· -1 Visum jnr th~ ••·
Cnuury. Under his lcadc.shop.
UNY 2000 launched an cxamonahon of the Untvc:rsuy"s role m
meeung evolvrng socoal needs. 1bc:
document grapples "ilh the chal-

UBatvdents h..e
prepaled a

Clant cr-t·
ln&amp;:canl for
Cb..,cello&lt;
Johnstone.
Shown wttb
the card
outside the
Student
Association
ofllceare
Rodney
Pannley,
left, and
Scott

Tancredi.

1
t
stePPing do .., for

a'W"i0:..11K.eo Fet

,. e

"liE'S ' re.is5il)l'l$
~~ac
rma"'frooerc
.Jet'""10 saco . . ~ SUN'V

orTru ....

'iola~&lt;:&lt;man,the

"'

• ~ SUN&lt; Croan
ceoo&lt; 0 B uce one

S NY Chancellor""« 19 .
J.,hn"onc =gnedcfr&lt;&gt;:ll\ c MIII'Ch
I for. reason or J'OOI' hcotlth He
lea' es alegac) or ochie\'emcnl and
conlribution 10 SUNY and hogbcr
cducuuon lhrooghoua the nauon and
&gt;&lt;ood. ocoordang 10 a rc:oolutioo
pasoro Feb. 24 by ahe SUNY Board
1bc: Tru&gt;tco n:cogniud "wnh
J&gt;Pfi'CI&amp;LlOO. esteem and affccllOIJ
tho grcaa oducallooal lc.wlcr "'ho.
dunng lustcnureo•erlliepasl fi&gt;cand-a-halfycan;.hasmadeeunoordinary contributions to ahe gro&gt;&lt;lh
and development of hi bclo&gt;ed
Untvcnity ....
A&lt; eduaa ional philo.ophcr and

I

nemeo ,,.. 18·

Tr..~s'"'

merrt&gt;et

ltn~C

of t·hanj!IOJ! a larj!C lnSIIIU·
ttonJnattmeo(•ncruseddemand
lor erti oency and producii\IIY
Accordong 10 the repon. fonnall)
adopted on Sept 25. 1991. SUNY
musr sho-... aggreui \ ~ leadefshrp
tn addr"cssong the needsorthe state,
ond sed: addiuonal non-Sllllc fund-

lftl, I the 64-&lt;:ampus yotcm I 10
adut\C gre&amp;enes rn the nc11 ~­
aury
Johnstone said :11 thr ume .. A
plan for I large com • IIISIJIUllOO
hlc a Unt\:eJ'5U) v. tl1 probably not.
on the end. yodd ~oals !hal
&gt;urprl
"'
the reader )
more than U v.ttl Ct.lf'IUlJn fO*) lhat
"'II profound!) v.re~~eh 0&lt; do&gt;l\lpl
lhe 10..\lUUOOO The pibl 1), both
~ardang and {'('ln.)lraantn,p \\'hal
an\1 1n Utuuon can or
bocomc

"''II

,.,II

t\

·\,en much a

ltJI'k:lk.ln

of

'41\al

lhat m~nuuon b all!l.l has been Tile
degree~

of true- frced,un 11 a
plan arC' fc\.11 ('\en af It
mu&gt;l be prepared '" do ~~~ k f&lt;X
ceruon change&gt; In !ton, the St.Jc
nt\Cf\Jl) of Nt¥~ Yorl 1 uo 1
~'""' cou,....,. from wtuch 11 hould
not , ...,. dramalk:all)
- At the ~me ume. a ptan can
and ougha to maucr That "· ahe
unl\t~t) "to.

COISICR~

of a ooomd plan,

\Oo

ith

I

clear arwJ Ammcdrate actlon agenda

ought 10 r~ r-nergaes. tn p1rt
ne"'1 and creau"e ~vior. and •n
theendalterthetraJ«Ioryol"'herc

laiUOIII the&gt;LIIC' ~t.angan popu
lanon--oM that 14tH he- RWf"C'
cthno.:all) do&gt;tnc ond older For
the"'"""' ,lf the report. the .km&lt;&gt;
graph~&lt; l1ll"&lt;
dc.ar " Put&gt;-

v..,

'"' hogher educ '""' mU&gt;I a wmc
an lfk.~ tn$1) unponan1 n•k tn
an Jn~rC'a anrl~ muhll.:whuul
..,(h:ICl)

tOSlt.;7p•n

a• t s. pt...ata P€ftOO ot tr a.,s..tar.
·Joe bt~ s a V~rea11": ot
• nc-.,. eog
oeacJers

t~

a~

e11Pr.ce
w'ISOaTl to
tl"'oofl ·

..... 5 Oe.rn HIS etr

rl!f""W1 .tl .... l('ft\ l kii\CJ il ~!'!
gern1kftlf'\L'i'\ 10\:l..h.K:ollm~
more hc.ahh,.,rc "'ilfla -·\ I
read) t man~ (",.., ,. t'~" c.··r, o~.n

rt(M r'C\:C'I'' 10£ lht: health ... .tfl' lt"te)

OC'Cd bcx:..uJ

h.. ruah. ....-.:

0\l.:f

em,.., &lt;led. health p(-.tC:,,htn.Jl arc
u:n.a\ .atlabk... nd K"f\ K~ an: no1
cqan11.ed h&gt; re,.:b all ,. "'-• need
them Educ.aiKln h the lc~ hl N~"
\ 'orl,' hcallh on the future
01
ool~ "'111 dlC' &lt;.,.Wit' fei.jutre uu:rc•-..·
mg. nulllhcn or heillth ....,~ '""' ·

al

O\-rr

the

nt-11:1

de ·adc. tM

"&lt;&gt;

prot&lt;SSJ&lt;&gt;ru~L. them
mu'il bc
edocated to u&gt;e the I e-t 1&lt;1'ht11'&gt;l ·

oec•..on

1n eu·n pas.! on -was a ea
cnoce tot
Tt
1~
ma"" • Bor•e s appoontmelll

-.as maoe ...,~ r-r.e Uflde( ·
soa'd•ng mat NO
o ""'
0e a cano&gt;Oat lor cr'&lt;l'lC&lt;' •

"" tast

Sep tembe r

Tr.J1&gt;IBe$ nameo But•
l.cer..n-d1arge
spon

o..e to Illness Bo;rke servea
on t&gt;lal capaoc
Jaro1994 ...,., ..loh&lt;".scoroe

&amp;f)

.etun~ -.·

rec...med o

~....-,

Dcspuc the fieroe financo.al p...,·
..,,., or the l:ue 19
John ,.,.,
managed 10 lecp U rv ort trocL
to"' rd goals of e cclkocc and
acx:cs.. UB Pre odenl Wilham R

Grt:tntr potntcd out .. Bruce
John stone has been aleadcror good
bcan and ycat vision for
Y
Contonued on page 5

1111-

01 cloa"Ce!!I&lt;

o.mngJonnSIOI\e sat:osence

OfY3ndt olfa--.rnk.""'C"h,adt\~-r;.c
populauon ""1thtn a rantt" \"lf ~"'
1bc: Tru toes' Fd'l. 2J I'C'O!u
uoo reaJTarmed lhr
'.., com·
mounena ao U • 1000. 1 on~
note of the program. alread) on.i oated as pan of it, and m.d.on~ mention or lhe broad &gt;uppurl lhe plan
n:cened lrum Go' CUt.'mo
and legi&gt;lau' c leaders.

tto:e
eft·

s dutoes

BJt&lt;e s ntoa !I!!&lt;IIICe at
SUNY Cle&lt;Va *11S as aclli'IQ
l'nM&gt;s1., 1965 aile&lt; an 1 1·
yea~~ as
ol
SUNY Colege 81 Ptal!sl:n'gh
He was Ieier named SUNY
l'nM&gt;s1 a&lt;10 ~ gMWI
l"oe
ol Pro-.&lt;J81 Wld Vtee
Cha'lCelor for Academe Al-

pr_.

faoos
As Pm
t , &amp;Jflte nas
l1at:1 general supeM$0&lt;)' , . .
~OIIel academic

progiams. ~ . libranes
saences ll1d hOspt-

nea

ta•s ano other acaoemoc-

relaled actMDeS on the SUNY
system He coordonated
preparaoon of an all-funds
Contlf'IY&lt;I(j

""page 5

�-u.----.--

2
H :

•• 0 F 2
-- - -

--~

~-~

Setting
goals

..........,_........,
,.....

forUB

..-l)l'll(eaor.

ol epidelltioglc
ch lind dtrec:U ol
H Oa61111nWllol Clwloer

c-.
e.ncer

Pille
I . teC4IMid tile Natlonll Volu!Ceer Leedetahop
Award from ltle~
CAilcer Socllll)' 81 . . booard ol c:hl::lcn rrMilno

h'1

Ga.
lhe -.:1 is gi\WIIO

A.CS~wta.-­

w::e ID
naiiOiwl cencw
crgapialion hu bMn long
.nd &lt;fCSIInguiiiMd
, _ 'Mtlt8l\ more
lhan 180 ~~

and bociCI en cenoer and
h i s - hu lntoencecl

meoy area ol cancer con-

trol, most tiCIIIIbly ·~
educallon ancf ~.
He \d5 pnncipal inYesllgator ollhe ACS muJD..Insnludonal study--lhe largest
proslate catlC8f d8t8Ciicn

study 10 c:lele-whlch founC1
llwl
- ..
and lhe prOSUI!HP«ific;
antigen blood
conjunction witlllhe d!Qilail rae- ·
Ia) • . . , signilicanily
"""deleclian rate
lor 01111 ollhe riiCJ5I COimlOn
types ol cancer.
He !las served on many
nallonal ACS cornmillees
and task groups. From
1982· 1988 he waslhe d~
reciDr ollhe Erie Coumy
unit ollhe ACS and served
on lhe prolessoonel educa·
lion and public education
coovnittees.

lest.,

REDERJC K WINTER
) b&lt;"'•auurpnsedthal
"""" people 111111011ail)
dKin' &lt; """" that hl:lllg
Dean oflh&lt; UB School &lt;11
~ would be an elcdk-nt
"Tho isoneolthebesu:leanstups
on lhl: couniT) ... wd Wm1&lt;:r, v.
booomes dean olthe School rl Man-

agemenl on l tmel
.,.. l I good I.I\MI'SII)' Y,11h tACOf.
.... 6oca*y and good srudenls. .......
business oormuul)' ~&gt;1111 high po!On1111 ond . meuq&gt;olran .... oll .4 milban people. And I faood bodl.Prtsrdenl
Greaner ond
Bloch eroo&lt;naq ond~.·

Wrnu:r romc wUB afleudJ •
ungurshed Carttr as I professor of
busJnes aduum lrliiJOII ,. hO'ot' ~­
~earch 1n lhe mari..eung f1eld
spanned a '"'~ n~nge of am&amp; but
W ti(~ pnmanJy . heg)L.OO

marl e1 lrat&lt;g) and &gt;cgmen~auon

He has spenllhe LaS1 ''"en years .,
bead of the Jkpanment of Bu;,nes Admm1str1t1on at the Unl\'er.

sn y or IllinOIS •• ChampaignUrbana Wl11lc lhrre. hr lncd 10
hrre se&gt;eral membersofUB ' s managemenl fliCUh) . "lucb. he&gt;&amp;) . I
an rndJcalioo orho .. " ell regarded
lhl:) are m lhe1r licld
" I II ·e admtmwauon. anchhrnl.
I hi•"&lt;' lhe ablht) ror II" \\ rnler
.o;ays. ··s u1 11 ccruml~· m l. e~ n
harder lO l.eep up )OUf ICII\'11) 1n

research Sull. l lhml m) research

ClCJMPtJTER SCIENCE
I'AMIUSl:

--~- ~

assoc:iata prolessor or comput..- science. end a member of lhe Center let
CoQnitive

Scoence.

was a paneliSt atlhe

llllrdannual
" - 'lng ol
lhe Society
forMa·
IIAII'APOIIT
chines and
Mentaltly.
held in Allanla in December, in COM8Ctlon with lhe
AmeOcan l'tlilosoptlic: Association Eastern Division
~gs.

Rapaport, 1he lmmedia!e
past president ol-lhe Soci-

ety, is also a member ol lhe
APA s Commft!ee on Comput..- !he In Philosophy.

Send mafl3rial for Honors
section ol the Repaf8r ID
Am Mh'lc:lw. Reporlflr
Ed/la, 136 Cro/1$ HsJ,
Univen;ity IJJBuffab, 14280.

tnlming "'111 help me m 1hrs Job."
wu.cr·s fadoerworit:d fora cnpoll'IIJOn. and !iO y,r....,. gl""' lq&gt; duni.Jng
hi: wculd go inlo busines hi: says.

After_, a - · dogrce m lnduslnal A.drnlnoslriiJo a Purdue 111''lniiY· w...... ~Mlfl.td '"• CIJI11Wil'
-'IIOilml:lll rcr • yeor ,.. elpM...,. bdp&lt;d 111m dct&gt;de lba hi: pr·
femdthe lllldlc&lt;:tull~ollhl:

acadenw: -'1. hi:
. ond
hi:
..... bid: Ill l'llrQJe lir lws Plill
\\""*" plans .. cbo llldude lhl:
esablislvnrd ol ., e.ecoo"" MBA
P"SfW11
llr 10 lhl: hi: .....
111\dvo:d on r ·
• lhe Unr•...-..1)

pupwn ..... invcl"'

'*"""""

&lt;Uihl:

'l&lt;dmloln:ad)'lhertmlbeda.
W!CUIMS ....i ll1ll!llocouoll
-.J
lhar,.,.,.." hi: "'Y .,. ...

hi: ~ -

pq;r1IJ1 fty w

..,."-'

Th:y'l.,.apd

ond

.,.....,.or_

or~.....n.-

The llroncr

lr.l1£lh

ol UB' s ..,.,

P"S'W""b:n~ll)(lll!rer.~­
bme fBA ~ wt.:lbcan llllo.e

.,fi...,&lt;rsu)'t.OI'!'ID~

•

larconcrmsollhe~ oom
m&amp;llllt} Ont c.umplt mop hi: a
~ for hl:allh c;.., mal\ll!..,..,.
lha oould b&lt; ~VCIO lhl: INII\

..--oftheman~
.,.., Olp&gt;llliiiOOS ttl esiL'm

Yod.. Wlftltf"'Y' •J
-&lt;haw
lhl: COfJKll* ondcampuo pbyen ~·
become a l1lOJOf foroe ID .,.... it ,.
hl:alth car. ~- hr ""~'

"E\'ef)'~""'"""

lba•-10

" hi:"") "I
help lrnl. "'' a
~ propmt . . . lh&lt;
na1
o:JIIIItUlll) ' v.tltdt " ..ru.

"-.....!

"Every· deallShip has certain themes that it
wants to .accomplish I wanted a chance to
help link up a rnnrzagemenJ program with .
the extemal business community, which is
·what I thought UB needed. "
olllbnor C.oo.ll'o&lt;S ,.·di hi: ""'¢11. Wml&lt;r"")

~&gt;llh~on~ad­

&amp;lliOtollbad\...... lo\i ....
''Or-:J,.,,..JUI~gJ~m:lR

' •!1UIJ1&lt; of the umquo &lt;0011 thai

clatcr 10

t&gt;.CCUIJV&lt;&gt; ~ 10 the

~"'1"'-....U)

lassroom.
Asslgnmcras m CUCWY&lt; MBA
IXU'JieS " ill
odapr&lt;d IOih&lt; p:wtJCUiar
~oflhl:e&gt;&lt;o&amp;~vo. ond more
""-"" studre&gt; of actual business SIIWIIOnS ,.ill b&lt; used \\""""' says - A b
of lhl: """"""&amp; in lh&lt; •""""'"' MBA

led from lhar
mlh&lt;.,.,olo.ecuuvo. ..""'..,\""}buS) : hi: .
Wmter r
1mplemenLll.llOn

oorwdmn~

lhe

of ,.1lal hi: call

" ruche ~··...,rogrm.. lhaa
designed 10 hl:lp the SdiOOI ol
Manogemoru work ,.mh lhe partiC\1-

1rt

h
""

I dtlroa: ID

&lt;A""

UB .-led. L'B'• S..tn

I

.~

~-·firg"""'

Council ll1llde "" ol ~ fWN
dcnlsondOiherllou:!ctdd ......... "'""'
buslness~ . IDd lh&lt;) ,..., ad
,.
. . 011 mony .-llullh&lt;) ""'""
beaa-dwl ... do."
Oa a morr personal it' et. wI'""&lt;
say llul he •really I
the MioJ
v.C51. and I
nL Bu olo """"'
ltlld -~ 'Tb&lt;~her&lt;ba•&lt;•
b ol dlaracter. llld lhe OOflllllU""'
ba\ real!} opmr:d its ..,. "' ""'
.., ,. anted li changt&gt; of &lt;n• ,...,.
men1." b&lt; sa&gt;d. "'a nd Buffalo 1 an
eas) pbce to IJlt Whtn m) ,. 1k
and lcameher&lt; . .. e ..,. lbalpeorl&lt;
~

tach Olber rucelt e&gt;&lt;n '"

the airpon We dcctded lbal 1h1
.. "' thl: lrnd of pia« .. her&lt; '" &lt;
ld b•e "

Executive MBA: Its a first for Western New York
lly SUE WUETCHEJI

News Bureau Slat

T

HE B SCHOOL ol M anagemen1 "orfenng an e~«"uU•e
MBA program um Iarlo program• orrered llllhr ltljl b&lt;J&gt;In&lt;S

schools m the countf)
The program . the li,..,. &lt;' CCUII\t Masu:r ' • of Bu 1ncs
Adnum&gt;lfallon program 10 b&lt; offered m Weou:m Ne,. Yor\., " 'Ill
begm llu fal l with . cia.. or bet w""n
and 30 sludenl&gt;.
Wluleolb&lt;r uru versJties on the area offcrpan-time MBA program · 1ha!
can lllke as long as lhrtc 10 !iYe yean; 10compleu:, studcnl&gt; enrolled in the
UB tJ&lt;t:CU!Jve program will """"' 'e thor degrees m 2211l01llh; UB also
offer&gt; tradioonal MBA programs for both full - and pan-ume SIUdeo
"We see Ibis program as crucial focbolh lhe oommuruty and the School
of ManagemenL- says Fredcnd: W. WiniCr, who becom&lt;s dean of the
school June I . "Thecommunitycurrentlydoesn'l ha•·eane&gt;.ecutJve MBA
program. 'Tb&lt; program will prm-ide an IIOpOIUlll ~nk bdwu:n our racully
and the business communi() . II' a way 10changc the OJ!rure olthe school "
Winlerha5
slrellgthenmg the School ofManagenv:nl's 11es
10 the busines communily since the school illliiOUDCed
lb.ln •
year ago thai he would become dean . Winaer• .-ho was formerly the
bead of the Depanrnen1 of Business Administnllion 11 the Univenily

zo

"""sed

more

of II hnoiu1ClwnpaJ gn- rbana. ha penUboula wed. pennocu al
UB during lhl: pasl )car ~ltng in place hi W&amp;legJH f{lf the dloool .
The UB PfOI!I'OI1l v. all foiiO'A the roodrl of the "tried and 1rue and
rested" ex&lt;culi•·c ~BA program 11 the Ulll\'ersity of ll hnor lbal
Wrnlerbelped lol$ubhsb20)ears ago Tlunprogram.rn lum. a&gt;ba....J
on thl: program at thl: Unl\ tf'511) of Chkago, ,. ~h 1&gt; •hr lnnlcst-ongoing t.lltCUin e tBA progrllltl tn the coontry .
Erecuti•·e MBA program difftt from traditional !SA. programs
in lbal lhey onlt ac«pt as sa l&gt;dc:nu expenenced executi• who lta\T
lop rnanagernem ~al. Sluden also mus1 have the ful l eodors&lt;m...,.,.
of their emplo)ers. many o r .. hom provide financial suppon as ..
Many of the top busin&lt;so schools"' lhe COIIOtry. includ1llg the J L
K.eiloggGtaduateSchoolofManagemmla Nor1hweslem Uoi""""&gt; .the
Fuqua School of Business a Dulte Uni&gt;'ei'Slly and The Whanon Scbool
at the Univtrsrl} of Pt:nn5)1vanaa, otftt .,..,..,Uve MBA programs.
Ccun;es in lhl: UB J&gt;IOill1lm will b&lt; otfaed 011 ~ Friday and
s...da "" ~ con wort; full lime ..tailt lhey CIJII1Ilole lheir stUdies~orerelatrxl.~mucb aspossiblc,tolheiCIIIII wort;olJlllllicil*lls.
enaillrng lhem ID 'lpPiy irnmo&lt;i-=ty lhl: 10CMicp.1:s IICIC)Uired mtbe prugnun.

..,n

&lt;lass rnartlerswillprtlgttsS tlwoughlhe)J101l111mas · - v.ili&lt;:h~
~ ID learn from me arnher as ,..,U as from lbe f,.;Uty.

n.~··~~~~O)' N~d~lnCI~. S...~dNawYDlt.atButtlti Edloraiafta&amp; . . ~nt36CI'OIII:tt.l Nmlra,(716)~
OIAECfOR OF ~TONS ._,L~.fDfTOili --WWW:... ASSOCIATEtr:XttiA . . . . . . . . . MTOIAECtOft -..cc&amp;.-..-.., ~lt alflDIIIJ[CTQIII ,..._. . . . . 40V'EAI~ ~ _ , . , . . . - ,

�Senate vote supports current policy on Vigilance will
use of sidearms by Public Safety office:rs deter thefts
., -

WALLACII

liepcx16-

Sial!

FI"ER J..EN011{Y ddiMe. 1br
~ SrmleVOied 21-IS lui
wid to support a reoolullon
recomtnelldin&amp; coot:inuod UK

eminc lbe

&lt;lflbedooument"PoliciesGoo·
Public: &amp;nety

Offoa::n at !be State Uaivenlt~ of New Yad:
at Buffalo~ !hal was implemented lao. I,
19118. 'The ~llltion peneded Ill illilill
raotution put fOrward • lhe ..-unc thai

would have supported some proposed
chan&amp;l'l! in tbe 19118 dooumenL
The p.r oposed ebang&lt;s would mal&lt;c
sidearms ~pan of lhe Uand.vd oquipmtDI
camed by pubbc safety otrJOm II !be Uruvcr·
documenJ A)'llhal
sity al Bul.falo." Tbe I
fmanns 11rt DOl pan of standard equipmtnL
Slqlbtn lleMI:o oflbt ~ OpporwnityCalll&lt;rsaidlhllbe-apinsllbt~

beawse"'havon'•t"""'itdllcussediDlbepoint
rha! il'sdearlhallbecurtml policy .isn't "-"""·
ing. This is a ICIISilive i
and lhe IIUIIistia;
don't show lhal ~IS .-l&lt;d"
Bennett Aid dW UB had a tradition of
having oo guns on campus. and wondeTed
what sort of mes;sage UB would be sendln&amp;to
it• 5tudcru.i and Ol.bers by anmn its pubbc
saCci)' off1een. "Guns are ..,codents waiting
to happen." llcnnelt said. "I don't care how
well people are traioed. But if we ann our
· officers, we 'II be S¢11ding !be ~e that
guns can proc= )'OU."
Benneu said dW be "suspeeuod a hidden
agenda ~len:. Are we goin!, to sb)•away from
lhe concept of public Wei)' into bcooming 1
university police fon:e1 1strongI)• and vel&gt;&lt;·
mently Object to the whole concepc of Ibis
proposal."
William George ofEnginemng, .. ho put
forward lhe resolution that lhe Faculty Sen·
ate support&lt;&gt;d. Did !hat th&lt; 19118 docum&lt;:nt
aln:ady allowed publk wery officers 10 bt
anned in m111y oiroumsiJUleeS. "Our prcseo1
policy does nouay that lllelpOIIS can be used
only after hours and must be lefl in public
safety vehkles," George said. "Contrary 10
wbaJ we're led 10 believe. our present pob·
cies an: 001 restnctive. A pubbc safety offiOCT can carry a gun any time !iOIIICOile
thin it'• necessary."
James Lawler of Philosophy Slid that four
problems had led ID lhe proposed changes; a
case in which a SllldCint had died. a case i.n

...tlidl 1 fomale polici otrar "felt inJeeure"
-..ilhooa • _,.,.,... ibe dilllcuiUes ~
wilb lll\loc:tiJ1I ibe bo• ill p;ihlic safcsy hit:lft In wbidl wapons on turrelll)y kqlL
andlllldoalswho"fedSlnl!p:"Noii"ICindo
oct have 1!,U111. iBui from o[ ibese prot&gt;.
!ems b clelr, !..awl« aid. thai lllwu&gt;&amp;
_,._,
~ lll)"body' safel)'.
"We have 1 hil\b level o( civil order 11
UB. ·Lawler .aid. "Our a.diUORII campus
policy should be ........ piooeui • ,.,..
COIIoCql( of ,..,.,...,ty. A.llowin potbbc ufoty
of.f~eert
carry ll1llli capitulllesto !be all·
tureof•loleDccthal we'netry
tocomhat~

"We have a high level of
civil order at UB. Our. ..
campus poliq should be
seen as pioneering a new
conceptofsecuriry.
Allowing Public Safery
officers to carry guns
capitulates to the culture
of violence were trying to
combat."

-LA-

Herben Schuel of Medicine and lliomedical Sc1entts w.d that he Was ...in favor G-f

arming the police at UB. I agree w1th ,..~~aJ
people an: saying about lhe vtolence e&gt;f ow
societ)', but we're deluding ourselves tf .,.
think that b)' saytng 11 isn't so. ,.e sol"' lhe
problem of ,-tolcooe. Tbc Amherst politt
and e&gt;ther area police don '1 come on campus-Public Wety is our police If we don't
want lhem 10 be. lhen we should d1Sband
lhem and get th&lt; othet area politt out berc."

rw1n Segal of Psychology saJd !hat
Schud ·.argument f&gt;oinl$001 lhe value of
lhe old S)'Siem. Tbe fact that lhe police oren 't
hcte mems dW what
been doing has
been Vo'OI!&lt;ing." Segal said.

E

we·,..,

ll.obat ~• ..,.......,..,. f, . . . . .
aft'ain. aaid
!he f'I'Oill*d - .,.,., ...
sbl1i awo fiom !he
..t&lt;ty
model. '1'ltere's no lliddl!l8 ..,.,..ta .._,~
~!IIOir
"We lll'!t ~ from h alii
rnocleho !110ft' of a poliae COI!CI: DtOdel We'or
. . dille lui UIIM:I'Iibcsillh......,. .... Ito
-~ ormed public ..rcsy ollior.n.
eha .. IOfi
aobo-1; tiiiC ........ ..., ....... "'~ (1'liCl
ocber .
lnlllll&lt;llbe .,..._,.., ......
IIOI,"~wd. "We'..,CIOilSldtcdwllll:t

Y-.

"""""'ondM~Ihlll if~-IOpow:ic

lbe ltillfery- )'l!IU ........ 10 at ... 10 do tNt
wilhoullbe prqpe.-1lli:Jh ....uld be I ft1l&lt;tl.l&lt; "
l'reitdmt Wi!ltam Grculer. who Aid!-.,
,.... spealina -.. a member of the Scna&amp;e."
said lbal be had dHwssed ..,· lhe otra of
PubliC &amp;nety 'l'bal lhey lhougtal about tbc
problem of safety oo CIIIIJIUl. ~r m ...,.
tryin&amp; to MCOU...., you to vote either way.·
OJriner said. wBut If's my undem.andtng
lhallhepolicleoooorpccmorl'"u lbeirtlJJ ·
1111 for several , _ "
Tbe OfflCir o( Public Safely 1$ ClOOCC1Ied
that 1U forti&lt; 1!. lgllll, Gamer Slid. ond lhlll
recnnting .....,. more dtfrt&lt;'UII ~ publ1&lt;
safety orr...,.. are not .U.:...-..l so oury .,...
"We'rehavlogdifftallbes""""itmgotfars.·
Gretner said -su; (hose dil'l".tCU~tJ&lt;:&lt; would ~
away if offK.1l'ni -re con 1dered poi&gt;CC
rather than safety offteers. 01 only lheir
pre tlge but also their salane• aod hmefit&lt;

would go p.Willlarn Georgr wdlbat •It's been wg(ICSled dW "e ha.-e • lack of eonf&gt;den&lt;e 111
ow-publiC saCCi) offtcllll&lt;.buo tbe facti !hat
wr ha..: lhe finest quaH.Iy iCCUrity force m
W'*""' CW York. 'J'bl,i.robtlity I 1101 wbal' S
under dehak. Wr' re 'beit~g led 10 beheve &lt;hal
puuin1 a gun Ill somebody'• hands lll&amp;les
!hem safer. but tlw 's 001 true lb""l! 1 ~·
doesn't &gt;tOp bullet •

A pn:.posal by )..,... La,.ler 10 ~ a
faculty comminee to recumme lhe eum:ot
pol&gt;&lt;) of anmng th&lt; polioe ,..;n be CO!ndcred 11 an upconung meeting of tl-., Faculty
Senile Ell.e&lt;111h·e Commi""" .
loOiber Selllltebusiness. a resolutron was
pas&lt;ed that commeod&lt;d ll&gt;e Pnwosl for his
-Prncedures for lhe ~K'W of Academic

Deans, February. 1994."ll&lt;lCeJlCed nas beiJl1!
generally cooststent vdth pre~iou. !y apressed Faculty 5eftlue &lt;XtRCem . aod urged
its immediate implementation.
I

$180,000 grant funds molecular research
rOillel ·~ llllibQdies and lliti

"Sulfecefouli"'doft-IOIIWI)'-..cblfOilillll&gt;"uid
EmJRl\R.LECKBAND, usistantpofcuoral'cbrmical~ aJlJll, ·has m:eivod a SIBO.OOOPDI
from 1be Whi:takcr Foundalioo to do fuodamcntal
n:sean:h oo prolei.n adsorplioa and lhe forces betweell

molecules.
Lccld&gt;and is ooc: of o ~ of sciclltistS Jn lhe world
working Oil measuring forces bel:weeJl mo.leailes clurio&amp; ..,.,.
lecular lecognition. a pmequisite 1ftl( engq;i.DJ,I in a .....a:ion.
She iJ,COII(IQilling-of ~researdlln COllilboral:ioo witb
the lndostl)'fUnh-ersity Coopenttive 'Raearoh Center for
Biosurfaces in !be UB ~ dflliomllt:rials.
Tbe reoean:h i.s expecu:d ID]pd to anill=ase Ia !be~
Of prosibetic clevlccs. bean Y.llve~, contact leoses and any
maleliaJI'Te&amp;JIWIY ~to biological :II "Forces betWeeJl 11101ecule&amp; ~oe bo-t; njlidly !bey
bind; Lecltband Did. 'lll dlore is ·no allrletive force berweelt
them. !bey•jl collide.. But if u,mru an attraclioll. they will react
at \IP to 'two onlers llf' maptude f&amp;slel'.•
•
Tbe ·reoearch isimpodaot fO(understalldinl proteiD reac6on
. - wbicll an: critical to !be de$ign of IIIOiiiOIISClrl ~ in
de. . . .g bow antiboaieo bind l9 anrigens. In ll&lt;llla'borath-e
wo11&lt; witb ...-rCbm at !be Ut~h-ersil)' &lt;if Otah, Leol&lt;baod
COllll1lines !beotiucMes QfantibQdiesand bow lhe)' ioflllellCe !be

Leckband. "buu &lt;aiher than do ~~CO(~ ""'-you
obierve 1be effeas of11iofoetlinc, iam1oolt:k!&amp; • its 'IQllllccul'ar.

basis. This will P""' "' •
powM\11 ktod of
CODI1QI , _ tbooe , _
by~IIN:­

derl yilll

mol~c:ulat

f~.~

Lec1bo.ni1. "'&lt;bale won-.
u beinJ 'lfaockd by

tl$0

ationa1 SeieFatmdtotioOI. .... bold prem4 :J1051-&lt;Iottonl fellow..
·PI from ·lhe lliollll
die.

l1ts1i!=s .0( Hetllll Vlhile

WOI'kiD&amp;

•*' Uaiwnily

ofCilil'amiut Sana Bar-.

-b- .;,a etthe Muadul-

selts
lllctitute
of
Tcclu&gt;olozy•
Sjlecaroed • doctoral.e
inbiopbylicalcbemisuyfromCoo&gt;eUUniveailyandgntdualed
from Humboldl Swe UDivmity ill Califomi._

Townsend say
.F THE 40 INSTAN'OES

ot dtrtt

NIOI:lik piMt: in Alumnt """"'
io fall IWl, all ~ ~ due to
lbetr property .....

people.._....,

liCC\II'Cd ond UJI8Iletlded.
- T__,.j.
director of tilhldJc:s ._ UB, .aid lll5l 'IIICidl
dtma&amp; • ....,..... ht caDed 10 cluc:uu _,_
1 a1 lbe areBL
T.,.....ndcalledlbeMIIl'dtl_,.nt-h&lt;
uld. bec8tl$e oC a lad of i n f - in
Ne-w YO&lt;t 1bou1 lw'ueally tak·
lf11P*e"' BIn..,.,... of c:rimt .
"Wbat cocs 11110 Thr !&gt;p«fniiW and 1 """'

nty t

w_,.,

011

"Ifyou lay

campu

eatl

be tti&lt;n 1n a d1f·

f"""' penpec·

.... by lbOI&gt;&lt;

your stuff
down and
leave it

on campu · ...
TM.,...nd saad
"Someone who
piC:h up

unattended,

SJWnr-,,. c.bc ~
.. ~w... aod""""

.. ho are no(

n,

1bout 1 ' rjs1ng
en me nne • can
be led tO tlunk
u· un afc to
come onto the
UB clm •p u•
Lt:a' lDJ your
........ ·....-.:loci
and ~o&lt;~nc ,, 1,
not 'cn me ' \O
peoplrtndo"""
t&lt;&gt;~• n Buffalo •
There -.ere
no mugg~np . brr:a1:inl and eo~enng. prop&lt;tl) destruction or an. other ....., of morr
senouscnnx at Alun:ma Ara\llasl ~tnes&amp;cr .
To"' ns.end said "B"' 1f you lay your sruff
do-wn and leave u unaur::nded, tber~ 1~ •
chance th:a.t someone ~ t U Y..•al k a111 a y "'ith
11.· he satd. " 'o on&lt; hu lbc ngho to pK"l
up your .. urr. but 1t' s tltt &amp;Orl o( c"""'
lblll •!i ter) dtfferena from ~rtalaa,
tnlo SOfDeOoc ·s office. or as auii\A!
someont: .:"'
Lee Gnffin. directtlr of Publt&lt; Safety.
satd thai b)' all in&lt;bcanans. tht lht-fts have
pnmanl) been cues of student prop::ny
Stolen by Olber studrms.

there is a
chance that
omeonewill
walkaway
with it.,.·

it'-;.·

lumni AretUI bas '"'Y large pu
posure. Nelson T""'"DSC.Dd sa;d. ""AI·
IOOSI .--cry constituent group of UB. from

A

pre-scllooler'$to senio&lt;oitium. uses Alumni
11somepoinL~ bewd. "'Theonlyp•utaboul
Alumni dtll getS thal gcnenl ""J'USUre, holoever. tS lbe athlel'ic. rec::&lt;ea~ional s;de. Buo
Alumni also has d~-.es. llnd a wbol.e school
of lbeatre and Domce
"W &lt; waot people to cum&lt; h&lt;re for a.ll
StlrtS of e• ents. and the) do.· To..-nsmd
loatd. '"So .... need to let people \;:no.. alllhe
ormation about v.·tw · &gt; happemng here..
and cspeeially as it relates to the.f t.""
11te sollutioo to gi"ing Alumni a ....,..
IICCIJT8te i~ is tducation. T own5Cod said.
People need to understlltld that earelessne&lt;'
ahoutlbeir property lieads 10 a grr:atet lil&lt;elihood of its being &lt;TO\erl. ht said.
• A!umru Arena is as safe as we can
it." Tov.nseod r.aid. "Tbere" s ootbin11
witb this build1og tlw mal.es it unsafe . Our
own 5taff realize&lt; lbc need to be more
\•igtlantiJitrying to make urc that unauthoriud people don't come in. and Lb t ha

1m

mnc
wronr

helped.
" Wha!'s going to sol e thr problem is
making people ""-· lltld people makint&gt;
themselves aware." Town.&lt;eod satd. ""I thi~
dW's alrcltdy geniogbettrr. Tbereareeoougb
•lool&lt;ers hc&lt;e {or t\'etybody to secure their
IP~Y~...

..~AV'"i

�4
Nutri1ion program
popular; students
find it practical
. , _ MUCil
Aepor1or Slall

n... .,.. ............ aboul
nulritloa iJ

JIOICIPie

-

Wlllll. ....S

....S men

111tiQa .,.,.,... ia

UB '1 lllriiJoD ,.,..,.,..... i on eud·
lenl ,,..y 10 p:il iL
The: procnm earollcd lbout 2200

SIDdeals iJo .iiJ aencnl eel"'*""' DUin·
tioo.......,. m 1993, a 1111 ber
"
pella" d&gt;on
lbt ..,. oldie •'bole
frabn.l ct.o, oayo 1\JJfAww:l. du....o( die prop1llll.
"Thtoubject i very popular now.·
A ·od yo. · we haw oo mud! de·
mtllld dw lbt f'nm&gt;sl pYC US _ ,
lft lbt fall of 1993 10 odd a 00"" ltlCtKlll
of 2SO ltiiCimll .
The 111n110n Propam ""'"""'Y of.
fen two ........ dep-.
O.nic:al
UOtbOnand UIJ1IioD Scw:n&lt;le. and .. in
lhe process of
1D p:il a Ph.D
procram. A~
e•.., ""' only
~

propam

10 DUinbOn Ill lhe
A"..:!'" · "and lhe
m wescem 1-kw Yor!..· The

SUNY~-

onl)

one

propamdoesoatha&gt;leao~
maJOr. A~ A)'S. thoujib lboul I .

stlJda&gt;u enrolled Lui year ID advanced
nulnbOn oounes for~
The ulritJoo Program w the n:·
crnt recipltllt of a $4S.OOO gram from
tbt A.llea Foundaooo m Mtdlipn 10
upport resean:h actl&gt;'llltS ll&gt;d , . speakers for alhree-)ear period "The
Allen Foundauon ..... that ,..., do a
&gt;try good jOb on educ ung tudents on
the ftr.ld of NJ.uiuon," A.....S says

The

propam cunmtly has only one

~ TA, A.ruta Y"""" wbo says
that~ fond""' basiC nutn -

murv very helpful "The studa&gt;u
seem e•cil&lt;d by
learn." Young
'1t's a pr.::ucal CXlUI'ir that's ''tr)'
usriul. Wetadt IUbp:ls $UCh as und&lt;rSWldin&amp; tbt c:ardlo,._.... system. that
people ha\1: heard llboul tbrougll the
meda but don' t re.ally .....,.. about.. Stude'IIIS Will ofim talk to me lbout bo,. ID
beU&lt;r their health. usmg ~ on

IIOn

,...,.!hey

Sl)".

campusmoonJunctJOD"1L~whatlhe) 'n:

learning on tbt murv."
Despite tbt propam' .ucce&gt; • bow·
e'er. tbt huge number of underllflduate tudcnts puts a stnun oo tiS fllrl)
ltmued n:&gt;OUroe&lt;, Auf ""'od sa~
"Wotboursmall faculty (five full -ume ,
severalpos1·1tme)welr) to meet gradu ate aod undergraduate demand." he
says. "We need as much support as"'"
can get from tbt admimsltliJon ..
A.nota Yaung odd. thallhe most common fruslrllton of SIUdents tn lhe baste
numuon murv ts tbt huge sttt of tbt
classes "The greatot !lung ,..., oould do
IS get

man: money

SO ""

oould reach

man: section of tbt course ... she say

The quahty oftbt program'• laborarones, which are located 10 Hayes
Anne• D. separatefromtbtprogram' s
ofr.ces. al50 needs tmprovemmL A wad
says "The physical plant of Hayes D"
. very bad," A wad says " If you have
cquopment that needs a rootrolled atmosphere. it 's impossible 10 ba.&lt; tt
there. We need to moY'C, to have our
laboratories aod offiCCS together."
Despite these diffteulties, dcmll&gt;d
fornulritioncourscsremains very htgb.
Awod say•. "Pan of student 'interest
comes (rom tbt fact that tbt media is
''try interested in health right now...
A wad says. " But tbt program's popularity i• a1oo due 10 tbt fact that we're
good at wbal we do."

Events to celebrate Feldman'
HE UB OEPAR'Ilo(ENT ol M•
....S lhe Buffalo PIUIIUn...,...:
Orebutra will puseat "For
Many: a~ olthe Ilk
'WO!kollbc 1111: A.aloric:M1"*" MMoa Pddmao. Man::h IS ....S 16 011
UB '• NMh OlmpiO
All rdaled e-.cu:qa the Buffalo PlulbarmooicOre.-..ClOIIIOC:rt•
161f'C
ic
free of diOip and opca to die
Feldman"'"' a -.nbcr of die UB
faculty for 16 ,...an and otlbt lliDr of hd
dc:alb 10 I 7...-. !*'ofthe......orand-

- tt. nm
.. ca1aur •
/UIIte--ltle'*fer
--of
... p..,

-·-..ty'

._,. ..,........

,.perf..--'mdoc

....s

respecsed ropes .. America

· . tk

the leadlD&amp; member of the ....,.,..X.. ol
experi....tal J&gt;CI'III'IIdenl allllpOOCft profoudly mll.........S by Joba
the
- -WCSia'll aeslbctic:l he espouoed
Fddmon' 0W11 iofluenc:e
tael 10
~ tJwu bout the ............. ol
composcn that followed tum.
Ill lhe last
few years
e~~joyed a Creal rd&gt;il1h ol
in~M:St
recordJO&amp; 1111
performers
and entia hen: aod abroad. 01 evidenced by
the &amp;real many recordJ
of Fddmon worts
thalhavc~ '"""1990.
At the ltm&lt; ofht death Feldman held the
fApr art.. 0wr lft the o.p.tmeDI of
M IISIC, an opp-opnate post for a CClftiPO'C:f
wt.ose only ob&gt;~
gylt&gt;UC modeh were
Cage, Webcm ....S arbe. one oldie Creal·
... composen ol tbt 20ib century.
"For Mony" 1s comprued of SC\eral
evcnu., 111Ciudulga Tuesday. Mardll5 per·
formancc of Feld
's chamber "
CnppledS,-rybyNtl V!Jdand.lanWilbams and Ebetbanl Blum. tit&lt; three perf"""""
for "ilom 11 was v.'nliCn It II ..U place Ill
p.m. m tbt atrium of the Fioe Am Center
Earlter that day tbt three performers .. ,n
w

c. ...
....s

panlctpllC.

in

I publiC d t

CUSiiiOn

of

sensib•' ,..,.

Feldman' "
and aesthetrc
wttb composen 03\ td Felder. associate professor and Bore&lt; Cary
10 mUSIC .. UB.

aw,

de¥dopecl

...... ~

tltarode
ly _, a llybrid -

and~IIIOCieh

"--llil

·~

._

arethc

VJ!i)la~BflyL/ItS..rwr(l9'70-71)and

..

..,...,.,...

1U I p.IL dial
the 8PO U. , . a CIOIICICrt r--a three
'1lley Tlllf1111Fnq&lt;WN6byl'ddmM. ~ )
Vouttt aDd Su I'KJM fro
~rtuhl 'r
" AIJoras " by Felde.-. •bo worked
Fddmall 01 UB ....t ..,
become a
compoocr of _ _ . _ . ....,..._. The:
conan ·u be pnaded by a pond d&lt;lau·
of~·,,.
11117pm"" Bl
VoJdand. Will-. Staddlftlll and Felder.
T
arc $10. $5 and Sol

hu yurs 01 UB, FeldmM SCtVed
for thrcc year&lt; 01
I&lt;' cbn:ctor of lbt
UB Celfer of the Crcaltve and i'&lt;rlom:un&amp;
Arts. a compk.o.. radoca1 and ambtuou propam on ppor1 of
aod performers of new
· He aliO founded lbt orrh
IUnenciD New Mu
Festival . - ol lbt
fll'll ~ &gt;W o f - IDUSIC 011 the contuaenl
aod sulJ held -uall) at UB
Aion&amp; •oth
ClmUJ8 Wolff.
D..-ld Todor and Earle B
ttated "'tb tbt a tract uprc IOflf5l fJ'Il ers of tbt ·50s For Feldman 111 partiCIIIar.the

D

llf\QI

.... ~ uu •.rete 1

pa:erru~

1nfluenor on

lu mu tc throughout ho hf&lt;
In the 1950&lt; he becao c:omposmc preces
unmedJilcly recoptzabk b) thetJ .. ueme
poontiloSliC scan auuerc umbrts ll&gt;d &amp;ubduc:d dynamiC ~ Ont enloe nooed ~a
near ........,., of pulae" lD htS m
"and a

~I ( 19'71 ), ...U ~'daTed mtJcally u
liiOdJII
... IG
.......,....,
tulwes
.........,lbccolow-lidd -"&lt;llcol ,..._.

...,., "andY

....

..

....-..::a~-...a

""a ,_...J ol.._ Willa a ,........t..ad
&lt;II ...... Oilier
..... ~
FMs.-lltod81,.....,.
... - - - . .
d ... par
ltiOiben Schwan ol doe '-*"" r...,.
Studaes ID
Millie. lltooUya Col
lqe.
FddtMa "a OOBipOOer
0011·
!ly avOided doc Nt of lee:
oal&lt;d anaJyucal
and pal ""
r.. ;......,;u...land)••,.. conc:cmedpnnly wotb ~ iudf.
umbrc and tleJt
lure and ""tb I Olltlthelu. ~ "
TIU/IM Frol""""'· ..t.icb wtll he pt&lt;·
fomred cliJn
tbt BPO co.:a~ 011
16. tslll0Cit• otulltveworl. " ((:omlfor as

eli..,...._

coa-

on:bes1ra 11
I and
...... for on lli&gt;oefta of llppCf ftn

caJoiFeldmM'I ..

I

T}pt

...... .....,...

blc d)'

and .... of repel~

ant clescn

Torf- Fro - ·

ha\
"'loghtz}
I
and bnlt Ill c:olonJlJC ctfect ..
Oa•td F,elder u • tlw fro Man
Feldman he leamed "rr'~ for the "'"
- . lhe omportanc:c of the
atthellf
ume "Thol propam
clte\dctpod Rldet
1ft bJ role
compc:tlCO'-ID~ ,.,th Ill&lt;
BPO.the Grea1er Buffalo Opera and V.'BFO.
UB' 1 lllooal PubliC RadiO affil-

anyc·----(bc"'

Filmmaker, scholar to take part in speakers
series,
'Toward anAnti-Raci t Feminism 5
_,All

e, PAYIIICIA

-Bu-eauSUtft
WARO-WINNINGftlrmlakerand
Oscarnominc:eOmsuncO&gt;oyand
Nalt,c- Amencan humantlt&lt;
scholar M ArloeltA' Jaimrs Will be
featun:d in "Towanl an An!J-Rita" Ferrumsm
S," theftfthaooualspeal..ensenes~
by tbt W0tne11 's Studaeo Program on the Department
of
Amencan Studi&lt;s 01 UB.
Th&lt; unes.
subtttled "R.a:,
Gender and lhe
Plllmc:s of R&lt;prescntm10n."v.lll
he held MAn:1l
21-22 on both
campuses aod
"'lll oddn:ss lbt
CIIOY
IINIIl"o(,...,.,....
and ractal rrunontJCS on lbt media in general and
1D the mDYt&lt; Industry ID ponteular
Thn:c of Choy'• a"'anl-wirmo ng.films"Who Killed Vtncent Oun: "SA-1-GU"
and "'ut of Silencc"-will he scneoed
twt&lt;X Mon&lt;b). March 14 . from 4-7 p.m in
1200emen Hall aod Thursday. MaKh 17,
from 5- p.m on tbt West Room of tbt
do•rntown branch of tbt Buffalo and Em
County Publtc Librar) All events an; fn:c of
charge ll&gt;d open to the public
The senCi open Mooday. March 21.
.,;tb keYJ&gt;OI" peeches by Cboy and Jaimes
at7 p.m .. in 147 Diefendorf.
Cboywillspeak on"CooorSchemeoftbt
Movie Industry from..., J.ndependem Point
ofView." Jaimcswillpresent "Fal,.t:m.ges
of Nl!We W - in Hollywood Cinema:

To"anls lndJcenous LoheraiJOD"
On Tucsda) . Mardi U . lhe ""o •ill
pn:sent "Talk op "--.orLIIop/doscu ton&gt;-from 9 a.m 10 2 .30 pm on Room
330 of the UB Student Uruon
lllme.&gt;
a doocu mn btled ··A.ttcmauvesto IMltiUUOnahzed Raasm 1n the
Medta" from 9-1 1 a.m . Cbo• ....U dJstiiS
"Emruc TeniiODS" from 12 .30 to 2 30 p.
Cbo) has eam&lt;d 10tema1Jonal aocwm a.
a producer~ofa,.anl-"-.nru.n&amp; films
and VIdeos Her maJOr awanls U1Cludc the
Golden Gate A•anl• tbt 1993 an FranCISCO Film festJ,'al foc "Homo.. Apart T"'&lt;&gt;
on:a;"tbt 1992Hoog' &amp;ln1a1101&gt;00al
FilmFestJ,·al AduevememA..ardfor"Mt .
• oppiTnODJie;" tbt 1992ACEA,.-..ffor
Best Documentary pec1al....S forsa place on
tbt 1990 Mannhcun lntenWJonal Fdm Fes·
uval for "Best Hotel 011 Skid Ra.. : v.ludt
also won ftr&gt;t place m the 1991 London
Folm Fesuvalandotherpnzes.

"''"lead

he recoei\'Cd Jhe 1991 Alfred DuPilol
Columbia A"'--.rd.lbt 1990 ~ Footer!UbodyAwvdaodscveralodlernobonal
commeodatioos for "Wbo Killed UICCDI
Oun.""'11ich in 1989Wti nomcdOUI5Uildinc
film of the year at lhe London lnlemational
Filmfcsbvalandwasi'IOIDiualedforJIIAcademy Awml as beo1 re.un:clocumedor) .
Cbo)' most recently produced. duected
ll&gt;d vidcographed "SA-1-G •" a doauneotary on Los Angeles' Kon:a-Ta..'tl in the
of the RodD&lt;y Kmc •erchct. She has
wonmoretban 20additiooal majortWJonal
"'intemanonal film prizes 1oce 19'74 for
these""" other
including "To Lm-c:
Honor and Obey," " From Spiku to
Splddles: · "Peaple' • Fm:housc Number
s

wm

mms.

Ont" and "Teach Our Olildr'Cn "
Cboyhasalooproducedsbon~m&lt;n
tal ftlm a se•e-a·pos1 senes of r.lrru. .""
tactua,ll&gt;d"'Fonuoc
oes The 1}t~&lt;~
the Model Mmonty." funded by lhe 'EA.
tbt ·.,.,York talC CounCil 011the Art and
tbt Corporauon for Publte ~
Her ...ns~ ~ &lt;~
IJtscllosure," a film011 HIV and AIDS f....ool
b) lhe Pad RobJ:sal FoundalloD and lbo
Yod.l'oo.olda:lon,adoa.lmeaury.
I.Jn
Art of 'lea"; a J.6.Jum film tided
19 randaw..r-teatun:. "Wed
duJ« 1ft Heaven." She
a,_. ~
onuobanJII-Q&amp;fromCol
Uon"""'l
!11
aMrocaaAmoncallJiffilllled .. nh
the Ca!Jfornia M · and Yaqat ba&gt;ds vi
Jualleoo lndJ.ans. " a professor ol
lnd&amp;oD Sludot!s • lhe Uni\'CIU} of Colcn&lt;l&lt;
Boulder HeriiQSofspeaaluMIOIIarcedlu
admintslnboo and procram de\-dormont, bul she has~ courses rdaled "'
Indian ,..,.... ~ pn:·
Collllllb&lt;ao Nab"" Americ:o and'*"" and cth
01e rdOiions. She
also l«iurcd wtdel)
Her publiatboos indudc several"""'nolllbly"'FantasiesoltheMaslerR.:e. I.Jten·
tun:, Cinema and dleColon.zalion of Am&lt;n ·
caa loduans" (1992). and 1'*'1 aructesoa the
...,. and mytbo I:SIOCilled wotb AfnenCOII
lnlhan5. enVU'ODitleiDI elbics. popular fentt
nism 1m011g
""""""and tbt
o( ~ Indian eduattioa tn the U.
Jaimeshassuvedasaconsultanltotbe
US. departmentJ of educatioa aod stat&lt; on
per&gt;orroel ll&gt;d proposal review mauers and
has beat..., ecliJot:atioo policy coriSIJlWII to
the ava)O Ilion and other CJ'lUP'- She
boldsadoc:torateineducatioofromAriz.on•
Stale U.m..nity .· . . •
'

""'"""*'

mdt"""""

"*

�-

JOHNSTON

.... ~--- -

contnued from page 1
H" CXII'IWIIilmc:n 10tbo SUIIc Uni•&lt;n~~) Md
peril&lt;lMI dcdicclaa 10
llyAOm .....
""""crucial duri
l1NY hal
tiad fltelll ...., crpnizaional
Adell Fmcicril: • Solemo.
,_,..
a.m-."He prcMdod. tra&lt;lfa amwni, _ "' a&lt;dboz for p.Hic htjbrr cau.:.ion
&lt;Lnrta . . o1 Mew Yat
•
cruao1
period~ olec:ononac plamq...., ,...._,.SUNY otrlllills JXIIDIID ~ _,..
........... ol SUNY' "*&gt;' ~
&lt;lducaJcn(lbe
,..,.,.."""""~ ...
"'P~fi~SUNY.,.,.,..... intboiD(llen bart
rolleJe b&gt;ys in lh&lt; """"-~ ...,._ ....,

-years,..

0'10'11

and c:rem.-.,~ ICt
pus and •ystem;

,ltolhc:am-

• wmgl.hcn pohuc;aJ adwcacy v.ll the
E&gt;.ecuove. the Le.UW.urt. tuld c:omm 11y
collqe spc&gt;n-. ..,...,.,
:
• sharpen and wenllbea lhc •IIIII" ....S
oppreclatioa of U Y - · I llllfty.,.,....
SOtuctiCIC: · fulu..., uden ,
· ~ ·1
and othen wbo may influcocc: thcar enroll l'lldll decisiOns; publ •'P"""':S. '""'
and O&lt;hcr u
of

m..:leapricllwlht~ol
•andu·
'*'projl~Wllri-.iprofcooionalcn.c.ion.advtncco

.. hcallhcarc...t~.....-eh..
All ' I

,.........,.

w.,.

eul$ I&lt;OOI:IWIICidod

50\Jrces of re•enuc: and lhougluful rcstrue·
turing of tbe ystem iuelf
In a fivt·)ear ummary of h" office'
princ•pal activities. Johnstone wd ctntral
adm1nisuauon. guided by the Trustees. had
sct fonh the following pnonucs
• handle budget cuts With mmimallonglcrm damage to the uni• c:nHy ystem and 1ts
roo-&lt; mw.ion of IIX'tU. leanung. research.
and =vice;
• enhance monagtl'lldll efficiency and
countability, beginning v.1th crntral ad·
minislration~

• establish medium and long-range plan·
mng goals to maintain a cobercor ,;sjon for
lhc univers1ty's future:

• assure capacity fOf' nev. in,ewnents
and campus n=nc-wal-10 pite of economic
hard umco.
• continue the establishment and re~wal
of S) temwlde Trustee pohcrcs tn order 10
form appropriat( gu•dehnes for agg_reb.Jvc

.
. ....,

1t 11&gt;&lt; r.,.IJullcrl

mcmtll}.,..

'""'*"'" tuld , _.

.no..

..._.. IIOC\m:lll J&gt;RII"'fRR
·

mcm~

does ~~« mclude ra1o1t:uoo1o
'1..llst yar .~
ad&lt;ktd. .. lth
help of you. your leJblal&gt;t rollea.pe&lt;. Md
the ~. the
Uruvenit) 11Dcd
.... extmrl' tuld beg
the rood
""""'cry
afler yan of~"""""' o l - h•~'lllt) .
sappan staff. plaaL tuld cqwpmoent We
10 199-4 · 9S llop:fuJibal I ttend Ill 0111 ·

•

qJp&lt;WI.

21

addirboull'll:tua)

$4

- - 10 , _

n. would penna ...

,.._,.
"' add addilional &lt;XIUI'OC liCCUOia, ,.ucut.ri) •
lhc ~ io¥d. ...,.,_
I
lllldonts "' ~ 3) S3 ...001 •
8lo.dcnt auppon lltiV&gt;Ca..
.. """""
a d \ - chid elK. ee:. A) 0pt:r.nr
fundsforthco.u-Rcoe.dttrm.vrtGUI

And, he .aid. addressing tboo&lt;: 1n tbo
lcg1 lative hcanng room and elsewhere rn
the capital, "tlu " my ll'l&lt;SUit .

Johnstone also liOUght to enrourljlt ne,.

_,

199-4-9S eJ&lt;C&gt;QilJve butipt
aJra6y
...,
mol v.n.oc-y """ .

Go•""""''

o.cx:uli.. lludgcl oll989- . would~ ...
s...e Utuvr:rsily. ~ 5lld. Theacc::tDl not
he Slid. "'lt:prdl&lt;a
ol our gool ,.;u 11¥1 ~ ·u. "

. .....__ ..........

_,

pia •a lbt
""J*J*- ofopportiUI
for U • Y
CR Tbu hope has been reaJuc.l ID the
Exccuuve 8~ fur our Wtl&lt;
openiCd tuld flllldcd campua ..
AI fie_,.. 11m0, ~ """-J lOur
SUNY priorit11s rrt 1994-~ . I) OClll1llUOII} oo1

occur ~

-.

~Commiaco

taDCt the State Uru venit)

m fie

" .. noUha wccannotcutanyfunhr::c,llclt::aa
""' "'l"'CY'*'"""'Wl"FIIII'IIIIIo:r.~yif
lhm: is no rqprd for fie c:rono&lt;quencc;
" .•. 1101 that we ...U/nor
any fwtha.
because I lUSpCCI, •n lhc end. that ""' may
have to, e•en with your &gt;upport;
" ... but that tbore Wlll be consequc:nceo1 ses to tbo State-from any lc&gt;'CI of cuts.
And we btheve that the los
to tbo tate
from the full measure of cu in the executive
t&gt;udget ~&gt;ould hr so damagint and so long
lasung that """ need (your) betp."

___....

. }I, 1

IIIIU&lt;i.o"""'CJ'itJoeofthe~II'IIJl'lf

Fmm lbc bcgmni o( hi Jd1nslooe
1n..-l lbal quoUI) ""' be undcrmu...S h)
prevlllling potincal ..t """""""' forcos In
I • he oraucd SUNY's case 111 a hca't
hrfan: lhc Sc.- Finanoe Convnincc tuld lhc
Asscntiy
ond • CornrOOI&lt;&gt;e.
The ~-

~.......,.

JaJ

D . UUC[~

"His commitmenJto t~ Su:ue

University and his own persOIUJi
dedication to the system have

been crucial during recenr
years. as SU Y hasfaadjlscal

and organi::JJtional cltallenges. "
WIUIAJIII. - -

train1ng capab1hues. and the nauonal and
tntemauoaal " 'orlds of htghcr educauon
Johnstone· wmmll) nota that "tbore
ha•'&lt;' been clo!.-urc of enure programs. retl'&lt;'nchmenl$ of sentO&lt; faculty and profes•onal staff, lo"'er real earnings for thooc
"''ho ·epttbelrJobs.greaterworlt:load -and
diminJshed servKU for tudents
"Yet compared -..ith tbe demoralization
and contenuousM's that so fn:quentl)' ac:M
compan,.. sucb d1 Ire •• O&lt;hcr tales. the
SU Y bud£d Strategy has been ach~\·ed
wuh a Widespread IIJlllRIC•allon of 11 lant) .
falt'ness. and genenrl intelligcnct" ..
Other htghlights. Johnstone said 1n hi
report. are the sucxc ful dccentrahzation of
much budget and management authonl) to
campuses. and the move to effect greater

~ .... II. .,
Dunne tv ye.&gt;nt Allsany.Joh
ctwn.
poncd the W&lt;ICCpl of"l..eanunc Product" .
uy." htS nauonally ll&lt;lCiaimcd proposal to
tncrease the effectt&gt;cneu of "udcnt learn·
1ng !notal atCan1&lt;1U CollegetnOcwbe&lt;.
1992. Johns&amp;.- wd captunAJ "IO!il urne-

oovld - · - tu,n.. educa- n..
12tlt grade." he wd. ~ a JJO'I'nrall)
t1wa &gt;arushcl. """"
swdent ha•e apph&lt;d to collcJe Why '
"Thert are "' fcv. stales 11tacbocd to hard
dtligent appl Ilion througbout tNI e hrt
12&amp;h grad&lt; The ltte uon to the lcantlnJ
task 10 nuru mal tn Atncnun liCCOndll)
tiehool nd pesbaps le than II should he 10
Amencan colleges." Johnstone wd.
T'unte..he&gt;Oid.• lbolostooa:
lqm
!bar cdlqe"'""""- "Srudcob..., llliartB loQp
and lol1ll" 10 ~ V.'Nt used 10 be flu a

"'ost

nch penod of leanwl

fivt)'l3'51irlh&lt;~dtl!J'cc .. """'

)'13'5plus." -..cne...t Uni~hcsoa:l

........-

...... _

.

1'

~~-dwrof

u. prewdcu ol
)liU:IIl

lh&lt;

College ·s -.1.

~ ~

ol

Heads.- • ...........,.n( lbc b&lt;wdol

lbcJohT&lt;am1 ~COUI&gt;&lt;llolNe-t.
Yorl. ~ lbc Nabanal Farulry E&gt;.c......
and lbc Nnv y orl. SUIIc lt.ghcr Education
Scr:'ll.les Corporaoon Aa t-.onall} ~«:·
opwte~ oudlomy oa l.hc ...........,
r...
._....
higher alueatlon. be
....,_,
I'M&gt;
and man) arncles on
wbp:t
Pnor "' lu "''P"'Jl{matl .. chaaotllor.
.lohnsaone ""ed .. pra.tdcn&lt; oiBufralo SUic
C lerc He ,..,. the fnl UNY chancdlor «&gt;
be named fmm oac ol tbe )'Simi'• c"""""
pre&gt;ldonciCS He llbo ...-....1 OS C&gt;CCUIYe . ..

-s

and dxa .. \ ..... Jli'O'•
• lbc u.. .........., ol
yh IRQ. a pru,o..~ !iptC$0(1 for tbe furd
Foundaoon. aduwttS11'111-.
10 that
Sen Walter F t.bldale. and ao. a tv,!&gt;
lltiChcr ol CIOOI'IOI!UCS ond ht&lt;lOI)
He !told. a BA in""""'"""' 11¥1 a , _ o l
~ fi&lt;wn Harvard. andal'llD m
'
""" lh&lt; UaM:rsay ol
sunt 10 '"" preslJeN

dent fur

r--..

~ba&gt;"""".

should clanf) frelr"'JJCCL''IIIOb for .... pqlll'll11011 ol atll:nnt!
Additionall) . he noted. scruun ofhll!hcr

'11
pn•ilel&lt; to ....n. " ilh s ......
OUISIInd1111 TntSI&lt;a and pn:sldems ,....,.lbc,
pa&lt;1 fi•c years.~ be Wei tn a
dUilrib-

education·, merbod ol deh•·Cf)
umcl)
g"en the fiiUIDCIJIJ crms fac~ng tughercdu·
cation and publi&lt;c&lt;JnCCm abou1 n
rosti
Johnstone said hefa\'tlf\0&lt;1""'"' "H:1tcbinJ! 10
mastery." more computer-ISM ed leaming
"nh tbe goal of lf· paclRJ! and •ndJ•idual·
IZJIUOCI of IDSUUCUOCI. "Yes. some may need
""'"'time, but trWiy (!(her. need less time "
ldtnttf~ "'hit be termed "tbo ~&gt; ·

utcd b)
~ .... monlh. ~pnmn
mmt 10 qualll) " stn111g 11¥1 thdr mlleanc

•lSdom """o( u, • pealest
their lcadenbip. and .... ~of
I'I\'Mllil Joocpb C . Burlc. one ol the Ley an:bi·
to: of UNY
lam\'&lt;::r)'
obola Stale Uni\-cnity'•l'ullft. We ha•'Cmmc
t!troup~,_.ootonlyi
l:luuoJ&lt;llll\·
&lt;benru.ntcd. and 011 lbt 11J!ht O&lt;IOit$C •
GJVCII

BURKE
con11nued from page 1

approaeh to sponsored re&gt;carch and progmm :coordinaledthepmpamuonandlmple·
mcnrntion of a five·year plan 10 en~
gr.&gt;duate !i!udies and research on SUNY '&gt;
dnctoral campu ; &lt;k•elopcd a system M sc«mcnl program that evaluate. the kno" 1~gc and skills ocqu1red by SUNY gradua~
and a ocw program of performance andJcaHl~ 10 assess the perfonnancc of 1he ~)Stem
and ns campuse~

-eon-lttM ........s
In naming the search comrninc:c to find a
permanent successor 10 Johnstone, Salerno
,.;d, "Inspired by Chancellor Johnstone 's
vi&gt;ion for SUNY. the search for a new chan·
eel lor will transcend academic and regional
boundaries. We are seeking the very bes&gt;
candidates from within an4 Al!&lt;"ide ~¥~r

cducauon. both rn Ne" Yorl.. State and
throughout the nauon ..
Salcmo. a v1ct chainnan at NYNEX. said.

-nus commmee IS reproentalJ\~of all SCI·
ment.softheSUNY ommunit), odembod·
JC.!Jo the v. 1!!.dom and msigh110 ensure that t.h(
search proc&lt;s. "'" full) address the
Un,.·ersn) •s spec tal lcadcrshtp needs on the
1hre~hold of a nev. ttniUry ·· The comm.tlltt
conSist of member&gt; of the SUNY Board of
Trustees, four SUNY campus presidents. a
member of tbe SUNY Central adfllinistra·
tion and rc;presc.ntauvesof ~ major Uni'\ocr·
si1y·wide constituencies. Salerno,., ill serve
as chairman.

The other commincc members include
SUNY Trustees JOcbard A- Berman. New
Yorlt: City: Roderick G. W. Otu. New Yorlt:
.Ot&gt;"~.Q..GardACJ\~.,.rrato;_Jo!&gt;!t.l,. !l -

Holloman. Jr.. E.tbt Elmhurst; anc) H.
~lsen. Orchard Pari&lt;. and Rosemary C
Salomone. Brooklyn HetV!ts
SUNY Presiden" "ho v.ill serve are .

Scan A Fanelli.

u CoounLJnit) C&lt;&gt;l·

lege; Carol C Haner. College 11 Geoesco:
John H Marburger. 111. UniV&lt;::rSit) at IOO)
Brrol... and Frcdenc:k W. Woodvoord. Col·
lege of Agriculture and Techno)a,) 11
Mom \llle.
Also. ancy S. Harrigan. Deput) Unii'CI'sny Counsel. SUNY Central. William F.
Weitz. pres.1dent. SUNY todent Assembl&gt; :
James R. Chen. president. SUI\.'Y Faculty
nate; Michael Steuer. president. FJCUlty
Council of the Community Colleges: Will iam P. Walling, presidenL Association of
Council M.emhcrs and College TrusteeS:

Nu!:Y ~:

P,\'?Sidenl. .~i_on of

Board ofTrustctsofCommunityCollege&gt;

of the Statt Ucmmll) of Nc,. York; and
R00cn Gibhn. peoidenL Coo(cdcnrtioa ot
Alumni AsSOC\IIIOnS of

Y.
Tbecommtttcca e1.pcctcd1oe\Cntuall)
narro• thedtOJcttoa.elect
poffilUII'
10 be IO~tt\'IC14'cd b} the full Board
O...:ctboo&lt;:in""'-1e areroncloded, it v.ill
be up to the TI\Jstet&gt; to make U.C final
!idcct1011 of a ch.toctllor "We ha\e to establish an aggressm: targe.t and ba•-c a Jle\lo
hanttllor appmnted by our ScptembctBuard mcctln~ ." Salerno .,.id ~1 ~now thai
such a goal 1$ unusual, but under these
circumstances. •nth SU Y not havin&amp; tbe
full savK:CSofa permanent chancellor ·na:
last September. we mUSI use all a•a.ilable
resources to complete this searcb as quiclt.ly
as possible."
11

�8
1ntroducing . ..

OAS
SERVI
,

q~UJlity.

1.1

TE'
REPAIR

dt:pendablr. profusitmal malnttnan«
.u rvices tk4igrmi f or the
Uah•e ty of ew Votk at Buffalo

ffiM &amp; COMPATIBUi PC'i
OVELL &amp; LAN SUPPORT
APPLE MACINTOSH PROD CT'S
Also: PRINTERS

TYPEWRITERS

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.c..np..,.

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IU\'IIIOtE
S...uaiRisl&lt; -.lor.Sooad

f'-iftc, .... ......,_
olHJ\C~Dr. Hano F L
t.lq-or-'lbhlb!q. f'l'l(«- of
chnocol psydoo~Qp . Culumb&lt;o
Un1~ S'.beratn.:l l u . ~

alden A~ 1) .30 a.m.. lltJ.n ·
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trllKifll

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,_AIUS
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..rs Ubrwy Son·i&lt;r&gt; .....
- 821 1-k-oJth'
-p..

Libnlry
0ompw'
iO rqJ'SIOliOO ~d

COIJ.DIIlll••
Dr. KatWer.

BIH~ pro(~tt" 1

~). Uru~ o! Kei!Wd ~

hd. Nom~ Cam~

B•crbd!Ot\'IOQI and S&lt;tcaal .......
pocu of H&lt;&gt;lth

S.-1-Go.
by CbruullC Cbo) 1:!0
C.iemens N&lt;nb OIIQPU-"'

-PAlla

p.m. Pre:lml;ed

C'biatry .and mcdioal lb u.muitiu,

RLII RaTIVAL

Lihentan T...., 1Ji1oortia, U..

---

!Ado!a: J\k:Noh. l.lni• _of

.s P"'

:! K;DHOutv_....t
Chia!.
or Silo..... r,tm,

HOilJ&gt;ilal ,ttb;q~,

I SUNY Hetltlo Scient-. c.......

...

Crilk*l..ib:nt""'._.._

P - aDd ............s.R.ol&gt;en W Oaly. 'M.D. prof. of P'Y·

PEIIIATIIIC UAND ...,.,_

• ~­

~ c:~H

-~

II LUAil--..wn-

FRIDAY

Notrh

8 111-kolllo ....,._y,l*-'
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March 14th

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Orders for the
1994 edition of
The Buffalonian
are still being taken!
lk IIJI't 10 ~.., )'OW' copf
of B's oldesL pubbcatiool
Hurry. the number of~ is limue:ll
$55 will rcsen'&lt;' a copy ol the book in )'OW' name
and another
wiU getn obi~ to ,.'hcreoer
)'OU wan (Don '1 forget, campus mail is~ )

~ofN - 1\11...

L· Arliaiae. a ~- Oxid&lt;
yolllti&lt; Iaiii....,._, ia llats.
Molwnmod Tobnuo-Fanl.
Grad..,&lt; SNdelll. IJB D&lt;pt or
~ 5011 Cooi;e
Nonh c:.mp..._ 4 p.m.

contonued on page 8

Send a cb&lt;c:k or monq
on:kr for
(plus S5 tf
you ....,, tbippinc) Wllh

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l'ho(J...,It-StudOIII
Unioo Theator.. NoniJ a.q,u..

6:lO 1p.m. A.dm.iutoa: Sl, ~~a~+
denl : 53.50. oil cchcn.

Arts Ccnw, Room J41.

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f«t w\clt by 11 fctt &lt;loop
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To date.,.,.. dw! llO ""ndorJ
ba.-ebmlao&lt;q&gt;~Mfortb&lt;

slklw• .eo lijliCC il limited. Few
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c:llrlltdlllrouJ!o lhiSOIIUI"O&lt; For
addlnooal illformllH)e (.Y" •n

apptbtiOil. contaCt Gsty
Wa.hcrs •t64S -26«

JOBS
fACIJL'IY

L&lt;curer (Jour

,pool,_fF-

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Posllftl

401 Z. Mlisl.....""""'*'&lt;/f'ull

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645-6'125towegis1er,

WAaFIUI

papen from acros.s the country
The: Ul&gt;ilc:rgradull&lt; Ulirllf)'

Koliforaia. S!Udeot Umoo
Theater. Nonh Campus. 9 pm.
Admission· $2.. s.tUdcnh~ ll.SO.
aU o.hers.

Co!- H•ll r&lt;em~~y aubtcribed

IEXHI8 'JTS

publishes &lt;bt.m oo mtc:roftebe.
1llt 614 C'ititr were selecllcd for
tbell' tugh ntiog tn overaiJ dt·
5nbk, livin&amp; «JJdiuonJ ud
.,.pecacd job puwth. The ads
are cornpknc and unoctilcd and
arc deltvemi weck.ty to lM

·-A $h0•· of art

·i•

W'Ort

b)' &amp;en lOCI

majori•J me An Depan·
ment, opens Motch 10 will&gt; a
reo&lt;p~ion from 5:30-7:30 p.m.
•nd continues l.brough M1rch
2S in 111&lt; Unl...,.ity Gallery.
Fine Ans Center. Nort11 1Cam-

pus. Worts to ioclude painting.

pftol.""""'y. oculprot"&lt;. illu U'ation, communicatioa deJWl
and mlnd media. Galltry
hours: Mooday. Tuesday,
Wcdnesdayud Fric!Ay, 10 a.m.
to S.p.m.: ThUI"fol:b)', 10 a.m to

8p.m.

IIFII.ntms.A sboy.• of v..&gt;Orb by loam~
Della Pen11 opens Mllfclt I 0

vouh • r=ption from 5:30-7:30
p.m. and continues through
Man"h ZS in 111&lt; An Depanmern Gallery. Fine Arts Center.
orthCampu~

L'ElltFAIIT'I PUNSWA-TON
..L ".En:f1n1"1 Plan : Visions of
Wtihin&amp;foo, 1791-1991.- d&lt;ilgnod by the Olarles Sumner
School Museum and Arch.i ves
in WU'tt.ing&amp;On. D.C_ is on
v~w lhrougb March 2S i:n che
lames Dyeu e..hibitioo H11l.
lhinl floor, Hayes Hall. Soulh
Cllmpus. Thc:·c:xltibll, whicb is
free of d!lfF ...t1 open ,,o lbe

to 1 tcrVi«.. ""Help Wan1cd
USA,-Ihol &lt;XImpiles lh&lt; "help
wan!ed'' ads (rQtn 64 citit'.s and

Uodor&amp;rad~ Ulirllf)'. Help
Wamrd USA i.s hdved in lht
microfiChe collcctioa in the
rd'crcnct' area of t'tx UGL.
open .from '8 a.m. to 11 p .m..,
Mooday lh""'gb llrur!iday: 8
a.m. 10 9 p.m.. on Frida31, ocm
10 9 pm. Sah.roay. Noon 10 II
p.m. Sundlly.

-

ALe-._,_

T he A wvc: l'rognom of lh&lt; Re·
llCal'd:l Foundation. l 021 Ma1n

St. offers frcr us•stance in

rC'-'tting down on d:rinkin&amp;. Tbc

program is designed foe modef.
ale 10 helvy drinken. ages '21
10 55. who are noc aJc:obohcs
lbe program requu-es. the invo1vcment of 1 spou5C, partner
or frieod.. h includes a free
medica) eu.minaiion. Partidpana will be ,paJd up lO S·l '20
for uki.ag pan in th tl dgtu ~
week program.. AtJ information
n::malns ~elcly oonfidenliaJ . For more i.nfonrwlon. c11l
887.2573 anytime.

inJ 411'.4014

1 1 . - Soppon Spec:laiHt
(parl-dmehf'syebolo&amp;y, Pool·
in' llll-94010. Gnat rr-...
in&amp; Spociolbl ~-Spon­

sored Pm&amp;rams MmiJldilm.KWI.

--

P05ti.ng lll-94021
~on! o\.t..'liiiOd:I~·Bio-­

phyoics, l'osling fR-940Z2

SiaiTToc

ldao (SL,Z).fioe

AJts Ccn~er. l'us11!1liP·3063.
MoAer Doctric:l&amp;o (SL-2)·
FiD&lt; Ans Corner, Postirl&amp; IP3062. IAM.-iouol Sapport
........... ,. (SL-2)-FNSM Ma·
cbint Shop. """ing fP-402•
........,.,. Dir&lt;c:lor (SL-5)In.s:titutionaf Anatyr.il. 'Posung:
fP-308!. I a . . _ , yo,..,. ...............« ( l.-3)·
&amp;iuc:alional Services. Postinc
IP-402S . ..u.Hlaor Din&lt;tor.
S - (SL-J).Studeot A&lt;c:ounu. Postin&amp; IP-4013.

Coouudiq or Ctiair:al r.y.

c:lloloPst (SL-51.CounseUng
Ccnter. Postinc W-401 7. Hua.rdoas Waitt Tedta.k:ia.o.
(SI,J, two poolliom o..lJ.
abfe) -Environmenu.l Hcallll

ilnd Safety, Posttnt •P-4022

MI Sy.,...,. """'"" ISL-4JU.ndcrgndua&amp;t- ACadtmiC Scr\ICU, Posun1 IP-4019. M'sis-ta.nt to tM C11air CSL-3.
lrrtonW Promo&amp;ionol Opportunity)-Tbeaut and Oant;:e.
Postiog -P-4029

I.A80II ·CLAISIFIIEI&gt; CML
5EitVJCE
CleoneriSG~5)-Custocl"l

Services, Unc: 131804.
OleaiH'r ~5)-R.esulenllil

fet ltlldeou oo S.urdly, 'March

M.-

19fiom 1:30m4p.m. The
reviews will be held i.e the Fine

Scm&lt;es.Une ~2.

I'OIITFOUO-

'The An Oeparunent's Commuolcatioo Design program will
hold •portfolio reviews for uans-

Cusrodal, Lrne 143043
~

~

CI¥IL IOIYICE
Sapen"ioorl
(SG-14l' Focilities and Sy.,ems
Maialerwlce. Uoe 131749.
hDitor (SG-0'7)-&lt;:uStodiol

Royals capture '94 East Coast
Conference Tournament

Stool&lt;&amp; 5rri1ll e8med IOoJmaf1IIMt Molil
Valuable Playet l'r:Jnas as the Fkilya!s
captured 1t1te 1994 Eesl Coast Conlerence

Toumament defeallng ~ llJt.

ooos 73-01 lo the oharnp1onshop game at
AUrn Arena Sunday altemoon
Sn#1 scored 16 ponts Wid grllbbed
Sl" rebolncls lor the Royals !20-91 Sn#1
also was se4ecled to lhe AI-Conle&lt;ence
1eam prior 10 the IOufney
UB led by four aT the hall , 38-34. and
teNbehind as NortheaSiem IUonors opened
1he 6EOOOd hall
a 15-6 roo In 1he ..-~~~
SIX mnutes
The Royals ralloed behind ll1ghl con5eCUII'&lt;e ~ee ttvows O'&gt;'ef lhe ne~ct llM:l
rrvnutes wtole haldmg the Golden Eagles
( 15-13) scoreless Thefloyals lOOk the
lead lor good , 50-49. with 12:12remaining when fV:r"' Hale dnJled hBf one and
one opponunily dunng the slfetell FOr the
game. the Royals sllOI 73 5 perooottrom
the line goong 25434 Nt:l'h3aslemllrns
was:kJI-11 trcrntec:~Wty~Wld2410
f1 te lnal hal
The Royals held Nottheastem llitOOiS
scoreless n the final 3 13 while UB
scored lhe final se&gt;'en poonts lndudlng !he
laStllve !rom the free tt"row 11~1&amp;-~~Wo by
Anatea Fraley ana IIYee by Brenna 0o1y
Qoty scored a career-h¢ 24 poonts 10 the
WicJoty and was also named 10 the AllToumamen! team 'Nadine Mastroleoadded tO poonts and sewn rebounds
NaiOSha Cl.mnings and Fraley eactt
oontnbuted Sl)( ass.sts lor the Royals
Fofiowlng the IOCtory. UB head 008Ch
Sal Buscaglta s&amp;Jd. "I hope people rea'ae
wtlat these )'ClUng taches hav&lt;l accompltshed. INs year and the three years o4
0Ms10111 We have al/8fllged 19 wulS a
season'" OIVISICil i. Thts IS a brg wtn
because Norlheastem Illinois came wrthm
one poon1 ol bealtng Marquette who nas
rec&amp;IVed scme nallonal i/Oles •
The 20 wins INs season by the Royals
marks the 6EOOOd time tlla1 a UB team.
women s or rren s has~ the
leal Buscagll8 s Royals were 23-6 m
1991-92 when they also won the EaSI

Coast Championship
UB advanced to the cltampionshlp
contest 1t1an1-s lo WillS over Central Connecllcut State and Troy State
Smlh led the RoyalS wrtl118 poiniS
while Hale had a dOuble-&lt;IOoble Wllh 13
pomts and 10 rebounds to lead UB past
Central Comec:tocut Slate 64-53
Foot players SCO&lt;ed rn double l.gures
as the ·c--""
trounced T~
~r~
·-, Slate. 85-63.

"'the semofinals SaiUrday afternoon 0oty
and Fraley each had 16 I)Oints whtle Kns
Holtz added 14 aM Maslroieo tallied 10
HoilZ. Mastroleo. and Smlll each
grabbed seven boards "' the W&gt;n

Men' s BMketbltll
The BuHs played their most ltlnlhng
game of the season Saturday mght
falling on doot&gt;le overtrne to Northeastern
lllltlOIS B3-81to fintsl1 a1 10-18
UB Jumped ou11o a 37· 29 hallt1me

leatJ lind sent fle game into OOIOM"hrne
when 1
Myron Sal"1i&lt;$ l1d a 11&gt; fOOl ~
38 seconds remaoning
In the lrst elctre S8SSIOil. ' Iller 1eem
led by more lhan two. 8allk8 t&gt;d a dun!&lt;
wrlh 32 &amp;eCOnds feflltlarlks to an oncr-ed
oble dove for a loose tlaJ and pass by
Modie Co• 10 I}MIIhe suns a 76-74
eushtOn Woodrow Wtll- s.oored wo
pants '" llle 0\rllflime and bloclceo a

shot Wllh- &amp;eCOnds lefl Northe&amp;SI·
em Hl.nois' U1yses Maran foo::ed lhe
second overume
a 5hor1 ,...mpe&lt;
wdh two leCOOCls fefl
Wt 25 secooCIS remanng tn lhe
se&lt;XlOO OT Rasaun Yooog hn two free
tllrO'NS to e the game at 81 It was the
!!lgh!h he ol the corrtest St.annon
G•eene scored on a t•P m lor the Go1oen
Eagles to giVe them an a:HI1 teao W1lh
just 11 seconds rema.ning
8anl&lt;s led the way lor the BUiis W'#l 22
pooniS and 12 ret:an::lS Woibams 8dOed a
career-high t9 pcw11s ...nle playwlg 47
rrirules. YCJIXlO talloed J 7 wrtl1 se1100
lxliirds and Ke!wl Robinson had a seasoo-hlgh E!1ghl bkld!ed J;hocs Co• soored
12 and tJed Ius career-beSt """' 11 assiSts
11 hrs 4 7 ITlllUieS ol wctk Cox was alSO
seieCied 10 the All-Tournameot team ano
was named the East Coast Conlerenc:e s
Delf!llSio,e Player-of-the-Year and a s1
team ~ence selection
The Bulls advanced lo lhe semhnats
by defeatJnQ Central CoonecltCOI Sla
I OCJ..62 In lhe first round The 100 po.nts
was the most !nat the Buns had scored
s.....:e the 1989-90 season
UB opened U4&gt; a 41 · 23 haJ"•me lead
and neo;er lOoked back The BottS led Oy

as rna y as 48 pants on UB s lhtrd

W1fl

ot

the season over the Blue Devils Lou
Jotmson led the Bolls wrtll 21 PQIOIS and
se"en retlOuncls while Cox added 14
PQIOis on tove-oi-Six shootong Jon Za,ac
and Ryan Cmss each SC01eO I 1 POintS

W....aiQI
Marcos HO!Chlns QUalified lor ne&gt;lf
week's NCAA~ ~t~an~-s 10
his IOCtory at the Eas1 Coast Wrest•ng

Assoaaron TQLmarT~enf m LawreraMIIe

N .J

over lhe wee1&lt;en0

Hutchins. a fiJ100I', W!Ube ma1oog r.s
second Nal1onaJ Tournament appearance
He qoalrhecl as a fre!lhrTwllWO seasons
ago HutclwlS won 110s 167 pound~
!rtiOn overBtd&lt;nell's Jason f'rol&lt;opchak m
a bebreal&lt;er
WiR Moss Jr "'""""'
11 the 158
·· .--second
pound class· while
trestman Renne
CnsallAii (1 ~2) was 1hrrd and Anthony
Conte(150) fot.r111. The iBtJs scaeo 35.5
points to llnos!lldlh. Rider won the lOoma·
ment SCOt"ing 9425 points

Indoor Track a Flttld

Judith Novak set a school record a1 tne
ECAC Charnpoonshlps at Yale In the S,lXXl
meter 1\Xl. In the In! Clay of (XIII1:letltion o1
the weel&lt;end ewnt. Novallltnished al

17 3412

�- ---.-...

Most 'preemies' are alive and well at 4, study shows
~an
llS.,_..RC HERS AT
Ull, following 1ht
health of 194 babteo
born 12-17 weeb
premal urdy have
fou_nd_t1w aller_four yean,~
ma)OOty Of lbe clnldn:n...- abve
and well ond b ad n o m.ajor
1

m::uro&amp;velopmental il!ljlOinncots.
However, teSUlu !ibowed ·lbat

one-fiftb oflhe$Ut&gt;l~ors eabibiled

atleaSiooe oflbe senous probleqls
associated with ~ pn:n!J1JI·
rity-.mcntal mard11ion, ccrdnl
palsy. blindness or deafness.
Babies • srea&lt;st risk of dying Ill&gt;
"'""" of ·lheir ""'&gt;' early l:irdls •v.c:re

rnorellikdyto bemale, e &amp;b leoslhan
llXl gnms II binh. and to have..,.

eJ&lt;!Jmle prematuri ty"""""' ron-.

&lt;IOUldlcldmin~tionou!IIICIOUkl

dueled befon: lbe lnlrOdUQIJQJI of
slrl-t lhenlpy. and 11w n:-reb clone durint: lbnurfiCl&amp;DI
enohaorocuaedabnoltexclusively

i"""""'thcirl&lt;q-&lt;~erm.urvlyji_,

.....,IIICic:adnlpllsy. &lt;lllt-bliod

c:nbaacelhtirqualiiyofUfc."
Msatl' s tum IIUdied 1~ in t bonlbel.......,23ancl28wocb

llllleiiJihldmullipleCI:IIIIIilionL
Mavin&amp; a bloilurial iafectioa
(sepsis) as a n&lt;:wbant. or bein1
malt or --'011ite were lbe , _
llipi6canl rit faclcrs for de\-dopinaueriousimpaimo:lll.
M..Uuid •tbi aiJdyislbefint
to piopoim sepsi• as a rut fac~cw
Corrnajol' neurode¥&lt;&gt;lopmcnt&amp;J impoirmcnlS ADd for """"tal n:urda·
lioa in panicular.
'1'l::rhajlo oqooi is I llllll"ker of
iDf- who are~ and requm:
ITlOI't invasive mooitonna." Msall

oalbdirstone-10-twoyanoftifc.

"Mtmym&lt;nbaiJicsan:Sill'oivin&amp;
~ "neelbeadveolol"-fllllanlihcrapy,"IIOIIldM:sali.Whois
aff"diJICd with the Robcn w._
Rc:babiliultian 'Cc:nlc:r oi'·OUkkm"•

" J,I,..,h-f. ,,
.· ·~ ...yym
_g

.

of&amp;estatioaatChildln's i H~w
bdweea 1983 ADd 1986. Their

l"''&lt;llJ'aSWUmoniiOredinlbeinteruoive&lt;are nun.CJ)' 11\d later
dvough a follow-up prqvam of
lbe Rdbcn
Rohobilillllioa

w.,..

·'·fi

·~

to_
ULteTVentzons ,t COU . l1n{J
· lr
/ong-tenn SUTVivaJ and enhance their
quality o~fi.i~'e."
~

nsK actors c.OUtu

hat

ld

'JI

-

"""""""calf-luna~ ~IO
!heir ~ ac-

L IIUU.

.,-1 mallll'llion d

rorcJin810 the findings. The srudy..,_
pCII'Sin theFc:buayissucdtb:.lowml

rfP•rinllltMJgy.
MiohAel E. Msall. UB associate
1professor of pedialrici a.nd reM·
bilitation medicin&lt;.. and lead author of the otudy, oaid most
long-term tudies oflhe effects of

HoopitalofBuffalo. "1hcnisaneed
for follow""'P oftbese surviV&lt;n 10
oiJiainyoJidlong-l&lt;:nnOUICOmedaia.
"'ur purpose was to identify the
risk fa&lt;:Wr5 for monality and major
neurodevdopmental impairments
before tbese children n:ach Iunder·
ganen age. Jdenlifyinll risk fM:SOR

Centa. Stan&lt;lan:lt&lt;':lilSwereadmini51eredahopproximllelyS2mon(hs
of age 10 149 of lbe 153 children
Who &amp;umved lha! long.
RC$11111 sbowed that 79 peroent
of the surnvors llad no major impairments.Ofthell cbildri:nshowing seriou• imJlairmenls. 15

UB research confirms it: nagging is
not the way to help a smoker quit
IJ .._ IIIAIIIJI
News 'Bureau Staff

!!SEARCHERS AT UB
1haveshownwhatpersons
!lying to quit smoking
have \mown all alongnagging docsn" l h::lp.
Panioipanls In .a study of 1,552
smOkers Who called a hoi lioe to
rcquc:st self-help information on how
"' stop, but did DOl quit. reponed
more nagging when they tried IDSiop
smol::ing than people who quit. Of
those who aoppcd smoking for •
short time but lillllU:d again.
Thooe Who ....::re successful were
more lil:ely to be oollege graduauos.
to consider l hcmsc:h'dl 10 'be in excellent health and 10 be confident or
their ability 10 stay off cigarcucs.
1be study also !ibowed that:
• Non-&lt;:juiuers wen: more likely
to ha•·e o ther smokas 1in the home
than the olber IWO groups.

• Heavier smO:kcrs were more
hesitant tou-y to quit, but once they
make lbe attempt. !hey art as likely
to succeed as light smokers.
• A trial run at q uitti ng seemed 10
be nece&amp;Sal)' for
smokers before lbey arc able to SlOP ,for good.
Tbe ·r csean:b. supponed by a
grant from lbe N ational Cancer
Institute, was published in a recent
issue o f Public Health R•poru.
""MOSI o f wlull we know about
smoking is derived frmt reseatcb on
subjects anending formal lrt31ITienl
programs, despite the fact that 92
pcrocnt of ex-smokers have q uit on
theirown." .aidCarlosRoberiOJa&amp;l.
UB assistant professor of family
medicine and social and preventive
mc:dicioeandlcadautborofthesrudy.
"'I is inplnal~IO n:cogniD: wba!
faaorsirelikdyto inllucncethecffec·
b"CleSSoflllllking c:r:ss8ln IJIIm1iXS
among lheae pnons Who have sucCICedod widrJul ronnat JliOPII'IS-"
Panicipinli iii lhe study wen:

some

interviewed when !hey called a
stOjHIIIOking bot line and again
six monthslater. lbeywereclas&gt;ified into tbn:e groups based on
!heir responl&gt;CS during lhe followup interView-242 quiuers, 497
recidivists, and 813 non-&lt;:juiuers.
Non-quinerswercdefinodasperscms who rqxwled they didn '1 try 10
quit after calling the hoi line or who
weren't able 10 quit fOf more than a
day. Recidivists weredefmed as par•ticipants who said they quit {or""""

"This study

substantiates the
notion that a
supportive
enviroronent and a
feeling of confidence
in the ability to
succeed are very
important to people
attempting to stop
smoking. "
than a day. but wen: sn&gt;&lt;*:ing at the
time of the fol low-up interview, or
had been offcigarettes For less than a
.month at follow-up.
Qoiu m were defined as those
whosaidtbeywere n~smohngat

the time o(the follow-up interview

.and had been off cigarcnes for more
than a ·month. 1llc: average .length
of time off ciga.n:ttes in ·thi• group
was 4- 112 mon(hs.
A comparisoa of domognophic

information, attitudes. smoloing bis101')' and health sta1tiS Moong the
dvec groups !ibowed that a support·
rve. social environment was critical
10 effoos 10 stop. on-&lt;:juillers reponed less belpful support than quitoenoandmcidh · .'llut:etimesmore
noo-&lt;:juittm as quium reported be·
tng nagged.
Quinen wen: more likely 10 be
college graduares than noo-quinen;
and recidivists, fmdmg showed.
1bey also wa-e more lil:ely 10 perceive a benefit frmt quitting. and
were mor-e confident of their ability
10 stay off cigarettes for at ICJBSl siJ&lt;
months than the Olher two 1"'-"'P'·
aen. who was appointed recently to a nati-onaJ panel

J

charged with developing clinical
guidelines for smoi&lt;ing pre&gt;•ention

and cessation. pointed to several
useful findings from the stud)' that
could beoefit oll health pa&lt;.1itioncrs in
hclping ,lheirpalimtstostopsmoking.
"This study substantiates the notion that a supportiv-e environmcn'l
and a feeling of confl&lt;len.x in the
ability IO succeed~ very imponanl
10 people anompting to Slop smolcing.• be said. '11 olso c:mphasi7.es the
need fOf early interVention. before
the negative health ronsequenceo; of
smoking are appan:nl
"Heavy smokers can be told wilb
confidence tballhey areaslikely.to
· succeed as light smokers." be .aid.
"'n ad&lt;lition.lbereseareh n:inforoes
the n~.ion that cfforu 10 strengthen
motivation are 1ikely to enootll'llge
more non-quitu:rstoanempttostop."
Cootributing to ,the SWdy, in addi·
tion to Jaen , were K. M ichael

Currmings.UBassocialeresc:arthprofessor and diltclor or smol:ing casation • :Rosvodl Psi&lt; c..xr lmtilllle,
.-.dMariWclc::my ondRobcrtO'Sbea.
UB associare;~esoors aC social IIIII
preverli"" mcodic:inc:.
0

c:xpcriencc4 lllClltal n:tord&amp;ti011,

P&gt;d. " !ental raard.otion from
ac:pW.m ay l'd1eci the vulnerability
of lhe •developin£ brain 10.
temic IIWIIL"
Anolysio of •peeific impa1rmenu
that hydrocephalus
(excess nwd in 1be brain) rcquiring a shunt was a •ignifiCllllt indlcator for holb cen:bnl pals} and
mental retard1111011 .
Noo-whiu: race and male gendu aloo were signiflllllnt predkron fO&lt; mental retanlation.
MsaiJ saod lhe stud~• findinp
in&lt;li&lt;ale that most enm-nely pre-

•rs-

m.~~un:inf..mounweudonfrtt

of~ ionpail'trii:IIIS• prc:oc:llool
qe bunluuuni"""oti I
ld

be~ an•

·

l'llJ"'IooO.

m need o1 COIIIi ued fl low-up
11 ...,.,.,.... lbat opecia1 biChruk JIT'l"'ps. sueh u inf..,ll ...;o.
hydrocephal oraepolt..maybe•
eVCD gn:ata ri•k for loo&amp;-tam
mortJidlly," MUll Mid. "If !hat
l'l..Si p oreoonf~ byotbcn it
may provide alcimlifJC
"s for
followin&amp; up these b icb-rl$
p-oqpo.SudiOIJ"Aiqic&amp;COUldbd·
1er delin&lt;:alc llll'lUcb at-ri
;,.rants
a r e - in """"of 8Ctive
II·
!m:candhetp familicaldcmify~
I'I&gt;Oit oppropria.e l'eiiOUlCeS to ·h dp

Ll&gt;eiT&lt;lhildrcn."
Also oontributing 10 the .study
wertUB reoearohetoGermaineM
Bud:.. BrianT. Rocers. o.bonh'P
Merte. Chri&gt;tina C. Wan. IIIIC)'
LC..........,. and \\r,lbam A Zorn
Tbe rcscardl was supported in
pan by •the Children' • Guild, the
cw York Stile Office of Mental
Re.,..&lt;btiot! and Oevelopmental
Disabililie&amp;. and the UB School ol
Med1ci"" and Biomed1cal Sci .noes.
1:'

Cl I ' L ; f ! ! S
-

-

-

Roberl A Baker, 65, Capen
Award winner in 1993
~ • - IMkl Feb. 26 m SL Ploul"t Episcopal Church.
Clarence. for Roben A 8 er. past P""'ideDt of th&lt; UB Alumno
Auociation ADd 1993 R:cipir"l of the Samuel P Capen Alumn1
Award for nOUlble •nd mc:ritonou conlriblltions 10 UB and its
family . Baker. 65. died Feb 23 on Millan! Fillmm&lt;c Suburban
Hospital
1be rtllred chainnan and presulent of Johnson Prtc1MOO Wno:s.
Baker served in tbe .S. Navy dunng World War ll and received
a had&gt;elorofscientt de~ from UB in 19&gt;1. Ht held a senes of
salei-&lt;&gt;rientedjobs before .uorung Fahritron in Alden wuh several
iatesin 1%2 lnlbe 19
. bedoubledlbesl&gt;cOflbePreci io&lt;1
as
plant. which m nufactu~ prcci.,on mac-h in&lt;!). retiring m 1989
Baker served as cbairT!WI of the En&lt; County Private lndi.!Sit)
Council from 1981-86 and again from 1990-92. He had been a
member of lbe board of di=ton of the colllK"il since its lncep&lt;ion
in 1979.
He: served on the Governor"s Job Traimn~ Partnership Council
and ..... f01'111&lt;:r VIC&lt; chainnan or the Joint Mayor and County
~ccutive " Task Foret on SmlliiBusmes..,;. Hcal•o..:n·edonlbe
adviSOI) board of the Enc Count) Compn:heflsi&gt;e Employn-.1
and Training Aa program
Baker had rooe.ived man) a'ol.-ard:S for communit)• senrtec:. including the Presidential Citation Award for the Summer Jobs
Program in 1985 from President Ronald Reagan. Last year he
received the Carl A. Draper Humannari:lll Award from lbe Private
Industry Council.
Survivors include hiS "''lfc. Dons: 1
soos.. Roben Jr. of
Orchard Pan and Bruce of St. Louos; a daughter. Susan Jordan of
Orchard Park; a brother. Dale. of Sal&lt;:m. S.C ., a sister. Eileen
Zimmerman of Akron and seven grandcbilc!ren.

Stuart M. Berger, 40, author
ofbest-selling diet books
llerCer, author of best-selling health and diet
books. died March2atlbeagcof40. Bc:rge&lt; ..a1973graclwueofU8.
received lbe UB Alumni Association's Georg&lt; W. Thorn Award in
1986, as outstanding alumnus under age 40.
A health advice columnist for the ew YorL Post since 1984.
Berger as lmo"'ll for lbe Southampton DieL
Berger's dieting ~ healing methods were based on nutritiot!
and improving lhe strength of lbe immune oy•tem. His book, *Dr.
Berger's Immune Power Diet." ouiiined the method by which be
redu&lt;led his weight from 420 pounds to 210 pound . At the time of
his death. his weight had climbed 10 365 pounds. acoording 10
preliminary autopSy n:poru.
Dr. $ uart M.

�:ID

Wes Olmsted exhibition open today in Poetry
UFFALO ARTiST Wea
. .._....
01a1tal col
• -rho
of Aalhoooy AII.Wpiecc.

Olraoudwillprel~UCJ'e

T..,.,..
M

in 111 exhibi6on In 1M readina

room of the UB Pl&gt;cuy/Rare
CollecINln. 420 C..,.,.. lUll
The exhibi ·
,.ill open IOday with a

pjbl.,rtceptio011t6p.m.lllld · 1.,.u.oup
April JO The readin&amp; room as open from 9
a.m to S p.m. Moeday lhrou Fhclly
In adclitioa 10 1M altarpo«&lt;e itaelf, the
exhibit,.illfeanmpoecuof~

ture. 20 Cramod

etches,

oo·

lp-

In otl for

t""-rho
final TempW!oos
aiJarpiece~and-ADiboooy
rdll&lt;ld wor
Alwptett" -~by "'*"'from 19 193 ~''"
·
tlw:raaaltorpicce
nor a tratmenl of the ht:mut
nt to ..'hom

n,..,r,..

It t called.., " alwpic&lt;le." say•Oims~ed.
because it i a wort of conttmpllrion. medtta6on and heahnl,. b e the altarpiecx:s pooducrd by artiw of tht Middle Ages lllld
Renai..anoe AllaiJ&gt;ICCa tb&lt;mselvea _,..,
less common after tht Prolesunt ReformatiOn. but mulu-puded
by thai name
bave continued to be produced by 111isu
from H"'""'ymous 8oodl to mod-201h cenlUI)' pain~er Max Beckman.
lbrtJup&gt;ullbe..,..apopularUjoct , _
for lbeoe lltworb lw been the qa · of St.
Anlhony of fcypl. aiOallld t:a111.y &amp;aint "-ho

......,.....,...,

...
. ,_,"-

--~"'the

420 Cepe~&gt; .

"I've lived dyvugh l4brld
War ll. the H-bomb, the
He was pruxllhl:rt by oil ......,. of embc.
\-.ciouo devils. ..tern"" raad houch " ' Korean
war, \rfetnam. So
JI'I)U .-.I (; .
ct... pdculainspinlion by the "''eft\UIOII of St. Anlhony"
instead of painring demons
pwd in the l..mtim Allarpiotx, a ~.
llch-o:nrtay Grilnewald ,_,...,..n poduoed flying around, I've used
for .. "'-iie ~in Alsace.
-ADihon) ..... IOI'Ilftd ...ty 10 datlh by liE
imagesfrom among the
dr\11 in many ro..m.· Sl) Olnwd. .,.. .....
tb-1 ..., of a dill'""" IJnd. r.., u~~ec~ houch
5,CXXJ... slammed into our
Worid W• D. the H-blrrb, liE Kaream v...-.
consciousness every day by
Vidnam.
rnsiCid of
tkrnons Oyina
around. r ... used images &amp;om llnlll'l the s.
different media. "
U.. ..., sllrmlcd i'*&gt; our
e...!)

.,.....,floe..,

byhaiJn&amp;...,.,acbcrt~

~

&lt;XJn!iCIOU5IJCI

doy by diffaml mocha. The JWa: is JdObio.
.,-.phocol. The ........ I oclcaal hove 5II1JII&amp;Iy
inO......:lCid m) bfl: and tot."

The Olmsted altarpte&lt;le coasisu of four
6 ' x 4' panel thickly collaged wrth picture5
representing wbat Olmsted con idcn some
the pnnciple ~ernptationo. homn and
blc: ingo of hi lifetime.
The two central panels feature emblems
of ~mpant lust. violcntt, naked greed and
otheT sin . wruch ""' painted, repainted.
painted un&lt;kr and painted over, all the while
competing WJidly for aucnuoa. This is a

or

barr1ge of familiar icons· John-John
Kennedy; Euon ••ecutives; the dark. ar-

ietnam' • H.ueys; the
now-familtar napalmed g1rl. a dozen O"'ller$
of large female breasts. mechanaed honemen oft"" Apocalwse; McDonald's arches;
Madonna '" leather

ttvopod

These are interrupted by occaston•l

snawbes of poetry. mll1ica1 srores. bus of
Hcbn:w, ocwspapercopy. the names of out·
standing banJc:s of the 20th century, and so
oa Same n:.ferences an: easily translated by
the viewer, ~rs arc """" obocu"' but
suppon the wort ' s internal cohesion.

here .. CYCOl • ,..,(......,.,

T

til ,..,....,..., 10

Mllhla' s Sympboory
• a war\
~Yihornl&amp;'t 10 Goethe's nooon of lbe Eacmal
Fcmutine. In addtbOIIIO hononn&amp; lbe JI'OI'IU·
t&lt;lrS of Ins"""" _..... fCitllntOC. the .u. ..,..
he tn-xd hore 10 ~ lbe W..,. sprit
of lbe bft-aiVl canh mothtr-4be _ , . .
aspect ofwomen. WOII'UII. alphaonlomeplbe guode t1110 .-.I OUI of bfe itself
On
eoarerne tre ...-. ~ " a &gt;mJt&gt;d
"beoomc" J*!d, tlusone~ ..,,.,.......
b~bce~ b)' Gban&lt;i. ....rom Olmolcd
calls "'ife in -.:h oflovt. not oclf«swaion."
The .....,. of the lndiaD rpdual -.d pol8cal
leod&lt;rN isuocd here
lllkal &amp;omoneuocd 10
iJiusnllc lbe&lt;XMrof a
abcul the......_. of
Rdwd ~··Iii film. "GGwndi." b IS
nnp! b)' thlo&lt;of~t..xial s,.....
lik.e Malher~

OlmAod '
Benneu Hi

......cor~, 19 lllldbc&amp;lbos pmnllnp ... ..,.._.. oolo lllld""""
...,. 1D ond lltK•IIhlffaloUI I
H' ....,n.
bauppeon:dnutrecardyia
1992...,.
•lbe Aadcrooa Gallery-~ from
lbe CollccbOn" 11111
1a 1993. 1be
Aadcrooa ltduded Olmslaocf. ....,n. ' its
Mnt Saop"
Has wo.t hdd
10 several collecttooas, ioc
thooc of tht
~ Ganery, the Burcbftdd An CeaICr, lbt: BIJSCIII!iaKM!dlani An Gallery and
the Aubura UDivcnity An Depart-.

·x.c.uncs..-

-s-·.

�Ftlmmaker to

give animation
workshop

10

&lt;dill Slilely Clradua~e
Group oFUB """ praem a
W&lt;ll1cshop ill tllimation litkld
The

"8~\JII &lt;Cdlulcld Boun(l,.
wilb imlo'Yativc: c~

.;es~

filrnmatllr Bdan aall, lod.ty ar 2
p.m. in !Room 286 ol w f\iae
AIUCeQk:r.

..
of~
andThe~~
&lt;o ptllll&gt; tho ,publ"
Owing w
ash
·
willocreea

bisowu
films and lbco;c ol Olhln lhal

in&lt;:a'JXI'*. nricly ol video,
digital -and ...nn.aed proc:a.ses
am. 'Who bat been employin&amp; mixt.d media tcdmiques in
the film medium for w last eight
rears. merges .form and oontCIII ill
his wort in a way that bos broken
new ground i1l
lidd. He.'has
tauabt film lheory _, tddi!ioaal
and Ami&amp;• COIIIpllter animltion
&lt;lOiftCil mlbe Film and Television
Plogram • ·Ontario's HIJI!Ibor
College ,for tho last roo. )'Cal'S..
Th: Wllfbbop ;. ·m.de pooAble
&gt;\&lt;ilh the support at 1be nep.n.
mc:nt of Media Slilely and 1bc UB
Graduau: Student Associat:i&lt;Jn.

qlml:llldlbpUnc. ... ~
&lt;Xlllnllqlli.., ....... llliOd wieldy.
~ joilled lbe K.tv.rd
lioculty in I 965, and
&lt;Wned
' c:Nirof,pcdillric: ·~cry ill 196&amp;.

He~~peaam

"'

Philaddpbia•• Ohildrcn'. l:lospi .

lallllldcrC. E

Koop, fOill'ICT

bna&amp;lned 1'hruu fo;w &amp;stmn
Uniled . -.·

Norma Shatz.-Rubia and
Camtllo Hanley. lfo.lpilality
dhaiqlcnJoos, will be ia dlarge of

speaker at

IUtai of Health.

Earthquake
experts meet in
New York

Norplam, w111
deliver the
D.W.

Haningtoa
l.ecr:un: at4
pJll. Mardi

23, in Butler
AudiiDrium in

Parbcrtwl .
Follanan'slccturc on "CCinical
Applications of Angiogeaesis

Research.- is fn:e and open to the
public.
ifolkman, who is also profes-

California and
Olborregions the
the Nonheasl. ..,;n also be disCU$Sed by the panel of expons. Ian
Budde, deputy dinocwr of NCEER
and professor of civil enginc:crin.IJ
• UB, isoncofthe speakers
OrJaniud b) the N~tiooaJ

Center for Eorthquake Engineering Research. heodquanerod at
UB. the briefing is being sponsored by the F...anhquake Engineering Research Institute (EERJ )
in Ool:land. Calif.
Leading mgineen. $Cimx&gt;logists and searcb-and-rescue •~­
pons who visited Northridge
foUowing the quake .,[II discuss
damage to stniCIUteli and life·
lines. gcocechnical effects and

o;orofanaiOmy and cdl biology at
Harvard, is credited with discov-

socioeoooomic impacts.

ering the mechanisms of

Women's Club
to elect officers
March 15

angiogenesis.. a fldd of resc:arch
now pursued worldwide. lt holds
that solid tumor cancers may

develop as a resu'lt of chemical
signals released by tumor cdb
that ca.,.., the bloud vessels in

suiTOUDding tissue to grow. Rcoean:h is CUlTCIItly under way
investigating angiogenesis and its
relation to many othor diseases in
addition 10 CllDCcr.

s-

A graduateol Ohio
Uniw:rsity. Folkman na:ived hi&lt; medical
dogme licm Harvill! Modiatl School
and 'beglm bis.,.....,., ....... while •
5IUdent lbcre, ldping 1D cleYdq&gt; lbe
first ~YODricullr ~

JXamab:r.
He served a tw&lt;&gt;-yeer 1crm in
the U.S. Navy at tho Bethesda
National Naval Medical Cerucr.
ln Bethesda. raearob by Folkman

and a colleague.~~ ~vo:J- _

0

TheUB Women 's Oub

will hold its annual clection mcding on Tuesday. March
15 at 7:30p.m. in the Center for

'

-

-

-

-

Sunrise Series

0

!Poul M, C.Ddi:no, Chief
eurut:ivt: ott..,... ollbc
Eric County Medico! Ce&gt;~la, w~l
diseuso " Health Carr:: A Rcp&lt;Jn
From the Front Unea" during
UB' • Sunrix Spealccrs Series
Morch 22.
The ..,..;.,., whleh ,. ill be bcld
from 7:3(1..9 Lm. in !be Center for

TOOlllm&gt;w. 15 ~ b)' the
UB Off110e of Coaf.....-..:a and
Spcciol Eveots and the UB
Alumn1 Auooiatiotl.
Candioo, formerly with W)'OIIIlng Couoty Community Hospital. joined ECMC in his cuncnt
position on Feb 14.
Admission 10 the ..ne..,....•hich
includes brea.kfOllt, is $7 for UB
Alumni AssociaJ.ion members •lid
$8 for the gencraJ public. To
mali:e I"Ciien'1llioos. ca11829-2608.

&lt;ngi~g

Judah Folkman,
Dyckman
of pediatric •Ulllery 111 Harvard
Medical Scbool whose raearob
led to lbe development of the
CXJntnceptive

.

Raul Candino

The Nonbridge earthquake
is
subject
Judah Folkman 0
for engioccn to be
Centa.
is Harrington
Geriatric
East
City, iroql9
lecturer
Psychiatry
Th:cartbquake's
JuJu
implicstion5 far
conference set
0
AndnJ.I profcosor
in
U.S, includ.mg
the
of • briefing
held today in
the United ~ng
345
47th St., ew Yorlt
a.m. 10 noon.

-

BMbttra~oDd~

will colldoct the dcctioa.

A memb&lt;r of the ationaJ
Acodcmy of Scialceo, Folkman
among bis many hooon o
l().year Merit Awand fmm !be
N.x-1 Caocc:r lMtilute in 19 9,
the Americtul C'llliCCr Society''
Medal of Honor for basic sc:iet&gt;cc
and the CbriS!Opha Columbus
Discovery A...,...d in Biomedical
Rcseanch from the Nllionollnsti-

'.

Sprowl, dWr. of 1101111..-la

rettnin '"' Boslon '"' became
~-&lt;:hid"' OJildrm's
McciQJ Oen...,. in Bosloo. • pc&amp;ition be held for 14 yean.
Appointod prof- of
IIIIIIOill)' and cdlular biology ..
HorYan! ia 19110, fdlanan left the
~ery ehain:nomb;p in I981 10

CCWilS

.

relreshmcnts.

u.s. .....,.,.. ,eeneraJ, beflft

CICIIIduc:t~fulltime.

(

---

0

Th: seventh annual ''Curmit Issues in Gcruuric

Psyclliatry" reg~onal conference
will be held {rom 8 a.m to 4 .JO
p.m. on Friday. April • '"the
Shera1on Inn Buffalo Airpon..
2040 Wolden Ave .. a..daowaga.
The confcn:nce is designed to
infoon healtiKare prof=ionals of
state4-llr-art menlal-bealth ...
sessmcn11 and ln:allrlent5. update
them on methOds o( oven:oming
barrieni 10 mental-bealth care in
lata life. and $1TC11glben their
confidalce in addressing menial
and Physical ooncans of oldcc
adult!i and their fannlieo.
The confc:rc:occ is geared lo,..an:! psychiatrists, Physicians.
psychologists, nurses, adult-home
administrators. nursing-home
administrat&lt;n and others 1n
beallh-reloted disciplines wortting
in , or inJ.cn::Sted ia geriatric psyhiatry or geriatrics.
h is &gt;pCXl5(llod by lbe Oi\ision o(
Gcrialricl's)dliallyintheUB
School oCModicine and Biomodicol
Scicnccs; lbe V.-.n New Yot:
Gaialric&amp;n:ationCenta ondlbe
Primory Care Re!nJrocCenta-. both
• UB, and lbe Amcriclln ~b-Gcriatric l's)dlially.
Ol!llto lqlistor far lbe conf........ce
is S90......., indludes tuition. program J1llll&lt;rials. n:fn:slmeru and

Tomonow. North Campus.
Th: slate of offioen for 1994·
95 is: President-Shirley Buckle;
Vice President-Janet Fedor; Trea·
outer-Dawn tblYOr$CD; Rc:oording Sccmary-Bemadette
Privitera; and Corresponding
lunch.IJiscoonts availlble for ll'tlUP'
Scauary-Wtoifftd 1Jmm. TI:JrrJO
o( bror nue, far UB faculty and
llli:IIIbcrHI..Jqe will olto bedcx:to:l.
b chooe alltnding half lbe day.
Ian Buckle. professor of civil
R&lt;gislratian dc:ad!D!e is Marth 31 .
Cllllincc:ring and deputy director
For moce information or to
of the National Genter for Earthregister, contacl Patricia M.
quake Engineering Rcsearc:ll. will
Krupp at the WNY Geriatric
-~ "'!:~~B.eal ~., - .• ~uationCentaat.829-3176.

Poetry Contests
The UndergradJ:ate l.Jbrary IS pleased 10 anno..n;:e the
1994 annual poe11y cootes &amp;ponsored on ClOOper8.tlon
w•th the Depattmerlt or EngllSh and the Friends the
Uniwr6i1y Ubfanes Two pnz.es ol S100 each are otl'ered
for the bes1 poems SUbmitted by University Ill Buffalo
students. The~ ol Amencan Poets con1est Is
open 10 both graduate and undergraduate students the
Fnends ol the UM!ersity Ubfllllll$ poze 15 lor undergraduates only
Entrle$ should cons•s• of ooe or more ~ypewrmen ,
doiJble-soaced poem$. nol 10 eJICeed 8 lOCal of SIX
pages The student"s name should no1 ~r on the
poems, but on a &lt;Xlller sheet wilh the name of the poze
the wr~er·s name and dass, address and phone ~
E'ntries shoujd be sent lo Glendora Johnson.Cooper
Actiog Director, Undergraduate llbrary; 107 Capen Hall.
Norlh Campus, Buttalo. NY ~ 4260-2200 n. .......
Ia F.....,., llladt .a . Winners wtUbe announced at a
poetry readJng to be held on Monday Apol 25.

a

Next Stop, NEXIS.
.~..., . . . . . . . . . . . . of~dleir

10

.

~ .-oe""'-e~OIIo-be~ill
llli&lt;ldd.
II is avoilab\e . I..ocboad l...ilnry"s B~
Doeomc:a!larea.
NEXlS deli...... a.. I!Cif oflboot..ss of
'fhl:lle
illdltde~...SjooPala:M$•FC!rtfp~ F--,

I I I (
'

I

'

~,t,..-

,..,

I l&lt;t ) -...... lc

c

~,.....,.

tJUTDdil)l ~A.r·
•

.\:\ ,

~. ~lid!
.,,..,
N.
7Tw

Nnrri.ri f:'"..,_,.,..

n.i-WC'I-dl&gt;

Ylc:alllich•~

l'ren. bulm, liPI. ud ~ llldt • MI1J.Iilp C&lt;louiclered, o; )1~, ~lfeL$abject._,-olportiat­
lw-.tbiolNEXJSieclude aspec~~oi"Mi-,~
~·~~thet:~~~t.p&lt;­

~politlo.llld ~n,. daoibaeloupdaloll~ ~tbe.t.y IIIII
is ~ 1111 baarJ Locbood lo ClpCil willa die
d
betwticD 2 and 4 p.m.
Fridly ...... the . . .
9JII&lt;m becclmr:l ~ Aniacs- fllll..etst(~,e.. ~ . .
A!:ld die lilltb w:1ic:te~ doe.,.,.,._~. '
~

.....,.tbn!lulb

~ ~-~ anio:ilt. ...s ........... ~
duded. NEXIS -..:s an: fzee 10 dowatoed &gt;lllifaW oi .interM

OIIID b - . d diobalr:a.
Ullillt:a-lbe~dallricl~~ ~..-..
mtn!; MOOS Is Dilly availlble m UB .r-~ty. _. llllmlllly
~istobe-.lialbe4tfdoponeat .

_,........._Tile

pd~,of_....._,
~JOIII.-Uw:ir . . . . . . to ...

' '~-­
..,rwN2XIS-.....

ti:mcM'"fcnDppet-.•t.cp.i!l~lll=:io-.c~~atp.

,...... _

~ c.~NEXJS.

-Doroaw

H~ lod.wooilLilmrry. ~Senlku~

wor, 615-281'1, (lJNT..DON@UBWIJ.

-&lt;ionmoO..~Md l.ms~G4azior, L"""--Utlr.,.

�There i little difference

mdwlonpryofkft andnght..hmdcn

up urrul ~ 65, and nght-banc:kn bw only aboul onr yur ~than kfi..honda. fiom"'" 65 on, a U8

pgnphtr ..... found.
Tbt find~~~g~ of Pau R.og&lt;non. prof..- and chair of
y at U dilfrr otnlcingly fiom mof ..n .... swclln mat &lt;Silmall!d that nght-hanck:n lift up to aitx ran longrr than len .Jw.ckrL
- In a swdy to bo published on a fOnhcommg wut of SonJ ~. Rogn-&gt;00 looUd '"' dw: hanckdnns.
mal status, ag&lt; at b&lt;guuung of earN&lt;, &lt;hu ofbmh and dart of dtath fe&lt; 4,448 bastboll playonluud on
"Tht Sporn Encyclopau:BWball. • Only&lt;"'- pla}'ft$ born bofO&lt;t 1920....,... mdudtd m dw study.Tht
srud al.o wu hnuttd to playns ltsttd as u ' dw: umt hand for battmg and dum.ing.
Usn.g "'" itansocal t&lt;its to """'!'"« dw aumnl """"" of lrfi· otld nght-haadtrs. R~
dttnmtntd that dw: survo al rat&lt;S""'"' surular for both groupo l:ottwtto dw: agn of25 •nd 65. Ho-.-u.

dw: sum•-.1 rat&lt;&gt; of nghl.·hmdn-s borwtm th&lt; agn o b5 otld 85 .....,., nott«ably h
handrrs tn thot :ag&lt; group. Ht found that 21 pattnt of ltfi-h.anckn ahw at

than

65

m- for kft-

ld bo altf&lt; at . .

85, ,..ht.lt 26 ptrcmt of n ht..honda. aln.., at b5 ,...,..ld bo ah .. at 85.
Ht calh &lt;h&lt; ddt.

&lt;xp&lt;a "' ...... dOS&lt;

tO

tn longn-rty "noo:w:nbk but snult" saymg that nght-h.tndt&lt;l65-)&lt;il&lt;-&lt;&gt;lds "an
yur longn-. rlu. or nunus • lottie: mort than half . yrar.•

""

"Thtrt's .amt&lt;hon toot." R enon .. ,.. of th&lt; thtory that n ht-handrn hvtlongtt than ltft-h.tn.kn..
But th&lt; doiTM'tne&lt; on longc-v&gt;t') for dw two groups·,. no&lt;"' sunhng" .om&lt; tudt&lt;S hav. suggo:sttd.
Ht "'Y" rhat "hJ&lt; th&lt;st oth&lt;r tudots ha1·t looktd onl)• at pttsons """"' had dttd, ho .samplt tndudtd
pnrons who ,...,... snU lmng

.. h .• amport.lJU to look

.1(

[.h~ ~~~.-ho ~rt ~tlu J.!u·~

br-.:am.t rh,.,

gl\l""

mott anrorm~uon. " ~ u ~

u

"Thost "ho havt dotd &gt;r&lt; JU 1 f"'1 of th&lt; &lt;amplr
"For rumpk. a e&lt;&gt;nelu.....'Wl. bastJ upon dau on dttt 51':1 ,ndJ,,Juol rlm nght-lundtn
fac1 h. ntgatt&lt;l of n'bU•'&lt;'lj """"'of dw kli-lundtn rmwn ain't.
"F-.n •nch nodtfT&lt;r&lt;ncts on lo~U\,11 orns:l11stoll brup&lt;et&lt;d from an anah

1

lo~

loog&lt;r may 111

oftl&gt;&lt;dtath.on a gwm

pcm-..l 1har ldt-handers ,.&lt;JU!d ha1't'a kn-nmanagtat duth,Mnc&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;fn&lt;'tnClcn« mdJcarr-.tha&lt; thr mnJmcr
o( lrfi-handtdnn

has tn&lt;Tustd

OV&lt;'f

lin&gt;&lt;."

) Tht oncodrncc of kll-hanJtdnns has
llll'l'ta&gt;&lt;d. Rog.non ..)". b.-cau&gt;&lt; •nm1 tuul l.fi-handrrs no long&lt;r &gt;K forcrJ. ;u

has increased beciluM

_ , nabanllleft........... no

rt-

longer- forced,-~. to
UM

their

"-ds. ~

chaldrt'n. H&gt; ua&gt;t tht-1r n'"' ht h.tnd

""l''

R&lt;&gt;g&lt;'f'&gt;On
hos stud) alsodtfT&lt;r&gt; from
ot:hrrs m chat h&lt; ustd a much !Mgtr umpl&lt;
rh:.~n mOSI prt\'tOU Stlldll'\

The

~mplt SLU

brgr rnounh, ht adds. th&gt;l thr ruulu

1

canno1 lx artnbutt'd lo clurw:e.

H•

not&lt;&gt;

that of thM'r arr mwl dt

tt·

cncn on t ht longt''"' of nght-handcn .md

lcfi-hanJc... b.t ,.·«n tiJ&lt; •g&lt;&gt; of :!5 and 65.

•hc:-y

.UT

harJtt

10

dtttCI

In

umrlr&amp; of thJs

uu bt-caust' of rh&lt;' sm~ll nurnbn- of J~ath.s m
th" ag&lt; rang&lt;
Hf' S.) tflC'd1fltrcfl4::(' m long("\ 11\ among

rhOSC' O\tr 65 mJght t...- Jur to thr

rd~uon­

&gt;lup btt .. &lt;m handtd.,....s and &lt;tr&lt;" at bon h.
Argwnt'nt

h.wr lxrn nudt by

SOJllt' N'-

"'archrr&gt; rhat lrfi-hmdrn npm&lt;ner

mot't

pr&lt;n.:n.al otld prnnatal sn~s. "hteh links '
ch&lt;m to a '""&lt;1.)' of dliOrdtn., mduJong
smokmgand akoholosm. brrast canctr. tuly"~' Alzh&lt;, ...... r' s do&gt;ra&gt;&lt; and w:haophrmt.L
Rog&lt;r&gt;&lt;&gt;nl-dontsth&lt;br.t~tlonk-

ng ltfo-hand&lt;r&gt; " llh d&lt;eru&gt;td longtmy os a

1

con&lt;l"f'&lt; called &lt;hr Rar&lt; T raJl 1ark&lt;r Model.
Arcon:img to t.hc modtl. thttt"
dt~nbuuon of hand~dn~ ~

·~

S.Omf .. pachologtc.lJ tntt'r\"t'nllon .. th.lt mumJpcs tilt" NtlJral

caUS(1. .J pt"fC'tnugr of thf. popul:.won lo swuch us h~ndcdnc-ss to tht- stdf'

or posllt rhC' n;uun.ll)' drttmun«&lt;5td(' of pr('ft'n-nct.

For &lt;&gt;ample, m a populauon that

u

90 prrccnt nght-handtJ •nd 10 prrcrnt lrfr-handtd,

mJ,.,duals--say 10 prrcmt- wou)d suiT&lt;r som&lt;

stT&lt;SS

somt

thai w&lt;&gt;Uld s.. uch th&lt;or handtdnos. According

to thr modd, '} prrcm1 of tht natural nght-hand&lt;TS would b.com&lt; left-handm and I prr&lt;&lt;nt of th&lt; narunl
l&lt;ft-hand&lt;I"S would btcom&lt; nght ·handtn. lu .,ng • populao u.&gt;n th.t

1

82 prr&lt;&lt;nt nght-handtJ and 18

ptrcrnt lrft -handtJ.
In thl&gt; kfr-handtd populauon, half would hav&lt; 1ho prcf&lt;Tm &lt; bocaus&lt; of th&lt; onorn,&lt;nong pathology.

Tht probabt~'J' of ftndmg a "pathologocal onJ,.·odual"--on&lt; who' would ha1·r a drcrcas&lt;d sun ,..al rat&lt;'" thr lcft -handtd group would bo 42 llllltS grrat&lt;r than th&lt; probabolll)' offindmg on&lt; on th&lt; nght -handtd
group.
lhe UB srudy was suppontd by a gnnt from tht

Scimct Prts•d&lt;nlUI Young lovesrig&gt;tor Award. '2..

anonal Scttncc Foumuuon and by a Nanonal

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Research on social
issues is a central

s.
concern ol John

2

-8

Bemioe King says
but1dlng bridges
between peoples is
wa_y ofighl
,..._.___
I

......,..,.,_

OR lliEFIRS'MlME..the Univcnll)' II Buffalo, lhroogh the
SUNY Reswdl f'oulldllion. .

~

liking "" equity poo;itioon in
ClllmplllY 1M i COITIIlW:Ici-'iz·
inr, liOChnology ro-de&gt;'dopt.d by a UB fllcuky

member.
Tbe foundation is inv0$ling in lhe Smart
Pill. wtUdl.. lin the tiny $hip in the fllm.
"The Fantastic VO)'agc." is a drug-cidjvery
system designed to carry a medical payload
10 a peoifJC site in &lt;he human gastrointcsti·
llallrliCt. Tbe il\geSiible., declrooically-conlnllled capsule has pcoeniial for impro ~
rreaunent of patients who require repeated
delivery of a drug. such as insulin, to a mall
area oflhe intestine wtwer. it can be llbsoltJed.
It also may have diagnostic appiicanons.
poleDbally replacing or supplementing lhe
enc1osaJpe and """"" invasive instruments.
The Smart Pill was dc&gt;'dopt.d by David
D"Andra, paidcnl and CEO d~
Inc. and direolar d Miu.d Filbmle ~-·
~andllevic:os l..ablnllory. and !Iemme
J. Sd!&lt;:rag. UB pOO:ssu- of phattnacouiJcs and
the ~·· via: pesiCbll of """"'""' and
clevelopmed. Millard Fillmole Haspil3l is • pri·
mary inYOSIDrln .... ampany
UB officials &amp;igned an uclustve license
agreemont Wednesday with offi ials of
Ga5trotarget, lnc., in ito office$ at 750
Ensminger Road. Tonawanda.
Dale M. Landi. UB &gt;ice president for re·
seareh, said lhe agreement"mari:s a new all in
UB savia: 10 new busines dcvelcpl:nml in
our community. Gastroolrget is a young. vt·
brant a:wnpanythal is thepiV&lt;Jt ofa new medical
I&lt;Chnology." be added "II will be a great resource 10 Western Ne"'• Yon:."
andi explained that in cases whe,.. UB
has patent right&lt; oo a tA:Chnology, the
university has !Taditionally received a h·
censing fee from the company comrnercializ.iog the technology. But mlhis insiJUlee. the
founda.t.ion will instead receive equity in
Ga.strota:rget. becoming. in effect. an in\'CS·
tor in the compimy.
" lo this ease. we ' d rather share the risk
and take pan in the gain as Gastrotargct
grows and prospers..- said Landi,
Tbe recent pall:nt issued on tbt Smart Pill
·allows for broad claims to the leebnology.
Olosm by Popular Scima as one of tbt
top lOOinventionsin 1992.theSmanPiU istbt
teSUlt of the combined exp&lt;nise of 0 ' Andrea
and Scbentag in miaominillllUe elearooico,

L

mccb.anicalandsoftwamengioeering.andpharmaceutical scieooes.

Inv~sting in

'Smart Pill'
"Thosdcvi&lt;r allow USIOproled a drug in
.oluuon as it travclslhroogh the Gl traCt and
release it ont.ad JU t u 11 gets to the nght
location.- said Scheotag. He noted that lkhik
noc .-ery drug must be targeted so precisely.
for~ that must. thts may be the only way
tO dolL

lbepiii......Jdbepattirularlyuodul mlr!::lll:ing
digestive disorden. ..dlas Crobn's ~ Be""""' i1. will deliver a modlcaboo ID 1 specific
di!ea!;c SJ!e.lhe desimd lbenopoutit df..:t may be
ao::hioeved ..;Itt less drug. redlM::u1g polel1lial side
dfa::ts.
1lus capsule repre&lt;eot.~ a signifocant adVIIJlCt 1n medocal~«:hnolog)· ... 0 ' Andrea said.

"In this case, we'd
rather share the risk
and take part in the
gain. as Gastrotarget
grows and prospers. "

"Wilb tbt Sman Pill. we have been ablt
mimaturiz&lt; 1 cornpkx elecuoaic S)'llem and
put i1 mto 1 capsule aboul one inch ~
You're 1101 jlHI takillll a pill, you' re s al._mg the in.moment.In reseorchmg.dnelopml' ODd manuf11:·
wring tbe Sman Pill, G II"Otllrp:l is focu&lt;--

'11&amp; on th""' a.pplications.

a Torp:tUIC """' 10

pn:aR ~ Ill

tbtGI~

•

Tesrm&amp; tbe lboorpltou or.., .. and &lt;XH~ ·

qdru

a U..

gtbtSmonPllltosampk~

may-·

or

llirids !hi!
d!omic:al-""""
dileosc:
Clulro1arp:t lho is wort:ia&amp; on • J!U.
bOIIIl ~.osu~ua:s or lieo\ll&gt;-fimoilod study 10
_..._,.,the~lniClllbeAIDS

-AZT. ;..- dfocoiw:.

v~

who an: AIDS ,_..,.. ot Mlltlrtt FillrDwe
l:loqJiull ..ill be involwd in the srudy.
D ' Andtl:.a ~
'aee ~
was esmblished 1992. m&amp;JOI" ~­
tJal companieS hove apressed """""" in
..,..., 1.0 itJ prodliCtS Tbe &lt;lOitlpM)'. wlucb
~oboul20Sman Pillseadlmonlh.
IS wortin&amp; with omnl cornpallie&gt; to the

llboorpboo or drup -

'" dc-Ydopmem

umnl mr:thods of...-..;a drugs"' the
~llal net in"llM the tim!·
&lt;XlllSUIIlln&amp; and .,., ~ mdhod

C

or

- . . . . " ' ..tlidt. 2G40011&lt;JQ&amp;.I:\cdlle~ ..... drug is ......n-od by • ...._,.
in alllllliSI. :d r - · IJir!!ded .,....uue i• ...-.J.

lol&gt;m 1ts ~ is manitortd by • lrlll:bf1&amp;
dc&gt;ice pllli&lt;nts
pan or
The ..,.
hlmes • tiny rompul&lt;:r, • boner)! • • .....,.._.
l ! l d - .....,.. die Clplllle tllrouJ:,tl the
01 tract. 1fbe ~ monilor IS obool dr
Ji.!rdaWaltm&amp;.
Tbe t:rafl&lt;Miner m the capsule produces a cootinuous....,.ve radio fre·
qucncylboli pt&lt;:todupb)'lbe........,..
and mooitor&lt;d by lhe small """lPJler
As the eapsuk passe$ &lt;broogll !be Gl
lnoCt., the ~DteMae
'nually deler·
mme how far it is from lhe &gt;ite 'li'bere it
has bcct1 proc11IIDilVld to ddivl'l" o drug.
Wbeo it ti!OICihet that s:il&lt;O, the recei•-er iu tbe

""""as

a-.

cap:wl• Wriatet !he dru&amp;' • n:iease. Tbe cap-

e later pal

from tbe body.
ludditioo m its pbarmaceutical appl:iealicm. the &lt;~moe lm l)' reveal- informo.
tioo about tbe human body, by
prov;clinr, a more ..,.,..._
the psaroinl&lt;s-

.,.,..or

tinal tria.

•

�..

2
h

"

r

••

f

s

Worst
IDs of
Socie
to*aal
.,••• procluct of the ' 601, ad
lhe bclJd of mc.t II
," 01~
Wod.nb.
~the J_.
B. W111tlcs '"'-reb Prof&lt;UCJr Del
dmoc:lor of lhe &lt;locknl ..........
Del ..-..rdlcelllri'IA the Gnduaie
Sc:hool of Sotiol Woo\ • UB 11
AIJ&amp;UOll993, oftc:nduainJUdl&gt;cd
c::va::r .. • I l l - such .. lhe
Ulliwntty of Akron, lhe Uruw:r'Y of GeorP, lhe Ueh--.:nrty oi
Mloyland. Jotms Hopklu Uehu·
lr:ms ODd lbc """ of 101¥1
)oitY, ODd scw:rol olh&lt;fs.
Tee,..c ~ k""' oleo.·
1'hc:
social ~lrol. dc:pmo&amp;ioe I WIOO
wori&lt; are VCI) d1ffertDI from the
M&lt;le
I ~qll ·
reosoru thai people ao 1
10cia1
clelmc ~ .... violeaiiiC.. on: today." Wodu i uys h.. ior has bccoDC oblolutel~
~If. . -......t
1bae
·-tathe'
of
,_,.,
ol'blvia comI11Cft reoawch
CYCf 10 ta
munity. Webellt'cd lhol an
1
0111 of lbeoe poblelllll "
Soeh problar&gt; pooe oenOQI
bJe. thai - CIOUJd fd
pcoplc OUl ofJ'O"ertY. thai -were
·.,... D&lt;'IJbbor'l ~ccpcr · We really
bel ~eYed ""'rould ma e the world
I bcucr pbtt."
W
begancollegetn 1962.
-J&lt;l'lGJ tn bu&gt;me II F1oncb
"~
Slale Uaivenity But be feb ua·
oomforuble in b!Kineu. be oa)'1.
and 10011 swi bed 10 oociol ....,.\.
HU wort&lt; ia the yeus oince his
becllm11nly in re808rd&gt; "oo all the
soctalprobl&lt;:msof society." beoayr..
with I foc:uo oa the problems of
childrm ODd lllolcscen
Wodanl,; his """""" numaou• books ODd orttclcs oo • huae
ronae of social i..ueo. includina
alrobol education. nutntioll, the
~brats 10 bfe 111 lhc: niu:d
rDCDtal beallb c:nocem of rural
c:ommurutle., and of cluldmt and Wodonlu aoy • pa'tiCUiorly be·
c.ousc they ore all huerrdated_
odok:ooenu. Teochin&amp;blsalto bee~~
imporwliiO him. be Ayr.. ODd 'h t
"Lei' I $0)' I ~ man drop$ OUI
of ldlool," Woo.r.lu sa) . "tk
his nxeiY&lt;.d ouutandinJteac:lun
... on~s from Waslungton Ullivcr- can'1 find 1 jOb. and S1.Vts clrio •
oily in St Loui ODd the Uruversi1y
ing. be
no oontrol of hi impubeo, be goes oa dru be his no
of (ieorgtl.
mooey ODd eventually be '""'
n the Graduolc School of Soctal
cnme 10 Jupport hu h.abots T
or1&lt;. Wodanlu •• duues ••· many P""!'lc obese da are &lt;loon
clod&lt;. the pii.MIDJ and dc&gt;·cloputg
thai
-A prison mmok onoe wd 10
of "''o'"""' for the school. fec•h·
tallng tudcnl devclopmt'nl and
me, 'Dr Wodlnb, "'htn I lulled
lbat guy, ll "' lbe hoJbesl rush. ·
thetr "'"'"' wilh facuh). and coordinating st.~Ch acuvttlat wJth vari·
n..o epllom!zcs wbae ceno.io
ousporuofUB ODd the wnoundmg . J'COPic .... ;, lhi sociely.
community
"ll!tint our judicial )'Sirm his
Bu1 for Wodan~• . n:scan::b on
g&lt;&gt;lloC cnzy--and lhi• i soc1al issuesrema~nsaccncral coofrom the '60s spcakin&amp; We' ve decern. "Unfortunately." be points
veloped IIOCICiy lbat his I ,.11olc
ou~ "v.hal ~lhought wcooulddo
lill of excuses for life dvelle ·
in the '60s didn'llutppco. lllc real
bchovicr. Violence affects e_,tl)rellto our society is DOl the dcfi.
Amcrican-y&lt;iu .... DOl imrDilliC 10
ci~ bul our en&lt;JmiOUS !iOCtal pro!&gt;violeace an)"'"''Cre yoo are."

,.......,_,1110

11111011TECTURE

___.._.
~­
.................. prpleleorof
.....
been elec:led ct.mlen of
NIWW~tor

SaleWld ~ PYodUCis.~wes~

~-·u.c~~­
eociaiiDn
rapr-*'g1he
of produc1

~lll!d~pro­

lessloNI&amp;. to locul on

of prodUcls and
seMces lor people
dlsllbllilills. or lor lhe "'lonQ·
~

ca., ..... assoaate profas8orof~e. has

been eleC:$ed one of 18
loln:IJng dlredor&amp; of ""'
New ""'t..nc~
Conservancy
The WNYlC 1$ one ot 400
such conservanoes In the
Utiled Stat wll0&amp;8 JU·
110M the prtl(eclion ot

w-

agnfficanl ...wonmental.

hlstoricel. liii'Cheologloal
and arehilec:llnlleatlns.
The Consl!lrvancy does
!IllS thrOugh donation of
land from property owners,
or lt1rpugh - The
WNYLC wot1&lt;a Mll .propeny
owners,~.

00"-

ermwul~and
CClf'l'l'l1UI'I gtoups 10 Identi-

fy lll!d -

prqpemes.

polentl8l

"I think our judicial system has gone
cra.zy--mui this is someone from the '60s
spenking.
've developed a odety that
has a whole List ofexcuses for life
threatening behavior. Violence affects
every American-you're nor immune to
violence anywhere you are. "

WUI 10 do d. but thr
)
llllyblloo
0........,.
IMY be 10 ba.-e ll:lhaols .-n ....
..,._ ioiAindJool ~tba
could pvoe
._.,
'lity."

' • eUI!IIpk of d&gt;e ,.,)
...~odlootscould cab: 00 par&lt;r
rap:.sihobbal. 9.''00..-.b ooaosu

--

I

lldcdia1~......,.....,ve.

~~ .Weaecdmloot
01 cclucllioa, • welfon:.alheCIIWI·

1111 joQicc lltd n..-1 bclllb .,....
- - all lhe syat:mS .. .
tociefy tba inl&lt;nd '"'"' .tolcoad1"
l

ThtAipo'w••~~,..,..._pubW'II:Ib;h~d~...a~SW.~al,...l'Oitl! ....... ~dka . . -..."\311Qallll ..... ,.,....,(7. . . . . .

~t:l~ - .. --~mnat --- ~ltf:DO'Ca. ----. I#G~ -

....... ~·""'~ ----- ~ ....... - - -

�FSEC discussion centers
on quality of campus life
~

j

AUACII

INO 11iE QUAUJY
of camp.~~ lifE a UB, Pacr
c:boir ollbt
It)'
110111
fW:ulty S.....
Execuii""Comminoelall
)'011 dllllk obaul il iMiou¥d • you
UJibta.cluPonlholrbr:rc'so
"How do - laJow
we bow a
problcm1--.aiOmCibody; ~lllid.
Wheft It CC111&lt;510 qLIIIil)'ol amp~~ life
duuomobody
· yio faculty." be lAIII.
V.aor Doyno of ea,tiotl. ,...,........, 1bt
"'""llsofo19 1989faculty-,.dc.£
by the OffiCe of lnstitutiaNII
CIJ the
qualtty of focu.hy life, lllld
the survey
bad covered 127 dilferau ..... ud uLal
faculty
buic queslJOOll about mo..: • ·
c:a-whot their p-.- lll.il[.c:Qoa with 1
""""area was, ud •f sotJ facu011 .... ~ow.
ho •mponut it
w "'iiJ'IPR)ve lhll
area Ooyoo Utd
lhllthe sun-ey.,....

t'""

-.

pm~y

oawtJve

tniUUnteltl. and we
learned 1 ftumber of

proocb O K - time." Doyao
• 1f
'
~
... OIJOIIide ....,.
do A111111...- tep01t. aed publllh it."
db- Clcorp ol ED '-uta
..tlyar.:..ltyourvqOllquolltyoflife
1101 be "tcpc::llcd potiq" a UB
Doy.o said 1MI be
IIIII" ,.,..
era!. it'sJOOd"' have a
a. a fl¥C·)"Ca'
..,.._, 11 ha
policy • B.a lie
!hal doon the...,..,.,. bad
a
deal of wort&lt;. and .., Jl
~ "'
diJcou Wluch
ld be lbt proper
do the.......,. io the fuluno.

"'*"'

-r
been.-

s - 1 S&lt;:bd: of ,.._cbel!LIIbl:s
..tldbl:rfa:ultybdiewd
.............
•
. ~y
bo.., •
More.-diiObe*-thMjuaiO
lbt
I'OIIUiu.• Scbod: oaid. '"'1bcft . . , t. 10 be a
...., oa w1wt . - bon
~
andwhofst.-donubo.a
TJx.poople
millht thinklbt uni-.it;y CMid.•
Wlllilm Miller of
Dental MedJciae

"How do we know whether ..-..-....
......,._..........,
we
e a problem?-we
"* ....
k
body.
Whe
.
vey, and
""""'
as some
.
n Ll
the c1a1a. If ibe ....

~~u;t;-mooumpor· comes to quality ofcampus ::!!:.,~~
lcifie issues, that omebody onet!Ua.tfit'sdoK
Corw.,rbr:rc's..... in identifytnB usually isfiaculty.. ,
..,. of.....,..._.

lint results of tbe
iUfWy,Doynouid.

Nnlll-

0enrus Mabttof
Ea~Jnccna&amp; .sdod
llutl "'ryou expen
tbe
IDI&amp;U1lb011

10 take lh' ICOOWi1y,

it's YCr)' llllpOCUniiO

of "low SOIJS..
)
foctioa and hisb
tmportance"-ar·
Cll i.n wtUcb faculty
were unlialisfted aod felt that illlp'Oventenl
wu imporunL But Doyao
lllld llutl it
wos ncc:euory, 10 ..... of higb satisfiCIJOll.
"lo let pooplc who
io ibole ore11 """''
that ""'oppreciale them." Otbcrwlse, be uid.
~50011lbooe areas """'t be dCIJt 50 well "
lbt 121 aonqnc~ __
26 fdl talbt

decide ..,. ooly who des\po Cite

ca~oepyof"'owsotisfoction. htab~

c:onant

IIUS

won:

or

Theoc includal quality of W&gt;llergr1odua cduatliocl. faculty n:&gt;enli!IDCft. morole both within UIIIIS and oaoulbt ..,;_,.,ty,
~- audcnl reauiune:nl aod support. ..,.
dtmic adviocmcDt. .........m support. aa1f ....
cruitment,oupponforinnovlltiOil.andpaRins
'1ijghl now.! doa'tlbink...., neal more lllfor.
mationllln.llbtqualilyoflife,"Doyno.-1. -we
should _.wid&gt; the~ nw)'1&gt;e for
the next ,.,..JIId I holf,JIId ......... ttawcns in
lmnS o( ~ We an p-lioe ,...,..,
JlOOii lltd _ . on ,......, bad." Such _ .
perbopoa&gt;uld be done~ lbtcl&lt;am!Wtils.
Doynouid. ~lhinpdown
prolllcms in • pri:Wr' uniL
"It's imporuntiO focililllecbanBO. aod 10
be &lt;pedftC about what needs 10 be dCIJt,.
Doyno said. But be .sdod t1w it wu his
"b;osed opinion~ lhal it wu bard 10 move
beyond tbe survey Olal"· '1 think tbe Faculty
SeiUlle sbould try the g..clual, c:ollegial op10 change."

..,....,..,em.

q---

flliie. !Jut aJ50 ,._bat questions ore ast.ed "
On-qualir)o(~ bie-Ot.ieo
~ o( t:lcaliolry JqlOI10d lbol the ...... o(
·~club for fll::o*y" both t..:nc lltd
llll1dy '1DthefifucolltdA.ui&lt;o.lhiK •more
llln.llbt ~ o( poq&gt;le dou'l
~~mop on~" Gonad Aid. "And the

Wd SCI&lt;oet hmal rctatl!y hod a &amp;a.illl!&lt;
ll1dt: 011 the quality o( ~ ltfc b"

F

aculty hfe today" "really JOIDB down

lull .• Gan....-.ck oatd In tbe pill. beroB •
faoultymember~pn:sup:." be wei.
'1t' omely 10 pontt out what tbuJ1S 1ft aaro.cu•e IOdoy about faculty life 011 Clf11lUS." be
added GIM:Iic:k said thtl delibc:nttions wm:
already beinB made at UB about CClllllniClinB a
new buildinJ for a faculty club.
Marprc:t Aan ofMcchcioe oad BtorrtOdlcal Sctcnca SDd llutl it .,.... ~ for the
Faculty Ser.- 1D ban iDpul oa lbt locolioa o(
1 faculty club. And Vt&lt;*Jr 0oyoo added !hat d
was ~ llutl we doa'l &amp;d lidclr.:ted
on tbe issue o( a new buildm&amp;- We've beea
lrliand to think new buildin,p oolve problans.
bull think lbtR Jbould be a place for a focu.hy
club .........t&gt;c:re 011 Cite apiac..
0

COf1llnued from pege 1

tbe ad~ study o( the vdalll oru •'llhm
the UTA
o( An ud An Kiaory
Dorsa&amp; bu a - . Harm F bcou Coculty m10 tbe
~ by oedcUt
llteu topu! aod uocorponun llteu tdtas 1e10
ilS JOIII.s. He atCOill:q'Od imerdllcipltGll)
faculty raearc:h lhroup
cunted abibtbO ad publtQC..-, l •
- ~.., p-o;ecu ,.Jtb ~

o..--

••YOI•- ••

~aodbea-a~ . .

llc:tworld 1 orpaiuiJoD for area cunten
and ... ocnter dira:lon
I.-ado(~
work II) cshtbllJoa
~ CRCAclhibi
uYdla.....e~

and rdatedoccriiJalleo'"&gt; s, pl&gt;otocrapbs and reprodUCtiOn

-.p&lt;na~ ....cb ldeYMI rdoreac:a from"""
eiiC. potiuatl and philoM1pbiral""""""'" Theoc

"""'*

pulll..ttcd by the pllery ..
obOer. _ o(tbe lf1W&lt;td I I ) . .
luplo .,.,..,._ .
Hanu F expocu tbe U8 p1lcry 10 ploy a
nnilor role 011 compos nd ao the community He uys lbt pllay ..,u suppon 1\'·
oearcb cfforiS lhll e~tte contrtwc:nul
.; 1 from vinOUS on forms The
dtscuuooa ~ .. ill be clocumellted.
1 )CJiltDalllutl praears pi lory octivn&gt;&lt;s m a

rea-oJ aod aatiouJ OOIIInL
UTA AnOcponmcat Owt Katda N&lt;lrtlt
dc:ocribcs CRCA's propam uncler Harm u
"incredible." be wd. "AI bcouJhlour pilay tniO both the reP&gt;nal ood .,.;o.w ..,.,..
""" by prescDttaa imparlant rqioctalll'lUlS
tn a CLilion.al c:ooca.t...
IODc:t T)'IOil. an cntic for the Fon Wonlt
SIGr-T•Iq..-,calledCRCA '•p . .
"ripouu. biJbly a.:qJlUitl. ""'&gt;' ...........

-a

coUydrivea.-reullill&amp;.... liRAI~.
"He's a very bardwon:in&amp; oniJt willa a
dhic; ... •iaJdlec:QoaJ with •
JOOd fed bpc:opleaodqtoiltCitlbobc'-."
ibe uid. "He bn:totobol the hue o( suppon

ripouo

won:

b-

....,., qaenllliiOI

-

.....-

-· ... """'*"

~

~--bmoilmod
......, and

"''ltd ~ -

~~....,...,._,.beta o(

I .I

......,

ICI-

-

lilrnmalloon. •
ltdcr Hams F~ C'RCA ~CO&gt; ·
end ............. vandy o(..,..,. -s ~­
queady -nee~ t11e won of repttMIWUIIS
10 tbaoc of ...................

0 ..

praoc:llled duna&amp;
tipO&lt;U o( donat&gt;c

-

lhroucfl. .._, odx:r

•••

,,.,leaoe

ao uueal

of docluac m.1&lt;cd lh
ad deadl doiG. A.atbcr bl.led "'Borda
NqDDoboDs ud lcleMIIy," . .
dreued
rc'-110 the U .-Meucu
borda ond 10 u UtdiYidual's odatlbty
Cllllbft.
....... ~
oad
by
Teus aniiu o( clutiDdl~

exhi

w-

cldl-edwoc~-

. ....

made up the
,.......
e 1ft excitnd and Clllllplcldy ...t;.
dcalm tile lc:adcnltJp be Will piO\'t&lt;k b
plle:ty." an. said.
"I
new and eaciuna ....X: ....,.
B

u..n.

ro.

udthercp:~~~ "

Hanu F holds a master of fine _.. drpu ,. poi.o
from Stcpbea F.
S...lhlivavcy,. ~Texa.-.1
dqreei•
Mexico S... U01¥Cnit . He
l.pt •
UTA. the UDJvcnily ofTe
El "-o. -.1
El "-o eouu-~y Collqe. He ... oc:noed
01 a Dumber of boards ud ~~~ foo-Tc:us
... cqan...OO.... ..
as a potiiCtist or
leVCDI) N'EA ovaview • projocu
&lt;XtaiDiillees.
0

·-oC...

.-..am-

"CURRENT IssUEs IN EnucATIO "

lHI t:Ji~Tr:nl edJ«:Dliona/ issuu.
SPEAKERS: G. Alfred Hess, Jr.• Executive Director, Chicago Panel on Public School Policy and Fm.ance
Linda Pericins, Associate Professor, Department of Educalional Foundations, Hunter College, CUNY, NY

GrodUJJlt! snuhnts from rht! University ar Buffalo and rrgional schools will discuss reot!nii'Ul'al'Cir

March 5, 1994, 8:30 am to 5:00pm
Center for Tomorrow, University at Buffalo North Campus
FREE AND OPEN TO 1IE PUBLIC
For further infonnation contact: Graduate Student Research Symposium Committee, 461 Baldy Hall, Univenity
~ tkpar11fiOUS and trtUhla~

alCIII

HeltnJorallla~ ............

The Second :\.nnual (;,·aduat(.l Student
Reseat·ch S~· n1posiun1

Sponsored by:

p&lt;MCIIr:

ooaoly .............. -

Buffalo, 645-5995

l1lldDtt assodaliDtu of~~~ &amp; Policy
and uanWr.1 &amp; /11Stn1CtiD11: Ulli~nily"' Blljfalo GSA. G~ SdiDol of Ed#c&lt;ztioft

�4
Ifllrodudn,g . . .

OA SYSTEMS,
ERVICE

C.

REPAIR CENTER

quaUry, depoldable, professional mainLenonce
ervku designed f or du!

Sta Uni-n

t

ot

York 111 uft:alo

mM COMPATIBLEPC'5
NOVELL &amp; LAN SUPPORT
APPLE MACINTOSH PRODUcrs

_
____ w
.---- -·

Also: PlUNTERS &amp; TYPEWRITERS

....,.,.
. (),_,,..,_
....,._Do
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- . Ual

-u.w-.-~
....,

U.•-

-·'-s,
..
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.,. Goil4 1111 Orp.ots.

MO ·Il

AY

~].)0p.a

THURSDAY

For eos1 competitive pncing and rcliabibty, call now for

your qootc

691-0001

~

repair!!!

luidfu I

pM A.

JaM

~. - U.. 454

.-.-c-l· ....

no. CJcy .. deolt• c....ry,
&amp;ea Huot 4 31 Clem&lt;n
-

c.mp... """
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w.. Gnftole
Prier to deo ltSO.:

Lordl...-

Tle&lt;~oloeAfrican

........... r ....

-

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o..--Y ...... K,.-

~TSAT4PLUS

Meation this lid and reaiYt' fBEE la.b or oa ) 'O&amp;tr fint

7
---....---Sl.- .j(J,·- --atA

llllo. Undo M. P&lt;rt
ouoee""'
ptol..-. H.dlt&gt;fy ol Edl&gt;ooteoo.
HuMcrCollcJ&lt;. CUPN 17
Baldy i"or1h Compus. 2.30 p.rn
Tbi lecture ' Pll1 of abe
U~VoteaVItl

iq Sc:llolan' Locom: s.n..

~cou-­
s...,.,..
Kdlcn. DqiL of " " '

I'!Ulotoplly ol S&lt;!CII&lt;o:.
lodioooU01v.. Bloom._. W
Baldy. l ' l - Compus. 3 p m

lOt}'"""

- . n a t sc.NCIE

~·"'....... C.U.bonetloo o.od
~1... 11•-o.od

~~---­
c:o..s.c.
Sldft&lt;r, Lane D&lt;•dop....,.cOC'p14 Koo•l'lCampus 3 )() p m

-

... w--r.... ~

..

-u.uoo~
~ 6.30...S9 p.m....-..

~...-­

w........,

c-~

4-6p.tn. Sip up ..

2S9~

...,..._,._~

Tie&lt; u.. ·~c-1.-.!laf-iloCiilli&lt;.al

-~­
Piw..a&gt;d--.

wu ...

AMI---...

c.......,. lllll&lt;n-. s . ulllOpAI.....,..__Sl,
.... ~-~
...,
clems. U -'10 11U othcn

- ...

Tie&lt; ~ hrple. Student
U..ooe Theiler 1'16rm 1\dmimon n . ..-..
U.50. all othcn.

eo_..

UUMFILM

Uke Watrr ,for Clloeolate.
SludetM U•tOft 1"hc.au:r Nardi

Campw. 9 p.m. Adrmuion. Sl.
SIUCXMs; S3.50. all olleen

~ol .........y.

-.........

~6848aldyl'l­

~- lp...

T. . . . . deo~Oiooll

a....-.,_-

~­
Tonn C...
...-lor T__..
Colo
,.... 9 ..-..- 4 ,)0 p..M For Jtltor

-____
---=-

S.c-"" L.

Shofu, M.D .. Aulll. l'rof..
!)qll o r - s....foo~
Utt•" S08 Coot.r North Cam
pu. 4 p.m

R.wrLM&lt;.--

call64~-61&lt;10

-IIIILU

SATURDAY

-......~,.,. .

_.__
a
--

Crtdaol Utono-r .......

821 -s.:- Lil&gt;nrJo
Soullo ~ 10.... 0 le;

I

H

Om-all._ .. - - .
() Alfnod lku. Jr. ud .__
P&lt;n;los.. I a is doe&amp;..,..,..
Du&lt;aor. Otiao&amp;ohe School Pob&lt;y ud Fi~

00-

I!Rd f&lt;rtJM" U

...--.fin&gt;.

or

Architect..e and Planning offers an exhi.btt, "L'Enlanl's Plan· VISions
Washington. 1791-1991: from March 2·25 on Oyett Exhibition Hall. South Campus

�• $349

14' Color Monitor

·--- 1f..o;;~~-~
- ~.t ...,,~lUI .......
• · - Hanl dnv&gt; • •""' ltAhl " • lS" Ht&gt;dnw

· ~ - ~~ · (Jir(l!;~ · ) ftMtlif'U~
4n~'Mio\1"f'VVt\

Marin

Wmdows

$90

. _. . . .MI...

h

$90

The men's basketba learn ran liS wiming Slfeak 10
llvee
Its langeS1 SV'lCe entering the tarikJ ol
OMSIOO IIIYee seasons ago, WI an 88-SO w::10ty
&lt;M!! Ch~eago Stale last Monday night at A1umno
Arena The Bulla led, 34-31 , afll!r a half ltlat saw 12
leacl c:hart;es end opeoed up a 50-39 lead trOdway lllriiii.Qh t~ secoo&lt;1 haK
Stat
fougtlllo Wllh!n bw, 64-62, wllh sl• mtnu1es le!t
oo I Bulls forward Myron Ban s soaed s· poonts
down the stretCh 10 secure the UB Will fl8saun
Young ~ the Bul s wuh 2 \ pomts lillhle Banl&lt;s
scored 18 and pulled 00v;n e&lt;gt11 rebounos. Mod&gt;e
Co• added etght potnts ana d1Shed M a ~reertvgt&gt; 11 assr&amp; s
'

o-.

cn.c.oo

-YSAT•rwa

-

.._ .~, &amp; . . . - " .....
. . . - - , l o u Rtnllldt Mil
am-.
ll:lOpA

-c::.n.-

Pluo~lt!l-

-- -~

Goodycor H11ll. 5oodl c:.n,p.n,
2-4p.m.

-

-NLLS

F......-...u.c M- Sardo

SUa ..... • HUliNET. 8 21
Heallb 5cieocu Li!nry -

Campn. 3
requjr&lt;4,

p_m.

re&amp;i:str~bOI'I

lleplolloooolB..............

17 Z1K nac- G-.: Sholies• MZF-1, Dr. Paer

or-.

Bndfonl. UB OqJI
"'*'':y ood Eq&gt;c:rimefllal Thcn-~f'orba'SoodiCIIm­
JIUL lt:JO~.....
--.a&amp;.8CIDICU

-

l ~tlt&lt;Gft&lt;ll&lt;

~T..U:

C..te Vio &amp;NA I'AI.... 1Ia ta..

H11,..1ti&lt; C' * - •• UUAB

su-MoW~ti,..,..

(' offl!.'tboullt. StudeM Union.
NonbC- 8p.m.

,..,,.......,DriMIIIhll
Gou. OqJI. olN&lt;&gt;I&lt;:allar-Blol"'l'.t. Mi&lt;:nJbiolocl',C.,.
Wew::ra Relcrvc UW:v 12 I
Coo«. Nar1ll CJmpu 4 p m

WEDNESDAY

-ncsc~

9

n..r.mn.C&lt;JIIIIclllhu• 103
Dod011do&lt;f South Compu&gt;. 4

a.--au~~ Ceajeebte li
T~ Wllsa•4. Prof Pa:u.l

p.m.

-~

Workdlop. 4 ~b p.m. Stgn up

_..._

11v c"""'"" " - &lt;il a~a~n~
TriAIII, !&lt;a= DoH. PhannD.
candldote. 2411 Cool.&lt;. North
Clmpus. la.m,

--L
-.,_-·~

Adnll&lt;lt!d G ..... p ........., AD
t:.porioatlal . _ . ..
&amp;.nit Collins. Wd Center,
Alumni ....._. Doemco Cnllqe.
Amhenl.ll:45 a.m.-l:JO p.m. ""'

--SKilLS

informlblll callbU-61.0

.-n 2S9 Capen,
ftWIIIACBinCS -...ut
Tom! up;d 1 _ . _ , no.
Krr•• ~~

Pblr'm.JOe:utia. 508 Cooke

North C -. 4 P'"
-YSAT•I'WS
l'oo&lt;ry R&lt;aclinc: n..Puotry
Secioty ol A.ma •• "Oistiad
Tracl.itJoDs• Nat:ioa:al Toa.r.
Ray A.. Younc Bear. Cecilia
\ rteuDL AJN Shadtd Ah. and
Tol [)em(laOIC, PQ&lt;Iry/Rm:
Boob Room.4:!0Capen Nonh

l o t - to HUB "ET •

Campw:. 4--6pm
W.UFIUI

""'"1&lt;4

-WELL PAIIIl STAFF
D r. Pder '\o\~b:ytL lnllotitu1.e for
MOI&lt;allu Biology and B;o&lt;odl
noiOJ)\ MeMmer Unh•Hamillon, Onlario . H1lleboc

AuditOI'ium. R PCI . 12 -30 p.m.

Forwula-

tioas. Balasubtam:ar1.11m
Sa!hyamangalaw Ph1&gt; • Pos;t
lloetooti 1'&lt;:11"" UB Ocpl. at

H""J)iUib-UBUbnr,- . , . ........n.. Bll Heolth
Scieoocs Ubnry, South &lt;:atnpm.
10 un. No rqiiln&lt;ico

-

.....

c~•.- Dodoloa· Moklaa

l4tll Alulllal

y.,......., or ADi·

matioo (16mm). S1udt:nt Uo•un
Thealcr. North ClllliJIU'- 6'30
aN! 9 p...m, Admw.tOO · U . llU·
dcnr.s~ SJ.so. an Cilher\
UUAIIFKM

I A.lll My Owa \\oman. Stu ·
der:n lJnron Tbelner onh Cam
pus. 7 p.m. Admi$$ion · S2. ~u ­
denls:~ S3.SO. al1 ochen

~acti:NICE

CCIU.OQI-

James Ptlslt'~"St)·. Brandc:as
Univ. 280 hrt. Hall. onh
Campus. l :30 p .m.
CAIIIDI ·~ AJID

~Tiv
ft-0. 1...,..,.: How to
l•prow the ·P rueobtioo. for
ladawy....,... "...,.__ 330
Studetn Uolon. North Campos.
l :30-5p.m.

-- ·~

HJII..........,. ol ta.. filly
Valley, .Y. WUiiom M.
·K-11, Hydro!Q,IJI. U.S. Gooloj:ical Sunocy, Wau:r R...,...,.
Di•isioo. lduocll. N.Y. 454Froo·
cuk. Saud&gt; Cllmpus. 3:30p.m.

EKHISITS

w....-• ......_.

The Royals pul together a 1CJ.O n11 late rn the
game and held on 10 defeat A11anttc 0 member
Duquesne 6IH&gt;5 Saturday atternoon a1 Alumni
Arena to conclude theit regutar season
Duquesne ral1ted Wl1h an 1 Hl '"" mu,way
through rt&gt;e $8COtld lla.~ 10 gtve the Lady Duke a
57-52 lead With 6'0 1 to go In 1he game However ,
the Royals lmmed&gt;alely answered wi their own
r\11, lhanks 10 six poif1ts Dy freshman po1&lt;1! gua.ro
Bierma Doty UB ICed rt from the ITee mrow line as
Brooke Smith nAiled a P"" Wllh ~ 2 seconds left

y-

ol-ia&amp;toD. 1791. , ••• from Mud! 2-8 . The
uhibiL in JJ.llle$ Dyeu Eshibiliou full. third floor of H11yes
Hall, SQwh C.mpus, is free and
opca I.Otbt public. II C'.U ·b t
seet~ from 9 un.-S !p.m. Mao·
dllysthtollah Fridllys,

lnfomwtim1

and Melanie Vogel hfl a pan wi! 14 seconds 10
go For the game US was 1:&gt;-ol-14 from !tie lree
throw l•ne UB shot 46 4 per-.e'lt from the lloof m
the contest
Daly seo&lt;edt3 pomls lor ll'oe Royals (17-91 ano
&lt;itshed QUI hve assrsls Seo101 Nao '"" MastrOiOO
added 13 Wit three asSJsts East Coast Conte&lt;
ence f.eld goa perceruage leader Kns Holtt Ia oeo
12 pomts on SJX-ol-ntne shootmg wh•·e Sm
grabbed tour stea Is
Earher 10 the wee' the Roya ls lei lo Marquett
1n Milwaukee 80-51

Wrestling
Tile Bulls wrestling team tlfoke an 11-matcn oual
meel losrng stre by defeal•ng DuQuesne 25-16
Saturday aflemoon •n Alumn1 A"~""

Freshman Geocge Gharroun earned a ma!Of
aec•s.oo for the Bulls With his 11-0 shuloot viclory
over DuQuesne's Geo&lt;ge Ekas at I 77 pounds
Anthony Conte a!SI) tool&lt; 8 4-2 wtn over Man
Burne~ rn the 150 pouno bout Three wresllers ,
RICh Meyers (I 18), Dave OuBrava {126). and Sean
Mclaughlln (Heavywetghl) earned ..clones by
Duquesne forleltures
UB closed out thelf ciuai meet season wtth a
record of 3-12

lndoorTI'IIdl
The men's and women s IOdOOt trao squads uaveled to Notre Dame over the weekend 10 partiCipale
10 the Alex W1lson lrMialtona• The women's !Tile
relay learn ol Sttortey Moody Terry Scheme. Tonya
Reto and Jame Horschman 1001&lt; lust place in a
schoOl recad llll1E! ol 3:58 77 Reid alSO set a schoOl
recO&lt;d rn tte 2())-meter n.&lt;tltl25.54.
On the men's S1da, Cllrts Keenan set a VB
record"' the 3,000-metet run tn 8 '42 8 whole Kevrn
Wrnkler placed his name "' the record txlclks Wtlh 8
500-meter run ~me ol 1·os 00 Winkle&lt; teamed up
wtth his brother Kns along With Enc Aschletn and
Fumu Gakodt to set a record on tte mile r ay at
3 1838.

-Of'W..-n~M'

T1v UB S&lt;bool ol A~
taft :aod IP'I:umill&amp; otters u
u11ibi1, •L•Eaf-' Plaa:

For Workshop

-·•Tennis

The n-en 's tenrvs team spill a pair ol matches
Salurday 8!ternoon al Sl Bpnaventure, dafea~ng
Duquesne 6-1 and falung to the Bonnies 6-3 to
g•ve VB a 1-2 spnng terws record
Luis Gurri (llOOlber 4 SingleS). M1l«! Proulx (number 5 sit1Qies) and Orrin Pndgen (number 6
singles) earned victor.es ;n both matches to lead
the Bulls.
-Spomi lnloml8rion OepaflmBnl

Orders for ihe

1994 edition of
'l h.e .B uffakmian
are still being taken!
Be ~ LO ft:~er\1~: )'OUT cop:y
ofUB'II oldest publia.tioo!
Htm")l the number of copies is Umitedl
1M WI ..,.,.,...., a &lt;Xlfl)' of the book in )'OUT name
and anotbrf- S5 will set it shipped (0 wbt:I'C:'rel"
you wmtl (Don't rorg.,t. campus mall u &amp;eel)

"Send o. cbedt or m&lt;11&gt;c:y
cnSc:r &amp; •$35 1p1... $S u
JC1U ant obipPnl.) •tb

.--101

,...... """'"' t1dilreoo and

Uniw:mly• Jlultalo

""~
m Studml t!1nion

~

fll&lt;lar.602JOO

Aolibenl.NY 14~o0

�_,

8

____...

Richard Erb returns to UB as
Distinguished Alumni VISitor
...... D.
~
_....,.._ ofthei~"' M..-.y
'Fuad IDd a lf'll'h*e t&gt;f UB , will !'dum tD arnpus 001 Fridly, MM'Cb 4, u a UB
~i.shcd AI
. Visilor.
Etb. w11o oc:rvat ill the
•.. Hooooe from 1m-14 .. • il.n'
110 the
Ptuidenl IDd
• Wll diRICIOr of the Counc31 "" lntcmllional Ecooomlc PoiJcy.
will be boacnd at a publtc breakfut at 7:30a.m i the H)'ltl Rqcac)' Buffalo
At the breakfast. c»-lpOIIIOI'&lt;Id by the UB Alumni AsiiOCtlUOn and Rep Joblll.
LaFalce. he will pres&lt;:Dta tal oa..,. Good Old Fut.we: vot,· Trends Toward
GlObal Gftl,.'th and Ptot;penty."
At II Lm.• ia a praealllioo&gt; for UB [ lty, ouoden and il.n', Etb will d
the glObal challeAp t&gt;f CCOCIOCIIia and~ His talk will Wz pi""" lAthe
tbeau:r oa the IC&gt;ClOild floor t&gt;f the tudeft~U
• 011the ortl1 Campus.
Etb, who ....,SWIICd from UB iD 1963, has
oathe il.n't&gt;fthe llllCmaiJOIUII
Fuad siDce 1911. Hlo joined theorp·
• ·
e&lt;OCUll-e dJRICIOI' for the U111tal
we&amp;. and in I U wuaamod dqluty
.,.
in&amp; director.
The lntcm.U.ional Moadary fund U·
pc:rvilelthe i nltl'llllional tDIJIIIt'.W}' I)'Sienlllld
provides linaacial ouppon tD illi 1711 member
COUAtne&amp;. In odditiou 10 savma u a ~
or
member CXlWltrieo to discuss important li
clal and monel.lr)' i
. It ocds the balanocd
BJOwth of intt:mat.iOIIal trade. h also ppons
long•term efforu at cc:ononuc reform IDd tran
formation i_a member countries. such as there~
esuhlislunmt of nwtct ccooorrues 1n the
countries of Easlem Europe IDd the former
Soviet UIUOG.
From 1917 I, Etb wu a I'Chdeot
fellow with the Amcncan Eaterprise lmtitule
and a COMUIWit to the c:omptrollcr of the
eurrency1ntheU.S. Treasury DeparunenL H.o., thedepanmeut' cleputy0$51Slant
leCI'etal)' for developing oa ·
finance from 1976-17.
Etb, ..to has a cloC1onte in economics from Stanford Univenity. has held
fcllowsbips from Stanford. the Woodrow WiiiOft Founcbtioot. Reoour&lt;:a for the
Future and the Counc31 011 Foreign Relauon

King urges new dedication
to 'celebration of life'
dtmF il inevtl.llbk, llhe bdJC•

E HAVE fORGOTTEN bow
to "cde~ life," lkroicc A.
clauJI*r of slauo aVII
ri
leader Marun Llllher
Kin Jr., IOid a ke Haii~UC~Joeace Feb. 24.
AI ~ speaktt for the I th aDDual
Mania Llllher KiQJ. Jr Cornmcmoraoon.
KJft Utd lbal100 maay people hllve forr&lt;JI·
tell the great aduevm&gt;m rqrt:sefttal by
Marua Lutha Ki I · Jr Day
)
"'f...,' reJOiniiOdoj tioeiODr. KJft&amp; '•
Je&amp;ocyandttulyc:ddnlei~ tbcol""'!!""'be

hoDCIIly committal 10 the elimioaooa of
thooe lhillP ia our society •'hid! probi 1
hf~. racism. and ww."IOid · a.
quotin&amp; ber father"• l'*"'iJlP
Y&lt;lUfWICIIclai.lt!l*r&lt;XCorcaa Scoa
and
Monm ~ JGna.lr. Bcmioe
.,_ .....
6na public &lt;DDon • tie. eX 17 10 tie Uailod
She is ., IIIDniCy and .. om.n.:d
forO.....Ru!IS...BipcillOutbm

...u..-

Do You
Want To

Reduce Your
Drinking?
Free assistance for male and
female moderate to heavy drtn.kers
(ages 21 -55) offered by the AWARE
Program. 8-week study includes
free medical exam. Requires
involvement of spouse/partner
or frtend . All participants paid.
Flexible hours . Fully confidential.

Allanlund~rolermclclbat"""'*)'OIIIhs
~AMEN CAd!"" ·Mftsoa-o ~.,
~ ..tJict1
&lt;X&gt;blnlbl. She Ia bca&gt;

&lt;*db) Eloty ..,..,_.QIIe(](t.e "SO!Adm
dTOIJICI"IOW.·
President Wilham R. Greloer muoduccd
the keynote speaker
Addressing lh&lt; problems of po'en tn
the U.S , King &amp;aid thai "we arc in cnt.K:al
condttion." Oc.cribin&amp; the U.S as a "nation
doVlded berween the hllves and the hllve·
nou.· Kin&amp; wd tlut cconorruc and social
51rategists are "putti.ng Band-Aids 011 wounds
that hll e been festerinc for yean •
1lle poveny-51T1Cken are vi&lt;:t1m of the
ecooomic l)"ltem. she wei. Social and ecooorruc policymaken are to blame for creal·
ing situations whict11eavepcoplc in po~erty.
IOid 1Gng. lnord&lt;:r10 tip i~ cacb incliviclual
muSI tab: an octive part in holding politic:iaDs
rc:sponlible 10 their COilSiituents. said 1G .
Although Kin&amp; said that Oin100 ' 1 prcoi·
dency was "hopeful." anochcr wave of social

She cital
&lt;:&lt;:lltered
Selma.
MD11IIO ery, a d Bumio&amp;bam •
h
spumd P!aideiiiS
y -.1 .~aha.- ID
ciVil ri
Ia-. • eumplco &lt;X whal
orpw;cd JlJOOps could KCOII1pli&gt;b
the wxtal - -

. .....&lt;.lilc-..ct........,..--

tionallJIOd,......... . lhe u

~ is

......,.(wdhasr-JWbcaa~ca
beat I , _ 1D deatb -.1 JCI nt8)' "' it." she

lllld. "T may l&gt;abiA die bdift their tinl
year-)!iO,i
eX- }'&lt;Mil people tal&lt;e
1D achool every day. E...., 14 .._. a child
under lhe ..,&lt;X live11111111dered ioo Amorita."
llhe....S
10011 that the"""""""'veiiiJillde
&lt;X ow aociely 10 bllme for fudlftl vio1aKz
As .. -..klle 10 tb ...ntlllioultud
violeaoe. Kill&amp; said. everyone
"buiid
bndp" tDWOii&lt;togClhcr, ondshould "1a1er·
nahu Dr Kin ' 1 pbtloooPty of _ _..,.._

lenoc ond"""

nc-

up, IW&gt;d up, bul
up." ohe
wd tow..J the end eX. specc:h puoctuOicd
w1th plnsa from her flllber's spea:hca.
Honored .. the commomonliooo .......
Luc:i• Almeldo IDd Br&lt;lllya Boy . who
l'tlCel ved MllrtJA Luther KJag. Jr Sebolanbip
A-a. &lt;XSSOO.The a"-.I is bald on pcnoaal
and l&lt;*lcrnit ~ ~ widt lhe
and piUloopby eX Dr KiniBo)tia wiD .,..._ in 199S • lpOCial
mo;r B.A She plans to mcdiaol
She doe&amp; a::ocardt. Roowdl Pft CinDer ......

"*"

tuoea

•..,.._."''ll'k.Aknoodo.a,._,.,.

SIUdr:lt tblaugl! BJP (&amp;pol Ojplnuniy f'n&gt;.
snn~ is awollcd ill 111e Nursioc pt&lt;llplll. She
plansiD~inl
A........,.,.&lt;Xk
Goicbl Key Honor Socay....
~k
Aocaicmlc Mabl m Eaa:~~tstcc A ......:I and the
SA Service AWII'd.Sbe doco..,.._.wark for
the
Bod! Almeida and llo!'tdon ..,
acbolln ink McNa pt&lt;llplll.
Musical rdcctioas for the p1011W11 ..,.....
performed by G.:y Buracu.dircctorof1hti·
~ty Opera Worbbop and usoc:aa&amp;e pr&lt;&gt;fcosor t&gt;f IDIIIic.
[J

...........
....... ......

FlEE PIC&amp;.W &amp; D1L1V111Y
~

HcwiiiUtr '•--~-iii;

........

.._.......,c.,~aw

..,_

.._......,._.._,¥ '1

1ntr
MIT, ClUAU1'Y IDVICI·1~ le4' ' cilia

Call 887-2573 anytime.
Program .!JQt intended.for alcoholics

... nr•
~

...., ..... ...., .. '--111..._.

C Technologies
Englawood
of
835

A..._., Town

(716} 838-2745
T-.11, NY FAX 83&amp;-6995

�..

- ~ ~--.-

7

...
for

'Farber Goose'

mry"0979}. ...,.,.._I &amp;lply"
(1984) llld "Amq&gt;lntlioe"
(1986).
l'aulftik is ... AlpmiDe pod.
attic llld ttiDiilaiQr. 1111910 he
c:o-fOIIIlded XIJL. a J'll"'ll' 11111111tiae clotliali::d 10 iaaowci... ...-it-

tospeakatUB
ea.tiam-llllld
pilot DiU Lbbmlln, who
aq:it\lrC!IIIbe lllll:ation of two
oounlries whee he l1liaed llllld
~·flock of..,..., 10 fly
toCUih, will iip:U: • UB Mln:h

15. Ullonon. wbooe lila")'featured em ABC-TV's "1JY)f.T
llllld in print .media IIOIIlld die
world, will~ at 8 pm. in
Butler Audilori.om o Forbt:r Hall.
IJXIIIS&lt;lftd by 1he
Niq' a..per of the
American , liwJc of Aeronautic!;
llllld
..
w~~o from childhood
bod dreamed of O)'ill£ wilh birds.
and fellow pilol Joe Duff cnioed
1he pliiiJIIO follow Ushmon's
ullraligbl plane. While Lb:hllWI
flew lhe le.s pllllll:. with 18 .,...,
Dying alemgsidc in "V" fortllltion. Duff~ up the rear 10
keep the fiOOk em eoune during
the fflzht Jut Novernbe.- from
Usbmln'• borne ncar OWwa.
Ont, 10 Airlie Center. vII..
En I'OUIC, IIDOCher goose dw
apporently bod losl its group.
joined the Oook.
In Apil. iflhe.,..., do nat
rt:mclllher how ID mal&lt;e the trip
back to Lishman'• bome.1he
pilou will rewm 10 V"u-ginia to
guide them back.
Lishman hopes lhe experiment
can he odaplcd by othcn to reeotablish migndllf)II'OUICI for birds
that have ceased mignritlg or .,..
in need of we migration """"'·
Although lhe lcc:um io free
and ClpCO to 1he public, a $2 donation at the door to help defray
expenses would be "PJl'"C'Ciahld.

.
e
uSbman.

Cornel West
speaksatUB
March24
Cornel w- alllbor of
'1Raoc Maners" and dim:tor of the Afro.Amctican Studies
Program at Princ:eton Univcnity,
wm deliver lhe BuiTalo Federation of Neigbbcrtlood Centers,

0

lnc..O:ntcn·

niai Lea.ure
Marc:b 2!1. at
UB.
WC!it's

fRSC!&gt;talion at
8 p.m. in
Alumni Alma
Will berospons&lt;rcd by
WEST
lhe Buffalo
Federation of Ncigbborbood C&lt;nl&lt;:rS. lnc. and UB.
A pufcsSO&lt; of philosophy at
Princetoo. West is known for 1m
dynamic speaking styk:. l:kmY
Louis GIIICS, Jr•• dit:eetDr of
Kalvard Ulnivcnity's black •rudics program. calls him lhe "pre·
eminent African-American
inJcllcctual of our time." West is
preoooupied with the SW"l'iYaJ of I
&amp;lroflg black community and
cullw-.., yet be challmges lhe
CODCCp( of Afroc:aurism.
West will present the kcynoiC
address for the BFNC O:niCMial
LcadetshipSeminarll IOa.m.

Hunter College
educator gives
talk t4Xlay
Unda.M. Pcmnl, ~
·
pufcsoor of edocatioa at
Hunter Collqe. will discuu
"'6~1
omen in Ondu.te Bduc:atioll Plitt to lhe 1950s: 'l"he
Militlg of an Afric:an-American
FomaJe lntdligeouia.• during an
appeamlCC"" today at UB.
l'&lt;:rkin• will iip:U: 11 2;30 p .m.
in 17 Balcty Hall The l&lt;tttire i•
free or charge llllld ClpCO .., the
public. A wine A(ld cheeoe n::cq&gt;ti011 wt11 follow. )
1toe lee!Uie by l'&lt;:rkino.. an
education hiSIOrian. i• part of
"Uodeuepea:ut&lt;:d v~·a
new visitin.&amp;scbolars lectun:
.me. oponsorcd by lhe 1UB
Gradua1e Sdlool of Education.
The IICIIics f~:~~~ureo unc. by
scibt&gt;bn from undem:present&lt;:d
_groups who are invited 10 discuiS
critical issucs in education with
UB students and faculty. and
mcmbcn of lhe community

0

Poets from
South America
to lecture here
Prominent South American
pocu Jorge Santiago
Pcnxlnik and Raul Zunt.a will
appear at UB as part of lhe Mllldl
19941'oelry of lhe Americas

0

Tour."
The poets will read from their

"'""'at 4 p.m. Marcb 16. in lhe

Poeayl Rare Boob Room. 420
Capen 1-bll. They -..ill lecture on
"'l"he Politics of Cultural Resi•·
lliJ10C and Autonomy" at noon
March 17. in 608 Cl&lt;mens HaU.
8olb lhe reading and lecture are
free and open to the public.
Emesto uvon Grosman. curator of the "Poetry of the Americas
Tour." said the purpose of lhe

event is to est.ablish dialogue
between poets of North and Sooth
Americ.a. The readings and lecture will be conducted in both
Spllllish and English. Grosman
sucsscd lhat whik: lhe event will
be an important coo(erence for
the poetics communiry. il will be
acceasible 10 lhe general public.
Zurita i • Chilean ·p od who

li••cs in Rome. where he worlcs as
a cultural attacht for the Chilean
Embasoy. An important figure in
the cultural rcsist.anc:e to Chile' s
mi!ilary dic:t.atorship. be has be·
come: one of the mos1 inlluential
poets of 1m geoention. lfu poeuy oollectio"' inClude "Purs•·

""· Rc di.n&gt;c:tllhe l'oellcl
Procnm Mlhe Uaivcnlry ol
Buenoo Airl:lllld illlhe lllllhor of
'1be 1'houuod M keys.•
"Horror'. Body" ..! 1be comrovtuialatllholo&amp;Y. "New N&amp;ealiD&lt; Poc:ay (1976-1983)."
The UB pertion of "Tho J'o.
euy of lhe Americu Tour" ito
~ b the Poelics Procnm
and 1he Jomes H. McNull)' Ohair,
bdd by Profesloc DemUs
Tcdloc:k. in lhe UB llqloonmau
of flllililb. Olher I . 'tu6ooa
booli.QJ lhe lour are Yale Uoi-oity. New Yor\ Uniw:nity and
Pri..,...,., Uniw:nity.

Federman
book discusses
new fiction

0

In "Critific::tion:
IUnnoclaD Essay.." bls
new book from SUNY Preat..
Raymond fedo:rrBola discuolles •
-type of fic:1ion thal.-ose 30
year. ago Ia Amc:nca. LatiJI
America and
Europe ...

Olloo---

lad..

_

A)'S il .V0SC

T. J. Greenwalt

For-.~ . . ...,.,..,., ..._ - · ·
_, rMtll Qllwn . . • ~~ -~ 1hr1 Gfadn.

r..ct&gt;tw.r.

lhld&lt;fl,.,._
64$-;290. (~,.......,.,_
1¥ l»pp_ lib «114 , . . aJf!Y ti/Mrpile.

reoponoe"'

due to eolrurti. soc:ial and pchtical conditions thai bovt: fora:d
serious writers to reflect-oftco
within the wort itself-&lt;&gt;01 the acr
of writing fiCtion in the tnOdcnJ
wcrld. In infortlll). provocative
terms. "Criti6ction" off,... a
manifesto far the preocnt and
fu!Uie of lhe new flCtional (DrmO.
Federman is distingulobed
professor of EngliSh and comparative litcrlturcs llllld lhe dim:tor of lhe Oreatl ve Writing
Prqgram at UB. He it a bilingual
novelist. poet. critic and tran II!Or
who has pubUshc:d more than 20
boolcs of liction. poetry and criticism. and many essays and artidco. His novel• ha~-.: been
tnnslated into a do= languagCli.
His novel. "Smiles on Washmgton Square." won lhe 1985
American Book Award.

.a..,..,..~llhlft...~lllo&gt;w.~~

la'c:nol lwndred IICICIItdu llld
physicians from around the ....:rid
Noted imtnomohematoloist
'T'ibo&lt; J' Greenwalt. 0{ lhe
Hmwonh Blood O:nta- II lhe
llni\"C&lt;Sity of Cincinnati McdK:al
Center. " 'ill deliver lhe Ernest
'11\ilebsl;y Memorial Lea.ure ...
p.m. Clll May 17.
W'uebsky was one of the
,.'Oiicl.sleading immu~. A
distinguished profcollC!JI' of micmbiolocY II UB . he ,..as lhe fllSt
direaor of the UB Center far
Immunology.
'l"he convocation, held evay
Olha year, deals ,.;th a ~fie
tqpic imponaot in the flefd of
immunology. 1llumatioully
recx&gt;gniud exporu pre.seot illle-

of-lhe,an information"""''
ocarOh. Jesting. diagnasi$ and
treattncnt related to the sclect&lt;d

con"""'
"""
Co-5J'Oil'lOI'I of

lheme.
the con•·ocatioo iJ&gt;Clude the American Asoociation of Blood Baob; Armou&lt;
l'bamlaccutical Co.; lhe Office of
lhe Provost and lhe Goof""""""
in the Disciplines a1 UB;
Haemonelics Co&lt;p. and Vii&amp;!

gives Witebsky · SySICms. Inc.
lecture in May Faculty poetry
rll Techniques to lllllke
U and
produru safer
reading benefits
for lhe public will be lhe focus of
the
lnternatiooal Convocastudent journal
tion on Immunology. to be held .
blood

blood

12th

May 14-18 in lhe Sheraton Inn
Buffalo Airp&lt;J:t.
Sponsored by the Ernest
W'neboky Center for Immunology
at ·the Univcnity at Buffalo, lhe

c:on•oc:ation i$ ~ 10 draw

...S

or-.

.unut...........
lhe &lt;wmoil of
lhe timeo.
Callmg this
lliOwfonn
"•wfrctioo."
Federman

iheW-'aCIIIIRie

MRE.ibew-·.~a-..a.~Ja&gt;.

~~~IC:I'\Iico..-dim-fhe...CU

0

Faculty members Robert
Creelcy. Raymond
licdcrman, Joan Reratlack and
Masani Alexis DeVeaux will
.prcsa:~t a poetry reading 011 Sun.da)', ~b 6, robencfilMrlos-

pJtcrr. lhe UB otudcot joumal of
poetry. proae and artworl&lt;.. 'l"he
reading will tab: plaoe II 3 p.m.
in lhe Uniariaa l111i-.all51
Cburcb.l31mwood AVCDue llld
W . Ferry Streel ie Bu1Uio.
Creeicy bolds the Samod P.

~Ohair in Poetry and ""'""

rormer

manitieo at UB. A
He
Yort S... pod~ he has
eamcdl:ll in~ rqlUWion
for his minimaliA poeuy. uwdl
.. for his published
leoen
and journals. He
l'ow&gt;dt:r o(
lhe "Bld. Meu-m• ocboOI of
J'll"'ll', wbicb atllblished che
aoti-acadenUc: poecic trldition
n:llc&lt;lted iJt lhe wort&lt; ol many siJnificant poeu of lhe l!Oih century.
f'cdl:nnu ... distinpisbed
profeosor of ~Iisb and 0011&gt;~ve Utomwc, and d.iRJclor of
lhe ere.tive Writinaf'rocram 11

-.ys.

u•

UB. Alllbor of ..,._,
pi.&lt;twinning 110\-els, $t:\'Cdl
voiWlll'$ of poetry and many
euays. be it repnk:d as one of
Ama:ic.a" •leading ..n~a&lt; of
expcrimentai licticn, W'llb
Creeley and othcn, he obo eli"""" the UB Program ill l"oeeicc&lt;.
R&lt;:Wio« u I ..uiling BUller
C!Wrof'Engtisb II UB. She bas
:llllbclml oevenl &gt;Oiumcs of
poetry and aiticism. and Ia
wort bas .11p!lC21Rld in more !han
-40 journals and antbologies iD
North Amrricil and Europe.
DeVeaux. a professor of
womea"s swdies ot UB, bas writteo Dmnen:IUS """""' of fictioa,
poetry. and joamalism. For - aal yeaR, f t hu boeD I COillributing writt:c 10 Eum« tDip%ille
and Olha !'llblicolioos·

�8

Five tuden

rrom '"" m.......,i&lt;&gt;n Propam"'
th•liBDepanmeotof A.n ha·~belf&gt;Ml ll'"'ED· T\' ""'"'~ .. r..uoolor. 199i 1\tadin~ Ralnbo-. Family Cakndar Tb&lt;o e..kndar
• publk-telr•i.i&lt;Pn oulll'acll proj..,. i• th&lt;&gt; onll o...- pro&lt;lo..-.ffl
b,· u local PBS affiliau• in oom~"t.ion ., irh tht. nauon•tl)
'):,d;,,..,od dtildn-n)'serie h ,..,. lun.kd by a
(rorn ''"'
'\a•ionalln

tlrut~

!!"•"'

for l.,i••Nt&lt;')

_

Ktubk..,., Collinsllow.~l~ l 'II Joroi'Pssorofan .,.ddJ....,, .. .,ftt...
l 0 IUu...,.tion Pmgnun """-.d""''"'"''-rnlar',an ru,.....or bilt'
....d •he stud&lt;. 11 ~&lt;oin&lt;dl&gt;rofc•siomd on "~I"'""'""' •"O&lt;k U'lf!U&lt;IIkr
de.aJbne a.od uMng inno" livt t~mi~ to fli'OC urt" lh~d) (Jri~ ..
n.aJ &lt;a:ori,: dUitl:nt't tl~ . Of~~~ of 411 •.ctuBI diftn

or

l'nJ.,nhe dir&lt;-&lt;1iou Ito .. ell and
..,, ard ~ ' innin~ iUu"f.-atur · +\lan
(~&gt;b•-r . til&lt;' l 'B lllu•or••iorl Pro~ram
ha.:, a hi~h'll') of ul,·oh m~ ~~ '11\1dt-nt~i:npmfes-&lt;riooalanw "''~trlW"flts.

1ltr flrop-am b.a ... fluuri lwd ..,irlC',.Ib
f'J.pan ... ion i11 1Q8!. ,.un1mg n-rol(ni tion anrl ~"'~ipm1rnh from an dirf"t·IOf'S £roU1 all O'\'f'f' rhr nmnrn I lu-..'t'll
b.aid tht&gt; .. tudenh .....-re -..f'l~·tt"''l fur
1h"' projt'IC'"I ba~ on rhc.,ir abil.l\ 10 ~:nrk dt•rW"'ndahl~· umkr
(O.U"it·r &lt;k.adliul' and for th("lr rt•puto1inn .. fur dolnfl" ~ul -.o,.L. .
.:tudeut i.llu ...rrawr~"~ an" Pat F Btuut..,.ak . Chn~oolint" 1Wt·1o"

Qut•nh\ Chnrwo.

. ~·u·nti

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§
0

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Clf

Jeti.llrk"ltt"

Pt&gt;n·1 nud

l iu"·""JI· .. iUul'otnuiou::o aJ~

\Jj.c·ha~·l ~
"'f'l'f"

oiQSrhino•

inc•lutlt-d

111

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I'"""

aolendar' "" ..... On&lt;'
b) Eiwn """'"" or tho- Cluumd 17
Gr&lt;~,Jib ·
l&gt;.opanment, • I&gt;&lt;&gt; ooordtnatod rh&lt;l "'.....,.11
d&lt;-si~n

.,.....,,.JM

Lik" rj,. it. du
Ralnl,_ progam it!rif. •h•&lt;':11lrndar "-"
targ"' tl:l&lt;'~~
readrr . dr-pu.·tin~
child"'" kadi~ rhlf;wrilnn. 'llrirt)

or

~~reti' frat-. , u..iudm~
r .. din, ruokw~ .
pia} i~ P'"""' anti
. mu-;~~· l~'!iht-r ar:tt'l
"t.slrin~

rh~

aquanum
and
ka&lt;-h ,.., ""Jl) o(f.,.., )0~ ....,,Jn-, .p&lt;rifll' •uge.c ""'' 00

book• 10 "'"d and fomilj proj....,. d&gt;ar '"" l&gt;o&lt;h fun and...,].,..,..
rional .,u&lt;"' h a... ~nJ'tll 'iJiff a ttar•it'lfL '1~1iog a fit·a m.artt'l. lm.e.r""" in~ ,.-•••dpar&lt;'ot- and It -..~ cool~s.
TI... ~ ~., -.itJo a Fob. 1 doolr 10 ..-llect w qan of II
•n-turg ~. -....1. .. oct. """' ~ Sq.&lt;. 30. h ~~­
()IJ&lt;IIIIll,.., daou¢dan ..H , 19%
i.&gt;.OO&lt;nffiliunol ldidaJ om.'~""' oil...!. inc:lu&lt;hl 'i\...,hm:J..,.·, na~ . '"-imml \'o-\o .
lla) ~arional PIJ! Oal . ' - - 1 T.op 0...., 0... 0.. IGnd io ton.ab
\1 tft. ...-I ' ••ional C..:..m l)al · For loon' &lt;lllH""" ""-""•""""'·
Ouruw Olnc~ 1!.'6di"'t Hwnl-· pn.rjr&lt;"1 ~- at 315-"'000

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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  <item itemId="86253" public="1" featured="0">
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                    <text>Joumallsm
Mentor
Lee Smith

he~
·

.2

students realize
their poten ' .

nventon,
Inventions

..4

UB faculty honored
for achievements as

inventors.

..3

The University at
Buffalo has received
a $2.4 million federal
grant toe t.abli h the
nation' first center
charged with developing objective standards
to measure disability
and its effects, and to
assess the effectiveness
of rehabilitation program designed to treat
disabilities and improve
function.
The new Rehabilitation Research and liraining Center on
Functional Assessmenl and Evaluation of"Reblbilitation Outromes
will fund s&lt;:ven teSeliTCb projects
over the next four yeas:s. Tll&lt; work
will involve faculty from UB's

Depuunent of Rehabili tation
Medicine and its schools of nursing. health related professions and
arohiu:cture and planning.
The new UB oenter also will

The gra111 also a.ll for

«- eloptn~ a cumcullll!l "'
fvnct~onal·auc

D ' You•il~
~,.nu

pital in Eoglewood, Colo~ RehabiliInstitute of OHcaj:o; Kessler
l.nslitutefor Rehabilillllion Inc., West
C&gt;niJige. NJ ~ The Ohio s- University, and 'Brown Uni•·ersity.
D' Youvilk: College in Buffalo will
wort with lbe UB center 10 de•elop
a cwriculum in functional-assessment studies.
"Our charge is to introduce o
t1101t scientific approach 10 measuring lbe abilities and limitations
of people living with handicaps,"
said Glen E . Gresham, professor
and chair of the UB Depanment of
Rehabilitation Medicine and the
gnmt's project director.
"We hope 10 de.-elop uniform
standards for measuring disability
and the methods disabled people
use to adapt tho:t everyone accepts
and understands .~

Cni-

atnw~ -

in

mAnual on u ing
func:ticna! IISses&lt;lllmt instnllDODt&lt;, and boslini •

!III:IOn.ll coofereaa: ""
functiooal-The 1994 a&gt;nf"""""' wiD
b&lt;lldd in asboDP&gt;n. D C.. in conjWIOIIOII o-.th the !Jxmlalimal hhabilllalllln Mecbctne ....,..,.._••

Grant Funds Center
to Advance Work in
Rehab Medicine
Gresham is grant's project director
I Y L Oll IAilER
News Btm&gt;a~ S!aff

collaborluewithfiw:olheracademic
rehabilitation a:ntcn-Craig Hosllllion

'" ..

mcnt......,.,....:;;&amp;.
•illheoffeml
oally ~ UB 8lld

Currently. there is no system 10
classify di.abitities accoroing to
s&lt;:verity. or a s tandard rthabilitation regimen based on severity.
Gresham said. As the population
ages and as the demand for rehabilitation services increases, the
oeed for an across-the-board Sian·
dard bas become increasingly evi·
. dent.

''lotbiseraoCbeallh-c:arerefonn."
he notro. "the field of rehabilitation
medicine must he able to prove lbe
value of its services. Reseatcll coodueled through this new oenter will
enableus IOdelinedisabilitiescic:8rl)'.
tell which rehabtlitatioo approaches
are most ' 'aluablc. and will allow
rehabilitlllion worl&lt;ers across t.h e
rountty to use a common language
to descirihe patients and their prob'lems." .

The center's sevt-o

r~arcb

projects and the acadeoUc: rehabilitation cmtors invoh'ed a~ :
L~ast

sat--toim~

prove lbe classification ofhaodicaps
(UB and Craig Hosp&lt;tal~

2.-

'\ . , _ ...

we

tode1cnnine howmucll

rebabilitationprogmmshe~pparients

(UB, &amp;habilitaliotr ln.rtirwu1{Chicago and K~sskr ln.rtilrlr. for R~ha ·
bilirmiDn).

a.--.'

· e: ' c -

- - - . coidentify barriers that

produce haodicaps and measure lbe
•~tent of their effect tUB}.

rehabolitatioolorthepastdeude..

Rescarchers from &lt;UB led a nauooal effort 10 de•dop d&gt;e Unifonn Data Sys!WI for Medical
Rehabilitation, wtucb oncludes
tb~ Functional Independence
Measure (FlM ), • standard now
employed nationally and ioterrultioo.ally by facilities treatrng scvc:rdydisabledpeopleoodefinea
disabled pen;oo '• abilit)· to per-

fmm common wtcs.
B' s Depanmeot &lt;tf Rebabiliwioo Medicine also esl&amp;blished a
lllllion.al database, wbicb C1111't1111)
hOlds more than 400,000 patient

S,-...'_
1.....·-...,..
_
_,___
....... _
........ -.--....--(UB. hhabiluanon ln.ttituJ~ ofCiu­
rogo and Keukr JIISiiimefor RehabilirmiDn}.

_ _ _lt _ _ _ _

_

_ ,(UBond'TMOIUDStau

Ulli~J-

1. ¥~_,.....,_.........,.

-

- . or FlM, a soore
used to follow a potient' s progress
and measure lbe ooiXXMlleS of a rehabilillllion •progJIDn (UBJ.

7.-..-.c-~-·tt lPhCII•

4, - - - . , - . .
elllcleod
........ oal--.tiw
:or~- to determine why one
progJIDn works beutr than another

annual .,._,~
The Uni\Oenoty at Buffalo ba&gt;
been in the forefront of medieal

(UB.Kesslerlnstin.ufor
&amp;loabilitmion and Bro.., un;...,,.
~).

records from rel&gt;aboliwion programs in the U.S, Europe. bpan
and Austnlia.

Byron Hllll111ton, UB clinical
associlole profes50&lt; o! rehabili tioo medicine. is principal investigator on the @l'lllt. ~~dine Asher.
UB clinical assiswlt lprof..-, is
progam c:oordinahlr. and James
A. Phillips, UB clinical iosln&gt;clor,

is fiscal ,.,....,.,_..-.
The DOW res&lt;:aroh and training
center will function within the
framewor!&lt; of lbe UB Center for
Functional ASsessment Researob.
,. hi h is directed b} Carl V.
GranF. professor of rehabi itatiM medicine.

C

�_...

2
~
ICII._....-.nDI
lOOI!'IIfl"'bon,.-15~1

Bringing out
·. for writin

~progr--~

Schollr _lor ... '1

d.'""'

-·~·gr..­

poinl-.ge
3.0
(OUl d a poadlle • ). T llllderN- Ml'lled ....
"**"'""GAP~ d
S 6 GPA..-.:1-. placied on

a

.... o.an.Uot.

,..-- ~Je..

t.n. Ctaig A. Sornbersld. ar.ndan p CrMiw\_
s
OonaiOeon,
R Fern,

.....
Linda
cary for doe~ d

a-

/Wt'tt:7trrC ~. twoldR
MMiw, ToddJ l'llce,
F -.c.z. DcugiM
Rad-

HEN A liradlu

.,.., JIIO'I'icle ..

.......

eclucatioMI n -

Riqualrtw A. RodrigU-

ez. Todd M Sci*'- l&gt;l'lk'lonf

~

~.

Adlm P Tard ,
EW.... W _ . .
..........
10mbelly A Agnello.
A. A,log
Dane M ~ . Jeanne R. S..·
lilch. TtM:II A Bulh. Megan E.
L

~~OU!felr

Ann Mane Gonk , B&lt;ldgel E

.._.., 5hei'-Y L

KKaren J Laky', Seta M See·

- ·Jet-

r-.
- ·Enc- 0
08mln"
emy R Br-.B&lt;oan J Out.,.._
c ' Mwi&lt;M Mal
Joseph M MarCil&lt;. Mlnlel P

v-.o _.. T...ta: Lui$

A G..,. Patricl&lt; Hoolihan
Standen R
Gtegcry
0 -Pridgen, MIChael J Proul•
Socii T Rllcllle, Edw11rd E

bell:
JennJer
A deeG&lt;ooet
-..,.
Wagner
· -··
""'· J A Onolo' Andrea L
Fnlley Arne G Gallagher
KnstJn S HoiU' Nad'"" R
MilS cleo
y J Reville ,

B&lt;ooi&lt;e B Smtih', t.le!anle L
Vogel'cnsr.wM
· -··
y--,_c:et&gt;....
eonn.v.

diCe L Cool!. Oenieflo Gianino.
s.ndra L Hamgan, ·
Kemf"'" F LN. Calherine 0
Novoc:llsl&lt;y, M - 0 OSl ·
man, Nancy A. l'ebbiM. laJsle
A. Sanlelll. Cendode L s.n-.

-··-~
mas F Ducey Devtd J Fal-Tho­
goeno, OwtStlWI 8 Ft-.n.
CIYIIIQpher T K -. Charles
E Moynthan' . Joonua 0 Aeosaog. O.vld J Y~ • ..,.. TrKk &amp; fleNI Oeldre
Lopez. Shot1ey Moody, R.chael
Retermal, Grelchen Welch

. . . .tJ ..... Dennis s Bauer' '
Antlo1y L Coru, Marl&lt; E
Kessler, Jeromy A. McVoge

._..ero..

~

Celher""' A. Mangan, B&lt;ldget
E. Niland, Judilh R. Novak.
Tara L R&lt;Wnet. Ceme C. Rd&gt;erds, KatyC 5pons _ . .

"""""'

""""'11'110, . eddo

anotber dimension 10 the tmn
"'eedoin&amp; w:elleot:t • Eileen ldzi
22. ~ fmm UB in May d
199) ond · a
for 1hr
oSaraloKimlii&gt;Saralop pr1llp. ...
sayo.. •If any IIUdenl bas a &amp;i for
"'ntln&amp; Lee Smilh wiD brin&amp; • OUL.
LeRoy Smith, bcller known •
•t.ee; former edilorW omter for

.me--...... .........,...

"'pon"'

"''"'S.

1M &amp;jfaJlJ
is - inauuclor
of JOUf1l&amp;liml for tho Ocpenmenl
d EnJlisb UICt 1969, s
dlered UB'sClllly journalism claD
AI age 7•• br ' c:eJebntm&amp; ht
~ anru.-ersary of
· 1
kecrmp&lt;~
saylhltSmith
sham&lt; ""'"' t1w1 · upen' in
journalism. Former lilUd&lt;ftas, who
c:redtt mith woth hrii"''C them realize their potmtoal, cleocnl&gt;c him
as a •,. ondetful friend" who pro""*mud&gt; pudaDOe . His l&lt;:aCb1n&amp;
Slyle, they Yy, .,..,..,.ots itUdenb
with realistic guidebnes for good
joumabsm ,.iuJe they IDiderBO the
JIIO"CCi5 of self-dJsc:overy
Smith sayo.. ·Wbal I tty 10 leaCb
studenls is howiO .. with inl&lt;ral.
curiaoity md a """""d e&gt;cilemenl
lbelpstudenls-q.-ioosbkt
"""' do V.'e wri1e. plher ........ and
pd. ii!Ogelher ill .. ~ .... '
Bul ownll. my w- is 10 btlp
studenls decide wbether joumahsm
bas a callinl for them •
A naiM d Washinglon, D C .
Smith d&lt;cidod 10 JlUf'SUt journalism
atU:t,.,..,q ill World Ww D. Grado·
aring fbi Beta Kappa fmm Ury Col·
lege d New Yen in 1940, he was
accepted atU:t lhe war lllhe Columbia Gmduale School d Joumolism.
In 1947. hr podual&lt;d .. """ d lhe
10p lhme studenls d tho class, cam·
in&amp; a "l'ldil= Trndin&amp;. scbalar·
sbip. "In prdli&amp;1oric limrs,- ... jokts.

"*'

T--- E
Andrews

Beloe, Enc T · FutTll
Gakodl, Ivan G. Lau. Bnon P.
M.IChael J McBnde,
George W Newsome. Slephen
J ParriSh. Michael T Spttt,
Gregoty F. W1111oc:k _ . .

Le-.
-

Enc J Roo.-.

Rasaun
· -·•
T......NM.Young
Genevie'ole
George. St-. J Harloll, LeenaLVtti&lt;UL . . ........ DlwlnF Rober1 J
Auet.~o Bistrong.

David R. Btalet. Christopher s
B&lt;edy. M811&lt; T. Horgan', Kotry
T. Miler, Joshua M . f'&gt;eczorN.
tenJ . ~ . -K.

w-.
Richard G. Wozniak.
MICh8el J. Z.110kwlsky.
R DeVIl&amp;.
L Jemiler
._,..,
·
- ·Sh8nnan
._..
Karla E. Keele, Nicole M Pillam, Andt8a L Sclllooaz. Kalhttn
V. Strilh. Joanna L T&lt;MW, Suz.ame M. ZDnch.
~'sl.J$1

al-yo~IObelp. ldoe"l

mow

ifl wouldhavepmsurd
ftddif
u werm 'lforhinl~mtMBN~io.ll.~pi-..fla:a

lll!inMay.~W!daev.s...
he.. becc IICa'J*&gt;d iD yncuse
l.lmYasily'&amp; ~
d ,_.
......... He ~~~rids .. ,.,.,.,.

~Sdb.Pclio.wbo

---'"'1

comac1y iJims in the Wllbqlort

a..-cillot
tudnoldea..tllll
doq"'-1
"""Lee. wt.1 btdid,... eM mr •

idca,andapl.andbt~mribol

lcwld...oydo .. He'

abel
liwlpiDeYer~paillible hat
{tow da)" . . l d - ' in the~
wilbSm. TedKamedyand~.

I oamdod lhe 'S.. ollhe Union Ad-

a...· wWh f1t6;JD /k-..s W

able Vr'llll '• pal aboul Lee. i5
lbal he ib&lt;Jrno.o&amp;h!y ~
. cnf1 wi Y0U1J1 peopk. AI
W'BflO, I tty 10.,.... au 10 m
·
wbal. Lee bas 1a11p me •
m1911\1,

·

~

Fillm&lt;ft O:lllt:ge""""" a friend 1·
gellledbeta~oe ....... alil&lt;nry...,....
c:ourx 81 lhe eap.il Dep.tmeiiL
1bio led 10 • ~ ... llllldl~ &lt;XlUIK ID

JCIUI1I&amp;liom.

Wilhamfiocher .chairdlhe EoPoh
~gyo'"Heladlls""""
studma; per capila " - .. ada
leOCher mlhe ~ ~

-.
Atn011d

D10Jly-.
. readily

. 10 ._&lt;Iowa-

falldT "" - . - . ODe
caJl oflal bear
· famous laSI
"'OL the bona
aory I do
100 much.bed to

d.a~ ll

GO:&gt;UDia. ......... ., ...........«
.....,todoaa.y
CUII

"What I try to teach students is how to
Jlld*:ia ..
y odt ... a J*IICUior
doy
.
.
write with interest, curiosity and a sense of
in .,..,.. I found
~ bt
liwd-iun..,._..bdow
excitemenL I help students answer
....... e. 73id Slims. T h e .............
doer-..,...., Ul1
questions like: How do we write, gaiher
mr
•
Skillbcd hNar
news, and put it together in an inleresting me, he,....,..IDIIItiDmebau;r•
-lqpoMaiDcm!iO&lt; '
way?"
~
sa.• .............,......,.,..
Llll

Boa...,

_liiDehe_.....,........

.....m;p and~ .........., . dd
bour IJ.I wid! him.•

A

fter he fmished ll Columbia,
SmithdidliOIDteditorW wril·
ing in Washington. D.C . This led
10 his fUSI job as a reponer for 1M
Philtuklp/UQ E&gt;'f'rttng Bwlkt111.ihr
largest aftt:moon paper in thecountty a1 the time. In 1948, Smith lef1
the Philadelphia paper to become a
reponer for TM Buffalo E'Vf'rting
N....'S. He became an editorial wriler
ill 1957, ond Ieier, depulyeditorof
tho editorial ~ge for TM N,...'S,
ond ovezlhe yeats,- editorials
on a variety d 10pics dealing with

New York S111e.
In 1985, whcu Smith retired
from 1M &amp;tjfalo Nc-..'S, hr became
aa ad"*- for 1M SptctrWrl. The
publicatioo relics upon his editorial advice and his expertise onl&lt;lCb-

,.._,. • ....,.. _ _ _ ....

tho_.., ...........
tiea.s'l)'
.
ID*"
cloalr"ln I
Lee iloililloJd
for
Ia order for
lbr.miDpiac:rcdilb-O.. . . . . . d
.....,;.q lbey - cloio&amp;- Thll .,..
bt..-lwidl51 tiUdonls.
~
112
And dc:spte 0....-y •
lllllldl ... bas fmm
... ,...
. ....... and aood bumcred.Eileen ldzik es: .
.th ••
invol- with 1M Sptmvwt
"He lreaU tho lt10dcD paper b
rt ••• 'lUI' paper lhlt people rdy •
ooformfllr'lllllioo.
I
editor • 1M Sptcmdlt, he

Couespmded lmy lnmiti. wt.ltN&lt;:rlendup~c.•bdil

will be bocoui&lt; ol bim.UB Gnduate bn Aroason. 23,
is~ and public affairs producer
11 WBFO. Aronsoosayo Smith wa
"iDcrMihly influential" in
ca-

ru.

reer devdopmenl ond achieve"Lee wasn "t jusla personal
frieod wbo I:Dew a lot. He wu the
pen;oo wbosbow&lt;:d melhlt I could
do wbal. I'm &lt;loin&amp; DOW. WbeG I
was writiD&amp; for TM Sf'«111lM. hr
showed me euctly whet-&lt; I needed
10 improve. BUI be wouldo't just
leU me the answer, hr •d help me
fmd i1 011 my own. 1 found rum 10
be """ of the most valuable asseiS
ll UB, especially siDI:e there is no
dec= journalism progmn availments.

oo.~o~an.,

CXUliCS irnmeuody popular.• Linda lqdao y "Ewsy se25 10 30 SIUdenls- to.med
a....,. md ~ maja:sollcllt...,
10..-aiuleucul-befooelhey
can taloe bis
•

His

Smilhlaadedicaed~
oodcammtri.ybodrpud.Heoona~

........ l"*S • W:e fll'C'Iidom d
~ &lt;:lppanaDQes Mode &amp;pi
&lt;XIIImliaee.,lllllal&lt;d a.,.,...tpto
_,and_._.......,AIIcncWt

l'lal!s. He-~lifclime ........

• .... a .-s b ilmpuwd

~bydlqllostodoy

Rdo'·

ria&amp; ID 9ily
larma' IIOIIIiDre
ns.a..yam+nr beoojcl "L&lt;D&lt;·
in&amp;•jaumoliomllltormsdiloJI""''Iij tole in ...._.., ..::ioly, I dink

................
d..,.....,...,..

.......~llioodapelliiiE)'
~

ab

lhe . . -

ayq-"rebadtiD~I

lbkik1heps.-lltollk• .......
look• ill~
"'De~

bcMip in the ......... Confmace d

wetmlly~"hessyL "A

FdiloriaiW~

- &lt;A*min.lhe
:;'::.. clodine in

.......... ollhe &lt;XliiiiDiDoe ......
Jd........, d j&lt;ubolism eWcoliart.
AJ. 7ltr BvJfolo NeM.. ... ~ 20
~A-.I&amp;" fla:athe Amrriao~Qiildllllltwo.....a.

r....:and

::74

.......
t.ton:

.............

,..._.....,.,-s,m.:.~doo

,_,. '-laewslila &lt;mJIIIDilk in ihe
~~

_ _ _ _ _ _ , _ , . ___ .._ _ _ _ _

~

.,,.a-....,_crltl--

�_...,

____

...

Reception salutes achievements of
L~--=:WENTY-S!X iiiii'OIIIlln who ore
on
UB feculty 'IW:tt baacncla1
a reccpdoo Feb. 17 1D
Caller
forT-.-.UB~

ly-

llen -a...s a lOW ril 15 J*c:nl$
yeot, the hi
amber e- for the
uni
i111 •
year. The lavealoo:ure
outhon or
ril United wes pat·
enu that 'IW:tt ....,.;..,.s 1993, accordin&amp;"'
Kathleen R. Terry, director of ledlooJocy
tnDifer • UB.
I'IVWlllAaroo N. Blodl......,cedawmds
recopizina tbelr acbievemenu as la.-on
of ~tenud devica, maJerials or drup.
The UB faculty
brn are:

SrephtuP. w......_,_.,.,.,~
feaaorrilbbDolaial&amp;,lllldSarm E.
plofeaaor anc:ritul ril biomaoa:iaJa, in
ofI IICW,IIXftClOIDfcrtable and
.-iaJ for- in daiLII
Stuley Bruc ensteia, A.. Concer
Goodyear pro(taar of cbemistry, iDveaiOI
of I sdf-cornoc:tiD&amp; device t h a t - the
cbarPII Cllllal of an declrodlemlcal cell
while experimeals are beiDa ClCIICiucud.
~~ Ganlella, prof- ril cbemistry,
and T~ Vargo, rc:aean:b
·
profCIIIOOI of cbemistry, invmton ri{ I proc:es$
that lelsacimtl&amp;tsdoposit mcuJs 00 IIOOSiiclt
5Uifaoeo, like Teflon, .,iille Iavine the our·
face inlact.
Stepha! J. Free, as&amp;ociate profeaor of
biolcJsieal acimces, inveator of I ~}'~~em that
allows for the rqul.tt.ed production of recombinanl proteins.
Tbclmlls Bardos, professcr of medicinal
cbemistry. inventor o(. drug that bos dem·

oaavated efficacy
-AID .
Walteo D . Can..y,...a.\epro(eaorof
medicinal cbemisary, i J J - of I IDidu.ne
that plrifa and ~ materials in one
COIII.iDuoua coil
~ c. Mollc:ndoof, poo(- o( mechanical and ~ encineerin&amp;. and
William Macy and Kmoedll'&lt;leblea.labontory equipment desi&amp;n&lt;n, in\leiii.On of I
"'--ddalr atUoclunmt that allows patients
inc:n:ued mobility lllld 1111 opportunity lo
e:u:rcise tbelr arms and
Ralpb Yq. chair of the Depanment of
Cbemica.l~iuventorof

nT:

t h a t - sulfur olOib from
redocinc acid rain.
Raj S. Acbarya,ISIIOc:iate plofoaor; David
Bme:osoo, profesror, V"ICI&lt;lr Demjancnko,

a.isant pro(CIIIOOI, and Mebniad s-Jdl,

unit thol~ll&lt;lred.......- ...

~iD--rillll~llnd

lllvinc to «*UUt • iadex
DoMid Hickey, retlaiiCia
pror - ril pb)'Sioloc, ,.....,.... ril a
iav •e .-Jood lind atw IIJ'fU"'"' for
blood ..__.. . . the lefl

--a.te pror.,.or, all of the ne,.n- ril
Eleatlc:aJ - ' Computer
.
llld
Alldre&amp; Soam, pror..,. """ chair o( the
Dq.nmeol ril Medumical lind AMllif*"'

. . that CD ddect .
of uouble tn ~ pnmarily &lt;Ual.ll·
breab:r fall we
lOft~

arp Srihari, dJrec:tor o( the ea.... o(
ucelleoce for no.:u..-. Aaalyw 111&lt;1

5
Rec:ocnitioo

and profesiCI" ril COliJfJUitt ICI·
ence; Paul Palumbo, reoearch tcieariol in
computer KieDCe, VlCior ~m
Ramalinpm Sridhar, . . . . . ,..,
o(
electrical and oomputer ~ and
Y0111-Cbul S • a computer science resean:ber, invmtocw of a oomputer me.-y

Partnerships needed if UB is to achieve
development goals, Stein tells FSEC
INB..OPMENfGOALSforUB

a.q""' 1993--94 fiscal year in-

prtMII

dudenuimizingflnl.aisiogq.portunities, fully staffing the
development operation with
.......... wbo ho...., drmoostr-' ....

Slallliq. SUC&lt;liS5as~affica:s,!Uiing

in place I lirsl-doss -.JiflllC'II propm.lllld
begiming 1he proceill ril buiking I " " ' !it!UCIIIIeiO~UB's~aaivities,

Rmold H. Stt:in, vice presKiom ftr l8liwrsily
~ml~ IDidCbc F.culty

s..- ~ Corrmiaee last ...a.

The new plans fer uru...sily developmenl
UB move 10 a more traditional model of
de'&gt;dopmeot in wbicbdevdoprnml is bandied
within the un.iw:osily, Stein said. "We're propcll!iing ICI move aur-iw:ly oa development,
whic:b · something Wier un.ivasities hove
done, so our goals ""' not tmrt:a1istic:,• be said.
Hmdling development within the univer·
sity may appear radical in tenns of UB's
history, in which development bas been
handled by an outside organization, !be UB
Foundation, Stein said But, in fact. the change
is a cooservative ooe, be said, because uni·
vasitiescomporable ICI UB hove loQc handled
development within their systems.
"We've now come to wbe:re private uni·
versitles hove been since the tum of the
century, and !be publics for the lost ten
years,· Stein said "We're !be lost great public university IQ raise money from its alumni.
"We hove along wayiO go 10 noise wbatother
miYcssDsbave." s..irtsoid "BBl wedoo \have
10 iiM:nt I dew:lcpol:rll S)'ll&lt;m; we COO simply
ta1oe 1he lxs ril wbat other~ do. We
,.....,. 81'* uataAJCd........., lat.UB was lost in tenns of m:eiving private
support in I ~91 wbco c:ornpued ICI other
majorpublicun.i--.ities, wilhappmJimalely
S 12 million, Stein said. But the model provided by 1be Unl~ _of ~ .•
··uni--.ity ~similar to
~
M

oo:

what UB could do. Stttn wd While Ptn
noised ooly about Sl7 million tn pnval&lt;
ppon in 198&amp;-87, by 1~91 that figw.
was close IQ $39 million, Stetn reponed.
But. Stein sa&gt;d, ill order 10 odtieve tlus
growth. UB will hove 1o bile more development profeosicnaJs. "()neri{ the "'"I.YS }W raise
money · 1o ho&gt;-e more people raising money.·
be said, DCtJ111 thai v.ilile UB aam:ntly bos a
clc-velopmenl.uff rileiP people. Pin bas S1
"The bottom line is that the development
office is sales,· Stein said "I'm not apologiz:inc for that The money goeo ICI support
faculty, dcpanments, lind 5tudent scbolar·
$bipo;. If I'm 0111 there talking IQ a donor
about $1 million fer Greek Studies, all that
mooey goes into that departmeut. •
Bemice Noble of Medicine and Btomedi·

"Fund-raising money is
the difference between
where state money ends,
and where you want the
university to go. "

to believe. that our alumni hove the same
distributioo of wealth .. Pitt.Charles Tn:zinb of Management said,
"'ne thing I've beard is that UB is ooe of
four univasity .,.,._., wbeRas the IClhools
· YiN'ie oampariniIt iO inociminilmte c:Un-

atri-rilthe~

Harold L cu-, pro(_,. ril...s.cand dir&lt;ctorofthe Heal ill flotA1It&amp; Projoct.
,..,.._ ril
. - crap for
· doe
lllSCCt . . . . . the canier ril a..p.. .
a debllitatuta ill
m Central aad
America
Midtad
l...mli, M.D C8Ddtdalt., ml
Robert M Ufcso, -.coore pro(- ril
~ iD...-s rill~-proves
• ability to inotn
10 . ..
m bone fnocluns tlile """'"'-"' x...y
expaourc-' ........ lilat Ullder

West Side study
to survey health .

of 700 Jwuseholds

poses Contnbuton may not dt5tmrwsb the
Albany campus from UB Is lhere any at·
tempt to g.ve UB a campus tdmuty?"
Slem responded by saymg. "I tlunk we: ho' c
an tdmt!t) Alumru ranembcr our fxulty,
lhey mnnect with tndJVIdual faculty rnember'!c
You're !be onc5 who made lbem suocessful •

D

onru Malone of El\gineenng S&amp;Jd that
"'ne problem tn ~ng faculty enthu
siasticabout fund-r&amp;lSinJ is that most facultt
are unaw""' bow fund-raisingliXllley is spent
to beDelit the universtty I urce &gt;""'to le11be
UB community !mow bow the """"'Y is
spent • And Roger Bunon o( l's)ocbolol)'
added that other institutions hove experienced •• problem o( ICandals and fund·
raisin&amp;. rilfund-raising money bemc plowed
back IDIO !be fund-raising pro&lt;aS."
Stein ~thai "Fund-raising money
IS the differm&lt;r between ,.-line &amp;tale money
ends, md ~ you want !be unh-...ity 10 "'·
TheOffteerilUnivemty DeYdopmmldocsn'1
c:sublish bow thai money is spent." He poinled
0U1 thai according IQ his proposed Sl&amp;ffiog
plan, dew:loprt&gt;em profra&lt;ionals wiD be hired
as assistanl deans who wiU 1!21S0n par1DI:I&gt;tlipo
between central fund-raisin&amp; ml the various
scboofsandworkwithdepmttnents. Undc:r ·
plan. each sd!ool will ho...., a dean's a&lt;Msory
council tbal will raise money fer UB, be safe~.
lnott....~.Oay!S.O..n,II!80Ci-

cal Scieoc:es said that "Unlike Harvard, we
dOD't ba...., gnds aU over the country. but
m...y who live in poor, workinc-class Buf·
falo. Have youiiCCOWlted for this?"
Stein responded that "Many of our alumni
have done very well. UB bos I 00,000 a)umni
outside the Buffalo area, and about 4-4,000 in
thearea..l believe, and I hove noevidc21ce not

-

ate vice pm;idall b

l8liwrsily dew:lcpmr:ot,
reporllld an 1he role ril f'aa.*y in ~
0a1e DiSano. extlCUiive cireaor m- major donor
&lt;kYelopmaJI.opt:Jktalxulhe~rillhe

clc-velopmenl opcntion a1 UB, and ancy
MidJolko,cireaorrilllpiCill,-.lml..pailal
gjfl:s.opt:Jkt a1xu""' UBAnnual ~
Stein said thai "My fcding. bcin&amp; malumnus here, is thai I !mow I fed indebted to the UB
faculty. We're givillg alunmi a c:bonce to say
thank )'OQ and ICI P"" IIDIDOihing J.ck. We do
ho...., a lmique "'''JJO1UUIity because we ba....,

TEAM OF UB rcsearclxn hove
wtdcmkrn !be ftr5l comprd&gt;cD
•e heal
ey of Buffalo··
Loo.er West Kit bqptlmQg Feb
6, atded b) a S7S,
pnt to UB lind Columbus Hospttal from !be Margaret£. Weadt
Foundation
The p-anl allows liB ICI upud a small
ptlot study cooduaed last """"""' in the
woe uea of the city UDder the leadasbip of
Carlos Robeno Jaen, U8
.
I professor
of family mecltcino aad oocial aad prneotive medicine. Jam also ..UI direcl tbe Jarcer

T be survey ..,;u
a wide nricly or
bealth-&lt;dat.ed c:aadilloDs aod experic:ncos, includinc social lind pbysial ldiYi·
ties,frequencyofWOIIICD"sbcalth~

availabilil} of beaJ care lind problems of
access, uperiences with crime, IIIII amount
of health services DCeded to deal with the
area's incidence ril
abuse, HlV
infection lind meota.l-health problems.
Jam said the populltion used m •
vey could become the basis for multiple
studies in the future. Results ..UI be avaiJ..
able ICI the public in about 5U
after
completloo of the m-....u survey
Interviewers will work 0111 of a bue itatioa at Columbus Hospital aod will cany liB
idc:Dtifteatioo cuds. A£ a side bendil c1
.,.nic:ipation, anyone llltinc part in tile-vey will hove access 10 a sodal worlter 11

~-~~itwi!f.~~~·--~~~f~.'f)t.M;pfH.tloe

dtange.lllld I~. ·

C

survey

0

�_.., _ _ .,_u

4

Letter !rom the Presiden:

Legislative Action
group t£Jkes UB

University must ensure free exchange of ideas

concerns to Albany

DUll
Fa !he
pert d
monlh, Khatod AbdU hUwmlae11
10 ue ._ oocaiiOned oorlsodeoeble oomrnen1 by f~. st.: .
IIUdlnts. ... g - eun.lo comTU'ily Thoa. In my jUdgment. IS a _., good lq1
l.Nely debe tS ~ 10 the c:ontnJa1IOn d free
lhOughl and 1r
upcM51011 It WOUld be wcrrosome on
exveme -!he rrwnbera .,r our llCliT'IIUltlyhlid not erCOMC!Ihw
nght 10 Algue ~and po.Oiocly &lt;N« M&lt; ~ •
~ and mesaaoe Absence d oommeot WOUld sogpesl8d a d ooncem lor lhe QU8U)' d llnJQht-«.
worse. a dealth d lhOughl uell
Our c::oiiMg.- and sllldents. ~ . 4IW1'1IliY demOn·
ated lhlll UB IS 8CbY8Iy and -OJS!y a...--.g the .,.Poca·
o!
reelibes d le on this counlrY One ol Chem os our
renw
divert~~)' of O&lt;IQII'IS and beliefs. anolher . our remar •
able
~ lor
own d~ Wi lhe Unoted Slatas
d lhe 21 S1 cenwry. IOW8rd a \lm8 wnan our people
llf'e more ru-ae than our touncters could ever lliM! omagll'l8d
me Amenaln ·one trom many• and tile prii'ICoples lf&gt;at bind tile
IT1IInY tnto one wilt be tested ega.n and aQ811'1 So IIley llhould be
Mr MUhafmlad s .....,t prCMded an occaSIOn tor tes!IOQ theSe
fundamentals at UB
Whaltleve ...,learned from al tt.s? 1
tnat students nave
learned lhal UB wrll hercely protect tile~
10 brii'IQ 10 campus
someone whose thought tntereSls tflem 1 alsO hope lhaJ our
studentS nave been retnlf1ded lhal we do not IOXeiC!Se Fwst
Amendment rogllts on a vacuum. thai. on openong the door to a
speaker who espouaes ooe poont of ~ - alSO open lhe door
to opponents ol that poonl ol ~ thai whom - mogl'tl
ottend. by espousong any poont ol,_. nave as fTlUCI1 roghlas do
- to express the• opn!OnS and 111111 - do no1 edvance tile
cause ol tunan understandlflQ _.,. tar unleSs - concern
ourselll8s Wllll
effects ol WfllflOS thai otners nave ~ed as
well as wr h the ellects of wrongslllat- and our forebears nave
suffered
As tor ltle rest d ltle un.-srty commuMy and eSPeCially
those who most vogorously opposed M&lt; MIA\ammad's .,.Slt to
C8fr4JUS tt.s mclderet prCMded a graphic demonslra ""' that
poor restraont of speech nas no place at UB As rt turned out. Mr
Mut\ammad s ta here was more restraoned lllan _,e I'IIS w.detycensured Kean Slala ramar'l&lt;s. 8\180 l!lOUQ!'I there moght , _ .
been much on 114 UB presenlallon 10 disagree w.lh , there was
comparatNely 1m that was nalelul. and much that was wort
hearrng Moreover ned UB preWnted Mr Muhammad from

§E

au

me

--

Reportlr E

apealdng. ""' long-term ~ lor-.· lr.oom 10
spllllk andi1IIICI could'men

been-·• •
~.waWOUidllaYII..-.cl*'~to-and

ponde&lt;apr-~onlhlt~end_.,gly
ntr~
Atnarlclf\ hisloly and c:Uiure
A number d ClOIIeliQIIU aslo.ed me. " lhlt , _
Ull. 10
c:onderM Mr ~·r-u twnproudlllll
!!lese colieiiOt* -~ lhw rrght 10 .x.,.ct pobllc:fy; hOWon at1ung me tor olfiC1el....,. of~--·.,...
eskedforan~~.--.tlon ~
llhould netther sponaor.nor ~ . nor canare. nor at.IPP'rdeu-Mt_, ideM hi 1T111Y be heMU
1
e u-e ~ belrM
hllleiiA rdaes can heve

..._of,_"

of

dange&lt;OU$ ~ •

hoSIDry has amply demor&gt;sttaled no! &lt;riy lor ~ Nnenc:a-&gt;1. 001 lot .., "*'Y
- · lit
behoovaa us
ow. ......
~. Jr 'amaun raga-dong lhlt ConsttlrJIJonel
free
expr- . ....,. free thaugllllot lt...e who ego-•
u&amp; bUt
tre«!!m tor the lhougl1t- hele ·The~ ~more
than any olhet tnSiliUbon. mull-- lhel OOflCAIIlllOn d f'rrsl
Amendment guar.,_ By ne&lt;ther eapouMlO nor oenaorng
rdeas. we -.se 11181 there
be at lent one neuttal forvm .,
wNch any rdea no ma
tow radrc.t or h
ut. may be - d

lOt_,_

-

to...,__ooncaptof

and Ct1lrQtJed If ltle urwerSIIy
IdeaS any ..-.•• ._.. liS

lii1Cnllly

ceniUt•

or

w-. ·
-011

c:er.ors

~

s....

.,..

HiciG

~ aad ~-

-Ed Suit--. dlairallhr ~"""""'
SducDlDCamaillee. w~
mt.t.l'aldlr
SUNY
·, prici1Qtsllld Ulrs piorib5 •

'*'*'" aocoallunclron 0.. SOCIII!y

""'l&gt;'Y
camol allotd Hatrng the hatetut rs not a produCWe _ _, .

Ycd.bllt-

KaadluValle,.--mlbes...e&lt;:om-

Md{eowa's..,..,. ~their
far a full 1tan1:11 WOIIid be bea&lt;t Ia ...tvaocr
al SUNY Da7.
""""" ·u 00ocrve diM ~ lldt 10 titre Cllpl&amp;l "' 1
poupal Abe)' al
· ci'UB ID addrumuo
a fall ....,.,...._ of
V1IIIIOft, ..,..
,._,...
hom 1 other voned orp&gt;W-

10

-may be natalulor otlensMO.
endorsrng 01
tt. and 1t1en dtScuurng .,._. to us-lhallS a producltve
llllemabve. and" ~&lt;eeprog
lhlt spor« d the ..-tv Sothe cancllehgl'll Y1Q4 held atlhe StuderC Unoon on lhlt attemoon of
Mr Mutlatntnad s ta Bolli emat._ are vawy muctun l&lt;eepng
wlftl our SOCial and rnleladual oblog8llonl as a public unrvaSIIy
The nrneteef11h.ceott.f Br
natomw Charles Bradlaugh
oard ·eener alhot.oAndfold abusaol tpe«:htnan • - d free
speech The abuW
.., a day. bUt lhlt,..... slays hllfe of
ltle people, and eniOn'1t&gt;s ""'hOpe of !he,.,., • u,. MuhatntMd •
preseruuon rs """' · boll the doalogue that
secae ·jUStiCe for
a".· d «rs ever 10 be secured contrnues and must contnUe It wrl
do so only ff we--as students and colleagues and cruzens at an
rnstrlu!Jon that more 1t1an any OCher ln$\l\uiiOfl on OUt ICJOI!tV IS
deiOwd 1&gt;v treedorTI d lhouo;tl....-ow comers 10 CXIIW'rllUie lteely
and e&gt;:Diore ~ Ideas That al IS ....._ we ""' nere

.._~-Molar-Trudt~

Y.S Soa«)'far 4-"""'riopn- ' ·.,.
York U..vasn7. wiD also ~their.....,
Mud~

I,

COW1I

pomiS ...._

"W~....ellltOIWltha-r~

To- 1

rupoote 011 pmt al lht

Jl"'l'Pk IDe a day olf'fnu ...on.
UDdenalr.t a IJ'Udm&amp; I 0-bour round4np

"""" a(

....s 1 0 - dw
.
ODd ClCliDIIlll
wbicll tllelr alumni e.x:bibllcd - . I !bt
..Sue "~be- UB dope.- ..............•

ride,

WILUAIIR.-

UB C0111111it1«, clwrcd by Judi

Scb.......,, preaed for SUNY lrpla
b.-e ~ ......
~

HE BUlLDI G CO SERVA-

no

ConuctsNetworkwillsooo
be el&lt;.pllllCfuog 10 the ortb Campus. wbere it will 00111inoe to improve US's environmental
responsibilit7.TheBCCNetworltbasolmady
bad sigroifi&lt;:am results Oil doe s...b Campus,
accordin&amp; to Wolter Simpson. &amp;WX:iaoe facili-

ties Jlf'Clll'llll cxxordinalor.
The BCC is a network of~ indi·
viduah far each departm&lt;:Dl. offoce, Ooor or
building who work with UB's Enviromnental Task Fonle (ETF) and Univeml)' FacilitiesiOpromoleenviromnentallyn:opobSl'ble
activities in their """' of the universot) ,
SimpoooAys. "Aftcrmanyyearsofuyingto
raise environmenl.al awarcocss through tbe
ETF, ,... decided that what was necessary
was 1 systemotio way of working from 1
gnss-I'OOIS irvel."h&lt;sats- "Tbat'swhatthe
BCC is.Theoelwork isalmodyinplaceantheSouth
Campus. wbere a hugr improvement bas be&lt;n
madeintbellliiOIIDlof,.'ISietbaJUBr&lt;C)cles.
But, Simpson soys. tbe BCC Network will do
more. "We're n&gt;definin&amp; wlilt's be&lt;n darleon
tbe South Compus,• Simpson ..ys. ·we·~
m.dening our cffan 011 tbe North Campus.
ODd wiD lak.e what
darle bere bod&lt; 10 tbe
South Campus. We·u ask tbe BCC10belp with
mall)' IIUillei'S a( campus mviroornedal respoosibilil)'.•
Tbcoe man... inc I...X enc:ouraging a variel7 of eoergy~g behavior, infor·
malty monitoring participation levels ODd
identifying problem areas that impede conservation efforts, oc:tlng liS a liaison between
panicular units and lbt ETF, the Conserv~

we·...,

ooungiog their departments to useaoypeof
paper that our pun:basinc cleponmem just
disa&gt;verod, wbicb is exeellent for copy mo·
chines,~ prinsen, ofbet printing ODd ru
macloines, and "''hich is IOOpen:em reeycled
with at least .SO percent post-&lt;l01l5UJD«
waote.•

A "kick-off" mectiog far tbe BCC Net"'ori. is pl.amoed for Much 3 at 3 p.m. in the
Student Union, Room 330. The meding will
feature discusoJon of items ouch IS speciirc
opportunities for BCC members to mokt
thcrr offi"" more emoromnmtally respoosrve. Stmpson say .
The potenlial of the BCC 'etworl. bas
already been made dear b) the'""' im·
pro&gt;rn&gt;et~t on re&lt;:)drog on the South Cam·
pw..1bat improvement bas been greatly due
10 lbe work of Matthew Declo.. insuucrional
supponassistant for buolding services ODd
grounds. "'ioo bas educated South Campus
members of lbe BCC in lbe new mcycling
system. and William Bagley, maintelllliCe
eng;,_,. wbo cfucc:tly handles all UB paper
waste.
·we initialed tbe project to inaase n:c:y·
cling on tbe South Campus a year ago,· Deck
..ys. ·we· changed tbe sort of materials we
oa::epu:d ODd switched to a oew vendor "'ioo
collects all sons of paper.• Copying lht
system 11 SUNY-Brockpon.. "Rccyclin.g
Only" sticlan were pl...::ecl on 'WliSlebasktls
near workers· desks, while noo-&lt;eeyclable
~ge oow is takto to •a central location.

llBEII&lt;ti)&lt;~Propm.....S.the. -- Deckillys.-·-R&lt;eyd.~biDs-.IU&gt;.beindoe ·

include ss millica .,........-x ID GIU opcr
The twaury of
. if fwldod. ..

~ fiDids

u..us..-~40pt.rO&lt;U.ot

openlina """' bet:auoe a( tbc ..:1
scope al tbc ........:t. - bave ccial 011 lrctt
"We' re also
·
for 100 eddJucmal
fulkimt. faculty J&gt;Cl'idar. ($4 milliCln sys·
trm-wicle). This will c:nlMe 800 &lt;XlUIK
""""""' lbrouPout titre ~ Ill bdp 5111·
deDis complaE dtreir dqrees iD feu )UIS.
Next is $3 lDillioa
far Slllde8l

t9n ...., •.., •-.,.d 40-.SO SODS., reey·
clabl&lt; prba&amp;e a 1DCIIIh. Twenty pcn:e111 al
UB '• wale is now recycled, ahbougll our
program is still onl7 on !be South Campus.
We can Jel up to 40-.SO peroen1 n:c:)'Ciin&amp;
wben we apand to tbe North

.,_.wide

servio:&gt;ec...,pon:: EOP~.,..,.......,.

8tliDc. dWd care, nrious ~ far dao
disabled, &amp;mall&amp; tbr c
•
Also "" McK.eowa'a aplllle are _....
tainiDJ pacluate TAP, wbK:II titre govemar
did 1101 iaci...X ID lht ~ blldgel. but
"'ioicb UB off'acials bope to see r&lt;:5IOftd by
lht legislature. "Far IMJive:r5ily ccntt:rs. this
· a cntlcal blow," ..ys
·w~·rr
bQping lht legislature •ill restore II beca
it' -r imponam 10 lbe Ullivmiity cx:ntcrs."
Another coal i 10 mainaain-tbroughoul
the bud
ocgotiatlans-W level of .uppart re&lt;oMUh&lt;p tJcd by the govemar. 'fbr

tlttmg that I'&lt;C)don darle is BaJ!ey's
job. A staff of udcDis ODd IUJLE.
Program ....n.ers !iOit tlorou~ lbe paper
"'liSle Bagley's .wr diVIdes lbe paper i
grades wlucb ""' pocked up by UB'• &gt;eo·
dor, RJorncol Fibre&gt; Inc., wluch JII.Y$ VIJ}'IIlZ
rateS for dr!Terent grades, Baaley..
Key to the """"""" of the program bas

G

81

least .,...,

comact in c-r clc:ponmmt on the South

Campus," Deck.Ays. "KJ&gt;owina people per·
sooally makes a huge d i f f - .•

1994-9Sbuclptislbtfintsillcel98'hilbo&lt;ll
rcducdans Ill doe'-, Mel{..,..,. ..
ew Yodr. icpob1ars .-n aut week
from their week.Jon&amp; vaalioD ODd will be
f...::ecl with I 0,000 bills inlrocluc:lld siDce the
swtaloeasioa,onlyfi¥ealwbichbavebecn
pasted ....S 5ipcd
law
far.
McK.!ownl'dunllto Albony Marchi, mal&lt;·
m, doe rounds willl llllir::e eo..,blia. clireda:
a( govemmenQJ relodClns a Slaay Brook. The
idea, says MllK.eowu, "is Ill mow pai1DOI'Sbip
ODd unified c:1Jon a~ eods of lbe-.
We on: goiDa 10
around ll:lpdocr oud..,.
Cllcs,IO sbow- a( CCliiiiiiOD ial&lt;:o:alt: GIU

&amp;11)1

WalterSimpoon ..)'S. "1boseofusonlbt
ETF hive been uyinc 1101 only to establish
enviroomenlala-a1 UB, bul10 look
at wlw other.univcnities do. What we've
seen is that other univemtles doo ' t }'el hive
anything likt the BCC, which gets environmental responsibility down to the individual
level U8 CID serve IS I model a( how to
make envin:xomental reo;poosibilit y work. •
Thooe intcreoted in becoming members
altbe BCC. or in rcceiviJo&amp; more infCIImlllion.,

ooiJetr

us-

ball, and prba&amp;e cans mlbe ofJ'iceo..- Deck
'"&gt;"· • aw it's lbe other -7 around We
get people to paruci~ who doo 't .._ "'
get up from thw c:haors"
Sioc:e moot of tbe was1e created 111 d5ks
is recyclable, Deck says. thoro's a m
smoller IIJtiOUDI al non-reeyclable gtubage.
"ID Fd&gt;ruory L993, ....tim we initUited !be
program. UB nqcled aboul 6-a lOG$ of
p.rboce a ..-th," be ays. "SlJoce A

been the fact that "we hive

COIIUIIUIIity

fllallioaed lbol a1
~very lqislative V15l • . . ys
~ prioritics diM S
....S UB
for-....S
· a blg&gt;e far

Accent is on environmental responsibility at UB
r&lt;C)dutg program. and dtsseminating UB 's
mviroruncrrtal pobcoes, Simpson .. ys.
·us bas uc:ellcnt environmental pob·
c:ies.bullbey won't"" implcmc:medwithout
ouch a gnoss-roo&lt;s effort.· Simp5011 says
"BCC members can do such things as en-

fUDdm&amp; -we

a.o

co

·

.waawww..~~it~~ ·~· · ~'IIIMf, ~no&gt;;-..!.• · · · • ·

�_____.
....

Northridge quake is 'writing on
the wall' for U.S., Buckle says

MartiQ Luther King in Buffalo
:. ........,.

ible ~ dial iiiOiote them from eanl&gt;-

ASTMONTH'S arthridJe eani&gt;qualr.e llillowed tMI even • cities
-.dlh mandamty upgndr. propams
designed to m:ltigate damaae, muy
bulldinp remain \lll.lnc:ralilc 10 eveoii&gt;Oik:rau:~ac:eonlin&amp;lotleadin&amp;eanl&gt;­
quake~.

"ltiseextnmelydiffiallttedlnic:alproblern, as ''"~11 u a major financial dllll""'&amp;e.
to protect people and
putlcuiuty
In older buildings. ....id lao Buckle, Mpul.y
direciDr of the Narloood Ctmer for Eanhqum l'ngioeerillaRest:m:h(NCEE.R)at UB.
profes&amp;ar of ·cim ..,m.a~n, 11

Jli'OPI!l1r.

e:q&gt;crt on bow

otruCIUieS perfonn

Cll1hqunesandbowdamagel0them

lllllipted. He made his COliiiiiMtS In
' uessicn Fea 11 dwin&amp; the omhlll medina
of the M1eriean Associotioo for the AdVII'IClCJIIent of Science Ill SID Fundsco.
"If the situation is w be imprct\·ed, two
tbinas ore .....,.,...,. ." be said. "First. the
existing boildln stock must be ronli&lt;d. and
prioritymustbegivcntoup~g
•JJ.ial
buildings, such IS hospitals. Scc:ond. less
005tly, moo: effective
art n«ded to
make thest seismic upgrodes. •
Reseorcb ploys • mojor role Ill making
retrof"ttting less 006lly. be noted. "New t&lt;:&lt;:bnologies, such IS host isolatioo, lrt not only
reducil\g CXISIS, but ore also allowing rctrofllted !ilruc::IUreSIOperformevr:n bcru:rtbaD oe.w
buildings1batmod todoy 'scode,• said Budde.
He noted tbaJ after the Nonhridge quake,
lheboose-isolaled UniversityofSoutbemCalifomia teoclling hospital in Los AnJeles remained opr:n and full} operational without
suffering ctruCflnl or 001151ructural dam0ge. lnstt:adofbeing rigidlyeonnc:aedto the
ground. bose-isolated buildinas sit on flu·

""'Y•

Tbe
bue-illolation t.edmoloc7 usa!
usc bo8pilal ....... bebla lpPI.ied ..,
two bisloric Califcmio 1~ lho U.S.
Oowt or Appeals 1n Soot Frucillico alii! 111e
Ool(land CltyliWl, be ailded. "Ill 'b olb-.

pooia1 Callec:tb. Rt:adiiQa ...... 420

CD !be

eo,-. Arooll&amp; the ~- a.. type-

.,...,. of lniroduc:lol} mnu

· Pita's

~~holdllnintada '

,._r,_

""1111 by can.-.mionaiiC!Cilmiqlars.• be said.

Jlboi''I'"""'-Miila
1961 ~
c:q.tioD M....:ll C11 W . '
Uaac '
ol Dr. Lydia T. Wri&amp;k, rt'liled

B isin

8ult

'-'.ioclldonwaslcsexpeosi~Jimlllb­

podiatriciall and fonDer
idlool t.o.rd

.~ledhnologyandotberprom­

new ~opmr:nts are the ft!SUltof

inlrnsive .........:~! progruns funded lorgely
by the NatiooaJ Science Foundatloll .. the
State Uni...aity of New Yark and the Uni\IUShy o( Califomla•tr earthquake risk blto be reduced in the:
U.S, tbe5e are the kinds of lnnovoU0115 duot
must be i.mplemerllod," said Budde.
~.be adde(l,,_,;balooris insuffiCioa "'wner:sandaJOIOC!iamoftbel'lllion's
buiJditlss and infraslnlct:ure must be liw:n
ioomtives 10 ..Jop and implc:mellt thest
ledJnologies.. be aid. He
tbaJ such
policies mt&amp; be ~~doped~ the
earti.Jguakes ocwr lnfmqucdly.
"Seismic rislr:.is dfllenninedby two f~C~&lt;J~S: the
til&lt;dihood thai an eorlbquake will O(Qir in a

membef. ~l

befli&gt;Dti-IOjoul
thc man:h.
Or. 10ft( '* '*' CGpJ 411 lntrodUc:t:loft to
lt*!Cb.

""w

"'*"'

u.s ..

......, ..n.n:

gMn""""'aod fhe~IO

IXl!mlll-

nily sboddlla ~ocx..-: be said.
Even regiOII5 where the probability of
occurreoce is low, the ri to society may be
turb because COCIS&lt;ICI"""""" may be eatashophic, be upl.oincd. He DOled \hal thi$ is
.portieuwlr \J'Ue in oreu S1lCb os
Eat
Coost. becoltiC cities like New York ar•
llllpi'OpOm!.
"Time is or the ~ if. disaster elsewbert in !be ooonuy Is to be avel\ed, • be
said. "TbeNortbridgeell1hqual&lt;eisthe writ·
ingonthewall,-just forCalifomia, but fO&lt;
the rest of the c:aumry .•

m

a..

n.e ........,. hll•l!r ••• Steff Auecltdl•• ••• tile
Offke et file .r..l. .et ef ••• U.hrenlty et ·• •ff•l•

pr•••••

. . . II . . YIIIII'II AIIIIUAL

LlLl:..L-LLLL L~l-lu.:-L· l~LLLl: lL''Cl
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naauul' :a4, t·•••
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. from Dr .JdMDat..dler
•••• 1967 .,.,.,.,.. Ia IWfalo, ia tile

•d

qumlllCidcm.

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--~­

IN-.-T
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lJnioD. 2 p.m Fra:
and opcll to all . . - . ; 00 pre-

- - roquir&lt;d. Call Comm .... and 011"-Campuo ScMces
a1 64UI2S !«...,... infc:nrtabon.

-

..

-

uau.a

~,..._-

- ~--~.821

Ma-SIIJLLS
lllti'OIIuctioe HIIBNJ:THoopieal Mil l iB Ulww}
......... -..-.'11211tealth
Somces Ulnry Soudt C...pus. JO Lna o rq:tJtBUoa

'"''uuod

UFE-

Tu.l Aluioty, U8 Cowsefnt&amp;
sWl Nooo-1 p.m. Call 60S·
6125 to

rqiJII~

-WB.LPABStAW

no llol&lt; of Protdot Dyuoaia
I t o - - o f SipM Do-·-TI"UUIductioe: A
c-......-~

Dr. llaWW.......,.._...,.,_,.
""" c:hair, D&lt;pL of l'lt:JoliolocJ
""" BiopJ&gt;ylia.,....
SiMI
Sdttoal ofMcdiclott,
New
Yod&lt;~. HIIIdoae~

TMUeSOAY

l
-

Sub ltoppe • Uni ;{art
Cop top • Ctmpus Church o..lition
Campu Tee' 4. weats •
D'Angelo Hair Cosmetics
i&gt;&lt;wrntow Rem-A-Ur
GPAlltsannce ervices
lutltet;n Cnnpu Mini ~ry
twnyTrna
Center

Optiullmage
Kaplan Test P~p
ni versity Boo to res
UBMicro 011es Center

-~IC-..ua

...-·-

~­
llladoW-itiGrM....
~no
Maldoo&amp; of-~

A~Mri&lt;HF_.........,_

llla,l..iottloM.I'I!ricillo,pn&gt;C...... hiololyof-......

Con*1ued on page 8

�_.

8
CALENDAR

Stah

Cootinoed from page 7

., . , . , . _ , . -...oQUII.

Slqilla ~ Pc:!Jt. &lt;JIH •
"""'..., l'bllooopy

d-..

---

lalllaao Ualv.~
4114 lloold7, I pJII l'!lur&amp; Cillnpul.

~5"'-.0.Jitol ~
Oaqo. • c::laMs. 3-lO P""-

'""

-"""Dr.a.···
.... aAbl'-........,

~Or TedClocqloa,

·-

Biolou IJqlt., -~
Uaiv uu:-. Niril~
IIAlllaiATICtl-...oQUII.

,... ......-.r.-c......

U T -.'IIIILL8Y IIXMMt
Sloow'llf

:;.::-fa

... ~Wlmc:Y.

Mril,
._Fr:b.u••~ ·-

Moo . Aug 29

5~7:

_......,..,..,....,.. ___

11..-,-. -. . poo-dlrowp . . _.,..,. drho
lw Nn. E...,~ Lood.

Classes resume at 6 p.m
Yam Klppur-Observed Holtd3y (beg&gt;nS at 6 p m)
- ClaSSII$ res~.me at0 6 p m
__:::W:::edrtesda==-:.::.=y::.:8Ched~'"'1':-:"-::
Jle 1:0:-be;:-;follc)wed
==;---- - -

--·...---

....- or:holmh;pl"' )lll&gt;lar B.A
CIIIILf.A.--

oojuntorfine-llllj&lt;n.

Classes resume

"""......,..._ia.S..Vm

G011tty""""" lllooday, To-'"1.

Semesler li'laf
_,___ __
Aeadcng Day

L.

Shafer, MD , ... pro(
.... O . p t . o f Swd'orcl Uru\• ~Cook&lt;.
!bti!Ca_.,;4pm
UIIU 'FILM

T1ot C....... Pwpk. Stwk:nt
UDioa n.:....
Compoa
6p.m Tod.cu Sl,51uden&lt;s.
S3.50. •IIOlhero.
UIWIRUII
l..i.Lr Wata' for o.oroa.te.
Studebl Uaion Thealltr. l'liorth
Compoa 9 p.m rocuu U .
51udebts:Sl~. all0lhors

~-p&lt;Miloda•..,.

_ . , . . ,...,.dSOIIy

_ _ IIISI'U,

lope.---.
"""""..me..

- ·from

Maoda~ cluoo(!h

Fnday No
ildrniosioo&lt;hor&amp;&lt;

~Fridor,9•.m.-5p.m.

W-IIIU.D,IIII

E..bibit .- ........ - . . ,.,.,...._
in&amp;J,~f1ic:tk:sw....,.,.,..Woa

~lhrlif&lt;&lt;ll

J08S

- Coownencement W~end

"""'""'UB.....m..jll&lt;lf-

FACULTY
Vliillac
. - rr-or._..
Mods• ~;.:::~lf4010

1 ill &lt;be dlsplly """""''"" Mufi&lt; t..brarj.NonhCampw.

r.........o.c..p.tl-11'11cntvJ.
Poorinc tF-0011

O(,...;c....

...,..rbroorgll-

.u.iltaM/

IIIEKUlCM

-.,. c-tor c E-Zf-l'&lt;y·
chology. l'o$Cio1 •R-9JOS7
F-'ty J&gt;nolc&gt;p.....,t A«odot&lt; ( E-Z. laolf-1'-&gt;-Fomily

NOTI •CIS

-- . .n
: l - rRAI
s..,..m- ple;ost 1101&lt;"

lNG
....

.........
~
'
""
' - - 10 prtMdt
ctybo..,;mfonutioa .00 trun:mc W a!l empLoyees Oil hQ.ards aod w~ lliiSie

Medoct.e, Postbl( tR·9lll3

Stc:rflary II

-CAMPUS BESTSEtl.ERS

-

-WEEKSONUST

z

~

IJ!' MIChael Ooonu:ln
(KnorA, $24)

2 ~~~~---COVNTT
3 -wauz•CB&gt;M,.._s • .,.,.
K"*"
4
5

(porc~I.Q.;I

•R-

bl'ftlbertJionesWale&lt;
(W-. 18.951

·--·by Garri!on
(Vlimg. $22)

byKarenArmsUong

(f&lt;l&gt;apt $27 SO)

NEW AND IMPORTANT

KAVIHIUIUR lAY, TME OEI.ANY SISTERS'
MST 100 YEARS
BY SARAH &amp; A ElJZABE1H DELANY WITH AMY HIU
HEARTH

WI
Having Our Say ciYoniCies 1t1e INes of Sadie and Bess·

(Kodansha.

oe Delany ttvcugh the early days ol t&gt;ac1&lt; lreeclom and
the rise olthe t&gt;ac1&lt; moddle class os a cornboned
memoir that WIH make readers
they coUd mee1 the
Irrepressible Delany sosters

»

wrsn

NEW AND NOTEWORTHY
IUI'CIIIEN
Br BANANA YOSHIMOTO
(Pocl&lt;siBodrs, $ 18)

A very ~sing book by one o1 Japan's bnghlest kteraty stars. Yoshimoto's style ol writing is very "":"n ~
precise. h puts one in mind of the gleaming wnne kitchens She writes ol, bulleaws the reader with a warm
comlortable feeling found only in a messv. overcrowded kitchen.
-Con!p/IIK1 by Dawn Klen, Univsrslly BookSKXe
L:___~_,..,.~,..,...,.~
- . ,..,.
. _ ,..,.
_. ~
-- ~
- -~~......

Mon ., May 1

May

lues . "-'.ay 2
3- Thurs • May 1 1
May 12-May 14

Termin named East Coast
Conference Coach of the Year
Men's Swi-*C

second place hnosn ol 2 4 e 1n !he 200
bad&lt;stroke was also a scnool reco&lt;d

Budd Termtn was named East Coast
Conference Coac~ of !he Year and Mark

R-94015 lt.....,...h T«&lt;Wdao I (porc-timoi ·B~
Serenoa.. Poocin1 IR-94018.

mer as the Bulls captU&lt;ed the ECC
Swrnmong and D •ng Champooostups at

baske!baM team unproved u- record
to 16-8 011e&lt;aB and 3-2 1n the East ()]as·

Northeastern llhnots on Feb 8 and 19
The SuUs hrushed wrt 1227 5 pocots Ill
the two day evem eas~y outdlslanemg
second place Central Connecticut
State's 733 5 wtwe Norltleastem 1Uif10rs
was lhord wit 240
Ho&lt;gan took the 400 IM event tn
4 19.71 lor theSulls and leamed With
Kerry M•fler. Shawn Paytoo-Newman
and Dan Houlihan to take the 800 free
relay in 7 20 06 M ler also won the 200
backstroke on 1:55 45 while Dave B
Clan Houlihan and Jamie Pla~alr look
the next !tYee spoiS in !he event lor the
Bulls M lef also 1001&lt; the 200 free tn

Conference w a 71-55 won a Nartt&gt;eastern U.ono!S on Saturday ntgl&gt;t on Bll
rnportaot 'ECC test
SeniQr Brooke Smith led !he way lor
1he Aoy~s wlltl 17 points as UB rallied
!rom a »20 halftime delicll 10 put logethe&lt; a 23-1 run CM!f the hr&amp;t seve~
mmliltes of the seoood half Andrea
..-./-~
Fraley roninbu!ed 16 pocots while
Nad1ne Mastroleo as lhe Royals' high

--..t.
c .......u.. ... CllaJeal Psy•~oo~o&gt;&amp;lll (SL-.!!I.cooa..lllll
Paocing-'l'-4011 . Mon·

ec.c..-.

qcr-R..,a r..., lf1o....,lal
Anal yolo """ - ' - l l l &amp; Op-

w
P•yroll Sen"- """'""
tl'-309) .......,.__ Aaa-

2

Moo
~Maf20

EnJin&lt;eru&gt;J. l'ostm&amp;
9JO.I2 Saoolorll....m.Support podallsc-Famil) M&lt;do crncfRural Keallh. POSimc
•R-9&gt;40 II PO!d&lt;lo&lt;torwl ..._.

..,.,..., (SI.A)-A"""""'U&gt;&amp;

byftlbertJamosWollet
( W -. $ 1696)

Wed
------

TVE$ • Ja11 17
Sat . Marcto 1

"" l'ro-

tlo!e-PonodonloiOJY. , _

Books

Tues . Dec 13

Wed~
nus . Dec 1~Thtss . OeC 22 c~Sat Dec~

- lnstnJctoon
1ns
Spnng reoe~m~ classes _
Cla&amp;se$ resume
- Jnstruc!JOO ends a close of classes
Aead1ng oBy
SOOieS!erTonaJ e~~

Mrioa
Duopcn,
llOIIIlnoai "' Fe!&gt; 2S .. Porstyj
IW&lt; Boob Collo&lt;ooo Reooluq:
Room. 420 a.p... Mondor

,......,..._.......,.,...,.,_

ChlriH L 'ErlfiiR 's pia"' fodl&lt; ..pnal, Mlo:d&gt; 2 ~
Mlo:d&gt; IS. 10 i1mes O,«t·E..U.biUaAIWI, l!md floot , IU~ts
HoD. Sou1h c.mpu.. Open to
SludeniS, f1&lt;ult) ed tht oomannut) from 9 1.nhS p.m .•

rues . Nov 22
- tkn . Nov zs

6dualrloi!-M • Die-

"-'&gt;1 •

ocmposer~ Oillnptlk!f mllSIC !J!io-

NICIII1U1\III£·L'Enf:&amp;Jll'" P\.ul· Viis1oos of
w~...; uhil&gt;tl o~ uclli·

----·-

sdledtJ!elDbe~. ~~~fipm

W-y.l'ridoy,lO•.m -ii
fUlL, lbur&gt;day, IOa.m. •8 p.m

-

Mon ' NOll 21

- Thanksgiving reoen begins 11 dose ol dasses _ __

lodi&lt;MOqll.A~--u,.

l..&lt;joml A; Hiller ( 1924-199-4 ~

EXMIB 'I TS

Moo , Sept 5
Tues . Sept 6
ed . Sept 7
Wed , Sept 14
Thurs • Sept 15

-Oolcr)'.l'iotMJOrM:

l&lt;ooriios. Pr&lt;JI Slev.. Hutd«,
lhli•. &lt;11 olinooil(loiaoeo. 100
~ Scullc::..p&amp; 4 p.m.
NIAIIIlACBI'I1CIB'IUB
1l'he lllor or c-,..o.r&lt;leotnoi!HIJ
looCbicol

1'

Monday. July 1i .friday, AugU$1 19

Mllmlltt81 o.~ .._r (Mcnclay, Mav ao1
l.ndi!JQ;ende.- Day~ Halioay (l.bwiay .My 41
'I\07E ~ ~ robe tollcwed en ~Y July 7 (Nr s....wr. Stlssiortl)

. . . . . . ,. _ ..........
!&gt;rpm--

s..e..~•Suu•

Pll-----

"""\'n .....~t Sufi'."lln

Session II
Seaionlfl

loSpoool~lloodiool

........ Aiiii!!I.9-JUI'

COI.l.OIIIIW

-

- - .__ ltio&amp;. )f. lolloiftllo,"ead!M t, .,.u.;-,.
All:lliwa iD ....... , . _ HiiiD)o
Noallo. .............. ~
,. _QICllp:ft.

tof ,..,

Approved Academic Calermr tnr 1994 95

_....,

WACII.IM1li'IT-

ff-011..... 0\JMY. 17
~ l-lO
PA.~ ~die Clnl&lt;to... d lldbc:odaa.

Boldt-

Llll\-1 , .. ,f't

'" 'st,.l ( L-3, -

pooilloas

c-·-

....ilablo~""" bo-

1~ Tcc:luoolosY. l'osuol

«P-0015,4016
Applic:ol.,. Pn&gt;cno- ISL-3)-CompucinJ
•nd Wornmion TeclmolocY.
PootinJ IP-4018 __,Fillld...._,..ut
(SL-3!-A&lt;ooontiO&amp; ...r Payroll
Sernoes. ~l tP..OOO
-....BoUDin!&lt;1ar (SLl,lo.....,.I-Opportuilyi-ReslOenrlal Ufe.

PoorinJ tP-4!l2ti. a...........

Wu~ T C!Clluliriall ( J.....l .. two
posltiou a"ailablt)-P.nviron-mr:n1al Hutch and Safety.l'o$1ing fP-4021.

- . n n v E CLUS8'IID
CIVILKtybaard Sptc:loUSl (SG-4'1f'itwlcial Ald.
134361.
Colarlotloas Clork 2 (SG-0)FiCIIDCial Aid. Lint f) l 121.

u..

-

IMOII CI..USlAED CIVIL
a-...(~

Semas. Lint t3421J - ....._Helper (§G..06l..n cilities w Syscems Mauot&lt;-

--lllll&lt;l&lt;.UII&lt;OJ1951.

.....:au

LiiiiW

~-~
Servic:eo.
u.. 131495.

.. ---· ----- . . ' . ..

Horlfatl was named outstandll'lg swtm-

Head coactt Sa Buscagua 's ooomen s

reb!lurlder with s

Earner 1111he - · lhe Royals defeaJeG Ctucago State 66-$) in Qh;cago
Srrnlh scored a career-high 24 poi!lls on

1 47 72.
Payton·Newman also won the 100 fly.

fomshong in 52.82 tust 13 seconds ahead
of een·ral OooneobcUI s Paul Emery

Brtller nosed out Playfaw lo take the 50
free In 22.25 wtlile his eammate lintShe&lt;if in 22.26.

Wom.t's SwllnainC
The Royals also '10011 home an East
Coast Conlerenoe Charrplonship as UB
scored 1104 .points lo Central Conned&gt;cut State's 736 and Norllleastem Illinois'
331 to win !he tme. Megan Connolly was
selecled as outstanding SWimmer .
Connolly. a freshman. won the 100
and 200 bUilerfly everus as well as the
200 IM. Connolly was also pan of the
winning 200 and 400 free relay teams.
.Ann Marie Gornkl ( 100 breaststroke. 400
IM), Martie Duffett (500 and 1.650 free)
and Karen Lasky (1- and 3-meter diving)
also were double winners lot the Royals
in lhe two day ell8f1t. Lasky sef a school
record with 505 points In !he 3-meter
corT\I)etition and 1ook the 1-meter even1

. -~-~-~-~~~--~~-~~·~:~ .

Wom.t's B.sklltbtlll

12-of-161ietd goal shoobng to lead the
Royals 10 the YIC!ory Smith also
gabbed !lll1e rebounds 10 lead UB on

!he boards.
The Royals fell 6&amp;6710 e&lt;0S$10Wn
nval CaJliSIIJS a1 Afc.mnl Arena on Febfuary 15 MaSlroleo scored 18 points and
Fraley adOild 161or UB wtwe sophomore omter Kris Holtz grabbed nine
f&amp;b!:&gt;ulilds
W.......,
The &amp;Ills wrestling squad dropped a
34-5 di!CISIOO Saturday allemooo io the
defending East Coast Wrestling Assocoation champion Rider Broncs in
Lawreoce\lllle, N.J Marcus Hutc.!llns
(167 pounds) oofealed Rider's Dion
Vcsconti 4-2 while heavyweight Sean
McLaughbn recorded a 2-1 overtime
dedsion over Mike Westhead for the
Bulls only 111Ciories UB also dropped a
22-9 contest at Hofstra over the weekend . Hutchins, Aemle CrlsatuHt (1421
and wm Moss. Jr. ( 158) were viclorious
tor !he euns •who now stand at 2-12

overall.

.. . ::·~~~-~-· -·. -- -

�_..,

_____...

-lor

The fllporw . . . - . . ocrmwlllt)'on- a1- . , ,.............., oommunlly ......... ....., ""
olyle..., lotlglll

NAFfA an~ Higher Education:

The Cultural and Educational Dimensions of Trade
. , ........ ALTaACM
BE NORTH AMEIUCAN p,.,.
n.le~

APTA)

pnllllilel dooer flCOIIOIDic . . .
tians in tbe worid'•larp lradq
bloc. However. unit lbe Euro-

pea Uoion.. tbe~lrlde~
NAPTA bas atlnnl or l&gt;duccioral dillli!IIOioiL ~economic Ills will~
bly ~ culllnlllld edutaional
imptic:aionL Now is lime 10 rdle&lt;:t .. wbal
Nor1h Amr.ni:m ecooomlc inlepban will
man 10 Olber aspec15

1"aimed.~. cq,.,.
o{........, C.-do iladf chided.,.,._,

Mcu:cl ~ in.""""" IIUdy o{ !be

•~and~adloasnm
....., JdolionrDp NAfTA will
lhe

aboal c-Ia and t.bioo iiiiCICIIlly-from u.
medii Recml
..,.,..
mulncuilnn-. .. !be curriathn o{ Alllcnc:m collep and universiucs hl.-e 1tlldl:d 10
~
more 011
a- ..
• otae.lf In
" and
~he!£
is c:onsidenbly more~ about
UniiCd
but n · fair 10 Ay lbal !here
bnJe
swdy o{ the u ill the
collep and unlvasotx:s o{""""" ~
lias """ dJin&amp; 10
aboul
Ulllled
Slale&amp; from "''IICbmc
' or
ond
q!me anolber
about
~
oysu:moiX:IIly There io, Wllboul claubt, I
ClOIISidcnble knooo-Jod&amp;e de6;:a Chll -.Is 10
rec.tifiod.

_.....,.olc.r.dimad!lnl........,

" also ........ ndiliao ol......yq

.... u ....a.al daminaDon. It

§3"*-

tndibon--

aDy leola.! ill....aal diroctiono i n - o{

rdllions boelwllcn
Mt:xic:o. the United
SI.II&lt;S,IIId c.o.dl.
n,., un1..,..a;., an
cine~ Clllplay
m;,.,.,_.rolein
AI.TUCII
~I r..- in
wbich !here is bdltt
urdcnllndin&amp; o{ cine eli- cultt.n:s,llld in
wbicb lbe
D&lt;CCSSif)' ror ~ ugJ8m are avoillble.
In Europe,....,..,. andGOI!nR......, ~
o{lhe vision of ~ c.a.m.nry fiun
lhe ~mil ...... cmbrbd ill lhe 1'tal)

Akqdll,.,.....
.... ~!..IIi!........,_
6lm. and c:uloa.
lillie
.
o{ !be 100 Gnnde,
- ;.
belf. ~ t!ltlucaionol and &lt;»&gt;ttDD
~- Mexico
aloo boon inl1uma:d ..,
a.cp... and apeciolly Fft:nc:h c:uloa. for
D::llocluallbougll.. At lhe..., ...... Mexico
boon t;n*Jy
Unilod
s-s. k is......,_ a."'-""- Corloo
SU..de Garull gmck-.1 &amp;an Hlnwd. and
his~....,...,.isaboa ~of a
U.S .a....ay. biconund C.-don w:
ndilianally boon t;n*ly cxnxmrd aiJOI.l u.s.
dominaboD. his nat SQ)lrising iba !be &lt;XliiCepl
ol depend&lt;D:y as 1 meons ol daicn"bq lhe
eoonomic dcltlinllion o{ JXl'l""''ul ~
rlllions OYer smollcr p.riphmJ - i n ncl cri) o{~ boa
in c:uloa.deYdcpxlb)' MaiCIII !OCiii8CieiiiJSIS., !be

olR.omemil~b&lt;ai~SilaP­

I

o{ the oornp6ex .... o{

....s_ or ...-,lhe &lt;XliiCepl ot!be OC-Ihe
c:or,.a.e paliliaol, ~mil adb.nl uoifiC21ion o t - &amp;.ope-- rar beyond
oradl; ahbou&amp;b eronamic JdMions- • .
&lt;XJe.l!,.,..ifNAFJ'Ais~ls

gnncio9e ill~ !here is IDidl iba Clll be
lcomod &amp;an lhe Ea.qJem expr.ricDJo. CkJe o{
lhe maiD k&amp;ions is tbll cammm:iol ........
..., ncl &lt;IIOil&amp;h. and iba rrLIIIII .......... . .
is Ill ~J*clmyCXlDiitn.ICiive n::lailnmip. The &amp;.ope.. eaplrimae abo sbows tbll
~ ~milcxq&gt;enlimisncl

easy, mil Chll cxmidcnble all&lt;dion ' - " 10 be
gi-10 lhe "3cift" cim&lt;mion&lt; o{ cammm:iol
andpolilicll~
II is ~ 10 1U1t with realily. ID North

America, !be ..-iaions and inoquolilils ..
cOaDonal,culnnl, and~·"""'"'
lltllqlbc liRe CXlUIIIries DMJIOIIC! in NAfTA
art immo:ose. The Uniled Slll1:s, in l&lt;lmS o{ ils
bigber ecb::alicn S)*m. . Rand D ""P""i"""'m:lils~~dami­

-IIIli only ils NAFJ'A pn!M, boa is !be

larp and .... influaiDal ac:adomic .,._.. in
lhe -...uld f\dber, u.s.adnn1 domimlicn.

tDtluP film, deYi!ioD. and !be prD .--. is

also C\'ilbL The Unital Sales is !be"'"*"
m:llhe twO Olber&lt;XlUIIIries -,10. sij:nifican.
dope, poripbcnL c-dabaslq v.arird
libcu u.s. aJIIInl dominlbcn. ond bos pul ida

andBiuil, ll

Clll

inlluenad..,

cb:olionol m:l culnnl rdalicn,
ba"" Mwa)'S b&lt;allapsid&lt;d and~
For~ rhere-liAJIOm-1)' 1
MaiCIII SIUdeds l!llJdyq in u.s calllp; and
aiJOI.l
SIUdeds &amp;am
!be Unilod Sllaesaudy ill McUlo Cmodlln
tipes"""" .. .,.... gteWl imbalonce---.oo
19
Oooadions SIUdy .,
u.s., while only
3,1XXl Am!li&lt;:ms aamd c..liorJ ..-.-silie&amp;

E
...-......while

.S.~ddarly~rom-

Jilm" ~and dola !JmksCIII

found

1lrou&amp;lnl Nortb America.
At lhe some lime, rhere is CXll&amp;denblt
ignorlnoe o{ lhe major..........,. o{ !be~
OII.'Ode Dllimol bordels. In lhe lJnilod Sales,
tlae is oonsidmbly more~'"' Elrope
and ASia in lbe CU!DC1IItnt o{ calllp; and
Ulli¥clsilics, and Lain All1l:rian !ILdies does
ncl focus mainly (II Mexico. WIUo SpUsb is
lhe .... pclllllor flll"eipl knguo&amp;!e '""""~! u.s.
!lOClJIIIIory andoolle&amp;e .......... Oucncy in
Spmistl is"* limilodand ~ o{
MaicooaJI!tK and bi!by is ""'&gt;' limi&lt;:d.
Clnada is.,.... more rqJoaod. Only olwdul
o{ IICidemic: imtiUitus offer my au..s specializ.ing (II Clnldl, """" lbougb Clnada is lhe
U.S.'s lqe!lu.iog JWU&gt;rr. ll is sipfian
IbM u.s. pro{&lt;:s9015......, ..... oriem&gt;d 10 - -OIIialoliiCidemic: alllrllCI5 dw! ...... their

~oaodomic~

Mcu:c-...........,.

a-s..

-o.na..•

"NAFTA will have
inevitllble implications
not only for economic
re~ns but also for
education and culture. "
Nov. is !be lime 10 build !be educaionll
bridp""'
prc:Mde II&lt;OlCbl wdt:danduc,
knov.iodJe and il&lt;ilk .....-IIOdeol wilb more
....,_ncle~and ................,.
10 lhe ........ .,.....,. o{Norlb Ammca.
"Tllltt.., o...tD:r o{ imponln CXDC:ftte lll&lt;pi
iba &lt;:Ill be 111m """'10 .... . . , J"-lhe
ecb::alonll and culltnl ~The
followirl&amp; ~ ..,l"oruiod rnomly on
whalbc Unilod Slats Clll do., prqJm: aell"
for lhe aa olNAFTA, boa lbese doos -..ill be
...,._..,an ltftlt cnnries.l am cxnxmrd
hmo ...ny ... psxwudlo) ...._.., tu
all&lt;dion IIU5labo gJYI!JI 10~ and
~ ocbook as wdl.
• Mexico and Con.odo must become prinwy foci for lbe Fulbricht Program and
other 111tiooal agencies invol&gt;'ed with
cdiiCI!iorW and cultural exdwtge. Many
more lectureships. .........dl scholarsbips
ond Olber eadlangeo JllliSI be 1Dide ovailable..
• U.S all leges llld universities must
build ties to COUDit:fJlU'S in Mui&lt;lo and
Conoda tbrougb inslitutioo-to-inslitutioo
udw1ges. putDeiV!ip ap-ce:rnen~S. llld
lbe HU. Srudents in all fields. perbops
especWiy in such professioual areas as
business, engioccring. and education

PhiliP G AJtbach IS prolessor ..0 ~

at /he Corrparatn"' Eci&lt;JcaiiOfl Cenll!r.
Slste l.kli&gt;wsrty of New Yorlt

* Butrlt1lo

The Second Annual Graduate Student
Research Syn1posiun1
, _
"CuRRENT IssUEs IN EnucATIO
Graduate studenJsfrom the University at Buffalo and ll!gion.a/ schools will discuss ll!Cenlll!uarr:h on current educational issues.
SPEAKERS: G. Alfred Hess, Jr., Executive Director. Chicago Panel on Public School Policy and Finance
Linda Perkin • Associate Professor. Department of Educational Foundations. Hunter College. C
Y. Y

March 5, 1994 8:30am to 5:00pm
Center for Tomorrow, University at Buffalo North Campus
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBUC
For funher information oontaet: Graduate Student Research Symposium Committee, 461 Baldy Hall, University at Buffalo. 645-5995
Sponso,..d ITy: 'I'M ~porttMrus and BradMal• sf:IAMnr anoci&lt;llions of EduauioNJI Ol"fatUVJ/UHI, AdnUnistrruion &amp; Policy
and 41'min1 4: /nsr'!'¢o"' l{niwrsiry m Buffalo GSA. GradMal• Sdwol of £ducarion

�:10

Hormones may help regulate women's
blood presswe ·during stress, study shows
KE RESULTS OF 1 ·lltlldy by ,.._
-.dlers 111 liB looldna 11 bo"·
mental affods 'blood .,._
""'I·
estrogen ml)' help
~ulale women's blood pn::tlliUI10 durin
mental su=, and lhlllhe prctecti"" dfec:t
disawc:an after m&lt;lllllJli.USC.
sure of ..-omm vm;us -

sest

thl.l

w-··""""'t~~tsof~dis­
....., during lhtlrlqliOdudive years, as wdlas
I . - J o(•l hll uald after IDIOOilpU!It. ha""
...... Dl31&lt;:d flY many yem. $dmlisu hi""

..

¥E"'•'u~
1lllt·il
bullb&lt; waye:slmplji'OIOCISis

.lhor
SliiJ OOI IUI!y

.

s...,.ua~...-..

oaDmdfmno:dicint:,i!di&lt;i
'no: ~'Mii:ingotMillald

Rllmon= na,pilll may bnot fill&lt;d in Clle piece ci
1hll pa.zle.lbey fo.n! 1hll blood ~ ln...-J mnin ~ -in,..
!ipOOIIIO IOIDI!dai Simis 1'-l iruo~o(mmor
io ...... 8JWP' ..pmomllpiiiJ!OII _ .
~ b1ood ~is 1 risk fa:lar (ar
~ ~- said Sun&amp;. "ondrtiOrlllll
- i s me flottllllll is known 10 CIIUIIO 'b1ood
l""i'i'I''IOrise.lfblood.pressurerisesiu.....,a&gt;oe
10 11-..1 we wed! eopect il10 me in

similar faobian. iD l&lt;!iiJ!DIO 10 adler
"The blood pr=oure o( ftoe fiOIUD&lt;Ui!&gt;pa
- I n OW aildy RIIIO •&amp;ipfiaonlly
hlr,btlr nnJbe adlet-..ty poups.~ S..O.uld.
"Tbisleads U5IO.,.,.,Iudedlat ~
partkulai1y estrogen, can i ntliiC!l&gt;CO tbe
body•s ...,.,._ IOISinlOS, and that tbehiper
blood ....,....e rUe UD&lt;IIl&amp; ~
WOCI'Im """""' oubjecsed to stn:aS may be a
ractor in Ibis poup •• inoreaso.i ri ordevel·
opift&amp; cmtiov-..Jar disease.·

"The blood pressure of
the postmenopausal
v..'Omen in our study rose
significantly higher than
the other study groups. "

-

lbemsean:h..,.ul ...,...rq&gt;a&lt;ted inCir~·lationand~allheAmericanHcan

Association meetin!l in No&gt;embcr.
To, _ blo¢ Jft'l!ll" Jai01"!' 1 0 -

... 10 10 , . . , . _ . . . , . . - 10

J*RI

'*inJcni~IOp:lil·

IDI!IICIJ*IIIII-ond 10,.,.,.

J\IMI
mntllllllloodllft8ft••
.......
bad .~ ...... ~ llle .....

. . . .ptiiti ............. JIO'lP

andobq
Theblood~ddoe~

returned to East Germany af1er (hf'

Berlm ~'all cam• oown and produced th1s awardrlfl'lnmng film
Pr...,med he.., by )•n ·Chriscorhef
Homk. renior f1lm curaroo-. George
Ea.oman HouS&lt;, Rothe..tu. T ick·
m : $3.50, SUO (srudcnts)

Pnsmrd 1&gt;, UB GT&lt;&gt;dw= Group '"
Gmnan Sn.Ju,s, Hall....US, w Bw/folo Th.ory Group and w Offict of
w Do=, UB FooJr:, a/ Aru and
u um

14

FILM

Screming of • ..., rd-winnin,g films
by Chmtin&lt; Cho1•
I ZO Oemons Hall. 4-7 p.m.
"Who Kolled Vmc•m O.inf'; "Sa·
I.Ou." a documentary aboo1 LA '•
Kmea·T,.,.... inU..wak.o &lt;if &lt;h&lt;
fim Rodney King rriol verdict . and
"Out of Silonce." a ,.,deo aboo1
AI DS.

17

liSting.)
PT~ted

rn corywnc::oon Wltil
"T....,.dan Ana-Racu! Frnurusm
·Rao•, Gtn&lt;kr and ,r., Poooo of
Repres=aaon .• th&lt; Fifdo Ann...U
Sprmg l.«M &lt; S.,., ,.......,.t b'] h

"""'""
subfoCU
'" "'"""
Cll )'Ol6
·-.
..... W
aarticles
ViewtXJirn
Lelle&lt;s to the f.OOI:lr u
as 5en&lt;1 ma&gt;er.... t o l v f n llapooer EdJtor ' 136 Ctohs
. l!uft.olo
N ¥ 1&lt;12ti0 0&lt; COI1IliC1 "" by E&lt;TIIIA

-

~ .. the

mom.! Room, basmoenr o1 H..kh
Sc"'nas L•briory . ~. 5 , JO p.m. Loglu
r&lt;freshmmt&gt; wdllx ~
R..S. v.P~ Jane DiS.lw. 6&lt;15-1S92
STAGED R EA D ING

"111v A-k""i • by Kato
Cbopn. Alkyw.y Th&lt;attt. One
Curt~~m Up Alkv. Buffalo r.rtor.
ITWl&lt;leS ao 7 p.ns. Adaruuoo from

Spon,.J,., UB sl~
C..U.. f&lt;w It'"""" Pbw~ on

w

rn..

~"""'
A!k,..uy
cur• For m[&lt;&gt;ml&lt;li&gt;On. roll 0-

SERIES

9647

"T ALKSHOPS"

23

bj

M. Annct&lt;r ]annes
1130-l •30p.m.• "EihN&lt; Tom..,..,: ~-oclulxop/d""""''"" loo bj·

ChruuneO.oy
REV I EW

The Joy lud&lt; Ou.b by Am Ton
R"';e,.ed by Roben Daly, Dl&gt;r•ngu.m.d T &lt;1chmg Prof...., of En ·

"=•den• of the
Can&gt;pw Oub. R
.,.,...u Part.: Meghsh. former

·•D&amp;RLit' WU...US UfCTUIES
MA_ItCH U ON • sH t P'1"EE
~CTtvltS : A fll hmrtT
BASII:D ARC:ftf TE:CTUaA L
D .UION THRlOaY . "

L E C TU RE

"Shifted Penpc:cti-: AD E,...,,
Boued Architectutal Dm,n
1'beort&gt;." Bever~ Will' , architect and tbeoriot
J()J CroSI&gt;,&lt; Hall. 5:30p.m.
•nner of t.h&lt; 1993 Monrgomery

F.Uo...tup frocn Danmout:b ColJq., Wilh• recendr has '-c 1
v·wtmg lcctu'"" :n irgmoa Polytechnk ina1rute Unh·er&amp;trr

UB Women'• Sa.J,., ~am. Ma&gt;do
11-Zl

Foo.tndmc T""""' oi &lt;he Nat:100al
&amp;ildtn&amp; Mweum, Wnlungton.
D.C.
~ed~&gt;, w~ o/Ar·

cloor.ocnm. for mjiJnnaDon C..U
llonnir Orr . 829-3-fSJ
S T AGED READING

"1m A ..a eaiul" h y Kat.
Chopin. ~ Th"'"""· ~
Cun:am Up Alley, Buf&amp;lo. Pttf..-.
"""""" ar 7 p.m. Ilmatiort. 01 &lt;he
doc.. (S.. March 21 bstme;.•
. Sporuoml "' UB's """"""""
. C.:..... far W""""~in

21

EXHIBITS
MA R CH 1·31 :

WOMEN ' S STUDIES

S PRING L ECTURE
S ERIES

w-··Snut... f'rorram ,
Man:h 21-22 .

K.e]no«~ '

UB

WOMEN " S STUDIE S

~'ork5hop/JISCuJStOO led

. -- ·- lobe-

on e&lt;nent IOpOCs r •troo II&gt; 1tte ...........
sOtf and h q . e&lt;:kaWon as- a on

SPRING LECTUR E

tuuonal•,... Raa.m '" thr M.dla. •

&amp;reetting of 3 a,_.·a:rd· *inning
filim by Christin&lt; Cbov
Dowmo""' ubra!)' West Room, S·
Sp.m.
Film. !o b&lt; shown Off "Who Killod
v.ncem Chan!"', ..Sa-l-Gu, ... and
"'u1 ofS,Ienc&lt;." (S.. March H

1a ur. oonYnUI'III
~-oame..-a.....w.,ourcomrTWliS

'"" 1'&gt;0\'d hy C.&lt;hcnne nn..u..
cloc.

9,J0-11 am.. "AJ~n'WI&lt;.'&lt;&gt; w lma-

mwARD AN ANTl-RAasr
A:MINISM: "RACE, GeNDER
AND THE I'OUTICS OF REJ'RE..
S!NfATION"

s,mv ~..ocnat .sm.s prosmrd o, rr..

22

Hear Your Voice
no. ._..,

[)oruu.,.,.. •• '""

cllliMc Umon

Pr&lt;srnrd m corYomcaon with
an Arui-Roctst F&lt;minimt ·
&amp;.oct , Gmkr &lt;md w PooticJ a/ ~P·
rewuarion . • w Fifolo Annwal

"T"""""

dUICC'f..direoor

Wor\.shop/do""-""OTU. 130

F IL M

~Want to

"""""" "'""' 21 pc::meal.. .-rly twice doe
iDcrelse o( lhll ol the mcro and doe ocher
- . ill·n:spoaoe 10 doe - . s
.aid.
Rtsults sbowed that:
• l'tanen&lt;Jpauoal OO'OOiell 'bld the smoUesl itlcrelsela$)'1101ic: """""""- j pc:ra:ntOOCIIj*edu&gt; II ~inmn~,IIUI dt&lt;cliosiOOc
iDcrcar in dJr;se""" poup5- • 'bor-13
pm:tlll- 14 pttClODI, r&lt;speeb""IY
• l"nmmopausal _ _ , t.aldnaorai&lt;OI&gt;~- bad • blood ~- increa.-.e
simila~· to that of the moles.
• l'o.sunenopmJ$a women aperimced
• 21 pcroc:n1 inc:n:ue u. both )'$101k and
eli olic pr.....-e
W""""s wi!b Sur1l, ~ U8 ~
U.-H.~ Wendy~ ........
lliDb-. Jaocpb L !no, MidoaeJ F. Wiocu. ~

u..

&amp;vmh 633-21 J()

-.n. "'*

ad!erlmoep:qsb.i.......... o(3J.
}bot--oimillriliiiJl&lt;IIP•~

"Colo&lt; ~of
MovY:
lndUllt'T from on lndepmclent
Point &lt;&gt;I V~&lt;o~·,• O.ri&gt;unr ~.
a-\l'ard..wmnmg f•lm and ,.,'Ideo ptO-

LEC T'URE

WJ1be held Friday,
a1 2:30 t;~.m. jj') 250 Salfd
Nof'tl'l Campus, lor
DeniM J . Brougl'Jtoo,
ROiot 8dmi
DCliJinSelor.
who was found murde(ed in her
Bailey-Kensington
area home ~- 31 .

&amp;.-daspw:a-*dpM!wilhmesic

Am&lt;Tican lndlil11.S&lt;udoes :n thoe
Umvonn·y of Colondo,llloulder

"Cbci e in Buflolo,• UB SocioiOCY Prof..-~ Lninc
.Unitan.an Um\·ersalm Churd~ ot
Amh«St, 7,}0 p.m. Ttcke&lt;s, Sl a&lt;
d"or
Spc-...-.0 b:t A 'I 1..'\l?-Amii&lt;T&gt;J
BTarwh For m/orrnatiOn utlJ \ 'olont

otice
A mernori~Jl illm'ice

Di&lt;fend&lt;&gt;rf 147.

(p.m.

"'Fol.. lma&amp;es o! Native Women
in H oiiY"'oood Cinema: Toward

lndi&amp;mJou• Liberation, •

M.
Annette Jaimes, prof...or of

"UB Women in t:hc '90s," "GOYel'lllllellt Docum.nts
Conumin&amp; Women, • and "Buffolo'o Reioute'in Famil~." Loclcwood Library dur"'i regular library houn.
~Jd..t. and Pouibilities: Mary Bbir Moody, UB'•
First Woman GndwoO£. •. f'ruerued by Um•'el&gt;lty Archive•.
Capen Ha11.

no
w.,.,.,., in Medicine: Early Womm UB Gnduatea

1896-1918. Health Science Library. Contact LiUi
S...a, 829·3024, for more information.

""""'"""' ·..W.dw~Tio&lt;·

""" for ~. c.all 836-

9647.

24

D ISCUSSION G ROUP:

"The Unuoidable Feminioo Perspective: Women in An:hlb!C·

rure,• with s.-ly Wllli FAIA.
108 Hayes Hall. IOa.m. to Noon.

Sporuored &amp;, h ~ a/ Archi...,..__ F.,.. •in/&lt;&gt;mtalion&lt;dil
&amp;nni&lt;Oa, BZ9-.U33.

�_..,

__

..,_ ...

Check Out LIBLOAN
CACbanquet
to focus on
world hunger
AH
8lnquet, iu[J Uftlled
"' 4anooolrale " -

dilplrillr.a bdwem iDdil""'' and
am- toderi&lt;s affect ......td
bullp, will tallz place in the
Stud&lt;:nl Unloo l1rida , Mardi 4
The -.uol buqu&lt;t is spoasoml by Community Ac:lica Core
and Tbe PriDccl&lt;ln Revio , aU
~will be dclnal&lt;d to Cal)'
MlssioD, PrieDdo of the 1pt and
.-her local food .,et&gt;dcs
AD~ will be
'pled 10
one of cbe foUowin&amp; ca~qoric5:

IS~.

2$,.

orfiOt;

The~

claa (IS") wiU ba"" qcplaill

pumisi- b diantt. '""'
middle c1as (2$,.1....n....., nc.
and beans, and che lowtt claos
{60,.) wtu .,...., nc. only.
hope
wiU
'
cbe •
uitia; in food dislribution
throo.lgbout che -"!,. id Poul
Up100 of the Communny AaioD
C&lt;n.
'""' 0001 .
pi a canned
good. SWdr:nl
• S3
plus • canned good TICkds .m
available throo.lp cbe Commllllity
A&lt;tloa Core office lathe Student
• or by c:allina 64S..2375
'""' l'rina!t Review lft111C:ftlhan 60,
uclmts.
)eaT for che LSAT. GMA T. GRE.

·w.

ss

MCAT, ATandaldlofella

~- flcr IIIICR ift.
formatioaa. c:aJl I
995-5565.

Leadership
issues topic of
conference

0

"tadul&amp; Ia U1111y Em-

~ Mc:D and Womm
of Color" is cbe title of. COIIf...
....,., 10 be bdd
weekald ..
....,. ron~~ sit&lt;5 us·. Off"'"' of
IJ.Idod MIIIUCIIItur:al Affairs a
CCHipDIIOOr of cbe evmt a1onJ
"' Buffalo Stale and Carusi

I I I c
I

HIGh

I He)"-' lc
. -

D

1\~.~~

Coll~ge

Described • an drOll 10 adooacemina men and
.........,. of cclor tn lcadentup, the
oaofemtce ..;n feallft •
,.-omen· propam 01 Buffalo
Stak Colkce, and • mon'• program tn tho Student lJmoo, UB
onh Campus, both Feb. 26 from
IOa.m 106p.m
The COIIfermc:e dooes with •
100&gt;-n meeuna Feb 21 from t 10 6
p m iD OmisJ Colkl•·
Oiber features mclude • fashion show empbasinn cultural
~
·
in the workplace, • 11&lt;1·

dres&amp; -

Excellence in Teaching Awards
for Graduate Teaching Assistants
1993-94 Guidelines

......, ........

1nasmucn as the Unl\l9rslly IS oorTYilCtled to p&lt;ollld.ng ots stu·
dentS hogh-qlallly nstrucbon. the
of teaclwlg p!'OIIIOed by greduale SIUdenl teadlers IS of pnrre ~e

In the onterest d. enoourag.ng graduate studeots who halle
delleloped excepoonal oompetence n teat:hng the Graduate
Stuclenl Assoc:laiJOn and the Graduate S&lt;;hooj halle establlshed
the EJoalence In Teaching Awards for Graduafe T8iiCilmQ As·
SISI1ifiiS
~

The nominallOn Is open to aH current lull-tme graduate students
who halle been Involved n teactllng at the UniYI!!Sity at Bufta&gt;o
b aJ least ore semester

N I l tiMI,.,_
The nornnahOn process
be conoucted at the deeanalle'wel
Naninallons may be made by any member of the facuny Aca·
c1emoc deans wil noufy faculty d. the dale by whlCh nomonallOnS
and supponng mateoals must be receMid n the acaclemoc
dean's olfJCe Nomo'latJons must be reoe&lt;Ved n the Gradua
Sdlool (552 Capen Hall) by Marcl114. 1994

ertt.tar..s-.cuo.

n the seoecllon process
1 TEAC&gt;iiNG SKIU.S The nomnees must perlorm superbly on
the classroom Relevant cr~eria onclude mas1ery of teaChing
tec1nques and adaptanon to student needs. Interests. and

The folowng crileria wil be used

problems

2 MENTORSHIP. The r'l(ln'IOM8 must be concerned With the Intellectual growth d. ondMduai studentS. 8\llden09d by accessa·
billy "' them beyond the classrOOm
3 ACADEMIC STANDARDS 1VID REOOREMEN'TS The nomonee
must se1 high standards tor students and help them achoelle ac
ademlc excellence. She or he must work actNely w&lt; ondMdual
students to help them ~thew schOlarlY ~IShmentS
4. EVALUATION Of STUDENT PERFQRMAJIICE. The nomnee
must evaluate student ac:hoellemenl faorly and C&lt;JI'T1)Eitently
5 PROfESSIONAl GROWTH The nornnee must be making
sabsfadory progress toward her or hos degree. The nomonee
must be wei prepared in the area in whiCh she or he IS teaching. evidenced by satiSfactory progress toward the gradua e
degree.

... _........

Nomnalions shotid onclude the follawnQ supportong materoa!S

1. LETTER Of RECOMMENDATION FROM SUPERVISOR OR DE·
PARTMENT CHAIRPERSON A letter of recommendatiOn from
the r10fT'IiMe's depar1merllal c11a1 or direct supervosor (With the
Chair's endorsing signature) that assesses on deta hoW the
~·s performance es a teacher fulfiUs the Cntena for Selection.
2. STATEMENTS Of EN0QRSEMENT A I'Tl8lOITUTl of three
statements from studeniS. oofleagues, and/or faculty _These let·
ters should offer persuasM! evidence d. the nomnee s excel·
1ence es a teacher. StatementS from faculty who haVe d~ect!y
observed teaching are deSirable.
3 S1UQENT EVALUATlONS- Summary d. SCAlE reports or Olh~student evaluatiOnS of the nomnee's teac~Wlg should be p:ovided.
This award Is not open to individuals on Lectureship appoint-

ments.

..................... , . . _

....llaa .......... ..

................. .., ..... u.UM.

.

-.and•""'""'·

place lughhglltm&amp; people of color
tn busincs All prognms inc:IOO.
tr'Ol'I$JlO'Ution.IXII1f......,., materials and rdresbmenls. Saturda) ••
worlaibopo include luocb and

tpiOC'lrii'W'f'dl

~ Gt:Nral ubnma I~ LDcut 0/fiu t~~CCYpuftw
r~..-s ~ ,__ pu ..wk ..,ltnJtu ...-.utn/ £k~1

or b) p~J~Hr fonA. 17tey CtUUtOI por4lflN ·-~ ~
c{ oddJJtCHVJJ ~..,au For_.,~""~ Gn~Lral
ubnmn iltlubbrary loan ..."""4 &lt;md UIILCMJti-~ .,.
y. cOIII«f Lb. MMT1'4), 643 -21112. UNUJZeUIIYM For

Ill/~ "" 1tr11111 "" c.--u dCCOW'II, CDfiUICI " " c_,--

u., &amp; lrtfomoontM T~ Htlp Oak. 216 ~en­
ter, 645-3342
.......,.,. 0.\f,.., IIJ&gt;C! LOU~ Glaz&gt;or. L.oc:hood L.bWy

opli&lt;lNI eutcrtainmml pecbge at

"" addltiooal """'
Confercoce fee os S5 Call
645-2132 or 645-2055 for addJtiooal tnfortDliUOCI

UBprograms
on Korea
to be expanded
The Uru•et'Sity at Buffalo
World Lanpges lootltute,
1odem
Languages and Luentur.,., bas
&amp;llDQUDCt&lt;lan ovenll elTon to
expand its program on Korean
language and culture. h bas also
begun a six-,.uk_ on-sik course
in medical S~ for employc:cs
of Buffalo Olildren '• Haspn.al
This summer, the instinu will
inuod~~te • three-year sequenco
of classroom COUI'5IC5 in Korean
language and culture, beginning
wid! an intensive elementary
Korean course and a course oo
Korean society and culn.ol'e. A
course in fU'Sl-year Korean will
begin in the fall
Cum:ntly, UB bas SOsnodenls
enrolled in "Korean Language
and Cu1uue.• • self~taught course
offered through the interdiscip!iIW)' Asian Studies Progmm.
Tbe World Languages lnstitutt
also bas establ.isbed a fund
throup cbe Univeml)' at Buffalo
Foundation. Inc. that will """""'
charitable donatioos in support of
the institute·, language prognms
and activities. Thl:se daoations,
aloag with e l l a - will
be used 10 bdp support Languagerelated professiooal and programmatic development and will
~ .. matdoin&amp; limds b
federal ond private foundation

0

put of the Depenmeot of

grant applicatiom
The JrutJI\IIe 's program m
med1cal SJ*USh at Cbtldrcn .,
HO!iPital Wlll run from nud-February through the end of Mardi
II IS designed to OSSISI med1caJ
per50111KI wbo c:ommUDICite oo a
bas1c lovel with pmusb-&amp;p&lt;al.ing
pall&lt;'DIS
llus coutSO IS one o( many
non-credit programs the inslltut&lt;
has caodiiCied for local ccmpro·
Ill&lt;$ ond orpniutJons. Tbey
includt "Japanese Language and
Cult~R" and ·spmusb for Busi·
ness l't!c&gt;pk.• Each propam is
custom~gned 10 """" the
linguistic: and cultural .-is of
coutSO panicipams.
In addition 10 caoductin&amp; DOIIeredit programs, providing uanslatioo, interpmOlion ond ella
oervice5, the institute offm
creclit-btarinc classroom and
upervised self-iDstnlc:OOD at UB
in less tlOIDDI(lll)y . . . lang~~ages, inclt&gt;ding Arabic, Danish,
modem Gn&gt;ek, lndaneslan. Japanese. 1lw and Vietnamese.

Alumni unit to
meet for panel
discussiofi
"CaD G&lt;M:mmtot Work in
cbe '9alr' will be the focus
of • panel discussioo Ill • luncbeon 10 be beld by the UB
Alumni Association at 12: IS p.m.
Mardi 10, in the Buffalo Hyan
Hoed.
Pantlists will include Sbcila
K. Kee. Erie County budcet director; William C. Lyoas, vice
pRiideDI of Pilst Natiooal Bonk
of Rocl&gt;esll:r. J...... w. Pi

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ma)0&lt;1ty leader of the Buffalo
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will be moderOied by Jobn B Sbtfftt former
e senator ...'bo now 1 saUor

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n.

reno.. 01 UB

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S12 for DOO-Gielllbel:5. Raerva·
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be
by Thonday.
Feb 24, · the UB Offoct of

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Contnued

on page 10

�</text>
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                    <text>Women's
Health
Initiative

clinical
center opens
Feb. 25
'S..t'
atertala
Engineering professor

creates material
that can fix their

own problems. , .

2

Free . . . . .
Controversial lecture
puts accent on
freedom at
speech.

.. 3

Students. laclA!y
share Ideas and
personal insights at
dnlef table
fehru.lt} 17 1994

\folume 25 No 17
~UIIbaDCW-·

AVID

FELDER .

Bi~Ctwrof

81UB,wasolfqally llUI.tiJcd I'd&gt;

10 U c:ompolU·I D·
residmce for lhe Buffalo Pbilbormoaic Orcbeslrl (BPOI. the
Greater Buffalo Opera Company
(GBO). """ WBI"'-FM. ill a Uve
Radio Forum br-o.dcul by WBfiO
from Allen Hall
1l&gt;e forum feawred a m~d~Cal

Installation of
UB's David Felder
kicks off series of
collaborative music events
in Western New York

AM,pltus Aylward
plays "Another
for aolo violin
by David F.ader.

F-·

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a pmel discu -

goa oa ouch i
u lhe tmporlii'ICeor preoeoli"' in Weann N...Yor\ "'bat bu be&lt;:ome !mown as
-...,., musk " Oo lhe panel were
John Bauser. ex&lt;&gt;cu11 ve dorector o(
lhe 81'0, Muuruano Valcb, lTIIJ5I&lt;
duu:lcr
BPO. Gary BwJeso.
llr1lSliC c~ueaor
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Benden, WB flO propam c:bn:ctor; llld Ted Wipnod of M~ 1l&gt;e
Composer. the oallOnal composer
lei'Vioeo orpruzatioa lhat iJ sponsortn&amp; the m;idency

or""'

or""'

"'t's my~ pleasom 10 be ••
th11 po&lt;itioa." Felder uid. "I want
to bnng DCW IDUSJC to all or Westem New York.l' mglad robe worttng wotb tbe people who bave done
so much ror """' music iD Buffalo"
Felder defined "Dew musoc" as
"music on the 111 musoc tradtlJoG
wrineo for audiences in !he classical
mu tc tradiuon." Felder dostingudbed new music from wbal be

called"musocfor

pro•-e we care about new

vaides SAid

But. aides wei. tbe pcn:eplJOII
lhat tbe BPO bad 1101. heal inla--

ested ill ~~ew muSIC in n:cent )'eatS

was "JIICCiftltl." Bad
as""'"
.. fiDancul cbfflCUities bad
forced tbe cancellalioo or rourmuske-. I b i s - . bad hem
ponly respoosible for lhat percq&gt;tioa. be uid. '"l..ast

dJmcu.
Felder's resodeacy oaeol oal)
..~ naiJOIIwide "New Rt:siclmocs.-

pass-roouoomposer-ill--rc:oidelll:e
....,.......,. ror axDIIIIIIIII)' orpnizabOIII .... desJped aad
ported by ~ The Compooer.
said Ted ipud. Wipnod sad tbal
~ The Compooer "
&amp;lad 10
pport ~;macin*tive ... ol
·
ill tbe

'ty"

throuch ...,...

10 use.
This n:sideacy uJ*t ola - - . 1
movemenl lhat Meet The Com~ iJsponsorm&amp;."W"tp'Ud sad.
"Our cmpbuis bu heal 011 puttinc
a bWNIII (.,. on tbi
· _• The
,;...,odaresidencies- ia w
iJICIOil, D.C.. Saa Frandoco. Cal.
Saa AMOII&gt;o, Tex~ St. Paul.
and EuJene, Orepl. Wipnod said
Preseoled dllriJI&amp; tbe flli'WII was
• vand)' o( tbe inlloftbve. c:aailla
edge music tbal Fddct will be
llriJllia&amp; 10 Westaa -New Y ark.
The perfO&lt;IIIallCO$. IDOIIlly compoled by Felder, femu-ed such
things as Velcro lap clancina \lmlike traditional lap daftc:ift&amp;. •-bat's
imponanl iJ tbe .....s )'011 makt
wbesl you lift your , _ oJf tbe

~ tbal CD "put

. . . . . . . . .lll....!:conttroed~ on ,page 4

�2

'Smart'
Materials
Ex rt
HEN IT COMES 10
mattnal•
that caa improve
adler people' 11i
Deborah Cbuoa bdoeve thai
• only 10 , _ ; , c:ompul&lt;n
creatin

-

REHAB TAllON MEDIClNE

ca do. II you wa101 10 !Mke "'"'
IIIII beuer motenal . ond 1101 jU5t

··~

c.tV. . . . . .. I)!Of. .

analyze old ones, 0.WI

soroe~mect­

lloat ccmpul&lt;n - ""
ute
for the hard. and _ , . , dttt) .
haD&lt;h-&lt;&gt;n ....-on: of the 1"""'-Y
Thai plulooopby hal belpcd
O.U..,. lhc UB ....,. M&lt;ft,.

ane.
r-...ctttw
frank H•.~ Award
ln:mtne~~

my oC Physoclol w.dicirw
end!W&gt;Ibilll.ttJon
The-.!~~

~~Cl!U&gt;­
bAD11 ID tlelilld ol phylliclj

-mil

~..,

... _oll)llllertC118, ..

-a.. educaJn.lllnryanlb.UII. &lt;XI1'IT\dy ..w:e

lnd i'wclM!rTwl ih , . . _ . .

a- o(

also-.

ciree:Dol ...

c..w lor funCIIIanll " - '

mll'lt Reeeln:h.

Heisell'lllf'llberol
·~
~ 10 deYelop
pnc;t;ce guldehe lor
SIIOke~lor

CentlW for HM1Itl ~
lcs~end·~

bar oC lhe edlloriel bowd oC

... .Arrwrican JOI.Irllll d
PnywiciiJ Mlldocine end Re-

Raoeardl ond •

prof....,.. of JJ~Cd-.ICOII ond oerolplllCt.ftiJII"Cri
u..yawatdl
ond a..- mMCnal lhol have...,.._

isbcd her ~·

coiJeacuco

'""""" the wodd, aad ....Uutioni&gt;cd the way tlllll)' 5lnJClUR:I in the

be builL
..'bo ..... bcm ond llY&lt;II!
m
Kana UDill..,. -10 oo&amp;lcJ!e • the Califorma lrostiu.ott of
Technoloc'.dccidod by the lime she

-

since 11183, Gnlnglr IIISIOdlle ~ oC
()epMnwt
ol RltoiiiJollbbof• Mectile In
lhe t.e mtdicalldloot He

iJI •

CCIIIur)' 1111)1

nooa

wasmhiahldlool
s h e _ ..,
W&lt;lllt m ~ ond science
1 was very cacdcd by the forA

n..- Iandin&amp;" ChJna u

"IIIII I
lhol had IOIDCibt 10 do ..ill!
my~ When I•'11SmoolleJe,
I dccidod lholl didJJ ' t want 10 do jul;l
~ IC&gt;CftClC. but oorned&gt;in&amp;
lhol ,..,.. mare immcchaldy uoeful
So I dlnlcd my major towonl compuu:r and c11:arica1 mginoerioa.

~

1nmyl&lt;llioryorlwas~

IJIIICrials raean:h. the llUdy of
eogiDoc:riQg .....w. sucb .. mel·
.... oenumc:s, polynat.. ocmicar&gt;duc:tors. and composites- any
mal&lt;rial.lhllis.lhol buildun)'lhinl.
M.ut:rials on the foundaliom ofiiOCbtdogiel. and ot' I 8&lt;XIIlfdin&amp; 10 the
use of ITIII&lt;rials thai butlllll socic:uc:s
have changed Thai' s " 'by, for on51an0t. werefenothe 'Bronttl\lf!.·•

10

~

..
-1'0~,.1....
~

, _ P . ........ proles.
-end chair of the Oepattmll'lt ol Medicine, has ~
etecl8ct 1o a one-yearleml

-~-- as
!hechairol
American College
ol PhyoiolansBoard
ol Regents.
Nolan haS
seNed on
the
ber •21knan&gt;board
&amp;lnc:e 1989 and was
chair ... 1993. Prior 10 joir&gt;ing the board. he was the
society's govemor lor New
YO!'k Stale for four years,
wllliWlg 8 Gcwemor ol the
Year Award In 1988, and
was president ollhe New
YO!'k Stat chaplllr from
1967-118. In addeion 10 his
us eppoinlti-. Nolan
58MIS as director of meddne 111 the ene County
Medical Center.

-L..JI-..-

.nee

kaow•'lly. Womealsaveatlculas
much ability for c:n · .u~ as
-.But womeoo wtll..-tnx:o
away from enJincerinc
they don ' tlbinklhey have the t.:ltgrowad--&lt;hey never played with
trlln$lstonasehildrea.
only
10"510 prove thallluk prts should
be goven • b&lt;a.der range ofiO) •
Despot&lt;: her ability 10 opottd
aiminatton and F 011 wolh her
v.oo.t. Otun1 ..yo w '• var aw...

C

oftentheonlywomanontheclti :
Chung uyo. "I was of1en !he firs~
woman thai the prof....,... I W&lt;rlcd
~&gt;1lh

had ever tau gilL"

ShedJ&lt;In 't really e..,..-M:nce dl aimination as a student. sh&lt;: uyo,
bul thai was mainly because she
traJned bendf to ignore iL "I just
told myself thai I dido ' t care.lloat I
would just do my stuff and do il
well." shouys.
'"To many peeple' s wprisc..the
top tudeots in engineeri~g chooses
are very onen women." Chung
uys. "It's quiteCX&gt;nSiswu.. l don't

a... ..,. ... lhe......,

• hiala ..........

htky'n: · ~or--..1.
ond . . io ...,.,_pvc ....... "'

""'*'*o~~~te ...... ......

......
- """"""""' """""'to h
tiD .... pttioml.-

..........

S

that "many professoonal women
are mel with ..,..,., degree: of discrurunation You ce
""' that re.llccted in pay dt!T=nual~ chances are thai mak

mart malalals differ from
mare ndiiJaoal .._...,...

....,;min lhol moreii'Duooal
IC:Nis-s10tsave_..for
c:ilher emb&lt;ddod or lllaChod. ""'*'~~

cng1neen. cam more."
After""""
hor Ph.D. ut Matenals Science (rum the MassaohuSdiS lnstiMeofTec:iw&gt;locY. a.m,
.....ted al oevcral other univenttieo
before coming 10 US in 1986
H&lt;:rre\dulionaryreocard!hal:toa!
on the ORa of what lhe
"'nw1

"'*"'

11-..rials." l&gt;ilich,lheuys..an:
als INa an l&lt;nllC. n:pon. ond ew:ro

am:a their own SINCIIni lllws before lhcy bcoJme sipf.-.

.

"lmogine an airplane winglloat

can clwt&amp;e its obape in response 1o
theairflowaroun:lii."Oulguys.. "Or

a mirror INa an cbange irs lllape. or

can

aJIDCI1liiiS

COIIIpUIU

...,. be clcM&lt;r•

1110ddi111a. only bdp )')01 ......

Iliad
""""*'&gt;' .- _...
bdl!naloc
itdcxs.llulada&lt;a't
help )01 c:r-.- - - - . .
"'Ri
DOW, t1B bas 10 dcmic cap_,.,., · propam 011
material._ We teaclo -mal&gt;
c:ouroesiD Y~-boltd!ae'l
... pi'QIIlllll ond 10 doa ' t U'llll

_......,......
..
a....

who
a T......ofthe
Y..-Awardial992-93
UB

~olthe~booor

cicty T• Bcu Pl...,.~ ond

--

wcatat

-

'"""'--- pcopk..,.._

~
.,.,.,._
·. -.rdl doll
' t it""'ve
"llhe
., . ,_.,
t.d for the _ ,_bec.-

'D

"Women have aJ least as much ability for
engineering as men. Bur women will
sometimes shy away from engineering
because they don~ think they have the
background~hey never played with
transistors as children."

e~~goneen

hul\8 was one of the fors1 fOOT
women 10 graduate from Cal
Tech. and the '"'Y foi'Sito graduate
in enaoneem0g "Not only was I

-sn.t·--- """'_... ...........,_IWO)'
.......,.

eoi:IOI......,.
_ . . ........... ...,10_

.-.n:ll .. ...,_,., ""'-1

-a~..-·. ....-..~·
for facdy
taCildo -

llnle·

.....,. buill wtdo lhcm. "1l&lt;aa!oe r,~
beat able 10 mate the
l&lt;rial iuelf liei1Se lhe
"&lt;lun&amp;
yo. "'hh:ft •• no aced for l&lt;l11illR.
the dt.nbdity of
is beaa-.
ond
~_,
IIOIIJUSI
y"
lnJanuary,O.W, ~her
raeardo 011 smart mataialo althe

-

procluaJvc "'

10 tt:odo very

IIIIlCh.

o.1JilemMy~-=ben­

""' aaive iD ,..,.m_ She 11)'5 lhol

...

aroup" .

.

1101

bc:al • bcc:a&gt;seracarch..t ......
lftllbuulcl "flow.., each odtcr
~y Smart MaJaiall &lt;IOIIf'K
flows .......Uy from my r&lt;:Sellfdo."
she ..
"aDd may o( the caamplel I - ia 'I UIOderJndu.le
CIOIII'IIe.alooc:omtliommy~

lnler'llaional Worbhop on CIV11

Infrastructure S)'IICnll in Taipei,
T.. ,......_"~'~lop~&lt; waewnlc:d." she
uyo. '"They hadn ' t dramed that a
material could be its OWDICIIIOr."
a.m,·sl'tiQrch bas abo led he&lt;
10 l&lt;aCb a opecial topic: pwlulle
coune 011 "Smart Malaials" iD medtanical~at UB. There is
no I&lt;J&lt;Ihook for the course, wiDch.
WSI)5, shodc:vdopcd &amp;mucrlli:b.

R.eoQreh
ld boola totaduogdtll' I the advuo!aJC 10 Jtudc:DU of
bc:iaa • a rocarcb · · ·
""The T_,.,.oflhe Y..-Award
was 111011 meattiocfu1 ID me be·
cause rm heavily ilo'l'lllvcd iJo rcseordl. but the reward ....... wbll '•
1110 clooe 10 my bcatt.llila: havi
a uoiwnity- bcauoe I have
a stroa i.ttlaelt ia bodurcu.• 0

tt.Aepcww•ec::M~PU~OCII'NIU'WIIr,.....,.._.p.diltledbt' . . ~ af~Md~-~f/ANwY&lt;Ifkllt ...W0 EIMr:ww~-aac:..a-. tSOdla .......... (nlt . . . . .
~OF........cAllONS

._,,__.,.,EDfTQfl:

---. .ASSC:~C»TtEDITC.IIl

.... - - . NnOIII!C'fOft _ , _ _ _ AWOCIAli:NtrCIIB:fOflt . . . _ . , _
•

•

~........_ -. . . . .

, • • .~

~·~ · ~

• 64; ,

····~

�3

Muhammad peaks to overflow crowd·
silent candlelight vigil is held in prote t
.,._alP

UB officinls say
free speech
must be defended

lltpo&lt;W CorWtilutor

S UES OF RACE ond nocism

oenu:r ~at UB WI Thlll'liCiay as an
ovcrflowina crowd of more than 450
people ancnded lhe mud!·annclpall&gt;d
speech
Khalid Abdul M
r0111Jtj" natJooal potcspcnon f« lhe auon
or Islam. Houn earlit:r more thaD I otudenu ond racully """""""' hdd a .t1ent
candlelipt v.gil )ll'llteStil1&amp; lhe rpeedllhey
said c:anicd a lllleHll&amp;e of .-..1 intoietanc:e_

Mliwnmod..,.dwslaot.._,..""'_
IJ&amp;blllorlllllii!AaCOIIIIOWI'IIial ~a ~Can
n.. ..-:h. wlait
hod!-.
. -Somal: aDd ..... Rlllllld iobis
• ...,.,..""'*"'"""_far
lht
by lhe J:lll&amp;ti'S led:r, lAlUIS
~ aDd drew cc•tdenasous from oevenl lilld: leQ:rs incUinc""' g.,. . Jesot J
!lOll and~ a..;., em::ulive c~naaror

Cdlqe5EJ
...
.

lhtNIIIonal As9ociaJonfor1be~or
OQed l'cqlle.
l..asi'J"Iusday................. ~~
111Krm20.~dcfended-­

• ..ma had di!b1a:l .,. """"
SIF- "You've brad a lollll!&lt;u mo." hellld. 'tu
)QI ba"""'' heard from me. You bono&lt; ....:I my

dairoina 111e ..

word!&lt;. tu )01....:1 my words OUI or~-

~~

in _, dearie Slyle 111&amp; WIIS pm ....a.,- and pm
preactlor, said III)'OIIt ~him IOcmdane
racism would be ~ 1-k spocifically
ad&amp;rssld lboo1e who ~ in "" siJcnl
andldigbl vi£jl apuztd ...... in ""' day by
UB b Ptace.
I CJOUPorSIIIdclnwho~

po!OOdi¥Y!Sit.

"You
(lhc protest-

ers)

or~

·all

worl&lt;ed up

B urning
candles. Preparingforlhis
grcar hater.

lhi •

grtal

btgot.

thiS

great

anu ·

Semite," he
oaid. "I did

Protesters bold

aiCM

outside Knox 20.

not come

10

the Umver Silyat Buffalo
10 teliCh black people 10 hate "ilite people,Muharnmad oaid " I came to teach black
people 10 lo~ their black selves"
1-k c~ow~..,&amp;ayed tep0115 or lenSIOO belwoen
himsdfand Lows Fanakhan. wbopttiidy chastised Muhammad b his rem:ai&lt;s a Kean OJIIege. calling lbcm "Tqlugnant" and "rnahciouL"
Muhammad said, '-n- is no split. there is no
divisicn." He called Faml:han lhe "champim
orlhe liber.m andsalWiionolblacl&lt; people.l-k
is my spiritual falh&lt;r. my led:r and my toa:ber.

AodlilrearyJ!DOCI!ICIIl.I ....... IDbis~"
Mul.nmalllld.l-k~hos ...........

1101110 I

"'honMaloolmXandNIDonoflslom

1eG:r Eb)lb Mliwnmod split""" Mltkdm X
fU&gt;IidY OI:IDIJ1IftOd .,. lhe or

Pn:sidl:dJalwt Kemcd)'-a&lt;*Col"'toecbd.home 10 rooa." Mulwnmad
li3ld.
X spc*r lhelnlib,tuhe!p(i;elhe
!Nih before hu led:r.....,..bunooand~hls
leader in!zrul:-.l bun not Ill.HJs ....... Ill bbd&lt; W&lt;lcnls. Muhammad
Slid.
"Ill lcnowlllornseMs" and "lObe"'""""
S1lldents." 1-k Slid bllcl::sv.iU
CCUllry ldiJ the) 'bal. r-··and lal.e resporNbilily for dleor.,..., cWcllloa. Y&lt;:1. M1otammad
noted. b moot bbd&lt;s in Amenca.l!lllinin« odf.
~IS ....ty ~ bcau5e bbd&lt;s
bave IDiorgone rem.ncs or ,...,. oppr&lt;sSlOI&gt;
wttdl hos destroyed Iliad.~ -~

ens como

,.......!JI'lEi'l"ll1""'

ccordmg to Muhammad, about 250
millioo blacks w=ltilledas a result of
•Vt:rY in Amenca. Tluschsturbing bi tory.
Muhammad satd. may offer on 1gh1 mto lhe

A

current probl~m of ~rica. "Toda). you
(whne Amencans) &amp;a). ' Biad.s are k.JIItng
each other at an alannmg rat&lt; lhese day ·
Well. ,..e had a good teacher. Nobody ha
lolled lll&lt;n bloch llwl whne ," be s.ald
Proclamung lh• &lt;country to be - ,,.o
Amencas· one black aod one v.lute." aod
calhng !best 1,.0 Amencas "separate aod
unequal." Muhammad called on blacl. students 10 build !be blacl. commumty up from
"olhin by m•esung m blacl. busmesses aod
upporung lhe blacl. fam1ly -roo many
blac ." Muhammad said.-..
arou111hilh
an
onlheiCcap,an
on lheirswt:atshin
aod a white gni on their arm.- He emphasw:d that by no means did he belie,·e there
..u somelhong v.TOOg with "bite females

·x·

·x·

aod be acLac:lwledced that jQ,..,
i bbllll" but. be wd. it would benefit !be
black c:ommumty 1f blac mea aod
black wocna caned bl
flllllha topthcr
Mulwnmad ad-=-! .... blld. ....
dcln -.dy blldt biotory. ~ODd ........
....bfblatb:iloln.J-k-.ri)y"'*&gt;dlbiiBI
ldloolsblldt
IIUilyaDchisltoryonly .....
iii&lt; "'--nt ~ Iliad&lt; eodmts JalChllba men lilre Gecqe Wllllanpln ODd
Genenl AmhmL far ........, AmhmL y
nom:d. R.....,.,., he Aid " Arrtllnl ,.,. I nDJ!DOdcnct.rwhoJII"'IOICCodiObelplhelndilm" he Slid. "'GaJoll&lt;
then gave lhem lhe

··I did twt come to the
University at Buffalo to
teach black people to
hate white people. I came
to teach black people to
love their black selves."
Woshinglm ,.... a~-- 1-k"sao
k 10
bbd. people. n- 's not one JewiSh srudenl or
CCIJ!iCIODCie II
oudimao"'bowouldWW!I
10 Sllldy from a hisltory book 111&amp; made lhe Nllis
or Adolf Hiller a hero." be added
The relaiiOIUhip helv&gt;-een !be black aod
JewiSh communities was a central theme or
Muhammad's speech. He defended some
llis past swemenu ond derued bcina
·
Sem111c. He au&lt;:r1ed that it was blacb ,.ilo
oflen were lhe \icums of le"'i i~
aod greed. He criticized Jev.osb ~
who. Muhammad said. SWidoutside aO&lt;toor
Islam rneeiiJigJ aod sboullllli..f'llmll:bln
gaos. Hesaidblacbdon 'tbccbe:rJewisb Jll'&lt;lllle
at their synagogues. He abo aclmooisbed Jev.osb aod Arab shopownett .. he claimed. oel1
"roolt:rr JXX'k aod liquor" mblact0Cl1111DUJ1ines
AaxJrdiqg tnDennis Blade. deao or S1Uderas.
...,.;,nm...-lhebbd&lt;nlkwishCCIIIliiiLII»IXS was a point or &lt;XII1Call a U8 as ....0 ODd
S&lt;CUriry b lhe speech was ligiL AaxJrdiqg ID
~ IDIII}'-'IIIIal br no means
aJI..-41he Sllldcln involved in lhe UB fa- l'l::ace

or

no.

n..

.;g;J ~membenort..Jev.i&gt;h Sludenl Utaon.
~- OQllllil.en ort~te •iP ........ttl:.-""

group's fOcus was lu:naoilarian. not racial or
religious. "We" retryingnotiDDlllkelhis~
bbd&lt; lbi'l! or a ~ thin&amp;. said Man:
sa-.oneoruorp1i2asofUB farJU:e.
Si1Ycn1one !lll'eSSI:d lba he was alhe vi£jl not as
a,..,.,....._;.., or aryJ*Iiculor....,..,. tu as ao
inoSMdJal trying 10 pnllllOIO a IJII:SSIF or unily

IIIII peace.

.. 0

...... satUmon "''ii orpuod
GfarSludenl
be
...........,....,._Wlw...........,

he hdd • C'llldlt • lhe

l'l::ace.

"*-"ctd

.... " 1-k added. .,
- $WIIenl&gt;
ODd racult}- bondhnclbas...,.
Ear1ocr iao lhe weet. V'a
far SOidenl Air""' Roben L
I51UIId • SUiaDedl. noong 11:.- ""' ...
......,., 10 M~ or OCIIlC&lt;:m"'
l1ll:ri&gt;m d"" _._...,. - ~ "1l1ey ba... apma! bol!o
I*D and . . . . . ., ondowlual ..ilam
the) pm:a"" 10 have

.......sen-:.--

Rom.o Calbobc, IIOI -~ool
,.,..... "ill be speal;q alhe tn..ntt)

"'The O.\'WOII or SOidenl Affan •
Palroer SOld. ~ llnlknblldiJI&amp;
aod .......,, 11y bcneen ODd 11t1001 our

dt•a.tstud&lt;m body IIIII -~
lhelrroncmos. ~.1he0.»-

also arol:n::cs
unpoNDI cooccpts of freedom of 'Ptte:b · and
~. lndood.lhete lierdom&amp; are
a JlO"""'"fvl lradiDon m Amenca. and
110" here doeli u have g1a1er or more
gmf.,.. power thaD in uniYa'SrllleS 1-k added "'The llnM:rsily • llull'alo
1Qh

llh&lt;Ud 001~ "'"""""""~'=~

bramea~ar,.,...,...,

monoll)~orpMDIIIII)'~

oomemben or• 11111\"""Y CXIIllrDUIIII)'.
Ill fEL !he Rules or !he Boord of1'l1.-.
orlhe s- Uoivmoly or~ Y ~
cific'll1y - .
-m_ faallly. or
olber lllllfJDOIIhr or~...,
--orpmalry
saldy tor lhe cxprtSOIDII or ....,... nor
b ....... IMO:IIIbled .............. tir""""

.......,.._In)-

pl.l)lO!il&lt;."

~ ""' )"'Il'S. , . , . &lt;&gt;JCIIIOYC:I&gt;i'
IS.'IDOSand spe&amp;a-tba\,1-. Jli"S"'lIl'd•
lheuniven;ily," l'lllm&lt;rsalll. "Asatnvcr011)' ~·- ""'bono&lt; anspanoibilily
"'"""'-' aotll\lironmmllba JIIU11'*5
lhef'= .......... lbd~oli
tuT&lt;ICO@IIIZI'Sibdooasido:rsuaensilivitios or our chene popdalions.•
As dtier udeor alhirs offioer.
l'llmrrSIIdhe
"clommiiled liObelpin&amp; m:ate a pasAA-e. ~ ond
5eiiSlli~ eDVironmc.nt for all S1Udenls.
AdmiatJdly. I am dWtppoinl&lt;d lballbe
SIDdcal orpnizalioo v.'hich cbcoe 10
inYiltKhalidAidiiMWtammadiDCimmoreoenstliYe
Ibis mi&amp;bJ bave on our urtiwtsity coinrnunity
Howewr, l ddeDd
lheir~ IDCXIOIId """"., illviuDan.•

pus--in,_....._

"'"*'impact

�- U, I L M 4 _ M._ILY

Reorganization i topic at e ion of Faculty enae
ProYOOt's Ad"sory &lt;.01111111me~

"'" h&lt; made

•

UB "

IC

Doyno, reporU

a member of the

Am and L&lt;tla'S fll&lt;lUlty. tald ••.....,...
of quesll(lllS hlld et11C'tJI'd from
deb
taoa of that ~
ty R'pldiq m;wpniz:a-

Malone

p•·• hi
1.011

"/ would strongly advise
..,
a pan of 1
that •ao desJ@ned. IC ·

'
clwr of the
(ao;ulty a "proacu&gt;&lt;" role
on the queSIJOD of """'••uz.&amp;lJOO 01 l!B
'The comrmnee don 1101
a can:ful
analy 1 01 band of the prect&lt;e eat""' of th&lt;
dtffICillry
ated .., the d&lt;IJ\'&lt;1} of the
UGCcumculum,.hiCh. Malonesud.IS•hat
th&lt; comnunee h&lt;h&lt;&gt;..
h&lt; the prulW)
tmp&lt;tu for re« ll.Ollon prop&lt;&gt;W 'The
oomnutl«bel"'' thatlcostlb&lt;nd"llanal) ·
1 of bolh the PI""""' and ~""'~""«~ &lt;tructurh 1 &lt;nU&lt;&amp;IIOthe £enct'IIJOO of1 rea5011&lt;d
opamon on the as ue of reor,anu.anon.
1olon&lt; ,..KI
Alw ~Tporung to 1
nat&lt; ,. "' Da\l&lt;l
Tng!!k. chatr of th&lt; p,.,_O&gt;I·, Ad\1&lt;01)
CQmmtlltt on th&lt; Suuctur&lt; of Ans and
·aenct\. "bo said ha commmee tLas t:Jao:n
ln\Ohfd ID l~ ateti Of v..orl.. Jee 1ng
n

Pner

~.to &amp;1\&lt;ll:&gt;t

ba""

mfonnaoon and opmK&gt;m from

\.&amp;nOUS

.n-

~&gt;l&lt;d pM!JeS . tncludJR£ the cleans of tbe
potmuall) aiT&lt;CJ&lt;d arcH. ~latl•cs of
. th&lt; Uoderrraduat• Cotl&lt;,e. and tndJ• idu&amp;l
f:ocuh) members, fOCUSIR£ tbe
II·

a numbeJ o( qU&lt;SI:IOaS cmuaJ 10 ID)
rtol'fiDJUIIOO propoW. and 100\ IDI tov.ard
th&lt; "nung of 1 final report.
ler&lt; on

" lnth&lt;&lt;nd."Tnscl&lt; Satd. "recommendauon for reorgantuiJOII .. h&lt; mad&lt; b) the

,u

that we do not simply
di mantle the UGC, but

keep it as an active center
for thinking abou1
un.dergraduare
eml arion. ,

IC

uodtiiM

aJ ....)"' "IMpOK&lt;I" "" ......

~

uon 'These andutled bo"' parucular departrnonu. ,.ould h&lt; 11T&lt;C1&lt;d whllllhe tmelltt·
tuallld•
.. of ..-pruzauon ~ h&lt;,
"bether promotton and tenor&lt; problem
v.ould result. hmo dean "''OUid h&lt; noeducated to deal "''lh th&lt; dtffer&gt;R£ scbolar&gt;h1p
of the ~a uoder th&lt;Jt control. and m&amp;n)
other
U&lt;
'The Pro \lOSt" .. """" a( lh&lt;
bu.marut.es '"" ahio a ke) 1 ue an Alb and
L&lt;tkn dehbeJauons. Doyno SOld
In the bS&lt;nct a( any offiCial spoUunall
for the Facult) of
Pner
td.&lt;1&gt;011 reported on lh&lt; r&lt;SUI of a meel·
1"£ of the
W Sc~C'D&lt;X [acuity. Anl&lt;lnJ
otooa ..,u&lt;&gt;, th&lt; questiOn ,. a ra1S&lt;d at that
moeung of" hlll "ould hai'P"'&gt; to lh&lt; Ho&lt;tory

••thout "'bet

acc:epced"

elida·,-

t1a&lt; tlepanmr
H&lt; wd that h&lt;
"""" n:&lt;lrJ.IIlWDI the tlecanal INC'I""' of

proposed~on
pnmary m1 aon of promoo 01 research.
and

CJUIJ&gt;C liCIJ &gt;d •

and the

trnporw&gt;cc of
•s wuque proj:
sdlool•
.• should b&lt; bt. concerned about
...,
Jndl\tdual departtnmu and llDt

obootld h&lt; about the futun: of the ..bole
wd -u ...
10 ret1est
our cumcvlu to tale lld•antag&lt; of our
un~&gt;emty." h&lt;

ba••

unaquenas.lh&lt;n e
ld"
ln respon • MIChadMcugcr of ot1em
lanpagc and Lituatu~ wd that the cen-

L'B ,.ouJd ltd oohc
pnoblc
D~"d Tnp wd that h&lt; lhoull&gt;t tboo
the Pro•ost' • Ad• I.at}' Commttl&lt;lt
""
dcrJnduot.e edtiCilltOn cradu* eciYcatJoa
and researcb
I) Tn&amp;&amp;lr uod dill n:

"'*' ·-

~
r&lt;&amp;l dtffJC111.
LJCJ , .. tD lcrm of u •~enuy lTUCtu~
qucwooo of ~~ (UftCIJOGal prot.
• and soaaJ and atltun1
La Olber
the Se-.:
sed t .. "
resolauw. on 1""' role for(
I) .. u

f""'

deal •h !S&lt;mellf, . _
recornmtJitl&lt;d
thai ,..ery
t)' membeJ b&lt; tD•ohed In
academtc ............... and
. , Sluderll
obootld be as '•pod a faculty ItCh-...,

FELDER
con nued rom page 1

CoW1Cil hears
Greiner on books,
housing issues

noor.· Satd the dancer and cornpoo;er of the
p•ece. Paul El"'oodl. 1 pWIO ptec&lt; in v.ioch
lh&lt; pant Am
illwns. dtd no1 Stt tn
front o( lh&lt; ptanO but l&lt;an&lt;d tniO II tn order
play I~ and I p&lt;l'&lt;USSIOD p&lt;rforrnancc b)
u\ Brundage thot "'a de tgned to h&lt;
hool.ed up to tnno\ Ill\ e -.'ltleo leChnology 10
ca t changtng ••&gt;U&gt;.I
aa:onltng 10 lh&lt;
changtng iOUnds
Otoo perfonna.nces tnclutled a 1o '&gt;ohnp~b) An g1nu A)l,.ard,and . . ocal
performance by G&amp;r) Burge. that "'" pan
of a \J.Ieooper1 b) Felder called "'TheM."
All the pteces, Felder "'1d, "can t&lt;ll )OU
something about bo"' I mal.&lt; mu&gt;~ ond
thtnk about muSt&lt; •
\Vilh Fekier a a corn.pos.c:r-an-resuieoct:.
anytluog can happen 1n musiCal performances
m Buffalo-and JU t rt11ght
Felder saad that one th&gt;ng h&lt; "'anted to do
"-'llh nev. mu 1cdunngh1s restdency v.-as ''to
reach k1d . to bnn£ an an aud&gt;enet (rom
school age up through college Mustc eM&gt;
male a realnnpact onchddren· h\es-•t'
1101 JU&lt;I I.Omethang for th&lt; elne." h&lt; Satd
Students from ""boot around lh&lt; or&lt;a at -

10

. . . . . . . _ . _ ... ~ cle­
ICI'tbed lorrr*D'1 rA a SludJir( A
-loroe~""'YSto...-etne
8ool&lt;sklre more ~
ta
ciOUISIIndtng~OII&gt;­

'rna@"

•~nded lht

forum on Felder's mntahon

liM«

·-ch..-ono
us Cotrctl

dunngameetFeb 1
Gr- ntMd ha; hope lhal c:ooperatJWiy , _ -.ys can De lound to
~tl'&gt;ent.nt)er tnllWlgll&lt;llbooks
and to getW1l1ly ~ !llOMCI!I

rllfle

In deicnbm hJS musac , Felder said "'I'm
•ery &gt;nter&lt;Stt&gt;d 1n parucular kinds of energocs" H1 mu &gt;&lt;. h&lt; SOld. can h&lt; bolb "very
d) narruc and muscular" bul &amp;1&lt;0 "very lyncal." andean ,.ncb bd,. een the rwoqudly.
" Mu I I ' organtud
nd, • Felder sud.
" 1\ long U thert I In tnl&lt;OI behind the
mal.tng, thert 1 musac •
'The on-au forum v.as the f&gt;nl of a scnes
Of collaboraU\.C \t:Dturn In
estern C\\
y od tn connectJon .. ith the restdcncy 'These

v.allonclude an tnten•1e"' sene. de.agned by

Felder that wdl air oo WBFO. th&lt; JW&gt;&lt; on
Fesuval from Jame 5-12 that •nll
featUr&lt; perfOI'IDllnCeS by onternatiooall) renowned """'1J05Cn and un
perform-

e..rralo

crs..andaperf~bytheBPOofFelder'

"Su Poems from
Oft

h&lt; perfOI'IDllnCeSof 1

eruda"s Alnmu" 01
11-12 1'hcre Wlll &amp;1&lt;0

ne• orcbestn

and a one-act opera. au or hiCh use IJd.
•'lltiC&lt;d ntleo ICChnology and ,.ill dra 011 a
•-.nctyof perfOI'IIIaDil&lt;O and ant&lt;lte f'&lt;SOWC&lt;S
m Wtstem ~tw Y

continued 11om page 1

tun. 10 mal~ the tudt a wccess ..
The stud} a5elf "Ill be conducted m;v.o
pam-dtn&gt;calondobsenliii.Ol1al 'Thecltmcal
component v.iiJ 1n•oh~ three tn\esoptJ&lt;lD&gt;
• A testohh&lt;eiTect&gt;'coessofbormoner&lt;placement therapy 10 r&lt;ducmg lh&lt; nsL of
coronary h&lt;an d1seasc and OS1COporOStS.
. Astudyoftbeeffcctofalov.-fat dteton
th&lt; nsL of cardto• ascular d tsase and breast
and colorectal cance:r
• An 1nvesuga1J011 of the efTectJveoess of
c:alctum and vttamin 0 supplcment5 1n reduct"£ osteoporosis and colorectal cancer.
In Western ~""York. 1.400 women will
h&lt; recruitt&gt;d over thr&lt;e yean to take pan in
the clioJCal trial .

lnothe&lt;~Cit-.lltbtllacl

..., -v prerra.re. decussoons rA
• ,_

school butldng

The eo...c. ..... r-d. report tram
Senter VIce p,_,.,.. lor 1.Jrwwsil:)o
SerYIC8S Robert J Wagner 01'1 c:;o.
Cuomos
~ andCSn&gt;~lorUB andapr

on
,.,..,., College tram v.ce
PrBSident lorPubtoc 5eMce and Urtlan
I'Jiaors Munel Moore
UFC ~lor tal 1993 SkiOd
a! 2.704 Sllldenls. Moore utd The
~~are~

WOMEN'S HEALTH INITIAnVE
f r \o\Omt"n 'IA.ho "-4nt morT tnformauon or
""•'h to '" lunt~r
1'lu • v.ootlertul opponunuy for Westem N~v. York and UB," Tte\tW&gt;satdofthe
IOJIIOU\e · we ~• II b&lt; tai.Jng pm 10 a b1 ·
tOf)·malung study that Wlll answer •&lt;t)
•mponant qu..uons r&lt;garding the wcU-k10g o(,.omen
" In addtttoo. 10Cormarion we gam from
lh&lt; ccnual tud) will h&lt; lh&lt; seed for other
studtes that will contribute to our knowledge
o( v.omcn 's bealth. ltls alsoetutin£anumh&lt;r or new JObs, and more jobs v.ill h&lt;
c-reated as other !iludics or&lt; generatt&gt;d."
"But tha ts a ma sive undertaking." h&lt;
added. " and .... wiU nned the coopention of

o

"'orneo 0\ a eagbt Ill I::! ean to It) to deter.
nune phystOIOIJC&amp;Iand ltfest)l&lt; factonlhat
can affect the health of women Panicipants
1ntbi pbas&lt;ioit1all) will~nedctailedrnedt­
callmtoncs and thm wtll be COOUiclt:d "''CI')'
thr« &gt;-can; to update lbdriofarmauon. About
2.200 •omen w&gt;ll W.e pan in the obser.-at.Jonal pitas&lt;
Women ma) call 29-312.8 to l&lt;a\e lbdr
rwncs if lh&lt;y ar&lt; •ntercstt&gt;d m paruapaun .
A sisting in the study
h&lt; Jun
Wactawski-Wentle. UB clinlCal asststaot
pro(es&lt;Or of gynecology and ob tetrics:
James M""'ball, U8 professor- of social and
P""''Cotivc medicu&gt;&lt;, and
otbermedtc&amp;l school faculty &gt;nten:sted in women 's

"'II

..,,'CI'al

the .,_age age IS 31 PrtnC!p81 goals
for lhe CXllege. she Sllfd, are to boos!
erwo~rnentc·••tlbOut 112rA-•was
n 1972") and 10 achieve some JUI1Ion
and leer
for -..,g SILdont!! the
ISSU!!S rA UldJng CJII81 died .....,..
mai~U"")'S" rA lorn8-SIUdenls, IAaote
J)Olnled out

The Count::i ~ 10 llllP'D"8 the
derCal schoofs &lt;eques1 10 honor dOnors to lhe d8rUI oen1em1a1 The Oral
Pamology Cont enoe Room was
rwned '" recogntDon rA lhe ClasS rA
19671or gills IOialrtg $66.590 from :JJ
class member$
The Ct.-a and bndge depal1mt!l't-

conerence room was nemed n
memory rA Or &amp;nw GaDord "' rac-

tal

ognlbOn rA gills !rom .4() rA hiS ClasS·
maiDS n 1968. 101a1rtg S 12.705.

• many people ..~~CI!~.Y~~~.Y?'~~-r. · .: ~, .CJ!'.s;::•.ti.~~al nudy will folio~
............................................................................................ ~~·~#;,i:·: :·:·:-: . ::·:·:·. :·.:,. ::·:·: :,. ~·..t :·. -· ~;:mr;;.:rnn-.n:tt..w'r':-::rn':l7'h?'7t.'1T'

�-,o&amp;r,. - _ _ ..._ u

........ ...._..

_...,
...tlittl pmo'.idlo

ot.-odl: tddls.
AIOidi...O.Sti._..,...or....._

............_.,........,
............
1illiDin&amp;
.........

ESEl\!RCHERS AND maiN·
fiiCIUI'en, as well u 1ltlldeilts
.00 focuhy ill !be Wts~&lt;mNew

~

a

Y orlt rqias wbo .....,. 10 F·
form ebemiuJ,InJorm.lioo
&lt;l011lpJ11:roeon::b&lt;$ fas~t~rancl 1110re.e1ficic00y,
are in•-Redtolal:z
of•-· on-line
IRinill&amp; prognau oow CJPD1i111 a1 UB.
1bc P'Qitlnl ofTen llllini:rlc on """" dlon
180 scientific dauobaes, nngia&amp; from pbar~ 10 ·m ariab ~ 10 Ollvironmenlal issues and '"net:&amp;l', b.y providing

~

oil....,.

dua-bMic
lllOIIlben of lbe

bQrac:u

"'Wbeft scimtim ~ researob. it's
vital that !bey l::now what's beeu done in lbe
field,. Sl8d Dovid A. c.tenbead. - - - .
deanortbeUB Focull:yofNabni'Scieoaesond
Mathemolies and. profesoor d ~B~
Aid. volumes of CAS ob:ancu
fill whole IOOim, anc! seordtil1&amp; lbrougb them
can be unwieldy o.nd imprecise. One fiYCyeor index alone can number I 00 volumes.
Up until now, tbme oearchina fot inform.a-lion hlveeilb«h.ad tomalcelbeirwoy dvwgb

lbe •p rimal copies or ~~tempt 10
do an on-line
liC'.:IIdi.Whkhdlll
be expensive ;r
socnrooe is not

l.ooldiiC- .....

.-to,._ wt: ....
.... TIIIMWio_.
lllcMnt t..nlllk of
UBMdJMkoe
...... .of Cllenalclll
A...u.t s.Mce.

odequatdy
IJllioed_
CAS is 1bc Nonb American sen&gt;ice ~­
ta lot S1l'N ~ (!be S&lt;llentific: Tcdlnicol N&lt;!wod::). prcvidiQ&amp; diroa ....... 10 lbc

$1.1 milliqn grant funds continuing research in
effort to develop substitute for human blood

molecule !Mt wifl serve bcuer as a blood
substitute than normal hemoglobin," oble

said.

surr lib&lt;&gt;

~HUIIIIII bemog.lobin. lbc oxygen-&lt;anying C&lt;liiiPOO"n1 or blood. is deligned to fUnCtion within a ll!d blood cell." be explmoed.
"Wibcn it is remo~•d from !be ll!d .-.,n, it
binds oxygen so ~eht!Y that a person could
hive a generous supply ol oxygen and nill

"We are trying to obtain
the .fwulamental
lawwledge that will

enable us to design a
molecule that will serve
better as a blood
substitute than nonnal
hemoglobin. "

The ~b involves monipulo1ift1 !be
amino-IICid ~ of tbe beiii!Jilobin
moleeult and oboerving bow lbe ·IDOiecule' s
struciW'e affects its func:Uoco,
"We ...., mak:ift&amp; new ~eniooo of IN_,
IJanodobin by crowinllbe protein in IJIIck.
ria and doi~g si~-dilecled mutagenesis,"
Noble Aid. "We can chlnge any amino acid
in a protrin into any Olber anuoo acid we
choose. In this way. we hope ultimotdy 10
design I molecule WI will function opti-

mally as a blood subsUMe "

oble DOted that research is ad•"'DCJ'Ig
oo se••eral fronts, but actually producing • ,,;able substitute for human blood is
years ""'"Y
"To do that. one bas to deal WJ!h many
problt.tns." be wd. "Here we ore dealing
with just one pan or the specttum of prot&gt;.
lems. Theil! ore a lot of things "" doo't

N

mow."

Working with oble..., ~associ ·

LaUJ'I Kwtatko..,ski. Allee Wilt, Hilda
Huo and Anita Wierzba.
Also funded through this oe,., grant ore

aJes

-·- ~
suffoc•~

becauoe !be oxygen wouldn ' t b&lt;
released to !be ussues But creating a whole
synthetic ll!d cell tS too compbcated. So we
are concentrating oo c=tinga form ofbemoglobio that will function outside a red cell."

ll!seareh programs at Washington Uni•·ersity m St.Louis. !be leodiMtitution; ni\·ersi ty of Iowa; orthwes:lem Unh"US1ty;
University of llhnoos, and Alben Einstein
College of MediCine.
-

Nestled .i n !he woocls on !he eocupment, tbn rusric CLARENCE COR""''J&gt;J&gt;WY
brin,gl the lfe&amp;t oUtdoan into )lOUt ih ome with I majcsric 'View from CVCI)' window.
Over 3, 100 squaR' feet oftlowinc
plan. designed for cornfonable livin&amp; and
CU)' cnu:ruini"'o lf1""' are Jookin&amp;for JOmCthinc clilferen~ witb • sprinldinc

noor

of uebircaunol spiee in a private, beautiful oetti"'o call
john Belaami. Soles ligen~ for deaoih. Only $284,900.

1\1 A X

•· • r ,. I I

L 11 l

t.

8 3 3

0 1 0 0

~

·

cr

Cllbtr......._...to&amp;rhm• . . U B 1:
will br bdd ....,.,,.. run
.....t of .-y,...... • UB.
on
Manlb 7,from9a.m. 'IO ,._ ia llltoom ll8ill
1be Ullllerplodaa I.Jibr.-y ia &lt;Apm Hall
SesAoos "" ·iipOicif'oc files
will be loeld.
lqlnnin&amp; rib&lt;ICieOII "Ckmiotty" from 14 p.m. oa Mon:b 7 , Fees vary. clepeDdin« on
111e rypc or ......,. 1 beulc offered.
For furlh« infonnMioa about lrlinia&amp;
lCUIOOS. eoraaal'n~&lt;:~lla Clarkc.labonlor)'
chrectam lbe UB Olemisuy o.p.tmenl. •
829-3013 ; Thomas Mro1.iot, the
depanmmt's execullveotriiCei', •I29-J2n.
or Moiten aylor. Clbiemiltryi!Uih librarian. ot829-216S
&lt;::

Public Safety takes
part in seminar
'ftteU.DQ '

?fll fl.dcs...tya

...... ~-~IIQII!'CII ~

., ... ,..,., .. ~.,·P&lt;ti'G

program diMMd to~ .....
.._.,_,-.podt)j'lle-~~Fonrn
'lt'elcnrn$~1'1::1Jior9'

'*'

progrsm
Pft'\IWI9IY .,_, pn!9lll'llld
&lt;n( to m.napel police deiplm'enls, ....,
Lee G1ln. lll diAdr d poillic ~

..

1'1'1!~-- ,_ llllellm:Jntl
Jor· at~...:ls~uo lleOI!perl­

mend F'ldc Saloty. • dtlsV*J ., """"

P&lt;*'"_......_lrom~

~il'ld -ITU8~ prob~

f'lndplns ..... 10

.-..y

~CIU!III!Sclornnai...:!&lt;:Mprob­
lemi; F1:11ice ere 8l1&lt;lOIIlli!IO(lDU'dlonas

• ...,.,.._, ... r::mmriy...:lager.
ooes..., Ca'l ~ addna lle prabion's c1
1'0118 the~'-

'On a more inlamalllewel" sad Gtilm,
·we """" .,_, US1'1Q ITI!Ir1l' ol lhe tech"'QL11!6 at UB1ar a rurt&gt;ar Cll- •
'lt'e ........... prtMdlid lhe llruaiXe 10
eJII)and lhe UB clloc:ers' lind~­
-dlhe~P*
aess. l'le- twas~t&gt;t

L.oo811192. Oludl82. Ameranfedar•
t~CnciS!lille. Oou'tiiiii'CM.nqpal~

ees .bft YOII&lt; SWe lJ!Ixo Mlntgement..., lll AA:lic Salotr
- 8)' MARY BETH SPINA
Newss..-.s../1

to 50%
.

R E

will

.....,_ p&lt;ipDil for

ship~ by~a! Abwact Service

T

Ill&gt;
UB

,.........,....,.~

UB was d&gt;oscn as ont ofonly foor siteS in
lbe Uaiud Slides for lbc aeacbl.,-panncr-

IIJ .._IIAIID
Newa e ...""" Staff
I:IE UNNERSITY a1 Buffalo bas
received • S 1.1 millioa grant to continue ill research into developing a
synlh&lt;tic form ol bemoglobin. an
element essential to tbe creauoo of a humanblood substitute.
UB is one n£ six institurion5 ~pating
in !be S6 million, (1\·e-year study, funded by
!be National Mean. Lung and Blood lrutitu~ . The new grant allows UB scienlisu lo
continue resean:b supponed by a S 1.3million
awatd 10 UB from lbc same ager&gt;cy in 1988.
Scientists agree !Mt a blood substi~
would be a powerful medi&lt;;al tool. It would
provide a blood upply fnoe or any human
viruses and would elimina~ complications
ossocilmd with using human blood. such as
iu shon obelf life and lbe need 10 match
blood types for mnsfusion .
Robcn W. Noble, professor of medicine,
chief or !be laboratory of protein chemistry
at !be Buffalo VA Medical Cenu.-. anc! a
hemoglobin researcher for nearly 30 years,
is principal investigator on !be UB project.
~we are trying to obtain tbt fundamental
knowledge that will enable us to design a

CIDO-

- ~-~. • -u •

....-., f4Jir IIIII facully. JD..dq* ~
•
dolabateldlolcoocriii"'Cific
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Rutgen Uni¥q1i! ·. Ofthwes1a11 Uni•erity IDd lbe Univenity or California a1 San
Diego also were lll1lled .u sileS. The univer•iliea wcr&lt; dlosen based on their location,
lheir desill! to operate a lrlinin;g ct111ter ODd
their eosting ocientific ODd on•line seon:hing instroctional progrllDS.
Designed to malce sean:bes for a broad
range or chemical information easier and
more widely available, lbe pll1l&gt;CI'lbip grant
provides UB wid! I.S IBM PC$ and new
softwano lO access cl.at:abases.

CAS ul! in CiC1t11111c1i11 CAS ell STN

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OA SYSTEMS, INC.

--

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SERVICE &amp; REPAIR CENTER

60-SI4.

qw4_iry, &lt;kpettdllbk, profeuionaJ maillklllJIJCI!
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OVEU. &amp;:. LAN SUPPORT
APPLE MACINTOSH PRODUCI'S

&amp;4t-6717.

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Also: PRINTERS &amp; T\'PEWRITiERS

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COI.UIQUII.
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Coa- f'r8ctioou o( AleeNIIIIIIJeriT Prof. Joloo
WolfWU. N. lllioooio Uoi•.&amp;Dd
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MOIIDAY
Jack NICholson stars in
UUAB f•lm to be shown
Feb. lB at 611 9p.m in

l 'ftlftb lpL Kaoloorifte
C&lt;omdJ Thcala, Ellicott Compi&lt;• . North Campos, 8 p.m.

-

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6&amp;98.

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Student Union Theater

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645-2950.

Cloacal Hall. Nonh •Campus. ·B
p.m. Twkeos. 56. '$4 .t $2.

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Inquire 4bout variDus rebat~s at~llilabl~
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Hoctlit.enu North Campu..&amp; 4

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IIICIPtiYUCAL SCIDICU
F...., ,b db!D ADulqo

.....S~Dr. Harold

ao., Dept. or Boopbysia. Rf'Cl.
106 c..y. Sowh Campus.. p.m.

-UAT4PUIS
Ul1lltAIIY
Jteadlac. Borbom
Tedlock. UB
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ClWr Profeuar of &amp;Jiilb. Poetry/~tar&lt; Boob Room. 420

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"After being played out
on the front pages ofThe
Wall Street JoumaJ and
other publications, this is
the first time these issues
(l1'f! going to be addressed
by the professionals. "

pnx&gt;edwcs llld
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Dyson to lead NEH semiriar
teachers at UB
.,for
... college
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News

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RCHAEOLOOJST AND on
IOnllll Sltphca Dy'SOII.,
of
doe Dep.nmmt of Classics 01 UB,
wtiJ conduct I N.tioaaJ EiodoooltlOIII for doe Humann&gt;es
far Collect Teocbert II UB nut R11M1er He is the
only SUNY foaolty 1111tmber 10 ....,.;..., 1
1994 rEH ummcr
put.
Theocminar,tonmJwoe27-Auc. 6.1994,
is titled . , . HisiOry llld Lepey of . .
Wcaem ROIDIII Empire." II is upcdled 10
lllniCI 12 10 IS c1auicisu.. IIICieat biJIOrilliS.III't'fooeoloci llld llllloropolociJ from
IICroiS doe COUIIIJy.
is dettipcd
10 provide resarc~~ OWUftWidia for oan-e
teadoer«!oooartiD collqes ......... dDclanl
~11101Jo&amp;i ... lbem • ~1D
COIIdDcl Jheir 0W11 -.:to
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Semioor ~ will be pided by
Dyson ill ID~of~ -.rc:b
issues rdaled so tbe Clallia. ma]orn.,...
llld colbpoe ol doe ROIDIII Empire. Dilcassioros olso will llllaDpl 10 place doe ROIDIII
Empirelftd iiS colonioJ CJtperie:Dc:e ill I comparolive pc:npcclive by lool&lt;in&amp; ll c:oloooial
octivities.., dois oootitoeuL
Ill SqMember. Dyson was doe only Nardo
Amc:ricon illvited 10 llddress I pleDary JleSSioo of doe 1993 IDtt:mational Conpus of
Clossical An:boeolo£y beld ill T~t~-.gOM.
Spoin. Dyson presetoted 1 paper oompori11g

s...n-

..,mm.r

no..,...,......

fnoa&lt;ier
10 coloniol Rome llld .
coloaW Ncnb America.
He obo m:endy ~ .... foil parcno of doe Cloaoks Ebol Nu1Da ....,., JOoX,
doe
pn:s1l of ocvenl lec:llorc:slupl
5pCXIJORd by doe~ ltiuull.tof
Amenc:o (AlA) Dy ... prescoiCd
10
AlA doaptts i• Ocvelmd, Ci110.ouomo.

Vutoavcr. Seonk, Spobne llld
Eqaoe. ()rep.
Hisqicawa't- - PIJoapeii ond
.......
-.:a
..... . . . . . . oldie
diltc:iPiao of cbssiad~.

Dyso• . wbo
ladllbeUBU.
~Col­

.._ .... pallliobod

ioocludin&amp;

~Wily ioo doaaic:a .io-*.
77w
"-riaM '-ntal of~ ~be

fCIOIIOr - - edilar 11101 C:uro-ly
..._ . . . . . review edilar.
no. former preaidaol of doe Ooasicll
Society of doe A.meric&amp; Aaodemy io Rome.
Dy- is 1 ,_COUll ,.classics JnduMe of Brown Uai~ly llld received 1 diplomo ill cJassicoJ ""'-o-osY from Oxford
Uoiversity(Enpnd} u 1 FlllbricJol scbolar.
He holds IDISICr'slllddoct&lt;nldepccs from
Yale UDiYenil}'.
• • • • • ·c

�"This is UB to Me"

Photography major
is contest winner

Jarvis propo e
GA certificate
8 AND THE SUNY y&gt;lem 1n
&amp;mcnl CJIJI pt.y a key role 1n eslabli 1ng slalldards for GA and
TA professiooal drvelopmenL Rl d!lrd S JarviS, SUNY YlCe provost for ocademic programs and research. !Wd here
~onday

Janis, a former UB faculty mrotber and
Fredooia StakCdltg!eadrrunl&gt;lrllor.addr-esscd
a &lt;hscu on rnceong "" &amp;"d"* Sllldcn1 profesSional developmcotll theCenr&lt;rfor

T&lt;lr1&gt;0n'OI' .Spmsors
"ere lhl: Grad ~ate
School and the OffiCe of Teaching Effecth"ell&lt;S&gt;

ln many way~ .
JarviS Slid. fostering

profemonal&lt;levelo!&gt;
ment among gnoduaJeSIUdcntsisdutctlytiediOUB'sself-~

as a reswt:h university. For one !lung. he
ncaod. "researdl universnies are ha"ing atough
ume" combating the general assertion. how ever ill-founded. thai undergnlduatc teacbmg
,. suffering a1 lhl: hands of the rt:sea!Ch rrus1011. In Albany. said Jal'\1S. llu coo1en11on ts
"Unremitting and ~ng worse Su::tr an anilude 15 funherod b) the lacl. of

t-

~researd!~amongq,sta­

their staffs and &lt;Jihrr dociSIOIH1Jai=; 10
Albany. This fact. said lams. pia)~ uoo a''fund3m&lt;nalll'lisund&lt;nlandng" of ICidling 81 research
uniYCr.iiur.s solely as time spcntw a lor:.1cm. wllh
lmle~ofthe time spent tr.ming groduate
Sl1ldeoo thallr.IDSCCilds the classroom.
The ingredients of professional de'elopment for graduale Sllldcnts ·are no mysrery:
sard Jarvis, and in\'olve a package of onenllltion sessions. video ptesenlallons. and the like.
What's missing. he said is follow-up 1n the
second and third year of graduale wort. w~~=·
the plan "seems 10 break down ."
Jarvis urged the formation of a set of rigorous .undards that oould result in a a:rtificate

for gnduatc srudcnts as they sed: 10 markei!IOI
only their c~egn&gt;e. but also their portfolio of

teachin8 and rt:sea!Ch skills acquired in gnoduate study.

. .

Ward names as ociate head football coach
W....., U8 Med football coael1
haS named Mnx Bowman to the , _
p&lt;&gt;srtiOr'l of associate heao coach Bowman. head coach 101 the past seven
years a1 Greenv111e, (HI ) CoUege Will be
a pract1ce coach and Will handle
aoiTIIOStrairVe dulles
Other changes announced by Ward
JllTl Garland ltnebacke&lt; coael1. P&lt;omoted to oelensJVe eo01d•nat01 Andre
Creamer. running oaci&lt;S coach named
defenSive backlield coael1 Joe ReiCh
defenSive line coach. p&lt;omoled to assiS·
tan head coach Re.c . mother ol Frank
ReiCh Buffalo B1ils quarter bad&lt; . has
also been named strength and cond•·
uorung ooach

....... Basketbllll
Myroo Banks scored a career -h.gh 20
pomts and Lou Johnson added 17 as
the Buns defeated Central Connecllcut
State . 84-72 man East Coast Cooference matchup at UB s A1...-nn1 Arena on
Saturday afternoon
The Bulls pteked up lhetr secood
stra.ght Win to ..-.prove to 7-16. 2-21n
the ECC UB shot 64 percent in the llfst
haff and used a 21-1 run to take a 44-27
halftime advantage
The Bulls opened up a 3t-po.nt lead
midway tnrOtJgh the second ha« until the
Blue Dev•ls put together a 19-{) spurt to
pull within 80-68 With 1 35 remam•ng
The surge prove to oe too t.Uie as UB
shOt a season-h•gh 6t percent from the
field
Rasaun Young scored t4 po~nts while
Banks pulled down a game--hiQ e1g t
rebounds
UB snapped theu s•x-game losing
strea w1th a 64-60 VictOf)l over MidCootinent Cooference member Youngstown State Feb I 0 The Bulls eveoed
the season series Wlttl the Win over the
Pengwns With bOth teams taking VICtones oo theu home floor Bulls guard
Modie Cox was the star olthe game ,
Mung a short ,umper m the lane with SIX
seconds remaining to g1ve UB a 62-60
lead. FollowiAQ a YSU timeout. Cox stale
the tnbounds pass at midcourt and was

fo. od oo and corvl8Cied oo both free
throws 10 ICe the game It wu head
coact1 Tm Conane s !50th ootleg!3le
V1Ciory Freshman
Swenby scored a
Cllfeer -h!Qh 14 peonts 10 lead the team
and alSO grabbed e.ght reboonds (f
on the oflensrve end) Cox BOded 13
..... t three aSSISts and lour steals ano
Lou Johnson ta led 10 poonts
The Bulls f 10 ~ 16 wl a 77 -52 toss
to 1..-y League ader Penns lll'll8 Feb
7 UB ra•led 35-27 at ontertniSSIOil led
by 13 hrst hall pclll'ltS by Mod.e Cox The
Quakers hen took contrOl tn the second
half QOillQ on a 25-1 run to Slat! the
second seSSIOn Cox led !he Bolls With
19 pomts. nu&gt;e rebOunds and four ass!Sls Lou Johnson added nllle poaus off
the bench while Kelvin Robonson polled

I

down seven rebounds
w~·· · a.~wt~~e~
Sophomore guard Andrea Fraley
scored a career-high 17 poontS 10 lead

the Royals past the Central ConnectiCUt
State l.JtwerSity Blue DeYt s . 87-63. Sunday afternoon at Alumn1 Arena
Fraley. making her first stan ollhe
season, was 6-ol-13 from the held tnclodng a thrl!e1l(Mnler and tour-oi-SIX
trom the ct\amy smpe to lead the RO)Ials now 14-7 overal and 2-2 tn the East
Coast Conference
The RO)Ials opened up a one po101
lead w1th a 15-0 run earty ;,, !he game
and never looked baa&lt; goong up 39-27
'at halftrne
Besides Fraley. three other players
SCOfed Ill double drgits for the Royals
Nadme Mastroleo had 1~ poonts while
Brema Doty and Brooke Smith each
added 13 t.1e1arue Vogel , Kns Holtz.
and Anne Ganagher each grabbed Six
rebounds to lead the club
The RoyalS OU!shot their opponents 46
to 32 percent from the floor and out
rebo&lt;lnded the Blue DevilS 50--46
The vrctory was the program's 50th
s•nce moving to DMsion f11'1 1991-92.
Earlier in the week, the Royals fell at
home Thursday to Mid-Continent Cooterence member Cleveland State 80-63

Sm&lt;th pulled down • career-besl 17
rebcll.nds while IU'liOI' Jen
desGroseill&gt;ers paced the Roya.s
14 poontS
The RoyalS pocked up a ncn-&lt;:Onlerence "'"' 74-70 a! Colgate on Feb 7
SrTlll scored 19 ponu; to lead the team
while Holtz and MaSiroleo each had

etghl rebounds

For he&lt; effons. Sml was '\Eimed the
conference player-ol -the-week for the
tl'llrdlime lilt$

suson

W -'sSwliiTThe ~'aJS womer,-s SW'Ifll1eam I to
4-5 With 1M« 183-112loss to Sl
oo Saturday ., the le8m s

Bon~ture

hnalhome~

Arm Mane Gor . swwm-ong for the
.-._:
last tJme at Alurml Arena won two
events for the RO)IaiS The seNOr took
the 100 breastStroke ... 1 08 35 and
:200 b&lt;eaststml&lt;e In 2 29 80
o.- Karen Lasky won both the tme1er and 3-rnetar oompetiiiOOS Megan
Connolly won the 200 butterfly for UB 111
21416

WI ......
Will Moss. Jr (!58 pC)OXl()S) Marcus
Hutchtns ( 167) and Sean Mcl..augt\1ln
(heaVyWeight) won thetr ndMclual
rna ches IO&lt; Charlie Cheney's wresvong
squad as !he Bulls I at horne 10

Sue
I 31- t 0 00 Saturday
Mclaughlin won his malch t:Ner Mattllew OO.aoomo
a 4-2 0\lertlme
dectslOn With a two-poon tal&lt;edown rn

....... ,.....

the eiC!ra sesSIOn

The men's tem.s squad klcl&lt;ed olf
then spriAQ season OYe&lt; the weekend at
the Umversny ol Plttsburgh tnvnanonal
Tournament
Omn Pridgen reached the hnals of the
number fMt fl1gh1 where he was defeated "" the charnptonship match by
Penn State's Chns Cahill Dave
Monkarsh and Mil&lt;e Proulx reached !he
finals olthe doubles COir4)eli!IOfl. They
were also defeated 111 the championship
by their Pem State opponents.

�-~-"'· ----.-~-.

New method sticks metals to Teflon, leav~es surface intact
Tilt - Jli'OOOA, !he ftriiiO ...,
able 10 do !bal.
IGI'a&lt;Uid rho
..,.,._ of
bi$lle)' Colp., •

EVER. WIU..ING to
lea •e well enou.ch
alone,

~ofnaocmdec­

cllelruo:al•lllld~

~nlistl

ba\-e
lotlg lried 10 getlltiftgs

pamaDy runded 111e •art..

to &lt;tick to Tefloa.
From el~ to biomedi&lt;line. a
in&lt;Omeplaccs~ha•cuemen­

dou.s applications. But any melbod
tbat seemed 10 wort ended up detro~lll&amp; the urfaa:
"~r in Scim"" by chdnists
at UB. 'N al'al!l=arch LabomtOI}'
IDd Geo-Ceotcrs.lnc. describes the
f1n0t prooes tbllt leu scoentist dt- ·
posit meuls oo nonstick sutlaoes
while '"'-vmg the surfatt IIIUCI.
1lle simple and 1nexpens1V&lt;' ~
ce is expected to g~a~ly e
lhc- u s ~ or Teno n and orber
fluoropolymer. 10 electronic and
biomedical applications
Jostpl A. Ganlella. professor &lt;X

J

'"Thisdfon """""""gowmment

Unlilnow, ftll'-&lt;dy bom paillible

with e:all&lt;:mOiy CICt'IIJii,o, - ~
oM aabods. Moir pr:ople have ......
OOccd-. on !ICln!ilidt
by llqlpin£ df .. ol ... tlaDt:iar..
llllrinc • ...,......_ .,.,.;,ay,IDd

r...lllll~iD......, ,"said

c:lltmsuyaUBandT....,.,C VartA

Jdfrey M. Ool ..... loadcrofk Sur-

aUB~felkw. . have~

beet IDd I~ Group • 1be
BIOIMoleoolar Scio::acle
IIIII £.acmo&lt;rinc • NRL IIIII oooodlor of the~ anidle.
'Onedtbe Slb!lrao~ 10

c...-- for

for m&lt;xlif)•ing
6~ arla= Willi $pOcific
c:hernlslries.Th&lt;se matcrialsha&gt;e boon
wlimlfortll'ldarnemiJ studir:so(,.,...
llli cell llllliChmor1: and groo&gt;11l. n.:

boolnediClll implallts.
Resea.rcbet5 ., the Centv for
BioiMolecular Sc&gt;tnCe and EngineerinG at 'RL.ha&gt;e conrom'"LI)

b

~

and IIIU~ ilb&lt;nlmes""' as
• • pallldipD roc cdlabonl:ive t.sic
~ieadqiOIOC:bnolocyuaos­

pa~mted ~ses

~ .......,] Os.u&lt; f&lt;r pol&lt;lnlial ""' in

&amp;Dr~·.....
ct...,
...uc.,

"This effort between government and
uni,1ersity laboratories serves as a
paradigm for collllborative basic resean:h
leading to technology transfer and
applications in uuiustry. "

nonstick nuu.erial tbllt was mcky

~goolisto~n-nals
f&lt;r~anddin&gt;amgthe~

k fxt ... ...,... "*-• aleyh ....
oi~Jr~e!Jolllom. ~ lliiiG•*k "8ul ill
CldoriOblhiDiilm&lt;r-·

..... c:ally

been using simiw cbemi:suies on
various urfaoes. sucb as SJbcon
and glo . to produce well-&lt;lefined
patterns of conducting mew pathways via patented elecuoless mctalhz.atto n processes. Tb~ s e
pmce'S ~ s uu ltu mctaJ -bmdmg

sites. "tuch allow meuls to grow
on a surf..,. from a woter oolution.
These two separate I) &lt;lneklped
conceptS have nov. been combined
1o produce a mt:tbod for ~pplyont
mew to Teflon. "'
homogenMUsl)' or in specifiC panenu.

bed.,...........,. .. lbe fulureb
too&lt;:JCJI!JooaliaoJIIICbljacilTdlcn."
said Olllw:n. "Boa ID..., il eft'ealwly.
)'OU ba&gt;e lObe :oblietDde!lno......,..
ID!IIII J*1i'lTIS on lho!le !IOifa:="
~...,..

~ ~

boca:J!oe ol

men..

pq~Ci1ioo.oudlosthr.or8tsulilqda-·

.naco.

lbCIIcq """" ~"' on.- Aid
CiordrJIIa. "Wbbl ....did
IDailoe.....
IUJria:6 df. II um cu ...

a fi::w

leaMiw an

·

"'*'=" k

bydl&lt;ll)tl~- ~.

'lbe NRL ....,.,. is ~pod 1D
Iliad dimd!ly .10 ~
~ plocod Oil the modified
flu&lt;mpolytt&gt;:rllllfilco.llldl• Tdlm.
'lbe ID!IIII Ibm .. de:poo;:ilocl
lbe
IUrface lllaoqp .............. In • """"'
plorq boeL ., ealn:IJiely ocmmon
in:Uinallldlmlogy.

Do You

Want To
Reduc·e Your
Drinking?
Free assistance for male and
female moderate to heavy drinker
(ages 21-55) offered by the AWARE
Program. 8-week study includes

..........................

,..... .Wfl C..1al •. .

.......... lllkDI&amp;I.

free medical exam . Requires
involvement of spouse/partner
or mend. All participants paid.
Flexible hours. Fully confidential.

....,...., ... loll-.
No ........ chorgot.
Todool'~.

fOI·llCKEf~.

--OIIIcoof
"""""- _, Spocial e-. al
~14.

Call 887-2573 anytime.
Program !1Qt illt.endedjor alcoholics

�---·--

CAMPUS iBESTSa.l..fiAs

Entreprenewial
forum is set

for Feb. 24

0

I'Rsidenl Will'

R.

~will be II1DOII&amp;

COIIIIIlWiity leaden who wiD
~'*" iDa Stnlqic Alliance
floolm fowsiq oeen~­
shipm
~ YOI'Ic.. u. be

w-

beld from 8-9:30 a.m. Feb. 14, in
the Uaiweniry Inn and Ccnference Center, 240 I North Forest

R~~pranted
the

Center for Enuepreneurial
ership AlllllltU
. . . the
Uni•-enity 111 Buffalo.. wiD c.wninoe 'the inoovarive steps being
~ iD educ:ation. busines5 end
the com.munity Ul support emn:preneutS!lip;o Western New
Yoo'k.
Tbe session will be l1'IOderiiU:d
by Clw'let MitsCbow, c:hairman
of the Marinoe Midlend W~:i~em
Rqioo Board of Oi....,ors. In
addition 10 omna-. the panel will
featuR Andrtw RudniCk, president of the Greater Bulfilo P.vtnership, and Robert Bennett.
presidcrlt of the Uruted Wa)' of
Buffalo end Erie County.
A legilitr8tion fee of$15 in-·
elude$ • oontioental breakfast. .,
be served Sl.ltti!lg a1 7:30 un.
11or """" lnfonnatioo, oontact
the Center fur EntreprcoeuriaJ
l..adcrlbip. part of !he UB
School of Management. at 645·
1200.

Lecture deals
with animal
liberation

0

A lecture lddm;sing the

similar treaDnenl of animals and women in a palriorcllal
society will be beld .. 4 p.m.
Mut:b2, in lOS O'Brian Hall.
"Animal Ubcntioo Through a
Feminist Lens" will be pn:sented
by 811)'11 Bauman of Feminists
for Animal :Righa, a New York
City-based group.
Tht lecture, which is free of
charge end open to .the public. is
sponsored by Students of Law for
Animal Rights (SOLAR) in the
UBSChoolofl..aw.

El-Khawas,
Mingle speak
at seminars

0

Elaine EI-Kbawas, a vroe

president of the American
Council on Education (ACE), and
Jarnes R. Mingle. executhe director of the State Higher Education
Executive Offi=-s (SHEEO).
will speak as pan of the 15th
annual Breakfast Seminars for

Western New York· s Higher
Educators.
El-Kbawas will speak March
18, in the M oot Hall of Buffalo
State College. Mingle will speak
April 29, in the CoUege Center at
Hilbert 'C ollege in Harnbw:g.

~ tf.dniinillndon ad
Polley illlhe c:Jndo.- Sdlool o(
llduc:Miooa til UB.

Vice ·po:esidod fllr •policy
INI)'IU and I'CICII'tib for ACE,
EJ-Kba..·aa ....e!l-blowo aa 111
analyst of broad tmads affteti
bigher~

oocents reseadl

0

A tiay &lt;:lllliOn lbol 'takes

Law student

c:olor pbotos i!Uide lhr
moulh. Wen .....s 10- tenaiJI
oral ksioos and iniiO\'Illve rE&gt;
teardl pn&gt;,jc&gt;eu by UB &lt;1mt.a1
&amp;ttiCientl; will be fearured 111 1
&lt;:enfem~ee lO be held M.orcb I i1t
the Orand l.slaDd Holiday llliL
The fii'SI annuo1 Dental 'St~­
dml Auooialion Confemna: will
be •held rmm :30 Lm. to s p.m.
Mcxe lhan SOO B,aff'J.blled
dental faculty, studerlu, alumni,
lil.lff and cltniciam ... c:lp&lt;!Cied.
Tbe &lt;:enfert~~&lt;&gt;e promises to be

atUBnamed
fellow

the mo . ~!live !lludml
resc:otdl program of i kind in
the oation. said Oplur l. AWouf.
fourth-yeo&lt; lludenl in the UB

0

Scbool of Denial Medicine.
A
will 'be presented 10
the lDp Wee swdeo1 projeas.
Two natiooally "'-"' ~e­
sew:chcro at UB will be Ryno1.&lt;
opeal;;&lt;r5. At 9 Lm., Raben J.
Genco will disca • "Dental Resean:h: Tht Engioe Behind
O&gt;ange." Genco ls chair of the
UB Departmenl of Oral Biology.Roben E. Baier, UB professor of

Mingle was oppoillled in I
as lhr fira.CUCIII:ive diroclor ol
SHEEO, an OfJIIIIiUtion rqn-

seming the exooutive otr1100n and
1lafEs of the swewide COOidina~­
ina and govemin&amp; board• of the
SO stales.
Tht 00$1 of '""'-1h oerninll' is $~ ,
which ioclude$breakfost. For
R&gt;&lt;n information. ~11645-241 I.

Nic:ole Holder, a UB law
studmt. is one of eight
gnduale students placed in
policy-mlking offices of the New
y 011&lt; Stale legidarure and Slak
ag-ies. as pan of the Fcllowship Prognun on Women end
Public Policy of the Center for \
Women in Governtl'IC&lt;lt.
1
Holder will wort in the ew
YOI'k State Depanment ofTnns-

w-

ponation

~wllldilcw s

Now in us 12th year. the feltow.hip ~seeks to encourage the increa&gt;ed patticipatioo of
women in the public policy process end 10 deveklp public policy
and leaders.
Tht program draws graduate
students from 1 ••ariety of disciplines, and combines • 30-hoor
per week placement witb gndua!e-level studies on women and
public policy at the Univenmy 11
Albany, SUNY Gradwlte Sdhool
of Public Affairs.

" Biomalerialo. Bananas and
OlewingGum" at I p.m. Somt
lO lludenl re5eloiCb projecu will
be presented.

Adults needed
forsrudyof
antihistamines

0

Adults age 6S or older who
are in good health are
noeded to help UB researobers
evaluate ne"' antihistamines !hat
are used to tn:.at allergies witbout
making palicnls feel drowsy.
Whit. n:seart"ben know thai
these drup du 001 ltlaU younger
patients feel drowsy. less is
known about how older pauents
react to them. Tht study is de51goed 10 determine if these medJ.
cations are as non-=iating in
older patients as they have been
in younger ones .
Participants will undergo test ·
ing from 7 Lm.-11 p.m. oocc:
each week during the two-month
study. Subjects will receive complete physical examinations and
allergy and other teSIS prior to
beginning the study. They wiU
receive S 1,000 upon completion
of the study.
Anyone interested in pnrticipaling sbould oontact Fran
Gengo. UB associale professor of
pharmacy. at 887-5281 or 8874799.

The seminars are sponsored by
the l:lepanment of Educational

............... ,. ·~ ............

Dental stucbtt
oonference

·~ ···

.. '"'"'·"""' ''""'

Committee
details healtl\
safety issues

0

Tht Joint l..abo&lt;IMmJagcment Commiaee on Health
and Safd)' dellls wilh any i....,.
rdltin&amp; 10 the beallb and saf&lt;ly of
employ= 11 UB, or:conli.og 10
Albert Ennaoovics. c:bair of 1be
c::ommi!ICIC."111e commi.aee nepre...uslhe various~ units
oo campus.· fnnanovics says.
"Ailboogb our role 1 lldvi"")', we
bave a direct link 10 President
G&lt;einc&lt;, and can nuivau: dcpanni!OOtS din:aly.
"One project the c:onuni11ct bas
been involoed in is~
the admiruSirarioo 10 establish a
smol&lt;e-free CltnpU$." Ennaoovics
says. A=lrding to their mission
SllliMlCilll. the oornn»aee ....- as
a rooduit between employees and
senior adrninisrratioo and the Depanmem ofEnviromnenlal H.eallh

MB&lt;SOHUSI'

a

l =-~
2 TM,.¥.:'"'--3 --~4 ~~
,,fln.lifJ!
5 ~(=....-----. l fOI
, 12C)

I

fill.~

I

'----

bt'Gonloan~

~

l

l

NEW AND Nf'ORTANT

....naGUIII,._.. ....
9Y HCIWB.1. RAINES
~,...,

A~

boakmearc notcny fa mun 4(}.60 ~ o1 aoe. t..t

lloo fa~ men-..ng Chemi66&gt; Clllli5 fa_,....,~
10 ~men. illnd lor~
I low lor fasl..towlng ....
""' n11!1e chllenge ollilndong the ~ - •

NEW AND NOlEWORl'HY

•1111 WMT OF 1111 YALUY OF I.:OYE
BY CVNn-tiA !I;A[X)H.IITA
~•• •OJ
,., ..,.c:ilng ,_ _,., on
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~DeVinr&gt;o)'lllld!.Da~-. ~~

and Said)', and relays cona:ms
and n:commendalions to the OJllll'&gt;"
pnate people.
Tht mission statement also caJh
for the COitllllittee to checlc periodically on the progress of
measures. if so WIJT8Illed. and to
pursue grant fuods in &lt;&gt;rdcr to
pursue n:sean:b or educatiooal
programs " 'IUch would beoe.fn the
employees of UB.
"We wish to s1JeSS that we are a
labod~ oatominee of
peers. easily oa:essible, and willing lO scm: the employeeo." the
mission staiCIJleD1 ~- "We are
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Goidon McLeod Harris,
retired chemistry professor
SerYtcea . . , . Mill last month in Laguna Hills. Calif. for Gtwdoll
McLeod Harris, a retined UB cbemiury professor. wbo died Jan. S .i n 1

numng horne after a loog illness.

Harri&amp;." who was born in O!ungk:iog, China wbm: bis father waa a
missionary. lived in Ausml.i1 end Conada before C0f11inc 10 UB ill 19S4
to join lhr UB Olemistry DepanmenL He retired as Ladl:in l'rofeaor of
O!emistry after 30 yean of service to !he uniweniryHe is survived by -h is wife. Justyn.ofCalifumia; adaugbter, Deborlh,
of Illinois; two sons, David of Colifornll and Mallbew of Obio; a
grandeh.i.ld, and two step-gronddbildren. Burial was in Califbmia.

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Ill I'IOieacr P8lar -.non. dlnlrC will\ ltlem,
111orW with UB faculty, lft1 ....... In l!leir

............

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~ «fttllllwly_ .....

-

.. o.-r OlaloC .....

,...~

'I'J IIIII ~·,. 1111 ·sc:llCIUn; 1111 of ua. Tile
~ .. q
erent In tMt the("' jUSt a Ntlle
more - I n their ftelds. W.'te al stilt lamIn&amp;.' Nid&lt;lnM Uld.
·vou mill' lhinl&lt; •your prc&gt;fessod don't to
see ,uu. but tMI's notuue-not.b IIIII ~of
them. Facutty-..ntiD ~ IOU- and
wort&lt; b

JUU, .. 'bnllcera' In tbeir · puttlrc""' In
llt&gt;l to take IIIII lniUathoe ID

·CtlltDllnclw
touch wtlh people
who_•shin! )'OUr lntefflts and pals.
_
L~ baCII 1n and out o1

Qoy. . . . . . S,..DII_ I...... IIi-*totlletiiM

.lntaf.ctlon • • _.. • .ct.~,...,.....

But""'""

tt.e classroom, In all Its -

...... .......ntlbRichar

permu\8Uona, Is !he -sian
of Pete&lt;

-..on.,,,_,

of the mediCa! Khool's Pa-

tholoCY

Cilia...._.....

Gnoclu.l lle """"""
al the F'ec&lt;llly Sell• -N-.on Is deeplyc:oncemed about !he""" ofUle
student In IIIII modem unlend -

-.fty.
He has- prime
niZII&lt; end lecllltAilof of IIIII
dinner enddtllloCJe JIIOCrllmNid&lt;er&amp;on e n d -

orca·

c:ol~weteon-to

done wtlhstu0el1ts In 1he Gort-

.

,

~ res«&lt;ence ~-­
as they " - -..1 times

____

. ,....._

,........,........._., 4

I

since last semeater-IJ&gt; perli&lt;:lpete In FSA end llesidenUal life' s Jolntllo...,.,.,_

c ••• , ...... ,

)

' Govemon Symposium . ·
The , _ ¥erlblla •l lalb back

to PlaiD' s dii)'S -

stJJ-

primerily....,.;;,

clent,lteaoher intet'&amp;Ction was mo&lt;e social. informal, diaJcc~ered. based
the free ·eJ0::1\811&amp;e of Ideas.
JennlfertleCo&lt;y, an elecUilcal ercineerirc! major,.,.. seced with RObert Noble. a professor
of Biochemistry end Medicine. 'It's a nice d\ange to get to know ~·SOB on a llei'SMal
level,· DeOoty obsefved. "The classroom lends lo but 1t1em on a pedestaL You forget tMI
they're human and"- opinions. •
Noble JaugheO . 'It's uncomfort- tore- lhat people llttribule ~ f'righteninc
- t o , . . . ._
students become mo&lt;e hesitant In~ you_ The
reticence grows with lime. But IOU cion ' t feel eny dl1'ferent than )'OUdid- )OU were ~r . •
Neart&gt;y, se_, law stu&lt;1ents and an Occupstiooal Therapy pmfessor we&lt;e busy~

to
you, and

As,.... get-·

ead1 other's egos. ' In IBW · ..., make fun of .our friends who are majorlnc In OT." said
Sle"ole tee. 1Kent 11gges, associate professor ol Ocoupellonal T'hel'llfll', reSjX!nded with a
laundry ltst oftawyet ~~ - f&lt;t 1he end of tile
Ttgge,.._., firsH.Ime S!'f"'posium
panlcipant--&lt;Spol&lt;ehightyaltlls .-Mends. "I had a¥eeynloe time, · he said. "•It's niCe to hiM!
a chance to hiiYe a casual relatlonshlp with students-to be on their own turf 10IIlere they're
already reta&gt;ed and It' s up to me to relax .
'I don't thlnk)OU can preacll unless)OU practice ," T1gges oontlnued. ' Mel I don 't lhlnk)OU
can tead1 unless )OU know your students. You"- 1o know their concerns. tllelr issues, their
lnterests ....And yoo jUst don't get that in "dassrnom. •
n.e frequent 'laughter and broadeniTC nashes of personal Insight may be wl\at Thomas
Wolfe meant wllen he wrote In L929 of 'minute-winnlnc moments that make , _ map: of a
dusty wor1d ••
for Instance, Professor of Microbiology Semloe Noble's COtlllefsatlon with an encineerinc
student revealed lhat the arcnltectural plans for the J'OUnc woman' slrigh school were drafted
Dy Noble's son. 'Where else would we-eomi"C from our dM!rse bacllgrounds of encineerinc
and ~- had the opportunity to hB¥e lhat con.ersatlon?' mused Noble.
Nlc:l&lt;erson, lorC mindful of the need for kind of
fonrn, eJ&lt;Illalns the genesis of the Sj'mposl\m. 'Wei,
'lliSU&gt;rically,' I'm one of !&gt;No !80Uity reps to 1he fac:aJII)'Stuclenl Association,. he said. •• kMW lhat !here
needed to be more Interaction_, sUJdents 8l1d
faculty on a personal lelei, an:t '-'"&lt;!to be at the
r1gl1t plaoe at the rCJ1t time. I called the PRliJ(IS8I 'Adopt
8 Oormilory,- to indicate ~p Dy the faculty. If
we're lornJnate, we cen enlargf! it to the entJre lrilerslly."
The Symposium Is actually pan of a lone tradition
olln'oloMng faculty and residence hall students at UB.
The Elllcoll Ccmplex was cleslllned to function as a
lM"'I leM1inc Center ' modeled after the cdlegiate
systemsofCembrldge. Oxfon:l, orHarvanl, when! •masters" were to HwHn with sn.dents, IICa&gt;fdii1C to Rick
SchoeUicopl, associate director of Residential life.
Thtoughoul the 1980s an:t early '90s, programs
like "FASTalks' end 'SUnset &lt;:afe' brought professors In 1o socialize with students.
Nickerson's future Sl'f"'poSium plans Include
visits to the el ~shman residence halls, provldlnc the _.-runltyfor professors to old In firstyear students' transition tounlllerslty life. Stuoents and laculty wm also acoompanyead1 other
to the Charlene H unter~ tt Oistlnguished Speakers Series lecture on 1&lt;prit 20.
Nickerson stresses that the prngram Is, Dy Its ¥elY nature, interdisclpllf181Y. Professors who
"""" participated have come from the Medical School, Mthropology. Psychology. and
NutritlOn. Faculty are encouraged lo contact Nickerson to particjpate In an upcoming
Symposium. 0

-nc.

- --t__ile-l_
ot
......,..__,

SUva.

S~~ar~nc--uon- ~,.,.

....
'"""left
··-·- BarfOot.
Nlcke'-1,
Robfltc
WllltMy,

you, u 'brok. .'
ttlelr networks,
puttl

you In touch

wtth people who

..._.your lnteretda
goals. But you've

tlve to get to lcnow
SOIIIeOIIe. ..

PETER NICKERSON

�</text>
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                    <text>Mflgner

explains
budget
implications
for campus
Artist
Critic
Jolene Rickard has
dual appointment
in Art and Art
History
..

2

a.rterato
Pu lcAccea
Architecture students
find disturbing
deficits in public
buildings.
,.

5
Fcbru_, 10. 1994 Volume 25. No 16

Or. D...W
~.

HooCtrton C*
..,.~.

looks ..... left,
• "'-~dent
GNIIner

...-uue

-~·""
FemllyDoy

UB'arole of

to Donolcl

......-diMCI
t.-h

UB, city schools
sign partnership
agreement

Roc-.

c-y

with

took pUce
Feb. 411tECC
City Compus.

com v tty
bettennent

program a

be Schook how: aped • · - .... ol
cbipediO ....... -~
UB's iD-.ol._ wilh HaWa Pwk
1-', ant o( Buffalo'• few reoMinm&amp; oril'lllfxldlood
bools
Amolll lh&lt;R SJ&amp;niJIC the apemen~ iD a propam
Jan 26 at lht 5cllool 011 DonaldsoG Rc.d ......., UB
l'rel;iclent William R Gremer and Buff
Ptobbc
Scbools Supenntmdtnt Alben 'Ibompca.
GreiDer said the pro.J&lt;Cl
os a pi1al fer
other partn&lt;rSiups bee.._, UB md publw: ~ill
the Ctty of BuiWo and tbnlupooot W&lt;lllall rw
Yott. "lt'u p&lt;nO&lt;eumpleofthekiDdlolcollaborauono that caal&gt;rirlc""' S1re11Jtb 10 ow ClOIDIIIUIIi!y,
our ochoob; md our uruvasity,- be eddecL

...,u """"'

lnadditiOIIIOGremerllld~ibooelipmc
the~ ....... Joyce~
•
o(

Ridlordaoa,,..,.

--

TllldiC a cue from the land-grant tradition of the last century, UB'
Office of Public Service and Urban Affairs is forging a new enterprise,
one that blends community well-being with intellectual rigor.
Muriel Moore, vice president for public service and Urban affairs,
says the idea behind her office-created a year ago-is to address
community betterment in a manner that supports the university'
research and teaching missions.
"Over the last decade,
Moon: said during m interview, "the univasity really
focused 1 peat deal of energy 011 ~- ADd I believe that was the best tbiag
that we could hove done, to

put 1 I&lt;X of mergy into that
research . Without tbal
knowledge base, you can't
ha~e

service...

Moore's Capen Hall of-

ficeadminislers oeveral aco·
demit programs and COlD·
munity outreacb services and
internships, and olso lries to
mgendcr a spirit of public
service oo campus.
"We provide the leajler·
ship. linkages and facilitating. so faculty and staff can
become more in\iohed in
publicseo·ice,·Moore says
"We try to resuict handling

pro.JeCU and issues

out

Hamtill Put&lt; Scbool 74; Mazdla
clent of the Baffalo Baud ol ~
A.
blre, UB vice presiclont fer public aervic:e-'
affain, md HUJb Parle, cbn ol the UB Gmdlaotc
Scbool of EducabOD.
Tbe ponamilip ~~ reafrJIIDS a _ . _
meol ... the pon of the Ulliw:rUy llld lhe
Pubbc Scbools 10 ounure .., urba 8Cbool
tMI
R:COIIDCCU schools ID !heir oeipt&gt;nrtw&gt;ock ud ID
luzer tDel!&lt;lp&gt;litaA COIIIIIIIIIIity.

or

this off~ce We really try to

push them into the academic
departments. However, we
may seed 1 project to gee 11
going and once the initiauve
is moving aloag. try 10 gee
dean... 10 co-spoosor it with

us and .-cntually

to

lak

o-.er.Emphosis ., on 1 bro.d
contltlued on page f

It

~-cr-t--•

........ ...

ScMol 74: A-. left., ......... . , _
ftontnCton; 8ul'llllo Sclloala f I trt
Ala.t ~ .......... SNIIIot.

8F I

�2

~

n

H

o

~

-------~

~

--

...

--.-.-

...

s

.....

DENTAL~

--~
...... . . . . _pillllllu

Rickard
is artist,
critic

n:lchlfdh~.d
O.~lf;rtwlll

'~ d

o.!llll Mldlcili1e.....

onrr-_.., ' - ! rwTIId
~d

--~
BoW dO.
f'llh:lklgy.

nw b!:*Q.

~

I¥"'

~~

Ggy, --~0:

I

Tithe Mien-

...

Oral~.

pll!il~d
~~

riOrll~n:lthe

M'lilllcen . ~d. Orel

..._..__..... dimciiOr'bt

b~dirilC«lhe 8llfa.
lo ~ liol!l*fn:l Ull's
DMsicn olliaaPIIII Dental
~+etas

beene

member d the U8 dent8l
l8culty ainoe 1984..

-

MANAGEMBlT

.-..uf IIUCMaCQ

. ....., ... . . . _ . , as&amp;OCI-

. . pralaslu d~
and lunlr1 tti!9&lt;U!li!S hthe
~d~Ns

been namad 1993 &lt;l!JslarO-

lng ......., Aesoor&lt;::e !'rtie&amp;smalbyltneNiagam RaW
Ohapalr rl tile Sooiely b' Hu-

..U!I,_..,_

man 'Raso..roeManagemerj .

andllcr place in iL
Rid&lt;ald. a lecmn:r at UB with 1
dualappoirot:mMLIIl tbedqtartmenls
o( Art and An tli!Ull}'. and·~­
rapber whose work has been $hcw.-n
ILI1lt!ll&lt;l !be OOWIIl')!. is pan or a..
H~udcnausanoe. nati"" people in
Western ""' Yort "bo lilirorically
beve beert
10 ILS the lroquoo•
Confedency. d the Six Nat.Jons_

ref"'""'

Burtbt:~dooot

call lhemselves that. Rtcbrd ~Y'-­
and the nght of people 10 speal.

ohout lhemsdves and t1&gt;cir oomrnuruties tn tbt: ..-ay that the~ "'""" l•
auclalloheracuVttiesas.anarust.an
URel~ •

...., • roembef of the

srnoe 1974, Newman has

T~na1ion

authored "' oo-authored

The 11ft or tbe Haudcnt.usanec
first ga'e Rickard the perspectJves
on communtty. the world. and the
vaJueof c:rea1ing that ar.e oenlraJ co
bel wor~. sbe says. For Rickard.
the things that people make uy a
lot aboot wbo they are
~wbelher through bltskeu. ""''·

ltvee books and more lh&amp;n
30 scholarly arboles He te
on the editorial boerd lor
the Joumal of Ooroamporary Business Issues.
Newman &lt;eceMid the

SUNY Chaooe!iOf's Olsti11gulshed Teaching Award on
1982 and the UB School ol
Managenlef( Distinguished
Teaching Awatd In 1977
and 1988 He was named
Disllnguished Prolessor ol
the Year in the School of
Management Jn 1992.
FAMILY t.ED!CMO
-TOPNII1:
c..to.
assistant p!'ofesso&lt; o( famtly
medloitle and social and
p!'e vent!-.e medlcine. has
beeo named
10 a national
acMSOry

"'*'-to,....,

panel lor the
A.geneylo&lt;
Health Care
Polocy and
Research,
ct\arlged

with devel·
Qlllng cllrrical g l:lldelioes tor
smokinll prevention and

cesssliOn.
Jalln has done research
on smoking cessation Iince
1985. and has pob1lshed
articles on IObacco·dependence and disease preveollon in ~ journals. He
wasonedeigh! ~
honored lbytl!e~

~d. ftmiiYPtlystd - in 11192 tor J)Of1!ll:lu1iclo$1D .medicine and
public health.

'lorytelling. song_, or dance ....
Rkbrd say•. coo&lt;l&lt;:ntmion on on
md the maktng or Oft can be. "site
of renewal" 1n at1ve American
communiue$. and a ~· ay of
"retradllionahztng" their rtlatioo·
ship "'ilh eacb Olher and the rest or
tbt: world that brings their ooginal
ICichings in10 the 20th ce&lt;&gt;tury

During

the past 15 years.
Rickard'spholognpb) basappeued in galleries and shows
around the country, 1nclllding the
pres.11g1ous Heard Museum in
Pboemx. Arizona. and a holilr
called "Messag&lt; Camers" that
originated a1 1be Boston Phll4ograpbic Resource Cen1&lt;0rboused at
Boston Uni,·crsit) 1be sbow ,.-tU
~n~.-el around the counlr)' in 1995.
Her work will also be shown at an
exhibit opening in April at the

Mensbel Galt..ry at Syracuse Universi ty. Sbe is currently planning
two Western ew York exhibits of
the work of native artists, "Sicy
Woman" at the Castellani Gallery
at Niagan Uni versity, and " Keepen of the Western OoO&lt;" al !be
CEP A Gallery in Buffalo.
"I have used photography 10
work with my experience as an

indigcoous perwn." sbe says. Her
work is communily-o:ntered. sbe
says. and attempts 10 "reclaim a

~'"the Art Oeplrunelll

spaco • wbeu tbe
oan dlscu and
repmteDtthe,.orld fromdleirown
point of vi~ .
-l&lt;ly "'ork ...,., about findmg

lhat llicbrd oould sm-o bolh of
tbeir depanmtn wdl. lhe ..Y•-

uKientity.• say -nmo.,,.bat
my identity '-'· ......::tt as anyone
does So I"m If) ing mo&lt;o 10 e&gt;Ub·
li&gt;h a ..,181ioo bdwocn my rtalit)
and lbat or tbe rest or the world-

Ricbnl AY'- ·Tm glad !hoi lhey
share my bcltd "' !hoi possilxht) .
and thollhey are
- theeffM 10
nndef!ll&lt; liiCt! baundarir:&gt;.-

wdl be callc:d '"Viwal Theor) , ,...,..
thelia, IJid Cncic!SRL"
Sbe calls bet 1J&gt;111011Cb m lbtsc
&lt;:&lt;lOneS. •1li&lt;Jb ro\'a"l9llt and 20th
ctlllUr) art , "cempoorall&gt;'e uotegra·
tiOC\." m ,.tudl swdmllilool&lt; at tbe
reboolt of ind!P""'U• art to the art
of otbe&lt; cullure-o
f '

'R ICI:.ud has

mtdlocnal en• tronment ouiStde

cullurlll

l!la~

m)· ~·or\ i1:about tT) •ngto rei.n\ltnt
~t-a.t be.u'~

lftdu•n means ...

1111~ ~tn~ enung '' somelhiRL

" llaww what my
identity is, as much
as anyone does. So
I'm trying more to
establish a relation
betvveen my reality
and that of the rest
of the world-my
work is about trying
to reinvent what
being Indian
1neans."

thai Riclwd does not do solely
1hrougb her artwork. bu1 also as a
teacher and an i:nrellectual in a un.ive:n.ily environmcnL To be botb an
artisl and a cultural critic in a university is I'BJ"C. she poants out addmg that bel culture does DOl share
the distinctioo belween artisl and
critic tbat is typically made in westerneult~ .

i•-

The fact that she
an artist
and a cultural critic bas led 10 ber
dual appointment at UB in Art and
Art History. TyrooeGe&lt;qiou,cbair

or the An Department. and Jack
Quinan.chairof Art RiSICry, agreed

1bnearigbl10bean~gtOOUS

l1:llllrer as well as 10 1ll'tl&lt;Uialr wbaln
.....,....,be.,~IIIIIL«."

lectured at numer0\lS confen:oces. n weU u ~

arts and education mstintLIOJl
around the countr). mdllding the Snutbsoman lnstllutioo in WasllltlgiOR. DC. Last '101nll:r she spolc
at Syracuse Una~e.rsity o:n.
"Matnltneage. Women, Art, and
O!ange: and last opri.ng she '"" •
participant in the coof"""""' on
- Aesthetics of Commu~&gt;ity Based
Artmakmg.- co-sponsored by the
Gett Cenler f&lt;K the Kislo&lt;y o( Art
and the Humanities. •iUch.IUcbnl
says. is • the foretimt ofcontm&gt;pe&gt;rary work on community-based art
RicUrd ..;u abo be speaking
on "LaJ&gt;d and Our Sumval" 11 the
upcoming conference. on ..,Women
and Pllotograpby" sponsored by
the Houston Photographic Center.
The talk Will be about ~identifYing
our urvival IS indigeno&lt;l' peQplc
to our variou relaliooo!rips " 'ilh
land. and clem&lt;&gt;nwatins this photognpbically.• sbe says.
Ric:lwd's octivioo bave 1101
beert coofin&lt;d IOJri}• LO ILn academicoootul, ""'--e,...-.Ala~n&lt;e~­
in~: arranl:&lt;Jd duoogh the Kellogg
row.cJation. sbe rcc:em:ly "-:dbc:r
an-·marketing skills "'th membc:n.
of the Ojibv.-al""'''le in Michigan.
.. Na:Uv.c 1\.meric.an an criticism
it still an emc:rgina area." Ricbnl
..yo. "It's itnpO&lt;Qntto find ·many
ways 10empoweryoursdf and ochers in I (IC id Jhat' S jUSI ooming 10
the foreground.•
At UB, Richrd 1eaCbes an undergraduabOCOUBein "Indigenous
An PIISL and Pn:senl," as wdl as a
gn.duate seminar on indiget10t1s art.
Sbe has oliio 'tllllght a gtn~:ral educationCIOUBeiD "'lltw:al Dynamics." which lbe says, is currently
being r*signed ILS a required

Rlcbrd's"""""'smomAk and
berowncommun.ity ~ . ho~~r

ooJy &lt;m:ngtbonc:d bel be:Joef ID W

u.-,,onana:or

ry.ibesa}"

·1 feel u's m) RlpoftS!blhl)' l
nwiUitt dtaJocur witb the leldorslup or my commumty. and atlhr
grass .-s level. • ohe sa)'S. "M)
fcoling ;, that II' • e.ssen~Utlto sh·•
"""''"'"~~£ bec.l: to my communol) .
well as to v.ork in a.a ocademte

""I'm' -·
gbd "' IN: able 10 tach
aotllor&gt;. admtnislratoR. uudmU
and OJlh&lt;n """'"' deal .,.-jtb tSsuet
of cuttw:al eqtnty. Even tboogb my
wort at UB ..,.....;mr$ is - do.-ly ll:nked to the community in
whicb I ~ up. it rt&lt;llldbeless
crea!CSI opac&lt; f&lt;Kdi&gt;cusiion about
those issues.
~wben e.-posing 1illJdmu to

m
-

digeoous an. I uy 10 wdC&gt;CIIme lbom to tbispan of&lt;he world.
because this pan of the .,.·oddbflf,¥
"'orld . It's important 1M11 •
Haodeaausanee person is wod&lt;:inl
in this IICidemic Mvin:trunent and
represeoting a body of b:towledgc
lhat' s .....,.,tial10 "'-bore we 1tre in
the lat10 2001 =nury. Tbt " -orld I
show lbom..., .longer remainsliiCt!
• flli'J:ign pl.oce.. and il COOJlC(IIJ
&gt;1udents 10 the an and "' ·t he eom·
munili&lt;:i duo the 1111 romes from.
-rm by no ,.,.... the first alive 1\.me:rican .., W&lt;ld&lt; in an academic eavironmeol, but it's vezy
util:~ ~ it gi - me a
dtanc:e to axw:i~ on 10 man
levels. l ......, broolgbt &lt;q&gt; bel irvin&amp;
that it-~ 10 tbink and

pl:anfor~e.ell~of~
ott..- you. I fed 1duit opcaing the
litiS &lt;q&gt; in this way is an essential
pan or lhat wort.·
o

ThtAipot'llrila~~,..,.,..,.~btb~d~anci~SU. ~or ~ vodt. aaun.o. &amp;~~r:n~~~ . . ~ .f'l 1 '31!iCtallltHII..Arr'I*C.. f11'&amp;) 64SWM
ltWClQftC.IIIt,lll.ICA.TONS _ . - .a. . _ . ,, EDn'CIR- , . . .- . A$SIClCVITEBXTOft . . . ._, NitOfiB:JDfl .-.._, ~ftMl' ~ ..._.._., ~~ ~-

�-u

University and athletics: Greiner discusses t)AC recognizes
~UB leadership in
their complex interaction at :FSEC meeting area
ofdiversity
10-·
ECAUSE OF THE COD"\ple&gt;.
rules and rec~&lt;latiolu !hal ~·­
""' CAA Divi i011 I member
itmlbrtiom, and lhe "elobonue
Jlfl'lleSS" lbal UBbas put in pll&lt;:c
~... oftbooendcsand rqullliom, l'resj.
dent Wilham ll Greiner Aid 1hll whm n
oomet; 10 sports 11 UB, he hi "rnc:n of a
handk in I dcWled ""'Y on I regulae ba ~
Ulan for any Olhor.t~ea of B."
·
Gmner ltUide hi* remar\:s in 1 dlscussioo
wllh lhe F"""lly '~ E&gt;;eculi.eCommJt·
~« l.t.&lt;t
He Aid hi rerrwl&lt;r """"
&lt;iesigDOd bel.p 1bc Faculty SenMoe be 001·
niz.ant of w imtirutional oonarol for llhld·
ic 10-orb UB, andtollkcadYaniJI&amp;eoflhe
in
lab: llhlellc 51N:ture.
~I want to try'"' ....Wtiu you to boll' UB
worb in 1enm of •thlctJcs," Gminer u:id. "I
,.·ant you 10 b&gt;ow "'"hit my •pec:i&amp;l respon&lt;i bihoe are,andwboorelhel""''*inYOived."
Gretnoer u.id lhat II&lt;:CM!illll 10 NCAA
ruks and regulations for Dtvision I member
institlltlons, lhe pres)dent of a DIVisiOn I
member instllution is. respoosibk for .. in.ilitutionol oontror of athleuc . In Olber ~ ­
Greiner &amp;aid he bel~ved that lhe pn:s;ideot
wu ·r esporuible for gcnenl cfi~ton and
maintaining a supportive environment• .and
shared responsibility for researcb and teaching wilh fiiCUity. But presldenti.ol cootrol of
tnlei'COilegiaU: llhletics u required by lilt
CAA was n:111cb more specifteally defiiiiOd..
he said.
"I have a compendium of ma!Crillb from
the CAA tbat "''efYbody &amp;hoold !mow
aboot," Greiner£aid "'Titey&amp;Jverllhcrelaborate Jnstructioru oo whaL NCAA anstiwuons
hl''c 10 deal with, pl~n other lhillll such a
lnl5tee• polK: ies."
William~ ofEngu.,.ring i.aid that
he was "coocemed thlt the Faculty Senate IS

Richard Jarvis
to speak at grad
student session
........ S.--, vice p!(Ml&lt;SIIof

academic programs and r-on.
SUNY Central. w1n gJYe 1he opoo!ng
remarl&lt;s dunng a cjjscussjon mee!·
ing m Graduate Sludanl Prolessior&gt;al OIMIIopmenl . Mcn:ily, Feb 14
lrotn9'3&gt; a.m. to 1'1001&gt; W&gt; lhe 0)nler
lor Tomorrow. Norfl Can1lUS
Jarvis, a former UB facully member and adminlstrator. has titled his
talk, "Graduate Student Professional
Oavelopmenl: SUNY System PerspectiYes • The sess.on Is a pot
prcject of !he Graduare School.
Joyce E. Sirianni. dean. and !he Of.
flee of Teaching Elfecbvenass.

dol lhon outsidt lu reUORible
He ~ lhll the acuity ~ -~
out of 1bc ; ue" of pon ~~nt&gt;Jdy; and
pernap. should have only "UIJlUt on "-be
~ in lhe"' .,.,u. h would ~fy our
lnW'C:SI bot """'ldJi&gt;'O u no lnYOive'n"""' in
the dd:ail&amp;," George uid

"We've got an elaborate
process, and the Faculty
Senate should use the
tools tluu are here. "
Greiner i.aid tbal ~I lhtnlr. we oo,cht ro
appolnun..nu to the lntM:dllcgi111•
Athletic II&lt;NIId wllh as muob ..,.,..,,..., ..
odw
But the Faculty Senate could
abo hear lboul alblet.a, maybe through a
}early rq&gt;ort by the- lAB clt1.1r." Bu~ Grctner
anytlnng in•oh&lt;i ng lllhlc.1t&lt;:li '"bas to be
done willnn the frame•ork of what""' ha-r
10 deal
"'!lardtng NCAA rules and
rcgulonons.
V.'illiam Miller of Denllll Medtcinc ..id
that "We're allrelati,'ely fl&lt;lW 10 thiolni:MIC·
t1011. ~ there obJ"WWDIO n:pons being lihared.
publ"'')' wllh tlri• commill&lt;le'
an:
happtmng that we don't know aboul. and_
tbete" a fedtng tbal there's - as moob
information oominc from you as you &lt;ay.•
respoodcd lhat lhe annuli repon
of the lAB was pubhc, and th•t RC!bert
W -.e.ncr. semor' icc pru:Jdenl for uni ven1ty
scn·JC&lt;S, and ChJU'Ies Founner. UB"• NCAA
factrlty-n:prescnlathc. could al"" ~ to
lhe Senate
Samuel Scbacl of Mathematic ,;aid that
"Pcopl&lt; may need some kvcl of confuston

ckared up. 10,.
the 11\8 • ~Gmmcr acr-1. IIIII .aid 1hll
quntton "-ld fmt be directed 10 ag- or
four1toer before ~i Cllben in•oln:d..

"Lcfs do tbeoe ·'1\P in way•1tba1 mulmiz.r
output;Gret,...Wd. "1Ac'.1i ofclamy"boUI
from fiiCUity and from lhc odmimwauon ill
acveraiiiiCideatJon !he_,.. pMl
umrs c.oased UB "to plow lhe -lrouad
lWO or lhtM tJ:me:.,p Grcmitr
e' ·~ 101• ebbarw pooess.• Gtriner
Ald. "and 1lle Mta:lll)' ~ld w;ellle
l.uol lbal:~ ihne.. "
Dl rid B
of Anthropol&lt;ll)' aU.ed f
tbete,. any plan 10 nuke
•~
ociiiJ'al pan ril UB •• IDI SKill. 111 fWI'CUlar w
~ 10 UB'• R«nn l1llJS&gt;OII - l
Grciller ft!$JIOilded lbal "S.oned!• be lbal
mi~ flow out of oar ~iUitl&lt;l'l prooeu
with the

CAA "

handle

...,H_

"""1.

,.,Ill"
or

nun,

G""""''

n other flSEC busi.ne •.lenntftt Crod,er
of P ycbology , c:batr of lhe ~- Bod
~·· Pnont~ Conuruuce. noted tim lhe
gmemor'• ~ bud rl for 1994-95
conJvDOdno lump wmredocttonofli~

I

le for lhe SUNY y~m Tl\at •us
"good-~ . c::ompared to lhe pa.t." Cm..ke&lt;

av11

saod.
""We·re m lhe middle of the late

budge:~

pn:&gt;Cle •·" Crocker told lhe fSEC The bod·
g&lt;l Alii tw. 10 go to the &lt;tate kgt&amp;lant..,.
,.tucb can make chan
'" it, Crocker Uld.
Croc\cr AJd lhallhe nwn "OO..'OSide" of
lhe governor' budget ,... an anempc 10
ehntin~~elh&lt; tuitiooawSiliD&lt;lt for,... gradu·~ stlldenu. Vo'!l:l&lt;lh would make stodtn!S
"'ho .,,.. grad.ate .chool rrom IbiS year
on""ard I.C'IIOI.I&amp;lble for TAP. ollboo&gt;&amp;bewttnt
,graduatt stuclenu;. .... m conuouc to rtc""n\tTAP Ho,."C.er 'ienior Vtcr
Roben W 0gneru1dtbal hefelllhethm•natoonof
TAP for gDduate &gt;tud&lt;nt&gt; v.u a&lt;;uall) "'un·
hkely to pass -

"""'den'

HE MSOOAn N O F " CollcgcslAAC},.,.,,,y -ncchb&lt;
U.U vcrsuy as Buff
•• .,_ o( lO
,.,.,.,.

klm

Cunl&lt;!u-

ia

and"-~~)· ~~

.....,..,s pmmotio&amp;

a

"""'dNaslty 8nd 101-

..._ .. u.s edoc:moniie5&amp;Jt- J

,......,..__prof.,...

"When the
AACiooked
a1 UB's
program,
rheycould
see
cohesiveness,
integration
and good
faculty
development. "

...., of plOycbolor;y
and onr of UB' •
liiiOODI 10 tiH:
proJ&lt;ICl. u:id. !bat

lht odect&gt;aft - lolltatcl

reeoc••·

11on of US's
leadcnlup role til

..:bolanobl p and

watban&amp; llbout &lt;II·
&gt;&lt;nil} lit lhi&lt;...,.

derpduale lew:l
The .........rt;,.

one

of chra
a.trTel!llly
•,.,...uncuodl:ntle
AAC". - IAIIia·
proJCds

tn·e .

A..meru:.a:a

Camnu....-:DiDemocracy and Liberal
\ 'C:IIlJI)',

~

............

- - funiedbya$1 .18

IJIII!Joa . . . tram
lhe Fan~ fouada,.
IJOn.~lO

Meatlhm. As a R!SOUI'a' tnsotilll&lt;lll. UB. s

'* . . ,., be ., .....

......0 oil' Ole: ..,.

scl~"led "" plannmg tnsntutiofts by lhe AAC
'"ub "courK and facult) ~dopmcnl m lhe
area of Amencandt&gt;'tt&lt;lty," Madham said.
CatJraJ 10 lJB •• 5&lt;!locllon for the prqet1
Meocham.-1 . is .. ~ l'bail&lt;mCOOJrOC,
..tad~
f:lcal qJied for Ill Ails.-.! Saax:c
majon. """" lill1 1992. The """""' deoJs ,.;m

Schneider to take on additional
race.
role in University Development ..,...,.,......, """""""'will...,

~
aas.. dri::ity
.md ..,.._ ilCdii:IIOism. About 25 UB fKully
Amcriciiii'IIDI·

qu&lt;SbOilS ..

" " "to-the"""'*
MeacbmJUB~.~
lilid.. 1bio CIU1IC
bc1&lt;q5
beiMI.
"'The COJl'!ll! iJ:npnwel IIJIIeanx IIIII the
~rildilfetence11UB." Mao:bam
Slid. '11 reacbc:s ~~bam I
SIUdmrs a yew.
the AAC loobd II UB' 1 PQ£1.'1DL dley
&lt;nt\d ....oobesi- ialo:gnlion.llld r.ood
f.aeulty ~-The .....,... ptOClCII

OWARD P. SCHNEIDEIL~xecu live director of the University 81
Buffalo Foundation. IS tal.ing on
additional dutieo ond i being named
IWOCiate •ice president f01 developo:ttnt
sya~ems and opcnotion&amp;. Untvcrsity Devel.,_.._
Repoctin~ 10 Sdllleidcr wiD be managementoftheexislill!l alumni dlllabuc and gift
proc::essing system. say• V10e President for
Uni"""'ity Ad~nt and Development
Ronald H. Stein. The unive111ity. Stem adds.
"is goingout,.itba Request forl'toposal for
a prospect -tnclr.ing system that will ioclodc
the existing alumni database and gift-processtng system of lhe UBF. We don't hive a
prospccl-tracl.ing system nght oow.
'Tht , a very sophisticated new soft·
....,.. S)st&lt;m that will m a senst he lilt
mfrastructu!C of the unhersity' entire d&lt;vdopmcnt program," Steins:ud. lbeimpleIJI&lt;flUttion of this, os well as !be ovc.l'!.ight

Fran!&lt; Scllimpfhausaf. d~ector
The worf&lt;ing session wdl also If\elude dlscussaon on enhanCed
graduale teaching ass•stanl training
programs. a wbjecl consodafed
crucial to UB in lha 1990s
Following JaMs' remarks. sman
and management of it. will rcpon to Ed.
groups will dtSCUSS ltle following
Another area for tum is gtft pmccs ing and
resolutiOn from lha UnJYersily Faculgift ~gniuon. which again will rcpon 10
1y Senate: "Be it hereby revolved
him This is a critical piett of any successful
ltlatlhe Faculty Senate of the State
development program. whtch ""'· ve not bad
Urwersity of New YO&lt;!&lt; endorses ltle
in tbe past and whiah we're now puuing in
pnnctpla that all dOCtOral students
place at UB .
should have PfeparabOfl and expar•
"Ed is uniquely qualified. We ' re very
ence Ill the teaching of their d iSCIfon unate that be· s agreed to aocept these
plines. To advance this principle,
additional responsibilities," Stein said. ''For
1he Faculty Senate encourages the
Stale UniverSity o1 New YO&lt;!&lt; 10 deone thing. he has pcrsonally developed wonvelop plans for lfT1PlementlllQ trainderful relationships wilh a number of our
lllQ or preparaoon tor teaching as a
donon and has helped 10 complemeo1 the
raqu~ement tor lha dooloral dedevelopment program. Given his long ten·
grea."
ureat UBF. he representS our link to the past
--- -·-· --· ·· ---··· · · · - - · · - - - "lll'ld ensure&gt;continotty:"' · · · · .. - ·-- •

'1\,_,

b pricipMicD ;, jhe _ . . ~ Meodlml ait1

bi8flly

A..

part rillhe .,..,;.a. Mea::hn and the
C!1bes- UB lioioaa tothe pnJjoct,.._

.

LudwigefMoil&lt;ml..qullg&lt;sond~

will

.-mc;Jl&amp;"' ;, • &lt;nnfe.aoe, '"'''tatiting

Di...,.itylndDi•..,..;fyiQCT~-

,£DWAJIOI'. -

A memberoflhe BF staffflll'l7 years.
Schrltiider earned his undergradullc degree
at Canis.ius College and his MBI\ from UB.
Wtlhin the UBF. he "ill oontinuc to be
the uhima1e person in chlrge of fund-nils·
mg. financial seoices.. real cswe dc\'dopment and investments. The mission of ihc
UBF '' 10 suppon and promote the activities
of the umversity by providing uppor:t, .a d·
,-ice and counsel regarding philanthropy,
fund-raising. de-•elopment: managing gifts
and gr.mts on hehalf of lilt university: providing a " 'ide range of financial ...-vices for
' 'anous units: developing and managing real
property oo UB's behalf; and providing a
strong hlsc of prh•atc sector support for the
univemty th:roilgh the effons of Foundalion
tru &lt;tees and·d:itecttm.
.,

iaiN'ew

Orleans Ftb. 17-20,&lt;111Jerelb&lt;)',.i1J
.......
y,.ilal UB bas dcoe 10 promoiC di'ICl'Sityt.leodwn lnd l..lldwig will wUh ..,..,.
sm11Ji,... from the p&amp;anr1iftc insti~ wah
whidl UB has b&lt;al pured. City College of
Nn od: one! Clommunlty Cdllc# of Philaddplwo. he sm.
In late li(lril1g or DC&gt;lt fall. Meacham ..;d.
represeotatives from lilt two planning ·
tutions will mit UB 1o learn bow to develop
tbcir own diversily C()W'OCS for lllldeozmdu·
teo. Meacham and l.udwlz will do an onsite ,;,it and COil$UlWion wifll lhe ~
mstitutions, be added.
Mcaclwn cited the Yioibi:ity lbal UB
ac:hieves'bybeirtrl.involved wUh lheAAC,#te
Fon1 ~and 60 C!lbes' insliiiiiQis ..
key to lhe irr{&lt;onana: of ~ ... the
pn;ect.lnsocbapn;ect. .._ lean osi!IIIC!a os
,.... conlrilue." he
a lot 11111tt
lhal needsto b&lt;dooelll ~ in ltniiSril..--

said,.,..,.,

ingdi~.oncl lhere'sda 'loiMcabm

from olher diOOis ~~bam bow 1b&lt;)' do il.• ~~e
..
G

siid.

�4

RE ·RECENT New Ycd ..u
Cornmi.u ion oo edueat.i:onal
Slruc:wtes. Policies. and Practi&lt;es

rmd-

wu m«re IIIICICeUfuJ in its
·in&amp;• about the condltian of ....
we's public odllcatlouys~em thin it
wu in the~ it midi: aboot
bow to n:fom.&gt; lbal ryllem. Hu&amp;h Pl:tric.
dean of the UB ar.luate Sebool of Edooa·
tioo. !Old the audience plhenod In Baldy
Hall 011 Feb. 3 for his talk. ~Beyond the
lll:gonts ... Beyond tbe CDcnpad for Laming .• What's Next for ew YcdS..u'!"
Pelrie called himself the 1lono dissen.,...
on •&lt;hecommi$$ioll. and said he roUid give at
best "quolif.ed asseot" to the Rport '1'uning
ldn:n ust" iss.uedby the commission on
Dec:. 21.
.
Pelric
an his talk by de•cribif1&amp; "the
m ""id&gt; the oommission ..... establ.ishcd." lrw:ludif1&amp;'1hc: Neo.Cornpact forl.aming. • pion for tcl1ool iml"""""""t .epprovc:cl
by the: Ne"' Yori&lt; Board of Rqents ..,.era~
years ago. The ·ew Compact for Learning
de\·oloped a new eomculum framewori. Ill
s:llndMd wbjecl mauer area and De*I!IOdel
of asso ing the ability of student ro ~

~
'

standards "' tho$r subJOCIIlllll&lt;:n
nolher conrtxnw is,.., was wl&gt;at Petne
called .,., 'lWo 'Y""ms or education Ill
""' Vat State--&lt;lOe wburban. mainly af.
tluent. white, and performing well II&gt;&lt; other
urban and rural, lliJder fmanc:ed and performing less well. Also rooiUtUI!Iy importam.. be
stUd. was what the: Business Council of lhe
State of New Vat bad called tbe "SII billion
myste:r)'"-4he quostion of whai bad happened
oo new money for education in ew V 011&lt;
a!loeated o• ..- the last decade. whk"b. Petoe
srud. in f:od turned out oo be about $12 billion.
Tbt commisSJcm made a number of imponant fi.ndings. Petne .&lt;atd He .&lt;atd the:)
confirmed the pc:rceprion thaJ the~ ,..•• a
"dual system of educouon in e" Ycxl:. •
But lo-...e"-pec:tl\tion:\1 for1.tudents "~~~'erestate ­
wode. the commtssioo found. although the
problem \\as Wbr'ie in schools thai were
doing less well Petrie said. Sud! klw expecuuions. as well os a \liCk of access 10 high
qualhy curriculum and flri!Jtie&lt;. contributed to the problem&gt; of sehoob that were
doing less wen. he said.
Tbc: rommi sion found inequitable access to early childhood education. and to
heallh and human"'"'"'"'· Petrie said. Petrie
said the commission also found that special
education was OJ:tremely expensi.e. and that
much or the missing new money for education had gone to special education. Tbc: commission found a g~ deal of inappropriate
placement of studen!S in specoal education
prc:&gt;grams. Petrie said. beeause SChools often
had a fl-nanci.al incentive •oplaoe students in
those programs when they did not need to he
there. NO&lt; wast~ much prof...,.ional de-

A

~ 00 the &lt;tate of

"Some ofour
recommendations-.like
increasing the length of
the'fchool year-had
little to do with our
findings. I don~ think that
re-thinking really
happened. "
l'elopment for tc:acber!. woo ~ orked on speCI.al cducat1un, he s~ud .
In faa. Pe&lt;ri&lt; said, II&gt;&lt; oomrruSMOI\ found
that lht:n: '""' msufflcient pro esslonal de&gt;elopment for all le\'els of educatiOn prufessional&lt;, mcludtng teachers, admmiSII'altn. and

principiis. fU instance. he Sllld, many prufessionals bad 1101 been l1'1lincd in dtanging approaches to subject J1l3IU:r and~
ThecommissionfoundthatthemirnngSI2
billion bad for the lllO§I pan 101"' primarily 10
inflatim. Q..., to special education programs,
then for inaea&gt;ed administration and salary
raises for senior leiiCIJ&lt;n. Pt:trie said.
A numbe:rofkey ossues arne out oft~
fi.ndings, Petrie said. including the problem
of a "hostile labor management chmate" m
whoch pubhc employee umons wert "reha·
mg 10 think anew."Otbe:r issues mdudc.d the
lad. Of iru:·entj\•ts for COSt-effect.IVeneS:S tn
school•, alienated t:upayus. the ftscal de-

Bli-'F \1.0 •!• \\

\IJ~

TO l B

Exquisite Condition. Owner Oc(:upy or Investor .
~~-

Apan.menl t Is cuM'f'nU)

being rentrd lor S80Wmo.
Includes 38R. 1 112 Bath
Gorgeous ..indlllfl
oa~ stalrca
on loft..

Apartment 2 has a
separatt· entraooe and
UIIIIU

r-.'0 car gJJr"l:".

A must ser!!

Cindy Jalnchlll
lJcmiltd

s.n .o\lt;nl

839-9300 or 689-9269

Hucll Petite

tAIIaltoa.ldy
New Vorl.·, "'bt&amp; five"
Hill IIUCIIence
cines. and the 1 Silt of
8llout ,.art
how to solve "fragDf•tabtcommented'. education gov mlulonCMI
emance.
~
Petne said that. unfortunately. he did not
belte¥e that the reoommenda!Jons 1 sued by the c:nmmis 1011 would
really help ool¥e these problem • although
he said thot 1 few of the ....,.,.,.mendanons.
~uch as the call for a "Children '• Sumnut"
tho! W&lt;&gt;Uld deftne &amp;commoll &gt;Ute a&amp;&lt;nda fur
.d&gt;tldretl. weTe some .. hat useful "Some of
our recommendiltlom-.ltl..e tncreasm&amp; the
length of II&gt;&lt; school }eat-had ltnle ro do
,. ith our ftndings." Petnesald. '1 don ' t thin!.
that "'-thJnlttng really happened ..

.__

illi&lt; wos saKI ohoul boo. the reform•
suggested b) the c.omnussoon would be
patd for. ~orl&lt; saKI. And. he said. the oommissoon supporu:d the ew Coii\P3(1. dc&lt;pitc dissent from kxal school boon! ·. Al!iO,
the: commi ion called for BOCES 10 do
more professional development. witbout.
Peone Sllid. tl!king into aoooont the une¥en
quality of BOCES across the mue.
"Because of the disjunction be:rw= the
rondings and the recommendations of the
comnussoon. I gave only qualifted as§Cilt 10
the results of the rommi sion." Petrie said.
"We did 0()1 'l'tn&lt;l the time IO maU II&gt;&lt;
neoe&gt;sary analy&lt;is of bow 10 malte =ommendauons beyond busines as usual.
"We missed "''hat we might have been
able on do, be added . "M.oyhe the upcoming
Children's Summtl will give us a se&lt;:ond

L

chancr ••

_____....
OIUnn..,.aellllt'rlhlmD'Jdet711t
IIIIIJillliatt 1lJm. Tile IDmiiS Millllie II h lal·
lliH2!1IU5 b:Uns

·-~· allia!s

a den cllite

. ........ n!lllilollices

• dia!s ol hf!CIJII &amp; l'!ti!sslorli Sill SAl!$
a allictallllr~

•

aiSUI!Ini

I possillo. II leis! cnllililo8 illm rlllDQ':mi~SIIInllltltt:m
""rl!l ~. ~ar
e~. crm

..-lle!b!~ ot te anldil!'s 1t1e ni~~~X~~J~&gt;
~liem:tted 'ID

torm

AI---------4CUTIO.JII:rn&gt;karl!smls~ll!i!kll

tlfllCI(eDI!fGii

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earm-

Oiha!olhPrtMISI
562 t.p,lllal
~llllUIIiill&gt;

BtA!ltlo. Ni'~

l.kml nlarmutt(lnt!t!ds ri h~

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marlll!ostilmil~. ~­

m 11111 DIDn bros 11r Cllqj ·66-29!1l.

lifs ttnDy [letJee Carmllilt st11111 all
~ Tlls lDll!lllle. dllinllllr Prowosl

MilO II ·Biodl.UII!lPri5eS~Itt:m
lilt laotlr. 5lude!t

boclr.,.,...., Sill

Asstlaillttl'l.lll fuRillan. nl Ohr ler 1111!1'

neJis aiGII"uritlnly~. ~ils
ll!lecltonaiJdl!ltial~ hamnilllle
-ll!lldDI olllllllerliGID II#Dr1

eam~-INGasse$.nllllel

mlius:oo•nenotolbts ID!'I!slin
R
Gt- lli!PI!Sidt!lr inm'*:ltedolsets Ill IE llJwa'dld 1D b dlnlllllar b' IXIliS&amp;-

NIID!liiiDnstll!lii5~nmt

""stbllifa!!f lola'diiB, 1!194

Women, Science &amp; Playing Politics!

Gender Inequities in the Sciences
A public meeting with

Gail Willsky, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Biochemistry, U niversity at Buffalo

- A presentation of the facts Tuesday, February 15, 1994 7:30-p.in.
Harlem Road Community Center
4255 Harlem Road, Amherst
$2 donation at door

�_...,

_____ .

finds pattern of discrimination in public acces
STUDY CONDUCTED by
ID lbe UB Scbool of

The YiobbociJ of ADA pideliMs II lbe
audillld • found by lbe UB IOideDu indueled·
• l'llbiiC ..,..,... tba DOl entirely

~u4~~~bH

accasi

tCIIIIId~a

lli

u4cbs-

llllbiai pic:lure ol concimlln&amp;

cliJaiminatioD

,

people 1llilh dtoabi6of lbe Amerilies" in violalioD
cus wi Disabilitits Act (ADA), •hacb
cleab with IIDCeSS 10 public 8tCOINIIOda-

oe ntJc m

IIOnL
The~

t.ed lbeu c:oaclusJom
oo ADA «Mnpliana: a&amp;adi that !bey ..,.._
clucced WI fall of p~blic IOOOCIIIJIIlCia
hotels , aupc:rmarkels, ohoppina mall ,
pbann.w:jes, rnovielbealenllld 11:1Uinnl$8CI"OA Weslall u4 oeatraJ New Yor\
leam of22l!Udenu fCJIIIId I palterD of
clitcnminatioo even ill lbost
~ run by J.arr;e ODd

c:omparues.

nus

dtiiCrulllnatJOD
WU in violation or a
1992 ADA
deadline for lbe remcJVal of all on:bil&lt;ctural
ODd oornmllllication bamers 10 a&lt;ce55 10

J........,.

pllblic: IClCOCIUIIOdati
After clocumenuna lbe pec:tfoc: nat= of
lbe compliance violabon , lbe "u
loclced 10 lhe reasons for lhe problems ODd
deviled a model ADA educatJon and enforcement campalgn Thetr researeh and lhe
c:ampatgn has been presenled IO lbe l.ndepeo·
dent Livina Cen~erofWe$1em New Yon an
hope of obtllnmg corporate and pubh&lt; monoes 10 fund a field 1e&lt;1 or lbe project
The udy .also was provxled 10 "'The
lndepc:ndeniS," a UB club for OIUdeniS ,."llh
clisab!Jna concbllOC1s, and 10 a number of
national advocacy orpnu.auons for people
wid! dtsabaiJtJes
llldeniS involved an lhe project ""'
seniors in a pedal procram 1n fKilrries
management at UB. They "'-or\ed under lhe
direction of Scott Danford. UB
a.au:
professor of eoYJrorunental and orpruzalional psychology, 10 1
ADA eomplt·
anc:e by lbe 11 different t)·pes of pubhc
accommodations
Theyrevie..·edlhree nesfor~type of
aa:ommodauon. In each case.lbe lhree " 'es
were operaled by lhe same nauonal or regtonal bu iness cbaan

• A

tor.,.

triiiClel al

perceola&amp;C: of
ible .,..
.... intemalional aymbol of

'lily wu DOl poll&lt;d
• A ,....:nl aboencc al poll&lt;d e aa.aabOn piMs that""* inlo ...,.,...!be neecls al
people
duabiliua
• Spe&lt;a forwbodclwraeall that were
y aqrecased ....., IbM dupc:ned
~Jhout lhe laciiJty

• Coulllr.R, tables and bon lll plwmaoes..boWJ and~ that were typically 001
witlun lhe allowable bet
ranae of 2J.. J.4
IDCho&amp;. a
~~~a. a11ows
10 lbost in

ranee

wbeeldwn
• IJI!ormauonal gnaae that ..... neJiher
dear. larJe, . mple ...,.. ICCOIIIpMied by eJ•
Iller raiJed lenenng or Braille
• Publoc: tdephones tbal usually were DOl
eqwpped ""ilb volume control for lbe hearing impatred
In addiuon. .... 51udeDI.S round • number
of problem untque 10 Spec:~ rae: types of publac: aa:ommodallOC1s 1bese onclaxlecl. but
"'ere not reotnctal 10. """""' Alsk in theolen ODd tle.Uln&amp; tbal dtd 001 ~
lhe hearinc·. SJ t- or mobihty-ampaued.
anacuniblt shelf heagbl in supc:rmatUu,
poor anformauoo sir;~~~~:&lt; on automatic teller
maclunes. lad floor obolaclts an malls lbal
presenled a haurclto the vasually-unpaored
In cooductlng the audtiS, lhe otudems
lased lhree kinds of dtsabtlil) 1" on.
heanoa and mobi~ry unpaument) 11
oo ddemune lhe UlCb of problems encounlered b) people
eli b1lt1an The)
took measurements of counten., doorway•.
elc:., lbal pemulled dtrcct oomparuon '"'lh
ADAAcces 'btUryGwdelines(ADAA ).and.
UOJn a cornrnen:aally 1\'&amp;alable 16~ · ttem
acces 1b1llly un·ey m trumeiJI. •.»ened
each te' compliancev.,lhoelc:dedADAAG

"''It

pt'0\1 IOn

''The resultS offered pnmo jD ta• tdence
of ClOflllnuang patterns of Cl .. tl-nghu vJOiauons agunsl people '*llh d1ubahur-s, ..
Danford SIJC!, "and the ~uden began lool. ·
ang for"'"""" for lbe fa~lure to comply
"Prollabau-. t'&lt;h related 10 eompiJance

cloD.,_.., poae..

ICIGr)'e

• he adcled ""The ADA _.

,.

reqWnd ~
'.-lily adlievabk••

10

cldtnnl.... •M

dloole

...

y e&lt;:blev-

lb&amp;t,' lbeU . ~alJIIIIICtha
ruled lhll
wual of .... ~

~chouldho

-hoWe!. "A*!. m lbe.-eofallbul.-eallbe
pubbc
- eUIIIIed, lbe

paR*......- IJ I tor.,.""" protitabk
~-

Acclordul&amp; 10 Oufont.

"Total ignorance of the
ADA would be difficult to
imagine, given the
publicity the act has
generated since it was
passed in 1990. "

.

dent from the aruual audtt thai !bert -re
on!) r.. o po&lt; able eaplanatmn fonlus out·
111.1ncb pananofdtJatrruiUIIJO&lt;I ellhorlbe
pubbcaoc~ ba-.adefaaentun
derslandan of lbe cornpUIIIICt llandard or
lhe) do nol feel suff1c:oe111 !ftS"'"' 10 "'at·
l1lnl
the requared cbaQaes
"'TherecetUJnly,. adefJCiml undenlandan
f lbe 1&lt;'1." he said "W&lt; found lbal
cenatn publac acx:ornmoclauor made 50CD&lt;
chances. butthecban esdtclll' teomply .. tlh
lhe ADA ~lny
~ . 0. lhe
orber band, cenatn pu
accommodat
"'ere found 10 ba•·e made DO c:twa:... sue·
ge.~angand erenc&lt;atbesl Tocal1~
of the ADA o.ould he dtffoc:ult 10 ...,.,...,,
g" en the publacuy lhe ._.. has &amp;en&lt;nlN
Sine&lt; II was passed JD 1990 "
Sance only those •'bose cml n&amp;hts are
hemg vaolaledcan bnn@SUII under lbe ADA.
lhe students detemuned that af the aa 's
guaddanes""' 10 he enforced. lhe effort
ha-e to be launched by peorle ••lh dtsabtla -

.,.,n

T...

~
doe pubbc
,...,..,._ ollbe ADA a8ll C1plaul
the UB P'OJOCI a8ll 111
n..y IIIIo
CMI.-.._ADA_....cu
,.W.C
~m.~u.~~ADAAG

uau "'

pt._.. lllld 111e ~~ep~lloaey .,.. """'
hove doo .... eaforad.
To~ lheoae pllllflbi&lt;U. doo
cJeau

al10 procluced I aloon ,...., 10

~ one of lhe maay ways
·~
•'tdespread public lwarent!il of such • .,...._

plllll

Oomford doctuaed to name lbe ......,_.
or lbe .,... aaadJat:d
'"Our p bete .... "' I"' • aeMt of ...
of lhe prol*:m .,..,.. I brood ....
., oe&gt;eral
..al public &amp;CCOIIIIIIOdooont.. ID rqlOfl 011 A llld 11JU1:11 I way 10
........ ~ .- hosaad.Headcledtboc
lhe UB auditinc....,. Jlf'O''Jdod free ClOIIficla&gt;.

ors-- ..._

.... ..,..,.,. ., lhe

publiC w::c•..,,...._. ·ere e:lM'MiDCd
"Tbese C0C10f1100C$ dtdn ' I mv1te 115 10
II thetr fiCl~tJel,' he ootcd. "and doole

JD·

eluded on lhe seve} tenaull) area ' I lbe oal)
or 1es
ba&gt;e' l ampiJed
"'till ADA guldelu&gt;es Far f
For lb(K
realiOit6 we. ,... . 10 ................ ~
al)' Tbe 1es .. ~ loatedat•ae all c:ocnecled
••lh map bu neu c:lwns,
ver, lllld
111e modtftea110ru l.be) had r..led 10
wou1d have been ...,thor e~..,..., cit ruplwe 10 lbeu ......_ "

""""*""'

.....u

Danfordoullberearea-.~Ja-alaceroes

and_,...,...tbll
help
0011&gt;ply Wllh Title m aldie ADA by c:onduc:ung
detaled audols or
for a fee Oaae
such local CJrpftiZ:mOII
lhe lndepeDcleat
l.mng Center- a( Wea&lt;m New Yoo\.

PUBUC SERVICE
coounued from page 1
t~oftrivasilypubbc~CMCZ.whether

a · IJTCl'O''Od ~ tt:achJng. lhe dep1oyrrcr of grdae sniCicnu 10 ali1W!IU!IIIy
projocn, or pogroms dull CXIIIIribuoe 10 lhe 0011&gt;man good. "We'rc:~IOad&lt;Rssprobitmsdua
.., oa:urring in !IOcicty ac:ross lhe suo:."
Jan. 26,1heunaversityandtbeBllffaloPubbe Sc:bool signed an ~~ to eapond
UB ' involvement in Hamlin Pari-Public:
Sc:bool 74 in Buffalo Wtlh help from lhe
Onaduau: Scbool of f.ducalJOII, Scflool of Information ODd LibnrySiudtes. School of Man-

~tandFacultyofNatUBIScic:ncesand

Malhernatic:s, !be prop:! promotes piiT&lt;Otal
involvement. and expooes
sixlh gnders 10

so

educational tedmologies and UB n:sources

lnSeptember,UB'spubloc:iaVICeprogranl

was cited in a W:.part report oo lhe Nord!
Carolina re&lt;earch trianBJe by authorfj(l&lt;lmOhst
Neal Peirce. pub6shod and commissioned by
the Raleigb Ne.... &amp; Oburwr. Peirce and

coiJeagueCunisJohnsoninlcrviewedconununity ~and &amp;Ova:nment offiCials and included an assc:ssme111 of area universities'
prepan:c1ness 10 aid !be larger society.

UB. througb its SchoolsofMediaoe and
Biomedic:al Science . .liocjal Worl&lt;. Educarion, Nursing ODd the Center for Applied
Public Affairs Studies, also supports the
King Urban Life Center, which plans to offer
piiT&lt;nl educatioo for children ages 3-7 in a
restored fonnerchwcll . The project follows
resiOralion won oo lbe beautiful but badly
deteriorating St. Mary of Sorrows &lt;llurcb

Foil-Albert of ArcbJU:cture. and tephen C.
Halpe.m of Pohi.ICal Scac:oct, "'bo dtd much
oftheprobonotegalv.orineededtosa•elhe
bualdtng The prototype of llus prlllfltn a
currently operatJng tn Pubhc School 90. an
early childhood ca&gt;teron BuffaJo' s c:as1 "de
"We learned that we could pro&gt;ade help
to a dastressed neighborhood and sunulua-

"The COrnntUnity
understands Veryclear/y
what the university has
,IT,
S h h.
he
to Ojjer:
0 I e t mgs t y
ask US tO do are actua//y
the things our p ubl'LC
service mission covers. "
--. -

neou ly serve our own miS ion of educating
studen and generating lrnowledge," writes
Halpern in Univenities orul CommJIIIiry
SchoOls, a publication of the University of
Pennsylvarua. wbicb praised tho Butfaloeffort. The Pennp~blic:ation nocedtheac:cderalillg rate at which "colleges and univet$ilies
throughout lhe c:ouotry""' eopged ill ef-

and ser'lce an proJ«IS desagned 10 assast

local schools and rommunttJes "
Moore says lhe uot":r"t} bas~ beto
._'ttve m pubiJc sen·tce. """"many facalt) llld
suiT senoing as &gt;'Oiunii:&gt;I:R m a voritt) of serand researd! pn&gt;JOctS 1lw: professioaal
schools.especially,5hesays.olfercluucswnh
a "'1Cie ranae of modocaL lepland od!er spectaltzed serviCeS and leClhnicaliSSISiaDCO.
Wlw 's ne"''· says Moore, 11 !be a:ntraJ.
llOed emphasiS 00 ba&gt;tng lhe UftJoeRll)' realtz.e " tnillalives. adeu and proJriJ!IS that ha&gt; e
a dtred ampoct on lhe mfrasuucture u4
development of lhe area tbat we ~ve m"
Andlhos assen'lt'edncdyinlhe..........,..s

•=

lDI&lt;RSIS.shesays.aslheCXIUIIIIyfacesiNI1mOib
!IOCII!prol*ms. "lftt..R'sno""""''YIIOUII&lt;IUS

ru..c-.ng. we Cllmlll hive alllivcnity," she
sayst:ll1lhalia.lnc:llarlqtiscfftaiaR,MocK
drew oo l'lt:lidera Grein:r's .....-a IIIII lhe
IDYaSII)'bas.indood. .. oblipioniOihelqor
soci«y.lhe -ldlir¥Jihe 1862 Morrill Aa
wblc:bled 10 lhediUbliatll-of~oalleges IIIII universilio:s.
'We IIO&gt;Od colleagues in indep&lt;oclelll Iieber
educaliooiOleonmore..,.....lheMorrillca&gt;c:q&gt;tiono(lhesocialrole~" On:intr
""'*' m a JlllllOC P - ' lost ...,..... • lhe
Cmft:relll% 011 Corranlllily l'll1nr:ntip bold a
lhe lJnMniry of l'tmsyiYIIIia. "We IIO&gt;Od oalloogueoinpltiicbigberodx:alinn.DOtanmu:biO
.....,.,.... ... redefine dla:rnoc:IYeS 0510 I'OIInll&gt;
lhr:ir pltiic rocu.
"No,_.wball:indal..uincweflla&lt;sioo

di~~--~~--.·--·~, ~ ~~!~ ~~!...-.·~~-~~-~~~-~r·.~-~-i~~~ ......~-res._liua.~ suburllon anc1 rura1;

Grtaner added. "'I " JDCUIIIbeu llpOD • 10 do
a beurr job of heipon&amp; 10 ler'lo't our"""""""'
al~-

Dlrasmc ....

.-1. al our locabties. Our aocaecy · no
tong:,orsuppan ~ve---.,.
~\'elllU_tf_clo_

pn&gt;YJde aorne ...,..C.C. ......, to !be people
Moo- clqo&lt;ad 011 ....-

cxaordtng

A

10

Moore. ..,.. COIIIIDIIIIily

........... \'a)'c:icodywbaloeuaMrSII)'basiOc6r. Solhe
alhloplhey"*us

10clo-aauall) lilt lbinp.,. ....,u:.lic...-ine
miiDan .._._They .... ........,.., tdl tboc&gt;-

IICialllldlplllied. Soa--.lhey IIO&gt;Od .....
tbeoreb::ol ,.,..,... 10 hdp them......,...
...._ 10 malie lhe a:onmn~y more Ylll:alt.
~ a's ..-.:!to ancio1 ar OCODDIIIk: ·
S..lhey
..... 11510 clo JIAllted ._.......
To fully iJ1C11* ptiic oavice. MooR II)'S.
~llldcli!acipline"- .-.:.1. '1f)IOU lock

• lhe lOIII .,...... of~ IDOIIIben. llae -

lloralblllhey-DOt•mive . ~
•lheyclelft;lbisisc6ua.,.....,..ot.,.....

!'undine•' .

adiocipline..--.by~

....... allhe anc:ial, eab::a&amp;ioaol. OCODDIIIk: llld
ptblr: oervice -.... dJa lhe aduioO.uli111 is
~ 10addlas,lheymaybeableto ·
·
pqocalbllsuppanlhoir.-dlllld ..........

diroa oervice 10 lhe pltiic .......
1bol's a cb:ullioo lhot ,.;n hoYae to be en...., in aldie~""""-"
"'Pc'*Y wiD IIO&gt;Od 10 know ....... - &amp;Wild Ibis-

MocR..,..

plllldmiaoioDallbt~ ail ...... IO

-rmew~pumotion~~ .. ...r:::_ ...

�6
OA SYSTEMS INC.
SERVICE

REPAIR CENTER

qualil)•, c/qlerulab/e, profusionai maintenana

sen,ices designed for 1M
oJVitrslty of ew York at Bufl'alo

IDM &amp; COMPATmLE PC's
NOVEU. &amp; LAN SUPPORT
· APPLE MACINTOSH PRODUCTS
Also: PRINTERS &amp; TYPEWRITERS

--,_..........::; Jar 30 ~ •l*t d.

's~Jil'lOtilanpo•r mv­

TNU •R SDAY

stc. WIIbe~ID-....:Ii­
enoea &lt;Mit lhe """'1lv'ee
t'lrougll

rw•

'""-·~

AwtNulibl ...
--~
ot•rl'*'h~

..for «lSI rompr.tiu~ pnc.: m ~J and r~tabth l) cal l nn...- for
) ourqUOJC

691-0001
.a •d d -a.~ lllWE labor on lour first
ftP•lr!H

10--11011 _,__y
the- --"' "'*'-• c R f C Wollen. UIJO'

.....

a( SJ'dno)
I-46Dt&lt;i..!ori' Soudo ~

fp

-IITOWIYDS-

_,..AND
ft:C-T

l a-&lt;dialt VMS. 'onh
Compus Q "-"' -Noon- Conuoct
lhe oodcmlc bai5on ot 64S·
3540 for regtm'tltion tnfarma-

.___'--AirY

81SOJII'o..-ratioa. 223

A-AI.~­
Uinlaf -.Ia RNC!anlt. M4

l 'nolalq.- ·R dlift.

l'b.D ., .,...r_..ot~.

Colonrdo Swe Om" School d

Vetmnary Sc:ieDot.. 114

«Itt Nonh Campos. S
p.lll. Spoasorod bt
o(
l'banalcy

t.oolcwood L.ilnry Nonh CamNo~...
- . y,

"""·Nooa-

~-- .. CMll. Nonh
Campus. S-1 P-"' Coa-tbo
oco&amp;:mic ~WooD •t 64S-3S40
for rqisrntion ildoannion.

G nwdt Fo&lt;torll&lt;plotioe .C

- - · aMUraAu.

--AI.- un--11011-Y
1-==-n-y Cltol;ea-p """-ypolo ...
Oid&lt;, Ill . 5w11&lt;y HaiY&lt;!SOO,
UB Dept. ol Biocl&gt;mUcall'lbarmocology • .!06 farber_ +Clamfus llL30 p.m.

~~-­

Main Gym Nonb a.-,

6p.m

a . .....,..lty: Aa lalnldeo·

t1oa. s.n1 Williams 6:Jl0..8·JO
p.m, Caii64S~IU 1o rqiste-r

~­

Llf'E-

S AS for VMS. Nonh Campus.
1:30-4:.30 p.m. Contae~lbe ~ea~
dcmic IW.OO at 64~3S40 for

rq;.u.oon iafonnauoo,

1'-.wq-~ll~
Isla-, I. A. ""'cl«. 1-9 p.m.
C.ll64S-61U 1o rep...

COiiiPV1'IIIf AND

-11011~

·x-

~.c

I b.trodurtiM to Motlah. Nonh
Campu.. 2_. p.m. Coauoa lhe
..,..,..,....,. 111 64S-JS40
fc. regisualian IDIOI'l:Nban:.

PlfftiCS CCIU.OQUIUM
Nqatiw Doaor IOGI ill SeanetMHtBct.or Structures-: A
Lower .. Di~MMiolt" l:a Atomir
Pb,...., Dr Bruce McCombe,
UB l'byoia Dept. 4S4 M-oncul&lt;..

Wiado...ta~o North C.tOpUS
1:31J.-9.JO p.:m Corutt lhc ICO·
dcmic liairao 01 6U- !540 lor
n!!J;:tSU'aUOO illfonnabon_

..... SlaLt.-, •.....,..
·· MaiiEtaAU
Arena Main

"""" pmgram ciwelqped by lhe lnler'*'&lt;:1081 muu:: ~ .... , . _ ,
Meal lt'le ~ . lbepmgr..,.,._

ay,._ -C..-

pus_ 1::10 p.m

1abidhes Oawl Felder, e.ge.c.y chiW .. - .
ue . ae~~~.,...

....

BUf!alo f'llil&gt;arrnoroc Olcheslta (Bf'O), .... Grl!uffa:&gt; Opera ~(GOO) end weFC&gt;-fM. UB's
PUblic Radio siJIIion _.,
~In . . poollion ... _
piaoe
lrom "p rn IOdlry In Nlen t1ollloo lhe Soufl ~
The- open 1D lhe l)lblic.
be~ We
rNfl1f WBFO-ft.l belole an 8ldanc:e d..........._
sd'lOOI chbetl _ , - trOWT'bers Cllhe OOimU'Iily
Th8 program .....,es e panel disouslian wllh
Felder; · ~ Vllldaa.lruSic OOicU ri he BPO;
.l&lt;tr1 Bau;er.- dlrec:tor el .... 8PO; Gary
~ ·IWIAStic direcb d. w.e GOO. David 81n:1er1.
WI3FO program direacr, and Ted 'Mp!ud &lt;!I Meat lhe
~ ~ wll &lt;iaouss- ..._, nu~c· 1$, ' • 1$ difterert li'om modes d. caJ1X)IiliiJi I wid ..
hiSI01Cal relevanoe ID a.AIIIIO on ~
Incorporated no the dosc:usslorl.,. be demon-Sir8110ns ol &lt;lllhe melhods and IDola used by
Felder and OCher compoeers in lhe tn11111on ol , _
music oomposiLorts These
JI10iude a UTilJidon
and rephcatiOI'I ol.llute rrus:lc usirlQ a NeXT a:tmpuler--iilealule-&lt;!1 Fetder's ~ "Ncmiimber
Skr'-nd a (Jef1ormar&gt;oe by &lt;JaTIIl(ller Paul Elwood
o! an ' antHap' ~ on Velore !hat he used 1111 tus
percussr.... 10011&lt;, 'Edgar VariJSe in lhe Gobi Cle$ert •
The audlenoe al8o
hear~ by UB ~'
alurmus Kirl&lt; Brundage, a pei'CUSS.IOnisl d. ..-..IOil8l
repulabon, BPO lirll'l \'iollflist and 8SSOCI8I8 ooncert
master AnsoarJU5 Avtward. and Burgess, a do&amp;llngui1ll'led - a n d 8SSOCI8!Ie prolesaor of music: at
UB They-will perfoon eJ&lt;OerP!S 11om Felder~11 WC¥1&lt;$.

"'*""'
"**'•

- PAlR~ OClM:1VAN. - - SUilf

~--T--0..
T..-.,
Dr. c...ol C.-·
:=_-.2~.:r..~:d.

Vi lla htarU Cal..... 1::10 1U11.
Call Ji96..0lOO (&lt;"'- 334} far

...........

--- ... . 12
-·-- - 11
--- -ur
---

North Compus NS p.m.
-.o.cA.L SCIDICU

FRIDAY

SI'SS 1
r.r \ 'MS. I :'10-4::10 p..._
Coruaa !be~645-3540 f«~ iafor-

Mtdoaailllu .CD A Seq......
lt.ecopilicMl. Dr. Gerald
Koadelb. UB Biological Sci..,... Dqx. 121 Coal.z. Nonh
Campus. • p.m.

"""""'-

~-·OQIM·
~
~
C!'dot;ift!NIIe!oyllroll
~- :·-~~~

,_ ,__y
·Oriattatlon "' ... Crosby

MKilllO&amp;It 'Compo.tPr Lab.
North Campos. 4ond 5::10 p.m. ·
Conuoct lhe acodemk tiaisoo ot
64S-3S40 fe&lt; -reci=rti&lt;m iafe&lt;tnlllioo.
IL f t l t -

Mod •I M eo._.llaitleDcy
__.,..~ Do¥id

Felda-.

SAfUR 1DA'I'

~­
-'11011~

Diau'bo..,t

c-....... M.rroa

I'IDI4'1111CCIIWOI--

~ ....,.,._, Br:mtlol&amp;
lhtiv. ?O~Soux!JCam­

ludolsolm, M.D. Kinch Aud.torium. OW....'slbpilal, 8 a.m.

w--.cwaoun

c.n-...,J.~r..­
lm..ouoialltNoo, Ricbanl

w -;. lllcber£4--.,
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pus. •

p.!ll.

W._ T ....... CMta- f« Te&gt;7:30p.m.

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~­

1lloo MllirStrilofl Qurta. Sloe

_..._ ,._

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Aluami- Main

.Gym.- Clnlpos. "'"""

St.---....-..,...
MaiD Oym. Norill CaDp!s.
lp.lll.

_ . . .JIAIG'riiAU.

.

~c--. ­
~- Oym. NonbCam-

poa.3:30pa.

�_..,

Will64

____..

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8etJ1 w- 1-c
·......
~
0111

64Uil.l•-

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FREE R

m of Paper

M w·
Pnn r Purchase
r.roo
'-. J FREE Surge Pro ector
M
__
or 500 -

Wi

C&lt;o*u&gt;ua Fom\1

Personal Computer Purc:hase

~-$.-7,,

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tht ~ hat
64.5 -3540 ft~ R'&amp;JJI.llaiJOII
tol,__

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denuc I~ 11 64~ · 354() for
tq1str11.ioft IDformaJ.HXL

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frame. I : ~ .30 p.na CORtld
Ill&lt; IO&lt;adc1llic IW.5on .. 6451540 for rqwrauoa •nfonnaoon.

-

INULI.a

_
_.

liS&amp;.-

I a - toBnltlo Sd·
..... u~NwyS...·i&lt;osaad
R-....s. 821 H&lt;al!ll :5&lt;1·
&lt;acU Library. Sou!ll Campus. 2
p.m.
~ reqwn:d.

...
...

Cbooolac y-~- 2 ·3 )()
p.m. Coll 645-61l.loo ~&lt;~'""'

8oJbuUa&amp; Sip ............

0...,. CWtboyL 7-9 p.m Coli

Art

Parb. PI&gt; D.
-profntorof-

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pro{&lt;DOf
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The ,.._...... lioopull ol SL

~.o...,w.....,...,.u.,vMocl! ­

col

eo-.............

Air'

"Jungle Soene"lrom the
Geoff Bellamy CoUectJon
•s among art to go on voew
Feb. 12 81 Afncan
Heritage Exhibit1011 '"
Poetry/Rare Books
Collection, 420 Capen.

for tq.utrll.kleJaf....nu

I*'"*
_..,.,_,

-..1 Hall, Buffalo Oenenl

b..w.von Ill ft.I.S

l_ U

-

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·u-•HU•
...-.. ....

u.Ubrvy
a - - . &amp;liHcakb
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Sc:oao&lt;:n Llbno)- Sou1l&gt;

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ad .,.. .. ""' pobl For -

..,.........,.call llol9-67()0

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For _ . ..,.,._.

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Convenience
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Variety

.otD&lt;ts.ry
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Spodlldly,
NAil .balop: -

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821 H&lt;allb S&lt;ocncu Llbno)South Campus 10 o.m No res·

l~

~

,.;r, w,u,om C

New Low Prices
On P111Ctc::al P~ Modem~
Mocrololt Solrwa.

r.rVM 9.!().11 JOo.a&gt; c ..
tat1lbr ~ t.a
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In-Store, with Software, Penpherals.
or Memory Purchase

... - .

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.... o..-.....-.

(gb • 64S.2942.

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Walcman Pun:hase

eour.cot1 Moo 1M/&gt;. 2 , _

M FREE lnstallat on

..

LomaC Hill.~ by
&lt;leorpC olf&lt; ,_Loft.
~s
A~ 6p.111
.,.,....,..tbyC«aP Mu..ey
Coii&lt;Je and Off""' of MIIIIK&gt;UIIJnl All..,. For ockeo

FREE Batt ri s
Wi

0..

0.
Cioklilaa. Dep&lt; ol 8"'f''&gt;y-.
URI\ of~ School of
Mecbcnw: I ~8 fttber Sou:rh

oalition

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c:onlinued from pege 7_ _ _ _ __

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10426-.-..0ihnrhci•----~·tD
1991 Th&lt;-...
5UppOft

EXHI81TS

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Oui-

~ ...

• nhl~ fca~.Wl•IW't
froaa Afnca ud 1bt Afnc.u
Ootif'O'"I. "P&lt;"• Feb 12 .. 7 '10
p..m ... CODCJMIQ lO Ft 25
onlbr i'o&lt;11)/llott -.Col
m- Read'"l Room. •~
c.p.... onb . _ . MoadaJ
lbrouJb Fnda,.. , 9 I m -S r m

cu

be~,,

r- art

W.IUtq to laU dk' lU!It id
JOtl'oi..,.C-..ctlh&lt;Ad• Cmu: Scn"len M
l&lt;C-J 11 for rrM.tt usfot'INUOft
... ,oa-.ernlll your tunt
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k.asll )'an ola,e ad ha"C'
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call b4S·l917

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~y "fW~

.. coUea-t;

tnid boob for U.C

orptuUIJOft' annual bool

Amood ""'lo&lt;lo
bbtk.-Md ... tuw and coklr. "
~-c-.tl u bdtoncal and upen

uJt
10 bC' tldd lD frUd . J99of .. tht
n.nr.a~ Mill .,..,.._b.
hotd """"' . . . roll&lt;cuhl&lt;
booU an: wdcomc:
lrll
booU. atrTftl map.n.n (W
Rnder"• DIJnb •...tl bC' at.
ctp1e4 Don.auom •rt tu-ck-

......o~ phococrophK """"....

duc!Jbk f'ro&lt;oec&lt;h a{ lh&lt; ....

JUDJOR

toanel,. COIIIIDut:l dvou~

He lidded.

fcob

18 ..... Art Ocpor1no&lt;tw Gal ·
lcr)-, Fiat: AruCt:a~tt, Nonb

ea._

Foe Mid•oonal mfonnauon.. call
MS-617 Exhibot !ipCIOI-..1 b)
oh&lt;Cary Mlod
MADIIAftAdo play.Cwortby~l&lt;
swdrnu 1ft f'8.llllAft&amp;.. K"Uipl'un:

.................. """""""'.

~y . tUustnthoa

-Feb dcotp.
~
'"""'"'
16 rn theUDJ\&lt;ef'lll)
Gal
lcr), Fonr Aru Cml&lt;r
h
Campus
LLIAII£N IIIU.EII, IN

-

M uhtblt of scorn.
rec:ordmp. llttJcles and mr.mo-

rab&amp;ha convnemorat•a,clht: hft
.C LeJOICII A Holkr (19Zol-

19941, compooor. rompll1&lt;f
JC ptoneet and UB eme:nru,.
professor of mu:uc. II (WI \'It'll
a.Ddc'finnel) 1n dx dJsplay casn

mu

of lh&lt; M""c Ltbrary. Nonh

C•"'''"'

an UX!d to fund

k.~Jpl.

fet~sh'P' Aftd

commuM

proj«U For IIITIItlll("tneftt~. tall
634~:140 p,. .... clepo&lt;

--" ' IR" .,. . labk

tbrouc:tw-1

pak:fBuffa

l bt Creatt"'~ Crafa Cmkt-. 120
Fill....n. EIIJCOU Cornplu.

onb Campus_ os olfcnn,
pnnJ '94 cnll .....uhap&lt;
beJ'Jnnan1 tha •""t.t:k won..
lbopJ. art scbedukd •• • ·ea"
ma.
Cl"UCitronc.
hem SIJu:b craft. qutltJno~ , btik.
~y . cal'nC1ll ~o~~tt: and

""''and

-- ~)Stull

Ln ~rnbro.da) . liliJ.nt:d &amp;tan.
,c...-c:Jry COOSII'\ICOOft lnd pol·
let)' ftts arc S2M'IO f0&lt; stU
denu aftd RNOr alJ.ZC:IK~ S:J&amp;
SAO for fecvhy. suff 1nd oth

a..-

firm t'mOWftCd for

111 SC'I'n cott.ll
arohih!.dural re:phcatK'IIl and

For men lDformauon. a iCbed
Ilk ond. map ........ phoo&lt;
b4S -24J4 bdV~occn I S p m or
~S-61l.S bd'vocm 8 am and 4
pm

to"""""'·

J08S

-

1.1#-1011

In &amp;he W:D yean 5ince u voas
estabh..dJed as a pnll...abor~ ctron.lh&lt; £.-

....

,..~

-·..-

NOTICES

Dt-

A oc:llolanbipfunclforstudenl&amp;

of colo&lt; .... beea - - ..

memory .c DaWc J.

BrooabU&gt;a• ..,.;.,.. ........,..,...

COUDK.kw II lbt uni'ICI'Iity.

lbatwe

...........

.... belp&lt;d &lt;mploye&lt;&gt;. ...........

aDd lheir farruhes V.' llh a "anefJ
of problem~ by po&lt;n&gt;JCI••&amp; U\(0&lt;mltion and rdenalto • VUldy
of campw ..., community ...
""""""- Th&lt; EAP nowl&lt;Otb
opphcanu fO&lt; two EAP c:oord1,.._ pooitioCis 00 be filled.
respoc:tively' .. April .... J...
a{ lbU yea. lntaosaoll pcnaas
ohculd

-..;,.-Ilion&amp;

wid! oleacr af appl- oo:

ol111y 111'111:·

..,.. ltuproblobly_,
apmtolbt~~

~ IJid
of
be upp'llded
"Foaall), o l - INl maory olll:oo lltiiCIures lluoa W&lt;ft nol ~ 01' ""&lt;'&gt;'e Jft•

iliDdards Md t&lt;e

~u.. ......,..o..-1
- -..., ...-«103

...~ 01'

~.,-­
--.....
.....g,o....._..,-...,

be cadull &lt;'•alawd
llll"IICIMnll ftiCIneen and
UbODO ol retrofit or
•
ld be
rnaoded
cac:lo
11ft I omoqut.. Ill lteeeSW} 10
at t"ldl
ww:ture Uldl"dualf} ud underslaad d&gt;a
lhert' t1 DOl a 'on&lt;-&lt;Jzt-fou-all'
u~"

.

l&gt;lro&lt;WoiOndop-

IP

---ol--

-\o._ ... ......,.,..,.,
-D&lt;wl

-Ill'

l&gt;lro&lt;Wol~ ­

lbal en!COIISinOCI&lt;Id

a.s.an...,._ (be(orei97Sl

ov-ol~ -

01'-

dial meet iel

s

JRifOConl~

"Some ollbese bwldm&amp; I led because
the "'crt onl retroliaed to • lnel
nen
.... eronomicaL" Wei ~.nbom

Am
5)-U•ncnn)' O£v~

mnl. ......... IP~IO Din&lt;·

IOrol~--"'

.. \"cnll)

D&lt;velopn&gt;eol. """"" t

II

~--,_­
ur.(11 l)-5.-..LJk
'"« tP· '096 Mo4bllt«woh
Sporiotk~ISI.-21·­

H&lt;alth......,...._...._..
c.-.. -~~~~
3097

on-- (SL·l)-1....,..,_.
E&lt;luocaboo. Posuoc Ill'

.)(Jllll
01.-.rol~ ­

s.-. ol Ardo......,. ...
Ploaal.q
Sj-I'&lt;IOtn•&amp; Ill'·
400&lt; . . -.. ou-..,

·-&lt;

l, l .. ...... - .
liNaJ Opportooit Stud&lt;ol
Aoononll1. Post.oa&amp; IP-0013

"-'"" ou-... (SlA, .....

......... ....._.._Oppon..
nlty)-SIOCkal_, ,..,._
....p

14-

w.... T -

•· ••

......... ...._.... Opponanit,t.......................
e,, 11011.-.1 ..

S.lcty,""""" IP-4022

c.a....ua ..-clietio:al ...,-

--

.-pa (SL-SK:wat&lt;hn&amp;

c....... Poohq IP-0017
cowaawaacwa CLUaRD

~ Spodoliol (~
l'lm:ho&gt;anJ, LIK 110616
Cltrlt I (SG-16)-SmclerM Ac COUlll1. Ll11&lt; o«J727 Cl&lt;ft I
(~c-o&lt;aiiOII

-

Syt;t.eJN.l...lnt

l.Sl!i

eu&amp;aiRD CMI.

c..._ (SC-85}-Uiu-

Focwue.. Lene t l1632.12349.

.................

a 79- T7 JOad los 10 Jacl&lt;sonvttle 0!51 Wednesew( -""0
7 06 remanng goong on a 14-1 run to
lake a 73-72 lead on a Myron Banl&lt;s tree lhrow a1 the 3 02 ma'1&lt; Alter adii'Q llucl&lt;·
eiS Jacksonvu-e s Memus McClary nn one oiiWO tree throws to knOI the sea a1
75 But after mossong oo the f rs1 try downc:ourl , U8 came bac:l&lt; bloCking a McClary
shot Freshman Rasaun Young g&lt;abbed the 100M bal and snuck on for the lay\.tp
and a 77-75 US lead On the next posses$100 , JIJ s 8a&lt;ry BrOWfl oonnecteo on awo
free tvows 10 lle at 77 w• 46 seconds 10 play FOllowing a Modte Cote 11l1S$ . K~
S....ent&gt;y toed up a Jaci&lt;sOnvil playe&lt; on the rebolnj bol poo;ses$&lt;00 ,.. a-ded
10 the Oolphons sett.ng up a 12·1001 IUfTII* by BrO'Ml WI 2 1 seconds remanng 10
sea' the JacksonYoooe
UB was led by Myton 8arO&lt;s Cld Rasaun Young each
scored 19 poorns Banks recorded a 1~ 11 rebounds
Modoe Cox
added 14 poonts and fNe assosiS Ia the BullS

The Bulls I

lo 5- 5 w

UB battled back from a 12-pocm defoe~ "''

w-··•,....,.
The women s ba

lba team snapped a ee-game losing Slrea and poc:t.ed up
ol the season w an 82~9 drutlbong ol
Chicago Stale 10 raose the teams record to 12-6 The Aoya sl"ool 50 7 percent to&lt;-...'"
the game. their besl ol the season COIYleCI.W'lg on 34-ol-67 foeld goa
8l'f'4ltS U8
Slrell:hed liS hrSJ half lead by goong oo a ro-o nM&gt; e on the half 10 g!Vt! the Aov8IS a
43-17 halltlme edge F
players scored on double hgures
jtnOr .len
desGrose&gt;lliefs leadli'IQ the Roy w 15 poon on t:Jdy 15 monutes ott the bench .
Senoor Brooke Smo added 13 poonts
M1y Hale led lhe Roya
e.ghl retxlunas
the~ l•rSI East Coast Conlelence VICtory

............., •c

Head Coach Budd Termn·s Bulls swm team lOok a 129-114 Y1Ctory over host
Cleveland Sta e on Friday, February 4 The Bu!ls now stand a1 5-2 on dual meets
Marl&lt; Horgan 'WOO two events tor UB Wdh forst place
on the
freestyle
(4 48 70) and 1.000 f eesayle (950 51) Kory
a so lOOk
200 backstroke for
the Bulls on a ame ol 1 56 49 Jamoe Playfu won
50 lreestyle 8\lerll on 22.37 and
Shawn PaytOn-Newman fliiiShed forst m he 200 freestyle on 1·46 20 The 400
freestyle relay team ol Horgan. Chns Brady, Pay\01'1-Newman and Dan Houlohan also
lOok filS\ place
a 3 14 00 showing

nsnes

w -·.sn

ruaonoon.. c:ontanues lhrouJ.h

Feb 2S oa lh&lt; lama D)'eu Exh•b&amp;t.on H.all, Wrd floor Hayes
HaU, South Campus Th&lt; hall ot
opeo
r.a.lty/slllff
and lhe commumty from 9 a...m.
to S p.m.. Monday lhn:luah Fnda) Tberc t5 no adnuuaoa
chq&lt;

wre

(Sl~5}.u.........,.
G_ _, _
--oi~-

~

AIICtllttCTUUI. DISPU1'
"Ardutectvral UttttJ Boston
Valley T&lt;tn Coua." • d"pla)
hi&amp;hlolht••l
of lh&lt;

I

I " "ft)'

......,. be ooV'OI...S m .a.

.....,....,...

Th&lt; Bufflllo 8.-.h ol lh&lt;
1\rl"'ftnc:.l Mtoc~ ot Una

~

.,.._...,..,.......,_lito 0111

... wnaearor~·

.........

Bu.ttaao•l99l
, _..*"-

w

traiDtd

ueM.troflbr:ewM. ~tl

Jod)'B.....,_

be lidded

.... ~ t.ildoll&amp;

eadl

,__.-.-

Kolhonoe

Ti
M ..- . $ 1. 1111
..,.... For...C.......... nll

,........,a( ...

IF • IJibft

. - · .... a.- Upeo Sdool

-~·p...,

plu

c_..

WW!t-ll~l:a

d'oaYftll w.U M: ta'W11111
..-ell• deuc:n. ~ 10

_,_

~

-

soo

'*C

Dorsi Raynolds' women's swrn team also traVe4ed to Cleveland State oo Feb 4
where they held on to{letea lhe host VIkings 124-111 Am Mane Gorsia won two
events for lhe Royals, who ra.sed lheK dual meet record o 4-4 Gorsko won the 200
ondMdual medley on 2 10.93 ano also fonoshed ftrst on the 200 breaslstrOke on 2 27 74
Karen Lasky won lhe three-meier diving COflllBIIIJOn for the Royals Wdh 242 10
poonts and Kelley Sharl&lt;ey won the 50 freestyle on 2Ei 14

WteeUIIC
The Buns· wresllli'IQ squad traveled to Central Connecbcut State where they tet110
the East Coast Wrestling Associatlon nval Blue Oevlfs 28-13 1o drop their record to 28 Will Moss, Jr. won a 20-11 deciSIOn at 167 pounds over Centra Comectocut's
Daw Scarpillto pace lhe Bulls . Anthony Corne (150). Ctvos Lerrmo (158), and Sean
Mclaughlin (Heavywetght) also posted wms for Charbe Cheney s Bulls

llldoor Tr.dl
The men's and women's indoOf track squads were allhe Hardee's Classic on
Morgantown, W.Va over the weekend Judi Novak won the 5.000 meter race lor
the Royals in 18 :01 . The U B , _ se1 two school records Tom Ducey was fifth on lhe
mile at 4:23.7 and the distance medley squad fonished seoond in 3.24.

�()(IISiltUIId tom PtoQe I
ltf~-s

•

liB -s llamlin
l'lod&lt;'l •

....

...

•

Thtinilial Jli'Oimlllin,......Saprojea
..,...,...IIIIIIIOCial

..'hillb

and llf&lt;:r lhe
•• _.... ODd dclllb

~

ia. """"'Yo~ ...........

pus dviliea cleYdopod by lhe UB
~Sd&gt;oolol~

.,._._. two.dtns
lhe proaram
,• • wide .-..,e
of c:oop:rati~ eollbvcn in¥01 •
The -

'"' lr\'Ual UB pro/at;ionalldlools
and raeudl
Its ijbnries
and lhe F-lly of a1Ural
I·
moa IDd Mallhellllllic::a.
Greiner IIOIOd
"UB very

proud or~
·
laboratiou wi
Hambn Park
74. 'Thu u a
Jli'01&lt;d 1ba1 lw
• lot of
people
ItS """'Jl'ion ID I
nol JUSl lhe ot:IJdaru; """' puticopale, bullhe focuhy members"
•
~· 1hem,.

H

e odded "We lluM. that B
and Scbool74 are dotnc gfQI
"'or!&lt; tocetber in getun~ young
people !Jke tbe&gt;e ucn.ed about a
rolle~ educauoo--cenmc !hem to

thoM. about IOIDC to a unl\·emty as
an omponant pion lhetr I.Jvesand on br · their ochooJ prepare
thrm to pmtue that p i
11' a aucial p;mty Tor . - . .
liOnS C'/l'lo&amp;hrr~ espcciaiJy I

p&amp; unMnlly ijke OlD, 10 support
eierrtet'Gy IIIII !leCmdory eclalion."
Thompson said 1M panD&lt;nlup
•n•·olvon&amp; UB and Hamhn Pari.:
Scbool74 i one of the most comprehrn&gt;o •• undenakcn b} tbr BufflloPubhcSc:hool " Bbnnc the
,.ealth of tno ...ledge u research
communoty can pro• tde and 1M
sum or the expenences of"' fac·
uhy to bear on 1M problem of 1
''"'lk eiementar) school." br added .
11u V.1ll male the UDIV&lt;I'Slly a real

Gresham, Mueller
named to new po

'*'oldie dlilcnl' ti
.,.,.., help '*lbdr·a;pec:~~~rm
ol "-*'
The
allioace '*'be-.~
To dale, die collabonlioa be,......., UB Md Haml Park
74
Jlf'O"ided .alt-p1111e . ..
demJ &gt;ritb bands-on nperioaor Ia
UB ......,_ W.. lftd oppcwllllll·

!leo to ..... ' the .... ersity to wards
Md report OD fi
videoo and
llllei'IOCU~c:ompuler ~

"It's a ctUCial
priority for
institutions of
higher education,
especially a public
universitj like ours,
to support
elementary ana
secorulary
education. "

-

mce&lt;&gt;cnl'hpoc~ and anumber of OCher topt .

101heY&gt;Ce

st:ude.n

The

actJ\1tleS.

••paneled projat. to be dt·

reeled b) M"'ahmu Shu.JU. l:B
a sostant professor of educat&gt;on.
mvohpecrfh: acu' Hit: dt ·
ogned and ffilllllled b) tilt &gt;ehool'

t

I.e) areas

"We've had a lingerong uuht)'
appropnation problem, because of
ugnilicant casu. Tlutt ' , eveo
!hough " 'e've reduced oonsumpuon. cosu for utiltues have been
n mg •·ery quickly. Our expectauoo for 1994-9S, bo..-e,..,., i lhll
thecampu utihty shortfall appropnatJon will be addressed. so we
don 'tsee 11 as an ongoing problem
95 ·"
10 !994"-"'.........
"'This sununer-probabl) start·
mg 1n lht latt spring--.'e will bt
n:locaungthrDep:utmentofChem''II) fromlheSouthtO orthCampu• That real!) bnngs threr
llddJtional cosu to the U!Siitulloo
F11S1. there i 1M C05I of movtog
Olerrustry,astheiJiboratorydepartmentsbaveasicnificancc:ostolmov-

mgassocitded..;tbtbem. Thecampus
~about half I million dolIars. ,.1Uclh is our esuma~e fcx the
move. The executive budge! pro•tdesus&gt;ritbabout$300.000olthll.
"Second. we see the additional
utolity C05151hat the new building
will bnnc. being taken care of as
pan of the overml utility appropriation for 1994-9S.
''lbinl, there will be additional
univ~ity facility costs in the areasofcleaninganduadespc:oploit's a very compticated building.
... ,

lllere 1 mon&lt;) tncluded m 1M
execuu•.. budge:t for ne" bwldmg
openincs. but !best ha-. not been
allocated for ondo vidual campuses.
"lnshon.•eantic.ipatefundln&amp;
for 1 mooth move and expect !hat
.... " ·ill have the Cl&gt;emt&gt;ll) [)e.
partment reloca!c:d and back on full
operauon., we sta11 w fall 1994
semester "
GRI

lni;::.~.~=::;.=
ootho campu .e•en l1TlOil£ all the
SU ' Yunl\el')ll) cen~r . hecJu-.c
\tiC are the mo't compr~fx'n, 1 ,r
campu' '"the ' )'"'m ~ ~1'3Ju
ate educ•uon and rc..c•rch m"
""'" brre are'"') large 1b&lt; SIO
mtlhon or capttal GRJ fundtn&amp; for
1M .y.. em I • postll\r ror u In
thccurrentyear. forexample,there
1 SIO milhon of apital GRI for
tbr system. We ' re effecuvely us·
ingourponionofthat (38 percent)
forcqu.ipment pwcllases and rebabolliat.ion of spaoe.
"But because it is a capttal budge:t item. it cannot be used for personnet coru. We' d like to see on
1994-95someGRioperllingfunds.
whidl wouldprovideusanopporlliDity to add selected academic
faculty and support positioastothe
university, which we thiM. would
move us r&lt;lfWllrt! on the ~of
gnduale education."

(Jill c:oontm.&gt;o-olk

, _ for

pro-

endoW&lt; nunonry

darts Sbr., 1 tnuDmtllm
dn-.lopn the prtlfl1liiiS , • pn .
11101) r
.., liOUI'Ce ror __,ty
~

...........

\\ e' "c

~

r.tr

C)CS

of

tbe.e )oung ~le hght up t WJr
DeY.. . pt'C\ KJUSI)'

UnlmA!Ined ....

oomph ments And as edocatOf'&gt;
of teacher\. •c"\t tnour lno"'·
ho" off of tbr campu and onro tbr
commuml)', v.hen&lt; u ·..
en on
.... hft and &lt;'llerj!) "

BUDGET
se•'ffal

ud

l&amp;rec:

C&lt;l&lt;lhnued from page 1

Utllltl•

ltrat.ca•c

•~commuruty. •llhaaey&lt;

....,_IDI~mda..,....,.,.

B' s

\&lt;triii)'·WUk

......,
for....,.devdoc-.,-..-...-s
qua!JI o/h ~
Sbr .......t .. .-. _.&lt;R~I)' ' s

decuooM
buJUwdlhat se•eral UB foe ·
ulty research Jlf'OJ"CC "dl br con
ducted II W
llo ,.ell 0.,.,
.. ,n be 1 case tudy of the processes and pohcoes used by Hamhn
Pari.: Pnnc1pol 10}« Ham ""'"
ber dlorlto dfec1 I cban,e 10 the
scbool culture II Hamltn Par\
Another. COC&gt;ducled by 1M UB
Center for Apphc:d Pub!x Afr
Stud.n.... ,u eunune 1M relllloe'1' hrt•-een lM scbooJ and II
ard1mpnmngtheoroDler'letiOn
"I thonk "'' all
UJd
IIJII, "thai ......... otked l
gecher ... 11 Jn lM pul lfl I "''I}
lhll' benefited c~&gt;r child= ....~u
as the UB educauon facuhy and

on jan •-as added to

.....,. . . . ck •dojw:ul ol--

~
call for the
~ol10
pand partotalonvohemeneta lhe
scbool' cu11101lum and poi.Jc)

T
e

1'hey lhoha¥e boon J'R&gt;''idod,.,..,
I ftn1hond look a ~ Ilk and
lr:attq. •itbtheplol......"""""
IWab:lnapl'onhem.l...ast ,.._,the
propwn
~toii:ICUJe""'.
ntn1
..

..........

an:-......-..~-­

YAP
"Last year, 1M txecutJ&gt;e bud·
get recommended 1M ehrrunatJon

of 1ll ne"' gnduate TAP ouppon
But cer111nly . ,.. "'""ld bopt to
fond a "'"Y to resl&lt;n tlu ~
as "'" cbd last )&lt;Ill' "
~

outloolt
'1llen are rows
y pnonues
m 1994-9S. should addttJonal moo..,. become 1 ,-..Jable: 1Jrommurut}
col~ suppon. 2) $4 milbon ~...'ldrtoluruddtuonal fiiCillty nu
wouldpcrmllthe')'Siemtoaddaddt·
t~&lt;oul"i&lt;-.ectoon•. parll&gt;"Uiarl) 81
~~lek\rl. to do..'"'rea~

thrumentA..,&lt;tudcntqo ~uat&lt;
l:B"'"'Idm:eH&lt; 10- 1 ofohe 101'1
new lull-lime
or onac1ed
"3)11&gt;&lt; )'51em"..Ualsobeft:&lt;lUCSIm&amp;S3mdhanforiludmtsupport,.,...
\1&lt;=. such"' career oourueltftl.
l&lt;h1Sellll!lt.childcare.&lt;tc4)Thesys-

unC&gt;

""'"illbe""JU"St'rlllopentllngl\ond&lt;
forGRJ. We will beSURJOIUrllaD d
theie miliiiiYOS. lu ,...·~ ~ •
leadenhip po&lt;itJon repn:bns GRI.
Gi-. the faa tha -bop~ "itb •
stablet.selul@claswehlrvetirl994-

95. il' tally an "''fXXI11..IiitD lot the

~~....,.i' ~
"Wewillwod.WI)'hardto...,....
tha theie priorities . . on the lep;latiYeii,IICD&lt;Ia fur 1994-95. Thai "ill begin withaiJlOISirtc'-'lli:s IDCIIIIhd
localaon.,.JSpaidmswiththeWNY

legislaliYedelepion."

,._ , . , \.~ ''"'~\........ \.... ... ...~ · .• • • \. .. ~;.":.. ~~"''.':..'• ~ . ..' ~"' 1 .\.~ 1,, ~...~ .... ;-- ,·. ~

.,•••, •• ~.:l·.-.:_.~

He has been m''Oh'ed •l1b numr:rws un1 \ ersny com
•
oncludo"&amp; sentn&amp; as depar\metllal lw""' •db 1M Offoce of
Senoces for the Handacappc:dll)l
bues Sen tea ond • a dqiMmmtal ~veto the Cornmtuolt 011 Depoe~
Off-campus. br lw been • IJ'eagftr - s bowd member ol . .
8enntll V tna,. Terrace Homeovo11C11 8
0
-s a
member and....,...,., oltbe Adult Educ:atOJ Semceseu.-ol
lhe es1m1 No.. Yort C&lt;morut.111oleolqeo IIIII ~Mueller nmed a bdaelor' ckp&gt;e 1D secoedlry ..........
fromtheStatrUni•....,tyColle~at&lt;lenneo.amasacr'sdep.or•o

cuidance and
rueh fmm St. Boaaveature Uruversoty. ud a
1BA depu. emphast in finance. from UB

Johnstone resigning; Greiner
praises dedication, leadership
D• .,ce~, l! ., chan&lt;:ellor acr 19 andformer~ ­
deru or Buffalo t.u Collegr. """""""ed lu ""'~""'""' tond.J) be.ou&gt;e of bralth rel&gt;&lt;&gt;th John'lc&gt;ne. 53 , I
ffertnr lmm CIIIL"er WI
&lt;•peeled to return to Buffalo for tle~tment a1 R ..
P
Cancer

.,u

lnstltult

UB ""'sulen1 Willoam R. Greoner ossued •the folkw.onc swement
" Bruce Johnstone lw been a leader of good bean and peat,........ for
SUNY Hi commJtmeru to tall' Unl\-er511 and Ius o,.., pcnona1
' dedtcatiOO to 1M sy em hne been auctal duri recm1 years. as SUNY
lw faced li~ and ""! lz.auonal cballengex . .... the llll-.J level. he
has taken a socnifiCIDIIcader&gt;bip rok on raistng a..-.rcness and Ullckt'standing oa key educational i sues, particularl) ia tbe area ol fiJiaiiCJJIC
lugber education He really has done a t:remeDdous jOb. It
beelt a
plea.wre and privilege ,.'Orbng wotb him.
"All of Bruce's rolleapes ~~ UB jotn the thousands around dte .._
· who are wislun&amp; bim well. We know what a difftcuh ckcisioa his
resiiJllllOCI is for him. Md " 'hal adtfficult time this i fcxbotb Bruce and
Gail. Wlule we wooold like LObe able 10 ,. elcome 8nD: borne 10 Bulfak&gt;
underbettercircumsl.lnCe5, wewtllcenainl betbinkingof'IMJobnslone
family and woshonc !hem the •·ery best."
Jobnsmoe'o resignation I effective March I. The SUNY Board ol
Tnw&lt;:es ..,iJJ meet next week in ew Yorlc City and are expected 10 name
~~-

�_,....,.

RichaJrl Howard,
retired phy ics
profes or

__._..__heldFeb.4
in UGiwian Univaulist Clnm:h of
Ambena f.:.: Rictllrd J. Ho,..ard.a Mimi
UB ph}'$i&lt;$ !W(essor ond 111 expott in
clouddlambcr"prysia..Honrddil:dhn.
lO . :Millard Fillmore Su!Jurbln """Peat after
eri'lt a be•uftack.
A groru. d 1bo Uoi...-.ily d Km-

IDCky,..t.orete...,.;...,bolhBS.IIIdM.S.
Howaa-d -=-! · AID from
lbo(hoS.Uoi....,.jty.ln 1 1bojaimd
. o.p.ma. llld rrmoftd
h!lreor11iUlis~ill 1993.

~

'~~.m~dOd~~~~

ing a gnn for his Wild: on !lllpti&gt;IIIIJil
....... \'111)01'. His Ia...- Wild: ""' in ~-0 .
phoii:Jgnply and lhe ph)'&gt;lcs or nuic.
Survoll&lt;)nl tncludebis wife. Eleanor;
two daughtets. Diane and Mau..,..n R
Ragen; and three grandchildren.

Anthony Kaye,
former social
work asst dean
.........,. -IL ~a. former assistn
deandlhe UB School or Social Waoi(.diod
I'd&gt; 4 in St. fnncis ur-sintl lbne fO!Ioow.
.ing a lengdly illras. f'unenl ~ W&lt;R
held Monday Ul St. Grqpy lhe ~
OaJroh. Wdbamsville.
l&lt;l\)'e earned a badlekr's degree from
Buffalo -Colle:@le ll!dm_. &amp;.
P"" and doc:l&lt;lwe m soc.a1 Wild: from UB.
He lq&gt;rl hiscamor as a ~for
1bo Erie Oull)· Dq!artmerll d Social Servias,lhen ~as a sooi.ll Wild: supen.i""in Bulfaln Oilldom's Can He la1rr
"'""named&amp;SSISillnldoanor!ho UB School
or Social w.n. where te sava! for rm
years.~in t975. AfterbisKaye worb:d ror 15 )'COB as ldminislr.tli..,

cirecsororcasewcxt servioesf&lt;rk8offalo
Calholic t::lioce5e..
"" is Al"'i\'Od by tus
Adele. or
Wil1iamsville; IWO 500S, Anlbmy m nf
Rncl:lesl&lt;f ..-.:1 ~ or Gao~
Md.; a dauglner, Caodiscc 'Meade of
Williamsville; a trOO!el'. Vina:tt Sn-ith; a
siSier,AgnesCzahor:aod 5 grandd1Mm.

wme.

T WAS A breatf

_____.
........
......
........
............,
.......

_
----

of dwnpions u

.S . Oiyrrq&gt;lc~-hopd'ulkn­
oifer Mead spoke ~ nearly 200 Uli

_.
.........

.
ond alhlelic .smintl•dwil1&amp; • .breal::full~~:ld Feb. l
f..- Nlrlional Girl ond Womm in SpmU Doy

-01'1

(Nowsm.

The Student Anoeiation and the
uniousiry'' OWSO C'Oinll\lUa: ~
che brealcfiSI l&gt;anquot in Alumni Arena to
r"""''IUU che l&amp;lenlS and contribution of aU
women alhlars. espeiCIAJiy !hole 01 U8
Mead bopn by ttllina tho~. ~you
could all be in my pos1tioA," Her~
c.m&gt;eLU. SUit basketball pbyerandwrtiJ:I&amp;
goal~ fa&lt; Providmce Oollege, M.,u. ....
inu:.uupll&gt;d .......... dutins her oopbomoreyear
in January 1992. she wu ~ wit1111
~tal bean okfOCll Steunderwentqpenhe.ait SUl'gef)' m f'ebnlary J9'J2; tell da)"
after tho qperation she was an tho bencbes
cbeering on •her teiUrulllltts. In four montll&gt;
sbe had mad&lt; I Ml l!OIIlebac 10 pom.
That seuon she was nruncd Ill tho orth0151 All -America ..,am as "'""II 1s the firotteam AU New England se...,._ f o r -·
Hera_,_gesoorefar · tt'lball Ibm..,.....,
wu 10.1 poinlS, woth a pel"-£a.me average of
7.4. In January. 1994. Mead act:rpiCd tho
Honda-BI'I)derick Cup 1D5porabona1 Av."'J'd,
.,.,_.... eocb year10 a collegiate""""""
alble.., wbo O\'CI'OOil'leS 1 peBODAI handicap
1~ contribute •t o tho ~s of her team.

bile rd'emnJ! 10 her wrgery as"'jol~
aD01ber obstacle "toO\·croome, Mead
Ibm an a!hlete's mtntal attitude is
wbat nlllkcs a di ITcrena: She said • strong
belief In bon-elf. the ablht~ to set goal$, and
not being afraid of fai lin,g contributed to bcr
success.
NOihong u more i mpon411t thaD setting
goals. sbe said. "My roal through surgery
W3SJUSt to live. andbave abean that""""""·"
Mead said that sometimes people mistili
her self.;o surance fa&lt; coclmess. "But I JU&gt;t
see it as self-cooftdence."
A• for not wonning e•"Cry game. ··11 happcM toe••eryooc." sbe said . 1'here'ulwa~
another day and anodler game " She Wd tbat
it' s euiu to get through the bad games by
realizin&amp; tbaJ after it•s over. you c:at1 over·
loolr. it and mo'·e ooto win~.
She advised, "''i e 100 percent oow.
Even though women's sports bas came so
far. it' s ifl'IPO!Ullllhat we all make m effor1
10 make it grow."
In an in~w after her speecll. Mead
indiealed not. of the ways 10 belp women •a

W

~sed

••• t ....

t.-....r

"'* ·

pmU .cll.ieve 111&lt;n """"' i
_
spread promo6on of "'""'"· "Most petJple
dno ' t evet1 """" that tho U.S Soccer Team
is t rinJ the East Ooast. It·s h&amp;nl far

- ···- IQ""

the ....,..s OltL.

"Give 100 perr:ent now.
Even though women s
sports lras come so far;
its important thaJ we all
make an effort to make iJ
grow."

--

Sbe alsn said that it IS unponant fllf pade
school ferruole 1thlet"' to have positive mlc

model • •wttm I wa• YOUDJ! there wore
hanllr any women athlete5 10 be mlc mvdels. I always lOOked to people who ~
more sucoessful thaD I was and tried to

emulate tbem.•
OOeted lwo fulloCbolatShips from l"mvi-

Newton
gifts provide
'fwo,.....,....,..,._C..
___ pharmacy scholarships
fran

Mr. and '" ' Cecl J. Newlorl ol &amp;aderllon. Fla., .._~
reoe-1 by the School ol 'l'hamlacy mpenTI!Ij lei dlv endow
The Ceci J. and Voolet W. Newlorl Scholarship Fund.
In lldcfllion 10 a gilt oi3.0Xl shares 8IYIOUnOad - a t
oronlhs ago, Mr. and Mrs. Newlon have made a aeoond gift o1
another 3,0X) 6hares Combilled. the two ills total sNgh1ly
more lhan $230;0013 and are Jhe largest ~ 91191 recellled by
the school from an lldlvidual .
They will provide W8lly needed resources IC&gt;' Mure pilarmacy students, ac::IXI(di:lg ·to Oaw:t J . Triggle, dean ol the
School ol .Pnarmacy. which has 'Pad along-slandiog dlstingulshed reputa!lon Ia' teachqj and research. and IS consis·
tenlly ranked as one ol the nat.iorl'SIOP pharmacy schools.
Initially, Triggle added, 10 schOlarships ol $1 ,000 each wil
be awarded annuaDy to undergraduate phannacy students on
the basis d need and merit.
The Newtcns explained 1ha1 their primary f88SOfl Ia' making the gills was in gralitude for the OUISianding ·educalion
and lr8irWlg Mr. Newlorl mceMid at 'Butfakllhallead to his
successful business and prdesslonai~-.A 1928 graduate of the trillel'siiY's School ol Pharmacy,
he was wilh the w~ Co. as a tPIJarrtacist inl sua nwlage.- from 1933-78. 8)(0ejll frtlm 1941-45 ....mtlhe \9erVed in the
u.s. Arm/ in1he Sa.tlh Paclicald Korea 1heaters ol eclion. He
retired lrorTillhe 8I111Y with the rank of lie!ilenMt colonel.
The Walgreo;ln Co., Mlich QPEif8leS 1,836 610res ttvougt:t.
out !he nation. recenlly annaJr'tCE!d plans o &lt;JpOO sewn

_,_
stores in the Buffalo area within lhe IXlfTiirQ ~The US pharmacy school was clled in 1993 by
NeNs &amp; IM:w1d Report magazine as the sbdh best in lhe na1ion based upon a ·sorvey of faculty ahd deans ol nne than
70 phannacy schools. U8 was the only pharmacy school in
the northeast rM&lt;ed in the lop 15.

u.s.

dc:nceCollqeondUnivenityoC ortbC.vo1
Mead cboJe to pllly ba.uthoi.U farl"mvtd.....,. Collece. DeaJ ~r bometOWII of
IRa
Mau. A i1r&lt;1r1J f i l ' l l - .-ned
ber a spot oo tho Bi&amp; East C&lt;laf- AU-

RookX B..tdbooll Team ill1990. The oen

year she bearne 5tlttif11 ~for the
sooca- team m additKlrl ..,...,_ posiliocl wifb
the basketball '&lt;.lrn. .,.., 6ol&lt;lun,g ber'foustb
year playina f&lt;ar Providenot, Mead U)'S the
Nmiooal Soccu Tum and trauU.ng for !bt
Olynlj&gt;io:$ are her lon&amp;-llmn ~
bo! she hopes ro oomeday CIOICb col.letelevel '"""'""'• socxa
O!herspeaken"' thobaoql.ld ~Nei!IOO
Towusead and Emily Ward. Omctor ond
Assisla.. Oirecmrofl&lt; lf1ics.~vdy :
&gt;ee Presodoeat of Student ADocimioo Kane
Kaney. and Carol~. •ife ofUB ~­
dent Will:wnGreiner. who spoiUcm borOWII
esperimca as a coltqe otblete.
Also honored"" Betl.Y Oimmic&amp;, Auocia~e Oin:dor of lleereatiOIIIII Addetics.
Dillllllid was.,.,_.... -.ith the UB Ita:qcciliocl A1li'lU'd far hel -w:e ond cootriburioouothoUBAthletics[)q&gt;artlneol. "We'~
""""" .from Oladt Han in tho '70. oo 1\Jumni
Aeaa ill the '90s. I'm pmbll alllled'in!cUoa UB pmU lilt
"
.uL c

�_.
•

~

cloolaleroiiHDL .... pen::enl
body fa
·
wbmaximal ~.,...,I) -

to give pugram

IDd IQer
oplioas
&lt;Ail for 1be fait ; m (in·
eludes a UB RT t-41irt) . Fe.
rqiJiratioft . crmalion. call
R •1 Services (6-U-3141) be.......,9.30Lm aad4.30p.m.
~will be made II
I S-minule onlftVII
PwtiociJ*IIS may complete
that~ fonn and pay
lhe fee II R • I Servic:a, Room
I JO AI
Alma. Clolbma
IIJllliOIIn* f&lt;X exercJK lbotlld be
........ f&lt;XIhe
.
SJX101011 of lhe eva~~ UICiude
tbe Division of...
Departof Pbyoical Tbenpy and
EJ.cn:Uc Scitac:e. UB Sports
MecliciiiO IMitllll&lt; and lhe Uvin&amp;
WdiCenler

on drug thernpy

0,.....,m

Tho ICJqlpe Psi " " - " -·
tical Ptwnury ofUB • ·iU

a procnm.

~ Updalr. Focua
011 New
'Jb&lt;npy 1994"
Feb 19
from 8 LID. 10 );)() p
111 Webller Hall in Mlllanl

Drua

Fin- ltoopilal. Gllla Cilcle
Tho procnm. WJef&lt;d 10 pbormacy pnclitiooen. IIUdt:nu and
pbysici-. will lllldr&lt;ss
u

1opoa and new '

~aad lllltipbldtt
lbetllp)': ...,., byperU2W011 padc-

lineo: aueaiD&amp; Jlllliml ~

of pbarmacoCbcrapy new dru
uoed in tbe trea1ment of HIV:
Wllqicl r.. overoornit1a cbemo-

Courses for
pharmacists

liletlp)'~ tumorl

second-JC110Rb011 anti·
ronvulsants
Paniapa.nts will rece~ve oor
coolaet bour of COIII.inwn&amp; educa·
ooo aedit 1Juou&amp;h the Olfoce of
Conunuing llducasion in lbe UB
School of Pbannacy r.. eacb
• lecture !bey anend Atlelldana: II
lbe entire program will provKie a)
Ull&amp;l of Sl1 cootac1 bours
The genen1 rep lra1ion fee of
525 and srudent regtstral:Joll fee
of SS tncludes all lectures. bandout matenal reliesluneot a
buffet Juncheoll and a oertifteale
of conllnuing education ored1L
RegistratKlll deadbne 11 Feb 14
F&lt;X more mformatAOn. call 7Sll4
.

Fitnes Fair in
Alumni Arena
on Feb. 18

0

Recreatioa and Intramural

Servoces ,.ill hold a Sprir~~
Faculty/Staff fitneSS Fan on
Friday, Feb. 1 from 10 Lm. to 3
p.m. in Gymnastics Room 17S,
Alumni Arena. North Campu
Porticipatin&amp; faculty and Sl1ff
..;u m:eive a bealth screemng to
tnclude cudiovucular ri · anal)"· blood pres'""" and hean rile,

are offered

0

The OtVISIOII of Conlin
'Ill EdUCIIIOII Ill lbe UB
School of l'barmac) li offeon&amp;
aa IDtr'Clduclory program r..
hospital and IMIJIUIJOII-based
pllarmactsl5 tlus "'mlel The

COUJY, ~Basto

of Cbnteal Ptwmac) l'racoct An lntroductO&lt;}
Course r.. ~ sutr Pbarmac•.a."
IS designed to pro•ldc: •ntroductory-kvd dtdacllC traJnlnJI a.uned
at !be de•'dopment of bas&gt;&lt;: chm·
II for
cal pbarmacy practoce
lhe suiT plwrnac11a
Semon
be beld from 79:30 p.m on Wednesdays m
RO&lt;XR C-248 of
·e Hall on
lbe 'orth Campus Re~tsuaoon
Will bqin at 6. 15 p.m
The scbeduk
Common Labor'alor} Tesu and
lben lnterpretauon-Pan II. Feb
16. Susan Rozek. UB diniCll
assistant professor of plwmacy
and coordmat&lt;X of dru&amp; information iCfVJ&lt;lCS at lbe Erie County
Medical Center, will be the In·
tructor.
1be Pby icaJ EJ.anuoat1on.
Feb. 23. Fred Bonnes. UB chmcal
assistant professor of pbarmacy

,.,J]

National Security Education
Scholarships are available
~ ............ ........ to COIII.aCI liB 's Offtee of lnleml·
tional Education im.....u.tely f&lt;X information on complellng lbe detailed ~on for National Security Educatioo J&gt;rocnm
Underp-aduale Sc:holanhi
Under this program of lbe lnstitule of l.nterna1ional Ed~uon_ (liE).
scbolarsbip usi511DCe ..-ill be available for O''Cr5C.l5 study •• re&amp;•ons of
the worid outside Western Europe and Canada. Its purpose I to build
national copacity f&lt;X leader&lt;hip by expanding opportunities r.. senous
mady of lanJ1118es and cultweO lbat .,., tess commonly chosen f&lt;X

mady abroad.
'II be . .
1~
The NSEP pilot year r.. underpaduatcs ~
gm "' summer ~
and continue lhroup lhe spring
academic term. Freshmen and
sopbomores may apply f&lt;XIhe summer 1994 leriD. ~sophomores.
jllllion and Jenion may apply f&lt;X fall 1994 and spnng 1995. Scbolardtip awards ore f&lt;X a minimum of ooe academic term. However. sophomores and upper-&lt;&gt;lass studen are CDC&lt;IURied to liUbmit applicatiom
for a fuU academic year. Students wbo have 1101 previously ~
abroad, and may need fmancial usistance to do 10. ore especially en-

1m

~ to apply.

.
.
For more information call !be OlfJCC of Jntemaliooal Education II
645-2258.

........._"-..'(_~

~-,

~

;\.,,,._,...,.................'to..._,••••·.·~\.·..•.

..........
The

"""'"*"

I 1 1'
10 """

t:ha lafOI'II'IICIOD ~
MMdl 2. Joel Owc:rbodl. UB

r 1 '

,-

''

:-. :

'

s-ot-

dlllicaJ .......
o(
pblmlacy Mil darector of claaical
pbarmocy ll!mCieS for ·~
--MedK:al Gcoup, PCIOnlup
Hdlth. . be l h c -

..... ~ ...pproecb to lhe ~
9.
Cwlls .._ clwcal
for dJM:al...., • lbe
Depanmo:nt o(
Roc:hella Gea&lt;nJ
Wlll

_,.,_

Tbe reptntloe f"" is SJO for
eacb
IOII.~WIJI
""""'ve rwo &lt;DIII&lt;l boun of
C0111111DiJ1c edol&lt;:ouoD credit f..
eacb -lion lbey lllend. Fe.
funbr:r infontllltion. call 6453931.

'PET pioneer
Marcus Raichle
to lecture at UB
Marc:us E. Raidllt, t.D~
a poancer 111 lhe u~ of
pDSIUOO~HIOD I&lt;JriiOinlpby
(PET) to mady normal and abnor·
mal funcuon of lbe buman bram.
..mdebvcr lbe 1994 fopft t....ctura at thr unt•'ttSII) on Feb 11
and 1
The lect=s. tn ,..lucb Ra&gt;Cble
"''" present " lllu of 5lUCbe! on
lan&amp;ua&amp;e and memO&lt;) • .,., spoa·
50ftd b) lhe UB Departmcnu of
Neurology and Nuca MediCine
A professor of neurolocY and
nadtauon octenceS at lbe ash·
IIIJI100 Um•"emtY School of
MediCine m St. Lout Ratchk
dtscu -~mages of the
Mind" in a 1ec:ture at S:JO p.m.
Feb 17. tn the UN VC~Stty Inn and
Conference Center. 2401
for.
Oil Road.

0

,..,u

He wtll leclun: on " lmagtiiJ!
Studies of Memory" at noon on
Fnda), Feb I . In But.kr A..W
num in Falber Hall on lbe UB
South Campu . Refreshmem • ·111
be sen'Cd af1er tbi leclute
F&lt;X funber informat&gt;On. call
Xocbttl ICholson at
7

..::.....--~

for
.,..,_,
......... ....._.
.......

~""'-s

.........,.._ ForftmJter.,_,.,...,---Oon!rNDeVi

0

lV

_u.,..__.'--.......,

ment suaxs '" chtldren o'lr·er a
l()..yar~

Patuctpant ..., placed on a
plan thai tnclixle&lt; a nutnoonall)
balanced dtet. repur uemoe.
behaVIOr modtfiCaiJOll and a
IDIUIIaWICC program
O..ldral 1eam "' dasstfy ~
ac:cordlng 10 lhe pals on a ITiffx:

b&amp;IL baP-&lt;l81one foods - r&lt;d.

moderale-&lt;:alone J
ydi&lt;&gt;w and
low&lt;alonr foods. pet~~. To be

ebP&gt;Je for lhe ~ cboldren

p. least 20 .....-

Aruma! Pam and

Selena -

-~­
and lnfonned Con·

Ouucal Tn

...-.tssue..MM:hl.l21 ~
Spe&amp;er Raben le\._, prof
a( mo::docal bumarutJes II lho y.
um~cnoty School of Nedociat and
author of "Eiboa and Rqulal&gt;on
of a.a..:.t Resealdl Sacnb6c Froud. Mlrdl 17. 114
~ Speabr Mamdle
LtFI*&amp; 1....-dJ pd&lt;worof

......,. and lldtldoc:t policy.

•Clro'Je w

more
the ideal weipa f&lt;X tbesr
.,._ and ba•e oor .-r- w •

Uaiwnily. Ht
. .... ldhorof~ ... l'l:d.
Froud. f11c*111D and MilalncU:Im

onmdweeldytreatmenl~

Sacnb6c~-

...th lhe cbild.
Althougb lhe propam IS flu.
a rd'uodable deposit . reqwred

Soodal Reooume AUoc:abon:
Tbe F.lhlcs of OIOice IDd a-,.
7, 114 ~
pemr J
l..lndcmanD
Nelsoo. IISIOCia' for ellucal Wli-

must ....

u-

Enrollmenll bnwed.
For funber mformall&lt;lll. or to
mroJI a d\1Jd ID thr program. call
64 -6316

P ychologists
Lectures cover
set program for animaL humau
overweight kids ubject research

&lt;h'CtWeipl c:hildrerl be·
tweeo lbe l&amp;C5 of 8 and 12
. , being SOU&amp;hlto panicipate in
a free. four-month weigbl-contn&gt;l
program oooducted by UB psychologists.
The cocbprebensh-e. familyb a e d - procram. called
lbe Stopl.icht Did Pmcrwn. IS
bemg oonducled by L.eonanl
Epstein. UB professor of poychoiOCY and ooe of lbe country's
leading experts on dilldbood
obesity. He-on,inared lhe propam 16 yean ""' while a faculty
mernbel' at the Univenity of Pilllbtqh Medical Ceola".
Fw!ded by 1be NllliooallnsliIUiel &lt;il Heabb. 1be propam is lhe
only &lt;lnC in 1be country to doal-

£-. 0JtiiN!{
Smtor.W.V.

dtt~LJbNria'~~

ryG,.,.,.64U211 t&gt;r LOIMI

0

Animal researdlllld buman«Jbjecc n:searclt .,.,
.ll'liOII&amp; the topia to be disocusscd
at !he 1994 Bnsroi-Myen Squibb
Annual Lccrureo. sponsored by
the UB Sdloolofl'bannacy. This
year'' Jecmre series theme is
'"Soence and Morality.-

Semons ..,;n """" from s6:4S p.m. on lhe Nonb Campus.
Tbe scbeduJe:
Animal Use in Raarch and
1'nlining. Feb. 10. 114 ~
Hall Spealcrr. Bemanl Rollin.
profeaor of humanities • ~
Colondo Sale Uoiveniry Sdlool
ol Vclrrinary Scitnce. Rollin is lhe
author of"Animal JliPis IDd
1tuman M&lt;nli1y" IDd "'The Unbeedod Cty. Animal Conacious-

l'obcies."""'
ICS.

~

HMtirlp c--.

......

p

l

~

.

'

=.

..........

. '. :

,...._.
)pro.

gr- .. lhe School of Maoag1!11Tl811l

nas mc:Mld no

prognms nlhe U.S ..
n terms ol resean:h ~
11ons 1'1 leeding MIS ,aumals,
., 8ltiCie .. Olllabase reported
Wntrog l'llhe Aug 1993 ISsue, J Stolen ollhe tWv d
Nebraska Dased hoS lindngs
on an Nllier ass essmert by
0 l..sndO'tg and J Walherbe ollhe lffl ol ~
The atAhors based . . . tnciings on~ ofleadf1g
. ~and joomllls ru-1'10 lhe penod 1984-1990.
10p 20

c

lyZIId-.....,..

Cegonesol-m ....

proc(. 1!11&gt;~~!Wgu­
~and IW'I'Cli'alr&amp;-

seardltat i'dJded case
'*-'Cias. field SUills and llbo-

.-.y '*-'Cias.

�P loot aa

to )'

II • • •

T eaC

in the
er outside

may be fTighdUJ., but
indoors at Dorsheimer
Greenhouse, plants are
flourishing under the
watchful C}'C of
Horticulturalist Ted Bieniek.
Peperomia, Rudbeckia,
Bromeliads, Ghost Plants and
African Violets: there ther are,
ignoring snow, ice and
forbidding skies.

~ Bieniek tends the plants

Ox-Torp l'tmt

from the Teaching CoUection,
a group of xerophytes and
greenhouse ornamentals,
grown to supply teaching
specimens for the Deparnnent
of Biological Sciences in
Cooke Hall.

!A The plants are taken to the
labs to be used as demo
materials, but at this time of
year, the sight of something
colorful and green is
enough to set a gardener's
heart beating faster. ~

"C•ndclabnz Pl..m"

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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  <item itemId="86250" public="1" featured="0">
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1716545">
                    <text>upub/ic strVice
is cmtral to

ourrnissWn
as a-SUNY
~

E hanclng UB's role as p blic s rvice

rtner

and sharing

·rfonnation

arul exdxmging ideas
are cmtral ro our
mission as
a wtiveitity."
.....,~

Mwaru V.ct Pruidm&lt; f01
Go~R.w....,.

, and giving somechi:ng bac -to ew
York State, and to tbe gn-.ateT Buffalo
-that' tbe push behind the niversity
at Buffalo • new Institute of Government, which inaugurated its activities Jan. 2 7
with a Local Go emment Symposium for Western
Yor local goverrunent
officials in the Center for Tomorrow.
Tbt:oU-da) s)'lllll(lfiiwa ,....dal.,..,ciiOiatroduce lor.ld..,_. off"ICl &amp;othr •lii'IOillityprsoflmllllq
a iofl!llllai10II . . - llw lbe Ulfltlllllr ..UJ ~ 11111 ~ •
ot ;..,......... m. qua~ay ot
pmllDI'lllllll openU.oas and pobey· ill Nn. Yorkihlt il O&lt;IIIUI"' lbe inMJM&lt;' milliOD, ....S
y
..;c., pn:ooidet&gt;l fot ~ 'ldatioos uod direc:Wr ol 1 b e - .
M

W11.,--

Tbt: lnstihl!r...... c:reattd 10 hrJ

UB~diiCililalofaf'lbevoin·

iqol_..ol':ficlalooiaNew

Yor:k sc-.
10 m.h......,..,.,..
and""""""""aYailabl&lt;!or-.:ond
local zo.-aumnt offlciab,
McK&lt;OWD Aid. Tbt instituk will
help emu elecud and appoinlod
oiJ'Jdaloinlbe~ptbe, ......teo
~&lt;Dow as odministnam&lt;,
Aid·we p1au 10 .....-~; ,.;m 'l'U10US
r;avemmem bodies.. CC011111iss1om,
ossoeiatioos,andOCIDIIlitteeo,and
IO brill&amp; various pouj:15 and individDa.ls !QCedlcr botb frma Inside
•and O&lt;ll!&gt;ide UB, • McK""""' aid.

""We Will work Mlh rna~
county ~gislalaos, O&lt;bool

bocds,wwn....,.moon,~lllld

otbln.

• ~lll"tny of · - · .socob .. bow
da! "'ilb bud~ wlda q...,...

lbe UmliUSII} oiNoniiCan&gt;l!ao •

OltbcthattQpic:asudo•-_,-

ai'Teusot
. 1Dd11&gt;1: lJni-ou.
sky o1 CleaoJ;ia '-*- of&lt;Jo.,.
·.,__ "'ar f01&gt;111 wiU bt •
pnicticahDiilua&amp;, • ~ oaid.
"Weare-~
.,.
paiuticns-'aaSibeR;d;ddler
1'ou11ic1.1tJon •
Tbe
sai&lt;llly-..puus. aDd &lt;loea - 1141- aay
pmtialllr policy or.....-.*
. ~ "'McK-, the
!-.mat will drl..... llldl diwn&lt;
ICalllemic ~ •1'olllical

(],lapel Hill, ille LJ"''iioo IWMs
u..-cof-.wiilo _ _ _ _
_ Sdottooi ,-.IMu.-.oay
"Mc:K_..ou:l n..mwiD pnwidle OippOflllllltic
for offJdalo frma diff=n~ c:omIIIUilili&lt;sanddiflcm. .ewe alp·

&lt;:mmer11 10 &lt;XJ~~~r ~ .

m-

t«bnlques uod ideas. and devtlop
• MIWOrit ot peen. she said

A CC&lt;JidinltoMcK-.Ibela

o..wm-

stiiUie of
'l'iU
povidie srrvicts similar 10 ot¥a'll

adler insliwlescurrmlly &lt;lpCII1IIiq
«TTSS the eoun~~y-lbt Kennedy
Scbool "' IUrvvd, lbe In·
Slitull:of~c

-a-,.

'

..,_..._,,_.,

..._...c.-11......._,

,.._.,... m ~
IIOfl

JJ.au.

�- ..

2
~

0

~

~-

0 R S
~--

~--.---

--

~
_ . . AAUfiLLGIWI
clllhp . d ~ dct.rilry

.._ c.w-.

ltU\hast.a'llllr1'l8da~

IOwd

""""'*'

~

bhM_.d

Henry

r---~~~r---------------~------,~

,.,.., ..
..........

---.....
"'
~

----

Louis

Ta lor

"'c-t.

tor

~

f'IMc
Millin

IS I'AMILY AND bi5
eommunlty taucbt
Henry l...ouis Taylor 10
belie\.e in bimsdf 111&lt;1
. pogibolities. .....
caught bim. as
the impc&lt;'of wor • 10 ~ 110Ciety e1 large.
Taybblwlaln:adyexperienocd

....,o,

many career dllnges, 111&lt;1 o

as iiKICh af a coraribuDaa to ·
lOCicty .. be felt oec:aoary.
be c:ame10 UB in 1987 as a profes'111 """"' bJl'l I fi~-&lt;Jid
- in lhe Americ:ao "Stladies DepmUDOIIt ..... the dimctor of the
plliail I bod
furx8anally
doaf.,..,tanays. "Sbc-lqla.boa
Cent« for "-ppbed Public Affaus
Studies. Bdj to Wlderswld tbe
ber
Mlfitre, aod k lhlnp tbat bave .-ivated him, it
way e&gt;;pellli~ fa a &lt;Yd •ilo t.ddJx.qlotfS.,....,.._I
is ...,.,.,..., 10 JO bed: to bis UJ&gt;'
irled 10 find ....,..,.,. for ber odllcalrillging iD Nasbville. TetllleDtle
lion. boa couldl't. l.ocikq II her, J
"Nasbville is a vtrf diffm:n1 110ft
thwPibotlcould!!il~aod .....
ofSOUibem IOWil. " Taylorays. "It's
ibe 5lllrY al'ber v.1lale bfe, bocaloe &amp;be
oftearefcmd IOOSIIte 'Alheosofcbe
...u.i_.bavellte,_,_IO,..
South' bocause of .. lqe aumba'
of ocademi&lt; in&lt;titulions. It's long
ill!! ber ~"*dial 'i1:J&lt;R"""" 10
lbw;mds d abers lik ber lha I
I
bern kDown as a Cli2IIU for blaci
bodlo.,.,..,&amp;omlltelnlfb~IO
educatioo, with institutioos lila: Fisk
p!llbc
pD:y
.......
in
..tOcb
I
could
Uni...-sily aud lite Mt:bany Medical
beGcr help ad! people.•
College aud Ho&amp;pita1.
""''ben: ....... thriving blacl&lt;
D lbe [97(5, ...mJe w&lt;lridng 00
middle class md business class, 10 I
bis Ph.D. in li!aary 01 UB, Taylor
pew up ill ao etrVttoomom wba'e I
~willqriirics ..,,....
- &lt;lSI!d 10 blaek people !IDling
dJin&amp;s. CatoiDiy, osbville wasq- lime ... p&lt;JiiiQI copni&gt;a for lbe
Blaclt Wodo:ls~ •hichewmrqoled.S...NoslMllehodblaeklawtuallyfal.bimiOOacblali. Wbrnibe
,....., doaols, scientists, policemeD,
BWC diotJalod, Taylor beeline m
engio&lt;o=. 111&lt;1 ~bore wue maoy
itkuinisu- furdteum-.itydQo.
weallhy blacks in lite ciry.
"P&lt;apleafdill'...,.,. elasr;es, ricb
..... poor, tived in the &amp;&amp;me oeip.
bo&lt;bood, 111&lt;1 mixed l.olelbcr. I
didn't grow up feeiU., iDferiar 10
oi.b&lt;D, or bona tbaD ihem. I be·
tieved tbat I could do aoything I
wanted because I SIW theeviclmoe
a0 around IDO. And I blwl peal
t&lt;:aeb&lt;n, too, wbo """" .,., • missioa 10 instill in their st1ldenu •
- a ( purpose ..... pride, a:tnlg·
gling with 10 belp ~
ciiJr.-i Mediad Sc:bool.
oome lbe ~ tbey could be.
"W!alwasa....,.lal!ycamell&gt;
"My falhcr was my btro aud role
Wl&lt;bslaod lite an and aeicoce of
model. He blwla Ph.D. from CameO,
adminisnatioll," Taylor says. "I
..... - c:bait of Agric:uhural Jico.
lt:amed bow big .....,m.tions fuDc,.
oomics 11 T""""'""" Agric:uhural
liaDed, and my lkills ~
aud Industrial State UnM:rsily. He
llldiDIIlllrOCI.I came 10 fed, as wd(
taught lOO lbat a pc:IBOI1 sboold be
lbat many Africao At!:leran ....,_
asbomod uotil dtey bad woa a vic- mentsblwlfailedbec:auoecbeybadno
""Y for bummkind, and tbll great&lt;:r inslilutional knowlalge t.. a&gt;ailtalent le8ds 10 gr&lt;:a~trmspoasibility.
able to tbcm. lben: •'&amp;S no sopblstiSo I gxew up asking myself lite quoseated, I)'SUmOiic: effort 10 produce
lion of bow I was going 10 llf:IVe
knowledge tbll&lt;lOUld sbape palicies
lunaoitymdmalrelbe woddl!I'OUDII
10 belp people wbolived in"""""""'
me beaer.•
&gt;doped .,.... of dties. •
Taylor.unedbiscana-asacliniThe dcsile 10aeareon Clplliz.acalaudiologist. worldDg wilb peel~~~&amp;- ' lion 10 do jusl lbat led Taylor 10
..00 blwl b&lt;:a!in&amp; diffieWiics. AIdeYelopllteCcmttfor AppliedJ'ul&gt;.
dtougb be found cbe wcr1c: tewm!lie Affails Studies at UB in 1987,
in3, be evmtuaOy c:ame 10 fed lhat after ......, years as a prof....,. al
the field did llllt allow bim 10 make
Obio Stile Univ=ity. "'!'be Ceoter.
ous intellectual c:ballenp. when

maCbor-""

~
I1BTED ro NDIA'1111C

aoan'T:
............... UBII!JSICi.
1118 pmjes$a cA pediah::s 8'1d
~medicne.has
~ ei!!CIIed lo ll'II!IT'blnhop

in lhe Sodllly b' f'ldari:R&amp;.-dl. a t'll8lnll crglr1lzlilian
b .......... pill iGd IIC8demiC
peclalndiwiS.
Msall's research has focused "" the problems end
~olextrame

prematunty and lunctiaoal
inclependanoe in clildren
lt1 Down's syndrcme, cerelnl palsy end neurode\19lopmen181 dosabir les.

A UB faoAiy nw!Ut
si1oe 1981, Msal elao Is
chiel d de\leloptwiCal pedialncS end rehabllalion medIOOe It O'ildllln'a Hoapilal d
8lJfalo end lhe Acbert Wem-

• .Aehablllalion Qerfer.
MEDIA STUDY

cna,...,...,....,
o..lil o..~r. so::iale
prolessa d made a.dy, has
I'IICIIMid lhe.JamO!Ik Awlwd
b' E&gt;ccalonce In Media tram
f'e NY Slale lba'y Astlt:Jt:ie.
iicn. O'Grady- toncred
b c:onli'bAiona OJ« 8 21yea'

ptWiod. He was .I&lt;Bynole

llflll8ker at New York's [)on.
...,. Public: Lb:8ly c::ont.·

ence"" buldono nm

n

prognms libraries. He
illllo died b tis GOIOIIitilil!l (
ID 11m IWld llideo distribulion

n Weslilm NeW vex~~. n tor

oonll'lxfklg lo lbwy coleotions ~hiS production
cl kldapeo ldenl doclmenteoy
lima b' plblic II¥Visi:n He
Is helping lo preser;eiWld
«issrrluue lim&amp; ollhe ciYI

~....,......,..IW!dlhelirsl.
25 )181ft d kldepeoldenl vid-

eo produclian in lhll US

I

...... it pm d doe Office ofPublic:
s.niceaodu.t.Afliin,
made
J!C*iblc by lhe elf&lt; of Rcbtst

l'llml:r, vice Jlft"'iccoaa far OIUik:al
atran.
lnllysswllteCOIIIIOCUOII
belwcoa my ...... _, Buffalo '~
_._,"Taybssys. "And~
~. wbowasihmp&lt;Cl"'&lt;&lt;ll.­

• pad bdp as wdl

'1"be Ct:o&amp;er lludies lbe bislory
o( underdevdapcd oeicb~
md CIOIIIIDIIIIities Ia order 10 defiDe

moclem problemo, • Taylor ays.
"Since our coal is 10 c:lwl&amp;e the
world, 1101 j\ll5l to study il, - ~
our ideas aud make ihem projecu
10 chaoze urbm tali1y.
"'ur projcds iavolve lqe ....
5ellltlb-,oiocellte~
of IOCidy is 100 OCltQilb for lbe

.... ()ffice

d u.t. ....

--·~p..qllld

..,.,..,...;c~ID'Pwilll •

--

••¥• olud loall, tie ea.r 11M
...., bora ~·alllljor..,.,.

aomic~p!3jlr:l IDIIICOUI'

•

bui;Ba ~

Ia. Afnc:oa

..... ~n.

..t.l&lt;mw!J!...... Tayboays.
O•rioa....odyin\IUMIIJD&amp;p&lt;jocl
mT.,..,.~

..aioooi'Bo.&amp;lo~ID

!IDCisl....,...,.,..··kwatc:u:W-·
toiizaliioo
'
aod ....
d!aiol~lit

purviewofmyme.,.,._, Webave

-we.;..IUdi..........,.....P.

~ imadiaeipliaoJy wilbiadleCCliiii:XldClld1illyc:nfted
CXlDIJCilblal ~ Ooe of lite

bodtODdl ........... ~ . . . .
JAasfu•,......irs aodD"'amy
• Jlllll*:aa," Taylor oays. -we
far ........ ladtl..._..-..

·
r111 111011 proud of is 11111
.-e'veprow:ntbaa..:.dtmiepoup
COil lreak dow!! diSI:ipliaaty .......

""'*'-

Jauodadoo 0t1 wbid&gt;ID
build AMicutb lite main pd*ms II
....tuxwmwe+iesemwilh.........,.....
.,......

•

'

·soo....W

...... ..til:i&gt;.
boalllltibe
"Since our goal is to change the world, not .....
AI. a.-,_._,.,...,.
-.s ................ ~polity
just to study it, we take our ideas and make .....
lll6as boo:*
_ , . , llld
...........
o.. .................
them projects to change urban reality. ..

lllllllilirsiJIIlle~.....

-

·- l A n .

-~par1DOI!Ibipsllldpmjoc:u

. Giber ocademi&lt;-.
Two d Tayllor'a projcds 11 die
ea- bave .....tied in lite boob,
~and 1M City•• study d bladt
Ulban life in Cioeinnoti from U!llho
19'10, llld ~ .w.riQw and
1M I&amp; t!{&amp;ifPlo ~
City, wbidl be clr:8czibeo as .._, .,_
lbHlriealed ............. pojett lbot
"""''tliO icblify lite Jlld*mo md

,.,.,..,NIIutritJJ

....

---~~
....
....,.aoe,c:liii..S.,..m:we
fly 10 build
• IDtlaeclpojoctsia ...... ~

'1olhefiaal..,.,

o-rr..

doe.......,d......,...

Apj6d Public A1liils Sludi:s io
a:&amp;clioo
&lt;lKiil:lr.
~ Mil

I

""'''*&lt;diDR!q&gt;UB~inwd.
&lt;lKiil:lr. Voce~........, .:1

....... Maote, vice pairbt bpli&gt;lic--":e aod .... a«aa, .......
boraway~o.-,­

Uced.,. African Amrrl-

bocaaled ...... - ..... ...,.n.d.

says,llldbasboda~ iaftu-

liootobeamlimalbds'inmak:illa
liDbFo ~ lbe uaiw.aily ...

diflic:uldes

eaos oioce I~ Ia. Buft'alo, aud 10
cle¥eioput1111qy ...,mfonttoclting lbaie probilms.. 'Ibll book bas
talo:o oo a "'ife d ils .,......."Taylor

ence oo palicies affectin&amp; Africao
Amoricaos .... l!ufblo.
"Rad&gt;er~lltelllodt~

rioa:le•lhapedb)' wbilcs, - - · ..

ajar~6omUB.

roc:u.a

-we ..,
-ICholady
~ "" wcrlc: 11111
~
l!ufblomd lite ............cliqioo.
TbeCraasbowiU8'1~

•.,.,.lble

llteciry, wbidlwill allow U8 Ill play
in buikliD&amp; America in
llte2laCIOIIIIJI)'."
0

Thl~ila~ocwmu*t......,.~tl¥ . . 0hWonol~tnd~S....~ri,....YOf\.•....., &amp;a.wca.n~oc:-.ln1315C:..HII,........._(711)..._.
~OF"WUCAllONS ._,.L-.,EDI'l'ta --. ~TEB:WTOit ,...--., MTOIIIIECTCJk --..-., ~NtJ~ --- ~ ........... -

.-

�Computerized systems to improve services, Karrer says
IIAIIII WAU.Aea
Slatf
OOOfTONE~DARS,
ond Sc:becWeH,~I)'»­
-~IObdpUB~

illldeosondfaadty. a-iD bop opc:r-

oqOII&lt;Iflbe-IIMail,....., 11)111

1

kila~Clim:r,.....,... '*"'pesi&lt;kdml&lt;lin:clllr

t:l lillldoal m.o.:... .... ~ ,.... O)Rmo
•ill bdp UB ~ ils .....m b 11D11:ti
~ IIDII:ti ,.,..,.._ llld da.&lt;aoom
. ondwillcmbletbellB&gt;IIIff~
in 1bo8e ........ fully .tms IIIUdoal ....
,...,. t-'s. Kaner III)S.
Touch Tone ~gisttatlon. in .,1tlcb liltldmls can rqister by pbcoe for clasoa&amp;om
anyw~ In the world, is """"""'l&lt;d ID be
fuUy~ by spring 199S, says Susan

Eck.

rqisllllr. Butbeginnln&amp;lnspriqg
1994,." .. ~ &lt;q:istrltion toyS~ UB begin hs ~is&lt;ration 11.1 a
more~ame,

Eck ..ys.
Sl!adcms will be fii'SI negistm:d in midAJ;ri~ Eck oayo, aoc! then have • period al
rougbly 2-1/2 -=b 10 malcl: dban&amp;es in lbelir
sdl&lt;duJc:s. This will g!velhcm pl&lt;ayaltime 10
IXliiSUit with odvislxs 00 bow . _ 10 go alx¥
gerting the CXlllllleli lhey....,.., she oays.
"SStdents wbo have a cbcck.lllq&gt; thai """""'
lbe.ir~ fromJIOinlduougb will ha""
a diana: to deor i1, • Scik says. "Studmts wbo
try 10 regis&lt;er for major..onJy c1ass1:s bec:ousc
dlty tbiJik !hey t.ve "-' 1ICXll!flltd as a major
but then fmd &lt;lUI that they haven '1 " - ' accepted, .fur wbaltYer """""" IIIII tbenfore
ba""not"-'gl"""tbeCXllllllelitbey~

for, will also ba"" 1 ciJaoce to dear up lbeir
pOOicms. And lie&amp;bmen, wbo sometimes g&lt;t
ooly one or even noclass!:s an initial~
lim,will ba""limel0spe:akwithibeiradvl9ct:s
about wilal &lt;1011185 Ole aVIlilllbk."
~ newregi:stral:ions)'SICDisbouldbavca

I

major impact on Drop( Add lines, Eck
.ayo, and "llludcnts wiD go borne for the
semester with. muc:h saner idea of !heir nut
semester's scbedule."
This computerized re~ system
will be in effect only foraboottwosc:mes~CrS
before Tooch Tooe Registration becotnrs
avoilable, Eckuys. Blsically, in Touch Tooe
Regismtion, audmts will get an appoint-

mat durin&amp; 1 period of sew:ral
10
5Ubmit tbeit rq,iltratlao f~ by pbooe.
Scik Ays. They will be aiJk 10 re5Ubmil d.farms by pbOile MIIIIJ lime after lbat ialtlal
poriod.. Bul. libe addo. f....:t decisioos aboot
the -y Toucb Tooe R~gi.llnUoa will be
....,., II UB ba"" ·oot beiOII mode.
"Toudl Toae lleJI&amp;tratioo Jl•es U'B the
tle 'billty to handle registnl!ion &amp;117 """Y
!hey wam, • lid uys •we' re pn:pomd to
work out Touch Tooe Rqislration in 1 vari·
ety of...,.,., all of which ..., lopic:s for opm
disous&lt;.ion 11111&lt;1118 the UB comm ty.•
A lest ofTouch T ooe •Regiooatioo with 1
llmilednu.mber of studenls will beCXlllducttd
in D«lcmber 1994, Eck say . "Wutillbaw:
to wad 0011 &amp;aipc for Touch Tooe Rqisua-

....tdch k will!'- -'Yte1i&gt;de~ma~Dt .....

~the . . . . . .:. ...... ~the

...

uolontaill neod&amp;IOmt~e~,.

Goodman ys. 'l'lbe requ\n:lnellb o( ibo
llludo:•l's major,geaenl edtatian n&gt;quft.
ftlf!lll&amp;.llld tnn5ferllRidl will .tl be CGillridorod by
be soys
"Swdi:ds &lt;lMIIIik llARS--- ''llboil if'

nAR.S.

~•

Goodmon ayo, "1Mb

IS

•..m.

~dolt.veiO-irl""""*IObe

c-

OARS (Dei'"" Audit Reconlin&amp; System)
will"""'bleSiuderusto .-ive teclmial ad·
vioemeot about tbe coun:e ""!Uin:mena of
UB and of specific departmmts and progrm&gt;S, says ieolas Goodman, interim vice
prov061 f&lt;r undergndwne education_Some
aspects of OARS should be usablt by faD
1994, Goodman ..,.. with the system fully
in place by 1995.
OARS will occ:ess the Student lnforma·
tioo Sysaem (SJS) 10 gt:ta audeot transl:ripl

--·--far . . . . " '
..,...

eaobltlll&lt;...a..-~-«

proe-.
.. - l l l d r
dfono_........_,......._,_
al

--bolla

pidllr;&lt;e ndltr . . . jultk
of
-requinmaa.
Ill Coet, Clooclllla oays IIIII OARS ill iJast

"""'*

IIII'.IJ&amp;bsb Olljor, or on~ lniiJOI'!-

aneplltalo...........,._of
.ltDdml.!....._JII!CIOC.a•UB.

I

...U." lot aoys. "But ClDClt the- .ad bolls

norderto wodproperly,bowew:r.DARS
will have to bow wbtn die , . _ nequlremmls """ wl»cb ..
• ted Ill •
S)'ltelll of 00 DWIY prop:tl5 ad requift-IIIO!III$,Goodmanll&amp;ys. von-~

"The new registration system should have a major
impact on Drop/Add lines. Students will go home for
·the semester with a much saner idea oftheir next
semester 's schedule. ..
tioo lbat tells Ollldeats bow 10 proceed in a
sttaightforward IDI.ODClr that 'o oot 100 timeooosumin&amp;.• i;lle A)'S.
Jolm Karrer says that Touch Tooe Registratioo obould do away with Drop(Add lines
~ , and will greotly belp alldcols wbo
live M. a disl.once from UB and may ba•-e
troubk get1lng to campus in ttrne to bandle
scl&gt;ecluliDg difficulties.
IDARS
Aadlt •a -4
·,
--., - - -_

.......

Clo&lt;otbt••yo,OIOiioclllllll&lt;alldp..__

--

will hav~ 10 keqJ OARS up 10'dak on chan&amp;·

in&amp; nequUemeall., be Ayo.

"Tbe dlffoc:.dty • that dcportmc:oto 0011·
trOI tbeir OWD programs and cwricldiDII."
Gooclmm ys "1 ape that they ougb! to,
but nevatbeleso, ... will .need liCme eemral

morrilllrin&amp; of requimno:nu so that ...., can
1mc&gt;-A' when they cbaqge." Goodrnau says
that . morritoring will be dooo: through tbe
DI.WOU. of Uadergradual&lt;: Aeadomic S&lt;:r.
via:s Currio:ulum ComJnitu,e.
There '•still• problem with tronsf.. crediiSandDARS,GooclmmAys,.bo:cu9c:lllmsfer ret:IUllo IR 001 currenlly evalt.bk iD a

woylbatOA

-

. ButtbeSPEEDE
sy em may uninate this problem by hdping various univc:n;ities seodtbeirtrmsc:ripU
electrcnically. be ..,., and l1B aJmody reoeiveo some transaipu through SPEEDE.
"Within o 5bon time, the SPEEDE proztam
obould be widely accepled and funclicxling..
Goodrnau says, "but for now ...., still lurve a
_ , _ data c:rury problem..

-we-

told f.aadly-..t....dia ~ .mld:l
UDder lbe.,....,. . , _ wouldu'l

~

..., ......U..Sa-x.JJ • factoh}&lt;:olll
•
10 odvioe IIJideon ia I ¥1111&lt;:1 of WI)'S.
.... I
OARS,.
...,.

............,....lOr.............,._....
.....t&amp;,
rfa
dccm'l •il**
OARS is tip. a: wiJailotre-llplCiiE~

ll&gt;lbr

ptqplm

.

llllla •. _ o r

aaqos?" Goodtnm ... ""Doe fino!

_ , lies wilb ~ 01111 ...,. as 1D
........ lilldeut ... md~llul
ftiiXIrd li!qq will

.....,.. ...... boc:lur
DARS'*'llke.,....N bordla"

The Sc:h:dol&lt; 2S &lt;Xllllplla .,.....
·~yasstgnSperuc:ula-OCJIDI$liOI*'·
bculor~oays&amp;.-&amp;:k. 111ioebmi-

-about 1M:~ al t!-...1

"""'* .....

IIClCiwoc oboul tbe

........ur. OlbeJ
prooeso of IS1!iiJIUIII c

will be

dJao&amp;cd,libe~lhllaD~
~ locaooos, doys .... tina,
mom COfJlli, .ad mom....,.
be booored by
ibe p!'(&gt;pUl. A limited- al Sdoodule 2S '

......n.

be

for lijll'in&amp; 1994, 'l!d. .,.. with k
yilaploeeinfaD 1994.
Kaner,.,. bl "Ft:llr . . Sdlo:ltit 2S ....
ND

sr-

-.,.ct.aoamo~~

_.. .....,.,._.

S&lt;~Je~Wen- --

llllllianc:tlic:ia:llly. ill&amp;_,.. . ~..._
u.,............,...~, ....,....,.

grm~'*'!iqtyben&gt;tua. BotbSdlooUeZSMII
T&lt;adl Tone ~-"'*''cltol:lllclby a

OOIIIIIIilloi:IJIPllit1laclwa-...r...nlbrl'f"5idont .... ....,. Woe pesi&lt;kd....

. . . -s

ta::boical.......,....... ._. a;·tca.ooys. "&amp;...
paticy clocioio;m oo 1110 or aptbililils al ct.....
~..,. ...,. by
&lt;XIIIIIIIDes..

SUNY encouraging self-assessment programs, Metzger tells FSEC

.,._.WAUACE
Reporter StaH

I

n k:.,.p!Qg with · .nationwide eoo&lt;:em for
liiCCOO!ltlbilily in higber education. the
tlnlnr!ity at Buffalo and 01ber SUNY
campuses ari being encouraged by
SUNY Provost Joseph Burke ID ~ a
variety ofself-asses5IIICII1 ~ Michael
~ger, cbair of the Faculty Senll.lc committeeon educatiooal programs andpolicies.
told !be Fomtlty Senate Eucutive Committl!e

last

tion. The issue is ~ and the EPPC
plans to work olooely ·with Goodmen on !his.·
NkolasGoodmon oaidtlw the issue "'bas to
do w i t h - A ,lol of what isdooe with
..........,...~r·mlde:nlbusia5liclibooa.

"Pn:Mlsl Burke wants ........,..,.. in four
areas,"Ooodmlllsoid..Alleasl in tams altbe
"""' of paliciency SlliDIIonk for !l:ills, there
sbould be a woy ol SO)'in&amp; what we waul
SlUdeofs to know, llld for d&lt;temtining Maher
they la&gt;aw it..

ing """"""" !bey do DDI
...U ld ba..,
.,.._rUB's mquiJed ~ .,.,..__

Learning Ccmler. Tbe study showed that in
lemlliofl1lll.lbemal:ictheULCcl&lt;:arlybelpod
students, Goodman said, but in writing, die
widely varyin&amp; ftiQUiremeots of EngliSb !OJ
couroes made measuritl&amp; the \JLC'o effectiveoessmuc:hmoredifficuiL "ButihTiting
is amdeled a
obould there ~ Ibis
variaooe iJI such Ci0111:5&lt;S?" Goodrnau aid.
Maum:n JIID1C:Iillll t:l Modem 1.anguqes

Go:DnatGllil!..,. lbe . ·· ' )JoOblem OCD1I!aCd wilboel.tt~alptt&amp;iea;y ill

mu.

~k.

Burlu: is eocow:aging assessmc:ot in the
areas ofotudent devd opmeot, ~gqual­
ity in~ education """""'"' effectiveness of ~te major progtiiDS. and
proftcieocy SI.I.Ddards forskills vital tobigber
education,~.. reponed.
Mel;zp tqllllted lbal., in n::opoiLOe •10 dltse
c:axans, ioolas Goodman, inl&lt;rim .oce !""'
YOI!I for ~educll.lion, plans to develop ·aiu:rio for tllllhemaics, writing. and
fureigolaoguageslcillotbalaredofinedinfuoc..
tioaal tams and moasunod by bow well SIU-

dt:ntsperformoolllllianallyoormediiCSIS,ntber
lblllt mquiring • specific"""""' sequence.
Tbe fordgn lanpge skills mquiteroeot
approved by die facUlty Senate for next fall
will opente in oucb • .,..,..., Meb:g&lt;r ""
·parted,allhougb funcliooal iioons must sliD be
~ by indiYiduallqua&amp;e progroms.
But writing and malbemllics skills are c:urrmtly defiDed in tcnnSal"""""' reqWremmts,
besaid "We.,.,tryingiO~foragiven
body t:f Ja&gt;awl&lt;dge, wbll.l shall coun1 as a
=tain degree of elficieDcy; Metzger said
"Esbblisltin8 such 5llllldards is • =eel ques-

"At least in tenns ofthe area ofproficiency standards
for skills, there should be a way ofsaying what we
want students to know, andfor determining whether
they know it. "
ID tmns althe new foreign llnguoge skills
requin:mell1, Goodmen said IIIII wbal counts
IS linguistic OCXIlpdmCe ' sbould be deor."In
tams of llllllbematicsn:quiraoeals, Goodman
said thai il sbould - be 100 difficult 10 """"
... wilal llOUDI:S . . siriUs. But in die ..... of
writing !~&gt;ere ore serious problems, be said
"There .,.., cooceptual difficulties with
bow we measure writing. • be Slid. " Is writin&amp; a skill, or not? If il is 1 sldl.l, can't we
meas= profroiency in il? If il's DOl a sk.ill,
wily do we require it?"
As an example of the difficulties lbat
l1le8SI.IJ'ing writing could cause, Goodman

...m.

pointed to the results of an ltlempiiD deter·
effeeti~.,.... of the Unlven:ily

miDe the

--

lbe '~"He ....,., lO ~tbe

EPPCiibouldloaltD:Jtbe....._ mp..._..
118, or 'Oiibedx:r omtbl:r CXIIIIIIIilloe
Vic Ooynoal&amp;clNl ' dul Cbe ~
lcm al...nting" i5
• CCIII5isls of"!!o _ , .
&lt;lifli:n:.- . "illo::luilitllootja!ll . udopellir.la ldabo top:.oqumr:ulllicm.and
IDitl)' OCI.tt ospe&lt;liS.
t.ta:z.,. ...,..ad 1ba t&gt;e EPPC Olplll t&gt;e
f'SOC~Goocla.l's po::p:allbll.l(~.

. . . An:aGmml~~ . in.
lbel*kOUldbe tqkj:dy by ~lioally.
&lt;Xllllilil1fllbftbe. . . .\..Yja1-!imeflolllyllld
T.As.fdo~z~Fpododo.t·dtot ~"""
GcaalS:Iuatlim CCIIIII!IeSIIIIIJ!ytdy•UIIdt:r-

"*'-..

'*'* · pmr..icnl~-:b

.. .....,.,...llld~~­

and Lilmllures asked wbot flexibility die t!D-

~io-pattiatbeUOC's .................
cuaicuUa iat&gt;eklsd,Scir:aas.
Wil&amp;IOit.filbalDaJIII Metli::inewca:!Md

dergraduate College would ba"" for dofinio&amp;
"imermediate proliciency" in • foreign Jon..
guage. siDoe it tokes loltger 10 acbieve prolicimcy in snme ~ Could doliniD&amp;
"iDDrnoodiae pofi&lt;*D:y"in lmDSal-~­

..o..ct cp:siono ........ "'be Qllli!y t:l
ioslnxUm" a UB. Aad Yo: DoyDo .a..!
Goocla.l...ta be m.w alull bow
IIDII:ti ~..., lllinodond...,.nilod.

~ "*'Yforsnme~me
asked, and would that not tum the llnguoge
~b.:!&lt; in10 a course n:quiremeltL

Carol Zemd alAn History said, , • .., bad
to deal withSllldeofs •ilo have pMI!I&lt;d Eoglisb.
101 but can't ]ll.ti!Cdella:S ll:lgelh&lt;r." Sbestid
lhat UB bad die "'aerious problem" al bow to
odYiseSllldeofs wbot-'morebelp'Witb'Wiil-

~.Qner.:ullyllldTA~
COIII!II$

.u-

~~ltmw1ba

llllldlabcoll&amp;,ldlbabe.......Sdtot .....
tlailq IDlY be~ ia ~ ~
-."Hclllid ........ .u- ~~~~~~~toat.
libouldcxxDtueiDI!eocb:yci'lbe ~

lt:ll:tD,altabe_.

IDdo:a' -Jrjl.

"J&lt;bl'td!kllc,illtbe~l'llll,il's,.,.,.tbURID

trylOballeibt:aetillp~.- ... -

0

�_, ____.
GOVDlttMEINT
~lrompegel

Saelll:e. BdoK:IUcm, Law, Atdlbocbn aDd
l'llmllii&gt;&amp;.M_,- aDd Sodal Work.
....,n.t EdwiD . J~Caalerfor
and t.oc.l ~Low
At 1be I)11IPClC
sioa and~ wm lhdy, •
officiols from oround Ne-w y ort
.
U,.,ir c:oocalll Olll varldy cl topic&amp;. YJIIPI&gt;'
um
lacludrd a local~

~ODd

~.and

job

ao--

... .._ .......

Oll~etb-

,.,.,,~

qemm&amp;. and dcaliDa .
Fnotul Porduna.~~ate

u,., ....tiL

ymanfor

u,., 1460 Outrit'l lDd chair cl

local

&amp;&lt;&gt;"..,_
live con..WIIio11,
lbt fcotured
at d&gt;e lunc:beOII.
In
mnorb, PorduiiiiOid lhe pb&lt;rc:d
·emmca1 offlaals ")'ou're out m lhe
lmld&gt;cs every cloy. A$ a....,
)'1Dlll.
rm .,...,. from m bomt ...,.,., dJR&gt;e 10 four
do}'$ cl e-'U}
But if
p&gt;eS
•TOI1&amp; m your cammunltlelio, people know
bow to fmd you Penlum uJd thai vmunent a1 lbt -..r
and oauonal le•·d has .,..... been w. '"
develop~ owl lhrou
means
• rev ·
~ proJOCU that can htlp local
munm~&gt;
lhe11 tax burdm ·we in
Alban), aad d&gt;e federal~. have to
do • brUct job.- ht uJd
He oak! thaJ reltd JD&amp;JJdalcs at the llaU:
lc-el ba-. ofim come the~ cllocal

,.,th

""'---

--.I tk __.,. cl

""""""' '

local
Ue ........ t6111twodt011m...... ~~
~ (llb\a) . . . ~ cl pvlala
local .,_........Ollk-llaal affect 1bem
•you have 10 be portlua 10 Jd eleclled,•

-to

Porclumaicl..,....,. )'Oil do. ...... ,.,.
10 ~ ~· We

llloukl uy

~10
bve ill.-

Mcl(eowa- tballhe

10

our ,pikll project aad f......-..1 a
top
Akllcl
JivaiOIII,llld- . bedooD&amp;• _,.cl
follow-epo. Thlo iojultlhoe~cl
vand)' cl experUie that - - ..... 10
"""' in. boch from - .,..,. School cl
q . - ...J from OUIOido 'UB •
I
·wureJIIOUdto
MeK...- lilld
penicipara in b&lt;f opeaiq ........... "It .a.n ..
•M · 11 a very illlptWUIII •-a, to
become a more oro ve
your public
se:rv&gt;ee Publ ...,.vv;:e a &lt;:aJU'llto our
""" as a SUNY CIIJ1\PIIl, aod IiiianA&amp; or
matloo aad e~&amp; idea art central
our mls5ioa IS o lllliWftll)'

-w

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ua:

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tbr

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""""th&lt;:m
with aad for you ... op&lt;cial and
pWJCaJJI
cl
jobport

our

DiSanto is executive director
of major donor development
o.le A. Dllaato ba beeD oa.mod 10 !hoe ..,. JQit1oD or nca.Jiive diftiCtOl c1

.,... _ _ ,

MBAs help defe contractors
convert to consmner mar

.us.-.ooCioorJI

-UB-oriot

preoideru for developmatL
DtSIDio ..ru be lt!lpCI!Wiible for l:q aspeco cl the IIIIi..,..;
~ Nadraislq ....,.,...
011 the de5Jp1Dd implem&lt;laatloocl• ~ popamof majorcifts at1tMttica.
ooUcitatioo aDd ~p. He ....u work ~y with
sealor 'II'OIIIIIIeea IDIIIDtSIIben cl the tmivenity . . _ .
nity to ....we private supporl for UB'a oademlc IDll
leiCIIldl propms.
DtSaalo joiriS U8 from The ObloSWt Uni....:sity, wba:e
be
aenoed • diftiCtOl cl CllXJIOI:II.I' aad foom&lt;J.IiOII
relations. Durin&amp; . 1e&lt;1Jn. '!be Oblo $we Uni
complt.ted lbe eec:oad larp8l c:ampelp eoer ClOIICiatwl by
• mtjor pqbllc .-ell Ufti....:sity' niliD&amp;....,.., 1tu $460
miUioa iD elf~~ aDd pledaea, morelhaa half fmat c:orpom-

r......ma

...-.lllll)'

..s AniD

lUI~

llill, Samuel P. Capen po-

r - c l ......... al
~Jbe­

daao..
Tht stJodesiD. wort to
dolt:nDIDe tf Jltoes&lt; clef....
J&lt;dJololop:a could hove
~

apphcaliOGI
... JMde poaibk by •
~ to the U8 Sdlool cl
Mana,..,eru from tile

.,.......__H.
. . . . . .J .,....-ot llt
SMml T1 I 111-r

w.....,. '

Yort Toc:bDoloc l&gt;e¥elop-Center, blc. Tht JDiliiiO")' Cllllt from Jbe
sn-p: ~Group S&lt;:Mc:e Propam.
1
r procrlll1 clesiped 10 iD&lt;:reut clcvdcpm&lt;IIIIDII..,__ia~~

manufactunD&amp; .,.,.._;,..
'!be c:ad cl
"Cood War" bao led 10 OilS
lol the [eden! de{.,_ lJu4&amp;&lt;t IDll I cl
....ufac:~UrJD&amp;,

t&lt;dtaical. -aerial _,

cloe:riOOjobaatdeft.~~~~e~oaidlaia.
y.... m&amp;n)' cl· lheoe
batt

.,..._;eo ...,.

leCI!nolopl that c:oUI beodoipled to • W&amp;u
marlztplace lhaa thai JWOVidcd by the Deportmml cl Oef..... be DOit:d.
for eumple, afler Wodd War 0. ayiOII
bec:ame more pro6labk f« Dupoal Wbs II
,... used 10 make paryt..e for Jbe COD·
....,.. mad;;e1 lhaa Wbs it ...... .-~ r,.
de(..,.. purpooes. Jaia addocL
But ado.JIWIC thae teciJDolopel to 1
brooder, """"' c:oRiliiM:iaJ matl&lt;el "wiil ,.,.

cliff..--.....

quire. totally
ciU1iDIJm&amp;.IDll
tbat'o ~ - come ia.- a.. &amp;aid.
lbelllldoals -~ 10 "tteacatl"Ve" ODd offer
011 bow lbeir
compmty"• u:clmoloc7 'Jbl be COIIIIDOr·
ciali.u:d. They .....s..cs.d IDIId&lt;d .-ell 10
clef- lbe domiiDd for Jbe JliOP&lt;*ICI procillc:l.
beled Oil tbr ..,me need&amp; cl Jbe CIOIDpay
tJDd lbe type cl iaduouy wbere lbe prodotct
mi be applied.
'!be ..... ' • - atdJea, Jairo DOled,
I\IIIDin&amp; the
from wirdes ......._,;..

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"T&lt;dJDolocy .
Ollly il it c:aJl
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110 ~ .aed by lbe ~ ell).
ocbcr .-c~o c:a be llllliafi&lt;d ~

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. t.ldoaclocr71
dial if. .
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dca't aeore . _ typoa cl job&amp;, I doa't 11&lt;

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bow-cc~..-.....wdcl li

IDllreve8De boae. 1'11111'• . . reobJy

......n.s do wba...., do . . . . . ~
coot.. We hloe 10 swirda ro joba dlorl au:
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ClndyJalD&lt;iiJUI
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eaable .. 10 p.payiaa job&amp;
lead 10. biP-- bile,. be added

B I I T \I .0 •:• \\ \ 1.1' l 0 l B
A....,...e.u I 18

..

to~We.-'l~WIIbtl&lt;

low-wace. low.uc:b joba offered b)' Chm

or 689-9269

C Technologies
(716) 838-Z745
8315 Englewood A....,., Tooon at r--.
FAX 13H1115
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____ ..

Faculty members take part in innovative lecture series
lr

nt.l ll!l-.llliiDI

....,., GenW ~. . . . pro(
o{ c:c...i-

RepcNr Slafl

ERONTOLOOISTS bavc
obown !bat laldlectual .
lalioD
rho u ol rho

catioM.

Dut&amp;t

eldr:rly. - aa;rsOearJo
Yilll """
I.-me,

..SM)IIeo

c-ap. .. ~ Leviooe..W.

"We-..,w.on.• ~te..w. llddiiq ct.
for

-.1' 1

lOa
~.,._.,.~UB..S

rho na1ioD '1 -.at 01:111o1:n for the
· and care ol rho eldorty, pr&lt;IYides
many diffen:nt levels of euppan ~
uadeo- one rnof--from iDd&lt;:pendear.IJ • to
full-tiroe care. The complex, wbk:b """""'
360,000 oquare feet 011 more than 70 aaes,
mainlaina a DOD«Ctarian tiiii'Silll borne, lD
adult home .. well u apatmeDIS.
Menorah Carnpu5
a philooopby to
provide tD&lt;:Dtal aod ph)Wcal ltlmulatiaa.
aod a......, of oommunity for lbe residmu,
said Judith K.att, rho facility 's vi« pra;idml
for axmnunity relationL As pan ol Ibis
pbilaoophy. tbe campus r.-.. inlcnaiau
berween reoiclmts aod lbe greater Buffalo
runity· Kattaid.

Zobar; R.ik Whitaka, Buffalo Swe Colle!"
profeaor of journalism and broodcatinc,

Ea&lt;hofrhothreekeynole~ wbicb

will be beld from 2-3 p.m. in lbe K.iva in
Baldy Rail, will be paired with conespooding workshops.
1be lint 1ceyoo1e. "Varidy ill rho Arab
Wcdd: Wbo are The Arabs,• will be preoenled by M'ld&gt;ael Bar-Zobar, prof..,;or of
political science at Haifa Universily ODd a
former roember of l.snel's partiamm1, rho

Kncsset.
Conesponding workshops will be beld
10 build trust, rho portrayal of Arabs
ODd J...-. in tbe media, and tbe receru pea&lt;:e
agn:emeol. They will be cooducted by Bar-

Oil bow

11oe leotlft ~
ulty fi:om I wide flDII' of
to talk
Oil maD)' difi'CftiiiiOibjeca.. ao.icl Levine.
"'111ii kind of llimullllon &lt;Xmlnbule&amp; lo
tbe ·p owtb of rho mind ~ m tbe Later
,_.,• x..x Aid. w· tbe bdp of Levior.
Km uld, sbe haa ftlCldved more tha 70
plllitM ..,.,.._ Cmm UB faculty who
...... ageed lo lec:lwe clurinc rho year

.

.

.., an bistcry, pubbc cpiaion ""

tbe am... aclministtoliaD
of rho
s
Era, and Clllrure of tbe ElizabetbaD
Period already bawe bea1 prc:ICJlllld to
MCDOI'lh Campus residents by Manila
Dunkelman,
pro(....,. o{ An His-

-oo..e

- · - ' o f·Aivin 8. 1-fen-inc.IISSiswlt duecult of rho
National Coo.btioa Buildin&amp; lu5titute in
WosllbJ&amp;ton, D C., will JIR'i&lt;lll rho keynok
011 African Americans ODd Jews, cntitJed
"Pasonal Relalioo:lsbip&amp;: African Americans
ODd Jews.•
orbbops wtllbe ~by Herring
Oil "The An of eo.JilJOII Buildin&amp;;.
by Norman Solkoff, UB professor of P'Y·
cboloc-. Oil "Race ~
by BuffaloGiyCouncilmanlame&amp;PitlsandGerald
Golclbaber, UB as&amp;oeiate prof.-. of communicati&lt;llls, oa "Pooiticaa Power ODd Flow
To Use It Effectively.•
The thin! keynote Oil inurlaith relatiooshipi, entitled "Love, Sea aod Tndition,"
will be prelll2ll&lt;d by l!&amp;dlor Pa-el, a New York
City author, lecturer aod Jl6Yc:botherapist.
~I also will pn:smt a wortsbop oa
coping ,..;th guilt aod Wnily pressmes. Local P'Ycholocist Sbepord Goldberg will lead
a seosion Oil "lnterfailb Conflict Oil Carnpu5
aod in tbe Wotkplac:e." A oession on "Oat·
ing/Marriaae: lnlerfaitb Couples Cootemplatiaa Marriage,. will be cooducted by

W

a-.. """

DaW! Gc::rm, eJLDCUtivc diroaor. aod Tern
Julian. a saaff IDCIIJb8. o{ JewidJ Family
&amp;.vioea.- loold.. &amp;-.•

FoiJowin&amp; rho procnun. •

UB-.

X:~ clinnu
ld from 5:30-6:30 p.m . iJl
in rho UB S&lt;udmt Uniaa.
Rqistrarion fees for rho c:oafermce on:
$2 for 8ludcms and $6 for rho public. The
COOl of rho dinner is $3 for stu&lt;1ca1s ODd $6 for
rho public.
The confen:nce will be lbt higbli&amp;bl of a
~ Shabbaton, ..,.,ch will nm l'nlm 3B:lOp.m.onFriday, Feb. IJ ,IIIdl'nlm9a.m.
to 6:30p.m on Saturday, Feb. 12, at Hillel
Flouoe, 40 Capen Blwl., Buffalo, adjactm to
lht UB South CaJnpus.
Additiooal C&lt;&gt;-$pCliSCIGof rho c:oafermce
are tbe Bureau of Jewisb EducatiClll; eon,..,.
&amp;atioa Havurab; Flillel Foundatioa.; Je1rislt
Community CZntr:r; JewidJPamily Services;
lewiSII Fed&lt;:nti011 of Buffalo, ODd Ttmples
Beth Am, BethEl, Sltaarey Zeciek, Sinai and
Beth Zion. Also, rho UB aod Buffalo State
Colle!" Jewish Studeat Unions, l.snel liDdeDI organi.zatiom aodA RJ, I Jewish SIDdall

will be

newspapot.
Also providing IOISislance are tbe Black

Student Uaion aod Paleslinian Student AJ&gt;.
aociatioa at UB
0

'Vutual chemical plant' will help train engineers
tu t""J bein&amp;
liB""*"".
ms;p

11J IUD _ _ . .
News Btxeau Staff

"VIRTUAL chcmlcaJ plmt" camplelewilh leaksllldequipmoot failures is being deYdoped at tTd to
instill in chcmlcaJ ~ un~ Sl1ldenls the iD!uili"" "fed" for
cbemicalplmt~tbalusuallydevelops

0D1y a&amp;:r yeatS o{ OIHht&gt;-job c:q&gt;orience.
Computer simulations will provide stuclenls with experieax:e in dealing safely with
complex cbemkal processes in real time.
•you an try to loam aboul ridin&amp; allicyde

by doing foroe and lOI&lt;JU" ballnces, aod tbat
~ you • good lbeon:bcal feel, but tbe ~y
way 10 team to ride is ID just do it," said David
KDtke, assislaot pro(....,.. d chemical enP.-in&amp; at UB and dDec:ulr of the new lab.
Jasimitarwo;rs.be lllid.a-toom lcclurea

0011

• "ftdprocaJ rdalliaaollip.. l.eYttot
Tile
a .... . . . , o{ . . . _

Interfaith issues focus of WasSerman Conference

Project to lntt:rmarricds.

..__....s.

doc......, ............ ,.... ..

~h

HREB MINHJONPI!P.ENCI!S &lt;16-

doc.---,. mllo.e •

-·'lllla.,...._
M--*C:ampoa,

si.gl&gt;ed 10 eumlDe iuter&amp;ith relatiooshlps and the relatioDShlps
between Jews ODd Arabs ODd Jews
""" African Americans will be te.tured in
the eigbth annual Arthur and LouiliC
WaSlli&lt;mWI COilfen:nce. 10 be beld l'nlm
1:30-S:JO p.m. 011 Sunday, Feb. 13, at UB.
n.. .-. spooscnd by Hillel of Buffalo,
will be beld in Baldy ODd Knox lUlls.
~ are rho American Jewish
Committee ODd rho Community Outreach

.....

UB..S~

Tbe-.dalb

1he ~nts represent a

-

..

:scr.- ,.,.,.._

f-o{

bee&amp; 111-oived Ill an iDDovati... procnun.
Menorah UDIYUSity,lbat brhlp 1eaur&lt;s by
UB fKulty 10 a oew Amhersl ClCXIIpie1~~~m~­
ill&amp; the elderly.
Tbe leclure taies repreoeiiiS an cumplt
ol rho maD)' c:ommWiity ll:n'i&lt;:e ollerinp

provided by UB focuhy, saaff ODd swdmls.
n.. propam - cle¥dopecl by David
Du1ll&lt;e.lman. JlC'C'Sidenl ol Meoonh Campus,
wbiocb O(lCIICd Ibis past SUIIIIIICr.
Tbeflocility islocaud bcbind U8011 North
Fcnst Rood ovaioolcin&amp; Elli&lt;lott Creek. n..
new $46 miiiJ011 complex, billed as one of

I ,

..S '
roe h cl&gt;
, BUbua
_ _ ,...._ol

~illrhoUBED&amp;Jillll~. lt
11117 e\'UI leqlhee daeir u-. l..eYiDe - .

mosaic ofcuiJun!
Jmki they have a "wealth
ofexperience n that "we .
can learn from. "

I

-o{

anaJyticaJ and data..aquisilion skills,
doa't belp them cleYdop the
into bow
chemical-manttfa:lurin&amp; ~ wodr. tbat
an be obainod mly in the field.
The a...rucaJ Engineering Simulatioa
Laboratory (CESL), 011 the otber band, will
simulate plant processes typically mcounten&gt;d 011 rho job, complete with rea.listic
disturbances. S1ttiJta II a graphics Wllrbta-

doaeindass,.bul the

the&lt;Dy

oaedesipdto~bolb.-......and
labtnlcly ~..-.-lbeamicullm.
"Simuloaonisbec:aringaibW~·

K&lt;6e lllid, adlio&amp; btl ttaditianal lab expaiIDIIS.., limilod by Clllll, lime, llplDO and Aky
CXlDillSm. "We can't do lab c:a:pDnc:als with

lliiCOIIInlllod cltb:ine loab, boca&amp; btl ......ld
bedongaoos;be..;d. "W'llhsimulllic», we can

tion,studr:DGintbechcmlcal~=-

prao:r~~tbat.,...;otoJlUIIonlsanduoeittoinotill

riculum will be required lD make docisioas in
real time aboul plant ~ they would
nonnally- eo&lt;:ou111&lt;t UD1i1 a&amp;:r pdull:ian.
R=!ntly funded under the NatioDal Scieoi:e Fot.aJdmln •• Lt:adersbip in laboratory
Dc:Ydopneol JlRI£ImD, the CESL pojoct is
expected 10 be lllllllin&amp; by &amp;pring.
A bDII'ul ol ~ dwole
~ltM'-&gt;dewtopod•~

inlbrmm•o•Jr&gt; ... itcola.,....,_chanical
pllOOIIIIinc pinciple,.
Aloa&amp; with Kofke,lbe new software pn&gt;gramnnd interfaces are beiDa cleveloped by
Thomas W. Weber, profesoo&lt;, Cui R. F.
Lund ODd Mi1:bae1 E. Ryan. assoc:Uteprdessors, ODd Scott L Diamond, T J . MOUIIll:ims
""" Jcbannes M. N'llllebt, assistant ·prn{csaan, aU mtbe UB ~a OoemicaJ
Engineering.
0

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• ......,. .........

tbetllliwnily . . ollopa-*fna .........
. lh&lt;ee poc:ipk, be lllid.
n.. ...,._- ~ lo r..:.Jty ......
.,.__ n.. - lccbore, br s.J .
pror..or in rho~ o{,..,..,.., . . .
Oaace. "" y ·
11oeatre. will be .....-..~ .. Feb 2 1 at II ..................
CampuL For more iaf....m ca IdledcaU Judith JUu. 6)9.3330,
•n 44l
F.adry""'"""""' lllla-.dia~­
in&amp; in tbe lecture seri&lt;:s ba... beea ....., to
caU Judith Klitz 11 rho
......., or
Gear!" Le......ll645- 2.SS5, Dt:p.r.- o{
EoalWl or 1~5352

Wed....,._,

Rand FwuJ.wiU

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a.p.o.4p.a.

T- ... IAnrios,

Btqhomlarl----

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..... lllllldlla llbnrioa. 210
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Sm. UB
Ployoia Dept. 4S4

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THUR5DAY

MONDAY

~

..--(Ill)~

C..plna .. Colalywa ...

II.NAO..•...... B, _ , .

&amp;--.l'roLUB 10 AdaoD Soudo- c:.m. ·

North c_.. 3 0 p.m.

, _ 4 p--

--.a.-..

-~
lll:l;poe- n,...: n..

Gtoos+llutler:T11o •........,

c....., ..Ia"'"....... Dor....,
Ball!wul, UB Boo.

Dr

lop:al Sdeaca Dept. lll
Cootro.. North Campus.. p.lll
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lloy...t Ill&lt; ......... lleytood

lllo c-pct ror ~Aano~oo&amp; :
Wlaal". Nut for if'W Y..-k
S...1 0.... Hqh G P&lt;tne,
UB &lt;Jroduau, Scbool af Ed.oca·
Campus.
boa. 17 S.kly -

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Md~ Pn!{. Huum

U., Visitin&amp; Pn!{, UB Mlnh.....UC. Dept. 103 Dicfcodolf

-~ · p.m

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-Gollsy.
RDe AN
Campus. 5.30-

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7:30 p.m.

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rt 223

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c..ter ror~ -..._

~~.-.

-.w-.-llolrd

,.....

ReciWHall.-~1

,

._. CD....-JitD

~Oraolto­

-~,.,.._

Bob Wallen, u.iv. ol S,..,.
106 ow-lorf. Sood.~

.,....

210 Pone Nanh OuapuL 2-)oJO
p.m.

:-=.:..-~.ii!I.IIA~M~ill

THURSDAY

-se..n,..u~-

- c.r-. J. T. Mullhaupt,

...

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..........,._

-~-60-)S40

Pruair.loc. 206Furoas. -

~.3:45p.m.

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lorT._.._. Nanh~.

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Medical school, RIA establish
new .center for alcohol research

CALENDAR
CCli1II1U!Id 1tOm page 7

HBUBSCHOOI~­

Biamedio:al sa-.llld lbtiJGf·
~ ~ lnl1dl.ule 1111
A4dicllooai(IUA)ba"" receinda
jctinr
. - Pill !'.- dllt

... ~~­

~

wil.....,._

..., fllclml ...,. illllumao alalbclic$ ., -

--~

I

ooddiliaa, d!o:
. -

will
. dewilap 0 •CCIII&gt;p&gt;llll1lllbit: infOIIllldon .,..
akdlol CONtnpion . . . . project
cliJecla William F. WIIIII:Dlldt d die RIA;
.-lltisll • otatiiUcal .....,.. IIDiil mm11 awe dinlcled by ll.- MmbaD, UB
pet- d oociallllld pewative 1IJIIIIici:Do;
... up• bloockpa:imm bankiOIIli'JIM.{Qiure
,_..,., • project lobe dirediod by l're¥ison,.
llld boot • naliaaal ~ 011 akdlol
opiclonsiology 10 be bdd io 8uffoJo .. 1998.
The grant will = * aboul 30 jobs.
D

~

..... 011

-----"""-""'"-

~ tomi 1\pn:c,-

u.cr.-.llallaffalola1992.
V o l . - - prcMd&lt;d

to 426victimslltldtboit f.ami..
tia mDine IUUI '' -Pilllk m
1992._
Tbobo__,ify
tlbattaiD&amp; ...,_
a(
_
......
.

totabtbetimoiOJ&lt;l

u..ot...t. c - tbe " " -

..._.. .. am. s.rnoeo ..

134-3131 for"""" iaformatica

m-.
... ~--·

---

Wome:a :md meat
-Ill
'-11yanaCar.eaadhl..
tbelr""" . . . _ . - .

IIY llAIIW

_ . . CWII'IO .-.JI

v.u.mnw.- rASJIJIII

The iUB wamen·sOub wiD
hole! a 1/llleatiDe Wine Tatint!
011 Friday, Feb. II at7:30 p.m.
ialbeCc::aaecforT~.

Nodh c.q-. 'Kevim llriocoll,
--llll'n:mla-Li·
-&lt;A. ..m caplaia eadt
wine........d&lt;iurit&gt;ld&gt;osit·

dowttoffoir . ~ltao:s

d'ocu.... ...Wbo........d•
we~~.-...-..,

-

tbe Once CopeD Sebol-

Tloe
- - oftbe
American~
a( Utti....;.,.w.,.._ls&lt;ollectin~

"""' boob for tbe
~ - .....ualbool&lt;aak
to be held iD tni0-1991at tbe
Tltruway Mall. "-""&lt;b.

---No-·
bani

C&gt;OY«"""-

b o o b , - ....,m- or

-··~willbooc.­

ceptod. 0...- .........
docu'ble. .oftbe aak
..., . -... hind odlolanbipo.
fc~Jowotibipo"""

_,.

~~~~
its...,availabledlroupout

---Buffalo.

' lboC...UV.a.li CcDt&lt;r, l20
I'll~ l!lllcoa ci:mple..

-c.-. .. otr.,.q

cntt ·warb:bopl
lqinttiaa t1&gt;e ...a. or Mouday,
feb. 7, 1991. WcxbiJopoare
Spine '114

oc:bodulodiD-&gt;io&amp;.lmittitJ&amp;
" " " -..basic
hem ;Pifooozm·
ltitch
&lt;:aft,~
poy,camcnmcaad~

photoplqllty, .B ruiliao emlroidery,llaiDod ..... jewdry

..-ructiootlltldJIOil'"Y. ""' $2()1$30 far..-..lltld
-citlzea; ~ .far
-,.,r~~~~

... - .

far~D~nlDfllllllalica,.--

ole ...Sa

_..,_.,.._64-S-

-na. u. die r- NlAAA

Aklcbol ~tt­
oean::bCenterdedic8ledm otudyina die ' ·
cal and medical epidemi.oloay of akxtbal,.
said Blane. "The new c:eau:r adds

"lle..W.
""'7I*JIIIeCX111-

_...,._~_f:aaaq,

IIIIo
•lbo ~ " " ' akdlol aalldlla
...........
TlleUBIIII:IIdyCWlalcddllillll .....,_.,
wiJ be dte fin110 CDIIIIOI b pollilllle.,....

"Most ofwhat we know
about alcoholism is based

population never enters
an atcohol-treatment
program."

--

10uo!dea,JIIdtanua:iliaaal-aall~
~~ is ·porlic:ulody lm-

IIIIIOidl1c-

10"- 10 ..,....,., be aid, bociule • PI*
deal d aloobolis-""" ill_., bas.
The~bankwillallow

fubue .-.:ben to eqll&lt;n dte role afp-

Ddk: maDzn md iDitividDal "W"'¢ltlmy.
IIIII!-- dte ~ .,.,._,... alcobol

theoe mama.
Oiooe oflbe CCIIIt:r'• pis Is to dewdop.
better '""""""•odin&amp; ol why !ICIIIIe olcddi a l . d - - ·wbile cdless do - . llld

an..,.__ CXJ11SU111111io _.

tan~subswdiveditediaamalcobol~

Joaa

..:aJ-6e--. ... -

on studies ofalcoholics in
treatment, but it has been
&amp;timated .that 75 to 00
perceTfl ofthe alcoholic

........... lbo l'tllllirlllhip

"*

1.434-1 -Sp.m.«~

"''he~· 0
. . . . . . . . ~lll!IMI
~ . bJII:adiiiiMJC~~

Tbe. . . . .~ ........ will
ftiDOODC1III!IIIIdy~,..,.'fiiMIII1

p!lb!ordtoeioi..S .,._..;... modidrJr, trill
bdallllly rl alcdd's
iD l l q - . AI.
RL\, RlmeiiDIAIIIDWJl c::t..

6125-la.m.ond4p.m.

.•

"We

bcl:wtllllllcdd~.-....scoo:&gt;­
_,.~Jo~UB...:iolo

iodloiroftbe~- ..

edited""""-m.-

Ak:obolilm (NIAM) to liall the
llllioe's ·ru. CeaiK for d!o: Cliaical llld
M~ P,pidtmiQ!ocy d Alcdlol.
.Howwnl T. Ba-, alA diRcs«, will dircc:t dle-.w- mdMarda
RlA
lrlllior ._..ICiealilt,.
be ICiallif.ic
dlteclor. M.rurbk1 ~ cbairof,d teUB
Depanmeol at Soda! and l'm'alllve !Mediclne, will direct.._.. c:oodullled al UB.
will &amp;..... •

mltip FuDd. ........ 8 1 - -

alfiP""ric. . .lo~--­
IIIGathltbaa
dlc~-10 CI08dacl
~ 10 dlraU:diioea.e.

in Ibis oounay. These studies will lip!ficantly expand our latowledge d dte lllllUral
bi51ory of ak:dtolism and die rdltlonsbip
bel...._ lkxtbol .... md bealtb.diaarden.
"Mcstofwbol""'l:now'txu•lcritnlism•is
bad lllll5ludiesoi Uoobalics i o - .but
itbasbeencolimatedlhlll7S41190pm:alloflbe
oJcobolic pcpilalion .,._ &lt;I1IO:l5 . . aJt:dd.
be said.
!bon: ••
~ nrrdfac~ lltldies like
will c:a&gt;&lt;iact.Trevian said tbe grant offers a unique
appo&lt;lllllilyforaloobolteSI:IIICbersandclini-

-Jli'OII'&amp;III,·
!be""""-

-no..

wbyiOIDCalcobolics~to...,.,.....witlt-

-

11ea1111eD1. Rusdl uld.
lUA is. , _ _ . ilsitute llffilia1l:d widl
the """" Yon: Slate Olfice or Alcobolism
and Subllaboe Atx.e ServiceL
AdtlilioeallUA ..,.,... irmlMd ill the
new
1. ea..a, tc.:mdll E.
l..ooelnlaall
IL Atm. AMitlaaal UB
sc:ierJibils irmlMd - ""-"do M. Delo!.

--Gennl

ldfrey s. Sdrwlrtt, o.-)11 ~miso
V. ~ 1'CI!)' ~ .ldln E Vcm,
LucyCaqJboll~

lJ

Naughton tells Senate committee about
consortium approach to medical education
lobi! P • ....,..._, UB vice president far clloic:allffain md deaD ol dte OB Scboa1 of
Medicine and Biomedical Scia&gt;cca, restified Jan. 26 befare the U.S. Samo Commltlee &lt;WI
L&amp;barandHumanReoounlesm W~NauaiJiaDiali&amp;doedte~~
topduatemedical educll'ion,ibuppoodleadcnecliaa~~
lq&gt;ort from tbelt.lliona.l Cotmcil 011 ~Vedical~ mddte

an:anaem=~ bylJB'• medicalacbool fa mare
10,..,...10
ll1liD rooideat pbysi&lt;:Wts in
New York.
The Gnoloore Medical Dedal Bcb::olioa. Ccmanium of Buffalo, of wbidl
Naugbtm is chair, is caniX-1 of d!o: dim:t:D ·d die - 1• &lt;:i&amp;bl a.:llioa
bospilals, din!aa:s d ach residcD::y propm, tsicloals, ,l lld.dlecn.. d die
UB Scbool d DaaiModicine.. The CQ111001tium, CICIDiidi:mla model fardle
way boallb-an: illlstitulioas wllllimo::Daa in die £uture. bas aeallJd a uailed
fmllllo provide quality bealdt care wbiJe aJIIiua ams.
~its acoompl.isbments aM:

w.._

• Abighly•regudcd$5millioad&lt;mooslndiaaprojec::tiav01Yia&amp;dle~~

payors and the medical scbool designed to raise die penlCIIIqe of mliclem pbysi&lt;:Wts
elllering primary cce fields to SO perceut by 1994. The project is fimdiDg a Primary Care
lniU.tive that is actively~ m;idoms into primary cce 6e1ds, devdopin&amp; '-*lag
siu:o in tbe community, aeating a primary cce ·leadership ttaiJiin&amp; tniClt wiihia •lbe medical
school,dcsigninaalell&lt;:bing-dfccti._propamfarprimarycarefiiiOIIky,U¥1fimdillgmd
«&lt;CCUUllgilqj l'e!iealdl in primary care fid&amp;.
• A joinlly..finaDced tiM-&lt;lptic "infarmatioo super bigb-y"l.inJdn8 caasartium members, laying die gro&lt;lll(lwcrk far shared patieo1 r:ec:ards, fullmt:lllbc:r acc:e&amp;$1D compul&lt;:lized
leaCitina and diagnostic tools, medical daJabases, and videoCClDSIIIIin&amp;. The pis to link aD
~.~and beaJtb..care l ~ia dte reaian wiibin 10~

l ln"'-aafieldsbetw&lt;:eobmerly~ha!pi!als.
•· ~~aetwol'b
O:mbitted~apeemeu~&amp; .. .
..
... .. . . • ..
.. · - o ..

\

�I I I •
1-

-Beating

I , . , •· .I •

...

~

•

-

Finding

'The
Bends'

CamPUs

E-Miil .

A~
a...t ............ ..
llllll&lt;ingehe

lo ~

comtnonea~~Dn• lnding E ­

tnllil .:ldr-for loallccr' IIOipCii 0ort1a Srcenolingle
80U'Cel lor ~ E~

addr-·~ com-

aeu,

commonly

1cbown - tho ber&gt;do,
ofrldS- people lti!Riban albers have ealiolcd 011lliUISUII allyibt Buffalo Fire Dq.nmtu..
Oecottq:a ....... ~ OIXUIS
..... pmiOIIIUbjecled to higb · ~JIII'EU"'foroewnlboon

mla5 . ,

ploD. )'OU
lo try •
lew dlllerent ~'*"- to
estllblo5h colectronc eon111c:1
mernbCir:s ol
...,__
oJty &lt;UmUllty
A fir111 Qlp. ol &lt;XlUIR!. oa
tt&gt;e leiephone Many .,..._

mvirollmcD wilh low • -

~pre!ISili'O too ~.

It is.""""""~ bazllld
fa cleq&gt;«a&lt;iw!s,ISIJOIIaiiS.pm.,
. woo l1y IIOIIJlR'SI!Uii 1111111
pli1DOS, """ - - &lt;ldJer 1!1pllCilli2Jod
..mas, llld is a mojcr.....,., 10 tho

rw. 't''d:ftrm:illi:mmar.:tlbcoal di\'tiS
,, "" Unilod s.:s.
j

Tkadjlilk~miiBtpo

on normal air, esplaio&lt;:d

aoes

Umdglm, clilm&lt;rofUB'sGslr:rfar
Rt9emhlnSpociol~

the~tbepmjecl.

Under hip pm:sure, IIICh
e&lt;peric:ncodcluringadeep-&lt;;ea di,oe,
nirrngtn becomes dissolved in the
blood and body tissues, he said. If
• diver ascends slowly, nitrogm
leaves the blood sueam gDdually

........a..

PiA,..._,._ a
addr-.
(If.

aad is e:qdled
the '"""·
lf a diver sun.IICI$ quickly, bowever, pn!SSUte falls ropidly and the
nitrogen gas is released from the
tissues, much lib bubblea in a"""
o( soda pop whell it;.~
The bubble&amp; CliO ·bloct blood
Yesscl5, caiJ'Sin&amp; ...-ious ,problems.
The c:oodition CliO he fataL
*Wedan'lfidlylllldmtaodbow
decompressi011 sk:lme&amp;s coroe.;
about,orwhatmakespel'*liiSmon:
or'lrs~ *saiill..w:lclpt:n.
__

Far Ibis
they .-ied
beallby ,_, of • vm.ty of ,.eo
~ work sdledules ma:ke them
available durinc the doy. Thio is
~ tho Buffalo Fire Dq&gt;onmenl
.....,.. the p;m.n,. ~ wcn..d
wilh lild:llfms 011 projec:u in .
nativeSMdon, L.uoolgrmdccidedto
call on them azaia~gblmi""" uniquely qualified far 1his ~"he said. "They
have apecial oct.oodula, ..., """""'"
IDIDedtousio&amp;brealhingpK;,am in

nitrogen
washed

happms ill the body, ·maybe ""'
c:ou1c1 c::oro&gt;e up wilh ·ro
avoid itO. uea1 il beaa."
l..m&gt;d,pm and hioreseord&gt; leml
ore leamitlg about clccompression
sidr;ness by studJing bow the body
rids ilselfoftliJro&amp;en. lbe~­
ers ""' particularly inlem;l&lt;d in
f'lndlnz out why susceptibility
oeemsto inaease with age.

cliodpliaod. on ........rial qualiey&lt; foe
goocl.:iealific .........,a iiUI&gt;joelo.So he ldqJboncd • dqJuty fire
~. Wboput..,.acaDto
bis forc!igbwn. ~ have ,.,...,_
ora.d to doll:- Panic:ipEns, who ~
ceive a srnaJI stipelld in reoum far
tbeirtime. teeliDe inan air-tip piatic .,.,._....... """ ""'-the Ditto~air lhmo:ozb. mask lllllil all

docallll........ oidrDeaa ""'*' he •

~lf-ean......,._

- r

p&gt;&lt;lli....,...-.__ _

1
ODl

lhn&gt;Dib

lheit
. MeaDwbile., imcW-

piDI$1DOa1ft

bowf•thonitrozea 4WiJaSII!dplber&lt;ll.boNIII.iatormoD.»

- --lhe-c(
lbrou!!ba'-Yof......,........., .

oddition 10 Jft'l&lt;'lllilll balllh
pcoble:mo ....-! by tbe malady.

boac."' CXliJICDIIans, .uch -deep... oil~ ,..., .... di..... _

larly.Adi-wbo"""""'.,...bour•

• dopdl of 300 fed ...... 5fl&lt;lld tho
nonlle\12llnn inadou:wttpcisi&lt;wl
cbamber, l..ilndpal.said. "If -coold
ma:ke dtctmpessiou baqJpeol r-,
and safer," he-..:!. .... would he .

1atific«momic bc:D:fit *

.J

list
of I~ E-mail
Mllc:h .,.... be '*Y holpllA
But ~ rtu does""' WOI1&lt;.
)'OU d 'lithe&lt; try OCher ...
pre&gt;acM$ firSt (your phone
,.,., alriiiiKiy be bed up
l'OV' ~ l ) . ttwe are cp·

""""'"""""can-.-u&amp;

'"yout'
- · "place
"
~
to lOOk lor

E-m&amp;ll addr-i8h!eiBelloniC__,.,(l(ha~

dlttK:by To . , . .. type

•l•e• a1

rou• system

pr~ Seiclcl~. -

then 'Faculty
- ,.
Pages.
then &amp;
•.Sla!l
__
lhen "Individual FecultyiSW'
L.ooicup • AI tt&gt;e ~ . type
'" me last name (l( lhe ondi-

Y!duaf )'OU s-.

Youmaylllllo-.toccnsull lhe pml ~ "' lhe

"*"P'A direcloy for ......

UB research keys on intercellular channels
I!ALTRY cells dlroqgb0111 the body ,coonlinale
octivities with their immediate neighbors by
S&lt;Dding chemical andeledricalsigoalsllaOII$ tiny possagewaysc:alled
g~jotoction channels. When a
cell'• health is otlUiprOOiised. ...
tesolt of ttauma or disease, healthy
cells around it prn(ect themselves
by ~tbeoeclwmelslndsbut ­

m.

me ofbeatt-muscle OCllllDII:tion and
in lllldcnWidittB the initiatioo of tu-

KOino d:l

mor ~" Nicholsoo said.

pnlll:ilt. Theoe -liSpCllldod "'
. . . . . . . . ....,.lbedlutdby

The biologists inveslip.ted pn&gt;line, an amino acid 'that procluces a
bead, or disto&lt;tioll, in ooe of the
~o(lhe

gap-jometioa. procd11. This wu
found to ..,.,...,..m a critical focal
poiDI {ordwlges in the orientation
of the pnllein that cause the channel to em in"'"""""" to a differ"""" in the &gt;'OIIa&amp;e between c:dls.
• All cells em ala•o cptive volt-secompared to ibt oulllide ...,.w,.
Nicbolsoi explained, "so wbon 1&gt;00
DlliiDii cells lllk "'each otb&lt;r, lhey
""" bolb ·eq.Jivaledly ocptive and
there is DO YOiblge diff....,.,.IIICRlliS
tho jUIXilian. ~:~owner, if """ cdl
suff= iDjuly. ils &gt;'OIIa&amp;e will II&gt;"
pro.:h thot a( thooulllideof the cdl.
This CIU90S. &gt;'OIIa&amp;e
thecells,aiJowin&amp;tbebeallby
cdiiO sbul the a-JtJs down."
This is a pol&lt;dive lllflCbonism,
N"ocboban DOlled. "NotOIIIy would it
he nlher boring 10 CXIClbnue lllkiog
toacbd aoigbbar, it would he ktbal
to any cdl to sborecven pllllians 'of
11s COIIImiS wilh siclr; ...qbbocs ror
my ·c:moded time,. he said.
lbe....,cli!icxMud proline'smle

ting off communication.
But while .:ientisiS have observed Ibis in cxperimenCS. the
lllCChanism responsible for the
cbmnels ohllllinB 'down n:mliPed
a myslel}'. Until ·now.
A group •o f biologists at UB
protehL
report that they b""e idmtified ·an
amino acid, called proline. that · aoabow1beoepmiculllrct.mds liiiiJ'
playsaceallalroleinsbuttiu&amp; down helllddowo ina:l!ain~­
bul also liJII)' he tho ..,. 10 • gap-joDI:ticm c:bannds.
"Tbejdenrificarioooflhisomino ,.....a mtdali!m of~ """
dooiog&lt;ldlerct.mds...,.._in the
acid, proline, gives us the first foot
in the door to figuring 0111 what
......., """ 1IUOCie S)'!*:IIIL
- Puhlisbod mcmlly in NatJUc, the
cauoes thea-nels to dwl down,"
said 8ro1:&gt;e J. Nidlolson. associate wart waslllppClR:d by tho Nllional
~oCHcaltbatldaPewScboi­
proUaorof biological sci&lt;D:es al
Oisbip awaroled •to Nicldsan.
UB~andleodcrofaJ!OUP
•unclemomd.in,g the gafulg
stodYin&amp; theSirQC!Uie and functiao
lllliCbmismis~bocuooopen­
of ,tbeoe iDiercellul.u cbannelsinB""" ~ ofthe&amp;edraonds is ln&amp;bdliog~wlteu.IIIIIOd
lbe~oflelsutonlyilrplr­
·lal!l,illbntllicD . - y ID ·fin&lt;lilg likdytoheaitil:olilt ~lhe . ·~ ~ to n!place this

diff....,.,..,.,.

.,.,jjb odlas
do ""'
,..,...,.tho~ bald ill

&lt;JP&lt;I41111bos a..~ ..... e-

_,qthodlutd"a ....,...,..,._
Thomas M . SucbJU&amp;. a
~ fdlaw in Nicholsoo's
llblnlaryandthebda6:1r.D&lt;Jied
thot wbile 1his wtd ,,.,, .......
the """of pnlioe in ·s baaing dDM&gt;
commllllicmon vj, pp-juDctialt
dJIIIIIlds, ;r . also ~ ..,._
.,.._ 10 otb&lt;r tiDds a( dJmods,
sucib alba&amp;e in~ved in llalllill:lission of ·decldcal impuloco ~
-cells --omd IDII9I:k:s.
1bisamioodlisblldlnuimilar &lt;allel1 •in lhele &lt;ldJer a....dr,.
~ "Tbus, il liiii)'Rpal!d
alf'JI'IIIliDOCI!mismofpting.•
The F011P ill~ SllldyjD&amp;
pmlioo's mlein~--...

cbooocil wilb Anlhony
L Auc:rt.dl, _.,._ prar..ar of

S)'Sian ...

biopbysical~inlheScboolof

~""" BicmcdicaiSciooD:&gt;os..

Other &lt;XHt.athoa of tbe Nt~~&gt;~n
paper""' Owies R. Fourtne:r, UB
prof- of biological sc:i&lt;:.n&lt;&gt;es;
Lie Xiom Xu, focmerly • vio1tin&amp;
prof....,.. At UB wbo is now at
Nanjq Univeasily in tbe fc&lt;Pe'•
Ropobl.ic of &lt;lllna, ,omd l"eQg Gao,
a .......-dt ttdmicion atUB.
0

eral ~ now ltll&amp;dnclary •

has onctoded E-malf addresses In lis -.gs .,.;
this 1011roe
oftengM! )'OU

!he inlonrlatbl )'OU .-d.

Anewfu.boe"""'-'·
able on alltl"ee marill"ame
ptallorms-IBt.l, V/OX and
Unrx- lhe Rnger o.ditt- AI '
'I'CU 6yllleiTl ~ type
....,. ...... thelastowne"'
lhe person )'OU WISh •ID tocalli ~ In ITWid lhat Ito$
otllily worlls &lt;liflerenlly d&amp;pendir1gonwtlichfTlllnlrame
yoo ere on One nice laalln.
.ll)'OU*eadlfknow
1he user td (l( lhe f)8I1IOn you
are !lying 10 &lt;Xli'Wacl. is 11181
1'00 may lll8o l)'lll8 ....,_
toflowed by B.-icl, andlhe
Ulifity . QMYQU·addilionrll
inbmalion ebao.t lhe p«sonyou...,..(lor~. l

lheyceClJmlllllylaggedcn)
Forlltwiibti.... iOibC8lii'lp ~ E-mal eda&amp;ss!JS.

alFll!lcrhl.......,.,
"*'" .

Senlblt. ~ &amp;
tnlllliM Tcoc:Mat1gy (ASCITJ
~ HiN!Iy
AJtllllod

s

lll""tlboill&amp;r.l . . . .

r

n ....,.craol

.......
---""ASCfT ,...., llilll!ll.llll

&amp;IS-

3SC2.

-~~

�[

t

•

l

I

f

Denise Broughton, adviser

Research, teaching:
a creative partnership
UIIRENT OU'I'IOISMS oC the
empbasis on sdlolarly Te$CilCh

Y e~ w11a&gt; the dlo&lt;:ussioo wms 10 the
univeuity, we are told lhat ,_.,a. lu.JN
d&gt;e stu&lt;lcnls and drivesawoy lhe best4l::IIChcn:. ln (IICI, the university lhat footeD .,_
search U511lllly l&gt;clps Slllilmls beco- it is
far men likdy to nuin more of lhe best

In lhe hiring and promocloll of
uni versity profe550rs often
overlook the intellecroalcmiiS leloebers-the inlellecroaUy active people
o!llle best ldlcibels. lnooYative, stimullling who a1e clooc:st to the "Clltting olge" ID a
6dd of lmowled e. Tbe best universities
U:adJcts, like innovaliY~&gt;~
· every
&amp;pllrre ol society, ask diff'JCUI questiolol. nscmbJ&lt;, 1M best businesses ID their~
cballenge (amiliar clicbO$, and look coo-· to sed and ..,_,j anployets ..t.o deveklp
stamly for new ways to
their ,innovative .pprooch!s to oew or old problems.
world and Lhemseloes.
'Ibis bouolc principle.of lnsti tutiooal vital Sobolarly research is by 11&lt;&gt; means tht
ity
~y disappears wbelt critics dabn
mty ""'Y to ask quc:slioo$orfind oew ltoo-'1edge, but it · one oC the activities lhat help thatpr&lt;j(-.n(~Y in the humanities
people deve!Qp tDd mainlain a creati¥C, ID- or social scieooes) on givin&amp; too IJUICb
quisitive ~ to lhe illformatlon and aumtloo to 1beit _.c:tt. Most of lhe best
ideas that ,cimJ.Iate in our cultute. In Olbcr tead&gt;ers I know, loc•weva-, happen 10 be
- - - - - - - - - -- - cx&lt;lellellt ,_.,a..
words. good •e.... and writt:rs, and
searcll c:obancc&amp; the
the connectioo is
s1ti1ls of eood ld!CbDOl simply a roin-

= Allhougb

!'his
claim for lhe positive oonnc:ction 'betWeen reseattb """
4l::IICbing lw 'helped
to Wpe Amer1c:aD
bij!ber education
duringmOSioflhis
c:emury. it lw dwi-

ousl! f •iled "' c:oo-

vinc:e those many
critics wbo believe
lhat academic ,..,_

search frequently
hurts lhe interests of

"Strange as it may seem
to persons who have read cidence. They are
good tead&gt;crs bethe recent _criticisms of
""US4( they are aJ..,.,ays) uki:ng new
American universities,
queo;Dans and looking. for new
imaginative, substantive
.........
It would lhm&gt;research offers one ofthe fgrebe~
an~

ODd

best indications that

'·-/Y to
someone IS• fUl.e
remain an imaginatiVe,
interesting teacher. "

tbesnxlents, pan:o1S.
and taxpayers whom
univtmties are suppooed to serve. The
cliched defeoscs of
scbolarly ........-ch ~ mainly 10 provoke

angry, cticbOd demands fm more emphasis
on good teaching.
Everyooe in American collegeo tDd universities wants to Jl"(JJDDOe good teaching.
l'bedisa8""""""t focusesoo thequeo;don of
bow we identify and suppart the people who
willn::main interesting. knowledgeable teachers over lhe cowse of their careers in the
dossroom. Sb:attge as itmay""""' to pcrliODS
Wbobave reodlheTeCelllcriticismsofAmcrican uni versities, imaginative, substantive research ofTen; one of lhe best indications that
50IDCOOe is liltely 10 remain an imaginative,
intereSting 4l::IICber.
The best uni versities in America 'l hus ask
their faculty to do moretban tco&lt;:b what olhet
'people bave discovered; they also ask their
faculcy 10 comribute to the 1tooWiedge and
in~ibal will 'betaPtlOil&gt;OI:IOW-

IIn lbisreopect,. fust-ftle~migbt
be&lt;XIIIIjllftldiO. fust-ratebuoiDess. ~
everyooe woold ~pee tlaol ai')Od busiDess
must eDCOUrlge'iiS emplo)'eca.lo - t e new
products or think of-~ for old
products or search f« illfOI:IMiioo about
bowlhe business might cooceinbly develop
in d&gt;e futuro. 'lbe &lt;:OtllJIMIY tbauiuq&gt;ly uses
the research and knowledge c( c:J(bers can
remain in business, bul it will be a mediocre
en~ lhat relies oo imitatioo instead of
innovation.
These points seem clear l:llOUgb wllallhe
publicdiscussioofOCUitS&lt;lll die need for business imavatioos. America t:allllOI cxlulptle in
a global ecooomy unless the nation's corporalions encourage their employees 10 stay allhe
"cutting edge" of oew bdaaologies. new ~
sean:h and new ccnunetCiel pac:tices.

aelf~g

for universities to
respond to their critics by devaluing
s&lt;:holarly rescaJdL
lnooYalive, imagi-

native faculty &amp;eadJ
ID public univasilia!ibec:al&gt;setbit:unlversities
b.ave
acla&gt;ow1edged """
'""""""J!ed lhe llOilllOClioos bet-Moen their
miellldl and their teac:hin&amp;, and lhat they
will begin to leave wllal their research is

LI.OTD-

ignoredor~ed.
Students are now~

about lhe occzsiooal,l assof. good teacber, but !hey would
be evm tll(ft disturbed 10 set bow IDID)'
excelled teachm: would leave if lhe support
tDd ~for .-arch

were., de-

cline or disappear. The puNic univetliiti&lt;:s
would
of ooun;e, like busiDesses sur-

sumve.

vive wbm lhey repockage lhe prodocts of
otbit:rs. They would~""""" 10 be
lhebndoffusl-mteinstitutiaos tbatlllneland
main those
who also be""""' =alive teachers.
Gttat teaChers deal ' t just provide infurmalioo; lhey convey a questiooing, curious
au.itude IOWUd tbit: wOOd; lhey cballeDge
4lllXIenls to fmd their own paths to trutb; tDd
they ullimatdy oeod students oo lifelong
":researdl lripa" that evolve in the IIIOSt

=ali"""""""""'

~ direc:tioos.
lt~a easy 10 tDDYe fust-tate

institutions
from positions of leade:rsbip and ilmowtioo
into positions of mediocrity tDd stai!JI"'ioo
by squandering """ human resow&lt;:eS thai
produce DeW ideas. This g&lt;:DCD!izalioo applies 10 univasities as well as to every Olbcr
fiOCia1 institution, """ it carries • specific
implicatlon for poop~ care about publie universities; the COIIIIDeOdable quest for
het!et teaching should never &lt;Werloolt or
devalue the essmtial forms of lnteUedllal
creatiwty lhat roUe it possible.
o
Lloyd Kramer is Associate Professor of
History Slid Associate Director of t1&gt;B

tnstitvte lor ""' Ails and Human/OOs at the

UnMHsity of North Carolina. Chapel Htll.

u jarenHill

c

�_.
oam

Chomsky
to give lectures
Wcdol-..............t

0

•

ODd political ......,..,
pve lectures
.. UB ODd Bu!Jw SWr CoUeae
011 1\laday, Feb
8.
orel'ret
ond """" to tbe
public. He will

Noem Olomll&lt;y

opeak aboul

.

"l..ansuaae ODd
tbe 'Cosnffive
~Uvo!Uiioo'"

from 4-6 pm. Ill
Sloe Hall.

S

wiD iDcludlo
from tbe NYS Dqlt. d

d

by UB'a Co:ruer far
•. ""Sc:lenct, tbe """-"'

por1 d tbe - · · Distincvisbcd

pem.ro Copitive Scl&lt;:o&lt;z
5t'li&lt;s. C&lt;Hpoalcn d tbe UB
ledure ore tbe o.p.rtmenls d
Campult:r Soleace, lJo&amp;ulstics.
Psyc:bo1ccy ODd tbe UB IDlaiSi~
fnllisb t..m,uqe lnstinne.
Oausky wiD cldiw:r • l&lt;!aure,
1lJe Middle~ ODd tbe New
ortd Order" 117:30 p.m. in
Rocl&lt;wdl Hall, Buffido SWe Col•
lmtilul£ PldCMar in tbe
Dt.por1menl d Unpistic:s ODd
y II MIT, Oxxnsky is
rqardod •• ~.-ianary figure
in moclem liapisti&lt;:s.
He:
Fdlow d tbe N.wtimal
Acadom! ar Sc:ieoc:eL

&amp;~c.-v.Doe,

F''*

U
&amp;lid W'alcllife
0.S. l..aka l'ropm II UB,
Bu1&amp;lo Slate Collep ODd EJ&gt;.A
Goal d tbe
to illform n:aiOeala d tbe Lowu OrCIII
t..au. ..... aboul tbe ecoloci&lt;al
d
.....,.......

Nutrition

doni ar
· R.ecyc:r s..vi&lt;u. IDe.; Patricia l..aMorlle,
add.-..aard AlcnCaU,
Delocnll A. Buczek. paidaJI d
Buclet, IDe.;~ Cola!&gt;.,
preaiclall d Colemaa eoa...ic:abOII Ccrp~ Sheila Bclrat. preoidonl d s - Tout~ World
Tmd,lnc.

Program gets

ar Eeoud"' a.......; ·

Allen grant

0

The lllridan Ptopm.
UBbosrec:&lt;lllly beoD
aw.decl a $4S,
p1111 for a
duee-yeaa period from tbe Allen
K1uodlliorl d Midlipn Th&lt; .....
wiD IUppOit raardlactivibrs ond
g.Th&lt; Ndrilion Prcpm dfus ..
M.S. dope In Clinicol Ndrilion Mel
Scimce. In Gliliaa, iiE
ptJIIIIDollas~dao:s

in bllrilian to-......., educlliao
.........,._Mel wilb....,.an
b&lt;dh. Th&lt; popm
JO M.S
~In~
ale daws e&gt;«&gt;oeds one half iiE UB

&amp;.mr.l daoo.

Sdll·duk
l!Y.l

~OC.lliO'-

2p.m.

AhrmiAtena

FIQJfy rlMs .wfl.IIIJin
Sdlllcl51tld ~
FIQJfyrl
[!:!!!!l rl SociM Sdlllcl5
2!!;!!
Phi BID KIIJI)IIndtdion
se.m.
Uriwnity Honors Convoc3ioo

s.ew... l~"
Schlol ol Helllh Alii*! Prolessions
Schlol ol Hlnlna
Schlol ol trmniDln and~ Sludies
Sdlool ol Enalneeri!:i ltld ~led ScieRz
Sdlool ol f'hanTmcy
Sdlool ol Art'hlllldule and Plmlnll
Sdloolol~

.....,1_11

G!llduli! Sdlool ol Educ::Pln

c-..

~abe

row. Speaker for tbe e&gt;en~
Mic:belle B. B&lt;d, fuw&gt;tial~~n~ ­
lyst for Rich Produc:ls Ccrp
Officers d Beta Ga.mmo
Stgma ....,, presiclcllt. Frank E.

MMil.~u

Glldulle Sdlool

8d.a

D&amp;ticuaJ boaor liOCld)' for
ocbolars iD ~ .
31 UB lllUdeols cluria&amp; a
clmDer in tbe Ccoler for Tomor-

,..;u offer pnseoaatloas at a
wor\sbcp Feb. s from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. at tbe c-er forTomonow.
'll11lll'lll\'ll1l'Jll

a.ao.

0

Greall...akoes nseardlers

£\1[ ... 1

Miller, preside~~~ d w .y Family,lac., Detn More,
d
Rick Aut~ Linda
Sbeci-Priebe,...,..... d
mlon Worb; Jdlll Sallord,
preaidr:m ar
~ac
AJoo, Amy Stromberg, • part·
.... iD BoriAo, Halpem cl
Strombr:rz; StrYal D Szll ' '
euamve .x:e praidml d PC
Alliolauc:e; la:ry A. Walclkoelt&lt;r,
praidml ar The Way to Go
Toon,IDc.; hmea Weaver,
""""'ar Pailll- - Thillp and
J-. Y
owner ar l!eDiky
Marl&gt;kCcrp
Th&lt; ..,.,.,.S c:Ja. ID tbe
ErnerJin&amp; i!.nuqlraleur Propam
IS ocboduleciiO lqu&gt; iD Mardi

members

Seminar Feb. 5
on Lower
Great Lakes

C

Abo, Anlwr Furra. ...,.....

Honor society
inducts new

"a

0

totbe- dtbe .,..._or
orpllbatloD.
Nembea aftbe ~
claa.-: Bruce~ preD·

9a.m.
9a.m.
1Da.m
1e.m
12.m
2 e.m.
s e.m.
se.m.

Slee Coocat ~
$lee Corart IIIII

Alllnni Arena
$lee Coocat
1bllall!r-Siudlnllj)ion
Aim Arena
$lee Corart Hall
~~IMII

AIIJml Arena
Slee Coocat Hall

Bansch&lt;oc:k; """ presideD1,
Sanford Gwm.; sec:rewy,l!reasun::r, Jobn H. Sbdlum; studenl
presidml, Kalt:n L. Hoffman;
allldenl vice pres:idml. Thomas R.
Miolwe1s, h .
Studeals iDclucled: Jobn p .
BeriiD, Jdlll R. Budlholz. BriaD

J. t:&gt;urtMc, Rap D. Duryea, Jr.,
Gl&lt;ml T. Ever&lt;a, OuUel T.
Golder, Pbyllss A. fiafDer; Usa
M. ~ C1w:iea E. Hm.l;e,
Brent A. Hmdcrooa; Cary K.
l.ol.-e, RaimODd K. Jeoaitis,
Jalm R. Justice. Mdissa Kme,
Manica D. K.lawina, Carolyn B.
Kobd, Jobn J. Koeppe~ Garilyu
A. K.uba., Todd J. Levy, Thomas
J. Mac:Leay, Diana L. Mamer,
W'tlliam R. Roz:icb, Kumala D.
Rus1ie, Mary L. Ryan. Sc:ca D.
Sadeshim. Elizabelh A
Sc:bafliuU, Mark D. Sbacktl,
1...,.. E. Sbaw, Mark 1.
Swhlmiller, Jack' A. TUresky.
Stepbm L. y CIDlly .

Cohane names
assisant coodrs
for basketball

e.m.

UB men's baskelball .
Coec:h Tun Cabane bas
lDII&lt;JUDCt&gt;d tbe aclclitioa d tblee
assiS1ant coecbes for tbe curren1
......,., Frank Valenti, Roll
.JSdlool
!!!!!!!!!.;oi
!_Sociai
:!!!!:!!'!!.:W!!!I!!!,..
rt _ _ _ _....:...
7 Pt:::.m~:-:-:
..:. :':
_~
':=:-'Corart:'
.."".":
. _:..::
Hal=-1---:-..::-:-.. . • .. . ... ___ •

Sdlool olllw
2
Sdlool of Deral Medicine
2e.m.
Sdlool o1 Medicine and Biomedical Scleras 6p.m.
R0511111f M GOOJale lJivis/011

Slee Corart Hall
Alllnni Arena

..

-

c.

0

0 f

I

~

1 [ R f S 1
Ulllted ·........

"*

Foreogn and ~Office
gn111111dh
..-s11y a graduate sc:halllfShp to b e - to • UB ~
IIUdent emllled ., lhe IIOCialllCIIIIrlC*, n or m.~~~ge~-lt. The
The Br

grenl COlle&lt;$ tuibon, '-· books, -~- ~-­
supend 10 , _ IMng CCICIS. The....-.! • .,.,.. ..

,_and •

A'!)'~.,

lhe UnHd Kingdom

To 8llPfY. send a reun6 and a bnl!l prtJpClUI (l.a .• r-.:h
p&lt;OI8Cl. eo&lt;ne ol sn.dy IMding 10 • par1IC&lt;Mr goal) to·

Oliooof SlJdy Abroad~
211 Taiban Hal
North~

Deadline lor Slbnssoons IS Fell. 11 , 1 . . .

IUNY---~~~~

...... Ca•••ttllae

'Whose Best lnleteSIS: Custody RigtU tor lhe Non-T!lldCoonal
Fwnil'( 1s lhe so.tlfecl ar lhe 1994 ~ and OIMd Sc:twps
~. whocl1 ~a cash prize of $1.000 and • oommerroraiMI plaque 10 lhe Slffli'J!'IOI" .mo 'Mileslhe -leoglll
essay of up Ia 3,000 words on 1he IOpic
The SGtaps ~ chllllw1gal SIJ4Y ......... n-p:ll18rt
- o f cu
f'asi~Cpa ncwe 'The 511p1ra1on of Ouch and
Sla.. 'The Ailtt lo PIMcy," ~of E':l:1aDl Opparu1ly and
"'-Xrn d ~-and 'The Fht!lmonctner'C and~ d
lhe - - · The Sctwps Plize is made po&amp;&amp;ille Ill'. bequeolllran ......
d Homah S Hra::thm and Is open lo Ill 9.Hf Jrin II "''9.Hf
CIWI'fiU6 wto .., cxreiderrg law 8Chocl as a pat d tl9l' ~pion.
The s.bnlsslon deadline lor lhe ~ .. . . . . . 10,
1 - . lntwested members d 1he ;nor class siiOIJid contact
Jerome Fink (64S-2231) or Challes lMnb (64S-2133). UB pr.edvlsor$, lor more details The wlmer
be IIIYlCk.flOed in May.

*""·

�?frra Cotta

exhibit
showcases
custom work
from Boston
Valley

!l.~,Jl\.u ~

I

11./fi.'tl! u

.., Mlwl
1fJJ(

1fl

•Wt1

t

t

IIWI.J

wilrly illlbo bm of
p.z..!...S biabiY

Aloorq:maed...,
tm110011&amp;~

\/1o'

If

.,,JII

mJnlllt .;tftJ J L/
1

tr,

•Utur·•lfv liwiJm

mJ... n tn.n B,j.&gt;;r.d

Valley 'fem Coaa, I
New Yorldinn. is lbe
in I fl&lt;li&lt;::s .of spring eXhibils 10
be p-esenltld by lbe liB SdD'&gt;I of
~and Plrlnnillg.
lk exhibitim, • Archilecllnl
Terra Caul: Bosaon Volley Ten
Ccna. • .,.,.,... roday wi1h • public
~ .. 5:30p.m. inlbelames
!)yea Elhibition Hall..Thin! Floor.
Hayes Halllt will nm Jbrou&amp;b
Feb. 2S, and is ,-,.,. and open 10 lbe
public. Gall"~)' hours an Monday
~ ~. 9 LliL 10 s p.m.
Bosaon Valley Tma Gona
manufactun:s wstor1Ht16do m:hiU&gt;C-

tlllll ....... COlla and
roof tile lU _ , _
pont)' ioslallalions
and m:hilflcrurll
restoollicos. b has
rtS10rCd and n:pli-

ad&lt;d ....... cctll in
bundmdsd m:biledllrally signiliCCII buildings
lhrougboullbe
oountry.

This &amp;bow -...;u include samples
and pilo1ograpllo of iotricote ws1001 .....nits~ and ratisans
bl-e procluctd in c:onnedlao with
lbe .-.stollltion of~ buildings
in Wesum New York; Bos10o,
Ma.s.,and New York City.
Aroong ~~an-'"""'""' Buf&amp;Jo

SlliiCSIIreS: Loois Su!IMo's G.arGy

Buildio&amp; known 1\r its eloballle and

Pl.olos b,-Simon Tong

lbeonoe.~
8ddey lmlldirw in

poli!D and ordJims
..........SIIG ...... indio -"&lt;tic

.emna-~

l!cJia:lll Volley 17em CJoaa wos
ontral:ri&lt;:kfxbym:llola-....,_
r.:u..t flmow
""""'-d by
lbe ltJwie flmil) in 1981, 1be
JO.l'IX).,_, tea faaay si1s on tiO
...... ofclay andllbale &amp;:p:.oils 20
mlbl&lt;lUib ofBotrah Tbefxby

""'*"·
Terra ooua-litcally '1IUI:d
eanb~-iooneoflbe_ ,_

ful uobi!OCb.md rDrlll:rials lr:rown
10 Jtllllkind, ~ aalquo

poperlies of~. ricbnt:os of
surfa:e and cluod &lt;:olors. Produor.d from tiln-limd clay. it .
limdeos in ils ·llllia&amp;lolion ofardlimalerial dlll cao be oo ....tily
impressed. and ill firqlroo( qualities and rcsislmoe 10 odd oud.llt
lln:loot ony clber ~
Small ....... 0011&amp; flguros
from os early as :1000 B.C.
bl-e boCII found in lbe
MeclilemDean rqion.
Bec:ause of ils clap....... w:rsailiry and
durabilily. terra

...p-sand

cctllwascm-

ployed
througboultbe

oncillll!......td
for""""' utililari.m pur-

.

"""""
...,u- os
housing

bricks, roof

tiles and

facin&amp;.
,_
..
trmple

DOW, tan

qluc

'llntr 1(

'.lt. .!i~l'ff

I

1

t'

! oJ ~

I!'""(

:.J"l

,,

hru!a811iias~S#XI
~ ·C..Soffirins~axl

................. ,_ ............

',c•:At

-t• l mk

~oflbemolr:liat

cq*&gt;ys bigbly aWIItd

1,!1'

Jaw

adla)' wbm boCb

&amp;.sm. Hal Jfi&amp;l!
Sdnll in lll&lt;dtyn. and1be l'lmdt
SPA Apll1DICdl8 in Oillar&gt; Spinp,

r
1 •t

te~Mt.-..

lion lbo~Dh

lbe~4d

inlrialle facade and copiral diDiling;

llu!ldit1g; Uberty T"""', wbic:h is
fio:c:l wi1h a pulsac:llroone"""'au.. and lbe""""""""""'
n:storod Calumr:t Ans Cafe Cll
01ippc:M s-.

ltllldeln
-~·

Bl!loorWie Hilla Cily
WlefeofNew Yc:G;

the~

~ap~.Mcbtwk

cobod~and

Dab~,~

...,.. io
CJ:Jemive

friezes.
Tma ooaa
died 01.1 as a
building and
facin&amp; maJrrial
belweenlbe
end of lbe Roman EmpiJe and I~ AD,
but n:oppc:ll&lt;d io ISt!Heolury
Italy and Gmnany ond oprad

oonmlc tocbail:ioa;,

arti!IS"""'lmd
10 eadl piooe

d - .... ibn:lo~P ... ...,_
pmcollllllliof )liDUfiaD.
A1 BciiiDI 'Yalk;rTemt Qltla,
moldo-JI..teto....... .
pia:cs.ln6t.-ofa.....,..
pojecl.cr from llllllldl~ for
"""' •
Oily illwll!
poclrod (jn lbe .-ofdoailed
piocai) cr rmddne RaaJ-' m
pldor
l i&amp;lwll! li:ii!lboCI
wbm~.Jwd- li!D)'Odo:

lwll! pliried
c:ob-lllllldJod
Jiozm m:llin•tho 2150" P.
lbi.abiit wil be~ by
"L'&amp;f..rsnaa:
ofWrl!bJIIIklll.. MlldJ 2-:2S-' "''IUf&amp;&amp;lo
Hltbaraxl~ Rorbms
Wliodil:ml CIJIIIIIIIiolica,"
Apri16-,29.

v...,._

�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1994-02-03</text>
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1402593">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1402594">
                <text>en-US</text>
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          <element elementId="51">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1402595">
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            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1402602">
                <text>12 p.</text>
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          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
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                    <text>Budget proposals viewed as offering stability for SUNY
~

........ . . hdedGor. CraaiDD'•

.. ........ -

l~iludptJIIOP&lt;alf~theSia~&lt;fl&lt;ew

Yod .,-.em

. budpt lllbility fur the Iiiii Iime • -

,.._-.~~~liB

......

he
ill~

e:q.-1 11m ill

1992. The ......... - - o;.-.. d
lloqa, !alctttudy ........ ,p it!.

..........

Gldacr&amp;.aibe41beCI&lt;ICillh'lObuclptl'ft*DI'd 11m. I •

SUN\'Ia'-a.~llldbq&gt;iQclor-dlefial.-lulq

limelhiiJakls*'PfOIIaklheaaliobofllUI'._fundiii.&amp;.Go¥.
Cluamo J.s ......-cl- of the SUNY Bo;mS riC~'
._,ftlliiCII. Thii'Sa oay ·pocilivea~Jn for SUNY ....a us.·
Oreiner...ued: "ii'be..,.,..,.llamade pdonblap!UIIilc
110110 all SUNY fl.l1ber. he'o ~ 1be llCIIlllliiDBJIIO

Amooc

•

iltthe bucJilllbll&lt;arJ

...... lialillllilrUBiaoonlinoled...,ul
d
~~Stlu­
allionllld~lllillld"f!,lld lilr'SIO
lllillioa.lllapaa~ua

...

Nat.ad

••

........,...,....__

Wllllco..-·.~~....-.~&amp;adiltcfor
Cirdlloer-s...

fuaol5

"WeWitqpo:ot.,.

"We WI&gt; _

,.., ,...... - Molly d . .
TAP Mid will.._ be Cllie-. ..,.._

bLac~
-

B

beillo::IIII!W

_...._._
dlidinc lllida'lhe 'Nib~ .......

uadn:GIIll:,~(in!br~.

. ' .

........

il.-.,•to•ldll*

~lbndilfilrlheltililiiiiM.

·

tionally n:&gt;Cdmlllboul«tpt!lltlllll ohl&gt;o ORI 1\Jada ' ~to
SUNY.
'"J'be GRIIiiJI'PliUUB's lmil SUNY'a_.., IIIII.

_,.,..,,..,._.-.~

liltot..

......-.,~-

ftlllpOIIIioe•SUNY'I

"'be'- CDC 111-,.,.... ll1ethe IIOUIId. fllltile bocl&amp;&lt;t dill

......

• Oo!liD&lt;r ...-1.. "'l'a
lhaitc:lllilil:lb•ll&gt;4twiap-

"""-.........

...._,.. .-!

hil't ory ~o"th
'

'

'\

aa

I

.. 3

.

Stop That R

Space technology wiU be used to reduce

wear and tear on wind-whipped llgh pales
at Rlch Stadium

lnriao ond~ ~coonlina­
IIOt. "It "' .. eactplionally U!ltl'..fric:adly drivell S)'!'lem. It
the I"*"JJiooto ..... !he
Cllltli'UI~ ""-' iiiiOUCb ~- ....
number of~ n:&amp;OUI'tlrJ&amp; ond _...,.,. aVlliWlle 10

I

SWIFil..Y-AND SIMPLY-a "'i."'

~
~laklstllgbltbilscmcoter.

'llB Wings"olfers-IO.,......;..,campusinfolma..

.a-

..._,focully,IWJ.ndalumni.~..-.can)­

lion end ..._as • ~'ay 10 an elecuonic
beyond 1be unlveuily.
1brougb Wi
a pilot group Q( liB "information
providers" otms on.:tiue servicl:s Ibis .....-: lhe

puspffirati&lt;m,~oampus~pol.icy

doourno:ots, ' *'- .,.....,.,..ny will all be •vailable will&gt; the
iou&lt;bda~·

DI:Vimeyd!slbll iiii:OI'IIIIIIblmh w-New

~Cdlqe,lllll~Utnrio&amp;,d&gt;eCam-­

puliQcCeml:r, CounoeliDgc.-r.OfficedSII.donlUfe
.ll:ld
l'llbliattians. Type in~­
into lhe CCllllpUifl:, cboaoe an .,... &lt;ll
intt:re&amp;1 ond you'D finda&lt;btription&lt;lf
..mces ond the full-4cxt &lt;ll IOday's
kpone. All !hal's .-icc! is an dec·
•
lrollieaaxullavailabletofaallty,staff
and students by ""'PJPin&amp; in at 21
Canpulina
"W'JD&amp;S is • joint prOOuttioD o( tb&lt;
Lilnries
Canpulina &amp;. lnfor:ma·
tion Tedloology,"saysJamesGerland,
IDIIfllg&lt;O'&lt;l( oetw&lt;llkuoersuppon. Com·
11
~ and Information Tcdmok&gt;gy.
and UB W'mgs coonlimtor.
"A task foroe, includ:ing mxarians
GnltM4 O£V1NNO
and ~ Center poople, did
rnucb wori&lt; in,..,..;gating olher Campus- Wi de Information Systems
(CWIS's)." says Gcrland "We loolozod at their merw
designs and broke into S&lt;Ji&gt;.groupo. Each 00&lt; of us took
respo~~S~biliry for a paJticular amo, for eumple, student
life, ca1mdars. elc. We did a n:al wislt-list of wlw we
would lil&lt;e."
The gnoJ of W'mgs (named after BufT1llo's
yen foraSU&lt;XUimt cbickm pan)
"is 10 gel the informatioo OU1
there, to malz individuals n::sponsible for the:ir own W'mgs
setViocs,• says Gerland.
"'ur feeling was that it would
be updated moreolieo ifpeople bad
a sense of ownmhip and n::spoosibility. It's also too
buge a task for the =mal
oornpul.ing staff 10 l=p
up witliit aU and updale
iL Wcbcfie,!etb&lt;sys·
tom 8lld infarmatioo
is ownod by tb&lt; information providers in the

liB

1 II ...

.-.

"I

ecr.er.

university.oommunity. We
soc our role as facilitating the
infarmatioo.•
i;
So fu, the pioneering pro~ vidcls arc entlwsiasti'c.
~
"Weiothel..ibrariesarcvery
excited about Wi
. mgs for ·• wriely of ,......,.,.,• says Gemma
deVmoey, l..ockwood n:f~ li-

~

s

Fledgling communications
service apens access to
a world of "nfonnation
on and off ~pus

Yodr~ willal!lobe &amp;YIIiJINe
"l..lbmioas ue ~,. c..:lred
aboul W'JIIB's' polmlial •10 bd,p peoplt
fulfill lbo:ir i o f - ..... Local
m "line l!bnry Clllllapforvmous....,
libnncs IDOh as BuiDio Slllle Colq,e
and Omisius ~ an: oVllilable
~brooch W"q:s. W'lllp ....... •ill also
beableton::adily"""""'CIIIIIaptb&lt; Dlliao lmil iou::n'*-lly • Milas
olher in!&lt;xmalioo _....... ..... ....,.,
as CARL UNCOVER as W'- po-

•06etif1Slaod'*'&gt; aa:csslOtheinlc:mc:l.
lhc elec2rmic .....,m;gb....y •
!1tccr Gold. associa~&lt; dean of m.

.........
...,.
wqs.

U~Gc~Jese.ma:otly mode

d&gt;e ~Ralobow Book,"·~ of
US 's ~ ltlinon., and pq;!lllll5,
a•-ail.abk 011 Wmgs. "'The bool was
initially prodaoed as a ..,. of hmdouls fer...,. llhlllmls

clunng """"""OrieotaOOn. bcause

romp"'""""""

""'nec:dcd. -

and......,._~ d ll:&gt;ldomic
optionslbal Wll!&gt;getlt\'ld totb&lt;...,. SIUdM.• .,., said. -rho
~·
lends itself 10 Win bcc:ause il is a
series ofcbscrelr: filer; ~rqulor.l:d infrequaiL.

upclaling."

Soti,.._ for W'llljlS is

-~--~-dot
Uni\or.;isy of~
Mid dnlws its ,_
that""""""''&amp; ~-...
~""" lhe lbilig.&amp;o-.:11
od:a IOPba' ......... 1-s ..
fta)U ik:lrls.
(
"'t' sllso a plq&lt; &lt;a
words, lilr ~CJ&gt; rm norClllltioo, •• says OedMd,
... inf&lt;JI:IDBiiclll delivery srnico. There gopher servers-~
po6ilories Q( iDfonna..
tion -epproxim.atrly
2,000 a!'&lt;JUDd the wodrl
EadJ bas the obility to ...
cdlsm011!1111ianone.::llalber•s
informalioo llli:IJIIS.

"WIIalwe'bopetodoherea
the university,ls 11&gt; !lave eopber R:r\'·

... arouud c:ampos.l..ocal eopber &amp;ellll'l!l1l
5
...... '

-=~·a,;

Page

�2

Linking
Past to
Present
SJIY..tM'old • ...., Depreellloa
~

T'S IMPORTANT "' rc·
member tbat tho past i II·
ways wub us. William
Sylvest..- sa~ .
A professor emeritu in
the UB Department of En£lish,
1%5·· 1988,
Sylve&gt;teT hu-., an act:i,.., poet,
fictJOn W[IIU and scbotar both O!
UBand in the city of Buffalo, where
be os a fanullar ftgure in the aru
OOn:ununity. He has ...,. many
d&gt;ang.s o•·er a long and frurtful
cam:r, and tx. says tbe quesnons
rnsed b)' those c~ ar&lt; never
simple ones.
1 flii\'C I talk I fe" yean; q:o
about changes I had «:en in uni,·er·

""""'""""""•dfrom

~
Cfi'IDNII~.

Emilie Paulo • &amp;lderr i1 )
f18 Scl1ocj ol Awmacy. ,_
~ -.:l8cl ., As!icdl!lion
ol8laci&lt; Ho6pflal Atamaclols
~ SUJeni&gt;&lt;:hliMIme&lt;l Award.111e
Wlld1

-d.

COMPIJTEJI SCIENCE

.,t) EngllSI!dep.o:rtment;,"be "'l •·
"\\'ben I wa&gt; (lnt&gt;e, wmeone m tbe
:.wdu~.ooe !ioi.\d that 'ill! hall wa: ULlk10£ about" as juSI the cl"-'&gt; of ' 4 ~ .
duu all that was ·ovt.r no-. ·· ·
Bill. Srlvester s.r•. thmg• are
not reilly thai SJmple. and great
"'-orld e"ents oonun~ to affect
peopk long after tbe 0\CDIS them·
!1clves ha": pa.'&gt;Cd. He gives as an
eumple th&lt; fact tlun "In tbe yean
srnce World War n, the United
States has nc::' u had an afllut:nl

•NAMD •FELLOW:

war industry. It' 5 m) feehng that,

.......... ......... prolessor o1 oompUief soieooe

in a sense, World War II d1d 001
stop. and the problems of ttx. De-

taos itwee pmlessloml

~~~C111S1Sr1di11gleaic:ler!lhp Sill-

- *""' al 75 SCihCX.Is rJ

~lheUJS.ara.,..._
edll~b'l'lllftWd.

A~AJder1i1tle

bal:iheb"s dagee~BI

w. PaLl 'is pra;idlrlollhe l.B

d'oapaolho s.DrtNaliorel
f'toamwB.Ial As&amp;ocialion

and director olltle onivetlll·

based on

11:&gt;

nt\·er soh'ed ••
Syhe~&gt;'ler was born in Wasbmg!O!t,O.C.in 1918, rntloelinalyear
of )'CI IIDOiber war He grew up in

lnstiMe of Electrical and
Bectronics Engineers, tile
workfs 1atges1 proi8SSI0081
engineering &amp;OOiely
Srlhati was CiiBd lor his
contribu·

Germantown. MM)oland dunng the
Deplessian. ''People who ha""li''Cd
throughtbeDopn:sSIOil-....,allgiven
a tcm'blc scose of the rcalrl) of human solfistlncss.- be say._
Ttx. "rei! turning point- that

lions 10

monl-ooder·
standing
systems.
Srlhari supervises and

condlJc:ts research in diM!Iopng melt&gt;odologies. algonttms, software and
hal'clware With a locus on
machine!&gt; thai can read
A~ ~lhe l.B com~ scienoe

lacU!y since

1978, 5mari receilled bach&amp;la's degrees ln physics and
ma!herr.ancs lrom Bang:alore
Lnversity, a bachelor's degree
, eleclncaJ ccrrtTUlication
EII&gt;QflEieiYlg lrom lt'e lrdan
insthJie a!Soence and master's and docloral d~V885i1
~ lnlcnnalionacierlce
fmm Ol'io State University.

h&lt;eou&gt;edinalif"'-1. Thathnle
grrl 1 tx.re in Bu.ffalo. now, as
Eric• F~derman, w1fe of UB
professor Raymood Federman.
"Befo•e World War II,"
S)'lvc&lt;ter say "Shakespeote hod
enormous relr~· ancc ami immc:-

S)'tvcsu:r"""" bnloght ·Ill the UB
o.p.nmc..by Albed Cool.
lbcD dlllr of the dcpattmcnL. • poe!
.udocholarWbowosmo-.
lal in ~ mc:t&gt; weU-tnoo.'ll
Ammcan poeiS "' a..k:s Oboo.
Rcberl C'redey• .lOOn Lopn. In~
Feldmm. Jac C1ar • and MJIC
Hammond to UB m the 19t(&amp;. thus
beginnit1g dlie reputa!ioo that UB
ond the cit)• of Butrllo 00111io11e 10
have as""" oftbe primlll} ceru.e n

En&amp;IJ

~s.lon \lt'CI"e

1y's Center o1 ExcellenCe ror
Oooument Analysis end
Recognition (CED.A;R), haS
been named a lellow ollhe

cllaracte&lt;
recognition
anddocu·

.

societ) !hal Wil5 001

QIJJed 'Lillle Orpban Annie. lfta'
b..- scnnoos if peqp1e would SJI
through them. We tan! 1M a lobap
had boen sunk..ud tbala!i*girl by
the oamc of Enca Huebscbcr had

brought him to an interest m litera·
rure. Syl~ster W~ys. was • tnp. as
an adoiescen-L lo an exposttjon in
San Diego . 'They were putting on
about 20 minuleS of a number of
Shakespeare' pia~&lt; m a p.eudoEliubethan theater:· he s.n}5 " I
saw every ingle one. but remember the segment from JuliusCae:~.ar
tx.st. It ended with Amon}' s line.
·crv havoc. and lei loose tbe dogs
o!v~ar.' That'~ \el') impon.n.nt. be cause we \lro'ert: alway' afr:Ud of
war. and we lne\lo it " ·a oommg··
Sy1vesu:t till rernembers vj".
Hily tbe day that war flnall) came
"In early September 1939.1 ..,., at
sea when England declared war.
Ttx. boat was packed. Ttx.re ,..as a
singer oo board, Ruth Elting. who
was famous in her day. and a
woman gi ving fundamenta.list ser~
mons who promised to recite a poem

" In tlte '60s, people in universities began
to urulerstmui all the ways that our society
was still at war."
diaq•for so many people. HiS&gt;•,ritmg IS concerned with •iolencle.
and wnh moral ambigu1ties. It'•
my sense that a lot lhis concern
became I tin the 1950!1.
"Here in the llftited ·UIIe!&gt; .,.,.
never faced our O"n gudt about
&gt;&lt;&gt;me of tbe lhings ,.•• &lt;hd in tht
\lvar.... he say&amp;. and gl\'es the incarM
oerauoo of Japanese" American
dunns the: '-'13T itS an tx.amp.lc of
United States wrongdOing

S

)'IYC&gt;ter says, "Such things
alwa)s lca\e me wnh a ques ~
lion. How i il possible to be thai
ntCas:t. and not even know it"'!
''Pan of the pr001em is that you
can't tilk about dies&lt; thing&amp; How
do you avoid tbe alltOml!IK: selfrighteousness of saying, 'I'm 1101
like that', which is an attitude that
doesn' thelpussolveourprolllems'!"

for poetry in tbe U.S.
Many wonderful things happened to the 1960&gt;. S}lvesu:rsays..
bUI probloms pno· out of that era

as well. "'n tbe '60s, pcpp1e in
unh'etSities ·tx.gan to ~
all lhe " '•Y• that our SOCI&lt;'Iy was
still a1 wat," he oays. "We tog the
sense of our alltboriity . and l .don'&lt;
~hink -~·'t"C: e·ver faced the ronse ~
quell&lt;!CO of thaL"
Although be mtired from U B
ft•·e YCJUS ago. S~l•ester remaiM
1111 active member of Buffalo'' arts
communit) . In Dettrnber tx. gave
a reading at ~ Burdlfleld Center
of a work called ·war and l.ccb- .
ery: Ttx. Poem.· wh1cb is relakd,
tx. says, to thedoctonl dissenation
tx. wrote many years ago at tbe
Univen&gt;ity of Minneso1111 called
· war and Lechery in Eliz.ahethan
Theatre.• Ahhoogh tx. refers to

mud&gt; of .s

"'"llll u

"IWICI-up

oorruc poetr)'." b&lt; 's ~ h&lt;

thai tbe diSS&lt;:I'WIOO migbl
be (UDnier lhoa the poem.
"Uolih stand-qu:omedy, bmo"""'· the flow of the poem it helt\il)
directed by the sound of the ,.uds.
and'-' ihey ftt.." Syi•'CSier Rys.
fir adds that ~ 's somedlin&amp;
of on affinity LD it to ·whal the
V.A- -G=U=A=G-.-i! poetS..,
dolllll." refcrrmg10amooemt.uin
ooolempoory poelry with wh:icll
O.arles Bem tetn. modler US,
poet. has ofien h&lt;eo auoeiatod.

S

lisa~

yh·= has
pubIUhing • ..,.., ....nes or·.. ba1 he

calls "foldo&gt;w brooldsides." sbal1
bookku of poelry by ,..,......,.. p&amp;ets ID ""'around the Buffalo community. 1'he series &amp;Mo bim a
chana:. he say • 10 keep 1IP with
wbat
p wrilen ""' doina·
"There have h&lt;eo ohaJp tweUi
in my life. and uuhe li of many
,p eqikof ·m )' ~-s)'lves~~:r
says. ..We wiD neverretum to some
older su...Wds. like the way our
!iOCiel)• !IH!5 womcn---altbougb
bo"· the dc:Hils ·of 5liC'b lhings •·ill
,..orlc out is IOOlhCrmaner.
"0110 thil\1' thai 'seetDS to be
cban~mg is the 'l'fJJI of change.
A.nd lbesedays I see • neo-eooserVatl.l&gt;ID out there tlun' 5 gorng ro
leave me behind. You can ooly go
throo@h so many revoluuons in ooe

lifetime. BUI still I have to ask. i
the past over? Is the Depression. is
World War U reilly over?
• 'onetbeles&lt;. what we have to
filet now may be far o&gt;ore impor·
uun than anything in the past. This
JS

ttx. threa~ and tbe chalknge.."

�'Clock ran out' on efforts to retrofit
California highways, Ian Buckle says

·=....-:==-

lME RAN OUT Jaa 17, tbe day
oftbe LA. eal1bquake. for eifortt
lo rwofit snme of 110utheno
Calilarnit'rbusiesl ghwayucI
conllo to a l..tiq upert oo
how bridps and Olbu perfonn
durina earthquak.. and how d.unal" can be

lrNtigated.
~Retroflttin tile volurneolbridgain•tbe
CAl..TRANS oyslem Is a hallie _,ainsl tbe
clock." said Ian Bl'lltio, deputy diRICitOr of
the otiooal Center for ~ &amp;gi-

. ·.·.-

~

....,.;,gRetateh
(Nc:EER) • tbe
university and
UB profeuoo- of

a vii eopneerlne"U nfortu natel y,
. '
in ooulbem Cabfomia. the clock
ran out Jon. 11 ll
4:31 a.m."
Accordol\8 to
Buclle, until eng!ne..r.n h:avc: a
chantt to see eanbqum meords and struc·
tural cletaili. it wlll be difroc:ultiO '"Y whether
or not existing l&lt;:dlnologiescouldba•e ~­
vented the collapse of the Santa Monica
Freeway.
S1ill, Budde •ITiphui=l thol seismic
rodes pmvented muc:b OjOfC seriowl dalmgt
from occurring. -n.. 6ct lb.lt ,..• an: Wking about a large number of collapses
and cosuallles i• oestimooy 10 !be fiCI thai
seismte codes do ha&gt;'C Ill impact." be said.
"T'btTe are probably more !han 2,000
bridges in the epiceniTII region. yet we ha• e
.

/(

ocly heard aboul 10 0!'10 !hilA aolllpaed,'
Sd.mUcoodo:sdefulildy mob add!'-,"
B""'"' -.:lded lhat be wa -IIUipritodby
the &amp;IIIOOlDI ol
thai oc:c:.llmd.
"11Us6thetypeoflocalizedd&amp;ma1Ctbal
.,.., ..-...lid ea:pect from a ·rnodo:rw e.th·

"There are probably more

than 2,fXXJ bridges in the
epicentral region, yet we
have only heard about 10
or a that callapsed.
Seismic codes definitely
make a difference.''
qum on a d&lt;.osely papdamd aru." be said.
-A&lt; attSUil. policymakers.....dto -.:!orale !be rate ot whoch exia.nng buildings,
b&lt;idges and pipelmes are retrofin.od.. And

researoh «nten like 'CEER noeed 10 gi~
priority 10 de~elop eos1-diecu~ IeU'Ofit
techniques 10 ~""" tbe financial burden
tnpayers and buildinl
that
a,...,.... must ~-um:olly be.- Wllb o sei:smlc

homeo.........

~An CEER-~
learn ~ of engineeR m Califomuo
end evada is cloiog ·initoal ossessments of

"""""'"''sance

~anilfiUngaprelimirwyrepon.Oiher

NCEER m•«liptoro. includiq Andre•
Rtinborn.cl\'il tn~neering profe sorlll UB.

ha..,beo:naeoiiOLos~

~

~

....... 10~ liwonry Md - crete buildiap

for WNYexecs

dJoo andOiber ~ ~a­
pccnfrom*EE:Rdi--mwbe:lt ....,.
10 pn.1RlCI torid&amp;a

...m.

• tiJe

Thind U.S.-J..- omtoopoe ~
1'1'.-:doo for
Ja 2-4-:Z:S m the
;Bet'keley MviDa Marrioll.

he ~- orpDizld by NCIFJ1ll,
lpmOI'&lt;Id by die NtlbDI 5dc:n&lt;&gt;e
•
lrlllioa..Cidlb&lt;
~o/SUI&gt;­
dards Cld T~ . AJto ll1elldaoa tbe
.......sbap........ .
' ~­
socilile pro(ouorof d~il~~~~~ UB,
and JaM Manda. UB as.,5.l&amp;lll prol'nJor o1

T

-

Foo.mdaticxl. tile Fedem Highway A

covil~"'-

Cons.tanu-.

~ ~ s~~o

...

in1 •lhat a ohdm&amp; aerJIJiic-isollboe 1JS1effi
would allow bndga to wily ICOOiti!IIOOWr
fon:u fmm an eartbquah muc:b tlroll(er
than Maoday't San Ftmando ~
r.ustaiJoftg gllifi&lt;:ant damaz&lt;. Slod111 ..,, mic-ltOIItion .,....,
enahlc ~
d&lt;.ck 1.0 sllde above po&lt;n and obutn'ICfll&gt;
.clunng an ~ reducmg ~" and
5li1JClllnold.unage
Mander and Stuan Cben, UB
prot.,._ of civd etlgmeet'IO£ , ~ resulu of What is .believed 10 be tbe fll'5t •qu;c
release" foeld scm of a bndF mthe Umted
Statea lb.lt has been ..,smican! reuofJIUd.
Called a ·snap-ba:k le$L the procedw'e in•-ohe&gt; using an byd111111ic loodt JIIC ..,.
getber with htgh-slttllglh rock and loodtl\8
beams to poll tbe bridse sWewllys. !ben
allowing illO on.op
mulv to those caused b) earthqll&amp;\b

,.,!hoot

"'"'&lt;W&gt;I

bact,.,._.,. •·•brauons

The Bills &amp; Super Bow . UB profs take
aim at American obsession with winning
HO BETI'ER TO offer
some perspective on Super Bowl xxvm and iu
outrome than three prof.-sson from UB. home·
town university llf the Buffalo 8H"1
Here an: someoplnioru from poru historian Norman Baker. psychologist Michael
R.a.ulin and oociologiS1 Lionel l..cwos.
1llt fact that !be Buffalo Bills' place on
sporu history rests not on the f oct that the
team is going to an unprecedetoted fourth
Super Bowl but whether 11 wins Sunday·&lt;
game is tied to a uniquely Ameri an notion
that "unles you· re No. I . yoo· ~ no IQO!l"
according to Norman Baker. sports hi,tonan
a1 UB. "'"'" os pan of a North American
sponmg 'problem.· lhe nouon that~ ha:s

hom that " 'ith the Buffalo Boll&gt; ~ m to the
AFC chJiffipiooshop game, Buffalonian• "ore
~ond of laling an almoot illicn plcaslm' on
aggn• ating the rest of the nation." Refemo~
to the banner unfurled by fans altho end of
the game that proclaomed "We're Back. Deal

''If Marv Levy and his

coaching staff can
continue convincing the
Bills tluu IW one wants
them to win, that they are
the outsiders, the
to be- a winner. th01t unle:!.S }OU·~ No I dowlllrodden. that may
you' rr no gt.lNI In man) coontno. 1t '""o
teams pia) evenly or to 01 d.ra~ or ue. u' " be the e.wa incentive
sati.sJactnn'. But for Americans it'~ not There
they need to win the
is an o'~mpha.;;io:; on v.inmn,g ··
Super BowL "
al:er UB hosto" profe&gt;sor. "''d u:rood

B

'
use ~mong a.thl;tes and the recen1 attacL.
on fipore skat.&lt;r Nancy Kerrigan demon~uate the extremes LO WhiCh indivrduals WHJ
reson because of the emphasis on winning.
The ~sion IS also rt'flec•cd in the anitude• of fans. '11oe reality and the unn:ality
ha,·e become so moxed up tha11be unreality.
tbe sports world. for many people becomes
more important more real than the real world.
Tbey invest more emotion. self-image. more
sense oftbemsth'CS in the sports world than
.!be real world."
Michael Rauh n. clinical associate professor of psychology at US, $11ys it appe:an&lt; 10

With It Amenca", he added. "Every smgle
porsor. I have talk,ed to has seen thai sign and
immedi.atel)' ~sooated to ia. Almost e\erybody knows we·~ not su~ to go bacl.
to lh&lt; Super ·So,.•I. We ' re soro of an embarrassment ; r we. re in the game. nuu doesn't
seem to bother Buffalonians •·ery mucb.
"1 think the Bills are a good icon for

do ot )COl' after )eat and don ' t1i«:m to get Ill)
rrspect fo&lt;Ot."
Raulm
Jl&lt;l'"'D' on Rteh Sw!Jum for
Sunda) ·, ,.·onarau&lt;'&gt;lll&gt;e '
sC.t) Cluef&gt;
"People ,..,., jo ing ahout 00"' moen fun II
" as to u~ tbe re 1 of the country and 10
bad. loth&lt; Super Bowl It'• n1ce touand up
to the rtst of the COUntl) and'""" tbem thai
d&gt;&lt; city d•dn't fold end that our football tCll!TI
didn•t fold."
1'be Buffalo Boll• can go fmm a three·
tune Super Bowl loser to a foocball d)'ruiSt)'
o•emight ifthe~m u~lbe Dall Cmo ·
boys in Super Bo"l X:XVlU. occ;ording to
Loonel S. Lewis. professor llf sociology Ill

•u•

UB

·L

e"'-is ""id the "labeling t'-r} • ol..ooiotogy is reflect&lt;:d m the fa.--. that althoup
!be Buffalo Bill ha'e been '"lbe m&lt;»t.uc·
ce• ful oeom on the country in the l;o&lt;;r four
' 'ean, b rt'O~ 1n their Jour t..~
Super-Ho"' I appearan.,.,,• d&gt;&lt;)
labeled "IO&lt;Cn- A win Suncby •@&gt;11lSI the
(&gt;a 1Jas Co"'bu) C&lt;IIUid lead 10 00 0\ emogbt
iJo•ft on popular opimon, he added. "Tb&lt;
'J&lt;&gt;&lt;er' Jabel v.-ille\llpontememJght and the
Buffalo Bill of !be last four }&lt;an "ill be
consodeffll a dyna..,y."
l..c"'' said tbe Buffalo Bi.lls hn~ utiliud
• -.,ell" mt:nuhty ..-as ~efl&lt;cted in quMter-

h.'l,..,

bac~JimKcUy'scommentof"We'n:baaack"

10 ·th• nationaltekvisioo
~ ndar"s

audieooe at the end

Buffalo. Tbey' •·e beenenormously success-

AFC ctoampionshlp-ID lflUrn
their fourth ~"OOsecuthe Super BowL
" If Man· l..c' )' and his coaching staff
cBn continue COR\'iocing tbe Bill that no
one wantS !Mm to win, that they are t.bcoutsiders. tbe downtrodden. that may be
the extra incentive they need to wio the

ful, have comeback fromdisastrousseasons,

Super Bowl ."

1.0

. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
a
'liC e
_ , ......... Apil2l . Edlo11nd
..... ,._.. ........... and ....:epncsidmtd A:lbotn~ ~cOrp., ...ill
addlas how
bos bea:tme
5II&lt;'ICe:l$li.d ill -.lay's bi&amp;Jrly
·
.

his"""""*"'

tj.., .~

.........,...,.Mil)'

....... : .

t . . . .,...~

19.0iiE.

~ &gt;ieepUiilelltdf'mllir.

dilettu.lloOf Praulr. wllida -lbe
raul"d tbe lpill-dl' by a..a. Oad1iae
c...p.lllill '
. p.tiiS--n&gt;~ itself.., • Olpllizalion&lt;:OIIII!IIiaed IOtbe •U:icu cCl:oeiltc b ·

.

~..,..t&lt;:lllllln&amp;"mm

-no.~-

.-

........,... lund. Da''id l Enl,'d. UB
professor ctlaw. will discuss how prodoct-liability l:av. bao
and"""""'
.nis litelr m1::0 in a mar rutwe.

"'""1iled

~-· .-..w.wlt T- IMWT:_ .. _._~-

.. F_, ,....,. ,,.... n. 'ldln s.
Sa&lt;vms. tDirlilt&amp;

lllllllqer •

a.rrco

Onlety &lt;hp., and sew:ral munbon d
the
SMWT will '
lbcw

am::o

tlle~has~CCIISC!d

inaeased pnj6ls and~ monle.
Th~ fee for tbe MIJill e.meat
Roondlable is $40 prr seaioa, cr ·S:ZIO
boil ......... aes.sior Group dUcouul&amp;

area&gt;:ailtlble....:l ~ullmiicil.
For flllthu inflll'lllltion, coatact
MarianDc Sullivlll • tbe ~ .....
~~645-llOQ,

�4
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saJJ

lacl.•on has rocketed." ~.1

&gt;a} "We..,..,...a~&lt;Jhanc&lt;olllilll­
tude •• lbt ll'liiHiCI'IpiiiiiQ. •'bl:ft ....na. uoed
"' b&lt; worn down bj di.sgrunllod SIUdoa •

Amherst, NY 14228

tdca • md &lt;k••kll&gt; a Detworl.. of ~ •
kKeo"'n otressed llud lhc lnSilUU -,
r.lt'lctl) _,.partl ..n .and doe&gt; 001 ""•ocau:
an) paniro:lar poiJc) 0&lt; agenda• Tb&lt; u ru
.....lly

plan

10 riiiiC'IlOCI ••• dunn~

.and worl&lt; tn00!1JUDCUon ,.,Jhbod~C:S of go~ ­

emmm.l, 8"'""'menw comDI!Uees. • ..,_
CWIOM, board•. and Olhn coiJeg.,._ .....J
•.uri\CI'Sittetir .~'

loptc

1ncludm~

A&gt;&gt;embl)man franc~&gt; J Por&lt;Wm. chau
U);l latn·e Comnu oon oo U.:al
Go•ernmenli ,. tU ope.d: ., • lvncb&lt;oo "'

go"erTUJllenl ethaD. bu
m~; . ~.a~-man·
agemen1 tswcs and deahng. \ltth tbe ne'll.·
med1a
Tb&lt; "'"r\..'hop"·•ll b&lt;•pon&gt;tJred bj UB ';
~ lnstHUlt or Go\·emment. ""hn.:b I ded.J cated to bclptng Y&lt;Ue and l&lt;ral offinal•
tmpro,elhc qual II) of gO\emmmLal opera·
uon~cs.ndpoftc) -makm.g lnNev. YorL. tatt

of the

tully Md(C'Ov. n. as ISW.nl "u.~e prest ~
dt'nl for go,emmem relanon\ at she un;v-er~11). \aid the 1n~ueut.e \lotlJ dnv. oo UB '\
dtvcnc~ademtcdl'!tClp11De" -to ou~t 3\at)abte re.sotlfC~ and s.en, lCf' for ~~ Ofri ·
cui~ entruGed "'!th 'ht re~pon~abibltt"l ol
!~&gt;tale and IOCril go\lemntent •·
'f'b&lt; IRSIHUie. W added ..... 111 p«&gt;\ldC
opporturuUt-'!1 for offtcia.h from different
~ommumtres and dtffereru lc,el of ~\em­

• ~To&gt;o"liJustieo: Mart. FWftll.
IOI'll'ICrcb.airoflbc To.,.., of A~~!hers~ Educ
Board. '"L.ocal Go•muncn• Edu""" ·
• ~betla K Kee. Ene Count) bod~
duec'it&gt;r. "Go•&lt;:mmenLal Budgeting"
• R. l'\1ts Olwa, d!mclor of chmcal pm·
gram&gt;'" !be UB La"• Scbodl. "W•••• Man·

"""''"' COil1C together.

&gt;hare tt..'tlnJqu"' and

noon

The other&gt; •peakers and their lop!C' .,..
• J.....,. L ~.,....., . pannes tn the
Buffalo Ia,. finn of Mtaga•·cm &amp; Maf3\'tm
and !«"'llleprofcssorofla" a1llB. "'Local
Go\emmeot 0\·en·tc"--lo ..

~·~-···
• Jolm E. ~ duttlor of rommumotUOib for !be Stau: Scoau: Majont) ••

Alban) . "Otalu•c ,.,lh the

~ed ... ."

Energy grant funds training lor
hazardous waste work force
ar EU.£H a«DDIAUJI
News Sureau Staff

T

HE .S. DEPARTMENT of Energ)
t.. ""''orded a grant to die UB TolOcology R""'"""'Cen~tr1011'1.in or\...
ers " ilo will b&lt; ti:medtatU\j! .,•.,.
oonlaining hazanlous and radiooctive w~
from lhc Manhauan Projea and Olbcr go..,...
moru and •nduSitlal~ .
The grant pro•·•des $275.000 per year fO&lt;
IWO ~ 10 cooduct b&lt;altb and Wtll) lniDIDg
for approxunately 2,700 v.•orl.:en who will b&lt;
worku18 at sn"s '"Tonawanda. Wes~ Valk)
and oabcrlocaliooslhrwghoot Nt.. y or\..~
"Our role IS to tram &lt;ver)'OI'Ie " -bo nughl b&lt;
tn•"Oivedm handlmg,wasu:.d!spoYngofitand
transpon:itlg•~as wellasthosr who are ~­

iFoT cost competitive pricing and reliabiliry,

691 •000 1

ol'fu:W ~
lcntly &amp;ltnd.

Institutes workshop is designed
to help new public officials

Transfer Home Movies,
Slides &amp; Photos to video

TATE UNI\'ER.Sin OF

.. ulllllr•&lt;:ll."&amp; u s."''J'be.
wl h
would qr IIIII ye low,-~~
i
- pboloecpy C!larly. n.c ""'"
bad 10 I""
ll'8nlmpl IIIIOCtlt
'""'!be 1}-pr..~IP ~~ pU, ION

m tbc surrounding c::ommunities." said
L.t:onard E. Ambt:nki, rese8n:h scientis1 at !he
Toxicology Research Caner.
'1'olice. file. crnergmcy medical and mainII:DIIDCe personnel """ will ,mquin: ~"
The gram is being ldminisaered by &lt;he
Nllional lnstitule of EnviroomonaaJ Heabb
&amp;lble

Soieocc:s ~~Mer a program aodun up so-called
fUSRAP (FomJeriy Utilized i~e&gt; Rcrrw:&lt;hal
Actioo Projcct)siteurounclthe nlled Soles
In Wes~em New Yodc., ,.
b&lt;
carrying o ut remedillion at four sitoS 111
l'onawandl: 11 !he Uncle Cenw, ""'land I.
Mhland 2 and Se3\\11~ [ncluSiriall'lrk.
The Uncle .ite was o uran 'wn fl'OC"SSillg
facility for &lt;he Manhatlan Project W""ISie
was latcr&lt;fu,posed ofa.- mdlllthe AShlam
and Seaway sll&lt;:$. Rem&lt;:dilll:ionlll Wesl Val·
k y inoludeo !be sOlidifiCation of high·lovd
nodioactivo WilSie pruduccd by (he ·rep&lt;t&gt;ces•in~ of ni&gt;Cieat fuel and now stored "'
underground La
a1 !be old ni&gt;Cieot fuel
plam.
··we Mll $UJlPOf\ training effortS. not only
for worl:&lt;n anclll'liDSpOO'Iln • sius, but also
for C~JDga~cy respcod&lt;:rs whO may haw: "'
....,00 to~ Miler on-We or

,.,u

oli:

silt., ..t.mltllllerials-nnspar1td~

said Paul J. Kosa;yniak. direotoroflbe TcWcol·
OCY Reseao:dia..-.oncltm---prohsSIDrof~ mdlbenpelllicl.
:J

�.now

....., -.oilly
ondiwbilunilslllil cll&gt;,__.,......,lllil ·
iheir"""'infor1111&amp;n. "EWOIUI!Iy,"S~~yt~Oodand. "we'dlikEJO
'-"eW'. .btlhc~~l'orillfa:mt.
licxubtulhc~,,.._
-*!be
IIHoiOfinr:lolr.llldoy'slunr:t!
--~
rumiac•lhc RneMoea., wbol
lhe I.JIJia&gt;, e1e. We - * ! lillie 11&gt; '-"e ptillic
kiolkslli'IIMIJCIOillioalllld
uplllil-iho

filii»-•

inforn-...co.eoaoo~'-s,
"We'dlib!W'-.siObt~IJCIOillio's
mindswbeindley~IOfiorl infcnnoboo..nllhe
ptl'llidm Cllll5i(b- ,.ten !hey wafiO
.......,_~ ByJune..UIO!I&lt;#us

lir!l,.....

would lib! 10 llll&gt;&lt;oinfunnaooo •volbtlk from lhc
majoriry ua.. inibaJ as ....... J!liUll!l'- We' Dtq,
ao)"bo!y ,..., hlo Wbnnlbonon ~ mokr
ibcir iol'ormallon ••-.illl*."
udJtb Hopbns.te&lt;:hnocal r;erv1«5 ~
and an&amp;lysi• off..,..- for l.oel~ '• Central T&lt;dlni&lt;:.ll Services. unclerscores Wines'
potetrual. ~It cal be lhc place """""' faculty
"""""""eon cflec.1k for lhe aoct WI:JI'dtnc &lt;If •

J

80V&lt;!1'113Jl&lt;Cdooumenl. "1loeteSIUI.'Ienl:scon find
up-4&lt;&gt;&lt;lalt informatiOn rel.ung to !heir - .
demic ~ ""'-' olJ can find cal!:ndor
anddin:&gt;ctol)•'lnfcnnation. Since W'ltlgS will be
'updatcable • m a dccenltaJizod fashion (o•ilb
each """' ebk 10 updalt: its own segmmu 01
Will). lhc entn
commuolty will
ha•-e""""""' 10 .... most cuneot •...:sian ofead&gt;
document, oil atlhe .same rime."
She adds "People ..;u hav. less occd to
stan: (and then lalattyto flllll!)miscella_,.n
do&lt;:urtreol$ thallhey b\tic""
be useful in
tbe futunc P&lt;qlle will'A\'e time by 1101 baYing.
to go fmm offroe to olf~ee ond standing in line
when tbe desind infll&lt;l'DII:ioo .. only • ftw
keyl'lrtlkes oway. And shu W'mgs is e&gt;.pandable, ~veryont wiD be f""' ro s~ggest ....,ful
addition and even 10 bc:aJme information
pr&lt;J\id&lt;n. II can &amp;tO"' in lhc ways lhc W&gt;iv~­
si.ry conmtunJty finds desirable. NOI only will
Wings be a one-~~ OCillef forcamponcn:JaiJOd informatloo and acti•·ities. it wiD

""'"""''Y

""'hi

Athletics report to Council
belhc-IOihe £qu""''ddoldaamnic

lnfomwion.For lhc OffiCe ofllai~

~

de cribes goals f9r future

lhcfiOillriJ!c:lulltviiUII&lt;b'la:ily. "Wepllll&lt;lll
PJillna all .. _.__~ -moo

inc:ludiut UB Toda_y, ll.rporrer, ~ Piyti-

ritat, all reauitmoaa pec:e.. ollllllMrtity ...

lilrmallm

p;eces," aays

~

llcmloill.

W10Clialedltec!or. •,., lhc fiJI:=.
pboa 10
ha"" olJ lheae piecool OD Winp witb llllhc 11:X1
indc1ed. This will cake~ ollbe electronic f001111. Some key piectS WID be .e..
tbought orpniuliooaUy 10 lAke peater
ad--.e d .... way leldtn imc:rfllce
e1ootromc publico!ions. We ..;u have tu
~ ol lhc ll.~r ond UB Today oo-ltne
fully indexed w~ will abo be ~
~ ·publ:ic:ll&gt;ont 1ft. ppblc:al fmml
ll1ll ~ lbcm on-fiDt.•
1bt~Cc:aorio~full.:h.....
.,. «me Ci1p1bi1i1ies dW"q:r.·..,. DmJ L
Gil&amp;Thornas.diniad pll)'ddop1.Hisofticeis
lldlin« up Ill infii'Uilbln ......_ bt SIUIIau.
flcuiy and su4f Clll ..,..__ "Tbe informlbln
lldl.lles ~ l:rtrd1a-. wcri:llq&gt; c:ulinl:s, rcadio&amp; hsts. and rdi:ml ~(II.
"'I1CCJ' ("# IOpics such .. n::IIIJonsbop&lt;. _....
llbuouexuol-.11. subr.tlne&lt;Dioe.omc-nwr..,.,.., IIIW&lt;ty, adjuolirta ID ariJr:F life.
"In llldilroo 10 !lao ' ""'~ ........ M:.
•11lbernakingmeaalbeailbt&lt;rliwRI\-..IableiO
""""'dW'IQCJ- w~·.., 115o ~ .. ._q
trom.--...n ... tltcre .....&amp;m!il OCICXIJDI
10 IJl'll feo&lt;lalk. W'q:s allows lhc ~
c.:.-10 mal.e IVIilrrbleJO lhe Ull ClllmiUIIiry 1

!d"''

wcollhdmeaal~~
ina Wl)'lhar!'easily~ond..,.,'lt1CUS."

Aplin from Wtll£S. Ocrlm! "'Y'o "'We '!me
~lrNS.....,.,.'!&gt;=IJCICIIlkCIII~

various topics. 'l'llm&gt; lR mare tNr&gt; I .....,.
dodicalai IDdas,.,., §lliDe ~with I1Jirlan..
""'!DCh O.&lt;IS!.igrmenl. syllllbi. dC. In """"'Cit!I!S
IIISiruCXlrS ""' USing 1be """" 11'001" tor man:
-~ di""""""' beyond
~ &amp; ...
cally. tbcre ..., tllRle Ulililics ~can """ oo
c:an-plS: E .mail. New• and wmgs.·

Chancellor'sAward tor Excellence in Professional Service
NOIIINA110NS INVITED
On behalf of lbe Olancellor of lhe Sta~ UniwtSity of ~ Yort., tbt Prolernonal
St*ff SeMie A-wards Commiuee "• pl..-1 to annou.ncc Ibis )'l'*r' s call for nomina·
born for lhe ClwrccUor's Awords fiJI' &amp;ceHence in Professional Service. T'hel;e
awords""'"'~ to give ru:opltion for~.l11'80fdinary professionala&lt;:l!ir~IIIC!IIIl
ond 10 ~~ the continuation of e~cdlenoe.. Tbt awards ..., an intportllllt
opportw1ity forll5 toocknowledgethecumaodln;jdb petfOI'mlll'IOeofUB's prol'essiooa! staff.
Nominees for the award should be individual5 ,.ilo have repeal&lt;Odly SOL\gbl
irnpro~oflbemsclves. their campuses and ultima1ely the Swe Uniwnityand.
io doins ..,, have trlnSCalded the DOmlll ddinitioM of c~ceue:oc:e both wilbio and
beyond their positi.on descriplioo. They should ...,..• as role models for a univenity
syswn in pwsuit of cxcelbtt.
We encourage yoo 10 cake this opportunity to oominalc dcacrving individuals for
this prestigioos award. Recipients are hoDomd at an awards luncheon •with the
pte5enlatioo of a certificate ond an inoatbed medallion. 'They also ,.;u be given
rea&gt;snition in the ool. catalog. by the oddition of the phrase "St.rte Univc:rsitl'
Chancellor· s Award for Exeellenc&lt;: in Professional Service.·

NOMINAT10H PROCEDURU
Nominations for the award must be drawn from individuals ~y taVing in fuRtime professional service capacities with more than SO pertem of the usig:nmenl in
non'teaching ~rvioe,. Nominees must ha~ completed at ICiist llu= yean of
continuous full-tim~ profes&gt;ional (oot dassifiod) service in the position fDf whlllb
nominatod.
Nominator,; may be any Olmlben oftbeonivemtyrommunity. They...., respoo·
sible for preparing a support file to indud&lt;o: a current viw: on tbe nominee's
prof=ionaJ car=r, an u~ positioo de.mptioo. a maximum of fi•&lt;e leuen of
support(,.;th atleasto~~from a supervisor,acolleagoe, and aconstilllelll), and
tbe nominator's summary letter of suppon.
For further information, nomination packets and ~ilod gui~ll~. cornact the
Professional Sta.ffS~ateAwards Comm:iruoeChair: FredMck Kwiecien, 341 Abbott
Hall South Campus. 829-2946.
Deadline for eompleted dossiers ili Friday, Feb. I I at 4:30 p.m.

00111 IA1fl&lt;'liCd .. lbt u
A DfC, 9 repan 110 lbc l1B Couoctl,
Dir&lt;clorolAtlileu&lt;s l'khlan 'J;
y-.omd rqJ(IIt OlllhDiQg l
y ~ ond deKribod
chalk:JII~ •bead in r..... -ram .., ,

£&amp;Vt I

NCAA recenifiell:ino -

....n..t.i111.

"We'"' npl
ftlO\'UII up u&lt;&gt;ne of tJw:
bener rw111&gt; team U. tht U.S ," oaid
T~
ciaod"dy
leadonhip"
indxswim~ l..aliUummer, l b t .. as nltd "unlber ~ OICademiCall~ ia tbe
cuunuy Durin&amp; a n:cmt Pwsbwgll _ , . .
mem. team ·membtn catablo&lt;l&gt;N l9 illdi·
•1dual beS1 ~ T'"'11tend UJd
Wbilellle""""" of B' o Foo&amp;bloll Bolls.
"' ll&gt;oiT fir&gt;t yew ;o Diri..- I. wu only II 0. T_,llmd retnillded lhat Bobb) &amp;.'*"r
W11J G-Il on luo fint)
at FSU
NO!eWorthy he Wd. i• tbe Bull '
"lD over Fordham- " t ..,.., unbea!ahk
yun 118"· yec our program from,.. posruon
as abk to bc.ot tbem.- The Bulls "'=R
"•ery oompcutt~ •• many of lhc ,._._..
To....,smdwd
Men'o tcnnos taWod """"~"="~ IG-1.m
IU fill ICaalll. inl::tudinc " 1 very lfllllR'SSl'e
,.in" """"~· Womea 's OOOI:ll2'1()..7- J
cod. Wlolfr the "ID
mdudingColurnma, Colpun&lt;J Slony Brook.
Men· soccer linisbod •
3. eleteoiJ.ne
Col&amp;* aod ComtU aod t}'lll&amp; l'lttsbo.qll.
Men's&lt;ross--ooanii')'&lt;'IOif\llilodan Jl -2n:&lt;JI.Yd
and won tbe confemroc cbampoooslup .

~

.,..._

... ,..__
haft_...,.
__

for'i10lalioMofNCAA~itotk

........

..........(

dml..oil~~Jftt-

"-1"'

bncllc1:cu._......,
101......,....
pmeud -casll r... aUB
.,.,..., fto .... - beta &lt;llllflkol'al
II l1B .._ 1990..) The__..,. .
0 OM--)OW prubllioll. lllld ~ clle
~

athlc!&gt;t ,...,.,_

,_,......,111
lbtuaifl:nlty

foon of pllllloc: a~. It
told

to_....,._...._

in~ lllll'f .._.
CAA tt.pla...__. d'l'od calJiaa fer- . . . o( ......
.... ""-'y ill p.ce, 'I'
-Tbt
A.A Comminet OD ~

Townsmd-..d,~"'ddebsep:MII)•

availa~

to lhc asoocuaon 1111hn -

:

••II&lt; "...we tend to forget that
16 of our 17 sports D:1r! on

II(-··

track towarrl being very
competitive."

----

oppam~~~y tatrna 1111&lt;&gt; ac&lt;X&gt;IIDI
mMt d onl_t one

lbt

c.......,.. """""

m~·

and ..,.

o.tudM!· adli&lt;'Je. ond what the CIOOIIItlllltt
UB' • "'prompt and dlorougb iavatipnoo of lhc ~ """ lbe -ron.
t&amp;kea .. to endant itscoonpwrce I"'''P**I··
forget that ! 6 of our 17 oporu are on tncL
Ml.od 11&lt;1• alwnn• enthusiosn·and«her
toward beinc .-e&lt;) competitia ." be Slid
l:roooten CIOUld 1'\'0id ltDWin:ia&amp;IY Yia\Mina
Towntend announ&lt;:&lt;:d that lire 1994 fOOlNCAA Me$, Towm&lt;:nd said """"''ftl'a
ball sdredllle
10 gatne&gt; sdleduled. wllb
s1"e ectuc.hon is thr ...ooly ...,..'Cf ~ E.actJ
~" comperrlllrS to !ocludd&amp;meS Maduon.
year. onrdonl-amtete. - ll'llil&gt;od m r:~~ese
Cheyney . nnnois Slate. co1 1a~ onc1 Lebip
malletS .. """ of their eUPbilitY lftlMI/icaA recent ·~ o f - IJder holders
"""· c-:bt . too. must pasJ I yearly e.uun
to etrsu~ tberr IJiliSiel) o( · CA.A rules
"''~ W'll&lt;lg S&lt;lJliXl'1 ond "provides "Ill
mf01'rn.11ion for us "' tbe lrulri.etrn~: of lbe
P,..,.idem William Gre•.,.,..explarned that
prouom ne1u yur," Townsend Wd "We
~ for. SO) , albletes •
sporuolioo.lltllSI
wid • huk o•a 1300seasoo uc\.ets thrspost
be butlt i
the fUl&amp;IICIII aid~· Wbat.
) CM." wd To~~&gt;osmd "'TbJSIS 001 an CKII ·
canOOI br "'PPDff&lt;'d "
l ndi&gt;-.dual aid.
i n~ numbe-r bu• n is a ,.ery eJ..Otmg nutnber
For Ul.SI....,., • coech ~• l'llUtr 10 a pme-v. bo
whtn you oon&gt;idet that we' ,., up from 60 oe« 111 athle~ treiJ.:Jng throogh !be ,
(..easoa trcketH old) rn 1992 - Thc goal for · cannot top and ptek him up. Nor caa an
I'»Irs 5.
sea&lt;on tid.cts. wd Tu..-osend.
alonuru tak. . playaoutaodbuyb&amp;ma it.
A:.oordrng to the survey. 81 ~nt of
the eumples gi .., as 'lhc Coundl
sought to clarify me INIICI.
'
the ~ason uclcel boldcn - 3S-64 }&lt;:ar&lt;
old: 92 pen:en1 are male: 91 pertem are
T"""'seod&lt;lesaibed lhc !!(:AA., upc:am-ma.rried;
perccnt plan to purchas&lt;&gt; tbe inc five-yecl'&lt;lCMifi
procram for all
package next~ 911 pen:oent Cooed mo30l ochooli. UB uoneof69to .beeumiJiod
sonable tbe eost or a ucket pac:bje; and 34
this)'l'*r. ~toT~tbe ;cAA
percent rated the UB stad.ium atmospbere as
1oo1c at_,., school'• adbeaenic:e ro t6
·very good" or "excellcnl.•
pn!ICIPleo IISSOCUIIed with ICadr:mic """fk.
Oo:M:Iopmcu is • "d!ollenpJg" ..... ~ar me cal intrpity, equity and stodcnl wdf.-c.
divisooo, Thwnst:nd said. "'Direa ~
"'''te NCA."l will imd ;membe:n 10 our
anDJes 10 be I dJalleoging jiiUbk:m. . .iJ is 0 a.mpus ro visit with .,. on the plan that we
YCI)' imponarw port a ..u ..,. do.hln r odopiCd in rams of operatiJ11 our proTownsmd also discus'&lt;d lttUit sane- grant in Dn ISioo I." T""''IISelld said.
Womeo '&amp;eros&gt;-&lt;lOOIItr) Wfi 11 - 1
"Becau..: foocbo.ll i• 10 I. ...., ~ 10

t......,.,

,,_!

..-;u

=

BUDGET
Connnued trom page 1

(

'

..;thou! rL We will keep lhese &amp;ucs up fron1
boiSICring lhc ,._ c.'&lt;XlllCIIOY 1!5•prootOtin,g lhc
fer fwthor ccmidendion."
transf..- of """'"'lod~ fiom lhc lllli\Uiiity 10
Should adcliboiW fundtng bc:aJme avml·
industry and by ~ ~ and
able. be said. the W&gt;i•·ersi~ will
members
..,..,.,..,.. fur iDdumial n:str\lciiJriug
of tbe Wes~ent ~ y,_\ lrgislati"" dolcp• $.2.025.000 in aJIItinoed tioo "to take tbe lead in placing still other ileitiS
for lhc NatranaJ Cmter fer fi:artbgua1re En&amp;i- .
befon: their col~.oeering Resean:b (NCEER.).IIeadqaanmd.
GremcrprarsodlheinciDSIORofthefollo,.- ( I(B~ lhc~ ollbt tlli&amp;Cdy in 1..os
•Ill! ttem '"Cucma's budgrt prnposa!·
\M!tf'les.'ull.dearerlllan """'lila NCI'ii!R'•
• $2 milhoo far lbt new Strmegic Partner· · Wurl is &lt;'fltically ~ for lbe nllioo .-.11
ship for lndusarial Resoor=. (SPIR), a t~ew
makes ·~.. Yori:.Statea~io1beaitica!Jy
cooponrth" effort invohing tbe enginemng.
im;ron.:mt......,ofinfrastrucrural~~
focuho&lt;s at four compu t1w wos inlnatod by
he added.
Tlu!. Chanctllor's Award for bee/tenet in Professionnl Stniu is giwm primarii,)' &lt;n
Goorgel.tt,deanofUB' •SchoolcfErtinoa• $5 million fOr ,~~
recognition of ~.1'1roordinary adu~~aenls in on.~ ~s prof~S$JontJ.t capociry. Coltn~ and Apphed Sc"""'"'. Thc goal of SPIR.
rnitiotivesat UBandadllrSUNYc:on..-, "'Il
l~.ague.s tt·bo go ~'Orul tM normal sco~ of projessionof actil'iti~s in ~rvic~ to the
alsoim·ohrngthem~lne&lt;nJlt!proglllmSOIIhc
otdD-10 ICaCb tbc .tills and .te.~ b:lalaoolWlil·msil)' or rommuniry may IH! nominat&lt;d for the Professional Sraff ~natt OuJuniversit)' tenlerS at Binghamton and Sillily
cdile lhar Nc=w Yodc
rely ""' in ibt l l..;r
SIJlllding Serviu A••ard later this spring.
Brool&lt;and the SUNY College atN-Paltz, is
cenuy.·~"Sl..NY'...,..__
an CICOllOtllic de&gt;-elqpmcnl initiati'-e aimed 31 hiM:~~ fllcililits.~
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Admission is free

..... Coato&lt;tdi&lt;--

!o4S-3340b rqjstr&gt;boo
UlfJ&lt;lllll

for VMS. 10 a.m. ...Noon. Coolht ICiidemrk li:ai~ :a1 :64S~
-U40 ror rqUinaion ..fonnatioos.

bid

"Death by Hazing• is
the &amp;Ubjecl of a talk by
Eileen Stevens. whose
son was killed iA a
haz. incident at
Allr~U11illersity .
Stevens speaks Feb. 2
at 7 p .m. "' Kalharine
Cornell Thealer.

64B540for ~~ iii(pt-

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20 :boob or po&lt;UJI aod cnb -

cwn; former ed.nor of SocialiSt
R"'"''- 6011 Cl&lt;meru; NGnb
Campa.. 12:30 p.m.

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Cunpu•. p.m.

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"-'nrtb Campu.. 8 p m T~"i.cu;:

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lkyood tb&lt; ltqaiU. ll&lt;yon&lt;l
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WbaJ' Nut ror nr l 'ori.

Stalt! Dean Hug:b G Petne: .
l 8 Gradua&amp;c: ScbooJ of Educ:a·
hun 17 Bald)•. North Campus

4pm
Commutie,c Matriees
and A.pplielltions, Prof Huauo
LII'L Vt 11Rg 'Prof.. UB MashcrnaJ~a 'DreJ1. 10) Dtefc:ndotf
)oulh Campus 4 p m

-IIECIPTIOII

The Cr.duate Sho•- An De
f"'J11n&lt;lll U.llety , Fm&lt; Aru
C~ttt Nonh Campus 5 30-

B ISON Detaoastno;oa NMb
Campus:. 7 p.m No prcn::gima-

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Fillmore:. Elbcou c~~­
North Campus.. ito olfennz
Spn~ '94 craf•
be
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wod'""""

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camen uw Md operahoo. pbolograplly. Bnziljloo ~do&lt;) .
stalJ'oOd gJtis. j&lt;WCby """""""'
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tocreased i.n Buffalo io t 992.

Carpoat..- ~~~"""'"''

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Ftcihues.. line tte3()9.t .

I"ACULJY
JUslaaDJ - - - (-

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•iou•..uabl&lt;+AIIc!SIIIesiol-

Convenience
Quality
Service
Variety

-~A.ns
C.:..l&lt;f. ~IP-3062 Slolr
T-(SL-1,1-

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deposiU .......labk """"""
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,u be occepoed.
~""'
tu-&lt;lcdllcttbk f'roc«od&gt; of lhe

day _~ ·~ no lldmtUJOn

Voltmteer oldvocau:s: provided
support aod cri is int.en~
10 426 ,;ctims and lbe.Jr famihcs
in nine area bos.pitaiJ in J992..
lbc: st&gt;mtring i"'poco oC rape
can be leoscued .If you m will-

w....

moooaT~ . I'ostu!l

lobe tdd m r.rud-IW4 a&amp; the'
Thruwoy MoU ~.bard
COV&lt;1' ....

Feb 25 1ft tbe lames Dyc&lt;t e.bibauoo Hall, durd f\OOf H.aye$
Holl, Soorb Campa• Th&lt; ball "
open w smdcntJi. f.aeulty/suJf
met lhe commu:ml)' from 9 Lm
"' S p.m. Mondo) lltro&amp;lgh Fn·

BlumenJOO U dwr of tbc: rvent~
co-cfW,- is Judy BrothmaD.

lonrlty~·c"""

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"""'boob lord&gt;&lt;

---~plicabooood
J1:i;loranoa, CODLUIUIO through

Capea Scbola.rdup Fund. A.nntt

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l.aknlai-Opper-

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The Buffolo Bf'IIIC!t of Ill&lt;
Arncnean AHOtlo&amp;laon of Ut:u

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Valley Ttm CooL" • dlsplo)
bimhl•cbrloc me work &lt;&gt;I rh&lt;
finn rcnDWilCid for 'li ten-. (.'(IRa

servod dunog l.be ~tt-down af·
(atr Goonnetlxn .d'OC\Ivre.s
wall be served es well a' dessert
Proceo&lt;b 10 benefiolh&lt; a.-

Mrriloc (SL-5}-Utu•"""Y 0.-·

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U~~CII:Adcs bld.-and~ w.-hue ...:t
color, u ....--eii~U lb!Wlncal and

-VA1.£Nmll
·· CWII
NOIJI
WIN£TO
TASTIM
The UB Women '' Oub •ill
hold a Vat.cnlint Wtne Ta~1ng
011 fonda)•. Feb II If 7.30 p.m
m the Center forT~·.
North Campw. Kr'&lt;'tn Dn5L·t~U.
wu~ manager 1u PTemm Ltquor
Co . • ·til fipi&amp;HJ each v.1nt

m-

oa -..olunteenog ow bmc
Womt'o aad meD muJI. bt at
lust 18)...,.o.f,.oodhaw
thetr OWD ~ton

Cc:n.ttr _Norlh C.mpus. At11it- otl.

NOTIC£5

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Pmgam .. Cnido $cr\'1CeliJ
8J..4.wll)l for IDC.'II'e nd'ortaii.JOI'I

COW'5eti. opal.!i

C&lt;JII""' from S JO. 7 30 p m
OOAUDUlt''J, throot_b Feb IS_ Art
o.p.rtmcot G&gt;Jicr') . Fut&lt; l&gt;.m

CIIISISSIERYICUSIDS

A Showo( """'wort by ;r&gt;du
ate A\Jdeols and undergl'Jiduate
jllnicn and semen enrolted in

·1'1111---·ao,

-oi~ -VI-

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7 lOp.m.

LOCK_U_Y

-.,

Before Prioeslnaease • Choose trom selected bundles tn-$1ock • Wllile Supploes last
•OIWV_..,
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• OIIwnof _ _ .....,. _ _

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MA-nes COI.UICIUIWI
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1100. call645-687i &amp;lubtl
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THURSDAY

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by U8 DopL of A!n·

SlUDEIIT

n.l~-.61ll

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u m A.mcricu Sl.t.eL

AI'F- LS:T\IM
0..111 ay ~Eileen
tt:veru.. opporata~ of tw::IDJ and
IUUJ!der. C H. U. C. K. CCommn~« ro Holt Utd&lt;u Colkt&lt;
~o\hop). K.atbariM CGmdl
7bQJcz.NonhOimpls. 7p..,
For fniCliR i:ofOI'IMliOD l."'OI.e;:,
Fnn.k CJ:ccaa or Joe S~noc at

(

~l'oou.. lll'-4003
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IIIOV.

~roasorod

__

Buy Dell Machines

u.. -~-­

"" 111'4002.

RecJtal Hall Sout!J Campa; 7

In-Store. with Software, Pe~rals,

or Memory Purchase
On Pracbcal PenpAeraJ Modems &amp; Selec:uod
Mlorosol1 SoliWare

llit-o&lt;lor.,
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Cbattcs "-lu.. ~ AII&lt;A

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5)-I)Ot......,
~ rn.iec~-400 1

halson at 6C.S·3:S4tt for RIJ!IIn:·

pm

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With Walkman Purchase

~FREE lrurtaJiation

M

~ftCiiHoLoey
Crosby Nonh

Personal Computer Pu~

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_,'SAf4-

dens • BtUger 'l&lt;i:ng • •
• Sub hoppe • Uni.Mut
P1 ~p• Um.pus Ch

Cimpas Tee'M.C. -.m •
D'Angelo H;ai,- .lc Cosmt.tic::s
OOiifntoWII Rent-A~

GP~tt tmces
Lutbl!i:I);;Qampu Ministery

Mw:ny:rnvet

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Center
Optic.U Image
~,.est P.-ep
Un" vemt;~kstores

UBMiO'O

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Wl
Eut Coat
U8 met eome IoUgh comIn Oecember ..., Janur(;
ECC tour lhey're Pf"!*ed 10 oo-1
~

- . ! I n MarCh
Ftang hiS most ,_,. ernployef •
Boaton Colteoe Head CoaCh
Cohane end cr- shocKed a large
crowd at Alurmo Ar-. goono one 17-5
run 10 open the 8IICOOd he d the contes110 take a 63-61 lead with 11 monut:es
remeJillllQ 8oc10n College howeYe&lt;.
outscored US 23-a the rest d the
y to
remain undefeated US a elton did rot
go umotiOed &lt;Net the r.na~ 10 seconds. the crowd gaw the Bulls a stendinO ovatoon .
U8 s bid lor anolher upset I fiJS1
short against Miami. lalhng to the Homcanes 63-57 Mer UB s 73-50 lOss 10
~
team began rts etghtgarne road ~ IIQU'ISI ho51 MariSl on
the Pepsi-Manst Clasaoc: ManSI, toow8119t. went on a SIX-flO"lt run to Nnd the
Bulls their SOOh stralghlloss Guard
Modie Cox was seleCted to lh8 AU-Tournament Tearn for his 34-point, 1O.assost
perlormanoe The Bolls once ag&lt;m entered the won colomn in the consoialoon
game of the~ · defeatng St Pe-

nm

tetS

College. 68-61

U8 than headed West tor contests at

Cal-State Northridge end Loyola
Marymoont The Bulls dropped a 90-72
deCISIOn 10 Northrodge and fall 10 l..o\1018
93-77 Following an 86-78 loss to future
Mod-Cont.nent toe Youngs.town Slate.
the Bulls earned a 71-57 W&gt;n over
present East Coast Conference member
Hqfstra on the ECC opene&lt; UB dropped
theor hnal two road contests of the tnp
fa! ng to N.agara 88-76 and Nonheastern lllonoos 86-73
UB returned to Alornn&lt; Arena Jan 26
to lace the Bog East's Plusborgh Panthers Followmg the contes , the road
warroors take to the highway 8gatn to
meet ECC foe Troy Sta eon Jan 30 and
Jacksonvone of the Son Ben Conlerence
on feb 1

w-··

BMketiNIII

The UB women's basketball team os
off to ots best stan ~ wt an 11-4
mark as January draws to a close Ma-yland Eastern Shore fell viC!om to the
Royals Dec: t2 UB then fell to N.agara
77-61 at AIUITVll Arena on Dec 18 FolloWing the Chnstmas holiday the RoyalS
bested Maone 50-4 7 to gove head coach
Sal Buscagha hts 58th won woth the Royals. the most on SChool hostory
The Royals then placed thlfd at the
Red Flash ClassiC on Loretto Pa UB
dropped the opener to Bucknell 72-63
UB tOC&gt;i&lt; the consolatoon fona\ wf!h theor
8().78 won over host St Francos on New

Years Eve
The Royals returned home to beg•n a
three-game January homestand by deleatong Coppon State 66-4 7 UB moved
to 9-3 on Jan 9 With theor 62-48 w1n over
Metro Allantoc AthleiJC Conlerence favorne Faortoeld The Royals defeated Marost

6&amp;51 UB lOOk !hair
c::or-=oJIMt
!hair 74-45 VICIOrf • Mrtllnd

Eeatem Shore

US's wnnong llnNik
8IIIPPed
OOIW lhe weellend 8S lhe ~
10
East ec.t Corlfw.-- rN81 Hafslra 5&amp;5511 Hemps!Md, u , . 1.-n C~Cltlln­
... u- fOIId ewing with~.
~and Troy S... t:..lora reiUfi'W10
home 10 oo-1 O'liclogo State on Feb 3

Wru"'C
The Bulls wreslllng equid under lhe
direction d Head CoaCh Clw1ie Cheney
hu already..,._, • nwl&lt;ad ~
meot a.w last eeeaon'a 1-16 c.npaogn
The UB grapplen are 2-6 on dull 'Mttl &lt;*:sNe WillS 0\le&lt; DMIIon Ill
~ B&lt;oc:ilport State and Eutern
MIChigan on
home mal
U8 placed
ol 20 - - •
the 25th Amoal New Vorl&lt;
lntotlfeoflegoale Wrestling Champoonshop ho5led
by RlT Jan 21·22 Friday.
Bois return home lar a matCh against Central
Mochogan begonnong at 7 30 p m

_.,out

w
-'sSw'
·•
The UB woman's SWWI1fTill'lg and d•vong team . ur1der IIIICOOd-year Head
CoaCh Dof Raynolds. owns a 3-2
record on the early goong d the 1993-94 '

season
The Royals opened the season With a
perfec:t 3-0 r9Cltl&lt;d, del ~ng Edonboro
~rty end
at home by
scores ol 158-72 and 1~ . respec:wely, -...1'&gt;18 handong Niagara a 1~
delaal on the road. The Royal$' forst loa
came to Syracuse Un~VerS~~y 162-61
UB put on a strong showing on the
Plttsb&lt;Kgh tnvnatoonal fii'IIShng on fourtt1
place behtnd Pottsburgh. JIII'Ms Madison and cttampoon M
(OH) The
Royals I to 3-2 W&gt;lh a 1&amp;4-412 loa 10
Maryland Baltomore County 11'1 the forst
BCII()I'I ol the spnng
Over holiday break. 12 of 19 SWimmers on the Royals' squad were
deemed Scholar Athletes helpong to
account tor an overall team GPA of an
ompressove 3 1

c-us

...................
_ ..1111

Woth 1~ freshmen and a 4-2 record
men s head sWIITYlllllg coach Budd
Termon has plenty of reasons to be opllmostc about uB·s luture The Bolls
opened the ~94 campaogn With a
t59-63 thrash&lt;ng of perem•al DMsoon II
power Edmboro urn-soty llllhe Foghtong Scots' home pool In UB s forsl home
rreet of the season. the Bolls defeated
defandong Allantoc 10 chempoon St
Bonaventure. 130-107
The BoIs' lost to e.g East power Syracuse. bot a filth-place finiSh w. the prestogiOUS Pottsborgh lnvflatoonal produced
36 personal-best limes for UB
The Butts then reeled off consecutiVe
dominant performances. defe81inQ local
rovals oagara ( 136-63) and Canos.us
( 153-48) to omprove ns record to 4·1
The Botos then leU to Maryland Batrmore County 127·t07. nthe squads
last home meet of the 1993-94 season

Indoor 1'nldl
US's ondoor track season go; under
way earlier thiS month !loth the men s
and women's squads fonoshed f
111 the
season openong Don Wnght Team Challenge at Western Ontario

�~f\'.

•.

~fSf~PtCh

Stop
That

ockin'

El.ECTRICAl AND
COMPUTER ENGINEERING

·
·T
- eotn'RACT:
b ...
_
prolessot of electtical and
computer ~lng .

recently awarded an ondus·
tnal C&lt;lntract
entitled

Wveless

PSX· from a
t.lauachtr

TOIIDUl

aensform
The $113.000
lllMdlf&gt;Q""
support the
WOtl&lt; o1 Ton·

guz and ove research IISSlS-

Iants n- am os to desogn
and buold a pro1otype thai
can act as an on11!!1ace t&gt;e""een an already onstalled
hOSt PSX and mobole (porta·
ble) users
Addiloonalty, Tonguz has
been named 10 !he IEEE La·
sers and Elec!ronocs f'ro.

fenst cootrac1or an*A'Il on pao&lt; tech·
1101 U tO the hght
poln II RICh t.tdlum on hop&lt; ol
reducing '"elf and tear on the I(&gt;().
foot tugh lilandard tauscd b) the
&lt;;ometJme&gt; foe= .,,nd thll ,.bop
through the sudlum
Extra t&lt;el rod hl\e alreod)
heen tnsemd to funher anchor the
poles and
ial daqJcn hl..c !hose
used 011 the bunch ro"er 11 C pe
Canavenol,.·oll he tn&gt;lalled 011 &lt;JtCh
of the su poles follov. on the J'O'l·
son playoff It "til he the fil't
IJme udt dampen.. u&lt;ed on the
launch of CO&lt;l'UJ&gt;en:lal t&lt;lhto.
ha' e b&lt;en onstalkd oa ltgbl pole&gt;
UBA" ...uProfe sonofC"tl
En onecnng Stuan Chen and John
Manderfil'&gt;l stud&gt;ed the hght poko.
It the request of the En&lt;: Count}
Depanment of Publoc Wori. The
pole&gt;, to.,mng
,. Boll fan .
sot 011 honz.ontal tee! ba;cpl•t&lt;'
fa&gt;t&lt;ned by tee! andwr bol" to
rc&amp;nfor~ concrek f001m ' chac
read! 10 feet under~roun.t L'hra·

s.om · ,e,bon the ~-)edt-old pok.,

~

··-

WINS CIIYITAU.CMIIIAPHY

llari&lt;R. ............... a
PGS!doctoral research associate on !he UB Department
of Ohamosuy. nas rec:erved
lhe Sidhu Award recognoz.·
ong outstanding orogonal con·
tribuoons on !he foe!d of
aystallograpl!y a nd doffrac·
bon made by an lnvesugator
within fM! years of re&lt;:eMng
his or her - al degree
Presspnch rec:erved lhe
award at the Pittsburgll Oil·
fraction Conference The
award honors the memory of
Surein Sidhu. one o1 the
conference founders
Pressprich earned a
bachelor's daogree 111 cllarnostry from Montane Stale
Urwersity. and maslar's and
doc1oral degrees In physiC8I
chemislry1rom W$Shlll0lon
Sta u~ Heisa
member of the American
Chemical Sociely and the
American ClystaRographlc
Asaocialion.

lhat some ancbor bot

"When the ., tnd blow•. t IJf'O;

dua:s uphft oo the ancbor bolts,
,.luclJc:an cau"' fatJrur
d Oten "In the ,. . 1 c.tse ..,.,.
nano. the fora: of the "''nd can
C'Tk

po~ IO I CnltcaJ IU

and lad to an
mg dlect.
,.hen: the bol fracture.·
- Toremm&lt;o lorodon theborwm nut
that h&lt;Jid.. the bolttn pUce. the~ I·
""""n!ICOI'IIrllerl t ..o stqK Th&lt;
ftnl. c:ompleted Ill thr fall. .. to
droll &lt;Ura hoi&lt; throurh th&lt;
~ antlmtothr fOUildaJon of

the pole&gt;
that • tra """' I'O&lt;b
ld be tmened tn
the poks
~ nttded crtra rod ~(:lu\t'
the"""""~-'~. heen raui'U"d
b) the ba...l·•nd·f.,r1h rod.JIIj! roottoo fn:lfll the .,,nd - ....:! Chen
To tunber &lt;.tend the hf&lt; of the
hght pol.., and 10 hett&lt;r prutc•1

0

ne u,:h damper. mw.lled on
tbe lau"'h to .. er at CApe

C'~&gt;-enal.

Aonda. atlo.. oda fully

loadedAlta.nu "''"oa&gt;m&lt;thruufll
HUITlClll1e An1Jre,1. , _alhcd
The .Umper for the mt tk
launcher,..., &lt;a&gt;tly Wpt.abl&lt; Th&lt;
Ortl) m..pt.:han~ ~~ ID

pb)' IC~

pcxlfK-aHoo 1oac~ommc~e lhr
"J&lt; of the light pole•

Cancer In

111u1e

h,a\e

tdentJfied a frequtntl)
u.ed cbemolherapy a~eot. do•oru·
l:»cm. a~ I map n~l.. (~'lOt lor
cauo,m g ~ cancen tn h•ldren and adol~nt&gt;. ~ho .. ur"\1\t
theu mtual dtseasc:.
Wtuk phystcoan ha&gt;e l no" n
fur )'U~ th.allloeCOfld cancer OCLW
m

'-OOlC

chtldre.n \l, ho ha\e bet-n

successfull) treat«! for an mouaJ
maltv&gt;"ll&lt;.'}. tht&gt; .. tbe fil'ot &gt;tud)
to anal)l.t the effet1 of the full
range of cbemotherapeuuc agents
and radoauon therap) used ttxla)
on the development of second can·
cers 10 a group or ped tatnc cancer

patJents. saod Danoel M Gr&lt;en .
pnnclpaltnvesugator
"Tiu stud) g"es u the mo&lt;t
accurate esumate yet: of the UlC1dence of secondary tull'lO&lt;\ m an
unsclect&lt;d group of children fol ·
lowing treatment of first 1umors...
added Green. professor of pedoat·
ncs at UB and Roswell Park
:·Jt allows us to mfonn parents
""'"' accura~ely about the 011ure
of lbis comphCIIlion."
Th&lt; fondinp o( the study ol
1.406 cbildree are reported in the
November 1993 issue of Medical

tmJ P~JilJln• OnoJIO \ and v.r~
rre~tr-d 1n May
t the annUAl

Th&lt; &gt;~ud) tn&lt;'led • rohon of
1,406 patt&lt;:nh le- than 20 )Car.

mee!Jn~

old "'
"""' tiUilod 111 R"""'ell
Par'l. bef\&lt;.&lt;en Jan I. 1960 and De,..,mber .l l , 19 Th&lt; """~ .
goal
tP tdenttf) dtsea."' and
treatment fiCIOnof rno&lt;:knt cancer
therapy lhat t~ the n of

of the Socoet) lor PedJat·

n..: Resean:h
Green -aod lhe re..ardt

'''"Jd

rc~ult m do-.orub•ctn bem~ rt"''"&lt;d from ;orne multo-&lt;lru' che·

mot.hen.p regunen 1f ns. ~ an
found to out\loet gh the benefit&gt;

In addtuoo. 11 rna) \bed hght on

"1J1e biological
respon e of these
patie~us... may be a
marker for genetic
susceptibilit)\ '
charactenstocs of patients ,.no are
geneucally predisposed to de\'el·
opmg second cancer'
"Tbese drugs are '&lt;I} pov. erful
carcmogens ... Green wd. "but they
don' t cause second ca.ncen in everyone. Therrfoit:. the people who
do develop cancer must ha,.. spe·
cial dtaracteristics. The boological
response ol these patients to do"orubicin may be a marl= for ~t·
netic ousceptibility .-

"Tio&lt; fNUJidJT-IS thai,_
daoupct'
a
Jc al1Kh&lt;d to II
and lbe odler
I lilad
lit·
ta.:bod.- oaid Tatlor
For ......... poles. the"""'~*&gt;&gt;
..... ....WIIClllred
,_.
dampen ahotll IJ..f«1long to be
I
led be&lt;"- the po&amp;es ond the
., all of the tadt om aear the
~
adtum ' 11ppeneat T
en .. ,u be anachod to .....t1 pole
B)
the deflecuoa ol lbt
pole
.. lnd.lhe donlp:I'IS
e~ 10 ....,.._ .... Ill&lt; 'liM ol
tbt pole&gt; 10 40 ~ e&lt; more
Ta}lor o., IC •
I""' od•nc "'J'P"'1
erutblc Oleo and
\ot anderiO IIIOfUU. .... perfOfmall('C
ol the dompen . - r the~ are n

c:un.c

Study identifie drug as cancern

gram Commmee.
responslble lor organizmg
IOPICal meetongs and conle&lt;.
ences in !he areas of folle&lt;

OI!'JC comrrunJCauons

reve~

had de• eloped small crac

~of· ='OIIdmalt!mi&gt;C) '
Pnor treall'nOIII .. llh
orubtclll

""" spleneanm) .._lhe onl} ·~·
ablo found to~ n •...,
ucatly signor"*""''
Gmen SAid
Radauoothenp)'.mo..nia""'""
othr:r 5ludics 10 mcrea&gt;e nsk ol de·
'~ speafoc type&lt; ol oecond
cancen. ~~&lt;liS not a grufiCOOJI n
flld&lt;lr v.heo all types of canan "'
thtsccbon ~comideral"'£1'1her
T .. eruy.fh'e scccndary
de\'eloped .. the duldree in the
&amp;tud • Tht rate of OCClllttOCe represents a five ..tunes pu.ter risk of
de' eloping a malignancy lban m
the ' N Yori. Stall: popl.llatioa 111
large. Gn:en said.
To arrive 11 tbeir condUSKIII&lt;,
resean:ben artalyud the reconls
o f 1.406 consccuti'-e childr&lt;l! or
adolescents. 793 males and 613
females. whocame10 R..wdl Pod:
for trealmtlll for
c:aocen dur·
in&amp; lbe ddiood $1udy period. All
patients were folio ed yearly.
Forty-six pen:eol wen: 9 yean old
or youncer• .54 pen:eo1 wen: be·

ruu

pile&lt;
Th&lt; ost lor thr mooufactun:
and olbiJIIt.uoa ol the I ~ 11arnr&lt;n
...n be al&gt;out - oro. acconlln
to Ta) lor

factor

... ..,n l0ud20

Th&lt; trntment tu Of} sho., &lt;d
chtldrrn rttet&gt;ed surzery onl) .
60. ra.1iat1011 0111);
• dlemothenp) ool) so. SUOf&lt;r) and ....,..
lim. I I."'*'~") onddocm:!cla •P.h.l
43S. r&gt;oehaooe _, d""ondtetlp) .
"""272. SUOf&lt;r). oo.atioe andcb&lt;·
morherapy "'- pollCJil dJ&lt;od be·
fOI'e recef\ mr an) treatment
~)-fi'" chtldrut bad devd·
oped o«ondar) c"""""' as of
0\'ember 1992. The only sipufi·

camn

f.llcton;wen:~y

(surp:al r&lt;IIIO\-al or the lpiocen)

and tJeatmenl ttb do~orubicin.
Th&lt; n:oeardl. Gmen saod. is both
ewunc and...
odem cancer
thenp)' I allowing childrellto IW'·
'"" IQUCb

bl&amp;u "- .. 1w: ....

Th&lt;a,..,...~teolaur51Udy IUIVI·
\U'SI 21. 8 .. t h e _ l e a _

some oltbem w1.oc:ni11c to IIIOiber
cancer And IMDY d
lllllllldaryc:t~~~anare ....,di.ll\aolt 1011ea.•

Th&lt; $1udy .....
grants hom lbe

upporled by

A.s:ooaalion Cor

Rese.vctt ofOuldbood Cllll&lt;ler and
the

llionaJ CmK:er In

IC.

oo- memben o( the raarcb

team .._
MJcbod A. Ze....a; ~ tee A it-..; Geoffn,y S. Lowrie;
John F. Gacu; Jolm l. Pe.rce;
Arthur M. Midlaldc -.1 Eliabedl
A. Slepbeas.
:::;

�- ·"·- ---

....

Services today for John Archea,
51, architecture professor
A - ' I l l _ . . . _ will beheld IOday in t.bt James Dyell Eltbihitloo Hall. t1un:1 flooo'
Haya Hall. South
fa&lt; Jobn Arc'-, 111
oliii'Chitecluno •
llftiversl ,
d.iecl Dec. 16of a bean llllaCk ""bile oro ubboollcallll Maic:o. He was 51 .
A l18 fDJiry IIIOIIil« 1100e 1981, Atda bod bom wort. oa a
while U}'l Ia
Mc:nda, a city oo the Mexican YIIQI.In ·~
Much of Ardlea' s •on dunn&amp; d,. pes! 20 )'QI'I was
ca&gt;len&gt;d 00 the WI)'IID
b
beiJIII ""J'J'Od IOif*le
mdlhc ....y Sf*lC .. formed. He bad ltlldied lhc arduleCtWlll
aspecb o( falll 00 Slain, criminal bebiYior ill public placa
aocilhc actioas lakeo by buildiac occupoDII durin&amp; fires _,

..._......pal'-

ClflbquaW.
He bad ....,.,_, a grant from lhc Olloul
ter for
lladbqoAab: ~ Res.eanlh. helldqulnaed UB. ID
IIUdy lhc beblvmr of aurvtvon ollbe lAma Priela eanhquate.
Hi lD!&gt;SI recetll "'""' tnvolved c:omporu!l modes ol bebaYior in~ in lhc non-Weaem world--4pcc:triCill.ly b·
lam~~' COW11Jies.-lo those: in lbe Wesum world.

*

J:k WUIICtiYely Ulvol\'t!d ,.,;111 the EnvironmmLaJ

Literary eries opens Feb. 1;
20-plus events cheduled
of wom. •acba:luoc lhe IDiho\ocY,
'ew Atgentm&lt;

HEUNJVERSITY' S
1994
"Wedneldays • 4 1'1115" IIWIIr)'
oc:ria. 10 be bdd from Feb. !-

Desip

Research Auoclllioa, s&lt;:n'lQ&amp; as chair of lhc bawd of dime.,. from 197 ~ and cxpnizl.nJ lhc .....,.,....,.,., ......,..
Before joirun the U6 fiiCIIby, be ...s on tbt f.:ulty of lbe Gear&amp;•• lnsutuu of
TecbtlolosY. He abo bad wori&lt;d for tbt l1ional Bureau of Standards. ,_mu~&amp; lhe
archil&lt;lCtW'Ill f.:~on lSSOCJaWI wub domesttc-swnuy ecctdenu and lhe evacua- of
cldetiy and baudicapped potienu from bo&lt;pttal and numn&amp; ~tome rues.
He recet~ed a bactlelor'• decree in architecture from the uru ......tly of Ctnclnnall and I
doc:torale in tnaA-atviroomenl td.-s from Tbe l'l:nllS)IY..U. State UruW'I'llty .
He is sun·h-ed by his molber, Manon. ofCtnctllllltJ, 1 clauJbter. K.un, ofMiMeapohl. ao6
1 son._Guy, of ·6 ufTalo.
His mnain were to be aematcd and
nered o&lt;tr t.bt IO\O"D of Rooda, SpaiD

April 27 .....u ptaenl ........ daaD

20 ~- 00 lbe Nonh C~Jm!lu•
and at Halt...U Coatemporary Arts Ceftl&lt;:r
and lhe Cealral Part GnU,
AU ISli&lt;ICtii&lt;ICI'evmu are free of C'barJt
and open to lhe p;lbiJC
The oerits, ..,._...t by ........S......,. m
dal: U8
ol Ea&amp;JHit lind lbe Fttallty
ol Arts ond l..t:aon, bas oiDce

o.:.--

1990 ~~- pmbc ~
hundreds ol ex;porirnaal

A _ _ . . . ..vice wa held Dec 21 at lhe BurctU,.;.J A11 Center tn Buffalo for
James 6 (&amp;n) Townsend, ementus professor of Enghsb and 1 DOled sdtolar of Amencan
art.
Townsend d1ed of cancer Dec. 13 1n his Buffalo ltome Ht "'"' 15
Responsiblt for numerous edub1h at lhe Burcb&amp;ld Center, Townsend luod several
published ......-ks on 111 and literature to hiS credtL 1bese mduded Joltn lhmdscm. PtHt of
Armag•dd011. C!Jorln Burrhfi•ld's Journals · n.. PMtr)' of PID« and ThiS ""' Man: A
Disroun~ 1n Ponnms Ht: V.ti also edHOI' and comp1Jer of N1Mt~~ntlt Ct&gt;"llr") AJPU"n.cDII
ParnJing and Pamtt'N
Tov.·"'end "as foondong ass• tant director of the Smoth.onoan lnstotulloo ' s atoonal
Ponrait GalleT) . sel'\'td on tbe Albnght-Kno• An Gallery od\ISO&lt;)' councol. and was an 111
cnti for Th• Buffaln Nr~ s in t.bt euly J9(j(},.
A nauve of Stoll,.ater, Tov.nsend moved to Western New Yori. tn 1957 "hen he look a
job at UB. reunng from teadung m 19 3. A speci..,.. ID Eng~5h li1erature oflhe Vtctorion
ptrind. he hod al..., uught at lhc Unher&gt;il) of orth Carolina 11 Gretosboro
To" n&lt;end beld a h.:helor's degree from Pnnceton Uruven.uy. 1 ma&lt;ler's from Han·ard
Unrversuy and a doctorate from Yolt Umversi1y. all in Engh•h lneTilure
Dunng World War U, be ~td on the Office of SlrlUCgic ~oces in Europe.
Su" .-ors include h1 wife. the former Jc:aoette RJce; two daughters, JO&gt;eplune Kaestner
of Ba!urnore and Clan sa Town &gt;end of ' ew Yort City; 1wo sons. Jacbon of New Orlean
and Rhy of Won:ester, M ., a brother. ladson of Mynle Beach, S.C.. a Sister Frances
Townsend. also of Mynle Beach. live grandchildren; t-.. o step-grandchildren; and one tepgreal-grandehild

Bdjinc-toomt.,...~

Mea-Md lknseobnt e;
•...,... SbadJd Alt., •
....., .. ol Kalbmir; Cecilia
Vtctuaa., a Chilean potl,

tiY~ ·Amcncul pool

asan•~pressionondmfor=

"""* .._.
- - to

110

ol.....,.,

e.pa.1ioo. includin&amp; physical gw&lt;lel&gt; "poem!.built o1 ..,. and syrmols. hypMru lictaon.
dtfl~......,., and poetr tneiJilhors for
Jllfi'OI'rly "'Op dyJwntcs..
F&lt;:m.ml C\aU Ita~ will tOdudt •

tall..and ........ bypo!:landaec:Ron -.
IUI!Jor
New
one ollhc lllDII

.-1be

s....nce:

oipfiCIIII.....Uolp&lt;l(!lt:Sollhe Jllll!l'V-

era. Sillinwt
........ -1han 20
ol
fl'ldiYanda'ltQqn """""""'....~
lllllxlklcY. "'n &amp;be Amencan lice."
Ont ol lhe lllDII ...,_.,. ollhe 50-CIIIItd
"'lalgulflO po&lt;IS." Sillimlft bas carried lhe lllDII
..-...~analysts ollhe ~~be­
IW&lt;aloealurnand~~ollhe

abma.tr110 a OOilCJtl&lt;: or material tiWJg.

Bl I·T \LO •!• \\ \I .I\ TO l B
E\.qulslt~

Condition. Ol\ne r Occup or lm· tor.
o\partment t Is rum"tllh
bti~ rcnll'd ror S800/mo
lnrlude.s 38R. I tr.! 1\ath

Cof'I:"(&gt;Us

"1ndln~

oo'- ~Uti~ 1o lon
Apartmtnl 2 ha' a
~ratr rnt.ranet&gt; and
utllltle&gt; 1\l.u car IU''~

.. mu51

S("f' 11

Clnd) Jaonctolll
._.__
839-9300 or 689-9269

•perf&lt;XtDa~~Cr .. •
and satlpor, and aRay A.
YOIIII&amp; Bear
Poet and cnuc lou
Reullact, \u.tlln Bulle&lt;
Cbair professor ol Eapisb
• U6. Will kcwre 00 the
~
wort of composer Jobn
1ft Apotl.
Cag~.., Marcia , pool Ron
l'tadpou ••II gtv~areldlnJOII Man:h 16.ao6
poeu P l.ramall ""' Tina Oatrqh oll read
from tbeu- "'&lt;ll\: ~ 16
~ ........ SlutD ol San Fnn::tsoo Sea
UnMn;ay and Otmd I.Jevl Sir-. forrtiiOredilar
olAar(Sanfilnasc:o).willci..,l~·
Hah-alls ... Apil26.
April
tlleoe
be
• pocll)' ........ from &amp;be 1993-94 ilou&lt;ol"""""
~ U6's l..itawy Society mopzine.
~
l'llct and cnuc A.L idoooL. ......, ol dal:
boldly l't'uiorust. MRadl.ng llao::e: White
American Poets and lhc RaPal Oi!lcoutso in
lhe T_...., c-ury.· willlec:llR lnd read
6:ombis wort Feb 24 ond 26. s.t..Tedoct,
l1B prn(mor olll&gt;llaropoqy. and Deans
Tedlook. UB ~ 'oily Prolmor ol Engli&amp;h.
..;u pmmt • joint radtn&amp; 00 Feb 23. Aad Oil
Man:~~ 2 and J. pool 'EDca Hunt
read
P''"
-n:te Cil) '" 1be 21st Cenwry W
)' 5 11 4 PI
is sponsored b)
three of the principal endowed daairs tD t.bt
B Dl:pat1111&lt;1&gt;1 of En~li5h tbe S&amp;mOO P.
c.pen a..lr of Poelr) and lhe HIUIWllties
(Robctt Credey). lhe David Gray Owr of
Poetry and ~ (Owtei &amp;rnsteon) and
the J~ H Me ulty Cbau (Dennis
Tedlod;), and by lhe UB Poe~ty/Rare Books
Collectton cu ted by Robert Bertholf.
It is pr-esented in cooperation with Susan
Hm.. and Raymood Fc:dennan, UB professors of English. poetics Program Fdlowslups .... co-&lt;fi0010R'd by lhc l1B dean of
Arts and L&lt;:tters and b)' dal: Offtee of lhc
ProYOSI. The serie5 is made poaiJie ill J*1 by
~ &amp; Ypm. lnc. IMqblma;orglldli&lt;lm
lhe Lila Wallace Rlslcr'slJiiF!l IU1tl; a gild
from lhc Li1onmre l'lqpwD ol lh&lt; New Yal&lt;
Sla Coun::il OD lhc At1s, and by lhc l'bc:tly
Sotiecy ol Ano:rica.
;::;
Ill

of cultunl tqemon;eo.
Rtarltpd

s.........;c. oae

~

ate Yancd., evoJ Ytn

"""""*"'51.-.dord
......
offered....__

0

J.. ta ' s kadill&amp;
ibc:oruu olpotllllllldetaltlll;

••stance. from t.bt oo-

tton oflquqe as a kind of
f.-.. a,cnt operatillc 11 ...;u
aiiiiOWld and •ilbm Ul. or
from lhe ...,.. of langllage

Amt::riU ..s a.m MaD.
Ia .cidll""' 10 tbooe noled ..,.,... 011: 5e·
....,.. pesl •TllaS will "uodudt 1994 UB
l'oeba Fdlo. lltJbnb l&gt;]unc. • y
laVWI JIOI'i. cnbt: ud tnaJator;

ICI from lhc U.S aod .....,._
arouad lbe ....td.
Tht: in ited writen ate
those: •bolt WOt'lt alters our
nouoo of wlutt a poem or a
wort of foctioo IS . Tbetr

for

. _.............,ficaool.ududutcMJri.

of Yu

110

f!Ciiaawrilmand&lt;rll·

Memorial held for Ben Townsend,
75, emeritus professor of English

·
Poetry
I 3).'edoaclays • 4 .......- ..-hocb t.. fre..
&lt;jiiCIII)y .....clded ..adiopiD-a..,pcrfor- . . poaenll "New Ficlda
...,..
April IS ond 16, a ..,... ol oeadlllp ond
b)/10111&lt; ollhc- c t , _ -

(197

nn Lau1ernach, a 1993 MocArthur f•llo" . 't111 be ague" speal.er and reader
m Apnl Her bool. of poelr). "'amor.pub~Wd to con.'i&lt;krablt accla•m. tS ...0 1
ollustml&lt; her method of poettc play 111 v.tucb
"Jong~ I lund Of a freeqenl operatin at

A

w11l all around and "'thin us."
A spec.al readln&amp;anddlscussionon Masch
16 and 17 "til highhght lhe wod. of two
guest writers from South America. Chilean
poet Raul Zunu and Jorge Sonuqo Perednik.
on Argentine poe1. critac and tran lator.
Zuri~ ,.,bo now hves ill Rome,
an
unponan1 figure in the cultunl resi5tance
· donng Otilt' s mDSI recent miti1ary dictator·
ship and has become one of tbe most inOuentia!J&gt;oetsofhisgcneratiOtL Peredniki lhc
co-founder of XUL. a mataztoe of poetics
and poetry dedicated to innovative writi~g.
He is director of lhe poetics proaram 11 t.bt
UniveBity of Boeoos Aires and author of 1

an

n.

.,.;u

w

�-,.~rr. -

- - . -....

Multidisciplinary Pilot
o- 11 1 member or ..-a~
music '"'-loa ..-iMioas,
•
lbe lit . l!doocalon
'Nalloa.al Coolferalco aoad 1he New
VOlt Couecilof Mooio: T-.toer
~ Prop-1m&amp;.
. ...
ICtVed .. prHidenl from ) 988-92.

Project Program Announces
CJuidelinesfori\pplications
_,
JlfOI"dt..,.,...,-

The~ ....
~ llw I'IIMIII prajtlc:lo .. cl nUiicllectpiM•y ~The~ d . . p-qgnm alP ..-.1111&gt;
ulyin ~,_-prqeca10•10.....,.tw~
--ci~~IO-.w~«llfW*..:·
llw lundlng ICIUt1:*- The~ llw ~Ill ~10 ...

....

OllicldtteV~ee~llw~•Feb

UBCouncil
gives approval
to policies

0

Tbe liB Counal 011 Dec 9
ttpprOWd IWO raoluQom
OOIIC:I!mill&amp; pobcaeo 011 lbe loatbon
ltlld~ofiu~

Boyer to peak
at Law Alumni
luncheon

0

The ofT.::en lftd directors

!1 tbt UB LA Alumru

"'&gt;Ociation lftd tbt ~ 'ew
Yorl Olapter of tbt UB uw
Alumni Associltion are hostrng 1
luochcon to be held at nnoo on
Fnda~. Jm :!8. in tbe Ylk Club,
5&lt;1\ •ntl&lt;rhth A \'e. tn '" Y
Cit~ The luncheon is bemg held
II rtlOjUJ11.1100 V. Jlh the C~
\&lt;ri. Sute Bar Assoclation'•
annual rn«Ung.
The Juncbeon v.i[l feat= I
w b) BaTry B. Boyer, dean of
w VB LAw School. Boyer ,.,;u
updlll&lt; alumni on law ocbool
act" ities. including proposed
changes to tbt curriculum that
• all better prepare UB law 5UJ ·
dent for professional practiao.
1

UB faculty
take part in
MLAmeeting

lriam ("Ex.poning the Enghsb
Countryside Jameo Gmnger' •
Oeorgic Plantatton"). Bt ary
('' ·leh til&lt;. Hegel. and
the Sublime").
~iding o= pn:llflm ,...,...
Clal"' Kaba c-tolourrung tbe
Acodenul; Pro.JCOI~) ; aod BiD
w..,.... ("Going 10 E~treme&gt;." a
pn:llflm of the Oi~osion of LAte·
Eighteenth-Century LoW'awre)
In addmon. Barbara ·Wablde, dorector of nt'tr'Slty
uinri&lt;&gt;. spoke 011 ·Art We Going to be Around on the 2 ht CenIUl)'•

forecason&amp; a .,. Pittadlgm

for the u'brar) ~ dunng •
"""'
on lbe cbangon •&lt;Jrids of tea·
&lt;Ierne lftd scbolarl) publtshing.

TenyGates
named chair
of Music Dept

0

J. T...,.Goltos, ~

potesoor and roardinalor of

in lbe Doponml:o1l of
MUSIC, has been named 101 tbree-

lhiSIC ed.ocalion

year""" .. cbaJr of !hoi cleparonerL
H&lt; rq&gt;laces
Stqn:n Manes.
who bad beaded

0

A large number ofUB
faculty from tbt Deport·
ment of English lftd ComparaU\-e Lnerature panicipated in last
mooth's meetin&amp;of·lbe Modem
Language Associ.oon of
America in Toronto. Their Ia!.
or papen iMiuded;
Cbaries BerasteiJI ("Pro•i·
$ianJ] Institutions: Alternative
Pre,,es and Poetic lnnovanon");
J oa n Copjec: ("Melodrama: A
Rtu-.on to Cry"); Robert Daly
("Authoring Subjects" and "We
Rt.nl Have no Counuy at All:
Ho" thorn&lt;· s R&lt;OCX:Upa!lons of
Ht""'Y"); Vie Doyno (''The
~nomics of Consciousness m
Marl Twaon"): Jim Jlolstun
(Jhe Harp and the Cap: Re••i·
'"'"''m and the Uruted
lnoJunen"); satty Hubbard
!"Unmaking Genealogy: Oenrude
Stetn's Serial War on tbe Past").
Also, Joan RetallaCk ("John
Cage: In Dialogue with Chance");
Jim wan ("I.Acan's Gaze,
Ketler's Touch. and the Language
or the Unconscious'); Andrew
B.,. ill ("Murder and Melanebuly: Moravia and the Fascina·

tion of Homosexuality'). Sbaun

lbe ~

!iinoe )989

GATES

Manes. • c:oocm
piani&gt;t of irmnalional oepation.
has n:uned 1D
IC1IChing and

perf&lt;m13DC&lt;.

0.... ClJJle "' UB on 1986 ali&lt;r
l&lt;fiUrtS .. dmlctor of gr.1duolc 1T1USJC

aducalion .. tht University of Alabama. Tuscaloosa. asst. directoo- of
the &lt;Ctw:Ja of 1T1USJC • The Oluo SUite
I.Jru,-m;itv, and cbaJr of tht 1t1IJSlC
~and supcrvi9Jfofbnnd
&lt;Xl11&lt;luctJnB P"'l""""'"' Musl..ongum
College. New Conoord. Oluo
HtsfT"'ior.,..-f&lt;Jn1lllllCeii!CISft
oonducling. d:oe double ba&lt;s viOl and
tuba G:lles. publocallODS include tht
1988 bQok Music EdMaJtian in w
unum S/oles: Conumporary Issues.
i&lt;'ttal """" ~ and amcles.
He re&lt;1eived a bachelor's de·
gree: in music and a mas1er'
degret in composition and music
education supervision from
orthem lUinois Uni versity, aod
a doctorate in educatioo from the
Uni,oersity of Illinois. Urbana·
Champaign.

• 'Wbilt Council ~ woU
........ 10 be tdloduled ... 305
Capen..~ may be """'cd.
• lbe ebair'• dolaeoon, to liorgor
room • 567 CApon. when all public spectatOr oaung bas been fillod
1ft 305 c.., ltlld addotimal indi,idual. .. 10 on.md
Spccwon must bt seated
during .,.,.,.,ngs SWodoJtg room
.... n001 be ., ...iabJe.
If 1 meeun car.no&lt; be moved
10 a III(IU tc 10 accommoc1.atc
additicioal~p&lt;&gt;C~at&lt;n.

copoes or

lbe ..-tJnJ genda aod official
medlft&amp; I1IJliUtes .. til be made
available 10 memben; of the public "'bo are un.ablt 10 att&lt;nd

The Cwoc!l al..., approved a
to .UO.. 'tdeo camera:. on
!be tnCel.ll1ll room for the purpooe
of •·odeot.apmj; ~gs One
.-eo mille room ,.,;u be clear!}
designated and ideaufoed for vtdeo
CllnCI2S aod opcrliOrS Video
!1leiSin

c:ameru "''" be resmaed 10 the

odentified osea lftd should bt on
place before lbe m&lt;ellft&amp; begons
Addouonal dewl aod coocmrs
or quesuoos reprding lbe poboo
should bt du-.cted. tn v.Tltmg. 10
UB Councol, 536 Cap&lt;n Hall
onhCampus

Nevergold
heads Planned
Parenthood
Barbara 'ev~ lee·
tu= on counsehng aod
cdueatoooal psydlology and ad·
JWICI professor at Empire State
College. bas been named exccuu ve c11rector w1th the locaJ affi l1·
ate of Planned Parenthood.
Formerly dorector of fo&gt;ter

0

C:orefadoplJOO S&lt;notCCS With

Fnendslup Hou"' of Wes1em
1
t"'- YorL.. Inc.. e\ergold 1s an
ad' ocate of \'OiunW) farnil)
planmng and v.omen's reproduc UH health ISSUe£
'e\;ergold 1 t"'-rounder of
Concerned Par&lt;nts and Cmz.&lt;n&gt;
for Quahl) EducatJon. lnc. She IS
also a membeo of the Buffalo
Oenem Hosptllll Boan! of Trustees. Buffalo Ps)chiatnc Center
Boan! of VisitoR, Western Now
Yorl.' s Coone~ for Afncan Relations, aod Alpha Kappa Alpha

Sororit), Inc.

Sbe reoewed ber B.S. from
Buffalo Stat&lt; Colk g&lt; 1ltld Ed.M.
deg=s in Ftmch education and
counselor education from UB.
where sht also earned ber Ph.D.
in oounselor education.

11, ~Be ~na110

eoa.:l $20.000.,- ...... ~ 10 be lf'l'ltUlCeCI bV Apr«
15. IIBC

.

Applao1iaoa may be aubmlllecllor pa !llqiiCI ~" fPJ . . . Ill
~-· Spec:lll 001-iiiOlt ' -· be~
IO~U.c;ra.

~- ---,_10

oaniJaiiO . . ~ edUc8llorl -

~d~~

1...-glbi-~-­

hlPI-C* ...... ,.....

U8 ftnOa -.:ledt'I'Uibe ....,10 ~ . . pr~ .....
~Ill dtlmonllr
""
ortg1n1llil)o ...a.tr~ r:J
the PI'OieOIID ~ ....... i4lOI*li'S

81

A..-

Awwds we not 1l&gt;1:p8CSIId 10 e..-:1 $20.000 n drecl COliS n:lfliCI
COliS
not be lllPIIId The mtll1II1'UT1 penoa os one yew
IX&gt;trCiallor ,..,.,.., urder ~Ill&lt;~

ftnOa may be t.-'10 """"'
COliS d suppi1es Ollla aco.-.on -.
.,.,.., ..-.:1 8CCO!m ID ~ nececsary 10 otnln prelnwwythai dernonsV
the ~ r:l h Pfop!CI FUI"dllm8)o a11o be .-3 to
I)I'OIIIde I I ' - MS1Stan:lll'ltp8 F\TlCis ttwy na1 be useo 10 prtMcje - ry lor facully or &amp;Ia~ or 10--., ..-.go 8'ldlor cont.rerooes l.JnlaMl
funds may not be 11BnS!errad 10 ao IFR ac:coun1 IIIlO muii be l'8tU!'lad 10
the Olf&lt;Oe cJ It Vree P!esadert lor Resean:n
~lor the pliO! pr~ should 1'101

from OI!W """"""

••

llOUICleS

01 -

"l4!pl:atiao•
IIPPIIcabclno 8rtl encouragecl b.JI ,

any-... ~

n-

dudng CCMII ~ ..0 budget. must not exOMd IS pages double
spaced lingle IIOded The cover w- ,..... nctude a
llw tne II'OIBCt
tnenames ~ lull acllll-..es.-.l phone ~d .. pmopa ...-t.gann the fOlios r:J , _ , h to &lt;OII'ttct' tne pr'OPOGal · - al'ld
1 t 1 e - lull add&lt;,_ and pt-one rvrt&gt;ors cJ r..o P1"'I"S....., are !a
moloar Wltt1 one a all t1&lt;eas at the preopooeo .._.&lt;:1\ bul ., W"lCm ""'
prtnctpal in..es:•oat&lt;Yl&gt; ClO"" .,.,.., ~ ey:
r
,.,..,..,..,.

ws.ness

.. - . . . . .

-

... -

page d .,.. proposal ., CCJnC&gt;Se bullellorr&lt;l

011 tne """ey: secanCl

• Sc&gt;ecrltC goo/ cJ tne pliO! PI'OfE1CI, • e wNII opeoi1C lfll&lt;orTnaDon

daJa
&lt;Y results rnJSt be obta1ned on oroer 10 establtsn the \llllblllty d 1ne
prQJeCt and 10 Slbnlllbe lull prnpooa! 10 the awraprlale sponsa ~more 1han one pnnopat ~ • ~ . uar goalS at eacnlfl\ieSI.ga101' ,.... be speatca del"""'
• rrne r8QU1fed COfT1)Iele po1ot prqed
• Amount al polot pr~ fl.llldwlg requested
• f'rcposed &lt;tale (~l lot submr.llng
proposa to apprapr"

a e e&gt;cte&lt;nal sponsa
• E&gt;aemal spoosas 1D wt11Ci\ lull proposal

be s.Im

• Pro,ectecs avemge anrua1 budget ..-.:I twne frame 01
pro,ect
Include the l'1l.l'1'lber r:J lacufty and SIOO&amp;nls 10 be ~ pe&lt; , _
rt the full pr0j8C1 .. lundaO
• Speedy any eJIPI3Cled c:ollabora!JOn(s) ~ Oltler academe ,_,_
liOn$, g&lt;Nef1Ynl!&lt;1l ageoce; or •ndustnes aur'"llltle pilot PfCltE1CI
ancJ/01 the ful prOf8CI
...... ....., " ' - . . _ . . lor pliO! "-""""~~ must ncloJae the lt:oltoMng
• Baol&lt;.ground lor r~
• Explanatoons al the ongondy 81'Xl/or1Jf11qUen8SS oC ""' PfCltE1CI ..

- a s r:J the value r:J ll1e prllti!CIIO pclenWII- sponsas and
ID the lnWfSII)I lf1 tne years . _ ,

.• Expianaborllor the read lor and relaOOnstl1p nary results sought and ltle lui. """""'~ proposal

sponsors

....
to_,..

pr.....

• A descrlPilOO r:J the IOCWBI pilot prqed onclu&lt;llng the expeml8f1t:S 10

be per1ormed and the narure of ltle dala 10 be colectlld and result

1D be 8kp8Cied

•

• A aetatled budge! SI10W100 tow the ~ po1ot Pf01eC1 lRJS
would be utd!Zed by e&gt;;pendotoQ categOry (suppl.es. aonatyllcAI data
ancror se
llOIJIIlOlen! ~ st.pend eu:) must be ir&gt;-

cwea "' the proposal
• An appendiX W1lh an
lnvestlg81CY ~ tnciUdes tne

abt&gt;re-"'""" curncuLm vaae lor eacn prlllCIPal
~ng

a) Bnef blogr!ll)hlcaJ Silelch Reseamh ana pr&lt;iBSS1Clr181 """"""""
b) Publ&gt;catlOf\S (&lt;:~most recent"' relereed JCUfNIIS)

______________ _

c) PvbltCaoons 11""' 01 tess) reta ed 10 polot prqec1
dl CU&lt;Tenl researCh suppon (ageocy and dtrecJ costS pe&lt; ~~
e) Ptoposals
under re.rew and bV ~

_,__,
cu-•ent!t

------.....IU.Cc:.--.
.. -.u,
at
The lorm. Request lot Approval

DM.

Sponsored Program, (ie .. the "roottng

sheet"lor a typal proposal) rnJSt ~the appllcaiJon (~

nems 1,4,6

e.na

12 t4a, t4b. 15.16. 19111rougf'122. 2•.and26

through 32) Wlth all appropna1e s.gnatUres I1Ciudtng Pnnapal
lnves1Jgal&lt;n(s). ChaJ&lt;s(s) and Dean(s)

Deltwllllllle
Either a brief &lt;epor1 whdl describes the results of the pilot pqect or a ftA
proposal to an external sponscr must be submilled at the end r:J the
award pemd. DeMir~ r:J the report a"ldlor proposal to ~
depanment c:haJrs, deans end 10 the VICe P!I!Sideollor Researoh

�The photograph Is at once
ubiQuitous and stran
eluslw. In

ly

a show openlf'C

today at the Art Department
Gallery. Ane Arts Center,
graduate students and
JUnior and senior under·
graduates majoring In
photography, g.ve ample

-- --lli!IJ
Peft11.

.,_,.-....a.

)

evidence of how that form

continues to challenge the

v1ewer. even as advances en v1sual technology threaten to overwhelm
our senses .
From abstract musircs to stark portraits of American struggles
to

still~ife.

the artwork Will irdude black-and-whrt.e and color, as well as

historical and experimental processes.
Simply entitled

·us Photographers,·

the show opens with a

reception from 5:30-7:30 p.m. and continues through feb . 181n the Art
Department Gallery, Rne Arts Center, during regular gallery hours.

c~r•-.-

.._..,

'Woshif1tU&gt;n. D.C .•

---

.J,ohn v.-a.ntlno

• - , .•• !rom l t l e - 'the Shlmooo - ·

. ...... .-

��2

nary.
0

ClUC\llOMJO,L

• ,.-.,..nON

--- ...

OPPOII'I\OOTY &lt;Df'l'l1
W

___ . __
s_..

r...

·6'0.

callf&lt;9-

nntM :ZIItlp.a

molrt an4 Ja:t- •
)
n.~ omes fnturu clalll&lt;: pft'!Cli'I'IWI&lt;a from ThA!
Ju
The
Golda~ G&amp;a Q\lmrt. )arnn Onorland; Mahalia .lacl*m. 'l'lumw l:lotwry, Tlw S..W

nu

Sttrras. Tb
lO
p
0 dml
ory Cl:llkcticm an4 .-arch. 014 mort than
J0 )'ftrt of IIOCttJ an4 poltnaoJ lldMim aNI &amp;J'I1atiC ""J&gt;..-n U a fUI9U
FCDRUAA V

.q &amp;

5

Aalig' on. prayer and t'arn ly

mCAN AMERICAN REDG!O rdla on rh'f\1\m for 1M ""P.-tlwoloq1almnnlnqo: wrt a DorWd
Mattll..,.... prof...,. of Oturch an4 Sockty a Clucago Thooloqi·
cal SmWwy who wtll lecnuc at UB'o Edueatian&amp;l Opporttm!ty
C«mtt u pan of Bbod: HWtory Mouth~ Manlw'wJ
addl tllet he II "Uilemoteclln tile ln~JI of the lndMdu.ll an4 .ooety TluJ
moru that the ft&lt;ldt of !'l)'dwloqy. IOdoloqy. anthropoloqy and hWtory..,...
portant u they htlp us to Interpret th~ atutuda. actlmu
014 bdtavton of tndlvtduaJJ and «&gt;&gt;W qroups •
M.t.ttllr.NW. who l't'Cd~ hll Ph.D !rom the Vrt!Wnlty
of Ottcaqo DIVIruty School. wu formerly umtallt pro,...,. of tht hlllmY of Chriltlanlty and Black Oturch
Stud!a. C&lt;&gt;lqa • Ro&lt;hatu Dtvlnlty School
ln two lectUrn on "Rdiqloa an4 IUt)'Uun· ThA! 1loou of
A1ncan ~can CWturc and HJstory; MatthrNI will
4uoc:ua African Ammcan rdJqlon ·u a procao !hal prooeeda hrough rhythm- Topt&lt;o wUI!Jiclude Splrituall
and the Blues. TheiUt)'Uun of Pra)'U and Pruc:hlnq and
lUruaiJ and the IUtyt}un of Ufe
Donald Mattltnw
Ma htwt' artrnnon tum.1 to presmnq contempor&amp;rJIIOrl of 111 d«pM

when h explores 1..ooklng for a Blnting !ndlnq VlolenN and Butldlnq
the Black Family • He wntes. "The cycle of VIolence tn the black comml,llUty
threattrus the ''1!1'Y nature of our rxllten~ u a laving and humane communl ty •
Top!&lt;:~~ lObe tncluded tn th11 addrect ""' For the lDvt of Money Th~ Roo11 of
Vlolen~ In Amer1ca. Gan;l1a Rap. Symprom or Soluuon. and Famllin BuUdlnq
Community
Th• rec!plent of a M.Dtv. from the Paobc School of ReUqlon tn BuU!ey CaliL. Matthews ret%!~ hll MA. 014 B.S deqnu from llorthwmun Unlw:rrity
He hu taught at Tempk Unlwmty. Central Mtchtq&amp;ll Unlw:rrity 0141thaca C&lt;llleqe, and wu dtm:tor of Black Oturch CommUnity Proqranu at Oticaqo Thtolcqlcal Smunary from 1985-11 ~ &amp;W .,.,...d a mtnl&amp;ter for the United ~th ­
od!at FoundaUon 014 Mlllorlty Campus Mln:IJ!ry at th~ Unlw:rrity of OUcago
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PLEASE CALL OR VISIT ADMISSIOI'O •
CAPE HALL, ROOM 17, ORTI! CAMP

645-6900

LI V E

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BEYO D
THE
DREAMVI:
ACelebration of

"Injustice anywhere
is a threat
to justice everywhere"

Black Histxy

Blacks in Politics -A Struggle for Indusion
A

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~IM•O.II'I~J

FEBRUARY 2. 1994
1:00- 3:00 EST
120 CLEMENS HALL

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The Office of Public Service and Urban Affairs
a proud sponsor of
Black History Month
Young

�</text>
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                    <text>December 2 . 1993

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Volumo 25. No 13

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~""~
AIM:Uon. Ill York Uwersily,

Torcno, 0c:L 22·2&gt;4. He opakB
on. 'Cowl OlrT'pllers lkder·
Sllnlt.vMoe7 A~
Science l\llpr08C:h ID Lrodor·
Sllrdi'9 Nlrtalille Te&gt;dS.·,.
~a&gt;wokdonebVII'e

SNaPS Alaa&lt;:tl Group olll'e
~Science Da!:&amp;l-

mant end Oisaou:se end . . .
181M! Rooeatt:t1 GnJI4l, Cenler
lor Cog6e Sc:ience.

wort.
RAD bu
hoed ho hfe oo doe CUI·
bfll ed&amp;t both of tedoooloc and doe ....
Coorod, • professor
in doe o.p.rtmcnt ol Mecba Study
at UB """" 1976,
lon&amp; beat
ontr:resled "' doe way
on
tt:diDolncY affect doe II1S HI - D
career hu chanced as new tedo ooi"C'es. and doe ne"' ideas that
hand 1n hand wuh lilnstledulolo&amp;te$, have becomr availoblc In lilt·
1SU and theonsu ol an.
"l"ve on&gt;eled 1 path from mu oc 10 film 10 &gt;ldoo, and (rom that ID

en

communU) netwndln&amp;

dlrouJh

publ' a::ceu tdevi

be U)

1011,"

Coorod be&amp;an tu aru$11C careu
as a m.uSlCIAA. wort•ng Y..tth ucb
v.ell known mmuna.hsts as Jolon
Clio and Lamonoe Ynun&amp; But
throup "&amp;JIIfiC&amp;RI ~ oftbt
1960s and '1Qs be .....,ned U I
compuw pmcrammer and "nh
ocher dectroruc instrutnents. and
Ius abt!JI) tn ,.'0&lt;1. with doe Jaoest
led&gt;nolopeo beame 1 cruciAl put
of doe films be bepn making m the

mul- 19605
"In the rough and ready envlronmezlt of Uflder&amp;round film. my
level ol t.eclmical understandu1g of
liUCb thm&amp;• u anthmetic and eleclr&lt;lllieo really bdped mobibu a lot
of tfun&amp;s," Coorod uys.
HJS first film . Th• Fhcur
(1966), gave Coorad 1 reputabOII
as an avaru-prde filmmalrec, and
II beame what be caJI " an ICOD nf
doe suucturaJ film movement"-&lt;~
movement ClOIICel1lcd with questioning doe "' IY films wen typically put togetber, and With findin&amp;
new ways 10 structure and preoent
films that "''OUid rnakt audiences
moreaworeofhowfilm&lt;wenmade.
" Tit&lt; Flidur opened 1 lot ol

opponunities for mo 10 show my
wort.. and ID teldl.- Coorod uys.
"My worl&lt; 10 film had been intaac·
uve with things like underground
film. and pop ouluue and lilt, u
well as those areas nf fine aru likt
music and p&amp;Jnbng that on: u.di tionally thou&amp;ht nf as 'senous.' "

F
zations

or Coorod. v. bo hu n::ce•.-ed
numerou grant from orgaru ·
such as doe Rock&lt;:feller
Foundlt1oo, doe ov. Yon. Stato
Council on doe Arts. the Amencan
Film Institute. and doe Nauonal
Endowment for doe Ans. doe poss•·
bil1tics for lilt to be mtenctive and
interdas.caplinary. to cross such
boundaries as doe difference between h1gh and popular culuue.
bet..-cen mu ic and doe visual aru.

It llrl U . lO fact.
IDta'elt 11
rntenb 1pitnlr) art ---'
Coorod 1D the UB ~ of
Mecba tudy m
fll'll placle.
"In tbt mad· '705, there was DO
str'lllll;t:r' wort.
lfOUP of mecba
lltUIS lD a .........ty lettJ
dJ...
doeR wu a1 UB." be u . "'Pecple
M.&lt; Holbs Frampron. P.ul Shan
I'IWIY ochers. I was~ thai
tbe) 1nviled 111010 tach vldoo ben:
ill 1976, ..-... thou h my a-:k·
grauod was 10 film
~People who -...e« ontt:raled m
formsofenleiUlruntnJ. I televt·
SIOil and IIIOYieS, but who aJ
"'lllllOd ID do IIOOOUS artu&amp;lc ...S
cuhural "'011&lt; were the a.s ..11n
eotabhshed and Kt doe mecbiiiU
D11 IU """""- 'They .,..., affected
by popular culuue on the.- hand.
but al!o had • senous cnmmi1melll
ID ideas and 10 d1p1fym&amp; tbeu
OWII melhocb
wort. "

onrad hu produced I greal
d&lt;al ol both film and vid&lt;o.
and hu been vn, llCtlve 18 numerous IllS orpniuuoru ID W.-n
New Yori&lt;. He is oa doe boon! d
dltccton 11 Hall,. ails An Gallety.
doe Media AIIJaoce. and Buffalo
Media Resources Much of doe

C

fill public oa:eu proJ&lt;ICU. be says,
hu beat doe tde-v&gt;QOD pnlll'8lll
"Stlldln of the s -- eo-producal by UB ll\deM Colby Seeffaa
The prosram bepn ift I
u 1
...,.. ol inlavoews ~ 011
doe s.1ep0 ol Buffalo C.ty Hall to
prole$1 doe laclc ol public .,.,.,.
mecba fllCihues m tbt aty
" ltq
beamea~for
tbt p«-. .., tbt ID have

For Coand.
tbt lJB

o.:p.n.

ol Mecba
SQody COIIIJIIIIeS
10 be- e:ud·
lent place for
wozt:Jac .., IIIII

distnbunaa

..... .....,
~

T_, c-M

...........
,..,
I

....

lntao .... . .

~-

formalioa aboul
11..-oeweod&gt;-

aolncieL "Mecba llloCbes.

..

ltlberaldy ..~ . ...
10 emu Indo·
tiOIIalllouAcl.y .._,- be says.
MeR than wnpty a place 10
prl&gt;¥idelllldalts .... laforturioD.
the Oepertmear of Media Snody
~

"People who were inlef'l!sted informs of
entertainment, Like television and movies,
but who also wanJed to do serious artistic
and cultural work were the ones who
established and set the media arts on its
course."
wort. be hu beat o.ssoeiat&lt;d With
hu been OlllltJ'OYemll-be provided the oound for Jock Smith' s
1963 film Flamint c~allltYI,
-which. he uys. beame aiiOtlll'iowi
censorship case.
Coorod' s wort. over doe lUI five
)'ellS hu been primarily with publiC ~ tdev1slon, be says. and
w1th doe questions about COIIUDUnity access 10 televis1011 and ocher
media material that pubbc ~&lt;~CeSS
teltvisiOI'I raises
been ,.orbng10
"Recently
..:hieve open pubhc acces to tele·
v1sion," t.e say . "Tius raises a lot
of questJons about Font Amend,
mcnt rigbts and fJeedom of sp=b."
One of Conrad' most succes ·

I'•·•

--

access 10 td&lt;Yisioo." c-ad }'L
e put about I dlous.wl pqople
OOI&lt;Jevisioo, 111111 lois d .,.,.,P. 18
Buffalo 'll'8ldled it every week. II
has also beat sbowo•111e Alllriabt·
Knm. ..,. tbe DocumeataAns FoslivalinOr:rm..y....... ~
'1 was also imlol.-..1. laa yar.

ill~&amp;•cablcJlt'Oillllll.na

wi1b UB io&amp;ems.forBuffalnLeam-

in&amp;Television. WevsedcrtiUOVa$
~""""" &gt;ideo and computeR. so
that video could help improve educatioo access. But ~ ..-u, unfOftUftlldy. some resistaDCe 10 DtW
tecliJIDiocies. Teadlen are someumcs terrorized that the kids lcnnw
more about new~
tbey do."

otfen lltUCienls .........., expen·
_,., - ' a wide varier)' !ll..l
i
apponli8Jties. c-ad says.
"Tbe Media Sbodyc:.ricul. . 1110
~-"'--)'llnle·
lllred lblr a lot ol...,.IIDdeab do

ciepe:adl ... their - - ialr:resu.
. . . • doe plduce lblr -

Jive

10

Wellotl'totf~lrliDin&amp;
-~. Now. l

learn Cram my IIJidcab-l da.'t
likt 10 • d lbom u my
studeals.
"One .,.. cc:t expenenct
lbout 1lle zdllb berwtal media
....S educalioa lwR in Borlfaln dl...
alatnsl anywbr:re else in 1lle COWl·
tty,"loc says.
"My"*"""'
lUll oo a Wt&amp;ent
10 111t fine IllS as !bey are tndiboaally conceived nl," Coorod uys.
~I 've WOVCD a coune in lllld OUI ol
masc:ums and pop aolture. over a
1ooc period o1 time.· 6ducation
-lll&lt;llhales between the many cultural tndit&gt;oos dour society and
doe nopidly cbangiJI&amp; work! llniiUIII
he uys. and 10 ~it was DIIIUnl.
I think. form career 10 ead up in
tvell

I

univctSlty 'l1181ioa.

p

�Grants fund training of nurse ane theti t
1.018 UUII

areas of the U ., partl&lt;ulorl)' tbooc
kit
urban popubuon tetoltn A 1990suody COD-

I!!J&lt;elru Slall

HE B SCHOOL of
1111 bas
mc:dved""opanu •lalallll&amp;""""
lfo_, SI.S miU1011 10 ......,it and
cc~uc:ae nun;ell!leSihtti wtoo

:n

pnocti&lt;:e innnllllll Olbcnnedic:ally
u!ICiener&gt;'ed areas locally and llllllonally.
A grant for S757,695 trom the Indian
Health Sctvi&lt;:e Is a one--of-a-kind award to
UB 10 rec:ruio Nan-e Americans to be 1\liJV
anestbel:illt The p i of dot pnt i• 10 cnoowa~ these ....:ru.its . .,.,., !hey "'""' ..,.
ceived their mastof'• degrees. to provide
care 10 atJve American populllttoos throughoul lhc: United Sta .
~grant . for$797.1103 and awltdoe&lt;l
by the Oovi ion of uning of the fedtnl
O.partmenl or Hcalth and Human Scrv_,..,
wiD be ·used 10 enlw&gt;ce UB ' s ellisung nune
aneslheou cuniallum, de..-Jop rural clinieal-uain:lng sites nd m:ruit othnic minoritieS and pcrscru from rutliJ .,.. into the
oursinx .chool' nune aDCSibcsi.a ~·
The nuov anw.heti 1ls the pnmary pro' oder and moonor of 1111:$1besiA in many

dueled b)' tbe ation11 Centtr for
R.,.,.....,h 'howcd lhal allhal dme.lh&lt;: ·nllloo

needed 6.000 l1lllll' nurse IIIIHihm
UB ' s effons to help aile- the shortage
..,n take ..-.1 awn-be
· Tbcli•-e-yearlndianfileaiOoScrvieegrant
woll provo&amp; e1ght full tcbolarslrlps to lll"t
Amlencan&lt;. Prot:ram lltlff will rtm~it nanoowide. CIOIIOeJI!rllln oame lh&amp;)Or lndi&amp;o
Ha!th Scrvi&lt;:e medical cet!U:rl&lt; i:n Gallup,
N.M. • Phor:nl~. Ari~.. and Anchoracc.
Alub. .,. ...,n as Wes"'"' New York'•
large

JIUV&lt; Amencan popul01ioft

The grant also provide. monty to set up
fiJW&gt;Ctal , ""-'!ial,a.callemkandOihersuppon
pmgrams to help m:ruiu complete the 21mooth master's

~

The w~ ..- 1n&gt;m me Otpatland H
Senicu ill
Jlo.. lbe p
sdooolto upend ill
~,....,......, p«tfoally ~ - 1110daae Cllftdldol....... - ..;llin&amp; 10 wort
111 nnJ ~~US or with &lt;Ibn I.IIJft&lt;II'IU« Rcc:nutmem wtll be eonceotrllled wilhla dlo&lt;e
populat.l&lt;Jo,., and ll1lilu
will lie
oAab!Bited A OU((yonJ ..._ ID -.a pcr"""" o--.d on jnCtic: &lt;e 111 rural - .
StaBtics 11om • 1991 ........,. or .... •
ca~ pcnonnd in '9¥estcm New Yod. under """" w IICed (or these 11 ' pec:bllsu
~ pKltiom b8d the
vacancy rate-14.} pm:cut-aad ,.r..,
among 1M ft.-. IIIIOSt dirf1C11lt ,b ea)dt""""
positJlm 10 fill
'!'be UB
' !diDCJI wtlllllllikc ,.. p&lt;&gt;gram INn~ by ....., ............
. . - o( H

oe_..

~IOC!Ihnie~anol,.,...,.,.of

,UB
crunmg

ba an establird&gt;ed tnck. mrord r&lt;and eduatJn&amp; Nath1: Amencan nurses . Its Native. Amencao une: Pf11iC.
btiOI'I&lt;!t program bas been m opera11011 for
si• years. and bas attracled Gtlldtal £110111
Ne"' York and sevend ..-e&lt;tern -~•

HE WEST'ERN Ne"'' York Hcallh
Scienoes Con&gt;OrtJum. on coopentioo,.iththe '•" York Telephone
Compan) , h.,. cr&lt;atedf nc-v. haghspeed oommun•cat100l ""'work to
ompro•-e signofocantl~ the data shanng proC&lt;S&lt; among eight ...,. boopotal and 1M UB
ScboolofMcdwincandBiomedicaiScicnces
Described .... ~"'P"fbigh.....y.- the fiber dislri!Juted. dat.a.inloface (1'001) network "'

exJI""'ed 10 be: opcllllional bd-theendoflhe
year. "Compared ,.itb our curr&lt;nl c!ala !olwtng
capabi!ily, i1'slike expanding ahigh""'Y from
on&lt; 10eight lanes." John E. :Friedlander, pr&lt;SI ·
dent and oluef ex=ttiveolfJCttof1lll: Buffalo
General Hosptlal and chairman of lhc:
oonsonium' s Information SySiem&gt; O!lmmittee. said during a Nov. 29 •poas oonfem100.
Initially, the FDDI nerworlt wdl iiiCiude
UB. BuffaloGenerai, Mollnd Fill""""' Hospital a1 Gate' Cirele. and me Erie County
Medical Genter. In phases 2 and 3. The
Children •s Hospital of Buff.tlo. l\1el'\'y Hospital. Millard Fillman: Suburban and Sist=
of Charity Hospital will be added 10 the
network between May 1995 and April 1997 .
''Establishinltbis ndwor\: is a major accomplishment," said John P. Naughton. UB
• ietpre1lident for clinical affairs, !lean of the
UB mcdicol&gt;ehool, andchairof·tht Western
ew Vorl Hcalth Sciences Consonium

wonf."''O'DSSImo:onj\n:MnwuhNYTt~qttone.

5llld. 'Ths DCiworl Jlf0'1des the inlual infnlsnuc.
"""' 10 penni! the 0011S0f1ium 10 ttaoi liS patlCI1IS
ao::mss a 'oontinwm of caoe' invohing marl)
~and

ITIJitiple health""" facilltio.."

erald Wolson. •·= pr&lt;S&gt;deot of mformatoon servoces at The Buffalo General
Hospital. and a ""'mbc:r of the roMORium's

G

lnfonnationS ySielllSStt:r:ringOJmmi~~t~t,smd

help Slr!Okers
to quit habit,

PSSurges
n.

Ptwl 111
I ...... Smilie
pooued a raolucloll • ;os 1\lo¥. 17
~ .,.U0C lbt UB ..........

''"" 10

tht •·arious &lt;oii&gt;OI'tlum eotma wrll
lmud
b). fiber op1JC cable N.,., Yor\ Teilepbonc v...U
SCI'\'&lt;

a&gt; the SV. !lchmg poonllD the dJ5111'buuoo

prooes · As &amp;a " tranSIIUIIcd on the 11&lt;1~.. Yon. Tele-

...n. ;, ...mtx: ...,....,&lt;! •

pbootand~wlheiiJ'!"'O''"b!destinatoon

or destinanons.• WU...O smd
H.wmoond &amp;&amp;id thai on ~ 10 &lt;IN
sh""""ll- the
will bavr I1IJf!l&lt;fOOS tq&gt;piJcauoos fu tho hospitals and UB ''l()e.d.
opmeno of a -~ hare&lt;~ cbn.cal
~ and • c:ommunlty-..·Jde. Q:IID'llhzed
dectmruc pallmt tndex wiD be: high pnonti¢!&lt;
onct the ""'" net"'-or\. " in place.·· ht Slid.
He DOled lllKJiber benefiCiary ol the netw.orlt· a new lugh-tel'lt electroruc tnformaoon
•Y'l'W tnvolvtng blntieo 11
hoopltals and UB Known "' H"'JJItal and UruveNI)' at Buffalo Lilnt} Re5otm::t N01worl

nd""""'

"""""''"m

!HUB 'En.tht )'Siem"' created to support
educai!D11, p:went care, bloma'llcal """""""
andbeallhcare~HUB Er...'llich

became operaoona! 1n O:l&lt;&gt;tler. mvoi&gt;'C&gt; hI:Jrari&lt;s II the uru,..,...JI)s leaching ilospalb
and UB 's Health SciCli= Ubrvy.
~HUBNEr&lt; f"""""' is the 'IIIU&gt;al
Ubrar) of MediCine's MEDUNE~
oderence IIC:MCl!. II1CIII "idcl) liSI!d &lt;:loaraor::
medical informaooo """"""' in lite worid, full

ide--

-

joumolsand IOXIIxlolcs; .............
troooc moil. and. dinDI bulleUnboard 5ef' ;ee

Year of the Family was
noted Nov. 18 at Early
Childhood Research

Center. Left Nadia
Shahram and daughter
Melanie Brasad, 3, pel'·
fom1

Iranian danoe. Be-

low: Festlval of lights
candle ceremony.

dditoera

"lli'Citl

llutc"\0 ................. lllriftlftity-

- - and op&lt;aled - ~ IIOd
to pnnJ!Ie .,..c....,..._ oflbe to..
The rHOIW·
bon abocallsfor
~oDsultaooa

nnl llepnniiii00111'SCS .. iH ... !lfliem:l
• Side University CoiJece of ~ York •
FrodeniaandJ..._.,.O&gt;mmo.mil) Cdlqit.
10 foc:tl!UIIe euollmenl of swclem fJam Weotem Ne&lt;o Yon.'•n.nl Soudtern T~&lt;~r. Ad.......,.,.
COW1ie'&lt; Mil be ollen.d • L'B.

High speed communications network to improve
data sharing among hospitals UB medical school
" It uwb the bqiMU't! of numtrOO cooperative projects that will eMllnot medl&lt;:al odu-Co11l00. ~and patJeniCartln Buffalo and
Wes~em 'ev. York.· &lt;aWl liUghtoo '"What
"'"'can do w1th this~ ..111 ~1M
... ~ pbysictaM ~ on the years aheod.•
No&lt;inl thatthecoruoruumhascontnleled
woth . .. York Tr.lepboow: 10 insuall and
m.ainlain the FOOl netv.·crl for 10 yean.
Fnedlander observed that without the
compan) • 1n"io.l\.-emenl and coope:nnon.
development of 1M communKJitloo sy 1
woold not have been rea iblo economtcal
Friedlander sald. "Tht uodert 1ng "
nghl at the bean of health care ..,rorm efforu . in !bat 11 ,; a mulu -pro~ider. fiscall} respoosible. shored solubon "'htch 01.........,..,
wouldba•e been duplicated eoght to=• over
by eacb of the conl•onium parttct paniS kim Hamomnoi dua&gt;orrioonsoruum lnfor·
sysaoms. ..m~""' FDOJ net-

Ban smoking,

w11h nudcnn
and wttb co31!ch\ie barpmiag

uniu

o

ut.Uf"t

tb~

co.as:uSr:r.-of

en · c.oocern.s .
mcltodllll popcr
nollCe ol "") dwlge JG the ~
poUc) and an e&lt;~gmn« nwm:mano:c
OO&lt;:ulpUHJf smakJ.nJCO$~ pro-

pam• and &lt;!trues
~og ID Ro5aJ)'fl ~ I

l.Jmon.

chou or tho Pmfe 5JOlW Staff Senate. tho: ~""" dttlen from the
reool 1011 on nd.oot poii!C) pos!ocd
b tho: F II&gt; ScnMe bc:caust !lao.!I&gt;
for enfon:e;,.,t of lbe ~
pol !C) ond for "'*'nieiWia:ot !im&lt;ll·
Ifill ces.;,.Klll proxmm and c.ltnic•
Tbel'rola&lt;ional.Suffs..-,__
d uded dw. UB' • ...,.._. ~
poi!C) badonly.._011001$S,"
Woll.Jn500 uld. and rbal me.. tw
ma,ror -.ld.oriom oould maLe a SJf·
nif1CW't unprovtmem.
~·· felt that tho ~ pOOey
..,.,sometlun -'-dtot*uund
on.- Wil ...,., oaid. • o &lt;lcaoloo
~as a &lt;l&lt;ct""" By
10 tbu
reoolunon. "'e
tho llinuaiwa110&lt;1 !bat"&lt; ... iGicr&lt;:olcd 111 makit~~
cbanf.C&gt;-"'
•1%101W11 policy.
"'Tbt I :lOll mm1ben of o..- profes~suffarecopizamof- 's
gotng on to r.errm; or unol::i.ng j&gt;Oiocy
at UB, and are -.it1ve to lhe personal
ues inroi...S.." Wil
..;.!. 1'bco) - the people ........ do
the da.y-1&lt;Hiay II\IDalill&amp; of doc
wodplace, and they knovo· tharlliey
.,ill be lbc: ooeo woo will ha.., 10
enforce lhe smotia&amp; potq .v.rol:k.iMoa Jllid lhal the PmfesSJonal Staft'Scnak condueled ex;,_
"'"e in~rie'WI -itb its con:stituebts
about the stn&lt;II&lt;Jng pOOcymembc:n bow cbaoges in lhll policy
would affect them. and...,., they
behoved l'lto!;e &lt;:ihall&amp;es would affitct
studenls as ..-ell.
\
Peler 'oclerson.cbairorme Pxulty Senale, commemed· "1 penonally {3\'llf the._. pol\cy. l would
urge 1M admirus:tnlliaoo to (IIQIIllllplt o new policy ..nth all ddiberale
speed."
The IBuffalo Ceota' Obaptcr of
dot United Uni•-ersity Professions
also passed a l't&lt;Oiutioa Ibis post
summer "to reeommend bannin&amp;
IIICllking in campus buildings.· ..,.
cording to hmes Lawler. Bulfalo
CbaJiu,r Secretary for tho UUP. Paul
Zan:mbb. presidmt or the Buffalo
~Cbapl&lt;:r• ..;.! UUP'• resolu• tioo was o.o ettempt "to suppon 'the
n:solutioa or the Faculty Scnale" oa
banning smoking at UB.
0

..,._,III!!

us·.

U?J-

�_...
Faculty taff to be honored for
40
of ervioe to uni e ity

xears

Thursday • December 2nd
10 a .m. to 9 p.m.
15% ~.except on CooNe Books
Penodicals end ~~ Older$
20% Diloounl

fo( members

Enter ara...ng for a $100.00 Gill Oeltifocate

,..,...,__. .... , . , . .tt- .........

IOl 11 :129 f 22AO

105Cift&gt;Ct: AnnuaJ 1«Uftl!
Htl
h &lt;"OftCefll' truetdo"'ophti.Ot)
..,.. ha&gt;tng to do ••lh mo1or c"Oftll'OI.. "'""
o pnlnllt) areo oa ntuntl
nnl of ""fl'li'
'""' CUJm11 - a , a!J.o m•&lt;&gt;l ~ ha 111
neurodmb51ry he o. a rnt:ll1l&gt;n or&lt;~&gt;&lt; AmenPh~~"'"' Soc~) . lilt AmencM
ASSOClaoon for !be Ad•aacrment of Sa"""". Ammc:an Thonctc Soaelf """'Soclel) for Nair
l&lt;!lllt: amon Other~
An elpenmrnUtl parllCk Phl'"""" Jm
)Otflll&gt;lillltl r ll)"l019S4afreremun.

now get yours /

docwaoe from Modugan SQtt; llm•!'f'&gt;il}
and ,.e&lt;1Jn1 a "'""an::h •
1011: pro(es" " Ill tilL Chemi I)" Oepartmo:tttallllt ua..
Monne..n lit: obo hol&lt;h B .A and M A
ttr&lt;&gt;&lt;S 1mm ........ u.....,..,~
J
has boat • mardi ..,.,.,.. • the
Uruveml)· or~ ond La"""""' Rafba.
IJOO Ub m Bm.dey. Ca .. and "&gt;ilm&amp; l'"'fcs

( (luro U rqu.hart . b ... ll c1 nqs cmd po rf s o f ,nH-rf'$1

, . al BnWJI UJW""""'&gt; on England ond !be
Uru,...,..ty or W mgl&lt;lll ., Se.lllr Fmm
19!&gt;5~he .. aaF\olbnf!lolVr.m Prm ., Rajaslban ni-m.oty"' India He b.u """"'tid
... a &lt;crenufoc Rlh1scr 10 lhl: Amrrocaoo Em'-sy A I D on N.,. Dolho. and ;. a f'eflo&gt;o .
Arncncan Ph)·sical Soaet HOi~ oou-

art n o t~d by ttlul'nbno ll stt"tcf,ts

"""" SQ!td IW&lt; ph)'$ici.. elot-.mn ancllf\JCiear

~

f tm

fu ll color

J~

.. Dy ZS .. t tft o qr apft ready t or

fraf'!'W'l.Y
Sflow f a m rl y anc t n ~nds U B and tbt
Buffalo art a 1ro ,., so ~tn 1ow"'' s • , s.'Opt' s 'lo rtPI
tc {ll j (J(jOrO fClfJ$

P.1 Ct!Jy rll v s t ra ~e .:1 by r(ilf 1 1S f

Tw o scroHs

pr o ., ,of. a tt , story &lt;J( {J B Qf'td Buffa lo ~n 1ot. al
91f1 for famJ' )' and ft Jt.f'lds '
OrUy St.t 95 r

magn&lt;'II&lt;'II:SOOIIliCIIO.Citl!JIIic""""""":mdlllghenergy phy....-.. and bt:a\.-y ion • ph)"""'-

Dr Phil m
and Gmnanic lingui'Jiic$ from

yron K.oeklcod. holds lilt

B German

the Univenit) of Vienna on odditioa 1.&lt;1 1ft
MA from lilt Untvemt)' or Midi paand a

B A. from Oli•·et Collct;e. He tauJbt albc
Univeo;uy or llbnois hef&lt;ft joininr the UB
r..,ulty in 1953 and has .u.o taugbr .. the

Uno~)"ofTeUL

""'"lt'"'•

The IWihor of numerous
and articles in n:fen:ed JOIUill&amp;l ICod::koelc is a
rnemher lif the American A5&gt;&lt;1Ciauoa or
Teoo::bcn of Omnan. UII&amp;Uistic ~of
America. Modem ~g~ Assooiatioo of
Americ!'. and lagan. unguisne ~ .

OpenFon~m

To oro.. send lhi portion wilh a check for $4.95 {each) plus 8'1&gt; Sales w to:
UBMicro Sales Cant:t S:W !..« Enuance Road STE 109,Amberst, NY 14228
or O&lt;dcr using MasterCard or Visa by calling: 645-35S4.
Sho

To.

QuantJty. _

@

$4.9S - - -

Sales 1U @ ~.. :
Amount~.

PiNR .....Udwb pa)lltlbl&lt;ro:
UB FOIIII'Idtllit:M kriVJ'lio, Jtu:.

O...rmon of 111&lt; t:lqJartmeal of Germanoe
and II'IC Laneuqe · It
1971 -76.
Kod..klld&lt; bas ~""
Fandoy Serlillt
and the Ua"&lt;TW)
te
ror~m&gt;,..""

r

Uti) ..,.._ ,.

woo1d w...

II . Andre,. Sapr ..,......,nod tm loOd:IDIC.ol
ltiiUDOn&amp; "'' lbcUB School ot"l)c:ntal M«bcu&gt;&lt; under the 01 8dl
A.t UB. •
~ X.qys on all cbm&lt;al
patoearJ ,.. lhr ~ or Orlbodonliocs.

_,......,.,_.,..,.,.,.......,..for)&lt;!UIIt
,...,.,... and handles~ m""'*")
for all dirucal ~ Oocrlhe yean. he has
.....t.d doody
lboul
&lt;lllderls. leadu.lhrlll..,. "'....,..,_ ...
~llrf&lt;n
JOifttb&lt;-clmoc Hev.&lt;ri.•

new...,.._.

S.

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UB

foaih)• Or. k8t

C....... Dr IMI}O.....andDr

~~

hos served ISI~IO&lt;I'tbodonbcs

~-Ia

Mylo. Slarin &lt;arned
Pb D. and M .A.
from Ville lfnovcnllyanda 8 A. from Quem&gt;
Cellege. He .JOII&gt;Od lhe U8 f.....Jty u
UlWliCID&lt; "' 1952.
1!JmuP iht: mots

nsmz

to fuU profew:w on 1965. " former depart-_
menlaiiiJ&amp;OC:iakcbomnan. he abo~
ihc Enghsb Oepartmrnt' slibnry a:&gt;IIIDiillet
ond&lt;:baml_......_hlbt~

Hehti~-~S....and~
~From 1968-197l.he-&lt;lllllidi-

..... or l:ilnry ..s infcnnalioa .......,....s
din:ociDr orum....,.,.;cy llllnrie&amp;. Hellos"""""

• • a:IOiSIIbal for leJill writinc ~
ond ..nnca oa lllllll lipa; as f.aa .PI:Jomd far
Yale ~iry Ubnuy &amp;=ar ond Anei,_ ~-..,.,, eniJII&amp; OCher pmodiak. His
~ha...,~ia&amp;jf...Snt.JI;iffilJo

N.,.,.j)belry.._

.

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As~~ the Uni- ersity at Buffalo will be implementing an lntetsession Curtailment

.......,...,.~

-"""""'-""~

Program. As in previous years. tbe savings 10 be realized
Chmugb JO\W'.r~ oonsumptioo and other features of
tbewrtailment will assisllhe uniVC"Sity •in ~g
Within this year' reduced budget
AU universiry office8 will be da ed and telephones

-~"""""'­
,.,.

do . Oo&lt;b) .... _ , ., Doc :Ill
d&lt;h-

~-..,.,.··-y, lilo&lt; 21.19&lt;1!,

will nm be muweff!d t!UJepr by departmental Qll5wering machines from the close of business 1m 17tursday.
Dec. 23, 1993 until the begituting of business on Mon day, Jan. 3, 1994. 1h.is will appl ro rMuniversiry's
Nonh, South, Ridge Lea and EOC campuses. Note: A
number of critical library, computing and campus
mail jimcJiOII.S will_~ sustained during lntersession
Cu.nailment. Se~ils beloW.

• T_,._..,...__

wtll•bo:-ooYt'OIIdlloO_will,..

be.l'li~bl:!lc:

~WYwn~ty~-.dl.• iJQod

•

~and~busaq..-11! •bt·~--

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•

Buildlftp••Ubt locttdf.or.tCICW'Il)'rt:a·

........ ot-llll.ooly-

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RC'!Cded for~ lc:a:M lhd I frw
""-"'!J'IIbo&amp; .... W1ll be~

te-

• ~ s.fery ud llN¥a"IOif)' Mlolttirt.
&lt;UifwiiiP""''*-,.-""'build-

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21. t99J, the: fbl~l~, Unl"¥tf·
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from 9 a.m ·5 ,p m.OI'I

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c. Chcmisb'y· Milhemal.n Librar)o-:k·
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thnr hi') ClW"dJ. No libtvr-v IUJjf ....J'U bto eM

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Tht rnac:biat room ..:! IUJ'POMi~ dT"~~Ce

oai)·ot doe~ Cenl« ..... ,. -

!Sr.- COMP1JT1NGjor~ dmub.l

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Sekctresidcncehlll$ wdl be open ao1011:m11~

riooalstlalcr0$......,1hecwUi--- ~f«aborild­

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f.dUOcs lislcd llbovc ~ to ~
bceutteeivcd by Nov. 19 ina 'proctd= pn:vM&gt;usly ...dloed.

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ll;llpCftcadl~da;IIV24

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Sen~ C"n~C"r

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earned Oe;. ~- 19ll) } Slak~•'ho

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abk:to rmkaha'mbll'e ~s. ~
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that fa1. oo tMer Chu 'NOt· I~ tW\

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c.np.n. Mall Seri;Jt,;it!!. Ce;rJ'd'.., l..1l.('l" dum

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fWY ..... n:qtiiCII5 b - allcnuk: .ut. !Uit.
Mll'r . , ba\'C boca an 10 Sponlamd Prop-arm Palloond ID 'oll'llbnJ_ by 12/IJ93

the Rtscan:h

FwodiiWrl"s~montbfwopenu.­

mllm&lt;nlf«laldlbenet"I!&gt;. Ma....,wrlll b&lt;
sml dimctl,- 10 all ltt2ar.t:h ~ re~clolcs.limcsand -.......,... .. m.
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bo: ...... 10 pant ...theft .... pmvoolo

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bo: ...,...~....... ~and,_ focul)
uSJnc thea-ley canb lilnr) 5tafJ wUt ax
00 dlny • tbu wu:
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curu~lmenl•dte . . . b~and ria . . .
..,.,. HUB NET will he a-vaillbk 1111 tbr- Heatth
S....C.:.I..itxwy..., ... doal...p
AJl ol#tn- (l/llibrUM' MIIU W1'1/J #w riowd
dMnter tltt atnadnwnt
NcR- .Umft~~mnrnl
of maw::nak will bt' p111r"Wkd 10 UB fxulty

~

b) .wr • l.od- Litnty. ....
year't a1tcmate war\ sllr ( m: EMPLOYEE
OI'TIONSl.
F-.hy ...no ..:cd know-'ll dems from Chc
-~wood.M-.Ln.

.......a.cm....
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PAYIIOU.MIMCES
w........,, Doc. Z9 ,. a S..O. and UBF

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p

Sat Dec 25
Sun Dec 26
. Dec. 27

Closed
Closed
Closed

rues

Ciosed Ooseo Closed

Dec 28 -

Wed Dec~

30-

Thu&lt;s Dec

I

l

I

~ 5J: ~ _AMnded
5 m -M~
Aru!nded 8 30 a m -5 m

Thu'S _Dec 23
I Fr Dec 24

U&lt;lattendeo
U&lt;lanenaed

enoed 8 30 8 m ~

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Fr&lt; Dec 31

Closed

Allenoea B 30 a m ·5 p m

Sal Jan 1
Sun Jan 2

Closed

Uoattendea

---

~---

---

- - UnaHended - - - - - - -

_____
-- .......... ...... .._-.....
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Mon. Jan 3

""""*""

Anenoeo · _
syotsm---:sCal-:-..,.- -

Any ""'""..,;
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Empioyecs •11odo DOC wari.., and •-hock1

---

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IUI71'i11at64S· ;nntomlkt:lht~

EMPLOYEE OPTIONS!

11

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bt art) mad dt
b\.-rnndunltftbtcurtaiJmr;nL,C"mtJMroMall
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dependmg 011 whe'da"the ...._ tn ~they
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be ti51ptd 10 ~ aftl::rDak': wort Slit 1ft 1ht
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LEr:n.E SEIIIU
IIIPIBL.OSOPMY
Wibat il1it .. '"Bee the Quttlion!•: Skoptioioao ll&lt;&gt;islt&lt;d,
Andre• orman. HanuiiM ColleJ&lt;. 684 Bald) . Nonb Compos

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"God's CountTy: a play by St..-. Dietl INn os
expenmenlal n lotm--ols actoon a collage ol movement and sound designed 10 evol&lt;e thlt hatree and
deeply r001ed rage INn propels thlt plol
be
p&lt;esented by thlt Department ol Thea!e&lt; and Dance
8 p .m. on Frodays throug!l Sundays. Dec: 3-5 ana
Dec 10.12. on thlt Kathanne Comet! Theater on
Nontl Campw; Dorecled by Jerty Mnnllgan, thlt
play rt!IIOIVes around the U S who! ....,..emacrst
~ the sensatoonal m•H980s murde&lt; of
Denwr tall&lt; show roost Allen Berg and the tr&lt;al
1
fOllOwed
DI81Z IS a playwroghl and d~8CIO&lt; ..nose wai&lt;
has been staged at regoonallhealers ltorougt&gt;cut
country ncludong A.C T on Sea!IH!. 1ne Los Angeles
Theatre Centre and thlt Oregon SllekespMre Fesllvill Among his many playwr ong felloowSI:I&lt;plt are
lhoselfom the NaiJDnal ~for !heMs and
lhe MoKnoghl and Jerome fotn:laiJons
The cast tor "Gods Country"IOCiudes Selh
Robbin&amp;. Jane Stclare, Nate Flowe&lt;, CaSSie Holl

BoWL 2j() Baud

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Stlr-8dp C..po&lt;: Wut, Wlo
aad WloG Ccnaer for Tomor

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645-1&gt;140

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and Molecular Bootoc. Wash·
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CFS Addtooo Soulh Compu

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CUIVPtf\'IIICS -

M ...,w a... Epb.uy
G.....'tloofS.."-dOKtor
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Cornell

Unt~·

206 Furnas North

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TUISDAT

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-'"'7GI)............ Or
Iader Vt,ta)' , Dept ol Amn:al
-.eaca. U.t1o o( Mar) laod.
CoUtrt Pw\ Hll\ebot Audtlo-.
num. RPC1 l'l..JO p m

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lbmdwo Cotlqt 4S&lt;
Froacul. Nonb C""''""

'10p.m

,

CMmic:al .... &amp;nochonl
E..luU.. ol Mdoi..S...i&lt;Ge·
6ed.or latufaca.. \\a)~ A
ADdenoo. liB OeJo of Ekctn
cal and Computer Ent-lattnng
206 Fun~&amp;&gt; onb C'ampu&gt;

-) 45 p.rn

llw Cloelllbtry ..,d Eazymoi"'Y of boa&gt;&lt;riatiooo and Gl) •
&lt;O&lt;J1Trolllf&lt;r ll-=tiooos,O..
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Tyler Sddooo. A&lt;opboot. 250
·Baonl. OdbCampus . ~p .m

J•raal Clab. c.fetorium A.
M=y llospitol. 1:30 a.m.

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mu. """' fiPOCO•I
gu&lt;SU~Apnlldx:Ma ·

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c:luDe.Fuatdoobiest. aftd7Yur
Bitd&gt;. AlumGI Areaa. Nonlo
Campus. 8 p.m. Tocl:els.,. Sll

Voi&lt;o R&lt;dtaL 250
Baird. N - Campus. N0001.

Sec(! SchwMk. Knsbn Tripp, M
Rtccardl Jacl&lt;
Palau. Ctvos Roberts. Ennoa.C.G Vglln, Ellan
Lerner and Ecstasy Seaton. a UB sWdents

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b)' lhc UB Center for :h..a.a,t
ment Dev-dopnat(. lht Buff-alo
am dla:pkr of thr Nc• Yori.
State: S.OC~ of Cetftflled PobiJc
Accou:ntanU and the Ene:
County 8.ar Auoc.at100 C•ll
64S·'~ for ~·stratton and

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ofVrr-

Mx:robioloc'. Uruv

aorua.lt4H-= Nonb

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Caldano. V - D ouo4 EJ:.

FRIDAY

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Kinch Audllonum.

Chtldf'en '1 KoriptaJ. 8 Lm.
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o.o._...u. Dr. lieu

Coobnued on page 8

Convenience
Qua~ity

Service
Variety
erson Froun Cu bud Ro.ut Betof
• Burgu King • PU:a.a Hut
e- b Sltoppe • UniMut
Copy Stop• Camp Chwch eo.litioo
Camp Tee's.CSwnts • CVS
O"AnMJ.o Hair Cos
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Luthent Ca.a~l..fiimllittr

Travel
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Univenity llook$to.re&amp; •
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4:30p
Fnday, Dec 10 and Monday. Dec 13.

-..: ktt courw ~ receilled
~ 30
on Monday, Dec l3. may I1CJl be pn • 1 ed 1"1
tme lor
bAng deadline and.
• ri5Uil.
you may be charged $60'" ... feM:J'
Remember to check
Records and
Reg
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y ......... ..,
Dec8mber. w
al mel!ling
and room asigrmeri inlctmallon tor ~
10 which you
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Of

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lor
preteg~Ctered students 00 Selurday. Jan. 22
end St.nday. ,., 23 from 10 a.m. 10 4 p . at
1he
Unian Wonnelion Delk..

�_. ____
._.

Body
shape&amp;

health
Study liMa ...n w.a.t, .a.c•
hi to •endcMnetrlotlls

warm up

TEAM OF UB researchers
$&lt;dcin1· to delcrmone of the
~hape of 1

in UB, write

woman' body may

ignal her dunces of developendometl'iosls found that
young ""'men
the tereotypically feminine form of small waiSI and lar!J"f hip• were
so:x limes mo"' li ~dy to de-.lop the condJtioo than lhose whose ...,.. and hop measurements are ocurly the .sarr:.e
The posouve findmg only peruuncd to
"'"'""" JO )ll'lU'&gt; of ag&lt;' or ) oonger. howe•..l'lhe lte~che:r$ found no rgnrfic:aru creh.l:·
tion&lt;hip between body fa1 di 1nbution and

U ,

Buy any UB"' Licensed

October

thedJi&lt;asc.
.~ar

her&gt; ba=ltheu in,esuga.to&lt;&gt;o oo
prior e.vtdencc: indlca1ing tha t .a woman's
hormonal m ruu.p maylliO ueooethe v."O) fa1
i• deposited in lhe body, and that estrogen
may play a role in the development of
endometriosis. Tile cfiseasdsalmost none.xistenl in pren&gt;e'fiStrUal girls and posuneooausal women. e..xcept tbose receivi ng
~ogen neplacemen1 therapy. the srudy
noted.
"' Because esLrogr n is ampurtant in
endometriosis, and lhe ratio of androgenSio
estrogens appears to coolribute 10 body-fat

U

and tote UB! ~

ResuJ1s of the ~lUdy. lhe fiN to onveoouga~ I he "'latiooslup of body-fat doslnbuuoo
and lhe ri k of endometri"'"· "'ere puhhshed in Ob:r.terna atul G)'fl~r&lt;&gt;lor- for

Cenaer, a prh are practtce m Buffalo. and a
malching group Of V.'OffieD who did not ha\e

4

parade~/

~

risl of eodomelriosis m stud) panK:tpan_u

or

wrth

time by UB.

0\'c:l' .30.

Endomctriostsls:•condition in whtL"b the
tissue of the uterine lirun.~ (the eooo.-rium)
m:rgrakS into dle pel vic region. often caus·ing extreme pam and infertilny . II affects up
10 7 percent of women rqrroductwe age.
Tode~ermine ifbody-fat distribuuoo may
be a rna.r~er ror ruk of dt\-eloping
endometriO'&gt;is. the B researchers in~or­
viewed and lOOk body "''""urenlCnt&gt; Of fl8
whi~ women chagnosed with the condi6on
1hn:&gt;ugh the ReprOOUCII\'e and Endometn0&lt;1

I

Product during Oerember

_!!,

for $5 or more and we'll

dtslnburkxl. we might expec."t a charactensuc de:~uJon of body fat m "·omeD v.1th
endornetrie&gt;l5," ""id usan E. McCann, a
doctoral andtda!&lt; 10 1h&lt; B Department of
Social and Preventl'e Mochcin&lt;. the &lt;IUd) ' '
lead aulhor The 1eam al!oO induded Jo L
Freudenhelm. Sherri L ODJTov. . Ronald E
BaH. Mana A Z..ekzn)

S

lW) ~ ,....,

dJ•oded

IntO

under

-JO and over-30 age ~rouP' Ca."'s and
control\ wen !loimJlar tn age ~ educatton.
wcogln. ho:ogbt, d:ugh corcumfercncr and
bod) -mass onde~. a figun: represenli~g the

of weight to heighL Rc ults sho,. ed
tb:al. in general. women v..nh endometnosJs
ended lo have smaller waJ lS in relation to
&amp;
htps, indtcatin~ a pn:dominance of periphenl bod)' faL than those Wllhoul the &lt;fisease
Women under JO with endometriosi•
tended 10 weigh le&lt;s and have smalla WliiSI
ond thigh rneas""""""ts than controls. For
theSr "\IIIOffien, tbt fi!lo k. Of having
endometriosis increased as ratioofwaJSl-l o~
l'lltiO

send you a

\olo ilh lht large 5-1 v.:at.st-to--&lt;htp n.ho \\'omt'n
on th" ~e ~roup
the doscase alo;o had

,.,l.b

law~r

,. aJ l)t -tO· ltugfl raUOi. anolber lndJc:a""" of pcnpheral (31 accumu!atooo, !han
lhO&lt;e ~~oho dod not . The) had a three nme•
greater nn of endometn~\ than c::omrol!!o
"oth hoghe&gt;t v.atsl.-to-tlugh nmo
Amon~ the older \lo'Oflltn , lho&gt;&lt; '"Ill the
d1sea"' tended to ""'ogb o!J~htl) more. he
lihoner. and have ll!fger,.•aiSI. hop and th1gb
measun.-meniS than 4he oontroh, !he stud)•
showed. H0'\1\'e'\'.c:t, in this group. waut-tOhlp r~ttio was not as OCllt~d with
endomc1nosts risk. "Our find111.1 that penpberal body-fat Jl~Momo.nat&gt;tt " as 8S&gt;OCi·
aled with endometriosi• lends adchtoonal
C'\ idena: IO lhe eJ&lt;islence of a cbaracltrist.ic
shape. possibly ...,..,11ing l'rom hormoruiJ

News Bureau Staff

changcsoccun:ln&amp;ooilh dx: discase,~rese:an:b-­

......,_-may be used more widely m the health care
field. partially replaei ng lhe surgeon's scalpel in 1he operating
room . identify ing and removing pre-malignant and cancerous
lesions and ultimately functioning as a dental drill. a UB denw
n:seatcberhas predicted. Charles Licbow. inlemalionally known
for his laser research and its poten6al for n:moving pre-cancerous and malignant tiliSile in the mouth. outlined the growing
irnponancc: of lasers at a National Institutes of Health coofer·
ence on "Scientific Frootien in Clinical Dentistry."
Uebow. director of the Laser and l'bolodynamic Oral and
Mu.illofacial Center li the UB School of Dental Medicine.
Cllplaincd thai lasers use focused energy ro ••aporiz.e tissue and
enhance specific biochemical reactioos by monochromatic ligbL
"Seleeti~g the proper laser is vital." he said. "w:ilb energy
absorption defining lhe aming cib..-..:teristics of the laser."
For example, carbon-dioxide laser~ght iSihighly absorbed by

1

3glng even '\iurfa~ tissue .

In phouxlynamic lhentpy.

spocoaf' I1Wldicatioos activated b)· lascn

sdectovely kiD cancer and pne-alliCC'OU5 1es&gt;ms without banning
nama! tissue. Uebow ~Patients anddo::dislsolicn find lhell!le
rL laser.; prdaabl&lt; 10
Sl.ll'g&lt;ly b&lt;c:allse bc:lling is more
rapiclwitlominimalblordingaoddisromfortRern&lt;mdrLcb:asedlissue
using laser.; can be mere ptiOCisr ihaD ...--- wiib oan1IC:Illioaol
scalpels. Animal f'CSellldl conducted by l...iebow aod his c:o~J&lt;a&amp;ues
at UB and RosweU Park Cancer 11\stituk: ggesu thai carbondioxide Jasen cause sign ificant release by the body of growth
factors thai aid healing and may direct~"" of ti ue.
Licbow warned thai safety and eflicacy guidelines muSI he
established for each laser sy s~m. " It i• also impenlive that
clinician us ing laser be adequately trained.~ he emplw:iz.ed.

I,...,"""""""'.-..."""'---

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VIde clue&lt;ro the ea:uses of endomolriosi•."

u.·ater and ussue. but can 't be used .._. llh C&lt;HI\ "etJtional fiberopl;ics
T1ssuc: damage can be! n:un.imized by using h1gboopower density.
Ne&lt;ldynoum: Yunum Alumini um Gamet (Nd: Y AG) laser
allow• more effecov&lt; roagulaooo of blood. often .,-ithoul d.am-

,_,._,..stip~""w.,...-pna

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ers said. 1'hese 1'CSlllll &lt;IllY C\'ODtuaUy pro-

Lasers may soon replace scalpel, dental drill
lly IIAitY •Rnl S.P INA

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~future

President invites more

,

______ ...

portraits" of UB

EDmllt:

a O'ell plealue 10 • • Oull&lt; TrzCO&lt;a a let18r n

NcMn'lber 1 1 - . . ollhe
"tllooll:lnHon" ~ 10 my 5eplambe&lt; 1. eddr
10 the IIOing laaAty
we mJSI become
ol uaiiV'oughOUI
US oomrruntty llhould
up the ClNIJenOe ollered n lhlll
by 88lliung 10 r
end redeln l'roie&amp;Mlr TI2CII'Q&amp;daecnp!IOO ol whld l , _ .
to be ........ good~. f'tnonalty,l
1111
llreedy ... u:h. ~
a I ' - ondiCaled I WOIJd 811 &lt;U llgtn higher But I do
l h e - ol ~
Prolessor TrZCO'll&lt;.ll suggesu 11111 JUIIIIine
ol PfOO"-

Rt!ponat:

• a oonvncong .00 ll'1l!)rrG Wfl'/10 de8crtbe the UB

-.es

ProlelsorTrzx:nlo4's

•pr&lt;MdeS..-:t!ylheklndol~ ~

- - IIlii! fueis
arc~ Ati8CIIdemrc ()Cll'rlfTU'1II
o1 ...., .oo
crea!MI oeople sucih as ours. ShOuld gen1n1e a
fW101!1 oi\IIIIIOnS lhll
llllp us
set cu: llQhts where !hey need 10 be Oevelopng SUCh III5IOfW and lharng 11-.n P&lt;blocly •
flfSiend moe1 ~ slep n our progress n orde!IO......,. ~
rrust be able 10 say oa.~y .00 honeslly where we wrc 10 00
I hOPe ltl8l f'IWly Oltws lmOnQ &lt;U laaAty .00
lcJioow Chucil Trzconl&lt;a s '-:!
The~· trlClMdu8 ~ ol our goalS
can ~ 1t1e rrore we pMS SUCh
exp&lt;_,.. 1m0nQ o.neillea. end
more we debale lhem--siiWldng • our marlboxes n 0.1 depar1menl.al end decana! n.eungs IWI'lOf'Q 001 vanoua ~ bQd.
-~ clo9er we come 10 a colle&lt;:IMilnlerslandong ollhe laSi&lt; b81ore ua
E-v faculty~ , stall member• .00 sludenl n our academoc oc:mrurary can
li'ICIOubtedly pan1 at least ooe "tuuure ponra " oe a sucoessfu US Let crea1.e u fTlllf'l'f
SUCh portr
we can ao 1nat 0.1 gallery ol cnoooes rellects !he lui
end
WISdom ol 001 en:rre ~ Keep em comng

..

Soncere•t

-...-

-afttw~·a..·

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--

P

0

R

'sBIISketiMIII

T

S

VIEW

CAJlOLCULP
.o\drrunmrau"" AA~tunr

o.,-r-.r &lt;{Or.J IJ-"'o

J

Head Coach Trn Ccnw&gt;e got all a womng _ , on
26 as his Bulls men s
baskattlaJI team opened the 1993-94 se89CWl
a 7().6 vocrory t7iel bcal NAJJ&gt;
opponent Oaemen College
The Bulls,.,_ !I&amp;Jied a tney tool&lt; a 37-20 lead at hall!rne and ,_IOo+&lt;ed •
back .1\.noor Myron Slno$1ed a scorers.,. 18 PQfliS and 10 retxulds Banks
w 9&lt;&gt;1- 18 from lhe floor Junoor t.IOcl Co&gt; scored 16 poonts from his guard
posrt100 and pu!\ed oown _., rebounOS Freshman guara Rasaun 'fOUJO IM'lo
led all ,._ Yo&lt;k Slate tlogh SCilrJoiers .., sror..,g last saaon at ,._Rochelle
H.gh School came ollltle llend'IIO
fof IS poon15 end a ga!llfHllgh 1 I rebO&lt;.nds (seven on !he ensove end) He atso ocn:roouteo mree ass.sts .00 three
st
UB came bad&lt; ltle followv'lg ll\lel'l4flQ 10 lace Marost College a member oC tne
Nor1heasl Conference The Reo Foxes hanOeO UB forst lOSs a the year w. an
87.acl deCisiOn
The Bulls • be ~ytng 10 lhe Canlslus Toumament lhls weekend Fnday they
~P of1 at 6 p m n the Memorial AudllO&lt;lum agalflSI N gar a The seoontt game
P&lt; hOst CarliSIUS and Gonzaga at 8 p m The c:onsolalJon game
be played
on Saturday a 6 p m wr.h
c:hampoonsh game following ai 8 p m

w-··......_.

The womoo s basl&lt;el
team l.flder Head Coach Sal Buscagl&lt;a ~oo the!&lt;
exhibitiOn season
a 59-54 wn 0\le!'
s ~s a Kongslon. Or118roo
and a 75-63 loss to the Upstate ~tal BaSke1ba League
Senoor cen Molly Reville led the Aay'als
1• poontS .., the USOBL game
Sopl1omore cemer KrtS Holtz added 13 pontS and led the Royals WI 10 retlounds Sana poont guard Nadne Mas!IOieo added 12 poontS
The Royats rebounded lor tt&gt;eor \llCIOJy 0\le!' Queen's by nartong some key l•ee
ttlfows at the end a the oontes Senror 1orward Brooke Smith and Mas!IOieo
~ hrt thet&lt; one and one a empts
tess than 30 seoontts 10 oo to preserve
the W1l'l
The Royals host the Lockpon Savongs Bank Women s Baske!ball Toumamen!
en Froday and Saturday UB Will lace Eastern MIChigan n the openng rOUild at 8
p m preceded by Akron meellng Northeaslem ll•f'IOIS State at 6 p m The oonsr&gt;
latiOfl game IS Saturday at 1 p m w the cl1ampoonshlp following at 3 p m

o.-n

TU
I

CHU
oruon. Iindy chopped

~~.t~ JI'C'I'Dd tuM
1 an (

01.)

rm

tomatoa lproc....d m

~poulld chill powdr&gt;
2 tablcopootu vqrtabk oil
n tnspooru jVOOI1ld cumJJ&gt;

ta.poon

t

1 em (20 OL) red ladnq beam. undnmcd
I omall do.. r;arJ.c. ftndy chopped

2 teupooru

p,..

-purpoo&lt; !lour

l/2 teupoon JI'C'I'Dd

1/4 tnSpOOfl pepper

SAUT£ 0 10 ' and pt1oc .., od on
m&lt;doum-DK sauoq&gt;an tlllU! oofw..d. }
mtnutcs ur tQ nukq- CXJOik unnl oo ptn
r&lt;JilJIJn• and mas bepns 10 brown
ur tn cornatOeS wnh thcu rwa. cha&amp;
powckr, flour, cwnm, gu&gt;&amp;a• ..It and
pq&gt;p&lt;'f Bnnt m botlo.nc 1.-.r heat Cova
and wnmn for 25 to .30 nunuta Sor •n
bam and r&lt;bcat.
Servo . Rcctpe an I&gt;&lt; doubled or
quodn.plc:d
PAUU E ESHElMAN
Head Jmooor, RnJnm./ c..-J,;J
SWIEIH- APPUI:
2 aapo apples. diaod
2 ablcspooru !lour

rt•

}/4 cup...,.,
pod&gt; o( salt
lqz
I tcaspoa
1 cup IOUf cream
I onch unbaked pte d&gt;dl

..,,u.

COOK APPLES unuJ dosbtly JOlt. Beat qz
and vanill., odd lOW aam and mtL Add
ROut. supr and ..lr and mn: U Add
appkt and !Old tot;«b&lt;r. Pour into pic d&gt;dl
and baler 40 mtotru:~ u 3SO ~and
spnnkk With t:OppiiiA- BUt IS monu""

DisplaYJng placards and signs.
GSEU members
seeking a contract exchanged

views yesterday
wiih President
Greiner and
other UB officials in the
Jeanette Martin
Room.

mor&lt;

TOPPI G
113 cup •upr
1/3 cup flour
l teaspoon anrwnon
1/4 cup buarr mdrcd

Blend mgttbcr.

MAllY-CAMJUE. SCH'«1NDL£R
~hamild-~

v.u.aaA·•~-

1 A I'Ol.'ll QUART o..tdl .....,., "'" dot
2-3 CUf""«'o(
2·3 Olpl of'!"Jl&gt;&gt;'
I cat1 m:am o( duchn -.p
looo.illoa (3 """f''f" prua!&lt;. or }
cube.)

I ax:!&lt; buncr or marpnnr
I ~ bead o( auldlowcr
I
Ofto&gt;n, chopped fiody
2 aapo each cboppecl carrotl ~ cday ___, Scuoo "' QJtt: pepper.
MlX CORNSTAROi 111 on&lt; cup watrr &lt;o
ducikm mmcr IDr 1-ln .., 2 boun.

�ThrkeyTrot

SeSmart,

Be Safe

0

winners named

"""tar-

or

A ru11
lbdi _,
""' 1n Mld IIIOIIDd Alumm

Arena

Be

prompt.ed a dopn, Be
"""'&amp; Willi ,.,.,_
for minirruzing
and pom odong a Ale

envi.ronmeoL

m:om-..

Aonon&amp; the
Never leave propcny unonmdod
aru of Alu!nm Amoa
Loci.Cft arr IVIJiabJe
Jbo&lt;e
..bo W1IJII ·them lol1&amp; nn.
f..., lod.us arr ....
Ill the
111 Ill)

......,-and
er..,....,.
for llaoR •-too caDIIOI afford I
Cft 01 c:looo$e 10 I Ioder only
on a daily
· (You supply the
kid:..) Don't lea"" penooal p-op-

eny unanended;

50C\ltt 1t

If. dcspilt llting pmcaullOnS.
propel1)' is 1iiOb. rq&gt;OI\ the IIICIdaliiO ...::ttarioo
Oil
clu(y and remain lbere unlil you are
asun:d 1hol campus publiC 01)'
olfoa:rs know of your loss.

If been""""
l"""' '""" us·

20

r.... aru
...,....,.,.___n.e.a- and

21 mlle nm
Wonnon ..

~.

~.)CIIIIiferHctdmw&gt; .

Mu oc

M&lt;dla Study. Art ond
. &lt;n tngetberon the

same campu&lt;. modo les&lt; 1ft the
bwlckng. IIICC Au I,
...,...~..... three o{ the d&lt;-penmenu
have 1IC'Illcd Into the new Fine
Arts Cttner 011 the orth Campa ••lh theM
~
..._., door Ill Baard and lee Hal
At p.m. 011 Wcdoesday. Dec.
IS. they'll cdetnle !heat iOJdhemeu. alon1 with the oew roof
0\'er their heads Tbe eveal ••
"Showcase," a eoti«::Joe ..-e-UIIlon of film~
video
IDSlllllatoom. perforiii&amp;DCU, eompultr images. music art. all
dcslped around the theme of the
ma:s..ove """' Fone Arts Center
Tbe e ent. supported in .,.,
by UUAB ...,u ta1.e place in tbc
~· llll1um Mld i free of

Women's Club c:lwJc - open 41C
to hold annual
Financial aid
Soup's On
renewal
UB Women'&lt; Oub
0 'Tht
woll
its 11111ual
applications
On" l...uncbclon,
10 the

hold

'"Soup••

Friday,

Dec. I 0 Ill I 1:30 a..m. 11 the Center for Tomorrow.

Appetiz.en will be set"\'C:C! With
JUiceo and ,.;ncs, Tbe 1tuee soups
dU year are ganleo vegeUble,
Greek bean and mushroom bar-

le . ..;tb muffi • rolls breads. Desserts ....
cream
and fruit and cranberry pecan pie.
All recipe&gt; are from the
Women's Oub Cookbook "Foods
for ~ht" A limited IIUillher
of cook:bool&lt;s will be available
for half price 01 the luncheon.
Proceeds benefit the Grace Capen
Scholarship Fund.
HO$pitality ehairs for lhi•
event are orma Shatz Rubin and
Cannella Hanley. Call c:ar-u 01
633-4216 for n:servllions.
CbriiR&lt;lpher Sierwhull, pianist,
will puy during tbc tuocbeon.
Shirley Buckle is program chair.
Poinseaias purdwed during
the Women's Oub 11111ual Poinsettia Sale will be distributed 01
the luncheon. Proceeds from this
sale. chaired by W'mnie Donn.
also be:ndit the Grace Capen
Scholarship Fund.

ononc•

0

The 20th
ual Twliz-)
Ttol • . 14 lllncled )
RlllftCB ... bo ~ .. !he

Tbe U.S Dcpon.mmt of
Eiduc:atioo .. mailon&amp; n:..,..... appiiCIIlOII for 1994-95 10
udents wbo applied for Federal
financoal lld in 1993-94 ond
..'hooe appliaotions """"' processed prior ro No•. I. 1!193.
If you r.oo ion the.,._ '*I"'Y·
you W1ll ......_(or t... already

0

~,.,...

......... ....,..,.,

for 1994c9S. Ute lhallpJllialian
ir-.1 of lhe me Applialion for
Fed!nl Sludcnt Aid
Federal financiallld oppbcatioos ood renewal opplications for
1994-95 wiU not be proc:essed
until Jan. I. 1994. Do DOl submit
either opplication before this dale

=

femrok under·

female fiOCUitykcaff lain
..,......, . female - . Oiooroe
G._, O&gt;&lt;ryiG!oK. Cy
Woooh. K.unbcrty Myen . malo
u~Adn...., max:;
malo pdoooM&lt;. Jdlctas
male fiiCIIlty/uaff, Todd
H........ne. male-· illwro
H.-d. lobo Scbolntr. Jom

Pnce.,

One~

AmoiJ&amp;

lbo&lt;e
..U.. m the dTon """"
Ed Iiebi. Briu M
Slepbuie Bal.
Oay1
Colebrook. ood an. Mon1s

Poetl7 . . .-.c

Healthop · n
transfer period
g
to Dec. 24

0

8pm
lnlema1lorlal
864

·---

Tbe ()pboo Tranofer Pe11011 for

lbll

e

Can Oorw'le.
UB Professor ol English
Fnday ' Dec 10

IO di.IQre

~fo.l994....,. UMll De&lt;.~ 1"3-

UB Emenlus Prdesscr'
dEngll&amp;h
Sunday. Dec 12

«1' "' - - ' , . ,.,
IJ&lt;wrw ...,.. C.utml- brfU'S
1212JI9J "'
ciDu ti( btuilta

*

2p.m
Eb'chfield Art Center

~the.....,.,...,. (
al ~ Serv1coea. 104 Clrafts

1:n:l9mwood Ave

..... ,............__

30 IUL·S
lldilloil ........... ,..

Hall, Mcadlly..Fnda ,

p.m.

~......_

-eMir

--------- --lhe....-.yc.&gt;na~--~.,
~ 10,.. elleol
be
tQIIIlldlo-- ~ WBf'l).fW 88 7
~
bl&lt;*lCast more~ rolam!lllon The.._~
b e , _ tfr 6 a !l'. ond
be,._
~trequnly

8elore 111oo dec:iloon caw1 be""""'-..,..

mus1-

tQII roed ~ lhe K*)' ol our

bus--

voce 10 prtMd8 ~"'"""' ond among lhe ~. ond our ...,.10""""' lhe C8l1'lllUS roed-

onlv_...,.,.,
f'Wol....,_,..,

_,. ond l*1cJng lois open Once lhe ~ ISnwM ·
In expected 10 NIIXIIIIO _,._
Am 01Med WF--. Seadv..........
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1n order ID ...-.lhellhooe"' yo~..-. w t o - ""'"""" l&lt;rclw
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haS IDbenwM AI
-~ ID*Y
11011 ol "" .-.-oo&lt;.noement petiOd
nae ~ wto-" on .,_days shOUld. r11 ClllO.I-.. be nw1led pr---. AI
cNrge lhe ..... ., pononal- . , _ -*"'"· per-.rnll- or: ........ _ ,
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1tlllt lhe un.-'SIIy 111 Bullalo • ct.d end orY-t he

srow......,.,....,

-e

a.-nor ...

WIII'OJ! use o l - orec1ts In .. - . -. •
vacaiiOn, personaileeYe Of OOIT4'&amp; . . . Y

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rrua

lomencl ...,._.,

- - . d i n g lhe llboo4. no ponon"""" rs able 10 ond cloes 011110 wodt • be dlpMdd lhe apFuthermore. Jl i s - doing""' .,.,....d.
door- ~ cannal
~ efl8aM!Iy, no~ stocroAd be~ IOieeYe • '*~
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leeYecredlls
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shoUld be made klr _ , _ ~ -loc8llorls
klr tae wt'o do QIIIIO htcampus, but wto &lt;*11101 oo 10 Ita' mgtAar- ~or c.&gt;na~ pertmn
&lt;eg&lt;Mr- ......,.,, .. ._

poriUnily.,--

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or..,

able.,_

and---

"*

-Oihce d S6oor Vrce President RobM J W"'II'W

asit wil1-bo~
you must also
sq&gt;arate

me •

TAP appiiCitiou f&lt;ll' 1994-95.
TAP filen only must complcle
the Federal application (FAFSA )

The deooclliDe fCI' University
Campus Based FuDds is May 16,
1~ .

What's ina
name?
-UB •s ....,.,._..,. its visual identity--&lt;dlould eonvey an image of
the univcnity's excellenee Mld
tradition to the outside world.
THINK SMART!.
&amp;uide 10 creati.e
&amp;raPhk: · ·ng produced by the Oftioe of Publicalioos,
shows bow 10 present UB 's visual identity tluough publicatioos, statioocry. busiiiCSI eards. si~ .tvertising, promotioos and newslettersTHINK SMART! il available Ill 110 COSIIO universil)' departments. For infonnarioll 011 obtaining «&gt;pies. call Stella Ryodak
in Publication II 645-6969.

a...,..

WBFO:
WBFO enhances its public image \Nilt1 a series ol10 billboards strategically
placed around ICJ&gt;YT'I (this one's at 2500 Main Street). The billboards were
made possible by Penn Advertising BJ'lCI M&amp;T bank.

�_.,
PRIZEWINNING

__

..,_ ...
EMMAO. aEFD

RLCIPE

Secrcatri

DiMirt r{SNtftt ~

0/fi&lt;r t{SI:wlntl Lifo

lHEWAYTO
ACONTEST
JUDGE'S HEART:

1 """'" -.~.

..... _,_.,.

.........,},/. . .,...,,.,.....,..."'-fin
~N~

~(/~

........ •H AFOOD IIAUD
lCUKcmab1
~. dnit&gt;ed
I Cilllloboort (Of- fmh. M cooWJ
I CUI whiu: ool.d "'""
I rup ~ pe&lt;D pq&gt;p&lt;r
112 rupd&gt;opp&lt;d. ,.,o--

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Ill

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.......

114"""~ ......,

...........
'piol:h ofo:olt
~

j

•u.... ,.......,..

w ......... ,.,. . ~-.,-­

~

IN A KUVY SAUC9 .• c:oa&gt;bUoc
m.~.....t...._m.

.

'airrins ~.lix

20-2S min
or "" th&lt;
......... J.nc boom. Th£ clw.aoq
la:eps, m-..1. md. chillal. lOr 1

Wtcia. s-. .. .......,

-1"""""'~· Mac! oboul 4

CliP"-

2 """' d&gt;opp&lt;d cdcry
2 CUf" ""'r&lt;'

lop.-lh.i..-

o..a.oft

s..lt md p&lt;pp&lt;r "' am
BBWCJ G rhauhc &lt;by .bad the
mannao wil IIIIP"""' do&lt; a...,.. &amp;.... on
~- P&lt;IQOO dups....,. bt aumbl.:d on tOp
PAT'RICIA II TiiOMANN

S&lt;m:ucy I. OJ!tc..•f~ &amp;C.."""""""'
• wl• S CHICKEN C A -EROU
rn&gt;U. debontd. cur uno bn:rw.tp""""
I cup
~ . slm:dOOI

4-8 clu&lt;.ktf,

Vergic also .sent us hc:r
pecan pk &amp;vorice-lhis i.
my adapted. venion of Chef
Paw Prudhomme's recipe.·

2 am mushroom""'!'
Ill wp d~:~m milk
112 &lt;:up ftuh mush_, P'"""'
8 oL stuffi-na mu:
l'R.EiiEI\ T OV"EN w J50 degRU. M..
""'"'htr the ..,..., and
s... '"

muoluoom poeces Pt.ct c:hockm f&gt;'&lt;O'S on
bottom of 1r br s· b.Jant; duh.
wuh S..U. dxa&lt; fallow&lt;d by """P mittuR
Top Mth
'II&amp; mt&lt;- Ba1co: for I how
S¢mr ,.... na wuh • sidt dish of bti&gt;IXillll.
(M~y be poq&gt;artd and remgrrar.d the d:a
bcbt. ~from refugrraror 45

eo-

cook-she's one of those peopl~ who still cook from scratch. "1' m not a mix or

mimms h&lt;forc !.king.)
(do Ul )'OW mourh-o funiJr fuoriK,
noo: only at bot.d:a)'$, bur do&lt; rune .

a packag.: pason," she says. "I do • lor of entertaining-dinner patties."
Vergie, who has worlcc:d in Purchasing for rhe past 18 years, says, "I've
cooked all my lif.,_" She subscribes to cooking magazines, Gourmet an.d Bon

BAABARA JAGODZJN Kl
a..t. I, L.cft-t ~z•""'l

Appecir, owns a lot of cook books and has taken cooking ks.ons as well. She
especiall)' likro her pritt- a coffee table book on foods of Tuscany from the

HOT CHICIK.EN ~
CASIHROI.E
2 CUPJ chopped cool:&lt;d chdm
2 cups chopp&lt;d cdny

Beautiful Cook Book seri.,..
Her prizewinning recipe is for Cranberry and

I12 ""!'chopped oalttd almonds (bb.Dcb&lt;d)
2 rabl..tpoom &lt;:bopped pt"""""
1/3 wp chopped gnom p&lt;pp&lt;r
3 r.ablopoooa c:hqpp&lt;d aruon
Ill mupooo Alt
1 ublcspom" ~&lt;:roo.. Juicr
1 ""P maJIOfiiDISt
113 """pu:d Swia
2-112 oopo crushal powo dUpo

Pear Chutney." After you try rhi., you'll ever
aga.in eat cranberry sauce from a can, • Vergie
prdilced her enrry. "I've bttro serving it for a:bour
three years, for Thanbgiving and Christmas. • she

n

said. And guests love it. "They c:all up the next

day and want the recipe, • she said.

BLEND T&lt;X;EniER chick.m, cdny.

The judge "'no sdec:red the winning recipe, Dr.
v..p

___..-of! bof

c:oKboolc -

"uu, ptmento. gnom pq:of!ft. oD1Dil, salt,
lcroon ~ ~
Tum mm •

....,..,...w..:.

Arhalie Joy, is anoth"r cook-from-scratch cook. A

buacml 2 qomt ~- Top ·with c:hecsc
md pocaro &lt;:hifa. Bake U. • ~c._..
(3~0 dat;r&lt;al about 25 minures until c:hecsc

clinical assistant professor of psychology in the

·

Departmenr of Psychiarry in the medical school, •he has had a lifetime

mdu.M.bs6~

enjoyment of rhe arr of cooking-beginning in rhe

JOliN A.LBARfl.U,
~J.:lcpanm&lt;nrOWr, SUNYJEOC
ctflttSTIIIAS ZUCCHINI ·P IIZZA
3 w ,po &lt;oancly pau:d ma!hini

fourrh grade when she first made fudge . She has
conduaed Life Workshops on cooking with her
husband, Dr. Peter Gold, associate dean of the

~Whitn oreg substinotcs ~dy

undergraduat.e rollege.
Dr. Joy says Vergie Oettinger's recipe

~~:;o'&lt; wb= pasuy flow- or wbirc

"Sounded good--&lt;lifferent and holidayi.h." She

112 cup llhr.d&amp;d mozurdJ;a Clhceoc
1/2 wp pu:d ponncsan dxa&lt;
I ablcspooa basiJla..,.

especially· appreciated the mix oi ingredien3-l r
seemed liu "something mat would be. genuinely
new ser of flavors--ginger and red pepper."
The

Repot:rn thanks

Dr._,.,,_.....,__

Dr. Joy for serving as our judg~and also for

preparing die winning recipe and sending us a sample ro

uy.

Thanks, also, ro all me UB people who rook parr in rhe annual
conttsr-rhere were to many excdleru enrries, it was difficult ro ch~ just
one. We're printing as many of the contest enrri.es ;as we can-a few arrived
roo Lue for judging. We hope you'U all r:akc pan in ntxt year's contest.
first, rhe winner-

m-e

F.ollmvmg iJ a S4mpling
ofthe mJrU:s thtt.t arme tv
the Rrportn' from aU oVQ'
the univnrit]:

GAATE THE ZUCCHINI ond '"!,_,., our
allaa:os moisrute. Combin&lt; the mod&gt;inl
wiib all rhc orbl'ir i:ngrtdimts. Sp&lt;ad on •
,.,, "' b;&lt;p coOkie .bert dw: lw .....,
spayal with a ooolcio:o&amp; oil spray. Slu,pc 1hc
soli bmec into a Ouistm:as tne or any other
holida)'lobope rou pttfa.
BrWb rhc cop with olive ail and broa
under modctatc: bat lOT 5 minura.
Dcma:at&lt; wiib Au&lt;l&lt; anoi)""Ul' &amp;vO&lt;itt
piua roppings. &amp; creative. IJ d&lt;a&gt;raong a
Continued on page 10

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                    <text>~

Ur •. , .

'W"or gToge er'
ThemeofFo
s

UB senior officers call for doser working relationship between
faculty and administratio()n to address university sfuture

.

. . _....,11..
. .eo.--try

110

Fit'UIIy lilt!

fJOIII

10

-~
...a.
•., _ ·......
_.._

ture.B

'"' lbollt ~
iD lt1e
dllnr:la ardncbon ol.._ ~ . c'-l;r..,. ~ alol is
aln:ad) ben! If&amp;... • c:bmgi&lt; liD
, mc:cpuL •. . . .

roan~ "' kd be

"" lidded.

au "'"'..,

lln:IChod -

"Eadd"' •"""'10

IOdolloiiDOire Wldt
1 lol l1llft 611Jemra~

..., hove and "'

dua:nonl.."
B
...t !here ,. ...., be ~~
miCCOUIIllbillly .......... " ' _ , .

""""

......,.., · ~PJDfan~map- ­
.....,. Ill ~Jcher..mc..oo

"""""""" farcurnpl&lt;.thol-....e
ol as who n.... boa~ or .., dooply
UIVolved II! researdl - JOIII&amp; tD
fmd"""""""
II!Jo:ollhll~­
"'arch t1w lu•n.'t bttn
bd&lt;n. We an
far,....t 10.,
c:n' U'OlVntlll ch.l s. pna 10 morr
chal\mPRI' In "'I\
..., baCh
, OIIIIOI'Ublc JlliJ u•&gt;.:urtll OOOiblr -

cation,

UB 's senior officers
Tuesday Lold the Faculty
Senate of their desire Lo
engage the faculty in an
ongoing dialogue about
the university's future.
~odc:nl Winwn R.G .... nersa.J
t1w he. Pro 'OSI Asron . Bloch and
Senior V aa l'reli&gt;dent Raben J
Wagner ""' look&gt;ng for a ''le•el nf
collegiality" 1ha will nunurt oommurucaooo bel"""'" the focuby and
adminrstration
"Wbal ,..., have to do." Cremer
told an opea forum held as pan nfthe
Faculty Senate' s ll10lllhly llftllng,
..is get into a spirit where it's let'
bury the ·-. and 'the) • tlw e.me
out nf wbatr•..-ourllisaoryol p..,..""""" was in the 1970.. which is two
decades old now. going on Ill=lbeforum. at ,.1Ud, G""""'"'"'
)Olfled by Bloch and Wagner. was
held in The Commons to continue
the dialogue that beg•n with
Gteiner' s~ 101he Voting Faculty m SepL 14 and Bloch's address
10 the Faculty Senate on Oct. S.
In . ~ 10 the Voting Faculty. Greiner streSSed the ......S for
the lllli-.ersity IOdod&gt;cate instirulional
energies and rcsouroes 10 five immediau. priorities.
They included: preeminence in
nesearoh, scholar.;hip and aulive
adi\;ty. IS wei) IS in graduate and
professional education: distinction.
breadth and cchesiveness in under·
graduate education, w1th a ~v.ed
emplwisonteachlngandonstucknt
c:le\'elopment:centmht~ and focu,o(
profe&lt;saonal edU&lt;.-utiOil. wuh a re·
ncwed emphasiS on'"'"""· respon·
~~ ' encss and 1(\00\ au on tn the
commun•ty agenda. and anno\'alJOP,
commitment and dl\·..-sny 10 the
development of the uruversil} ·• &gt;IU·
c:lerux facull)• and staff.
Additional th..-nes lligllligtaed by
Bloch in his address la&lt;l morlb 10 the
Farulty Smale w=the ~~

a:malizalion" "' n:sp'Y"ihiiirirs .......

decmon-m

mg to facultJe&lt;o and

motic q.,.,.;tron I don't thrnl. dec&gt;""'"' •• ~ng to be 'ery good aOOu1
man' o{ the ts~' v.t IT tallmg
....;. bel-. unle&lt;&gt;&gt; the fa..:uh) i mmlved
"()n the other band." Blochll&lt;l4ed.
"I don't tlunl. deer 100 are£~ 10
be v..-y good on the ..bole of the)•are
made b} faculty plebo&gt;e1te

sdaoolsina way that» abgn&lt;d wtth the

&lt;l''mlll dmlctaons of the

Ulll\'011i11} ••

-aCUB'sroleasthearaerof
pubbc p-ol~ and gndu:lle ......
caoon 111 !liN Yod. Stale; the need for
the ..,;...,...y 10
~orm in baghr:r e&lt;b:ooon..llll.q the
lead nalionally on 1l:mlS of~
pannen;lups Hh other sqmentS of
SOC1C1) . and the need 10 address the
ITl8l18jlat1CI1 of undergnoduat&lt; and

....x:..-

....

*

In Ius commems before the Faculty Senateoo Tuesday. Blochpned
Grcioer rn calling for a closer workIng relationship~ the admmiSU31ion and fllculty.

) r.quor&lt; an mtunatecollabobelwctn adnurustnruOn
and faculty of the) are ~ng "' be
effective and 1haJ OOVO"S I "")'brood
I'1IDll" nfiMUeS acro&lt;s au of the aneas
....,.,.. tall.ill( about . Tbat' "'"'Y I
mal;e 11 a pointiO spend a f.nr fnlc.
11011 of my orne each weel. wath the

"Faculty participa1lon mdec1S100
and governance 1n m) rrund.'· be
lidded. "as panly a quesiJOO nf philosophy and democracy . panly a
question nf prcrogllllV&lt; . But mueh
more imponantly. u· a ''ef) praj!·

Faculty Senate e•ecutive c:ommu~
tc&lt;: It's also ""'Y I'm a hnle bn
dislressed t1w u· s bee~ to f md
peoplt wa!Ung to S&lt;n&lt; on that commJtlee m some uruts of the umverSII} l'durgethefacul&lt;yl11&lt;ln'bruadly

~enrollment.

rattOO

to talt an Jnleft').l m dw·
of
1!0'-eman&lt;r and"""" boa""' thor
panrclf&gt;IIJOO " cnuoal -

\\bale the anver&gt;ll} alfnn ,..

!ipCI[Miod 10 facull} .,.....,..,.• aJIUm'.
about 11ou&gt;« ~ rmncn-the
~ol ~ ol""'"' bluel'!ll1 tck:phooesoo both Clllllpl1'leS.lbe
allocabon o("""""' fo-IICidcml&lt; pn&gt;1lf1111'. the ID"""''&gt;' ~calcn­
dar--d!e)omade•~map

JUPR • the ,.,...,.. ..... 10
fuD.Jie.
"l..a.'. knook aiT of thd
Oil
process. lc:&lt;'s ba•e a cmYaSIIJOII."
O....ner Wd at one potn1. IIIia addnesst • profr:sscl&lt;' C&lt;li&gt;O&lt;tM about
ftiD\'&lt;I'SII)''

followed 10 4etermme
use ol buildmg spoce by a:ademlc
progroms.
AI the end olthe forum, CRiner
obsefved. ~1
tbinl: wt goc as far
&amp;:rwn the tr.d .. lorlkJJ!g at il&lt;
&lt;ui&gt;J'ICIS that the Jli'O'OSI and I """"'
the

proQIIIO

run·,

"Let's bury the 'we'
and 'they' that

came out of .. the
1970 ...

'""b
He

defined ··ptJbl1&lt;. .crva«"
g\ that .. uJ ma1&lt;: I
iliffermo.-.: m our ~ 011111
and thai no..•OUI ol our
hruadJ\ I&gt;

'"'"""'"II).

"""""' acac:lermc ""
"'luct&gt;
.,.. re&gt;earch, scbubnhtp. creata•e
""'\ "' • lelldu.ag and 1rmlltlr Whtle ....,. may v.e.. tht
... ,~ . jdlk«:ro'IICI&lt;
•
• ney,•dimc:bon.Gmnrrlllll!:dm.-. ..
~ !hal ""' ......, be&lt;o doq.
btlba.,..IOb&lt;mllllklng ....... I

belle&gt;-..,. .. """""""of
doilllbe

..........~

~of~and........:hio

pul:llic""""""-And""CJIIIIIIIOftltlt1CIIIlrtbaL~
Teac:tuar. be added. '"io our r.....
chisc nussion. We oould dole the
"""'*"*'oltbt.,;.unwenlly_.
.. .and 10011rrorla:rour~
and our """"'Y
Clll:h up
"'and ptllllu&gt;etaS font. But il......ud
a lol \aQp tJ.I if we tried 10
'lltut down the leOdlinJfunclion.lllal.
wculd produce an
reoctio&lt;L"
Gmner added. 'e ooed 1D be a
lmkmore ~about theteach'"l'-traln&gt;llf funcb&lt;lll and the publiC·
,.,_.,. fun..'11on and """ they fll
"''th our rolt"" a uw• eisny and ~hom

"""*'

,__.,..,IS

~&lt;eouptiO

""""""'olauoltlu

'" the way Ill "bich "'"' I'IIClQCDitt..
,..,....m our fqlty and sullf. To a
large exten~ I tbinl: ,..., ""'*~)' do
that. I tbinl: we sbotdd do it mare
effeai..Jy over the,.,_......._.
Bloch as&gt;Ored the r.:uJay thol

ConbnUed on page 10

�2

..-.. -Phla. oridl

Public

llonoicJcles ..... patf11toalbtoma.
,,.,... illli&gt;- aty 1lrrr
..... kll t1l dd&lt;:u Qtl
what to do about those
1 Of"'.ecltfa:r~• .
•nd
wbelbu 10 creatt nc ..
.-._

Surfac:e5
&amp;
Social

"'f """"""· ...... liS
lli.llOrl' 1bto Uniled ~
hu alway• f11o0ed tbest:
10CU of
, with dJfC
(tmll Cllllblems tb8l ')'11'bolued

Issues

~.

with

"'How 00 you crclll&gt;:
respect under ClOildibOIU
of 110 rct;p«1 Cmtron

r

U.. cor."MOCtlon

P""''"

Cintron' s work

IS

an outgrowth

of h.i~ IDterest tn the cuJtural. lln·
gu1sttc. power. and ommunity
cross-relaljon.ship~ that ha,·e aJ.
ways surrounded him. ht says . ..-1
haveimaginedmyo..'llhfeasW11king oround in the mid t of different
groups "'bo ~ speaking different
languages and tu.ve different cultures. I've: aJways been interested
in how different groups come together, borrow or slay separate from
each other."
Cintron's dissertation was an
anemptto unci&lt;rstand differences
in education lhat.migbt cause difficulties with literacy in 1 ·city outsick Oticago that was one-&lt;juarter
Latino. and whiohhe hasgiveo the
pseudonym Angelstown. But after

•ho II

~....,r..,._

Roc:kefeiW Fellow

:SI.rteiS are ·p lact:i
where Sffeet gang
mad. their struggle for
control and donnna.nc&lt; both "'"h
OliCh other and th&lt; cullun ••I"'¥".
Ralph Cmtron says. and graffiti "
a mad)of lMI &lt;lruggle l'he S)Mbol of a particular ~ang. 1f painted
upsid&lt; down on • wall, 1 • ign of
disrespect to thai gan, . says
Cmtron. a 1993-94 f•llo.. tn •the
Rockefeller l'oondation f'eiiO'Obipo Pm.,-am"" UB.
The role 1bat surfaves hke 10•alls
and Slleets pia) 10 soc.al problems
is central 10 the book Con1100 ,.
current I) v.•riting. Pu~s Aq11i, Lanflldlf'l anti
i• Angtln"""'an elhoographk study of a pnmaril)' Mex.ltan community outside
of Chicago.
Cintron gr~w up'" a membet of
the only Puerto R1can family tn
M=edes. Teus. a small town
about four mtles from the IUo
Grande and the S . border "' ith
M.exico. H1.s father worked in tilrus productton as a trained horticultunst who could deal with
professional issues as "'ell as speal.
to the pnmarily MeKtcan ,.·ort
force
..Tel..as IS a cunou.s place to be
Puerto Rtcan," he •ays. ''NOI only
~ere we the only Pueno Ri an
famil) in to"' n 'oll':hen I wu grov.•ing up. ~o~oc m1,ght ha,·e- been the
only one tn the ~A-bole R10 Grande
\aile) ."

i&amp;RC:t P'ICJ.,

Ibis ti.me oymbohu wboa

Ralph ·C kJbon writ
~~bout

de«p- liutc.d
looololofwort

- y., do , br ronIJOib~~&amp; publiC liJ*IOI for
your own use. but tn so
dote&amp;, you dvealen those
wbo rWly control public
.-pu&gt;-tbepobcl&lt;. n.cn,.

• 101 ol

. theie day

about '"""""''

. pub-

lic spoce. But tndoing that.
)OU ah&lt;l conLWI some body else's opace, wb&gt;cb
i~ -p robkms
...)'.that polkr JO about
COIItroiling the QreeiJ 1ft$
up~ (eeltng•
theestahbSiunea"
In fact, C mtron sa~.

..,sa

~Ret ga

"There s a Lot of talk these days about 'winning
back' public space. But in doiJtg thaJ, you also
contain somebody else s space. "

as b:l:ve maR)

d!mg&lt;tftCOIIltlMm ...d!the
ooc.ery lhat they """" to
be .. ,.., 11:111151---(bey
Willi to own property. 10
h..e """"'Y and resp«:L
problem " that the
ooly means by ,.hicb
they feel they can oduew:
dill are iUegal." be .ays

- - Budoepoinlsootdlllmany
---------------------------------------------- pmg~WhKhofum~
tolhemseh-aas"organizalions""What boppenc.d simulta compleung Ius """'ruuoo. whtch
oro $()1'{10times ,. ilb
10 paruatnvolved e great d&lt;al or work. in the
neously tlh dns oo!lapsc wa tb.t'l
patt 10i!b the eulture 01 larl!" . H.e
home of people in the commua lot ofMextcam, both doc::wnmled
nl!y, htsresearchchlln.ged,l&gt;&lt; sa)'ll.
and undocumented. bepm to move 8'""' u
·• umple o Chocago
··1 loi1 mterest an maling state·
SIJ'eel pm&amp;, 1loe Oi&amp;ctplet, that IS
in, Oil the periphery of 00..1ROW&lt;L
ments about educationallhtngs. and
neptatiD£ with Cluc.q:o officials
Spaoish storo&lt; began to appear both
bec.arnt more inlere: ted in the
to have tts membm; say tn school.
on the penphery and downtoll&gt;ll.
at
least pan:ly ben!lse the) ...-ani
darker problems of the v. •&gt; comlhere had been a l.a1il&gt;o presmuni lie\ come toge:thc:r."""~~ben whom: tmned tnbandle
onceintheeity incethe 1920s,but
ibeir (UWI(JC$,
rorOntron, these''darter problarge wa ""' of Latooos be&lt;gan to
lem .. •nclt.!Ck uch 1btng. a com·
move the~ in the lote 1960s. In a
Ointmoo, who "'iU li•e a talk AI
UB lhi spritlg oo the -..mic:lbc:s" of
muntty JlO"·erdiffemnctS. and ho"' cttythathadn'oltefoteexpenenoed
publ•c surfaces and structure_reinthese 501Uof rondtt~ lh' popustreet """"- is • prn1t:ssor in the
force those power dJ rferenc~s An
Uni"'-1'Slly of Iowa llr:panJned of
lauoo ""'med an implicu lbreat.
example-. he s.ays, t!t. '"hnw cuy orThe Mexicans became a ymbol ol ~ whoa 'he l&lt;a&lt;beo what be
dtnances inadvent-ntly become
calls""' "rbetori&lt;: Ofpublic. ~til&lt;: husk fear e&gt;f going downboll
.,..ay~ of cootmllin8 a oommunit) .
'J#e says. -Rbdoric tS not just a
lhllt many in the city wene feeling.
"If you're ,poor and live in a
ltmgDage · ue. but hu 10 do ,.;Ill
111&lt;: city d&lt;&gt;doped an Imago
bamo. and)'OU haverun-do~nca:rs
Task Fortt 10 holster their image. all ""' physical swfaces that .,...,
and landlord problems, ordininces
How w.s thi• city going 10 on&lt;IICt display . I'm interested irt "-•Yious g11&gt;qps &gt;OOWpy s,paot throogh
yuppie homeowners if neighborwill try to control public '~"""''
and han~ violations for such things
hoods were dilapidated and cultur- fcnnsof~y.
as house repairs. )Md maint:e"Can. Sl!tl1lds. the way people
ally threatening? In Cbicago, the
nance--.ony1hing that has to do with
High Ted&gt; Comdoc was expanduse lheVboclieo,theway tbeydn:ss.
th&lt; look of a ne1ghbortood."
aU are ways of c:relling statemeau
illg and moving west. with new
high tech industries. and tbe city
about who rotlUOI• public spac:e.
I lhe time of Cintron"s ~·
wasci&lt;&amp;perate 10 alll'l&lt;lllhat lcind of
PI use street !11\P to funber
se&amp;ICh. Angelstown was sufinc:ome and gTOW1b.
my cultural critiql!C because they
feri~~&amp; from whllheci&lt;&amp;eribes as "a
111&lt;: lrnq:e TASk Force became embody a l&lt;ind of di SCIIt. and
real collllpse of economic
tbetefore ·nevcal dcep-ocated sopan of lhat sense of fear, "" they
strenglb----the down1o;.,n had d&lt;tetried tO detennine what they con- da! problems," Cillll'OII say•. "I
riorated. ~here was a collapse of sidered ways 10 clean up the city.
find my own critioisms are amlocal industry. and competition
pli~ by using them u ._. _
using sooh things as ordinances.
from malls on the outsk:im.
What re~ly upped the ante were
ample&amp;-"

A

The~ .. ·~ cormU'Illy,____ ~by-OMio'\ al ~..a~.

s- IJrwerliyaiHI!w 'fottt• 6u!ta:l EtllanltcA:. . . ~in 13&amp;0:clll, ...... Arrtwa.(1•G)66-2826.

~OFPIJI!IUCI,J'ION _ , - ,_ _ .,ft)ITC)R .... . . . . _ , ASSOCIATtfDITOft M\IIili...._ MT~ - . c A'. . _ . , A$5(1QA.l£Aitl'Oifi!Cltllll ~--, NI'iEWIISNi~ - -

�Politic &amp; the presidency: George Will take aim at both
HI IS IT; it won't lei In)' bdtft,"
Clecqe f Will f'lllrtu:r f'N.e Wlftocr and yndieM&lt;d colu 11t.IOid
on ouchtnce of""""' llwl2.
01
Alu o Ala\l lost "'
WiD's
reference was to t1oe ptrfOI'IIIIIICC or 11oe
Oin1011 admini
on ho toll. t1oe ....,.
ond tn U8 's Dostuoposhod peakas Senrs.
He IOIICbod on topoc n111'on fiOill the
matJ.OnalozaiJOn or the uecuu•e bronch. the
onh Amencaoo Free Trade A&amp;rec,.,no
A.fTAj. health n:foom. &lt;due.._, and
I~

liOCtd&amp;l.problem

"I believe this
~nistration aspires to
as left-wing an
administration as we've
had..,

..-...

Callin&amp; hom~lf a JOUmaloSI ond pohucal
analyst who"onlyth'
about &amp;OYatiJTIMI
on the bateball off-season." Wolloottoculakd

hos &lt;x&gt;mervali•"C ,.;e,. about 10vemmeo1
Wtth a healtloy dose ofbostary and a smatter·
inc of bueball
"I beloeve tho admonoSirluoo aspores ID as
left-win&amp; on admono IJ1IlJOII as ~·ve had."
Will assened. describulg lht Bcmocratoc
Pany as one of "upon ive pem""'"~"
Moreover. the curn:ot odmoni ratooco i ad·
die in&amp; i sues that an: ooullthal important.
he wd, cili'l&amp; the emphaso that Presodent
Oi11100 .. go•in&amp; ID t1oe c~crocit. Will oaid he
1 lhanUul for t1w emphaso • sonc:e 11

oted po en. the pealer
nou:d w oth lht fall or the
Berion Wall and the end or
lhtcold ....... the "'pn:sidency
lJ. AO* back to ~ ll was
on the 19tlt ctlllW')I ," WoU
&amp;ald. oddon&amp; that today "the
population I •leptocal or
!Ovenunent "
Callong the recent
NAPTA &lt;kbate bet,.een
R
Perol and oce Pn:sJdenc AIGon: liOI'tle·
thtn out or "Monoy P)'tboo." Wtll - '
Perol' s inconso.\le100eS o.ertht o sue cle.t)'
c:aow out dunna t1oe debootc A "'PP"'f&lt;:T or
AfT A. Woll saod he bebe• the ag,.,.,.
men! ,.,)1 be ~ by Coocnn. It I
omponant for Meuoo and for the U S • he
saod. oddo that by tMooldtn&amp; the MUICIID
economy II woll l'IICOUnlgt Me._ICIM 10 toy
borne In oddlllon. II ...u enhance the ...y
Olhe '""' the .S • and hostorically the
.S. has been in favoroffn:c trade. he ....S
Cntocal of C'lontoo ·' anempt to refonn

0

.,---~
News Bureau Stan
HE

-

.

8 ATiil.EllCS program has
been placed on probauon for one
year by the atoonal Collegt.~te Athletic: Association for ' ooiJot:aoos of
CAA regulatiOnS on the men' basketbafl
J&gt;'OI"lm·
The NCAA omminee on lnfractoons
also on tructed UB to develop and omple·
menta comprehensove educational prognom
to inslruct roaches and athletics department
safi about CAA reaulations
In as~ ing the penaltoeo roquu-cd by
CAA byl1ws. the c:ommouee toot tolD account the "lomoted nature of lht ~oolatooru .
the univemty's prompt and thorough on•t&gt;·
ugation of the alle&amp;MtonS and lht acuoos
liken bytheunl'crslly to enforce '"comph·
aroce program "
In addition ID the one-year probatoonary
penod ond educational program. the action
omposed by the commlllee onclude a repn·
mand and censure of UB • athletoc prognom.
institutional n:certoftcatoon or all athletoc
policies ond procedures. and a mo.. -cause
requirement I Sued tO lht former USistanl
men's basketball coach omohed on the voolations should he seek employment "'"h an
CAA member 1ns1i1uUon.
The Comnutteeon lnfracuons repon satd
""the \'iola1ions 10 th1 case "A--ere hmued and
resulted from • r... ac:t by one assistant
coach in several extra-benefit v1olation involving one stuckot- thlete and anothet extra-benefit invoh·mg two student-atbletes."
U8"s investigauon began las! summer
after the pons editor or '1'M SfWctnun. the
U8 wdcnt newspaper. conliCied el""'
Town ..nd. U8dorcctorofathletocs. for comment on alle11tions that a former studentathlete who wa a member of the U8
basketball team hod received airline tickets.
sneakcn. tickets to a profe ional basketball
game and some cash from a UB assistant

or

CAA rtj!ulaloon.
UB President Wolloam R Greoroer Slid
that U8 on•-estJgJled the alltr.auon a """'
as they came to hpot "Tho onvestopoon .. .,
tltorough and a&amp;gn:&gt;sove. 11
completed
quoci.Jy. and 11 n:sulu ,...,.. prompt!) rrponed 10 the NCAA by the OOIYCilill}'
The alle&amp;atoon • all "'J)&lt;ll1ed to h"'e OC ·
cum:d on 1989. ,...,.. found to have '"'ohed
only the one student-athlete ond onl) one
roach The tudeol-athlete .. -.a UB team
mrmber from 19 ~91, the coach has not
been empiO}-ed 11 U8 sooce 1990

*"'

.-...,added

T'hr unl\o'ef'SJI)''S IO~llgauon roood 00
O&lt;hcr 'oolatoon
After subsequent tnvestogatoon. the NCAA
"''thdre" the alleptoon that the coach hod
omproperl) proHded ncale" to the &lt;tu-

parts or C.. C1lCi an: Ill I
moh&lt;lftnol." he-......1 Thcctunare.,
ora.~.

health care, W oU saod the
elf
onl&gt; partly concerned ,...,h the hoalth or
people." The larJcr p i
I "'n:slort
the heal
of tht Dc:mocraC•c
Party." Woll Silled, odd'0&amp; that "Health can: woll be lht
oal Seat
nt) or the 1990&gt;
1 11 reall 100 much to ~ood 15 perceol
or the budge! ooo health carer Woll u
mro&lt;&gt;n&lt;:ally He coted the elrama IC I "'""'
on coronat) b ~ opn-auon-. from 10.

on·,.

UB athletics program receive
coach. all •Ktlauon

v

.....,.. or lht numt&gt;n or - · llw lotoranc:.
ha•e

anctions from CAA

1 Cohane ond ho staff "'" uphold obt
'C AA .' htghc&lt;l .aodartb "
C'ltat1e- R Founner. l 8 pn&gt;fes'"'" or
bH&gt;I
teal kiCIICn and the unnemt) · f.: .
ult) athlttt&lt; re~llll'e ""bet a.ducted
l!B" tnV1,&lt;to~•toon . tdh" ud) oodthatof
the NCAA
ed oh;.t "tht' ,, t 'itllnall) a
one-eo--onr rd~100 1p be1•«n a iitDdcru·
atblett and a coach
"Bodo on the 8 nd the
AA tn'eYI-

th)

g.atlon!., 1hcft ts th.olutcl) no tt.ldencc t:ba.l

anyone elve 1n the Do" oon of Ath~ or
lht UOI\t I) tool. part." bt aci&lt;kd
Ndsoo T.,..,Mtnd noted that the uruv&lt;r·
qreed ••th the CAA that • oolatoom
tool. p1aa: bated on .w&lt;ment&gt; b) the former

"'&gt;

&lt;tudent
~c

oaparu on ocher CXIIII1(J1H
The~
ledOUI poor or\.
ond erode llatJOII the root causes or tl&gt;c:K
pro~&gt;~moJ. ""'the...-. or~
""
ed-oon 8od t"a~Chet ..,.,......_ oe.:bcii"'P'I

v.err unable. howr:vn. lO document

aller•

..) of
ID

our
"It

pooffiCial~~

Internal IQVC$11

,"

lor added

a cast or the wu •enOl) or the
or AtltletJo "fXXD''Olnr or condoo·
tho ·~-pe or beba&gt;~o•: T
Slid

Do"'"""

DOl

" 8a.ed on -

~er-atblda
team ~lth thts

do

"bet....., on the

eluded thai thu. ,..,.

man..

"'t

O&lt;her

""&lt; h.a'\.t'

osoWed oncidalt. a

&lt;a&gt;eor ...:omeooe lr}"""' ~ f ...
enrolled
·-our ,.,aJo, thai 01 aoo: happ&lt;rt l!ltn.thal
,.., I maollllon ontqnty and abode b,&gt;-the
CAA nail'&gt;." he added
~
UB tu. no plan 10 appeal the oanctJMS
" ' a member of the 'CAA. "' support
the aulhctnt} or
""'""-and ..-.It
abode
11 nab ," Gn:mer $lid. ·

cknt-atltlete
re.•ners.a•d ... In ~m. ""e bel.evct.h.aJ UB
dtd everytltong that 01 could and should
have done to handle tltos ca&lt;e on • umely and
responsoble manner We an: pleased that the
'CAA toa. acloo,.ledged the prornplMS
and proprtd) of obt onvestiJllolooo. and we
are grateful for tbt full and faor heann~
proces&lt; accorded UB by the CAA
'
"As a result of bolh UB "• on•esugauon

G

and

~~

heanng • ""c are satJSfied that

lh•~

case 1.s an 1solatcd one ... Grriner cooatnued
.. Ex~nstve eva uauon ~veals no fun her m*
fracuon amoog the umvcn11y' coachm_g
StilT. and ronn ITIClSUmi .... in place 10 ensure
that no sucto mfntctions will oocur apon.
"U8 i committed to buildong a Oivosion
1buketball program or top qualuy and bigb
integrity. We match the athletoc exceUeac:c
of our student-athletes with a firm commitmenl to academiC exccJience. wise and
tbougblful coaching leodasbop and complete personal integrity on the pan of bodt
stuckot-athletes and roaches." he oaid. "We
will continue ID develop the program in thi
direction, fully oonfident thai Coach (Timo-

Gtt11' Sports Cri::
held Oct. 30 IJMer
r:&gt;1scot.1et Wcmen's
Sports grart.
brotl;;lt 500 . .
girts to AUmi

Arena. Here. ........

Bul1ilch. a~

ollhe women'a....,
learn. gilles iniWI),
tJons in the~
ming

start.

�4

Briton

from UB,

J

A

~Q&gt;

\.'"lcni
pc&amp;ui. "~ Ah lalf Hunter. Bno
c-on I g&lt;"n&lt;nl and dtm:t« renenJ of Bnt·
1&gt;hTI*icand ln1~ tm&lt;OI . ~Inn •• dtm:·
"" of Bnu&gt;h lnformat100 Sen~CrS (81S I.
and Ra)
}lllOnd. "c~ consul of tbe PoliCy

wannup

in ua. write

0. \lswn of 8JS

wilh

Allhougb tbe foi&gt;IC' """" g&lt;~~~-poltllCal and
eoonoouc 111
tbe forum ' emollOriOI
IUJJIOSilhcn!: ,•.....,., gmllll}-lt&amp;it' .be.an&lt;d ..
tl
solemn• otbe&lt;s. One""""""' Raymond
..... dr)1y c:twac1cnzmg tbe ~ col~

-w-e.

ua. parade

Wor., · a &lt;hp.t llll..mder&gt;tlnda"'~w..,.,"
and
nr 1f all was "'~"'"" Tbe nat mnmmt. """" .... patOO"' • bleal. portrait of .
Europe lncapabit of ""'~"' """' blood·
&gt;h&lt;d 111 tbe Balkan
Innes and Raymond defended Bnwn and
WCS~Crn Europe from aa:usauon mad&lt; b)
th&lt;U .S ~~·emmentandU . S med1athatnot
enough was done to ~ven1 en il -.11r in tht
former Yugoslav...
"1 do 001 accept !be cntiCistn that EufO!X
.at bacl. and "a~Cb&lt;d. • Innes ~d

time by UB,

'"d loU UB!@;

)

Buy any UB'" Licensed

I

noel&gt;. "ho &gt;en'ed "" a monito.- fO&lt; tbe
European Commurut} (EC) 1n Boseoa for
almost a )'Cl~T , Ctled tbe P"'sencc or 2,300
Bnllsb lttlOp!o m O:ntral Rosell "'ho ha•-c
=oned rnorr tban 70,
'""'of humam·

Product during December
for $5 or more and we'll
send you a

..... $5

tananaid to \K1.nmo(~ "•o,encc. He also
odded that !be Royal Atr Fore&lt; ha. flo" n

~ U8 pial

~than 9(X)

.- ~

Raymond. a regular

M•ll·l• free UB"'
pi• certlftetde
._,

AA)'UI"'.bcleltKdJI")dlllafnna~

oft-GIIIpld "-"'liier Khtnt for • k-.
Sl. ·f'Vtt~riWJ

Of

s.M:

n.

1
~o6"onatccrufocot&lt;
2 Ad-.d
\olap-.lltl tbepYA."ha.iotPf'Clt

"*'

-~IUmCC'Vt'lcd

flrQductCend"ll:lllt •

..Uto:
UBN Pia Promooc.
)()0 Qullslbll

llolrolo, NV 1• 2fill
•All. /or r#w UP~ Pmdw1

lecturer II

I
I
I

C~~411QIIIVJIQ"Uf/tltnwMUinC"f'ftWn t.,

,... u.u~ndF~•~T" 'J
.adS"""' Oller~J__,., IS. 19M.

I r,.._,_l

comp111 • be nwnt

belte•ed they had h"t&lt;&gt;r) , truth and JU&lt;II«
on tbetr ..c~e...od '1bt laftd hHn ' l

Euf&lt;l!X- v.l

seen pe.acr: a.n ~u. centurte'S ...
lnna .-1 '&gt;iuk 1tun:u1n.nanan tfforu and
economac !1Aftdaon1r1 ~ould be 1ncreastd.

"Contrary to American
public opinion. it i
only a reluctant minority
of England-far smaller
t/r1n people think, who
are oppo ed to full
participation in the EC."

Western Euf&lt;l!X can usc NATO f01tt&gt; 10
mforce no-Oy l.OCle\ and to accompan) a1d
shipmenu.. A TO does 110( ha•-e the leg• I
capaaty or moral authonty to 1mpose west em ,.;Jues and Intervene 111 t~ Cl\rtl "'•
AI tbe qu.."tiOil·and-an ,.cr pcnnd fol lowmg Innes' remar\.s one man tn ~ auchcnce re.fened to EufO!X as "an 1ncurabl)
cnmonal cootmcot, for ,.hleb one genoctde
ptr centuf) as tn\uffictcnl •· Thrt aucheru.."C
membet saod tt "'"" "&lt;hameful" that Bnwn
and France follov.-ed Germany ' ' lead m
ogna.zmg lo,·ema and Croat~ . and •n msH·
turrng an arms embargo 1ha1 man)
1ntemauonal anal) lliiS ha"e saKI umented
the Bosman Mu hm in a ~umn of beang
hopeless!) outgunned by Setb1ans engaged

m

stemauc ethmc deansrng.

Innes defended tbe Onto h pos1toon...) •
1.ng that re~ arming the Mushm~ moH·
embraced by Prestdcot Clonton-·ould on I)
lead to an cscalation or 'IOience and would
endanger humann.orian relief workers and tbe

of a

~'cs:tccn

European

ned.
and 60 pm&gt;eol of all du'ec1
f ret,n ln\ciim~nt 1n

Amenca ts from 't\~01trn
Bnwn be·

tbe IMI'~ ID &lt;" lOr
Raymond odded
" NATO 1 tbe pnce for secun
I'
"" mont.'' Raymond ....s
ln~-eRmcn~. tr.dc andtbe ~Com mu ny "' !be bjc&lt;l of tbe opem~~&amp; ""'
seowwn by Bnu Con I Geocral Allll&amp;lr
Hu!IICZ• ...t.o cxplamcd EQPaa&lt;l' s lllltudt
un.-anl
EC. an ltlltlldt, be ....S. ,.1uch •
"ohm m1SW&gt;dersto6d"' tn tbe Uruud Suus
lDf

Conlrary to Amencan pubiJc optnMlft.

HuM« wd. u 1 "only 1 relucum muoom )
ofEn&amp;land--far ..,.,ncr than people du ••
"'
art opposed to full partlapOUOOI ID tbe
OC EncJand oornplael) wppaned tbe ere

._or •••g.~e~-mart&lt;rt.
be wd. .., accomph meot he called '"'lit
oc·, t.~ IICfucol,emeot.n.: aellDOI\ of ... ~ nw1&lt;et. ..
offiaall) oonclud&lt;d Jan. 1.

~ secunoy, UJdthat "h1lc theoountne&gt;ol

=·

l The- wl)t&amp;~Mt: bcmd ptOdut1 bhd or tac.
the- LIB"" l..Kcn!icd

{(~ 011 the lkm), w

UBOtf~~XoiT~...Sl...IOm"'fU

VISiliO~

w.,, Pouu on NATO and Western Euru·

·-----------·
I
:
I
I
I

ma!I\Don,. to de.hver a1d to lhe

bes&gt;c:fed City or SuajC':&gt;O

\0
ia thJ COIIIIU')' I
tmployed bt a substd&gt;tll')

"""""'!*'
ldocn tent to JllllO"d tbetn.
"'T1w:r&lt; IS no easy -'OluJ....,, • lna&lt;$ ,.iJ,
noun&amp; lllollbe former Y
Ia~~ tu""" ·
cally ha - . , pi.,....S b) biJS&lt;r coo0K1 !be product of «ttl"""' oft1hmc and ~hi IOU
lllll:red E•-cl)' Croa1 0&lt; Serb 1'-. evtt md

to

~mote~b&lt;swoa!OC

Bnlaln' postuon IS thai the ultol'llllll&lt; loOiuuon
tbe ooofiiC1 bes IICl 1n WesB'n Europe. bul
m the lhrec pan.ocs tnYOived m lbe dts;pute
Raymond , wboo;e ~ revolved
around NATO and the future of European
sec:unl) . noted that !be suuauon m the fOJmter
Yuplaviae•cmpltfle&gt;tbe ' 'ne.. , moreoom phcated n ·ks" that face tbe po!il-&lt;:Oid war
"orld Raymond ackno,.ledgcd that a sul&gt;•tanual m1nonl) of Amcncan&lt; '"'" NATO
1 obsolete and favor a d1mntisbed
role
'" tbe defense of estern Europe But be
wd Amencam snJI have a utal mt.ertst in a
strong ATO
.. Wh1le lhc:n- 1~ no more inltnse. ft"'())()..
hlht&lt;: So•1d ~ for ,.hoch 'ATO ,...,
founded '" 1949 to counter. Amenc:a has a
greatcr eoononnc
c '" W&lt;i!em E'.urDfX
u tltd !ben." be satd
One of ~'""Y two dollan; of .S. exporu
IS booghl,. WC':51A::m ~S. Raymond

10

"""'than

~o&amp;~d. One out nf ""'&gt;' sc..,. man.ufactunn

~

~h&lt;l&lt; ._....aod ~OCC11121m

freedom to live aod work ..tat theychoo!te. llr

Hute-

~oboac:asallllft~

ll:m

ofbonlanc inc!-

,H omier.
"ho ,. also dtrcctor gmeraJ of
Bnush trade Md onvcsunr111 m !be U _
Kl that hts I"' ernmen1 ts more cauuoo
and R'IIIGUilt 10 tmplan&lt;ru addu...-1 mc:a
.....,.._..uch ... !be CTeaUOII of. . p Eun&lt;""' '
peon curren&lt;) -hocb would ulumasely lead
to !be complele uruty of the EC. A 1nflt
~cumncy • .,.,.,of/bepnmary p i
oftbe Maastnohl Treaty. iln&lt;ll•es a~­
that ,.ouJd bcfon ,..;111 tbe loc n&amp; of !be
liC' S e dwJ&amp;e ....,. and
Jd end Wtth I
&lt;~ngle """"""'Y pot;cy ~ b} a
European Cenual
be ex:pl&amp;t.otd.
" - said wbilc . p i .... clcsirablc.
timcb IS inc*&gt;tu-.w.lwiiiCl)ll'l axno.
"'t' s """retllllldy prao:tiable 10 ~b)
the end aft . decade..- be said.

Provost's advisory group to hear views of UB community
Tile ............ ~ C I
lttwe on tbe lltUCtUrc
of Al1l and Scien&lt;les, O.vid J. Tri&amp;glc. Olair. ""'b informa·

t ... L
ClUBS""""'

OUBFxuloy/Stalf

0 UB AI!Jihi'MIS

0 VB

Fnaldf\'i~

......... __ .............. --......-l.,...

n.._,.,_---....,......,. ,_,.
-............................
... .....................
ptt:'.....,.... ,_.._
.,...,.........___
,....
... .,...!"",_..
.II ........,
..............
..... ...,.......... __
........
......
~'--

~

~

&lt;Wt_ ....

~

Oll.t,...•l44~~~~tt

·-----------·

tioo from · lbe IJilivcni.ty community on lbe relatioolbip
betweco u:ndezpadtW;e educllioo and tbe 5lrUCI:wa tbat
ppartlhisproceu. Accordlogly. Committee members ,..;u
be anil&amp;ble Dec. 8, from 9 a.m. to 5 p._m_, to bear presen..._
lions from interested fliCUIIy. uff and students. Prciet!ta·
lions should be directed 10 the Committee's charge. which
bas been provided by Provost Aaron Bloch: All prutotatioos will be !aped and made available 10 Committee mem·
ben fot foature rcf..-.oce.

lndiriclttals wbo wiSh 10~ · llrlllldon totbe Commit·
tee oo Dec. 8 1111111 CU11act LYJIII~ • 64S.2311
~ 3 ID tcbeduleibeir .,._,...;oa. &amp;ell~ . be
goWD a room locatioo and alJoaed five ·
lor · or brlr
prcseawioA. Ms. 1...eism&lt;o' c:u provide .,....,..un wid! a copy
nf !be Comminec •• clwge upon requc;sl.
fil'*'llen arc &lt;:llllOWllged ID provide tbe Commilule wilb
writu:n information 10 &amp;JIIIOIII and 51!PP0fllbcit pc:autllioa
u needed. If demand =-ts tJi, time periods a...uable oo
Dec. . additional dales and times will be tdleduled 10 IICCOID·
modale inpat fmm all illtereiled penies.

�_...,.._

___

_...

'Vision of splendor' in Duncan exhibit
G cxlutnuoa -,..
ympoooum of lhc I.Jna&amp;maiiOn
Roben Ounc8n on Word and lm-ae." •rtoe Wd Library.
of Monn .• Monnupolo
o• 20
through Jan 23, offtrH lhrnf"&lt;' 1 alOOf,
penonal relaoon op
prodootd onrngu'" ~• ual"" and"""" oflht moslonno•au-. podoc fonm of lhc 20th &lt;:entur) ,
II focv
on lhc &lt;:Oilaborauoft
Roben Duncan,lhe influ&lt;Olaal capenmcmal

n,.

1&gt;&lt;1.,...,

pod

ro-foundcd lhc "San Fnncasco

Renal unce· 1n American poetry. and
pamter-&lt;oll_,,.
b11 """'~'&amp;""''" bft
and an for ........, lban 35 y..,..
"A S)m
umoflht L,.,outoa" ,., ..
clevdoped by Robtn Bc:rtbolf. curasor of lhc
Poetry and Rare
Coll«tlon at U8
1l_we 8 coll&lt;aion of 20th ctruury potU) rn
English a ll&lt;fl""llly con ader&lt;d the fine.tiJI
lhc ...,..d and us ldchn&amp; ancludt O)&amp;ny of
Duncan' rare and firotdllrons, manuscnpt.&gt;
and personal anafact , some of whiCh form
tht ba as for tbi &lt;how
In h1 introduction to tht: edubauon catalogue, lkrtbolf "'Tit lh • tht ""'"' rtpre ·
Duncan-Je\
household, "'hocb from 1951 unultht pott "'
&lt;k than I
.... "ah&gt;t "''th potlr). mu oc.
an. oncaent '"''11om. [ ary ul" and fol
lej!end --4bt h•$h romaJ1&lt;:e of luerature ..nd

"""' tht producU\ II)

I

paantanr •

Apnl 24.

-OUIOCM

Bo toa's
offArt . M.ay 21
p Au&amp; 21.
1994, and Nu

Yor 's Wh11ney
M
of American Art. SqlL 22 thtouch
Dec. 4, 1994 " AS 111p05lUm of the lma£1 natiOII" "''IINnconcu'"'n"••th"J "arlbt
MrU Collrgc: Art Gallery, 0 land and at
lht Wbune) " Boston "'""" v.rll ht announctd
OunnJ thetr )&lt;"" to,cthb !195 I- 1.
Duncan andJe&gt;•ponutd ondl\ adu.al &lt;ndta• or..-.v.ell a,.idtran &lt;ofcollabonata&gt;t
""""'and htn"ll) pro.J&lt;C1• Tha tdubll. !Of
'"""""'· ft.ature.&lt;&gt;nj!tnal card . broa&lt;ho.Je .
cb.pbool """ n.bl) attcron.:.al ""'"""'
and poem .. ~ \)mbol• dtmtd from a

T

an:

......,..,_,.....,
for "" &lt;dot- of Dwlc:a ••
pn .....
o(
the pod ondlor
by
. , as~
Bre-verman.lbrry Jar:oobu&gt;. PolriC1a a-loft
"....X" drav&gt;tftCl -.1 bandwnlkll pocrm
for ~ ~~ 8
of Ruembl.mcc - OUia
Dwocan~td pubhcataons rn..ludt spt·
coal coptn of lu
• "Utkr.." and llx
endp~p&lt;n for 1'hc Y..,.. a Cttdle&gt; •
8&lt;nbolf ....- "*- IW: ....... ... mill) . .
col

-·· a.e:

Dln:all' r_.. ~.......,
......
pnn&lt;::rpltos .. a&gt;UoF and "rtfonnod by e.. ..
tbnofa
&lt;botodtok ~ fi;
tmllplllllOII ..
..... achat\OOd . . 1ft "' ht
'T
....... and
--~..
~ and

"'""*" "'....,... _.

-8&lt;nbolf. "'Duncan~

.-~~P'.......

"'

'""""

-FSEC heru;s computing environment plan
RBI\TING A ISIO for the
dtvelopment of lhc computi11g
environment "' UB over the
"""t five y..... and a plan on
bow toactueYCibiJ vt51011, will
bt lbt p i of the A&lt;*ltnuc Compuung and
CommumcattoDs Adv1s.ory Commjue:r
(1\CCAC), 1\ssoc:aatt Provost Scan Sulhvan
told tht FSEC last wee1t
us " bccomaor a plact .. htre
bas.. or will ba..._ acx:ts&gt; to a •anety of com·

••-eryono

P"'&lt;f """'"""- Sulll\"111 said. In an &lt;n\llonment marl.cd b) oomple&gt;. and numerous 'YP"
ot os omponaot 10 con•dtr altemab"" way of Jlf"O'idaor those ...,.
•octs.ht "d
tba,-tiOclanfyandcbangc:.
so that ••• can serve )OU better." SulhY&amp;n told
tht FSEC. He ggetitCd that Compuuor and
lnfonnation T&lt;dmology mighl coordmare total computior Slllfl"&amp;. r1llh&lt;&gt; than servmg all
.-Is dm:ctly. U8 should ooruider "different
-ways of~Ying SUfl!JOil- that do nor lli&gt;OC!a
allllnl organtzati&lt;xt "to do it all- ht ..., ..
1\coording 10 Sulhvan. AC'CAC's vtsioo
,. COI11pJ1er ltl'"tctS.

-5houldrncludea~-.Sinl­

egy fer CXliN1IlJflicau """""""- S)'Simll.
and infrostruaure dt-.loprn&lt;nl. for buildin&amp;
"dislrii:Ut:d computing" (computing done 11
the desloop of the local user) resouras and
SUfliJOil savia:s. and fer diSin"bubor information resources and speaabud computing and
multirnediaiCChnologies and prodllcU 10 meet
lbt di"""" needs of the UB commumty
The vi ion statement should ai&gt;O descriht a
romputingdtvdopmentdecWon-makingprocess thu invol\&gt;eS local and central planner&gt;
and decision mak&lt;n. stiS minimum Slandards
10 ensurt compatibihty acroo UB as "'dl ""
faciliwing effaaent uS&lt; of hnuted resources.
coordirweseffecthel) withUB ' sbudgetplan-

ning and l'tSClUfC&lt; allocabon proc&lt;SS 10 inOuenoeallocaboo deciSJOO-malalll\- and adentifaes
and dttermines strategaes for pumaing aU
sources of revenue and all fonns of creath-.:
financing 10 meet the ,oaJs and objecttves of
the vi iori .urernent. Sulli•an repor1C!I.
Sulhvan 's repon said that lht finalized
vi ion sratemm1 should bt prepartd by Ftb. I.
1994. It is aucial. ht said. that the statement
take tht cosrs of irs vaSJOO into acc:ounL ·we
don't wanttodt,"&lt;lopa vision Slllltmenl"'ilich
can't bt implementtd b&lt;causr wecan'tafTonl

a 'W'"ty

..... he said

thai

~IOHJDnch Mar-.
'"""
pr&lt;5lderl for~ ond Worn-.. Tocb-

compulUll

...,qy,k......-.1-""~fty
~of..,...,._...mc....us,.pf\CUT

Cl'narrta fry; Mnlnilanovr Contpwng and
Cormtunaoon an lnformaoon Tedtnology
..-hdl.,...,..,. pnonbCS ond ~ .,_
chit ~ ..,...,._ """"""' • U8
PAa::IT.,...,..,.. a.....-.ber fi; ~
lNI deol•11h plltJCUbr ports ofUB'• ~
1 ) - anducltrc lluslrt= S)"'mmi. !iiUdaa ,_
-general """""" ')_,.,__ and fUII.I'e ta:l&gt;
nologc..
wtll a. ~ I number I~
b-

~ o.;orun-ej '""" """"' . .d.lla""""'-

Morlm&lt;. ..-d.
Rortr Bunon al 1'\)cllolott) '-lid ttut he

had """"" thor ~) 65-7~

percatl o( tbe budl!d "liS """"'"" ..........,

..,_tor

idwd Lesn ·
of a&lt;:oodemac
oces, Y~d tbal bt charge: a to orga""" centrahzed compuhnJ pport. and tltat
ht orpnu:auoa 1 c:unanly "w-addlulgt W&lt;l modtl of
SUpport. a otntraltud
modtl and a more local one He • cun-em!y
"'or onJ on on rucuonal compuunc. utformatton r&lt;sourtt foal . and basoc computer
...nKt pmbkm , he &lt;aJd
In u:m1 of 10'-lruchonal compullnJ
Lt noa -..aJ that he a ompro•~ tudtn1
"'""" '" mt&lt;.-n&gt;o.:ompuun~. upW!uor lht VAX
du"'-ler. puttlnJ computer clu.Men; 1n thr

donn dt•doptn,da.sroom tbalba•-.comput&lt;r technoloc) l'atlable "' •ell "'a program on """' 10 learn 'anou&gt; technolog,..,
and .. on.tnJ ... ith off-caiJIPUS cu!iiOmCtSln
terms of anfonnaUOCI reaouru &amp;&lt;&gt;aJs. l..emJak
..,d that ht os lr)'IDC to put lht anformahon
technolocY h~&lt;ncy ~ IJI lht forefrool.
and thai be i eriCOUniJIDg pariJICnlups and
)Oint pro.JCCIS in lhu area. He JS abo dealt
watta basac problems sudt e&amp;UJI iotsrnactional compuaten and access priority qaosoons for Kldcnuc
ht wd.
Mainen ,.....,.... of Modmt ~
and Lalaaures DOled thorlheJe -IIWI)' ......
uru.,..;ry uscn on UB' • CICnlrll ~ ond
wandered If thor a-.-1 "terlstoot."
LesliJal,. said thaJ there I such leftSion. and
dtdn'1 feel that Compuung and lnfonnataoo
tbalU8aslJ)'U11tofigureouumodtlforv4111
Tecltnolog) "dad" all." andasked"Wby ba&gt;t
11Hi1Jppor1 )"SIIelll rolt IS 10 thecommuntr)'.
aiWIIderful compuung sy&gt;r.em but no one v.tao ,
Wayne Billa&gt;.. "'- fi; the Fat:l*y Sen&amp;
can tell u hcr.o. at \1101"1. .,..
Cornmiul&gt;eon~Ser-1CIS.saidchlr"evSulbv., responcbl that wtuJe f'CIClPit need
ery tamr I &lt;Nuss ~ servia:$ wilb tbe
,.,.., plac&lt; 10 go "'""'" '\tumped'' on the local
f:tcult) . I lilt
ri;N away.· 81111.11 said 1M.
1c:ve1. thtrt is 110( enough fi; a ClCDirOI org.,;1Jibon be thouglf that the Acr:.AC should * a more
10 ..-all suc:h needs. He said abo that a~
"'"""P'- global ,;.... of..,...,._ is5ues. indudalnadalaaa:ess~semcu• U8 bad
anr """"' fi; avaibbilrty ond acoess. and tbe
!ftnsentoo.tiOc:achfacultyand5Chooi..Sulli•-.. quesoon of how rmdt U8 .,..,.. to be on the
said that the pnonbCS .. the~"""""'
C\Jibl1@edgtofc:hqq ..,...,._-..,q;e._
sysaem are. ... order .. ~ 10 gel ....
He said 1M. he abo fads 1M. library ..,...,._

UB should consider
"different ways of
conceiving support" that
do not need a central
organization "to do it
alL"

a....---.

~ anfraslruaurtU*&gt;place.IOS&lt;:rVenN

fxulty. 10 supp&lt;l1 instnJcSJonal ~ !WI
.........n_ and 10 provtde library aa:ess and acass
10 adtrinistr.lti•"&lt; sysaems.
Dennis MJJloneof Eleclrical and Computer
Engineering asked what ptteent.age ofthe llllal
COCJIIIUling budget was sptnt on acadtmic and
adminosuativeromputing. M1111&lt;nsrespunded

anfarmoiJan !hould ht pori of the acadoroeth:an ...mr-..... ~
He said 1M. a l;q cpsion fer k 1\-.:
-..lei be howto&lt;XI&lt;fld ..,..,._servia:$ .. U8
10 Sllldenls .and the OUISide world. ~
tcetrdog) isgoingiOb&lt;aJmeprn"OSI•-e. ,.belhtr
we ~ &lt;Y: ,.._ ond ,.belhtr wt •re ready fori. or
,.._- Bialas said.

-··--

........ s socx.er 1-'1 lnlhed
' .... 8-&amp;-3 ma1o: ictllottl
ng
1.() &lt;M!&lt;\fT"te loU 10 Holsn "'
hi East Coast Cor!lerenoe
Feu
~
Olmln
!loectler
0
.-.d
Bar 91 tO _., n;omed 10
IIJ.Coollnnoe ~ Edor\1 O&lt;pewi""O
l..uolrto Gallo Enc BoeGner .-d ..,
Palmer ... receiYed \OJia tram

The

, _ MASOn

&lt;Xll'lleren::e s ~ Fo&lt; ... .,..,
~- • ......,.,_ledlhe..-n

11 110M none-. aiOial o1

-

23 poora Oanen 8oecher WCCifi!ICI none
gcltlfll whle 0
led ... IQI*S

WI

'Tq

HMd Coech o.lae Oleney's
1 aong --., • off 10 a good _ , lol:lw1110 , _ 31 ~ deiMI ol Broclcport
on T.-daV. Nov i lSs llictcry

sa.

~

O'f ....,..,_ Alrria

~-~

&lt;Mil

•

O!o'8r1ime
• 1Q pounds
Roger Scali &gt;3 CnllaA ecored

o:-. on Soca 33 ~.,.,

• 1
pounds . . . SCCln!d • lat&lt;e OOW"IIale
111 hi
petaod 10 dtBCI&amp;ICf'll'll ~
poneat

-

e&gt;&lt;lra - . n

·· w'

UB s mens

, •

-held off d&amp;-

lendlllQ Albmc 10 ctwnpoonl St.
13:&gt;-107 ~IDf­

eor-an

, _ dulllmM nwk 1D 2~ Soph&gt;
more Micllllel ~ledh
1-. YIC1Cry 111 1he 200 1M ila ·
o121l121 Fle&amp;IYnln OUIIIin
IIXit . . ~ciwlgWI ......i

.

c..

..•.

...... .an
Maninol
IIXittw
9l 40while
.......,_
·--·
--.c
218.C.

._

,

,

The WDmllfl't ~ -.m.-.....c! ID
NlglraNov 10..,_..,.~
""'*~ 1~ 10 14) ,_cUI
~18C0dl02~ f'IW'nwl~

I ~&lt;tOG! Itt! 200 he t121n19 rd
... 500 he in 529 17 FtelhTwl
Comollyllllo~~lte 200

IM(2.15.81) end OObl.llartr (1Ql.83).

The men's rd11110111!n's

_,.

IO!l~ Slklal!tr. Nov 2llll
A&amp;.nn~

w-'aY...,...
Women's ~ 1l'lii4Md ID h
~ Toumarrwto.-h Mllllt-

end where twylelnhw ~ ID
V9*teorm-or-ltl1&gt;12. t~
1&gt;13andf'Uger$1&gt;1. 15-10. t&gt;7.
The Ro¥als ... cropped • .
dBcollon IOhllt ~ 1J..15, S.. 15.
&gt;10, 15-6, 1&gt;12. UBianow 6-14
hea:iing n.o .. fasl Coe!ll Oanlllren::e Toumarrwt at Hollh on~-

�......... ., ..

.
...

~---­

0..,_. J.._
----~'!"'!"
...,_._..e...
..

u....- ..n · -

-~·,_

•

.
--.1»1---

It's Holiday Recipe
Contest Time

~~
~-~111&lt;

sz

n..An&gt;c.-.
-c_._a,
..

staff and sllJdents

represenls, how many years you\oe serveo ~ to
- rave revews. etc , noiude that

'f'

Mlllorfuto:
Reponeo- Recipe Contest,136 Oolis UnMl~
at Buftalo.

142SO Or &amp;«&gt;arl to

~

·-

WoM}~.~-

-

We ·n jUdge • lor la!ile appeal ease of
p&lt;eparallOO. ongonalt!Y attii!S c:ontrb.llm Ia a
heal1hy doe! W'YIBr o1 ~ recipe JUCIQOO 1he
be$1 Wtll receM! a handsome coffee table ~
bcXlk as a priZe

Please t,... llle f004)e 11'1 ()()()k bOOI&lt; sryle Wll/'1
tngt'BCIIE!rCS forst, dlrecbOnS ~~ put
'fOU' name. address, department 'fOU' UB trtle
and phone nurtler at lhe tcp ol tl1e page II
there's a broef "story" al:xliA t11e r~
you created rt whal ·k rld of tradnoons rt

_ _ 1]_'10
__
~

Call'l"''- 'l ......

Go look c up--1t1at f~e holiday racipe. lhe
one 1i1at famty and friends Clafro' tor t&gt;ecat.~'s sooo good n can bnnQ you fame and
f~ by shamg • wilh&gt;JO.X UB
colleagues, yoo could have I ~ fl lhe
Reporler and win a pnze l:les!c:ies
0\1 annual rtlC1P9 c:onlesl begins ril)lll...,..
~ -, open 10 facol!y

244 ~;~ry

._

l!f
___ I
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-TIIIC--

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CliatM~ ' Yak
......... bd Door a.......

_,c._

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...,...._foolfilrt!w:&lt;aof"""""""

ront• ,...,.~ Suftj

lid

st&gt;&lt;Jowr&lt;d~o!oe

MSJ

Ccnta:r lor ~ccmtm [)rll;d ·

.....
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"''"""'· UBS&lt;Ioo\&gt;lofM_., -

A.mn C'hd..rl"'.aa . 0.rutar of Soctal V. etfwt for dw'
RqMibltc n(Soum Afhl..'11 I of
KDOt. ortb C~ l p .m

-YJAT•rws

UTEILUIY-

a-tine. Tho&lt;don:

PO&lt;!U)

f.n,hn . wlhnr of Hl'llfil' ~ rW
Goidt&lt;fl M'llldt"*l 207 Churrlull
Ttti.I.H Cllft.l!Otll C'l11~fC' - :!001
M.a11'1 • llO p.m C.o-spon

....vat h)

C•n.t'•~ .

Rdl 1--llnnet
md Just Betrak) Lnenry C"C'h ·
~tt

F:~.w

tite't

mon- 1nfcnniUtN'

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Bern,;leu'l

,aj

l:'OIII-

M~

'8112

-'11011·

Pncli&lt;al T~ 14'1(' S1o
-linaonNorii&gt;C.....,..._J.Spa

-

llilmutl:-llVDIU AND TIIAIOIIHA

C llai&lt;al-utloa and
Tratlht'DI Plae.n -&amp;for Akobol od Ottwr Dru1 Abu,.,
.Kattw)-n Rt:~M Ed.c• w u:
Cmltr D~~emea C!)ll.ere.
.A.rnhenl ~ 1-m .... JO r..m fOr
mort lniormJittoOn call tM5-bl40

--...,ft...

tot'kliftg Prodmil) of Adu.lt
... their Eld«iy
0..
gl•s Wolf Ph 0 ., '"-socuu.c: pn 1t""Mll' af rnetropoiJLOin studiC'l.
M u•·etJ Sctwlol of Publte Ai f..."-. 280 Pari. N.on:h C.ampu!o

Nooo
~'!J

l..ock-«ood NonhCampu&gt;
Nooo&gt;· l 30p m Rcpsfrltbon
fonm can be (Jbuuned at
l..ockwood"• referentt de-l or

b) E~mail
(I..OLGEM MA @&gt;UBVM•
~IIICffoU.

Plaeo - - ofU..Ial•

--

y.,... Mlidw!&gt;alf. IWrd R&lt;ciral Hilt ortb Campu; ooo
MIA-ALSCIEHCU

u.....onat Rf;p'lolion or Kid-

.,., Epii brliai •OoU Growth

---

~-­
Cliaiiul~- ....
T....,__.,.,...._
....... Otiotr One lUisa
Kad!o) . _ _ &amp;.~.tow- w._i.

c....... o-co~~.

---

Aalhrn&amp;. 9a.m..-4 :JO p,.,. foil

flll(ft' , ...r~.

catl•b-45-6140

S.•Il&lt;M......... llpodM
mtKIIC.im. Dn(JNil CM~p)5Mltorl

"" loh-....nou!j.
c.--.

mortmho.l
ftutft
EPI:::t~~tJMal

and

Opponam~

rnCJO'I'

"'am

• 8u;f[alo 10 • 1ft
Spocooood b) Ans ia Eiatocat.-..
lo.,.rlldltof'll"'h:"')' ad 6lX" ~

£La:ftiCAI.-edCIIdt~RC~

Objoc'lt.......ioat:"""

__

........I Not-won.. f • l -lrial A~--l'raf ,.,._,
M l'i-_ Ufl [lc,p oi

E!eo:mcal...t

t.._ &lt;"1:• ......,., .

ftHn"l! 101 8•~ Na'thCam

,_

po•

l l•mA~C'.,.,.,_
r.atillllt §.eo~~UAaT

p ........... ~..,· Local

Dnl&amp; Dtiln'H) , ..... Goo&lt;IS&lt;IIt
"""'!"'I Dcolal c-.. 115"""

~­
!WIIIl -ofH"" "'/llw
~M\Il'll

lJ.'I J, IJidPuJ

·
- ...~JiooO.W#W$/.tpl
-dnr. o., ........
f.ll..mur, ~(* j CCftlr.III~ IPad
C.ritk :!SlY Mato Sll«'l- 1.30

c.m "'!&gt;_,,.

p.m co-_..,....sl&gt;!

IWI-IIUII!Im!klblo

...
c.mpu. """'"
·~-AL

--Cl!odo&lt;

~c.-- For~"'!"'

----·
-y
-- m...US.. 'Tboma.' C B.uT) liB
of c)~

D:Uol)j,;Ult pmf('SitiOr

I~.K'

Stl.ldmt Umoo . C111
Cunpu l pm
COMI'\Il'Eit

,...,..,.....
MiraML

-ofT•y
d Rcc:oiiWI
NooG Fo&lt;mlor......,.cti!M5-'1'r.l

Nania~

~

............

~u ,~~a:~~w

RardM-R of Approx.imatiae:

-and~Diac-

~'loclatitic

-

FaM1iara Dr. Joan
F&lt;a~m.. "T&amp;T Bell LabonliltwlW!._ 20 tc.no' North C'.atn
pus. l }().,~

I PMYSICa ANO . . _ . ,
COt.I.OQIIIUM

SHI'..t&gt;rJanh.ed Cridcalily i•
E'ofllliDA aod Ehlit'Wkft. Dr
Pe1· 8.Al, Bt'('l(\l.'btven -NNtOO.a.i
Lllb 4S4
pus .3

Fntn~." lil'~

•s p m

onh Cam-

QIUCA.,_ LEC'IUM
Clolill;&amp; tlw Ga,. ...A~ A

Rhleri&lt;al

~.,.II..,._

aa~ C..ot~Cft"1K

About IJIIai-

cratioa.. o... "'tu.tnc Seller. pro-

fo'l&gt;Of of 50tUI foundaiYllfU., V B
Gradual&lt; S&lt;bool of EdtiC3llo!t

lOOBIIId) Nonbc..._cp.m
MA-llCS COI.LOCI!IRIM

AJ&amp;d&gt;no

HomoiociH aod

Qunrwa Fidd Ptol 11&lt;xa1
Lan. Yak: Uru,.· 103 D.efcndorf
SOOih c..._ 4 p.m.
stAtarncs COUOQUIIIM
~

Bcr.MI~ea • tt4 5--

2.

li3clla.lloc i .t.llor M

l ' - ' ll.

cluect&lt;d b) ....... -

ICIENQ

aaADU.t.I'E-01'

INTEIIMET CUNIC

1'1K Bu.ft"... FJW e .

COI.LOCI!~·­
c-~toc• r~~u ....

TiorC.... _IIoo
..\eltio&lt;le. l....-.Mie!LW .D
Ktod&gt;A- C'hftdon '
H015pW- a.tn

Midaocl A~M D ..

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[)q1&lt;. AA
oi
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U 7. lf8 OtrAICIII Cc:DctY• ..&amp;.!!

G&lt;.

Stnoct.

Ia·~ p...

MllaanM e-ll no.-.
l:llacoo

c...,....

c:--

1""- P"' Tii:I.&lt;USA. - . .

UB-)ond

- """"'

SIO.,....ai-....,..
For "''""""""" all 645

Ottt. . . . .

"

- "
Pll'
- raiCI---~
-

·" "" Prn._loo .c

Child- Obolily, 1...Epslnn, PILD, I""!.,__,
D&lt;p oCP~ :!Sl.A

Flltti«. Sood!~l2:30pm.

Tho s..,,... for tlao J1ia:o a.
...... 0... R:ouel Kaod'f....._
Brootha""' Nouoolll Lab 219
Fronwa\ N5 P-ID-

_..,.Cal.,...._ .......
_....,~·­
Coor-.rioaal

~-

~.:::.=~'u~

"""""""- Soo:lh Campus 4 p.m

FACUUY IIEI:n'AL
f1rlna ~Boldt , pi•.no. •llll K.t:n'lllyt~~ Boldt, pi~

ano. Si&lt;cC.,._.cn Hall. NMh

1.
-----De
'Beitd-~~l­
AI..... ......_NlaiftGyta.
c

onh~. lp.m

-

.B CITAL

Paool Hall.
~~Nodh
- CaJnpus.
· - R&lt;
citlll
8 p.m
For iofonnanoo caU645-29ll
Stiii~Cld;iq (Aller

zt l'ean;),

�7

._..__,..._&lt;Jt_
- E ..._

.. ,....,.,

I -1 &lt;) I II J _.\ '
SI)[ -_ (_' J 1-\ LS

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. ~
t:._ . p...
I --!01'11•-·- ...B.,
....... .... ~,
~ ...

-

, . _ ...~- l¥21

Madn h Qu_adr• 610
Bund.ft&gt;

60

25MHr tF'tL I!MB AAM 160MIII'IIIod

1t1

dfiVE'. "P1"-' f'lu&gt; 14' O&gt;b M«uror. LA.mpu$
Sohwllft' St!t. AppJ..
~ n ...c1 ~l'ric.o w
StyhP 1ft , . _ _ _ _ __.$1,945

2,096
'-t..c Colm ClassJ&lt;
_, !...""U Ch•• Uri .. "-114
b.l!Pt1&lt;lrlo

~ ..

1

ot~l!-··'

"4K P- ft'lklcJio.1 S
lillwfl:TJ!nl!li!O M&lt;&gt;d' ~ :J'di:Ht r"~ .... a.ut

~

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... .

!foo&lt;n.- ""-tl"

..

~~.~~~_....,.

~-~~+&lt;Jpll' ......... li!'lr)l"'

TU ES D A Y

!3
---

Convenience
Quali·t y
Service
I,
Variety

t."'iooloot C-iotllot ·~

o...-.

&lt;if,.....,...ll....
tt.... ~t~Oit MD

Cale'f.olf'IIJf!'l ~ - Mttn

I"'O••iI$TIl M'&amp;....·- -

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rn

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[)a.:,fX"ffC~

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15E;;:

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----

1liorll--,.,~_
Rm_ 821 lttal!!ti 'SaeDO!r.'ll LA

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__

............. .

......,.~

-

,_

SA.tfl CiNUpii\; lt p .m

o..t..-M..,......,. P"".U. [

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of Brt&gt;•-•U.
CUI,..,.._, M IWYI: RhuW11.
st""""'- Ull !l&lt;;l&lt; of
M~ -

Sou1h

a'I'I.IIIIIHTIIECO'AI.

Pk&lt;Htt1ldltot1d Fritt.a
&gt;\~ llokiLilunl Recmd Halt tbtb Camped; Noon
For lllfonnJll&lt;IO &lt;all 64~- 292 '1

MULTII-aiiii.LICLUS
Ullloc'8ft1tll 5&lt;--.. Llb....,for R-rdo ooel Writint~R.m.. Bll, He~llh Sc~t:nct$ Ll
~-

_

....

-~s.--ub&lt;w)
·- Ria
s~ t. lk--

M.olec•lar t."''lancterization ot

P""'• 106 DqCampus,..,.,..

Lilotw)--

Snu:th c..._. 2 ~ -m

•CUUICS COUOQIIIUM
R.ecnil ~f.n:K"a IM

I---

ruedk'tnt aed oe~~ l '8
c.li!t. "- ~lol&lt;y K.-.p!UI l!.JO a.m

HPLTMSCIIEJ!ICU

CLASS
URII,IIldi!Jiso.Uhra&lt;)
I for ...t Writbl;a.
Rm. 8 11. lk&gt;lth Saencoo Lobral) Soulll Campu• I 0 ._,,

IIEALni-MAUCU.U
lotnMio&lt;ti""- tAo 1Jeollh Sci...... Lihnl'}' .... 0._...,.
oltAGpat&lt;rSy..._. Rm

0 21. HH~Ib s.:.....,._, u~&gt;r.on
Soulh Campur.. 1 P-"'

-U.O'--

COI.LOQIIIIIM

IAci&lt; Didioury Eatn..Mo-lnilucti&lt;&gt;o,
ld::Otial ilnd'lCtioD.. Mariam
Thaiol.)lr. and Jobn Camoran. UB.

I

f . l DAy

~6
.

1. ':

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f&gt;c_lon. Ul! Dc:pt &lt;lf lo!...-,
I }4 8 Fo - Sou~!~ Campu) 4p rn.

''f)

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----~~~-------- ~~~

=~"""'
M•f• Oym Nonh c . _
p.m
MD'S J1AHDa4U

~on.~~~~p~UI

G-j m Nonh C. . _. 7.30 p m
AUIOIIIIUII fAA&amp;: -~
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Camptft .. , m

Corn-.n----on--page-uec~
- -8-----

1

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1•

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....

CAL£ DAR
coniAt1ued ftom page 7
¥11110 LIIC!UIII
u..n. 'Hill. •idee " ....t
CUI'Ilot.. !@6 Fint Aru Cftut:r
bC*"'f'll' 8 'IO~Jn Hill

.. ,u

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£u~ ~r~.

w..'rl from iE.btem
wdl e her wurl m

,.,....,..o{""""
fiUJOI'l

JI"'SJ'&lt;'•

Prot.r~m, open

AJavrithetlc: ~Upott&gt;.rc......
1"'....., . - o..ip olloup.d irftil&gt;,
C L
aw;c:,

ot c""""""'

1

Uru' of UllftOI; at

T.._ . ... D,_In .r
114

Horb.Ae:ner. North Ca~ 4
pmCo-~J:toj lh&lt;
Gnduat:c Group 1 F -H)lfofOtlft-

'""' EuHor&gt;

-LEC'IUB
Tbolll~...-iou

Plo"MR s-t_,

.,..,.._
nw,

Dr .lohol.. Martk). Dcpo . of
Bux:hcrm,.ll) . U1111~ of w ,~
o~ MadiSon. H tllcbot A..tMnum, RPCI 12;:\0 p m

Toool()oofllft!l or t atit:al m-"Wd: • •
plbdom for a Scimct. ot
o Copllioll, I O."d

C

H

mjlt'\&lt;U

(!tlllil:fVI.

t.akn

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VllriaWt~

tftu: Neww Teduairpr$ aact
11M O,pportanit.n
otrer,

k•we.- V\-'f:l F'ut

St&amp;ftleCi

ManM c---~.., !)r
Stt•en Gao- DqJI ol Bt&lt;ti-

- - PAB &amp;TAI'F

t.'t.lWl&amp;.~WeS Utroup

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Ul lhe fn.odilll\10\

lin

_ . . . . . SCti:Jtla:
UC'IUIIII

L.&amp; DqJ~

---

0

anlhror)"
• ,...,..,.
'"
"'1110!
fin~
Gall&lt;fy
hooln,
Monday ad U.'edMJday. to

am.-6pm TIW:tda) , IOam IZlO~m •odl"l&gt;pm.n..o

:..~&lt; ro heodll ""' Gtto... c~·
S..·~furotadt-~•

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tHklll.tiiJ;Illlhfiknmal.r

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f~u T &amp;oodJ 10 --.r IIIII ~

r.,. r:-.-w p~o&lt;MJ-.

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huem IOd Conte.lt.. a IUlbOU.J
tttYCbll£ tdnbmon fniUtmf
r«:em wart of an1t¥10&lt;1 CaM
~Jii .and ISJOI.."la\e&amp;, "'""'hnllt'~

Ott. 3 IQ. tnt JMf)t'!r:
F..d»bbuon 1-taJI oo tbc

Chn•_gtl
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ICES

t&gt;fii\IIOper1i&lt;lll&amp;oNho-~extt.-Ot&lt;lary'u.:h­

~Mlo­

Grlhll!l will II&lt; onlloblt for
111dtvlehul~l'

~ . Dot&lt;

C!le

IOinlhe-·

..r.......,.-.
104 Croft&lt; Hall. urn. CatoJpoo.

n&lt;~~c.

'romCJ•m-l4iftm To~

... """""""'·!*-call ..
-s.n
.... .........,.....
:at-MS...2b66

,~Folk

. _ . . , f!ober1 Abrams
&gt;rillllh1t l a w - oo
Dec. 2, lunching Ill facuhy end gMng a
on

Scjl'l&lt;t dno and ,prroft:11:&gt;0f of lllrt
hl!iU'q. Unil' of Alk·kl:and..
t-.: 7..c:abnd 43 'Clrmcu'-.
onhCampwi 2 p.m For mor&lt;

·-

....

I~Y

--CIU.L111Nonh CaJJIPI'I. 4 ~. m.

U B aod Uai""ft'dll Hti&amp;btt.

\\'BFO
7FM 4-S p.m. Call
&amp;29-2S55 1&lt;&gt; osl. o q-100 ol
0~U'IC"f,

ltvr

OO •thf"

'"
Of'US: CLASSlC$ RECitAL
lkraadctk Dlno, pl.ono. Alk•
Rec1t~l Halt. South Can:\f"U- 1
p m Met: to the- puhhc

m•

UUAI
TllX- l 'lll. Studc:m Uru011 T'healer. Wl 'Student Umon c.IJlh
Campa . 8 p .m. Adm1s:S.Km..
SBO. mdonti. B SO. UIJlOfS

I 0 • S
t~UioioaaM/"-:W.

... ,_

_

l'olhnlo&gt;cl . """"'' IF-:!®6

Spirit al RefooTI.. lrom

11 .30 a.m. to 12.30 pm. on
100 .O'B&lt;ian Hall, North
Campus

UlltttlAit

Eabryetlc: DN,\ lteplbtiola
one;.., Joel"· Hubconan.
I'ILO- Dep&lt;. &lt;L B ooiQpcol Sci ·
........ ltosv.dl Pori. c:a-.lnstuutc . 301 Roohsleuer

Pres.Jdent

pracesa, •A Rene-"

l'obrams. - i s Slep-

piog clown lrom his po$1 on
late •Oeoember 10 join a
New York City Ia firm. was eleaed Attorney Gen"in 191'8, ~ .....-! previously as a Sta:te

BronJ&lt; &amp;rough PrMidant
UJnder .A:btram&amp;' cftrection, lh1t Attorney General's
ocelocused on cornbaiJIIQ enwonmeot poilulion and While collar and organized crime He sue·

A.ssen*&gt;lyman and ¥

~-·---PiaA­

""'" """'""
llf.J091 "-'~·
ok!F•U
.....,...,....Aidu~e&gt;e·
"'"'· Pootq IF-3091
~-~­
......
...-- ...n.w.)-A&lt;·
. 1 I F-3099
lllll'rot--

du1ttt

BRIET. I'!Ktmc fF -ll
.MIkwd .....,.._-Mod&lt;m laD·
gu•lf' and l.n¢raturn., flrMun1
IF-lH12. 3103 MoiltoiiiJ.U.
IOdate Praf~.l.atric.s..
POStt"li tF· llOC . ...._..,.

cess!utly launched MW ~sumer protection,

........... Pral-·S"'l&lt;'J'.
1\Ml••l ff·llOS. 3 ICC&gt; Pralft·

anblrUSiend CMI roghts iMJall\leS.

~

Abrams. a 9faduate of Columbta College aM
New York Unlverslly School of Law. also created an

1\-,..;llttll- • f· ~~Oi A.ftis./A-!i'!IOC.
Prof'...f'hyliK211hr'f:ap)' atld

aggresssve consumer outreach p&lt;ogrem 10 bnng
!he services of tu• olhce to all pans of the state
lie has se&lt;Ved as president of The Nattona l Associal'IOrl of Anomeys General. was named Ouwand·
•no AI:torney General of the Year bv his colleagues
m 1991 , and was lhe recipiem of lhe AssoctatJon 's
Wyman Award lor d rstinguished achievement as an
attorney general

IIU'UJICH
u.:-in&amp; A_,.,. (EO·l~
Tt'l.."hno40f)' Tran.,.fc-r $en~
Posf•~l tR-93. 101 Se-c:mat)
IJ-CIH1 En.gmt~nng. Pmtanf;
•R-93041.

11.111d

h.M'C'l~

~
..,-nun--

onh Cam·

Ca~· ·

-U!ICIWS
Dyua~cs .r ~pedllc M-ae
l:qK-oaioa fOIIow'iO&amp; G ' c:onlnlid ,............,~ o.tn c
Dubou, Ph.D ... .researcb WitS·

lltrll prof....,, UB Dept. of'
Otology. SOli CO&lt;lk&lt;. Nonh
C.ampu1. ~ p.m .

~-tltAJNM8

-SDIIIIAI

CUol&lt;ol Su.porvW"" for PToc·
ti&lt;ing O bemlca1 O.pond•ocy
Cilo.iC:aJ Suponison, Dr.
Nncy Smytll Wid&lt; Cen1er.
Daemen Colkc&lt;- Amherst. 9

ao Early Na:tritional lntu-\'mtkHl. Or M. S. Patel, c:hau ,
UB Dep&lt;. of 8tochc1nusory,

a.m -4.30 p.m. for 1"DDrt" •nfor-

b) the- Gractuau- Nutnuoo Oub

.._,........ c_..........r
Acheson Anntx 1 Sou:tb

Cam~

pu,. 4:30--S:JO p m SponsoRICI

Provam

011110&lt;1 eall C&gt;4S-61 &lt;0

and N.uuition

I.AW •LECTUIIE •

Ml E X - . - OHJIIIHI

Toward a •Re.De"Aed Spirit of
RefOOll. Robert Abeam&lt;. N&lt;o.
Yod Slalt: Allornt)' Gene-raL

f."ound.alloa EshlbiL S"ludeot
&lt;MHery. Fmt Am C'c:n\t-1'
Nonh Campus 5 )0. 7.30 p m
Show COIIIinuc&gt; lhrough De&lt; ZI

11 :30a.m.

FIUI-

106 O'Brian. Nonh CarnJ&gt;us.

AIUTDMICAL SCIEJICU

MIIIIIAII- .
Modo! Sj'&lt;tftllsiOSiady

Mecbuhm of Vin:as-CelJ Fu ~
iioo.. Dr. Shin~i 0100, UB
Btopbysia Dept. 306 Farltet.
Saudi CMnpui. 12:30 p.m.

111_,__.....
E¥ttmion olSia~. 145A Slu·
Cl:nllniao.Nrl'lh~l-Sp .m .

lhud floor of tbye l Hall. SoW!

iM Moath&amp;in •
frubiUII Donn. Gen!ld

Frodl:

&lt;~udcnu.

The hallos.,..."'

focuhy tmd !he carnmuntt)' from 9 a.m. to :5 p.m..
Moodily lh""'gb Fndo)

A L M J L - 1M M1'IS1
MYIS&amp;W.A rttrmpc:di'VC' exhlbirion af
dnwmp. prints. watcn:"Oion
and d..~•C'bes by nauonany ac-cl~tmed anist and 411ustralor
Alan E. C.obc:r cont1nut~
through •ov 28 m. the
Burchf'weld A.r1 Crnler For
more mfornu~oon contact

--

E.tlc:c-n Sulhv•n at 81

-4.5~9

IIIUCMI R080VQI:

-ALO·s LOWEll wut
An elfubnwn or llrOf\.~ by mtemarlona!Jy ~-ntd docu~n!Jll) pbolographtt M1ll oo
Ro,ovtn conunun •• lhe

Burchf~id An Center throur.h
No\ 28 . For fnOf"t mformaoon
IXdiCf Fib:o SWb~ • 818·
-'529

O'Grady. UB a»oc.~ue profo~

wr of media srudy . 206 Fine
Aruea-, Nonh ~ 8 p.m.
UUAIF1UI
Tho Livia&amp; Ead. SIUdent
Unfon Theater. lO I Student
Uni"t.m. Nortb C1mpus. 8 p.m.

I'OIJISE!TIA ULE
The U8 Wotr~en 's t..lub ts

Tid&lt;eu: SUO. Sl.SO.

&amp;pOnsorint m. ann.u:al Po.nsetua

NOTICES

-1

--....
t1eo AIU Ctal&lt;r Ttttluaial

ISL-4)-Hoe ArU
me f P-3013. £labalaer (SJ...
ZI·AIIliiOl!UCal Scimccs, Poa·

'"'"'·3071.-

- - - C - (SJ...I.
, ...... --..Oppor•••IIJ~"'' tmd !afar·
maoioo TedlaOio&amp;Y. Poorillt
fP-IOil. -

Dindert

MoVo&lt;o.-~

( 1..-5)-Uno...,.ny &amp;Velop-

.,...._ Pootma fP-'101S

S.olor

Dirocl« o( Mojor Gilb (SJ...

5}-tia1' ·en:ny Oc-telopmC'nL
fog_mg IP~J076 bK¥ti,;e
Dind.e&gt;ri'Qn&lt;lop....l 0,.....
tioas CSl.r-'S)·Unj·\len.Uv 'Or\-e.l·
opmmt l'o&gt;l:ior OP-30°77 S..
cUor Staff ~te
fSL-S) ·llnt\.~rs:•t) Oe-.dop-

"""'" Posnog tP-l071 Dir«·

UK". HH~It.b Scitacft lJbran·
(MP-3)./kalllo Se•&lt;nm Lt·
bnu) . P&lt;J,.;og • P·lOS4 .

-CUS&amp;IF1ED
CMLKIIYIC€

K•y._nl S,_;alisl

(~1-

P~I SefVlCC,

l.....lM
•2061o S...ioo- Typisl (SG09)-0ffKC of Studenl Scrvicn,
School o{ EnJ\tn=i"' and Apphed Scleocu, Lint fJMO~
Ckrit 2 (SG-&lt;Ot)-Uol'&lt;nal)'
Fac:llrtib Adm.irnslraJ.J\C Sn-~

"'ce-s.l..inc 0471 0

ficn..o Huelr-""

'"'"'a&gt;'*'

- -1-t,Jo..a:

A Treasure Trove
of Riches
I n ' - ' _...._......_ hlt)iligb«:d•anou
"""'fel~~Utn on BISON. Ibt

nn""'il)" Ubr:aries onhnemftii'!NihOnS)'S·
tern One re..ctnt1 ~

added database "'urdiY
arOOICIOUB~on

Jm&gt;.."'t".ltf-110~

c.-.,.,.,.

Smith. 2'11 s ..rd
pus. 4 p m.

~

Teachfng Prol•••••",.." Ia$! ~- 0\t&gt;e&lt; Otstlngutshed Teacn""0 Prolessors a U8 o&lt;e a-rt~ B&lt;snop. Robert Da
Cllariesfbe&lt;Lit.ltnayEtt.-.ger o,.defierred Or'i'GeM.JrpnJ.
Russe Ntser&gt;gard Jam Peradot!O, Ge&lt;a d R"""9 1"""11
ShamM . .I&lt;Yyoce Slr•arm. Warren Tttomas and Howaro
T«i&lt;etmaM
lliom&lt;fl!1110nl; O' PO!enM ca""'&lt;'ates lew !he- O,SIJ&lt;&gt;gU&lt;SIIe&lt;l
Teac'llng Pro!essor$hoi) &lt;Yogorwte at lhe Oepa&lt;tment Pre·
Qtam 01 facult; (School)
and we
throog
tne oean ro 111e O.si•"'u&lt;SI\eG TeachonQ Po-o&lt;essor Se.ecoon
Comm nee c.IOOff.oeol tne V&gt;ee Pfowlsiior~..~r&gt;c~ergra&lt;~ua·e
EOlJCatton lnaovtd~IS a&lt;e tf'hllleO lo 5Uggest pole&lt;'\l&gt;ai Cfl&lt;ldidates 1o cha~• and deans lndovlduai~ may 001 ~te
lhemseNes lor lhM:e pro!es&amp;Of'5ho;l&lt;.
Ouesllons llbout ltlese professor shops OT atlOUIIhe nomt·
na!t0&lt;1 and $l!!eCI.on process may be O&lt;ected 10 Or Ntoolas
D Goooman Cheor al the local Selectoon ConYnillf!e, at &amp;tS.
2991 1'111t .................... l l , _ . . , _

Cllair~S~:t('toktc).

Dirocl«/l'nMI- ~

TH ·URSDAY

sucll-·-

cha.-pe&lt;S006 may be nomtnllled P«l"'J)ed
!hey CB'fY tt&gt;e
ca~tned 1u14.-,. teaching load lor persons Pf!!·

Alellande&lt; Brownie "' l!ooct'&gt;enul')' -

~lheelec

Outrks
Bemsteln-m.04.5·) M2

1nformatKm Cft\1K1

Stl'IJ Ontv lull prolesacn wtlo haYe regulllr"lr earned a ,..,._
tme react..ng load as de!lned by !toe c.mpus ..0 !lave
laugh! on lhe campus !cJo a! least ttvee years we ellQtllle for
COI'I$tde&lt;a!JOI'I tor ~ to tilts ra'* ~~

form;ng

ollued r~~l) fn;cby ·~• •ollilNI.""1wnbel• 1 •llpm litl
£hef&lt;ndarfiWI. Soutb c..
pu Reque&lt;o .w..-m.r l&lt;&gt;lk,•··
fn"-m 9 It p m E'"~anr l l
•ekomr . no pattntr ~
I rtt odmt"""" Spno
d toy
lhc Graduat SNdcnc A
rM:IOB

,_,-y

a1 me uncltoo'gradu-

ot theScl:toolol~ - e aPilQrlledO.S lflgUISil&amp;o

o.n.;.IDJ J.ll

,._Y..t!A~

,...., Reodiaa, Ton) Gf«'n.
ooo.ednor &lt;If $plad, .attl~ ol

~~

llte gradoale, ondlor~- 1""- .,._.g~Dus
prol8&amp;1101shlp$ whchare~r-CtOI"Ilen.al&gt;J'IM
SUNY Board o! TrUSiee$ ate a r4'1l&lt; ei:JtM! a loll f)rOie$SOr

....,.

~tt-sy

-ATIJAIZ

LITEIWh'-

lhe l'lOIIW*toon procesa - - •
"' cl namonel&lt;ln """'
lllll cha&gt;r, •ltoilllP0'1ono
trom l!le oean. • o.oe~ ...,..,...
ol he rat.ooate!t:Jo lhe r&gt;Omi'IIIIIOO ("""""'maybe 111eluded.,
le'l\erklim
chl~orlhedean) II&lt;&gt;Clecurr~¥11M
A er 3 prelomonary 1 0 - . g
SelecOOn Cornm.:tee SOhCK loll dooislera on !he U'D1"911Sl """"
The Otsltr!QU~Ched TNICtlong ProiiOSiiOI"SI'tll: IS .,..,,_

ong compellllii1Ce DWif a periOd a!

---- -----...
day.l0o.m -12 10pm 0111&lt;12-8

Distingui fred Teaching
Profe .sorship Call for
,.Nominations
, a _ _ ...... _,_..,...,.
Dl ". IS'T...........
- T!"'-llaiOeol

and ~ sruclenb
1 tile Certt..- foe Rr.......Ulibnrits catak&gt;g. Siner 19fljlbtC.,.terfoc
·Resoardo Libnorios in Cbic•go hi.$ beet~ collectJng
re!oCarch matenals on bdWf of II&gt; m&lt;mber libranes
and maldnc lh&lt;m a•·ailable to sd&gt;olan via m1crllllrltr)
loan. The Ulli&gt;U1&gt;1ty Libraries tw had membcnhip
powikget ...;tb CitL far many yean. ow, for lbt
fttst time, UB researollin haw lbt luxury
Jng iu •ut ll'ea5\U1:$ via compuieT.
A samp~ of --ch lf'ml iftdude: tbo rec:oo:ls
and IWIICripU oflbt Julius and EWJ 1tosenbrq lriaL
Voet COf\&amp; cloournems of lbe orional Ubention
Froo1 and the Peoplt •s Revolutiotw:y Anny. Smbom
fu-e nsllt'liiCle 1D11J1S. i~ Oei1!Wiy mi:htary
5lgnals from Worid War 'lL bundleds of foreign
new~. a oomp&lt;ebensi•e co11ection of Frendo
play in the 17th. 18th aild 19th Clei!Luries. Voia of
Amtrica uansaipls, U
primal'} and seoondary
!idoool~eUbodks, eo ten~., foreign eli serution boldings. and officio! docull&gt;ellts of•lbe Manbauan projcc!l..
Alllhisandmuch. muaunon: are only an inlerlibrary
loan request away!

of""*""'-

To - a t 1M c..twfer •~ I.JIIrwlea cabllcl&amp;. '''"'' 04 ~from BISON 's Ocrobau
Srlrnum Mm•. """"I)~CRI..tC andstJm ""'rchm~
using ·t hr $1l!M commands } 'Otl •n for S&lt;'m"CIIinr rhr
To IJ!DJTI _,., abour tilL CllL coli«·
EK'S at thr fiN! imroducJt1T) scrHn.. If
you id~tify a ~~~arch ittm qj·itJlt~st dwt is nor
UB

.Wrtr~Jag.

,;,.., l)'fl&lt;'

olrtady ownrd ar UB, p.rinr ""' thr CRLC scrH&gt;I
wh• h trmtains rhr CRL "qouw nJJ:mlNr. a1ld bring 11
to rhr opproprialt' Uni~sity Librari.s imtrlibrory
loan deparrrM:nt For morr ilifoT'tiiiHiOfl. ask a r~tr­
~n r

librariorr fot" 41SI.stanc~.
- Gemma lleV.nney and Loss f'eQtleOO Gliwe•
Ulc«wood Lib&lt;ary

�_...
Dome homes cheap remedy for India'
rountl) '• populnuon or 900 mol-

ESIDENTSOFoomc
retnlllle village in to

d.amay $OOCt be onding in their thlllchcd

hut

for gc.ode'ic

In 'Ill rifon aummJ.nuu the hl'\t..
of lif• u..t occ:un fromrnon!iOOII'
and natural di,..!ol.en •UCh "' oanh
quake•. a UB tudent ~roup nd
leadtn. of a f;ra:s -root.lll 010\cmcnl
on India an: usinr. Buc~mon ter
Fuller'• tdca&lt; to develop a chr"P.
modular ijnmc: l'W!able for ~'ere

J

chmatea..
Woth ronSUOOLton com of about
$150, lhc new l&gt;o:!tnH 10e pro••idin,g ·
"Hagen morc thlmjiJSl affordablt,
"wdy Ilet .'The dome sbap&lt; and

cement coostroction al.-..o "" all pro·
•kl&lt; p~oon from'"" and ra
a ¥~&lt; C:II as. gi"~ rt")ulenb a nt-v.
sensr of permanence

So fa r. f a\'C': nrw

home~

bas.ed

on thi• d e•ign nne been con·
-sU'UCtod in ~Villages surroondlng
Vi&lt;ltokhaptnarn. • oty on .outh·
eastern lnd1a.. mtdwa) ~tv.e&lt;n
l adras and Caleuu:a
" A lhc rea:nt l ndillllearthquakt
•howed. tho p&lt;oblem wilh hou&gt;~ng
on llWIY paMS of lhc OOUDIJ)' I that
vollagen """ the cheapesl ma~en·
als they can find to build shrl ter.,"
uod Alo · Baveja, a lec:utra in Ute
UB Depanment o flndustn.J Engoneering and president of G uruJ..ul.
a UB group thlll contributes money
and •technical si&gt;tanc:e to promote
Jitcrac:) and bener tcOnomic con-

di tions tn rural lodia.

A

a:ord ong to lht So Vodya
Tru ~t.

an Indian commumty

de&gt;-eloponent orgamutton affili·
lied wit h Gurukul , lhc problem of
providong adcquote hou&lt;~ ng for th&lt;

"""' M-".ggl. • UI!IIOid ........... I
illllocall a atllble~oel
ertal and indasmol ~
the-n pmed- .-1
II·
!llchcd lO • .......,.,.,... fTamewort

••ed ..

Lion h.al. bec(N1lt: s,rvtre... I\Ct'lh%t~
toting a fi&lt;SI and dleap ont1hod for
building permam:nt housong
··~and
natural
ds.saskn. st'f'\it b m.gtc renunde
of~ ob.ence of prt&gt;p&lt;'J'hou"'Of.'"
lndoa and otJM,rThord World &lt;1&gt;\ln
lrtc' :· ~1d HneJa
To bu•ld tbror hon.,. lndum
·r llaBt:n. t)p~cmll) IJ\C' ~l~ol.'l.ll'l
oe&lt;:ltd V.'Lih &gt;rl} -.en btndoog
mat,nal. ur mll&lt;l and dned l"'lm
frondstomol.cthak.'hcdh"" 'fheo,e
home~o often do oat '""'' through

otz

mcwuna. the tm&lt;tg\£ f'rllmeworl&lt;
.. Jrmt&gt;\'Cd, .....
•
of ferro...,.,.,~· a~- rm~turt
orc~and

rt'C1lf"•~ h.'lr

.. «rht

strcn~:th....,.

He
odolcd lhll becau~ of lhcor ollape,
" - house• "'"" ... u be ..,_.
,.t.ft ""'*r on tbe ...,._ than
&lt;t'ldlh&lt;&gt;rl*l ""-•gn•. and ••ll·belJC'
de !'Ia~ w ond and ntm
ratJo.•

!o&amp;ld

n •dcht~IQ to pro,.llli•nt

I nem

"'"'mr for

~­

,,J~

rbt

.... I'~ h&lt;1&lt;1le\ ""' exp&lt;ded
tu hll&gt;&lt; -&gt;the!. le&lt; L&amp;ngoblc ef.
ft&lt;.1 on ~ ,.
'" e m them
~ B«-.a.lJ'w:

need

tn

tht-lf CUt1'lefll bot:nts
be tdlwlt lllmo!;t ..,...., 7-I 0

"""""" ~ canoot tho beyond
ihill pcnOO." &gt;Old ll.a•qa. "We .._
them to begm "'

---

...... ond"'

es&amp;Obhsh"""'« """""'"'""''. . .
"In the lorq! run. me

c.,.. "

txn ngbt """" ·

me \1lla!JI"'
don't have me capotal- Uld ll.a••eJa.
fted.

Guru u.l '

houses cornt cra.5.hmg do~A n.. c.aus·

"'"domed

ec•""""t ot ona-

tcn.ll and n&lt;ellcat

vwleot storms. or monsoons. In an
eartbqualc. the v. alb of tone:

mg. tnjur') and somet unes death.
Bl\'eJasaJd
""\\'alh rhts ne'"" t)pe of con·
srruct1on...c-•... c tned ro addrn.
maL" hr added .
Designed to be constru&lt;:ted b)
me vilb~en; ~hrm.elves..lhcclomed
""""'oanJM,buolt on fourd&gt;y&gt; The
L&lt;y to its .. r.. ~
&gt;hllpe
-ro build eanhqua l c-resi§"~ant
sttUCtllre•. )OU ll) 10 male tho

.....l
bb loog been

"'Fcm~c

"To build
eatthquakeresistant structures
you try to nwke the
building
~)1mmetrica/ around
its own center of
g~vity."

~IC Irian~ Once the

of

buoldmg &gt;}mmetncaJ around '"
center of gra"lt)." '!.~nd Dcm
McKenna. • Rochr&gt;ter. N Y . ..,..
t'hllect and a memJM,r ofGuru\.ul.
"'bo ~llltrnclto lod11 th•~ \\ m1.er
to hrlp buold some of tho home
f&lt;&gt;Otprint ol the doone on
me ground" ab&gt;olutd)' •ymmdncal. so u· ,.lfUcturall)' \er) effi O\lol'l

·•n.e

c"'nl. E.anhquake and .;,rod k"'th
""' dl\tribukd through lhc truo:tureandta.ken ..arelytomegro..nd ..

To maltc.•oosrruct.H~H1 cconorrucally feasible on • ~g100 • t.ere
familoe&lt;&gt; typiCIII) mal&lt; ohout S300
a JUT. tho ongmal @to&amp;.- te dcs•gn.a,.conce•vedb) BockmJ.a!ikr
Full«. had to be mocbfoed In me

11.

team tn

vp

w1th

UB •• campa&gt; ch.q&gt;\er of Habi.for H wnasdJI w nu.w rr~~D~~e)' fw
build•"! tho ..,.. on India
and for ctootonuon~ HllbJtat' •orl.
on w....,... Ne"' VorL In addrtton.
Gwu\.ul dtWtbut&lt;:s to onkl'eSied
srudcnlli and sr.all menlbcn 11 UB
) O!Jun conwoen mto ., tuch ~}
aro on trueled to drpc.mt oae dom&lt;
per da~ . Monc) oollectcd 01 tbt
end of each m&lt;lfl!ll i "'"'to tbe Sn
Vtd)a Trust in lndl&amp;. abtdt then
alloca~r funds for development

pro]«'I&gt;

UB to face Big East powers in'93-'94 basketball schedule
OM E GAM ES agaon&gt;t Bog 8h1 Confer ·
enee po"'e" Bo"on C&lt;•llc~e . Pm,burgh
and M.iamJ . and another again\t A.tlanuc
10 member Duqllfine highhghttJM, 199394 U B men·, ba;ketball ...:hcdule an ·
nounoed by Bulls Head Coach Tim Cohan&lt;
- wc 'v&lt;: pot together a schedule that, " hile .. tr&lt;m&lt;l)
di ffi cult for the team. os ceruunly great ne"' for ollege
basketball fans of ttm area.- ''"d CohliD&lt; "When you
think of college ba l.etball and the great conference .
tbeBigEast andthr Atl antt IOateat thetopofmeli&lt;t "
"'f,.•ooflhc top four cooferencesinlhc nation""' tho
Big East and Ute Atlantic 10," added U B Athlettc
Director Nelson To ,.•nscnd . .. And among our JO home·
games. four are aga l n~ tt':a m.s from those confereflCes.
Thisis thetyp&lt; ofschcdule llnow ourfan&gt;and I belie-e
lhc college basl..etball fans on Western Ne w Vorl.""'"
"''anted Well, lhllllks to Tim and his staff. n's here."
1be Bulls' home schcdule includes 10 home games.
plus t.wo exhibition games. UB. which again begins
play in the East Coast Conference with Troy St.ate(AL).
Chicago St.ate, Nonheastcm Illinois, Hofstra and Cen tnll Connecticut. opens its stason Nov. 26 ot home
against Daemen College. B will play II home j!lUllCS
and 16 on me road plus host Ute ECC Toumammt on

March 5-i.

Fotlowing theCanisi usCol lege Oass1c -.-. .th CaDJ ~ aus,
tagam and Gonzaga. Ute Bulls tra vel to Vorg oni a
Commo nwealth on [lee. 7. The Rams
20- 10 last

,..,.re

season and eamod a benh m the Na1i01 al ln\&lt;ilalion

Toomafll('nt
The Bof Ea t pia)' Buffalo on Ott. ll and 19 ~hen
BostonColltge and /llhamo. respe&lt;.1t' d~ .pia~ 111 Alumru
Arena Topon o 7.30 for tht BC ~ame and 5.30 for
Miami UB thrn d""'' Ute tlmx-gamc home stand ll'hM
n faors Duq...-- on De..' 22.
The Bull&gt; thrn fau an eoght -gOJne rood tnp. indudmg the Manu Tournament. l'!ii.O gallle' tn Ca.hfomi~
again5t Cai-St.ate Nonhndpe and Loyola Mil) mount.
and a Jan . I 9 game aglllnst oagara
The Bog East returns to Buffalo for its fi.Ul sho"'ong
Jan ~ 6 " htn lhc Bulls host Pitbburgh UB lhco head&gt;
south for a ronf=cc maJcttup with hl!h-powe r&lt;:d

Tm) St.auonlan 10 Th&lt;TmJan'-mlhnrorutia!se""'

&gt;

at the Do"~"'" llewl. are C&lt;'lllon~ ciT a _ - recml and

a ""-'Ond-pl;oce fim,k on me 01\ '""" II . 'auonal Qwn..
poon.hip.
•
Tro}' tate, ••luch ••·oreged Ill I pomts pel' ~atm
la&lt;t "'ason. 1 be&gt;t mmembered or tts NCAA aJI d.JVIMort reconi of 15 polnl.! scored in a -....~.nO"- a Olf'Vl)
lnstnute """ yean.llj!O
After •~""'""" 11 l ""'-""""lle on Feb. I. t:B retiU'n
homt for fourcoosecum·eg:ame5 apinstPtJtosyharu.t..
Voun~'tiSla,CentraiConox:cttcuond~ t a

U B olose&gt;out tbe regular~~oniJM,madagainst
Central Con~ and Cle
Stll.le (1 2-'6).

Basketball Vicket Polley Announced
'lllle......,flf A~ huan.-nc:edi
studmt bclatpoticy fortheJ 99l-94 ·b W:dball
which bcb ol'fNov. 26 wbett tho Bulls
boot Daomolt College.
Stltdcotactcu to
are OYailable
free of dtarJe '10 UB ·Widergraduate Sllldeau,
and &lt;WI be picbd ~p .. Ute Alumni """"'
T'tetcl ()ffi(&gt;o. or Ute UB 1"i.cb:t Offuz, loca!ed
io Ute new UB SUtdium. Studc:ot ticUts ""'
non.anusl'enble and must be piob:d up befc:tt
Satwdly. Dec. II 81 4:30 .p .m. Elcb swdeat
must praent a valid UB srudeot identifiCOtion
card and sign for bis or her ticket.

homo:·-

-.-UICA-.....-naarrw-9
.l&amp;lft.lb: a ~Onltll~
,._AIIIIITi*-OIIJ:e
• Stt..ID.2Q
• lob!.. lb.22-T IC;.ZI loblrtlllaMIIOIIJ:e '" LaL&gt;I~
• J.bt..'ID.r!!t-fii.Q£.3
illltll11dll!lllt 11 UL-4
.. . idol!Oikol lll.l!l-.2p.J11.
• Sit.Dic.4
Mllliillltll TdiiOIIII ftl.l!l-4 JIA
• ~~on. Die. 6fri.. Die. 10

• n.n...

• sa. Die. 11

·~

olin Tdll Ollt

Sldllt!TDIIOIIII:a

lhlii.~JIA

9llll.-tlll liA

,-

�The Repone&lt; ......,.,._

comrr•erury on -

ol brOIId '"' esl to lhe
Mat oeltnel' be
ted lor

OOITWJUl&lt;ly
and lenO'h

Feeding Problem
n

11y _ , . A.

of all of our

and pro&amp;nm and WI
10 dt tnbull: budlfl wpboard.,.. Or
11 rtt"kct an unv.1lh
to u our

,.. ,.,u eooton
porl or redoocto

~=- and ~ rtualt&lt;lm • opp&lt;lf·
I llltli (Of tmpnl"JI&amp; educallonal q
II

Jl'O'"'

by lltVllnl «rta~n provom (Of
and ~ lor fl'tR'IX:hn.etll In tother ~­
tl appears llwl t dT""' would be tbe
..,.. V.e would be &lt;cdm probkml and
st.af'\'1

orpottUnltiC'S ...

"""&gt;' )ear !or o~er a deca. econom~&lt;:

h•••

fo&lt;tOn
D'I&amp;Jidm:d o.acnftetal b&lt;ldlf'l
c1ooten ...totelo could be best tnade tn tbe

J

of &lt;karl)
ted pnontl&lt;' for the
nature and scope of educauonal provomm••l An e phctt b.enrch ol ed ttonal

COfllell

obFfl- relaled to soctet.al n&lt;!ed .. oold
pro&gt; &gt;de a ratoonale for
tn pamful
C'hooc:a ,.tuJe a unn t publtc thai tbe
o tr}tngto be tbe "educauonal.
cullunl. ecor.ornJC, and teciu&gt;ol ...at
force" tbaJ the Prmost proposes In conLrHt. an m:ab1ht or G~A-Ilhnc
ao tden~
to f) the educauooal acu &gt;Ill« of most
tmporlanee to do ... u. tf 11 all, dtlu
dtmont
~ b) tryon&amp; 10 do

""''"'"'&gt;

' "' process It """ . . the COfl ..
for tbe 1ea&lt;1on ol ond,.idual
10
the pnont""' of ........,. allocoLIOn .-led 110 fiC'II_.vt tDCfQm\11) spt·
tfte and locall)' rrk• ani p
and
obJeCII&gt;n II u trtlendod 10 &lt;ttmulllll: the
ckvdopmmt ol ) laD-wide and
&lt;i~abh

p~om·~ottt.e

.... ·

~.

fiSCIII. and poiJbc..t 1..- ID the '

some of"' erythonc
If our Sf&gt;CC1alstren'tb i ow tn.dtb.\
dots that mean that "'" are sati fted ,.1th'

pi.IMtlll docum&lt;ttt. L"-'}
AVu-ft&gt;rtltt! n-o· Crtttwr&gt; . rro•.O..
for the fnttu'IIC. an unambt
UP""·
KJIA o(
m1 tOO ol the W'lt"er"l)' chat 1
apll) rtpracrued as the ftn1 11ep m .,

Earl) tn Ste•en ample' • lenure as
Pratcknt.. be brnu 1 the prtSJ&lt;knt of
several state uru•enttars 10 Buffalo 1 tell
ho.. they """'"ed e cellence Exit

"

C pt.tJ leadersbtp enga~ tn produc.
uve planninc ~ wtth brood •••ol\'Cmmt of r 1t • lldmim&lt;tnll • and
C:&gt;CD tom&lt; ol the "folal.dloldets" I qualtt)

venay 10 prooper.

••&gt;
"luk

ed

optn1&lt;: II the notll

enlwlc1111 and ~. ea.oellmcc

111

ron: -=tmbe&lt; h 1 a
.a
ckmlnd atracnbalry leotcknlup
HIJrry A 5.Az IS Pmlessu ol .soc..J rtd

Prtwertt·
HNlf

~...a {)lrf1CfOf

c/I'W!I

s.r- ResN•ch Progr-.

Schoolci~M&gt;d~.tS.:..

-

o--Sol)·.

~

Entrepreneurs continue learning through alumni group
friJo,.~io 10

ORE THAN 75 of Y. estern

&lt;v. Yorl&lt; leadong entre·
Jnneut"i .... padua~t&lt;ofthe

Ce01cr for Entteprentunal
l...eader.lup !CELl. a proJram on tbe B School of Management d.:ogned to enl\ll""" tbe enlrepreneunal •loll&gt;
of loonde" and mana~en. of e&gt;tabhsloed
bu '""'"" . thu ompro.,ng thetr pr"'JJC'Cl
for further I'D"'h and ck&gt;elopment
And man) of the.sr: tUCUU\ ~ . nowu it!.
fellO"' . conunue to buold on the kno~~okdge
I be ¥3oned and the relntoonslups they forged
"' fello~&gt; b) pantetpaung in the acto&gt; otoe of

thtar ov. n aJumnt ., tahon
CEJ. Alumno A soctatoon co-founder and
currenl Chatr Gerald Mu . a con uhant
and U.S. operallons manqer forC'Iwneleon
Color Card Ltd of Canada. U) tbe O&lt;pnl·
zatton ~rr" out oflbr desare nf man)" former

conlanue the- "'OCJ "-t'f" an and
1\ltnng begun dunn~ theor CU npenen..e
Nov. m ah thud )tar. t.ht alumm group
mamta~ns a bu
schedul~. ~o~oalh a \Olsal
ouun~ . rftre:at or toptcal n~ung ,Jatcd fOf
eJIC!o month Tbe fTOUP os plannonr a "Stra
l&lt;:giC Aluanct\ Forum" on Februar) that v.oll
feature lc:a,Je,.., from bu&gt;1ne , educauon and
tht con,muntt) h also na, \l.:~ulcd a
W Yecononuc ummu 10 be held 10 Apol
'Thoma&lt; Hufbo. owner of Ramlx&gt;w Fa&gt;h·
"""' on Orchard Pat\. and a member of the CEL
Cia&gt;Hlf 1991. &lt;a)\ the most •alual* thong be
gamed from h1s CEL e~nce "' a ne~
..,,.on, ol bu&lt;tne&lt;&gt; fncnds who offer ad' ice
and sen&lt; as a "'KJUndon~ board'' fO&lt;R&lt;IO odea&gt;
Hugbe&lt;&gt;mccntl~ .. uawardedthe fiNC Ta) lor"""' A v. ard b) the alumno SOCW.IM Tile
av.anl named for the Buffalobusme&lt;'lmltl and

·&lt;

CEL adjullC1 onstructor who ,..._, I.JIIod 111 an

~arod to II&gt;Silit mllqll'meUrS operaltn, me' W1th I().
emp~oj..
dtum-med

01rplane cno.&lt;lo lasl year. " pm;ented to an
alumnus of tbe CEI. program v.ho dt plays

and detcrmonaonn to &lt;uu:eed

j.'OIJ1

nulbon and a ..,. l:.mergutf

htned .... m a ctwnm~cmmt 10 communal) -

Prop-am~ ..,,.,.,._...ol

ucene Wa...h. a CEL PoloC) Coun&lt;·tl

E

~

mmtx:randmmtx:r&lt;llhe.,.,_•• -

olthe

INt .-e beyond
ral
o/191!7 ....Sihe~CEl..and ..
alunn l5lOCUIIOn pt&gt;'U ., .t- odez ,.'lib
&lt;Obor~t&gt;'"'....,.. V.ado, owner
and~ofE.OW A5oo&lt;
t:IBulblo
CX course. onr· farmly and fnends are
Sl) • but "oltotn. bet
.........
prenrw '
dtfferent fmm anytbtn else. n
bell" tn fond Olberl "'ho are tn the wne sttu.atoon " Wach feel the CEL can be
'alual* to compan
thai ml) loa•e OUI·
J,!I'OWR theor _ , abtlotJrS "v.'&lt; art able to
pro&gt; &gt;de ..~ lhar .... leq&gt; • llu&lt;me&gt;s
•oable. J..eepina_l(lbl. here Ul Buflalo." be says.

"'""""""·he

CEL

orr,.. t"'-o programs

A Qn Program

eesandanonal'*"olbetwt:oen S I rmlhoo-S20

~

llan·IIIP phaloe. bul

mo~beh~duetothe-

01'~
Balbpoup~o . - ..-J} • UB . poruopao-

"" ... 'ldoedule ol d ........ lecb.ra and
f'ultctton. desiJned 10 eolhMICt thetr
and manap:menol
and foster&gt;tlamf k.lmthe fncndl)
In tile Core ~fello&gt;K.....S
.. nega&lt;lltiOIIS,

aptal

andbomon~

........ _.......,.ofthetr
and~

lJOn.

arr maached •

..,...., ""a re&lt;oUrtt for

t

lnaddo-

a men10r -."bo can

the~

year, members of ttr'
CEL Alurmo Assooatnl •-.11 .,........ omAI·

R&gt;r the ronr ume

don.,. oo lhetr o-.·n busmes
they ton.. pown pro(.
days
ellooo

and tdalt _ .
"""" thetr

TOWN MEETING
Con,.ued from page 1

to• 71 6 / 129/ 224fl

v.htle there

ml)

be oocruscd

~

oo the

uno~ · ladttR&amp; and pubbc -senxz rrmob dt~n~ut-t.ed rt!afdl tffort Will not

,tOrt&lt;.
~

~

&gt;

i

&gt;
"
~ .
D

:~

N

w

if);

~
w

z

. .,

'

b

.2

... 00

0

~

01
0

D

0
1:-

i

~

c

::&gt;

e Art and

Photographic
Services

0c:

s;

u

.!
c

.2

0

ocodemle services · computing and ln!or«'

~
~

ibbJ

z

be relegated tn a suppont mle
H&lt;' '-Aid metnbt:n of the todcll( ,
...,.
\-'tC'" t.eam that "w~ l"B bst "
wen
-L\LOru~· thai lhc unJ\ef'll' ¥.
•"boocf"
, """"gh to lost resean::b fll&lt;l
the fi&gt;e

.,;,.,..g

1tem m 1ts nu

100

s&amp;a~emen~.

" It's because sn lhetr 5121e$and thetreJ&lt;penertt:c feglsiator&gt; and tbc: public ha&gt;e focused so

he:n tl) oo undergtaduole educauoo that research as an ln&lt;IJIUIIOIW prtOnl) bas bem
~ely de\·alucd." Bkxb added.
''We ha•en '1mack thai step. We c:ootJnuc to
place II lugb and perhaps forst on our lost be·
caUS&lt; we l&lt;now that out of eoettllerl&lt;:r tn re·
search and dtsal\'ery cotne!&gt; the abU11) 10doall
ol the Olher dungs .,.., want to do on special
,...y . R.esearclt t the ley to malung a dtffer-

enceGreiner ""''I'l&lt;led 10 one facuh) member''

corx:em tim .. the

""'""""'&gt; ad&lt;ftsscs
""'
scnves

topiCS~ b) both be and B
tt
10 ~
1he £
) member Sl:llod, "thaa
ocadenua ,.., n ocackmta and
't com&lt;

downlO the le\ d ol protluanc shoes or'*" ..

Gre.... noted. -n.e lhin&amp; lhar 10'\11 paron"~doOOIJt~up the fuDdamenW and
\'aloes of the aaodtrn)- O&lt;aadr:m&amp;a IS
rf do. ""' wiD looe ow •'3lue 10 !O::td)' Md
scaety "''" fipn tim out very qwclly.·
He added lha&amp; "the lUI value ol the 11111\.....
ty or the college 10 soaety•4arze · lbll ....,
are dedacated 10 the pur5UII olln.lb and I
50Ctd)' .... ~qe ~ dill. One ol the
reasons that 1am so anxious 10 loa&gt;&lt; us taU ow
Lnowledge. tab: our
our croll our prolesSIOO. our dt&lt;cipline and owlY lbem to oerwn
lands of jlubhc•sc:rvx:e problems u becaust
we more than ..yooo ehe c:an pronde the
analyses IDd the Insights lhar I think our !OC&gt;·
el)'despenlely nooeds tockal wido ""'problems
facin&amp;

...

,

�_...
Rreign studen:
seekho for
·Thanksgiving
The uruvcn&gt;ty 1 i«kt
todmduals or f111111h "
-..ouJd likr 10 dlarr lhev 'Than
11•i meal Wlth one or more UB
foreJp
ilttla ~..e ..., .
UB Off~ of ln~emational Sw
dent ond Sobolar Sm&lt;lC:a. t&gt;..
plaim that stuclcaU from abrood
are fticlnaled b)' thr
ory
bdurd thr hoiJday "
' - mlliVIdual. rouplt ..
bt; ablr 10 P'O"tdr lbr
..,th lnmplliUIJOn 10 ard
lbr mral. Some student are
gle. while others may ha&gt;e a
liJlOUS" and/or )'OIInl duldrm
Every lllltmpt 1 l1&gt;lde to maleb
thr IIIW'eSI of thr host ard
studrn . Anyone tlll&lt;nSUO&lt;I on
5Cnt
as a host for Tlwlhl".
•ng dtnner o.hould contact IL"''
111645-225

0

Exhibits feature
wodcof
U.S. architec

0

The UB Sdmol of Archt·
tectun ord Ptannmg has
onnoonced a sene of free IX' he
••h•bition featunng the wor1. of
Ament.~~~~ archilrctS ard utban
de&lt;ig.,.,.... past ond pn:sent
E.Uubt .. ,u ilt iltld 111 tilt
James Dyeu Exh1biuon HaU on
the lhml lloor of Hayes Hall The
hall i open l.o tudents. faculty
ond the community from 9 a m. 10
5 p.m. Moncby throu,to Fnda&gt;
The series opened Monday "'th
a natiOIIal nvelm eJ&lt;Iubltlon,
"Pantrn and Corur:x~" rearunn1
the l'&lt;lCall wort of Cesar Pdll and
Pdli is one of the moot
mfluenual architects pnocucong in
America today ond thr focu is on
IWO buildi4g type&lt; tlw have occ:u·
pied much of hi alleOIJon dunn~
the past I0 years-the dcyscnper
ond thr ~ buildmg.
1ncludod Ul the r:xhiboL "'hldo
"""' llwugh Dec. 3. .., ""' ...,....
buildo:og5: N-... Bank Tower am
Blumentball'l:rfOI'ItllngArtsCmer
in Ooarloae
th&lt; Carnegie Hall

.c.:

Tower in Now Yort Cily; Boyer
Mediclli Cent&lt;r a Yale Utv.....w:
~bring Ha1J • RJa: ni\...sity; ti..

Mathemobcs. Corrpaing am Eng.-

,_;ng Cmer. Tnrul)' Collqe.

am Wmdl Prafessoanal emer"'
Wm Forest Uni\...sity.
The Pdli r:xhibit will be foJ.
lcowcd with a presentation of stOOIO
wort from the Oillhool •s graduate
design .wdios from Dec. 10.21
will be followed by four
exhibits in oonjunction with the
"""""'"• 25th aruliversary c:elebra·
lion:
Art:hitectunl Units: Bo5ion
Valley Tcna Cotta. Jan. 26-Feb.
25, wort of the f11111 rcoowncd for
its tern COlla archllcc:lural restora•
lion.
L'Enfam's Plan· Vtsions of
Washington, March 2·25. an u·
hibit of archii&lt;Cllulban desogner
Pierre.Qw'les L'Enfant' plans
for the capital.
Buffalo Hartxor and Aquanwn.

nus

o, a-...
I.
..... ..:l

.

..~

_,.

~
piOiee8or

·~

0"1-IICC\.-l ol ~
..,...II"'
a

a:rr on

._.,., "'

18Qai ....,_

a~ ·-~ · on

ABC a "20r.10 · E"""'' ~011

~ol

-.siD

hea&lt;b the ..........
O.sonlon Ot.noc tn the L'B De·
pallmml of l's)'~y . need

., • aory
Her6JICJ

., grouoa

Pw .._.

•ndmduals 11.. 1 ~s .. too ·~pr ·
nence ponte attac S}mptorn
ma tnclude a udden "' of
anx.oety oflrn accompa.noed b)

r.oc1n~

loran beat, dr) mouth

fwfulnes · ard ~of tn..th
\ 'olunteers *Ill recct\t . a1 no
charge. a norHO'-bl'"t Jh)'·ho·

logtealllelltrnent de orfk'd to
rtd~ theor fear
Any~ lnltff'led tn pan.ct·
poung on the "l&gt;dy 010) call Bed
att\45-3671 v.ed.da) betv.ern
ond4 30pm

JOa'f

Seminar
will discu
new tax law
The Cenl!'r for MllJial"·
meot De\elopmrot at LB.
m coopenuoon "'"" the lnt«nal
Revt.nlllt Sen tee nd tbe 'c.-v.
Yon State Oeparunent of Tau·
uon ond Fuw&gt;c&lt;O . .. ,n cooduct1
Tax Pracllloon&lt;r' Semonar from
30 Lm. 10 4.30 p m Dec 3. m
the Shenuon IM. 2().1() Walden
A•~, OoceLtov.-.. The senunar
1 designed to update w. prktl·
t.tonen: on the changc:i tn ,.._... Ia"'
ondothc&lt;i .....
The prognm
dt&gt;Cu stilt
new tax Ia..-.. w. form upda .
w. plannong for reurrrnent. be·

0

.,,u

loW·marl:C1 loan . IO\estmenl1111nSaCl1011 reponmg ard

fnnge-be.nefil ISsue CO&gt;! of the
setmnar IS S90. Regl,.raJton
' 26 fof more
deadline o
onfonnauon. call the Center for
Management Del&lt;lopmrnt. 645
3200

Pharmacy
students win
scholarships

0

IS

n.... f&lt;Utb-year SlUCierb Ul

the UB School of Pharmacy
have lxm aWIWdod S t.oo:&gt; scholar·
ships b)' the w""""' ·•OJb Fund of
the Cdumllia Uni&gt;enily Co1JeF of
l'!oarmacemcal Scaoces. The reap;.
eru. m.n on the basis of IICIIdemc
S1lnlling nl finoncial.-1..., Pall
Mudd n. Mtry 8dll """"" nl
Oay!Rooe.
UB was ooe of four insttiU·
lions selected to receive fund
from the Women's Oub when the
Columbia University College of
Phannaceutical Scieoces closed.
The others are Albany College of
Pharmacy. Philadelphia College

Dollh use

of l'tu.tma&lt;) ond tenor&gt;. an.l
the Sctoool of l'lwmac) of lhr
IJebln, Um•tmt)

Iexhibit benefi

of lent lem

To date . , L'B pbormac}
studeru&gt; ha&gt;r rece" ed tilt
Women· C1ob 'Cholu'l" P' "na
the) ,...., for&lt;~ 1v.vded on 191

are named

to CITpo

0

ct...,...,..,,.

111ft01J11Cedb)~:nl

I Sent&lt;b.
lnlarmabon Toclwook&gt;g&gt; . L'

Cbartos
dJI&lt;a&lt;lr o( h1111l\T &lt;Xlll1pUlJnl for the Is

.
1~

·

yean.
.,_, namt&gt;d dufx:oJr oi
speoa1 pqoru Moll ..iU """""
loodmhlp fu prqo:cll&gt; of OT or
UM'"""')""'Ide!ropr Un&lt;krtv.
&lt;tt......w.p.

us· odmaru_,,

COI1'.,utmg """""' F"'

sogrufo·

cand) . ond ..-a. wiled from bald1
~ 10 on-bne &lt;Xlll1pUlJnl
tao) ITl3JOI )'Sietl'l&gt; V.'CI'&lt; modem-

lltld doni&amp; the

0

lUI""' uuderu .............

about lhr need for bruer
toou..n1 around thr ~ or1J ond 1
home. •h•lc m.....,r fund for
buoldm pn !«~ o the,.,., nf
''Oian,r&lt; for lhr Ikner ·9r bron

Moll Seitz
T""' !Uff

building }X"q.

.lr1lnSIUon

Jll'lllll'O~~Ibvtl
v.hldo the Sperr)IUIIIS)"i &lt;Xllr4JI*:r
.,-a. replaoed ,.llh., IBM CXJI'I1Il'*l'

Kr&lt;ill Seilz. llSSJStllll \ lte presl·
d&lt;nt for finonaal ""'tct\, Ill&gt; 1xm
named II1IOnm din:ctor of odrnwstra·

,u a&gt;nbt1ll&lt;' 10

"'"' OlllllpLilllf and ..

hold the rri o f - \lte presl·
&lt;1M. In ht nN post. he woO ad&lt;Rs
~ail ossua as~~
liOft'i for oncreoscd aross 10 daa.
Olfonnaoon :nl rod~ COillpiJIIng
am vnplementabon of depatmen·
tall) -boscd SQIUIJ()I'&lt;.

Dental school

held IOda) ond "'"'"""" • UB
To ·L off the .-ent the UB
Chu&gt;tse !udent A soclaliOII "'11
perform I tnlJJtiOilllf On."""' h&lt;1n
d.tna. wmple&lt;e "rth colorful
c '"""" ard paprr machr head
¥•ar. at I p m .00.) , on the 'nwo
lobb) of the tudent U n1011
The ~ ent I be1ng SjlOR!iOI'&lt;d b~
the LTB Cllmpo\ dlapter of Habota
for Homaml) ond Gurutui. 1 UB

c:trocal ~ .. ~
cy ....., Gango ..... the ....,.

&lt;tudent ......, dedteallld 10 tlllpn)\ .

1110 olrJ WIICie"

"' II\ ong condlllon; 10 de•doptnr

"""""""a.ercome eMnll

p.,en

)&lt;&gt;U

~lfl-"l il'

CJ()"l

.,T'Jt" ~

sh0tf,&lt;1Q

E~ · SIUO~

Nt tbupr
may
I'Jilli'Y' I Dere'o al

on~~Dr

'f-~

_,

ne-" homes lUb1W ,.LU btnld 10
Buffalo . .. hole half"'" furd tilt
of lov.-cost hou Ulf

-----

onlndoa

sorolr..-rredo-.e

Collecuon bo'"' &lt;haprd I e
man11tUJT hou~JeS ""'U br set up
toda) ond t011101T0Vo from 9 a m
to 6 p m. 10 the Student Uruoa
ond from 4 30-7 p m tn lhr
Good) ear dono laall on the
th Campu an.l the dmtng
'" the ElltroU Compkx on the
North Campu&gt;
Thr dollhou"" co11ectton bollt'
.....,.. budt b) udents from thr
L'B School of Atchuecturr and
PIIIMing. under the .uper&gt;1SIOII
of R11:hanl Yenc:er. tnstrudiOnll

QUCJied n an artiCle aoout
"""' PET rnagng ,. l:lecOIT&gt;-

,n

Half the proceec~ .. fund
ronstr\laiOII of roof supports. for

suppon tec:hn'

ian

~ "babuats" destgoed

seeks adults

for gum studie

Uoton.

0

v&lt;&gt;J abJIIlv "' "' "" •

COIISUUC:liOII

~

con llUCied b) the

Adulu qes 35-74 .. hose
gums are rtd or '"'Dilen or
ITIIy bleed ..toen the bf\lsh theor
teeth are beuli sou,tot by researchers at UB's Periodontal
o;......, Research Center. Re·
searchers are stl&gt;dring.periocloo·
tal disease. greatest cause nf tooth
los among adults
Anyone intc=ted m partiCI·
paring in thr tudies should call
829-222 or 829·2 53 weel..day
bet~n 9 o.m. ond 5:30 p.m.

__,.c.r
JtT'C*'
""""'

ond
udeols also

wtlt be cb played at the Student

How to
..as~IJI;

rutS

proteuar'ol nutn!IQn ., l!1e
~~

Hefti ............ prdes-

'"O an~lDOI ~n

or1CXli0!1r ana c:ar""*&gt;gy .,

r,.. 4tOOcal Pbsr

Sl&lt;}
~....-.::
at tAl 11\a! lead ID OIMII001'11!11'C ol •smr: Ct7IC'
W"'Ct1 can soonat ...._
crad&lt;s oc::os The wort&lt;
done 1:&gt;1- o.Mnlh D.L.

a-,.

a"*"-

~of~

research

~ ~ ol mechaniCal
and~

eng---.g

and daclorlll candtdale ....
a-

�:Fri co courthou e lifted off foundation
UJ in .tall quake-protecti e device
te ted here b CEER
: •BlOck~ court·

· ~··

: ·I stallatlon 101110&lt;
of

.

art

...

ilhwl
NCEER "*"•lllldbyat. ~.n
: lbe..,.,...,......of . ptOdllol : __,.....
~

: _...,.,.....,poosiblt.- * .
• II)

: """""' deVIce.

d~~
~··

• UB. c-.oo .,.,
bis~

"'Wep~lhe•~~ '

: r,.., ,.,... d -

lbe """"

• liB Mil . jec:led models of

....
bulkf~~~p.

that ,_...... faokft.," • brod ud floor systaM
'
ID
wd llibchai.WJ
C. . eqoiAiod willl lbe
Comuri~Jnw,..,.,.,_pofis­
""~

.....

. Dd&lt;l'ii~•L!B. : ~onUS' illllbablt
· "AIIiiralcan.,.... - They~ ... .......· fihould do ""')' wdl ID ~""*'&lt;!
. taaln SII'UC.tUttS in at C\'all tbe ~· ~Ofl
' v.tacoe lb:fe is esiJelnOi) IArolll', !be"*ubKIIIdproYIIIedlhe
experimenlal_....,.,..., ro.
. ocisn1ic: tl&lt;'ltllioxL"
.
~cilai i\JQS~ ..
-ry.nghm. Thoy~
'\nli:r-.ydnfl" 1be . . .
' ibernotlil..,...,tedmoii:Juildlo1g
.
bve
~ belwem
: -dlhe · 1iss~soippL ' ,.....
· ~"lbefaoe
enmor f'elnRs oomo caaa
~
illll&lt;llR
: IXlrlliCeS ldomcd """" .........
l6 fuuodaioo. and
. '-h. Wid ...t. ..'bill: IDl bkr

.

...,.....,,....,........

.*

10""'

--- --· . glam1 took. Inside. .._ :

~rmnl!i;"'"""*'*

-·~~-·

ibe~sup-

-·

!loon;: va.flod,rmldod~ . pam in!&amp;allod

: nwbleaUmsand-&lt;l'ld
· mr;mol ti.cmra and lllllldmgs.
.
u-:toolhe aOOoal Reg• ISla' fJ( 11J&lt;IOne ~'loots. the

~

lbc biod,.Jon#

lt~&gt;­

ton.; building " bemg lifn!Od
off or i fwndaooo "' !hot
worl.&lt;n can shp m lflll&lt;l'&gt;~­

f""""" Ill !ilniCIIIrei by lboul•
f~~Cmt fJf r.ve
1lus is a boB ""f'forcanh·
C!W~

tecmol·
cm." sa.dAnoopS.M
a
U8 gead
and &lt;lrll&lt;llllftl

While lbc bwklm&amp; SUf·
'i &lt;&gt;([ lbc 1?"'11 San Fhmcl!iC&lt;l
eal'lbqulll..e ol 1906. 11 ,..,,
: damagedm 1989h)lbcLoma
Pnet:i ltmhio.r TM SA
cln....J 11 •mmalllllel)
de·
•clop rneth&lt;Jd, ol n:pa~r and
to find a "ff.&lt;l)" 1.oprotD:.111 from

should allow lhc 60.000-100
''VIt'c \\:ere In the ~
buikbng "' """""" 10 &lt;lmn&amp; ' c:ondxl:lt&lt; (!OUt# 111.•• n:IC8IIod
e2J1hquakes by sWtnpng gen·
VICIOf Zayas.
d tbe
tly from side
SKit. ltli:e a
Fl'SIDl~~
pendulum. mimm1zing the
~SJ'l'l&lt;ll1!&gt;d'Sanfi11n.. .
n of d:unagetolbc SUUI:I'UI'C
ci&gt;co. v.ilicb " awanbl tbe
and ibe pevplc ...no worl ...
GSA COflln&lt;'l. Aa:mlmg 10
&lt;lde11 The ystmmbas&lt;doo
Zayas. a was tbe ~ .
lbc pnn&lt;~ of SCISmlC. or
"ve ~done mBuffillolhat
base il'Olation. wluch proteCtS
was amgorfaoorm ibeGSA ·,
S!I\1&lt;.-tures from eanhqWlkt . docisioo.
'
damage by tsolating lbcm
"Th&lt; to:Sb.md resean:b .,.,.. .
from ground motions,
formed at NCEER ..- criti· :
lnvool&lt;d. developed and
· cal•n &gt;erif)oing the tebabilil)
manur~ in me us_ the
: of lbc FPS bearings," be said. :
syso:mbeingin&lt;lalled .....III!SI&lt;d

"'"""*"'

' ••in

"'""""vely•ubeNotima!On"""for~~
Rescardl(N(HR~ blead&lt;pJar-

•

8 iEI.LEII .-.oaAUM
I!Wll Bureau Sta~

When tbe "big one" hits downtown
San Francisco, 'the histori_c beaux am U.S.
Courr of Appeal Building at Seventh and
Mission s~ couJd be one of the safest
·places to ride it out. In what may be the
lmgest project of its kind ever undertaken
to protect a building from earthquake

tered a1 UB.
On the basi• of those ....
resu Its and other mea.•ures of
liS pen&lt;lnT!.'lll&lt;le, lh&lt; S)'Siem
"._, g.-en the highe&lt;l overall
tc&lt;:hrucal score by lbc u:ctuuc:al evalllllllOO boonl th•t .,.
.,..,.&gt;ed proposals on behalf of
lbeblllldmg'sowner.thrGeo·

tTd.i Sen K:c:s Adminrstratton
(GSM. At $2.8 mtlhon. lhc
u-.eoftheFPSaJ&gt;OOt.."O·:!ObabouJ
S4 milli.on less than &lt;Mlpel·
.. ingsystelll$de\•dopcdinN&amp;·
Zealand. Japan and England.
Historic: beaux arts :

bulldii1C hu vaulted .
ceilings, mura sand ·
marble columns. :

Sehmk: Isolation
cle.-lc:a w . . t ted

•rte

y

at

NCEDI .

lhe "'""' ,, """" oolulm "' •
spbc:ocal
&lt;Orlar:e "" ..lhe .atdi:&lt;
'"'-"'· tht arct&gt;na."'ulllllcn.liJ·
"""'"'bod&lt;and
~ ...
ne&lt;nDI\ flfDl hm:d 1&lt;1 do tht . ean
, and tbe shdet
podii&lt;t. ~
1be bear·
de&gt;ot~n worl on lbc pro)&lt;cl
1Q!i$1DlJ!rmSfers1he ~d
"'1'llr buikJmr. h • leo of
thebuddqbll ...... liu&gt;luston&lt;: fca~UnS and )'00 .......
10 """""" lbem from tbmagc . daoon ..ben: • . "'''JJIO11don future earthqu;tk~" ,;atd
To ID&lt;Illlllbe devtces, eacl\
M&lt;&gt;kba. ~doctoral "'«1. of the buildlr&gt;g" 300-tm !llo&lt;l
ld UB focU!it!d 011 tht sy!ilem
l~ ..tw:tllhelolldil1g'.
foundlu:la .-sis ld'lod by byThe &lt;lbjec::l••• "as 10 n:~
.
drau.IIC
piCk U
flamt
JlOITtht buildiJ!g and pa= II
torrhcs,
tht WO!i&lt;ti's lice
for tht future
"""P"'I!
COflStrUCUOC'I to 1 m1nunum.
' ~lbeetlll'l...,.,.,.,.-1
"We &lt;Milww:d 51:.-e21 qprulumn....wl1be I'PSag!lla!
liom for lbc loal!lllR &lt;lllillla-'""""'lberollllnnboclt&lt;Xa&gt;lbc
IIOrl beanng&gt; mel eype$ of . ..,..._~insl:allomnwork i!t
t&lt;Oiator&gt;. 10 ~ lbclr imeJP"CCId ID ~ by
pact on lbc COS! and lime nee'fl"'ll11994.
lnlbosummcra€1991 v.iten
'"'""&gt;' lor COOSI1UC'IIOO." ""id
Amin. ohieistruc:lllllll ' lilllbeli:IJOiilwor!r.' ~
~"""" .. Sicldlrtcn..Owitlp . lbecxulbuildinriDbe.b)•llr.
&amp; Merrill. and leader d lbe : lbe......,.,.. and ........... SINe·
pmjoct de$ign ICam.
· IUtdnlhe US N i!t equiRlod
''Ou-&lt;bia:s work"'") dlf- . IO....n.eonlttpaali:efora:sllllinc
krmlly fn:m 1be ....y -&lt;Jib. : . _ ·IS&lt;Uion.
eng.mee"r ~ u.h SkJdn:Kire,

o.. ...,&amp; M&lt;mllofSanFran·

futuR elilrlhqu......,

"""' &gt;elecl • method of ,.,.
u•ce~en~ng
I pwnngandretrofirunglhe
dr-' •« undemeinb
butldmg. lbc GSA had eng•Oocc m&lt;aalled. lbc Fnc""""' and de"g....,.. con &gt;der
uon l'l:ndulum Sys1em U'PS) · stveral devices.

- . show«&lt;lilallbc

i*"'- reduced eonhqualo:o

• bU!Id&gt;qgi d•glblcoforNibi)Da!
• landmari swus

~

on !be ll:lOdel

"'""le

buildlr1g. •

��hich librarg to Use1
AOi OF 1HE ten UB Libraries has

~

tlons specially tl.ilored to srudents and
JC

~

the.subjea pecialties o{ the various UB Libraries;

c....---

•

5

• a-..

-

6

aa...,

2

6
·6
~1.-- 6
'-UO..,._
3
.
aa...,__
62

·~

dddan

-

4

6
6

-.....- 4

--

.._

-=---. .....

4

•Mwrban. . .

~

-.·
aa..y __
~

..-.-....end"""""""-- /1.,.... .....

.M

• Nunintl

Health Srt~ntes tibraiiJ f~U

._,.,

--...c--.

~ -821}-3335 (FaxiJZC)-2211)

Rfimu- 829-3'JXl
Mtrlia Renms CerJe-

·Social-

-821}-3614

Hisbyci~ - 829-Jl24

lrbmalin Dis:eninalill SeME (100) -821}-3351 (Fax 835- 481)1)
lrEdllrary lnan -IJZC)-3337

Uni:.oemJyat &amp;tfalo 11iFSES AND DISSF.RTA170NS tnr focmd in the
library if the dfsdp/inr

-.........____--==-4
-......,.,

CM1., • lnndl d lhr Scor:n&lt;:r and ~ llnty, hawa . - d o
........W. in aoadoenwia and d&gt;cmatry, ll1duding boob, ,..,..,._,.... jownals.
..,..,..,..,., boolcs,
d lb:aty
sen-.ccs ..., walbbk. ~ ret.......,., ll'llaib:lls)· loan. dmbase oeorc11.qt
and ~ f:oci~Jbe&gt;
•

J.odn&lt;,lood and Music Ubnries

...-6
...~aa...,­

Fax -829-3913

• Ma.-

• VBfDIIory

3

end
,..,...."IIIJOn

-·c--.
821)..216), SZCH278

• SodalWorlr.

..__.

coo-•*"•

rhEmistrq-Diathe tini Ublanj I[JUlJ

_....__ ....,...._
--6
=- ·8
4

ror ,....... .,....._

ID-

fDIIory

6

8

u.e

format -10 me,
- ph)'IICII ,...... lilian d lb:aty .......alo, lbr Cenlcr
opeoal
In llddioon
f""""' !l1llf and puiJIIc.........,.. d
iooues ~ ...,..a.ng
lhr proper aft:, ~and~ d me, &lt;XJiomoao,
food and . . . .
~ 'Wflloio lhr li:nrils ~ me, impartan:&gt;: d mopen&lt;ion ""''i
!he llM'milly communlly
on~
poqpam.

· -,.,~

.
=:-_
4

end

""""*' ""'""'

..-aa..., 3

37

atin

Sin&lt;:., &amp;s in&lt;:q:JiiOn in 19@S, lho eer- lw """"""'a P"llP"' d ~­
ton .,.,.,.,.,... lrdldin(l m:blval phnlo&lt;ll~ d bdlllr boob. and •
heli!to:ened ..,.,..,11)1 ID facaarlo
&lt;be&gt; iot..... l WC&gt;fb:18 WJII&gt; Ihe
~ &lt;XJIIeruons me, Cenlcr oalr bas~~ dboob,
~ J"''&lt;'&lt;1M' mdc:aJn:s for faak ........... end~......,., d

·~
·~

•

l:enter fur Boo l'l
u-,.,...,

~.....-

--

m

. .............. !he
Ubnries &lt;lllloaJono bas~-~
loig .. """""'J""l1$ due ID
.............. """""Y, . ,
" ' - f - dllxvy
........,._In~
dlalnwe. lho CftMy lor llc:&gt;ol. ............_
~.....,.. lho lJnMmity Lt..1a ID muimblr lho.........,. d
&lt;lOII&lt;cllalwo " p1 d
Cenlcr • "' .,..,.,..,.., , _ , .

--7
-----

hiiC

CrD!' ~

Ius general works in most 6\Jbjea areas. Below is a ~ lo

6

_,

\\wl

the Undergraduate Libr.uy (UG!J The UGL oollection

~-

Al

IJZC)-3

lhal is, you will find dw. ror your rna·

jar/discipline, you will do most of )""'Ur research

..,

~

.......

Hrdtitectme and Plmil! filiarJ
.,..

one or two of the UB J...ibnuies. An e:x~ 10 dlis is

__,

_aa...,
_

in

subject areas. Geneally, libraly ool.le&lt;Dons do

1'0 overlap-

_
__
-------___

and c:dkc-

+ liSt. IOmded in I

&lt;XIlltlins maoerials in lhr fidds d MEDIONE AND
IIIONEDlCAl. SCIENCI!S, Df.NTAL MEOIONE, N
, PHAJIMA(;Y, ....S
HEAI.Tli-REI.\Tm PROFESSIONS. Combined boob and joo&gt;rnals in HS1. .-1
"""" 290,000, and~ 1D journals IDial .,..... 2.3()0 tides. The NEOlA
RESOURCES CENTER
In HS1. aruln5.,..,. 2,
~Ilks 111
Y2rious fomws, inr::ludirlg «lll1pUUer-~ inouuaian for d-....on,

· and cbssmom-.. The llOil£RT L BIIO'&amp;'N HISTORY OF MEDKlNE
COIJliC'Y10 hawa l
volumes d rare and bi!!IOiical marenals as .,..,. as
atii&gt;QUr rnoedocol and &lt;l&lt;!rul ln5uurnenu
Computerized ~ ~ ofteoed on!Jbe healh .aences &lt;h.&lt;.'iphnes ,,.. HUIINET-tioopbJ and Uni~ otlluiGio Lbary
Resource ~"0&lt;1&lt;. HUBNET f"''"Idoo ~ ~~C&lt;:eSSIO bibhogr2phic doLt·
bases fuU lf:XI JOOnals. dinical manuals and ~ drug irlor:maoon ~'&lt;'­
SCltllCeS, and ocpert S)'$1dll5. IRSIJUCiion on !he ~ d boom«&lt;lcal
mformation and Otheo- speaol "'ffies is ~ by~ ...;m • rde&lt;- '
~ librartan. lnlerlibral)' loan oeMccs
"""'
HSI..
Heollh a"' prdessaomls, bw fmns., buoinesses, and lndMdUJis nol alfdt....:1 ..oth UB or local&lt;!d olf-&lt;:ampus can ol:ain bocmedic2l and be:dh ll'lform&gt;·
tion thmush ~he INroRMA110 DISSEMINATION SERVICE IJl)Sl This depan·
"""" d HSL an f"'''Ide. oo o fee-for-servia: basis, phc&lt;cxopies d joum:al
articles. boolcs and audiovJsualloans, inrerllxary loan ref"enls. compuoer
searches. and ref.,..,..,., •nformatlon.

••'2ilable ...

�~boob ard"""""' In lht: l"arii ~.......,.,.and"'"
~

Special....,... of lhL' lllmy l&lt;ldtJdr JOTJI~ k
JAD. and
JA,U OfSOOGtlAPHY. Ol"'llA. MlJSIC liCOII.J!S IN FMSI
MlJSIC .BIBU·
OGIVJ'I-I¥, EI.OC'I'ROHIC MUSIC. and aEf.'EJW\101! MNT'DlLWi 5pedol !XJl.
loaiens Wldud&lt; dote .... l1ul1dm:l "J'IJCE
• ~.,
AHnQIJAIIWl AND AlJCJ10N SAUl 0\T
IICXNJG.
'RAPH'YSIIDES, oripW _..~the: HISroiY OF U
URIWIIAN5KIP tinduditll 01111 - ). t.. ....,.._or ~be! Cf'lll'llll OF
llU! CREATM; AND
AJn'S ard 1hr ~OF NUSIC,
u
os ...._ ;. pooboblr one or m. la&lt;JJeOl ~or SOI.O 50NG .,
the u.s fin wblttl aU of the ll1llll&lt;n of tiWI ""'~
IGny ~ ·i ndm:s, ~. and CJihoy
in fJndq .,..,.-k,; "'
lluft':alo --..s. 8uft\a1o mtlidenls, ~
"'llh t..
0epa~ evmu $dille ~~ """""' 1n ~ !1W1t.ISI:Iipl ~or
comJ!OI!'!d
and in '" '" altM Bl""" to lht: llnry b)·
lao.-,,ly
mentbet&gt;

-n

+ The law C!IJilectioo _.,.. a wide ·varioly or malCI'tl(l$ on lAW and lA'II'·
RE1ATIED SUB.IfCJ'S
The library an;,. audmls, focuky, olwnni, and lht: oommunily fuU ..,.
....reb rocillli&lt;:s, induditl8 pror-..a~~y Dffed rdem&gt;ce, documcnu. and
aLo:lioYuml dl:panmeols.
The rolleclicn or •nearly %70,
volume5 and 425,
microl"orms II1Ciudes
FED£RA.L and STATE &lt;XXJitT CASES. STATUTES, 000ES. and REGUI.ATIO ' ;
TEX'J"; •nd TR£A11SES oo a Wide varioly or legal tCJPCl'; cail&lt;ctions or INTER·
A110 AL and COM!' AliA11VE lA'II'; and a small ooll«toon or FOilEIGI'i
lAW The MORIUS 1... COHEN RAilE BOOK a:&gt;u..ECllON or the u,.. Ubnry,
"''hk:h oonti!lru: I'JiiiGWiH AND AMERICAN LEGAL SOURCES from the ltllh,
Pth, l!kh. and 19rh cernu-. pr1'J"'ideo bodqJround materillls lor re$Carcb in
thr early foundat:lan5 of oor lqjal . . - , The popers of john IAlrd O'llrian.
the ~ la"'yer and prouunent public 5C'~Vant for whom the law
odlOOI IJuildJna ;,; named. arr
for lht: ...., or .-.ardl&lt;n
n... .wolOVL&lt;&gt;UAL D!!PARlMENT maimom • roll&lt;cllon or oud"""P""
'idoolapes. and Olhe&lt; nan-boolo&lt; ltll1eri:ds to &gt;Uppon thr u,., SdlOOI oomcu!um Low !ot\Jdent&gt; 11UY ~ rhe.r oral :od\'OC'.ocy or courtroom sldlls USJ118
the vXIeouplng' oqulpmen&lt;ln tht' KOREN c:»&gt;T'ER FOR CUMCAL l.EGAL
EDI.X:A110N
1bc: DOCVMENTS DEPARTMENT bci.Joe5 Umted :.tlltes and ~ Vorl&lt;
bolls, Unit&lt;!d Stllteo ~ fle&gt;ring&gt; and Repon&gt;, Nc-o&lt;· Yorl&lt; ~.,
l:loc.umcm5, the &lt;.ongreoslonaJ R&lt;!cord. and a vanety of JIO'-emmenl-produa:d
materials Docwnenl!o of lht: Unned Nations and Olhe&lt; ~ &lt;Jri!a·
nizalions .,.., also lao~ in this rollo&gt;aion.
LEXlSINEXIS and WESTIAWIDIALOG , ~ 1qJai te&gt;e2I'Ch st.,._
terns . .,.., available only 10 wrrcndy enrolled bw Sl\ldents and full-lime low
f.u:uhy . Searclhes of NEXJS, a ..,...,.paper and wu-. services d:ltabia5&lt;:, and IRS
( ~ Yorll's ~ ll.e!rieYaJ Syo~an), • .., condua.ed by libranans on an
~-only bash

.,-ailable

Indrnrond llle~orial tibrarq mnu
-..---.-~

•Oilaro:l..,...,...-

""*''!dual

S[ienve and En~eeliny tibrarg (SEll
·-Rflmre
-....--.
- 645-29'16--~'- '
E-Mail ~

~ (oo liiM, \\X.~ lNIX plali:rlm)

~ - 645-~

Germd lrUmzm - 645-29-i(i

Fax-64H1'10
lnf0!JT131X.-1 ~CEnter (m:;)- 5-274
Gim-al Mmmq:Uini/BISONCooool ~ c:alJ llelp

+

El. IS locmd on the """"""' and third flocx&gt; of Copen. ..llh """"""'"
dlfOUI!h the fft llocw of Capen m the ~tc lin!)- ~El. """"""" the
f•culry and II1Jdenu or A TIJRAL 5ClE!\ICE:. ard MA'THfMA1lCS, •• •-ell os
ENGINEERING ond APPUfD SCIENCES Coll&lt;a"""' ondud&lt; o--er •IS.
lxxlks., I.
~ ioumab, I 5 milbon microf0&lt;JI10. and '''""""" audoovtSW~l &lt;:oll«::::oos. SEl. lw one tnnch. the OiEMI~· -MA Tlil:."\o\A11CS U
BRARY, ~on dr Scum Qunpus
SEL offer.&gt; arculatlc.G and ..,..,...., """"'-""' joondy ..-.m UGl 1'be Un."UlaDei~&lt; 0. loared on thr fn floor ! "' UGU OriJe- SEl. ""'"""
include ~. inle&lt;libnu}· loan. and lil:nry iflStiU&lt;OOn Comp.llrr ...udlins is .00 :n'ailllblt on """"'- and~ ~by advancr oppoinlment. CD-ROM l«hnoiQgy in SEL all"ords the opponunily to ....reb certain databases a1 no tn!L
1bc: INFORMATION na-JNOI.OGY CENTER (ITO oft'as ~
l1lal.erials and ,._q equ.pmerl: In oddilian 10 micro&lt;ompo.llrr """""" The
I1'C main&amp;ain&lt; a variety of~
in~ wllb
rwo ~ a lokiM!II ,.,...,'0&lt;1&lt; of !BM..fCo and an Apple litw&lt;: ~of
Mac'• The Cc-rkr
p&lt;trltin&amp; media ~ "'l'ilpmml.....
optjcal texl ICallner, and I \-.-y of"""""""'
n.r MAP R&lt;X&gt;M is on thr !had floor or SEL Thr roa.a.on or.,...,.
200,00l maps inclucl&lt;:o TOPOGRAI'HJC, GI!OLOGICAI.. lAND 1&amp;, HISTORI·
CAL, POIJ11CAL. IURfST. WOR1.0 AND aTY M.-\PS. and A11.ASf'.S fmm
around the ,.Uf!d
Also an the duro floor 15 the EAJmiQUAI(JE CDrf'EJt !NI'ORNATION
SERVICE. The 1nrormaoon ~ Dff ha5 developed an~ ' IICC!eji-slble dambaJe oo eanhquake """""""' callod QUAJCEUNE, ••'llibble as .,
MDAS file on Jm;O Th&lt;y also Jl"'"V.Ve ,._,.u..-1 tdm!nc-e ~ "'

"""''Rc$en"

mien""'"""""'

amtlalm -645-2815
Rfime -645-ml

E-Mail ~ - lJNI..OCK (oo IBM, W{, UNIX 1Jbdoous)
Ineiilnry lam - 645-28U
G!Mmmt ~ (lsllbr) -645-2821
lleii!M! - 645--2144

Fax -645-3859

+ ART, BUSINESS, ID1JCA110

• HUMA.Nil1ES. ard SOCIAL SCIENCES oolic&gt;::tions .,.., round in l.odcwood Ubrvy alor1g With oolle&lt;:tions of GOV'EIINMENT DOCUMENTS, EAST ASIAN mau-ria1s. the FRIENDS OflliE UNJVER.
SfiY UB.IWUES, jlNENlLE. UBRARY STUDIES, and f'OUSH materials
Holdings lDclude "'-er 1,400,000 books, as wdl as journals ard micro(orms.
making l.odcwood thr larjjeslllbr.u)· at UB
Dat:ll:we searching. ~ ~UerW.. intftlibrwy loan, rd"""""', ard
instructiOn .,... """"' of the """'""""' availablr at ~'00&lt;1 Gr2duau: levd
SC'fVic:!e5 are emphasiz.ed. A personalizled lis&lt; or aructes can be produced
tluoo.\gh I.Dclcwood's a&lt;Xli!SS 10 a full r:angr of compurerlz.ed d:l~:il~scs in the
humaniticl;, business, and soda! sclen&lt;:es. Some database!&gt; arr ......moo by a
lil:nnun roc a fee, '"''hlk others thai ""' av:~ll;oble on CI&gt;-ROM are searched b)'
patrons themselves
The Business/GcM:mmcnl Documents Center " a dq:losltory for DOClJ.
MENTS of the IJNl1ID STATES, NEW YORK STATE. and CANADA European
Communily documents e2n be fourd m l.&lt;:&gt;ckv.uod's gener.il rolleroon. 1bc:
micro(on:n ~ tndudeo numerous newspaper.; and perio&amp;cals, pluo
many special roll&lt;aions •nd dls&gt;ertatlons.

abo""""''""""

earthquake~

SEL off= a fec.bued """'J'UJe' sean:b and doc::umen! del"'Cfl' senice. the
TEOiMCAL INFORNATION SEAROI Sf.R'1CE &lt;11SSl. 10&lt; loC2l bus&amp;nesoe5
and any ocher~
m padcased ~ Pnce 5Chedulos
and inlormaoon about nss""' .... lbble at the Rdcimc&lt;e Deol&lt; or b\'
C2Umg 6-IS-29'16.
VAX renmnal · COI'l1l&lt;'Cled to U~ Computing ~ • ...,
on the thin! floor Also. miCTOW!Dputer inarucOoo for lht: Ulll'-etlil'f rommuruty os pn:lYided in 212 Capen (m SEU Am~ for this &lt;'Cmpu..,. or.unirlg .,.. made lhrougb UniveM)' Compu1iQg Semces

111""""""'

.,,iL11;1c

Osr.ai R.~ilrrennan Dnder~uate tibrarg IU~ll
--....-----~
~ (lsllbr) -645-2944
Refertn:e (lsl lbr) - 645-2945

ffinsi[ librariJ IIDll~l[l

Fax -645-3858

E-Ma11 Rfima -A.'iKI.n (m IBM, w;, ID: plalfon:m)

--....--.-c:a.w)
arwlatioo -645-2923
RffennE - 645-2924
Dinmr'sOffire -645-2935
Fax -645-3824

The Music Ub=y hokl&gt; broad-based reseaJdl collectooN which su~
programs off~ by the Depanmeot of Music, but also those: in
DANCE. BLACK STUDIES. AAWUCAN SlUOIES, ANniJIOPOLOGY and U."'GUISI1CS. 1bc: catalogued rolleaionS c.omprise over 60,000 scores and perforrnancr pans, 26,500 volumes of lit=wre 2bou1 music, 15,000 periodic2l ard
seri21 volumes, hundreds of phoros, 6,000 microforms, """"""! h undred video
tapes. and ne:orly a thousand music-related ~- 1bc: reco«&lt;ing collections,
numbering nearly 27,000 ilems include JAZZ, FOLK, UTliRG ICAL, POP~.
ClASSICAL, and is especially rich in the AVANT-GAIIOE. They can be lislened
10 any of 24 listening sD.lionS 07 Of Which are equipped wUh rompaa disc
pbyus). Se\=1 Cl)-ROM products ..., a\'llilable for n:fercnce. as .,.., 0\,.
caatogue cards
1,8Xl '"""'"'"' microfiChe con&lt;aining images

•

llOl only the

or "'..,. 9zs.ooo

• n:,., ~ua~&lt;: Library, popubrly ailed ~ "UGL" • ..-.ves as the enb')'
poinl ro the bQ!U liB library sy=m. Rltlnded ., 1911, l.,X;l "' de$agned .,..,.._
.cillll)' fer~. \tb the only~ I~' in the SUN'f
5yo1an and one of only 34 u~ libr:lries.., Nortb Americll . UGL b •
gre:u pba&lt;r to bc:gln your ~ and learn """" about thr UB linry S)"Stem Located on the grourd and IDst floors of Capm Hall, UGL f'eaiUn!S oer''lCeS and ma.t cnab desQ!ned • •ilh the ~ and ;rudy needs of uro:ler8J11du;otr in mind. l..ibnanans at the lX&gt;L ll&lt;:ferexrllnfocmalion Dei~&lt; can help
"'ith a11 aspecu or )'OUT ~selecting and Jnreres;mg lllpi&lt;' 10 ~oar ­
mg the bes information about il- and will tradl !'CU !he sldlls )'OU need to be
"tnf0f'1'mtion litmne.•
BISON {Buffalo lnformali&lt;:Jn Sysu:m ONline), the Libwie&lt;' computer ostem will help )'OU identil'y books. llrlides, &lt;locumenls, and alhef m:ru:ri&gt;ls for
your research. UGL's colleaion of 105,000 books, 600 journal subscrjp&lt;ioo&lt;,
50,000 microforms, and Yarioly of study are2S will help you do the bes "'""'
possible roc your ct1UI&gt;C!S. Other re;eardt SOUI'CeS ...., 0\'llilable 00 compurer
.....,ru,.oons in thr R.eli!ren&lt;r .,..,. - indl.ICbng fulkcreen ima@&lt;S of aJtides
and phot"812flhs from popular magazines and ....eardt journals. The Qrrula-

�·~Oak.,., rill! fll!ll

ftoc:w .. ~,...
out lbwy "'"""""""
~placedcn~bf · ~f_.,,,.,.,...
"'
fUW pope&lt;, rill! ldarmllllao Teo:hnolofly
loc:aled on lhr ~
in rill! Sdome and~ Litnry, t&amp;rs 0 WAiltf d Cill1'1pUW:n.

c...-.

.,....._ and .,..,_.

. lho: llbnuy ~ "" usintl ,..,.... OHnail ...,.,.,.. "'
is an eledronlc- ...,.,.,._.........,., waJable 10 .............. ~.and

AS
air ~......,...a.nbe..,..ooUGI.IInnan!;wo~
from lhr IBN, VAX. and UNTX S)'tliemS and a"'~ .....UW. ~
hours. E-md ~should
..,.. 10 ~«.bulhlo.tdu or
ASKUGI.eubom

Other Imrari~ 01

____

rm,

In llddiillon 10 lht Uti lb'aries. tbn.te .,..,
on
lht ...,.,.,....dfao*yawllor~
""'cWII!Iiic-.lhm:- be
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• &lt;ad&gt; locauon b- irlformDln ~ ~

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---__ . _______
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~ ~HO

C1tmeao Hal (

(q&gt;m 2&gt;1 ''"'"' ..o.rt,..-'

~pedalU!Uertions

11&gt;7 Fillmolr c::.a-. EkXlll C&lt;lm!*:rr

&lt;:anrp..l 64~Wl

IS Qrp!n Hal

--~c-_.,

Unilmity AldliiEs - 645-2916. 645-291
IUDyCdB:!ioo - 645-2917

17llaldy Hal (Nanh &lt;:anrp..164'&gt;-241111

Fax- 645-3714

2~

• SpeaaJ Gollecoono inc:ludo lhr Unn-erill) o\r&lt;:IWes and rill! Potuy~
llooU Collection Matcn.ab in~ rollec:tJono do ""' cin:ublc. ~.
ll'llll.erlah frorn rill! Sp«1oJ Colloeaions can br Wl&lt;d in a
corn{Odiii:Jk
n:ad"'!! room l'tlooooopyir'f ~ .,.., al.oG avallal*
lJohoasiry ~
rill! olf'Jdal fl'J'OII'*l'Y d hL1o:ri::ally
. """"
UNVCf$11)' """""-&lt;. ohe Unhoersily """""" ronWns _.,.,.. doru~ ohe
HISTORY OF 1liE , 11VEitSrTY and ItS "udenu. alwnru, farully. and ....,_
""""" Thr collo&lt;tJon. &lt;~ d""""' 7 tnllhan """" oncludelo u~
~.l"'f'''l''l and pro{ewonol paper&gt; d,.,.,.,.. d lhr &lt;IM~ rom
murul)', olf'IClal uni~ f'UbiiCioons. and morelho.n 2'i0.
phologn'*"
and 2. 'iOO rerordrngs
Specul rolled.on:. llldude malenll$ relan~ ohe ard&gt;d.o&lt;.1 I'IW'&lt;'!.:
U.O\'D \\"RRGHT and lhr OAR'«l MAim" HOUSE Thr .......,..,.,. al.. &gt;rrwnuun a snuD local lustllr)· coll&lt;coon and (YO''Kies uU&lt;ll'l'I'IOOOn alxu lucol
;ourc..., :n-.;labie for ,.,_lrllon lhe lloJffalo amo
Poecry/llare Boob Colkction: o.-...,..,a to aJTH CE.'Irt\11!\' I'Of'Tl'Y I '
f':GU H A.''D ENGU\H TRAM•lATIO'II lhr Po&lt;1J) eou..nron &lt;~
90.000 •olume:. bf "'CI'l ma,or and mam 1111n0&lt; po&lt;:l&lt; Wl'11"'11 &lt;11 f.ngb&gt;lt
~ d poe« readi~ from their """n "'""'"· poe&lt;.&lt; llOtebcd..•. lm=
•nd m:ma&gt;mJn, and ....-.de ''00t1J d I&lt;!.em)&lt; masaZIIl&lt;"i'""' al•o lllCfudtod &lt;11
th collet1ron ApprOxirn.Rel) 3 .'i00 llllk magazinr lllles. I llX) &lt;'Ur=t&lt; .ub&gt;Olpoon.,, and a number d ponr.trLS S&lt;'Uipcu,..,.. and phc:&gt;cow:aph&gt; IOUll&lt;l out
l{&gt;e oollec1&lt;00 Thr ro~Je.,,ron ., rnU'mlltioluUf """"n fO&lt; ru qgnrfocana huldd,!J&gt; on JM1~ JOYCE. ROBEIIT CRAVB. O'l'UN THO\tA.\, '&amp;'YNDI'IAM
1£'«1' and V.lWAM CARl.()', 1\.lW.(M~
The romc.'f'Slont' d 1ft&lt;: R,m, llo(lk., Collecuun iS Thonu' R Loc.'lc1o.oor:h
cullecbon d r..... edu:&gt;n&gt; oi 1ft&lt;: ~ d EntcJ.sll ~ •"""-"' from lhe
Ibill througl&gt; 19th """""""

tarwe.

Qrp!ft

{

Omtp.il) 64H802

;z(,O
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GomJ*x &lt;Nmit Campus)
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64H1~.

64HoU

~-103 T...... H.ll CNanh Campusl 64H~

(Sbwly- 0111)1,,.,.. 24-.... tJJm -~
Ull l'illno:ltt c.rur Ekoll Compb (Nmit Campus, b4S.:l6'19

Sdwlol d Ald1lt&lt;a= and I'Laruw1l
3}2 1-b
Hall C"'-&gt;udt Campuol 1!29 2...0

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Oauba."'
&amp;luca.trun

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CcaU rndA'ldual ~ I
8~VIll

Frruon
Genenl Referenr;

!N!-'7123
Bj8.~10}

lit""')

8'iiPIO~

flnjrrersi~ libraries Director'sOffice

Houn
Lk long tnmrng &amp; job lnfonnat.on

IM-890U
8'i8-7290

Gwerallnfonna!ioo - 645-2965

MUSIC'

----...
Fax - 645-3844

Tile Dln:&lt;:wr'' Off'ICt' SUpport&gt; lhe JdmllllSinuon d system "''Ide bbnol) ...,.
\.IILb 1lr Office- d the Assc:x'1ale VK."e P'resdent for Unwet"SSI) Ubr.1.nes 1~
k&gt;cat.ed m 433 Capen Hall Some aher funruoru .,fuctt ope!2"' out d m.,
Drreaor'' Off"" are. L&lt;'br:uy P=lonnet. BudJ!"'. BISON. Fnend:. d lhr Uruver""l Libr.mes. and V&lt;:'ndacard """'""" If you lu"" problems "''Jlh opet2IU1g
)'OUr \ 'endoc.n:l, or rf you need to credrt \ 'endoc.n:ls "'"h an 1~
t:ol ln\'orce. ple2se go dorectly to Room 434 Capen 1-bD Fnend.&lt; rnemlx-rihiJ'&lt;'i
...., •\'aililb!e m Room Hl Capen HaU

The Research libraries ~roup
The LiB Lbanes ~ 10 the R.esean:!t L.harc. Group (Rl.G). 3 &lt;'OClp&lt;Dil\'&lt;'
' """"ulc d the natran's ll1:lfCl' """""""' and rese:udt &lt;lllllll1tOn&lt;. Rl.G pro~-.Je.
ele&lt;lroruc :access to a map- poruon d the rollectJons d rTl&lt;IJW ~ Mm)•
d the UB Linrio. "'-' ~ ~ """""10 a f:uwe rary d oo1o:-atons
through RLIN, the R&lt;seardt l.b:orier. lnfann:mon UB Lbanes obo have
pllysto:2i """"" 10 researc!t rnatenob bsted rn RUN through lrler1iDr) !.orin ~
For """" dorrmiiOrl oo bonov.Ttg rese:udt rnatfnals. c:nmult Rcferenc, or 1fla1t.
1..-.uy l.aul Oeponmero per;onn&lt;'l

L&lt;rer:m.ore
MIC'nli0011S
P&lt;nm~.&gt;

~lloub

'&gt;oenre &amp; Tt'Chn&lt;Jiog)
T..-lephonr l)treoon&lt;&gt;

~[[

~,,,_

Brancb~

Amhenl lltltn Libral) (Audulxln)
Cbrfteld
~'llle-Snyder llnnch
FaUfteld Branch &lt;Atttbent Some 1
Greenha'=t llnnch ITonawandoi I .

~·
83+-~......
690-2111

fln!lhton Branch ITona,.•and:ll .

832

___
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- - - (&amp;lf.alo

~ Cc:tkgel

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13

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Cirrulaoort
Refermc

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-~~..­

cay campus

t-IIT'6

Nol1h C.tnf&gt;U'
Soulh

Thr UB Lihru-tcs ·~ • member ollhc Onhnc L&lt;br:uy Computer Ceni&lt;.'f
lOCl.O. lhe "'"'"d's la'l!"Sl compuu:r W&gt;raJ} ""'"""and """"'rch
org;tn=oort The 0CLC """"ulc hnks rn&lt;&gt;re ttun I 5,000 ldnne&lt; tn 4' &lt;"&lt;ln'""" and termones. Its online dat:lb&gt;se """''""' d over 28 tTU!bon ctt.:liotl
re&lt;ord:o With attached hold&lt;ll!J&gt; rnfonnation Not only do the Ullr.lllC"i """ the
fde as a re:sou~ lfl cau.logmg the matenab "We ac:'qUare. but b ~~ aJso a m.1JC"W
tool used in loc:2ung m:nerub requested throullh lnterlihr:uy l~&gt;:tn

"'ll

~3

8'i8-11ll
8'i8-7101
8'i8-7118
8'i8-"101
8'i8-

campus

_..._,.,.

.. 851-IZ'~
•

851-1~2

�• La&lt;* ..
lllCXlkD for ...:b d - ....... prllll
or nlilkr a Dl.'llr d lbr LOCA'IlON, GAU.
ond

lNDING 1HE library r:na&amp;erials you wan! can sometimes

oonfusing and may be more d.tflCUit than lhe acmtl

To

,_,..,. ,....

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the )..OCAllON line.
The lbonts

,..,..

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ind dot

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youll&lt;l&lt;'dbdp~dot

You do need 1.0 follow a •game plan" and allow your-

self some tune. AI. each step of the research process.
you will probably

bolh general and sub;ea-related

resoun:es. 1bese are in a varie(y of forma wdl

pa-

per, audiovisual materials, or comput.er dal.lhases RF..FERENCE
UBRARIAN ARE A All.ABLE IN EAOi U8 UBRARY TO HElP

YO

DEODE WHJOl RESO

CES WilL BE MOST

EFUL

llbrary
,._ 10 clwd&lt;
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book II In the lbaty If the ..., " ""' on
Onk lormli ~ are~ out may
I!£CA1.UD or plomd ON HOlD
1ar ,..,.. &lt; the •J-101..0!&gt;
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., tt. Gwdr)

-......not .-.eel"'

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--per

To identify ;oumal, mapzin&lt;. ond/or
..-til IIOI&lt;'d 10.,.. on ondt2 or-.......

TO YOU .

lhe dun entitled "Research Stratqn flow Qun•

IS

the sug-

gested path you should consider raking as you research your
topic

~lRATlC.\'

~elect aTopic

thrt

&lt;OrUJn

lh1oneo-

to-dtndo1.,.and-.....,CO
TA~U·
IIRAIIIA."' TO Stl.fCT 1liE
011 T1iJtfJ: WOST lJSD'UI. I11,1JEXES Ott
AIISll!ACI'!&gt; fO!t ~
\"Ol PAI11Cl.VJ! TQPl I mnoub111
•ldt • liln11211. )~ " ' f&lt;xl dul tnd&lt;1&lt; and .oh&lt;.rract an .-~ilalie.., •
\41rtt")

Rl!.E-.RCH

IllUde. on !'DWIDJI'C, you
lnde&lt;ei and at.roru laod JIOU

"'**"'" "'

10 l'llde
ouhjoct AMno::ts
lmm ~ "' .....
• 1-.nd' ~ d the a&gt;noenl5 d the amde n,.. l~

rl

•

,+

t4;w-nub

Pnntrd Hwa

rumuu lOde-

..._'lt.-•t1aJ ft."':ent

u-wnpu~.~t"d

•

C.omput&lt;'n2o.J mdt

•

Cl.W'IlpUI~

.th-orDt't ..

w11:k1u....... twr.K,..., on Bf'J ,,

\ Nt··mun)

\colccting an UllL-'T't"Sltn.g ·-.,!fiu.tlleo'" 1Uf*. ·~ the (1'\M.ul ftril ~t..J'I 1n undeukmJ~~
• pro,ea
S~pUflOlnt library• ..,.,.rth \"our lopo&lt; &gt;hould
he ..,
hroad dulY'"'
Q\'e1'tl1lelmed wllh ..-sean:h m:nerul or"' rum"' that )t&gt;U
iiit" 5trugghn.g 10 ftnd suffKXnl lllf(lllll'Wt&lt;Jn Mcr'it 1
\. \.'nu 'tt.Jinl IO
&gt;elea atoptc th&gt;t v.1U hold ~r ""'-""" throu1'110Ut the """""'h .lfld Wl'lllJll!
~ Reft.~ lil-onaru an lead ~'OU to ;1: """afll"')· ol ...nu~ It) tldp
~ genera &lt;opK Idea!&gt; 11 "'a ~xl odca 10 '~"'"'k ....m 11 .. m5tru&lt;1or as\ljln·
~ the ~ pal"'f 10 nuke reruom thor! vour odca, t&lt;lf
~ble and h&gt;'" .wfl&lt;'llrnl foru,

'"'.,."l'lll

,"':11'\11

nr•

•1

'Of"&lt;" ""' """""'

Bead an Onemiem
After sdeaing a topoc, the ...,., step tn !he ..,.._..n:h proce&lt;5 .- 10 ICienbl) and
read lt1lliCrial •orhodl g,_ •n 0\'en......., d the topo. TI&gt;e llmv~ W""""'
own h\JJldmds of !iOUrreo. ""'ho&lt;:h t'f'O''lde ~nd infOittl&gt;lJOO on thou
sonds d """!an:h IOfliCS These mdude ~ t:nc.yctop&lt;odi;L'. h&gt;ndbo'&gt;Oit.&lt;
yearbook&gt;. Slllle4-the-an ""'"""''· mapzmt" CO\t'f s&lt;ono. and texlbook.; jU&gt;t
:a&gt;k • ,...,~ librarun fCK as&lt;ISUn&lt;r m delermtruJ1g the t...... pl:oce 10 Sl:&gt;n
findmg onfom~uon on your t&lt;JPK•

ldentifg Ke~ Terms and [oncepts
Read the Q\-erview artier o..,ulh· and cntiolly to odt"fltif) the kq "'"""and
~of your topoc Use ~h ~I and oubto.'CI-&lt;o dd'.ne
the key 1erms 1he ul:nne&gt; can ass&lt;.« •n th&gt;S ara d r~h "'"" hundred'
of gm&lt;...-al and spe&lt;uhzed dK:uon;mes Mk loo- hdp If 1~ n«:d it

onlme n.Jt.·u

;~ho;tra..u •hk:tl u

lh a:m ·u ht· •

fet-

[ompntertzed Databases
Tit&lt; Uhntno publi&lt;h a loso etU}ed "Compuu&lt;'flh.'l:l o...toasa foo - ·
o.tlk.1t "
each lilnr)
"' computmzed ~ and mROM da,.~ ""' ~· ....,.,..fn&lt;ndl\. and lh&lt;n: "' pnred l1lOit:-nal ~~
n&lt;"CCl•\ each """f'Uf"f """"""' to hdp you ...ldt lhr oearehong JliOC""" •Of

.--.ibt* "'

"'*"""''

""'""· II'""'

h&gt;"" 00) queotiOI¥ ·~ ~ ~~
w-.r.uun ~ ...
tlablt- "' hrlp &gt;'OU dunt&gt;jl rq:ubr ,..,{.,,..,,,_.., hours ) Onbn&lt;
datah.l-.. .,., typo&lt;:all) .e:ardted ll\ • ,.;.,..,.,._,. Lbanon If )'OU ""' '" paytnjt lor du&gt; Ill"' d ~.etch &lt;usual!\ hecause tt.er...,.. no
•ppropru1~ BI'&lt;Th or ffi.ROM cia~ a\-atbi* for )'OUr topo&lt; 01" you •'2111
t() update. Q)-lt()&gt;.t 0&lt; BISO"&lt; searml, &lt;umull • .........,._..., librwnan
Mosa llld&lt;-xo and :ahou~:t.&gt; Jl'O"'Ide ""' ...ldt • cuoon I1 • ....t.or d the
•mde rum&lt; C'l the artxY W., at the ;oumal ~ nuri&gt;L.. ul the joum&gt;l
dat&lt; ol the~ and!»~~" number ui d"' .ut&gt;&lt;:i&lt;l You ntldl
tbe ad.il
110tl31 """d ~ iftbe llnr\.....,
the ;ouma~ .......
l'Otlta~ the arude )~ noed To do du&gt;. g&lt;&gt; to OR) BI.&lt;;ON ~- I)
...., &lt;rdUnl&gt; and """' liB&lt;.-..&gt; .., the D:lta
..........1lun Menu n....
"1'&lt;' t• &lt;tl&gt;e'" d the ,..,..,.1&gt; &lt;rcmrn&gt; 1001 the. :uucle tltit') ..... )'OU.
loukmg for

lh1oneo""'"

"-r! a

nw tna]Ot'exaptooiU tu 1M abol.
l nurpmfl Libranes

pmcnu p

lucat, ~ m

&lt;iiXh ~ GPO

I. There arc ,.....,.2( compuoenzed full"""'" II1Cioe( ~ PmodfUIJs OrrDtst:J Ill the~

Ulnr} , •tlk.t.

ldentihJ and lorate Boohs and

•

Hndiomsn~ ffiatert~s

aasoN
Bufb.lo lnfontUIJon )'Siem 0 'hoe IS the l.ibr.lno::s' computer S)'SICfll. olf&lt;nng
a&lt;X'eSii 10 the liB ubranes catalog (UBJ. cataloft-. of sde&lt;:tro libr.&gt;ne; out..de
liB (CATS &gt;. and sclected inde""" to •rudes from =gazmo and roumab
(INDX). 81501&gt; may he searched fnlm tenninab Ill the ~or ll\' modem
from your llorno or oifiC&lt;' rompu1c:r If you plan to :.eardt BISO" from your
llorno ex~ rompuiL'T a&gt;i&lt; for the RI'&gt;OS REMOn: fl'"de from am ..__,.,._ •
C'fla' dc:sk m tht: Ubr.tniL.'•..,
lliE UB UBR.-\RIES C.~TALOG ( lJB ) "'the l&gt;r~""' and""""' tlnpOIUtll
BISON datiha.e. Use 11 10 H.ientify books. audJoy\SWI matmah. m"':!oons
mu.sw: SCI.lf'eS, JOUm:ll ~ goo.~ documents. and odk'T matt"f"i3ls av;ul·
able in. and on orck-r for, the liB ubrmes Deculed mstructiOOS are avall2ble
on the screen, from printt.-d matl"fla.Ls near the BISON termmaJ~. or from a
libra11211 Type hdp &lt;ftmrll&gt; or explain &lt;taum&gt; from almasl
any screen to 1c:tm ""-""' about the sys&lt;em or ASK A REFERENCE UBRAIUAN
10 get help at any pouu m your search

.,er-cnce

10--WDol--A-·,_,_

• Type surt&lt;rcsum&gt; 10 sec the DATA BASE SEUlCllON MENtl

•

TYJ"' ub &lt;rerum&gt; to SCI uuo the UB UBRARIES CATAL0G

•

TYJ"' )'OUT search sw:emeru and then pre.. &lt;raura&gt;:Search b)
lTI1£ (t•l. AlJTliOR (a• ) , S UJECT (s•), MEDICAL SUBJECT (sm•).

you

--..
\

....

....

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~=-

I·

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____,

IL...._____
_
UIC
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,

----

�chr c:apodly 1&lt;&gt; prilll chr OCIUII orucle a a ~ ......-!

n..

indexes~~(~ ...... from thr
Dw
Sdealon Men! and then Idea • dalabue
thr 1111) h.a• thr Olpl·
10
re )'011 thr ~ "Heed by lbaJy • II )'011
IHt ....,.,.. II
thr boacm d thr AlnlCI£ J!CORD """""'· lypt bol&lt;rnurn&gt; "' _ ,
~ loc:atlon tnfonnatlOII.

q,.,.,
m tbiJI 1M~· Libra
IWtl .JKIIl ~ ltoO CfJhON.

do-'"'"'

11

'
pumtll tbllt .JKIIl

1. Subnlll on 1lVrlibrary Loan 11&lt;oqueo1 (..., """""' on "lNTERlJ
lOAl'l" In chr Guklr) or
""' unable m .. 11 thr one 10 llu-ee weeb ~ onm ~ 10 F' an
tlvouab lnlo11braty Loan ond )'OU ar&lt; willln&amp; 10 tnM:! 10 onothet- bbnuy, consuk d., r..,..,. - · tOri! !M"'" Ust ofsm.us 10 ..., • chr JOUINII
-..r roo neod is own&lt;d load!) &lt;• 11!1 d local!~ is P"""ldod 111

1. lf )'OU

artlde

Guidel

Borromin' Pertods·

ld~ntihj Other ~Uic~s
The lint\..,..., Libr:IMs ""' I Uei&gt;Ur&lt; " " ' " d usdul ~ n&gt;al&lt;'Nif
)'OnCI
. pmul map.tme&gt;,
and audicJ-·,.....,1 """"""
Refeft'!1Ce libranans
the penc.e and louis 10 hdp )'OU ~ and
loca"' pertlf1t"1ll ~- !!&lt;""""""""' cloc:\Jnxru Slli\Jiilln, ~
~- book ~- d,.;nwoom l&gt;oographnl matmol, ""'
:npo
lllll'l"dorm sct.s boblq:r.tph&gt;es, "" et&lt; }CST
•

....,.."'"'J&gt;C"',

h,a,..,

I

I

0

N

ft

0

"'

1

._

lnterli~ranJ Loan

(..

.

Re,;earch maten&gt;ls ,.-tudl :lit' nol ""'ned b) !he UB Llbnt,... m.tf b&lt; bor·
roo.·ed from 00.... libr:ariel lhrough Interlibrary Loan Sen·"""
A fDin!mum of ,_, ~ should be alloowed (or """"P' of ma~enalo More
ume should be a!IM.-ed as thr"""""""" ~-!he......,.,.,. of~­
loan """"""" lllCR2.0eS dramalically .. ~ b "'"" paP"fS ond dass

~·ppmad!
) Cerucot teOil'iaJons may apply 10 lnlo1ibrary Loan ~ Only ,.....W.
001
at UB may be ~urthc!nnore, c:ewn typ&lt;s of nwcna1s
"'hid! normally do no&lt; clro.da,. (such as "'"' boola, ~ f'ra8jlr
rD2Ierials, m~ books, etc.) will no&lt; be avallal* !1vou I~·
Loan HC&gt;Oo't'YU, phcxoropies of dlapomi and arudes from ~
nutenals an be obc:nned, proYided that !he requ&lt;:S~ 1101 •"iobt&lt;- copy·

••••ilal*

ngjll ._.

-......----r.....,. ..... .-e
, _ AYOdabie 10

LAW..-: A•~ 10 Law

School fxuhy ond student&gt; on!}

- - . . _ . , Avaib.bk- 10 H&lt;2lth Soena:s facully and onx1rn&lt;s
only He:alth C2J"e pro{essoonals. law forms, ~- and ind!Yiduals n&lt;x
assoculed ..-nh UB should conQCt !he lnfonnaoon ~ 5ev...., ••

829-3m

Borrominq librarg lllat~rials
ten librancs and nnl!Jons of book and ;oumal ~ the-re's """"'.
thm roc~"""' 2t UB Whom )"00 """'' lO taler library ITUt.,.b OUtSoCie d
~ lll&gt;r.lr,. follow thc:&gt;e seps

',l'llh

1. lclentif)• """Clll nwnl&gt;&lt;r ol """neoded """'
2. Find !he nem on thr shdf

rrom a 8150"1 l&lt;Omlonal

l. Preoern your 1!8 10 Can:t al !he libral') 's Cucubuon Desk (t """""&gt;'at
Buf!aJoSTl.DEXT'S 1-AC!l.n , and STAFF...ay borrou· ltbmry maJenals J
El.g.bk- non-L B tx..,.,.,..,.. mu" obum a Ufli\'="'J' Ul&gt;ranc5 peaalllorroo. •
ers Can:! from authonu:d hbruy "-'l1f For elogobilll)' ""!Uiremo111s. """ thr
"SPECIAL BORRQ',t'fR!&gt; • seruon

farnl~ and ~taft ill f.ards
swr

UB P.acully and
ID Cards are aUTOI'Tl3tJC2Uy ISSUed by ~ !'ersonnel Department Loss
a card should be reponed unmedwel) '" ~ Corcuiallon
Desk of any UB Utnry Replacement cards can
obuined
!he Personnel Depanmen! (645-2646)
Faa~ll)• and SWf lD Cards are non-tr0115ferol* UB Faculty may obum
proxy cards ~ in P"fSSO oc by advo.noe mail re&lt;J"""'

or

a-

~
~..,.._~.,of~....,..
I ~ Loan. and ~I Loan-.
!Jbral) ""'""'Is ma) be mutn«l OJ !he Cucuboon 0&lt;-!.1. of any llll lbv)
IU:cetpt5 fa ~ tnRIUio ma1 be c:oblaJnod at any lilnry Cimlbuon
Desk upon~

&amp;it
thr ltbrary' )'OU
!lvough a boot; cleoecoon lf*m. An
a1ann .. aounc1 r lilrar)• nwena~a ~ 001
propor~y &lt;:hechd - • ""'
C..:Ulation Desk Be ....., 10 chock OUI ti1IICnals at !he Qn::ubtion Desk ..t)'OU plan "' lea..., ~ librat\
As you -

llenemals
S&lt;udmu and mooa spcoaJ

all filrully, regt&lt;lered
. and !Uif
s..t.,.asii1Ciude HUMANITIES, MUSIC, SOCW. SCIENCE':!., AlUIW. SQ.
ENCES, MAmEMATICS, AND ENGINEEIUNG AND APPUED SCIENCES G&lt;neral Linnes IU inclucles ~ MUS&gt;C, SEt, UGJ.. API.. and CML The
Goner.~~ l.lbnnes Ill olfJCr .. located tn l.oc:l&lt;wood IA&gt;cu)· 5eCOnd floor
$OUth side. Thr phone number 15 645-2812
-

"
canna~ w..:n ~ or """
nh C...ruboon lkpattmrnl ~ rl l'OU ~ ""' ~

J.xmuis and """"""-" "'"''""

Ubrat\
oon.•

room

~tud~nt ID Llrds
Srudent 10 Cards are ~ by """ otr""" of Records and Reg&gt;slr.luon ror a r,.,
of SIO. A Specia!ID Center opentes on extended hours (announeed In !he
aJtTm1 Ow Schedule) at !he beginning of each tenn. Alier tlw tim&lt;. ID
Cards are ~at 232 Capen. (Nonh Campus) and ~ 8 (South Campos),
Monday lhrough Friday, 8.30 am 10 5 pm. Srudents.who are wailirlg for thor
permanent ID card an obuin a ~ry Ubr.uy Card upon preoerution d

~1m) ,.,..,.. . . . , .

m..,.. ...,_ ...-...,..

are ~or h,a.., 1-.:o request&lt;:&lt;! by 00.... poaono
and Open A«ao
faad!)·;llalf ma """"" """"'umes unless km:s h.aYr 1-.:o oequered by &lt;~~her
potJOnS
~'21s can be madr in penon or by
but caruu be hcnoo-ed
"""' !he phone Renewals an
madt upon ~of thr
_,.,
or a liot of thr t.roocle numbers (locaed "' &lt;!..- bad: d 1ibraty
For
~ Scoencltand ~and ~J..~Jr.tries.­
..., :occq:ud by eleaJ&lt;lnoc rnaol vta lJNLOCK. ASXSn or ASICUGL

-&gt;

Holds and Relllls
Elorrooo...-s can ~ that a HOlD be placed on any libraty """' aJre.d)•
dledted OUI of chr llbnry A HOlD ....., lila thr malelal ...111 be a\'3ibb6e
10 !he ~ upon !he recum of thr «ms 10 !he library When thr ll&lt;:m5 ...,
rttllmed 10 chr linry, a I10IICe IS .... lilrough !he
10 thr HOlD ,.,_ '
que5ICr. !he HOlD r&lt;qU&lt;5IDr then bas chr opoon 10 """""" thc:&gt;e 11&lt;:m5 A
HOLD eiJnurwes ..-.....~...,., &lt;he&lt;:kJrl8 on thr ~ ....... ~
mau:nak and .....,..,. that thr *"" ..
Books n&gt;a)' be RECAiliD from OOrrQo...,.. upon ~ requesr of at!OChl!r
OOrroo.~ or if needed for a ~~&lt;sen" ~A-...,~ ...0 h.a~
~ 0\'ft all HOlDS
·

..u

•

fines
failure 10 pa)' fmes IN) ~ m thr lass of OOrroo.-.ng pnvileges, suspemoon
of ~- and !so 510pS chr &lt;hsuibuuon of tr:voscnplll
not be bonared ..'ilhcu •
Claim$ ~ """"' ol itxat)• IIIOIL'n2ls "
librar)-&lt;ssued rc:a:ipL Fines~ 11 thr rate of$.~ per da)' (S20 tnUJnlUtl1)
for eadl day 0\'efdur, LVCLIJDLNG days !he library Is daoed, such as ....edoends
and hobdayo l'a)'merll should
madt et!heT ., P"fSSO .. a&lt; by mail 10 !he
BISON Bilq and 11orroMqg OffKJt"

BI~~n Billinq and Borrominq Offi[f

N-·-

Fines can be pad u&gt; P"fSon ""
BISON llilling.'Bonowlng ()fflc:.,
2H Capen HaD
North Campos
64S.S950

Eruer !he

\.Jnderwadu.a"' Ubrwry on thr fiTS! floor in Capen Hall and ...., eleva-

tor insJd&lt; hbmy to go 10 !he 5eCOnd floor

�__

,..

--

_,

Nalke &lt;bocks Jlllrable ...

•

-~oll'kwYortl• .......

knd d&gt;&lt;dt

or.....,.,.
...........

+ 2~

~
llilll~llonooo.-1"1 Olfu

Duoe I hour . . . ll&gt;nory

• 3

IJnnooetwy d York • Oulfalo
2H Capen lUll
8ulfdo, NY IU60-162S

. . . , _ • Drop Site
Lod&lt;wood, ta.... lbllh
•

x..r.c.s

Due on day

lnesr w Clrc.'ulobon
• ot...
and ~ Lllrari&lt;s)

RdaJn boaom copy fO&lt; l'QUT ~

ocJ.,. """"'''l w~l br lioued
IRfC'I'I .,......_, lop copy d ll'allaaoon .a.p, and Ol1fllnol BISO
notiCe in ~ and pu1 m D110P SAFE

•

ied •

Oueondoy
All ..,..,.., ,...,_ mu11 I

In .,.,_,..,..

•

2~1.1nry

0..., • hour opecfled

~ 10

.,;pW

ORin', "

~ 10

ciW'

""-"' lhey ~ ~ f.,... Will

Oail&lt; d
lllrttr} bum
fOJ
~ 10 an

~

&lt;llh&lt;rlilmy

""' fll'lP'I" ~ d )'OUt~ UliiLU'Y
HO'I1CE 011
ACCOMPANY PAYNEHr. PAYMENT AT 01101' SITE l.OaJ'I(JINS
OI'TION A AliAIILil lLY
1..111aAKY fiOUIIS, "« 1bary .rn.d
...., ovaibt* • all l.b2f)' Clrrul.mon

IJistlllama~ed materials

---.. ·~cha

"'pU.:emrnoC'O!l&gt;. •ndaprtl&lt;"""'ltdu
nwe&lt;Ul

... , t

..._l&lt;'d

for al loot or dom&gt;

-.
ln-Prilt --&lt;'.urrenl alit ci lll'!TI
OJt-4-print- ~aJI'IUit .
•
•
•
•

alit by unit

•

LMI/5~

CMVSI

+

MUS (Book )

HSI/$1
LAW/ $70

+

SD.SI
l Ll

APIA~

+

$~~ .

!Scon! l S10

9o1trll nuke !he researdl

Jlu:ess to Other libraries
~

HE UB ubrarb olfet" a numbef' of speaal

t.onJ..

proces!&gt;

a bnle

'iel'\-x:e&lt;&gt;

eaSief A =

mformauon elearonicall . or ~-orne to !he LIJ:lrane.. ro

~

conduct your research E4her way, you will ftnd spc-

UB
fxulry, and Slalf may
nwefUl from lh&lt;
d ocJ.,.
tOducahonal tnSiltUIJOR5 m N&lt;-tt. Vorl&lt; 'U!l" '"'"" cenoun ~ These In · -

rul services a\-aibt* to help you Amon .lhem are

dude

+

All SUNY tnStllJIIOn&gt; and any &lt;XImlnWlll) CQI
ln r...-... Yorl&lt; ;...., p;aruc&gt;paliflg in W OPEN ACCESS ~aibble 10 Ull stude1u faculry and
Slllft, requues a UB 10 card

typong and rrucrocomputmg fac:ilrue!., phooxopymg

·\

+

Waor:m New Vorl&lt; -..om porudpmng tn lh&lt; I.Jtnry Acx:eo.s l'rDjo&lt;1
( LAP&gt;--vallablr 10 UB balky and ~ Slalf as '"' II as ~ and professional 111\Jden:s '"'""'· """" obcuned an lnlopass frcr:n a l fll Libnr)
+ lJruversdy d ~and )Ta&lt; lm,..,.....-.,.all.lble 10 VB f•rult}
and dlx.1or.IJ 11\Jdenu requ1t0 a l 'II 10 Card and a """" &lt;A ontroduruon from
a UB lllnty Cllt'Ubuon depanmenl "'P"""""
+ ~ lil&gt;r.onr&gt; d lh&lt; Rarardl Ubr.ti"IC&gt; Group I RiC. .___ .-..W~ tu l 'B
facuky and Slalf, requ..es a UB 10 Card

Bllffalo n::sideno&gt; and nonrestdonl &gt;tUden&lt;; and ouff "" eh~ to aJ&gt;PI) for
l:lorrowmg JlOYile8&lt;'i from lh&lt; Buffalo and En&lt;- Counry Puhlt&lt; lotnr) . a litnr)
card will be ~ upon Jlii"CfUIJon d a UB 10 Card and proof d local and
or prnn:anm~ address

~pectal Dorromers
Persons not :alfutm:d ...oith Ull may 1till be able to '"""""" libtary matmal&gt;
Consull Ubn.ry
at Circubtton Desks an all UB Ubr.t""" for ~ anforma·
oon. These cal&lt;:gOrie&gt; d Speaal ~ tndude

.wr

• faadty and ~ Slalf rne&lt;nber&gt; •nd pro(esstonal &gt;tUden&lt;; d tlUbiUitOnS
a.ffiiWed With w w.,....,.., N&lt;-t. Vorl&lt; L.ibn.ry Resources Council and partlctpal1118 in w lb2ty A = Prqea CLAP) v.'ho ""'" obuan&lt;.&lt;l on lnfopass ~
is no fee.
+ Fxuky, orud&lt;:niS. and Slalf holding rurren~ \'O.Itd !D Can:~&gt; from any SUNY
mstirulion. tndudmg Empore State Collqoe. or from any commurul)' college "'
New York Stat&lt;! paruopa~JnR m lh&lt; OPEN ACCESS Program ~ ts no f""
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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Four are named to UB Fine Arts Cen er taff

AT I ff l

Science, students are
focus of Bever1y
Brshop's 4Q..year

career.

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Music81Roots
Michael Woods

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ongin of Atrican
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No .. emb&lt;e-t 11 19!tl

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)

Grant fiuids
research for
test of dioxin
exposure
UBre•••ch
.._basrec.lveda
$770,000 gr..t to
develop and validate
certain biological markers in animals and humans that could lead to
a simple blood test to
determine exposure to
dioxin and related
chemical contaminants.
Tile researc:hcn also will investigas.e whetbtr these sensitive m&lt;&gt;lcculor and biochemical responses
can determine if cenai:n indi Vlduab are susceptible to !he biologic
and 10x.ic activity of dioxm and
related compounds.
Tile g18DI from !he Nauonallnstitute of Environmental Health

Science5 is pan of a major national
re.ean:b effOrt to develop ways to
..,..,., subtlt human bealtb responses to en\i.ronmental insults.
said JllrnCS Olson, UB associate
professor of phannacology and
therapeutics and !he study' principal invest•gator. Olson is also

associate din:aor of !he UB Toxicology Rescan:b Center.
"Our aJm isiO develop .-bods
tiW might bt appbed iD !he next
ceotwy 10 clell:nnine if a partic:uw
environmental cin:umstance is a
bealth cooc:em.• Ohoo said. "Our
projea will inYCSligue bio1oP:aJ
nwters in mature a.nimals, as well
as newborns. whicb ..., more
ccptible to !he toxic activity of di·
ox.in.*
Olson said ~ 11 !he
Un1versity of Wisconsin exposed
pregnant ...... 10 w:ry low doses
dioxin and fouod thot !he male off.
spring. at pubcr!Y. ~wed a lowered sperm CCIWil and oboonnal
development of !he reproduai~

- aod abe U8 T~

Raardl
Center .... - -painalhe
rel;ooom;hip ""'-!he
~ofli

OaW&gt;o.

~­

or

or
o-entually predicl wbo IDIP bt
SUSlleplible 10 effectS from ea.posure to lhese c:cmpouods and who

system.

...An environmental ex:posu.re
tiW would cause tiW reoponse in a
buman population would bt a maJOr problem," Olson added.
To assess !he action of dioxinlit-e compounds in the body.
Olson· s team will concentn.te on
!he part of a cell called !he Ah
receptor. Tile Ah receptor-is necessary to initil1c !he wide: range of
biologic and toll,jc responses associated with exposure to dioxin and
like compounck. Olson said.
He noted tiW when these compounds biod to the receptor. they
go tlvough stJu&lt;tural changes and

r......

~todocwo­

like a ·iroa~DmcaJ OCMMWt'"P'dS
IIIII .-epoduaiveand de•dopmattal . . . - . •• a pqpu~-.o~~
New Yodc S~a~e qlers.
AaMber pwt of !he swdy .
•olves collectiJI&amp; p1agen1a1 •
from a bospilal itt Oswqo, .Y.
and
•01 lhe:m for erideDce of
ea.pctsUJe IIOdioxia aod rdaledc:om-

mtgbl DOC.•

lson's worn will measure !he
presence of Ah n:cqll&lt;lr and
CYPIAI and CYP1A2 in tissue
from maternal and feul rat liver.
plact:au and white blood ceU followinz eJtposure to dioxin. Tile
researchers will determine if !he
presence of these subslances can
be used as markers. or iodJcalors.
exposure. effect or susceptibility 10dioxm and related compounds
from eoviroomental sources.
" If levels of Ah &lt;eceptor indicate susceptib1lity 10 dio•in-like
compounck." Ol.on aid. · - can

O

or

Ooepon of!he four-year project
""'" lDC blood
lOCI ~to

Ulllf'les from per--

bave boen exposed

to dioxin-lik.c
as a ..,.
sult of eatin&amp; fi taken from LoW:
Ontario. wbere levels lhese oontaminanu are liigb. Olson said..,_
1ng contaminated fuh and wildlife
represcn one the grea1t:51 nonoccu~ e~poswes to diOxinlilt compounds.
Olson 's tum '" "
tudy
biornali:eR in "-bite blood cells
from this populatlOCI for evidence
c.xposure to dioun and rellled

or

or

or

pouuds.,... pwt willbt~
in collabonlioa wilb Hdq Ooly.
of !he Stall! Um.....-sity Collece •

Oswqo.
Olson's team also will inYCSligllt~ and caffeine IIJOCibo.

bsm as potenual 1odicaton of
dio.un e~posure in
Co-in,-estigotxtrS on abe .,...,.,.,.
""' ... aod Tboma5 A. Gasiewicz
of !he UnJ.....-sity of Rodacsler.
Other members of !he team ...,
Daly. Joyce A. Goldstein and
George w. Lucier from !he ..
lJOCial Institute
Environmental
Hultb Studies, ud Mi&amp;lld
Rodfllluez-Bigu
Roswell
Pad Cancer In . ute.
'-

or

�_....

2
~.

c

••

[

S

F,

Science
career
spans 4
decades

......

HI GS

clinic* aulslanl

and ofleJI lhe key 10

CII'IOOII

... ...,

~ .-Dr.csuaJty
I
ba&gt;'&lt;e ......... ..,. ....
10 .,...,.
lUll • 1ft ........,
WI) I ..lllll
10 ba e lhcm. II
111t
011 lnt't. lllld I
b)
end of
lhe hour lbal I ba"" reall) CJO¥cml
e.ball•llllto
"O&gt;vCCir;&lt;: IS lhe of lbc

SCHOOL OF NlJRSING

. . . MYSIU. aucAnolll

·Dr._, ......... GNSH,
81 the School cl
haii'8Ceiwlcl the

~erly

--

•

19!&gt;3 New
'1'011&lt; Slate ....._ N8ociallot! (NYSNA) Nldng 6duca1Jon Awwd.
-d

The

idOIOWiedgn Rmlclc-.
~ oonlrt&gt;udon to
bale,~- oon-

lirUng educalion.

Fln!llck -

rwc:eolly

~. S398.-40711W&gt;Ing ~ "Bmggng

)

cw

EdOc:8llQn 10 Rlnllbses.'
lrom !he u.s. Ol!peo1rnonl cl
HMI!h- Hoolln SeMc-

:--.,The:m~:ntl..,.r.;progr.,;;,.---·
lng fdJcatiDn progr... to
~
oognilillll-

behaYioral ~ICiea
regardng ~-­
ment and ~0Y11!1'181li of
rural WNY nunreswho are
pi8Ciic:lng ln acule , lorlglerm and home heallll cere

BIOCHEMISTRY
011 _ _

.,~

-ate prole$Sor
· -of.
assoc•·
biOChemis·
try al

us. has been

selected by lhe National
lnsbiVIeS of Heellh (NIH) 10
serw as e member of ns
Biochemistry Study Seclicn,
OMsian of Research
Grants, for a ku-year term.
Merrtlers are .-:ted on
lhe basos of thew demon·
strated ~and

achievement in their sceotlflc dlsdp4ine.
Membas of &amp;IUdy sec·
tlons review grant applic:a·
lions submitted 10 lhe NIH,
lllllke riiCOIMlelldallo on
lhese applicaboos 10 lhe
appoqllriale NIH national
acMoory CO&lt;nCil or board.
and a.nev llhe slalus cl
research In lheir ·fields cl
sc:illnce.
Pic:l&lt;alt has aulhored or
co-euthored more than 20
artictes In acholar1y jourNils. She.a.wrendy Is condueling two · - c h
projects lhel are ltM&gt;Cied by
' lhe ·NIH tor ·a lola! of more
than S1 mllion. ShereceiYed 8 bachelor's degrae
ln biology lrom fUman UniversitY and 8 doclorate in
bloc:harnislry lrom Brandeos
UrMrsily.

CHANGE,
BoShop bows.

pmi'IG~ . bccausc
II'1 liO broad." ;:be iiY

I

h.lppy and t.UCCnSful

B~- ..... -

life can be lhe obiiJI 10
adlpC 10 change, and IO IICCqlllhe
OJlPl&lt;lunrties and chaUcnccs thai

.. be&lt; ~ . . Clllnally
hokk !he
•
o f - COOl ·
diutor. OVCd«UIC supervised

B•Shop. a Oisti~ Tc:acbong Professor utili&lt; Depanmeot of
I'll iology a1 UB, wbi&lt;:b will honor
be&lt; tluJ D&lt;:cembcr for 40 yean
service 10 lbc univeruty. bec:an!o a
llCoeati&lt;latatunewbcrl ~ dtd
001 oflal ha"" such opportuni~ .
Sbe io a wtk. a rnocbc&lt;. an aiq&gt;Jane

In her ofrocc. sw:rounded by
ogos of her ongoing ICI.JVliiCShandboob for studeou, charts and
pbocograplu. soovmors from Japan and Olhct COUnlnCS. and lbc
&lt;'OITiputc:r on "'1uch she ""'"""' her

1nnovan\le courR matenatsBoshop seem&gt; a hom oeniiSl. a
...-oman -..bo • cunou~. engaged.
and contJnu•ngto tne»e fOt"*ard 1n

boer focld even after many ears of

mvol,·emenc 10 It
So 11 comc:s as a surpnse to Je:.m
th11 he became a scientJSI almos1
by chariCC
"'As an undergraduale. I ma Jored m malh and aperimental
J&gt;S)'chology, and had never beard
lbc 1&lt;:rm phy.wlogy." she says.
~By tbe 11me I rece1ved my
mMtcr's in psychology (rom lhe
Uni vcrsil y of Rochester. I was
married. I came to Buffalo in 1947
when my husband got a job bore
and I was e•peeting my firs1 and
only child.
"Arler my son was born. I
needed inocllectual stimulalion.
and I took a phy ·iolngy course.
which really turned me on. I
wun'1 very serious ahoul graduate work, but I was encouraged
by my professors .
"My busbandg01apubbc health
fellowship 10 study biochemhtry
11 lhe Unh•enily of Glasgow in
1955. When we gOI there I presenlcd myself 10 lbc physiology
department. which bad a line tbey
needed 10 fill and so they wel comed me.
"'l1lcn were 60 experimcnW lab
5&lt;:1-ups d:lete." she said. "and "'

.,.,..,_

dolne&amp; II« lonJ c..- at UB. and

chan&amp;• o&amp;a WJeJ.J&gt;I'CI"ddy . , . .

polol.a.......ndtra-.eler,areoearcber,
and an innovat»'C ~her who bas
alwa used cuttonc cdgr teChnology 10 ,,... &lt;1utknts lbc mf.,.,..
lion IIIey need 10 be uccessful.

llu ..., CDr tile lui

two .......... )'all- lllld il'l bee•

~She--­
~aeftnl
aTc:adlmc A
rn. llB.

•
bYe

lhe~llor's Award C... Eu:d

Tcadliac- lllld !he F'inl
Oall of
Hc:.bt. RdaliOd ProfaSIOIIS.

1oace

111

Decade Award (,_ ,

r

''These
tough times for young people
in the field. .. They spend so much time
writing grwtls... There s not enough money
to go around. "

bc wor
w1ta au:merou
pooadoc:b-al

-.deals. lllld be&lt;
S
...,_a, .........,. ...

-.loaapb-

nary- ha•-mc .. do. . OOObi.JI. wcblpni!W) . . . . . _ . . .
ol respinltion c..- reKarch abo in oh ~ ber •n

"'*""

~ (a

wun:l dr say&gt; dr

comcd~ Ill pbyoicallberlpy lllld ea ·

etmoe..,.....,.,lllld widtlhe Reoeooch
1115Uillle oe. AddictiDrui oo Maut
Suecl.. for ..t.dl
a

..'Od v.oth studems. lllWUC'IOrs bad
10 l,nmo. odl60. 00 I bad 10 learn lD I
t.my
"When I came bacl. 10 Buffalo,
Dr Hermann R.ahn had JUSl tal.en
over Ill&lt; Department of Plly 101ogy. and tbi~~gs wen excitJn&amp;. R.ahn
v.as bringing in forc1go
postdoctoral students~ I kinds of
people wbo later became famou&lt;
10 lbcir fields.
" He also made • mad because
ofhi effon10bringinwomen. Wc
have a large number of women in
lbc depanmenl now. which ....,..
Rabn's doin&amp;. He was nwried 10 a

and mo•ed me from pan·urne 10
full-1m I de-1gncd m) own ...,..:
rophysooJo&amp;y course . AI f om 11 -as
a lab couroe. but largn numbcn of
Jirudent made thai itnp&gt;SSihk" Bocau e all my tudenl5
weren't nccessanl) '" Ill&lt; lal&gt;-

over Ill&lt; world for ocbrs ~~~t~~ro­

cifficulty with~

~architecl.WI'el:ogniud

ph)'Siolo&amp;y c:ourocs. with a boot IG
whieh each page maldJed , _ of
lhe didcs. Of tlOW'SC. it was I very
primiti"" compared 1D Ill&lt; cocnputc:r teehnology we have ......."

"W1xD 1 -...... Ill)' medical
JlbYac*ol,yCilllde.,. 19S7 or·

lbc value of her career.
"AI that time UB as just serv1
Wcstc:rn New Yurt. almoa as
a city college. I remember very
well when we changed from a privale institution to 1 state one
"l' v• been ~Caetung al UB for
35 yeats." Bishop says "lsaw lbc
dorm go up, lbc VA Medical Center go up, lhe Nonb Campus go up.
And growinc di•-ersily berc has
been signlfocanL The thinp we're
teach in&amp; oow. IIIey wcrcn ' 1 leach-

lOg lbcn."

B;ocklhen. she says. "UB didn '1
hire its gradllllCS, but I was corn·
mined 10 Bu(Talo. and Dr. R.ahn
found me a teaching assignmcnl

labs ...,..., there. bul opoonal-1
used my busband' aomeno kHal.e
pictun:s of !he lab for my ~
and made \apt reaJRiuJ 10 ,.,

aJooc ..-itbu.. pic:wres. E-llllly
1 used .tide ohows-a po,.aful
leaching loot AI oae pain! Ill&lt; slide
I bad created wen sold all

D

espile """"' irutial

I'CSISWICC

10 computc:rs. Bishop 10011 incoqJOrllcd &lt;bern into be&lt; innovative teaching

methods. which she

will demonstrale a1 tbe Sociely for
euroscictlct Annual Meeting thi

~

fonncr~~dc&gt;dopng

.........,,

vclr51&gt;to

andmoliOr

notnl

...

~ .. ~ydaf-

bmtliWlil
....,. .... ~
ago." B.IShop sa "Sclicnce IIJdf
50 dynamiC. ~bul fi:IIIJim'DI· Bullhesr - ~ for
)'OI.Oig~llllbcfdd..lllldiW&lt;ll'l)'

aboul that. Thry ..,.,...t 10 muc:lllime
•mit13.-.lllldWIIIoP"!"'..,..,..·

doUic

lfs 001lbollbey' ~
1..t li&lt;ll·
&lt;:liCe. buljust lbolble. 11101"""""'
II'IOIIq' to ,., lrOUIId. l
!be

u..-1 S..... may be txatod for

'*'

lbere &lt;lOlly
Olba' lakqlbe O!JODC.I -1101 a...areol
bcin&amp; cldcriminlled .,.m.c I bad 10
be l&lt;lld. bu1 wboD I
•IOid. I said.
·yca, lbol'albe woy il
'Tm ""cnbdmed bY !be oituotioo lbol women .., in," dr says.
"and allboap r ve llf:ftf been .,
Olll5pOtal Certliod mytdf. I pvc
aedittolbewomenwbohaY&lt;opcncd

up !be scicaces.l fed )jlz r"" made
Her currwl method inYolvcs
• .....n~~y~wbichDr.
slides. created by oomputcr. c:acb · ~
same oebcrsfeatures nne particular idea wriDen
suppodcd. And I married lbe riP
OIJI clearly for studenllll&gt;lllprOheoman,IOO. Melt and........,. ore vuy
SlOII. Olher slides of charts, poccliff..--, and libouldll'l ha•oe 10 be
turcs. and diagrams provide
~ve."

"'*'

�3

•

Woods explains roo of

"African

African American music

peop

'M PR.ESEN'I'ING Afr¥u Amerian
be

MldJ&amp;U

lbew roou 1ft, Mid "'ben they come
" aa s Dr. ~I W
deICI'l .... the

-

.....a """ be

&amp;i~
81 UB'a &amp;iucauonaJ Opportwouy
CCI&gt;~ Mid other locatKx. 111 the Buffalo
arulhi fall "I wonuo belp llllldents boukh
ba:k 10 these m
10 let
bid
lind ~ar lboee
from a penod before
Europeon &lt;&gt;ppu5ion I w
10 belp them
feci lboee IXliii&lt;Ctiono, Wllb cnoup bld11"'l"J&gt;d 10 know wblt they're
Woods dr•eloped !be ..minarl, wtucb
1ft bein IJIOiliOft'l by SOC IIIII lht Arts In
Educ:abon lnsruu1e (AEI) o( Wes~m~ 'e&lt;&gt;

man ao

""'''"I·"

Yor\a~lbeSt.eleUm~~·Bilf­

falo, tbn!u&amp;h a Mt-' Arts AdmunSin·
tion 'Fc:l~op be reoei~ from Arts
MICI
Wood bas written all tbt music
IUOIIrCC manuals thai tbt laChen Mid 1111·

• !be ICl1IJJian
'fho IIOIIUIIIrS,
bepD Oct. 12. COli·
Sl o( lectures by Woods 011 Africu Amencancult=,IS •-ell umusicaJ perfCifiiiAI&gt;Ce
by Woods Mid ocha-s, Mid ..-;u fei!Urt a
opcaal perf.,..,_ II SOC 011 Nov. I Mid

__

19 by Sami~e Mukln10, a m
an from
Upnda who pia flule, thumb paano.xylo-

we~

phorle, lind other
"By 1be umc
1e p11
..mbe lble 10belr whore Afncaa ~
music CIOIDell from," Wood

oods will al hoot • J&amp;U
"''" feature a fi-po&lt;:ee J&amp;U .,.,....,

..

homeland.
buJ with

for laChen of etemem.y Mid lf&lt;lOIIdary
odlool uclollla oa
17 •
tute for EffKtove Educatooaal Claa e
(Eroell ), I 0 0 Marynle Onve '"
O&gt;oetJo,.
from 9 a m 111 4 p

~old

sounds still
inside

t-

propal&gt; 0 llmiiAirll tbt

ll«&lt;&lt;lld o(
proarams lhlt Woods bas hem tD¥01ved "'' a AEI. An AEI
t:
Traulin&amp;
1011 focuaed 011 mu tip1t .uta
o( Afnan lind Afnan AmertcaA an. and
hided M Afncan AaUqw · 1ft e ibd
Mid • IIIOt)telb
OfiiiMCe
Lamo
Iilii Tbe week-ion&amp; ...... al fu.ured
perfonnanc:n b a Wa~ African dMce and
m
troupe from lbe' IVOf} Caut, Leo
Gwnvooou, a local Afr¥u Ammcan JOI·
pel poop. Tbe
a local Afncu Amen can clance """'~'"beaded by J - RflOd, Mid
Satrule MuJon&amp;o

Accordina to Woods. all AEI ProJrams
de$1cned 10 Jet people 10 leam about the

them,,

--

pala' respec~ for tbt ,.
• be sa
"Afnr:aa people ..._ lJitao a a from
tl!eu homeland. but uh tbt old ......ts lll1l
onslde tbtm.• W
says "AfncM Amen-

1ft

tan

aru by porucopau

or e&gt;-ennecesunly abk 10 read
The)
pll ed ... IIOUIIIb alrt8ll) tn de lhml, Mid
t they •-at cempletely ronftdenl •&gt;th.

m tbtm. - morel)
study1nc them. lD order 10 bKome a """"
active Ieamer. "When y011 do, you'll ha•e

taken

away from
their

ICIIII ..fte -

Clasw:all)

tnmed

but oa wtfamoluor IIISt11l8leiiiS The) - .. ••ell tn.toed r liOdwque. boot ...,.
they ~ ..,.,. bas • they •oulrd
•
...111 abudoa.
lllllka 111car
• dif-

r - fmra ot1&gt;a

rona ·

For more r.,__ llbaullht uaws aad
ptaon o( the ~ COOlQICt lbt SOC. or
dw:Anuo~IMI:otuleal
I
7

.,.CaStellani is chair of UB Foundation Board of Tru tee
"''th

News Bureau Stall

AWIU!NCEP. ~..­

nl did e.eaoo~ ollias of Top;
Ma1oeu.
.... been- em-of tl1e Boald ofl'rusloes of
Unvenity. Buffalo Foundll&gt;on,lnc.

The rOUDCiabon pnli1&gt;0ieS us·. aamues
lind p-ocnmo by JI'U''I&lt;iml ouppon lind advt&lt;X
rtprdinc fund-nHi
lllllll&amp;lll&amp; colts lind
gran 011 behalf o( tl1e
provldlng a
"'lde range of finanaal ~ for ,..,.,...
units o(tl!e wu_...ry. clevdoponc lind man&amp;&amp;·
1ng real propenyon behalfoftl!e um.-ersity Mid
'PfOVtditli a bro.d .... of pnvate· sector support fortl!e uru•tnll)' throQgb tl1e foundabon ••
lniSICCS Mid dwcton.

..,.,....,!)',

Tbt Board of Tru tees •• responsobk for
rat ing the commuruty's a,.-areness of tl1e
oeed for pnvm ..,ppon for UB. solicoung
g1f 00 behalf tl1e UDI\'et'llly and managing asseu rec:e.oved by the foul&gt;dauoo

or

Castellano bas bc:cn affibaled
tl1e
foundatoon 1nc:e 1986
He Joi""" Tops J'rim(l!) "-Uu as a
cler\ 10 1962. Afler OOidJo&amp; oeveral ,.,_..
nal
lionS throu
1he compan) . be ,.
appou1led ~ o(
10 1975 In
1991 . be was r&gt;&amp;n&gt;ell pres.odenl lind CEO of
Tops Mmeu. In&lt; Tbt cornpan) emp~oy-.
15,
,.men Mid operates 61 T opo Fncodl)
Marl.ets.

WdliOO flUl!H

Convmta~a

·~
f
5lllftS

SloreS. 10 B-K"
and six VIX Oc:cp Dl'iCOI.allchgstorts tllrouP·

OUI CerttnJ. Wes\tm Mid Southern

ev- Yor\

State lind on Bradford. Pa
Tbt foundal.oon also ha appomled o&lt;bcr
offocers TbtyareJolmL Henne~ . r.. chauman and CEOofWSF lnd11&gt;tnes. lnc .. \ICt
clwr. Rlclwtl E. Heath.
Ru .
Andrew , Woods and Goodyear. se&lt;:reW) .
nd t:&gt;omldA ROS&gt;. pres&gt;&lt;lentoCRandCapo·
Corp .• treasurer
Nancd to ....,. IJO'IbllllS on the tx.d of

or Hoclrson.

w

..--.-Raldalllllend&lt;nm '""'~

ur 8endonoD ~eo. ~ EJim E.
a... Bahlp. &amp;ir County nBDI h&lt;Mb oom·
. nl Gerald

s

l...oppes. a l*1ner

w.ur

J...we!..Si!-

R

dent

or Parct and Pnroe . Ia..

&lt;rf)

II, Pfhodent

Corp .. and

\1, ollwn

or

OCO En

H Pun:e.

pr«J ·

Se• eralllleJDben of the oo.rd of du-.oors
ha•e mo'ed to t11e board o( tru
They
are La,. renee P C&amp;SI&lt;!I&amp;ru. Jolm L Hcnn
Sr .. F1anl. L. C.ml!lellt. prestdenoo(Commelb
Oe•el&lt;&gt;pn&gt;e&lt;tt Co. Inc .• Je=n) M Jac
Sr . cba1nnan Mid CEO of DeJa,.are 'orth
Comparues, In&lt; .• and Carol V Kocorla. n:·
goonal execum e \ Itt preudem
Manne
{odland Ban
A
Robert J Wa&amp;n&lt;r. UB ruor
presodent for IIDIVU&gt;UY ten J&lt;'eS. and Ronald H
tan. l!B \Ice pr«~dcnt for wu•~••&gt; ad-

or

•=

~ mernbon of tl1e t.:.d of &lt;llr&lt;clcn.
..tudl o&amp;n -"-ocr- coo-.!"' the t.:.d of

lniOlec\. m: 0... 0 B.wd,a~,.......

llU&gt;IeO v.ere Recmald B

eappornled
'ewmat~.

Ill

'a.ncc....,..
and dr&gt;cloplnem.
ha e beea
owned __,..,..
u-o/!int&gt;--..,.

C
&amp;: Co . .lorJallbon \1, •
olf.ar of Ida..
. Sbddoa I llc:r1ooo .a--ol'llttkw.
Real u.-,
. lbny R. SlaonrooL OCCU·
bve •KX prewdent of""" lind m
for
M.t.T B.wrL and Kaondb ~ PloubD, ..,..,.
'o;e presodenr lor M&amp; T
Members or the oo.n1 oe ~ "'""

T
&lt;Mf

ha•-. ITIOVed 10 the board o( ditectian ...

L Ga) lei. La.....,.,., 0 Ja:ob1.. .
btado(tbe~o(

alTho
Buff
GellenJ Hooprtal,
B Kame;
Leonard Rocb•.. rcer . W1lham M E.

C'l.arl.son. 'ortbnlp R. KDoJ.. doamnaa or
Manne bdlond Bonl. Jlictmn~ E. Head!.
Mid o.-Jd A..
Aha: M .
IUWI) t.s
hem DICied ~ cmtn~m

A ldndler, gentler image sought
for Internal Audit Department
.,.II.UII_._
News Bureau Slaff

"You _,- hlwe heard tl1e
e ahout
audllors-t.hey' re tl1e ones '''""go on after
t11e war and bayonet the wounded "
So begon a new pubhcatJon developed
by UB · s Depanment of ln~emal Audtton an

effort to •mpro\-e 11A 1mage
"We under!il:aod thai you

m&amp;) ha,..,

some

concerns about wori&lt;lng ,.itb 11&gt;.• 11 c:onllrllleS.
"We also know thai itosn 't easy to have someone loolring over your shoulder and suggesting
changes in the
you do th10gs At the

"'"Y

Uni.-ersity 11 Buffalo. ,.... havt bc:cn ~ng
active!) to change ~ arutudes and to increase understandmg o( our operauons.•
Tntditionall). ontemal audits ha•-c conJured
up some pretty negatne coonowioos. said
Mochael F. LtVine. whodin:ctstl!e UBdepartmenL He added thai such ~ m&amp;)
stem largely from tbe lade of mformarooo ~
agers typical!) ha,.., about ,.iuu an audit rs
supposed to acromplosh. '1'hcre has bc:cn a
shift in t11e ontemal Allditprof~Wo:· he adl¥d.
He noted chat tim 1&lt; hiS d&lt;panmenl'' forsl

attanpt to explaon on detail "'hat an tnt&lt;mal
audit 00.. lind to allay any featS managers
moght ba-. •· Audilon ha•"t typocally bc:cn
lhought o( as people ..-too come '" and ... _
)'OUI' uma 4lld cnl1&lt;:JU ,.'bat )'011 do.· hr Slid.
"ThelJlllfCllldl,...,·re t.aUng is thai we can hrlp
ltW\a80f$ solve problem£~
Tbt brochure lraiJe$ the entire IIIJdlt prooes,\.
explamong the JUil08&lt; of each """' llll:lu&lt;lq
anona~~~ro~~ooo·...,andJnsUnces

wbtrt"'"""'!'"'&gt;""P ~an aldit. · An audit
....Uy is., Cfli'CI1IJnltY to....,.,,.. an indeper&lt;len

trppraisal of the e~JeaJ,...,... n1 efficionc) ur
your urut's Unonosllatl•'&lt; actl\11le5," the brodlonexpiasn&lt;. ·-our~rstolr) IDII.molve
a problem withma..,. WJlbout q to report •
to...,....~-

Slid u

llle.

H&lt; added thai the depanrnr:nt ....u piO''lde
manag&lt;IS with openlions &lt;&gt;.peruse thai may not
beavailalieiotl!eurutl&gt;e&lt;:ouoeofbudgctcubocb

••,. lclof&lt;Uwoo\rsoperabOOII." hr said. "We dcpiRn&lt;rls. ·Art there
beaa ways of doing ~~ungsr h can ~
t:lle lltl.iodcpeodl:n pecm. to '" wbcin ~
be bcnefJciallmdsl31'f~

..,u

Rrst Lady Hillary Rodham Cf on, VJSIIlng Ntagara Fa! s Nov. 5,
lalks about the presfdent's health care reform pan wtth John
Naughton. nght, VICe pr8Sidentlor ct1n1Cal alfa1rs and dean of the
UB med1cal school. Naughton greets Rep . John La Fatoe as Mark
Celmer. presodent/CEO of DeGraff ~emonal Hosp tal. ~ ~-:..... ... ..

�..
4

baring aids librarie
abide tell F EC
•COOidoMu.t \18'•
.boi&lt;Y.n =-rca• cm.oflbe
Cealien , . Alba , Bia
&amp;ad lOB)
.. ill .... \18 IIIIlCh of rtl de·
...t or mo.e ~ 11 atune"'
lilnlyllucl&amp;eu _ _. m..,~ for
lilt
of
newjoumlblllllll
BA'tlca Woblde,
V1oCC
delll fix u ......., Ll'blwio&lt;s. IO&amp;d . . ,.,_

u.....-

ully SeaMe Eaeculive ~
"""""
11le
of ..
bnr) ._, bor
""""'11~~-UBcouldutt t
....,.. balf its oeQUCilS
i-rubnry loaD

roo-

-&lt;ria!J b)'
10
ocher UIUVCISIIJ'
,.,. Wilhide rold
FSEC. Tbt
four U111
Cemen ba ;e -!opal a
pncnly IICXlrS.&gt; ~&lt;nl&lt;ie 111&amp;1 II
hbnry
0
II all cc:nltt 10 11XeSS lht oolleciJons
of the ocher «nnerr,
wd
lnflotiOil, espoc..Uy
....
of JOVI·
nali and lftlliiOCRilhs. bas ue«dcd budgetIll}~ for...n.-, and UB basforced 10 clo IIOIIIt &lt;UftlDC bed. ID fht mate·
rials II arden, V011 Wlhldo wd Bill librw}
c:ompu~n~c 1 now oa the mM Maurfnme.
Mid., and the ...... NO'TlS ...nw...e lhaa "
bctnc uied 11 many ocher~ un1vavtaes.
PACUNK. 11 available
library """''JUI·
1
81 UB CliO DO'fl SUippOI1 access 10 many
ocher li)1leml, and caa becolne more cb ·
tnbubve -...1 dccen&amp;ra)lud Ill lam of IC·
ceu 10 a wide •·and) of reliOUJ'CU, she sa&gt;d

Voe Ooyao of £Dahill Mbd....,..

'*"""*" fa:ulry 10 !be - ~ how .. leldllhelll 10 oeamll .........,_..,.
10

for the maJaial !hey "aiiiZd.

~

Typing of: Tmn Papers- Theses
Dissertations - Resumes , Ere .
Programs : Profe.ssi.onal Write
Word Perfect 5 .I - Lotus 123

uli I

I

If ).;

l

~

1 b uI I ;. l c

s s( H0 c l

(; I 1.' ;. 1: :. GII,' I i: 1

offm fur Fall 1993

"This is a dynamic
environment, at a time
when prim material is
still with Us. There are
traJZSitiollS going on in
how we get material and
provide access. "

---

"lnfonnotJOJt on llu slufl basn '1 tittem!
dov., 10 the ocademiC communtl) ." von
Wahklc said ·w~
t1us htfl C'nC!oned
and dJscuned by the academac
UDity.
and "'"' wanl to unprovc oommunicaucn "
A faculty u.e .-.Is asseumeot """'"l'
bad shown lhaa 'there were a "'br:"'ll&lt;lmnJ"
number of compu~&lt;:r information SOI.U&lt;Ie$,
•'On Wabide said. and revealed abo lhaa
faculty wue~lboul00fi1Jliii"NN'­
in&amp; and aoc:ess 10 the inf&lt;llmOIJOD nc:tWort.
Ho"""""'· the
s.howed tlw a majortly
of faculty feltlhaa 75 perce.al ofdaeir Cliii'Te&lt;ll
library .-.Is wue already bctn&amp;""" b) 118.
she said.
WilbamGecrgeofMCil~ and Aerospace Engincerill&amp; aJ1ed wbelbo!r the oollecuom ar the Olher thmc University Centers
wue eqw.-.lcot 10 lJB' collections, and

""'"'Y

2222

22--

.,.. S)'SiemS and Jdc.H about

-II&lt;XZSfor......, a.-c
decade for

$pOIOded '"Tilt hbrwy a WI
amy of __.,.,.," llhc

For more n ormaiorl:
oontiCl Uilnerslty liiMJ!o's

Scbool of Mamgemeot
a! ( 16) 645-3ZOO

... •.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.·.

• Cash. 8 caJculator and two books of
stamps, wortll 8 combined value ol
$91.60, _.e r81)0ned missing Oct 25
from Pall( Hall.
• Stereo eqwprneot, valued at $520, was
reported missing Oct. 25 from fljld Jackel
Quadrangle
• A bicycle was reported mssJng Oct 25
from under a statrway in lfle Student

u,..,...

•. • . •.•.• . •.•.• .•.·.•.•.·.·- ·~·-·.·.•.•.•.•.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·:.•.•.•.•:.•.•.•.•.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.-.·.·.·.·.·

• Public SS!ery'receMiil'a repoo Oct. 26

" " " " 10

a \UI

need 10 • ... lebe$ "

Olbon -

"'We

10 make

lobwecaJ.....,..,.,ofModrrn ~
and Lllt:nbftt uUcl obout the . _ of •
a.allill&amp; PACl.lllfK at UB, 8Dd wbcdacr lbe

COIIlf*Jbdrty II IIIJows WI

Olb« I orllll·
-.....b bad lweD &lt;I\&lt;ORh lbll COIL
Slepbm Robcturcsponcled by uyt 1
1 PAOJN local~andlniOO·
aclJOm " 'I fht ocher IUVcnity Cftlla'S
IICCOUIIIed for
90 pm:e111 oflitnry
~ requ&lt;sU COllie! be
001 10 the cornmoeraal c1ol.tbtiH •'IIK:h the
"""' •&gt;
also ~~&lt;XZS
be Mid., and ool)
0011

thea dod h'bnry 1oo1n hove 10 be .....S , _
Adams of Loc:l.......:&gt;c~ t..~nry poonrood lhaa a llliUOOal COil ftlld) OD tc5eal'di1JI:nr•
"" bad """' n dUll wbil&lt; the cut 10 \18 of
nat1onal tnlerlibraty 1oom •·as ....,.. S2S a
""!""'~
t $S lcs tban the DIIXlOal a• •
~ · l PAWN
ld COil only
about SS or
a .........,.,""
'1'h is. d)namie .... '""""""'- ... tunc
,.'boo pnnt m11ena1 is lliU ,.;111
• voa
Wilhide AJCI. "'1bc:tt are ttaruruoas !01111 OD
ID bow W~ &amp;Of mllenal aod JIIV'Jdc 1Ctt0
We need flelolble p&lt;ap1c an the library suff.
and amonc foculty and II1UII&lt;DU "
In ocher FSEC busme!i P.ut !o(Kbnort,
&lt;1wr of the focolry ~ wd lhaa lhe
unplaoen&lt;anon of the Schedule 25 """'"
putet ptOJrUD ..... Pill at..!. and
11
.. .. "follt" !hot focohy had lweD II""" no
lnpu! ID o
t he dcci.-:-lk
d dill be bad
..-n~~e~~10 lhecbau of !be Sd&gt;edulc 2S ~uq&gt;~e­
mmtllioo Comnolnee 10 say lhaa the foadty
..... "displeased."Scheduue 25 irmoYUI&amp; ahead rapdly,"
NJC:Ursca Aid "Ow CDIICml . relit and
oodl-fOillllded iclt:noa said 111&amp;1 ... had "&lt;&gt;&gt;IIDitJel'ed
the FSEC 10 appou11 faculty 10 the unplemenutJoD
illcc. IX addrd 111&amp;1 imple·
meolins Scbedule 25 in•'Oived a nwnbc:rof
i
imporwlt to facully. inducbnc how
classroom 5pacc •'OUld be awp&lt;d. aod
boo&gt; quicW) biiiJ fordaueo •'OUld be sen110

stlldeo .

. . . . . . , . . . . . . . . _ _ . , . . . . . . . . . _ . _ _ _ _ . . . . .. . .

, _ ....., _ _ o.t.

IM

moll 1m·
ponan1 IQP
lhe ..
ocademlc COIIIII»&gt;Dlly.• ,..,. W lhldo "' .

1

,.,

copieS of 811 issue of ~
magaz:w&gt;e _ , SIOien from lhe maganne's
ollice in lfle Student Umon Value of lfle
nnstng publications was setal S1 .600.
• A - con!aining credit Clll'ds was
repol1ied ITliSSJng Oct. 26 from 1he Tnple
Gym in Alumni Arena

lhat.

• Public Safely charged a man Wl1h falsely
reportong a f.-e and~~ mtSChief Oct
27 alter he allegedly tampered Wllh a 'Ileal
'delec16r ., Red Jlid&lt;ef 0\Jadfailgle

I

�I
NCE AGAIN, lbe
University at Buffalo will be implementing an
lnterses ion CUrtailment Program. As in previou yems, lbe
savings to be ,realized through
lower energy consumption and
other feature of !he curtail11lClll will assist lbe University

in operatii:tg within this year'
reduced budget.
1be following ummarizes
lhe University's overall plans
for lhe 1993-94 lnter:session

Cwtai1ment Pro~. Opposite i a set of policies and
procedures that includes steps
for requesting aa emption.
• All Univasity office~ will be~ ond
ldepbooes will DOl be ans.....-..1 Ucepl by
def*tmeotaJ answeri111 macbiJies from lhe
close of business on Thursday. l.&gt;ccanba2.3. 1993 until !he bqinninz of business ·
on Monday. Jlftllal)' 3, 1994 This will
owlY 10 tbe University'• North. South.
Ridge Lea. ond llOC campuses)
• Sponsored Prognum Administratlon
offices, .lcx:ated in lhe lJB Co!JJIIIOQS. ,.ill
be open from 8:30a.m to 5:00p.m. on
December 24 and 27-31, 1993.
• Temp&lt;rature in buildinp that are
closed will be redl.oced 10 50F ond no hoc
water will be 1\'ailtbie.

•

c-

.,

......

!

-

r-:a'1l'ioolilr .............. ,.W..

a Cew ~ pM:ma loU will lbe p1owa1.
• Publioc Safcq and Univrnil)l f'Dlillel
sWJ wi1l prD\Ilcle &lt;IC!CCSs&amp;ry .,...,.... ......
~ sa&amp;ty and reeurily.
• As i . .
....,..,, ~from

~·

,.,...s lor osaqptloa

10-

10 ..... _..,...
.~ u.;.

Ol:l'lily..-.. ....... -

~

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Intersession Curtailment Policy
and Exemptipn .Procedures

....,

T

...,.......,.

. . ,...... OIJICCIIII coopei.X. ...

~,~
1

.,...

........................
_...._......-,.,nc

dlotwe.,....,ror.,....,...,_...,

f

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.-TWo ............... ....

· • IDiheevenJol-fall,CIIIyrtllld~

...,.... - - _.,.,...
could adioqlllldy r~ ot

1lll'badl

a .,.....- e
leN............... ......,..,.....le¥el
• ooy ...-for

al61F (J*dr
eunopcio&amp;J

• A - o f entl&lt;al bbrwy, D01ii!J11111i11
and campus - 1 .......,.....
be

Wiled durmc ,..,. - - - CBUiilmenl

period. Douiled mf01'1111aiii:1n ~

al tlloK ....... will be ...
""""""" ..........c~a~eiOiheU.......

.... liOClpO

~-

__
-----arilr

· ~ wbo~to111'01tOOIIIilyOf

...._ H_.,..,..,..,..._.,..,._

IPIJU . . , .

H_b!tiuo..__.,.a
--piOCIIWogld ... __,.,..

-......·lr:&gt;)aJr....-.......--

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-

LBulldlng..,....,.. _

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............ ~-cblng . .

~

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--__ . .
-... ...-

c-~ ~
- . . - . . '*-*"'~' ....... .,.,....

.. .,.,..._
~­
d~HII

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I -Building
o Hi!lyoM"""""C

~-_.,..., ....... 11'0'1'0...

...a. Send""'-**&gt;

~.. . . Hill

,........,

r ~I ~Holl

reasons.
• NonnaJ Univemry .....-..:es. sud&gt; as
food service ond campus bu in&amp;. will 001
be offered.

J.

e..,..,

ua

n&gt;KalarHol

L The"*"""''"_ ... ....,..,_,
&lt;b*lg-

a..~

-~==~~
...,.,_
!1 __ ..........,..
....,.....__._

~ -Hill

.... ....,.,.,__..,........., ...
.,._..,s..orvooe-

4. The.....,._~oa..­

L l'M _ _ _ I I a _

LSO..:.-~Ltnry
b-~Ltnry

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. .- - n-...-.,.,.~

a.-Hill
b. Siple Hill

......

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.,_...,.. ..... GI**l.

Funher cnfOI'lDIIliOft ccw::ermoc tilts
yeoo' • · - CWwliDCIII Propam
10'\U be pn.-!10 lht ~r &amp;$ well U
ill tbr ~ Tht uni-=ity •ill at
you .ttould lbere be lillY s;cpifJo:aDt

worm

J!l.aM.

ciwlges

~--·-

"''dJis - · -,..,. sw;u:ufvL

~~:~

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we

'*""

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~

l'IUJJWJ""'"*"'*""'-"' ...

all o( !be 6 "''
........ days wbich faD
I
tbe -lmeill period. !lui fto
IIOl ~"'an
will be ope11
as a RSUil of an.,.....,._ or who.,_...
maLt: allcmatl~ ............... will be
OIXJOii\lllllda • aa ....._., WDf1&lt; me.
Ounnz
year' CIIIIUJ~ period. the
~"" ~.or
be l...ockwood
Ubnr)· local&lt;d na lhe Nonb Campus This
lilt&lt;: ....n be hEaled"' tbr ~ Um•-enity
WUJier ICiiJ!l"ddOI" lndMdual uu~m..,
lhe ll!lernalc "'
....
Cilia brul~
""""- suppbc:d b)'
dcparunc:nl or war\
,.ill be t i 1glled by tbe """ SUpon'l!IO&lt;
~~"'bel dilec:o&lt;d
10 011 ~ ckadiiiC tM.c UT~~nge ·
mcnb and tbe
that employee$ ow..
~ ~m ~ 10 """"' Clunnr . - "'
more al tbe 6 &lt;boys quesoon

....., dlot

$' . . . . . . . . ._
...
bW

tle- .

e.

• Building&gt; will be locked for """"'"t~

• 1bere will be no distribution of mail 10
iodividual.s, but depiJtmcols that wUh to
receive mail durinz the auuilmom Sbould
COillliCI Cmnpos Mall Services no law

....... ..............

IIID 1211719J ot 64S-!743 10 amiiZ" for
~"''their mall"' lhe Mall

r

4

18I

I

ID

year' I

"""'* ""'"'' JIO'U~

ill maJ;.

•

Test detects cause of tooth loss
can cawoe often irreversible damage that
llllows healthy Udb to becomt loose tn tbe
supportinz boae.
-vears ago. people believed that IOOib w
in adults ...... lllllnl CIOnS&lt;&gt;&lt;JUCIIC' of.png,"
Ciancio n:lloeo. But pooneering rc:seard! ·over
!be past two decodes at UB and elsewhore bas
sbownthatspeciftcbacteriafoundinlhemaulh

ingta1 for gum or perindonJal
disease promises 10 aid in tbe
early ddectioa of this major
cause or tooth los among
adults ond in monitoring theeffectiveneso of
u..auncnt.saysaDOied UBdcotal ~Tbe Periodontal Saa:ning and Recording method (PSR) combines a pl.zslic or
metal probe 10 measure !be depth of pen·
odontal "pnckeu" around teeth with a simplified conesponding numerical chan and
sooring sy51ml, says Sebastian G. Cioncio.
DuringaPSR ..,..,ning. a dentist measures
tbe depdt of such pocl«&lt;s in sill equal so:ctioos.
orsextan~S.ofapatienfs . mouth. The measure·
mcntS then are ~ using a sooring system. ~viding a quantitltive reading of lhc
palieol's condition. The u:st helps dentists describe pariena' cooditioos in a clear. Ulrlgibk
manner and..UOWs parienl$10 gauge tbe stale
of their periodontal health m-er lime.
Ciancio. chair of tbe UB Depanment of ond tbe body's1nunune S)'SICIII in baiting therr
activity play major roles in the disease.
Peritldontico and past president of the Amcri·
"Proper nutritiOQ. brushing ond f]...,.mg
can Academy of Periodontology, i$ editor of
by lhe paden! can help revenc early &lt;!age of
Puiodot11al Updllu. the academy' new•·
the condilion~* says Cia.QCio. But Jf 11
leuer for members and general pnctitioners.
progresses unchecked, surgecy and specifoc •
He points outllult many adults have ear!_Y
antibiOii&lt;:s
in pills or rinses may be ne=·
signs of gum disease. which incl~ seMI·
sary.
Sometimes. he DOles, it may be 1100 late
ti ve aodlor red. swollen or bleeding gums.
~un'f"~'~: he e~asi1~ ~~nclilion :/CX:·_~Y.~~~~orev,e.~ . ~p~ _.

"Unrreated, the condition
can cause often
irr{!Versible da.mt:Jg.e that
allows healthy teeth to
become loose in the
supporting bone."

... -·· .... -~· .....

·- -- ~

..... -- ... -· ·· - ........... -.- ... -~~-- ... - ........ _,._.,.. __ ,.. -·

-·~

••• -- ...... - · . _ .... __ - A

�8

It's Holiday Recipe
Contest Time
Go lOOk« up--#lel fallonle holday reape, the
one lhet 1&lt;m1y IWld lnonds clamor n becauSe
~·· 11000 good. 1t CIW'I bmg you fame and
~by shoong.
yt» lJB
ool8agLes you oould ~ t po.bloshed on the
Reporter IWld
a pnze besides
0..1W11ltlal leqll! conlesl begn5 ngtC ,.,_ _

c·s openiiO facuiy. sial! and SllJdents
~e ·• jUdge a lor ISSie appeal, ease ol
preparanon. ongonallly. and liS !XlnlrbAJon 10 a

Malthy diet Wmer olthe IEqll! pjged the
best
I80Eirole a handsome ooflee 1able oook
book as a prtze
Please .,.. the IEqll! .., oook book style W!lll

ongredlenls filii. drectJOnS lollowl1g-and PIA
yoos name. address. deparlmenl. yr:u UB
IWld phone runber at !he 10p d. thB page ~
!hBre's a bnef "SIOry" abol.t the~
you created II. whallund ol tradrtlons tt
represenls. tnw rrwry years you've served • to
1'8119 revews, en: ' rd.Jde that. too
)

..........

Reporter Flec4)e Contest. 136 Crolts
at BuHalo, 14:160 Or &amp;maillO
a

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io llot llolt ........... Dr -

Sb.U. [)qll.
IW!olo s.-~.,.. 244 c.,.
~~4p...

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Loctwood Ubnry _ _ , .

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t' : b--.t-,.willt

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Baicly . Nor111~lp01.

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Md Scbolar S..V.::.. 14~A

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joel
........T'- Dola Diolrlboo..... Prof Too) Reo&gt; ... Dtp
ol Eloancol EncU&gt;cenoc.
Comc.ll Ua1" 20 Knox onh
Camp.... HO p.m

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Ale..._,

"-'-millllioa •itla f'e•
s..-d'-'t:UI.....-

11oerlw o,........ .,s-;.

.............. s..t'o&lt;a. Dr
Radard IWp. IBM T J
w...... Rnelrclt ~- 4~
Froacuk. Campu .

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• Siaplo Dr. Jc:nm.
fcr ........ ~Mo:da·
cal ScDool [)qll. ol 8 10doemillry. 11 4 -Oampuo. 4 pcm.

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Clooopoo.
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ICES

The 1993
ern .._York Medoa festival lo be held New. 12·
14,
oller lhe pubic
_.,..,.,.,.. end .n. alcnfl

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A dlrioiW-·• i*e.

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c.q-. 2 p.m. No""'"""""'

. naliOnllllypolicymalker's end comrnooicelton
actMsls .._ vtdeo and fikn wotks
be ._..,
and oomrTIJnlly-aooess p&lt;OQfMII explored
The lesllval ls spanscred bV Medill Allianoe,
ll&lt;lflalo lloledoa Resources (Squeaky WI-') end
H a - ~IWY Cenler in oory.n:t1on
wilt&gt; lhe UB Oepanment ollloledoa Study, SCAM
and the l.JpQeJe Media Poae
~ --.ts are free and OPI!f11D lhe pubic
They . !Me place a! Hallwalls. 700 MaK1 St..
Buffalo; Buffalo Media Resources. located on the
Connecbcul S1 Nrroty. and lhe Bullalo fiillon
Among spec:ial gwm
are Nolan
Bowie. professor ol ~ al
Tample t.JnoY*'Iily; OeeOee Halleck. prolessor o1
communicel&gt;cna &amp;IItle ~ ol catilamia a!
San Otego and foo.rlder ol Paper Tlget lV and
Deep Dish lV l'rafecls, one ollhe first publicaccess cable llfOIIICIS on lhe lJni1lld S1ales. Bob
o.Mne, prnlesaor ol c:ornnunocatJon .. Anliocll
College and lormet direclor ol ~ ·s PL(&gt;bc-«eess operatoor&gt;, and Tony Slone, founcle&lt; ol
Playing To Won. a natiOnWide innef-dly project
tlla1 lnVOduces urban youlh 10 , _ ledlnoloQies
The';
be pan o1 a panel at Hallwds at 8
p m New 12. us MedUI S1ody Professor Tony
Conrad · modefale lhe panel
PattJc;pants · be welcomed on Sauday.
Nov 13, at Buffalo Med.a Resources lor a spa·
ghe · pol-luck dlmer and an 11 p .m -lo-dawn
"Conema Slumber Party" and cresn scene lor out·
ol-towners and Olhels

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F!or ""'"' ;m.......,;, call64S·

6902.

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"""'-in&lt; ComdJ lb&lt;all:r.
Elliooa C&lt;&gt;mptu.. C.m·
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a..rtes llendloa • 64$-3882

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professor or clctmaloklc7. C...
Weacm RC'IC:f'Ve Uruw:mty
Medico~ School ()..2 Mc:monal
IWI. Baffalo General H - 1
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8 - National Lobon
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MedK"u•&lt;. RPC1 Hdiebo&lt; ""'"
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Jlmwdl Part. Cancer
l.rultt»&amp;e. J 2 ~30 p.m.

--.o.t.YaAtZ

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Po&lt;try lladito&amp;. Mod Wali&gt;ce .
cd.Jtor of Su•mo- Uld author of
C~IOIU from SIIJI'IIimt '"

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HloWoyo- 11b&lt;tu Pia·
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Campus. s·»-7 p.m. s~
b) tht lnleTI\.I.Uona.l Bus.neu

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Allen ReoW Hall
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for day.J.04oy JIC"'UIM of business open110m, ~ fi-.ul openuon of CftllD
and for

office financw systems and c"" ·
m&gt;1 .,.,....._. He will

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sonnet and equ•pmmliO user Deed
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holds t.:htlor'sllld mosaer's depoes 111 to...... fi'Dm UB
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Dr. MoryTIIIh.

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l&gt;ivkioo. Bmtol Myen Squibb.

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S)TIICUSC. HaUeboe Audltanum.
RPCI 12.30 p.m.

-

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PnJr....- .... Cluolr-S&lt;&gt;c&gt;&lt;&gt;lacy. l'owlt&amp;lf-3107

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Golde"
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Q&gt;.sponoored by
Red
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tion conUICl Owies 8erm&amp;eitl

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PIIYACSAJeCOl.U"qqlll•
Sdr~ Crilicalil1.~ .•::

,..,.,..-ity pion. tk will ha.. n:spoasibibll&lt;s ID buildiJt&amp;
ood for !DIIIDiir:naJl&lt; oldie plonl 's ~ . . . . . . - , will .........e facility ........ R:IIIOdd.iacKqlc&lt;has ot.:htlor's dq:roeintbearlllli- JDOIIIF·
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11-.r ood
. kdJnoiccy, liom UB. He- worbd in die
UB Dl:prtmall ol'l'he:atllor IDd Doolcte since 1118:5 • ...,.,_
la:bnical diftiCior ond dileclar ol pat.,._ l'acililieS.

c-.....,.

VIDEO

BY TERESA GETTER

A screening olllideo wor1&lt;s by lhe tale Teresa Getter. a

Oepartmem o1 Media SIUdy 1eact1•ng assiStant. will be
presented Nov. 16 at 8 p.m 1n !he Fine Arts Center
~~~~-.~~..~-~-~.111 . 25: .· .
..

ally~Saentt.

...... .

"''IP-3011. Ubnry
c - l o a Toduriciu (SL1, ln1d"UU ~ iooal 0,..
porttuii.Y)-Uoi...-.jly ....- -.
.... """'"' fP-3082

•.•• · .•

President

Gt-.

speaker 81 naturalization

ceremony Nov. 4 in U.S. Oislrict Coon, welcomes Prahba Narayana, 1989 ~ graduate of UB, as Mahesll Sankaran looks an. "let
us learn from you and be strengthened by
you,· Greiner told the new cllizens..

·.·. , ,

�-u

Chlorinated water, high fluid
intake linked to bladder cancer
WHO drillk
W:ae quantibes or
Ouidl every day
have • create:r
dlaDced devdo!&gt;blldder- CIDCOr dian men
OOIISUIIIefewbe-.es,IDd~

rinlledlllpwllerma::tybea
1r1
utina f&amp;&lt;llar, a UB researo1i

bas fOUDd.

Total Ouid con mpuon lD·
eluded all alcoholic bevcrqe ,
boaled be
• ooda, mi co(.
fee, lea, juice~ and W!~Ut. 8e-acea from tap wascr were ddined
.. coffee, hoc and cold tea. 15 perDeDI offroz.cn I'CCCilJUtuted Gnll&amp;e
juice, 37.5 percent of all odie&lt;
Jui&lt;les. and wat.u taken directly
from lbe 111p. Tap-wascr bevenaes

or

"Hypotheses that
bladder-cancer' risk
or is associated with
long-tenn inge tion
daily.
Brealdq down comumpcion of chlorinated
into tap IDd DDD-up aoun:es of
surface water are
liquid. lbe results gest dw 11p
wascr is an inclepeoclcnt ri factor
supported by
foe blldder- cancer, with the IWOcialionbeillg~lhole
who bad neva $lOOked ci&amp;arettes. • epidemiologic and )
Results
the
•
·Jbcd
in Arv:hiws of Environm~tttal
Htalllt,
w a two to four tunes
greasa biadder-&lt;:ancU risk ill males
wbo clnnk more than 14 eupo
Ouid per day COCIIf*'Od to males
wbo drank Je !ban IC\'ell C\lp5

Tbe Sllldy, led by JobD E. Vena,
UB assoc:lak profeucr
social
IDd preventive medicine, &gt;UppotU
finding from previous r&lt;leai'Cb
conducted in the United States.

or

experimental

studies."

Denmark a.nd Oerm-any th11
showed a relationship bet,.een

blldder- cancer IDd fluid IDtake,
and IJIOiber tudy showing I lip
water-bladder cancer associauoa

V

ena 's group compared the
Ouid con umption of 351
wbite men WJth confirmed cases of
bladder cancer, dtagnosed bet-.een
1979-19 5, withthe0utdintake of
855 men without cancer. All study
bjec:ts were 35-90 years old IDd
lived in Ene, Ni~ and Monroe
counties in Western 'ew Vorl&lt;.
lnfocmatioa oo liquid consumption wu denved from data collected by penonal inlervoews for
lbeWestem ewYorl&lt;OieiStud .

-L-

were broken down furtber onto
those made with boiled "'""' unbeated water.
Researchers allio&lt;Xlltlplml Outd
intake and cancer n ••
and oon...ool.crs. and conducted
separate analyres for subJCCU O\-et
and under 65 years of age.
Tbe results or the s.tudy """"·ed
no associatioo between any ab&gt;hobc beYer~&amp;cs or bottled ~­
ages and the ri ofbladder cancer.
Ho,.~•er. there was 1 5lrOll&amp;
lillk bet-.een toW Ouid ontake and
tbe ri ofbladdereancer, WJth the
ruk tnereiSlllg u consumpuoo increued in both age groups

""""en

Tbe lltr'OilFit effect appeared
the
err age poup Men
under 6S who
the
l.tquidi--1' to 49 &lt;:vp5 a day-.re
· nmcs ltkely 10 develop
blldder-.,.,.,.lban !hole ..too consumed ..,..., or fe
&lt;:vp5 a day
lathe ov-er-65 age poup. the mlc 11
Ul

theboJbest OlllllliUmptiOC ~· about three u
greasa !ban at
thelo
le&gt;ds
l:&gt;ru!boa lip wat.u"' IUOnciY
I1SIOCI8Ied wtth bladder-ancern
lD both age groupo
Cftl .aJd the
connecuoo bet...,.n bladder cancer and Outd con urnpt&gt;011 could be
~lated 10 the tap-•ater rompoocnt
and~-thellhlorme

ured 1D dt nftc:tthe "ller and carcinoceruc c:ompoomd fOUDd in ,.....

face

water

- Hypotheses that blldder--a10·
1 ISSOC1aled
1111 lon&amp;tertn once 1100 of cblonoa.ted
urface "ater an ppontd by
epodemiologic and ••J&gt;CO.-ntal
Wldoe ," be saKI "Ho toncally.
moot urface w ters have been
ueated With cblonne to ooatroliDJ· ~

cer n

croboolopc cootamJDIIJOO "
Most of the otudy group bad 3
ured chlorinated pabloc water 90
pe=nt of tlletr loves
~
"Chlonne reacts ,.,th a host of ~
c:anccr"""""""cbenucals, ux.iud- llll! manmade cbenucals from on- ~
dustnal and muotctpal WilSie
~
or ruooJT and natunll) occumng
orprucsub5lance&gt;toproducecblohas been plagued ""h e&gt;ce&gt; nulnetlU and I O~IC cbmucal poiJurinated orpruc c:ornpouncli.- ....
UOO. be noled "Eighteen powbk,
wei. "Trihalornethane&gt;antbemost
probable or deforute human carcommonly oc:cumng organ•c
cmogens ha•e been odenufoed on
found 10 dn!Wog ,..ter. and ap•aryon,g concentrauons on the f1npear 1D the boghtu concentnUOOii
lbesecompounch an IDJUC and cartlbcd dnnl...tn&amp; "lier taken fmm
Lake Ontano,- be \ltd
anogcmc tolnllnal Ullugb do&gt;Cs Tbe result&gt; of &lt;In &gt;tud} StJe&lt;i
be Great Lole Ba&gt;on, onr of
the urgent need for furlbertn•'&gt;U ·
the large 1 f~•h oouroe&gt; of
gation. and for uppon for tbe
drinking ••ater tn the orld and the
Ntagan Rover Remedtal Actton
source of 11p ..-ater 10 tht nudy.
Plan and the n:comrneodatiom of

i

,..Iter

T

the lntem11100al JOUil COilllllti"""· Vet~~ SU2d. Bocb "''f eb0&gt;1·
naun the dJSc:bar~ pen» &lt;~eDt
IOUC CbtmtcaJ IDI&lt;&gt; the Great

or

l...alineco&gt;)IUm.
Be&gt;odes Vena,

8 RUdy ~ ­
oeard&gt;m. ' luck Suoo Gnbua•.
Jo Frelodenbelm. J...,.. MarWll
ManaZoelaa). and My a · all or the Deparunent orSocw and
l're\'ellll\e Medicine, and Gerald
Sufn11. clwr or the t:::lepertmear or
Uroloc)

Study may ·help cut sepsis death rate in hospital patients

E

LDERLY PATIE TS
who develop the bacterial

infection sep5i from rei·

piratory ailments ,.bile
hospitalized have bigber monality
rates !ban patients -.ho develop
sepsis from olber infection group&lt;.
acx:ording to a study by UB's Center for P!wmaooepidemiology Research.
Sepsis. wbicbaiTeru""-eralbundred thousand hospital patients annually in the United Swes. is the
most common cause death in inlellSive care units. said Thaddeus It
Gruela, dir&lt;lcU or lbe Cent.u for
Pbanbacoepidemiology Research
and a U8 assistanl professor of pharmacy, wbo was principal illvcstigatoroo the 5tll:ly.
Grasda said the sn.dy, wbicb involveddlla from I,7S8patienls ill86
hospilals. re&gt;aledmortality!IICS1blt
V1ricd widdydepeodin&amp;ontheiOUitC
of the sepsis infcttion.
Patients with .epsissyndrome ac-

or

quir&lt;d from respuatory tniCI tnfecbaos, such asbospital-acquindpneumonia, had the~ morulity rate
at 59.3 pen:enl Cancer pauenu bad
the ow highest rate. 55.8 pen:enl
Those who developed sepsis from
• community-a:quired urinary tniCI
infection (a rommoo form or the
infection) bad the lo\\CS1 moruhty
rate at 15.4 pen:enl
Morta!Jty rates for paliCDIS who
acquired sepsis from OCher onfec-

tions were:
• 46.4pen:entforhospital-acqwred
uriJwy tr1ICI infedioru;.
• 4S.8 peroent for pllients Wlth 11&gt;-

inadcoce or
sepsis in different types ol pll1ml
populaooos, the U8 udy ..-ed
p1bt:Dts mceiving antibool.lC&gt; for suspected or doowncnted cases or gram
ne;ptive infccuons that can lead to
1iep51$. Tbe palients ..,., followed
from the beginmog or their ~rea~­
ment for infectJOo unol thetr ducharg&lt;: from the hospital or death

.rtons 10 tdentify the

"Pauents

woth rnparaiOr) IDfecIKXIS had the lughest nsk of

death. .. they !ihould be ~cando ­

dates for treatment." said Gmela.
Many hospital patients have m·
dominal infedioru;,
fections. be explained. but a relatively mall pereeo'-&amp;e develop
• 36.7 peroent for patients "~Ill !ilcin
sepsis syndrome and septic shod.
infections.
Of thore who develop septic shod.
• 35.9 pen:ent for gram..neprive
• ~ pera:oc:age die.
biCierania inclus;ive aD liOIIJ&lt;'CS.
'We don't bave a good dil(liiOIIic
• 28.3 peroent for respiralory lrliCt ·
tell for~ who is goinc 10
~acquiredinanuninehome.
.,.,.,-.from
mop now beq de\d• 24.6 peroent for prienu with urioped for sepsis." bt said. "The new
nary tr1ICI infcclioos acquired in •
&lt;Wp are (ICing to be WI)! expensive.
nwWl&amp;home.
nl doaats need 10 "'-who should
• 20.6 pc:rc:ent for trauma patienu.
One of the largest m .olti-&lt;:ent.u nl shoukfool receive them."

or

The U8 study~.......-.

preYJOU&gt;Iy unavadallle mfor:morioo
Wllb wt.a. health-are po:Mtlers will
now be able 10 malr.e lhooe doaslonL
OOcal tna1s mquired 10 - the
nldlicacyolne-. !rqlliis&lt;Wp
prior 10 bwlppltMII for mormmg
III"QQYe)'DiqiP:!', .,.,.,'jlMlaiiSfooa

lhooeintheUBstudy Tbe . . . . . , .
ol sotJJccts "' cJuuoool trials aJD&lt;b:ted
on drug trcatmeniS forsq:&gt;Sb 1m t-1
55. "itile tha m the U8 ~ """'68.
Gnosda Slid.
-Wbeii physcan;
resulb of
c~rucal tnal they must figure OUI
ho" to extBpOialr from those ~­
""" 10 their poliern.- be added.
"We souglliiO Jrid&amp;e the gap beno,._, reoults ill the poliora ill c!Jn cal tnals and ouults ill patients
physiCians are"""" likdy 10-.Sepsis may develop in hospital
patients ..too,.,..,.,. any or a..,;.
&lt;lY
infections. From
··
IDfectioo site. the ~ can invade lbe rest or the body. If the
~ peneu11loe the bloodstream.

""*'

or

endotoxins""' releasedtbaiCincause

organ failune or dellb. T CIJIJUitlym~WI&lt;Illkf'*

IOeod&lt;Wol&lt;l.DSandpewnl them from

do1QI
clamage.
Tbe study was ooaduo:lled ftOiliJII
tbec--bl'two , 1

'"'""*o

R.-dt'·~~

n.. on1y

dbt ill the u.S

.........ide""""""'
"'"""" l,l
522 baipiDio is orp~in

ruz.ed to c:on&lt;b1 srudioodhow hollpilaltzed poocm n:a:lto . . . .
Pl•uo.,q*tr'•*4«r • a ·lda-D&gt;'d) OC.. &lt;ilcpline
ef.
(cct&gt; "' &amp;ugs 00 specifiC pll1ml
poJlUIIGons.
s....,.,.,..s in.,.,. by
fmm
l'fiza- Coop. v.i&gt;idt is cleYd&lt;lpiQa a
......- for lqlllis. the SIUdy also ~ by raeardol:n •
Otikkat' Hoopa~ "' 8ulfalo. ..
Sc:bool oOdedicine aDd ruoa..tial
Scieaccs11 UB,
Wltilellol-

"-IIIDDiiDIS

a.,...

S.:....

pillliDT-.Cbe~ot"Ge.­

gi&amp;.the MltoiDI Colloe&lt;dGeorpa.
the Univmity ol tdic:bipt 1116 t1oe
Univasity
Micbigan Medical

Center, .. .

or

.

.

. 0

�- u . ....

--.-u

l.ettB
Get Set to Run in the
20th Annual Turkey Trot
llllmlll:
The 20ih AnooaJ Turkey Trot
be held
Sunday, Nov 14 The 2 2..mlle run
beg at 11 a m near the rear entrance
of Alumni Ar- on Websleo' Road . Thts
yNr's categorteS onclude male unde&lt; graduate. female IJ'ldergradua a, male
gradua • female gradua , male lacully/5talf, female facu
all, male tewn
{lour people), and female learn (lour
people)
For more lnformabeln and applocabons, stop by 130 Alumni Ar-. Of call
645-2286 Entnes are free of charge

Entry deadline is 10 30 a m
the race

;:;Jday.

So, come on OUI and try to Mn
seW a T-shirt andJOf a tur1&lt;ey
•
See you Nov 14 at 11 a m.t

-

---~LA'IIIAIIi

~­

Clarifying a Statement
on S eech Codes

llllmlll:
In the well-written article on the ~Meting
of the Executrve Committee of the Faculty Senate (Rspon81, Oct 28. 1993). I
was represented thOUgh nof Quoted as
sa)'lllg
I did not beloeve that UB
~ a speech code to address a
mative actoon ossues I bel_, that
statement could bene~ lrO&lt;n SO&lt;ne clar ~
focabeln
In my formal statement. WhiCh 1 read
to the FSEC, I confined mysen to two
lhemeS One had IO dO WI
the makeup of the COflYTlfnee . and the other
called for mtrospectiOO on the pan of
the FSEC itsen '" the area of equal opponunt!y and affirmaiM! actoon I m.n
those two themes were well reported ,
partocularty the latter
I behave the issue of a speech code
os too complex to make a categorocal
statement as to ns need or not, on our
campus Any oonS&gt;de&lt;atoon of a speech
code ommed•atety onVOI&lt;es debate on
Flrst Amendment Roghts Lawyers, JU·
rosts , philosophers, soc.at scoentosts
theofogoans and the less sophostocated
kke me. debate the ossues and argue, or
argue about poiiCoes and lnogabeln pertaonong to First Amendment roghts . First
Amendment nghts of free speech are
and have been fE!alously guarded
On the other hand, the couns have
found occasoon to declare hmns on such
roghts on the interest of the healttl and
wenare of soclely. These tnC1ude the
wall-known restnction on the nght 10
fore In a crowded theater· pror~eople ,
when one knows no such danger exists
Crommal and partiCUlarly ton cases recognoze that the nght of expressoon IS not
unllmoted
lr~ereasongly. sexual harassment
charges are being made mostly, (and
nghtly. I daresay) aimed at Dnendmg
males The message is that one is not
vouchsafed to speak as one Will without
regard for the feehngs, and well-be1ng
of the opposite sex So on sum. there are
and should be lirlllts The task IS to balance roghts and protectoon under our
legal system. and the best moral and
eth1cal pnr~eiples we know
I accept respo11sibility for lack of
clarny on my par1 ' beheve that some
rrusunderstanding grew out of a queshon pu1 to me OUiside the two them8S to
Whoch I anempted to confine mysen. In
respons~ I went back a few years, cijed
Vlgnenes of furtively wrmen eJq&gt;ressions
on campus that I found mean. despicable. and potentially harmful
On speaking with someone whose

cempus ttxpenence
more globe!
mn~. I toond that IUch fT18AaQII&amp;
were not confined to my area of obMrvaoon Of ClOUf'88 1obf8Cied to auch
amenl$,

tnen .-.d now To me. IUch

remarka have no piece on a e&lt;v1hZad
society Thai may have orwoked an mWhen •
oonvnent was made abOUt
undell'abd of a speech code. I
po111 ed out that lf1 my rematl(s that t dod

-oe of &amp;peech code advoc8cy

not address that topic I made the d
clamer because I beJ18V8 IUch a 08CI·

aion ShOUld be made only aft111 car
dehberabOnS ar00no and by. repr-.
ta11ve aectO&lt;s on the campus
But abOUt the exwnples of WhiCh I
spoke I felt that ll:nod r~ or pasSIVIty was mapproprlate I atoll do That
does not , _ , malctWlg ha ed
hatred or bo 8fMSS
bcttemesa
Hatred and ~ are destructille
forces They don1 butld the good IIOC&gt;ety They erode our t&gt;urnanfty and are to
be aVOided Now 1have no o1tus100 that
anyone cares what I thlrW&lt; about erry of
but thai my po&amp;itlon
Finally. I am trying to
1hat what·
ever my penonaJ stance on the ISSUe of
a spMch code for UB. d was not addressed at the senate rMetlllO nor on
the spece of this letter But JUSitee, fa~­
ness, equality. mutual respect. respon~
bilny, and at tme the nglltong of some
wrongs was. and IS

)

that

·yen

What:S a Success
IEIIInMI:
On Sept 14 . Pres&gt; dent Greoner spoke
for 35 monutes on hos vrsoon of how to
make US a ·pa hbreakong" urwersny
The speech lays the conceptuaiQ!ound·
work for a seroes of admorus ratrve acbOns thatth1s admonostration feels wdl
achoeve the goal of an outstand1110 uni·
vers1ty Fo&lt; many 1nslde this un~versny
the speech IS roch on detaol and ompllca·
toons lor the way that faculty. students
and staff onteract But wnat about those
OUisode UB? Or those Who don1 pey
much attenbeln to adm1mstrabve actM·
toes? How dO they fudge whether the
plans are a success? The speech was
probably unfathomable for the average
tal(payer Who 1&lt;nows lntle of the academoc process and only shghtly more
comprehensible lor most stUdents So to
fill tfus gap and to sllmUiate d1scuss10fl.
debate or even angry 1nvectove. I propose the folloWing measures of success

Happy U~ Students
AJ. the and of this process (should rt ever
end) undergraduates woll feel much
better about this onstrtutlOf\ They woll be

able to get courses on ma)Ois they
largely fmd ontellectuaJiy sttmulattng
They have good reasons 10 beloeve that
whatever theor race . ethniC background
Of relogion . they have as good a chance
of success at UB as anyone else They
Will have fond memoroes of some professors and w111 generally feel that theor
professors pay some anentlon to them
even d research takes a h1gher proorny
They will have had a few frustratoons
With S1udent tole but WIU not remember
them tor tong Generally they woll feel
that sooner or later the 1nstnutoon responds to reasonable comptaonts abOut
whatever They will be happy that they
chose UB aver theor alternatives whoch
1nclude many of the "Bog 10" schools .A
lew of theor froends whO went to expenSIVe priVate schools will wonder Why
they are paying all th1s money for the
same thing they can get a UB
Happy Graduate Students
Graduate students w1ll feel thai UB pre&gt;-

vodon a nch enw0fY111101to develop
" onteltect 10 the ~ Where they can
hope to tTIIIk8 contrbJ!IonS to
foelds They feel tha " ' - wotl&lt; w the
f.culty IS mponan! and
10
eome audtenee The probe
11 rea·
aonably high that they woll be able to
fond I powoon that ut IIZS. the
they
develop here The SIUdefU Who do the
bNt work haYe a good chafiCa of
act1oeY1ng IIICIA!y posrtJOnl at the best
ac:edemlc lfl&amp;IJIUtlonS
hera they
cnoc- not to exp!Ofe opportuno s tor
graduate IIUd.es at olhe&lt; lnStdutiOnS
and are enthuSIUliC when proepect
graduate s udents 11181! campus
....., FI!CIIIty

Junoor faculty are W\lilng 10 cane to UB
as tong as the fellel of compenutoon 1s
roughly eQUIValent to the batter ·research ontansn~e" unMif1ll
US occasoondy altlacls new f'tl 0 's whO are
thougl'« of as on the lOP 5' of all new
f'tl 0 's and typocally attracta people "'
the top 5-15% Tenured f.cutty are al·

qys happy ~ they can get 1'88 par1&lt;ng
The ...,_Sily pays for more free pwi&lt;ng by charglllO an exorbollnt tee tor an
e4aborate rwnep~a~e on each faculty
membef's door (that only tenured lllCIAty
purchase) For
1acu11y the
enwonment IS solfiCtently SbmUiattng so
that faculty at other r - c h uno~ottes
teel they rrust pay some ananllon 10 the
pubhcabelns produced by US faculty
Occasionally there IS an Idea that has
wide n!luaoce and has dramatiC effect on how people on a foeld lhlfllt about
an ossue Faculty try to ta theor choldren
mto studying at UB

-en

SEFAcampaigne

....,Mitll

~ .......... hV ... .,IRR~ 1*1 of., II1XlfWt ....-prila
lftlA'tlllly lDputaahlr~l'l

n.y

,..~_...bac81.-

..

~

tlenll . . . . . rdhlr-..ok•~
-~by~ln ... ~ Whirl
t-ey do
ollon Iran,.. PI"-_.,.
IWy . . rnor.lll!ly 10 ~ twn twliO

acalllltwn
The . . . . .

u.:....., ,.....,..,.

T~ , _ n:rt 0/Yf '-d of l.8 b.t

wo-retfareida'b~~
~10,...., .... ~ dlnwldiiOr

mora rmnev rTWil by

rrw-ooe bplln.

a:trt••*" •IO
(lha,...,..
.........

ntora hippy) T~wl'o- ~
of . . . . . . . . . .. . . . _ ........
lllhlc~or ,..;gon,,.... cttian

•t.e.
""'r::or.:lercl!ncl twn

,_.good. chinle

of~

IW¥lfWellle Tawp&lt;IIIO!II'S-~10..,._
,.. ~ idlla IIlii
~
QIOUI bilcaJI!IB fll!nY
know
!hlr ldea.~byhl....,....
~-l.8 ..... 1.-.....-.oedhlr
. _ Mlrt, of him hiM!
pcllilll.e
~ CXJ'UCI
twt.:uly ~
t.. _,l.8 rraw:red n tw naiiCnll

.:me_.,

~ano,.. pal!ty.- Mlnr~DP~¥"

know ....... ~-...l.8. ,.;,ed
tVa" lhan I - n 1993 rod n:rt JAil becauae c • a good \II!ILe lOr fla Ullon
AUrn tlri 1 ~ 10 ..._, ll'ad&lt; cia
uprarg .rot~~! cl facia~ l.8 lobe
and mora \IOU~,... "Ul• a diWm good
~·

exceeding g~

�_...
etwor'
Pharmacy
School program
on diabetes

The ......... ai to ..........,the
'-'hin&amp; liltill of primlty care
c-Ity- Old) .. .
SpnMorcd by cht J'n-r
0..., llelourco Cmtet ODd"""'
_..., ,byebe T~ Meeti..,-

0

-

The UB .Scboolorfbar.
macy ""'" p'Oalll • pro-

pmmopdllie~oa

diabetes
· from I Lm. ;ll)
3:30p.m. Nov. Jl, ill lhr
Sllmdoo! lDo Buffllo l\irpon.
2040 *IMAve..~
The Jl&lt;OJdlll. "Updllie 011
~N-PJ&lt;d.• wiU
focus oa lhr role of !be rbma-

,..

cill in C811a~ diabdes
pobcnlllld •
· or lbc mem pincipl&lt;s J types 1 onil n
difease.
..,....,_ ;,
""'~or &lt;babtteol a1
will be ditcu~ iodlllli~ •
recall study !hal found lbolliJhl
eootrol blood gl....,e 'n sul!S in
!OignifJCanl rediiCiim in 'lbc ri of
retinopathy. nqJivopllby ODd
oeuropalhy.
fiacu.by members w(U inch&gt;dr
Ceo&gt;dit F. Sleil, dinialllld instilutionld manqer of l'banruocy
Comtc Enl&lt;:rpriteo.IRaymond A.
Eder. llOOidinalor of fJU&amp;Ii\Y ....
SUillll&lt;e ODd educoilion II Mercy
Rospilal of Pii!SburP ODd on
ossociale profesaor of plw:macy
11 Duqucsoc Uni....-.ily, and Pat
Kreuu:r-Ad:uns. • registered
n....., wiJh !be lloduinger
Mlt.l1nbcim0orp.

or

For-~.,.,.,...,.

!be UB l'barmacy Continuing
Education OffJCeJOI 645-3931.

Seller to lecture
on immigration
concerns

0

Ma:doe Seller, a proftssor
of social fouudalioos m lbc
Graduate School or Education.
will d!Ter an historical perspective 011 recent Q)O(lOf'(l$ .oout
irnr:niplioo in a
lednn:1obe
bcld at 4 p.m. 011
Thursday, _Nov.

18. in 209 Baldy
Hall on lbc
Nurtb CampliS.
Thekctun:,
,cntilled "Closing
lhc Gar.e...Again.• 6 flee and
open to lbc poblic.. II is sporu;cred
by !be UB Gradualc School of
Education Alumni Association.
Seller is a faculty member in
lbc 0epartmco1 or Educatiooal
Organization, Administration and
Policy in lbe Gnduar.e School or
Education. Her reo&lt;;arct~lw focused on lbe hisn&gt;ry of education.
immigrants ODd lbc education of
minorities and women.

Doctor-patient
communication
workshop set

0

The Miles Pbysician-Palieol Communication
Wo.tsbop ""'" be held [)cc. 7
from I: 15-4:30 p.m. in lh&lt;

Lippschutt Room ,&lt;Room 1!5)
CFS .o.ddition. South Campus.

Prop-. it will be~
by IUduad s.tin . ....JO. director. Pedi.uic Ncdical Sludenl
Educalion. aod cooolinal«.

Tachin&amp; £11'e&lt;:li¥CIICOSI"rnJram,
Prtmary Care Resoun:e c--.
The IJRWIIll1.

......-s by lbe

UB Scbool or ~IDe ODd Biomcdic::ll Sciemt:l. qualif.IC:t for- J
boars of Calqtty I crediiiDWord
lbe Pbysic:ian' Rtoognilloo
Awwd of !be AMA. h is xcqliabk f01 ) pn:raihcd hours h)' cht
An&gt;etio:M Academy or Family
Physicians. A $15 fee ""'" be

.::b.lup!d. For more infomwjon
CAll 829-3176 or fu ·829-2927 .

Volleyball
event to feature
top teams
The univenity wiU play
hDSl 10 national men·s
volleyball powcn l'enJI. Swe and
lbc Uoivenity of Soutbbv California, Friday. ov. 12 Ill 7:30
p.m. in Alumni Arena.
Tablxd as tiM&gt; of,lhelllp propm mlhciXIU'llr)'.lbeNlalny
U...on6T
..... _ . _ _

0

,.,.,... ......, in the tdion's Top 10.
wilb Ptm s.: IDihing lhin:l• 'lhe
NCAA OMsion I Nobonal~
onslip; beld. UClA
USC, IIaliooal ctwnpion in
1990 an&lt;hunner-up in 1991 . returnS 'five WlrlerS fn:m lasl year· s
squid whdt fmisbed lbe""""""
wilha18-12"""'"'andaNo. 7
nmk:ing in lbe final coacheo • poll
Tdels.., availabl&lt; • lh&lt; UB
Stadium TO.:. 00'10e. Nor1b Qm.
PJS. Ma!day lbrouJ!Il F1iday. from
~JOa.nuo4:30p.m. Tddsan:
ll&gt;oa•11ilabieh)' ~the U8
Tdtt Offia: ol,645~;
M.-a.tJ on6 VISA""' ao::qmi
Price$ are $1, reserved. $5.
general admi sian. and $4, UB
student$ wilh a valid •wdenl J.D .
Groups of 20 01 more can 10M:
advantage or S4 group ra~e .

Social work
alumni honor
Sara Murphy
Sara A. Marphy, 5Upavi,.,.. of lbe school iD!en'eO·
lloo service and dropoul
programs for Catholic Owitics
orBuffllo. has received 1be
Alumni Associalioo Awllltl from
lbc Social Wort Alumni Associalloo of tbe UB School or Social
W¢. .,..urphy, who received lbc
awllltl allbe alumni association's
28111 annual Social Wort Day
Dinner on Oct. 21. was booored
for her wad: in lbc community
· and her commitment 10 lbe Social
Wort Alumni Assoc:W.ioo.
....urphy, who joined Catholic
Olarities in 1961. received •
master's degree in social wad:
from liB in 1967.
~~ ll&gt;oinslalled new

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lillld&lt;m in.mat wed puoibons in
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..,._., professor of edLCallonal orgarizalion. ..
ad......,,•;..IISiraiD"""'"'
and poj!cy. discussed hiS MW book, "The Varnished Trutl," in whi:lh he
says lnAIHelling IS moraly overrated and l)1ng is necessary for fTIEI'UI
health and SOCial~ in inlervoews on WHVY Radio and W&gt;\'08
Radio. bach If] Pl-.ladelphia; KOA Radio in OerMl&lt;, KlRO Radio., .Seal)le and 0077 Radio on Calgary. Alberla. The book was~ in The
Philadelphta lnqurer.

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exhibi6on MIOOr. l'le """"a~

Caaolty member acd head of""'
Dq1. of Social Work acd So::iology
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Olllnwce..N.C..Idm: joining U8
in 1992. IY ....,.;Wid a bodlolor's
degr&lt;r from SL Alxlrews Olllqje.
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wort from""' Univmily cL Nor1b
Clrolina. O&gt;apol Hill. and . doctor. . from lbe~ofToron10.

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chermlherapy mmedlately aller surgay, and •esearch on a ,_ .oo11&gt;
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led by Ou!frlojr also was reponed n Medical Ttb.ne.
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,._ - . director ol !he medical sohOors office al &lt;IIlii healll. and
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1rom urban medical CEf1terS to rural areas.
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81 group of colleagues lhaiiOoused 00 how &lt;nfanls reoognze ~
panems was fean.ed "' artiCles on 5elleral newspapen;, l1cluding The
Boston GJaOe. Chcago roo.- and !he E&lt;tnmron ..tunaj,
A tribute 1D lhe late Renal:ssan:le ITlJSIC scholar Howan:l Mayer llnwwl
by - , _ ., pmlessof olm..osoc, was discussed in "'assicaa Noles"
in lhe Music Section ol The Bostoo Globe.
- ~by the UB

'"""''S Bureau

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1 am lnessaObratso\&amp;. 49yeanold. I amateacherofmus~e Nov. I am . -.. 1fe My hfe1 fuU
of bobl&gt;lco and social acliVIIleS. I am toteresU:d m w problem of femurum and lb luflel} ,.
dtffertot coullllleS. I am aleltder of the fe1Dlru51 club,
- · · UcJ&gt;t." in T..,.
I am marne&lt;1 My husband i on orc:bileCI. He wub in his own .uclulectural firm.
We have two chlldrea: a &lt;~au&amp;tw:r and 1 soo Our d:lugblcr' 111111£ 1 N.u.ha She • · 2f&gt; yean
old She IS In uoderpaduale II
uru~erslly ofTver She IS. memherof"Womeo's U&amp;lll.My 5011' 5 name I Denis He IS 23 He I I wor\D.
I am food of clus.ICal music My f1""""' composer1&gt; an: Bacb. ~-en. Mozart. Sehubett.
MAhler. etc.
Readi111 boob u my fl&gt;&lt;lf'lte hobby----fllliiO&lt;Opit) and an My (IV&lt;lf'ltoe writen- Oooloevsl •
Herman Hesse. lllomas Mann. de
1 would Wu: to learn l1lOI'e aboul how people live tn cbffc:rent parts of our .....:wid.
My address: Ruma 170023, Tver. UL Leruna 43.1:v. 38.

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I am Valentina U pensbya. 42 yean old. My husband. Grqory. and I have nr.o
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and Paul (I 0), and 1 cat. MOOIT)'. I am an tiiOCilte prof....,.. of .ocial and politic*~ acaence II. T ....
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..t Furuly
Studiel.wsocialhi510r}'ofRossianwomen. ..,.Heminismill
. lamlbepuidmloflbeT,..,.
femmi51 club, ·women·, Upt,• WbJch my friends and I 01Jiniud two yean 1110Reading boob on lu tory.philooopbyand art " my f1vorilehobby. l amfondofdamcal
art and theater, and would litt to learn IDOI't
how people hve ill different paruofour wortd
My husband is anelectncaleagioeer. He is foadofboob, 100.81111 bicy&lt;:lm£. We orelft!'ll fri&lt;ats.
Our llddres · Ru 11 17000. Tver, UL. TI'CIChsviatsk&amp;i 31130, h . I I.
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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>SUNY .hudget .request includes 6.6 percent increase for UB

1i
cuts
X.qy Exposure
UB one of few U.S.
sites offering new
scoriOSis

assessments

..

technique .

-

Greiner Outlines

'S~gjc

g'

President tells PSS of plans for human, capita development
&lt;Tl'"" the idal ph) &lt;.a! plant. Gm.ner

Asked wtr.. be woold do , f be had It&gt;&lt; ~~~· '''
cned the need for a tudonl Sen ttt' Bu.ddmt; 10 .;sUO"-

lSCUSSIO of strategic planning for the
university and an ideal set of nt0W construction project highlighted President Greiner'
appearance Oct 26 before the Profe sional
Staff Senate in Uni ersity Inn and Conference Center.
Greiner noted tbc current proces&gt; of ""'t&lt;W and redefimtj(m
under way follo••ing his Sept. 14 addr&lt;ss to tbc Voting Facuby and Provosa AMon . Blocb 's
OcL Stalkbcf&lt;R th&lt;FocultySemruo. "llricd 10 laytbc fotmdarionforsomestrategic thinl.'mg a
the universily marches toward the next cenrury," Greiner said.
The process continues OY , 16 at 2
p.m. in 200 The Commons with a publk
forum featuring ll:K president. Provost
Bloch and Sentor Vice Pre.;denl Robcn
J. Wagner during a meeting of the Fac-

ulty Senare.
~we .Wiy have to il!ink ahead and
lay the foundation for the process of
development over the next ren years."
Greiner said. '' in which we do a little bit
of additional capital development on ll:K

two-campuses.,.
While there will likely be some pbyr.i10 ...round ou1 the two camT&gt;uses.~ Greiner said, "the real investment
over the next ten years. I think, has to be

caJ capital

in human

n:sour~.

the hu m:m capital

1b~t means developing and helping
the people " 'eha'"' on board to develop,"
Greiner said. - 1 really do think that the
sman universities over the next decade
,.,ill begin m loo.l. much more carefully
and strategically at humon resouroes and
at developing fatully and staff,.. be n01ed.

··one-~op

shoppmg .. for &amp;.ucb

"We nred a bu1Jdin~

~-.t"n1tt~ M

~..tudc::nu~ 1n

a targe unn~U) m do

reg•,tr.a:uoo

1athem UC&gt;.- bc aJded '\\e lllU&lt;t lll&lt;l't th&lt; 1•th Oepanmetll
{rom the Soulh Campu!i. In thai procts.... "e V.l'IIU hJ al ~, pnn uk con~hdau:d .,;paoc fOr .the
Depanment of Compute&lt; Sc 1ence And ,.. ,.,-.uiJ ~ho u"' du oppo&lt;tumr! . tn Pha"' II of ll:K
Jl:atural Scten&lt;&lt;&lt; and Math (\•mrk•. to llutld a wmpkte ~ fur tbc Oepanment of
Ckolo-g1cal Sctenct"''\t " Gt-olo~~ '' IOi.~;.ll~d 1n f-rt'IDCzlL iil'kt R1.J~~ l..ea: Computtr S.:rt'm."'f'
nov. occ-upu::s \ ariow• locauoo!lt on the \'tl'th CamVU"·
AOOihe.r factor to tOO&gt;tOO tn kmg-r:Jnge rlanning. &lt;.a!dGre&gt;net "a tlurd ' leila' tower
on the 'onJ&gt;Compu&gt; "ilh modular l&gt;k. Th" "ould free &gt;pac&lt;""'-'" occ-..pred b) temporal)
bUIIdmp. he wd
"Contmumg down the rood. "e nred to bnn~ the Ardul«ture Scbool 0010 me onh
O&gt;mpu&gt;.- Gremer told tbc &lt;•1"1 it)' Bud!eo&lt;:c -Jt'&lt; tbc n~ht thutg. to do acadenuc&amp;U~.- be
satd Ttus buildm~ ; opro.)'!Cted for me
f@f

are•J'"" ""'tb&lt;&gt;fllleCommon row
~ of ll:K Floe Am Ccng,r.,...., •o ll:K
nonll &lt;&gt;f Clemen. and Blllrd lhn .
Cremer ol de&gt;cribed loQ~-nn~e
plan$ m bring ID!!tlbcr departmem.s m
the l'acult,y of Social Sciences and abo
n:lie•e ~SUR on tbclibrarirus....,..,
unit; em,., from tbc Sooth 10 the North
Campus. Impon.anl; too. be said. is me
manner in "'hich """'IY a&gt;'li.lalj)e space
on th&lt; ooth OUnpus is used m ll:K
future. ~ A Sooth Campus master pta
proccs~ i!t now undt:T '-La} }
T'be questioo-and~ans"A-er session also
cm"'red such t&lt;:lpi s as classroom sobeduling. parl.in~. d&lt;welopmenl need• of
prof.,.sional staff. and Solnh Campus

reohabilitaiJOO &lt;.'ODC'rm!

•President Greiner spuks

to PSS membets at Oct. 26
.session.

�_..

2
H [

~

C

S

~

Suppa fo
UB's 'aggress~ve
mission'
OR UB Council member
Oa\ld
Campbell.
-"'II•~
~
tnl\-e\

-Jt' ·as 1f you """
tn\-ehn
......... • COI'IlUI&lt;:1II ond
e-ery orne you have to learn • ..,,.
1ar1c
- 51)' tht dwrman ond
COO ol

... _.._.
&lt;Jty ol Ani end l.etlers a U8
hiMt riiCI!M!Id reoogrwon a!
~or contetences

...... -.IISIOCII Ie

prd8oaar clan taJy

~ t1e kBynJia adCt8IIS •
.,l'l8n'lllll&lt;nll~n

Au5nlia lhls 1a1 a&gt; 111e-

a

Vincerf VII'\ Gog! The~

posun w\11 be held n CD&lt;V"'"
1Dl Wllh an 8ICilibllon a Van
Gogfs Mlhe Nallrnai
Galer; ol VctJnL Zemel tes
~a book a&gt; therres
ol rnocl!lr'*Y n \Ian Gogl's
-. lO be ~ ini99C
pro~esaor
.... -

a media
SlUOy,
· assocaale

was a ma,or pariiCip8nl at
the li'SI ........ •Doc:umenlaly
Conterence. held lasl rronth
al Duke ~ She Pft'oenled 8 paper on her 20
years ol
researcll "' Alaska. appeared a&gt; 8 panel end
ntroduced a=~ of the
award-wRlng doct.mentary
"'n.wns Winter,· .m.ctt she

a

co-direCted and P&lt;oduced
. . . . - . Olstlngo.ashed Teactw&gt;g Professor
end Andte!&lt;i v.v. Raymond
CllaJr ol Classics, receMid
an 8r1IIJJslasllc response to a
paper he deiM!red last .
rronlh at a oolloQuU'n at the
UnNerS~ty a Grenoble.
France The ..-..g was
convened 10 evaluate the
- ar~ Harvard

clasSIOSI ~Parry
"f'ortrats in Steel: lhe ex-

hibc!Jon based on the book
by hosiery Professor . . . , _
and adjunct Prolessor
........ has attracted the atlentJon ol The Muset.m Berlr&gt;er Arbeiterleben "'
Bertin , ~ is expected to
run the snow "' 1994

T

Buffiii&lt;Hlased mlo.&gt;nnalloo &lt;en ICr&gt;
f11111. The l7·yeat-&lt;&gt;kJ rompilll~ I
U1ld&lt;ld on tht ""' Y orl. S
EA ·
~ It has 4
rotPoY-IDM
lcxalloos-roosl of""""".-. tn tht
Unned States It&gt; mJ 100 JS 10 help
11 c:bents app1 •~ m autornaoon. oommunk:alJOn .-l mforINIIJOO sy.-.s
)
Canpbell was lfli!OOII&lt;d b) GoMono M Cuomo 10 fill tht rounol
se.t ol tht ble M Rob&lt;n K&lt;nn.
,.be """'"" for """'Y )UTS on tht
oounal ond as 11 dwr.
Th Slay ahead o( tll """""'""'
'" t1us h1ghly rompe1111w f~eld.
CampbeU has to ha•-t.......,.., llWI)
o( the IJlll"li'I1AI&lt; langwtge' dun
bJS25yean wubCTG And althout;b
be 1 a natJvc: esoem '
Y onn.
CampbeU has 1111..aed far ond W1de

raa.

on bu """" l n
be mh&gt;Cd ""
fm.srou!IC'IImedl~becau "'"'""
out of the couniJ}
"'"asonth&lt; ln&gt;utwof ~­
mcnl~ll'nehll@mEasl

em ond Wc:st&lt;m &amp;.ope
cultonld11T~

on

ndbusinessop-

ponuniues.- be c&lt;pblns
Campbell grodualed from '•agara
Uni•=it~

" There ' a

tremendous amowu
of saJisfactitJn in

Group. a

1uchbealsu""""'"'

a tn!SI...,.._...,th a B.S on mathematand mo•ed on to srud) for •
mas:aer· ~ In opt~ resean..iJ ID
rughl school at B "'hll~ be bef.an
tu career He -.-or\.ed for IB 1 from
1963 to 1968. .. hen: be .. orl.cd '"
tht teehmcal and rnarl.tun~ eno:J, ol
tht hu&gt;IIIC&lt;O\
W1th hi\ tnalh dej;Jtt. Campbell
v-a.\a ll011urallorle('hnk.:al'4 orl. and
be !oUtJ'I'l&gt;Cd .- tn tum&lt;oelf b) g.:n•"!'
on10rn:ll'l.etmg " lnc•erdreamcdl'd
e-er do that." be ..ay BUL be add •
"I found tht lime m marb:bng to be
Yel') mfonnat.l\t ... So .nformatJ\C.
m fact. thal tht&lt;Ape~ronllnuo

ICS

serve htm
1'ht ognoficanl pan " h;l\ mg
tht siJIIs to &gt;01&gt;&lt; a problem." be

to

saod. - 1 lool.td at 11 on 1-.o part&gt;
ffiOCJ\11100 and anal)'"· Bnng•"!'
people 10 llCCepl &gt;our &lt;oluuon o&lt; tht
hardesl pan Jl',a little bu of"""- ·
manstup "
The challenge • 001 JU\1 gcttong
people 10 accept a suluuon. be say
but ~dUng them to foil~ "v. oth
\,gor. lberc:'~atremendou amount
of s:lllsfactKXI m ac1uall) gu1dJ~

actually guiding
change. It ' a cary
but atisfying
thing...
r.,.,

ooenh~~~:

dowo "'th

pan
Campb&lt;D-.homo&lt;lf.. an

mcurabl&lt; opbm,.,-- u·

m~ pal·

.... ~--.nd ...~ be '• had•
lotoffunn ng1otht1upoftho'
molhon pubbcl} U1ld&lt;ld onlemiiXIII&amp;l
corporallOI1 But. he odds. rt' bern
hard -.'01'1.. too "It' a ''tt1 lwd JOb.
runrung a bu&gt;1"""' He ...., appoonled J'I'O'klenl ol
the compan on l'l'N and on 198A
became CEO
"' be plldeo. tht romp&gt;n) ' he
sa)' pari olthe cballenf.e' lno'""!
v.hol be doesn ' t lnov. " You
tb&lt;'ll )OU don ' t loov. .- be &lt;a)
" You' re al hop&lt;ng
11 your
besl .tlOI But dTon docsn ' t count
.. ,,
.. "''tt1 &lt;~eo'""'
do
I I..Jlo.., tnout;b' V.'ho C11n I t.liJ.

to,,....,

.r

to""

continue&gt; 10 loulo.

• tht prob-

up -.·nh mort' m.., the f'tleVo'1j emec
ated by the busones "arid "There·

noc m

"'

tho! ~ ·1a1Tce1ot

all" be )
Throuth ho commuod~ and cdu·

cmonal scnttt. C"""""'ll fmc!&gt; a
to\lwr-.ndiOabo;&lt;wtunor" e~and u-J&lt;dt"abooo lho:
world R&gt;r uatrtpl&lt;, be """"- lu&lt;

""l

ICO\'ll) In

~k-\·er-K OnOO'IIC .S~

n&gt;Of) orpruzaoon t&gt; u!dul 001
on!} 10 luomclf. but
be helpful a

...,u10u,r
·~ Forulllt'lple,
be Ita&gt; &lt;cr&gt;ed on tht board of tht
' ,. Yorl. Stak ~and T&lt;do
ncoiot!) Foundation for tht
de
cadc and "lh33 e~ IN) be
.....,fK:oal "' L'B •·
Campbell aho a rn&lt;rrlber of
Go• bno Cuomo' Counal on
Fi&gt;Cal and E.cononvc l'nonb&lt;s ond

!"''''

lmos of tht bu ones m term' of
v.bal he leam&lt;d "hen he "orl.cd on

" • "'t'I.VW "''" cbamnon of the

man.etmg Analyso oodmoo•auon

The-icex~"•llhdpbombelp
UB . be 1-et...•e&gt; lk v.aru to help

Andhe-.

\lOC'f'CU.lt311iUI110--

'""""' "hldl fO\'Itl'\ liCl'omplhh-

mall ·1 thml I'm an rnurun~nl
creator ·· hr ...a)'
T0&lt;10) oo topo1 tht frll.C ~U
findsbercad;,alctond!I2vd .,thtf•
to «&lt; for hunsdl

rornm ol tho

"""'business opjlOftUN!Ie-ITIIj;lw

e\ •

... "The Cll\'IIOrlll&lt;nt ~"'d) .
naJ11JCally. you ha\ w have sensor.
out. -he"')~

"11111\-elalctfor"""neo.'
I &lt;a: people It CJe3IC\ on exJXI"'R ..
He manage--to lrr.U)' m •ouch v. 1th
tht off""' through tht compan) ·,
dJ~1tal \Otce c,.change. or 0\'X. u'
well~b) tclecommuni("OIIIO~

'-'llh a
lapiop rompu!er and 0\ crnoJ!hl m.ul

!&lt;.ef\ll."1!\

'1kre ·' rea11) not much rca" In
to feel remo,ed"' lrutn Lhc offi~.:e he
"')

Carnphdl mal.e\ an cffon to lo.ecp

...,u.-

an"""""""C~In addi!IOD 10 Campbell'

onr rom-

He ......., lool.td funber

and'"'"

", I hdpdclalho:OliiCti&lt;TI&lt;ofNII&gt;on ' f\)(11)
1t110 llpiUb
OuROL on JWI&gt;&lt; 1M
has rood
of
tht l11lll
be 5I bcau!oe d call ....,...
"""" .., --~ CllpiiAb 1'1111'• fl) Cbma "" do ..,
be "'&gt; '11 · onll) ,.,..., ""

11ft .-.elanenb

Bu"nes'Councd&lt;.ofNe,o YorlSI.w

&gt;Uppor1 Pre\odent G"'oner on "'"""
ht- calhl ' B'-. - w
'~ '~m' \¥)11 ••
I \\a' aru,HJU 10 ~PJluf'l 8111
Greoner.''C~~y - l}&gt;Cmo&lt;
ol m) ""'" 10 help tum bo"' cno. h\~ ti he cant. c~n f&lt;cl
'· m. he can
"""" tv.~e.•pcneroe ..
""""""' """ tht unJ\'eNI} CIJI1ll00'"l) I&gt;unnilho 1'192tnpl0bompe. hc
mel .. ft'"'l""} ,.,th .kho 1'lon:t..
""""- &lt;lean for Ull&lt;nlaiKlnal proJ!r.llll'o. l B So:huol of M....,..._
The tnp """. ~~ cxpenence.
hc-...1 "Thc " """""'""'qwted&amp;lfa&lt;nl l m ) dollcn:n1 ~ o( C.'CtlnOmiC

"*""""""

unm..d.W11\ •· H&lt;."&lt;:atrr~"3)''-'nh~

,..,.

""'" lotuj!ta'cdualtoon. tht comP""l' """"'"' .....'Orldar) edu&lt;:aloo

c.,..,._r

~
-..:lopt&lt;d"
tht Buffolo ~ of Snence
The partnenJlop lodpo the a.:ad&lt;-m) -'
.wdenu by I'' them a.::crs to the
~ v.orid. and II pr'O\

run "" ....,u

soont
Gratluaoon •un:o
the
Delo

"""'*'1...

...... held Ill
\lrl« A'"-enur ~ ala\1
man""" !hal Ita&gt; bem a&lt;bpl&lt;d to lbt
l'll.'abolllusonc» 1M1 anun
uwal and lood of 1 fun pba •
Campbell .a

C

011 the b&lt;wds
of. , .ancf) of commullll} Oil

.unpbcll al

tural. f-..:W and ~orpmu­

bon onc~ Roswd!PWI.c.ur

IMutult: '•Commurul)- Council Pint
EmprrStaCorp and Naoonal Fuel
ooCo, os
Cllben lkalsoo•
I 11\SeC of
B fouodaboD.
Alllooupl
oodotllmUIIl)
II1\'0k.aned
.......
of ume. Ca1.,tJc11 ma1.es r.mJy a lOp
poorily. lit ODd b ,.i(e, ~Wood
~

-&lt;"fcupt-'11)~

1M ~-ODd..,., rdues.he .a.
.,
., pia)
bull
bJ.e 10 PI&gt;
W1lb my """'- be
1 · tu r m
liLcl)
llo'l!h my fanily .•
And ..11m be~ I chance 10 do
"""'-' ,.,._, read tng, c.mpbell enJ"l' no•·el loJ..c those of Jarnr&gt;
Cla-.U But don' t npect to fiod
tum curled up ,.lib a bool. too oflell'
he rem&gt;:
\'&lt;1) bus) Clea'l~ be
h
ltlhal "'"Y
Campbell i a; opt•m•~oc aboul
the fulure of the compan}- """
~ ldent , 1 \l'OO\an. ~~ ~ntl)

unprh..'\Kin\
· 'ihc' \oof.:alc o~.rkia.."tt 'ollhe lJ.
rllilrl.CI " ' " Wlfert'RL" be &lt;a) " I

appointed_, ne 1 about the futull.'ollbe,.orld And be's read) to

lehqull(' ptl\llt \C a.b.._,. lhct'n'U'OO·

lot to be done.- be sa

\ CI') mll."f\."'lll\l!

~CI bus) II shlpJ~ II

1'bere'

I

�3

_..,.__..,_d

Goodman dea.l:itlg with advi ement, access, enrollmen

L~s:nAU.M:IE

aolveDrll!p/Addpo..t&gt;lemut B , aod~ich
tl bopefuDy be in piKe by faD 1995.

DEAL WITHllffiproblem ofundercr_a:Juale educiiXln .. a S)'6"'"'; Sllf
~rot GoodtnM.. inu::ri ~ pro•o t f &lt; uodeTpadlllte eduClltion.
Ooodman say• llw h'i job row on
!he: nuu ond botu of Ill&lt; •anl.lerJndua pm,..,,alUB.
Goodman poin outlba u i lmj)Oftllltl&lt;&gt;
di unguidJ bit &lt;1uties fnxruOO... of lqlben
Dyson. inlaim dean of Ill&lt; Under£~
Col~. whoaooo«&lt;.ng IOOoodman blndles
Ill&lt; ~plulosopbic.tl luue." ofunderpaduale
eduation and deals w11h uch matten u
unp\emcnun,v. cuni&lt;:ulu.;. and ortioolatJng
lhe reasons behind currkulum chaJ~~n
"VYiiOO l'l'IIOliU to ""', l&gt;ul bt handles hi

says.
Ooodmon. in hi
nc ..

pool liina Aut\. says be bas heerl
invol.ul pnmarily in
.. odang on d)e UB
advisemenl y tern.
and on i """' of enrollmonl and nys 10
allow u
loduale
sruden bent:r10 CO&lt;niC$ and progl'liiiiS A\10&lt;11 a re- ago. UB 1n10sfmed m

edministrabwc eor~~putmg 10 lht IBM Main·
fnune, which wilt. Goodman sayt. maJ:.e po&lt;·
sible many advaoceo m lhet&lt; areas. "We'"'
now be&amp;~nning 10 "'"P lhe rewards of !hal
ClulngC.:' be sa .
Acoon:bng 10 Goodman. ~ ""' ~
new computer programs "''bich UB will bt
implemeuting !hat wt11 impro-. UB •• ability
to sen·e undergradua1es. The firs~ is Toucb ·
TOIK Registra~loo.. which he wd
help

,.,;n

TbtliCICOOd~i$Scbedule2$, wfudl
•111 e&lt;lllble COOJr&gt;e repstratlon 10. be done
OJII(Imalically by CO!npUitr In ead of by
band "With Sddule U. 111 ,.«ks ,.'I'd
w;\1 ben:dilot1ed 10afewnun111a."Goodman
..y .. Atxold
1&lt;1 ~. Sdhedult 2J;
will cuable UB ~0 l(lll),ao;. bdter mpuo$0 ID
~tratioo demand lllldadd- cou~

if no&lt;:euary . Sdleckdr. 25 may be tunruog as
Fdlruary of nc•u )-ear, Goodman
.-ys, add I
that ~"'- Ollldcn\ .. til ""
homt lhb su11111&gt;« ••th a full schedule for
lbl: fall i band."
The lhud prog&lt;am, OARS(~(:""' 1\.udlt
Repol'ling Sy ..ml, will enable tudcnu w

~y

.....,,..,~a&lt;J.I....,...,.oboullhe"""""

mqui"""""'u of UB lllld of~~~ depart·
meniS and program Goodman ..:r Ac·
cordtn&amp; 10 Gooclman. m lhe OARS system.
..tuch will be in p1o&lt;:e losomrt&lt;lml ' next
}&lt;II and fully 1mpl~.men!ed b~ lbe !995-96

IIICI!ool )'~Ar. Sludonu wtll re«t•&lt; a com puter prolruoultclling tllem eucl\y ,.hal ..,.
qutremeJII• 1bry havt ld1 10 meel .

G

""l''

oodman
lhe ""' of OAAS ba.
se•enl k•l 1mphc:au011 for under·

~raduateeducation

Since mformat1ooabou1

lhe numben of srud&lt;nu ,. ho need 10 take
r&lt;q1nred coun;eo will br a•a1lable. OARS
w1llenable mo"' lllri&lt;..W decJSIOO&gt;'IO be made
aboul lhe number of web CIOUI1i&lt;$ thai B

needs 10 offer. be says.

"'We emhm
tlqnat UB."Clood

theod•......,...fiiiiC·
)&gt;
.mho

number of adv1sor&lt; m lhe 01\'JSJOilof Under·
graduate Acadermc Services "'ill oo,. bt

handled b) OARS. Tibo5C od••u;ors ,.-,. ,.ill
bea•ailabletoad,isestudetlts inolher a&lt;rti

•
&lt;ed aodDI""

ID&gt;Oh
"'t
of(Joe.
uhy, WT and ,;t...:lrlti. be
. in • aatmpe
In broad&lt;&gt;! lhe adoifemelll f~llCll
10 ..,.
elude fac'll y &amp;nd I"'C'f adn•il'li; BQI be
It$
lballhiHe
111
.at·
tzmpt 10 undetm1""' tht role of pofes •&lt;JAil
lldviSOB.
be abk! 10 roan doi'O&lt;.'tly on"*""" of oaudmu ,., pan~eubr
ddftculties, 111&lt;'1ud1.,.
or IIOCial dtffocultie • acodr
UDIIblr. and f111111&gt;0&amp;1 a.d

. :a..t

Will lor
o(..

JOI"

....u

"I believe in the righr of
pal1icular progf:am.s ro

set their own agendas,
but there will be
increased ceniral awan ness of what goes OTL "

--

problem. . mtolerana " ""'· lllld 1 •lk&gt;k
ran~ of olher ~1f1C prol&gt;km
~w. 1mp&lt;J&lt;Wlt
~nder.;tand tlllll all of
llm tnu11 be1n~ ....O.edonon&lt;l talked about;
bt lla)l. "Tbero will br ~.-rn i•r ronsu!ta·
tiOO v.ilb IIUUI)' group~-- "

r ·..,""""" """"1tl11*'1 from aU lhete
dtonJII'' alreal)o." Goodman sa
"In par·
ur.uw. t:&gt;rup~Add .... •...-bet llll• )'UI'
!han ot h.b .-.-er ~&gt;..= - lit &lt;n&lt;' t .. n ma.to
..,• ..,. for ltns unpnn·emenL 0.. fonr being
lila 0...., ..... acees. 10 rotnpal&lt;'tlz.cd loft "
'JCn all '""" L 8 so lhat depanmenb could
handle fon:&lt;d
lhenhehe. Stt·
ondl) . ahhougb lh&lt;R .... 3. 7 ~

..,,-..on

lh~&gt;y.,., , aboul600mortlh.all&lt;hen:"'erela!;!

&gt;""'

!he Prc:wtl&lt;l """"" [t&gt;nd, ••·uJabk 10
add lhe&lt;.'OUI'IioeS .....,...&lt;ary foctbeK .wdmtt.

Goodman n:-~

Aoco«11ngtoGoodman. the omp\&lt;1neftu·

Furtbermor:e, teehnl al ad v1&lt;ernen1 tMI
111 lht past bas been handled b) a !muted

"lbe!.....,i• lbonp!ofpMlc1.ibr
10- their

1100 of all lht.e oompuler pn&gt;g
,..,u
r.na k UB more 111t.onan) manarr undor l!l""''uate cdueauon But the 00.. ns&gt;de. be
..yt. 1&gt; !hat !hey "'ill al reqwn: c:entl11l
supervi Kin. and moru10nng of "'hat happen• on pectfic depattrMnU and program

"E 'S&lt;:IItJ&amp;il) ll1l ~ f&lt;e mrn .. e... ble 10
full..,me load "'11hoa! rumd1ng 10 loaf:
U) 'Thr number of Olll'SC&lt; 111
.. hodllhe . . . . . swdcm .. tit"ruolledup I'm pmold of llu 1&gt;cawoe n
' a
fiJJQRlll """ o( IR!iiJQJt~ """""'es for lhe
bmefi•
lhe tudeols"
~a

lmcli; ht

ar

Dyson is guiding plans to builp UGC excellence

"T

wtU bave a number of new aspccn oe•l tear,
Dyson Sllys. includmg JUnU)f k•el sctena

KEUNDERORADUA
TECollege
is
lhe '&lt;llllliiOr" of oflkial
general
edilcation policy at UB. Our plans
""'c::omplic:-Oled and ambitioos, and
wr.'retrying 10 put them in10 effect
II a tim&lt; of limited teSO&lt;Jn:eS; sayt SI&lt;Jlh&lt;:rl
DySOD. who bec:amc interim dean of !he Untlergraduatz Colk:ge in .\alA! August. 0,..00
says !hat his mission Ibis year iodides ewerseeing &lt;ll~t operations of lbe Undt::rgraduale
Coll~gc oo a daily basii, malting and i:&lt;nplemenring plans for iiS future. and considering
!he role lhallhe Undergraduate Colk:ge and iiS
dean will-play in n:lation to whaJ ltappenswith
reorganization a1 UB.
Overser.ing daHy opentions is "'the r.a&gt;t ·
!SI pan of his job.r Dyson .. ys. bccau&lt;e ~
have a supr.rb su.ff." Fu1u"' planning. be
1

says. is more compleA.
The UB genenl education cumculum

courses for au

DOO~s&lt;:ience

maJot'&gt; 1n Sc.Je-o·

ufic ln.qutr) and

Grear D•scovcn~!io an
Sctence. and a one ~
yea.r

langoa,~

r"C ·

qu1n:menr ..., h1ch .

three

)tar~

from

DOW, .. tJI become a

IWO-)C&amp;r

n~qt.ure .­

ment. Dyson &amp;ays
!lull he has al;o spent

s1g_nlficant tnne

fig~

unng out bow to Slaff cwrentl)' required

courses m American Plurabs.m and \llorld
Ci&gt;iliuuoo.
ln rdation to potmual ~gamZaJJoo a1
UB, 0,..00 !o8Y' th41"UB .-Is a""""' w~

1""'1* can 1lunl. and act m •~peril1le&lt;llal and
innovative ways in undergraduale education "
The pubbc: waniS suc'h1noovation. ht Sli}S. and

e~f'&lt;CI' 11

bcawse "it pay• !be bt0&gt; "
"liB ~ . tn the Un&lt;lr.rgro;luat&lt; Collqe.
an m•ututton destgned 10 bt more ,. tde rangong !han 11 ~ btrnme." ht Y)'l'. and
potniS oul a number of effons C\IJTent.l~ bemg made 1o ••pand u:. ..,,.. The Honon
Program bas been brought under tht O.U&gt;·
poceooflheUndergraduaJeCollq!e. ht &lt;I}'·

agate. utd 1o get partoa.pal1011 from facuky
and from acaderruc:all} quahf!ed admonr ttalor&gt; ..-hodoo'I ali C111!&lt;'1 chanilc 10 leaCih...
!&gt;)-""' .ays He uy• bt " currently encour ·

ad&lt;!ongthathebeheve lhatllus~ram,..dl
btcorne a majoc.clltng-potnl forunderpadu·
111e cduat1on at UB . And • "symboltc w:p"
to"oard eK~Uoac:e hilS been tal.~n by plactng
lhe olfK:es of l'tU Beta Kappa In lhe Under·
graduate College.
DyliOII&lt;ays he,.al.aatltmpll.nfiO''bnnt'more Ji(e"IO lhe program of freshman setninars According 10 Oysoo. fre.hman semt·
nars,1n which~ llll.e slllllller cl~

n ... ai§O tn\·ohod 1n bn.ngma "ari~

Jret:ter IC!CeSS IC disc:u KMJ "A'Ith professors ...-ere hi@:hly St&gt;C.cemul for aw ilr
un1il funding costs led to culback in semt-nar numbers. "We 'rr tT)&gt;ng tou.p;tnd !hem
w ;ith

agmg 'anou 51'""""1 group~-- to do&lt;C'IIS5 ••lh
htm ,. hat educauon at l 8 os toke. nd wbti
chan~e'

'D}

51ud&lt;-D

oru~bt

hke to see

oo onll'Jiec1Ual e&gt;~l 10 UB , be u:ys.
,.&lt;or\.sb&lt;JP$ on bow lo leaiCh od·
enor 10 1:1()11•5Cielllle major.;. nd t..:am:s by
~ ue&lt;ot speal.er. ~'Uch
Sll.llll R.&lt;ls&lt; of lhe
Un,...,...C)' of Cincinnati. ,....., IS oommg to
t!IC'lud•n~

UB to
about artclml TI'O)' 1n rdabortto
lbe World Cl'·tlwoion .program.
...-._}
"I .. llll!O &lt;ee man: mtelle&lt;:t.W and culumd ., enboriel&gt;led to lhe ubjttts -teadt..
and ODundergtaduat&lt; Interest•; D)-son u ·
.. U B ti't becoming mort&gt; dn;e·n c and
l1ltilllcttlumi and il" san tdeal pl.aoe fa- partlapollllll indt~ oo thost &gt;ubp:u as welt,"

Phannacy launches home study
The UB School ofPiullmK)' lsoffetfDg ahome &gt;IUd)' conunumgeducaJJofl
program in whach participants receive conti nuin#; (:ducauoo credit lly study1rtg a
prOj:!ram and passing a "'Jillen tesL There are four diff=nt programs
• " Effective Pharmacy ~t" ;, a te&gt;~bool. dt-.•p&gt;ed forpharma&lt;.-,..._, and
phannacy owners and managers. h rove~&gt; busine&lt;s sLill&gt; and manag~menltedlntques
The le.tlboolt. ...'hich
$60. is divided inlom..,e sectoons. Conunuing educat100 credit
is earned by passing examinations oo each section. wilh a IDtal of 33 cn:drts possibk
• " Therapeutic Pen-p&lt;dlw""" a publication of the Drug Information Serotee~
of WNY, contains a continuing ..education sectJon in each issue focusing on new
drugs and 1herapr.utics. One bour of credit is eMnod by pas•ing Ill&lt; exam on lhe
oontenl of eacb issue. Each issue costS SS.
e • AJDSFad.dor Phllrmadsts, • a videolapr. program providing baste infonnation on lhe etiology. r.pidemiology. patbo@enesis. diagoosis and clinical manifestations of the HJV infection. Cost of videotapr. is $30. Sua:cssful completion of Ill&lt;

=

r.xam earns one hour of crediL
• "Pharmacology IUid Therat:-ttics by C orrrspondentt," is a se1 of home study lesrons. Eadllesson prov.ides five hours of credit and costs S30.

Winter l'lf(ived Nov. 'I but campus snow
sculptors ware reactyforilhe ol'iallenge.

�4

.

ewteam
. 7-10

UPT080% OFF
Onginal publ&amp;her priCe,

OW AT THE BOOKSTORE
OCTOBER 28-

ov

I

cconbn

.
- .
. ..
UN I VE RSI TY

B O OKST O R [

t\trV.

leennJ.C.ommuter. I.M ue '' ttteam til
meet "'nh maD) m&lt;mhcn of the adm•n•&gt;&lt;raIK"' and the facull}. •ncludm . f&lt;W •n&gt;W&gt;&lt;.~.
1h&lt; tennr: commllltt and lhe hcvh} oe E&gt;ecull\e Commntet_ .. ,II&gt; VOUP'&gt; nf
Mudena- odIn) 01~ ..
lhr) c""""' 10

d.li -Thurlda\

~•m-7pm.

Fndn •am·'rm . ..,.turd.l1· llam-\rm

10

1be

Mlddk we-

place
} e-rn 11
The unover&gt;ll) · Ia 1 MICidlc si-t.,
ft"\ K'1tl occurred 1n A up . I
~
Tbt ,roup \1\JURI LB IXll -~ h.i\
beet! "'PPh•d "rlh &lt;&gt;.kn "' bac t rou!ld
maltru1l "'1'11r) do
of thell' "'
nj'hl
~ ·· .....t
lone -~~ · -·~ ·~
lhallhe) "''"

theorconlnbulN&gt;I"' '""

nu.ed meeun 10 . hcw,.c"er ··
Acrordlnf ro Malon-e , lht \t\t1tn team .
~hen I
m~: at Jtl erutre m\tltuteon _ t.alr\
anto a...'"COllnl 16 - c-h
ten 1u.: ' m1 1on ,

repon btfcn lbt) leo•&lt; Aa tJ.Jt mtn"-~
l!8 8dmlruo..tr•••lf'l
and "pan of 1h&lt; fO&lt;uh&gt; - '"'" ' ' " ofr.. ,.
htft"a,~w-n...toft
fr m Mdlt~
u.d The formal "' ual.IOft ••II ~ bt~r
he uplarned
ACl"On:hnr to b~ . 1ht onJ\er 11\. h.old
tnpuu IO!he
-upofthe.,ttte.vn.'- a
to ure. famd WJt\ •1tb concun of • 1ATft"

roaJ end ob.)Cdi\C'

r't"roe'at\:h u:nnel"\11~

mce1 IC rnll} the1rc~l

Hou"

Malone

A "'"'" ..m
ynrs

R 22

L'

10 ~&gt;hom lh&lt;)

..,l~fO~I~IIh \\t ' \.t-~top~or~a

, In llt Utu'M\&amp;1 tnl~ nt)

0
"93· •g• D ISTI"GUISH£D 5P£AKERS SIEIIIIIES

POLITICAL. C OMMIE'.. TATOIIt

0.. '--lsW. ........
ProfCWJ&lt; of Hoah&lt;r Educauon
Duec~or. State and R&lt;!oonal Hlpoer
Educauon C&lt;nter
I'LOiliDA STA'llO l

C&lt;&gt;-clotur of Sn•

Ttam

Unt&gt;nsily Lobran
LI-WERSITY Of CAUI'OR&gt;i~A &lt;\T
SANTA 11ARB&lt;\llA

Professor
or IUstor)
"'·
~--·­
l! IV

In

0. . ...... . Du;unguoshed Prof&lt;10sor and
Assoctale Dean
Collcgt of &amp;gmeenng
IO'f,' ASTA'llOl

N

m

o.. c-,. • . o.xt.
Pro

sor of Management and

Marl.rong
1'911&lt; YL\ AAIA STATI UNI\'ERSfTY
~

\ocr Prnidenl f&lt;W lnformatma
Senoce.
I'IU

1\EilSm
~·uu

0.. JoMpll A. Boi-

OEOIICETO"

O..lraFucM

n.o.u EJortldl

l'DIANA"\!NtVEilStTY SYSTEM

Clotur of Sut ll.ru Ttam
O.. JoltnV. ~

Prof&lt;5sor or En&amp;Josh !llld
Comparoove Loterato=
O....rman. Oepanmen1 of &amp;posh
PIUNCt'TQ!. U 1\ ERSm'

0.. llerrtr-. o. ~eld
James B Dul.t Prof&lt;SSO&lt; of
a.emistry
DUKE lJlooWERSin'

/l,nr~

Forrnr&lt; ruor oc:e Pn:sodent.
Program lk•'&lt;lopmtnl. 8
and ludent Sen-.

m

RtrroEJtS

O.. AIIr.- . . . . .
~Pro(J

wlldi

o(

...., 0eaa Em&lt;n

College or Fine Am

c
O.. DOIIIINR.I'tb
Itt Prtsidem for R.esearcb
tJNIVBsrrY Of' l't.OIUDA

0.. ........ ~
Pnw

......_........
Rl'T'CEAS
8R

• IVEIISJTY, '

.:sv.

A5sistaol Voce ~~ for Plann~
lnsbtute for Researdl ia lfi&amp;ber
EdiiCIIIioo

UNJVEJtSITY Of' POt

YL\' ANlA

0.. - - r v..., f&gt;lesideol for S111deot AffaiR
and Setviceo
MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY

SUNY Ctmrol UDisotr

U.UII.ScattM
Assiswu Prm'OSt far Graduale
Program

�_.
difficulties faced by prison arti ts
..

BE c•tnmdmary
creativi.ly in ind.J idols who
don't t.now their talent-! 'help
lhomUPft' tbem&gt;ei&gt;'M."f"Jddil!J
told lbe oud~ of
aboutlO pwpk aalhe.red at UB on Oct. 25
for hisll.lk • An and Utrraturt in Amenca'$
Prisoos: ew O.frnuioru, with a Positi•e
Ou.UoQII., 001 the Chanatr oC Crime &amp;: Pu:ni mmL..
DoW10n. a vi ualll'li5l and flttoon wri""'
,.'bo has published numerou books.. perl\aps
the mo&gt;l wcil-known of "'bod&gt; i Kraz)'
Kor aod 76 Mor~: Co/lt'CtqJ Stori~s. ;.
currently lhe cha.irohhe PEN Prison Writing Committee. Histal Wtico-spon"'red
by lbe Prison Ta k Fan% at B_lbe OJOvid
Gray air of Poetry and Leuen, the No-

o.,......,

·o·..... .Wid""......-.
,._,. . .,
hi&lt;TII)'

pt'l

~ ~.,
poll~

........ c....~...SAO&gt;ot·

I'...,

,.,.. whl&lt;:h u ~- _,.,. AttlaL
....
•'boRht lladbeeo
,.,.. Che .,.. "'""'*dl
rardy lasl
ton&amp;. .... 101. boocolo!lt prum ........ • ·ill
bmokuppllltlpoctpn""""'" ho•-e•'()&lt;bd
top:lher"" .,._,...,
DoWIOII c:ondudl!d lw
bJ
10£
the wort. rJf tqoitr" Wayne All&amp;nooa. •
pnsontr on Or.lh Ito),., .. tome lUI\ ~
l1ld 101tured, ~ &lt;lr.,..iq ~ ~
• po.....tfut •um;&gt;lt, o........ wd.. or dor
Clpllt»loty
llrtlg 10 pn&gt;diK., ·
t5hlng -.c.-d undc!f art:umst.ao~CC'S of et.trat:Je

""*""'

La~&gt;yus Guild and the JWil Buffalo
WI"«
~nter:

tiona

or prl!oOO Offic'IIJi i•to d1

wson ·, talk, whtd! wa• u IDllCh a
performance as a lecture. was • mon"'ie or
st~ experic:nc&lt;&gt; and pm;onal reaotions..

sucb al1u~u. is ...noi a hbe.ra.t ron.anuc cause I
punw. and 001 based on libnuy .......dl I
leave my ego ool&lt;ide in the parkin~ loJ to be
open to what! f"""." he saod "My students
teach me. and I learn_"

•• well .. or n:adings of won. by prisooers.,
de•igned 10 show how mUCh ~··• tale01
there i in Amonco' pnson&gt;. A Ill ode show
of writing anddra"' mgs by pnsooers..,
panied Ius temarks.
DaWb&gt; has been workong " itb prison

oa.. son

satd !hat pnsooen n.. e •rl)
hutr access lO lhe matl'rtals. nccesury \O
worll&gt;lllheor an. and lh•t lhecurru.t anuude

OUfCIII&lt; cn:•llYII)'

•mon,gpriwners. Ha"wg a·cd-...~ 1o m~tenalr.­
'"prison is "m,..,hmortdJI'focuh forpa'nter
than poets." Daw...., wd.•lt~ beodded
that it "becumonJ. "mor• ond moot dJffiCIIII
to ..-ritt- m pn)OO _
Mos1 pn~r*" h.a"'e no anJ~tK trammg_,
Dawson wd. and sho.. ed "umples of mudl !he)' CO&lt;O ld om

or .,..._

"""'•

been'"

Andero.on haJ.
a lin) cell for yean.
and '"II """" br e~eaned
llw~
lbt "orl of a:naSI who l i lboo11o
doe." he Slid

o...._ ..od.

t'

Student enrollment close
to target, Palmer says
the only m tituuon tbll.l nwt) tuJ/kfi.ts an:
tnlcrested rn .
'1n other words. we are oompc:tmg rt'lOfe
often "'itb pn' ••• school• than are orne of
our other sister 1nsutuoons ..
Ourlane.ploonedthat S . ·y apphcauon
fonm alto" a stude&lt;lt to apply to four SUNY
umts omultaneou&gt;l) .According to Durkm.
!he Office or Access Sen·= 10 Alban) . I
clearing bou&gt;e fO&lt; appheatJOO ··, wtlhn!
ro share ,..,lh eadl SUNY unu . the number
and propoit,an or '" applH:atiOO• that ....

HE I.JNIVERSITY' S total enroll·
montforfalll993.undsa~25;t&gt;35 ,

jllllting the uni•etSity at .3 pel cent. or 80 ~ts . aho•e •ts en•rollmenl 1Mge1 of 25.555.
"We set our enrollment WJetS for flrsltimt students at a level tbat woold enswe
that "'e would bit our 0\'et"OII enrollment
tl!Tget ," Vice President for Student Affaors
Roben L. Palmer said last ,...,~,_
"We were ntremely successful from a
headcount standpoont," Palmer said. "To be
within 80 S1uden of our eucuargeU think
is pretty commendable.
"We do have a rather luge freshman class
and do need to make an adjustmeOI downward in the future. Our plans call for suc:h an
adjustment.
...In out enrollment projections.... Palmer
laid. "we will oer a decline in the number of
first-timefresh:men rmdsome 1ncru.sc 1n ~
number of tran~fer 5ludents."
Palrner s:ud thert · ·11. some concern over
the decline m !he last fe" yean. in Millard
Fillmore College part-lime enrollment thai
we will have to a&lt;ldres on the future."
At an Oct. 14 ~wion before the
University COUDCll. Director of Admissions
K.e"in Oufk:in rqJOned an enrollment in·
crease "in nearly ev&lt;l) category" of student
between 1991 and 1993.
He noted. atoo. !he rise in single applications to UB wilhin SUNY "reflective of the
fact that the Universit~ at Buffalo is an
insUlutionoffirsH:hoice itbinSUNY.e"""
to the point that the UnivetSily at Buffalo is

smgle •

In sll.lllmaf). Oun.ln s:ud. •..,..., llll,.., l1'lO&lt;e
l&lt;lUI opphcauons for fall 1993 than any alher
SUNY unit. and ,...,ha,e!IXR fre&lt;hmanappb catioos .than ""Y Clher single SUNY unn We
h.a'\'C: mort" llimsfer a;pphcauoos from tillritbin
the SUNY y.wn than ""Y alher SUNY unit.
And we have more lrilmfcr application; fmm
outside !he SU 'Y 'Y tern than an) olher unll
in lht- Sute llnn:ef'l(~ uf 'e~ Vorl.-

ccor&lt;hng to the SAT prolilc lor the
1993 fr&lt;shman class. about46 percen1

A

hada&lt;omhinedSAT&lt;eore of IIOOouhove.
Durbo told the Counc•l
Graduate tnroUrnent of 8,548. he added.
.. ,s jusl about ...,,tlert' we Y..ant tt 10 be Plan
call for the umversuy to hold graduate ,.._
rollment stead)' . but for it to a~ui'Jle a grt,atc:r
proportton of the whole ..
Durkin also pomted to t~ lllt.."Tt:aSC' 10

mioonry enrollment no'\!1. 17 percent of ne\\

Live! lfia atellite!

Nove ber 10, 1993
120 Clem ns Ha'll, 1-3 p
Open Forum: 3- 4:30pm

'

undergraduate enrollment for fall 1993 Between 1980 and 1993. he .. ,d, overall monority enrollment hb nM:n from 14 to 17.5
percent.

We Want to Hear Your Voice
"!~-,

Rt·pp•tt·f , ... L•6 ...

c;~n1r~1,,•lrt•

nt'\\-..p,t;Jt·•

.~nzJ

v..t· v...t•'t '&gt;l'C.

~.

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1
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foundabon JOT ca•pu.1 ""'"- 7'/u• u a ,.,.si-SI'rfn'Vgl"ll,. forrolllzn

1M/.,,.,

lnJfiUS ah&lt;&gt;ul """""!.'to g&gt;"roln"lroW of trust and '""'•al "'/&gt;f'''' a-r;oH of
thnr $-tudntb, faro II') and adwr:rutmllwJ.

F o r - w .. ..-.- ail 645-3414

�,.........._ 9 un .-4:30 P•• For

.-u.r--&lt;1116454140.

--QT
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no._,._ .. , ._

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U -SERS

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Mc-Gtu u....,.rtt 101 Baldy
NordtCa- ,poo.A
C.l&lt;pe• Corpono.- s..n......

OTHER INOVEMIER M&amp;TINGS:
Fn, 11/5
Graphic Design SIG,
Frillmore 218.7 pm
Fn, 1 1112
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F~lmo.e 218, 7 pm
Thur~ 1l/1 8 Monthly Meel!ng • AutoCod Rei.
12. 7 pm, Clemens Hall •1 02
Come and see how ProMDc con suppor1 you as
o Mocmt~ oompu113&lt;' use." . F-or more info, call
MoryBien.652-75q4, or rom. oq\ .4980.

-~~_...~ktifCI

.... blldoC-- ...
._
......
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--··_.., -cNCefft

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THURSDAY

4

~ .JOOn W

FtC~.p~lnd . f'.U'C:WJvt

cLmctoc of
the Alchloc4d B"*Cr&lt;al SraJ100
101 S.ld) NonhCompu 4
~ m s.,.,....,.,d 1&gt;1' tht Focull)
(tl N.1Uur.11J Scmwrn &amp;nd Math
t11Uiil.lC\. funded prtntlplll) ~
'"" C""'f""· StetfnedCo , loc .
lbc- Coo.fcrmcci.IJ'l thr D1SCI ·
phon and tht Omn Fo Ia 1..«-lu~lund

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E..,....&lt;ioa &lt;I

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c.,..rlJilw ViPark. 50S

ruS~~tJ,Oaunt; ~Mo

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Coooo:&lt;n Holl Catnpu.
r m fof mformaQ(lfl 1,;
64) NJI
U\IAB 'RLM

Sammy an.cl- llow ('.ft Laid .

Cooke. NonbCampu . 101 rn

Sruden1 Utu(ltl ~ald". 20 I

StVDQITKCftA&amp;.
Piuo SbHtea.ts or Friu
Ani&lt;Uuka Boldl. 8•ll1l Rt·

S1uditat Uo1on North C.ampu.;,
8 p m Admr!ii§.kln \1 SO \tu
deMS : S l ~- aon~snwkm ti

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AIIA.,._ICOU. KIEMCES
~u.l.atioos o( lOAir.e

CUJ'1"e11H
ia Drosopblla, S.lplfl Soogh.
Pb.D .. U8 Dept_ of BoocllC'f!UUI
~JObFitfbtr"

So&lt;Ub C.mJ!IIs. 12.30 p.m
COIII'UI'Eit sctENCE

COlJ.D®IUII
F"I"CNNI Data Structure through
Topolocy w HyptrboiM: ~

omt'lry , Prot. ha -y• Ca.~ . VB
O.po of CO"'P"'Cf S..· """"' :!iJ
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COlJ.D®IUII
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P'robloc tbt tar Formatioa
,.._..,Prof hod) Po phcr .
Um1o . of Rarcl:Jet1er 4~
rn..cuk. North Com""'

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IIA11IDIA11CII CGU.OQUIUII

DoH God nu,. DM:t!, Pmf
Wang~ Uruv. of Mnryland. Coll&lt;oto Parl. 103

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SIUdcm Uruoo n..-. roJ
Studem Uni.oo North Campuio

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cluou, IDep. of~ .

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lotrodll&lt;lioo to H&lt;a~U Sc:&gt;etM:ltS Ubrary ..... Q\.U"\-W.
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Conlonued page 9

t~f

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8

New procedure assesses scoliosi without X-ray
111\qC, sb&lt;

.aid.

"I IS '""'a thmt-d!·
FALO IS ont or tbt few 11 tn
tbt \J
ofl'erin£ a """' ICOhOSIS
-I&lt;Chruqut lhat
dnlmaricallypatien 'e posun 10 Xdwint. li'Cilmenl for lh&lt;
nal dtformny.
Josent Bettan) , """ of lb&lt; "'orld' s aulhooueson tbt non-invasiff lmqndtd Shape
lmasinc Sy ltm {ISIS) aod

'""ba&lt;l

I SiSURl

ional Toa
dlmtnsion you ba\t 10
tD.e rwo X-ny ."
Scohm:1 t a CW'\"alut"t
of lhe 'f'lDt that develops
primanly on chiklrtn aod
adoltsctnl Stlllh&lt;1 ""
rtporttd that up!o IS pc:r&lt;&gt;ml of bool..agt ctuldnn have ..,.,. lype of

profe sor ol

tw'\'llUtt. "1th about tWO

pb y11cal

J&gt;tK"eDI n:qu&lt;nng trtal ·
men&lt;. BeiLin) Kl
Correcuni mold ro
modcratt scolwst · u&lt;ually

In

thera(l)' aod ··ere~ Ktence

in tht UB
School
of
Health ~laltd
Professions. i
contmu•ng her
ISIS research.
.loMtU llettMy lind
·t he lstS _ , . ,_

mtniiontl p!durt. "'btlt
X-rays arc: one-&lt;lunm-

fir 1 d ont '"
England . ••

UB.
Wbilein England, Bettany performed and
JL&lt;StSStdnearly4.000lS1Sscan~­

generattd images of tbt p~ wert
taun over time lo dtlermine if a prescnbtd
scoliosis trtaUnent was wori.Jilf,. Traditionally, such assessments bave b&lt;tn doot '"'
rtpc:attd X-rayL
A 1992 study aulhortd by lkmany and
tbme OlheR in lb&lt; mtematiooal publu:auon

Suifou Topography ani/ Spmol O.fonml)
sbov.td that ~It&gt; of ISIS scan aod X-rays
taken o'er
,..,_month period · l''ttt
closelycom:lattd Bettany'sresearch sho
that tbt non-inva i\eteclmlque i
good as
X-ray in ~rrmning a paueot's progre
An ISIS scan, "'bleb pro,·Jdts frontal,
aggotal , and honzontal vJtws of lhe spinal
curvature:. also produces a ""'"' complete

'"o

tn\:oh e 1 bac brace
C'tuldren "11h ohost'\
may ""~"'"'
man) ••
:UX-ra) O\trthrec years
of treatment to ddemunc
l&gt;rao:t! •• •ffec~....

.r lhe

"oth many palltnl h&lt;mg
morutored for 10 yean. or
""""· Btnany saod
Scoho i patienls tun.e an a~ased n L
of dt""loping leule~a aod bn:asl CllllCtt
due to lhe repeated ~lllllon e JIO'""'- occordin&amp; to pubh b&lt;d studoes
Rc:&gt;carcll conducted by Bt!Liny and others bao ho,. n that sooltOSI&lt; patitniS need Xrays on on1; lhrt&lt;! snuallon&gt; to confirm the
dlagnooii and rule out concc:n•tal abnormallUt&gt; at tb&lt; &lt;rullal ""'· ,.b&lt;J&gt; tbtre bao
b&lt;tn rapid growth or change m lhe deformit) . a&gt; dttennultd by ISIS. and h&lt;fore
•urgery for po!jal fu ion to assess fuston

le\'CIS.
ISIS sc:an;caneffectl\·elyrepl_... X-ray
tn all.otbc:rcu-cums.t.ances •nt.ol\ltng scoh 1 •
Bcttany wd.
.. ln the mc:antamc . -....C' can savC' the pauent

"ISIS gives a threedimensional picture,
while X-rays are on dimensional. To as es
two back dimensions, you
have to take two X ll)'S. "

Booton. San Dqo and

a lot of radtat&gt;on In m} txpeneoct . "'b&lt;n
pautnts art tiled"' hal .,..,..-..dun the) ,.ould
prc:fer. lhe) ai"•Y" choose an ISIS

Qb,-,

UB begins national study
ly LOIS llAXEit

federal Agency for Health Dr&lt; l'llhC) and
RcstMch"'iU rt\aU Blheagcnc) 'stenttrfor
lhe SIUdy ofHlV diseast m rural Amenca. The
S250.
gran1 oomes 10 UB as a result of il&gt;
designation by lhe agency in August as one of
fivtnationalruralb&lt;&gt;llhresean:htenters. 'These
cenlerS art chasJled with collcctint. mformation and conducting research inw lhe 5lalt of

"We are the only state on
the East Coast with a
'frontier area '---!he
Adirondacks-where
there are less thfzn six
people per square mile. "
b&lt;allh cart available 10 U.S. rcsidtots U•-ing
outside of mouopolitan ..-.as.
UB is tbt only one of the five asoessing lhe
sweof HlV infection and hcallhcarc:availabJe
10 patients in rural arras.
Thomas C. Roscnlhal. chairman of UB's

Depanmcm ofFanuly Mtdocint and • .,,,:uti\ e
drn:ctor oflhe rural hcalth rc:«:arch ce01er. said
UB "asawardtdthtHI proj&lt;ctbtx:aU&gt;C •.,.
Yoric 's populauon pa11erns make n a good
model for lhe nauon " We art lhe onl) Slalt on
lhe East Coast "-1th a ·fronucr area· -lhe
Aduondacl.s-wbert lb&lt;n: art los than &lt;ox
people per square mile," Roscnlhal Slid. "Man)
olher part&gt; of lhe state rrunuc lhe Mtd,.tst.
._-here populalJon IS aboutl50ptr 5qtt3rt mile While srudy data"' illlx collecled nauonally. ew Yort. pro\ idtugoodstaningpoint.
Rosmlhal noted The proj&lt;ct bao four compo-

• A comprehensove nauonalliltrlllart search
for tnfonnation on HN onfecuon in rural settings
• A sunty of nauonal databases to dtltnrunt
the use of heal1ll ""'"""" b} rural rt&lt;tdenl&lt;
with HJV infection by zip code. and a companson of rural and urban use panorm
• An a.sessmeot of the oost of medlcal care
for rural resident&gt; with HJV infection
• Focus-group moetmgs to dtterrnint how
rural residents with HN onfectJOO gain access
10 medical care. oncludin~ how ofien the:)·
tn1vel 10 urban hospitals.
The swdy is slaltd 10 take 18 months.
The na!ional designation makes UB and a
consoruum of panner institutions eligjblt for
$2.5 mill1011 in restm:h cootraciS ovtr fi \'e
years. Future grant&gt; could""""' a variety of
areas. in addition 10 HlV infection.

~-

Oool)

As U . . 1 9 9 3 - . - . . . - to. doN,
from
~- .s.p.rt.
-ma - betQC ...en •
boDy.

• OerQI ~''""'

• Eatlt3!ton
• Emerorus Cenler
• Engtnee&lt;tng an11 ~oed ScMlllCe$
• Hei."'Rellled Plolessloo:s
• ln1ormaloooanaJ.~rySiuooes

S161Kl
S14100
Managerrenl
-521200Medor:tne
SliO!XXl S110 4142s- -Nao ni Sctences anO Mamemaltcs 527 !XX! S25.525'.83
-Nots,I!Q
sa.!Xio l7.!&gt;44 s1
P!tarmac-,
StO 1100
Offoce Dillie Prrsodenl
S&gt; !XX}
Office olllle PrO¥OSt

• Low
•

•
•
•

.
•
•

• Publo&lt;

Sen-a•nd Urban ANa"'

• Soctal Scoences
• Soctal Worl;

w

ocanners are curtmtly tn u~ wtll1cl,. .at
A scanntrbas b&lt;tn tnotalltdaod"""" oo
opeauon ar UB

~to SEFA

on rural HIV infection
News Bureau Staff
A new grant to the universn} from lhe

ously. tlus ~can abo b&lt; u&gt;ed oo
prqnant "'""""'who can'r •• X-rayo •
The ISIS
ue and sc:aruDll&amp; equtpmcnl ,..,.. developed b) Ootford Mcu-ics to •
Odord.
gland. Bettany bepn ,.trttng
-.ithlb&lt;....,..,_metbodllthelloyal
Na!Jonal Onltopaedl HO!if&gt;ttal"' ~
En laod, one of lb&lt; larrosr scoliools ceo~erS
tn Europe
She saad the tedlN&lt;p.tt " rqJiaclllf, X -rays
for ~ and tiSSeS.ment of scolro!.ts ID
fi•'&lt; or su ""'*"' rbrou_Jhoul Eapand. and m
a number of European """""""'- bur 10 her
l..nowltdfc IS LIStd in the Uruttd Slaroes onl} m

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0.) Snocb&lt;&gt;. CUNY HO So.

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plusecaU.,..

fTnoMd Sen-..:::n
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The Commuter Dollars meal plan ( .. •• ) wa
de igned exclusively for the University at
Buffalo commuter tudent. It · versitiJe and
,easy to use.

I~

•

offer a ale tax avings of

8~ .

point bonus for initial purchase
Ior,,i . ofoffer200a 10~
or more worth of points .

( v • are aljd for the entire academic year.

(:,.. are accepted at ALL UB Dining Service areas.

lnt~l FoiL O.nc•

'"
Fndl) ..... ,• .

offtftd C'\-C'f')
w.rw:t..,. bqJ__, •

Otd'..-nclorl H.Jt. Soul
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EXHIBITS

)

IIAUOWUHSAdt~)n(w.

"'W.II!IJI&lt;.e•

sonal d'rmt Cflll'lllnut i1lroMJ:h
19ut Roo.
Flat An ~nter.

11

ol
C.~m

tftalt(ln

••h•

-Till:

arwl raJkr'}

~c.n

0451&gt;87'1

AIITIS1'
&amp;LUI.L
Aa VISUAL -.u.JST

Lod. ...... Llbror) BM1. lr.
Lod. ,.-ood Labrat} tn(ntfk.('
Campy. 10 a._m of; r m

A f~'11'-t uh•btlAOI'I ol
dn&amp;lftf~- f'"Dt' ._ Men:uiUf"\
t4hr~

Mid

M

Nth-.na.ll\" Ok

c-Wioc!d U1l'"' ~ 111\r.tr-'~w
At.n E Cobtr tonun.Loe

COIICEJIT

M.utrrCti •ilh \\ill.aa•
Sllarp. Sloe COGI:Cf\ H.dl

-LLc:n..£North~

lOam

111~

Ubtral C..Un••li~ : Rr·
co.IJoledt.c "'1:torery "'itt.
Epiotealr Procti&lt;e, AodJ••

Nanna. Harruhoo Cnil&lt;r&lt; i&gt;IU
Bald)
Campu ~ p m

l'tiYU:SANO-

CCIU.Oell**

Phocoeaitsion •d._ F'-toSeroM .........: Uknfti1
£locuva OjDUiia a( S..i·
teedt~Ctor~ ur&amp;ft'S. Dr R•
cllanl Ha~,t&gt;L IBM T J \\ a!~'"
Rncarcta c~tcr cSJ. Fron&amp;.:z
NMhCampu.. 3 45 P·"'-

-

SA~

~'Tht"'
h~'Jollml~
the Ca) Fund for llll.n

-SALE

dvuuth

-\h

~. •

Bwdtf•dd M

C&lt;r~h:r
;At ~o~-

l...orM. l&gt;an..mwth MC"d•r.·.at

smoot. Oepl

of 8 Klehr'ml\.lr')

ll ..t~ter

Nl1C'thC4m

pus. 4pm

MATMDIA11CS COIJ.OQUIUIII
l~prasibk

urf'Jieft !n

o-.1 Braid Com plrawnl
Prof l..u Kml:et

1e1n

O.nmoulb eon.,. 101

D&gt;&lt;fendorf S&lt;uh a..y.u. • rm
I'MAaMACamCS LLCTUIIE

sProparatioa,
..-.. Tuol r"""""''"""'
·
Cbaroct&lt;riD·
tion aad AatitunMM"

En'«t of

Tasol Coataiain&amp; Li~

Commuter Dollars

.. .aofi:'l

-ALO'S LOWl:R WEST

R o,o\1D contmU('~ •

thc:Bun.--bfM.'ld "" C-C"ntct lhl~h
"''o' ~ h• mt1f't' ml•llfWYhtlfl
~d lto\ltb ol:l

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m1 F -~ Attoaatr
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lor (pat1-ttMf'J •..0..:"·~t•'lNI
lbC'QM p..,..lmt tR ~ l ll~
~•n 11 -Rc-h..b•lll.ar•
Medh. lftC. Po~UnJ! R-9lHJft
R....,rrll ~"!'port ;,p.c,.tu,.
P ~'-hulof~ P~N:tDt I"R 'lliiJ.,

l~lA ..O.t&lt;Cf:O·ll
lc..:hnnkJt!) Tnu't'Jer Sc-n.•~e
r,'loU,nJ! • R 9llm RrJJ"'1nect
1'•rw CR' · H·B ,q MS Rt

.ard1 Ctnk'f. ~nr •R
«&lt;ll
S«rftar, Ill "-oi ur"'I"F

• 9ll09

Pc~unr

~man

ll -(par1~\.-C'I,..,,..,,-,

Pt"

NOTICES

_._

IIEALnt IIIIWIIAJICE
cttOICU
NC"&lt;!io Vorl Swt emf'l•l~rr'
V. ar..-b \OW" matlbln. 1n m1J

l\6iitaa1

Rrcmrar fw Dau

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JTu..- ( L·ll·

No\('mhtr h)l ~ l0(1' o( Hrulr~1
llt:ulrUIIlt' c·~ ... f ' ,,,, J"'¥.l II
&gt;OO
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""'""h w,·n.

cunlnbutJc-.n JW1'!'l&amp;m ('n
roUmnlt. \OU mu ..1 &lt;J~.:I to-, 'l,,,
10, 199l .
c~to~ ... , lur d4.·
t;~.tl' The- dl:.adhnc lt\f ... h.;mgmr
heahht~Ofllton v.lll"-'
artnOUnc"ed ~llh dlie ·~ prr'
mu1m ralt\ Fl,-~., -.111 he- d•~
tnbulc'd D !M.N, ;a) ate' h.l'c
t;IJ.

been o&lt;1

-SALE
A bool ~ nf mt}I"C' lh.:.ta :!,000

UHIVIRSIIY AI BUffALO S SCHOOl Of MANAGII!INI
offers for Fa/11993

8'\-.llablt t-An.h-rta..l\lf'C' P,N

Tra:iai•• Prorn .. c~

smE IIEYISIRO
An ca.h1bllklf'l \)1 "'uti. l't~ tn
tcmomdnllh f«&lt;l\\loncd: d..k·a
metiW) ~41fl~ M1II\Jtl

f.J.Ittft

rd./

will be on sale
Today Thursday ov 4 &amp; Friday ov 5
at the Farber Hall Dining Area
Main Street Campus

309) A.Wsuonl/,.,._lot&lt;fl-4dl
Prorn:Mr-Miu k. P0$11'ftl If
3094 3095 """"""'/A.....-1

,,,.,

MLJONIIOOO-:

C001k1

'

1--~P-oa •r

Prol'esMr-flRifT p, •l•n&amp; •t

hw

ftlOf't lftfj•m.ht'G l.t"WH-.1

f..lltn uthun

FACULTY

'"1 •F· m

the'

~IICIEMCO

C in::adia• n.ekftpblc in •
impte )dna. Dr JenrufCT

SlOO rrummum.beginning pomt purchase required.

~

Adnu.aiaoa

THUaSDAY

~

lmm91J p• b""'"'*''
""'tlromc- ., pMnts' J'IICIIOed
f ... klh&lt;

1ec

c"""""

Cooanlloll

t •

C'MI

daoc.·•"' tua.,..,

U'll '

9:\110

&lt;Vd\ •nd
•nr trP-"\Ob',1

RC' ~ .. IfaU''" P.K!
/o~nl Dnn

for Summn Sdsion aod
~•inistratHm t ~L-S -· \1 tlharlS
r.Jtrn..,r-r C••llcft. r~"'hnJ: t P
\010 F'irw A.f'l' Ct"nter T"'h
ntcaJ Dint-tor/Production
Mana~ff (SL-U-fuK· An,
Ct"n·~ Po•.ltnl! • P \0'7~ Em ·
baiiAt'f' ( ~2 )-Anoril'lmt..:aJ

Sc.:tt:n..t'-.

p.h~lnf:

• P l(l11

LA.oil CUSSIR£D C:Ml
SOIV1CE
C'kann' (SG...O.S)-R('"dc'nt•oll
(.·u&lt;rt.~ud1.11l. Lmr • .4 \0~1

New student p.-klng lot .-.nounced
The Arena Lot located behind Alumni Arena has been opened as a free Student
pari&lt;Jng lot accordtng 10 Carmela Thompson. d~ector ol the Off tee ol Canl:&gt;us
Parl&lt;ing and tnformai!OO Services The lot. which con'.atnS approlOITlately 225
spot5. will reman a paJd lot tor faculty. staff and VIStlors. ~ sao

GRE Refresher
Course
Tlll.-.d:n 2lld 111u!W~~
6:50pm 9.30 pm
\ 0\L'I!lbcr 16 ·December 9, 19'H

m;

GMAT Refresher
Course
Saturdaj
900 am

·

1:30 pm

\ t"'-'ITlllcr lO · Jamwy

$29&gt;

. 19'}1

�Exploring

Senate as
UB to remove
aoces barrier

S~ociety's

Problems

fACULTY SliJ'oiATE.-,d,......

.............. &lt;:llllilothlbo---

New~cou....

llily1o

,delv. . lnto 80dtll ......

_,..,.,...,.....,...
bamon II)
.,

0111~

. pnora llh~dl=iplr.., foa
•
lrpll) ftQtW'Id 10 do""
nc s..- Jltited
ft!:!iOlullom out·
Fa&lt;d ~
o..l'olll of Att:t-.ft and
A--. m lu fqJOfl ..
dill£ Senaloe'
Sundinr c - " " Facild:ios Pbnaing

..
tnl{ROPOLOOY 1w often
u a .coencc of
nd esou:ric. All·
th~tSI · ha•e born descnb~d. in the popular
lit.eratu~. as llnd!ana Jones 10 seareh of i
lated m"bes. lost &lt;Rlll~. magiC d1o.ir&gt;. and
that ever-elusive Big Foot. In reality, v.-bilc
anthropolq&amp;isu do go 10 far-off ...nings 10
rond(JCIO&lt;:icnlificmoearob, 1\W'Yothets suoy
at home and srud~ ""'1-lift problems in our
own bacl&lt;yal&lt;ls.
"For a loo&amp; tim&lt; I have felt that profes,;jooaJ mlhropology wa
Ortb mneb ifir

·bien

•-ed

lbe ClOCk

I

ar

~ltplly lllCJIIR!'. onlyiO J"''1d&lt; ...-.-10
~. llullhr
"""*l- S.,.,IUOkllront.~alkod l&lt;r
IJBIOCIOIIduol.,~

&lt;UNO)

ofuliloilllftand 10 punue lledoaloi! 1111e flD!.
q ~~o- lhr &gt;)WII1IbC ftmfMll ar
'"""""'liomllfio:iblles.
The reoo!Ub0115 also called for SUNY 10
bud£et Jli'IICilCC$ OUJt f(lltt .,.,.,.

d......,."'

"""'&lt;Urelll

wblllt&gt;· l'"lJ"CC&gt; 10compettduU111) """' ......,.

........,. pl"l.,ct&gt; for tbt swnr pool al O'IOWri
Amon:lu., 10 Danford, !he ~f) a&gt;-

said PhilhpsSteven .Jr .. associattprofes&lt;ar
in the Department of Allthropolo£y and reClC'nt reciplellloftheO!ancellor's Award fO&lt;
Excellence rn Teachrng. "Anthropology is

Approaches toC~mporary SociAl Issues"
that Ste\'Cns Is currently te3Ching to I b ..,.
nlors .
With their elhnolagical t~run: and an
appreciation for !he importance of culture as
a shaper c&gt;f worldv1ew.anthropologlst5 have
the perspecthe and methodology to look at
contemporary problems in America in lbe
cc&gt;ntext of it&gt; ethnic and religiou &lt;her&gt;ity,
Stevens said "'Thi 1S something that IS lacLing 10 many of the olhu social sciences," he
noted. adding "there ,. 1101 a Sl.ogl&lt; cu.l wn:
for Wluch anthropology b.a n'tstudied. ..
St&lt;,"&lt;'OS point&lt;d out thai roore anthropology is ~ing done in the U.S. ~ause of us
heterogenerty and t~ fact that il is becomin:
incneasingly difficult for anthropologists to
stud)' traduional socieues. ibey are diffiCUlt
to find and political and economic ronsidcrotions make intemolional r.,ldworl&lt;di.fficult
to conduct.
"'"The aim of this senior seminar is to
expose a group of graduating seniors to the
idea thru anlhropologi.c al th&lt;ory and m&lt;thc&gt;dology can ~used to understand the SOCI·
e1al problems that are of great coocem 10 all
or us.· Stevens said.
While the first part of the coutse covers
the traditional whareas of anthropology such
as economic anthropology, political anthropology. ~inship. and cultural &lt;rology. the
remainder of the course is ~ing d&lt;d.icat&lt;d to
the di~u don of con1emporary U.S is~ues

ACT

11. DWud 1M!.

...,..,.......vl&lt;r

couldn't~appbedtothebiiHDfrealpeople."

uruq...,ly equ1pped to addtesJ; coottmpo&lt;ar)- ·
Amencan prol&gt;krns and issue.," he said.
• Anlhropologicaltheory and pracnce provide a frameworl.. for undem.and.i~ oocial
issues in a on. course. "Anlhrop&lt;llogical

llad&lt;rftAlmni:ano~illl
tJB IS~ b) Tille

- - . . , called for by the re.oi.U~Xm&gt;
.....wd CNhle UB 10 ldenbf) all .. .-din«·
and problems web u oociaJI&lt;OOOOOuc prob·
lems In lbe IDDCT Cl!) , subwtJs. and nmol
areas; thebreal.down oft~ family and"falll&lt;
ily values.· Jeoder relations; pubhc &lt;di.ICa·
bOll and the school : &lt;0&lt;0
and the mari::r:l
oystem: trealm&lt;nl of the elderly; child abo"'
and negl&lt;d; alOOhohsm and ocher addtctions: ' 'iolence: incest; ltcau&gt;''"·ualit) and
bomopbobia. raci.\.rn, antl-Stttuusm: u:nophollla. and hate cnmes

Oth&lt;r

lOpt • covemt m tht routs&lt; m clude " ew Age" ideolopts. altema·

ll'e medtc&lt;n&lt; and rehgton&lt;: culls; "'UgJOUS

fundamentalism . and oatanimt, Si&lt;vens e•plained. addrng that -., t~ Millcnnrum ap~ ther&lt; woll ~ 1 lot of rmporunt
rebpous acbvll) occurnng."
Ont of the seminar requtn:ments JS for
students to get hand -on exp&lt;rieoce by domg a research projtd "Each "'udent comes
up Wllb a project. wntes a proposal ,.hrch
includes a reSt:arch plan and proposed metbodoiQgy." Stevens .aid. The¥ lbeo go out
uno the university or (IOmmunit)l and become anthropologists. he added. By ronducti!ll these research projects swdent; learn
about the "naturt of sciencr and """'llifJC
inquiry." St.-·ens 1101ed. add•ng that all collegesrudents~lhlstypeoflrll.lning . Hopefully. in the end they oom&lt;tounderstand that
"sciem;., is a way of knowing," he said.
The students have chosen a wide range of
IOp•cs lO research. Ste\'e.ns said. ~ iswoikmr wnh a group of AIDS sufferers who arc
also vicurru of a nt:\lo ~traan o( tubeKuiO:S'Is.
Another student •s looking at N!Senlemeru Qf
famihel m Lc&gt;\0 Canal. On&lt; is looking a1

altitude ,_llld abortion

Pbllllps

and the eulnueof()penl-

s - . n.

R~~~
anOther s:tudeniiS iRinJID

teaa--

••Ink:

uon

011 the meetings of a ho-

IOOSt'wal •uppon group

~
Mfllor .......

n.wlriMFAC.

order to eumjne boa
cope in •
bomophobk 'iOcie&lt;y
"The o...,... has~ very ~f1c.al for
me.· wd Kirsten Hedlund, an anthropolo&amp;}
ma)Of. ,.be tnmSferred 10 UB from Cornell
''Tht forst part of tbe COIInie bas ~ gro1
because we're IJ.dtinc a broad o ervic-w ol
anthropok&gt;gy . wluch os SOfll&lt;tbtng I dtdn ' t
get at Cornell." Hedlund sa11!.
··o.. te-~n shows a g-reat tn~ m
"'hat he· s dotng. and ~ explains lhmgs
"ell " H&lt;dlund oolod, adding that "'~hen 1s a
lot of open dtscu s10n and thr &lt;tuden" carr
about "hat they' ,.. leanung • H&lt;dlund. ..t.o
" ••or\Jng as a volunteer at "Filt'nds of lbe
N1gh1 People" for her researob on alrohoiJsm among lbe bom&lt;less, is hopi.ng 10 rontinue her studlell in cultural anthropolc&gt;Jy as
'a graduatutuderu at I~ ni' ersi!)•ofMidug.an DC'11 year.
Craig HelliWI. """"""studeru in thrclass.
notnd. "Whilt many oChercouncs &lt;1011"1m.aU
you think. lhlS one does_Dr. S""cns W&gt;mt:·
time.! won't giw: 1 du't"a
wer to a q
uon Ht" wants us to find the am-.--ers
ourselveo. He' r"ellly an incredibk t&lt;acher
who tne. timt for tuden nd cares lbou1
tbem." Kerman added. Hennan, '"'ho hopes
to study osmopalhoc m&lt;dkme. L$ restan:h·
mg how ost.eopalhk medtcute is. ,.;C'wed b~
phpidllns andpallents,
10

bo""""'~uab

tur.a[ lwnenand 10 pulAII oc:curu&lt; pri&lt;%Cig 00

the COli Df dleu ..,.,..-al. tnf&lt;llrlllatdl ...tuch.
Danford Ulld. UB does 1101 Clll'!elldy oe l!p
10 tbt. pouu m lime. UB ba&lt; 1101 e¥en diXIe tbe

""""limtted ~........,. ..tuct~ T'nlell
""'"
!hem 10 do. Ooanlon:l sarod.
The resdllli&lt;,los ai&gt;Ocalled farUB 10"""""
Wilt fundu11 .,. lbe ........... of"""" b:artlen
lbrough either leglSiauve tnterYention th:l!
wouldpermn thecc:rmbu&gt;inc ol'm• -&lt;»S~ a&lt;Xl&lt;:&gt;·
Sl i\lly jii'OJOCI5 so !hal the~ can qualil)· for
IUndr!lllhrougbtheSUNY~ FUnd.

orlhrou&amp;fl~ ~speafocaley

b) lhe Stall: l..eg1slaom: for lhe purpose Df
remM'lng bon:itn 10~

obn Boot of Manaremem Scitnce
and St'st&lt;:ln! sarod that hr had mformmJoo
lbor IIIIII.Y SlildeDfs wllbdisatiiiJIJoes .,_llopp)
""'"' Ull' • Cllll1:'dpoboe$. and
many ...:11
SIUdeorJi fell tba UB had~ quilr """"""'"""'
10 delhng wilh dleu paniocul:ar &lt;lilllll:ICUI$ lk
said thai UB had "ppt•lorlc
0&lt;1 impn:&gt;•·
ing i1s aa:csg'biJily for """' IIUI!enls. and be ·
qu&lt;ISiionod wbeltbtr .. IIIOmJll 10 "'""""" oil
artihil«ltllrrl bmriers lO """""' ..... ""'"' im·
ponant ·than other """'-'CmS.
Danford respot1oCied b) saying that.~·
tbe onu " "m 0r1 stud&lt;:nts ro •dentify"d!em-

J

,..._y"

scl•·esu havingdJ&lt;abrlity and that, ~unfar­
tunatd) .

mer.· s

Ill • sticma nacbod. • H.e

sa&gt;d oJso that II wa 1101 the goal of his
oomm1uee •s "'""" to compare the impor~
tance of retnO\ ing ordu~ barnoen Ill
occess 11o·ith olhu ooncems 11 UB
lnolhor~ lheSei!R~·­

bOOIDS!rollglywp:UB ~andean~ Ol)d leadmi 10 ''dn lb:ir 10
lbe Buffllo Philharrrmic On::beslra"

=Cowmal..,...to~~lbal
thef:.CUII)•micbt

invol"•:hn1beis&lt;ue-s

~thepqx&gt;O!d~dlhe
Schcdnle 25 ~ JYOil'lW II UB.

En~er ~he Repor~er ·s

Holiday Recipe

Con~es~

Go look It u p-t!lilflav&lt;rieholclayreape,lhenlhaliamllyardlnMds
ctalllO! lor because d's sooo good tt can t.mg you tame and tonune-juSIIly
sttanngJt W11l1 )'OUt UB collea!IIJ!!S. you could have~ publtslled m!he fleporrer

Pleaoe 1)'111 tne re::rpe Ill too&lt; boo!&lt; Sf1l&lt; with lfl!lfllOii!fllS hrst. d recoons
rollowUJO-&lt;md pu1 yrur name aodress depanment. your lA! trtle and """""
number aJ the topotlllej!age Ultlere sa Oflel•story' abo.-llleoope-liawyou
created H. w1lal mel ot tradillons ~ r~ 11ow many ~rs you ve served n

Our aMual reope coolest begms rlgtll oow-~·s open ID lat~~tty. SlaH and
SIUdems. Well judge H!Drtaste appeal , rue ot prepar.lllon. origlllaiHy, and its
colllnbutron to a healthy diet Winner ol the recwe judged !he best will receive a

In rave revieWS ell:. . onclude !halloo

.aro win a pnze bes!Oes

ttandsome coffee IBbleoool&lt; book as a pure

Mall or lal.lo ~ Recrpe Colllest136 Crolls, Uowers~y aJIMI.U..
14260. ~5·2313 Ot E·matlto r...-t...,.•.llllflale.edu
[).eadlinef'orreceipot-of"ent:rlesh~Nov. .t8.

Cowen menuCI!:lOd """""""lhal might
inv""-" the fw.:ulty. inc.ludmg tbt problem ar
sdleduling ..ill ~ changed b) the .....
sys~&lt;m. The faculty had not been asli:&lt;d to
panicipale in thedoc1sian 10 implemedScfx:d..
uJe 25. Co\0-en said, Olddm&amp; thai hr belkv&lt;d it
"-a. a decision in wlrid! Ill£ faculty was "ooncem&lt;d •itally. We sboukln 't jus&gt;~ told about
it,- ~ said. adding that be WI$ ........-ied thai
SchedulelS ...... ld hrimpiemelm:d bef&lt;n tbe
faculty had • chance 10 act.
5.amu&lt;l Sc::hact al Mathematics~
thallhe FSEC should coo ider a re.olutioo to
enter into decisions about Schedule 25. 'Peler
Nod.en;on.FacultySenal~chair ,.agre&lt;d II "''liS

a conc&lt;m and lhat he would loolo; iruo lt.

�Washington Po t
reporter to address
alumni

0

BOWIII'd KurU, mcdta repol'ler for
n.~
l'ost and a '1974
gnoduale of UB, will be the q&gt;eaker for the
fan! oven! in lhe ~UB Ia Wasbingtnn"
scri&lt;s. iP be hdd from
p,m, Nov 4, M
N.mud;;et Landin H23 Elm SL,
~ near lho Bethetda Metro Sut.aoo.
Kuru w\11 diSCUSJ lu recent boot. t.k
dio CIIC~U ~ Tt'OMIM witlt AIWI'i.,...·s
NA:IIJOP'1'11· 1\ Wasltl~tglon I''Ofl .wr
member oiDce 19 I. be b.u served as the
paper's Now Yor\ A'AU chief and co• •

w.w...,ton

trod the J...uce llq&gt;&amp;runent. Coogr&lt;&gt; and
urban allair&gt;.
H&lt; bold&gt; a degrer m Engli.tt ond P•}·
cholog} from 8 ond a ll'i&amp;SU':f'&lt; degree
from the Qllumbl&amp; SdJool of Joumalism.

Students get dose
of real life nursing
ursmg £tUdents ll1 8 ..., gJVIO~
nu obou .. sit"" around Enc Colmt\
this fall and leammg about !R""ntl'"' ·
health can: m the prooeso) Thr 60 SCOlOf
.wdcnt&gt; are mrolled in a (;OUt5C in the UB
School ofNW'5il'l!l tided· 'umng in the
C.m1mumty "In .dd1tioo 10 their d~ ...
room WO&lt;it, the W&lt;alht Stodmts to
school ·. 00011pauanal health centen and

0

borne~

agcooic•.

Thr flu immumutioo p!'OI!I'llm. dare&lt;'led

by the Vt aling Nursing Ass&lt;x.'1ation of
W""lf:m ew Yorl:. Inc .. prm·tdes ~ rmportanl sen;.:., ....t.ilc gtving studcnb a
dose of &lt;eai-!Jfe nllr$tng. sa~&gt; C&lt;tU~&gt;e cnordmator bureen Friedman. UB .,..,._,
profe&lt;SCJ&lt; of nursing

ClOIIdu&lt;t&lt;d fOt Ills Cortbeomtna book. '"Ia·
mlble U - 18 Jatl G.t1 Men, 0!-IC&amp;t!'
and tho R...::on&gt;Wetioo of Maohood.•
Nero,~ of rh&lt; African American
Su.odtes Pracmn and profenor ot rbelooc
and tbatet 01 811et COI!qe. CllfTIIRII)· i&gt;
...-vine IS I R~feller Hu
iii« l'el·
low In lite Cen ror l..col&gt;iaa and Oay
Studios • lite Ctty Um•asity or~
York.
Hi leavrt is~ b the UB
Gr.cSuale Oay and Le&lt;bloo Alluuu. thr
~

0

Oled African American ocbolar
C lw'les 1(, ent will speak on ·tnvisi!lle Lives: Black Gay Men and the
Farmly." at 8 p.m. on Thursday. No••. II .
m Room 330 of !be Student moo. Nero's
speech, whid! i · Cree and open to rh&lt; pul&gt;bc, will be based on !be =rclt be has

~~~ ~;,g

nrt,.,,_..,.r

.,.., nurby ~ C&lt;nter opens 1&lt; I JO LeBnm
(pll
I ro llotky .. Aiettmd =VA H~l
• f&gt;'l"l"'""'d by the &amp;uffalo VA M..t.cal Ceotrr
• C)penu&gt;J l&lt;J 'I"'"' w the \...'1! Cammon .

•

• ~ ..,rams. tod&lt;llinl&lt; ~
EnrolliJl! o0'101

861-4702 or information

tudent~{G$A), Iibe

GSA procram COCJrtJiuablr. ~I
BliCX
Law Students. the Antmtan
Srudtes ~ Stutletll Club the Depanment of Amencan IUdtes. ibe Rookefdlet

I

HunwmtCS Fd.l-..btp l'lropa the t..abtan!Gay/Bi..,,.,., &gt;\lllano&lt; and the Studenr A !wOC'•at)oo

U)
~d"

•UB alumni
Jegi lative unit
honors Lundine

c

&gt;

0

LA. Go-. Sta.n l.Atadillt v.tll be
hoooml b) the l Ahnnru A
••
uoo Lej;tslatnc 1\ctlOtl Comnuttee 11 a
breaL.faSI., 8 am ""Wcd...,~y. ' ' 17. ·n rh&lt; Rtcl1 Rc:nau'""""' lllpra, Ont
W . FUry St . Buffalo l..wKime v. tU be
bonorcd for Iusmany ye~~ts o( suppott of
UB, porttcu!oriy tn lho areas or mttUiti'CS
and program• in sc~ and 'tcdtnology
Thr UB ,O.Iumna A.ssociatton l.eJll•lllll'&lt;
ACltion Clomminec bdd i firu rnedinj: m
!arch 1992 Mernbcr&gt;hip oncll.lde 16
a!umru of UB who arc ded&gt;Cated 10
the tmporu!n&lt;:&lt; of s1a1• '
ol

••Y••r

the untversn and

'"program

ID members

of thr We,tc:m N.-• Yar\ delc~at&gt;On on the
State Le~t&gt;larure
II was founded b\ J OOtlb A Scb,.c:ndlcr
v•ben she Y.M presl(icnl of the CB Alumm
A~ation and C'OOUn~

Noted African
American
scholar lectures

QU61ity _.,;,.

under her cba:Jr-

"""'t""'

m.m.&gt;lup. Molly McKeown. UB
'1C:t ~tdml fOf ~\tmment rclat1on\.
~" h

as ach t"iif 10 the commtuee

In addJbOO tu Sdo,.endler. UB alunmo
v. bo serve as. 'olun1eers oo lhc: r.omm•tt«
are: W•lham E Cres•tn211. Marybeth
Cullman, FronL N. Cuomo. Wtlhe R.
Evan•. im G. FIIITCII. Wilham G
Hamtlton Jr . Loon Hendc:rl;on Sr.. Ttmotb}
J K.uoe. Jeann&lt;'lte E. Oi:den. Walter R.
Pacer Jr .• Jornt F Phillips, MD .. Jean C.
1'&lt;1"''""'· Donald C Robert&gt;. Denni&gt; C
aero and T&lt;"IT) W WeGier.

~t¢

-'='-

The University at Buffalo
faculty of Natural ~ and Mathematics

SelENa

1HE E

ONMf.Nf

l..l.ctuRE 5ou£s
101

Bal~

Campti~

Hall. "orrh

Fir-e Ecology&amp; tbe Florida ::.cmb}ay Lessons for
Con ervation in t1 Fragrnertted Ecosrstem
pea.kec JOHJI. \X'. frrZJ&gt;. ~TIRICK •
lbt:&amp;tSda • Nuvnn.bn' t:b at 4 pm

The hifir1ite Complexity ofTrupical Bfologrl·pea.ker. MIOl..a
11ue!!day,

H.

~ 9th

ROBII\~~
at ,JO pm

Request fov Nominations for
Distinguished Service Professor
The Slate University oC New York is •nlliting nominatoans to the rank ol Distin·
guisned SeiVIce Prolessor. This prestigious ran!&lt; recogniZe'S outstandlflg
seiVIce to the campus, State Urniversi!y and beyond
The OisbnguiShed Service Profes$01'ship is a rank above full professor. It is
a tenured ooiv~ rank Wh1ctl is 0011!ened only by the State University ol '
New York Board ol Trus!ees to individuals who have attarned lhe rank ol full
profesSO&lt; and who have completed at least ten yean&gt; ol futJ-ttme _,.ice in
SUNY. Nominations may anse from faculty , student body and admtmslratoon
Those presently h01d1ng this ran include G Lester Anderson (Emeriius)
Claude Welch, Robert H Aossberg Norman Sol&lt;olf. James Coover. Oenn•s
Malone. Newton Garver Kenneth lnada. V~gonra Leary and Thomas
Headrick
Each nomonalton should be accornpan"'d by a curren; vrta ol the nomnee
SeH-nomonatrons are not appropriate
Please send nominations by December 3, 1993, to:

Joyce E. Stnanm. Cha"
Disttnguished Servioe Comminee
VICe PrOIIOSllor Graduale Educatoan
and Dean ol the Graduate SchOOl
552 Capen Hall. North Campus

john W. Fitzpatrick Michael H. Robinson
ExEamvE DlllECIOtl,
AltCI:llBOLD BIOLOGICAL

Dt.RECrO&amp;, AI10NAL
ZooLornc.u PAD:

STAIION

JTHSONW'\

1Nsnnmo .

Both lectures are fret: and open to the public
Sprm.sotWI ~· tbe 0..Upt'r'-Sii11frr.ed (Jomp"'fl' Inc ..
lbe Corif&lt;?re11C('5 lrr :fbp Dl$cipllPI.ffS, Qlld tbe

Orn•Jl'&lt;&gt;lier i£&lt;:tlfff!' M&lt;nd

�•

y

will make il. ]p qai.

11-

SliC(IOJ!Iil f~y.
ayL
On!;
~~
om.i&lt;thr
~ Qayo-CCrllicna l'bladetpbia.
• ""'""'..........a~ eol&lt;lrprise serving men .Jb:iln ll'lXI childrtll aiiWo !lites, with
piiUISIQ """"'elhil:d Oiltl next'!'=· Orild.~.
he writes, "cxplicil1y&amp;rmnslrates thr positi '"'

link belw....,. quillizy ewe 8lld quality JOb&lt;.··
Aooll&gt;er eump'lc · ,lbe
Community 'ur.itl)•, lnc ., a ~ betwee~l
community-b:~.'O:d duld..,., ~ 11!111 a 1"'1'• CO!'fK""•·
isbet-Prk.'C. Inc.
·Community ecooornic de&gt;'Ciupmen~ in ~ 10 IJlldO. ·

East,.__

eocKIIlll1lCdevdopmenl. is~as )Jllldl

and seeks greater llei;IIQCl.,Oe•
&lt;M:&lt;alocaJCCQilOiny and equitable ollix:&amp;l~~

OS Wllh OOOOOnUl' IJI'OWI.h

, Pil&lt;j8&lt;&gt;ffllClleS.
;, well"suited ro these goals b- •

~

It

rains:

dli:ld&lt;M&lt; ...-vtces wpporn 1lbar ~
'ld Cilll'isessentialfor parmlal~

_.jd ~-inl-omo oomrnunilies.

cihild-cate programs with I qualit)'edu·
$1R:nglhen the oocial and ecooomic
. in ""' lot1g•tr:rm.

..,~ ·

ooafuM~~ ad-~~~~--~~'~

oiZlllioo. Anafl:malell ~
and &lt;!O!lJIIllll!il ~ ptO&gt;iilos
and access 10l.aooaal~

"The oipif,.,.._of,Cll'il&lt;ll;poiQe is its
r.._, di.'IU*fily (Jfobi~jllbsand~'lll:ld-IJGI&lt;dlild·
care S&lt;Of\'1.,.,,~ Pitegoff write._ "'Wbik
the
ado:rinislrative. finm:ial and~ ~c( ~ ~­

""""'qpetalionfontildreo,~-!IO~Ibe

&gt; OtiJd.care vem~RS cnn 01\".ale jobs at Ieos ~ ·dwl businesseo;lha! rt:quin: investmcuts in IIIIlCbinery and i~M:olory.and
.are less ~le to global oolt\J'Otition dwl ihe •1111)1~
Qll01lfat:n~ring-sector.

cbalkmge of ·~~ Gltdet tb1J i!MJIIC
care~and~" ~C&lt; ·~ .Sllt'ltas

iJ4-

cxhJ ' ltld.at~ ·aa~ m&amp; ihei:laSel'&lt;nmiburing
~ WO&lt;IItii~~J..o&amp;;- )leu
-

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Octobet 28 199)

Voluml" 2S No r,

Higher Ed Su
Regents U · Says

g,

Restructuring offunding system recommended
uoas of nearly one btll1011 dol~

Tbe cuU..O

oncluding
that New
York

State 's
"higher
education
asset is eroding," the
Regents Commission on
Higher Education in a
report, "Sharing the
Challenge," called for a
major re tructuring of
the manner in which the

State deli ers and upports higher education.
l..ookJn' at

lbe Stale's 148 collej;e&gt; and uruverslllrS. thr comnu -

oolbbonuon
and shanng rA resoun:es; -irutional
rruss100 stllemenb "used m 1 rigor-

SlOO

urges

ous way"

onaea;ed

10 ronnut~ ~t&gt;n&amp;...-angr

plarrs; and llllentioo tochanplll! ,.on,
foro: needs rn shaping cumculum
and aadetmc l'f'OI1JUl'
'1be Comnu s10n ('.11\'1!-t~ a
bmc " 1\tn !be SUitt' """"' sysu:m
W&gt;ll collectt•·ely become a 'virtual
unwemty .... tbt rqXWt. o»ued Sept.
23. stalb.. "composed of mdl• odual
inWtutioru. each -.nh fl o-..n rru..,.
oon but parucipaung full) on a Slate ·
wide learrung commurut ~ wuhnut
boundaries on space or ume."
Aho recommend~d are re soun:es to CU 'Y and SUI\'Y '1o
mruntam qualll~ b) 1ncre~1ng lhe
percentage offull-ume faculty. abiliz.tng student/faculty ratiOS and
p rov iding a needed su pp ly of
oou~ and course ~lect1an~ 10
permit stu&amp;nts to romplet&lt; COUtS&lt;
requ irement oo schedule. among
other teiiCbiog needs
"A combination of addmonal
SUite funding, tu ition rncome. and
reallocation o f e1isttng resources.
will be essential to attaon the sup-

pon n&lt;:ee&lt;!&gt;ary." the report stat.4'11ere has been eros-ion in SWI."
suppon." according 10 the report
" In the fiscal year 1992-93, State
appropriations for all higher edue&lt;ttion pUTJIOS"S were eight peroent
lower than they bad been foor years
pn:viously. an inflation-adjusted
loss to higher education mstitu -

have caused rcduc-

11011 onfocultyondstaff,lbe&amp;fer-

ral of rss&lt;nlial mainlerllll&lt;lf and,
parucularl)' on uodrpen&amp;nt on&lt;lotuooou. uS&lt; of on lliCI'UIOOnJ proportion of tullton re~enues ror
studertt fi!WICI&amp;I atd"
n.. e Comnus oon call
oo s.wt: leaden to mamta.m campu ph ocal foc:iliues. ehmonate
"arbnriU') bamcno" to student '
mo~t tbrou&amp;b lbe ·~&lt;~em u
.....,.r..... and 1t1&lt; barnc1"nl of
ne"' technoiogJCS for lcarrung.

-

hbranes and
"l'o realae the full ~ ol
lhc-~"sayslheComRUSSlOO. "thr woe should beJp as..,.. that aU focuh} and !ru.Odcnb
ha'" 'dcsl'Ulp. ~ 10 nrtwori.&lt;d
oompunng pov.a ond powerful but
""'} -4&lt;HJSC !Oft,.-.., ll'lOb
1'o take ad• ant•~ of !ben'""
=hnologoe to help achoe-. ompro"r:ment m tea('hanJt A1'ld learn
10g. tnSlltUifOO hou1d do "'hat 1'1.
SIIUCtl&lt;&gt;ll.

Deeeiut)' to reqructurr tbear Of -

garur.auon.cumculum, graduaJJOn

""'"""mert'' ond onfra&gt;truetur&lt;: •

--·

by &lt;4r&gt; e-m llld lqnha&gt;d)
1\nlcd"' 1987 "'o ............. de~ ol docloni edualion and

.........,
............
In f'I"""'''Jn&amp; lbeComnumoo ·
final

repon 10 !be Re

rt-commt:odatton

....-1} ""er} prct of """ edttUIJOO deh"&lt;"T) ond wppon.

fundin g, tuiti o n

d•.ttotbo a.ndudr

thr:~ ll"UCtUflOJ

• Gnml pubhc 1n tuuuoas
~lin 0~
t1lon tO
orerau then Cl1l1pl.
r o.;counta ht ......

incom e and.

• c ......

reall ocati on ~ of

e xi ling resources

olctWl't.tii,..,.,.....,.IO..,.,andii'IOie
COOI-dt'eo:ID-cway or~theu

will be e . sent ial

"R.tle}wd "AOO..:aU~
educloon mus1 &lt;mbai on a pMb
that '"" dc:rnonstnle 10 lhc pulilk
and 10 thr Stale lhllt 11 IS cmtmltiCd
10 Stgntf&gt;antchanlr "'1111&lt; """""" ·
on~ lbe best of ns ondloonal mlr&lt; •

F"'""'

1'o JR'i&lt;"W lhc on """"""'
alread) fWik
retUrn'i
llllhr year.illhead.lhr
~ •'llh
~ g&lt;l\'c:mmc:nl.&gt; ...... nwLt lhc
choKr topro.'*lhr""""""""""'""
""Y 10 &lt;Nble htj;hrr eth:aiJOn I&lt;&gt;
sc:rvr
Ytd. tT1tO tht 1JSI cen

IRl kl""'""'" ..,
s....

~ "'PP" OOO&lt;S liB'&gt; """"""'·
&gt;hop "' lhc As!io.."lllllln ol """""""'
Linl""""""- """ """'"""-" ,.,..,.m
oppt:W1liDl1JO made po&lt;SJbl&lt; b) lhc

!Ur) "

GnidlatRcan:h.......,ve.Jl'OIIO"''d

of ltll1n&lt;) """ I' bblr IO&lt;duc:mon.

fiscal

a ttain the suppor1

t ~....:lertbeJr""""""

• Rt dun
.. pobll.. and pn •
'att 1n -lut)()M, bout cu:rncu1
prlll.':t'')\._ Of'JULIZ&amp;UOQ&amp;J llitr'uC'IW"H

and tit&lt; mu of t.et'brtolof) aad per
&gt;Oilntl

nece sary.··

..... , .

·, &lt;&gt;labltlihrd ,aa~

··Qualu~

and Acre&lt;
Cboocc." tbt repon
...,_ """t •ncbode on eqld.l comof

~ ub

S!ae.IOO. ''llae ll'l:dllli·
cull chooces." IUle) t'OflllfiUOd

~

t

'-"'1'

'"'anl-

for the

dt• tdual "'"'-""

colic ~and uomtmtlt'
th• mean• thou oful rcdJIU:tlOII
~Fe&lt;

""' recornmao-

Othn "'"'""

ent&lt;. Com -

roo ton Charr Voctor J Rdt) ]r
urted bo&amp;ha edocaoon ond lbe
State t pnn W. thr ludc..tup for

CtlUDC

COD

" ... additio nal s tate

""""' . ,.,.VI,._ lhr"'*Slale,
of
aiOI1j!

a.m:t1l

c:orr;IJ'IO..,

we"&lt;!CCaaf~lhrornount

It add&gt; ''Tite Corom"''"" h.b
doub&lt; thai fwther lbudgttl cut'
•nuld product •k!m(_liW ..cnuu
doma~ '" tx-.h '1"41~~ and a.:&lt;~­
'-lb-dlt'!' IR thto.c' ~ pu lh.l lll"-tltU
han Therehn&lt;l~douht.t-tthc-r lt\41
adi.biJonal fund" "-1H ~ 10 he'

DC'&gt;

fli'O"ldc:'d th~ IUHtOP .aijU't
mcnt ft'tOrr ,~~~gft''"-'f' lunc.t-r.u ..
tn@ 1n man\ ln,tiiUtton... nd

rallo&amp;.:.atllln

rflort h;.

l~

m..:t:Itu

uon thcrn~l\~ "-. b •-ell ot aJd1·
'"""" St.te aprrnrnauon •
Tht ·p.tf&lt; "'P&lt;'ff on.:luJ&lt;-, I~

mttment tt "'Cc."KI Eff«tt\-eoe

~

c""""''""" found

u"'"" IJlollft of

·

Y

-

the

•

y- ·

r.:m &lt;PI lugha' edualooa proo.ldet 16

runJ.mtnto~

Rt.le) IOid the

Rq........_, '1'1-lourh •-ontpn""' rA a
':ttld)

puhl"-. tndependcnt ond

dq;=-,._.,

cofleres

and uru,erqor.. 11

a

~

udter Tht Cornrrus&lt;tOil .,....
phil&gt;lzt&lt;. the 'alur ol
teal """
&gt;AM or Jn~ I
10ib....

----9.92%

•

4.96%

17.36%

Education

:=1

Healu./HOSIIHIIIS

:3
0

w.tfwe
Public~

. . . .llfa

8.88%

0

Ott.. Edualtloa

0

Emir. . . . . . . . .

Govt. Adlllift.

Source

~ ca-.on on Hrgl&gt;ef Eaucsl""'

5.34%

od

.~poru tudt~

,....._il

0
0

o.Mintwnt

Ott..

�------·

2
•

...

•

~

-

c

~

-----

Research
on oral
health

J
SOCIAl

"I gm up in South Central Los Angeles,

W(R(

~

.._.,

in an environmenJ that was JWI conduche

. . . _ L - - allll&gt;danlln 1he UB School d Soc:.IWorl&lt;.- been~
• Golnell ~ Sctdar·

18 becoming a

--......-

cienJist. "

.......

sr.p from .............. ,.._,.
d Soc:ael Wcmn
The $4J)OO ICI'dlnhop •
- . . , . Qllllliliad .....

danl...,.., ' - wotl&lt;ed Wl1h
N!IIM&gt; Amencan or Hisparoc
~

Jomlnon, r-*'"1 ollhe
Alagany l'1dian Aeservabon.
" • ~ rTIIf&gt;ager
child
andlamly..
Seneca Nobon In GowwdiL

She---Iarmore

Seneca

. . , • clllc8de

H1 offtec 1n • 1er Hall onlh&lt;
Sooth C.mpox 1 rneuculou ly "'
gan11.&lt;d. the oompui&lt;T equlj&gt;l"llml.
tbt
l•c•. and the numcrou
clutn that co•cr the board abo&gt;e
h1 do:sl an amonged 1 suctu "'ay
that c•&lt;T)'Ib
has a well-dE-fined
pbtt. And ~hero art lh&lt; """"""')
human IOU&lt;t&gt;es. pllocoyaph ofh1
[011\lly m ont """"'' of lh&lt; room.
..,vera~ poctures of boet oo the
waD wtuch malclt ""dl "'1th the
SOJiboolls noa11~ on the computeT
liC1't&gt;en
"1 ~up m Sooth Cenual t..o.

Angeles." he say - 1n an envuonment that was not conduavc 10
becomtn&amp; a icnuSI I &lt;lon ' ti.IJ&lt;&gt;,.
of anyone dsc tbtrc wbo became
an oeadetruc The bl£1lesl mnu ·
~1nmy&amp;o100W~I

Klt:llliSI "'"'my folher, wbo U&amp;·
geSied that I COIISider med!c1n&lt; .,

• cateer

Wh1le o

tudcnl 11 UCLA .

KururubiJ decJded thai he hod

I

prd~ forracan::ft ovaclo""""

modl&lt;'lne • ...Sihe rceuh -

1

cion

I'll pwiu...Ill boochcm&amp;&lt;U} Ko.nnvtSU
vod boll!
B I m do&lt;miSU) I ond Pb D (m
boolococal d!&lt;mlstt)l • lJO..A
"At thalume. 1at&lt;o fi
early
11~ btochcmostty bos&gt;cally '"
•olvcd tbt !il.udy of bktena-{bJS
..... before tbt molecu.lar btolocY
r.:voiUliOil Boe1enawoslbtcbota:
for ud)'l~boooyw:msthcn An•
mol we&lt;econstdercdt ccmplc•.
v.hcreo&gt; b.cleno "''OR somple. e.uy
10 pov.. and e.pcn mean on tbtm
could be done 1n a do) . os oppo&lt;cd
to week&lt;
"Later. ..-tule other\ "''"cd on
to udymz lar&amp;a btosystvns. I
!ii.Oycd wuh tbt study of b.clena.
because I rcco,ruzcd the vanous
ed&gt;aDIO£et of wor\.
•nth them
Because tbty are 1mporuuu as
cou...,. of d~IeaSC . I 1'00\'cd 10
!il.ud) 111g thai .,.,a, m pamcuJ..- di ·
SIOIIIO do

.,.... of the mouth •

Panly 1&gt;&lt;-ca...c of

counr on

1

ltt1un

m~

tho.! he

onh .,.,.,

Wfl(left DUrnen:NS

beat

JMJICI"S - · · \oC
'*I for 20

"" lhol

tun .......~ be

~

~
decay " related 10 suaosc:andllumM
.~ he
e&lt;plauao
~....._.
converu wc:rosc lDlO a
~ ~M~
~erial thai ......-hcs 10 lb&lt; ledh I' •e
donr I kJI of wort 011 ..,....

t.:oenois.ond-~·from
10 ond &lt;llmlplc

-

Kunurutsu.. UB •as ae

~
ea ~

cellenl place 10 contJ

alteedy •....,......,.., researdl.IIIOil recmtJ) bos ~ 10 ID·
dude the problems of pm diSOK.

Ute

to

.....a. 01 •
dtrecl

111

m

lmnSoffut .. ~--

""' for oral
It's ....,.
bow IMI dJere &lt;IOUid be • pn&lt;:ll·
caJ pa)'Oif ID ....... o( tbt ablbt 10"
COIIII'Oidtseak "

Facuity, alumni unitrusts provide gifts to university
HREE cbantable renwnder llliiiAI.SIJ recrntly ,...,.. e&lt;llJb..
I!Shed to provode &amp;11U 10 the Univcnoty at Buffalo.
Joyco aad Jolul MlllipJo, PhD .• professordfh•story at
UB.~yest&amp;bli&lt;bcd theJoyceJ. andJohn D M1D1pn
Scbolarslup Fund at UB lhrousJ! a charitable ,.,.,.;n&lt;ter
unibUSI amongemenl. 1lu pft c:ommemonii:S • J I.-year-old usoetation wilh tbt uruven;1ty and a lifelon&amp; mlertSI in civil ngbts.
The Millipns' pft will proVIde"""' anouo1 ~ sdlolorships for Afncan American .auden majorin&amp; in history 10 be
known u lbc Milligan Sd&gt;olan.
AI o tn'bute 10 bls family ond hiS :&gt;4 yean 011 the faculty of the
University • Buffalo dental ICbool from 1955 10 1989, llolooo1 E.
Paaten., D.D.S. '55, bu medc a paerous gift to ll)e Dental Caotenniol Earic:turteol Fund. Bqinnin&amp; with bls uncle Stanislaus J. Pamcn.
a member of the O..S of 1917. IS mcmben ol Panleno' s family ho""

re~

urne .. bell 11 C:M hovr
"" ........ heal

IIISetldcd tbe UB Sdaool ol Dental ~The &amp;•ft. uoin&amp; • Charitable ~ tmilrust.
the
Robert E. Panlaa. D.D.S. ~ f....S tollddreafulureaocds ol
the -~~ ICbool. and bollon bls UDCit, for wloom the liedlnJques
lobontory will be IWIIcd.
n.a... F. Frawley, M.D. '44, .,..,._of Gradlolole Medical
Educ.alioD .. St. Jabn •• Medical
aad Ementus ProC...- o(
MediciDe. St. Louis Uaiwnity Scbool cMMedicine,
csuiJiilbcd
• c:bont.tJie romaillder unilrust doroap • cifl o( teCl1lrities volued at
$SO.
10 tbt Uoivtnity • Baffalo.
Tbe
will bene:f'tt lbe Thomas F. Frawley. WD~ lle$ideacy
Researdl Fd
ia 1bc School o1 MedJCicat ...S B.iomedic:al
Scimc:es. 'This ~ win p-ov;.te • aipeed for • resident 10
podonn n:semch for oae year before clccidina 10 foflow primaril •
m&lt;dical research career or dccl10 £0 iDIO clinical pnctxe.

c-

�3

~earden named to 11e

earch · upport po, t Program_ makes

&lt;ultmote opponunnies for UB 10 U'llll&lt;fer
OHN DEI'.JlOEN. fUI'Illlel" do=ror
or 1he Ulli\&lt;a'Soty Ofr&gt;&lt;e ot Sponiomd l'rojr.cts Ill Thc.ldw Haptin
Uni.....:ity. has been llallled lieftior
&lt;iOWISclor to liB Ptm.ident William
R. Oreincr
Di•idin,biui!mbet unUBandWHhlnJIO!l. O.C ., Deanlen Will help the unn-erty ..:l:lkve a bmadoer base of llliJl'POI1 for
rr:sc.areh. ·with primary ltipClll obllit. fur
de-·elopina oom,.•:t&gt;onS bel....., UB rescarct&gt;
and ~lol)' tnlmfer programs and fed eral. •tatt. rq;iooal and local grou
' tn In ""'" pot.i, Oe11den woll aclv1.., un•venuy&lt;&gt;ITICei'S and f~~eulty on the •mpaa or
de el"'''ll""t • in .,.;.,.,., rnt.atdl policy
and reoearch-tellled pol !C) _ He w~l ~
h. h a UB l'f"!C''CE 'n relation to fodetal
bodies and llgCOCie&lt; thll ufea national re·
searril pohcy
AI the tale le•el Dearden will odenu!y
•ull:wid&lt;- opportunioo for UB in reseM&lt;'hn:loted economic de..,lopment ~ ;

technol"'f and otho:r ~~~ - - " '
lllale ~ies: and u
me an aetl c role
S&lt;'ltin. stm ~ pr)onties
L.oc:aiiy. he will de&gt;dop CO!Dlaet ..ilh
mdllllli)'IOi*nlif) opponvotti&lt;-sforl'rlcmil
~J'l,leeh~Mll&lt;&gt;p ~n~~Ufa- nd otba
eollal&gt;c)rall• &lt; pro·
pams
AI
John&gt;
Hop tM. Dearden
..'OI'ktd 011 beholf ol

•n

ion"""""'
lies

~
Jotm H.,..m... ~

Aonclo

10

•

tM\II!JOn;ol

Hen a

polll:)' lbat ..-auld """"'F ond ~
um•&lt;!I'SU) re.....:h

e

helped 10 CRAll: !he

Aonda Dr:tnonura!ion Proje&lt;lt lo &gt;tandard12e. weamloot nd
•unp{if) federal ...,.ni&lt;lrauve and management ""!utmneniS for codemJC research.
WOitJng ,. ilh Whtll: Hou.se olftciak. he
Jll"'pared and •ubmimd a ~I to the
Presidentoal T - fOtce 011 Rcgul•tOC) Re-

.........0.-ofl'our

l......S ~ fo.

li&lt;ndh)'Cihemocal ~ ~
1CAS~a._,"'"""tJfU.. ~Cbemoical
' lt'l) and • U) ,.,_,., ot pubb&lt;bed cWI
1'he ~ pomlde&gt;

colll'IIUOIUC'I-of

..,....of the F«i
era! Dr:tnon tration rro,..ct C&lt;lnlntcu T
Rxce .
An OOnor.
rn politiCal ,.._
from Rlil"'"' Uni•-erqt _Dearden dod due-

hard..--.

I'IOd""'"'

• - n.l oudoo•"""" c:qo.oopmnt oo trloln
"'oenu"' llld rnt11lb&lt;n ohhe ,..,.,.
m"" t)
per!Oflll diem .11-IQformatiOG

""""n"

meal ocnoe • the Whanon

..,.,..bel.

u"''""'''t or""'"'"'..
Hciu·-mbetoflhe '01l&lt;llllllCoun.;olol

llRI\'a'Slly Rc&gt;Ureh Aden llt&lt;lniiOI"\,

c.,...,....,. ho"&lt;r Olld awr d'fi-

CAS " ohe 'North A,..,.,·an oen--.ct ca&gt;...- focST'N lt11emo11.....W tthe Scienuftc Tecbn"C&amp;I nw.
t.~
J'ICO-'~dJ:rn.'1~5
to the .. orld-, ""ta'lllfiC and ieebnoc-al daub&amp;..... tnt&lt;vmahm that ' pro•tded 1 '" 11te
form or A0strac1J of "- omufIC am In

t'ly of ll...alrll Aduuniunton. Soc""'t of
Un"enny Patent Adm no lnlOOi . Locetl
•nl&amp;ecUIJ "'~andA.mrni'anA. ,_
ua11on for the Ad•~ of S..:l&lt;1&gt;Ct

Rutten Lnr~J·fn4t~ -'l:orth euem Untand th&lt; t:natrul) o{ Cahfonua 11
S.o )}ott&lt;' aht•"ere llal!1td 1&gt; lie&gt; A.tead:J
"'•· AS ,. oil .e1 up SUit&lt; -&lt;li-the-an. on-lont
twru facollloe&gt; for""' b) uru•CI'W)o .ad
CAS Wlff on condUCUnt C A and s-r-.l to•&lt;nol)

tem

uonal

"""'•hof&gt;'-

&lt;:Sigocd IO
'o&lt;21Chts for che:nucal
onformotoon .... , and morr: ,.fdely
1 all.able . the par'lnrrol'ufl pant pro»oks IJB
"''th 15 ,..,. 111M I'C• and .ott......., to

D

1

lCCe'l dau~

-wbm ..,.,.,._liD~~-

'

"""'that dJey . . _, •-b.ot •• ~ .,._
r,.,ld." w&lt;~ o., -.:1 11.

•t'•

the

CIOdcnhoeod. "'""'"-

dean of tile LfO Fkult} tJl 'aluo&amp;l Scaeaces
ODd MW!c:rnau'" and • prof.....- of cbe~D~S­
Ir) But. be !iaJd. •olume&lt; of CAS~
lill "bok roollh. and o;carohing ~II&gt;
&lt;hem caJI be ur,.lel&lt;l) me!·~· 0...
li ...~ -}e&amp;r 1ndr.'\ alooe cu number I

lnbmalion Servloes. lnfonnMian llh:u cmJpiiS
e\'aliS. tral1$pDIWion ~ and special pa!lc-

in&amp; IIC1COO'II'TIOd OS ......U OS dtn:ctoly ISSI5-

lllr&lt;leaodCW'tl!fUSmops.arcavml:lbleollhe"""""',
wbicll will be open 7:30 8Jill0 5 p.m.. Mocda)
ttrwgb Frida) .
The otoler's basic ob)&lt;Cii•-e.,Thompsoo
.aid. att •to enhana: visioor parlcin&amp; and rcla!ed
services by offering oooveruen~ casy-ID-find
pari:.ing; to irnpm'e publiC relauoos v.itb the
sunoondingCOII1lllW1itf:andtoccnlnliu=wr parlcing so that tn01e parkirlg spaces can be

b~

'"'ntl)

,_

anofdJeNo:ih~ oaidc.motaTbcrnpIOII.~ofO..{lft;ceafOimpusl'lrl&lt;inl:lnll

"People may now find it
easier to use the shunle,
and we encourage them
to use it."

talflle

-:h"''~~

memb..-ofthe bo.-dd dtn:aor.

ortheBWIIJitS!iC

Ne parking oenter for visitors is open
HE OFFICE Of Camp!H Parlclng
and TranspcJ~Uuon Senicc bas
opeoed ou """' Vosioor Parl&lt;.int
and lnfOirl!"'uon Center al cbe enllanO&lt; to 1!le Ccnlcr for ·r ornorrow
Parl:ing Lot.
The .,.,._ fcatun::s l """''DJI1 .... v.ilm::
"""'"may~ iiJtJud&gt; 1it&lt;n1we llb&lt;u UB,
Wbile walliQg or !ihuaJe ocrvioe 10 dJe JICikl!:mic

I-·-

UNIVER nY • Bul'faiD boo

A tram

toni "'""""'
School.

•

to seLentlstS

Btfcn jOin
.,...
dircc1cor. Off!&lt;% or Jtat...m
and l'rQJCCI Admo Jill'm(lll 01 , . , _ Umv oty. and ...,,_ de.u of """""'""''•
Woodfl&gt;,o Wo
School of Publ&gt;C Md {10-

~ andformrr

~awl!'

For eumplc ,

cJ.a.ta_ avmlable

ill lbc a.liemioa of . .

hcf Tb1

"-u-

n.o.t .ean:!nn1 for rnformauon ba'"'
e lher had "' l'lllll.t theor ~·•&gt; lhrough the
prmted ""flft&gt; or 111temp1 10 do an 011-1""'
«:an:ll. -..h&gt;Ch C1lll be C&gt;.pen&lt;l~ o f utON

freed for use by fat.,--ull)' , staff and swdew
~o y=tralonnt"'"''orparlang. ""'hope10
tree spliCeS in '"'pac!ed 1015 oJoog the UB
5pltl0.- Thompson said. "'The ceruer 10coll also
enhance the omagc oflhe unloersil)' 10 •isi....-..
Visilon Jlel lost here all the ·ume-the) don'o
1mow when: 10 go or "'~ 10 do. B&gt; ba"nt
""""""" v.·ho can an.,..., their questocns. "'"'
will gjve lhem • better unpreSSIOII or UB ...
~ s1-.1tt1&lt; t.Jo.n -.iRbe""PJPJdod- with
~ now from N5 a.m !D p.m , tw.A'da)
lhrough llu&gt;d..ty.and lllllil S-45 p.m. on FridaJ'I&gt;,
Thornpo&lt;Jn SOld ., . .,.,_ will bclp acbi&lt;\'1:

" ""'
lldeq •n Decemher.
··~ tmned UB Ollllleau. &gt;tall
S-ing

hener~w:Jd~ol'lbcp;rl 81g1iboole." g., wd"'Byba&gt;qtheillullodepal1

from•Sillfl&lt;dlol. wecan&lt;lll1m1UI'lical,.'llh IJ!mi
of 8l\)'1l1lnl! ~ "''lml' ....m d-oe liluttle. we·..,
I""D'r ., ~ p&lt;!Opie"' n:-4tunl. lheor ..,_
tude;~~

Man; l;q!earnpuliCS .....,

lbcm People may """" fllld d easia" 10
sblalr, w:Jd .... trllOUr3IJt th!:m 10 ""' "-..

T'heC.cnler fiorT&lt;lt'DOI1'll'A Lot "'II openite
a a paid lot for all \~(and llOIHISII""')
It ISfTCeiOfacuhy.mfl'lnfl~ Froocz.al.
and Arena lots ..;u conunuc to off&lt;r paid

,,.nor pad.fn!

and facull) , as vorl! as membetnwflhe
·

mum!) ,

rom-

,.u) be abltto~ lA ll'OlOIDS

"orl..s.hop&lt;. thm ,.1JJ teach theirJ ho"' to cooed oct """' ba IC ~- ln-dqlth traimnB
&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;1011 (ty dalaba&gt;cs !hal C!O''C:J, pecifk
lile&gt;al&gt;&lt;&gt;,. o!l be 11 ~.tile lnfonnal&gt;Oil about
lnllnf

""''"'""

....~~ned

from

Pn ilia Clad&lt;. lahor2t0f'J' d 'm &lt;he
UB O!erru•lr)' ()eplrunent. &amp;I 829-3023.

'lbonw. Mn:wak. the~·· Cl.toiiU\ e off.ocer. .. ~nn. or Mail:en Nayjor.
chemiSII)Imath

litnri~~n, .a8~216S .

Committee aims to raise awareness of tolerance issues

E

DUCATING lliECAMPUS commu.nhy on tolerance is the impor·
tant •nilialillc of the new UB
Comminee for tbe Promotion of
CampusToleranoeand 01\'erstty. The group
bas olready begun a vanety of activities
desigocd to raise camp!H awareness about
issues of toleranoe and diversiry and to pn:venl acts of intolerance, according to Donna
Jljae, associate yjce president or student affairs and co-&lt;:bair of the committee.
"'The vatucorlheoomminceistbat weare
proactive," Rice said. '.'Our goal is to anticipate anti-tolerance activities. and to come up
with strlllegies for llcaling wilh lbem."
Reorganized in the .pring of this year oa
cbe basis of an initiative that goes bad to
1989 to investigate acL&lt;of in10tenmce at 'UB,
lhcrommince includes aboul25 repn:senta·

:

,,•.,. from facully. staff and students. and
plans as one of IL ma.jor goals 10 emphAize
and pubhcolt the tolcraoce-related policies
by which UB abide&lt;. Rice .aid. ,
"We hope that cbe commiuee " oll make
people reahze lhol the university ,.iU not
ooler11.te intolerance,- R•ce said. "We ha•c a
president who very mueh "JJIII"" act of
intOlerance. There's a 101 of misinformation
out there, and people don'! 'lmo1o• how effective the campus is al combating inloler1onoe."
One k.e~ element of cbe committee's work
this fall will be a revi.sioo of cbe Univenity
Manual for Managing Diu-Related Inci dents. and an at!empt to mltk:e dear to membcrsofthe UB communiry how wch inc.ideniS
will be handled. Rl.ce said. ''A doeumenl will
be d;suibuled telling people how SUCh incidents can be rq&gt;&lt;&gt;ned." sbe said.
Acoonling to Michael Stotrs. djru:wr of
student multicultural affa.in and co-chair &lt;&gt;f
1

the oommonee, cbe commi tee h&gt; oJreiOdy
begun •BIIC'Iivities with the di5lri
of a
survey designed to idcntiry already «ist:in&amp;
campus-wide effons to promot.t tolcratme
and celch&lt;ate dj,ersity, 1'hr commiuee bas
" 'ookcd wnh t.hc Un.iven;ioy Advising
Council's 1993-94 MuluculnmJI Progmnmong, and will he co-$(l01150ring ,.·ith lbe
l&gt;i vi.sion of Student Affain and the Office of
the Pro•'OSI a ov. I 0 tcleconfenonce called
"We Can Get Along: A Blueprint for Campus Unity."

thor committte ac!ivities Ibis fall mdode drveloping a Sll&gt;dmt-&lt;ll'ic:nted l!rochure drscribing """""' 10 get a l1llllticulnnl
cdueation and bave Iilii doing it." and !Jviewing the feasibility of produciqg an infannationoJ video for orientation and prtXI1Iltional
oc:tiYitieslhat demoaslrar.es UB ·s stance on the

0

celd:Jralion ot dive:rsity, IICOJI'ding 10 Slol=

~totheoomnu!lec. ~is

defined. liB a&lt; "any 811mlp110 Injure, harm.
maJi&amp;n, « harass a per!iOII because of race.,
odiJ!ion. oolor. natioo&gt;allllizjn. hiK1diaop. . .
""'orR:J.ll&amp;lll1'1&lt;:11latian." ond includes I&lt;IIS or
Ollt:IDJl'S • ph)-.ical « psyohologioalllllm or
t:hn:a 10 mdividuals., groups. UB or tbt comIDIII»ty. Aa:oalding 10 tbt OOlDII:liul:e. o(
;nJOicranae differ "from otbor.oo::IS ofinlimid:tliaa or aimim1 br:baYior" boause they ae'
"motivalrd b) blmd of tbt cba.,... istiocs •or
l&gt;diofs or 1he Wlli= Am ot~ ae
&lt;Xli'IScious, drlibented beba\iors in--..,
insctlsjQveacts, ~maybelhei1!5Uiloflad

of

a - .·

"l'beComminoeforthePrtxnobonofOim-

pu.s ToleranoeandDiversily islakinc.,ICii...,
role iD educaliJIC tbe univasily CIIIOil1lllllir Oil
multicullunlismasweii~CCIIpiS

life b)' plannin&amp; and supponill&amp; ll:llllliallald
events and activities,. Slobs aid
.:

�•

..__
Tbt.ccmi!Cn:noe.o&lt;&gt;4p-.l!ld
o(~11111

,..,. '"""'""'

not.

bt

hdd mlbe Manm .......,_ 125 kweal'wi. "'Y·

Buttolo W'balo

ooar- " ..,. """"' 10

lbe pubic. .,..,._,.
bt rqo:Jf1l!d ••
pubiJr
10 bdd from 2-4 p no..,. Ott.
3 I "' lhe Buffalo 11111 Eno Cod) HJSIOnelll

ron.n

Society on '

Tcma m
oncludeJ*U0$10Ibe.,...,
&amp;ned rn MJrdl 1993
ned Ill&lt;
procnom lor Ill&lt; Jll'll'l'l')''• ~ The
rCJlltorl ...,!be UN ¥mill} 01 Bult ; Ia.&lt;
S~ UN -.nnyof~• Y
(
)COft.uuct&gt;OII Fund. Ill&lt; ~w Yorl. ~ Offt&lt;:e
ofl'arl.s. Recrauoaond Hr.aonc ~~ II&gt;&lt; MllrtJn HO&lt;Ilir Rouoratl&lt;lll Cor·
~

ponDot!

lnnl&lt;d ~ de&gt;cribed t i Ill&lt; ~
rolkaiOIIofFnnl.l..lo).dWn
11111
·~ ...... 10 pber tn Bulfalo. llldude 01oonall) "'Pfdcd reolonlbon ..aw.ru ond
orclurccnnllustonm&gt;. opntiCipll o(lhe Franl.
Uo)-d Wn
Fowldabon. ~-of
prupcrtlt'opmlll&gt;l .. houie·""""""""
01 Taltc:S111
m ....,..__ Tahesin Ea m
W r """'n. lhe Wn¢11 HM~&lt; 11111
m

w""" "esl

m

MBA tudents work in Eastern Europe
help open markets ~ local companie
~ ""
10 1ry 10 ddcrrnlll&lt; Ill&lt; ~
Ouni.Jr\ . . - I:IU 10""""" II&gt; boo ..... boiler&gt;

EValAI. V.'ESlF.RN Nev. Yur\.

10 I'I:Jiond He~ pro&lt;:tJdun:s ond rqula-

"""'*"""
- lr)'ID&amp; 10 pn
ldt&gt; .. F.-n E&amp;lropemrnori.m

oonr. ""J'Jftd for
rncli&gt;clrnJ """' Ill&lt;
-Vrrlur:AddodTaulfec151h&lt;
dborlm
Wrdd. who
~ ............... bork:r

•'ldllbehad
·..U.."'""'} •
Bulflio MBA
moe ""
deals ~ Ill&lt; ..........,.., eillw l'olond or Himpry~ nwbsiac 11111 llldus8) lillldil:o
tba ........., cadi oo•r. -ry' • polmllaJ lor tnde
an&lt;IQ..._,....,Ihe~

IIISilllltn. drslribuocn ond """"""""" alfraak
R....- Dlw)u. ..bo abo ~ Ill 1\"-1.
&lt;XIlldrDod &lt;IUdies forMmldaun He f'*-1
up on Ill&lt;~ procrso IIlii M&lt;nholalum
~ had """*'&lt;! Ul order 1D aport

The ~~ ....... DurAw\

Radi-.. Corp, ~ CoolnJh Corp_ Tht
M&lt;nobolaml Co.. Inc, Rdl Produc:lsCorp. ond
Cdumbus McKitnJG Corp.
The auda .......
)WI "' Ill&lt; Globoll
El&lt;pon Mab:l S&lt;n-.cc !GEMS Iprognm 11111 b)'
Ill&lt; Ollica o(RtoleM:b ond 6oonorrw: ~
mrn • 111&lt; s- u.. ...,.;,y "' Ne.. Yor\. ..
CXliiJin:bOn ¥1'1t!lh&lt;Ne.. y or\ S..Dq.tmtn
"'Eronorrw: De\doprnod.
-nus ~ ropreocru . """""&lt;worru-

dane ..

DIIyforaseb:t~dNew Yor\.~10
~
on ~ m Ill&lt; Hungarur~ ond

Pobsh morizts.. ond O&lt;Jnrib.le 10 Ill&lt; larnmg
c:.pcoenoe d luJlllly ~ICd MBA SIUdenl&gt; m
IIII&lt;IY*KW1al IJusmcs.." Sl)'l km M Tborna..
ossoc:aoe deal for llllmiii&gt;On3l Jll1lllJ'IItl' "' Ill&lt;
UB School oCManaganerL
Thc!Wdcnlswerel1llli:tlcd"11hlhorle5pCCuve.........,. .. lh&lt;liJliVll!. ond&lt;pentlh&lt; las!"""
monllts d Ill&lt; !doool &gt;'""' ~ .,11b Ill&lt;
c:omponicsiOdefmeac:oocn:t&lt;JliOJ&lt;Cl- Tht"""
....,. rroonlhs ~ ~ dl Poland or Hungary.
~ w011111b011 &lt;1 "*""'10 111&lt; a5SigJlCd
~- Each Sll.denl ~ Ill&lt; rno::rest:.

dtus &gt;pemllll1llllcxrr.....,.. ond"'3S~
for~ • Jli"OJI'd tba mot Ill&lt; rwais ond
objocliveso( lbal fum. Thomas~

The !iiiiCbu ...,.,vod lra1Siabon ond Olhcr
dreir tellpOClrYe OOUillneS lbrouglr
Scbool d Manrrip:mr:nl 110S ''' "" JJIIidlonian
Uoivenity ar Krak6w. Nrn1. ond lhe Tedwcal
IJniveJsily &lt;I 8odlp:sL
Robert Wrd&gt;d ljiCIIU:i&amp;i• """"*&gt; io WIISOW
~ in

·

·

"One thing I've leamed is
that people are more alike
than they are dijferenJ. Ir s
rhe subtleties that
marketers really need ro
grasp to be succes.iful. "

l'llland..,... d ru """' rn""""- ~ IOpical ~ and cold ~ He oho e\
plored the: mori.et polmiW d Jll'&lt;"'u.."-' of
Menlboblum· • Jlllmi&lt;XJIT1'0Dl •Rholo PharmJ
or:ullCIII and "*""""''«~ prw• phormacer.cicalmanur~

.. lh&lt;W....,...,..,~

JOI,.........,bw&gt;IOti....,.lh&lt;possrbilrl}d~

a bcrenscd manufa::IUrer .. Poland rf • Jlr'l""'d 10
bt """?ohibro,.., 10 e•port Ill&lt; Jli'O(La&gt;. &amp;
oonclusoon dwwld ITilft~alhrl.
ume. far Mcnlholarum 10 aport Ill&lt; product&gt;

DaVId Mdlcr. wbo 5pCDl lhe summer m
Bl.dapea. found lbal lus CJI1IIOlll Jli"OJI'd forO..
lumbusMciGnnonclrqrodOIIIlebt bepn v.Q\_
Tht ~ had spcUn wilh a Hta1pW1
ITIIka: d d!ains ond ~ lboul c:sablrslwog a
;ca. Wllllft. The project ..-aoflnbcrlhan Ill&lt;
inibol q&gt;try. Miller's rooio objr:aive ,.... ID

~·:~_far~.:.~·-~~~~~~~:~:~·'""l),e-.-a~u&amp;a

'Rocks for Joqks '

•• ~ond ..
10 .... _
&amp;.ope. Tbt
•
kq-4am pi would
~ ...

~

goes efectrom
-

......-

-d&amp;arot-r

..
B...m.onlabor
.... . pnvomaon
ond .... -

~far

1Jll&lt;r bepr ., C!OIIducl .,.......
rn1
.
bt
• ather

..

lhe,.. ........, The~ cn-*1 bt. )1ft
....,...,. or • ad:! a:raU ., own
~ .. lhe~ "" ........... ,._,._

·......-fidd'

..-oftDolo.~dlh&lt;paDlllllp&lt;l

....... ,...,..ond olollltrrbtl'fpaDlllll...,
.... ,'-ibularlond

p&lt;l YCIIIIIrep~S~n~n.lnlict,bt.............:IID

Mc:KIIInon ...... ~ ~
, . . -plaDond

...

•

-

" Cnt,:Jat-.,..............,.

for Ill&lt; llll&lt;nJIIJIXW

.,..... d Cdo

lllcHY "'Ill&lt; JIRlPm'

'1 foo.md 1110 I Ya) ~ . IDf!e!
some""')' dclarlod .........._.,lboula
Jli"OJI'dor~lba•would ........
~alai~

• Jcrhmlan
ablll) 10 t.a--. •
indMduol ooriCtiaaw
.,..on ............. rnlhe........,...,..
~"'"'''lllllbk orus.~
Allllwee
pnrRd """'"""' ...
r1 had br= allmiCrldou&gt; ....... ~ '1

~IOI!ll'l)ioln:ai
r .... lcomod Ill class.&lt;:ll:Jru 10 d.--. Ill ond,.,. -

lhmp

"""'""'

"'

'11P'"""'"

lhlnc-- ~ ... -

Our)afound•-wao..,.._mlrio:l1a
..nru ~
·, rr&lt;nssoril&gt; """'- ....., Tht
fun )WI .. lirw;lq Ill&lt;~ ond
en= rn m.. 10 appmodr problr:m&lt;.• he
~ r ... lcomod "..,..poop~&lt;
mm:
atri.&lt;IN- r\ aediff..-_ It' lheil.lbllclatba
~ mrlly """"'10 p1ISp 10 bt
li&lt; " Ill SI.WpmiOd ID frrrd lbal peopl&lt; rn Poland
,.inckurf. gi•-q ~a poiCrOial mor.,.,.danem..,..............,~

..

m farrulrpbolmsond~ "Ptqllclbinl..

... • land "' bobu!trbs ond lftaDmrs. tu ....
....Wisn'nnre011)'1t&gt;&lt;n.The W..-nrollucroe
an bt ....,~ )'OU look.- he soys.

~

'1lrt &lt;XIrnjllll&lt;r~- drrdD
ri&gt;M&gt;1,1!11P1rrc." ..S~

and

For

tunrpe.rnalaborala)aaa.r.. eanhCjlllll.b.
c:an,_llre~IO
-lheCjiiCIQOil. 'bolwould....,_
t1allnlllf~OOCIII'I'1ld•W

falo'!"

&amp;sed

011

d..-s Ill&lt; . . . - ......

11110 Ill&lt; CJOIIlplla'lbouldrrloaooa dill&lt;

ea1bquak&lt;' s cpa:rr~&lt;rond ·

~

·-. coknd~
mop

- - lbalrndrcallewh"'

darna&amp;e aad pound cld..-. To-

m.. .,

affoa

Cll1bqwrl.t .. Syracuoe .....,wd
lhc ~ iftforma-

Butt:

bOrr...auld bt ..tlh&lt; -...auld
dlSpla)o dltJm:rx levels d donraF 10 rellca lb&lt; ~ II III&lt; &lt;poeer*'

-~

�Jenkins urges Senate effort
on affirmative action is ues
a
to
1101 oalylhooush lhe
.Praideac'&amp;6quol ~aiUIIIIY
Al'limllllve A&lt;llioaa ,_...,...,_, "-•
in lbr tnllk&amp;&lt;lpafcbe Poo:ully Sc:allt illdf.
Edwwd
o0bt~olt..Q111
and~ told lbr
Sc:allt Eaecunve Ccmmiuce WI ......t&lt;. "Tho FSEC should
makt
to equality, JUIIJa:. fllrmutual rapect. and ~ mOre dafficull.
to nabbn&amp; some
• Jeabaa Ald. '11'
lmpen!JW: 10 show yoo.ndf faJfbful to chese
principles.to "IMiidC)'IIIC1SIII" .... aft'......
IIIII o "bono olllclt ol eiTean-eled 0111br FSEC ... ..,.._
...,.,..., and fllllllll'lllcl•
bello of
and oldie Smile itldf. and rK*d
lhll it wos auaal to have..........,.. and millcrines 011 ClllmlJ1I&lt;IeS ocber dwo mr aft'.....,..,
ICIIOO commiaooe. II imponllll10 IMiid 1br
~that millaribts- imolwd oaly
cerwn io.sucs. and.,.,..,.., 11U111ben. be IIIII
Jc:nbns said lhll be bcliews lbollbe equal
opportunity and aft'll'llllllive aroon &lt;Xlllllllilk&gt;e
should be all1ll"*"" pVnarily ol faculty wid!
- a n d llaffWJib&lt;lOIIIinuJog..,.,.._._
Sucb I aJIIIIIIiDcesbould 1101 be~by
adminislnron,.lenkins Aid. becawoe !heir lint
commitmmt WOIIId be llllhe olfoce for wbatto
111ey wort:. u...a.....t racu~ry ,.;p fed .,..
williJlc Ill speak out ..,.... aft'..,.,,.., acbOII
......._ be Aid. "' bebew lbollbe atrlltllllive
ICIJOO - - sbould mmisl ol clodicaled,
mfoonod,llOUI'IIgCJOUSmo:mben, wboauelllirrant. able 110 ooc:qot ailio:iom. - ......,. olfendccl, and who ha"" • vision of bow
allirmaliYe acbon .sbould open~&lt;. and wilD ...
willin&amp; to wad: t.d.- Jentms Ald.
1..oyce s-an. asoocialle domctor o1 me
Office of Equal Oppor1unityfAJTum..&gt;oe A£non. said it is lbr g&lt;W olher ~ 10 monitor
UB and oqoon to fccleral ......,. 011 """"'UB IS in compllance wido affinnolive ICIJOII
Ia
and to aid in l'llCI1Iiunml 011 all bRs. BUI
sbt Uled lbol me otroce os noc currently involwd in faculty n:len6on issues. and lbol no
(ollow-upo m: bein&amp; done by htJ-olfJCeOII why

I""""""""

UB 0 . faculty and utr B U I - 111
~ illlpOI1IIII
Jbe lllid, tooc.oot
UB .... tok.emcre
.,_il .._
t o - . , Nollaofar......,.
thai ... 1101 kmwn.
Qoraeol~ and~

...,e~

.... lbr
ol
1be ..... oldlo aft'.......,.,
- s..w.t .........,.. by
UB'
atr....,ve acbOII..,.. is-,_.. 011 '!'11M
Ja,. .· She rK*d thai UB '""""""tooqoonoro
lhe
of-and
e...
. . . . ead&gt; ..... ollbr_.....,._ and~

lhal 10 I ~ of lbr I&gt;IIRlb&lt;f of _.,
peoploo qaabfood to
..
Th&lt;
&amp;O""""'IIIInlroquirtS UBIOc:ome"""'nh coaJ111 CDmiCI. dd'lCieO&lt;:ItS m all - - .
IIIII
.......J'DII*'d ...cnr:::.i IO'"'l'oftirmo.

--

...........,..... ...

cdclnD ...,_,. and di&gt;ocnity Th&lt;
ol
llll'lf:llllloc II
Ye and t.lB 10 6p.re."
he-- Rcfemn&amp; -.bally 10

M

""'IIRll

~JI'ICll*wilo ..... oqotiiiCio

...

olliaol ~of lido IIICidoaiL
Samuel Scboc:k ol

IIIII lhll

r.. btin&amp; lobekd. ~She
....,..S lbol a- be
ploce II U8 fOr

-iepblivdy
. wilh.......,.
. - cifticully poblcms.lk
.. """"' "' -..d

lhll

me ~ or 1

le8d to "'nucb ...,..,. abuses......... - hecid DOl belie&gt;oe lbol liB.-!&lt;

code"

~

aSfxa:bc:odeiO~oflirmabve.....,......_

David s-ob of Anlhropolocy said
be
wished lbal me c::~~qe 10 !be equal opporturuty
and affinnalive acnoa &lt;XIIDIDiar&gt;e was toro.der
and dod DOl fo
i10iely 011 ra::tUilJnml and
-.on. bul mode more refen:na: 101be general environment ofUB and IIHlommwucalion
011 atr1111'111ive l&lt;'lion issues.

s..a

•• li8li

$12,600 $11.440 71
s6~. 17447
- S311oo- S25:i24 14

137
122
83
• &amp;iDiion
129
• Emenws ConB
108
• Engltllllfl~ ll1d ~oed Saeras S25.Dl
49
S8.500
• Hullh RNied Pr~
9
• lnlonnlltDn a tiPL_Siudtes
$1,600
~ txf
$14,100
$8,395.00
38
• t.aw
- - - S21.200---s2~S1 1M
78
• Mwoemen~
- $110.1D)Sl03.46~ - 412
• Medocille
120
· ~aiSaeras~ S27.1Dl S24.290.83
$6.125.57
43
S8.1Dl
S2
SIO.BOO $10.234.91
$6.90912
11
SS.IDI
$1.85471
53
$10.1Dl
113
$13.100 $14,061.1ili
139
S31.1D1 $28,163.92
8
S2.SIIi 96
$4.000
$7,11122(
$8,400
60
2!!0
$31.000 $31.4511.07
$39.00
2
SS.100
S2,6111.11
34
$3.000
866
$91~ $105~12
$15.335.11
S18.119.1Xl$21;18005
$8.01974

•

....

_

90 7
119.5
50.5
IllS
31.8
83 0
11l.9
1057
- HIA
891
431
849
!15 0
511.3
125.5
692
57 1
48 1
18 1
1139
94.0
32.5
899
38 9
544
76.5
94 7
39.3
- 13.3
1381
51.6
78.5
- -ST,ti
102.6
- 518
90.8
- -400 - 6-44
- ro.s ~5_
~ 1014
07
6-41
89J
634
108.3
IU
IU

----roe

S25.oos-$20.763.56

$14,500$20,400

=

&gt;
0!:

s..ao

Campa~gn ends tomorrow Thts report
reflects donations recetved by Oct 20 Your help ts
still needed to put UB C111er the top

Advftemerl and~
An:lldloaln ll1d ~
MsllldlrlleB
llenla!Medoane

w
()

Acara. eo&lt;hau of the
Pond 011 R£vlew ol
~siodb&lt;ame-ol-....,.inc:ocbllslriO&lt;XIalally.............___
001 am:ndy beq J1dormd oiiDolly' and ...
~-

The 1993 SEFA

•
•
.
.

(I)

he ~
andiO~
oi"*a'IIDIS .. 'Tit&lt;~
....
lbr..........,ol
llaliOooWIIb..,..
wiiiDknae or """'PL T.....,. ol JI'ICll*
wilD'"" dilJcmt con he prottdOd.• he-'-

---w. .

~UIUI

!.!!

UJ

.. if)

Art and Photographic
Services
oc-...: - . . .:c...............
· · · ~., 0
•e3-•84 DIST1NGUISH~D S~AKII[.S SltiiiES

~UTic..AL CO••CflfTATOW

f~ WS

IZ

irlfort(\

�8

WELCO

OISC:QVERY
A. St GlES EXPERIE CE
jA--~~

DJSCOVE:RY

is a gathering of

adult ingles for group
discussion, dancing &amp;

sociali:J.

E\'ery Th111'8day, 7:30p.m.
At the U nitarian
l'niversali..t Church of A.m1erst
6320 Main Street
~lliamsville, 1Y [ 4221
A smal Jonatioot ,.,.,.,.. J,,. Jo-,..~. pop

and pina,· a/sa a &lt;ounJ •ynem "" Ja,.,. .. igl.t
Discussion every Thu~y
Dance every second &amp; last Thu....day

Tonight's topic :
Are age &amp; loo~s important to you?

--

..........

(I1,. i ""'P;, ....,..l...omiDotoaao!J

1M I'mlool•

Cilolqld."-s-

llrilil&lt;looJ ib-

UR- --.....

THU·S -OAY

alolll•AI-

.-a.-.

~~
__

n.. Dlllcs of Tnatb Tdlinc

aod~O.•Od N"""'.
UB~

of.....,..,_

leader Nixlh~· . p.m.
adl 60S-()Il5 f«
mr""""'""' s~ b) the
s•..._ uf• Off=

"''"""'JOn

.

._._

! IIA-t'ICSCOI..LOQUIUM
..
.... - 0 r.
~

~

o....p-c;..,..l
Let:luro, Prot Stq&gt;hrtl N&lt;ldk-

-of .........1 Map.. Prof

1 John~ liB IOJ

Tbt lnibtuJc of Ca.cer Rr -

, . , . _ Soud1 Compu.. • p.m.

-AND-

P'MAIIIlACEUnea uc:TWE

Dnl&amp; Abuw~ JOIIP
Duque1tt. ~ltf W!IC'l C-enter.
Calle~ . Mlh&lt;r&lt;L
9 • m.-.,.:30 p.m For l'nrlr't lOfor -

LaboralUI') .

St.arcb.. SIJUoft.. En~lad ..ISJ.

ortlic..mp... 9 .. m.

!~!:::;...-:!':'1«

INSmvrE- ADOICTIOMI

r... ~ ...dou...

mat.ta~~ai1 &amp;4.S ~I40 .

f'OU11C:AL SCIENCE I.LCTUU

B·

-

Upt't'C'O -putH0.'e.nin! .

Compo! til' Cenler Nanh

H£WMUSICFUTIYAL
Ned :Rorem at 70~ pc:rltH
tM.nC'(1. tl.l the composer ., "'Thr

,1~

"anu.det Sool'-·- ··e.n,m Mu

manoa t."Oftlad Nec:la Bllkl
-~SOIINAII
A~r Prodbl Training.

Jamo; D. E11s., Up'idlllt- Nc~
York. Outpler. Amcncan ltnm)
f i'IUOD l.aV.)'cn A!I50CI.&amp;tl0ft

t AlLAJ. v. d1'1ipe onH -1 8
\ ltoa St3tllS, labo! l.:c:Ttlfn.-atMPfl
.and employmmt·ba3oed pcrma~ ·
nent res~d~ l4.SA Stud.l!:nt

Uruon. Norti:J Campus l -S p n.
NEWIIUIIICFDTIYAI.

E! COUNTER; "itb Nod
Roraa. Bai rd Recta! Hall. 2.50
Baird. Nonh Campu ~t. 3 p.m..

-.nDSCtEHCE

~~~~·
laterKtiw
Computational
Mocleh ud Nonapprol&lt;iauobilit y of Hard Opti·

aa.iution: Prob"-. Prof Anne
Condon. Ocpl. of Compute.
SciMCe.. Unh1 of Wrloeoru-.n 11
Madi1i00. 20 KnoL North Campus. 3:30p.m.

·-

- -TWY

M Mdloc •"" .U.O.Uted
StDClia of DNA lnltt'Ktiom..
D.~. Stephen Nddl&lt;. 1993
Bri&lt;U&gt;I-M)·m Squibl&gt; l.&lt;crum.

19

c-

(lll'U

64 5-!572.

onh

Uf\Eldentif)i.ftc aad Rnf.art.:hio.c
~en. Soma C1ntllt.
pod~W&lt; .,..,...._ UB Car=
MaMma and PIIICCR1C1111 N\'lf1.b
6.J0.8 p.m.

ru · 2-S p.m. For furthet 10lnr
1

-

c..,.

pm TJCk.eu SA 'fi,6

priUI

Hlp-H-. CC~ H..nc!~ t'DII

doorofti

Slco&lt; Coo.:&gt;al H.lll

1'tonb C.arnpv~ 8 p..m

T.....tltlouiS.-....

PhMn\at'ollnc1.CJo.
Mdlard FrU~

romr.nun rbroCl.th ,..o"

l..ow:Uan.a S LJ:tc U IU\ !80 Par\.
N0f111Campu•. 10Lm

S1 6 uflalo lpm

Tlot £ - a..~c-tu.
..- b y Loo !Uom.... ,......
Tomar. Na ~ ud lobo
c._. All&lt;n fWJ 5oulh

\ '•euenc:il Witboel P1t'Wdos..

01.ftM."aJ

H a l - l&gt;alllbit. Studeul
GaJltr}, FuX' Al1 Centtt ~orth
Compu ~ J0-7 JO p m S"""

liucal Sc~~- Na
tiooal Scon1o&lt; Foond.tuoo.

--AL
Mco:u.._e r With tile IACM
Duo. Hath• alh \ .tult '?tXI ~.am

--fUTIVM.

0\an~ Rafftrwl, Otuo SUIU:
Linn bRJ. Bald) North Cam
pu~ ' p m ("~po&amp;M'II'"ed b)
Ruffalo l...oJ){" Col)oqutum and

1.

IAA'f~-­

Elt.dions.. f'tmf Jame•
Campbell. _..., offkct. Po-

Jolm T Aieutmr prof...., of
htt.mr, ..ct Sovre1 and~ W
ropc•lt\tl!be:, UIU'II of K..lma:i.
OTolbm -~Jpm.

..

...,. "" c;.,.

f'llt~'-"­

Hospnal SQS Cooh

....

&lt;If.. .

--

lET 4 p.tll. T -· $.4. S6

~aod B..ostatJ.!i·

Campus. • p.m

Tu....,..lloC..C~

Rdl:obol......., c-.ow.,. b:lu
-~-11
~
Clot- .... o.....

..,. ,_

PhannD . d&gt;....., .
lK'

o..,,..,

--

~.

1021 M1WI S... B•Ifll&lt;&gt; llO
pm. C....,.,.....,. by lh&lt; UB

" A.-.Iob.--""A

s-1\rld ·s.r- ....

MW-FDnVAL
CAIIAKI"

A.ntimicn:.tbUb. Alan kwrt

IIWI
lla&lt;icC-. Todlaiq,...

l!loct....t s -

,.,_,- "/ohla."

l..omwoo CollU... ,.,. 0 . Re-

·L - - n : u

F~.

.....,,..r.-.
fu&lt; Cdlo - ' Horp.

-

LA-ntt&amp;ot ur tM

l mua 'lbeatt"J !(II

~lud..:ol

~~;;!~,~~{~~ ~~:nh

\ ' ~l. JM:m·litucknh

UUAII f1LM
' lghl of'Lbe Lh log lk&gt;ad. \r.u
l:knl l mnn Tht"iiiN ~tJI Studeru
l !n1un 'lorth Campu~ Mtd
no~h• Adm""""· S2 l'-1 l "8
.. 1udc:n1~ SJ SO norHotud:tnl~

E"'eqrtlt'n Oub
V.~t~Jtt .

H.O • aU~;

8ufblo I 1 p m.

M~CHEMIITWY

~" A.~mt

Sl.,....

Adi'\ A.pin..a

6""" Ca-. T~ Prof
dle. 19'13 11n&lt;IO! ·
M ~en. Squ1hb ~c.wer, The:
~ 1:1 blUU' of Cam:Cf R.csear\!1\.
SuttOfl , England I Ill
Hodt letkl Norctt C'•n•pu
J 40pm
_ , . . , - COU.OQCHI•

c.talj'(ic Conwq...... of
El:.pc.,......ntat F.~olution,
M ~t.11:Kl L Sll\:.ftOl, opm-ff.i*•
Ulll ~- ~~f UbM• at (."bltta£0 10

rm

L~~t l. r:. \tud~n.t

.8-

s-.........,._ond&lt;h&lt;

Ce11ter t'o rCopultYe &amp;ae:t)I.."C

... K " ''C)t.:le ol Hoi~ Sunt" 111\d ~ Ad~·\o01l SOIJlh~~ .C'flnL
''The: ')olftta F.: s.-m~ .. - Baud
N£W MUSIC O"UtniAI.
P4:1"CU.t!ih-~ R.ou.t-niaaL Jet:
~ ... 11:11 H.II J, !..~ B.-mJ 'urttl
f•lll'l~o.-tn H4lll NunhC.amfXI'l ~
C;;~mpu ... "' p m Tu:Let ~ SfJ

uuAenl.M

c.-.

lt.:t.;ctJ. . ~ . \4't

UUAIIALM
P..,)cbo. Stlo'lknt l ;ru('&gt;Q lllr.ateT.
!ill Stl.IJc-ru L'~ f\urthCam
ru~ ~ o4nd 10 p m A.dmt!t»&gt;ft.
\.2 ~~ tB ll'ludenb '"'0. DOt! ·

--

C.tl.-~ ··

Uionrlos. _

Doctor

.........

1-. s....,..,. a

ulaod. MD.,-.,..anolf¥·
ult) mem'bc:1• Y.ak Ulti\'.
' :boot of M~. A.usttn
Aua Rcalliag R"""'- llc:allb

----CSc..ec&lt;•l.o""""Y

,... lll".lOa.A&gt;

-c....
I

'

Ootrob-Mer&lt;y. Al&gt;om11J""""'

Fteld. North
II a.m.
NEW IIUNC RSTIVAL
11erm
Triucl&lt;: Tho Political s...c-, Don
"'ffOli. KMh'- s._•. p;.
ano: Robm Blttdt. Blllt"ltftddAtt C"""", Bufl"ol&lt;&gt;
SIJII&lt; Collq:&lt;. l p m. T"tebb-

onr.....,...

S

ATUR DAy

. ... ~Bo
lO aonc. . . . _ ---ll&amp;.
~ . S6 .

IIIEW -

~9

,.EDIATlliC - D IIOUNDS
~ew ~-~~meot.: in Hemo--

vu-.- ...R8TIVM.
lity,st&lt;:p~te&gt;
'· .,;..... Blird ~te::tw

Hall. 2.50 Baird. Ol1h Campn.

5 p.m. Ttclc&lt;ls: $.4 . S6.

SOOR: ~

Slcc Coocen Hall and !bud

~= Holl NOf1b C.mpus.

UFE--

IIuyloca Home. urtltCam-

Coto1 Pl..wnura. ~
llerlrom Tllreu:l;f...............
Joltn Fo.,.ille. f\ul&lt;: -

Sdlid:. pcro11$1iioft. AIJ&gt;nCitll t - "-" Galkty Audiloriwn.. ll

p.m.

�------·

7

------....c:&amp;AM
0.-tl~

111111

........,.

-~IG-IIa.-.

..,.,

_,
.. _
·-_

S1
I • 11/lJ'JJ

,..

w- Wwidoolill lJion.

...-..~-.(~

$476

od.lOrfll ... - . . . _ . . .

---A&amp;.

~2p.m

IIA-YICA&amp;. f'tiYSICS
Tw~B.-

,_.,., Prnf. s Ro,on. Plly•·
1Clil)qlt..U01• ofRocloeso..-.
lll Froncul NMh Campus
4p.m
~CUNIC

l!

C.....-.-l.-

110 Loct-l.ilnr) Rep·
U'lbon fonm cu M lltlcatllltld at
Lock~ ·· rdl:ft.ct drrA; Ot'
byE-maol

l..OLGEMMAII!LB\IM
1· lOpm

h
M.tlvm.l-ta

Compo .7 .JO poa Pktitcoll
~'-'612$ for tq:rtttalKMI tafOr·
!he"'
deall.lf&lt;Oifa

-

_...b

Carapuo 7 pm

onb

~

4

-flll'io-f
'-

--·
""-oon

AIOAIOMICA&amp;.IIClEJICU

~11lat. . . .
Ia~

fiii..WC ( Uffttlb
OrS.,pool

~~~~mc....pu

1: lOpm

~~~~n:r l.tn...R.MI I "'ltCt'1 ~

rr.w.c tlw SUr F.,...t- .
J~o~h """'
l!•f\ o1 Rochco;;lC'f H.C

........... Pro(

~.......u~.
) -'.SJtm

"orlhc'""""'

....

..ouMIICAI. I I C _ .

-.nn!TI- t A X -

State Tu Updak, w.l••

CA.·

••II e.unune mullt.watc
~t&amp;cctod

r•

(1f'l.

,......, foocJ \\dJ D}DIUO•
k:i ~• Uw Gmt LaUot.. Or
S.arH· Brudt L'B 81t~ ) Dept
I lA H(111.h ..IC'ttet
C.aJI'lf"b
MA-11CS CCIU.OQUIUII

lo lb. and uadavwiu.al re~­
dc:nc) Uru'\-eritl) Inn &amp;.. Confer

'\1
V.. .nt_l'tll\ " Milt'\
t.nd l ~likp:' hrl Jl \
l)o~lt'fti).IC't \f'Ulh
ru ..
~ r ~·
f't~AaMAC£11TlCS LECTURE
Maann.-.col.iottic aftd
Plui,...,IM'Gd~ uak' •.tftc•b
(
d~ratJoe el \h·dt' I·

Center, 2

Ruad.A~

I " Fornr
9am-l:!45

p.m. For fee lnd rtJKtr.1Uoh rnfot
-..,...,., adll&gt;4S J
IIEAL111 SCEMC£S
BSIEAilQI SIOLU CLASS

l!sia&amp; llHitlo Sc:l&lt;o&lt;ft Llbrar)
few ~lii•IMf "riliftC. B~ J
Heallh

~

WEDIIUDAYS At 41'WS

tAU!
T1Us Pbrosia u..n-u.blr Ex·
«p&lt; u..-.. Kathleea Fnoter.
foundan, editor of 1bc: 1nfl~JeDtiaf
JOUI'DII of upen~tallsa po-W')' by •twnen Ho-f ,.wr} 60S
a....,.., Nonb Campus. 12.30
p.m For mort tnformaooa con
tac1 Ow1es Bc:ms&amp;c:tn at64S·
3 2.

NIALtllSIUUS
lDtrodlldloa
•• 8 LCLASS
• ...,

~"c-pu...- ,....
...... 821 H&lt;allh Setcoce• ....
brwy. Soulh Canlpu&lt;. 2 p.m.

-

~God

~OM Q oakdloo, lcam

10

sean:h !he

n .... Oino!

c."

or

I inpl"fllai5elolw
aad Tracrotiinlf'Rabbit\. \\ nJo.:.a.i: ..
P l(' l.OJt.tt•~• . Ph 0
p.t&lt;old0.:1t\C11illdll·~

ubral} South

Campus 10-lla.ll'

Convenience
Quality
Service
Variety

'rm

s....
w.on
"'~"&lt;'
and
Pf'O' ide
u ·
update
lhr M.alt"
C'~

1

1.._.......,.,. . .

s..p. t B B""hc.,..... Ptw
.........,o.po '1Utolor1&gt;cr

N o-..-.1 .,.\crt
and

It

/ THURSDAY

Plf'fACSAND....-Y

peru

w-m

*

Anodoa&lt;KU -

TU ·ESDAY

mln.etl

~~ s

, _ oppbc.a

Rental Hall )'\II 84urd

Music ol.lob Z.O.... H•Uv.all!t

2
-

$725
$795

can hancflto numft'Kal ~-.IIC: and
~phol cumput.a"'-. and'- a bwl
pf'OitTOmmu'llbnf:

--.vounuu.
........ 41_ ........

Do • ~~I

m&amp;~bcoland

Ca.mp~

-IIUAC f'UliVAL

Vauh. 8ufblo 7 p m SA

- . . .. coaladCIIotin
645 3

h

c_. •

0.~---­

-Hall.

-

Maon

....

N - 0 . . - S..,...
D&lt;.r,. no
8oinl.

" . _ , _ .... podry ..,
-H"'*("'"I· 31 ~
NorUo
p,. Fer IIIOR

l 8 l)crr
,t/ Pharm..:~atl\.' ~ "~ o1

Coo
"'lC'ttl
Campu~ ·" p m""'
IICIOICE AJID 0 1 - . n
L£ct\MEMmD
Fir&lt; f.coloc """ .... florid•
Scrub Ja) : ....._lor- c ....
wn atloa t. a FraciMIItdi
Ph.a~-, ~

I

"

E&lt;M,-..... ~o~uo
Ftll.(.Qtnd.. uennn r dlllX'tOr

An:hbold Btolof.acal S~.a~.•on.
l.aU PI0&lt;1CI. Aa 101 Bold)
onh

Carnpu.~

Anderson 's Frozen Cu wd Roa t Beef
Braden • Burger Kin • PUn Hut

The b hoppe • l:ni 1art
Copy top • C.mpu Church Cmlition
Ounpu T«'
Wf'.lts • CV
D'Angelo Hair &amp;c C ml!ti
Downtown Rent-A..C.r
GPA insurance Servias
Luthem c..mpu .tini
1um~

ry

Travel

'ewm.111 enter

Optic.U Image
Recon:l Theatre
Kaplan Test Prf'p

niversity ~tores

UB

~BMicro .1les Cf'ntu ~~

4pm

WAIImM

Sa•• _..., ROS&lt; C.. lAM!.

StQdrm Untan lbeatcr. 20 l
Studenl UntOO ' h Campu~
p m Admauaon ~l SO. w.
dt:m . .SO. oon·~ udent

'3

azra:n

�------·
Stressed out? Poor diet?

••
____ .......,
---c~
Clll\llOOed from .page 7

Li

aXBtaiTS

Well Center ;can

DiJiolol'.ol-"&gt;o-·-

Noo. 19ioltoooo&amp;Uol~

......

a..-.-~

'lllollbowh_,..li)' ...
c.,. Flaod. For,_..,.._.
lioo.cal~S~.

- ..y
,...,_-·
..................
Wect io.,. dioPoJ ia

l..&lt;lcbrood Ulnry lllroqlo OcL

o.....,..r-

31 .
Drilioal
--c-,&gt;d

-olo

-clio,_,.,..--_s. ___,
___
_, _
--£Do, Cily olBUIIldo,
~t...........-.,...suo

""""-

"fibtt en:.o;.,.- ,..,. -

lllob:&lt;•• disjlloy (!(milled -

--.Deocn-Sai&lt;s.b

. . .irwlhRJol&amp;l!OcL:IliiO
•Oipetl Hall ,_.,.lobby display

IUIWISU.IL-

..........,_..__...,
A~·--bl'

w - AID E. c.-_.
...
._

......... Noo. u

-

llluddiddAnCemor.

___,

Elllibilioo..C _.....,. blt&lt;nla-

10-TERMS are coming and
many studen ore rased
out, not. cooling
and
lookio&amp; a bit bagprd. ' ow's
ihe lime 111 di..,.,_ !he olferi
of!he Livtng Wdl Cenl&lt;:r, loaolcd in
Room 223 on the~ lloo&lt;ol'lhe Slucle4!

~Mii_R_,..

,_,......a Burddidll

...._u,

An

c..- liltouPJ'k&gt;"·1&amp;.

___ ·,

..

NOTICES

s-......-.or~

c..-... --St. ..
BuiTalo io'l'ilc f.UO.. UB ll»·
-.oojoill.-r..lrictar
..-i01 for.,...,... p&gt;&lt;ls fat
... - · OcL ) I l&gt;qiloniq 01 4
p.m.. 1111 St. .JoKph_•s OMm::tl OD
MaiD St. Brio&amp; ..........
NftomaD

~ume... For lmoteiD~.

coilldoo •N ewmoaea-018:142297.

.--cwa

UB 5quaSb Oub wiD _..

........ "'c:itywide-"-1style (ooftboll) 1e&gt;op&lt; ..,....
...... I&gt;)' BuiTalo Squo$11

~

R.ocqlal
poliool ia the IIIC (imcmoodialel
.._iaD(-icel~
OA Uucrc:a.

Mcmbcn of gajyer--

sicy comtn~Jnity invited 'lO J*.
lioipak. For ;,r.,..,.,.,.;.,., call

-

Union.

_..,._

-..

It'~ tilt place lo rud poutl(lhleu Clll good
nutritioo. 111 lind out !he dale of the ~~rx:J Life
WOII'Itlbop on.....,.. reducboG. or cho:d&lt;. out
one of !he many heallh-&lt;elaled video&gt;. This
could mark !he beginning nf a beller and

~-5-

llq1m&gt;eoUii.. M. J - On·
.__wilt ,:iw. iDdividual ooeillllobollstl&lt;LIOie-

s.Mc:aCcaf_lt_

healthier life.
lbe Living Well Cenlcr. which is funded

104 Oolls 1:1111, c-p.s.
frura 9 Lift. w4 p..lft. To .chechtle
..........-.ea~~­
Servi&lt;:es """""""'ist 01 MS.

-

by mandltory Sllldcnl fa:s. is open 10 S1U·
dents and faculty o.'bo WIDI Ill learn aboul
wellness, said Ron IJ1galshe. Dir&lt;:CtOr nf !he
Living Well Cellle&lt;.
Wellnies$, u cOOled by lblberl DuM in his
t96t ""'*"High Lrw:l wc~~ocss- "defined
... philosopby """"""r "phy$iaa.IDODial. and
spirilual health ore intcgrared." Ingalsbe said.
oddinl it provides a framowod; !hat onybody
can we 10 facilit~~&lt;: oelf.fulfillmenl.
~ from EJiiccu 10 the Studenl Union
bas~MD us alai more~·tothe 5b.ldott&lt;."
said Ma-y.Jo Balmini........ educator • the
Living Well Ct:nooz:, who oddod lhol "'Wt'"'
~ ... "'aD dilfm:nl groups. Sludr:l1s 1ft
al•:ays ~by ond ~Skin&amp; ...n.. ...,..., aD
alnaondhow-belplbem. Thisisiqutanl
in a jlioDe like UB """""' if • &lt;liS)' 1D g&lt;!lost in die

2646.

-~1'01.11
. .............. ¥&lt;lit

llancio&amp; ..

olleml..,...,l'nday. lrutruc:lioo tqiu 01 l P.Jn. ..

ll!iefoolod'HaD. Soudl c-.

pus.a.q_. ......... !ium9-ll
p.IIL

e,...,.._ ..........; DO

S_...b)' Gnduaot Studoo!
--""'"~
Ms;oc:Uiioft._

Scoa 'W dler, 64.S.znl.

IEA&amp;.lll-.u!CE

N ew Yort ·s.... E1aployt:a:
Wasch your mailbox ta mid~
-fora""P)'dH&lt;tlll~

las""""" c::Jookd for 1994. tf
"' cbanc&lt; your .....
w c:oauibotion ~ ell•

you -

rollmelll. l"&gt;" mw:t OCII&gt;y Nov.
30,1991. Sa:Oooicufardc-

wls. o-tlioe for &lt;llaotPOI
baldt insuraac&lt; &lt;&gt;pbom wiD be
"""""""'wi1h 1994 ....,wn
......_ Ayaw will be&lt;li w i as moa u

·rates

have beat ICt.

Joas
F-.rY

~~~-

...............

Africaa Ama:ican Smdits.
~ (IF.307l. Aaislaat/

~-libt:said.

- -·Lanoio&amp;

~

A=nting (ibysical. mmt.\1.1, and spiriiWil
the Li11ing Well Center maintains a
proactive appmacb 111 wellne:ss where indi·

ud-PooUn,tF3019, 30110, 30\ll . Aaislaat/

-~
or l5docalioll. ~

viduals ""' enoouroged. "through assistaooo

Scbool

from doo staff and .,.,... educaton 10 ~
higher levels ofwell ness.."lrlgalsbeexpbined.

IF-3092.~~

2222
llle,__ __ _, _ _ _.,_ ..,to_
tlllli

-.-,-OCt. .• -

•w
D I J I - of

:1.4;

• A woman reported Oct. B thai a man
"flashed" •her while she was oo the Capen
walkway. According 10 Pubic Safety. the

man ran when the woman screamed.
Offocers were unable to locate a suspecl
liUing the man's ~• Two canvas car roofs. each val.u ed al
$1 ,ooo, were reported missing Oct. 10
from vehicles patl&lt;ed in the Fronczak B
and Governors B parking lots.
a A rnode&lt;rj. lO feel of cable and an
adapter bled&lt;. wor11&gt; a c::orl'lbined value ol
$650, were ,reported missing Oct. 121rom
Baird Research Pall&lt;.
a A leather jacket. valued a1 $100. and
two building !keys ·were reported missing
Oel!*"""'eood\1=11811. ~--··-·-··-

a A woman reponed Oct

12 lhal $600 m
cash was missing from the Fone Arts Center
a Two modems, wor11&gt; a combined value ol
$256, were reported mossing Oct. 13 from
Baird Research Park.
a A lrench coat. valued a1 $100, was reported misslng Oct 13 from Jarvis Halt.
• A video cassette r900fQer . valued at
$695, ·was reported mtssing Oct 13 from
the Ridge Lea Campus.
a A calculator. valued at S400. was reported missing Oct. 13 from Fronczak HaA.
a A wallet. conlaining bank cards, a credit
card. cash and personal papers, was reported missing from a dresse&lt; in a locl&lt;ed

.~n·~ ·~~~·-····-···--

e.. aloDg wi1h other groups. such as
!he Counseling Cenlcr, offer wortshops on sttess reduction. yogo. Tai-Ctu,
and limess and nutrilioo,- he said.
For e.u:mple. the 1en-&lt;1ay T01-Cbi wort- '
shopslelebaC:bineseformofuercisewhicb
"integraleli tilt body and mind lhrough gcnlk
flowing movemeot." Ingalsbe said. Ol:her
activitieo suoh as !he suess and li""' managcment workshop ore geared towan:l stu·
det!1tife. '1..olsofstudeo1Sareundcrpressure
boc8use of ~ obligalioos. and Ibis
particular workshop helps !hem to Jl'I2Jl&amp;!lC
!heir lime and nduce stress.- he said.
AnolherCeoler&lt;Jb.jediw:islllprovideheollb
education and prevention. With its newly
opeoed tibrlry, !he Caner provides boob.
maguines. pompblets, brochures, journals.
8lldio LlpCS and vidoos on health educalion.

uol your blond lft"OUI'C.
howtotten:lsc,....,....,y.or
10 achie""'
m.an&amp;ge·
metll tlu'tlQr,b heallhy ....
ina.· ln3al be ~ai&lt;l In
llddilioa there are video~~ on
prevcnti
t.he pread of
AIDS. ad )'oil can """"
get your blood ~""""'"' checked or dele.-·
mine how muc:b body w rou .., ...ru. our
Fu1re1 body·oornpc&gt;Sitillcl mactrine.- he said.
In COOJaing ln&lt;llllhs !he Center will Ulln)-

""'"P

c~ouo....-~~witbwl!id&gt;
will be . . . 10 . . . . lbcir lifesryles.

...........wbicb .... eesyto-,aslt~
health praoliocs anll lifestyles. Students will
Ibm be raled liMed on lbcir ....._..,and lbt

"You can get information
on how to control your
blood prr!ssure, lww to
exercise properly, or to
achieve weiglu
management through
healthy eating."

---

CClf11Pdll'l'wiUpr&lt;Mdewuesti&lt;mfcrheoltbier
h.U.g. lr1galsbe said.
In odditloo 10 illi role in providing beallh
eduCIIlian. tilt Center is rea::bins ow 10
those tudcnil • UB ..11o may fed exdueled-~studenlli wilb disabilitiel. minorily IIden"' women. single pareniS and
Olhen." said Toby Bloom Scboellkopf. &lt;:oordiDIIICr of !he Living Well Cm~er.
'We're~ 10 deYdop • prtlplOmiiD help
""""SIIIderD;mS&lt;J.priorilicsboscdonlbeirown
.-:15. We ask lhem wbalbcy .-!, inslead fL
ldlqtbemwballbcy""""-Aithelillllelime,...
do 1101 wn 10 "'JJil* them from the wider
sruden.populalioobwalbercmlnce!bominthe

..,._ ..divmity." me said.
lbe staff and Sllldcnl volunteers at tbe
Living Well Cenlcr are eJ&lt;cited
I ibe
fulun: and bope to build a larger ou
. program lhaJ will ~ge many more
uudeots 111 anaiD wellness. "'We're just in
!he iofant stage.~ Scboellkopf said. lidding
lhaJ "we have a lot ~t~Cnlll do in tilt upcom·
ing months."
"'Piu1 of our sua:eso is •l hal we doll 't
dictale, ·WC (ll&lt;ilil&amp;re and educate.• Blll:l'dti.ni
said. "So Sl1ldents should drop by tlltotru::e

_ !.'Xnu.CIIlgrt jnfrymatjgqoo.J:aowJD..cun:__ _..aad.cbcctJwt.ltlbat wr

b•vr:Jo.offa::'_ .!:'-

�--~----·
7hP Reporrer _,_~on ~$$~AS d orr»d •IJfflllt 101M..,._,.
IIWY be edited lor lljlf&lt;r .wt lengUl

Clltllii'IIA'1f

L YINO 000 HANOI prclYJdcs
• initW ond 1101
imJIR ioe of VoctAam. Tbe
CXJOIIIIr)'lidt,daaood
"u
lush. widl di:q&gt; '"""' nee 6dds.
~die .
.-edlerolor .. die muddy Red
pewd. The ·Hanoi airport . lillie """" """' •
lwJeroom wilhdew
fcroft"llliall
., dlolck
h lllrdly Ill
....,
llllrOduaaoo ., doe c:api'-1 a{ • lillian a{ 70
miUionlbMbas
yfoupuhreealdlo
world'• m.;or""""""" lbe Fraldo.dle Amrri.,... ond die &lt;lliDeoe. ~die pall o40 )'1'111
Indeed, po..ny . die aabty a{
..,. v .......... The per
~ $200 per,_, ..,.,
IIIWo'
••
IO!alo.eolf

Riw:r......-,- ....

Soviel-«yye

AI

least in die aliOS, however, people do 1101 ......
... be llaiVJnC. ..,.,
...., (.,.
a{ die
IIMIICII&gt;e illequalmes aod object JIO''a1y M
c:l:llracteriu. fO&lt; ~ lodoa. which bas •
unila- per capol.IIDClOIDC.
lbnoi, die naiJOnll capoJal. lh I population al rnorelblol twomilbon. is alhrolo.'bocL 10
anolber .,._ In mony """&gt;"- •• · a cbannmc
cuy.
Wldlimpmsivc
....... boulrvwdo.
....,_..,..,.of
Pions 1"'1::......::;;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;__--'...._;..a.
ond lbe
but crumbling
mansions

IDd govemmc:n1 buildill&amp;' built by die French
cluring their colonial clorni-.oo. The ooly
stniCIUJeS aloqualdy matni&amp;IDCd
thooc
belongit1a 10 1ntt:maoona1 orpruzabOM. fereigo tmbames IDd a few multinaoonal bus!nessco. l1lc:rr are vinually DO new buUdlll
EspociallydramabctSlhealmoSic:ornplde
lac:k of automobiles. B&gt;cycle&gt;, along '"lh a
omall but growing nurnberof1110WrSOO&lt;ll4n.
cbn.noltdlestreeu..Hmot · acuytluuaopped
growincUIIbel~. ltma)beoneallbefew

p1ac:a left in the world tlud g~ve a sense of 111
&lt;llllier. IDd in..,...,. way more roman~~c:. unspooled era. Thrrommemahsmofotbcr Asian
alJeS is largely oussmg. lllc:rr..., ""'&gt;a r...

Slgn&lt;of20yearsofSo-...,.ontlumce.sudlosHo
OlihMinh' mausob.rnllldlh&lt;t11110111ol.......,_
bly building.

L

iK, there ""' Oftl) a fe,. thong• 10
Hanoi 10 remmd one or what the ietnarnese call the • American War " Miin ym·
bol is the "Hanoi Holton." the large and
forbiddin&amp; priliDII '" the nuddle of 10wn
wbere American POWs were l:epc It 1 still
a jail but will soon ·be tom down and tq&gt;laced
with an offoc:e and sboppmg romplea.
There were DO tp of anh-Am&lt;n&lt;:arusm
an)""b&lt;re in Vietnam. On thecuntrary, people
are espocially welcoming to Americ:UtS and
look forwanl 10 the end of the American
tnde embargo T-sbuu, available for $2,
urge the end of the embargo or an emblar.oned wilh "Good Morning. Vietnam." Thr
U.S. dollar is the preferred currency and is
accepced by everyone, from the 1dewalk
ikew.

"w.

ba"'ker 10 the hotel easbott

now c:nunbhJI&amp; Ammc o phon&lt; boolh are

As for the embarg&lt;&gt;-tt 1 a bit of a JO
Amencanproductsorc:ava.lablce "')·~
from Coca Cola 10
k compu~erS let·
nam Anlu,.. use 8 "' 737• on tntm~auonal 10111., lle&lt;J&gt;i"' thr populant~ of the
dollar, the 1nc:re mgl)
ognlfiCallt fort1gn ID\esl ·
ment i from Tal .. an, Ja11U1)'
pan. Hoo&amp;
and 10 a
1.....-utentfromEurope
Wnh •·ery low wag.. and
a largely literate and

JU """''
1UO&lt;I rmunderof
b a &lt;bSI.Inl rntmnf)

"It

bardworl.tng populluon.

v - orren noc

""'&gt;

,.tlol'""""

The fort&gt;Jdd.lo1 bun e,.. butlt 10 pro1ec1
pohc:e Kadquaners IDd other publt&lt;: butld101 rernaurunosed around t&lt;Wo·n Arnmcan
IDd hrlK"'f''C£' tum

be one oif

fhefiewpln eS feFt1
J
in the ·w orld that

give a sense of an
earlier; and in

¥1\ld """"""" oi the ...
• .... 10
the ('" Chin ·-~ • 40 Dies
Sqoa
thM
mile\ .... ~ .....,.,
hand bwk ~ the V oct C""'J do.Jrio&amp; die
a
renwUbl&lt; fertl .... tnahtwy ~ ()e,.
lifl*
&gt;&lt;
~ lbe A.........,.., lht
IUIID&lt;l ....,., ...... c:apiUftd ond IOn'ed ...
" - for Vtet Oq
1n die
Deb "'PPn s..m.l
-\nlmt:.o
dtcn dtoed lbere. U,. •1111 more
10.
\'-.....:Thr\-...elml}
~ '" ...--.10 r... -~ rrne.
lor S I a thol """""""
eornmcmaiNa I I
~ oi the tune•
\ -..m I
IU tro\~ la lhe plbt
da:ade. tt bas ,._ from a n&lt;r 1mpont:r 10 lbe
,.orld.
-larJeste"""""'olnce.du&lt;IDlhe
ofrollea'" onlbelama lnlbe
toUib. me, - lbe
ol lndultnal
~11J and ID\&lt;&gt;UIIml AJth
&lt;eonmll·
) de•1I&gt;UII&lt;&gt;Cl b) "' .. "" the v......,..,.,

up1ntheoddeslpla...... ,,._
lb '"the garden 001. ide a
d&lt;Wo'tiiOwn r&lt;S\autanl Thr
Arnenc:anEmbi

I)

the final tgno

'"'" U S

\ll&lt;of

'"thdra .. alm

. ' """

used try se&gt;eral V1&lt;t11am·
e.c ageociC\ but ... u ,...
felTed to a• th&lt; "Ammcan

an untapped market fer
con umer ~ood but a
Emba ) "Old Amenan
o urce of cheap labor
OeSo&lt;o buses. loaded " 1th
Amencan finn are a)SOme Wa)'S 1110f'e
people. biC)Cle . and proready lostng out 10 comdon.
e people from the
pebtO&lt;S. Thr odd thtng I
rof1Ulfltic,
\II lag.. 10 the b1g Ctl)
thai the Vietnarne&lt;e =m
S..gon' eoonom) '
to ba•e a pec:tal prefergrowtngrapodl).espectall)
ence fa&lt; American and
"' contrast to Hano1 It per
Amencan products Thry
cap1ta .ncorne 1 more than
also ba~e a mania to learn
twJa: the nauonal a•erage
Enghsb Et£bty-five percent of un!'emt)
ll&gt;ere""' CUI on the Ired to compett ~~&gt;uh
udents are otudying E.nghsb
motor liCOOCen and biC)'Cks. there an
HoChihMtnhCny, formerl&gt; Saogonand
traiTK Jam&gt; uf&lt; 11101es faster l'dpoc;ktu
uU largely known by that name. " on !Jwp
abound. and me, are a fe,. beggars
c:ontrast to Hanoi Although 11 bas been aJ.
The arduttct""' i mon: """""""' of i.lmost20years mc:etheAmerian left. there
amoBea:htbanl'lns. TbeCootinenWIIIdRu
an many tgns of theu presence Tan Son
Hoods, "heR die cddnlt:d Amenc:ao ....Nhut Airpon. at one tnne """'of the busoC51
reponers lwng out dun~~&amp; die war. an bacl1n
iatheworldduetoAmenc:anrruhtarynlghts.
their gkwy. but they baH to SUNJve on a
still bas the reinforced hrhcopter hangll'&lt;- """""""'of Ewopean tOUI'ISU and bu...,..._

W1Spoiled era. "

••-eo

ICb,.,..

ecanortl) "'
COUDIJ} I 1D I

"" """'"'

·~ 1!1""'111. The

pmOO a{ dr-.mabc lraiWb-lrom npd Slatt roatrol 10 a rnarl.a"""""""'
V~&lt;~t~am

bas OOI&gt;Sidertobk

~

~a{ nc:hopiculbnllmd. olf

otl """"""'-IDd alar);c. ~and larJdy

u..,._ populatJOn Jll'l"i&lt;k· - ror..,._

grov.1h.
fw. lbe pOOucal ,._,. ..........,
unct.anp:d Clr:ol1). the - . . . . . . , . , .
IIC5 bopeiO ~
the 0....... moddoitaung up polrucal &lt;:ontro1 ,.
up
the CICODOI11) Wht:lher die) ....u $UIXlllCd ....
open quesuon So fw. Anloncms ba~ IIIISw:d
the boa~t .....,. IbM wr bne .,.., """"
ban&amp;-upsobout die v~-lbe)ba""
obout
Thry ba•-.: pul . . . bebind thern-11
tune fO&lt; Alnenc:aM 10 do lbe
l'ttilp G Nrb«:h IS praltJ$!ot .w1 dnlclor d
!he ...-sly$~ &amp;:u:a8on Center Herectlf'lllyleda~rD&gt;oiAmenc.on
edl.iarors to V~e~~&gt;am.

Save up to ~0%

your

Ir's Holiday Recipe Contest Time
Go looll rt up-ihalliMlltle holiday recipe. the one thai lamily and lnends ctamor 101 because
it's sooo good b C31l bring you lame and IOrtune-Just by shanng ~WI your UB colleaQues
you could 1me d publrshed 111 lhe Reportet and w-on a prue besrdes
Our annual rectpe coniesl beOtns nghl now-rt's open lo la::uiiy. staff and studeniS
We'll judge ilfor Iasle appeal, ease ol prepara!JOO, oriQinalily, and ns contnllUtron to
a~ Winoet ollhe rectpe Judged lhe best Will recet&gt;1! a handsome coffee !able cool&lt;
book as a prue
•
Please ~ lhe recipe m cool&lt; book Sly1e w· onorecheniS first. duec:hons
lollowi11!r-311d put your name. address, departmert, your US l~le and phone number illlhe
10p ollhe page. If lhere's a brief 'Siory" aboullhe recipe--llow you created it wtla! rnd of
traditions ~ represents, how marly years you've served ifiD rM reviews, ~ , include thai, too
Mail or lax ID:Reporlel Recipe Coolesl.136 Crofts, Urnverslly a18IJ!Ialo. 14260 OrEmail to •.,. ...,....~•. -

Deadline

few

recetpc or eruneo to Nov ••·

PICitoUP • DIELI¥IIIY
to .. ............., Lec:8IIIM

................
a.- ........

~~~~~

.....
........,.........................
c.,llra
... Fa_....

a.- .............. ,

II

FAIT, GIIALITY I8¥ICI · t~s-•'1111"tdll•

C Technologies

(716) 838-2745

835 Engllllood " - T00111 d T- . l a . NY FAX 83MI95

-·

�----·--·
Smart c,oncrete

Antihistamin
could~

yow-drivmg

reveals its flaws

llOIILiE .WitO lab: . ..

'""-..u."'
to- aller• ·IIOd cdd .,......,..

its oonducti\1ty i I 0 tunes luJher

thantlunoforduwyconcn:re."e• ·
F STR.UcnJRAL engi_.-s
CIWJdldl~ly ..berelin}'
crao in C&lt;li&gt;&lt;!T&lt;1e begiR. they
might be ablr ro nop~ir them
on:
y pow into daD·
geroos frw:N
With ...
concrete.~ a ne-. .
.., matenal de.
veloped."""'f'tly atlJB. the~ m•~
now be able to do just that.
Tille Del'• marmal os also SltOD·

~

gerOillnordinary~. andacts

toslueld~icnld! uon
nlih other materials de•~l­

opod for ~smart strueturrs.• the
new ronc::retL does not rely oo sen"'"' embl:ddt:d into them lerialto
orack tructwa11laws. lnstead,tjn&gt;•
carbon fibers miU&gt;d inte&gt; the ron"""" with a OOOl'entional concrete
mixer makJ: the lDIII&lt;rial intrinsically " $11WL "
The material !s described in a
paper to be publisbed in Smart
Mattriah and SIT..u:r~&lt;ns.
"'Tbe carbon fibers are dosrributed everywhere lhrouj;bout the
coocrete on a microscopic ocale so

ld IVIIiddrMn&amp;,neo
if they ....... ftd ~- utlil k)

lll!rincd Deborah D.L. Chona. UB
Niqara M&lt;ihlwlr. dwr of mlleri·
mn:seiUdl. proft$SOI'ofmeclwuCII aJ&gt;d aemsp~~&lt;~e cnpnemns aod
author of the paper wilh doctoral
candidate Pu- Woo o.m.
"1"he&lt;:OOCrete 'scleclncal rest •
ranoe will i ncruse in the pr6C!Itlt
of a flltw," 5he .a~d
n.e change ,In resrstaooe i easily det&lt;:eted by electrical probes
ploood on the ouwde of srrucwres.
Such proi&gt;r•could either be permanently
to structures tn
littlllegic IOClitiom. providing rontinoous monitorin&amp;. or they could
bnppli&lt;:d wbene-eogmecruu poet there os a llaw.
"Boca use the fi ben protrude
out of the concrete a little: the

a-• ~~oot~

....... """'*

1lcq!y llld . ,
. _ ltility 10
~met Jnd iapOCid. lu
ellom
dcln'l I~ OIXIIr &amp;

QCYJnda~ ""11h

Millonl Mllmtn """"""'". O...Nelr

ldoP&lt;"~

"Siudoes

oient.," Chung said.
In addition to revraling iu struc·

tion. m.al.Jnl it poccollally useful
u a budding ""' · I for dearie
pov. er plant&lt;., military llUCtures

- proiCrldrc
•lions together, caltlon lhleft.

rural health. rbe $nwt ~
rums out to be lOUlber than oo!J.

and nLK:lear ructors
According 10 Otung, the car-

nary concret-e

boo fibers n:duce by 00 perc:enolhe

flr&amp;llrally beca- of &lt;be~
of carbon fibers It ' also aq&gt;&amp;blr

"When you put . . _
all these -

tbe extra e• pen$0 ·o f .OO..t 20 pen:ent is manageable.. .... """-

Using chemotherapy on childhood' brain
tumors may eliminate need for radiation
M L TI-CENTER
study headed by a UB
pediarnc noeurologisr
has shown that -.ry
young children with
brain rumors can be hUted suecos fully with chemotherapy immediately
after
surgery,
postponing. and on some cases
eliminating. the need for-radiation
treatments that :m devastating to
the developing b.min.
The s tudy was the lead anicle in
a reeent issue of~ Neo•England

Journal of Medicine.
"To understand tbe importanCe
of these n:sults." said Patricia K.
Duffner. UB professor of neurology and pedilllric1;, "you need to
consider 't he situation when 'NC
began the &lt;tudy in 1986. AI t1w
time. children less than one year
old with brain tumors were 'let die.
The only ueat:mcnt avaiblble was
radiation, aJ&gt;d tbe.survi~ ~was
terrible. Children who did sumve
were so profoundly retarded, so
damaged, tbeinurvi~ broug!tt no
quality of life.
"Ole:mocberapy had never been
used as the primary postoperative
treatment for bnin lllm&lt;lnl." said
Duffnet. "'We showed t1w ror most
tumor groups, cbcmotbenpy is as·
diCCiive, If not more effective, than
nodiatioa as ""
ttealme!ll in
very young cbildren. aod we 811licipate it •will be a lot lessdamag·
ing to me bnin..
The study was conducted by the

earty

Pediatric Oncology Group. ..hlch
iocludes ins111ut:ions on both the
lJnitedStAtesaJ&gt;dEurope. In addi·
tiontoUB andOUldren"s H&lt;&gt;&lt;pot.al
of Buffalo. where Ouffner is ossociare dm:cror of cbildbood neurology. the major on•estigators came
from Roswdl Part Cancer lnsti-

months of age when d&gt;agnosed ,.,.

ee.-ed multJ-ageol cbemothentp)
for two years
Sht~ ·so • childrcrobetv.eentbe"l!"'of!4and :16
months wben diagno&gt;ed received
the cbemotherapy re~m""' for ooe
year. Treatment oeased earJj,r •f
the d.t"Cll.Se progressed. Follo,.1ng

ependymom.t tumors - mo.. affectuog the hnmr of the •entrides
of the brlliJl and lhe central spinal
cord canat- .. eR: blill alove after
three year .

R

ewl showed children who
'bad no tumors fo~oogdor·

mothenpy sumved oe&amp;rl) as long

as children ..~tumors~ te·

"We showed that for most tunwr groups,
chemotherapy is as effective, if not rrwre
effective, thpn radiation as an early
treatment in very young children, and we
anticipate it will be a lot less damaging to
the brain."
PATIIICIA

Wte in Buffalo: lhe National Can-

cer In tirute; the University of
floridainGaioes••ille; Duke Medical Center in Durham. N.C.; St.
Jude's Children"s Research Hospital in Memphis. Tenn.; Children's
Mercy Hospital in K811sas City.
Mo.; the University of California
Medical Center in S811 Diego, aod
MoatJeal General Hospital.
ThesiUdyasconductodbetween
August 1986 and April 1990 and
involved 198 childreri under lhe
age of 3 with malignant brain ru-

mors.
Following complete or partial
surgical removal of their tumon;.
132 children who were less tb811 24

-dn•~ng.ntwl.t-

10&lt; show 1bal the depee of

IIIJli)Oid1italoon- s....,..
""""will Wink o f during dryinc. COftC..-tll

a.od stronger

_,.

t~~~~t."uysl:nn
O...,O.UBamo. . proks!ord~Jnd......,._

ofshieldmg~rada­

contact resi tan.ce between ~
mcral probe and tl\.e concrete i
small. making probing con••·

~~WlDalfc•:llbom.

a UB ~ pui'&lt;Mor..tmes.
~~

K.-

oompleuon of cbemotb=py. all
children received radiauon treal·

menrs.
1be results showed that chemo-

or

therapy produced complete
greaJer than 50 perc:ent n:ductioo

in the tumor size in 39 percent of
lhe children. Cancer bad not progressed io 41 pcrcenl of the older
group after one year of Cbemolbenpy, and in 39 percent of those
under 24 months after two years of ·
cbemocherapy.
Cen.aio lUitiOrS responded better Ollln otben. the study showed.
Embryonal tumors did 001 respond
well, while 61 ,percent of infanu
and very small children with

moVC&gt;d completely through 'Uf!&lt;"Y·
Re.eatl:ben fe&gt;und DO detenonnion of bram function as a resull
of the cbelll&lt;ldtmtpy.
"Thi• udy has demooslrllled
mal chemotherapy is dfeotive
again" ma\ognant brain wmon in
infaocy." Duffner saul
..Further stutfies hold out hope
that more irueasivr cbelllOtherapy
may achie'l'e t en bem:r results,
allowmg us to de~y Ctr eliminate
radiaUOo Ill a largr """"'"""' of
infants and very young d&gt;ildmn.~

mut produced by the typ1cal
.....--tbe-oounrer Mli.lwltlmlne """
be stmilM to &lt;hat prodllad by a
lllcJod.,aloobo lt:&gt;el 1bal ~ impair ~ libilitits.- be say. ln
New. Yod:.Sutd:~rc:umple.adriver

"Antihistamines
can make people.
sleepy and also
impair their ability
·to react and
respond, but these
effects don 't
necessarily occur aJ
the same time. "

----

..idl • blood..alcobol lt:&gt;el of mon:
than .OS is CDilSiclcred 10 be ·d ri•q
..itile impain:d. ..'bile. dri- with.
Je,-ef of man:
.10 is ronsidcml
ID be drioq While IJIIClSicmd
'1nwrSIUI!ies. atypicoldo!ed.,
"""'~ alliltistanillecpiJI40
pem:l1d~ri{lblin!Jo,t......,l!Jae
two,.,.'"br.~ib&lt;"**.nat

dri-.e\lfltilibey ~~:Dow r..aradlisla-

mint: Mllllliett diem. be
"The ...................... is.
pen
1beW lint docie..,..,
lqias
clrm wilhoul ~
t--o-iftbeckug .,;a lllfoa tbcm"be
says. ID .PliDa:l, ~ if., ldibi!iamine usudy does ...
iqlair-

-..m"""'
a""-

trallhapiiUcullrjlllim.~

!nods Ctr IIIMqg .,..., coe ok:ddie
dri'* em _. k piDed's UIUII n&gt;

sponse.

......a.

~ is &lt;&gt;liiCluaiqc
'10
~t--&lt;XllmXJII~

impeinnt:nl is wid!~ ·­
~Jnd ..'hll.ifllll)', a'eft
indic:IDons ltd .. indiviWal may be
pmetoimplinnml. ~Jillillisla..

minos ......, 50J!IIX*d ... pable ~­

imiD1bellainblccauoeil:dJlood.lnin
baJialoeepsdltihCII..'1lcJays. WU.'s
IOUDd ....... if fOil cdy
single dose atd if }UI 111-.e alallhy
llloccJ.bain t.ri«. 1M in ICJDIO~

'* .

&lt;rlypllials. ..d.:nowltd~
CliO cmss ltd.,.,... mcnc:asib'-" :J

�Eureka!
c:.....- . .... _ _ .......
~l.itxmel~

McKeown is
as istantvp
M
M~ dimllor
of mk relations. bas bcea

0

~

10

vice pres;.

dem for~ relarioos
~ bcr bird wad ll!ld
said Via:
l'res:idelll for Unh.eml Adnnc&lt;on&lt;:ntll!ld lleve\QpiTII,III
RooWd H. Stein. "Molly lias been
primarily oapoosoble for lbe ·
proood ou:ognilioft of 8'1&lt; Swe
Rdations pqg,.,., as lbe be5t in
lllld ane or lhoo .,., ~a~
1111 univcn.i!ies, public and
on New York we."
new pos1, ldd(.,.,.,'D
will bave &lt;M:nlll.a;poosibility

BdOtt joinl lhoo UB sraiJ in
1992,Me eowa
a!cp;llll~
ossitbml '10 furnoa- o:w York
St.uSenaor Jc:fln Sbdl'..- n.
l'nlvioos 10 dud. $be llcn'od &amp;S
owi!Wildin:acroflhe New
York
Seaak Hip!' Eduao·
lion Commillee

creative~~

for all government relatims prognllll$ .. 118 , inchlil
fed&lt;BI,

McGill, Miller
honored by

Purchasing

~McGill,
' lant
via: preside~~~ of campus
~ and Juct M.UJeor, dlm:tor of purchasing. ..._ """"""'
by~...,. in .,., Purolwlng
Dq&gt;amnem during an.Oct. 13
lundleon in Cmfu Hill matlang

0

President reminds UB:
'EAP is there f or you '
IDI£Ait . . FACULIT AND IIToVF!

A:s- dO awry year a1 this tme, we ~ heard a good
deal in recent weeks aboul ·!he Unlwersll)l a1 Buftalcll's

SEFA campaign. The generosJty with ~ our univelsity
r~s 10 !his amual appeal-along with our ongoing
commlJility setllice efforts and our leadership role in
Western ·New Yorlr.-.s earned US a~ repu~a­
llon ftjr the eering and ~ of Its people .
Bl.it as much as we at UB give 10 our friends and netOI&gt;txxs, sometimes each of us .--cis a l'lllnd. too. All of us.
from lime to lime, faoe personal ~thai can d~
mlniSh our energy and QDnfldence, jeopardize our health.
CO!TlPrteale our home llfe, and lessen our effeclivenestl at
work. To extend to members of our academic communlly
!he ti8IT1e kind of carirlg that our uru-sily oflen; our home
COfiYI'IUI'Iily. UB sponsors the ~ As$1stance P!o-

orarn !&amp;.Pl.

The EAP is a referral serw:e, 1ree to all UB employee&amp;
and !heir families. This program puts rnembets of lhe
~ COfiYI'IUI"'ii in touch wilh approproate serviCe
agencies in our large!' Western New York corrmunily
Through lhe EAP, members ollhe UB GOmi'I'Ulily can lind
OUI tow 10 get professional help With lamtly or marital
problems, liMnclal or legal difficulties, emotionalossues
such as stress and grlel, medical questions, and all fOfffiS
of substenc:e abuse.
Etnpiovees seeking help through EAP may difeclly caU
one of 1htl lour EAP ()OCJI'dinators Whose C8fl'4lUS phone
numbers appear in lhe accornpanyirlg box. Any issue
d iscussed with lhese col1eagues is held in 1he strictest
.confodeooe unless lhe employee alllhorizes !he ()OCJI'd inalor', fn writing. •10 reveal information to a prolesslonal or
agency Who
prollide netp. While a colleague, supervosor. a lriendmayreler an~ IO ·t he EAP.Ihe decision aboul ~ or IlOilO follow up is entirely the
~'s. lllld !he .persoo Who makes !he •rel!lrral will
&lt;eo:l!9l\le no information "Whatsoe\ler aboullhe OUicome of
lhe •refer(al. Nor Is an employee who seeks~
from EAP ob!lgaled to aoceplthe·program's recornmendatQt.

It you could ose a~ t1and wilh a personals~ua­
tiol!. please remember !hat EAP los1tlere tor you. Yoo are
'.'ely. Important to UB,.:and we want to be sure 1hat what-

support )IOU need is 8VIII1able 10 )IOU .

Sincerely.

m:::--~

• Day." Badi'!Oaeflita'Olls
!iwllcd oestimoa'
dariJic • aemmany tto. drew
lboul 3S fll'l'l'le.

Swgeon gives
Huang lecture

0

Sloerwbo B. 'uiMod, 1111
aulhcf lllld r.,.,l!y me:m1&gt;er
ill tho VIlle Umvemoy Sdlool of

oanc:, win~ tbe rn
CJC.. 'Huon&amp; l&lt;•ltwe Ill \be I
11111 meet1 of !he ·" '-H of
tho Heallll ~ Ubnry Sunday,Oct. )IOIIO:lOa.m..ondlt
ot.uslin Aim Main 'Rradin Room
oflheUBH.,_.
Ubnry'"' ..... Soudo ~·
Nubnd't...,...,., Kmllllod 'L·
bnirio$, Mull!ld lhe
Doctor's ~.rna&amp;&lt; -"
Tht C H gl..ecrun: ••
named in honor of lhoo forma
dtrecoor of the UB Heallh Sci·

• ...,.,. Library.
A member of !he Yole •urgocol
faculty for J2 yean. Nulond also
reach&lt;!s the lustory of IDI:IIIiciut ..
Yalt. He IS !he ambor of "'"Wt [)oe· lldloctlons on We's
Rnal Chap!«" and "Doclor'S ~ He
• also li~erary oduor of C~­
oa M~r and as!;Ociatt a1J1or
of lh&lt;! J
of t~r Huomv of
M..JJCi~ aNi A.llJ..J Sdmcu.

0

A feamre &lt;q;IDCIII on documentary pbot~ and

UB faculty .,...,ber Miltoa

RIJI:OVin and hff. 1.,'0 pho&lt;&lt;&gt;graphic series featuring
Buffalonions will air ao 9 a.m oo
Swxlay. Oct. 31, oo the CBS
lde•'ISIOil program "Sunday
Momong" wilh Olarles Kuralt.
Tht featured series an: "Por·
trailll in Sltlel." pho&lt;ognjlh of
Buffalo &lt;~eel~ ao&gt;d lbtir
oral hisoOI"ie$. taken frorn a book
of lh&lt;! wne name w:rirum by UB
h"tory professo&lt; and noled urban
historian MX:bad Fnsch ll!ld -rhe
Lower Wesa Side Revisited,"
photos of U.. same Jl"'O''e l3kal
.,..,.. 20-ycar span. w.w. Nonoo
Publishers will pUblish • book
buod co the&gt;c: photos nc•l year.
A CBS aew visilod Rogovin and
bis wife, Ann. in Buffalo a~ ....
viewed them 11 boglh. Kunilt ame
10 Bufl'alo for """ of tbe &gt;bxiiS a!
in&lt;licad lbol be ·doJghl il """one
&lt;1 tbe best~.,., Show bod
ew:rpockoood.

Neidle talks on
Designer Drugs
~patiloen!CID·

ar ~lllh&lt;!Uaivorsily
c#l.oodoll;will g;.e tbe 1993Brilali-

(North Campus)

Anthony Lorenzet!i

64!&gt;-2564

Richard Sigglekow

645-3166

(lllorth Campus)

I I I •

rJI

col doe -'d's

1"- I(

I I«&lt;

'"'(- c
I ' -

"

,·,,
~

Myor$Scp.lillb l&lt;l::tum;•lh&lt;! Sdl001&lt;1
l'bMmacy.Todly a 9Lltl b&lt;willli'e
aloc:ll.v:e, opa110 lh&lt;! pu~ co "'esigl:ocr Drugs," in 454 lironc:zak.
The """""".., 1\nJod by ......
ctowua. from Bri!Joi.M)OD Sqaillb
a!W~~ Two

mDR&gt; l&lt;dmic:al
scboduled.

leeturc&amp; an: also

..

&amp;.b~ ~da.4M~~

~~~
R-.:11 IJlnrio;s
col
_ _ . . fltled.

a-,.

IIIM10111i1...,._ ,
dudie:
flt,riiJdal •
.,.
C:On!l81, KCUU &amp;JI4 _,.,..... ,

~- ~

D
llleUB~toa.dodle
lnsilk lofonnllloo fol« whida c;o• ...:as 10 ..-ock ciCliilioM
~~
ly 10
JOIImal I
m lbe 8
J..ilnry•s ~
Supply O:mre ~
uorn.,., ..,..alolia &lt;:Jillt.._ of ,- .,
c:~Mx;..., ro 111y lllk:nld11ddreta mcl
'
_.,.,

,.

_. ~

I . ,...oo 10 ,._ E-mail
2. lnve mailll!ld ..
ip rnmpllypt
~
] . At U.. act:uunt prOCilp ~ \'iE.f'A'
4 , A1 tht
'Otd JII'OIIIPl f)pt.
. Vou an:
• !he BtB role. You.,.. 1ype ...._liN ro odecf tht
IMide w...-.... ro1e, or you .., ~
6. To extt Eoonlta 1ype: op
Eombaearchtl"li
fmd IIJIIPk help ll!ldce&lt;P--.
lbe
sean::hiq S)'Aan. If~ iBf&lt;wmllliBa .. dol:im1. rontac:t the Rd'&lt;l-·
....,., De!il; o( any ruvemly Lilnry. Qun1ioM ,_,..,..,
!Mil otiClOUIIIO&lt; """"tdnct
bt do""""&lt;!"' lhr Compon~Cc:acr:r
Help 0ea. 64S-l542.

)'OUT,,_..,

,.,1J

_,.up •

~De........,M01Los.s~-. t.ooboml.lln!y

Sports
Football Bulls drop to 1-7;
Cross-country quads win
T - - ..._......_..

Feature on
Rogovin airs
on CBS Oct :J\

0

Judith Dingeldey

CiOIIIJ'Incd I

tiDa240iillliii, SQOAngonr..br&amp;t

lot.&lt; possessiOnS lO de!eal UB. 38-1&lt;4. In •1he 1ea:Sa1'$ home finale
Therogers!ICCfed1hroe~Mdalield~Pt~ll1~~

20tnn.JieS.ird.dngboOIDpassestanOeriOowleyandan"''ttl..,adiU'l
byJc:m Swlgan. oneof~m~escoresl0rhtnrrll1g bad&lt;onhday Aum1e
IOCXJIIBry by &amp;Is' FS Kareern sm-r- deEP., T&lt;MSOO!alfby led 10 w·s
flrs1 pons 06 Cliff Sooa hit WROx Srr1l'&gt; lOr a 22...,_ m on.,.., ne4 play
frt:m scmmage 10 OJI1he lead 1D 24-7
On UB's next pos:ses$100, Scoll hil WR Rusly Knapp
a 53-(ard
SOXJnnQ pass ~ ltle Bolls wo1hwo 10 2-4-14 Thar 'oOI:IIa:t be as close
astBWOIAdgel.holoeve&lt;. asannerceptoonbyT~'sOonbmlerman

Wllh 39 5BCOr1ds remai'Wlg ., lhe lirs1 half Slailed a golden $OOITlg
oppo&lt;lolllty lor the Bulls Swogart scored on a lour..yard !l.ll1 and c;oooo
the scoring Wllh a fiw.yard TO reoepe.on wllh lhree ITW1UieS ramanng,
droppong UB 10 1-7

~

'

ue·s men's Md wcm•~&gt;'s cross-&lt;:oun~~y squads 1001! home East Coast
Conference Ch;;mpooroshlps this weekend The women's team placed
fi\lerunnersro the lop sur places 10reoord 111 poills and a G;p:Jror W;iiOiy
(M!f Cenlral ComectJc::tA Slat
leading lhe Charge-- 8ndget
Niland and freshman Slacey SIIOihman. wOO finished lirs!a'ld second,
respee~Nefy Niand"s wnling bme """' 19.35 1 while Slrolhman was
ctod&lt;eo at t9 49.2 The Rov* 1001&lt; u- ~ ecc a .....,... .. op
On the men's side. !he Bulls ran as a pack. linistwlg ltli'd llrough
Sl!lll!l1lll indiVIdually lOr 25 poiftiS, ID pos1 a~Wl&amp;-p(l~rf \lic:byower~
place Troy SlaJe. whict1 had ltle lop r..o Nmlll$ W.lhe race Tom Ducey,
Char1ey ~ .lchn SynolyrtsiQ, Gteg Shusler and Kwelo ,l,bcUah
Muss aloo lalied for the Bulls It was o-lirs1 ecc Olai olj)iooiShp.

.

_. ._.

Freshman Jay Pamer recorded his lirs1 r..o sho..oWuls ollhe year as the
soocer Bulls look 1{) vioiOnes 011er Sl. ~ and Colgate.
f1l;lltman Edoru ~scored theg;me-.w against lle 8omies
wt11e Eric 6oecher talfiOO the lore goal in lhe w::tory ower lhe fa!
Raiders. The Bois record now sl8nds 81 7~3

.........._.

'

The Royals socoer lOam tnMlled 1o ~ ~ hly pQSiied
w:tones over Gamon (3-0 in OI/Eirtime) Md St fl'ancis (5-1). Frelritn&amp;l
Lori Perillo nelled 1w&lt;Jgoails W11he Royalsw::IDryalGannal wifhRachele
Galipeau gcinglhedislance ID _ , hersecond &amp;hultoo.toflhe~. .
U8 defealed Niagara. 2{), eatlier in 1he week as JenniiBr Oellllaaxett
bolh goals. The AovaiS' oea:ord is 110101 10-6-1 ·win1Wlg leu .in a row.

..........,.....

The Royals wcman's l6nris squad1ravefed ID Cenlral Oonnaaic!JI lt)r1he
ECC Cha olj)ioo iStips. JoeOevis' tq.oadfirlshadlhirdwifh 18pcints. The
runber lhree doo.tlles team ol Melissa Maitin Md I.Jlri Wales linisbed
second in their flgL The duo lei 6-&lt;4, 7 ~ (7-6) 1D Cenlral Connac:lictA in
lhe Royals' only~ matd'l.
--~.v...,...

TheRoyalsSIIlppedStllonallenlure in heespnes 15-11, 15-12, 15-13
on the road. UBretlmed home 1D 1111110 Y~Siale 11-tS. •6-16.
1 ~ 1 7. 12-15whife~againstVermoni1S.S, 16- 14. ~15, 15-S.
The Royals now stanclm 1~11.
-&amp;xrTs- alice

��</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>__.....

Stadium

park
to honor
World
·Games
volunteers

UpCioeea

Pwsonal
President tours
campus to address
students' parl&lt;ing

concerns

.

2

Festival presents new
music from around the
world
October 21. 1993 Volume 25. No. 8

)

Plan calls for start of conslnletion for
$16.8 million project h) Fall of 1994

to build
apartmenttyle housing
has been modified, Associate Vice President
for Student Service and
Dean of Students Dennis Black told the UB
Council last week, with
the site now planned for
an area_of the campu
off Skinnersville Rd.
near the Ellicott Complex.
Campus officials pre,•iously
sought 10 build"lht apaJtmcnts for
gnuluau:. professional and manied
students on lhtremaining 7.5 acres
of undeveloped land of Parcel B.
Nonh Campus.
developed
some difflCUllies over lhe landlease atral\l:ements lhal we had
, ~~·~"ed_!nlo fo:r,that propeny aboul

-we

atlhe pro)CCt. ll') mg 1o aclue' e !he
same goals for lhe campu,.The proposaJ under re\ 1ev.. ,
Black S&amp;Jd. eolails a m1• of one.
IWO, t:hn::c and four-bedroom UOJl),
~~oith izc '"ll)ing from 540 11&gt; 900
net square feet . In all. !here "'ould
be approximately 359 bed spaces
Each apartment would include
litchcn applian&lt;:es. furnishings.
storage SJ"'C". cable TV . computer
hoolcups and parl&lt;ing-"'ht l10d
of amenities you'd find in an offcampusapanmentromplell. .. Blxl.
told lht Counc1l. Common spaces
would 1nclude laundry and recre ation areas. meetjng rooms and
possibly. child care focililies .
Blocl pegged the tolal cost of
lh e projectatSI6. miUion.signalmg "a move from ,...to-supported
residential comple&lt;es on wu: umversity campuses, to self-supported
resideotial complexes.Acaxding 10 Blaclt. campus offi.
Clals bopc 10 forward a proposal10
lht St= Uni-sity Consuuction
Fund/Dormitory Authority laiCr !hi
fall following furlhercampus p.lanning and 00111ul1at.ion. 1lle plan

calls for complcllon of des1gn .
award contract and the bcginnmg
of construCtion m lht fall of 1994.
wilh OCC:Upanc) 'CI for August

1996.

notber reason fi&gt;r cboosmg
!he new sou:. " 'hich Blacl&lt; described as property controlled by
lht Stale University. 1 its pro~l m ­
ioy to lht Ell icon Complex and the
advantages the locat.ioo bolds for

A

placement of ut1ht~e• and transportauon
........._
- we·rr ll)mg'1!nle,elop a resldenllal communuy ... sa~d Black.
-wed like to build a small. selfcontained residential communi!)
thai would prov"k easy access 11&gt;
lht resident on and o ff camp&lt;1 , as
...,u as easy service delivery into
lhe areL ..
Black said the coocept caUs (O&lt;
tbnoe-SIOr)' , townbouse-Style apart-

men .. ilb 1denuf1Cd put:uog for
each bed pace According to
Bladi. lht pn&gt;JOCt ...,.)d give uudenu apartment-lth 10111emties not
u uaUyprueollndllrmitories;creau: a larger on-campus student
population in suppon of campus
life. and~ recnntment. The
project "'ould cootaill ..seqwur
1\ghtmg and ~ hght tdepbooes
for security; units would ble accessible 10 .pen:oos wid! disabilities.::

�- ....... - -. .

2

Parking,
up close&amp;

rsonal
T to txpenenc~ part.uir
from the ptl'5p&lt;lCtl&gt;f of tu
dmt l'ratdrol "\\ tlham R Grttnn
t
ro lht lasl Wtdntw11y,
.,.,.;~ t
pat\tn &gt;tlu3b011 .. rttun
undetgrldu
&lt;t
u 41e&lt;. '· .,.bo hod
1 sued 1 pubhc
on 1M S~-t,_
lot Gm
to lind 1 parlin spill 011 the
'onh C..mpll' 11 10 a.m
"You' ,., fotlll to lAkt u "herqou """'
to pan..; · G,.,•nn told No • "!.LI'&gt; tt) tu
&lt;kline the problem and comt up "11h '""'
&gt;OiutiOil "
llqUllllllg at I0 Lm , and liCCOmf&gt;'U1ted
b) As tatt Voct Pratdent fe&lt; tttdent Sn1o1

Drnno Blx and Wolbam Rtgan.
dt~or
cooferenoe\ and cptcl&amp;l tvent&lt;
Greiner and Aks 1 drovt pas1 all the loo on
the onhCampos.lr)'tll!itodtl&lt;:rmine .. tuch
ones wert full. "htdo lot hod open 5I*'&lt;' .
and ""bt.rc! udell were !il&gt;aJIInJ 1n hM 10
pari..
•
\ltt\

or

frte lot forfiC\IIty, stall' and &gt;tlld&lt;:DB on
the south tck of the 'J'In&lt;, from the front of
Al.unno Amu to tht Old Stldtum lot.,..,.,
all lull ""h a oumher of car. parl.td tilt·
gall) on the cUI'b&gt; Fret lou 011 tht north Ide
of thuptne. and 011 tht
de Elbcott.
,..,., al full. a: "" tht Alumno Arena lot
Se•eral of the 101 hod lone of can; "'th

or

gudents" aotmg to pat\. somt uudenl """'
&lt;tudymg a. tht) ,. a11td
1'here o:re broad curbs m m&amp;n) of tht&gt;e
parungl01 "GmnernOied Although Blacl.
pomted out that cars parl.ed tn non-m td
curb 5i*'&lt;'S are currently hcl.eted. Gremer
&lt;U&amp;gesled it mogbl he 'iable to open more
curb parllllli "Wt could mart off more
pxe for parl.tng on these curbs," he said
AI tht Hochslmer lot. v.&lt;biclo hod tht
longest lux of gudents .. aoung for iOpO(S.

OUl and ~dtrectl) t~ anum 00 of udent IUlD ID thefT Cal'S
Ht&amp;lher Kucrumans , a"'fJJtom&lt;lre.
"111 for a&lt;poltn H
ld1n e&gt; tt)
that
cloy
bern tn hnr about half u hour,"
&lt;he told Greontr. "and probabl) ha&gt;t about
20 mmutt to ro I lr) to allo" m),;elf 45
mJnu\ci to an hour ..
'''htn 1 ~by Gll'tner why &gt;he dtdol' t
pari. funhtr out and 11 t tht huttlt.
Kuctwrw~ 1 wd. "I ha"" I
do
and
I dun't hkt tn to out 10 tht r.hvltlt lou late
I don ' t "-ant ID ,.aJ OUt ti1Cil' II rupa "
Altss1 added that IIIOlher rrobltm
hod no4ed " that faculty and ....rr pat\. '"
'anou Slttdent lot&gt; "htn the Ho.:b cttrr
fliC'Uh) andstarrlot ""''"" relllJ\d~ &lt;rt!p(}
Jom Locl"ood. a ,.,ruor_ od that "tf )OU
lea•e orne btt .. etn lti&gt;a, 11 ·'
) n..,
South Co:mpu 1 moch """"' But tt' an
OO)'"l ,.htn r II) par\ on t:u&lt;knt lots"
n.., only open spiCt1&gt; on etther tht north
or south &lt;Ide of tht sptnt ,.ere tht paod
par\..m&amp; .. A. .. lou. • hJcb 1n lll&lt;N a'oe§ \ii.Crr
onl) bout half full n.., oro. "A" lot on tht
far lde of 1\.lumm Arena"" al"""t &lt;mpt) ,
and G~·- mc:ntooned tht po&lt; tbslll) that II
could ht turned onto a studmt-&lt;&gt;nl) lot

"I'••

w

"'"!Ked

Gmnn
out that a aumberoflot
hod botn made IDf pa&gt;d ..II. " lui
lie I
rrrn4 henefot prner&gt;-.d dau-.c ol oculi)
and uotr coniJliCI&gt; prohtbot ctw,.,. hton
atUIC!ted 1D loti onct ti1C) ha'e htta opmed
a&gt; fret lot&gt; "Fxulty and '-Iliff don ' t pay for
bc:causc of thetr collecti\e borpin ·
1~ ap-ecn1Cnt that thty ,.,II noc pa)
olhout
a cootnct rtntiO'taiJ • he .aod

ran•

D-

~ the lack ol pao1••~ el •httt.
tlxll' .. ....,
p01 •• the lot ""
lht north Ide of ElhCOI~ and at the C&lt;n!Cf
lor TOI'IIOrTOW and Cru Hall lot • U of

conn

or.

,....,k.

v.bo "" ro•mllli the
1 for 1M S,.,•
rrv,. , v.h) tht) "ould Wier 1101
&lt; the
sbuttlt Me hea !i.ltd ht somrurne' lea-.
campu at an hour after tht sbl-nl&lt; SIO!"
runnon~ . and potnted out also that · .,.omrn
lotudmt o:re lttt) or the huttle ,.,._oa: -

Ales&gt;t added that thtrt "'"' no "') to rc:[!U
Ia ,.'bo g01 oo or off tht unle. and that an
lltaeler could ompl ride tht bu and
v.oth Olhers at one of the lot
Whtn told that tht &gt;buick ran mu~)
~'CI') 20mtnutt''-. and lhat UcU't:'lt:dtht\pint

reo ""

~indut:hngaconfbctof..-poltcy.

by D=mber oC !his ,_-, l...wldi said. Allbough
UB .. a.rnnly und&lt;r DO mlicial .,..... 10
~ ils policies. ht said. tht NlH and NSF will
prorrulglle • propo!iOd rule fe&lt;coollicl oC inleresl
cases for all uniw:r5llies, and ifUB Wlii1IS IO&lt;llatn
NlH arxl NSF funds. --..e willlhcn toa.. 10 &lt;hft
ourowooonlliaoCinl&lt;:trsl policy. ln fairness. it
will ha\-e to iiiCittde anyone involved in an
external funding search," Landi s.aid.
Philip Yeagle. c hair of the Comminee on
Rescaroh andCreativell.ctivily, pointed out
conflict ofinteteSt issue~ that rnightcoocem
faculty. FIJ'Sl. !he question of the in!JUSion of
commerciJol funds onto tht campu Sc:cond.
faculty might want to know more about

pro)t&lt;'IS of accountahtlity research on tht
Ubj&lt;CI of conniCI of tnlerest Thud, Inter
dJSClpiiDit) ,.,..,arch, and tht need for rommumcaLJon on thu topte an lhr en\u·twunent
ofdectnlraltzauon Fourth. bowunder!ndu at.es mtght btntfit from facull) ~starch
Fifth. bo"' best toconunut •upponon~ gradu-

put on les of thetr tOUt! a&gt;mmttmmt 10 liB
IIllgN .UII be mort \
lo the taDIVef'illy
dwt Olbers v.'bo ga•e a,..,..., llnDliDI of lhtu
tOlal comnu.,.,.._ ·-r m qu&lt;Sitonmg the .,.,..
dom that a,..,..... poOC) on
oftC&amp;Il apply to ~ttyont. - T rtto
Slid

att student .....arch

c-raft I poOC) 011 ronflJc1 of ~ that •
"llllled. and "luch could onclude "-'Ch I

"I'm questioning the
wisdom that a general
policy on conflict of
interest can apply to
everyone.

Landt responded b)

s.t) '"'

that UP could

In ~FSEC ~ Judltlt Adams oC
Lilnr) tq&gt;Or1&lt;d that • tht
;y

Lod;"'

UIII\'O'ill}

Facully S.0.

ll1

Allm).

Go- CUomo !1-.J that be was proud of tht "''II)'
tht SUNY sygan had dctlt ,.,., Its bucl!let fbtbtlrt) She ~that Oom"W'Jrb""""'
flatbila} "f&lt;rSUNY arxlnmdi''llbtl
"'the han ~-CUomo
!1-.J. tht
"""""' that ht dod 1101 suppon "diil'trerllal ....
..,... fa tht SUNY Ctnon. Adams

had"""""""'

W illiam Moller of Dental Med ocone
pointed out that ronntct orcommitment problems dJd IIOitnvoht research only. but oneluded teaching and Olher academic dut~s
John Boot of lht School
t.~
said that it ..... diffiCUlt 10 defme lht limtiJ of
oonnict of commiunen~ and Olll'les Tn:zinl.a

or

of Managcme&lt;K added that ...... peopk ~'bo

Wa~ .

Grrtnrr u ~ t
"h•Ot&gt;ld h

nl..,enabt&lt;~

1

S«tht.tlllltJeNII&lt;WryL&lt;IIIDI
"h&lt;·
'-Ald. · And mo}bt 11
ld fU ""'dJ.-...'tl,
up 10 Atlll C11'&lt;'k - '
" He added tt..
Mm

II mJ

be'

""merou'

FSEC discusses policies on science
research misconduct, conflict of intere t
HE U IVERSITY'S pohcy on
misconduct m research in the saences IS OUt of dtlft. and may need
to bt expanded 10 inclttde Olher
field&lt; and Olher faculty concern .
oncluding theaddJIJOO
pohcy for
oct
or tntert&lt;l co:&lt;e • Dale M Landt, 'itt pre ,_
dent for research. told the Faculty Senate
Execuuvt Conuruttee last
Congress has .....,ued tht Nllbmallnsllll*'&gt;
oCHeahh (NIH) and tht Nllbmal Science Foundlboo (NSF) 10dtM:Iop a ntW llllianal policy on

"" Pvtna

0&gt;qe. ...,., made b) """' oC tht SUNY
oolleg!cs that the SUNY Ct:nlen
tllus ~ &lt;mlllrnerlltvels d.~ .,
SUNY. Adams repol1od. A pc&gt;&lt;:etwd &lt;M1p in tht
quaiJiy oC Sludcnts tlwoujllxu
becausr oC
1 lessenmg oC S1anlbds far admtss.on 11us ,_.,..,. also Olll3Jilr CXJn:ml a fht l1:IOellng. she s;ud,
She IIOlOd that er..,g Conly oC SUNY Ctumt
reponed&lt;bq tht~eo.m- Mc.ttng that grov.'fh too:nroiJmm ha!, l&gt;een ID Arts and
~ 1101 tn ltdVlical ftelds.

s

mt ht enrooora~
. bunlc "' a \lable opl,.,..

"I don ' t
,.. li~ pat\
unit"
td 1 bcutr uream of rn-mue:... Grr1nrr
s.aid " But . ~ alreaot) pi) $1 H 1 ) ear
through the tnn-pol\llioa fet "' DkJfC
rr•enuc: we could bwld her&gt;tr lot&gt;
protit ""' x:e that
..,.... ~fl
"-t

�--------·
Sullivan urges SUNY to
international education
N'l'I:RN A110 AI. ediiCIIJoo illS
' ofpataroounlnnponancelf cwY&lt;rt

u aoi.lllto lllve 1 cornpcwh c ect&amp;e in
world &lt;:om111C1Ce, fA,,,ard C. Sullive.
c:bairoflbe ew ¥oot we A mbly
Higher Education Comi!Uttce !Old "" audl·
mcc Ill Che Caner f&lt;W TI&gt;IIIOiTow Oct. I S.
Sullivao was lbc lim lf&gt;C&amp;ker in !he
1993 94 Breakfast Scm1nar cne for
Weswn ewY&lt;rtffigber&amp;luc:aton ponsored by the UB Dcpanment or Educational Orpniu1i011, Admmlsttation and
Policy, in conjunction wilb lhe Watern
cw Yoot Hlgber Education Con50rUUm,
Buffalo S11~ Collc,e, Hilbcn Colle,e and
the UB Graduate School of Education
Alumni A socialion~SuUi"an, 1 gradUilC
lhe ew School
for Social Researeh who ugh! Engiish as a
sec::ood ~
is cle«ioo 10 the
Assembly m 1976. encour&amp;J!ed cduca1nn to
·help studcn learn forc1gn bnj!uaga ond
ocquire peafoc koo~ of olher cull\lmS .

SIUdy of ArabiC and OliDC5C 11 .we
•universities i still 1 rclati ly rve occurn:nc:e. dcsJ&gt;IIe lhe facuhat bdbons who peak
those Jan uagcs could "be ready for our
services and prodiiCIIS." Sulliun argued.
Acquiring a second or even lhiJd Ian-

-·

"

...........
bowto
· """·
«lully ......... lbc~---lobk
Educalor&gt; could, ulh01111 sud. COili&gt;CC1
thetc ,.. SCCIIllllfly dr.,..atr and
~ '"" tudea!J. .. enloJIHa&gt;ed c;con
UIIO thr 21 ce:ntuJ)
Sulh an al wted educlton 10 ra:x
""' lrUCtllrn of educa1onal dcll'e&lt;) • ..,..
""'"' llwl
ytars old. 10 ""' 1f the) ldl
gu• i the fim ""P 111 ldlie•ing lobal
liletlle)', ulli•an ...d. "How can you issue 1
t.cbdor' s a
10 someone "'ho doesn ·,
speak two laoguages?"
Without suffiCient hOJ!UIWC and c.o~JturaJ
Jll1'patall011. Sullivan said. .S martets ""Ill
connnuc to !bnnl Flll1her, such StUd) can-

not. he said. he &lt;oofmed to those tud)1n1
the hwnanrue . but mu01 al he the pro• IIIOC of uclcnu In an:lu\CCW"', bw.UlC"·
"lpneer&lt;Of and other techrucal foekl
Sulhnn urted educaton on SUNY 1
usc oechnolon oo greater ad•·anl.lgt on
trun~nz tvdrnt '1be bu.su~
•orld u.

...n

ld sta~ .- SuJb,an said
rudcftu •n Ulll'ti'UtleS
IOday .... 110&lt; .... . . , . dcrnographocally •
lbc) "'""'40)'canqo. Yet(thtSINClwaof
ed aoonaJ dchvet) 1an: the same I
rood Idea' I'm 001

"Pnnoplt

"form can chan&amp;c

«&gt;""" "

Greiner chairs child development council

~==

.

RESIDENTWiDiamR.Grc:inerhas
'bcc:n named clwrman cia lcalcrdlipCXJUDCil tbal will planond imple. . . - I ~-ode effort 10
aid the early cluldhood dcvelopmml of all
children in E:nco County.
The program. called Sua:es~i by 6. . bel
unroduoed by The Uniltld Way of Buffalo&amp;:
EM County. Sua:es~i by 6 IS 1101 designed to
cn:att ...,.. programs or agencies. buJ 10 coordinale and help dc&gt;-elop cffons already under
w1y.l goal;. torai&lt;e lhecommurucy' s ....,.,.
ness of children· • i
and !he barrien thai
can dcpi•-e chiJdreo of a bcalthy early clu'ldhood. and seve as 1 .....,....., for information
on the staiiiS of children. 6naoaal opponuruti&lt;s ond the progress ond 5laWS of other groups
in the community. I I * ond Dlliorlwidc.
NcwsofGmner'seppointmentondfonnation of the new program came Oct. 14 ll lhe
WNY Grantmakers Associatiou' s IOth annual
Confermce on Pbilablhropy ll the Cenll:r for
Tomorrow. ''The Uniltld Way' sboardoldirocIOni is dclighled thai tbts very iltlpMam community lcalcr wiU IOU on the challen&amp;e of
solving the problems racing )'OUI\Il childrco,
and would be willing 10 bong lhe resources of
the uni,-rtsity 10 bear on llu '""Y unponam
is,.,.,," said Pamela Davi Hellman. chair of
the Unned Way board of director&gt;
l.asl ~~o-ed..' ron(.....,. ..... ~Oied 10 thc
of earl} chikllood cbelaJmenl. Patncia
ti&lt;M:n. JRSidonl of thc Honeywell Foundouon.
deb'-eted thc l~ nooeaddres!.on thc Succc.s b) 6

l"""'

propnin ~The Mmn&lt;apOOs pmgram. bqun by the Uniltld Way of Minneapol&gt;s Amlin 1988 and spea!taded by J..,..
Renier, clue( ci&lt;CCWveofltoneywdl Inc.,
~as a modeHor
by 6 pn&gt;gn1111&gt; m
lDOft !han 50 """'""""lieS IICI'OOS!he """""Y
~~~ is bolh 1 great c:halJenrr ond 1 peat
pnvilege 10 b&lt; asked 10 clwr the leader.ihq&gt;
oouncd for E:nco County' • Sucoess by 6 omnabYe," Gmnenaid '1amai!Oproudl0bnl\lllhe
Uni~asrt} ll BIIITalo inlollu etlan. Unwet'SI-

''Through this joint effor1
we can help our
community's children get
the care and nurturing
they need before they are
school age."
are all about thc future ond future lcalcrship. sov.-elll\ea special responsibtlitytohelp
dc•elop our fUillrC leaders Wt al&gt;o h:wc a
broad an'2) olbuman and matcnal re;ource-, on
bCI

offer to tht~ tmuau"e.
b) 6 could and \hould be one ol
1mpon.an1 thmp 10 happen lo ~
Count) 's farmlte-o m a \Cf) long tunt:· ~~d
UC«'S&gt;

the

rDCht

Grcmer "In our counl)-&lt;&lt;pe.:lall) on thc

disad..,....,_
..-of BIIITak&gt;we lllve
cl lhe hl&amp;)&gt;esllllleS c1.......,.
dJSireS'iod

s6mr

prqnancyand,.,fanrmonalll)'mlheSUJt We
lllve ""'"'tllln :!0.
chiklml under tht "'
of bv1"1, m powny. The&lt;e kids rna) never
mal&lt; 11101j(lb.oriOiu&amp;hocboolor&lt;Va~ 1 0 •
..,._ The&lt;e ~our oommonuy· own ctuJ.
dretl. Thelt prol&gt;lm&gt;s""' our
We a,
a oornmurul) m~JS~ clo somcllun &gt;O"'I(lU; and
1mmed111C
l4kt"""' of !hem "
IOHtiltl'-e . he added. - .. 111 bnn~
together a coahuoo of SCCIM. mel
bus,... educat100. labor. 11"' emment ond
health and human &lt;er&gt;-.ccs "t!mc.e&lt; 'lbroupl
lh" pnt elTon "'t can help our communuy ·s
ctuldrtn gc&lt; !he """' ond DUnUfU!t lhey ......t
bcfon: the) arc !iChool age We can hdp thcu
parco~&gt;. oflal young. ngle pam1t&gt;. learn how
10 .._ tbc cluldrcn' s needs &gt;0 fluu the DCA!
gencratiOII grow&lt; up ncad) to leam and lead ..
'!be Su=ss b) f&gt;'Eir1} 01ikllood ~
rn&amp;n 11\KJabVC n port of thc
Med Wll) of
Amcnca · s effon 10 ~ the .-Is of childrerl
and familie:slll nsL. Earl) chil&lt;JJood cb'Ciopmcrl
"a process thai bcpls • an::q:lbOn and oomn
ues llrou{h ag&lt; 6 h "' dunng """" &gt;"""' !hal
chtkken develop the ~ !iOC1al. CltlllllOn3l
ncllectual and l1rllgltllllivc . ilh ..mod fa •
hfebme of grOW1h and :oc:IIIC\-emmL Barner. ID
e:ul) ch1ldhood dc\tlopmcnt mcludt lo"
l:&gt;u1hv-'&lt;1j!hl and famil) """' ~~drug and
a!.'&lt;.._~~ . dnatt. un&lt;n~mont. J'O'ert)
J1&gt;J 11\.ilbjw!&lt; famol} "'''ff1
'!be !In&lt;:
nl.Jll-. t.."(m('l'flef'll'- Cl( .
..~ bart"ad\oca.."'

'Y......,

:'e'.. ll1 '&lt;'J'\"'1(%'\

and il""ate'llt!'

Lecture to focus on Poland's cultural heritage
llyPA'IIItCIA-VAN

News Bureau Staff
ARIA Koc6JOWA, librarian
and visiting scholar from
Poland' Jagicllonian Unive&lt;Slty.
will speak 00 "Pooand' s Culunl
Hc:ri~ How it wa&lt; Preserved During Foreign Domination." Monday. Oct. 25 117:15
p.m.inlheReinslein Bnu&gt;choftheOiecl:tow~p _

Public Library. 2580 Harlem Road.
Free of charge and open 10 !he public, the
leclureistheseoondin UB'si993 Jagiellooian
l.cclurc Series. in which participants in lbc
UB-Jagiellonian scholar txchange ~
discu economic. cultural and political 1 •

~~- ~~~~-"ll. ~~~~ Pol~·'ll_".

series is dJrrrted by Pell:r K. Gtssncr. B
professor of pharmacology ond therapeutiCS.
and IS sponsored in !he oommunity by the: UB
Council on lntemabonal SIUdicsand Progrons
K.ocOjowa 's leclurc will a:ntt:r on the survival of Polish culunl aniforu. despite 19thoeorury foreign oocupation. She will addtes5
how-althy 19th~ families used powerful positions and iniCmationalcoonections to
collecl itrtporw.Polislrcultureartif-=ts_ ..iUch
they then held in trust for the subjuglled nation
Gessner points out lluu these collections
wen: fioquendy tnmsformed into mDSCUJDS.
llll:hives and libraries lluu their ownbl; OOped
10 ~ 10 the Polish naticxl. However, bcC31JSC Poland did_"'!' ~xlst ~an i~

Oct. 14 blaze
damages medical
research building
~~-. . . . to tiNt -

medial

rescarcb building 011 d&gt;c Soulb c-.
pus "~ '
II Sl
ia a

fu-e Oct. 14 that 5larled ilia ditlmpslcr
DCJlliO lbc buildon
Tb&lt; fire iUftCd ibonl) before noon
after 1 spark from • ......~ IOrcb
lPJI"fcnll) tno\tkd do&lt;on a ,. t&lt;
chu1e LcadmJ!IO 1he dumpster FJ..tn,tled bad up the c
~
fues on each of 1he floon; ot-lbc
bu11dtn@ . A a """II of !he heat, lhe
plastiC h111e mch&lt;d agAinst lhe Side
of !he buildtn . Tb&lt; Buffalo Fire Dc-

'ClOlC'llmes

panm&lt;ntt~theblaztwidtm

""""' don31tld 10 mumcopol aulhontoa or- rc -

30 nli!IUII:S.
The full Ult:DI of !he de.mllle will
dcpeod on any damqe 10 lhe SIJ\Ie-

natJOO a1 the ume. the

collo..""l'lW'I~

mamed on pnv111.e hands unul Poland rcj!lUiled
Independence Koo6p.... w11l focus on lhe
collection of Count Emtryl. Hutten Czapsh.
whose pn:lCUfCI1lCfll "'ere donated 10 muruopal aulhonties of Kl2k6w and IOday are held 10
the collecoon of !he Pohsh ationaJ Museum
'"Krak6w.
Final lecture m the: '93 lll!loelloruan series
"11lb&lt;given
8ao7 · 15p.m.inlhe~n
Branch. Speal-er wiU be Andrjez Swpa. ....,_
ciatt professor of ccononucs 01 Jagielloruan
Umversity IUs lecture. "b 11 Possible10 ln'tst
lool ., the: OltracliOIIS L'lll
nsls assooaled ,.;th thecum:nl ""'"' of&amp;ro-

'" Poland•:· -.;u

p.,;, CCOOOITIIi: spe(:ulauOO.

. ..

tural Mel. Wayne Robmson of Ploblic Safc:!y ncccd
Che OOIIIndOr
initiaJJy bill placed d&gt;c ~ 1ll
USO.OOO ~alo fore offic:ials
lllve said cbat it is eloocr 10 SJOQ,OOO.
II wu initially tboo£hllhll wor\:en
trapped on lhe roof and lbc
Sheriff's Dcpanmem. hclic:cpoer
called in. 1berc v.--u no D...t for ..,._
cne, howe\-er, ·noe all wor\:cn &amp;ot
OUl safely on their 0\\'IL

v.=

�4

.,........... _

-.201 S t - U - Nonll
~

2 50. U8 ,a*nu. SL , 11011
"wltftl

--

p:wral .tit.ldl«'ee1

- 1 : (l"ll· · - b y
u.- no.

Spo e l M . -

----.
- zo·-.101

c...,.

TO

DISCOVERY

f'ltiDAT

2~
-·-

A SINGI.JES EXPERIENC£
(A. n.an-pro{it UtPeuu&amp;on)

is a gath.erin:g of
adult singles for group
di cussion, dan cing &amp;
soaializing.
DISCOVERY

...-.. ...

.-.....~..,.­

Bamled Sle&lt; lUll • ~ ,_,.,. 0.. 2S Tid.
&lt;tr $ 4 . -t•.
.._... tor I'!!IOiah • J p..m
_,5pm. SJIOII"'C&lt;'dbytlwll8

ill&gt;._....

·--

l)qJal\..... of ........ ,.,. ..1\]r
-i&lt;Jo.ooUb45-N!1
PlliiAliiiiCeaAIIII-

n..c..- ........... (hll-

O..ilwf'-o(A-

•ttk '8 "'jli&lt;t). En R- o n .
R.N.. J.D... ctlr~ofpt4talr~~:s

Curd I.., ....t M td&gt;od
1\nd.....,oo. oil-de) lld&gt;&lt;duloe .

Hn&lt;p.,. B•ffak&gt; KuiCII 1\lll!no
_
_
,
1wm. Soutb
C•!Tifll££.
• All
m

12 .l0pm f,nr'D(ft 1nf()rma

Discussion "''"ery Thun&gt;day

110n canlid·Oiartn, Benuilem 11

-UCTUIIE6&lt;5 -3lt81.

every second &amp; la•t Tbursday

~~i•iRa, Doc·

Tonight's topic:
Do me11 and women
communicate differently?

. ...- .~Norrt101n
Colter• w Bo~&lt;~y
"'""" c.mpn... l p.m.

"""'il""'

...

.--.~-Tnlai~C. s-t.. I

Prwtlad
-IC n
'
'-

Guitar Fou:a.s...t.M~;o olA.mcrica

yrnposiuna. dit«ted by
c"""IJani..., MWirael

J~

AndnaccHl: all-&lt;!&gt;) $Cboduk,

Surd and S!e&lt;lkl .... Norll&gt;
C.mru&gt; Th"'"lh Oa 2.1 Tid
... Sol ...
!.6. _
..
adm.t lOOn fur II'U'tUI~ a! t p...m
ond5pm Sjl('ll-.dbyllleUB
Depanmen1 of .._tu te For •nfor--

..oe...,

-

rnabon.Qll ~S- 2921
IIIAIIMIEIIIJfT _,HI&gt;TAIIut

11...1Quolity (Oipklii&lt;DI.alioa

Stratqia, Thomas I. O.&gt;on.
manq:er ol hwna~ tbOUT(It
Allred ·SI~nal ln&lt; 106locob&gt;.
N«d! Cam.- 8-9:30 a.m F&lt;e
$40, for ftgl~tnlt.IOO infortml·
'tiocl•eonliiCt Mana.nne SuUt\'tll
.• t 1
64j.-3200

-.n1CM. SCIIMC£ U:Cnlft
ll"J A Matlerot1nterprdatioa. Prof. J.amn Kalk.luM.t.
Dept of Poht1C.I SClencc. Un~v
or l llmots 11 Urbiina-

Cbanwaicn 2.80 Pad North

Rl'i•narcllmematJonal udtns
•..:h iw at hrtem.atkmal Student
anti Sdtoi.ar Seru:~~~rt. • ·UI de
scribe Ill&lt; 'YP6 of pr11&lt;1JCOI

tratruot 1\.:aJilble to m~m•
ttOnal!iu..deols and 1he •ppl.cil
tJM~ pr«'t'dunos far ltllborua
uon. l.tSC &amp;tlkknl U1noa
Norlb c.mp., .J.5 p m

COMI"UTEit leiEMCI:
COI.LOQI • •

1\lpillua ror O...•iac
Gnopti. Prol'. Rob&lt;rul

T.......... o.p
Sacoa. B~n

-

ore~
lln1\- , 20 Knoo.l

Nonh Compo&gt; l 30 p m

--.a&amp;.leiiEJICD

tdmatt~ ...

fOr l1!eiWt • I p
~b)m.t!B

IJm" of Wtilu.n~ SC!Cfit

'l'I\IIM)ft. ca 1645 · 29~1

! I S - South

LR-

--nca
rev-

Cou.oQUIUII

oe-Cea,·n

Opt:imizallu in t Cak:ulus
of ariations., Prof 'uel J

&lt;:arnepc

M ~Uon

Campus 10 Lm.

Walbngton.

INTEJlNUCUIC

Um" 103 Otdtndorf South
Campu\ 4 p m._

El&lt;rtronic:- c .........

2.11 Loctwood. North c"""""

ooo-1 ;30 p.m ~•stratton
forms can be: obwned al
Loct.woocr s rd'C"rcott des.L. c.by E·moil
(LOI..GEMMA iiPUBVMJ.
UR:Wur~

TiP"

4ftrr ~ Suniv.l
rnr 11&gt;&lt; Rul World.

EJjeen Ames lnd Am} Sa rod~· ­
gradua1c .ass.t 1anu. UB Carcc:r
P1annan,g and ~t lead
e:rt. orth Campus. Noon -1 p m
Caii645&lt;i12S roc regJ&gt;IraUoo

tnform.alKJn. Sponsored b) tht

-

Studen1 ufe Off10&lt;.
ANATOIIJCAI.IeiDK:U

D endritic Cban,es in lht. Hip......,.,... in Alzheimen o;..
..,._ Dorochy Flood, Ph.D.. UB
Dop. 1\rwomu:al s.:........
306 F -. Sourh Campu•
12:30 p.rii.

or

UTIIIAIIT-

WEDNUDAYS AT 4 PLUS

Write l.lw :Power: Brat.b•--aite.
a.r..u~n,

Orthoval&gt;hy, .....

Polit.ia, 18ob Perelrn.an. IUlhor
of Vintu~l R~a1iry (Roof) and
Clpti~ lt.4Adiaor (Tit~ Figurrs).

438 Oleme..._ North Camput.

-

C...,._

n ..w-·

U..IIHoltio-

th.'t. M.t.!MJO Treo.·.iuin, M D
114 S , pro(...,.. ond &lt;l&gt;au ol Ull
Oep. . oe.:_Socu1 and ftt.t.t:ntt\-t:
ed~1oc

a~· M tiM"

f"l''f tnfnr

M.U•.._..,._,Mr11&lt;

SOCIAl. AIIOI'IIEYEIITIVI!

c....,_

t'.)qartme t

2:52A Farbt-r South

l2 ·J0.1.30,rm

-·---

I1.ICIIIICA1. . . ~

-·~-""
P'Mirmlt

A.~ Hilla.('~.'\
~

Da\·td A.adenon Gai·

let) ktd&lt;r
p

nnttc_.

1-'

m CaD 64 -6 • ·u for- rep-sua

'""'tal""""""'s~b)'
s,....,.. t.r• OtT....

111&lt;

RI01ULI.

T_._ SU....IJB S&lt;ad•
1..,.1 North CamP"" l.lO ~ - "'
_

.. 'IOUJIYLfoU.

-~t~~t~hipn&gt;cos-

VtnDML Atumn r\1t'tUI Ma lll
O)m 6 pm
....,... _AI.~

....... Prof l'«tr&gt;&lt;ll.

COtiCEII'I'

CompnttsEn~IQI

musK

Bald) 1"-.orth Clmpu.s 3 p m

tC!COn:hDI llllbho Sl«

A.Khittrtun for

liiC~ - - - - Dmribui..S

w O..Wd
UB O.po of Elean&lt;-al ond

lsalbt-~: f'lulnucol.
OC&gt; (u onrvil!•~ S atbesi

Tloollah~c...-t_ arl)
en~k

llbd Don.Ht
Conctrt

Halli'lottltC.mpo

~pm

T.clc!e• S6.. 51udtnls. S:l2
en.1 twdtcnr.."'t:

ren

"""~I') ,SmonM

Sdvermao. Zeoea: PMrrn.ac:ru1•·
L-ah•. lac . Wdrrunt'Qn. Odawarr: 1~ t Cook~ .onh OuhP"' J p m
CMORSTIIY COUOQI'IUII

I IKillwi Sobtllli II.NA Ny·
_ , Mollipl&lt; RoiHolt...
s;,.... ad Ddta Sobwoib, Dr
lobo Hclmon. S&lt;clKlft of M.,..,_
~.Come!IU..&gt; 114
""'""C'Jompu&gt;. 4 p.m

A.Jcorith•

Burd """ Sl.. IIIII ·. on

c....,... Th""'P,O... u TK
tl:t : s.. tltldettl•. 56,~·
..,dSp.,.

tiolo,E&gt;Iee.&gt;L Wmoo.PbD

night

..........,..,.1_

S~pooi

.......... tlo6r- .. Sftn.

GTP..-iq ~"" Ex ·

A .small Jonalion C\1...,,../w,.. JO.,.u,-ru , pop

Dance

u.uo..Cilrllpu&lt;
- UB.....
Admusi&lt;lo.
Sl.!r(J.
IIUJrle :U.lO. ...-..-...

... .o~n.,.,., . .u.,.r ttho:dale,

~n~'t:~Ua.OOrtAh

J.JHL"Y

......... 'll1efol ~ 11"'1.

......,..,..l!ySpibeiAo.-

c...!~...,-·

Ai the Unitarian
Universalist c;l,un:h of Amhemt
63.20 Main Street
Williamsville, Y L4221

and pi:::~.tti also a sounJ $~Stem o:rt

11-'..10.--

C..illwl'_ol_.._

Every Tlnusday, 7:30 p.mj

("f1w c:ouup ,.._

"""""

~-.....-.

suo, IJ1I •

I"'IAAIIIIACBm I.LC1VItE
Ph.rtiJ.aC'Odraam:in of Acut"
ln_t_~ &amp;el•eea ~ro­

fNII lotnaau l:a M111~:lar
S..a&lt;h&lt;s, Atrgcl f.. Kruf&lt;r. pmf~sor. Unr'' · of M I..Iml. 10

--s

Acl'leJOn Soodt Cam:pmr._4 r -m

VOtUTaAU.
l 'CMlaplowa
State.. Al-urnn1

Amu~ Mam Gym North C.am
flU!&gt; 7p.m

-

GUnAII FUmiAI. EYDIING

J lo.Mno A•

1• .n:-launed
f:UIUrl).l S1or C OfK'C'I'I Hall on
I he North Campu~ ~ p m
Ttd.~tt. S6. ruOe-nb , S 11.

---

Gukar •f ... ndotioe ol A )'lllpO!IIu-. dutt1cd b y -

c.-u .... ond Ml&lt;bael

Anclnacao; 1111-day ocbcrcltlle.
Bounlancl Sle&lt; Hlli,Nonh
Compo ~0.. 2.1 Trl·
&lt;U ~ . stud&lt;als. Sb.,.,...l

mtHCV.I.ar BkM:k.ers aod H1•

A.nuqoo.isli. Yo~ndru Mt!-.hra..

Pb D • po tdoo..""1or.al frHov. l B

\ Oepr of PhamlaCeuttc) ~
· CO&lt;.rl..e onh Cr.mpu .. 4 p m
I'HYS-YHMIIWt

boning Machi.nes.: PowtT,
Ertduraooe and Attlout Dr·
~n.t&gt;r C ~rdTa~lor .
Dept. of B.oh'J} and MuW"Um
of ComparatJ \'C Zooto,:
HO!Nard Una" Butler Audnonl&amp;ttl.
F1Uber Soo!b CJOmpU&gt; ~ p m

unw-.Dls:on:lt'rs.

Eacillc
Or M-nnl.
Slunnolo , l~!oed fK}chologll&gt;1 .
leader onh Ca.mpu 7-9 p m

Call 64~-6125 for regaS.tmJon
anfOr'l'IUihoo Spon.w1rtd b)· theStudent Life OrfJCC
GUlfAll FUTIVAI. EVENIHCI

CCHICEII'I'
Nicholas GoluJti and Bonita
Boyd.. &amp;uitar~nu~.e duo Sl~
C0110c:t1 Hall Nonh C~~m~ 8
p.m. Tackess: S6. Sludenlli: Sl 2.

gau:r~l .u.cn~ .

UUAIIFaM

Hail Mary. Su&lt;dmr Unroo l'h&lt; ·

Guitarist Eduardo Fernandez
to perferm In UB festival
E&lt;luardo Fernandez . a leadrn J ctass.ca&lt;

gunanst from Ufl.lguay w'll perfoon Oct. 2• a!
7 p "1, "' a Slee Hall concen presenled by the
ORS Grea1 Per1ormers Senes and ihe GLJII.al
Rlundaoon o1 Amenca
Fernandez whose program ~Mil lnclu&lt;le w01~s by Feman&lt;lo Sor Leo
Brower Alberto Grnastera J S Bacll
a'1d hts own ·consecuenc.as. ~ made
~rs clebot on !977 and has SinCe toured
!he wortcl to great acc;la•m
H1s recrtal ~ With ~a-­

banS and Drscoverres." ihe 1993 Gurtar
FoundatiOn oiAmerrca lnteroational Fes1rval and Cornpebt&lt;Jn laking place a1 U8
1hts week . Co-dtrectO£s are Joanne
Castellano ol the U8 music 1acutty .and her husband an&lt;llellr:M·
guitarls! MrchaeiAndnaccto.OihereveningrecMJislsareNd'lolas Goluses and Bonita Boyd (gunar-fiute duo). ihe Bal1imore
Consoo ancl guitarists Roberto Aussel and Clavid Russell.

�-

;IU.,&amp;MS--.-·

Amuteatt A~ke of Oiat:lc' W'\

LISTEN UP'

F..d«:akn ,._ rq:nA.I'IIhOI.I

"''""'""""'call
........_,.

29 ll'/1.

AUL 0 lC.UIPf,,Er,r r&lt;u .. /.. ;... ;. •

·

l'loocodf&amp;Uii&lt; ll'ltmlpy Ill Cloe

Troa-ol'~ ltoo·

cnSMre.PhanoD_......
24 Cook anbC'_. l

00C 0U111plaalllipo. T """"

_ ,....

Cooru.!loe111~AUdoy

1.~•m

___
---

-All n:atiYAI.

!Abt. . . Foo:ullda, ........
ootoofSor, II&gt;WI'f,

'Ill•

G•o-ra, U . ll..,., aud
uwn "''on:RteUencw~ ,.. Sl«

COIICft1Jbll.-~7
_.,.J IIMf_ __

p.no. llici«U: 56, -

... s.r;.,....,

jOintlY

; SU..

QRSO...Of'ef""".
ihe

(lu,,.. -...

Dr.

_ ..,.ll'nHIMr.

D&lt;p.

or

-sc-uen.£- ... _

daloood........,._

plofbod&lt;-

Sdlooloi'-Hdlt'bol:
...-_Rf'CI 1l.Jilpm

B... , .. w..,. ...

,,...,
~~·::..-:= ~::r,:

s..... Udoo.VB o.r&lt; or Pitt..-

.,..,.,._ 280 Par\

-Campo&gt;

Ottw- 8TMds &amp; StyiH

~pon-~W.S.......

Poland '••C•Itllftll Horilal&lt;:

O.......:Lupa..-of l b&lt;Uo·

L&gt;ft

coa~ Su1a11 Qu..lniiiHI\"r~

Buffalo atlOmt"' •nd todcrn ,.t

__..

tiM!I-1nd..,_~..,dl'1~

..ndftiii:MI

UNt

~ilnd~tvriwobn. pldl~
~~"'"ll!IQ"~,..·~

Running A1achines: Pol\'cr.

Andnii&lt;!OO; oll-&lt;lay odlodule,
8ou&gt;ludSieclbll•. Noe111

A~t

fHrr~tdr'*IJtwllft(~

OffttO&lt;

k

~1!\l;m..ltl"&gt; lnCAM:IJ~~ ~

Endurana and Animal Design

c - l'brousb o., u r..,,.

-~- .....

URCaolb uol t be O&lt;nlt, l'!ldl
S•e'\ em, UB aUlJC1..1~ profCS110r
....~.ltadtf .....
Campo• 1-9~ .. c..ll645 6125

~ - l ; :IOpoa

......... O....Iutlott.M.,,

G•kar F..-loD ol AnHrico
't
diret:kd b)' Joa:ane
C...eJI... •nd M i&lt;'bod

~

. .... , _ ... l i X _

u-lt "' .. ,.....,.."'o.noc

-IC!I.~

.

(A11t$j.-·~· -~-- ............. /1)11

NciomJioey. liSC. &amp;.. f &lt; -

COIICIQI-

._.,_

--'""'""'--·........-.

~ 1""''"1tllnll~~-.-. Pnrrtt'&lt;:l"""""f~lnJ'...,

,IIIIG\A,A.A..._N~ \~~

S4, oruO.aC&gt;; 16. l&lt;""ral
admiWon fOJ ru:ttal• • l .p m
•.., s p.m s~ b~ cbc

lf'ltr.rilk:r

,&lt;to;

.,M&amp;Iblr

UB Deporunont or Mu•oc For

_,

mrQrnlllion. c1U MS..292l

tt£SUIICII..._.... CUA
l~&lt;nlllodloo to Reallk Sci...ro~ Ubnry....tO.·.m...

otComputn- J51mas. Bll
ll~L SoulhCAIIIP"" IC a RL
,., nt@i'SiraUOn'I'C(IUimd .
~~~--YHIIIIIAII

Thr IF...pil.ft•~Barr Vir'ti: La-l t&gt;at Mnabraar PnJuia

(LMPI) lndotu NF)IA&lt;th ·
n, 1a. Hu ...n Lymp[MMd c~
Mn Lmg Clucn. ~tt ilu-

d&lt;m. UB Dopt. of M ierol&gt;l&lt;&gt;log~
IIJ6Carylt.ll oon

WEDIIDDAYI
A.J 4 ii'WS

URIIAIIY 'S DIIU
riftrnlllrti.ac,
(ruU..tloas), M"'IJ!••
o·Suni"IJl, autbof of

m,.

It~ tllv HQ«~(' of
SJ.w,wn. 608 ~"""

N&lt;Jtlh Compo• I 2 lO
p.m Fat mort: mfOf·

PKYS-Y HIIIIIAII

m11UOO conlad Cb~

ln.spiratioll, Ui"ff• and ~
alcn&lt; Rook. Dopt
of Biomedical Sdencc-.11, Univ
of Abcnle&lt;n, S."O&lt;bnd. 108
Sb&lt;rmon. Sooth Campus Nooa

8C'.f'Mleln ar64S -J.8 2

c._ Dr.

UAAIIYIIU£AIICII
lfEAUll
llltJU:8 C1AA

HULYIISCIEIICES La&amp;UIY

_....._.CLAD

~~~=::.
Ubnryand

~tBoaltliSoimeesUbnry

~;... .r

for Raoorch and Wrltloc- 821
HSL Soolh Campus. 2-3 p.m
o regis:lnltioo required

MIIaal Gliidaoce la tb&lt; Dovelt.ou..

opiat Vlsul Syo;lftll. Dr

Rcoclwdt. NeuJOicience Uon,
H...u

H:ugho:s Medical C...n-

ltf, Uni\·, California. San

Fran-

"'""'· 026Fsrba SoolhC..m-

fi'.
,.......::

Comput•rS~m.s.

821

Hs.L SaulbCan\f'lO

~-.1

- - --

IDQI-KIEMCE

I

r..m

rq,i.RJ"''UBn l"eQUitrd

P'HY-

AND AITilOIIOII'f

Oa • "Nnl:rino Sp«trum in

ee-.1 Relathit). Prof
JC!Iendd Sacfu.. UB Php.1n.
D&lt;po . ~19 Ftoocu&gt; Nonn
l·•s p."'

Campus.

aJOC-SOIIIIAJI

IM-~ p.m.

~tioaoftb&lt;Majar

UFEOb.l&lt;difl&lt;lllion. Tem Clart.
cooosellng upe:rvlsor. U8
Snu.ah1y Ed\lalion Cerucr.
le&gt;&lt;l&lt;r. Nonh •C..mpu&lt;; 6-7 )I)
p. m .'Cal1 64 5~ 1 2~ for regtS:I'I"a·
•ion 1nformation SpooSOftld by

OutC"r Mt"'DbraM Protein of

~he SI:Ddeot Life Office.
SUDEUcn.E
Ar'l and LitentuR in

Branbamm&lt;lla CotannoU..

Dr

Ttmotby MufJlll) . UB lkpL

of Medicone 1348 fort&lt;r
Sooth Ca:mpu11. 4 p.m

ALD011QUU1 TAIII.E srtll&gt;EifT

~-=~lnfa•t.s.:to
Studcnr Untoo.

"~orth

Camru,.

8· 11 p.m.

...\:m.erlc;a's PrUoos: Nf'lll' Defini tiou, 1fitb • Positin Out·
look, ......
.r
Crim• ..,d Pnlsb"""t, Fodd·

a...-..-

and SU..S

F.,:tnontiaar, \"a.c:atlon A.llf"r·
ulilt'I!S, l)rbnr.t'l Lrptoo, l~t.ader
North C•mpo• 3 16-S p n&gt; CaB
645•6125 for rq.J!!&lt;tnh~ mfor
INIUDJ\ puoliCttd b)- t:hc: Stu dena Lfe Offtee
MEDICINAL C-SrRY
SOIIIIAII

Moodinz an&gt;l .......,..ted
St udies of P NA l.n1tT'acUons.
I. Prof "Sk:pbtn C'1dle, 199"
Bnstol -Myen Squ1bb la.'1UR!'r
The lnst&amp;ttllt' of Cantt.- Re lroC'arch. Sunoo. blfL•nd 114

-4~

aal £pitbdial Celh in-91.~
Jon.mfn- 0 . 81acL Pb..O .
RMWell Part lD.siii.Ult DeJ'( of
Mul:rmar..""'OQIY- 307 HlX'hslt:tter

·---- ---SCIEIICU
ua COIIIIIIUIHO-

Empo....--..1: A P"""""l
Polllto R.&lt;IJMMUil&gt;lo So1C-Care.
R.ad li.SOO H01el and Suitr.i Buf·
ralo.. 4243 Qeocn;t SL,
O lC:d a:owaJa.. 7:30 a..m -5 p.m.
c~spon&lt;OJOd by tb&lt; w....m
New Yort: Cbap~er of the

-

·SVO&lt;UYULL

Can· · 16. Mumm 'rt:na Mm,
Gp-o 1p.m
100«T11 AM£JIICAN IIIIISIC
~IVAI.

Musk from t bto M OS('O• Cirna Botlb~· .Prc-u~e: . Jl.U drum
..., Sk&lt; UJnttt1 H•ll Nonb
Campu~ 8 p.m T lns S4. S6
For tnfot'ITiaJKm C"tll b4\ ·Z9:1J
&gt;p&lt;""'ored t&gt;') lb&lt; VB MQ"' Oopl

UUURUI
\ 'iMJft&amp; f'ra1'1.keD.strill. S'udcrn
ll.nlt()n 'Thi::alrr• .ZOI St-udenl
Unt(m 'lon.h C'ampu:) Mp m
1\dmr\!M:'In. Sl: ~ . UB 'tudcnt.'
~'so. non ~f&gt;tti&amp;-n~

Hochstettcf. NOAh C.11mpu~
HOp m.

•IOCOEMICAL

COIICEJIT
David Rassell. guitarist Slec
\;on«n HoM. Noe111 Compus. 8

Way II is"), LA""' Qumo ("lnco
His Sent.cncu'"), Tammy Ryan
("Lie~") ond Megan Terry
("Brukfast(JuuJ"). Hollwolls

UFE-

S1ud.e~

-MA.COUMIY SDIIIIAR
A.CU"8tion of Prot flo Kinaw C
l.soz) 11W!S is Associated "'i t.b
Post ~M.itotic:: Ennb in lnlt"Sot.i ·

GUIJ.U 'FESTIVAl. EVENING

Gertrude Miller ("That's Th&lt;

8 J(lp.m

Dr. O.'"id llto.fb. UB :Ob
~-Furnas. Nonh Camptb J. p m

r m.

Hunkins (~).

Junc••n ps)'~l€} and drum
mlCrprt-tJtllon Noo.n eampu~ "7 ·

Studte:i. .laf~tlloruan lkln
41 Capon l )I) p.m Spoo..-l
by t.hr Counn.l on lntMW!I(IRal
1.100

C-ICAL -EER1NG/

mg Da~. c:haultWI of PEN
Pnson Writin&amp;Commiute:. 106
o·a ....... Nonh C..mpaJ. 6:30

ffm. Tdea: S6. students ~ S l~.
&amp;.-.J audience.
ITA.QED ·IIEADIJIO
4ple:r + '1 , program or s:tlgcd
re.dlngs from play' by L«

Kat6jowa, I'!&gt; D , D llab . hut!.
Sd:aool-of Libra!) and lnf«ma

Noe111'C..mpus. 4 p.m

ovel S.peetr:oscopk Methods
For Probia&amp; lon Motioa in
M•mbnutos, Dr. M. St..-z.ak.

or

Oepl .
Cbernis.try,
Bingha mton UPI't'. l 06 Cary

.

Convenience
Quality
Service
Variety
Anderson's Frozen Cu stard &amp; Roas.l Beef
Braden~

• Burger King • Pizu Hut

The ·Sub Shoppe • UniMart
Copy Stop • umpu~ Onmh Cotiition
Cainpus Tee' &amp; Sweats • CVS
D'Angelo Hair&amp;: Cosmetics
Downtol\&gt;'11 Rent-A-Car
GPA Insurance Semres

Luthem Campus Mini tery
fHtiRSOA Y

2~

U.I-'YDIS

SQU- L£C1Uft
O..i&amp;....- Drop--Gelln-ol
Lo&lt;ture. Prof. Steph&lt;n Neodk_
1be lnWwf.t' of Cancer Rc ......,h. Sunon. &amp;ocllftd 454
Fronczak. ortb Campw. 9 a..m

Conlonued oo page 6

Murray Travel
Newman Center

OptiGallmage
Record Theatre

1

i

~

~~

uu·

Kaplan Test Prep
University Bookst
UBMicro Sales Center ~
~·

~
=

�6

e

QUJJ/zty CJtrt m a nlii'Tllring, stimul4rmg tnrinmmnJt
•..,., neorb) Daycore Center opmt at 110 ~Brun
(ponlkl to Bailey. belund the A Hooptw)
• JlOI1"'))"C&lt;l by the Buffalo \ 'A 1cdocal Cmttr
• Opcrun 20 spoca to the U8 Commuruty
• A=pcng mfants, toddkn &amp; pretehool~rs

•

---

l tiOTICES

l'll S4poaoll a..
"*- .. C:WV'Wtdt ,.,........
tlt~k I

llk:aipr . . .

_....,._,

-~
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tfy'-"""'-11) . . . . . . ,...

-

S&lt;ooiV.- bolq

Typlnt of Term Papers - Theses
Dissertall - Resumes . Etc
Programs : Professwnal Write
Word Perfect 5. I - Lotus 123

~'

-~

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.......... f« • .....,. .. -

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l'ld s..,._- 1993
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UBroofcuwof~

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poatOrai b~ tilt
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few dt

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Soc~'

10. 1993

If

ea

,_A!'ftl

~Tioe
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tn»&gt;.C:'-

~ prorr~r~a

he:

-&amp;.pod. II•

s.tv

u-nca~ • •

Ac....loo r.r l'orWk

The Presidenl, the Council
and the Director of Athletics
of the University at Buffalo
request the pleasure of the company of all community
and campus World University Games volunteers
and friends at the dedication of the

coli

J

.............

---

·

....,u.

...... 10 , _ . . . . - . .
t.M:~M~ltft - rf110. Wf' MnMt )'OM

to p.e Wo.ca

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t1t

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,.......,..

••u Jlert

prol~l

on.;.. o( ........ , . _ Pr&lt;Jf
John RJ.,Iaoc!. UB IOl
O..fendod Sou&lt;h c -

Tlounoda 1 ~ ~ p.a
C...fo&lt;tl-. wdl bt C y Aikft. ""__
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'k. .O..ru..:at PbarrnacokJJ~t~a
lA""'-&gt;. M ollord Fol""""'

Ho•pnal ~Cook&lt; Nonh
Campus • p.a
AIIT~­

Hol
- E&lt;IUM. Galkry. " - Arts c....
onbC._ ~·7pm

Throop "'

19

~~ .17 ....

for

mc'Jft'

..StlMMI.-

FAU.

CIIAfT-

C~"c Craft

CeNer n oiJa
•AI " •ut. F•U Crafl ft'od.:
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MUOWUHUIOW
o, . .rL.} \•t "' .. -.uh .. ~"'·
'ol&lt;flal t.hc-tnt'
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u·p"~ ()._, !H tmm' ~• 1

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Cc:ncer, rr.:unbC~ llw
~v. v.tu...-h C\ln110Ub lhrou.th
f\ tt\ 19. I\ ~)OibOr~ b) the:
c~ f•nd For 1IKft tnfonNI
lk'lft . call ~S-6879

1:35 P·"'-

World University Games volunteers
Bulls-Tigers ldckoff

Admission to the game Is free
for aU volunteers wearing their
World University Games 1.0. badge

TCMa . ~

,....,_,..

....,,,.. ~ 11\:dcr .. ..a4b.

EXHIBITS

AIICMI\IU W&amp;ll DISPUY
An rJtblhlt not1ftC Atehtvcs
Wte:ll1 M display wt l..ock
1-&gt;lnr) lfwoucl&gt;
J 1 On dJ•·
pb) . . ...,....documeoufrom
CooN) olEn&lt;. Cit) of S..fllllo.
Bufllllo IJouontlAIOhont) ond
UBArdlo...

en

-~ b\ 0.....
"'Fimc--

B.l.n. aduplayof;,.ud-.,

~. ~fromltk111!'11 't.

~ Ma_· Sc::neL () oa "~
lhmufllO..' :!'I'"CopenH&gt;U
....., iallb)

d"'""'}.,.,..

M......,
~ •• \

""""""~···
n·n•,..~LDI
.~\'C" h.llf l't'llft tnio.-.

-TAonB..uk-)

-alll'&lt;..'l&gt;l'lll
til MEW
~-5,._
~ M J-~

•liiiJ"~..Ondul~

0... . 10 • Pmooond s.r..a.

coar........, R...,. 104 am.

.....-c..-.r-9

a.m ..,.. p.m. To IChcdWc • II!P-.coll"-'-!Ser

-

\lC'eS ~.

645w2646

-~-...

~Foii.Doooona"
,
_ """') Fndoy .........._

beto• • 81"1' .. Oodeodorf

Hall. Sau111 &lt;"-. Rajues1
doo&lt;Uij! r..,.. 9-11 P-"'- Evcryooe ·•-dcomr. ao partner -.:dcd..
"""' ad..._ Spomcoo.d b)'

---

CO.IIIIIW~

~

SpocWill (SG.-}-

l.uoc:ll

.,

c..... .,..,.. ood .............

--

....CG.I1111lft:CIYIL
-

, . . . - (SG-t1}-

0mu! M..S.C:....Looe

�-·

Science, technology directo
hold re earch es ion at UB
HE

AnO '

TOP wrponte,

~Mdp"tm-5Qen&lt;le

Md u:dmolocY dir&lt;cton •..;u ,_
11
IIIIi
ity0cC2S-27forlht
aDIIU&amp;I Amenc.a lnstliW ol
1CS (AlP} Clorporlle Auocims' mectu1
Hosted by lht Cal
Corporauon, UB and
the Medical FoundatioqofBufl't:lo.lht~­
' will fta
Jft!"fftoboo 00 WIC and
opplied researoh in pit JCS and e&lt;I&amp;JneetU!J,
"" well u new direction fa&lt; ocknce polocy
"' tndusUy and covunmena.
Tbc lhe;&gt;e for Jhe mocllog I
IIT·UII •
uon Be 'l"bete Bdlft You
Then: "llus
"'tU be lhe fli'Sitime lhe C
te IU&gt;ocot·
It&gt;. mocl1ng ha been beld

c

pu.

Welcomingmnarl&lt;s Will be IT!.Ideby UB
""'"'"' Aaroo
Bloch end Cal pan Pre.,..
deDI H.R. Lclaftd.
n.. SCJeQJJl"IC propam lt1d ~"'nl&lt;'B
..,u include:
• Findings f""" .., CTil recent stuchn of
the Slt\ICUite or !be cosm1c ba&lt;
nd nod•auOit u 1111 ground-based. ballooo-bome
andwdhte(COBE}-blsedupenmenbdutt
offer 1 g~mpse of lhe physical proces&gt;e.&gt; in
the earliest IDOfiiCn of lhe uruverse: Plulu&gt;
Lubin.profeuco-ofpby ic 111he n• en.ity
ofCahfomia. Santa Barbara.
•
tow result&gt; from using 5Canniil 11111nelmg miCIOSOOpy toeuminecry&gt;UI growth
a1om b) 11om, and tec:bnolog•cal opplkolion&gt; of the ledrruque; Max G. l..agally. E.W.
Mueller Professor of MIW'ials ~ and
Ph) &gt;~e&gt; a1 the olvet'Slty of Wisconsm.
• Tbc latest successes from a new ...mio1mal" method dutJ muunely •oh eo molecular
&lt;ltu&lt;'lures oontaining sevCTII hundred atoms.
operates on 1 wOits!ation and takes ju51 1
few boors IOOO&lt;Ilr up with a cor-rect solution;
obel Laureate Herbert A. Hauplmln. ~ I·
denr of the ~al Foundauon of Buffalo
and researdl professor of bioplt)' ical st•·
ences and rompu1er seience a1 U B.
• n.. useoflimuiii.IOO in stUdying earthquakes lt1d in engineering stru&lt;twes able 10
"'ithstand earthquakes: George C . Lee. dean
of the UB Sebool of En&amp;incenng and Applied Sciences and &lt;fueclor of the auonal
Center for Earthquake Engineering Researcb
beadqu.u1tred 11 UB.
• Hypcnonicsandhigb-umperalurep.seous&lt;:bemisrry; Micbacl G. Dunn. vice Jl'e$1·
denl and researcb fellow OJ Cal pan Advanced
Technology Center.

7

liCiaiCe polocy i
al .. .U be
addressed II thr _ ,
Tn:) 'P. midi. dnc:tor of pbysoc:al IIC1·
ences at thr IBM R - h o;.;...,.. ' T J
w.._ Researd!Center"' v&lt;n-.... .Y ..
will dl!ICII&lt; '"The
Nl I or-

Re\olulioa." Acrord1
10
tbe mlcroproceuor baa proclucala rmwl..
able &lt;XlRIOiidatloa in IDfClrtiWlOII l&lt;tdmoJo..
'""' !hal
rnacl&lt; lhe upercoonputer and
the personal rompu "' pncticallt "'next of
Lin." He
d!seu h company' ~­
we move i
panllel rompuu
'" ne,.
wpm,.&gt;nttJut•ng center and t,.o ne,. ~lllen
mi!IOII

,.,u

for computauona1 c

SU}

Charles
hn . dtre tor or the
L.awrenc&lt;o Bett.ele} l..aboralory 1n Betlek).
Cai•L lt1d profes"" of chcll'llW)&lt; , e1ectnca1
eng,.,..,ngandCIIli'IIJ'Uiel'sqc""""andpb) .
""11 the 01\'tt&gt;ll) of Cahfonna at Ben.elet. u.•lldlscu ·n..~ Rolc:oflhe
auonall..a~ " dunn aumeo(eroDOinJC diffiCUlty nd ID lhc aftenrulth of the
Cold W or. He v. tilt
about 00.. . after mort
than SO )-ear&gt;
romph bment. lhe U S
Department or Enetxl · nlllOitlllabO&lt;II.OI')
sy5tem noY. must alter 11 n:u Mon I.Jld \eC.'l
lin partnd'!JuJ&gt;' "'llh 1ndu II)

SEFA donations help pay for
services of Hospice Buffalo
o.&lt;JOded 1te..,. Aw~et- a......,.,. ParL ••
ap

....... .,....tr•••pl..ta, ot..

auen

PJ!Uent~

lberlopsc v.1U mdude SJmulau
and
tbeu ""' •n stud)IDg lhe greenbou&lt;e
effect. tbe ronurucnon of mall eleruoruc
device., rrucrogra"IY ilpd CT}stal yo.."lh.
and mesoscopic elecuonkdwucal&gt;) Slem
All l«hnocal SCOSIOII "'ttl be beld on lhe

O

"''!h

For ll'mt
alftmtl\ll tllne • for .,.1Jom
the"' " no " truBC)&lt;," cure oa lhe horizon.
there 1 H"'P'C&lt;' Buffalo Inc
1be dediC;auon. roncern,
toOand )CS, pener.entnce-of IVOUJ! ofWtSI·
ent

1

CW

Yorlen

""""' Wnhng A ..-an~ v.11l be
pesenl&lt;d 10 fUns Omstuon ""'Baeyer for hts
~&gt;oo~o;. "Till:l'ling ihc Atom· Tbc ~or
thr ISible MicnJ,.'Ofid. • (Nev.&lt; yon._ Ran·
domHouse.I992JaJadlnnertobehddon0ct.
2.5 in the A!bnprt-Kno• An Gallery.
AI ihaJ tune. lhe AlP abo
pesen111J1

began wor

-in~,

jW1dod fTom an tdea befWl
., England 10 1 mulu·oer·
'ice aa,c:oq that set"\~
some 2 pobciiU dati)
Hosp1r&lt; Buf
In
Bf0"'1l from home-

,.,IJ

Pnt.e fa&lt; lndustnal Applscanons of Phts.&lt;:
to Leonard S Cutler, Curt Flor) and Robon
P G•ffardofthr Hewteu-Packard l..aborll(&gt;ries for appltll'1B a ,. Ide nurge of basiC pit) •
•ci and elc tron1 s to tht destgn and
impro•·ement of frequency and time &lt;11!1·
&lt;lards. •ncludm a ce&lt;1um cloc muoduced
m 1992,that 1 lbeniOSIIOCUnU:and reliable
umelcqnng dem:e in lhe ...-or1d.
n.. AlP Corporate A SOC:IOICS IDCiude
some 80 leading rorporatioos and labonuories thai have JOined AlP 1n UIT}·ing out
iiS purpose or ad•ancinm and dtffusmm
the knowledge of phySICS and tiS 1pphca110DStO human "elfan

~bo

cocether 1n 1976 ha•-e ••·

UB campus
'Tht AlP

care~ppon

temunaJJy

Ill '"llh unctt

unn foraduhs
0"' It 'i&lt;nO

children. adole.cents lt1d adults ufftn"l

from an) rypeoftern:unal or hfe-dt"'oten•nt:
dines and thr~r home e&amp;regl\en.
A pauents requ'"' more sl..illed care.
there are paU~.&gt;uve care beds m nearly a
dozen acea hospiral . '" thr ~ m-pallent unit 1n Alden and tn matt than 20
oursn•g homts m f.Qe County
H&lt;»pice Buffalo Inc IS the largest agency
or us ltnd m e .. Yon. Stau:. And there are
plans oolhedrii"1DB board to bu1ld ~"''II
he a nallonal hospice model on 1 20-acre
1993 SEFA Ca mpai gn

..,.. J&lt;.n """Jdcd "' ~ ­
are 100111) or patUall) mmburotd by
tanOU1o ·~ CO\~ no &lt;me v.ho
neul ~ '"'""~ " tumed .... be·
cause: of u•obllll)' to pi} . uy Murrl)
Ho,.land. M 0 • hospocr as'iOCUte mtdtcal
dlreaor
Farmh~\ &lt;:u partKI k 111 al! \oef\ ~.
udtn 1 coc:respoederll.~ procram.. kad' llbrar) . one-.....,_ direct 0001a1:t. open
ppofl P"UI"- C!dta:IUO&lt;Wl """"'" groupo
lt1d pld ..tocauoo da) •
H Wid. a chnJCal prole&lt;~....- ,. B. s
School of Ma1...-1ne and Boomedi.;al
&lt;t'l&lt;leS . uplal
~ end chlTen; 11'0111
one Jlt"""' 1 lllOthtt . ..en """offer-ed •vy
and are fleublc:
.
Oooauoru 10 HO&lt;pOCt. Buffalo l.broclp
SEFA help" pay for sen
for
""'""mbu.....t b) ln!oUI'IIICe camcn Thew
mclude berea•-emem ""'&gt;&lt;e&gt; pro• Jdcd lo
fam,._, a. ...n lbc suppon pro•'lded b)
•"'iun""" '"bo annually conml&gt;uR more
!ban 17.
boon of sen""' Many of lhe
'olunteers and health-care l""''rden .......,.
oted "11h Hospice Buffalo. t ludm lllle&lt;bcaldtrettorRobertMJicb.MD .• ...,affii.....S
••th UB
Cannz and ltanng b) deslcnatme HosP•~ Buffalo Inc. oa your SEFA donor wd
" "ral the coounued growth of st:I'\'&gt;Ce510
pau...1 and l.beir lo•·. .t oneo
Althouab -

00·

der" drug llrlifICial bod} lrnp!Anu.. and&lt;llhct
ad\IIDCe&lt; tn rne.dl(al l&lt;:nct' ""' nWJOJ
lon#er. healtluer h"'" 1 "'&amp;Ill)" for man)

=• "'bicll"'

- -- -.....

UN

• Admalmel1l and~

-' ~l!ll~

s12 600

SJo.m

n

- s6:iiiJ-. S6.82H7

- S3t.200 S2HS3 C2
S2SOOO -$20434~
$H .500 $1438971
iiEd.auon
• Emenws- Cenler
0.579 00
S20
~Engl~.,g and ~_!_teO Soences S2S.300 S20 487(f)
S8 500$791174
• Heal1lt ReYied Pr~
$1600 - s1.ii9oo
• lniolmaltOil andJ:·~ Sluol!$
si)B2 oo
$1ntl0
.-Liw
--- S2f zOO- $23-:-32~
$110 000 $S7 005.06
• Natural Soences and lolal!1emMocS $27.lm i22.845.83
- SS.OOO
S6 07557
$10.800
S9 885 91
$5.000~12
$809239
$10.000
$13,700
$8.045 00
$31 ,000 $27.017.92
$4,000
• SocYIWott
$2.51696
• 5ponso!ed Plogii!TIS
ss..OO $7.18224
$31.000 $29.971 .07
• SludnA!taJIS
$3900
• Sludn
lll115
$5.100
$2.282.50
S3.10l
• UB founclillion SeMces
• llnMrslly SeMces
$97.lm $99641 \2
• All:sandi..ellerS
8 !leJUI~

•

Don Johnson and Katie Kaney rule
as king and queen at Seturday's
Homeoomlng whictt brought thousands of students. parents and
alumni to the events on campus.

...

,

-1SitGd13

.....

lm,tiLAS

"'

61

115.5
1131

Sl -

793

615
448
161

1100

36.0

&amp;16

~
1 -

111
- C2-

-

88.2

538

159

48
9
48

36.3
fillO

15

60
487
.0.0
10.5
434

91.5
106.7
B09
517

132

8
fill
253
2
28
631
l,lW

52.1

A
52.8

fill}
&amp;4

81.3
644
855
966
01
160
\027
IJ.t

�--.-----·

8

J

ann t ver~ary

presenmtion of the Ncnh Nnencan New
MuSIC Festival on Oct 27 Previte 's
perftlf1T1CII'lCtwillbeooeof18festNal~

that will mclude concerts, cabaret
performances and discussoonlpre5itl'lta!IOOS
by some of the world's finest 111US104ns and
COI1'liJC5e1S of new musiC
The festtval, which was one of the f.m
of Its kind m the Unned States, IS sponsored
by the US Oepartmf!nt of MusiC m
cooper1rt100 wtlh the AtbnghHO:.nox Nt
Galle!)' and Hallwalls Contemporary M
Center. The festival, which will run from Oct
27 · No.I. 3 on the UB cafTl)US ana at """"""'
lhrougt~outauff,lo, willbeded!Catedtothe
memory of 'lvM Moi&lt;hashoff, pianiSt, UB
professor of fllUSlC and co-founder of the
I

y

P

A

T

a

c

end J4n Withams

ClocltwiK. .,_

Mll:hashoff was the
fesuvel's art1st;c

•lowof:r left:

dftCior at the lliN
of' Ills dtaln Don

'a a..de
trilllgk.

Since 1980, ~North Nnencl!l'l New
,..._..IC ftstlvlll hi!s e;cplorl!d the rellltJonslhtp
between IOOSICIOI\ COf1lJOSef and sene

IMlZ sew~s as
assootlte
~ams

..__...,.

H. ~Goredd.

through Plblo:: ~. -classes,
Klbml!k evenmgs of Cl!bara, or~l
msembl£ perfbrTnar-as and 5IOio

are fMde possible
by the UB IXan of'

Med ,. . _ .

Msandl..etll!r.i,the
~partment
of

tobbr •" -it&amp;.

fesw , Yb&gt;dl4!rl0ct 12 ~pra:!o
raree from frtt to s1ope- evcr1., IMth most
1n the \4-16 range
The CJPeMl9 concert IS Oct 27 at 8
p m rn Slee Concen Hall Pre&gt;ote and an

Nov 3 wrthallutfalo I'Wh!rmonlc:Oroheslra
performancf!ofWI:lfl&lt;s.by John lorn. ~
Goree and Nrlf W~llllll'IS
,o.Ji-wtUbetapedandrebroaOcasl

~olperfoonerswrll~osenes

of Prevrte ' s livdy , co,..ple&gt;&lt; wortr:s
comm~ by the~ Con:us and
perf011Tltd here on nba, VIOim, ~.
halp, pe-cussoon, VOICe, 91J!Iar, kt;boords,
drums and bass

oo

Et.ropel!r! radoo~

coocerts,

Nso OIT'OI'l9 thrs year's htg!lllghts w•n
recnats of new and old worb. M/ll"f of the
Cornpc:l5CI'S whose v.Q\ will be performed
be a retmspectrve coocen featmng many
and varl4!rl compos~IOOS by the p&lt;ollfic • arei'Rsent to~ 10 ~ ~
Ameran composer Ned Rorem, tradttiCXlal
Throughout Its first ~ the North
tndones1an game.lan musiC, plu-s
Arl'lenC«&lt;New ~ FestMllhi!sgrvenmony
conremporarycompos~JO&lt;\S wntten fOflhal
of the finest COI1'liJC5e1S and ·perfooners "'
the world an opporn.notyto be hea'd They,
rnstrumefl1. a memonal concl'!l't of""""" by
John Cage, who was rl'l\IOI'&gt;Ied With the
on tum, have presented the1r
all
Nath AmeriCon New /'o\USic ftstlval lex many
acclaimed reper101res to re""!&gt;!M!
years, and a speCial concert that wrll ·astOlflded oud~enees Thos )~'ear woll be no
exception
10new"""""bycC&gt;rT11JQ5CS hom
The Ncni&gt;Nnexan New MusiC festMJ
~naoons
was tOcnded 111 1983 by Yvar Mll:hashoff
The festival will dose 10 Slee Hall on

P&lt;"'""""

OOHOVAH

H

c

I

u

n...

qorector

~Dnlry.

~

,_,wuu-,

WU&lt;ic, the~Ory
fll'ld. ~111

!hie Disqplines and tl1r Gr;U.Jate Stuclenl
AssoG1illlon.Mdrooni!ll Sl4lPCfi,IS pr&lt;Mded
bytheN!Ioonal ~for1he:Ms,the

Nt:w Yodc S!ltt Co&lt;n:d on the Ms, the
Copland fll!'ld, the Canadian Consulate,
ftJC UB prO!J:am in· O!radian .s n.o;Xs, the
flemiSh Mtnistry of C•ultur~. M«t the
Cor'nposer, the GroM:nor Soc.o£ty of' the
!luffalo and .jne County Plllblic Library,
\Ma', W!liO radio and private clonalions
u

�Onlrwlww
!onlmd
..., '*-"""'-cu
...~ h•.,..
"!~..,...,.,... ....,..... uB-

... ~..,shue ..illoJ'OOomto"i""di~
"""•nd
.....• p&lt;llfpea~&gt;&lt;
of """ f&gt;UI
oca6c:mic""
,.,..,
on
wbere &lt;his Uru..,..;..y is and~ w
~
p~
of
evetltl m !he Un!VCJIIIY, Sou; ond

Excerpts from =the Provost's
..,.,.."'""_._,.!lf'f'PII'·
Annual Re ort to
-unovc:nothe acuity

""'.,., wilfolljiiO-""" ..........,.
__,..,...,..., t1us u..;.,....'l'r...

1'ba

doflloa::N 1l&gt;m:
livm -.,..,._.Diic:oe.and
,_,.,.. - """""""'

.,.,d..,. om lro .

&lt;'fit 11:1 r'lier"WJ£M;t t~Hide: dM! (./n.tWfl:uv.
bur .. t\. ht....,.
110 thoM'
~n~n£ ~ { 18 (,.... dw
tstdrc..
W(' I « ~ •nd 'M-C tiE' fk-.-

c,..,.,

"""pi'.

Thi• ..-ill ~ • lolljl •nd
kt ~ bct;tn WI~ I
oummory &lt;if on 0.,.. . I """'' to '"'
IIOmC:thi":&amp; l rhc OUB~e't ai)!)Ul [be

~·dl) duJ""n'"""-"''"t.""'

p~~~~1:=

wcfinodouneh'C'S tnthfS'COUntr'\-, both

""" """" In , _ drenc
ftappen

I \qJl( 10 .. .,.. somcthm~ es "M d1ahour
the •-q I' ncv. cm·trorunem rr. n::·
llcctod in mK!rlXXlSm on doc: s.... &lt;if
ew ' ork. and 1&gt;o about on cff.....,

•&lt;~•H"J:

-~

J

All ofthC'.sc fiCRll'1'-'0ft\'tt&amp;CtodK.'bltC

!Klme ''CI")' dJffaent km&amp;i of !C~ps
"''hichwc,.,h necdtonke-•fwc-ar:c: ro
rc:lp)nd dfcctn.JC,k to our c!:'\'uhm'l·

C'm."UUIIstllnat!i

""I"

ll'l'bcf

mr-

~dlt-.t. but fiii•W.hc:~ rtCa!
c.~-1" •lf;alfnn'C'tfolt) laktlB andour

::'!~U:l:~~;c~:~;!

te,

State rCSOUI'tle$..
At r:hc bconoftlu• rcp&lt;ISIUO!ltn~tof
U BisouoAm.,..,s,_,ar~ool

uoc: the ""'d "oore • odvi.edl) . The
Amend Sciences lt.a•c to~ cbc bean

:c·~~~J!~ f:;n:~~~~
~ttether the,• arc now
~"tllred 10 1 " "1Yrhl1t il todtc:trown
bestad~n~tandt.or.hc: .be1r:a&lt;h'11n-­

.able tO ask

ta~;&lt;&gt; &lt;if doc: Uni•-cr&gt;iry. "llte dialogue
about t'hc Structure of Arts 'Uid Sa·
Cnut$hn.alrudybcgun.and I want to
talk 10 you :.bom m)' own rhoughls

::!~:~rn:C:~tdi!~~~= •n

n1 folla"' 14-ifh Jttencion tO IWU
structures central to our purpoie:, &lt;itur
GratilltJtrSdotJland our n$f.:mienrer pns.t. TheGr=.tduneScbootismsenous need of rc:nalintion.and I v.·am

wdcscnbc: some of eM SLC'J)!Io we h:wc
begun w take to address the problem.

Resarchadmmiscnc.ion ts ~·h con·
soUdatcd at UR. in a citmate whu:h

gives re:l:!IOn for roncnn. We ncccJ ro
ta.k~ steps. fcx cum.ple. to fCtm t~u-

~.: ~~:O=o~~~~.;

momem urn in ptn'1.:h that resean:h ar
l 'B suSt:tined dutmg 1hc 1980's.
FmaHy. for a n~ ortht~ to\\-ork.nt).
albolutd)' do~nti:al rft:,r UB and ~aJI of
lt!i members think of the: l Jnl\'ersi{) .

and of rbcrn.sehrc.,o.s. 1t.s

~ fWIIti!Uirffl'.

t'l

rmpnn t qh!N.artuall

lll'"Ct thr

\'luitofourklrt-J! . ftnn
fuvntUI n ...k 1'\ •.lift the . . . .
In tt.e hf'mE:t u:tm. 0111 l'b.IM:illQC'Irs
......., dcl&gt;c.&lt;e .._, I ,.p&lt;ll'lod o r:hc
"!.mae 8udc.et

•• •Toa ••

1.n lmbitious ~ppn:tiitC:htothe_,..,_

graduatecduamontn~' ''orit

1baco
~ c Ufl

nct.tf~ \at~

~==~~~~~~~:

a focu:!'lug of ou r undergrtdu•r~ pro-grams •t o cake ad\-an~ of that ~n,ri ­
roomcnt. t roncomiunt shift and
redoction 10 our 0\"e:rlll enrollment.
and a ~uaJ expan~ion of oui non·

namfer h., lJIIk brcotn
C'\'ff\ rea.own to~ dw

rn:h~

)

The bnJJ;&lt;t "'P'e&gt;&lt;nt&gt; ""'" llf the

"""lth ~-utc: legislaton and \lith uusre~~
and t'C'D-tral adminlSC,.LOIS of Sl ~N\ .
'!'be) hove to do witlh • mk f01 L'B
wtuch bewru m d•fferenri:nc u from
r:hc """ of the SlJNl' sy em and to
position us to do the tih•~gs ~c dobesl
in ~t much more tdling WI)'· 1ney
cnrailt reassc:rtion o( our ruk a~ 1hc
c:em.er or public profcnion:ltll and

1ft b~ YDCJI ~

plr""d ~x:rrn "' r.. ... o.... perf«
ma· ~lft'I!JY.nv«d~~bcen

::...~r:·mnr:w,..-

\ve ~\oc: alre~dy mnod w test tht'm

f.,u;rr ~thar
rmpkJ\ 1'0Uttf111eh.
m pn-

't-" .. ~dndopcd

J.lfl•alt fuu~

~~JH'WIU. "-'~'«'•"•

propouls tNn 1 wam to malu: w you

lin.,. (T'I.ItiiC!Ii

\"'fe pn,La ubnJrn.~•"Cart"f"'CM
r.okmc ""P' '" Ulll&lt;'Ct m. Mojo&lt;

to fac.utues •nd
schoob an • '11--a) thai lt. aJ1~ *"llh
thr: m~ dJIC'JCOOO ..,(the L' nt\'Cf~
:~~cy. T:u!l. "'oobcrtna:de(:cnualrtwuon"
plays out in irnpon..anc \l""aV) m chr

oor dl'ecrn·cnt:s:\ ., •

110me

\\e arc

or re$pOO•nblli:ne

\"aSd)

illt:

Cf'tuc:'hn.tmdd.l!ct1

b•"" """""" ..

ll1117'111rwtitJ,.and 5luh ofm.an\ lund:!!

uru~~htS &amp;cads to 1 11e1 of ~fJilnfo

~-twnmc~··-~-­
•
~ blJt
••l

hat l~d wc:U (nmpieed
WMOWO .
'Wttn •oond fht i.: JUnotn, Out at:~~·
dc-t'n.. Pf~I'II'MIIt~: mt:a:t;OI;f.r.capal
plinr " oupcrt. and !Jtt of diebr; ""'
~'kc arc= ~or,.n«J ~~ toS'k. fuM
fflli,•(H
\\ ee IIR: "'h~ we an::---~» M*fV
1\.~f «:~aR·h tJ D•~e ~--de-~te
ltk- bud,:cr rtductJUftS and daptt
cbc: fj('( thou w:t hn~ noc ·~
nw p '"&lt;"ntiiiJ U•t'plorr tr.~Uftt'Jof K!'•·-

'l'ltto!;r
~jtln ~-nb """" of
thr: W'uctur~l Li1&lt;~nr;a th111 hJ:&lt;\T atread) ro.km pl..., or l '8 Tbc ompur·
ranee of these eM-f# . t:s gofn,r. ..a
become mcteasm,h• C\'tdc:n1 m our
JO)"'Il&gt;-da)
om the A--

pron

.... here

&lt;bprtc_..,~.....,...lll

Senate

upon rtbcmtcnw~l cr:wuonrax.nt •l' 8

but it abo rc:prc~nn 1 chance to im·

who

obio \\c .,., hMipcrcd b. doc;
~.
.aa&lt;L&lt;- door&lt; """ uuj..cdc
rhe-,,f
""' liiO&lt; ~of .... ....,"""'.

forhlghcn:d-ond r..............-tL

:a~~~~::~~t~"=

..,.

• po.,ll ........, .... ~;,r·
1 ..

&lt;if

of infrastru~."''lfe; lh:at ate ~ to

--

_.,.m.,....C1/""d.

ing buul mihOf pte(:bo(lfinetun~
I om rolkingoboot l1gnillll-""'
lake od "'IW' &lt;if"'*"' "" '"' ond
v.'har: \11'4e ha'"--c:~ nd u~ m.r ~"'.an~

-•f,.,ro/l..,..r.ond of dreoonc:omotanl dem:amb on fiCUhl 1,\·~­
cbss.mom $f)Cl'Oe. and or.ht:r clemenu

obcu.

"- 'T'hen: ill . . _...."'"'~­
U It

., I -

""" ploa: """" ond ~ ;, .........

~t ~tthe nonon dw bud~r"
DOC ari cntidemem but 1 'W'afc~ mrnumettt.. ~"'Orkin~ hand '" band ., Kh

.- ......... for-.c

=-':rt:" ........

........ I om- &lt;lll&lt;illjl at-1 , _

t'"'led report_

_.......,.,...., . . . . _ .

•don hooodir. - - - ... ~--~--~~~
_dooraaa_,..._
........ ..

ot oppomHii&lt;ic-s, ond

..

of--

011

-.

..., ""'In! J&gt;OSi&lt;1011 "'eo:p~on diem ,r

=.:.~~·· ~· kind

l ll f l (

---.. -.-

n... - """ """""

.,..~oerw•n.but

........

... . . ...

I IP fC I I l

"""""
......... '""' •nda• _..,
UIJI"''ICr· \\c ""' fiiO&lt;:d 11111&gt; .,. cx-

awordilW)' ...

.,,.. __

N O rl o

At an open mcei:mg of the Facull) Senate 0&lt;1.. S. Pm•' r Aaron V
report to the Facull) Senate before an audience of about !00.

I ....

I
Bloch ddwercd h;, lj"r annwtl

Following uponPre&gt;ukm Wolham R. Greoner'~addrc'&gt;tothc Hmngfxulo Sept. 1-1. Prmo.;t Bloch
p&lt;esc:-ntcd a SCl of pcdfu_ propoo.als fOf l'B's reali~nm&lt;:m ro unhze 11 """"!:&lt;""and proJCCt r~
l'ni,·cr~il)' mto n"" kmds of natoon10J leadc,;hop

The dtaloguc will commuc when Presodent Gretner, Prmo&lt;;t Bloch and Senoor \'ice Prcsukm
Robert W~ncrparrtctf"'t:e man open forum, duringameeungofthc ~ a&lt;.' ull) Senate on Tuod.-,1'.0\
16 or Z p.m. in ZOOTheCommom. The l 'niversot~ commurut'l, rn•or.:d to artend the f~.
The pron"r
·e " tthout prepared texr. The fullowtngc:&gt;:rendod
are fromau:m..::npoon
of his addres-s.

""""'P'

Wordshkcd:wl!!IC:anr.ooeuih dq:en ~r:are

into s-logan) or gQUJU'OUS arlcr•

rhooF:hts. but I mean them in a n~li! f)
urgc:nt sense. Tbe(Jhlllllcnges-.·c flk"l"
are cnortllOtlS. tOO we stmpl} c.'tnooc
hopetomtttrhcm~Wltbou1 budd·~·

comxn.uru() m " "hichour fiC'U1ry. s~ff.
and Uildc:nuGI.kcc:M-nc.rshlp. fa:l \n, .
aJcy m thC' inse:I£UtKm 2 a "ho&amp;c:. 10d
wod;, U) shape n. ~r'h2t man) not ool\
sc:rvM.."e to tlk: l 'nwemr, •t~c:l(, but
much more profo~mdl) 1 coUec:.·m'\"
""""' of lt:Sf'O"&gt;lbilo"' r.,. loolung .r.
ter the- peopl~ widnn our rommunU)'.
of wurku\' -.-,rh one anothc.J w bon,_
ouuhe VC:f'\' best 1n eac.h of u.,_ The:~
elcmetmofcommuntt) t."umc: tOf,!Cthcf
im_pcmatul~ tn 1).,.-~ of dttrmft; tnHI
u}J'n-'JNJm:r rllTIDII, and I "111 dtM."\1.,.)

.someoflheWI'IMhJflhtli l 1nt\ CNII:'\o ·~~­
ilt-lpmach to fhc 1ourpon 11nd t-elebraW'K'Iofd,"'ers•{\ bntt~Cj.':1mmbroadcn.

Indus rounm

"- C

hone: rhmed for

rwo gem:uooO'i upon a remadutblc

p:u'Ztd1gm fur tht' suppon of h1~het
educ-.mon and ba'it&lt;: r~n..il F01
ben.er or \4"()(X. tlut fUDdl,(tm no" 1\
Opjdh· and HT~\·er~jbl,· ch:a~t~\\ t:'fu\e_ been dtc bencficianc' of
;a ~ldcn .aJee. F01 btxh ~ 11nd
dub1ott)I'C:1SOO'l.O(I(k:a~o.tamon~thcm

the Cold \\'ar. ~0\ernme.nt,. at the
Sure and Fedcr;:~J lc\ d ha,·c: been
" '• Ilin~ c-o fin~m."C t~ th1ngs that " cat
univc~•ci~Jm•t wdu, "·ith fc\l fJUtlt.twn,!l:Skcd. We ruwe bt'cn ~Upf!Ortcd

l:ugc.- t, on ow t.Wt-n

rem~ ~h

on a

rompcc:tti\t: bast-s of mc:m. -..1th \1:1'
bcde oven I«."''.IDililbili« few the: rc·
rumo(!IUmefbm~a"'lbktOthc~­
et~ that susuuu us. Go-,"C:fflment • t i
content \l'tth the proposaoon tb.Jit the
supportoftugber~dllCltion~A'tigt:Mng
ropmd~JCC kJ1Jedandusc:futocittns.

th1t the Support ofb.mc ~.r.c.h \l"8S

indore&lt;tly ~"'I to pnklucr """"""""
gtc:&lt; and ~ttei-&lt;hc be:! ttl! and ron·
dK'ton ofthe-SiOCKt\. •nd lh.ill .UofthU
"as to doc: f"'bUc good.
Our rrobkm I&gt; 00( du1 pubh" sruj
l-,"0'\T.m cnc no lon~r be hen· ~
dun~
No One! ts scckm~ c.o c:nd
~uppon ofht~er cdut,.oon and ~IC
re-seard1. 'lbrtbc:r. we lwc en a umc
w'hefl JC:S()Urtt'S art QKK"e or lc s ~ ~
rn:;mentl,· SOU('e ~nd when thc~·teo·
r~ fOrt.-oJ lO 'il"rtmni7£ C'\'C'f''fhtn~
1t don and to r.~sk ~ h:n \ alue 11 1~
~tun~ tn return for tht" In\ 'C'$tmC:nlS ll
ha5 nude. ·1 'ht' QlJ91'K'IIn n 1 a'!iki~ •~
" ·hethc1. at tht:- our~u1- (he n~t pubIK- dOibr hould be:- s:pc:nt oo u.;,. or un
heahh care. ur on hou~tn~ rhc home·
less, Of pnmar) and~ C1Juca-

m.t

110n..oranyofdo7'.cn~ofoch&lt;:rprc:s'lo~
~;al and cconorn~ need~.

In the

dmurcof('()mpeurt(m
of rhc: lk..i.tdem~ fu,.. no.-

ON

rhC" plhUJre
bccn tmprr:~o we. \\ c Jle('d tn under!&gt;tand dui1 Wt' \1m1&gt;l\ «."oln ·, o~ffhrd ctlhcr of rhc N--o k"\'JlCM1~ ~c: fue\C
bc.\."'tn~ ftkhl oK'\.'tt'iitumcd 1u m3klnJ!.

We C3n "t :Jftord tu ~ .tk•nfJnd Wn1 ,
or "'c " ill be un:t\\ helmed b~ burc::aucrtHIC .10d uulu.;.~nlin llllj\Ut~ .
NOf can " ·c afford to htx::umc mdt~­

nanr and ID ..la."Sr:n :JC3dc:"m~t' \'aloes ,jn
rh.:u a.ppc.:1t fu Hu~h1.."11. bUI (()

W'llY'S

mm•dcnsc:c:m~wtSn-T..a:rrupJtL

•ndout&lt;ifrot.och.
1n tc:ad WC' m.ast ratizc .dw ""C'
ate I crotll~\. tnd C'Kf'Cn.&amp;IU' cmcrprtK dwt' ~ d1tT.nltt to ~xpl~rn. lf ,..c:
~«rheretcbt:rJ•cdu · •-e~then
•~ ~~ to be ablr w oom.munieatt
wthoot::•'hosupponwt.-l}md
on dtc;,r 0'1\n «mt&gt;, tbc: •:onlt •nd t'bc

com.:ent of •-Mr \l'C'. do... And ~-e oue.ht

ro loon: c:nou,;h 0&gt;&lt;1fo&lt;knc&lt;:

Ill 00&lt;1·

:_~ ~m~~~ l~B~~nc:;

be noeontradtaion ~'eel); .the:- aca-

~--I'M.lfllleS (""~

S¢nc._cl,s.-~c~

~r

nu_IJ.on. •:e ~Me ant) •
f&lt;&gt;• mtfl- ddt- ohM ol'banf.oblc
. 51

ICJ 10\-01 U't lii'J!mr' ~IUfWt¥ ~ 4MW·

~·\;·es. ...0 •&lt;' .ll't' onto, • b
mdbotl
doll• no a~-e h•\ Jill! ru C'Oit$.tdet

I dud the

JBC.On1an mcaiUJ'd'
~

J'llt"C'uf
tt"\~thcfir-.rsmudl
~C!f tNn tbt ~ ol f&lt;lll•n, b1
~. but OtUt r.n:anaaJ condi-

me

uon R':'mlltM ~.....rnt

tluf ~'-Ill\ IE'\

U....&lt;ersek-~

tmpha tbal smaU

~"t:;'~:t.".~~

m"" h rc:d:JR:C'U('Itl uf ._. rcsourt:e~ or
control of OUI
(0 make a .wbstm~
ml ddTc:~nr.:c tn

1iOmt'

of' die dun~~:~·

dut •-c:dfll

hJ,c- tome ~re ~
\;·.t~l opponunJI te 10 make s.udl iidJtl:M:mcnu.. 1 'be tntemal dmrtbu£K~t~
of •our """'utta, fnm:n for • t1m1: ~
rud&amp;n ~ n:d.,.,.,.,., ""' be
tO'lf)fn\od ~defabh, . \\'e ,a rc sub"''"'"'"' o.e,.,..,u..d "' r:toc .,.PK.__....
tf\ W tbt u.nwersu~ • .and a-e can

... vtther. -.('

fiMII

r

rebc\1:
"""'""' .,., ........,.,.,"' $1UiWioft. \\ C C't.pa:'l ntW flft:ibU-

IIf\ 0\ et the rw"-.t ·fi
m b!D ve~n
""" .........,,. """"'~ o( r..u~n

.. . tbt

'Na\"C

htn:d

lO.

£he: J9fJO•'$

l'l70 'sltq)mw~

.xi

T~.

&lt;hc:se fJaOI'S ,.,._... a chaocc for
... to MXUmplt.h • I« lll&lt;lK """'
lji; ~ v. t h2\"C than
e 'fNd:tt u.nder
ordin•n oondmons.

demiC ' loa t:h:tt: we C'herM and dlc:

d~fferenec •c. c:m make m thc-liiOl'ien.
.around u~~o.
·

1k

Jlre'MU-~

.Uf"'m US llfC

got~ tO

•l'lllTc::asc. l"here ue m:t.m in '\\lash ..
·~ 1400-n:peL"t th.!lt ~ llcalfh
care: 1s dealt "' ~m, h~ crluanon k
nc:'~t oo ~ hst for refJlm1 'f'boM-

unn C"I'Stftcs '-boaR" 'll.ilhl'\{ttn~'tlf"k tn
p.tnnershap tll-ith orhcr ~nt\ of
andtolotJk.m,atk{hci'YI5el\a
»nd C:\-:aJUJtt' and f\fDIO.'t ~iun ~,
tun ( w offcl. !Jrt' goa~ to be the:

~'bm ~• ~&lt;if buold"'&amp; Of plan·
g an\ m~tKUtillln.. ·~ need fim: m
odcoof) ''"' Sj'IC&lt;ial srtengdu .roomc1

&gt;&lt;nich ..-.onbuild.&lt;br:...,..nidle
thol&lt;'lln""'""""""f"""""'~·

noon. Fot nu.n~· uni,'CNWe$. ~ ..,..
"""'' ~ • partocu!ar sr:n:ngtb in
a'"'"'
~,-en 11R2. J "'en f.e-ld dw sbooJd

li..'f~\~&amp; i~t.~:::
..

S4A..et\,

&lt;ruktnd&lt;if"""""'- o.r·~.,,"'-"" \l'. .redtemosr&lt;omprc-

Uni\'Ct'!iiiO« rh:u 1akc ~~ bd n~rion­
.t.lh. I sec no
"-h.' l l8 cannor
be at rhc forcfi"'Ol
htli hJft ln

:::'=~·;:;en~.,~

tJ'tstltunun:llladeNup;, an

f:~et

there

3K lot~ of reason-. •'h\ ~e rJrNbc- an

the-

forefront.
the f~r;~~(~~urk~~w;:\•::::
v. har a~~o ,_,.n~ on m ~ c" Yo&amp;
:r~
e&gt;~.'iWC'Ii rhc." ruuOJUJ ~nc- st.l1\.~ ·has
exper.cnccd sna~e budtct cu &lt;n'a
the ll3"'t fC"'t' ' 'ran.. ilnd I think these
h:o~\ e kfc J1 "'YllolCm that ls hungry rOI'
neu tdCI'i :tnd dirttrit'II:K. \\ ·c 11ft' lh-c-

hc:tm'~ ..-ru\'milfV io Sli ~Y--&lt;hc:onl)

onl} one • •m "'full on .,...~-of end"...,~ \l e ore the nnl) pulilic
uru' C'f"Jtf\ 111 N~, \ 'orlr. Sou:e thnc:an
offer all &lt;if thiS in one: pll&lt;le and can
nunurc the •n.tC'fdi:sciph~· syner~;.., thar folto.. 'Th:it "' doc; bq:in-

"'"'l

of ,. liar make:&lt; us .pc:m~t h
IR\1tC':!Ious.rohuitdupun""tw.Ountque..

rather dun OOI'rl;ptetc • -ith the rot Q(
the 5y:Rcm for --·h:at ""C ~ in com-

mon

�- ......,_. ..................

~i!'eo.a.. IAr '""'flk
.. . . , _

...... hnrdo&lt;
._

................. ....,;

......

..............,dot"'
.... .... dot

Exmpts from tht! PtlJ!tiOSti Aflnl/0/ &amp;port to th FncrdJy Snlml'

'"""'""''&lt;It:·
.....

iW oiCh!:!! ~,..SOfAC J&lt;:JWUfCfln·

fmm the """'"" ~'hM
«oi:WU:atitm
really mean,: •s lhlu w~~:
lt'C dc;mandtnC of the "'"'" aco&lt;lorrn&lt;
"""""""'of u., l'ni··~
ft do
m job, W&lt; ,.;1 neither creot&lt; nor

('Vlt'llmdn

iruerd1~ snoriou&gt;"'- booo

al~cnmpietem rMD) 1\'l)l. '"~­

mt.Sundc:f'SUIOd. \\'bM If mam tS that

=~"":~~~
~=~~=i~=\':,~
makt:'i lhc dean\ rhc
•mf3C·uft.c.s •-dl tm--e

~

ll~ C'!i&gt;

to

LJC',~Inp

tu' t'

lllc.·cn-

cbc1t rc~IUKn 10 •n

C'n~f"'enC'UtUI ""~

ptosureoothc:-'&lt;'l~hud -

get 1&gt; ' " " ' ' ru bt:
Tiunt theft
1'1 *C1'101:11 "Stnlm on the mff6U11Ctwt"

Cilfder r.il ~.l!l"npb~h

lft

U'loi ~":It~ 'I:"'

1lu'li ipi)fOIIC:h Slrt:"lc-tw:-5 'h&lt; u:rtf houh 1nd f!IKulua tu the
ron1 of mca;surcd noJ.. P-.nt&lt;'":Ubll'" m
ttM! Lu~ umh. fnr&lt;"umrk. there'"
110\J~'!i

*1"11'~ #

t.Tft.-l+n ;unnum of .... ~~

:1'-1l!l:abk:-tliltJI1' 1Umo\1:'r. Yhh.atJ
co1i l K"hn !t41tlrl.':C"I o( bon -tcon ,,..

I

Rur: 1U ( 8 It
nnt"-ttn'lCtunlh t n:deratJ-fuf"Ahhud ·
a~\ul"(1fh doeh ow~ that the t."c-n~hl'lJI.. rhac fund,. a.n be tlfltll..ed ru
r.er h.J~ ~n aba11l'loncd. :~nd cht1 "t: ] ion~·-rt-rm needli.. ul'llkt lht: a-sg11.mp·
iiJC ~~ fa~·uJuo and ~QOt~ '!ipinntnJ:,
1.00 rh:.~ 'il'..II~«'Mit\, suml.JJ shon~

otr m t5 mdepe:ndem d•rect:Klnli "Hh·
out rommunfClloon or (..'OOfdmatton
Jnsrcad 'iu: ut(cnd ru bolld and pn~
tnOI'Ca ..mJtttencdec.t:-nttal.lt.IUt.Jn .. IO

• tcr-rn \OIJri."'c::"')tiC

cq:.Nnd thedi"C'C'tl\~ r~JOU~or man\

I ~~~~"~me: nn~f\~~tt- ~~~ •-•hole
1.b&amp;e
m

dl&lt;' trnu.'Cf It\ "rJ..c, "'Ill be tn m.J.n\
"'~~llo auc:OI"Mlffiou~ btu thn " ·d l •I~
be ~CaJUnmbk-thn~l~h the bud,gn
pmcc:ss. thrtM:~.~ smu.qe:lf 1nd aoa~
df-_nuc rc,·te::v.. Ind. mrough «nlnl

of C'OOfdinatM'ln rnr actr\ ll a
ll-l:uch span fac.uJtiel. and §ltl.ool-i.
poitUS

"&amp;tjen u nDI . , mt&lt;~lmvm bwr •
rtr41flll ~tt.ftnmtt'l'lt, \4.-'CJi:mg lwmi m

t-J &gt;.&lt;.rb 1111 ~''If pm:m &lt;f
it'N'ifl"

f'r'\IU"W

~tnJ ilf«Jnmt

Those a.mTJJ flOlrlts of oootdma·

•.rc noc independent umuofthc:
they can siJ&lt;l&lt;'C:C&lt;I onll b)

""'""'fl
•'Ofkln~trollaboratnd.,-wlth dclns.and
I

faoolt) membc... Th&lt; """' omport•nt IIC:Idemtca.Uy arc headed b) thre&lt;"
noc pm•oosu and f'Vo'O' KlC pn'!'Adc:nu..
The vH::e-provostal rc-spomnb1 tn t¢1
incl utk the Gradwrr &amp;.hoot, the un·
dergr:admt.tc- \"liCe: provOSt's offkJC (inctudm~ th&lt; [ 1 ~"'" Coli~ I,
and our JtJO'R;ng mtc:rn.ttonaJ pm~ms. I "ill h.a'\·~ more to Y:\ abol.n
~later

•

"The C\lo o ,,..'C ptotdenc::te1 cnutl
rhc 1"1111""() r~ofl.bc l'm\·ersn,,',uut·

reaoh-ecooomk and fcdl~K"'21
oo the- one h:uwi, and hull\IJl tod li0C&amp;ll1 tJn

\U\.

lf"c

to

'"-oos.tdcr 1he l
and

I

lnO'll"t

il~ ·~ actdermc

unrt,.. \\"'tur hu emerged ts • '~
tlu•d lund of hudgeron~, In dl""t

~~e~n~ -=~~: ~(=~~,-~~~!

been ab!h: to (t':ll cJ&gt;~.:h dean rh.sl he Ql
).he can o.pca net I yar to-~ ftom,
•Ins&lt; of9R'!l of 1.-t
bud·
~t.ISsumtn~ that c:n Cftll ~~fund­
lnt. •'t.!l reouin ~Of lcssCOil.SU.nL

'""'''Stott

l"bcrema•mnt;;?W: ,I!Otiantoa I 'nt\"Cf·
"'" ·""t~ pool 1'\d 1:\ n:aUocaro:i at:·

:t~Tn:d~:f ~~~~~~::o~!

do thai tnd 1!1\tkc- •meUr~nr dcoswos.. it ha~ been ~.n. to~1c:-.
each st.-hool '11 b'ltcg.a it! depth \\ c
h.a\ e uktd eactl K'hool for n:~ n'!&gt;JOn o(
tm

ri•nrrJ'lg, ..
l"H)O

hkd"- (11 be 2\aibb1c."

1 ;fu~~nr;,:le~~~ 8~-c'JJ!:;;~ ~~t ~

•hsch -.c:hooh. :and fs"tlloe:'
\C':Iof
thc:~r sp=aJ di&gt;I!OCtrt but !&gt;h re til&lt;

0\'eftrt:hmg HhlJUJt:tnr\11 ro~

the O(l\.(or, \ ·tee Pres:tdem fot·

Rciearc:h

11ke L IHK"h 1 re&amp;pon!t.ih4e
for spoo1100:d progrun,., tochnolo'l(l
mnsfer, chc :tdministr.luoo o( our or-

t~f, "A"ht':I'C It Ui ~~ htJ'Iil f-a1 U tS

from 1u r;:oals... and 'Ah:tt.JI.5 pn~ ro

take: 1.0 rc:ad1 rhc:m. ('Kl\.Jilrt.r:IO~ It~
most 1mportan1 need."' t- rom !iOnw:-

deuuk:d drst."l.tS..'iJons and :a bttk
bttofmtJtUaltn;~mu[), •c.luvebcen
able: m US&lt;'" the- teallocaoon pou1
collabontweh• to.eddren some- of Eht\"e')

mos-c

pre m,: probk:ms •nd m'" HH"IJ:

tat11tU

of OflPOC'Wnt!) ,

l'hat ll wt:w-.c: dtd W.r rar, find-

~~~ 1r:':e :"~ ':tn;r ,rmSm~

klldem.c bud~ of ahum $1-10 mtl·
lion. more than ~ mJlhon ...~ an.·,_
a red .Qr reallocated to stca.tc-~K' need\

nfW:"hools..ldooo..e~"tthlltlundof
~~li.I'IC'C 1Jtlllftdll$o ,"(';1(, \)(':{..,U~
lfyut~ llkr. chc S','Rem has bef:n soha.kcn

OlltfOJ'M."'!e alteith

and the: O)()St oo, IUU'~~

pock.w of undcrunhzed resouf"l'c:-,;
ha\~ been upped Bur I do c:lOJlCC!
that"'~ wtllgothtCKJgh the sa.mc-lo..•nd

ganized resc:arch unr1:s. ;tnd ma;m o(
oor industrial partnc:rs:blpS. MOnel
Moore. our \'ice P n:oident for Publoc
Senia:and Ut.bln Aff'•irs. has tc~pon·

of~ and thatt~•il1a:wtt.imx
to be mo\·emenL

sibifiry for commu.nity ouueac:h. our
special ~s f(M minority and d1.)-

the: scftool-b~..mooi OOl&lt;&gt;Oina oft~

ad\"'l:nl2ged studcnrs.a..nd lmpornmdy

for Millard Fillm&lt;:&gt;&lt;e Coliege ond m&lt;
summerscs~. L1~r her guidaocc
1 1 ~ lm .cwo an: IS$Uming new ideru1~
ocs as ansuumenrs of ouO"C:Ich and
community lnvoh•emen[. Because::
bodJarcuarcdoJd)· intc.rNined.,..im
OUTacadcmkprogn.ms..thetcN--o\-icc
· presidencies now report ro the Pro\'OSL

Cohc:renrdccentraliut.ion c..i"langa
subsanrially dx oha.nacter of a nuinbcrofworth~iti\e:entc.rprisesthatunril

00\&lt;•hm:bcenldminisrercdeentrll ly,

I have in mind the Undergraduacc
College."""" ofour retc:aldt
and other lK'ti,•h:K:s ch:u Nvc bee-n
funded b)' the Pnwost and lu•'&lt; nor

""1"'"·

beenxcount2blc.rodc::aM. Gradwll'p

but steadily, we arc purU.O,.an end co
dlln mode ofopcrotion, Collabonnw&lt;

enterprises ~ill mntinuc w t.hri\'C,
but

:IS

joinr

'\'CIUUI"Cf

I •-on '1 r_akc you• umc to

fC'\'tCIIl

. bud.~;-cc-procen~ l ~ared dtltl.OfOOlUIttorl ¥~•tth the Senate: Bud~ct l~imui~
Commlnoc lasa Sprin~. :.1\d it rs :.al'a.if.
:abkroynuuponrcquesL l do"&gt;antt.o
takt a rnomc:nt, fwl"'C"\cr, ro

re"t' IC"\Io

"ilat emer~ 1.s some: ofthe pressm~
l 'nivomry-"-.d&lt; need~ A 1oo of me
reanoctnon went co"' nd retention of
facu lry. \\'e mack t:srteted sal•-" adju!o"tmcms. parttcuLarly for rrud..areer
f:a..."'tlltl ""'ho are ln the s:n=cp pan of
t:heid.1foumc eamingscu.n&gt;e and wh£1
were espct•.t11y disuh an·t2god ll~ the
ul:l::r).• fr«7.1!$ of the- pa!M. fl:w \'ea~

We wen: also able to fund )()me sua·
u:~te hira of ~· f.-:u.l o and som&lt;."
sdecti'-e rcsu:nc:ionof,c:rtilw·te h!J-1\ram:ships ~ hen:.insuuc.·uoru.l io=tdsrrCiuucd rhcm . In sdcht100. v.c
~dd.resscd some: \"C.t"V scnous needs

for suppon st~ff. cql11pmeru for instrot:riOfllll labs.. •!"ld compurmg..

o( schoclb 110d

,f~ l~nli!~~~,ptoj~impoocd

..,_.."" l'l'i4-'15 ........,_.,.,..•
f"'OCd undl dw:n ..od as 11 rnuit thr

hn•"

"'"'J&lt;l4

kM' moJe tn ,_.,
100 ~1 -

nteS. and f'ha·r d)C'\ •

~
m1ljllftntb1d,.,....,_~bc1

chc mol rr~
"""""
tto.c or•"""
and'"'"'"
dc:!tnn.trx- fl\ fuU finlf)(."UUI "'heft ~
~1cb31. and:. " n ~u u.c r() fC.'IIt"neio

r=:~~m~~=~':,:r~~~ ~~d

~r l!l

Seoobd......woolwd

Cln tXJn\tM"

lilnd mc~·c- n"U:IM:' ,_.fthm tbc fK:.ho(~

r110:1o1

111bout 1bcu n\\n d1

from"-.__

then!:

bt.J.c:t&amp;efooftliurtScatk:daft ...U-fu.ndk'"

basts.. \\-t

from thc: &lt;£nccr a&gt; lh&lt;"" pc&lt;lj&gt;lc Mho

'~~"al''.t

"""'"lhc~deci-...tl npotr

dt&gt;cuwiii•Ubeftt:£n
1£1 be I "Itt: tftat {he

Oelibtbt)toi"'I\'r~ m&lt;&gt;nj!;bud·
~~.0::~- \\'e-an-,hcn:m ablc:ru

ttntr1:Junon"" it•wordd!atn•·l&lt;kh

.... ......mn .. "

,. ,.....1'1* ~ I'OdiOC·
"'-....,. .. do- ¢'PC"1'-dot:
............. • d•rco;;J. beat _,. of d••
brwM. \\t"' cd•a""thc:
........ bout tho. J'IO!IIl'l'&lt;'l. 111'14 the\
prd'.orffil I 0
t'hc d miter
tlwl letn'&lt; fundl
I dl
&lt;hn

Ap:mst rbaurrun utc. ~--= J't' c · J'l.lii.X
1m yeua bud~ pc'OC..'C:n •ilK ,,. m
nun-) Vi'I\'J t drepurufC' &amp;om ptif pmc~
r.icc.. \\c· we« tble ro do- so u'l pan
bccaUJ&lt; SUI''..._...,.. &amp;•ven.,. the:

\\ c: h•vc: tO bqin \l.l:fl;h ~ ur and
IDfribttUC..'iuK '1-..."tDt co \f)C'nd 1 mo..
mcm uiJJn&amp; t:bout the ""a) in &lt;W"hk"h
trll bo• b&lt;ll"':' w re ruc:tu"' tt&gt;elf
.~n\Jm 1n•n'd) . a JWUl.eSS •hd:t '

.. htrl&lt; lkublor
m lhc
('
flJN\nJIC\-IAM\olftcr. \\-c:
will~•

lleYiew

~~-

\11'1:

Thc:-reare •f"\\-o&lt;:ategoncs a.n "'rh.ch
took llld \ol o'dl (.'OOI:IOUC {0 take

' )II~

spttif•· I""'P",J' "'ml•
t't.Ustm."'!ft if L"llff rDit oiJ thr ltrU/'1 ('(
ptti-1. r'!frs51,,••J·"" r""~"'

o(thet~,..,"'
~m\

ckmtt-

'llte--11&lt;11·
.-c:

b~

•m..'l .,_

bcclu,.6!11Gn,merlllldB.:.b\\-•,
tn adn1.1nholtfm~ rhc bu~ ~\k 0!)11111 o( the p:N .iMI' )"CIIf'!i., ll~t~

t\Vlf.S"tl a,·~~'.,, ~rzf""JJ•~m

f.. hole tu n=dUL""t: 'let\ w.:t"tt mort .df.nta·
c&amp;lh rlwl a&lt;'ldcmiL 1-J&gt;In l'hcu
rc-3§0M hid fc ,do
th.: ~llilue. tJl
l 8 , 100 1111tb t:bctr ~lOft du4

r~il"f'rJ ,~,

l!"locntaqJll

rJ•u•""" vt .\'~

} ~,.,f.__
!.jt,.t.t,"

••fh

~.en

r4lr t~J\"otn~ tt) r

mu,.onrnrrtt, 4 IN~t"mttl '' d-tf~ ~VtJ
miN.ilJOif rn l11H C&lt;i'f''"llll rnmll.mmt

.rJ ",rfUi~~_,f n:partnon ~r Mtf"" ncn}utr

memhc:r of •o uttdcrtq'M'ett'ntc:d m~ ...

_,') l!:""'!'"ho "hm:&lt;l to Sl 'P..'\
campu.._ lt&amp;u ,.t:at +iffen:.d .to m•tch
thl• for •n).· case~ t'h.n -.at." f)(lll Cll\ ~
c:md ~ S:l , :'\ . \\'bc(.hcf A'fl a rauJr of

P'a''

thts Of" n-l'lt, mi:rtonl) hmn,; th:b
)o"C:If ,,
hi~ d 'hn lx=c:n U'l dJC
rcol'ordcd hr~rJr\ c,(""l R \\"c fanJtM.~

me

rtlt)c:: ~

undcnt:"f')A:!IC'OtC'd mrnort't'\o
"'c~ "tot':' tt~f mociC' ~
lii"l:"""""etciil~ahk-cunu~

·rn

~umm~

'"~f) ~offel'\ {Of~l+OI~'IAho

frnath cho!ie OOl ro lon'K" hc.rc Those
numben are nt;!Whcrc near • ~ ~
oodJt co be. but the,. represent :a dou·
blm~ ofrhc l)e";t • c h;~\ ~ done: m c. he

""'"

Allacftl'ii -t~ l lnn&lt;."f'M"t\ , -.tt.ttepc

trutt:m'-'n uc u.ndc::rwut'l -.h~t:h .:o.n.
odcd • u:h and m 'JOmC: nsc\ emttJ;Cd

thr ~ bt.tUgcc pmc..'C'n \b}Or
rcscmt.:tunnpoft. u-mt.-ubl h:.'~ ~un
from
In

t"a~

ru rrbtu&amp;d
-'., 1 rc:-

1h.oln ~

"uh.~r&lt;tCniiCC"'. Hli.Uffl(IUtlflA. hbrat
1c' lwbmawrt~" and barldtnr.
r1Ul0fr!Nili.7C" Jf'(' 'iof."\.ltft"l\ !&gt;U*JAed J\ \

~:m~::c7:'r~:~~f:

.........
·-····-'
ncnc. •·c Mt"

furw:h ~"lrd rile' '-11M\ f&lt;..:~t the lim
fe-v.' n; w•pludvut•'"·(l(a:.n~

h+rn..

-..oold t..-

l.io.RrM buddO~t.k'lCf\.~attbc-wmc
~ tt• futd V\i~•""~

f'tJMirr.tJ

to.l.ina#!:~Ol. w~. Jnd """iutcc~

\-eo,

mUJL-b OUl o( I' MRI.

!!r ~=-b=,J·~r:r:X~~~~
._..,.~~)tiQU'f'~J'Pd.U:IIIU:: 11ii!O§flmS

•tn.etc t.rr 'ht'MOfJM.""ai reuoo'lii

fot rh: ..

es
hod""'"""""
.-.-m

t\). m1ln\

o/ \.00 t.:ln •nea.
dunn!{
the: 70's &amp;od at11 l&lt;ll"&lt;
fJifha.."'mtnl!: a much b~ pl.kc.
apo&lt;,fi~IOIJ!n&lt;t11~1ille&lt;h.o&lt;ofomap

"'Ofk.i"'- lt&gt;-

ntr-.":ork du1 wdl o"Jnnel't tbcm •ith
h~p.tals '" rbe. ~-.o.'l and 10U \'aSd\

c).pand d\t" ~X' of dt&lt;: llc:.akh
CRC"C" ..

Sc.-

L+hrarv. Tllc I.M.-boul of Phw·

ml&lt;." •~ rnw: far from a fD(l nanonal
nlll"l!- \\ c bdtt"\e thlll a n:ltll\'d)

'm41.11 aJd1t.ion•J •mc.,;rmcm

CA"erd~t

ne:tt:t fe- ~~an c&lt;tr&lt;~.j,ull it w dw
lc-\-el, 11r'ld V.'c lnt\·e a.:roc:d to~cJt'h [lean
1'ri.t:gk to help tn that dtrT:'OOOft.. Wid~
O.:.n ofArts and I"'""" I.:C11') G&lt;'lllt
ond the Oq&gt;anmrnt of' Modem I.an ·
pi~ "c tu'~ reor...,ll"..ed modern
l:t.n,;ua~c in-srrucnon. mo\·mg the
World LaOJ;~ Jn:ntrutc rnto the
&lt;kpoJUnent lllld ~the f.... teps
~·a.rdtmpk:m!m:J~tlonoftheforcign
~~~~gc requ1temen1 thar c:he Sen-

ltc opp""«fbsr !'""' Th&lt; School of
lnformalioo :and L •lhtiilf) ~·cud~ bn
begun tooon~dcu fk:1il, prufi~ "'hillh
rntt"fQCU more srron~ "lth hbnuiei

borb tn me l l nwtrsi~ and the ca.."te!f""' oommurury, ·1ne« •~ propo,otl

11 ''10005 sta~s of ~-clopmenr

and

fundtn~formtcnfn.ciphn&lt;:~t) protDnb

tn • "Omen's studtn..

pot~")

studies.

·"'•.anscud~n:h:..btlnam'CftlCidtt'ine.

and structun~! bioklJ.." .
I don't mc:::rn for th•'~- 1i.s.l to tx
ex:htl1SII\'C:,butfc:k)mc.Qlnto&amp;t:-... \o--e}"no
"t[h ..t.ht' undcrst;~~nOmJ!. th.:u tn \'el)

chis lfnt\CF\It"\ h:a~ the:
whcrC\IIllh:d to mm-e fur·w;,rd an !rit:-

fight tiMe\

la,:tcd area~ and dlar ~ &lt;: h:wc t&gt;c,:un
en do so Tlu.s B noc the pro(tk c..C ~
umu:rsrt~ thar b rerrclll.iun~ Of 1!1 m
rctre:st m illl)" sense. I Cq1C&lt;.1. more
tnuiarln.-s li'k.c d~ 1o t:me.JJ,.'C nc11:t
~ar,1nd I cJI;pocl Uli: w he rCllOurt.":dul
enou~h mfuodJtlcasl some of them.

fi:O'o.l

"' .....,
l r i i i i D - - ' d·
kwoe m die ~ fll our fUmiOn . " tJ•
rw:.ciiiiX our enmllmem ro, t.twd t"f.lif"f'4
............ dw:~olo:bel .. ,
"""' . IAd•.,........,c
""f."'.,.,_.,.
_ _ S...bc'L..,I

-na:s

dtc~lunlCC"\,.IIIJtllo

..,...... lhc

of- do-

'"' --mmc~obooot
~ of "'"
c t'hc
oo the
u

c.nrullmttm:

IJ't'

¥t'.J"J!r'

IIOfl"l!e'SefJJOUI . . . . . . .liCS

"'"""'"""""""",_,~-­
dif pracqtd...U!
r'r\ln'\ (J(

I'JA

Q)l.ff1C\.,

lnJ'\"1: for OClY:-f UIIUi'Cfl.lt.C\
r'hc} Ia. c bc:hlftd • ~on our enroll
nocnt.-ftlullll[abWJI&lt;'tlooode ,

them

~ •Jflmtt&lt;IIIJ:OOfSl :'!uri!:&lt;"'
(l1l(' ,...,, de\.ll('t f l....lJ lc 10 fill fhl"!l

.Pfl bH ~1\ to
d O'eft J:1e-i:lrt
nurnbmotfr&lt;:&lt;hft-."'ho. --.,~,
l".:Jl.IDOt ~~ ltlCOthetr ~1UiJOMi.

•·dl t&gt;..n1 1
m nC'I"l ~ e~xho and ~"
£arc an r''C"' ~ h:"'!ilhm.., d.no;.
r1H~ rvnern .qLtk:: f) 't:ptr: b lrtlf"J · "
rn'lt.ahthn •h11..it tht'\ l n.r.a-.rr\ m
L:.1nnC4 tok-~te--c'\:"OftnlmUIII'~­
~fh. .-.-mur.ah,
fbc- t..~e

,-..\

f n l ¢ dun ~0.1 ffe:'\h~ \1. hco Cf&lt;
lt.·rc:d dus "'nf ml\ be- t:hc- h-.r1"1$nt;t."l

tit

l~ ..och

.I &amp;pM";Ji.
\\c 1'1't4$ ~ UU4
Cf.lrollmrmundd-O"lii'Kltol.:and¥&lt;~ttmN

do~t R(N

To ~1!ih a'h-•11 "'~u JUiu-tK a
of '-UIIfl"chcn'"""&lt;' c-n.mU

nc- k1nd

We U•t tak.cr

admmrurtfT\-e ucps r.o.ard ~end
aod 1hr\ 00 e been t~red no:.,
!\Jld\ m The &amp;OOf!tr \\r h:.\·r 'iC'1
up • c..:ommutc"t' srrw:11.Ul'f' '"'\"OfH~
the:""""' alfoc-ero &lt;i dot l m\'"""'
• &lt; ...., all of me tccl&gt;ni()OI .,.., ......
110e

mbk-.nd 'itiC"Iuu:• bc:m:-rbandk

ron tbe numbcn •nd tku

"''lll'K

QunKXStha, t""\C't bcfdrt: "(."are u~u

rncrlu~'::f~ru~~or';:

1

IUtlpk. .mea""" ..:bwl ~te&gt; •
~-en UlJUI'W ti 1 ~.t.. the

n~l.mcnt.. M.:ht'sendcd."W.:..·e,'t':l,
~~ bocamedetrdu •-tstDOr"C!"th:a.nthc

antl&lt;'lJ'OII'thedfco:, opoorh&lt; focul"
ch•t off~ lfhe toune.
l!ut globolk, &lt;hctir omall JOd""""
tnn~e sc:~ ..-.:u aot bt: eft(~ Ou•

rCMIIJ.tCX'tof tbc ( 1.,nt:Bttyeod.ld sup-

port.

I '&amp;

~"''KhSU~\

.,,.,..,._

~k:~.:.:.~~~~
~ucc

.-he tar~n thc:~h·~ ikJOA h

""" of me '"'"''"" Sam"' '" l'lt!'l·

·•.:hor,&amp;:~ ~ nm~o

arn

ttmr,

Ill I

-Pro..·osc '\/.,,k CJIOCJd.man •tll

hod
del~ j!;JO\I'rl"'""""''thooo·
wnd ~udcnn abt.n1:: tts tar~ en-

,,hlll-)'1n.teteued iD rc:onn~i"ts.detu·
o;al entrrpnx. an:d ~'i: helped mn:·st
•n thdqonni.ngos of duo 'l'bc lloalt:h

~her u;M·-ard 2 rncd,cal lnform:-.u:M..'-5

""'"'
....._ • fil:hoJ'IfC:I!IOolllble
"'
&lt;to.:.,.....
- tdood thar tlorel ......... "'
...........
1'11t,..., ..) ,..... .,.,.lttkM"'

Mm-nu:.m publte u•f\'rtrfitf\" 1\nd u
"''b :1 (tmt" -+ten fu:lldt6~ "'11 pk:nta·
ful 81 the: mtd 's. t:bc l """"'"

:~~"~.k" t.':ncbr.:~:::

5oc.flClC.."S

..-~~nc

mcnt ~Rl.

""", ·n~ n""

dean of the Srhool of
l)enul Modocone, L.ouo (~,.

..,_

.......,....,....
..--~dot*)QI
_............
...,_..,

=::...~·=·::-~.:c

Ali••••lc .._._,
..........lc

---·

~~·~~·~~m
p!Jitk-

Sl~~·-we-.-

~~-~.::,..

f...,... ldt ,_

ukYmatet-.- thcu w~ners"hq. mna,rc·
"''de in ,.ntt.,p;~rintt M!hooat•nd (a-ut..
lte'll 1'1hltlt!!.d\Cke mt'hrirloo~-r.eon.,
&gt;-i&gt;hihry,

c........

,..mdlltsimpiC'Pinlllt~t

)-~dJaoollollv . f-.1
tlacrillord • ddoht:ntt

~10:0\""C'"tln~..... ~ftNC­
Nft"i.. From rhc .-.:nl:ct there i1 much
~ 01n dQ to~ rand catahu
I&gt;C'\0'

......

the"""'""··~
..........
......._...l • . ,... ....

"I ic """" t /w., ·""' wab tbr
w11irrstmdt'Jg tbu rwn m In} t'lft
rrrna t#ru i 'nnrm1)•},., tbr

\.1,-bmwttb.J '" rmr\1( f~ ,
!.fltrttJ "''"'• •"" rJ..t -l.rw brg.n
"' Jo sc Tha " nor rlr l"rf•Y ~( •
.w:ru\l"'r':UJ)' ri:Mr J.a; rttrrndl"\e .,. rs: m
mtt.at "' •")

a1f...,,ilntmml 1 ~~ \ •:c

~ tS

roar

txt\. and
• nuonal

'I&amp;'C:

m the

1J"'\

cH

~Trail l'fU.m·

aced lO ~them

Ul

•-a'

Spedflc ...........
Takc:n t~thcr. ~"K am~&lt;tdcr ·
auon,-anuunmc-nt.. budgt't., a.nd
enroUmeru-ic'td IK1(.t~h.
.th.dt v.c M-."C' bcJ=un ro m~kc: m •
prdmunat'f •~ '-~~ ka fw;tro tn
!.P•~ l !Rem ond
Sw.. Lqub·
IUnO, Ourlir•uu:pisw~ l'B.s

me

the

pmrllU\

Ut)tl

m

&lt;en&lt;cr f~es.....a,

.,..,-pro(~-!;JlldOA&lt;ecdua·
!'\~·

\orit Sure. So onte' ro
m dul dl·

~ntr1tcour ~

ta'tiO!a. •c PfUP'O'K" ro ~ co mmc
Oltcnt oor ~ncnJ k$c:f-dJ' rstOn un-

derg&lt;adu""' enn111mmt.

j('IUf "'

llu~ b,.u us the 1R1001 •·e need
npand .~WeSS ro deperc. tnaaK""'
n:ttnoQn of liUideJoa. ,.,J""" time ro

&lt;iqm:.and"""""""ow......Ueff&lt;r·
0\'Ciftel$..

•ubi!"'

The
c{ thts pntp0U1 depc,-Bds in •pon upon ""' COf"'C'!)' "'
I'Od..,., COOJII"""" thout "'duci"':
&lt;R~r cntJtlem;c;ru ·•o
tHe budget..
SUNY-o:sdmcnnd"""""~

•• dabrnrc "benclunatll• dtaL i

~"'~==-:::.

stnocUon "' diff"""" ftd&lt;k ..._

small spc:riaJiu:d c:ounc~ arc anrnnst""llr """" apensn" ro oll'&lt;:r than
la&lt;g&lt; tem.n:s, the bc:ndtttllri&lt; •'aghs

tUpperd;-.is;ioft.tnd~tl"lKA.':~lS
lllOf'C"

ba\ ·.tv ·m.,. klwcr diri5ton in-

audtK!tory oouna.

\\'id\our mdorsi a merit -..-c
an usc mr l :)' bendlnu.rk to('oftSIJU&lt;,' model srudent profiles for l B
lfvt e '&lt;iii ere_ ({w ~mpk. to rcdt:JCC" OIU
frnh.m:an d~ b\ fU~ under 500
&lt;tll&lt;knu.. •• che end of four vean the:
tot";~/ number of srudc:nu. ,.ho tud
cnt=:d [ I R ~'I&gt;Uid b"'e datt"-..ed t.alno&lt;Kt WOO. If the: ~"'"'•~ dmp:pin,~t oot d1d 001 du:"J!:C· the at'tllal
rrducfloo.n in I!M:J1!tul:nion ~oold fx

�I

IIIK.,.

nk

_,....,
•
• pcth... by
Z.&lt;;(l l!lldenl· icon 1n4 US w&gt;llt I net
"""""'- o( I
IJrldcrp&lt;l._ If
~-~c-.b¥

....

•

; ...oo;sr.~,.,v::-_:

• p,.,....ll}........, """""'""' o( I

IOidtno.. ...,., chc ...... ~-1&lt;­

rochc .., budc&lt;nhon•-r hod bdOK
""'-..tchce_,_
,..,.._
Rudeocpopulttt-wwk!M tpa·

ally~tbontt111odr..

Our......,.

d~&gt;'is- unde"""'
&lt;ntaiiWOIIId be ubo&lt;annoll -11cr. bul
bctta tenT&lt;! ond otill chc ~ in
NY. Our "I'I'C'-&lt;Ii~..- nderltJ*I populmoeWDUid M
rf)

Aed...,.,bullo&lt;CI'fmPft&gt;I'OITIOOI

rite:

o.'CnlllRUd&lt;ntbntl)

\\'hood&gt;ct- •-oold th&lt; (mol
"'""ben omotterof~ Inti

~':~~~

bud&amp;«. phased tn ...-rr umc,,. ..-.dun
- - Suchmca&gt;&lt;tf&lt;S•uuld loti

'7bm u.. """" •opon••r,....,
for tbu Unn•rnry zbt,
u.rlj
"''Oob..r.Jiy, tnsr""-lly, •nl

.,...."1

are~

fe• u \'enmt' - no6C cMc
lho.,.,&lt;noou-.ed-~Artu.od
~
u c:nt:Jf';. bcN-a~r d •t
otpiiWed. II .,.,...,._, U
•
..-.:ll n... " non:"""- on doe !\It
and ~foro~.)

It'• I

~nca.or.

:.::..:!n.~nt.":ltt:
rntOit'h """-.:rMl'· w. """"k o( rbc
Am •nd ~::

Tlv:

;'\

flv:o&lt;
--...aMo
o£
CIUf_...
_....,........,.
l'lnt
~ c:xpem . . .

t:fTtHU fM'l I he
of uor fa:u1n do bc'll.
10 makr ~f di'\UHI!I\ cnttJlmeN
1udablc m &lt;he -'&gt;! "' oo41q:c. that
thtn~ man\,

~td:~),~Jff~~'tu! :::
ru•

'il 'N"\. and thcrc:b\ to
U\ '"
p~n.nenh•r rather rftan tn (._nrn.pcnuon Wlth rhr rr of the W\1.tm
1\ redlk."tton nf IlK() stuJc.nn , •

kJ.q 1.n rr\Cnuc tO rhc St '1 &lt;\~em
fbc I\'Uem Cln I'1'UI C' It Ur' r( (hrb&lt;'
~rucicnu enroll el-.e¥ hac tn '111'.') .

but tfthc\ dl:.wl't. v.c t.•ould nuke ur
the lrM~o'S ,t •c routd •.:ha:Jle :sn cxtn
S...'1XJ daffcn:nu'J cu1t111 110 un tht campui Coupk-c.i 11uth a Kton~ tu1t10n
a tstai'K't: ~ $_."((} ma\ ncx be=

.....w.. ... 1.:1_, ......,
..............
\\.._.
laqr
. _ c _ doo:._.....

tooh~anti"K"~rfOfourstudc:m\o

to ~0, m return for a ~bsunuafl
•mpdn.'Cd unck-r~uatC'n.pcnet~C~:
Thor .sPh...,Onco(chc PIQPOUI

l'ho!rcTwot dcvei&lt;Jft...,...,.,..,.,.,
b&lt;)ood dorrct !&gt;mr su1opon. puall) cxpandonr. OUt ~m,._ dunonaun' bor.r:lcnCdu, and putll.n&amp;rnote
rhOfle) 1nt0 much o( 'll!ob •"C do. h

•.,n depend on pm upon""' groo.m o(
prwareplubnthropjlndupon.,.,..__
urn we can rake to C'I'K"O\U"I~ s.pon-

..,.-cd~l&gt;'&lt;lt:r'm'-u:..io~

c:

tn.nsfcr. aod cl.tnial rC'\'t'nua \\
oould rerum ro the 0\'Cflll (uncL:
le\'el• o( a r.... yon 0::0 ,.,m on odd!oonal dt.fT.crC"mial runon tncrcase ul
Slnl. I do ncx r:11pttt us ro tmpooc 1
lOlal incmo"" of$1
penrudcm om
umc soon. but 1t n wordt I'Kllln' that
such 1 rite: \\"OUkt onh place ut near
dlc l~'efagC' fOf I non:hc:astc:m pubhc
uni"emty. 1 btt belovo t:b(o 10-utte
rumonofRu~ \\cJrcrKXspeakm' here o( c:xori:Ktlnt COSB: we lft'
Stmpl a&lt;kill(wlw nWlUakcrornokc
l'B func:uon I.S it ought rofuncuon.
That IJ c:hc ~· snnouna:
oorproftlc:re-cmpha&gt;~ttpm(cs 1011al
and gaduar.e eduauK)d. reducx cnroUmenn and shrft rhcm tcr.-ard rhe
padUJ:tc: and upper~n.1ston undefp.d uatt k\ds~ and to the c.-JttC:nt that
1ddit:10nal rc:\'CftUC ~ nec·cuaf),
..
pu~h
for a d1fTerennJI runKm tntttasc and
ooncm~ t.n the meanumc w develop
oddit:rONI""'n::ao(fundon~.lt"nor

a rt'\·oluuorul'\. prupos:o1l, but I th1nk lt
•s the rrun mum ~ to tabdtzc
l! 8 a,;atnst a !itflOUS SC't o( ~nrtal
probkms.

......_ ...... Arts

-.llcl••c.. c...

If W'C are ah&amp;t: w 1mpkment all of dus.
we ...·ill tu"·e ,.. dn~ professumal
ochoob centered obout an Am and
Sacncc:s core "ith us pc-esent iitt tn
faculty but :IOfTIC"A.iut wna.Uc:r in u.ndc::tvadu•tc enroUmenL The Arts
andScien&lt;x:s "" !he hean o( !hc Univenir)\ and it 1 tncumbent on us to
ICC that they on: or~nacd and suucrurcd in • wwy that doc:s thc:m •nd the
Universicy !he tnOSl good. 'They have
had ro bear spcaal burdcm, budc&lt;t·
aryand instrucoonal. at UB, lndl•m
not at •11 cxww;nced (hat our present
or&amp;ani.uuon tS hc:lpm~ them ld·
equaa:ty.
h is for thlt ri!2.SOf\ that I openod
the dialogue this Jl*st summer lboul
whit the structure of Arts and Sciences ou~t co be:. 11m: ~~an 4.S ur
"'h;ct, is deeply felt, for good ..,...,...,_
fany loc:tlmu::rcsu •n:: at sake. and
many h.Lgher lmcresa as "M'Cil 11\erc
arc com.peun~ k~nun:n:c \1Sion5 as to
what Art and Scic:noe5 ought co be in
1 rcsca.rt:h univcrsif)·. and the:} dcsc-n~c: a full airing..
Acrouthccountl).l dareu then:

It ''

, I(

w dclt'cn el unum.n.M..·nott Our prob·

~Afth f"C'~

1\..". Uh 1111

~asdcor"""""h p

~\ c:~n;:;_~"~=-t:':;
lS rc~bk

•"-adabk f« tnterdqJertmcnul and

trt&lt;J:tdtool~
.... bet......
~
k
!hc ~ -

fourrh.

m1trn:

wn set up

cnun,

1

•

r~ tn·

depcndcnd,_ UUUitdc 0
SUUC ·
cure. h t) 111 m n~ "'" 1 noble
""f'Cnmcnt. 1nd n bn been """""'
Pille for some - o l tdeb ond
mnm auon
8u1 • hen n tu., ••tempted m 1mpkmen1 the-m unt·
\Crs.alh. H h•'ll run up l~atn)t
hm1U1Uon m raounxs tha·t fca.ll\
bclonK,

10

thrc.c fsculuc::s. -.uh a

JC't of respon Jbthucs
1'hcrc: I no pliK.'r v. ~K aJI of tht~

broader
(.'(JI1'lC'!I

tocethc:r c.u:qx tn m' ofT.a:. I

thc.nbecomc.asrhcn-PI'U\'()'qGrt1.na

was bcf~ ""'· • tlr- form dean of Am
and
1cncc1 The probkm) 1re
mf"cd onh tf. a~ I h d mdo ~ lCII,
I call !hc Colle«:&lt;: dean and tltc: thr«
Aru and :tmi."C$ dam ~ to
111CC't't\'lthmcre~brh coadd~the
I
lit:\. 1ft deutl 'flut n; rM)( the: bn(
....~fur the l "''C:Nt\ 10 funt..1.)(M) I
shctuld br dotn,! t){hc:r thm~ and the:

facult""' •.r.'uts and""""""' s.'&gt;ould
be mud1 more dtt«lh 1n l."'nltol. of
£he: t.mdcrxra&lt;fwtc m'im.k'Uon the}
dch•&lt;r. and of !hc .,....... benooe..
d\11 tnsmK.·uon 'nd rOOf 011~ -=-·

dcmK. rt"IOtiU~'\

I haH'! oo tnlereSI 1n hlll'mi"J: the
l ndcr~adwrt" Colle::~. rwr tn •rbt[nf) rcor~r-~n.wuon fOf pur:poscs of
tdmsntS(rlri'-C COO\'CruaKX:.

Rathct".

I bcl.e'ce we need to brif'l.g the l ,ndcr...
~U&gt;t&lt; Coik!l&lt; hornr: 10 tltc: facul.
Ob ..rntch suscatn n.
There arc of t.'OtJJ'SC man\ diff•ent a~ro thtK u.-sua. and no
one 01 tbcm ofTen 1 tnaglC _panoceo.
Any solutoon '"" odopc "~toM
1ommpktc. If .-c mmohdat.e anto
one F.:ul£} of Am and ~ v.-&gt;c
IR: ILk ely m nerd exus adminiscratiaft
and spc..-..1 lmlA!I&lt;""""b for chc am.
rw.tOf) KltCncet., with

thelr vc."' dtffer-

entC(:(JOOOl) , phrsacal mfnnruct:ute..
and mode o( gradowr: cducar1011. If
~:-e m11nt11n a partial tc:parationofdv;
fw:ulno. then m lhc ex.tent U..t they
dn tried, ,nc:n: undcrcodua«
IRsaucllOn"Aill ulfc:r. ThctCarcoc.hcr

1"'

• uesofbud~t..1:0"'Cfnlncc. .lndaca ·
denuc cultu~ wtud1. abo hnc to be
~lam noc sure that I k.OOVt the- nght
"""'""· ' llv: best! ooulddcno&lt; isth&lt;
one I proposed during the summer to
tltc: &lt;kpanment duu• of rite: th.rer:
facuJtiel, 1hc ExCC\111\'c Commincc
o( the Undctgnrluate Collcfl&lt;. and
tltc:Chairol'th&lt; forul'l Senate. with
the undcrstandtng chat "~ \\"'U.Id be

·nrc•n "'' ..,nono/~.,f
,...JwJ t1 fl'lt

mnrt+r """""":"'

£11'11

'"J &lt;111j!t to J,,. •"' "" ""' bt •
bwn: ""'~""'""" tbt """mttn cf

"'F''"'·-·

the ~me Dr)!;Jruunon
lnrrc art- c..."Ouou:r~~ u
'l'""Cii. and I belte'-C' that rhen:: ~ mtJif'(
du-11 one solutiOn •iuch wouJd unupon OUI JWC"Cftf SOfC' ofa.fTun.

f't:·c

,:;~~rn::~"":%;;.:

Am and Sacnrn., ,.-no IJ'C tn a ('O'!tJ·
lO IHe\il the th:cmao\"" tl:\ t WI~
u free a pas 1bk from OJill uriX".Ql
bras Th&lt; Chiir ' [)a,..t Tna:J&lt;.
l:&gt;rstrngut&lt;hcrll'oofeuor and Oeon oi
the bdtool ofPhatma&lt;'\ . I hoY~ asked
dw: c:ommmcx w ~k .,..tdt ~
foculr. I(&lt;OUf" char ..;u M d
th• 1nuc. u:w:t.ud
rbt chme Fa"UU~

{.00

t~C~fhcmtd,&lt;e!i , \"Jf1il)(lfdcpatunt:n

tcnatcrommmee,..andathen..Mdw
m to nmbc\ac dtotr optn.onJ "'1lh
tbc.i.f own JU(Igmcnu m '*"~ a bll-antTd """'"""'"' o( sc.·cal alo:rnaovc structuR"J. The c."'ODmJDCC IS of
""""" aho fr«: ta onuodttc:e ochc
opr:ionsn a d&gt;oooc:.. I ho•-e 1.-tbe
alo:rnam..-. J)RIJl&lt;IOed"" fi&lt;, and the
constr.t&amp;m:) upon any durion dw 'lr'C
do adopt. '" chc lena o( c:haqc
romrnttrer: mcmbcts wlucll ,. bc:ulc
publtSitc:d tn lk Rqgtc;t. A li• of
commmec: members appean there at
,.·ell and I WJ:" ;oo to OOOlliCl mt o(
thorn If )'OU hi'T an ~ IIJ C:l•
.,..,... 'They""' cenainty'""'"' r:·
p t Ot"hct ahtmttn-es.

I ....,,.. asked &lt;he oommutce to
men dunng th&lt; F.U and ro b)' ro
repon a( ~ PfCitrninary ooodu~
stons b) the end of 1.hc pr«cnt
~ or earl) nc:u semc:':SI:cr, ..,
th•t 1f • ·c do dc:ade to rmrpnitt
we • ·ill be at»C
•--ork. tbrou~th
t:hc dcuil&gt; dunll( thC
nr: and lx
readr to nnplcmctot tltc: dwlfl' ne&gt;a
)&lt;It
That S&lt;bcduk ""' $0!Jnd
rushed, and It ptobably il. bm I
tb1nk. tbe tstucs of ali&amp;nmcnt of
rhl'lUn.n'CB.nyan:ur~otl!nOU~dut

Y.-c need to addre!S them ~ e~ ­

riously .. ""' iblc. 1 'he) ... comph

end ,,m~, and ~ ~·e 1 full :ur·
int,. bl&gt;t forth&lt; good ofounnsututl01

df&gt;tt. .... bcoJmc c:nroralt,
f111.J"0'UlW ~ •n k'Ot.--c hnk ~
hoob Inti f-'ttn J &lt;&gt;poet • w
~ • full J*IDC1Plnr '" our . ,.
lktntc: pbnnmJ:. h ou~ :aho .,,
cmcr,c: as 1
•n« 1UUICC' t.r w:trn-un and pndc. ponoculoth r.. f•:um

"""*'

'fhctc•iflbcaftWW'C'M:tn~~

~C' tepmmor*"l ~&amp;"U,'I.QC'I,
.._ b&lt; bunched tx
UltiCd b\ thr (Tftln l "'11'D1AatU»tJOfL

l&gt;ut thr:-1

nda-~==r:!d=~

the-\

-~....._..­

I

F

c.~

sun:ed •
1 f.JCWn...,adc
and1 pmomtnat) ....,.....,.,(
••
and th"""""'- llv: Graclunr
hoculry ...._ , _ met t cr-rmodc1 chc
re-sults. fotm~ ·~ oo ron·
Jldcr the pnnnp:al u:'SU~e'S 1n mote
dcp&lt;h I a;poa rq&gt;om or •1"''1&gt;'""1
.. tht acodcrnic- llv: ptoo. ~

an C:~MI

\

me tq'M (}(

Qtl0« ('(MftiJUOCC.

f"''O'r

~made "''lor!:ehoi~~&lt;leon·

lronuxher unwenartcs-. bocan n jiU·
ot&lt; and roGl""""chc """"""'
take\ Wpe I •tiJ •"'l.nr to han: " Wlt.h
the loo.:uln SetoaK

UD(laff\C'

""' of chc """-'• dfa • l
"
uboolcte. I •-oultl
-

ccvttt.-e: Commtnee
cnndun 1 :nn~ •df-sw.h o( the
Thot

lmiPMr •"fth

tbt- Cana.l"

I

"E'.rl:"~,~~~r-;e~c~CC

en •"lh

'~lObe dri\.C1'1 ~

l'bo •at depc"nd
\
ID!hout"""""'- l

tn .........., o{""' ~ ..i&gt;ool,
•ho hJt.~ ne fll(ha orprHutif1ift.ll " .

IIUIU&gt;lontltheG.........

hn·"'- Bti'Ht.A:hat
1
t:cc:'hr-likl!f!'\ H'tU'ft'II\''C tftd....

tl ~

j

"' m tht" 1ft" ftum I at lf1l to n ·
"uw:: . lftd he ....,... ta..d tmt" of the:
.,.-...
low bu&gt;ld.nt "P « 1' 8 1
mapw JWneno.c: 1ft srn...tt.r.l! ~

huUr

llv:

gad.Witt Colle:~ ~1uc.·h tn r~
probl~m

tn:rlttdt&lt;tl."lro'uur'\

..,

am·• "'I' ......,.. lor tftduo.
edt:t.t '.JrDIU7.MlOftJ. .,. ar-

tkf w fif'di!MII. -N-.. a:nd m.:-a to U'\

.m

dcttntnltZCd. the forrrud mer l&gt;anosm

fo. the

dwnb\o \\e ~'C •n t'ndrer-

ro the

nn"'C'n&lt;•~·.,.Kklt.a."'.md

ruronc. bc:aw\C' ~ •c hecomc morc-

~uanoncutnc'ulum,. hk.:h IS fran
1

h~
u~ ot.nd

.... C'diJUtldft
,....,_ arc 1ncrc2"WJ~ ...,~

•nfnsuu\:ttlre. an ad" •n&amp; ) ('fn
"'hK:h t&gt; M=-&lt; helmed, 1nda ~llC1&gt;1
m

v-"'Cii.K1.11\I•~... ~ofl' 8

f~

obl~mpaructpete.a' rpm~~U~t•s

CJft"'u- •·hK·h

m.IIJOf t·c.nttt nf

~ikfw.tr ;tudcnr\ lr hn tH he r
liCafofqualtnt·ttACrt:ilmp u..tcPfr"
,r:ntrH . .and n h• tt • help ~ v.Ads~
t1l C"U'tUcnt."C h N\ t·~ t·onunuc- r 1
fYnCt
~ "" 1:~
:r uf
lll:1ll.knc tt:n l!l;'e&lt;J and WfJP.Jil \nd t(
h~to~ m~..~~:· morcdunKt
bcc-r..

become:'

1'4"f!tuJ&lt;'OUftldarw1to

.... hod .._ • ....,........~ ch j
Oca&lt;dm John "'" ""-

abuu.t rc

1n mtetf.-c •
d~ ~rna! •tlf'ld
and ••'" um fk ln and rw~'f"nc

!lUI""""'"'

lcrnruhatnobocl)

l 8 u •

t·r'm.Cui•l

I duntiiC rtunk '\itfuLturo~Jt,e,._,..
ofthe prnbktThQf• unn'C'n.trY I th1
pe&lt;.tplc \11"\C' them. 8tM: 1hcsc: rc

kl ·

IJI'C fr:Tt~JU•

c

k( •

~&lt;~~..::: .:~"'

fa1llt~ hJ\ (' • turd nmc "tlri. tn~t

~duarc

(,reU~n ' ~ca

need c..f ~ut•.r.anon. ~

ttorU.,J!.

tH~cther

flerut'CIJ!e\Oln

tf'l

t:uth

undc:rJtradu.tt cdtN:anon t"'i n-nr f"'P~h (If~,..,~. arKJ t.h..t the \C'\~nl

W.hKh

~~~-!"~~~~

... ~ .. aiLrncd.t

~

anodter~-crd'ldrmn•matM.ntoda.J

bccDnc

._..fed&lt;ftlfuntluk'P' -

Grad
cd__, .. ...,.., •de·
J'IVtlllC&amp;
~ ll"t , , ,
and
ww ~""" me Gt.tw.1C

•K.h them. or tiM:\ llf•t rht 'm ltld
Sc:.ena.n up But v.beK lht \n lftd
Soc-net" .,.dntdcd.peuplr:fondtho&lt;

llfi&lt;'t t&lt;ln.tl. ond I dunk
IS ttfC t.f tl\os,c C1

.

Orbc&lt;-..f.,_.. ....~

!,.._,

llfDf\J:r-mcnt

....

~......-OW\

lr' • tnd J/ ""'"""" np&lt;nerwr
that
the ""and~
""' w,;cthct '" """ faN!t\ , l""'J'k
lhtn If·, ·~ bAr- m admlftbJC1too b.t,.. •Kh ruo man, 1.1~ 'f)C·
aolt
Cttttet decode
odd

d•

..

.nrJnapul~
e~•
~\ . . . I~.. fu ......

=~~uc::F~:~r~
to M •n c ...,.. fatvlr, !»-

Q'IC\ lO

__ _

"'* •

SJ~'f•-•ch·._

'" tM ~ of docu&gt;nl r&lt;·

"be'"'""

W: 1.0 COftc.·c :ntratt nur

'-"""

~=
"~:'!...-I~
...,. . . ,_,..
kw-

""""""tltc:

""""" jl&lt;l)bkftla(tC

~-

a_..,
..... _..,._

1ll&lt; Gl8 •

"'-~•oc:co.~

,.,~

wvlly ,. • """" "'--n ""' """"
J.wncjM&gt;~II), "".'f, onl rn.ftr

....... _ _
.. •

tn&lt;&gt;IG.-

-~-·~IGRitfurldo

..-hat...._

Keadtl,

of

....-.~-.t·a.........,.

-th&lt;··

coltcan·d" •• one
.......,. Ia~· ben
&lt;tJcr oh- th&lt;
reoponsibol") for
C1 drH
vn&lt;icJPu &lt; «ho.-.oon. Thar ,. opC1100nlll~
!hem tor;«b«.
8.ut ~ ""¢ ft'PT up rhc II\~
K'lile ••--av ftom cc-:ftef•f ul'lderCJIId•
rn: cduaooon and
uo a.od cod,..te _..,_ IJ!Criol·
chc
dcportme"'""""I'A"~ 1\m and Sococa N•c •n (.,"'ffttnOfl dunrrusha
XnccJ

.................._

....,,..... ··ill toke pUtt rNoolcll th&lt;
-ofchcdc-dc:::am •ho *"-! m•~nl \\l' can ra ..

"""""11&lt;-~-"'""""""'­

from dlC ocntel". bur • u: dirt "
10 M chc
dsoldcn ta th&lt;
---lfth&lt;'ldoft."
enfiOICh
of rbc collobonooa to h&lt;lp - "...., IL chcto C&gt;chcJ ~ ort: &lt;loon«
-ooc•-orthe"-&gt;uudn't h - . lftltc:'- dou&gt;~~;
ton'IC:Chm« -~ .. •dl (.'IOIMe . . . . . .
OUI tJudcn t'C'\-IC'a pma:&lt;1i • •
ech " I
""""""""o( If dote
coUabonooa
kl nol
~
W'('
fu.,c f.ou.nd --.a C'ff«tl,·t "fttur
mcchanrsm In che end t dunk wt•
find tNt '0~ ~I . - . : thff.ao.k. but

....,P.

·:=:':i!.:=...:.~
than •·e hi ~had bcft'~the

,.__..

bo.._.
01 our or~n:o&lt;a«h - . ~01u···~
..ton .....-c been ~ ch&lt; ~
~ of lJl n...,_.
ch-ac ht~c fm omc tuflc bec~tt
funded tublunr..U 1&gt;1 th&lt; ~

rcaal 1rap(arr.on

........,

-LVI"""

od-antl"""s&lt;ill~kk

&lt;r:-nerolfu

J'CT'~"'

tc.o(that

. . '='

,...,

_
_.........,.._._..,tneot-h ::.":"~"""Cnill)
=J:
.,., ... dloa ... become- bud-

1\lv:n Pttsr.lent GcerrltO&lt;op&lt;ol&lt;c .OOU.
l
pnor-.. chc finutu~ ltc:

1-

lll~opardc:olol'&lt;n&lt;!J'.

~and..,...,.,

r:RObi.shr.ac-'! •

dl&lt;&gt;n t mt
nor.....!

and1~~WU\~I('

\noomewa

'"...._"'~Tdthoc

'" othen bo•~ • lor o(
•orlt do. Boa i&lt; · undmtablc that
UB hod pdoeood a .......uble mo-_ , pnor corbc ""'*'"""'-and
we tu&gt;'~ oo e.nuwion k
that

---

u·

llv:-'t .. _ . - d • lJll tn chc I
's .,. ..,.....,.wand -·isiblc.. S...thatgroo.-tb"""
Jr:.-dcd o(f dromoricd) in the """
r~ l"C:::IS. and ... the currem )'HI OUf"
doiW. ~
lrtU1lty dc:creuc far dtc f&amp;tK umc tn
memory. We do noc vcc futk u.ndetROntl the _......... r..-tfo.dccrooc;•,.
ltke., that th&lt;v hOl-.: mudo do w1rlo
the n:llioml iu.non. ll'halr"'CI chc
asc. the dech..nc d (o«:in~ us to take a
hard lool-. -at "hetbec" "'C are dou\&amp;
&lt;JY&gt;U,(h to cncouro~ and del clop ~­
O&lt;lltdt at l iB.
To f1&lt;1ln..t&lt; dus kind of ..._
'lll.cc.ood.icbu:d U \UrchcoffiOC'Io(
the \ 1r&gt;: Pn:wO!it for Reoatdt and tltc:
\ ...._. Prnt&lt;knt for Sponoon:d Pro-

total--'""'"""

~

ORU's ho,-,--

odf--'l'ioaoc. .... ......, -and
rdo ,.. lhor oemcal £.- .,

me,

---~ .............
• t:B " JJjfrmtt.Jr- ...,_..
Ammcoo _........., llm-" ...

mnrr 1om, ...J • .,.n.J w.J.ty

"

�_.......
aitedl~fmm

A.me~.n u.n1 t""itiC'I to uidu J'\
ttarttd oof, •n d'&lt;' nrl I
·,,

..~. fcd&lt;nl ....

r...

,.,.j

I

f~urrpts from th.~ PITJ()()St's .~n110/ &amp;portio tk Fat11/~ Smov

··~ "
lp of' IOH:fttlftn ,
tu&gt;d ... tdlcwl- ..... lett
the
" ' - theCIU-tfPO tn
tt•lvtnl'lt.e I
u•d
the-~. OI\MII ""~ '"""
tO

·tueb

a"tt'\KteS

ha\-c-.,..

~

n ..... cq.u•*"',.. 1 ai
.• ~· bud'''"· defl,,.j f.po.n red tc carch bnc:
INM

b
"U'J'&lt;fl
._
n!k·
&gt;dupo INc klftd ai o tmC:OiiO !'""
am..tuaofC'~ tl~lt

idc-ntth tnd prot«1 .m-.. cm....-u.
lntftUJ'nleb)
~aftdliC'C'fl~dw:m.
andlllhllf'I'Mli'Ct•mc"fura~lw
1t0n and w..bluNd:l murm \\ c hl'e

1 'e-n Km"'t pam:nc ar.d 1.:
~ (.(
fo&lt;.-rtnthcl f'&lt;bkhan&lt;b
'lnr,,
•nd the numbr:t u( S"'fl!lU dtrl~
tu&gt;df~oopha htttlltf 1
dr..,.o

..,.u,

Tbc ""'""' I ......., the &gt;ut.,.n ",..,..' ptl4nctoow~.•h.k·h"
udt rclefl\ct-, mall (,lfVIIo&amp;a!t\ '" t

r~uf· r~ ho.ndrcdthnus.nddr.JI·

t.n ~ ). but aktt \tiiU ru the fa1
dat • rh" IC'In "' ~"' and ht·
\.'UI'I'lln .non: .W
1 put crl uur
a::actem-. lift. n -..n miiC'" 1uhk f.at'Jt:
f1-1~mrnul .-~~~klm ul polk' nd
uJun \..Itt)(" ()(her oru'n-..un h~'t'
tudt··Ucal•t.thl~..,~- .., .
bm I don '1 ch11\ th3c cttllef \( ' ' (If
t R h.H qwcc f.k.~ ur 10 them 'c:t
l'hc.R: •lll bt
~ ...unRK'f o(
tntceel\. r.f conn.ctof ~·ofmnmtlnM. «•f

m-•

enc:ru"«..n~ (_'flftlnlC:ftulnJoOt.ctru.ul'"o
'll.tt.lltlfM. rnnnt~­

...Jcmk. and

all of them tlMnf"hntC"d tJ\ tu:J,..Ifla~
l·cderlltttcmpc" tu dtlUte un" c-n•n
pol •
l'hc~ arr Jtt:p and rr•'""
"""~ And

a dun I ttll~ tu
tctoh~ thc.m tn ttu .. t~~f
bu1 I du
du
~ an: f!O'I11; w N'c lU bt:oonwdtftd l.r\ t:hc f a·uff\ ~tc o . u
pot...x tnlhocaf"Ca)atcmhcrpnmt
twc. and the\ cerutnh dun'f en' 1uun
d.e ,uJumc alld '~ ~ piiC't'l(-ft"·
btcd actn '"' rh"H I dum. v.-,u bt ta.k
fou

lO ct.p\•JU U\,lf t.biln ht; tH\UM I.Jf"-C'
In th•~ ,~ nrc:u the- ( .ommmC"c: h..a" 1 flt\•IC.all"tb 1•,
1
\n\ -.nd
.c"lkc\ ar'-· ._, •he- t:mc u thn l nncr' r.
,jnd l.arn .... \..ln,::tht ( ... omm•tiC"C' wu... c:a hMd ~,., .al
f~" mtthr bn1 J" n nthcm'Cht.: t•• 1o&lt;r1 (h"•'-C'Ptral
wk' T1tc prrrkr('al .-.. uc I\ •hcthc:-r tht- J'l't"~m ·•~nt7_,t.,.lflal HUL1urc cat tb~ \n ~~ ~tt.tkt:' n. t.nr \Uttc4c
m«t our rK"cd and ho,. 11 ow-~r.h• tu he: c:h11n~ ,r 11 '' nt.Jt
~\C'r.al ~JrC'f'TUU\C! WfUC:IUfC'" h•\C! been l""hJf"rK"d I be ,,.,mmJttC&lt; ¥-tfl _.,IIU I
a"'&lt;'~ the
rn~~h'lo .-nd
•n n~ ~u/c*-hofthc-m.a •dla~an\othc:-nth.a-tumo~~' •• hto•nfr.;duc.c IM~..~rrcntpr•lfW'U' tnc.ILWk•hc-

,,h,
h··•

fullv,.m~.

A .. ( :.u11~1d.a tc the pt~nt thl'\.-c: I et ulu.!'1 fulh

lnJ:piacc:•ll"taJJf~rt'h unt\'a"Wttt"ft

•n cht t.'Ofl"'tn.-.dcadc\ Th"" • -,.Jtne.
"-c un ,. mu.., u cup a. I 8
and rn '\hnn

a. (.._on,ol.tJ..tc •

t:ht~

pen »de:\ ;al \..C the: ll~""
~e ht\.t: d1-.cu .. ~d. I tu'c kit f•'IC u_,,

1\c\.'al,I')C It

thc-humantMkuf("\trC'ntcrrn-.c \\c
•1\'lflh c:.anntlf ~lk,"'C'Cd.n•mu,~tf\
v.nb.JUTc\f)Ullf .tUcf'IUnn t•uhcbmJ,d

'll.lofcommunm.atlR ·rtur"•IUW
pcrhaf't'&gt; lx 11\Jc' ol an' ,_.,.~,~~Ut»n
buc '' • p;tnk-ut.rh lt'Uit ~ \\earc-

bfcr: "c arc ••.-tdcma:-all, dl\ cr.c-. v. c
tend w

("0;1~

aruund

pan~C.hul

could prottet our ov.n cnttdcmc-nu

-and k.a:p f)Uf k.Jcal~o."lrric) Iota: tk
resc "Wki taU C"&amp;f'C' of tbdf

l'hc

rh• cbt-K t) 1 ~r
ltl be btuk and lkt1 the

QQCtun

tftftJ .. "''"~

1n \ tltu Jllw• .. rate • w:~arc 'K

I .C.'Uh\ uf

C. I ()fmi~I'Jith· \(.fkl(,.tlf\ '""u.1lo~~nd Jlc-rfornount \n • .;md ..on..t

Jilt"

D. I ortn • 4xhoul uJ \ hu..l .and l'crf,&gt;Ontn[t \n\. •nd JOfift thl: l~r.anmc-nc tlf ltl,l(.)f\ •nd Pl••""'"lf'h' ••th rhc
rn~tnd Lc·ucr tk~nmcnh to ft...-m a nt..--v. 1-.uh Hf ltu~nUK"
the- rt.·~vll v.t)uld be fr r 'I&lt;CJ"otftll1c:.
fo1M ·""'- tluman•nc-"- "'•t&lt;~J ~.c-nu::' an.J ' .awr.at ~tc:Al.C'&gt; 11111'1d M••hcm.cat:

I ,. \t.at!'ll .un the pte!Knt UlfiUUic m.ec--.urc In c:"llll.laun,:: tht 1ltcrn..u~c the &lt;.omm.rn~c ml 1 hn\Jdt-r
•ht-lh&lt;r .alt lhrtt f.ttt. uhtc\ ~10IJ repvn lhmu~h .1 \ KC Prt•\t.-.t lm "n" •n.J 'w. tt"n..n lc t 1 ""'ufW=t dc--;,~n .. t
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>SEFAHelps

YWCA

Pre»e•••

YOJ SEFA dollar5
relp prOVIde a WICle

r~d ~ 2
Hell of Fame
lnd eta Athletes
Athlellc Hall of Fame
woll onduct athlete5
5PQf1S booster and
an enure lootba:..
team

'•

3
October 14. 1993

Vnlum"' 2S No 7

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n

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rnc:.Jt; l"ool . ,

p(t' un: .11"k.: t~.tf1 r.4tr: '''l" !lmt"" Jur1r,t: th&lt;- ~ \
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t'\l•"oJ! •,..

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f\ct1'-"'.l
• 'he
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&amp;om !he bloc&gt;&lt;!
e::r.:ei'ClSing
"fbto~ v.·tU be: .t,-..c- .. '&lt;d a~.un Junnt= li"k' ltr-..t
seveo day~ aha the'' h"U&lt;.. h ~ok•w. n_ and at J~ 1.13~'
post-Otght Astronaut' on !.he fll't nl(!hl duJ l'k.K
qan oonnal~..ilfdl tt\ olxular halafk;~ and n~ ld

UB ....:aent1't' 10~L'h
cbt projet.. l 10 .uJd1
uon tu fartu an: A.lhen J OISJ:Ov.-k.a l&gt;•' u.J W.
Peoderga~l., Barhara E Shyk.off. Ma r. '\nnt"
and Rot&gt;en " KJocn

-···

�2
ITUARY

Much o celebrate for YW annive ary

Yvar Mikhashoff,
1nusic profe or

IICf\'e oa die &lt;lOIDRlitloe.

'Thi

~.abo's

to plallt

COIIII1lJ

lhe local "YWY
12Stb bll'lhday cd-

l!bntion tD J99S
Dim
buloly, thcre'\'C beea loa of
and ~-m """"' to cekbrale'
Two yean.,.., the ll&amp;tiOOIIorJIIUUliOil,
wbdl h.od beea \:Down tbe Y W c.A or
y
w
. CbrunanAJsoeoatJ&lt;a.,.,mo~ed the ponotualiOII
and became
lbe YWCA.
Today's "VW" doesn't ~ITUI member.tup to • partiCUlar • """ dotsa., ....
qwn: ,.,hpous affihauoa and doe1o ,.tk:ome
melt and bo~
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poiiC}. annudes and Ia" "
eruoblc:
all pcorlr
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JU&lt;nct. I
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dtan 1n tht School of Arcbll«.1urt and PJ ..
run~. '

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more than 20 ...,, .c and communtt)' or~am·
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Mll'l tooch
the II\ e. of "'omen nd chtld=
btlt w Y,;; pro.,dts a ran#" of~
\~ t.n thr communn)--ulltfudJng
' wdln&lt;un:toeoadcral'l&gt;~

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Bf)anll paruculari) proudofthrceochtrsrll.d
may not be "' •·wblc to pocenbal cloncn
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pro\'ldt along-termhomefora.&lt;many"" ll
lliOihen nd 3 cboldrel&gt; 1n 1 man ton on
onh Street Addtuonal bou&gt;tng 1 avatl·
able tn a four-unrt p&gt;rtrnent bu1ld10l and a
four-urut cotta,e. both renouled ,.,tb htlfl
from Habitat for H uman11) . The,..' • al&lt;.o
permanent houstng available m a ,..built
hou for'"" fanul
,. ith chtldrcn
Sf) ant proudly noteS that the Y'NCA 1
tht largesl httnsed pro• odet of affonlltble
befOrt- and after-school ca,.. tn900chrldren
rn 13 bool dl tncts
ln h) 1992. th&lt;o
opened ll Chtld
Center for children a &lt;&gt; ,. "ee~
thnough years. A &gt;hd1ng fee ale" u..,.j 10
·e tlwo prognm affocdlble fot pam&gt;t
"00 V~oor\ or art U)mg to augment thear
edu.;at1on for th&lt; futurl' Tho&lt;.c v.ho """'
"nh tht- )ouns;«en. art can:full&gt; !i&gt;Cree~
&amp;J&gt;d mu 1 ha'e a dtr= m earl) ctuldbood
educauon
Sua ltxre an De\'t-r enough finaoca.aJ re-

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fund '"" prouam' for all th&lt;
famihe; and )O•mg tors v.ho need them
Your SE.FA doruun&gt;n an help'

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Qualif),azrt in a nurtunng, mmulatmg ntt•rronmmt
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• Sporuoi'M b)• the Buflialu \ ';\ \ lcdJcal Center
• Acctpong rnfants, toddler&gt; &amp; pre&gt;ehoolers

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brubef. Gar}
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Gillot I Ill
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(716) 838-2745

835&amp;9ewoodAwna, TOIOtlciT....._NY FAXI3lWI995

�Hall of Fame dinner honors co-founder, tar athlete
wo AII-Amr:riall ........ .....,.
boollrro(k U8

ptllllllmond

k ...... IIICil1bmhip o( k IIISB
Larnbl!lt Cup Roolblll Team.., dlil
~·~in
UB Alwmi
~ AOIIeU:""'oCPim:.
The lodiarooo will &amp;aU place 111 cllrmorto
be held by 1be UB Alumni Auocialon at 7
•P.m. Oil Oct. 15. in lbe Ant Ms Cenu:r New
mernben will be ll&gt;&lt;iuded by Barbara A
bennan. p:esidMI oC lbe UB Alumni ........,_
Clllion, end VB !mli!lonl WiUiam R. Grei..er
The ln&amp;l&lt;lt:lon 111,9 p.m. wiD follow """'""".lit$
by Greiner: Nc:lton E.. T ownliCIId, ilinoc1or of
dlt U8 IJIIvU!on of Albleua. ond lllillwn J
Evins. eucuti-., dirrJclor of !be UB orr..., of
. AlWTitll Rdariom.
Thi year's iadl•ldual mdtneeure. tarpre! f. Gd1riJIII, al987 U8 gnodl.ialr •••he as
• tniC!Ic..and-fioeld and CII)S&gt;.()OI.IfllJy " " ' be·
Clllll&lt; UB 's fitSt fema.le All· Alll&lt;ll'icM lib!&amp;
ondlbe only UB altllde 111tlllbleve All-Amm·
can saarusin twosporu: Gmdd J. QulDIMm.
• 1985 gnodullc end~
.....oout '"""'"""'
UB •• firs! n:cipieru or IN: fus!.-m co11qr
divisJon Aatdemit: A.ll-Am&lt;ncan d!Stlnction.
IUid DouJd B. Bofilutr, a co-,[outw:lcr or dlC
UB Alumni Association HaU of Fame and
loris-time supporU:r or UB llhletics whc&gt; luis
h&lt;enafootball~ldder!iil'lt% 1951 .
Also to be i!lduc:led oo lbe 3511.&gt; lllllli~ersat)·
oftbeir S.l winning season-tql's SU&gt;gle best
football seascn reoord-&lt;lrt tb!l49 DlOII:Ibcn
end 8 momber&gt; of lbe toldling gaff of !he
195 football team. The lram amed !be Au·
gusl V. Lamben Memorial a.p for ,.;JlllJJlg
!he Easaern Small College Football Olampioo·
ship in Di~isien 1-AA and eam&lt;d UB's only
post.-.on howl bid. onin,•ltldioD tolbe Tangerine Bowl in Odando. Aa. Tbe ~ram turned
doo.'ll lbe offer, howe•·er. when lbe bid com·
minee imposed racial ~oos.
R.etmdheadroocltRichard w.Offmhamer
andOiarles S. 'T'irone. Ml&gt;., who. .yedguani
will speak on behalf of lbe team. Offmhamer
has lllready h&lt;en indllClled into !he Athlcti&lt;:
'Hall of Fame. as have sii m&lt;mbero of the
l.eam-lhe \ale Nictlolas A. Bcnini. team rocapuun; lbe lllll: J. Gordon Bukaty: oUoc R.
Evans: Gerald R. Gergley: Loui M. Reale. !be
team· s other c:o-&lt;:apWn. and Sampson "Sam"
Sanders, who laten •·os UB headfoochallooacll.
The other team members are: !he late Rob-

""""""'*' ........
Fino. T_,.C&lt;A:F
DmoiooAI::Idil:ml:

........................
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apQJD.

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All - .\mortcan
Tcomondlbe..._.

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AD·""""""*'firoa
T-.~

ECAC hkdaJ of
Meni..St!orl.lom
Gr.-St:bolll'-......
lole A,..... for,_ )'C8R. His

lnductMa: ' 58 IAmllert Cup tum,
M~QA~nt M .
Gelulne. Gel'lllcl '· Qulnllnn and
Donald 18. Holmllr.

...................

top, and hom t.l'l.,

ddar ..... ..........,..: ..

19IIS..1illibeCidbdC.I'\mas

Adams. J""'"' A Allegrel1o. Pbilhp 0 .
Bamfm!.J....,.E.B&lt;dznch. athanM Blo
Jr.. KenneUIP Bam. WilhamP Bropn,Oavid
M. Bropn. George Cidaney, Joel Dempsey.
&amp;man:! Fagan and lobo B. Fortml .
Also. David E. Gardner, James E.
RlctwdGuold.James tfatzhaus, I~ HU!Ie!'.
Carle)· A.. Keati.l'"""' B. Keat.\. Fredericl J.
KO!U\, Stonlcy I. K""'al&lt;kl. Thc:omas R
MacDou all. Georgr C M.._.,, Fnmru
M~'ICZ and tbe LllJt llltllwn Me '

~-.........,A•..._,the

ert M

a....,.._

tnunn .
Mwpnl

G&lt;tlril1c

~f.
id fi"" llldoof tl1d
{our~......:t.asaUB,...,.,.,.In1985.

lihe"""""" UB's tn fanale A.!l-Amonconllhlole, p&amp;acq IS!h at the NCAA chanlp~Cfthp&lt; m
In '86.1ihe ..... filllt., the....,"'

CI'O'ilo-&lt;Xllnll}'

ud&gt;orncll-&lt;lnll~• 3~evca

A

ho. Robert A. Muscarella. tbe \ale Je&gt;S&lt;ph O 'Grad} . Joseph I , Oh-.na.
Raymond V Poohm. Stq&gt;ben J Salasoy.
Owles V. Sooi1.,Joseph W Shdllet,Raymood
G Sbine. Rc:mald G. S~e.phan. Paul R
Szymetldera. Melvin H v.., Curet Jr . Rich·
ard Van Valkenhorgh. Joho \1/eldl, MJdlacl
Wilson. Roben Yanchuk. Roben l . Yerge and
Eugent C Zmru. The assisuont COIICbes "''ere
Fmlenck H. Dunlap. Karl F
uddlohn.
Roosld M. LaRocque. MIChaoel E. Rbo&lt;le&gt; and

ch.llectural bamus acu' ety dutcnmm te§i
agamsl persons v.1tb dlsabiliues. Danfortl
..,d, the Facilitle'o Planruog Camrrunee de·
cided to eumjne how be 1 to removt e~Jst ­
ongardu~&lt;:Ctun!l banier&gt;irom the umveni1y'&gt;
faeihues. even !hough UB was not legall)
required to do so. ·•\\'ebeht\'t tn the removal
of all bamer&gt;," he slnd... Al
&gt;tty least. we

t,.,

ought to do v.hat's reqwred under Title II.
wht h v.e h.l:tvt

not

yet doot:·

Unde.r Title II. a pubhc OAUt;· " reqoored
to ..e,aJuate its cu~n1 sc:r·v1ce. pohc1e .
and pracuces and 1he ~ffel·ts thereof.""'
Oa.nfurd "''d. UB hod doot such an e&gt;alu•·
uon a.nd v:as requ!I'ed under Tille II on I) to
re\'le-A' tllal C\'alualJOn. he: sa1d. But,..thc Jus t.ice Depa.rt=nt had indicated that 11 e.peeled many pub1ic entities to reexamine: all
their pohcoes and programs. be added. a.nd
"ttetloer or not UB bad fonnall) undertaken
such a reex.ammation was unclear.

ore fundamenU!lly. be saul. "!&lt; .elf·
evaluatioo required Ulldor Title U v.as no&lt;

M

"""""""'tothe~"-""'SS'lSilsurvey

required Ulldor Title Ul Witlnltsucha survey. he
said. UB ...,..JcJ ncll:no:&gt;v.' eithor the full extao~oo
which its el&lt;isting factlillCS are adlvel) disc:nmi·
natir1g ~DSI pen;rns with disabilnies, nor tl:r
acwal 00015 of~ all31dUlectural b9!rien..
Furthermore, UB's presen1 policy fur ad-

~

NMiorlll
Sc:ymour PoiUclc Oa~ld E Hudl "'-a. man~ end !he bit ldln L SC1era "as """"'

&lt;l&lt;:b-q~as"""""""'&lt;lunr!£ber,_.-

110d """"" &gt;"*'

.. em;;~. l&lt;ldoor - --

ard-fiold andrudo&lt;r1rack..and4odd.S i r lilt UB ~ Femalr Atl&gt;lele o(lhe Ye.AWllld. t1:r ECAC fedal d Mmr and quoltfied
fa-ti:r NCAA ouo!ooa-l!llfi...-.1-foddchampioo'ihrp&lt;"' I
Sir earned • bodlda''' degnx Ul ~
soencr from UB. and a rn:lSI&lt;:r's degnx., exa~sporutudo&lt;sfromSI!lllh~ CJctrong
.. ....,.,... pro(.,.... o( p,ys.:;.l educooon and

~born

dressong ~ batners ha&gt; been on a
case-b)-case basis, be oaod. lt o only ,.ben a
complamt •• made. besaid.end"ben ~

ooa:ssibiltl)' cannot,., ~'ured ony odoe&lt; ..-.y.
that fiiCihues alterations ""' made. ond tbert
ool) to dlC eJttenl oe&lt;lessar) ill that pa.rticular
.a.se. ··we di5Ciirnmate. and mly u.jhen sc.ne·
one \Utll)lams do we try 10 f~&gt;: il.." he said.
The cru• of the pnlblem u IDOil&lt;') , Danfcnl
saod. UB luis no flllllion&amp; dedot:aled to the re- ,
ro&amp;\'al of ardlitectural barnersto"'-""'S&gt;..-.d
• nesul~ accessibolit) pojects ........, farad to
oomprte .,,th -~ IWOJ"CCli for the
~LUll!.'" hmned pool of monlb. ··1n such a Slltt.a·
tion. occessibobty ~ly loseo out,toe · od
Theoommitteehad~rorornm&lt;lldalions.

Danford said. FU'SI. it reoommendcd that UB
&lt;toptbc pr.octioeofhavingacoes.'•ibllil)' projects
oompeoe dumly with matlltlellall&lt;e pmJ"CCS
for on-hoo!i&lt; rnooey . ~ lbe wrivenity

!.hould conduct an .accessili!M, assessment
survey of '"' facilities 10 odentify all architi.'Ctural barriers. so that it cculd put an acrunur
poce ~ on dlC COSI of !herr n:mo\'lll. And
thud. UB should tbert pui$UC outside souroa
of fundmg for lbe &gt;) stemaliC removal of an
such banicn.
The FSOC plans to male resolutions regarding aocessibility for the di&gt;abled in the
Faculty Senate meeting of Oct. 26.
·

Scholar-A.tllloele Awad. l:
....., the Owandos&gt;&amp;
A•wd

uol&lt;,!S4~.,.,..j~MI*AII*Ie
uol~ .

""""'«!

uon'll\on
h&gt;s bod&gt;dor'o dtl;l'l!t m ctaomoall ~ fmm UB .,
1985 llld MBA from the 1-Ur&gt;-.d ~

Q

,., .
8

Sdtoolinl

Aresai&lt;dda.-.

......,.'*"..........-~-&amp;

Gormlt .. ~illc,&lt;ho.
o...w B. l:l&lt;Dw-. .. lldent """""" d
UBIIII*Uc:5.,. o co-ftutdor., I o( the U8
Alumno ~--ilboo Ati.'olic Kall d !Woe lio
dcl.-1 tho orijJiml ploqueo. and I
PI be
tacb for Hill ofAIIlte .............. OOIIIIitued
10 . . _ , . . li.nl m""' ., ~;:eq~.n.
progi)IDlal!"" !iiJfma-,.alll!tnJmenlll•nn"•·
"'ll the Qun:mad Otil .. l
tl1d "' fuod.
~ID&lt;Ilppol1lll:*cicsgalbe

J_.....,.,.n..,

i&gt;.,.,...,tertollldi-Mar~·.... lnc..

..

..

Firat.._......,__.,
........

FSEC hears report on architectural barriers
HILE TliE Univer&gt;uy at
Buffalo has oo lq;!J obh·
gmion to pui$UC dlC sysu:malk remO\·al or all
barriers ro !he a&lt;:&lt;:eS&gt;.&gt;bil·
ity ofits facilities for t,.,rusabled. anything less
than a policy to do juSt that may ,., mtapmed
b} those in dlC disabihty communtt) as a &lt;at:.t
endorsement of conunued discrimmaLioo
against than by UB. Soolt 03Jlfortl of Ardu·
llleture and Planning told the Roculty Senate
E).oc.uthtCucnmiu.ee•·a::emly. Danfol'd,•ui:iik
his remarlcs aspartofareport from !be Faculty
Senate Committee on Facilities Plllnrung. of
which he is chau.
. Underthe A.mericans v.ith Ots.abilill&lt;&gt; Act
(ADA) of 1990. UB is covered by Title II .
Danford said, which requires the unwersit)
to ensure tbe accessibility of all programs by
July26. 1995. 11 was important !&lt;&gt;distinguish
between that and Title Ill he added. which
did no( cover ua. and under "'hlch it is
req uired that all faciliti.s be accessible ~y
Jan. 26. 1992. What tbis means. he saul. "
t.ha1 while UB is required to mal-e all its
program accessible to the disabled, it i.s not
necessarily requi.red to remove all archllec·
tura'l barriers to acas's.
However. since lhe prese.ncc of such ar~

UB, •

!Stl4...S

~ ............ o(

FIICUIIJ....a.

AI. an open ~olt.fi8CIJI!ySen­
Oc:l. 5, ~Aaron
deMAd his lir5l Bl'n.ll!l ~ 10 ...
f11otA1V Senate bo'font an ·audience or

•

aboot200.

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G&lt;Wiefs IIICidreS$10 llle "'*'1!11KU!r
~ 1C , I'I"0!10St81och~11&amp;«

o1 spect1ic propt:l&amp;8ls lor UBs relignmeot lo oAIItn! b ~ an:l projBc.'t
the............,...,,_l&lt;n:tsdl'1llllllnal
laadershp The dlalcgUe ,.;a CCll1lnle

-

PresldartiGteoner, f'I!)IIQitBiaah

andSeru&lt;lliat~wa,gnerpar­

1on.otV (dale 10 be

......... ....__.
IJqpalB ... "" open

anr'Onll!d st-oiiV).

• Suut:lural bnd!illcns. c:ohetenl
~

• Academic bUdget and mategic

I1MIIw
• Enrollment 1ltld ~
~

• Specific proposals
• Structure d llle M$ 1ltld
Sclences core

• •
•
•
•

Aellllalaa:Jon (II Gradullle SoiJDcil
Research enterpose
CUllin and t:OI1Vl1IJIWty

=:-..._.
.. __.. _
~-=="'~.,..
F\ltl.re ·~

�4

-u.~--.-r

WELCOME TO

DISCOVERY

--·

A. 'S'I GlES EXPERIE CE
_.tA...,,pro!;t-oiulioo&gt;J

.. ........... ~..,t

~

.... _

~M.D

OISCOVERY i

uv.n.. -a.ld.
En&lt;
r...._ _ __
Klods ..._orc_.,~Mt&gt;&lt;~
.waoocy'•

a gathering of

. ._

adult single for group
discussion, dancing &amp;
socializin,g.

-~­
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., .... Ho..... F.dloooo- C!wlt""
afdlt-·V...t~c.-o&lt;T.._

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____- . ........
,

Fw llftllft ~XIII tc*IICI
0.. William

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......... ~lliiii!Ody

A l the Unitarian
ni.,.,rsalist Church of Amherst

u -, _ -

Camput.

IO!l.t~~.

~lB&lt;IPY-cww.-'•U..'lnt1loc
··~-·)·· ~......

6320 Main Street
WJiiamsville, NY 14221

~

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(J\.e ~p to! 0..~~--u.:m..l)

MollyM.;~-ol

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ric..-.IOam

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.,.,J phm; ,./so " sound syst~m .m Jan&lt;•' mghl

UNIX-

Discussion evo:ry Thursday
Dance every second &amp; last Thun;day

!Jot..-ialt t'ND.. """'""'

&lt;~'IX~

Tonight's topic:

u~

w1th ~ t..'dt~ and ~lh
I:JC• 'ta -.ark, mott t"ffec:tl ~d) OD

Grab bag discussior1

MA-nc•C:ou.DQUIIHII
Cebord: ms.r1 y•p\t!c:dc
b .ni.fokb aod ~rk
(Jamiutiort. Prof v,L:tor
G,nlbuf'l. Harvard Un1"
Ooefendo:wf. South
4

THURSDAY

L£CnJa£

luoe c,....

....,..r...a-,.
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Me:u

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Ph.D .. R&lt;-

--

Ne.:u Blact. MS-l~H

IEI..a:TIIICAL-~AN

Maltidllp MocltiH

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.......,...T~for

H i P - - . - . 101 IW&lt;IJ
otth Campti&lt;. 3 p ..

..aroh Fello~ _[lq&gt;L of Drag
Meubol""'- M&lt;fd Rosoa1dl
U.~ .10&amp; Coote Nonb

IIITDNET CUiiiiC
Libntr·
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(LOLGEMMA~lJB\'MI

_ . , _ &amp;PIIOI.UI
Visa Optiocls. Mat} F ldL&gt;O&lt;.
imrmptK'WI spenahsz .u lruer-

oatrona:J Student and Schot.r
~Ill dl'•ClhS. •~wt'&gt;

affectl'tlf mtc-mauonal &amp;rudc:ft(\

..~hotct- 1t1 c-mplo~ tnr:nt ,ba-~
IO:SA Studctll

Uruon Notdl Campu' j.S fl m
Spun~d h) lnlcomah~1 -,.tu
dent and Scholar Sen. ·~·t-o Ot
(K"r '"llntrmaltQt\.lJI F..du...i~lhKl

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of pb~lli.l}'raph) 111 8t~Oc.l-.p.•n
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Of'l'·lint Rerocnitton of 061·
rnl 'H aru:huillen " ot"ds L\·
in' • H;tpolhesb Gt"Dt':nttlcw
and bnl..ing Ml!'l.hodol~ .
John T Fnau 20 Knox Nt)nh
C.mpU&gt;. 3:30 r m
I'HYSa AND

~OMY

COUOQIIKIII
So.,. Loopy Pby.ic&gt;, Pro! A
V As.htc~ar , Penn Statr 2-1 S
f"'TTOCuk. orth C:ampu'
3:45p.m

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g:raduar ti!J;IM:Int ID UB Career
PLano
and ~emeM.. ~

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Nonh C•mpu'- 6 30 p m. Call
b4:S--6l2!fl ror IT.IIS~&gt;I'IInfor­
mation. SpL'lr.l~ b) rht Snt
dent t..~rt Office

How 1o Bw)l • MM:rornmputu.
Ra~ Volpt and Ketrft" C.ahana.
UB Mtcro, lc:.ldm. Nonh Cun·
pm 7-8 p..m c.u 645..(1,1l."i t ....
l't'giSlraUOft

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MXed b) tbt! Studit.oti.Jfe Of.

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l'ips. TrricU •Dd Tf'Chniq~
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JctU Llh:JJ!h.;·e

PHARMACY SDIINAR

Proceod.urn to Beller C ~·tm~l
Palk-nH abot:tl Prn..~.·ription
l ta-r \tc:dinuion.. Llit..fht-lh
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b~ Puu1 B.anel S1udm1 Unu.11']
Th~all"r. 201 Swdcm Ur:Hoo
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Acloe&gt;oo Soutll c.,.p.. 4 p m

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COMI'1/TEJIIiCIE'NCE
COUOQUIUM

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'\utrfhon 11nd 'f"O_oto~o,ii- for
ll ota.lth~ gin&amp;.\\ lillliiiiJ
I l~o~n ... _ prof~&gt;.....::.t IUid dn«u-.r
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C,;e.mf'lu' 610 p m !Pnt.~rgh·
Nev. Me"xK'Q ml!lldl as 8 p.m 1

P.,p llallJ .... Bonn....
Good&gt;eu Field South Campu.
7 r.m
WA&amp;FIUI

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Cubius. Satttr Fodd
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.. .....,.. eaii819-329L

The: Pri..,_ Brid&lt; U 9111),

dtru:lod by !ROO Rc-ua. Studcn.l

Umoa Theater. 201 SnKknt

Lan-y Mt11tr, comediOJL Tnpk

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~~

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- - S l o e c - Hall

OIIII~Jp.-Toceu

l2. lo4. 56

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Learn how to u e the MAC!
Attend Hmd.s-On Workshops.

................

-"

S.... Prof 0."'1 H..U

Bu. . . -....,.0.. Do
Enot.1o 0. anlto. ..
profeuo&lt;. UB Dcpl of Onl
Booio&amp;) lSO Cl'S Adcbuoo

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Convenience
Quality .
Service
Variety

ewuun enter
Optiu.llm~ge

RerordTh ~m
K.tplan Test Prep
· rsity Bookstores .
UBMicro Sales Center ~

UB

orth Campus
Opnr · am to 1

==

�6
CMENDAR

-

continued om page 5
Fidd

....

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pily .......... - ,......
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\llaJki-. Cornqac Mc'lloo
Unw I 01 OJ.d
South
Campu• • p.m.

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Moc:llad Audtiacoo.lll-&lt;lay

ocbedul&lt;. Baurd ond Sle&lt; Halb..
Catnpu&lt;. '~'~~rouP Oct.
ZS. T"*'"•' S.O .......,...._56.
admisSKII.ft for~ar
p.m•• $6, 5ludt:ou;.;

and~

$12.~:eoc:nl~forrt ~

cna1•t 8 p m. poosorcd. b) lhr
UB ~of Mu&lt;ac For
nll ~5.. 1911.

inf""""'""'·

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SIEIIID
Total Qw&gt;llty IIIIP.......I.Olirul

Thoma J Ou.CXJ ,
mana.ger &lt;if human ~M)Urtt...
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Ph.D• ...,.._...
UB
Dept.
501
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pus 5 p.m.

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p

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Manannc Sulh"an at b4S-3_

UUUALII

POUTICAL SCIENC£

Hail Mary. Swdcntlltuoo
Thc:alor. ZOI Srudent L'auon.
North Campu 8 p._m Admii·
'MliL ll50. UB studeat .
51.50, ROD -I'IUdtAt\

LECnJIIE
tt•t:AMann-fJIIa~

tioD. Prof James K.ukbo '·
DepL of Pohttcal Sc:~e&amp;"t..
Unt\ . of lthno1$ 11 Urbana·
Ownpoagn 280 Pari.. eampu.. 10 a.m.

DI11!1111ET CWIIC
~nk Oi!iltUssfo.a Groups.
223 Loch.ood Libnry . Campus Noon-L30 p.rn Reliitn:noo form can be: obuuwd
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11&gt;1 Crof" Kall onb Campuo.
from 9 e.m -~ p.M To ,lidlt:dule

p1c:r1tea11 Q Ita i'lnt lh\A Will i&lt;' more !han 20
years b~ delea!"'9 Paine" lflague member Foro:lttam
UnMII'Sity. 33-1 ~ Salufday II! Jacl&lt; Cdfey Field 11 1l1e
Broru

The Bulls go!. 00 the boMd f~&amp;l when Me&lt;'&gt;. Moz1 8 I
connected on e. 45-yard r
~ the score was set
up Dy a Oon Suchnya e&lt;oepnon or l!'llf'Rams for~!

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Sutblr"*O. 878...(52'9
fACUUT ~ UIOW
11lc M FM»~!y conccu. .... •
sho~ of '*''Of\i lrom the prw•tt

au piRIIn' aetded

..

CUM · ~

TO-FALL

1lw: iam'Nh~mtl Conurultn: of

the Womtm·s Club -.IU tp)lbOf
a f•llluncbroo 11t ~· ·Gar

ua "

.;..,. ""T.....Uy. Oct 16 11
J ·p m For fu:rtMr tnformaliOil,
call AJ..,. He.........« 01 (&gt;92 •

roU~cttoru

•1s.&lt; For ....,.,..,.,... call

C'OOllD~

Onon Hah-uiell

pm , Tot"sd.ly. IOa..m..- 12 -10

J08S

ol UB an f.acult~
ltu:oo..,th Oct 22 1ft
............ ~Gal
le:r) . Fux- AruCc::nkr. Nonb
c..mpu. Gallery """" Mecr
dl) and w~... 10 •-m....f)

tO

P"&gt; Req~~&lt;" dllli&lt;ull .........
ffom9-11 pta E'I'CJ")''OIC•
-.'tk:omt,

a1

,

689--6 lO~

p rn and 1...0 p.m . Thundi)' .

10am · l2l0pm. ud2 ·
p_m , Fnd.ay . IOa.m -S p.m.

FACULTY
A-..JA&gt;ooc:loilo Prol-·

1l1e Bulls deleo&amp;we effon w.th e&lt;ghl UICklell

Afnc:M AraencaD Stuchea..

w -··v·oam..a

"""'gi'F-3012 A

NOrtCES

----TONOUI
--

HI FOR INI'UIMEJ

1bt un,\"e1'5JJ'~· tmemet u~
Gtoup •ill Mid an c.pmuuonal~u:~t,Oct..19at 1e

llJ. U:d;wood A.U
l.nrernet l.l:iCn ¥ic.kame No
prctet•IU'Iitiola reqvu'ed: Con·
tact LOLPOETtfUB\' M for

Lm 'IG

tunher uJOrl!UJJOn

ursA.

Thr- School of
~IWIIb
ywto•()peoiiauKN... 5
fn~~m 2-S p.m • L25 SUI;boo
Kimball T.,...... 011 lht Soulh

lOra!-·

will be ..........
~'\It$ ....u bt aftlbaod
to dbcuu the
II) 8 -=calaureare and RN 110 MtiW' $ Ptqpam

PaikJ.nc available i.n t..t:lchad l..al

on Blaiky Avc: For mclft mf«·
call 19·3701

tLOLGEMMA@&gt;UB&lt;'M l

dolal/

&amp;e~eo

una5S1Sied

The women's 110lleytlall squao re~ ns rea:trd to 1 • · 7
last wee1t The Floyals 1001&lt; a lOUgh ftve-game matdl au
•••UA5Hdat• flrcd't"fttO'-St•·
hOmeagr.tn&amp;ICorf'IEI110ct 6 . 9· ~ . 15- 1
15-13. 4- 15
UlllJC\. P05Uat: f f . lQi2. lOll
15-6 10 e•lend hen home unbea~en stnng 10 "''
to.
11.111/-'-'-" P...,fm&lt;or
wasr&gt;t
as
fonunate
on
lhelr
road
1
no
to OhiO 0\le'
. (""" poskiooo ....l..ble)·l'a ·
the wee!l.end The floyals tell at Dayton t&gt;-15. 8 ·15. 1S·
f:hoaOJ:) - Posttng •F·3084 Pr&amp;-f.,_wr alld Chair
1 ty
13 7-15 Cand1e ~.rst led the SQuad wtth 12 i&lt;oi's ar d
M&lt;daa... ro.IUIJ
· '!081
16d•gs
AislttiiBI/~It PreiThe Royals then playeo1.-o matches '" CrnonnaL
Cocnpu"" Sa&lt;att. Pcouug fF
loS•ng at Xavte&lt; lfl rae games. then dropptng the
1
:1086 - · ......,_..
Um~~ersrty of CtneltlnaiJ Bearcat5 tn f&lt;Ve game&amp;. 6-15.
Alll:bropolou. Poo.tm&amp;
tf .]()ll7 ~ull .......
16-14. 15-13 3-15. 15-10
r...--Law. """"'' ff -.1088
UB hOSts th&lt;S weekencfs U8 Volle\'1)311 lnvttat!Onal
~~Prof-·
fealurtng nataonal powers New MexiCO and ~
Lc.mmc. and ln~lOil. Postas well as East Coast Conference toe Hofstra
"" OF-30119, 3090. 't.l91 AsAISOciot•

Ill~

Aher a l&lt;areem Stroman tnlemeptaon UB e&lt;~endeO
s advan~ lD 1().()
OB Cl ScCI1raoed lO
yards lOr a 'TO wt 3 . I 2 10 play 11 h apel'lot'&gt;g periOd
A Scoct rntereept1011 oo lhe Bull$ ne"' possessoon led
10 for'dham s f.rsl poona ollhe COt'l'est a ~x-ya&lt;d TD
pass from Joe Moomel!ld o Ct11•S AO!&gt;s
UB tooO. a 17-7 lead dnvang 73 yards on e&lt;ghl p;ays
capped by a n.ne-yard TO pass from Scot110 WR
Rusty Knapp , ltle f"st ume lhe cwo have hool&lt;ed l4l "'
1he end zone th•s &amp;ea900
· FoiiOWlng Moorhead's seoond sca&lt;rng Sll'
10 Ross
th&lt;s tome !rom 3.2 yards Sc011 rusned se.en yards tor
"' second sOOO"e ()I the day govlng
24-14 laa&lt;!
On the Rams neJ&lt;t play from scnmrnage ,. SIYnan
hneba e&lt; Sle~e McDufloe recovered a Foronam
IIJmbte and raced 21 yardS to&lt; the score. QMilQ UB a
30-14 halftime aovamage
The onl)l poarn$ ()I tt&gt;e second hal carne on e 4A ·Y"'d
tk&gt;zran hek! goal
14 09 rema•runo
Fri!!SIYnan rumrng back ~ MOttey became the
'"'" UB player to ecltpSe 1he 100-yard mart&lt; ., '93
rustung 23 trmes fa&lt; 118 yards ..., Aoben Hamsle&lt;l

..nan

___
.__.., ...
- ·..-a-T
-·b) .,. .,. Oa:oduolf--

c.n.,...
·maslle!r"s.
-.....
ba:xlalawalt..
and docEXHIBitS

Football: UB first I-AA
win in more than 20 years

~ll&lt;ti-SI""'"

IIIUOM-

-~~&lt;diOO

tlll"ri' ·lor '....Con•••
Opl.ioalutlou Ill tbo Cal&lt;ulus
&lt;Jt IU'iMlloa1,Prof oo1J

Gun.r F..uduu.a .r
u..rb S)............ dt-&lt;d

I p,m

.- S C I D I C U

MA-nes~

21-n-

~~

.rc.....,..,.,

-

........ ,...., ............

low&lt;fkll!b) dl.oJU&gt;""""
AI.AII 'L c . D : n t l - 1

UIIMFIUI

Tboemt. ZOI Uoioe
NMb c.mp.s I p m. Adtlus·
mo.\2.50.11
\ldciiiS.

~

tt.waJ!Oot

Gnopll Prof, llob&lt;no
T...... ia. 0cp.
SnetJc:c.. Bt'O'!Q. Ullli"' 20 KnoL

IUU NMbC....,..

-~OleaOOM..,
- DlaMt

lAta
lblirr• • .mp~

..,._.

-"'ol.......,-

-"'"ilor. IMe:ntiiUoOa1

"""S&lt;hobw - .. ..; ....

~Macrobt·

""'el . """""'IF-:lOllS . ........

ue

sUWtti"'-"'"
...,_.(;ndwal&lt; School of

-

EidUCIIlKKI.. Post11\l • F-)(W2

Compoar.r Propamm«·S.opby ,.._ Poo:u~g tR ·9:l09!1

ll.-rdt Ttduticlaol (

~

palt·llme posHioG)-oraJ Bioi·
Of!J, ......., fR-930119. •P rojod
Aid&lt;-P&gt;ydoolog) Pl&gt;ilm~ IR ·
93100
-AlCINA&amp;.

Mea' s Soccer
The men's soccer squad !raveled o Mobile. Ala over
1he weekerid wt&gt;e&lt;e they ooleated Arkarisas-I.Jttfe Roc!&lt;
6·3 co overume Darren Boectler s three ~IS onctuo·
tng rwo an the 1•151 lour IT!InUI.e s ol the hrst e:NJtra !li2SSlOn
provided lt&gt;e spark lor lhe Bulls. UB then le~ 10 hosl
South "-lal&gt;ama 6-1 on Sunday Kevin O'Netl scored on
a penally kiCk for the Bults· only goal
Ear11er an the weelt. O'Neal set a school record wltl1
five assists as the BullS pasted Buffalo Slate 7-3
F&lt;eShman EdJro Oiq:lewho and )Uroor MlVI&lt; Matil&lt;owskl
each netted rwo goals for
The But s now Sland at

1i fo.-tbt Rnl Wortd.,
'Edt'ea A~ and Amy Saroc:k) .

Dindor, MFC Ad•.issiollti
...tE...U..JM._........... 1 lAI. l'oaUifl fP
3051. ll-.1 Spidali&lt;t IMP·

~
UB Cllro&lt;r
Plano.mg. """'"""·
&amp;. PJaccmern . North

S1--..et~. P001mr

W~'sSoccer

•P-:1004 Anislut T«bniaal

Campu&gt; Noon· I p.m. Call ~S ·
612.5 ror n:'tist.rmon .nfonna-

D'""'or I L-3)-F.,.. ""' C'tn

Sophomore Annamana Gasbarra tahaed the only goal
Ia&lt; lite Royals as 111ey tell at t.lreillgan Stale 3-1 laSI
week Gasbarra's fot.nth goal ollhe season ues ner
W1ltllo&lt;• Penllo for lhe team lead The Roy
are oow
6·5- 1

ur. Aft&lt;r Collqo: Suni•-.1

lt'f.

niaotioo , . _ T«bnlciao

tioo. Sponson:d by the Student
urr Offt«

( L -3\-COO!pOIIIDJ and lnfiW·
ma0011 TechnOlogy. Pos.On.f!
4P- l067 . Co mulll.icatloll Sys·

aUIATOMICAL SCIENCU
MMINAII SEIUES

~P -:lOb!

Flood.

AudHor f L-C, lnt..-...lproroot~l opportvnit) ). Poa:t u~a. f'P-3074 , Bo1 otr'.~~~tr J\.1a:n ·
ll&amp;ff (SL-J)-F;no "'" Cn.ter.

UB An:a01me£1 Sc:tences Dept.
.106 ~"""'' South Compus.

12o1Q p.m.

WEDNESDAYS AT 4 .JI'WS

l'oa"'l' IP;3059. Cvnatorial

un:JlAIIY SEIIIO
Writ~ tbt' Po.-er: Bratbwaiu_
ll&lt;roskia, OrthoJf'11pby, and
IPotitk:s. Bob Pertlman. author
of Virt~l Rratiry f ROD]) and

ADiruanl (SL-1)-Fu,. Aau
Cenw. l'om'&gt;l OP-3061 GIS
and Works&amp;atlou Sappon
Speciali&gt;l (SL-4)-Q.ocrapb).

Posung t306S

Clpullt' Attd,~na ( Tit~ F1g·
un-s) • .438 Clemens. Nonh

Cornpu. 12o:l0 p.m.

~

CloaMr (SG-05}-C..,.o&lt;h•l
Scnoice$. '-""' 131513

informauon contact Charla;

Bm!Stcin at 645·38&amp;2.

COMPmtTVE CLASSIFIED
CMLAIMCE
Kl:)·boanl Spe&lt;iol61 (SG-Gfl·

~NI ~C1\Jtl£SEJIIO

matism, Andrew Norman.
Hamillon C.ll~. 684 Baldy.
Nonb Campus l p.m.
-MIRA'- RIIINAR
Pncti&lt;al Tra!Dla&amp;, Sllfldn J.

Ranagcl. intcmationaliiUdeot

CLASalflED CIVK.

~

For more

IN 'JIIIIII..CISOPHY
Skoptlclim. ll&lt;Wivima, llo&amp;·

.

=-=~.!~:t
n&lt;&gt;ioc. I'&lt;&gt;Silnl
EDP

llflHlrilic Chances in tbo Rip.-ampu in tbo o\llheho•n
~Or Doro&lt;h~

Posung fi'P-}()6() ·Comm.•

falllest'83

Dig&lt;\ble Planets performs In Alumni Arena
Saturday. Rain !Ofced eveflt indoors.

Demal Medtcrne. Lme t 27595
ltON.cOMPEJITIYE CML
HIIYICE
DeJital A.Jsmant ISG·~m·

Dental McdK"•ne. Ltnc 1.&amp;.0798.

ue

5-5·2

2222 Punllc Safety'sVleekly Reporl

- ,o
f--..... - ofNllllc_,._

n..
f10I1owtttC ....
~to t l l e O a , SapL%4-30:

• A wallet contammg cred11 cards personal papers a.nd
$121 an cash was repoflect m&lt;Ssang Sepl_ 24 !rom Capen
Hall

• A wallel . oootaanong casn. credn cards, pe&lt;SOnal papers and a ba.o.,.card was repofled mrssmg Sepl 24
from a book Dag1l!n' on the runnmg 1rac1&lt; AlUmni Arena
The v1ct•m also reported thai someone caHed her alter 1he
thett reqvesung her PPIN- raumbef

an

• A Goodyear Hall res!denl reponed Sepl 25 that someone entered has room through 1he balhfoom Window and
too!. a casseue recorder two lapes a boot knale and a
watc11 . worth a comt&gt;&lt;ned •alue ol $ 190
• A woman repofled Sepl 29 that she had been recetv·
1ng harassang telephone calls !rom a man With an appar•
ent footlettstt. According 10 Public Safety, ltte woman has
srnce moved inlo 8!J9(ller dorm &lt;Oom.

�-..-...----7

7

Let s go Gopherin
Taylor delivers
Rabn lecture
on Oct 21

O
l9din&amp;

C....... T.,._,

Pla.D., ODe of the world'.
auJhonbel 011 lbo lDilli'IIC~ between animals 10Dd Ibm
enYirorunean, wtll JR«:D1 the
third 111111111 Hermonn Rahn Me-

s

morial~. p.m.~ 21.
on Butler Auduorium in Fatber
Hall

The=:~and
Design.." I spoil,.,..... b)
School or Mrdicl"" and
Bl&lt;!llltdK:al Sc~ and i frtl'
and open to lbo publoc_
Taylor' the fll'51 0\atles P.
Lyman Proressorof BIOlogy 111

Hanard Un"emty, "'ilne he
rcttned hi dociOnte &lt;tud~ In~
under Lyman He h., ~n dt=·
tor of the Conoon:l Foeld Stall&lt;&gt;n
of Hllr'ard' Mu um ofComparatne Z&lt;lolofy """" 1970

act"" field ~archer

An
througbou1

tm ~r. Taylor"'"'

a rtseardl OCICiltllol Iii ith the E'.aSI
Afncan etennary Researdl
Orpniza1.io.. rn lbo I 960&gt;. He
~
prof&lt;'iSOr of an una!
ph}!&gt;lolog) at the Uru"""'ll) of
'ajrobo, Kt~~ya. on 1977 ., btl&lt;
conunuong hi dunes at Harvard.
In tm laOOntOI)', he bas
piJoced rheas. boo . bng.\roo&gt;,
cheel.ahs, gazelles, """""· goa
r. and even elephants on 1
treadrru11to im•estopte temperature regulation and the m«:lwuc.
and energetocs of looomoiJon.
A member of the auonal
Academy or Sclenc:cs ince 19 S.
Taylor serves on the ednonal
board or the Aml'riron Jmmool of
Phys10log) and os clwrman of the
Intmmion Conuru oon of Comp:mltJve PhySIOlogy

Se sion will
discuss reform
in health care

0

auooal bealtb-care reform will he the topoc of
the 13th annual meet ong of the
etworl: m Aging of WNY, In ..
to he held from 8:30a.m to 2
p.m. on Tuesda) , No•·· 9. on the
Buffalo Hilton. Ste•·en Pogeon.
.S. assololant secretary of he&lt;ilth
and human ..rvices and fom-.er
Erie County legtslAtor. "''II he the
lwlCileOll and keynote peaker.
A panel P""""tation "'ill offer
the perspective. on health-care
reform of representatives of trndotJonal med1cine~ 11 natwnalized
&gt;ystem. the insunux:e tndustr}
and the r=oarch c;ommunit~ lbe

ethical and moralts.u•os assocoated with health-care refonn aho
will he addre&gt;sed
Panelist:s will onclude Deborah
Rtchter. a physician 10 privat.t:
practice. eli meal as ostMt profe&gt;sor of family medicoo&lt; at UB and
a proponent of a national S} tern;
Frank Colantuono. president of
Independent Health Inc.: Jurgis
Kanwt. a researdler and professor at Buffalo State College. UB
clinical assistant professor of

family medJctne. and co-dm::ctor
or tbe Primal)' .c ., Raource
Caua' II UB; lbo ~- 1UcUrd
ZaJIIC, ct,.tam o( SRlt:rS Hooptal, and I repmentlltl"" of tJx
Medk:al Soc:oety or Ene Counly
The CIOSI of the p&lt;Ocnm. lll•
cl · Iundt and porbfll. is ns
R.e$ervatiom m

be made by
o• 3 For fur11M:&lt; tnfonrtaiao
call 29-2922

Readings set
by women
aywrights

C5

The lntemauooal Center
for Women Plttyvonghts
"''II Jlle'tDI "4pl&lt; + I." a pro·
g111m of SU~ged readong• from
pb) by fhe \loomtn at 1 p m oa
tnn&lt;b) . O&lt;t 25.'" Hau ...n,
nter for CorucmpurOU"'' An ...
1fO l •tn \1 • Buffalu
lbe pbp•ll~hl,· &lt;&lt;OICJ. aU til
bled "1th CB. IIMUlilh 'f'&lt;"'""'
•era! su~&lt;d readtng' and rrodt•:t&gt;Ons of play b) "'""""' from
the roled Stales and abroad Tilt
Oct 25 program ..
&lt;cl"'
110ru f
the f&lt;&gt;llo\o 'l'lt' ploy-.
"Seq
ered'' by Lee Huni&lt;Jn&gt;.
ciJrected by Ahcta Banner. ''Thai's
The Wa) It Is." b) Genru.lt
Mtller. dtreaed b) Ltnda Lmgjcl.

,n "'"'tde

"Into HIS Senu:nces,• a monologue
by Laura Quonn, '"th Susan
Son:nsen d'""""''; "'--." b)&lt;
Tarnm) Ry.o, "'tth dm&gt;roon b)

Mareul Mornson. Megan Ten) ·,
"Breakfast Caul." dtrected b)
Lorna HiD
For tnforrnaiJOO about tbe
!ntcmational Center for Women
Pill) wngfn&gt;. call Anna Ka)
FlliiiCC. UB a&gt;soCtlllt profe&gt;""' of
Englo&gt;b. at 645-2575 For onfor·
mauon about thl prodLICIJon. call
Lmda Leng)·el at 2-0661 or
Hall"' all at ~-5 2

Stoke to direct
tudent multicultural affairs
D

~AStabs ha
been named dtrecwr of tbe

Offott of Student MuhK'lllunl
Affai" at U8 As dua.,&lt;Y of thr
office, pan of the Ot \ISOOO of tu
dent Affajr.. stn~...... ,u be respon tbl&lt; for prondong
can1p.1 -v. de act" 1lle'l. to prornol.t
mulltCUiunlo m and celebrate tbe
diH!:r"it) v.1th1n lhe ~\com­
munity

tol..h conttnu~ tu ~·c a"
dortC'IO&lt; of the Ronald 1:.. Me wr
Pos.t -Baccalaureatr Achte\ctnr:m
Progr.om. an ac~mtc )eat and
summer resean:hlnlemsh•p program designed to de• &lt;lop the
anal)tical and research sl:.ills of
students and ultimately &amp;&gt;StSI and
prepare them for doctoral stud)
A UB staff member fe&lt; SO\'en
years. tokes also os duector of the
Special 5eJ:'i= Pro]CCI and halo
been a senior counselor in UB'
Educational Opportumty Program
He receiVed a bxhelor' s degrtl' on
ps)'Chology and convnumty mental
bealth and a mas~er's degree in
college coonseting and Sllldcnt
personnel. both from UB.

I I I &lt;

Three earn
tax program
certificates

I It&lt; • ". I&lt;

'

'· ( .. c

.'.&gt;'

Tbret tax pmfHSICIIlalo
b..-~ ....,., ved cerltfi
from the Graduate Tu Ceruft&lt;:*
PrQpam. run by the In btlll£ for
Taa Studoes on tbe
Sdlooj of

0

M.,..ement
The dtree--Deborab Toa:o
AdorW\. EA. f l..oc pan. an
accountmt
C&gt;bemeuc Com-

••th

mun.caK'Ifl Syu.trru.. Om~Jnt

A Learman. C'PA. of Grand
Island, of the accounun finn
Cbmunt A Learman, CPA . and
R o~ R L.&lt;belhoer &lt;• Orchard
Parl, of tlw 3\.""COUhllltf' ful'n ~·f
Ma'oQn. B= &amp; Atl..oa.,.&gt;n---t..-.
'''mr~ ntnt tv. &lt;t.nu•1l&lt;"'

•dttun

tht yt:a". m.amlil1nmF C'-Lt::llent
''~'"~ v.tth thr an\ofatutr
~ Gf~tUte Ttt'&gt; Ct:mfh.o:M
Pn.~ pt'O\ tde ~Om.J'R'he-fl.,J'I.t­
IU. 10\lr'lklmn for prtlil!'~tfWh

.. ho deal "tth mmpl«

w

~~.,ue&lt;tt The program "Ta:l"'tuztU
1&gt;1 the I~I'Nl R&lt;'tnue s.,n._.,
a~ 1 qua.hfted '-pon'-Of t.•f t.-onunu·
10r educatiOO program&lt; f&lt;W lndl ·
'oduah enmlled to pnctiCt heture
the IR.'t
The lnlolotule for Ta.• Stud.1e 1
rego&lt;~rred "'"h the '&lt;"' Yori.
Statt Board of AcrounllnC) a&gt; an
offoc1al spono,or of conunuong
educll110f1: .cou~ for CC'111fled
pubjk accountan1 ...

Em t Falzeder
to give lecture
on Freud

0

Emat Flllreder " an
Austnan P'~&lt;boanal)" and
'n~urer at 1~ UntH~:f\.H) of
Sallburg "'IK"" an:hl\id re..ean:h
reccntJ) ru.rned UJliL"il~ tbat
allummatc~ s.~mund f--reud'\
ulumatc pe)\lml\lll about !he
CUral l \ C pov. Cf'\ Ul P')Choanal)1h. rhtt'ap) hal"'-' unckr"!!l·(,.-c'
the dtffo&lt;ul" he had "11h
.. (.'OUOIC:f·tra"n\(t"~'l: lU\t" •. for
ctna1n pallent\

Falt..eder v.tll dJ....:-u"' lhl" cote
on a pubhc lecture at LB . "M)

Gr.tnd Patoent.

~1\

Oucl Tormen-

IOC."Itl beheldat.Jpm m Oct
I M. on lt(JI! Ckm&lt;n; Hall
H" la.1ure " 'P""..oral h) the l B

Center tor the StU&lt;!) oJ P..)Lht'
anal) 1 dl1d Culture and the Department &lt;&gt;{ 1&lt;:1dcm l..angu;o!'&lt;"
and Lttc:ratU1e'
FaJuder ,., Cll-cd.nor of the
Ferenw-Fn:ud correo.puodenc;
t Hat\ ard

l 1nt \ ers1t\ Prt-\s ) and
fQil1'1er re-carrh felk,.. at the
Bahnt An:tmt.~ at the ~~ "" ef'lt)

of Gene, a
H1~

tall.. v. all

1c.:u~

on the n:l.t-

uonslup between ~rtud and one of
tu ) hnheno unnouced.. but c-.-

tn:mel) rmportaaL paoent&gt;-the
extraortbnat) Frnu Elfned&lt;
Hmchfeld. a woman "' no&lt; onl)
fasconated Freud. but nearl) dro•&lt;
him cruy wtth her rc&gt;tstance to all
forms of therapy Her treatment
and it:s final faolwe morl.ed a tummg point in Freud' behef in the
ability of psychoenalySJs to cure
serious newttic illness.

T-sh1rt sale will
benefit children

~tO-~

EDITOit:

cr.s:

A•ESEC B!JHa•c a~ orgarua·
110"' 1n the S1vden1 UnO"l "" i

• Become coear ao::.t

se T·Sil rts the we&amp;&lt; o• Oc•
• 8 A procee&lt;ls " 1 00 seM 10
the cht o,.en s h()Spt1a ,.
Sa·a1e o The s •rls w 1 ha•e a
co!Orfu p.cture or • eo back
a"d "' say Save t~ C N
dre~· on the lront The s ·ts

"''' sel lor $12 aoece 5 ''""'
the sa e of each sh 'L w go to
the ch&lt;ldren s toosp Ja
yone
0/hQ IS onteresteO tn 0\Jy"''j

shiftS can contact us
!he Stuoent Un•on

hroug~'

poA&amp;JLa.MCUATM

Alf'SEC BuffalO

Advice to prevent
date rape
D£AII MDIIBERS OF THE
C.\MPUS COMM ITY&lt;

We!CJJme to !he llegr'fVll &lt;:J a
roew school
• ou heal" a n
aoout 1te fl'lEii'ltWl9 &lt;:J a .......er&amp;&gt;ry
expeoence A ..-wer&amp;&gt;ry s a comfT'Illli:Y Wt1n SITitlarmes to a City
1011\'1'1 &lt;:¥ ne&gt;gi"'OrtlCll We canl
exped 10 ha\le a 'p.JSI'"' ·camg
C()(1"ffiJ(""l l6lleSS we take respao.
s.bt!Jty for !he way we lfea1 each
otner nIS ~to respecl !he
roghlS ard ca&lt;e
welbetng &lt;:J eacn merroer o1 !he us
C()(1'YTlJ("Oly
In o..r COfllTU'II1y dale.'acqua&lt;1lance rape IS~

Dale rape IS defnecl as loroeci

lllWaflted nterco.sse v.m a pe&lt;-

sm you know Make ro rT1IS1ake
aboul t rt 1s &lt;Wl act a WJience nIS
1101 a crrne o1 passoon "' merely a

•es&lt;JlcJ~
.oa~

h l$W1
ISa

cJ a:1&lt;&gt; s boc:l\&lt; and ere s

To helo tn'I&gt;'E!'II dale &lt;ape
'fOJ

neeos a10 ~"'a 'l!iato'ISf'llp

•

~Ctea1y Bed"

'ect.. as.-sert'....e.

-e

• Do ""' ........e assurc!ICriS'
""" rneon;

• Mal-e S&lt;.&lt;e ~ ~
irO Wit"! ...-..om VOw art! gong OU!
inl wher'IIO !!&gt;:DeC: you bao::&gt;.

rnm

• ~&lt;!INa)
~
, _ 'IOU l.l'leaSV

•
I

.ro

Don t g-.e " 10 pressure
• Be aware t:l t'CM tTlJCtl -=ohOI

you \le cons.med Alcx:h:tl .,.;
drug$ rna)' C10uO 'PI~and yr:u dale s'

• Oont leave a pa-r,. a
""6'1

SOC&gt;a

someore you"""" lfJSI

met

• ...._.eops l•st dale

cre . - ., a p.JilloC ptaee

scme-

H you fee you- rrgllts ha\19
been vda!ed go lO fnenas who
can gMl you emot()l".a• 51.pport
Ccln'.act PuoiiC Sale!y wt'tOCI1
~ lemale ofhoers aned
to asstSI you Puoi!C Safely, faculty and/Or SUift members can
PtJ1 you on corttaa W&lt;th a oounselor Or can !he Counselng Center . 645-2720, ex Crtsts SeMces
Ho! Line 834-31 3 1 Remerr'tle!
!hal date rape os never the
\ltCtJm s fault For more onlormato'l cortlaCI the Counseling

Ceotel: a the Se&gt;CtJality Educaoon Centet. 829-2584

--..f'IMA

0rac:t7 ~Cenret

�8

Facts abolll
improved

reading skills
lost in a sea

j
~

of media
misinfo.mUJtion,

UB professor
says

~

obthtoes on the Unilod
of CaChe
'")' • ''!hose clw
&lt;:01&gt;cluliion tha! the n:adin~ pro&amp;.--....&lt;)
f)( tOOa) · ~ !iiUdeob meet or e•a:l!ld&gt;- o f - from """'1
tat.H. "As

1P r8a ........ tiD
COIIbay, ''lf:lere ~ absolute]
question that American children read better today than
they did 10 years ago, 300 that they read better I0 years
ago than they did I0 years befcxe lhal." says Michael
Kibby. jX"Ofessor 300 chair of Ire Depanment of Learning
300 lnslruc:tion in Ire UB Gtrouate School of Educalion.
Writing in the September issue of Journal of Rending, a
jX.tblicarion of Ire lnlf:lnatiooal Reading Association,
Kibby says the widely beld PJ1&gt;!ic notion that the reading
ability of American studems has declined is a myth that
must be debl.m!&lt;f:d because it produces wJSie and despair.
"!'he reason the publoc docsn 'L
...ading ability has omproved !ilead~y over the la&gt;t 150
)'ears is because roponer.; wnung
oo this wbj&lt;a oftco can't intcrpr&lt;,t
statistical roporu." says IGbby _
"'They dnlw maccuratc conclusoons
from comple• cbu and &lt;nd up
pan&lt;lc:ring to our "''Or'St f"""' about
tt~ sene of AIIlerian education "
The """"" must be set straight.
53YS IGbby, bet.-ause the publtc
alarm that r=lts from these modio

~that

hullabaloos isn't harmless.
Mylhs 11bou! poor readmg. he
odds, halle led not only to d&lt;spwr
"""""&amp; ti:OOber&amp;-who have them-

selves come 10 believe them-but to
wbat'l!e'
seri&lt;s ci quicl:-fix
panaceas like~ *'&lt;ling.
bad~ cril&lt;:rian tcsiS for
glade promolion and national testing
Jli'Olllll!l1S. In the meantime. bona /ilk
educalional ;_,.go UJIIlOiic&lt;d by
the plblic and politicians alil&lt;e."
Kibby 53Y' one 5LCh bona [a
issue;.; the f~= to respond 10 the
fact d:l3l. v.tiile they IR far from
ilfuerale. less lhan half ci 17-year.
aids an: adcp or advttnaod rcadols.
LegiSlators and gowmmenl olfocial!;
who are unaware of this ""'promot·
ing various kinds of poot-s:eooOOary

calls-.

.

,

educatioo and tr"""''l' Pfll111'""" for
,.,hdo rmsl of high sdxJol ~
may not be ll"f"Jed.
It is Ul'lji05Sible to deme global
coodusoons abou1 the readong
l&lt;""ls oC U.S. children because
before 1968. Ibm: was no systematic national assessment or trend
analysis of edliCatiooal progress tn
the U.S .. accordong to IGbb) .
tia-'tng ~-....u~ all data denved
frtm ITI&lt;R than • OCIIIlO} &lt;i'"'heo

stud.,. ""'"' • OODIJ.ooing ~.
AEP ..Readmj! ~ """''

bul the

DO ~hang&lt; tn ..WUS.

5tudeata .. CllrlldM ..12:
• Unqua!of&gt;ed Sllll......,.. dainung
thai tOOa) •• hog)l school !iiUdeob
.,.., les• htcratc than on the past are
100111) em&gt;fl&lt;&lt;&gt;tJ&gt; and ooc ba&gt;edoo
daJa and fat.'t
• "Then anJ ""'" ..
"'IUTlltll
the """"'IU:&gt;KHI tha! &lt;here " ...

Sl""""

conbnual gam tn readtng ;;abtin)
througbool th" entul)
• A•'llllable ""'tandordor...oon daJa
show tnctease&gt; from the mod191 Os through the early 1950&lt;, but
"-nee then the daJa ""' rru-""«1.
• Scores on the 'AEP.fl.&lt;allmg
as.teiSm&lt;lnts. pmbabty tbe most
sophisticated oC all the &lt;ests dio;cussed, mdicalr C&lt;liiiiJI&lt;IaJ and
signi:fic:anl Uta-oases in r.eading

· The) drav.

1naccu:nte conduswns
from comple• data and

and"""rswdi&lt;s. ~
and rmorming ~ rnlthe NatJMal Assessmolil' OUiW:aoonal

end up

pandenn.,~

to our

"orst fears about the

Progn:ss (NAEPJ ~ IGbby ~
lh:Jl ''all dal.l 0\'llilable for coroa;ting
post and """""' R:ll&lt;liq;

-

st.rte of Amencan

8bili6es

educatoon .

display no OO..'Owanl spiral oi reading R:SI: sca:es...
,.
H.is conduSIODS""' .. follows:

............ _,....

• All availabk cbu debunk the
mym that Ibm: has been a &lt;lechne
tn reading abilities of grades 1-8
students in the past 150 yean.
• "!'hen and now" and ·
oestaodaniWolio Studies through
the late t 960s iodicate a continual
goin in reading abibty. although u
may be modest.
a Since the mid-1960s.. the daJa
are mi1od-all =ndarclization

DONOVAN

proficiency from 19'70-90.
• Secondary Sllldenls
read
beoer than Sllldenls in the l
and
e:nier. II isn't clca- if IOOay's ~
lilY Sllldenls read bootr dat Sllldenls
2D yeao1&gt; ago. l:u the hesi available
dala AEP) IJ1dicale they do.
In the ''then and now" studir:s,
IGbby foond DO evid&lt;!nce to su.&gt;:--.
port • cooclusion of declining
,

"

a........-

·. .._the

tl(ber&lt;nle'ilr:d."

In
,.,,;,.. of tlt'Dds from
"'n::wndardlnh- and
-~- Sll&gt;doc:s. Kobb)- foond
the mo-""«1 newlts no cause ror
cbpalr - n.e.e stuclon ..., used b)
pubb&lt;heri oC Slandordized """ to
~""' currmtl) u~ tu agm~
l&lt;'h""·emenl~tst

l 'nf&lt;lrtmlaldy.

he } '- II " ,..,....., I")' ible to
ctollml for lhc: change!. m demo~ 10 fX1pUiaiJi:wts stlldoi!d I
f""1 thai matler&lt; Jco.s to •the pubh'&gt;her than 10 thoot using the dati
ll)analyu""""'Tb&lt;- AEP """'
oondudrd m 19b!l• ....,.., tbe fll'Ol
nauooalo- or owdcnts"'

r.....

thefoddsoC~~

and liCIC!ICC. Today.

AEP COI&gt;o
duels n
I1CijUalliOIADd
tborougb ......-of mare dian

10 IICIIdonuc- ~ """'"'
eizblyean
Tb&lt;- ftnt 'NAEP n:adon@ ...,.,..
moot ,.... &lt;&gt;CJI!duaed tn 1971 and
bas ince been aclrninisli:red 10 9--.
ll-lpl17-ye•-olds in 197S.
' &amp;4,
and'90~·~·
rigomus OliiJlllmg d&lt;sign lhal
leSII
in a sample n::peseillllllivr
of lite U.S_ pqoul.olian in l&lt;:l'ml\ of
regim. sizdt)'pe oC cammuni!y.

·ao.

gmderand~. ltibby

also loolzd ~ .., NA£1&gt;-&lt;lOIIductr:d
Sludy of Youtl£ adults ll-25 10
assess the reading abilities of!bose
00 longer in scbool.
Kibby apees wllb OlbOIIOI ....
"""' in the 6cld thai mding ioslrucIJOn .-~s to oO.:n SIUdenls 10 1111PY
the higbrr-lewJI skills of logic. infer.
cnce and S)'lllhesis to reading '1Cl15.
Th&lt;re &lt;fllllllto•also be. jlll:lll:r .....
of mu11ip1e au in ......:liQg illstnrlian, lbe says. 001 only Nl18live 1ellS.
l:uexpoo;iny ~- orimcc.
malb. ea-J 'IOXl:S as well

. . . .. , ...

•

t

•

f ., f

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                    <text>......

/los lhe detlls shall8 &lt;U.
IT8'lY all!B ate

~abc:Uhll'

fiJlre .... medlcli

care.

Medicine, geovap y, anthropology combine force for new ulddisd.plinary
cou.rse that looks at health and illness from social and cu1tura I perspectives
!NORDEllTOIIIIdl:nl...s
lbc~ol
"""illnea..!Jb~and
~-~d.tltumms--wbilebioiocJ·

c:ally

--croupsofindivicNals wbosbmunique
II"'JJIllPhic and IOCJOCUimral ~ This ' '
..... oftm dewmines tbe typiS of m...:.- thai poq&gt;le
expcric:oae ·111&lt;1 how they J&gt;I'I'Cl"livc tb&lt;m.
u~ thil ~ 1s 111e coo&lt;q~~ be·
bind~ M&lt;dacmo." 1 _..,.,..., bein&amp; offe:nod
10 ~ medical srudetti and lld........S ~
IIUdans. bY lbc Sclbool ol ~ 11111 Biomedical
ScleDco$, tbt ~ of Anthropolocy. 11111 tbe 0.,.
perllnerll of Sacia1 """ Ptew:utllivc Medic::ine.
_
to imrod""" ~and anrtltropoiDcy
imo tbe modical tcbool curriculum so"'"' beOer inform

e....,.

A~Jdcnt&amp;ltboullhe~andeilmicdcu:rmittallls of

humiD disaoc.. saidiRicban:l u..,pror.......of podLarri&lt;:s
iD lbc ~ ofModieine llld odjunc:l ~in
lbc Dq.rlmcnl of Anlbropolo&amp;y.

While c:ourses exist in intenwiorW health and
lrliDICUIJinJ beal!h-&lt;:are issues II Case W....., ile8erw
Uniwnily, Harvard. 111&lt;1 lbc Uai"""'ity of~ dUs
is a flnl for UB, lM Aiel.
"1be pl. in tbt broodest ....,., is 10 m&gt;k&lt; medical
students aware oflbc iiiip(lrtOIICe rJfbeha•ior as • facmr
ln bealtiL Since our medicine is stroogly dri.., by IlK&gt;-

Josical modds. bc:bMor is Often Bi&gt;'m IIICIOIIdlry .....,.,...
unco,- said A. T. .....,._Jr. pofeslor of anlbn:lp&gt;IQCY, who lidded ihat """" pont)'
_ _ , belllioloci&lt;aJilld behavicnl c:auta of
And it is hoped ihat 1M could ...... ~ ~
ilqc:r, e&gt;pecially
tbt --..nl olbancr bet~. JI'lillCticine.~beahh ..... llouoin&amp;"atl'B
Steqmionn lidded.

II"""'

T

hilr.modicalllllldmb orultuo&lt;d ro&lt;u~nn~
ddfamc:es iA illnes !hey aeed"" "imell«tutoo ~"' ~ Ill. ID ooier"' botJtr untior·
- - ' how dillertlll illn&lt;:oocs. ..... tbt percqlliOb of tbeoc
illae$le$. arc l'llldifali:d m dilli:mtl CiUimnll p1lllpS. sud

""- J(

vv

Donald lloUoct. Uli&lt;ltlrl profeosor of •ldll~
~ ~- oiJ;o prOOdos ~
de fmm odler fldds.
anlhropi:llol)'
...oai
and pn:vmtive medicine. wilh "clinical ~ 1bal

w

OOII!dbe- ... --~ ..-

...........

in IIIIJ&gt;IJrily po11p0 in 11m socldy.- s...prwm aid.
t::lunng lbc
eiectlve c-..:, 5IDdr::ou ""
&lt;:q&gt;OSCd to •anous ~-md ~by fac-

ultyfmmditferaadoeparunents.laaid.Tbecumc:ulu

IA.........,IIlldenls~ llllllbona) e~

IIW""""OIIdi.....,~llll:il•11k~

~or ·

l earn bo• to a ~eo

*

..-•

nu:tnuonal ruttu• thrOOI&amp;h

•••"P"""""' ~or powt~~ *
DOlt

..oo,

Slllderu-., """' ~.,~ ..
fl&lt;lUII} . lM ..ad, and h..,l
ot\Jon-

tbe--

tspeaaily •1Jm ~ Wtll! ddf...,.. prof~ bEJc.

~""-liozddf....... o p - Sllll.
Jlf0'1dod. gn:M forum b d ....... and..,..,.,.,...""'
.. around a lllbk lOr • ~ penod """ ...........,..
eacl1 olh&lt;n' &lt;OilC&lt;niS...S pcnpectl-~ ~
It ..
r... harnmc:nnl- fUiure lllpC$ (ortbt

.wo -.""""""'

"""""'
Tbe-ai!OD--~""""·A.JDS

11111 LfiDCDlteast m1htCIOilltl01of ltumlot beboYIOr. lM
poolll-lhlllbcCIIIft'JI'DC" ol tbt loner (~ by

......

~--

de{ore5111ice alld

Cln::IIIL'tbe ·

.......,.._.

~COilla:l . . , . _ ............. I

mil1cdoer~

rarm-.

the.....,.._......,....,_

ooc:tudes lcautes 001 1ht culnmd IIDd en\'llOillllellllll dctn·
minanu of eli,._, traditional cor&gt;ccpts of hotoaltb IIDd

H-~plll&lt;t'tl&gt;al ~tbt~
of dJiiea&amp;. lM uocl. fU ~. in Buffalo. boa&gt;&lt; 10
many dd'f&lt;mlt odlDie Jl'OilP', one .., fiad "aobc" do

heali.nc. cultw-alaspocls of fenilil)'. tbt ~ liSJli'C1'

""""' such as Schi&gt;tooornlascs or 11 rer II

of IWU'ition. and othoiotl) and biology

pan-

�2

•

}

lh&lt;n.--1111
It"'

lorlf IJtl c( ecll••
..,.,._, """

c(

................ Ht

IMO'UmellU.

yeonc(
c(

"-*

•And afler mlW

R
dtvdoped m

a.atov
o:xpocu 10 have
C1al\ •
black bdl.
1\JW ........
clop
.,., hdpfulro br •~ on
m econonucs from Ncr1lrwalall
...,.n from your mardi and Uno....ml) in 19SI .
your pro(esullll. • br uy . , pro011 a
....,.. ..,.. Ford
•'&gt;ID fora,.,........... dyourproIOrCompM) lhltlosaall7 ~and
fo ionai~~J~e!!:SU and &amp;i&gt; you .,
U~Ciuded won. on -....oaol - IJilllOI1IIIIIIID expr:ncnce chtrm:nl
8lld proclud ~
lllmp II ..-.c~mo your pmpero&gt;e
'1 hne lh&lt; ddnnatve
and l1llke$ for a fulltr life.·
o( tor. I*' c( lh&lt; liW\el .....,.a
O.W becamt a pro(eMor on lh&lt; for lhe lidsd.• br uys. "I ..U my
o.p.un.a c( AaxJunlill&amp; and Law suderu lhol ond !hey &amp;"' ..._,.
m lh&lt; UB Sohool c( ~
8111 llllhoup lh&lt; product ll&gt;dfwas1
when br wa m
mod-forues.
bun&amp;Je, lhe rnarUs:ma chJiribulloo
111M yeon oC 01bcr ecllvrues Ht
,.... actually well~. ThcD Iller I·
was 1 mmober c( lh&lt; U.S Ann) m went 11110 ortla1lllbONII lllllltdmc
haly duruJ&amp; won1 w.- n. and had a
...t.m 1 ..,.,aahll&lt;d r..- a wtWe .,
loo&amp; career 11
---------E u r o p &lt;1 n
Ford
Motor
lJUCii:s
Compant He
Y.'OrK
"Bill I ....
eamlldllo,.de1..-~
u nderem ·
""" and prac·
r~
~-o.c-

I,_.•

a.-.. ......

in
Jw/o
psyc
gy
proved veT)' usefolthe Freudian notion
that there's no such
"My

COMf'liTER 5CENCE

..,_
~-­

.._C. ......... pro-

'-"ol~.,...,.
ha ~ r--.d 10. second~

wmasaor 5!»aolltlereC
Group on

Anliclallnlellgenceol
the~

110nlor~
p..ling

-

IMchinery (SIGAAT), lhe
pmcipal sociely lor OCJlliUer science.

SIGART apmsors oonterences. ~ ondwor1&lt;·
ohops ond pUblilhes •
r--.asr ond oonterence
plca.li iQ6 aboo.l artilioal
illell1gera.
Shapiro. a member or UB's
taa.«y ·sinoe 1977, ~as
chair ollhe Cleparrnenl ol
~ Scier'CI8 from
tQ84.90 ond was acting •
a- 11om 19711-79. Her&amp;ceiwod his dodorate In 1971
1rom lhe u-s~~y or w;s..
c:onsln. Shapiro has P&lt;i&gt;lilhed - - boclks.

~The~

---

dMilicial~

a.na ......... -...or....,.t:~o

...... : -

.,.,.._~131101'*

...

::=..':".:
Mocbopa Bar
... UOCIIIIOD

Andhaswi&lt;kvand)!dacademo&lt;:

..,....mhas-.

thing as an acci.denJ

tens~•·• readin

underlies much O~Trry'
~
academic ""'Ork. "

aJded by hi .,..

lll Chinken ax:b
as freud
Ia C O l i bOn,
is
emerndy eo«·
gttoc.. prococclong
from lDpoC Ill lDpoC ...1lh
....,. lt ' o also cte.:. as br launctt&lt;s
&amp;niOiht deW!sofbisexpenences.tbal
br.s • born sto&lt;yldler
"In Wocld W• D. I .,... poll oC
lh&lt; anny of OCC\Ij&gt;ltiOII. although I
never&lt;lwcombat.lnmyoulfnlwas ,
lh&lt;drum mtptn lh&lt; mordlln&amp; bond,
1 cbnoc&lt; plottr in the ooncen hand.
and lht Slrul8 bass plottr ID lh&lt; JIU.
band.
'
"In the army, after basic llalrung.
I was assign&lt;d to a hand on Italy 1bal
had boca poll o( the 36llt infiUIO')I.
1\lW Rome was ta1ccn, the hand was
rnodelhe post bond lllhe Ftfth Army
Rat Center. The Cenla' had DnJI·
nally been built by Mussolini as a
monument to Italian fascism. and,...,

a..w

"""'enlhu-

... _ .. lc.qoul.......,..._......,lll' ..

--'111¥

"'""'Y

=~
deadechocan·
pldi&lt; 111)1 PhD.
1
f OUAd OU1 I

"'"'""""""'

oou~c~a · , ~Ue

•

1h&lt; Ua"'Cmly
dM.ocbipll.so

one day I ~

ctded to so
dowaiDWoyat

Swe Unm,r-

s.ty and enroll
m1degm:procramthcR. BUII-ed

..-til tdl you ..... ...,... · · when I to&lt; thcR I found out tba ~hey

oalyc.e I nw ~oor-. rti'J_,_
wtlicb poves tile . c( . .
tba ••
011 ...
. - bas a
for 1 cloa1LWhaJ br came 10 UB • I '112.
foooad
earlier expmence

,_,....too

"*"

a.-..

very llolpf1li.. . ac:adt.moc ~ecle!:Dr ~ ... crq&gt;l
ID)'
and Meafdl." br
say ""Wba1 you
for • ....,.
mduslnal fmn. you devdop akqlaCI
!hot you
nol devdop
otherwdoc. I earned a PILO. 111
ness poioc) from UC-8c:rltd&lt;) • ...S
studied l&lt;lC10iocY tbere .. - tlllder·
ly1nc lh&lt;ore1x:al cb:lplme 1-..d
&lt;lCOIJIXm&lt;
• Nal1b-...
and I hne a In clop And ID)'
work in poycholocy ' - JlfO"rJd very
llkfoJ..-.dle Fmldiaa tba
,_., no
...,. • ., aa:ideat
Ulldlllilsmtdlorti'J
'IIOJik.a..w·. acode.at 'IIOI'k has c(.
1101 f~ 011 iMiiluboaal orp»utioa. "taotiruboaaa bdlaVJOr IS
~• br ays. '1f you aa
lltlder-.s ..
you caD
pmlict wblt ii'IPIIIIO
Bioi you
hne 10 ~..
m..oa.
apeople.-eaaaaDy . •wu-. . nol wbll
they uy, bUll wblllhey do.-

"*'

orca-

10 ......,

Ht~aaa

coersc 1a the
Mll ... procram

Cllllod'1lle0oo-..-...SThe
Firm." ...StYer)

.

,,

~

Cllolllll¥,
..,_..,.._
...,... - .
.............

....., ..
......
.........

- - ..mod '1lle Colma&amp;

Maae&lt;nal

lloslory.

...s ec:oaomac

tllllfbuho-eJ1WIIImt

....... ot ...-..ds..cloldalc
~ l'nllieMor and The Profies,.

l.ltel} To Oo Otr 0.. "
T..,..._ aflhoaP I doll' t ratty
olf011
· lilllibllllltldl." br
tl· ., ella&amp; tbeoe ...wds- pal.
-~llwaulr!n ' ICJvttllaa

d ..,. - · · .....,.,...s..
~ lh&lt; dass and 10
-..1."
But•ID'IIllvmc • llil..-...r:

Ill ....

.._is,tt,_.,._

0....

away
... Olhor ..
........
... ,..._.aa:lliJiwilh
,
. . .,._..
.,._
.....
and
Ht - - " "

daonc .,_,...,

vo-

tllaa 10 'li'lllbble
oondiooa.abtc~c(· .

• .......t:q ..... ...,.,., lha
Cllbeo a:alt:mic !IMlkoemmQ re:fl&lt;a llis ......cl exptr·
lille. Hr's lhe c:hair c( the F.cuby
Scule Albldic:s and Rer::rat101t
I

Coomllaoe.and~Mt.sprq

by lh&lt; _ _...,. admioital ....
br ., imema1 ""iewer for 1h&lt; De·
par1lD&lt;III c( M .• , ~
Rnocw. And br ....-Jy .... asbd
lllc:hairlh&lt; ~MmorRe­
VJsioas s.tbcxmminee c(lhe Under~ Commiltt!e c( 1h&lt; Sdlnol
c(~

fer

M a tea::brr, br bas I repubiiJOD
~II) tbll br claims to

c(

• • .,.,...,.. "'

..._

....,.from,.

didn' t t\UI c{fer I dodontle in ec»-

"""""'- 'T'hm. I
...,,,. 1h&lt;
campus. I pwed lhe Wayne Sea
Law Scbool, wall.td in and told them
I wanted 10 take 1 law class They
laugbed • me and said I had to apply
font-wlucll I dod. and c:oosoderios
m) record, got in easily.
"Several yeon Iller I graduated
"' lh a low dqlee. llllhoup I didn't
wao1 to pr1ICIJOt law ond had no
lnleOOOIIt\Uidtalao&amp;lh&lt; barcum.
Buu colleague""""""' me
·
afnxlto take it. 10 I dod. and I pessal
I chd tiOitl&lt; pnc1IC1n&amp; 011the 5lde as a
membr:l of lh&lt; Micbtgan bar. The

.......

..,..

.-s

t.t:IObisdU&lt;IInod . . . . . . buildmodel
llld ..p.nes. And
10 keep in lhape. be &lt;lCllltinla lD

ID'Irard ... black belL
il'. imp~&lt;·
be a doer ralhe:l lban a
•'lldler." be says. '1 ...,... m

.,.... "'-Yo fell
10

nneeor--

....,.exlralll&lt;.

bur ••• really - - II' I nuir: 011 tbe
one '-d. Jlb7sical uacioe 011 lh&lt;
Olbcr. lW. Jlb7sical and
~ c( tba - bdp5 every
aspa:t c( oae' hfe. I ~y fed like
r ...boca very lud&lt;y10ba\oear::t.w::e
to do alllh&lt; lhin&amp;s I've done.·

......w

oo...onol _ _ ... ~ s.........,ol _ _ _ a.... - - - -..... " " " " - - 101106&amp;'8

�World Food Day Teleconference to be he d Oc . 15
OT'EN11AL ...Oict betwec.t
biolo&amp;ical clivemry
aod die IIJ'O'Ii~dim&gt;llnd lild
will be
of lbc 1011!
annual Wcr1d Food Day TdeCOIIf""'tu, l three-bourpovatll be amd
fmm(lc:(qeWasbs
Uni.......ryOct.IS
Md\'10Mdhlft11 noonmlbolnform.Ooo11nd

Tec:bnolocCenrn-,120Cicmms. onhCompus.
Admissioo i free and the pubhc , in•ile&lt;l to anend.
1'lm i~ the lhird ~-cor ....,•ve opamon:d
lh' e~'enl" uidAIIanCanftekl.eniorOICldemic -.!Vlsuud ..tj ""'faculty member
"' the Depottmenr of ComiDIIRIClll&lt;lol Tbe
e
ro &lt;01nciclt wieb "Food Wee " (Oc:t
I 1-17), "fi ill wrlh the notioa tbal ""'' n:
bc:conuna C)ol* in our coasc:iclumeu and
tbal - bne glObal and local lftpomibtlitles. • uid Canfldcl. foatl meator to lbo
UB Rlldel!r ~ &lt;JIIbo Woold Hungtt
lnt&lt;:IUI Group (WHIG)
Tbe biodi"ftl&lt;il /food theme reflects a
number of inter!
·n ooncerm of the
Unile&lt;l atioos and U arpmz.ang group~&gt;
Tbey include the coounwnc""" of ddoresW&gt;OO in tropical OOQornes. the need for
more sr.ainablc &gt;ystemsof ~~gr~CUI....,, and
effecu of population gowth on efforu to
combal hunger. Otscuruon will &lt;eoter on

"The theme combines th
ituerests ofenvironmetU,
developme1U economic ,
agriculture and biology. "
been funded by the U A.Jency for 1.-..abOftll l)e,.elopment and lbc Rq:iooo) Offttt
far Latm Amenc:o of the U. • Food and
~lUre Orpru.UUOII (FAO)
Orpm~bytheU.S . of
Commtl1« for Woold Food Day, • coalnwo ot •so
priva1&lt; voluntary group&gt;. the lelecoofcrcnce
IS upponed b) lbc FAO and U.S JO\-ml •
meol ogenctes FAO Otrector-Oenuol
Edouard s..,.,..... ,.-;u open the procam '" 1
CrcetmJ from Rome.
Oeboltng lbc • sues dunng the ftrlil hoon
...., panclt&lt;t J~ El;qurnas Alciz.ar. seen:-

rruddk hour .. ,u r.-~ 1
fdrm .
"'7eea Gold-t-1'01111 the Ml)l
M
" (New Me
W. lllld l'uJdue l 1
lldy of the -.uca~ •able of food croro
and lbc need 10 preaet"e
dm:ml),
and "Sc&lt;d ·" ClllrUftt~~ Hila.I. •
~bet
l&lt;:r method• o( med&gt;aau:ed fllr'IIIJ
btoleChnoloc&gt; lllld seed produc:rloo
Aculrdu•c ro
Young. coord&gt;Aa·
ror of the Food 01) comnunee and t&lt;:lcroa
fen:nce orpmur, -rbt theme combt...- thr
·~ of cmr mens.. de\-eiopmm&lt; «:ononuc.• .,.,cultun: lllld biO!og) lnren:s~ m
Lilt men.:a t also CJO"'CRJ Especully m
tJtc COUJttne&gt; liUITOUndiDJ !he 1unauJo
10.
then: lee IO be an a•on:nr: of lbc I ""'"
lllld lht mtc:tiCIIOII of def.,...,.,tmon. dt•el

ren«

PMn"'•

\..X

pncw lO

C"\&gt;ml

In an Oa 20 payd&gt;e... ·stuffet. UB em
plo)ee•
be d.trected I&lt;&gt; l•o . , . _ , . . fund hunrer reh~f thot' 8o,lon based
OXFAM and rht loc•l "1-nend of the No 1

••II

"""""'-

UB Dental Centennial exceed goal by 74 percent
Wl1lf thecelebnt·
lion of 111 100111 uutiverwy dwiDJ
1992-93, the B Scltool of Dental

Medicine and its dental alumni associat:Jon set out to raise $1 millton 10
provide a permanent endowment fund to
support propam ood IICtlvitiesofthe sehool
for wbicb stole funding i limiled or Wll•-.11able.

Leaders of tltc UB Dena! Ceolenntal
Campaign have IIJlllOUJICed llw they rai~
the S I million and then quit&lt;: a bu JtiO&lt;ecxceeding !heir goal by 74 pcrce.nl and coll«tlng $1.747,000 in gifts and pledges
Titc •nnouna,mc•u wu mode on Oct. I 11
the annual dinner/dance of the UB Scbool of

Medocine Dental Alumni Association b) cochairmen Roger TrifWIIuser. OD.S .. 1 mem-

ber of the Cl.us of 1961. and Rocbard A.
Powdl,opro(osarcmrntusand 1949grodu·
... of the dental school
J
tbem for the un\eding of • gtanl
banner proclmnifiJ the CIDlpiiiJO ' 5 SliOCeU
w George Selfridge of SL Louu. a I
gl"lldlat&lt;: of lbc ~ 10ilo se"'ed on
ca.mpo;go leadenlup commonee and ,. !he
current presodem of the Amencan Ac..tem)
ofOrthodon
Low J. Goldberg. dean of !he derual
lidtool sma: June 10, said !he camJWsn ' &gt;
re&gt;uhs "rqnsent an extraorduwy effort on
!he pan of the frt&lt;nds of the UB School ot
Dental Medtcllle and ...., a lnbule to !he

nouonally n:cogmzed poslllon o( e.cellentt
tharlhe lidtool has IIIWncd dunng !he man:
tb:m 20 yeon under thr deanslnp of Or
W'tUiam Fearon• "
UB' • Scbool ot OenW Medocu&gt;e on March

GLOBAL MEDICI E
Contonued from page 1

suesusuall) found in Thud World countries.
"Physicians ...., o~ naJ\"C about these d.t.seases," Lee said. and need some understood·
ing about the minoriry group&gt; rhey
in

=

thelt medical pntCIJCeS.
Clwlges in behlvior baoe • smking ompoet on rhe nse of ill hcallh. Increasing
violence and the use of guns musr be understood in !he contexr of poverty. and physi-

Runners surge
across ltle
starting line of
the Fourth An-

cians sboold h1&gt;e some fanuliarity with !he

Yalem Memorial Run held

causes of lhis violence, Lee said.
F'ltlllly. "we can use anlhropology 10 undersland how ethnic diffetenees contribute
10 incrcllled sues and anxiety, which in

rum. can lulve 1 neptive impoct on heallh."
AldtoUgh "Geographic Medicine" bas
been uccessfulas a ftrlil-time venture. then:
is room for impro\•ement 10 planning for the
furure. Lee said.

"Hopefully. ,... can organu:e !he course:
around a cross-cultural elpcrieoce · where
studenrs will be able to spend some time tn a
Third Worldcemmunu~," Pollock said. "and
experience 'Abat it's lil._t to do nJe&lt;bcioe
under very different circumstan&lt;leS. ·•
Other possibilities include lulvtng stu·
denu work wilh U.S. miooriry groups in
wban clinics and rural senings. areas tbal..n:
generally undersened, Steegmann added.

nual linda
Oct.3at UB.
The run, which
benefits rape
prevention,
draws record
crowds each
year and is
named rn
memory of
Linda Yalem, a
UB student
killed while
training lor the
New York City
Marathon.

.. as ntJW:d 0 6 In the l\llton 10 tb ftdd b)
U.S. ..,., &amp; Wor/4 RqJOrt IJII compoWma
of - Amcnca ' Best Gradwlle School ..
lnm:ent eon.lhelcltool
boc1tlllll0tll
!he nauonal leaden •• tei"IM offundo from
the Nollonal lnstnut&lt; for Denial ~
( IDR ,.E •remalfuodonrfor~ ,.lbc
&lt;dtoo1 lui gone from about S
all on I QJO to tltc C\IJ1Uiile"'l &lt;&gt;f abour
mtlhon

I

n 1981. the lOR named the &lt;;dtool thr
cou!!U) ·, fii'R pe&lt;:utlu:ed Penodontal ~&gt;~&gt; ·

ease Chruul Resean:l! Center In I
11
wa&gt; one of the fiJ'SI four dental !&gt;Chool m lhe
L S named b) !he NIDR as • narwnal Den·
tal Re.earch ln!dttul&lt; 1n Oral 8toJoc
~

"'lh the

" dlheend&lt;w.mcnc~tabl•!ohtd

~)

""'til be used

mSl:d dunn1 thr &lt;011\p&amp;lpl
the &lt;~celk:nc-1: of

IO tnlUJIWO

!he ocademl&lt; procrantS. lllld 10 de\ d-&gt;p ......
tll11l.,.~ IQCbmJ. ei!Ro:al pn.ctJIX lllld
baste~ -

Tit&lt; booonr\- C'IWrttw&gt; of !he dn&gt;e ....
Jom&lt;s A Eql;slo of Son Ok . Cahf . a
former dean of thr ~
In oddruon 10 Self~ . memhtn of thr
e&amp;mp~IJtR leadenlupcomnunee .. ....,
C.W.OO. 0 D S of K.on sroo, sma.twt
C11ncoo. D 0
of Amhel"t Ed .. ud
Dmo. ne.. 0 D S . of
)•
OrmiWI.
D D S . of Buffalo. Raben Gene&lt;&gt;. D D •
of Buflalo. oben G&amp;anoddo. 0.0 S of
Buffalo. ).,., Guttu
DDS . of II. est
of
Palm &amp;ad1. Flo _IUctwd L) :il, 0 D
Buffalo. Ru sell •&gt;tnprd 0 .0 S of Buffalo: Harold Ottman. 0 D .. of Buffolo,
Bom R..._ lm. 0 OS ofToaa"aod&amp;· Salt
Se)~ . 0 0 _ of Butrolo lllld Wolf~
Spn~ 0 0.5 . ot Rochesler

�-·

4

HEALTH-C
Many at UB are apprehensi e about the
Hnew chapter' in medical care
H.EN PETER SORJNI.

I

n:sodent

ID

nearootJr1CfY, takes I f...• mome OUt
of 1 hectoc cia) 10 pondtt lbe proop&lt;oCU
of brallb-are rdorm. h mood turns

decidedly &amp;Joomr.

"All oft~

thinking,
talking and
worrying
that has
gone on
will lead to
change."

I·

"Wiws
going to
bargain for
us? Wlwse
time am I
going to be
spending
when I see
patie111S?"

Or Sorinr 1 lbe end of I If&gt;.
ye.- JOUf1loCY drrou hrJher" educll&gt;On.
"'ludt
culmiDOU&gt;d in lu """""'
tale Um em!) of Ne"' Yor1r. II Bod!'alo. He has
...,aa.~up$200,
on udenl·louddll~doyuW&lt;d:.hr day
beg
11 S 1. . as be cheo
on " pauenu 11 Millard Fillmore
Kosprw . At 6 p.m.. be
bem summooed by bcepe: 10 IJal an
accident vrarm ..tro has .omved 111 ncarb) ~ crnrer's ~­
gtoey room.
Dr Sonnr ,.'111 frrush hrs rratruo on June. but be wonders rf ho&gt;
hard wort wrll pi)' off. 'o ular} Copi hiYe been moewoned yet under
lbe Oin- reform proposal, but Dr Soruu feel that l'"emment
cost oootrol mrght !Jmrl hr rncomt

'Put flit . . 011 llold'

"All my~ in Montano."be uy· ·. refemngsolus home.wt,
"have lbe ho&lt;rse.lbe boat, lbe l1'llC and lbe I&gt;O'f&gt;mobdcs I bad 10 put
my trfe on bold.Uke Dr. Sonru. IDIDY others affdialed •rth SUNY Buffalo 11r0
app&lt;dlensiveoboutPre&lt;rdmtOnuon'•
lh&lt;arereformproposal
Medocal education bere spr..,.1 over • city campus and out iniO nrnl
and inoer&lt;IIY clurics lind o ooosor1i
of moe Cdlduaa bospiw
Many docuon. dentiSIS- rurdenu. OIUdeots.ond odmrtristroton bere
support !be principles behind Pres relent Oioton' s plan. But !bey ""'
1101 so e~ciled that !bey VIeW tbe plan u 1 "new """""" on lbo
Amencoo Rory ."
Only those in lbo School of umng seem 10 be cheenng.
Meoco Cnnley.lbe dean of nursrn&amp;. bas • IOib-floor off..:e lhot
looks out over !be u.e.Jmed strecU of north Buffalo towanl ....,..
Fall "All of !be thin ·n&amp;. tllkingand WOfTYIOIIbal has gone 011 woll
leadto&lt;lhange.." she says "And that change will be good for numng."
E&gt;en lbougb lbo Oonton pee~ is sull hazy. she uys. ots
ernphasos on preva~t!OII and prunory care rs wre to benefit nursmg.
One prognm that h Cranle~ 0\'ersees tnm1 nurses 10 become
nune-pnrctitionas. who are able 10 treat polieDU and write prescrip!JOO . Nwte1'f1'C(otioners ..., given an unportant role in lbe Omton
plan.
Many nurses wilb bocbelor' • degrees liguR&gt;d out whrcb ny !be
winds ofchange were blowing even before !be Whrte House plan was
l'l'Veoled last ....,., "I could fill up my nurse-prlldiliooer progom a
nulhon limes over," ..ys M . Cnnley . "Well, maybe • doun."
Rha Domon, who is about to gnduate fmm lbe procnm. says.
'"Tb.rs rs a wooderful time for me." Ia bee preoent rntanship. sbe
wol'lr.s a an inoer-crty cliruc ,.irae !be mojonty of !be patients have
DO rnsurance. Behind !be desk wbere M . 0omoo doeo bee poperwol'lr.. lbe clinic' ~ ~- are posled. Rule No. I rs to "break
!be u" and make pmonaJ COII10Cl wilb pitleDU
Ms. Domoo ..ys she likes !be Ointon emphasis oo uruverul
coverage and prevention IJec:au&lt;e she sees many patients who put off
seeking care becauoe !bey don't lmow bow !bey wrU pay for iL As 1
n:sult. sbe uys. colds tum 10 pneumorua and lugb blood tnSSU"'
causes strOkes.

......... ofnlldt chi -....cl
T'be medical scltool orullbe Buffalo teadu~~g bosprtols ore 11)-mg
to train more doctors to JI'1IC[U P"'''eniJve medicioc and prunat)
care. As a forst step tov.ard stoppmg lbe proh!eraiJOII of speeoal'i~
!be tc:aching-hospiLal consoruum Imuted !be total number of rnidencies to 750. ·ow lbe) ore II) ing 10 rncreast !be proportJoo of the
resodencies that are dedicated 10 prunar) ~
T'be bosprws· goal forpnmary-carc resodc:nts for last )'car"as 42
percent or lbe 750 residency .too. but !be numbec reached onl) 36
percent. (Unfilled positrons dedocaled to primary care arc DOC con,.erted bacl&lt; to !be specialues.)
Other teaclung hospitals around !be country .,-e trying to make
similar clurnges, uys John Fnedlander. president of Buffalo General
Hospiw. As a result. be says. !be competition for rocdu:al·scbool
gnduotes who are interested in primary-core residencies is onteose.
T'be bospi1.tls try to sell recruits on tbe idea lbll Buffalo is a nice plIO live. But !be city is linked in many minds to soow. "We can't do
onythin&amp; about !be wealber." uys Dr. Friedlander.
T'be medical scltool is also trying 10 shift its curriculum to attract
physicians 10 primary care. But web change is slow. "It' slike trying
to tum a big ship around." says John Naughton. dean of !be medical
scbooL

Or.
011 uysit!OQt _... ,_...,- fllC&gt;IIty ~ ..s
~ dot CIIITiDIJ
10 pill I (J
p!'Ktl&lt;le
. • Ill
•
me4rcal
gel d - ' C1
pn....,.
t1rt t1un1 ~ ol
To &amp;IIIU room
pr8CIJ&lt;t: 1D dlote t1md .,_-, loe said. drt Olllt ...........
!lleCIJane Uld wr&amp;&lt;t'Y had to be
Ancel.a '\llboekr. ,. u
up a~ •• t
medianr • S
Y Buffalo.
_,
-...! .,.._ • • d~D~e-

C8R.,.

,,,,.,u.,.

byButfolo~Hoeptal. B..

l.,.audlello....tonelbtO.....

"""'

.,. prmcrple. It' s &amp;CXJd.- obe ..ys
c.-try hu 10
y
............,., thol ..., OlllhliO be able 10 ~ care ol all of.,.. """""'" Butobe"J doclorsii&gt;O)'tufferuadormorel'l'pl....,..,
_ .,..
10 Jd slammed.." sbe U)S

c-.-

,, .......

Her ooacems.., echoed by tlrt medical scbool's ..,._ facvlr}
memb&lt;n Pb)'SICI
may be .--ed .. w
gton .. ha•
•
~ul lobby,
lbt focull) 11
Y Buff • .,.lib """""'" thol
ore • peldlworlo: of textlr rcsean:h. and tre10J1C ....-., "'ort)
lblllbey WOD't be able 10 ~ tffectJYd~ for pomc:r,..,.,. 1ft I
govenJIIle'lll-&lt;lOftiiOiled ~ plu
"V.'bo..
10 '-JOin for D .,.. . .
s - H Sdl..liiU. I
chrucal professor of medicuae here -n.. ,.m_....ry~ T'be booplw.,..
(Or
""'"" bas .. offllCle • B alo ~ ... ....... • solar)
from both tbe booplw lind the medoalochool.) "Wboec llrne
I
going 10 be speodu\&amp; ., bee I ..., pabt:llll?"
T'be bead of the Buffalo ~ bospitols abo """"'&gt;' about
betOJ able to COftiiii!SI' for potJenU ,.,lb J0¥U1U0C111 bctidr co...,...
wileD lbeir mstitutions oany the llddillOIIal costs ol toeactaaa and
..,..,....,b AI
1b !be
beaJ1h
pJanaed by lbo
Orntoo AdminrSITIIJon pronuses10 Rduct lbe burdtll of IIDCCIIItp'llwed .,_, lhll man&gt; t&lt;:aCttmg trooprW ...,.. .,....,.. 111oe boop.w
e&lt;ecutr- are q&gt;llCill -n.. reform p.cl.age ts
10 mandole
more care but pi)' for less." u · Jolin Onnood. duef
off...,
• Ene Count) Medocal Cemer
Joseph Ruffolo, presKienl of Ouldreft' • Hooprtol, yo thai to
provide care for everyone:. !be go&gt;emmmt' s nopbaY moy have 10
be on !be 'IIOiu.me of care provoded. 11&lt;11 on iu qualrt) "liiiiJIIWOOs
Wlth an IICildenuc comnutmenl could be put 01 • dJSadv
.- be

••v&lt;nol

oov.....,.

r,_.aJ

"Changes
to the
medical
curriculum
maybe
slow: "It'
like trying
to tum a
big ship
around "

--

'"Y'Soroeoflbepby rciansot~&lt;o.achlagboop.tal

wonderrfdloteCbnlon
plan puts too much empbuis on pnmory care. 1...awtatt 8 &amp;.e.aa
1 socrat.e professor of onhoped.tcs. "'
11 tbe co&lt;on1y medacal
center. I publiC bosprW WI I busy emergency [)r 8oDe
SII&amp;JI'&lt;lS !be proposed plan might be puttn&gt;« more rnpo~~&lt;~ bly 011
pnmory-carr doctors !ban tbey """ handle. "1'bey."' good docuon,.
be .. ys. "but lbey're 1101 per-docs."
Dr. Bone recaUs • pallelil who as rd'em:d to lum b) 1 pnmaty·
care doctor and ~bowed up wilb 1 foldert..U ofX-nys that tamed0111
10 be UDilCileSSif}'. Jie says be diap&gt;II&lt;Jd dlote pot&gt;&lt;:ftt woth 0 pb}siocoJ
eum and prescribed """"' phy.al tJaerwp,'

Cllllrler ..............
If !be....., •ystem doeut'l make good

of !be~

obilitJes of pecillists.. be ..
.._ could spe...s • 1o1 of lllllllC'Y on
polients tryraa 10 figure Olll what's ..,... ...
In Springville. o small town 50 minulc5 soulb ol Buffalo. lbe
doc:ltn seem much calmer about the fut:ure of bealth attt.
Ouutde • pau of tW&lt;Hior)' """-lbll opve • offrces for QP
pediatncianl,lbe autumn (~is just
. to llln1. w.nin T.
Hoffman. ooe of !be pedWrician in !be )ndice, is • clinical
associ lilt profeosorof pedJ;IIrics lllbo medical o&lt;:bool But be
roos1 or br time seeing ciUidren. up 10 S of lbem 1 day. He goes 10
the publrc scltool . 10 lbo Cartarau us Indian Rt:oerYall(ll) Heal
Center. and to two parHrme off...,. in nearby towns.
Undtt !be medrcal scltool' s empb&amp;sts oo pr1....,. care. bis
practice ,. about 10 get computers lhat woO all""' lbe physiciom to
search !be medocal llteralllre and 10 wop electrooic moil ~
v.1th colleogues. ln !be past. !be pediatricians ha\'C: rta:ived help
from the occasrorlal reMdent"' medtcol udent who i mtereoted in
sceong "'hat v.'OI'ling"'l_the country " like. Now. under lbe new
anangcmeru. lbe Spnn~y icians will get a rCgutar resident.
Dr Hoffman rettntly joined • beolth-marntenonce crpruz.atioo.
"hich has a style of care lbot would be emplouiud under !be reform
plan. Joining !be HMO. be u&gt;·•. bas freed himlrom pap&lt;:r1I'OI'k and
allowed him to dedicate himself to te.lehing ~ seeill&amp; patienls.
"It's lbo bestlbrng I ever dod." be SO) "Secood only 10 moving
OUI here."
'-'

Reprirnec:J from The Chronicle of Hogher

Educruoon

"We could
spend·a lot
ofmoney
on patients
trying to
figure out
what's
wrong with
them.,

�-·

!TIE UUU If ILTICILUULI1

Prominent educator ay more attention need to be
paid to diver ity, ident ty and the future o youth
r,.
.,

-

... ... --·
ol...ta

Rapot1lor Conlnbulor

d!ff

Yet......, J.plf'OWPI o f . _

ACH EVE I 'G. Amenu
c:rm,. ,. ·~c v.eon &amp; """'
carryl
cra!*k '
of d&lt;alb
aaddeoo!MIOII ia 11aad de-.! of

~

II

blmiuutyand~land

that lolled to be Yo~CJ~dav'"
Yet. ocme ol tile same lltJIJiclet, valun
and IOCtJOm that IUti'CIUnd o•il ,.,.,. •n lhc
fortn&lt;r Balblo repuhl ' also can be found 111
tile
ned laiC$' y&gt;~em lf educotion.
MD..,. G=ne. 1 professor of tdocat""'
and pbtl050pb) at Teacber' s Colkge. Columb&lt;a Uniw:mry
G=ne. who prestnl&lt;:d lhc fi1'W tD 1 IICna
o( lccUires spocsored by tile OJarlone c.
Aon Endo"'-mtnl fOI' Col
1 on Urt.n
· Educauon. ,..,.,t.e
Thllrtiday about lhc
need ID
our-edueauooal -.n toward
1 pbtiO&gt;Ophy of "new p!urab m." ., approach ""here lilel'eOCt'JlrS and labels att
11&lt;omed and tt&gt;dtnt arc allowed to dc•~lop
tbeulntetdeiiiJ~ tnenvtrOIIDXIII ofclt•er·
uy and equal rqard fO&lt; all cut
To fuUy da-elop . -· ldmltt) and 1o
~a complele and equal paructpant '"
sociclr , I stt&gt;dtnl must be rqiJ'ded I I
constantly evolvmg tndJVtdual who
the
sum of many pam. G=ne sascl before 1
ofllhoul 130tnUB ' s~nlt'l'fO&lt;T&lt;&gt;­
morrovdn many CllCS, however, lh doesll'i
happen: tll5lead. children loday art '!e"'ed

.,.. ..........,..
......
......_....
..,., .....-. r... •
!lp I perD0e• I

much ofm culturF
can I keep?· and
'How I'Tll«:h do I hav
to g;ve up?"'

lrJ1q "' . , , . . _
~

•

.... ·--_.,..._
·.s..,.,.""'
y

a..-e atlaClllld ....

~-·-­

..S""-''y
SCCR'Cll&lt;id ochool •
-teX
and
f
• CW1'X\JIJa exduli&gt;'d}
IOCIIs&lt;:d 011 aparticuW tun!~

......... rep! teaS oflbe'"""'

ethnic. n~etal or rehctous co-:
grouplowbtchlbe) bdon&amp; • etuderlta
o-. bam and msed - tn Brootlya. lolled her own etMUr
ltfe u "" ttample of her
pbilcoophy "A an &lt;:ducotor. 1 ,.'011\1111, 1 IIIOChcr and • member of •
mliJOriry group. le 1&gt;1 at 10 lnltrseciiOII of
many f-.".,.."""'- 'o~ today JU'lt
one ~ To
human t&lt; 10 become

...... ol

.... a...... . wt.a~·

~-

mo"'

illlll

., •

co-.... bootltit-•
oody...,. r - IIIII

"People ai'K.ay must
ask themselves 'HoMl

Oal~

""'""

te.m to -

·

"""' and 10 ' - olben. ....... "" """' llloey
1ft and ..... .,.,~'""
10
ll l!r po&lt;
fO&lt; ~.,...poop~&lt; rlewloptdenlltt and for IChooh 10
""""'-'}·
wd

fu~

u •

Tbe U. aoech 10 II'&lt; tiiOI'&lt;
lbe ~ o( dJ• rty. Klnll:tt} and lhc
f'uhft o ( - -. youdl. Circew ""*'~!.

..

Diverse, multicultural education nece· ary to combat
the societal divisio s of the past, Ronald Takaki
ONTO ANY uru-

mc.nt Of multiCUltural
educalion.ln alllilelihood. tht•d&lt;bole would
be 1 beat&lt;:d one; the eso 1enoc. 0&lt; non-e~o&gt;l ·
"""" of multicultural Jl&lt;OI:mDS of study 1
perblpo the most controvcrsiallopte tn higher
&lt;:diiClll.ioo today.
Ye1 whilo proponent• and cnll« or
muhiculturab m argue lbetr cues .,·ilh equal
fer.w bef&lt;n • JtJrY of IICI&lt;knua. Ronald
Takal.1. ,.,ho delhered tbe fim annual
Multicultural Lecture a1 UB lasl Thunday,
S&amp;Jd for bim 1~ need for multicultu&lt;Ot &lt;:ducouon 1 bel.l evidenced not tn lbe world of
ocademta. bu1 1n soulh cenu..J Los Angelc .
Tal:ala. prof&lt; sor of Etbmc Stud1es at lhc
nivenuy of California. Berkeley. echoed
lbe words ofRodne) ng v.ben ~ osU&lt;I lhc
&gt;tmplc. yec dt~ing question. "Can'1
we all gel along?"
For Tabli. a nauonally recogniZed
scholar of mulucullur.tl studoes. lhc answor
10 lhos quesuon-1ronicoll) pul fonh b) •
man \\-'ho symbolizes thi nauoo·s mab1hty
to cope w1tb i1 racsaJ differences-. indJsunguoshabl&lt; from lhc qll«1lon of whether
multiculrurat educauon belongs m our
n.auon's colleges and UntveniiUes.
"We can all gel along and funcuon as 1
c:ommunny rf "'e W&lt;e the opporturut) to
learn aboul each olhcs." JWd Takal1. "'ho
was tn!!otrumt:ntalln crcaung a mulucultural
&gt;tudies requuement dl UC-Berlek)
Mulucultural stud"''· Tabl..i sa.d. gl\c
~:o-LudenUi a ~--haoc~ to learn about others and

combal "muluculturalrllueracy .'' the study
of f"'ople. so.:tell"" and hiSI&lt;Jr) from a on&lt;·
Sided. oflcn Eurocentn~. potnl of,...,,...
Takal.r coted Angel Island. an rmmlgr&amp;1100 oen1er tn San Francisco where millions
of Asian Americans ha&gt; e enlt'l'&lt;:d lbe U.S.

•should""'

ly reason oroffm

ho&gt;lr.btyof

"We can all get along
and function as a
community if we take the
opportunify to Learn
about each other. "

tvcr~dl)

.aoo.

nclul to
......... lpo-

......,., ..,.
ROMicl T8kllld.

'\\'bendJd )OUrortJ&lt;
to du COUDIJ')' ?' and
ud&lt;nU and theor fan&gt;alin ha&gt;-e been
on America fa&lt; I 00 y&lt;aR," ~ saod.
T
· . whosemosueoe:nrbootADlffn-·
ntt Mirror· A Hrstory of Molrrclllncral
~nca IlVas pubh&gt;bed last JIIM. defended
mu~ltural studres apinst ·cnlic:Wm that
• he) only a&lt;i:entua~c tile di ft'erenr.-es beriO'een
peoples and cause don ton • rnslead of foCUSIDl 00 What people ha&gt;e in common
He wd man) ol t&amp;la&gt; ' SOC1elal d" l ·
tODS are caused by the pnoctrces of past and
present btstorians "'ho offer only lbe "wbile.
European view of American htSIOI'y."
0&lt;

tiJo«,

"How many people ba-. beard of Angel
!&gt;land.,.. he asked. - ow, how many people
ha•~ beard ofEUi Island. where rrullion of
European en1ered A~?'"
Tabl..i.'&gt;j&gt;Cikong m Woldnun ~ 10
a cro"'d of almo 1
ard 1heso
muluculwrally tl.iJienue atti1udcsollen aloenale those groups of people "'has&lt; cuhur.tl
backgrounds are not European.
This alienation lakes many forms on our
campuses, Takalci said. 1'&amp;1\ging from lhc

111&lt;·

""' t lhc nnplc tpc&gt;-

ranct e.xpre ed an
que lion .
"II' • like wbea ASI
American or Latin
Ammcan udenu art
ad&lt;:d. 'Where dtd you
learn ro &gt;jiCik Engfub'r

lbe

or~ a

lnllllltieo.tltul'lll
froauhfr..-~
ldbavelbeopporhliiiUCI .., learn dttm
btllanes
as while Slllde:rll.l of Ewopea. deocrrtll
In I
. " " - lhc mulnc:ultural 5Didtes
mqUII'CIDtnt ,.
8doped 11 Berte!e). 52
...,..,... ol SlliCiieau ....... of color 11oe 1111·
aontieo. art - in lbe mmority aaymore. •

Tabh bose fadlrer ..... 11........., I
•'Oit&lt;:d on tbe ~ ia
1 "'ppwa!Jmt:" lfii'I'Oidl

p'&amp;ftl

H.otw&amp;Ji altvocm&lt;:d

10modoculturaJcduc~U

. so-

, I
ialmelaUOD amottt RWJy dtffcttm cahuns.
Ta.k.1lu 1ea ~ "IUClal IJiequahllj' in
Amenca· A lfuulncal Paspeclive" 11 Berulq
Ibis phnhst ~
Somt «1uca1on. Tabk.J said. prefer lhe
"parttcu~.wtstx• appoocb. where the empblsi i on lbe udyof ._ indiWiualtoptc.
A major tn Afncan Ame:ncan Studies or
Clucano 51Udtes ..-ould be examples..
Calhenne Combleth. B ~. SIJd
&lt;audcnts ha•·• e•cellent &lt;lllfJOI1WJllics 10 ol&gt;ct&lt;ll} CortJI*'all~ly. focu

wn aclt_....,,modticuluni~IIUB
1'he) can Cl&lt;JIIJbine • d.u:l liU Amencan
Pluraltsm w1lh Olber CXJUntS ol SlPdy 11w
offer a more io-deplb loot cie a sub,jecc.• o

.,.,f .

�--~
..
-.-Y
JllllitlaOioa, MJe6aotloa

0:.~~~.,..
c-ponry~or

~. Aalft,o. Norma.
llamtl- Collqo 684 Baldy

-~ lpiiL

.-----.
~

Aloa E.

CM

c.e-. ~ .......,_

•tl:wu:dor ..SUB.._

~

-.na-

cou....-•
Loci&lt; ..........

·--&amp;liT......

loTolo-

.,.........._,l'rof ~

....... klkore. Momi10Wa..
J 20 KIIOX Ncx1lo Caoopoati
lJOp•
-TIIAT•PWS

lo&amp;liw

n-. -

RocPdiRaiiAUIIJ\'&lt;ndy Collq&lt;
E l - "'"

.. Ruffolo. '7 pOl.

.., ..d

LI1DAII'I'...... _......,..._..
l'aiotia&amp; ..... ·so.

1MEATEII
·~ -.~·'d).
IOC"'l. women ..t shr: •po-old
bool&lt;of!h&lt;O&lt;...- .,. 8 Pwl. ud m. Yard!&lt;)

aDd Ut.t "61&amp;. Kt"t" Pu-tt.
Bnu peel tral'l5lal.or. an cnt.Kand prolt:d(W of Arnrn~.:.n ht

pu" SpmTt~::let

....

enturt. UnJ\• of Afcamt . Spun
•

C~&lt;m&lt;n

Nonll c"""'"

~eon.n­

EIIOC&lt;M' C&lt;&gt;G&gt;pk•

c-

IIM...W

M dw: lTB Tk.ltl Offter ..S d.e

lulthonn&lt;Conodl,._ ....
· $12.

.... -..c._..,..,

3JO p m Co-liP""'""'" b) lh&lt;

off&gt;« $b, l 8

Lderaures. For ft'IOfr •fllonna

""'Sn..hiJ' ~ea...;.

0ep of Modem Unf1'1JG one!
bOll OONK'I Clw'l~ Bemstcrn .,

-

~$ · 3&amp;:!
~ac:tQOCD

0 0'0 DP,A -BiMi"' ..........,
Jlqlolak c- E - i o •. 0.
8an'y llurlbw't. Dep of 8t&lt;&gt;c:benulll) . UIU\ of~.
unle Rod. 1 1 • Nonll CompllS • p.m

...

---~

=-~R
I. Wood, t:lollowe Uan IOJ
Dicf.-f Souris CompllS
4p.m.

FRIOAY

~

�7
1485
• • D . . . . VA' 't

1
-_,

__
_
__
-__
_ol. . - -

._ ,.

. ...-....

_pa(_&lt;fl___

--.
-...j)

- f w l l o o o T . . -61iubdlo Pbilhpo.

-

r

·I'JAIF

. ..,_boloop .......
..... ,(lei G.-do ... Go-o
~-Aa~A•

I I ; - 5lnl.o&amp;Y. Cor! -

I'Ul., Dept. ot~
~.. II.PCI Hi!Jd&gt;oe

,

--

-.... .

--II:I'CLEbloed
ll.30p.m

Cor1ooo-

MONDAY

-......-

1
--

Coroiac s.-. ...._

_,_

~

2-l .lOp.m

a..t'f'tle Faa..JiiET, W-esll!m
YO&lt;Io"• pOioloc
ma~t) ~ aerwott. «-1. . . . &amp;rand operu 'Ill dh.

,_..com-

pubb&lt;; ~ {ubjn"l

O.Moniolloei...,.,..
Theodor...8ow:n·lMDt!lll Fur
lloowi
o.r-, 2Ai Cool.&lt; North

haods-on latrodunfOO ro tbt

'Y...,.
c.-~&lt;wT"""'"""
t&lt;onhC-.J-t&gt;rm. _

-foen. w..-.,. •-•-•nurc..Rm--. .r . . - 1

Co--

·--

''''""''"""'"n

EIII!CltlhtlMI&lt;A.clloleaB-

Cdl Ftolldlea, Mill: .Bono. ,
M D .. pro(c...,, Dept of Podootna, 0.• . ot Alkq;y, Oooocal

. lmmiJIIOI&lt;&gt;Q lli&lt;UihaomooolotY, Clollclm&gt;'• Hospttal. 350
CI-"S Addltioo Soodl&gt; ~
--eo.~ by Sdlool

ofo.:..oal - a t.

............ forlkSoootlool

-.

_..QdmO:b,

l'lb.D. DJUI&gt;• .,._,,.. prulfttor ol - " " " ' '. l•oellnru..
u-~ . aa Knd;6w . 'l~ Cape:ft
N&lt;rioC_. 3:30p.m • ·

&lt;q&gt;tiooo to ~ Spaasorrd by
lhe Co&lt;mctl o( 1...,...,..., I
Soorbtsoodl'rocra"' 10ddle
Dept. of~~

J...,._ ...

CarTio&lt; OJ-ic:t aod lafno-

o.r-. ll8 Dept. of Pbilooo-

...........__ill ........
Sili&lt;oa, 0.. W. C. W""l· M.Wo
Uolv. Slwlpi 2~! Foooezak
-Conlpoi&lt;.Cp.m

p.a

,.,_

.__,G&lt;e.... -.-..w-v.-

---- --u-

YO&lt;Io(PA""""'). ..... _ _

-Oct ..... ~5,.._

&amp;~-­

. . . -. c.ollt&gt;&lt;S-:1931 10.

...._~.

ldto T

f'a.-. Ml"""""

.....

Polonh

~llOp,._

-......s.- i.._,

-.201_\J_
........-

lplll.ltdnu!
1 -~
,-. J2.SO. UB
S3 50.

345J! .m

--....cAL ,~,

. ......_ , Ia CJwollllftl
~"~~boo, 0. t:looP&gt; Sboptro.
!ilop&lt;. ol B"*'c. EN1&lt;111
...,u... 114

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o..u-a. """-' u...
o.rr.ndaf Sow1l
Mo.oa

c-

UU:TWE

n-c-

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a-c. Pb:O_ -

f.UO.

Dept .. DNJ - ·

Mer

~OA.KSHOI'S

. AII'I'IIl
_n.,

"lo~P~U~Q(

..

dra•u.ra.. l'f'l""'. •'*'R:oloR
-~by__.}

B....,.,ood ·~

MA
~tl
......_ ..
Maolfol&lt;b ..... a-rlr
Qaetiut.... Prof ·~
tO&gt;

_

M.UI L

• P'"- C'o-•.,..........tl'l dot
Gndllllr Group 1ft Ev~

4pm

daulled ar\1-t -:1

,n~ualQf

c.-...... ""'. . .,.

--Ed«•
' s.nr.-..- ... n&amp;... 529

l

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ut•lnali)'

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Conlonued 011

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ll.tlloc:llMiao Fna&amp;
a..511tl&gt;AA,..._

'RftWl ... Hil Ddlk, NC'WIOO

plly. 684 Bold! N - Calf1ll'd-

---.....-.ol-3:30p.m

~-.u.ac.-.

.,..~

IOI&gt;Car)

Soull&gt;Canopui. 4pm.

"-tu.:1010ft b:"el • "l,chu P•M.i~f'l
Ald.. fft:dl....t

lntr/Xiucmg m Spmo;: "94
"" £xrm&gt; and Poo:lt'rPc~" f

~~

I I ('
'
....,

...

D'

f1
....,

,-----

Convenience
Quality
Service
Variety

-ol.A~. andlhc

coone_,. claDI&lt;Books
G&gt;uo stm~,.. Poetry~

Room. •20 Cop:n. North C'.am·
pus. • p.m. Fcx rnote iafOiml-

uoo COIIlK'll (.'hmk$ Bcrn.s&amp;em al
~S-:1&amp;112

l't!DIA'niiC1--.1 CJab. Maio Coolercoco Room A. l;krcy liosJOool

~-

Good &amp;ttiq: An lotrod-

,. .. s._.. ,.....,

_ . . . . _ NonhCoonpu•

10 V........nism. Walt« ood
Compuo.
6:30-9:30 p.m C&gt;ll 64S-612S
for tq:larauoa &amp;nformatKJO.

J-4 p.m. Caii64S-{ii2S fe&lt; ~Spoosored
by die Of'l'ice ofSou&lt;lem L..k

;., UsUoa UBS. 223 Loctwood

8:30 ......

I.IR-

-

I CU.OI:;

" - " IIHJ&lt;'O • MJ&lt;Jm!&gt;Oft 1'1 ord

- T S AT • PUIS
UTIJlUIY
......., a-llaa. Ed..onl Oom.

12

1StnlllOI1 in.ft,rma:tloa..
I'IIYSICS~

M

IYaa 6 Coilr1..,..,_.

-~·
s...-..w .....

ldala-!MJ&lt;..-. 0.. 0
Lcd:bood. UB Dept . of 01enl•·

T U 'E SDAY

I

by .....

t'llopla. Prof A

V. A - . " - - Sou&lt; UN•
·~-r.al.
c_.

ll'tiAIIIUC

LeMn howto~tbce
Attend Hands-On Workshops.

l.l&lt;lool--(ltm,--.a

~LECTWE

I'IIYSICS-rod-Up-(loa...-

I

aJ·lO,....__.
-·CE-iooSlOJ'or

C OU.IMII••
0«-

-- Eln
· 2110
UB P1rt
Dept ....,u,
of
An1ilrop&lt;lloc

n..
- tl tloo DnloopiJlla
8raiaia~BdaavkM-.

Clmpus. ~~ m. Dept of

"""""""---~
_.._ 1•

!toopiUI.- .......

-C~ompoo. 1·1-"Coob:
.....

-

C-'

_...,_....
--~
~ia;.-.D, ,_
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Hip T, S..porcead.......,.:
GAp. ODd ·Gapo.l'rof. T.
Mc:Mas&amp;a Um\1 , 219
Frooc:zak. Ncrtb c.unpu..
J.4S p.m.

1imu

--~~~· ·­n
R................. b&gt; P

Traa-plioo Cootnol. Dr.
Edward Bn&gt;dy. ll8 Dept. or
BiolocJal Sciefloes. I 348
Fatbcr. South Compus. 4 p.m.
UFIOb, My A&lt;:aio&amp; llack!

onh

ComJN'-1·9p.na . Oali~S-612S

fOJ feCisuatioa information.

-CUIIIC

S....bblalhc World'• Ub&lt;ar·

Nonh ComP"'- 7 p.m. RcJIWll·
[ormscan be obtaiDcd at
~-ood'• rt'.fen::nc:e desk or
byE-mlil:
(LOl..GEMMA@UBVM)
bOO

mecdn: c...mavicatioo.
~-

l'iorlllComJ&gt;"'-7-9 p.m.Coll
MS-612S for ~ratioo infor·
ma1ion. Spoo."""" by the Offtcr

-----!tAL
=
of Sludeat Life

Mario Folcaa, ba&lt;p. Allcto R~cital Hall Soul!&gt; Compo•. 7 pm

S)'ll'pbaoy. Slcc Con-

ocn Holl. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m
WAll . . .
n.. Se&lt;nl ol laob (!Ml),

.,.,..........._ MdiUYPop
lliiiOftC F.U Fest .............
Fall Fest me autumnal n1e sponsoretf
by the StuC!Ienl Assocl8UOI'I . rs set tor
Sarurday OCI 9 a1 Baifd Poont t&gt;egmnong
al Noon
Among me neadlrners are lggy Pap. """'
SUifled pla}'lng drums at
f...e and
lormed hiS forsl rock band
grade&lt;
111 MJC'hogan; Zen Bungalow, 8 Canad..,
quamit thai sholo-s "ffashes of TragiCIIIIy Hrp-l;J&lt;e poten·

ua1: according to NOW magazroe, and Oog.able Planers .
saod 10 create a "hop-'tlop dreamscape, weavmg a space
trallel.,... groiwe witn a lilllng, peaceful vrbe Infused Wltt1
evecythrng from jazz to psychedeha •
Also se1 to play dunng Fall Fest are Blad&lt; 47. Super
Cat. Cop ShoOt Oop and twO local acts.

'e-w:ma.n Center
Op6ul~
'R.eeord~

Kaplan Test Prep

lJB.

Urriversily Bookstores
UB)I.ficroSa.les Center ~~

.

~
a:c::a:o

�-··----·
Sports, comedy, lecture

8
CAL£

AR

Con!inued l•001 page 1

in Homecoming line-up

_..,.~MilloJI

ltOIO"... -

...

a.dofodd ..... C...lllnoioP

.For_iaf_

... _

"""""' Ellcca lo~IU,... 01 111

_,...~-

QMECOMI

1lw~=~;.~.

football
~ llw: UB
Bull lind tht nval Bllfftla
Stale 8cllph and a ptrlor·
b COlii&lt;!Cllu l.an')
Miller wiU
•PI hlenu ..1 ""'-

•olldkm., ua ... ,_..,,
- ...... lh.....)llO&lt;L lllft
rb&lt;O&lt;.. An~Gol ·

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c_. diopla) - ,......
""'lptllft Clollay -..Moo·
do) llld W - y.IOOAI -6
()II

•111 Wockced '93 to be

ld

a

U8 ..,

Fnday. Oct. I S. throup s.mday. Oct !7
" A ltoyll T~· 1 dlo lhemt Ollb.e
~ wllldl a1
.,..;u r-ure r.... lee·
IUl... ~ 1op ,pro~:_ campus...,... 11114 •

p ..., 1'-y. 10 .... ·1'2.)0
p 111 Olld Hi p.m : 'l'bor y,

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IOuo--tl.!IOp ~a. ll!d
p m ; FndJo) . IOa.JII.· ' p m

•-omm'5\'0IIeybalhouma

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Tht....:UadwillbeOHpOOS&lt;Jnid 1~llor
U8 • Off&gt;&lt;&gt;I! t1f tudtftl Ufe. Office of

lliOTI 'C £1

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"""""' .... lO'/l. -111
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.......,

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IF-)079, 30110 AMiolaalj '.o-

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1'ht IQ&amp;t:I'Utaoaal CHntmnet of
lbt: Womcn 'sOYb...-tll

~ioOI"

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......... ~) . 0..
p..ftl for fllf'lher

26111

IQ(onnatJ('Ia

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Pntessor~Siaulil-wt. Pui1..,

,..........

•F· 'IOSl. l01l3. __,,.,
tiooo• ..allol&gt;loi-Po!b&lt;ii&lt;Jc&gt; '

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o..... Ha'-.
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~~

61')-610$

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-..,.(!;L-31-F- Nu
Coal«. ,..,.,.~··· :!06() c-.

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w......._Tt&lt;:llo&gt;olol)'."""·

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~- ,._,. JFl072. ...-111/Aaociok ....

• fall -

Alutrlm Relalmm and U~ Silldell! A ..,....;o, 1M ~ 5plllli(lft
11dlonne Mldl.md 8
. . .A ...S MIMI·

1oas

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S&lt;Mon.
t....
$l

igbiOob.
Chedc · i• tor f"'l'HH&lt; "''"be held lrom4
to3p.m Ocl 1Sand9am lo!IOOftSaolr·
da). 01::t. I ia lhe lobby of lht Studmt
Umoo on lbt Nonb CIIJipu
At'lmt•H for JlllHU on Oct I S wtll
....,. . . u applt-p&gt;li
part It~ pJJl Ill

mm Foculty """"""" and
fa•orttt profeuors

diC Studenr

"'Jilbe~Jil

O&lt;V} OOCiel)'

utncion and

w.....,.,

S P 0 R T S

w-··

voneyt~a~t

The honeSI 1eam so far has Q01 o be the
WOI)'Iel1 s YO!Ieyt)aH $Quad Head Coach
Bob Max-wens f'lo\lals have reeled off lf\111!
coosecunve V~Ctones and now stand at G5overaN
1 the• weelter.:l acuon at AlurmJ
Arena 111e Royals oowned fBJr!Jeld tn lou•
games t5·9 5-15 15-5 16-14 In !he
tourlh game, the Royals raliled frCJT&gt; a 1412 defcn wrtn the Lady Slags servtng UB
lorced a side OIJl and then 1001&lt; the next
lour potnts 10 seallhe v1n Sophomore
Laurle Same!~ led the squad ,..!h 13 killS
and 5 digs wh le &amp;ef\10f Damelle Guinoo
added 12 ''' s ana f.-e blocl&lt;s Sopoo.
more Candle Hirst Chopped n w.m 12 ~diS
and soptloroore sene&lt; Sand.e Harrogan
tallied 34 as5JSts

On &amp;.nday, the Royals comonueo ""'"

w-··

worvllng ways defeaung S1 Peters "' three

games

Soccer

The women 's soccer team hosted !he forst

UB lrMtatoonal Tournament CMlf the
weekend UB defeated Columbia 2· t
Saturday afternoon and played S.eoa to a
1·1 tJe on Sunday to pu1 theiJ record at 641
The Royals were led by Joanna Tower
who scored on both contests Freshman

Lon Penllo scored the game·WII'lntr'lg gOal
against Columbia and now leads the team

w

len poonts (tour goals and two as-

SJSts)
Juruor goalkeepe! Racnefle Gahpeau

stopped eogllt shots on the two contests
For the season. Gahpeau·s Goals Ag;mst
Average stands at 1.59

Men's Soccw
The Bulls soocer squad traveled to Long
Island lor a paor ol malches 011er the
weekend Coach John Astudlllo's squad
• took a 1.{) 011ert.,.... \IICtory at Hofstra on
Fnday nagnt with Ed~u Okpewho pr01110tr'lg the margin. Sunday !he Bulls tell to
long Island J.1 with Tyler RJCI&lt;s scorir'lg
on an assist lrom Jure Abecic.

.,

" a driVII'lQ rall'lSIOfm The Bulls
goals from Oarren Boecher FrJ--......rJ,._
and Ov1S Adams Goalkeeper 8~1
St0f80011SI&lt;• pocked up i'IJs second shu10U1
on as many starts
The Bulls reoord now stands at 3-4·2

Men'at
Coach Russ Cnspell's men's tenniS team
defeated S1 Francrs (Pa ) and Canrsous to
mprQ\Ie lhelr marl&lt; to 7·2 Bolh malches
were 7.{) decrsoons
Luos Gum defeated CanaSltJS T00'1
Palmer 6-1 . 6-0 to lead the Bulls to me ,....,

011er the Golden Griffons. Gurrl remains
undefeated In srngles play

Foolbell
Hofstra scored 21 unanswe&lt;ed •d quat·
lei' PQtfllS . SCO&lt;Ir&gt;g on liS f•st ltvee posses.
S!OnS ol the second haft. and held on to
defeat the Bulls. 26-20 at Hofstra Sladtum.
droppmg UB to 0.5
UB quanerbaei&lt; ClaH Scan CCifTIPOeled 13
ol 36 passes lor 146 yards on a QB!T"e
diC1aled by a Sleady 20 mph wond HolstrB
got on the board first drMng 60 yards on
fiVe plays, capped by a 56-yard TO pass
from quartert&gt;ack Geo&lt;ge E!eJsel to
Haywood Crorname
UB knotted !he score at seven on an
Sume
eaght·yard
I I'Jotley ID run The
score was set up ~ lt.mble reoove&lt;y by
Todd Shaler on a mashandled P&lt;l!11 at 111e

Holstre lhree-yaod I ne The Bulls took a 97 lead wtoen SPeCial teams captaon Don
Sucllnya blocked a Hofstra punt n the ena
zone resullar'lg on a salaryA 43-yard Mark MozraU field goal closed
the farst hart sconng, govong the Bulls a 2·
7 advantage Three Beisel TO passes 10

open the second ha~ gave the Flyong

Dutchme&lt;&gt; a 28-t2 ""ad UB pulled w&lt;Itun
the tonal margon on a 13-yard Chff Scooto

Doc Smnh ID pass, and a. coo-soon run
by Scan w.th 10·16 rem811'11ng an the contest Motley gamed 76 yards on 2t cames
..nile wade receover KnstJan Green led the
r800M1Q COfps. Vince Canosa nad three

sacks.

. . ~~~~:'?:.N.~3:&lt;: !.~~~ht----~s ln~}!ff!Ce ---·. _____.

ored by rhe UB

School or Health

a..,pu......

profes«&gt;r and duec101' of tilt

"oil Labo-

rai&lt;H) for Hu:man

Performance Re ·
searcllat Penn Stale.
'l'hi:oe wtll he programs in r&lt;&gt;idence
halls from 6-8 p.m.
on 0&lt;:1. 15 and
Sbabbol servia:s and
I i.O!br:r dimr:r
scheduled for 6 p.m.
an Halle! House on
Capen Boulenrd.

*"

The lint prtiCO in

"'~""""""··
volleyball murna·
men! will he bdd in

~

E - c.Ocl.16w mdtoclt.....,...fm
lectuRt.. . .
Clm!pooo
art """"'
10
publiC. The I"'*'"
ltlaiDd
MdCJ--

• "'Sbodr A~ AAA4•.,..._ mCnla·

~;"Mhw
UB
llllil) abrOIId ooonfnudor, Snadmt Uruaa

n..:...r, 10 LIL

· ~ m ¥oo.wT

Can toHr

Y&lt;M" Childml's ~
l.obl&gt;yul&amp; C.. M
a OdJ.cu~· Moll
M&lt;
ILrector ol ; 130
Stlldoal U.O.. 10 LQl

• "Qq&gt; " ' - • lbe Next~Ia Balclwwt. ....... prol'eaor bioolap:al
.......,.,., 121
Hall. 10 OJ'II

c....

or

• """"' to Fly in .....
IW, ~ oliiiCdloniaol and ......,..,
............... 330 Sludoallleioft. II .un.
• "MAl'
mall "'-'--They l-* lbe
l'oooeriD Sbr Men' • Blood A Bnd HiJIDry ol
l'lalala aad Oe:slpl "' ... Qoy ClflkllbJo."
1\!:fRd Pnoe, _,.,_
ou prof&lt; sor and
chairman. Depart-

ol Pima...,,
Slldeal Un1011 The·
ller, 11om
-~E&gt;;­

h

DIYwJnd ~ -~

~-tor~10twS.U·

-------

dil.y Oct

11Hou-ow~g1Dalblllg~~~te
~oUB and ~SialeCdiegltlt

U8 Sladiool

, . . . . . ,. . . . . . .

by~ltlllt

va'id 1993-9C UB ~ loflnlilice:on
Card a !he~ cM!nbuiiCJI1

aodlhelidI&lt;Jr)lriUk,orWb)

artS!*"' Atienl: AI ·
nytl..it(leGmu
Mea':" Charlt:•
~ll-..

profess&lt;r ol ~ ­
cgy. 111 Coo:IUHall

II un
lbr~

ua

Rel~!'r

fOi ion .
wilt he dd,.cmd by
Walliam I Enn .

......

llf9pm.

~CI(el Polic~

lbtOred.-l&lt;tla'hon·
u

a-toe

Homecomin~ Game

theevellloponsoned
by Ordc&gt;r of Orner&amp;.

Fllots for Httl
Ac•n&amp;" will be tilt
lqpiC of lhe lilill ••.
nwtl J
Perlr)
(A'('I...,. 10 be dehv·
~ .. 6p.m Oct
I S m the Ka!hanD&lt;
Cornell Th&lt;all!r The
fr&lt;c ~ . spoa-

forOcll~

,...,., . "'TTit l'nN:Iw
ll:tiiC:IIilldllfTpm. ...Sr.J

~S:!II

• Oct. 9
• Ocl 11·1!&gt;

1111.m ·2PIIl
II oun.-4~p.m

..._.. ,. , _ 11drM orne:.
• Ocl11-15

• Ocl. NI

Dam.•;k31lpm.

Clrfyonellcll&lt;elper!IIUdilr'f
be -..cL
Studl!nls wl5twg"' c.ld foe Qlml will
lhel' . . . . . . . be~ toelr1ic:l&lt;$
on padQ!s 10 the ..,.._ .,. tte Cl!lice c1
SliJder( l.de As ..... olher lt:oclbll"""""'"
nolree-wllbtt~!hedlyot

1te game 10 ue SIUdela.

For

(IUeStillns 01

8dt:litoonll ir'llorma·

- . pillase-..ac:tlheUBTicOl!IIOIIicell!

64MifJ66

Alumni ~na on
Ol::t.15. wilhtbeUB
RoyalsJalcinc oo Hof..,.. Uni&gt;ersoty at 6:l0
p.m. and teams [rom lhc Univcmty qf 'Pim·
burgh and tbe Uni.,..ity of Ne !oll.;.;oo
competing at p.m. Tloe 1011mamern will
continue mAlumni Arena on Ocl. 16. W'l'Jh
UB uoling on Nrw Me&gt;.icxt at II a.m•• f'im.
burgh vs Hofstn at 12:30 p.m. and N~
Mexico and Hofstro playinJ at6:30 p.m.
'' homecoming pq&gt; rally and hoofino
pon....-ed b 1he Uoder;graduat&lt;: Student
Association will be held ho111 7 p.m. to
nudmgtol on Oct. IS tn Good)'t:llf Firld on
til&lt; UB South Campuo.
T10o ootsr
· alhides. a ro-founder
of the UB A.lumru MSOClation Atbleuc H.aU
of Famr and the enuno I~ LAmbert Cup
fOOl ball Team and ilS coaching staff,. iU be
tnducted anto lhe HaJJ ofFamr ala dmlljlf to
h&lt; held b) lhe UB Alumni A550Ctatioo at 7
p.m. in lhe lllrium ofthe Fme Ans Ceruer on
the orth Campus•

tloat parade. spclll·
OClRd ~ lbt \Jndor·
gradua&lt;e Stuclenl
Ass,oci.alion~ ..;n
taU place It 9:30
a.m 011 Ocl 16. II
will lea•~ lbt Soum
Campus. proceed
DOrth 011 Bailey 10
Gro"CC&lt; Oevclond
Hipwoy and llxtl
follow
Grover
Cleve~IIHI/

Milknpoo

to

..11Jt'SU~dium c.

tilt
tilt

'onh Campus.
Thebomeooml
[ootball fiiJle ax
I 30 p.m. will be
prec:&gt;edod ~ I . _
pany 5pOIHOI'Cd by
lb.e Offon of
Alllllllli lWatJoliS

JM.Jded&gt;UOUih. .
of tilt Sl.ld!um. A ooke!IO the {oocball proe
.. ,n scn'e as • pus to m. pat1y. vihicb will
fcallm: anoIa «m• picni&lt;, music .00 a o:ally
with the UB ebeo::rtc.den.
A post~pmc peny will be held follov.-ing
the game in lbt Studem Union. MuSJC ... ill be
provided by tilt UB Wind &amp;tscmblc ODd

,.,ll

iDclude jugl&lt;n. a c:arieaRes&gt;aiSW&gt;Ce pb)'US.
At 8 p.m. on Oct. 16, o&lt;&gt;rnedian Lany
Miller will perform in 'lbt Triple Gym of
Aluonm AR:m.lf !here arc ticburemaining.
!hey may he purcltased 11 the cloor. Miller
h.a mad&lt; regular~ on "'T'hc Torugbt how" andtlltf....,.,. "Litt •!:bt"1th
Oa•·Kl Leoemwo."
The v.'tdtend woO close ,.,th • brunch
from I 0 a.m. to nooo MOn . 11 on Postaclno•
in lh&lt; Stlldenl Uuion. Res&lt;rwtion arc liJn.
iled 10 lbt fml 325 people oo a fltSI-come
basis.

cnttnaiDers

IUR liJtiSI ...S

�Be,st
laid
lans
F. . . . . . . . . .
.......,_.,
to ,. . c.MIMII br
. . . . .llllllbil

r.ctora

UB ST\JDY 10 cleu:rmlne When...~.
wby and ' - ' al'ta1
n::laliYdyboallby~­

dtm o(. tmiar&lt;itlzen hdlity spericuce r~ bas
liiJowe lhal ......, in I lldtin&amp; wdJ.
f&lt;noowD by .ia; inbabit.arlta and de-

signed lpi!Citir:ally for dxit ~­
more lbon a quarter of lh&lt;.......,.

.... ~ran.a ....... .,.,.

l Hcllfofthe follJ .....-e lllribuled 10

environmmw f.,..,.., the

study
ob&lt;w.-.d. and the Wli!Rr•• dt'vice
dosignod 10 help pnMde subilily.
was named IS the tulprit in 15 pera::ot of the ran..
boned IS W culprit in balf of 1bo

-

Furntture--

Th&lt;:!;e fonclinp. combined with

daa fmm 1111 earlierUB studY showdil':d H5DCial:ion belmusclr wr:al&lt;ncos and the numbcraf

irle •

RESEARCH INSl1TUTE ON
AllDICTIONS

JI!IICIIVDtUM ~
. . . . . IL · acrimi.ndtlgi51alhe
~
lnstilule 011 Adcllclitrls. hal

been~ S3J5.562 by
lhe tlialionallrlslllule 011 ~

hDI AboJs!l '"' AlcohDIIsm
!{ NIAM) II) ()()ll(t.Ja . - t t l
0111he inl*Jl or woman's
aloatwiha on lhet ·a bl!y 10
llflll8ct lhetchllc:hn 110m
bef111~ This Qllll'll

ll!ill!lldend her-'ier ..

_.en an 1he elfllct cil bmily
vialenoe on woman's aloohal
Plllblllml.'Miler18 study lis
enlllrlng b tifth year '"'1las
receiYed tJIIil support 01
men hln $13mllian 1rom
NIMA.

u.....

nursinc-Mme mAdenls fdJ.

led the raearohm to m:ommm£1

musclr rehabilitation aspon af !Ibndare! .,.,., for older ildults. end to
all for bean-designed 8Siisbve deviae~.

"Wbat !Wiy ~ us llbol.l
this 5Wdy was !hat ~hines n::iiderwi
......, very familiar with and """"'
designed 10 help d:lom, or ot least
...... dosignod 10 be safe. ......., the
lhincs they feii&lt;M!r,IIOI hawtls !W:
loose rugs or mugb floors.· said
Bdb Erasmus Aeming. UB clinical assistant professorofpbysiology and principii author of 1bo
study.
OavidR. ~ pdeooorof
pbysiolcgy, is c:o-.outa or m. liiUd)'.
wbich is pub!Jsbed in Ardfi.w of

~ "liJI in&lt;k!XD·
denll)'faO&lt;~tleul

Olllle.andlquar·
1er oull'er serioul
iqjury .
lnlh&lt;UB -.dy.
tluo reteatcller•
...,...,., 294 faDs
rep11111!diM:r......

yea """ ....,.,_
q9Sn:lideatsof
an~fldl­

ity, and intcr' ~wed po:nons
&lt;llml1lly li""'' in
flllility oboot
-faD 'f'hey
noed .... la:olim
andlime
_.,

oa:idenl oa:umrl.
and &lt;:atr&amp;Orir..!'d
lhcm IIXUdin&amp; 10......:
- • En•.r&lt;&gt;nmental (furnst\1,.., ,
llllbeele:hain. walkers, cane • ,..,.
ludts. floor surf.,.,.)
• PbysicllllOild:looo o(1he ~ ­
(~onbritis.lossorboi­
IIX%. medocatl&lt;lm)

f !he resior on ..,.,.._
bm&lt;linc. Wllkinc. m*q bed)
M&lt;n lbon 50~ ofd:lo falls
........, CliWied by oi&gt;Jccts oroondiuons
11&gt; the en\'li'OOmenl. resulu showed.
with l'urninft rnmtiOiled as !he culprit in half of the cases. Walken
we... lhc """""" ...- -lrequendy
memionod &lt;r&gt;vironmeoul"""""' f&lt;&gt;llowed dosdy by flooc finish.
Neerly • &lt;jWil1l:r of all fall$ ""~
mribuled ro lbr l't'Sidenl' • phySJCal
wodition. witb loo ofbalaDcc. dizziness and oollapsed knees IOOOOUnlinc fur 81 pc:rce111 of the follJ.
Physical activiUe:s pn:cipitlled

• PbySJCal acti&gt;t

deN (""DC from

1

only 7.9pera!IJI &lt;&gt;f !he falls. No clear
indic:aboo of caust wu rq&gt;Or1.&lt;d in
17 pc:rce1ll o{ lbt liiXidems.

A

majority of lbt faDs-51 per~-tool&lt; place in residenu'

rooms,witbllbol.li6~Mp­

P""irie in bllhrooms. The ........nder

Foreign Accent Reduction

Compton
P-ESL Progran1

"What maJly surprised us about this study
was that thing residents welt very familiar
with and we~ designed fO help rhem, or at
least were tksigned to be safe, were the
things they fell over, not hawrJs like kJose

__

rogs or rough floors. "

.._

loot. place m hoflWO)S,OUidoor$1de-

r=&gt;ll o{ phyu::o!IIIXIYJI) • ODd 1bo

waJb.dtnin&amp;I'OCIIIIS~

~occurred

areas ...t..fl: resldr!n

would be

~or~. flasmus

Fleoaing laid stairwayo. pre5UiliCidto
be a bu:lld for older &lt;ldu!ts. caused
onty 4 ~ or the fill in ·
swdy.
More falls occurred m lh&lt; momtog than in the afil::mooo or lhc
raulls ·. no-1. alll&gt;auJb
f&amp;idy .._...lbtougbOUI lbr da . eody ~of
tbe accideols occurred durin&amp; ....
nigbl.
Becal5e few faD &lt;JCCIJml:d as a
~
flllr:O -

flldy 1111ifoxml
.,.... a 24-ftour .,.,..,oc1 in and !idUnC' ~ f~fOlbtresi­
deru.the~can::ludod­
llllcildel'l)· p:noo'•frail~.-.

dmcJo1,.. 1 pr;m.y cause of m~~~~y
of lhc oa:idods.
•AIJboucb 50 pcroenl of1he ~ ..eR precipi-.111, tbe environmeat in 1bu ...Wy.~ Era mu

f'llominc Slid. .._ a&gt;tiCiude IbM •
~ bf ~boor may lbe
'*"""by~~­
pt!Mitl:d •
li!:lm .......
..rely • lln'erl\'ironmr:a..
1J

t.p:

WOMEN HEEDED TO PARTICIPATE IN RUitA'RCH STUDY:

I"Child-free by 'choia:"·1
,. Are )W dulMree by chotoe (eilher through postpooemenl. delay.
Olher life chotas. or early cl!risioo )?
,. Were )W born during the "bab)' boom" 0 943-196ol?

,. Are you currently llWTied or in aoommitll!ll relationstup d

:u

leaqfl\lf!)'eaJ'S'

to .i ntprolie your Business. Professional. Social Speaking Skills
&gt; Small-Group Programs o.r; Private 1\ltorinq Service
&gt; Sessions Conducted in a Choice of Locations

Diane Medler M..S~ SLP. ccc. NYS License

Domestic and Foreign Accent lmprovetnent
Please call (oradditionol information: 873-4482

&gt; Are you willing 10

your~ in an i.nlel\'11'1\'

(eilher indhidual or group) Lasling 3boull lJ2 bows?
IF YOU ANSW£R YES TO ALL OF THESE QU£ST1,0Ns, pleasecaiJ

.uumiew

\auneAinsworth (886-5130) 10 llmlf\ge an
IIIJIOUTroo"'!!lieen.
(Please l8i1ve me;sage on ansu.mng ~if1WI avaJJable.)

· --·fJil'l&lt;f""'*""'-

�Students call Middle East
agreement a ' hopeful step '
for.future
.,_WAUACC
llepo&lt;tar Staff

Willie •t he ,, _ . ~ bclwet:n l.sraol and the 'Palestinian Ld&gt;&lt;:I'IIIIOII
Orpniuri011 ~· a j)O!Utive gep U&gt;Wa1d .,...,., on the Middlt East. poloocal
wciuodli !like a long lime 10 heal. and it may be eaucr 10 uy oae ii CX&gt;~Dnuued
bealll!l lbooe ........as "-&gt; II •• to actually heal lhem. said JBm~y BeJicr ol 'l ht
15111cl• Student Orgmi.:tatooa and Orner A,.
of !be Arab Studtnl Orpnil.aboo.
While 'both tudtnu beli&lt;'ve that 1hoe ......,.mmthollk &lt;lUI peat hcpe forlht Mlft.
mo red dlllalol
be dme.
kremy Bergor ..,d tlw be is ~.ery ~
t1w ""'01111 fiod a solo.- for pe.llif&lt;'." bul still ,.
ellln:mtly wary of oekbntil!l too soon "II'•
tiCIIt)' from an I rwh ~pective," be wei.
't.ec:.U&gt;e ...,.,. dealong .,'11Mhe PLO, "'bich h
!&gt;ten a k:mJrij;t OJlaniU!Jll&lt;lon the past. It' ueally
importanr 10 que.t1011 how much they can be

Special Olympians build
self-mnfidence, self-esteem

...

they're
110 doE
fiMI .,.,..., are lhouunds ol ,.,..._..,
..,.,, and lldultt Wllll "*'l'llll ....... d(
~
Idles~·

lterblodoor ~.aUB ,...._ -.1
...... ,__
lko" ~I'
~
for
H_.intppool liM
a~
wido pecial &lt;M)'1IIIIIIK'I TC!iky bt li
Um&lt;
I
. . . fidod&lt;XIIIIOIL
Tbrir dod.. Dovtd. dean of UB '• Sdoool ol
l'banuey,lbao
Ills ......... ~­
,..,. 10 vt....n7 ...,.,..d ~ 1u

SpcicJal 01""""" progrtll1lS Ill J6 &lt;XIUJIIrics.
Through me s
01
dedi-

~ofdw~

ROFE IONAL ATHLETES
lrai8 ~...--round wot an eye w-

"''""'"''
Aoott&gt;&lt;:r IJOilP o1 ~ wt&gt;o
,.,III!IIR.
'

rdllilllli!U:•~wlltl

.. ~

.......

.ned. . . . v o l - .....
.........

oma-

,..,.."'to

"""""""'
oadlJIII'twmcy
Apolbec8ry ill c.ootz,
Hall .. bod! "tal.eo" .....
101'1 bad: 10 ..,., turn ollbt
Clelllllry. pre·mo&amp;n.t ti....,.

dr"'pr&lt;&gt;no.
Faoded

baYCII' t

yet rewritten

thoir con'ilotuuon, whieb calls lor a '"'&lt;&gt;--p hase
plan of ""liOn; first. get wbal land 1"'*"1 i.s
,.iJ~D8 to gOYO up. and urond_ launch aiJruted
Arab ottJcl from t1w land. Tbey sull ofrtcoally
SUpport u:rrorism, and do not reco,niu I SIVI I
to ""' the rewriting of that c:on&lt;Utu\1011

-

'"'*"'

~ But

lthmk they·,. sincere. for several...,..

,.-bl&gt;k otpruWIOG 10 a foroe •ucto as Hamas."
the Polesti.ruan group mos1 bouerly "fll"&gt;&lt;"d to
peace
"I thmk the) ·re aho 01ncere betau'"' of 1 )
do !iGmething fal"' now. the world communlly
woll o:pealt out og.un ·t tbem They· ve gooc public woth this. they've stood on the Y,'hJL&lt; Hoose
la~&lt;n . Jflbey ~bad.

oow.lbe) will nneragain

be token senousl). and ,. ill ha-. gi•en up all
bopc for peace on !be Moddl• East."
Awass say•rhathe believes !be agreement"
A.WASS
"obopcfulstepforthefuture."bulal&lt;ofeel that
much more remaons to be done "'I tr)' 10 be
optimisttc," he says. "but I don't tlunk it' enough 'The tcy i uc 1 land for peace
l' II be""'"' optimistic "'hen I see subsl.lnti\T .t eps to grant Palcsnruan&lt; a t.te
'The agreement can be -.ry good for omprodng relatJOns between Arab&lt; and
Israeli•. We have to hn"t'"""" rooperatioo on 'both $ides.
"But there are alia people on both Sides ~&lt;'ho mo~t luo&gt;&lt; advu.e feehngubout
the agreement Disagreements within the Palesunoon camp. and wnlnn the Israeli
camp. could be a potmt~allu~ to further pr&lt;&gt;l!ftS .
'T m tryong 10 be opurrunic but l' m often pcmmlsuc . I' II be more "'""ed ~ hen
I actually see a Pale•ti nian state ..

llcxibolity.~ondur·

Thew ..,.a.;~ ..... ·lc:Mw ..,....
~ .. _ . . .... the_

cared llhletes con o""'- fiXlm mort moo 20
events in ,.·bicb 1.0 paniclpa:te-oe""'l'tbing
from aqu.tlllco to woi.L&lt;ytall.
The Oa•id Tnules om one UB fam11}

acuve on Specoal 01yrt1f11CS Since ol was orga""~ Ill Erre Counly
~ter J-lyn, 2S. ah;gh ·lictlool &amp;roduate and pan ·luntdidary aide. dove. ro.....,.;.
at Bromptan HeJght&gt; Arlult C.aR F""'lrty
and the Ni.pno Falls Aquanum 'lf'here lbe
•olun~etn""""' a wrel. fnquemly 11ving
the audimoe the eleo..'VIC ed demoostrotJoa.
She wu enrolled ot age ~ en tn the
Cheektowaga s...;m Club program and lfier
the Special Olympc• ..... organw:d locally.
W parto opated '"
events IDcludin.&amp;

softball. trO&lt; and
fodd. bo"'llng.. basc'ball. floor l1&lt;xU ·

• ~ i10d llneloprnenl

~~~C~~n""'iilll~ - • M1 one l!fS

•

PHl )]] ''il )\,\I SJ-LI\1 I \Rl \l SU\\ I l l '
Typing of: Term Papers - Theses
Dissertations- Resumes, Etc.
Programs : Professional \Vrite

Word Perfect 5.1 - Locus 123 -

'The competllOf\

lllkl improve a~neral
bealth, ba.l.arlocc. mu le

dooe.
SOM They're •• a lot of)inaacial trooble Tbey
made o mlsW&lt;e on upporting Soddam Hu sein,
and so los1 their financaa1 suppon from !he Souells. And because of the ri-'&lt; of l&lt;lamic fUJida·
'mentali m. Aruat is on don~ nf loo•ng his

nttrdy

"""" douDocls b)' lndl·
vutuab and bu11ae toe•
wbo "care eaou&amp;b to
lh&amp;t'e.." the Special 01 ,_
!""' Jll~ atblet.es 11'1 ep-ponu
to bw
their
iidf&lt;OIICideace .... self-

trosled

"For onstan&lt;;e. they

.. ~ ..

the 1ft
i&gt;ldivJdual ..,.
"ble f.. lho t..,;,.....

$12,600
Slillll

ana:oadiiiCJIOr

·u

Thele speaal """-" tiR...
..tudl
uy., "'Let me wtll. but of IOIIIDOI w\11, let mr:
be ' bO~ lht attcn:lpl.-

a

c"""''l''"..,.

r pu!Jcipai&lt;QI ito the en..
2l procralm and trovdiQI 10 _ ,..., ... and

people.
and ............. a&lt;IJ\iues
..iloclb bmd'ot"""" ~ chelr b-.
Nlllmlydotbelllllc:les&lt;~Wp~e
. """"
-lua&lt;bmlollhcm ~lilt World
Uai~ Games told! iDio LoSIIk Pad., ib

odooo:r compeiOIIOI&gt;I. they -

lkwq.-w '

32-Giyn.o~'

Fe 2S-27w•llbeanoolll:cbtle.-wbea

""" Erre Coul'lly Special Ol)'lllpiCS
the
r&gt;~a!CWiidc Wlllli:r Gamel, t&gt;iridl inciludes
Nonli&lt;: and Alpine tiin&amp;. ice· skallng.
'~ng

poly..-! Doorboct.ty.
Local olifoctal dcome your donarioas
oa moe SEFA -d..Lipuded donorform but llso

your UIIY as "'Ounteer ~· •• forulh
l i - and &lt;&gt;tbtrdUlles II thl event! Call !3S1861 to Ill liP·
'

$3,3116.17

ss.m.n

lS

26.11

44.S

IIU

$31-.200 --,t6.263N
67
22.1
52.1
• IJentl, Mril1CII'e
- -S25,(Q)
S12.m~41
--;'12;-1;---- -;-49;.9
• EllD..!011
S:IC,!OO----r.i~6'2171
S'i!"" - · 5() 4
80.1
' • EmernU&gt; Cerllef
$20,400
$5.3!&gt;4.00
5li
A
26.2
• EnOIIlllfMJ ni ~ Scoeooes s25__.!! ll3.mas
64
26.0
5(0
• HeatlttRNald!'rolessloos
'S8.511P\ $li.l36611
17
'21J
12.1
a }iilomu!Kiilltifllttrllly Slulres
riBJl
$1 ,501.1XI
5
lll4
91.1
• lllw
$14.100
J&amp;.tlr~
27
au
(1JO
• ManaQement
l21.200 S18$C2.69
50
SUi
119.3
• Median!! - $110.000 PO.IMU1
21&gt;4
20.9
63.6
-. N.'IIlltiiSaerlcesant!~ $21.000 S15.12l83
116
212
56.0
• N~ =-$8.000
$4.371.01
32
41.5
5U
• f'ltntll;y
SIO,IQl
$9 ,~7.00
40
~.3
81.9
• Offo of~ PreSloent
SS,JXXI
$32SO.Il0
Z
ll3
65.0
• OffiCe_Ef lite Provoi'- S10rol
$325721
15
16.C
32.5
$13100
$3,534 00
6
3.9
25.1
$31_(Q)- Sl1,29139
- - 1112
384
611.6
S4.iiilsUm96
5
25Jl
• SooaiWork
18:~12 .00!100___
25_
~ --34T'"
• ~ed- PrOQ!11mS
S3i_(8)__..__$15ffi1 _ _ 115 _
1s.e
!ill~
• SluOen! Atla!r&gt;
$5.100
$39.00
2
A
01
· SJ-Oiuariiiat• us fourmtooo SerW~CeS
$3,000
1.341.50
10
18.8 ~
• urn~Servooes U1 .~162,563.00
496
362
64.C
$5!. P!!,G7.11
1,!1
...
...

·so.o

�•

Sympo iumto

ofevmu.lhelkl:tt.

address jaw

cdevision .. .

joint ~roers

0

Educato
group funds
UBprogram

Mllrrioct HOld.

Nationally n&gt;COJIIiud scieft.
and clinician inlhi .,.,. of
dentistry~,
ind
oeoeral fmm
the UB Sc:OOol DelilA! Med.t·
.. lhe propam,
cine. will
wbil:h liOnon lhe flllt!lllr UB
11

The..,.;...,.....)'
...,.J...J
a $4,760 a"-.d from the
li.diQ!Ion for~ Oe-wdopmenll'nl&amp;mn (EID I. A soci.atkin of lnt«national Edual.:n,
for a prclJtlC'I enoded "GtcbaJ
Con"C118tiom m Eiducii!JOO for
Devdcpnent: Prepaing for !hi!
1\nune."
CoonLMilnr; lhe efJon .,.,
Holm L &amp;.,......, a li0ci11t ell
rec:mr, and ShdJ• M. Lewis.

•"" ~and ~atmen1
modalities lhal = t t y .,., bein&amp; llSed.

UB &gt;pe&amp;kers will include

victims

of violence

0

La,.. 51Udcnts from UB now
on: belpi'l&amp; vimms of

domestic violence in ~.,.. and
Monroe Counties. and ex.,anding
services 10 Erie County residents.
thanks to .uote fundin made

jX&gt;SSible by Auemblymao Sam
Hoyt (1)-Buffalo).
A $ 10,000 member item secW'Cd in the Slate budget by Ha)'l
bas enabled !be Domestic: V&gt;olence Clinic at the UB law odlool
10 ·become a full •time opention
and assitt ·""'"" victims domesbe violeoce tbroogh wiJat con be an
inlimidaring and OO!Dj&gt;licated legal

or

Suzanne E. Tornlcins,
clitricaJ instnJcmr in lhe clirU&lt;:.
1be clinic, .,an of the ,law
school' • Legal Assi tance Pn&gt;IIW'.t:, uys

&amp;mn. combines academic training in domestic violence issues
wilh real-world experience. Swdco&lt;S e.vn ocademic credit while
I&gt;'OViding more than ISO hours a
week of f= assistance 10 social
service agendeo and legal offices, iooluding the district auoroeys' offices in Erie, Monroe and

Niagara Counties; Neighborhood
Legal Services; Legal Aid of Buffllo; Legal Aid of Ni~~gar:a County,
and Have~~ House, a sheller far

battered women in Buffalo. ·
They are involved in a variety
of projects, such as com.,iling
and editing a manual on domestic

violence for incarcerlltcd women.
assisting in the devc!Oj&gt;ment or lhe Buft'alo Police Department's

pro-arrest policy and wruldng
wilh the Erie County District

A.ttomey's Victim Witness Assistaoce ProgniJll.

Librarian

0

dcotal&lt;kan.
....._. the lopies ·10 be discussed .,., behavianl aspoct of
lemporomandibu!M joint d!sordc:r

Students aid

lhe ..... ,.,.. ,. .,

•11o-

l&gt;istlliden or ibe jaw ,;ouu
'
lUI -lltnlpOIOmlndibular and orar..w •pain will ·be
ibe ~ &lt;lllho 22od J
A.
Englilib Symposium, 10 be held
from I un. 10 &lt;4:30 .,.m. oa
'llllmday, Oct. I .C. in •!hi! Buffllo

W.O . Meeall, prof.,._ of oral
medicine; Norman D. Mohl,
pro{eosor of onJ medicine; Richard K_ Obrbacll. m;earch S&lt;Xntist
in lhe Deponmmu of Oral Medicine and Behavioral Scimces,
and Ahmed A. U!bman. D.D.S.,
UB professor of on! medicine.

a lid pme.,..

~watdll

.....-or mafl. or iDd · dot
~ iA. filllllly liCitrity apa~ deal10 lhooe
for
from borne," LtoiU """""" out.
645-ms n. illf,_..,_
1

pogtanl

. OIC,

lntematJoDal

Student and Sct.obr s..v...,.,

UB freshmen
studied in
WBFOseries

0

nve l're5lunm at ill&lt; uni-

venity will discu their
adjllilment 10 col~ life. includ·
ing •their r.... llld expectations.
in 1bt F'trS! Year," a series of
mpons on college life in the
1990s t:bat will air over the Delli
several mooths on WBI'O 88 .7
FM. "&gt;c National Public Radlo
affi I late OJIC11lled by U 8
In lhe fUSI in udlmentthat
aired yeslerda) , !be
dlS·
cus.ed topics that included
money. roctnma1e:S and lliCJstn

r;,,.

The series is being •produad
by lan Aran""'. WBI'O ne,.,, and
public atTai~ prodox:er. The five
tudeniS
will b&lt; followed
througb their fl"l'shman expeneooc on: !Tom Queens. fireeport.
Penfield, Roches1er llld Amllent

,.no

William Evans
to deliver
Perry Lecture

0

William J . E vans, director
oflht Noll Labcntory for

Human PerfoiTil3Jl&lt;X Research at
Pennsylvania State Unh·ersity
and consultant to two I&gt;'Ofessional h&lt;x:kty teams, will I'""CDI
the 1993 J. W am:n Perry lec!Utt
11 ·6 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 15. in
the Katharine Cornell Theater.
Ellicott Comi&gt;le~. Nonh Campus.
Evans will speak on " Nutrition
and 'F itness for Healthy Agiog."
1be Peny loctu~ is sponsored
by lht UB School of Health Related Professions . Admissioo is
(.,. and opm IO tb&lt; public .
The author of "Biomar'kers:
The Ten Dcten:ninants of Agiog
You Can Control" (Simon and
SchUSieT, 19911. Evans is a consu.ltant to lhe Bos10o B ruins and
lhe Washington Capirals. He

pr.. Klllsly spen1 10 yean al Tufts
Uni-..ily as dud o( its Human

Pll)'Siolo&amp;y Lalxnrory and .oeruor
ocielllist otlhe USDA Human
Nutritjon llaeard! Ceme.- on
Agit~~. b&lt;adquar1ered .there.
He " assoc. editor or MMu:i""
d: Scff'M'r ~n Sporn and &amp;nt:lJJr:

1lliho lhe J'l'lllO'll oe bdlalf
of lhe Wll&gt;&lt;nll)'.
The UB project. &lt;lid Susan
Luc:lll, ElD pn&gt;J13m dinoctor,

ill
• .,,~ront:ribution 10 lhe educaiooal e~peri­
&lt;006 of lhe wleaiS from
de¥elopina DMioM wbo are .,,..
mlled • lhe umvermy "'tlile they
n:maiA i lhe U.S and upon tbeir
n:blm loome."
Fund~

for lht l""@nm
from lht U.S. Agent') for
Iii e.-national O.•'dopmem

is named
to UGLpost

0
cram •

recemy

Teri W.U,

~ brr MLS 1"1&gt;

or •s-

lhe u 'taU!)'
basbem
oppoill'led 10. ,IM&gt;-,_ ...... 1&lt;1
the u~ Librw)' .. the

CCIIISIII·

Viut
M.i -.1:)• LilnllllliL
Weil brine&gt; 10 ber- ...,.._
experimce.,. a iiUdenl assiliUml iD
the Etlwc Stuc~~e&lt; Collecboa or
the Collq,e L.ollory. ,the u........
lily orv.·~ llldber
wOO!. a. a
In add:rtion 10 W1ri:inc llllhe
UGl., Wei will help ID de•'Ciop
library """""'" for under~ populaliom oa I,JB.
SM •·ill """"' as a membet- of lht
libnry ccmmi-. aad bqin ber
~libnrw!

... - ,

Friendship aim
1Sally Barrett
of program
Tomkins is
appointed to
seeking hosts
new vice chair Giving staff
aiiOOJCildof Coalition
0 The Program Frienduni0 S.llya..nu,
SlUdem

I

lntemation.ol
l&gt;iup
11 lhe
•·enity is looting for an:a
residcolS ..-bo would like to Wr&lt;
e meal. an e~&lt;ent or a holida)• gettogelher .,.ith • filll'ign studcot:
More than I00 •tudents from
15 nations have signed up thi
fall to be " matched" ,.,itb individual . couples or familte&gt;.
A variety of options arc IVIil ·
able to potential "bosss." Some
m.ay !&gt;"'fer lhe UB Friend! ymeal.
v.·hicb involves treatmg a sl.Udent
10 a single meal at home or in a
local ~uwranL Others may opl
10 shan: a Thanksgivi ng or other
holiday dinner with one or more
student&gt;.
And for those
would like
an ongoing commitme!IL !her&lt;· s
the year-long host I&gt;'Ogr.u:TIHeleo Stevens. associatt d1 ~
n:cto.- in the UB Office or lntcrnational Education and Servkes,
says it' • not unusual for hosu
and Sludenl! 10 build ooeans.,anning, long ·term friendshipS:
Program staff auemptto
match the interests 0&lt; bobbies of
the hosts with those or the srudcots. all of whom speak English. Some of lhe &lt;.tudenu are
single. while others have spouses
and obildn:n in Buffalo. Many ·

"'no

on:

graduate studcots.
Prog:rem roordiruuor !&gt;heila

Lewis emphasius that host obl igations are miAimal. AU that's
roquired is to provide tranS!&gt;"'U·
lion ~or the studcn~ or in lhe case

0

Suz:aaJw

Tomkins. •

co-foonder o( lht Do!nestic
v lole.nce auuc in lhe School of
Law. has be= elCCied &gt;'lee chair
of lht Ene County C&lt;&gt;alit1011
Agairul Family Vmknce.

The c:oalilion, ,..bil:h was t&gt;·
labllshc:d IS re- ""'· is oomposed of agencies and individuals
,.-orting toged&gt;er m stop alii)'JleS
of family violence, includlt~~ lhe
obutc of children. lht elderly and
puUII:I'S. II alto offer,; an CJPPCI1ll·
nity for service j:roviders. 111&gt;1&gt;caoes. aiminal-jor;tia ptrSoDDel.
goY&lt;miiiCfll """""""llli&gt;eo and
Olbcn 10 lihare ideas and OOIIIlatiS.
Tornkint, a 1992 groduau:: o(
lhe UB law scbool. curn:ntly
serves as£linic Instructor in lht
Do!nestic Violence Clinic. .,an of
the Legal Assi&lt;Wl&lt;lt Program ln

)1'11'
•lhe ..,;..,..
slty. lw been lllmOd o .,art-&lt;tmc

~os-ontheADoual

Gi""''!suff.

Bam:a "'
'

b&lt; respan5Jb1r for
lht ADoual Givut&amp; staff

wuh otnior """ parall
-

develop-

pnlpiiiiiS.. Sbe will all1o hdp
~ Telcfund

suwon m.

propm. mated. o.n.,; the
summer,
oa
lllla1IShip widllhe ptlii'IID wiMn
she .....-.oacd&lt;lll ~.

a-"""'*"""'

stnJI!Ier, man: Cl0111p11:11!cm..,
senior~

•o.ma comes to UB from
A1legbeDy Ocllqe """-me

....,..,aBAiiJ~

w and panicipatcd in pbDoOibolls
forlht ~.....W fund dli..._
She plam.
in~ ediation llllminmration ond ......,nan RA in G:wenxn.

��</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1716535">
                    <text>had spon~

IOmt ~

pbnl. but .... d It
oHn rr\I.Jtr tt'dlnl al
e&lt;IIU~.-rl.. ... for lht pruffo\:\.ltGal"'
Rtk:l! !loll~
Ht- trnuaod mecunt'
(;8 ulfiGill and re~­
""''fmmM"""Ioc MOIOr&lt;lband
Fi.tltr- ~ that cul.--:1 1ft tho
COIIrit..&lt;ri.ll

at

need

L

~

1 """"'"'·" says Aodrn Soom. cb:alr

UB takes advanced courses
in engineering to worksite

•111i!dwJJo11 Mel ltld&lt;.lslnal ""P"""'·
"''l-W""P"""""'«~'"""" m -.hod! ~ d all f.u

Med&gt;arurnccnng and

off"'"'

the bool;:s the) lli:ICd '" bu) . and

pll'l:lng im' t a problem." he oars
"l'lw: masll:r' del!""' 1 ,-;e,.•cd
as a va!UIIbl&lt; degree." he cxplams.
"h 15 a d!Silngwshing ~and a
ve&lt;) wcnh"''hile acadetruc crcden·
tJal for someone who , on a leehrucal cm:ertracl.."

~con t:x:..d"ot.

Raa:. cle&gt;&lt;."'''!Jeo. dlrt pro[!&gt;".., a
"'~"'llf'~szan&lt;doodleu
masu:r'• ~ 0... &lt;.&gt;Ant will he

I

offercdedl~fordl:lll!lltv.o

~ oftor o.-bich Ill: p&lt;ll1.apOru art
cxptOcdiOomax:ubie11110 repa

us ...,.._..ng progtam
Tht ~ IJSllall)

1ft """"'

(;'BfiiCidt).~localpuios!

b):

ab"11hanolcd~ ~y

The UB School of Engineering and Applied Sciences has literally ''taken its act
on the road" for engineers interested in
pursuing master's degrees by packing up
the entire operation and bringing it to the engineers'
worksites.

I

encrall)'. Ihe Sluden " 11&lt;&gt; gel
inYol'...:lindl:otT"'"'~
ltavt -~ acadcmK: bad. -

G

~- from.\~

offlllt 011gl·

nccnng-d:lools.~UB.he""""'-

JaoRcoc.s..humanJeSOIJI&lt;)OS!tl3!&gt;ogu at Mrog Corurols. y$thert "
muclt enlluosia•m for the proj]l'llnl at
his plant. Moog Control&gt; prt' oou ly

may lelld1 a .,.,...,;t m lila foeld
UB f&gt;!'l l:lrotq!bl11&gt; off_.,., r-~&gt;­
!l"'fll "' Ben ~ TeJMJn m
~ ~COUll) m 19811 Thai

'''"'run'"'""""""'""
:aarl..-lbllsl
"""'-""ub!IUdcnl'
piO@I'IIIl

Lil.inga"""f''&lt;of • ::adl'&lt;'mt'&gt;·
1cr and oornpletong tho del!""' 111 '""'
and a half )Car!i

m., -.np *&lt;&gt;odaftl "''

____ ._... _

U...por!Jalbr'....a,.ofeo.."tl~

""'

"'\\'htle tllt H...,snn

._tal-~ ..

0."''""

"""'*--

...,..,_oDISir)--Llnde.a.a~

pber of1&lt;d&gt;stnal
lli:ICdcdiO"""" .,.,...nJ dlmJoc;oj and ............,
C&lt;lll:1ir~-

lnleno::tmg wnlt

local~

l&lt;lr lbc un......ny ..
wdl. he......,._ odd clt:M lh&lt; ...-..r·
" lltlllUtt""

mtn~m~llll&lt;!:ds

ol loc3l empio)on ..,
.,.,clJ.,U...et~t~~eS

UB,

-.

todd ""'"' Jle:libibJ} 10 0.. - ·5
~~D~tleer'!lllllld~
..... . eulltng-a:lgt ~
'1t.anome, .............. - OI!@PIfll' ...ubotherWNY~ ..... -

~ '" c:;ftmnc
...- -··
pqnm;.
Mil. dus ~ d""""'"""
walt. .... pn:cnplcd •
1Y S)'lllallldecxplanbon
WI) c( rmotq"

m

""' domaods of a;.,.,., """"'"""'
jlllDCdla1y ill1llll ~ •illbola
~a::a:o;,10

c(lbcSUNYID-

Last wed&lt;.. 24 nc" "uden~&gt; in the
.moo!' Off-Si~ Moster'• Degree
Program hit the book!. on burro"'-cd
opace at Moog Controls. toe.mE1Jna_
Engineers fromMoogCoo!ruls-as
well as 1hose from nearby Moog.
Inc., Fishcr-Prioe and Mo«orola-wiU me&lt;! weddy 10 take cour&gt;es
toward lheir 1t18S1ef'sdegrec5 in engineering from U8.
The Sl:tldenls Cllltlllcd in the progr.unatMoogConlJ1llsjoin those from
the Harrisoo Division ofG&lt;noral ~
tors and u.e Linde o;,;sioo oll'raxair.
fOI'I11C!IIy Union Calbide. who are laki!lll advantage of roo&gt;'e&gt;lient. oo-lhcjob maslcr •s &lt;kg= course wed
through UB'• eoginoering school.
Tht SIIICicr'll&amp;-are. in all~
n:guWp:tn-limcUB SIUdenswhollUSI
moeldl:st111Edr::grcc~as

any (llhcr ·· C3lldidalcs.
Butthe.ya oid!b&lt;ltassle5ofdnving across lov.'ll in rush-bour traiT"'
or standmg in lint 10 r&lt;giSttr for
courses because the university con-

a

'rat'

~~ofi!IO'""~~oo­

l-.,..,..,.....-1'\t'h!-·- _ ....... -.
master"• pmgmn. "'\\'c bnng them

uw fur llit;lnr;n •our

&gt;&lt;h eacn ,.,.. pn-ognom. UB
ltas modo tgbl , _ ,
m
Ill: OOIInC otfmnp and deem: ..,.

tnaQief., c.:UITJC'ulom
iloo;.allbwnessatMOO@Con!rul•-t
~ofllhcfoorOOIIlJI"''"'&lt;Ieal
"''We lake car&lt;: of all of the reg. - m •-....!) ddl'en-.nt ~..,_ w

cal and Aerospacr
on&lt; of lh&lt; arcluulas of tho

•m.ng &lt;111

"'It!

So1lt

ofi!IO't:8

8111 """' "~ '" the rorrt'DI

UB ~ oull

Urlr~~~ or1....o,·~ 111

ZalttoJj8n. . . -

professor of lndustrllll
~-Pnlla*

Co&lt;!l.lliT-..nda
stuclenls B. J. Woillblde,
left. and Donillld ltrusdca.

�2
~

~

••
-

-

-

p

s

~--~

Cultural eritage
Influences Career
_., ...

W-A li ,

~

~

o(Soc:iaJ War\.

ball

...,.. ncb
bon

........
--

....... . . . . . . , __ PI&gt;..... dbd:Jgoall . . . . . . .

l..ll,t.~-=a.d-•

nm Paw Schlllr o-. d Zl

blomedcof-a.wcto.n---.
Gcllhac ...

......., aGXI.IXX&gt;O'tlrll&gt;

ll.d\o' ........... ~

d

oene-.:n-n

Gcllhac. iMI!IIglllng ' -

,. ....... _
genea -119.-.:l rafrtlt.qltle....,

=:ofP't*inl~
t:LI ..... f'm.9l paleR
~OOdlng

.,_(rro

ru:leoc aacl).

sucn.-

of......,.

-rs"'-"'JIIIll

...s CXJIIIIIIe• thr culllnl
anbr

o(

W..,..,.. ,_,.,. I I Lak01.1 Indian. her {Mhor liT"" up "' thr
AppUchiM
o( ,_.,Ten
, _ She - nwoed IR PuiJmaa.
W
I small nnJ collqo
k)Y.'D lD
Jnland PlctfJC •
a r.,.. mt~eo rrom w border of
Idaho. ..n.r. her ,.,..... .._ bodt
oollege pm(esson • W
.5.-Uru
I)
ForW...U.OCliDWI&amp;IO""""WIIII
thr axnpkut) and
fJCantr o(

herO'IO'JI cubural """~~~"Mol llfCSI
d&lt;aiiO do
thr
"""" u.
.,. lw been dt&gt;&lt;OI&lt;d 10 ...... net

••lh

w,.

actnkl

1 ' \'t been I~ ID socW
....tt os fa"bockal CM remember."
.t1o "'Y "The firR """""" canp I
_ , . 10 "-as for lwxhaoppcd ctnldren. and dlen I dJd a number of
pr1)10CIS "
thr Camp F~tr Gvh
Soc:ial .....n: has reallt been • hf&lt;-

'Wca\.cr.

~hn

shortly ..,u f'CCel\~
her doaora~r from
thr Columbo~ l 01·

"In coming to

a.~.....aocr.

•entl)
I of
Socul Wor\.oxhi
1ts a fneodl), com-

Buffalo and VB. I

patlolp&amp; n......, &lt;:a""lllln

A laoAiy merrber • UB
snoe 1

• GolrO receMld

his doclorale In~
tram Iowa Slale u.-wty
andgr~trom~

tnglln Slale ~

-IIYIIAFESEAACJ-i INS1mJTE ON
AOOIC110NS

AAOC:M'IIOM:

a.- ... - - . .......

r..-dl acionlisl81lhe fle.
on Addicllons
W1d adPn:l prolessor of soodt:Jg{ al

......m-...

UBwasgtv-

en the 1993
[)lstn.

~Ca­

reer Award
klr lhe Practice of Soool-

ogybylhe

Amencan
Soaological AssoCiaLon
(~ 81 tsamual ~.,

Mamo Beach lasl rro'tlh
The ao.or.wd l'ocnlrs • !IOCIOIogosl who has mode sogndicant COOI'iJubons "' lhe field
The ASA pniiS8d Barnes 1or
her r..-dl on edclesoenl
dnr'Qlg, klr ,_ Sl8leWide
epdei 1icAogocal studies, for
her 8lCierlsNe publocatoons
and presen!a1JOr\S. and tor
her &lt;lOr'r'mnly servoce -

-·

klnl ICII\Ity for""' "

he sad. baca.ee~­
lnding mtn ~ IT'O!e _ , . .
plios of t1em n 01115 n pncu-

CICr'*OI gene~.,
wus 11111 caa./4C13Wld

...,
.........
....,
.......
..........
........

posed prt&gt;&lt;n e
onud lhe busllc ol
Boldy Hall She
opeaks
bu
~ as!ihtr.ocouniS some of lhe
patnfuldewl obo&amp;n
lh&lt; IT&lt;81lnenl of lhe
l...aliDcl6•1hehlnch

""lhou'

oflheUruledSta~~:&gt;

'1'he Lo ota•
tl&lt;'on&lt;oflhelarre t tnbc 10 eM
counll) They hi•~

wru- chao

ing more
than just a job, I
was choosing a life.
There's a strong
Native American
comnumiry here,

and that s extremely

imponaru to me. ·•

ltmllnolly Ill clnl-

dr&lt;n

She ha

B

ml

, W.....,br-

camelhe~ollheSo­

!iJIOD!oOred legal
ser&gt;'l&lt;:CS program

" ( laugh! all ""'

Her

I lhe lllltrllSiupo. and tlrffioped
lhe cumculum. 100 Some ol my
udenls prot.bly JOI !ned ol melbr)Mdto-mtmlhe
and then . . . . ""'~~
Wcs-tr has iiiJo playai an 111&gt;J&gt;~l~Wa role tll
lllbOIIal

tht

problem or domestk. "aolenct.
and m 1 unKm·

dnsetUIIorl,

on !he relobcnstup
bttween cuJtUJ"e
and
pht •cal
heaJih,

IDVol\ed

v.or\.lnJ ..,
...
u' e American
clnldren

10

com-

ll&lt;JM.

••tr)-

"II"""

wllllaodlll

ctal Wor\ Propwn •!he URI•'efWf}
a( Idaho, • bde !hal .. "' """""""'
of I ITUSIIOIDer bec:ame """ hendf
v.a.&gt; lhe "'holt procronl. '1 "
I
one-penon p&lt;q;r~mO..:..,• .t1o sa~

~orl.ed 'Aith

~·rnuruti&lt;'!Oallm-er
U1Ciud111g m)
flmllyresen11110n&gt;..
lh&lt; Northea"""'
s
P.n&lt; R1dge and
Rosebud m South Dal..u Bu1 m)
"l'•e don&lt; o11ltk btl of
!lung." he sa~ "Soctal ,.
1
L.aLCJCa formly hal. been IU) from
such a brood f!fld But I'm partiC\I the res&lt;n abOn 1 long ume
Iarl) lnl....,.,led tn c:ro..&gt;&lt;Uhural
L' poiiC) totalelncliaa
Cia! v.on. ..
clnldren from lheu ~ 10 board'A'ea\'a'". !io iongo.penence IDatlS\·
mg school'!. that .......f'rc solllrtl~
culrur:d
worlprtMdessenbal m
thousand . or nules ....) Th&lt; I'Uf·
ber•nYOl\~ ...ltht~iSlle:'»Sli'TOUnd­
pose of ~best school'- one of lhe
most ~ell Loo.,.11 of -. htch ... as. 1n , ong the lmmlgra.cn Rdonn IDd Coo1101 ACIIIRCA I a( 1986 'There WISI
Url~&gt;le. Penns)I•11Rll. was 10 mal.&lt;
grea doeal a( C\-.dencr. she
!hal
lh&lt; ebildren forge~ lhetr culture. &gt;o
thry could 'fil m• 10 Umled Swe.
the !RCA, "1ucb" desoJP'I'd 1D penahzr ~.... v.to tum! undocuhfe. Oru ~. lh&lt;) couldn ·,&lt;peal
lm*ld worltn.had lediOv. idesplad
lh&lt;u ov.n language And often lhe
jOb &lt;bcnrnmauon
parent&gt; wouldn ·, IJlo,. ,.ne.., lh&lt;1r
· "llv.-a.affecu"l an) .. or~.er .. ho
children had goo&lt; -at most,lh&lt;dlildren ..=aliowediO\.... IIh&lt;uilarno
dKin '1 speal. Engjl;h """· Mol an
acceru. or ""as k-ss luerate-«nd ~ ·
once or tw.a: a year.

numercx.t)

.... ....__

and all
v.anl1na"""'""'
..n.r. &lt;h&lt; brlpcd

clt-.-eJot-1

v.-orler\' ~lheNotional

of Social Wotkel'\
I AS ) and lh&lt; CounaJ oo Social
War\. Eduabont
IE!. w· she
CSWE .t1o IS curmlll) Ill vai1n
de•-dQpi"l! "hal she, calls "I dr&gt;u"'l lelecast.- l port lltped. 1*1 b\'C
~100 lbaldeah ..llh lh&lt;cltfficulties, 1
...S dlallenges o(
ASSOCIOIIOD

mulucuhural educaooll....S ~
opeaal 1.1pe5 for • llllmher of clifferenl groups-Afn
AmetlCOll
atm: Arnencan.. ,..._ l.alino&gt;.
PY and lesbian.. lilld "'Orii&lt;IL
In COITlUI 10 UB. Wea,erloob
forwanl10 !Qdu"l! 11 lhe . . - -·
IC\el, - JUSI II lhe ~
·el IS W did II Idaho And W
ful ) el&lt;pecb 10 ronunue lh&lt; aim" " and 'aned 111RI!" ofherworl. m
local COITU1lUJlrtl&lt;$, on lh&lt; NIIJO&lt;Ial
IC\.el, and as aleadler.,

ICtJ\..,.,.

AJ l

ltlld&gt;cr. lnm....., ......ur.. lift·
pitt !hem for
's -lhtre So" ~ m

calli

Jifld'Ciil

&lt;xpenenc&lt;, H' rbeor) . lilld
I cao bn In lois of pra::IICII exp&lt;·
""""" IUliCcueaamplc$.1cao "'&gt;"
'WeR.Ibo ......ned for mt boR.'

1n

toBaffato -fua.1

"'-.sllh&lt;Jooialmtft!l- jllslo job. I
.....
a "i'beft:' II URliiC
............... ~here.

ond
mo.

r m e.ICIItd Ill be here ID

• wrand)· ....,.,.,..

~

-

ftrllf'Willll

10

�3

Cheney warns of dangers in deeper military cu

===-·---- ... ........,_

'llll!llrity' Mil .men ik&gt;)'OIIrilo.tauyfortetG""""'"" U.S. voUii~1'bc:!lttwo~

end&lt;ll'lbeC!oid Wor, ..,...,
Diet Ole!ley. fom...,. socretary
Olfddi
IIOder President~ Busto. who
spoke T&lt;acia:y
on A!UIIllli Arm. os
Jill\ d !he 1993-94 Dllllnpbd Speai.M
~

Ckney qpenod hlllec::rure by relalng 00...
on W. fltll day as lll!aiUr)l of dofeme he ~
loot lllld wu lockal out d lllr f'elll.lgm onlbe
way to a medina v...U. lbe ~ 1'be
l'lesideol,..• ..,..

forme.andmy

-

lociiUna far me. all over lbe p!.ooe." Cheney
said.~ tbat wtl&lt;ll bK staffdid fmd tum be
did8't mi.H 8 slop aod !W"Imdcd tbat ~

waswrona.
Less&lt;x! 011&lt;:-Act like)OOblooo Wbii)OO ·~
doing." he told bi audM:ncie or 111&gt;ou1 2

· Ltssclol rwo: ~~ ,..bo you~ and
how you ""' your f'O'UIOII," a.-y said.
adding bow during 1 """""'i ru""""' ·!he
'*'J' 111temp1 in Mo&lt;lcov. io I 991. he """"-'
ll phoot call from Mi• John!iOil. hi• lug!&gt;
school &amp;giM -.tier
Jobmon called 10 complain tbat her ll'aSh
" ... 001 hemg pocked up. Ooeney 5IJd_ He told
her thai he wa.&lt; man omportan~II'IOebng bot .Jot:
pcnistcd. 1-in.al! • he !old her: " I do "or and
peace I don't do ll'aSh" John'""' shot bad.
"You~C&lt;lfW"ssfcriO~·r~e~
me yoj) don·, do uash." Chene~ rdaled.
Turning 10"""" seriou&gt; c:oncem Ooenq-said tlw •.tth 1be end of lbe Cold ar. ~ is
• "naturallaldetlcy 10 wm inward and 1t1 fOCI.IS
em~ txeblems."The 1992Presidenlial

can:opobgn. ,...,.._,.;allf~ ofwoy imcr·
national issues. he said, adding thai the publoc
place&lt; &lt;UCb issoa at lhe ''borulm 111r pile. ..

or

Thi amtudr has implCaion• far &lt;:Yet)'·
thing from lhe North American Free Trade
Agmanm~ ( 'AfTA ) to military prq&gt;an:d"""'in times or cnsis, Orney noted. adding in
a somber ton&lt; tbat 111= I$ ..~ or isolanon

StvetaJ
aboul
.m of
lhe Cold w............ Cbeney
Finl. ihlft
iliheoo00111hw.lhe"OUillOmeollheCdldWw
w ~We didft 1t haYO 10 opead
bil
(of 4cll..l on dtfonR, t11111
nism- doomed IO(iolJ.~~aid. U»,p on ·lhe 11'1'1
!he
tlllll ll'liliwy
~ c:ontObuled Ill
4uwnfilll he . - l

or

can~

expect

u.s

the
Russians

~. onspiteoflbe

lltof~·
111Jim,said0x:nry, '"Wf:ha\'CSOhe ~
lor yea"SIO.,.,.,., • He added tbat lbe '"m&lt;iiD·

tion!ia

)i

tosol~V?

lllll(.,_"tllllllhat~"'lan't

their
problems
ina year

eJqiO&lt;'IIhe R

1010lw
problemsm
a )dl or two AnDid a:albclo• ~ .U
(MOI'Il!rf....... uooon.minonlyp!IUpS
In~ and """"""' .., lllllkr ......
collap!oe. II may tah tm, 20, eve~~30 ~ Ito
~o.e the: pUbleom&lt;..- he tWill! In addobOn.
~ ' iaJd Che!IL'~, mil • "auckpde c{
nuclear -.pom ~.-

--

OT h\.Q."

S&lt;ICOild mo~. said a..ney. i
IIIII !he U.S . tas door on """"' of the:
WOI\ o~ !he IIISI ~ )al'5 "' fli'OI«!!"''i lbe
free WOIId 'Ill&lt;! C&gt;J&lt;II{rJIIlOOIII..,!Idom ,., ow
il' s l&lt;ll'!ltbod~ rl.e' • tw11 Let tb&lt;m hear the:
burden.'' a.-y said. ~ lhe ll .S. bas
"""''all"" m 8riuin. flnlnet and Ga:many,
"no ant el"' has lhe copact or !he mooo1
lllllhonl)&lt; 10 occompbsh om loury~,.., fin
lm1&lt;'S of en ~&gt;I." he added
"We chd II on l&lt;u,.lll lbme yean; ap&gt;••
a..ne, wd. l'dCrnng Ill Operation Desat
Sunn If"'" had oot. he wd. S.adumHus.san
"'OIIId he 1111 be m Kuwall t11111 lliOIJld have
111M gooe 1010 Saudo Arabta. 1bu&gt; OOIJirolbft£
t••&lt;o-·tlucds of the. world's od riiJPPir
Whik"""""""'ledgmg1heneed-nsozr
!he ll.S. molowy fun:~ he lum&lt;df
belped 10 do while ~· of' Dricnsc-

liktro cut an .:ldJtional J12S·I30 bilbon from
lbe bodi"L be wd. ~ IIIII
c -.1 to
-fnl.-clas pooploe 1n !he: mo.l.ll.al),d 10

. and adoquaoely mun&lt;Jd 10 ocoomplish nul1tary
objlocti\'CS '" •
.., Europe and !he
Middle East
Alread) . SJ22 hdl1011 bas boen CUI from the
de[en&lt;t budget. score. ofJObs ha•c boenelinunall:d.and 800nulllar) base. h..e boenc"-1.
Olene)· saod The ne,. adnuno&lt;tr.1uon ,.'OUld

dolllls')'Oilneecltopay lllmn well and-c...,
oflbeirf"""""' ..
~ j, I fundamenaoJ problem 10'1111 "'"
SUllk.g) m IIIII ad........,.,, lila) •llttfp'et lhese
qustnlerns as "51g11 cf we.akne&lt;&lt;." a-q
saod. "We need co be op:ni.IClllally reaJ~ If
)'OU talc dovo'fla fon:e 100 bani"' f-st rt may be
dtffU.'Uh 10 OCt.'O&lt;npll&gt;ll milt~ obp:u..,.,," be

A

(l&gt;etq said these- o.-~&gt;o strongenoow&gt;

........
...........
ltiO..,

...u.s.

.-..,.

said. Olld added cbll M ......... IIWlY ~ 10
rdluild. ~ rilil¥) f&lt;JrC&lt;
Milillu) fi!IIU: thould
) 'M ......s ob)onh-es..., ~niles ctq.,.._ are
set. and pbns for~~., ~II de·
[mod. Chen&lt;-) s:aod. 1'hc:st ~ muJd he
~
~lllsuchplaa:s ... , . . . , .
lllld IM'IIl , bul .., mucto more ddf'ocull 10
,....,. .. ben
llosrua beauv of
lhe lad of clear &lt;•h!«tl'n from dr U S poo11

"'obout

o( ' ......

a...., $Old

FSEC hears proposals for changing student advi ement
ing ....,11," Goodman '"'d
ICOLASOOODMAN. '""' JY&lt;&gt;''051 for undergradullle edoca-

lion . outlined a proposal for
dlangong lhe &gt;ystem of ad\1se·
mentforUBSIIIdent&gt;atthemeeting of the Facuhy Senate &amp;ecutl\e Comm!ltee last w.ulc The proposal called for a lhrtt·
pan solulioo 10"'""""' ad•·o&lt;em&lt;nt problems
tbat included nnpkmentaoon of a compO!erizod advosemeol S)'Stem. OARS (Degree Au·
dit Reporung S) sleml. en&lt;:ooragement and
mcenlne for under·
gr.Kiuate'&gt; 10 d100&lt;t a
maJor earlier, and
greater f-ucuJty lft\ol,·emt".nlm ;;:rudent Old\1\1!-

ment.

" Righi """' UB rut.
only ten profess1oniil

ad\ 1 on.:· G~)()(J man
saod. ·-sl&lt;l) pen:enl of
oor student&gt; are urdecided in !heir majoo; or not yet accepted into a
progntm. and lhey ~ advised by lhese ren. or
not ad\&lt;ised at all Tho; mean&lt; that • smgk
advisor ,...,.u "'ilh os many •• 700 studenK"
According roGoodman. !he Jll"&lt;"'lt sysrem
of undergratluare ..:t•;sement coosi$15 of lhra:
basic pans. SIUdenls who are not enrolled 111 a
specifoc program art cenlnilly ad1·isod b} the
professionol advisors.Students accepted inlll a
profe&gt;sional scttool are advi!OC&lt;I by faculty
member$ in their
and ac.'CepWd AJts
and Science maJOI'!&gt; are od1 ised h)' faculty
member$ in their department or program.
''The profe'&gt;!Jonul ,.,0001 systcm i wof'l.-

,.'hool,.

"But~'"'

the

')'item '' nor v. orl.Jng "ell " He wd 1ba1 the
maJOr..,.......,. of the cum:nl problem "''""' the
illCl of prof.., ional advisorr.. the fact lhat ffl

perooltofundc:rgr.!dualeSareo.md&lt;cododomor
)~ """""""' onto • program. and !he fiW.' I &lt;hat
the sysum~ofs.tudent ~lretl"'Ilb •~toot:om­

pkx and not Clear!) defon&lt;Jd
Accord111g 10 Goodman. the omplemcnU""" of OARS. a •Y"&lt;'m of oo· IJJ&gt;e degree
audtung. coold go a kVlg •:ay
solving
many of the thffoculues
!he ~ ad' osemm1 &lt;y"em '11r OARS &lt;)'stem 1"lb
"udenls wtw1 n:&lt;jlllremeniS nmwn to be met,
and the} can al'&lt;O
II ' Whal I r· Qll&lt;&gt;1100 ,"
be wd. " Wbat th"' means t&lt; that &lt;llldent&gt;could
do the.or m.n dencol ach·i&lt;ell!ellt The prof&lt;'&gt;·
Mon:al ad1 osors could then focu """" on ,...
'""'Pianmn~ and the v.·a~ lobe&lt;! use rosourot"....
SU&lt;Xe&lt;&gt; ful ompleorenlllhon of OARS abo
mvnh.es the cerural monuonn,g or requi~­
n&gt;enl.!o, Goodman addod. ~Depanmenb woll
need 10 prunde informa1100 aboul lheu- .,_
qum:menr.. and then won't be abk to change
!hemal theiasr mommt or on a whom "
Buo if 1he advtSer~~Misystem"' 10 unprt&gt;'t.
'' ..,u be necessary 10 ha•e grouer facull)
lO"OI\.'elllef1IJA aihismg.. Goodman §8.td. and
he called for a Senate mandale n:quuing all
untlet:odc:d students and all Am and Science;
majoo; 10 have a facull) advosor. Provldmg
u-.:entive. f6r departmenl&gt; aud focull) 10 get
in . . olvcd m ad\'ising could tx a oentral pan of
lbe"""""' of MICII.a pro;jec:L he saod. although
he added !hat '1hen: · • liD eool11lOtJS amount of
goodwill on !he faculty" for in&gt;pro1 tng the
proces" &lt;&gt;f under~.odua~e education.
Erll'Ollf31\ing "udeniS 10 choose a maj&lt;&gt;r

"'lh

'""'Old

earl}. and prl&gt;''&gt;ihng on..mu•&lt;&gt; lor 111&lt;1rdotng
'1), ~to'OUIJl enill&gt;le studenl; IO ;,._~1\oe adequ•

&gt;IOOai ad''""" I l B had dropped ID""" '""""'
~ lud heon mill'&lt; !han :!Om !hera!) I 9~

""'"'"'"""'!.
Goodman "'IJ
'hiJ&lt;, f'SEC memhe" a rroc:d on gen.er.tl

o.cut:l'&lt;d""-"'""' or·~ IJIU~er511) a.;od

lbat tmprr.wrng the ')sttm of adm..meD1 "as

"""'&gt;

"' &lt;&gt;rellenl Idea.
had q"""""' · ""'""
the specif.. of Goodman·, .,....x...W Judllll
Adam' of Locl.v.ood Llbr.u) "O&lt;&gt;dem:l "b)
P"" Kling "'"""""'' for f"""lt) "a r&gt;ec&lt;&gt;·
)o3J). and al!!O a.;:
..., hat lncerHt\·~ "'ould be
helpful.
Go&lt;ldnun =ponded b} "'Y'"l'- -k·' •
"'&lt;rtload J&gt;sue. We 11&lt;1011 Ill ""'""' tliL"uul) v.h&gt;
v.ill r:;l.e""',.,....,... scnau'&gt;l) .llld !ben:~ a&gt;
he "" UlSIIIOOC.nli ~ ., rerum lbal """"'
ck3' lhll the admonNI'illlan • oltr&lt; tlu• "

P """"""'

Wilb.arn R. Gmoncr. on"'"""
presen1D11011. wg~ that &lt;;Ome !""Sible '"""""'"" [or fill:·
ulty might ill&lt;'lude tiDJJDCool """"'"""' boib for
faodt) membc'l!; in&gt;oh'Od in ad""'l'rl&lt;'nl ond
fordeparunent achteving -etr~ " in &lt;tu·
dent de•elopment. He ~ IIIII a IJO'&gt;ib~ l1le3Slll'r for 'od !fftclency could rome
from lookong al the rauo of lbe IUlJl1be:r or
students a dcponmenr gradu:ll&lt;:s 10 lhe number
danl.'t'

for~·,

uadnutll..

Voctor Doyoo ofEngJosll said !hal ad•i'Oe1 weds be:st when studtob have a rol&lt; in
c!looSmg lheor advi&gt;Or. and suUe&gt;red !hal in·
centov..,. for "ude•m 10 !iel&lt;ct a major early
might be de•dof'C(l b)' all.,.ing pn• ilegecl
~I"Yrnll&lt;lll for SIU&lt;Ietlt' ~ilb declared ffill}o«.
He al-.o poonlod OU!Ihal dilrocul""' might ari..c
for &lt;aOOcnl "llh jrunt or spe&lt;:13l m.,jors.
J Ron Gentile of the Grnduale Sehoul &lt;&gt;f
F.Jucarion ~~.,.ro wh)' the num"-r t'lf prof"'-

GoJtim.illl ..-..p&lt;rndod lhal dr ouaoon had

w ~'"""'"'c ••:lld&lt;mK ~mno at !he ex""'""'
(-.f'!oervR.-e-~

The FS-!f-"''" the clw!e
de'&lt;d&lt;lp I
s.-.- ~"" ad\'lSemenl 10 the Edu&lt;a·

lliJUi&gt;l~andl'lliiC)Oll'fli~(Efi'C)

In ...... Senate ~ • Ronald H. Suoon.
'""' ~at fer I.JM.tNI} &lt; h - ·
and 0.. elapmenl. "'fll'1'd IIIII the World
I.Jnolnslt\ a..me.r'\lo'lJO..J klSl
..,...,.S4

1t11ll1011 1ir olsorcport&lt;dtbat V.'l(l&lt;.lbeorgan17m:I003! ~ &lt;~ the Gtalu Buff.UO
Athleoc Coopm~~IM tGB CJ ~oblr for
the """""'· still bad I 1 9 r:uJJion 5bortfaJJ Yo
mo:ung frn.&lt;OCW oblipuon far •!he Gami:s.
burd:totaplan "'""'mplaoUol"'} bodalllbosr
vibo ,....., &lt;IMW IDODe)'.
Stein wd ill3l.
"'"hi~ problerns&lt;Jf
!he O:unt'&gt; "'""' the dofflCulue&gt; m ~
alhle""'. ..ru..il OCCUI'I'Od bcatiiSC' man: alb·
""""' !han ~ had atlmdcd !he Gami:s,
and lhe fact &lt;hat lhe wealht:t " '"' 100 IMalthooi;ll he adrlr:d lhat tt " ororu.: !hal Buffalo &gt;bould come 001 cf the Games with a
reputation for he&lt; ..'CIIber.
The tooue&lt;t po&lt;iii1'C of lhe games for UB,
he &gt;ald. """ tbat the uru'"""'Y gained • ..,..
diuma1nomst
\'iclar Doyoo Ned v. bethtr alllllr mone.
1ha1 "'., rnr.ed to liB had boen paid. S~e~n saod
dlal "''"' na !he &lt;-. He said ilw half the
""""'~ f,&gt;r..,ldc::n&lt;:&lt;:ball,•nd·rdrdedeliJll'lb"l'
had bom paid. and mar. not oounting Public
Safe~) o•erume.ahnlee&gt;•'erSJ!lO,liOlwosstill
0&gt;1'0Jd 10 the unl\?11&gt;11) .

�-·

Geographic Center developing computer o are
to solve economic, education and health care p oble
COMPU11:Jl IMA

~

1he

world.-,.,. ICIOIIIhe saeen
J:n dill """"' I -.x *"""ft&amp;

lbe flow~.,.*""- alllb·

and ~ • ploa&lt;d
CD -.,lbe pmsrwa
day
1111)' bt
by..,.....,....IOIIUdy lbe ....
lial ditnmsians ~ lbe &amp;labol COOIIOIII)'" and ..

""forecall
ltllvil}.. 111&lt;1
Bin)' .ILSOOCUIIe clu-.~obeNllbcall ea..

.....
,.............
....,
Clt,y ..

--........
-

onoa11011

GtS ...,. &amp;al.e dla from many cld'li:n:ool
y them .,...0, 10 ........ I
Billy-'~
oucb Wiler CUIIpOIIIOS lllllltplha" I srdoal ~ ... 10 ~ ... loc:llloa, - - .
andlh&lt;
ly~lbey GJScaabt
used to
lh&lt;ae ~ cnplucall}
as ...,u .. ., rorecao~lh&lt; l'ullft
rorlbe

1111 1-4 •

IIOUia':S and

0

-

-

-supply. bt 111&lt;1

. . ---y.

for Geograptuc lnformallOn llld Anal 1&gt;
(NCGIA) IJid pro(.,._ of ~y II UB
ThU ooflwan: .,..,.,..... alan&amp; With Olbrr&gt;.
cbo~
mf.,.,_,... ond lllalySIS ~-. .,
UB'sElllooaOlnlplex.&lt;binglbeNCGIA &amp;.d
of Dlr&lt;dan. Annual Meebn&amp;

1CG1A. a consoruum ~ tllree uruverubeS
lfiCIU&lt;IintlUB.theUm•=ot}of'MameatOrono.
ond the Llll&gt;'et\11} ofCabfonua 11 Smta B.vban..v.asesubh'iobedm 1
.,,thafht-)-ear
gnu11 fmm ch&lt; ·Olln\ill ~ncr FoundoWon.

A1101btr...., 1D ,.
GIS an bt used
beallh . - , Baay o;pllin&lt;d. The quabf} of
beallh .,.., dq&gt;a&gt;cb - only 00 lh&lt; ~ of
liOCbnokJ&amp;y, but also on lbe deli"') of dill
l&lt;!clmoiQc)' ...
be
addu~&amp; that GIS can ~ Ileal care b)

-"""".-lot..-.

mappulr out '" dJSinbuoon '"a~

r........ fer NCGIA 1oo1&lt; bnllflc a. '
N F fundal&amp; bas bcal _..,., ror an
Olbtt dlrec yean. bt r&lt;pCll1&lt;d
In addtloon 10 lh&lt; dlrec-&gt;-- ,._.. al from

CICS 10

'F

llflll"lPPlllt &lt;XIn'eClJOn bt wd

pub for a
of Jli'OJ&lt;'CI"- wd PM
Sh)
adman&amp;......, for
lA
Ont pant. f\Mided Chrou~ ~ Expk&gt;-

"""- •
uUormaiJOn. hcabh ~ pro'&amp;den can &lt;plll.llly des&lt;nrune "''her&lt; def&gt;CICI'I
ft 0) Slem Ire JocMal and mal,:., lbe
Olber """'of lll&lt;' for Gl mclud&lt; """""·
um-.. ~ pal1tnl'&gt; of bownJ and ct..&gt;..mom

T

bt

fac:u

..........,.""'"""'""~

New system to manage traumatic brain
injury may become model for state·
AL HEALTI-l-CARE faaltll&lt;S.
lhc VB S..hool of MediCUl&lt; and
BoomcdiCll Sc&amp;eoceS. llurd-pen)
pl)tri and f:urul) """""' poop&gt;
lm-. JOined f&lt;li'CC' IOC1Uie
~'" )-..emfonnanal!IIli\IDUmallc·
tn&amp;n ll1j\I')'N IS ....,..tl&lt;lod II r-.e.. Yod Slalt
The N""' Yorl S~a~t Heallh Departmen1
has endorsed lhc L'B Traurn.wc Bmn lnjul'}
RellabdtWIOR )S&amp;Cm-"'iud• pro&gt;lde&lt;complelt car. fer pa1leRb from lhc momen1 of
&amp;numa through long-lmtl care. 1111 on local
factht~ o \lud)tng n "'a JlO'~•bl&lt;
mod&lt;: I fO&lt; 00...."""" of lbt """'
''The unavaol•boht~
a roordonatcd ')'"
Rem of care ror li'1Umattc brain lnJW') In We~
em 'rv. Vorl: caused fam1l.ao. 10 tra\'d to

a"""'

or

out-4-stalefacah~MddtngSlgntficantfinan ­

ctal and ernouonal burden to an allead) l!'agJ&lt;
snuauon." wd Rtclwd Unn. VB cluucal assi5Wit profe&gt;sor of rehobilol3110n mcdtcme
IJid the sy&lt;~m~'s program dorector
"Tlus S} &lt;tm1 ~ umque 10 t1w. wttlun one
geograpluc area. .,.• """ can address most of
the rehabdotauoo rte:l&lt;ds of ondt.-idual; 11.1th
bnun ll1JW)' Pa-sons onjun:d on Wes~em Ne..
YlX1t will bt able 10 Wly m Western New YOil
and otuin comprehenstve servJCeS."
The VB Deponment olRebabiliUIIion Modicine wtll coordinate and adminislcr lhc new
Syslem. ErieCountyMedicalCenu:r(ECMC).
Our Uody of Vicw&lt;y H05pital (OLV ) and ch&lt;

Deacone., Center of The Buffalo GmenJ
Hospttal "''II prmld&lt; d oniCll can:
A board of dtrecu:or... headed b) Gl&lt;ll
Gresham. chair of the UB ~of R.dtabobuoon iedtane. .. ,u...,_the S)'*m.
John Naughton. UB '"""prewdenl fordnucal affat" anddeanoflhc UB mediCll school.

•

UBFH~am
hAll. . .

C. lh&lt; le&gt;-.J 1rqiONII.,...,. cco-

ter. pro&gt;-.des aur medM:al

can: and bod! ,.,_

ho&lt;ptal IJid out1JOll&lt;ftl n:habtlt....., sen ocn
for the bnun-m)lftd.

Una•

. TbtHeadT-

OL pro&gt; odes ~ are (or pa11&lt;n1&gt;
,. -~10
-etbeu-~for
m:overy 0\tt l ~ pc:nod of b
• The ~
pro&gt;-.des lonz·
tmncaro forbram-mjlll'td pollniU ..ito an: ncx
able 10 n:tum tn the 001111'1-..1) or "ho .-1

c..-

"This system is IDlique in
thai, within one geographic •~terlded can:
AD.,._.,.noa.,ffl,
u:amo.,.._
area, ~t·e tww can address "'"".,._'"JIIIl&lt;'"' ~b)anrmedi­
caldu-ec:u.l\1.111\aLC Labo.L'B IOlallprol"csmost ofthe rehabilitation
'"ofrdtatoi~modoctne.and•1Ubtl'dlowed
.,. !he) """"' through lbe ,,...,... Lab ...-.~~
needs of individlmls with
prondr umfJOd rnodtall dimo::bon 10 pabmb.
"""""'
'*" """"" the ~ fiiClbbto;
brain in}uf}: "
and roonli:na '*". EC::MC.

-.-

Gar) S a.R. dtniCliiWOCiale proCessor,
and KettbA Wilhams.dJniCll Ul&lt;IIUCIOr,boch
on the VB Department of Rthabthtlboo Modi~medical eM:. the DeaoonessCemerond OL V. respeat~) . AD 1brec
phySICWlS - pbysiatn~ysociani &lt;P&lt;wng m n:habtltlaucil mod me
ClaudtaWass.a"""""'~anpoo&amp;e~
and VB clorucal111&lt;1rU1.11or of rehobilrtaaoo tmll-

.. ,u sene on lbe board. along "'tb ~ ­ "D&lt;-...,u
"'"" fmm ch&lt; parttcop3Uflg facoltues. the §lair
Health DeparlmenL tlurd-patt) pa ""'
bnun-&amp;nJury ad&gt;'OCliC) groups- The health dc:panmen1 has Cllllorsed lbt
Western .,.. Yorl syslema&lt;twa)ofpro&gt;-.dmg qual tty Clft at a lower 00&lt;1. Medtcaod oft.en
pays for rehabthtauon. and local can: is 1es
expc:nsove thaD """""""'out-of-51* facilities.
Each facihty involved willrontinuetopmvod&lt; specifiC oer.•ices. .. it has In the past:

ane.,.-.llbt~dtnaoroflbe 'SICm.

Lmn. .. ~ don:aor. Will adminiSier
neurop5)'Cholog """""' ond direct PRl£l'1lt1
~within lhc sys1atl. ..

-a

liS()\.....

llOtlhc bram UIJUI) rdlabibulion .uJT • OLv.

Oct. 13

A_UII . . .. ...... ~
Oct 13
oltar pllysca
- ong and
8I'I'1ITlll'lg 10 lacult)· Sllllf
~end....,..,. 8S

8S 10 lhe

corrmnty

The proga-n. an
Healfl

~

~

d h

Rn!ss . __. d&amp;-

!IQ18Cl 10
h ..... ,._. d
.f'do.Witl&amp; """'_. 10 ~
gw&amp;al t'elll1 end ~ f'ICUI1l
- - - Ll! Fe • SJlCif*ll8d by h

er-:.oa~. Schoola~
endBoredciii~. Spm

[)epaTneA d f'!¥itCS
llwa!:Jv and Bcerose Soerce and

en

liw1g Wet Cere

ness~"==•=~
oeer &amp;.llPM

T~ ~ rv::tJdeS
&amp;aiii!IW1g 10 assess~

a..- helllt1 ano 10 oder'Sfyoct'« ~
loal deBase nslc lac:krs
Feelorhealrl~I$$\S.

..r-.:r.
ra.oes a t.e Fe T-6hf1. and c:o;ers

~~-d"deslerOI

and booylanesw1g .esang btlod presand r-t rae rneesuwrtllR as
well-~ Scnaw'lg
tai&lt;e
jjlace ro lbcnl175 ..AUTn M!ra lrdo\lllials brei lObe.""" lorawtliovasan!

aAa-di9BaSewibe~
leSlrog opcrns suctl as physical finess
lflSII'Ig, UlCir:nll capact)l evaUlllon

and m!docal evaUaltan
For rrae riormaloal, cal R&amp;l Serat 64&amp;3148 ~ 9 .:Jl a.m

\IIOOS

and~:Jlpm

�•

Community cOmputer
network to open ~Oct. 13

=:: ::-All

Neurosurgeon introducing
. technique to help children

'""""'•iebllutpcl'liQJII(COIIlplten~.......-

DeiWOib. 'b is""" uf 16ecross1he Uaiied
~ ,.llh 20 more in~ The

ally will be.II* 10- (lQbl oamimdlollllil..,._ • liblwios. "'
&lt;I' other des. Tho!)
WID be libk ro ponill..., as JU&lt;$1S on dJe
M""l'l ,or open • fl'l'e (.'IC:I10I:llll ...,.,_ tlult
-eill11~ ibem ecx:oento"'""" roon: !mlt&lt;U,
Thefinuuc:blemllrulll&gt;inplaltinlbel...alayeile
Squon: bnndl cllheBuffaloand FneCounly
Publtc ubnries.
Yf:tkcyOI) tbotdespi1etbrll&amp;n"*'&lt;&lt;minc diiorpnizobon ol liWI)' ~ nel·
BIJFFALO FREE- lET ii e.il ~
ondcompeiCftded.-b) lbt.UIIIJilbaled_ ILS
fnendly "our._.,. destp ~·a mo:nu
dc5cribed as a tcnes (If "buolddoc:s~-~
,.'bofoe...,..IIJCIIIOS!IbolrMo&lt;&gt;foo.n:tin!lido.
AmonJibe20'11ui
p"openi&lt;lfarOR

I'I!CI:iPIJilll••iUfeatlfta~obooloneofCbe

lbe8dmmllilnlfioo~.,..llballf&lt;Ypul&gt;-

aul:oliSbed
tbeliEARTI.ANDFIIEENET illl'earia.lll.
Special guest~ at tho pu1t1 ~will
include fclnnoi- IIWe Sen. Jdhn Sheffer, ..'lao

be discussions, 'lf'OI'U' lfll'1clal · group hal:l, p&lt;l!i1 off&gt;ce. tbe achool bowie, tbr
Wa~em N&lt;rw Yor\ inftll!miiiJOII center, hlnry, and many more Oooehe or she....,.,...,.
1 buifdin&amp;.lhe IJICI'CM aekd fmm a~ of
infunnarionpath reiMI:dUJthetopoc:
• Upon entenna lhe ~off""'-" for to
stance, lhe W1&lt;:r can dec! to learn """" oboo1
the netwarlt • "pooraa """'ices,• cbed. Ius or
be: mail. .....S ll'lilll. ha•"' mail fono'lltded, 6ncl
OU1 lbc locaiJon and baun (If local (X&gt;!'tal
.....,;.,.,., and so OC1
• The "specul uttmeSt group hall" offrn
biJII&lt;tin boolrds and netwod: diJ.Cn&gt;SlOil' 10
peq!lt ,.,Jth specul UllenO!o'lS ~·8 from

IJFFALO FRJEa-NET. Wet~~em

New Yorlc"~ publit IICDO!UO&lt;t&gt;munity C!OII1pOlller rte~work, will

oelelnleiOiflllldopcnir!£wilho
RIOeJlQM!ioon:J.6jlJ'D.onWcdnesllay.Oot. 13. .,lbo&lt;ltrllorli:lr'T~~~m~mw.
The pubbt is iiiVJVId ond will ,_..., •
bano:Js.«J inuoduction to lbe ll)'otem. Thooc:
plannina 10 llttlld - ~ to call 8S2-

3844.
. BIJFFALOFREE-NETtSponufoRIIlOOal
moYC~J~m~IOWIUdrre.,.commuruty~'YOICII1S el infOftllllioo ~.,. CClll1pLlB

,_,oy

isk:d the~ wilh 1 ru,(D)
gmoclhrougbibe -Yon.s-~

of llducallon.lllld Torn Grundet. JftSldenl of
!be Nationat
. T~ Nerwork.

''About 7,axJ users have
been testing the system for
the past year. BUJ we need
many more produoe the
critical mass necessary to
fully 1f!Olize the system~
potentiaL"

to

~ liEIL , _ . , .
-'----------lhe national umb&lt;ella organ12&gt;1t1on for

.-.

r--

The S)'ilcm I spon&gt;Or&lt;dMIOJ funded tbrough
several UB entities· Uru~ Ltbnuie!i. lh&lt;
Oepanment of Compull"'\ and lnfonnat1011
Technology. lhe School of Information and
Ltbrary Studies; lh&lt; Town ~jfTonawanda lob
Trrunmg Department; tbe We&lt;~em 1\.'e-.&lt; York
Library Rc""-"'XSCouncil and NYSERNC'IIh&lt; ew Yor\ State Education and Researdl
~twor&gt;..

EYeD in iiS oum:nt. fledgling Slall•· BUFFALO FREE-NET offers access 10 an asiOOisbing am1y of infonnatioo and educlllJOI:Ial
resources at no charge 10 the u&lt;er
A. Neil Y cr\ey, associate professor m lhe
UB Sdlool of lnfoonaticn and Ubrary Studie$. has been woddng for three )"'81' to llelp
ewm!ish the local network. He I!lens !he system tothepublitlibnlty mlhal it offers a wid&lt;
ranl1" of frtt infortn!llloo and oommunicalioo
serv"'"" to everyone. iocludmg llue wbo cao
neither afford nor easily find lh&lt;m oo their
Aocess to tht system does not req01"' special training or equipment. Wilh vtrtually &amp;n)
l.iodofi'Candaninexpensi•-emodom.anyooe
i.n W01ilem ew Yor~ can log into FREENET. Among. [ oomponent.s are electromc
mail internctiv&lt;: biJIIetin boards. directories.
cal.ndar:s. "virtual meeting" sites and collaborative educational and social "entures.
Beyond lhe Buffalo ~~ea. FREE-NET offers
to '"""" [earures of intematicnal networl.s li&gt;.e INTERNET and INREN.
the proposed national researcb and educa-

""1t

= """""'

tioraal network..
"About 7,0CXJ users ha•e been teSting the
system for lhe pas1 year." Yerkey says. "Bul
we need many more te prodiJ&lt;:e the critial
mass neceS-""Y to fully "'alitt lhe system· s
potential. A certain number of "speakers" ." "'
needed to keep a speclal-inu:resl discusSIOfl
group going. w~ also will be adding to the
yl&gt;tem and e&gt;panding se"ices that users fi!ld
useful."

amaaeurnodioandpopliiU&lt;ICto~
Alive" m&lt;ioolor~. Some Vlber li(X'·

cia! crouP' include 1tbr Cemtr for lt.eunilir&gt;g
Fami• Buffa(().~ s&amp;e&lt; aty group,
....,.,.,..,., issues group. the bbrar) ~
Clt&gt;llliCil and many othen; .
• n.e "counbou&gt;c" -only p - ib&lt; """"
a di=*&lt;&gt;rj of lhe name and loca1Joo of all
munictpal. counry. state and
court
houseo, but also offers a SUI1l!JW') and update
on lttmdr&lt;d&gt;ofU .S ~CoundecJ..vm
and e.. Yoo State App::ll.ut Coun deer-

"""'8 The

"scho.~ hou - rollen ac&lt;...,.,_ to a
networ&gt;. ol nabOnll mterl&lt;'ll"" cla&gt;!&gt;IOOUI dt&gt;proJ&lt;CI&gt; and coot.:st.s on a va""'&gt; of
fields; a student pen pal net"&lt;TI..; a netvo ori for
diSCUSSKln. and onformauon uchan!1" fnr In·

CUSSIOO

home educatcn, tellehers and porent&gt;
Usen v.bo elect to do so can tap on1o

INTERNET, lhe mas '" mtematJoraal us«
netwai..
BUFFALO FREE 'ETcurrend) ..s1Bffed
by oomnoumty and unoversrty SWdenl volunltei'S c~nity
updated tnfoonatiOI'I mto lhe ')'Stem from a ' 'ond) of
soun:es. Those from UB-- Y~ and romputeranalystlamesGerlandoflbe UB Department of ..,.. Suppon Sen-x:es--wor&gt;. With
lhe nctY&gt;•o n.' teclmical, admimSiraU,.., and
information cJe,-elopment fW~&lt;.'(J()f1S.

'"'"""""'load

TO SIC~ ON TO THE BUFFAlO FREE NfT SYSTEM

u.

...

. an.., Sial!
EU .O.TE

,

GIJII.Yforc:cn:lnl

~

....-..f'omla:ly

-·aiblblt em 'Wel1ml """" Y&lt;ri.,
Is,_ bema~ br 1"""'
• Clluldren' Hii:Jol;pal uf
pofeoOQI' of

....,

........... ..

,_, *-.., ....S b . . . ...,_
fll'lber ~ ·
~
.,..
i&gt;k
lllilll
ia
balpilllllll)'l
O...' ....._,lbe~
1111&lt; 1 ~allo
&lt;lllltr
• All~ fl"liiWII ror ualiltc
dlddral
.,... baroda ..c1 ~ ...-

of pedlotrtc
. ..

• specall

n--

eo~ in de~
f~ uf 1be
lnit1 ..:I "'"ftft CIO!d . ..cl 1 wrp:alapmem of pedJalric brU 1111110n
He • tatroductlll &amp;e• pcduomc

,.......u...,._,
Ollllydeomod
far~

•
""""

~toc:botoquosiDW.,..,.Neo&gt;Y

flo::ioldlllllbw• ~ - . q i c l l --m. cbJdra .... - .
o..-'1'1!111 tlll:lllitafdqretllom The
Jobm
' t..WYc:rul.y
dMoediaoe
- ~ ,... _._.,.,. a::sidom:y •
the lltii.....ay d ~- He ...... .....,

ande~eust~,...,m.,edortbe bpn

fnaw'sy
,...,....
00.~., l!cdfalo., .....,.._...,.,..
pm::abdor~ wilhcadni polo) lllllled
idoctlw lbuol ~. "'t.idl .....,.,...
n1U!do:: lUI-.. and pL In this JliOill'dtlre, ibe
!U'pOI ..._.. ClliWII ........,. INI .., &lt;:aJIIlllC

)'tilt\"' l lpecUoic

nuldoeuoe11!11m~,;piSI'II.

___.,.,.[dow ..

be olfmd for Cbe 6na 11tt1&lt;: ., Buffido lJo:q
fibelopbc far lilrn -.b:&lt;d llwllocb
flextiLo ,........., dlmlles &lt;dod~ ,..._
..... """',.,.,.... ~ LJSm« frwc:r

.:.1 c-- ore t.llbn&amp;•poUD:Ja · po(.....,. of~.,...........
u..r-..rySchooi~Hc-81a&gt;•
llltJrlllu1j!""""'""'J"•Ibe~'aMo­

monal lediCII( Cltrllor ..

a.c.co.

UB employees can donate
vacation to ailing colleague
a....-

4be Buffllo ee.d
. lbe pl\)'gnun pmn:les ., .,..,.llcat ond """"' .-lod

NlVERSITY UNIONS ha•-e be""""' part (If lh&lt; VIIJ8IIOQ L&lt;&gt;avt
Oonouan Program. ,.blc:b&amp;llooo'S..,
ml(llt•yee to alii •ac:oodan
urne 10 a &lt;ril~ jb!i&lt;tJI from tbe offi&lt;r
l&gt;ecai.R~ollneso.s:udllarbn~.
~ ISSilC1a ..bo .. ~ tht
~ for l'eNJmel Services.

COil

~-be modo to t;pedfic: ...:11•lduok. ·o.rury~ ~- ..... plOL
Furtbo-, )'Qll havetohavel,.ucuiar...,_
m IIWid " Oonaoons
be,_ from d ation leave ani) ,and the ......soflbe~-

odded.

Whtle no., v ..,.._ ~..a.. Oonatloa Prop-am JYO'-.deli on c...-dlcat 1uMni1anao ..,.._
\1«. a&lt;:&lt;:oni••! to Pa.ul Zarembb. 11
.,..,laiJolrl} ,. still more hmllrd
he would
b e "Right """ ODI) ~ Stiff and
hl:nn.lln.&lt; """ . . _, ,.,. oadomics.- ....... he
notes thai liOOiber bmM till &lt;t5 I!Ylliblbil:lcy it
'"~ ot..u polmfuol. ~ '1f I
v.IIIUZ:d to maLo a donalim, 00.. \l&lt;OQJd 1""""'
who ...,.. cut them::'!"'
8&lt;11 Zlmnbka adds~ eoob o( tbe
Soef'\-act' are trul importad.. - ' bops diM
man) donors .a.::p ""-d. '"It's a IJal ..,.
III3IUW'ilwt
.1would li.lz..,._ ..mhas
II&gt;CIIIII!ida' ~ iL~
form&gt; and addiuonal mflll'lliOiiaa COlli be
olxalned by COibCUJII! &amp;br mdr•'ldolif' union.
"'b) ~ Olnsly • 645-l6S2.

r=r•'t donaoor!&gt; of ~tnl

11- from a col~ue 1n an) of lhe
por11Ctpallf&gt;! orgarulJIIJOilS. &lt;ubject 1[1 ~D

lea•&lt;

gu.:lthnc&lt;
All Clf11PU' umom ,..,., p;utlClpOII::, she
They - UUP (lxJth Cenlt'r and Health
Sereoces Chaptml. CSEA. l'£f and Coo.mcil
82. ManaJ;&lt;nai--ConfldeotiaJ ~""'

' "&lt;!

alo;opartrcipont.smdns~ Speclfoc~­
hne&lt; as to ..11o moy """'"&lt;aid may
from

,.at').

organ.iutiOII

p:q:tt """' . .

111

~"'aoid

lepl - ) conftdenbal.,

1\ooo&lt;don IOOinSI}. a worler "bo!;ebargauung urut" m tho profl'alll and ,.rohaslbed
all '&gt;ld lenc

...,._ "'1$....,. ..

,.,...~&lt;ef&lt;&gt;&lt;....unalbe~orpni­

3Call'lllng 10
Omst~. but a •!lllldanl funn for donotJco ~
110'&lt; av1.1lablt for all parucipao~&gt;
It .. impltwlt ... note.. """' Din&lt;!). t.-stedpersonsmo) cmo.SIItliOmlnOflkriO
help a fello" emplo)«
Accardo"! 10 Plul bmnl&gt;U. president of
10 O&lt;pi11UOOO.

-,....,.,tune

au-t ...,.laU.-..tty

....,....follow .... ~
below:
• Setl'(lur mooem 10 1t1e f&lt;ljtow.ng

lie P..tt;y, a bit, VI 100 - ' - ' 8 Doal &lt;llrectly to (716) 645-6t28

• «« does not

hit me return 11ey three
or four tmeS UI'1IJI a asks yoo to tog "

........-... .....

...

8 Type _ . . . , _ _ l d o r
FltEEPOIIT (lhe guest user ld)

.._ ......... CIIillft

The menu Wtl now appear Those who
want to apply for a personal account
allowing fa pecsona1 mai Oellvery. etc
can select ·Apply for an Account ' Irom
1t1e Admlnlstrat., OffiCe on 1!le ma•n
menu and to!low mstructJOnS

. . _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ,

I

MIT,GUAI.n'f-· f • t 5I

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.

...,...., .... ..., .. a.. .....·

Technologies .

(716) 838-2745

835~"-. Towndf--.da, l«

FAXf!36.6!191i

�•

E!eoa1 pool •Actwe~ ~- Re,.
Mn3r -~for TheOacn.
wloller- .. *V~--N&gt;~~
ns.nt Poarv ano Pian:&gt;.· Oct 6 • ep "" ..

.

~Comell~ . Bocot~
~~ poe1r¥ ono
lr
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an Oboe Award-""""""Q pjaywrgi'IIIWlCI e s;age ~ He
'iMera!Qe&gt; £kw'lz • ""' SO'lg m...o&amp; t.l&lt;'lnJS bv Janos
Jopitr1 anc1 iillP'W
or sucn
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T-

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LaSI Waltz "

=.:..'= ~

Fey
•&amp;eer~t~Y ~ nlo lne Reo- 'N Aol .
al famE , IIf9&lt;' ""plaj'IOQ !llueS 1M !IW .. 01IC8QO end
a: ended UCLA s filM'\ SC1'lCOI w me !ale Jtm Morr1Sa1 . 1&gt;&lt;1
l'le'fOeC 10 ~ lhe Oi:Jo's ~ I~ 11191

tM&lt;o.w.s,........w. .......

chroniC &lt;'ut.

lJOI!Irl'lik1etclll ~-

Uilf~OOlll.l(1

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101:,..

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ComdiUntv 10bu; Nri

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f • 'I OAY

41.'1 hoi~

I =:.:=•II'IIIONOM~
AI \\hat \'ou "•nrro Kt10"
About Mu:tr.ipartldt 0) ntt•IICii

U.lf".p r--c ...., _ , Prof
Rtcbanl " '&lt;mer. Phif'W'

Um~ M ltburg. Gm:naft~
454 Froncul North Campm

--3 45p.m

ATal..,r r ..... c~w-a · , s.11
T ......_IIIMI~lil y in
1 Modd Plant SY"ent, Dr Mill')
Biti!K)ft. UB Brok)gtal Sc-.tA.'r'"Dop. 114
Ncnh

Hocb.......

c.mpo. 4 p.m.
_
, _ I.K1\ME
- AtE SCHOOl CW

=--- - - -

~.-nst
~

\\........,Politl&lt;:&gt;aodSerioty,
Dr Nar•'l McOieo. pru(.....,. ti
r-•IIJJoal ~. Na.pra Um'
H&lt;nraj!t Room O..llali,
,...~u
a.m. Cow Slthl
the door. full t-i
fa..-.a -. til
b&lt;..er&gt;-.d Cali i -~IOr
mort .nf(lflJ'lJIII."KJn., Spon!IQR'd ~
the Watcm Nc.- YOO. RcgMJn.J
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Apjllir:o- I · - - - - - - - ·

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Theotor. 6il ~•St p.m (;,.
~b) Summott., ..,,.

C~s '30pm

by-.,.....,-

- -· -

_- -.),.,.,

Amrm'-.:

WEDNESDAYS AT • f'UIS

2'921

UICI'u.
R.. Cdo_.. llaor. Tlllrl-ofll\'hlto
. . . ..

()n.'ft'15il,-, Dt R.ooakJ T
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'"""'""'""'"'""',;all

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plh. ~pm ~andopent.ol'ht

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c..- "-"

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"-adot.&gt;·
nua ~- , Hotrputl a._""

NonbC~

Pa:lnt.-.a
Knopp II rht UB l'nftW) C=
A.lltumn ~ted.utJ el' lhe Grad•
F_,.,ll.!'- Ct't'lk.1 )(I" fl)mlw
ro-. North Car!sru" 1n , m

~ W'lh , _ , _ ano rr.sca oagrner-cs Sn:&gt;e,...
,ears "' The Doors Manzareo haS pt'tlOuCe&lt;l ~ aD..mo
tor he LOS Angeles bano ) 9"d cob!Xltllll!d
f'N&gt;IP
Glass

Altf IX,_,...,_.

1"ht A.J1 ~) C~ 54¥
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:iob.. fWi'l matl.lkl!dl'lmt !oC'1Uah1~
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ll!ldrn~t . Forrnorr:

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John G Broob. M D.. profts""
Ioiii! Qo;.ncr m c INiifl'&lt;· Opu 5'1,
; Skr c....en tWl. on11
Pluralist World, I&gt;Uxrn&lt; Greeoe. ar pedtll""' llld &lt;hrcaor. o;, ,,.
prof&lt;S...- of pfulw•phy Mil ed•·
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Door Do;;uibuoort ep...........
for Caaf(lmla! llodt...,.

n..n.p,

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r...,.... Cetor:r. 2o001
... Rd 1.4.30 p.m For dl.f.,._
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MD. d l - Caf - A
M&lt;tt)~ •lOam

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Quality
Service
Variety

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medoc:alSomc&lt;s. IJ&lt;BFSoud&gt; c:..n.,.. 4 P""'
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"l'loo ...... 223 Ladwood
Mil Campi, . 7 p.m Repuoo fomtli c. bt ot:omcd al
Lookw,&lt;Jod' • .,r.,.,..,. 4lc&gt;k oo b1

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flOLG MMA lfB\'M I

Br.tdens • Burger l(jng • PizLl Hut
The ub ltoppe • l ni. fart
Copy top • Gunpm Church Co.tlition

6

Campu Tee'
wut!i • CV
D'An elo Hair &amp; Cosmetics
~nt·A-Car

PIWIIIUC\'-

Proporal ........ l it&gt; cJw
ICU, JOO&lt;pb Sas«eo. Pharm 0
candodatc 248 Cool.&lt; .,_
Campus 8a.m.

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1)r a..la., llii.ALwood

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-YSAT41'WS
lli'IIIAIIY-

Porta.,- Poocry, Qxa

Capno. pn&gt;fcssor o( Amenan

Studtes. Um•· ol Coimln. Pcnu-Campus
Noon. For more tnf&lt;Wmltloo coo·

pl. 438 ClemeM.
UICt ~

l882

Ro~t BHf

Anderson's hozrn Cusunl

WEDNESDAY

Bema.ean at64S-

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lnsunntt · t&gt;ni~

Lulhem Campu Minis ry
1umt1 Travel
ewman Center
Opticallm~ge

Record Thutre
Kaplan Test Prep
Univenity Bookstores
UBMicro aleS Center ~

UB

~

~~

The Art Falty CaUects
E"ISI!l'l und Bud Wurst by Thomas Nast c•ca 1892 os par. of the exhlbrt of facui!y-oM&gt;e&lt;l
works opentng today ., the F100 Arts Cencer The show contnues through Oct 22

a:DXXIl.

North

Ca~npus

Opnl 8:30a'" to 1Qpm most

uys

�8
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Merftll Callge. he ...-.cl •
rn.tc.l degree tnYn Nlw
Yor1&lt; ~ He jooned 1he
UB 1eciAiy In till1

.............

super-conducts at~
degrees Kelvin;
other carbon
uperconductors...
do so at about 30
degrees Kelvin. "

l.OCKWOOO UflfWI'I'

a.ua'f AaOaA"
....... ~ dnclcrol
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bcllrd ol dnlclcl's ollhe U-

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dMsloncl
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brWy Asaooa-

Sdlnelfa. bo&amp;
Ill •
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20 dopes
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and

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60
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Electn&gt;&lt;&gt;ptJca1 f•lenal ond pnnIU&lt;&gt;1 al!oamcmbcf oflh&lt; Nev. Yorir. llltelnQIIU1t

II Bdl Llltxnlcx...ando&lt;h&lt;r~

1993-96
L-----_J

~~

-

At7lenl:an

Aln&lt;.lsetTWlrt Pat&gt;. " 1-isny ol
TecMclogy IJfll1 Thrills has
wnneo booi&lt;s and many JDII·
naJ andes on teciYlology and
n Arnencan cutlln. as
wetl as a botlloography at Jules
Verne Stle has heicl prcleS5101131 posllJOtlS Ill lhe Library
ol Cong•e$5 and at lhe libra!·
.es 81 Lel"ogh
.
Cieo&lt;Qel-' ~Sity Oldahoma Sla1e UnM!•SIIy and
Ao.b.rn lJ&lt;werscty

TO---

SOC1AL &amp; PRE\IENTI\IE
MEDICII.,oE

._..,.,
Frwnk

Sc:J..... .-,

8SSISlalt d!s11nd clrocD' d
~~an:lr&amp;-

- · lhe Sd'ocl d Medale
'"'8oTledocal Scoences has
bem- presdln-elecl d
lhe Sooory d Drecos d A&amp;_ , " Medocal EclJcalm
The sooely wtCl cxn1.cts
and~ rnedocal ec1Jcaand aas as 1oaoson
and ClOI'ISI.CMIIO- rnedocal

110n-

gOI4lS IS~

d prcfessoomls n lhe foekllrorr. U S lnd

ear-. rnedocal sc:tUlls

~a1965UB
~- has bem acwe n lhe
90Ciely for .-1y :we deca:jes

M 8SS:lCiale ptt:Aessor n lhe
UB Deplnner'l d 5CJCiaj and
~Medlen!. he holds
rnasiWs and dociOrBI degrees
lrom Ohoo Slaie lkw!nlly He
has held hiS ().lfenl posiOOn 81
UB snoe 1976.
He r8CI!M!d lhe Slffl 0-.ar&gt;c:elcr's "'-d for EltallerGe n
f'n:*lssional Serw:e n 1988
andlheNewYOI1&lt;~

l.l'welslly Prolessms f.&gt;cel.
lance- for oulsiWlOOg
perbTTmce n 1990

UB ·

Cenler for

Elect'&lt;'DIC

~rn--.por

oo Supcn:oncluaml) based "' UB
"Becau II becornes ,upercon.
doctu1 at 1empemure. "" much
lu her than 1hos. of JR' KJU.J) )n·
th&lt;.1zed carbon supem:lnductor&lt;. II.
W..•lh&lt;ooprer-&lt;&gt;'ldt molena! canna be nplatncd b)' cunmt ~~leone\
about suporoonducu"l)

~&lt;heloped

do oubou!'IO~
, ...,-.,.
uplaJncd "'Tbosr rn.lenah
be.
b) and ~ eq&gt;il!ncd b) lh&lt; BCS
~ lhat cr.._,~

""flC"l''lld·

''In
C . C,.andC.,
h dJe fll\l ari&gt;ol! supercoaduc·
lOt 10 be ~
hole-&lt;lapUif. •. """"" ..
lbe declncal
~o(lhe maiCnal-cbarac·

1m zed b)'

cborJr&lt;On)1 J*U&lt;Iei

lhat bella&gt;&lt;. nn-er1hden. I

0\"'~"""'

~\ 11) '" ttnn o ( -

~baveonl}bealdopoc!WIIh

llCk-\ tnteraf..1' 111.1omac 'abra!Kln

n&lt;pllvd)chorBedJarUCits.&gt;ad!Uo

~ .... dl~n~won..d

IOn ..,

chwpd par•·
Kao rxplau.ed lhat tbe BCS

OUI

b) Bardr&lt;n. Cooper and

"Becau!e~

ll'IOSil) ...:..d ..-.~~
hl¢o:r.._...,. ~·'-1!1&gt;

Study looks at drug reaction documentation
hosprtah ""'

HILE EQUIPPED
w11h modem com·
puler ) Siems. 70
percent of ho!.pltals
1n a rece nt nau o-nal 'un t)

\anDU

published aJ.

l"'"lhrm. Inch genenll) ~
on
~"'&lt;' '"" ly
relat,.el)
common ad·

"""""'zed..

\'et'SC 1:\''ents
~ For

lha

reason. rare

conducte.d by 1he Cen1er for

e'-c:nt.~t~nal

~Ia!;&gt;

ltlel) 10 be
lclenufled
causal!) ~­
latc:d 10 drug
ei.J&gt;O'Ift ond
•gntf1caot

Re&gt;earehat
UB are u-10 odequatel} doaJ.
menlmfonnoliOrlllboul pauml&gt;' ad·

'"""' .-:oor..IO dru!!'Often lllC) aruble onl) w detocl

ad•er&lt;edrug reacrJOnS lhat ha\'C
nt:'W ad\-ent
Jft\1011 ly reponed or""' relau'-ell
common Only 30perccn~orlh&lt; 166
e•·am m3) 10 unn-ponecl," lh&lt; ~
hospitals m lh&lt; Slue!)
a phar·
port SlaleS The ~ ,.,..,.,
fi'UIC') computer system were able to
lhat charactenSIICS or mcl.mcluaJJn·
eleelromcall) link drug-pre'ieribmg ' sutuuons.. ~ .,. whether 0&lt; na a
dala 10 pauen1 oui&lt;OnlCS. a nec:e&gt;hospital "as &amp;ffihalc:d " 11h a med•sary step '" morulllnng pal.leniS rO&lt;
cal scbool and lh&lt; number of beds '"
adver&lt;edrug~ Onl) 164po&lt;·
lh&lt; hospital. "ere or mtner unpor·
cen1 could proVJcle lhrough phar·
lallCC '" cletemunm~ a hospital'
macy c:ornpu~erclatabases lh&lt; reason
morulcnng ) u:m ror ad"""" drug
rO&lt; drug lherap). onl) 8} p&amp;enl
evenb
- Thaddeu\H.Gr-aseb.IISSISillnlprocould provide lh&lt; name or a drug'
vendor and ool) 3 pcn:ent could
c:A pharmacy • UB and duu:tor
proVJcle tbe lol number o( • drug.
oflheo:nll:f. ..ro """' jYlDCIIIOI '"-The study, lObe published'" lh&lt;
tigaa- '"lhe sn.dy. sax! d '1ugh!Jghls
OCiobet issur of Amt-rican Joumai
lhe ddJCic:ROOS o( ~ sy&gt;l&lt;mS
of Hospllal PlrnrmtJC)•. also round m!be hospitals wberemastof Amc:nca
thai in orderiOddoct ad"Crte eveniS.
goes rD&lt; iiS heallh are." Whik mon:

.,,lh

ressor

~..men~....,.,.SIO

hospolabi -~lbeorcl&amp;a.
be ocldlod. ldalvdy fell, bavelbe doc·

1IM:IIIple

aor.:l'ellli.IOtSIOU-=!I!iplC1ficdnlcs

..-.ociad ............... cW&amp;acl--

"""

&lt;lfTIIIIIm

!he..,.,......

-~lbecln.w-productb

no.rmen.."""'ll'll')!""""~

0&lt; J*lmiS'

ldvene
1lr .......,_,

d&gt;a

""-"" . . . . .

..........t ................... n.e
llllWOit fouDc!IIUIIIaOU!I
hmt

10

. ..

• icledlfyq .. bad """""""'
lhe diu@. JX*SII
rl liiiMrse
and the pllonnacoubcal romJ*IY and product b number c:A ,..._

IWSl berome mon:..,.,..., .. rqJOr1lng
-ene e-au 10
FDA ond 10

...::niS.

~~­
newi)~~&lt;YMIS ..lllbe

~
1be ... r/lhe ....., .. 10

maclr knaoon .._.
" Aid
Gnseb.. The SIUdy .. anb:lod
llwuj;h lhe ~ ~ Net·
•~1cl.e .....mc:Abosppbormacisls OQ;IDiliOd 10 aJIIIb1

"'*""- ...... ......,.....""""

pcs-marl.:mng wdoes &lt;:A how basptabml plbeiiiS reaa IOdnlp. IVIclc:d
by lhe Foodond Drug~

&lt;Wills." SIKIGrada.

....n.
w

and~~lhe
~ beadc:d by Gntsda. IS lllliQUe

.s

utlhe
Wlat.augs..,SIU&lt;hc:d...,..vdy
"'dnca1 tnab bdooe !hey are mor·

l:eoc:d. ....ron:seen liiiMrse u:acoons
rill) occur afier ~ bc:cause
lhedrugs""'""" ~
10 much 1qer Jl(JilUiatJons o( patienls.
~ c:A v.iJcm .., much sder than
those who(lGII'IIQplliCd in cbnical tnals.
The ad\"""'-e''etll survey .....

~ .. lr.&lt;y-r/lheho!p-

111. .........,.,_,., collotlc:d ond
.. ...
rl a&gt;mpiii&lt;IS ..
ftb.....-.qldvene
"'

holpals -1111111*
dormloan

10 ~ ~

abooa pa-.' ""-"" oeat:DODS 10
clnlp. 13.5 peaarl c:wld
ID

m-

adrnill-....,_, 71.3pmzrlc:wld
olllllin lhe 111111 number c:A
c:A.
drug ...:1n--...s - ' 67 .7 per=ll
could obwn informabon .toJI pi·
bCOIS' alletpes 10 drup.
The SIUcly QCXIIeS - of a rela·
11\ely new d•sciphne . cal led

pharmacoeptclettuology. "'h1ch
moniton;efTeasofdrugs onspectfJC

plliml populatioas.

�Three big wins for
women s volleyball;
weekend games set
..... eo.. .........
":men's \ltlleybllllalm ill on a rol. wnIWlO hee ~ matcl'alnl 1M1
d lle last . tll'lise . . record tl 7..s
The FqW1 D1MIIed tl Niaogara on Sept
21 w.tlere they dafeeled lle · ~ Eaglea
U .. llfUJHY

,u

15-6, 1&amp;14, 15-1110

...MO ~:§~
tniiiChe8 in 48 ton_
Thefloyljs~

weelcehd -Mih a 5-15,
11,11-15.12-151oGs10
AllantlC Ten membar West
Vrgna Le txlk a palr of matches on
Saturday -Mill YICiorl88 CMII Aobar1 Morris
15-9, 12-15, 15-5, I~..,.;! St. Fr.1ncis of
f"ennsyttllna. 1.5-10, 17-15, 15-12 Sophomore c.ldle Hils! recorded 2•
n lhe
IWO tnaiChes while ffestmln Candl Sims
added 17 ldlls Wid 40 aSSISis Sophomore
Sandte Harrvln IB1Iled 15
. -45and 20digs
U8 ex1ended its
Slreak on &amp;.nday
aflamoonwilha 15-13, 4-15 15-9.15-13

decisoon CMK East Coast Conlereooe foe
Cercral ClonnectlcU State Hwsllalloed 16
kits Wid 18 digs v.tllle Harrigan cllpped n
Wl#l 30 8SSIStS and _ , blocks Senoor
Oar8le GiarWlo scored sx blocks n:t 17
digs with sophomore l.alxie SM!elk addng 11 klls and 19 digs
The Royals
be ., IICial agatn Bl
hOme on Saturday when they 11051 Falfloeld

.........

IDP t.e rfl~Sfln at rwGeoge .._,

816p.m nSI..n:tay~Sll'lllllr's•
Noon. AUm!Atena.

~ lo'MIIIIanllln laellug, Va

OA s..day

,......

The BUll,.,._, 101h n h

mDII while ... Aoyals JMoed 131h

Ediru ()(pewho .:xnd
00* 10 llllld
lhe men's IClOI»" ~ 10 a !&gt;&lt;1...., &lt;Mil'
~ rillal CriiUI on s.u.;.y nlltC
~Gallo, a.. Adam&amp; IQj Mat1(
Mall&lt;owllo IIIIo ..., b Coach JciYI
~·s squad who ..-:1 lheor record
1D 1..3-2 EMiillr n 1he
tie BUll let I)

The BUll conduded tteor SllplerTilar
~on Sanlda}' noghl
a 28-17

o...m

II~ Edinboro'-"-·
flilltol~ UB'srecord•oow 0--1
Junoor ~Clift SooiiiY... b .

loa 10

......

_.

9tr-~

~

281 yards

1. OIJnl)i&amp;-

IIOnl on 27 Bll8ri1:JIS Hcllc:JnQecl c:orJ'Clleoon was al'5-yard pas&amp; kl Rusty~.,
.,.. ltwd quarter Knapp fi'Wled lha noghl

The women's IIOOCla" -.n loll a ~ dee&gt;-

SIOO 81 hmf on Sal!sd8y

Radlllle Gel.-,. had 1 4 - n
game b ... Royals Their Mend a,..,.,~
Slarcchol&lt;'s tnt allege goal propelled lhe Royals 10 • 1..()
• home
agaonsl Colgaie on Sepr 22 Galipeau
agatn spaf1&lt;1ed ., goal, SIOppr'og 15 saves
kl earn her firsl shulrut of 1993
The Aoy8ll holt lie us lnllilabOnal Tournament on Saturday and Stllday W11h 5l
eona-e. CoU:Tba Wid Siena prowjing !he OfJpOIJtJan
Amamana Gasbarra scored IWO goals
~ an IISSISt n leadng lhe Royal$
10 a :.0 si'UIO..I CMII Hofstra 111
~eed N Y Sunday allemoon Lor•
Perilo also added a goal 10 ewn tne Rov• · record at •-&gt;~
Sophomore goell&lt;eepe&lt; NIOOM! Pmam
had_, &amp;aYeS in'reoordng her firS!
·
6hu10ul of !he season

122 yWds on lhtee raoepcoons v.t111e
~~l.lllled 116)'Wdlonso•

ca1ChaS. ~ • 51-)llriW ltW . . \4)

lhe BlAis' tnt score on 11.- opanng &lt;*Ne
F\.nnng bid\ Sunnll Modey gar«~ 52
yards on 13 cames and scored one IOIJI:h.
down Scoa scored lhe Buds hnel m on a
Otl8-...,d sneai' on lhe f.-st play at
lotdl QU8I1el
ScXIO -lorooa o.A ofiiCIIorl..-y
ltYl:u;t&gt; h! b.m q.aw
!WI r'f.AY and
was replaCed by Mn Taytor Taytor a
~11om lroqL.os. ganed er;jt y.a;
and.., rl'¥lQWt hdown on,_ wco.
lege !niP
hshad
19 y.yds n.W1n;l
and- :kll-5 fm.Vl ne ar1or 31 y.a;
DelensM!Iy. oornerbac:lo. Terrenoe Ftllw
and strong safely E - ~ eac11
collected IWWllael&lt;les Fisher also lorced
an Edinboro flntJie n:t brd&lt;e 14&gt; a pass
1 iriiOide llnetlacl&lt;er Cra.g Guest COiteCieO

I

w-i.
The

T..-

eogl'r laCkJes

's hlmls 1eam was stu! o.A7.fJ

Ill hOme agaW1St St. BonallenaJre on t1e0r
arty adlon of ! h e - n- record tS now

2-5
~
Bndgel N•land and Tom Ducey Wl!"e the

Head Coac:to Jn1 Willd s squao now hits
load lor a pa1r a oorsests The &amp;As
ta oo Holslra on Sa!lxoay Oct 2 ., ~
firs! - Y game ollhe season The Bulls
oelea!ed Haslra 26-15 n lhe ona1 game •
ad UB Sladoum on 1992
·Sports l&lt;r/omla'cn &gt;ee

HOSPICE B FFALO PRESE TS

''A Fest·va of
Fine Wine &amp; Fr·ends·''
An International Wine Tasting Festival and Silent Auction
.featunng Gold Medal \Vmes f rom

1

ew i(nh, Ca/1 omta, Frana:, and Ita!)

Friday, October 8, 1993
5:30 - 8:30 p.m.
tUB Fine Arts Center, Amherst Campus
$30.00 dqnation per person.
For reservations, please call 838-44 3
All proceeds from rhe even~ "~ll benefir HospiCe
alos
capital campaign to bu.Jid a cenrralt::ed health care campu.s
rhat will meet the special needs of people wuh advanced til ness and rhar families .

�J8

UB volunteers help renovate Habitat for Humanity h'"'~
HE "Q.fPOSSIBJ.E' &lt;~ream of
oomenllipi!M oome....., tor
20 l o w - - Buffalo llrilies
Wllh lbtir ....... . . _ aquily" cod
die
ofdie -.pOOl I:Wa·
Ill for H-uyJBldYalo.
Many
fltllllty IIIII sWf II UB .-.
IIIOCIIIIdle,_.lball
k&gt;tllll~omo
gm: lheir o.rne. Went and ~ "' Ibis
&lt;qmitatioll. Which"""' boost.\ of913 d!at&gt;WJ, ..,.,. lhe
--··--·-·--

'

'

IMin~ :

!

~ ~ ~llJfln~ !
~----

____;

u.s.
Roben W .
llt............_ UB

fmncr.....,.,....

..........,...,.,

dimcooftilllllall

I..- Go:oo:U.. . '" "'

only • ..,._
.,.. . . . t.:.d
~tUb­

.. for H~. The b:al """' has
beOD
in Buffalo hciglll ycm
On lbc n:ernc "Da:y of c.i~~J, • oewn.l
,.,...,. urludift&amp;some trom UB. &lt;aDded, bam~ and dry-wall«! • a t.au.. .., w-..
Sired.. wb1d1 sooo "'iU be home for a B11ff:Alo

...r.e

f.amily.
lbobi.w far Humaruty bcpn in """'""""Ga.. 17 J't8l' 11:0 10 b&lt;lp qllOiifled. low-in0011&gt;&lt; fwmlies o..-n !heir own IJomes and belp
rn1tllott primarily urban nci~.
By de.sifl1181ing Habitat for llwnanilyiBufWo on your SEFA form. yw can help fighl
urban bou ing deterioralicn and ~ '"
~-, "\mpoSsiblt" dream.
n,eotpU.z.aoonn:rei"""~torooo­

donarJOnS from mdivKiuais ...
.,..,.., or through boustng 00111t. Would•be
""''IICIS must be able "' l1lllb • S300 down
Yak lhrougb

~moctmootbiY~IJ'IymetUtD

·-s .. eo~ equity hwn;" rna)' be 00 die homo
lbef II buy. -..'ell as od:oer Habtw bou&gt;ci as
die fi:lturo OWD&lt;'lli "'all for die~ 1&lt;1
acc:pnri'AD~bouse fanh&lt;mbasc:doo

family

SIU.

be new ...,-ncn.ol.-oW.&lt; I&lt;Olll'!ot m homo
o-..ncnhlp
and ore OS"'l!n&lt;d a Habt·

ta~•'OiuniO&lt;Irforonypmblem•or~lhal

"""D&lt;r

""'Y onse after die
mo&gt;es in.
Habitat also wdc:omel; oev.
Wbo
can gh" a r... hoon Ill belp and dooalioos of

•·ol..,..,...

OSikrials one! llanS 1ft jlOOd (!lll(hbon., sud!
ligltu. cllbino~~ and pertt111nen1 bouse lixtui'CS
ld\ over from n:tll&lt;ldclJng prop:U.
Formformaoooon ways tllbelp, call741-

_..,._..,.
:l079.

-Kuro!iawa..
(lliiiSI.Stucimr
dl-UniOft
~ '"'"'
lbe..,.

-~8pm.i'o!·

rm 1011. S.2 jO, UB 10UdomJ .
13.5 0 . - - -

ROC&lt;Mn. bolh of 0.. t:B lao:Uk)
an ~' !broufh ~ 2 • the

1"

J oas

Jict...,. PI Goller)

houn. T...,_
dat·SOIUrda)•. IOlOa.m tnS :10

em.

FM:IA.TY
AlolsloM .............. l\oUd1cmaJ

-...lf.JOTl. -

PrefftililDr ,..... pl)§it:iom.

.,.,.o.

""-'!! IF·
J078 A-... rror_...p,&gt;

-)-&amp;:ooonaa

EXMIB 'I TS
Al.AII L ~ tHE AJmST
ASVIIUAL__,.
A retrofif'IUIJ'"e ~d\Jbtooo ol
dnwmg!&gt;. pont'S. v.u~ and
~b) n&amp;r.JOHII~ &amp;"~:burnal

Md. tlh.JSU"",.t(.- Alan E.
C'.ob«ooMID"" lhroop """
28 • tbt Burt'hfldd An Cenltt
For more 1nf-artna1ton t.·ont.act
~

--e.~cen

sun., ..... 111s...o 52'1

IIILTOII~,_ LOWEll WEST
An elhib1tion of wuk11. bv I n"'f-

Miionalh· re.~ntd tloc:~­

oary~Mdton

Rogm.-in oonu~ atlhr:

""c......-

BurdJfodd
lhroup
· 28 For fllCWe. mfomw.1on
C()(llaO Ei.!.oett Sullr\•an" m 4529.
FACULTY~ SHOW
"The"" Focuhy C&lt;Jilcds.- .
show of wllr'ks from the 1ndt~
\ltdu:aJ colk:coon!&gt; of UB an fac·
ulry . ~ Sept. 30 v."'lh area:ptJOQ from .S-7 p.m '" the nev.
Art Doporunenl Galler). Fin&lt;
Am O.niC&lt;, Nonh C&gt;mpus Tht
show ClOflltintJe~t dtmugh Oa.. 22
Gallery houn Monda) and
Wednesday. 10 unA:i p..m.;
1\M:sday. 10 &amp;.ftl.-1.2..30 p.m. llt1d
2-6p..m.~ TIM.u:sd.i.y. 10 a_m.tBO p.m. lOll 2-llp.m. : Fnd&gt;oy.
101.111.-Sp.m.

POimLUfS • snn
A nalional rta\'diq c-:xbibition
of pl&gt;otogTaphic ponro;.. 1011
oral biiwnos d Buffalo .........
- . dcm-.1 from the boo!&lt;
by Mic:hocl FniiCh and Miltoo

~. f'awn~IIF· lQ'I9 . .!080

NO TI CE I

--F
- OUl lnk:n'\lboftal fol);:

...-ut/A.soocilllo ..............
Afnao Ammcan Smd . Pi&gt;St
m~ lf-3011

~ncuag ~~

(Jffe:ted ~ Fnday .... -.th

- A - 1 0 - { ) , .1

Kl

~bqlnmnJar.Spm

m

c.nv-u

O..fmloof Hilt. $oum
Roque&gt;~ dmnn~ follow. from 9
II p.m. E\'CI')'Oftr: 1$ •t=lcome.
no p:wmer net'ded 'Free .:iml!...
"""-~by"'" Gradual&lt;
Studen:l MsoacQbOA

-SDMC£

B.OOO. f'awnl oR 91101
Prej&lt;d .u.~sa­

-

(J&gt;OI1-Iime)-Sp&lt;OOI s..n.,.,,

~· -9~. Wicol

'""'"""".()o--

Thcnpy. l\&gt;sang. .lJJO%.

- T - 1-B..,_
F'o!;uog wR -9JO'J7

&lt;~~&lt;mo.u:- .

~

tAIIOII ~CIVIL

~t:I'IC'I11ilriai!IC:I'\"Sall.il!~hdd
Ck1- 6 :a1 Noor! m 2SO Baud
Hall. Nonb~. IQI" Hantf

Oeaorr- (SG--05}-Ucu~.. tt)
F.aohtlt''!o. Ll~f 3 1-'8l

Abdus· Sabt', l,'B lav. !raclu.llc
and fCJr'mf!r counsc.O " 'lth tht
€ducauoru.l Opponun1l) Program AbdU&gt;· Sobr . ~lol·
ocndml at 0.. A.UtJ&gt;·
'~""" Art Fouvat tk ~
r~cendy trcn named ooonbnator
fA dw pubhc lnllms;tnp pmfJ"Iffl
"' Con P M•loney Coliq&lt;
TO-CU.
Tbt Um~ aa Buffalo Tt.)OI~ ·
mas~aS Q!Jb meec; 1n Rm 2UJ
af Tht Commons. I"M.h CamP'b· on the secoad and founh
Tuesday()( each"""""· Meet·
m1s are beld from S 30 to 7 1S
p..m. MembenJup as opt"J!IO UB
""Ptor-1011 10 0.. WNY
com.mumty. Tht SlX·moo·t.b •ni- .
oil meriJers1u;&gt; L&lt; SOO. Mcm·
be:n.t:rip rmc"•·als &lt;'OSt S:14 evt':fy
six months.. Purd'tue Olden; and
pmooillchtd&lt;s should he IN1IIe
poyoblc 10 tho Uni"""'l)' II Buffalo T.,.......,....Oub. RJr r..-.
thc::r inf~ CORt¥1 Sally
Oa)'Cion. p«SidcDD.ao645-2471

._,ng""

'

35•
456
692

4-1

131,200

s:!5
tl·~

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a Etotlfu~

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S2.5Jl00

33
45
2t

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132

116

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S1.05300

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• Healh AMid Pr~

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21

153

65ti
359
i18
Sl •

suoo

- ~lllllllnySitlilla

a u.

S!UOO
SZI.200

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•

SIOIXll

sm:m
S8JXIl

SIO.Ill
~

S10.l1Xl
l13.100
131.l1Xl
$4.1Xll
s&amp;,.QJ
S311Xll

· ~f'lllpns
• Sluder(

'

· Sildent~
• 00 Fwmtlon Serms

$5 .1(1()

S3.1Xll

• l!T!5I!r SIM:e;
Til*

~.280

$11 001 39
116315061
S10.620.£l

S2.21l301
IS.5!M
00
$141221
S3 .00

$1

110

26.9

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213
39
13
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166
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Finding Your Way
So )'Oil'"" t'llld .a die ll'liclos Ia
IJal::mol. lite dcclroai&lt; bJibwto'

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lliiiiJ:s
01 -IIIOCllotoiide .,_, • . "
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ASCITE.-il d..,nre , ~ • ·lbo
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Cor1tnJed !Yom page 7

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CAlENDAR
Wo\11 . . . .

· ~..,~
8 Ail:hiltJI:Ionlllll~

T

Hlbllolof$:200. includillaprinc:ipol•......_,
and axes. and give soo boun or -....... tct
uity." The ~ages..., oJ1110R:S1·fitt.

1993 SEfA Campa1gn

~YJ~aD~IIaoll&amp;roa-lloe~~-,MJI..
lld'ift ...... llteNet,Jilll meyWIIIt . . ._blcqraucf IIIIBiallloab 011
lite lrlk:mel- aYIIilable ... libnria ad~~
New 'YOlk.

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..tul~bocots-~ikouJbllteli!IM:nltyUbnr:ilis.~•D

.:lobbMe"'

lypinc ..........
l.oc:twood Ubrwy will bealfcriDc: a tr.ries cllilla:oel 01nic1 ~ ~ IDII
NoYembl:t-=twilh a LS hour~.,.......;e, 011 'l'ul::ltiiQ, Ot'L 5 {7~
p.m.tel~ooWfldDesday, Oti.6(NDca..I:JO
Olbor..,..._totilow
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E.-uJ tJt:0DWtt d '-rrbtr"""" AI II.J1f il Olll llte ~
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More focus is needed on the f11CXl3
mundane little issues. at the I.JfNversily
'nw!Tllfl on lhe btidQe ana .. ...., "r. lf9l"le
' - d;ll8rw'(
--~...,-~on..
~The.__,
, . l10111dit ·pnnma "'-ana 11&lt;)1 n.ervr- .__,
ol!f .,... ana I'1DIIV Dlldl
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-"' ~·

~· .-d··-~lorh-..a11::'~
qLM
·~ .Ara
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.-e
ht
our~
Thev don1
I"OW ... ~·to Cometl They dont worry llboll Clo4riJ!y
donf er;l'IICI . . 10 ...... oon-ti'\'U1IIy ..-:15 They
WW1l ... to do
.o1&gt;11
-~todollour....,..~
Mdf'll\lte.- ... 1 onhi~'-Mirom.,_
our Sludlnfs llboll diiiJeooom ~~-a kll to
IIOOU! ~
cltscl¥l tar ~eacnng rod
IIUdanls llbOul~ ~
We are~ . , . . , _ r 1n11 percept~C~n&amp; we
.-ortl!

1015-ITII:O 1\'U'dr&lt;e •Nf! ~ lil:tl
dillleel bll'lg met?- "CMM . . . . . - -

"*

1. a! the 'WU&gt;er. •panofo
two-day Vl$11
lpOMDI'e(l by !he
B Oq.u1ment
of M • and the Omia'oa Chapl«ofl'bi Betl ~
1'he lecture. "Moun· s fYUUIO
Cona:r1os and lbeir Audienot. ~ It
4 p.m. ill Blird Recital Hlllo
free and opeD lbe publtc: WID be followed by an infOl'IIIOII
re&lt;:cptioll from 5::J0..6:JO p.m.
Kerman al!o wiD mod ,.;
several U1lderpodualt and gradulte c
while on campoll
Kerman is 1 rlOI&lt;d contro•et.
ali and critic or the zenen1
mu ' scene. H1s maD) arudes
and n:views indudt such ~ ­
con:ulalion media as 1M Ne~
Yott Rn-1~ of BooU
'!be aulhor of w boob.
Kerman Ill$ spen1 tu 1eaCbina
cu= laf&amp;dy a! the Uni\~1) of
Cahfomia 11 Betkeky

Vmyl Madness
a uccess;
tation reports

0

WBFO-FM" -vinyl Mad·

ness. •• bdd II Allen HID

Sepl. I . nised $6.200 for the
swion. ..ys Membership Oirecoor Mil)' ,'\nn Rogers. 1'he event.
,..hich featured some 10,000
donated records. oapes and
duplicates from the swion ·s
library and priV~~e collections,
was so 5UCCC$ ful lbe station
plAns to repeat it next year.
1]&gt;oae wbo picked up addotions to their collec:tion for
nominal donations were also
~ 10 live music by Gumshoe
and Hoagy and lbe Blues Bombers. Some 15 staff and volunt..,..
bdped with the benefit IS did
Tops Frieodly Markets whicb
donlled plastic carrying bags.

co

oe dalireo

tt..1 te*y Mfhfee
' - 100 10 rod 0 - * IIIIIPIIC·
!MIIy, lhe .--age t ' - aza • ~ BullOO . . . oame l'lOme
r411Xlf\11g a class sze a1100 ana~ 20
repor1 a ~ s.ze ar 10
10 the
ffiPOtl8d
we •
The
peroep-

ana

0

-A Festival of Fine Wine

and Friends." is lbe oitle of
an international ~&gt;ine taSting
event ancf ilent auction Oct.
from 5;30-S:30p.m. in
new

us·.

Fine Arts Cenaer. Proceeds will
benefit Hospoce Buffalo.
Sponsored by lbe Pre&lt;mer
Center. the fesLh·al will feature

o;elecled Gold Medal Award·
winning wines from New YOO.
Stak and around the world.
A $30 donation per person i
being requesled. For reserva·

lions. call 838-4438.

-aoe

oon

es

ar

es ''*
ana

--a

EaUy 70 per011f11 the tacu1y .-e ~
c::orrtno:IBd
"-INn 0 P8I01If1l ( a - perceruge. bo.C not~ a 11rn1111
rvnber) are rnetTtlers Clf h , 111n o n - .
«X 1. ,
on~- cU&gt; Bullhey are roe ones
OClfTWTl.nlly- 81l.Uld
lh1ly ruie Ole percep~oon
The F'l'esodent notlllf!le;es$ II10efCuiS tK DelooMibo: w!l1ln leW.
nng 10 h facul!y liS·~ O&lt;IQI'IIi. highly I)RlOuaNe de8ply
engaged • The&lt; • SUCh a pheo 1011 e 101• as the 1eosute the 1t1110ry
coas&amp; IWid , _ , the 70 percerft l)t.6nQ ' - -.gnt_ are r lhe ,.._,
very regUar fol&lt;s
The Pl'esodenl alsO rngs llollclw "'&gt;en 1&gt;e CT
~!&gt;SSO:I
oo,ean.oes C4ln be achoe\«j 8J&lt;h:lr1atlore . - - .,.., rnac~ l'1'liiP5
With~ to~ ptOgfeSS-&lt;lf faoJur And he IS"' error"
beloiMng lhallhe btlr9s ll'llnll
bey'oncl .... ~
long
ar. he chilns course
When payr&gt;g a!l8niiOn to detail
tlog PICIIJ'e
no ~
CloeS not f&gt;e Oh!r way 8&lt;0L(lO Meest,- tllrd ~ gw.te . . lhe
t1eory ol--.-.
ol f&gt;e I6W&amp;I'se oy C01!fast. ne gfllndoose ol religion "" tO
...orl&lt;ed lhe• wa~ doW"lto decenl ~ llelliiVliOr
The "Ma!&lt;e No u
Plaras'llloga&lt;l 1$ not b&lt;All'-'
e.g Plans
()roe suctl pian &lt;S hinted at
proposea
-&lt;.JP al •Arts rod L.eae-$"
n o ·Arts· ano "Leners • Such a d•""""'" wllalever f!S mentS llh:Juld
ro be confusecl " YISIOn and the connw:JIICln CTealeS sllCluid not
oe conftJSed 11 mot.ocl&lt;' n -saw Plan {w!loct1 may~ be
...:&gt;-m mal&lt;ng •- !hongs,._., a toll
ll1e rea e.g Ptan WOUld be 10 stan a! oo-og last ~ S!I$1BIT&gt;wooe To wonder 1M1e!her Pt1ysocs shouiO nor oe 8! Sl&lt;:or'l' Br001&lt; Eoucall(ln Sufl Slate and Engneenng 8! UB Genera&lt; Moon doeS not
nave each model ma1o.e own st ong wneEI' t&gt;e way SUNY ooes
ha-..e each campus teach ' - OMl SOCIOlogy
In lhe absence Clf suctlllonest~ e.g f'I;;M1s we do
to
locus on lhe
ossues lrom f&gt;e machroe room per-spec~Ne And here
IS a bd ol good news When a logtlt swtdl was brOI&lt;en. a quo, SOS
bfOugh1 QUid&lt; 'l!lll!! The resulllng tloocf loghls Ood mar for Yl!iiCln 81 US
and more for our 5IUdents tnan · ~ Cln!ma!C chenges• loOM!·
eYer lhey may be) thal our presooent calls tar
- ..1

ana

ar

UBprogram
invitesWNY
teachers

j

Repo.ik&gt; on the Classroom." AF

o &amp;ar.lag. former

:tena: ~t:aeher

m the K.cnmore-Town of
Tonov.-ando School O..U.C..
• Oct. 20- "'OtOO'laUn." RJchord

l

Lou • te&lt;&gt;lozoSI "' t Buffalo
Ouldrea have 1 beuer
Museum of Sc•~
a H~lt 10
chance of bccommg ex ·
the """""m
cil.ed about sc""""' 1f the) see
1 a Oct 17 "Reach for lbe tan."
that tbelr lellCben ""' also e cued t A II&lt; GttJooo.. planet.anum dltCC ·
lboul il Thll". the philosophy
10r ., Buffaln S1.1oe College and a
,.,~II 10 pli..Dl"tanum
belund lbe Weslfi!l e"' Yorl
Soence Forum. "hoch " holdmJ
•
O\ 3 A'' n to \\ est""ood·
tts llrd annual lecture 'ltne for
Squ1bb l'bam1accuucah. lnc and
teachers of all grade- nd sub)CCtS
1.11 b) Judo pel!. commumca·
on most Wednesdll) e-erung
uon IIW&gt;IJerll Whlwood
a 'o' 10 ~A•ghl Somulauon."
through January

0

Unles Olherv.-tse 1ndlClled.
"'ill be held from 7309:30 p.m. in 70 Adleson HID on
the South Campus The C05I of
the series i&gt; $20
"'We knew thot to get cluldten
turned on 10 SCience. we needed
to emhU&lt;e the lelldlen." Slid
Georg~ H. anrollas. SUNY
Di&lt;tinguished Professor of Olcmiwy and ctuur of the UB Oepanment of BiomaLertals ..11o SW1ed
tbe lecture series on 1970 At·
cording to Nancollas. the senes
the Lal

ha been ' 'et)' successful, woth

Wmetasting
to benefit
Hospice Buffalo

ar

MIChael L Pamg. Aoght Re·
search Program 11 Calspan
a No' 17· "Sexuall) Tran rrut·
ledDiseasesoftheFuoure,"
Beverly Roe, professor of boolon11 Ene Commurul) College
a Dec I "lmmunolog) ." Sandra
Gollnodc.. Department of MoJecu.
w MedJctne, Roswell Pari. Can·
cerln&lt;tituoe
• Dec. 8 "What" Happenmg m
MJddle School Sc.ence:· Nocholas J HeJllly. sc•~ menoonng
provam. Wdhams,olk Central
School Dosmct

I
I

• o.c. 15. "Ph) SIC&lt; and Earth

thmughoul Wesoern Ne-. Yorl
ancollas noted ~t teacher.
"'hn attend lecture. aiM&gt; ha-e the

lwe&lt;ter. phy&gt;oc and
Seneca Central Schools. lfnd
Bemadett&lt; T01111&gt;elh. t:111h SCI·
enccs men..or 1n ~ Lane~
Central SchoQis
• Jan 5- 1"he O&gt;eml,tr)'
Mentonng Pror:ram." Su&lt;an
Sulhv-an.. chcm1 ·tr) mc:ntor m thor
William vollr Central Schools
a Jan 12. "Enet,) and the En" ·
ronment:· Waller impson. :u.so-. • 1
cuuc fa&lt;:.h~s p.rogrom
coordmamr at U B
The lecturt'l art \uppurled b)
the UB "Faculty of Natural S l ·
e~ and Mathematic To reg•"·
tcr. come to a lecrurc: or contact
Barbant Lannen or G&lt;orge
Nancolllb ot 829-2045

opportunity 10 call on addot1onal
resource&gt;. uch ._, reque&gt;11ng
as 1stance from SClentJ Is m presenting conceptS 10 classes and
scoence clubs. and borrowmg
unused sc•enhfte equ1pment 10
provide Sludents ...-oth more
hands-on ex~nence.
Paructpants 1rt abo eligibk
ror m-sen·icr credn rrom their
local school dostncts.
Top1cs to be co,..,rtd on the
lecture serie 1ntlude:
a Oct b: "7he Ocean IS the Eye
oftbe Earth" b)' Roben E. Baier.
UB professor of boomaoenals.
a Oct. 13: " Amphibians and

Science• Menoonng Program ,"
Lo-..el

"*' -

...-..-.g.........,....---

(U-

or

-CA.I

about 100 teachers no""' act:J'-·cl}
parucipallng from d1S1ntts

sc•encc mentor m the WeM

or

~0f

I

~

1 ( R( S 1

·

1

o.n-....,a..t ..... AIIillf•Kild
Applca!J;rts a-e naw berQ ~ b lhe DMO ........-ual Gra-t.
a lebNshp prtMCI8d by lhe Dlll.isctter AAa1et1 isd e Aurr

tausd&gt;-Ooensl (Gen-rm AcadeltJc ~ SeM::el lor a year

ci siUdy n Ge1mnt

The~ IS open to Ph 0 ca-didales and advlroed
gradJale Sll.denls d t1ll1' acadoo"lc caliber ...mate errolled n
lhe I6WilrSI!y and am not older lhln 32 Apploc:a-IJs rroy be toll
!Wli ~ exoapt lhe healltJ SCOEn:eS

The dec1socn; allhe DMO Seleclm Coomaee a-e based m
siUdy a resMCh, and
teasblly a lhe plan at a GenTm nsiSJlD'l. Appir::lns rrus1 be
able tJ derronslrale 1001 a Slay n Germrry os essenllal b lhe
~ lheor research pn:lf6C!S Prefereroe
be 9"'8"'"'
~~been rMted by a laaA!y merrtler at a Ger·
m.ro ~ IDSiudy a oo researohn a pMn.ia" clepa!1marl.
l"l5lltlAe a laboratory
ac:aClemC exoeleral, pqxlS6d plan d

lrWorrnaOOn and applocalJon fa-n. are avaiable fran Dr Da\lllj
G Retards Clep&lt;nnent a1 Modem Languages and UeraUes.
tcm Clemens Hal. Nor1h~ ~ deadlne is en
22. l!m

�"THESE RESULTS UGGEST mERE I AN AD ~'TAGE IN TER.-.15 OF TIIESE CARDIO 'A.SCtJlAR RiSK
FACTORS TO BEli"G MAl.E IN UCH A C'LOIS1F..RED FARMING COMMUNITY AS lliE M

( f l

I f
•••• •u•••• a r arr
Mennoru

NE OF 1llE FlRST DIETARY tud.,. of dor-..:1 Old Order
pro•ldrsfuttberc'-.dcnccthatphy~•ctmt} can help

diseast The) mea;ured blood presswund """' cllolew:rolaubose" ocr-!
to be leSIOd Their,...... showed..._ •'bile
peraa oflbc....,."""""....,.

r«~uoe cholcsltrollc•cl
The study by UB ~

procb:uond&lt;~~S""""biF "'ddcsocrolondmree...-:sbobewd , . . . . . , .
lbc......,... of......-! fa m ~heir diol
...,.._ 11&gt; p..- '-t ....,_, 78

sho••'cd !hal despite consunnng •
diet high in AlllniiCd [Oland cbolcswol. the M.....,...te men.,. ho dn
the dolly farm wuk. -cnly bad low&lt;r~ level lhon tbcu
Cemalt ClOUillerplttS- men&lt; of the lllllODOl oorm-bul bad

signif1C81111) lowacholcslerol~lsand
blood JRS'"""' than the DIIJOOa) . _ ..
• for males.

· ond 66 peraa w- ... ......, qp p:&lt; cloy
Theavcracescoreoftbc
on • Slandanldit'lor)•111Cl1611rin«dtvlct
collcd the Slllllrlllrd F~ A......,.. Scale ,._. Iowa tn WMiy I

pcn:era OOIIIIIUd 11&gt; chlk ,.tlolc

~==============

~of. ~Amonaln

bomo JlO!lUI*IOil ond.

le Sllburban ~

the~ found

G.-en

Wormanononthecommun.ty'scahabil5 also showed that mcmbcn;
lnow the) should avood foods high in
,..wraiCd fot and eholt:;.terol. but becaust wch
foods""' basic to tbctr agranan dJct. tbc) eaa tbctn
regular!) anywa) . lnadditJOn.halfoftherncmbcn
repo11&lt;(1 • famil) luUO&lt;) of hean disease
The stud) was cnnduciCd b) AnclmA- MIChel
andMy1'1lf1Giid v.hrlcthey """"' mcdtaol &lt;-lUd&lt;nts
at UB. and 100mas C. Rosenthal. chm of tbc l ' B
Dcpanmeno of Fanul) MediCine
ultk sctentifoc dau cxtSI on hfe amoog Old
Order Mennoru~e&gt;. and ~ e' odcooc suggest&gt; tbcu cbct put&gt; them at n for hcat1 disease
~

stud)· IRJUP' eatJnS Iabus. the

~npccacdpan~Ctp~U' choleil&lt;:rolreo6-

m
be P.
howe¥er. lba
men bad lftltfaad ..,..., ~ levels and
blood ~
the naJONI a - . ,
Squally ""l'ffi'"@ W11Sthe fact- the McanomiC men bad lowercboiesll:roi!OelidiQe•lhan 1hr:
1ennonnc women. by an • - . oil I poials.
The.....a.a-s~lbol

IMirnay~

kw. dlolesaerol ltod ond
~ drolplc
lbcir 1111-hc21-hrallb) ~
f1nnir-.: ..,.,_.
d:nly hord ~ labor l'b)"51C31 ocra ba
st-n 11&gt; rcdua: !WI~ 1cw:1s.
~
~IS on od'an
"'
terms of
II!C\Ilar ruJ.. (..,..,. beJa&amp;
male 1ft sudladotsaer&lt;Jd f"""""communll) OS the
Mconom...._" the IUibor&lt; ..'!'Ole.
"'Or flfldtqp
IJidicalfe a pllfiCirll 11c1 of

Themmoftbc~v.a\ toliSSJSitbcpnmat}·

C~Seph)'SlCWI&gt; rr&lt;pOn\lblc fortbcrrcat&lt; b) dcfinmgtbccan!roYli§Cularnslfactorsthatwercr~t

m thiS populatJOn.
Rcsull5 oftbc Slud) ._.,. pubhsh&lt;d m • ~•
r-.suc of Tlw! Joumal t&gt;[ tl~ Ammr an Board of
Fam~!t Prtx1tt:r.
Old Order Mennomle\ "a consenaUI'&lt; O&gt;tNran \CCI "''hose memlxn li~t
I"'!,CChcr rna closed rommunny and make tbcrr 11\rn~ b) famung. ~ shun
most thongs worldly . mcludingautomobtlc&gt;. radroand t'*-osiOII. pubh&lt; cduca
uon. rrubwy service. socoal--.elf= program&gt; and health rnsurancc
Theoommuntt) m•&lt;&gt;hedinthos5lud) '"" Yale\Count).mtbcf'ing...-J..U.e'
ll'giOO of ev. Vorl The rmesngators "'cened pemm 100 from tbc churcll
bishop to intet\1tv. rl' member. E.oghl) -the pen.'etll oftbc household,, or ~50
oduh.s. panocipaiCd
Through personal m~'ICWS in tbc hoonc. tbc =hers dctcnnrntd the
amount of sawraiCd fat and dlolesterolrn panrcrp:uliS' dJets, asstSScd !herr
l:nololedgc of good doetary pnteticcs and obtarned a family histOI) of bean

&lt;:IICplneS !han

I""\_,Yehcaltbprac~~~:XS.andDIRID1lli"'udlnceof
&lt;~ida) &lt;:lWdlo&gt;'li§CIIbr n · faaors 111 this Old OnD-

,..,.,.,., JXlllUiaacn." Onl) peraa bod hod h:ir
ctlolesl&lt;rolltiCa'illlcdbcl'orelht5 srur:I) .&lt;Cfllllll'ldlr:&gt;24Jl"'''lll'' ·i nasaudyohnollw
ruralf~&lt;XlltU1llll'8t)and46perom~mlbcpc:plbOOnMbqre.OnlyS2J)Crt211l-

nrosrly ~hadlhelrbloodJI'I'SSI.W&lt;dood.cdm
83 percent for the
~ pcpu1aoon.
The~su

.-yeor. oorr.-cdll&gt;

thatphysictansma) .-IIOdcvclopspcclllcbolatcrolandhypene:nStonset.,crungprograll\'IDreacbclostdrornmunittessuc:bas
the Old Order Meonoortcs, gJ&gt;en tbctr potenlia) pubsposnion 10 heandisease.
They ..., cooducun~ a folio" -up study analyzmg the diet. ptrysul octi''IIY
and lean body mass of tim population ~~I)'.
Mlll) Crav.ford.areseoraurs&lt;r&lt;taotrntheUB0ffKrofRtnllbJ1b.a&gt;sr;;v,d
on tbc "'5t22Ch

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>"'ba:""""'til

tbc be&lt;l f*llln of ~bar
·p&gt;Wid lnd qWihfiCioiiOil if
cit&lt;") . . ..,be~ulm..,.,..,Jll
the""' of lbe!r- -

OlleCe

loolcing for
jobs !hi year will need
razor- harp kills and
savvy job-shopping sttategies, if'lttey are lo ucoeetl in today. tough Jiob
mark.e t, say representa-

"llli..W.". ~ proplll1l
helf"~

'6nd jabs llltoUgllt •maid!" •db

wpnn. u.,..,.... OI'Ltllf,lnd JOb ..-...rdl
Jud&gt;th

ilJ&gt;'."m&gt;&lt;rqb~)c•

~urca-eer~hriJ&gt;'

~""'~ •thlletn
Pal of .... lu
Rc"""- '1 thmL
t:B u
• '""&gt; o.pec1al .- '-A)
Appie~Nwn • Alornno 'ol
r.
(romallf"'k! ll&gt;•e -tl:l&lt;'tt

tives of UB • Office of

Career Planning and
Placement.

A

SfJTlll@.

&lt;IUdeao • to nplore dilfa- .,..,.

.............
!ll"' ..,_..pioymenltlllvuP
1..--jab
~-

CtXll'l:bnrk&gt; ARJI&lt;baum. I }~
alwmha•ror..,..,.. p;at ·

2'15

nology. ~issobst:mtialdemand
for gradurues in 'uclear Medical
Technology:· he o;ald. "but our program is very small, so ""' graduai"

onlya(relari•·elf.., ." Monday'sfair
saw about9P prospective ernployen;
on campus. all oriented toward patient care. "·ith rqxestntatives from
hospital&lt;. home health care agencies, the miliuuy and rehabilitation
"'lanizations.
In generaL says Huri&lt;)'. health

IJC1pall"!1 "'&lt;th

-,....,be-; - Alurnru

Oi)l!lt

a

""""''"I

•oiUfll&lt;t!'f"o

from ., """"&gt; nf fie 1£1,.

ruJ~ ·

~fl\llnP'~

lulll!)and....,,,_...,!
Ill theal&lt;!r manJt!Oill&lt;'tll.. t.e&lt;·hn;c,tl
"nun~ and &gt;peocd&gt; ~) StudMt .rr•,... &lt;h&lt; l'B Li noiCbool

m lh&lt; Cum Raoor"" ul:n&lt;} . 15
Cllf'Ol.&lt;-ompl&lt;!v lind &lt;Uboul i ""1«:uon I&lt;J1111. and ....., -.rled of u..
alunmU!i volulllftf 10 conl'al"t.
The stur:len! I !ben ""P''-'I.&lt;Jd ID
crt 1ft lauch"
penod
~ II a muwall)'
U,_ One user rq&gt;an&lt;:d a~

• ,,...,......,a

.m""' ,..,_.,."""'

COII\-

JClonc c:.ll ..,j1b • U8 ....... •oWna.: be had ...,.,.;vec~ "alaafble alva. be oaid. on ~ into

1

tlll&lt;1ncs andmayb&lt;.,..,..ajcboffer
to boot. f'orOIIOOier, fl mr::IIIIID hour
' of the &gt;nhmr='s ''\mdhided atllllluoo" coopled "ilb an~ 1hat.
'"'" "candJd and ~-110 balo-

~

\

"t:kfuutel~ tbc~

says Huriey, are

Nursing. Occupational
Therapy and ~edical Tech·

al.urhl'i. or

meet ~~Ill fel:t.tw;

ume.

Career Planni ...'hidl is spoosoringCIII'l::elr{aitsrbi ,.-.ckandne.xl
targc:led 10 ...000. fields. i admi
fres:bmen and sopbomorcs 10 rbilllt
now about !he wcational aspoc15 of
!heir srudio..
Acoonhog «&gt; Manry magazine.
lh&lt; cum:nt luggish marlo:l IS prod .Icing only si.&lt; new enb)'-lr•·el 1&lt;11
for every I0 young people ...ho
gradualed •• May. This- 11 a
time, ,..hen more lban a rrtillioo
Alnencano gradualed from colkge
in 1992.
Cat= Pbnnmg and PI~
togelher wilh lh&lt; Offire of tudent
l..i e. cwganized the 13irs. "'Inch inc.ludod Health Rel•led Can:er Day.
Sepl.l!O; Law School Day. Sept. 21
andG~ School Day, Sept. 22.
The Jab Fair oo Sept. :lO wiU lake
place in 1he Studenl Uoioft Social
Hall from HUO Lm. 10 1:30 p.m.
Career Plmning's Tom Huriey.
in charge of Monday's prQgralll
Wbic.h ..... geared 10 heallb !Cialed
arcers and was co-sponsored hy
Sludent Life. ursiog and HRP, soys
cmpl.oymentprospec!Sforgnoduates
in health care "have remained rela·
tively strong over lh&lt; diffiCUlt rimo
-."'presently immer.;od in. Phy&lt;;i·
c.al Ther:wy has probably been one
of lh&lt; most active areas for ~
years and it look• lll:e we have the
same sitU3tion this).:ar...

lso

I

... •ilhn~

""""ll!&lt;d ' " " ' - u

ll y
care graduates "are"""" in~
in geographic areas thai don't prepare a lot of oompetitioo. The Buf·
.(alo area has a lot of programs ln.
say, nursmg. Olher !geographic) ar·

eas are crying a lot louder for new
employees... Among !be health agencitsmcruitingat UB this ..-.do;: Buffalo VA Medical Center. Strong
Memorial Hospital in Roct!el.1a.

...., people io
l B Linl." •lhnSl&lt;li"'J'bCipaoe." U)
Torn Hurl&lt;' . ·'!don 'o blow 1hat sotdent are bealmj! dowa !be &lt;looo-.
~·•nhea ~""''""Y
~ IO&gt;oard employment, 1&gt; I ·grem deal of e.tposun: 1D
there
II' H I T !' H E H
pracrmooers -.'hit.. •• !he propams
her&lt; Wt "'"" lllJld&lt; refC'l'Tllis 10 U8
ber. UB career plannol"&gt; "") ··we
unl. so"""""""oangaini'OOI'I:pracRnersade Melhodihol H~pual t~
e&lt;x."ourage lh&lt; heallh people 10 par. -.....!'c-al e.posure and kn""''ledgr of
Columbus.Oh•oandProRehob.lnc.
nclj)Ok tn socii oh•ng&gt; "'jOb bani._,
~ •.,,,i.ml!in(h&lt;hellllhairdield.
of Boone. .C.
·and
"'sumo help." ""Y' Hurl&lt;~ . A l&lt;ll of heohh reboed prop;m» 11
Career fain can al5i0 g•' e !!&gt;LU"Howe• er, ohe athant.agt forlhem,
l'B ""fUll'&lt; •'lllllllttler ,.&lt;lfl 10 b&lt;
dent&lt; lead&lt; on summer JOb&gt; won~
thai ll&gt;tl "''II he 001 m a chniCal
coo'idered for-enb)' • map-. and
with a~ to fo.'\1' on the nouure
af'fihati&lt;IOidunngtheull'3irung~).
th1&gt; can b&lt; a way to~ 1L"
oflhcu ru~ empkl)menl. e\'en if
Still. the thm{!' we do.,.. import;1111
Equally tlllpOIUinlrocamerplangradWIOOO is se•-=1 years off.
for them. even if the job&lt; •• oheir
nen.lftlhetiesii&lt;'~"'-iducaAnd. career planmng nc:ed not 1x
restricted 10. r... da) in Septemfield ve fwrly obundam. 111q· need
Contnued 00 pa9£1 4
1

�-------·

2

'Service' i
keyword for

dental dean

to

eductoon
"""' t finl hr:camt 111volved ..'1111
&lt;llilaiJOn. ...
HE ARST TKING one
nauccsoboul Dr. LowsJ
CJoldber&amp;. ..... dean o(
Ill&lt; UnJ\'Cnll) a&amp; Buffalo

Scbx.l of D&lt;nUJI

Medlhr:'HOI) !all At6f00( 3
or 4. hr:'• a man ,. has tD reod1
00..-niO ollal.r
pcoplt. band&gt;
The""""""
d that. ~
to Ill&lt; scun)' ond busl1e ommd hun.
hr: ..,...... eXJrm&gt;tly calm He bas 1
casualoulbortry lhll ooems m control ol. ond comfort.lblr with. Ill&lt;
a tivit) lll&lt;Jn&amp;
pllor IIIOUlld him " 1Jiis
ont.tS

Squ1~ Hall .
hornr to Ill&lt; UB
School of DeniAl
Medl '""· 1 an

•J11!l"'SSS'•

build-

Jill. G~&lt;anmg IOd

e''P"""""·
il bas
hllllway-'1
\hat
streldlWimllllll)

dJn&gt;c:llon&gt; People
bu'rry pas1 eacb
Olhr:r. C'btly, ...

~IOm&lt;IO .... .ma&amp;.l ........-

011)' Jalllj
IOd- • relaled
10 ~ AI UCl.A l hlld lhl: dlaocr

10111.1:.,., Ill Jlllf1y lhq;s.IOd 10-=h
dlfl'emol .,...,.. IVGd&lt;llrr&amp;."""-..:%10!111dem
abooluldy oororal 10 lhr: rolr oilhr:
11:11\'mll) Ill Amenan bfr "One of
lh&lt; m&amp;'lOOSiball do ......, I &lt;ll"•
I
feel ~ ~ lbal )'CIIIII poaplt
should be l!l.., an "''fl'll11llli 10 develop .. aelll&gt;e. umque JndivOJals,.

.. Jlllf1y

rr...,candolhll.

.,... couray will .....

SOII'II:Ihina lhll Goldbera COIIIInU&lt;$
10 fed .. hr: settles JIIIO lu -

moin f1""L If not.
poutJOrl
community- .......
iD.-r•JI'ICI'."
"Then
• "" o( auc.al ~
110m
ahoul hr:aiJb are ·
oowOoldber&amp;'•
i)z dentistr): nursing, 11ft_IIQ)'
p-&lt;Mdeo
uy n&amp;ht """'·
ts a hr:allh cart
prolCU101111'1 Whal ~the responslan ucelknl ex·
medicine, allied
1111* of ...,. IIlii bilibCSofont'•V.'bal tS pnmll')' c:art•
Who• ~IOdh:wo
""'
""" of opportuml)'
lrealJh--is leading
can lead 10 Born .,
"""""""'~
btallh~oome&amp;om•Wba
..
lbt:
C l11lS. be
the ":'0}' in the issue the
-Neo.·
tale~--c.y "'"'his tarn.~}
ofhealth care. "
or Goldberg. holb lbe ctl) of
,.benhr: ..-asaho)

.

~

1~ ..~-

ponaol. JllllO\'..... Ihings ~ hawmmg ~bas been~ ben:

only since Junt 30. ali&lt;:r lea\1J1g •
UCl.A lha&amp; hr:pn In 1964
B111 hr: ,._llmody, an inlq;ral.,., of ns

=- ..

f\maJonin&amp;-'
In Ius offJ&lt;:&lt;.. wllh a VJCW ow:rloolanllbe SoulhCampls, Goldbt:r&amp;
oppean genwnely pleased 10 talk to
Ill&lt; R'f'O"u. He IS 1 man"' ho seems
1o hke people. who reall) cares to
......,... who !bey ate. He's sol\.,;pol;en, bul undcmea!b Ius Cllmoess
then!' a certain fOC\IStd intensity.
"As a resean:hor, l'\'e been m\oolved ""uh neuroscience,- he

ex~

plains "My piUUcular area bas been
oral motor control---ho\\ Ill&lt; bnun

contrOl Ill&lt; JroUih and J'IV. ."
BuL hr: adds. hr: bas long hr:en
Jntc:R:Sted m the "'hole proce&lt;s of

,_ _ _

"Of course, I

can ' t tc:ll you Ill&lt;
ltu&lt;! story aboul
,.ilal madt rne U1IC:rC5U!d m d&lt;nUSir} ." he ~ "But my poRiliS
grt" up m the [)epresston In thetr
rommunny. bemg an cduc:al&lt;d p&lt;r-

- . he&lt;:ortunJ a profesi.JOftll.

"""

vory unponanL lbooe •1llues ......e
JIO"'Uful ond IICC&lt;p\Cid lbem I "'""
!he forst penon m my fanu1) to~ a
pro(esYOnll degree.
' 'Conung OUI of that t\pmencc.l
ba•e 1 '""} Slrofll ....,., of respon&lt;Jbthty I went to BrooLiyn College.
almost fn:t "1&gt;en 1staned

"""ch .....,

an 1956. only oboul S8 a &lt;emes~cr
lalcr, lhr: Natwnal lnrututes of
H&lt;allh oupponed my docl&lt;nl r&lt;:·
search. My educ11100 ba.s hr:en subadiud by llus counlr) . and hr:tped
me d&lt;velop m many "'"Y' "
His sense of resporu.ablllt) . h"
desu.: to ~"" -.etrung bacl.. "

Buffalo ond the UB School of
Dental Medlcuw: lln'tllttllcnl p..:.:.
10 dt"""'cr answcn 1 lho!ie ~­
liOnS "Ont of lhr: fmt llungs I noDeed ahoul Bufiolo " that 11
a
SII'OOlt ..,,., of cumrnomly People
really bke thb place If the) lea&gt;-e.
they oltc:o come bad. 10 ......., lh&lt;lf
'duldJm hr:r&lt; 'fhr:) Willi the Cll) 10
hr: temfJC I could !iCe lhal lund of
conunatmen11o lhr: CJI) also opphed
10 Ill&lt; school
"UB'• School of Dental MedJctnt " one of the I!JUI resean:t
deniAl lftSIItuleS of Ill&lt; ...-orid. 1be
~ elopment of a facuh) such r;lhJS
)'&lt;a!&gt;..

JJnd

11'

a '"'Y fragilt

llun&amp; All lhr: v.Oilderful d&lt;no
scienus , studerw. ond prognuns
make llu an &lt;Xctt•n&amp; tn\II'Onltlenl
far research.
"1lu rommuml) n denU"').
"""'"'· """'""""· albed hcallh-'1
.-..lly leading lhe "'") m the 1 """of

cart And

people ...... ...

Cl&lt;CIItd ahoul lbe rolr d&lt;ntxu) """
ploy .. J*\ o( lbe hc:oltb cart _,.
., fed
!he
. ... hr:aiU
proli
IICbool
• ~.,.,..,..
101h!:C'Ili11II'Oifll, holbll•"""c
lh&lt; ~ ond toJl'O' Jdt&lt;Ju
caiiOOil opponlllll
P&lt;OPit .. h.'

haw: lurutcd ....... ond

...c.:-. •

JI'I1ICIPIIIXllmlbe
UB I""' &gt;dis •

.e-lh.al

And ~ 10 PO\
""""
• opp&lt;II"'UUIJUU far Goldl&gt;&lt;rr 1 c..,
f u l - 10 !he l)pe ol edu&lt;a!• "'

dUll swdenls can JeO&lt;&gt;•&lt;

"Eiduca&amp;JMa

·~•&lt;pr&lt; l­

ces&gt;." hr: sa.yo "Srudtnt&gt; 11rt .. ~

"'lh

ob,t&lt;cts 10 be filled
..,,.oJod
•-...:lorn They learn as .,_, nt •
proces&gt; lh.at ,nvQi....,.lbe ..holecnon·
munJ1}' Tbe Jl'OOI'&lt;S I complc' onoJ
cballc:ngm&amp;. bul d' • cbaliml'&lt; ..
ha\'e 10 acc.cpl

· All of the h•~b p01~1 m m
people," Goklber¥
..} " In reseMCb. )'OU a.n ha&gt;e.
lon · tenn relatton 1p •tC tv
d&lt;-nu. and col~ If yoo ·re ..,
edua~tt, yau ha'• 10 bdlr'·e m

carttf 10\'oJVt

young people. )0&lt;1 baH 10 rDl&lt;"
.t"'iO&amp; YOODI people tool and capabibbe&gt;,&amp;J\'lftl!tbemundentand10 ond ··~ so lhal (be)
can W.e o and becom&lt; creall&gt;&lt;
•ndi•iduals
"To J*1JCJPIIII' io lhr:lr 1""'-th
lhll' a real lull&gt;-lbaf
bat olu·
,.,.,., all oboul..

Lectures by Greene, Takaki to addres multicultural.LI.A..ll~
-~......-y - - - WIIIOlS.CUS$

.,._ plural&lt;sm"., a lecture Thursday Sept 30 at 4 p m n lhe Cemer
lor Tomotrow Greene's leclure. "CI1oosrog Selves IOent~y n a Plurai&lt;S1
World .• IS lhe form sponsored by U8 s Charlotle C Acer E~ IO&lt;
ColloQuaa on Urban Educa110n I IS
apen 10 all Sluoenls faculty a!'"""
and oorrmumly members onte&lt;esleo

on lhe challenges ana ~leY~oes of
educal&lt;:ln '" lhe urtlan setting

TAKAKI

Greene ~-&lt;HesOence~
New York's l.fixiJn Cenle&lt; lnsllt--"' tor
me Al1s n Educallon. ""' e"l))I&lt;e t'll!

~Xily and mponanoeof &gt;Mla! She
calls •. _ pluraliSm" and ItS expresoon on 111e JextS ana art 1orms o1

rrufiJcUll.lafl

fo professo&lt; of proiOSOphy ar&gt;d educabon at T~ College o'
Coluro.a U!we&lt;SIIy lor 25 years Gr- haS pWilsheO 100 arooleS (lfl
CU&lt;TlCUI.m lhe ans educa!oonal phllosophy.ITIUitlaJinxaiiSm and IIIE&lt;a'"'e He&lt; books .-elude 'The Pub4oc School and lhe PrMtte ISIG'1
"LandScapes of
• and 1he DlaleciJc a FreedOm •
ol multiCIAiu&lt;&amp;
stuOoes "" deiNer lhe ltl'st amual Mulncurtural Lecture 81 UB 818 p m
on T&gt;vsoay Sept 30 "' Woloman Theater 11 Norton Hall
Tar "" discuss 'M.JtCUII\r.IIJsm Al!rnlng {)Jo;ersjty" n ""' tee:U~

- l - . _, ............. -

C&gt;'esentoo by tne I.&gt;'Wef5Jiy
ecu-.::- n ~ Wlll'l otner
campus oces iY1d groups Hl!&gt;leanJre
be tree and open 10 the jJJ.biJC
Pr&lt;Jesoor ol e&lt;hnoc SWOtes m meUrwerSJI)' o1 C81itcmoaal!lerl&lt;elevklrthe
l)aSI IW:&gt;decaaes. T3ilai&lt;Jihls.,.,..-ri!CI!II«&lt;a0os~J1gulsned TeachngA..a'd
81 Berl&lt;.eiey H&lt;S , _ boc:K "A 0t1!eren! Mm:lr • prtMdeS a cx:mpreher'ISM!
r.srory of lne ma.ng ex Ameroca s dMlrse sooety ft was ~ '" llne

'

�------·

3

Educators must deal with environmental i ues, Orr say
r---~----~----------------------~
IOHEJI EDUCAno . tohallleiOmdl-

a...r

~laaon 10

,_,.. ....,.._ Ia .. CIMIOII-'1)'

- ..... ,. ,
the

"''Jdd iflhey

y mpobd to dJo tMJ.

orlhel!JI.-ury, Dr. Dovid OrTiotd
plbettd •me Cemerfor T..,...
me

row on Sept. 20 for bis talk.
U111vamy for dJo 2111 Cealury ~

emayu-atbralto~

dcUaa. bullbe)' ... aJIJiin&amp;,. Otr uid. "''llrn

~from me
wort.fiO,.
-do ia bWia eduolboa. Sllndlrdsor cxcd·
lentt art mme procea d
Orr• ..,., · a p&lt;00
or mVInliiiDirllal
Sllldies• ObcrtinColqe. made hilremorts

ibef-.rodopeakormadoyoftvcn~Sdeslpod

to
-

mae- ...

lhe rdaoon be-

m-. Tho e-...u,
Wlucb includod • Atscus • llloul
UB md dlt

&lt;ll\c"ltOII-

menW!y
ble campus opcnb005. ancl
poslel" dssplays and praatUIIJOnS 011 """"""
environmenla! aouVllldi and ~ .....,
5p(lll1i(lRld by me
a o1 me Sauor v~
Presidtnl fur U111
'ty Servoces 111 OORJUDC·
lion wid&gt; me UB EnVlrCiniiiCmlal T
Fora:
~n&amp; 10 Otr. line en~,._
$lieS tbll will be absolutely unperci¥t for
edao:8lcn olme DCXI cmtury to deal W1lh art
dlt ri ' """""" d aa1Jan dioxide on dJo
almospbert. dJo currenl wort.! populaooo 01plosion. and 111o
•
or destruction or
Nllllrallr:!OIIr005=jungles. and ammal specie$. "These problems will shape me
-..uid ol dJo Dfl.t gcn&lt;:niiJOII mort pc(oundly
than any 1 can lhiDl. or.- be wd.

Pethlps dJo basiC problem dill hl&amp;lw:r
educabon msriwoons
I face m""'f'f&lt;O'Iml
to these mVItOIIJl&gt;miAI cnoes. 8ClCJOI1Imt. 10
o.r... faa • """' inooti......,. operon orpnwocnal mOOch~ in Ill&lt;
f.nlo&amp;btmment "A ~ystmn aaiCd Od of tbe
clesiJe 10 c:onquer IIMlln: ddiru~ely has ncpuve~" beS&amp;Id. '1nstlluloonsbaocd

*

me

snn

on an o.ndu5u&gt;al mociel ..m""' do ..-ell •

Otr 1.-!alllllllber ol problemo lbot. m 1m
)'rd-.! 10 lbH ~
mmt modd. Acoordo 1100tr.lbese problems
IJit\ludo dJo bebtf tbllognonoce " a 1oh'ablt
~'leW, .....,

problan. tbe

raa tbll

-orpnuod

"PP~-

w1lh htllt or
..-between each Olha- or Ill&lt; outsidr rommuntl} ,
' and me reabl) ol an onliiJOOIIIOI&gt;I '1
on
.,.,.,.,.., tbll ... odd&gt; ..11h dJo ........ ~
110 belp • All ol t11cm ho&gt;e led. be wd. 110 a
~
ch&lt;f~orpmlMXIO&gt;hoW:
osolaledlbe:msd"CCfromtbe~m&gt;t·

............ Ill

whoclllll&lt;lrtWONII

faoledand
~

"""'and soaallw: wd
Otr Aid tbll tfU lnch&lt;f ......,._ msto ·
tn tbe
tutoon&lt; we to """"'nih&lt; , _
W()l\4, 11 nec:essory for tbem to n:!!u
"""'

Sheffer resigns State Senate seat to join
UB faculty, establish polic~ studies program
~clopmrnl oftbe School of ~and

Planwng ..

TATE SEN. JOliN B Sheffer,
0 (R-Leroy) has reotgned hts
Sa.re Senile seat and will jotn
tbe UB fa)Uhy as 1 Senior Fellow. dfecliw: Jan. I. Sheffer.
..,., biiS spent nearly \8 years represenung
Weaem New York Ill cliffereot leYels ol JOY·
emmcnt. will """"011 ibe faalllies o(bod! ibe
Scbool of Law and lhe Sc:bool of Alt::hitieclure
and l'llnnin&amp;- He will also belp 10 esaabl" a
new program in
policy otudies at
ibe univmity'

"Tbos "

a

lllliqueiJ!lPilllllllil
fur Ill&lt; law ICbool
and the unrven;ily
10 brq in liDIDOone with Ill&lt; ""'JIJ
ol expcnence and
dr:pth and tttadlb
of inu:llect that
John
Sheffer
5HEFRll
has,· said Barry
Boyer. dean of the La" School. "Hos comong on board will benefit both law students
and the """ program on poltcy studies we
are creating with the School of Archuecturc
and Pll!llling.
"The core of tbe program." Boye&lt; said,
"is to equip students to u.oder&lt;Wid the process of forming public policy and be effective advocateS in that process John Sheffer
will be a great asset in that •
"I'm delighted with the news ofhos coming to the unoversity and that we wtll be sharing
him with Law." said Brunc:IB. Fresclti. dean of
ibeSdloolof An:hii&lt;CIW'Candl'lanning. ''He' ll
bnng with him a ..11o1e new dimension to the
faculty and tbe curriculum in our sd&gt;ool. We
arc most pleased that tbos is a first~ s_teP
in o-.tablislting a cenltf for poi"-J' studies.
w1uc1t;, a &gt;uy serious initiative in tbe fur.u-c

Freocbi added that the Sbeffer appotrttmcnt
"wtll enable the sdloolto begul d&lt;&gt;~ a
- . 1 propam "'lllun ibe di plmcs ot
planruiJI and IICiu~
"Wel&gt;dc:ome Mr. Sheffer's obvoou onL&lt;I·
li&amp;enOC. expenence and greal UISlght 11110 tbe
ossues ol mvtroOIDCIII md the moer-cny as
wdl as brooder q.-.ons of the region md

"This is a first concrete

step in establishing a
ceruerfor policy studies,
which is a very serious
initiative in the fuJure
developmenJ ofthe School
ofArchitecture and
Planning. "

---

Canadian and Amencan studte&gt; ... Frcsclu said
"To now hove the opponuniry 10 "-orlt wtth
students on many ol the same pubbc pobc)
tssues and goals that moti•ated me as a young
man in sdJool and hove continued 10 rnotJvalt
me as a senator in Albany os sometlnng really
cxtnoordinary ." Sheffer said. .
"Bolh 11 UB ar.d in my priYalt efforu. and
c:ommitrnents. I intend 10 remain actove
in issues of pubhc policy in our commuml) .
stare and nation. For me. it o tome 10 work on
such issues and goals from a new and different
position."
Citing his "rarcmi• ofhands-&lt;lnupenence

on tbe rotJ¥h pohbCal ....:wid and ., ll1ldlcctwtJ
awmact&gt;to ~- tbe &amp;iff.:W '"" ~on
an ednonal Toesda) said Shrtler' Elllcmtc
appouurncnt "t.a plu for Ill&lt; \JB facvlt) Tho
uru•emt} getS""""""'
bo•
cmmmt and poltbCS war\ tfttbe mol ,.orkfand
)el has tbe &gt;'JSIOIIIO
beycnd
rWny"

.,-bet""""'

ro- ·

Admissions Office
moving to~
expanding services
~~;;.;;;;.Oftlceof
"""" Sqx.
Qmpus 11110

liom lht Soulll

10

rrw:ft

....toll: chordf&gt;Cl' ID.,.,....,. ""'la:SIO

Elecledlolbe~~m I
Sbtfl"er · ~ID""""""~-diftaar
hasctwredtheComnvneeon Tounsm. Recrt·
ol
.........111 .... ~
aoon and Sporu Oevdopml:nc. HIS leflslao•~
"'"""""'faallthe
... -.-~
efforts ho•'e cenlmld oo economx- do\.,lopo-1 ...,..e·o 1oc"""" Vlliblc. ...,..I&lt;Xlt:lliblt.and
ment.educabon.mem'lltllUTiml. tOUnsm. w. 1rt I nadl bela l'l&lt;i1il) "
and ...,If. . reform. 'tCU • ngbt t h e ~ 10
Dutba.- ,...,.
of seruor CIIIZftU, and Jft"'''llliOI and !JeapresodMfurli1Udclll.tr.s~
mmt of drug ancl alcohol~
lh&lt;mow:IOCopm!IW)'beflo~...,m­
anldlorwe .. ......,llwllckeodt ...... Giirym
I speaftc UUIIIIIJ&gt;U Include dJo Gteal
tbt Olfn m Admissoan5 to .....e
"'In
Lakes ~ A&lt;1 o/1990;
lrl)~
1'1KM'Iimm:
. ,.,.....,_
oonallll1l&lt;tldmmt and legt&lt;laooo on ibe C..W
&lt;U&lt;U:II!II¥tlllMI furolf..,.,..
Recteatoc:trll• 1 Program. dJo SUire Aldlt'
...... fan. and all
Panncr.ibip Trust. tbe Ne,. Yark Sa.otc By~
" lw:...S.
..-.ys Program. and ibe lair Vdoenln&gt;" 'urs"'lnlillaolallwr
.-..cu a*r
on~ Homt tn Balan&amp;.
pdoclaon:;..- fill.&lt;:oklr a.d soo.nd
lbt
A former i~ of V. illwt:b"llt: Truster
tina "'1ftS'iiiD mL'B for tiW1) o/CUIIIIXIIJq
and Mayor. hcffer ,. dec:led 1 tbe
:11Udomhas~bt:atlh&lt;fo)cnt.H.i)GAnno&gt;.A
A&lt;«:mbly •• 197 and"""'""~ f, 10
By pta:q lbt Ol!iceol A&lt;htsotons ia a C&gt;:llllllll.
)e
-.e.aco:oliiblt IDcMKll&gt;. wec:a&gt;MMn::ecu
Folio" ong lu tlunl elec\1011 10 ·the Assm&gt;ITOSSDI .. ~ a.d ~'"*) "
1&gt;1&gt; 1D 19 :!. he .. as namod \loCt dlau o( tbe
A.m. •-ill .,.,..,... &lt;lUI ol rc.. lliOjllr
R~hcanConf=nc:eandlierVedootbeCom­ .. Capen
~ 10 Bcntsem
nuU« oo Wayt and Means, Hogber Education
ClpcnHaD t7
betbt~mlbtc:olliasol
and Jud&gt;Ct.!lt)•
lbt ........
'
_,__ &lt;bcte SIUdenls
He alliO c:lwmi tbe Assr:mbl) Rcpubbcan
be pnmriy diR:aod. Tho two
Study Group. and on I
. llrot.tacornpr&lt;htrtdnc:IOrs. and dJOIIIISOt:iadiftl::a:rol
proposal for reform of dJo lqtslalve
"'lllbl\•eolliceoir&gt;Cop:a IS.Tbehiiti .........
prtX"C&gt;5. -Project 990-. Tho~oiEf­
ollh&lt; Ttt&amp;l Ro:m, and Clpcn bc::hkld me old
fectJ vc Legt!.1attve
emen1on the ure ol ·IJCb:l...-. " · bwst..,.
Dff. Mam
Ne" Yori-"
moilioig ~ fur the office will be 17 Clp::a
1\. hfelotlg r=dent of Wesla'rl New Yort.
Hall; new ICitphone tu!lber 6lS-6JOO.
Slw:fftrt&lt;:Ciewed 1m bacbclor of ans degme on
Tho Oflioe ol Mnlosions IS
"'*"'8
hiSICir) from Wheatoo Collcgc. wit= he _,.
cffons 110 provide expalod.......,. 10
president o( the stud&lt;rtt body. He holds • J.D. Tbe Canp.os ........ pognm. ...bictt oft'm
from Syracu£t University Col.lt:gc of Lav.. pcellia1 UB Sllllleoli and lbt:ir 6tnDes 1i1""P
where he 5erVed as tdilor-in&lt;boef of the S&gt;-ro·
~and 101ft or me.,..,..,.. 011 Vo'llCi·
cug Lat.· Rn •in&gt;.·.
days andSolmlay!.. willa&amp;rmort IOUI1..

H

'"-c

awon

�-----.-·
$540,000 grant will fund re earch on hazardou waste

•

c--

YORK STATE
rorHaurdoolsW-~Man. . ...,.,
headq...nt:red at UB,
bec11
~ lllln than

SS40.

10

fwldiO ~ llld de&gt;dQpmenl
The projocls fOcwJ 011 ~the
.alume or~ ofhu.wdous~orOIOnld in New Yodt SWe
--~~fortre~~m&lt;~~~

*"'~

.......__..,~by the

.........ra _

....r. IIOdacal adYioory ClOimlill&lt;le I:Jeflft

"IJill'l'Ylll by l b ! i - bawd. Two of the 10

,.._

IWink.., .... ., UB r..:uky mr:mlxn

"'dee up paiJullla 1ft
........... The ...... Mdl S4l.622.
• C'ombllsuon
of limul&gt;ili&lt;d
.lana prolaIW.wdouoUqutd
of~mdlaOipi&lt;X~nl

Aqnr.
aaland~.

.,..._,.. d: """"-·
-

dlt aelliOII of _
.............. OUI cl .....
-ofbaz.wdousbqoad .......
lbe
.. -lilidy lnlllpOnlld. -..:!
aodd&lt;llro)ood n.....,. .. ....a.S65,4o43 lltdl$.
8) ..,... .. Ocadmal Oaernal Corp.

..,.,..,..ra

........

8 SW:plal

'-wil

.,..,_

Wbfty.~Polyt&lt;doc
aplaN
.,~

·

.-.I of23

...... of bal-

• u.e of s..n.- ex--. ofClrploc

..._ Grad: S35,71 . lntbar)' ..,....
Gcnml Eb::lnc.

df"""""'Y ••

IOCillrrVat'-dousfi)'allhfrom ..-..
oombusboo . - ~ l1lC)dcd pi)IUu

l'olllaoindleli-.-:IZooJdabnC.f'W&gt;.
i.n,-naprofaoorcl~.
Sllldylht

~of llll'f-. UO&lt;d
~ ........,;o..l

soil-wa!Jhin&amp; .,._,. ..

w......u. C,ornq Inc,

..

....t. ...

JOBSI
Cann.lll!ld from page 1

holline. .. adtloiJon 10 ~ ...,..... and

demtc advasen and dep.vtments ear..,,
Planru"!l' Mary Am~- for IJ1StlnCe.

~ bocausr ft""""""'l' kind

......tromes lbrdwlce 10

11jlbcoow We',.,cmcrmodlhll!i!Udmb."ilodo

AI'S . ...t.chcaneufee.

~., ~

• Ill) 1Jt11r ......... VocaliC)

10the0assof'94,
yeslmia)
Another aid &amp;S the Swdent f.q&gt;lo)mmt Pn&gt;gram. ,.1Uc:tt hu its ownJOb fair in March Tlu
can.,._.. mto valuable a'*""'ShipslndOiher
ocaoonal ..
... sbe did

10 ~ .........

"lhllve=-*•lh~a:adcnuc

'
depanmollls ll1d I ...n ciooely with a number
of aadeouc ad&gt;uemeol sWT," .ays land l
Mather of Career Planru
"'ilo dueocd
yegerday'sOraduale Scboollnf""""""" Oa)
"Many procnms. especW!y , _ sc:bools. also
loot • • smdeol'o level of in•'Oivernem an
acta&gt;il.tcs. ClOI1'liiiUlUty - l n d ""'"" topean llddttion 10 !he ICidennc lllCUd•
Sh&lt; adds: "The odo of thingo ernploymi
loot for""' !he kinds of dnnp bw and gradu... school5 loot for. bul they al must male
""" the Audc:nl can get lluoogb the progmn
The only !11eiSW'tl&gt; they can
.,.., previous
academJ&lt;: penortnaD&lt;:I! and - SD)&lt;e&lt; The)
ooru.lder~ quatt ...-ongl) ."
&gt;t'uesdo) • Cllb7day foq:mspc:lliJYe Ia" swd&lt;:Ns. &lt;1m\ ~'"" from ahoo.l ~ Ia"'
!idlool toclllliin&amp; Boolm College. Case Wes~ ­
tm. Hof&gt;lr.l and Detroit ('~of l..av.
) e&lt;krda • Gradualt School lnfannauon
Da) andud&lt;d repre&lt;entall'"' from about :Ill
~hool . W.ln"'t scnd'ng ~J\.0 to dr\·
""'"all theu gnodualt: fli'Ol!J1'IIl'· other\ Of1Ulll
to "'fl'l"CDl a tf11llc odlool or facult&gt; ·Stu• dent knov. thai uo mauer wlu&lt;:h ir.&gt;uuatc
program !hey'"' ~mg. they C1lll re&lt;earcb
!he program genenlly ," SO) Mather - Th c )
can ftnd grea1 inf__, on what'' lherc:. on lh&lt;
focus ofprugramstbal.,.,rcpm;&lt;'Jlled.alonf W1th
admissiam ailma and procctlln:s. .... """"'
dJal ""' mqwmd. finanoaJ aid, de.

"I llunJ.

I

Itt of audeob "11111) J;l1llluw

ochooldo

cl...... lbcm

fordltrigtlr .........._

lhlltheygoon10aSf1iduapropamlhll..,Dg~ve

lbcm v..bMihe) Willi...,.,. them.,wt:ri. mlhcir
fidd of a_.,. dlt 1&lt;\d they --10 wort ..
"Sruden who 1ft ..,11-prq&gt;Ored .ad hll•·c

"We ' rr! concerned thai

""""""' lO pruduP::E • ~
and
s.tgn up for~.,.~ plo:tneor1

~OOIIl!JI*f
"Weal D)' 10 ldmnf) md .........tlcm
pk&gt;)'Ulj! orptiiDlJOm md D)' 10
Olhcrinf&lt;Jri'OIDOft lhllas
fielD
IIIey •~
for." 01
lqlne1U "We help lhem
_ , COIIlf*II"S· for inJ~MC&gt;t We

II"'

to

lt!CIOncS

~~ rq&gt;011&gt; a dtsa:nuble UJliD1' for
~ rn !he"""""' tndu
lhougb IllS

good IICademtc """""' " all gencnll~ get mtO
!he program' !he) want I -..a.t&gt; they.d go I1&lt;1
""""""faan) earl..,. m lbetr IOitlemt.. """"""·
the) could find out "'iw'• !U[Utred I'm the
rr-.oduate '&gt;ChtJol ad\1'&gt;0&lt; for Ollf ofTter. )CrT)
Fonl. IS lbc Ia"' ...:hoot ad' 1~ Wc It) U&gt; p;lllll
J. reahQt~.: ptctLR and pro' de ~att.'h th.1l "Ill
thc:tr t.·.hark.·~ of geumg Ok:'~

IObea\"A

ll1lkt

the Coflcge "'-"'""""' Couocil. ..
of anployen- ~ "'
Sllldenu r«&lt;a&lt;l&lt;nd wtth .,... orr..., Tbe&gt;e dt~ ,.;n amve albr end oflb&lt; moodl tn
health, ltduucal ll1d bu.....w..on-4eC:bntcal

srudenJs who go to
graduale school do so for
the riglll reasons. "

I IlL~

..,.,~cl~- n..

••

' up lor lh&lt; 11'li'P"'C' JOb fil!f S..,.
J0tS\1ar) Am~ WIKIIn&lt;'o•ofind

]OI&gt;.fugen&lt;nlo'il maughlmottlel ·-n...d.t~ 1
pnmanl) lortoN""'' dOd tfldu..lnc... om-profit&gt;
rond!l'""'""""""-~«"~"'orc:m
bu"""' and tndu.slry lhau In} ooher :orca... \be
13Y., 1'ht Slllt:lenb ,.,.uy .,..,.s 10 tal.e ad&gt;llnlllgt
of e&gt;Ct) ~.. 'ii)'S Stegmoer ''Our AUIOIT\i1l&lt;Od Placcm&lt;nt Sen'ICe\ I AI'S ,~ 5lll&lt;bls
10 paruop:ll&lt; m • 24-hotr pb \-a.:anL') phone

SlaJI a 'Ct) rompetttl\-c arena "Rt£hl """.
probabl) !he""' 1&lt;~ SCCIJOila ancreasu"• ...ell
"' It-&gt;. ·~ . fafllnC1al
merdwldt.rnJ. and con.ulllf11l ..,naco. lbe a&lt;ro""""" rndU&gt;lt) " ugbt
rt hh btefr for 1
ntllllbttllf&gt;""'"' ()rg3llazaot""~" llh
def~

•ndu'&gt;lnc• are dl\eNf)mg •·
Dtw of .O.O.S lntcm.tiOOal ...,.
her •'001Jii'll) . an AmhtN ba&gt;ed ftnn
t1Y( dlJe&lt;to enguwnn .and t&gt;n\ arunment..! (.."'n'"lunl! fordacnt'llv~houtlhel S . " "lool.K..lh~

I"''

m~ for ...:&gt;mobn~ carea -foc"U&gt;CdCTllt) le\el
mmunum o( a bacbdor'

rog.a~ \Lith •

~- """""' degnoc prelerred. ,.bo .,..,
lool,.mg for grov.th opponunrue&gt;

1'ht m&amp;)OI1t) of ourmtr}-levd enpneerang lu"" ba•e been from the vru&gt;miit) II
Buffalo 0&gt;-er lhe ptiSI "" ~," ,.

c.t ,

wbo,.allbeatUBScpt .lO.
cdon"tba,ea
"" number '" nuod. bul we .,.., hoping tn be

Provos1 to address
Senate meeting
PnMl6t Aaron N Blocn will
pcesert M IWst arrua! ~
the State the I.JrWerslly allhe
Faculy Senate meeting oo
Tuesda'(, Oct 5 81 2 p.m. in the

a

Coomons 00 iletbtl ~
fact.ly are ~ kl aaenct.

STUDIO ARENA THEATRE'S

I] lfiWlJ

-~

Special Educator
Discount

Wd

A season of plays
for $81 .00

Call 856-5650

to improve .)Wr B~. Professional, Social Speakinq Skills

:.- Small Group Proqrarns or Private Tutonng Service
,.. Sessions Conducted tn a Choice of Locations

Diane Medler M.S .. SlP, CCC, NYS I..icense
Do~ic and Foreign Accent Improvement

Please callforaddtt!onal information: 873-4482

�...........
.................
llf t 1, _..__., .......
-----~

I

~o(·T. . I'oiQ:

~-

-

loientifood _, """""""'

tiiOIIIbots lib !acilicy-elaled """'""'Y
~ llhould .... o.p.tofNiilic &amp;l&amp;ly diftal' '
Moll campus f.,Ultia .., &lt;PD 10
.... poblic"t&gt;da ~
o...~

po6-

...... -bmtllldto

~-guesu.~­
..., locbblt llld a......- doon on 1he
Sood! Camps""" lhe
~
Gm·•mor"• Compln, Rlct!mond.
caon&amp;ftd~~
.... OOftiJQIIod

throup • -

tmder

R.esldootutl- illlhe ~
Pota:r.l*!lled.Jach!Qoaobnll&lt;s-

- - ihn&gt;ulh c ....... doon !hal
.... -~in-of ..... ............
•

RED...,JocL,d2UownD"';)jn:&gt;m
t'~. CGI!tbt ~on#} 4S CPS ,.Lit,
• GREEN......,_ 24 11wn ~ da) ,

,..

IIINJNi&gt;lldl«&lt;lJHU. -lrolt&gt;nrtHfor

't;

"
" " " " " - &amp;ftd employoos.llld 10
~ve~&amp;ftd~oo
mqtJOSI.

Thrs rqur f"""""' on Uni....,..ry
pqromll and~ and fooilities
&lt;&gt;wt&gt;OdorC&lt;InO'OIIcdby111&lt; 'Uni...-sir)l.
UB bu """'1"15&lt;:. loa11ed widliD lhe
City of Butr*k&gt; &amp;ftd T""""' of Amhcm.
&amp;ftd
municipoliry basbw &lt;llf~­
mmt.lgenciesorid maimainsorime ....
tistics. ·For infotmollOll 011 ...Cety ond

"""'*'

aime mlhe local -otieo. 0011·
... lhe Deportment o( Public Safeoy
The Uai...my is~ obou1
crime in lhe mnununiry and worla

~mlocallaw&lt;llf~~m

a.......,..., in

------........ ........
____
...........
............
._
----·
~safety

anelfan

10 n:duc:e lhe number o( inciclenrs ond
assiJI io !be In~ o( aUnos.

...

_

1

. . . . . . . . . . .' - -

_ . _ .. . _ t .....

._...,.
_
.. _ . _ a

The Deprunentofl'llbli&lt;: Safeoyis
the Uni\--ersity"s law et1foroemeot
qency. It bu an off""' on the arm
Campus (Bissell fWI) &amp;ftd I ~
lion on the Sooth C11J11PUS CCiemont
HaiJ)ID faciliultc the rq&gt;Oitina.l""vctlbOn, i!lftd mvestiption of aiJIW1&amp;1 ac.
th it~ and to provide for prompt
""JlJllSl' to Olher em&lt;:f!,.....,.,.
Memben&gt; of the IICidemi&lt; rommunity and visrtors to rttr c:ampus are
encour"lled to lqlOI1 ori,... 10 the
Dcparonent .• dtsp;tlCher by Wephooc

(645-2212). In alldition. lhe campus
bo. a "bbue light" din&gt;CI line S&lt;CIIrity
tdcphonc system located at .ltt&gt;tegi&lt;:
loatioosonthecampusfor~

use.Thi

dispatchotroa:n.opemed24
hours a day . seYaJ days a wed: &amp;ftd
dispatd&gt;cs patrols "' ~ calJs
and lqlOI1S of cnrninal ICII\ity. A5.
appropnat~. the [)eparUnent intm1Ct5
wim local crisU servicr agena.s. Ia"·
enforcem.nt units, emergency hcallh

em: agencies and prosecutors in rc·
•-pon&lt;iing 10 rq&gt;&lt;&gt;ru of cnounal acttvities or~i&lt;s.
flolloWinl- . . - -

no. ......... _.......to-,.

~· ·

COMity . . . -

cllltlu,

lncludlnll eempua

_.,..__.....,_
rbtc,
_,,.._,,......,.,_
........

__

.......

........... at
-

(l)

his wtt:lt . .

~

(11) ........ - . . . _ . . ,

_.

~_.....

-

Sheriff'•Otrw::ellld lhe New Yori.S....
-.n..~-24
I

...... ula) ...

-·~-..--..

....

__
---................. _
ducb-pmcr

'

.......

~~·""""""

'

~di

'

per-.lsaf~ broo~ Otld

.,._....,...

~-s..............,onlheR

day ..W0 and ldelype CIOIItla

wid&gt;...... ....-.,.,.,.,..._.,...._

Jurisdiroooofcampuslaw&lt;llforoomtm .,.,..,.,..,.1 a&gt; pelll&lt; ufft&lt;lCn ..
lrrnited 10 the Clll1l"" &amp;ftd bijb,.,.ys
tbal are ad~ to or
tltrout:h
!be CIIDlpl - m a y ...... in
"'ltd"punuit in&lt;othc sutTOUncirrlgcom-

""""!

llllllliiJ.
Depanmeot personnel oond\ict
crime prevention ODd ............ progBmSfcrlheampas ..- . _

""'ropclC'IiJ1a of crimes. n.. l""flJ'J'I'
iocludes di51ribution of motal&amp;k. .,..,.

Tho
-~-

- w.. Pub1x- Safd)'. _, !be Uai-

-

no.-....,..._.......,..
... .._,..,_..
potim in CllmpUS-wi&lt;le &lt;'YCIIU
~

~­
. . . . . ...-rttr
.. aca~.......
pNCtiDea- .. _ . , . . -

......,.

~·-

I

......... _

fllf-

lbe campos has ac arove cnme
prevention and ............. l""flJ'J'I'. The
Deparunent of Public Safety cooducu
a set:ie&gt; of campus progmns oo topic"S

!dated 10 se..W ass~ult. self-&lt;lefeose.
persoooJ safety and~ aime .,..,.
vention. Pn:.&gt;entatioos are made m lhe
rosi&lt;!cncr balh. 11 emplo~ and .....
dent orienlanon progran:t5. campus 11&lt;·
b\-ity fairs. and fO&lt; campus bargaining
units oo request. To make ~­
ments f&lt;&gt;&lt; a group 1"""""011011. caiJ

Public Safely directly '
The campus Penonal Safeoy Task
Force pteparcs an annual rqur on
campus security £0&lt; ,...;ew_The T.u~
Force also txl&lt;'IC!ucts open forums, disll'ibtJtes pt\nted information. and ar-

AOOilAVATEP ASSAVLT. .., ~fttl-'
m

~""""-«loss&lt;(~··
GLARY~.xl~l t1tt!

mrryitold o buiJdm,rorodwr .flrr.r:tliiT...,

...... i ltlill2ftiiiiM - - -

1_.

- -.......... I Ia
11ft
I
--..,..,......

Local~ .... ~

....,....,.~10-a&lt;W

ond mpood 10 off..,..,._

~

-

llld

&lt;:ruNnalt ....., •

ft!loml Of' Q thl{t

advJJIOI)' boartl 10 monilor

IIIMienaacli"'Ymlhc..,.~
lhe South~ La.. ...ton:emenr
,..,.,...,.,. &amp;ftd ..-nwtll) lt.adm . .

156

tltt!-"'

r' J MOTQR VEH.Ia..E rnEFT r1w llte/1 ,.,.un_,.t'd
rlvf1 &lt;(a
•-.IP&lt;·f&lt;o

n

"""or

h 'l) EX AL OFFENSES utd-JI /~• of N&gt;Pt
alldfon:tbh ..,.,._ .... -..dl a.t ~ o.w::t"'
KXWJI abt&lt;sr and SD&gt;Itll ~

..... The _ _ .,....._. ...........

-

.........

_..,_._

.... .......... ., ...... lor lhe lolltJww1g

crmes occurrng on C3'lllltJS (i) ltOt.Or law lldat0"6 I•) aug abuse
VlOianons and

&lt;•) weapons pot5SeSSIOnS

_,_

1 j

tqUMZOUOIII&lt;:odmlitp_pattoculart)&lt;thc

"""""'
fralmtd&gt;o&lt; and..,..,.,. ...
Scudmt. ..., ad•·....:! 'tf IIIey ...,
~ for a vi&lt;4lll- of In• cl

2

II

Dijfnr . . . . . -~&lt;K~bofJily fllituy ~
~~~a.loslofl«ttJ.. poulilrt-...aiillflt'l)
{1•18

C•' UQIJ(lit LAW VIOLATIONS
, _ , . . , pi'&lt;Walbolurr rlw!

tiM

,...._.of la~s...,

_11/btt.,..

0

, ,..,.,..,.

,_......_or"""&lt;( .uro!ooll&lt; ~~·
lhe c:ommuntl)'. Swc. omllll1011n• me
~m ""'
&lt;f ·~ """'" 11w ...,.,_.,. •
1...~~"!..,;m
Univers1ty~lpMirionnot.o~or
:mr "
tw
1
......IO"JlCC''"l~fi.Y the \ - - - - " - : . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - student """""""'
lu or t-c- - ~ Cui DRl!G ABUSE VIDVITJONS ,.....,....,. &lt;( "-•
.,..... Sluo:lcou
•'IOialeaCoca!O&lt;".h·
pro/li/mm ·w~n""-'--_,.,...,.. &lt;1
"""""or Ill)- law tho kpl penalb&lt;o CY'J'FOJJt rontrullt'd ..m-.-rs wwJ w
&lt;l'um;t'Or1W.,.,

fii"'Cribed
t')' mil......,._._
n. ........
-

or-

_,.or""'""'

Wlil&lt;ud'"
tlw!t.•..:_:.__
,..,.,,.,;on
_..:.___
____________7_ _

-

,__,_,.....,.._
.,._ _..., _ _ _ _ , _

Cm) W'EAPO SI'OSS£SSIONS """"'-oflllws&lt;f
onlz-sprolub&lt;tmtrN-.f.
r&lt; llM ~ .

....
-.·
ef
. ..
..
.. .-.·
., ..·
_
_
_
.,,_,,......

CUIIfll
UlU
- S . &lt;.lj&gt;lctsrwJ
t
Wd
yf-

....-..... .,_.,._

olbislhc&lt; riPH"' IIDiify ..... &lt;llfon:e--llld1hcU...........,...

..... __ _
.,__. ____ _
. ,. . . . . _ _ _ _

I

1

-----

T he campus C&lt;lt!Jill&gt;es wtm swe
llld f~ '""'JqardmJ!Ihe po.&lt;liC'S·
SICII. sale. and COilSIIIIlpl- of alcohol
and illepl drop. AU
ate prol'ldedWllltoniiiDWll Drug Free Sdloob
&amp;ftd Community Act compbmoe , __
men&lt;. wludt dcW!s campus poltcies.
tteatment &amp;ftd &lt;OUnfebn« prnpliiDS•
&amp;ftd cduooiJollelf&lt;JrtS Facult)' &amp;ftd sWf

51lldma•

__
---polky-""'""""'m="'m.,.._,.andthc

campus o.u~ Free w~ Poltcy

._......_,.,_
....
_,
..... __,
A-..;ao.ol.....,__
.....,_
~

(iii)

"'" '-,__..,.,_.,.....,...PIN
ofi-Mr s
or 4n:pl.rn illiJs . . . . - - , _ ,, * ...-

..............
....................
., .......
..,............
.........
_......,.__
................
......... _,_..... ....... ,_II
.......ry~c-

__
-- ......_......... . .
.....
......,. . ___
____
...,_.,........_faculty. &amp;ftd sWf
8J'OUilS. !ICWlipllp&lt;O' aJau. llt1d paruct-

10

of•

I"""""'

•••t.oodw.-111Ullla1lr ...•m51lldma

Pub1x- Wery Deparunonl &lt;IIIApll•
bw e~~f'm::el- JlCI'i'lODI'I have the
full ......, outllonl)' 10 enfor-ce and io.-csllg~~e aU laws Ol1d "'tulaoon&gt; Thc
Deportment is in d o l l y - wtm .....
C'tty d Buffalo llld r......, d Amhcn.t
pabco: dcporlmrnu. lhe E.rir Olunl}'

boor

""""YIIId........,pro-

are pro•11d1ocJ Wlllt ...,llrily rr!Ja!Oid
prinled ..-iah.. ~ Uk 0011·

.. _ _
---.......,........,..,
.......
___
..
__...,__,....
...........
~.,...;,""""

COI1IlDUIIH)'.IhefollowqtnforJMtion bas l:a:o pn:pored for campus
.,....,._The ibformalioo ;. updoliod
an aarmal basis and as availatMe LO

In

pamofor-artotr"""'b)o
.
llld Sludm Wt off.,..

_____

1fllfl.fbN&lt;(f"nuloorr'·-Br&lt;Qil,..

N OOMl'UANC'E rmh 111&lt; reirmlenb o( lhe federal ~a.....

~

Tbc .............. ~ Sahily
Ta Faroe~..-.... facib
oudils ,..... • ...,. ~ .... [ldl.

..-"''J(!!''Id.c...,.__,.

Mllmond'bt10~111&lt;
....,..,...
et)l of111&lt; K*lemac

-ftw-.....-

~'dated ..,.,. Tho ! ' - - of
~di'Ubbc~-­

Forad&lt;lrt.oo3l""'""'ofd1eoepoh
oe&lt;,"""""' Stllde:nl AffiUJ'515J_ C"i""'
Halll&lt;Y l'monnel Sen·a. 1 lOS Croft\
Hall).

.... to--

The Uaivtrnty ootlliool.\ a number

of trlllrung and informa11011 prognum
focula)•. stafT. and 5111 ·
denu with the procedu= to follow
should a sexual assauiJ OCC"ur These
Jll'liBillS are oonducted by lhe Pllbbc
Sa!eoy De.,..,..,..,:. the Uni•=•IY
HtaJm Sen-ices. the Student Life Depanmem. and by numben of 5ll1dma
groups in&lt;luding the Allli-Rape T asl.

10 fanulfJinu

Force and lhe Sexuality Educ111ionCeoter. Residc:ot $11ldco15 onmd manda101)' floor
on this tOpic. and
lhe topic .. "".....,., in the u.n...my• s

""""'"gs

orienunion se5SIOft5.
Studenas ""'informed !bat lhe Uni·
vmdry wiD impose maximum diocip!lnarysanctiom and advise !be \'iaim

-

I~&lt;SJM.conc-..w-nt.
0&lt;'-of O«JII•u
,__
mer"""'&gt;-.

wtllm""'
"'
''Kllims ..,511 10
,,1

..,...y ..

u

10 ...... in dou!J "'
preli5 c:haq&lt;s. lhe Umam:st _, ~ lhe ..,.

OWIOdclf.-.onc:antpJS.~

action could mclud&lt; li't:lm
&lt;he Um~ry The _...., and tbr
&amp;XIUSOd w1II baw lhetr lop! np
rnatiiUiinod &amp;ftd boCh ..rn he iJII'.,.,.,.j

.........

o( ""' 1lUir&lt;1me of Ill} ~.

and

The '&gt;aim ts -rood of tftliabk

CiOIJII5Ciq. mmaal hcolth. &amp;ftd -

campadal&lt;kullslhedoat:.

___ .

~
xw.. ....- -

---................... -

...,.,.,.

posocnomd local-110

f-llldcaoJIIO'W
~-.1

·

110

ooatme~

iayosw....-

......................
DEPo\1.1Miil«OF P!liiUC

SAfiE'I'Y

_
__
__
------....tbt·
,.._.. ......
,_,.--.-""to
....,.. ..

' Saf&lt;;lf.....,. lhe

-~. Tiw~de­

1\a&gt;ethenJl't&lt;IOcluts!&amp;&lt;'&lt;l••tr~
*Dd b''mg duatiam ..S a.o:i:U be as~

a'"''.ilablc in al~Uftlber cl t..fn i\ft'U:y
- - ...,.,;..., wi&lt;le d!sl:ri·
buUon on campus.

1

.._

ad'&lt;Xll"'and femaleol!;an'"'ta'..;J..
able '"'""'"" .. all tmiCO. v-lcti~ ..

&lt;ualassanlt~_,.,..,._

tn 1ht campus~. tk "

R.,._r.
In oddiboa.

"" """"""
llldllld
"' lhe
Puhtic
Safer}
lhe
Um•...-..tl Healm s.,..•...,. .,;u pm,. .de a cnSJ-s $tin:te:eS it&amp;llli ISSaiUh.

·~

...

Clll'q:10lllolfl&lt;ltS-'i•~

•ocdrl&lt;y

""""""' commurut~

s.sted m cbng so of they cl&gt;.&gt;ose. lnformrmon ~mg the uru~r·s

t:Jmo.-

po&gt;bltshct • ...sly ....... o( -

......... c&gt;IJ&lt;:IIRofall--criminal
iDoidmts The ltstiJil" OIIWI-s to

6U-22Z2
OFRClE$ S't1JDEI'n' 1ft
MUI:tS
OFFIC:Ii OF 'II.ESIOil:I'Uii
URI
64S-2Jll
UNMlltSilY CllOI'ISEIJMl
ClEHTillt

643-:mD

m:lllE'.NT AFFAIRS
64,5..l!lC

l'fltSONNEI..SatVO!$

645-2646

_.. ........ ..__. .. . . .
Man-""'\ltw- *"
~-·..
1
.
,.._.,
.......
_
-·-.--... *· SOlar)'"'"""'*"""-""-

- - ·I Y:
Oliced ...
SLclln
Cloportrnon(dl'\oi:'

-

.....
-~"""~
~!l&lt;t(TilflrN-Ctmo-

"""~~~

�------4

8

--c-tr--t,.,........__ -,"--1.- .
.ICI_..,.
... .,... -., ......

. ...... _ , . . . .
AIIJ...... Dr ()-Ow&lt;) 0.. ol
£n•·-I'Oplllot-. Oilll
Otra..UIIIC' IBwlrJc ll•ll' of
Coll&lt;ndu-14J&lt;--C.,......•p.

,_ ID!Io-'&amp;"
iaoo.Da•-.r
E.-- l'llD. Dl:pt . C B

na.-.thw•"'

~~1)4BFarbof

~~·P•
Mal:......... ~
n.~., .. -

ALialt .., _ _ _

_....."'_.......

n....tt:.

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_._...Dr _O

--l...ooc'fSwp.-al
R""'..-cll~

~

Hoo;p&lt;.l

Sol.dl c..,.... . l
....-&lt;~ .., ""

w

SloormM
p"' . . .

_

BolT...., c..rq-

&lt;&gt;flnvml"""'n ...tIll&lt;~

w.-jea..,.r.,. '""""""'

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.
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tTB ~ ~ M.echc~JIC' .lind
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p.a C,p..

_,.,..,_ca111-07--l

T-CiortU.&gt; M
~T....... c - c•.c

UIM8FIUI

UB CW..C. Dl:pt ood 1llr

I

~~~--~~

Stn'110t'-. Cu JOb JilL·• Nnnh
Campo K-9-.lOam Mmb"""
S40 pet

~

lnfOf1NibOI:l

h• rq;t!dnhoe

COfK&lt;k, Mamrr:lfk'

sw1"-.. .. !145-1.100

f

I.Y1h Ctmp~~

' .C ~

~a.&amp;UI'\'

T -.Locboo&lt;ti..Ainr)""""'

c""'P"1•r-"'
,....,.. bl!aiiar) late• lht-I'Niaft
rd"&lt;fmCI!

deQ

IU.-IICSCOU"QQMW

~ol'tl-aod

.,.,_. W&lt;ty T....olq-.
Bllffalo Pofoa: aiM! Mr&lt; Deplnmenb Stt.ldcul Ue•OI' NOITI:I

-

~

10a.m2p.m
MA,__
- byC!)"puoi'M0111·
-lalfttloa&lt;' ' - 1 . EI&lt;drophJ'Ii06oc)· """
Mimlll_..._...,, Dr Midla&lt;l
Dulfey. VB Pby~ Dqo
lOti FMber !&gt;ooth c:.m;.., I~ )()
p.m.

..--.-.urY

·a~c--.-..ioa'-

1\illo--.., ProtG..
Qw.... Cl&gt;&lt;n. l'bl\ of~

i01-S..ahf'4p.m
TIIEA!DI
A Llnl&lt; Nip! Mtni&lt;.l~«let
n.:- , 6\ll~hln
&amp;pm Co~by Summct!... ""'

...,..,..r........,..caii8A1-6461

I1 WM·-

""' Maop. ...-.......

--~
p.tnAd·
- . u .-.s&gt;so.

..,.....-,.

1-ATUIIDA Y

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~

T..-..-l'rtr:ii'I-'_T'a&gt;._,....,.
cqiCtU. • Ulll$fn'
,__
Elhooa C&lt;.!mpl&lt;&gt;. •••lf'l,. '-"""

l ' - F - C l l o h T --

..,, T-0..0.~ o....n....

........... --~
9 ..... -5p10

lt.obtrt- Alumni ........
MalO)"' Ncni&gt;Compoa
Jp.m

I:J0p.ll0.

-"""""-and"'"""'
u.._ .......
~

C.,_ , 14101 N -

k&lt;aal.
. . . - h ....-12&lt; p... l'o&lt;

...........

.... 1&gt;4 l200

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--

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UO) .C O d - - - -

.- .u:ftAU.

Gtm.

~

It'D$

~6p.a

~&amp;pa.Admi&gt;-

ao.n
t" 1U for l!lliCR a-l.,_coll64j.34J•

· IMamS.. JUB-Co~b) Summeifart_ Fc..lllOft' trd:orw!l31J0lt ca'U
1-b4flt

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From recent feaJ\J'es 10 cu11

r~oe~&lt;s

1cro0

"Unforg!Ve!1" {Sept 24) . an "engrosSing
The New
YOO&lt;er. lhat eamea an Osca&lt; lor Oorecta/Stat 0111 EaSI\IoOOd
Other lllghitghls l"1duOO James Ivory s acdaomed t.rn
"""l''nS of E.M Forster00118fs ~os End" and "A Room
Wllh a
both on Oct 1 For those seeking humorous
dNerslon l Ia Manly ~'yUlan. WAS IS olfe"ng "Holy Gra( •
"Meaning otlJie • and ·Ule of anan· 0c1. 2 01 tile cu11vatl!!!y
are "'EalJng RaoU" (Oct 14) and "N.gtn of 11&gt;e LMng Dead'
(Oct 29), on ..nich. wntes one , __"'flesl&gt;.eabng
.
zorn.
boes ectJVatea by rad.atoon !rom a space roo1&lt;et ravage tile
11\XX!y Western " according 10

v-.·

..... .,

mcd•f~-W;c tbc: IUilt '10 P' •voi~'Cd.

favored by &lt;XJbege SWdenfs Me UUAB

film seroes gets under ,."3)1 tnos ~ on
Woldman Tneater Norll1 Campus The
cpenong a.ne-..p tneludes Denys Arcand s
·Jesus of Montreal" {Sept 23) and

Ande.rson' Froun CIISW"d .!t Rom BM£
radens • Burgrr King • Pizza Hut
The ub hop~ • UniMm
Copy top • Campu Church Coali tion
Ulnpus T~' 4r. we~l5 • CVS
D'Angelo Hill &amp;
eti
Downtown Rmt-A-Car
GPA Insurance Services
Luthrm CnRp Mi
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Mwray Travel

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K.tplm Test Pt-ep
University Book tores

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coootrySide.
A more classiC film repertoore IS represen1ed IM1h "'ReOef
WithoutaCause"(Oct 8).,"11hJames0ean. "GI8nr{Oct 8)
tlle sprawtmg Weslern leatunng Dean. EIIZllbelh Taytor and
Rock Hudson. and tile untorgenable "Psycno" {Oct 29)
dlfllCteO by AHred Httchcod&lt; Also on tap are a fuee
Stooges "'""'lestrval tn NoYember and tv.u films by Spoke
Lee "Malcolm x· and "Do tile R.ght Thtng." both Oct 22
fd&lt;els are S2 50 students IM1h I D and 53 50. non-stu-

. _ _ -- o l - . bt . -

"RQcoYln
111&lt;
Bwdlfdd Art C.-llwup
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a&gt;n&lt;ad"Eilc&lt;o SuD ..-.. •
87 -4~29
1'0a'1'11ARS • &amp;TED.

oents Mae tnloonatoon on the senes can be obla•neo by
callong UUAB at645-2957

111,..,.... ol Buff

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(}pn &amp;:30at to 1

MOS.t U-ys

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UB, Goodwill forge partnership

8

to offer ''Learn at Work" program

Amc:ricoll....-.ee~

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~dbcuuodrow

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July9.
• The frora ptlt d: iht ~
SecUln &lt;l •ibt July 9 .
&lt;I
tfS.\ T..try lbo &lt;raUincd a
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July 18 il!ue d:
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end Arlilicio1 ~­

Jolla E.

• MidiMI LoMat. pmfator
of oral biology and
perioclonlnlol)l, ..... ini&lt;T-

til~rihihtrisk
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.
lioddcr CII!Oel'.

""=-!IIbooi..OO. b)-lwneel
UB ~ U.. resuh&lt;d in
the ciooG1e ~....., JD¥lr ~
leim found in
VI Ill lhe

......... prolles&amp;or&lt;l JCilill eel J1ll"''''llior
medicine, eel \liB c:allalgiJa
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• in!he July Z4 .
d: ~ Ni!M'S. Vcm's ..,.

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July 199.1 is5ue al /Jut:rMr
Aboplllt dille~""_,,

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ore UIHIR A. &amp;bek,
MOiilbll Roddy. AnDy
R.l'lriolham N.nJIluaasubbu
!otlra
~
• A Sllll')' in USA Today on
:July 21 aboul the 111111 .. Los

tal disaslon. was

~

~o(lheMmondeztmh­

on taRO R.ldio in Seat~&lt;. lbc
No. I rdoSIIIiooinihtPacilic

enu. feoum:d qUOies from
Clwtes Pootridt . ..;,g. pro-

Nonhwesundll,inmiiJ,.Jaly.
• DIMd Piny. pn:6ssor rX
plannin&amp;eeld&lt;:sign,
viewed in .. lllide aboul UDpxwl!llthe imlt&amp;e &lt;XSan .loiie.
Cali(., on July 2S in the&amp;...~
M•muy HI!WS.
• Ar-ll&lt;ll)'litoa"'''atnoicsins..d,~ ..,.,.......in TN
N&lt;!w Y&lt;ri r"""' m July I
The book. mcon:liog !he oollapseoffiuffalo ·sAid indliSiry
in the \'Oia:s ardC.:.:S &lt;l ·lbc
men and women who w&lt;I'I:M
in Buffalo'• fCJUD&lt;kiesand Aid
mills, isa&gt;-auChcttdby fidJaol
friolcll.pd'ewrol'h!stayard

fe!sor of law and~ ~
fe!so:d:~. )
• Oo July 30. Simon Slop-.
liSSOCililr p d ' - d: liDCIOI-

Jo

.l 'l'IIHnht Ja. JaiDH

Manila~, Marie 2'Joleal '

,,. s - . eel Genokl

Sutna.
• Clwtes H. • Ehor1, 00·
tingllistled tcfiCbill,&amp; pn:leuor
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wasm-

m. -"'X::Ilitd &lt;ild!Jiot,·lheir par·

ogy. -~onWCBS

Radio m New Yad&lt; Cily Clou!
a study coodooted by rum;
Mumoy ~ ptllcsoor al
~. and s..,... JGu.
lilrmrr llB docl&lt;lral SW&lt;bll.

ics. Poai.. •lf'.:llm. 3074,

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pcrvisionmllove, sdiiXIIperformanc:eandtheinllu&lt;noeof
friends in iUeffecl 011 youth&lt;'
dcltnquent bdtavJOr.

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tioo -Ttdulldu(SL-l,
lat..,..I-Oppor·
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COW'£iillft ·ClAUIRE»

"""""IF-3019, .10110.

a
ft.. . . . , _ Speciafut

Ra:eom.T-JI-IP!lar-

\Jni'Versity Faa: rues Admtmst.ra·
live Servi&lt;es, Lm&lt;1312Sl Cal-

""""*''Yand~cs.

I'&lt;Jottn&amp;fR-93088 . ....._

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Pasb.. Mll-930119. ProJ«t c.

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lbentp) , ~ R-9l090

r.el-.s are often young."
SIObed added.
1b&lt; IM:c ll'llll1Ca who par·
ucipued in the program at UB
learned \•abuble oiTICt sl:ill

suet&gt; .. """""' c:odJng.

and

fwn&amp; of off'Itt mall:nlls.
Duong lhoir fil&gt;;t two """'*&gt;
on 1he jci&gt;.lhey ....e rnanilortd
by RJ.Ih Ann Ool:mooa, Y.'ho
wab fer (lluodwill lndustr'o:s.
Cuciooa&amp;. wbo "'*'&lt;! ... job
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bas"-&gt;.~ Staberi cmflttlll:d.~lllllmtnmr:&lt;..
..too had ~ 10 be qui1oe

lia: setting as tnne wern (Ill.
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learned lllld is now ~
in

becominl!

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1993 SEFA Campaign Goals

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llqoipmeat ____ ' l ' _·
ll&lt;mol Mcdi&lt;:ino Dean'' Ofli&lt;:&lt;.
Pasbnz tR-93093. . . . . , . _
~Biology. Postin&amp;
Mll -92101. R-uT.....,;.
duD~~ ­

ology, Postin' IR-93017. Rc.......,hujod-.u
Cpart-&lt;imt)-Spccial Scrvice1; ,

·-

Postiozi.R-93094.

R - Spedolist (MP-'5}'f 'monncl SeMoos. Posti. . #f'.

3064. GISud W -

S..pport Spedolist (SIA, lat&lt;moi..,__Opponunit~y. Posllng fP.
JIJ65 . fi-iol Ald Adri!ior

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llpportW&gt;ll,Y)-Foii.Otlcial AOI,

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;,. now Bllhe ~ d gelling his
I.,..,..,_ Slllllal sad
"All of~ pecple have lbc capaciry to do the wort. they

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(SG-07)-QoSIDdial &amp;Mces.
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Other dcpartmenl&gt; at llB ihat ....,..sd like 10 JWiiaplloe or
oblain Rl(ft information llboullho "Lcml II Wad&lt;" f'rtocram.
""""""""" Elizabelh lachajayk, Goodwill Industries. ati!S43494. Err 3301!.

~.(;usj&lt;&gt;dials.n.c.._

.

267

aide,

worlo:in$ oo the clerical side of health care." explained Swberl

Line 134609. a . . - (SG-45}·
Reoidentio~Cioslodial. Lane
114]()4(), 0041 , 43234 a . . ~. port.U... _,........,.~
Reoidenliol Closlodial, Line
114 3713 . 0..U....~ .....
'JIOMIIY UDill I'd&gt;. '· I
Cusuodial Servi&lt;u, Line i ll574.
a..-(SG-GS)-I.lni"""''Y
• f'acililies,Uncl3148l .

.

l!)J

1.0

unli I'd&gt;. ZJ, I-"4Kuswdoal
S&lt;Me&lt;s. Und31784. O..U....

. . ....

46 1

rr

- lll

CIVIL

--(SG-

su

loa
25 •
231

(SG~-

09}-&lt;Uaiwnity Facilrue.. U..
IJ.!0423, 32044.

62.5
25.9

l!i1

1.9-

-v-

00
214

-,52

11

6&amp;

0- -0-

.so

3.&amp;
- 2.!1

21
2
3
ti

200
192

211
B1

IDMCI
o..u..r~·-ponll')'

cr

Posllng tR,-93091. o...ut

'c'""

~~

U8oni10aodwillhop:10-

locitillc 10 ·~"' """"""~ inlo QIIJer- and dopm-

norno.

Mcdocme, Po!litoc IR-91091 .

·.

w1ll!individualswuhdiSII:i.libcs,wd""""' the Q(lpClrtunily 10 ..un. with
the trainees u colleogSIOberl addled. "11hi i cspt·
c&gt;all)•""" for the llB !ib.dc:ou
who wort 11 flfiloi&gt;CS--dlry
find IIIey hi~ alai uowmmon
wotb lbe trainees. ..too lho!J:n-

Jldi .-IW ~to ll." IGona--a.
w be..,..IDfccl
daey_ .....
10 otlioo ;. impcorai!J"- lidded.

adatlocls Olorll
(SIG4)-Studcm H.ahh C&lt;n~er
l.&gt;D&lt;t34!l!II.C.....Ialion&lt;
Clork Z (SG-09)-Aalounlm~
Scrvice1;""" Reoonl Lin&lt;

llooean:Ji S..pport Spedolist-

ISJ~3, 1n .........

eusi.OI'l\eT stn"i« rr~ntau,e .
Mora&gt;ver, die - of die llB oiTice
staff. many of ,.11om haw: 1101 "'oded

inlmw:nool. hocamt: more comforuoblt and at ease uo the of.

A.taooiait/hl " " " -·"·
"""M.._wllcoaom·

--

we*"'

I'M&gt;"""""'

"""''t1lb:s
''"'diM'**
heavy..,_. mu- ooh o.cmoa. spmllcs.\ lime-social fiiCIOn .. poronlal ....

Cantnued from page 1

~-

'*"'

came

CALEJI)AR

.... ..........

'""""",_r
_,dllt..._dley......,

PA.RTNERSJ.Ill' B~ UB'• Uniftftily
Focilitics ml Goo;ldwlll ~ &lt;I w.......
ew Vad&lt; bti m~~hed in 1 &lt;:lcrlcal ~
procrom. "'L.e.rna Wont." ,.11icbfoalses 0111be
&lt;I indiVIdual wltb diubili
eel the
~ 1b&lt; Jll1llfllll offm SUl·wedt ~ c:auncs
011 dal:l ealr)' and tenm1 otrn slall:.
, _ iJIIIemS w-. alte8ll)&lt; ~die~ 11'01'*"'
111heCutilomerSemoo~onibe
~ "'J'bd
t.sbommutuallybmeficill krthecrainoeund fllrus Tbo)lotaoo
allnlllq lroro • .-:t1 and
1\:JurWIIdtiof-"
irllllliJI." SOiidlllll~ ........... -.........-.
In lddi6on 10 ltanung ....., Wlls. the ~pill cmfi.
dcno&lt; llld boromerncn soctall) i""''JlJliid, said ,.._,. SIObert.

·-· ·-·-.. ·. ·-·· ·. ·..... ·.•.·.•.·-. ·...•.·. ·.·.. ·.·.·.·.·.·.. .'..._._._._·.·

Presiderlt Greiner
jxesents certilicate
1o Made. Russell
Sept 151o nole lhe
pefformer's final ap-

pearance atlhe
l&lt;alhal:i1e Cornell
Thealer. After 18
years a! us. Russell

rrowns·Show

to \-VNED-lV's new
downtown buik:ftng.

�------4

S P 0 R T S
UB Bulls to face
Division ll Edinboro
Saturday at 7 p.m
. . . . . ~EIIII*ooro u.-­
n.lade UB sa.oun
Slm..fday
lor a 7 p m ~The Aghttog Soo!s
111e H hs aeaaon
ln foolbaJ 8CIIOn last wMI. deferodr1g
sily

Pcnollelgue~ ~Col­
lege~ OU.IO 8 29.{) lead .-.:1 held
on 10 del8lll UB, &lt;9-15, dropping ihe Bulls
1:)(}.3

.

Ulfayane . .....c11 to J.rliOf or eenoor _,.
ers on defenle. fOrced Unc:M!rs on \Ms
lirsiiiYee po&amp;SeSSioo•lo make ihe d'

enoe 111 the early gorg
. Mer a a Scan on~ercepoon on us s
operW&gt;g drille. ~ marcnoo 67
yards on 16 plaY$ for a ro The dove w
·kepi 111M! by alal&lt;e-punt pass play lha1
_.. lor 24 )lllfds to ihe UB 29
FoloiMng a UB lt.mble. the Leopards
drtM! 17 yards on five plays 10 1a1&lt;e a 14.0
lead and - - up 16.() when U6 QUane&lt;.
baclc Ooft Scan was ca
lor nterdJorlal
grOIXldong 111 the and ~ resut~~ng ., a
safety
l...abryeUe loOk a 23-0 halltme lead when
qoal1ertlack Jason Cameva! soared his
second rushng ro ol ihe had this tome
from 008 yard OUl
Two lhlrO-quarler field goals ga.-e
Lalayene a 29.{) advantage
UB acoted ils fnt poonrs o1
game
Wllh 1.52 renwnilg
a Soon hl
Wide receiller
Green on a 30-yard
pass The saxe was set up by an nJe&lt;cepoon by UB delensiYe bac1c Aober1

wnen

Hams
The Bulls sellhe final score at &lt;9-15
when frestman ltAibaci( Sunnel Modey
scor !d on a two-yard ~ . capc:w.g 8
selll!r)-piay. 65-yard dnlle
UB Wide receiller Rusly Knapp had
anothet OIJ!Siandong day, caldlong eoghl
passes for 140 yards. 1M1ole Cl•ff Soon
~ed 15 ol 27 passes for 222 yards
and a TO
Detenslvety. the BullS _.e led by tonebac+&lt;e&lt; Pete Conley who recorded 14
tackles Kateem Strorren and Robert Ha&lt;·
ns eadl chipped "' Wllh nne tacl&lt;les with

...........

H~wr• n Terrroce ~ poc1tng
UB'IIWO~

up

The 'MIIlWl a 11000er iwn rolled 10 en
e.y 11·1 VlfCIDtY 01*' Rot.\ Morr• on
Sau:day 5ep( 18 at home The FqU
I8IIIMj . _ . . . goal JUII • .26 ..., lhe

fl1liCil n

,...., u

0

•...n . . . . ...,....,.,... . .... ....

..

~

• .,. ._...

L&amp;cT. . . . . . , . . .

(;,.,....

'93 '94 Dl Ungul.L..J Sp....l-,.. S..ri...

Old no~ loOk baclc .. ,...

ere ADv* &amp;OOred Sarmmore ~

Mann led 1tw wav
.,.. goe~s n 1100
-..Is Sophomore Jemofer OoMia *&gt;
rliCDd a goa~ n 1100- The ~qa~s
OUIShcJI lle Co1onia11 2G-3 as eophomore
goalkeeper Ntoole Pmaro ll'l8l:le 1W0k WIIS the MCCnd ~ 110C0Y lor
the
ilh::h now -.Cis 812·3

,_.•,....

The men·s llmiS re.n had a busy
weellend, oploang up .,_ 8Qt*is lo play
811100 dflerenl tocahons UB a A' 188m
trawled lo Al:ww1y. 10 OOir(lele agaroll
eome ol
SII'OI'lgeS: OMaoon I~ ~
oon ., lhe nation The Buls finat1ed
a
3-1 record. good for a ~ place fll1lsh o.r,
ol16-.. The 'B' SQUad stayed on
home couns, ahutllng ru s-a. 7.o

w-.-• . _

Joe OaVl$ women s terns souaa traveled
10 lllnas lor a pa.- d oonlerence

twO,_

matches The~ spilt the
ngs lallflg 10 Chcago Stare 8-1 ..tole
SlCippr1g ~ l1flOOS 8-1 MeleSSa

MaM at rvroer SIX s.ngles. won bam her
maldleS del
Chcago State s Kel8ha
Washngtoo"' IIYee sets. Hi. 6-2. 6-2
and s1u11n0 out Karen a· ot Norihees
llltnoos 6.(), 6.() Mattn raiSed her M'ldnfldual
record 10 3-1 W1lh the- wns

-··--

The men's aoocer ream lied Big Easl
Conference member l'rllsl:kJ!lTo 4-4 on
Sepe 15 The BtAs lied the match at 2·2
jUSI U 1 remaiOilQ ln regUa110n as
T-,fer Rd&lt;s scored on a b&lt;eakaway
neader Goal&lt;eeper .Rt Pamer earned a
rare asS&lt;St on the
Pttt lOOk a 4-2 lead
early n the extra sess&gt;on. but the BullS
r 100 W11h an unass.s!ed goal1rom Sobt
Tanevs1o 1t1 2 07 10 go "' the 0\ll!&lt;trne to
close the gap 10 4-3 Frestman Joe
Mer
wt a TBne11Sk18SSISt netted the
final goa1 modNay lhrougll the second
tor the 4-4 rona

ove&lt;1me

---· 01();,~

General Periodicals OnDisc
Ill a.c ~ - 'I . . JW I 1 usinc BISON's GmnaJ lndex to
PeriDdlcDls (G
m ideotify mapzioe and journal Oltides on a wicle
ol
sub:joCits. AoadJcr woeful IClUr'Oe for~ a-ni inu:rea mapzints as well
osiCboloriy journals on a host oliOpicl, is 1 CI).II.()M producllblll may be aoed in
1he UaderJradu* Ulnry \::oowD u Gmerv/ P~ OnDbc (CPO).
CPO alien earc::tnnc for lltide cila-

"*""'

I I I &lt; I H( &gt;N I&lt;

liaaswidrluni&lt;p;aetirno:s~MncCGJ~;

for many ollbo .nir;:leo cillod. lbo .aual
fuJ1..rul ollllal tuticle k 1vailable fonadingand pWina 11 d!tCPO W&lt;lrbt.moo.lf
you ~ m tuticle ciralica lllalli"""
you lbo IJieSSI&amp;e "llem ...wi1abiJity: a&gt;ROM.. pres&amp; l'dlmlllld )'011 will be""""'
• ~ disc IIUIIIber. A&amp;r findin&amp; lbo c:crppact disc. you em
1he
oniclecn lboOOIIlpiiiiOrs=en.orprinl iloutusinc 1 - * * d 111he00Slol20oem
per~. WllbCPO it is po5Sible10elimiDafc lhtt..leof~llltuticle&lt;lll 1bo
lbdf 111111 illlldioa lllbo pi"*&gt;CCpy mdline! TbousaDds ol anidcs dalin&amp; belt: 10
1988 are boosed 111he worlcslllion on contpiCI dilc.
.Joumals available lluolsh GPO IDcludca wicle Yll'iecy ol prinl joumalssudlu
Arclril«nmJJ Dildf, Al'iariall W..t &amp; ~ TtdwJioc, Bm ~ cf

HiG~

0

\\~) S

eilber•

lliglterEduaztlott.DriN%/II~Fomlne. '--lcf1'cpti/QTOJIMn,Jit1tlru

kMa. New Yo!t TllriUMa,aziM. PKLA RollinfSime, 711wand many albers. In
fact lhe GPO full.lr.Uil'licle..files c&amp;u- u a bacbp fer journals dial• 1101
found "" lbo slid- during lime$ of peat demllld. They - illenc6ll!o, u-1 iD
BISO s t1B files wid! Cbe OOCiblll "(D..R()M Geaenl ~ OIIDilc."
- GI'OisavoiJIJbkp~Dflll/im--.finl-Mrw4bluii~IDN
ClrtdergradMole library'# ~ a.st. s-dltn tin tiJUd '" ' lilffitlhdr

lt.SiioniD21JMilrMID,.,.,odtn:rtJIY!~. For...,..~m~coll

llte UNiugrua-lJbrar)''tllefrrrlt« Out at6#5-2945 or &amp;wliiU )'OfiTiJWIY 1D
llte foiJawinl tlddrus: luWGl.
-&amp;rm&gt;o Dt\bloywtdl..oa ~Gioziw. Loc:IMoodlbwy

-Continental Breakfast
·Morning Break
-Buffet Lunch
-Afternoon Breok
-Room Usage Fee for the

Entire Center
-Set Up and Breakdown of
oil Programming Areas
-Banquet Area for Lunch
-Free Parking
-AV Package:
PA ystnn wuh M1cropltoncs., ltdrt'

Projtctor ,Dv-rr,~adPro;a:to~
Scr un.s, YCR 6- M o11lr.ors

�~~

''

'

r

S

~

-

'

Pioneers
. pam
.
m
Control

~·~
didc lbol illllr&lt;iillllel
ocmfart dnlmaJj,.
caflr .and gcu potienn oo lbeir fCC~
"""' 001 of !be boopilaJ · - ... ,t fwe
da)'ll-lhancoovenUcnal pain0001101~
A~~b)'Kew!J.

Gillblb. UB .,.._. .,..._... of
""""""'P'. paad In llbioltllblr
. gdalin """""' filled wiib lllllQilint

""""lho: ' ~-lll45JIUM
bet""' ~lhei~Wioo. ~­
CCJ'qlllullho: ca:nfnn tand IOClC&gt;\U}'
time of """"' 'poliults ..ilb -.aJIIIrol
groop .. 15 poliiDs '"'"" llad dilil&lt;:
""lil"'Y ond ..,.,.,;wd l&lt;tllndonl posi.·
sw:I!I'IY ~ iqjoclionstocxmcl
poia All &lt;UIJ!!'rics"""" pcr6:wmod •
Millard FU!mn ~in Bulflllo.
"'w- $bid)' s:howt lho: .......,mne
~ provides sate. clfecti.., and
alendedp.tincornrol folio~ diJ&gt;l&lt;.
~." ..00 Gibbons. "It worlc;
beoerlhllneonveorim&gt;l painthert!py
in 1bis SltUitioo beaUS&lt; Jl proVIdes
continoouo llli&gt;CiicaOOn dimc:lly 10 tho
pain site. It mal:a ponmlllm&lt;n cxmfonableand p them ...~
"The convontiooal method of
oontmlling pam followifll:, surgery
for a hemimd di!it islhrougb .t1ots
of morphint or ocher narc:olicli. but

lbll is o:elllilr.dy inadequate,- Clil&gt;bom Mid ""Wo blow peill is belli
tn:eled be!""' b ~ inlense. Palielll$ olbouldo 'I sul'fer .....tlcsdy.
...ron, for • 4lol """' !ben IOllibog
for il. to lllot dfeu...
Gibbons pmcnliOid lho: Sll.ld)' re.
rr&lt;a~ts•dxannuoJ......tin&amp;oflho:

ArM"rice

Auoci.at:ion

~-

Bx:k-~

ally

of

fmal Sltpll tn did:

,..,.,.,_.,,
Oil:&gt;bans said. because ly~Dg in bed
.... makc.bd. potJiblcms """""' """'
r!ll&lt;} bring Oil cc:rnpticlltioo. Soh:
quicb:r pol!ioiJis ~y""" be on
lh&lt;lir feet.
heM'. Bun•!:li!ln ...q

~~P*z•ob­

oattllible .,.... ..,._

and then waiting for
it to ILlke effect. "

5laldng""' be severely poinful.
Thirty- of lho: pol)enls ..,.,.,;,.
Ill£ e., nop.ino sp&lt;ll1gr "'=able 10
walk m. lilme da)' m.y had disk surCC')'' ond Ill ......, wa!kii1I! b)' lbe fi&gt;l..
Iawing da)'. Oilibom. repan&lt;d. MlR
!hao a
noaddilional pwn
llll!dica!lon ""111e day or
by lbe first ptiSJ-qperali\'e day. half of
tho parienls .-led no furiiler pain

third""""""'

wrgery."""

ID ... -

.....

"'Wobll-..ponlho:ideaci~

llllllqtiao ida ibe !1J1011F • a .,.,..
siblt _, .. P"'"ldt· ~
laolin&amp;poinOWI&lt;i&lt;lfl&lt;rlbe~-­

~~):ina

~ mr:dlods,

o(lbe

rpry.

""'- boaohpli!IIIS ..,...,.,..,c ..
aabiao lnd PI'*"' lbe ........ it

pillitnu 1110dJlloo-

..... ftlltld •

~~a

convmli

lbe lobar "' cbillhdh. A5 -

"PaJienls shouldnt
suffer needlessly,
wailing for a shot

-~ - .

be Slid.. Tho !IJIOIIF dislolftS """' ••
~ ~yb)' ibebody
tJB~ha""'~

ldief. be Slid. Thin;y-&lt;n: -

dis-

t::iw:pdCI'IIbefilsiJlCllil~­

IOmG&gt;esea:JW. dwceoolbetinbnd
.,.,. "" lbe fourth. None .. lbe 15

.,.,...""'"""'"""~

tmiiiDOn&lt;

fir pain oould rP bomtm

I!Etdpost-qpera~t~Jben::pcnd.

~~lbe~
filled~l&lt;dmiqueb)' cmtiniog

IW05tilndanl~fiiiiX1"dtJt!:
Morplmr (T ohr ~ lypcally-~dwpiduml!fll'l&lt;
to """""" pain dilriqg do;k upry, •
~lil&gt;o001T1110111yll!llldcDiog

usmg !be IIIOIJihine......, ~
fully for I g mDIIlbs. Olln-liiiiJl!Cilll"
haYe tqun usitw fie lldJnique as
ll:pOOlofils~
tpead
b)' IIQ!ddm&lt;Ub. Gibbon~ lllld.
~ a-.bcu .. ibe re.
~ team"""""Adrieollr:P. Banh.
a certifJed ..,.,roscitOJoa t&gt;unc;
Anrind Alqa, dJnieal ti5islaul io-o(~JIIDC$1...

Bundy. dmk:al ~ lftl{essor
ClfnewoourSI'OJ.OIIdL Ndoan.Hop,pmll!tsor an~~ dhalr d ...
UB J)oplnnw:li·~· -

. m.

Doctors' motivation affects preventive~
physicians""' mOii"llled

viding

queorly than otder
women , and older
"""""" ""' """""""' for cbole&gt;.wol
arM1 bleod in lbe $1001 m&lt;tt often ll:Jan
lheirmak~

But it is pllysiclans' moo"llll&lt;ll&gt;their gender ru that of lheir patic:nts--&lt;holappears lDOCCOUill fort!-&lt;:se
and lllher dlif"""""' m tbt kinds of
~"" health care older adulu; re001

oeivc.aUBsrudyshows.ResuiiSoftbt
rtSetii'CI1
in 111e current tssue ct
tho JoumoJ ofrh! ilmenam Board of
Family Pro;;:rja.
' The ~ fmding from this
$IUdy is that tim wasn 't a big diff..-.
Cl'llle in lho: pra&lt;:tic:e habits
mon and
womtfl physicians in this populatioo."
5llid 8art&gt;ara A. ~. UB assislaolrmfessorclfamil)' mr:dicioe, »&gt;to
Jod tho $1Udy. 'This is di1fereDI from
......JIS &lt;qmrd previously.
''Owr.dl, ,ntilbcr"""' 1111' WOIIlCO
pa!iem3 we&lt;e faVIlll&gt;d.l'revallivecare
ol'llmilxlib wasbelowthelewl we'd

swear

or

likr:IO lil:C." Majcroni noo:d that unless

~

-·llld.,.,.

can:. m.y ..., ,.,.

lhat dder!y ~"""'" dm't""""""' ...
itlt:wnlz.O&gt;us ond ~

mill)'

lil&lt;ftyiOioo:rpanlte~andalbor

fDr.,.,_-or~mrl ~

pm&gt;enli..,...,_ rreasum; inlo lhoir

... ky .rould. ind I!IOmt ~

p1ICiice.
''Further reseazdl

ba'vel~lbaiJICIIda-biasOJUiii
IS ~"

tbt

"Overall, neilher
men.1wr women
patie~ were
favored. Preventive
C4fl? offered both
was below the level
we'd Like to see."

-A.-

~ """'"""to ddino factoos
ioYCIIved in ddmnining wbicb physicians ba"' 'lba! mOiivalion arM1 wb)' .
[)jlf.....,.. and irucraclions based on
tho sex o( ph)'&gt;icien &lt;T ~do 001
explain the diff&lt;:rmle."
Various S8lllic;; ba,., delermiJxd

be-&lt;AI!le1CIISI:I&gt;S.
To deler:mirle iftbti!!&lt;IJdord physicians (T palialls pia) • mit in .,.,..
'~~belllb&lt;are.lbelelm
of ~ in lbe UB Scboo1 of

Mcdianc and B~ Scim:&gt;e5
IIWyll:d lbe Cbans d 3.327 pl1llil;ru
from 2 IOp.ysieiaos io 'Weslml New
YOIL Thoy l«lllrrlod k gmdcr d
poricm ""'""""ofti:redJiu.OildjDlllmoooct:al
- ~
eunlioolions. f..:al"""""""'
llCUll! IU&gt;d
Pap

•moan.

breast' eumi:n.ttions and
~. rmd thogcnderof1he
physiciao offering tbt p!lClOIUe.
~ sn.:Jy. Majoroni noted. had
IIJn:upals: to deler:mirle if maR: men
&lt;T wihm moeiwd ,.....,..Uoe ..Ccines arM1 ~ if more male or
female~..m..:.llb:­
ings. rmd if~~ rmd
pltioolsb)· oex~ Their
=ihs $1-..:llha:
• 63 pera:nt of lbe w&lt;m&lt;:n. &lt;lOrnpared 10 47 JlC'I=ll of lbe tmn. ~
sm:ened fc.-cbolcstaDL
1

.....

• ~..S porta~~ oflbc men-

41 p&lt;rcli/IJI of 1he ,..........,_ &lt;CC!!Oived

• f'cmale~...,..,""""'

lilally

a.... illdr male~ 10

v•• ftu &gt;hen lind perform •fcad occult~~ repnlleu of

pallerll •

sex.

• No sipificml dlffm:nce ...
(ound~ malellndfanalc:plty-

sloians ID tbel'tequc;ooyofdoing Pap
~least earns.""""'
l&gt;llli&lt;mand~

oumi-

• The pati&lt;:dr' • • had"" effect
Oll &lt;::le dtllmcd.

a Mm:biQl p8licou; and physicians by gender did ..... .-.11 in
lllOI'&lt; ~ ..... boallb c-.
C!IJaaai&lt;OOIDIIII!ildllburlscaiJIQr
~~~~~'"'·~~lnd
:lOr all women ~ 6S 10 haYe an

lllltiUII molllllqOOill. Majatll1i said.
Oolidelinos lOr lbe .mnoiJ!iqg pm:x&gt;&lt;bt:s ~~~tol&lt;ss.clear ....
~ in ,.,. 'orWy""""' JI.Qis
""'-. a&gt;&lt;in!ardlbe UB ~
~C'.astsan&lt;DWa:le.
of'lbeWNY Oorialricl3dlciD:xlGeoB

• UB; .Mdis.u M&lt;Oeadie d lluffido
Sllllle Clollo;ge. lnd E,,., 'C alms, UB
~0!.10' M1Crirusdtm&amp;cme.
~

�Medical alumni

togatherat

Yalem Run set
for0ct.3on

UB conference

North Campus

president

0""""£h

0

Entrepreneurs

0

Wes&amp;em

ew York~­

prencms will !learn ...,..
ideal
medoods 10 help p-o, _ t:rclllivity IDd ltmon'llllon in
business from- of the
lillian's rap laoltro In busiDeti
a!IICIItillll 111&lt;1 ctlln:lpR!at&lt;lrSbip
dunfllt the 100&gt; IUII1tl.ll CreaJ.in!y,

ana

l~&amp;~p

Conferenc:e.. 10 be held on Oa I·
. 2 aa the Butralo Marrioll, 1340
M;Dasport Hlpway. Ambent.
The CIOIIf-...:e is ppoo.:d ~
the tm Ccnlcrfor ~~
Lc:ldenlrip end the Canisillli Col·
leJe OcOicrfor En~op.
It is belag spooscrallly the U S
Smoll Boillness -"dm.ini&lt;tl'lltoon
IDd the Creali"" Ed
Foundaiica. For moo:e mformat1011.
contact the Creali..e Educallon
Foundation • 675-3181.

Lecture series
sponsored by )
Pearce finn

0

William R. PnoJU and
IUs COIJl!l'll'Y· ' ~and
~Co., Inc, a residential and
COI!IJ1leldal properties m.lnagt!·
ment a.od o:al ........ ""*era&amp;e
rorm in Buffalo, ba"" endowed an
annual lecture series ill the UB
School of Ardutec::tun: and Plan·
nillg tbrooJ;&amp;h a gift ofSSO.OOO.
Joe E$heriCik, one of !he
nation's renowned designers.
deli\'CI'eCI !he fim William H.
l'ean:e and Pearce and Pearce
Co, Inc. Visiting Cntic in Deoogn
l..ecture "" Mloy I 0.

Symposiwn
to discuss role
of fire radicals
The fll'SI intemauonal
symposium dei'Oia!IO the
role of free radiCals in diagnostic

0

~~"""bythelUllva­

liity. will be beld from Oct. 7-9.
1bc underslllnding of r.....
llldlcal geoeration, det«&lt;On and
COIIlrol is one oC the most impor·
tant emerging """*" of medicine
F= l'lldicals- compounds
within cells tbal ba"" an unpaired
eledron. They bit other oompounds ,in a:lls, causing oell damaJe. 1\nt:ioxidants, also called
free-radical .&lt;Cllvengers, get rid of
!he free radical's extra dcctron.
n:ndcring tbe compound inlclive.
The existenoe of free radocals in
lbo body bas been linked 10 ~
bean disease, caooc&gt;Or. diabetes. the
effocu of aging and numerous
othe.- degcnmllive ronditions.
Kunio Y ag;. proCessor am dioo:torof tile lnslilule for AppiJed Bioohernistry in ~ Japan. am the .
wcrld'$Jca:ling autb&lt;rily Oil

r....

oadocals. win toe among expens from
fi\'t OOUIIIrics a.od .....-al u.s.
uni.asitics making presentarions ..
the symposium. Sessions will be
t..ld in the Hyau Regency a.od al
Roswell Part Cancer lnslilUIC.

name Reisman

The l..md&amp; Yalem R1111 to
benefit rapt. p1'-Klrl
the Uno:J. Y lllem Memorial Scloolatship and the
wi•'ei'SII)'' Anli-il9t 1'
Fon:e wollloe beld II 10 a.m on
Sundoy. Oct. 3. ouWde Alumni
1\reolo on the Nooh C-.pus
Tht S• 'l&lt;:mMcr run. rn
ia fOUI'I!I )ear. is named m
memQf)' of Linda Y'*'n. a UB
udenl "" was assaullal and
l:.dlal wlnle tnirun for the New
Vllf1t Coty 'MII'alhoo1.
With lbc """' now part of !he
Buffalo Nt,. ' R unncr of !he Year
""""" ,, .. eJ:pe&lt;.ted 10 a!lract

even

IDCW'e

ru.nnen.. s.ays race

direnor an H~~Ve) ·we·,.,
plann"'l on 1,200 to 1,500 (run·
nus)," Harv~! say .
The C05I ol tbt """' will toe
$12 for oommunoty run,.,. and
S8 for UB students wbo teglSl&lt;:r
by Sep&lt; 27 , and $1Hor anyone
rcpstenng !he da) of !he """'
Olec on U.S funds onl).
&lt;bould bt made payable to Lr
Yalem Mtmorial Rua

bu

llMlooft

been~ 10 I QOC- )'HI'

M.a:' ,..... y

s-..,.._,
...._.,""1'*1 I

uw-asny An illl&lt;ll'naUOIIally
..._o spectalost in lllki;Joes and
omm\IIIOiogy, lot o '" fellow of lhr:
A""""""-n Cc:;llege &lt;&gt;f Ph Y""'""'

He mual from MJinne on J
l. I 992, bul "'*""""' his affi .a·
oon .,. dwnnan at the bank· •
w-.. Rc:!pon ·a-.~
Mi~ . .....,..,., a ho&lt;lol

Allergy

~

F.,- rtiCitt infomw:ion. all

O.T. professor
offers advice
for caregivers

0

A ocw book wrou.eo by a
UB occupational ~"

offers prliCtical advt&lt;% and resource infonnation for family
members who proVIde tooone care
for ill or disabled ttlati~••·
CIJrinJ f:or ~In
Hom#:, published by the Buffalobasal MAST Health Group. covers such wpics os undersrandin~
the rudimenu of Medicare and
Mcclicaid a.od -..-bether to mu oc
buy walk= and other equipment
II also offcruoll-frec numben for
additional rnateriaJ and advoc:e

y.,..,

Kent . 'fiues. assocoa~
professor of occupational tberapy
al UB and one of thr&lt;:e co-authors
of the bool... emphruzes that " ·ith
the growing elderly popublion.
more family memben are beoomtng caregt' en.~ and m many ca.'lioes
JDl~~.hng worl. scbcdulcs as well
"For the cazegivers.leanriog
ne"' sld II&gt; aod often makong major adjustment:&gt; on lifestyle i fa.t
becoming a challenge of !he
1990s." says Tigges. """'
the book with William M. Marcil
and Christopher J. Ah.erio, his
fOI'IllC!&lt; students in tbt UB SchoQI
of Health Rel,ted Profession&lt;-

w"""

~~~~

I

c.-.:: and communat} ~·

"'ct

Olairtospeak
u-n1 c. Sum-.....

I help
Immigrants need
with English
I
j

f'oloCj' j 0 CORjUOCIJOO ll' ith

Mitschowis

Executive of
the Year
Chattts M. Mitochow,
cbainnan of !he Western
Region Board of Morine Modllnd
Bank. NA. bJ« been named
"Niagan Frontier Elcecuti,·e of lbe
Ytar' by the UB School of Managcmcvt. The award will toe JR·
!iCnled at lbe 44th annual School oC

0

~

Aklmru A socoauon

Awards Banquet Sept. 'lO at !he
Hyan Regency Buffalo
The award horlon. • "'"dent of
doc Noa@W11 Frontier "'ho ba•
dostingu!shed him,.,lf or hersell on
a career marl.ed by "eAecutove
~ ... 1 pro\'en willingness tO

assume a ~ip role mch'ic
affairs and demoostraiJOn of htgh
pcnonal integrity,
Mitscbow, a graduate of
""""""" WC51 Higll School.
earned a bacloclor' s cleglu' from

New ........iova-tts ftl:m !he IOrml;r
SeMel Unocn- contC'IUI!
me BIA!alo wea n)&lt;:l.l &gt;MlU1C Joke
10 help ltlem Ill!' used 10 Amar&gt;can Eng&gt;Jsh please call Julie
LawoW&lt;y at .Jewosn Farnl)o 5ef

10-"'

Seminan

.,..,arcb

""'''"'td ..........,..,.eonr.......,

.-..lii'Cb
the NatonaJ
d Osnsoaru. and ...,.,. Otsbn·
pHbcd Olll!ltD A,.'llli the
Nrws Cin= ol ·lho Y""' .,. atd
llld the UB Alumno ~
Do..S
shed Alurnru A word

Assembly
Education

tbt
Western '.,. Y or\ Hoghet f.du·
cooon COOSOftlUm. Buffalo Stille
College. Hilbert College and tilt
UB Graduare School of Educt·
uon A..lurruri Assocutioo.
Oilier spen.,.. .. ill toe EWne
EI-Kbawa · v...e I"" !dent for
polic} analyois and
for
lbe American Councol oo Educauon. MatdJ I . aod J""""' It
Mwgk. eX&lt;!CUtlve dirtctor of !he
State Higher Educauoo Elcceuu""
OffJC&lt;n. Apnl 29'

.....

mdllrpd

lmmiiiiOkJeJ

for estan •~
Yon' s Htgtta' F.ducaton - The
semonillS ...., sponsored b) tbt
UB J)eparunenl of Eductiooml
OrgamUIJon. Adtru noSll'lliJon and

645-3141 from9a.m.to4pm
weekdays

~of Manne'

IUid !he A~ Academ) of

RegoSII'allorl forms are avail·
~na and the
Uodc&lt;gnod~~~~~e Studetll Assoc...
1:ooo orr.., .in !he St.udent Umoo
on w Nonlt Carnpu .
abk at Alumni

I!&gt;...,.

Reumanl&lt; • 1956 UB ~
ate and 1 chnical pror....., of
lllcclicine and pedultrJ« • the

won

,u

5klnge •od shower fllciltties ..
be avat1able 10 runlXf'S aod spoc·

puntlled

di\'$on. 1970.- · - prno
del of bnno::h
'
..
19'73, &lt;:Uil!llll&gt;e , ...,. ,..,.... m
19Uand W'*"' ltqoiJ""l'da!l in 191H

chainnan of lbe H:opooer
f.ducanoo Conumttet of !he N..,
Yllf1t we A.ssembl) . ..,u speal
10 rep:esrntatoves of lugtta- alucallon m Wts~em .,. Ycd at
8 311a.m OR Friday, O&lt;lt. 15. m
the C..Uer for T """""''"'
Sullivan will bt lbe ftm
'....,U. Ill
993-94 "Brealftil

Edl part..:'lpant "''II mea e a
s..-.:a!Shin clc:wrned by Omom
Tee. Parong. rO£troomJ. bag

-

term u ~of the Malical
Alunvri Msoc:iat:oon 01 the UB
School of Malicl•no md Biomedical Sae...,.,.
Also decU!d 10-11
I W,
Batidfe. •...e ~and
lary A. Kdly, tretiolll'tt

''ICe. 883- 19U
Voturtteers usua~y mee1 """"'
RUSSia~'~ f8fl'lliles 10&lt; atlCIIA an
tour a week K~ d

R\JSSial'l os not requored
-T'IALL

, ~ -ol1

�1
T

,.

H

T

"

I[

H

t..: B
A 1'10

0

\ATU lfJl'&gt;

;o

/.A Of IVJU) Sf\l:(.ru

o nn !"( ni C'..M{I't

"J

T&gt;.MASTROIJ AROl' 0 L'IAI: L~
I oo thr unhCompuoull&lt;'"&lt;IA\ andth•&gt;U rdu.:b,..,..m
a.grn&lt; blur bnon ~"!{ 1 " " oc f&gt;Mi"P' ""'"' tpu&lt;tt&lt;l andptf""' Jrld.,.. """'~ 11..- tho•rl,..., "'
null.ud m.n
lhr brt-a\ La
\\ntcm ~ \01'
pbrr for blrdm~ Jhud..,.,..rhm )
ollht "'~"' n.
""'"It .ona.
-uno ""r rrMOdrnt f&lt;• 'fx&gt;o-nl Pn~ ~Enr •ndOnunoofurma """''"' bomrr ,,, """"
bm:b. "-1
n ·1 fh ill fc
~ borfW'lc.JI ..,..._t'f Th lcKc
thnn lO 0\ CJII.'t"1 tht
mmmurJt•
It U

•liT'".,

b«•..,..

rpt..Jn.-d
lbr t1ld rc-wh ~a U~AI ((K" hurl• au tlf'T"\~a nt\faadol common and r.;uf' OOd 'f"MXK"t
upolt our
\.UTI bwd lc:'C'1~- our~11dldr
u:iug&lt;" ;orr . 111 oh&lt;- em , .00 ngho l&gt;&lt;n on &lt;&gt;Jni
h&lt; odd.-d
m~tnbndtr ~m J~t;._hnt~.ndhlJ"" t ttJUI'l"dl
-l.iland-~!Wmth
IIR'. frnmiWt.M.
~•oMonu
.rnd~~"''ll
bird spton on one""' lll&lt;'\ ,...,,. huol&lt;d on bord
"'RtrdJ a agre""at bobb\. ... 1\.aoin~!iooud --.uou.ndon~m,.hnc-•md •tn'txd' ~.&amp;ndHtt '\uudon't tU\'t'Wbr~'("xpt"n kl('lijlJI'Ij
11 bt"t
\()U(.AI' find bud! "-1\C'ff'\ t 'c.u
•Jwtra"-ekd Wf.Jia&amp;:C"fl sue. II cM\\lmr lc•ul""'n m(' tJiltU
IJ co.tSt o{ WIW" , tuld Sn*·nsnllf- T nA&lt; m lit'M1l\ of bud
0 ldM
pntfr
tntb&lt;"J.)co~l'\f"'nluf(..nJifitl.1lf..th hoit1otwntn~ut'dtnbudtn rkrtw"
\-rAn Qlit MML. tntrnrltd t~J '\o{Ufh (.Jif"T'I~ but
h&lt;-" 1unwd otT tJ L..b cc.KU"W'S ht- futd w LAlt'
a.\ilnW~lUlC" 1~~~oa••tntMf"iU'dmt.hc~afl
notanl\.:McrUsfuncl.HIIIl.·M.ut.~ Midutg
th.u !&gt;&lt;· ~~"' '"'" pit• ..t ~"'11""l&gt;ln aold
on hirdm
•""""""' hobb\
lnl'1 J~b.r l12\t"l.nit.hr~hmrt~e(,;,u~npr'-"1:"'f'\andthr\u_
• ngk\T.,f'C'&lt;&lt;&gt;rdl~idrnuf\1n~41N fl&lt;'&lt;'"'"~Mo...OO 'lhlroh&lt;-d...t
ec&gt;4fmdnl)l:...,...th"'l! budu .. ,,~,.
rolkctm .. \b.rl \iUd 1\nd 11' .. •rn1 et.CU'lie for tniVMJJ\(.'t bf!&gt; pouurd om
Wht.Lr btrdm tn M.UCX pbcc.1 u.n be eutU , "'-IU don·._~ lO KO t.tWl b .r to faod wuqur ;and

•*

""-nan&lt;!Mar
lxrd1n

"'(('ff . lM~J.ll(

•Rn...-o awurkk

pb&lt;d"'

. ~t.lrl. ~~~k-hum.ilti&lt;J~~'l"t"tlwo,.oridtntlX' l~rt" tol;,t"C

h&lt;rd .....,......U•

t~Mo

man' dllkrnu opt'O&lt;" &lt;&gt;f gull IMo odd&lt;od

h \'tMH•i·ountugtdwtling t

1uhumt,oocan11tan

ul~OMn

tucl~&lt;OJd. flu, abotdf~.......-~JUdbJrd .....tor

and"lU'll 1
..-rwnfo~tttht-t'-*:"C'\.-ndfnrm~¥111U
..t§"wr!~dlt" ~~he •
lllt'\ 'i3\. \oo can
("\e\'llun~ hum na~--dllc...,.nt hillnnur.gbord..OI'l&lt;Jb.finchc&lt;.aon:LJW....,Kisp;on•"' JU" t• "'
dlt' "'~ ;w ddirft'llt on~ ~• lhr \t:"ll , J.w..ngaci
Anumbt-rd'oq.•·JnazaUlJf'a.ln\\f'Sll'1'1\ '""'\Ori..(Ar'! tod\c"'
un&lt;n:SOS ul uldm&lt;h""" &gt;nii'Wtlt'd Ul1:ordonp. n...... onclud.: th&lt;
llufi.OO Orm~ !. """" . dr lou! clupttor ol thr Aud
&lt;,...- . Mldthr
M
1ol
IO", ~hkh&lt;.tl""llrid"'P"
tt'l~ ..... has.Tdftf•m ·diUn.:~~Mlddtt~
:.&amp;r.lRn.tt
n •., hL\IC&gt;n u( lht Buffalo Onutholu!l•ul Soc~" go&lt;&gt;
'" llw 1"~ "'""'" m... moo&lt;k tht"u bird counu dunng Apnl,
M.l\ &lt; tnhft. and am~ &lt;ou&lt;t Gn'ald Ro&gt;o~ Duong;.,"..-&lt;~ T r«htng Prof""'r ;and PI"&lt;W
l~no oll...eammg and lruuucuon
Rnon:g. ~'ho "TI
a noour.: &lt;olumn lor lht &amp;ffol&lt;
:-...... , beaunc ml&lt;!r~ m blrdmg "'hen 1&gt;&lt;: """ m gradeIt hool ofw- lw okkt- l&gt;roiMr rffrl\"&lt;d • ""'"' bodgtl'rom the: 8o)
11 for bird snxll •Afo~r that I ~-..
hool..rd. "IWd Rmng. addmg that h~ ~ th~ fU'SI
duld mcm~ to pn a bud dub an Roch&lt;"stM"
Wes~em . ·.,.. von. I • good pbc&lt; for blrdong
be-e~ it' &amp;ocalt'd bt1."«n 1hC"' .o\t.bnoc .;~.nd C.nJlt".l.l
n......, r &lt;plaln.-d RJSmg \ r g&lt;'l • numb.&lt; of buY!'
from the mtd....
;;,nd the. .o\rl.mtK" em~ ... he- s;ud ··on ...
goo.ld &lt;b~ mu can ,..... "'""' I00 sp&lt;'COCS o1 buru •
~ 1.uscum of
t"mr ha: a umqut" 'iftf''kt- (.J.Iint
•OiaJ..a-bird .. {R9&amp;1 271) "'hc-r("talk-ru-an ~t'1 t.apt'-«"t•,td("t
u

~ o(

unusual bud "'tRhtiiiJ..""

10

dw-

a.c:-6 .....

··('II .t.~

mfonnaoon aboul hu·d "4.1
·An~'boch .... ho ~ uu~ed an bu'dm~ should l)r'( tJIHt'
omol\-.d "''"' tl...,.. orgamuuon " Oo.ark.. """"' ;,ud
Tht' mcetJ.o a.rr open w t"\t'TYOflt". from bc:'glnnM""&gt; tt1
(');peru. ht- sa:~d. and SlAfl ftk"mben an" "\'t"f"\ e11.pc:·n ·
NKt'd ;and l.tO\oos.rd C'".ilik- .1hout l:xrdmg '"

L_

_

�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1402352">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451889">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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                <text>Reporter, 1993-09-23</text>
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                <text>1993-09-23</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1402338">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
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                <text>en-US</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1402340">
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                    <text>.b,&lt;oe &amp;ran

'MD'S

rTBri hals. w abc7.le
al, she'~ a

·pocpe, .

2

TbeW'IriiiiMsl
They cane I.P
rghl a"lS'Mll'S 'D lhe

SEFA cros.s.o.ad
p.Jl21e,

..

8

THE UNIVERSJTY AT BUFFALO'
RTRE21ST

"

~ br IJI'lroUfr-..-.m~

to ct. ..
11w

,.....,l&lt;a.lonr..,.,.,......of
\..~

an..t .. IIW'Qk•

~ kl

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\Cf'# \

w. dl

~

mrt"f ... . . . . cht

.

11r&lt;1 .......- •
In lhc fW" :YI :ltl
\eM'. , . . ~ ....... Ufti\('J'\,If)

"*'fC'Unn0..1Cd a21dem-. nlfl'VI'MI

,...,..,.,.... ha &lt;
l.orfrll """'
tl c VI. ~ ..... (" ....
nJ kl t~
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nn). and

00&lt;"""

en~

m""' rt

fa.'1•\&gt;e1)1 -.uh , ... lar~ \.\'llnll.,....,.f)
lnd ,... fnMI l..ltf\
qJturf'll.tt""

" "' a IM"t ...k'r

"M~ rw

little plmu: tit
magic to stir the
blood wuf pmbabl"

1

rlmrut'lf lur 'lVI' lu
w.c..J'klUI.J rt&gt;..t(
flf'lll .. ha l
""' .•
ha·u!' bet-P l 8 tn •

IW(

llll\

IUtu'n..AI '.t-f('t.ll\
.~

(

lhh Uf"U'\t'1

themse/1 -e;, wiU nor be
rea/izt!d Make big plans; aim
Ju~h in hope and worl.:. "

'\

'" ~ J&lt;llnrdlh&lt; ~ t " '

~-.ttm ~· fhtr1~

"'""
'""'• l "N 't .rt.d .. m...N
.and

l,)tllllpk1e

tUJ

t:•'Rl

--

pr~ 't'Uitl\ &lt;n.&amp;()

t:enau A

''

,a

P""*'

anutuuon.. • c had ot
'itltlllf &lt;'On: of ... and"'"""""""'
~and• ·~roc---:a&gt;ofpm­

laslooallld!ool lnd l""l'Q'QIb ...
hall a ll'ldltlon ol e&gt;.cdl&lt;tnlx m ICIICil
10 ~-IL """~· and ""

AN AI:JoR.Ess TO '11-IE

u f our comn:und) ;and ~-

o.,tr\ aN

UNJVIJISI'l'V AT BuFFALO

1'100 A• • pubbc unM:&gt;'&gt;II) . n ....,
.,... pliWI and .-..""'
on
lhalba! . rnm....,and~
tl.tube
Y'
andmo•uomprdlmsl'&lt; ...........1).
~

BY~T

publoc omtlluoon • 1h&lt;
and one of Am&lt;rica •
ISi l~\ .

~U'll.\tHI.R
~ :00

14, 1993

t'." ... · 1 1 I hu

Top: PrMident Greiner,

at podkJm In Slee Hal,

*"""- the VotlnC
Faculty.

CIN&gt;d ~ll- """"""' "'
an t a.lleol
JWXf

,....

R"i'"'" ..t poet

"'"""""""'""
- o n d -......., ol deli
our

alJ\ .C actl\ Q ~ . llnd·--e ·~· ~

VonNC FAClJLlY Of''ll-IE

Tt

our l10.':01'11pl•"- . ,... h:t..: f&lt;&gt;-

L

AST YEAR. in an inaugural addres

to the voting faculty. I suggc:sted to
you that UB must develop a new
spirit and practice of.rollecti ve. creative leadership and m~t be prepared
to change in sOmetimes ~-weeping.
dram.ati ways if we are to fulfill our untven.ity·, unmatched potentials and ~ibiliti~. Thi afternoon. I "'ill
present a broad outline of priorities that the university's loe'nior officers and I believe UB must adopt and implement
ovo- the course of the next decade; I wiU also offo- some
historical and contemporaJy context for lhese institutional
priorities and foc an overall vision for the univemty.

Provost Bloctl Wlll address tht
same subp::t m a more lilcral fasluon
m his October 5 ~to the
Facully SenaJe. whm hr will describe specirtc details of structural.
fiscal. &gt;nd pct&gt;OMel suatqic:s for
UB's1.10C11iooed dtvelopmenl. Bod&gt;

afrtrnoon· ,. taiL and lhC'
Jli'O"'SS's presenuuon "''"be cm th1 s

en:d Ul&lt;:nSI"l'ly tn the Rq&gt;&lt;HUr.
and tbcse IWO &lt;CSMOII&gt; " 'ill be folk&gt;wod by.
meettng" .. wlucb
all comers may commem on tlus
111T0j of plans and proposall..

,.,..'1\

r_. public

um•·ersrues.llld ..,"""" DOCJU'I&lt;U
rqlOII.bul ahoow&lt;to~rand­
Those Sbllll'e and."' my joodgmalL
should """""'our 1
•
ob"""'~byOIM'm­
creasH&gt;fiY ~~ _... ond

I""'"

tn\ul\lftllallS.

o..... the COIJr!iC of

ptillhlrt}

yean&gt; ...., "''" &gt;UI&lt;:d lht&gt; set of oi&gt;)'1'1J ~ n "KIOUS wa .
1

came

10

LIB. our

..q;.., ,.,.,.

Bcrl.eley of k l:asl"; """'the pas!
dcclldt ... tallcdofbang -. IOpiC:O
pubbc,..,.,.. lmi""""'Y." (n ptt·
oddresses I have: ~ 1
hnr !hal encapsuiales our objocn""
for lhc •
be the
pu "' rescardt univas~,Y in the
ortbcasl and • leadm;h,p institution for Ammcan ~cducooon.
Those asporaliOilS ... require U$ to
pulSUC CJ.cdlc:nce irl all
.... do:
10 support ond....,..,.lheclisco\ "') ofknolo.~ to fOSIIlrcreali• 11 in the an~ aod innovative
\'lOUS

r,.... ,....

ill

lcad&lt;tshipm INIII&lt;n&lt;:&lt;XIGOIIK, ...,.,_
nolopcal. !Ocial.ond ocluc.lional: Ill

T

o BE ~our""""') bal.
iUpp&lt;lft&lt;'d "" 1ft
_,_

....,.,......_L,

E.llropcoll .........,.,..,.,., -

...........

.,. ......,...,....., .... ~I&gt;}
1niRl'ilnC5 d

"'*"'-- 0.

110011~--1&gt;}

_,

d roiJep:i. and

---pofessao~W

-~by
"'
.,.'bid~ our own fw::ully IIOCJIIIlY kadmltq&gt;...,.; -pubWIJOWIIOis~Q' ­
&lt;m&lt;d ......y by ow fa:ollly ond
orpntZA:d"""" ~and
irudla:llall ,....,. dill - eslllltt
_,.,...rederal~

..,

...,. lli&lt;:d lhn1up .,...,..,. ·t.ud&gt;
Nmoml Scator
and
ft
..,.,..., facu y on 1ootn "'"
~

pnorllleiO. leV.....

aod delcnnme -.do d
-..ny aod
ously • ..,..polittcll ........... in

And-""*"'

the~ JIIO&lt;CS-&lt;XJOAidu hett
koor;oinc~.,..,.ilma

p-.d"""""' flllllkto .... wasibes
aod c:ollep:i ~!troup icpsbllYC SiOI·

asides. to 1h&lt; ~ ll1ldmon
d potllical pert bmdincTo""""' C\WJCIII ~Ibis
mmtmal fermat ~ f&lt;r
cur -=adtmoc c:adtavon-wbicib
CorWiued on page •

�2

''My
p
is
not leave-

Sirianni'
a'people
rson'

tMdting.
Rightnow I
hm mo~
graduate

.....................
........ . ...
Plufunr, vice

' - ' .... lllvoMMI

--

p! a I prqwlbOII for Oft~ hordsbipo cklnna
fioldwor\ ......... Jbr
lhe .tdo. •• 1 far bor canli&lt;&gt;vasculu &amp;)' km-JOI to lu:c:p

~

Waii::Jn&amp; 11 JW' ol 11. She clelbecalorollbe ~llo­
..... ...A:cd .......
...... . .
do b wulbe- ~leUr·
u.bne
'")'1. .. her OWD
blue eyes focus t.dt on lbt _ ,
o{ lblllxally

Thos pbyacal fi
partw1. far
bor. IS a "'a)' IOC. . . berbeaii.IO hdp
bor k;eep bor prianDCS llrllpt.
ADd SUWD-.1)' .... 1 kltol
!WJOribCS 10 k;eep 111'11
A UB
1eacber 11nce 1972-IAd UB
bectldar's ond .......,.. 1 CJ'IIduolie~~T..auncPro­
f...or o{ ADIIropolocy
who ra:aVOid bor clociOnll: ID lftlllropolocy from 1be UaiYCI&gt;II) ol
Wlllllmpla.. Saale, IS V1CC provost
o{ ~ ~ ..., dc:ao o{
lbt ~ School ADd sht bas

*

s.-.

UDder

univenily con prowle. The lllOII
common ..,.,.,...,. lhe heln 1 '1
cloo' lknow wbll' s 1voilable"

c-~~
. . _ . ndbonel

c:hiel and falltMeper ol the
Onondaga NaiJon and 8$81)r-~~ ciale pmlesIOI'ol

p:lloli II itliiWAI """"""&amp; loSI
April.
ADd &lt;be ottll""""""
"My pref.....,., 1 1101 10 leave
~- sht '"Y' "I don ' l 0.0..•
ho.. you leave. lloghl now. I hove
men: graduok SIUdenu chon I hove
hod m l"iule." Sbt •• also 1eaC1unJ
UDdcr'gradu-.

ftrwt

"lliU beul&amp;
Th&lt; key 10
&lt;be say.. 1&gt; 1
good ..wr 1'hey .... fired up ......
can generolly keep dungs SOUl&amp; "
Smanru ~ 1 people-person b
- n o differmcc "''ho lbe people

American10

~argraduoksru­

1\tnenaW!

~­
UB.-the
di!IOIW the
OCliTV'Illlr10&amp;

11'11J111addresslll~~.

He opcl&lt;e an May 9 in the

c.n.Oome

~.....,directs the Na. .... American SIUdles f'ro.
IJWII81 UB. Ia ~ dMilir

irMMd .......... ~

i&gt;digenoo.e piiCiliM arard
the world. lha ~ole

beC:helar's degree fnm S&gt;,oraCU!It ~· Cclllge ol
An8 Ana,l.pla ,_ llllq,t •.
UB since hi 19701.

denls. teacbe:r&lt; and Olbcr univcmty
pro(ewonals. odrninistnl&lt;n. fellow
memberl or l..eWI&lt;IOn' s FII'SI Prel;.
bylt:rian Olllltih where W I Ill
elder-1be cores Cor lhcm oil. '1 aJ.
low myself 10 b&lt;mme mvolved."
nus pbilosopby keeps .... busr
1btre ore times I hovr 10 01q&gt; m) ·
telf and '"t. 'Whole am
SirWw moinlains onotr.a: m lbt
ADibropology Deportmml in lbe
flliooa Compla iftlldddion ID bor
olfx:e on Capeol Hall ' • fifth floor. In
oddition. ofit::r Y""R o{ ~ lbc
idea. ill June 1993, &lt;be bqan worl:ing out ofbor home 50U1&lt; doys.

1r

llllfllllbe)''"' looltiQa Car lblllbo

I

S4riaooolti 8)'1

sa-

lrlllvrpoabao.
-.bmdf
mare • . , . t - . She 11 a n:pe..
_ . . . . , o{ lbc IDvendy' l poii

As ai lbll ...........
sht
1U elecled pn:ooden oflbt Amen·
'*&gt; AsSOCIIIJOII oll'llyslcol Anlhro-

...,. ""'*"""* """"""'
...,.,p.

AII4ER1CAN S'T\.OtES

bold&amp; ..

..., bco::auor
-c:looe 10 SIUdenu. sht lall:&gt;ws
till !bet ..- ..., wbal .
o{

two iUiba

....
........,.
--""'lie
D ;al

AJiboacb

ll cbll'x:ull.. sht

IICiatov.Jood&amp;es.

10Py*-ol~11181' •

bappenmc on campus Who ....,....,
omqme, foreumple. tblllbc
orDenlaJ M&lt;dlane would ID''de Or
llochord Leab:)'. . . o{ lbe lllOII
rapeded~JD

lbc v.ooOd. forlleclure'Th&lt; SIUdenu
511.01}1Dg docolal ~
Stnonru would -.1)' ho\.C liled
10ho\-·eaaa!ded tbosevem. Alllloulb
lbtl1' WIS pubbary •
IUI!iS&lt;Id
lbc lecwre. Studo:ols o{dentol modi·
cme ond SIUdenu or c1eo1a1 llllhmf!Oiogy probably bl•e 1 101 '"
axnmon. Th&lt;challengoe lleo•nbn~ ·
ing tbae-or' lln)'-IWO groups ..,.
gdber.
"Ob. boy. do poopk """" 10 ges
togedler," Sm1n01 uys '"We' r&lt;
wori:JDg 011 possibly r,elll~ oro oolme dotabese of wbll' s ovoilablc."
Th&lt;daabae shtaMSioos would
worl: 1 lol like BISON, OIH:IIIlpUS
uscn could lap m lbrou&amp;b lbc ten'lll·
oals thai..., IVoiloblelbrougboul the
UDI\Iel$dy and I'CIDOie IISCn could
cbaJ up VUI modem.
Thos daabae would utelt&gt;dt Ill·
fonnooon llfoul ongoutB reseorcb
and gnodDale SIUCienlllld facult)• ..,.

Sbt ..
.,....., we Illite- oltbt..,.,...,.,.
weheYe."

10.

s..- bopes 11181 111e CIIIDC»-

-·

f.-llhc: .,.._

r.r... -.e..,_~""

-.lediO
......... .
Ia
ID
lbti""'J'JCI
udooodes........ &amp;om-.eu.r-Uiy o{

a-. •

.. J..--

hDI
"' .........
dents Clll fiad every c:oune aft'aeil
ID

•II"""' ...,.,_....,

•rtee•..-sm"'W1too'

poklpl &lt;boic • a ploce lite lb.r' I

1

t;pCCiol """"' or Olbcr c:oune of

...a.

lOculi .

ADd
..... IIIOiber btotf• b
could help ,.-.pe out dupbcotJoe ol

elfcn..Smab;lbo...,_.;ayagu ......... ~ -c-u...d du--

.....

pbcobono{........,..

I I IIICt

alllllro-

c-s .. - - .,...o{..... o{

lbt ,.,..... IOidion ..........s •
lbo
" lheaoys.
.. ~ .. ,

....... .

........,.,....,Worid

.,..,..... 1

w 0 -

-

11181

-a)' aod o{ tbe ..... "

-

Ia od!SmooiiO scboblsbe. ......
, _ ,.. ..., ~ IOOI"'l·
IRmDl also
oewnl 6dd
pr&lt;IJOICIJundcr 'WJ.One. bllfa .......S
owoy 011 lbe tsllnd ol Pokliu., •
Wllves lbc tdonlif.ocobaa llld
lble ...........,.. al
deld from.,... o{ lbo bklody Pacific
Island
a/Woric!Ww
l&gt;unqc th• baale. Amenc:aD
forc:oes lllldul&amp; Olllbc t5lond ~
10 mo.. m quickly ond IOJC:tft lbc
•&gt;land. Tboy diSIJII\'t:n:ld lbc ,..,..
...... hod~ lbc resadeau...,
"*'Y 10 . . . . . in poenilla
'O'IIfareusinclbo ISiand's-rcaves
oslbarbue.
Finl.lbc isbtnd ..... ddolillal in
.. elliz!t 10 JOb lbt Japmeae o{ bidme~ Iller. lbc IDOUibs or
lbe caves ......, blown up.

-.

s...- --

-=

lbcir eot1llallCeS and

..-nbm&amp; lbc

worrion.
1be ISSUillplioo is lbll ~...,
still Clvt:&gt; wt1h soldi&lt;n in lhcm.-

--.-.. .

'1 cloD' t

.,....., cxpao
I ,_

lbc

Olll•lidd&amp;.wop~ilt
p........c·•• J ( - is ClOIIIiDI
'-*. Tboy left SO yean ,.a; 1994 is
tbe SO" -WISII)' o{ lblllloolllo.."

sm-......

·-pul

ol'fby
......t:atcwtlb ................ R.ollbcr
" - try 10 llllinlloin Ia ...........

duunae by~ !be te-SiriMni-10...~

...uhlbtm.
'"llWJSa._~··

-·-

'1 ldl my IIUdalls. 'Never looe lhll.

Once 11181 ~ . losl. olbe
ys. ')ou' ve loll COIDCl. Tboy calk
10 you beocr tf you try 10 lllldls-.d
lbeaL
1btre's I COIDIDOII!bread lbc:&amp;
It's Ill people." -

�Senate schedule orientation
on faculty governance
icolll~ llllniCIIfillie 1*1

HE I'ACIJLTY ~l'Ewill ,_
11ft 1110rieAiaioooo flocully ac,...
tll!IUitebbolb newand

fawlly""""'"""ll ' 5qlt.l111101:1·
iq.oaid Fallly Sal* a-Pact
idi;mm.

The JlUI'POO" d lbl: ........... ~ 10
10 educlle llliCftlbl!ts so cbllllht
&lt;ftlite Senile u -u., on equal pound · ~e&gt;­
ptding~dprocodure. '"We
pWt«J •
Cbe sll'llllllft d I!MI'JWICC. ..
....Uu•lht
'billlieolllldGpponunilieurisiqc lrom il,. ~Slid
ADondint Cbe Ol1elllalioD, Wlud! ..... Olpnizad by idrcuon. ,.;u be l b l : - la')'dlbeS..O.,Maumon,.,_,ofModem

idznon. .

~and~ as....Uasoevcnl

1*1 Seallle dian
"M..Iy fK:ulty doo'llll&gt;e ........ d .......
go.emanee is." iclanon said. "So we need
IOinlrocluoe pcq&gt;le.~Cbe ne1l4) clocoed

...,.._wort

...,...,...,IOihtJI'IIC[lll""f"'CUof~

., w
eq&gt;laio IOihan
and
CJ&gt;elbema-ofourbyla · llhowanllo
erQilbasde lbl: ~ of our c:ommiuce
!i1niCIUre. If we can Ill"" good oomrnillee
cbairs within lbe s..:-, ..., can get 1 lot of

s....

cblir. IIC""'Scblii~Cbe .

ofCilmlllllleeWOO:-be~

"1bo ...,..._

* .- lo Wild: llMrt

•ilbin Cbe S....
lbc)' lllw belal,"

be lllid. '"'n1tr ~be c:arryJII&amp; ......

d

llaankol ill lenDS &lt;JI brqina

to lhe FSOC and "'-Jy,10

.

w Nil s...aae.

The full Sa.-lhould 1101 be &lt;lnrtliaa lqislaLIIlll. 1'lley Ql8)' .. lliOikfy lql
cblll
bas liOftl ,...,._t by I CIJihllliilec, l lul
~ needlo draltlhe
•
SUI. Ooodman ald. a
point
Wbidleac:b..,..,..lllllll~

~

lhatlhe

lrom lbe ""'""" ·dill ...,.,._.,..

lhefJI&lt;lUI!yin~ ........... "1bollllioa
haslhe-IDmabibl:
.
lisloon
10it. Thrre..,no~omderwbdl
lht ~
lo bslaiiO ....
by qumm~ and,.,.._..
~. oobik CIOOpOtll1tim ....d:ti:n Uio
Scmle IS an imparlanl i..,...:lic:nl10 WCC&gt;eS"Cbe Smale ibo bas a necessary wllldJdoc
fwlocboa, accordin« 10 Barbaro Howdl.. ,_.
fessar of pbysidocy and farmer Sa.- c'11&gt;&lt; S&lt;rUIIe ••roe IS 10 orMte lht.tmin~s­
. _" &amp;be said. "8.. lbc)' .., olJo I 'l.w:bqJD thalbc)'
keeptbeirey&lt;:s Oll,.'bal
lht ~ IS J""lP0$10111S policy "

w.-

...n

'*

:sm.

-to

wodtdme "

UB nuclear
Legislature funds position to heighten
public awareness of Great Lakes ecology· research reactor

-------- -I
shutdown

_ _ _ _ lll.,.,.,'odwtlh

HE NEW YORK STATEI..eglslio-

edoaliooal P"'J''IXX, """ boo ~ 1$
l&lt;ldio-vi..W pn!ll'lllDl, illcluditlg ~Yipes !
Stripes! t..:t.dn Mussels"
"Gel~~ Lakes-

ture .... Cunded ....... posilion 10

Ga:ar~" Sbe

irqmvepublicarxlcrstandio&amp;oboul
lbeet:alog oflbe O!al !.Aka 1M

lll5llUCIDr io 011\irooml!:alal """"""' and Ill
~a U8 and NJapro O:lunl)' Commumty COllege.

wiJJbe~bylbeCamell

Ooopcmi"' Eoemioo and """'-'ed at. UB.
Helen M. •Dornsb:., cbe new exl&lt;DSion ..,.,_
a-, wiD dol~ a Vlriely of prtJCramS intended 10 beiglnm public .... .,.,...,.. or
problems in lht Oreal l...ttes and ongoing
elfons 10 ill'lpO'Ie Oreal 1..ates ec:oa;y~~am.
Voiland said.
Sbe will "'Jll'' bod! 10 Carnell Ooopcmive
Ext&lt;:nsion's Sea Gran! and Marine Eomsion
Prognm and to U8 's Great 1..ates Prosram,
wb= &amp;be wiD serve as~ din:aor.
Dc:mste was most """""-'Y curaiDr of education atlhe Aquarium ofN'..... Falls. Respoosible for developing a ~

baslil:lrYedasan

Tho: new hybrid po5ibm Cll1 b&lt; viewed as

a IIIOdrol for possible funJre etrom ro

brine

~ coopemioa betwcm tb&lt; IIW6'Jde
Coopenri..,~andlbeSUNY

sy-... ICICCJidin&amp; 10 Midlocl Voiland, program ...... of tb&lt; Sea Gran! and Mlrine
EnolwoG l'lqram Ill Comell. Voiland aulo.d Sm. .Joba Sbeffer, an Amhent-a~a R.,.
publican. and ""-'b'ymm f'r-=is l'mlom,
• HaJ:nboq Democ:dl, wilh lealliQclbe etlalt
10 pin a swe~forlbeNew York
Sea O...lnslirule. a SUNY .QxndJ .,._,...
tium. for lbe pooilion.
'"Butralo .. home 10 • boa ol fedtnl and

O!al Labs~ 110 lbo . . . fii"'SC8'l'
lltliqu&lt; oppor1Unitloo for 1 speaalulod ~
"""'.,..,..,..,- Y&lt;liland said.
Jooepb v IJiei'Wo, """""' &lt;JIIht c;,l...ttes " ' - II[ l1B, &amp;ddad, "ln dtilioe to

clirecturc _,

- a . - 0.......

......

SooiJa c:.aq,..- ... 5qJl.
c:boc:L b y - f.w:illy fllllf ~­
......-m...-'11) • i &gt; r - r lbe facility' •

~ ~

""'*""'........
ill&lt;

reoearctt Olt lhe a.- l..IU:t;. lht a.- l...ttes
Program bas ..ax:aoon and ........, .......,.,.
iDiendod 10 brillllbe'- ~and"""'­
ruc:al WCJrmiiiCIIIOO :lhiJ &lt;O:&gt;SyllmliO II!;~
stilueoc} in ., lllldlenw&gt;dable ............
The posiiiOn abo nsponds 10 Cbe SL'NY
2003 T
Grollpon ~ 'Coroocr·
vallon. ....tDdJ .. belpma esaibiJSh pis tor lhe
SUNY •,.-n's lcq-nflll' ...,_ The 1JU11P
.... &lt;11lpilaslmd lhe fur ....... plbl\ll·
~ orimlod pcllllilioe5 10 """"" .. .
sm."Y ._.._ albe ptiJc.
corcli.l&gt;&amp; 10 Anne McElroy. din:aorollht New
y art Sea Gran! Instill&amp;

~ pbnbq .,._.,..
Scmt
-&amp;om
_... ~
....... .,................ _
.poriodicollylbndmibe~..-. Ad..a:oflbe
.me.. oflie flalily'o ..,..._lod q.
&lt;aii-JIIdudilc~
"'-at
nodelasltlle'-lld......_ Uai&gt;o:nilydcills saaood .,. Ibm: lios boal ~ no
plbbt b&lt;IIM!Iod ....,.
The ftabn OI:IOliOrd ..... 10:30
a.m.
Sq1 8. "' """""""'by ......... - . -•
qullliono.lhe~

,_II&gt;

-=·

..mm..t of ibe ICiioa. Sllllilody
llllbmodibe
-...............
~
ol!ic:a:.
· ~·
of lbe flciliily's

Doctors' offices, clinics become training
sites for medical students, residents
percenl 10 50 pcn:eo1 by 1994. The

OUR DCX:'TOR'S OFFICES, an
inner-city beallhdinicandanHMO
in Wes~&lt;:m New Yort are bealm-

ioglhenalion's futlpriY111e modical pndices 10 fuDclioo .. formal
out-of-boSpilal tnioing si1es for medical SIUdeftts and n:sidc:nt pilyDcians !liUdying 10 be·
rome primary-can: pbysicians.
Tho: prognun. called lhe Olmmunity Aca·
cJemjc Pra&lt;:lia: (CAP) projocl. is. cooperatM
venlllre of cbe Gnoolu* Mcdical..o.mal BdaJ.
CllliooConooniumofBulfalo. TheCIODSOitium
isCXliiiJlO'Odoflhe U8Sd!ool ofMedicine and
Biomodical Scitr1cei and its eiP ~
hooplll1s.
The CAP Jllll.ioa is pan of a SS million
Primary-Care lniti&amp;tive unveiled by lht axr
sonium last fall, designed 10 in=ose cbe Dlllllber of resident pl&gt;ysic;ian training in primary
cue in Wesu:m New Yort flowitals from 35

"ioiwwve

lho incllldcs ....,. curriculum. new RCNitmem pmg11111n and increased ertlpbasi on
primary-can: lellctliqg and researcb.
"As far as I !wow, Chis-,. lht lint formal
academic fll'lllli'ODl ;, !be COUDtl'f usit1g cbe
resoun:esofprivap:ac:lices." !iaidPauiJma..
co-&lt;lin:dor of !be~ ..,.... .... """"'
medical progriiDStbal have uldlilt:s, llullbey
-owned lll'ld ~by !be uru..mbeo.J..,... Slid !be Bulfalo pro;.a is abo !be
onlyraidcacypRli!JalllinYOivinglhreediffi:r·
""' ctiscipliDes. Resideab from !be modical

d!ool's ~ ol lnk:mal Modicine.
Ptdiatrics and Fomijy Medicine will pnc;..
paso..
The pro;.a wiD allow ~ dociiJrs 10
srudy primary-an: medicine wb= it .. poe·
liccd-in dociiJrs' private offiJ::es and walk-in
clinics ralbor than in bospitals. !be b'lditiooal
tnioing ground for oil fields of modicine.
~Hospilal lnlining ~ !be otills of

lllll!ly &lt;XllmDc.

hdiminory....... inllctdlllille...,....
., ibe S)Wm r. ...... INdo pmnilod by ·ibe
led lbe bealll clqw1naL

d o:odioliao ~ ll&gt;lhe air

opcaaii&lt;ts.- James Slid "They lanA: reaDy
inlpnossi"' using oil cbe llll.est lldriqucs and
equipmonL WbaJ medical
ond res;.
dmli """"' with genonlisls "' hospilals. lht
generali!ill may......, less ·llcillod by oomplll·
.,.._Bta oo lheJr ow llllf,lbey really sbil&amp;.·
The pro;.a is tqJ aod l1lllDiD&amp; wilh-11011 of otr~a: 1il*"'- iaslalblioa of modiail

Foci~~~)'~

PJio&lt;IO&gt;beasmalleli:......,lht~~'­

dl:bqa:.

lhe dJree sloes~ ror !be S199
lint
~~·n.nls-nJ
podiall:ics pnaioe.; Tfi..County Family Modical~.

mnl f.omily tllodiciae (lDC·

·Fmdaoia MiOdicai

Part, an illlomal modicine jDCiiae in.Ftodcaia.
Wort is ·~ 10 lqiD • 1blee olbor
..... iD Oclober- wburboa imm&gt;al modicine~ in~. t....wby Hmro'lld
Sporr. Health Care Plan, an HMO 00111&lt;:r ill
Wesl~andl&amp;praFamilyHealtbCm-

""'· an lnner-citytaltbclinic semng• primarily Hisponie ,JXlllUl.uion.

=

lbetastof~

.... lhe &lt;:U&lt;S tocmon of .... problem. wtidl is

"""''JUIiQi """"'......,.,...,.. ~.

lice ......~ and

New Yort S... Ueolll

~ ibe Eiie (hay Qliae of &amp;a·
@I'IICi)' Sonliceslodibel!ull'*~~-

I

0

�........
_...,_1......,..
far _ _ , . ,
-d

blho21._,.
Aadoollow we
our-

..._ID.,_,..._..,..l

Whit-- .,....

oaed..,wodd'a~--

'""*
.

lbar

... ....-.

..._...~.

daimioll ~ by . . . d domoc:nlic
by riala cl ,_ .,...to -

-

·----atlidals.

IOCilll .., polobcol

........

--~
SCIIIIe ore-_.

...... cl ........ ..t

............. .,._lbcy
If

---world.

the owrwllduiie&amp; ........., "'l"fi·
&lt;*KlOddul "'*"J'riot d A.moril:on
,...,. educotioa. wbdl
. ""'
"""l'cldoewarld.
We..., I ....... pouDd., I --

.............
.......,... o-""' llHI,.,..
laaodoriD

for upcn --.nee. • ......,. of

"

Make
0

little
Plans
)

"

laloovledte, and

M

f&lt;:l1'eolldw:tr ~ ID I . - : &lt;
lila can.cu ..,.....,.. them all.
M I . , _ "ilal pal cilonF IS doIIWidcd, .... ...,
• • "'"""
..'here """' chan
sbollld bt
~ - led. ...txtt pal help
obouJd bt off..-..!. w1&gt;&lt;R peat lrldlbOns
bt
n.e le8&amp;! ·
mooflht"''lridwebvem
IOUi
IOdo•i&gt;llwedoevoa-.r
ba.e, and 1t i no k,.,er eoouah 10
""""'&gt;' OI.WJI""B lila ..., ..., e&gt;.cdlcnl We mull
iMiil} oureatc:r·
l),our
nolcontbl....,.,..,.
dl!:tJ!lCOOil ma} rar noc oo much on
bow &lt;hsb~ we.,.. Jud!&lt;d 1D
bt ~ oo.w peen, bul on'- much of
a dJIJ........, ""' maLt"' our IIOC1&lt;f) .
a - ....U .,.. hc&gt;ed
IIIII
pnVIIL&lt; leod&lt;n. tall 10 btlp 101...

r-.l modcl 1D hdp .. ~

soclll prollian&gt;.
And oo. for&lt;.rJinll&gt;l&lt;, tt .. mcum-

IObwld ~!hot .-:11
"""'" IJDel btl.....,., the publ.c -

btaer - &amp;ra.du.ue edu-cauon-eol onl:t
becaute It I&gt; lilt f1lbl dune
bul
abollecaJsc,M I tune "hen ..-noIKJIIII cornpebbven&lt;:s I I pal Ill·
tJOnal """""'"'·our soc'td) demlnds
do • btuer Jril of preponiiJ
our petlf&gt;k "'
produc:tl\00 member$ of a btJhly sopht ucated
wor\foroe. In order 10 do , ,...,
D111Stt~ourttadttJOnal defirutoon of lht po.trp&lt;111r IIIII qualrty ai
~educaoon wbal-.,
lht purpoteSdlibtnl.ueducaoon
forme 20th cenwry1 •-hol "'"'*for
eu:dlc:Dcemsuch.,educaoon'how
will these purpooe&gt; and 5lllndank
dtlfa 111 me 2151 oenwry. and how
mu5l m.y bt Ulfluato::ed by me ...
' - ' on

10 offer

IDdo,

"* ....

sues lila '"'" conc:em oo.wlarger oo-

ael) 'Witl!olldustnrrund ....,should

'*"fUlly teelWIIIJ&gt;O lhe admuusuan-. str\ICtUreS through wbdl ,...,
rnanac&lt; our efforts 111 lht aru and
&gt;CI&lt;:OOCS

Wemustundl:nal.z5umlaronah·
......til n:prd to lhe l\llute ~
rclevllllCe of our reseorc:h, lhe modabues and eff&lt;CUven&lt;s of our
teachlnt. lhc breadlh or our
gJobolu:aoon.lheextalltowbdl we
antnce and rdlocllhe culunl dtvemry of our people. and soon. And
.. - tlunk llbout oil these
must btor in mind lila we DOW oct in
10 _,.lila i&gt; simultaneously loc:oL
reponol SUieWide. !llliOnal. - natiOnal. Gral and dtsuftcwsbed
univemticsoftheoemwyobeodwill
bt excqxionolly onentive and responsive to oil these c:onsntuencies.
and IOiU bt willing to take JDidkx:.
lUll and instilunonal
for the
..U of lcadc:mtip and st:rVJCe. We
cannot bt •o11 things to oil Jl"'OIIe."
bul I do gcnumcly btliew that. Ftseol
constlainasnocwiti!Siandt~ UBcan
IIIII mtHI do • grea1 D'UIIl)' things for
• gna1 D'IJUIY J&gt;I'Oilk: UB can and
will do lbooe tbinp excqxionolly
well; UB CliO and will bt o greot

lite

dour~.-...,.

-~lrdcrnl.....,.

{lllldarneDiaJ

---

. ..............

......,d.,_,

D
,_...,oun:ommllllll). - -··
UB

noc .,.,. bt •

........ IIC1J&gt;t pil)rf 111

f.-- more
~ lllltudes ro IIIII •
me &lt;:tid at""' c1ococ1o .-e
~
bDtJI I flr&lt;lnCCI"
of emooonol.,
Ulrdlecnaal.
and pbilul·
IMlpoc ouppon for our OOIIIJIII.IOd
.,.._.. IIIII clrvdopmerll. In adler
~&lt;: , _ bollt """more IIIII
,.. more 1beo&lt;..., ""o
ai the
.-b., bur -

pob"ffl

""""mm..weanmc~
onewttboul~doeodler

Wt ba\00-...! 011

roed bul

ba... •loll&amp; ""&gt;'., 10 w~

pn·-~~~-

to health core. tndullry. eduat

ncn. ,.,...,......._ IIIII

propneuil)

~

We ,.ill baYeiOdoublt
IIIII redouble our efforts 10 ..an
a .- ' """"""' for our re&lt;eaR1II
and IJ1Idu* educol&gt;on. c:spec }
tn the t&lt;:im&lt;le&gt; and~- We
...n o11 ba"" .., .,..,.,.... and ocn &gt;oel} ouppon fund rat
UIIIJa
ows We mu do oil lbal we can10
..., and cl&lt;s&lt;rve pluiandJrcpy from
fnmds IIIII o!umno of UB We mw.1
pm&lt;r suppon from IIIII tnlml&lt;:l well
wnh oJl ourpublta, from illldmts 10
alumai feiJoo;. scholars "' oorpo.
..., IIIII,.,..,.,..,.... tlUJlPOit&lt;n. We
rms bt _..,._ llboul UB and
tnSilll
pos
•• cobl:n. 10
...e "''" bec:ome the 21st-&lt;lC:IIIllry
le8&amp;la - """ and should he.
V.'bat "'" bt the Slberll cbantc IDI&lt;IJCS of dus 21 ..,.,....., UB'
We may look •ur dtff....,. (rom
ather axnpll1lilk
Wt
...,u be ..,.,.,.iw smolle&lt;. much
morefoeu5ed.and perbapsmoreself5Ul'fiCICOI dwt our CIOUDir)'' s ert:berypal pubh """ er lite , the
midwesatm and-..~
UIStlnatons; ..., will bt larger. much
lessexpemtvc lorlilltdenls, IIIII more
1111mb"" to our IOCidlll ~
than the lypic:al pn VIto insliwlion.
We will very corefully 1to1an&lt;z re·
liOUrCt$ and enrollmenls m order to
, motDI.ain ueepoonal quolily IIIII
ossure Sllldenr occess 1101 juSI 10 the
uni-.ily but to our degree pro~and especially 10 lbooe of our
programs lbaJ 1ft umque ,.,thtn

"*

SUNY
AI 1 result.

~ the turn of lht
~W)', UB. s student populaoon
should ~vmpnoe proporttonltely
more IJ1Idu* and gradtwe-professoonal ~; dtscrele orc:as of •••
cellell&lt;% tn our IIJ1S and SC&gt;aiOeS
progratDS. a greot many of !hem

multtdisciplinary. wtll be receivq
wide$preodJeCOgrution for their ex-

•

~

- shrJald dodoi:a ..-..-..!

erps..t

.............
__
. ..-. ,....._......,.
__ _
·--·
__
...,_
-----..-.
..
.,-,....._......,.
_____...-...,.._
...........
__ _
-.-.----._..,_.._.,_
_......,__.......,
-----·
.--. --.
--- ..........
....-......10me

pnlllllt&lt;l~elll_tn&amp;_

.....

.......... dcllil

1kfiv' pnontJts art
$

$

.... _

I. PM

X , .......,_

_ _

--.

~

...

acowpid...., .......

,...._:IH_.,..,

-.¥Cnll) Yt e

., a1*e a
ctuu.e aa wlla::b bern' rw ...,
po!idNtccalaure . . -... ba e

___,.......
..........

""'"'
"""'......-., ........,_.,
eoch Olber lndeod. .... ..,. r..l
oond- blurnac * '- """""""'
upper-&lt;ttVIIIOII wudoip . . . . Mil

~· rhr ""' cl pnortltO 10 bt
onextncabl UMareloled. for ex.
IIDlj)lo, .,... ~ offer the ~
uooaJ IIDl\·enn)'- u.ed unckrcndu* educaoon a(""""" .......
copble ..,
abo reo1tnac the
ruues~~~andre­

seord! a(
ColloctJ&gt;'dy ..., -

....

copble

exec:~

....

lielldl. ...,.,., IIIII '""'""'· ~

thoucl&gt; our mdl•&gt;diutl pnen11a for
dae oro....,
,.., ICalrdul&amp;
"'our0101l
Mil. &gt;W) . .
Slip$ m lXW ~ buleane of liS
COD -.fiiCIIOril) perfonn• •Y 011&lt;
cl dae cbn:r .......'llboul """""'"

pluiuocpd

nu. mac:b

1&lt;1
indl\'lduolly. eod! c/lbeoe r....... pnanbeS

_
--... .......... '-1..

.. . - - .

_.,
0

.... - . . - . . . -

,

·~

UB's r-.:b~lllllrd-.1

pluole-.1~~

do ·
· UB,ooalll'li-.ay. fiom
odlerrypesof. ..... . , ~
licxs. We must~ ...-.:11.
ocholanlup. IIIII aa1111e ecuvily 10
our .
. . ct.aaerisaic a
OCIIIIaliiiiSDOil, paniada1y •lCb ~­
prd to the pi-.! role a( lbese ....
deoYOB 111 pwiL&gt;* edtac:olioft, IIIII
~ 111 a
-..(~ioo that mode5tly illCTealeS

we"''" .,....,..
cr-s. enrollmeot ... propornon
of the 0&gt;...-.11
We will

udeot populabon.

rmew and redd'me the role

ofourGnid"""' School and IJ1Idu*
focult) ...th ~
the quality
ond dtrecuon of our £l1ldt.ta progrorm.

We w1ll act1"ely promote
multidiscipJuwy ft:5CII'Cb, wbicb IS

lower~..

~

"'

"'IDoccderw the ocadomoc ~ -

opnonll cl
cl our..-...
·e •ill
ld
!lilt .......
eduatbon ............. c:am:ad) a(.

Cered 10 - ttaaiCiel
llvough Che L'rcltap._C.o&amp;,&lt;

'*"'-! .......... thesedJoru

&lt;JI

~

-

~cat..:filtn.di_,.,)'ft

oo~~eu

... ~a(

y...,., ..

rbaot~~the~ We

..

ClllliiUnF -

~

noktdi~eft

lb£11U.nda•

rtt '

-s

ourdi~....,.,..,

..

uecler,

wn.

pwlua.....,_, .,..,...u

~-~

~- -

.....,.,..

'-cedUjlpJiwits foropec:ioluled

~oftbt.iwlb­
eot quoltl)', IIIUdllftd ID ~

illldmts' oacoiac ptiiOIIII IIIII pro..-.aAIIIIIMd~

........-! - * - ' mcrJY ,_,.."'~-.....,.
lbtqaobtyotlllldl:alllk bulb,. me
cto.oom - Olllliclo it. .............
iac our IOidcolls lllde\Otlop adorllhip
pioleap:rimoe•.,..,.,.,
81111
odw:r penoaol .......

-IIIII p&lt;nOIIII
- ........
~~a ........
dow:lapmall.
If c:xctlle&lt;w:e in n:searclt, ochol·
arshcp ............. _ . . , • ....,.
euory cODdttiou for uedkor
pwlua IIIII prol"_.t edacalioo.
lhcn ~ bCiunc by • foeuti) engopd .. n:oeon::b and efton.. OCtl\ily IS a foundlbon for me
uruquehi~~

educaoon •

llounsbts m me ....

uni•-erWe willlbc:rtfore
dosdy
and corefully • our atneot strUC·

""'a( • . . . . . . . , . . _...
011)'.

�..--•

add!t-. becauJe of the

Ublrt
o(
-..
.......
, . . . . . ...........onl.....

·--

•odes ..... local
~ prop1IDIO lrt

1ft

a ,_jy w:nue for lh&lt; - · ·
pllblr
ta'V1IOt
- - · !hey
be eoa&gt;
....... ·unponanl
..
• ••

-.,..,. ... n&lt;XI

and will Uoo I'IO''ldt
tbearuand""""""""'

r. ... ,_...
1D

~

opporllllllla . .cnncblheu

· 'lllabo, .. IIK!IIldmlbo

coateat of reu.a.rcb and
muluditctpluwy mdeavor, bwld

-

b.obo&amp;e&amp; between

""' pro(a-

SKJMalboarua~will do 1tus no1 (101) for lbo purpooe

·-~

ond--... tbrool&amp;b p l l b l r -

___ ........,.,.._

oollabonoonL

4.

~~hybrid~

~

for UB AI ..,..,.,._

IOibo..,.Viae~forl'ul&gt;-

"UB must not only be a more
active player in meeting our
communilys and states needs,
but must .. foster more
entrepreneurial attitudes, so
that at the end ofthis decade
we will have built a stronger
base ofemotional, intellectuaL
political and philaruhropic
support for our continued
growth and development. ,,

--

policy. forcumpk. Sucb oollabcnbOOS will alto""""' .. ~
ond dt\-elop emtin&amp; profetOSional
programs tbal lrt inberedly OOD-

""""""' 10 lhe .... and """""""' like
those in ~. ardu!IOCIUre,

law.

a

cduc:aioa.

We will tbougbtfuUy explorr lbo
role of lDd SI1UCtUrt for the VJ..W
ond performing aru in lhe uru-&amp;icy. Wllh the oporung of tbe Fine
Arts Center ond ""' ,.,~ocauon of all
our ans dc:penm&lt;oU 10 !he nor1h
campuslllast.UmaybetimeiO
roxplore lhe possibibl)' oi redofaning
the role oi our arts proc&lt;mll. wbiciJ

-'D

~kind oi
professiooal educllion and sbould

art their

perhaps bec:oosideml and"""""" ..
IDOCber ..,..... bridge between ""'
lwmanilies and tbr prdessiaas.
cia!, oc:iallific.~ and poblic

s...

policy c:baft&amp;cl ond initiati"" moy
al!o ~ "'revisit and mlefine
1be role ofond SINCIUrt foradminisltrioatheheahhandbiomcdicalsci-

""""" in this lllliwnity. This ..... is

be Semce ond ~ Affiun Mn
.....'Dcbqthal
........ 1\r&gt;t yew oi
opc:Rtion , ou:r

....

DOOJhbonore..,...
to '*Od.: on 1b1

"

...

artpn.-andp-

""'"'""' spomol'$-

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Offtce of

""'for Pubbc
""',.,_
Sen-.ce
and
l

Umon All:
oi """&gt; ftw
d m lhe coun

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lr) - and almo
a:rtatnly ""'

1

(101)

one pastooned .a
ccntrall) tn thr
tmtJWbOn. admut1~\

h

e structure

wtll CIOOI1Due 10

be • focal p0111l fCI'
tncte&amp;StDIIY tgDiflCant commu·
011)' UUualiY&lt;S

1'be wtsm agenda will OlldJJiUe
10 be a very lqb pnoruy far"'· ow
bomeoowD mBuffalo M5 a Jl'l"ll
.-:1 for l!B'slalcnls ond ~
and &lt;lifers..., in tum. many opponuruues 10 develop and apply our
mow~ We can a!
bclp address. StglllfiC&amp;Ill S« of rural issues.
such all'l01Diairun&amp; lc• el and quality ofltealtb care dell very 11 uolaled
rural hospnals 10 Wes~Mt New Y or!(
onc1""' Soulhem
1nr1co:1. heallb
care and ....,_ scn'ICei wtll be a

r...-

miJOf' focus of our ClOnlmiGlity UU·
tilli""'- as will educabon. A,ptn.
tbcseefforu will open oewpossibiltl a for all . . - of our acadamc
communi!)', bul espoaally for ow
prdessiooal ochools.

.........

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..

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~use

our dt..,..•f)'

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rli•c:n.uy .. val ..

""'ptnanlll and pQ

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Ul bod! ..-. bul al!o.. •
o(

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and addt "' .,..
lll1dleclual ADd IOCial "'"'!lie

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we lrt alto 1'*1&amp; m build IJ 'I

GreMel

Workattlcloood Wllbour'bornec:omrroDI) herem w.-.. New vort,
llimullaneousiy -~and an

in artaS ll.dlls jownabsm orpllblr

• .,

'"'"'"' dlwnory • a ~~ea.,..

,.,

Like my uniwnil)'. U8 is 6rs! and
forcmosammaprilec:ordactod by.
far,aaboul P"&lt;fl• ex~rus fa&lt;ul!y. ond aaft'. Our studciiiS .... -

dt&gt;d·

opmenl o( .._, IIICII&gt;btf o(
acadamc~t COIMndy,
spoaall)'peSof ~and prda ·

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and rtlllmo

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Md. fa&lt; .
u11y a sutr.... dfaru.,
dlvauy • thadlftaboCOIIII'ha-

dear:nbod • ,_

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bul
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mo.tiUill ...,.,....,.. Jnlli1DeS . .
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l!B'•.,_-and
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-

mlbe spcdal de•dapta• and. ...,.
pon services tbal we otler m&lt;m1&gt;en
oi owiiCidemoc ~
Finally. we ....u-- mKJflmd 10. •ery m.d. """""""""' absu-. buiii!JI1dbeleM cr\1011 maner
thai affect&gt; every oor of
lbo
ownll qualtl) of bfc at liB 1ln

~'eNin.

.,...,_,_..In

bulldon&amp;

Cl0111&lt;1111-

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and stJ\ICilnl reabgomenu ......
maU it possible 10 addn:s1; these
pnonties. Sane o( lbe specilic reqWSIICSICpo will mdudedl""""f'&gt;'tn!

,u

I'&lt;VeiUieS

ond

by lllll'aCrul&amp; phit.bropy
J*Uier·

buiJdin&amp;

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better
wi1b eurmal OODStitueiii&amp;.,
urging ....... flexibdily and crellivtty CD StJNY'5 J*l; and .........
..ilb Stile Uni~ l:ltDnl
admiruslralioo on a ~na~~~e procea
mrn suitr:d 10 iDslitutions of our
lyp&amp;-illl initiai"" tbal ,... MYO
already tqun
will punue eva~

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STUDIO ARE:N A THEATRE'S
Special Educator
Discount

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c:ibeal ~ 1D elliJI.-1
alili$4
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A season of plays
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Call 856-5650

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Puzzle Answers

0

FOR-MER U . S . SECRETARY O-F DEFENSE

1993 SEFA Campa1gn

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Now you can go to the library
witliout leavmg your room

a&gt;- ROM tfdmOOgy ptm ~of inforrnatXxl at~~­
lifls, arvl enables )00 10 v.ttk with sooOO, viloo arvl animatioo. Buy
~ Macinmsh Centrif 610 with a&gt;-ROM dri\\; arvl )0011 also ~

rur mgift pack. \NI )WI' AWie Ca1nJx.ts ReseUer IOday. ~ ')W're

trere. alt aboot ~ v.ilh ~ AW!e"~ Loan: Alxl
disa1.oer ~~of . . • The ~ kl be }001' besf
645-3554
Hours: Mon, Toes, Fri. 9:30am-5:00pm

Wed A- Thurs 9:30am·7:00pm
•Prices and availability subject to change without notice

~

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w~ School ofMcdicille
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1bt Umvenity ol

Grmobk, France.

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Homeric:
• and oral b~etann ba"" beaD ieviled 1o evalllale
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Odypey and "' lbe on! hla1llllre
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iu fOilDillaic cbatw:Us:
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roofc::t!:IICIC'I eigbl-penon orpnlZ·
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Frances Nesti
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for research

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FI'1UI&lt;li!S Nest!, ebnical
assistant iDSIJUCIOr in the
Dl:panmem of Pedwrics ID the
UB Scbool of Mecticine and Biomedical Scicocel, bas recei•·ed an
award from the Society of Critical Cart Mecticine in R&gt;COgllliKla
or h&lt;r research in petituorocarlloo
liquid \'elltilation.
esti. who recently recerved
the award at !be society's annual
ymposium. worbd with a tum

High mileage
car is foui1h in
national event

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macbin&lt; destgned. built
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UB ream, .......,.. vduclc regJ •
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discusses
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luJbly readable leltl iD~atW~nes
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Auslralia that ~ lbc body
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WOMEN NEEDED TO PARTICIPATE IN RESEARCH STUDY:

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&gt; Are )'00 rurrenll married or in a arnmitted relationship ci a1
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&gt; Are )'00 willing to discuss )'OOr experiero5 in an mteniew
(either indMdual or giOI!P) lalting about I 1/2 bows?

I F YOU ANSW£11 YES TO ALL OF TH£SI: QUII&lt;STI ON S,

please call

Vaune Alnswolth (886-5430) to atr211ge an inlei'View Ill your OOIJ\1ellienre.

(PI«zse kave m&lt;'SStlge on flMDrilg machine (not available.)

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--

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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  <item itemId="86237" public="1" featured="0">
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1716532">
                    <text>$7).5 million grant
fimds new national
center
1he UniYenfty at Buffalo bas received a five-year, $7 5 millioo grant from the
ational Insrirute oo Disabilities and Rehabilitatioo Research to establish the first
national centec for a&lt;Mmcing new devices f&lt;X persons with disabilities from the
inventor's workShop to 1he manufacturer's assembly line.
if. ~ is usobk. and lb&lt; lOC
Theomler"ill-protaiypes me Wes~em New York Ta:~Joo~og
foroewassisli~&gt;edoYieesfrornllaO!lS

lhe u.s .• seleet those with tbe most
rnarlrl:l potmtial, evaluate and mfme
them.andestablisb.,..,...rups with
oanutlOI'cial fums 10 manuf~
and rnarlrl:l tbe poduas.
Called tbt Rdlabiliation Engi,_mg Re!learcb Center oo Teohnology E•aluatico and Tnomfer,lhe
new initiative is a oollabcntioo ~
twec:n tbt Independent living em""&lt;XWeottm New Yark, an agency
that ossisls peniOil$ with ClisabiJiti&lt;s;

~ Cenler,lnc. (11X'),.
rorpontioo in businf:so to ae.tle,
e-&lt;pand and divm;ify leehoology·
rel8l&lt;d businf:so in Wr:s&amp;ml New
Y ad, and UB'sO:Ilu:r for Assi:sliv&lt;
T&lt;clmology, 1 multidisciplinary
group .,.,.;dingm;earob, education
and service in lhe foeld of assi:&gt;rive
tedboology.

UB'sexpms

nial feasibility of eac::b.new device.
The lndqJendent lMng Cerdtt ..m
oaodudccmumonrast.odeli:rmint

"Pi'ojects like this uJil~ UB s
capabilities in some of the very
best ~

JXNihle. ,

,.,;u ........metech-

wiD ....,.. tho mar!&lt;d pooential of
~iocsand~tbooe

..., prornisin&amp;. &amp;dl wiU en.. 00
~ &lt;nD&lt;'Sand notianol orpni.zatioosto~ in~clesip­

orsand manuf~~&lt;UmiiCrOSStbe U.S.
...tricb lqan ()JIIDrion SepL I, will swt ...a! '
de"""' in October.
UB PnosidOill William R. Gmner
slid the pii1DODlbip involved . tbe

noe=-,

""""""~how UB com

be an I.BipOtallol&lt;d """"""" far tbe

"t.ok &lt;Ill#

(1( _,... in Wt:&amp;~~:m

New York.

"1llr -.... and de&gt;d&lt;Jpnem
~ •'llh us......,. •ooordtnatorondc
Will
cbocu
sp=al medsdemond
~ Cltlllive ............
Gr-c:islor Aid. "II. will bel,p c:bonnd
the
a~ etrms o~m­
lmlil! tbe &lt;lOOIIIr} ialo tbe . . -.
lri- of local ~ ond
....u..n and 'll'ill tbad&gt;y OOiJd 00
... ..,..•• _....._!twill
ploor .... e!la1l New Yorkand UB 11t
tilt fonfronl eX .. llldulslJy oohca:

-mosv

'*'

fuiDre sbopr.
"''roje&lt;:ls lib: this uUli2r UB 's
atpobilibes in $(lOll!' of tb&lt; YaY beSl
- . poaible. • be said

·w.,·..,

proudtoc:lft'ersucb~~

f..- ...-vices ID iDeal ~
andf.,.,ondweiR-ay pdulto
lhe~l ~lllslbltmeo.

md RdJobiiiwJoo ll&lt;:sc:wdl r...- ...
generous belp in bnldint thiS propam"

G -...-

odcbl ·wes~m~

nx:·.

Tht
role ., Ill&lt; """'
.... ' he Silld. wtll
10 ...u.r tht

"'"'""""'-*"' ......_
lllllto~Jli'Cllblliii&gt;Cde-

,,.,.._

n.,.,..,..,.·,~

........
........ _....... ...............

~headdcd.

............ dio:Wieo. n..- ....
~..m...J~Wiiblll&lt;ib­
oucalll!dawb:adolaiO~

c:ommea:ial fcosibiloly .l'roal(1( .......
cepl
bo dt:uwwd br !be
......... bdme lbo - " " " " ' - .....
_.,. ils fino dcollar w_, Nrw York D&gt;IIIU!acrur.,.. """ l:&gt;ond'!l from the Ill
....., WII)'S. ~UJ Mort&amp;.
..,.,....~"'this IWiaool

'""'*""

prondr...t&gt;nr-e"'
dew:c.avallahlc lrolll the,.._ftlr
~llOled. ~ ......
lhe plano 10
) IXIINI!a'aol.tu • .._ 0... .,...,. """" l""W
m • _,-1lp . . _ llllinclbe ~
pm ....,.;,es of ·tilt,. u..v..:.lty ..
Buflldobuoioor.ol&lt;~~

""""

York willbc~aloc""""

senioes md supflld lilu! this fmm
UBo.-.rlhe~f""'f&lt;"''S·"

-R&lt;lben J. Monin, pn:sidont olh
tilidlle ;,-~..,. tlr
~that lbcbhllbiliulioo

roc.

~~c-..:011
T~ E
...,. ond 'l'taaoif..- povicles 10 local basioess 0$ it
dowJops IS!Iilriwe doYiees fer per'"""'wiib
•

Loaol~-­
.. iD be obit to ]Wdclporr • tlat

-·

G. A1on
~ .,_ oldie \JB
Sd!ool of Hea!!h 11"'-1 Prof5ioos., in "'i\icb the Cmtet fill'
~T~ilohouoed, aid

the Rd1obiiDrioo ~H.
seotdtea-oo T..::IJnalocy€..,._
atil&gt;ll o.ad Tnnsfer •npuds
~ lbe Clplbililioo oflbe
aor.nued en page3

�2
Thri/1s and

· at ePe~~J-filled Operll!r for new UB ttJtliJm

...........
......
.....

~u.-.~~--na~· ~L~
~ ....chullhe~dbqtomeOJiqje

!alga r-ues, a mcfeloos aoMJ d
11::1111 And urd
'Ulry

Become a charter member!
AmeriCiln Association of University Women

Amherst Branch
-serviltJ tile WOmeJt ofwestull ew Yorito impl"aw your Bustne.ss. Professtonal. Social SpmJcinq Skills

&gt; Small Group Programs or Private-Tutortnq Service
&gt; Sessions Conducted In a Choloe of l.ocat1ons

Diane Medler M-S.. SLP. CCC. NYS Uce:nH
Dcnne11tic and Fontiqn Accent bnprovenumt
Please call (or addittonal Information: 8 73-4482

Local. .~tat., IIDboltal fiNkrgrtJtiluu qffiliaU ~ltipl $26.50
FIIU mft~Jb«nltip for boeaJiawrcme .,._ ltoiMn UO
For &lt;!gellda and -ktur, C4l1 V. BozarlJt 633-21 JO.

�3

HIV testing available: It's volWitaty and confidential
..,.,..............

-··~- .

HIVl dalt 10 ,mu~~~p~r
.,.,......,•
Bihr tllid, .dililll droi II Is ,. .,. -w to
.....u.n.J ..s J*)'liall
d

(for

I'OINNING . -.willllle
• &lt;:1 ~ U8 IIUL'Iools
Will ,... ...,..,10....,~
Halllb Servicle til Mlchod tWl on

"Wcare.IO .......... ~~Iilr
lbe
·ea.,
t~ '
-~
nllt far

......,011)'

1\:r....ms&lt;M~D-JXI!Iili'lecr,..

m 1\:r·lht H1V virus.

-~..,...
lbe..-lbldml~

..ro

1n lbe ~ "only

llml ina loqe uni--.,.likt
UB. It is Jaliblc lbot up to (10
otudaactheuaivasityoould
be .
wkh dJr HJV .;.

_ , II)'DllliDinlll (Ia AIDS) could

"-bil'l!loodlblom (allbes.ud!ra
lbliii·Cam'}ftt 1iJV
"Mid
Sinh Bill', cliRdor dUB's
Hod!~ Cam'. T.,...._bcilcocrb: ~only. Bill' lllid.ldd"'a lhll SUNY Cam! bod fdllhltif

......

Addillonollr. J!M:albefacl
1hll111111y -.:nareoexvally oc:ti.-e llld dlill the HJV
virut ...... "'"' 1-.q pe-

~hod-IO...qinlbe

riod (S-10 ,.....,,

..,..,.,...,.,..,.

&lt;lOIJII'IUlily, it -

nat lbo role d

~

""*"'

..._can

tll"Udlill•li~tllllll­

.,... d coill&lt;:ce ...,_ may
CJIIT)'inc HIV,• Bibr said.

videlhele!l."
'Mia&gt; AIDS fintl:!ecMlc """'!-

Dim! IS a major bald! pnliJicnl. SUNY ea-1
fdllhll ii-IXll~forCIIrJIPII!I$IO­
fcr HIV l&gt;oc:auor tiW1Y ~ lalkb l!CNicos
...... not Wll4*ch:osi lie """ _ . , Ulllblt 10

provide ~ ~ oorvic:m, said
1Joemis818ck.-"'*.U~cntudlft

O&lt;IVia:a.
)
Today, the sltuationobviousl~ hasdaopl

Earlier this year adnlilritliaas ar SUNY

odw
""*Miklhe
lnlher-ct
,._,. tlliid
• oddllld ..........
UBilto......, ..... !illldiDwillla

...............

. IIIHill'Dplll-ma..

Tbol c:ollep lliiUdenl&amp; ore 11 • •
• fu
HlV infec:tion, t.o ~ 1lhowa in a ....,.
lbeSclllib~lllllbe-.lfur
~-.iflbey&gt;Cio
CIOIIdllotlod by lbe Cmlln for 'Oio&lt;Me Cc.olllol
&lt;I AIDS. Tbott will be 1nD &lt;D1 10 ((DC) 011 . . . . tJiood ~ ~
~blbo ..... poyjclool..,.,. ..... ..., lbe
1111baMDJC..,..,..he811b....-fmm 1918
SSQ.pcr._lallhlioe. R.adls ·&lt; lhar .,.,.,. 1990. Ono in
~ .......
..-I pooid..., fllr HIV,..,.
will be top .. aJIIIidenat, """
fdlow.... ..,..,.,.. will be proviclod
HIV Testin g
cardinJ 10 the CDC. If ~

n.a.-a.to . .

Moo,.,....

................,.
.........

lilY ·-

~-mv-.we_ 't....,

...,_ ...... : - oddllld.

~ ... be . . . . b 'H JV•Ihr
dm Heollb SeMae, loaled iD litidlod Hall
lbo Soulh Campa. Hedb Scnic:&gt;t alai!"
mtlllben..,tnlned .. HJV .......... . t lltlftllllo rh&lt;
"
&lt;:1 - .
Tbe1&lt;:al
lllllldle
ha""~~
lbe ..ide ,~- Pled.
~......,.,.. &lt;Miodec:ide
br _ , •ill
IPthruuBI:r pe--. ~ Wh .., HIV
CCUlll!b". 1bio '
~ lO ond 4S
.,..._, durir~&amp; ...tJid&gt; time the QOIIIIII;Ior .
eJqlloln b - ~""" ...,,
.qiiOIIIiono, in.--~ Wly, illll rh&lt;
\IIUidlellt moy ha~ abcu HIV IIIII AID , Billr
~
•
Scrcondly, tJiood •nil be dmWD &amp;an the

c.c.-1, ~- ~ dtbe ptlbJem. ~ !heir ao-tiCI&lt;C!l1iaa JdJCY ODd
P"" the~ forlndi&gt;iduol"""""""" w
dec:ide wbclbcr Ill" ""' ~bey WOdld ....,.., for
HJV Durin&amp; tbe . . . - . UB llllmioislmlort
..,.,..,...t a~ for oa-ampus lalltJg
'1 rlml: • is a .-..nadaol&gt;le orep f""''afd

&lt;II

...w.

--to•lab"~~ ..ilicbio~

o.p.:un... &lt;I Heollh. ADy tJiood
~--..""'*""
- . ! ..... by
...,.,... medxx!IO &lt;XIhm U fir.l ..,._
Tbe t'OIIfidenlial .-.Its will """" be ....
bock to the HJ\' c:ounoelor • us· Studcm
Healrh SeMele. Only the &lt;XlUIBdor or !he

d""' -

...

_...,.
...._...,...Bilrlllid.addinc . . -w._.,_ ....

"We .,.'-l'
•Y ""~
&amp;

1M

..

_,-

ltoiMoc:..)

.............. dbelrqd•---

~-

II'*- &lt;I llll' rnli:rnnllian ........ HIV
. . . ... . ~~&lt;l'p!UIIidlolawill
..,.... ...,. ...... ......, pcrariollrra &amp;am .... din. ~dllrrnolim.aa.lho-ond

----·

...~~

.. --'s .....,., c1wt, Bib-

..U.. d a

-

plrriotd~c...nr.ft'~

....,.,...

~- mond~

............ HIV

••e.tr.....

~delel:llarl.

wbidlcm..,..ian:-JIR~tmd

..ru:...idwac&lt;tbalkHIV""""-'

be

~

GRAHl'
~trcmpage1

Cmllor for A!rsislive. Teci'Jnolocy, alrody a
hlghlf visible leader in (be f&gt;tld.

•11 ptmi!osiDirrc::reose&lt;Ucollalxntim,.11h
anunor~....,.,.ondl'fflalr~

in !he CICIRUtU1ily IIIII llllionally It off""' a
~....., rnodd d ~ ""'""~. lkf;iras llld piJiic inr::nss..
Tbe ~ willldp clc.&gt;;e 1be Sl.qllydi:manli!'P in &amp;istiYe devia:s exmng natia&gt;wn; .. ~~...... ~dimc:lrx &lt;Ithe
c..m b A.ssi!liYe T..a.olog)· ard ~ dir&lt;clllr&lt;lthe"""•irlilii!IM. ThO~ddr
prt;eaare William C. Mlm. pm(CSiillrandchair
d the UB Dc:portmrtt &lt;lo.x:up.ional Therapy
anddir&lt;Cior &lt;I !he O:!nt&lt;!- fllr AaiisUYe Ted:JnoiQflY, and ·Kennodl J. ~. pro(.,..,.. &lt;I
~ ihenrp)• and IISS&lt;llliMr &amp;.in &lt;I the
UB Sdlool &lt;I Heal1b Rdall:ld Proli:s;ims.

Fi'"''o IO""""de....,.pery""'-ikmodw
lilllily would 001...ach the public Oll:&gt;erwiserould beromr avoila!* ro persons .,'iJh di&lt;iabilities "" a result of the cmlt2''s """"'"We plan to bring into !he l'I\I!Uiplact
prodUCISihat will nW:e odifferenct" in peoplr 's
lives,• Lane added. ·we bope to reach the
in"""""" working in the family garage. as well
as tbeesublisbod designer.
~Really belpful produclsoftco _..,.._the
§!SNIT~H?.

lillht of clay bcca
many desipeno and m""""""doo't "*""~to develop tbeit
ideas ond matr them lllll'1=l
don·,
lcoowhawwl' up,..;u..
;be
!iaicL "'n the &lt;llh&lt;r hand. manufacrumrs oftco
bck l&lt;now~ abool """""""' .,.,.,a, and
produd requiremems Our new=- .... n
Jl""'ide the I'OSOilrCeSand beromr !hat rniS&lt;ing
tink"
onr:odded "MrliW)~onddevd ·
opn&gt;lllll of the pasl decade gmemed •
u~m of .,..,. t&lt;Cboologies !hat ... Jl&lt;l1dinlr
dociiS'SifiCauon They held pa~ promrst for
IISSSive lldmolog) oppliaruons.
"Tbe focilities oow at UB, aloog with ..,.
""""""'in Toronto, ~a. Pimburgb and
Cleveland. malo&lt; !his region uruquely posltionod w beromr the natimal center for ..,_

L
..

sca.rch

and manufact:un..ng 1n as: istiYt

tec:tadogy . We ""' defmlldy the Jeac:linB regioo in !he foeld.Tbe
for ~"" Technology cur·
ren&lt;Jy bouocsthe nanonal Rebabilitarion &amp;gi~ Research
on Aging. which
develops and e\-.luotcs a~h.., devices for
disabled olde&lt; adults
Also ....X.: the Center for~...., Tech-

a:.-

a:.-

AMD G:R.A!D&gt;'UA "JI':E

ENGINEERING STUDENTS
Prepare for the Professional
Engineer's License
Take the E.I.T. Review Course -

1
~-

~ ':r .

-

--

.~·:···Fft

Sessions begin Sept. 15th
in Baldy Am 101
Class Time 7 - 1Opm

Jntormat;onal Meeting:
Sept.9tih at 5 pm .
Room 112 O'Brian Hall

or for more information call ESB office 873-4455
(sponsored by: ESB, NYSSPE &amp; SlJNY at Buflalo School ol Engineering)

lllillqg)wollfdla""'tlw:De~Dis­

•bilibeo ~~ T&lt;dnllog)lostm*, which
...,..,. and produas """-demand IISSSiw
proctua.. Pn&gt;jea ~ • ~ dola-

""""~.,.,.,...,....."""""'«...as0""

products ..i lh ppmpria1t de..- monui'Mllllf·
ers, Rdwbiluion T&lt;IClbnoiotlY S..."""'- wbrdJ
designs and buil&lt;ls ~ scaiJIII ond
positKJI1in&amp; drv1a:5, pi • •-.dt ...,.,. d - \")CCS tor pmons"'
"""""'}. pbysoal and

oogruli¥&lt; impUmenu;
Douglas J U
•~ecw r dln:idDr d the
t.ndt-pmdorc Ll"IDI! C'~ ~ w_.. Nn.
Y&lt;rl. bailod lhenewcrmt«fllr bringirltplqlit'
.. oo ,.;n • ..,..1111ny .,.,. the devia:s
tbe

"*'

proc:eo6

"It'.. lakin IISI&lt;istrv&lt;: ttchnolc&gt;g) for per·
...-.;with disabllities..OO invol•'llll! OOil!itJil&gt;Oill
c!uectly." he wei "T~ &lt;1f lhft;e de""""'
be OO:lr by J&gt;l:llli'"" ,.'illl disabilities iD
""'1-Uf•. e""')'day. -~ "!Uitioos.•
... l&lt;kncmber bootd of dir«&lt;ors wid! ttp,..,......ves from lllliorull OOII$UIIlOI' ....,..._
tioos, pri,..te ~ .-m:h c:&lt;ml&lt;n

wm

and lfdlnolosy ·lnn!ltr~ will.,.._

""'...'"""'or""'.,.....,.._·procas.....-.:s 1M
fi~ ~

amoandmoneywon'tbe,.-.nl(ll1pa:b:tstllal

OO..'t"-""""'" wb.IA&gt;&lt;ooid.

Fadl flii*W)1lt wlll beanolyudby .......

. JlllliiPii'll"""&gt;'""""'ondwill

.-ard
........

wilhdnrwlt~ . . .aac!lr .....

.........Uc:olloaiYe......._
e&gt;1W-...Iallbe"""Y
,dhopiD 10
~
.-Jrdild--.aJ@Il&gt;O......,tlft&lt; O.."""'OOUid..-rhr~
""""""
• .,.
~&lt;mdft')o,d&lt;l dovdopID&lt;IL 1...-r .-1.
Tbe a:tm' .. """""""' "'
d-tllffiacd
.... &amp;.oc~ h4tt,...._~
fundstbrougho~ef lhesal&lt;s&lt;:l de.'ioes
liani&lt;d 10 ~ pomoi.OMlld!ip d.
...,. ~ ond r--tilr........,;.,.s d8pd ID
&lt;kp:ndinc

,t,hout2SOde\-ia:o-~IO

.......,.mi~lhol-lllialdiOpoy .
A...,.., nor40r'Jll'llll &lt;Xllllpq'. ~be­
~,.;upby-lilalt~._,..

.... ~ ...........liiiil'uallsi&lt;r~uommr.
Tbe usc..-

01J-

fill......,.;..,

,..ru
.,......,..IIPdde'
wdop..........

T~

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Give Your Child a jewish
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S1 Lawrence Quartet

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Undsay String Quane!

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141

Kollchs1eln-Loredo-Robln5on Tr1o •
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Tuesday evenings

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700 SWEET HOME ROAD (N~ar Shtridan Dr~vt}

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a~s Mu:stc Hal.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Septembot 2. 1993 Volurne 25. No 1

,

.,. -

WAUAC:a
ReponerSir'

~.J.mn&lt;)&lt;atStnlh&lt;n

1he players .a ready. The llt'"'
stadiwn is ready After more than :!0 )ean..
the fans are very, VeT) read)
Oro S.ourday. Sept 4 11 7 O'i p m. tt.. LIB Bul~

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m"""m at 8ot111oc •for the ftN tunr

cdJetr fonrbal llo thr l
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remarls~Gmncr. \Oor~

omd fconn&lt;r Bull&gt; looct.IJ
p-ea1 Gerry Plulbm
Tbe atn'\IJ of l&gt;r1. N0n (lontball

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;"It, th.
drpartmt:nl tlf arl} other lft"-1. ,:nt..unJ\ t'fltw'k.ll"!!. i.lY I..JWIII\
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VB. he Mkh. n:u..Ung q~Mktll!- n'lll'll"t" .... art",,, t.lrtlf'lt\-n--th..u
thl: UI\J'-'n".lt'- oftn"!.
Wrth thl!'&lt; ga.me.l a· .. DI\L~"!flttl Athk111. . . . . 1'1.A.'&amp;hK•\t-d

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lhr io....k· ,-.tf

f,v i).uftt-1 !!llf:'

ILfr

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~aJd Cari.ll&gt;n

bcb

offUtrro
Top &amp;Jlsto~
lttDd Ill JrllfiiCt jot
OfXIII''

�............-. .................
UB faculty members named Distinguished Professors

2

Awvd fer~ Senior IOd
T....... • from lbe UB Sdlool al
...... ODd l3iamedio:al Saen::ea. Brownae ...
aulbared joumol aruoleo IOd booL
c:hloplon. He ...
edllor al
&amp;tdot:rutt

.ned.-

OUR UB FACULTY membcn

n.-.

. .&gt;e ' - ' nomod Dillinpllhod
l'nlr&lt;Mar, doe ~ pooillon in
lbe SuR UnMn~ty at New Yon
sywm. b)' 1be SUNY Boord al

c--........•••nmba

allbe eddonallxwdoal ~ ~
ODd AMm&lt;GII ./oJmtQI af

c----.

l"bt IIIII&lt; is ., orclor obo¥e full protc.arsbipond ... line aHiqUal ~ J&gt;is.
tiQpiobod l'rd...., ~ Sc:rvU

~

l'nlr&lt;Marond~T---I'raleo­

J Huetnc.- boo hdd.........,.. _ . . ,

oar. l"bt ronk al ~ T..cluna f'n&gt;.
f...,. wu conlf!IITOCI upon Alaudtr c
Bro..U. pro(_,. al ~. ODd
R...w J . Ruofioor, pro(_,. alii&lt;XOUIIIln&amp;
ODd bow This cleoiptltion IS aWIIIIIod 10 p:7-

"''

pooioono

c:~wu

at

at t11r

~­

Dqwtment at

at

BusiMM A&lt;krutusmobon propm. chourol ""'

o.p.nm.a .- ()paauono AnaiY"'-ondud

"'~"""""""" r......., ODd rnarUlJnl--ond
dutdor al ct.. .,.._ for Tu Slucllc5
He"-"""rdud"" lbe SUNY a.ancr· A,.lid b e.&lt;:d
l!mem T-.i~Qa.lhrMBAO..al 19"n A word
fer T..t..&amp; EJo:dlmce 11111 fl&lt; ~
~ A"lld from ""' Zl:u n- dllf*l at
Bola AlP- 1'51 hmorW} IIOC1&lt;f)
He hu 1udxred er C&lt;HUIOOrod runerouo.
bool:s. pumoJ orucl&lt;s. bool. c:hapocn and "'
llrUciJOIIal rnalenalli He CUT&lt;ft.l) S«VQ IS I
member al lbe al dueclor&gt; and ~
...-.. al tbr Buffalo chapcer ol ""'
Yon s.- Soaery &lt;&gt;f Ccruficd Publk Ac·
OQUIIbniS He recet•-ed I t.cbdor 's ci&lt;ptr In

·-~.-pduat&lt;

level

~

lbe UB Sdlool

lllcludanc aamc

-.1-u..

Two&amp;cully I1IOIIIbers....,., nomod Dlam
pisbed Service Prof....... 1'llo.oaJ
a..drick. pro(..,. al lao • ODd Vlrpnio A.

..._,, pm~._.. al

Ill

""""""""and l.aw,c:t.u allbe Muu

dtu~OUIOI8IIdina-»-

or

He ..,.,..vee~ bocbelor"s ODd doc·

tonlclosr-m~ from l.'idlnburJII
UniYIDity
A UB &amp;cully III&lt;:IDia anc&lt; 1968. R.anald

bow This

ronk os aWIIIIIod fer ...-.dmc ...-vice 1o lbe
oonmwruty, liiiiR er nlbco tbroupllbe appb
ClbOn allllldlectual - ch ..... from ochol

ariy ODd ..........:11 .._..., 1o """"" al pubbc
ClCliiCall.

AleundorC. Brownic.amemberalthe UB
&amp;cullysincr 196J,bao..,.,..vedlllll!ya"wds,

IDCiudiDa lbe Lows A IOd RUib Siqd Dlamguisbod T..mine Awvd ODd lbe Slod!co

mad-.c:rnoua from
Col .... and .,
MBA ODd doaorwu- from Comolllhu""""l")
1"bon. E. Hc:d1dc ,. ..,.,_ .._. fa
.::aton.: off- m thr U8 Sdlool atU. A UB
facully memb:l" IRl&lt; I976. be ........S • .._. al
lbe .... dJool ftt .... ,_.. He aloobM........S
•IIDII &lt;*-,;; lh&lt; Focuky at Ana ond L - .

...... """"""" al""' ~ ColloF
F\ocull) 11111 ct.rallh&lt;Oenenl ABsnbly allhe
~Cdiotot
Reoondy &lt;llHdltor ol ""' pumoJ lA&gt;&lt; GNf
Pobcy, be .-fa world CIYihutJon 10 under
~ ond corpcnbOD5 and corparal&lt; fi

nonce oo lao" . . - ~ ,..,..vee~ 1
to.chdor ' dope on~ from mN.bn
11111 ManhaiJ Coliqt. 1 to.chdor"s d&lt;ptr of
loaonlllpoitl&gt;cofromo.ford~lni""""'Y. "'""""'

be ...... a f'ulbrlP ocholor, I ..... ~ from
Yale UniYmilt)' and 1 cioctorw tn po(oocal
..,...,.,. from Sanford llni""""'Y
VIIJIOIIIA ~ . lrnanborallh&lt;UB~

Professional Staff Senate
presents service awards

T

WOMEMBERSallbeuru,..,.,ry·s
pro(e&amp;llionol !Uif ....... honored W1lb
ProfessKJnll SlaJT Sena1&lt; fPSSl
~ Sen"10r A,.ards at I
May IID:beon

entel1aln 00

Slreetrumg

John llil. ....,.,..., cbr&gt; "' ""' School at
An:hill:CIUT&lt; and Plannmg. and Ja..,.. IL

G.riMd. "'P"f'~

piO@XMiatti/Wiaalysl f"tt
acadmuc••mc:oson~11111~

T~ ........ cooodfa~""""""IO
UB~ccommunily &amp;c:lo~SIJm

casbawordll1ll1~at~

Unfesl. held last
weekend lA3 stu-

..

Bis. who has hdd his currmt JIO&amp;ition m the
on:hitccture school since I Q8.4. ,.... honored
for his efforts IS I mentor 10 faculry and
""""""" v too gives selfless) y a( his nm&lt; and
energy Hehlslspecialilllerelilm""""""'g
I!Wfalo ••
ohaor a(""' Buffalo Preserv.ban Boord and a( the En&lt; Count)
~COordination Board He also ts
1 member of the Uot.n Culrural Pari&lt; Exhibit
C&lt;:nt&lt;r Desogn Rev1ev. Commine&lt;
G.rland was honored IS11&lt;Cbnoloj!Jcal imO"

his1ory."""""' ..

dents parbc4pateC

n the event. whdl
benefitted the trooe--

_....,

pende&lt;"lt Lrvng

_,.. who ernlrloceo """' ICCionology """"" "'

Cen:er

pacDcal11111affordooblo ....ys He ..... ~
b)· the PSS as 1 pnon who has 1 _ . . , fa
81'"'K ... ~ bCIIlto lbe ....,. oomrnunK\ 11111
mr ..too..., -.lords 111 the exponcing field of

""""""'~

He Jli!'ICII*"'., lbe ButWo """'""' ~
"'"l""'' Conmo-. pon,;; a _..-oocsdfon "'
malcr~a\'allobltoolbepOOIJ&lt; .

ard -

m semng ~ an ...,...-.... dc:c·

umoc doscusslan fonan ~·ocod to lht Bolli&lt;
Republ ~e&gt;

Save up to 50%

Remanufac~·your

Toner Cartri e
&lt;&gt;

FREE PICit.UP &amp; DEliVERY
to All Unlvenftr LocatioM

OPEl\ 7 DAYS
&lt;\WEEK
\1 on~Sat

10-'

\111uW 1 I:' il

BROWSERS'
C-:&gt;-0 SED BOOKSTORE
• ,. "&amp;t(f_ .._.&amp;Joi..JW

87-l-8286

\

~cneraltL-.c'"d

htll'k'&gt;lorc w1th an cademic ~nt

-4t;( u 'h HL''''n \fC'dJ~\ul HlSlon-. L S Hu1f r\
Pllli''"'·'f'ln Th~r,lot.,'f\ LJn~uunrs. AnthTV(I't.&gt;l(~\

~~~~~~
Apple, . . . oilier

"'H.Jiulu/

~''"'"

a.- Prlntws, Coplen
a.-......... _......._

Ht..\Ton_ Ata1h.

l..Jit'raJu.rl'.

PMtr) , An

I lim C,,.o!J&gt;&lt;.M_..._ Spon.s. KuJ.., 8o&lt;&gt;J.s

... Fu liiKIIiiiH

FAIT, GUAl.ln 111MCE • t~ latilfllc:tloJI
Golab Ill.
...........'t ..... ....., ....

a.-1111...._.

Tc 835
Technologies (716) 838-2745
Englewood A -. Town d Tooawanda. NY

F~ ~

r----

~---------

: !2g%~Pff Coupon

L----------~----

�_..,

____.

3

- ..........

Fine Arts
Center
open for
business

......... b ·on.-Ocorplu-'The~ol6rM~

--..~.

IJdiJulle .... o.orp.u-s. ~
..... "We~a....,..llltmd
Ill .... - 9ein&amp; in
Fine ""'

ea...

the ......

c..-. -

puths . . lniD .... lhidc d oily life. be

""'nod.

""'-'c.ef'IDIIIolm

dr..,._..

~-~

lhc &lt;llbeJ:- o n d - boi&lt;ltnf
b!nr&lt;ton
The~ ..VI
l!ltJ""ondtheRMII _ _ ....,...,.._"
~ ooid The focilmeo ... ..-d) do!lilmdGalrptu !d!ld,~tha "Wr"""" ....a.-ed

H'• - • home of --..me
..,.. , . , _ _ .u 111 ua

!Jorndoy-BI~_,.;ofilOI.I"IIt&gt;Odr.

W"llhiiiUdioo ond- for~ 11\. illlrih-

--~~........ ~w~... ~­
...._...
~

"""" ~ tboi • d'licoml)'
...-y
.
HE UNJVERSflY'S nrw Fine Ans

llti ..,..,.. had 10 ~
- - . . . - - heollh f-IIICIIDq•

begins.

good \'&lt;llllluoo- nllilkcy f-IIUI:tt

~good by the owanl-winnil1g arcbil&lt;x:ILnla:amofO......_,nlSqd~

-s...,..,..,..

mom. ...

malrir our SI*'C Mdl W.. "' """"" .._ •
Wbi1r tt ...UI tUr Ule bcu« pen ,_

a....oom..

In addition 10 improving worldngand !eachmg conditions for me \-.rious fmr arts d&lt;panmmts.the"""'perf"""""""IIDd~spo&lt;:e

will be available 10 student groups and Olhm;
for functJOnS sucb as n=p1ians. screenings.
oonf""""""- and octivities. K.ra.. saJ&lt;l
Wilh its atrium lOOby and 1 vaullr&gt;d sl:yhght
spanrung the building ·s ennr-. length, the Fine

,.,u.

Ans Cenler IS filled
ligh~ "'en dunn~
Buffalo· s darkest. gray"" days. Kraus said.

a

1 ,._.

deponm&lt;n .. full)' fta::oonal •
U's ready for the,.,.. In fact. I
~""""' openotod:v-llldteArt [),
'*""""'o.Dery, llllloom84j _from ?p.m.
Georpou mYli&lt;S ~ ID ocr the ~
bd(n the ....

....w.:.p. nlllbanlcriel. Y.iD t.mg ~

the UB nl WNY on &lt;XIliWDimily
Housir1a UB" s Dq&gt;onments of Art IIDd
Media Study. and 5llpllClltirlg the needs of the
Dep.nmemsofMIS&lt; and Tbeoler and Oon&lt;:e.
the magnifioelll 5tNCIIft melds ~ the
IICademic and porfoo:manco sidc:o; of the III1S
-under one roof. said Oovid Kno""l pro;ea
dimclor fa-the Fine Arts Center
The foct thai all the cleportmaliS DOW !ihatt
spooe in the ne-w building will pro.-id&lt; on
ottn&lt;lOphcre conducive for increosod ~
mion and~ of ideas. Knous said,adcl.
in8 !hal in the ~ lhls...,.. ~ difficull
boca""" the &lt;loJ&gt;onn-IS were spread lhmughOUithe """ campuses.

--n....

....,..-n...nd..,_._~

f - - . """""""' the """"'"""' ., lmX:IIJ-

y ark Oly. the cxnomponry buildinc wilb ils
.num ldlby. multiplelhr&gt;-

spe&lt;Sirular~

ond ..,.,.

M""""""·

Cmlcr.Joc.n:JmtheNathc.mp.s.

"""""its dam 10 ......... Ibis"""'*
.. the Foil 1993 -

-

adding that 11 .• .tml.l.ing "' stand insxle the
lOOby dur1ntl I f"linslorm_ •
·wc bope "'"""""' • up wrth dooor511C'hos
plants md trees; pennaoeno: h"' fohare.• Sll&gt;d
Gerry Kqief. fociltbeo duoclar lor the Fu..Airs Cmter This all wiD Ialit oomc time. be
said, oddinjJ that ports af the buildJng ""' 1iOlJ
uncler CXDiU\ICtion !iUCh aithe theaters. boclSlllgearea&lt;mdsomdobontones Theysboold
becompid&lt;:d by the mdafthe f a l l - 01"
early in the spri1111 ...._.,.._he explamod.
"We an: oslang studenlll.. fliCUhy md staff
10 stay IWO)' from these lmiS wfudt ~-tO be
clearly banicaded. • Knus satd
Oneon::osill und&lt;r CXIlSil'UI:nOI1 .. the~
n-.._ wiiJd\, ,.'i&gt;elt~
IIKXl
p!qlle. Wlllu pro;cmrum lhtll can be !-.-1 m:l

,.,n,..,.

lowaed~upctnthe'l'P"dr&lt;rforn"'"""
an:~...,.deplh ~anj~"""""

cal Wllll panels"'"' .,.. oomputer-&lt;lortlrullcd.the
1-vj!e Thca~a..-dl belfiedfcr&lt;;ymphoruc..,.,..,
oren- anj clarK:e. Km.; sni
The buildmg ai,.,OOilWll!.a 400-..ut dramit
!healer fl.. small mustcaf&lt;. and chamoo ""

ertiS. There an: abo 1 "W.Ck Boa" Tbeoler ond
RdteoruJ Workshop 1ltcola; badt can he
IRd fo.- ·~ procU:oons o n d -

s

Tile Dqwuncu d h4edio Stud)- ...,...,

moQ, . . ...,.., &amp;om W&lt;n:le Hal oa thr 5&lt;utt
-~
Tile :zoo.- Ser-eenini Room w1IJ be .-I
c-.- ..., Fine Ans ea.. -w, ...

by the Modio Stud o..p.nment aod WID abo
•-heft the pubiJc: &lt;:a11 """"
r-wll.. ood v1&lt;1eo art&gt; pn:x~uc­
ooos Two dance swdlo&amp;. 1 6.S00 oq~fnol
Uru..-...ity Galla-y. IIDd a smollt:r 1\Jt Dqlonm&lt;o. Gallery. in the Fine Am c-.r -

~ as an orett
!lJOVIeS. film

cum:ntly bemg compid&lt;:d

Tile ..,.,.. - the """ """a.- 00 Jul) 26. IS oinxs """""""" i:u I will
scm&lt; ame
doponmt:nr Clffio::a nl
labsorr~y"" 14&gt;
"'E"")'bad)IS""'}
e..-ll:u ~ "'snll 1 lot d wori&lt;. Mll-"111!; ..
an doponmt:nr IS lsJ.r '""""111!; I ..:l&lt;rtO&lt; dq:torl
mml becausr &lt;X all the tug!Hedt _...... h
Ill= ome and can-lui plommg.. Sllld T)"tlll'
~ clwnnan d the An~
-wf: ·11 ml!'...li.Bc.-thurlt' tthe' An 0eparunen1 · ..
former ttom.1 hu1 ~-•II remembc-1 the hal'!"
da~ thor&lt; She "-"" &amp; !!fOnd old lad} -an

bef,-..

.,.._, "' be i'lrJ-&lt; The "!-.% .. ""-:." ....:1

Mquonle ~-IOthe""-"-'of
Mcd~SbJ&lt;Iy

Allbaugh the""""'- bocndlfi'Doll bocouoe

--

cllbebi#ty~..._. ..... lll!led

"' sw.ty. the...,., t...:ilfiot&amp;- ..._..,...lor lbe faadly and utr. obc-.-1
~

... cxmart ........,--. ...

ani)' add!;., lbe

ie-o-oei i:u IS good far the

oo:Jitme __.,_ Knowlcl811&gt;1i The ..,... pro

- -drpal-lob. cdi:ing ..,..,_ ond
~""""' will""-"'&lt;lh&lt; ~ """
rtnner&lt;. she p:ll!lled cu.
~ from p&lt;O'&gt;&lt;IIn~ brood spor&gt;lanJ! -&lt;It'",.
foc:dttte5.. the Fme ""' c-..-.- .. oil aflooo&gt; t.-x
- ~rea1n commurucauon ~ ••t'ftl dqNtn

,u

""""'-. Knnv. ... "'""'- kd~ ..,... ..
~ I"J''(ff col.Labonw"'f' ~ftew't' and rnrn- 'lllo'Or'k
1flf!tt~tcr4'"..,.Wa.ru._~.Jlr' Sitid

F001"BA1L
Coolmued trum page ,
ha•-e made ad"8IIC&lt; .....,._-allons through lhe
Presidcm"sotl~e&lt;.complimentaryoommemo­

rwtive game ockels will aJ.oo be 1vailabk
Nelson Tov.-nsend. who will be the fearun:d

speam at the buffet. plans to dJscuss the new
stadium and iiS onportane&lt; both 10 UB and the
surrounding area. 1be new stadium is noc JUS!
great for UB," he said "lt"sgoing to change the
f""'ofspon in W$em ew Yock." He noted
thai a vm&lt;:n' of non-UB events Blthe sudium

baveaire&lt;l&lt;h· beat booked orbtdoo. includi~

the NCAA ;....,k championships. and the New
YorkSweSecuon Vllughschool fOO&lt;ball and
orack championships.

As anothor pre-game .-·ent. Alumni Relation&gt; ,.;u ;ponsor a ~ailgate pany two hows
before game time for alwnni. faculty and staff.
Actioll wtll center aroW1d a blu&lt;--and-whil&lt;
tenlset upon the lawn between Bissell H.all and
Alumni Arena
The Opening Ceremony tithe stadium will
involve local digniwies and UB r-ball
alumni, accoRiing ID Richard Baid,.-in, .,.;ocl l!edireclor of Conferences and Special E....,IS.
FoUowtng the Opening Ceremony II the
stadium. the UB Bulls will takelhefieldagainsl
Maine for the fU&gt;t of !heir 11 -gorno: 1993
Division 1-AA season. Aocording ID Coodt
lim Ward. it should be a tough bl1 exn-eme!y
~g,.,.,.,.. as theBullsprepareiOhandle
a variety ofDivi&lt;Oon 1talent from sdtools IS far

away as Aorida-

•

'1be challenge will be m:mendous. be
said. "But we will mee~lhat cltallenge. There

W111 be obstacles. hut o,a.e ' ll hne l.o t.. raueru
and go around them •
One I11JUil obsuck v.oll be the ~ of
the opposition Seven of the tea= that the
Bulls f..,., dns year h.a,-., been B1lked '" the lop
20 of theii dtV&gt;Sion m po-esr&amp;SOII pol!.
"Our first g""J " to beat Mame. • Caodt
Ward sud "'ur second goal ~ to v.'tn ("...('1)
game we play We· , hopmg 10 get ht!ner each

"The new stadium is going
r.o chnnge the face ofsport
in Westem Nev.•York. "
week_

Because

~ ·~

a

y()(nlg team, Wt' •re

going 10 try very bard m aJI down on nuslAkes. • According 10 Ward. as rrtan)' as40to45
pacem of swting ploym; may be fteshmen "I
proved last year that r m 001 afraid 10 play
fresl:unm if I thinlt they """ do the job "
As they mW: the leap to Divisioo I-A.A.
loog-&lt;crm ~goals forme Bulls inclUde
improving team ~ and irw=asing the size
of the playm;. •year in. year out. we WODIIO be
~widJOivisiani ·AAsdlools."Ward
said.
But he al.oostnssc:s that suc:ass on the field
is 001 the only goal be tries 10 inslill in his
pl&amp;y""'- "I •lso want 10 increase the ovenoU

GPA
fr(tm

for !..he tea.m Wt- ' \o't- alread:~ moved up
2 2- whach eo about av~t for schoob

m our dtv!SOOil-to 2

n

Tile No 1 Jlfl""'&gt;

ts

tne11 lo ~e&lt; an eduaocn I try
ma.i&lt;l" them undm;tand why they-~ """"
Onot-llx-) do undm;tand. eYe1)'1lung el5w: falls

fO&lt; these young

10

Ullo

ptac.- •

ther hornt' contests ttus. ~ take place
on Sept. II (Ne.. Ha•-en. Hl5 p.m ).
Sept. 18 (l.afayetlt. 7 05 p m 1. Sept. 25
CEdintta.l. HlS p.m ). Oct 16!Buflak&gt; St:~te.
I 35 p.m l. and Oct 2J CTov.-&gt;on Swe. I 35
p m 1 !!&gt; wa) 1!0"""' include banles ,.'flh Hofstn.
Fordh:lm. Youngstown. Boston UruvtfSil} and

O

Cemnl Aonda
Although thor&lt; v.o II be suffiCielll parkin~
for everyone anendlng. r.ht- game~ 1 ~ park·
mg scheme wtll be 11\&lt;Uruted !hi&gt; loll aoronltn~ to Rtdwd Baldwtn. A ,..,.-.erved porlcing
S}'50J:m wiD mean tlw certain people can only
pori&lt; in cerwn Iars. ·R.,_,..., )'CUI" porlcing
plans. and haV&lt;: au idea of v.-bcft yoo fit in.·
Baldwinsugge:st&lt;dasa -y10avoiddifficully
There w;Ube I fireworks dio!ttaY aftll-each
bamepme. andfu-eworbwillbe~ofi'­
UB !ICOreS. Clowns. jugglers IIDd a jazz bmld
will abopro.-id&lt;c:ntmainmrntal various borne
games this....,..._ A live bull-the new mascol-will also be preoen1 10 c:t--oo the~
Tile UB SudiLIIII will abo be borne 1D the
mcu 'sand women "s ll1lCII: md 6eld teams.
The stadium. whoso seating aopoc:ily for
football games is 16.500, his a nannhurffield

andlllleJght -lartt. world-dasstrlle"k. A op:aaJ
feature .,_ the """'-ol' the-an """"""'-d podua!d try OolaroNa.. And the
b.gbt
~ ot I~ feet lngh. ue the tallesl of
thew type m orth America. Tile """' facilil}
..-.. dc:slgned try HO ~the- fum

s:tadiw

that

&lt;~.--.loped

Pilot Field

Acrording toTam Kollt:r. asszsw11 athletic
duoclar lor media rdauoos ond ~
~ £&gt;t,1SIOO I football bockiDUB.mwdl
as Olher Dmsoon I """"'- h.a&gt; beon • loog and
often difficull pnx:ess.
When tn 19S4the SUNY Board o!Trust ~olt.ibited mdiVIdual SUNY campuses
from uppadtng lbe-ir inUn:OIIcgtale alhlel•cs progurns. 11 appeared that it would bemany )·ems befor&lt; mojo&lt;~ sport5 ..,.
turned to UB. But 1 c:ombmed effort by UB
students. racull) . staff, md C&amp;DipiiS aflia:rs
to gam SUNY conunilmml and NCAA n:dassif!C&amp;tion proved w:ry succaoful. By
1986. the TNSiees had lifted the bm oo
athletic scbolarships II SUNY institulians.
The CAA officially uppaded UB"s uhleci&lt;:s program 10 Division I in 1991.

Nelson T~uyslhaldaere 's SOille­
lbing be !db~ who asks 8bout UB
fooo:ball and the new stadium. ---n..re·s one
!hi~ I WllDI studeols. alumui. frimds,
erybOdy, 10 know. ADd lhaJ io. if - dota 't
malte use of lhis stadium, if we dota "t celebrate il, lhaJ will be a gross llliltaU. 'IVbal
we have bert is SOlDdhin&amp; 10 be extn:mely
proud of in w"""'"'
v , ..,. ·-

e•-

*"-X..._':'.

�4

_.,____1

Temple 13eth Zion
&amp;hool
• Fall progta.nu 41 a•labk for 2. J. and 4-ytar..:Jids
• Oassn o_Dtml Mt&gt;tlday through Fnda morrun
• &amp;.unded Dal•-Monda • Wtdllt$day and Fnda ajtm10011s
• ExallmJ studmUtcruhtr r&lt;JLIO k1Lh pmaf ~ro;onalt:.td atLmLIOn
• All art ...dcom

Goodman and Dyson
are named to new
A MOV

THAT

the

...........,• ..........._.. 10 ned ..

unckr,radiUtt nuation.

lcol

~-bem......t-m. .....
for~eclucabonOfld

LO,......_
......t_,.,
.-.mille UB ~Coll&lt;w&lt;-

For "'ove and . _ nil ttl•" enroll

""""- Aamll Bloch ... ............t lbr
~m
pmr..orm-

I'OUf' child - ·

...._._ . - . . . mthe Foe0y-. pmr... ncMII m
~~oro-.a ~ follow1ll&amp;
clq.llft from UB mlobn A Tharpe.
il now
.,...,..,.. Of1d.,.,., pnsoclml for"'*"""'= affioirs
II 0uo- C'.cllqe. Gly
d
Yor\.
Tharpe haddual....,.,...;t&gt;il
ily •"""".,...,..,.. for ..m
~ oducobon ond- d
the .... pod~-* c:olqe.
Sqwaliac the two
and lh&lt;n fi .
wid! ......,

836-6565 or 886-7150
700.~WI'f1

II 'lMF ROAD AMHTRST NY
lNtdt ~r~ Or1wl

Foreign Accent Reduction

Compton
P-ESL Progran1

.....,.. n

..,_ s-. n

U.......,.

cb~

r.oully _ . , .

-.~

.

IOthe~ ..........-

Biod! noood

to tmprave your Business. Pro(esstcmal Soaal Sptalang Skills
Small Group Programs or Pnvate Tutoring Service
Sessions Conducted m a Cho1ce of locatiOns

Diane Medler M.S.. siP. ccc NYS llcer\IM!
Domestic and Foreign Accent lrnp1"0Y£11'lenl

PleasecaU (oraddtnonal tn(onnatum. 873- 4482

"""" """ mcbviduol bot
both respansibibUC5, Bloch
explatned, is thM 11M- vic&gt;&lt; pro-

""""""
"""' ..."""'pi-the&lt;

VO!ilfc.~tt&lt;dua~ ·
tiOil
broed liN vets I ...-..1&lt;

lqt- facuhy to """" t ""

lm&amp;&lt;sDyson JOII"id

res;pansibohlleli tlutt
canlloct Wldo
o(
11M- dean of 11M- undcTp-odua1e
rolle&amp;c as ad•ocaoe for IIM-

t"

ult)

collecc

SICS

In additJon, liM-tune C011111111rAm15r&lt;qull'&lt;d
for either job !leV&lt;Idt limits an mdiVIdual'

abilny 10 , _ 11&gt;r cler-.do mbodo pao;ioons
'The responsibo Inoes m 11M- unclefpadu
ate vic&gt;&lt; prm._ an: very broed and in¥alve
11M- coanlinauon of vinuolly all academoc

· Continental Breakfast
· Moming Break
-Buffet lunch
·Aftemoon Break
-Room Usage Fee for the
Entire Center
· Set Up and Breakdown of
oil Programming Areas
-Banquet Area For Lunch
-Free Parking
-AV Package:
PA5ysrtm wfth Microphonts, Sl1dt

Projeci.ors, Overhead ProJectors,
Screens. VCR&amp;MonHors

111

1991 •

UR ,.,
prol""""" lfU

ct..mtbeo.,.rvn-mo....
follawonc I 21 ,._ ta1lft II .,..., . .

Uni ......y.~hc

hcadd ..

~

A elassK:al

~ of

-10011
on thc
u.........,. ond Triruly co1
be- Mollon l'mf_,.-

~ lft"110ISS} senoed

*

toculbes m v
lqe. From I

~~-appro~!)

•tbe~c...rfc.a-ical~

11.000 uoclerpwluates, onchodwa """"'" •
c:coursr ovailablluy, i~ of IIM~-educaboa c:umculum, 11M- ossip- m pa&lt;tuaoe teocbin1 ~- 'fl&gt;en,
1 wl&gt;&lt;ole syuem to administer
'The rollecc &lt;leon·· primary reo;ponsibil·
ity. on 11M- Olhtt hand, is 10 leod, is 10 innovale, to advocaJe for the collese lloc focus
on implc:menting 11M- uo&gt;oierpduoote&lt;&gt;o~~t? •
new cumculwn took ""'"' than 7S pm:ent
mJohn Thorpe •S IJI!l&lt; on ""'MI years '
Bloch 5aid,
r und&lt;rgnod101teo desave
1 full-tome omderp-oduol.vooe !""""" Therr

a in Rmue.

uta need to redes1gn ~ advt5.01') system.
streamlutc and redefine academ1c Sft'\' tCQ
and omprovc 11M- undo-gra&lt;i111t&lt; upmcrooe Goodman. he - . ...... ~ vef) Ul
valved in these IS5UeS for many years. He

···1Sdom

brings BJ1'III energy ond lllSiina&gt;onol
10 11M- job omda opecio1 pc:rsporu•-eos unmtllb
at&lt; ~ ciwrof the Faculty Smate fk under
!bnds IIM-II1Siitwon,IIN- conflocun~ """"''""""
on the focuby. """'' ot W... to puo th"' 111
logetherGoodman bas bem 1 facult) member on the
UB ~of Matbernaba Slna" 1969
amec~. 1 pm(essor in 1989, he pn:•'IOUS!t
senoed on the deportmena as dinx:tor of under
graduale studies, director d summer sessions
and...OO..Cchoir. 1-k waschairmthe Faculty
Senate from 1991-93.
A graduak of Horvanl Univaso~y, whcrt
be was elecl&lt;d 10 Plu 8da Kappo. Goodman

�_

.._

.. . . . . _ _ _ &amp;

Research may change
pe~ceptions of ,cell

.,...,..,_

..........
.........
..

billit c:ubic I}'IIIIJI&lt;Vy. ' - - " ....

I

;

~c:oonpuler............ltlol

URI'RI.SING otw&lt;'Yi ·

for 111&lt; finl time

""""*' all tine

doule.beil!&amp;poi&gt;lished

~of.,.,...;,c:dl...,...

lbisfall.dlol
......_,. -

l:nncL Patodie

OII'\IClllnS

' crJI
cubic

oo;ganir.od

.. ialo ......... llbyrinlhine .........
"9"'11 CIOIIIplecdJ irlvalidllte the

=-~~=

"WearellyqtoM&gt;e~

lhlt .... ...,.,......, uodl:rslood be-

"""" id TOIJII6 laodh, IIOIIistmt
pro(......olbiomllerials• UB, and
.. llllhorol1Jie~~:
111el!ollofCiuw!d !illttj'tJas ;,. Na·
"'"· The book. Wbicb will be pul&gt;lisbedthis•.Jib)'~

l'l&lt;:ss,
also alllbcnd b)' SICrl
A:ndelsoon, Zol.tan Blum. Kire
Lats9m and Svm Lidin of L.md
Uni~inS~ withStephm

liyded e.rty Ninham ol Austno·
liln NoliooWIJnhoersiJy.
"For thor....
c:dl
membrme !IJ1IClUI'e lhlt we can ac-

time.""'"""".

ufJooeo

'

l!Udl•
of wbioh
lb&lt;reis ....
• • ~ mvisiooed tllll the c:dl
membrme caald be 10 ~
-

mininllil ........, -

"""" rum.. ... each -

l"""""""'

~"beaaid.~

~ obaved t h e a e - befcn,.Nlhey-~tbom
•c:ubit:.lndeo:o'OII~pic­

............... dne-dimmsiooal;;cruc11ft of • c:dl lllmlilranc can loot
-'ly~beauieilmoybe

1ftifoa_ 'll1nlugb tbe .... of fiuoJcn
iilldlllainsmd~~­

'"Theuhatsoftbo::oeJIIIP"'ddl't
ha-~tbey-Joobrw
•md!IDCICJUiltiHimufy wderly-

W.,.,...,..,..IO~ClUe, .......

"For dw.first time,
'"""'audeir~tbecdllobe
ing~lllrUCIUIE,"OIIId
..... 10..., it~*' d&lt;arco mi~haveaceU
Lindh.
OI:JiOOI"'. Or. il ....,. ..,.,.,., • jliDim
llocau!oe rL lllis.........,. have a - membrane structure
lhor ipxrod evidmce &lt;I """" cuboc
l.anltl's ........,. in abc """"""
bepo,.,.,..) ,_. "«"- ~ &lt;Jo.
~ orlo.-l tbem"' ~
that we can
tbey _,..,..,...,. ...... &lt;I dis~for I ~-&lt;ldivay S)'li1mll
-.Jol:dil&gt;&amp;lbem "'adlllung ....... accurately define
ailic plla.. ..-ill fiun liPO&gt; md
tnnm•or "pocuuiw llotliai. •
-.t,tbe..-rialslhal~cdl
8Lisofor,Ltn:llhas idmlifiod
from a
membnnes.
diffmn~rL
-...x
be began '"
v.tDc:h behasdl:tmnined d-o!IIJUCIIIQ. crystallographic
... tbe.......,
"""""""'...,. ol200.
and mathematical
!..lid)•. be finds tl
SII'\K1lnli in
f1rued vt na
11ft.
perspective.
"
"I havm )bJodany
• AlflfSt, il
dW 's llOI~-

111&lt;!-·-....,..

rn•de no

ocx have lhis ,.,....., in oanr rL io&gt;

s.ensr ... hoe
said · w r
werr seeing

cdls~"bescid "bbd;to

t~

cubic
phos&lt;s in fnb
epithelial
c:dlsand thr:n
....,sawlbem

in

ceJI.s in

scale""'''11S.

""' 10 beliew """ &lt;"")'

lllrouJ!I&gt;

cdl -

the Olhoc mudlft II """"'

poml &lt;Uq "' lif&lt;lime •
Undh noted that it Is vcf') W1
likely that th&lt;o rubic !il1\1Ctur• could
be an artifact since 11 cannot be
fanned by the sample preparatioo
procedurt:s nc&lt;:cssU)' for electrou
microscop

. . . cn:ot\I1:S

that emil tigbt
oumdy define from a crysaallographic ond mathc:matical por.;pet·

or..,. bes:.id.

wll&lt;atbey'rt~ Werouldn)

figure out why the..,.., OXIICl structure was in $UCh diffm:ft cdls. •

The.....a.a.oouldpot&lt;:ntiallyre-

l.anltlbepo~jwr ­

sult in ~ Jess than I dnmalic

nal&lt; in lbe UB Hc:aldJ SOmas Litnry, loolcing for mare~ rL
this abc S1niCI1R in tbe elodnnmiaaioope ~ ... aa:ompany wticlesmdiff...,.. typesrL reDo.

redofinilimoflbestniCilRind tunc.
tioo of ceiiiiiCIIilnnes.
Using matbematical principles .X
periodic minimal surf~~CC:S that ex-

,E """'ually, be ""od, it woll be
·
necessary to coosrruct "'hat
hr ca11s an optiCal difrrac:tu:M"' rm
c:roscope that will be eapabl• .,r
reconling "li•ing" diftrocuon pat
t&lt;rns of cubic cell membnu..,

lAndh eJLplained that beta"""
&lt;ltb&lt;limuationsofEM teduuques,
biologisls have generally believed
that cdlular space could a],. ays be

descnbed., heinz-· 4111nerl

•--dammoicnll

~"'&gt;'

·we 1oo1. fu: l*'i&lt;Y det:aih t1111&lt;
ore

~ • l..oncll

soid. ·we
tofmdonethmf "'""""

II'&lt;

"""'J!NU
Tht IISk '" c:ompha11m b)' !be
lao. that eloctrun~ ro&lt;·
"""" rL IN! ...,.,....,. loot
diff....... ~ "" duck
tl1r onJ!INI ~ ....,., tb&lt; 011j!inal
&lt;'OflUNortb&lt;rrnpr,.,.1ud!the

""""""...as CUI
~

lular

l)f

t"•uaceJlullir tJr • 1tlun or

""'Y' to kd at tt." be !iOJd. "By
domg ''&lt;TY ~ "'"""""-·

d.. -.c.- can r«::Ol5UUd thr e.ua J-0

!l"""ll""

""""""
Upan

organi:auoo """"'"' m&amp;n) doffereno spaces sc:parati!&lt;l b) oh&lt;o
m&lt;nlbrane., "he5.1ld Foruample,
on tb&lt; mdoplasmiC lfticulum. the

tcrn.tl1r~ylbea:m­

"'Soddet1ly ~(' h.av~ evldenott,..f

membnn&lt; cons;dered the cclr•
prodoction ne. Landh has i~ll
fled II pa"'llel ..,..,.,.
l&gt;escribtng tb&lt; procesr. as "look
mgat cell manlnntsuua"""' "'lth

newtyq!lassfol."l..andb""''icsbacl,.'lUtf from lhou&gt;ands o{ ~­
tnicn:J!icopo picrurts from scimtifk
JI'IIX"SJdiishedsincrtbeb!r 1950s.
Becaus.two-&lt;:ltmensioool!Jliao.
""""'ptetun5 don ., contlin """"8h

SEM'!(al miSSior.o d a groat PlAllic l.mlll&lt;sily

-e

ger&gt;mllm as
joruorJ&gt;.

'"Uch~n;.acn

A . . . ~~ ...t te8dt ..S tntin lltllllents, botn \SlOe&lt;gtadollle aNJgraduate add to""' OOdt ot t..rowledge aNl
art ttvough researCh. ~ . andcrealil'eactivity; and fJfOI'1de publoc seMCeltvOugh a ""'""Y ot prog.ams and actiVItieS that el&lt;land and apply
its teaching and $Cholally ~ 11 8ld d po.tl4ic needs and lf1fe&lt;'eSIS CollectMoly the lacully are prmanty responsoble k• doscllatgng 1hese
Individual lacully are expected to be ptblislwlg scholars "' to be
engaged "' """"""' activily, to make --"""""'
allllfTlliS to obtain e&gt;&lt;temal support lor ttvw work. ID oonlnbule el1ec:tJYely to the onslnJCOQnal prog&lt;ans ol the mM!I'Sity, and ID partoapate
actNely .. unM!flliiY. professional. and poAJiic serviCe The preciSe
balanCe arrong tl-oeoo aspects ol each lactAty merrbe.-'s responsibilitieS Will var,- !rom one program to anolher , among indMduals wilhon a
program. and even from tme to orne in a particular indivirual's ca"'"'
In accordance With A111Cle IX. Title C. Section 4d The Poloes a/the
Boafd of ' Trustees (1990). I ls the chairs and tnt who are
responsible lor aftoc;atng dulles among the lactAty in thelf progrMlS.
Each acaaemoc tnt truSl develOP and
to WfliiBn guideli1es
whoch oetone lacuily responstlilities wiltllllhat ..,.._ These guideli1es
shoUld be Ct&gt;'lS'Sient with the rorms in the re1eva1t discipineat leading
onsiiiUiionS. and especoaly at leading poAJiic trtnlefSilies_

Iw~ond..........,lllme­

dunetl&gt;ooaal computtt pat,_

tlvouP • cell md lbere are iD1ini1t

Faculty RespJllSlbility:Policy and Process

()l!1erwlse actM!Iy

dunetmonal&gt;1nii:IUI1S. befiniii'IIOI
IOfiOt...,...,.,.,. ber&lt;iow:n I f*'ICO-

Faoult)l ~s a.;e.-equred annuallytosuonvta "'portdesctobong
n detall1t- prolesslunalaciMtJeS and acc&lt;lfTlJioshments lor r~ by
the
and the dean Based on lhts report and n constllabOn With l!le
laculty merrber. the chair sl'oJd asce&lt;1a1n that the perlormance of the

a-

laculty member IS COOSISient woth depal1mental guodeltnes and woth the
current needs ollhe ont As needed. the chair sllould fl'ISkltellorts to.
aSSISt the lacully ~ toNard SLOtable prolessaooat ~
The dean . on evalua!lnQ a chair's perlor'maooe sllould emphasiZe the
eklent to whoch the tnt IS pla)'II'IQ Its proper role n the lllN'e&lt;'SI!y and lhe
exlilnt to •.nell all members altha urvt are oontnbut"Q appropna!elyto
that role

PROMULGATED BY Presodent W.aatn R

~

ockotifY~t~~ • smJilw ,_..

.,._~ proJOCUOO

on k

'*"'"'

dJpru.ed ~
" W&lt; 'vr fhll&lt;1d lbere ' 11 p&lt;lfect
match bel,..,.,. 1beol: compoo:ite
SIMJC1ures and k t'llboc periodic
mnnmal ~ as doocribed 1Jr
rnath&lt;IJIIUCal ~ sudlos
w•..,... ~nrqno~s.· .aid l.oudl.
"Th" ,..,.,..)' pR)Ye$

-lllnldUOe,-

call) that it is !be
be
5aJd_ "TOICIUIIIyprt&gt;"eii.J'OU"""""
noed ... inflnile number tJI cilf..~ or· views, boll llois is a ·
uemely good~.

--..

/

r

�,.

--

-~----

~~~~:!ftiil • l:i:tr
rJ1 ~i1f~E
fhH~t
~,!

l

•

..,

�7
NOTIC:fS

Co venie ce
Quality
Service
Variety

--.._

,__,., __

\1umy Traut
~ .."UIMI

.:,

untn

Optia.llll'l&lt;l ~
R« rdlbratn

K.tplan Trst Prep
Lni•·~l"§ity Boo torrs

UB

l:B\1ic ro airs Ctnttr ~
IXXIXD&gt;

LCIII 4160

.

Apple Power9ook 180C 41160
~

........

PRINTERS ... --.
_ _ ......,._ontoring

--~..-.- --• SM!Wrlte&lt; II InkJet
Pe~ Lase.W e&lt; 300
Pan.1sonoc 2023
Canon Bubble Jet 200

$281.00
$540.00
$211 .00
$335.00

Also chedr out our wide MlectJon ol:

Supplia, Accessories, Sotrw..
&amp; Wotbhopa l

�8
,.:

;;- ;:'.'

;

A .......,..._. .. ....

.........

Al!cllplian d \'t9FO'a ..,...lnhte.l d BIAbllo • ,_

,"11ro

~...,.ID

mlldiAug.miD,.

................ ~. -~b\1 ....
Fani~Carrmllrsion. WBf()

-vr-

._~ ... dhl::litlnll ........ -.i~

""""~reoUitlglna-~ il...,...

"
- - -lhlll.-d
been CIAiicla,. !81g8 d WI'IFCrs
. .'.,._
...,.llra.l9!15.
N lholl..,.., hi 8lalil:lri- 'I8QUifecl"'1riO'IIIIril,.,.,
.._ ~ in !he dinw::lm ell Fat Ene. eo aiD P'I*ICI•
ne.or~:&gt;y Cllanriel
tlllbcalial\ wt.:fl 'has
qli(J'IIICin8l ~
In SoiAian Onlilrio. Jha Slllliorrwaloomel OOI1'ITilld$ on.,. tllehnbldwoge lrttn tw
~cam:ady. CaiGenoni~.-...A:Jt&gt; · 1!:&amp;2555.
f

A l

l

1

~

~

Dick Cheney leads off
Distinguished Speakers Series
ICIK O:IENEY, cbc:ribed b:r 1'7lt Nt'W Y&lt;ri 7Wts a •indl!tpualbly 1lle imponal _.._., "'..,...,.,;, ...., - qull1a o(. ot:Jiftcy." will
lbe lint!
;., UB'a 19'1~ ~ Speobd Series. Clarlley, - . y Ill
dtf&lt;:nole~Go&lt;IIF9oob. iD..,.,.U.&amp;pJIII.
,......... Alma.
lbe ...... io..,......Sby UBondthe Don tlltmo'"*' World~Fund.

3

e...,..

.roo._.,.

~inlhe 19'13-94seri&lt;!swillbeGecwFF. Wiii,Nitzer~.,....._

W.O ......................

oolllomisl for TJw Woulli..,- PtJJIJf Ohd...,.... on ABC"s "Tbi&amp; Wed&lt; Willi IJIMtl

WBFO..,.IIOid •a lwcakutllOW....,I'!nlllidert WWiamfl &amp;Giner on~.
Sop~. ISirttn 4-6 p.m. The llhoW !IIIII bt h 6'111 ell Into such PftV'lldll ... 1116 UB
~---.:.place'* 1111. Mdillipnol~
IIClteCUed b Ocl. Z7 and
Ollc. 1. (The station wll IIWihe """"""''IUip-i!l 10 lhe,Wfto taaAiy Siapl I~ .. 6
p.m.)

oatioual oonapondmt for
PBS'o"lbe
~

-•e

...,._, \1 'W la II!••MIIIIIII.. ll(llao-.llllli•
H you -'&lt;atla~.- a modern.
ar~FreeNel. youew&gt;oUJeatleiO
pUer Cal DIMd 01 Act*latl 82!N!!'O!i''ID 11:

••

wiliiiJl'*ltooNoot . IO.ood~H..--GMdi.MEmmyllnii~......,S........

IIJl'*lt

NeMHour,• who wiD

mApillO.
a....ey bopo his w.m.
inglon .,.,._ &amp;S ~ IO
lb.presideftond
ct.ic:fdSialffor

"'"'""

~

Gerald R. Ford.
l'ollowillg his~ ,..;th
lh&lt;Ford~he

""wucdiOW~'Itllton

salt""""""'

he ,.,.._j !D IDmS as the-··
dlhe Hou:ir Ill~-- Flo:"""' dln&gt;up
the ~I' nnb 10 """"""' !be Hooot llqxJbliaoG Whip "' Oecmlber 19118- lb. OOIXII&gt;II-

ranl&lt;in!l
minonty ...,. "' lht ""'Bulb's def.,.......,....,.tmm I 989·91, he lorroullokod 11,..... IJOMI o;ecuri!y lillnii&lt;CI' ond
cleYelopod ...~ pblns w downsi7" !be u.s. mililwy. a....ey """"Wld lht ~
Medallllfm:dom,thelllition 'shiP-civitianaWIId.farhis~~lbel'mlaoa.KWor
Tod:&lt;l price; rara....ey ·,~...., $5 for UB Sludmrl&lt;; $12 for UBfx:ulry,Sialf. UB Alumni

M:socioriort n&gt;embers ond ...mar c:iuJens, ond $15 far ~ ednusooan. Pnecs for thr lhmespeamseries -SIO. U4ondS30. ~ody . MIISif:rCaJd. VISA."""'*ortnOilC)'mlorltliJ
he used wllen&lt;'lldcring tlci&lt;dsby FA (64$·133.1) or mail Yla the~~ Set-.
314 Crofts tbll.IJni..mty •• Buffalo. Bufhlo. y ~ 142ti0. For funber mformab&lt;lft,c:all64&gt;
3414

-

Ttcll:lsmaybe~allw door
as a! .New Wolid Rec:ad. 512 Elmwood"""··
BufbJo Sale Colqr Trlel Offi&lt;:e, .sn.deot l.Jnom. I
Elmwood Ave~ Don l)a,.,. A uoo Wrrid
Inc., 22T1 Nlq;ora Fa! Bt"'-. Am!lmit; Tho Soc* ~-. 1382 Hcl"4d ""'-· ond thr Oompur.
0:n1cr .. Fn:dcnia Sulk: Go~Jc:gr c..lbal &amp;1 Off..,.
Alumni Alma IS wbeel-dutir oca:ssiblle. There IS baodicapped .,-rkmgncart&gt;y
lionguoa!&lt;
int.c&lt;prelrn ar&lt; availablr on request b:r c:a!Jin« 64S- 34

s.,.

'93-'94 fine arts season

offers plays, dance, opera
HE UNIVERSTTY' S 1993-94 fmr ans.....,., off""' a vanery d pl'&lt;l@I'&amp;RlS fmt a(
minimal CO!it Among lhtrn .... public poell)' ~ o:larlo% """""""'
operas. an ediibllion&lt;i. choral programs. plars. films Ohd ,....., Jl""'C'CIlIlions There
are public oonoens by individual mlirll! anisll; ond enscmbi&lt;:s, 5llldoot oolois1s.me
UBuiTalo Sympbooy. II,. BPO. lht UB Olorus. thr UB Ch:nle and ~
pcm.t"Sian. bntss and wooct..1..! mscmbles. Walch me ii¥PQif~ aJendor for deuils
For lht first time. UB will prc:5Cfll e&gt;o'm!S in ils
Pine Ans Center. Localed oo the North
&lt;:ampu. h«wcen • Ice Cooa:n twl and Alumn1Alena..lht .,.._ promises 10 be a popular sile
for a Yllriety d campus and oommunity ewms. In llld'ttiQo 10 Ula:ISi"" c:los!.roam. 8Wdio Ohd
offJCe spaces. il featuros a taq,e cmaal auiwn Ohd sev&lt;nllboaters. ga1Jerie$ ondscnoenlrl&amp;mams.
Tho Fme Ans Cemerwill hosllbe UB Prinunalr.en; &amp;hibman through s.p.. 24, followed by
an elhibition at work by UB on faculty Sepl. ](}.()ct. 22. a Halloween e..hibil Ocl. 28-Noot. 19.
Special~ bylht Music Ocpartmc:m include UB's immalion&amp;lly ~North
Aml:rican New Music Fe.nvat Oct 26-Nov II in Ytt1UC5 on and off campus. Tho 19'13-94 Ske
"""""' 01 ..

""w

VisilingAnilosPerf"""""""SeriesbeglnsSepl22wilbtheAm&lt;ric;ln~QuinletOhdc:cntinueo

will• perfannanocs by barilorr William Sharp. Eusembk Projecl Ats Nova, pionS koln -Y""'
Thibaudd and lht ~oblnson Tno The Slce Beethoven Cycle Ibis year
pn:scniS !be Mwr Siring Quane&lt; in perfOiiljJafiQOS Nov 12. Doc. 3, Feb. II and Mart:1J S.
M any a( !be countl)' 's moiSI invmli~ writers and ~ """"' 10 V.'NY ever)' &gt;""" 10
participate in "Wodnesda at 4 P!"'-" UB's nant-ganlilitenry series This)"''lrlook forr-s
Robin Blaset, Sepl. 13 Ohd 15, Ed Oorn. Oct. 13; Ted fnslin. Nov. 18 and Kalhlem Fraser, Nov.
3. IJozem d "edgy"""""" fdl OUt u.. program lhrough next Apil.
Thoater and dana: productions include W""""bam' s "'ur Country's Good• Doc. 3-12;
Anouilh 's "The Lvlc" Mart:IJ -H. and Apnl7· 10; Glawaclci's- Antigone m New Yori&lt;" Mart:IJ 1&amp;20 and April 14-17; UB'sGEMMS Musical ThoaterCcmpany March 3-12 ondZodillque
Company OV . 12·21. March 11 - 13 and Apil21 · 24

o-x

CALENDAR
--.rM
.,._..._CIVIL.._

...,.......,_.....,._

H..,_.~(SG4S.

J-31, 1Jt4~ Hall. ....

...... ~u...-.
~,

·~

,,. ..... .

Go.ni - (SIG.I~

................ .............................. .... . .
~

ltalidr:blioiFxililil:o,Une
1431!!0.

�Shakespeare? aught! But have we go a boo for you...
UN~""'"""' Of lli£M ..., rip.

. BOR£SIIIdr.
..... Brilioh roy.~ family.
pocially
Ol n.... you
....
l!oucpldofplb..
..t.dtafly,lcd.., - w . o f · - ·
or
fOr * - I fildJ&lt;L
Bulca6e.., •
'-ld
.
·..,
bod'JO'eyeonal_or_... • .,.
p:icM ""'"'*CMloch~IOe:lpnllll:&gt;e...
)!)'of"'""""
For lhaooe Wbo baw:a 't enjoyed.
,_,
Iince they dJoowed down "'The Hardy Boys
Moot CeliDe,. belp t.llriwd ....... k ·~cbe
populist and user-frieadl "UST OF
VNF1821JWDREAD1NG" """""""' br""'

1...,...

jolll.,.,.,... • ...,...,.

,.,.,.,..

~Collqe.

-.lm'fil •
All- but ..-ely

The u....qund Rslnc U. or"tJRL" is on
invilllian ID unwiM llfiOilt 48 fawde ads
ag&gt;IC&lt;Iby UB~-.t.oaythol.,_
hacbcm.,.t liD IMs....., .... """"""a-or jr.a!IJII"" d!cra •...,. aood mae.
-Gold. ........., clr:an
OJIIefF.
said cbe liol ~from cbe ~

~

~

...

_

s..p....

,_,

Time--~......,

...........
...........
-.

....

Qoel,.r

Ulll.llt«
Ac.27

~
Coo

•a

~thol•-llr

"""'"""""end ..... ...,

llloolpbullhie....-.~buildm.i­

dollbdeo

Oooi).....,......._...-Md."-"'c""• Baltwo Tuo:t.rr.'
W•l "The Guo!; d "'cUUl"

mmt,cbeewr-vigilonl URL flalllydocidod 10
exl&lt;ftd I band ID die kids in die hall
"Theli!l --..-ID&lt;ileTheGJUiAT
lloc:*',"Gold.-s. ....... ~of rJ.ny

ofWorld

• FqJuW ""''lllcs by~ Owl R.opn.
bloloPl Rata Canon end
.,...._.,.
s- 5lqm. J &lt;h*l
•
llrR..s,"m..,..Jod.
......,.
..........,.lanJnciOra-.:fuiWIYID1rw
• ~
·s "Tht Ory in Hilluy." an

................. ~

by poople ......, ,_, allen
fOr ... - - Jllr-.R of iLV.'bo - ..... poople? One miP be ...
ocodemic JliO"'C*lW ......, aosigns • Jud. ...
b:da;

,

"Aiftf........,.d

oammitter .......t.c.. oc-

cal .-..din&amp;
llld thll uni...W.Soupt 10
be builclin«IIICh
Coooemed IbM tbeor
SIUdonts oddom ,_,
silnply for mjoy-

~

.

has..,.

~lxd~byplarriac~

Atfml Pmethol
r.a-.1
d
...... ...........,, dry~"""*"
polilial ........
.
on!

a..u.:·,_-inend,_-oo.rbutan...,..bome
-~llrMBr;~.cbe....WS
~owrini\Jnwtw.,_,r~

fur wdlf lore.

vs.
Saturday, September 4, 7:00 p.m., UB Stadium
Be part of eport:a history. Try out one of the 17,000 seats in the new
·UB Stadium. Watch the Bulls taclde the niversity of Maine Blade Bears. It '/J bt o parry!

�10

Give Your Child a jewish
Learning Experience ...

L. Boy
Jr. retired dentistry
chainnan
Qaarl

Aftn-....,.. •• .,.._..

...,.. .•

a.m.c.J

1942-46. he .........
,_m o( tht rWf.,. ()pmboll en-o.k
011 s...Jno ....o •lhr
r... .-r...., o(cbe- bomb_.. hdd. Hr
..,.,..-a~ cbe Anny C:O.Wiedoow
He hdd
.. doe~
Boonlof~ .... ...,_,._Aademy
o(~cbe .......... Socoet}oCDmllllr)' fCICloildlm.chr ~ Denlial
CIIIJOB aad .... l!nr CDunry OmoaJ SccJd)'
SwviVJIIC- ... Wife. Helm. o( A.lnhmR.
·~·
Jcmao(Rdlf"dd.Ohoo;
.,..., w· · oe e..w-, &lt;ft aad Rdlwd oe
~ J . aad
.. lllddJildr....

...ar..,,.....,..

Orton Str1ng Quartet

Novetn~

•

23

st Lawrence Quartet

•

o.c-n-

Undsay string Quartet

•

Mc::arch 29

Kallchsteln-Lorec:to-RoblnSon Trio •
Emenon String Quartet

•

....,... 6

May 1 7

New , , . ...a.cH1 .

p~--.

talks by the artists beginning at 7 p .m
Cott 838-2383 tot our brochure

or more tntor-matton

t•

Floyd M Zaepfel,
A - f l f ~ 8..-111""

o.da.

~forf'lo1d M.ZMpfel.""""' cbocf
o( surgery at SS&lt;rS lb:pnal for 23 yeoa and

ocrved

.. _ . . .

d...,..

~aotbrUB

offi

for FaU 1993

GRE Refre&lt;iher

Course

TuesdJ) and lbur.idays

6:30 pm · 9 30 pm
September I

1295

prof...,.

o(

o(~aad

• B""""-&lt;'JQI S&lt;:x:rl= laql(el, 79, died At1J
17 m Millard FillnJor1, Suburbon Hooptal
A graduaeo( c.ms.,., Colqr aad chr UB
medx:al
• he ...vat "' lhr Ami Medl
cal Carp.. He •-asnom&lt;d dmoc:lor o( cduc:aoon
•• s...... Hoopow on 1947 and &lt;1u.acr oe
~ lhrn m l9S6....~he'""''&lt;~&lt;~ unul
1979
H&lt; ..... ..-oechrUBMedlcal
~ lhr c.hol
Pb)'5ICIIIfll Guild
and lbe Mfdical swr oe tbt ~Has­
.,.w o( tbr Diocese o( Buffalo
~""" onclucle
..,,-, Thelma, fivt
da\Jihlen, Carol K..a. o( Victor. Mary
Hub&lt;ro(~ille,Fia, EilomM.~

a( Buffalo, Nancy L

KelaafTonawooda aad

Thdma C. Abbouie o(Nonh T........,..._ fcu
SOM. Ao ·d A.
Gaspon, Jolla A.
Wllliamsvdle. Albeit Co( iqano Falls, aad

or

0w1e1 T

or

.. gill

or

Rocheskr. • ,.;...,., Bemote

" " " - ' o( ~iDe.

26 grmdclul&amp;al aad

pat~

Mark van de Vall,

oociology professor
..... .,_de V... prof&lt;Aor o( soaoio&amp;y II
UB from 1964-1978. and .. adjuna prof""""
fortbt .-·~,.....,died July 31 inAmsmlom,
the Netherlanck. He was 70.
A Nlllve o( the &lt;llher1onds, Van de VaU
- - ' in lhr o...dt ......._,. cluriJII World
Wor 0 until '""" prioaoor by tbt Gc:nnono in
194-4. He was inumed in Gennony and nor-

far nm iriurmotim:
Unlversily at Bulblo'l
-&amp;dtool of~t
II ( 16) 645-3200
COIII¥1

lOwly ourvi"""He rec:cived his PILD from tbt llDiversiry
o( I.JindJt 1&gt; 1963. Sbonly oftmnn1, hearne
10 Buffalo, ...._ he loua!1l ..-n:b llldbods
and udriques. The focus o( his l.ifdana ~
searcb ~ llOIIDd tbt
o( aociologiaol 6iilincs 011 oociol policy.
In 1978. v_, de VaU roturned to lhe Ndherlands, joining the fJoc:ulty o( Laclea Univer-

anc-

""'"""""'

,..,.23.~Parl

for ...... D ........ 79,1

_,., _,_"'

~

o.p.t

-·
...........
WylO,I l.
• . , _ Bullalo l'ltiit
pr..t.a Bullalos-do(.,.._......,....
far)()•19?9 He

Sctoa..,...,..,.

-IE-

adlodWIIb-,.tbelbiSIIII
11
Bullalo11l
fdk&gt;wwclwi
......,....
ioo WNY..t. C-.1
-.:a. oae ~oCtile New Yar\~.....,.,_,111
cloolh,he

_.,..IOI'VICZ
AI. UB,
..olved ..........
"*
tbe T..,._,_, Meu:o
...
for

hdd Alii

~'teet ~

reseatdl~

.....,.. _ _

~""""""" ... ....,._.• 1

surgery prof~
)() in Our lady o(

Jooah D. Margulis,
at11hrqx)logy

n:podul:llaD o(
-~o(tbeS.....toilclo

lfli"WW "'s.. Amcl!m far.
Y&lt;UII~ He

*&gt;

ll·yoa-o(a I
....... -

~

polr

.,..... .. tbr
farlbe
.....,. .........,

&lt;ftldiOd....
- ...,,_
o(Antl.apcJiocl

~"""""""•t.:idar'odep&lt;rBII")

""'*'*Y
doclcnl
Scm

UB, ..tlrfthe...-1-·s aad
11 ~ ai9S2 8ld

...-.R&lt;ao.

1957

~ !(.......,... 8ld Emily
&amp;o&lt;ubMm.. - .
Rcmid..,. Ddn)
lbd1, Ra. and_, p-...

"""- N.a:-)

funces S. Rupley
engineer, wrote
guidetoUB . _ _ .. . . . ,, "
IIf(JT-t(tlttu.-n.,•

........ AII-4111..apidetolbe

us.,.......~._,_,clilolw,.'ll.I993

"' Ia bcmt in Oannlr lftr • """
l'llnl:nlllniceo- bdd in QoJ_, ~
Oudo, Wdliiii'ISViillt
Sloe"""-nr.. .,..;-rin -~~ ....
~chr-*ne~
J1101!1E11111'Imlo~-0Jn&amp;.......
IJ&lt;n&amp;jll" aiaaall

adrs. Ibm ~for

pin in Cclo.ut!us, Cbo.
In ~~·~ ... Bulblo ...........
llrUti!Diclcoip...........,.;ll950-tdaisbe91l
Ia
f:mlily. AI. ... 31 ...

.,._..ole..,_.

~IDOIChoal,--.t.:mb'""""-'•
..,...... in IOCiolo&amp;Y 8ld ~·bulla

doclcnldiooomlion inooc:it*lcY Ill UB. Sbe
• loaun:r Ill~ .......... inoliloeaal ...
cUtina UB aad - a
far lbe
l...t:&gt;oeCinal Koallb Soudy..t.cbe ~~
Flmily ~ .. UB,
RIII*Y jaftd ...
Aldilocbnl A_._. Proj!d 111 UB in 19116
8\dawda~fram 19111-1993.
s.rn.oa lnolude brrlluslled, OoarJe M.;.
.... Dr. "Ilion. M. o( Oona:rd, .M as.; tine
cloual*n; Dr. o.ahy s ofl..dloy, RdJoa:a R.
l'£eilkr oe ~ ..t. V"aaria or R.
Wwyrr.lnd..; a ...... Dobnb Walm o( Eden
andfnep~ ··' •.

.....a....,.

�_______

._

Cam us
Bruce Holm is
~&amp;an

in medical

school

0 .......,.

II.. Holm bu ' - '
appoinled O!IIIOCizle dean
ror .~ ODd pduale &amp;tudics
1n the us School or Medic:lllle
IIDd Bi&lt;:lm&lt;dic:al Sc:iencea. Holm
replaces Jooepb T. Spmce. wbo
left UB this opriDa 10 diroclthe
Human NUIJ'itioa ~Ceo­
u:r 1n the u . Depar1ment or
A,criculture.
Ill his "'""' pooitiaD. Holm will
rcvlewpnt
Pf'liiCl'i&amp;l$from
medical ICibool

""""'""""

before they ~
sUbmitted to
fundina~

ODd.,.......,., the
medical gnduate prop-am. Ill
odditioft, he will 0 - the
iDstitutiOIIII review board, which
is responsible for quality coniJOI
or bumaD resean:b at UB's afflli·
ated -.:bing bospitals, and de·
velop new ......-.ardl prognms
tlulougbout the medical scbool.
Holm will reuin his teaching
and resean:b responsibilities ..
UB &amp;SSDCiale pot_. of pediatrics, obstdrics and gyn«&lt;IOogy.
and pllartMcology.
A gnduale of the University
of Iowa. Holm received IDOSiel''s
and doctonol degrees in tox.icol·
ogy from _the Univezsity of Roch ester School of Medicine. While
complering his gnduale studies,
he held I National lnstituleS of
Health (Nilf) pmlocunl fellowship, doing resean:b in toxkology
and pulmooary medicine. He
joioed the UB faculty in 1989.
Holm cum:ntly is principal
investigator on a five-year,
$820,000 NIH grant and a
$36S,OOO NIH Resea.n:h Cal=
Development Award to study
pulmooaryoxygen toxicity.
He also is involved in two
projects within the University of
Rochester medical scbool's S .5
million Specialized Center of
Resean:b on Respiratory Diseases
of Neonates and O.ildren.
He bas published .50 anicles in
pmfessiOIIII journals on pulmo' rwy diseases and lung surfaCtant
therapy.

Oslo ldiJ his dtotdlln 1980.
.w.dl roc:ei-s lhea-.1 for
~ 011

"-errooocY. virol-

ogy ODd molccubor .,....,uc. he
CCIIIIuc:lod M UB and In Oslo 1llith
"-Preacl
Uaiw:rsitycl
Oslo and Roy Steven~ ol Columbia Uni-my. Pteus
visit·
Ina ocientist 111 lhe UB dental
ICibool.
RUS&amp;dl'o ~ f~ 011
a cmedc viral vd&gt;lclc coiled a
~ODd the badlrium

-a

Actillobadlhu~
ale
.
which

~pmdi..-....

0

D. Todd Russell, a senior
at the UB School of Dental
Medicine. bas become the fu:st
American and the fii'SI
StUdent to win the prestigious
Waemaug Priu presented by the
Scandmavian Society of
Periodontology. The priz.e is

dcnla' ·...

giveo in memory of Professor
lens Woedtaug, who is consid·
eted by many to he the fatbe&lt; of
modem periodontology. He was a
professor at the UniVG!IiJy ol · • •,•

II

..... ....

...a.

' - ' named spcriS infonnll1on
director at UB. Rowland's duties

•

will review the l&lt;lpk:s wido.,....
proper use ol
the drvp or deviccti, CIIIINIIOI1
. . , _ ractioo-. -s wllal'*l be

af~e cmpbasis em

don&lt; 10 avoid or amellarate a...

credit.

inch&gt;O&lt;d writin&amp; and editin&amp; the
Bofhlo Bills' weekly press release. editin Buffalo's NA.
Gomeday Magazine and assistina
in public, community and media
relati&lt;lftll. He contribuled "' the
Buffalo Bills Repon monthly
newspaper and ..ruted the Bills'
scouting department and soadium
operations
Rowland completed his under·
graduate and gnduate studies in
communicotions at Edinboro
UnivetSity ol Pmnsylvanio where
be produced nwnerous CAA
medii guides and publicatWns,
..ruted in medl• relauoos ond
served as the school's baseball
and volleyball public addrcs5
armouncer.
Torn Koller, forme~" spcm
illfonnotion director, will ..,._.., as
assiSUDt othlelic director for
media relations and qw-ketio&amp;

Phannacists
will hold
infonnation
sesstons

0

The UB School of Pharmacy and the Pbannacis" •
~ e\\

Yor\ (PAWNY) Will presenltwo
srnoinar,; designed to pro•id&lt;
pharmacists with information to
allo"' them to hena coun.«d
patients •bout their prescription

medications.
A ~ion on quinolone and
cephalosporin antibioucs will be
held Thursday, Sept. 9; a program on cot1tracqltive methods
will be held Wednesday, Sept.
29. Both sessions will he held .
from 7-9:15 p.m. at the Unlver·
sity Inn and Confc:ren&lt;% Center,
2401 N. Fans Road, Arnhei'SI.
adjacent to the North Uunpus.
Registration will begin at 6 p.m.,
and sandwiches will be saved.

r

a.m."'

9, 9
JO p.m . UDivenoty 1m ond Cmlermce c -.
Ambmt.

• ~l'nnaplts a r - llduaoon Procnom ~• Doc &amp;.
9 a.m 10 Noon. Hobday 1m 11.-.t ond Coafr:nn:le e a -. Onnd
lslaDd.

• "Healoh Issues Pauunina to Afric:an.Ameriall Fomi),.. • the
Year
"Feb l8, 8a.m'"'.J0p.m, ea-f"'T"""'"""'
Far more informMJon call the UB ~ .ne liducabon
l'ropam Ill 1!29· 3291

Olebook,• I
IS

.....

• ~- Froooers m lhe T""""""" cllhe &lt;lDcdol7 Pldon&amp;, •

new col~oo ol poems by

UB hnpist J~ Galmrt.

' 4•*

,.._.yo-

For funher inf~ or to
rqister. CUitacl the School ol
l'llanna&lt;y Continulnc Educatioo
Dovisum ot64S-3931.

~Fore;I""''O

r

nc.

...-icn., ........... dnl&amp; ond food
itenctions and, wbm - - , ..
any special information penineat
to lhe dnl&amp; or devi&lt;le. Each program
hec:o ~ IM&gt; ClOD- bolas ol CIOI1IimoiD&amp; ~

0

a

-- - ~~

The us School or ..._.,~ 6doallca .....,_
opm a 1992-'93 oeriel wilb I . . . . , . . 011 "'tiid
' Jl-a
-s ~ Dlleaioo and """'-'bon"., he r..ld SqJL 10-.1
II ineheH)'IIl
~
lllht ........ ......,e! ~ rqioltred
I'I'O"i&lt;k Woo:moDoo on 11i1b-rio1t lilmilJes. ~-- ~ ..S
.........,.., po..-. cbildrm ..s """""""'me r.-~~y. n.e ~
Wlll be~ by lht UB
clSocial Work.
A ........ - . . . . c-.q Kilty
J1rof- _..... -s
~ ol the UB School orN......_ wil he hdd Ckt. 16
s-9
p.m. in ~~~eea- forT""""""' • port or han........ ~
i5Che autharcl "Suocide The~
•
n.e popnsio ~b)' lhe us
or .,... ....,..,..
Asocioaon.
OCher Jll'lll'lll5 1ft lhe .me.
• -~ Plr)'!ICII ~orlhe Adull."
7-IOp.m from Sqll 14
NaY 16,11.
IDbe~
• ~~A ~'&lt;rooM~ Pllh 1D ~ Self-e.re, • Ckt.
27,7.JOa.m -Sp.m ,
.
Halei....SSuileo,
-.

their p-nplian&amp;. , _ "CouD·

aeliD&amp; Cloateoll ~

-

......_,.....,.,_.

p....--bavt

.-.~~~pilar·
10 . , . _ , plllents about

Mike Rowland
named Sports
VB linguist
Infonnation
publishes
Director
new
collection
JloWiaad, former
gnduate ISSiswu in media
0rdati&lt;lftllMike
of poetry
for lhe Buffalo Bills, bas

Association of \\'estern

Dental
. School
.
semorwms
WaerhaugPrize

hec:o

~~fonmcl

Yen

------ ----

a

foray into "f&lt;nignneu" usin&amp;

playful parado•es tnvciVUIIthe
rq&gt;resenlllion ol the self in lanIU*&amp;e

ol Span-

Ouitan. I

ish, modem

language and

r

..

l

\

~~.

s_....,

thrir Kl&lt;a&gt;. Men ll'lll1llnC miOJW!OS&lt; ~and GUitutt for
Americans; ........... 10 n&gt;dllce """" lwrial; bel....... Japan and
.s should be implo:mmled. Ammcan produc:l quaiJI)' should be
unproved ID oompr:1e with Jopon. 1 - CIOOlpiJUOS should I!&lt;"
eiiClOllraled to ernplo) more Arnencan monagers

UBfacuhy

member since

1973 A mem·
ber ol the board

ol duUltoro for
the liS Buffalo
Utenry Cenu:r. be is '-idely
published in the field of Spenisb
ltnguisi.ICO
A Mtive of Havana. Cuba,
Gwtart bas writom poeay in both
English and Sputisb for mort
than 25 ) ears, and both his scbol·
arly v.-ritinJ and poeay have'-&gt;
pubhshed in the United Sut&lt;S,
Latin America and Europe. He
holds 1 bachelor's degRe in psy·
cbology from George Washing·
ton Universny and mastt:r"s and
doCtoral d&lt;grees in Spanish and
hnguisl.•cs from Georgetown
University

ar • ...,.,.,..,.... m

Member5
~ Bd&gt;oVIOr -sAd·
ministrllioo Ill UB have l&lt;lOeived a leitleo' ol oppreaation from
dent Olnton. The cla!s"""" ....,.,..;an. 10 the pnsocleD 011
IJIIPO'-ina U.S -Iapan l71lde
~a YMioo from
ABC' "N•r;bdine- on
m•
m the U S Among

eoTA~rT

II

The Women's Oub or the Uru""""'Y 11 Buffalo -..'111 hold ns Fall

1

I

Merobership Lunchcan, Saturday, Sept. II II II .JO a.m. ot
Pisl.acloio's in the Sruded Union, North Campus
Menbers will be able to sogn up for vanous omvit)- J!IUUII"
before and alier the lunc:boarL Women's Oub Ptuident Marilyn
Ciancio will lliii'Oduce Act1"1ties Olau Annie Blumensao and ber
co-d1air. Pat Addelman
0wrs ar mdJVIdual actiVIt} grotlllO '"""'""' m c:barJe ol ubleo
11 the luncheon an" Marie Sdlillo and InN Katz IAntiques, An
lhstory. 13c:ds), Pat Addelman and X:la Ya:acans ~l;
Mane Schillo (8ridgr A•ghl.l; Joan o·Amao c~ SI:J1111). Jean Jam and Mariaone Lobovlc (Fmx:h Cooservmon),
tela v&lt;naris &lt;Couple. Gowmc:tt. Manon Blame and aea Morgan (Evemog Gowmc:t). Sun Mi Fung, &amp;rban PapneU1 and Bar·
bara McCanh~ (Gowmc:t Tedlruq"'"'l· K.tlut Mogel'lSel'l
(lntemauonal ), l oan R ~an 1 e&lt;dk"'-orl. l. Mall&lt; Schillo and Ann

Publications
Maurtzio Trevtun
Chair ollhe (.(l ~ ol
Soc.aiMICIPreYe 111W A-.o

Co-autt-or of the study. lJnc
ACid Metabolism and Tubu·
lar SodllXTI Handling • pcb~shed Jn tile July 21 ISSUe of
the Jounal ollh8 Amoocan
MedJcal AssiX:IaiJon. The
research 1sam also inclucled
faculty from St. George's
Hospilal Medical School in
lOndon. England. and the
lns!itule of Internal Medicine
and MeCaboloc Diseases,

Second Medical School.
University of Naples.

. ...~ ~ ~~ and,N!'!".. . . . . t·.....:.;
'"::....!.'~··•e!.•.!;•·:.__~-----..1.

Snub &lt;Tenn~&gt;)

MemberJup m the w omen·, Club I!'&gt;~.,.,..."{! {L\ .n .. on"'rn .... oo art'
m scn1~t h, ltv unJ'- I!n.l[} hJt mort 1nh)('JJ13uon on
memll&lt;"i&gt;h•p. call l..uoll&lt; G"'iJ''l111l at b34-6502. or C~nnclla 1-lanly
at 633-4216 for lundlroll re&lt;T' " '"""
tlllerested

Patri&lt;U
ylel-, a doctoral student m """""""''" educmon at
UB, has been awarded • 1993 Spcn.Yt 01Sl'&lt;:!Uuon Fdlowship for
her research on teaCher tratrung 1D CUba and Venezuela.
n.. Spencer o....erut1011 Fellowslup is pan the Spcnc:es
Foundation's effort to eDCOOlll&amp;e outsundmg """'!d&gt;olats to develop insights 011 issues mlating 10 education. The $1S,OOO owvd
supportS the fello~~o-s while they finish doctoral diss&lt;rtations. Only
31 fellollo-s werr. cho!;m this year from more than 600 opplicJiion&lt;
from IS4 graJua1e inslirutions
Schuyler IS also the recipient cia """"' sr- from the Canadian
Social Science and Humanities ResearCb CouociL In additioo, sbc

ar

won a 1991-921\dbrighl. gnuc.ua&gt;eJin&amp;"' Veaemo!a IDCIIIDducla
ClOillpai'Otive 5IUdy ol teaeher educadoo iD Veaemola ond a.t..

�an exhihition

of 45 printa by m.Jenla,

"

b...-ulty

a.nd

UB, •.iiJ be the fim exhibit hJd in the
student gallery in t.k university's new Rne Art.
alumni at

Center on

the

1ortb

AnlJ"US ll

Sept. 2-24

--

---..,_

....iiJ b._. held from

lhe gallery ....iiJ be the rlt&gt; of a public re..~n U1 honor.J the..
ttx!a) fn.lfTl 5 . j r m
l1u.-msfter~ah houns ....iiJ be 1onda&gt; t.l~h lh~&gt;• IOa.m. to p.m .and r;.J..;. ; -S p.m .
r;,,. h.ut1er infonnation, cJ1 the L B Arll).,partmt'"t· :....(&gt;87
lhe exhihitwn .,.iiJ fe..ture
exocut.ed m
intaglw, Lithograph); relief a.nd mo~pe. Empbs
.,.iiJ be pla._..J on ...~ ~· current studenlto m the
pnnl~ pn&gt;;;!nun directed h_v Prot;
n. llarvt"Y
llender~.&gt;n Bn."\.-cnnan, ,.t,.
U1c pnntmab • (,.JJ ha. ra;._.,..u) ~ru.fi.:ant

Brl.'\wman and ,\d..lc

. .,_

,..or!.:

in

intt'TJWtional n.'Q)I.1'rution, notes that l 'B print~

hoe arlto at a h..lfrl of hm -rate s.:houb
haw repn.'5Cnted U&gt;e l 'mted S~.att-s m mterna · nal &amp;,,,naf... held in
Europe, North Amen&lt;:&lt;~ and :=:outh America.
Although pnntmabn~ lE not a rnarJ..e.t..Jm"'" intella.--tual enterp
llcnclcrson says U~at I 'B ~raJu.Jl.&lt;.'!' ha, found employment as arltsan-masl.cr-

graduates haw punrued master's ~n.&gt;es in
and

pnntcn;, prinhnalun~-worksl10p enlrepnmcun;, JluSt.ratoc;, educalor.!, cural&lt;&gt;rs

and exhihit designers In addition to their r~~any solo .ho.

, their" J. liaS been exhibited in ~n&gt;Up
venues in Europe, Asia and u1 ,mually 1."\-ery nabonal print.ma.ki.n~ sk..· in t.lu.; rounlr)
Henderson and Brl.'\'erman point&lt;&gt;Ut U&gt;al since prints haw a Corrna4uahty and "-OlllC power
equal to &lt;&gt;ther mcdiurm, 1."\'e') maior art.U.t of 110le in this century ha, utht npre · n through
this medium
'
lhe l 'B program, sa).
Br"vcrman,
"affirms that the unique

polentialiti

for personal exp"""'ion in varinus

printmaking

"lan~u~" is U1le£rated and
other art COWS&lt;.'!', but hvtb"kinJ

fed not only by
of int.ellc..--tual

purs~its

university

that

only

a

can stimulate." I'ATI&gt;-'',~' ' '

--·

..,.._

--·
..,_

��l:arin~ is ~rin~

. . . . ........_................

~woc.JI

()I'

"'~~"'-"

t'H\

Dear Colk"ap,ues

lbanks to you. last year's tat Emplo
Appe-...tl at l13 excet."'t.k ."&lt;.i iL.., goal. Th

o,ccret

Federated
of th~

a.-s:

&gt;U

. EFA c nmti.tm ~L.., to

fX."ople like you made genero

health and human ~f'K't.~ agencie~ l.h.at assLSt our
netghl &gt;~'&gt; . fnend'&gt;. Jnd fanuly mcmhef'r-agenoe'&gt;

'&gt;trugglmg. 111 the face of rL-duced gm cmmenwl -.uppon. tc ,
keep thctr door-, OJX'n 'lour opcn-lundc--d rt.....,pon-.e to l.t-..1

year' .1ppcal hdfX."'tl ..,ho" \\t.....,tem

·L'\\

York tlut l 'B rcJ II

doc'&gt; cJ.re Jhout our home l ommumt\
Now we need to do tt .,..._

11w t n,t..,

1

n 1 c l\l'r for

th~

nearh "'• I ...,1-J

. . upporwd

.1genue' that ; &gt;ller help .md hc ~~ to mam thou-..tn~o.b of \\L"-tl'm
Yorker-. \\ 'ith tht:tr 'l.lll' anJ fl--Jt.&gt;ral tunJmg .,ttllumt·n..un

1\'t:\\

thetr o.,tJfl, and fatthllL..., . . hnnkmg and (krn..tnd lc&gt;r U1t:tr 'ot:'f\Kl"
grt)\\

mg lllll}. the...e .1genut..., .tre m ·mg '.thantl\ lo do mol\.' .tnd

more '' tth ll''-'- .md le..,.., ll1n R·h mt rea,mgl~ on pm .Hl' and
mdt\ tdu.d nmtnhurnr-. to hl'l'P them gomg
It..,
\o.:;.lr-.

,1

~l' .

'tiU.lltc 111 th.!l I B lu-.

t

c liHo.:

111 undl'r'&gt;Wnd \\ell

roc, _\\ork undt·r It .:tl u&gt;n-.t.r:IU1L-. Bur

111

R·n·ni

.t-. ttght ..~.. . our

lundmg rn.t\ ..,.,nwtum· "'L'L'm. 11ur unner-.11\ . . ull h.1 . . ..,. , mt 1lh rn&lt;
tc' \\ ( lrh \\nil th.tn de' thl.' .tgenut..., ..,EI-A urr)&lt; lib
If\ ll)g
But

h•

hnng

lf1

u c•ur Idle 1\\

1111 &gt;f\.· -.uppon tn Hn c &gt;Ur
\\

l"ll'n1

'\~,, ~ 1 &gt;rkl.'r-.

1.1

.If\.'

\\L' .

1&lt; K 1.

.lfl'

lllllntlnJI\ .tnd regton
h, ~md

hehmd u-. \\ ,

mLt....t t cmtllllll' t&lt; &gt; -.tand hehtnd them
'Ill&lt;:

JX'\ 'Pil'

uf 1 1Ur

.11\.'J

.unph d\.'111&lt; lll'-tr.ued t.ht:u kmJm...,..,

.md genl'nl-.tl\ tfu, -.ummer. ''hen ....:mw I

Yorker-. '1 ,Juntel'fl"'tl thl·tr tune

\.'r1l'rg'l

,1)(

1 \\'l"&gt;tem '\e\\

.tnd ho..,prt.alll) t.o wekonw

parttup.mL-. mthe \\orlJ l nneNI\ Gamc.:.-. If our fnend.., and
netghhor-. c1n do th.ll much fur f'l""C&gt;f'le fmm around the world, t '1'.
can . . urd\ dt' tlur 111LI\.h for uur fnend-, and neighbor.. It bch
uo.,. ~~ . . f'l"~ 1ple \\ tlh J&lt;)h-. .md -.aLmc.., and health
.1 !tnle had-&lt;

111

can'

'l'"

benefiL'&gt;, to gtH

our hnn)L· umunurul)

lh.., 'v.n .., t.llnpu-. FE-\ logan

'&gt;&lt;1)'.

"(.anng ~ sharing."

Plea"L· hdp I B pur tht-. pnnupil' u11o Jl1ton m 1995 by ~&gt;Ck."Cting
the .tgent tn '1 lU "t'&gt;h 11, -.upport and mak.mg a gift or pledge t.o
..,I: FA C)ur t.unp.ttgn

11l'l'ti

\our o.,uppon ~tore lll1port;.tntly. our

tnvnc..b .tnd nt·tghhor-. n ·d \our help
\·m t ereh

{JL? ~

�~~~l UB ~EFH

C

1

11

UB and ER form

a vital _artnership

lnrdr....,

;BaJbara WCltl Wahlde,
CAMPAIGI'i ClWll,

ES'IIf:ID..\Y,
1
ddftly, ad~

Ubmrl&lt;!s
Mutiei Moor&lt;!.',

-

~bSF.f'A.a~ftubion&gt;On

, ..-.cd
~ .....

ahlde.~¥k:Jc '

ASS0C1ATE OUIIPAJGN 01A1I,

proolclcn. for ............., llln.rie-. and cbor d lht- 19'13 '

A/[mrs

~
SEf'A"J e-.c, ~

PuWc;Smb and oman

•

Un~ FadJUtes

•

"'""''a(~
"U ··aha~ dlanl:-e nr '"'*',.too' · L'f'IOiliJulo:d ll'l the pu&amp;IO aaually

Adrlllalstn.UV·•

-

Kathleen BM:hou,

...

.5&lt;&gt;ruae! atld

Rooortb

Richard jones,

StudenJ Ajfm

Karen Noonan,
UrulerflraduQ/e Academu:

&gt;'On

~ lasl

=

- - -

a I~ """"' ta&gt;.e-hromc ""' I rom lb&lt; f &gt;JJ
~ ~ dJal """'
C l• 'f"' cht-\ &lt;~ Uli'UIUt- 10
a~dlroame.-O&lt;"'""'ht!~~ &lt;"'1"-''!..l.ih
!l&gt;t"e~&gt;&lt;afltk
...
II'' • pe&lt;u:nlil8" r-or tllr
... ,., " " w ..... ..~ h&lt;lp&lt;' the). wiU
tur\SJde' l!&gt;m'll.'iotlfllheu gdtbn """'' &lt;lrriOUfll [\ tf1 .,.) l'et'IIHJI' &gt;O:JIW
out c1 u..: ~~· •su~ • a1~ ........... c Alld mal&lt; a ~ •
U..: Cllaplq!11 Dean. wJD 11:ahld.r "'1 "'he ~ &lt;i lh&lt;
&lt;'&lt;lll'lmUflll'' are 8L!II gr= and pertup. greal"' ll'WI ~...., liere'&amp; • dwJcr
to help""_,., hdped "' lhr PI"' md ro """'"""'our~
10 r.n., """' md "' h&lt;lp lhooe lt-s:s fortl~Jlatr •
~ u..: ~
u..: eiJOI'IS d &lt;w&lt;lento;.......,., OOetl

=

University UbmrieS

Cam/J41S .'ll.,.•ces

"'

e••w"""~~Fl'i'"'""' ~""""''"'~
""" •-ear,• ''On -.;~ ..d&lt;.b "'hen r&lt;• 'f'k'
had not -...a,.,.,., for""' c·l'll '""'" '&amp; e t. ~
rl~atfK."'Ol''e .. dl&lt;Ulllnut'tohe~, .. 'lt),

Connie Holoman,
Of!la of. Preslde&gt;ll
Kenneth liood,

james adbrwch,

...il

d !he ~.00 SFJ't&gt;. OOe. thr
ond ..., m. ..... lh.al th&lt;:nlUll'
,. ho u ... or hil&gt;'r I :o«l $EF A "'-""'"'"'

Jus~

R~McGill .

ahkk

t,..J gh ,.. are •
., ll:unl .. , . ....,.. 1&gt;o1 " People .,.,

Oln'lpll

~

Olaries Fogel.

Michael F. t..e\rme,
lnler'tlniAudll

~ 'f""W •

C&lt;JnltiJ!.ll1lt'j'.

Sandra Faz.eka&amp;,
Arts and l£lwrs

Bll.l&lt;le Kolesnidt.,
Adoancemetll arid
De!JelcpnumJ

u..:

lc omalk:f.

A.rr:htte.:1rm• and !'fannlnJ?

Slwknt .Finances and
Ream:ls

....... ~ doiLm. ~

tJeot- c:llJij&gt;U5 d.,,..mv,.

van &gt;AId l~S.OOJ.....,

Ru!h Dryant.

Qlrrk;a/ A/fmn

a) •

.-.... I

ASSISTANT CI\MPAJG CIWR.

john~.

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adapioo d "Oil) of &lt;::.arq • '"" abide art nr ._.._,.
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L--------------------------~

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                    <text>..

., ,

TaldnC . . OUcll

He Loves a

Outofle

L.oogtine law school
prd Albert Mugel
discusses a Mark
Twain 'mystery.' p._

IF

Advice hun UB's
experts (I) deaing with
SlllYTlel's pesky side.

2

~-~

~University faculty
praootioos are
anoo.Jnred . Plla

4,5

The World on our Doorstep
Memories
W S8VOI"
foi' . . a sts,
hosts

For tt.!/1 durs ill July.UB ..._....mini Unltad Natlons•the World Unlvenity Games took over the North ~and
,_. tl-. 5,000 world&lt;(au atllietM ca¢u..cl the attantlon a n d - of W-em New Yorkera.
'IIMI Games- to Buffalo July 8 and ........ with. spectacular fireworks cU.play at closing_... JueY18 at the new

UB Stadium. 'IIMIIItllletes, coacMs and volunteers, .. - t 20,000 strong. took -

135 c:ountriM
By MARK HAMMER

~·-

. . - l e s and , _ ., -people from

cet ~. theN will be .tortes, m.~Y -

They tell of the cultural exc:banP, the~ Htabllahed by

people who RYe wootda

....,n,

atortea with • sprinkle of human

k l - and underataolillng ttvown In for goocl ,_...,.,
Continued on page 7

Vo/vnl&lt;m pi!J&lt;Miiy carry jlJJgs 01110 , .. UB Exr/tangin$ pins: Carlos ~,.. ltft. ~
SiJWm jo!flOSJJ181J,_Y lilly I&amp; ·
· U.S. and Asillty Smith ~ Soollt A{ri&lt;u

�2
H0 N0 RS
MICil08IOlOGY NoV
DERMATOLOGY

......... .....a:

_H......_,prof.....

aorof ~and dermallllogy,

was awarded lhedegr986of
Doctor and

Honoraty
Doctor al the
Univenllty of
Trondheim ,
NonNay, during May ceremonies citKlg
his work tncluding his role as
the originalor of the use of

irTYnunoftUOf'escence in immunopathology of the slun
ENGLISH

.._,..,and
~
Albert Mu&amp;el

Solving
a Twain

In h i s - .

-law
olllce.

m_ys~
Hllrtory of Mart&lt; Twain
manuscript fascinate•
law prof Albert Mugel
By~ WATERHOtiSE
Reporter StaH

T

HI · J.fo(;AI TYPF.S call

_ _ , . DOC10RATE:
Robert Creeley, D:stln·
guished Profesoor ol Engllsll

~
I

cetll9d an
raorary OOC ·
CR£El.EY
!orale lrm1
the Lfflersity
ol New MeXICO A UB faculty
merr1:&gt;&lt;1r Slf100 1966. he was
me of ·the ongnators of the
"Biad&lt; ~- sct'Od of
poetry and was New
Vorl&lt; State's poetla!xeate lrcro
196S-91 Arrcng r.s awards
are lhe Robe&lt;1 Frost Meclal
tram the Poetry Soaety ol
AmfR::6 and- Guggen
helm I~
a Fulbrlghf awwd., 1!;138

He'""""""'

hm1 ''H1g AI .. H(' lean-,

hal k 111 h•' lt:alher cha1r
..t11d fold' h1' b1g hand~
dl,:ro'' hi\ ww~h.:oat He
\l.tft''&gt; lllh, thl' m1'1 tht· n11n ha.' left on
J,,..., nto....,n Pt:df! S~.rt:t:l and h1-. gaJX
\.C"Cill' II• gP ~ypnJ the huddmg~
ttJdl hh11..k the \It·'-' In 1m ht' 1tffKe
'-'ltll.ltl'-' OuL,Jdt: . Jnt! dt:-.pilt: lhl'
unmt·Lho~tc pn-~ntr tlf the H)all
Kt:~t:nq dlld the monoltthtt ~lab of
Llmt:n- tt· that'' (ll) mpit Tower.. he
-.c:c' the old lav. ~·h&lt;1ol bulldmg on
'Wc't l:.agk m I !.J&lt;lS. the eflon.' ol a
rmm name-d Jamt'' ha.~r GIUI.J. It)
npanJthenl) ·,llhr.u;. mthc 18~0....
tht· r.ulmml pan•L of I MY I , (ilud.·,
Hllf"''l'n,het..l dcdth 1n I Xll7
Altt·• \tlutilt' th~o:n:...,•liLPlllt'ol
v.hen !ltl IIIW &gt;Jo.i\J ft'nlt:'Tnhc!
\t•u " he -.d' ' · And 11 1 re.u.:h had,

l!lll1.'

ht•\tmJ lhc: /IIC:/IItl/'"1. II/ cUI\ fll&lt;JO I' cl
!.1~ IO.JIIIl~ thin~ .

r:uor oftht: ne"' hbrdf) and he wrote
to Twam m 1885 ~aymg . ·Here IS
th1 s ne~,o~, !I brat) . th1" wonderful
movement. and tf 'W"t' 1..'ould halft:' a
manuscnp111 would msp1n- ~pie '
Twam send.-. h1m the -.ec.:ond half of
Hud:.lt'bern Fmtl. because betwec:n
wntmg the flr.,t half and the ~ond.
the tyJX"wnh.'l had been mventcd.
and h&lt;' J had the ""-'Ond half I)'J"'d
bel me -.cndulg 11 to the pnntc:1 ..
Mugel thlllk.., th:.tt Tv. am h.ad -.cnt
the fir.! half. a handwnllcn dr.tft.
du·cctly 10 tht rnntr.:r !hi'- I\ \.1. h; . a_,

HIS lORY

NAMED WILSON FEUOW:

G.org G. lggen, [)snngUished Professor at H•stOI)'

~=~~2

"The mpiration of the le!?ui prr!(ession
shmdd be the social orr1e r. trnth.
wul credibilit\: "

the 1993-94

academ•c

I
I

IGQERS

year by the
WOOdrD'h
Wilson Inter ·
nat)()('lal Cen
tef !Of

Scholar&gt;
lggers· leHcmship p&lt;OJBCI
wlll coocem ·A history of hiS·
toncal wnnng s1nce the En·
trghtenmeflt • Fellows. who
represent n1ne states. the
O.srnct of Columbia and ten

other natiOns ....vere chosen
from a field of 802 appliCants

fHtA TER /J. DANCE
NA11011AL AWARD:

T'hotnaa P.

~te,

0C1uer tn dance a!

UB. Will

rsceMlthe Altlsnc Acto&lt;M&gt;-

ment Awatd lrmlthe NallonaJ
Associa1o1 ol Dln:e Master.;
Aug. 7 a! the essodatia1's conlfOOlion i1 0-.cago
Ralabate. who dlfec\S the
Dance Program in the
()epar1ment ol Thea!e&lt; and
Dence, has 18ught with major
dance organizationS lhtoughoutthe u.s. and Canada.
His chOieogtaphv has
been featuled 81 Ar1park. the
Studio Arena Thealra and at
the Miss Pemsyfvania and
Miss New Vorl&lt; Sial&amp; Sctlolarsl1lp pagean1S - e d with
the Miss America Program.

Jazz

Ht.., real II&lt;Ullt' '' Alt-1\.·n Mugd
. tnd he: I' a -.(•mur pannc.:r 111 the: ftnn
J&lt;tL'l.·kle . 1-=lc•-.(hmann and Mugel Tt'
gettuhJ'&gt;Offtcc . whiCh I' 1n the uppc1
,r.Jne\ of hJunta1n Pldl.a. y~1u .._,
n:nd a plu~h hut narn,)v. \taJrt"a.~
hc1ween wc1~ht~ tnmt·'· ){lU frnd
you....-ell 111 a .•on of kgal atnum ,
whert' chrna cup' nl coftce "llt'ool
1ng on kathcr bloncr.
"'B1g AI'" Mugel. \A, mner tht' ye.u
uf the lav. 'il"hoor, htghcst honor.
the l:.dwrn I· JaC1.: ~lc Award, ha,
hccn tcachmg at UB for Lhe pru.t 4-1
yea,r., k:Jor IWO houn. 00 th.a ~ r.Uil}
monung ~ fieLd.... tm. legal bustness to
the aftanoon so that he can start." out at
the mtst and try to recreate ~ pa....:
The name James fraser Gluck
ha...., come up before Gluck was the
atlumey who proposed the law school
'" 1887 and the man fascmates Mugel
because he died penniless, but with a
~ret relaung to Mark Twa.m

T ~,o~,.un tu!J Gluck ht: 1.'lM..1lJ 111.1longer
fmdttutht~tKllL"&lt; In IKX7 a\eurrlmm
Gl~k tu Twa.rn ..ayo;; 'Thanl.. you, hov.
wondc:rfultt '" that ynu fOour~:..l ttl(' liN
half of H1u.·Uebt•rn f 11m ·
"But no ont' hJt..l -.an tht· damn
thmg ," Mugd !1.3~"
'Thtn there are rumor' th&lt;~t
)otheh~ 'o; ha~ a manu . . cnpt of
Tv. atn'.., two old lad1e' had found
the ftr~t half of Hw kll'lwrn l-11111 m
a trunl.. The) tumcd out to ht.· thl"
granddaughter" of Jamt!' ha"ot!J
Gluck But \A. hal 1' thC manu,cnpt
domg m a trunk""~'"
Mugel add; that tl&gt;: Marl. T~ :un

e hav(' come back to Gluck
through a dtscusston of W
mwty water.;ofFinder'sLaw. wluch
provided a briefobstacl&lt; to the Downtown Utnry in tl": efforts to be rewutc:d with the nussmg halfoffv.1W1' s
Hud:JL~rry· Finn manuscnpt.
Mugel says. "Gluck becam&lt; cu-

whole Uung," chuck.les Mugel, ··1!1
th.at we thought we were faced wtth
sometlung tha~ '" 1887. was beyond
the memory of any man. The que&lt;-

W

T~,o~,wn

m1ght haw: wnttt:n ... ~)'
Mugel. who wrote hi!! OWn thooT) ol
hov. the manu~npl came to be rn a
trun~ m Calrfom1a. for the lilerat)
ThuNiay Club "G luck had the ""' ·
ond haJf of the manu~np1 bound at
h1!&lt;&gt; own cxpen-.e Then came the
r.u lroad pan it uf I HI.J I . he lost hi!!
fortune I t.tunl.. he too~ the f1~1 half
of the manuS~.:npt and kcp111 until he
could rc~tun: h" lortunc.- and h.a\lt::
the manu'-l.:npt bound
'lhc: ..ad lhmg ,., lhal when he
d1c-d , at the age of 45. he dted tnsol
vent . the parallel wa..., Twam. who
wa.' ,l],o ""1pt:d uul h)" t.ht&gt; rd1lruad
paniL hut who tht:n wc.-111 un tht·
... ~:tl..er nlxlr"

Mugd gr..t.duated frum LIB ·.., Ia \A.

-.choolm 1941 .at a umc whenC\Cr)
one- lult"\ol. 11 v. a,, a matter of month'
\xlort lht." l 1 S \A.UUldjOIO tht: v.ar
almmt 1mmed1atel~ , he:' .1o1ned
Kenefic~ . (()o~c . Mlh.: he\1 . Ba!oo.., , &amp;
l...ctchwurth
""That btg fmn 1t11.•~ llll thrt-'"(' '"""
)-CI' \tra•ght out ul J... v. ~· hool. and
the) needed -.umtont· 1n the tiD.. de
pa.rtment Bo..au-.c I wort." glu.-.~!1
and wa~ t.he mu't h~d) one nnt 10
pa" the phys1cal anJ JOin the anTI) .
tht") hu·edml•. "Mugel..a..d '"hhdn't

kno\A. much Jhout

M

ugcl thd

tiD. ..

gotl' V.df.

and

~,o~,h~:n

he came bad•. got ht~ old JOb
bad, ··Hut) ,tJJl d1dn't lulo~,o~, much
ahuutlax," he "a).;; ... ,,,o I deCidc:d 10
lc:am abou11t .. He leamt."d enough to
teach reiUmmg ~rv1ccmcn. and the
unl ... el"'!llly , m t1me. as~t"d h1m 10 JOin

dlld the: ~ugge"&gt;IHm ""a" thdt tht" fi t""'
be on the UOIVCI'II) '!lilt' t ill "-'\.u 1
St..rec=t The~ wa.' a h1~ T1JL ~u ' ht.

nne

L· au!-oe lh1"o 'W"Ob unpopulat \41th lh1
medJoll elite Ill the 1.."11)
" But 11 'ka.!&gt; a!o;;o k..nown thai lht·
umvcf"H)' had a limHed dJTlount "'
monc':)' Among the e lik wa.' &lt;~ m .~ r·
w1lh some power Ill the t.: lt) , and he
had the fire dcpanment condemn tht·
law 1\,(.'hoolto force them to u~ lhlT
money on a new Ia"' !!ehool rn .. t r.~&lt;l
of the med1cal bUJidmg So 11 "'.t'
thm we had a nc~,o~, bualdmg Jt We'il Eagle"
Smce tho~ daY' · Mugd bt'l!c: \t''
that a L·ha...m hru. opt:ned bet\ol. el'l
la~,o~, schoob and the bar . and th.tt 1n
cro~~mg 1t. lawyers lose the1r , .~ 11
Ill{! "illere ' o; alv.ay') a sugge..,11on 111
a ("unn1c1 betwt:en the pnll.'tKLng h.11
dlld the lav. v:huol The bar'" 1111[.'1
e... tcd 111 trdllllng. the school '' lllll'!
e ... tcd m broader a.'pecb of the lo.~ "
hl" 'rud
"I feel our problem~~ n:all) v. nh UK
legal prufesston 1he pubiK ·' pt:m:r~·
uoo of lhe profess1on 1s not faH~Jhk
and I thmk lhe publK t~ large!)' .:om." 1

m 1ts pen:epooo

thai l.awytn · prole-.

~•ooal aspua.DOO.\ have-

taken a \l'l."t lflt.i
ploc'C' to c:ornmen:tal and financ•dl Ill
terests lf thai· s gomg to bt- com:t:tt.-J 11
wtU bt- m la-w school
·-n., "''PtrdiJOO of the legal pmll·,
""'' should be the soctal onlo:• . truth.
and cnxbbtllt) Thai tlus " COII&gt;Jdcml
lo..\ Slgruficant lhan a system of la"' ''
had lbehevethatforcentunolnw~t"f\
have been finding the truth b; rul~ ~ ~~
ev1deoct: thaJ wetght:d value a.gam~t
btas or prejud.Jce., and th.as l., honofahk
The approach that tlus sysu:m " all
wrong. that the system of ~nL.., ''

I'Q\Jnda!Joo anempted tocstabl•«h that.
no matter who had owneNup nghl!lto
the manuscnpc.. no one: had the nghtto
pnnt tl Now then- 3n' four rontcndcn.
on the fteld. Glock·' gnmddaught=.
clatmmg Fuxk:r' !I Lav., the Buffalo

th~ fa~ult)

and En&lt; Cou nt y Publ.- Library .

at 77 We;J. Eagl&lt;. across from Count)

Sothoby'&lt;. and the Foundaoon
"One of the fascmauons of the

mlaeSIS.

Hall It was an old mans1on m terribk
shape the library was on the tlurd floor.
snow u.~ to get mto it. and~ were

"But I don't thmk law studenL'
today ~ any less exemplary lhan
thos&lt; I taught 81 an earuerdatc." Mugel

"Back w~n I .... a, m Ja~,o~, ~1.
fmrn · J8 to '41. and when I started
teach.tng 111 '48. ~ uruverslty wa.' a
prwate msntuuon and ~ law school
was lo...41e.d m an o&amp;d former res1dence

uon of abandonment finally settled

always skylarl&lt;s n)'lllg around
"In 1949, I was appoinled by
Samuel P Capen to h1s sd.v1sory
comrrunee. t~ b1g 1Ssue that came

the case
'"But wha! was Huck domg htd·
tng m that trunk ') It 's a mystery that

up .was ~ bu1ldmg of a new medicaJ
school "The old ooe was on High
Stsee~ near the General Hospual,

all wrong. a=os an empnness. and 10
that emptu.:sslav.-y= find nora11fic-"
oon and drift mto their own finano.·•al

satd "lt'sbocna wondetfuluh:tohav&lt;

been associaJOd with young

poop!&lt;.

and tohavehad a large fum also toSI&lt;e!
through tife s difficulues.
"And it all started because I wo«
glasses, and they thought r d fat! 1h&lt;
phySical."

�3

Buffalo News gift will provide scholarships

~~~
---

T

N BuffuJ,, Nt"wi waH pruvade a
S I 50,&lt;XX) grftto UB for both unn:
~otncled ~.:ampu~ "uppon llnd ,up-

port tnr 'ioCholaro.hlf&gt;" OVC:f 10 yc:aro.,

II wa." annour'll:etl h) Ronuld H

\tt:lll.

l IU

prt:\JdCnl fur
and Jc:vdoprnt:nt
VU:C:

UniVC:f".H)"

&gt;II)'·Wldepnoobeswilenoverthe.-l"grell!cst
"We at TM Buffalo Nl!ws are commm.ed to
!he excellence of the UruversaryatBufTaJo,and
loc:xcellencemthe fieldsofprofess10nal news·
paper management. JOUmah!l.m, advertl'img
andcJrculauon." ~1d Stanford L•~) Buffulo
N,.~ \ pubh&lt;iher and pre&lt;ildent

ad

ho/a hi
l....,u~htllar.hiP""""•IIh!:d"""dfl.b.idnnuall~
SC
rS /JS Wi/1 he/p
oul,t.andmg undc:rgraduale 'ludcnt' theu
talenJed, deserving students
JUrltm or -.enutr year who dt::rnon,Lr.Uc abtlll\o
iUld tlllt:rt!\1 m JOUmaJtlilll. new' '-"nltng ,;,
defray their colle~:e costs. "
new,papc:r management. advcrtt,lllg_ and
\dJlL('OK:Ill

n_ ~
,, I fte

111

1n

~.: tr

tu latum. wnh preference fOVen 111under reprt&gt;
-.c:niL"t..l cthllll nttnontu:'
\1..hol~htp rt:ttpu.:nh,..., ho..., Ill he.· ~noy, n
,,, 11ll' Bufla.ln Nt•...,, ~f..'hol..,... ctl•.o mo.n hd\t'
npP'•nurut tc' 111 p..tntup.tlt· 111 Jl&lt;~td mtcm ... htp'
dl J1u ..... t'\t I Of C:\fl' ... UH'II•IIlhCI eJUL..tiHtfl&lt;lJ
t·nh..tnLt:ntC'nl

&lt;It

IJ\ tilt·~ &lt;JI tht'

1\t:\1.

'P:.t~·r ·\d

dlltofl&lt;tl "''"' ~uppon ...,dJ J'ln"uJc: h•r UIU\t' l

l'nlt' II ""oh .U..Ii.!pltt.l In Ill ;J full length him ln
&lt;,l·nn;m\ "here 11 h&lt;.~d carl1cr fl•Lt:l\ ~:J lht"

I-I£&gt;WS Hureau Stall

N

0\ ...J l "'i ll&lt;.nmPndh.·c.k·nn.m
' ' .J ....

nit' I lund "''"ld h•m1' .tnd

'-llnlc'n•t humc1r lit''' "'dt·h
rt.")!JHJt-J ht:rt' .tfld .Jhn I.Jd .J' 1 lilt'
pj •\triCfh.il ' k,IJIII.f.' \l.flll"r' 11!

l'\fX'rlllll' lli.JJ fiLIInn

•\ I &gt;t'itfl}!Ut\hnl ProiL''" 11 nl I n~Jt,h .1nJ
&lt; •1111p.tr.t ll\l' I Jlt'I.JIUrt .Jl t ' li h·Jcnn.m hil'

.• , , ~lllfh..llllll•ll·IY,fflJ! ol/111111)! Amt:nt ..tn Ulll
\ ~..·r...,tl\ &lt;JUdlt'llLn Whtk he ha' lc•n~ garnt'rni
lllli.•tl applau-.c.· Jn,tn ~T! Ir t' rn tone ~ lttcrdf'\
puh l~talt u n ~ tht• ~t'nt'ml A,rur:nc. &lt;ill puhltL h.J ..

~

nt"ver ht'ard til htrll

lnl:un.•rx·

h11'Wt'\CI

ll•llhlltln 111 and

d

""hcrt• thL·re

ldi~t' dttd!l'nu·

c~ .~ l1111)!

l11r t'\pt'n

nlt" nLal lltt·ratun: . 1--cdennan '" .t '''"

The&lt; jcm)llll puhlt~hmg.hnu'-t: Man • \ t•rla~
rt."\.t'ntl; puhl!\hcd the ftl"ol \lllumr t•f h1~ auh'
tuugmph) " bn Vc:ro;;1on Me tnt' ~ l.dlt·n, D1e
l·ruhcn Jahrt." " t ·A \ Nwm of M\ lfuldh1H1tJ
11h f..url\ Yt'an 1
He' wntmg' Ilk ludmg pot.' II) ,l'\...,&lt;i)\and
worl.' ol ~:n l!ll'lll have bet:n w1ddy trnm
l;ncd tn f·.urope A Ill'"" ~·cdennan nu~&lt;d ha'
ha-n km•wn to'-t:ll a.' man) a~ 1\IXX"&gt;c.oplc~ 111
a fe..., day" Ill t:apHaJ, h~e Berltn. Bw.:harr't
and Budapc'lit and ha.., won -.('\C::TJII11aJor L·u
mpcan luerar;. awant...
AI..,.•Jntcmalionall) ~no~Wn ..t.' a lrdll'&gt;latur ,
t''"NJ) I\ I and Samud Bed.. ell " .: holw . the
h-c:nch-bt'm Fedennan ha' '&gt;Ccn ht.., n"" n wor~
tr.mslat~ Into &lt;;even lan ~uagc\,IOC i udJ n g.Japa·
ne'&gt;(" Ont· of h 1 ~ e1gh1 nnvdo;,, ··Douhle t)r
Nothmg." won the Fram·e, Stdofl Ftctton
Pn.tc and the Panache EApenmental h el ton

We,tem"-e"'- Yor1.mu,tmaletnttrckrtt•tlf!cr
the vef) be~! educatiOn and lr.tJnln~ lt)tiUf \C:f\
l-.:'1 'tudt'nl\ \\ t' areextn:mel) grateful to Mr
L1p-..e) and h"' (.'0/le.tgues for thetr ""J!lmgne"
to won. ...,1th l 'R ..tnd help ou1 'lullc:nh rt)(t\t'
.theaJ ··
Currentl) o.1 lllembc:r uf
Huffalu ,, ,,.,,

rn,

Tht' gcncrou' gc... ture by 71rl' BufftJI(INt•h'
""dl mc;m &lt;l great dt"al IL) our Lampu.s .md uur
'IUdcnh · 'illd l 8 Pre'&gt;ldem Wilham R
(tit: lOCI
I Jrf ,-\·,.. .. ' -.c.;holat".hlp' wtll help
l.th:ntcd •k~·n mg 'tudenl' --e"pec1ally lhu-.c

Federman autobiography
is published in Germany
By PATRICIA DONOVAN

from undem:Jlf"senuxl gmupo.-&lt;Jefr•y the1r
c.:ollc:gt COSL'i, cuJuvatc sagmficant JOUmaJa~lll
and management "'kill' and get the han&lt;h-.m
work c:xpene~ that 1\ \u "aluahlt' m a lltUf!h
Job market
"We very muc.:h &lt;.~pprt::t.Jdlt." I ht .-._ .... ~\, ,up
pun." Gretner adc:kd ··we t.a._c a lot ol pndt: 1n
lhl"!o UOJVC~If)';.:unHOUOII~ pi.lrtncr.hlr I[ l"
exactly the lmd 1.1f mutuaJ efron thdl l 'A dlld

( ll'nTI,fO N..tllonal Boo~ ·\~ard
t·t·dcmMn. ""h'' .... me' 1n 1-rl·n~..· h anti f·n·
~ l 1"h

.tl"'""'lllthc 14X'iAmcnc.:anRo(lkA\.Io·,ml
II 11 tht' lhl\t'l ·'\mile:~ on 'A ..t..'htngt1m "iqu&lt;Jn: ··
In tu .. &lt;Jutnhutgr..tph~ ... cdcnndll e:o.plorc'
tht' u:ntr.Jl traunUttll ht" I lie h1,o..., n 'un 1\..tl
tn tht• I&lt;Ju:' nl hi' f.und~ ·, Jef.lth A~ d ~oung
ht '' he "',1, h1ddcn Ill &lt;1 du~·t b) h" mothc1
y,IJt'll the (jl·,t,Jpi.t td!Ht' !11 .UTC'I h" Jl&lt;lft'nl~
.tnd"''tcf',_.tll{ll whtlmillcdmAu'&gt;!.:hwJV lllc
npcnen('t' h..i' dt:t:ph. lllfomlt~d h" l!tcr.m
'WOrJ... gl\ 101-! II U rle\:ultar t'Vit'l\ t:ne" that l\ hi'
lllt:mry 'rgnature
··1 tt· nd no1 to luuk a1 tht: e~pt!nt:nu• d1
f'l.'ttl\ .. ht .....n '· "bu1 m'teac.J. urtle what hap
pcnc::d. tl"plaong the tr.tuma 1ntoexpenmental
pm-.c ··A nother elc:mcnl of h" . . tyh.-- the u-.c
ol hlad humor hl e\plort' the: nuance' of the:
Hok11::au"' ha.' d"turhet.l '"me: of h1" rcade"
.mJ \aU'IifJcd ut.he"
··Man) wnlef'i&gt; who ha\c antt.:ulated the1r
Ht11tx.·au'1 expenence!'l explo11 thetr pam ... '-&lt;~)..,
...edem1an 'The y demand puhl1c ane nuon "'m·
pi) becau~ the; h.avc .;,uffered Bu111 ...ecm' hi
lllC' thai after Wt' hearth!' kmd of'\ !Cllm' l,lt)r\
P\ t:r and m cr a gam. then the ... uhJCI..'I bct·om&lt;."'
hartal It 10!'1(;., 1 ~ power lo appall u'
''Tnt' Ho locaust made tht ~ temhlt' \ttud m
m~ ltfe All my hfe I have been lr) mg to comt·
to 1em1' w uh th1 ' huge absence. l.r)tng to
tr.tn,fonn 11 But I'm lnlere-.ted not only mtht·
honur of the mdl\ 1duaJ hiStone\ . but 10 the
""'") ... unnur~ cm:k the .;,tof) all our il"e'.
t"vadmg 11 . 'h1cldmg oun;c lve' from•t~ 1mpil
LJ llons even a" we 1r) to understand them "

Give Your Child a jewish
Learning Experience ...

a.htonaJ \taft t.~::a~:he\ H JOUmal"m ..:nui'C .tl
the Unl\tCI"oll). ;md fl\t(' UB '&gt;tudent... .!It:: 1n1~m
ltl~ at

the: fll'"'-\~pcr th!\ ....umrnet
The unt ... er,ll) offe:" a \pt.'1.1o.~l OIJJ"' 111
JOuma h~m . .tlthough 11 du:' not h&lt;Ht' J reg"
lCred degree progr&lt;~m

Campus Partdng
and Transportation
Offices Reorganized
Following • reorganization of
Campus Park•ng and Transpor
1a11on Serv•ces all bus•ness tunc
11ons ('93- 94 park1ng perm11s
bus•ng access serv•ces shuniE·
1ranspona1•on pa•d-park•ng Op·
era11ons) w•l ' be housed at 10?
Spauld•ng Ouad Bldg ? ElhCOII
Complex Nonh Campus
Buslneu FUnctions Offtce
General tn1ormatl()n

Off•ce of lhe Dcrecror
Fa&gt;

All clepartlnent.l requests for
guest permits and correspondence addressed 10 the dlfector
should be forwarded to the
Spaulding off•ce
Also effecuve •mrned•atety lhe
17 D•efendort Annex off•ce on the
South Campus w1ll be renamed
"Park•ng V•olalions Off•ce Coor
d1nat1on of alllicket•ng enlorcP
rnent appeals heanngs and
fine-related act•v•t•es w•ll lake
place there

General rnlormat10n

Parkrng enforcement

Fax

829 2884
829-ZBSt8?9-?888

VB andKonan
to begin student
exchange
By P'ATIIICIA DCMOOVAN
r&gt;~ews

Bureau Staff

U

BPRI-.SIIli-.Nl Wolh•mR
Gre1nc:r &lt;1nd Kazunon
Yua."'-1. pn:'1dentof Japan' '
dl\tmgul\hcd Konan Un1
\t'l"oll~ "'gned a three-year agreement
Jul~ I~ lntltattng an academ iL 'tudent
C\Lhan~e progr.un ~t~Wt:t:ll Ur !Wn
v..houl .. r1lt: agret:nknl make\ Knnan
ltk: fJfthJdpijlle~UOJI.t:l"olf) V.lth \lohtch
I R hd' dO d1.. adem!t n c h.~nge pro

!!r.un
In oiddJ11on 11 1) u.t'J ~ho '' .J pn•
lt""'rttl .appltt:d ph\ ,K,&lt;~I Kcman. the
J:.tpanc'ol.· delegatttm mt JuLktJ Ma.....ttll'-1
()t.t. unr\t'l"olt~ \ 11..e pn-.. u:knt.md pm
lc"t)f nl .tppht~&lt;.J phHIL' Jun ' Kht
K.d"'a~1 prnle ....orPI pt)ltt!~.:.aJ -.t1c:ncc
1111d dm."\.lnr ol th~ J\.ondll lntcma

lltlflal 1- \\ twn~e (

emer .•md 'r t "'hlhtl..o
plltfl",'\(lrtlf f.ngil\h
l R repre~·ntJit\L'" tn iidt.hunn to
f&gt;rt:...,ldt:OI (.Jretnef tnc.:IU(kd J&gt;n.JVU\1
-\,uon' Bl,,._h \ tc:phen C Dunnt:n
l'H \ tc.t' prmo-.tlllr tmem.atttmo.~l edu
Lot linn .tnd d!rct·tor of the unt~&lt;CI"otl~&lt; '
lnten..,.\c f-.nglt ... h J..mgu.Jgc: Jn,lHut.c
( )!HIIfl. d.'\~"ll..ldte

l~an'

"-c:rr:-

Cimnt. Barr:- 8

Bmcr

Jtl't.'j&gt;h J Tufanc:lltt . •md n:pn:....cn
t.IIJ"l"'t'f' Mll}lJ' llK·ulllt''·departmc!nL~
.anJ !ht· l 'R \\c,rhll .. mgua~t:'' Jn,LI
lUll•
t\tnl.ln l fll\c:f'-ll\ hru. prt:'('nted ;1
..... htlla!".h!p to tht: pro~rdm · , r.~ par
tlupam. Scott Kuehn . a semOf m UB · ~
lntemat!flnal 'tud1e' program l·k w1!\
enter Konan rn Seprember
The fil"ol Kunan o;;Judent\ wrll begrn
lhl'H nne' \tt:ill" matnculauon at l ' B tn
\cpLcmher IW-1 .md. ltLe rno-..1 for
~1g.n t::~.Lh.mge ' tudenl\ , ""til be ~
,,mlla tcd lmmed!ittel) tnto l 'B '
regu lar aL&lt;u.k:nuL program:.
The n~.:hangc: prognm at Kunan
tlpcr&lt;.~tl·d through thai umvcr-.tl) · , In
tc:m.altnnal 1=-:u:hang:e Cent.er Wll!'l ck·
\clope·d ltl )t::af'&gt; dgo dlld "geared 10
l:ngll'h ~pc::a Ltn g '1Udcnt' nf tner
dgt" II\ mg 'tandarJ, from tht.' l l n1t~d
...,tate.., Cdlldda . f:nJ!Iand and Au'
dlld

tr:.tlld

l ' 8 'tudcm. . no"" dllend ~5 forc1gn
unt\t::l"o lllC' thmugh exchange agree
fll('flh and \.IUd) abroad program~ m
t-uropt.· A'1a. Au')tr.tha and Ce ntral
o\men~a Ten new pnl~num. are pend
tng .... 1th '~:hoot' m S~na. Hong Ko ng .
~Jl~lanJ . ThaolanJ.

Honduras. finland.

&lt;\u,tr.tlm. Canad;,, and France

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�__ .___..., __

4

noHM.bbop.ptuc dalabucs by &amp;CMkmK

Kt-

.....,.a_•-"

ASSOCIATE PROFf.S.\CR
Dqx.lr1ment of Comptrtf't" kuma•
Qsaknvany hokb a 8 E. from the B1rta ln'&gt;ll
lute: ofTccftDoloay It Scwnot m Pllam. lnd1a.
an M.S from SUNY a1 S1ony Broot. . and •
Ph 0 . from SUNY as Albany
Oatravany's rc:sc:arch mten:~u p1manly
conccm aiJOOthnuc aspecu. of very large-5Calc
intcp'l;lion. He IS !he au! hot of numc:roos JOOr
naJ artidet and ~tthmcal rcporu

......-a-c

ASSOCIATE PROFf.SSOit
Dr!pnrtml'ttl of Ek&gt;etrlcal ami

Comput(&gt;f' Er~gfrU!rT"lJJ
lbrra:.pie.ntofaPh.D fn&gt;mtheUn!le~nyof
Illinois MediCal Center, Cbc:ns lw abo !aught
111 UB Depan:mentsof8&amp;olO,:ICIII Sclt:nces and
Anatormcal SC1cnca: and a1 Pace: Uruvc:nlly
from 198~-87. hewuarc:scan:hsc!efK~ 1nthe
Phys.a Drpanmc:nt at IBM T J Wauoo Re·
sean:h Cc:n1er Amana hts research concc:rns
art the devd opment of an X -r11y prop:uon
m1crotoeopc and micro CT syscc:m for rtUitenll.i
and biomahcal sc~en«!&gt;

.,.,...... N. a..n..ta
PROf'ESSOR
Departntf'111

~s.c:m..
ASSOOATE PROfESSOR

Departmem of Armtomfcal Scil'uce:.

lbr rc:cip•c:nt of a B.S degree in biOlogy and
mathematiCS from SUNY at Albany. and I
Ph.D. 1n anatomy and neurobiology from Case:
Wc:slt:m Rcsrrve Un• ven uy. Cohan 1:10 the author of OUITN:TOUS pubhcat!Of'IS
From 1980-86.hewasaposuioclorajltS50Clalt
• the University of Iowa Oq:.rtmeru of BK&gt;Iogy

em..

ASSOOATE PROFESSOR

{)(panme11/S of ITriudoruoJog)'
arrd OraiBio/OfV'

Hoi~

nl~llant.~~CDmmunu-u/1011
n~·rl

1\.'&gt;....0C\AT£ flMOFE!&gt;...'&gt;Utl.

l"ll11lrr1nw?ll nf F.U..-t.,t e1l mul

-R.-...Jr.

(_nnlpul•-r /; t 11JIIWI'rl'l8

htS M .S l:. f: (romlhc Uruand htl PhD from the
UntYen tl y of M•nne~ota o\ohyo Ouduatt
School of MC'd~emc
HC'
a n:~an:h IOI;:tcnll~l at ThomwnAt:huya

~r:tved

\ltrmy of

Mm nc'~

w.,.

CGR at 1\,.y lc' Muuhneau\ , haoct' beforr
,ommg rhc UH tacult) Ht' ~llft'h mten:st~
mclud(' tmagt proce&lt;ismg and anJI)'"''" com
pule! nl&gt;ltlll and roboMiCS

-.anyL--.
/\.'\...,(}( IATI f'RIJF'L\.'&gt;OM
I\.1)(Jrfm••Pil uf fJr(JfJIJI':,;u fll

'W. ll'1ttt'5

A membe• of the UB faculty smcC' 1981
Auerbach recc tved hts R A fmm the' Unu·cr
'''' ofCIIIfOmtlllll Sant..a BIU"barrland ht\ Ph D

lrtmlthc l ' mven.ll)' of~gon
Auerbach's grnnt suppon ov~ the paSI 10
ycuf\ ha .. hc:c:n m

cJ.CC\\

re'-t'arrh mterc-;b mcluck

ol \I m1l1tcm
rr~mbnu~

tran~mt'i~ton ,

1-h ~

bttlfl'h)''

tc\. hgand-protc:m m•croct••&gt;n\. chen"cal
ap11c

Emt'"Sitll Prrrprc-

'&gt; "

mn channel mech.:antml!&gt;

chenu.:al l..mdll.."" W1d compulallonal bloph)''&gt;tC!&gt;

l•mm 19M9- 92.hc:~rveda.\&amp;nltmbcTofthc
Cdluhu Neurob1olng) RevieW Punel of the
Nauonal St.'1ence fouuodatmn He T\ an ad hoc
11"\'IC'"'er for Snrm r. Rtoph\'.flr'tll Jounwl
Amrncun ltlurru:rl of l'huwlng\ 11nd the Jour
fllll uf Cdlulur NrurobwloJ:\ amont! other
JOUrnal~

AmiN.-

PROFESSOR
/)t!partmt"'/1 nf MtcrobloiORJ'

lka.m !) ch.a11 lf lhr FDA·~ Anu-lnfn:t1ve
Adv!SOf)' Comm11tce Hc du~cted an mnovamr proJCCI established by the FDA and the
lnlccuuus Dl..ea...o Soctel) of Amenca to det~rmll'll!' how 1hr FDA mtghl speed the approval
proces~ fOJ nc""' ;anl!b!Ohcs and enhance lllo
1001111unng of those oo thl' mar\et fot early
warmng!i of adven.r effects
Editor-m-ch•ef of Jnfrcmm:J m Mcd1cmr
Beam kil\ alened the: pubhc on way\ to avo1d
~:».lt h1n g 1nfccuous "bugs·· and his rtscan:h
filldlng~hav.-bttn publi.;;hcd wn:kl) tlr ISBI\0
""wc•ate ch1ef of \Iliff for cdocuhon at the
Buffalo VA Mffiu:al C'enrt:r

J. Gayle Beck
"'-'IOCI"Tl' l'kOft-~'01{
J)e:ptrrtnwm of Pn\. hl•l'4{l

lkd,, 11 I ~7~ mtiNntl r um l11udt' ~r.M.Iuatr of
Bmwn Un1ven.TI) . n:Cei\C\Ilhr PhD m dm1
Ulji~)Cholugy lmrn SUNY Ill Alhan}
Tile- autht)l' of hooLs, Jlilpt'f\, W11de\ and
re\ti"W), ReeL I) mu~ rnted m the ~search of
human psychophy\iology 11nd bcha••u,-al metl1
.:1ne She 1\ tec!plc'nt of thr 1990 Outstanding
l!duc11or A"'ard from The Nauon.1l llon\lf
SOCII"!~

~B...._....,.()( IATF f&gt;HOFE."''')(HI
of Orrbupa.t&gt;tlln

A:O.~IAri'I'HOIT,'ol:ljl

I k1Nlrf11W,II

fJt1Jt'rnmer11 uf J1NII tl111'

Bone. whOftUI\cdh" a A dC'grec lnm1Hopr
Collrge 111 UnllaJid. Mtchtgan and hT) M D
degree from UB. wa.' previously ll»IS!aot pro
r..s..or of orthopaedtc ~urgcry ut UB
llKdirrttNnf The Mu~u1tKkdcta l Trauma
Scr. •cc at the Ent County Medtcal Center,
Bone wa.~ the pnnc:lp;i1 m~·e-:l!gaior of 11 \tudy
un the: benefits of euly ,·crsus delated frx1un:
~tab! IJ uUion of thigh-bone m lniUfT\11 paue11ts
The rer1p1cnr of the !Yin Amc:ncan
Onhopacdlc AsSOC!alioo Trnvehng f"t'llowshtp.
he IS the a.uthor o~ numerous pubhcauons

HIK'r. who TCUIY~ h1~ fi A and M I) dc~rtt'i
from J ohn~ ll upLm~ Umven:Tt) . \lo8( an m·
~truc! Of m mcd1C1~ Ill Tho: Vandl'rh1h Umvrr(11) School of Med!CIIl(' t'cfott JOining the U8
fa..•uhy m 11,186
lbe aUihor of IIUIIKruu' paj1Cr", HIK'r I\ 11
fdlo"" of the Amencan College of Pht,l&lt;=lllm
and 11 member ofboch The Amc:nc:un Federat1nn
for Chmcal Research and the NatiUnal AN).
CIIIIIOII of VAMC Rhc:umatolugl\1~

CleaopA.Bamoott .
I'ROI''f.SS(JM

Departm&lt;:&gt;rlt uf CummTrmnrllttPJ

-B.
A.~IA1T

ScierJCI'

BMilett f«'CI\'ed hi' B.A and M A dcgrt't''
from the Umvenuy of IIITOOIJO and h1~ do~:l&lt;,..ate
m ~'tlmmun !c!li!OO frum MTChTgan Statc UmVl'f'LI)' HI\ d•"-·-';eniiiTOO focuSC'd on bilmgual
mformat1on processmg Smce That umc ,
H:unctl'' ttscurch ha~ focused oo thc role of
cummumcallun m SOC111Iand cultural change 111
avanctyofcontuts
H.- hlb also taugh1 at Rrnsscl~~~er Polytech
m~· Institute and the UmveNII)' of Ten.\ at
Ausun Hr served as a reseateh fellow at thr
Ea.~t - W~1 Center m Honolulu and • ~ The author
of fi,·r boob mcludmg HunJbooj,· ofOrgum·
::UflDt!Ul Comnuuuca/UHT and mo~ than SO
chap(ers and art!C:~i He has p~.\C'nted abouT
IOOconfm:ncc papen and is lhe cumn1 editor of
PfTJ!rrJ.S m CC)mlmlmcarwn Sn~ncf' and Orsu

Llltlcen-

UBRARIAN

tmtl

er~gw£t•rlr1R

A D1plomatc of thl' Amencan Board of
PmodontoJosy. Coht:n rece1vcd h1s B.S from
Cornell UnlveBII)' and his M.S . Ph.D. and
D.D.S depics from UB
A mcmbCT of the editona1 board or the
Journal of

Llbmn·

Bu))T hold\ B.S lllld M Ed degree~ . both m
biology, from F~ma Slate College. m addtlloo to the M L S from UD She: camc to the
um\·en.ll) as a libnman SC\·en years ago and I)
now assocuuc ITbranoo and head of ~fen:occ
and colltti!On coordnu~tor fl'f the Science: and
f::ngmeenng L1braty
Htr most recent puhhcatmn a b•bhotHll
ph) of mooog rllptuc work!!; 111 bTomatenal,-.
appeamt 1h1s summer 10 JourtWI of Applt~d
Bwmllft'nuiJ. refkctmg her 11lCr.'it re«nl fl."
'l('arch mterclit. whiCh lli b!OO'IIltt'nllls literaTure
Shr IS past chan of the B1olog•cal Sctences
Dlv•s•on of the Spcolll Ubranes Assoc:TatiOfl
A..~ pan of a grunTfrom the Couocil oo Ubnry
Resourtts. she 1s mvest1gaung Thc rollec1Jonof

P~nodofltoiOIJ.

he

of Medtcmt•

l'hert'Ciptc:nloftheM.O fromthc:Umvc:nltyof
London. Otani pncd 1he UB f.culty 1n 1983
after tcachtnl! a1 the Uni\·Cf'SII)' of Mdugan
Med~eal School
1l1t' author of nume.rou' att!Ck~ tn ~fereed
JOUrMh. he: iS CUJTC:ftlly pnnc:tpafinVni!JilOr
fOf a snady on ~gulalton of pulmonary ciiCUlauon funded by the NHLBI lnvcsugator lmua~ResearchGrant

...... Lat............. J-..
ASSOClATf PROFE.~R

Deparrnwm uf Mk:robiQ/agl
HammatU.J(Wd. who rttc:i\'ed hc:f 8 Sc and
M..Sc from the Untvers•IY ofStoclthofm, hokb
theM D and Pt1 D from the Karohnsk.a lnsc•wte. also m STockholm She was a resc:an::h
ISS!lilanl pmfc:uor at Karohnsb IMI!IU\C befortpmng the UB faculty 111 1986 1br author
o( numcmuspubi!CilJOOs, Harni1'W'IIr.j61dsc:rvcd
as pnliClpal mvc:susawr for a study of the
molecular mteracuons bc'lwttn the EpstemBatt \lfUS and HIV . funded by thr Na11onal
)nslttute of Allergy and lnfect•ou' D1scak

-{1987-1992)

A-~IA TF PROff\~OR

of LeamiiiiJ tmd 111Stnrctiull

1br rcc1pient of B.A.. M .Ed., and Ph.D de:~ from UB. Ck~TN:nt~ taught previously al
Kc:n1 Swe un,vcmty H1s cm:hlll u'ICiudc: numc:rou5 artiCles, reviews and books. espc:c•ally
on the use of oomputen '" pnrrwy. elementary
and middk schoois.

-E.

...,.... J. a. cnnt
t&gt;ROFESSOII:
Depamru.&gt;nt

eac:e and ttdmo&amp;oty htnnes

rctt~vcd

the

New Yort SwdUUP New Faculty Developmc:niAWardln 199J . In 1992.hewuhonoct:d
by the Soc~y for the Advanormc:nt of Dental
Research for fostc:nnslhe princtples of scudc:nT
researeh He tw served as faculty mc:nlOr for
lhe Mtnonty U1gh School Research AJ)Inntltt

Prugmn.

- . c . Cromley
Dcpartmer/1 of Archttectun•
Cromley rra:tvcd t.'r Ph.D from the C11)
Un1versuy of New VorL Graduate School. hc:f
M A from the New Yori: Un1ven1ty lnslitutr
of Fult' Aru. and her B.A from dE Urnven1ty of
~MSylvarua.ShepnedthrUB facuhytn 1980
Her boob tnc:lude Alonr Togrlhrr A Hts ·
torvofNr"' Yort 's Enrh Apurfmrnu. fur whtch
she rttC:I\'edthe 1992 Vemaculat Arch!tCCiutt
Ftm~m'~ Abbot Luwt'll Cummmgs Award

Dt'fXH"tment &lt;f" Atta/OmRal 'il'INICt'!&gt;

Hard. whon:cc•ved8SandM .S degrrcsfmm
the Unn·rntty of Wuh•ngTon and a Ptt.D '"
biOiog•cal.sctencn from SUNY a1 Albany. w"
an alSJSllnt profcsSOJ at Oregon State: UnTverSll)' and a research auocTate at Dan mouth Col
lege before JOining the UB faculty tn 1985
In 1992 and 1990, Hard roce:tnd commencbl!oos foe- 1eachins eJ~.cellenc:c: from the Sludent Committee: on Tc:ach•ng Awards The
author of numerous SC!enUfK pubhca!!OO~ and
papen. he 11 cum:ntly resean:htng "Waveform
andCoordinatlonOfR~ptratoryC.ha'· undcf a
grant from the Na110nal lnsututeS ofUcahh Hc
IS a ~TN:mbc:r of !he Amc:ncan Soc•cty for Cell
Bwlogy and a ~v1cwcr for Cdl Mo11lm and
TissUf' ond Ull. among other JOUmlh

Oealfrey P. IMnf!l
PRm"f.SSSR
Departmt!nl ofMed•clrw

Hemg. who recc:•~ed hl5 mcdtcal degn::r tn
1967 from Case Westc:m Rcscnc Un1vemty
and dld h1s mediCal residency tf11ln1ng at Broru.
Muructpal Hospatal, was professor of mediCine:
at Wastungton UnJYmuy School c.f Mechcu~c:
befa« bcins named duu:torofthe 01vu:tons of
HemaTologtc Oncology and Bone Marro...,
Tran~anWlon. Dep&amp;rtment of Mechc1ne. 11
Roswell Pit\: Cancer lnsiTIUte m 1991

-A.ASSOCIATE I'ROFES.-.QR
[)('partmenl ofGynecolog)• and Obsterncs

1M rtetp1c:nt of M.S. and Ph.D degrees from
the: Un•ven1ty of Rochc:slc:t School of Mcd• Clne. Holm recewcd a Rc:sc:arch C~ Dcvcl·
opment Award from the Nauonallnst!tutes of
Ueahh 1n 1991 In 1987,hcm::ewcdthe HIU'Oid
C Uodge Award for Especially Mentonoos
Research from the Un1versuy of Rochester
School of MedJCUK
Ht hi) wnnc:n w1del)' on ihe rok of surfac Lant m treatmg lun1 d!$CIVS II!§ CTCdil!i ai:!OO
mcludc'numcrousa.ruclc:&lt;ilnpttJ-~v•ewed,l(lW ­

-M.-

nah Holm t) a member of the Amencan lborDCIC Soc1cty and Amt'm::an V'h)·~m l og • cal
Society
f&gt;KOFI-'..'-'&lt;lR

IA1Kirtm(''lftl}l-ttmo mrt .\

Gradmlle X:booJ uf H.t./11( m11m
Cunumng' n:ce•ved hi' 8 A tkgttc frum The
Un,,·enuytlfMTch•gan. andht)M A. and Ph.D
degrcc:liftumUarvardUnT\'Cf\11)
' lbc author of't" bookJO. ed!tor. co-edltOrO(
tran~lator of an add1t1onal su. volum6. aod
numerou~ anl(•les. Cumnungs \3)'~ h1s g~IIC\1
mterestn 111 butldmg lhconc:~ of 'Wh)· and ho"'
systems change: 1111\ wa~ 1 maJor theme 111 h"
d•~senauon on Unt\t'f"\tl)' reform m Japan cmd
the ~Ubject of h1 ~ fir;.t t..x&gt;L. Educutwn and
f.quollt\ 111 lafHin. 1-tc alw researches edu~·a
1100 111 de\ elopmg countnl". subjCCT of l...r'"'
Ccw Pr.rrwn E.durauon A Su Nuii/Jn Stutl\
L!stt'd 111 Who s Who 111 Amrnrtr ·Easl.
Cummmg~ h\ed for ncarl) I "i year&gt;.'" A'u'

-E.

Duffey

CrJJ PhuiVIOI(\

_L.._

"~'IOCIATF

•

I'ROI"F"''..'ol:lH

I'Jt.1Jartm,•m of TT..litun, _,
lludaL.11 wmmacum laude gmdua1eof Amhcnot
College. rece1vcd hi\ mc.•thcul dc:grec from The
Joltn, Hopkm' Um,en.uy Schonl of M~•c•ne
In

Duffey. who recened hts 8 S d.-grec from
the Umversll) or to ... a. and h1~ M S and
Ph.D desrees from Camc:g1r-Mdlon UnT verMty.JOtnc:d the UB faculty as an a~s!stant
professor m 1979 Hr ...,as prevmusly a VIS·
illnJ ns1Stan1 profcssor m chem~~:al engT ncertng 81 Carneg 1e-Mellon , 11 poMdoctoral
fellow a~ the Unl\erS!I) ofPmsburgh School
of Med1cmc. and th r L' S A11 Forcc' \ fir,l
bmmrd1cal engmee1
The author of numtrnu ~ JOurnal1!rucles.
boo ~ chapttr). repon' and absuact~. Duffey
I\ currently '"''CSt!gattng ..cholmc:rgTC ttgulauon of mlesllnll pOI:ISSIUm 111111.\porf' Ill II
study funded by the Cy~lll Ftbro\1\ FoundatiOn For The lu~t 10 yeah. he has rcce1ved
.-nnll nuous ~uppon from The: NlltTOnllln\\1 ·
lUIC .~ of tleahh. Cither II) prmC!pal 10\.C)ItgD
tor or co-t nvesllga1ol tic " a membc:r of the
l'dttonal board of !ht Amrnron Journal of
Phvswln~t'

lbc rec!plenJ of M A and Ph D degrtt) from
th&lt; Un1vt':~ll) of Ch1cago. l-lolmei lw, been a
V!Slllng proftl&gt;WI' l ithe Un1vemtyof Mamtoba.
Waync Stale Uni\'C'i"ll)'. An.wna State Unu er\lly. the Unncr&lt;&gt;ll) ofCaiJfOmla at Santa Barban and Mona ~h Uni\C:rs!t) 111 Melbounw:.
Austn1l1a
A mcnlhl::r ut theahlortill booud of the Jour
nul of Ma.-~conomlf J . he •s the author of
numerou!&gt; profes~•onal pubiK."atiOOJO and IS listed
111 Who 'J Who 1n -'mt'rrcan l:.ducultUn

1979

A nt'Oruttolog.1s1 ill Children' s llrnopual of
RUffalo. he ,, al\0 a frlkl"' of the Anlt'ncan
Academy of Pedu!.lnn and Amcncan llloroc•.:
Soi.·tety Hudal wa) oa the faculty 11 Johns
Hopl1M Un1,ermy School of MediCine' from
1984 unul JUIIITng the: faculty of the UB m~&lt;hcal
..chooltn 1990 ~It' Was ptt\'IOUSI)' an tiSIStanl
professor of pcd1atn(') at Johns Hopkm\

-L. . . . .
A."-'IDCI" Tl- I'KOF£S~k

/Npanme•r11 of'-'ommuttiC:Ulffm

1bc: n:t:!pltnt of PhD and M.A dcgr~ from
the Umvcn!l) ofWaY!mgton. JacobsonjUtned
lht' UB facuht m 191l7 aher t~ach 1ng 11 the
Med1ll Schoof of Joumah\m at North..,ntcm
UnJ\I""''Y lie ha~ ""nlltn and lectured W1del)
on the role or C:Cifllpoler.. m rnagTUint and newspaper puhhshmg Ut IS 1 member of tht' International CommuntcattOn Anocuuton .
Communtca•ion lnslltute for Onhnc Scholar~lp. Assocu.l!on for Educa11on '" Joumah~m
and Mus Commumcauon, and lntemalion.a1
Assoc!iltl()O for MauCommun~bon Research

_.

.,...

ASSOOAll! PllOFYSSO«

Dtpa,PMnl cf~tlve Dtmtlsl')
The ~ptc:N of the 1990 Radwd A. Powell
Award for Exodkncc 1n TnduaJ, Joy.~ t\a\
wnnc:n for ftiUI)' J(IUnlals &amp;ntludin.J lrMmo/ CJ{
EsrMtic DeruWry. Operaliw Dnulmy -.cJ
Q""''~SKI!C~ lmentDI~DN~L He has strved on
dc:n&amp;aJ school comtrutiCc::ll for the: Ad Hoc Fin~
Ye.~ and Fordp Dtr:ntur: AdrruuiOAS Jk 1\ •
memberoftheAmencanAuoclattanofOemaJ
Schoob, the Academy of Opc:nl•ve Dc:miSU)
and Onuaotl K..ppa Ups1kM, NIIOOOal ~
HonorSoew:ty

Geaop"-I'ROFl:SSOR
School of !Au.·
A gndua&amp;e of Harvard La.., School. KMu\lU I\
a
cum laude: JfWiu.ate o( Y•lc CoUrgc

mac-

and ICfVCd u a uaff couMd 1n the nattonal
offa of the Amcncan C.vtll.tbcn~es Unton
from 1979--86 He was named auocwe profc'M:lf m the UB School of Law m 1987
In 1989. K.annar was apposnt&amp;:d b) \.tt"
Cuomo w the: New YoritStatc Temporary SQil'
Comm1sstan on Local Oovemmc:m Ethle'\ 111,
anrcles have appcam:l1n l.uw &amp; Soclllllnq"'"
Columbw Law Rn.'ln-.. Yair L.a-...· /ournul
Columbw J~ntlllmrt RI!''W"' and the Nt"'
Rcpwbl~e.amongOlhe.-)OW'nlis Healdmttted
to pnc::IICC befcn the U.S SUJWCmc: Coun

-

.._..., IWnnecly

PROFf-:SSOH
Departme?lf of Amt•nctm 'il11dJt"'

Kennedy. ""'ho rra:!Ycd her 8 A from Smuh
College. her M.A from the Un!ven;ll} of "r.,.
Mc:J.ICO, and her Ph.D degree from Cambnd~r
Umvcn!t)'. ha., been a mc:mbcf of the I 8
faculty SJncc 1969
A found1ng mc:mbc1 and dm:CTor ot tht
untYenuy·s w omm·s Stud~s prugnm VIr
hn lectured wldc:ly OfT Native A~TN:ncan .-ul
~ •n Coklmb.a. K'J. roles mdwttp1'18 'IOC~.,.,
lhe lt'nf*-1 of fernuusm oo the Kadrmy. uri !h.."
luslary of the Bufftio lcsbw1 oommuruty
The: .wlhor of numc:mlU films and pubh....
uom. Kt nncdy ''co-author of Fl'tnmm Srlinf
anh1p K~o-.dltf18 1111hr Gruv~J ofAr.odrlf!f' and
author of Boou of l.Lwhu. Slii'Pf'rJ nj Gllld
IM hts/0')' of Q Je.JbUUI t'OffVPUittfl)'

hiiiR.IInW!t•
PROFES.t;OR
Depanmenr

of Anestbenol£lRt

Kn!&amp;ht, who rc'a:!Yc:d hiS bac:hc:IO() dcgn-t til
med.c•nc sc:.c:ncc: from lhe Un•~t) of
braska and htS medK:al and doctof11.1 dcgt"te•
rrom the Pc:nnsylvarua Swe UntYC:Bit)' Cui

""r

lcgeofMed!cmr.. was a Umvermy ofMtch!pn
faculty member before: com1ng to UB as Ancs
thes•oio&amp;Y Ocpartmen! chan
'The author of l1kft than SO }OUf'RAIIII1TCirl
and a revte.wer for AttUINJroloJY. he ha,_ dr
hverc:d nui1\IC'JOOs presc:nlallons 11 prolc:ssTOnal
conferences. Kmgh11s • diplomate of the -,:;1
uonal Board of MedJcal E.ununen aod The
Amc:ncan Board of Anc:sthe:SJOk»gy

M._ ........
A..'\SOCIATI: PROFESSOR
Departrnl"nt of M edlcim•

Lance. 'Who rctttved hili 8 A and M A t.lt
gird fromCambodgt&gt; Umvers1ty. recc:ued h1•
medJcalde~aiSt.lbomas' Medtcai Sch....&gt;l
of London Un! vtnTI)' From IQ74-76. he hcltl
a fellowship m gencn.l mk'~l mcdrcu\C' mo.!
sastroentc:rology at B1mun~:ham Um,rr.tl'
Hospttals 111 England
l..ancc'. dJreciOf of gastrocnlcrolog~ r:t1 lhr
Buffalo VA Mc:dtcal Crnter. was co-pnm:lp.!l
m,·estTgato.- and drnTcal du~C1or for thr Hu!
fulo component or a 1991 N111ooal Canctr
lnslltut~ s1udy. of the: rok d.c:t may pl4}' '"
~venuns co~lll canctr He: 1s the uuthm
of null\etOUS an.ck:s tn peer rev1ewed punul•
along wuh boot chapters and tt\'1..-. \

ThornMJ. ......
-\.\.~lA l1' PROFF.SSOR

.

f)(panments ofl\'euroiCJK)'tmd Peclurtn1'
1bc fC'.C!ptent of A B and M D dep:ree' from
Bro~~&gt;·n Um"ersuy.l.angant.aog_htprt'''ou'h .II
SUNY at Stony Brook and Wastungmn L'm
vcnll) School of MediCine From 19K~ -s.t.~
hddaf.ellowstup•nch•ldncurologyat S1 UJu l~
Chi ldren's Hospital
Langan has bcc:n :1 pnnc1pal ln\oesflgator h.•r
studtes funded by the Natlonlll Mulupk So:krn
SlsSoc~y and the NauonaiiMtltutcsofHralth
Among h1s r«earch mten::su are dc:\elopmc:n
1.111 and c-c:llular ncurosclt'nce and gh.U crll
bmlog) He: lli a ITN:mhcr of W Amcnun
Society fOT Cc:ll 810logy. thr Soctcty fOI' Ntu
rosc1encc: and the Amt:ncan Academy ul f'&gt;edt

- W. Lallr

A~'&gt;OCIATI PROFt-:1\..-inR
Ot•fxJnmem of.Hedfl' Wt!

Lohr reccwcd h•~ 8 A m chenusU) from !he'
ColkgrofWoostc:r.Oh1oandh1~M D degR'C'
from the Un•venuy o( Kansas Medical Center
In 198~. he: held• fellowship 111 ncptuulog)
a1thc Um\'t'tSity of Kansas.. From 1985-87. he
""u a rcsearch !IIStrueTor and a ~ taff
nephrolog1s1 the:~
1"ht aulhor of numc:rous pubhcauorn :mJ
abstracls. t..oru- l!i 1ntcresccd '"the research of
hyperkOSIOO and ~ miCfOV11$CUhllu~ 1'
wc:ll as the mcchan 1sms of cell rcgulauon tn
n:nal epuhclta

--S.L-C MIA."''.SSCCATE f'ROFF..SSOR

School of MedicirJe

�-...........

_:a. _ _ ..., __

Lwcbup-Mubu recewed hll A.B. delfCC
from Amherst ~Je. ud biJ M.D. aDd Pt..D.
from the Univenny ofCalifomiallf.San DqQ.

The author of numerous joumaJ atticlel.
bookchaplen. rnae..t and abltlw:u. he directs
~ Pul11'1001fy and CritkaJ Cart: Division •
well u the Luna 8KJ6o&amp;y R.etearch Propun,
bolh of Buffalo General Holpit.al. BdorecommJIO UB, he wu auoc:iate pmfesllW of rnech·
Yale Un1YetJI1Y School of M~chcll'le
CWTCrtt.ly. he 11 prince.-l•nvest•aator of a
1wdy on "neorwal mamx dnveJ luna n:pau''
funded by the Nahona.l Hc:an, Luna &amp;. Blood
Institute. He 11 a membe-r of the Amcric:an
Thonc1c SoclCty. S iJml X1 Soc1ety, Amencaa
A.UOC111t10n fOf Advancement of Sc•ence,
American Soncty for Cell Biofoty and Wt:SJ.
em New Yurt CntK:Jd Care Soc~ety
Clnt a1

........ -...

A.SSOCIATF. PROFF..SSON
Departnuml of !.Panting and /nslmcltmr

Malave received a 8 A from the un.venuy of
Puerto R1co, aM A and M.F...d from Colu.nb1a
UniVtn:lly and a Ph. D from UB
Widely pubhshed t1ptt1ally m h1hngual
cducauonllfdsccond ilncua&amp;eab:atlon. Mala&gt;d
taughl prr:vK:JUsiy 11 D'Youv1lle Colkr:£: and
SUNY ~kge at Medoma and was a resean:h
&amp;.'iliOCia&amp;c and leaum- m the CUNY sySkm.
In 1989. Jht received the G*iyJ CCJC1Ta
Award from the New York State AJSOCiallon
fOJ B1hngu.al Education In 1991, sht coord1·
naled tht annui&amp;J Weuem New Yurt Research
SymptK1um m Bilingual MultiCultural Educ:alion and ha.' ~rvc:d u an 01licttof lht Nauonal
Anoc&amp;ahon for B1hngual E.duc:a11on

-...c.-..
PROFl-:SSOR

._J.....,_
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

N!Cbobon. who rea:ived tu1 t.:helor' sdea.rec
from rhc Univcniry of Qu«nslud. Ausc.ral111
and hls doctorasc in cell biofory from the C.h·
fom111.lnstitutc ofT~y. was a reteardt
fellow at Cal Ted! before JCMinl lhc U8 fac·
lilly in 1986.
Eath~r th1s year. N1chobon and Klaus
Willcc:ke, a colleague from the UniVenJiy of
Bonn.Gmna.ny, wooSI2..5,000frumlheMu.
Planck Soc~e~y/Humboldt Foundauoo to &lt;:Ofl·
tinuc. racarcb on pp junc:110fb, intcrttllular
pu.ucewt~ tJw allow celb 1n tht bod)' 10
commuQica.le din:cdy
In 1992, he recetved a five-year Amc:ncan
Hean Associa1MXt Established ln vest•punhip
and a pant from the Nat.onal Hean UJn1 &amp;
Blood IMI..iwtc: 10 study tht functiOn of aapJUnctaon channels as the map mcdJ.aton of
electric-cum:nt IJlftad m tht hean and the11
n:lat.toostup 10 canhac d1s.eax

......... G._
PkOfESSOR

Df'partmem of Biochemistry
Niles, who receiVed hiS B.A •n btoiOI)" from
liB and hu Ph.D. 1n biCJChcmistry from the
Un•v~ny of Manachuscus, wu previOUsly a
~ 1.U0CWC and NIH Fellow at Yak Uru·

'"'""' [)q&gt;onm&lt;r&lt;

of,_..., ._

In 1983, he co-authored a map text on
JmmunogenctJcs

~L­
I'ROFF.SSOR
Dl!partmtml

of Matbemalla

Ol~n. who earned her B.A a1.

Rcc:d College

/Jepanmel/f uj(Jccupal lmUJJ "fb#.•rap)'

and her M.S and Ph.D ar Tulane Umvenity.

lbt- n:c•p•enl of a M S dc:gra: from Vug1n13
Commonwealth Uruvers1ty and a Ph 0 from
UB. Mann •s ctwr of the ~pan.ment of &lt;kcu·
patwna.l Tllcr.py and director of the Center for
Thcrapcuuc Applications of Technology
t\TATI. a mullldt~lphnary center locaJc:d at
the UOIVCBIIY thai provides ~ devclop-

wu a postdoc:u:nl fellow and vis1tinalecwret
atlhc: l' :.~vers 1ty of Toronto before JOining the
UB faculty as Emmy Noechet ReKareh Instructor In 1972.
The rec1p1en1 of the 1978 SUNY
Chancellor's Award for &amp;.ccllcnce •n Teach·
mg . .tht u. 1 member of lhc: Amencan Malh·
emartcaiSoctety.theM&amp;lhcmaocaiAuoc:iation
of Amenca. the Assoc1ahon for Wome n 10
Science and the Auoc1at10n for Wnrncn 1n
Mathcmaucs
Olsen has ~rvcd as an assoc1a1e td.1tor ff.ll'
the: Prourdmgs ojfhl'Amuicon Malhema/f("Qf
Sonny, and as • rcv•ewcr for the Na11onal
Sc1c:nct Foundat1011 and the Nahonal Sc1encc
and Engmce.nng Council of Canada

mcnt.cducai:IOnandscrvw:.cmther.rkJofamsove
ICChno&amp;ogy for persons WJth dlubilzueL
CTAT wn dec:hcatc:d '" 1991 as tnt lim
n.a11ona.l rehabi lllalloo engmer:nna cemer to
iiudy and develop asJ istJve dcVJ«:s (Of older
persons With diSAbilitieS

T-E.~
~K...IATE

IJBKAHIAN
C:barlt!:! 1J .Wr!o IJW Libra,

laAdellel'helpa

McCDmU6Ck ra:e• ... cd hi" R A from Buf!alo
Slate College .a.nd h1s M L S fmm UB AudJoYISWll L•branan .md head of the M Robcn
K~n Ccruer for C hmcal Lcpl &amp;tualuon.
M cCormack WIL!o Jlf'CVIOU.sly leiUllmg rnource
hbrnnan a.1 Villa Mana College and 1 graduatt
ll'&gt;~I'Wlnlln the Pl.1cdta U!lxntory of UB"s School
of lnfomwmon and L•bnu) Stud~
H1 \ crnht' 1ncludc llftlclc:o. m rdc:rec:d puhh~'tlllon~ and a ""''ork m · pmgre-.~. "'Select Btb
hogrnphy 1n lnlerneli\e VidcodiS(' TCl:t\nolog} .
tic ch:ur. the M!crogrnjlhiC All(hov•~ual Spe
c1al lmerc\1 Secuon of the Anl&lt;'nl.l.fl A"..ocu•
uon nl' Law Ltbranc' und 1eache' ba'l.l lne ..ha
cn:::.llvJt) m 1nt School of Information and
L1hrary S\IJdte~ He'' umembc:r oflhe Anxn
l·anA~"iiC' I a iiOnofLII~ Lib-rane'and !he A''o
C1a1~on of Law L1brane.s of Upst:atc c~ ' url

EllenT.Mdlnlh
A':O.CX: IATt-llllltAHIA'\
Chari(~ IJ .}(y4 ~ Lmt I11Jmn
lOt- rcr;;1p1c:n1 of a 8 A degree from tnt Stale
Umvcrs u y College a1 Gcncs.:o lind an M L S
fmm UB . McGrath ts the au1bor of the monograph Gljuil'lml'sforCotolog•,.g lht' F1fl'sAm1f
Jl.bll' ThmMgh LEXJS pubhshcd la"t )Cat. 1n
addmon m refereed llf11des and bool n:vtew~
Named head o f caudogmg at the u ...- L1- .
hrary 1h1 ~ yeai, she: IS acm·e •n the Amc:.ncan
Auoctauon of Ltw Ltbrancs. and 1\ a mc:mbc:1
of the SUNY L1branans AsSOCIIIIIIOn and the
Aud1oVWJa.l Callllogcn lntm:st Group of the

Wcsaem Nc""' York

Library~

Council.

A.SSCX:IA11' PMOJ-"E..'\SON
l)f.'pa,./m('tl/ of CCJunselir~g
&amp;lucullurwl Psycbolog,•

tmd

Phelps. wbo rcce1vcd her 8 .S and M A de·
grecs from 8ngham Young Un1versuy and her
Ph D from the Un1\·ersuy of U1ah, taught pre·
... IOUsly m thc Dcpanmenlof tduc:ut1onal and
Counselmf: Psycholog) :u 1hc Um\ef'\11)' of
M"soun. Colllmbua
Co-alllhor of GtJmm~&gt;: ~,.,.nrl' alung wuh
llUITlC'fOU~ rcfclttd JOUfNII amdc:.._ ~he W8\
hnflOf'ClJmJhc IIIISSOut~tand•npo Young Women
uf AnlCnc:D nalloiUlillwllld' prog111m

E.rtc:Bnlce""'A..'~'XJATF

Uruven.~ty ofC1nc:tnnMt Bdorecorruna ao UB

ASSCXlA TE PROfESSOR

o.pa..._. of BkJiot!lcal Sdenc,.

PROtt'-'-'&gt;&lt;&gt;H

IJc.1JOrtmt•m uj.Umlx•nu1t"'
P11man. ...,.ho rr-cr1\'ed h1~ 8 A from Nnnhwcsh::m Un, ... c~\1) and ht' Ph 0 from Duke
Um,er..uy. wll\ ·~~si.Dnl pruft"'wr of mnthentat•c~ 111 No:~· Jc~y ln.st•tlllc:ofTr-chnology.
and a VISIIint;,mcnlbcrofthc IMIIIUIC for Mathem.aucs and liS Apphcauon~. Umver.uty of
MmncSOla, before commg to UB an 1989
l ie 1s currently pnnc1pal tnve s11ga10r m a
study of "'MuludmlCMional Ptoblerru m Dy·
nar.uc i'1asuc•ly," f11rwkd by the Nauona1 Sc•·
encc Foondat1on and 1he A1r Force Offict: of
ScJc:ntiftc RestlliCh He ha.s pubhshed many
professiCmaJ papers and has lectured through·
out tht Umted Stales Dnd m England-oo
Co-directo r smcc: 199:! of !he Gntduate
Group on Adv&amp;n«"J Sclenllftc Computmg. Pit ·
man s.crvcs as a n:fcrtt for SIA.M Jowrnol of
Applll'd Mathl'mUII rJ. Jowrnul uf Nun ·
Newtotllan FIMid Mulwmrs and Q~~Untdl'
Jowrnnl of Appllrd Mmhrmoflcs

5

o.pamn.m of OwmWry

u a VIS!ll"' t111stant j:nJ(cuor 1n 1986.. he hdd
JI051bOM as a ien.IOI' sys&amp;ems an&amp;lfl' Ul luJ

Rx:hard.whom:e~vedh•sB .S a.ndPhO from

natl~lndlll..

otuo SUIIC: Umnnny,lai.IJht 1111 ~ Un1Vtn1ty
of KelltUCt.y befo.e Ius rec:au amva) Ill UB
from 1984-8.5, he wu Hen:hcl Smuh Ft:lktw 1n
OraarucOienustty. UntvennyChcm•cal Ubi.
Cambndp Un1vers•ty m Eng.iand
He u lhc: l.lllhor or nu~T~ttUUs research pubIK:ations and IS ClliTCntly AudY•Ili ~Reactive
lmamcdtatesofEnrymaucRuctiOm""throuJh
fundtnl from the Nau01111l lnstnu~ of Health
He u 1 member of lhr Amencan Chemical
Soc)(:ty, tht Royal ~rrucal SocM:ty and tht
Amcncan Soctcty of Btolop::al Cbcm1stJ
111

'"""'-c..__
ASSOCJATE PROFESSOR

Departmenl of Fttmtly Met.llcme
Dtteetor of the Primary Care RINoOUrt:C" Cc:ntct
in the UB mcd.aJ sc.hocH, Roscnthalr«e:•ved
hu M .D degree from UB 1n 197.5 In 1986. be
establl.$hed a run I health care train1ng provam
at the univen1ty, one of only thrtt such propvru. •n lhc: country. It was accrat.ued by the
Residency Rtview Comnunee of the Accrechtation Coonci1 on Medk•J Educ:auon 1n 1991
Tllc prClBf'am Wti des1anr:d ID enc:ClUnlge
phy.udans lO snrocc m nn1 arem w~ hallh
~ IS SJ*!t and the poYCn)' ieveltJ great
Rosenthal is the author of two monographs
on run11 hcallh and numerous JOUrnal andes
He u a member or lhc Na!tona1 Rural Hcahh
Assoclll.tKM'I. ln 1992. hc~&amp;Ved rhc Na!ional
Rural Health Assocaauon O.shngll•~ EducaJ.orAwanL

-..,....._..
PROFESSOR
School of ML'lilllrU'

und Bl(,mfVItnll

Sciences
Simpson IS a 1969 grwiu.ate of Loma Lmda
Univcnity. when: he n:ce1vcd h1~ medical de·
grec m 1973 and • muter's dcgRC m puhhc
health 1n 197.5
Chau of the UB Oeplortment of
Otola.ryngolol)', he IS a foondms fellow of the
Amc:ncanSoc~fOJPedilllnc~nlatyn,BOiogy

lkforc JO•ning the UB racuhy •n 1991 , hc wu
actmg duur and us.oc•atc: profeuor 1n the de·
partmcnt ofCMola.ryngology at Boston Umver·
Jlt)' School of MediCine, and lnSII'UC1or Ill
Olola.ryngoWgy at Tufts Umvcrsuy School of
Med.c1nc He also wn otola.rynaologlsHn-ch•d at Boston Un1vers1t)' MediCal Cen~a and
director 1n lhc Depllltment or Otolaryngology.
Dc:p&amp;rtmcnl of Health and Hospttab fiJI' the
City or Boston and Boston C•ty Hospual
"The author of numerous lciemifK attJeloc:s.
Simpson has conducted exten~1ve n:scan:h on
lutt SWJU)' and JueJ lnlc:f'ldion wirfl IIUUC 10
deal with !Umon and Olhc:r dts.casc pruccs~

.loM!Ifl T. ~
PMOff_"i...,OR
llt..portrm•m of BrodJf'mlSI'l

~lATE

W1SC0n~1n

Spence ~ned for thrr.: year.. a' a health
'ICienliSt:ldmimSir.llor Iiiith the NatlcKUII ln:U• ·
TUies cf Hcahh bc:fott' rctum1ng to tbc UB
School of MediCine ll.'l :m as..oc1atc dean fOI'
n:sc:~h and graduate ~ludn~~ 111 198M llc ""a'
a.UIStant UB profcssm of hll.Chc:m"ll) from
19&amp;0-SS
The amhor of numcrou~ profc~SIUfUI.I pllbh·
cauons. he n:cc•vcd a quality ~~~-ant fOf OUI ·
~ltlndmg pcrfonnance from the Nauonalllean
Lung &amp; Blood lnsmu1e m 1987 Spence hti
conducted rescW'Ch on lhc: rc:gulat1on of me·
tabolism. ~pcc•fica.lly th:it of ca.rboh)'drale~ and
hpcds m the h\el

'N.It'lltt '

mul 5)'l:tt'rtU
Sun:sh r«e!\ ed a 8 S from lnd1an ln\tuulc of
Tcchnolog) '" Madrus, )n(ha. an MBA from
McMaster Unl\'etsll)'

lnvHIIpiOI' Awwd. W'.e hal dc:.e 1-.-b~

~a,......,......,

~e~oltornpowtd ~~­

-F.-

cpttauallb'UCtum, lllld powdl Md dalnl:wlzabOn ~&amp;tun film e~ manaiL
He has pubhshed more lhM 7!5 mewdl
papen 1n jount.a)s ...:t proccedutp.

School of M('dJC~rw und BiOrMdrc41
.sc........

PROFESSOR

IJepartmnJI uf lllocbemislry
Tllc m:1p!Cnl of 8 A , M.A and Ptl 0 depeo
frum the Un•vers!ly ofC.hfonu.a. Taub JOined
the faculty 1n 1'179 as an &amp;Uis.tant professor
foUowing a postdocton..l fcllow.stup 111 the Uni·
H'nlly of Cahforma
A member of lhc: Amcncan Tis\UC Culture
Anoc1atKJn. the AmcncM Socic:ty for Cell
B•okl&amp;y and the Amcncan AnocaatJOn for the:
Adv~Ua"mct~t of Sc:.ence, 5hc "the author of
numcr~ pubhcauons. aruclcl m revlCwc:d
J('IUmab and boot chaplen. Shr ~~ ed11or of
huwCMI/wrrofEptthrlwlUII.J and has done:
c:x~vc ~h on hormonal ~ d
bmey cplhdW ceO growth under 1JWU from
the Na.onallnwt~ of Hcahh and !he Nmona!
Cancc 1nstnuae She IS a r'CVICWlnl cdttcr of In
VitroandhartvltVto't.dmwKI!ienptsfor Jn44f?td/o{

Cclluk»-BJOChrmut'),JOf4miJin{Cd/ularPhy.sl
ology~rt("mt }OMtTVJio{PiryliOWg\,among

other saeoorc pubhcatJOM;
Her- awards and honon Include a R~rch
CaR:Cr Development A~~o·atd from the: Na1mnal
IMIIIutesofHcalth

_...,_

In 1991 . W•lsoo wu appotmed diteaor ol
cardKWascular medte1ne, duef f:l the eq:.trnau of Ca:rdtoJoay and dud ol the Depwl·
mcnc ofNudeatc.nbc:qy for Milllllld Fil1mcft

""""'"''

He was previOUSJy professor o( mecbcu.e •
the Oklahoma Uruversily HcalthSciencaCentct. U~aak dud' of &amp;tafT for taeardJ al VC1·
Cf1UII Aff111n McdJc:al Cenccr 1n OtJahoma
C11y. and director of nucleaJ cardKllotY 1111 Oklahoma Mcn)()I"IAI Hospital
Wilson bas been a VI~UOJ lcctuta Ill the
LudWIB· Boluman lnWiute 111 Vacnna and lhc:
UruVc:nJIY of Colopc, Germany He IS a Fe I·
lowofthcCanbovascuWSecbonofthc Amen·
can Phyuo&amp;osw:al Sonc-ty and the Ammcan
College ofCardiOiotY He ts IJ:Jled tn Mlrncon
Mt'n vf Sclt'fiC~. World Who 'J W1lo m ScU"ncr,
Who '1 WJw m thr fAn and AIN'rlt."un Mrn and

-J.W--·
PRQfES..c;,()R

Dtpt:Jnmt.'fll

of Qogrupby

Wo&amp;dtnbetg rett1ved Ius B.S and M .S de·

PROFESSOR

gra:.sfrom~Un•vcnuyofWucorwn.aodhu

Dt&gt;par1rrum1 ojSuc&amp;al muJ Prt'ff-',11/n&gt;

Ph D from Columbc.a Uruven1ty
Before: pnmg the UB facuhy as asocwe
profeuorm 197S.bc: wManoc::.astprofeuortn
the: Dcpartmcn1 ofC1ry aod RqwxW P\amnna
a1 Hanoard Un1vemty"s Grwfu.ul: School ol
J:ks 1&amp;n In 1989, brwua.,.ISIUDCscholartnthe
Oepanmcnt of Cicocnaptly a1 Cambndgc: Un•·
vcrslt)' tn England He 15 co-ediiOr of Rrwr

Medicine
T rev1san. a 19TI magmJ rMm lowil' gradua1e of
the Un!ven:uy of N11ple1 Medical School. re·
CCJved Ius M S m c:pldc.nuo&amp;og} from UB en

1989

Before ,ommg the U8 faculty m 1985 . he
was 1 rc:scarch fellow m lhc Dcpanmem of
Conununny Health and Prevenuve Mc:dK:1nc at
North~tcm Un1\trSII)' Me:~hcaJ School , a
VISIIInJ ph)'SICilln Ill Harvard Mc:d1eal School.
and tht co-pnnc1~l mvesuzator and dirtttot
of 1he Un1ven:•ty of Nopk!i' PfOJCCI ..Gubbto
8J-85.H a popullt!OO·bascd ~tudy of IUil•tra.n~
pon aboorn\lllill~ and hypencn.,,oo
Owr oflhc: OcpanmcntofSoc•al and Ptc ...-enuvc Medit:'ltiC, Trc:visan '' thE pnnc1~
lnvesllpsorlnthc:$6)5 ma~ Women's tie:akh
ln•lllll•vc:.lhe NattOnallnsutute5 of Health 5bldy
of d1scun or wofnc:n and thc:u ITCIImeN Uuu
wtll bc:gm acTO'» the: country lhu f.a.ll UB,
'IC:Iccted to be: nor: of 16 ~anguard climcal
CCnler.&gt;. WJIJ helpdc:\lj;n and Inil laiC lbC' ~lud)
I'HOt=f_,;;oR
f)fptlnme,t

&lt;1

Nrn.·orbandcditorof Modl'lJm~rpltol­

ol) He ha~ aho wlhofed Dumc:rotlS an.cln 1n
rderec:d .f(Mimal.l.. boot chaplc:n and techruca.l

~satnl"mbcrofthc.As.socJ&amp;OOnofAmcn·

can~andachan.cronernbcroflhe

eduonal board of GII'OiftOrplto/Of) . fof more
than 2S yean. Woldcnbcr). has scucbed mor·
phometnc and dyn.umc ~ o( lreeJ and
nctworb He has iftll'Dduccd ~ ~ lbc
1

~ u=~nor~s":o~
~

nc:twori:: ..Wy~ an Ius wrio~t,pand

kcru=

DoroC~~y

c.

uHRAKIA:oo

w-

f.J"-L'1uXJtJ Uemcmal L1bmry

Ph1~ 1 ulul{ \

Udm. wlto rC"CCJ\'C:d her M !-. dtld P'h 0 tmm
MIT. wa..' 11 member of the loC'Icnulic •mff 1n the
N!!llonalln,lllutc for M•.:d1C!!I Rc'-C'arch •n ~·1111
H111, London before JOanm~ lhr UB ~pan
ment of Ph)' s•ology m 1979 ;l..' an a.s\lsliinl
profc:swr
AmonE! her rc"'arch m1en:~1' arc dc\dnpmcnt and pla~IIUI) m the Lcntf'3l lll"f"\110\ ~Y\
lt'm uf \trlehtah·~ ncuroanatomt ~ al.
eltttruphy\ulk&gt;!!IC:JIIlnd beha\ltJr.llln\C:SIIga.
uun~ of aton-a\nn •ntt'OM."II•'If\' and o f flln..
uunal cffc:t·l\ uf neurnnaJ rciirl"'!.ngemcnh
rc~ulling from bnun k"tln\ and abnnrmal C:J.
pcnencc . \tM.i!il mformaltoo pn~ee\smg and
bcha\iOI Uc: r rc:&lt;.e.m:h ""'th Warttn J Scherer
on the rolc drug therapy may play 1n rc~tor•nx
binocular VI\IOO tn damaged op&lt;x: nc:nn. v.:h
pubhshedm!hrAug 10, 19901S"iucofS.·,,n. ..

a..
Ry-ePkOf-'f.:&gt;.'-OR

...... C........

.

..... ........_ _...,_..,....,
_,....,.....,.

PROf'l:'S50tc

M.yLT-

-B.Udn

A graduate of St Franc:•~ Cullc:ge. ~pence re
CC:iVed hi\ ma,ter ' , degree m nutmwn and
doctorate m nlllnlmnal blocheml\lr) from
Comcll Unl\C.r'IIY He wa' a posldoctoral
fellow for 1hrec )'Cal' 111 lhr Untversll)' of

A.'i.&lt;;OCiATE PROI-"F"''&lt;&gt;It
Departmerrt vf.\la"aRt'mt&gt;t/1

In 198.5, Slltuh recetvcd lhc: Alfred V
BodtnciSocldY of ManufactuntlJ Enau~een
Award for uucbc:s 1n macb.Jnc too' econorruo
A contnbutor to numerous refereed JOUrnals, he
ctwred the Manufactunn&amp; OpcntKJn~ Management (MOM) ()pKJn Comuuu.ce fOf the
MBA procnam !Of two yean, whd proposed
and •nlroduced tht new MBA Opt10n

C..ifOI'"OfalDfli:Wit-oiT~
The-ncapcat dw 1981 ~ YG~MW

WOlxhon. who hold~ master' &lt;; degr«" from
UB and the UnJ\'ef'IIY of ~h~soun.Columb•a.
....,as a ~eolo&amp;&gt; hNanat1 :u the Un1\c:r.u~ of
M 1s\01Jn bC'fOI'c commJ! to UB 1n 1976
No "" soctal ~•ences ~llhj«t "J)CC!ahs1 tn
Lock~ood Ubrll~ . she.' reccnlly re«Pit:d 1
1-ulbnghl Scmor Scholar Awan1 10 conduct
rc'&gt;Carchof rn:en1ly unbanlliCd h1stoncal manu!&gt;Cnp!~ . luchi\C"i and nc:""'~pllpct'&gt; located II Ute
Ma)lbuye H 1(10f) Centre. Un•vef'\IIY of the
we,tem C.11.pe, C;tpe Town. Soutl. Afnca
'Thcm:tp•em of the 1989StatcUm,enlf) uf
Ne~~o 't'orl 0\llncc:llur', A"'"ard for &amp;~llcno:e
m Libfananstup. \he also held a pr-c'illgtoUl
Amc:ncan L1hr&lt;~l) Aswnauon fellowo;h•p
fllnded by the t:mted Stale~ InformatiOn
Agency, 10 truck down Swu1land-relalftl hl~­
toncal mform.3uon and ma1enals 'iCanen:d
Jhn&gt;ughouithc:""'orld. Hctbooks•ncludc Onurr.
l VI fntln to Afm•o 's Utldmg ltfago:.JN'. 1951
/96~ ( 19881 and Dread,. of OIJC"Ofll~nt A.n
lndtt ro Ft;:h~mg Toll. , 1954 -196.1 11992)

/)1f.'/XI rtmc'1ll vf 1:1et.mu~/ 1111.!
Computl'T EllR' '""'n'J.~

s

W•c n:c:cl\c:d hiS B degree from Chonnam
Nauonal Uni\rnlly . h•' M.S de@:~ from Seoul
Nauonal Umvenll) ll.nd h" Ph D from !he

and~h~"~""-D_'_'"_m_'_
"' -------------=--==--:-------l

Temple &amp;th Zion
Nursery School
..• because you care.
• Fall programs QI'QI/ablf for 2. 3. and ~·yn" ·ulds
• Classes o{fercd Monda\ through fn,/a; mc&gt;rmngs
• Extended Da\'-Mcmdav. v.'cdncschl\ •!nd Fndm aftrm,rorh
• ExcrllnH studrnrllrachcr rat to wuh \pt'( wl pt"r~nnull::t"d dllOllhHl
For "love and learning," enroll
your child now•

. 836-6565 or 886-7 1 50
~~';-:":~:';":~~

700 !&gt;WEET HOME ROAD. AMHERSl
l!)Jcar

Shrndan Dm·c)

NY

�____ __
..,

6

Findin s

r
I
B

y

L

s

0

B

A

K

E

R

NEW S BUREA U ST AFF
and antibiotics-particularly
tetracycline~an cause sensitivity."
When it comes to damaging the skin. however. the sun
needs no assistance.
"Preventing su nburn protects against aging and the
chances of developing cancer." Pincus says. " An episode of bad sunburn in teen
y~ can increase the risk of
melanoma. But that doesn ' t
mean you should stay indoors
all the time. Protect yourself.
Stay out of the sun during the
peal. hou" of 10 a.m. to 2
use a good sun -

I '; ;:;.d

I

Pincus say !!- ~ un !:&gt;c reen s
have •mprovedsJnce they firsl

were mtroduced. 'They 're ef-

~kr-.tfle ...

.,.......,yow-._ Not &gt;O
well-known IS the fact that the
sun can react w1th certain s ubstances on the skan or m lhc

body to produce equally un pleasant resuiL'\
Stephanie Pincus. ch:ur of

· dermmology at US. describes

fective. waterproof and pro-

duce few aJiergic reactions."
Still. she advises sun worshippers not to be lulled into
complacency.
"You can't both protect
youn;elf and tan at the same
time. All you cando IS reduce
the rate of damage··

majO&lt; discomfo&lt;t and in rare
instances. deallt.

How do you know you are
having a serious reaction to a
sting?
"Watch for any reaction
that takes place away from
the sting site," advises Roben
E. Reisman, a pioneer in research on insoct-sting hyper·
sensitivity who is a clinical
professor of medicine at VB.
"Allergic reactions often begin with general itching. If in
I 0 minutes you start to
Itch allover, in 20minutes it will probably
get worse."
Anaphylaxts,
the most serious

reacuon ro insect sting s.
causes about 40 deaths a year
in the United States, Reisman
says. The common symJ&gt;toms arc swelling ofthe throat.
circulatory collapse and
shock.
Reisman notes that insectsting anaphyla"tis occurs most
ofien in people undcr20ycass
of age and in males twice as
often as females , probably a
reflection of exposure more
than any other predilection
About one-third
of tndividuals
affected have
a hi stor) of
olher allergic

reactions. such as asUuna. ec-

zema. hives and hay fever, he
adds.

Persons suffenng anaphy lactic reactions usually can be
treated with adienaline. anti histamines and other drugs.
Reisman says.
For those who suspect they
are allerg1c to hoe stings, or
who don ' t want to find out,
Rct ~ man offers tht~ advtce.
e A vo1d cont?r t. Don't walk
barefOOl linger around food .
wearperfume or brightclothe&lt;
--bees are atuactec. to fragroll1ce and co lo~ .

e Keep emergency med1cme,
such as antihi stamine~ or epi-

nephrine. handy
e Obtam allerg) inJecUons,
whtch arc nearly 100 percent
effecti\e m preventing subsequent reactions.

two types of unwelcome rc -

ac uo ns : photoallergtc and
phot01oxic . A photoallergy
occurs when exposure to the
sun alters a substance applied

to the skin. causing an adv en,e reacLJon

" Any

per~ o n

c an ge t

pholodermatiu ~. ·· P1ncu:. says.

"Sunscreens themse lves can

cause such aJlergies . Berga-

mot. an ingredient often found
sunscreens. cosmetics.
soap'\orafte~have s. is a common culprit. People should

1n

avoidanythingcontainingber-

gamot if they will be in the
sun
A phototoxic reacuon occurs when the skin is exposed
to certainphotosensitizersand
then to sunlight. For example,
phototoxic reactions have
been zeponed among citrus
wori&lt;CIS1Uldcelery harvestcn
as a resuh of their repeated
exposure to photosensit.iz.ers
called furocoumarins found
in citrus fruit and celery.
Some medications also can
increase the skin's sensitivity
to the sun's rays. ••If you are
taking medication or putting
medicine on your skin. you
may increase the risk of sunbum. Diuretics, antifungals

.._..._._..._..
tllllle _ . . . . -...
........... For most people. a
sting from a bee, wasp, hornet
&lt;x yellow jacket causes ~'lin at
the sting site. some redness and
swelling. But for the 3 pcn:cnt
of the popula1ion
allergic to insect
venom. a sting
can cause

A cool c1p on a warm day
Is~ But if water
lingers in the ear after a swim,
it can bring on the hot discomfon of an infection.
Otitis extema. more commonly known as swimmer's
ear, is an inflammation of the
outer car canal caused by bacteria or fungi that grow in the
presence Or moisture.
"Swimmer's ear is very

prevalent during the summer
season," says Jeffrey Banya;.
ass istant professo r of
otolaryngology at UB "An)·
one who has a pauc ity of v. ax
or an excess of hair in the ear
can be especially vulnerable··
lbeearmay simply itch 1n
the earl y stages of the mfcc uon . Later. the ear canal rna)
become painful. rcdand sv.ollen. and tht= may be som&lt;
disc harge. In rare cases. parucularly 10 dJabetics. lhe m
fec u o n can spread tu
surroundmg bone and us-.uc:.
causing serious problem' 11
not treated early. Banya.-. ...a~'

However. swimmer' ' c:Jr
ts largely preventable.
"Ltngering mol ,lure
causes the infection. so ~ uu
need to get rid of n." Ban)'"'
says. " If you ' ve seen a doctor
and you know you have no
holes in your eardrum, you
can put a couple drops of rubbing alcohol in eaclt ear after
swimmmg. ThealcoholhciJ»
dry the moisture."
Ear plugs can help l=p
mmsture out, bU1 should bt'
used only if the ear tS mf« ·
tion -frce .
And while people rn a)
think that cleaning theear wuh
a cotton swab after swimnu ng
IS beneficial, au.emplmg to
remove wax or clean the ear
canal can cause problem!'
"Normal earwax has a protective efTeeL." Banyas say!&gt;
··People who attempt to clean
out the wax promote mfection by removing the protec·
tive coating and irrilating
skin."
Persons with ccnain types
of wax problems or those who
haveexcessiveearhairshould
have their can; cleaned by a
physician, Banyas says.
And whileconfiningone·s
swimming ro chlorinated
.JlOOISmay seem a logical way
to guard against car infection.
the theory docsn 't ho.ld water.
.. , am not awareofStatisti·
cal evidence that infections
happen more often from
swimming in ponds and lakes
than in pools." Banyas says.
He does advise Users of hoi
tubs to soak only their torSOS.
not their beads. "Bacteria can
linger in the heated water," he

warns.

�7

_u,..__,..,_.,

Passing Iht bawn: USA's Kevin Lyles comptles in
4x400-mtler men·, relay.

Gold medill winners: Ihe Jour members of U.S.
womtn's 4xl!XJ-meler rtlay /tam.

Up and om: men's high jump comptlillon broug/u
ano1her gold meda/1o Ihe Um1ed SialtS

One \Vorld at our Doorstep

The Memories and the Medals
Conrimtedfinm the CO\ ·er

Thill wnthe - - - - e l n the Atllletes' VlllaCe within the ESIIcott

c.te ,_tent In the VIlla&amp;•- a - obo.ver of the etllletes who....,.. to his -lohment.

t-

_ . . ..t a lot o f , _, • he lau&amp;Joed. •aut they were all curious M&gt;out

•FJnt of all, -

eacll -·They a t e - talked

toe-. -umes u o l f t l l - . . . . - they c:ou-·t

_ . . . eacll _ . s . . . . .a. I t ' s - • lot of fun. They • ...,

ChineN

~~~·

ma. Soma

came by and aald they couldn't beHeve how .,._ Ametic."la . .. ..

ButAmeri-aren'tjustphyolcallylarce, Nld Helzaburo Olutwa, thefenclftll
coach for~- •The emotlonlol commitment of the volunteers within the VlllaCe

has- simply amazln£ They've done everythlftll they could possibly do to make
us

~.

e-'all)' durlftll the heat wave early In the competition, • he explalnacl. •1n

81~ umbrella helps 1racl &amp; field
Jan 01 UB S1ad1um lttp f()(UJtd

Japen, we don't have that kind of custom where peopte from the community volunteer to help

B1g smiles from1\\'0 mung

specwrors m1mck f\'enu.

make a large event successful. They' ve . . . - the experience of the Vllllllle a great pleasure with their

lblsls not an Isolated story. Many of the etlllet. . e-oaad their~
for the_... attention to the food- t h e - - WM . ,.... by

unlverstty panonnel who handled the myrt.d details of taadlftll- houslftll the
- - w h o came to live here durlftllthe Unlv..-.

"-'Ch the etlllet- were serious M&gt;out their sports, fun wu not forlottan. On
any _,.en day,- could

p - playlftll Frl- -

walk_.,

the VII laCe- find etlllet. . from"'--

L8ke !.&amp;Salle or watc:ll u • lone German etllleta ran
continued on page 8

Auslrafla"s Rohan Rnbmson. ]rom. rlears 1he
~00-meier hurdles

�8
N&lt;aJiio lAia&lt;wllf RmM.I&lt;ft, IIIII

E1Jil llltildn Alltolflll,.,.,.
._..._.
,IWJ) __

---·

A day In the life of
• harried World Games
media manqer
''THERE WERE PROBLEMS coming all !.he time." Thai 's how
Chm.tel Avenhall, medea accredJlation manager for lhe World
Umversny Games. described a typical day. '"'The hotel rcservauons that never went through, or people losing thelf 1.0 .. or
people cla1mmg they got lost in the database.''
Avcnhall dealt with two more journalists while on hold

dunng a telephone call. and then rerumed to her anempts lO
a-.sto;t a med1a n:prcscntatJve who'd had his l.D. confiscated and
had spent a few hours m the cl mk. to boot.
·111e tnterprcter I!&gt; w1th h1m now,'' shr explamed to two
World Unt\Cr1111Y Game' orgam1.crs
Busy Lhough shew~. she took the time to
c,;changc sofl-spoLcn JOkes m Swedish during a
cal\ later m the day

A"enhall came to the States as a student one
and a haJ( year.&gt; ago a~ pan of an lnlemational
Marketing Program between Stockholm. Swe~n .

and tht State Umvermy College at New

Pah/
·11~r.:n

Harbour

I \.lo-Orkt.."ti m Nev.

Yor~

Fe~llval Found;~uon," '

Cny for lhe

she explamed

'1ncy produce C\&lt;cnu.. and I worked on 'Cel ·
cbr.Jtlon of ColumbU!&gt; 500 Yean.·

'"Then RJch Perelman. Dm=ctor of Opcru ·
uons. 3.\. kt..'tl me 11 I wanted 10 won. for the Game~ I V.lli&gt; vcr)
!&gt;Urpnscd when he asked me. but I sa1d yes ..
l1lc' number of repone~. medw techmcums, photographer. .
.. :uncr.uncn. and producers anendmg the Games rt:ached a
n."Cc,rd total at I ,200, the-.e wert: Avenhall's charg~ . All had 10

he .-ccrcd1ted-- regiStered after a 24~ h our secunty check-and
alrno)l .. 11 brought wnh them v1sa problems. accommodatJoo
problem.... or 01her proble-ms of their own

Rus hed !.hough Avenhall tended to be , '\he srud she enJoyed
Game~. and 1s anglmg for a Job w1th the Olymp1cs
" I'd al-.o hke to stay m the U .S for a couple of yc~ ... she
soud

worlung the

She ' ' abo enJoyed Buffalo
" I'd heard "'oman)' bad thtng!l ahout Buffalo before . and 11
wa'ln't ll~e that I've hkc!d 11 Vtr) much··
ltOelltf

WAfllt"OUal

Danttla Antipm· of Rommua and Ntrolrno To:;:t 11137! of ItalY orr ntrl and ntel m,._,·,&amp;XI mtltr nm.
furiously -CIM&gt;ut the Vll...e, blowlne e loy .-ty iMMn- wmn&amp; e.,_ 0....... flail to the_.... . .
of ell he - - . I t w. . th8t kind of oplrlt, excitement, raw -cy left over from- ....._ut1on,-

And yet. however mueh one may love con.t.nt exdtement, It has tta place ...t tta time, Nld Pia Dfval~
Bjork, • member of·the Swedlllh women' o fenclnC team, _.,....,. _.,.Interpret• .._.. Hooven of UB

Publleetlona. "It w. .

~~- th8t

the

ectivttlft

died do,..,. efter -

mldniiiJrt. l wented to have fun, ,._t -..M- ell the rest. But I wented
tocetoomeoleepaowell," -laullhed."llo•edbeln&amp;ebleto _

_ ..

from America. Even when we a.tt the VII.._,• ...t went to downtown
lluffelo, the people w .... Yery - l y In t h e " ' - -

..-rema.·

One ectlvlt)' th8t ne••dled down w• lhetredlft&amp;of- ~pi,..

lt'o e

~

tredltlonllt ...,. ethletlc- for .uMtes to exchenC•

theoe tok- of frleMshlp-

estMm. n..-exchenC•- .....,y •

conv....uon, - I n oome-- tiMt .,._ oft.lk, • - • lr8d&lt;
-field coeeh from the cz- Republlcbecen
pins toenyone

........,out

who uld hello or llhook hla hend, •

he welted to enter the VllleC• one

e n - ·r-..,· w• .a 111e En&amp;Jiolt he could .....p, 111e cooct
will --"'nC for il-K.
Athlt~s rtltbrotr as tlt.v """" Mlo dot }itld 01 clming

rtrrmonin ur UB'1 nn.

tfadtum.

/Janus: Baron. !.rod of tht PoliSh '""" fill" forr!o Itt' btn
rffort m tht ~t'Otl\ttl .f shntput

-1---

Pin ju,...;. w.... evecywhefe, Mttlnll up
........, _ _ _ _ _ e..,.oflhe-.ltlsewwyto_.,.al

---·e--,.,u...--,-.-., ....

�9

Patnrl HtmtOIISp&lt;IM. "ft. aNI Matrtl Had:tl of Gt~
sJwrr llori and COI'I\'tflUtiOtl mladtlnts' Ydiatt.

Festival of food
brings out athletes'
beat appetites
THROUGHOUT THE GAMES. a1hlt=1es ""ere treated 10 a
feslnraJ of food 10 the VIllage l1K" generous supphes of food
1mpn: s~ many of 1hc athleLes from abroad Although thry
wolfed dov.n plemy of meat. rh&lt;'y were grateful1ha1 thert were
o~l'ol.ay .. plcnl) of fruns and vegerubles to be had. according to

Pa1nd. Hennan~pann , a frecMyk: sw1mmer from Gennany
.. , can have all the food that I need for energy and strenglh."

he "atd, enJoymg lunch m thr Amencan Cafe "And 1t'&lt;i great
!hal dle) Sta) open l&gt;O late (I a.m.). ll' s been great so far ··
Tile ' 'nnety of food and the gractou~ness wHh whtch 11 Wa.\
-.erved were al~ very amponant. accordmg

lO

Hc::rmans pann 's

teammate. Marcel Hackel. who gave h1!&gt; VIews wuh h15 fnend

il!i

mtcrprerer '!be people wam us lO ea1 and eat" ht wd. ''b's
great. l need a lot of food when I compete. I love the American
food, the: fned ch1ck.en and the bamburp:n. h 's good pro&amp;cin
food."
Hennanspann hails from lhe ciry of Cologne while Hackel u

.. "" ....

a res1denr of Berhn .

....

Brazilian

~ of

Unl-

of the Brazilian National Basket-

ball Team from 1959 to 1967, and
the ultimate pin junkie.

"I have ov• 40,000 pins from

the Wo&lt;ld Champlonlll11ps end
other events, • he said. "I also
manufacture pins and -

or

Mil them et_tltloo .. throug)t-

Alumni Ar;nu u rht fl'tnr of mrn'1· l'(l{fn·ba/1 f\1'111. pmmg Austfllfw 'f arhlt'trJ u~:mmt 1ram trnm
lnJonrliiL Japan. Poltuul anJ Jt,ulh Koull 1nf¥. lhr mr&gt;tlllfJ

out the wo&lt;ld. I think thet by exchllnjllnc pins, I help to bring-.. • better reletlonlll11p betw. .n etllletes, and between sports loY.,. from
IU'OUnd- wo&lt;ld."

by--

Mirna.. McNemey, • freestyle awlmmerfrom the U.S. women'• team, couldn't agree more. She aald ahe
w. . .,.... 20

u.s. pins

.........,. b)' - f r o m
way to - -

a

before- tot to- vm.,e on July 4 - - y w... eoneln four uys,

-nd- wo&lt;ld. "I did elot of pin-.., when we tot ln. It wee fun and an-Y

and -

people from o - CCMintries," McN-y said. "This Is my -

lnternetlonlol - - anc1 t'll81wer-- theee pins. It may
of the,_

llllnlla thet - f r o m - - --.

time In en

-.nd cnlZ)', but they .._..mall
Contonued on page 10

4rhlrlr~ tmm rhr l
t t&gt;ITifli'/111(•11

to\

roo' ~~,JJ 1uW nllff mrJaf, m th£ I10 unJ J(1J mtn 1 lulrdltt

�A lutk likr kap frog-oti/1 """"' lugiltr ap allllnt dtlln tilt bar 111 pelt ,..,,
The pin~ w M - - ey._...,._ U.S. baok-1 pl8y. . fO&lt; a photo ex-.o.,..,._ with s-th .urtc..

R...... • • .......

to-

•-polo pl8y. . bhley Smith. Anyone watchl.,.tlllo-

WM Instantly • • - o f - potential pnlblem reiatlnC to • - politics: R....,. lo an A - - -· · - - -. ltcoulclhllve-adlffleult.......-rt,

but not at -

W - Unl&gt;erwlty - . _ The picture • • -

--pins.

_ . . - omall bap each wore ...,..nd hlo neck, b&lt;acaleto,

R.,..,..

~rtfri-

....

be"'"

-y .,_ hancla,

to

tr-

necklaceo,

They talked fO&lt; another15 mlnuteo, .,_,g~~ time fO&lt;

to join In - f u n.

Jwlw [htftrL 1( L S "Dmr'n \ "'"lnf rtam plm1 ~ JurwsiC

Pari ptnJxdl Kumt

111

SJudrnJ Cluh 111 Elllfolf
convnunlcatioft can exist when people rnM• It poaalble. A.a Oartuaz Bwon, the chef
de

mJ.- o f - Polloh deleptlon • . _ - It
•n.e · - - t o lluffWo to compete, to.,........._

Games bring a reunion for
anthropologists from UB
US ANTHROPOLOGISTS Dav1d i-h mmclgrecn :md Dave Turkon wen: elated to
learn that a team from Lesotho would be partJCJp:nmg m the World Umversny

Game&lt;i The land-lod,ed Afncan nallon, completely surroun&lt;k.-d by South Afnca.
~as home for more !han a year to umver..lly researcher.. m 1991 No.;. 11 wa~ thc1r
tum to re turn

!)Om~

of the hospuality lhcy had rece1ved there

So. 11 was off to the opcmng ccremomes where the Lesotho team of three entered

Stachum and proudly unfurled thc1r nag to the cheer-. of 70.(XX)--plus spectator..
1be enonmty of event for tilt Le-.otho athlete.; can onl) be undc.."'itood wuh the
lno" ledge that thi s .;mall southern Afncan nat1on. tht: !&gt;ll.t of BelgiUm, ha., :t popula·
11on of I 6 nu llion. most of whom hvc m !&gt;mall vtllage!&gt; of 'ievcrnl hundred pt!Oplc
"It wa . . fanta.,llc.'' ~~d Kenrelh Hlasa. ch1ef and coach to the Lesotho Mtss1on
.tnd lecturer at the altona! Umvermy of LeS()\ho (NUL). who added that o:;o man y
pcc.1pk together m . . ucl) n large smd1um was al....u O\'erwhclmmg for him Hla!ooa. who
h~ pan1c1pated mother uuemauonall&gt;portmj; e1ocnt' from MtN:o" to Toronto,
l'Ould not -.ay enough about the opemng cerernomc.;-from dlC torch hghtmg. to lhc
tntroduct1on of the teams. and fmaJiy the closmg fm~work.s and ffiU'ill'
Tur~on dl-cided that the best way to mtroducc the U:!&gt;mho team to Buffalo "a' tn
rir-.t ucat them to some of the cny's finest cuJ.,Ine-wmgs andp1u.n
Dunng the meal the con venation w1lh Hlasa and the two other team mem.beri. Rob!n
Olamgamandla. a physiC'i and engtooenng srudcnt at NUL and Adelatde Malepa. a
stallshcs o;:l\Jdent at NUL cenleft:d on the recent election..' tn Lesotho, the Gamt.~. and
Buffalo. Dlamg:unandlo and Malepa an:"""""' who con~p&lt;t&lt;d m the 1100 and 300l
meter events. Hlasa had grea1 pr.usc: for the factl.!t.es ru UB. espc:cmJJy the UB ~.hum
''We coukt use some of lhese faolities m l....c:sOOlo to tram our ~ ... t.: saKi.
Rll'h

each--

GtmkUI mhltttl K'Cn't ro rht rf'D'4Yi at rlnMI rtrtmOtUtS m
llt'4 UB stadJJnn.

to...., oometlllnc, maybe juot

'-'

President of Olympic Committee
addresses conference at UB
FORGET IMAGES of Bill Cimton JOggmg Arnencan . . don't exerctse enough.
accordmg to Le Roy T Walker. prestdent of the U.S Olymp1c Commltlec
And wh1lc a rca~nable l1fe expectancy may cltmb to 107 by the tum of the
century, Walker ..ays Amencans will be crookmg at a mere 87 because of an
mchnauon to dnve everywhen: and cat m•crowaved food
As an acadenm: accompam ment to lhe World Umversuy
Game,, FISU and CESU-che Federatton lntcmauonale du Spon
Umvcrsttatre and the Comnusston for the Study of Umversn:y
Spon -Jomtly sponM&gt;n.-rl a confercm:c. "Change and the Human
Dnncn,mn of Phyo;:•cal Al'ltvtt) "lllc: conference. whtch featured
o;cholar-. spontf from all O\'Cr the worl.d. took place on UB's orth
Campu' dunng the World Unt\'Cr..tty Game,· opcmng "'cekend
LtR01· T. Wal.ltr
"While man·..., eth1cs ha\·c'changed. h1!oo body ha.~; not." 'i.31d
Walkcr,thc confcrcm·c·s ke)n()(e spealer But he ..dded !hat the
change Ill cthtc' mean' that no" the h~man body" at ml. Wan.er prec::hcted a
dt.."Cf'C.be 10 CXtTCI'OC In the :! ISl I:'CRIUl), and an IOCfl!a&lt;&gt;t." 10 Ci!rdiOVa.~u)ar prob]cm!oo
''Nmety pcrccm of phy\lc.al problem" are beyond ph)'&lt;;lczan' · control. Our
phys1cal problem!&gt; m.:~) be heredllar). en1dronmcntal. or beh.t\'lor-onented 1b:
\Ctkruary hfc't) lc of the mas..cs has led to the loss of o;: trcngth. endurance and
cardtuva.'!oeulu.r net! VII) thu.t t:ontnbutcl&gt; to the pu~u•t of happmess," ~ s:ud
'"'fllr: Uruled Stutes has sp..--nt S287 btllion on health care. 11 . ,_,.ill have spent S3
U'tlbon by the: year 21))), bfe eJ;p::ctancy will grtJ\' to 107 )'~ a.vuagmg out aJ 73
years. How we take~ of ot.u"Sel~ L&lt;; rllClre tmportant th.:m ma.bctne." Walker saKI
•oat•T WATI.MOUII

�Playwrights' Center to introduce
seven new works by women
,.._ M
IW_...,.,...,..c..t.M&amp;Ia haslaunchcdanintematiooalne~w&lt;xt
thai will identify and present staged readings and a production of new wO&lt;ts by women.
The fino wO&lt;t to be pn:8CIIi&lt;d lhtrugb the "New Plays Networlc" is a July 26 produclion of Not For
The Ferryman by Donna Spector, direacd by Linda Lengyel. The pelformance will be held at6 p.m. 81
the Buffalo Ensemble 'l'heoln: qn the sixth floor of the Jocbon Building. 220 Delaware Ave, Buft'alo. lt
will be free of char&amp;e and open 10 the public. The Playwrights' Cerll&lt;:r also will praent staged readings
of """"'P"S from .U new plays by womet1 beginning 81 7 p.m. on ThW'Sday, July 29, at Hallwalls
Contemponuy Arts Center, 700 Main St, Buffalo. The plays. free and open 10 the public, are:
• .. .After April by Arlene Fanale, dii&lt;CI&lt;d by Christina Rausa, which explores the tife of writer
Willa Cruller through the eyes of ber longtime companion, Edith Lewis.
• Clwic.s by Gen!Jyn Horton, dii&lt;CI&lt;d by Susan So"'nsen. focusing on the "'lauonships of patients
and health workers in an abortion clinic.
• The Hardwan Stor&lt;by Joy Scirnt,direacd by Anna Kay France. Theexcapo is set belweenelectrical
and plumbing departmcrus. wh= two eldcrty stn111gen enoounter and alfea one another.

-Continental Breakfast
-Morning Break
-Buffet Lunch
-Afternoon Break
-Room Usage Fee for the
Entire Center
-Set Up and Breakdown of
all Programming Areas
- Banquet Area For Lunch
-Free Parking
-AV Package:

• Headwind by Diane Taber-Markiewicz. dii&lt;CI&lt;d by Trisha Sandberg, a love story set against a
background of "'tigious oppr&lt;ssion and greed for land and sea rights.
• Scanered Jlmong IN HeOU..ns by lnkeri Kilpinen, direacd by Linda Lengyel maps the trials of two
families in FU'Ulish-&lt;lCCUpied tenitory around St f'elersburg from the rise of Stalin in 1924 10 1990.
• Small T&gt;om.sttc Acu by Joan Lipkin, direacd by Thomas Kaunierczak Ill, inlroduces two pokerplaymg couples. one straight and one lesbian, and illustrates how "'lationships shift 10 meet individuals'
changing needs.

For mfonnauon, call Dtane Taber-Markiewcz, 873-7758. or Trisha Sandberg, 836-9647.

OBITUARY

Paull Sharits, jilmnulker, professor

PA Syscnn with Microphones. S ltdt!
Projectors, Overhead Projectors.
Scrt'aJS, VCR &amp; Momwrs

P•l J. ~ 50, a profes"'r of film at UB for nearly 20 years, died unexpectedly July 8. 1993
tn h1c; home
Shants, who was regarded as one of the ~c:y figure.!&gt; In avant-gnrde filmmaking in America, made
h" first film10 whale mcollege m Denver. Colo. A nat1veof Denver, he camcdabacheloroffine aru
lfl pamung 10 1964 from tht: Umver.,ny of Denver and a master of fi ne ans in visual design from
lndmna Univers ll y
He came to Buffalo 10 I 971 Before that he had been an an mstructor 31 the Maryland Institute
11! Art m Bahunore and an asSistant professor 31 Anuoch College.
Shan~ had one-llUUl exh ibitions at the Albnght- Knox An Gallery and other galleries and
mu!oeums throughout the world. The Albnght-Knox presented a retrospective of his films m 1976.
A memonal service will be held th1s fall at the Whitney Museum of American An ln New York
( II). where ShanlS' work IS represented in an exhibit on Auxus, a renegade 1960sart movement that
hl' JOined 1n 1965. Surv1vors include his son, Christopher of San Frnnc1sco; his fat.her, Paul Edward
\hanlS of Canon C1ty. Colo . and two grandsons.

Springfield Meadows
Located on Lincoln Ave., Town of Lockport (2.5 miles east

o.IJTr~msit)

ld)\\\\ '-1\\ 110\11 «&gt;'-'&gt;IIU&lt; 111&gt;'-&lt;0I~J&gt;OR\110'- 1'10..,1'-1"1111

' '&gt;I'RI'-&lt;,IIIIIl'&gt;IRII'''

The key is quality and afforlklbility.
• Excellent public schools
• Conveniently located: easy access ro 1-990; approximately
20 minutes from North Campus
• Save on real proper,y taxes
• Significant savings over comparable Amherst new-builds

The Springfield (Elevation A)
Starting at $ / 22 900 includes /OJ ' r 200' lot with public mo&lt;r and tht folimJ?ing .
3 or 4 b;drwms family roqm and firtplau, asphalr drivrway, garagt S&lt;rtJtct
fiJ:o~'J'i.12
baths, wood dtclc, partial briclc frrmi, tile foyrr and mam batn, dzshwash&lt;r
&amp; dispMal, rwo wallc-in closets.
We will build your plan on your lot-come check our prices.

CaU Dan Merwin at Keyway (716) 692-5966

The Springfield (lUnch)

KEYWAY NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION CORP.

~

�--.

... --.-WEDNESDAY

I

"FSfABUSHED EXCEllENCE"

WEDNESDAY

2~ --wnL11

-wnL
FEU.DWS-

PAliK - D

Read Any Good Skt:k1oos
Lately! Dr. Joyce S1nanm. dean
or Graduate: School. UB . H1lleboe
Aud.itonum.RPCJ 12 .30pm
SHAIIUI'EAIIEIN
DIELAWAIIE P.utll

Romeo and Julin. directed by
Y""' Yvodo:""""""" by Dolhy
Mueller Dclawan: Part bdund Ill&lt;
Root Gorden. 8 p.m.. Tuesday·
Sunday.llvough AugusJI5

FRIDAY

SOCIAL AND PIIEVEHTlVE

I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments AV3liable

120 Meyer Road Amherst

SIARA MANAGEMENT

12.30pm

THURSDAY

EleYatorsl
Quiet Park-Uke Selling!
Care-free Ufe Style!
Activities Director &amp; Program!

Professionally MaTIQ~ by

Hilleboe Auditorium. RPCI

1~
29

10 Minutes from UBI

836-6861

PAliK aTAn

R adlatloo, uuke.........., in
Moo and M....., Dr. E. P
Cronkite. Medical Depc. of
Brookhaven National Laborato-nes. Upton. Long Island

THURSDAY

22

-wnL

COMI'VTINQJntrodudion to UNIX. 202
BaJdy. Nonh Campo~ . 3-!i p.m.
For regaslration information contact the academ1c haason at 645 JS42
COMPV11NQlntrodiK1ion to CMS. 202
89ldy North Campus 6-8 p m

For regasuution mfonna1ion contact the academic liaison at 6453S42

PAliK -..a
FEU.DWS-

ln tbe Beginninc: ~ Evoludon or Earth 's Alm05phe~. Dr
Charlc:. Eben. DtstmgUIShed
Teadung Profes-.or nf Geogrnphy Hilh::hoe Audatunum. Rll("l
1:! 'O p 111

TIIEAT£11
Staged Readings. excerpu; from
Sl~ new plays by women
Hall walls Gallery, 700 Matn St.
Buffalo 7 p.m

Womeo
andSEIIIIIWI
Wt~~Mss. Dta.ne
Depken. Ed.O . asmtant profosor. Dept of Health. Phy5ical
Education and Recreauon , BuffaJo State College 252A Fatter
South Campus 12.30-1 JOp.m

WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY

~0 -wnL2J

PARK STAn

FRIDAY

2~

M£01CtHE SEMINAR
Non- Insulin Depc.ndenl Oiabele!i Mellitus Among Western
Nr-"'' York Rlspanics, Carmen
Alvarez. M.O. chmcalas~c:.tam
professor. UB Dc:pc or F.am•l&gt;
Methcmc :!5lA F.arber South
Campu' 12 30- I 30 p.m

SOCIAL AND PIIEVEHTIVE
MEDICINE SEIIIINAII

Quantitating Clio teal Judgmftll: S)111ptoms A.~Wkd
With OliU. Media, c.r~o&gt;
Jaen. M.D. Ph.D 252A
Fart&gt;cr Soulh CamP"'
1230-1.30

MONDAY

26

EDUCAtiON PAN£1

Jamts P. Comer, physac•an and
profe-;sor of child psychaatf). and
pa~lists John

SOCW AND PR£VENTIV£

T. Cunm. Albc=n

Thompson. Robert L Lon=t:m and
lllomas Coseo 1l1c Chautauqua
Amphuheatct. 10 45 a.m Adffii'i~lon S35. GSEAA members.

SoW. non -member. 11nclud~'
lunch) ForrtgHilrdiiOn mrnrmalllln call CH5-2.t91 Spon!M.m:d
by the Gradual~ School of EducatiOn Alumm A,,o.:IJIIOn
TIIEAT£11
Not For Tht Ferryman b\
Donna Sptttor. dun·ted b,
Lmda Lcng)el. lu.:l -uff p'ru

dui."UOn fm "Ne\lo Play' N~t
\loorl." of the lntematiORJI
Center fur Women PIJtr
\lo nghb Buffalo ·
Ensc::mblc Thearrt.
200 DelawareBuffalo 6 p.m

WEDNESDAY

Hill INAil
C•lclum Binding Prul~ns and
lhe Moletular Mechanlsm of
Vitamin D Action, Dr Syl\'13
ChmtakDll. Ph.D .. professor.
Dept uf BuxhcmJstry and Molecular B1ology. Unrv of Denh.!&gt;tl)' alliJ Med1c1ne, New Jerst!)
Hlileboc- Aud1tonum. RPCI
12 10 p m

EXHIBITS

-

PAINTING SHOW

4

ROSWEU PARK SUMMER
FELLOWS PROGRAM

Knot Theory-h's In Your
Genb. Wilham M ena.~o. Ph 0.
a\socuue prof~.!&gt;Of . UB Dept uf
Mat hcmat iC.S Hilleboc Audltonum. RPCI 12 .30 p m

FRIDAY

l

TAX INITTlVTE
Changr"' in Ta"\ R~urn~. mn
tlm·tcd h) tht'" UB Cc:nte!r fm
~1.ut.lft'mcnt Oc\eluprnc:nt. m
~·oopt-r.atnm .,.,_11h the IRS Center
lnr I llllkiiHI\Io Nonh C':.uupu'
H 11) .a •n 12 -45 p 111 Fe" S55
Rcg"tr.a1111n dcJdhne " Aug 2.
call fl-.1'\ l~OO tor more mfunnJ
loon

SOCIAL AND PREVEHTIVE
ME{IICINE SEIIIINAR

Jounull Club. 252A Farber
Soulh Campus. 12 30- 1 30 p m

P..atntmgs b) l-4 student.!&gt; m
Millard Fillmore College. who&lt;;e
maJon. tnclude nu~tng. a.rchuectUn: and bUSIIle.\S. Will be on diS ·
play lhrough July 30m the
Drewdor.&amp; Gallery. I-+.$ Parker
Hall, South Campus Amsu; ~
RCKCmary M Bond. Olga
Mercedes Escobar. Jules M
JablonlokJ , Man M Ko1lows\..t.
Amy S Marhng. Julie A
Marusz.a. Joan E Sha\lo, M1chael
A Snyder, Regmald A SJWks.
Peter M Talty . Derek J Teeter.
Hm Me=• T.!&gt;U1 . Melody Vydas and
Jamcc L. WuiO\Io'ICh Gallery
htmN an= 1-8 p m. Monda)lo
through ThuNiay,. and 1- S p m .
Fndu)'l&gt;

N 0 TIC E.S
VDWHTE£RS SOUGHT

FOR RESEARCH STUDY
Dr Bung H...~ Sung. n:~an:h
lb..c-..: . profc"'ur of med•cme.
..eel ' nwlc \Uium~er;. for an:
-.e;:m:h pmJ~'CI un etlecb of caf.
lcmc on blood pre''urr dunn&amp;;
rc..'t and c\en.·,~ Volunt~.--en
ntu'l bt- bt-1\o\c:-c=n 21 and .15. m
guud he:1lth. v. uh oom1al hlood
pre:!&gt;.!&gt;UrL' (not greater !han I 30/KO
mmH~). F'rt~ ph)·:.•cal and cardlllvot.)('ular evaluatiOn and a
$140 st1pend for compleung lhe
\tudy For debils. call Or Suns
or Wendy Orlo'Wsk.i AI 887--4556

�M

CIIISISHIIVICO
V~NUDIII
voluntee~

bem August for Advocate: Program ofCris1s Sc:rvu:cs, 2969
Mam Sl. , Buffalo Volunteers
~tns

1

• •

"Rhythm Revue• on WBFO schedule

pnwtde cnsi!l mtcrvenllon. mfor
mnuon and suppor1 ~rv1ces to
\ u:Um!&gt; of sc~tualllli-~ uh and the1r
f:anuiJcs m the hospllal,or emc:r

"Rhythm Revue.· a classiC soul and roots rock program,
has been added 10 WBFo·s weekly schedule Thos show
features rhythm and blues of the 1955-75 era, covenng
harmony groups. Southern Soul stars. Motown. Latin
Soul. early funk and more. "Rhythm Revue" arrs from
modmght on Saturdays through 6 a.m , Sundays. Tune on

gcnc:y !f.ettmg Tiley also provide
cm&lt;XJoo:tl SUpporl and procedural

mfonnauon m the court.\ For
mort mfonnauo n call 8}4 -) 1.l l
Re...:rvc Ltsts for the 1993 Fall

R

To celeblate a decade of nall&lt;Jnr.o broadcasts, "The
Thistle and Shamrock" 1s QIVIng away a ten-day trop for
two to Scotland The tr1p 1ncludes donner w1th F100a
Rttch~e. Scon1sh-born host of the program Entry forms
may be obtained by calling 829-2555 "The Th1s11e and
Shamrock" explores the tradot100al folk musoc of Scotland
and Ireland, and IS heard on WBFO each Saturday
even1ng at 6

Tr.u mnJ for new

R£URVE USfS DUE

E

MONDAY-fRIDAY

__ _ _ _ _

SATIJRDAY

SUNDAY

\c,~mn

arc now due Fonn.-. are
J\a!lablc at the Rc"Crve Dcd.: m
t".Jlh hbr.try

CRAFT WOIIKSHOPS
('rcauvcCraftCcmcr. 120
l•llmnrr, Elhcon Comple~.\lo1Jl
' ~""''N.Ir workshops 10 knlllmg,
, ••k.het 1ng. qudtmg, phutogr.tph) ,
JJr,,nlmn c mbrmdcry. stmncd
j!l.'~'- jewe lry constructiOn and
pulh:r)'. bcgmmng week of Jul)

NPR,_at
lopol ....hour
5am.-10p.m.

l:ocal.-sand
feaUas. Tlllft:

and_,_
repotl8.

~n

t·ce" art .S2M30. studenb
.tOO \.C:ntor cllw:ns. S301S40.
t.h. ult) , \tniT and othtr.o FOf more
mlnnnat1on . call645-2434 be
r""c:cn I and 5 p m . OJ 645-6125
""l~~ot.·entla m

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and4pm

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J 0 B S
f ACULTY
A..'.\ista nt Prnf~so r- l nfumtatJon
~ml L1brary Stud.!~ . Postmg IIF
II ._.~

AUEAIICH
St-crtt.~~ry

Ill (NO..(;)-Spun:.urc:d

l"rngr.J.ffi.'. Xlv ice:,., Postmg #R
.,,l lhlt Projed Staff~· ­

l·.unt l)' Mt:d.Jcnlt'. Postmg

Convenience

~R

•IWffl

Quality

PIIORUIOIW.
1.&lt;00 Prognunm..- Analy" (Sir ·
JH ltfK.-.: uf the A~mt~ v~
l'n....,•dcnl for Uruvemty Ldrdllo.

Service

/\~ling 1ffl.J048 Instructional
""'upport TKhnician (SL-3)-Um ·
\mil) Ubr.tno. Posong NP-3047

IA:Ud Prog.ranuner/Analyst (51..._\)..()ffK't of Educational Serv~ ­
llil:nl.al Mcxhcn-.e. Postmg •P-JO.U&gt;
SUttT A.~t~ ·(SL-4)-Dean ',
t&gt;ffit~·Fncu lty of Nanua.l ScieOC'e..\
.uld Mathemattn.. Pust.mg ltP-.3015
lrNructiona.l Support ~ia t~
lSI ...-2)--0ffn of Educaoona'J Stt\K't"\ . Posung lt P-3034. Program
Coordinator (SI.r3, Internal Pro--

"!V ariety

motion Opportunity)~mpu11ng
.md ln fonnat•onTcchnology. ~ -

. mt,\ltP-305 1 BenmtsSpecialisl
tMP-5, lnl&lt;rnal PronKJ6on ()pportunity~Pttsonnel Servtce.'l.
1\l\img •P-3052. Smior Staff
"""""'' (SL-l, lntomal l'nln&gt;&lt;&gt;tion Opport uni t y~ology ,

1 1u~tmg MJOSJ. Flnt Arts Center
Director (SL-6)-Fine Aru Center.
Pt~ong

•P-3045.

C0MPEnnvE ctASS1FED CIVIL
SEIMCE
C ieri&lt; I (SG-46)-Lnc~ wood

Rhyttm

u-

Revue

br.uy. unc 1126}12 Keyboard
Spt"cia!.M (SG-46)--Nulnllon. Lu'IC

•)(m7 Keylx.rd Specwt&lt;l
tSG-()6. tnnpor1l.ry u ntU Aug.. 31,
1993)-UB FoundaiH&gt;II. unc
..,I 148. Keyboard SpeciaiN

(SG-%}-Rcsod&lt;:nual Custodoal.
Unc 843003
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CI.AHIFIED CIVL

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Clranor (~ port-time)-R"o·
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Jazz Set

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14

Eating

Green
Environment.. colllcems,

.........
- ........-ve
- - t o break the
meet habit
IIJWALlEJt-

M

Y WIFE. NAN. and llmve
been vegetarians for over

ten years. We are raising
rwo happy. heallhy vegerarian children. Even our
dog's a vegetarian. While a mealless diet ha"i
become second nature to us. we've never

taken 11 for gr•.mted. Being vegeuuian is
ba"c to who we are
Our pnmary rea.~n for abandoning meat
wa.\ concern for anunaJs and a desm~ to be
non-vtolent and compassionate. Since
changing our dtet. we've become aware of a

[~jiji.ljifl~

number of other benefits of vegetarianism.
A meatless diet IS
gcneraJJy low m satu rated fat aild choles-

terol and high in fiber.
minimizing the nsk of

heart disease and
and certain

stroke

cancers.
But as many UB
environmental studtes students have re mtnded me, there are also good environmen taJ reasons for becoming vegetarian. This
powerful argument for abstaining from meat
has JUSt come 10 light in lhe past couple of

SIMPSON

year.;. I've taken some time to acquaint

myself wilh lhe facts and figures and have
reached the conclusion that the vegetarian
diet and lifestyle are as fundamental to being
environmentally responsible as recycling.
conserving energy and fighting pollution.
Conjure up in your mind Bn image of
America's Midwest farm belt. Can you see
those :'amber waves of grain"? Do you think
of it as America's bread basket? If so, try
again. At most, only 30 percent of lhe grain
grown in lhe U.S. is used to produce bread
and olher grain-based foods directly consumed by people. 70 percent of our annual
grain crop is fed to tivestock to produce
meal

Even when animals are penniued to
graze. converting forage into meat.. they arc
unlikely to go from past= to slaughter. The
more likely scenario includes a trip ro lhe
feedlot foc faru:ning on grain for four lo five
months.
All in all. nearly 150 million tons of grain
are fed to U.S. livestock annually. Alllharto
produce only about 20 million tons of meatprodu&lt;;ts. In a sense. this process wastes 130
million tons of grain a year, an amount
estimated to be enough to supply every
pc:rson'on earth with a cup of grain a day.
Animals arc inefficient convener.; of
grai n to meat. Besides producing meat.
livestock use food to produce body heat and
fueL body maintenance, muscular develo(&gt;ment and activity. Also some of lhe food
lhey consume ends up being excreted as
waste. With all this inefficiency, no wonder
so much grain is needed to produce meat.
Disproportionate grain consumption
magnifies lhe environmental impact of lhe
meal industry and lhe prnctice of meal eating. What are the environmental conse-

quences of the meat habit?
For one thing, it consumes a lot of en ~
ergy. Jeremy Riflc.in, in his book Beyond
Beef, estimates lhat. all told. it takes lhe
equivalent of one gallon of gasoline to produce a pound of grain-fed beef. To keep an
average family of four in lhe meat habit for a
year, it takes lhe equivalent of 260 gallons of
gasoline. That's about half lhe amount of
gasoline the avemge family car consumes in
the course of a year's driving.

E

nergy use and energy wa.ste contribute
to global wanning and acid min. Our
addiction to oil also creates pressure to open
up. wilderness areas to the destructive effects
of oil development and increases the chances
of fighting yet another war for oil.
It takes a lot of water to mise grain-fed
livestock. It has been estimated lhat a ~un­
dred times more water is needed to produce
a pound of beef lhan a pound of wheat. If it
were not roc livestock crop production. not
nearly as much water would have to be
pumped out of dwindling Midwest aquifers
or diverted from rivers like lhe Colorado
which no longer even reaches lhe Pacific
Ocean. An estimated 6000 megawatts of
electric generating capai:ity has been lost
from rivers in the Pacific Northwest due to
diversion for irrigation, much of it for live~
stock production.
The ILvestock industry is also reSponsible
for lhe mega-use of fertilizers an&lt;! pesticides.
If it takes ten pounds of grain to produce a
pound of mea~ lhat makes lhe meat habit
roughly 10 times as fertilizer&lt;Onsumptive
and pesticide-polluting as a diet based on
eating grain directly. Pesticides and fertilizers significantly contribute to non-point
source water pollution.
The feedlots used by lhe livestock industry also cause water pollution. 1be. cauJe on
a large feedlot may produce a million
pounds of excrement a day but feedlots have
no sewage system. No wonder lhen lhat lhe
livestock industry is one of the major
sources of organic toxic water pollution in

"Even when livestock are not gobbling down grain, their
environmental impact is damaging. Nearly 70 perr:enJ of
public land usedfor grazing livestock has been damaged"

the United States. The recent contaminauon
of drinking water in Milwaukee was linked
to fann runoff: containing infectious recal
matter from livestock.
Livestock also produce melhane. a greenhouse gas. The World Watch Institute reports lhat each cow belches one lhird of a
pound of melhane for each pound of meal it
yields. If you add in lhe carbon dioxide
resulting from energy use. every pound of
steak has lhe same global warming efTeel as
a 25 mik driv~ in a typical American car!
As one record wann winter after another
occurs, scientists are warning us that global
warming could result in a rise in average
global temperature of several degreesenough to produce more heat waves and
droughts. undermine ecosystems and agriculture. accelerate the rate of species extinction, cause a rise in sea levels which would
nood coastal areas around lhe world, and
produce generaJly more violent weather.
Interestingly enough, even 'when livestock are not gobbling down grain, their
environmental impact is damaging. Nearly
70 percent of lhe -268 million acres of U.S.
public land used for grazi ng livestock has
been damaged by overgrazing. Moreover.
federal predator control programs on lhese
public lands have waged a war against natwe
wildlire such as coyores and mountain lions.
The much publicized roundups of wild
horses (wh..ich end up being auctioned for
slaughter for pel food) have also had lhe
same objective. namely to eliminate wildlife
that competes with livestock.
The env1ronmental tragedy is com ~
pounded m tropical countries. like those in

Central America. where lhe creation of
pasture for grazing is usually accomplished
by clearing and destroying rainforest.
Rainforest destruction has meant loss of
biodiversity on an unprecedented scale. A
hamburger made from expon beef may cost
5 cents less but scientislS have estimated that
each hamburger is responsible for lhe permanent destruction of 55 square feet of
rainforest Is it worth it? Of course not.
ince lhe 20th anniversary of Earth Day
a few years ago. a wave of renewed
environmental concern has swept across our
country. It's time !hat we looked deeper at
how our way of life, including wbat we eaL
is damaging the environment and undermining lhe chances our children will have for a
decent life.
Every thoughtful American should feel
challenged by lhe fact lhat our eating habits
(and lhe industry lhat supports lhem) are not
only environmentally destructive but art also
unheallhy and based on vast amounts of
needless cruelty and suffering for lhe billions
of animals raised and killed for food each
year. Luckily, there is a sensible alternative
which maintains alllhe pleasures of eafing.
If reason and caring dictate our actions, lhe
future belongs to lhe healthful. humane and
environmentally sustainable vegetarjan diel
and lifestyle.

S

Waher Stmpson IS UB's Energy Olf'IC8f. He
and hts WJfe Nan Simpson have wnttBfl an
mtroductory booklet on vegetarianism and
will be conducting a Life Worl&lt;s/lop on the
su~Jject tilts coming fall For informatton
about etCher. ca/1645-3636

�S?fCIAl

R[COGNI!IO~

tlevr-tng
0...a......
cb1no

H. . . . . . .. SUNY~Teachlng Profaeaor
and Applied Sciences. received lhe Dean's
May commeoiC&lt;O'I'illl ~ ceramcnjes fer ·~-long"
CICIItrb*lns 1o enor-1nQ. A "*l'1ber or lhe UB faculty since
1982. Shames Is lhe unNerally'olor!gdme lead 1ns1tuctor fer eng;.
~mechanics. In 1991 , he and oo1eagues _,a grant from
1he N11iona1 Science Foundation 1o Shale ln8lructional techniques In
mechanics and computera with cOllege Instructors 81ound lhe coun!ry.

Slwnes 1s lhe author or CXHIUihor or numeo'Ou8\/0kmes in eng;.
1-..tng 1hal have collectively sold over half a million copies. He Is

edllor or McGIIIW Hill's Advanced Eng~r-mg Mechanic&amp; senes.
Shames' teaching honcn Include lhe 1978 Chancellor's Award for
Excellence in Teaching and Teachet ollhe Year, 1990. He Is listed
in lhe CUil8nl edition ol Who 's Who In~

A. . . . . ..,_..... M medlcai8Chool mMtlnC

0h9al1h

llvaeiMN insurance pmviders, along with six faculty and
nine resident physicians, were hooo&lt;ed fa&lt; lheir contributions
to
care at th&lt;i 1993 amual faculty meeting of the UB School
ol Medlclno and Biomedlcai.SCiencas.
BhJe Cr06S/Biue Shield of West81n New YOI1&lt;, Health Care Plan
and Independent Health, received the Naughton Special Recognition Award fa&lt; significant advancement of the mission of the UB
medicaJ' school. They ware singled out fa&lt; the~ contributions to the
New YO(k State Hospital Reimbursement Demonstration Project.
Plllllp T. Lo Verde. professor of microbiology and pathology,
receilled the Stockton Krnball Award for excellence in academll:
achlellement, recognizing contributions to research. teaching and
service. Lo Verde has devoted his research career to finding a IISCcine fa&lt; echistosorTiasi, a parasitic disease that kills 800,000 people amually. He Is principal researcher in a project with Ain Sh8lns
University In Cairo, Egypt. part of the $39 million SchistOSOfniasls
Reeearch Project funded by USAID and the Egyptian gD1191Tlm8nt.
~ • . . . _. acting chair of the Department of BlochemiS!ry
and Distinguished Teaching Professor, received the Dean's Award
for outstandlng fepdelship and academic excellence. Ettinger was lauded fa&lt; his contributions to the medical school and his
depattmentalleadershlp.
" - F. Upton, clinical professor of surgery, received the fifth
annual Robert S. Berkson Memorial Award in the An of Med1cine,
v.illch recognizes excellence in patient care and teaching by volunteer faculty.
Louis A. and Ruth Siegel Awards for Excellence In Teaching were
P!8Sili1Wd In fQJE calegories: pr&amp;-ctinical, clinical vofunloo' and
houSe staff. Winners were selected from nearly 200 faculty nominated by students.
The recipients were:
~·

. _ _, assoc1ate professor of anatormcal sc1ences.
pre-clinical category
RlchMd . .rtdn. clinical assistant professor ol pedialncs, clinical
category.
n-a. Dwyer, clinical assistant professor ol family medicine.
·~category .

Dnld IIIMck-. Ob/Gyn; ........,• .._r. Ob/Gyn: Hlroakl
Yoehloka, surgery;.....,....,_., neurology; Kll......,.
L Plea, medicine; .loMptl .....,.., medicine; Edwenl .1.
.,_..,..,_., medicine; Sheny WlthlllnH.eltch. psychiatry,
and Qoaalo F........ neurology. all receilled houS&amp;-staff
awards.

llne~_UB rec:eM NIH 'FRn' ~
UB faculty member.; Scott L .,.__,.., 0eorve tt.Jduczak and K8ueNk lhHtrt have received ·FIASr

0

(Rrst Independent ReSearch Support and Transition) grants from the

NatlonallnstiWtes of Health. The grants are awarded based on scientifiC merit and recognize young investigators who hold promise fa&lt;
future scientific achievement in the biom&lt;ldlcal sciences.
Diamond, asslstant professor of chemical er.ginooring, will siUdy
how tilling cells respond to the physical fo&lt;ces generated by flowing
blood. The tour-year FIRST grant will fund research on how cells
respond to SlJCh fo&lt;ces, whicl\ cause blockages to develop in 1188sets and arteries, particutatty after 118SCUiar reconstruction or"'!'gary. DUmond eamed a doctoral degree In chemical engln89flng
from Rice Unillelslty.
1-tajduc:mk. ,_.ch assistant professor of physiology. received a
~grant to study how flllUrtlJ'IS prOYide in~tlon to the~
to measure blood presaura. A member of the AmeriC8n Physlofog~
cal Society and lhe WOIId Federation of Neuroscientists. he earned
his docl!ltale In phyliology from .US.
.
~. 8llialanl research proleaaorol medicJne, received 0 ~- .
v- QIWIIIo i::onduct reaearch on ocmplement actlllation during
open '-tllll'gefY. A member olh Amellcan Association far Ad111111C81'1lent of-Sciences, he earned his medical degrBe In intemal ·.
medicine fran GcMiimwJt Medical College In Sural. india

~-.

,_..__l£!il!:!!!!
Ave ~of~ Faclltleewere recognlzlld for

D
C8I'II!T'JCille

' ~~lo~881vicedlmQJune 15
atlhe ~Cornel n -.

~olt)e1992 FltiVAt*tig Q.lltr!W$eMCBIIINetd-. . . .
.
. . ._
. . ._
. ._
Six:IG'oom;
~
91op;
_ _..............
Gtonil;_
..... c.pny -

91op; and ....... - - - . EnWarwJa'tltll Haaltl rd SIM!y.
~-~by Ronald Na)4er. asaoclale vlca.p!VIidenlfer laclltle8, and Senior IJic:e Ple8idelit Robert J. We(pelr. Raymond Reinig. fer wtan the~ W8!l rwned. W88 also~

•

-----.....:-

Facui~&amp;SiaH
BIll
.............. c....
a.w8ChooldNn

0

Aundra C . Newell. formerly assistant dean for
admissions and student affairs in

the School of Law. has been
named associate dean for student
services in the school. In her new
position. she will supervise programs of en·
rolled students
and law student
organizations.
and coordjnate
student advisement with

career guidance
NEWElL
infonnation in
conjunction
with the school's placement program. Newell also will serve as a
c umculum advisor to students
attempting to qualify for the New
York State Bar. and will provi~
academic and personal gu idance
to minority students.
Befort: comi ng to UB in 1986.
Newell was director of the PreProfessional Program for Minor·
ity Students at Marist College in
Poughkeepsie. She is a member
of the New York Suue Bar Association committees on Minorities
in the Profession and Legal Education and Admission to the Bar.
the Bar Association of Erie
County 's Special Task Force on
Minorities in the Profess ion, and
Attorney Access. lnc.
Newell received a bachelor's
degree in secondary education
from Cheyney State University
and a law degree from Temple
University School of Law

UB, .,.__.project
wins geMtrlc - -

0

A project that prov1des
nursing home pauents with
routine dental cleaning has re ceived a geriatric merit award tn
the American Dental Association's
1992 Community Preventive Den·
tisii)' and Geriatric Denml Health
Care competitions.
The project is a JOint effort of
the UB School of Oental MedJcme and Buffalo General
Hospital's Deaconess Center
Located at Deaconess. it was
submitted by Daniel T. Golder,
assistan t coordinator of the Deaconess Ce nter Dental Clinic and
coordinator of advanced education in the general dentistry clinic
in the UB dental school. Also
involved in the project are Betsy
Tuites. a dental hygienist. and
Terrence Thines. UB clinical
associate profcs«&gt;r of onll medicirw: and Deaconess Dental Clinic
coordinator.

Doc:bnl-......twlns

----~~
l'lltricia Schuyler. a doc-

0

toral srudent in companltive education at UB. has been
awarded a 1993 Spencer Dissertation Fellowship for her research
oo teacher training in Cuba and
Venezuela.
'The Spencer Dissertation
Fellowship is part of the Spencer

B

0

Foundation's effort to encoun~ge
outstanding new scho~ to develop insights on issues n:lating
to education. 'The S 15,000 award
supports the fellows while they
finish doctoral dissertations. Only
31 fellows wen: chosen this year
from more than 600 applications
from 154 graduate institutions.
Schuyler is also the recipient
of a n:cent grant from the Canadian Social Science and Humanaties Research Council. In
addition, she won a 1991 -92
Fulbright grant, traveling to Venezuela to conduct a comparative
study of teacher education in
Venezuela and Cuba.

0

"Phone books don ' t grow
on trees ... they · re made
from them.·· IS the mono of a
campaign to limit phone book
disuibution on cam pus.
Employees are asked to order
fewer campus phone books than
in the past (a maximum of one
din:ctory for each full - and parttime staffer). and to s h~ these
whenever possible. Further, departments are asked to order
fewer regional phone directories
(NYNEX. Talking Phone Book).
'These policies wen: developed
by lhe campus EnvironmcnW

Task Force in consuhat.ion with
other administrative units. In the
long run. the task force says it
hopes to see a 90 percent reducuon
m phone directory distribution.
'This kind of conservation
wi ll benefit the environment by
minimizing the cutting of trees.
energy consumption. water and
air pollution and landfilhng."'
organizers slate. "While the um versity is now able to recycle
some of the di scarded phone
directories, reducing consumption
and wa~te in the first place produces more environmental benefi ts than recycling."

GoldMber book rated

'most ..........

0

A textbook authored by
Gerald M . Goldhaber.

associate professor of commun ication at UB. was the book most
often cited as being the mos1
innuential in the area of Busi·
ness-Management-Organizational
Communication (BMOC) in a
recent survey of communication
professionals.
Goldhaber's te&lt;thook. OrganiZJJtional Communication, is the
flrst hook to develop the basic
principles of organizational communication. defined as the exclwlge of information. bolh
internally and externally. between
organiza~ons . The book examines
such fiiCIOr.l as soun:es. credibility.
channels of communication and
the feedback system that increases
or decreases the accuracy of the
exchange of infonnation.
Six editions of the book have
been published since 1974, more
than any olber textbook in the
field of communication. It is used

A

R

D

in more than 250 colleges and
universities worldwide.
A UB faculty member since
1974, Goldhaber formerly served
as chair of the UB Department of
Communication. He has woo five
teaching awards. and is listed in
Who 'r Who in rilL World and
Who's Who in America

0

The women 's nov1ce fourcrew team in the UB Row-

ing Club took first placr m thr
Dad Vail NationallntercoflegJate
Regatta held m Philadelphia in
May. The team, which also had
placed first in the New York SUite
compeuu on. beat 39 other. for
the nauonal trophy
Also at the national event, the
UB men 's nov1ce four-crew team
took fourth pi ace m a fi~ld of 46
crews. The men's vmity lightweight eight placed seventh. In
the smte competition. the UB
men 's varsity four won first
place. the men 's nov1cr four was
second, the men 's vmity hghl·
weight eight was founh and the
women's varsity lightweight four
placed sixth.

0

Donna Musimo. costume
shop manager in the Department of lbeater and Dance.
has been accepted for membership by the
United Scenic
Artists. (USA)
Local829.

USA n:presents
designeB,
anists and
craftspeople
working in
MASSIMO
film. theater
and television. Membership is
based on a ponfolio review, an
interview and an examination.
In addition to her work. at UB .
Massimo has designed costumes
for numerous Western New York
theater productions. including
Studio Arena' s 1992 production
of"Fences" and the 1991 Alleyway Theatre production of "Hit
Me Again." She also has designed costumes and scenes for
various productions of
Shakespeare in Delaware Park.

...._.._ofMIIIcllle
updMes ...... . . . ,

0

James B. Lee, professor of

medici'"' at UB and direcmr
of the Hypertension Program at
Erie County Medical Center, updated the prostaglaodins. thromboxanes. and lcukottienes sections
for the recently published 16111
edition of ThL Mm:k MQIUIQ} of
Diagnosis and ThLropy.
Said to.be the most widely used
medical rt:fereoce in the world.'l'hL
M.,d: MQIUIQ} distills the ltnowledge of more than 300 of the
world" 5 fon:most medical scholan and specialists iniJ? a single,
compact volume.

�18

when )'OU tlli'*llbout lt.
We'll know they're out there when we find the same s1gns that rhey'dpick
If that gives you the creeps. remember that the technology our intergalactic
ye= away IS pOised at Kennedy. Castro and Khrushchev on the brink of
year&gt; away. and they're still decoding the mushroom cloud over Hiroshima.
mall. . -

t

up if they were watchmg us.
neighbor.; are lool:mg a1 30 tight
nuclear war Fony-eight ligh1

NASA scienti st Michael Klein , addres~ing a recent UB meeting

Section oflhe American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. began

I

t1st he had no evidence that we had been visited by representatives of other/
could have been visited a million yearsagoandnoone would know ... Hi#lterest,

I

hosted by the Ntagam Frontier
by saying that as a physical scien·
plane~. bUl he added that ··we
he said. IS in the electronic hard·

ware-"h1gh resolution Microsoft" stuff-being developed by NAS/to observe~fe elsewhere.
''What'o;; exctting about thts period:' Klein said. "is that we have the cap#ility of doi!4 experiments 10 spac~ today. We now know
what the ancient~ su11pected: that staf"i are place\\. We've seen mdirect evic;lnce that ptalets are circling those stars, that there are solar

~ystem~ stmt lar to our own."

I

/

The problem. Klem sa1d. "d~&lt;tance. The space probe Voyager.laun~ed in 1977, -'&gt;k 12 year.. 10 leave the planetary pan of our ;alar
~y,tcm. despate the fact that 11 travel'\ a Maggenng 40-50.(X)() miles In hour The knnous. hypersen siuve radio telescopes K.lem IS

antcrestt!d an- the largest. Aercibo in Puerto Rico. boasts a dash that,ould fill th~eld at the Rose Bowl-still cannot discern details in
other solar "'Yo;;temo,; "The ...eparat10n.'' sa ad Klein. "io,; like seeing .le two edges I a quarter 10 Los Angeles ."'
The tnck 1s ro li)' lodelecl SJmilllf s1gnals m the ones we giv~ur--or, moralascinating yet. have already gaven out-to observers 10
other gaJaxae~ Klein and his people are looking across the light ~-the si.ll .lllion mile' traveled by light in a single year-for evidence

of lh&lt; -.nd of tech nology "they" migh1 be using to look at /

I

Klem remmded hi' aud1ence that an otxerver 100 hght
awa). Mra#lmg to ~e our earth 1n 1893. wou ld o;ee nothmg: one 40 light
yt!ar\ away. howc:vcr, would see "the faint r.tdao r-missi from the sun .l ur solar system ~parkling" a."' it dad 10 1953
··As we rotate. our technology 1"' !&lt;.pewing out sign
as a garden ~ri nkler doe~ a~ 11 goes arou nd .'' says Klem . ·11us means that
mter...~ellar commumcation 1s possible in the 20th ce ry "
/
RadJotelc...copc'llle Aen:ibo. and ot hers tn Aust ia. Spa1n and ctl ifomaa. have already detected new ~tan-an the processoffonnauon.
m\\ matcnal'\ and \ a.'t quantities of water in are
here star&gt; arelonnmg. and other ~tars that are dying
"Planet~ appear to be a natur..ti reo,;ult or the st fom1ation proclss." 10aid KJein. "What we're looking for is ev1dence of technology out
there we're U'lng C;(J\IIng md1o tele...cope~t arch for m1crc:J,ave mdio signab produced b) their technology
"II'~ hl..e standmg at the shore or a cosm· ocean. looking l &gt;r a lighthouse.
''B ut detection 1seasy: ~archang 1~ difft t. In our own Ii tt~ local neighborhood of the Milky Way galaxy. there are I 0 million po~s1ble
planetary systems. The problem is whe'J' o look: you hav/to look m IOO.OOOdifferent directions to look at the whole o;;ky."
NASA is usmg custom microch~
· p t o'flnology to dec~ huge quantities of mformation. and has dc:veloped a new. dual method. Klem
satd. "We're searching stan. that are
be~t cand idates#&gt;r having planets around them.'' say) Klem. who added that a thousand of these
"best candidates" already have bee
enufted . .. And ~ re searchmg the whole sky-an ·All Sky Survey' wit.h smaller antennae to search

the other 99.9 percent."
1
I
He compared the process to/"annmg a field ofJ.•heal for the tallest slalk.
'The computers are srunpli'g every frcquenclfand asKing. is there anything in there stronger than the background no1se. the energy
of the whole field. They c rere four-dimension# maps in which signal s stand out at these frequencies. these coordinates ...
Voyager. he added, hyready picked up ~1Smissions equivalent to those emihed by Aercibo 5 million light yean; away . Like recent

Signals picked up in Cal/Omia.

I

"~ey'll

haveJl be decoded before we know what they mean."

I

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                    <text>STATE UIIVERIITY OF lEI YORI AT BUFFALO

I( f fJr r I( fJ
J1_L_ 11_ lJJ1
Brig tOut oo or Inventions
fJ

World -

Un~Games

Buffdlo'93"

June 24, 1993 Volume 24, No. 29

T

lly ANN -ITCIIEJI
Reporter Ed1tor

.

UNYNOW

RANKS among
the top I0 uni versities in the country
in patenting new
inventions and discoveries, with VB
a major conoibutor
to that ranking.
About 20 U.S. patents are expected to be
1ssued m 1993 for UB mvenlJOns, according
to

KathJee n Terry. patent attorney and direc-

tor or UB's Off1ce of Technology Tr.msfer

l ~ fatents b~ued on LB imentions Ill 199~

D. L C11unC. "Carbon Fiber
Re1nlorced Tin-Lead Alloy as a Low Ther ·
mal ExpansiOn Solder Prelorm • Also. "Car·
bon Rber Composites Hav1ng Improved
Fatigue Reslslance •

K. QupU, Sushumna lruvanll.
Eh Ruckenste1n. "Stable H1gh Sohds. H1gh
Terma! Conductivity Pastes •

-E.-·

lbolpll T. YIIIIC. J1anp1ng Chen. J Ed·
ward CtehanowiCZ , "Low Temperature
CatalytiC ReductiOn of N1trogen OXIdeS •
Stephen P
Warunek , "SiliCone Elastomer L1ned Pros·
theuc Dev1ces and Methods of Manufac-

-0..

Serv 1 ce~ Terry adds that the um vers1ty's
ture •
··tn venbon Commerc1aJJzatJon Enhancement
~- LeoJ Magee . Jr
Progmm" hold&lt;.; prom 1 ~ for faculty mve n"Glassy Carbon Linear Array Electrode •
tors and the campus
'' By state law. the mve ntorgets40percent
off the top.'' sht" ex plam s "Of the rest. my
offi ce geb a 15 percent adrruniStr.ttJve fee .
The rest is divided in a complicated fomwla:
to the inventor ·~ lab. the inventor' ~ depart men! and our campus royalty fund.
··we arc begi nning to use some of tht ~
ruyahy account to fund the making o f prototypes. or samples of chem1cah. or dcbuggmg
~ftware . whatever ~ needed-to Improve the
10vcmion to make: it more licensable .
"U mvcn.Hy 10vcnuons come at a very early pmnt
10 t.he1 r ovcmll deve lopment as licensed product"' So
1!'s hard to find a l'mnpany that "111 take J. ns ~ on
developmg them But by cnhanc mg 10vc:nuon'
wtth the u~ or lhl ~ ruyalt)
fund. we ..:an get them O\~r a
n ... ~ bamer. ~hov.• lhat the) re aJI ) '-"Or~. thai they can he reall)
rmadc. maybe pnw1de :.ample:. ft1r tc,tmg All m all. the go;:li '' to make mven·
uon~ much more anrJ.CU\t.' to a hccn~c ..

UB's efforts to fostor fac ulty
mvcnti o ns c01ncide wllh
SUNY's g ro wing promt ·
ne nce in :..ecunng patents.
· According to a patent survey by
lhe Association of University Technology

Managers. conducted out of Terry's office. SUNY
faculty secured patents for 33 inventions and discoveries during

1992. Thai figure places SUNY tenth in the nation among
research universities.
"As a service 10 A lJTM, we provide this survey every year ...
says Terry. " It will be conducted again in early 1994."
Pa1ents issued are not an entirely reliable measure of techno logy transfer act.i vity. survey authors emphasize. "because some
inst.irutions have limited patent budgets, and only seek patents
when forced to. by publication schedu les. or whe.n a corporate
panner has been found who is willing to cover the cost. Others
patent more freely without any regard for commerciaJ vaJue ."

Topping the AVTM list were MIT and the University of

J. · Mohan N Badgu1ar
'Coal Recovery Process •
. , _ N. · Yang Pang. ChiChang
J Wung. Frank E Karasz . "Th~rd Order Non·
Linear Optically Actwe CompoSites. Method
ol Making Same and Photon1c Med1a Com·
pns1ng Same •

Cleor&amp;e C. LM, Xa..yt Sua. ~Determina­
tion of Amb.ent L•ght Level Changes tn
VISUal Images "
- -· " Rad~a110111mag1ng
Uuhzmg Data Reconstruction to Prov1de
Transforms Wh1ch Accurately Reflect Wave
PropagatJOO Charactenst1cs •
~F.

Mu11111Y. MIChael A

ApiCella
"DNA Probe lor the ldentrt1catK&gt;n ol
Haemophllus tnfluenzae •

Ca!Jfom1a w1th 126 and 81 patents. respcc·
tively. Schools mau:lung UB's I I patents
ISSUed 10 1992. 1nclude Northeastern Uni·
vers1ty. and Un1versttJes of fllino•s. Iowa.
Ne"' MeJUco and Waslungton.
Accordmg to Terry. relatively fewer
paten~ were ISSUed m 1992."than one
would have expected." but not for lack of
m"enuveness. For some reason. she says.
there was a slowdown 10 the U.S Patcnt
and Trademark Office
In the AlJTM survey. SUNY at Stony
Brook had 10 patents. Albany had one.
Binghamton four.the State University Col·
lege of Envuonmental Sc1ence and For-

estry in Syracuse. five and the Health
Science Center at Brooklyn. two. 1be survey considered mulu-campus universHy
~ystems

as one unit tn

1tc;,

tabulatiOns or

patent totals. '1lus is an ampress1ve record. ..
saJd SUNY Provost and V1ce Chancellor
for Acadentic Affa.rs Joseph C Burke of
the o;urvey resullS.

Along with sec:urtnc these patents.
the Research Foundation moved many mventions and discoveries by SUNY faculty
by licensmg 31 ne"
technologies rangmg from laboratory devJce
to a new anu-cloning agent m human blood.
mto the next phase

"SUNY·based technology has earned more
than $4.5 m1llion for SUNY campuses and memben, of lhc!1r re~h facuh) m JUSt a bnef 11 )"~
smce the creation of the !SUNY) Off1ce of TechnoiTr.msfer." accordmg to Pamc1a Winters. dtrector
of that office " \Ve currently market more than I 00
patents or t tX"hnologu~s de,eloped b~ Statr: Um ,ersJI)
I.Kult~ :· Wmtr:t'\ ':.ud
·111e lmpetll,lorunl\'l!f"'ll) h..·c hno l og~ u-.m:.·
fer came from the fedemJ gm emml!nt.''
e\plam ... Kathleen TeO) ·· ~tuch ofthe
n!"!art=h 1n thl,l'OUOU) ,.., ~upponed b)
the gO\emmcnl J.Jld 11 "a' reL·ognw:d that
"ltht'lut hdp at tht' umver-11~ lr:H:olm prota·ung
J.Jld h~,.·en,mg the rt' . . ult.... uf the re...carch. potenllall~ 'aluahlr: 111\cnuon:-. y,ould he
fallo" m the :.c1enufic hterJ.·
Og)

tur&lt; Th&lt;SUNYS)Siemhasa
cenLrJ.hud office to sobcit
an,en110n discl os ures .
JSatent and IICCO'it.' ln\'COtiOOS. lnetechnoJog) !.J1¥1Sfer funcuon at UB was decentr.il1.red

from Albany three year&gt; ago ..
The enactment or the U.S. Patent and Trademark Amend·
ments of 1980 encouraged umvers1t1es to commerciahu their
inventions by allowing them to retaJn ownership of the discoveries made with federal fundmg The SU Y Research
Foundation·s Technology Transfer Office. established m 1979.
provides SUNY faculty a place to have the1r mvenuon.s evalu-

ated for potential patenung and commerc1al viability One of the
goals of patenting is to be able to offer these new technologies
10 industry wath an incenu ve to produce them commercaally.
1be grant of an exclusive or non-cxclus1ve hcense to a patent
provide~ a company with the rights necessary to conunit the
resources to bring a technology to market.

�--.--...--

2

...

Kids can look forward to

hours~ Ul, thanks to lhe
hard wor1&lt; ~ IIOit.niBers who

built new playgrpund
May 28 at Collaborative
Childhood Center.
South Campus.

-Continental Breakfast
-Morning Break
-Buffet lunch
-Afternoon Break
-Room Usage Fee far the
Entire Center
-Set Up and Breakdown of
all Programming Areas
-Banquet Area far lunch
-Free Parking
-AV Package:

UB Alumni Association awards
are presented at annual dinner
lly IIIAirY Kill SPINA

News Bureau Staff
NATIONAL leader in
the effort to eliminate
discrimination against
people with AIDS and
the host of the National
Public Radio program "Fresh Air'"

A

were among those honored June 1 at

the 54th annual installation and
awards dinner of the UB Alumni
Association.

Alan Brownstein (B .S .. '67:
M.S.W .. '69). executive di=tor of
the National Hemophilia Foundation. and Terry Gross (M.A.. "75).
who serves asexecuti ve producer. as

well as host, of National Public

Save up to 50%

Remanufac~ your

Radio's "Fresh Air." received Dis·
tinguished Alumni Awards.
Also receiving Distinguished
Alumni Awards were Henry J.
Nowak (J.D .. "61 ). former U.S. congressman representing the 33rd Congressional District. and John T. Curtin
(J.D.. "49). U.S. district coun judge
and former chief judge of the Westem District of New York.
The leader of the National Heme&gt;philia Foundation for a dozen years.
Bro~stein has been a major figure
in working to assure the safety of the
nation· s blood supply and has served
as an advocate for the elimination of
discrimination against those who are
HIV -positive or who have AIDS.
Gross has been &lt;~&lt;!scribed as "one

ofthe most thought-provoking interviewers in media today" by Th• Los
Ang•l.s Times. "Fresh Air."" which
combines contemporary culture with
public affairs. airs daily on 150 sta·
tions nationally.
Nowak was a congressman from
1975 until his retirement in 1992.
His effons to bring federal aid and
projects to Western New York have
improved thequalityoflife throughout the region.
Cunin has written many deci·
sions that have significantly altered
and improved the community, in·
eluding those that led to the creation
of the successful magnet schools
system in the City of Buffalo and to
the development of affirmative aC·
tion policies for the Buffalo police
and fm: departments.
Th:recipientoftheSamudP.Capen
Alumni Award for notable and meritorious cootributions to UB and its family was Robert A. Baker (B.S .. "54).
As former chair of the Buffalo
and Erie County Private Industry
Council. Baker played an important
role in supporting and maintaining a
productive work force in Western
New York. ln addition. he has been
involved in programs designed to
retrain and place workers who have
lost their johs.
Nationally known groundwater
scientist Mary P. Andenon. Ph.D ..
(B.A., "70). a professor at the Uni·

versity of Wisconsin, rec:e1ved the
Clifford C. Furnas Memorial Award
for contributions in a scientific field.
Winner of the 1992 M. King
Hubbert Award given by the National Groundwater Association ,
Anderson has authored more than 65
scientific articles and co-authored
two books.
Francis M . Gengo. Pharm.D ..
(B.S .. "77) received the George W.
Thorn Award. which is given to a
UB gradua"' uoderthe age of 40 who
has made outstanding nationaU
international contributions lO his or
her chosen field.
Gengo. who is on the faculty of
the UB School ofPhannacy and the
UB School of Medicine and Bi&lt;&gt;medical Sciences. is nationally recognized for his research on the effects
of drugs on human cognitive function. He is director of the Division of
Neuropharmacology in the Dent
Neurologic Institute at Millard
Fillmore Hospital .
J. William Dock. fonnerdi=tor
of the UB Alumni Association, received the ftrst Heritage Award. presented for outstanding and long-term
service to the alumni association.
As alumni di=tor. Dock traveledextensivelytobelpbuildastrong
volunteer alumni organization. Our·
ing his 21 years with the association.
the alumni population tripled from
50,000 to nearly 150,000.

Toner Cartridge
GAMES
s-ttJ'-

~for

Prtnten, Coplen 8ftd Fax lllllc:hlnH

The Department of Defense has begun construelion on Ihe temporary secunty fence around
Governors and the Ellicon Complex. Access to
bolh facilities will remain unaffected liml June
27. After that, everyone entering the Villag&amp;Wlll
be required to present picture accreditation.

a.a-Prtnter~8ftd~

AccredltMioa-

Apple; ........

FAST, QUAUTY SERVICE ·100'11. Satlaf8ctlon ,01...
a-.ntMCI
'6¢'
·~~ecyc... Don't wute llloner Mel Undflll ..,_••

Tc Technologiesot
835 Englewood Avanoe, Town

(716) 838-2745
Tonawanda. NY

Accreditation passes will be &lt;ssued only to those
who have business in secure areas (Govemorn.
Ellicon. Alumni Arena). Emplo).ees required by
their departments to have accreditat!Ofl were to
have been contacted by their supeMsors the
first week ol June

FAX~

TheReponet esae&amp;'T1)USc::amuvtynewspaper pt.Clkshed b)'lhe[)MsalotActvtroc:ementiWld Oeveloprnenl. SU.se

UPDATE
..... ~
Department heads are encouraged Io develop
flextime schedules for prolessional and classified
staff volunteering in the World University Games
Flextime schedules should recognize that the
unive&lt;sity will be open and operat&lt;ng th"roughoul
the Games: schedules will depend on departmental needs
Whie use of flextJme need rot be reflected on
rT1CX1II-jy a&amp;mamual anendarce records. department heads should mantain a record of such arrangements. according to Ellen McNamara.
assistant vice president for tunan resDlXces Those
with questions should call the E/Tl)IOyee Retallons
section of Persomel SeMces at 645-2652

~oiNewYont 81 Buftalo

Edltalaftifcesae loc81ed

~ 136C(roftsHal. An"tt8fst. (7 16)645--2626

OIAECTOA OF f'UBLICATIONS .,_,.,., J. . - o T, EDITOR .,_~ ASSOCIATE EDI TOR »M ....a.. AAT DIRECTOR ~I'~ ASSOCIArE AA1 DIRECTOR fMI.foaA DOWI', ADVERTISING MA.NAOER ----~

�181ma11N__
_...,._._...,

3

Faculty&amp;Stan
1

8

I

L

L

B

0

.,.........,.._

Edlllalllon Alumni

0

The Network in Aging of
WNY, Inc., headquartered
at UB, will hold a fund-raiser
from 4-7 p.m. on Tuesday, June
29, at the Pier, 325 Fuhrmann
Blvd., Buffalo. Boat rides , cold
drinks and cheese, volleyball, a
business card exchange and a
door prize will be included in the
S 12 donation.
The Network in Aging is an
organizatiori of individuals and
institutions involved in the issues

of aging and long-term care. The
network has more than 500 mem-

bers representing educational
institutions. community agencies,
hospitals and other organizations
serving the needs of older persons. For reservations. call Donna

Kelsch at 829-3176 by June 25.

::==:
0

Adults over the age of 18
who have plaque psoriasis

covering ~ 0-30 percent of their
bodies are being sought to participate in a UB stud y to help eval u-

ate a new vitamin D-like
otntment for the condition. Pa;.
ucipant m the study, to be conducted by UB pharmacy
researcher Robert Blum. will be

required to come to the Clinical

Pharmacokinetics Center at
Millard Fillmore Hospital-Gates
Cin:le tw1ce a day for 13 days and
to stay for three 24-hour periods.
They will receive free phySical
exams. eleclroeardiograms. and
blood and urine tests. Those who
complete the study will be pwd
S 1.000. To participate or obta.in
details, call 887-4584 and leave
name. address. phone number and
the words "study 995 ."

0

The UB Graduate Scbool of
Education Alumni Association wiU sponsor a luncheon and
panel discussion in conjunction
with the lecture to be presented by
James P. Comer at 10:45 a.m.,
Monday, July 26 at the
Cbautauqua Institution.
The luncheon at 12:30 p.m in
the Athenaeum Hotel will be followed by a panel discussion at
2 p.m. in the Hall of Christ Subject of the discussion will be topics
covered in the presentation by
Comer, who is Maurice Falk Professor of Child Psychiatry at Yale
University and director of the
School Development Program in
Yale's Child Study Center.
Panel members will be U.S.
District Judge John T. Curtin;
Albert Thompson, superintendent
of the Buffalo Public Schools;
Robert L. Loretan, Erie BOCES I
district superintendent and Thomas Coseo. superintendent of the
Clarence Central School District
Cost for the program is S35 for
members and $40 for non-memtx:rs. For reservations. contact the
Graduate School of Education
Alumni Association. c/o Dean· s
Office. Graduate School of Education. 367 Baldy Hall or call 6452491. Deadline is July 12.

COIIII£Cl10N
In the Commencement Extra
edition of May 13, the localion
of the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics was
lncorTectly stated. It is housed

Within the Schoof of Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences, not
the School of Phatmacy.

A

R

........c..Dent.!

0
to be

~

IIMtllutlon

0

The latest techniques in
operative dentistry,
endodootics and other diagnoses
and tmument of oral problems wiU
be the topic of the 14th Annual
Cbautauqua Dental Congress, to be
beld from June 30-July 2 at The
Cbautauqua Institution.
M&lt;n than 150 dentists and dental
Slalf members from around the
nation wiD atlatd the event which
wiD fealuR: speakers on the arts,
educalion, religion, politics and
business. UB periodontist and dental
reoean:ber Sebastian G. Ciancio, wbo
founded the Congress, continues to
be its dim:tor. For further information, caU 829-2320.

Oral BloloU wtns _.m
forYOIIItll~

0

The Department of Oral
Biology at UB has been
awarded a grant from the National

Science FoundaJ:ion for a "young
scholars" program to be held from
July 6-Aug. 27.
The Young Scholars Program in
Biological Sciences is offered to
selected students from WNY high
schools. Sixteen students wbo have
completed their junior year will be
selected based on an application,
leoers of rocommendarion and high
school transcripts.
Selected students w11l conduct
"hands-on" research in a lab and
work with a faculty member in

the Department of Oral Biology
conducting basic research. Participan ts will receive a stipend of

S I00 per week, as well as $30 per
week for tran sportation and
lunch. Rosemary Dziak.. professor

of oral biology. is program
direc tor.

CALENDAR
ContiQued from page 4
tratJon tnformauon conuact lhe acadenuc

hauon at 643-354'2

MONDAY

26

........ AT CIWITAUQWI

Jama P. Cc.Dtr, physician and profts50f
of child psychiatry, YaleOtiktCenter

Cll.autauqua lnstitutioo. Presentation at
10:45 a.m. followed by lunch as 12:30
p.m. in the Athenaeum: panel discuuton at

~=::::=wco:

ciabon. 64S-1A91

........,..

NOTICES '
IIDIIIWUSTSReserve Lisu (Of lhc: 1993 Fall Session an
now due. Forms are avai\abk a1 the Reserve Des.k in each libruy.

k eteardl Tec.bnician 1-B iomcchcal Ptw-·
macology. Posting IR-93048 Stcrdar}'
U-Civil En'ganetring. Postmg MR-93042
Secrttary 0 -0ean 's Office {Ptwmacy l.
PoslinJ IR-93049. Coordinator of Slu·
claol All'aln (SE-2)-Spocw S&lt;rnccs.
Posting IR-93050.

Joas

IIIIMCII

-.nn¥W CUSSIRED c:ML
Cieri&lt; I (S&lt;MI6}-R=&gt;nls .,.{ Ro&amp;'Sin·

FACUI.n

.......,V.U..:Iau/Fiill ProC..,...Family Medicine, Posting IF-3041 . ~
Prote.or-Neurosurgay. Postins tF3042 . .-.-.m/,._..Pr-oC_..

Podiatries. Posting tF-3043. - . nv
"-odate Prore.or (2 positions ava.ilable~B iochenUSlt)' , Postina ff. J044.
C liDlcal-.nV.u..:~oto ProC....,..,
C llalcal~togy/Obs~&lt;l­

rics, Pooting IF-3045. ~ ProCa.,.._Biololical Scienc:es. .Postina tf. J046.
A.J:shtaat~mistry , Pusting

--

IF-3047. -.nV.u..:lalo/fUII Pro-

WEDNESDAY

r..or-o..mis~ry ,

Pooting IF-3048.

U.mnily Galla)- 1&gt;1-.r (SL-4)-Fine
Arts Cenleo-, Pooting IP-3033. Eloctronla
T~ (SL-4)-0&gt;&lt;m~lry .

Pooting IP-3037. Dino&lt;Uir, FIDe ArU
Cta&amp;er (SIA}-Finc: Arts Center, Postina
IP-3045. Maaqomoal
Pro(SL-J)-Offoce of~

s,.......

IIOaWILL PAa liTAlP ..-u
Summn- Foflowo ......,._., 0.. Joyce
Sirianni, dean of lflduate scucfies. UB.
Hilleboe Auditorium. RPCI. 12:30 p.m.

s.rnas-o..u~

Mocticine. Posling IP-)()16.

Mlillldq- (SIA}-Fin&lt; Arts Con... Pos1ing IP-30t6.

tion, 1..ioo lr26TI4. Koyboonl Spodalill
(SG-46}-Medkal Technology. uoo
120881. Secrttary I (SG-I I}Qffi&lt;Z of
Pn&gt;vos•l..ioo lr2t609. Koyboonl Speciallot (S&lt;MI6)-I'monnet Semccs. l..ioo

125484. Cleaner (SG-05}-Facilities and
Residenria.l CUstodial. Line 143044. Laborn- (SG--06)-F.cilities and Building
Services and Grounds, Line 120968,
3t212. Cakulalioal Cieri&lt; U (SG-49r
Purolwing. Line f30863 . UNCI Janll&lt;&gt;r
(SC-1.5)·Fl1Cilities and Resickotial Custc&gt;
dial, l..ioo 143233. Cieri&lt; I (S&lt;MI6}Lockwood Library. Line 126372. Keyboon! Spodalill (~ lom porary
utU I{.JIJ93~Nwrition. Lu~ 130747
Keyboon1 Spodalill (SG-46}- UB Foundation. Une 14114&amp;..

I 0 Minutes from UB!
Elevators!
Quiet Park-like Setting!
Care-free We Style!
Activities Directo r &amp; Program!
I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

12 0 Meyer Road Amherst

836-6861

___ .,_.._CIVIL

IIIIMCII
Juitor (SG-07}-Facthues and Res.ulentJaJ
Custodial. Line 143023.
._... . , _ . . _ c:ML aamca
Cka.Dtr (SG-06).Resldent1al CUstodial.
Une143044

Fully Fu rnished CorporateSuites
Also Available

NT

�4

1~

24
-·-

-

-WBL~-­
~­
O..dopm&lt;Db Ia Public Key

E valuatloaolllocuriddoiActlv-

lt)' olCiprollouda Ia the Sen ol
V......_.wltb Voriowo t.ev.lo

Cl')'[&gt;tOinpby, 0.. Alan Selman,
chan. UB Dept. of Computer SCIence. Hilleboc Aud1tonum. RPCI
12:30 p.m.

olll&lt;nai F\uoctioa Aplaot P.
Kn~aiDOM. S. pneumoalK, S.
aureus, Jucfith Hyatl. Pharm.D
candidate !48 Cooke North Campus 3 p.m.

--

F R I 0 A

WOBD a.vaarn UIIU

IUE5D A Y

2J

29

PIDIATWIC .-AND IIOUfiDI
SuddeG lafant Dealt! Syodnlme-.,...,..,.iaF.rie
County, Jane 0' Donnell, RN. MS.
PNP, d.iscu.Ualll. Kmc:h AIKhtonum. Otildren'1 Hosp1tal 8 a.m

PDIA1111CSummer Rashes, Jill Crolick..

IWU ANO U.ZZ COIICIJrl

IIOaWb.LP'.t.lll( . . . . . .

AJ Tinney Quartd. Allen Hall
South Campus 8 p.m Co-spoosored by WBFO 88 1 FM as pan of
lhe Wortd Untversny Games '93
CuiiUBI Fcsuva.l

Teoaa&amp;&lt; Mutaat Nu,ja loa Chanoek, Steven Simasko. Ph.D.. a.u1s·
WII profes501" of phys10logy. UB
H.JIIeboe Audironum. RPCI 12.30

-

M.D.. discussant. Cafetorium A,

Mercy Hospital. 8:30 a.m.

~-

p.m
~

Ndworl&lt; Ia A&amp;lol ol WNY, heod·
quartem:l al UB. Boar rides. cold
dnnks and cheese. vollcyba.IJ, bus•~s cud eichange and door prizes
Tht PM:r. 325 Fuhrmann Blvd ..
Buffalo 4-7 p.m.. Donat1on S 12

-·
DB.AWABPAB

-

P'MAMIAC'f -EAitCM

P harmaroklnelia of
Penloxitylline ln Cridca.Uy Ill
Patie:nU. W1lham Wolow1ch.
Phann D canchdate 248 Coole
North Campus 3 p m

COIICIJrl
Taipei Municipal Chinese
Cla.wdcal Ordxstra. S\c:c:
Coocen Hall North C&amp;mpus. K p.m A.dmiss1on
$5 llus tS an event of the
ln~matJOnal Cullural
FesiJYal , WOTid Umversuy Games, 8uffalo'·93

A Midsummer Night's Dream.
d u~ted by Saul Elkin. sets and

costu""" by Wendy Shea of rhe
Abbey Theatre of mland Delaware Park bchmd the Rose Garden 1 30 p.m., Tuesday-Sunday.
through JLJiy 18

TitO ud Me (Yu1oslavaa)
Woldman Theater, 112 Nonon
Nonh Campus. 9: IS p.m. AdnusOOn,
gcncnl; S4. students.

~0

-ss.

-

M olecular Diapostic:1. Steven J.

Gmenbera. M.D.. NewoiOSY Dept.,

soon.S5.-.S4. studenb.
EOt-4£&amp;DA"'

W£

NE&amp;rA'

WOIII.D UMI"V'ERSS1'Y UIIU

7
--

Ttw F.l.tmentary Stbool. Acadtmy

S5. general; $4, srudents

Why Did Bodbl-Dbanna J..Qn
for the Orimt., a Zen fable .
Woldman Theat.et, 112 Nonon.
Nonh Campus. II :30 p.m. AdtmsSion. $5. general : S4. s1udcn1s

IIOSWil.l.ltAIIK ITAFF

RPCI. Hilleboc Auditorium. RPCI .
12:30 p.m.

1
--0 -~UMWbm'­

Tito and Me (Yugoslavia).

Wold man lbc:ater. 112 Norton

---

North Campus. 7 p.m. Admi5s1on.
$5, general: $4. studenu..
WOirLD UMI'VD:IITY MMU
Why Did Bodhi-Obarma Luve

the Orient. a U.n fable . 9· 15
p m Adm•ss•r•n. $5, general. $4.
students

(or

~

ss nus

North Campus_ II J0 p.m. Adnus-

WOIILD UMIVIIISin' UIIU

IIMWIIL I'AM STAFF

UIIIVDISITY QAIIU

Double Bill Card'ul (Guy Madden. full-length) and 1lw Comb
(The Bro&lt;hen Quay. shon).
Waldman llleuer. 112 Nonon
Nonh Campu.s II 30 p m AdnusSIOn. $5 , gencraJ. S4 , srudents

Award Nominee for Besl fort:1gn

Film Woldman Theater. 112
Norton. North Campus 2 p.m. Ad·
gmeral: $4, ~wdent.s

---0
rlmSIOI\,

ss.

WOitLD UNIYDIUfY AUlD

Muala, mustcal comedy set 1n
Toronto's Indian communuy
Woldman lllcater, 112 Nonon
North Campus 4:30pm AdmisSIOn, S5. genen.l. $4. students
WOitLD UNIVIJtiiTY 8AIIIU

Why Did Bodhi-Dharma Luve
ror the Orirnt, a Zen fable
Woldman lbeat.er, 112 Non on
North Campus 7 p.m Adm1ss1on.
SS, general; $4. srudc:nr.s

S ummer Fellows Program, Joel
Huberman, Ph.D .. Mokculu and
~llular Biology Dept.. RPCI
Hllleboc Aud11orium. RPCI 12 JO
p.m.

Ma.sala. musical comedy SCI tn
Toronro's ltKhan community
Woldman Theater, 112 Nonon
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m AdmtSSIOO,
WOIII.D UNIYEJISIT'Y UMES

FIUI--0
Ban-om, Spantsh..Cub&amp;n film dl rttled by Paul Leduc Woldmnn
Thea~r , 11 2 Non on North Cam·
pus 9· 15 p m Admtsston, SS. gc-n·
eral. S4. students
WOIILD UNIVIJISrJY CIAMU
filii-VIDEO
Cabeu dt&gt; VJK'L ep1c based on
Cabe:za de Vaca's e1ght-year el.pe·
dt11on through the Na11ve commumttes of the Southwcsl Woldman
Theater. 112 Non on North Campus II 30 p.m Adnuss1on. SS .
general. S4 . ~tudenas

.....

......

_

Oroubk B1ll CamuJ
(Guy Madden. fulllenglhH&gt;nd Th&lt;
Comb (The Brothen Qua)'. shan)
Wuldmanlk-

-

IIOSWD.I.. PAliK STAn

O r. William Kaelin. Dana Farber
Cancer Cenlcr and Harvard Mcdt·
cal School Hille~ Aod!ronum.
RPCII230pm

1J

.,_...,__._
Introduction lo SUN. 204 Computmg Center North Campus I 0
a.m -Noon. For reg1strnuon tnfor·
mallon contac1 the acadenuc hauon
at64S - 3~2

.,_...,__._
Introduction lo UNIX. 202 Baldy
North Campus 10 a.m.-Noon and
J-S p m FOf" regasuahon anformatJon conUJCt the acadrnuc ha~son AI
645-3542

IIWU AND JAZZ COHCDT

WOitlD UNIVEJtl:rJY GAMES
.,....,_.,

UNIVPISITY
QAMU ~VIDE.O

14

W0111.D UNIVERSITY CLUIU

21

George Garzone with lbe Grq
Piontdt Trio. Allen Hall South
Campus 8 p m Co-spon.'IOI'Cd by
WBFO 88 7 FM as JW1 of tht
World Umvenuy Games '9) Cui
tullll Fesuval

~

COIICIJrl
Zop-d&gt; Unlven•y ChoU-, S...
BntviC, cooductor Slec Concert
Hall Nonh Campus 8 p.m. Admissaon. S7.
IS at evm of lhc
a.lunll'abval Worid
Uruvemry Games. Buffalo '93

Double Btll: Carf:ful (Guy Mad
den, rull-length l and TM Comb
~ BnMhcrs Quay, shan)
Woldman Theater. 11 2 Nono n
North C.mpus 9· 15 p m Admb
SIOR. $5, genen.J . S4, Studcms
WORLD UNIVEftrJY GAMEl
F1LM-VIDEO

Zerograd (Karen Stt:UJuuuarm 1
Woldman lllc.ater . 112 Nonon
Nontt Campus II ro p m Adm•~
'ilon. S5. general . S4. student,

6
----

ROSWELL PAJtlt STAFF
WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES
fi~VIDEO

Cabn.a dt Vaca. ep1~· b:bed on
('abel.a de Vaca's e1ght· year cl.pc·
d111on through tht Nat1ve communllle~ of the Southwest Wo ldman
Thearer. 112 Norton Nonh C'am
pu~ 1 p m Adm1~ 1on . S5 . ge~M:ml
\.J. ~tudcnb
WORLJ) UNIVERSITY GAMEl
RLM-VIDEO
The EW:mentary School. Ac:Wcm}
Award Nommtt for Be-st Fon=1gn
F1lm Woldmanlllater . ll 2
Norton North CamplL, 9 15 p m
AdrruSSJOO, S5. grocral. SA , sn.lcm.-.
WORLD UNIVERSfTY GAMES
RL.JI..VI)£0
8ai'T'OCO, Span1sh-Cuban film d• rc-ctcd by Paul Leduc Waldman
Theater. 112 Norton North Cam·
pus II 30 p.m AdmiSSion. S5 .
general , S4. srudents

IDIIIWI
EndocriM-Paracrine Cells of the
Pro!."tale and NeurMndtxrine
Ditrerentiation in Prostatk Car ·
cinoma, Dr P Anthony d1
Sant ' Agneo;c . professor of palholog) and labunuory mfdiCine, Uru\
of Roc~1er Mrxhcal Center Htllehoc- Aud1tonun~. RPCI 12 30 p m
COMPU11NG WORKSHOP ·
Introduction lo VMS. 202 BWd)
Nonh Campus S-7 30 p.m For
~~ lslr.J.IJon •nfnrmat1on rontnct lhcacadf:mtc ha1'&gt;0n at 6-lS-J5-12

22

WOitLD IJMYIJISIT1' CLUIU

IIOSWIU. PAliK SUIIIID

Uroerad (K..llen Shakhnaz.arov)
Woldman Thc:arer. 112 Nonon
North Campus. 7 p.m AdmtssK&gt;n.
SS. general; $4, students

~ln
the Bqinninz: Tbe Evolutioa
of Earth's Atmosp~ Dr
Charles. Eben. DlstmguiShed
Teachmg Profeuor of Geography,
UB Htlleboc Audttonum. RPCI

~

UNIVDSlTY--

Thr F..ktaaltary Sc:boot, Academy
Award Nominee ror Bes1 ~1gn
Ftlm. Woldma.n lllcacer. 11 2

Nonon.Na-lh~9- 15p.m.

"""""""'ss.-: S4."""""'.

~...,...,y-

Muala, mustcal comedy set tn
Toronto's lndian commuruty
Weidman n.oau,., I l l Norton IWl

9

-

IIIJJD AMD JAZZ COMCDT

J ot: Ford with lkltralo's Best
Krp&lt;Socn&lt;. Allen Hall. South Campus. 8 p.m. Co-'f'OOS'lO'd by WBFO
88.7 FM as pail oftht Wortd Uruvusiry Games '93 Odo.nl Festival.

12 .J0p.m.
_,_

__
__

latroduction to UNIX. 202 Baldy
North Campus 3-S p.m For reguln.rion mformahon contact the
acadenuc lt1.1son at 645-3542

_._

Introduction to CMS. 202 BaJdy
~otCh Campull. 6-8 p.m. For qls·

Continued on page 3

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~t1'.t846tht uatt•

legu.lature authonzed

th~

aubon ci the Uni.vl'nlty
of Buffalo wtuch UlJted
only as a mcdlcal Khool 111

· ~~:C..I,

1962 The
Univtnity ol Buffalo
bec:ame I SUNY
• SUNY .11 Bulfalo lJ thr
lArgest .uniwnlty Ln tht
state Wlth a.n enrollment of
more thu. 30,000
• UB's Auoa..ate colkgr
M1l.l&amp;rdF~u.CJM ol

thr aldmt and !.uses•

eveUns ldlooh \II tru~•on

• uo·,

Lockwood Powy
roc.n h• the largHt
coUection of Amer.CAII

•

~oruan

Or EM:n
perfected the .aft contact
lena and 6ul!d Praident
Johniotl while VI olficf'

the Z2:nd Pre.W.ent o! thr
United Suta U\ 188S. and

.~-:~ di.v
=~~~~~~r$1

1-te-ru.gh• talk lhow. whtch
bcre his n&amp;DW

•~Ju~~= 1~r~•~:5~fal o
1

•

~ t:wmn on~
flau.t16hed

Ln Bu.ffalo, but

~w:d~~~~IP
• Our to the Lake, BuH.alo
h.t.s r-~ thundn'510fm)
~ les&amp;cha.nceof
humc.ane~o

en-

tomad~

lhU1 m051 Ammc.n OUt"$
• MetrbpOIJtan Buffalo has
17 colJeg8 and uruven.~bn
and 200+ tu.gh IChooU

• Out Croavenor libn.ry 1s
onr of tM larpt resurch
50UI'Cfti 111 l..,e world
• Bulfalo hu 3 Pu.ht7er- Pnu
W'\1'\1\en Brua: Shanks,
Ed~r May and Mtchul
Bain&lt;tt

· :::~~~ ~:·;~.
ol 5th Awnue. And thto
btgget PuJula Day ParJod r

-~=~:esue
, Smiling" and Y,_.y W'd
Lruh

RC*w were co-

o:.~~ ~~~fal~bom
• We're the l.lfRtsl gnun
millingotnterlntht US
produang 1.1 mi.l.l.Jar~ tons
olMUally

• Ttw J¥catlakrt w.u
LnVmted Md lhe
~ectrolurrunHCmt

deVI a

. o~~:~U\~~0

. c:~ed~:rnc:~~~~
lhe natton aJ? pnnted by
Grr:ater Buffalo Pres!.
• Bulfalo is ranked m the top
25' ol the hotte5t growth
mu~ in Ame n ca
• W~ weJ? th~ fiBt oty to u....._.
Altnnanng currmt iUld w

~~;'~!.With

tht'

• OU!drt:n s Hoeq nt&lt;llt!o
world leader tn chlld hNM

· ~~~P.uki!o

lhtftn.t

.~c:; !hC:~~t' .:~~
wnttm by Buffalo·!.

~

&amp;) -) ~· · •

......~

Full-sized (24" by 37") four-color lithograph copies of the University at Buffalo poster are available for $4 .95 each at UB Common's
outlets. The full-sized poster contains much more information about UB and the surrounding Buffalo community, and more
extensive listing of points of interest, and good places to eat and s hop while in BuHalo. Call at 645-3560 for mo re information .

2

�UB's worlcl-dass faclltles
in spotlight for a......

for tr&lt;t(.k .md f1eld

~

Juot2(1993fol2Ut29 -

WOHL !J U~IHHSIII GHH\

Lum~mann

"h 15 truly a fuc •ll{y of rhe

~ ...

)&lt;lid UB A!&amp;lC.tate Athletu..

Durcror B11l Breen~ "h bru everything you would ~ver need

w run a

fnsr-das.o; uper.mon h ISimponant (or us to sho..•:cast&gt; th1s (acllny , not

By RI CHARD DEITSCH

only

S~10wR.,.,.,.

rht Stad•um v. •II g1..-c: WNY some hra~mg ngtm around the nauon ~

(or

our un1vrrsary, but for all of Wntem Ne-w York We hope rh;u

T ennas, anyone'

lXn' -SEVEN HUNDRED ATHLETES and coach&lt;&gt; from more than
ntnes w11l show~ rheu sk•lls at the 17th World Un1v~rs•ry
thLSmonth.
Btu t~y won'1 be the only ones showmg off
As a proud host (Of four of the Games' prcm•er athletic events-•rack and fidd, d1vmg, volleyball. and tennas-thc Un1'o~ers1ty at Buffalo
will bt&gt; a featured pan of the International cclebrauon.
TI&gt;e recently completed $22 million UB S&lt;ad•um. the 16.500-&gt;eat
aown ,_1 dUB's athlenc fac•liu.., will be t.xn. to the trnck and Held
Qllllpl.&lt;otooo and the Games' clooing"""""""' TI&gt;e sprawling. open-a~
adium lcatun5 an &lt;'ltot·lane. '100-metcr symheuc trnck woth a Sp.=n
~. a natural turf 1nf.eld, a serva level wuh b:ker rooms. admirusuauvt'
c:A:a and mttt1ng rooms, full-serviCC pn:!~i box, private suites and sportS
tDOdiclne and tta&gt;mngfacil&gt;uo woth "'l"'l'"""'t fo. physocal condit&gt;OOitlg and
lft:ml'lent d athletiC UlJuntS and rdlabilnatKn
When the Games concii.Xk, the world&lt;lass factlity w11l bt the
home of UB's O.v~•on 1-AA football Bulls, and w•ll bc uulued lot h•gh
school, collcguuc and profess•onal track evmu, concens, and graduauons The su.dtum lS the thud la.rgeit sports complex m Western New
York ahcr Rach SmdiUm and Pilor Field and u boasu the tallest frtt.
stan.:hng light structure m Nonh Amcnca , a top-o{·th~-ltn~ . fiv~-pan~l
la~-Krttn x:oreboard, and a world-&lt;:lass finniSh lyrur: nmang system

LCO

The Games' tenn1s com~uuon wtll he hdd at the refurt'la.shed
r~nnu facdny on the North

Campus. Thr 14-court Elhcocr Compkx

TmnuCemer w1ll be rt'(mo:l wnh a nr.,., , permanent 'Umrr Coun"
scaung t .320 spectators and a "Stad1um Coun" holdmg an addtt1onal

6IX&gt; prople. Fmals Will be held on Cem~r Court. wnh

~ung

1ncreas.ed

hold nearly 2,CXX&gt; spectators Srvrral stat~-of- tht' · an tmm5
scortboards .,.,.,IJ br used for r~ compeu uon and w11l become a prnnato

nem pan of the fac1 liry. After the Games, the T enncs Center wtlllikd~

be the sue of future champloruhlps, mcludmg collegmte and Unnt."tt
States Tennas As.soctatlon evenu.
Aces won't be conftntd to the trnnu coun, as vollt'yball wtlltake
cen t~r sta~

on tht' mam floor of UB's Alumnt Arena The five-stor)'

fac•ltty offers up to IO,CXX) o;eau; as many as 7 ,CXX&gt; on the floor lt'vel and
3.000 tn the balcony !~vel. and features tk largest "fr«-·floatmg" hard·

wood floor m the Unned States-48.CXX&gt; square fert The facdtf)' fe-.a ·
rurc:s basketball, volleyball and badmmton courts Circled by a lOO..meter
track. Both the men's and wom~n·s volleyball finals wtll be played on
the mam floor of the arena.

1be Alumnt Artna Natarouum wtll be the sue of th~ Galllt"5'
dtvtng compeutton. The d1vtng wt:llas 18 feet deep and 60 f«-t square,
Its towers off~r two one-meter spnngboards, rwo thrtt·m~ter spnngboards and platfol'lru ar I, S, 7.S and 10 meten. The well holds approx• ·

mately SOO,&lt;XX&gt; gallons of water and

offen

twO UllCkrwater

w1ndows for

televaston UIC . The divmg area has
I,CXX&gt; perman~nt seau. Tht'
Natatonum 's ru~r surface has been
replaced Wtth a new blue and white
UB surface and rwo sets d portable
Judgmg plarforms will be kx:ated on
bmh stdt"S cl tht diving wrll A hnt
be tt'mpur.mly mo..,cJ Into

ruh may

the.· Nntatonum , allowing da·e" I ll
remam 1(.)()5(' durtnt: tht' compeuuon..
"Yf i\.J'd

h- hard · rr~ rn find

a be11er arhlt•tl( b c tiH) - anJ that

tncJude, h0th

mJ~'ltu

faCI!ttte&lt;r-than at

:md nuu.J1,11

~JR. "

alU._-d Pc-tt'

Bothnct, tht· unl\'t'f\11' \~Itt' m~magt't

f01 t ht· Gamt·~

Elt·vcn hunJreJ .md mnt•f\
me.Jal~ Will ~

awanlc=J Junnl! tht'

u.·n.Jay w l_lrld Un i\'t'l'Sll)

Gam~.

..__.,-..,.............
...., __ _
... ..., ..

Track and fi-14 "'""" {ut the Worl&lt;l UM&gt;ersil)l &lt;;am.s will intrn&lt;l=e UB's handsom&lt; """$22 million stadivm, which will aLso bt- thL sltt of closing caC'7JlOJLieJ

"dl N.- the

h1~t'!&gt;l ~· tnnrr t'lf

--1'
Y
..................
-..
-----.. _
...... ....,. . . 190

_
.,...

..n................ ,..,

hut

tht· 17th

far the- (/am.e;t .

..,....,.. a - l e'• home ans"-""'1g maChnv refleru,.,.,. :&lt;ttl and pauwn fm w World Utu...,..U)' G"""'' A{tLr a
qWc:k htllo , caH.n htat a puch 10 buy oci&lt;Lu fur thu """t &gt;0 long m fl'eflaT""""
Thtu "'"" &lt;1(0, after readmg ......._ accounu of w bod to bring w G"""" to BuffaiD, Coancw "-came a G""""
wlunt=, foeus!n8 """-ffaru on w Gamd Speaken B"'"'" and dt""""!! on""" broodcrutm,g ·~· "So fm thr«
'ftm1. l have been speakm.g to wnou.s O'fiWUtanorU and romparueJ buiidmg up an eJprir dt' corps about rht Game.s and
infcmnmg w gennal commurury "C"'""" """"""'that J,&lt;XXJ propk lviw heanl..,. d.=be the Games and*" s~gtufi·
canu w WtJtem New York
C.ancwalsocharred last fall's "GioOOl E.mamgan:a" sponw&lt;..J lry w UB 11'/omrn"• Club. uiuch r&lt;=d S11.7CI.'
furrht Gatr~tJ and W urut~IIJ ~ fvnds U-'t'Tt' wed to pure~ four ti!Tlnu SCUTl'boards and a \lmd JCTel"''l for W llt"'U.~~
Ttfi(K.(ll.ed G~ tennLS cnuzr
Cinnao, UB alumnw and "!'f• of Pmodonoa Ptof&lt;"'-" S..bruaan G C.ancw. u w """'fur w World Gameo
mf""""""" cmu:r (R88-9300) As Women's Clubw:• ptwdml and progmm chan- . Ctane., mc=og&lt;d w i"'"fl 10d..bc"" w" &lt;[fans fm w
"ftaT w rN Games •,.,o wr could seU thm mere~ and help thtm to raue mort tTIUr'lt') At each of tltret gtneTal ~P lunchrons. "''sold
Games"''"' and made an addiaonal $/.&lt;XXJ fm w (}"""" m &lt;lddooon tow $2/ .iOO · She""' ,,,,.,,ry mstall.!d ru II'/"""'"'' Club pt&lt;&gt;.dau
At tht G~ btromr a retWry, CllmCIO conunue.s hiT 01lJ1'le.S "oluntttT u.ork SN u~U hon an mt.t.'T11a00fltlte.a)ul, 11. a Women·, CiJ.d:...
spon.!O!.:d"""' fm Games d.gtutanes andfartul,membm of compeaum She'U also be ht/pmg out'""' w CESU ron{i!rt:na July 9-11 at UB
~Tftt a~ ~ bt' a.uoc~d u.&gt;Uh our communuy fur 'JC!m1 w romt" and will ~) bt- a reflecoon em OUT alxb.ry w be a u.pr(d""las.s ory I reah::L'
chat W Gtti'Tlel art a nsk, but 1/ttl that m tll"deY to adutw Jucces..s ant mwst b.:come comptlled w rak 1uk.s Tiw u a arne /(11' our commurury to bonJ
u&gt;g&lt;tiw:&lt; 10 aclueve a k!!"&lt;'Y uiuch W.U rohance BuffaiD"o '""''I" tow ....,n,J "

...

....,..._,.. ......
........... ,,.0

wht'n the compcu uon end!.. thl.'
Umversn) at Buffalo. "nh m 1-x-autl ·
lui new ath lc.·uc lacllllll.... IOa~ \t'r)

t~Mcr~

..............

�• JUIIf 2t 1993 lot. 2Ua. 29

-

\V ll kLII U~ IH HSI'II GHH S

Athletes Vllage wil be
. . l1111emational cily

have an add•uonal )()().')workers wtt:han 11 at any gJVm ~~ dunng
tht G-dmes, sa.d Krakowwk. "For cxampk, we're going to have to
cha~ an awful

lot of Imen over the courx of tt-.oR two w«b. Our
staff Will ~ worlung all tht Umt:."
To make~~ VJI!age an amacuve and haspttabk plact:, a-vm~l
WI nurYrymrn have donated theu snvsu:s and f1owcn to help beau·
ufy the grounds, h&lt; s;ud Tlutt flagpol&lt;&gt; w1ll fly th&lt; flags olall th&lt;
countnes bemg represented at the Games over the coune of the ren
days And then, there's the entenatn~nl ~re wtll be mghtly
CUSICXhaJ

By MARK HAMMER
~SIJJff

VEP. lliE PAST MONTH AND A HALF, US's Elhc.on Compb h"'
o nned

from a student dormnory area m10 a small CITy, as tht'

uniftaily prepares to help hosl tht- World Umvers1ry Garno. The
A thleca' Vii~

LS

styled aher the compounds that house athletes at

the Olympic Games. The Village LSoutfitted and ready ro make the
~ of athleres from over I 00 nations

comfortablt and ,.·elcome

Plarvung the Village has talc.en the bttter part o ( rwo \'ears uf

dernJDdinc worl:, accordmg to Joseph Krakowmk, dtrector of Untvt"rsll)
Res1de:nce life at UB ... We've had
work&lt;d OUI."

to

make accommoJat•oru.," he ...:uJ.

"bu11t'1 ali

t'nrenammem acu '"the Wdls ~ bua1dmg. We're abo mstalhng an
urra gamr room m the Creauvr Crafu Ctnter wtuch w1ll fearure
~d m ~ hastd on the new ITK)Vte,)uras.sK Park"
/\nother tnnovauon wtrhm tht:- Elltcot't Complt!x mvolvt!d pur till(!

36 dosed ctrcuu

ll'ISI.!i tO

For example, the Elhcon Comrlcx as able w seat ah...1ut 80CI

camt.&gt;~ il l l'lf' hutldtns:.-

for survt!tllanct

pu~.

sauJ Krnkowaak And, of cuur)e, there •~ the three mtlr..~ ci securtl)
ttnc m~ endosmllthe Vdl..tj.:t.' YWe'v(• aiSlltru.rallo:i 40 new ltght.~ on
the V!li&lt;tJ,&gt;e anJ put l:trJ..'t"

lt~ht~ lln l~lf' uf even butidiO(:"

'l'htle cnmmuntcathln nughr bt•

tt

problem " 'n h dthleto rcpn:-

v.ud...~ \Ioiii havt: t.... o offlCtal

people bmeals at any g1ven mornem, sa1d Krakowaak . But th;u wa:.n't

&gt;Cnttng more than 100 (o)Untno, tht:

m oueh to serve several thousand athletes thrtt meals ada}, e\'t=n

bnl{uages. Krdk.ow~otL. ~-ud "We'll tlt' )pc--rtl.m..: Enghsh anJ French 10

thouab mealt•me "'-'OUid vary for each compe11tor

, - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - --,

..We had tO find a way of prov1dmg about 8CX&gt; more

VIII••••IIIIM~

So what we d1d

te •• •w.y ef cultwr.l

wa5

find a flat area of grass next

fO Red Jacket Hall and erect a

40-by-140-fom tent."
FcoJ for the v~1~..g.: "bcmg prov.J..oJ ~&gt;~· ScrviCC
Amt:nca. he saJd. 1h&lt;:y havt= R Joe cJ cxpenena.· &gt;o~.uiang
wuh laq.~-scale evmc.. Tilt:y were ~bk for r.nn of
the Summer OlympiCS dl&lt;lt wt.'fl' hdd m

fe•H••I ef tit• Werfotl

t....AngdcsUl l 984.''
Commumcauon

Unlwerslty h e..••
1"'"-1•

'9~ .

tha1
U.$ .

t5

another area

Kr"'"'"-•.!: and ho srnlfhad ro

\l.'n!Stle

With. lhey've \I.'OO:t.«J 11 OUT SO

that every Rthlctlc tr..-am w11l have one
lt'k.·phunc w1th ~d~ St.-rVn

cell•••••• hoe•

••II

"Thc,n•
also be a pOe.., bunk S&lt;f up ~
W1!L:C'i00 H:t.ll wnh about JO phones. -

m

Clo.sed-circuir cmnl'TW

............... s.......

.Slln.&gt;ey Vi~LuRt .

(UB T cil"CCmmurucat\Oru Manager)

Frt.od Wlul wori«.-d cxtenswdy with

i
0

N.wYuo\;T&lt;Iephcln&lt;anJAT&amp;Tio
~
~~ thL'&gt; hmctKXl~ And there L' a pubiK: ~system
liB's Ellicott Complex will b.come Arhkw Vi!J..r&lt;, hom&lt; ., rhowoands a( athkra d..nn, rh.
St."t ur !iO we 11 be abie tO bnxdcast n.-mlllder.t {() arllletes
l't&lt;Uf=n .00..., in Rich-..! l.oc, will I&gt;&lt; - . d ., ""'- accus s&lt;anily &lt;qwipment.
ab.:.Jt \..lf'XXTltng compeou~ t"\"&lt;."fUS and th~ rnlung
place tn dlC V1l • . "
Among o ther proJe&lt;:b that had to br coordinated fm usc: wu)un
the V.ll~oe wen: che n\Slaltauon cia fully functional bank where ath letes
wn cxchrtnbtt: the1r 1..urn:nq (Of Amencan dollars as well a:. .t

hulle, •DI•I•I••II ••
..,.,....,. etHI

1...,11••·

.l•ly 16 .......

·a.•w-..·• ............

Muncrmau c mach me, a post off1ce, the V1lbgl' Mayor\ Offlcr:- tt' ht\"-.. 1..up11..-d hy funner \'I:INY Congres.-.man Hem)' Now.Jk -and tht· eft."(. ·
I

tun Ill the l:ne Count} P~·n.thle Stah&gt;c. wh•ch \1"111 pnwJJt• ... lullJ .tn~l

hchun~ !.If

ntU!&gt;u:ai ,K t" pcrlnnnm~ ln!&gt;1Jr: the V.Jia~l.'
1
"\'( 1.'\'(' .t \)ll '&gt;Cl up IWU 60-fO.)l tr.ttk·n In the Far~~· parkulr.: lot

thar v. tll .~:rvc as tht· lwad4u&lt;tnco fnr the '&gt;(.'Curny ,lfftc('o," ~•u~l

......, ..........

Krtt~IIV.Iollt.. "Wt: 'w lrlt'llto mah the Vdlar.:t• as mdu-.1\'l'
rqr.m.JmJ.! rh,· net-d. oftlw athlr:t~ and thc1r u~,;a~.,ht"'"

l" .....~ ·~lt-

()n hlf" of tht· .uhleh."!! .tnll tht:H 'UPJ"-•OmJ.! lobt~. tlw \ dl .• ~~; ~.~..11

l•ly ........tu .........

commumcate
on a basiC leveL Wr:'w changed the s1gru m each room that explam
hm~· co behave Ln thr: cast.&gt; of .m emcrb"Cncy ~rectioru arc g •\'en m
Enghsh and Frent:h"

v.~ual cummunK&lt;UIOO ~·un't h.· ,j rrohlcm thou~h .•b ca~lr:
tdn·l!&gt;•on 1\.:'1) bc.:en 1\btallt"d m tht.· durmuo r'i luuOJ.,'CS, s-uJ Krako"1aL.

Ueumg Elh&lt;.uft rl.',ldy has h.-en a lunj.! and raxmg rr~xcs... Rut
Krnl.Pwta~ takr:l&gt; ~athlrtC IIl'll Ln all that hru. hcen accumplt)hcd. "We'vr:
w.ul.:.t.J l ln rlannLn)! !he v.u .•ge fur 11\'t."l IW(I yt.-ars al,mg With the
Ljrr:.ut.·r Buftalu Arhlt.·tl~ L•q'li.Jraii•J.n Allthr: Jn.l!&gt;ttlnl' arc maJr: no v.

It \ urn~- w~.~nru~ wh,u .... ~..·ve- Jone"

- Fur Dr. o .....ry I. Youns cht· ~ll \4.\TI Il l t'n.SUTt' dw t'1'l"ryO!ll'-5pt'C"t.aU71'l. cuhlt:~) . ufftoals and odl.:rs-.:nJ&lt;!JS
a w./t&gt; and~ WO'f'kl Unn:"-,;u, GW111'' u w r('~ml th....,.,.. as JWt another da'Y cu dk- affru Youl'lR u W Games' t-Ounteer
ClS50Cla.tf rr'letbcal dn-ecwr . a UB dnU(al cusmant profenar of~ ~dlctnt and rhamntm of Ell&lt; Dt&gt;paranent of
Eme-rgmry Med&amp;crnt- ru Mallard Fallmorr Hospu.al l t'l lw }Oh w coordmatt' rc:.spnn.wo~ tn emt"'fRt."JlC')' 51tl4CJ.ll0ru rrqun.e~ and
muhap.s clw ll'qurre the rramed mecbcal CTews and mnbulc.mces

De.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

.....,.

,,,

the V11lage," he sa1d "We had grnduatt' students m Frmch gl\'e the
staff some ruct.mentary French lessons so that they can

......" --

Young also sen.!-.s as med!cal drr~tar far the WeslL'T'rt Rrgwn Emt."T~'TlCJ Med.cal 5..-,.'lCt'. u.+uclt coordmat~
~ n'lt!du:al rtsponse m Wt!.Stnn Nt"U York He gol mtoltoed urtU. W Games Mu.ohm I font hrord the G~s tut'l'l'
corrung--ous uw Wre ywn agu Wt needed to be mn:Xted earl) ," he wd

••dc"'--ttMU.I.

lnlus capaoryas Gamt.~ ClSSOC:1&lt;1U mtd.cal®tciOr, Y&lt;n111gcocmJmcu.,, the ~medu:al'&lt;sporutai the
NllJgClro and Gme.s« Cmmue.s as wcU as SittS m Cano.da-12 st~ m aU Emt"tfmC} mtdacalll"dtruaan.s-EMTs-&lt;md ambulanco wiU be sla11ding b)"' &lt;ach of these ~"'s ro lvrnclU medu:ai ~. Y&lt;n111g S&lt;lld. these
110( Band-AJd and ~a-pock /i&lt;&gt;1..l SI&lt;Uioru . -lrui&lt;Od a( U.. .....,., caiJm&amp; 9/1: ht S&lt;lld , U.. r=ru ..U b. on-~"
PCU1rn!S will be ll'anspon.,j from Games ..... ,... 1D U.. apf&gt;n:Jf&gt;n&lt;u&lt; lv&gt;spual, depmdmg on
local&lt;
ewnt siw m Ene,

=

LaFountain

w

Btcawt ht "mtd.cal Mtc1DI' o[Wts"'" ll&lt;p&gt;n EMS, Young " "' obit w comdmcu.. 0 """"""plan 10 U..
sm.es of ewnu cJw u W World Urut-&lt;effi()' Games Young ~eues con/idencr m lw ttam.s, NCK only art tJ..ry rtad) tel
htlp prop/&lt; ...no nug/,1 suff., htan ouocks "'brokn bonts, llvry'..,also Jlt11't1Cipo1&lt;d in "R1101&lt;ll duos..,. p.tp&lt;r·t.dn&lt;SS
The V~ Mtd=J Offiu IVMO) u ~ w dirrction o{ Dr. RJc-., ....._ . . , UB dnucal
ass• UN prof&lt;SJO&lt; and clinicJJJ dnrc10r. ~ mdicnv. Millan! f;Jimq,p HOSJlll&lt;ll A/"" o yem of P&lt;&lt;Jlmaoon . VMO
" re..Jy 1D ll'&lt;al .cuhk"' and o[fiDa!J fu. any ,U,.., "' '"I"""' W, moy """"" d1m11g w Games The VMO ..U be
naffeJ!. l4 ho.m o doy lry p/lync10ru ul.o wiU d.Ttcdy 11\ICI'CICI u&lt;th don= ai,.U...,..., , /..afowmam scud

Gam&lt;s.

�JUDt2( Jggjfel.2(k 29 - .

W0HLll U~ l If. H\II I G\ \H \

Coni....... looks at .........,
social . . . . of sport
. HANC E AND TiiE HUMAN DIMENSION o( Physocal Actovuy" ~
the aab;ttt cl a w•de·ran!lmg mtemational academ1c confe~nu to br:
hdd M UB July 9-11 10 ConJuncuo n wnh the World Un•ven1ry Games.
The conference Will draw pam c1pant! from ~nnany, Nigena,

T:uwan, Hungary. Barbados, the formr:r Yugos lavta , lncha and Ponugal,
m addltooo 10 cht U.S. and Canada.

NFL
"Eat T o Compete," }acqudme R Bemmg, Sporu Nu!rttiOfl

deocy, and Bryam 's move to the

Coord1na t or,~i t ed Starn Swtmm1ng.

Oesp1tt' ex tensi ve knowledgr of nutnt1on and the: body's meta·
bolac needs In tr.untng, fe-w athletes, coaches or evm diettnans have
bnti~ the gap btotWttn laboratory and d1mcal restarr:h and the practl·
cal apphcat•o n of rhest f1ndmgs. Bemmg wtll dt.SCuss optunal1ndtvtdual
d1e1 and Wd)'S that nutru aon can be uult:cd to ach1eve peak ~rfor­
rnanc&lt;.

"Teac.hang Spon Psychology Slnll.s ro Coli~ Stuckm Athletes
A~ S tudy," Cynthta

L. Adams, Boston Un ivrmty

Carolyn Thomas, conference: program director and assoc•ate: UB
professor of phys1c..1l therap\' and exercLSe sc•~ce. scud many prr.tematloru will dea l wnh !iOCtal and polu.cal aspects of sp:&gt;n. 10 additton tO
studies of a more phy~aolog •ca l narure:. They 1nclude:
''A Pr.:tetiCt' ofRacl5m 1n lme:rcollegaate Athletics: Un1ven1ry of
A labama it\ a C'"..ast- H1~1ory," T1mothy J Bryant, Un1vermy of Maryland ,

logtcal skills to sruckm athletes. Adams will dtscuss the srudem athlete
c:i tht sporu consultant as t~:acher, discuss
1mporram r~ htn g ~thods. and exam me ways of measunng tcachmg
effecuveness.

dnd Otmr opher J Hallman, Unwers1ry of Alabama.

of$100 for the conference. The rrduct1on as also bemg offered to faculty

h w~ 1966l:w:fore the first black at hleto; took pan 10 mtcrcolle·
J:•ate erhle11Ci tn the Southea.strm Conference; 1968 beforr a conference

Lmle ancmion has bttn gl\'en ro the proces5 o( teachmg psychoas Ieamer, address the ro le

Facuhy and staff at US are bemg offered a reductd regasrranon fe-r

~I awarded a varsny lener to a black athlete, and 1970 before thr

and staff' 10 other colleges and un1versmes in Ene and Ntagara Counties
The reduced datly regtstrauon ftt tS $50 . Standard tqLSmtuon t.s $lSO
The reducrd fee does not tnclude meals or cop1o c:i procecdm~.

Un1 vtrs1ty o( Alabl.ma allowed blacks to take pan m 1u athlel1c teams.

which can be purchased separately

To bt.·uer understand the tntegrauo n c:i the U ni verslly of Ala-

bama campll.'l and us athltttc teams fro m 1963-1973, the authors mterVIt'""ed

four who knew Alabama Coach Bear Bryan!. lmportam to the

lnl t:b'Jtltl(m of Univemry of Alabama arhleu c teams, they felt, were

fl"tlemlly enforced busm~. Gov . Gl'Orgt: Walbce's 1968 run for the pr~i·

Persons may rcg:tsler on sue tn 51« lobby at 9 a.m. Fnda~ , Julv 9.
and 1n Knox Rotunda Fnday afternoon throogh Sunda~· Advance
regtstratton forms are available from the Department cJ Phys1cal
Therarv and Excrct.SC Science at 829-2941 . or from Confermcrs and
Spte aa l E,•ents at 64-5 -1018.

Pw licipating Counlries from A·Z
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Wm odo" , !hey may need o """' 0. o /1'"1&lt;' mtU 0. a Rablx . 0. a MuUoh 0. a
Th&lt; •••· • - 0 ...... Campw Miru.slel" cmd chan- of 11-. Campw Mnuscry As.sooaoon, n..dl 11-. &lt;[fan
10""" 11-. &lt;L.m. n:ligwus needs of cht 6.700 cuhleu:s ond coach&lt;J who woll con""l'" on liB's Nanio Campw f"' !he

World Uni....,.;ry Games.
"Wt'"....,. c~vu w.. """"'cuille~&lt;&gt; """"""'~! foum .u"""' 11-. u&lt;&gt;rld 10 do 11-. worJnfuJ"""""" of spons .•
.,;d Ruff. Th&lt; mas&lt; spiri=l gWdana woll b. "'!"&lt;'led try 11-. /osc, of w """""' """". Ruff has lwmtd foum R""
NhJe, N..U. who""' chaplain far 11-. Games cuo
m Shtffidd, England. "Wiw ....,·,. domg ," smd Ruff. · ~
f1'&lt;s&lt;nlinga """" whtr&lt; '""""' faidu can liv&lt; m ~, . v.lud! !hey'" no&lt; aJ....,s able 10 do (m 11-. ouuwlt u&lt;&gt;rid) "
Th&lt; Buffalo and Ent Co..nry Council ofC'""""' , ond BAM, 11-. Buffalo A= Minucry, has =led 11-. pro.
"""'' IOfli'M lhey'w fomvtl a rommi""' which~ u~ 10 prowlt a "chaplamcy, N&gt;spualiry ond ma1i1a00n cnu..- m 11-.
A!hlto&lt;&gt;' Villa&amp;&lt;" at Elliroa Compla, .,;d Ruff.
"M' primary •wff has b&lt;rn foum 11-. Campw Mini.scry I'U b. S&lt;Mng as coonlmatol- m 11-. Vollagt ond I'Ub. uorlong wuh a swff foum""'
Campw Ministry AssociaDon, of which l'w szndcu doaio-," ht smd . ..,....,. woll b.""' loung.s · ant woll haw sofas, cham ond nutriaous •tfr&lt;Sh""""· ...;rA ~U&lt;&gt;choplaiou amilabit as nt=sary . n... woll also b. ..ligiows ...,.,)up oppomauD&lt;S on 11-. )tu'!Sh Sabl:arh , ond 11-. samt f"' Islam,
Quholic pn.s~ woll prow1t Mass, and so on. Th&lt; cloaplairu woll also prowlt """"'I ond ~as ,..,jd ond ~ "
Th&lt; c.nr.,, far which Ruff's rommi""' is~ 10 mist $1 0,000 . ...;U also fto=&lt; Ja,go-S&lt;Ttrn ~on ukh cuille~LS can wau:h
11-.i&lt; comptlium , ond f=ign " " - n&lt;wS/JOP&lt;'l foum aU OWT 11-. u&lt;&gt;rld .
Ruff, uo/oo is a Lulom:n minis"". sa,s dvu 11-. Ccn"" has almoscan mnnnucal ~""""'
"Wt art following a"""'-' proUdtd try Shtffi&lt;ld , al:hough""" ~ gomg 10 b. mu.f.,rA ," smd Ruff, ll&lt;ldms dvu lw commot!U ~ snll s=c/vng far
"fJJ'es&lt;nlall"" of Islam and Sikhism. "h ~ "ligwus suppon [o.cuhle"" """"''!foum a umcry of ..~cp&gt;us "ado"""' DIMousJ,...., can'o
prow1t far rA&lt;m aJI.-.&lt;krt'd b&lt; luuvlmls ond h~ 11-. Campw Mnuscry u domg wlvu u can 10 ""p.a and pnx.;dt far IMst "adilions Th&lt;
local community woll b. doing wlvu i&lt; can 10 pnx.;dt spmo.al ltadenlup ·on caD .·
"J prnonall, {iniJ 11 '"'T"''! cmd rnpya/Jit 1D"""' ...;rAW "lcplus It.d.n of UmiiW f"'du ond duoplm.s h'&gt;an oppomaury ID ...pta
&lt;=h ochm' dif{tm"&lt;:es ond 10 &lt;nJU'J 11-. rAnvls ""loa.&lt; m common Th&lt; boaom Jm.. ~....,·,.aU
ond aU of wart"""""' ond s;pmal."

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6

June 2t 1993 Tot 2Uo. 29

WoHI. 11 U\ I \L H\II I GHH \

Kt'l lo P.ll~llltJ Iiiii IIIII G,llllt'l

_

-....---...
.......,._...._.
fGc-nan A Lot, faoitt/d only

_..,.

ril3 p.m.J

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fvmos Lot, foaittld only ril3 p.m~

---.7-.-.-a...-.

Alumn1 Arena

CRt=aoon...!Mkaa ~!
2 FmeAmO:nter
3 S...,\1 Ha\1 (P.&amp; Safery!
4 C:unplL\ Ma1\ Cenrer
5 SJ.. Ha\1
6 \lomlHa\1
7 Ckm= Ha\1 CAru...! l=nJ
8 lock&gt;ro:&gt;J Memon,,J ub.-..r;
9 Sru.lmt Un100
10 Bold,· Ha\1 (Eduawon/Sroai
Som.:.s. ~/Ubmry s......,

11

Jacohs Managemt."flt Center
CSdroo(~!

12 M Hall (Sooal Som.:.s!
13 cYBn.n Hall (lAw , &amp;onam.a!
14 Knox l=ure Ha\1

15 Bdl Ha\1 IEngm«nng)
16 Furnas Ha\1 IEnginc&lt;nng)
17 Jarv~ Hall (Engm«nng)

,.

23 Cap..nHa\1
(Ctn=J/IDmmH~)

24 TalhortHa\1
Cs..tmz G"'"""""'"FooJ Sm"'!
25 Fronaak Hoi\ Cf'lrygal
G~!

19 ilook.&lt;ccn
20 Ken« Hall (Engm«nng)
21 Bonne.. Ha\1 ( Ekmrnl

26 ~~CcniL"f
27 Narural Sc~ence; &amp; }...fat~m.uto
28 Huch&amp;encr Hoi\ C!lOOg,J
29 C:I.uh Ha\1 (('l&gt;a&gt;'m&lt;n/D&gt;&lt;.Lg.l
30 D.:nhemlef laOOrau.-"'·/

22 Noru&gt;nHa\1

31

Gxnmon,

£""""'"""

(Soodm&lt; AcO&lt;mes/FooJ Sm"")

G~"U't"

lnfunn.ttlllfl &amp;_._){},

32

G.wetner'S Residence Halb
A Lehman Hoi\
OuuonHall

a

C O...,.Holl
D Roor.covelt Hall

40 Crdts HaU
(P""'"""'~Sm...,l

41 lncuOOux Cm.td
42 ElhcooGxnplcx
A l'a,go ()lnlrnnglc

33 Umversny Stadtum
34 &amp;ker ChiUN Wawr Pl-mt
35 c~m cr for TOfT'IIlll\.rW
36 Hdm Bwkhr~ ((:.mtmf Rl,_&gt;r;mtn/d

a Poner~lt:

C R&lt;d jacket Qw.;lr.u.,le
D R.chmonJ Quadmngk
I Spould'"" Q.&gt;adr....k
F Wilk ""'"~le

Warelv-~J

37 Statler Cwnmts.'-"""U)'
38 Beant (A.11tcr f f'h:ysud lbu Sky')
39 Hum._'" R~~ rkvdupm~.'f'lt
Cenwr

0 M1llan:i Fillmon:
Aca1emK Ontt·r
M Kmh,'\!Ul(' C..on-."!11hcmt·r
I All= P S, locru"' H.&gt;il

43

~.....· SmJJUill

�J101tlt19!llt2tk29 -

7

w.w
0.••••

Parldaw cluriaay
Unlvel~~n,.lilr~lilhilvr

jULY 8-18, thousands o( vbiton will bo drawn to VB to wnn&lt;SS the:
ld Univers•ry Games '93.
How will the Games affect parkl.l\g this JUmmer? Hen: are answers
o( th• moot c.onunonly ask.d quest tons as d&lt;tailcd by Carm.la
, di=tOI', Off&amp;&lt;:&lt; o(Campuo Parlung and Transpon:noon

WiU parlung nJ.. and ...gwJaooru chang. rJw '"""""'
Yc:s. For 13 days, july 7 through july 19, th• mrin: campuo comllllllliq!--faculty, staff and srudcnt»-wt ll bo ask.d to~. a
&lt;L s-It ing rulc:s, r&lt;gulauons and proc.dures when parlr.ing on th. Nonh

new..,

c...p,..

_Q

WJ.c. ...U II&gt;&lt; abk 10 park!

A

Mc.t o( the:~ lilr the: """'JU' oornnu.outy will bo loc:u.d on the:

nonh ..!. ci the: aclld.rruc sptne. Enrcnng the: """''U' from Rcmch Rood or
doe Lxlcpon ~y ( I-9"JO! will provodo ""'!' accc9l to tho!&lt;loo rhat
..... boen ~ ... faculty, sralf and snodorrt Jllll'&lt;ing.

--k. . . . .

.........., will ... availa ble IBOftll11p, ewe11l11p a11tl
"' Fronczak B (Pay lot. 7 a.m.-} p.m.)
"' Gov&lt;mon A (faculty/staff only, 7 a.m.-) p.m.)
• Ketter Lot
• Keneficlc Place Lot
• Pari.: Hall O•n•c Lot (meterai)

Q

to JatvtS A and JarviS B

• Furnas Lew (faculry/naff only, 7 a.m .- 3 p.m .)

"' Crolu Lor (one-half clooe;l 10 Croft&gt; Hall )
• Onter for Tomorrow Lot (limned spact)

Yes. un less you have an annual permu The pay lot w11l

scudena.

ca•~Ms. o-..4

Q

ltreke• fer tiN M....

WiU sproa/ prowrons b. mod. far ltandrcQjJ parlung!
A Yes. In adchuon to~ handKap parking spaces available m the
pennitted lou descnbed above, all of Pumam Rood wtll be available to
thoR with dtSabiluu:s. ()(~.no one noc 10 permitted should park
m areas destgnated for strvicc: vehicles and other spec.Lal uses.. Those
parlung on Putnam m~1 have a handicap parlung pcmut clearly VlSiblc

&amp;.Mrn •• 196&amp; .

Q

annual pcrmn wtll also be gtven access to the lots dwmg th~ houD.

W.U shuuk""""' b. avcula/k•
Yes. Shunle 5erv1ce w11l be ava1lable to tr.mspon accrtdned
srodems and UB personnel berween the Ham1hon Loop and the
Ell•con Complex. Addltlon;llly, summer-long shutt l ~ serv1ce wtll oper·
ate bt:rween the Crofts L01 and the Academic Spme ( 1.e ., around

• 1,192 M,.l

Mt-tered parkmg w11l also br: ava.Jab l ~ and nnctly enforc~. 7 a.m .- 5

Pumam Rood) . Shunle

• 66 IHtUtlll•w•

r.m., dun n.g the Gam~

through Fnday

~ OJX'O

and ava1lable to fac ult)l , staff and studenu who w1sh to pay . Ra1es re·
rruun the same and are tn effect 7 a.m .-3 p.m., as usual. Anyone wuhan

Q
A

Wtll l haut 10 d..pla-,

...

ua•.

m~uvehacle .

w Fronc,k Lou•

Wtlll ha... 10 J&gt;aJ rn park"'

Wlvu if I owri m EJ/icoa!

Effective June 27, parking m the Elhccxt lots will be ~rvM few
Games ~I. Howevet, a limited nwnbe:r c:i spaces have bttn
mad.: availahl&lt; in w Rtclunond Lor for accmlir.d faculty, staff and

"' Fronczak A (Pay lor. 7 a.m.· l p.m.)
• Governors B

Q

World V.U....ir, G&lt;zmu. O..clc in/onnorion P..., her. and su maj&gt; on P"'l&lt; 6 fvr lor .....u..bi!iry.

A

Part.l119 will also ... awallalole Mo11tlay through
Frttlay, 7 a.111.-6 p.m. om

A

P""""' ndu and rqwlanons on aJmj&gt;ou ...U c'-c&lt; ~July 7 and """""""c rn._,. July 19 fvr rhc:

my~ wlul. parlung dunng w Gama'

Yes. In fact, parking pennlt!i must be d15playtd at all t1mo, 7 a.m

....... ....-y.

A

SCf\' ICe

hours are 7AS a. m -S:4'l p.m., Monda.,

CS,300,000 ~ ·

ll:llvu ''

A

Umvetslt)' depanments shou ld

lSSU('

ft.J

-·-

• Heual•1 ,.,. 3,&amp;72

w pohcy for gw«sr )l&lt;Us&lt;l'

Q

guest prnnm; on~), to guests

Mtdmght, when pa.rktng on the North Campus dunng the Games. Tim

who are v1snmg UB on umvenny busmess Guest pas...;a should no1 be

ensurb that adequate accommodauoru are mamta1ned for the un1verstty

tss:ued to v1s11ors ancndmg the Gamn.

community.
•

Q

Wlvu

A

Currently regutc."red students and employees wuhmg to park on

if I don' I haut a parlung )&gt;&lt;mill !

154

~....

• 53 ttulltlll•w•
13;000, 000

the North Campus dunng the Games·must obmm a parktng pennn

•hHi••h

ponatton St:rv1tes. Annual pennit holders may obtam a hangtag from
rhe parking booth attendam at the Froncz.a.k. Lot.s.

Yoga Classes
Music
Jewelry

More tlum just a Bookstore....

Cook ~HC

.....

Mtwing Systems,lnc.

89 7-0700

~-

ft.)

• H-.al•t ..r 1,146

Penntu c.1n be obtamtd from the Office of Campus Parkmg and T rnru·

�I

-a J11Dt2~l~loi.2Uo.29

\V 111: I [I U\ I\ f H\I I I G\ \1 f.\

'Woltcl's best' all..._
co... ele In Unlvenlade
By DIANE ZWIRECKl

Spmalw !h. &amp;pon.r

HI 'IPCIUJ) WILL BE WATCHING UB &lt;his summer. as 6, 700 ath·
letis andc:aii:hcs from mort: than 100 nations convene in Buffalo JulyS.
18 (or rhea.uner World Univeniry Games. being held for the fim timt
ewr in the Un it~ Srnt~.

"Th"

,ear, the most important sporting event in tht: world, bar
e, i.s the World University Games," says Ronald H. Stein, UB vice
Jlllllfident for universicy advancement and developmtm. 1l.e World
~venity Games an: second on ly to the Olympic Games as the world's

mult1·sport event.

will.,..

The Games bring to Western New York not only the planet's
, mongest and besr: athletic competitors, but a nine-week internal cultural festival, a major academic conference, and an educ.ar.ional
I• -.rdl

Western New Y00. school children.
When rht: athletes and sc.holan depan Buffalo foll owing lhe

..............c . . . . . . . . .

cbmg ceremonies July I 8 after the 10-day Universiade is completed,

n.. c. ...,.

I• llalre4 h

completio n. Seaung ts available (or 538 water polo spectator.s.
Term~ competition

will be held on US's Nonh Campus at th...

Jllllllgram that enhances the learning experience for mort: than ZSO,(XX)

1 994 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...

c. . . . ., .. . ,., lltnHtv....

drawong card for UB. "W&lt;v• alr&lt;ady been approochcd for hogh !chool
graduauoru and o ther events. It 's a community facility and will be used
as such on a regular basts," he says.
Swimmers striving (or records tn a full program cJ I 5 men's and
women's events will use an eight ~ lane , SO..met.er pool newly COtUttUCted
at the Eri&lt; Community College/City Campus Athletic Center in down·
town Buffalo . Tiw $19 mtlhon facility also was funded through state
I:X&gt;rmitory Authority bond sales. It has J,CXX) permanent speclator and
media seats and a six-lane, 15-yard warm-up JXX&gt;I.
At the Town of Tonawanda Aquatte and Fimess Center, where
the men's water polo tournament will be: hdd, the World Untverstty
Games stepped in and enabled the new, already-planned center lO ix.nld
a larger and deeper p:x&gt;l, Aickinger narcs. The Aquanc and Fimess
Center, which opened in 1991 , has a nme-lanc:, 50-meter JXX,ll and
includes a movable bulkhead, children's pool, ftmcss room, steam
room and sauna. A $1 .5 million World Umversity Games grant atded tts

~will leave behind a legacy and a spirit

of multiculruraJ eoc~pera ti on
5C'n5C of civic and com~

and ethnic awareness. Along with thi.5 comes a

mumry pnde on the pan of Buffalo and iu univenlt)' for having hosted

such a spectacular event.
The concept behind the Univrrsiade

tw existed since

1910,

when the ftrst lmemauonal Srudent Games rook place in Rome. An
Allll••l Ar.aa evaah.

n..c. ......m

"Academ1c Olympiad" was organized in Berlin 10 y~ later, and the
f'int lmt:mauonal Srudent Games under the guidance of educator jean

Peuqean were conducted in Paris in 1923.
Afu:r more than two decades of worldw1de (Xllitical change. the

International Federation for Uruvtniry Sporu (FlSU, from

Its

Frmch

namt' "~ra t1on lmemarionale du Spon Univt:rsitaire") was formally

created

1n

luxembourg m 1949. Today, ASU remairu the imemarkmal

l,&gt;Ovcmmg OOdy for umverstry sport. In Western New York. A SU works

hand m hand with rhe Greater Bulfalo Athletic Corporation CGBAC),
the local organizing consorrium that brought the Games to the afl!:3. and
was awarded the summer 1993 Umversiade on June 17, 1989. BunT.
hahiN•: Gft 1 800-Mof

Rtchngtr, one of Buffalo's prem1er business leaders. was named GBAC
chatrman.

400·•··· .......

..........................
200· .... ac,...•l•w

.....
Al..1 Twa tl.aca

leaf U•h•nltr 0.1.....,

..... t3oo . .,.......
._._.,O.IIe&lt;y.

Ope:nmg ceremontes for the 1993 World Universay Games are

set fo r Thursday, July 8 at SO,OCO-seat Rich Stadium in Orchard Parle..
Here, a torch relay with JQ,(XX) torchbearers wtU conclude its ttek from
the United Nations Plaz.a
us·~

tn

New York through the state's major cities.

Nonh Campus in Amherst ts the major sit.c for the Games

Top collqiau diwTJ will com.t to VB ', Alumni Arrna Ncuatoriwm to corni:Jck in

th&lt; World Uni...-sity G&lt;zm&lt;s .

and its athletes, but other sports venues will be located across WNY and
m Oruario, Canada. Competition will take place m 12 sp::nts: athlencs
(track and field). baseball. bask«ball, dovmg, fencing, football (soccer).
gymnastics, row mg, swimm mg, tennis, vo1leyball and water polo.
"Athletes range in age from 17 to 28 and arc all at the untverstry

"Center Court" se:atm.g 1.500 has~ added. A 600~sea t ..Stadium

level or one year out o f the untversiry level.:: notes Kathy Scanlan,

festival, whtch began May 8 and ruru to july 18. Fifty Western New

14-coun Elllc.on Complex Tennis Center, to whach a new, permanent

Court" will become a sue for future

tennis championships.

Games offictals proJect an attendance of 200,&lt;XXJ (or the culrural

World UnJVersiry Games executive dir«tor. '"lbis is a wonderful oppor·

York cu ltural organizations are panicipattng, The Games' educauona!

tuntry for Buffalo to extend its hospilaliry to the world's athletes."

component, "'pporrunifies m Educatton," involves 655 elementary and

Competitors from ll'IOtt than 100 nations have accepted mvita·
uoru to take pan in the summer 1993 Games. Ten spans are mandatory
under ASU rules, and up to thrtt additionaJ spom may be added to a
U n iversiack: program at the request of local organize.rs. This year. GSAC
opted to mclude baseball and rowmg. The 11 sportS that make up the
1993 Games will be contest~ in 132 events over 291 st:S$io'ru at a total

hogh schools, 17,000 tcachen and 255,000 !chool childn:n, Stein notes.

of 28 sites, including four in Canada.

'This

lS

an Olympic famil y event ," n otes Ron Stem. '"lbt' Inter-

national sportS governing boards are thr sa.rM ones that govern tht'
Olympi cs~ the

World University Games have the same standards as

Presenters at the Commintt for the Srudy ~U nivers iry Sport

(CESU) conference, to b. held at UB july 8- 11. arc "some of the best
people in the world in th• study of sports," acrording to Carolyn E.
lbomas, conference program director and associate professor c:l phystcal
therapy and exercise scienct at US. The confttence, ~and the
Human Dimension of Phr-;ical Acttvity," includes presenters from
around the globe. The opening ""'ion rakes place july 8 on Sltt Cham·
her Hall, with individual sessions in Baldy, Knox and Norton Halls.
"WhCn we went into it (the Games), we had

thrtt objr:cuves,..

the O lympic Games. This means you ~t the world's best athletes vying

Aickin.gn says. ~e wanted an evem that would have a major plStrivC'

for the same records."

economic impact on Western New York. We wanted to put Buffalo m ·

Both rrack and field and swimming have official rccorW. And
both will take place at state-of-the-an fac:iliues tailored to the htgh

could attract national and intemanonal spons even!S.

standards set (or international competiltons.

Crown jewel in facilities for

the Games is US's new Universiry Stadium, whtch st;ats 16,500 for

football,""""" and track and field. When the Garnes end. Univcnity
will be: the site of Division 1-AA fool ball at US.
Completed in lat&lt; 1992 and flnaOCcd through the sal• of bonds by
the NYS l:A&gt;rmitory Authority, the $21 million stadium has a natw.ilgnl$.'\ infield. It also has administrative spact, locker rooms. a full-servtce

Stadium

press box, private suites, and sports medicine and training fac:ilittes.
Even before itJ completion, Stein notes, Umversiry Stadium was a

an international spotlighL And we wanted to develop facili ties so we
A groundswell of voluntttt support will boost the Games.. .. a total
oll2.000 voluntttr&gt;, bolstering a paid staff of I '10, acrording to Scanlan.
"The Games will cre:ate greater understanding and a.pprec:Lauon of
US," notes William J. Evtns, U S 's executive director cl alumni re:lauons. "Combined with specLal alum.ni evmr:s built around the occaston,
the Games experience wtll remttoducc UB to its graduates. "

11w s&lt;ory l.u been condcued from a fcanar:·i&lt;ngtlo an&gt;&lt;:l. U.. ~ m
w S/Jfm« 1993 ww of UB Taday
.

�'

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Juot2(1993lll.2(k29 - .

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accompan ted by organ, on Tuesday. july 13 at 8 p.m. m Siee Hal~

chou's fust U.S appea.ranc.r m 20 yean. Mano Peruar, chou orpmst ,
woll perform rwv 10lo po&lt;US on the Sltt Hall F;.lo Organ.
Part ci the World Univcnuy Games' lmemat K~nal OJJn113 J
mttval, ~ COOCeT1 IS opm t O thr publiC.. TtcUu a« s7' general audience; SS, sruckms and stmOI' cltu..tns.
Under Brnv1c's duuuon. tht chou has pc:rfonned With (amui
conductor Kun Masur, and woth the Vot:nn:~ Symphony Orchesm and
rhe Orchestra of the Nauonal Opn-a o( Monte Carlo. 1lley have appc:ared m a numbtr of European musiCal fesJiva~ and have tourtd
Salzburg, Mun1ch, Naples, Verona. London, Budapesr and Srurtgan .
among other c 111es.

ITS FOUNDING in 1948, lagr&lt;b Unw&lt;mry a.,., has ddvcd
a wlde rangt ci vocal and lNtrumemalliter.nun! , despite the msuffenng and pohucal snuggles of the Balkans.
Bdore the bqmnmg ci the war m Croana tn May, 1991 , the

choir had planned a series of"Concc.n.s fOf Peacr and Hopr:" wnh the
~b Philharmontc, to~ pe-rformed tn towns wtth suable ~rb popu·

la1toru. The adea was to en~ndcr trust berwetn ~rbs and Croau. War
broke our m Palcrac m
Wrst Slavon1a shortly

r- ·s- I

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Za(.rr~:h , despue .tn atr

r.uJ anJ bomhu1g at -

tach
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1987, wtlllc:ld ,t 40mcmber ~:ru.emhll· m a

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All medical srwknts: UB 's fint

Women's aTchrry team at VB U sho..&amp;m at practice duri;., the J940s .

foorball team.

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SaNa ilt levels high cluring

lheO.nas

Wlw ~ w;Jl UB Pwbl.c So/try a'"''"' dvnnj: the G"""" '

Q

A

During the: World Unovenlly Games from july 8-18, UB Publoc
Safety will continue to provide all normallevds of servacc to 1M campw.
community. In addidon, Public Safety will proviCk expandut serv1c~
funded exclusively by New York State--for the AthJetes' Village, UB
Stadium and Alumni Arena to augmem the secunry provKkd by New
York State Police a\!agned to th~ Games.

Q

""'t

nGtmg

Who
mwlo.d. ao&gt;d "lvu "'"' d&gt;d UB Pwbl.c So/try l.wt m comdo•
the S&lt;omry plan•

A

From t~ bqmnmg, UB Pubhc Safet y played a cntteal ro~ m the

planmng proc~. lOose mvolved ancluck-: Ltt Gnffin. Exa:uuve Commit·
tee , John G rela, 0\au tithe Val~ Secunry Commanee; Wayne
R~uuon ,

T raffle Commutec and &lt;llaar d dw Mecha. Cn~

Pr~mtaon

and Ccmmun1ry Relat•ons Commtnec:s; Frank Panek. Volunteer Commntec~ Su~ve Barry, Publt Safety, V1l~ and Commumcauon Commanees,

Danud Jay, lntelltgencr Commtnec; John Jordan, Assa.stant Village Commander and T ratnmg Commmtt; Dame! Walgau~. Asststant Venue" Com-

mander; Rochard Londe. Command Pool, and Davod Frank, Cultural Com·
mm~

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•wff ..&gt;d sn.dmu dvnnj: w World u,.....,,ry Games•

A

A carefully coordinated program of ~ffcct • v~ and unobtrus1v~

securiry measures has been developed under th~ dirccuon of th~ New

For your safely
..,. Av01d walktng alone a1 n1ght. Keql to well-lighted a~as
... Ple&lt;Ue lock your door, ~v~n 1f you leave for a shon ume

York Stat~ Po l•c~ . UB', Public Saf~ry Dl!panment and mor~ than 40
loc.al, rrg•onal and national agenc •es. Spccaal proeranu to prmect all

... Do noc:

t~

... Noufy Public Safery cA cnmuul acuvmes, suspiCIOUS pe-rsons, or lost keys. Dlal

•nvolvtd hav~ been designed tn coorchnauon with local law tn·

for~ment agenc1es wuh day-to-day raponsib•ilry at each stte of the

o..m...

Ia

1'

1

u.s. ul• ..

a ..._.

leav~ pu~.

lxx:*.s, or other valuables unan~nded.

2222 (campus phone)"' 645-2222 (publoc phon&lt;)
E""'l"""Y Bt.. Loglu Plvmts-&lt;lrrm lmcs w Pwbl.c Sa{ery-&lt;J« a«Ulaak cu ~ loca·
aons on tilch c.arnpw;

1o.......,.

Ia aAIII-11' ..._

lHE TOP COI.J.EOIA11! DIVERS In the Uniud &amp;.a will be an bam! wl&gt;cn the US. tqUOd""""'""' In the World Uni..mcv a.m..
boa!nnincJuiy 13 ot Alumni Anno N..mum. Sanbd junlo&lt; Eile&lt;n ~the 1992 ond 1993 NCAA3·
meurond pladonn ~will lead the WOO!al'a tqUOd while llni-, .- Miomi j\mlor Doon Panam. the
1993 NCAA 1 -mou:r~ondJ.mm,r~~ondUnivasity.-~lialunan
P.). 8oprt, the 1993 NCAA plodonn ~ will lead the mon'a tqUOd.
RY&lt; """""' ond ft:u mon - . .....a 10 the oquocl t.aed on the raulu .-the 1993 NCAA meet ond the
1993 Phillipa66NIItionai(Indoor) US. OivqOiompionshipo ioAtmn, T..... nu...divqtveruswill be
used fOr the World Oamoa: 1-mem apingboord, 3-mem ~ ond Jo.a- plamnn.
~
a.,...
Ricbettlli won a gold medal on the: plodonn at th.c 1991 Pm AmcricanCJan...ondplaced third on the
platform at the: 1993 Phillipo66 Nationals. She will be joined by Uni..mcy.-Flcrida lialunan Mcllia Moors, Univusicy oi'Tcxas ftalunan
Sh&lt;ny WiGinton, and a polr .-Onlvmicy &lt;X Michigan divcr&gt;, junior Cinnamon Woods and oophomore Carrio Zane.
Ohio Statc alwnnus David Pichler joiN Bopn and Panaro on th.c men'• team, along with Navy ftalunan Nate Smith.

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UN IVERSITY BOOKSTORES 100 Lee Emrnnce (645-3131)
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w•sT.RN N.W YORK LOCATIONS
Amhmr
UNIVERSITY INN &amp;: CONFERENCE CENTER 2401 Nonh Forest Road (Gth ShopX636-7500) fo• '&gt; wtat&lt;hiru &amp; T-Shlns
UNIVERSITY'i!OOKSTORES, MEDICAL BRANC H 1610 Mam ;met (Across from M:un St Campus)(833-713ll
for Gla.sswart. Hau. Ktychains, Mugs, Ptn.s, SweaWuns (:, T ·Shtrts

Buffalo
GREEKS &amp;: SNEAKS 3212 Mam Street (833-1913) Jm Swtat&lt;hms &amp; T-Shom
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NUPRINT GRAPHICS 39 Comet Street (877-7771)fo• Decals. Kc) Tap , 5wtarslum. T-Shor" &amp; Tano Top&gt;
POSTER ART 1055 Elmwood Avenue (883-3034)jm Campus Mr Pnnt
RUNNER'S ROOST 1386 Hertel Avenue (875-638 1) fm Caps &amp; T·Shl&lt;'b

Cheektowaga
HYA IT'S GRAPHIC SU PPLY Walden Galiena Mall (684-6162 ) Jo• Campus A&lt;r Pnnt
MADONNA ART Appletrec Mall (681-9 111)jor Campus Art Pnnt

Grand Island
EDDIE'S A:RT SHOPPE 2305 Grand Isl and Boulevatd (773 -1711) Jo• Camp"' Mt Pnnt

I..ancasta
FANTA:SlA 256 Iroquois Aven ue (6HI · l) I')) Jm SwL'ar~hlrts. Cup1 &amp; Mwg'lo

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Williamsville
BOND'S ART SHOP 5454 Mam ~lreet (632 - 1180) }m Camp"' An Pnnt
HYATTS GRAPHIC SUPPLY 8565 Main Street (632-000I)Jo• CompU&gt;Art Pnnt
FOR UB COLLEG IATE TRADEMARK UCENS ING INFO CONTACT: UN IVERSITY AT BUFFALO/ OFFICE OF T.JtADEMARKS AND LI CENSING/ 716-0i.S.}4 Ill fAX 7l6-0iS- 5 9&lt;tJ.
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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�2
..,s.a,s.a COMMENCEMENT 147 EXTRA

UB ~llawarrl d~ to
6,100 m 14 ceranorues
.,._p_
News Bureau Otrectof

A

A picture means more than
1000 words; it means 76 steps.
It takes 7b steps to gettmg
commumcat10n
pll'fr drstgnod. produced and
d(·i! ven'&lt;i to the nght plan• at
the nghtttme
That s a lot to asl. vour
'UPf&gt;Orl &gt;lafl to squeeze mt o
tht.' J\'t'rage

it rouhnt'

At MCA. we take the 76
steps fur you, and we do each
thr way 11 should be done·
rrra hvrl y. effectively. timely.
rost-t&gt;fhoently
Stnce that'; all we do
e1·erydav. we do 11 pretty well.

worlload

Monlyn Coppelhno AssoCiaTes

Two Symphony C1rcw:

Buffalo

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during 14C001JTielw;:emen(ccmnonies
10 be beld 00 Friday. May 14; Saturday, May 15. and Sunday, May 16.
Theoniversity' s 1471itcommencemcnt ceremony will be held all 0 a.m
on Sunday, May 16 in Alumni Arena.
President William R Greiner will
oooferthedegr=anddeliverremarks.
Frank N. Bradley of Buffalo. who
will receive a bachelor's degree wilit a
joint major in theater and politica1
science, will be the student speaker.
Speaker.; a1 the 13 divisional commencement ceremonies will include
Li. Gov. Stan Lundine, who will
speak a1 lite ceremony 10 be held by
lite UB School of law on May 16 .
During the 147lhuniversitycommencement ceremony. the presti gious Chancellor Nonon Medal will
be presented to journalist Terry
Ander.;on, fonner head of the Beirut
bureau of the Associated Pre.!~s. who
wa.• kidnapped and held hostage in
Lebanon for nearty seven years.
The President's Medal will be presenled 10 John L. Hettricl.. chairman
and ch1ef execunve officer of WSF
lndustnes. Inc 'IJ1d a loyal and wmmined friend '" LIB
The Olanccllor Norton Medal "
UB's lughest tribuu:. II IS pn:scmed
annually m public recognition of a
pl."fSOil

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6.100 students will be
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from the Universiry a1
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who ha_..., m Norton's wonis.

"performed some great liting which is
1denufled with Buffalo .. a great civic

tributions of time or treasure, exem-

plary leadership or any other major
contribution to the development of the

Univer.;ity a1 Buffalo and thequalityof
life in the UB commoniry ."
Hettrick has served on the borud of
uustees of the UB Foundation since
1971. A&gt; chair of tl1e board from
1988-92, he was one of the primary
architects of the highly successful
Pathway~ to Greatness campaign.
which rdised $56.3 million in gifts
and pledges to benefit students. faculty and programs at the university

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• School of Engineering and Applied Sciences-Provost Bloch will
speak and confer degrees during a
ceremony ru I p.m. in Alumni Arena.
• School of Pharmacy-Dean
David J. Triggle will speak and confer degrees in a 1 p.m. ceremony 1n
Slee Hall.
• School of Architecture and
Planning--Susan A. Maxman.presl dent of the American Institute of

Architects. will speak during a ceremony at 2 p.m. on the lawn of
Hayes Hall. President Greiner wdl
confer degrees.

• School of Management-Provost Bloch will oooferdegreesduring a

ceremony a1 5 p.m. in Alumni Arena.
William Slall. chief fmancial officer.
Digiilll Equipm:nl Cap., will speak.
• Graduate School of Education-Tom Toles. syndicatededi!Orial
cartoonist wilit The BuffaloN~s. will
speak. President Gtpner will confer
the degrees during a ctremony ru 5
p.m. in Slee Hall.

0

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brary Studies---Joseph F. Schubert,
New Yori&lt; Stall: ubrnnan and lite
state's assistant commissioner for IJbrnries. will ;-peak. UB Provost Aaron
N. Bloch will confer degrees in a ceremony at I 0 a.m. in the lhearer m lhe
Student Uruoo (Room 20 1).

or political act, a great book. a great
work of art. a great scienhfic achievement.. or any olherthing which m itself
is truly great and ennobling and which
dignifieS the perfonner and Buffalo in
the eyes of the world ...
lt is being awun:b:t to ArK1erson in
recognition of the extrnordinary spirit
he displayed throughoui his long ordeal
and the comfort he provided his fellow
captives. and for being an elUlll1ple of
deu:rminatioo. resourcefulness and endurance that typifieS the best attribuu"'
ofthechardCterofWestem New York.
Ande:rson. who wa~ raised in Batavia.
will receive the award from Philip B.
Wels. MD .. chaiiofthe UB C&lt;&gt;.mcil.
The President's Medal will be presented to Henrick by Greiner. FiN
presented in 1990. it i~ given m recognition of''signal and extraordinary ser-

vicetothe university. lt•spresented for
outstanding scholarly or an1s1Jc
achievements, humamUtnan acts, con-

The weekend of graduation cerernonieswiUbeginwhetlthe UBGrOOuau: School holds i!S commenc:errenl a1
2p.m. May 14inAJumniArena. Cl1arles
H. Ebert, Distinguished Teaching Professor in the UB Googrnphy Depanment will deliver the address. President
Greiner will confer degr=.
Seven. division conunencements

will be held on Saturday. May IS :
• School of Nursing-Dean
MeccaS.Cranleywillconferdegreesin
a ceremony ru 9 am. in Slee Hllll.
Speaker will be Priscilla Heidorn, a
1963 gr.ldu:ue who is vice president f&lt;r
rrudwtfery serviCeS wilit lite John D.
Archbold Medical Center in
Thomasville. Ga
• School of Heallit Relaied Professions--Prestdent Greiner will conferdegreesandconsultanl AnneS hue II
wiU speak in a ceremony at 9 am. in
· Alumni Arena.

• School of lnfonnation and

u-

Commencement ceremonies 10 be
held oo Sunday, May 16 are:
• School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences-Margaret W .
Paroski, M.D .. clinical assistant professor in the UB Department of Neurology. will speak in a ceremony a1 2
p.m. in Alumni Arena. Provost Bloch
will Confer the degrees.
• School of Denllll MedicinePresident Greiner will oooferdegrees
during a ceremooy a1 2 p.m in Slee
Hall. The speaker will be Gcruldine T
Morrow. past president of the Amen can Denllll Assooiation.
• School of Law-Stan Lundine
will deliver remarks ina ceremony at6
p.m. inAlumniAn:na.Degrees will be
conferred by President Greiner.
• ScroolofSociaiWm-Shirl&lt;y
Lord. associale professor ofsor:inl wor\;
a1 Buffalo State College. will deli verthe
cornmencanent address during a cer·
errony a1 7 p.m. in Slee Hall. Degrees
will teoooftrredby Provost Bloch.

�3
..,.u,s.Ma COMMENCEMENT 147 EXTRA

USAB honors winners of
_]. Scott Fleming Awards

T

HE UNIVERSITY Student
Alumni Board(USAB)honored winners of the 1993 J.
Scott Fleming Merit Awards
during a May 5 reception in the
Jeannelte Martin Room in Capen Hall.
The awards r&lt;eognize meritorious service by full-time UB students
who have promoted school spirit
and enhanced student life through
lheirextracwricularoctivities. Nearly
50 students completed applications
for the awards this year.
This year's winners are Dawn
Marie Herron, Steven Katz,
Kmline D. Meyer and Kimberly
D. Packanl. Each winnerreceiveda
check for $250. and an engraved
plaque. lneir name..c; are also engraved on the com memorative

plaque listing all previous winners
since 1983. Honorable mentions
were awarded to Steven J . Harvey,
KJoren T. Hillary, Suzanne Musho

and Juliet N. Pecenco. They .,.
ce aved marble paperweaght~ .
Herron is aJUStice on the Student Wide Judiciary and serves as presi dcm of the Golden Key Nauonal
Honor Socaety .

Kat1.. an mdustnal engmeenng/
applied mathemaut.· ~ major. has been
an ac uve member of the Jewash Studen! Umonandthe Student Assocaat•on He as a membe r of th e
Student-Wide Juda nary

Meyer, a JUniOr env aronmcniHI

science major, is a resident advisor
and was an orientation aide leader in
1992.
Packard, a senior psychology
major, has been inducted into lhe
Golden Key National Honor Society, Psi-Oti National Honor Society, UBLAUNCH, and lhe Senior
LeaderJhip Honor Society.
Harvey, a senior business administration major, is a New York State
Student Assembly delegate and the
founder and treasurer of lhe Ethical
Business Association. He serves on
The S~crnun Board of Directors,
Student Senate Proxy, and is a UB
assemblyman.

Hillary, a junior chemical engineering major. is finance chairperson of the National Society of Black
Engineers. She also serves the Black
Student Union as academic chair
and the Caribbean Student Associalion as academic cO&lt; hair.
Musho. a graduate srudent majormg m archita:ture, is national president of the American Institute of
Art:hitecture Sll&gt;:lents, where she was
treasurer from 1991-1992. She serves
ootheSchoolof Art:hitectureandPianning Admissions Committee.

Pecenco

JS

a senior mechanical

engineenng maJor active in the Society of Women Engineers and the
American Society of Mechanical

Eng1necrs. She is corresponding secn:Lary of Tau Beta P1

Packard is named
Weinstein Award winner
Kimberly

Packard,
shown In
Student
Union,
received
award
aponsonKI
by the
Emelttus
Center.

I

-

1

I')'
j I
I

I

'

I
I

!

--

---

I

'j

--------

-

Commrncrmrn t 15 not only a proud rnd to an &lt;mporlant limr of pmonal achliVtmcnt.
but also, as thr namr suggrsts. thr b&lt;gmmng of nrw posStb&lt;l&lt;l&lt;rs Any graduatmg clas5
factS such a brgtnnmg. but yours com« m an era of b&lt;gmnmgs Wlllnn thr post fivr
years, a nrw way of ltfr has brgun m Eastrm Europt and Asw W1thm thr post year. a
nrw pmulcntwl admm15tratwn h1l5 b&lt;gun m thiS country
Thr acilrmcnt of nrw oppor1unlills notwllh.standmg. thrsr rrccnt rvrn/5 and thm
- - att&lt;ndanttunnoil and confuswn havr rrmmdrd U5 dramatlflllly that btgtnmngs arr nat
tasy. Thry rrqu&lt;rt mlllatwr. dn vr. &lt;mag&lt;nation, pasrvrran((. a cltar goal. a rrs15/an(( to
d&lt;Spair should tht first try prow to I&gt;&lt; a fals&lt; start Btgmmngs may bnng hop&lt;. but thry also bnng
unarlainty, and thry often makt us frrl as though thtrr 15 no trllmg what mliJhl comr next
Tht great par115 that thtrr !,l no tdl&lt;ng what m11Jht comr nw
Tha/15, b&lt;gmnmgs rrmmd us that anythmg can happtn. thatt1mr and hiStory arc flutd. that our
l&lt;vts and world arr no bs than what wr makr thrm And brgmmngs rrm1nd U5. or should rrmmd us. that
possibiliti« bnng wtth thtm rzsponstbllll&lt;ts. and that our l1vrs and world
also br no morr than what
wt makt thtm
Anothrr brgmnmg for all of us 15fUSI ahrad thr brgmnmg of a nrw untury lind a nrw mllltnmum
Such timts arr h15torir:ally 11mts of prrdiCttan and prophrcy m whiCh rvrryonr clmms to know what 15
commg nw No onr doo. of cout5t. but thac 15 at ltast onr good answa to thr qutst&lt;on of what IS next
You art
You. mtmbm of thr Class of '9J whatever dtgrrr you havr complrtrd th iS yrar. whatrm your plnm
for tht futurr may bt- you will br makers and shaptrs of thr list crntury and wluu lollow&lt; 11 fhrmn 11fl
your grra/ rrsponStbllity
Par1 of you r rrsponsib1l&lt;ty w&lt;ll br to yout5tlf, part to your fa m&lt;ly and {nrntb f"'" to vour l&lt;(r &lt; work.
what!Ytr you choost that to br Plta.st rrmrmbrr thnt part will also bra rr:,pml5thlluvto 1hr commumtv
and country and worW of wh1ch you arr a niLUtl and 10 all ,·,o!lf oOtrN who tnhahttthL" worfll w1th vou
For too many of thcst othrrs. thrrr ha1•r ban too frw hrgmnm9~ mul/U(I frw po):otbillllt!:l Thrrr havr
brrn. mstrad, thr samr hungrr. thr samr 11/nrss. thr ~mr r.u/uswn {nun hopr thr ~mr qrrrt~ IP ~lup m
You. on thr othrr hand, havr hatl rducatwn antltwnHnq Dunnq vour vrtlr. 111 l'B vmJ hm-r
drvrloptd spmfic knawlrdgr and skills thalw&lt;ll hrlp you ust opportu11111r&lt;11nd wnlr"'", lwllrnt/&lt;&gt; "' wrll
as hablls of mmd tha t can kup you growmg tmd ltflmmg all vour hfr l'\'h!lr no or1r 1an rwllu knm' whm
comrs nrxl , you havr rrcrtvrd somr prrpnrntlotJ 111 tt111kr tmd mrrtwhtllt ornr' nnt /n thut vn11 hm·r had a
pnv1lrgr that othr~ havr not
As you makr vour way plra_.,r sharr 'omr of thr bmd1h ofvmu rtluullwn wl/h thtl't whoSt
opportum/1(5 havr hrrn rtwrr lmutrd lhhaps L/1111 will r1J/a a profr.,o;wn that mubk~ LJUII In hrlp olhrr'
d~rrrtly, prrlwps you Will spmd a llltlr of your (ru tum workmg 1\'llh othtr!l. U!JU19 and /urtha drvrlopmtj
thr sk1lls ami undrrstondmg~ !JDU lw•·r 9t11rwl hrrr at l 1B Prrhap~ !JOU wJI!Simpll/, many ql\'rn momrnl
find a chana to rxlrnd a poss 1bJ IJ/~ fr sornmnr rhr ---and m ..o dmnq, vvu w1fl cxtt'rul yow own poss1blllltr~
and thoSt of your world
'f1ns past hmuan; 20. a!&gt; thr l!lllttd )fain markrtlthr hrtflllrlllli/ of tl 11rw po/1/ua/ rra thr pot/
,\ !aya Anqrlou who at thr brgulrllrl9 of hrr /1k wa_., qwrn 1-rrv fr•' opportumt1r::. and who l!a::. {rom thrrr
mmlr hrr Own world of btlwty- rrtl!l llu~r wort/:- lo millwn' o( /J:,tmr~ around thr n'Orltl
L&lt;ft up vour hrar/5
l:tJch nrw hour hold5 new thantt"i
f-or ll nrw brgmmng
Ihr lhancr~ anti brgmmn g~ arr your~ h·rn 111 lhr lra~t urtmn rrwmrnh 1,mu hm·r muth o( wh1ch
yuu wn br proud. of wfuch you can drram A~ you /1{1 up vuur hrart~ vou willll[l up your worfll as wrll
\\'r. your nun/ors and fntnds at liB wDh and rxpril (or vou thr hm11drst oj pu!lSJhil ll!r~ . thr bnghlrsl
of brgmnmg.~ . thr brsl oj conclusions .A luch ~utcr;~ llnti htlpJ'Hif~~ w vau m t1/l vour rntlrm·o~

"'II

- IVIil&lt;am R

Cr~tner.

PRl'&gt;IDH.:t

Senior Breakfast

An Event to Flip Over!

K

IMBERLY D. Packard. a
UB senior graduating this
month, has been selected
to receive the Rose
Weinstein·Memorial Award. sponsored by the Emeriius Center. The
annual $200 award. keyed to studies

and researc h on the subject of aging,

was prese nted May II during a reception at the Emeritus Center.

The Weinstein Award, newl y
named this year to honor the late

Rose Weinstein, an Emeritus Center
charter member. is offered to UB
stude nt candidates involved in educational projects on aging. The winner is selected by the Emeritus Center
Committee for Scholar.ihip Awards,
cu=ntly chaired by retired English

professor Thomas Connolly.
Packard's winning entry. devel oped under the guidance of fac ulty
advisor Roger V. Burton of the Psy·
chology Departmen~ is a proposal
for a grant to study "Effects of Visitation and Control on the Menta]
Health ofthe Institutionalized Aged."
In addition 10 the S200 prize.
Packard will receive a testimonial
plaque and wi ll have her name inscribed on a plaque at the Emeritus
Center listing the names of prtvious winners.
Packard plans to attend West
Virginia Univ . at Morgantown,
where she is enrolled in a clinical
Ph.D. program with a concentration in gerontology.

--~

To the Members of the Class of 199:'&gt;

�4
-.,u,1ftl COMMENCEMENT 147 EXTRA

:------....., "'-*

Speaker
to stress
selVlce

llnKieJ
.........

·lnthe
theater.

lty-HAMMER

Reporter Staff

H

E'S YOUNG.passiOnateabootactingand has
hi s entire adult life
ahead or him. So what

is Frank Bradley. this
year's undergraduate speaker at UB 's
general commencement. most eager
tO lJlik about on the eve or his graduation? Community.

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Wait a minute. Did I hear you
correctly? Did you say .community?
Well. in a nutshell. yes. And this
aspinng acror doesn ' t even blink
when he tells you that givmg some·
thing back to lhe community is hi s
message to the graduates this year.
"What I say will be as short and
dirucl as possible... he said. "But! want
to convey

that when we graduate, the

most imponantlhing is not to find ajob

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that pays a lot or mooey. We should
have learned our lesson rrom the greed
or the '80s. The most imponantthing
we can do is to give something back to
the community, to contribute what we
know to thal corrununity."
Bradley, who will graduate with a
double major m theater and potilical
science. said that his flr.il IXOjecl after
graduation will be to play Peter (the
clown) in Shakesp!are's Romeo and
Julter in this summer's Shakesp!3Sl! in
Delaware Park.. He·s currently acting
in the !rishC!assica!TheaterCompany' s
IXOductJon or Geraldine Aroo's Bar
and Ger at the Calun-.,t Arts Cafe.
From tht:re. he wanL' 10 l."'Oltinue
octing in Buffalo through the end or
this year and then move on. " I have no
definite plans to go to grdduate school
a1 this point because l'ma Little burned
001 rrom school." said Bradley. "But
I'd like to do an MFA in octing down
the road."
But Frank. whataboutgivmgsomething back 10 the community? You're
a native Buffalonian. Why noc give
something to this lOwn?
Don., worry.lhere is a plan accord·

''The most imponanl
thing we can do is
give somfthing back
to the community "
· FRANK IIIIADLEY

ing to Brddley. "RJght now. the plan is
to audition ror everything in Buffalo
through next January and then move to
New York. to get some l'1lOfl: b"airung.

I reel that! need lOgo to New y""' and
Jearn more and then do the MFA.
"Butultimately,"hesaid. "1 want to

come back here and oct and be involved 10 the thealer community here
~an actor or a~ a director. or by serving
SOftleartsorgantz.ation. Wehaveavery
vibrant theater life here. in this city."
And acting 1~ ··an tmportant way to
gzve to any communit)'. ··he said. 'ihe
narun: or all octing is giving. at leas! ror
me. Few actors I know do it ror the
money. We do it toennch the culrural
life or the city."
With allllus lJlik about octing, one
nught rorgetlhat Bradley also majored
in political science at UB. h may not
appear to make sense at fi"' glance. but
lcammg about national and intema-

nonal potilK:a!SlruCIUieS wasessennal.
he said. "One side or my rarruly has a
very military bac~ground. I was rBJ.&lt;ed
With a heightened sense or what was
gomg on worldwide. politically.
''When I fug came here. five years
ago. I decided that I would major m
sornellung that interested me. r d been
actmg sina: I was a freshman in Jugh
school and had always been inu:resled
m politics." said Bradley. "Somalay.
r d lil.e to do some heavily political
theater. like Br&lt;ehl I see that as my wa)
or affecting things. instead or being '"
the military. It's my responsibility."
Responsibility is a quality Bradle)
will stress in his c:omrnencen-.,nt adctn:s..... .. At this point in till'Y:. it's oot
optional ror us. as graduates. about
whether or not to tie responsible." he
said ''Now ts the time for us ro be
responsible mcm!Jcr.; of our communities. And it' s an organic proce'\ ~
where the community grows proportionate to the contributions of tt\
members."

But octing has never been a given.
ra Bradley. He's always had 10 wort.
hard and long 10 aehieve what succes.&lt;
he' senjoyalthroughlheyears."Hope·
fully, I'm going 10 tie an to:tor. Or
maybe. I already am an to:tor." he saKi
"They say it takes I5 years. so maybe
I should agJlle with them and wait"

UB'sMissNew York State?
BJ DAVID HIMMELGII£EH
Reporter Staff

F

ROM CLASSICAL p1ano
to the Golden Key Honor
Soc1ety toM1ss Buffalo and

• beyond. That's what Je nni fer Diumar. a graduaung senior at
UB. has gomg for her. Dill mar. who
i~ now preparing fur the M1 ss Nc""
York State pageant and anticipates
graduate study.
has plan.!' for the
future that tnclude
helptng to make
educauon in the
U.S top'\ m the

. world agam.
Dittmar. who began pluymg the

piano at age fou (, came to UB m
1988 as a piano perfonnance maJOr.
Later she switched her major to business management with a concenlrntion in marketing . She would like to
continue her graduate education at
UB with a joint degree in law and
business or a degree in higher education administration . ~
Dittmar first became involved in

pageant' 1n 1990 when she heard
about the Miss Erie County competition on lhe radio. She entered and .
m addition to winning the pageanL
was named "Miss Congeniality" by
the other contestants. a great honor.
she said. After winning. Dittmar
spent three yean. modeling.
Recently. she won the Miss Buffalo utle . wh1ch was qune competi tive. she said. During the interv1ew
ponion of the competit,on. ""the
Judges wanted to find out what makes
me tick." Dtttmar sa.Jd. adding that
"they (the judges) wanted to kno"
how knowledgeable we were about
current event~ ...
She 15 now prepanng for the Miss
New York State pageant wh1ch Will
tie held in Watenown on May 29
Diumar is very concerned about
education in the U.S . and the ''lack of
goal setting" among the youth of this
country . As a member of the Golden
Key National. Honor Society and a
peer recruiter at UB. Dittmar helps

1lus has been qui te successful.
Dittmar said. explaining that "many
high school stUdents who were not
planning 10 go to college are now
considering it after meeting with

college students...
If Ditttnar gets into law school she
would like to srudy oorponu.e law
Companies have a responsibility to
sociely.Ditttnarbetieves.andshewou!d
like tO beeome a facititaiOf or this
societal responsibility. "Corporations
must oontribute to soCiecy ... she said
adding that this is especially uue with
regant to ·"environmentaJ resp::n~ibil ­
ity ..
In addition to her career goah.
Dmmar has been involved in man)'
other activities. She is currently president or the American Marketing
Association for StudenlS and v1ce ·

president or the Golden Key Na tional Honor Society .
s~ is also a volunteer for the::
Children· s Hospital Benefit. a tour
guide at UB. an ae:robics instructor at

to bring together high school students with other "Golden ~ey Stu-

student marshal for the university 's

dents" who share similar interests.

1993 commencement.

Alumni Arena. and she will be a

�5
..,u,un COMMENCEMENT 147 EXTRA

Four to be honored for
achievement, leadership

F

OUR UB students will

receive special awards
during the university's
I47th cornrnercementceremony to he held on Sunday. May 16 in Alumni Arena
Three students will receive
Dean's Academic Achievement
Awards recognizin g outstanding
undergraduate students: Lcshc G.

American Universities and Co/legos. In the summer of 1990, he was an
engineering intern a1 the Henkel Corp.

I

GRADUATION
SPECIALS
until May 28, 1993

ship activities at UB. includmg the

Leadership Task Fon:e. the Ad vanced Leadership Seminar and the

Inaight 4860X/33 •

$1,948

Fully upgrodoablelnteiii006CPU•

in Dusseldaf. Ocrmany. Ensherhasan
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Acceleni!Oo" SVGA Canl •33 MHz •
4MB memory•2SOMB hard dnve • 3.5~
and 5.25" hi gil Geruity Boppy drives •
a· Nl SVCA D"\01litor • Enhmced 101 key keyboard •3-button mouse•MSDOS 5.0 • Windows 3 1
Compt~rr to DCU 11t Sl.D-49

experia1ce
for an Wldergraduale. Heha&lt;;

68alO proc....,.•I6MHz •4MB

demiC Achievement Award from

done re search in
ex peri men 1 a I

AppleTalk • Standatd SCSI
Sn~ $70 with Select JOO La.Hr Printer
Savt 595 with ~lect 310 LA•er Printer

the Faculty o f Ans and Leuers.
Amba K. Smglelllry of Buffalo
wtll receive the Senior Leadership

physics at
UB and in
theoretical

Barr. Dean' s Academic Achieve ment Award from the Faculty of

Social Sciences; Jason R. Ensher.
Dean's Academic Achievement
Award from the Faculty of Natural
Sc1ences and Mathematics. and
k.n stin M. Scheible . Dean' s Aca-

Award presented by lhe DJvJsmn of
Stude nt Affairs
Les lie G. Barr IS a p!&gt;ycho log y
maJor wh o is planmng to study
med Jc Jne and earn both a med• ca l
degree and a doctorate In her psyc ho log y h o nor~ th es 1s. she 1s us1ng
a ne w. co mpli c ated quantitative
method to s tud y the vanahl es con·
tnbutm g to differe nces- If they
n. l \ t - between men ·~ and
"omen ·~ ~e lf - c=stec=m The moth er
() f two you ng c hlidren . Barr has
hce n a vo lunteer G1rl Scout a~s•~­
tant leader and co nf1rrna11 o n
teac he r
Jason R Ensher, who • ~ maJormg m physiCS, i!&lt;&gt; a Pres1denllal Honor.. Scholar. a.' well a' a Barry M
Goldwater Excellencl" 111 EducatiOn
Scholar. He IS a member of Ph1 Eta
S1gma Honor Soc1ery. the Golden
Key Honor Society and the Mortar
Board. and appc:an, m Whv ·. ,. Who in

I "' . ~,

I I )\

Macintosh Color Gusic

Macintosh LC Ill

nuclear

physics at
1he Col lege of
Will1am

and Mary.
andpanic lpated 111
the NASA
Space Life
Sc1enL·es
Tnuningl'rugrdl11attheKennedySpace
Center. He is vice president ofUB' s
Undergraduale Phys1cs Club.
Kffi1.in M . Scheible, who has a
double-maJor 111 women 's stud1es
and anthropology . has been nomi nmed for Phi BeU1 Kappa . She rank s
firstm terms of grade-point average
among graduaung sem ors m anthropolog) . Scheible transferred 1o UB
from Monroe Commumty College
Amba K. Single!Jlry of Buffalo
has been mvolved in sc:veralleader-

',.\\ I " ( I \ \1:" I

l

2P M

she is a peer mentor. volunteer peer
rec ruiter and a UB tour gu1dc. Lasted

m Who's Wh o in Amt'ricafl Umver sttles and Colleges and on the NauonaJ Dean· s Last. ~ he is a member
of Alpha Kappa Della Sociology
Honor Soctely and !he Golden Key
Honor Societ) . She i!&lt;&gt; a lso involved
community serv1ce project~ lhat
deliver mentonng and tutorial serVIces.
111

Prof W•lllam R Gre•ner
Pres•dent

Or Charles H V Ebert
SUNY D•sllngwshed Teachtng
ProleSSOI' . Dept ol Geography
Unrverstty at BuHaiO

Alumn1 Arena

Prestdent Gre1ner

Anne Shuell
Health Care Consultant

Dr Mecca S Cranley

Dean

Pr iSCtlla He1dOfn B 5 63
VICe Pres1dent lor M•dw•fery
Serv•ces John 0 Archbold MediCal
Center Thomasville Georgta

• Nurs1ng

9AM

Stee Han

• lnlormatiOfl and
Ltbrary Stud1es

lOAM

Student Un•on
Theater

Dr Aaron N BlOCh
Provost

Joseph F Snuoen
New York State AsSlstant Comm1s
s100er for L1branes &amp; State Ubranan

• Engtneenng and
Apphed Sc.ences

I PM

Alumn1 Arena

Provost BlOCh

Provost Blocn

• Pharmacy

I PM

Slee Hall

Dr Oav10 J Tnggle

Dean Tt~g~le

• Arc httecture and Ptann•ng 2 PM

52,245

San 595 with Selrct 310 L.a.ur Printer

$2,441

&amp;

memory • 230MB hard dnve •14 Color
d.tsplay•Extended keyboard•butlt -rn
AppleTaii: • On-boud Elhemet • I-Ugll
perlonrumce SCSI
Save $70 with Select 300 Laser PTinter
S.IVe $95 with ~lect JlO Laser Printer

CSTEP Program Ad' 1sory Board. A
member of the UB Gospel Ch01r.

MAY 15 (Satunlio)')
• Health Related Proless10ns 9 A M

&amp;

6804il proc....,- • 20MHz •8MB

.I,-&gt;;" I· I 1\ "-· \1 . \"II \I )Ill\ I ...,..., '-,( I II I )l I I

Alumn• Arena

51,905
$2,101

68alO proc""""•25MHz •4MB
memory • 8&lt;1vf8 hard dnve • l4 " Color
display • Standatd keyboan:l • buUHn
Apple Tall: • Sta11dMd SCSI
S..n $70 with Sel«t 300 Laur Printer

Macintosh Centris 650

MAY 14 (Fridar)
• Graduate School

&amp;

memory • 8CMB hard drive • J O~
Trinitron Color display •bwJt-U'I

Dean
Hayes Hall Lawn

Pres1dent Gre1ner

Susan A Maxman FAIA
PrestOent Ameucan
lns111ute al Architects

• Managemem

!&gt;P M

Alumn• Arena

Provost Bloch

w.u.am Steu!
Ch1ef Ftnanctal Ott1cer
D1g1ta1 EQuipment Coroo•a11on

• Graduale EOuc ahon

;PM

Slee Hall

Pres1dent Gretner

ThOmas To1es
Cartoon•st
The Buffalo News and
The New Recubhc

• UntverSily

lOAM

Alumn1 Arena

Prestdent Gretner

Pres•dent Gre•ner
Remarks

• Med1c tne and
810ffied1cal Sc•ences

2P M

Alumn1 Arena

Provost Bloch

Dr Margaret W Parosk•
Chn•caJ Ass1s1an1 Professor
Depanment ol Neurology
Unrvers•ty at BuffalO

• Dental Med•ctne

2 PM

Stee Hall

Prestdent Gre1ner

Dr Geraldrne T Morrow
Past Pres10ent
Amertea'1 Dental ASSOC•at.on

• Law

6P M

Atumn• Arena

PresK1ent Gremer

The Honol"able Stan Lund1ne
lteutenant Governor
State of New York

• Soc•at Work

7P M

Stee Hall

Provost Bloch

Dr Sh.rley A Lord
Assocaate Prolessor Soc•al won..
Buffalo State College

MAY 18 l!iundarl

$4,163
$4,359

UB Commons • North Campus • 645-3554

Lllj lalllllllll
~

-

A-.poft~-a~lrDr-, ._,...a

...

Convenience

~~~~~
~
·Yariety
,.. _....

's Frozen Custard &amp; Ro
ng • Pizza Hut
Shappe • UniMart
Campus Church Coal
&amp; Sweats • CVS ;

J

·-

,----

�6
..,u.s.a CO MMENCEMEN T

S, \I _L'·I-1-~ -r()
S-1-L' I) 1 -~ ·" -~~\l- ~

11 1 ~\ ' 1 -~J\ \ 1 -~J"_ I _

Dtplomas. celebrate the com111et10n of ngorouc;, flrOJ.!rc~m~

as well as. years of effort-along wtth them . specto:tl

award!J of excellence are pr~entcd to s tudent s who ha\'e
made out standing contributions in areas. of acadcmu. . ~.

research . community service and artisttc performilnce

Among the awards that UB students wtll recenr'e at

147 EXTRA
GRADUATE SCHOOL OF
EDUCATION
EIIUCA~ -..zAliOM,

Adricve..-. ;nctudina her eloctm "' P!u
Beu Koppo. ""' for do&lt;wnenwy crea~•"'

wort an video.

_ , H;ah Aadem&gt;&lt;
Acbiew:men~: ror ouwancbn&amp; wort as he.d
of tbc: UUAB Film Stnes. and for bnnpaa
Spike Lee oo campus
Maltbew _

~t'ION

u.......

KarlSII..,.,J,._Sil.a,MonoiSioii,Lori
Till, Kathy Wood and Mlldt:liot Pot have
been named to Wllo 's WlaoAmortJ Slwkflh
In A.m#'riC'an UnHH!flll~l and Coll~gn

Also cllcd for HiJh Academac A.chtevc:mnu
were· Siena J . Di,a,1110ad, Auaust R.

CrHtas, Nancy Sherrill Huddlntoa ,
P,tridaJ... Illl. ThoodonJoluo Oowald,
Jdhy L. StoHler (P!u Bela Kappa) lnCI
1Aoley Roberti WahL

EDUCATIONAL
OPPORTUN11Y PROGRAM

-~-

JtuDaW. BroW11,pachWrnaGcrmanmaJOr.
has rece~ved an awud from the govemmen1
of the Fedc:raJ Republic: of Gcmw~y for
Et.ccllenoe in German Sludlei
CaroiSkd. p&gt;duating Gennan map. w
ruriwx:l an awvd from the
of
the Federal Republic of Germany for
EJ.celknce in German StuWes
Cn.tina Cuauiio, graduating Spt.ntsh
major. has~ departmental honors for
EJ.cellence in Spanish Stucfjes.

aovcmment

Cumellna Gcau•, gnduatina SpaniSh
major, has urncd deputmcntaJ honors for
E.lceUentt 111 Spanish Studies.
Uu.n Dt1 Vecchio, arw:tuaung Spanish
major. has earned dcpattmcntal honors for
ExccUence in Spanish Siuda. Laura tS also
betnganducted into Ptu Beta Kappa

submiUed by various departments of the university .

~

Jf( X )J ( )~ &gt;\Rlliffi( ll. 'I&lt;J

r\,'\!1) Pl .t\ ,\J~IN&lt;,
ARCHITECTURE

I

human envtronment sysu:ms

=n:.::7es~~~~~:u:-:!

envtmnmc:nl ~yllilems

Mart. l&gt;eMn ~.u m:c-•vc rhc:- Hc:nl) AdtJm~
Man:\rJoA. Aguilar, Rosa L. Eilts., Kent A.
\1cdlll l...orrU• Fontam~ ~•II R'U'!Ve the 1 1..-b.. Jr .• BarbanA Now• k andDavki P
llcnn Adam' lenlft(ale IJoch a¥&gt;anh atT
Rosalohaverecel\c:dhonorablement iOnfOf
lnom thr Amc:nC'an ln\IIIUI«' ol Archllecb
thr ~ntor projeCt m human envtmn~nt
1 AlA I l:.;u.h ~COif the' AJA tTo.Ot!OIIC\ the' top
'Y\Ienl\
.~o..Adc.·nu\.rcrfnnnrf'mca..:hlM.:crechrcd-.chlw.J/
Oa\'td Bro"'"· J o~r Busc.agh•. Ph ilip
''' ..nhllcnun- on the.- t'ttuntr) A~aru~ lor
D iNico la, M.v.rk Dome nico. Alan

;:~,t~~:~~~~;~.~·~;·~~~7:~~~:.:.~. g~~;:

I

thr ftl't and !&gt;C.'\.tmd ht~hc't c-umuhllt\c ~r.:u:k

~:·:; ~::~~~"' '' ""tuncrulthc Alrha Rh"
( ·h, Med;tl lur h.•adcl\htp '&gt;C'r\ •~·C' 11nd mcnt
o\lpho.~ Rh11 Cht d ndllun.tl pruiC'~\Ion.1l
lro~tC"rnJI\ e~Khye;ullwurd~o~.mrdaltt l .. li"t
rn ea-.h
.k.Trl'dlted "'- htw.1l ol archlltti\JI"t'
P'ttilipOi.J."'JK-ollt anliToddMarsh arr"'lllllt'l\
.,f the' Drrn:tur, Award fnr e\Ldlcno.e 10
.tnhllt'\'IU r.dtk'\l~nlurcon~r\ICOI lugh.·a1r~l
Jc''ll" "" ''rl. pcrftlffill"llln t~· dc:~t~n ,tud1m

d&lt;''l)!ll

~niH\ £."4.•uhar " h"t plo.~u· ~&lt;&gt;tllllt'l "' "
Pdi~C',W\

\,hulo~r\htp.

ltlltU¥&gt;101! 411
otnnu .. l .umrc tttu•n lnr lrne .. uatt lltl rn
.rrrhllcLIUh' ,run .. urcd b) thC' V.,·,tn\
lluildtn ~ l'rnduLiwn' Compan) am/ th,•
Rtll...,.·~·n('•llllp3.ll\ Honorablemcntr&lt;lfltllllt\
h• ... r,in IN ·ornt. ar~ Slcptul nie Randau.u
llt-nis. JunJn ha' rc~CC'i\cd the liuc lnun~IC'f
l·ulkt Award . gi\en by thC' 1khool uf
ArchttecrurC' Bnd Plannrn~
lknjwmin 0 . Pollard h.., h...-cn ntllluno.~trd
hll .111 i:lc:anor All~o~.nrl S...·h.tlol"hrp
1\. l k h H I Con\rr1inoha' ¥&gt; Una ~ l.fll() .o\IAJ
.\AI- Schn/arshtp NomrnJII:d fnr the' a• •ard
~«'IT Ke,•in ~ ol'lli. . IHni..w Juron and
Rkhard Hunl
Michatl~· hasbecncu.edror()ut...undrng
AcOOell\K.· Adue\'C~nlC.nl m tiL-sign

1\ta..k Co n &amp;i~ IS betIlK honottd ror&lt;kslgll
c"c~ Jiem:C'

rn product and graphK dcsrgn

S hawn M . Travenr has bc:en c ued for
Ouhtandmg Academtc AehtcvC'mcnt Ill

Student poetry prize
wl~-nced
Winners of s tudent poetry pnzes
have been announced by Margaret
R Wells . dtrector of ltte Oscar A
Stlvemtan Undergraduate library
Sally GerovM: has won the
Academy of American Poets Poetry
Pnze Honorable mentiOn went to
Antara Satchld•nand . c . . ey
Fotcen6e •s wrnner of the Frrends
of the University ltbrarres
Undergraoua t e Poetry Prize
CandKe Watsh has won the Althur
Axlerod
Memorral
Award .
Honorable mentions went to CraiC
Turner ana Uaa Amato. Monte..
Grtet rs winner of the Scribbler's
e for the best piece of creatrve
lting by an unde rgraduate
woman . ..... Wllbml has 'NOn
the George Knight Houpt Prtze for
xcenence 1n theW0111.of the E~lSh
Department.

~

and M M:: harl Sraga hu\C btt.n named to
111
Am,.ru'tJ/1

I
I

~=::.;"~'~~ ::/~~~~~~:~rms

PLANNING AND DESIGN

S t ~iguwa td ha.~ won the- APA
lk\1 The=\'' Elizabdh Crt:ato"
wrnncr of the- APA A¥&gt; ani/St udenl of Ment
E"r U o lbrrg ha' hc:cn honored for
Qut,tanthngAndrnu... Ac hrc:vcment Frank
Amrento ha.' bct:n n.. mc:d Good Crtll.t'll of
lhC' Dt-pannk"nt

Mkhad

prufC""•;tono.~l degree , undtdarC"

Murt.. Uo rn cn ko" rn·•r•em ••I thr M,,llh,·¥&gt;
'.'.· l&gt;cl&lt;i .. udu• o\~&lt;&gt;o.~rtllltrt'\\.t'lkn,elnlt)(al

~i~';;~.sJk~iwJ~::~s:;Pn.:S~wl.:.=:

A~aro ft"'

I

I \ll ' ll'll If AKI'&gt;A~i)

1J r-1 I

K~

4RT
Cynthi• Ui~h.a p3rmrng maJOf. Jll1d J ~nn.a
Spcvaclr.., a pnntmaktn(!. nlli.JOI. ha\'C' rccct"ed
E'clynRumSl:ySummerScholar.&gt;hlps 1besc
award.&lt;o DR' ba.&lt;itd on qoahty of exh1bttC'd
work and a wnuen propos.al descnbrng ho¥&gt;
t~ scholanoh 1p wtll be used
Sean Donaher, a photography maJOr. mnd
Krista Sqoirrs.. a \Cu l peu~ maJor . hav~
ra:etved Sally Hoskm.&lt;o Pof~nza Memonal
Scholarships 'The:K .a made annually to
Jumorfme aru maJors and llrt: based on taknt .
dodrcut1on and potenltal
Marc Krokzyk , a tvmmumc.a uom. dc.&lt;o1gn
maJor. h a.~ rttel\ed the second annual JuhUii
Bloom Memonal Scholarshtp. g1ven to a
second·&lt;itmt'.&lt;oter JUmor for excellence rn
typographiC Sludy
Jllme!l Paulst":n ~ m."Ct"ed the' Phtltp C
Elliott and VuJpnra Cu l hbert Ellwll
Schol:ush1 p. awanJed ttl a Junior m the pamung
prugnun who 1\a.'o shown ootsrandmg abtllly
and tntert'sttn the aaa of antsuc patnnng
CtL.rieJ Agel and £Jiubdb O.vis ha"e
been named to Whu J Who Among Stwdrnu
111 Amrnran Unwrnl/lrJ und Collrg~l

ReamaJohnson. RobenJoscph. KyeJtkJung
Jacqueline K.onc5ky, KJmbert y Knmcr. John
Krause, Kin Chung Kwong. Tracey Kykr
Mung ling Lau, Minh Le. Amy Ltt. Far~
Hon Srng Lee. M.dwcl Lce, Shartey La.
SusM: Lee. NJChok Le5csne. Stepha1UC' Leung
Btlly Levm. Ktmmtt l...cWI!o, Glona Li. Han~
La, Ytl.J, Ytng Lt. Jua H Lt.ao. Xaao Wet Lm
Chao l.Ju. Otun Uu. Joffrr Maguez. EAaar
Maldonado. Euntce Mane . Samlomena
Massaquor. Jackte Mathunn, Jan Man hew)
Jtll Mauragu . Rhonda Mays , Gerald
McCallister and Lt Ptng Met
Also, Marknc Memwealhet, Tracey Mokn
Wilfred Moss, Ke11h Nauyen , Tabttha
Ngwa.sht, Sandra 0~. Roben Pacheco.
Venus Paredes. Haen Pham. Tneu Ptwn
John PereL Kct1neth P're,·cu:. James Pnnce
Dmah R~ . KJrsten Reynold), Ana Rl\ en.
Jdfrry Ri"era. Hugo Rodnguez . O s m.&lt;o
Rodngue1~ Suwen Ruan, SaiVo'a Swd. Esther
Sunttago, Susan Schmucker, Phonesavanh
Sen~ulh.
v,dS tmmom, Shoo Yu S1tu,
Thereu Skotan:ul. Omar Small. Toms
Smtt h. Khamphay Somchanhmavong. Elr~
Song. AntonK.t Stamos. Cathleen Steffan. Cut
Zllu Tan. Pe1 Tan. Fehcaa Th.:u. ltsa 'Thonw.,
Dancne T1n Han, Ken) Tomlinson. M ichell~
Ventura. Rostta Vallagomc:L H~en Vu, Wendy
Vong, Tc1sha Walser. Dej'lltt Wttk!o. Dav1d
W~t . Tracey Welch. KJmbcrly Wtlgus. Cheryl
Wtlhams. Jo.n Wilhams. Jmeph1ne Wong.
FaiSal Yazadt . Jenny Yec, Man )'m Yeung,
Jenmfer J Hong Yu. Abdul Zwd. M1chclle
Zemro)e. Jenel 7.unrga and Chrrs1ophc
Ptawdztl

o-..

s

'ol HlX lL llf F NC I/'.:I:ERI N(,
A.'-10 APPLI f D Sl l FNll:'&gt;
ENGINEERING IIOHOIIS
Ha\'lngachttvedaG P A ofa1lcast .l 'i 1naJI
engtneenng couNCS taken through the Fall
1992 ~mesler , the fo/lowmg Sl:nror.. hav~
been awarded Engrneenng Honan Othc~
who aehrev~ thl ~ level through thrar fmal
o;cmest~r wtll 'l.ubsequently be so hoi'IOrUi
Jeff~ J Anlkowtal (EirctrJC'ol Engmunng /.

Michael H a mmell , #raJualtng Spanuh
maJOf. ha.&lt;o ea.mcd departmental hunon ror
ExcellefiCC' '" Spanish Stud!C1.
Am y SparTOw, graduattng SpaniSh maJor
has eameddepanmcnual honors for f.1crllmcr
m Sparush Srucbe!. Am) ts also bemg U'due1ed
UliO P'tu Beta Kappa

Olp . . - . 5u&gt;an o....ntUU. .........
~amicer, DWw ,..,.,. Barbara
Mitrr, MArk llak.estnnt . Mervin RomanCapeb. v....,.~GabridoT.....,_

Gooa ard s.art.ra

V~Wilklm hav~

been rwned to Who 'J WhuNrw""R SrudrtttJ 111
/vnt'ncan UnnrrnllrJ and CollrgrJ

ARTHIS10RY

MUSIC

htrida BlltiM aod y ,onne Wtd«~o r have
been named to Wh., ·,. Wh11 1\mong St&amp;Ui~niJ
111 Amrncan Unlvf'rSIIlt' l and Collrg~J

l..u~ P.ul Vah hiD. bc1-n named In Who •

Wh o Anwnx Srudt'nl'
Uml'rf$/tlrJ anJ Collrgrl

MEDIA 51\IDY

nEATER AND DAHCE

1bt followmg Sl udcnl!&gt; wett horlOlTd ar a
May 6 awards ceremony
·
John R. Annslron&amp;. who wtll m:ei\e hi)
bachelor's degrer tht) monlh, t!ii one of two
rcctptenu s tatewtde of the 1993 State"
Umvenmy of New Yorl Thayer Fellowship
1bt fell owship eames a $7,000 cash grant
and 1s awarded annuaU y to outsmnding Sl:ntors
or graduate s tudems abotu to leave a SUNY
college or um versity and embMt on a catter
tn tht a.ru H ~ was Sl:lected for the Thay~r
Fellowstup tn R:Cognit ron of hts worl m
documr.nwy vtdeo productton
Joa.lban Todd Glaur. Htgh AcademiC
Achievemenl and scrvttt 10 the department
Joseph A . Sb•rr•: Hrgh Acad~mrc
Ac.hteverncnt and excellcTMX in h1s lenurt as
ediror or 1M Sp«lrwn.
Jm.nifcr Nodit: Mannin&amp;: Htgh Academrc

fnnt. Bndky, William C unning ha m.
Dankt' Kowalny k. £1iu l..lamido and
Mic.heUe Oplingt:r. ~ll rheaict tll.IIJOn, have
L..t:uen Dean ·~ A¥&gt;ard
!U'Ctved thC' An.s
An.w Bi.ncof~. Sus.n rtbrrolinl and
Martin Nagel, dance m.liJOrs. have al-.o
~cetved the An!&gt; &amp; Lenen. Dean ·~ Award
fnnk Bradky and J f'anin• .Hutwr 1\uvC'
been elected tu Ptu Betta Kappa C111'TW
Housef. ha~ been named to Whu 1 Whu 111
Amrncan Unu~I'JitlrJ ond CollrgrJ

111

Amrnn1n

~CI-J(X ll l lF J) f ~l AI
MEDICI f

ORAL SCIENCES
CalMriM 1\1 , Gogan.Jama P . l\ta1onund
Rkhard K. Oltrbat.b have bccn- named to
Who '1 Who Af'fWI1g Srudrn/J 1n Amf'ncan
Umvrr.f/1/rJ ond CollrR r J

Paul Banncharan (£/rctnral £ngmunng ),
PaulK Boya(Cwr/ £ng111unnRJ. lynnatnc:
Bartun Bryan I Mrr hmura/ £ng111rrnnx I
SlephenP Buecht!Cml&amp;gmt'rnngJ. Raben
D Call IMrchamwl Engutunng J. Jeffrey
Y Chan IAnmpaC'r Engm~rnng l. Jame~
Marshall Da~'l' 1El~ctnrol EllxmunnxJ. Paul
Edward Oes.Jan:hn IAt'rospncr Eng111urmg ),
Colleen
MarrC'
l:.agen (lndustrwl
tntt'nrf'nngJ . Valerr~ Renee Ford
IMrdwmral En[tmuflnR I. Wt!ham Rrchard
Garbacz (£/r(·trtro/ EnRmrrnn&amp;J. Scan E.
Gleason CA1uhamcal Engmrrnng). Jeffrey
S H ew~n tMrrhamral F..ngmur111gJ. Kah
Km Ho (Eirctncol Enxmunng ). Orn'itrna
M laf«"IMrrhamctJIEnxmunng},C Dunald
Jacobs ( Cm/ Ent.:mur~nx j. Le~ he A Jano;cn
tCn•1/ Engmur111g J. Oun Ahmed Khan
tE/rc·tnral Engmunnx J. Jamtc 0 Klube
(/ndustrwl Enxmt'rrmto . Joseph P l.adaC'
tArmspa1·r F..nglnrrrmJt ). J()bn H LcrchneT
ICml &amp;rgmumt}t l. Yt Jun l1 l fJrctncol
&amp;gm~rrmg). Y(ln~ Hong ltn tChrmual
E.ngmrrrmg J. Joseph M Ludwtg !C111/
Engmu,.tngJ . C'harlc:'
Macktntosh
I Mrrhanu·al Enxmunnxl . Peter Jamc:!o
~kVergh tCm/l:.nR•nrrnngJ. BTlMI Mtchltel
Mcred11h tMcrha111rcl/ Engmt'f'nng 1. Jmeph
Charles MUWU\'tch (/uduJtnal &amp;rgmunng),
Sumtta Mt5hn (Eirotnr al Engmrrrmg) .
V1vd: Mohanl)1rdJ0111t'41/ tngmt'rnng).Chr
San Mok tE.Irf'mt·al Engmunng}, ~ter
Jerome Mucc1 (Mf'thamc-al Engmunng},
Todd Edward Murra y ( M uhanrcol
Engmr«"rrng} , JuStin I Pan JChrrru cal
Eng111unng ), Man:o Maunzto PaJUanc:Jia
(£/rcrncot EngmunnKJ. Juhel N. Pccc:nco
{Mrdwuoo/ Engmnnnj}, Anthony M Pnro
(Eif'Oirrcal Enguurrmg }, Crarg Ross
l •nduJirtal Engmrrn ng}, Gregory Scoct
Rouse (Owl Engmrrring) , Km Dav1d
Schtndler (ElrctriC'al Engmrrnng). Kcu
Edward Sc.hultl. (Ctvtl 6nttmunng }, Scott

I

_"'

of t h e - - Coordlnl&gt;

! D f o l - Clnon Oolele... '"""
hiiYemade~~

wthe.....,..;oy~curc

I!ACCHUS(BoootAioonoiConodcusOOS5Ccnc:oorr0rcllw-ollJri.

Abo. Sheel.tl Gault, Dclv1n Gomez. Jose
Gomez. JasonGoulah, Dwane Hams, Jarrulla
He, Kimberly Hcntetta.. Jane Huang. Jane
Hwang. En Xiang Jiang. Jasseue Johnson.

Twenty-seven undergraduate students from UB have received the
Grace c_., Memorial Award from
the University Women's Club m
recognition of hrgh academic
achievement .
The award was establtshed in
1975 by the Women's Club and .
since then, has been g,ven to
undergraduate students who com
plete three semesters of full-trme
course work with an average of
3 9 or better Awardees are:
NICOle R. Blenk {8iol0gy). Mat
thew J. Burger (Engmeenng), Mar
leen J Caldwell (PhysiCBI Thera.
pyJ, Dantel E. Carl (Engmeenng).
Cra1g K CendrowSkl (810/Dgy),
Peter Ch1u (Pharmacy). ThOmas
C. Dleuel (Englrsh and ClaSSICS),
Mrchael Y. Eng (Architecture). Jel
frey R. Errington (Chenllcal Eng1
neentlf). Bnan 0 . Fabio (fngmeer·
rng). Robef1 J. Feuerbach (Phys·
ICS). Kevin D. Fisk (Mathematics}.
Teresa A. G1annr (PhysiCS}, ChlOe
Gottlieb (Psychology). Ketttt D
Herr (81ochem1stry), Jason KanHsun Ho (Computer Sc1ence). Air
CIB S Jaramrllo (ClaSSICS anc1
Phrlosopf)y), Marcy l. lake (S tu
dro Art). Henry Lee (Lrberal Arts).
Brett A. Mascta (BIOChemistry).
Gretchen P. Meyemoefer (MuSIC).
Samuel Robef1 Ogie (MechaniCal
Eng1neenng). Thomas J Pastor
(BIOOhysiCal Sctences). Mrchael
S•ptor (Undeclared MaprJ. M•cah
Sobczyk (Psychology), Shukei Bt ~
ly Wong (Pharmacy) and Me•·T1ng
Wong (Management}

Fnt.f'laoo _
Honors_
fDf 1lwlheNoncy
1.-ch N&gt;
_.....,

Wolch_,_...-...llrlnllcr&lt;or

Ngec:b Aldcrwtsh. Devorah Alexander.
Evcns&amp;e Ambos.. Khur.m Ashnf. Angela
Baran)'&gt;. T.,. Barea. Pomd Beet.Jooe Belen.
Anne Btancofion:, Cunardline Bienveou,
Corey Boatwnght. Charisma Boaue. NICOk
Bruil. Van-Khoa Bu1. ian Bush.. Andtt:w

Steven Elsts. Roy Esputou, lrvtna Eslevez.

w--.•aclub ......

fUncyWeldtA'-,..,.,....,
....

ttteo..rent....-rr.c)!eS'. 8asuabo

Edwin Eatrada. Mary FArRll. JUchel F.ckhng,
Lcpcn F\oumcy, MtcheUe Galusha. Olun
Gan and Jennifer G~

27 fur Capen Aw.,..

__
__ _

1k foUowma audeniS h.ave been c1tcd for
Htah AcademiC Achievement·

Campbdi.MoriaCano. RodngoCaslro,c;c.ly
Ol.an. Kwona Owl. Kenneth Chau, Marthsl
Ooen. Sandeq&gt;Chopn. Cbri51opher0ui51&gt;&lt;.
Erik Christoffcnon. John Cipolleu. Nedra
Commodore, Raymond Cooper. Emc:sto
Cusaoctio, James Debose. V.dtra Edwanh

commencement ceremonies a!'e the ones noted below .
The list, by no means complete, is based on maten als

AND POUCY

corpa.Eiooin~

..,._ ._.... .....

-~forhor-­

----M.
""'si!V-).

~

Honors went to

who were ...,.,.,_,
respectiyety. for ""'pre to otpnl2e
a recon:J.breakifC 92 teams kl the
Nont11Anrual Ooziest lnlloroettrc
up 111e G&lt;M!mor's ActMty Prccrom
for residence hall students.
ThJnl
~.

-

z- ,..,._

Place for her work with the
Residence Hall Association and as
cha1r of the National Regiona!
Affiltat ton Committee . All were
honored durrne an awards

ceremony Apnl 30
Richard Spencer (C~m•ral EnR111eenng J.
Jeffrey R S1evens (Elutncal Engusunng ).
Kelly Maur~c:n Trost (Muharucal
Eng111Ur111f ). Cun.ts H VanValkenburgh
IAt'rosparrEng~Nt'nng}.MICNc.IE WaJtoo
1 /nd~nmol EngtnUr111fl . Rtchatd Man::
Wa.sscnnan(Elf'ctncal Eng~Mrnnf), Daruel
John Wtlharru (Elutnud Engmermtg) and
Timolhy James Zuber (Ctv1l Ellgmunng l
GIIADUA~

SENIORS

IN TAU BETA PI
Jeff~y J AnlkowuU.. Ger.a.ld Stephen A usher
Pau!Barandtaran, 1llomas Pcu:r R~e lawa, Jr .
Damdlc Yvonne Btndct , Ahsa Mane Bono,
Paul K Bnycc. Srephtn P Brod. Lynrwne
Batbara Bry11111 Srephen P Buecht , Roben D
Call . l.aang Cao. Jeff~) Y Chan, Krut.in l.
C ranc:10, James Roberl Cl1ffe. James Marsh:tll
Dav1s, JunJ M Dcputat, Gimge Olanna
Dc:Srlva. Paul Edward Oes.Jardtn. Raben F
Doleskt. Colleen Mane Eagen, VaJene Renee
Ford. W1lltam Rtdwd ~ Daryl 0
Gro..ge. Assad Hoawa, Ste\en G Hayes, Tsz
Ho, Chnurna M lafe, Xraoyang ling. Bretl
A !:an Johnson. Marshall Adam Kelly . 0zau
Ahmed Khan. JamiC' 0 Klube. Mart E.
Kluczynskl. Kenneth Howud Kortbmp. Paul
Kart Krueger, Joseph P Ucbe. Chao Wen
Lea, Y 1 Jun U. Jeffrey J Ups. Yong Hong
Lrn. Owles Mr.ck.mtosh. Collm Mtchacl
McCulley. Peter James McVe1g.h. Bnan
Mrchacl Meredith. ~lrr G Millard. Joseph
Charles Mmorov~eh, Sumua Mishra. Vtvek
Motwr. Peler Jerome Mucct. Todd f.Aw.rd
MWTay. Donna lean Organ. Jusun I Pan.
M~rco Maunzao Panzanella. Ju ltet N
Peccnco. Anthony M ~tro. 1bomas Eugcnc.o
Ptlarskl, DavldJobn Rcckrenwalt. Cmg Ross.
Gregory Soou Rouse:..~ Joseph s.btru.
Enc J Schau.. Thomas Fnncts Schaub, Kns
DavtdSdundkr. Lochsh.anShum.llan Taapl.
Roben Joseph Tttus, Jr .• Wrlham Alan
Torno¥&gt;. M achael A Tracey. Kell y Maurttn
Trost. Joseph Anron m Van Arendonk ,
Ka thleen Ann Van Lcnren. Cunts H
VanValkenburgh , Andrew Domen1c
Vassallo, TcddyT V1sca.BretAianWall-=c.
Mtc.hatl E Walton , Richard Marc
Wasserman . Teh Yu Wet , Danrel John
W1lltarm, Kent Yen. Jae Hyun Yu and
Ttmochy James Zuber

CHEMICAL IENGINEEliiNCI
Justin Pan and Scott Spmcer have rc:cc1ved
Allied · Signal Ac.ademtc Achievement
Awards.
Vooa-honc Un has won both the Allred·
S1gnal Ac.acknuc Ac.hle\·ement A wud and
the OxyChcm Scholanhap
Assad Ha,_.. 1s wtnner of the Ouwandmg
Senror Award from tht Amcncan lnsmute of
ChemiC~! Engn'ICen
RKh\rl Gootu has ¥&gt;·on the Ou1standmg
Senror A ward from tht Amen can Chc:rruca.l
Soctc:ly
The Outsland1ng Sentor Award from the
Amencan lnsrnutt' of Chcmtsts JOCS to
J onpaul Mauili
Grrtor} Gorsuch. lobn PKk and Brian
S.ttericy ha~ won Chc:m~cal Engtnecnng
Scntor Re:sean:b Fellowships
Jio Zhao wa... one of fh·e local $1udcnts
named Oulstandtng College ChemlSIQ'
SenKH'Sbythc Western New Vorl: Sect:KJOof
the Arrlcncan Cbemtcal Soctcly aJ rli Annual
EducatiOn Ntght Zbao. who plans to auend
the UB School of Pharmacy to do graduate
woO. rn mc:d.tctnal chemtstty. also was named
10 Who 's Who Among S11ulmu 111 Amrncan
UtfliJt'rSJII~ and Co/l~g~s

INDUS1111AL ENGINEDIING
AlokS.~ja. ThomuHULK.nt..ton:lla.

R•mpnud N•rulmb•n and J•ckie
Rr)'DOkts have been named to Who 's Who
Amottg Snult'Ns 111 At~V"ncon Umwnmrs
ond Coll«"grs.

�7

............. , ......

..,u,a.a CO MMENCEMEN T 147 EXTRA
HEALTH RElATED
PROFESSIONS

-~

The foOowia&amp; audents haw. 1 3.5 GPA fat
their ru. 7 lemCSler1: A.baad Saair ~

J~A.u-a, T.ocy-Lowlo,
a-.,.1 L MKk IOd X. Y• S....

...- .u.lodo, """" Marte Ball,
Chod W.c-Joe,IIDbutSU...PIJDDo

- . cw-..- a. s. u.a-udah.

J... A. Bouck, T.ocy Doaldlo Lewis,
Cb&lt;oyl L MKk IOd Medloa M t\lvebcen named to Who's WhoAnt()ffl' Stw·
dmu in ~rlcan Umvasiti~s andColl~&amp;rs.

NUCUAit-~y

Nk:olt Marir SW)'Jtrt tw; been named ro
Who's Who Amonr Stwklll.J 1n Anvncan
Unwertillu CJNJ CD/Ugu

OCCUPA..-AL 11ERA1'Y
The following students have 1 3.5 GPA fOf
their first 7 semesteR: Cllristd A. 8ftn,
Amy L.rnn Gootz, T.ocy A. Lohr, Undo A.

~.

_ , s.

X , . . , - Motto
Gloooa E. Mew-. Jll w.

~

Ort.er, "-1 Pmtl md Jey M. Vepo hive

wr..·, - .._ Stwdmu

been- to
in AMerican

Uniwr~ltiu liUtd Coiktt#.

SCHOOL OF lAW
The ..... of Elbohdll . . . . . IOd Doal.t
Spitar lOOk 10p honon • lhc fifth annu.J
EnvUonrnenta! Moot Coun Coolpecitjon. ...
lm'Jcst moot court pdlering in the counuy
William F. Trr:znant hu been named lO
Who 's WM Amotlt Stwknts in Amt-nmn
U11i~nitiu tJNJ Colk1es

SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Cary K.lauaaode hu reccwed the Raben
F Berner Awwd for !2ctllmce m St.at1stics
ADdna L Critbr has won the Calborundum
Compuy AwaniJiven w the MBA saudenc
who hu made the putes1 contribution w
hu.man resources rn.anqe.men1.
Doaaa M. R.k.bardsm ls wtnnerofthc: Delt.l
Sigm~ Pi Schoi&amp;Bhip Key. •warded to the:
full·llmeunde:rgJ11dualc:audenlwhocompilcs
the highest grade pomt1vcn.ge of aJI ehgible

T.........-. VirP&gt;JoE. Vlealt,LaiiWo.U

graduatinx lludenu

and JmnJ:frr JIRoaa Va.
Kimbuty Aaa Vudnrinckd and Mary
Ann Whlk have been named 10 Wlao 's Who
Among Students '" Amt'ncan Unwrnmrs
aNi Coill'grs

Tbeetwia H. Diefendorf Awan:l1n Fill&amp;l'a
xoes ro Jooaihan P. Skinner.

PHYSICAL lHEIIAPY AND

EXERCISE SCIENCE
The

followmg stude:nu. h.11vc a. J 5 GPA for

lhe•r finl7 semc:Siers: f\.bry Ann Aotbony.
FAC.tllt-C~ Marilyn Jean Pfahl DeMeyer,
Mi&lt;h.wl Ehtlak, JdTrey J...., Hojduk,
~WI)'MHamrick.RimaK. NU"'flis.

O.bn A. S.U.. Kathryn Mary Salamoo,
Kalb~o S. Schwartz., CbrUtine Je•n
Tbomp!Oft.. Brian L.aunocr Tru.dtl)!l: and
J enntfrr Lynn WkMr.
Palricbl l- Murny and Kirk Olescysk.i
1\aveheennamedltJ Who's WhoA.'"'""H Stwknls
1n Amenam Unnorrsilli'J and CollrgrJ
IIONOR~

PRlX.RA,\\

N1111ional Sdencr l' oundlllion FrUowship
't'l lnnen
Andrr-w Been.(CIJmput,.r St lt"ru f'l . MallhC'"'
Hcmhardt (BmloJllcal kt~nlf'J!

'i111ion•l Scien« foundation f."t'IW~~hip
Hono nbW M ~n c ton
~rr,IIO Corwm I Pir.ur •I. Ju,nrr bt,ht"l
' /'lt•t iCI I. An lh On\ Ptrr" t f lt&gt;rlftt a/
f.n/(munnRJ
t;o ktwa t~,. SchoLanbip'
Mrt•haken Pac h ob ~1 !( lu•mntq 1 Man
\alltLIU r t:ll't' trlr tJ I 1-.nJ(If!Urlfl/(1 M!Lhotel
!Hp!Or t PinSI('I /

~l

Ill X lL Of l~l·l &gt;k.\1.\ Ill l'A~Il LIBRAR\ '&gt; ll 'll lf '&gt;
Linda H•lliburto n •~ the rec rp1enr ol the'
1~91 Ann u al S rudef\1 Award frum lh ~
('henucal l nforma lmn Or\t\100 of the
Amencan Chem1cal Socr~l}
Rrnata McCarthy IS lhe ...... ~'"the Studen!
Paper CompetJIIOfl of !he Spec1al Llbnu)
As..n-w100 lnfurmauon Ta:tw~· Dlvt!iklll
Renata M c:C..•rthy and Eil«n Madde n ha"e
for preslr~rous n:~•denq
prog...msarlhr: Nauonal L•brnry ofMedJCinc
(lnly four rndt\'tduals w~ o;.elecc~ naltOMIJ)
Th t~ Amd l, Nk'olas H . Boron, Sara
C hurchill, Laura En gelhardt Kristine
~en ~ lecced

The Pearl and Lew11 Jacobs Award an
Mcleung tw been gm:n to O.vid M .
N1pima.L.
Mary P. Rehak 1\as woo the S1dne.y N 1Uhn
Memor111 Award for MBA Scudent
Excellence in Sales and Mclcting. She has
abo m=tlved • WcJII Strut Journal Graduate
Studenl Achtevement Award. given to the
MBA uudent t'Onlp•hng the h1ghbt gtlde
pomcavcn.ge
Tile Plllsbut) Company Martetmg Researt:h
Scholar A ward aoes to O.vid A. Scbuec:kkr.
Jtr~m y E. Shukey has r(:ce•ved the
Undergraduace Ach1evemen1 Award for
demonstrated scholu u c euellence and
outstandmg utn6cumcular serv•c~ to the
school and 1~ unrver.my
Mann C. Boot IS chc: wtnnc:r or the MBA
Achrevemrnt AwiVd rorscholllSiteer.cellence
and outstandmg eur.acumcular Jel"VIl'C tu the
\Chool and the umver'SIIy
1be Ph D Ach!cvcmenc Award g.oe~ to JCMn
D. Mahoney ror demonstr.ucd !i.Cholasuc
tllcellence and outslandmg e .. crxuml·ular
-.crvrce 10 the.- ~hool and the untvers11y
Mkluu.·IJ . Bum'! and Parnell M.Grusli" arc
wmneo uf Mrchael S Dockel) Mcmonal
Semor Award~ hom the UB Accounlrng
A:oo.'IOCtauon "fhc.3.c: ~ ~ntt:d to the semor
a..'l:ou nung srudcnl5 who hu,·e conlnbUied rn
d \Upenor way futhc Na!ron.tll Ascsoc18Uon ol
Accounlanh alld lhc: acnxmung pmfessroo
10 fello~ ~1udcn1~ and tn the School nl
Bn.drord S. Yromans II ha' wnn il Wull
)ln•.-t Journul Undergradua 1e S1uden1
Achre,emc:m Award, gtH~n to !he M1llard
Fillmore Colle~c -.cudenl comptlrn¥ thc
htghest gmdt: poUll "''t:ro~t:c
Maren C. Boot, Marta A. C!Wh, 1\.t'\'i n M .
Driscoll, C hris1ine F e nn e ll , Oh1nt' I.
Cardrwr. J . P1trick Sk.inner. Mimi Rehak,
Rkhard Taft, Mkhat'l Minotti and Susan
StitH· Dlw havt' been named lo w~u,· , Who
Amvnx StwJn111 m Am.-nran Unll't'rSIIIt'l
an,/CuJirJ(t'J

~lllllOI

l ll ,\\ll)lt 1:"-.1

A!': I) HIU.\\1 l)h ,\1
~liFNl

F'&gt;

ANESTHESIOLOGY
EIU..beth Kim, a \Cntuf nlt'd1 .. al 'tudcnt
rece1ve !he lrcllcrman A\loard 111

~•II

Jose ph A. Murph ) and Mid•m II .

Employee of v-

to

St-

Palasdano &lt;lurir'4!.., """'

27 11WM1sC&lt;!IOfl'OOy.

Palasclano. a jun10r workmg toward a bachelor of sccence degree
1n electl\cal engjneenng. 1s pantime s tudent offiCe manager in toe
Customer Servk::e Department of
University Facillttes. He was select·
ed for the award for exemplifying
excellence in h is work and for his
academiC and extracumcular pursuits.
Palasclano has served as editor
of the Butfa)OOian Yeart&gt;ook. as a
delegate to the Student AssociaUon
and as production manager tor the
React\ Hltfldbook and Generstion
Macazlne. Off campus. he rs an
advanced emergency medrcat
technic ian wrth Ba ird Point
Ambulance and a ki tchen ass1stant
at FriencJs o f the N1ght People.

TiktinD.y ha1·e been named 10 Wlu.J 'J Who
Among Snul.-ntJ m Am.-ncan Unn·t"rstttf'J
and Co/Jt'gt's

FACUI.W OF NArl'Rr\1
SC IENCES AND
tviATHEtviATICS
IIIOUICIICAI. SCIENCES
The fo llowtn g gradua ces arc rece• ' rn g
Departmental Honon
TirnOihy Barrett (Pht 8.-tu Kappa). Matthew
Bernhardt (HtgMst Honors, Plu &amp;ta Kappa }.
Joseph Lm-Yun Chow tPh, · B~Ia Kappa).
Frank R Comngtwn ( H tghest Honon. Pht
8t"ta Kuppa }. Raghuram O.uan ( DwmcllCM.
Pht Bna Kappa). Pe1er Ercolmo l Pht B~ta
KtqJpo }, M1chael Herbowy ( Pht Beta Kappa J.
Wen Chun Hs u (H ighnt HononJ. Mehssa
Je•l lcr ( Dutmctlon), Carl L.aCcn e (H1gMs1
H unon. Pht &amp;to Kappa). Frank 1..« (Pht
Be10 Kappa). Jeffrey LeGrcu (Htghut
/Ionon. Phtlkla Kappa ). Scephen Manctch
( HtgMJt Honon. Pht Bna Kappa J. John
Mulawka Ill (Durmction). Jeimrfl!f Mcyet
(Pht Bna Kappa J. Glenn Maskovsky (Pht
lkta Kappa ). Jennifer Onon ( Hrgh Honon.
Pht B~ta Kappa !. Alb Pltcl ( lllgMJ-t Honon,
Pht Beta Kappa ). Dan~ ReSE:tarm ( Pht Brta
Kappa ). f.nc Schmelz (H ighnt H on(m, Pht
8t"tu Kappa). Laura W ade (Ph1 B~w Kappa).

~CoryCiadt,Jtdloa:aCoiJino,J-

Amenavt

UNV~enUils

tJNJ

E... eoop... Kod1ryn R. c......rn. a..y1
Dorrie. M icbod Deabold. o..ielk Dohmle&lt;.
Rd:lcccl Oibbk:. Oc:caan Dimeo. Mauru:tl

Colleg~s

Also. Wendy Fitzpund.• Joel Foncane. Jr ,
Jetnner~ Gabrillargue$. Joseph M Gahmt.
t:louDdi&lt;Ganw. Gw&lt;ndolynG;oia. M&gt;n Roo&lt;
Glichowslr.r . D1onne Glosc . M111he w
Go&amp;dhawk., Ga.tl Cionz.aJel. Darutl Goup1l,
Ilolagl•s R Gress. Sally Ann Hard1i00.
Mlf'lndiHwru.StxyH&amp;Stunslty.Juhatleath.
Sandra Hennchsc:n. AW Hcric . Marcte Lou
Holler.M.-c Hormt. t-Un Hong, Duane lnge.lt..
IOctwd JICObs. Benutdet~e Jumslr.y. JeMJfer
Jauch. Stanley J1s.a. Kelh Ann Johnson.
M ichae l F Kane. Tracy Kelly. Bndget
Kennedy, G11l Klan, Manlyn Kurtzhahs.
Karen l..auy. Elrubclh Lamer. M~1chlt'
l.&amp;tham. Amy Lynn Lerner. Slepharue Levme.

·,Who""""""

Sn.dmuurNnrricanUruwrnlwswtdColh~s

PHYSICS
Twoaudc:ats IR; graduauna wtth ()eplttmenc
Honors: Krilta.n Corwin wtth H1gh Honon
and Juoa Eluher wilh HrJ,heSI Honon The.
awan1maof Honon lS buedon the student's
GPA and the compleuon of • Sen1or Thes1s
Kristan Corw1n. • U nm~rsity Honors Scholar.
will n:cc1ve the .. Up Quart Award.'' crelled
and runded by Barban and Jonathan Rew:hcn
for '"thesenKwundergndua~ phystCS Ruden!
whoJe enthusiasm. energy and vitalrty brougtu
new hre 10 the uaderar~duale phy11c1
program .. Knslln has also recetved
H()f)Of'lbk Menuon from the NSF GradUIIe
Fellowshrp Program, and h.as re&lt;::eiVcd a
fellowship from the Unn-cn11y of Colorado
118oulde.r

ofPhysacsandthr::FIICUityofNatunJSc~ntt5

SCI IlXlL OF PIIAI/J\.11\l \

und Cf•lft'}tt'J

fAt l'l 11 l l f '&gt;( ll 1,\1

ANTHROPOLOGY

H o~

wllh H1gh DI!&gt;Uill'tlon In Ju~te lllc-•
wrll n:cc r\&lt;e !ht' B A m Anlhrupolog y

ECONOMICS
AdnnarBechtold ar.!JUUshrw ApN·al h:ivc

Sn~t~crt. JasonEnshet i PI!yncsJ.

Sn,.,,r,sl . Dan•el Everett
RandyFieJniPnoclfolotyJ, Robert
f algrano I Eirttluhl and Raben Fand (Soaa/

/PJwltoi~, I

Sr'""' ,.,

Gilbnlla.rgue-.!SocaolSrtntuJ iflt~rdu&lt;ip/INJn
P~i•J(rum/ ('h:u1e,. Ganlt'r IHutonJ. N.colc
Ga\par1n1 t /tl alht'mafll 11 Cyn1h1a Gr~~:ant1

l fnKIHIIJ

I!I
1

I

I

Rancty James Benolas (Geograpny).
Anna M Schatz tCom parat•ve
Literature). Knsta A HugheS (H1story
Undergraduate College). Chnstophef
Scott Nowak tEiectncal &amp; Computer
Engmeenng) . Laurdella F Bodotay
(MusiC), Srmon P Joyce (fngltSil J
HoncKab6e Mentton:
VtktOI H 8renne1 (Psychology.
UncJergraouafe CotJegeJ. Gabnela
TotettJ-Gong (Modern Languages &amp;
Ltteratures Spamsh). Meg Chllano
t £nglt sh}. Chrts l rne M Plumen
(Sociology)

I PnrlwltJK\ 1 Thuma• h:r,:c: lf.umomiCJ/

I
I

I

Il

j

INTEIIDISCIPUNAIIY PIIOCIRAMS
Dcpanmental Honor"!&gt; w1ll be awankd to lt\r
fo llowrngswdenL~dunnl!a May l4 l"eTCil)(tn)
m 101 Baldy
· Natahc: Acosla. Abdul Ahmed, Karcmah
Alharl. Jenmfet AndeN&gt;n. TW Anderson.
Wilham Archer . Gahnella Arg1m, S1cphame
Arnold . Jcnnrfcr AuareJI• . Donna
Barnbndgc. lcnn}' BalJu~' . 0\ad Balzrr .
LaurcnBamey . AnrtaB~ . MK:tw:lcBame .

Paul Bate ~. Clludra Ek.agle. Gam:n Bekker
Ill. John Bellus. Evln Bcnsnn. Nancy 81~ 1.
Kathenne Blynt. Will1am .Bochrocchro. Carl
Bolsler. Angela BOOiey . knnrfer Brown.
SuunM BugaJ.l.auraM Burr. LauraCalla.

Thoma~ K1r~p11trt c k

1Po/11uu/

Sn.-~trl'l

Manhev. Klc:m I MulhntWIIf':JI. Tamen~ ~null
1\.ohuwta I PnrltniOft' 1
Dt&amp;N Koch t Ps•·cltol.ttH. GrcgOf) KOf'\onc

l Pnrlfllh1JI 1 ... aum1

cPulifl&lt; ul s,.-.,tlt",l Kc:•rn Kuru tEtttlulll. Plllul
Lilhcdl /Pttliltcol S11~ '"" 1 Carl l•cr-rlc
1 Bwln~11 lenmfer LaClaH /EnJlluh l and
\o\cnd~

Alw.

Undman t PJu!wlut\ 1

Fran~

U:c- 1Hwlog1/.

U~ltr

Lchnann

I!Ut.·~ l.111. '\.~tmu 1 ;:~~::' ''J&lt;;~~~:::= ::·n~=~1 ' '· ~
1

1-teathcrDav.nLrddt-II. Mrm

l'a!allc !'oki .U\.~tc

Soctety tn Htsuxy by the Alpha Delta Thera
Q\aplcr of lhc Socrely Jod1 EJysc Colhns.
J~ 0 Guanno. Shc:mWl S Jev.-ett V.
Raymond J Mang1one. Jr . Jolt,. Mann.
Holly AnM Petnk. lan Plan!. Aaron J Rted.
Bryan H R01h and John l Smatf'l. Jr

Shc:rm..tn k\loc:ll 1H 11ttln! Ton)·a J one~
1 MurhrmCJiu 1 1
Grctchcn
Kard•mr:n
l !.mltmpolo1p 1 Man!l lt..nll\.lugh / H UIOr'll/
'&gt;1.al) KclkcnbcrJ 1&amp;r¥ltslt1 Mantu Kenne\
11W... w.l S. lt'tlo I' I lt!tf'..-dunpltfiDr. Prurruml.

~~ !Z::~::7_ ~v~::~~:~~~:~~~~:::::

GEOCIRAPKY
Plul J . Mackun. an undc:rg.raduatc . ha!&gt; v.nn

Wod)al&lt;i.
DrSI!nct1on Cheryl R. Kaponer.
'The followmg students have been !Kimm~ w
che Phr Alpht llleta lmemai!OO&amp;I Honor

Jame~Grabk/Huwn /. Jui~Grlndt:

I Polu,.ul Stlt&gt;tlrl'l S11ndn Hennchsen
1/'n...--ltntt•ft'l '&gt;hc~l Herbo"' ) I B•oJog~eaJ
Y.tt'ttt"''lf Juht" Hertands.IPt~lmcll/ ScuJtCt'l

~:~J'~~~.:~g~IILo~~;lt.~~~~;~:.l~Cg).
Man~n- Jcff~y Mannrlln. Juhc Ma.o,on. Nlldrne

V,l.oltLUBtanc.lanJ .
Plan! and JLNin T . W'ICkham have ra.'C'I\'cd
Mthon Ple.&lt;iur Scholarship!&gt; for 1993·94
Cha~ 1... G1nler and MariM C. K.» vana ug.h
are rrcrptt'nl' of John T Hortnn
Undcrgradualc Essa} Pnu~
Graduaung \lo•rlh IX-panmenud Hor.ul'") rn
HIS!Of) ~
Htgha'1 Ot!&gt;llncuon W t"nd) L. Kln pley IUld
C arol A. Sllhl
H1gh Dts11nc11on Jill S. Nf'UJUalln. Donakt
T. Ptak, IUchtl L Was. Eliubeth T.

l~urdunplman Prorrom~

AIVI C'hn\ltrM' Fennell l fAJiu#sJ. Oaruellc
Er1n Fraboo1
!·lander' t PIHIIulofvl
tCommurcU"ottOtUJ. Amy fBmeftf tC/teMutryL
C'nnnac ClnnJ: Fu tCCNtUnMtiiCO ttmt.S I• .lelnnrttr

btx'n named 10 Whi-1J Whft -\mot~ a: Stw:lrntJ m
t\mt'nran U1111~rsmn and CuJit&gt;l(t"i

the.· "AwanJ for i:llccllcocc t1l Scholar.h•p 111
'icnror (ieograph) Ma]Of"" from !he- Nattllll:!l
Counc1l for Geugraphtl l:.du\-IHl lln
A\\tt~:Jat1on of Artlt'm·an Gt."Ographc:r. H&lt;"
ah.u rn:::ct\t'd an "Outslandrng ~ngruph)
MaJIK"' ~:r:ntfictuc frorn 1hc dcpanmcnl
Rlmd) J. ~n ola!&gt;. a gr.ulua1c \tudcnc. h.._,
v.on anl-..\cellcnce rn Tea.:hrng Awan.i

Pet.et-Ercohno

/ Stol oxtc~l

lcanrnc- ttubc1 1Tllrm~'' F..nla Jalobow.c:1

O.vkt FiorelLa ha' be-en named tu K'hu 1
Wh tl Among Stu Jt"n iJ 1n

Gretc:ht'n K..anbman . M af'Karet O'Keert'
and Krist in Scheible arr gmduaung v.uh

Bln ( PI)'C'#tolonJ, R.obcnBcac:h(M~J.

Ki"€(Geo/ofiYI.

PKARMACOUIGY AND
TIIEIIAP£UT1CS

Leslte Ban-.wht'"rec.·el\lnga H A from the.Depanmem of Psycholog)' ha~ rcccl\cd 1hc
Facu ll) of Snl'lal Scrcnce~ · Ouhtandrn~t
Grnduaung Senror A ward

Prottr019li. Mart.BwbrdtM~takl..-:a

JOKpb 0o.... cBuHooJ. Weylud Cklad
tbtglultl. Jon OJPP~DF l~sJ. Kelty
Coftkhn (Pulmcu/ Scinw:f'l • .feamne Cooky.
($Pffllll StwJiuJ. kNuler Cooper (E.IIflull).
GeorJe eon.oro tPsychnlooJ. KnstM Corwtn
(Ptlystcl), Patncta Cc:Mter iS«-uU Sr:IIIICeJ
ltUerd,scjpJIMrf Pro1raM I. Frara Coumz:hant
/B1olo8YJ. Ca!Mnnc Counney (C,Mp,tu
Sc1ettrr1. Ra1huram Daun (B•olOf iCtll
Srlf'ttrrs/. Aor:r Deck IE•rlultl. Laura
OdVecduo tSptvrJSIIJ, GecquY OIClwit:bu
t PsydtolonJ. Lnhe ()rd)lal tP~I.
Tern~~ Orou IPnorlto/on~ Mc:lma ~
tSoraol St'UII('t'J ltttrrdiM"Ip/INJry PtOfrDifii'Jtiot'\ Ehrhch / Hutorvl. Todd EIIKJCJ (Pola~eal

the 1993 ExceUence rn Teactn~
AwardS fOf Graduate Students . Sra
Excellence rn Teach!~ Awards of
S250weree;ventogractuatestooents
and four Certificates of Honorable
Mention were awardecl to graauate
students who haYe oemonstrateo
~~teepOonal competence rn teachrng
The rec•p~ents .....ere selected by a
drstJngu•shed comm•ttee composed
of : Professors Bevetly B rshop
{PhysKJiogy}. Elarne Hull (Psycnology).
Atun Jatn (Markermg-Management).
Mark Karwan (Engmeenrc; ana JOhn

and Mathemaucs. He ts a Univcnrly Honors
Scholat. as well as a Barry M Goldwater
&amp;.cellencc m Educahon SchoW He has been
rnduct.ed Into the foiiOWtng honor SOCieties
Golden Key. Mon.ar&amp;o.d and Ptu EtaStgma
Jason his ~e1ved Hononble Men11ons from
the NSF and 000 Gradua1e Fcllowshrp
Program". and has rtt.e1ved a fellow ship from
the Umversny of Colorado 11 8 lWJ1der

'&gt;lii&lt;-.!U~

5t-,,.,.,.,.,_

The Provost' s Off.ce has announced

Jason Ensher has been chosen as the
Outslandtng Sentor by boch the Depanmrm

l•lrNiisdpliaGry

a.,.

UsaEoctua .Roy Elpo..,..lftdl'aul f&gt;blrual&lt;

rrom

Sciet~ers

Sr ....rac:~sJ, Jc:Dtufc:r BllkowstJ IP~J.
lkbonh BedMold (Ps,cltolo(7). T. . 8crcbr
(PJJt"llologvl. Andrew Been IC0111p•ter
Srurcul. Matthew Bernhardt ( BuHOfiCOI
x,,.,.rnJ Kelly Bescctcr (E.IIrlislt), Uta.
BonvrnoiPI)'C'IIoo'OfJ'L Frant.BrwJ)q(Pulihc.J
Dlmelk 8~. (PqdtolooL Jubr
Burc tSo&lt;"•ol Sct ,.,.c,.s /rct,disc•pUMry

Kimberly Ann Edlund, Mehua Edwlf'ds.

C b•rtolle ll•llut, Aadrew B«rs and
C~aory Pierce art rccetv•n&amp; HtJbest
O!Siinction honon
!he deplrlment
K,..,pe. lo'- , . _ Nail&lt; and KJi11o

Suadwhlvebcennamedto W1to

Bal.ta (Sociol

Prorr-,, ADita 8at0ae (Sociol Sdacrs
/rcterd1Kip/UIIJ'1 Profr-GM,, Lahe
(PsyclwHovJ. TIIIIOlhy 8etrett (•~

Oeessla&amp;et. Kmt•nc OoUm.a.n. Deborah
Dombrowski. Wendy Sue Drake, Lana
Dube.tl.Uun Dubou,MMthe.w Ol.dl, Martm
Duproc , TriCy Dwyer, Joanne Dymek.

~SC:IENC£

l/nll·~nlllt'S

The
followioa
..... - - ~ ....
On*:ruo~ofl'W-~
Claud&lt;tx ,._(PDiilbi-),Oiod

0*. Goqory ConiaJio. Sal-.. Caoilfio.

Shenna n S.Jew~u

urui CuiJt"l{l'l

.o-1 a-;, s - Oori- 1oM P.

SUplooa A.
J - J. LoCiolr,
J - D. Mollr,SIIom L Rudall.a-ld
F. Set Md Lila F. Sxupun hi~ been
nMnted w Who's Who Amant St'UtktllS ur

HISTORY
Clutrin 0 . Gantu, L.con \o\ . Goktthwait.

UniWT$1/tU

The Career P1anning and Placement
Offtee at UB presented •t s third
Student Emplo)ee of the Yea~ Award

-111'1Ill:•-·

Maria C...., Dcoeeoc.n..y,Juoa M-c:.n....

.,.._

/kuJ KDppG )

PAntOLOCIY

PHYSIOLOGY

•

~1 .

commenccrtlt'nil't'ft'mome~

l'ntee) l gnalow-"ki ha~t.:cnnamedtt&gt;l\hc• '
Who Among Studnrh tn Amt'nf 11n

......._.,.,._.

William Waod (Piu &amp;u.

~ (Hjz~st HONHI. Pili

!

~.! ::-::~.~~~ ~~"~~ha \~~\~:~~~~.,.,~~~~~

Aho. R ~cmar' M t·l~a (,a\k \lcrn~ c'

~~:~~~:~lMt.~~ic~~;~;~l:~ ~~~~:~~::, :-1::•~\/op
Mum!&gt;, Kobrn Muu Hugh Mutrht:ad. M r..:hclk
Murra) . Lmda Mant' Sabol.n) . KLmbcrl ) R
. chon. Laur.t N1cdcrl:mder A hant Onmtc
Lba Mant' Oun. Rapu Angela Pal. Sarah M
Palm~ . Venu' ldanra Parcdc,, Cath!)n M
Pa1nrola. Jordun Ro~' Plav.ner Lr-.a Pull:~~.~
Scan L1am Pov.cll Ro~wn Pn:n11Cf' -Plcnm1
Mrc luel Earl Reuncr Chm1rnc Rtehanhon
Nanq Rot;el'") . Amtlcr Mane- Rom.anll.a~
l:.h1..ubc1h Rug. RlN:IIr Scagg~ . :-!anq l:.
Schcn~. M1chelc SchncKkr. Beth 5&lt;-h~rcr
K1mberl) Schwrngc. Kun Seaberg. Lon Ann
Sctfen. Laura Shedd. P.Jtncra Sht'll). Jud•lh
Shcppard. Tykr P Sh1eld!&gt;. John Slaughler.
M1chad J Some/'\, Laun. Sondag. Shannan
V Stahng. Carol M Stod. Wrlluun Sroffel.
Jason Scone. Wrllunn Srooecypher. Patnc1a
Ann Szymcz.U.. Ilene Tabor. Cortrss Ta~lor .
Janmc Trcde . Con F Tnub. Patncta R
Trawmskt . Helen Troncoso . K11thanne
Vasch\. Kt'll y W al!ers. R~ehe l Was. MtcMUe
Wtclr..es, C harles Wilham~. Denise Wrlham~ .
Juellc Wtlhanu. Jenmfer W1IS011, Janel WlSt'.
Mtchelle hc hiTUinn, Jenn1fer AM Zgoda.
Sandn Zornd:. D1ane Zubek. J1ll Zubler and
Knsune Zwerlern

PSYCIIOLOGY
The rollowmg scudenb ha\e been named 10
lhc: Psychology HOilOrS Program 1...LWe BarT,
Orborah B« htold , Bridaet fiaou1 y,

Co8eea Flanapn.. Felida lUtz.. Dana Lnit.
Kimberly hck.ard.Jobn Radford , Je~)
and Mf'lissa Stookey.
Amokt Kouk and CorinM Lindquist havr
been nallkd1o Wlw ·J Who Among Studt'tiiJ '"
Aml'nron Unnvrf/ltt'J and Co/Jt'flt'S

Say~

Stn"f'.n J . hwto"')k i 1-'i gr.du:aung wrlh
Hlghesl Hofw:lB and b lhc: l't'Ciptr:nl of the I..J...rcu
Mana Hoop A wacd for~~crllencr 1n Soc dog)
Mic:Mk Terne Trembby and J oy Carol
Yotra a~ gr.tduaung w1th H1ghe:st HOI\OI"!&gt;

ZM Alii'M' Lt"nahau, Kris1co Ven LUJC'ht'n
and AJiyton J O)' Sliverman an- gradua,tmg
With Htgh HOOOC\

1-\ntltmp(J/ot:' 1 Dana l...t-111 I PSH lwiiiJI /

:~~;:!~~~~!;';~~~::U~'!:~e;'L~~!:~
BnanMan:u~

Jcnntft'f MannmJ! tMrdw Stud\ I.

1Prwlv1i11K' I Stcphcn \1 ant.·w.:fi/ Btvi~li.Gnnt
M ar~

' knntfcr !'-1r)t"r rBwlut:•l
I t.hchllcl1H111o"''
"frlll ~·h 1p ,/wlfllt' l
Glenn
11

'&gt;fl\kul ~ .. , / Swh•fll 1 Vrr~1n1a Mort"l lll
tU,.ogruphlt. ~!dena Mu1 ! Pn r hlo/og\1. Juht"
Murph)' / PfHh.•fog•l- Palm."tll Mycn ISI1CIUI
Snt'/11"' 111/l'rdunt•lllkln Prr•1rum 1 D1.ant:
Sen)O. I Pnrlaolog\ 1 Jrll Ncurm~nn t Huwnt
Jt" N1l"fl Nuv.OCK"n tSpumshl Todd Op;nrhcnt"
r Pn-rhiJJo~' 1. J~ On 1Em: lull~ Jennrfct
Onon 1Bwlog1·1. l•~ Oun 1Sonol Sr•rnors
lm,rdunpluwr. PrrJ(rrlm./ K1mbcrt) Pachnl
t Pn\·httiultll Alla.Patt:IIBioloJII"IliSrti!'IIN'ft.
S:andra~lg&lt;'(SocrtJISrll'nrl'flfllt'rdts.r-I{JIUtOn

PrvgrtJm/ Andn:\lo Pnro!lo /Socmlof\l, Ptlru\
Ph:m tComput,., 'ic1rna/ . JIVdan Ptav.·neT
!Snr-1111 Snt'tlt"f'J llllt"rdtJr!pl•nun Pmtrom /.
Laura Pmc) 1Grnnan 1. Roman Pnwak
t Hmun·11lnd Russell Ra.U.rn tPswhulo&amp;\l

AI'Ml. Yr!a.l) R11 ykhman I PnrlwlotVi G~M
Rt'!SCh 1Grrman 1. Jeanne R~peukr
/ Mathe,umrs /. Oan11 Re~larrts IB•oiDJ)'I.

Mrchat:l Roberu Jfrrrcc#tl. Am) R~(dd
Clmstta.a Rou tMcuhartar•nl.
Cathlttn Ryan t Matlvrrtollcsl. J~my Sayers
1PsvchoioKyl. James Scannell f &amp;r1l•shJ, KnJttn
ScM1blc lkrt#sropalot.\' 1, Nancy Schenk (Soctal
Sn.-ncn /ntt"rdunpltnan Pro11ram1. Enc
Schme12. f BmiOtf\ 1. Jesstca Scabu.r} f &amp;,full).
Mcll tssaScelc:y f Pn"C"holot'l't. Beverly Se:uanna
JStw:ltoAnJ.lbomuStw-ptPIIdowplt\1, Jotm
Smatn ( Hisron 1. Rachl::l S~yertCUfPIIIUiniCOIIW
f&gt;utJrdrrsuNiSc~~~~:rs/, Roben Snultt / Poimeal
Srtrttrt"l . Am) Sparro"' tSptmuiiJ. Robcn
Sprr:adbur) 1Erot~omu J 1. Rob1n Stanton
1Pol•ural SrtnK"rl. Robyn S1eux:r ( PDill•cal
Srtt"nrr ~ .John Suvet ( Mutht"m~JIIl'IJ. Jeffrc)
· S101bt'r i M.-dtCJ SrMdH Mehua S1ooke)
tf-'SW'IIolog•J. CllndKe Suoh tSurllll Sclt"lk'~J
IPrvcholovJ.

lnurdiJl'tplutan· Protrwn J. Gann TOI1\a.'l.lelllsi:t
rCIIt"mtStrv /_ Carolyn Trou1 I Pnc- lloloJl/.
Sharon Uberu tCOifllftaurlt"Oitw Ouoro;Nn (UW}
.klt'ncnJ. J uhe Yogi( Pn't"holt'ft' J. l..awl Wide
tBtoJut.' J. Brian \ll'hue cPoJtnrol Ytt'ftt' r l. Mar\
W~k fPhufn j. ~WtenCCkeiPoJmcal

Sr•.-nc.-J. Kdl~ Wmd {Sf'Otlui! J. Wrlham Wuld
I Butlat' I. A1lttn Worden I Prw:llo/oft\ I. Ak::lko
Yam.amoco( Poiltlcul Sr•.-&gt;HVI. Edu:ll\b bedtru.
f Bc o Jog,rul s,.,,.,., rs 1 Oan1cl Zorrc h
! An!hmpoln~' l

�.., u, a.a

8

COMMENCEMENT 147 EXTRA

Four Years at UB
s

H E R E

H A P P E N E D

WHAT

Freshman Year

hpt.B, UH

OctoberUH

.IM.22,1910

Feb..1910

Feb..1910

~1910

April 21, 1.9110

April 27' 1.9110

July 1910

Ellicon Pub opens .

UB' s NCEER
experts go to Bay
area following
earthquake to find
out why California
structures
collapsed

The Reporter Is 20.

American Studies
grad students
Loyce Stewart and

US research team
tests aphrodts•
ao-psychologlsts
first to study male
sexual behavior by
Injecting drugs Into
specific areas of
brain.

Chancellor
Johnstone
proposes parking

Fisk Organ
Inaugural in Slee
Hall

Clifford Stoll.

Construction
begins on Student

Oct. 18, 1989
Astronaut &amp; UB
grad Ellen Shulman

Baker carries US
flags on space
shuttle Atlantis .
returns flags to UB
cam pus In Feb .

Feb..1910
UB. Jag)ellonlan
Unl\&lt;erslty In
Poland announce
exchange program .

Alexis DeVeaux
Interview newlyfreed Nelson
Mandela In
Soweto. South
Afrlea .

fee .

computer s~uth ,
UB grad, speaks at
unl\&lt;erslty. He blew
whistle

ActMtles Center
Addition .

on German

spy ring. wrote
book Tl&gt;e Cuckoo 's

Egg

1990

Sophorrwre Year
......

Dec. 5, 1990
PreSident Sample
to leave for USC

*•

...

'\. _

~·· .
Feb..1991

April 1991

April 13, 1991

Aprtl1991

Jerome Kasstrer .

UB miCro balloon
procedure by chair
of Dept. of Neurosur-

Olympic-caliber

WBFO 20th

Wor1d Games

Birthday Bash at
UB for NFR
program ·All Thtngs
Considered· hve
radto forum 1n Slee

John Cage ' s
• Europera 5premteres at UB 1n
North Amencan

UB to renew ues

Clown. saves

wtU'l BeiJing after
lg.month htatus

$300.{)(X) , much
ol that '" energy
costs

massacre

UB mediCal school
grad , named ed•tor
Ill-Chief of New
England Journal of
MediCine

Umvers•ty shuts

__ ,.,

---

~21,1991

Feb. 1991

Dec. 21, 1990Jan. 2,1991

__ ,.._

1o11ow1ng Tianen
man Square

gery 5alleS Savannah
ponce

off~c:er's

lrfe

stad1um construe
t1on planned for
eany fall.

New MUSIC

FeStivaL

January. 1991

Junior Year

June1991

Summer1991

October 1991

October 1991

$150 m1lhon wortn

Michael Shendan
volcanologist &amp;
chatr of Geology.
takes month-long

$8 .3 m1lhon A1r

Denn1s Miller.

World Games

exped1t1on to

S1bena, finds
volcanic explOSIOns
may have been
caused by same
mechamsm that
tnggers nuclear
reactor meltdowns

Force contract
awarded to
Calspan un.verSII)'
at Buffalo Research Center
ICUBRC). largest
grant ever recetved
by UB researchers

•

former Saturday
N1ght

uve sta1 .

v1sits on Parents
Weekend Oct 11

Jan. 1992

Jan. 1992

Feb.1992

Feb.20, 1992

~1992

Coach James ward
replaces Football
Coach Sam
Sanders

Sman capsule
developed by
scientists and
engmeers at UB &amp;
Millard Allmore
Hospitals. allows
researchers to
dtrect medlcatton
to spec1fic place 1n
gastro1ntest1na1
tract

New telecommun•
cauons system
announced for
campus. to be put
1n place m Aug

Morns Dees. CIVIl
nghts leader, g1ves

Eight new restau
rants open as
Student Unton
•ntroduces its food
court .

13

~
hpt.lB, 1992

IMng Feldman.
Oistlnguished
Professor of
English. named
MacArthur Fellow .

Gov . Cuomo .

...... 30,1992
Aaron N. Bloch. a
vtce Pf'O"'St of
Columbia Unl\&lt;er·
slty. named UB

P&lt;O'o'OSt

others. laud
William R. Greiner
as "students '
president.· at his
inauguration as
13th president of
Unl\&lt;erslty at
Buffalo.

keynote at Mart.n
Luther K1ng Jr
Commemoratton

1992

Aprtl 1992
State budget
forces UB to make
$9 mlll100 cut .

Senior Year
,~s.e

June16, 1992

get

measles I/80Cine
after case of
measles IS
oommutef stuclent.

[I
Stad1um. Fine Arts
Center . Natural
Sciences Complex .
SAC. The Commons. repatr of
nuclear reactor

-to

Thousands of
faculty. students
and staff roll up

doagnosed on

Provost Wtlham
Gre1ner IS named
tntenm pres•dent

of constructton
gets under way on
North Campus

May1991

October19,
1992
Pathways to
Greatness
Endowment
Campaign goes
over top. raising
$56 .3 million for
UB.

*

Nov. 12, 1992

Feb.. 28, 1993

~1&amp;,1993

Aprtl14, 1993

May 14, 1993

May18, 1M3

$12 million
Student Union
opens .to serve as
a hub for student
life. offering
50,000 square
feet of space for
dining, theater ,
lounges. publica
tJons and Ofganlzalions.

Filmmaker Spike
Lee. leading voice
1n African Amencan
art. speaks tn
Alumni Arena
during Blacl&lt;
History Montn

BlilzMI of '93 plies
up more than 17
lndleS of srow.
causes cancellation
of day dasses.

Tim Cohane of
Boston College
named UB's new
head basketball
coach.

UB and VA MediCal
Center dedicate
$12 million
Positron Emission
Tomography (PET )
Center in Partter
Hall ceremonies .

Joumalist Teny
Anderson . held
hostage by Shme
Muslim terrorists
f&lt;&gt;&lt; 7 years .
recetves prest~
gious Chancellor
Norton Medal at
UB's 147th

~30, 1993

UB selected as
lead research
center In $625
million landmaril
study of women's
health.

~t1n

Alumni Arena.

�</text>
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                    <text>~

........ il
-.
give students ..........................
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doaiiO lJecame rally~ ill ac:iCIICieforcipliO 10 ........

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w.-,. ...ter tbe oltecciaB of
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Jobn l'luly, ·~laeadl..,.,... Roawdlllld.,.,., ......
'"!'be projoctil ~by ibl!facully member. A1 tbeendoftbeiiiiiDIDOr fortbe 111J1111111er propm for tbe IMt IS Ye-s.
prop-. tbe lllldeall ~ tbeir findio&amp;s II a ocnfera~ee IIIII pooler Continued on page 4

a,..._

FdiiCIIIIon
US's rew basketball
coach, Tm Cohane.
pu1S a high value on
scholarship.

Yes ncarr-and
HebreYI, too. All this will
be derro1slrated
at UB

Super Senior

VokalllcPiumes
PoseDimger

cooference;. 8

,. 2

Varsity swirrYrer Robert
Hermare1 will graduate
wi1h degree in art and
marketing.

Researchers study
dangers thai vdcanic

,. 8

,.5

clouds can pose to
planes.

PET Center

Henry Wagner.

Dedication Set

for May14
UB, VA
Medical
Center to
celebrate
$12 millwn
project

c.rter's
cyclotn&gt;n,
~In

P8rlulr
Hal, wll
be connected by
pneumatic
tube to
IC8I1fl8f

director of nuclear

located In
VA Medical Center.

medicine services for
the Department of

Veterans Affairs in
Washington. D.C ..
and Yve s Jongen.
pre.&lt;ident of IB A and

lly LOIS IIAJIER
News Bureau Staff

1he University at Buffalo and the VA Medical
Center will celebrate the
$12 million effon to establish a Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
Center in Western New
York with a dedication
ceremony of the
PET facility at II
a.m. on Friday,
May 14, in front
of Parker Hall on
the UB South
Campus.
Juan Cassie rs , the
Belgian ambassador to
the United States,.will be

~~--~~--~----~--~r---~~~-r~~

professor of medicine
and radiology at The
Johns Hopkins Medi·
cal Institutions and a
leading expert in the
field of nuclear imag·
ing, also will anend.
Additional guests wi II
include Milton Gross,

CASSI£RS

the guest of honor. A Belgian fim1.
Ion Beams Appl ication (IBA ). built
the UB cyclotron. part of the PET
project. The cyclotron is the largest
of its type manufoctured today.

inventor of the cycler
tron.
The fonnal cJedica.
tionandribbon&lt;Utting
will take place tmder a
tent set up on the lawn
facing f"dri;er Hall. Joseph A. Pre1jo. chair·
man of the UB
DepartmentofNuclear
Medicme. and John P.
Naughton. dean of the
UB School of Medi·
cone and Biomedical
Sc1c~. will preside.
Alsopanicipating will be UB Preso·
dent WiHiam R. Greiner. Richard S.
Droskc. director of the VA Medical
Center. and Robert E. Ackerhalt. vice
chairman of the UB De·
partrnentofNuclearMedi·
cme.

The Buffa lo PET
Center is composed of
· the cyclotron. housed in

Parker HaiL and the PET
scanner, located in the

· VA Medical Center on
Bailey A venue. lhe two
sites will be connected
by p~umati c tube .

The center was funded through a
$3.4 mi llion grant fro m the Depart·
ment of Veterans Affair.; and a $1
million grnnt from the James H.
Cummings Foundation. with the baJ.

ance of the tot.aJ cost of S12 million
coming from UB. state granL' and
other private soun:es .

There are 25 PET imagong centen. in the Unitc::d States. The BuffaJo
cente r is one of a· handful with the
capaci ty to conduc t both treatment

and resean:h. The on I) PET facihty
within a 150-miie radius. Lhe center
wiU serve patients from throughout
the Nonheast.
Tile cyclotron produces ;;ihOr1·
lived radioactive tracers. which are
introduced into biologically useful

drugs. When such a drug. called a
radiopharmaceutical. is administered
to a patient, the PET scanner detects
the d!1Jg's emissions as it passes
through the body. Signals picked up
by the scanner are translated by com·
puter irito a three..dimensKmaJ pic·
ture of the drug's path. ·

The image produced. whi.ch
shows how the organs and tissues
through who ch the drug passes are
working. allows physicians to detect
hean disease earl ier and determine
ueatmcnt more pre&lt;:isely. It also al·
lo ws physicians to evaluate almost
immediate ly the effective ness of
chemotherapy. In addition. the pro-

e&gt;:dure is making possible important
advances in researc.h and treatment

of stroke. epilepsy and Alzheimer's
disease.
AdditionaJ ceremonies at the VA

Medical Center and the cyclotron
facility. and a special press tour of
the cyclotron facility. will precede
the main dedication. Lunch and tours
will be provided for guests follow·
ing the ceremony. Music before: and
after the ceremony will be provided
by the Algonquin Brass.

�_,

2

__

..,_,

-...
UB'a

Coach
Tim
Cohane

.....__
coedl

T1m
eot.w.

'*

phone

*-''t
atop
~

A~ on exc:el'ln~p,

lllllletlcs
WAlDiilouM
Reporter S!aff

II)' -

HEN I finally
Tim
find
Cohane, he is
sitting in a large,
empty office
with a phone cradled beneath his ear.
He is making~ with his left hand
andsayingthirigslike. "HowmuchT'
and "I' m not interesu:d in that"; he's
not a man who pulls his punches.
He·s drinking iced tea and the wrapper of an enonnous sub is one of the
few papers on his enormous desk; he
nods his hello and shoots the wrTIJ&gt;per at the gart&gt;age (he misses).
Cohane has been UB 's basketball coach for two weeks and I'm
lucky 10 catch him in at all; he's
hatdly ever in one spot (the week
before. he was recruiting, living on

W
~

ILIC'IIII "' .......

~·
.._......_,Oi
slin-

gulshed Proleli3or of &amp;1glsl).
has been
elected to
'membership
by the F()ik-

lore Fellows
of the Amish
Academy of
Science'811d
Letters In

UB'=er

OlrectOtot
for
Studies in American CuHure
and the UniYerslty Program In
Folklore, Mythology and Frlm
Studies, Jecl&lt;son is a teacl&gt;er. author, editor. doct.mentasy filmnaker, lecturer and
scholar on Issues related to
life in American prisons, drug
cuHure and antklrug law en-

forcement policies. He Is a
former president of the AmerIcan FolkJora SociEity whose
Jouma! of American FoiJdore
he has edtted.

ARCHITECTURE
-UMVIIIIAL
....... PACULTY:

l!dwerd ............. professor of archit9clure, has
a $5,000 stipend as a Universal Design
Education Project Faculty,
one of only 14 such deslgnationa In the coontJy.
. The proj9ct seel&lt;s to stimufale fnnollalion In design
curricul&lt;rn !eadihg to buildings, environments and prodbeen~

=-

~ts~turtt,:'~
ties Pd and the Fair HQusing
Amendmen1s Act, which together extend aCcessibility
Into gvery realm of the buitt
environment. bolh public and
private.

· Slelnfl!ld end oo-leade&lt;s
Galy Day. Ablr Muflick and
1tYee Olher UB faciJlty to be
\V10(ll.llCed, maY all use'the
IJnlvarsal DesigA F~
designation. Slelnfeld 8nd his
team will enhance a required
Intermediate studkl,-using

..-olversal design themes to

teach good design.

hamburgers in motel rooms), and
when he i!. his phone doesn't SlOp

ringing. The first ten minutes of the
interview are bate Iy worth transcribmg: "When you get a job like this.

down the hallway like: 'Tell Mike he
left his sandwich h=." Whoever is at
the other end of the hallway clearly
loves him. and this is one of the
secrets of his success. He might not
be e.actly ganulous when he's on
the phone, but he has a rapport with
the people he works with, and he
clearly inspires trust. and loyalty.

ohane was oom in the Bronx; be
pronounces the ··s" in Dlinois,
and his face. though handsome. has
been around. He worked his way up

C

"When I had climbed the ladder
from high school to college 10 Division I. I had no money in the bank at

all, and throe kids-when I was at
Dartmouth I knew my family would
suffer if I lost my job."
Which he did. He turned down
the other coaching offers that came
when the news got out and went to
work for Salomon Brother&gt;, the famoos ~e~ywhi~

when Cohane joined them, was on
the eve of the overexpansion, the
problems chronicled in the best-

the correspondence: in th e first

week .. .''- phone call. "When you
have an emerging program thai' s
very weak .. ."-phone call.
Someone down the hall vol un·
leers to screen his calls. and Cohane
explains.
"When you forst get a job like
llu s, you're deluged; every program

"I decided that someone who cooched as an
educatorfirst, and not as a maJter ofdollars
and cents, wouUi. be someone unique to
cooching"

in America knows your college is

weak so they want to play you."
That's the first slew of leners. 'The
second is from people waiting to
congratulate you. The third is from
people applying for assislllnt jobs.
"So in the first48 hours on the job
there are 450 items of correspondence you have to deal with .
.. But what is most crucial is the
recruiting. which isn't any of those
things.''

L

arry

Felser,

the

sports

editor of "I'M Buffalo News.

wrote a Damon Runyoncsque col·
umn about Cohane's appointment:
in it. he called the new coach "a

dreamer" (Cohane's father was a
celebrau:d sportswriter for Life: the
young Cohane was bopped on the
kneesofthelikesofVinceLombatdi
and Red Blaik) !ldding that President
Greiner"did some nice backing with
a five-year contract at a nice number.''
This is the son of language thai
suits a man likeCohane. He'ssix-footsormbingandwhenhe'soffthephore;
he's irrepressible: he""""'= around
his ollice. gazes. fascinated. OUt of his
window ("I keep waiting f&lt;r a sevenfoot kid 10 walk by") and shouts things

the coaching ladder until he became
coach at Dartmouth. Darunouth fored
him ... ("the team lost." he explains
with a shrug); Cohane's n."Sponse
was 10 do a decade on Wall Street 10
mak.C enough money to coach the
way he thinks coaches should. 'This
man.·· as Felser put it in the kind of
hoops shorthand that is Cohane' s
style as well. "bears watching."
''My father was inyolved with the
golden era of sports in the '40s and
'50sbeforesportscoveragewasmass

markeu:d: he wrote for magazines
like Life and Look and Coach. He
always had a prominent article in
Look. and he wrote a book. Bypaths
of Glory. in which he talked about
those figures that impressed him.
''Most of them became his friends:
a youngster I remember him llllking
with them in our living room: R!:&lt;f
Blaik. Vince Lombardi. Rock y
Matciano,~L.eahy.JohnWooden.
'That's when I decided to be a
coach. But IllY father told me. If
you're going to be a coach. you· re
going to starve. most coaches wind
u)&gt; in the poomouse.

as

EDITOR .,.~

seller, Liar·s Poker.

"I had offers. but I decided I would
nevergoback.tocoachinguntill had
enough to protect my family .
'1 went to Wall Street in the mid80s. in its heyday. I was the oldest
trainee on the Salomon Brothers training floor. I was in the training class with
all the hotshots from Harvard and the
london School of Economics.
··Arteracoupleof years, I discovered a niche in the mortgage business called sesving rights, and I
decided to start my own business. I
hired a lot of of my ex-players from
high school and college-( hired
kids who had the best work experience, the most persevernnce. the ones
I thought of as team players."
Thecornpany-Cohane. Rafferty
Securi~ hugely successful---&lt;he U.S. govenunc:nt hired them
10 help with the dissolution of the
savings and loan£-despiteatendency.
on the pan of one of its ro.owncrs, 10
ooach a basketball team in the afternoons. When he 'd made enough,
Cohane sofd OUt to Rafferty and went
back 10 ooachi ng. starting as he did

ASSOClA TE EDITOR J1M11 ar.ua.

ARTDIAECTOR

-..:rc...r...._

before. at the foot of the ladder.
"Whal I owned the business I took
my salary 10 hire a full-lime asstStant"-oo the ooutt. not in the mongagebusiness-"andwhatlfoundwas
lhtd I was a beU&lt;r coach. I was just
relating 10 the playas: I didn' t have 10
wony about losing my job."
11lal team was the U.S. Merchant
Marine Academy; Cobane broke
their losing sttea1&lt;. 1bey won 25
games and went to the NCAA tournamenL" Elsewhere. his reconl is
the same: he was hired 10 build a
team at Manhattanville College
("'where all the Kennedy girls wenC)
at a time when they didn't have a
program; throe years later, that team
was at the NCAA.
But wiMing is not everything to
Cohane, who thinks that the anxious
coaches you see on tbe front lines on
TV are symptomati&lt;: of a dangerou;
trend in American sports.
"Division I cooches lo5e sight of
why they came into cooching in the
fii'Sipiace. whichistoteach kids. When
I was at Dartmouth. the future of my
family was dependent on 17-year-old
kids wiminggames..Jcm' tthinklhal's
a very good environmenl.
"So I decided that someone who
coached as an educator forst. and not
as a maner of dollars and cents.
would be someone unique 10 cOaching. Which I am.
"It' s just my ego now; if we lose.
I'm not fon:ing my family into poveny."

B's team, as Cohane himself
says. has been weak recently: it
lost 48 of 55 games in the last two
years. The new coach. who has only
seen the team play on video ("I won't
really see them come out until November 1"), is confident toe can tum
that streak around as well.
"Having climbed the ladder again.
I think my experience leods itself to
doing it all: building the program
and enjoying it without the financial
burden. My experience lends itself
to what ' s going on here. which I see
as winning games and gnlduating
with excellence."

U

�_.,.__..,_Wf

__

3

Evaluating teaching methods: new form
.,developed at UB makes the task easier
Reporla&lt; Staff

A

NY ACADEMIC who values
teaching will tell you that one of
the best ways to improve faculty perfonrwv:e is to listeo to
student feedbaciL A new evaluative form that has been developed at UB,
called UBCA TS for UB Courst and T&lt;acher
Survey, may be just the thing f&gt;Jr faculty who
want a better way to gauge their teaching
method, according to Norma Honderson, director of the UB Office of Teaching Effectiveness.
UBCA TS replaces the old system of evaluation, called SCA TE. Stud&lt;nl Cours&lt; arui
Teacher EvalUation, she said.
"I think it asks better questions thanSCATE
did," said Henden;on. "And it's administered
by depanrnents or decanal units. which means

that each unit is responsible for assembling the
data and getting it to the Computing Center.
where it can be tabulated and sent back to the
depanrnents. Overall, it will make the results
available to faculty and departments in a more
timely manner than was possible withSCATE."
UBCAT'Sasksallofitsrespondents, whether
a student in physics or philosophy. 10 summary questions. A couple of examples of those
questions include. "Rate the usefulness of the
outside assignment'; in helping you to learn,"
and "'The textbook(s) and readings used in this

course arc .
After those initial questions. a department

can add up to 35 additional questions to the
evaluation fonn that would ask the student
about infonnation that is moll! specific to the

discipline of the class being eva!~ she
said. The possible answen to each question
range from one to five, where five is the most
positive response and one is the most negative
response.
And the new program also allows for a wide
range of analyses b&lt;cakdowns, such as by
depanrnen~ by ooune level (I 00, 200, 300,
etc.). and by class size, she said. That means

"It will make the l'f!sults
available to faculty and
deparlments in a mol'f!
timely manner than was
possible with SCATE. "

--

that a department could compare two different
sections of the same ooune being taught by
different faculty members, or a decanal unit
could look at all of the classes within their
jurisdiction according to seat counL
But UBCATSmayend up being much more
than an evaluative tool for classroom performance, according toFntnk D' Arrigo.aGA in the
offioe of the vice provost for undergladuate education and a graduate SlUdent in geogrnphy at UB.
"UBCATS was originally intended to be a
cour.;e evaluation to replace SCATE. But it can
be used for a lot more than tha~ " be said. " It's

a very flexible polling instnlmenLit could be
used to poll the entire student body on any
number of issues. The potential is definitely
there to expand the use of this survey."
UBCATS was originally conceived when

the UB Office of Teaching Effectiveness was
helping Northeastern University to test anolher
evaluative form they were initiating. said

Henderson. Northeastern's Teacher-Course
Evaluation Project (TCEP) form. which was
designed in the mid-1980s. used 30 formative
(and optional) and 10 summary questions.
"We piloc&lt;:d the form that UBCATS came
from." she said. "We were an off-&lt;:ampus testsite through Northeastern from I~-gg-1992 .
UBCATS is based upon the questionnaire we
were administering for Northeastern during
those years."
UB' s first large-scale use of UBCA TS came
this past fall. And although there are some
kinks yet to be worked out of the system. it's
proving to be an improvement over SCA TE,
said Don Henning, instructional support specialist for the Faculty of Social Sciences. "In
the Faculty of Social Sciences, we just used the
lO basic questions the ftrSt time around. We
didn't add any additional questions that would
be specific to the discipline."
He said that although SCA TE yielded sound
information. UBCATS will allow the university to standardize its evaluative method much

easier than with the old method. 'This form is
an attempt to standardize the system across

faculties. and across schools.'' said Henning.
"Our old system was similar and gave us good
resu lts, but UBCATS will be much easier to
standardize across the university .··

a-n- ...

With the WOitd Unlvenlty
to Open in two months. officials have begun over-the&lt;ounler sales of special
event tickets, In addijion to mail· and phone-order sales. Discount tickets continue to be available to UB faculty. slaff and sludenls
in the categories indicated below:

.....

.

tnock8ftdtleld,......,... .... _ p o l o:
ProTIX outlets. locaied in AM&amp;As stores In Erie and Niagara
Counties

v~

T

HE SUNY SENATE is anempcing to
gain a better uoderstanding of why
women and minority foculty leave the
SUNY system to teach elsewhere.

according to Walter Kunz. formerly dean of
undergnlduate academic services and one of
UB 's SUNY senators. Kunz. who has been
named director of development for lllhletics.
was reporting on the most recent SUNY Senate
meeting to the Faculty Senate Executive Committee at their meeting last week.
The SUNY Senate passed a resolution thai
asks Chancellor D. Bruce Johnslone to institute a data collection program that would help
ascenain wby women and minority faculty
leave SUNY, Kunz said.
The resolution also asltal the Olaroellor 10
n:cootrrald to Cllfl1lUS presidem that they &lt;k&gt; a
beoa job of appraising aD laadty of expoc:llbm
regarding oortiruing 8flfXlittlrmi and 10 &lt;k&gt; a
bea&lt;rjobofeslablishing~

JI'O&amp;I1IITlS fa- inoomingjunior laadty. he said.
Otho-resolutions passed by the SUNY Senate
included a provision that cllairs of the Senale •s
standing conunittees and the immediase past offi=softhehody be allowed toparticipR fully in
Senate proceedings. These participants would not
have voting rights. said Kunz.
And in a resolution put forward by the
Awards Commin.ee, it was resolved to recommend to the Chancellor that the faculty rank of
Distinguished Librarian be established within
the SUNY system.

D1scount tickets will be sold only to idenlifted members of the
un1versity community:
• Students with valid UB tdentification cards.
• Faculty, slaff and volunteers with valid I. D. cards,
• Alumni with valid Alumni Association I.D. cards.

measure lhru would have extended official

observer status to the SUNY Black Faculty and
Staff Association and the SUNY Women's
Studies Council, Kunz sa.Jd .
'"I thmk the perception on this last issue was.
where would you stop?" he asked. "If you

grant observer status to these groups. there are
many others who wo uld want it."

In other FSEC news, current UB Senate

Chrur Nicolas Goodman. professor of mathematICS. gave a brief overview of his two-year tenure
a.' head or the body. He said that he was pleased
with the work that the Senate had accomplished

63t-9393
647-1688
852-5000

ua11cket omce 11oun

srud.

GrmnntJca- F-lng:
Tlckelmaster Outlets
ProTIX ...
Prime Seats ...... ..
Tlcketmaster ............................... .

Reporla&lt; Staff

Each voucher. to be redeemed for "hard" tickets in late May.
will be accompanied by a fact sheet on WUGS tickets (i.e ..
refund/exchange poi1C1es. scheduling of teams, pick-up of
hard tickets)
• Hard ttckets will be allocated on a first-&lt;:ame-first-serve
basis based on the date of transaction, to be clearly tnd1cated
on the VOUChe!S.

Baaketbell:
Prime Seats. Memorial Auditorium Ticket OffiCe

...._. .....

__

Resolutions which were defeated inc1uded
a proposed change in the guidelines for determimng the number of SUNY senar.ors accorded each campus within the system and a

]ckel Sales Open for World University Games
.._..
._...,.......,.........,_, .........,,........

FSEChears
report on
.,SUNY Senate

..... ,_ua~

Games tickets will also be available through the UB Ticket

OffiCe on a vouCher sales basis. Two ticket options are offered.
• UB Group Discount-available to members of the university coovnunity .for selected preliminary events. UB Group

. ..... 1) a .m.-3:30 p.m
Monday-~nesday .
....... 11 a .m.-7 p.m
Thursday
.......... 11 a .m. -3:30 p.m.
Fnday
For further tnformation. contact:
UB Ticket Office. 8 Capen, North Campus, 645-2353
WUGS Ttckels. 888-9300

over the lasl two years.
" The woridoad policy and the smoking policy

wen:twoareas thai Ithought we handled well." he
But he cautioned incoming chair. Professor
of Pathology Peter Nickerson. to remain cogmzant of the wort that lhc varioUs Senate.
committees wer&lt; undenaking. "l fear that not

all of the commiueesdid as much as they could
have." said Goodman. ''In retrospec~ l would
have spent more Lime monitoring those committee:-.

Walter Kunz named director of development for athletics

W

student-athlete financial aid considered c ritical to UB's athletic program and its recent

upgrade to Division I-A competition.
Kunz has been associated with the university for many years. As dean ofDUAS. he was
responsible for numerous areas affecting the

dards. probation.
the Dean's List
and athlelic eligibility. He also

sion of Undergraduate Education ( 1973-1984).
During the summer of 1991. he served a.•
acting diJ=or of the UB Off., of Alutnni
Relations.
A member of the University Intercollegiate
Athletic Board si nce 1988. Kunz also chairs
the Undergntduate Curriculum Comminee and
the Committee on Degree Requirements.

monitored and
evalua1ed aca-

UB. he: has touched the lives of many of our

furthering our Division I athletic program. His
dedication to UB. our faculty, students and
alumni. will serve us well."
A 1960 graduate of Utica College of Syra·
cuse University. Kunz received two graduate
degrees from UB. an Ed.M. in general education in 1965 and a Ph.D. in higher education in
1970.
WhileanendinggraWaleschool Kunzsen-ed
as assistant dean in the Divisioo of Conlinuing

alumni." Rona1d Stein said. •This new appointment is a wonderful rtwriage of opportunity and ability."
"Walter Kunz has a long record of service
to UB ." added Nelson Townsend. "His extensive knowledge of
university and the university community will be a great asset to

of the Din:clo&lt; of Admissions.
Additionally, he has been a SUNY Faculty Senator from 1983 to the presen~ and
chaired the UB Professional StAff Senate in
1975-76. with aterm~PSS vice chair from
1974-75.
[i

welfare of undergraduates. includ-

ALTER N. Kunz. previously
dean of the Divi.sion ofUndertr:aduate Academic Services.
•
has been named director of
development for athletics.
Tile announcement came this week from
Nelson E. Townsend, director of athletics. and
Ronald H. Stein. vice president for advancement·and deve lopment.
~ In his new position. Kunz will be resp:&gt;nsible for securing gift suppon. primarily for

ing

"'ivisemen~

scholastic stan-

demic programs
and made recomKUNZ

mendationstothe
vice provost for

undergJaduate education.

Beforehisappointmentasdean in 1984. Kunz
was associate dean and acting dean of the Divi-

" During Walter's ~year association with

u,;

Educationandasanadmissionscounseldr.Oftice

�4

.

Role of research power brokers
..,.
......... discussed by BASAH keynoter
R.,...s

Woodl

llllpex-

pellence
helped

him 1M
the jab

he'lbe-

.,......

Jin lifter
tlon.

SUMMER PROGRAMS
Conllnued from pqge 1
''I slllrt by having the student do a great deal
of readtng on the basic conceptS of the area of
research," he said. "Then I give him more
recent mfonnation from my lab group on the

project. He also spends a lot of time in the lab.
learning techniques and how to usc various
mstrumenl~

From there. the student and the professor

work out a very specific area of the project that
the student will work on for the remainder of
lhc program. explained Pauly. ··At that poin t
the student IS interacti ng w1th everyone in the
lab on a daily basis.··
That k..i nd of inleraclion cames benefits for
the student. the lab personnel Wld the profes-

sor. saJd Pauly. "'The professor and slllff moti vate the student. bUI he also motivates the
\C t c niiM~ .

They force us to reexamme our own
way ofthankmg." he saJd. "So. you have a push
me. pu\1 you kmd of proc~~ The V\gor of

yuuth bnng!:&gt; quesllons you may not have
thought of ."
Lawrence Alston. &lt;1 UB scm or m b1omed• ·
and a fomu:r 'tucienl of Pauly's.

~.:al M:'lcnce~

srud lhat grumng an underslandjng of how to
move from sc1enufic lltemture mto lhe realm
of the lab was a cruc1aJ expcnence for htm.
'' U:ammg how to commumcate wilh Ph.D' s
and M.D ·~ wa..'i 1mponant for me. And the lab
''a d1ffcrent world for me," he said.
'' It '~ not just a bunch of chemicals and water
bottles I now understand that there's a lot of
tnal and error there, and a gJUt deal of team work as well. Your focus is on one pan of the
puz.zle and you need to hear the team· s discus~
s1on about Lhe topic to push the research fo rward."

Alston· s work centered on identifying small
c1garette fi lter particles in the tissue of cancermfected lungs. "I can remember making cuts
m a lung wilh a r.u.or blade and looking at it
under a mtcroscope." he said. "I fo und that this
kind of work hadn't been published. No one
had ever thought of it before."
After graduating in May, Alston plans on
going to graduate school. His long-term goal is
to beeome a practicing M.D. who does re-

search as well. "! g01 the big picture last
summer. This is definitely the lcind of work 1
want to be involved in."
Another program that thrives at UB each
summer is the University Women and Minority Research Internship Program. John Staley,
program director and rnastttofConlP. Maloney
College at UB, said that the program offers a
wide variety of on-site experiences for students whose majors range from architecture to
education.
''We place people within the university
setting and outside of it as well," he said. "'The
primary purpose of this program is to encourage people to attend graduate school. We place
them in settings where they may function like
they would as graduate students."
he program, which is funded by a grant
from the U.S. Deparunent of Education.
runs for etght weeks. pays students a S1.600
supend and includes room and board in Lhe
umversity dorms. he said. "We take about 25
stude nts each year. Most students come from

T

Buffalo. bul we've had a few from R.lT.

(Roches ter Instit ute of Technology) and
Harvard. And we runcareerplanningseminars
every Wednesday afternoon that address gr.tduate school preparation. assertiveness. personal
ach1evement and managing time and money."
For Raynard Woods. a UB senior in electri cal engineering and a student in the program
last year. the summer program ufforded him a
great look into the world of engineering research and computer programming. "My experience in the program worki ng wilh Dr.
(Raj) Acharya (assistant professor of electrical
and computer engineeri ng) helped me get a job
that I'll be starting when 1graduate this May."
He said that program forced him to function
independently as a student and scholar. "They
allowed me the freedom to choose the professor I wan~ed to work. with. And that experience
showed me how to pace and motivate myself
when doing rt:search . You've got to set your
ow n pace
Woods hopes to be accepted into the Edison'
Engineering Program. which is an offshoot of
General Electric Aerospace at Virgi nia Polytec hnic institute.

Career Planning &amp; Placement
holds awards program
11le c:- .......... and Placement Office at UB presented its 1993 Employer of the
Year Award to the Williamsville Central School District and to Electronic Data Systems

in an awards progntm on April 27.
The third Student Employee of the Year Award was presented to Stephen Palascianp.
The Williamsviile Central School District and Electronic Data Systems were selected
to share the 1993 Employer of the Year Award based on their extensive involvement with
UB' s acade mic and student services areas.
Special ac knowledgment was given to the support and generosity of the late Howard
Welker. the school district' s superintendent.
Palasciano. a junior work.ing toward a bachelor of science degree in elecuical
t nginecring. is part-time student office manager in the Customer Service Department of
Uni versity Facilities. He was selected for the award for exemplifying excellence in his
work and for his !ICJldemic and extracurricular pursuits.
Certificates of Appreciation were awarded during the program to Sylvia Nadler of
Compass House and Rudy Tichy of Twin Village Music for individual contributions
helping UB students achieve academic and employment goals.

TH!CS. RESEARCH and their relationship 10 rescan:h applications
in clinical interventions was the subject of a keynote speech by John
Banja of Emory University Saturday at a
retreat held by the Center for Behavioral and
Social Aspects of Health (BASAH).
Banja. associate professor in the DepartmcntofRehabilitation Medicine. Emory Uruversity School of Medicine, spoke on
"Bioethics and the Myth of Value-Free Science" at the session he ld at the University Inn
and Conference Center. The group included
facu lty. professionals and students.
Banja discussed valuative parameters, including social, political and economic considerations that affect allocation of resources for
resean:h as well as the results of research.
Among the topics cove~ was the role of
theresean:hpowerbrokcrs: who they are. how
they decide where the money goes. and the
way their political philosophies affect whether
resean:h is done. The use of fetal tissue was
cited as one example of the politics of research
issues. During the Reagan years. fetal tissue
research was banned; under Clinton, the ban
suddenly has been lifted. Banja pointed ouL
Factual or theoretical studies tell us not

wlwweougbl

E

10 do but what

Is fact. Banja
said. The end
use ofresearch

may nounatch
the intent of
theresean:hcr,
he pointedouL
Researchers
who di scovcml the technology that led
10 thedevelopment of the
atomic bomb
were interested in understanding a scientific
phcnomcnon, he maintained.
Decisions on the outcomes that are gmng
to count as "valuable.. are going to have an
exttaondinary effect on choices for medical
procedures in the fu ture, Banja said. Which
results are going 10 be paid for and what value
systems will prevail? Will the emphasis be on
preventive measun:s'? If there is a choice between giving a cane or a knee operation. who
decides and how? If the patient is 75. the
decisionmaybeiO offu the cane.

OBITUARIES

Peter A Casagrande, orthopedic surgeon
...._ A. C

•• dJ , 74, an orthopedic surgeoo and former cbief of Hand Setvice
81 Buffalo General Hospiw, died in the hospital April 28 after a lengthy illness.
A Buffalo native and a graduate of the UB medical scbool, Casagl1llldc was an assistant
clinical professor of surgery at the medical school and had served as lll1lloPedic coosultant
to the Buffalo Sabres.
He IOM&gt;CI in the U.S. Army Medical Corps for two yearo and was ~11o capcain
in 1946.
Casagl1llldc, who was attcnding orthopedist at Buffalo General, Cbikhen's and Vf#l:ans' Hospitals before bis retirement in 1986, was chief of orthopedic surgery atSL1osepb
Hospital from 1960-65 and a consultant oo the clinical staff of Roswell Park Cancer
Institute. At Buffalo Gcnctal. he was president of the medical staff from 1978-79.
He was aboard member ofseveral community and professional orpnizllioos. including
the WNY Cerelxal Palsy Association, the New Yor!&lt; Slate Medical Society and the advisory
conuniu.e of the WNY chapter of the Andtritis and Rheumatism Foundalioo. He was a
board of exams ex~ for the American Board of Ol1hopedic Surgery; an associaJe
member of the Hebcrdcn Society and chief amo medical adviser for the clivi'soo of Social
Security.
A member of the American Medical Association, the American Rheumatology A.isociation, The American CoUege of Surgeons and the American Al:ademy of Ol1bopedic:
Surgeons, Casagrande had numerous publications and cooducted resean:b on dleumatoid
anhritis, anatomical replacements and osteoporosis.
He is swvived by bis wife, Janet; two daughters, Linda S. Lopian of Orcband Park and
Nancy A. of Amherst; a son, Peter A. Jr., ofTampa, Fill.; a brothel-, Alex, ofl.ockpmt; and
two gmndcbildren.
A memorial service was held in SL MichacJ and All Angels Episcopal a.Jn::b on May 1.

Benjamin H._Lyndon, former dean
ofUB School ofSodd Work
A _ . . . ..vice was beld Ap:il28 for Benjamin H. Lyndon. fOIJIIOI'dcanofthe
SchoOl ofSociaiWorl&lt; at the University at Butralil. Lyndoa. ~know~~ in lhc social
woddiejjl, died Apil26 in theRosaCop!on1ewisb 'Homdftu .~ He-'82.
Lyndooi:OCCivedaB.A.degrcefromMiamiUnivmity, Oxford,Ohio;'amull:rofsocial
work degree from Calle-Western Reserve Univmity in CleYC!anll and bis P!LD. in social
service administration from the University of O!icago.
He came to UB in 1956 from New Yen Uruversity, wbOte be had developed the social
wen program.
After Lyndon retired from UB be continued to. teacb - Wayne-Slate University in
DelroiL He also CSiablished a social wodc program ar Brocq,on Slale Collep and was
professor emeritus 81 Buffalo State College.
'
He is swvived by his wife, 'Clan!; a son, N'ocbolas, of Brooklyn; two clougllas. Lcxa
Kahn of New York City .and Elizabelb Kij of Teaneck, NJ.; and four pmdc:hildlen- •

Hans J. Wl/kem', professor emeritus ·
..._ J. W...,·71, a professoremcritus'81UB and aresearcb scientiJI at RosweD
Parle Memorial Institute, died April24 in Buffalo General Rospiw after a brief iJipess.
Wilk.cos, a nali_ve of Escbersbausen, Gennany, was a gnoduatc of the Hannover .
Veterinary CoUege and opc&lt;:aled a veterinary jnCticc in Gcrmiqy uatil!953. fleame to
Buffalo that year, and worked as a research 9cieotisl a1 ~ Ulllil 1964 wbeG be
~the faculty of the UB School of Pharmacy. He retired in J98L SW'Vivors,include a
SISter, Mary, ofHolzmindcn, Gcnnan,Y: a sOn, Klaus ofWcstFal!s and twograadcbildren.
Burial was in Griffioo Mills Cetiteltry, West FallS~
'~
•

�.......

&amp;

~--.-~

SUFFERING FROM
BOOK HUNGER?
Sate Yoanelf at oar
ANNUAL FEEDING FltEKlYll

III.IIIPI: !6"' Ill
Nll-•1•1111'1:
Ill

!D"'

Scholar-athlete
kee s life in balance
Robert Hermanet juaJes dual
In art and IINIIketlng
lly RICHARD DEJTSCH
Reporte&lt; Contributor

W

HETHER HE'S poised
over a drafting table or
swimming the final lap of

the 400 individual med·
ley. Roben Hennanet i&gt;
known for his balance and consistency.
A varsity swimmer who will graduate this

May with a degree in an and marketing.
Hermanet can be seen hitting the Alumni Arena
pool before dawn and
the books hue into the
evening. II is a regimen
he·s lmown foc the past
three year.; at UB and
the 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld Faiipon
native says it has kept
himhonest '1tkeepsme
doing what I'm supposed to be doing." says
Hermanel "If I know I
have swim prac6&lt;x the
next day, I'm not going to go oot"
He transferred to UB in the fall of 1989after
a tumultuous freshman year at Bowling Green
University, where he did not like his coach.
Hermanet originally planned to major in
biology and minor in art, but changed to communication design in his sophomore year.
"Design is just solving problems. It 's hell
working it through, but the satisfaction you get
when you're done makes il worth it Art forme
has a l&lt;lltodo with exploring your inner person;
it 's therapy for the soul."
. Swinuning is Hennanct'stherapyfochisbody.
Although then: have been times he has felt like
quitting. swimming has taught him the value of
consislency. '1t was wonh i~" says Hennanct '1
love kteping in shape. It helps yoo manage your
time and it gives yoo balance every day bcaluse
every day yoo 'redoing somclbing the same."

UPITAIRI CLEARANCE CENTER
30% OFF · Non-Members
40% OFF -Members

maJor

Hermanet holds UB's sc hool record
(4:08.47) for the 400 individual medley, considered the toughest event in swimming. 1be

Meet

S.USAN HOWE

swimmer uses all four major strokes--butter-

fly. backstroke, breaststroke and freestyleover 16 grueling laps.
"Seeing that makes it all wonh it. I think it's
a unique pacing game," says Hermanet. "With
the 400 1M you have to switch and get into a

poet and UB Professor

FIUDAY, 7 MAY, ; -7 pm
11 a olpliDJ 6 rocepdoa celebntiDJ peblk:adon

different mind-set. You know what your

ofllerlatestWO&lt;tt

sLrengths are. You koow when to use them. All

The Birth-mark

my strokes are pretty much the same level. I
don't have this one fantastic stroke. My balance makes me good··
Balance is irnpooant to Hermanet. A top
student. he juggles a dual major in two very
different disciplines. "I've got the business

(WesteyM lJiwenly Press)

pan of my life. the an pan of my life, and then
I come to the pool and that· s anOiher release for
me." says Hermanet. "lt'sgood to be balanced
in all those differenl things. I guess they relale
to make me a whole person."
Last year at the annual athletic awards bencfi~
he received a scholar-athleleaward in r=gnition
of his oommitmcnt to exocllence in bolh the

lRIAD

classroom and the pool.'1 see my life as evolving
and my goals changing. oot at a cmain poin~ but
grndually," he says. "When I stanedoollege I was
a biology major and an an minOI' and now I'm
really interested in marketing ...
e hopes to oombine bolh disciplines as a
markding/design liaison. Hamanet plans
to dive into the WOI'king world shortly after graduation. "I think that I would like to get into the real
world and WOI'k for awhile and see what it's like,"
says Hermanel '1 want tii try somclbing new."

2 Bedroom/2 Bath or I Bedroom/! Bath

He says he may train foctriathlons. the arduous
sport where an athlele competes in three separate
sports-running. swimming and bicycling--over
one grueling compelition. "b fascinales me, the

1420 MILLERSPORT HIGHWAY
WILLIAMSVILLE, NY 14221

H

APARTMENTS

wbolebalanceofi~"saysHermanel

(Adjacent to the M arriott)

Washington Post reporter here as CASE Fellow
W..........,,._,...,..._Nancy Lewis
has been on campus meeting with UB faculty
this week as a media fellow under a program
developed by the university's Division of Advancement and. Development and the Council
f&lt;ir Advancement and Suppon of Education
(CASE). Lewis is exploring the topic. "Violence Within the Family," in the fellowship
sponsored by the_University News Bureau.
Lewis, a l'osl siDff manherfor 12 ycars.joiJ¥:&lt;1
the newspaper as night editor oo the metropolitan
desk and has been a reportor since 1986 oovering
''cops and oourts." Rrthe pa&lt;t 15 months. she has
bocrt covering thejuvatilejustice healTh: District
of Columbia. she says. is oot only seeing tmn:
homicides. but tmn: homicides in which the alleged killer is a youth.
She is participoling in the CASE Fellowship to
get a bet1cr harxlle oo how the pllcnomMCil she is
witnessing in her job can be pr=nlCd and how

youths accused of these crimes can be bet1cr
handledoncethey're inthecriminaljuslicesysiCm
UB is one of only two schools approved to
offer two such fellowships. A fellow from the
Minneapolis StarandTribunewilloome to UB in
the fall to WOI'k in~ area of human rights issues.
Among faculty Lewiswilloonsultare:Owles
Ewing, professor of law and adjunct professor of
psychology. who is lead faculty .manheron the
CASE Fellowship; Anthony Graziano, professor
of psychology and oo-dircctor of the Research
Center for Children and Yooth; Bruce Jackson.
Distinguished Professor of English and direc1or
of the Center foc Studies in American Culture;
Howard I:l&lt;uck. aSsistant profesoor of social
work; Simon Singer. profesoor of psychology;
Murray Levine. profesoorof psychology. adjunct
professor of law and oo-dircctor of the Center roc
Children andYouth; Gary Collen. clinical associate professor of psychiatry and pedialrics.

5 M I NUTE WALK TO CAMPUS

Ideal for Proftssi(fflll/s and Students
Shon renn leasing available
.&amp;

S~CURITY ENTRA.NC!!;
WITH INTERCOM

6.
A

AIR CONDITIONING
STORAGE AREA S

INCLUDED

A

TRAS H CHUTEli

.A

LAUNDRY ROOM S ..ON I!: A C H

A

DISHWASHI!"Rti

P'LOOR

·a

GAR BAG I!

DISPOS ALS

A

CABLE TV

Please contact the Property Manager
MONDAY- FJUDAY 8:30- 5 : 00, 688-4503
SATURDAY. tO:OO- 3:00

�_,.,.._..,_u

6

.
___
---.........
c_..,...._..,....
•n••~

'

flnw-llelectblc

c-...-

Silvio Micali. l.obonOory for

ComputcrSclerxz.MIT. t•

KnoJ.. Nonlt Campus. 3,304;.0 p.m.

-

-...cALM olecular Medwllmll of
TnalcriptiooaJ Rqulalloa "'
y-, Dr. Kevin StJUhl. Dept. of
Biolosial O&gt;omis1ty ond Mol&lt;cullt l'lwml&lt;:olotiY. Harvard

Univ. 121 Cook&lt;. Nortb Campus.

4p.m.

~!~Wende. Sootb Campua.
Aa~ot·"-A.d"Op­

..... Gorys.._,diftaor,
perfCJnDiaa- o( Gilbert .t
Sulli- ~ Suoponllnd
Moore. Sloe C&lt;to1ctcrt Hall North
~ 8 p.m. Toclca" sa. S6,
IIIIAIILATKIIII'II ....
IJtl: Tbe Yar 'l1utl Pullk

~~?;'2:_ey
Nonlt Campua. II :30 p.m. Ad-

miaaioo. lUO, UB students:

---For..,..

$3..50,
infonnalioo eall ~5-2957 .

~~
leA......_,
__

~'""""""'"'~
rio
and Host, Andrew G. Plaut.
M.D.. professor of medicine,
Tufts Univ. School of Medicine.
125 CFS Addition. Sooth
Campus. 4 p.m.

I0 Minutes from UB!
Elevators!
Quiet Park-like Setting!

-~
T he Elfoct at Corticooterokt
Blndin&amp; Globulin oa tbe Pbar-

DUICOkiDetlcland

l'barmocodpwnia o(

Pr&lt;d.-.., Hui Oloog Ko,

Care-free Life Style!

graduat&lt; srudenc UB Dope. of

Activities Director &amp; Program!
I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

Ptwtnaceutica. S08 Cooke. North
Campus. 4-5 p.m.
~ITAIUAMI

TIIIIIAPBifiCSI..ICn.E

1.!0 l/e )'er Noad Amherst
-WElL-DAY

836-6861
fill/;• Fu misbetl CorporateSuites
Al.ro AriGilahli!

l'rofessumally Mmwged by

SIARA MANAGEMENT

SATURDAY

THURSDAY

6

"'-ntatlons by a......u Fe~
lows, Thomas Lock. M.D.
("ModulaJion of VisuaJ Respon·
sivcneu in the 1balamus by Be-

~· o(ParitbiJoo 'J
Dioeaoe, Teren&lt;% Fullenon,
Ptwm.D.. UB and Millan!
Fillman: Hospito.l. 248 Cooke:.

North Campus. 5,30-9,30 p.m.
Sponsored by the Scbool or
Phannocy.

M.D. ("H,O,-Induced Type II
Pncumocyte Oysfunc1ion: Role
of Poly (ADP-ribose) Polyme~" ) ; Jay Zt:linski. M.D.
("Variation in PKC Expression as
a Funclion of Differentiation in

HT29 Colon Carcinoma
ee11n . 125 CFS Addi ·
uon. South Campus.

I ,30-3,30 p.m. Sponsored by the School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

NJCAA Tt"'&lt;k/FFeld Cbampiooshlp. UB StMiium. 8 a.m.·
6p.m
WCIPEIIAAII Evmmaot"Fun-Act" ~

...., Gary Bwps, di=tor.
performi"i wortt.s of Gilbert &amp;
Sullivan, Johnson, Sungaard and

Moore. Sloe Concert Hall. North
Campus. 8 p.m. Ticltcts' $8 , S6.

$4.

WAll LATE NITE fiUI
1991 : Tbe y..,. That Ploolt
Broke, di=ted by Dave Martey

havioral State"); Karin Klmg.man.
M.D. ("Furtha Stud;.. of the
High Molecular Weigh' Outer
Membrane Protein of Morax~Jlo
catarrha/is"); Bonnie Hudak.

AnttniC IVIJIT

Woklman Theater, 112 Nonon

FRIDAY

7
-

I'IIUMACY IIDEAIICH
P ilot Proje&lt;t to Establish an
Antirdroviral St.rum Coocent,..tloo Otuabose, Corn:latloo
With Clinical Outrome, Heidi
Chiang. Ptwm.D. candidale. 371
Cooke. North Campu.. 8 Lm.

ClltAL IIIOLOQY . _
Acquired Salivary Pdlicles

Modulo.. Aclbeaion of Cuuli4a
alblauu tD Poly Methyl Metb-

Krylate. Mira Edgerton, D.D.S..
UB Dope. of Oral Biology. 215
Foster. South Campus. Noon.

North Campus. II ,30 p.m. Admission. S2.SO. UB sruderus ~
S3.SO. non-srudents. For mon:
information cali64S-29S7

MONDAY

10
1'0-YComporoth~

Mdobollsm o(

- . Py.- in Flsb and
Momma1ion S:rste-. Hansh
Sikb. Pb.D.. director, G..at
Lakes l.aborolooy, Buffalo Stat&lt;
College:. 125 CFS Addition.
Sooth Campus. 8'30 Lm.

--- -SOCIAl. AND N£VEJmYE

Journal Club. 252A Farber
SoothCampu.s. I2:J0-1 :30p.m.

MAnKMAncs COLI.OQUIUM
Representations o( F"mite

l.oogtb of tbe Poio&lt;ari Group,
Prof. Clulrles Conley. MIT. 103
Diefendorf. South Campus.

3 p.m.

Pin&amp; Ge. graduate student. UB

Dope. of Medicinal Chemistry.

114 Hoc:hstettc:r. North Campus.
3 p.m.
AnttniC EVEJn'

NJCAA Track/F'IOid Championship. UB Stadium. 4-6:30
p.m.
COLI.OQUIUM

AppllcatiollS ol Transitloo
Metal Nitrogen and 0.,...,
Donor Complexes to Problems
in Coonllnation, Orpoometallic and Materials Cbemistry,
Prof. K1m R. Dunbar. Michigan

-Sta~

Univ. 70 Acheson. !)outh

Campus. 4 p.m.

lalfilll
.1':. . .
UB Stadtum is home 10

NJCAA events Friday
and Salurday

of Physiology, Cokndo St.atc
Univ. G26 Fatltcr. Sooth Cam·

pu.. 4 p.m. Sponsored by UB
Departments of Biochemistry.
Biophysics. P!wmacoloaY and
Physiology.

MEDICIIjAL CIEMISl'IIY

~ISl'IIY

actEJmST1I
FUoctloool DomolnJ ol Voltagopted Caldum ClwlDels, Kun
G. Beam. Pb.D.. professor. Dept

Tbe Blrtbtnarlt, essays by Su san Howe, UB professor of Eng lish, whose boot has been
cal~ "one: of America's coven
triumphs of poetry.- Talkina

Leaves Boobtore, 3l44 Main
Sc, Buffalo.
5-7 p.m.

-atUDY~

F1D111 Studoat Sbow, fetllllring
worits in film, video and dtgitaJ

MA-nes a.acnM£
Geoenllzod Ceatrol Extellsioas, Prof. Max Kelly, Univ. of
Sydney. 103 Diefendorf. Sooth
~. 4p.m.

-

~AMI

~~IS:1VRE

J ooepb E&amp;berid&lt;, an:hin:ct and
199~ Pean:e Visiting Chair. 30 I

Crosby. Sooth Campu.. 5,30 p.m

TUESDAY

n
-

•-•••n~­

ADA, provisictm C&lt;liiC&lt;fl&gt;illi both
TnNpoitalioa aadTdocornmUni&lt;:atiooa ....... n..c buildini.
3108 Main St. 1-4 p.m. Co-spon-

�_,

__

s.-Howetoetcnnew
bookMIIJ7
A

new publication by Susan Howe.

a member of 1he UB English lac- ~--•
ulty. will be showcased May 7 at a
bool&lt;slgning hosted by TaIking Leaves
St. , Buffalo.
~· a UB professor of English crttically hailed as ·ona of
AAlerica s covert t11umphs of poetry,· will sign copies of The
Birthmarl&lt; from 5-7 p .m . The new book of essays is publtshed
by Wesleyan Unl'l8fslty Press.

Howe began her car- as a vtsual artist, but her canvases gradually became sites fo&lt; 1he written word. Her books
tncluda "The Uberties,· "Pythagorean Silence" and "The
Defenestration of Prague.· She is best i&lt;rl&lt;7Ml, however fOf
her acclaimed critical study. "My Emtly Dickinson," wh.;h IS
cons1dered a landmark 1n creatrve sctK&gt;tarsh1p

sor&lt;d by the Ncoghborhood Legal

Services, the WNY Chapter of
Self-Help for Haru of Heanng
Persons, and the UB Unton of
SludenU with Disabllaues. For
reglSlnltion informaoon call
836-0822 (Voict or TDD)

WEDNESDAY

~

~-

Tahk, duft'tor, BuffaJo State Col ·
lese An Conocrvatioo o.,..
Albright -Knox An Gallery For

informatino con1ac1 Dr
Ramesh Shah at 439-3020
mort:

-WEll PAliK STAn
Adenovirus [ l A Oftto Targets

Recutatory

W hither Democr'IICy in Poland:
Who Sb.aU Hold Power? Jacek
Wasilewski , Ph.D.. D.Hab.. asso-ciate professor or sociology.
Jagicllonian Univ. Butler Auditonum. 140 Farber. South Campus.
7:30p.m. Sponsored by the UB
Council on lnt.emauonal Studies

FRIDAY

-~J.aCTI!IIIE
A..p«&lt;5 of Ar1 and Artlfoct
COOSft"Vatioft, Dr. F. Ouistopher

Growth

-

-LECnJIIE

and Prog,ams

AUOCIA,_ OF IIUUIICH

-

School of MedJcme and Biomedical Sciences.

Proteins,

Dr Anlofuo Giordano. Fels Rc: ·
search lnsmutt. Ptuladelphta
Htl lc:bot Auduonum, RPCI
12 30 p.m.

~

OH

P artne:rs ol AJcoboUc:s: Assessmut or Coping Skilb and lmplicatiom for TrUtment, Roben G Rychwik... Ph .D . Research
I nst1tutt on Addicuons I021
Mwn St. Buffalo LJO p.m Cosponsored by the Rehablluat1on
Contmumg Educauon Program/
Reg1on II. UB

~!:::' I'HY.IOLCMIY
Rolf of 0 1 on lbe Transition ot
Gas Excbanre from Placenta to
Lunc 11 Birth. Miriam
lilctins.ky. 108 Sherman. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
OPUS: CLAUIC&amp; RECITAl.

Maektrom Pt.rtuJSion Ensem ble. Bob Accun;o, Enc
Blodgeu and Gary Rutkowski, 1n
worts by Friedman, Samuels and
J~ . Allen Hall. South Campus
7 p.m.
.

SATURDAY

1J

·~

CUnical Utilizalioo or Positron

1~
--

TEAC-INntE
~'lOllY KT1lNG

F...tbo&lt;k lo Cllnfcal Medical
F..duc.atioo,'Rosea.nnc Berger.

M.D.• as;sociate dean for Graduate Medical Educaoon. UB Dept.
of Family Medicine: J. Ronald
Gentile. PhD., professor. Counscling and Educational P5ychol ogy. UB Groduau: School of Edu cation: and Ridlard W.
Schifcling, M.D., assistant profeuoc, UB [)rept. of Medjcine.
Beck Hall. Soulh Campus. 8: 1510:30 Lm. Admiuion: $ t5. For
registration information contact
Paulme Slalker u 829-3176.
Sponsored by the UB Primary
Can:~ Cen&lt;cr and lhe

s.mc.. a.-retolD

--~n:quiz&lt;d
For mcft information c::owct

l'llricia Kruppll829-3t76. Co~by !he Health SeMces
R.acart:lll'nlpm and !he UB
School of Mc&lt;ticinc and BKxnc&lt;fical Scicncos.

Emission T omography,

Myrwood lle&lt;ozri. M.D..
Jayakumari Gona. M.D.. M1chael
Haka. Ph.D.: Randall Hawk.ms,
M.D.: Brian Murphy. M.S.: Joseph A. Prezio, M.D.: Wilham H.
Theodore. M.D.; Henry Wagner,
M.D.. others. Univ. Inn and Con~ere~ Center. 2401 N. Forest
Rood. Amherst. 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
A dmission: S95, physicians: $50,
technologists, professionals: $35.
s.ideots. students. Co-sponsored
by the Center for Positron Emis·
,; on Tomography. For-registra·
ti on infonnntion contact Mable.
uB Conferentt Operations Offi cc, 31-l Crofts Hall.

"'

MONDAY

17

p.m. Admiaaioa (meludco ~&lt;q ­
.,... speakcr/dinocr): $80, pro(colioaals; S60, mcdicaJ . . . . and fuU-&lt;imc IIUdcla. ~
b'alion ~ Fe.- more information contact Patricia Krupp ..
829-3t76. Co-ljiC)IIJ(nd by the
Health Services Rosean:h Procrom and the UB School of
Medicine and BKMllCdical
Sciences.
_ ., CUUM:a acrTAI.
""'"""'
" " - plaoo,
woru by "
Beethoven.
Brahms and
MUSIOfg&gt;lcy. Allen H&gt;ll. Soulh
Campus. 7 p.m.

THURSDAY

20
-·-

~--­
H..W. s.mc.. Reoearcb lo

TUESDAY

1~-·-

Hoolth Services R......-ch lo
Clloical Medicine, Gonion H.
DcFriCS&lt;, Ph.D.. and Edward H.
Wagner, M.D. Urtiv. Inn and
Conference Center, 2401 N. For·
est Rd., Amherst. 8:30 a.m.-4;30
p.m. Admission: S.SO. professionals; S35. medical residents and
full·time audents. Precgistntion
required. For r1101t: information
contact Patricia Krupp at 8293 176. Co-sponsor«! by the
HeaJth Services Research Program and the UB School of
Medicu-.c and Biomedical
Sc1ences
PHARMACY SYMI'OaiUM

Estrogen R~ plattm~nl
T'berapy. Rochester Thruway
MamotL S1S1 W. Hennena Rd.,
Rochester 9 a.m ·2:30p.m. General reg1suauon fee. SJO: members, Pharmacists Auociation or
WNY . S20; ptwmocy teSI~nLIIii ,
Sl5; studenb, SIO. For more
mformat1on ca11645 -3931 .
DOMATOLOQY

HUCLEAit MEDICINE

T HUR SDAY

H..W.

CllnlaoJ Modldno, Harry A.
Sultz, D.D.S .. MPH, Gonion H.
OoFricac. Ph.D. and Edwanl H.
Wqncr, MD. Univ. 1m ond Conf...,..,.Cenlcr,2AOI N. -Rd.,
Amh&lt;nl8:30 a.m.-4:30p.m. Admission: S50, pro{essMloals; $35,
mcdicolraidcnu and full-&lt;imc

-.u"Y C A l l E - -

14
----IIUUIICH

-·-

..,_.,.

~C!WE

Penpectivn: oo Bullous Diseast, Robcn E. Jordon. M.D..
professor and chairman. Dept. of
Dermatology. Un~v ofTeus
Med1cal School at Houston . Sw1rt
Auditorium. BuffaJo General
HO!IIpltal 3 p.m

DEIIIIEI! RECITAl&gt;
Thomas Gentry, baritoM. B:urd
Rec1tal Hall, 2SO Bautl. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.

W EDN ESDA Y

19

Clinfcal Modidne, Michel A.
lbrah;m, M.D.. Ph.D., David G.

Kleinbaum. Ph.D .. and Harry A.
Sulu.. D.D.S., MPH. Univ. Inn
and Conference Center. 2401 N.
""""'RD.. Alrlhcm. 8:30a.m.9:30p.m. Admission: S.50. pro-fessional$; SJS, medical residents
and full-time srudc:nts. Preregistration required. For more information contact Patricia Krupp at
829-3176. Co-sponsored by the
Hcallh ScrvH:es Rcscan:h Program and the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences.

-·-

- . u - y CAllE--

s.mc..

Hoolth
R....-cb lo
COnical Modldno, M;ctoel A.
lbnhim. M.D.• Ph.D.. David G.
Kleinbaum. Ph.D.. and Joseph P
Morrissey. Ph.D. Univ. Inn and
Conference Center, 2401 N. For·
est Rd., Amherst 8:30 a.m.-9:30

GRADUATION
SPECIALS
until May 28, 1993
lnaight '"DX/33 •

$1,9U

Fully uppad.eablelntel80486 CPU •
32 bit VESA Local bus 1MB Grophics
Accelen10&lt; SVGA Cord•33 MHz•
otM8 rnemory •2S(JAJI hard drive •3.S ~
and 5.25" !-agio d&lt;Nity floppy- ·
14" NT SVGA moniiOr • Enhoncod 101l:ey l:eyboud . :1-button 1110\Me . MSDO;S.O• Wmdows3.1.
IO DELL .. $2,/U9

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Macintosh Color Qusic

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I'IIOfU-.u. STAn

-11!~
ProsenWioo ofOutst&amp;nd log
Sct-viceAwanl.s.Cen...-forTomorrow. North Campus. Noon·
2 p.m. Admission: SIO. For infor·
mation or raervations call
645-2003.
DIKAai!STATUANO
ntDIAI'IUT1Ca LECnJIIE

-

Ma..fta&amp;ement orCoogestiv~

Heart Failure:, David Kaucrad.
Plwm.D.. UB. 248 Cooke. Nonh
Campus. 5:30-9:30 p.m Sponsored by the School of Phannacy

FRI D AY

21

Attention Otfteii-Hyptf"''KKivily
Dbonlrr. Moot Court Room.
104 O'Brian. Nonh Campus
8:30a.m. Regssuution of S.SO
mcludes materials. luncheon and
coffee breaks. For ~ mfonna·
t1on contact the WNY Educational Servi~ Council at
. 645-2460.

--IN-Y
N euronal Domai.m: in Oev~ktping NtoCOr1ex and the Emer-Columnar Art.hitectu ~. Dr. Larry Katt, Dept of

or

Neurobiology. Duke Umv . Medical Center. 108 Shennan South
Campus. 4 p.m.

SATUI;tD AY

22

ATHUnC IIVDIT

W....., New Yori&lt; Trw:k Clu-

*- UB St.dium:- II a.m.-6 p.m.
Continued on

~:~~? -,;:;
Yariety

-..a

~ nce

Convenience

' '·"" ... x-'-

:

PHAIIIIAC'f RESEAIICH
DUDIK

Relationship 8dl4-'ftfl lntrac:ellular and Extnct:Uular
Zidovud loe a nd Zakitabine
Cooctntntioos, Dorea\ Lenmg.
Pharm.O. candidate 248 Cooke
North Campus. 8 a.m.

7

page 9

�_, _ _ ..,_Z7

8
NE\'I I~ RES EAR CH

. . . . . . . . . . iiiBOCIE
~ ~ Engllah. perfiot..
patad In a recei1t a.'*llr 011
~andlhliMsol

Healing" Ill
11)118Milaj
~olthe
~·

Assooiallon ol
America in ·
Allanta While
In Atlanta. she
also dis-cussed 'The
Cult of Elizabeth and the f'r!&gt;.
ductlon of Ellzabelhan Litemlure· and "Ki&gt;g t.sarss
Hysterical Text" at Georgia
Tech.
Bono, whO was a Melon FaclAiy Feb¥ 811-awrd bejors
joining 1he U8 faclAiy i11984,
OOids a OOctlral degee i1 English Iran Brown UrWersily.
She was mned associate professor i11986 Md v.tln 1he
SUNY Clwlceb's Awatd for
E&gt;ccellence i1 TeaciWlg In 1968.
She is 1he IIIJha ol Llletaty
Tfflf1SV8LIB/ion Frr:m V!wp&amp;J
Epic to~ Tmgic:tmecly along w4lh many Irides Md papss.

-

aECTRICAI.. AND COMPliTER

ENGINEERING
OM/I..............

...........

TIIIIIAL AI MIIIIIIHCII':
~.,. .

asslstanl prolessor ol electri-

cal Md~engiieemg.

Md his graQ.ialilstilert,,....
...... " - " ' CarpJar
Sdence, .... OI'QiriZir1Q' 8 oni&amp;day i1lemationsl Worl&lt;shop on
"Reasq1ing A.tlooJ Ftn:tion"ln
coo;.ncticn w4lh lhe "ANJ-«;
conference sponsored l7f 1he
American Association d Mificiallnteiigence, .A.dy 11 In
Waslling1m, D.C.
The Natlonal Conference on
Artificlal lntelligenca Is 1he
primary iarg&lt;Hlcale forum
where 1he highest qualily rew
research in AI is pr~
and discussed.

Allin
s
Scientists look at dangers posed to airplanes
.by clouds of ash from exploding volcanoes
llyiUBI-.wM
News Bureau Staff

A

Bursik. who noted that several occurred during the 1991 eruption of
Mount Pinatubo in the Philippiocs.
Oeaning ash from an aiJplane
after such an incident is difficult,
often n:quiring disassembly of the
planeandreplacementofmanycomponcnts, including engiocs.
Bur.;ik and his colleagues are developing ways to calculate how much
ash may be found in different areas
of a particular cloud.

S IF HIJACKERS
and fare wars weren't
enough, most air trav-

elers probably aren't
aware of the potential
threat volcanicplurnes,or ash clouds,
pose to airplane engines.
Researchers at UB are developing methods that may allow airlines
to better determine when volcanic

plumes pose a danger to jet planes.
information that could potentially
save the airlines millions of dollars.
"Right now. if meteorological
data says that a volcanic plume is in
a particular flight path, the pilot has
to change course and fly around it,"

he research team, which includes

from the University of
Tscientists
Island and the University of

Rhode

said Marcus Bursik. UB assistant

professor of geology. 'This increases
night time and it can cost a Jot of

money to reroute airplanes."
Concerns are not limited to flight

" ' - fly over YOicano In Alaska.

paths within close proximity to an

Administration in Washington, D.C.

exploding volcano.
Just last September. an ash cloud
from the eruption of the Spurr volcaoo
in Alaska drifted over Cleveland airspace---&lt;:OIISidered one of the most
crowded air corridors in the worldforcing airplanes to fly around it

to provide pilots. air traffic controllers. aviation engineel'3 and regulators with information on what

But while meteorologists may
know the path of a volcanic plume,

they are unable to detect its ash concenlration. a key factor in determining ira plume is dangerous.
Bur.;ik and other volcanologists
met recentJy at the Federnl Aviation

actually comprises a volcanic plume.
By studying the ash deposits of
old eruptions and correlating particle size with their distances from
the site of the volcanoes, Bursik and
his colleagues have found a system-

atic way to estimate ash concentration within clouds.

"Particles that have been ejected
into the atmosphere from explosive
volcanoes get into jet engines, tern-

porarily causing them to ·name out '
or stall," he explained
In 1989, a KLM jet flew into a
volcanic plume produced by an erup-

tion of the Redoubt volcano in

Alaska, Bursik said. Its engines
stalled and the jet fell through the ash
cloud from its cruising altitude of
25,000 feet to about 14,000 (eet in
eight minutes before the pilot was
able to restart the engines. Damage
to the plane was estimated at more
than $80 million.

"There have been a number of
very similar near-disasters," said

Bristol and Cambridge University in
the United IGngdom. has focused on
depositsfromaneruption5,000years
ago of Agua de Pau in the Azores and
from the 1980 eruption of Mount St.
Helens.
'The further away from the eruptiona deposit is. the lower its concentration of ash.'' Bur.;ik explained.
"We have come up with a physical
theory that describes how particles
of different sizes will fall during a
volcanic explosion."
The airline industry also is inlcrested in delmnining the polh of vok:&amp;nic plumes because of the amowu of
debris they can dump omo airports.
..Ash is worse than snow," said
Bursik, noting that following the recent eruption of Mount Pinatubo.
airportsinthel'hilippineswereclosed
for a week while personnel plowed
away the mountains of ash.
C

Computer systems that 'read' Chinese and Hebrew
among technology to be demonstrated at conference
IIJIUBI__,.
News Bureau Staff

G

ETIINGCOMPlJTERS
to ~land the infinite
varietyofloopsandcurlicues that make up human
handwriting will be the focus of the
ThinllnleinationalWorl&lt;shoponFrontiers in Handwriting Recognition, 1»ingheld for the first time in the United
Stales on May 25-27 at UB.
Hosted by the U.S. Postal Service-supportedCenteroffucellence
for Document Analysis and Recognition (CEDAR) at UB, the conference will ex pl ore the latest
approacbes to pen-based computing, interactive systems, off,linereading of handwriting and the problem
of teaching computers to read alphabets, such as Olinese, that have thousands of chan!cters.
Designated by the Postal Service
in 1990 to develop computer vision
technologies·.to help speed the processing of mail, CEDAR is recognized internationally for its work in
the development of off-line handwriting recognition technology.
'The main shoncoming of penbased computing lies in handwriting
recognition," saidSargurSrihari, UB
professor of computer science and
director of CEDAR "Th.is conference brings together the key research-

ers from industry and academic
institutions from all over the world."
The list of participants features

representatives of industrial and academic institutions, such as AT&amp;T
Belllabs,IBM,NECCorp., Toshiba,
Goldstar Central Research Laboratory, Paragraph International, Calera
Recognition Systems, Daimler-Benz
Research Center, the University of
Sussex , ~cole Pol ytec hnique~ontreal, George Washington University. the University of Toronto·
and the Japanese Ministry of Posts
and Teleconununication.
Keynote speakers will be JeanCiaudeSimon.presidentoftheParisbased A21A (A11ificial Intelligence
and Image Analysis). and Ray Morgan. manager of advanced research
at the U.S. Postal Service.

Among the highlights of the conference will be demonstrations of
varioushandwriting-recognitionsystems, including:
• A system developed by George
Washington University researchers
that teacbes the Hebrew alphabet by
acting like a personal tutor. It follows the strokes a student makes on
a tablet. suggesting ways to improve
the strokes and superimposing the
correct letter over the student's.
• A PC sysu:m developed by researchers at Taiwan's Industrial
Technology Research Institute that
recognizes Olinese characten.
• An initial version of CEDAR's
real-time. interactive system, the goal

SUMMER DELIVERY OF THE REPORTER
,-----------~--------,

F - , - wtoo wW be-a flf-.. this summer and
would like the surrmer issues of the Reporter mailed to their
summer address. are asked to provide this infoonation: Please
send coupon to the Rej:Jorter. 136 Grohs HaiL

-STREET AND NUMBER
CITY

STArt:

~~

1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

L-----------------~--~

of which is to read handwritten
phrases and sentences using language
oontex:t to improve word recognition. With a 21,000-worddictionary,
it recognizes c:unive words written
on a computer tablet and instantly
transforms them into printed words.
Once perfected. handwriting recognition techniques could lead to
dramatic, cost-saving changes in the
wayrnanybusinessesoperate.~,

ing mail delivery and autoniating the
most labor-in1a!Sive jobs like verifying signatures oo cbeclcs and reading completed tax forms.
They also could change the way
humansusecornputas.possiblydoing
away with c:ornpu1er keyboards. 0

�_,
CALENDAR

infonn.lioo 0001act MI. Eliza·

-

beth Enlci (829-2738).

continued from page 7

.._ ..... ...en.

AN_C_oadBWor
lllpU rwi'Giaod, Marian

WIDNISDAY

GnybowW, J.D., D.Hob" profeaor of CODititutiooal law,
l qiellooiao Univ. Butler AudiIOrium. 140 Farber. South Campua. 7:30p.m. SpollJO&lt;Od by lhe
UB Council on lno.m.tionai
Studies and Programs.

26
~

.... ___ ..

lily employoeo ood 10 lhe W caem New Yodc .,..,_.,ey. Tbo:
aix-rooolb initial memlxnhip ia
$40. Mcmbenhip .......U coa
$14 ev.ry oix moolhL """"arden ood pcnonal cb:cb

-.Jd be mode poyollle 10 lhe
Univ.nity II Buffalo Ttcrt Club. For funher informa.boa. &lt;001oa Bill Rice, president.

--11 645-3~ .

Cunem listiop of jobs in busi ·
DCSS

I'AIIII STAR

y..,. Cbapawl, Ph.D, Dept.
of Molecular and Cellular Boo!ogy, RPCI . HiUeboe Auditorium.
RPCI. 12:30 p.m.
_ , ., CUUICS IIKtfAL
Michod Cedric Smith, cullar,
works by Olopin, Villa-Lobos
and Tam:aa Alk n Hall. South

Campw. 7 p.m.

F RIDAY

~

NMh Campus. Caii645-2Z31
for more informauon.

JOBS
FACULTY

UII_,ATTitE-

4Ch Annual UB Nlpu at Pilol
Field. Pilot F,.ld. 7:05p.m. Ad·
m&lt;Sst&lt;&gt;n: S4. SJIO!lSOf'd by the
Professional swr Senatt Office
For mfonnat:Jon or reservations

THURSDA Y

call 645-2003

27

and industry, government,

heallh. education and non-profit
orpnizations, are avkilabie in
the OfflCC of Career Planning
and Placement, I5 Capen Hall.

NOTICES
VOWII1DIIS-.nFOit
IIAaiTATFOit~

CDJ.-.JU~

Studenu wiih.ing to volunteer for

S YIIPOSIUII
CY"k Fibrosis: Channel;.
Genes and Clinical Apoproac ~. speaker.; to include
Drucy Borow•t:J., M.a .. Dept of
~d1atncs. UB and ChiLdren' s
Hospual. Raym6nd Fri:z.ull .
Ph.D . DepL or Phys1ology and
BIOph )'S ICS, Umv or Alabama at
li1nmngharn . Lap-Chee Tsu1 .
Ph D ' Dept. or Gc:oetlCS, Hospl
tal for S1ck Childn:n. Toronto,
Pamc=.la DaviS, M .D .. Ph.D .,
Dept or Pe&lt;hatncs. Case We!item
Rese,....r Umv . and Rambow Babte!i and Children's Hospital
Rutler Aud1tonum. Farber Hall
South Campus I p.m. For more

Hab1ta1 for Humanity . an orgam1.ation committed to ehm1nating
poverty housing for low-incomt
families through rehabilitatmg or
building affordable housing. arc
asked to stop by Commumry
Act1on Corps (CAC) offices, 370
Student Umon.
TO.untlASTERS CWII

llle Uruversity at Buffalo Toa.o.tmaster.; Club meets 10 Room 200
of 1ne Commons. North Campus. on tilt second and founh
Tuesday of each month . Meet
.ngs, held from 5:30 to 7 15
p.m., adhere to a stnct agenda
and are h1ghly partJc&amp;patory
Memberstup IS open to umver -

-.n/~Prof.......
Ophlhalmolosy. Pcoting MF3027. 1Adu....--Butrlio ItoiCaJ"Ch Institute on Education for
Teacrung (BRIEl), Posti ng MF3028. Aaistut Pror....--Urol ogy. Posting MF-3029. Aaistut
Prof._-. urology (P&lt;diatric).
Posting MF-3030. Aaistul/
A.aoriat.e Proreuor-Medicine
(Gastroenterology). Posting MF303 1. Aaistut Prof.......
Medicine (Hematology), Po!!:ting
NF-3032. Assmani/Asoociat&lt;

Professor-Medicine

(Nephrology). Posting MF-3033.
Assistant Prof'tsSDr-Medicine
(Nephrology), Posting MF-3034.
Assoc:iatt(FuU Pror.._.·MediciJK, Posting MF-303.5. A.ssiJ..
tant/Assodatt Prof'eswr-Surgay. Posting NF-3036 Al&amp;islant
Prol.....-.Neuroiog, Posting MF3037, 3038 . ~Prol.....--~.

Post-

111g MF-3039. Asoiodatt/Full Pror.....--Pathology. Posting
NF-3040.
IIEHARCtt

Ci&lt;rt 11-SJIO"''""' Programs
Services/Purchasi ng. Postmg
MR-93039. Rein~rch Tec:bnici.an 11-B•ochemJcal Phannacol-

Help bt;ng

tl~

01)'. PooOoa llt-93040. Secre..,. 1-0ifiee or Mcdicol E'ducotioa. Jlootinallt-93041. Cieri&lt;
0 -&amp;cial ood Preventive Medicine, P&lt;lo&lt;iog IR-93015.
PilUS ......
Dlndor (SLl}-R&lt;Udeo&lt;W Ufe. Poctin&amp; fP3018. Snlor Applicatloas Aoolylt I (SL-4Komputiog and
lnrormatioo TedulolocY. Posling
f P-3019. Allillaot Vlco Praideot ror - ... - p.........,l
(SL-S, IDI&lt;nlaiPromo&lt;loo
OpportwtltyK&gt;ffiee of the Voce
President for Publk Service and
Urban Atraits. Posting IP-3021 .
AslistaDI to H...t or Acquisitlou (SL-J, lotaul Promotina Opportunlly)&lt;:entral
Technical Services. Uni~ty
Libnrics, Pnsong fP-3023. ~
nior Acodmtlc: Advioor (SIA,
lntau!Promo&lt;loo Opportunity).-Studen&amp; Services/Advisement. Engi.-ing and Applied
Sciences. Posting IP-3024. St-oior Applicatloas Anal}'ll (Sir
4, lotau!Promo&lt;loo Opportunity)-Computiog &amp;
Information Technology, Pcoting
NP-3025. LAN S}'ll&lt;ms Programmer Anal}'ll (SL-J, IDt&lt;rnal PromoiJon Opportunity)Computing and Information
Technology, Posting MP-3026.
Applications Anal}'ll (SL-J,
IDtau! Promnlioo Opportunity)-Computing and lnfOilJll,uon Tcch.nology, Posting MP3027. LAN S}'ll..,.. 5&lt;.1'1'-og.
Anal}'ll (SL-4, lotaul Promotion Opportuolty}-&lt;:omputmg and Information Technology, Posting MP-3028. Off&gt;«
SY"trru Sp«talist (SIA, lnt• rual PromoiJon Dpponunity)..COmputing and Jnforma llon Technology. Posting
•P-3029 ~farttding Dirt&lt;tor
(SlA}-Fine Arts Center. Postmg
•P-3016.

-Boll

CC*P£TTTI1I£ CI.AUIFIEII
CIVLMJMCE
Ktyboanl Sp«ialist (SG~)­
English. Line "20871 . Cltn t
(SG~-Un i ven1 ty Libraries.
Lme 1126382. 26270.

9

Law unit will honor five
as distinguished alwnni
lloe IIIIIL a.,t E. ......._ Harold J. Bcxeanaz. Ricllard M
Tobe. Pamela Davis Heilman and Wtlliam A. Niese tJa.e been
namod distinguished alumni by lhc UB Law Alumni Asoocialion.
The five will receive lhc award at lhc association's annual ~
and dinn&lt;r,IO be held beginning at 5:30p.m. on Friday, May 7, •
lhc Hyatt Regency Buffalo.
M~ U.S. bonkrupccy judge for lhc WCSliel'n Dislrict of
New Yark. is being to-.or.d "for his oonscienlious and diligmt
petformance in lhc judiciary." A mernbe.- of lhc UB law 9Cbool
Class of '59, he has served as a judge in U.S. Bankruplcy Court for
nearly 25 ye=.
Boreanaz. a memberoflhcCiassof'56, isa partnerin !he Buffalo
law firm of Boreanaz. Carra &amp; Boreanaz. He is being recogniud
"for his leadmhip by example as a privatl: pr.oclitioncr." Boreanaz
is a fanner sc:cn:taty and di=IOr of lhc WCSliel'n New Y ad Trial
Lawyezs Association. He WliS named Slate Criminal Practitiona-of
lhc Year in 1987 by lhc New Yad Sial&lt; Bar Association.
Tobe. Erie County cornmissiona for environrnoru and planning. is being to-.or.d "for his coounitment 10 public service."
Before joining Erie County govemmeru in 1988, Tobe was counsel
and chiefofstall'for 12 Y""" 101hc late slale Assemblyman Wtlliam
B. Hoyt He is a member of lhc UB law Class of '74.
Heilman. Class of '75. is a panner in lhc Buffalo law firm of
Hodgson. Russ. Andrews. Woods &amp; Goodyear. She is being
recognized ''for her many contributions 10 lhc beo.ennenl of lhc
community." A volunt=wilh lhc United WayofBuffaloandErie
County for more lhan 16 Y""f'. Heilman served as campaign chair
for lhc 1992 United Way campaign. and cunently is chair of lhc
board of directors and a member of irs exa:utive oomminee. She is
a fanner board member of lhc Housing Assistanc&lt; Center of lhc
Niagara Frontier. Inc.: lhc Community Music School. and lhc
Cenrer for Women in Managemenl at D'Youville College.
Niese.senior vice presidenl for law and human resources for n.,.
Los Ang•l.s Tvnes. is being to-.or.d ''for his exemplary petformance in business." A member of !he UB lawClassof'61. he is a
memhcroflhcboardofdin:ctorsofPuenreleamingCenrer. which
leaChes basic educaJ.ional skills 10 economically disadV!Ullag&lt;d
children. reens and adulrs; Lutherland oflhc W.,;.. anaganizJibon
of O&gt;ristian churches lhol manages a retimnent home for lhc
elderly. and lhc Los Angeles Counry Bar Foundation. a non-profil
corporalionlholprovideslegalsupponservia:siOihccommuruty.

world to Buffalo...

!J

UniYersitYGames
Buffcio'93"

~

@New'll:xklltlephone
Wilhlhe
-FMIIIyol~

S&amp;1pporl: Club'93
THE W ORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES:
The Best Athletes competing at the largest sporting event in the world this year.

D on't miss your opportunity to participate in the
Sports Spectacle of a Lifetime
Club '93 Membership Benefits Include:
Commemorative Gifts ~ Preferred Seating~ A Chance to Win Free Tickets

For Additional Information Please Contact Bruce Kolesnick at

645-292 ~--J

�Thirty young composers will come to UB
to learn, perform at June In Buffalo festival
11J PAliiiCIA - A N
News Bureau Slaff

Guggenheim,
other honors for
David Felder

liNE IN BUFFALO,oneof Amorica's

J

ambilioos oonternponuy music
festivals and lhe pr=iere festival of
ernczging"""""'""' in Nor1h America.
will oelebnw: its ninlh biJ1hday from
JWlC 7-13 by introducing American audiences 10
young"""""'""' ofWlCOfl1Jli'OI1l vision from
man: !han a dozen nations.
Foundodbylhedistinguish&lt;d American composer Monon Feldman. JUNE IN BUFFALO is
presentt:d by !he State University of New Yeric at
Buffalo and offer&gt; an environment unusually
conducive 10 open exchange among new canpa;en. !heir cstablishcd oontcmpornries and experieoo:d performer.; of new music.
Allhougholhernewmusicfestivalsareheldin
lhe Unitt:d SIBI&lt;:s. very few are deVOI&lt;d exclusively 10 lhe iniTOduction of new COI11p06CI"S.
Acrording 10 festival Artistic DireciO&lt; David
Felder, "lhooe !hat are don 'I f&lt;:a~~=oomposilions
and performances of !he quality you'U see here. I
can honestly say !here is nothing happening like
!hi.&lt;anywhere else in lhe Unitt:d SIBI&lt;:s."
Felder calls !his year's 30 &lt;Xllllp06&lt;r-participlllts. selec1fd duwgh oompetitive audition, "exln:rrdy gifled-4hc besl aup we've ever had,"
ooting !hat man: !han a lhiJd are from Asia. Europe.
Au.&lt;traliaorSoulh America Mootoflhem.despi!e
mo&amp;l

"This year; because of the
exceptional quality of
participan!s ·and faculty,
we've taken a major Leap
up in stature.
-DAVID FU.D£R

con:,•derdble dJstmct:JCKl m ~1r own nauons. have
never been hean:t in ttus country.
Aud1enccs will hear mus1c r.111gmg from
Europe's anu-nunimahsl "New CompleXJty" to
new fonn.~ . of elhen.:al nco-impres.siCKUsm m·
sptred by Japw.m ·s Takemit~u and wnucn by com-

poser.. from Spain. Great Britain. llal y. Auslmha.
Ko=. J;qxm.lhe U.S .. CanadaandSoulhAmerica.
The festJval has mt&lt;n.&lt;ivceducational and performance components. Six days of M:mi nars. symposiums. re:Jding&gt; of new work by perfonners
andconduelors.andn:conlingsess"'"'areooupled
wtth an ambitious l!vcning concen schedule.
"Most p.u1icipant~ and faculty compare

JUNE IN BUFFALO very favorably wilholher
festi vaJ s foremerging composers."says Felder.
"Thai includes Darmstadt, which is quite prestigious. Ahhough JUNE IN BUFFALO is
shoner, the work is of extraordinary quaJity

CLOSE

TO

NORTH

D
ER8

here and il' s given unusually fine performance.
n01 always the case elsewhere.
"JUNE IN BUFFALO has always been a
unique,importanlvenueforernczgingCOI11p06CI"S
of distinclion," says Felder. "Bullhis year, because of lhe exoeplional quality of participants
and faculty. we' velakcnamajor leapupinstalure.
II will he lhe best festival we' ve ever bad."

Compaaltloft F-"Y
David Felder. coordinator of the composition prognun at lhe Univenily at Buffalo, is a
major composer of the younger generation.
His work has been widely acclaimed and performed at leading inlernation.al venues for new
music. including Darmslad~ Huddersfield.
Brussels, Ars Electronica. Aspen, Geneva and
Rav inia. II has been commissioned by leading
ensembles. orchestras and individu.al performers here and abroad. He has received many
awards and commissions, including six Nauonal Endowment for !he Ans fellowships.
and others from the Rockefeller, Koussevitsky.
Fromm and Guggenheim foundations.
He: joms a senior composition faculty that
mcludes Pulit7.er Pril..e-winning composer and
MacArthur Fellow Charles Wuorinen, one of !he
moSI emincnl prolific and widely perfooned
hvmg composers. Wuorincn has won dozens of
major pri1..es and awards for his work. including
gmnl&lt; or fellowships from !he Rockefeller,
Guggenheim. Ingram Merrill. Fromm ,
Kou=vi!Skyand Foo:l foundations. andlhe NEA.
They will be joined !his year by performer/
composer DonaJd Erb. whose outlitanding career is marked by his explor.n.ion of a w1de
mnge of Slyles. from u-Jditionallo J3Z11D electronic performance. His honor. fea1ure major
national awards. including grants from !he Nauonal Council on !he Ans and !he NEA. and Foo:l
and Guggenheim foundation fellowships.
The founh member of !he 1993 composiUon
facuhy is Bernard Rands. one of !he most distinguished figures among his generationof composers and cum::ntly composer-in-residence with the
Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. His major
awards include !hose from lhe American Academy of Ans and l..eUC11i, lhe Fromm Foundation.

A N D

SOUTH

CAMPUSES

Spacious Home on Woodsbire South, Getzville
Beauliful3,000 sq. h. French pr&lt;Mncial home. Moin Door fe:uures an elegant en1rance
hall; large slUing room; dining room; kitchen wilh dining are:t; family room wilh WBfl';
laundry room; pantry; hall bath. Upsuirs h2s 3 12rge bedrooms and 3 baths. The
oversized I1I2SICr bedroom h2s an auached bath wilh a double jacuzzi. The guest
bedroom h2s an auacbed shower room. Full (dry) lnsement Patio and secluded, well·
shaded, spadous b:ickyard. Altlched double gang&lt;. Asiing 1169;000.

FOR SALE BY OWNER - Please Call 688-5268

lhe NEA and lhe 1984 PuliiZCr Prize in Music.
Ordle*lll ... .,......... ......... _ .
The final an:en will fealure lhe Buffido Philhannonic Ort:hcslra and world-remwned pen:ussionisl Sieve Schick in a perfmnanoe of worics
fealuring eleclronic JlC"'U'Sion. eleclric bass and
~~sounds. BIUSlitls' new music
ememble Trio Phoenix and New Yeric's Meridian
Brass Quinlet also will perform !his year.

......... IIIIIIIWiulll ........ _ .
The perfmnanoe faculty includes vinuosic
oellisl Josh
Gordan, bassiSI Raben Black, violinisl Katen
musician&lt;; of new music, including

Bentley, who has been a fealllted perf011ll01' at
major oonlelnpOrnry music festivals and wilh
major orchestras in lhe Unitt:d SlateS and Europe.
and lhe young Belgian pianist Luk •.
The faculty also will include nationally acclaimed pianist Anlhony de Mare; ~winning
pert:u&lt;sionisl Kirl&lt;.Brundage; Dutist Rachel Rudich.
acclaimed as a performer of great brilliarxx: and
sensitivity; Nardo Poy. who has held lhe prirx:ipll
viOla chair wilh many orcheslras; aw:ll'd-winning
guitarist David Slarobin, widely recognized as an
imponanl force in !he exponsion of guitar reperlOin:, and !he young French vio!iniSI David Wolf.
recipient of !he second prize in lhe 1990 East &amp;
West Anists International Audition for New YOI1&lt;
Debut and third prize in !he 1989 lntemalional
Carnegie Hall Competition for American Music.
Joining lhemare violinisll..tt Wilkins. founder
of New VOlt's Hampshire Siring Quane!: oboist
BrianGreene.oo-anisticdirec!orofSylvan Winds,
an anists~ in- residence group at the Wisconsin
Conservatory. and Olher nOiable performe11&lt;.
"-tunc~

Conductors
Conduelor.; will include Br-Jdley Lubman,
assiSianl conductor of !he Tanglewood Music
Center's Festiva1 of Contemporary Mus1c, direcloroflhe Slate Univer&gt;ity of New YOI1&lt; ru S100y
BrookOrcheslr.land acclaimedasoneoflhebest
young condoclor/oompose11i in America. He will
join conduaor/percussionist Jan Williams and
c'OOduelorlfluliSI Han•ey SoUbcrger. bOih distinguished conductor.; and perfonnersofcon!empor.uy music.

AVID FElDER. Birge-Cary OWr
in Music at the univenily, is among
146 scbolan, artists and scieolists
se~ 10 receive a 1993 fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
Felder, one of lhe leading American composers of lhe younger generation, is the artistic
director of !he innovative JUNE IN BUFFALO festival for emerging composers held
annu.ally at UB .
An associate professor of music, Felder
serves as assistant chair in the Department
of Music and directs !he program in composition .
He was among !hose selectt:d from this
year's field of2,989 applicants "on lhe basis of
(!heir) unusu.ally distinguished achievement in
the past and exceptional promise for fuwre
accomplishment"
Felder has also been selected as one of six
composers who will launch "New Residencies," a new national community-based program for orchestras, choruses, opera, dance
and !heater companies working in partnership
with local civic
'organiulioos.
Underitsauspioes, he will he in
residence from
1993-96 wilh lhe
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
lhe G=ter Buffalo Opera and
WBFO - FM .
UB'spublic radio
station. During
!hat time he will
rnD£R
compose a oonoeno for soloist
and orchestra and a one-ac1opera using advanced
video technology and perfooned by Philharmonic player&gt;.
The New Residencies program is funded by
Meet !he Composer, Inc.: The Pew Charitable
Trusts: !he Nati onal Endowment for !he Ans,
and !he Aaron Copland Fund for Music. Inc.
Felder' s work. featured at many of !he
leadjng international venues for new music.
has earned many gmnts and awards for !he
composer, including six fellowships from !he
NEA. a New York Stale Foundation for the
Ans Fellowship and two awards from the
Rockefeller Foundation.
Felder. who holds a dociDrdle from the
Uni versity of California at San Diego. has
taught there and al !he_Cleveland lnstirule of
Music and California Stale Univenily at LOng
Beach.

.

.••
~~

·~
·~

UB'S PREFERRED / DESIGNATED TRAVEL AGEN CY

AIRUNE / RAIL TICKETS / LEISURE-TOUR PACKAGES
CRUISES I BUSINESS TRAVEL I CAR RENTAL
HOTEL RESERVATIONS
GROUP / CONVENTION TRAVEL I SEMINARS
(INBOUND I OUTBOUND) / INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL
SPECIAL AIRFARE PROGRAMS

FIUI ncKn DILIYIRY

(71&amp;)633·3480
(lOr leisure """"')

·

IFOIIUSINESS IIAVR)

(716)878..0200
(foi busi.-. ...,.,.I

�_, _ _ ..,_aJ'

J1

Facui~&amp;Siafl
~Ill

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,..__~
far AtiiiMic .... C1# , _
I

0

The UB Alumni Association is calting for
nomtnallons of UB athletes, teams and indi viduals who have made outstanding conlributions to
the university's inlerCOIIegiate atbletic program.
lbose who may be nominated for inclusion in
UB Alumni Association's Athletic Hall of Fame
include:
• Individuals who attended a school or division
at UB and w= in a class that has beeo graduated
for at least five years. They must have demonstrated
exemplary athletic ability and performance "as measun:&lt;! by the highest standards of excellence in intercollegiate varsity competition whicb has brought
honor to UB."
• UB intercollegiate athletic teams from I 0 or
more years ago that demonstrated outstanding success and distinction and brought honor to the univer-

:~=~=~~~::::::~::::::::ofdlllof.psychialry
~

~~

Inf IIIli. of, 8rld ir*IMintionfor. llCallEme sl&lt;ills

'p
dilficUdeB.
.
•.
Rolli a.-.8, 8S6i6Un prolesaor
and pedialrics
at the Unilleldy of~ Medical center, wilt del~ the
seCond~ at 8:30a.m. on Satt.rda9. May 22. l1lis tQpic:
:"C&lt;lpinpwiiH
· TheT~ ~-· .....
~ · ThetcUoer-li:ld b.nerlirllcti orll18 ~ Oisader

cw

(AQO) aroc-n the
Sb..df Ceoler at vrg;i-e Paylech1lc: Institute
&amp; Sliile li"Mirllty. Graer)8 speciaizes n the 8XMlnalioo teei:her
Me~ e1asatxm . , . . - assoc::llled will1 woome n AOI-D sludenls.
He·aJso sbJdlas the clewt:pTalt a nstninents u measung sl!eSS.
altitudes, peroep11crs Mel salf-elficacy n tsa:hers.
In addlllon to lhe keyf)otes, the conference will feature m.merous seeslons on such topics as elementary and secondary classroa:n slralagies.legal rights and responsibilities, peer interactions
in the classroom and parents talking 1o parents.
1l'ie conference Is sponsored by Children With Attention-Oef!Ctt
Dlaotder (CHAD.D.) of Western New Vorl&lt;. e parents' support
~; the UB Graduate School of Edticatlon; 1lie Education
Cine in the UB School of ~ the Special Education Training &amp;
Resouit:e Centers of Western New York, and the Western New

of

YOOI·J;dUc8llonal Service Council.
The registration fee a $50 per person InclUdes materials, luncheon and coffee breaks.
For more InformatiOn. contact lhe Western Nev.: York Educational Service CQuni::U at 645-2460.

...........

..... U, ....... IIIIAMIIw....
~

f'llychia1iic RehabiJilallon: Actions Toward Rec:cMlfy" Is lhe theme
a d(ly-long conference 1o be held.In Buffalo, Friday. June 11,ln

a

~ Hall AucllorUn, Buflall; Stai&amp;College.
The~ is lnlanded lo address the impact of psychiat·

ric retlllbllllallo inleNenlions on the r6!1XN8fY prooess. The pro\1111~ ~led by practitlooefs conslc:lerild at
lhe tom'onl ollnl'loWiiYe progranmlng based on psychialrii:

"*"

reliabllalion pr1nclpfes.

'

-

'

~are Mlarn AnthOny, executMI director oflhe Boston l.lnillalsity Center fQr PsyChiatric Rehabilitation; John A.
Ta1bo11. chair, Department of Psydllalry. UntJersily of Malyland
Sct100I Me!:lcnl; 8r)d Leone Bachrach, sociologist with special
expertle8 in paychiatric ~ planning for 1hoee v.tlo ara perslstenlly mentally ill.
Coderence sponsor is lhe Buffalo Psychiatric Genter. Cosponsors are lhe UB Department of Ps)dliatry. lhe Buffalo State
~ Uelong leMling Cenler and libel1y Heal1hcara Corp.
Ragil;ttallon deedlino is May 14; 1here Is 8 S40 conference fee.
For 8 cdmplele prqgram and reglslrallon fnalerials~ Sue·
llOIIe,Nlllc lr'oloi!liation Olfiei&amp;. Buffalo Psychiatric Center, 400

of

Ave.. Buffalo 142J3 (8115-2261, Ext. 201'4).

sity.
• Individuals who have demonstrated extraordinary dedication and significantly conlributed to the
advancement and support of intercollegiate athletics
at UB, but who are not considered for regular membership in the Hall of Fame.
Deadline for nominations is June IS. A formal
dinner honoring the inductees will be beld OcL 15,
during Homecoming Weekend '93. For more information and application fonns, call the UB Office of
Alumni Relations at 829-2608.

....Kurtz

of~~--- .... Appled

~-toreare~-~· ....

0

Joan Kurtz, senior academic advisor in the
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
who is retiring at the end of this semester, will be
honored at a reception June 17 from 3-5 p.m. in 414
Bonner Hall, North Campus.
A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of UB, Kurtz has
advised hundreds of UB engineering undergrnds
since 1981 and has held the position of senior aca demic advisor since 1987 .
Over the year., Kurtz has
been involved in a number of
organizations. at the university.
in the community. and in her
profession generally . She served
on the Professional Staff
Senate' s Executive and Affirmative Action Committees, and
was a member of the National
Academic Advising Association
KURTZ
from 1988-89.
In her home community of Williamsville, she
was a representative to the PACER (Planning and
Advancement of Curriculum and Educational Research), an advisory board to the Superintendent of
Schools, and was president of the Williamsville
North Soccer Boosters.
Known for her dedication and skill, Kurtz is said
to be always on the lookout for new ways to promote engineering education and placement. Last
year. she and Mary Ann Stegmeier, associate dire&lt;&gt;
tor of career planning and placement, developed a
successful program, "What Do Engineers Do" to
address the lack of information for potential engineering majors. Engi neering alumni from all five
departments were invited to UB to di scuss their
present careers and educational preparation.

Klmberty PacUrd . . . . ....., of
.:n.rtlus Center'a Weinstein Awwd
.-

0

- - - - - - - - - -- --

Kimberly D. Packard, a UB senior graduat ing this month. has been selected to receive
the Rose WeinsLCin Memorial Award SJX&gt;nsored by
the Emeritus Center.
The annual S200 award. keyed to studies and
research on the subject of aging, will be presented to
Packard on Tuesday. May II, during a reception at
the Emeritus Center, South Lounge, Goodyear Hall.
The reception, from 2-4 p.m .. is being conducted
to honar participants in the center's Rev-Up volunteer program, coordinated by Leila (Lee) Baker.
More than 60 volunteers who have dollated their

BeAR

0

services during the pas1 year, to UB-linbd projects
will receive special r=&gt;gllitifl'l at the rcceplion.
Guest speaker for the event will be Clrole Smilb
Petro, associate vice presiden1 for university advaocemcot. Her.topic is "Cooneccing the Genenlions."
The Weinstein A want. newly named this year to
booor the late Rose Weinstein, an Emeti!us Center
charter member. is offered to UB studem candidales
involved in educational projects ~n Ilia&amp;- The winoer is selected by the Emeritus Center Comminee
for Scholarship Awards, currently cbait&lt;d by retind
faculty member Thomas Connolly of English.
Packard's winning entty, developed undec the
guidance of faculty advisor Roger V. Burton of
Psychology, is a proposal for a gran1 to study "Effects of Visitatioo and Control on the Mental Health
of the lnstitutionslized Aged."
In addition to the S200 prize. Packard will receive a testimonial plaque and also will have ber
name inscribed on a plaque---&lt;&gt;n display at the
Emeritus Center-listing the names of previous
winners.
Packard plans to attend West Virginia University
at Morgantown, where she is enrolled in a clinical
Ph.D. program with a concentration in gerontology.

w-··

_.,.a.Jdo .................

C1# u.w..~ty

0

Club

Marilyn Ciancio was installed as president
of the University Women ' s Club last Saturday at a luncheon at Pistachio's, Student Union. 1be
club' s theme for the year is the World University
Games; Unda Swiniuch, c&lt;&gt;&lt;hair of the Department
of Tbealer and Dance, presented a program on
"Dance Creativity" to draw
attention to the Games' international Cultural Festival which
begins May 8.
Also installed were Shirley
Buckle. vi c~ presidenl; Dawn
Halvorsen. treasurer; Joan
Ryan, recording secretary, and
Julie Cohan, corresponding
secretary.
Memhe,.·at-large are Jan
Fisher. Bernadene Pri vaLCra and irene Swiatowy.

~School

0

Mt:a ~ .....

The UB School of Pharmacy is sponsoring a
lecture series on "Disease StaLes and lllc:rapeutics," to be held from 5:30-9:30 p.m. on May 6,
May 20 and June 3 in 248 Cooke Hall.
The series will provide a " back-to-basics" approach to a variety of disease states. The program is
targeted to pharmacists who wish to renew their
l&lt;nowledge hase, as well as learn ahout new aspects
of the topics to be covered in the lectures.
May 6. Terence Fullenon. clinical instructor of
pharmacy at UB and fellow in clinical
neuropharmacology at Millard Fillmore Hospital,
will discuss identifying the various theories penaining to the etiology of Paronson ' s Disease in a leelUre, "Management of Parkinson· s Disease.··
May 20, David Klttierad, clinical assistant professor at UB, will describe the etiology, pathophysiology and clinicaJ manifestations of congestive
heart failure . His lecture is entitled "Management of
Congestive Heart Failure.•·
June 3, Stanley Carson, associate profesSO&lt; of
pharmacy and research associate profesSO&lt; of psychiatry at tbe University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, will describe the public health impact
of major depression. His leclure-is entitled "Management of Depression ...
Registration fee includes food, bevenges, handout material and continuing education credit. The
general fee is S27 for each lecture or S75 for the
three lecture!! ..lbe cost for membe" of the Pharmacists' Associatioo of Western New York (PAWNY)
is $22 for each lecture or S65 for the series. The
cost for students is S 15 for each lecture or $35 for
the series.
.
Advance registration is required. For more information. call 645-2626.

�fir~~~. !lieU.

invited shorts and sunglasses. and tlle croWd If 1.111, Rsllilll

70

de ureetemperabrres.heard the music lfSIClJ pps IS

.BLACK 'i.l-l..EEP.Studellts idded t

where vendors rano up

sales otT-shirts and jewelrq

�</text>
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                    <text>............

.... Cllllll ••• ct
In tMipa«WWt

Weyland Clela1d's

CK:aderric ux:ess
repeser 11s a n.rrph

fba¥1 Wi&lt;ilocn sets

!;Plls for staff

~

...........
.......

,.2

CNf!problemscrd
5
pan.
..
TopSecnt
Soviet AIM

Journalists take the heat
fran cne ci their &lt;1Ml,
Bien Gcxxtnan, here
for Disti1guished
Speaker Series. , .

3

The real slay ci Katyn
Forest massacre is tid
in Lockwood extibit.

Apnl29 . 1993 Volume 24 No 26

DRAMA THEATER: 40C).
Milt thutef In Rna Alta
Center, left, wNch . . .
klcludee .., 1800...t theater, bl8ck box u..t.ra,
dance .tudloe end .......
atudy IC-*C-

FINE ARTS: Tbere'a cnma In rnalolr,Z .., entrance to new Fine Alta
Complex, abowt.
STADIUM: 16,ooo-t .......,,
below, wBI ' - t UB'a football end
track field ewonta.

Opening Soon:
North Campus construction projects nearing completion
llyANNW*TCIIER

Reporter Editor

n.. university looks forw.-d to a series of official openings with completion near
for major construction projects, including the new. stadium, the Fine Arts Center and
a 1994 completion date for the Chemistry Building.
The $42 million Fine Arts Center is 92 percent complete as the university gears up
for the move of three departments (lbeater and Dance, Media Study and Art) into the
complex following the conclusion of the World University Garnes (July 8-18).
According to RonaldNayler, associate vice president for facilities, the university hopes
to take formal acceptanceofthe building from the contractor sometime in June. Official
opening ceremonies are set for March with details to come in the fall.
llle center will feature an 1800seat theater. a 400-seat dnuna theater, two black-box theaters, dance
studios. a 200-seat media study
scrttning room and olher facilities.
At this writing. said Nayler, "all public spaces with the exception of one
black-box lheater will be equipped
at a functional level for the opening
in the spring."
Meanwhile the new 16,000-seat
stadium--{o be used for the World
University Gannes and thereafter for
UB's football and trnck and field
programs-is "substantially complete," reponsNayler. "W&lt;'regoing
through the punch list right now, i.e ..
minor details and finishing work."

UB's needs. For instance. drug test- _
llle public is getting its fust glimpse
of the new facility with llle Legend
ing facilities for the Gannes will be
removed from the stadium before
Group/Western New York Relays.
one beld there last Saturday and anthe university lakes over.
olher scheduled for next Saturday.
The university community will ofThe relay-style competition with its ficially open its new stadium. Nayler
13 events. brings together more than
said. with tbe fu.t 'rOOiball game oftbe
2,600athletes from 85 boys and girls
1993 season. Satunlay, Sepl. 4. llle
tncl: teams from throughout !be state.
fust four games will be evening events.
making it the largest meet of its kind . he said. and will be preceded by
dayloog. camival-lilce festivities.
in New York.
Work also continues on the
Naylerexplained that the univeruniversity's olher large-scale North
sity and llle Gannes will receive a
Campus construction project.the$45
temporary CertificateofOccupancy
between now and post-Games con- million Chemistry Building (Phase I
of the Natural Sciences and Matbstruction. A number of changes, he
explained, will have to be mnde fol - ematics Complex): set to open in
fall. 1994.
0
lowing the Games to accommodate

�...-.--...--

2

Attention

r--------------------------.~~~

Wllcbon
..... to
WOitl on
--of

to staff

-a.trc.
.,......
heelth -.1

~-

needs
Wluw.-, chlll-a.ct of

ly --

PSI, seta iOIIIS

Aeporter Staff

.......
,••-. as-aoclale pnilal8or In 1he Dep!W1mll'aof~

SCience. has
~a

grant of

$10,00) from
the Xerox
Foundatioo
and lheXeroxWebSer
Research
CenteriD

study Conslralnt-based Programming Languages. The
WOf1&lt; wiR be ctM:ried out In
collabo&lt;atiort with research
sclenlists in the Doctment
Slructures Research ~ea ot
the Systems Sciences LaOOratcly at the Webster Re;
search Ceotar.

_,..,.....,._,

....

..._. - .. asSociate profossa &lt;:A OOI1J'U!er acleoc:e.

has~ an Invitation to
join 1he program oon-mlttee
for 1he 12th International Conference on Pattern Recogr»tioo, which w1a be held Oct
~13 In Jerusalem, Israel. The
conference Will again be organized as fax subconfer·
ences: Con1&gt;uter Vision and
tmage ~-Pattern
Aecognhlon and Neural Networks, Signal Processing,
and Parallel Computing.

MEDICINE
. . . . , VIti CHAit
. , _ P. lloiM, professor and chairman of the 0&amp;j)llrtrTlept of Medicine and 8
&amp;peelallstln
liw&lt; diseases, took &lt;:Alice es vice
chair &lt;:A the
American
College of
: Physicians

NQlNI
(ACP) Board
•
ofRegents
!bing 1he aoclely's 7-4th AAnual Seesion, Aprtl1-41n

. Wall*lgton, O,C.

fJiCP Is 1he nalion's larqest

fU\!diCII-Ipecl eoclatY.
wilh a nwrblr8hlp of more
thai\ 80,00) pl?fsldans
. tnlhld In "*"'-' medlc:illl

and nollilld 8Ubepecialties.
. Nolin.'tiho li*Jed 1he U8

::::~:

and MMid • cl1llf 1:11 !iid-

Cine Ill EUIIIo GenRI Ht»pllil. In 1m. .. t.cllhl
.... ofl'tlllllt:N llll8811l1

~nc:;:...

S

HE'SBEENworlring
on staff development
at UB for more than a
decade . So. when
Rosalyn Wilkinson.
manager of human resources development at UB. learned that she had
been elected ·the new chair of the
Professional Staff Senate (PSS). she
set about creating a list of priorities.
Having been vice dWr of the
PSS for four years. she said she has
a good sense of the staffs needs and
hopes she can respond quickly and
with authority. ''llovedworlringwith
lhe various commiuecs within the
PSS while I was vice chair,"' she
said. "Now that I'm chair. there are
three main visions I have that I hope
J can impart to the staff as a whole."
She said that developing greater

"llwpe to develop a
system ofgreater
access to infonnation
for our constituents
on campus. "

professionalism among UB's staff

lng as director" of a project on pre-

will be a priority because both employees and the offices in which they
worl: gain greatly from enhanced
knowledge and sltills.
·-r d like to develop a larger
rnerJiaingJXOgJ1lmthroughintemships
for employees.'' said Wilkinson. ..That
is when an employee goes somewhen:
else for a period of time and learns a
skill that she can bring backtothehome
office."'
Willtinson received her B.A. degree in public relations from the
University of Oklahoma and her
M.A. in counseling from the School
of Education of the University of
Missouri. She began her career at
UB in 1977 when she began worl:-

retirement planning at the Center for
the Study of Aging. She had previously worked as a public relations
consultant and outreach coordinator
for the Erie County Department of
Senior Services. But it was her work
at the universi ty that ultimately led
to the creation ofherpresent position
as UB ·smanagerofhuman rt::SOU.J'CCS.
"My work at the Center for the
Srudy of Aging required that I go
into the community and encourage
employers to set up pre-retirement
planning for their employees,"' she
said. "UB didn't have a plan like that
in place at that time and when the
Professional Staff Senate began asking the administrntion for more pro-

fessional developmen~ they created
this job. I applied for it and got it"
Sheisooncemed that somepreseot
UB employees don't know that they
can ask their supervisors for professional development Another area
that she would like to address as
Senate chair is improving communication among the staff.
"I'd like to improve commurtication within the Senate through orientations for new chairs of committees
and new senators. They are our links
to the various areas on campus. I
hope to develop a sysu:m of gneater
access to information for our constituents on campus. We want to get
more information up the ladder and
more information down the ladder:·
illtinson · s largest concerns are
centered on issues regarding
human health and well ness. "Healthrelated issues. both physical aod
mental. are imponant because healthy
people worl: harder than unhealthy
people." she said. ''I want to encourage more understanding of the nextime arrangement and how it can be:
used now lhat we have more households where both parents are worl:ing
And she prnctices what she preaches

W

regarding welJness_ In addition to reading se'm1!1 books a week C'llikc anydting that deals with an exccic foreign

destination. mystery and intrigue").
Wilkinson andherhusbondhave taken
up sailing. "We· ve been doing it far the
last couple of years. We took some
lessons on a 45-fOOI boa! in the Caribbean."

She'salsoanavidgolferandloves
to travel the countryside in the

family's motor home. "All of our
ltids li ve faraway. So we take a lot of
trips to visit them. Sometimes for a
weekend and sometimes longer: ·
lbis love of traveling may stem
from childhood. She was born in
Michigan, but her farrtily moved on
and they tived in Iowa. Massachusetts. Nebraslca. Oklahoma, Burma
and Ethiopia. "My father was a geography professor and thought that
he could best advance his career if he
moved from job to job. That's why
I 'm interested in traveling."
Besides having been vice chair of
the PSS for the past four years.
Wilkinson had served on the Senate·s
Outstanding Service Committee and
its Staff Development and Services
Committee. She assumes her new
position. which carries a two-year
term. on July I .

OOZFESTII
Was it volleyball or was 1t wreslling? Under !he mantle of all
that mud, students played !heir hearts out Saturday at !he
annual Ooziest. Rainy weather made the field perfection.

�--.---.--

3

Ellen Goodman: columnist takes aitn at
instant journalism and its rush to judgment
.,-.rJWA'Reponer Staff

liDie like her--ibe fiMrs the
SIIJIO&lt;UO(suil,tbeSIODCsfiglldy

E

LLENGOODMANissbowniniO
a room containing 17:1 copies of
Making Sense (1990, ber latest
book) and SO copies of Turning
Points( 1979), and is asked 10 sign
as many as she can in half an boor.
The syoclicaud columnist and associate
editor of the Boston Glob&lt;, who has documented the ups and downs of an everyday
America since the late 1960sand who received
the PuliiZCr Prize for Distinguished Commentary in 1980, asks if this ammgement comes
with a stiff drink.
Only slightly wearily, with the air of a good
spon (she gets a dime on each one sold), she
settles for a cup of tea and iniO the business of
signing, receiving each volume handed to her
from the top of the pile and stinging i~ signed,
across the shiny surface of the !able.
It is this mythm--,;ign, sling, sign, slingthat underscores a conversation between
Goodman and Tlu! Reptmer. It is a little like
interviewing someone on a rowing machine.
Goodman is a though!ful woman: her favorite
response, to both this inlei'View and n,.; news
conference thai follows i~ is "What do you think?"
She prefers dialogue 10 opinioos, conversations to
quick-&lt;fnlw judgments, and the columns in which
she has docurr,.,ued the crises facing America
since the 1960s-the permissive society, binh
conorol mid-life crisis, divon:e, women· s rights,
the collapse or maiptefJance of the family--&lt;Jre. in
tum. ironicorcompassionale, pul21edorbemused.
Soil is not surprising that on this particular
aftemoo~he is at UB to appear for the
Distinguished Speakers Series, and every newspaper carries a banner headJine on the confla~
gration at Waco--she ha~ a quarrel with the

second oldest profession. 'Tve been thinking a
lor about it I mean. what do you thinlc? Aicking
through the channels last night! was nauseated:
everybody second thinking everything instantly,
and with no pazticular knowledge.
"I think thai one of the things thai's changed
since I became a journalist is the pace. the impcrnnve, the iush 10 judgment Journalism was always
fdSt. but being quick meant getting it in by deadline
the next morning. But now being quick """""'
you're oo the=&gt;:, theoornpooiXI's burning, and
SOirebody in the main office is going through the
Rolodell, marked 'C: Cult'. picking up aU the
expc:rtr-1 mean. it's instantanrous. And the idea
thalyoucanherefkctiveinslantaneooslyisabsurd
'"There' sa lotofjunkoutthere, because people
are rushing. and some of it is preUy silly: such as
instantly going from David Koresh 10 'What does
this mean for the president?' There are a lot of

IIJ-S

IDIIIy hair&gt;lyle.
0.. &lt;Joo&lt;mm is
debunk the my1h of Sup,erwomao, who has ilaD tmd who
is ""')' good • it, tmd ., wda:liile whal: she sees as a oew

also-.,

ruspof~'1n~·

-

"There are a lot of
journalists in Washington
who put only one grid over
every story.- was it good or
badfor the presidency. "

journalists in WashingiOn who put only ooe grid
over every story, was it good or was it bad for the
presidency."
This is one of the reasons (the fact thai her
syndicated colwrut appears in more than 400
orhernewspapers anyway isanorher) why she bas
never been tempted from her post at the Bostoo
Glob&lt;."I rend IOhelieve in I'OOiedness.l also think
it's bener 10 he living somewhere orher than
WashingiOn or New Yorl&lt; if you're writing about
America. There's Washington, there' sNew York.
and then there's e~ e!S&lt;&gt;-and I'd rather
be from everywhere else. It gives me a different

social da!ge. tmd in ~
bock al the '60s, you lll'l the
....., thai people could tnak
from traditim, tmd from wha!
they were, their hislaries and
their pasiS, and beaJme sc.n&gt;etlting aitog&lt;:therdiffemllln the
' 70s, and to a degree in the ·~
people were readting bock tmd
trying to discover what you
mighllooscly tmn their values.
"I think what we're seeing in
the '90s is a reerragence of a
dialogue about values. It was
curious how in the '92 election
the right wing were aU talking
~ values-they ""'""''t talking
0 about my values---but they' d
"' already preempted the ian§ guageofvalues,thewaythey'd
- preemp&lt;ed the word 'family.'
''But m the 1992eieclion. for
the fi"' time. the libernl wing
Ellen
were also talking about the lanGoodman
guage of values, and in a.....,
they were saying: 'We can talc&lt;
back this language. we
~
shouldn't have given it up just
before UB
hecause we didn't agree about
lecture.
""')' traditional ones. • That. s
true fora lot ofpeople. trying to
ra:onnea with valuesthal.a!m 't
a-..ditional but which do exist. I think we' re in
another cusp ofanother period of change. It sraned
with reaction to the Anita Hili-Ciartnce Thoma&lt;;
debate. when~ as many times JRviously,
discovered they were noc isolaJed in their thoughts
and reactioos. That energized a preUy serious
polilical movement I rememba' the live broodcasts of thai hearing and wonder if we've noccome
full cin:le: did noc Thomas charge the media with
a "high-tech lynching?''
In Goodman's laugh there is the sound of an
outraged woman anernpting 10 control herself.
" l.e! us recall: he is a HighCounJUS!i&lt;%. hi! is noc
hanging from a tree. He is making decisionTpoorly wriom, poorly ooncei~ as we
speak So. no, I do noc think we Were guihy.
"Electronic lynchings are presumably moo: soccessful than draJ. "

-------' g

perspective."
That perspective has been forged in the fire of
the women's movcncnt. Goodman, whose dedic:uion to equality was recognized by the U:adership Conference oo Qvil Righls in 1988. was orr
of the Ml of a new gm:ration of women to wad
shoulder to shoulder with their male colleagues.
''Wherl I grnduated from college, sex discrimination was still legal; people fcrget thai the Civil
Rights Act wasn'tpasseduntill964.1 went to wad
at Newsweek a1 a time when all the girls, as they
were called. were =n:her.;, and when aU the
tren. as they were called, were repon&lt;rs.
"I wen1 to the Detroil Frre Press a1 a time
when they' d onlyjiLI'Istaned letting women into
the city room. I really come from a generntion of
women who were fir.;t not Mt in the sense of
suffragettes, not 'MI journalists.' but tu.t in
numbers. If you look around at a lot ofjournalists
whose names you· d know from print or television, we're aU almost exactly the same age."
A tittle mental math puts thai at around the
same age as Hillary Ointon. Goodman, who
admires the First '-"dy a great deal (but who
thought a new low. for won-a~ and politics alike.
was the "bizarre chocolate chip rookie bake-off
war bdween Ointon and Quayle'). even loolcs a

_.,.,...
_...at

Moore describes university's community seiVice role for FSEC

Reporter Staff

ERVICE TO the university and the
surrounding community does not
equal volunteerism. according to
Muriel Moore, vice president for
public service and urban affairs. Instead. uni versity service should center on how to help
~d infonn therommunity 's and the nation's
infrastructure and add to its knowledge base.
"Thecornmunityhetievesthal we have knowledge and.expertise here to do thai and they want
10 know why we aren 'tdoing more ofi~" she said
duringapresentationiOtheFacultySenateExecutive Committee last week. "I have developed a
large list of projecls thai people from thisoommunity want 10 do with the university."
But servicet.a:dsiObenefitboth the university
and the community if it is 10 he a sucoessful
Wldertaking, said Louis sWIII1Z, as.cx:iale professor in the law school "The emphasis I have been
hearing (from theadministnllim) about service is
how 10 ...., """"'""' and fnlllkly, I have been
disapp&lt;Xnkd with thal,"hesaid. "It is not the right

way togo."
Moore was quick 10agree with Swartzregatding the natureofUB' s seMce, but disagreed with
his pen::eption thai the present administrntiOn was
promoting only self-serving projecls. '1 don't
want 10 do things just 10 help us." she said.
She also pointed to the mission statement
she prepared to clearly define what the role of
her office will he at UB. In that statement,

had been discussed by the committee. but no
resolution had been reached.
He said that the committee formulated three
options regarding the issue: I ) To have the

Libraries continoe to repon to the senior vice
president for university services. 2) Change
the relationship-and have the Libraries report to
the provost, or 3) Create a new administrative

leadership for the coordination of the

division, the vice president For informatio n
technology,lhat wou ld comprise the Libraries
and Computing Services.

university's academic and service units with
the community in orderto find creative waysboth theoretical and applied-td address complex urban and regional problems."
And the private sec10r. according 10 Moore.
has high regard and expectations for the uni versity as well. "Public to them means everything outside of this institution," she said.
In orher Senate news, Peter Nickerson. professor of pathology and chair of the FSEC' s
committee on tibnries and information resources, said that the reporting relationship
berween the ~on and the Libnries

he thitd option is a relatively new idea and
has 001 been discussed with representatives
fro&lt;ll the Librnries or Computing Services. said
Nick=on "Although the oommittee did noc
have a sense as 10 what was the best oplion, it
strongly favored having the Librnries report 10 the
academic side of the administration," he said.
BUI the oommillee' s report SlreSSCS aCcess 10
infonnation, whicll p001Is 10 service rather than
researeh, said Oaude Welch, distinguished service professor of political scimce. This means
thai the commiace saw lbc job of.lbc Olnries

Moore writes that· her office wiU "provide

T

more in terms of service than research. In thai

case. he said. the senior vice president for university services would seem lObe the properjurisdiction for the repor1ing relationship.
Welch also noted Lha! the pnl\'OSI bas a great
deal of ongoing wad a1 the present time. "The
Provnst's Otlice might be too overladen with
O!herrespoosibilities 10 giveproperanention 10an
over!taul of the Librnries," he said.
Nickerson also reponed oo the oommittee's
deliherntioos concaning the rising cost of serial
publicaiions.
He said thai the central question about serial
acquisitionceilteredonownershipandaca:ss. He
noted thai access 10 journals by way of oornpuu:r
dalabase hoolrups with orher SUNY campuses
might haveiO hesufticienl for the time being.The
system. called AR.IEL: should he available 10
SUNY campuses soon, he said.
Regarding the large increa&lt;e·in the prices of
some joumals. N'dmon said thai Princclon
University had n:spcOOod in me inslaroe by
cancelingitssuboaip6onstDmepulllisberwhose
prices had~ in me year.
0

�____ __
..,

4

An~n

s

IsitTMD
Female students use workload as excuse
or giant cell
for destructive eating behavior, study shows arteritis?
11J LOIS UICIII

News Bureau Staff

F

=:~ers!

bulimic often overload themselves
with responsibilities and use lhaJ as an excuse
for dcsuuctive eating behavIor, an analysis by a UB nutritionist has found
1be analysis of the nutriuon and eating behavior of
female students who re-

ceived counseling at UB for
eaung di sorder.; also found ~

"The... severity
ofthe problems
mngnifies the
needfor early
identification. "

~

~

~
~

-ALMA J. BL.All£

that those who an: overweight are
t:oncemed about eating less rather

than eating nght. and recovenng
anorexics are loath to admit they
need to put on pounds.
The results of the study conducted
by Alma J. Blake. cliniO!l assistant
professor and nutrition res&lt;art:h specialist in the UB Department of Social
and Preventive Medicine, weren::por100
m Top1cs in Clinical Nwrition.
Blal&lt;e' s study group consisted of
a total of 47 students-24 who were
overweight 17 who were bulimic
and six who were anorexic-who
came to the UB Student Health Service for nutrition counseling between

September 1985 and April 1990.
For the purposes of the study,
Blal&lt;e considered being overweight
one extreme of the spectrum of eating disorders. along with bulimia
and·anorex.ia..
Using the medicaJ and nutrition

reards
of the 47
studypanicipanb,
Blakecomparedthelil=disorders. focusing on food choia:s. caling behaviors and dieting history;
pcrrepcionsaboutbodysittandhcalth;
medical, psychosocial and life-style
cha!actcristics; attitudes about nutrition counseling. and mo&lt;ivatioo for
coming to counseling. Her goal was to
UIJCOVerinfoonationthatcould be used
to trea1 eating disorders more effectively.
1ne analysis found that bulimics
were the most entrenched in their . .
~ behavior. They came to

seling
onlyaftera
strong warning from a physician or psychologist.
were cunently bingeing and purging, showed inappropriate dissatisfaction with their weight and made
the least number of visits to counseling.
In addition, Blake found bulimics
were more likely to overload thcmsel ves with responsibilities, defend this
self-imposed woridoad fiercely and
use it as a shield for their destructive
behavior.
AooLher finding that surfaced during the analysis was the overweight

students' disregard flY a diellbat was
good for the heart.
'"This apparently low level
of concern by the overweight about a healthy
die! has not been emphasized in the litcrnture," Blal&lt;c said. Her
analysis showed that
overweigh! patieniS focused on the occd to
losewcighlp&lt;ru, with
a relatively small number menliooing a need
to cal the righl foods. In
conttas1. concern about
eating a ~..art-healthy
diet is one of the reasons
oftm given by anorexics.
and to a lesser degree by
bulimics. for their behavior.
Blake said
The study also revealed that
all three groups consumed
more vitamin supplements than
had been reported in earlier studies on eating disorder.;.
Blake found many similarities
berwccn the groups---ooset of the
problem before college, low knowl edge of diet and eating problems,
low knowledge and skills in food
shopping and preparation---that she
says could be used as a basic core of
infonnation to begin treatment.
She pointed out that university
health fonns do nor ask about ex..isling anorexia or bulimia. and that
many health providers do not identify being overweight as a health
problem requiring uearment 1ne
consequences of this situation. she
said, are that many cases of anorex..ia
and bulimia aren't identified, while
the problems of being overweight
are identified, but 001 rreated.
"The level of severity of the problems of many subjects in this study.
and lhe implication that a significant
number of unidentified or untreated
incUviduaJs may exisl in the college
population, magnify the need for
early identification and treatment."
she said.

.oM IP.IIIA
News Bureau Slaff

., -

A

MEDICAL condition
that can cause permanent
blindness iflcft unrreated
often may be misdiagnosed and rreated as temporomandibular joint disorder (TMD). a UB
dental researcher says.
Ahmed Uthman, professor oforal
medicine in the UB School ofDental
Medicine, identified rwo cases of
giant cell arteritis thai had been diagnosed as lMD and referred to the
Orofacial Pain Clinic 31 the dental
school for rreaunent
Giant cell aneritis is charactertzcd by granulomatous inflammation of the small and medium artencs
that primarily affects the tempOral
arteries on the side of the head. Narrowing of the temporal arteries can
lead to decreased blood supply to the
faciaJ muscles. inducing cramp-like
pain and pamful chewing. symptoms similar to those experienced
with TMD. Uthman says.

0

!her SympiOmS usually include
t.endemessoftheremporalaru:ry
on the affeclcd side of the face. a
significantriseinaythrocylesedimcnuuion nue and headaches that wal&lt;e
patients from a sound sleep, he ack!s.
Thecondilion,bclievcdtobecauscd
by an autoimmune disease, occurs primarily in pa;l-menopousal females.
with the incidcncc in=asing with age.
Accurate, carty diagnosis followcd by
trcatmcnl with steroids will ~
pain and prevcn! blindness. Uthman
says. He stresses that dcttlisls. who
maybethefirslhcallhcareprovi&lt;bsto
see these patienls because the primary
syrnpomsarefacial pain and difficulty
in chewing. should consider the possibility of giant ceU arteritis when mal&lt;ing a diagnosis and prescribing
treatmenl

Uthman' s findings were presented
31the46ihannualmcelingoftheAmcrican Academy of Oral Pathology. His
rcport~inOra/Surg•ry. M«li­

c:W and Pathology.

Researchers at UB move closer to biocompatible implants
11J EUBI ilouleAUM
News Bureau Staff

pollutant precipilalion "Now that we
are beginning to liDdcrstand wlw hap-

lOMATERlAlS scientists
31 UB for the firs! time have
been able to delerminc the
nue 31 which O!lcium phosphate phases. the main mineral componenrs of bones and teeth, cluster and
grow on the surf~ of biological proteins.
The wort_ which was presented
recently 31 the combined anoual mcering of the lruemationaJ Association of
Dental Research and-American Asst;
ciation of Dental Research, represents
a key step in under.;randing the
biomineralization process because
knowing the growth rate is crucial to
knowing the mechanism
The main mechanisms of
biomincnrlizaiiareal wort in events
as diverse as bone fonnation. tooth
decay, the pathological formation of
kidney srones, oil-well COfTOSion and

pens 31 the surfaces of these proreins,
we will be belter able to modify them
to improve their biocornpatibility and
accelerate the growth of bone following implanuuion," said George H.
NancoUas. chair of the UB Depanmall of Biomalerials and SUNY Distinguished Professor of Cllemistzy.
Problems associalcd with coovmtiooal metal implants include migllllion
or degradation. as well as nojccrion by
the body. AooLher n.ya- drawback is
that lD1iike real bone maltrial, metal
coOOuciS heal more raw:lily. Heat is
JXOducecl as chemical adhesives, which
oftm are used to anch&lt;rthe implants to
Sll!TOUilding tissue and bone. soJid1fy.
A primary focus ofNancollas' resean:h ream is the deve~t of O!lphosphate implanl mareriaJs so
IJiocomjxlliblc that they would irnmodialdy induce the formationofboneright

a

ciwn

up to the implant surface. eliminating
the need for adhesives.
ButmimickingnatW"Ctotltisextent
requires a much belter under..-landing
of how bones and olher calcium phosphat.e-&lt;:OOtaining biological materials
grow. ''Much of our res&lt;art:h is dir..:ted toward Wlderstanding the growth
and dissolution of O!lcium phosphate
crystals," said Achille Tsortos, a doctoral candidate in the UB Depanment
of Biophysics who co-authored the
paper presented 31 the meeting.
''The question is. where do the ftrst
rnincraiWnion eveniS lake -place' Do
they occur inside thecellsofbones and
teeth, or outside on the surfaces of
organic molecules excreted by the
ccUs?" Tsonos said the recent exPeriments provide evidence that mineralizalion mayhappenonproleinsurfaces.
The resean:hers prepared asurfacc
with polyauboxylic acid, which contains cartJoxyl groups that abound in

bioJogicaJ proteins and are assumed to
play a role in the formation of teeth and
bones When the surface was immersed
in a supersalllralfd calcium phosphate
solution, the nucleation and growlhof a
calcium phosphate phase wasdeteclcd.

N

ancollas noted that it is only
10 the past few years !hal scientists
have bcguo to induce nuclealion--dle
process in which ions cluster inlo the
fm1 solid crystal (Xlase----on protein
SUJft&gt;XS in Yirro. But to tmdersland the
mechanism of these biornineralilll
reactions.. he said, it is """""""' to be
able to measure the speed with which
Lheyoccur,a&lt;wellasthecomposilionof
each new calcium phosphate phase.
''The process of nuclea!ion--thc
formation of the lirsl 'tiny stable O!lciumphosphatewlil-isextternclysensitive to the amotint of calcium and
phosphate ions in the liquid phase, so it
is extremely difficult to measure the

nue of the process." said NancoJ]as_
"As soon as it happens. these tiny
particles.&lt;Ynuclei, willgrow.conswning the calcium and phosphate ions in
solutioo. Conscqucndy,scicntistshave
found ir very dilflallr to measure the
nucs of these processes."
TheNancollasgroupdevelopedan
exrremcly sensiti"" rechniquc called
Dual Coostanl Composition. "We use
electrodes to Jo:ep rraclr. of the amount
of ions in the solution," he explained
.. As S\'00 as ions begin to attach to tl¥'
protein surface, the clcctrodes deta:t
tltisandtriggermoreionstobepumped
inlo the.solutioo from reservoir.;."
Because the clcctrodes ensure that
a COOSianl balance of ions in the solution will beriwnraincd. resean:hcrsare
able to measure the nucleation rare.
''The method is wliquc in its ability
to provide both the nucs of mineral
formation. as well as the nature of the
phase formed," explained Tsortos.

�--.--...--

5

CARDS
CALENDARS
PERIODICALS

Meet

DENNIS T£DLOCK
(McNulty Professor of EngUsh at UB)

Friday. 30 April
5-7pm
at a s igning &amp; reception cel ebrating
publication of his latest wor~

~'

TAI.I&lt;IlfG
ILEA VIES

... BOOKS

BREATH ON THE MIRROR
(Ha rper Son Fra ncisco )

University is 'place
for improving life'
Despite problems, pain Weyland Cleland has been near-perfect
student; he'll graduate with .._,. In English
II}'RICKARDDEITKH

Re~erCoo
~tr~ibu~
t~---------------"

I

'VE BEEN to hell and I've been to
heaven," says poet. teacher and father Weyland Cleland ll. "''ve been
an intimate part of an underworld
that somehow our culture doesn ' t
even see. We 're all on the surface and just a
little bit underneath that is this whole other
world that I couldn't get out of."
Cleland is a recovering alcoholic-sober as
ofhis3lstbirthday,January II , 1988. when he
joined Alcoholics
Anonymous at the

request of hi s
mother. And he 's a

survivor.
Wey land Cleland
will graduate next
month wi th Phi
Beta Kapp8 bonors
in English.
He entered Erie
Community College in 1989 and
began 10 reacquire
his love for literature and the written word. He
ttansfemd to UB in the fall of 1991 upon
acceptance into the University Honors Program. where he has been a near-perfect student-his only academic 'blemish· has been a
"B" in a seminar on Milton.
Cleland, an Angola native, says that everyone at UB "worl&lt;s for a better place." He
believes it's a place that' s improving lifoespecial ly hi s own.
music this low

sad dances
you still
my brighrest sadness

icallyou

answering joy
''Poeuy is a receptive thing," says Cleland,
author of the above poem. "You absorb it and
then when you're alone you spread it back ouL
l'U always write poeuy for friends. peers, and
for myself because it accesses the deep places
of me that otherwise I have little access to. I
sometimes don't know how I feel until I write
it down."
C leland light.s up when he talks about hi s

relationship with the acclaimed poet and Samuel
P. Capen Professor of Poeuy and Humanities
Roben Creeley. whom he met during an independent study at the end of his second semester.
" He's just so simply human, his poeuy is,
and he's brought me back down froro the high
heavens to where my feet are on the ground."
Cleland says of Creeley. " You feel so at ease
with him. What he's taught me is there 's a
difference between when I'm working and
when I'm not. and at the same time, there 's no
difference being out with a thousand people or
sitting alone at my desk."
Eighteen years ago, on the heels of the end
of the Vietnam War. the options appeared
limiUess for Weyland Cleland. He had won a
high scboolEnglish competition sponsored by
the National Council of Teachers in English
and had an open sc holarship 10 attend any

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14214
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Wed &amp; Thur s

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Ill flllllll...._ ............. ....

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university in the nation.
"lhadasc holarshipwhen I was 18. butlhad
to work," says Cleland. " It was the old Abe
Lincoln story. We needed the money."
So Cleland worked for 13 years for a private
contractor. building highways for New York
State. He quit work fi ve years ago, when he
was diagnosed with avascular necrosis. a dis·
ease in which blood vessels are no longer able
to supply nutrition and bone begins to die.
limping slighUy as be'wa!ks with the aid of a
cane, Cleland is no stranger to suffering.
"As an alcoholic, l idso must treat myself as
a drug addict-no narrotics at all ," he says.
" I've been in pain for five years and ljust don't
know it anymore. Physical pain is j ust a reminder that there· s emotional pain and there· s
emotional joy."
Cleland bopes to teach at a university and
luis applied for graduate studies at the UniversityofColoradnat Boulder. '1 want the passion
that English professors have," he says. "It's a
combination qf intelligence and passion. ll' s
passion guided by inte llecL"
Although he:s traveled a difficult road, he
says he wouldn't trade places with anyone.
" I've got it made. I'm going 10 be doing
whlltllove to do for the rest of my life. I have
a beautiful new son wbo bears my name
(Weyland ill) and a beautiful woman," says
Cleland.
"I like wbo I am. who I've become, afid wbo
I'm becoming," says Cleland. "And it's all this
plaoe that does iL"
CJ

*

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�8
vino EIA , _ ,
~Dr. 'l'bomu

s-. pro(eoaor. Depl. ol Biol"1)', Priaoeloa

Uoiv. 121 Cooh.
Nodi! Campus. 4 p.m. CcHpooIOI'OdbyCAMBL
. . .ALO l.a.c COUOQI••
LoP Didloaary F.alry-l'lntclox, loot Sagttillo. t..op:, Uoiv.
o( Samia&amp;&lt;&gt; de Compoaela and
Geor&amp;e Bocu. Pbilooopby.
CaniJius ColleF- 684 Baldy.
NOIIh Campus. 4 p.m. For mon:
infcm'lllioo C:OOtacl Joho
Corcoran at 881 -1640 or
645-2.438.
IIA-TICS COUAIQI• •
Aids ID lllo Aaal)'lil
otPDE. Pro(.
Eliubdh Mansfield, Uoiv. or
Exeter. visiting at the uruv. of
Colondo. 103 Dicrendolf. Soulh
Campus. 4 p.m.

.......-it
ors,-

FRIDAY

- - lO
T ho F.lr&lt;d ol Exporimmtal

Heart l'ailaro Oa ~~

ltn&gt;ol Blood Flow FollowiJI&amp;
NllrovModllaiDr(JIIIdloa,
Eliz.abelh Bachert. graduate Stu·
dent. UB Dept. of Pharmaceutics.

I 0 Minutes from UB!
Elevators!
Quiet Park-like Setting!

508 Cooke. North CAmpus.
4-S p.m.

Care-free Ufe Style!

aTAmTICS COUAIQI • •
Muiaoum Likeliloood Neunl
Networt&lt; Models, Dr. David
Faraggi, Biometric Researdl
Branch. Nation.aJ Cancer lnsoWie. 144 Farber. Soulh CAmpus.

Activities Director &amp; Program!

I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

4 p.m.

120 Meyer Road Amherst

836-6861
Fully Furnished CorporateSuiles
Also Available

Professianally Managed by

SIARA MANAGEMENT

~­
.
-ra
THURSDAY

~9

~CAllE IIESOUIICE
CENID WOIIIlSHCif'
Acamna lnfonutioo, hands-

~~aj~~~~n~~MU:i~~ :~

Network.. Kerri L Cabana. John
W. Loons k. M.D .. Diane G.
SchwaJtt. M.LS .• and Raymond

D. Volpe. B.A. 240 CFS Addition. South Campus. 8: 15 _

s

11 :30 a.m. Admisston. 15 . •

Pren::gastnllion required. FOf
more information call 8293176. Co-spooson:d by lhe

~

• .....at

ApprodJe Sftaii&gt;.Uapbtlquo
du M...... Publldlaln, Palrick
H&amp;illet, professor of French linguislics. Uoiv. ofToronco. 930

Deau'J iteoeptioo., honoring
outstancling groduating scruors m
the School or Managemenl I06
Jacobs. North Campus. 4:30p.m.
, . . . _ , . COU.OQUII.

Clemens. North Campus. 1:30
p.m. The lecture will be in mnch
followed by discussion in either

Socldal R - = Allocation:
Tho Ethla or Cbolc. .nd
Choke Polides, James

French or English. Presented by
the Dept. of Modem Languages
and U1&lt;J1UUroS.
vmEOTANTho Lonny Pudlea Show, an
opera by Ben Yarmolinsky wilh
libreno by Charles Bernstein,

Undeman Nelson. The: Has1ings
Center. 114 Hochstetler. North
Campus. 5 p.m. Sponson:d by the

Gmy Clair Professor of En•
gJish ar U3. 120 Clemens.
North Campus. 2-3 p.m.
COIIPUIEJI SC....:E
COUAIQIIII. .
Sottwart Engutft:rinc Data:
Wbcn: Is It? How To {!d.
It, ':'~ia Van Venh.
CanLStus College and UB . 14

Knox. North CAmpus. ) :)().
4 :4 5p.m.

UB School of Medictne and

BKMncdical Sciences.

~SCHOOl

MSTITIIftfOII-

~UUE
Cylotun.ReplollonoCinflammation ill vi.o, Dr. Jack.
Gauldie. prof. and chwnnan,
Dept. of Pathology. McMaster
Umv. 223 Shennan. South
Campus. 3:30p.m.

~--

SIMINAit
Our Sacred Storie~: Patbways
to Wbo&amp;eoess i.n Recovery, Janet
EJkins Sahaf1• presenter. John
Norris ATC. Rochester. 9 a.m.·
4:30p.m. For I1'IOf'C mformauon

call645-6140.
SOC-Y L£CTURE
Work Scbodut.s opel
Time Witb Cbild~n.
Prof. Elizabelh lOOmson.
Dept. of Sociology. Univ. of
Wisconsin. Sponsored by
the Graduate Group in

School of Pharmacy.
WAIIEFIEUI 011A1. SUIIQEJrY
SUITE DBNCATIOH

~Bernard G.

Wakef.ekl Room;o ~!lip
B. Wels. M.D..' c~lr of .
the UB ~nctl, wall dedj .
cate the sutt.e. Also. Bernan! D. Wakefield; Aaron N
Bloch. UB provost; and Joseph E.
Margarone. dwr. UB Dept. of
Mu.tllofacial and OraJ Surgery
Squm Hall. South Campus.

S p.m.
WU,..
'I"M Tunr
(Bill
Plymplon,
1992).
Woldman

Theater. I 12
Norton.
North Cam-

~

Symm&lt;trlesand
Quart&lt;

Dy-

-~~or Jan WWJams and
Toay ~Baird Recital

--L--

Hall, 250 Baird. North CAmpus.

Nooo.

Union. D' YouviUe College. 8
Lm. Admis.~Mln: S.S. For more
information call645-2491
ATI&amp;EIIC IIYIJfT
UB Traek aDd J1lelcl Stadium.

NOIIh Campus. II Lm.-6 p.m.
OIIAI.IIIOL08YPalbogeo&lt;sls or HIV lafc&lt;lion
in lh&lt; Nenous Systan, Leon

Epsl&lt;in, M.D., Oiv. of Child
Neurology, Uoiv. of Rochesle&lt;
215 Pooler. Soulh Campus. Noon

--y

SOCIA&amp;.AMDPBYEimVE

Coocepu a n d - in C..-

Cff

Scrooaina Trials, Brian

Bundy, PII.O.. dcpu1y direciOr of
Gynecologic Oncology
Group. Rl'Cl 2.S2A Farber.
SoulhCampus. 12:)().1 :30p.m.
Slatistit'S,

COUAIQI • •
AdapUd MIDck, n-its or
Coan.itive Evo lution,
Misia Landau.
•
Harvard Univ. 262
Capen. North Campus. 3 p.m. Cosponson:d by the
Center for Cognitive Science: and
Conferences in the Disciplines.

--

DD:11IICAL- _.,_

•
II 0 Knox. North
CAmpus. 3 p.m.
For addilional
i.nformatioo coo·
1ae1 Prof. S. J.
Upadbyaya a1
64S-2A2.S.
u-ncs~

- ·-BI:ITAL

siooc:r o( education. Student

ment. Rocbesler Insti-

~FBaliiDc:ID&amp; You.r A.d. -=tivilic:s to

- a D d Mt&lt;lidooScrvlc:os Avallablo OD lllo ln..,__
Dr. Alan M . Reynard, professo&lt;,
UB medical school. 223
Shennan. Soulh Campus. Noon.
Sponsored by the School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sci·
eoces, School of Dental Medicine
and Depl. of Micr&lt;&gt;O;ology.

l lipor Eduea!lon lu N.,. York
Slale: ..._..,Crisis aDd FuJ. Nolan.
New Yorks- deputy comnus-

"'"' ..._,.,Donald

IUI&lt; ofTech,.,logy.

Oemogropby and Oeparunenls of
Sociology and Gcopphy. 280
Part. NOIIh Campus 10 a.m.

i~lude aerobics and yosa demonstmions, blood pressure meaaumncot. jugglers., intc:nct.ive
computer wellness assessment.
fi tness equipment. more. Student
Union Social Hall. North Campus. II Lm.-2 p.m. Sponson:d by
the Living Well Cenlef.

Children's Hospilal. 8 un.

Tho PoiYJIDIDial Mttbod Augln&lt;SIIt&lt;l by Suporn.d Trainiog
for HIODCI-Prlalt&lt;l Cbaract.,.
R«&lt;gDDttoo, Dr. P«er G. Ander·
son. Compu1&lt;r Science Oepan·

PHYSICS AND

-

-l'IIIC---WWY---

CPC-A Sis-Day-Old lu Shock.
Brodley Fuhrman, MD. Valerie
Goldfarb, M.D., Jerald Kuhn,
M.D. and Andru Westiogbouse.
M.D. Kind! Audilorium.

NoadlllaleaiSym-.yll.&lt;ducllons or Partial Dilferenltal
Eqlllllioas, Pro(. P«er O art&lt;soo.
Uoiv. ofExder, visiting II the
Univ. '&gt;fColondo. 103
Diefendolf. Soulh CAmpus.

p.m.

IIIOLC*CAL

T raalttip-

-

tlnttaJActivatioo by
lh&lt;Ad&lt;oo-

3 p.m.

-~

Wellness Fair
Thursday at
Student Union
includes. yoga,

blood pressure
. rneasuerret.
aerobics,

jugglers.

Sua Cbol, groctuau: stUdenL UB
Depl. of Medicinal Cbcmistty
114 Hocllsl&lt;ue&lt;. North CAmpus.
3 p_m.
, . . . _ , . COl&amp;OQIIII.
~aDd Is.obonfillatidalllllD&amp; 111o
lloo:
ualty. Hilde Undeman
Net- The HastilliS Ceol&lt;f. 10
Capen. NOIIh Campus. 3 p.m.
Co-sponsored by the Comminec

wc.....

on Ethics and Human Values in
Medicine:. School of Medicine

�7

.,_,_,.,c-.
-

..,...._ loclude Jdfrey

w.

BlOW!l, Brodt Univ. ("'Cen.oinly
..S On:ularily in Deocaneo's
Thin! MalitaliDft "); Grqory
Sr.ev.ns, Univ. a f -

_,._,.
V.._.,

Bolt
inrerim cooductor.
WO&lt;b by Beojomio BriiU:n ond
Owles lveo. Sloe Coocen Hall.
Nonl! Campus. 8 p.m.

GRADUATION
SPECIALS

C'Oa!OiosWna Meioooa'•

Theory af Objecu"); Alia AISoji, M t - Uolv. ("Exj-tial RdlecOons '"' Frocdom"):
Kyle JlllZ&lt;JI, Uolv. af Gudpb
lllvina • Knowledgeable
Opinion of lh: Good''). 280 Pot!&lt;.

&lt;"Oo

Nonl! campus.. to a.m.-3 p.m.

Call T'un Modipn .. rn-9428
for more infonnalion.
~

SMop, 1be Trqkally
Hlp, SkUr Carol, Moll)'
Fruvous, fcarurt:d bands; rcfn:shmeots. Okl Stadium. Nonh Cam·
pus. BeJins at 2 p.m. Free to UB
undergndua~e~ ; StO,IIII other
students; S1 general admission.
Sponsored by SA.

s.

-IIIICITAL
Slopboo Brrtloo, plano. Stcc:
Olncat HaiL Nonl! campus.

-3 p.m.

Helena Modjeska

'lbe Tuoo (Bil Plymploa, l!m).
Woldman 11-.., 112 Norton.
North campus. 7, 9 and t t p.m.
AdmiJsion, $2.50, UB ......,.,
$4.50, non-so.dcnJs. Rr mon:
infOilnllliooc:all645-2957.

s.

-

UB Suopboor Quartrt, WoW
by Grainger. Hanley, Mozart and
othc:n. St.. Cor&lt;:en Hill!. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.

Emil Orzechowski. Kosctuszko Foundation

Visning Professor at the unrversity. will gtve
a talk this eventng on the life and limes of
Helena Modjeska . the Polish-Amencan
ac tress ( t640-1909). who led a colorful life
and achteved a vast repertoire of
Shakespearean and contemporary roles
The lecture at 7 30 p m in 140 Farber . South Campus. ts
the hrst tn a toor-par1 ser•es leatunng speakers from the
Jagtelloman Umverstty , Poland's old est and most prestlgtous
unrversity An exchange agreement between UB and the
Jagtelloman Unrversity ts naw tn its th trd year and has brought
to thts campus 12 d tsltnguished Jagtellontan scholars, lour of
whom are currently tn restdence
The sertes conttnues May 13 wrth Jacek W astlewskt , assoc tate profeSSOf of soctology ('"Whtther Democracy tn Poland·
Who Shall Hold Power"). May 27 . Manan Grzybowski. proles·
sor of constitutiOnal law A New Constitution and 8 111 of
R•g hts fOf Poland ~}; and June 10 , Sab tna Arc tsz. asststant
professor tn library and tnformauon sctence ( ~ Ltbranes tn
Poland Treasures and Shonages")
All lec tures .are at 7·30 p .m tn 140 Farber and are free and
open to the pubhc Sponsor IS u s ·s Council on tnternattonat
Stud ieS and Programs

r

-~

Scrftn GEMMS, song-anddance salute lO the movies. sn·
scntal by GEMMS Musical ThealtT Company and directed by
Lynne KunWel -Fonnato and

Tres.sa Goonan Cn:han.
Katharine ComeU Theater,
Eltic()(( Complex. Nonh Campus
8 p.m.

SUNDAY

~

CONCERT
UB Wind Ensrmble. Olarles
Peltz. conduclor. fea runng Tom
Gentry ; perfonnmg Poutcoc's
" Le Ba..l Masque ." Sltt Concert
Hull. North Campus. 3 p.m.

RECnAL

and Btomedtcal Scteoces. and
School of Nursing.
E~

SEIIIIIWI
Barpi.n.i.ng with Finilr Number
of Alterna.t.lves, Dr. NeJal
Anbarci. UB. 280 Park. North
Campus. ~ :30 p.m.

CHEIUS'IWY COLL.OQfl'll•
SequeotlaJ Bond Dissociation
Eoerps lo Orpoi&lt; and Organometalli&lt; Molecules, Prof.

Robert R. Squires, Purdue Umv
70 J'.chcson. Sooth Campus.
4 p.m.

PHYSIOLCMIYEDitF, Nllric Oxide and
N~: 'lbePbysio&amp;opc. Tbrrapeutk Coatinuum.

Dr. H. L Puna. UB Dept. of
Pharmaceutics. t08 Sbcmwl.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

UU.UI'IUI
1be Tuoo (Bill PlympiOO,
· 1992). Woldman Theater, 112

Nonoo. Nonh Campus. S, 1, 9
and II

p.m. Admissioo, $2.50,

• UB students; $4.50, oon·students.

-

For more information call

645-m7 .
UB Choir, Houston Dunleavy,
conduccor, in • program featuring
Rutter's ..Gloria." Sloe Concert
Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m.

o.va-

Screea GEMMS, song-and·
dance saJU1e ID lh: movies.!""
scntal by GEMMS Musical Thellltt Caqlony

and dimctal by

Lynne Kunlriei-Fonnalo and
Trcssa Gorman OdWL """""""'

ComeU n.e-, ~ O&gt;mplex.
N&lt;Xtll Campus. 8 p.m.

SATURDAY

1

u e - CUNICAL DAY

Doctor Watchers. James S.
Todd. executive vice president.
American MedjcaJ Association;
Charles J. Vacanti. M.D.; Nancy
H. Nielson. M.D.: Ross G.
Hewitt. M.D.; and Michael J.

Horan. M.D. Buffalo Marrion
Hotel, Amherst 8: IS Lm. Spon-

--

sored by the: UB Medical Alumni

AssoCiation.

IIASAIIBIBAT

Biodhicl aad tbo Myth or
Valu• Fn&lt; Scia&gt;co, Qr. John
Banja. DepL of Rehabilitation
Medicine. Emory Univ. School of
MoWcine. UrUv. Inn and Conference Center, 2401 N. Forest
Road. 9 Lm.-3:30 p.m. Conference registn.l.ion begins at 8 a.m.
Admissiooo$20, faculty, and
other professionals; S I0, postdocs, students, residents and
nuncs. Sponsored by the: C.nlel'
for the Study of Biobehavioral
and Social Aspects of Health. FD&lt;

-

more information af1!d registmion
materials call645-l426.

Fourth Aanual w ....... N.,.
Y~OatarioU....,...

Sc.hubcrtiadr Program. Baud
Recilal Hall. 250 Ba.trd. North
Campus. 5 p.m.
DANCE I'IIOOUC~
Sc!'ftn GEMMS. song-anddance salule 10 !he movu:s. pn=senled by GEMMS Musical The·
a1er Company and direcled by
Lynne Kurd1.ie t- ~onnato and
Tressa Gonnan Crehan.
K.alharine Cornett Theater.
Elhcon Complex. North Campus.
8 p.m.

--

Ciuo RediaL Baint Recital Hall.
Nonh Compus. Noon.
.

4
---.-s,.....,

•

--·MS-

Comp&lt;rt

to DELL., S2,/J49

AC«Mia&amp; s.mc..lb ......... tbo

Scbool

(or Cblldral

Macintosh Color Ousic •

with Emoclooa1 Problrms, Ann

68030 ~ · I6MHz • 4MB

Lawson. Center for Tomorrow.
North Compus. 8o45 Lm.-3 p.m.
For ITICX'e information call
645-6140.

memory • S(Jd"B hard drive• 10"
Trinitron Color dispLoy • built-in
Appi•Talk •Storldani SCSl.
s... $70 with S.IO&lt;t 300 l.aNr Printor $1,905
S.n $95 with S.loct :no Lurr Printor $2,101

~­
Human DNA lleplleotioo:
Mechaobms aad Ap~brs,
Dr. Thomas Melendy, Cold
Spring Harbor l.abonuxy. t 348
Fart&gt;c:r. Sooth Campus. Noon.

Macintosh LC Ill •

- AIID-.

68030proc....,.•25MHz •4MB
memory • 8(td8 hard drive • l4 Color
display • Siandanl keyboard•built-in
AppleTalk • Siandanl SCSI
San $70 with Select 300 l.&amp;M1" Printer 52,245
San $95 with Select 310 Lua- Printer 52.,441
M

PHYIICS

==~·= ~

Suprrcooductlvlly Toprs, Prof.
J. H. Wang, Einslein Professor a1

-·-y
-

Macintosh Centris 650 •

UB . 2t9 Fronczal:. Nonh Campus. 3:45 p.m.

68040 procesoor • 20MHz •8MB
memory•230MB hard d.rive • 14 ~ Color
display • Extrnded keyboard • built-in
AppleTalk • On-bollnl Ethemet • High

O ..•lopm•nt aad Plostldty or
Conical Cotmrctioos and

perfonnance SCSI.
San S70 with Select 300 l..aHr Printer $4,.163
San S95 with Select 310 l.uer Printer $4,359

Func:tloual Activity lo tbo So-

mato5msory Conn, Dr. Shafoo
Juliano. Depl. of Ana10my and
~ II Biology. Uniformed Ser·
vices Univ. of lhe Heallh Sciences. 108 Sherman. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
CONCEIIT

Graduatr Composers. Baird
Recital Hall, 250 Bairo. North

UB Commons • North Campus • 645-3554

lll1

C.1.mpus. 8 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

J

PHARMA.CY SEIIIINAit

Activated Cbarroal Usrd to

Creatr an Unlimited Sink.,
Allan C. Anderson. Phann.D
candidale. 248 Cooke. North
Campus. 8-8:55 a.m.
PIANO RECnAL
Studenls or Stepben Maot:s.
Baird Recital Hall. 250 Baird.
North Campus. NoOn.

-

-WEU.

I'AIIII STAFF

---..---

Robert W. Car.r, Univ. ofMin -

nesoca. 206 Furnas. North Cam·
pus. N5p.;,

·--~

PII'-M:OV"'Y......U
FCJf1IJOIIoo 0oc1 Replotloa or
N.......... Gnnnb c....., Ouistopher S. Cohan. Pb.D .. UB Dept.
or AnatomicaJ Sciences. 307
Hochsteru:r. North Campus.
4 p.m.

Tyrooille Klaur Rqulotioo,
Tony Pawson. Ph.D .. Mt Sinai
Hospital, Rcsean:h lnst., Univ. or

.-vucs-

Toroo10. 026 Fart&gt;c:r. South Campus. 4 p.m. Sponsored by UB
Depanments of Biochcmiwy,

Continued on

Biopbysic:s.l'llannacology and
Pbysiology. .

lnaight 486DX/33

Fully upsndatble Intel 80186 CPU •
32 bit VESA Local buo 1MB Gnphia
AcceJerator SVCA Card •33 MHz •
4MB mmiC&gt;ry •2SOMB lwd drive •35"
md 5.25" high den:oily floppy dri,..•
14- M SVCA monitor • Enhlneed 101Uy lteybotud·~
[X)S S.O•Wl.lldows 3.1.

-aocw.

Sponta.neous Genrnltioo or
lruo:ctious Amylolds by conIIEM&amp;REcnAL
Gnocia Docoako, oopraoo. Baord _ fljJW'Oiional Chango lo
Noninfo:ctious Pr«ursors lo
Recital Hllll. 250 Baint. North
CJD, GSS aad Otbrr
Campus. 8 p.m.
Spongj(Dnl&gt; Eocopbalopotbirs,
Dr. D. Carleton Gajdusek, chief,
Labon.IOf)' of CenlrB.I Nervous
Systems Studies, NIH ; t976
Nobel Laureate in Physiology
MONDAY
and Medicine:. Hillboe AIJClilorium. R.PCl. FJm and Carleton
St=ts. t2o30p.m.

l---.rs

until May 28, 1993

TUESDAY

Dynomk Jlodlovopblc lmaa-

page 9

Convenie-nce
,:;
.
Quality
.
/
---\:.·
------·
---5 ervtce
·Yariety
~

�--.---.-Parking·rules to change during World University Games

8

N JULY 8-18, Western New
Yark will host the world' s second largest amateur sporting
event. The World Univer.;ity
Garnes will bring mon: than
5.!XXltop.lllllk&lt;doompetitorsandcoaches from
more than I00 countries to compete in 12
spons. Thousands of spectator.i will be drawn
to UB. a major Garnes venue hosting trnck and
field, swimming, volleyball and tennis.
How will the Garnes affect parlting this
summer? Here are answers to some of the most
comf119nly asked questions as detailed by
Carmela Thompson. director. Office of Campus Parking and Transponation Services:

O

Q: Will parking rwks and rtgulmioru chang•
lhis S&amp;m1111Lr?

A: Yes. For 13 days, July 7 through July 19.
the entire campus community-faculty, staff
and students-will be asked to observe a new
set of parlting rules, regulations and procedures when parlting on the Nonh Campus.
Q: Whu• will/ ~ abk to park?

A: Most of the parlting for the campus community will be located on the north side of the
academic spine. Entering the campus from
Rensch Road or the Lockport Expressway (1 990) will provide easy access to those lots that
have been approved for faculty. staff and

student parlting.
l'lortdDg will be avallab~ mornings, eveninp ond woekmds at:
• Fronczak B (Pay lo~ 7 a.m.-3 p.m. )
• ClovcrnlnA(faculty/staffonly. 7a.m.-3p.m.)
• Ketter Lot
• Kenefick Place Lot
• Park Hall Clinic Lot (metered)
Parking will also be available Monday
through Friday, 7 a.mAi p.m. at:
• Fronczak A (Pay lor. 7 a.m.-3 p.m.)
• Governors B
• Jarvis A and Jarvis B
• Furnas Lot (faculty/staff only. 7 a.m.-3 p.m.)
• Crofts Lot (one-half closestiO Crofts Hall)

tl Games Parking at aGlance
Spine Detail

• Center for Tomorrow Lot (limited spoce)
Q: Will/ have to pay to park aJ 1M F I'OriCZIJk
Lots?
A: Yes, unless you have an annual permit. The

pay lor will be open and available 10 faculty,
staff and students wbn wish 10 pay. Roles

remain the same and are in effect 7 Lm.-3 p.m.,
as usual. Anyone with an annual permit will
also be given access to the lots during these
hours. Metered parlting will also be available
and strictly enforced, 7 a.m.-5 p.m., during the
Garnes.
Q: Will I hov• to display my hangtag whil•
parking during th. Gamu?
A: Yes. In f~ parlting permits must be displayed at all tinnes, 7 a.m.-Midnigh~ when

parlting on the North Campus during the Garnes.
This ensures that adequate accotnlllOdatons
are maintained for the university conununity.

Q: Whot if I don ·, hove a parking pennit '
A: Currently registered students and employees wishing to park on the North Campus
during the Garnes must obtain a parlting permit.
Permits are available, al no cost. and can be
obtained from the Office of Campus Parlcing
and Tt1lt1Sportation Services. Annual permit
bnlders may obtain a hangtag from the parlting
booth attendant at the Fronczak Lots.
Q: Whot if I work in £1/ico" '
A: Effective June 27. parlting in the Elticon
lots will be reserved for Garnes personnel.
However. a limited number of spaces have
been made available in the Richmond Lot for
accredited faculty, staff and students.
Q: Will special provisions be made f or handi·
cap parking?
A: Yes. In addition to the handicap parlting
spaces available in the pennined lots described
above, all of Putnam Road will be available 10
those with disabilities. Of course. no one nor so
permined should park in areas designated for
service vehicles and other special uses. Those
parlting on Putnam must have a handicap parking permit clearly visible in their vehicle.

II
evenlncs a weekenct.

Q: WiJ/ shuttJ~ service IH availabl~ ?
A: Yes. Shunle service will be available to
transpon accredited students and UB personnel
between the Hamilton Loop and the Ellicort
Complex. Additionally. summer-long shunle
service will operate between the Crofts Lot and
the Academic Spine (i.e .. around Putnam Road).
Shuule service hours are 7:45 a.m.-5:45p.m ..
Monday through Friday.

(Govemon A L.ot, fKutt)'/
staff only until 3 p.m.)

Parkin&amp; avallabfe Mondssy .

Frtday, 7 a. m• . 6 p.m.
(Fu~MS Lot, faculty/ ataft
only until 3 p.m.)

Q: Whot is th• policy for 8""" passes ?
A: University departments should issue guest
pennits only to guests who are visiting UB on
univer.;ity business. Guest passes should not be
issued 10 visitors attending the Garnes.
c·

Paid port&lt;tnc
7 a.m.· 3 p.m.

Faculty, staff to get reduced fee for academic
conference being held along with Games
lly LOIS IIAIIER

News Bureau StaH

ACULTY AND STAFF at UB are
being offered a reduced registration
fee of$100 for the international aca. demic conference ''Change and the
Human Dimension of Physical Activity" being held at UB July 9-11 in conjunction with
the World University Garnes.
The reduction is also being offered 10
'faculty and staff in other colleges and universities in Erie and Niagara Counties. The reduced daily registration fee is $50. Standard
registration is $250.
Carolyn Thomas. conference program director, said many pn:sentations deal with social and political aspects of sport that could be
of i•nterestiO faculty and staff nor involved in
athletics. They include:

F

• "uts Make Room for a Song: The ugacy
of Grantland Rice"-by William Harper.
Purdue Unive!'ity
• "Globalization and the Sociology of
Spon"-Don Sabn, D'Youville Cdllege
• ''Change of Values in Spons and Society"-Helmut Digel, lnstitut for Spons Science, Darmstad~ Gennany
• "A Practice of Racism in Intercollegiate
Athletics: University of Alabama as a Case
Study" -Timothy J. Bryan~ et al .. and Christopher J. Hallinan. Univ. of Alabama.
• "Gender.ExerciseandtheAging Body: An
Historical Per.;pective" - Patricia Veninsky.

University of British Columbi Canada
• "Industrialization of Spons"-Sui Lu.
People's Republic of China
• "Sport as an Instrument of Caribbean Integration"-Jai Jebndhsingh, University ofWest

Indies. Barbados
• "Transformation of Spon in Post-State
Socialism"--(;yongyi Foldesi. Hungarian
Univer.;ity of Physical Education
• "Competition: Win, Lose or Draw" Panel discussion on social issues with represe ntatives from Penn State University.
Univer.;ity of Pinsburgh, Univer.;ity of Westem Ontario and Northenn Illinoi s University.
The reduced fee does nor include meals or
'copies of proceedings. which can be: purchased separa.ely.
Persons may register on site in Slee lobby
at9.a.m. Friday. July 9, and in Knox Rorunda
Friday afternoon through Sunday. Advance
registration

fonns are available from the

Depanment of Physi&lt;!al Thentpy and Exercise Science at 829-2941. or from Conferences and Special Events at645-2018.

New Jersey finn will
produce ceremonies

A

NEW JERSEY -BASED firm will
take on the job of producing the
opening and closing =nonies for
the World University Games. The
opener is scheduled fcc July 8 in Rich Stadium.
The Kirshner·Organizlllion will take over for
dick clark oorpor.ue productions, inc. 'Kir.;hner
takes the reins with fewer than 80 days 10 go
beforetheGarnesopener.The fum. whose credits
include the 1992 Democratic National Convention and President Ointon ·s Ina•Jgural Ball. as
well as the Tony Awards. will have a tight timetable, but Butt P. Flickinger. Garnes l'l&lt;sident.
noted in ThiBuffaloNnvsthal''Thepeoplewe' ve
hired 10 do the show believe it can be done."
Attrncting big audiences is an imponant factor
in the financial success of the Games. Of the S6
million in Garnes revenues 10 oome from sales of
evenJS tickets, the Ojlener'is expect&lt;d 10 gax:nue
.$3.4 million.
0

�_____ __

--- -y-

CAUNDAR

Dr. Kevin Sttubl, Dcp&lt;.
d Biolop:al OJemiRry and

Continued from page 7
.... Dr. Slqll&gt;m Rud;n, Dcp&lt;. of
R.odiology and Bioph)'lics,
ECMC. 106 Cary. South Cam-

-Harvanl Univ.
Pbonnoc:olosY.
121 Cooke. Ncr1b
Campu. 4 p.m.

--.nca-

pus. 4 p.m.

Tile llrect ol Corticoola-old

......... Globoolia.., tbo P11or-

-~-AI.
Rap To-~
Joonne Loreozo, marimba, M;ltc
Moocr. bonjo, Loo Gormley.
tuba. Becky Slacbc:U, pcn:wsioa,
and CllriJ Critelli, tenor. Allen
Hall. South Campus, 7 p.m.
woru by er..ton. Kt.islcr and
o&lt;hcn.

uu.u ....

1be Mao (WUUom

c......,.

Mmzlos, 1953),..,.. 3-D run.
Adntiuioo. SJ..SO. UB srudenu;
-S4.SO. grnenl oudiena:.

"'"""-,_a ol

............... Hui 0.00&amp; Ko,

paduale I1Ud&lt;nt. UB Dcp&lt;. or

Phannaceutic:o. S08 Cooke.
Ncr1b Campu. 4-5 p.m.

uu.u ....

Tile Mao (WUUom Cama-oa
Mmzlos,1953), mor. 3-0 fun.
Admission, $3.50, UB stud&lt;niS:
$4.50, general audience.
Woldmao lbcarer. 11 2 Norton.

North Campus. 7 p.m.

North Campus. 7 p.m

A show of work by Kathleen
Cavanagh and Theodora
Zastempowski com..inuo.
through May 7 m Bethune Gallery. 29 17 Mam St Gallery
houn: Monday, noon to S p.m.,
Tuesday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.;
Wcdnesday. l :lO toS p.m..
Thursday . !0:30a.m. fo 12:30
p.m., Fnda.y. I lOS p.m. For
mfonnaoon. ca11829-3477

6

-

COMPVlDI SCIENCE EDS
~SPEAIIDI

Computer Scieocc Proors and
Er-Tor·Od.tdin&amp; Computation,
S•l v1o ,MicaJi . Labon.to.-y for
Computer Science. MIT 14

Kno' North Campus. 3:30-4 45
p m For more tnfonnauon . cootaet Dr Wilham J. Rapaport.
645-3193 (E-mail:
rt1papon@cs. buffalo.edu)
BIOl.CMiUCAL SCIENCO

HIIIIWI
Mo~lar

Me.::banisms of
Transcriptlooal Rqulatioo in

NOTICES
VOUIHTEEIIS

~FOR

The Uaiva&gt;ity a1 Buffalo T -11Wtm Cub mocu In Room 200
O&gt;mmons. Ncr1b Campus, "" lbe """""' and fourth
Tucaday d each month. Mer&lt;-

o( The

inp. bdd from 5:30 "'7:15
p.m., lldllcrr "' alllrict qenda

and are hiJbly ponkipoJo&lt;y.
Membenhip is open to university employccs and 10 lbe Wc:stem New Yort communiry. The
six-month initial membenhip is
S40. Mcmbcnhjp renewals co..
$24 every siA monlhl. Purchue
onkn and prrsonal chcci.s
should b&lt; made poyabk: 10 ""'

-

c.rtllled N...,.. .........._..
(SE-Z)-Social and Prcvcntivr
Maficin&lt;. - . tR-93027

- . . , . 1-Qccupational

Thenpy. Piloting tR-93035.

-..,. m (N0-5)-Social and
Preventive Medicine, Posting

IR-93029. Din&lt;lor d IIdiabiJllatloa Toduloioo Oa:upotiooal Thenpy. Pooting
tR-93036. SdeDc:o Admlaiot.-.
tor {SE-3)-Nalional
for
Geoppltic lnfonnolion and
Analysis, Posting tR-93037

c.o...

Clorlt 0 -Sponsorcd l'tograms
Services/Purchasing. Posting

IR-93039. lleo&lt;ardl Tedtniciao II- Biochemical ftwmacol·

--

-

-IIESOUIICURIR
S11JDENIS

NP-3019. Acod&lt;mi&lt; Coordinalo.- {SL-4, lnt&lt;mal Promolioa
Opportunity)-Croler for Aca·

ogy. Posting IR-9JIWO. Sec:.-.tary f.()ffwe of Medical

&amp;lucation. Posting IR -9).(}4.1

International Folk Dancing lessons art held Friday evenings at
8 p.m. on the: ground floor of
Diefendorf HaJJ, South Campu!&gt;.
Request dancing follows from 911 p.m. Everyone is welcome:
no partner needed. Free admission. Sporuom:i by tht Graduate
Student Association.

Cun-ent listings of Jobs in bus• ness and indusuy. government,
health, educallon and non-profit
organizations. are available in
the Office of Career Planning
and Placement, IS Capen Hall.
North Campus. Call645-2231
for more mfonna1.1on.

Assistant Focilitla Procr-m
Coordinotor {SL-3)-0..ign and

ConSUUCtion. Posting lfP-3009.
Rtsidcnco 11a11 Direc:to.- {SL2)-R.esidential Ufe, Posting MP30 I 8. S&lt;ruor Appllcalions Ana·

l_yot I (SL-4)-Com)K1ting and

Information Techno5ogy. Posting

demic Development Seno•ces.
Posting lfP-3017. Assistant to

Dean (SL-3, 1ntrmal ~
tion Opportunity)-Denlal
Medicine. Posting MP- 3022

Softw..-.ll&lt;oi&amp;...- (SL-4)-Psychology, Posting ~P- 3007
COMPEmM! CLUSIFlED

CMI.SDYICE

H.UITATRIR~

Srudents wishing to volunt~r
for Habitat for Humamry. an
orgaruution committed to elinu nating poverty housing for lowmcomc: families through rehabtlitatin&amp; or butldmg affordable
housi ng. are asked to stop by
Community Action Corps
(CAC) offi ces. 370 Student
Umon

Teac:lling (BRJEl). l'oalng IF3028. ,_... .....,_.-Urol oo. -..,IF-3029. - . . . .

- - I F-3030.

RIUIDAHC-LU-.

EXHIBITS

9

.....,_.-Urolozy (Podi.uric).

due.
Forms ... · - allbe
~Desk In each Library .

at645-3365.

GIIADUAftTHUIS._.

THURSDAY

~Lilts for !be 1993Summer and Pall SeaioM are now

University at Buffalo Toastmastc:rs Club. For further infonnation. contact Bill Rice. JMeSidenl

Woldnwn TheaLer, 11 2 Norton.

DE-BCIJA&amp;.
Luk Vaes, piaoo. Baud Rec•taJ
HaJJ North Campus. 8 p.m

..,

Kryboord Sp«&lt;aaist (SG~.
part-timeKomparn.tJve Literature. Ltne: lf303SS.

JOBS

~

FACULTY
Asslstani/As&amp;oc:iat&lt; Prof.....-.

Ophihalmology, j'ostin&amp;•F·
3027. Ltcturcr-Buffalo Research lnstitutc: on Education for

CLAUIFim CIVIl. SDYICE
G&lt;aorol M&lt;dloni&lt; (SG- ll)University Facilitlc:s. Line
131269. Plumb&lt;rfSteamllttor
(SG-12)-Univenity Facilities,
L.me 1131 3 16.

Think safety when

you walk or run
As 8llllnll beckons with the pleasures
of the outdoors, Public Safety is increasing
efforts to warn the campus community
about the dangers of walking 0&lt; running
alone
Pam Beal. ass1stant to the Personal
Safety Committee, offers these tips fO&lt; yo.x
safety
,. Walk 0&lt; run w11h a fnerl&lt;t Be aJen to your
surround1ngs and the people near you.
,. For v1sibility while JOQging, use a fllJ()(escent vest PubliC Safety has vests available
for a refundable $8
&gt; AvOid walk1ng alone at n1ght Calllhe
Ant1-Rape Task FO&lt;ce (645-3322) for Jhelf
escort and van serv1ce
,. Walk confidently and assertively An
attacker looks for someone who appears
vulnerable
» At n1ght. walk close to Jhe curb AvOid
bushes and doorways where an attacker
can h1de Travel on well-ht streets
,. Do nol walk. dflve or b1cycle wh1le us1ng
earphones
,. If followed . walk QUICkly 10 well-ht. populated areas If followed by a car. turn and
walk 1n lhe oppoSite dlfect1on
,.. Personal alarrns to help deter an attempted assault are available a1 Public
Safety fO&lt; $ t 2
» Check the SUNYAS CAMPUS-SAFETY
vnewsgroup (E-mail) for safety messages
and updates on campus crone problems
In the event of a sexual assauh. call the Sexual
Assault lnformaoon l..Jne (645-3411) for InfO&lt;rnaoon on acfun to take. optionS"' reporung
and resources available to a viclln

Help bring the world to Buffalo•••

1j
UniYersitvGames
Buffcio'93"
'

~

,.J

@New'bi&lt;Telephone
Wtththe

. . , . . Fwnllyol~

-Ciub'93
THE WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES:
The Best Athletes competing.at the largest sporting event in the world this year.
Don't miss your opportunity to participate in the
Sports Spectacle of a Lifetil'ne
Club '93 Membership Benefits Include:
Commemorative Gifts., Preferred Seating., A Chance to Win Free Tickets

For Additional Information Please Contact Bry,tce Kolesnick at 645- 2925
_ _ _j

�_____..,__
The Repotter W8lcom9s COtMI6fltaty oo issues
of broad interest to the urrr-sity conmtXlity.
Material may be edited for style and length.

Critics offer skewed vision of higher ed
~y....-a.ALlUCII

Martin Ander.;on, Impostor&gt; in tM Tanpk:

American

/nu/l~ctuals A.r~

!Hsrroying our

UniV&lt;rsities and CMating Our StudenlS of
Th.&lt;ir Future. New York.: Simon and

Schuster, 1992. 255 pp. $22.
George H. Douglas, Education withouJ Impact: How Our Uniwrs.itUs Faillhe Young.
New York: Birch Lane Press. 1992. 223 pp.
$19.95
Richard M. Huber, How Proftssors Play tM
Cat Guarding tM Cream: Why Wt 'rt Paying Mort and Gerring Uss in HigMr EducoFairfax, Virginia: George Mason
Univ ... ity Press, 1992. 201 pp. $19.95.

IIOn .

MERICAN HJGHER education has been taking its licks
recen~y . Not only have colleges and universities experienced their most severe
financial crisis since the 1930s. they have
been criticized for a vanety of sins of comm•ssion and omiss1on. lrnproper expenditure
of govcnunent ~search funds and an alleged
neglect of undergraduate teaching arc two of
the issues which have
recen~y been in the
public eye-and
wh.Jch are considered
in all three of these
books. Th&lt;:re has also

A

been much debate
Al.TBACH

about the focus of the

undergraduate c umc ulum, espec iaJiy on the 1ssues of
''muluculturalism'' and '"poliucaJ correct-

ness
These: auack.s have placed htghcr educa·
uun on the defenstve. Most everyone agrees
that Amen~.:an htgher educauon IS m uouble
and that there ts a need to adjust from a
penod of unparalleled growth and affluence
to a more conslra.lnud extstence. Even with
an expec ted upturn 10 the economy and
relauvel) steady enrollments. American
ht gher educauon wtll not return to its Golden
Age of growth.
There has been a good deal of soulsearching in recent years and even some
reform. Ernest L. Boyer' s Schola rship Reconsidered, for example, stimulated consid·
emble discussion on the relative roles of
teaching and research. Contrary to Martin
Anderson·s aSscnion that this repon was
ignored by the academic community, it is in
fact the most widely sold volume ever published by the Carnegie Foundation for the
Advancement ofTeaching. Henry
Rosovsky 's insightful report to the Harvard
Ans and Sciences Faculty. which highlighL&lt;
the need for greater accountabili ty for faculty time and effort. has also attracted much
anention in the higher education community.
ln shon, there is unprecedented debate
gomg on with regard to the futu~ of Ameri·
can higher education. Presidents and trustees
are playing a more active role in shaping
thelr institutions. And it is likely that there
will be some significant but probably not
revoiutionary change taking place as a result
of thts increased activity and concern. 1bere
has already been some change-for example, there has been significant reform in
the undergnlduate curriculum in many colleges and universities, shoring up the liberal
ans core and redesigning some counoes.
Many in ""' universities, espccially those in
positions of leadcn;hJp, ro:ogni:r.e thai the
academic S}'Sit:l1l is in trouble, f'acin8 some
inlemal JX0b1crns and many extmlal challez!ges. These three critics are simply wrong
whm they poinlto a S}'Sit:l1l dominaled by

IXO{essorial fat cats who are smugly satisfied
with the staiJU quo. It is cer1ainly the case thai
colleges ard universities are slow to change
and lhal collegjal academic governance doe&gt;
not lend itself to dramalic initiatives, but 0011sciousness has been raised.
MOSI of the aurent proposals f&lt;r ~
increased auenbon to multicultural a~
on campus---wculd not be weloomed by the
three critics because these initiatives embody a
lilxnl iruapreWion of lmowledge and curriculum and these three ...U.X. gmetally take a
conservalive perspective. The chief villains are
the IXO(essors.
It may be significant that the last wave of
right-wing critics, writing in the 1960s and
early 1970s, blamed the students. In these
three books, the students are seen in genezal
as unwitting ciphers.
There seems to be a
need to food a devil
theory to explain the
ills of higher education. For the 1990s,
professors have be·
come the source of
evil. If they would
shape up. everything
would be fine. Unfortunately, reality is
more complex. To
claim that American

to be foUowed by ''feUOWJ" who would have
a focus on research. AU three critics ""'
vebemently opposed to the tenwe system
and favoc its immediate abolition, ald\ough
Anderson is willing to let the cwreot incumbents retain their tenure. lbey favor a system
of tenn contrncts and want to ma1ce it much
easier to "get ricf' of people who are 001
performing up to standard. They do 1101.
however, indicate who is to do the evalll81ing and firing.
They have virtually nolbing to say about
academic freedom, the historical reason for
the establishment of the tenure system in the
ftrst place. Pernaps they feel that academic
freedom is no longer threatened in the
United States and needs no special pro!CC·
tion. History shows that academic fn:edom
needs to be safeguarded at all times a:s it
does come under anack. It is also suggested
that the current practice of initiating promotions from the bottom uJ&gt;-from the academic depanrnent-be changed and that
promotions in rank be the responsibility of
the top administrators, who after all have
ultimate responsibility for the quality of the
institution.
Many of the criticisms in these books ring
true. There is 100 much trivial publication in
academic journals. There is a good deal of
"deadwood'' in higher education. In many
universities. especially in the large public research-oriented institutions. undagrnduates are
sometimes given short shrift. There are all toO
many instances of waste, inefficiency and even
a bit of oorrup1ion in American higher education. Many of""' specifiC recommendations
made in these books are sensibJe..-..better evaluation of teaching (but none of the ...U.X. really
tells us how to do this) ardmore meaningful
rewards for teaching, early retirement plans.
more rational selection of~ and
the like.

"There is virtually no
recognition that the rest of
the world looks to
American higher
education as a
and
that the United States is
the most favored
desti.naJion for stwients
and scholars from other
counlries. "

higher education is
mired in sloth, inertia
and corruption, as
these three author&lt;
do. is simply not true.
Funher. it is quite
damaging to Amencan higher educauon
as it is begi nning to
deal with some of 1~
most serious chal·
lenges in decades.
There is a common tone of nastiness in
their books. but there are some imponant
differences as well. Martin Anderson. a
Senior Fellow at SUUldard's Hoover lnstitu·
tion, and a fanner domestic policy advisor to
Presidents Nixon and Reagan, takes the most
critical stance. At the core of the problem, he
says, is the leftist bias of the professoriate.
Citing data which is almost 20 year&gt; old and
some recent case studies. notably one in
which a resean:her looked up the voting
affiliations of members of the Stanfard faculty and found that the large majority of
them are Democrats, he claims that the entire academic profession is liberal. He does
not point to the significant variations in
political opinions by discipline or institution.

A

most publication is worthless.
He does 001 tell us how we might continue to press forward scholarship in his
Brave New World of restricted publication
nor does he tell us who should ma1ce the
judgment concerning whal scholarship is
worthwhile. He is also critical of the movement toward multiculturalism in the curriculum. It is 001 a1 all clear bow Dougbs would
have us reform American higher education
while at the same time ITlllintBining a commitment to mass higber education.
Richard M. Huber has taught at Princetoo
and SCtVed as a dean at Hunter College of
the City Univer.;ity of New Yori&lt;. He curren~y conducts seminars for the U.S. Department of State. His book. despite its
amusing title, is the most temperate of the
three. It deals with some of the points of
controven:y. such as
rising tuition costs.
the process of admissions to selective
undergraduate colleges and the like.
He points to a number of ironies of
American higher
education including:
• Professor.; are
mode~
hired to teach but are
evaluated as scholant
(true enough at the
top-tier researchoriented uni versitie.c;
but not at the large
majority of institutions of higher education. where
teaching is the main
responsibility and
LIP ALliiACH the main focus of
faculty evaluation).
• University
presidents diminish their authority on campus to the degree that they build up a research-oriented faculty .
All three authors point out how the c ui ·
ture of research has taken over American
higher education and point to the baleful
influence of the research culture. Anderson.
the harshest critic. also accuses the professoriate of corruption and dishonesty, pointing
to cases of plagiarism. misuse of research
funds, and the like.
Huber and Anderson both point to the
difficulty of getting rid of obviously incompetent professors because of the tenure system. Professors are. it is claimed. liberal or
radical in their JX&gt;litics and conservative in
their approach to higher education. They are
unint.erested in undergraduate students and
concerned only about building a cushy career.
lbere is no mention of the significant
recent professor-initiated effons to refonn
the undergraduate curriculum nor the fact
that academic salaries. for adecade. have not
kept up with income growth or inflation in
the rest of the economy. TI&gt;ese authors point
to the high salaries earned by some senior
faculty at the major research institutions.
They nowhere -cite average academic sala·
ries. which are much more modesL
Anderson, Douglas and Huber are especially harsh in their criticisms of the emphasis on resean:h and publication in American
higber education. Stress on publication diminishes attention to teaching and results in
insignificant journal articles. They argue that
teaching should receive greater emphasis.
Anderson goes farthest in his critique--&lt;Uld
even presents some proposals for change. He
argues that the title "professor" be abolished.
The top academic rank should be "teacher,"

nderson also singles out the trustees for

criticism. He claims. with considerable
justification. that trusteeS have not taken
leadership in academic policy and have
clelegated basic governance to the faculty
and administration. He fails to note that this
trend has been going on for more than a
centwy. Anderson argues that the trustees
should take back power and use it. He notes
that the trustees. after all. own the universi·
ties. Presumably the trustees would be more
sympathetic than the faculty to his conservative agenda.
George L. Douglas, a professor of English at the University of nlinois, also feels
that the faculty are the heart of the problem
and that the faculty have abrogaJed their
responsibility for undergraduate teaching.
He, like Anderson, is very critical of the
"pu~lish or perish" syndrome (although in
fact in many sectors of American higber
educatioo most professors are under linle
pressure to publish}--ilnd ~claims that

A

nderson, Douglas and Huber do not
seem to recognize that one of the main
strengtiD of the American unive~ ity is precisely its research focus--there is no discus·
sion of the contribution of academic research
to the American economy, of the importance
of basic research and of the effective combining of research with gnlduate level instruction. There is virtually no recognition
that the rest of the world looks to American
higher education as a model, and that the
United States is the most favored destination
for students and scholars from other countries-largely because of the excellence of
resean:h in American higber education.
But these authors simply have a skewed
vision of American higher education. One
gets the impression that a significant part of
their disillusionment with the academic
profession is based on their perception that
the professoriat is too liberal in its politics.
They also fail to see the entire soope of
American higher education. When they write
about the uni versity, they in general refer to
the "research universities" as if these consti·
tuted the entire spectrum of higher egucation
instead of less than 20 percent of the total.
1be fact is that most colleges•and universities have not neglected undergraduates.
that teaching is the primary responsibility in
almost all places, that me ''publish or perish"
syndrome operates only in the top tier institutions and that. for better or worse. administrators and trustees play an active_role in the
leadership of most American colleges and
universities. The large majority of American
students say that they are highly satisfied
with the education that they are receiving. C
·

Philip G. Al!bach is professor and ditecror of
1/Je Canparative Eiiucation Center. Srste
Unill8tsity of New Yen at BuffaJo.

�--...---.--

mAKmS Facui~&amp;Sian
U f:

:,

·.

~ I

I U '. A l

• Charla Patrick Ewi.ag,
professor of law and clinical
professor of psychology, and
his stUdies of women who
mwder partners who abuse
!hem were featured in a
cover story on that topic in
the Jan. 18 issue of TIME.
A study by a UB research
team led by J ohn Vena,
associate professor of social
and preventi~e medicine,
and lhowin&amp; dill eating
vegetablea and fruita containing carotenoids appears
to decrease lhe clwlces of
devetopin·g bladder cancer
was !be focus of an article
on Jan. 12 in The Washing ton PMt. Other members of
lhe team are Saxon Graham, Jo Freaclenbeim,
•

Jama Manhall. Maria
Zielemy, Mya Swanson
and Gerald Su frin . Stories
about the study also appeared in many other news·
papers. including the

Chicago Tribun~ . San Fran
cisco Chronicle and Tht
Sacramento Bee.

4

• The deve lopment of
''hairy carbon," a new marenat containing microscopi c
branching filaments of carbon that may add to the life
of batteries, by Debontb
Chung, professor of mechanical and aerospace engi neering , Niagara Mohawk
Chair of Materials Research.
and coll eagues was discussed in the "Science
Newsfront'' section of the
January issue of Popular
Science. AJso collaborating
on the work were Carl
Lu nd aod Xiaoping Shui.

• Doris J. Rapp, clinical
ass istant professor of pediat·
rics, was quoted in an article
on Jan. 30 in The Sacra ·
mento Bu that disc ussed
allergies.
•

In ao article on Jan. 25 in
USA Todny , Mic hael
Raulin, clinical associate
professor of psychology and
director of the Psychological
Service Center. discussed
the mood of Buffalo area
residents in the week prior to
Super Bowl xxvn and their
strong identification with the
Buffalo Bills.
• Charles Trzcinka, associate professor of finan ce
and managerial economics,
was among experts quoted in
a column discussing mutual
funds that appeared in Th•
N~»i York Times on Jan. 17.
• Joseph Zam bon , professor of periodontology. discussed how new 1ests for
gum disease will potentially
c ut the costs of dental care in
an article in January/February issue of American

H&lt;alth.
---oorrpiled by me UB '"-S

Buteau

BIll

--.vs.Newo.....ua...-

• Plot Field ..

28

0

The Professional Staff Senate will sponsor the
fourth annual UB Night at Pilot Field, featuring lhe Buffalo Bisons and lhe New Orleans Zephyrs , Friday, May 28 at 7:05p.m.
Game tickets (reserved seats only) are S4 apiece.
The PSS has reserved 300 tickets. Call the PSS at
645-2003 for more information. Deadline for receipt
of all checl&lt;s is May 14.

The Center for lhe Study of Biobehavioral and
Soeial Aspects of Health at the University at
Buffalo will hold a retteat for faculty and students
from 8:45a.m. to 3:30p.m. on Saturday, May I, in
the University Inn and Conference Center, 2401
N. forest Road. Amherst.
The keynote address will be delivered at 9 a.m. by
John Baoja, associate professor in the Department of
Rehabilitation Medicine at Emory University School
of Medicine in Atlanta.
Baoja will discuss ··Bioethics and the Myth of
Value-Free Science."
The retrea~ whch i• designed to encourage
multidisciplinary research. will feature presentations
by faculty and students on the biological, behaviordl
and social aspects of health.

WOibhops elm to make phy.tc:~Ms

better...,_.

0

Strntegies to help physicians become more effective teachers in the ambulatory setting for medical
Sllldents and residen1 physicians will be tbe focus of two
workshops to be held Thursday, May 13 and Thursday.
June 10 in Beck Hall on tbe UB South Campus.
The workshops. SJlOI1SOI&lt;d by tbe Primary Care Resoun:e Center of tbe UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. will be held from 8:15-10:30 a. m.
The topic of the May 13 session will be "Feedback
in Cli nical Medical Education." The speakers will be
Roseanne Berger, associate dean for graduate medical
education on the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. J. Ronald Gentile. professor in US's
Graduate School of Education. and Richard W.
Schifeling, assistant professor in the Department of
Medicine at UB .

Wakefield Oral Sullfery Suite
to be dedlcllted today

0

The Bernard G. Wakefield Room, the oral
surgery suite at the School of Dental Medicine,
will be .dedicated in a ceremony to be held at 5 p.m.
today in Squire Hall on the South Campus.
Wakefield. 93. a noted dental educator who was
chairman of the former Department of Oral Surgery at
UB for 30 years. is a 1924 graduate of the UB dental
school.
While living and working in Buffalo. he also
served as chief of oral surgery at The Buffalo Genernl
Hospital.
A hoard-certified oral surgeon. he is remembered
by his colleagues, friends and former patients as a
compassionate, skilled oral surgeon and teacher.
Phi lip B. Wcls. M.D .. chair of the UB Council. will
dedicate the suite. Also participating in the ceremony
will be Wakefield 's son. Bernard D. Wakefield of
Grand Island, a 1957 graduate of the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences; UB Provost
Aaron N. Bloch. and Joseph E. Margarone, chair of
the Department of Maxillofacial and Oral Surgery at
the UB dental school.

Mort. ao.d .__ .oc:lety

~M!W ~-~

0

The newest chapter of Monar Board, the
honor society for college seniors. was in·
stalled at UB in the Student Union on Sunday, April
25. ln&lt;talling officerll were Kathryn Timberlake
MacKenzie, national presiden~ and Barbara Arnold.
section coordi nator. They were assisted by Steven
Schon gen, national student council representation-

I I I '

I I' I

r (... ~

~..._,

~

B

0

A

R

.

0

at-large.
Membership is based on evidence of distinguished leadership, scholarship aod service. To be
eligible, candidates must be in the upper 35 per=~t of
the junior class or have attained a 3.0 GPA.
Cum:nt officers of the Buffalo cbapeer are Deborah
Jo LaDuca. presiden~ Stephen Maricich, vice presideD~ Sheri Whalen, secretary; Atka Patel, treasurer;
Jason Ensher and Eliubeth Francis. membership
coonlinators; Aaron Liguori is director of communi-

cation.
Raben Palmer, vice president for student affairs,
and Dennis Black, associate vice presiden~ student
services, represenlCd the university at l.he installation.
Chapter advisors are Jeannette Ludwig. Modem Languages and Literatures; Janet Mather, Career Planning
and Placemcn~ Michael Stokes, Special Services, and
Ann Hicl&lt;s, Office of Student Life.

.... GeMnd to be hoiMN'8d by
PlofJJJion.l Stllff ......

0

The Professional Staff Senate will honor
recipients of the 1993 Outstandi ng Service
Award and the 1993 Chancellor's Award for Excellence in ProfessionaJ Service at a luncheon May 20
at noon in the Center for Tomorrow.
The Outstanding Service Award recognizes
members of the Professional Staff who go beyond
the nonnal scope of their responsibilities to make
outstanding service contributions that benefit the
university or community. This year's recipients are
John S. Bis, ass istant deao , School of Architecture
&amp; Planning, and James R. Gerland, supervising
programmer/analysl Academic Services. Computing aod Information Technology .
The Chancellor's Award recognizes individuals
who have repeatedly sought improvement of them·
selves. their campuses and ultimately the state uni versity and in doing so, have transcended the normal
definitions of excellence. The names of this year' s
winners bave not yet been released by the
Chancellor' s office.
For more infonnation. call Joanne Aetcher. cochair of the awards committee, at 645-3636.

WBFO appoints Mary Ann Rogers
clrectDr or~

0

1 ~. "

WBFO has announced the appointment of

Mary Ann Rogers as director of membership. Rogers joined the WBFO staff in early April

and will be responsible for executing tbe station' s
fund -raising and related activities. "WBFO is already
regarded by many as a treasured resource in this com·
munity.'' said Rogers. "Our concern at this point con·
tinues to be increasing the: audience's awareness of
our quality programming and developing our listen·
ers' participation in the station." Efforts will also be
focused on increasing interaction with the: campus
population. Rogen; is a UB graduate.

AIll IIIII~IIIIPII
0111~111
For the firs! tme !he~­
sity COITITU'Iily has access
to a database of rewspapers and magazines from
the eiiY1ic and minorily
press in !he lJniled Slates.
Elllnlc llewaWIItch is a
compulerized ()fOdtx:1
which conlains the aciUal
fullteXI of articles from Alrican-Amencan. Hispanic.
Latino. Chicano. NatMl
American, Asian. Jewish.
Arab and European Arrencan pubhcahons Speclfoc
t1tles include Annenian
Reporter. Cherokee Advocate. Er IJumQila Prensa.
Fiflpmo Reporter. lnsh
Arnenca. Ira/ian VOICe, JewIsh runes. News India. New
Lebanese American, PolishAmerican Joumal. Almost
1()() lilies total'
It has always been easy
to find out what the mainstream press has to say
about current events and
pol1cy 1ssues Now discover
what the ethnoc and m1nor1ty
press has to say about
abortl()(l nghts . police brutahty. Saddam Husse1n.
bilingual educatoo. Crown
Heights racial tensions, and
many other topics. lntematlonal. U.S . state. and selected local news stones
ate covered as well as
books, theater. film and
muste.

Ethnic NewaWlltch
available in lockwood
library's ma1n reference
atea on the second floor .
Pnnt instructions and computerized help screens are
available to introduce users
to seatch1ng techniques.
Users typocally sign up in
advance lor 30-minute
seatching sessions. Call
Lockwood's reference desk
at 645-2820 to reserve a
time slot
IS

--GetM!a DeVtnney and
Loss i'oJqueflo Glazl6f.
LockHiood Library

_____.......
....,,_
2222
Pilllc

QrOJd'Jon,Stuclellt~for

a., ...,Cc!-••c•••ntExtnt

The Repa1erw;P publish i1s amual "Commencement Exlrll" edition on Thl.rsday, May
13. Please send us lists ol studentS receiving
graduallon or Olher honots idef1ilying honots
concisely: ~ ........ reoeiwM- '

..........

....,IS.

~

Because ol production teqUirements, we

can only accept lists submitted on 3.~
compuier disk wilh an aCcompanying hardcoPy version. IBM (IBXI only or Wordl'elfecl) .
and Macinlosh disks are boCh acceptable and
we will reiUm all disks. Specify !he program

pleaSe. llo FAX ...,II alone.
Maii iD Fleport9r, 136 Crofts Halt, Nor1h
~ Please ilclude &lt;Xll'llaCI name. department l!fld ~address wilh phone .
IUTOir. You ffW'I altlo-.tJrnitrwnes via
E-mail; (WhltcllerOpltl.bu!la becll). Please
phone edilor Am v.wctw 81645-2626 wilh
any ql8llon8,

'~'::r;·
.,..
_.......,_ a..r.ty.

Dcpab I It fiA Public
• A book bag and a wallet, containing cash, credit cards. bank
cards. a VIsa. identifocatlon and a
dnver's licer)se. were reported
m1ssing April 2 from Baird Hall
• A purse, containing_ a wallet.
credit cards, cash. a driver's lt-

cense. b11th certificate and check
book. was reported mcss1ng April 2
from Clemens Hall.
• A racquetball racquet, ball and
a towel were reported missing
April 2 lrom Alumni Arena.
• Stereo equipment, valued at
$1 .000. was reported missing April
11 from Goodyear Hall.
• T""' credit cards and twO
checks were reported missing
April11 from 8 purse in Loci&lt;wood.

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                    <text>......,
...
..........c
Tamara Th:Jmtoo puts
t-andwrili1g n histOOcal

~-

,.2

SUper Senior

Gene Kinbrew, v.ro will
graduate in ecoo:mcs.
sets his sights oo a
career in corporate

finar1E:e.

,. 4

,.5
Apnl 22. 1993 Volume 24. No 2 5

UB launches comprehensive
enrollment management plan
Provost to chair senior policy group
INDFUL OF dra-

malic changes in
higher education
enrollment patterns,
the university has
launched a comprehensive effort to assess the factors involved, by forming a new
enrollment management structure.
In an interview with the Reporter. Provost Aaron Bloch and
\lice President for Student Affairs Roben Palmer described the
effon..emphasizing the intent isn't to respond to recent publicity
about degree completion and retention

rates. In fact. they say. the two are comcidcntal in Liming.
Bloch and Palmer said there are
both shon -and long-tenn issues to be
investigated.
'There is a concern SUNY -w1de
about overall enroUment." said Palmer.
'That's why there's a great deal of emphasis on enrollmenLS from a system
standpoinL The university. however. is
probably in a better position not only to
establish, but to reach the target relative
to the rest of the system.
" By no means are we comfonnble
(with it)," he added. "Enrollments are a
problem. But they're not as major a prol&gt;lem for the University at Buffalo as they
are for the rest (of the system)."
Palmer thinks this year's nine per·
PAlMER
cent drop in applications to SUNY may
have somethlng to do with the state's tough economy. 'There' s

also a concern that we may see a move
towards students transferring back to
institutions closer to home because of
financial reasons. From a system standpoint. it's going to be awhile before we
get a real handle on this issue. However.
I think some institutions such as the
University at Buffalo and a couple of
others, will remain ina relatively strong
position. We still will get better than
17.000 applications for roughly
2600 freshman slots."
The hun lies ·00! in total
enrollment. says Bloch. but in
the "dislocations" that result.
"If you get an abnonnal num·
ber of transfers out-abnormal
amount of attrition as tends to happen in a bad economy-then you're
held to a fiXed target in total enroll·
ment. You tend to make it up by
increasing the siu. of the freshman class. And that's really what
we·ve done for next year. So
we're not in trouble with total
enrollment, but there is this dis·

location. Because now courses

lhat tcach freshmen are going to be abnormally large."
There are other factors to consider. A recent study by UB's
Offx:e of Institutional Studies found lhat 51 percent of UB
students are taking six years to get their undergraduate degree.
This compares to 60 percent at SUNY institutions and 63
percent for universities that, like UB, are members of the
prestigious Association of American Universities(AAU). When

"We have been
examining the

considering four-year completion rates, however, UB 's fi~
are less favorable than those of SUNY and the AAU. According
to this same study, 68 pen:em of UB students will persist to their
fourth year. the figure os 73 percent for AAU-member institutioros and 71 percent for SUNY schools.
As for the long-term, said Bloch. "We're doing the lands of
Conlinued on page 4

Ele18111Bry/•ondlry education
1991 ';12
C"·l'iJClt'115tlC

1980 81

I ~St !matd

20Ci4 71tU3

etlan~~

c,a~e-

!980hl

19S1 92

to

prC. j~CU:&lt;I

19~1

strategies... that
UB will have to

92

2002 2003

13

U.S. tat SCHOOL GRADUATES (........,...In........,.)
Total

• Public
.,. Private

3,020

2,457

3,011

-19

2,725

2.215
242

2.715

-19

23

296

-18

22

295

employ to ti1ke best
advantage ofour
changing
budgetary. ..

Higher Education
1991 92

Characteristic

~tll.OCH

2002 2003
I PWJt-&lt;:teO

'\ c hange

""' change

1980-81

199192

1991-92
to
2002 2003

17

13

to

ENROIJ.NENJ(........... In .........)
12,097

14,169

15,993

• Public

9,457

11.(}40

12.457

17

13

.,. Private

2.640

3.129

3.536

19

13

• Four-year

7.571

8,900

10,058

18

13

• Two-year
Age

4,526

5.269

5.935

16

13

• 19 years &amp; under

3.148

2,969

3.599

-6

21

• 20-21 years old

2,423

2,743

3,155

13

15

• 22-24 years old

1.989

2.226

2.566

12

15

• 25-29 years old

1.871

2,043

1.891

9

-7

• 30-34 years old

1.243

1.425

1.311

15

-8

• 35 years &amp; over

1.422

2.764

3.472

94

26

7.098
4,999

8.032

9,218

13

15

6,137

6.775

_73

10

10,475

12,163

13,787

16

1,343

1.703

1.871

27

13
10 ·

Total

environmerU. "

1980 81

testlmat~ l

Control of institution

Type of institution

Attendance status
• Full-time
• Part-time
Level
• Undergraduate
• Graduate
• First·p~~ional

Full-time eq ~_l!nl

278

303

3J5

9

II

8.819

10,249

11.664

16

14

EXPENDI11IES (8illana til CIIMtMt liiiNl ......)
CurTtDt'fuod

Expeodilll'!"
• Public
•-Private
----

$99.1
65.4

$150.6

$208.1

95.7

133.3

52
46

38
39

33.7

54.9

74.8

63

36

SClUFCE NAOONAL CENTER FOR ED..CATION ST~

�_........ - .....

2
H 0 N 0 R S

r..,.,.

-

History
in Handwriting

Thomton
h iAoty

In old
lettara,

..toOIIPh

booka

n c:aiIICraphy

Journals.

,.....,. Thornton has •
bookful of dl-verles
lly -.rAT WATERHOUSE
Reporter Staff

T

AMARA Thornton took
two handwritten fragmentsofpoemsbyEmily
Dickinson and tipped
them so that they caught
the light on her desk.
'This one is very unusual: she
seems to be tryingtomakeevery 1ett&lt;r
separate; and the ·e' s look as though
she's copying print from a book.
" The graphologists would say that
this manuscript shows a soaring opti·
ntism. an individualism. and a strong
sexual interest.The usual theory looks
az what sits on the tine and the loops
above and below the lines. "she says.
"The top is supposed to represent your
rntellectuaJ side. the rruddJe youremouonal side. and the loops below the
hne. r.our sexuality"

CHEMISTRY
--.-

James F ~ Garvey, assoctate professor of chemistry at
UB. has recellled 8 Fulbright
Scholar Research grant at
the University of Sussax
in the Untted
Kingdom for
the summer
of 1994.
Garvey will
· collaborate
with Harry
Kroto. codiscoverer with Richard
Smalley of the c., molecule,
bucl&lt;mlnsterfullerene. or
buckyball. Ha will continue
his research into producing
new reactions wtth this remarl&lt;ably stable molecule.
After receiving his doctaate
from the caifomia Institute ci
Tectmlogy. Gatvey was a
postdoctaal schof&lt;r' at UCLA
He received his master's a'ld
bachefcJ's degrees from

The theory. say s Thornton, ts a
direct transposition of phystognomy.

or th~ study of the face. onto the
k:ners of a page. 'The eye!'. and the
brow were thought to be you r antellectual sode, the middle of the face
was youremouona1 side. and a weak
chjn meant lhut you were anfertile.
"There areGerman·speaking psy·
chologasl'i with Ph.D.s working in
Swatzerland. Austria and Gennany

-.
Penman-

ship

c irca
1920,
Is from

Tamara

lhomlnn's
collection.

George!OM1 ~·

The book is "abouJ
the ways in which
handwriting reflects
changing notions of
the selfin Modem
America "
·TA M I U I A -

hand, a mercantile hand. People
were defining themselves as a
group; so yo u co uld look at
someone 's handwriting and say.
'This is a merchant's. ·
"So they express character in the
18th century. but its a corpora1e
character: a lady"s hand was small
and heavily shaded-because she
has all that time in the boudoir-and
decorative-as are women. You
could look at it and say. 'This was by
a woman and this expresses her personality as a woman.'
"Handwriting did not vary from
Individual to inclividual but from cla'iS
to class. Aristocrats wrote letters, the
mercantile classes wrote ledgers.
clergymen kept records; farmen.
could read their Bibles ... but didn't
wnte until the 19th century."

T

ENGLISH. PHILOSOPHY
NAMED MElLON RUOW:

.,...... ......._, 81992
La t-ooOrs gadua1e in English
a'ld philooophy. has been
n&lt;med croe ci 85 wimers ci 1
croe a tte rmst prestigious
nalicnal awards kl stJderCs in
the tur&lt;riies field. the 1993
Al'drr!Ni w.Melon Feflow.;hip In
t-Unanislic Sludes.
The febNsllp Is offered to
assist SIIJdents in Pning
lfflersity tur&lt;riies tarutieS.
Lonergan's 8Wa'(l.wif r:xHe&lt;
tljJjon, fees a'ld a $12.500 stipend for the 199W4 academic
yew. \'Alan she begins
grac1Jate SlUdy in philooophy.
In her senia.yew at UB. she
was cite&lt;l as the basi Class of
92 S!Udent in both the FacUty ol
Arts and Letters and the Faculty
ci Social Sciences.

She's working on a volume provisionallytitledScrip,.d&amp;/..,s, which
will be a history of America as told
by people's handwriting.
"It's about the ways in which
handwriting renects and constitutes
changing notions of the self in Modem America. from colonial times to
the present." she explains.
Thornton was researching her last
book. Cultivating Gentlemen: Tht
Meaning ojCo11n1ry life Among rhe
Boston Elite (New Haven : Yale
Uni ver.;ity Press. I 989). when she
came across a Georgian prospectus
for a business course in London.
''h advertised a strange combination of skills: penmanship, arithmetic.
accounting."
Thornton began to hunt down
other examples. and made a number
of discoveries. Another was that the
common a~u mption that one· s handwriting says something about one's
character as relatively recent

whoasscn this son of stuff as though
it were exact science.
:'It'sactually a bunch of mystical
hooey." Thornton says.
Hooey it may be. but it's the son
of hooey that she likes.
Thornton. who is a fairly recent
addition to the faculty in UB's Depanment of History. riOes people's
old letters. She also reads old au togrnph books, visi tor.;' books. pen
catalogues. calligrnphy joumals and
books on penmanship in general.

DIREC TOR Of PU8l.ICATIONS

'fWCmfT J. COMtOY

hi !&gt; is one reason why. says
Thornton. the American Civil
War IS the country's only war to be
documented in letters from the front :
all others. including the American
· Revolution. werevictimsofeither widespread illiteracy or widespread censorship. On the other end of the social
scale. meanwhile, there were people
who could write and who preferred to
pretend they dido 'l which is why, says
'The assumption people have,
Thornton. you can't read your doctor's
that handwriti ng varies from indi prescription.
vidual to individual and is an index
"U:gible handwriting was a merto per.;onality, begins in the 19th
cantile skill. Surgeons could write
century. Before I hen it dido ' t occur
because they had barber.;hop hands.
to anyone because people didn't
they were the anisans. Doctor3 and
have a uniqueness. What y.ou do
judges and other people of higher
find in the 18th century are dozens
SOCial standi ng would affect illegof styles. or hands, as they were
ibility. U:gibility smelled of the shop;
called. People worked out of penthe French. for example, never went
manship manuals, and each hand
for that- 'Britaan ssa nation of shopwas from a diffe rent social type :
keepers· and all th;n. ln Coflji!Ssions
there wa'i a lady·· s hand. a lega l
ofan Optum Ea1er there are marvel -

ART DIREC TOR ltaa!CCA P.t.IINMMI

ous descriptions of French aristocrats writing badly on purpose."
But then came the 19th centw)'.
in so many ways a century of curiosity. It was the age of houir balloons
and trips to Africa; detective stories
and the weekly crime sheets become
the rage; london Zoo was the envy
of Europe.
" And suddenly you have autograph collecting, visitor.;' books become popular, forgery becomes an
issue, handwriting expens start appearing in courts. and then there';
automatic writing, which again ~ ­
sumes handwriting comes from the
unconscious."
Despite the proliferation of telephones. and shorthand , and
dictaphones. and typewriter.;. and
then stenographs. and then electronic
typewriter.;. and then computer.;. and
then fax machines. and now computers that can talk. schools. say!&gt;
Thornton. continue to teach handwriting as though it were a I 9th
century, copybook an.
''ln schools today we still insist
on teaching cursive rather than printing. and we still measure handwritmg on how severely it depans from
the copybook mode. Penmanship
now. still, is very little invention. and
all self-&lt;:onsciousanachronism. They
wert" still using inkwells and steel
pens in the 1950s because penmanship takes you back to the good old
days when men were men and
women were women and we didn 't
have a permissive society. It's aJways been about conformity: you
copy this model and that 's it.
"Wedon'tteachreadingandwriting together, we teach reading
first"
Surely one ideal is legibility?
"Yes. but what is legible is in the
eyes of the beholder. The ideal 19th
century style is a heavy upstroke and
a hairline downstroke; it disappear.;
on the downstroke. A quill hand is
very hard to read.
"Tarzan. in 1914, tries to learn
how to read and write from old books
written in cursive: he can't make
head or tail of it"
Thornton leans over and looks
with uninhibited interest at the nOll!)
on this conversation. "What is thatis that shonhandT she asks.
Scripted· Selves is expected to
come out in 1995.

�3

-a.:a.a-.... --

Apartment-style housing on North Campus
is a·priority project, President tells Council

T

HEPROPOSALtobuildapartmentstyle campus housing must be advanced if studenls are to gain
alternatives to inadequate. even
unsafe housing, Presidenl G~incr
said last week during a meeting of the University Council in 250 Student Union.
Greiner updated Council members on the
plan announced last fall to build apartments on
the remaining 7.5 a=S of undeveloped land of
Parcel B. NOI1h Campus. Under the initial pro.
posal. a privale developer would design. finance
and construct 85 to I00 apartment units.
This plan, Greiner told the Council, has met
with legal hurdles (a statute would have to be
amended) and there has been some resistance
in SUNY Central to the idea He described a
much broader project beyond the earlier demonslljltion project, a solution. he suggested. to
the problems of University Heights.
Campus officials. he said. are exploring the
possibility of securing construction funds. probably through the State Dormitory Authority. or
failing that, of revisiting the notion of a private
developer. Srudent rent would be used to cover

operating costs and pay off the state· s construction debt, Joseph Krakowia.k. director of
residence life, told Thl' Buffalo News.
''We've lost a year on what I feelt s a first pnority project.'' Greiner sa.~d .
The Council aJso heard· a re(X)r1 on the

om proving fiscal health of the Faculty-Student
Association (FSA). provider of campus food
savice, along with a presentallon on student
support services from R•Jben Palmer. vice presi·
dent for student afTau"; Clifford B. Wilson, ~
c~ate vtce president forSlildcnt affain.. and Barbar-.1
J Rlcoua, d.irector of student life.
Greiner said he will pu.~h for construcnon of
4.!XX:J to 5,!XX:J aparunenL&gt; on the Nonh Cam-

pus-a plan thai wouldalmostdoublethenumber
of on&lt;ampUS housing units at a eos1 Council
member David N. CampbeU ~at $100
million. The dilliculties o( realizing the projed
notwithstanding. Greiner said he felt a "moral
responsibility" to do something about studertls'
vulncmbitity to crime and widespread code
violations in the area, even as the university is "not
IegallyresponsibleforwbathappensinUniversity
Heights." The university may be unwittingly
conlributing to the area's "demise." he said. by. in
effect, using it for SllKient housing.
The proposal was endorsed by student member Jonathan loew, who said an alternative must
be found to housing oonditions in University
Heights.
Buffalo Common Council Member ArchieL
Amos. Jr., who represents the University District,

"It's a matter ofmaking a
breakthrough on how we are
going to get this done. "

told the News Greiner's proposal would give the
city and the universiry time to work on rehabilita·
tion ofhousing ;10Ck in the area. Greiner also tied
the plan to the NOI1h Campus' increasing "gravitaUonal pull" for undergraduate life.
''Every one understands that for undergraduates. this is rhe campus," he said. 'The South
t ampus very quick.ly is going to develop into
an absolutely first-class medical center .... It's
obvious what we should do. It's just now a
matter of making a breakthrough on how are
we going to get this (project) done. In the end
what it will come down to . isnot whether we 'II

get it done , but how we'n: going to grt it done,
whether it be public. privale, or some combination of both."

A

ccording to Joseph Krnkowial, the uni versity now has space for 5,426 students
initshousingunits; morethan4,000areon the
North Campus.
Clifford Wilson reported on widening effons to gather feedback from donn residents
and described the planned addition next fall of
such amenities as a computer room and browsing library. A record number of students have
returned to the residence halls this spring, he
said, 564 more than needed to meet budget
targets, 300 more than the same time last year.
Whereas the food service operation last year
faced a $400,!XX:J operating loss, this year it is
$130,!XX:Jintheblock, Wtlson reponed. A record
number of students have signed up for a board
food contrac1, with both fall and spring figw-es I0
percent higber than last year, he added Several
dining areas have been refashioned in E11ioott, he
reponed. and a big eff011 has been made to
improve service and stress cleanliness to the
utmost. The South Campus now needs special
attention in its dining areas. he said.
"Given how the state budget and the economic circumstances of the academy have
changed in the last I0 years," Greiner said, ''we
can't afford to be quite so cavalier about the way
in which we account or don't account for our use
of resources.... I think that probably over the
history of this univer.tity as a state university we
have run very substantial. implicit subsidies for
various kinds of service operations.
"We're at a point now where m order to
continue with our own service operation or
going to other alternatives. such as (an outside
vendor). we have to get more explicit about
what it really costs us as an institution to run a
food service."

Kids learn environmental lessons begin at home
By ELLEN OOLDIIAUM

News Bureau Stall

Hll...DRENwanttoknowaboutenvi ronmc:ntal matter.i.. but middle sChool
teachers have notaJways known how
to capi taJi7J~ on t.h.:u interest
They now have a way to do so. thanks to a
new cumculum developed by education researchers at UB that teaches middle-school

C

students about household chemicaJs and how

they may affect the environment.
1he new cwriculum includes a unit caJJed
"Will it ever be clean'&gt;" in which students try to
clean diny water using various filtrntion methods.
They also grow seedlings. then flood them with

doffen:nt chenucals and observe the effects.
Other acuvities mclude a comparison of
commerc ial cleansers to homemade alterna-

candidate.
..We found mostly brochures, li sLs of do· ~
and don 't' s and posters. all designed more for

ti ves and mstructions on how to conduct a
household chemical audit.
So far, the lessons have been enthusJaStJ ·

passive involvement.
"But students are more actively inclined. and
our sense was thai if we could involve them this
way. the material would be bener received."
lnfonnation and activities for tcachen; will be
av.Uiable this summer from the New York State
Depanment of Environmental Conservation.
Contact Sharon Rehder at 51 8-485-8988.
The curriculum is part of an Environmental
Protection Agency-funded project being conducted .by the New York State Center for
Hazardous Waste, headquartered at UB.

cally received by teachers at the Heim Middle
School. Gaskill Middle School and Mt. St.
Joseph Academy in the Buffalo area.
"We did a survey of middle school educational materials on environmental infonnation. and we found surprisi ngly little," said
Rodney Doran. professor of education at UB
and an author of the new curriculum with
Patricia Stohr. a UB lecturer and doctoral

House

Calls

Doctors make
calls for
membership in
James Platl
White Sociely.
from left: Albert
G. Rowe.
Richard R.
Romanowskt ,
MichaelA.
Sansone.
Angelo M .
DeiBalso.
Lawrence E.
Mervine , Arthur
.W. Mruczek,
Sr .. Elizabeth P
Olmsted .
•

Fiscal news
heads list at
.,.Senate session

__

Reporter Staff

T

HE NEW Yorlt State budget was recently passed and it holds good news
and bad, according to William Greiner,
UB'spresiden~ whospok&lt;:atameeting of the Faculty Senate on April 13. "There
is over S40 million for faculty and staff salary
increases." Greiner said. But the budget news
wasn ' t all good. "We thought that the $11.8
million lump-sum reduction to SUNY which
the governor called for in his original budget
would be an easy lift in that over $600 million
was added to that original spending plan by the
legi slature ,"
Greiner said .
"We didn ' t get
it restored and
see no hope of

"We'll absorb
the (budget)
cut andbe a
little smaller:
...Weare
desperate to
come to the
poinl where the
bleeding has
stopped"

having it re stored."

He said
that although
SII.8 million is
asma11 decrease
compared with
the SI43.5 million cut Oess the
wition increase)

talcenbySUNY
lastyear.itwasa

symbolic defeat
for the system.
"We'll absorb
the CUI (UB 's
share will be
.f'IIUIDENT U£lHEII
about S 1.8 million) and be a
little sma1ler. lt won't be a tenible year. but there
is a lingering doubt." explained Greiner. "Where
areweasa priority to the l egislarure ~ Atth.is point.
I don 't know. We are desper.ue to come to the
point where the bleeding has stopped."
Regarding the collective bargaining negotiaLions under way between SUNY and graduate
and teaching assistanL&lt; (GA ·s and T A· s) within
SUNY . Greiner saod that he would like to see
the GA 'l\ and TA 's benefit from their new
umomzed status. "I would think their collective bargaining agent would hold out for increases in bencfirs and pay." he said. "My
guess is that their salaries will go up and the
number ofGA 'siTA's will go down."
And there was mo~ good news for gradu ate students. "We got graduate TAP funds
restored in the budget. Molly McKeown (UB
director of state relations) deserves an immense amount of credit for this effon. lbere
was also a group of seven alunmi who walked
the halls of the legislature all day," he said.
"We have access to Albany now we never
dreamed of having years ago."

reiner said that as far as SUTRA goes. it
should be viewed as the ftrst step toward
UB having fiscaJ control over all of its tuition
revenue. ''Havingcontrol of our tuition income
could be very helpful down the line. StJl'RA
helps us move tow:!rd that. But it's only in the
budget a.~ 3 one-year item."
In other news, the Senate aJso passed 3
·resolution on the campus's smoking policy.
which was instituted in February. 1990 and
called for smoking and non-smoking areas
within each building on campus.
The resolution states thai the original policy
has been only moderntelysuccessful. The design·
of the campus buildings causes smokJ: from
smoking areas to drift ininnoo-smolcingareasand
places great emphasis on recent evidence about
the dangers of secondhand smoke.
The resol ution asks that the administration
ban all smoking from campus buildings. while
consulting with student groups and collective
bargaining units to assure consideration of
smoker's concerns. It was passed by an \'verwbelming majority o( the Senate.
:::

G

�--.---.--

4
a.tOLLMENT
Continued ftom page 1

planning 1hal have ncv..- bad to be done bcre.
And lbcrc are really 1WQ grea1 eccmmi&lt;s bcre in
1mnS of which almost OV&lt;%)1hing we do flows:
one is money and lbc budget. ThcOiher &lt;XlllC&lt;IDS
Sllldenls and eruollmenL They are deeply inlerlWin&lt;d. Anything cbcwcwanttodobangsononc
or lbc Olher or bolb.
"Even if SUNY had no problem," Blocb
said, ''we would have to be doing lhis. Our
plans for doing 1his prcc&lt;lded any indication
that 1here was any kind of difficulty. There has
always been an anempt to manage enrollment
in the sense ofbining numerical targets. Sometimes that has been very last-minute, belterskelterkind of management but still it has been
done, arguably, with a lor of success."
Bloch said he will chair a senior policy
group 10 include Palmer, Senior Vice President
Robcn J. "'agner and Vice President for Public Service and Urban Affairs Muriel A. Moore.
This group will be responsible for general
enrollment oversight and strategy. Reporting
to lhc:m and in charge of enrollment analysis.
mformation and data. will be a second "work·
ing" group, chaired by Associate Provost Mick
Thompson. Members wiiJ include representa·
uves from such areas as Undergraduate and

Graduate Education, Millard Fillmore ColIeee. lnstitutional Studies and Admissions.
" All these individuals are involved in programs. activities and functions that are absolutely c riti ca l 10 overall e nro llment
management." said Palmer.
··we have been carefu ll y examining the
straLegies and mechanisms that UB will have
to employ over the next few years to take best
advantage of our changing budgetary and institutional environmenl'' Bloch said in a lener
to members of the wo rking enrollment group.
··we need a much rhore thorough understanding of the economy of incremental changes in
~nro llment . of their consequences in tenns of
demand on faculry workload and cla"sroom
space. and of their implications for the quality
of education we offer at UB ."
11u ~ i ~. say ~ Bloch. "a very complicated

economy: the ecooomy of doiJan and the
economy of Sludenls. These two inleract. And
neitberofthem basev..-really been controlled
or undetstood in any deplh around lhis place.
We don't know, for elUIII'Iple. in any a priori
waywhcthcrifwe~ourcnrollmcntby

one, whelherlhalmakes money or loses money
for the institution."
According to the SU11lA plan just approved by the legislature for one year, the
univ..-sity will retain excess tuitions if it goes
over target Eventually. says Bloch, the university hopes to keep all its tuition money. "It's
folly to gel into that kind of situation unless you
know the consequences of your actions. We
need to know the full implications of enrollmentforus-fromabudgctarypointofviewand also for the students.
"It makes no sense and it's unfair to bring
students into a siwation where, because of their
numbers, they're going to hit bottlenecks that
are going to prevent them from finishing on

time, preventing from living a high-&lt;Juality
academic life. Everything we do to suppon
them-all the plans we make for suppon services. for infrastructure-have to move from
our understanding of enrollments. So we need
enrollment management in a very broad sense."
"What was done primarily in the past."
Palmer repo~ . "was to focus on freshmen.
transfers and the overall target numbers. Now
we're looking at all those factors that have
influenced those numbers .... We ' re looking to
achieve a much more systematic approach .
Some of this will have to take place over a long
period of time."
"In fairness," said Bloch, "l don't sense that
(these effons) take place in many universities.
We may be defining some new ground here.''
Even with the lo ngvtenn nature of much of
their planning. Bloch and PaJmer expect improveme nt soon. " I really expect that next
year. if we get a fluctuation (in enro!lment).''
says Bloch. "that we'regoing to have a much.
much clearer idea of what the implications are
and what we're going to do rationally in these
spolS. instead of having to jump and increase
admissions or decrease admissions by some
arbitrary number at the last minute."

SUNY Olancellor D. Bruce JohnstOne is among a group of leading educators wbo las1
w~ [eCOIJIIDellded effixu todcaease the time needoid
degree completion, as the cost
of a college diploma continues to soar nationwide.
In a speech made 1his pasrwedtend, Johnstone urged presidents of the system's 64
campuses to speed up the time require&lt;~ to gel a bacbellir' s degree, the Associated Press
reponed He said l)UNY will lest the DOiion of cuning undergraduate degree IOOfllplction
time from four years to three, adding 1hal be has called a summer conference of SUNY
presidents to study the issue.
"Taxpayers and increasingly parents and students themselves are becoming less and
less willing to pay for what learning can cost;" Johnsli&gt;ne said.
According to figures from the 1990 U.S. Census, nearly half of aU U.S. students who
· complete undergraduate 'degJ&lt;CS lllkc more ~ four years to do so.
' ''We've put a number of impediments in front of them when they de this," Richard
Rosser, president of the National Association of Independent Coileges and Univ..-sities,
told the AP. "(These include) residency requirements, prohibiting students to t.aice more
than a certain number of courses, making it hard to test out eerlain subjects," he said.

for

His goal:
corporate
career
Gene Klmbrew alma

to be ftn.nclal planner
t1y 111CHA11D DEITWCII
Special to lhe Reporter

I

TSEASYtoenvisionGeneKimbrewin
thecomerofliceof some corporate giant.
chatting on bis speaker phone wbile planning the company's annual budgeL
Dressed conservatively in a red

crewneck sweater and blue jeans, IGmbrew.
who will graduate lhis May with a degree in
economics, speaks with ex.ciLement as he discusses a career in the coqx&gt;rate world .
'The challenge and the competition an:
exciting," says the 30-year-old Kimbrew.
'There is always the pressure to achieve, to do
well. l son of need that to keep me going. l do
my best work under pressure."
An honors student.

Kimbrew admits that
atone point in his life.
school was the furthest thing from his
mind. Bouncing
around from job 10
job after high school.
Kimbrew. a native of
Penfield joined the
SibleyMongageCorporation of Rochester, where he worked
as an income property underwriter from 1985 10 1990. But the fast
trnck up the business ladder was soon derailed by
his lack of a college degll!e.
"I tended 10 learn later on that you do need 10
go to college," says Kimbrew. "A degree just
seemed like a piece of paper then. I did nor
undersland that it was more than a piece of paper."
So Kimbrew went back to school at Monroe
Community College and grnduated with honors
in business administration in only one year.
"I'm nor a spring chicken." says Kimbrew. "I
did nor wan110 be in school forever."
He entered UB in the fall of 1991 and became
involved in the Minority Un&lt;Jetwaduate Higher
Education Management Development Program.
which places minorities in positions of high
respon.•ibility on campus to allow them 10 gain
insightiniOthe way management worKs. Kimbrew
has worked for Accounting Services and Records
sinreScp&lt;embcrandhaspreviouslyworl;edinthe
Offia: ofPreparat"'Y Programs and in the Office
of the President.
"I'm worlcing on projects thai would normally
be given to a fust-year associate with a bachelor' s
degree." says Kimbrew. ''II' s really helped me to
sharpen my computer skills and l' vc learned

Harvard Graphics. It has
also fon:ed me to und..-stand acrounting."

Gene Klmbrew
aays he does
' his best woll&lt;

under
Woricing in the Office
of the President last year
pressure.
also gave him a chance 10
observe UB' s senior financial olftccr Roben
Wagner at wori&lt;. and to woe\; on President
Greiner's travel agenda and speaking engagements.
"I was able 10 see a couple of things that are
going on there," says Kimbrew. '11&gt;:: walt that
Mr.Wagner' soflicc isdoingisintriguing because
most of il is just his know-how and his intuition.
The university had a huge cut last year and thing&gt;
could have been a lor more disastrous. but he was

prepared"
The experience also gave him a glimpse into

the furure he'd like for himself.
''I'd like 10 be an economic financial planner
for a corporation." says Kimbrew. "Actually. I'm
creating the position. What you have now is
fu&gt;ancial p~ consultants and compuolle"
in the corporations. What l have in mind is what
l saw~ lr. Wagner doing. I lind that intriguing.
and that is where, hopefully, my economics
u-aining will come in."
Kimbrew has applied 10 several M.B.A.
programs including Indiana. USC and University
of Rochester. He says his first choice is Indiana.
which of course. wouldbeap..-fecl fitwithhisred
sweater and love of college baskdball.
His academic career has been shon-lived.
but active. He is a memberoftbe Golden Key
honor society, the Minority Management Society and is a founding member of the Economics Club. Always four steps ahead.

Kimbrew says he realizes the imponance of
planning for the future.
"When you're a chief fmancial planner
you're not only supposed to be looking backwards, but you 're supposed to be lonking
forward," he says. "I phrase it that way because
it' s becoming increasingly important to plan
for the future."

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5

Little guys playing with dolls, tomboy daughters!~~onnal behavior, UB research study assures parents
News Bureau Staff

P

out to assess the prevalence of gen&lt;let-atypical behavior in a general
population of children in middle
childhood. and to fmd out if age.
ethnicity and socioeconomic status
bad any influence on these activities.
Previousresean:bersbadstudiedonly
small numbers of children, and bad
excluded girls in their samples.
For its study sample, Sandberg's
~ chose children from a school
district in New Jersey that included a

~~~;:.,~

sionally play with dolls
and daugh ters who
roughhouse with boys
will grow up to become homosexual
or bisexual can be reassured such
behavior is normal, a study by a UB
researcher h85 shown.
David Sandberg, UB clinical 85·
sistant professor of psychilllry and
pediatrics and principal investigator
of the srudy. found that virtually all
of the 687 children in his study participated at some point in at leasl one
activity considered "gender-atypical"-behavior thought to be very

"Only the child who

frequently. .. expresses
many such genderatypical behaviors...
needs to be evalua!ed "

uncommon in one gender, but relatively common in the other.

Almost a quaner of the boys and
more than a third of the girls in the
study showed 10 or more such behaviors. although for most of the
children the incidence of each behavior was rare. the results showed.
The study. which looked at the
behavior of boys and girls ages 6-10
from four New Jersey e lementary

schools. was published in the March
ISsue of the Journal q(tM American
Acad&lt;my of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry.

Sandberg said that when parents
see a son or daughter acting in ways
they don't consider "typical." they
may become concerned and bring
the child to a doctor for evaluation.

H.s advice to such parents? Don 't
worry about children behaving tike
the opposite sex unless they do it
often and exclude activities generaJiy considered more common for
their gerlder.

'That 22.8 percent cf boys and
38.6 percent of girls show IOormore
different gender atypical behaviors
('seldom' or ';,nee every three
months·) is important to keep in mind
when counseling parents who are
worried about the occurrence ofsuch
behavior in their children," Sandberg

stated.
''Only the child who frequently
and persistent! y expresses many such
gender-atypicaJ behaviors relati ·te to
little gender-typical behavior needs
to be evaJuated for a gender-identity
disorder."
Sandberg and his colleagues set

T

IGHTENINGthescrews
on companies suspected
of polluting the Great
Lakes will not necessarily resu lt in cleaner waterways. according to results of an
Environmental Protection Agencyfunded study of Lake Michigan's
Green Bay.
That's because, the srudy found, a
greater problem e&gt;&lt;ists with the pollutants already in sediments that periodically are churned up by nature.
The srudy. which used computer
modeling to pinpoint the sources and
fate of PCB contamination in large
ilOO:s. shows that thegreatestooncenuation of PCBs is in sediments in Green
Bay and in Fox River. which nows into
the bay.Thehighcoocentrationsandthe
depths at which PCBs were found
demonstrnte that the discharges have
been occurring for decades
''The conventional wisdom has been
that you should monitor end-&lt;&gt;f-pipe
polluters and cmck down on them."
said Joseph V. DePinto. director of the
Great U!kes Program at UB and one of
the project investigator.;. "But we have
demonstrnted in Green Bay that because thebiggestsoun:eofPCBs(polychlorinated bi~nyls) is acrually the
river scdimeni.S. noching you do 10

"Whats contaminating the Green ·Bay now was
dumped a long time ago and has accWI'IU!aJ.ed in
bottom sediments over the years. "
·JOSEPH V. DEPINTO

Completed late last year, the fiveyear study is believed to constitute the
largest set of coherent data ever compiled about toxic chemicals in a naturnl system. he said
"We can't let industries and municipalities go back to the levels they
were discharging before. because I 0
or 20 years from now we' Ube in the
same boat again." said DePinto.."But
what' scontaminating Green Bay now
was dwnped a long time ago and has
accwnulaledin botlomsedi~ntsover
the years. TheaccumulatedPCBsthen
get resuspended during wlllll we call

different depths in the noor of Fox
River and Green Bay. the n=rchers
were able to determine bow long ago
PCBs now buried in sediment were
discharged. Radioisotope dating of
sediment cores showed that the highest
levels of PCBs were deposited in the
mid-1960s tluoogh the 1970s. about
the time industrial production and use
of PCBs peaked in the United Siates.
Data collected for the study show
that while concentrations ofPCBs in
Green Bay's water coluJTl(l average
5-10 parts per tri llion in the water.
the ave~e concentrution in the sedi-

mix of backgrounds--41 percent of
the group was white, 38 percent African-American. 14 percent Hispanic
and 8 percent Asian. Native American or biracial.
1be study was conducted over
two academic years. Parentsorguardiansreceivedaquestionnai.redescribing a wide variety of typical and
atypicaJ g.ender behaviors and were
asked to indicate how often their
child participated in each activity.
Sample statements in the questionnaire were:
• "He is good at imitating females."
• "She is called a tomboy or
similar name by other people."

ments is on the order of 5 parts per
billion. a thousand times higher.
··Actual remediation and cleanup
costs for the Fox River and the Green
Bay could be on the order of tens of
millions of dollars.'' DePinto said.
"so it would be very costly to clean
up an area that isn't a significant
contamination source. Our computer
models help identify the worst hot
spots. so you can prioritize your
remediation dollar··
As a result of the projecL the
Wisconsin Depan:ment of Narural
Resou rce s is now working on
evaluating a lternativ e c leanup
progrums.According to DePinto. the
Fox River Valley. where the Green
Bay is located, is the site of perhaps
the world's largest concentration of
pulp and paper mills.
evertheless. he said. Green Bay.
which in the study is characteriz.ed85a large. freshwateresruwy with
many of the same characteristics as a
whole Great Lake. continues to serve
as a ITl!ljorrecreational center ftr boating and fishing.
Constituting 20 percent of the
world's freshwater: the Great Lakes
were loog believed to consist of such a
large surface ama that they could not
become contaminated, DePinto sail!- It
is now known that comamirwcd

N

• "He U5CS feminine gesnu-es
with his hands when be talks."
• ''Sbe imiwcs malecl!araclen
seen on TV or in the movies."
• "He wean a shirt or towel
around his waist .. a skirt."
• "Sbelilc&lt;storougllhcuoe(plllywrestle. play-ligbl) with Olber dtidren."
The 71 male questions and 67
female questions also covered behavior often exhibited by both boys
and girls. such 85 dancing; playing
hous&lt;; playing baseball. fOOiball and
soccer, and dressing sloppily.
The results showed few children
repeatedly exhibited behavior nee
typical of their gender. but most bad
participated at some point in more
than one such activity. Parents of
less than I percent of boys and girls
said their child had never behaved
like the opposite sex.
Girls. allllOSl without ext::qllion.
took part in more typeS of geode.-·
atypocal behavior and exhibited them
more frequently than boys did.
Sandberg said this finding supports the
consensus that society tolerates such
behavior in females more readily than
in males, giving females mon: latitude
in expressing themselves..
Differences in race or socioeconomic background. 85 determined
by parents' educational levels. were
statistically significant for very few
of the behaviors.
Co-investigators in the study were
Heino F.L. Meyer-Bahlburg. Anke
A. EhrhardtandThomasJ. Yagerof
the New York State Psychiatric lnstirute and the Depanment of Psychially in the College of Physicians
&amp; Surgeons at Columbia University.

sediments present a direct environmental danger to the food chain that
originates with organisms We. worms
that live in and feed off of sediments in
the bottom of Green Bay. These organisms accumulate contaminants
from sediments and then p85S them on
tobonorn-feeding fish Wc.carp..which
then may be consumed by humans.
''The concentrations of PCBs in
Green Bay fish are more than a million
times what they are in the water or the
sediments." said DePinto.
In Green Bay. levels of PCBs in
many walley ex~~ federal FDA
limit of2 parts per million. and~
fish consumption advisories. These
advisories warn people who fish in
Green Bay and the Great ' Ulkes in
general no&lt; to eat more than one fish
meal per month fium thes&lt; Wlltcr'S. and
warn pregnijlll women not to eat any.
(In related resean:h. DePinto is working with John Vena a professa.of
social and preventive medicine at OB,
on landmark studies traclting the health
effects of the consurnplion of Lake
Ontano fish on humans.)
Although. this project focused exclusively on the Green Bay/Fox Rivoarea. DePinto noced that OUl of 43
geogJ1IphicaJ sections of the Great
Ulkes considertd areas of rona:m.
COillaminated sediments are a significant problem for all bui&lt;X~Coflhcm. c

�--.--...--

8

pw. 9:30p.m. Admislioo, S2.SO,
UBAUdcnii; S5, noo-ltUdcau.
For more informatioo cal1645Z957. Co-sponson:d by
Hall walls.

'

Admislioo: SJ5 (includinc
IWid!). S.,.._..r by the w_,
New Yort Repo..at Commiaoe
of t h e - Council 011 Edu-

_

CIIioo/NIIiooalldemifiCOiioo
l'roiJ'Im the A d . _ of
w..,.., in Hi&amp;her cducalioo Adminiltralioo.

ror

_,._

FRIDAY

=~:.:-=.
-"--~

2l --

--..1, Plillip LDVade. PbD.,
UB Dept. of Microl&gt;ioloc- 215
Fcotcr. Sooth Campus. Nooo.
IIKITAL

Woodwind S t - Baird Reo
H.oJI, 250 lloird. North Campus. Nooa.

cital

NDIAMC---

--~

Karomanoultian, M.D. IGnc:il

s.r...aJD&amp; for Coloroctal CaD-

Auditorium, Otild.ren's HospitaL

..,., James ll Monltall. Pb.D..
pro(euor. UB Dept. or Social and
PreV&lt;Otive Medicine. 252A
Farber. Sooth Campus. 12:301:30 p.m.

SPR .........lldiool, Uncia
Duffy, Ph.D, and Hnrdl

Tbe Caot and Feoolbilily of

8Lm.

MAIIUIIft-fW

-~­

10 Minutes from UB!
Elevators!
Quiet Park-like Setting!
Care-free Ufe Style!
Activities Director &amp; Program'
I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

Bridco-BuildlD&amp; A..- Cuiaw..: Vallllq Dlvmdty in
Belpinl and Leamin&amp; Situa-tions, Teresa D. LaFramboise,
Ph.D., I.S50Ci.ate profeuor and
author of Psyclto1hLrapy wilh
WDml'n of Color, Univ. of Wisconsin at MadiJor.. Waterfront

Hilton, Buffalo. 8:15 a..m.-S p.m.
Tick&lt;IJ: $60, GSEAA members,
S6S, senior citizens. $40. swdenlS, and S75, generol admis-

-·--

sion. For mon:: information cal l
645-2491.

1.!0 lll'l'l'l' /(o(l(/ lmlwrsl
Computin&amp; and Vlc:&lt; Vena,
Pror. Roos s~m:~ Marquarie
Univ. 148 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
-YSAT41'WS

LI'IIIWIY-

Eopaemeot and lodilr.......,.:
Beckett and the Potitlcal, conference participants to include

-~-

Em.,.,...,..tldeatll'ylng
Sl1'11kli&lt;o for E&lt;oaomlc

Chaqe, ling Lyman. HUB

co-

venwres and chair or the Ameri -

can l...eadenhip Forum. and
Louise Laurence. assistant professor of cconontics. Towson
Stalt: Univ. Center for Tomorrow.
North Campus. 8:15a.m.- 3 p.m.

--aac.u-

~=::::.?!!'.t!!'.O,Exp&lt;aK&lt;I in XeDOpUS Oocytes,

Dr. Loo Lu, Dept. or Pbys;ology
and Biophysics. Wright State
Univ., Daytoo. 106 Cary. Sooth
Campw3p.m.
IEUCTIIICAL AIID ~

-Multi--Mesh

(MULTIMES H) N«woriu,

Prof. Tcn:nce D. Todd. Dep&lt;. or
EJcctrical and Compuler Engineering. McMuu:r Univ. I 10
Koox. North Campus. 3 p.m.

-Yucn.E

n.. Gallleo Mltoloa to Jupiter
By WoyofVOSius, Eanb-Mooo,

and the A.Rerold lleb: A
Geologist's Penpoctiv&lt;, Dr.
Ronald Greeley, Cc:ntec for Mete oritic Srudies. Arizona

Sta~

Werner Hamacher. Linda BenZvi, Carla Locatelli, Raymond
Federman and &lt;&gt;&lt;hen. 420 Capen.

North Campus. 4 p.m. Sponsored
by the Donato Oulir. Prognun in
Companttive Literature.

T,HURSDAY

STATISl'ICS CCIU.OQUIUtl

Marltov Chain Mook Carlo
Mdhocb With Applkatioos to
Approximok Cooditlonalloference, Dr. Martin A. Tanner.
Dept. of Biostatistics, Univ. of
Rochestc:r. 144 Farber. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

22

UFE-

Bikin&amp; For Fit.Mss: An Introduction, Marjorie: Allshouse .
leader. Nonh Campus. 5:30-6o30

- I S 1 1 I Y SEMINAR

Conlrol or Fat Synthesis and
Adipocyte Ditrere.ntiation, Dr
Hei Sook Sui, DepL of Public
Health. HaJ"\•ard School of Public

p.m. FOI' regisU"'ltion infomunion
caii645-612S .
LOCIIWOOD UIIIWIY
RUEAIICIICUNIC

Health. 1348 Farber. South Cam -

pus. Noon .
PIANO RECITAl.
Students or Professor Frina
Arschanska BoldL B:urd Rec1tal

Exploring the Internet. 223
Lockwood. 7-8:30 p.m. E-mail
experience ~uired. Obtain a
registration fonn by comacting
LOLPOET@UBVM.BITNET.

Hall. 250 Baird. North Cnmpus.
Noon.
COMPUTER SCIENCE

"'

W.UFILM
Dandy, directed by Peter Simple.
Waldman Theater. 112 N0r1on.

COUOQUIUM
Towards A Software-Engineer~
ina D~ipliM Based on
PROLOG, Leon Sterling, Cast
Western Reserve Univ. 14 Knox
North Campus. DO p.m.

sion. S2.50. UB studentS: S5.
non-students. For more tnfOflna-

I'HYSICS AND ASliiOHOMY

CAHADWI-FIUI

CCIU.CIQIMIM
Th&lt; Myth of Cosmic Symm&lt;try, Prof. Joseph Rosen. Tel Aviv
Univ . 454 Fronczak.. North Campus. 3:45p.m.

-

IIIOLOQIC.U SCIEJICES

T nnsc:riptional
Antitennination by tbe N Prokin of Phage lambda, Dr. Jack
Gr=nblau.. Dept. of Medica1
R.Csearch, Univ. of Toronto. 121
Cook&lt;. North Campus. 4 p.m.

-

PMMMACIIII1CS IIESIEAJICtl

B ioph.armaceutks and
ParmacokiDetics of ddl, Rashm1
H. Blllbhaiya, Ph.D., dim:1or.
DepL of Metabolism and ftw .
macokinc:tics. Bristoi-Mye~
Squibb Ptwnnacculical Research

Institute. Syll'ICUSC. 508 Cooke
North Campus. 4-5 p.m.

North Campus. 7 p.m. Admistion ca11645-2957. Cl).sponsored
by HaJlwalls.

FESTIVAl.
Warm Viiions, cross-sect1on of
genres and

~bjea

maner from

award-winning Canadian filmmakers: "So Far So ...(Ann Marie
Ac:ming, 1992): "A and Bin
Ontario" (Joyce Weiland and
Hollis Frampcon, 1984 ):
"Beaubourg Boogie Woogie"
(David Rimmer, 1991 ); " Drop"
(Carl Brown, 1989); "A Docu·

menuuy" (Frank Cole. 1979),
"Warm" (Wrik Mead, 1992 ).
''Out of the Gnrden" (Vmccrit
Gren1er. 1991): "Visions"
(Gaone Tomssian, 1992 ); "N1cc
Girts Don 't Do It" (Kathy
Daymond. 1990). 148
D•cfel'ldorf South Campus. 8
p.m. Made possible by suppon o f
lhc Canadian Filmmaktr"s Dlstn bution Cent~ . the Medaa Study
Graduate Club. lhc Dept of Med•a Study and tht An Gallery or
Omnno.
WUFIUI

Just Visiting tbis Planet, directed by Peter Simple. Woldman
1llea~r. 112 Nonon. North Cam-

In 1986, violinist Alexander RomarulloloOO fiflt1
prize allhe Wl6niawski intemalional VIOlin
Ccmpetition in Poland. The audience was
reportedly so ourraged by !his ranking !hal
ll'ey demanded nine enco-es in lhe wimer's
concerliO protest lhe ~s decision.

RomanU, who nex1 rronlh wil corrpete 111 tte
prestigious NaLrroerg Corrpetilim, wiQ per1orm
allhe urwersi!y Sunday, April25 at 3 p.m. in Slee Concer1 Hall.
His program includes lhe Pattira in E Ma;or. BWV 1roi:by Bach.
Conceffo"' D Ma;or. Op. 61 by Beelha.ian, Nocttm i T8l8lltelia
by Karor _SzyrnanowsK; and So1ata in A MaiOr by cesar Franck.
A na!JVe of Brookline, Romarul studiBd with Josef Gingold ar
lnd181la UniYersiry and lhe New England Conservatory- Wirh
Joseph Silverstein ar Boston l!nillfj&lt;si!y. and with Ivan
·1n New Yorl&lt;. He has given solo recitals at lhe Kaji Aso Center of
Modem Oriental Arl, Holzhauser Musi&lt;!age in MLJlch and the
Urwersi!y of Illinois. ·Alexander RornanU is one cA lhe rrost gilled
young violinisls lhar 1\&lt;e come across in my recent expenence.•
said Silve&lt;slein. "He is caPable cA compelilg on lhe highest
111temarmal """"· He is a rrusician and v11uoso violinisl who will
have a VBfY il'1po&lt;mr

Galaman ·

career

�____ __
..,

7
GRADUATION
SPECIALS
until Ma y 28, 1993

,.

Insight 486DX133

•

$1,948

Fully upgradeablelnlel804.86 CPU •

I

32 bll VESA Local bus 1MB G"'f'hics
Accelerator SVCA Card•33MHz•

"

4MB memory • ~ hard drive•3.S·
.oo us· high d.,..;oy floppy dri... •
14" N1 SVGA moniiOr • EnhonceciiOI key keyboard • 3-button mouse • MS-

005 5.0• WIJldows 3.1 .

Umof"'"' to DELL"' $1,1)49 (slupping not
rndudet/ in prit.u'

Macintosh Color Ousic

t&amp;

68030 procetiiiOI'" • 16M Hz •4MB
memory • SCtAB hard dnve •tcr
Trinitron Color display • built-m
AppleTalk • Siandard SCSI
San $70 with Select 300 UHr Printer
S..ve $95 with Select 310 l.a.Hr Printn $2,.101

Macintosh LC Ill
68030

Un• v 422 Fronczak Non.h Campos 3 p.m.
MEDICINAl. CHDIISTWY
SOIIIWI
o.s;gn and Syntbesis of Peplid•
Ho......,. Antqoolsts. Dr
Roger M. Freidinger, scmor director. Medicinal Olemisuy.
Merck Research Labonuones. I 14
Hochsleucr. Nonh Campus J p.m.

UUUFIUI

JIUI VIsiting this Plaod., directed by Peter Simple. Waldman
Theater, 111 Non.on. North Cam pus. 9:30p.m. Admission. S2.SO.
UB students: S5. non-students.
For more mformatJoo call 6452957 Co-sponsc.&gt;mt by
HallwaJis.

CONCUIT

IIISlOIIY c:ou.ciCitM*

Pror. Joan Scott, Institute for
Advanced Study. Pnnceton. N.J .
d1scus.smg her unpublished paper .
' 'Redescribmg Woman Jeanne
l)ero1n ( 1805- 1894)" and com -

mentmg on th1s essay . Prof L1ana
Vatd1 of Mc Master Umv 280

l'lYk Nnnh Campus J 15 p.m
Co-sponsored by the: Graduate
St..a~nt Associauon, the Gradu -

ate Group m Femmist SIUdJes.
the Mother Language ASSOCISIIOO
and thr Gradu.att: Htstory

A~

CHEMISTWY COUOQUIUM
Flash Pbotolysis lovestigalion
of Orgaoometallk lnltnnediatts, Prof. Peter C. Ford, Umv . of
Cuhfo m1a. 70 Acheson Sooth
Cnmpus. 3:30p.m
UKRAINIAN AfFAIRS LECtliR£

Ukraine: Rebirth of a Nation/
Politic:s or Statrhood, Oleh

B11orus. first Ulc.rami11n umbassa
dor to the U.S 109 Knox . Nonh
Campus 3:30p.m Sponsored by

lhe

Uk ra~ man

oper, visionary and urban pioneer. Joining him, Larry Quinn,
Bruoo Fruchi, lad Cordes. Marl&lt;
Tyka. Alan DewBJt and Marl&lt;
Goldman, rnoderaiO&lt;. Calumd
Theater, 48 West Otippewa St. 2
p.m. Admission: SIS. Sponsc&lt;ed
by the Ca.lcumet Arts Cafe and
the Friends of lhc School of Architecture and Planning.

Studc:m Assocla-

uon
WEDNESDAYS AT 4 PWS

IJTEJWIY-

Engagtmtnl and l ndlfferentt:
B«kett a nd the PoUiical, con ference participants to includr
Wc=mc:r Hamacher. Lindo Bc:nZv• . Carl.!!- Locatelli. Raymond
l·c:dennan and others. 420 Capen.
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m. Sponsored
by the: Donato Outir. Program 1n
Comparative: Lit.c:raturc:.
UUU LATE N1TE FILM

Dandy, di=ted by P&lt;u:r Simple.
Waldman lbeater, 112 Norton.
Nonh Campus. 1 p.m. tmd Midmght. Adnlission, $2.50. UB
~ tudents ; S5. non-students. For
more: infonnation call 645-2957.
Co-s ~ by Hallwall ~.

A~Roman u l.violin.

SATURDAY

~4

OECIR£E RECITAL

Jen.s Baro..ieck 11.nd Ki)·omi
Sbiba, pianists. Slec Concc=n
Hall. North Campus 3 p m
UUUFILM

011.ody, dLrc:cted by Peter Simple
Wold man Thc:atc=r. 112 Non on
Nonh Campus 7 p m AdnusMOn . .S2.50. UB siUdenb . S5.
non -.. tudc:nb For morr 1nronnauon call 645 - 29~7 Co-s pon!tO~
by Hallwalls.
DANCE PRODUCTION

Scru.n Gemms., ~ong - and -dancc:
sal ute to lhc: movLes. prc=sented b)
GEMMS Mus1cal Theater Company and directed and choreogrnphed by Lynne Kurdz.&amp;cl r-ormmo nnd Tressa Gonnan
Crehan. Kathanne Cornell The·
au:r. Ellicou Complex Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.
OECIR£E RECITAL

Theresa Quinn, piano. Band
Recital Hall, !SO BamJ Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.
UUU U.TE NIT£ FILM

J ust VIsiting this Pl.anel, directed by Petcr S1mple. Woldman
Theater. 112 Nonon. Nonh Campus. 9:30 p.m. and Midmg.ht.
AdmLSSJon. S2.50. UB student.~.
S5. non-students. For more informatiOn ca11645-2957. Co-sponsored by HallwaJis

DANCE P110DUC110N
Scrtea Ge:mms, song-and-dance=
~ lute: to the movies. presented by
GEMMS ~usicalllleatc:r Com pany and din:ctcd ind choreographed by Lynne= Kurdz•eiFonnato and Tressa Gorman
Crehan. Katharine Cornell Theater. Ellicon Complex. North
Campus. 8 p.m.

DANCE~

Screen Gutms. song-and-dance
saluLe to the movies. presented by
GEMMS MusicaJ Theater Company and directed and choreographed by Lynne Kurdz..iei Fonnato and Tres.sa Gonnan
Crehan. Katharine Corne ll Theater. EJhcou Complex Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.
DECIR£E RECITAL

John VrMland, organ. Slce
Concen Hall North Campus 8
p.m

MONDAY

~6

a iOC._ISTWY SEMIIWI
Initiator Proteins of Herpes
Virus DNA Replication. Dr.
Paul Boehmer. Dept of BiochemiStry , Stanford Univ . 1348
Farber. South Campus. Noon.
RECITAL

Strin1 Students. Baird Rec1tal
Hall . 250 Baird. Nonh Campus.
Noon.
ANATOMICAL SCIENCES

SIIIIIIWI
The Ro~ or t.be- Cytos.ktlttoo in
tM Rmewal of an lntqraJ
. Me.mbrant Protdn, OpSin.
Brian Matsumoto, Ph.D.. Neuroscience Research lnstitbt.e. Univ.
ofGalifomi.auSanta Barbiua 108
Sherman. Soolh Campus. J p.m.
SIIIIIIWI
.....
SCIIEHTIS1S

~VIII mtiNCI

QUAIITET CYCU
Tho Cavanl Strine Quart••·
Annie Fullard. violin; Susan
Walerbwy, violin ; Erib Ec:ken.
\'Jola; Merry Peckham. cello. Slec
Concen Hall. Nnnh Campus. 8
p.m. Admission: $8 , $6, S4. For
more infonnation call 645-2921

worts by Beethoven, Bach,
Szymanowski and Franck. Slee
Concen Hall. North Campus. 3
p.m. Admission: S8. S6, S4.

CAU*ET AlliS CAFE PANEL
Ltamlnc rrom tb&lt; 11&lt;co o;..
lricl: n.. Revtlallxalioo or
Soulh Beacll and Cltl&lt;s Llk•
Yours, Tony Goldman. devel-

Tool: Mechanisms of Action
and Rcsistanct, Susan B.
Horwitz. Ph.D.. proressor. Dept
of Molecular l'twmax&gt;logy. Albcr1
Eitwein Collc:ge of Modicinc. G26
Fart&gt;er. Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.
Sponsorod by lhe Oeparuncnls of
Biochemislry. Biopbysics. l'twmacology and Pllysiology.

LR-

Uvln&amp; Oft" Campus: Wbal You
Need To KDow. Ed Brodka.

t&amp;

!'"''"'"'"' •25M Hz •4MB

memory •B&lt;MB hard dnve•14p Color
dJSpl• y • Soandatd keyboard • bui1 1-on
AppleTalk • Standard SCSI
Save $70 with Select 300 l..aHr Printer 52,245
Sne $95 with Select 310 l...uu Printer $4441

leader. Nnnh Campus. 4-S p.m.
For regjstra1.ion information caJI

Macintosh Centris 650

645~125 .

t&amp;

68040 proc....,. •20MHz •8MB

LIT'IIIAirY IVIJIT

memory•230MB hard drive•14 · Color
dJSplay • EXIendtd keyboanl•buill-on
AppleTalk • On-board Elh.,.,.. • Hlgh
perfonnanc• SCSI.
Save $70 with Select 300 l..uer Printrr 54,163
Save $95 with Select 310 Wer Printer $4,359

Sluclmt Pootry Radin&amp;. fearur ing winners of Academy of
American Poets 38m Annual
Poeuy eon ..... Friends of lhc:
University Ubraries
UnderJ!r&gt;dauu: Poeuy Priu:, lhc:
Atthur Ax&amp;erod Memorial Award
and lhc: Scribbler"• Prize. 420

Capen. Nonh Campus. HO p.m.
CONCUIT

UB Suopboot Quartrt. woru
by Mozart, Grainger, Hartley and
Olhen. Sl« Conccn Hall. Nnnh
Campus 8 p.m.

C ommons • N orth Camp us • 645-3554

ll]j

TUESDAY

~7

I'EIIIATIIIC COHFDIENCE
Cktstridium Di.lficile Dbeast
and tbr Quest for tbt Magical
Silvtr BuUtt, Leonard LaScolea.
Jr.. Ph.D. Cafetorium A , Mercy
Hospit.a.l. 8:30a.m.
nNANCW.AIDI'IIOQIIAII

Stu&amp;mtLMmCowudmgror
Prosp«t.ivt Grad uates. Il l
Wende . South Campus. Noon.12:50p.m.
IIICICMMISTITY SEMIIWI

TnMC.riptiooal Rqulat.ion m
Myogt:oesi.s. Dr. Tc:-Chung Lee.
Dept of Cell Biology. Baylor
College= or Medicme. Houston.
I 348 Faper. Soolh Campus
Noon.

VDIC£ R£CITAI.

Sludent.s or Gary Burgus.
Sylvia Dimiziani. Dani&lt;t
McCabe and Harrid Simons.
Baird Recital Hall. 250 Baird.
North Campus. Noon.

-

__,..,

~

CIENTEII

ADA Tillr U, provisiOns thai
safeguard your right or access to
CLiy, county and local government
facilities and prognms. ILC
building, 3108 Main St: l-4 p.m.
. Co-sponsored by lhc Neighbor·
.hood Legal Strvie&lt;s. lhc: WNY
Olapter of Self-Help for. Hard of
Hca.nng Persons. and the UB
Umon of StudenLS with Disabilities. For regisb1ltioo inrormation
call 8l6-08n (Vrnce or TOO).
--AI.
Christopbor Sitncbula. piaiiO-

BaLf'li Recital Hall . 250 Batrd.

North c&amp;mpus. 8 p.m.

Coounued on page 8

Convenience ,
Quality
/
Service
Variety

�_,__

8
CALENDAR
Continued from page 7
~~

=~-of
Autoimmw&gt;lty, Roben RootBcmslein. Plill., IISIOciaoe probMichipn SIBle

501' of ph)'liolosy.

Univ. and former MacArttu Prize
Fellow. Bwler Audi10rium. Soudl
Campus. 8 p.m. Foo- '"""'information call 829-290 I. Spcn!OI&lt;d by
lhe """- Wild&gt;slty Caver lor
immJnology ond lhe ()ql&lt; of Miaobiology

laultl&amp;ralloe- After tho

u....,.

F-1 orl-1•- Vloo, lames

D. Eiu,
New Yoric Olaplet. American lmmipalion Lawyen Allociation. IOIII&amp;Idy.
Nonh Campus. 4-6 p.m. Spoooorcd by lnlema!ional Student
and Scholar Services.
. . . . - y CCILUIQIIII•
On Elhkal UllMrallsm, Shia
Moser, emeritus, UB , author,
Abwluli.sm tmd R~lativism iJt
ElhicJ. 684 Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m.

~~ PIIYIIOUNIY
Klaeda~CO,...-...IDtho

l..lq, Robert A. KJoc:k&lt;, MD. 108
Shmnln. South Campus. 4 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

~~

-

~­
~~I..IC1UB
lllcanlo Scdlldlo, profcuor of
ardUICCtW&lt;, Cooper Union

Sc:ilool or Art. 301 Ctooby. Soulh
Campus. 5:30p.m.

UPIE-

PIIAIIIIACYNIIIIWI

Advances In lmmuoosuppressloo-Fpcus on FK 506, Riclwll
Ptachcinslti. Plwm.D .. BCPS.

Sovo SSS Wbou Ynu Buy or
J..eaw a Veblck, Oluck Giles.
leader. Nonh Campus. 7-9 p.m.
For registration information call

645-6125.
OPUI: CUIIICI RECITAL

peutics, Uni\' of Pittsburgh

Yu-Hul y...,.. !.«,violin, and
Mldut&lt;l Kl&lt;lo. plano, works by
Mozart and Prokofiev . Allen
HaJJ. South Campus 7 p m

MedicaJ Cenler 248 Cooke

uu.u F1UII

Nonh Campus 8-8·55 a. m

1bt Tune, du-ected by BtU
Plympton Waldman llleater .
I 12 Norton. North Campus 7
p.m. Admiss1on. S2.50. UB students; $4 . ~. non-stu~nts. For
tnOf'e mform:mon call 645-2957

FCCP. di=tor of pharmacy for
ambulaLOry care and assoc:iate
professor of pharmacy and lhc:ra-

-

F lnandaJ Manage.meo~ presenl.llllOO for area bustness per$00s
and CPA.s, covenng such toptcs
as financ•aJ planmng. Improved
utihz.atton of financaal statements
and financaal ~ Center
for T omorrow North Campus
8 JU a.m -12·30 p m Accrt'dned

COHCEJI'T
UBuiJaJo S) mphony, Charlo
Peltz. conducto r SIIX Conccn
Hall Nonh Campu.!&gt; R p m

for 4 hours of CPE cn:d1t Regts·
llltUon fee S49. genernl pubhc .

S25. UB facully For funher m
fomwllon call Jen:mey Sharkc)
ul 645 -34 12 Pn:scnt.cd by Bela
Alph1 t')l
INSTITUTE FOR ADOIC1'JOHS
SruotES AND TRAINING
HIIIIIWI
Our Sacred Sto..WS: Pathway11
to WholtOf:SS in Rrrovery, Janet
Elkms Sahafi. presenter John
Nom.s A TC. R od'le~ te r 9 a m
~ 10 p.m For more tnform.tUion

call645-6140
ANAHCIAL AID I'IIOGIIAM
Student l...oao CouMetlng for
Pn:tsputivr Graduates. 4 KnoA
North Campu ~ Noon 12 50 p m
RECITAL

Graduatr Ek!ctronk Music.
Baurl Rcc1tal Ha ll. 250 Baud
North

Cam pu~

Noon

liocKEFEUDt FEU.OW
I'IIOGIIAMI'IIUEHTAT10N
Euroccntrism,
Multkulturallsm and Audio
Visual Pedagogy: The Ca.~ or
Columbus, Dr Rotxn Starn.
Rocke feller Fellow and professor
of cmema stud1es at NYU 120
Clemens. North Campu.o. Noon-2
p.m Sponsored by the

Rockefeller FoundatJon Humam tJes Fellowshap Progrum and Depanments of American Studaes
and Afncan -Amc:ncan Stud1es

-WELL PAJit( ITAFF
IDIIIMAII

MoUy Kule.a-Martin, Ph.D.,
Dept. of Experimenl.lll Therapeu tics , RPCI . Hilleboe Audatorium.
RPCI. 12,)0 p.m.
CHEMICAL ~NEERIHG/

UNDE IDIIIIWIIQIIU
Catalysis by Zeolitr Enugtd
Metal Clusters and Metal-Proton Adducts, Wolfgang Sachtler.
Northwescem Umv 206 Full)as
North Campus 3 45 p.m
BIOCHEMICAL
PHARMU:«..GY HIIIINAR
Biocbemk-a.J Plasticity in I be
Adult NtrVou.s System: Regubltion of Peptide E.-pression In
Syml)atbdic Neurons.. R1chard
E. Z..gmond. Ph.D., Dept. of Neurosc ienc~ . Case Y(estem Re·
serve Umv 307 Hochstetler
North Campus. 4 p.m .

BIOPHYSICS SIIIINAR

Tbe EIJtdJ ofOx.oVInadlum
Compounds on Normal and
Diabolk Ral Myocardium, D&lt;.
Gail Willslcy, UB Dept. of Biochemistry . 1()6 Cary Snulh Cam-

pus. 4 p.m.

THURSDAY

~9

I'RWAJIY CARE REIOURCE

CENTDAa:essi.oglntormalion, hand5
on training m lhr use of n:soun:es
avai lable on the Mcc:hcal School
Network. "Kem L. Cabana. John
W. Loonsk. M.D.. Dla~ G
Schwartz. MLS. and Raymond D
Volpe:. BA. 240 CFS Addiuon
South Campus. 8· 15 - 11 :30 a.m
Adnussio n. SJ5. Pre~gtstrata o n
rcqum:d. For mort information
call 829-3 176. Co-spooso~ by
the UB School of Medicint and

Btomedtcal Sc1ences.

POICUII- lt\IDENTS
RECITAL

Students or Jan WilliMm.s and
Tooy Mnnda. Baird ReciUll Hall.
250 BaUd. North Campus. Nooo
WEDNESDAYS AT 4 PLUS

utaiARY IIEJIIEI

Art and Cog.niUon, Misko
Suvakovtc. Yugoslavian philosopher and CODCepiUH) artJSI. 4 )8
Clemens. North Campus. 12:30
p.m. Sponsored by the UB Poettcs Progrum.
COMI'\ITDIICIENCE
COUOQUIUM
Softwa~ Engineering Data :
Wherr It Is and How to Get It,
Patricia V11r1 Venh. Dept. o f
CQmputer Scu:nce. Canis iu.'i College: and UB . 14 Kno x. North
C~pus .

3:30-4:45 p.m.

•IOLOGICAL ICI£HCEI

HIIIIIWI
Tr11JlliCriplional Activation by

tht Adrnovirus [lA Protrin:
Antin:prossioo, O..lbomas
Shenk, professor. Dept. of Biol ogy. Princeton Umv. 12 1 Cooke
North Campus. 4 p.m . Co-spon sored by CAMBL

IIUFFALO LINIIC cou.oQUIUM
l..o&amp;k Dktionary Entry-Paradox., Jost Saguillo, Logic. Univ.
or Santiago de Compooela and

George Boger. Philooophy.
Canisius College. 684 Baldy.
North Campus. 4 p.m. For mo~
information contxt John

-----.--

Con:ono 11 881 -16ol0 or

645-2-438.

_,__
-~

Pbl Alploo 'l'bda, ... IIIUdeuu
will be inductod info ibc inl&lt;rnalionol hiaory oociely. Tho Kiva,
101 Boldy. Nonb Campus. 4 p.m.
Local c:hlpCer is Alpbo DeliO
ThoiO; UB hiaory profeuor
Helju A. Bennett is focu!ry odvi1101'.

IIA-'IIQ CCILUIQIIII.
AJaorilluUe Aids "' tho AaalyollofS,.._ ~PDE,Ptof.

Elizabcdt MIDSf&gt;eld, Univ. of

Exeter, visitin&amp; 11 the Univ. of
Colondo. 103 ();efeudorf. Soudl

-

Campus. 4 p.m.

~­

,.. -

o( Exporlmatlal

a-t Follure On Apporall
a-llllood Flow Followlaa
N-laflooloG,

Elizabclh Baebcn, ........ 1111denl, UB

Dept. or P!wmaceutica.

508 Coote. North Campus.

4-5 p.m.
STA,..,_ CCILUIQI-

Mulmum Llkdibood Noural
N&lt;twwt. Moddo, D&lt;. David
Faroggi, Biom&lt;lric Resean:h
Branch, NationaJ Cancer lnstiIUI&lt;. 144 Fazbcr. Soulh Campus.
4 p.m.
DEDICAT»N~

ll&lt;rnard G: Wllkdldd Room.
Oral SUJlCf)' Suite:, Sc-hool or
Denta.J Medicine. Squire Ha.JI.
Snulh Campus. 5 p.m.
l'tiiLOIOPtiY COUOQUIUM
Socletal R050Uru Alloeotion'
The Etbks or Choice and

Choice Polkia, James
Lmdeman Nelson, 1llc: Hastings
Centtr 114 Hochstette:r. North
Campus. 5 p.m.
UU.U AUII

The Tune., du-ected by Bill
Plympto n. Woldman Theater,
I 12 No non. North Campus. 7
p m . Admtssaon. S2.50; UB studenl'&gt;. S4.50. no n-students. For
T1lOf'e mfomwuo n call 645-2957

JAQIEU.OHWI LEC1\JRE
IDIIU
Tbe Life and Times or Madame

Modjesk.a. Countess Bounta.
Emil O=chowslu. Ph.D..
D.Hab., Kosc1uszko FoundatiOn
Vtsmng Professor. Buller Audttonum. 140 Farber South Campus
7 30 p.m. Sponsored by the UB
Counc1 l on lntemallonal Studaes
and Progrwns

-

-1

...-T"'";'l~-

NOTICIB

c.

Reoerve U... for ibc 1993 Summer aad Pall Seuions ~ now
due. Fcnna we available 11 the
Reoerve !lest iD e-=b Ubnry.

-------UUI

•

-

,•

.

..

-.

• .

...

WBFO

''¥""1

'~

•

•

1

&amp;hooule

Dil.ILLD·Tho Gtadlwe School o{ l!duc:olion will hold • mr:mnriaJ oervicc
for Dr. William Eller, emeritus
profesiiOI' of education, Sarurday,
April 24 II I :30 p.m. iD ibc Center for Tomorrow. Dr. Eller, a
distinJuisbed researt:hcr in ibc
field of n:oding educalion, died
March 14.
The UB WomcD'I Oub il con-ductinJI sprinJ flower sale to
benefit ill Orace Copen Scholarlhipo. Dn ule are 4-1/Z-Iadl pea
of ,....UW... ($1 .80 e-=b or $201
""""'~ ~lant pocb o{ impatiens ($1.50), and 10-incb hanaiDg bosb:u of impllienl ($10).
Onler forms and infnrmllion can
be ob&lt;ained by calling Joon
Sprowlu83~. Deadline for
ordering iJ April28. Flowas can
be picked up II lhe Cenlet for
Tomonow on May 12 bclwcen
Noon and 5 p.m.

LOAN-----Tho Offia: of F'mancial Ajd and
Student Accounts will bold a
presentation oo loan counseling
for prospective g.nduates and

rKMHeruming students, Tuesday,

April V. in II Wende Hall,
Soulh Campus, and Wednesday,
April 28, in 4 Knox HaJJ, North
Campus. Both sessions are from
Noon lO 12:50 p.m.
TOAiliiAITUII CU.
'The University at Buffalo Toast·
masten; Oub meets in Room 200
of~ Commons, North Campus.
on the second and founh Tuesday
of each month. Meetings , held
from 5:30 to 7: 15p.m., adhere 10
a strict agenda and are highly
parucip.arory. Membership as
open to university employees and
10 the Western New York commumty. The six -month initial
membership is S40. Membershtp
renewals cost S24 every sax
months. Purchase orders lllld
personal checks should be madt
payable to the University IU Buffalo Toastmasters Club. For further mfonnation. concact Bill
R.tce. pres1de:nt. at64S-336S.

-.oANC-~

EXHIBITS
GRADUATE TMEIII aHOWI
A sho w of work by Kathleen
Ca vanagh and Theodora
Zastempowski opens April 23 at
8 p.m. and continues through
May 7.m Bethune Gallery. 2917
Ma1n St. Gallery hours: Monday.
noon to 5 P..m.; Tuesday. 10 a.m.8 p.m.; Wednesday . 1:30 to 5
p.m .. Thursday. 10:30 a.m. Co
I 2:30 p.m.; Fnday, lto5 p.m

For mrormatJOO, call

829~}477

FACULTY IIOOK ~IT
1be llrlnual "Social Sciences and
Humanities Faculty Book Exhibit " 1s on display m Lockwood
Library through late April. This
year's &lt;tisplay high!Jgh~ 63 books
wn~~&lt;n or ediu:d by UB facull)'
from Ardutocture, Ans and LellefS.
Education, Mana~t. Social
Sciences and the Univenity Ubri:uoes. nnd published between Ia!&lt;
1991 and early 1993. The exhiblll'l
located in the royer of the second

floor of Lockwood and can be
Vle"--ed dunng all Pmts the libr.uy
IS

open.

u•I'HOTCNIIIJU'tiEJIS

I'IIUEHT I'EIIIncTivEI Of'
UIIIVIIIIm
Photographic perspectives of UB .
pn:sented through lhc: eye and
camera of US Publications photognphers Raben Wahoo and
Simon Tong. are on exhibit
through April 30 in Capen Hall
Walion. who has been a UB staff
member for four years, is a
graduate of the Rochester Insti tute of Technology. Tong, an
ei~ht -yc:ar veteran of the Publications Office. is an economics
major at UB. The Capen Gallery
is free and open lO the public.
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays.

DFFEIIID
International Folk Dancmg lessons are held Fnday evenings al
8 p.m . on the ground noor of
Diefendorf HaJJ. South Campus.
Reques1 dancing follows from 911 p.m . Everyone is welcome : r.o
panner needed. Free admission.
Sponsored by the Graduate Studtnt ASSOCI&amp;Iion.
JDII REiqURCEI FOR
I1UDEJRI
Currentlisting.s of jObs m busi ness and W)dustry . government.
health, education and non-profit
orgamzattons. are available in the
Office of Career Planntng and
Placement , 15 Capc:n Hall. Nonh
Campus. Call 645 -223 1 ror mon::
mfonnallon

JOB I
FACULTY

As.sis1ant/Assodatt ProfessorOphthalmology. Posling Iff.
3027. Ledurer-Buffalo Research
lnstitlJte on Education for Teach·

mg CBRIET). Posting •F-3028.
Ass.istant Profeuor-Urology.
Posti ng tF-3029. Assistant Proressor-Umlogy CPedtatncl. Post -

mg lfF-3030.
IIEIEAIICII
Certified Nurw Practitioner
(SE--2)·Soclal and Preventive
Mcdtcine. Posting '!R -93027

S.C:retary 1-0ccupational
Thonpy, Posting •R-93035 S.C:rotary Ill (N0-5)-Sccial and
PrevCntive Medicine. Posting •R 93029. Director of Rehabilitation Tecbno~ Strvicts-Occupational Therapy, Posting
lfR -93036. Science Administralor (SE-3)-National Center

ror

Geograph1c Information and
Analysts. Posting IR-93037
PIIOFEIIICIMAL
Se.nior Staff Assistanl (Sl..-3)Soctal Sciences lnterdiscipltnary
Programs. Posting ~P- 3008 . Assi\1ant Via Prrsideol for Budget and Pef'SOooel (SL-S)-Qm~
of Vic:e President for Public Ser·
v1ce and Urban Affairs, Postmg

A'P-3021 . Assistant Facilities
Ptngram Coor,linator (SL-3)0..ign and CoosouciXln. Poslmg
NP-3009. H-..:. HaD Din&lt;lor

(Sl-:2)-ResKiential bfe. Posling
•P-3018. Senior Applkatiom
Anloly&gt;l I (SL4Komputing nnd
lnformabOn Technology. Posting

•P-3!119.
COMP£tmVE CLAIIIFIED

CML IEJIVICE
Ci&lt;rk I (SG-46)-Reconls and
Regastration, Lmt: 134927. Secrr-tary I (SC-I I )-University Facilities and Custodial Services. Line

126718. Supe.rvisio&amp; Computer
Op&lt;raWr (SG- 18)-Computing
and Information Technology,
Lme-131167.

~

CI.AIUmiCML IDVICE
G&lt;nmll Mecbanie (SG-U)-Uru·
\'eT'Sily Facilities. Une 131269.
WORLII '-'-JAQEI

IHITITUTE HEllS 1NTE11H1
11le World Languages Institute
accepting upplications for two

IS

Studc:m lmems for fa)l 1993 semester. ApplicanlS should have
these qua lifications: adminlStrall\'e experience (desirable). computer literacy t'WP5 .1. Dbase ),
strong verbal and written skills.
abiltt y to mleract with a diversify
o f indivtdwtls, foreign language
proficaency (preferred)._lotems
will recc:ive academic credit and
opportunity to work in • dynanuc
and growmg enterprise. Send
letter of application and res~
by April 30 to D&lt;. Marlo: A.
Ashwill , Assistant Director.
World Languages Institute. 402

Capen.Hall. North Campus. Applicants will be interViewed tx rcn end of the semester. For
more information , cal i64S-2292

�--.---.-Athletics, tenure, budget among issues discussed
by Greiner, Palmer on WBFO call-in show
.,._~

Reporter Staff

U

NJVERSITY AT Buffalo President William Greiner took to the
airwaves of WBFO 88.7 FM
again last week to field questions

from the public on everything
from athletics to tuition rates and tenure to the
upcoming World University Games. The hourlong call-in show was moderated by WBFO's
lan Aronson, and included comments from
Robert Palmer. UB 's vice president for student
affairs.
Regarding the increase in SUNY tu·
ilion rates over the

la st thre e years.
Greiner explained
that education w1ll
continue to be more
expensive, but he
expected the rate of
increase to be more
moderate " I think
you'II sec tUiti On go
GREI NER
up in the future . hut
I th1nk It 'll be in a much more moderate klndof
step process tuned m with the general cost of
mflauon and addiuonal state suppon." he said.
He pomtcd out that UB conunucs to be at
the "low end'' of Eastern universitJe!l n:garding
cost " I think UB and SUNY are very afford able places still ."
Addressmg budget concern!., Grcmcr sa1d
lhat although lhere we1e pos1t1vc ingrcdien~ m
lhe budget. including a salary mcrease for

SUNY &gt;taff and faculty member... "there remam:-. an S11.8 million lump·Sum redw.:tion
fu~ the SUNY system. And thai trJ.Ilsl&lt;ne ~ mto
&lt;.~bout $ 1.5 to $1 .8 million (m reduc tiOn~) for
tJm campus"
Rcgammg the money that ha.\ bt=cn lo~ l

over the last few years through swc budget
reductions is a top priority, he said "!'his
campus expects to do our rebuilding in a very
targeted and focused way by doing every possi ble thing we can to genet3le Olher-than-statefunding to support the university."
Greiner pn!ised what he called "some additional management flexibility for a new ap.
preach to managing tuition," better known as
SUTRA, as a way of giving UB greater control

Tenure "encourages the
faculty to be risk- takers
wilh regarri to scholarship
and researr:h I think that's
very, very important."
.f'RUIDEII'I' GREINER

over its own finances.

One cal ler asked about the possibility of
phone·m registrdtion for students this fall. It
may not happen in September, he sajd, but it
will be a reality at some point in the future at
UB . "It 's we ll past due for us to get into that
mode of registration." he said.
On the topic of the World University Games.
Greiner s.md that although corporate financial
suppon ha11 been slow in coming, offers of aid
m suppon services have been overwhelmingly
positi ve . "I think the public suppon for the
Games. both fedeml. stale and local. has been
very good."
Anod1er cal ler asked if the !enure system
tended to redi.IC&lt; the ourput of senior facul ty and
1f a better !ly~tem of accounlability was a nec:t!.\·

sary guard against such a possibility. Gremer SBJd
that -..: didn' t reduce output but spurred ere·
alivity and innovalion among all faculty.
'1t enc&lt;lW118CS the faculty to be risk-taker.;
with regard to their scholarship and research. lt
encourages them not to be conventional. I
think that's a very, very imponant. indeed, the
only real justification, for the tenure system."
An engineering major asked Greiner if the
money being spent to upgrade UB ·s athletics
programs to Division I status wouldn't be
better spent on academic programs.
Greiner said that the athletic fee was a small
price to pay for the kind of national recognition
gained from a strong athletic program. "I think
having a high quality. responsible (in terms of
cost and academic standards) athletics program will make the University at Buffalo more
and more appropriately visible and will make
the value of an engineering or any other degree
from the University at Buffalo, therefore, that
much more valuable."
Robert Palmer said that it is important to
understand that the athletic fee was not simply
imposed on students by the campus administration. "Overwhelmingly, the campus community supported the fee. and I'm referri ng to
faculty, staff and students."
A faculty member at UB called to ask
Greiner about low wages being paid jumor

faculty. She said that as a result of this. many
young colleagues were being hired away from
UB by other universities who are willing to pay
their faculty more money.
Greiner said that he agreed with the caller.
and that it was important for UB to lind ways
to keep its young faculty in place over the long
run . ''I think it's a real concern. The future of
the univer.;iry depends on our attracting nnd

bringing along the best young faculty . r m glad
you raise it. it's a good question. As President
Clinton says. I feel your pain."

9
NOTICE

flll1883

Prereglstratioo
Pn- liillluot ..._....
Awlllllle
9 a.m.-4 :30p.m.
Thursday and Friday
April 22 and 23
Hayes 8 and Capen 232
Check Wlrh Records &amp; RegrstratiOf&gt;
to see if you are check-stopped and
rneltgrble to register'

Rablmc-~

9 a.m .-4:30p.m.
Thursday and Friday
May6and 7
Hayes 8 and 232 Capen
Any DUAS Undergraduate

-=

Any course request recerved
affer 4.30 p.m on Fnday, May 7 may
not be processed rn &amp;me lor the brllrng deadlrne and. as a result. you
may be charged $60 rn late lees
Your Unovers1ty B1ll w1ll be sent to you
on late July It w i l l - • • - -

--

IICII..,.--~

b"-- for COUI'MS In whicll

,.... ·-..........tully_,...

Or,

Schedule cards will be available for
preregistered students on Saturday .
Aug 28 and Sunday. Aug 29. from
Noon to 6 p m at the Student Un100
lnformatiOO Desk

Help bring the world to Buffalo...

~

UniYersitYGcmes
Buffcio'93"
~,,.J

Prt IY

'

@New'lblklillephone
W1ththe
-

Fwnllyol eomp.nios

Support Club'93
THE WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES:
The Best Athletes competing at the largest sporting event in the world this yemc
Don 't miss your opportunity to participate in the
Sports Spectacle of a Lifetime
Club '93 Membership Benefits Include:
Commemorative Gifts • Preferred Seating • A Chance to Win Free Tickets
See Your Club '93 Coordinator fm· Details

I

I
J

�_.., .... _..., __
The Reporter welcooles commentary on ISStJ6S
of broad interest to the university corTrnUnlty
Material may be edited lor style 8!ld length

Defining Democracy in Our New World

w

ly--

HFNT. S. EUOfrellsus
lhai "April is lhe auelest
month," he explains !hal
winlt:r has kept us warm,
covering us with soow to
prevent stirrings and struggles. The Cold War
did !hal with danocrncy. Any oountty might he
a danocrncy so long as it was aligned with us
(!he ''fir.it world'). with some weak proviso
about el&lt;ctions and marlcets. Under Cold War
conditions we did 1101 need to think much about
w1ta1 democrncy IS. and we did 1101 do so.
Two maj&lt;r changes in lhe world have put. an
end to this complacency. One is lhe end of lhe
Soviet Unioo and lhe lertlalive beginnings of
something democratic in lhe fanner East Bloc.
The other is lhe rise of dictator.;hip, military rule.
ethruc strife. and poveny in lhe so-called 'Thiro
World."
The Third World is composed of narions less
than half a century old. many of than fanner
colonies. with boundaries left over from lhe
colonial era. While some of these new narions
have leaned toward lhe East and some toward
lhe Wrs.. lhe Third World has remained distinct
m i" thinking. The common ideology has been
toward a dernocrncy in lhe form of self-&lt;le!=nination. whiclt IS n:x:ogrun:d a&lt; a human nglu by
lhe UN Declur.llion of Human Rights. The Third
World Ideology contain&lt; a stroog proviso that
lhe trnd!bonal ideas and tnsututions of democmcy he modifted to preserve and promole local
cuhwe aM val ues Ex~ tn i:l few Soulhcast
Astan oountnes. the result has been eott.!r dictatroJtip or poverty. or both.
If we rrean to promote freedom and prospcnty. thts wake-up call from lhe Third World
lS even more urgenl lhan the one from the
disintegmoon of the Soviet bloc. Though these
t&amp;&lt;ues fm;t cap&lt;unxl nalional headlines hecau.&lt;e
of events in Iran and lr.lq. they are nowt.o-e
more poignant than in Latin Amenca. wt.o-e
the Monroe Docuine and decades of exclustve
U.S. involvement have not resulted in the c:mergeoce of even one &lt;.'OUntry that is healthy either
poliocally or economically.
The plausibility of the nght of self-detemunauon ru. a component of dernoc:mcy. has been
an 1mpedimentto new and vigorou...'i thinking
about the ideas we endorse and the systems we
suppon. "Sw-ely." we say to oun;elves. "that
people develop their own u\Stitutions and their
own values is jusl what dernocmcy is all about"
So I have thoughL too. It ha.&lt; taken a cli:ar and

oped. they squeezed 01.1 the smaller and IJXR
diver.oe local rteWSjXlpaS. Under Saddam. those
who aiticiud the government were identified
with lhe reactionary fon:es who stood in the way
of progress and thereby were dcfirtal a&lt; traitors.
Through numerous variations on this ~
self-detmninabon became dictator.;hip. ll cannot
he ooocluded.ltowever. as President Bush appeared to do, !hal dictaunltip means lack of
popular support. though it does mean a lack of
danocrncy. The ksson
is thai eloclions. social
development. popular
support. and national

eloqucnl voice from lhe Thin! World, !hal of
Kanan Makiya, supplem:nred by the calm
persislent analysis of Jolut Ladd. to make me
"""clearly how very mistaken this self-&lt;le!=nination is.
Kanan Makiya is an Iraqi. though neither he
ncr his family has been able to live in lr.lq in
= t yeaiS. Before the Gulf War he published.
wtdcr the pseudonym "Samir al Khalil.'' a
devaslaling aitique of the Saddam regime.
including a lltOSl
pcn:eptive analysis of
Saddam's rise to
power and his oootrol
of the Iraqi state. No
one reading his book.
Republic of Fear,
could have expected
!hal the defeat in
Kuwait would topple
Saddam More importantly. his analysis
showed the urgency
of distinguishing
dernocrncy from selfdetemtination. Selfdetermination rrwy
occa&lt;ionally deserve
suppon. as in the case of the Kurds. It never.
however. deserves wtqualifted suppon. for it
facilitates the growth of dictalorship by hiding
totalitarian origins from scrutiny.
Saddam's power in lr.lq nests on the Baath
Patty and its well-articulated priociples and
program. Ba' athism. Saddam did 1101 found the
doctrines or the party. They were, in fact. 1101
even founded in lr.lq but in Syria. where suppn:sston by rn,s;dent Assad led to their transference to lr.lq. The fowtders were largely
01ristian Arabs. and one of the main ideas of
Ba'athism is it~ emphasis on what Arabs have
in common rather than on wha! divides thent
This is still an attrnctive doctrine. moclifted in
lrJq to ioclude the Kwds and to focus on lr.lqis
mthcr than Arabs. One of its consequence&lt; was
weakening of elhrllc and sectarian identities in
favor of nationalism: another was va\tly larger
scope for women lhan in most other Middle
Eastern countries. Ba 'ath also stressed educa·
tion, and during the '70s literacy increased
as fast in Iraq as anywhere in the world.
1llcse posit.iv~ developments were, how·
ever, only half of the story. As national authority rep!JK:ed local authority. it became the only
authority. As ~ter.tey and national media devel-

"Elections, social
development, popular
support and national
self-determination are not
enough to make
democracy. "

self-detmninabon are
1101 enough to make

dernocrncy. What else
is tt«ded?
In his book
Makiya puts the
on human righls. By
human rights he means
rights that are wtiver-

=

sal. ""'ones oon-

noctcd with or
modified by local
conditions. The way
sa· athism modified
human rights was 1101 unique. It was. he insists.
in hanoony with a wtiversally held feruure of
Third World ideology. lhal wtivosal human
nghts belong to Western bourgeois mythology.
and !hal they need to he downgmded or suppressed in the Third World to focilitate local
indigeiiOIIS developmeru.
This is 00( an easy point for us to uoderstand. largely because the UN Declarntion oo
Human Rights iocludes far more than the civil
and political rights guaranteed in the u.s. by
the fir&gt;t ten amendments to our Constitution. It
includes or implies rights to food. housing.
education. cltild care. and even self-determination itself. Since stressing social and economic
righlli has often been a way to avoid basic
individual liberties. it is clearly the latter !hal
Makiya means to SlreSS. and !hal the Third
World ideology means to attack as a bourgeots
myth.
Most of this is sometlting that John Ladd
knows. and that he has tried to teach us. especially in his essay " The ldea of Collective
Violence." The theme of !hal remarkable essay
is lhal collective violence is always made to
seem necessary and justified by means of an
ideology. and !hal such ideology always m-

eludes five distioaive fearures, or premises.
The basic premise is the dislirtaioo of the
Olosen group from the Others. rouo.....l by lhe
exclusion (now justified by the basic premise)
of the Otlten from serious dialogue or pllticipolion in decision-making. Put in the tmns of
Ladd's essay, wlta1 is wrong with self-delmninalion is !hal it demands just the sort of dicltooJmy between the Olosen and the OOten
!hal so often leads to oolleclive violence.
lndiviWallihel1ies te fairly well JliOI&lt;'C*'d in
Europe and N. America. and 10 ~ than
elsewhere we need to look not only • the tltoory
behind lU also 31 the institution tlt3l artlrihutes
to such proteCtion. El&lt;ctions. to he sure. In lhe
larger picntn: are also fourd a balanoe of poii:ti.
cal and eoonomic JlOW"" and limitalions on
them The balanoe of"""""' in the u.s. is
USIIally thought to oonsist of the nuual independence of the legislature. executive. and judiciary.
but tit= other poiru deserve mention. One is
!hal the central bank is USIIally a f0U111t independenJ body--&lt;onspicuously so in lhe u.s.and in
Germany. where there are well-publicizrd disagreements hetwcert the Fed or lhe Bundesbank
and lhe leading politicians. Anollter is the balance between eoonomic and governmental
power: The peq&gt;le who make the big decisions
aboot pr&lt;&gt;&lt;ttrion. employment. and allocalion of
resources are 1101 the same: peq&gt;le who make lhe
political decisions. The thin! is our fede:rnlism.
whiclt JXOvides a balanoe between national and
local governmental power.
umitations on power are jUSI as important as
lhe balanoe of JlOW""· The Bill of Rights limits
governmental power. pecisely why Jeffer.;on
and otltm put so much effort into promoting it
Marl&lt;els are a limit on eoonomic power. whiclt is
why they need to he safeguarded
In the long run we will have to consider all
these faciOI'S. In the short run. as the Ointon
adrninistr.ltio revises U.S. stJBtegy for resporrling to situations in Africa and Latin America. we
will need to give special anention to the relalions
between danocrncy and individwl fre&lt;dom. in
the form of both free marl&lt;ers and individwl
human rights. To do that. a&lt; Makiya shows. we
wiU need to look much m&lt;R aitically 31 "rights"
of self-&lt;letermination and 31 exclusive reliance
on elections as a hallmarl&lt; of democrncy. Dernocrncy. if it deserves our support. deserves
beru:r critical attention than we have given it
Newlon G&amp;wr" ~ ServK:e Ftrlessorol
l'ttbsqJ/1y at the~

Makiya says U.S. should have removed Hussein from power
ly-UEA
Reporter Contnbutor

B

Y LEAVING Saddam Hussein in
power during and after the Gulf War.
the Unit&lt;d States failed to live up to its
moral obligations to the citizens of
1rnq and the Middle East. according to one worldrenowned Middle East expert who possesses firsthand experience of life uoder the lr.lqi dictator.
Kattan Makiya. who gave a keynote addJ)!ss
Friday 31 the political science oattferena:oo "Ethnic Cooflict and lntemational lntervention" held
on UB ·s North Campus. stressed his he liefthat the
U.S, had no initial obligation to intervene in the
Middle East after lr.lq invaded Kuwait in fact.
Makiya said. it should have been feUow Arabs
who stood up to Saddam Hussein instead of the
rest of the world.
However. once the U.S. did tntervene, Makiya
said it had a dwy to remove Hussein from power
and 10 install a transitionaJ government to oversee
the rebuilding ofaoounttydecimatcd by war.lltis
duty oontinues in the presenL he added
"More intaVentioo--ool less-was tt«ded
in the Middle East during the Gulf War and is

needed today.'' he said.
Hussein was expedient and it did adhere to the
The fail w-e to install a new govemtnertt in lr.lq
letter of the international law. replacing Hussein
after the war left adictator ruling a oountty !hal had
with a transitional government "oould have re·
been "bombed back into the 12th century:· said
stored hope in the
Makiya. who was boro in lr.lq and is doing
Middle EasL" he
reseait:h 31 Harvard's Center for Middle East
said.
Studies. In theaftermathoftheGulfWar, Makiya
Makiya captivated
said. one-halfoflr.lq ·s population was exposed to
acrowd ofabout 100
oontaminated drinking water. one-thin! of all
peq&gt;leintheMOOI
lr.lqi children were malnourished and food prices
Court Room of
uoderwent hyperinflation, rising 1.500-2.000 ~
O' Brian Hall with
percenl More tragic. Makiya no&lt;ed. was !hal in f
the details from his
the months after the war. 25.000-35.000 Kwtlislt ~
1989booi&lt;..Republic
men. women and children were kiUed by the lrJqi
of Fear. which
government. Also. a 300-pen:ent rise in the infant
chronicled Saddam
Hussein.s ascent to
mortality rn1e translated to the deaths of more than
Kanan Maklya
speaks at UB.
46.000 lr.lqi children uoder the age of five fnorn
powerand the genoJanuary-AugUSI of 1991. he said.
cidal policies of his
Makiya. who is now a British cilt7.en, said all
lr.lqi !10vemtnent during the 1980s.
this sufferingoould have been avoided ifSaddam
The bool&lt;.. which dwelled in relative obscurity
Hussein had been ousted: "Only by bringing
until August of 1990 when Iraq inv:ided KuwaiL
down the tymnL oould the Gulf War have been
was such a searing indictment of the Hussein
about more than just the ~bernJjoo of Kuwait"
regime. it wa&lt; published wtdcr a pseudonym for
Although Makiya admilled !hal the Unit&lt;d
fear the Iraqi government wouldallallpltokiU the
Stales' decision to end the war without removiing
at.tthor should his true idertrity beCome public.

~

Several days after lr.lq · s invasion of Kuwait---an
event the book predi&lt;:ttd-Makiya came forth to
reveal !hal he wastheat.tthor. His purpose. he said.
was to urge Arabs to take responsibility for holding lr.lq accountable for its annexation of Kuwait
and its treatment of the Kurdish people.
Yet. this didn't happen; instead. a U.S.-Ied
multinational ooalition ~ the effort to
~her.tle KuwaiL Makiyacalled the Arab world's
passivity "a moral fai.lltreofhistorical proportion
for whiclt everyone who cares about the Middle
East should take'JlOI'O'Ial responsibility ...
Makiya said most oftoday's problems in the
Middle East are 1101 the result of traditiorial ethnic
rivalriesimdhatreds. Rather. they derive from "an
intellectual and spirirual wcuum. .. where Arabs
blame the West and lsr.lel for a majority of
problemswhich~solelytheirownfaulLhesaid.

Makiya made a historical oomparison of the
situation in the Middle East today with !hal of
Europe in 17th century. an era when it appeared
!hal diff=nt people with different beliefs oould
1101 live together in peace. The Europeans learned
tolc!rar&lt;:e. Makiya no&lt;ed. "but the Arab response
has failed in oomporisoo."
-

�----...--

Faculty&amp;Sian
BILL
Clttlc of c.n11t AIDS . - e l l

to.,.,.~

0

•••
ns a
klwll:*l'll

.21, ...... _

..........

...-:- .........rt
~

PsychoiQgjst Teresa D.

l.at'rambiiise, an~

with a national reputation for
help;ng teachers, ca.melas Md srudents attack the
enormoos suicide rate
a-nang Naliw American
teenagers. will presel1 a

=s~~
the
helping professions on
~~ Z3. n the But·

The cor1erence, "Bridg&amp;Buildilg /&gt;.cross Cui!IJ'es."
is sponsored by the UB

a

Graduale Schlol EdJca.
lion Alumi Association
(GSEAA). Tappi1g LaFram-

boise:s ~ exper;.

ence 1n the field a etmc

ninority COLI'ISeling. ~ will
explore ways i'lllklich valuing elt'nlc diversity fn.
prO\I8S the effectiveness
Md quality ol the 'Mlrk erMrorment.

The conference is designed Ill foster skills 1hal

~the recogrWon ol

power Md Slrerlglh lrisi1g
from CIAtlsaJ differences.
P&lt;w1icipMis from edJcalion,
di1ical~· ca.n-

=.~~oo-

rupalional therapy Md empb,ment trai1rlg are ex·
peeled 1o attend
Regislralion is open 1o the
public at the following fees:
$40 for srudents, $00 for
GSEAA members, $65 for
senb- citizens EV1d $75 for
all olhrirs. For rrore hbmalion, contact the Dean's Of.
lice, us Graduate School a
~. at 645-2491 .
Associate pro1essor ear
cation at the Unillersity
WISCOnSin at Madison,
l..aFrM1boise is a researcl&gt;er EV1d COLI'lSeling psychol-

a

a

~~

a-nang Native AmericaroS
EV1d other etmc ninai1ies.

&amp;..dure Apdl r7

Robert Root-Bernstein, a noted researcher

and author who questions whether HIV is the
sole cause of AIDS, will deliver the annual Ernest
Witebsky Lecture at 8 p.m. on April 27, in 150
Farber Hall on the South Campus.
The presentation, "AIDS and Autoimmunity," is
sponsored by The Ernest Witebsky Center for lm·
munoloSY at UB and the UB Department of Microbiology. It is free and open to the public.
The UB center is named for the late Dr. Ernest
Witebsky, a pioneer in the field of autoimmunity.
A highly respected scientisl, Root-Bernstein has writ·
1m numerous articles for professional journals. newspapers and maprines. He r«endy appeared in a segment of
the ABC-lV news magazine program ''Day One."
Although most of the AIDS research funds have been
directed at the study of the Human lmmWIOdeficiency Virus, Root-Bcmstein and others have advanc:cd the theay that the virus alone may not he the sole
cause of AIDS.
Little scientiflC study has been funded by the federal
government and directed toward exploring other factors
that may he impcxtant in the development of this disease.
In his new book, RerNnJcing AIDS: 'lhl! Tragic Crur of
PrtmaJure Consensus, Root-Bemslcin chalJenges the
HlV hypothesis. explaining the mechanism of the human
autoimmune system and suggesting other possibilities,
such as II-.at an already impaired immune system may
play a role in the development of the disease.
An associate professor of physiology at Mi chigan
State Univer.ii ty. Root- Bernstei n was a MacA nhur
fellow from 1981-86. He is a fonner research associate at the Salk Insti tute for Biological Studies.

Noted geologist to speak

on GaiiTeo MTulon Aptl 23

0

Ronald Greeley, professor of geo logy, Cen·
ter for Meteori ti c Studies at Arizona State
Universi ty. has been involved in the geological
exploration of the solar sys tem since 1967 . Cur·
rently . he is on the sc1ence teams for the Magellan·
Venus mission. the Galilee
m1ss1on to Jupiter. the Soviet
Mars '94 mission and the
NASA Shuttle Imaging Radar
expenment.
On April 23 at 3 p.m. in
422 Fronc7.ak, Gree ley will
give a talk on '1l1e Galilee
Mi ssion to Jupiter by Way of
Venus. Eanh -Moon and the
GREEl£Y
Astero id Belt: A Geologist' s
Perspective." AdmiSS IOn is free and the public is
invited to mtend.
Greeley' s current prefects include study of wind
processes on Eanh. Mars and Venus; field studies of
basaltic volcanism and photogeological mapping of
plants a nd satellites.
He has served on various NASA and National
Acade my of Science panels to assess spjtce science
and planetary geology activities. Author or coauthor of eight bonks and more than 200 papers.
Greeley is associate editor for the Planetary Science
Series. Caffibridge University Press.
Greeley's visit is sponsored by the Depanment of
Geology and the Graduate Srudent Associati on.

UB'a

concrete-·

M~n· It, •

gMS to West Point Contesf

0

UB civil engineering students who designed
and built a I 7-foot-long,.metallic royal blue
concrete canoe dubbed ''Wingin ' It" will compete in
the regional concrete canoe competiti on to be held
on Saturday. April 24. at the U.S: Military Academy
at West Poi nt.
Winners of rhc n~rl) 20 regional contests will
compete later this year in the finals. to be held at
Ca lifornia State Universily at Sacmmento.
The competition. co-sponsored by C le veland based Master Builde rs Inc . under the aus pi ces of the
Ame rican Society of C ivil Engineers. focuses on the
design , construction and racing of the concrete ves-

B

0

A

R

0

sels. Entries are judged on elements of design, construction, speed, maneuverability, written and oral
presentations and team racing skills. National prize·
winners receive scholarships for their universities.
UB hosted the finals for the national concrete
canoe competition in 1990. ln 1991. the UB student
entty, " Hell Bent for Cemen~ " captured third place
in the finals.
Paul Gdanski and Ursula Szczesny, civil engi·
neering seniors who are C&lt;H:aptains of the 1993
team, said this year's entty features a modified
rocker underneath the craft, and one end is flattened,
rather than V ·shaped. About a dozen students have
been involved in the ~rojecL Faculty advisor for the
project is Ken Fishman, assistant professor of civil
engineering. Doug Bushne ll of Lockpon serves as
trainer.

R'a Pick A SNt Weekend
far UB footbllll , _

0

UB' s football program begins a new era when
the Bulls make the fin al step to Division 1-AA
and into their new 16.500-seat li ghted stadium.
Season tickets are now on sale for the return to
Division I in September and the Division IS maki ng
it possible for season ticket buyers to select the best
seats in the house at the very best prices. The first
Pick-A-Seat Weekend for prospective season ticket
buyers will he thi s Saturday and Sunday. April 24
and 25 from 10 a. m.-4 p.m. You will he able to view
the new stadium and the Division of Athletics will
be your host for seat se lection.
Those who buy now will save on the pnce of
single game tickets. For example. bu y the Touchdown Plan for $72 and receive six outstanding foot·
ball games. a chairback seat to relax in and free
guaranteed parking d irectly adjacent to the stadium.
The Field Goal plan offers six home games. regularly S60. for S50.

Convention features strategy games

0

A giggling gargoy le, the crew of the USS
Patton and a loud dragon are among the characters that will be played by mor&lt;: than 500 game·
playing enthusiasiS anending the fourth annuaJ UB
Suategists and Ro le-Players Association convention
April 23-25 on the Nonh Campus.
More rh an 120 events are set for players who
participate in the role-playing. mini ature and strategy games that will be played ;n Baldy and Clemens
Hall s and on the second floor of the Student Union .
The games woll begin at 8 p.m. on Friday. April23.
and concl ude at 7 p.m. on Sunday. April 25.
Live "co mbat" demonstrations by the Society for
Creative Anachronism. Japanese ammation films
~n d .. Star Trek" movies and episodes of tne relevl sion series wi ll be featured .
Speakers will include Sam Ch upp. game designer
with White Wo lf. a finn specializing in role-playing
games; Law.,nce R. Si ms of Optimus Design Sys·
terns. and Scott Aniolowski. Fred Behrendt. Gary
Sumpter and Mike Szymanski. who contributed to
the 24 supplements of the game "Call of Cthulu ."

Prof. Scott ollnatftute far Advln:ed
Study to speak In P.tl Hall

0

Leading femini st theori st Joan Scott will
discuss her unpubli shed paper. " Redescribing
Woman; Jeanne Deroin (1805- 1894)," during a
colloquium, April 23 at 3: 15 p.m. in 280 Park Hall,
North Campus.
Liana Vard i of McM aster University will com·
me nt on the essay and the audience will be invited ·
to pan icipate as well.
Scott. now at the Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton. N.J .. js the author of many bonks and
articles. including Gt!nd~r and th~ Politics of His·
tOry and Feminists Th~oriu thl' Political.
Panicipants are asked to read Scott's paper in
advance. The event is sponsored by the Department
of History, Graduate Student Association. Graduate
Group in Feminist Studies, the Mother L4ngua,ge
Association and the Graduate History Association .

I I I&lt;

lit&lt;

..... !

~_:

1

i•

\

HIIIYIIr~

l.aiWy
Need -=&gt; cmmllicaJe with a
ibr~? Perhaps )00 Wlrt

-=&gt; suggest a reN ~ for ptJ'·
c:tme? Mal&lt;8 an SRX*t·
ment for a re9fBCh araAtation? Get a readily available
piece Hormalion suc:tt as

a

a p..tllisher's address. the
phone rurtJer a a corporalion. the rreEri'lg a ~r~ ac:n:r
rrtrrf? MerrtJers a the triver·
sity corrmrity with M E-mail
acc:ou1 can row c:ontac1
Lockwood l..ibra'y, the Sdence Md Engineering U.
b'ary (SEL). Md the lklder·
graduate Ubrary (UGL) usng the lcllc&gt;Nng E-mail ac!dresses: UNLOCK.

ASKSEl. ASKUGL
The goal ol this service is to
create M additional averue
ol carm..nicalion belv.een
the lliaries Md tts users.
This os useful ...nan yoo we
not SU'e who to contact a
...nan yoo do not have the
panence for telephore tag'
Ub'arians check the mail da&gt;ly Monday tiYOugh Fnday
Md answer yas ncpry With., 24 hours a the next busi-

ness day
Corrm..ncanng With the II·
b'ary tiYOugh E-maoi is a first
step on a nunber ol possible
electronoc interactJons 1hal
win evolve m the wtuaJI•
brary ol the future The Un•
versity lJbraries we worl&lt;ng
on bmgng the library 1o yas
olfice a home
For ex&lt;rr()le. the lJnlversity
Ubranes Md Computi1g &amp;
lnformanon TedYlology are
cooperating to delleJop an
or&gt;-Jire template 1hal will enable users to make inter1~
b'ary loan requests electrontcally for malenals not OMl8d
on ccvnpus. Watch for an announcement ttus service
effiancement on the next

a

several months
For more onformata?n on
thos servoce contact· Judith
Adams. Director. Lockwood
Ubrary (645-2816or
lXli)Udya@ubvm). Kate Her·
zog, Director. Scoence Md
EI&gt;goneering Ubr9ty (6452756 or lllWlOubvm) or
Margaret Weils, Director. LJn.
. dergradua!e Ubrary (6452943aug~)

-Ga-rma DeVmey and
Lass Pequefv GlazJer.
LodMood Ubtary

Attention Undergraduallls in
llle following Facurues:

Register now
to participate m

University
Commencement '93!

Sunday. May 16. 10 a.m ..
Alumm Are&lt;1&lt;1

�a

~II
- ... a.:M.--

..

~-Y-U

S WA&amp;U

I

Of TU......,._c:umoaY

APOntiCAIIY ... - - MAlL

~ the services lhesuxes provide are a far

2 ay.from whal people expccll&gt;i from
pharmacies althe rum of the =tury.
'The pbannacist of that cimc was perhaps the only medical ~essiooal in
.the oommunity and people made use
of his services in many ways." she
said
In """" inslances, phannacisls
even performed minor opmllions.
"l'harmacisls made house calls." she

iaJo nlcoruainiog I pcunt ranJesnakc oil

----.__
---Alii
___.,~.,.,

-Uih-Of

.,..,.. uc:- to 1,...
ne,

w-&amp;wand wood IDilllllll, includiaa CDC previoosly owned by Geoern1 Lewis Morris, a
aiper oflbe Doclllllioa oflrdew~t~dt&gt;c e

nigleiii*'CIIbiiiiOUIId lbetumoflbe=tury,
p.m........ u:b. ~·· Oor-

liE)'

sJing Oil, SutberlaDd Sisten hair products.
............ ""and Doc's PIUs, werellllllllfllctwa
locllly. W--..NewYort'SIIIOD8~
' - provided • weollb of aJibemc products and
a - for lbe llpllbocay.
Mmy o{ lbe iloms Oil display ...... dooaled by
UB jXlarmlcy gndlllea.

Aloog the walls of the ~. mahogany cabinets COOillin pills. powders and
IMdic:ina1 herl&gt;s used aromd the rum of the century. The cabioels were donal&lt;d in honor
ofl'lwl Muzalewski, O.S.of 1917, and Alfred Szldan. ciassof 1941.
Large glass gklbes filled with co1om1 Wllltr-lhe symbols of the 19dH:alrury
druggist-bang ovedll:ad. An oma1e lin ceiling similar 10 those of the period also was
installed. The outside sign for the apolhecaiy was ~ by a blacbmitb and made
poosible by the friends and family of the laleJamcs M. Cooke, a 1924 gOOuale.
·
'We're trying 10 inteqn~ a specific cimc period and recreale whal happened.'' said
Triggle. She pointed out that bolh the products available in IOday's chaindrugslores and

said "'beywouldpackuptheirlealher
salldldJossllllloomeoutiOyourhwse.
They 11.-1 animals. too."
Triggle said that if IOday's consumers be1ieye products are hyped
·now, they Sbcu1d oomc lake a tool: at
some of the libeling and mort.Una
ll:dmiques .-loo products in earlier
limos. '1beywould pumisetbal they
cOuld a.e lllYibin&amp; in the wcrld, and
tbentheywouldJIIIIII*eyounnorit:y
back if they didn't
she said
"But people believed that theSe lhin~ would wook."
.
Prices were high. porticularly for over~ medic:alions, and as a pcunt·
age ofinoomc, they were subslanlially hisher thin they ... for
&lt;kugs aVIilable
. IOday. So in 811 effort 10 ~ marlcet shale, niggle said, 19dt ceoiUry drugs!Dra
developed their own early generic v~ Oclheoe&lt;Mr~ modicinos. '7o
axnt.t the high prices of palenl medicind, phannacisls manufiiCWred their own
mixrures. which they called drug ...:ipes." she said
.
.
Books ofbandwrium drug recipes dooaled by localpbamacioes areoo display 11
the apocbccary and the rruseum.
The.apoCbecaly was designed by Foit-Albert
&amp; Associate&amp;, a Buffalo an:hilectural finn. and
built by membets of~ UB.design and construction staff wcxkin&amp; on priVIIe cootract. The do- .

......n."

arc

natedcabinets,were~aodCORIINCted

by Pasqualca Ventrice, a~ UB caq&gt;en~er.
~ forindiviWalo or l!J'OUPIID visit
lbe apoihccary and lbe piwmlcy IJ1IIOe!llll may'be
'made by COOiaCting niggle 11645-3340.
0

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>TeiiiC the story
lnDeplh

1v1ar1&lt; Sed! ci WBFO
says carmitmenl to
coverage is winning
listerers.

,.

2

Mr. SIBpGoes
To'Walllll._...
UB philosophy map
tapped for internship in
Buffalo News
Washingtm Burs;

4
promises made wben he was here for
Bill Greiner's inauguration. by treating SUNY better than olher slate
agencies. 1here was an item of very
specific interest to us--$10 million
the governor had included for fund ing forGRI (Graduate Research lnitiative}-which has been approved
by the legislature ...

AM.

eon:,
forUB
IIJANII_,_
Reporter Ednor

....,.._,~~~~~, somewhat unexpected surpluses for the state, the budget holds a disappointing cut for SUNY and UB, campus officials said this week.
'The budget has passed," Associate Vice President for University Services
Valdemar Innus said Monday. 'The $11.8 million decrease for SUNY is still part of
the 1993-94 budget. Our proportion of that would be roughly a $1.8 million decrease for UB. That continues to be a major concern for this campus.

In a y - wtt11

'This amount-the $11.8 million-was in the executive budget
presented in January. But then as the

legislature was reviewing the budget. it became clear tbal there was
about a $600-$700 million surplus
projected. The good news is that the
economy is beginning to rebound."
said lnnus. "The concern for the

University at Buffalo is that the surplus did not belp to offset the reduc·
tion tbal was required as pan of the
executive budget. ..
Ken Goldfarb, StmY spokesman.
said the Stale Uni...-sity wa&lt; also disappointed by the
legis1anue' s failure
to restore the
$11.8millioo.
After what was
considered ahannonious period of budget nego~the Stale Legislature approved
· a $32.08 billion budget focthe state on

AJxil6.
According to Ronald H. Stein.
viceprestdcntforuniversityadvance·
ment and development. the

governor· s budget. as pro-

posed in January. included a number of
items and a number of reductions.

agencies. "At that time. we
said the governor had fulftlled his

0

n the plus side, said Stein, "is
certainly the fact that the legislature supported tbe governor's executive request and that we were
able to get legisllltive support for a
number of our priorities." These include SIJI'RA (Slate University Thition Reimbursable Account), full
=toration of S 1.6 million in graduate TAP for UB alone. the Liberty
Partnerships program(aimed at keeping students from dropping out of
school). and CSI'EP (Collegiate Science and Technology Entry Program). a student suppon services
program sponsored by the State Education Department and offered here
by Cora P. M;lloney College.
Items specific to UB that were
supported by members of the WNY
delegation include: $900,000 for the
Hazardous Waste Center, $150,000
for the Lower Great Lakes Wormation Projec~ and $100.000 for the
Sea Grant Law Center, which reviews and studies coastal laws and is
pan of a statewide network of centers and extension networks doing
research and developing policy.
There is also $2.025 million for the
National Center for Eanhquake Engineering Research, headquanered
here, along with a $500,000 increase
for the New York State Science and
TechnologyFoundation'sCATCenter.
ln a related developmen~ the lifting of the SUNY bond cap, said
Molly McKeown. UB director
of state relations. "opens up the
possibility of moving at least the
Math Department and other student services from the South to
tlie North Campus."
Stein said there is a "majordisappoinnnent" for the university in the
1993-94 State budget: the legislature
failed to restore any of tbe S 11.8
million to the SUNY budget "We

have not been successful in convincing the legislative leadership that
wben it comes to restoration, SUNY
should be 00 the list. ..
Beyood this. be said, "the $1 .8 million budget CUI to UB comes oo top of
$30 million in r&lt;Wctioos over the las!
few years. This continues a moot unf0111.1na1e pollml of~ in
public bigberccb:oliooinpr:nl and
in SUNY and UB in particular. We
will all have to wort starting now to do
a beaer jot&gt; of making SUNY and UB
a higher priority for the legislative
le:Kiership.
"The university already has a
number of serious problems sucb as
inadequate funds to open the new
buildings and inadequate funds to
cover increased costs in utilities...
Stein said. 'This cut exaa:rbales an
already difficult budget we face for
fiseal year 1993-94."
"We were really awaiting the
outcome of the legislative process
before we undertook the budget planning that was necessary for '93-'94,"
said Voldemar lnnus. "Now that we
know what the final budget is. tbal
process will be undertalcen."
0

�-u.---.-..

2

--r-----,Atthe

Telling
the news
in depth
role--··

mlkr. Merk

SeGUin

ww:o·.
lloulll

c.mpua

atudlo.

M..tl Scott ,........
IBrec:tor .t WBFO

H

E'S DONE talk radio,
was a disk jockey with
a Top 40 radio station,
worktld as a fundraiser
and has done pubtic relations work. But news has also been
Marl: Scott's passion. And WBFO' s
news director ·couldn't be happi..worlting for what may be one of the

last bastions of comprehensive
broadcast news services, National
Pubtic Radio. WBFO has broadcast
facilities on UB's South Campus.
"I have never had any grand de-

sire 10 do five-minute newscasts on a
Commercial rndio station, .. be said
recently . "We (WBFO)don 'tanempt
to hype the news . We would tike to
think that coverage speaks for itself.
We do a story on an issue, and then
we move on.
Scott returned lO WBFO fu\\-time
to assume the post of news director

about a year ago after spending six
years in public relations and
fundraising. He had returned in 1989
on a part-time basis to anchor Week-

cod Edition. His original association
with the station came in the early
1980s( 1981-1986)as news director.
Scon is happy to be back. "The
only way WBFO loses me again is if
they don't want me any more." be
said. "When I left in 1986, it was
with mixed emotions. I had salary

to accep1 as news from the various
broadcast outlets has become watereddown,accordingtoScott. "You
just can't do some stories in 45 seconds. because they're so complicated. But a lot of broadcast news
revolves around quick sound bites. !
like the luxury of taking time to
develop a story."
lr is that commitment toward indepth coverage of the news, said
Scott. that is winning the station a
wider audience. '1lle station bas

more listeners now than it has ever
had." be said. "People are discovering us. Now, when I meet people.
they know who I am and what the
station is. I didn't find that 10 years
ago. II' s very satisfying to know that
we're reaching more people."

"But in the six years that I was

e said that WBFO has an audiwith distinct needs and
desires that often differ from those
satisfied by AM talk radio or FM
Top 40 stations. "We know wboour
audience is. We lmow they're interested in the arts. so it· s our ~X&gt;Sition

away.! really missed the day-to-day
almOSphere at WBFO, being able to
do in-&lt;leplh news and also, the people
bere."
Much of what society has come

to give it to them with things like
Spok~ Arts and Theater Talk. It's
something people expect." be said.
"But we don't cover sports the way
OlberstationsinBuffalodo. They do

concerns at that time. My wife and I
were about to begin a family.! don't
regret leaving to do pubtic relations
and fundraising ; those skills may
prove valuable to me in the future.

H ence

"People are
discovering us. Now,
when I meet people,
they laww who I am
and what the station

is. I didn'tfind that 10
years ago.
-SCOTT

it better and have an audience that
wants lhatltind of information."
As for the station's ties to the
university. Scott says that while he
uses people from the univer.;ity with
expertise on any number of topics in

story

in a cenain manner."

Scott holds a B.A. in journalism
from SL Bonaventure University,
which be said is distinct from what
many colleges and universities today off..-, a B.A. in communications/media relations. "The thing that
I appreciate about having been educated there is that they taught me
bow to write. Production skills can
be learned relatively quickly. But
the more difficult task of writing is
not easily learned."
He was the news director and
station manag..- of Bonaventure's
campus station. WSBU, while completing his degree. That experience
led to his first full-time job after
graduation. at Olean's WMNS. a
Top 40 station. '1 was hired to do a
music shift. Bull started tocov..-the
local Conunon Council and county
legislature meetings. So they made

his stories, he's under no pressure to

me news director as well. After a

do anything other than wbat his coo-

couple of years,l started doing news
exclusively, along with a little talk
radio."
It is the business of gov..-nrnent
that most fascinates Scott. But the
news, any news, will do just fine. "I
enjoy being involved in the community. lt'sallchallengirig and exciting
to me," be says.
D

science dictates.
"When important things happen
here at UB, wecoverthem. But so do
all of the local news media. We do air
stories that aren't necessarily flattering to the university, and we do so
responsibly . Nobody has ever told

me that I've got to cover a certain

Events note publication of book on lesbian history
IIJPATMCIA-AN
News Bureau Staff

WO EVENTS honoring the publication of "Boots of Lealher,
SlippelS of Gold" (Routledge, 1993), a critically applauded
history_of one of Buffalo's long concealed subcullllreS-its
lesbian community-are scheduled this week.
Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy, assOciate professor of women· s studies
at UB, and ber co-author, Madetine D. Davis, will present a reading at
7:30p.m. today, at Images, 1329 Niagara St.
They also will be the guests at a book-signing tO be held from 5-7 p.m.
on Friday. April 16, at Talking Leaves bookstore, 3 144 Main SL
The book, the result of a 14-year srudy ofBuffalq' s gay worlting-dass
women from the late 1930s to the 1960s, is the fir.;! comprehensive history
of such a community. The narrative was developed from oral histories of
Buffalo women. at least some of whose experience as lesbians predated

T

the gay-rights movemenL
It chronicles not only the fear of per.;ecution.
which Kennedy and Davis note was stronger in the
19s0s than in any otbOr period in U.S. history. but
also bow and why specific gender roles developed.
II also discusses bow the women were abte to
support one another against tremendous qdds.
These are women. says Kennedy, whose resilKEMIEDY
ience and challenge 10 the existing social order
opened opportunities for all women.
The research for the book was funded in pan by grants from UB' s
Division of Graduate and Professional Educalion and from the Faculty of
Arts and Lener.;' research and development funds. A maj&lt;lrp011iooofthe
proceeds from the book will go to a fund for support services for older
lesbians.

ASSOClATE EOrTOA ..........

�-----..
Education 'an investment in tomorrow,'
Futrell tells Woman Power conference

.,_WA-Repor11o&lt; Stall

M

ARY ALICE Hatwood
l\llldl nallodtbedaYJwbal
bet clusmates called bcr
"booey" becauoe of tbe boles
inbcrclotbos ODd wbal it was
the drunks ODd bootm oo bcr corner
wbo made sure lblt she was in scbool.
"My fatberdied wballwas four ODd a half,
and my IIIOib&lt;r earned $IS a week," she said.
"And I got 1110R patental guidance than I ever
.-led.
"My IIIOib&lt;r said to
us, 'Tbe fact that youpoor does not mean that
you can'tleam; tbe fact
that you - black does
not mean tbai you can't
do well in school.'"

'"~bore's a"""""""" tblll we .-1 to improve educatioD in America," said Futrell
"But we have to come 10 tbe realiulioo that
cducotioa today il an invea1ment in tomorrow,
thai tbe n:tum oo every dollar we spend is six

dollm."
Putrell sin&amp;Jcd out Oct. 19, 1987, as a turning point for educalion.
"'baawas tbedayoftbeiiOCkmarketaasiL

"When I look at our schools,
we're not keeping up. I go into

classroom after classroom
and a/1 I see is an eraser and a
piece ofchalk "

l'utrell, wbobasbeen

RITRIU

named boch Woman of
the Yeai(Ms. magazine,1985) and Outstanding Black Business and Professional Penon
(Ebony. 1984), bas achieved worldwide acclaim as a woman. as an African-American.

and asoneofthe most influential people working in education today. The fonnerJeSidentof
the National Education Association and now
an assoc~ professor in the School of Education and Human Development at Geage Washington University,Futrell was at UB togivethe
keynote address at a tw&lt;Hiay conference on
"Woman Power in the 21st Cennuy."
The conference, held April 2 and 3 on the
"North Campus, was sponsored by Project WIN,
a coalition of African-American community
leaden.

Now,! do not heUeve that educatioo alooe can
solve the problems of America; I don't tbink
we can lay the blame for the problems of
America at tbe door of the scboolbouse. But if
we-toavoidanotbcrOct l9, 1987webave
to improve education andourown fiscal health.
These things are tied together, they all connect.
"Our children may he dependent on us
today. but we will be dependent on them
tomorrow. You should he nervous about that;
you should be nervous about the future."
Futrell redefined reading as "leading between the lines" and literncy as "full participationinourrepublic...whelherinthesupcnnarb:t
or the voting booth"; learning, she predjcted,
" will be a new form of !abo&lt; in 1hc 2l!l cmtury.

"'bM doesn't mean you have 10 have a PbD.
... il a-. you bave 10 be a pcrpelllal...._ in
mlec 10 suiVive.
"Bullitlo's chikkaJ wiD be ..,.,.,.ang wilb
1hc chikkaJ of Loodoo. Paris. Nairolli. 8UOII08
Aila, IDI Tokyo."
F\llldl said IbM, in bcr c::llpdy as lbe pra;.
ded of lbe WOOd Ccnfedenlion of o.p.m.
bonlloflbe T..:bing Prolessim, she Ia...., tbe
widcspead dlilioD of axqU:n IDI advmad
l&lt;dlnology ID liCbools and tWcoliooal reoourt:a
alrood.
"Wben I look at our liCbools, we're not lo:q&gt;ing up. I goinloclassroomafl.rclassroom and aU
I see is ao .......-and a piece of chalk.
''Demognlpbics soy lbal60% ofchildrm will
live in a single pom11 family, tblll families are
moo:: vulnmble IDday than lbey were ten years

ago.
"lOO,(XX)guns weretakalintolbesdxlols this
year. 17,(XX)~ are not in 1hc schools, and
lbey wmn't WDiking.
"We tive in an inlerdependcol and smaller
w&lt;XId and it's gcing 10 take aU of us 10 move
forward The missioo of education must be 10
educateaUcbildrm well Can you do aU this?Yes.
you can.
"Doo't let those statistics tell you lbal those
kids can't succ:eed; I know lbey can. I came from
a bad family and I achieved success."
She recalled mw, as a li:IICher, she'd always
been saddled with 1hc drug pushers and gang
leader.i by bcr superiors. and mw those gang
leader.; and drug pushers bad lllmCd around tbeir
lives; and mw, when she was a schoolgir1 in
Altavistll, Virginia. it waslbeneighbodlood waJCb
of bookers and drunks wbo kept her al bcr desk.
'1 /rauJ school. bllllbeybelieved in me; those
people look&lt;d 0111 for us."
o

Ukrainian ambassador will speak April 23
llriiAIITiniiNews Bureau Staff

0

I..EH BILORUS. the tiiSt lJkmi.
nian ambassador to the United
States, will speak at UB as pan of a
two-&lt;lay visit to Buffalo on April
23-24in which be will meet with-.business,
government and education leaders.
Bilorus' visilissponsoredbytheUB School
of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. Buffalo Council on World Affairs. Western New
York International Trade Council and the Buffalo Group-Ukrainian American Business and
Professional Association.
He will discuss "ukraine: Rebirth of a
Nation/Politics of Statehood" in a lecture 10 be
held at 3:30p.m. on Friday. April 23, in 109

Knox Hall on the UB North Campus.
Sponsored by the UB Ukrainian Student
Association. the presentation. which is free
and open to the public. also will include a panel
discussion.
Earlier in the day. he will speakon"Ukmine:
The Struggle for Democracy-Ukraine's Role
in the World" at a luncbeoo a1 Marine Midland
Center.
That evening, he will be the guest of bonor
a1 a dinner to be given by the UB medical
school and Millard Fillmore Hospital at the
Saturn Club.
On Saturday, April 24, Bilorus will meet
throughout the morning with local Ukrainian
organizations. He also will be honored at a
banquet given by the Ukrainian-American

community to be held at 7 p.m. in St Jobn the
Baptist Ukrainian Cathotic OlW'Ch Hall, 3275
Elmwood Ave .. Tonawanda

News Bureau Staff

HE UB HEALTil Sciences Ubrary
(HSL) has been awarded a 15-month
outreach contrnct to promote library
services to 75,000 health care professionals throughout Western and Central New
Yorlt.
The library will do this through its Westem New York Outreach Program. which
began in August 1992 and will run through
this October, funded by aS 158.699 National
Library of Medicine (NLM) contract
awarded through the New York Academy of
Medicine.
Tbe program will introduce its audience to
GRATEFUL MED. a low-rost softw- package.that offers desktop access to biomedical
information and will link unaffiliated health
professionals to library services.

T

Cynthia Benuca. head of information

dissemination services for the HSL. says the
program currently is tasgeting more than
I 0,000 phannacists and dentists in a 25coui'lty area.
, The counties involved are the eight counties of Western New York, plus Steuben.
Livingston. Monroe, Ontario. Wayne, Cayuga, Yates,.Seneca. Schuyler. Chemung.
Tompkins. Cortland, Tioga. Chenango.
Broome, Delaware and Otsego counties.
GRATEFUL MED is a low-rost. efficient
and user-friendly software program that offers
access to dozens of databases, including
MEDLINE. HEALTH , CANCERLIT,
AJDSUNE, TOXLINE. BIOETHICSLIT
AND CHEMLINE.
Through GRATEFUL MED, users &lt;;an formulate lbeir search strategy and view lbe results oflline. Because subscribers' contacltime

Project helps
elderly disabled
All...

7

~

"'*"'

tbll

wiD taliiiiCt eldldy paiOOI wilb dillllilities 10 .....r.:u..r. of cleYicea tbll em
moke lbeir &amp;.a eaoir:r il beitt&amp; cle¥doped
byUBtlwugbils~fa-~

Applialiono ofTecl!aoqy (CTAl).
The project. c:.llod I...iok 10 Allillive
~'roWeD (UNK), wiD b r q and~IOplbcrOilllelmiJII'Oinl.

~~
llmlb!Oosfn_,_......,._m.
... and rnaoufaclmn One of aeY&lt;Dl
~aimed atlbe ....... oflbe eldldy,
il is 1\mded by tbe Natiooal lnslilule 00
Disability aol Rt:babililation Rt:oeadL
"UNNC bas lbe I"**ia[ID llric!tlo lbe
ioflliiDIIlioo gap fa- eldon wbo nood 10
knowalxuas5islive~"

said William C. MIDI,dila:IOrofCTAT,a
m•llidi&lt;ripiUay~

deYelopmed. ecb:ation IDI!IeiW:e in lbe
6eld of assistive IOdDJicgy fa- paiOOI
wilb disabilili&lt;s. "I.Jilirracly. tbeoe paiOOI
will be moo:: indl:peoded. saferoodexperience an~ quality of life."
Cent.erstaffbaveleamedtbaiassistive
products--nnging from simple magnifiers. grab bars and balh cbairs to highly
specializ.ed computer equiproent-«re
very useful to people with disabilities
and that consumers would buy tbe products if lbey knew where to find them.
llNK will build a natimal, ooofideDial
dalabooeofp&lt;l01lleow:r60, iDclulioginf&lt;rmatioo on disallililiesiDI nood for devices.
aloog wilb dem:lgr.J[ilic datiL Swveys ID
- - w i D b e - ...
tiooaUy lbrougblleiW:e....,.,.,crmailed
upon JeC(UCSt The .,.._ hopes 10 have a
dalabol.e of21J,OOO by Aug!1'll
Once lbedalllbase is eslllblisb&lt;d, rompanics that manufactwe or distribute
assistiveprocU:tsmaysula:ribetoUNK's
servic&lt;s. Persons wbowisbiObeincludod
in lbe dalabase may call 1~2281,
Mondays- Fridays. from 9 a.m. 10 5 plil.

B

efore being named ambassador, Bilorus
was director general of the International
Management Institute in IGev and director of
the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the Ukrainian Academy of
Sciences.
He bas advanced degrees in indusaial management and international economics.
During his career, he bas been a visiting
resean:berat Columbia and Harvard Universities and is former director of the Industry and
Technology Division in the United Nations
0
Secretariat in Geneva.

New software puts medical information at the
fingertips of health care professionals
11r PATIIICIA - A N

3·

with NLM is brief. it is also cost~ffecti ve. 1be
average search costs less than $3.
GRATEFUL MED software is available
for Macintosh and ffiWcornpatibles a1 $29.95.
The software also will make hard copies available by FAX or mail from participating health
sciences tibraries via "Loansome Doc." its
document-&lt;&gt;rdering capacity.

be UB Health Sciences Ubnuy Western
New York Outreach Program offers training programs and/or demonstnltions in the use
of GRATEFUL MED and will assist health
'
in obtaining. tibrary services.
professionals
GRATEFUL MED will be exhibited at state,
regional and local professional association
meetings.
For 1110R information. contact Tracy A.
Nowius. UB Health Sciences Ul:nry. out·
reach librarian. 31829-3354.
0

Exhibit promotes
AIDS awareness
llr IIAIIT _ , . . News Bureau Staff
F..,._~

IIIJ a UB medical

student from induslriai-Sirellgtb black

plastic and designed to pnliDO(e AIDS
.awareness is tbe highlight of a multimedia exhibit being held through Apri116
in the atrium of the Cary-FarberSherman Addition on lbe South Campus.
The exhibit also includes jewelry.
collages. paintings and sculplure 9'0ated by more than a dozen students.
faculty and staff of the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
Exhibit hours - from 8 a.m. to 7
p.m. on Thursday, Aprill5, and from 8
a.m. to II p.m. on Friday. Aprill6.
Mashion show featuring the designs
ofsenior medical student Alissa Shulman
Will be held from 7-II p.m. oo Apri116
in the abium.
Both lbe exhibit and fashion show
are free and open to tbe public.
Shulman majored in art as an undergraduate at UB. She says bcr interest
and training in art is a good background
forbcrchosen medical specialty-plastic and reconstructive surgery.
''There is a great deal of utistic talent
amongtbe medical faculty. students and
staff," she adds.

�4
Celebrate with us
as we welcome

ELIZABETH KENNEDY
&amp; MADELINE DAVIS
to honor
publication o/ their her-storica/ work

Boots of Leather,
Slippers of Gold
THE HISTORY OF A LESBIAN COMM UNITY
(Ro.ti.Jg.)

Mr. Sharp goes to Washington:

-.~

~--

A Reading

A Signing

IMAGES

TALKING

1239 Niagara St.

Thunday,

LEAVES
Friday,

APRIL 15TH,

APRIL 16TH,

7:30pm

5-7pm

(b o oks available at both events)

•acu.AREUlfa
until April 20th get 25% off from these sectionsgardening, nature, travel, health, science, environmen~
cookbooks, crafts, and all caJds.

II'ITAIII w IECTIIf ao -m

on

he's intern for Buffalo News
He said that on the morning that the SIOry
wasbeingprepandiOrun in theN~•· evening
HAT'S A VB philosophy
edition, Sen. David Pryor of Arlcansas remajor doing in Washing- quested a copy of the piece 10 read on the Door
too bobnobbing with poof the Senate. "I was on my way 10 work and
litical bigwigs and sifting
before I go1 there. Tom had retrieved the SIOry
tluoogh government exfrom the computer and sent it over 10 Pryor's
penditwe ~? Tom Sharp. a UB Honor.;
office," said Turner.
student who is c:um:ntly interning with "1"M
"So at the same time that Kemp was IDIYeiling
Buffalo N~s· Washingtoo Bureau. says he's
his new group. E.rryJowu Amtrial. mel atraclting
getting an inside look at Washingtoo that is
Clin!on at a news OCIIIf=ncc fir not CUUing the
more valuable than any textboolc lesson.
budgd enougjl. Pryor was ..ading our soy.
"It's heeo fantastic," said the Law School
wlticb documented Kemp giving las! minute
hopeful during a telqDoncinterviewfrom Wasbbonuses 10 his peq&gt;le. into the Coogressional
ingloo. "Wtdcing with the press has givm me a
Ra::ati on the floor of the Senate. Tom is w:lunew view of how Washington wodcs.l had high sively responsible fir the success of that soy."
expeclalions oorning here and I havm't been
Sharp's presroz and ability have greatly ex&lt;lisappoinl&lt;d yet."
pl!lded the nmge of aclivily that the lueau can
Sharp wasn't planning on being in Wasb- ~in, said Jerry Zrmlski, News Wasbingtoo for the spring semester, but the opporingtoo Bureau cwe:sptt&gt;daL "Wball'velried10
tunity presented itself by way of a new intern
do is lbinic of things that he can t..lp mo: with and
program that links UB and "1"M Buffalo N~s.
wlticb would also beolinl&lt;:resllll him," be said of
The internship resulted from discussions
Sharp. '1 was able Ill get bim a poss Ill the Slate of
between N~s edi100&gt; and a group of UB
the Union Address. And he helped me do some
officials. They included Harry
fact-&lt;lwrking of Calgr=ional
Jackson, din:clor of federal refranking rq&gt;OriS...
lations; Walter Kunz, adminisZRmski said that he ollm
acts
trative dean of undergraduate
has Ill be in IWO places at once.
academic services; and
With Sharp in the office. he
JosephineCapuana.administradoesn' t have 10 mal:e a decision
tive director of the Honors Proabola wlticbe\'ellllll&lt;XM:r."Last
gram. Another UB intern will
week. I had Ill go 10 the Supreme
lllke Sharp· s place June I ; plans
Court 10 bear some opini&lt;lns. AI
call for still another to arrive in
the same time, there was a news
the faiL
conference on environmental
That position has afforded
spc:oding legislation. what many
Sharp the opportunity 10 sit in
- - - - ~ lli'OIKidhetecapodtbondspm:ithe gallery for President Bill
ing. that c:odod up harming the
Clinton' s Sllll&lt;: of the Union
envirnonaL Tom~ that
Address, after which he mel with local con- and"""" though there was no local angle lbel'e. it
gressional representatives Bill Paxon. John
was vety Iielpfui Ill be able to have him lbe&lt;e."
LaFalce and l ack Quinn 10 assess their opinions of the speech. He· s also listened 10 arguven though he doesn't intend 10 pursue
ments at the Supreme Court. cov&lt;:red Secretary
journalism as a career (be hopes to be a
of Treasury Lloyd &amp;ntsen' s rec&lt;:nl speech 10 judge in the future), Sharp said that this internthe Washiogoon Press Club. and conducted
ship has given him a priceless penpective on
research on budg&lt;:tary man&lt;:rs for "J"M N~s · Washingtoo bureaucncy. "I've found that a ·
Washingoon Bureau Chief. Douglas Turner.
reporter is a very important link in the area of
Sharp's work has been exceptional, aa:mling
checks and balances. That app8l1IIUS is there 10
10 Turner. "He's been critical for us," he said
somo: extent on the federal level. but il' s 001 all
rc:cc:nUy. 'We're using him 10 expand our Freein place. The reporter serv~ as a baclcup audidom of Information gaJhering capability. He aciS
tor in many instances."
as a llaison between our bureau and various
He said that be was amazed at the amount of
federal agencies, gaJhering information.
information that is generated by federal agen" For example, I'll tell him that I want 10
cies. "And-we can get pretty much allofit In
know how many !rips (former Secretary of Dethat respect. half of my work here is office
f=l Dick Oleney lOOk while in office and
wort. They are oft&lt;:n mundane I1ISks. but it
Tom's then go!IO find 0U1 how 10 find out. He has
giv"es me a chance 10 k&lt;:ep up on all the mat&lt;:rial
IOdoa lot ofdigging. I'm not spoon focxling him."
available here."
Turner said that Sharp was a major ingrediGoing 10 tisten IOargumeniS at the SuP"' me
ent in breaking one of the best stories that the
Coun was liDOihe:r highlight of Sharp· s stay·
bureau has been associated with. "Tom helped
And it may help him remain in Washingtoo for
'gather the infomlation that led 10 our doing the the swruner. "Seeing the Supreme Coun m
story on (former Secretary' of Housing and action was fascinating. They are vety busiUrban Development) Jack K=p giving bonesslike." he said. "Whiie I was there. I saw an
nuses to all his people upon leaving HUO in
8111l0UllC&lt;:rneot that the Coun is hiring aides for
January," he said. 'We were the first paper in
the Sl111lmer. I applied immediately. fd like IO
the countty that had that s101y."
stay a while longer if I could."
:J

W

"He
as a
liaison between
our bureau
and.federal

agencies. "

E

For details, contact: Debbie Wlnl, lntemltionll Fllllily Compriln, (800)727-2437
102 Gelnwlch A -, c:.-lc:h, CT 06830 m.6124

�- --...-....

She uses
language
of
dance
..._.student ............

Special

I

..........
~'-!~Ann

...--I. n
~

-ZOdlllqtla

.,._ Com-

.....
PMJ811d

__

.,. lllllfor 1ft

5

- - . of

•c:.n.~M

pre'

I 1111

~

perfomJ-CI 8rts

cial major in the performance arts ,
Szcupankiewicz is an accomplished dancer.
"You can say through dance what you could
never say through words. but most people
don ' t under.tand the language of dance as weU
as they could," she says.
It is a language she speaks well. She slart&lt;d
OUI at UB with a major
in biology and the performan ce art s. but
quickly~ biology

and picked up a minor in
theatto-.
"The more that I was
up on stage, the more I
knew that I was lifting

people'sspirits,"says21 -

.

~

- -

-

I was lifting people's

spiriJs."
'The scariness of being on stage is very
exciting for me, not knowing what 10 expect."
says Szczepankiewicz. a native ofTonawanda
and a graduate of Holy Angels Academy.
"I prefer group work because unless the
solo choreography is interesting eoough. the
audience isn' t going to want to watch it.'' says
Szcupankiewicz. a dancer since the age of
five. "But with cborus work or group worl&lt;,
because of the amount of people on the stage.
the audience is going to want to watch. TileD
it's your job to out-perform every one else."
RtalisticaUy, Szcupankiewicz says, dancing wiU not he a lifelong career because she has
tendinitis in her rups.
"It' s wonh the pain right now ," •ays
Su:upankiewicz. "You do it for as long as you

.

- - -

DAY

......,......w_

0 F

can until it hwts too much. I think I'U have a
short-lived career, but hopefully my career
wiU bum brightly for as long as it lasts. It won ' t
he a dull. long flame. ll'U he a sbon. bright
flame."

And after her dancing career ends.
Su:zepanJdewicz inteods to go hack to scbool
and reicindle her affair with the sciences.
"I think that if I'm not on the stage I would
not he happy about teaching other people to do
what I'd rather he doing myself," she says.
''I'm going to go hack to school in science and
math, possibly pre-med."
In the meantime, Szczepankiewi&lt;:z is looking at the immediate future, and bopes she outperformed the competition during recent
auditions for jobs afta graduation. She is waiting to hear from both the Disney Corporation
and Jean Anne Ryan Cruise Lines. a production company that provides sbows for 15 different cruise ships aU over the world.
"Something pushes me when I don't know
what to expect." says Szczepankiewicz. whose
first choice is a job with the cruise lines.
''Something inside of me makes me go for the
most! can get out of a situation when things are
not really in my favor. When I am the undrzdog. that' s when I fight the bardesL"
::

- - - -

-

Greiner.
She bolds a master's of education in
college student pe:nonoel administration from Colorado State University.
and a hacbelor of ans in EngJisb education from the University of North Carolina at Olapel Hill.

-

.

.

-

. .

.

CARING

011 Sept. I, UN, _ _ _
NewYOitl will expere
ence firsthand the impo&lt;tant WOfk being done by United Way agencies. UB
employeesare invitedtoparticipateby completingthefoonbelowandreturningn
to C&lt;\fole Smith Petro. ' Day of Caring' Coo&lt;dinator for UB. at 503 Capen, North
Campus . Members of the support and professional staffs are asked to make
arrangements witt1 supervisors lor an approved leave lrom rormal job responsibili-

TTI1.E

-

•This event is conducted in major cities across the nation, says Petro. "The Day
of Caring in Rochester garne_red 3,200 volunteers. who visited the city's health and

ORGANIZATION NAME

human services agencies.·
The Unned Way will match the inte&lt;ests of volunteet's who sign up for the program
with cine of the more than 90 non-profrt health and human service organizations
comprising the United Way family of agencies. and will notify volunteers of their

lABOR lNON NAME. If APP\.JCABLE

R

'_CWIW........., pre-

viously assilwll to !hedireclcrofUB's
Nalionll Cenlt:r for Gcognpbic lllformalioo and Analyris, Ills joiDed !he
Presideot'. Officell..a-foropenAccordingtoamomofromPr-..ided
Greiner, Holoman's appoinlment ~
plelcshisaxeslllf. wbcoeodwrnamon
are Kabyn A Sawu::r, CX&lt;I&lt;llive aistanl, Beverly Sanford, ...,;.,. Sllfr .....
tanl,and Janelilur,!alitntltf......_
Hokxnan wiD serve as the dmol op.,.... offi=forthe ~··Office.
with primary n&gt;spoosibilityforoflice and pmomel
management .
budget. telecommunicabons and
axquing.
"Her specificduties," said
Greiner. ..include management of all funds allocated to the
President' s Office ; processing and
penultirnau: review ofaU personnel documents requiring presidential review,
approval, and signature; oversight of
office equipment and space. including
especiaUy administration of computing
and telecommunications systems; and
mcruitmen~ supervisioo. and ttaining
of President's Office clerical staff."
From 1983-89, Holoman was direc10£ of ltUdmt houliDg ot !he Uni-uty
of Chicago. Previous to that. she held
several positions in !he area of student
bousing and student affairs, including
coordinator of career development and
director of residential tile at Saint Xavier
College in Chicago, and area director in
the Department of University Housing,
University of North Carolina at Olapel
HiU.
"Ms. Holoman has acquired an impn:ssive range of skills from these various positions, and we have every
confidence that she is a splendid addition to the President'sOffice staff," said

.N A WORLD filled with Smiths and
Joneses, KerriAnn Su;upankiewicz
(pronounced Sup-on-KA V-ilz) is as
distinctive as her name.
An honors srudent at UB with a spe-

"The more I was up on
stage, the more I knew that

C

tions, systems IDd oaxJUDIL

to the Aepot1sr

year-old Su:zepankiewicz. '1 rt:alizod that I had the ability to make
other people happy ...
On weekmds. S~is a dancer,
singer, actress and chormgntpher with Vegas
Shows International, a Canadian professional
dance company based in Toronto.
''It was a wbole new company that I had
never heard of,'' says SzczepanJdewicz.. "I was
a sophomore when they approached me. I
didn't know much about the theater business,
and lhadjustgottcnintoitthe yearhefore. ldid
not know what to expect."
She is also a dancer in UB ·s Zodiaque Dance
Company and an ensemble member in UB 's
newly formed Great Events in Music, Movement
and Song (GEMMS) musical company.
"GEMMS is concerried with the dancing
teUing a story." says Szcupankiewicz. " It·s
more forentenairunent than provoking thoughL
But with every theatto-experience you bope you
learn something. Zodiaque is rncx1ern dance, but
it also incorporates some social dance. It gets the
aLdience to look inside themselves."
PerfOrming is both scary and exciting. says
Szcz.epankiewicz. whose stage name is
KerriAnn Stevens . a derivation of
Szczepankiewicz~ which means .. son of
Steven."

Holoman
joins Office of
the Presiderit

I
I
I
I

~L.EACER'S NAAE fllroo4&gt; _ • _ .,_ ..,_,.....,._., . '1llw•~-

ADOAESS

a. 1

,

.

------------

. ...

ass~~t.

t at 8 a.m.. volunteers from local businesses and instiMions will galhei I'IJM8ER OF VOLUNTEERS IN YOUR GROUP-at their ,assigned agency to perloon volunteet' services from 8: t 5 a.m. until noon. Wo ~ '"- - {plsese clied&lt; 81 I88SJ. a&gt;sJ·
Following this volunleet' effon. Petro says, all participants in "Day of Caring" will be 0 Pllople wr.o are physicaly. montaly cl-.god G Seno- dbzsr-6
Jnvhed to join in a celebration from noon until t :15 p .m.. lncluding refreshments, and
to help the unned Way kick-off the 1993 Campaign.
:J Oti-en and youth o Arryot:&gt;e wto ,_.. help

v-~

1

I

w. ~ ••{plsesed&gt;sdrsti88SJ.Ot1flt

0 AdAls

0 Preoc:l1cd -

Please Nola: This loon will assist the Day of Caring committee in matching up your :J Rlysicallabor 0 Office- 0 Indoor- 0 QJdoa""""' o ~ is , _
volunteet' group with an appropriate project at a United Way agency. While we will _ ,_ . . . _
_ _,__
• PleaseiotMYspecial-ormcpertiOOtlloi)&lt;•Jilr.,..,-.oi)QIIJWP
try to match your team with a project that matches your interests. assignments will have. " such """"'as awpor&lt;ry. -.tal wort&lt;. pUnbrog. wa1pepor harlgilg. CDll&gt;IAin. n .maw. rTUiic. e1e.
be made on a first-come. first-served basis. Projects will be performed from 8 a .m.
!O Noon, Sept. 1, 1993.
,

I
I
II
I
I
I
I

1

I
I
I

1

I

L---------------------------------------- -- ~-------- - ----~

�8
Baldy. North _
CompoL
7 p.m., . .
UUMIIEAT
_
I'UnVAL
" " ' - (IJI5),
Joel:
Coull«. Woldmon~. 112
Nor1b CompoL 7 p.m.
Admillion. $2.50, UB IJIUdeou;
$3.SO, OOIHIUden!LFor""'"'
lafO&lt;IIIIIIon caii64S.29S7.

cliroclcd..,.

-o(-··

_.,

~c:ca..-··
l'oiJ(ar)fj 1 I I
), Prof.
l'llry J. W'llioa-Neilton, Soulbern
Med&gt;o&lt;lill Univ. 70 Ad&gt;eoon.
Soulb CompoL 4 p.m.

--- ..__
ot~. SUppen ol
G o l d , - Lopovtty
Kmnody. UB auoeille profettor
IIUdiel, llliiModelinc
D. Dovil,c:o-Uhor. . . _ 1329
~St. 7:30p.m.

'llles-MCMyNodoaol

Touriac c-puy. Kllharine

Cornell 'Theiler, Ellicoa Compia. Nonb Ctll1JUL 8 p.m. Mmitoioo, $4, 1JB . . -; $6. ......

- - For"""" infonnolioo
UUUIIEAT
COIIIIICl Lan zqJer.
__
645-2957.
_

. , . _ . , SUppen ol
Gold, E1iDbedl Lapovoty
""-'y, U B - prot....,.
olWOIIlell'o..:iel,lllll
Madeline D. Dovil,&lt;:o-audlor.

Tlltinc La- Boob. 3144
Main 5I., Butralo. 5-7 p.m.

n.c-... otC........ Rolh

Stmuel, ~&lt;ode&lt;. North Campus.
6:»-9 p.m. For..........,., iafO&lt;-

-caiiMS-6125.
I'UnVAL

Jlum&gt;u&amp;bo (1984), din:c1ed by

10 Minutes from UB!
Elewtorsl
Quiet Park-like Setting!

Howanl Bootner. Woldrnan The-

au:r, 112 Norton. Nor1b Campus.
9 p.m. Admissioo. $2..50, UB
studeots: $3.30. noo-srudents. For
mon: informttioo caii645-29S7.

Care-free Ufe Style!
Activities Director &amp; Program!
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

Nonon. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.

-

Campus. 3:45 p.m.

~­

C onlllct ..... Coopontlon Ia
Colonial lll...ubntes' U..

A1sv AvailiJble

._AW-F-'-

FRIDAY

836-6861
'

-

Admitsioo, $2.30, UB studeots.

$4..50, noo-11Udents.

120 Me)'er Road Amherst

FulJv Furnished CorporaleSuiles

UUUIIEAT_,_,..
I'DnVAL
PuD My Doily (1959), T.......,
()poll n... (!Kl), Thlo S..,. for
Jodt (IJil), 'l1le floworTIIlef
(IM), introduced by poet Roben
Croeley. Woldman 'Theiler. 112

E\'1lluatlon orSdf-Non-Self

@-

R«GgJ~itioo, Dr. Jljchard
Grosberg. Dcp&lt;. of Zoology.
Univ. of California at Davis. 121

Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
Co--sponsored by the Graduate
Group in Evolutionary Biology

ProjessioTIIllly Mwwged by

SIARA MANAGEMENT

and Ecology.

-ALII LOQIC CCIU.CIQWM
THURSDAY

1a
--

I..EC:n.£
Uoden1.aodiog Eucaryotk Ce-llular Nulritlon ODd Physiology
by UoderstaDding Bakrr's

Yeast. Daniel Kosman, Ph.D..
prof. of biochemistry. UB 8
Acheson Annex Soulh Campus
Noon- I p.m.

-ESIIAYS AT 41'WS

LlnJWIY RliiD
Art ln Post~ommunist Coun·
trits. Dubrvka Djuric, Yugoslavian poet and critic. 438

Clemcru. Nonh Campus. 12:30
p.m. Sponsored by the UB l'nei·
K:s Progrom.
canut Alan. STUDY Of
NYCIIOANALY- AND

CUI.n.E I..I!Cn.E
Manual Punisluoeol' Robert
· Coovtr't 'SJ)OJikln&amp; U.. Maid',
Elizabelh Wright. lcctu.n:'r and
fellow in Getman. Girton Col-

lege. Cambridge. 608 Clemens.
Nonh Campus. 2 p.m. Co-sponIICl«d by the Gnd.we Group for

Feminist Srudies.
_
,__
COI.LOQI • •
A Neural N&lt;tworil ArcbiUcturo
for Contut-Depeod&lt;11~
Multlattribule o.cloiOo MallIDe. Daniel S. L&lt;vioe. Dcp&lt;. of
Mathematics. Univ. ofTeus 1.1
Arlingwn. 14 Knox. Nonh Campus. 3:JG.4:45 p.m. For mon:
information contact Dr. Rapaport
.. 645-3 1~3 .
PKYSICSANDCOI.LOQI • •
ThD&lt;a-Md~

PholohnDm-.-ID ~
a-d Epllayen IUJd Q.&gt;antum
W.U., Dr. Leigh Smilh, Univ. of
Cincinnati. 454 Fronczak. Nonh

Kurt GOdel aod the Naturo ol
Mathemotia, Fnlncisco
Rodriquoz-Cnnsuegra. Logx.
Univ. ofBan:c.klna and PhilosoJjly,
Harvaro Univ. 684 Baldy. Nonh
Campus. 4 p.m For more mfonnation conuw:t Prof. John Corooran 81
881 -16400&lt;645-2438.

-L£C11ME
Congenital Adrenal

UYJ&gt;&lt;11&gt;lasia' From U.. Labon-

tory to U..lle&lt;Wd&lt;, Maria I.

New, M.D.. professor and chair.
Dept. of Pediatrics, Cornell Uni\'.
Med1caJ College. Butler AudJionum. Farber Hall. Soul.h Campus.
4p.m.
MATHEMATICS COIJ,.OQUAIM
Symmetry and Chaos: huems
oo Anrage. Prof. Manin
Golubnslcy. Univ. of Houston.

I03 l);efendorf. Soulh Ctmpus.
4 p.m.
~RESEARCH

KMIIWI

Phanucok.indks or
Bispboophonates, Sayed M H

AI-Habet, Ph.D .• Product Development. NOf'Wich Eaton Phannaceuticals. Inc. 508 Cooke. North
Campus. 4-5 p.m.

~Skydivlac'
Sport or u.. '90s,
Henry Szcz.espanski, leader.
Nonh Campus. 5-8 p.m. For n:g&amp;
stration information caJI 6456125.

-

AIICtllftCTURE AND
" ' - " - ~ I.KlUR£

M arh&lt;RulosiUJdSpaliallll"'ualily' Tho ea.. or u..
Ulliled Slalel, Susan

Oui.stophp'son. ecor••Jffiic planner and assoc:We professor. Dept.
of City and Regional Planning.
Cornell Univ. 301 Crosby. Soulh
Campus. 5&lt;30 p.m.

I l E A l _ , _ FUTIVAL

J u:r.ln-tgulan. Woldman Theaiel', Norton Haii..Nonh Campus.
6:30p.m.
_ , _ A N D L8UJIY

- - COI.LOQI • •
Tho Hucltlobony f1lllo MODuocripll, William l.oos, n1n: boob
collection cumor, Buffalo Erie
Counly Public Libmy. 108

16

PEDIATIIIC _

i lesipt or Au- Shulmu. UB
ienior medical student. coinciding with AIDS awareness exltibu
pretenl&lt;d by medical school facully, Slllff and IIUdents. Ctry-

--AI.

Fui&gt;et-Shennln Addition
Atrium. South Campus. 7-11 p.m.

__.

Low R&lt;l1la Hypa1&lt;1ltlon Ia
Cbildbood, Maria L New, M.D..
profe5501' and chairman and chief,
Pediatric Endocrinology, Dept. of
Pediatrics, The New Yort. Hospi-

tal, Cornell Medica] Cenler.
Kinch Auditorium. Otildren ' s
HospiW. 8Lm.
nHN1C CONfUCT AND

::::==._
...............

Eli&lt; SOon-,......-. Sloe Cooocn Hall. Nonb em..,.... 8 p.m.

:=..c::'ii~m--'IIIN!mlll-*

COl-IC I aYMnl

lnlen-mtioaiDlhoGuJIWoriUJd
Iroq Today, Kinin Malaya.
Harvard Univ. Moot Counroom.

104 O'Brian. Nonh CampuL 8
p.m.
UUUKAT_,_
LATI--I'UnVA&amp;.

Norlh Campus. 8:30 a.m.-5:30
p.m.

Burroapo (1.984), din:aed by
Howanl llootner. Woldmln Thealer. 112 Nonon. Nonh Campus.
II p.m. Admission. $2.30. liB
siUdents: S3.30. noo-students. For

-IPUIWIY

men information call64S-2957.

JageUornan Uni... .. Krakow S45

SATURDAY

Ethnldly IUJd Coollict Pands.
Newman Center, The Commons

COI.LOQI- OIII'OLAHD
Dr. Jocek Wasllowskl, Dr.
Marian G..-.ybowskl IUJd
Boguslawo Bedoan:zyll,
O' Brian. North Campus. 10 L m.1 p.m. Co-sponson:d by the

Council for lntemationaJ Studies
Prognuru. School of Law . Baldy
Center for Law and Social Policy.
Center for Human Rights.
OIIAI. -.oGY KMIIWI
Mechanistic Aspects or lh&lt;lote.rw:tioo o( Slrrpt««CIU
gordtm/i and • Mucin-lib Human Salivory Gly&lt;opn&gt;t.U.,
Donald R. Demuth, Ph.D., Univ.
of Pennsylvania 215 Foster.
South Campus. Noon.

--

17

::nn::.._____,.
Ef11111C CONfUCT AND

llllmwlonal lalenmtloo ......

IIIOC-.niY/I'HY-.oeY

ds. M""' Counrocm, O'Brian
!WI. Nonh.Campus. 9:30 Lm.·

RoguWion or Protdn Tyroslnt
Phospba.... 18 (PTP-18) Ill
MIU&gt;tlc ond Po.t-Mito&lt;lc Cdls,

5:30p.m.
ATILITIC EYINT
UB Tnck lllvllallonol. SUidium.
Nonh Camput. II un.-3 p.m.

John V. Frangioni, Ph.D., Molecular Medicine Unit, Beth Israel
Hospital, Harvard Medical
School. 448 RSC. 12:30 p.m.

---

SOCSAL AND f'tiEYDmVE

An App,_b to Sludylllg Physic:ion M0111ol Worklood Ia 111lensiV&lt; Caro Sdtinp, Dennis A.
Bcnnm. M.D.. Valerie Shalin,
Ph.D. and Michael
Sz.czepkowski, M.S. graduate
studenl 252A Farber. South

---IS11IY
Ctmpus. 12:30-1 :30 p.m.

Youoa L«, gndut1e studenc UB
Dcp&lt;. of Medicinal Olemisuy
114 Hochs~et~er. Nonh Campus
3 p.m.

--DAYJ..Ien.E

C•UProllf..-atJoo, Barty Events
IDC..-.brai .~Dr.

Verne Ctviness, Dept. of Neurology, Hasvaro Medical School.
Center for TOil)OfTOw. North
Campus. l-4 p.m. Admission.
S 10, studc:ota and tec:hniciaru;
S20, foculty ~ posldoct and others.

UUU K A T _ , _ RLM
I'UTIVAL
- ( I M Z ) , 'llleEad
(1.953), :c.rou.c (1!1115) 0 i n~r~;
duccd by fohn and video mtker
Jud Yalkut Woldrnan Theiler.

112 Nonon. Nonh Campus. 7
p.m. Admission. S2..SO. UB students: $4..50, ooo-students. Fc)r

""""lafonnalion call645-2957.
-CCIIICqf

_,ble,

Pick oru.. Crop DoD« IUJd
Mutlc
jOO&gt;ed by
Eisenhowor Dance Ensemble of
Michipn. Katharine Cornell
'Theiler, Ellicott Complex. Nonh
Cainput. 8 p.m. TICke&lt;l. SIO.
general oudience: S7, srudents.
For rr.scrvatioos or information.
call Pick or the Crop 11 83J.0002.

UUUIIEAT-LATI--I'UnVA&amp;.
Tbo-c-ndoa(IM7),
&lt;lirectod ..,. Jlnel Formln.
Woldrnan 'Theiler. 112Nonon.
Nonh Campus. II p.m. Admissioo, $2..50, UB studeots; S3..50.

oon-llUdcnls. For more information caii645-29S7.

�S UNDAY

------.-:M

•c•-.,lloo,.,_..
.... -

.

l'l!o ....

~

........... ..,.

1~ ---

MS-DOS6.0

II.NA ....,.__, Dr. Alice
llomllrooti, Depc. ofllaaoriol-

01)1, Uaiv. ofW",_;,_

1348

c..-.

- Soadl
N6c..
.
I . . . 'CIMWUft

a. Qaalllt• .....U .tUB Apd 21

... ~--

1MW-~~.

__

Ralud M.utiol, worb by
--.~~.

-- -~
3:30p.m. Rocatmoadcd lilr aD

sa Coocert HaD.
North Campus. 5 p.m. Admiuioo:
S6, S4. $2.

~..,

.,......, Boclt. Somoioo.lltld
Rein~Jcqu.

--.~~.
w-.-.

~Ws
8oinl Rccillll HaD. 250 8oinL North Campus. 8 p.m.

l'lllxrHIII.Soulb~ I:J().

~ .... ol rldioiooq&gt;eL

......... byApri119; ax-.

Rdolioa"'-:UonScMta, l4

-. -~1129-3281.

tioaScrvicallld l'lcbnl llmu-

IIIClliL

I'IIY--'noeCoodomb Blocbdooad

Siaale-Dodroot'l'luuoelliaa

M ONDA Y

19

IIIICifAL
OrpD Studeats. Slcc Concen
Hall North Campus. Noon.

--

-~

G-Pn&gt;lela-Coupled ll«qlton
Modulou lbo Mlad, Bertil Hille.
Ph.D.• profeucx, Dept. of PhysiOlogy and Biophysics, Univ. of
Washington. G26 Farber. South
Campus. 4 p.m. Sporuor.d by the

...

_

Dovica, Prof. R. H. Sillbce.
C«odd Uoiv. 219 Fronczak.
North Campus.-3:45 p.m.

-L.:1\IB

E. F. llunoey'o Aau11eun of

~WI&amp;M-oadlb&lt;R..,....

ofM- 1D Brilllb
s.tirll:al PriDta, K=y s. Grvtt.
U8 Dean of Ans and L&lt;ttero. 211
Bainl. North Campus. 4 p.m.
IIYMU.IIA-l'ICS

~­

Cotqodcalsu-urosl.o
Motbemotlt:all'byDc:s iiDd

Computla&amp; IIDd Va Vena,
Prof. Ross Stn:ct, Marquarie
Univ . 1411 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4p.m.

Baud. North Campus. 8 p.m.

DepaltJ'llents of Biochemistry.

Biophysics, Pharmacology and
Physiology.

..__

R&lt;ooan:b Stacb, Boods oad
Mutual Fuods: ·An Investor's
G uidt To Ubrvy llcsourtts.,

Michael Lavin, leader. North
Campus. 7-9 p.m. For ~gistraoon
mformation call 645-6 125.
Uodentondl.og tbe G rief Pro-

cess. Iris Rosenberg, leader.North
Campus. 7-9:30 p.m. For regJstn ·
lion infonnation call 645-61 25
. _ IIIICifAL
DavMI Meyers, pen:u.ssktn. Baud

Rcciltll Hall. 250 Boun!. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m.

Bien Goodman. the Puf!ller Prize-wirtnlng
colurmist, will appear 81 UB Aplll 21 to give
the Distinguished Speakers Series lecture.
Goodman's talk 818 p.m. In Alumni Arena
Is sponsored by lhe university and lhe Don
Davis Auto WOI1d l.Bc-

440 newspapers, are syndicated by
the Washington Post Writers Group.
The columns have been collected
and published in "Close to Home,·
"AJ large," "Keeping in Touch" and
"Making Sense."
The author of "Tuming Points,· a bool&lt; about social
change, Goodman has also written articles that have appeared in such periodicals as Ufe. The New Yorl&lt; Times Book
Review, Savvy, Woolen 's Day and Redbocl&lt;.
Her dedication 10 lhe cause of equali1y earned her the
Hubert H. Humphrey Civil Righls Award in 1988 from lhe
Leadership Conference on Civil Rights.
TICI&lt;ets lo Goodman's lecture will be sold at lhe door at a
cost of $12 fO&lt; general admission; $10 fO&lt; faculty, staff. senior
cnizens and UB alumni. and S5 f0&lt; students TICkets also will
be sold in advance at the UB Tocket Offoce in Capen Hall:
Buffalo Slate College Tocket Office; Fredonia State College
TICket Office; New Wood Records. 512 Elmwood Ave . Buffalo. and The Book Revue. 1382 Hertel Ave .. Buffalo
Art 'l'boft GAP Juactioa-Rtlol&lt;d ~ Dr . David Spray.
Dept. of Neurosciences. Alben
Einstein College of Medicine.
Bronx, N.Y. HilleboeAudi to-

WEDNESDAY

~1

rium. RPCI. IHO p.m.
~mvE ICIEMCE
COU.OQI•III
The P&lt;ruptlon of Melody.
Carol Krumhan.sl, Cornell Um v.
280 Park. Nonh Campus. 2-3:30

..__
p.m.

Bask Bicydl.nc Maintenance
and Safety, Kevin P. O ' Neill .

leader. Nonh Campus. 3-4:30

PMUMACYSDIIIWI
Captopriland Ot.ber Angk&gt;l&lt;mia Coo....U.e EDZ}'DIO lnbibitors ia the Tftlt.mt:nt of
Nt pbrotit: Syadromt, So.phen

..---

p.m. For ~ gistration tnformalton

call645-6125 .

C....:AL_,
Sam&lt; Newldtu l.o Applltd

By!lloader'o View, Kiyoko
Shimizu, Otcmon Oakuin Univ.,

0sa1tA. Japan. 684 Baldy. Nonh
Campus. 4p.m.

I'IIYS-Y

Campus. 4 p.m.

:&amp;.~

Ooes tile Prolonged-expiration
Si.og~H&gt;tutb M ttbod for M ..surio.g CudW: Output Work!
Alben J. Olszowka. M.D. 108
Sherman. South Campus. 4 p.m.
-YSAT41'WS
LII'IIWn' . . . . .
Poetry RadiD(I. Christian
PrigenL French poet and novelist

..__

~ YISITWQ ~c:tull£

And Venustas. Jennifer
Bloomer. llA!hitect. criuc and
associate professor of desagn,
Iowa Statt: Uni v. 301 Crosby.

South Campus. 5:30 p.m.
Elfecdvt Communication.. Mu
Donalelli . leader. North Campus.

7-9 p.m. For ~gi5 tmtl0n mformation call645-6125.
OPUS: c:&amp;.ANM:S IIIICifA&amp;.
Rlcbonl Eckm, c:dlo, oad
Yl.og-Yl.oc Uu, pioao, worl:s by

Bach, Crumb and Brahms. Allen
Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m.
WMFIUI
Tbt Revenge or lhr: Creature.
t!i=tcd by Jack Arnold.

Woltlman n-cr. 112 Nottan.
North Con-. 7 and 9 p.m. Admissioo. SJ..IO. U8 students: S4.10.
non-students. Ftt rraote information
call645-2957. Co-sponsored by
Gmerution Mopzint.

.

_..__
20

ladicatloos IIDd Coatro.....X.
for Aqt1ovir U10 i.o Cbldtm
Poxlaftctloo, Howanl Faden.

M.D. Cafetorium A, Mercy Hos·
pital. 8:30a.m.

&amp; Letters Dean Kerry Grant Apnl 20 in 211 Baird
Polcz, Phatm.D. c:ondidalo.

2411

Cooto. North Con-. 8-8:55a.m.

8iOCHIWIAi . - u
Cootrol of Muodt Sptdllc
Tronot:riptioa by Myocoaia

IIDd MEF-2, Dr. John Schwan.
Dept. of Biocbcmistry lltld M&lt;&gt;-

_A_I_

kculor Biology. M.D. Andcncn
Cancer Center, How100. 134 B

Faroer. South Campus. Noon.
~P-STAR

Tbtnaodyaomlcs, Stanley I.
Sandler. Univ. of Delaware 206

Furnas. North ~pus. 3:45p.m.
-AI
I'IIA-ACQL08Yo.-pltllo ~ .,,.,_
,..... tPP: A JI"'kilt assod akd
w1t11 Ak/t&lt;illttr'l, Kolpano P.
White, I'll.D.. Depc. of Biology.
Boondcis Univ. 301 Hochstettef.
Notth Campus. 4 p.m.

IWmllh-COI..LOCII••
An21t1t Today: A

Stacker
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Computing a.od Via: Versa.
Prof. Ross Slreet. Marquarie
Univ. 103 Diefmdurf. South

AJICIIITIC1IJII AHD

Br~ish sabncal print. above. illustrates lecture theme of Arts

In Stock

Motbemotlt:all'byDc:s iiDd

.....

Music, Sllire

$49.95

IIIY..U.IIA-TICS
1-""-IDU
Catqorical Structu res in

420 Copen. Nonh Campus. 4
p.m. Sporuor.d by the UB Poe! ·
ics Prognun.

TUESDAY

UPGRADE

tureship Food.
Art assoc:iale ed ~O&lt; and columnist
with The Boston Globe, Goodman
received the Pulitzer Prize lor Distinguished Corrmentary in 1980. Her
columns. which appear In more than

CONCIItT

UB Jozz Combo, Sam Falwne.
director. Baird Recital Hall. 250

7

---A&amp;.
Sbu-boa Cboal. pioao. Baird

.....
-Rociltll Hall, 250 Baird. Nonh
_Campus. 8 p.m.

EUeu Goodman. Pulitzer PrizcMnning columnist and author of
Twm ing Poitlls. Alwnni Arena.

North Campus. 8 p.m. TICkets.
S5. sn.dcots: SIO. facultyfstoff.
AJUDVI.i As5ociatioo membc:n
and senior citi.z.cns; S 12. &amp;eneral
admission. CaD 645-2353 for
more information. 0&gt;-sporuor.d
by the Don Davis Auto World

l.cnw&lt;:ship Pund.

Continued on page 9

Convenience
Quality
Service
.,
Variety

�_..._ ______..

8

Findin s

__

Parents &amp; Children

.,

No lnlltter .._.they lve, ~,.......chief~­
for eldelty ,_ta, UB atudy ebow•

News Bureau Slalf

AUGHTERS maintain the lnlditional role
of chief caregiver and
primary source of
emo&lt;ional support for
elderly parents, despite their geographic location relative to their parents, a UB srudy has found.
Although daughters ~ve no closer
to their elderly parents than do sons,
they more often are in touch with
their parents. UB geographers Ge
Lm and Peter Rogerson repontd
ApriliOrutheannualmeetingofthe
Association of American Geographen;.
Daughten; who are only children

D

mruntain much more frequent conwith their parents---both visiting and telephoning-tlwt do sons
who are only children, the srudy
tact

results indicate. Moreover, daughters in mulo-sibling farni~es who
live the closest to their parents visit
their parents much more often than
do sons who are the children ~ving
closest 10 their parents.
And. even if they are the secondor third-closest chil9J'en 10 their parents. daughters mainrain more frequent con lOCI by telephone than sons.
according 10 the srudy. which was
based on an analysis of data on more
than 13.000 participants in the 1987

"The

proximity of
the ckiughter
to her JXlrents
determines
the nature of
her
relationship. "

--

National Survey of Families and
Households from the Narionallnstirutes of Health.
1be proxiroityofthedaughterto
ber pareniS de!ermineo the !lliiWe of
ber relatiortship," said Rogersoo.
professor and chair of geogJapby 11
UB who co-authored the srudy with
UB doctoral srudent GeLin. the principal author.
"Daughten; have more contact
with their parents, relativeiO sons, in
terms of actually visiting them when
they ~ve nearby and phoning them
when they ~ve farther away," he
said.
"Distances make a difference in
determining the natureofthecontact
with parents."
The srudy also found that:
• Contrary to popular perception, adult children do not stray far
from the parental nest; the majority
of elderly parents have at least one
child living within 10 miles of their
home. For those with two or more
children. the second-closest child is
usually within 30 miles.
• Elderly parents residing in rural areas are more likely than those in
urban areas to have at least one child
living nearby.
• Rural el&lt;lerly also are more
likely than urban elderly 10 have
other children ~ving at relatively
greater distances. leaving them far-

ther from potential "backup"
caregivcn.
The results of the srudy are particularly importan1 in tight of the
aging of the baby-boom geoeratioo
and lXlllf:el1l about wbo will care for
a growing elderly population, the
geographers said.
"Now that the baby boomers'
parents are on the verge of retiring.
they are likely to have at least one of
their children living nearby to provide care and support." Rogerson
said. "The results of our srudy will

become even more relevant as the
baby boomers themselves retire," he
said.
Since baby boomers are having
fewer children than their parents.
they will be less likely 10 have children living nearby, he noted.
'1t is imponantiO recognize that
when baby boornen; reach retirement age. concerns regarding
caregiving and support will be important issues, not only because of
the large number of baby boomers,
but also because of declines in the
number of proximal adult children
available to the elderly,'' Rogerson
said.
As a consequence, it is important
to design policies and programs now
that will anticipate the increased demand for elderly caregiving, he
added.
0

A wider role seen
for enrollment
management

---

Roporler S1alf
'llltiiUNY .,............sttessiogtheOOilllCCiion betwa:rl tuilico
reveoues and emJIImool over the IMt few yean. The signals """'poim
to an ~y ~ telalionsltip between tui1ico reva1110110d
Slalereveoue giva~IDSUNY, accading 1D Myrm ~ ISOilCiMe
proYOSI81 UB.
'Ibon.,son said Ibis means tbol CllltlilmOIIIIIlllDllgeiiiOI at UB will
take 011 an inaeasingly ~role in providing CllCIWJIIlic llllbility 81
the univenity. He made his&lt;XJIIWIIIDSIII ~~the Focully Scaale
E=utiveCornmiD&lt;e(FSEC)011 Martb31 . "W'llbSUI'RA,thellllebas
set up a device where the SUNY sysa&lt;m and indivXklal.,.,.._. can
1rtcp excess revenue from over-auollment." he said. "But they''Ve abo
inlroduc&lt;d a spoci6c penalty fur uodr:r....rol.lrrall. And ...,·re lDid tbol
tloierrductions would bappeoquicldy. l'a'e&gt;&lt;ample. ifhalfway tbrougb
the Fall semesar:r,the SUNY t...1get office feels that we Wllll't make our
Sping numbers. they'll invade our capital t...lget in the Fall"
Thompson said that ifUB does decide toover-&lt;:nroU for the Fall,
1993 semester, those extra srudents would not necessarily become
pan of the projected enrollment numbers for the following year. "It
probablywon' tbecomepanofourbasewgetenroUrnentnurnberfor
the following year."
But there are unpredictable factors which the university cannot
control, such as retention of srudents. said Thompson. Retaining a
greater percentage of srudents would solidify UB' s base enrollment
and make it easier to plan enrollment projections for the future, he
said. "'We've had a softer retention rate over the last few y=
because of the recession and the tuition increases. The head count at
MFC is down from 4000 to 3000 over the last two Y=· We have
to look at those rates and find ways to get a greater percentage of
srudents through to graduation."

ne way of improving the retention rate would be to improve the
quality of student tife, according to Viera Doyno. pofessor ~
English. '"l'heredon't _,to be any indicolions ~major- in biBb
school graduates in the near futun:. lmprovin&amp; the quality~ SIUdentlife

O

in order to retain greater lliJitlber.; of SIUdeots is IJlDie ecooomical than
recruiting new aa," he said.
Thompsoo said that one idea being considmd is over-atrolling by
100 students for the Fall 1993 semester to guard apinst inevilable
fluctuations until all SIUdeots wbo are aci!Jally au.nding the univenity in
the Fall can he counted. "It can be a high stakes game 011the positive or
the negariveside." said Thompson. ''We don't wan1tofall011thenegarive
side." He said that the SUNY sys1m1. as a whole. probably Wllll't make
the enrollment goal set forth by the Governor's Stale budg&lt;t. "Applications are down about 17 peroent fur the sys1m1. They're down about 7
peroent here at UB."
Editorial policiesofThe Reporterw=di.scussedbyTIIOCooroy, the
new dir&lt;ctcr of publications at UB. He said tbol he was intereslled in
hearing the complainls that have heal leveled 81 the J111PCr by members
oftheFSEC over the past several monlhs. '1 wam tohearyoorooocems."
he said.
......., are two major concerns among the faculty. according to
I Nicolas Goodman. chair of the Faculty Senate and a pro{essar ~
rnathemabcs. '"l'here is the question of publishing faculty leam and
viewpoints witbout any atremplll&gt; cmsor tbcoe documeols. And there
seems to he a desire amongst the faculty fur less feel-good sta'ies and
!JlDieaJniiOverSial material in The Rqorur,"he said. ''What weha'Ve is
an at1m1p1 to produce an excessively rosy picture~ what taUs piaoe at
Ibis univenity."
Cooroy said IOOoe kinds ofissuos w= atcp Jrixity. "We bave lD he
fearless about publishingk:a=as theycomein,"hesaid. 1beremustbe
anatlmlpltobavemm:opemessand lesstimiditylllxttdifficullissues."
Another JXIlblcm lies in the pc:n:eJllion tbol the pllpCr will DOt publish
good news about people wbcm 1'.10 adminisiJ8Iion tl:Dds 10 see as
questionable. said Mauree:o J""""""" as&gt;islanl professor ~ rnodml
languages and litmtrures.
.
Cooroy said that The RepoMr does bave a mission stalenlml which
will he revised soon. ''We'regoingtorevisethemission~and the
editmial policy.Theedinisloolr:ingfooward !Dthatandsoaml."hesaid.
''But these changes will not happen ovemigiL 'l'bc:e are many polilical
issuos involved here and budget is the main one. The n:source JXIlblcm
has a tremendous ~ 011 what the paper is and what it coold he."
Jameson suggested that The kponer inay not have eoougb sll1f lD
adfhss all ~ the ~ issuos that take piaoe 011 ~ simullallOOUSiy. '1 thinkbaving!llDiefaculty writeforlhep~~pCrwwldbeastat."
.Cooroy again poimd ID the reowroe JXCb1cm IOd said the faculty
coold he one grouplhalcooldeol.qe theacope~tbC JIIIPCr· "R.eprding
IJlDie faculty writing fur the p~~pCr, tbol's somodling wesbouldcxplare."
Cooroy SlrCS9od tba1 i1 is~ tbolthe faculty make public their
peroeption&lt; of The 1/eportLr. He~ tDrevisit the !'SEC lD provideao
update 011 any changes being made in the famll ~the JIIIPCr. "And I
would ""1""'1 1halthe editor be invittod as well atlhal time."
o

�..

_..,

_

...--....--

CALIMMR

-&lt;=--~-~·~

Conllrued from page 7

c - - . . - - . D r. MoniDA.
T -. llqlt.ofSioliolico.Uaiv. of

....
-p.m.

-

~3 - - Soulb Campuo. 4

........
.- ....

__
~otr

CUIIIC

inf&lt;&gt;nDIIioo caii645-29S7.
IIORd by IWiw.U..

a-ret. Cblt: hploriaa tbo
lalenot. Loc:kwood Rm. 223. N-

----- ...
School o(f'ubljc Heollh. 134B Farber.
Soulh Campus. Noon.
-rn-rtpdoGal ADIIIonaludoo by
tbo N .......... clPbocolambda, Dr.
lock Gr=!!&gt;Jan. Depl. of McdM:al Reoearcl&gt;, Univ. olToron1o. 121 CooU.
N&lt;X1h Campus. 4 p.m.

-

eo._..

..--~­

Soot Sui, [)opt o( I'IUiritioa, Huvon!

-IIUIWICtl
l liopllanu&lt;eulicJ aod
~clddl, Rasluru H.
BubbaiyL Ph.D.. di=tor. Depl. of
MetoboiWn """ Plwmacoltioctics.

BrisiOI-Myen Squibb Plwmoceutical
R..urch IIISliiUie, Syrw:we. 508

Campus. 7-8:30 p.m. E.-mail experience

roquirod. ObWu •

COOioctina

n:Jisuolioo form by

LOLPOIIT&lt;iUBVM.BITNET.

.-Vlolllaa lhilll'luel,-

Jllll
by
Peta- Simple. Woldmao Tbeolcr, 112
Nonco. Nonb Campus. 9:30 p.m. Admiuioo, S2.50, UB JIUdenu; $!5, nooJIUdenu. """ .... informatico call6452957. Co-sponsored by Hollwolls.

EXH181TS

-

Ae.AW_..._,_

Cook N- Campus. 4-5 p.m.

JIIYlal.MA-ncs ~

Coqoril:lol-....laPloY*s...a~ood VlooV....,
Prof. RoaSO...,Manjun:Univ. l48
Diefendorf. Soulh ~ 4 p.m. Sponson:d by lhe UB Molhcrnabcs Dcpl

- Y S AT 41"\US U1E1tA11Y
Becbtt aad tbo PoUtlcal, oonlcn:nce
participants to include .w~
Hamacher, Unda Ben-Zvi, Carta
Loca~eUi. Raymond Federman and o&lt;h·
en. 420 Copen. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Dooo1o ClAir. Prognm io Compualivc: Uteratures.

drfa.d--IO"'Iomo"
... clilplllyod wilb • ..,..,._... wilb
z...i ....__A IIUdy of ...... dilf,..
-iapoid-~pidco
10 clearooic

"""""'-for--

---Afuluriocicriewof

__

---yoiooflooebnlow: ...
poaery. Crili&lt;:ol penpocci- on ..ty
.....u.. b i p -

....,,._ wilb lllldiaofjuJ&lt;ioe. law

..

violeaoe. T h e - illocolcd in
lbefoye&lt;oflbeiCCOIIdllaoo-of

-

Loc:kwood - coo be view&lt;d durin&amp; ...
timeo !be libnry il opea.

1-XINU•....-..n
~ penpocci-ofUB,IkiiJ fully p&lt;I&lt;Of&lt;dlhrou&amp;b !be eye ....
auncn clUB Pub1icoDoas pbocosJapben Roben Wolioa lllld Si.- Toaa.
""'on exhibit lhrou&amp;b April30 in Copen
Holl on !beN- Campus. Wlllioo, wbo
has II=&gt; • UB llalf member
four
yean, il• anodulle o l l b e 111Slibl1c ol TochnoJosy. Toaa. oo eiatuyear veter1UI of !be l'ubticariooJ Off'ooe.
is ao OOOOOC'llica major a1: UB. 1be
Copen Gollcry is free lllld opeooo the
public from 8:30 Lm. 10 5 p.m. weekdays.

for

-.rDAIIT"Tbe New Wririna CD II UB," 1 show
ol worl: by oompulCr dcsipen who
employ wonls, images, print. IDimllion.
bypennodio lllldi)'J&gt;Ogrlpby, cootinocs
lhrou&amp;h April20 in lle1hune Gollery,

2917 Main St=t.

jewdry. ooiJa&amp;&lt;s. poinlinp and
IC.l1lptln with an AIDS awareras
lhano--oll=-!by!llllllcm,fllcully
ood ...:r of lhe Sdiool of Medicine and
Biomedical Scit.:nc:et---w be: on view,
lhrouab Aprill6 in lhe llrium of the CaryFotbcr-Sbcnnan -boa, Soulh Campus.
Exhibit houR are 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.

FACUI.TT-~

~aadladlll'erma '

~--!be ......... . _

o f - ofUB faculty. Orip.J po-

-

l&lt;lllleob:$!5. ----P&lt;&gt;&lt; ....

sya~~~eaoaoc~

..tpll&gt;lloilod-looel991 ...

..ty 1993.

DooldJ, diroclod by.....,. Simple.

~ lll'riM AncllouiiU lloldL
Boinl Roc:ilal Holl, 250 Baird. NCampus. Noon.

Adlpo&lt;yle---.... Dr. Hei

.

em.."' !be 21• """"'Y ..,..,.,._

Woldmlm,_, I12Ncxtoa.Nonb
c.mp.. 7 p.m. Admillioo, $2.50, UB

•c• ..•••--.u

..,_

-""~
MOijorie
Alltl&gt;ouoe,
-c.m.
p!L
5:30-&lt;1:30
p.m. """
,..;.u.;o.
wormmoocall64s.61~ .

...

__

The: annual "'SociaJ Sciences and Humanities Faculty Book Edubil'' is on
display in Lockwood Ubn.ry oow
through late April . This year's displly

bigbli&amp;biS 63 boolu wriucn or ocliiCd by
UB fiiCUIIy from An:hliA&gt;C:IIIre. Arts and
Lcttc:n. Edocation.

M ~n~gemcot. Social

Scieocc:s and the University UbrariC$.

NOTICES
.... _ l . l l : n . - . J
- A T PIA_..
Facully and lUff may join c:oUequcs
for alight buffet dinner in Pistachio's
prio.- 10 the Ellen Goodman lc&lt;lun: on
Wednesday. April21 bepnnins116
p.m. Menu includes sliced brc:asa of
nutey, sclcctioo of vc:gc:ubica and sal ads. n:liobco, rolls """bulla-, dcsacn
The - is S7 p..- penorl.
Reservatioos art: required. lnformatioo:

----..-Tbeo-

LOMI--...Aid-Ami Hicb (645-6125).

'lbeOIII&lt;cof~

- ....-ma for.....-~ ........
Acc:ouau wiUholdo..-;c.on

doy, April27, ill II Weade Hall, Soulb
Campuo. ..t Wodoeoday, Apri128, ia 4

--

Kaox Hall, Campuo. Bod&gt; - lions .-e from 12 to 12.:50 p.m.

•

Joaa

-

The Uaiw:nily 11 Bullalo T _ , _

Cub .-a iD Room 200 ol The C&lt;Jm•
moos, Nonb Campus, on !be ICCOIId ODd
founb 1\oeodoy " ' - moalb. Mocsinp, bold from 5:30107:15 p.m.,....,.
10.biabJy porticipoiOr)l. Membenllip il opeoiO oni..nity
empioya:llllld10 !be W - . New
Yort community. The six-moalb initial
membenbip Q $40. Membenbip , _ ,_

qooda-""'

... - S24 ev&lt;ry s i x -- Purcbose
onlcn .... pcnonalc:hccb should be
mode poyoble 10 the Univenily 11 Bufr.Jo T _ , _ Cub. I'&lt;&gt;&lt; funhcr infonnmoo, OOOIId Bill Price. presidcul.
11645-3365.

...... I

ftl

-- -___ -----A'IIWAYA!Uaa
--TA,_
M. lllld Gn1wn. Employees' Retirement System repreaenwive. will be

available for individual coosultatioos oo
Friday, Apri123, in !be Human Re"""""'~ Ccol&lt;r from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. To scbeduJe aa appoi.nbDcoL
c:oJI R&lt;loc Kret or Sboron Beatty 11 645-

2646.

Coladolloas Clort&lt; 2 (SG-e)-Uni¥C&lt;siJy Focilitics, Liae 121258. Ke7boord
~ (SG-G6}-Iicbool of law, U..

125514.

--.mME-CIYIL-- - ' - (SG-46)-IleoW Medi cine. Line 127111 ,271 15.

.....__ -...--.mvn

lnlemllionoJ Folk Doncios ......,. ...
bold Friday eveoinp II 8 p.m. on the
...,....S floor of Diefendorf Hall, Soulh
Campus. Rcq.- danciaa foUows from
9-11 p.m. Everyooe is wek:omc:; oo put·
n.. nccdcd. Free odmission. SponiiORd
by the~ Sllldco1 Auociorioo.
CUITCIII

CGW*Wiiiid~CML

listinp of jobc in busiDCU lllld

indusay. '""""""""' hcollh, oducotion
lnd noo· profil orpn.i.zalions, are available in the Oflic:e of Corocr Plannina """
Ploccrnetll. 15 Copen Holl. Nor1h Campus. Call645-2231 for man: information.

""" be..._

ThoWarld~-il--

in&amp; oppticoliooo for- SludoD-.,. for
folll993-. Appliarallhould

hove.._~...,.._..,

cxpcoicn% (cbnille~ .,.,.,.,_. lilcncy
(WP5. 1.DI.-~--IIId­

ol:ills. oblity ......... wilb • divenily"'
indivdals, fan:iBP lquojp: proficico&lt;y
(pn:fcmd~ . _ , will
aodilllld oppor11lnily .. in. dynamic
"*'JllOe. Said ......
of~llld-byApri130 ..
Dr. Madl A. Albwill, ~ DUocoor,

"""'""'.:adcmic

and.,..,..,..,

more-""'*"""will

Warld~1noblulc,402c_.

lloll. Nonh ~

be

--bcfol&lt; mdoflhe .........
I'&lt;&gt;&lt;

coll645-2292.

Help bring ti"MS world to Buffalo•••

S&amp;lppCWt Club'93
THE WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES:
The Best Athletes competing at the largest sporting event in the world this year.
Don't miss your opportunity to participate in the
Sports Spectacle of a Lifetinte
Club '93 Membership Benefits lnch~de:
Commemorative Gifts.., Preferred Seating • A Chance to Win Free Tickets
See Your Club '9 3 Coordinator for Details

J

�_...,

__ __
..,

John Patrick Sullivan dies at 62;
former UB provost and professor
JoiJII l'lllltdl ....... 62, an inlemaliooally renowned scholar who helped revolutionize the field of cJBSSicalllludies, &lt;tied of cancer
April 9 in Santa Barbara, Calif.
A celebrated Latinist, translalor, literary
historian and critic, Sullivan held the post of
Faculty Professor of Arts and Leaen 11 UB
from 1969to 1978andservedasProvostofthe
Faculty of Arts and Leaenfrom 1972 to 1975.
At the time of bis death he was a professor of
classics a1 the University of California. Santa
Barbara
Born in Liverpool. England, Sullivan was
educat&lt;d 11 St John's College Cambridge,
where he obtained a stamd double first in
clues and held fellowships at Queens and
Lincoln Colleges, Oxford He earned two
bachelor's degrees and two master's degrees,
one each from Cambridge and Oxford and
served as dean of lincoln College hefore moving to the Unit&lt;d States in 1961.
From 1961 to 1969hewasaprofessorin the
Department of Classics at the University of
Texas, Austin, where he helped found and
promote the classicallitenuy journal Arion. a
publication that generated strong conservative
reaction in the field by promoting critical investigation of ancient literature heyond reductive philological commentary.
The journal and Sullivan's two-volumeedition of Critical Essays on Roman Lituarure
had a radical and seminal impact on the teaching and literary investigation of Latin authors
and largely generat&lt;d a critical revolution in
Latin studies throughout the English-speaking
world.
At UB Sullivan continued to foster literary

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FAST, IIUAUTY saMC£-111'11.~ G......~le- O..'t w.-~Mey ... t..lllll SjNice"

Tc Technologies

(71 6) 838-2745

823 Englewood Avenue , Town of Tonawanda. NV FAX 838-6995

l ii ii!RSITI

Jl

' 92 -' 9)

Btii!~O

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1

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Od. .

O J ,~

JLIO

1\ 0R.G

criticism and the art of translation. As edi10r of
the important classics journal, A.retluLuJ, he

ll(ltP!)~ P 1, '1 0

~RI'I Io iS

D I ST I NGU I SHED S PEAKER S SE RIE S

ELLEN

championed new theoretical approaches to the
classics, especially that of feminism. While in
Buffalo, he wrote his 1976 book on Propertius
and hogan bis imponant volumes on the Roman poet Martial.

ALUMNI ARENA, 8 PM, WEDNESDAY
* APRIL 21 , 1993 *
/'uluur Pnu IVimull!J
Synd!catrd ( olummst
Fcnrurr:d m £M'T 450

TICKETS
AVAilABLE

=~·

•

Aeon• oh~...ted . . _ of Christian Burial
was offered April5 in St. Benedict's Catholic
Church in Eggertsville for Sister Catherine
Mary Stalteri. who had served for eight years
in the campus ministry on the UB North Campus. Sister Stalteri died April 2 in Kenmore
Mercy Hospital.
A North Tonawanda native, she ru:e.ived a
bachelor's degree from Rosary Hill College
and master's degrees from Xavier University
and the University of San Francisco.
After worl&lt;ing as an executive secretary for
the Carborundum Co. in Niagara Falls, she
entered the Sisters of Sl. Francis of Penance
and Christian Charity in 1953, among whom
she was known as Sister Concetta
From 1958to 1961 , she taught in Catholic
schools in Atlantic Heights, NJ . and New

Lener
Walkway funds better
used on Student Union
cleaning help
EDITOR:
I }()() El.mwood

Av~

Buffd lo NY 1..-!22
8 78 -)n l

F1UJX)NlA SlATE
CQUEGE

( t&gt;nlr.JI Box Officf'
c.,mpus Cronl('r
fll!'donld NY
1406&gt;
~ n t-ral Ad miSSIOn

S 12

critical theory. He also~ his tluee books
on Martial one of which is expeciiOd to he a

Sl3ndard 8IXXJUill of the poet for gm=lions.

A prolific writer and popular speaker,
Sullivan lectw'ed and served on panels and
colloquia throughout the Unit&lt;d States and
Europe for more than 30 years.
Colleagues at Santa Barbara said ''Few men
of letters will he missed by so many as John
Patrick Sullivan. Belief in friendship and intellectual discourse as defining human values
infonned bis life." They added that in spite of
bis iiJness. Sullivan's "pungent wil. expansive
humor, commitment to human dialogue were
undiminished."
Peradotto concurs. "He will he greatly
missed by the many friends he left behind 11
UB who will remember him oo&lt; simply foc bis
scholarly and adminisuative activity, but also
for bis generosity, bis open-mindedness and
bis jovial good hwoor."
Sullivan is survived by his wife Judy. a
sister. Pat, and brother, Denis.

Sister Catherine Mary Stalteri, educator

GOODMAN

'.

Jdm PmKioao, Andrew v.v. Raymood
O!airin classics II UB, and a f011110tcollea&amp;ue
ofSullivan's.saidSullivan'ucbolonbip. "unLike that of many scbolan. ado a robust
afterlife. l:fis worl&lt; on ~us, Propc:rtius.
Martial and Emo Pound - casenlill ..ading
for anyone interested in there llllhon. K t """"'&amp; the first and ,.,.,.,_ advocares of
feminiJt llludies in the field of classical SIUdits
and bad a long establisbed and well-deserved
intemalional reputation."
•
Womm in 1M Ancient World: 1M Aretkw
Pape,.., ( 1984), wlticb Sullivan co-&lt;dited with
Penldotto, was the first scbolarly collcctioo of
feminist essays on this subject and is considered to have established the standard for Jeri..
ous scholarship in this area.
While at Santa Barbara. Sullivan' s accderated critical activity result&lt;d in additional worl&lt;s
on women in antiquity, Neroniao lit.c:raii.R,
early Roman imperial vme and~

67 }· ''02

OON OINIS AUTO
WORLD INC
2211 Nwtg.ud Fdlb
Rkd Amh('rsl N , ,
14 22 8 691 -7 800

fH E BOO• R£\'UE
I 58 2 H('nel Ave
Buffo~\o

NY 1411 6

8H-s 5n

Rather than spending $250,000 on a walkway to pin the Student Union with The
Commons. I suggest using the funds to
hlfe the support staff necessary to clean
and maintain the Studenl Unoo.
$250,000 would fund the satanes of 15
full-time cleaning staff.
KA'I'IILDJII..PresK18nr. CSEA ~oca/602

l..ex.ington and Athens, Ohio.
Sister Stalteri worked in the registrar's office 11 Daemen College for 23 years. serving as
registrar from 1964 to 1984. She was at UB
from 1984 to 1992. Since 1992. Sister Stalteri
had di=ted religious education for Assumption, SL Elizabeth, St. Francis XJtvier and St.
John the Baptist parishes in the RiversideBlack Rock A1ea.
Survivors include her mother, Mary G.
Stalteri of Norlh Tonawanda; a sister, l..ee Di
Pasquale of Williamsville; and three brotheB,
Francis of Snyder, Joseph of Murietta. Calif.,
and Vincent of Kenmore. Burial was in Stella
Niagara. l..ewistoo.
Contributions in her memory may he made
to the Sisters of St. Francis Development Fund,
Box 423, Amhersl. N.Y.. 14226.

�_..,

__ __

Facui~&amp;Sian
BILL

0

President William R. GJeiner and Ronald H.

Stein, vice president for university advance-

ment and development, will discuss issues in higher
education during the "Mind Over Myth" program to
be broadcast at I :30 p.m. on Saturday, April 17, on
WKBW-TV, Channel 7.
Greiner and Stein will discuss such issues as
UB's partnership with the Western New York com-

munity. the economic impact of the university in the
community and the role of VB in the State Univer-

sity of New York. system.
The program will be produced and hosted by
Ilene Aeischmann, executive director of the UB Law
Alumni Association, who has hosted "Mind Over
Myth" for the past eight years.

~~~

0 .

Manual punishment," a lecture on Robert
Coover's "Spanking the Maid," a
metafictional novel that plays on 19th century por-

nographic ficuon . will be the topi c of a lecture today
at UB by Elizabeth Wright, one of the foremost
writers in the lield of feminist/postmodemist criticism.
The talk. sponsored by the UB Center for the
Study of Psychoanalysi• and Culture, will be presen ted at 2 p.m. in 608 C lemens Hall. Co-sponsored
by the Graduate Group for Femimst Studies, it is
free of charge and open to the public.
Wright, a lecturer and fellow in Gennan at Girton

College. Cambridge University. has written ex ten sively on psychoanalytic literary cri ticism and feml -

nJs~~ver. a literary peer of John Banhe :md Donald
Barthelme. has written many books but is best
known for '"Pncksongs descants: fictions." his fre quenlly brilhant 1969 coll ection of short stories.
Etllnlc Conflict and lntemlltlonal
Intervention Focus of Con!-~ee

o

Ethn1c Conflict and International Intervention
will be the subject of a conference sponsored
by several uni.versity groups, Aprillt'&gt;-17, on the
North Campus.
Among the scholars who will participate ~e Jo~n
Ladd, Brown University; Robert Holmes, Un1vers1ty
of Rochester: David Hendrickson, Colorado Col- .
lege; Robert Art. Brandeis University: Teny Nardm,
University of Wisconsin; and Russel Barsh. General
Agent. For Directions Council.
..
C laude Welch. Distinguished Professor of Pohucal Science at UB, and Peter Ekeh, VB professor of
African-American Studies, will join Segun
Gbadegtsin of Howard University in a panel on
ethnic conflict in Nigeria.
Donald Horowitz of Duke University will give
the keynote address for the April 16 session on
"Ethnicity and Conflict," in the Newman Center.
The Commons.
Keynoter for the April 17 meeting on " lnte.rna.tional lntervention" (Moot Courtroom. 104 0 Bnan)
is Kanan Makiya of Harvard University. The conference is open to all interested scholars, students and
members of the public. For a full schedule, contact
Robert Reschke at 645-2542.

,._...._..._ .... role
j;"ck-t.r But'flllo Openl's oc.lro

.0

Gary Burgess, associate professor of music,

starS as the Moor in this weekend's Greater
Buffalo Opera Company production of Verdi' s
"Otcllo" at Shea's Buffalo Center.
.
Burgess has appeared wi~ the Metropolitan Opera. San Francisco Opera. Philadelphia Opera. Rochester Opera and Wilmington Opera. In 1984. he
taught at the Poulenc Conservntoire in Tours, France
and was awarded the Prix de Claude Debussy for h1s
rformance of French melodie in Paris. In 1988, he
tl1e People's Republic of China in a series of
lectures, performances and master classes. He has
been artistic director of the Greater Buffalo Opera
since its formation .

:::'ured

..,

21..
I

I I •

I I ' '&gt;

t &lt;

HiGH ~.: \\ \J s
B

0

A

R

0

Performances are Friday, April 16 at 8 p.m. and
Sunday April 18 at 2:30p.m. Ticlcets are $40,
$27.50.'$22 and $11 and can be purchased at Shea' s
box office and at all Ticlcetmaster outlets.

0

GaD Pauoa Mates, a VB alumnus and staff
member, bas made a pledge of$10,000 to the
School of Health Related Professions. The gift honors her late parents C. Alfred and Emma B. Paxson
wbo were strong advocates of the rights of the disabled and of quality public education.
Mates, M.A. '66, a development officer at VB,
also made this commitment to celebrate a 30-year
association with the university. Her husband, Rol&gt;ert, is professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and research professor of medicine.
MateS' gift will establish a permanent endowment to enhance academic instruction in the fields
of allied health through curriculum innovations,
student projects, cross-&lt;lisciplinary
ventures and the purchase of materials related to new technologies.
As a former medical technologist ,
MateS said she feels a close association with allied health. After
graduating from the University of
Rochester in 1960 with a
MATES
bachelor's degree in general sci·

ence, she worked in the Tompkins County Hospital
laboratories while her husband com pleted graduate
work at Cornell. In 1966. she received her M.A. in
microbiology from the VB School of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences.
A polio survivor, Mates says she values h.ighly
the work done by physical and occupational therapists in helping people function at ~eir highes1
potential-another reason for her g1ft to HRP.

c.npua Child c.. c-ter notes
Week of ~Young Child

0

Children attending the Campus Child Care
Ce nter at the VB South Campus are sampling

the cuisine and customs of various ethnic groupsmany of whom are represented at the center----:-as .~e
center celebrates the "Week of the Young Ch1ld.
Although the observance officially runs from
April 19-26, the center began its celebration early,
with " International Week" runnmg from Apnl 1216. Activities began on Monday, with an outdoor
parade in which the children dressed in ethnic clothing. Parents and staff members prepared such food
as Chinese dumplings. cannoli and Indian f~ ..
Assisted by various ethnic UB student associations,
they also led the children in story telling and songs
and dance represenling the Nati ve Amencan, Irish.
African. Ukrainian and "American" heritages.
The celebration also will include a display of the
children 's artwork from April 18-24 o n the second
Ooor of the Commons on the North Campus.

UB's CWIS: A New
Cooperative Venture
~&amp;

lnlormalic&gt;-l

Tecl'llOiogy !Wld lhe Ll"i'Msity l..iOOnls halle embatl&lt;ed on a cooperatille
1181'1b..re kl delllllop a &lt;Anpus-Wtde ir'lortm!ion System (OMS) targeted lor rnplerrentalion !tis comi'lg
Fal semesler. ACW1S is a
rroertHtillen system that
prtMdes user access via

netwon&lt;ed ca'1'l)US c:orn-

puters a hcrne c:aT'4ll-(ers

with modems to a'l ah'ost
Ll1linited trillerse d inlormation.
In lhe wads d Stephen
Rober1B. Associate Director
d University Ubra-ies, "A
~ flforTretion
system wiU quickly becoole

a local point d

acacJerrjc

and social life al UB." Roberts pred'ICIS !hal faculty !Wld
students will be usi1g lhe
CWIS to consUl lhe UB
~Directory, check
bus schedules. fnd out
about ca'1'l)US events, scan
lhe rrorutes d lhe Faculty
Senate rneelings. and read
lriversity publica!ions, jn.

cludilg lhe Reporter
By selecting lhe appropnate men.~ nerns. lhe OMS
user can rot rrlf relrielle information frc:m locaJ databases but frc:m a large
nunber d remoce CXJrT'4)Ul·
E!fS arot.nd lhe wor1d Thus,
a single search mechanism
will allaN lhe campus c:ornm..nity to log on to remoce 1&gt;brary catalogs. etectronic
reference tools such as diC-

oonaries !Wld encycloped~

as. !Wld many olhef resources. even wealher reports
lranlhe Naoonal Weather
Sefvice.

MerrOe!S of lhe t..nive&lt;sity
carm.nity v.ro halle rnainlrarne accot..nlS can get a
glmpse d sane of lhe reoources likely to be included in UB's OMS. From your
accot..nl. type ....... in
your system's "ready"
PfOO'l&gt;l 0'1ce lhe "Root
Menu" is displayed , leellree
to explore.
To see a CW1S in action
you can lieN lhe information system al AutQE!fS University. From your mainlr!roe accot..nl. type ......

AJJI'II1&amp; Commencement

-.........-. ruyour
system's "ready" prompt
Navigate lhe CW1S by se-

Friday, April16 is the deadline for undergraduat.e candidates In the FacuH1es
of Arts &amp; Letters, Natural Sciences &amp;
Mathematics, and Social Sciences to
register to participate in University
Commencement, Sunday, May 16 at TO
a .m. in Alumni Arena. Forms are avai~
able In the Commencement Offtee, 526
Capen, or at the Student Union information desk . Only students who are
registered will be allowed to participate.
A special Commet')cement Guide will be
forwarded to participants. Direct questions to the Commencement Office.
645-3414.

lecting men.~ nerns d interest to you.

Reglatratlon Deadline

Rlr more infamation on
lhe development d lhe UB

OMS. contaCt Richard
Lesniak. Director. AcOOemic Services. ~ &amp;
Information Tecl'llOiogy
(645-61 58a
lesniakOI.tMns) a Stephen

Rober1B·(fl4&amp;.2966 a
tJdsnvCI.tMns). They wel-

come your inquir'es !Wld
suggestions.

.

-&lt;ierm1a DeVnney and Loss
PeqU8IIo Glazier. l"'*"&lt;X&gt;d
Ubtaty

�_..,

12

__ __
..,

{and
more mundane
fields)
- --

"Quality

'cHemJStryt-

~

rial EconOmics.
epends on the

-

malth~f[~

na
~

between the manager or player an

--=~

the team. "
Although Southwick's remarks.are

~l\9r~eague .

tlli"'-"''""'""''

"How do you compare the marr
ager who has worked with bo ·xerox
and Kodak? " he asks. "Where is the
match? Just because a person has

B

Y

5

U

E

W

U

E

T

C

H

E

R

'·

I

IV

&lt;-,

1.

I,

II

I

.\

1J

,

I

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I

I

done well with one company does
not mean he will do well with the

because all managm perform highly comparable tasks. have the same objective, manage

the team while taking into account the team · s
hitting. fielding and pitching-variables that

other. The situations are different."

the same number of workers. operate ln a
common environment and data on job performance--the teams' won-loss records-are

are not changed by the manager.

In the study. which was published in The
American Economic Review. Southwick. and

c&lt;&gt;-author Kenneth S. ChapiJ\Wl. associate professor of economics at California State Univer.iity at Northridge. tested the hypoihesis of
job-matching. Job-matching maintains that a
good match between job and employee can
only be determined after on-the-job experience. While a job candidate may look good on
paper. a good '"fit"" can only be confumed after
the employee has wbrked on the job. Southwick
says.
Previous studies ofjob-matching used lessthan-ideal data-multiple woriccrs for the same
finn, job or industry were difficult to find. and
few of these worker.i changed jobs.
Southwick and Chapman chose to test the
hypothesis on major league baseball managm

readily available.
Moreover. about 40 percent of managers
tuive worked for 1wo or more teams, so performance can be more easily compared from one
team to another.
'"We wanted to find ou~ for instance. if
Spai"ky Ander.&lt;on was a better manager-a
bener job 'fit' - with the Detroit Tigers than he
was with the Cincinnati Reds."" Southwick
says. (Tile study found that Ander.iOn was a
better '"fit'" as manager of the Reds.) '"It's the
chemistry we 're trying to measu.re."

In the fust direct test of the matching hypothesis. the resean:hers looked at all of the
managers working in major-league baseball
from 193(}.88. For each manager-team pair.
they determined the net winning percentage of

They then compared the matches of manag-

ers with all of the teams they worked for. In
judging the manager-team matches. they took
into account the quali ty of the team and tried to
dete~ne the contribution of the manager.
Southwick says.
•'The question is, how did the team do under
the manager, rel;uive to how the team would
have done without him? If the manager moved
from one team co another. did be have a posi·
tive impact ca the team he moved to, relative to
the talents of the team'!" he asks.
For example. say a manager worked for
hoth the world champion Toronto Blue Jays-a highly talented team-and the new Colorado
Rockies. which, as an expansion team. will be
populated by what are widely considered t.o be
'"reject'" playm from other teams. The manager, through his game stnUegy, may have

made a difference of two winning games in
Toronto. while he may have contributed directly to five wins in Colorado.
Although overall the manager may have
had a better winning record in Toron!Q. he may
have had a better job "match'" with Denver
because he had more of an impact on team
productivity, Southwick says.
The SIUdy found that managas' pOOuctivity
differed fO&lt; each team they waited fO&lt;, oonfuming that ''rnatchin8 does matter,'" be says.
"You have to try someone in a positioo with
the rest of the team before you know if it is a
good match," he says.
"'The fCl\1 quality of a manager-«playerwon't come out until they've found the right
team.'"
Thus. executives at ·a company may as·
sume. based on a re~ and job interview,
that a potential empl&lt;&gt;yee will be a good hire.
But they won't know for sure until he or.shel\as
•
worked in the job, Southwick says.

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                    <text>____

_

., ,_

Ill- .... «* ......... . _ _ , piece ofllullalo lldlilloclunJ
hillory,

~of lhe

uni-.ily, SUNY, lhe New Yort Scale

Office of l'llb. Reaalioa and Hl.n: Pretawlion and lhe (Dirwin)
Millin Houle ........ CorpantioD (MHRC) haw lipd • jobll
~ ..,..,.meal defiDina !heir CUIIIIIibasi&amp; 10 lhe n.win D.
Millin HoUle. delipld by Prml&lt; Lloyd WriabL
UB Praideal William Gremer uid lhe ...aonOoD plllllllllb ibe
1Jet1nDiDa of anew aa Corlhe boule, cluriDa acaemoay to--=e tbe
bdd • tbe M8lliD Houle ... Fridoy. The MllliD HoUle.
..........,Dy ~ • oae of tbe belt exMipla of Wfi&amp;bl'a
eDIIIIIIOIIIIy a.n.-lal "PPai6e Style" of modr:m Iaidamal an:biiDcture, Ia k..-1 • 12S ~ Pkwy. The uniwnily
&lt;:a*iOdial
n:lpOIIIibi.lil Cor tbe boule. which is OWIIOCI by New yen Scale, fortbe

'* ..

j.a2Syeon.
"The c:ollobcnlloG we will formollzJe IOdlly." om- aid, "'• tbe
.CXliiiOiict.lio and c:uJminolioo of • dec8de of diocullioo. iDcreolin&amp;
communily inYOlvemaa, and ~~Cady, if ~ ~ (8 rile
............_ UB wa from lhe ~ COIIIIIIiaed 10 coria~ Cor lllil
faoc:inltiDI piece of llufralo and Bulfalo bialory," &lt;Jreilllrllid.
The New y odt Scale Office of Pldta, ReaalioD and Hl.n: PraerYIIioo eaan- lhll SS-14 milllcle will be .-led 10 fuDy tbe
bollle, buill between 1903 and 1906, 10 .. oriJjMI JIIIOdeur. The pujoct
Ia set 10 lake pllce in four pllll5 (~y to be opeawd • a....,_
...-un facilily wilbiD tbe New Yort Sllle HislarrSi11e ~)and $1
milllcle
am.ly ' - ' dised 10 lid in lhe ..............
Orin~ Scale Cormnlaioner of Parts. ReaalioD and Hilforic:
"The Millin Houle~ bulb
cbllloDp:s.
Conlinued on page 3

'*

PracnatiaD,-.

ear

ANew Anthem
for Alnarlcals?

Super Senior

Retired music prof
composes an anthem
that might be one
1n a million.
,.

philosophy: stuctying
both keeps Anthooy
Petro's life in
balance.

Baby's Ustenlng

Poll.a Happlat a••

Engineering and

2

How babies learn as
they listen. is the subject
of research by a UB
psychologist

'-

,.10

UB prof co-aJ..I!t'as
book that urmasks the

0

myths al:xJut the polka
and its ongins.
Apnll , 1993 Volume 24, No. 23

.Key role for UB in landmatk
study of women's health
Unlv.aity is lead rese.-ch center
-f or muiBmlllon-clol._ national project
II)' LOIS IIAIIEJt

using women as subjects.

News Bureau StaH

As one of the 16 vanguard centers. UB will help design the Sllldy
and estllblish operating procedures
that other centers will follow. Clinical
trials are expected to begin at the
vanguard centers thi s fall. The remaining 29 clinical centers are expected to be announced in about 18
months.
Maurizio Trevisan. cbairof the J:le..

HE University at Buffalo has been
selected to be
a lead research center in the $625
million Women's Health
lnitiative, the largest clinical trial ever undertaken in
the United States. UB's
share of the project will
total about $11 million
over 12 years.

T

pamnent of Social and · Preventive

The Nationallnstiwtes of Health, g
sponsor of the project. announced se- ~
lection of the 16 Vanguard Qinical
Dr...
... Dr.
Centers March 30 at a press confertt.lllllnltlllllv. .._.. 30 •
ence in Washington, D.C.
The Women's Health Initiative is being undel1alcen to learn
bow 10 reduce the risk of coronary heart disease, bmlst and
a&gt;lorcctal cancers and
in older women. Approximaiely 160,000 ~ Womell between ~·ages of S0
and 19 will be recruited by 45· resWcb cenrers tbrougboul the
United Stares to take part in the Sllldy, including about 3,Soo
women to be recruited from wesrem New Yort.
Hislorically, clinical trials have'-' coocb:led oo men only. ·
Alia result, ueatmaUS lesledexclusively oo men arepn:acribedfor
women wilbout evidence that women will receive lhe aame
benefit. The Women's Heallb Initiative is deaigned 10 gather
essetllial clinlcal dala oo the major di..ases affecting women,

w-··

osteoPorOsis

Medicine in the School of Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences is UB' s principal investigator in the study.
1bis is a wonderful occasion for
UB and Wes~trn New Yort,"Trevisan
said. "'This was a very tough competition and UB fared very well."
John P. Naughton. UB vice presidenlforclinicalaffaiJ:sanddeanofthe
medical school. said "UB is very
pleased to be 111l0111 the institutions
selecltd 10 be vanguard centers in the
. . - brllfiiCin F . - .....
Womeu 's Health Initiative.
"In addition 10 benefiting womeu
living in Western New Yort." be said, "this program will
.accelerale the role of the school's Depomrau of 59cW IIJ!I
Preventive Medicine in epidemiology, prevmtive m&lt;dic:in8and
cof!UDiDity medicine. It alao will ~ the medical .
school'sefforts 10 train alargernllltlberofprimaJ)'-are provid-

1111111110,.......-

ers."

Thesrudy ilaelfwill beCClllducud in-two~ and
ot.rvatiooal. The clinical componen1 will inYOlve lhree inveslipticns:
• A lest of the effecli.....ess of bormone ieptacemom
Continued on page 3

�.IIIQIIIN

2

-~.---.-:a

H 0 N 0 R S
eot.f'\JTt:R SCIENCE

--10~··---·associ
ate

fessor of OCJI11lUI8f acience,
prohas acceplsd an irNitslion to
join the prt:V&amp;m committee
for IPPS '94,
the Eighth
lnterTlBOOnal

Parallel Processing
Symposium.

sponso&lt;ed
by the lnsbtute of Electncaland

ElectroniCS Engineers (IEEE)
Computer Society. The symposium Will be held Apnl 2629 ,, Cancun. MexiCO
A member of the UB Com-

puter ScleflCe Department
Since t985, Miller has performed ground breaking research ,, the area of parallel

algorithms and archttectures

Spec1hcally. he has applied
the technology to solving
problems •n tmage processtng computauonal geometry.
graph theory . cCYnbtnatonal
opltmtzahon and computa-

tiOflal cryslallography
Miller earned a doctorate

from the State Umversny of
New YOII&lt; at B1nghamton.
where he recerved a D•sllnQUIShed Dlssertattort Award

He also "earned hts master's

and bachelor's degrees at
B1nghamton

---

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
AND ANATOMICAL
SCIENCES

- r-.

aSSistant
professor of med1cal technol

ogy and anatomtcal sc:tences. was one of 40 U S

SCtenltSIS

tnvlted to
present thetr
work at a
recent Na-

tiOflaiSclence
FOOndat1on
conference
highlighting
research destgned to tmprove math and sctence edu-

cation tn pnmary and

secondary schools
The conference brought

together pohcyrnakers and
educators from across the
natiQn to plan for the reform

of mathemaitcs and sctence
educanon m the nahan's
schools and colleges
Tamburlin was selected for
he&lt; work in developing a set
of braille and large-print illustrations; supplemented by
braille caption~ and· an aud1o
guide, to accompany secondary-school heallh and
biology textbooks. The
project's goal was to help
VISUally impaired students
learn about science more
effectively.

The project was funded by
a $153,000 grant from the
National Science Foondation
Temburlin cul'rently 1s working on e similar project aimed
at elementary school students, also funded by NSF
Sood 11futmatxlfl m hcn?rs or
awwds to Am 'M-itcher, editor.
Reporter, 136 Crofts HaN.
North Qm)us.
tfl8

Allen
Sigel's
Anthem
Will P,.,ot. All
repiKe "The St.
Spangled Banner"?
lly -EIIT WAlDIHOUSE

Reporter Staff
LLEN SIGEL has
wntten a national anthem.
It i!&lt;! true that lhcre
already IS a national
anthem. Sigel knows 11 He has written another one. Hi.f anlhem, Palriots All. ts one of 12 shonlisted for a
naiiOn&lt;tl competition. and, if it wins.
11 \lands to win bot h a $ 1 miliion first
pnLC and a petition calling on Congress to adopt it andgivelhc 11rt'Star
Span~: led Banna Lhe shove.
S1gel. a clarinetist and composer
who rcccnlly retired from the facu lty
of UB's Department of Music. says
that he· !1- not taking his chances scriuw.. ly But he is clearly excited, if
only at heanng his own work
· ch contestant has to proplayed
vide a v1deotapc u fhi ~or h cran them

A

m l\C\ion. so to speak. and Sigel

commandeered UB 'schoir- and Lhe
wam1 reception he's received so far.
HL" ad nut!&lt;! to bc1ng le s~cxcned about
the prn~pt.."'l:t of wtnning $1 million.
partl)' hecauM:" hi\ w1fc. Phylhs.
warn!&lt;! hun aboul bemg overly opunll!lotiC t ""lthm~ I'll h1rc a hallroom."
JOke' Stgel "You're invued"). and
partly hecau~ he"!&lt;! not sure where it
would come from if he won
S1gcl d1d not ~~ out to wme an
anlhcm until a friend pa~~ along a
n~wspapcr chppmg.
" I'd alway!~- written poetry, pri vately forbinhdays and familyocca !&lt;!IOn!&lt;!, and more seriou!&lt;! poetry
whenever I n(..'edcd tocxpres..'\ something; l' dalsopublished 4 or5piec&lt;&gt;
for clarinet. But in the last few year~
I've been particularly interested in
vo1cc a!lo rhe most perfect instrument
We ah.o have a wonderful choir henat UB. and I thought it wou ld be nice
to write some thing forlhem; so I did.
"Well. after that, a friend sem a
clipping from Denver about Lhiscompeli ti on for a new anthem. I' d grown
up playing in dance bands and had
wught some pop. so I thought. ' Why
not'?"
1llt! compt.'tition was the idea of a
Nunh Carolina businessman by the
name of Andres Skaar, who ha' gone
to the trouble of fonning a nol-forprofit pare nt company, Anthem!
America 'Th: finn recently released a
shonliSiof50titlcs.outofwhichthey'vc
selected 11 semi-finalists: the company also hopes to marl&lt;et album.,,
CIJ:,. and videotapes of the shonlisted
song&gt; to raise the prize money. and to
petition Congn.~ toa.do~X the winning
song a.·~ the new nationaJ anlhcm when
it's announced 0t1 July 4.
"Originall y. he was gomg to put a
ball ot box in eac h co:· &gt;a id Sigel.

"I discovered it's a very different process from
simply writing poetry-it has to be
immediately understandable. "
"So that there would be this grass
root- he keeps using the tenn ·grass
root' --this gra~"' root vote on the
best one. But I said. what' s to stop
someone buying up IO,OOOCDsand
voting for their own anthem?"
Instead. Skaar found himself a
panel of expe n~ who. while their
identities remain secret , possess Lhe
requisite c redentials : Anthem!
Amcnca ·s pres..; release lists them as
··music professon.. choral director.-..
composers. musicians. music critICS. and radio host"i." The panel will
narrow the field down to five semifinalists on May 30( Memorial Day),
then down to thn...'C on June 14 (Aag
Day): the wmner' s name will be
~lec ted July 3. tn lime for Independence D'J.y celebr.U I On~ .
kaw wa!\ affable when reached
by telephone- he' s so affable.
says Sigel. that he calls Lhe contestants when they get the nu- and said
that he conceived the competiti on
not because he has anything agamst
Lhe present anlhem but because he
wanted to rally the country.
'"I doo't mind Tlu! Suir Spangled
Banntr, but then. I'm llOl a musician; I
can hardly sing anything. But I was
thinking about what biid shape the
counuy w-.ts in and wondering how we
couldgetthisoountry toworl&lt;togelher,
and the best way, or the easiest way.
was to get everyooe rJIIied around an
impressive song.
·•H ow do you change the way
people look at the world' Well, the
advertising people say you haven't
heard anything Until you've heard it
three times. No one want\ to see a
mov1e three times. or read a book
three times: so what medium IS out
there that beg&gt; that kind of repeti tion'? When we were teenagen. we
would buy a record and play the
same song over and over again."

S

EO! TOR ..... 'WMITCMD

The pop song analogy is not peculiar to Skaar. Sigel says that a
prop~r anthem has to be. all at once,
as catchy and as rousing and as crystal-clearasasongby Lrving Berlin or
Andrew Lloyd Webber.
'"At first I thought I'd try 11 combining my penchant for writing poetry with music, but I discovered it's
a very different process from simply
writing poetry-it has to be immediately understandable.
'The n I staned with the tune. I
wanted to make n simple because
The Star Spangled Banner cover.,
such a wide r.mgc of notes that people
either have to sing out of rune or
falsetto .
'Then I Lried it out on people. At
first they would say. ' It' &gt;good. but...'
or ·But what do you mean by Lhat?'
which told me I was on the wrong
trdCk ."

Sigel gotontheright tr.lekby wOII&lt;ing from the jar of pencils on top of the
shining grand piano in his home( when
he played with the Buffalo PhilharmoniC, he fought with Michael Ttlson
Thoma.~ over ovmership of that piaoo.
(Xiying twia: the piano's value to take
it home). He gave the Reporter a private rendition:
Patnots a//. unired are we,
in flit f"U USt' of SWUt Jibtrf\'.
our ancesturs knew.
tht•rr t•rsion was rrue
as tl~y ea rned rite banner of
f reed-om.

Amenca. Amenca,
lt't our deeds clearlv Sa\'

tlun c1 nation "s gra;w .,:uy
now ln•ts in each m1e of usUmted Stare.\. a dream come

tnu at last

The ~ore 1s for soprano. mezzotenors and ba'i.Ses, and the
melody. says Sigel. is that of your
~prano,

ASSOCIAn fOIIOA J0U1 DoUaM

average 19th century hymn. 'Th:re"
one chromat ic moto wrtte new ment-one. shon.
national
sharp. salmon·, .
anthem.
leap up the scale.
round about 'frerdom '"-butolherwise,Sigel says that
he was careful to steer away from
more modem models in favor of
traditionalism.
Allen Sigel
Is a finalist
In contest

raditionalism-in the sense of
good old -fashioned patriotismof
what a ventw'e like Anthem! America is all about Sigel's not
SW'C that there is a buyer's marl:et for
albums of would-be anthems but he
does feel, as Skaar does. that the elfon
will atlea,.tlD1l up some songs thatlike America. Tlu! Beautiful or Tlw
Bank Hymn of IM Republit:-wlil
find their way into the popular consciousnes.'\.
If Sigel's lyrics have a Climonne
air to them. a vision of dreams mokted
by responsibility, then there's something of the Ross Perot about Andre&gt;
Skaar: a faith in grass roots. a
businessman's apprpach to political
troubles. and, of course, a million dollars. '"No. not really.'' was Skaar"s
response to the suggestion. "In that
I'm not puning in the money myself.
A record industry is interested and
we 'II be pushing tapes and videos.
and raising the money that way.
"I thooght it would be nice to JXiY
cash oo the nose once the winner is
anoounced." he added. "But everyooe
involved in this competition underSiands that that takes tiJre_There an:
250 million people in the country and
there 'II be 500.mxl of the albums. so
if one out of every 500 citizens of the
U.S.A buys the album. we'll ha"-"
more than enough."
And the fate of Tlu! Sla[ Spangled
&amp;mner?
Skaar chockled at the rocolle&lt;:tion
that Frnncis Scott Key· s effon did not
make No. I untill931. '" Butthere'llbe
a grass roots movement behind the
winningsoog,''hesaid "Andwhenthe
winning song achieves the """"' kind
of level of popularity as Wt Are Tht
World, then that's the moment to
petition Congress. ..

T
is. course,

�_., _ _ ..,_aa
MARliN HOUSE

~
.. ,

Cootlnued from page 1

...-·

·•
•· · l I.~, , .

in tenns of restoring it to its previous splendor,
and great opponunities, in terms of interpreting iiS unique place in American architecture
t.
..,
and Buffalo's social his10ry."
Robert Kresse. president and chainnan of
the board of the not-for-profit MHRC and a
partner in the law firm of Hiscock and Barclay.
said the wait for a strong commitment to the
house has been endured grncefully by a concerned community. "The long wait has been
justified," he said. 'Today's agreement witnesses the preservation of the university's important !&lt;!take in having the house as a unique
re100urce for scholarship and education."
Another important push toward the fmal ~
agreement came from Sen. Daniel Patrick ~
Moynihan (D.-New York). who was instrumental in securing SSOO.&lt;XXJ in resmration ~
funds for the project from the National SerLehman, Kresse and Irving Freedman, general
vJcc:-. Construction Fund, Depanment of the
manager of the SUNY Construction Fund, the
Interior. Moynihan was represented at the cer·
MHRC will assume responsibility fora capital
ernony by James Kline. regional directorofhis
fund-raising campaign and ultimately underWe!&lt;.tem New York office.
take day-to-day management and operation of
In a lcnerwhJch Kane read at the ceremony. the house after the restonuion. The New York
Moynihan e.u olled the hard work from various
State OffiCe of Parks, Recreation and Historic
secto~ of the commu nity. lhe university and
Preservation and UB will assist MHRC in
th.: government that have made the restoration
fund-raising and will help in the solicitation of
proJect a realny
major prospective donors. They will also at"A~ many here are aware. I JXlid a visit to th.i~
tempt to secure state money for the restoration.
house nearly two years ago and found what I then
The restoration project was developed by a
CIJied a rum and a disgrnce. WeU, a lot of good
101eering committee co-chaired by Pre:sident
thmgs have happened since then, and today. we
Greiner and Julia Stokes. deputy commisoflkially marl&lt; a starting poinL With the federal
sioner for historic preservation in the New
&gt;Ced ITIOfleY and today'' new three pany agreeYork State Office of Parks. Recreation and
n-..:nL we now have a way to begin:·
Historic Preservation.
Unde r the agn..-emcnl s1gned by Gremer.
Greiner noted the "exceptionalexpenise in the

4t

. ,.1 - ._

a
~

e

3

'I

~~/Jill\'-.
=onuionofhistoric sites" in the New York State
Recreation and Historic Preservarian. and called the Martin House Restoration
Corporation an organilJIIion that "represenlS and
expresses the commitment of so many WestL'fTl
New York friends and neighbors 10 restore the
house for the city's salce."

Offa of Parl&lt;s,

H

e added that UB students and faculty woll
continue to work with both groups, study-

ing the house and adding to a now Significant

university collection of photos. documents and
drawings.

Looking ahead 10 years. he added: "By the
time we are ready to celebrate the ICX&gt;th anniversary of Wright's Martin House desogn. thos
landmark will very much resemble the intn cate masterpiece that Wright origmally env1-

siooed. designed md builL~
Plans for the ~
projoct ore 1-.1 on a.....,....
hensive bisulric llniCIUie repall
and restoration plan pudut:ed
for UB by the restoration lldtitecwre fum of Hasbrouck

At~

flam 11ft:
~

--Olin
L.ellm8l,

PNeldent

o.w.. ..
Council
Clutlr Pllllp
Wela.

l"etmonAsaoci~~esd'Clliago.

The pbns _..released in lb
1990. The restoration
will take place in ~ wilb the standards
estaiJii.Wd by the us. Secrelary af the lnlaior
and will begin as soon as sulfici!D apital fmds

cerm.r

haveboenraisediOCI:MrtiJecootafthefinlphase
of the work. whidJ has an ..w.-1 coot af
SI,246,(XX).

During the restor.ttion, public vi&gt;itation will
be resumed on a limited scale to be agreed upon
by the parties. The home has been closed 10
visitors since 1991 . It will be open brieOy for
public tours during the World University Games
BuiTalo '93 in July.
The Martin House was constructed between 1903 and 1906 and has been a national
histone landmark since 1986. Prior to thai
ume, the complex of buildings thai made up
the Martin compound was abandoned for nearly
two decades, then partly demolished and reoovated for use as an office/apartment compie•.
For the past 25 years. there has been considerable mteres1 in restoring the property from the
university. the community and the State Parks
Offoce. Plans were delayed by alack of private and
university funding, disagr=nenlS amoog various parties about Jli"'Ol'Hd resiOralion plans and
by the defe:11 of the 1990 New York State Envtrunrn&lt;.'!llal Bond Act, which would have funded a
full restor.ruon by the New York State Office of
1'".100. Recreauon and Historic Preservation.

Higher ed must be 'assertive' to prosper, Greiner tells PSS
11J

AHN WNm:IIEJI
Reporter Edrtor

I

N A GLOBAl . economy facmg massive

restructuring. leader.. of htgher educ.-.ttion
must he "a,-.emve. actrve and ~man" m
thctreffort\ to ~.:om~te and prns~r. Pn."!-itdcnt Wilham R Greiner 1old mcrnlx!" of
the Pmfe.'\.~1onal Staff Senate March 25 dunng a
breakfa.'it mecung m the Center for Turnonuw .
Grcmc r centr.:n.-d h1~ tal~ on unpre~s1on ...
gathen."d during a recent tnp to Wa~hington.
b C .. where he panrcrpmed 1n a meeting of the
National Council on ComJXt rti venes...... AIM&gt;
present were the Secretaries of Commerce.
l..abor and Trea....,ury. along with busme-,s leaders and a few other university leaders.
""The Anx.'tican ccooomy is going through a
nul\sive restructuring," Greiner said. While lhe
nal.Jon's productivity ha.• turned upwarrl"fairly

dr.Lmatically :· the fact is thaJ. w-.employment

pcrsiSIS even as manufacturing increases.
"What are we going 10 do about restructuring
the Americanecooomy to provide jobs ina world
economy where it's dear that the low-wage.
lower-skilled jobs are going to go o1T-shore0 ,''
Greoner a.sked. "The jobs. .. he said, "are 001 going
10 com: for some extended period of tirre. be-cause we· re going to have toretr.lln people andrethink the way we do busincs.o;;.··
Greiner said he was concerned with the lad..
of reference to American higher education
during the Washington session_ especially with
respect 10 large resean:-h universiues. There is
much discussion about job training for the
non-college bound. but four-year schools are
apparently not seen a~ a way lO ameliomte the
problem. he said. This holds deep implications
for the future of the American dream of higher

• A study of the effect of a low-fat diet on
the risk of t:ardiovascular disease and breast
and co lorectal cancer.
• An investigation of the effectiveness of
calci um and vitamin D supplements in reducmg osteoporosb. co lorectal cancer. blood pressure and breast can&lt;.."Cr.

In WNY. 1170 women will be recruited over
three year&gt; to take part in the clinical trials, which
an: expected to begin in August or September.
TheobservationaJ study will follow women
over 12- 17 years to try to detenninc physi·
ological and lifestyle factors that can affect the
health of women. Participants in thi s phase
mitially will give detailed medical hi stories
and lhen wil l be contacted every three years to
updme their infonnation. About 2,200 women
will take part in the observational phase.

The UB Women's Health Initiative will be
headquartered in Farber Hall on the South Campus. A 24-hour hotline will be established this
surrurer to answer questions about the study and
to take names of women who wish to participate.
Trevisan said he is convinced that one of the
major reasons UB was selected to panicipate
in the study is because the entire community

t UB. the umversity has wcalhered a I 0
percent loss in core suppon over the past
two ye~. Greiner said. and in MJ dmng has
demonstrated "incredible resiliency
wnhout e:\cessive whmmg ." To be a maJor public
reM!aJ"ch umvcrsny. Greiner !!-:ud. "we must tx:
more self-sufficient. n01 only doing more with
what we have; we w1ll also have to come up
with a.ll sorts of new ways 1odoour actiVIUe!!-.··
Aggress1 ve pursuit of pn vate philanthropy w1ll

A

he the order of the day. he said.
"We have to go out and mise moncy,"Gremcr
sa.Jd. "We have 10do It withouraJumni. and that's
goingtorequireaconsider.tbleinvesunemoftime
and trea._que _··He said the univer.;itye~pects in the

oorningyearLO&lt;ka.woa~teliC:I'Ve\oO

'jump start" advancement and development effort'&lt; "We expect there wiU be a very signif1C311t
Jllyback over the next decade."
Greiner added that a major capital campalgn
is planned for the sesquicentennial celebr.Jiion of
1996. The Wliver.Oty. he said. hopes 10 raise
through philanthropy in the areaof$150 mill1011
'"1996-2001.
Other road~ to increased self-suffic1ency.
Gremer said. include previously announced
plans for private consuucuon of apanment-

style stodent housing, and better rapport with
the pnvate sector.

"In New York State," Greiner saJd, "the
more yoo talk aboot and the more you work at
self-sufficiency. the more eager the state is to
help yoo. In the long run. I think the state will
want to support u.s ...

Women's Health Initiative Vanguard Centers

WOMEN'S HEALlH
Con!lnued from page 1

therapy in reducing the risk of coronary heart
disease. osteoporosis and cndonleuiaJ cancer.

education in which "everyone ha.'&gt; a shot.." and
lhe potential for a greater gulf between lowerincome individuals and an educated elite

o;;uppons the efTon.
··we were able to offer a package not many
institutions could match.'' he !&lt;Wlid. "Thi~ effon
mvolved the Depanmcnts of Obstetrics and

Gynecology. Medicine, and Medical Technology. We had the suppon of the dean&gt; of the
medical school and the School of Health Related Professions. and the UB provost We had
the suppon of the medical community, the
political community. the health--care providers. and civic and religious organizations.
'Th.is is a very complex srudy, involving
recruiting volUnteers. retaining them and amng-

ing for reim_t,.usemenl"Trevisan said. "Because
everyonewa' behind us. we were able to addres.•
all of these issues...
c~principal investig;uoroo the study t&lt;Jan""'
M=hall. UB professor of social and preventive
medicire.Otherinvestig;uor.;areJofreudenheim.
Abna Blake. Diane Hayes. and Terry Pechacek.
all from the UB Department ofSocial and Preventive Medicine. Also, Myroolaw Hreshehyshyn.
chair, and Jean Wactawski-Wende from the Department of Gyneco~osY and Obstetrics: Roben
Kohn. Susan Grnham. June Chang and Paresh
Dandona of the Department of Medicine. and
Donald Armstrong. chair of the Department of
Medical Technology.

,_

·'llle-QdyScllool

Winston-Salem

• BrW&gt;am -

w......•• Holpltal

~.,-

Boston

,_

• E'moly ~School

-_,_
__
_
_,_

•n.-.---1-.!ty,- CGIIaeo,
111 tile

Tucson

·~.,-.-Dileo

·--c.-_llolplbl,_Tlle-W. WoadMJ-

cAtlanta

__
___

.I.W-.My.,-..,__,
~,_..,

La Jolla

____

·~"'­
~,

Collaeotl-

Sealtle

Ell¥·-·..........

_
_,
_._,

--__ --- ---..--·- DMolon , Pawtucl&lt;el

EdtiCOttlon

•Hoou•-~

~,---

.,__,
• .__,i.t .....
.1-.!ty,_
.__,_,
Chicago

Iowa City

·~,-- Deoillobyol
~

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Mimeapolis

........

.

·~"'-­
·~"'"

_.,..

�_s. _ _ ..,_,..

4

HOUSE FOR SALE Maria I. New of Cornell
Audubon Community-Close to Amherst Campus
to give Harrington lecture
~~y..-IUIIEII

News Bureau Staff

family room
with WBFP.

ARJAI.NEW, chairofpedi·
atricsatComeiiMedica!College and an internationally
known expert in the field of
pediatric endocrinology, wdl
present the O.W. Hanington Lecture at 4 p.m.
on Thursday, Aprill5, in Butler Auditorium in
Farber Hall on the UB South Campus.
The topic of New's lecture. which is free
and open to the public. will he "Congenital
Adn:nal Hyperplasia: From the Laboratory to
the Bedside."
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia is a hormonal disorder that causes the female fetus to
develop male-appearing genitalia. The disor·
der, which can lead to female infants being
sexually misassigned at binh. also can cause
precocious sexual maturation in boys.
The author of more than 400 papers on
abnonnalities of the adrenal gland. New has
established a world-renowned research team

M

central air.

For an appointment

Call J. G e rard Green
839-9630 ext. /15
mobile: 866-8307

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In addjtiorTto her position at Cornell. she is
pediatrician·in-&lt;:hief and director of the pedi·
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pita! . She is immediate past president of the
Endocrine Society. the most prestigious pro-

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~ ni&lt;llli.J '

'

].l(l()\

:.:.J !
Bini

....:~~~~r.JI.lU ~

\Jnlwr.t ' l

1-&amp; !18 IIYI / f\t).l

1111 K()l)J., IU\1.1
I \82 I krtt·l ,\\~·
1\utl,lln ·' ' 1·1!11&gt;

Medicine and Bio.

medical Scien=. A,,
Hanington visiting
professor. New will

spendtwodaysmeet·
ing with faculty and
medical student:, m
hospital grand rounds. at clinic~ and in mformal discuss ion groups.
The O.W . Harrington Lecture Fund wa"'

established in I H86 by Devillo While
Hanington. an 1861 graduate of the UB med• ·
cal school and a professor of genito-unnaJ)

and venereal diSCi!Ses at UB from IHH6 to
1905.

Nurses fear contracting
AIDS, researchers fmd
By LOIS IIAJIIER

PRES Ull 5

f Uh 0

fessional organization in the field. and in 1988
received the society's Robert H. Williams Distinguished Leadership Award in Endocrinology.
Among the many additional honor.; she has
received= the New Yorl&lt; Academy ofMedi·
cine Medal of Award and the Due Case Award
from the Office of the GovelllOI' of New Yori&lt;.
She was elected afel·
low of the American
Academy of Ans and
Sciences in 1991.
The Harrington
lecture is sponsored
by the UB School of

M

ORE THAN half of nom;es

remain fearful of contracting
AIDS from their patients IS

• The number of respondents who thought
it was worthwhile to spend lime and energy
caring for people who were dying dropped by
14 peocent- from 79 percent to 65 pen:entovcr the four years.

years after the disease was

• The number of nun;es indicating they had

f!J'St diagnosed, and time and

the right to refuse to care for an AIDS patient

experience have done little to change their
anitudes. UB researchers have found.
"Nun;es are the primary health care provid·

dropped by 12 points, from47 pen:ent in 1986
to 35 percent in 1990.
• Respondents who thought AIDS patients
should be cared for in a separate unit with a
special staff dropped 9 points from 1986. but
remained fairly high at 65 percent in the 1990

ers for patients with AIDS, .. said lead re·
searcher Yvonne Krall Scherer, UB assistant
professor of nursing ... It 's imponantto ex plorc
and reassess their attitudes so their concerns
can be met, if we are to continue to improve the
quality of care for AIDS patients .··
The results of the four-year longirudinal study
are based on surveys of nurses in Erie Counry.
conducted in 1986andagainin 1990.Subjectsfor
both surveys were drawn randomly from the
same pool. with panicipants in the earlier group
excluded from the latersample. lnfonna.I..ion wa...,
gleaned from 579questionnaires in 1986and 576
in Im . The two groups differed significantly
only in the pen::emage of nurses who had worked
with AIDS patients. In 1986,only 28J&gt;'f'CCnthad
c;aredfor AlDS sufferer...oomparedtoSI percent
in 1990.

survey.

• The 1990respondentswereslightlyrnorc
confident of their ability to meet AIDS pa·
tiems· intense physical and psychological

needs. but the percentage still totaled only 54
percent. compared to 43 percent in 1986.

F

ew nunieS in either group felt AIDS was a

foom of punishment. and approximately Ill
percent accepted homosexuality as an alternative
lifestyle that should not be condemned. However.
the same J&gt;'f'CCntage indicated they were more
sympathetic rowan! AIDS sufferers who t'OII·
lr.ICted the disease through blood transfusion&gt;
than through a homosexual lifestyle. The nwnber
of nurses who said they would not feel comfon·
able establishing a thernpeutic relationship wi'th a
homosexual patient increased five percent.lrom
55 J&gt;'f'CCOI in 1986 to Ill pen:ent in 1990.
Scherer ,.00 the study points oot the continu·
ing need for innovative ways to help nurses deal
with the AIDS issue. In addition to formal educa·
tion programs. shesuggestedestablislfmg discu&gt;·
siongroupswherenursescanvoi&lt;;efeelingsabout
caring for AIDS patients, precep!Orprogr.tms for
those insecure abrut wori&lt;ing with AIDS suffer·
ers and role model programs featuring nw=
experienced in AIDS care.

A compariM&gt;n of the responses from the
.two groups rcveaJed an abiding fear ofbecom·
ing infected with the AIDS virus and continu ~
ing discomfort with issues of homosexuality.
Over.J..II anitudes towarct the health care of
AIDS patients varied little between the two
studies. despite nursing edUcat ion progrcllllS to
deal with these issues and four more years of
exposure to the problem.
At least half tht· nurse~ surveyed in both
groups said they were afraid of contracting
AIDS from patient.!.. and a little less Lhan half
said they would worry about passing the dis~
ease aJong to famil y and friends.
Scherer's co-authors on the study were
More lhan three--quarters of respondents in
Brenda P. Haughey. UB associate professor of
bolh survey s said agencies did not have the
nursing and associate professor of social and
right to refuse care tO AIDS patient~. and only
preventive medicine; Yow-Wu B. Wu, UB
a few said lhey resented money and nursing · assistant professor of nursing. and Colleen
resources being spent on these patients.
Murphy Miller, clinical nurse specialist in
Some speciQc questions did reveal small
neurology at The Buffalo General Hospital.
differences in attitudl!s between the two study
Results of th!: stu&lt;!y were reported in the Jour·
sample,.;
nnl oftht New York State 1Vurses Associotion.

�__

5

-~.---.·28

.,.Spring football camp opens with emphasis on 'basics'
out lit old U8
Stadium •
c:anp befllns.

T

HERXYI'BALLseasonmaystillbe
silt months off, b&lt;ncoachJim Ward's
UB Bulls are already beginning 10
pepare for the 1993- 1994 season.
Ward opened spring fOOiball camp
for the ve~erans of last year's team this pas1
Mooday. saying thai he would emphasize the
fundamentals of football in the early going.
""My philosophy on training camp comes
f rum what's called mastery teach 1ng.·· he said.

~·

" You test a young man. then you teach him

again and retest him again. Everything in this

camp will be centered on basic football. '"
He said thai although he used some of the
mastery leamingoonceplduring lasl year' scamp,
he "II do ""'"' with it this year. '"I was also ll)'ing
to get to know the players lasl year. It" sa way of
preparing our guys reganling just basic football
you must master the basics fl!Sl'"
One area of the game that will receive a
great deal of emphasis in training camp is
defense. sa1d Ward. '"The main problem with
ou r defense last year was that we were just so
young. By mid-season. I felt that maybe we
were g1ving Lhe young kids just too much. This
year. one of the phases we're going tocoocen-

sick of seeing lcids leave
here (Western New york)
10 go 10 Stanford"
As far as~
within the team isconcancd.
Rick
Ward said he wams to field
the best team he can. The age
In the
of a player will not be a lilrrus
fDniCto&lt;,wld.
test for obtaining a Slarting
role on the team '"I haw: no problem playing
freshmen. If the ywng man is a lJdl&lt;:r footbaD
player (than a veteran), he'D start."
Bulls quarterbock Qi.ff Scoo. said thai the
CXlOCeJll of team achievement is ~ in his
mind. ''The first priority is winning. I haw: my
own lofty goals. But! just want to be SlJIXZSSful as
a team. My statistics are secondary. We jml try to
win and install a winning attitude in the program."
Scott said thai he feels thai the offensive unit is
solidifoed. but is very happy thai his brother
Anthony,awidereceiverfromGrandlslandHigb
School, is coming 10 play for UB this yea-. 'Tm
glad he decided 10 come and play with me."
Ward echoed Scott's feeling about his
younger brother. '"He (Anthony) can play on
eithersideofthefootball. He is thebeolownll
athlete to come out of Buffalo over the lasl
couple of years.'"
~won.

Reporter Staff

tr.lle on a lot is pursuit angles on defense. Last
year, we overran a lot of plays where the other
team would end up making a big play.'"
The camp will last through April24. Ward
said he hopes to evaluate last year's talent and
give them a sense of what's to come this fall.
The new recruits for the team will begin practice Aug. 13, said Ward.

Regarding the recruiting done to secure this
year's new crop of players. Ward said that he
would continue to recruit on a national basis in

hopes of building a winner at UB . '"We" II do
thai as long as the budget holds out.'" he laughed.
"ln athletics, everyone works LOgether I wam
to have a melting pot of talent at UB. But we'll

definitelytakecareofhome(Buffalo)first l"m

Slovenia scholar, U.N. ambassador, speaks on rights issues
BJ DAVID -ELAIIIEDI

Reponer Staff

S

LOVENIA IS lN no way in-

volved in (the fomlf:r) Yugoslavia . We have no historical
dispute with any people in Yu go~ la via-Serbia and Bosmaand are not act1vel y mvolved m any of the
alliances.··
Dr Danlio Turk . amba!)sadur. pcm1anent
rt•pre~ntative of the Republic of Slovenia to
the l i. N.. outlined h1' country ·, IXhltiOn laM
v.ed.. dunn)! h1' Vl\11 10 UB
Turk wa\a t the un1ver-.ny a:-. a Hald yCc ntcr
V"Hmg St·holar to teach a 'hun cour-.e on
lllternal!nnal human nght :-. in lhe 199fb.. He is
the th1rd d1Mmgu•,;;hed mternallonal -.cholar to
pa.nll'lpate In lntCn!&lt;&gt;IVC lntCrd1M:1pl1nary :-.emlnu~ on human right!~ bemg sponsored by UB · ~
Baldy Center for Law and Social Pohc)
Turk. who had to cut his visit shon m order
to return to New York to attend a U.N . :-.e!.sion
on Bosn1a and Her.regovina, spoke on the
complexities of the dispute in the fonncr Yugoslavia. his interests in international law and
human right!~. and about the scmmar he was
teaching at UB
The U.N. Secunty Council considered a
draft resolution on lhe " no fl y-ronC" in October, Turk explained. adding howevc r, that there
was "no e nforcement machinery" in place to
deter possible violations. Rece nll y, there were
violations. said Turk. when Serbian plane~
hombcd Muslim vi llages in eastern Bosnia.

There must be an effective mechanism.
including the possible use of mi litary force. to
ensure that these violations do not occur. said
Turk. He also spoke of the need to gain control
over the heavy weaponry and anillery that b
presently being used in the conflict. which is
having a devastating impact on the c1vilian

population.

pointed an Ambassador for the Republic of
Slovenia to the U.N. in 1992. Aside from h"
government work. Turk has conducted research on international law and human right!~ .
His research has included such diverse topics as the use of force by states and the operdtion of non-intervemion in internal affairs of
states in international law and pmctice: the

"I'm very interested in the righi of
freedom ofexpression ../! is a sensitive
and complex area. "
.OAHtLO tURII

WO!Xtng Group on the Right to Development.
During th1s tenure. he prepared a draft on the
subject whtch was eventually adopted in the form
of a declaration by the U.N. General Assembly.
In 1984. he was elected by the U.N. Sul&gt;Commisston on Human Rights. as an attemat.e
member of the Sub-Commission on Prevenuon of Discrimination and Protecuon of Minorities. and in 19%8 became a member of the
Sub-Commission.

F

rom 1989- 1992. Turk. as a Special

Rappon~ur to th 1s Sub-Commission. submined a series of reports on the realization of
economJc. social. and culturaJ rights. anC.Iater

worked with another member of the Subto ubmit a repon on the right to

Comnu~IOn ,

freedom of opimon and expression.

As to the mleofSiovertlil in the conflict. Turl.

funcuonmg of the General Agreement on Tar-

reponed thai Slovenia is not a participant in the
peace agreement that the mediatoo;. Cyru.&lt; Vance

iff; and Trade (GAIT); and human nghts

and Lord D-avid Owen. have drawn up.
While it's true thai the ··siovenian president
n'X!I with Lord Owen, their meeting was just to
exchange ideas."" said Turk. who added thai "'we

(S iovenia)arefollowingtheeventsoftheSccuriry
Council very cl~ly . and we express our views
on mauers. but our JX111-icipation is no greater than
other countries such as Italy (and) Austria··
Turk. a professor of international law at the
Universi ty of Ljubljana. Slovenia. was ap-

Mrs.

:zewe,, left, 8ftd DwWI
ZeiCier talk with M.A.A.P;c:oonllnator

Student guitar quartet pnMdes entartalnment In tiOCial hall ot Student

Venlla JenklM lit reception.

Union.

UB Says Hello
With exhibits, demonstrations and entertainment. UB welcomed.accepted
freshman and transfer students at an Open House on March 27. Faculty &amp;
staff provided information on academic programs and student services.

issues, including the M&gt;Cial and cultur.t.l rights
of minority group~ .
Before coming to New Vorl. Turk was the
vit-echainnanoftheCouncil for Human Rights

and Fundarnerual Freedoms. which is an independent human ri ghts group in Slovenia. lnternationally. he's been involved with
organizations such as Amnesty lnternationaJ
and the International Commission of Jurists.
Turl&lt; has been active in the U.N. since 1981

when he wa' elected the vice chairman of the

.. ,. m very interested in the right of freedom of
expresston."" Turl&lt; said. adding thai writers,journalists,and the media in general''run iniOtrouble'"
with governrrentsoverthis right.. ..It is a sensiti~
and romplex area·· which was "'dealt with in the
1940s and ·50s without much success" by the
U.N.. Turk explained. The reduction in EastWest tensions makes this issue somewhat easier
to deal with today. he commented.
D.Jring his stay at UB, Turk pr=nled a mil&lt; of
topics on human rights 10 SIUd&lt;rns and faculty
attending his seminar. He discussed human rigm
and intematiortal politics. the limits of human
rights in relation 10 civil and political rights, and
the successes and failuresofinlanational organ;.
zations with respect to human rights.

�6

SQMiiR

V.Fnre?
10 Minutes from UB!
Elevators!
Quiet Park-Uke Setting!
Care-free Life Style!
Activities Director &amp; Program!
I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

l

120 Meyer Road Amherst

I. Chang. M.D .. and Kenneth
Garbarino. M.D Radisson Hocel
and Suites. 4243 Genesee St .
Cheektowaga. 8; 15 a.m.-4 .30
p.m. Admission: S80, professionals; $75. facully. and $65 for each
member of a group of four or
rY'IC:n from the same organi1..aL100

---

-.-cALSCIDCU

Regulation and ActlvaUoo of

the c.Src Proto-Oncoprotdn
Durlnj; MIIOois, Dr. Dav;d
Shalloway. Molecular. Cell and
Cancer Biology Labs. Dept. of
Pathology, Cornell Univ. 121
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

-

ftd(t• Fumisbed CorporateSuiles
Also Atwilahk

PILUMACEVTICS IIUEAIICII

Gender Elf«&lt;S on M&lt;lhylpr&lt;d·
nisoiOM PharmacoldoetJc::s and
Pbarmacodynamlcs, Kim H
Lew, Phann.D .. posldoctoral fel low. UB Dept. ofP'hannacxutics.
SOH Cooke. North Campus 4-5

THURSOA.Y

1

p.m.
N£W POETIIY fU11YAI.

Reading. Bill Tuttle. Juliana

Spatu-. Lew Daly . EHZ&gt;beth
Willi s and Ben Fnedlander.
Hall walls Contemporary Att5
Center. 700 Main St. 8· 10 p.m
For r1l(n information cont.act
Peter Giu.1and Juliana Spahr.
Poeti ~ Program . 302 Clemens
Hall

Reading. Rod Smith, Lee Ann
Brown. Robcno TeJada and J e~­

Campus II a.m - 12 15 p.m for
more mformauon comoct Peter
G1uJ and Juliana Spahr. Poeuc"
Progr..am , .301 Clemens Hall

NEW P'OETIIY fU11YAL
Panel on PosltJon aod "Subjectlvlly. Je_•...t~•ca Gnm. C S

F R I 0 A. Y

~

C urrtot lssllf:S In Gtriallic Psy·
cltiatry, Barry S Fogel . M D .

108 Sherman. South Campus. 2

NEW POETIIY I'UliVAI.
hnd on Reading ·and
Refiguring, Forrest Gander. Jena

.()sman, Martine Bc:llen. Robc:no
Tejada. Melanie Neilson. and
Nick Lawrence:. modenuor 420
Capen. Nonh Campus. 3:30-5
p.m. For more informatioo cont.act Peter Gizzi and Juliana
Spatu-. Poetics Program. 302
Oemens Hall.
PKYUCSIUIDCCIUAIQI.IIII
Hyperrompoct Aotrophyoh:al
Objects, Prof. l'llzamcla. Dep&lt;

z.

of PhysicaJ Sciences. Eastern
Connc:cticut State Univ 454
Fronczak. Nonh Campus. 3·45

p.m.

Ph.D .. Gregory G Gcnnino.
M.D.. Mary Taub. I'll. D.. and
Jan:d J. Gran&lt;ham, M.D
Lippschul2 Room, CFS Addit100
South Campus. 9 a.m.-4.30 p.m

POf:lln' fU11YAI.
RE8dlng. C. S. Giscombe.
Cydney Chadwtck. Thad
Ziolkowski and Susan Gevut7
420 Capen. North Campus. II
a.m.- 12·15 p.m fof more .nformation contact Peter Gtzn and
Juliana Spahr, Puct1cs Program,
302 Clemens Hal l

pnuoolecular Cootrols for
Enamel Crystal Growth. Harold

--

more mfonnalion contact Peter
Giua and Juliana Spahr. Pocun
ProgrJm. 302 Cle~ns Hall

p.m.

~AL-.ooY

T h• Renal Tubuks and
lnte:rst.ltJum lo Health and Dis·
use. Paul Killen. M.D .• AJiison
Eddy. M.D.. Bernice Noble.

Journal Club. 252A Fartx:r
South Campus 12.3(}.1 :3C p.m

CONFUIEJICE

trb: In thr Denlopme.nt o(
Taste Papillae, Joyce Ma ni sWiman, Ph.D .. Um\' of Aorida.

-

MADUA'ft~8(

SOCIAL AND l'tKVEN1ME

GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY

-

Gcriauic P.sychiauy. For reg~strn ­
tion information contact Patnc1a
Krupp a1 829-3 176.

lecturer. Umv of Southern Cali fornia 215 Foster South Campo., Noon

North Campt.Jl&gt; I · 30-3 p.m For

ANATOMICAL SCIIENCU

ences. the: Western New York
Geriuric Education Center, and
the American Association for

C ShlVkm. D D.S , distinguished

G•scombc. Susan Gevl{,tl.. Marl.
Wallace . Thad Ziolkowski .
Myung M1 K1m, and Steve
Evans. moderator 420 Capen

Tho Rol&lt; ol Extnttllular Ma-

Sponsored by !he School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sci -

OIIAL U I L O I I Y Antis&lt;""' Inhibition ol AMEL
Translation Demonstrates Su-

fiEW POE11IY FESnYAL

s•ca Gnm 420 Capen. North

........

-

IIESEAIICMINSTmiiE ON

David G. Folks, M .D . Gary L

Gol'tlieb. M.D . Frun E. K:usc:r.
M.D.. Samh G Burger. MPH .
Manon Z. Goldstein. M.D.• June

NOTICE

.......

~SDIIMOAR

T he Natun.l History of the
C rack Epidemic lo New York
City. Jeffrey Fagan. PII.D .

Rutgen Univ.. cwark. NJ
1021 MainSt.. Buffalo. I:JOp.m.
Co-sponsored by the RehabilitatiOn Comi nuing Education Progr.un/Rcgion II. UB.
NEW POETIIY fU11YAL
p.--_

. ......s::pl.,

Elhlcs or Smalli'rn5 PublishIng, Gale Nelson. Cydney
Chadwick. Lee Ann Brown,
Connell McGrath. R. Smith. and

Roswell Patl&lt;'s Health
Express and the American Red Cross will

Capen. North Campus. I :30-3
p.m. For rt'Kn information contact Peter Gizzi and Juliana
Spatu-, Poetics Program. 302
Oemens HaJl.

.._
lloodDIM

provide marrmography
scteening and a blood
drive. Monday' Apo-il 5
from 9 a.m . to 1 p .m . in

the Center for Tomorrr:JN, North CampUs.

The event Is sponsored
by the Employee Assistance Prog181"(1 (EAP)
and campus unions.

proacb In Canca- "T'benpy,
Shaheen S. Khan, graduate tu
dent. UB Dept. of Mcdicina1
Chemistry 114 H och.~teuer
Nonh Campus. 3 p.m
PlfYSIDLDQY - A l l

Fluid S&lt;cr&lt;tioo and Cdlular
Prollrentloo In lh&lt; Palhog&lt;nosis ol Renal Cysts, Jan:d J
Grantham. M.D.. professor of
medicine . director, Nephrol og~
O.v1Ston, Univ of~
Uppschutz Room. CFS Addnmn
South Campus 3 p.m. Co.spon
sorc:d by the Gradwuc Group m
EApcrimcntal Nephrology

-.riiiSCIENCI!L£CTUM
Toward Unch&lt;atabl&lt; ll&lt;ncb-

marks. Jin· Yi Cai , Princeton
Univ 110 Baldy Non.h Carnpu'
3:30p.m.
. . . ,...,.-y ...-nYAL
R~onoaAherna ­

tJvt Modes and Media. Liz
Mick.al And, John Byrum:

W a.~

Michael Basinski. moderator I !0
Oemens. Media Lab. Nonh
Campus. 3:30-S p.m. For mor&lt;
mfonnation contact Peter G1u1
and Juliana Spahr, Poetics Pm
gram, 302 Oemens Hal l.

COlUICII••

~
Systm~~ R: Groupo of
Orpnk Mol&lt;cul&lt;s that Func:llon Coll«tlvdy, Prof. Fredm
M Menger, Emocy Urtiv 70
Acheson. South Campus. 4 p m

-HAll

OIIAL UILOIIY
A Gtne.Uc Blueprint for

Cranloladal MClrllhogo.-_
Harold C. Slavlrin. D.D.S.. d1s11n
guishcd lecturer. Urtiv of South
ern California. Goodyear 10
South Campus. 4 p.m.

- C T WIN L£CTUa
Advan=nmt ror Afri-

ear-

can-American Womtn. Mat)

Hwwood Futrell. associate professor. School of Education and
Human Oevelopnlent. George
Washington Uni v Slee Hall
North Campus. 8 p.m. Fe&lt; Sl l
For registration information call
645-2018. Co-sponsorod by
Niagara Mohawk Power Corp
-

POf:lln' PU11VAI.

R&lt;OCIInc.l'lm R&lt;hm. Mark

McMorris, Martine Sellen. Peter
Gizzi and Julie Kalendec.k.
Hall walls Contemporvy Artll

Center, 700 Main St 8·10 p.m
For more: information contaCt
Peter Gizzi and Juliana Spahr.
Poetics Program. 302 Oemen!&gt;
Hall.

Jeff Hansen, modcruor. 420

•-nca COlUICII•*
A Schur Doobl&lt; C...lnlllur

n.--.m ror Cocrian&amp;uJar
Hop[ AJ&amp;d&gt;ras and c-rallud
u. Alg&lt;bru, Prof. Davida .
Fischman. Urtiv. of Southern
California. 103 DiefCndorf. South

-

Campus. 3 p.m.

-...._,.,.
A naMUbJ bln~: A New Ap-

SATURDAY

~-..:T--ear-

Ad- ' ror Afrt&lt;an-Am&lt;ri&lt;an w-. Mary

�_ ..... _..,_2:1

_"" .

-II'OaiiY

-.

Spirit .... Proctlco,
EJiubeth Willis.
Julie Kalendeck.. Will
Alcunder. Ben
FricdJ.ander, fJizabeth Rollinson, Lew
Daly, and Steve

Evaru. moderator
420 Capen. North
Campus_3:30-S p.m_
For more information
contact Peter Gizzi
and Juliana Spalu',
Poetics Progr&gt;m. 302 Clemens
HalL
-II'OaiiY-AL
Radina. GoJe Ndlon, Elizabeth
Rolli noon. For=! Gander.

Myung Mi Kim and Jeff Derksen
Hallwalls &lt;:orwnporary Aru
Cen~er,

lhttwood Futrtll. associate pro·
les.501. School of Education and
Human Dt.vclopmc.nl George
Washmgtoo Univ 201 SuJdent
Umon North Ounpu~. 8.45 a.m
Adm1~1on S55 For reg1~tra1ion
mformatlon call 645-20 18 Co-

by Niagara Mohawk
Puwcr Corp

~ ponsored

-·

CrrY Of" NON WORKOUT

Atrobio: Against AlDS.I\NO 45mlnutc worlcout Jie!SIOOS tn wh1ch
money 1s ra1sed by pamopams
m llet."ttng pledges for AIDS rc!&gt;Ca!ch Alumni Arena. North

Campus II a.m Rtg1stntt1on
w11l be from \0- 11 a.m
NEW I'OE'niY I'UTIVAL
ReadJng. Mark Wallace. Connell
Mt-Gr.sth . Stacy Dom and Chn'

700 Main SL 8- 10 p.m

For mcxe infomwion corc.aa
PeiJ:r Gizzi and Juliana Spaltr.
Poetics Prognun. 302 Ocmens
Hall.

Stmffohno. 420 Capen. North
Campus. II a.m.- 12: 15p.m. For
~ information contact Peter
Gb..z1 and Juliana Spahr, Poetics

Program. 302 Oemcns Hall.
NEW I'OE'niY I'UtiVAL
PAM&amp;.

Word and Workl. Olris
Stroffolino. Cole Swemcn. Mark

McMorris. Jeff Derksen. Stacy
Doris. A~w l.cvy. and Nick
Lawreoce.I"''MXkr.uor 420 Capen.
Nonh Campus. 1.30-3 p.m. For
more mformat•oo contact Peter
G1u1 and Ju liana Spahr, Poetics
Progrom. 302 Clemens Hall

After months of legal wrangling Western
New Yor1&lt;:'s greatest Single hteraty treasure
11es secure- and complele-•n the vault of
lhe BuHalo and Eroe Counry Pubhc Library It
IS the or1g1nal manuscnpt of Mark Twam's
masterp1ece. The Adventures of Huckleberry
Fmn W11l1am Loos. curator of the library's
Rare Book Co11ecllon . Will address a colloqUium of UB lovers
of such hbrary lore. on Thursday . Apnl 15 at 7 p m 1n 108
Baldy Loos Will drscuss the manuscnpts that were recently
reunlled with the manuscnpts
ollhe library's Rare Book
Collec11on Sponsor 1s UB s
SchOOl of lnlormatton and
Library Stud1es
How d1d thts literary treasure come to rest •n Buffalo' tn
November . 1885. Twa1n sent
48 7 leaves olthe handwnnen
manuscnpt to James Fraser
Gluck. a young Buffalo a nor ney and a curator ol Buffalo 's
Young Men's Assocrat•on
Library An addtltonal 209
leaves amved some lime lat!!'r
The hbrary held approxunately
TWAIN
60 percent of the holograph
{the manuscnpt en the author 's
own hand) unt1lthe mrssrng portoo was located tn 1991 tn the
an•c ol Gluck 's granddaughter tn Holtywood . Ca
For more 1nlormatton. call the School of lntormatron and
Library Stud1es ar 645-2412

*

._NID-tlll

Issues ol Subslanct and Style
for Women Managers. Shirley
Kucera Reiser. presemcr
Daemen College. Main SL.
Amherst. 9 a.m.4 :30 p.m For
more information call645~6140
PHYSIOLOGY

Composition or Bubbles and
Risk or Doc:ompr'OS!ilon Sickness, Dr. Richard U llo. Naval
Medical R.eseal'Ch Institute,
Bethesda, Md I 08 Sherman
South Campus 4 p.m.

..........

QEJIIATRIC EDUCA,_

Humor In HraJtb Care. Tcna M
Garus. humor consultant and
heaJth care special1st. Heritage
Cemer. Bu ffaJo Conference Center. Beck HaJI South Campus. 5
p m For ~gistr.llton tnfonnauon
conlact Palrioa Krupp ru 829·
3176
OPUS: CLAUICS IIECITAL

Patrick Mason. baritoM. and
Pbyllls East., plano. works by
Schubert Alh:n li all South Cam·
pus 7 pm

THURSDAY

--AL
Robert Aa:unoo, perrulllon_
Sk:e Cona:n Hall. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m

TUESDAY

..

_,_AND~

. _ CCIUOQIIIIIM
Collodin&amp; and Ac:assiD&amp;
Women's Materials: A European Vttw, Gusta Drenthc.
Erasmus Univ .. lllc: Netherlands
214 Norton Nonh Campus 3.J0.4:30p.m.
~

COLL.CIQCIIIN

~ Q.alum

Ch&lt;mlc:aJ M odds for F.,. Energies In Aqueous SoluUooTheory and Applla tlon. Prof
Chmtophcr Cramer. Umv of
Mmncsuca 70 Acheson South
Campus 4 p m
EYOW'I10NAR'Y aiOLOQY AJIID
ECOLOGY SYMI'OSIUM

GM1dua1&lt; R...an:b Symposium. pan icipation open to all
UB graduate: students 414
Fronczak. North Campus 5 p m
For pre~gmra1.1on concact Dr
Howard Lasker. Dept or BIOiogJ·
cal Sc1tncts. 635 Hochstt:ncr
Hall. Nonh Campus
WU ountAQE FILM
I'UTIVAL
In a Glass Cagt&gt; Waldman Thc :ucr. 112 Norton North Campu_\
7 and 9 45 p m Admiss1on.

Baird Recital Hall. 250 Ba1rd
IIIHYSICS AND U11IONOMY

R~

Quan-

s-1CI City National Touring Company
to perform April15
The Second City Nallonal Tounng Company.
travehng arm of the famous comedy ensemble that launched so many careers . w111
appear Thursday , Apnl 15 at 8 p m 1n the
Kalhanne Cornell Thearer . El!lcon Cor(lplex.
ausp1ces ol UUAB
Founded 1n Ch1cago 1n 1959. Second C11y
lunhered the careers ol such performers as Alan Aida, John
Betush1, John Candy. Roberl Kle1n . Bill Murray and Gilda
Radner . It has s1nce added a second home company 1n
Toronto. along With two tounng compan1es tn the US and
another tn Canada
USing lew props and costumes, the ensemble lampoons
pohllcal, SOCial and cuttural1ssues olrhe days The troupe ol
e1ght actors often d evtses ImprOVIsational sequences. a speCtalty s1nce all matenal1s devek&gt;ped d unng tmprovtsauonal
sets 1n Chicago and T()(onto lollowu1Q rhe regular showS
Tickers at $4 , tJB studer)ls and $6, non-students. are
ava1lable at the UB Ticker Office For more 1nlormat10r'1 call
Laura Z18Qier at 645-2957

pm

FR I DAY

9

ClltAL -.cMIY Oonakl Demu th. Univ of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia. 215 Foster South Cam~ Noon

Wednesday, April 14, 1993
10 am until 4 pm
UBMicro Sales Center,
VB Commons, North Campus

On display during Fair hours
• New ValuePoints
• ThinkPads

DSM 111-R: An Imroductlon to
th&lt; Th&lt;ory and l'n&lt;tk:r of
CUnlcal DIII&amp;IJOI!Is In Mental
Ha.lth. Dr. Arthur Cryns. Ccn1er
for Tomorrow. North Campus.
8:45 a.m.-3 p.m. For m&lt;m: tnfor·
mation cal i 64S-6140

North Campus 8 p.m

Electron Gases: From

cosponsored by UBMicro Sales Center
and IBM Corporation

10 am • 12 n oon • 2 pm
IBM PC Trends and Directions
Presentation (- 45 minutes)

DEGREEII£CITAL
"--tlchael Pandolfo. saxophone.

nan! TunnoiiD&amp; to tho

Co 111 put e r I-a i r

SOCIAL---

S2 50. UB students and HaliVo'alh
members, S5 . geneml Co-sponson:d by Le.~bian , Gay and BIsexual Alhance and Hallwalh
Contemporary Aru Center

~·
8"-Lart-r Two Dimensional

I B\1

Quuttti .. Slnl&lt;tun Adlvlty
Rdationobfp (QSAR) Prodk·
!loa of~ty and
T""'toti&lt;Didty, Kun Enslcin.
pn:sidtnt. Health OWgns Inc
3:30p.m

IDUCA,__

tum Hali ·Eif«t, Dr J P
Eisenstein, AT&amp;T Bell Labs. .JS-4
Fronczak. Nonh Campus 3.45

*

1~
TD--

1l
7
:r.:..~

SiLS colloquium to focus on reunited
Huck FJnn -scripts

MONDAY

WEDNESDAY

IIIS1miiE--

7

WEDNESDAY

14

I'MMMACYls Triplt lberapy Etfedin ln
RecurT'fol Peptic Ulttr Dlseue,
Joseph Sascen. Pharm..D. candidate 248 Cooke. North Campus.
S-8:55a.m.

Ullo.----

--.!
Oo tho Mediaolsm of the
Cbmllc:aJ Vapor Dopooltloo or
Galllum Nitride, Robcn W.
Carr. Jr .. Urriv. or Minnc:sota. 206
f!umas_Nonh Campus_ 3:45 p.m.
l'opllck Coollnnatloo and Pro-

Continued on page 8

Convenience
Quality
Service
-·
Variety

�_..... _..,_

8

....

1HISWEEK

Books

Continued ~rein page 1
ldn Fnldlna. Dr R.
~y . Dept. of Blophy&gt;•cs. Roswell Park Cancer Jnst• ·
lute I 06 Cary South Campus. 4
Tho Smpe or Dlakdlcal P&lt;rcoptlon and liS lmpllatlom.

Baldy Nonh Campus 4 p.m

~l'tiY.-ociY
Elimination Duri~

C0 1 Breathing: DKompression
Sk:knels Ret~vana . Clac.'
l.undgrcn. M D I08 Shennan
Soulh Campu"' 4 p m

Prugrnm

OPUS: CI.AUICS BcnAl
Timothy Long. plano. Allen
Ha.ll Suuth Campus 7 p m
WAll BEAT GENIJtATION FtLM
FU11VAl

The Bnl GcncralJoo I 1987),
Janet f"'nnan . duWOJ Woldman
llleater. 112 Norton Nonh Cam pus 7 30 p m AdmlsMon. S2 .SO.

UB studenc.... SJ SO. oon-studcnts
-CWQOISCONCDT
Awadagln Pratt. plano Slc:c
Coocen llaJI Nonh Campus M
p m Adm•ss•on S I 2. SQ
WM OU'1'IIA.: FILM

•FEanY.U.
In • Glass CaJ.,'t' Wnldman llK-mcr. 111: Nonon Nonh Campu~
11 4~ p rn Adml'iSIIJII. \2 50. UB
'ludcnh allll l-l a!Jwall~ member!&lt;&gt;.
\'i . gt·ncml Cn-,pon,ur\':d h)
t .c ..h!an , l.:t) and B•-.c.\uo.~J Alh
.m~..c and Ha\lwalh Contempt•
r.1n An' C£'ntcr

--

Con..'Of'8fl at 881 - 1640or 645-

2438

LECT\ME

Con&amp;onilal Ad_ronal

Hyperplasia: From tho Laboratory to tM Bedskle., Maria I
New. M.D.. professor and chair.
Dept. of Pediatrics. Cornell Univ

Medical College:. Butler Auditonum. Farber Hall South Campus
4 p.m

-

..........camc:IIEKAIICM

l'barmacokl.ooda or
Bisphosphonates. Sayed M H
AI-Habct. Ph D . Product Den:l opmcnt. Norw1ch Eaton Pharma·
ccuuc-.tll!, Inc 508 C'ool.c Nonh
Campus 4-:ci p m
UFEWORIISHDP

Skydiving: Sport or thf' '9&amp;.
Henry St.c7.cspan,.kl. leader
Nonh Campu.!&lt; 5-8 p.m For reg

i&lt;otrarinn infnnmnion rail M'i012.5

THURSDAY

ta

AJICHITEC11JRE AND

PI.AHNtNO VJSmNO UOCTURE
SERES
Market Rules 11nd Spatial In·
rquaUI)': Thr C~ of thr
United States. Su'\Offi

Chn\IOphcr\tln,

plan
n~:r and a.\.\OCiatc pmfc!r.!«or. Dept
uf lit) and Rcg.mna1 P1anmng.
OCOOOOlh.

Cumcll Unn JUI Cl\)\b)· South

Campu... 5 30p.m

WEDNESDAYS AT 4 PLUS

UTERARY KRIU
Art In PU6t- Communist L:oun·

lrit'S,Duhrvka Djunc . Yugo~ la
~ taJl poet and .;ntu: -lJM
Clemen' Nnnh Campu' 12 30

INFORMATION AND UBRARY

STUDIO cou.DQUIUM

Tht Huckleberry Ann ManuscripiS. William Loos. Buffalo
Erie County Pubhc Libml) 1OH
Raldy Nonh Campu!&gt;. 7 p.m

p m Spunwrcd by the LIB ~lCt
IC~ PmgrJnl

UUU KAT OEHEJtATION FILM

CEHTEII FOil STUDY CW
PSYCHOANALYatS AND

Kerouac 11985), Jack Coultet·.
d1rcctor Woldman 1llcatcr. 112

ctiLTUB UOCTURE
ManuaJ Punishment: Robert
Coo"·er•s Spanking th~ Maid.
Eh1..abcth Wnght. Fellow m German. Gtnun College. Cambndgc
608 Clemens Nonh Campus 2
p m Co-sponsored by the Gradu
· ate Group for Feminist StudtC:.!&lt;

FESliV~

Nonon Nonh' Campus 7 p.m
Admission. $2.50. UB "tudcnb .
.\J 50. non-student~
CO.OY

Second O ty National Touring
Company. Kathati~ Cornell
Theater. Ellicott CompkA Nonh

..-

.....-xr......cnvu cw

lllmiDtSIJY
Phocogn~phic

pc:npcctives of UB.
skillfully presented through the
eyr and camera of UB Publications photographcn Robert
WaJion &amp;nd Simon Tong. llt'e on
exhibit through April 30 in Cupen
Hall on the Nonh Campus.
Wahon. who has been a UB staff
member

for four yean. 1s a

graduate of the Rochester lnst•·
tute of Technology Tong. an
Clght·)Car vetcr.m of the PublicatiOn' Offi~.-'t'. IS an tt'OOOffiiC!.
nta)OT at UR 1'he Capen GaJiel')
'' fn:c and upcn to the pubht'
fmmK lOam tn'iipm wed. ·
da)'
COMPUTER ART SHOW
'11lc: Nev. Wntmg CD at Us:· a
\hov. ol woO. by computer dc \lgncr. who cmplo) 'ol.ord._,, tm

pnnt. ammat10n.
hypcnnc:c.ha and typogrnphy ,
&lt;.'Onllnue.' through Apnl 20 10
Bet hune Gallery . 2917 Main
..1~c..,,

Street

GIIIOO~

tNVTTUCOHniiDICE
~AitTICI~AICTS

The graduate' Group tn E..·oluuonary Biology and Ecology announces a Graduate Rescan:h
Sympostum 10 the areru:. of evolu tionary biology and ocology .

Campus 8 p.m. Tickets a1 S4. UB

Aprill3at5p.m tn414

COMPIIIEit SciENCE

..rudents, S6. non-students. avaJI-

cou.DCliM*

ablc at the UB Ticket Office. For
Information call Laura Ziegler at
f&gt;'5-2957 Spon.o;on:&lt;J by UUAB

Fronczak. Nonh Campus PantCl ·
patton ts open to all UB graduate

A Nr:ural Network Arc:hlttclurt'
for Con ltxt·Dtptndr:nt.
MulUattribult De&lt;:lslon Mak 1~. l&gt;.uucl S Lc\' lrle , Dept of
Mmhcmallc.,, Unn uf TeAU.\ m
Arhngton 14 KnoA Nnnh Cam
pu' :\ J0- -1 · 4~ p m For more
mfonnaunn &lt;.·muact Dr Rapapon
at6-15.,'\ll,J.l

~AL

UUAa IIEAT QENiltATION F'IUil

FESliVAl
Burroughs (1984). Howanl

Bookncr. director Wold man
lllcatcr. 112 Nonon. North Cum ·
pu~ Q p.m. Admi,ston . $2 50.
UB \tudcnb, SJ .50 ..nun-studcnb

SCIE:.CU

SEMIIUUt
Connlcl and Coope:raUon In
Colonial lnvrrtrbrates: l.ht
Enluatlon ot Sr:lf.........Non-~ l f
HecognJUon. Or R1chatd
Grosberg. Dept of 7,.oology.
Umv ofCalifom1a at Davt~ 121
Cooke Nonh Cnmpu~ 4 p.m
Co-sponsored by the Grdduatc
Group in EvolutiOnary Biology
and Ecology.

MWFALD LDWC CCIU.DCICM*
Kurt G6dtl and thr: Natun of

MathematJcs. Francisco
Rodriquez-Consuegra. Logic.

Univ. of Barcelona. and PhiiO!&gt;Ophy, Harvanl Univ. 684 Baldy.
North Campus. 4 p.m. For more:
information conliCt John

EXHIBITS
FACULTY .ooll EXHIIIIT
1llc:. annual "Social Sciences and
Humanili~ Focuhy Book EA hibi!' ' ts oo display m Lockwood
Library now through late April
This year' s display highlights 63
books wrinen or edited b) UB
faculty from Architecture. Aru
and Lctten. Education. Manage ment, Social Sciences and the
University Libraries. and pub.
lished between late 1991 and

early 1993. Original poetry and
creative respon...es 1o "home" are

students
A S2SO Best P.o.~per Travel Gram
will be awarded to the o:;;tudcnt
makmg the best
pre~ntatiOn .Opttonaltutoriab

on
rcscart'h presenl::mon tcchniquo.
are available pnor to the ll)'mpo''um Student' wtshing to pantctp;:atc tn the 'YmJ)O:'&gt;ium and/or m
tutonab should contact Dr
Howar.d Lasker. Dept of Btologt ·
..:a! Sctences. 635 Hoch.,tcllcr,
Nonh Campus
RETIREIWfT SYSTEM
IIU'IIUEICTAnVE.AVIULAIIU
FOR CONSULTATION

M Janet Graham. Emplo)tt..' ·
Rcuremcnt System rcpre.c;ema
11\'e, WtiJ be BVaJJable ror Hldl
\ 'I dual consu ha\Jon~ on Fnday.
Apnl B . m the Human Rc ·
\OUn:es 'Dcvclopmcm Cemcr
from 9 a m to 4 p.m Tn ~hcdulc
Wl appOintment. plcas.r: call Rose
Kret or Shamn Beall) a1 645·

26411

POUIDANC-

----

Spon50C'Cd by the Graduate Slu·

dent Association.

O urmt listings of jobs in business and industty. government,
health, education and non-profit
organiJ..aJ.ions. an: available in the
Office of Career Planning and
Placement. 15 Capen Hall, North
Campus. Call645-2231 for more
Information.

JOBS
FACULTY
Assistant Pro(tsfiM-Oral BIOI ·
ogy. Posling I;F-3025 . 3026 As·

slstantJAssodatt ProressorOphthalmology. P~ung.

#F-3027
IIUEAIICH

Postdoctoral A.ssodatt...Chcml\ ·
try. Posung I;R -93023 Cat'ftt
Plannin2 and Pht~nvn t Coordinator- Educational Opponun11y
Center. Postmg MR -93012 Rt-search Assistant/Research Associate-Biophysics , Posting #R 93025 Restarch Tt&lt;:bnkia n 111
IU-Ptu:umocology and Therapcullcs. Pos11ng lfR-93026 Cltrk IJ
(pa rt-lime)-Computer s~ence.
Posung lfR -93030 Secretuy !Chemistry-Posting lfR -9303 I
fl'ltDRU-.u.
Director ol Studr:nt Accounts

NOTICES
GRADUATE IIUEAIICH

International Folk Dancing les·
sons ~ held Friday evenings ru 8
p.m. on the ground floor of
Diefendorf Hall , South Campus.
Request dancing follows from 911 p.m. Everyone is welcome: no
partner needed. Free admission.

...-a

1

-TEO.-

-----

4

ThiS t:xJd&lt; deals Wllh v.MIIS

ilo~. S2S)

lhat transformed agocultural
socieiJes into massive industrialized and urbanized corm-u-

nE CODE OF CODES

lhedelleiopmentaswellasthe
politlCal and ecologtcal consequences lhat laced SOCIE!IIeS
throughout lhe changing
trres

BY DANIEL J KEVLES AND
LEROY HOOD
(Hatvard~Ptess.

sr• 95)

A collecllon of t 3 CriiiCal es-

says by leacfong btoiogiSis.
c:orrputer saentiSIS, and soc&gt;a1
saentiSts corrrnentmg Ctllhe

NEW AND NOTEWORTHY

Heman Genome Pra,ect as
well as lhe ethiCBI ..-plicallOns

nEWMMAINST

o( the study of tM..man genet-

WOMEN

ICS Included are essays by
James D Watson ood Evelyn
Fox Keller. leaders 1n lhe fields
of genetiCS and SOCial saence
respectively

BY MARll YN FRENCH
(BaRanrr.eBooks. $12)

Marilyn French. bacl&lt;e&lt;l Wllh
stabSt1cs and facts, see1&lt;s to
pr011e thallhe suppressiOn of

women 1n our sooety 15 part ol

•v

COMPILED
DAWN 1U.E1N
General E3ook Deparrment
Manager Unl\l'9fSity BookstOfe

our cunure Ms French's anal·

ys1s ottoday's male-domnated

2222PubliC Safety sWeekly Reporl
The

followln&amp;--

of----.
.
of

to- o.p.tment
-5-11:

potted

Public: s.fety - -

• Public Safety rece1ved a repor1 March 5 that someone
threw a water balloon from a wtndo.N 1n Porter Quadrangle
onto a car parked tn Gane Terrace. shanenng the car's Windshield Damages were estimated at $450

•

A woman reported March 5 that a man harassed her lol-

lowmg

an

argumenl lhey had over

a parking space tn the

Hochstener B par1&lt;1ng lot
• A grounds crew reported March 5 lhal somethtng was
hangtng from

Halls Accord1ng to PubliC Salely. 1t was a rug
• Public Safety charged a man w1th publiC lewdness and
cnm1nal trespass March 5 aher he was allegedly caught

demlc Coordinator (SL-4. Jnttrnal Promotion OpportunJty )-Cemer for Academic

Dc\'c lopmcnt Serv1ce~. Postmg
liP-3017. Resid e~ HaU DirK·
tor (SL--2. Internal Promotion
Opportunlty)-Residi:ntial Life .
Posting #P-30 18 M nlor AppH-

callons Analyst I (SL4, Internal Promotion Opportunity )Computing and Information

a tree 1n the W'CK&gt;ds near Governors

masturbattng tn a study carret 1n

R~dence

Lockwood Ltbrary.

• A portable CD player. valued at $t20. and jeWelry, valued
al $2t5. were reported miSSing March 81rom R1chrrond
Quadrangle.
• Publ1c Safely charged three men wuh trespass March 9
aher they were stopped 1n the Alumn1 Arena tnple gym and
allegedly relused to show off1cers any ldentohcat&gt;On
• Public Safety charged a man With theh ol serv&gt;ces and
cnm&gt;nal1mpersonat10n March 9 aher he allegedly tned to
charge f(X)d to an FSA accoun1 ustng a false name
• A camera. valued al $75 . and $40 1n cash were reported
mtsstng March 9 from a rCX)fTl tn Dewey Hall
• Dental equtpment . valued at $3CX) was reported m1ss1ng
March 11 from SQUire Hall

Technology , Posung MP-3019
Area Directorfl'hmlt: HaU Coordinator (SL-3)-Resldcnual
L1fe. Posung liP-3010 A.~lanl
Fadlllle-~ Program Coordinator
(SL--3)-0c..,Jgn and Construct ton.

PosttnB liP-3009

COMP£TITME CLAUif1ED
CMLSEIIVIC:a

Supervising Janitor tSG-11 &gt;
Cu~trxhal Scrvicu. Lmc "315.16
S«retary I (SG- 11 )-English.

Lmc #20850. 208!i I
~

c:uautiD CIVL SEJMCa
Janitor·(SG-07)-Residc:ntial
Custodial. Line U3017

1

soc&gt;ety IS controverSial as well
as conw-octng

nities. f'ro(essor Buchanan bcuses cnthe unevemess of

tSL-S)-Studcnt Accounts, POil ·

Center. Posti ng •P-3016 Aca·

1

possibly the rrost 1~1
Single factor In \o\Oid history,
lhe technological rE&gt;IIOiutlon

ing MP-3013 . Tt&lt;:hnJcaJ Direc·

tor/ProductJon Manager CSL-4,
lnt.rrnal Promotion Opportunft'y~Fine Ans Center. Postmg
~P-30 14 Business Managu
(SL-4, lnl&lt;rnal Promollon Opportunlly)-Fine Ans Center.
Posung •P-301 S Marked~
Diroctor (SL-4, lntomal Promotjon Opportunlly)-Fine A.rts

II

~)Hall

{Vb!g. S3J)

displayed with "encounten"' with
Zuni Indians. A study of gender
differences in paid work ICCOmpanies guides to electronic support systems for operattons management. Critical perspectives on
early childhood as well as higher
education shan: space with saudies of justice. law and violence.
The exhibit is located in the foyer
of the second floor of Lockwood
and can be viewed during all
times the libraty is open.

1

2

BY A A. BUCHANAN

The Second Cily Nalional Tounng Company brings Its comediC lOOk at pol1~cal , soc1al
and cultural issues 10 Kalharine Cornell Theater, Thursday, April 15. alB p m

~~ '"'

=~

9JOOty

SeCIIII City Cllledy

......

SS)

nE POWER OFnE
MACaNE

WKDHESDAYS AT 4 ....US

IC\

1 .......

An autoboographical acccun1
of Carter's struggle white se9&lt;111Q publiC office in lhe ear1y
'60s Turro-Jg Poult IS a IIMd
portrait o( heM! 00 Amenca Ctl
lhe verge of politiCal and SOCI8I
Change shaped one man·s 111oon of tlCM!Ihe forces of good
can pn to nght lhe wrongs of

Edmond Wnght, Swedish

1.11DWn'KIIIU
Reading, Carl Denms. UB professor of l:.nghsh and noted poet
420 Capen Nonh Campus 4
p m Sponsnred by the UB Pue.t-

"" " ~ "'"

(rmes 8ool&lt;s. S22)

Collegmm ror lhe AdvWlCed
SJUdy oft~ Soctal Sc1enct's 684

Nl~o

--1*-

NEW AND IMPORTANT

~"*'
BY JIMMY CARTER

pm
. . . . . . . , . _ COUAIQUIUII

No Reportar Next

k

The Reporter will not publish next week due

to the spring break. The.next issue will be
published April 15.

�-..---.-:a

Filllln s
lly.IU-Pubhcalions Staff

SRECENTI.Yasthe
late 1960s it was assumed that infants

had no capacity to
perceive the difference between one speech sound and
ano1her untillhcy began 10 babble:
1ha1 they Ulughl lheirean. by making
thc •r own sou nds.

Now. however. we know that
an: quite adept
,n dtscn nunatmg among ~poken syl-

\."\-COt wo-month-olds

lahlc!&lt;o and. more tmpressively. that
tour· month-o ld .., can

di ~nmi nat e

d.:cd. work by Peter Ju -.c/y!... prn11:'"-'r of p~ychology. 'how!) that
h •ur -rnonth -o lds. from t:nglish 'pcaktng homes m the U S. arc able

111 pc:rfom1 thl!\ feat not JUS.t m Lhetr
lutun: nauve tongue but m fore1gn
lan~uagc!t a.' well. m th1~ case Pol l'•h
''lllt: p1t:turc that ha!-. emerged''
that mfanLli arc very capable of dJI krcntlatmg speech sound~ ... say'
Jll'-.4..: /yl 'lhc rcaJ quc~tiUO !t 11&gt;, hO\ol.
d~' mfant' uM: the!ooe very good capa r lllc~

Ju~1yk and other workcl"'&gt; m thl'
field u!oK two well-tested n'k!thocl"i: to
ob"--.!rvc- an mfant · ~ speech perception For very young infants- from
a lt•w week~ th rough about two-and.t-half month. sucking tx:hav10ron
.1 prt;ssure-sensitive pacifier wired

10 a polygmph can be deciphered a&gt;
mdicating that. for example. an in fant has noticed the difference between dug and bug . In simplified
rcrm!t, the standard routine in thi s
lmd of observation (called high

amplitude suck ing) i~ to habituate
the tnfantto a panicular sound. such
a' a syllable of speech. by repealing
11 after each suck on the pacifier. so
· that the infant fi nally understand!t
that sucking will produce the sound
After a period of time. the infant·,
mte of sucking (and triggeri ng the
~ound)declines . l f, when theexperi -

memer changes the sou nd. the
mfant's mte of sucking goe~ up, thb

.•

Thitty healthy peni006 aged
70 and older significlwldy
increased their leg rru9Cie
strength and endurance

through 8 specialized - dse program caJiad Otalbtative Progressive Exercise
Rehabilitalion (OPER) developed by Nadine M. F.-.
dinlcal assistant professa of
rehabili1atlon medicine at
UB. Tho S!Udy, reported in
The Gerontologist. involved
00 healthy ~ patients,
half of whom compleled four
months of OPER. showed
that the exercise group increased quadriceps strength
by 40 percent, hamstring
strength by 50 percent.
quadriceps endurance by 26
percent, hamstring endurance by 58 percent and
rroscle contractiOn speed by
26 percent The exerc1sers
also expenenced a 20 percent 1ncrease tn aerobic capaclly and a 12 rmVHg
decline '" mean blood pres-

l:an be taken a!t evidence that the
change has been perceived.
The second method. appropriate
for mfant!-. between about four and
eleven months, i!t even simple r. The
mfant subject. seated on its mother' s
lap in the lab where a loudspeaker
repea1edly bmadcasiS lhc leSI sounds.
IS taught. through reinforcement with
a Vt!tualtrcat. to tum its hearl toward
the sJX!akcr tf the sound changes
esearch in the last decade shows
that the earliest stage of learntog is conce rned with speech sounds

R

genemJ. a~ if all languages were
the same. But different languages do
have different sound structures and
one of the questions that Jusczyk and
other researcher.\ in the field arc pur),umg ~ ~how does the infant linguist
pick up the specific, particular sound
structure of a native language.
Stud1es by Jusczyk and Olhen,
mdicatc that between six and nine
month!t, infants begin to listen wuh
more ancnuon to thc1r nauve language and to tunc out others. When
Jusczyk te sted six-mon th -old~ un
strings of English and Dutch word:--.
10

to learn ..

BRIEFS

T....... t!M_..

What Infants h - yields clues to the way they ,..,.. lanpqe

lx"t\ol.l!C"n gr.1mmatically genuine
dau!&lt;ol"' m nucnt ~peech and ersat7
dau-.c" creatL"&lt;i by introducmg inappn•pnate paus.!s 10 the!-.pct..&gt;chstrcam
nw. dt!-.Crimmation ha!&lt;o nothin~
tt• Lin wnh meaning. ju!'.t 'ound ln-

__......

MED

The Baby's ljstening

A

9

recorded by a bi-

Tum of head

toward the
the infanl\ found source of
1hc li&gt;ISequally in- new speech
1eres1ing. AI nine sound lnd~
months. the listen- cates Infant
crs show a clear has noticed
preference for 1hc 8 difference.
English word list.
(Dutch infant~. tested on the ~
sounds show the same preference
for their language at the same age.)
Tile two languages are rhythmically
alike but differ in some soun&lt;b. In
'\lmi lar teStlii using English and Nor·
wegian. a language that has a dbtinctly different rhythmic structure.
mfanL~ were sensitive to the difference at an earlier age.
"It is remarkable that mfant.s arc
already tuning into these fine gmin
differences," Jusczyk ~ys .
In o ne of several cxpcrimenL-.
Jusczyk is working on at lhe molingual speaker.

n~nL.two--and-a-haJf-rrM.&gt;nth-oldsare

listening to wor'Ch presented either m
the fonn of a clause. for example
"the cat rdCcd white n11ce." or as a
simple list. O nce habituated to the
clause or the list. lhe infant subject
watches slides for a few nunutes and
then listen~ to tht.&gt; clause or list again.
but with variations introdu&lt;..'t..-d. Results show that infant!--. are more sc.:n~llive to vanauons when they ha ve
heard the word sound' m the clau-..c..•
r..tther than the li~t
''lnfant!t app&lt;:ar to U!--oe the
prosod1c packagmg of lhc

· clause 10 orgam7..c mfomkl·
t1on.·· according to JuM:ZY~ ­

Long before the sounds have
meaning a!-. words. the1r
combination ha.' meananga!-the mu~ic of a language

An Infant

communicates
whathe.healsby
sucking on electronic pacifier.

sure

Ellen
Goodman
atUB
April21
PultmrPitze.wloolllllcolurmisl
Ellen Goodman will speak at 8 p.m.
on Wednesday, April 2 t. in Alumni
Amla on the UB North Campus.
Goodman will lecture as pan of
UB 's Distinguished Speakers Series. sponsored by the university and
the Doo Davis Aulo World l«tureshlp Fund.
Goodman. who has been de-

scribed as "compassionate. tough.
sauncaJ and funny," says that most
of her column!-. begin with the q~
t10n. "why,.. She hal\ examined vaJue'i . relationships. middle age.
''og le -parent homes, women's
right~. abortion. condom~ and famihe~

She belaeves that the more Amencans an: overwhelmed b)
1nformat1on.
the more they
need IO make

h In ruac
._....,.
&amp;pe!

.......... ..,........
I

I

senseofcum:nt
events.
An il.!tSOC!ate eduor

Estabhsh1ng a urology chniC

1n a nurs~ng home rather
than requ1ring patients to
come to a hospital chmc resulted 1n better paoent care.
more physician SSIIslacliOn
and general costs savings.
reports KiNin Pfanil&lt;.o«, UB
associale prof9SSQ( of urology PfanikoN rroved h1s clinIC from a tert.ary-care
hospital to a nursing t-ome
after realiZing patiE!flts
weren't gelling the best serVICe The move mproved
comrnumcation v.-ith nursmg
staff. decreased physician
frustranon and saved patiE!flt
transponalion costs. Disadvantages were increased
travel hme for physicians
and lhe 1nabilily of lhe nursIng t-ome to recoop costs of
runn1ng the clinic from Insurance payers. Tho report of
the chn1c model was abstracted 1n The Journal of the

AmeriCan Geoarncs Socl9ty

,__._..
,...._

~ltlnlkeplllients

Older stroke patients don't

recover as well as younger
ones. and spend less tune 1n
rehablhtaliOn than do the
younger panents. according
to a UB study of the rehabihlatiOfl h1s1ory of 7.905 stroke
pat1en1s. The study. headed
by Ca~ V Granger. profesSO&lt; ol rehabdnaliOn med•
Cine. appeared 1n the journal
Stroke Granger speculated
thai older patienls may be
d1scharged from rehabil~a­
IIOfl ear11er because they
reach a plateau sooner. or
because other medical problems may firm theu ability to
participate vigorously in rehabilitation. He also raised
1he possibilily of a bias
against older patients on the
. par1 of younger care p&lt;tMders. who may speed up discharge because they feel
older patienls have less polent181 to benefit.

and columnist
with The Bos-

ton

Globe.

GoodmanreceivedthePulitzerPritt
for Distinguished Commenwy in

1980. Her columns. which appear in
more than 440 newspapers. are syndicated by the Washington Post
Writers Group.
In addition to her column. she ha!t
written articles that have appeared in
such publications as Lif•. Till! N•~·
York TimPs Book Revi~w. Savvy.
Women ·s Day and R&lt;dbook.
Theauthorof"'Tuming Points," a
book abool social change. Goodman
has collecled and published her col-

umns in "Close to

H ome.~

"At

Large:· "Keeping in Touch" and
"Making Sense."

Her dedication to the cause of
equalily earned her the Huben H .
Humphrey Civil Rig)lls Award in
1988 from the Leadership Confer·
ence on Civil Rights.
Goodman

graduated

a

from

Radcliffe College and was Nieman
Fellow a1 Harvard University.
Ticket&gt; 1oGoodman 's lecrure will
be sold m lhedoorm acosiOf$ 12 for

gener.J.l adm1ssion: SIO for faculty.
staff. senior citizens and UB alumni.
and $5 for Sludcn..,. Ticke"' also will
be sold '" advance a1 the UB Ticket
Office m Capen Hall on the Norlh
Campus (645-2353): Buffalo State
College Tickel Office -(878-553 1):
Frcdoma SU11&lt; College Tickel Officc(673-3562);New World Record.
512 Elmwood Ave .. Buffalo (88240041. ,;,d The Book Revue, 1 38~
Henel Ave .. Buffalo (874-5553).

�-S.ua_M,_D

POI.KA HAPPINESS
Conllnued lrom page 12

are

no1

actually fmishing one anolher's sen-

tences. are talking over one another. reaching

for records by bands wilh names like lhe
Molinas Super Scratch Kings (analive American polka baod, natch) while laking fresh nOieS
for a fulure volume. In lhe midsl of all of !his
is a gray-and-while-socked cal who answerli,
fittingly enough. 10 lhe name of Bubbles. and
whose purring position on one· s lap makes
taking notes difficult.
" I was just amazed to fmd a whole commu-

ni!)' dancing," says Angie. ··Grandparenls, pruents. and chi ldren. And there is no obvious
sexual connotation to the dance: it was energetic without being sexual, wilhout any obvi-

ous flirting."
ne mylh !hal Polka Happiness degrooves
on iL&lt; flrSl page is !he notion lhallhe polka
is Polish. The book says !here is no1 an ounce
of polka in Poland, where !he na1ional dance is.
of course, lhe Ul!lgo.
The Keils lhink !hal lhe !rend mighl ha ve
begun as a popular Czech notion of how Poles
dance (polka is lhe Polish word for woman);
someone. somewhere (various reports name a
Czech servanl girl and a schoolleacher, bullhe
names vary from story 10 slOry) had danced a
dance, someone. somewhere had written it
down, and lhe popular lune found ilS way 10

O

Anthony Petro
de..,..

He'll grlllluate with •
in electrlc81 8lld computer
engineering •nd credit tow81'd • muter' s In phllftophy
By RICHARD D£1TSCH
Spec•al to the Reporter

A

NTHONY PETRO frequenll y
hears the same queSiion about
his choice of majon.: 'What ·~
the connection·''
When you· rc: an academ1c

par.tdex - an honor. Mudent who w111 graduate in May with a degree m elect rical and
compUier engmcenng and cn.,--d it toward a
m.a~tcr' :o.dt!gn.'t.~ 1n philosophy

a ":unou' rcact1on •.., mcvnablc

Gmduale Fellowship. He is lisled in Who ·s
Who in Am~n·can Colltges and Univusiries.
and serves as treasurer of Eta Kappa Nu, an
electrical engineering honor society. and ex·
temal vice president of Tau Beta Pi. an e ngi·
neering honor society.
In addition to holding a number of aca-

demic scholarships. for lhe pasllwo summerli
PelTO has worked for Eastman Kodak in Rochcsrer as pan of its scholarship program.
"Oulsideof school.lhru had
to OC one of t.hc most broaden-

··1·m U!K..~ tudet.tlmF wnh the
4UC,IHm :· \il)'!&gt; the :2 1-) CaT-OJd .

··Pcopk "-&lt;~) that the tw(l are
compl etely mco ngruou .. and
want to know ah&lt;Jutthc conncc·
linn between cngmcc nng and
philo!~&gt;uph y I reall y wanted
:-.nn'k!t tiing that wou ld replace
tht&gt; tedium and strict quantiflcauun of engmccring, and phi losoph y allowed me to write
and think abstractly. h 'sLheback
and fonh OCt ween the real and
the 1dca\."
A nati ve of Westvale and
valcdictonan of West Hill Hi gh
School. Petro came 10 UB in I he

fall of 1989 planning lOmaJor m
electrical engineering. Because

he had laken a number of Advanced Placement courses m
high school. his sched ule was
flexible enough to le t him take
e lective!&gt;.
A Freshmanyearlogiccoursc
sparked Petro's interest in phi-

"People wanJ
to laww about
the connection:
engineering &amp;
philosophy. ''
-ANTHON Y P£TRO

losophy and he began 10 pursue
a OOche lor's degree in philosophy in additi on
tn hi ~ engineering studies.
·1ne nature of my engi neering courses

came oulOflCXlbooks. Jabs. lab reports, and lhe
philosophy co urse!~&gt; were almost exclusively
reading and class discussions," says Petro. " It
wa' an outlet. They were polar opposites. I got

logo 10 philosophy class and spew."
h was Richard_Hull. UB associale professor
of philosoph y, who suggesled Pelro lake
master's le vel courses in philosophy.
'11le ca1ch was I had 10 gel my engineering

degree before I received my philosophy graduale degree," says Pelro. who became lhe fll'Sl
person wilhoUl an undergraduale degree 10 be
accepled inlo UB's masler's degree program
in philosophy.
Petro has accumulaled a liUl!ly of honors
and scholan;hips including UB Presidenlial
Honors and a UB CenterforCognilive Science

ing experiences I ever had hecause it was completely unlike
sc hool." says Petro. '"II was an
unparalleled o pportunit y to
work with e ngi neers in my disci pi ine.to contribute and do real
work . I wrote some tec hn ical
publications and conducted research.'"
Petro say!~&gt; he want s to continue his education tx:fore pur·
s uing a ca reer in ei th er
acade micsorcomputcrrescarch
and development. He has applied for graduate studie.~ in
co mputer engineering at UB.

Michigan. North Carolina S"lle,
Slanford.and lhe Univcr.;ily of
Illinois. his first choice.
"' Phil osophy is almost a

Paris.

Finding oullhal much was a difficull process for 1wo reasons. In lhe firlil place. polka is
largely undocumenled (Polka Happiness is
filling a virtual vacuum). ln lhe second, say lhe
Ke ils. polka itself is a community-based activily, a working class pbenomenon. and as s..:h
is more lhe swff of legend and folklore !han of
fact.
ln the mire of rumor and speculation. a

slarthng facl shines lhrough.
It is 1844. a time of revolution .
" It's all very precise: the third week in

Man: h... says Charlie. ''The Czechdance somehow gets to Fr.u1ce at the same time Marx and
Engeb are cooki ng up lhe manifesto: ' What'!-.
the proletariat doing now? Why are they dancing when lhey should be pulling up lhe banicadc!~&gt;?'

"And lha.- s where polka dolS come from.
and polka hals, and polka ves!&gt;.'.
In Olher words. lhe polka became, m !he
early spring of 1844. not only a rage but a
commercialized rJg
Angie compares iL~ad­
vent to Beatlemania- and a class-war rage to

boot The Keils say il happened below slairli,
among !he bootblacks and lhe scullery maids.
jusl as lhe waltz had happened above slairli
year.; before. And like lhe wallZ, lhe polka had
a revolutionary swirl to it, a degree of abandon
and lhe abilily 10 shock ; unlike lhe strict quadrilles and olher choral dances of lhe period.
t.he polka. like the waltz. involved couples
tauc:hing.

"'There was already class resistance 10 lbe

waltz in London because of that," says Charlie.
"And lhe polk.a was lhe proletarian couple
dance: people were kiclring up !heir heels.
dresses were Oopping around."
Jusl as Poles indignantly deny alelldency lO
pul lhe left f()(J( in, take lhe left f()(J( our. pu1
!heir tishkas in and shake !hem all aboul so
Polish Americans occasionally denounce lhe
polk.a for being- well, as Olarlie puts il, "terminally silly." How !hen did il reach lhe weddings of Chicago, lhe east side of Buffalo?
Polka HappinLss is full of Sloriesoflhe likes of
Ed Krolikowski: born in America, he returned
wilh his paren!S lO Poland. returned 10 lhe U.S.
againlheyearTafl waselected,andplayedjazz
in ban; and hOle ISand movie houses. He ended
up playing a mix of Broadway. swing. and
Dixieland, and he soon realized the best money

The polka became, in the
early spring of 1844, not
only a rage, but a
commerr:ializt!d rage-an£1
a class-war rage to boot.
...Like the waltz. the polka
had a revolutionary swirl
to it, a degree ofabandon
and the ability to shock.
was 10 be made playing requeSl&gt;-"left, nghL
left. righl"-al dances. weddings. and picnics
The sad pan aboullhe polk.a's hiSlory is ilS
recent demise from the wedding c ircuit.
..It· s a threatened species. an e ndangered
music.·· says Ct1arlie.
'The music is having trouble swviving the
CD supennarkets that show up at weddings-

you hire a OJ and you can have rock. jazz.
polka. anylhing you want"
Bullhe Keils recen1ly came across a heartening anomaly . On a recent visit to Ontario .
!hey found a hall full of Canadian young people.
"not one of them over 30," entering into the
spirit of the polka wit.h the abandon once
associated with The Rolling Stones.
"Polish American music offends mom and
dad." says Charlie. "And lhese Canadian leen-

agerli were happily affllllling !heir Polish Canadian TOOlS and generational differences ...
Charlie. who watched his own son work

especially hard lo find somelhing his falher
didn ., already like, has a wagerwilh lhe future.
"When a generation of parents are playing

Melallica and Guns and Roses," be says. "kids
will be playing polk.a lo annoy !hem."

hobby for me." says Pelro. "I do
not intend to ma ke a career out
of it and I don't mtend to get my
Ph.D. at this time . Engirrcering
b. really my primary interest and

rm probably going lOmake my
living at that."
He won't co mple te hi s master's degree in

philosophy before he graduales in May. bul
hopes to pick it up again Further down the
road .
Normally , the failure to finish so methin g
would have bothe red him immensel y. but
th anks to his Philosoph y studies. he says
he 's developed a better perspective on life.

"h's kind of appropriale lhm I should be
Sludying philosophy because iL&lt; enabled me lo

son of renect on these things and see that life
is not a race." says Petro.
"I was a !ype A person. bul I've been lrying
to mellow out. The problem is the system
makes it difficult because we live in a society
where rewards are based on achievement~ . "
His studies also have made him philosophi cal about his own place in such a world .
"My life has been a study in the confl1ct

BadCer Button Box Club ~at Jelly's IIIII, - . . . . . .. In 1990. Fl'om left:

bel ween realily and idealil)' ... he says.

Hanl1 Magayne, Hank JU~~~~~N~M, Rudy Kotr., Frank Mum, Jim G811n1t1L ·

�IIIIIIII

11

_ ...... _..,_:a

.Faculty&amp;Stan
BILL

Prof. Chois
general editor
of international
senes

0

Kah Kyung Cho, professor
of philosophy. i• one of
thn:e general editors of the recently

inaugurated series, Orbi.r
Phuerwmeno/ogicus. whose edito-

rial board and advisory members
represent virtually all the major
nmions or cuhuraltraditiOn!-. .

Orbi.s Phaenomeno/ogwus
appears three times a year in Gcr+

man and English. The other geneml editors arc Yoshihtro N in.a of
Tokyo and Hans Rainer Scpp of
l·n:thurg i. Br. The advisory board
mdude~

the most prcsllglllu"'

"-·hnlal" .n the field .
Afte r the UB-based JOUmal.
Plulosophy anti Phe fl ometw iORtcal
Hr.H·a rrh went to Brown Univer"IIY 1n 1983 because of budget
l·o n str.u nt~. Cho continued to build
up the phenomenology program
wtth coopenuion from professional
~o ll cag uc s from the U.S .. Japan,

Gem1an y and othe.r

part~

of the

world

Nursing faculty
members
will present
papers in Spain

0

Three faculty me mber.; m
the UB School of Nursing

h;~ve been invited to presentthc 1r
work &lt;11 lhe lntemauonal Research
Con ference of Sigm.a 111Cta Tau.
the International nursing honor
'ucu:ty, to be held in June in

Madnd. Research papers 10 be
presented were se lected from 450

ab'\trJcts submitted from 20 countnc~ .

In vited UB faculty and the titles
of lheir papers arc: Brenda P.
Haughey, associate professor of
nursmg, "Sex and Arrhythmja'\: A
Pilot Study .. ; Patricia A. Bums,
a~soci a t e professor of nursing.
"Social and Psychological Factors
Affecting Adherence to Behavioral
Treatment"; Juanita K. Hunter,
clinicaJ associate professor of

B

0

nursing, "A National Survey to
Identify Evaluation Criteria for
Programs of Health Care for the
Homeless ...

Study leaves
available from
State/UUP

0

A

R

D

ment. and up to $2,500 for other

expenses) for activities occurring
between July I, 1992, and Aug.
31, 1993. The deadline for sul&gt;mission of Professional Study
Leave applications to the state·
wide PDQWL Committee i s May
7. 1993.

Application deadlines for the
second and third rounds of the
program (July 1. 1993-June 30.
1994. and July I. 1994-June 30.
1995 ) will be announced later.

On
Po.ta to ..... works
lilt pubk.Uon ..-tJ

0

A poetry reading and celebration will be held on
Wednesday. April
at 7 p.m. by
The Women ' s Writing Worltshop
to note the publication of the 15th
edition of Room of Our Own .
The celebration. to be held in
Suite 200 of the UB Commons.
will include readings by poets
whose worl&lt; appears in the 15th

:is

the Canisius College Alumnae
Association, a member of the
Canisius College Alumni Association Board of Directors, and a
past president of the Amherst
East Rotary Club.

0

A sy mposium on clinical

use of Positron Emission

Tomography, focus of so much

edition as well as by members of
the current Women' s Writing

interest with the upcoming dedjcation of the Center for Positron

Development and Qualit y of

W orl&lt;shop. Following a reception , women poets from the audi-

Emission Tomography. will be
held May 15 from 8 a.m. to 6

W o rking Life ( PDQWL) Committee. Steven Moskowitz, staff di-

ence will be in vi ted to read their
work. Admission is free and open

p.m. in the Unive rsity Inn &amp;
Conference Center. 240 1 N . Forest Rd .. Amherst.
One of the newe-st medical
imaging techniques, PET is now
available to clinicians and medi cal researchers in Western New
York . The symposium is intended
to introduce the general principles

Professional Study Leaves
an: again available from the

New York State/UUP Profess ional

rector for the Joint
Labor-Management Committees,
announced recen tl y. Fonnal
guide lin e~ can be obtained from
1he Chapter office. Paul
Zarembka. UU P Buffalo Ce nter

Chapter president. said in a memo
to profc~siona l s .
The maximum award under
1he.e programs is $5.000 (up to
$2.500 for salary for a replace-

OF

WBFO to ho.t c:al4l
~wllh

..,.....Chll.-

to the public .

lan Aronson w ill be the host

when President
Wilham A Greiner fields
quest1ons dunng a hve call-1n
program. Wednesday, April
14 at 4 p .m .. to be broadcast
over WBFO . BB 7 FM Call
82S-2555 with your ques·
tions and comments

I N TEREST

-----llltOneanbl

Fal:uii:J-totllclll"**6 -~vi

SUNY F-ACT-Faculty Access to Computing Technology-is planning a major event this sunrner. a conference on Faculty Access to
Computing Techndogy, June 9-11 at SUNY College Oneonta/MOrris
Complex Conference Center.
Among topics to be d iscussed are Computing in the Disciplines.
Instructional Technologies. Problem-Solving Across the Curriculum.
Visiting Scholars Program, Mac Computer Education on SUNYSAT.
Mac, PC and VAA Wori&lt;shops , and ti)&amp;SUNY,f'ACT Partnership with
the Cornell National Supercomputer Facility.
The program is open to all SUNY faculty and instruct100al support
professionals at a relatively modest cost.
FullragistrationmaterialsmaybeobtainedbycallingJarnesGer1and
ol UB Academic Computing Services. at 645-3557.

WCIIId ..................... lareauilmg
,., ................. pollllon
The World Languages lnst~ ute is currenlty accepnng applications for
the position of graduate assistant for the 1993-94 academic year
Applicants should have the following qualifications· f9'eign language
tutoring/leaching experience (prelerred). strong verbal and written
skills. the ability to interact with diverse students and staff. foreign
language proficiency, and computer literacy f-NP5.1. Dbase. Ouattro) . The successful candidate will receive a stipend and a tu~ion
waiver (New Yori&lt; State).
Intangible ben~fits include valuable administrative experience and
the opportunity to work in a dynamic and growing enterprise whose
constituencies include UB students. faculty
staff. the Western
New Yor1&lt; private sector and the local community.
Interested persons should send a letter of application and a resume
to Dr. Mark A. Ashwill. Assistant Director. World Languages lnstftute.
402 Capen Hall, North Campus.
Ia Apotl
UN. Selected applicants will be lmerviewed in earty May. For
more information call Dr. Ashwill at 645-2292.

0

Judith A. Schwcndler,

past president of the University at Buffalo Alumni Association, has joined its staff as an
assistant director.
Schwendler. who has res igned
as a partner in
the law firm of
Ward . Brenon.
Schwendler &amp;

DiVita. will
continue to serve
as chair of the
SCHWENOC.ER
association's
Legislative Action Commiuee. which she
founded . She served as alumni
association president from 1991 92.
A graduate of Canis ius Col lege who earned a master ·~ degree in English from the
Universi ty of Virginia.
Schwendler graduated from the
UB School of Law in 1982.
Prior to joining her fonner law

PET imaging. followed by
specific applications to neurological, cardiac and oncological programs. Issues of costeffectiveness will be addressed
and there will be presentations by

of

internationally recognized expens
and facu lty from the UBN A PET
Center. Also scheduled are demonstrations in the imaging suite
and cyclotron facility.
lnvited to register are physicians. health care professionals,
residents and students who wi sh
to learn more about PET and how
it can help in the management of
patients with cardiac disease.
epilepsy. brain tumors and solid
tumors.
Sponso" are the PET Center

and the Departments of Nuclear
Medicine at UB and the VA
Medical Center. The program is
su pponed by educational grants

A member of the U B Law

from UB Conferences in the
Disciplines. Siemens Medical
Systems and Ion Beam Application s.
For additional information.

School Alumn i Associauon.
Schwendler is a past presidem of

contact UB Conference Operations. 314 Crofts Hall. 645-3 705 .

finn. she was a personnel officer
with the fanner Goldome Bank. .

9r1P

11111_._..-

1.,

lhlei. . ..,.. Sludant &amp;Palla
1993~---Ccw••••.......-t

The Commencement Corrvnittee annou~es the criteria for SEilection of a stl!Qent rep&lt;esentative to
addreSs gradua:es at the 147th University Commencement; Sunday, May 16. 1993, at 10 a.m. in Alumni
·
·
•
Arena .
V~eeProvosl for Undergraduale Education John A . Thorpe will&lt;:hair a screening corrmittee comprised
ol faculty members and student representatives. The competition is open to all g~aduating seniors in the
Faculties of Arts and Letters, Natural Sciences and Mathema!JCS, and SociBI Sciences.
.
Seniors who wish to be considered for student corrmencement speaker must submit a written version
of their speech to Dr. Thorpe. Each student finalist will
p&lt;esent his or hef address before the screening
, committee . The speech that is delermined to be the best will be p&lt;esented by the student at

also

commencement.
Speeches are to be no longer than six m inutes. Selection will be based on the relevance and
appropriateness of content, as well as delivery.
·
The student commencement speaker was first incorporated into the commencement program 1n 1991
and has been well-received by graduates and their guests.
Entries must be submitted by F.-,, Aprll2, to the Student Speaker Screening Corrvnittee. c/o Dr
John Thorpe . VICB Provost for Undergraduate Education, 544 Capen Hall, North Campus. 645-2991

nEISSUE:

The pursuit of democracy
in Russia
nE IP£AICIR:

tteeu.......U

Awoc:MCe ... .,_vi~ lilt Ul
nEQUOIE:
"I am encouraged by the sp~rrt of comprom1se
that seems to be emerg1ng 1n Russia Despite all
the difficulties we see acted out today. I think the

Russlans have grown amaz1ngly even 1n the past
t\YO weeks 1n the1r understariding of hbw democracy works
"In any sort ol governmental system there are
twO questiOns to be answered what to do and
BENNETT
how to do 11 Tyrants dec1de what to do and beat
you over the head to rnake you do it Democracy IS a method of
compromise and of polling people as to what needs to be done
Democracy offers a feedback system and the best way to bring
closure to a natiOnal debate on d isputed issues is to have the
people vote •

�_.., ... _...,_ ...

lH~

climax of a wedding, says Charlie Keil, a real wedding, an American wedding, is the

e "It doesn't get any easier: right, left, right, left. It's a happy groove to get intp."

•

Keil, who chairs the American Studies program at UB, has been studying the groove.

Keil narrowly avoided playing
druniS for a polka band ("Td be putting
some polka drummer out of a job''); his
wife. Angie. who is Greek, was impressed
to find intelligent people singing simple
songs ("In Greece, the I~ more poOlic. But bere the people are sl!"mt=sring,
and the lyrics so inane"). They discovered
the joys ofpoll\a in the baJ:s and church halls
of Buffalo' s Polish district when they farm
made their waY. here through the .sriow
squalls of 1968; with Oiclt Blau.aphologPlalca Ana I r *I,_.
ntpberfriend,theyoetouttodisco..,.polka's tMI.Ie qiA tanantlall polka l*lJ.
origins. documenting both its history and
.
the bouncing, colorful work of such contemporary luminaries as Walt Wolek. Marion
Lush, and the great L'il Wally Jagiellq.
.
'1t was a revelation, a great high." sa~. "WediscoverAol white people have
a soul music, a powerful way of moving and grooving. When
like L'il Wally

•

Zone

B y

po~

.

R

0

B

E

R

T

e

·•

played, people were crying, weeping in....,.
ognitionofbismusic. Wby?WIIII'saDtbal
about?"
The trio recently publisbod Polka 1:/Dppi·
~re.u(TempleUniv=ilyPress.$30).aband-

oome volume SlUffed with pbolographs of
polkas new &amp;;nd old and a fascinaling biAory
of what the ~-uumpeter-acccrdiaa
player MariCIILusbcaDed "tben:lued~

aclllala:

mism"lbaunakesthepolka.polka.tbe~

a groove. (Ibe book is

.,_lit ,78 ......,.. 111 Ml•

•
•

book:
tbelrpublishenweresoo•...,._bytbe
polpoWrioftbouyand~.documeallry
and sboet love for the IIJ'OO"" lhal the adler

half, titled Polka Pmp«Jives, won't be out tilll99S).
lnlerviewing the Keils in their West Side 11*tmen1 was a jlleasaltl, if occasicJMIIy
coofusing way to spend a Thunday morning. They are on animaled couple wbo, wbm IIIey
Continued on page 10
•

w

A T

E

R

H

0

u

•s

E

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...... c..

AIIIIIC

Jan t..U:hler studies
plig1t a older

Americans fran

mlroity grrups. , .

'01 . . ..
'll*tlw.td

= ,.10

2

Belagi:l~
NeMok~

Super Senior
Physics major Kristan

Jullt Wlllll 'llle

Corwn en.PJs the

Doct.-01 ......

challenge a problem-

solving.

lA3 med stl..derds get
good news oo Match
Day.

,.5
M~rch

25. 1993 Volume 24 , No 22

.... _

university' s electronic card calalog-&lt;o users will
be able to locale
the mareriaJs they
need. 'lbe next
u-cfitold. step would be to
go through all of
the books." Serafm says. Books are
evalualed according to the apparent
troubles and put into one of two
classifications: books with brittle
pages and those without.
Books without brittle pages are
the ones that are judged by their
covers. They commonly have weak
or tom covers. busted hinges, or the:
"super"-the ma1erial that bnlds the
cover to the book- is deteriorating.
"We call them the recases," Seralin
says. "F""Juently we get paperbacks
where the covers are tom. We encowage the librarians. if they notice
the hinge pan is weak. to send them
punclled In
pMipNet
with ..t,ln
preperMiooi

.... ......,

down to us."

BooK PREsERVATION

CENTER

*· Place
The FIX-it
forTrred Tomes

Once the books are evalualed and
the correct course of action chosen.
bright-colored streamers are placed
in the books routing them to the
appropriatecorroctiveactioo. Books
that will get new covers must fust
lose the old. These are carefully removed as is the
old cover lining.
withthehelpofa
commercial
steamer.The glue
is removed and
the area is generallycleanedup.A
heavy weight
placed on the
book helps relax
the paper during
these procedures.

several options available for ctiplliring the oonJent of the book. illcluding pholocopying and microfilming.
The thin phccocopied lOOieS are
bound into book form at the center.
The thicker ones are sent to a bindery. "They' re too thick for us to bind
them." Serafin says. A sp&lt;cial exception in the nation· scopyrigbllaws
allows one copy to be made for preservation purposes..

T

be acidifiCalion of papers is a legacy of the
Industrial Revolution.
Before the middle of
the 19th century. papers were made
from rag fiber. These fibers have
withstood the test of time remarl&lt;ably well. In fact. reportS 7'111! N~
Yon: Tim.s , the pages of books lovingly produced by hand in the 17th
century are in very good condition.
When machines were developed
that could mass produce paper. papennakers switched to the moreavailable wood pulp papers. This
wood pulp paper is much more onstable than the traditional rag papers
and breaks down quietly. But they
Cononued on page 4

··whenever
we can. we try to

UR published legacy is
deteriorating.
Book bindihgs break,
spines split, covers corrode and hundreds of
thousands of printed
pages turn to dust, consumed by acid or otherwise compromised.
But all is not lost.
Microfilm is used to preserve images of books and experiments in
digitizing !ext and graphics are on
the forefront of book-saving t&lt;!Chnology. Meanwhile, the Library of
Congress. New York Public Library
and olher cenlers have developed
chemical means to arrest the march
of time and preserve the inslable
papers on which our books have
been prinled since the Industrial
Revolution.

But sometimes the important
thing is tofu the books and get them
back into circulation. lbat' s where
UB's Cen!er for Book Pneservalion
comes in.
'"These are things that are heavily

used ,"' says Donna Serafin. the

center's director and the UB preservation officer. "You have to preserve them." She is in charge of the
center, located in a suite of offices in
the basement of Lockwood Library.
Her staff works to n:tum more than
I,OOOofUB 's library books to circulation each month.
Under the careful direction of
Serafin (M.L.S. '76), the center replaces those fragile bindings, spines
and covers; stabilizes tired tomes;
and generally works to perpetuate
the prinled page for the thousands of
patrons of the university 's libraries.
Senfin began working at the university in 1979. and wben the cen1er
was organized. she was appoinled to

direct it. 1lle center was created in
1984. when state legislation was

passed supponing book preservation at the stale' s II comprehensive
research libraries-four of them the
SUNY Centers. The slate grant that
funds these centers has miraculously
survived the slate "s deepening ftSCal
woes.
The Ubraries are involved in cooperative research effons in preser·
vation and conservation. Cornell
University in Ithaca is the sponsoring organization in a project in which
UB panicipaleS. involving the digitizing of archival materials. according to Semlin. And while these
projects are very imponant to the
future of the field. the day-to-day
effon to keep books in circulation is
the center's priority. To this end. the
center has just started working in
microfilm repair.
"Were dealing with the general
circulating collection,'"Serafin says.
''What ' s important is the information.

''The 10 unit libraries send any
damaged materials to us. We log
them in QJl BISON"'- Buffalo lnfonnation Services On Line. the

preservetheorigi- AdlwsM .. applied to looee 11-c- for • doublenal cover-as a tan blnllneservice to the students." Serafin
says.
The chief enemyoftheprinled
page is the acid
that is the result of
che mical reactioosinwoodpulp
paper.;."Allthe
material we use
here is acid-free,'"
Serafin says.
"New super. acidfree paper on the
spine. clolh and
board."
The other category of books. those with brittle
·ww ~uilh
paper. are treated differently. That
brinleness is a pr6dUC! of the acidification process and is irreversible.
Acidified papers are discolored and
when a comer is bent twice, back
and forward. it snaps like adried-our
leaf.
·"We really can "t repair these,"
Serafin says. Sbe keeps a plastic bag
full of flllpel" chips handy to illustrate
the fragility of the paper. There are

th£ gmera1 tircu!flting
roll£dinn. ltizat s
i:rnportimtisth£
infornwJion."

-*

�__,__..,_

...

2
H 0 N 0 R S
SCHOOL Of MANAGEMENT

-MCUUY-- Mutchler
Studies
Health,
Elders

ciocconomicSiarus,
both blacks and
whites show similar measures for
health swus.
However, there
were some differences. Forexample.
blacks generally rate themselves as
having poorer health. they tend to
visit health care providers more frequently, and they tend to spend fewer
nights at a hospital than wh ites.
Mutcltler explained.
These results suggest that "older
blacks appear to have poorer health
than whites regardless of socioeconomic status." she said. adding that
the "stress of being subject to lifelong racism has a negative impact on
self-assessments of health."
''Ciosingthesocioeconomicgap.··
Mutchler said. may not necessaril y
reduce differences in health between
whites and blacks. and it may be
advanwgeous to ftrst start by ensuring that minority groups have equal
access to health care services. She
noted that it is a complex problem
with no easy solutions.

AWMDI

. . . c. .... has~­

lected by the Nalionel Unillersity Continuing Educalion
Assoclalion (NUCEA) DMsionoiConfinulog
Education for
the Professions toreceive its
1993 Facul1y
Service

Award.

The award

recognizes a universily faculty ment&gt;er who has made a
significant contribution to
continuing professional education !hrough program development and~ Jen, Manulaclllers and

Trader11 Trust Co. Pl'ofessor ol
Barmg and Ffin:e at the UB
School ct Mmagement, wil
raceille the award on April18
ruing the NUCEA national
conference in Nashvle.
A UB faculty merrber since
1964, Jen loo..nded the MBA
degree prognrn that UB rM
for """"" yews a! the National
Center tt lnduslrial Science
and Technology Mlwlgemenl
Dewloprnent in Dafian, China.
For the past15 years. he
has served as director, policy
council ment&gt;er and faculty
ment&gt;er for UB's Bank Management Institute.
Jen earned 8 doctorate

from the Univoolity of Wisconsin at Madison.

ENGINEERING

- t a a A R J I• .
, _ ...... (IMIJ) .... 8 double major in electrical engineering and comput..-

science, has been awarded
the R. M. Monti Scholarship
from the New Yor1&lt; City Post
ol the Society ol American
Milttary Engineers.
Ng rQ:eived S1 ,00l and a
oertificatB of tkXX) I ....,wna It
l-is other awards indude the
1991 Ronald McNair f'rogr.rn
Award. 8 1900 Grace W. Capen Merrorial Award lor aca-

der1'1c excellence, the 1999
New Yor1&lt; Cosrropoitw&gt; Lions
Club Sch:ll&gt;:vship and a Rotaty
Club Scholarship, also in 1999

HISTORY

--8RNft':

, _ .......-. assistant
professor ol history, has been

awarded 8 National Endowment for the Humanities FelloWship for the 1993-94
academic year.
Thomm, who speciaizes in
late 19th and 2!lh cenuy
AmaricM cUllm and intellectual history, said the grMl wil
riloN hoc to corJlllele hoc forth.
cormg bocl&lt; on hlrocMTiling in
AmaricM history, to be plblished by Yalo \Jr1iYerl;ily Press.
: The book. she says, turns
the history oll~eracy in America into an examination of
"conceplions olthe self in
American society .•
Thornton. who earned 8

Ph.D. In American Studies at
Yale Univ..-sity, joined the UB
History Department in 1992.

UB~Iooksat

I'KI., d l f f - l n
health, uM of services
IIJDAVID-~

Reponer StaH

A

S THE U.S. population ages, health care
costs soar. and the
notion of the ''traditio na l family .. is

turned on its head. researcher.; have
become increasingly concerned
about the health and health care of
the elderly. In a nation preoccupied
with youth. it is noc uncommon to
hear about the pain and suffering of
older Americans who often are i~
lated and unable to gel the health
care tht-y need .
A VB researcher isaclivelystudying the plight of older Americans
from different minority groupsolder Americans who are ar particular risk because of inadequate
resoun:es to secure adequate health
care. Jan Mutchler. assistant professor of sociology. along with her colleague Jeffery Burr. also a UB
sociologist. has been conducting research on racia1 differences in health
and health care service utilization in
later life.
The study. funded by the Na·
tionallnstitule on Aging. is pan of a
project examining change in elderly
households and the influence of race
and ethnicity on this change,
Mutchler said.
··The goal of this research was to
determine if health care differences
between blacks and whiles are related.to socioeconomic status,'' said
Mutchler. She added that the asso- ,
ciation between the two is not al ways clear-cut and that other factors

"The goal ofthis research was to detemzin.e if
health care differences between blacks and
whites are relaJed to socioeconomic status. "

also play a role.
The different life experiences
of blacks and whites have resulted
in different patterns of employment. economic success, and educat ion. Mutchler said, adding that
among minorities. these lifelong
mequalities culminate in differences in health status. with African-Americans generally showing
poorer health .
'1lle general idea is that differcnc~ in hea1th of blacks and whites
would disappear if differences in
socioeconomic status were eradicared," Mutchler said.
But she cautioned tha1 other factors such as knowledge about health

care and nutrition. and hea1th care
practices. all of which are both related to and distinct from socioeconomic starus. may also play a strong
ro le in determining health.
Using a nationally representative
dalllhase. Mutchler and ButT exam·
ined data on living arrangements.
econom1c resou rces. and heahh
among blacks and white.&lt; 55 year.;
and older.
Incl uded m the health data were
se lf· reponed evaluations of health.
time spent overnight in a hos pital,
and the number of visits to a health
care provider, Mutchler explained.
In their results the researchers
found that when controlling for~

~ tchler's research and teach·
IWiing revolve around practical
problems. "I like to teach things with
policy imptications ... problems associated with inequality and govemrnentpolicywbererecotTUTlel1dations
can be put into action," she said.
MutchJer was voted as outstanding faculty member in 1991 -92 by
the Undergraduate Sociology Association at UB.
··t traveled a bit when I was
younger.'' Mutchler said, mentioning the fact that her falher worl&lt;ed for
the USDA and her family lived in
places like Mississippi where she
saw some of the "striking differences" in the way people lived.
" I guess that•s why I became a
sociologist, .. she said.
Before coming to UB in 1988.
Mutchler was an assistant professor and faculty research assoc iate
at the Population Issues Research
Center at Pennsylvania State Uni ve rsity .
Prior to thaL. she was an Amencan Association of University
Women fellow and research associate at the Population Research Cen·
ter at the Universiry of Texas at
Austin.

North Fund will enhance library seJVices
.,_~

Special to the Reponer
An endowed fund to support the Univer.;ity Libraries has been
eswblished by Robert North Jr .. B.S .. LLB , a 1938 graduate, with a
S55,&lt;XJ(l gift. To be known ·as the Robert and Marion North Library
Fund. the endowment will enhance the collections. technolog·ies. programs and services of the lJniver.;ity Libraries, and honor.; the memory
of his late wlfe, Marion de Mauriac Nonh. Nonh credits his wife. the
daughter of a minister. with making him more sensitive to ihe importance of philanthropy.
This recent gift is in addition to aS IO.CXXldonation Nonh made to the
Augustus Hunt Shearer Memorial Endo':"mcnt during the Silver Anniver.;ary Campaign of the School of Information and Library Studies in
1991.
During the Depression, North. a 1933 graduate of Harvard College.

tutored student&gt; at the Gow School in South Wales and also polished
"""'· He then attended library school at VB and later took a job in the
reference section of the Buffalo I'Ublic Libraries where his future wife
also worl&lt;ed. After a tour of duty in Egypt during World War D. he tool:
several library positions elsewhere in the country and - m 1952 was
recruited to the newly fonned Buffalo and Erie CourJty Public Library
system. He remained there until his retirement in 1973.
North 's father. an architect and artist. was a friend of the late James
Dyen and designed Dyetfs Buffato home. ·Building on his father' s
relationship, North worl&lt;ed with Dyett to raise $40,000 to enhance the
Iibr.uy of the UB School of Architecture and Planning so the school could
meet accreditation requirement~.
North spent yean; as a ~olunteer and has remained active with the
Friends of the School of Architecture.

�___

...__..,_...

3

Media neglects science news, NPR anchor Facuity Senate
Ira Aatow says at program in Allen Hall chair-elect aims
-,DAVIDIReporter Staff

1

__

.,for cooperation

4PPPN

Reporter StaH

I

nspileoftoday'sfast-pacedhig!Hochwcrid
in which information can be beamed into
tiving rooms thtwghout u., U.S. wilh u.,
flick of a switch, there is jusl 001 enough
news on scieJ&gt;a, reaching U., public.
This was u., genoa~ consensus of a panelled
by Ira Flalow, scieJ&gt;a, anchor of NPR 's "Talk of
u., Nation" and UB alwnnus who was at onetime
news director for WBR&gt;. that mel last week in
Allen Auditoriwn.
Simulcast on WBFO and sponsored by the
radio station and the Western New York Cha~
tcr of the American Chemical Society, the
panel of mcd1a and science people d iscus..~

I

~me of the realiOns for the lack of science
news m American television and newspapers.

The most imponant problem today, said
is lhe "quantity and quality of pro-

~latow.

gramming. lltere's not much science news

reaching the public." He added lhat not long
ago there were '"70 newspapers with science
)CC'Uons ... and now there are only a few dozen.··
Pan of this is due to lhe fact that many newspap= U.,mselvcs an: dying. and in metropolitan
areas where there used to be several dailies. there is
often only one lefl Flalow explained. "People
aren't reading newspaper.; any more. They watch
·rv ... said flatow. adding that television is 001
making up forU., lade of"real science" news in U.,
written press. Moreover, bolh newspaper.; and
televiSion netWori&lt;sgenernlly maintain small bud!,'""-if any. for reponing on science, he said.

F

latow gave an example of ()lle Cunnecucut
newspaper that maintains 25 economics

reporters but no science reponer.;.. Addition·
ally . the nnedia. especially a11he local le vel. arc
"preoccupied with junk news.·· f-larow said.
The nctw ork~ t.J o have a !01 of pmgrammmg

on husmess and the economy Yet at the ~me
umc . "cditon. don't have the shghteM tdca
what dnvec:. Lhc cou ntry It'"' ~ience that drive!-.
the counii)''' and n ·~ M:tcnce that powen. the
e&lt;.:onom y. Flmow said. JX&gt;intmg out that the
J::tpanesc recognw: the tmportance of ~ience
m Lhear lives and "they thnvc on SCience··

Anolhcr problem wilh science news 1~ that tb:
mcd1a to a large cxt.:nt. has fOCtL~ on mtxilcinc.
While nnlical issues are important. ''science t~
more than medicine and technology." J-olatO\Io

relaled.lllere are many otherf~elds in sdcnce that
•mJXlCI on u., lives of people and also sparl&lt; their
curiosity and imagination. he pointed OUL
When lhe n-.xliadoes focus on other scientifiC
fidcb. !hey often repon on politically cha!},-...J
'""""" such ., U., supercollider, he said. adding
that there is litLlcorno information about what the

I ra ~.

e LIB ........... mum. to um-.lty to lead panel In Allen Auditorium.

"Ediwrs don t have the
slightest idea what drives
the country; Its science
that drives the country. "
collider does but a 101 about how rruch it costs.
The end result is that there is "linJe science on
popular newSC&lt;ISIS" in spite of u., fact that u.,
public is very interested in science, Aatow said.
He maintained that network executives are not
mtcrested in educating but very interested in
aumcting SJXll1SOl' who an: looking for certain
types of audiences.
Scientists also bear some responsibilily fa-this
problem. a&gt; many have diffiCUlty in trnnslaung
U.,irrcsults in IU1 urxler&gt;tandable way toU., public.
said Joseph Garoella_ professor in U., Department
of Olemisuy ru UB. who organized U., panel
dL'CU.&lt;.&lt;ion "Scientists should have more of a
responsibility to communicate. They must make
-.cleflCC intercsl.ing and exciting_'' Garoella said.
Ellen Goldbaum. senaor "iCICnce editor for
the UB ew!-1 Bureau and a panel participant.
also poimcd out thai '"elementary education m
~ience i!i. horrific.·· and as a rcsull many people
"arc scared away from M:ience:· Because of
thts. a 101 of the public ..doesn't kno"- what
scienHsts really do." Goldbaum satd.
ardella adcled that ru the univen.1ty level.
some courses m sc1ence are not very
stimulating. and often lhey are used to weedout students. The sense of challenge and fun in

G

science is not conveyed to students. he said.
A atow added that we "need to teach science as
a great mystery" and lhat students mUSI learn
about the tools to investigate these mysteries.
Mike Vogel, science writer for T1ll! Buffalb
News. also addressed U., issue of science as a
long-term process, often wilh unresolved questions. "The public is oonditioned to expect a
package wilh neal resolutions. Science is n01 a
package but (l'lllher) a process." Vogel explained
The public expectS science to con-e up wilh
clear-art conclusions. but. in fact. there are many
tirres when science: doesn't have the answer. it's
001 exact and it mainlain.o;; ''buiJt-ln contmvcr.t.t.''
Gudella said.
.. News stories on scaence are tough because
!here are no clear-art answen;,'' Vogel saxl. adding that U.,y are difficult to write.
Aside from making science educauon m
~~ and universities more interesting and
exciti ng. !he panel discussed waysofgetting""""
science storie:. from differertt field&lt; n."p&lt;JJted by
the media Sctencc programming onlVis expenSIVe and i!'"' diflkult to get underwritC'fl) to
sponsor thern Aruow saKI. However. 1f 1V e.ll.tx:utivescould be convinced that the public is very
interested in scierx:c progr.un._~. wtuch ~Y'
"how they are.n may be easJertu get underwriter.
to ~pon.o;;or these shows

Aatowpointedoott.hat m Boston. NPR\ ..Talk
of the Nation" "U., No.3 mted radio progrdll\ and
it·~ No.I in morning programming. A£ a result of
tlus high rating. sorre B&lt;Non mu..\ic Slallons have
begun to sponsor ''Talk of lhe Nru1011" Jll"' m get
lhe1r calllettcn. on u., ""· Flmow said.
The panel suggested that scientiSt&gt;. publiC
relations people. and the news media mUSl wOI"l
together to get out Interesting scJeoce sto~ that
are undelSiandable to lhe generdl public.

Tnnothy Conroy named director of publications
Tirnott~y J. Conroy, a manager/designer with extensive experience in universities and nationaJ periodicals. has been named
director of publications at UB, effective immediately.

Conroy comes to lhe university from Old Dominion University
in Norfolk, Va.. where he had been director of publications and graphics since 1989. There he led a 14nnember staff charged wilh the design, production
and printing of all university publications as well as
graphics suppo11 for faculty and gmduate research.
He chaired the pub I ications committee 81 Old Dominion and was a member of the President's Ad vi. sory Comminee on Equal Opponunity/Affinnative·
Action and Diversity.
From 1980-89, Conroy was a graphic designer for
NatioruJI Geographic in Washington. D.C.. where he
designed and produced about one-third of each
month's issue. coordinating the efforts of various
depattments--layout. editorial, legends. research. CONROY
an. cartographic, engrnving and printing and typographic-to maintain consistency of style and design.
''Tim has the wonderfuJ blend of experience from a university
and from a national magazine," said Ronald H. Stein, vice president
foruniversiry advancement·anddevelopment "He is a very creative

mdividual wiLh a sense of service who clearly understands the role
the Publications Office plays in a major research university."
Working wilh National Geographic Society picture editors,
Conroy produced several photographic exhibits for Citicorp. New
York City. and curated two book exhibits--T711!
Flturon: A Joumnl ofTypography and Rart Advtntures. a di splay of lhe Grabhom Press Rare Americana Series.
He brings with him a pen;onal collection of
4,000rare books and printed ephemera wilh emphasis on fine print and typography, 1920-1940. 1hoogh
U., collection contains gmphic arts specimens from U.,
days of U., icunabula 10 U., JrCSClll. In building U.,
oollection.Conroyconsider.ibinding.typogrnphy,presswork. ilhL&lt;trdlions, paper. Wld, of coun;c,literary merit
He is a regular contributor to the quarterly
Bookwa)'S. commeming on the substance. anistry
and craftsmanship ofcontemporary fine-press books.
The recipient of an M.A. in gruphic arts from
Vennont College of Norwich University. Conioy is a member of U.,
Alrerican Institute of Graphic Arts. U., Univmity&amp;Collcge Designers Association and U., Council for U., Advancelrellt and Suppor1 of
Education.

F FACULTY governance is 10 continue
university policy on a wide
range of issues. it must strive for greater
cooperation wilh the adminisuat.ion. according to Peter Nickerson. profes,sor of palhology and newly elected chair of the Faculty
Senate.
.. , think there is a real necessity to continue
the cooperation between the faculty and the
administration that's been evident over the last
year," he said during a recent interview. ''The
president. the provost and the senior vice president are open to listening to the wisdom of the
faculty here. But we also need to continue the
independenceofU., faculty . The Faculty Senate needs to g1\'e an objeCtive voice m the
concerns of our facuJty ...
Regarding issues that will be imponant to
U., future of education at U B.
Nickerson sa1d
thatthedecentralization of some
10 help guide

budgetary maners
makes il more importanl than ever

"The Senate
needs to give
an objective
voice to the
concerns of
our faculty."

that faculty governance be strong
and clear
"Wilh decanal
unus assuming
more responsibilny.govemanceon
a local (unit) level
is going to have to
be strengthened. I
would like to see
the resolution
Implemented that
asked to establish
local bodget pnoritiescommittco
forthoseunit~that

don't have them ...
-f'E1U NICIWISOH
Nickerson. who
""""toUBinl967
afiercompl&lt;ring h"'
Ph.D. at Clan niver;1ty, ha.&lt; been a n-rmberof
lhe Facuhy Senate Exccuuve Coounitu:e for five
y~. He1sinh1&lt;ii~tennasaSUNYSenalor

and ha; been U., chair of U., Senate's Ubr.lry
Conuninee for about three yean.. He has also

workedongovemancewilhinU.,medicalschool.
Admission Policy Commitu:e. as
presidentofU.,MedicaJ Faculty Council in 1991 1992and asU., directorofgraduate studies for the
f&gt;.uhology Depwtment
Anlllheran:a that Nickerson wants to continue
to address after assuming u., helm of u., Senate
is faculty promotion. "We (U., Senate) have been
looking for u., conecr balance 81 lhe university
between teaching, resean:h and service. We' U
continuetodothat.AndwilhU.,provostcum:ntly
looking ru lhe PRB (President's Review Board),
it is a good time for U., facuhy 10 have a strong
voice in how to proceed"
Closely tied to the process of promotion is
the organizational structure of the faculty. said
Nicker.;on. "The organization of the faculty is
often related lo its teaching functions," he said.
··But ln research.. we don' t always coincide.
Wilh cross-disciplinary wotlt gaining greater
emphasis. I'd like to look ciQser at how to
better organize the faculty here."
Advising of undergraduate students by faculty is another issue Nickerson hopes to begin
tackling next year. "'The role of faculty in the
advising process needs to be looked aL Students seem to view advisillgasaproblem. from
feedback thai I've gotten. l really. don't have
any preconceived notions aboot this issue. But
· I do waot to take a good look 8l it ..
Nickerson assumes his new duties, replacing current Senate Chair Nicolas Goodman,
professor ofrnath_ematics, on July I.
a&gt; chair of lhe

�4

--.:a-. --.-a

Bazzani, basketball coach, resigns

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FamiJy room witli' wood burning stove opens to quality
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DONNA CUill.AUME 839-9047

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UB'a-·a......._. coach Dan Bazzani
resigned Tuesday after I0 years of leading &lt;he
Bulls. 'The team's record &lt;his season was 5-22
in (he second year of playing in Division I.
Bazzani's record overall
is 119-14g in I 0 seasons,
wi&lt;hhisbestyearin 198687 when &lt;he le3JTl posted
a 15-IOrecord.
In a statement from
&lt;he Division of A&lt;hletics.
Bazzani said he would
"explore o&lt;her profess ional opportunities
within the university.··
·1 aocep! Dan· s resignation," said Athletic Director Nelson
Townsend. "and on behalf of (he university,

convey our appreciarion for the 10 years of
service he's given 10 intercollegiate athletics
and especially for guiding our basketball program through &lt;his transition period from Di vision mto Division L"
"It has been a pleasure 10 serve &lt;he university as a player in &lt;he early '60s and as its head
basketball coach &lt;he past 10 ye:m." Bazuni
said. "My sincere app&lt;eeiation goes OU( to all
my assistants for&lt;heirtirelesseffons and all (he
student-a&lt;hletes who have played under me."
Bazzani 's four-year contract expired after
this season.
·we ' re going to move forward with the
development of our program ... Townsend told
The Buffalo News. " My plans are to have a new
coach aboard by (he (April 13) signing date
(for high school seniors)."

BOOKS
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Gc-11crdl Adml!»lo n S 12

'""''

nl't- ,'&gt;02

oontinued 10 be used because &lt;he raw materials
were cheap and available. Now. acid-free papers
are competitively priced and pubtishers are using
&lt;hem. The federal government passed a Joint
Resolution Establishing National Policy oo Permanent Papers in February. 1989 and has since
produaxlmuchofitsmaterialooacid-freepapers.
Au&lt;hors and others have joined librarians in calling for widespread use of acid-free papers.
OldeT books get very special treannent by the
staff at &lt;he center. ..Anything before 1850 we
wouldn't repair. We don 't want to repair them.··
Sernfin says ...And we don't want to replace the
cover. Thal'schanging its bibliographic integrity."
Those books are placed into a special wrapper
rnadeofheavy.acid-freepaper. Among thespocial
machiJlCI)' and tools used by Sernfin s staff of
preservation tochniciansand srudent assi~ts. is a
crimper used 10 score the heavy paper so the
wrnpperfitsthe book perfectly. The wrapper looks
a linle like a boxy envelope thaJ closes in oo it..,! f.
Books thaJ are very fragile and valuable get
even morecxcep1ional handling. A special box is
ronstructed 10 hold these books. These doubletray boxes, which open Iikebookloandlook for all
the world like books when they· re on the shelf. are
painstakingly constructed. ·we·ve made quite a
few of them for the Poetry/Rare Booklo Collec·
tum.'' Serafin says.
To best protect !.he contenl".lhesc box~ must
do;e secwdy and tightly. In fact. all the work
done by the centers Slaff muSI he ilCCW&lt;llely
mea~. It wouldn't do to have crooked or
sk!.!wed coven.. unevenly sewed 'lignarures or
misaJigncd box.e)o.

riii &amp; Xlt..Rt- \'l't

1\S! Ih-rwiAvl'
Burt.JIII :0.: ' l 4 l l n
8 14 - '&gt;'&gt;'&gt;\

anual dexterity 1~ a prerequisite for employlllC'nt aJ.lheccnter. whcrelhrceprescr·
vation technicians and six !oo1udcn1 assistants curremfy work. To make sure that student&lt; applying
for !"'5itioos at the center are qualified. Serafin
administer.; a quick "dexterity exercise.··
.. We do a lot of measuring. and you need to
know all that" Serafin says. 'We do a lot oftha!
by eye."llle exercise includes a measu.re-by~ye
componem ac;; well &amp; a glue exercise. ln book
binding, neatness counts.
The center's staffeo; must have a professed
intereSt mbook preservation and often have related experience in·other fields. One of the preservation technicians was a dental hygienist and
contributes her dexterity. another has a back·
ground in pixlographyandprintmakingandbrings
an innate Wlderstanding of paper to the job.
Serafm herself began woriting in the field
before it really becarre a field. After fmishing her
Wldergr.lduate worll the Buffalo native landed a
job wi&lt;h the New York Botanical Garden Library
Book Preservation Center working wi&lt;h conservator Heidi Kyle. "I received all my training
privately from there," Serafm sal"- "In the early
·70s. there were no colleges:· offering &gt;1JOCialty
degrees in preservation. "The f~eld iL&lt;;elf was just
beginning to open up: · Ser.tfin anended confer·
ences and work..~ on book prescrv:ition to
broaden her trdining.
Serafin headed back 10 Buffalo to study libmry
science at UB and joined the Uruversity Libr.uics
in 1979. Before the center wa&lt; opened in 1984,
she was head of binding and finishing at the

Finished books .... placed LWider press
while drying. to preserve shape.

Libr.uics' Centrdl Technical &amp;&gt;Moos.
Serafin loves books. " It's the paper. it' s the
illu.o;rrarion. l&lt;'s the an of the book itself-&lt;1&gt;.:
paper.the texture. the whole gr.!Jlhic design of 11.
The book a&lt; the artifact.··
But she balances this affection with a dose of
reality: wrnctirres it isn ' t possible to preserve~
anifac.1. lben it's necessary to preserve the content '' It·!tnol critical tohavethe book in itsorig1nal
version." she says. "You can look at things two
ways. A lot of the books thaJ we're seeing are
bic.ically unponam for the informational content.
The other rype ...lhose have historical value:·
Of the books whose text it is important 10
preserve-and many books are in bo&lt;h categories--microfilming is the most common technique. "It'!) the most proven way to reformat, ..
Serafm says. But recent work has been in digitizing of lhe information. "You can enhance. yoo
can er.c;e. Once you digitize, you can oulpUI it on
paper; you can OUipUt it oo microfilm and you can
go the next step and output it on CD-ROM."
Booksoouldbecomeaccessible&lt;hroughcomputer ne!Wori&lt;s and bulletin boards. '1&lt;' s fa.&lt;Cinalingbecause a person will haveaa:es.&lt;. Geography
doesn't become a factor:· Serafin sa)IS. Evenrually. readers could simply retrieve an entire book
by computer from a networic
But she acknowledgestha! those days may he
a long way away. "There are a lot of problems
wi&lt;h hardware and software. The life cycle of
hardware isgettingsoyoudon't wwtttoinvest in
it. And I Wlderstand you have 10 refresh the digital
information."
There are still problems wi&lt;h deacidif1C31ioo.
too. Massdeacidificarion rrojectsaieunderwayat.
for example. Harvard. NOI1hwesem and Johns
Hopkjns Universities and at the ubrary of Congress, but Serafin says the logistics and the seloctioo process can be difficult And the most basic
problem: Whenabookbecotresbrittlc. i&lt;'salready
100 Ime. ..you caimot send a brinle book 10 be
deacidifled." Serafin sa)IS. And thai's where the
Center for Book l'reseJvarion""""' in. "What's
importan( is the infoonarioo. The.impcrtant thing
is thaJ anything lhfu's brinle beC3jXllred."

�IHIIRIII

5

--..---.-2:1

Kristan
CotWin
Physics Ia her c:~~m..,
111'-DmKII
Special to the Reporter

A

LREADY A BUDDING scientist at the tender age of nine,
Kristan Corwin remem~ fiddling around in the family garage with tools that belonged to
her father. " He was always pointing things out
in hisshoptomeand saying things like 'Kristan.
hand me a screwdriver'," says Corwin, who
graduates in May with a degree in physics.
She has come a long way from thai toolbox.
l ..ast summer she worked with Philip Furst at
Georgia Tech a• pan of the prestigious Research
Experience for Undergraduates (REU) progrdiTl,
and two~ ago as an intern in NASA' s
Space Life Sciences Training Program al the KL-nnedy
Space Center.
"I learned so much

about the space program...
says Corwin. ''I was some·
body who was kind of interested in space and this
really expanded my hori zons on what was availab le and where the space program was going.
I gained experience working with groupo of
people. So much of what goes on at NASA is
group-oriented. 11tat was really drilled home
to us."

Corwin used the knowledge she gained
from NASA to help her in her duties as the
president of the Physics Oub, a position she's
held since the beginning of her junior year.
"It was a way to explore some of the more

tangential things to ph ysics." says Corwin or
her involvcmenL 'Tve been more of a facilitator

of other people· s ideas. The most important thing
to remember is to ll'ie the taicnl'i of the people in
the club I like to see a group of people do more

"I may go into industry, but
eventually I expect to come
back and teach as a
professor in a university. "

together than they can do individually."
A student in the honors program at UB .
Corwin has been inducted into Phi Eta Sigma.
a freshman honor society, and the Golden Key
Honor Society. a sociaJ sciences organization
that recognizes academic excellence.
A native of Elma. the 21-year-old Corwin
entered UB in the fall of I989 intending to
major in engineering or biology. But after
anending an honors physics seminar with Prof.
Jonathan Reichen. she knew that physics was
her calling.

"He had a dynamic per.opective on introductory physics that just caught my attention
and brought me into physics," says Corwin. "I
just enjoyed the physics classes. the challenge
of problem solving."
The summer before the start of her junior

year she studied with Gilbert Brink. U8 professor of physics and astronomy, and gained
her first real experience of working in a lab.
··1 enjoyed that a lot," says Corwin. ··1
learned basic things in a lab like how to solder
rwo wires logether. in addition to some more
advanced things, like how to work with laser.&gt;.
We were also trying to answer the question of
what lies between the stars. what compounds
are up there."
Corwin is pleased with her undergraduate
educat.ion. especially the anention she received
in the Physics and Astronomy Department
'Td say I've gotten an excellent education

at

us:·

says Corwin. ··1 think the Physics
Department does an excellent job of focusing

on Lheir undergraduates.··

Corwin will pur.oue graduate and doctoral
srudies in physics and has applied at Cornell.
Berl&lt;eley and Illinois.
··1 may go into industry after I graduate, but
eventually 1expect to come back and teach as
a professor at a university . It is something thai
J'veenjoyed when J'veencountered it. I like to
ex plain things. I like to see the look of enlightenment on someone 's face ."

Her friends say she is bubbly and energetic.
and Corwin laughs at the n(){ion that physicists
have no fun .
''To some extent physicists enjoy being
behind a door with their nose in a book and beru
over electronics, but when they get OUI they
really have a good time," says Corwin, wbo
enjoys waterskiing and Ultimate Frisbee.
She credits the support and caring of her
parents for her success.

"The support of my parents has been very
important." she says. "Without them. I would
not be here. When I get down, they pick me
up.

'Woman Power' conference
to explore career advancement William Eller, international
0

" W

OMAN POWER in the 21st
Century·· will be Lhe theme of a

two-day conference exploring
issues of career advancement
for African-American women that will be held

Friday, April2 and Saturday. April3 on the UB
North Campus.
The confereoce wi II be sponsored by Project
WIN. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. and UB .
Project WIN, founded last year by the Erie
County Chapter of The Links. Inc .. is a coalition of African-American
women who are locaJ commUnity leaders.

Futrell is a.ii.sociare professor in Lhe School of
Education and Human Development ar George
Washington University.
The conference will feature a series of
workshops on topics including balancing personal and professional life. leadership developme nt . effective co mmunication and
combating stress in the workplace and at home.
Groups participating in the conference include the Gamma Phi Omega Chapter of AI·
pha Kappa Alpha: Xi Epo ilon Omega Chapter
of Alpha Kappa Alpha:
Frontier Chapter of the
American
Business
Women 's A~sociation:

Mary Hatwood Futrell.
internationally known educational leader who has
been cited in numerous put&gt;licationsas one of the most

influential African-Americans in the U.S. and one of
this country's most out-

standing women. will deli ver the conference's

keynote address at 8:45a.m.
April3 in the theater of the
UB Student Union (Room
20 1).

She also will present a
public address at 8 p.m.
April 2 in Slee Hall.
President of the World
Confederation of Organi·
zationsofthe Teaching Profession and a former

president of the National
Education Association.

Project WIN is a
coalition ofAfricanAmerican women
community leaders.

Buffalo Chapter of The
Links, Inc.; Buffalo Urban
League Guild:
Chautauqua Ladies; Coa·
lition of 100 Black
Women; Buffalo Alumnae
Chapter of Delta Sigma
Theta. Inc.; Erie Couoty
ChapterofThe Links, Inc.;
Rochester Chapter of The
Links, Inc .. and th e
Women'sAuxiliaryofthe
NAACP.
Buffalo Associate City
Court · Judge Rose H.
Sconiers is conference
chairman.
'The registration fee i~
S55. For more infonnation.
contact the U8 Office of
Conference Operations.

645-2018.

B

I

I

U

A

R

i

figure in reading instruction
W.... Eller. profes'Or e~reritus in the U8
Graduate School of Education and one of the
nation· s most distinguished researchers in the
f~eld of reading instruction. died March 14 in The
Buffalo Gener.ll Hospital after a short illness. He
was71.
A natiooal and intematiooalleader in his field for
more than three decades.
Eller had retired from the
UB faculty on Jan. 15.
Eller was past president
of the 90,000.member International Readi;Jg ~
ciation. which recognized
his accomplishments by electing him to its Reading Hall of Fame in 1986. He served last year as
the president of the Hall of Fame. Eller was also
a fllUfldef and president of the Natiooal Reading
Confemx;e. He was the only pen;on to have beld
the top position in all three groupo
He was recruited to the U8 faculty in 1962 to
instilllle a (Xogrant in reading education. He buih
that (Xogrant into one of the most OUISillnding in
the U.S.. acx:onling to Roy Callahan, acting dean
of the U8 Graduate School of Education. Its
graduates have gone oo 10 distinguished educatiooal= both bereandabroad. a fliCI that was
a source of muclt pride to Eller, Callahan said.
p!er served U8 in an administrative capacity
for nearly a quanercenrury. ln the mid-1960s, he
becaJre the first chair of the Oepariment of Reading and Language Arts. Thai department was
-subsequendyreoamed Elementary and Remedial
Educatioo and in 198:Mlecame ~of the current.

Depanment of Learning and lnslruction, wluch
Ellerheadedunti11988. The same year, he was the
recipiemofthefirstDistinguishedProfessor Award
.given by the Graduate Srudent Association of the
Depanmem of Learning and lnslructioo.
"Bill Eller had a profound impact oo the
GraduateSchoolofEducation.onreadingeducation. the school's faculty and staff. and especialJy
oo his srudentS. wbo truly valued his advice and
friendship. He will be deeply missed," said
Callahan.
In many journal articles and oonference pape"- he explicated methods of CSiablisbing a
poycbological foundation for reading. and presented a wide range of reading inslructional stralegies. EllerbeldSiateand national offioes in many
Jrofessionai~ includingtheNatiooal
Conference oo Research in Eoglish. He was a
member of the American Educalional Research
Association. the N...agara Frmiier Council of the
National Council &lt;&gt;{.Teachers of English and the
New York State Reading Association.
He was a gFadua!e of the Univer.;ity o( Wi£coosin a! Planeville, which presented him wiih its
Distinguished Alwmi Award in 1987. He mceived a masler's and doctaal degrees in educational poyebology from the University of Iowa.
He is survived by his wife. 8elty Sanders
Eller; a soo, Owles 8.; adaughter-in-iaw, Ava.
andgrandson.Jadr:Mellion.allofBurlingtoo. Vt
A manorial service will be held April24lll I :30
p.m in the Center for Tomorrow.
Menu:iaJ oontributions may be made to the
William Eller Fund. UB GnWale ScbooJ ofErucalion. 367 Baldy Hall, Buffalo. N.Y. 142ffi

�6

UIW--

_ _ ._.., Gllolo-

FRIDAY

\\l1a1llw\ 'ai1l ...

~.-...Dr. Nlnila
l!op.lo:od«. Nonh~.

--26
_,__
---- -------6:]().8:3() p.m.

..,. resiltnbon

infannotioo call 64~125.

I

CD

Crtdool

cu,_,.-*Ea.!
.

.-.!C.W.,Tunothy

LW&lt;e. V"UJinia PolyiCCbnic lnsti.

lUlL 280 Part. Nonh Campus. 7

I Clllll-•taocut.

p.m.

C&lt;Iuplos, Dr. Derue Broruon.
Cctuz for Tomorrow. North
Campus. 8:4S Lm.-3 p.m. For

WM . . .
Aldr.. Woldmoo
112
Nonnn. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m..
9:30 p.m. ond MidoisbL Admjs.
lion. $2.50. UB IIUdeota; $4.50.

n-...

, . . infomllllon call64~140.

OIIAL-.o8YSorfocelleoopl&lt;&gt;n ODd Neupbll
E.mesu&gt;
o.NIItdin. Pb.D.• UB D&lt;pt. of
OniBiology. 21S Fosler. South

I'll-.

Campus. Noon.

ProdlctGn o1

v...,."',.._

duo Owl&amp;lo&amp; Spodolllls Aller c-pid·
lo&amp;Grodua..

- B y - , co-dir.acd by
Cotbcrine Cowtcnay and John
Elliocl 0yzon. Katharine Cornell
lboater. Ellicoa Complex. Ncrth

Campus. 8 p.m. T!Cbu. $4. UB

lllldenu.ICilion. UB faculty ,
Jlaff. alumni ; $10. gene:&amp;~ admis-

THEA'IDI
F...,dnma
by Caryl

l'nlnlnc-

Dc:nnis A.

Bcnnm.

'IIIICIJOIE:

MD.

"One of lhc problems is dill a lot of guns used in violent
crimes ore illegal guns. Simply tigblening up gun ownership~ is problbiy DOl going 10 put a dent in lbc
problem. you haw: 10 go after lhc IIOUI'CC and SlOp illegal
lnldc."
Ewing praises lhc legislation passed in Y"uzinia dill
limits gun pun:bascs 10 one a wcdc. "'bis llllkes a lot of
sense. It will put somothing of a damper on illcgal gun
lnldc. You won't be able 10 drive down from New Yod&lt;
City, fill up your trunk with guns, lhco go back and ocll
!hem on lhc arcct."
He raises questions, however, aboUI cffons like lhc
Brady Bill thai would aea1e a seven-day waiting period
before a gun can be purchased. "If you want a gun IO_go
kill somebody or oommit armed robbery, you're 001
going 10 go to K-mart.llll out papers. and lhco come back
in 7 days. You"rc going 10 get it on lhc arcct."

THURSDAY

2a

-.oGY-AII

Tb&lt; Rol• of Glucan·Blncllog
Proteins in Strtptococrus
Mutan:s Vlrultnce, Dr Jeffre)
A Banas, assislant professor of
n=search, Dcp of Microbiolog)
and lmmunolo8)'. Univ of OkJahoma Health Sciences Center
250 CFS Addmon Soulh Campus II am.

~­
lliolcJci&lt;al
Pr-oporti&lt;S ol Plant
fbvoooids. Dr EUioo
MMidletoo. Jr . UB profes..foOr of
mcdK:tnc. 0,\ of Allergy and
Immunology . Buffalo G.nernl
Hospital 8 Acheson AnncA

South Campus Noon- I p m
Spc&gt;IUOmi by the UB School of
Health R&lt;llud Profeuoons and
the Nutnuoo Oub
. ANA-roo.cAI. -..co

-

Tb&lt; Blglt l'raoiun! Modubtion
ol Cardbc Mllll&lt;l&lt; l't!rfor·
111&amp;0«. Pen)' M. Hogan. Ph.D .
UB Dept. of Phys1ology 258
CFS Addition. South Campus
I 2:30p.m.

.......,.YS AT 4 PLUS

UIUWIYaa.s
Frum "R&lt;vlsioo ol HlsWcy" "'
"F.,.....t Rlslor1&lt;s": lloa)iog
with lh&lt; l'ulln Con"""P&lt;&gt;no-y
AmericaD l'o&lt;try by Wom&lt;n.

Hannah Mockei-Rieke. Gennan
poelt)' scholar. 438 ClertlO'b

1W:- .
-IIAIIDTNQI'Jh Campus. 12:30 p.m Sponsored by the U8 Poetics Program
IIMCIIIIRO

Volunttmsm, Nancy Guadasn&lt;&gt;.
e..ecutive director. Make a Wish
Foundat:iotl. 145A Student Union.
Nonh Campus 2-1 30 p.m

assistant professor. UB D&lt;pt. of

sponses.. Dr Amos Ar.
Dept. of Zoology . Tel AYiv Um\
121 Cooke: North Camptu. 4
pm

I'MAIIIIACUmCS IIESEJUICtf
~

Investigation of Inorganic Sulf.lltr Transport In the Renal
Proximal Tubul&lt; Uliing Rat

Membrane Vesicle Prcpara·
tiom and Porcint Kidney Cdl
Uno LLCPK,. Manha
Mammarella. graduate: student
UB Dept of PharmaceutiCS. 508
Cooke North Campus. 4--5 p.m

llnDIU-~~CEHIDI

Vk&gt;ladon of Women 's Human
RigbllL Buffalo Museum of Science: Auditorium . 1020 Humboldt
Pkwy 6.30-10 p.m. Co-spon-

son:d by the lntcmational Institute of Buffalo and VIVE. Inc
For more mfonnation call 6452073

UUAaf1UI
Twillcl&gt;t oltb&lt; Cockroocbes
i 1989), directed by Hiroaki
YOshida. Wo ldmanThoalef. 11 2
Nonon. Non.h Campus. 7 and 9
p.m Admission. $2.50. UB students; S4 •.SO. non-smdents..

UFE-

lntcrYttwtna SUCX'ta: It's
Easier Than You lbink. Jim
Kumor. leader. North Campus
7 )().9 p.m. For regis.ltUtion mfor·
mation call645-6125

THEA'lUI
Fen. drama by Caryl Churchill.
directed by Jerry Finnegan.
PfciferTheau:r.681 MainSL 8
p.m. Tickets. S4. students, senior
Cltizcns, UB faculty. ltafT ~
alumni; S I 0. general admission.
For more infonnation call 8293742

Social and Preventive
Medicine. 252A Farber
South Campus. 12:J().I :30p.m.

--

LIV&amp;actiOn

an•matlor

IUC11IICALAIID~

comb•ne .r
ton1g111 5 ' JUAf•

Real· 11m&lt; Aln:rall Panme..r
ldeotlllcatlon, Soon Buethc.

engmeering test pilot and Oigh1
control engineer with Calspan
Corp. II 0 Knox. Nonh Campus
3 p.m. For additional information
contact Prof. S J Upadhyaya at
64S·2425.

MA-nes CCIU.OQUIUM
Prof. FU&gt;hld H~lr. 103
Diefendorf. South Campus 3
p.m

-

lt~rr1a1

7&amp; Y

Chun:hill. dir&lt;cu:&lt;l by Jcny
Finnegan. Pfeifer1bcaler. 681
Main Sl 8 p.m. Tickds. S4 . students, senior citizens. UB facult) .
sUtff and alumni: S I0, general
admission. For more information
eall 8..?9-3742.

- . - &amp; . CHEMISlWY.

D&lt;slp and Syolh&lt;sls of l't!ptld•
Honnon• Antagoolsts, Dr.
Roger M. Freidinger, senior di =tor. Medicinal Chemistry.
Merck Research Labontories.
114 HochsteU,.. North Campus.

3p.m.

_,.,.
COI.I.OCII••
r&gt;t-ocr-ID U.. O..dop111&lt;11l o1
Now M&lt;lbocl5 ror
S...-.-.«ttn Orpnlc Syntbo-

- . -y
sls, Prof. Anhur G. Schultz.
Reossclocr Polyteehinc lnstitul&lt;.
70 Acheson. South Campu~ 4

p.m.

~..EC:n.aa.s

.

Spatial ~totloolo Pootmor Pari&lt;lal &lt;M1u, Dr. Corol
Colby. Natkmallnitiwtes of
Health. 108 Sherman. South
Campu5. 4 p.m. Spc&gt;IUOmi by the
Interdisciplinary Gnduaae Group
in Neuroscience and the: Dept. of
Physiology.

-YAT41"Wa

UIUWIYJiadloi, l..ooioc Gluck. ..... 420
Capen. Ncrth ~ 4 p.m.
S(JOiliOIOd by the U8 l'l:&gt;elry Com.
mittec with fundo from the Abbott
Fum llld Pocu llld Writtn.

SATURDAY

27

PIIUMACYF-

Come To A Pbarmocy Fair!,
f= cOOtesu:rol. blood preuure
and catbon monoxide: testing;
poison Jnvm.tion puppet show
and video: medkalion
cosulwion. Center focTomor·

row. North Campul. '9:30 Lm.-2
p.m. Cn-5p&lt;li1SO&lt;Cd by the Phar·
macists' Association of Wc:stc:m
New York and the WNY Society
of Hospital Pharmaci"'.

_'1'1._,.
COiiAANC • .

Mandlm • an llltdlodual TraditloA, speilin from UB.
McMutet Univ., Uruv. of Roch·
werand York Univ. 280Patt.
North Campus. 10:30 a.m.-4:30
p.m.
'*A'!'Ia

F&lt;a, dnma by Coryl Churchill.

�diJoa.od by kny Finnepn.
PfeifC&lt; 'l'beoW, 681 Moin St 4
ond 9 p.m. 'l'lck.u, $4, - ..
...Uordtlzt:.-., UB foculty, .wr
ond llumni: $10, JI"'Cn) lldmiJ&amp;ion. For more infonnalion caU
829-3742.
WAll . . .
Aldn. Woldman Thea...-, 112
Nor!OO. North C&amp;mpul. 7 p.m.,
9:30 p.m. and MidniJh&lt;. Admisaion, SUO. UB &amp;IUdenu; $4.50,

non--.
_._.._

v_. o,--. ce&gt;&lt;IUectcd by
Catherine C&lt;&gt;urt.eoay and John
Elliott Oymn. Kalharinc Come!!
ThcaU:r. Eliiooa Complex. North
Campw. 8 p.m. TICI:t:u, $4, UB
studenls, JCnion, UB faculty,
oWl'. alumni: $10, JI"'Cn) admission.

SUNDAY

~~
........

Fen, drama by Catyl ChULdlill.

directed by Jerry Finnegan.
PfeiferThealc:r, 681 Main St. 3
p.m. Ttckeu. $4. studentJ, &amp;enior
citizens. UB faculty. staff and

alumni: S I0. gcn&lt;:~-.1 admiuion.
For more information call 829·

3742.

DAMCUI'·-

VIsual Dynamks, co-din:ctcd by
Catherine Courtenay and John
Ellion Oyzon. IWharine Cornell
Theater. Ellicou Complex . North
Campus. 8 p.m. Tick.eu. $4, UB
srudems, seniors. UB faculty ,
stafT. alumni: SIO. general adm1s·

--AI.
SIOfl.

Torn Gentry, botltooe. Baird
Recital Hall , 2$0 Baird North
Campus 8 p.m

MO NDAY

~9

TEACIWII

Gays &amp; Lesbians In lh&lt; MIUtary. short talks on gay and lc.o;.
bian veterans. civil righ!S. issue~
m education. relllled topics. SAC
SociaJ HaJJ. second floor above
Putnam 's. Noon·2 p.m. Work shops on homophobia and legal
1ssues. Rooms 2.50 and 145E
SAC. North Campus. 2-3 p.m

--AI.

James BUJ"''t!iiS, tromboM. Slec
Concen Hall. North Campus 8

pm

TUESDAY

--.---.-- -----·-.- --- - Hall, 2$0 Bainl. North Campuo.
~

-.order.... An:llllodure ODd
Appllca"- Yona.a.uJ
Sbin.

Slmpllllod

Ph.D. condidale. UB DqJc. or

llleclricallnd Compu...- Engi-

nccrina- 140 Keaa-. Ncxtb Cam-

pw. 12:10 p.n s~ by the
Gnduale Group for Applied Aru fiCiallnldliaence in Enginecrina-

__

llec:aallpn- oll'aniiOI

~wlthFIIIIlta,Rameah

Sillnmln. Pri.nceton Univ. and
NEC Racan:h ln&amp;titule. 14
Knox. North Campw. 3:30 p.m.

,..,.,_

IKiu.

C.tb&lt;rillellowe, poiniO'.
llclhunc Gallery. 2719 Main St
3:30p.m.

-

PIIY-AMD-

-l!lodroo and A-l!lodroo- Studl&lt;s or
Surfaces, Prof. Y . Gao. Univ. of
Rocbesler. 219 Froocuk. Nonh
Campw. 3:45 p.m.

L-.-

Uvln&amp; Off Campus: What You
Need To Know, Ed Brodka.
leader. Nonh Campw. 4-5 p.m.
For registration information call
645-6125 .

-.....__,._

u-ncs
cwa u:C!UIII!
~···

lloa. 143&lt;: Studcna Union. North
Compus. }.5 p.m.

•c••
r..r....-..._......

Mala&gt;lm M. Sial.,.,., 1'11.0 .,
UB Blopbysical Sc:icnces Dept.

J07 lloc:hstcua. Nonh Campw
4 p.m.

............... G-l'n&gt;Cd.no
In Medlaalcally Induced SUIdal M - Gn&gt;Wib, Dr.
Hcnnan VandcnbutJI&gt;, Dept. or
l'llholof;y ond Labonlory o(
Modidne. Miriam Hoopital, RJ.
106 Caty. Sooth Campua. 4 p.m.

UIIIIAII'(-

- T S Af 4PUM
Theory, fie-, Spirit: A Com....In lllollDdtoJrouad Party
ol UIOpla
Fredcrk
J . - , CUrtiJ While, fiCtion
wri...-. 420 Capeo. Nonh Campw. 4 p.m. s~ by the uo

._,.,...to

Poc&lt;ic&amp;Propm.

-

--.u.AMD

,.__,..,.,_~

Campw. 5:30 p.m.
OPUS: CUAICS ..aYAL
Eu&amp;mo Gaul&gt;, piaDo, ODd

James Ptroao. dariDet, works
by Bet-g. Brahms lind Schumann.

AJien Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m.

_ __,_AI.

Uodonlaod, Prof. Howan! Bell.

Radin&amp;. lena Osman. Andrew

--------,.----Human Semc:es PaDd, Robert
Bennet-t. president. United Way

of Buffalo and Erie County.
Leroy Cole. executive director.
Buffalo Urban Leogue. ond
Myrna Young. executive director,
Everywoman Opportunity Center. Student Union 'Theater. North

Campus. 4:]().5:30 p.m.

HWIWI Se.niees Career Fair.
Soda! Hall. 2nd Oon.-. S1uden1
Union. North Campus. 5:30-7·30
p.m

UR-

Polntu's For Building Your
Flnanda.l Worth. Dr Jerry 1--inl...
leader. North Campus 7-9 p m
For registrauon informa11on call

645-6 125
LOCtiWOOII L.laiWtY
IIULUICIICUNIC
Locating Grant Sour-as..
Lockwood Rm. 110 7-9 p m
Preregtslralion requtred P,ck up
regislliltion forms at Lockwood
Librnry '~ Reference Desl..

WEDNESDAY

Levy, Cole Swensen, W.ll

Alexander, and Melanie Neil501l.
Hallwalls Contemporary Arts
Center, 700 Majn Sl. 8- 10 p.m.
For more information contact
Peter Gizzi and Juliana Spahr.
Poetics Program. 302 Oemens

Hall.

Zvlllardl, cdUsl, with Stephon
Manes, plano. works by
Beethoven, Hindemith. Chopin.

8at\.6k and Brahms. Slee Concert

Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Tickc:ts: S8. S6. S4. For more information ca11 64S-2921 .

THURSDAY

1

NEW POETRY fUTIVAI.

Rradlng, Rod Smith. Ltt Ann
Brown. Roberto Tejada and J e~ SICa Grim 420 Capen Non h
Campus. II am.- 12· 15 p.m Fur
more mformatnHl coni3C1 Peter
GtUJ and Juhana Spahr. Poeuc!i
Progr.un. 302 Oemens Hall
NEW POETRY fUTIVAI.

ll

Panel on Position and Subjec·
tlvlty. Jcs.s1ca Grim. C. S
Giscombe. Susan Gevinz. Mart
Wallace, Thad Ziolkowski and
Myung Mi Kim; Steve Evans.
rnodendoc. 420 Capen North
Campus. I :30-3 p.m For rtl()tt
information contad Peter Gi1.zi
and Juliana Spahr, Poetics Program. 302 Oemens HaJJ

..--..-uv

Hl&amp;b Ptrfonnanc&lt; FO&lt;Inln,

I'IIMMACY-NAII
Sumllriptao-U.C In Mlgnll""
Heaclacbes. Eric Huang.
!'harm.D. candidale. 248 Conl&lt;e.
North Campw. s-8:55 a.m.

_,___

~

lO
---··--- ·-__
,._ I'KY------IIULUICIICUNIC
Locadna Gnnt Soor«S.

Lockwood Rm. 110. 10 a.m.-

Noon. Preregistnll.ioil required
Pick up registration forms a1
Lockwood Litmuy's Reference

NDIA..CC-E
Topic to bclliiDIJUJlced.
Cafetorium A. Mercy Hospital
8:30a.m.

ScxuoJ -~ Ru~y
Locldwt. NYSUT UUP Labor
Relations 5pCCialist, and the 1beater for 0\ange Company . Center
for Tomorrow. North Campus.
8:30 Lm.- 12:30 p.m.

Desk.

~PAIIII~An

David F. Kowalsld, Ph.D., Dcp1.
of Molc:cular and Cellular Bioi ogy. RPCI . Hilleboe Audi1orium .

RPCJ . 12:30 p.m.

Part.. Nonh Campm. 2-3 p.m.

___,_AI.

Paud on Readinl and
Rdlgurina. ~ Gande•. lena
0snW1, Martine: Sellen. Roberto
Tejada, Melanie Neilson. and
Ni.ck Lawrence. moderator. 420
Capen. Nonh Campw. 3:]().5
p.m. For more information con1.ae1 Peter Gi.z.zJ and Juliana
Spahr. Poetics Program. 302
Oemcns Hall.

CGU.OCIII••
Hypucompad Astrophysical

Objccls. Prof. z. Pawneu. Dept

-=n'AL

Sludcalal'rom lhrl&gt;ugboutlh&lt;
UB MWik Dept. Baird Recilal

David L. Presberg. Cornell Univ
'Theory Center. 14 Knox. North
c.rnpw. 3:30-4:45 p.m. For
rrw:n information coni3C1 Dr.
Rapaport" 645-3193

Attenlloo, Esw;n S&lt;gat, UB Psy-

chology Dept.. organizer. 280

Tho Scbool-to-Woril Tnnsl-

p.m.

...,.._ODd Adlndaa ol

or P!lysical Sciences. EaSiem
Connecticut Slate Univ. 454

.._, &lt; &gt; I I \\

\ 1.:. I

llloc-Sn:~

Durtac~ Dr. Dmd
Shalloway. Molecular, Cdllnd
Cancer BiolocY L.abl. DqiC. ol
l'llholozy, Cornell Univ. 121
Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.

==--~~.:.....
-~Kim

LOTUS IMPROV
introduces the exclusive
dynamic view technology for
only $89 at UBMicro.

H. t-. Pbonn.D .. posldoaonl
fellow, UB Dept. of
P1wmaceu1ica. 5()8 Cooke. Nonh
Campus. 4-5 p.m.

-~--AI.
- . . . . Bill Tbale. Juliana
Spahr, Lew Daly,l!lizabetb
Willi I and Ben Fricdlaodcr.
Hal1walls Contemporvy Atu
Ccnu:r, 700 Main SL S.!Op.m.
For more infOfl'Dilion c:on&amp;acl
PtiCr Gizzi ond Juliana Spahr.
Poelics Program. 302 Clemens
Hall

An An:bltcclllnl P r - , PtiCr
Rose. •ward-winnina Canadian
architect. 301 Crolby. Sooth

Some 1binp £udld Didn't

Bnxk Univ. 103 Diefendorf.
Sooth Campw. 4 p.m.

Froncult. Nonh Campus. 3:45

IN
"''"'CO'O'Y _ . ,

~Jiecoplonlalldlnol

7

EXHIBITS
,-.,.,-~
The annual "Sociaa Sc:icnces ond
Humanities Faculty Book Ex hibit" is on diJplay in Lockwood
Lilnry oow through laiC April.
This year's display highlights 63
boots wriucn or octi!Cd by UB
faculty from Atchi~. ArU
and l..etterl, Educaion, ManagemenL Soda! Sciences and the
University Libnuies, and published between late 1991 and

early 1993.
1besc: books reveal the intriguing
range of intereMS of UB faculty
Original poetry and cn:ative responses 10 "home'' are displayed
with "encounters" with Zuni Ind.! -

\ \ ' &lt;&gt; I{

K .._, I I &lt; &gt; I,

ALDUS FREEHAND - a comprehensive design and illustration tool
for the Macintosh.
Buit: DrllWing ill n.dftmd
417:11&lt; 29 • 12~pm • $49 (30)'
Cr&lt;anng Compla D~• ill n.dftmd
5118 I&lt; 20 • I~ • $41 (23)'
WorlciJlg with Color ill "-Jftmd
6/]6 1&lt;18 • 9-Upm • $41 (23)'

Workshops held in 218 Fillmore, North Campus
• Student Fee discounted in parenthesis

ans. A lludy of gende&lt;differences in paid work accompanies
guides tO eleetronic suppon systerns for opctations managemc:m.
A futuristic view of cities of the
21st century compliments an
art istic analys.is of late bron.zt age
pottery. Critical perspectives on
early childhood as well as higher
education share space with stud·
1es of justice, law and VIOlence
1be exhibit is located in t.ht: foyer
of the second floor of Lockwood
and can be viewed during all
Urnes t.ht: libnuy is open

--

l"'llERJfT ......:CIIYU CW
UNIVDtSm'
Photographic perspc:ctives of UB.
skillfull y pre:stnted through t.ht:
eye and camera of UB Pubhcations photogrophers Robert
Wahon and Simon Tong. art on
exhibit through March 30 tn
Capen HaJJ on the Nonh Campus.
Walion. who has been a UB staff
member for four years. ts a
graduate of the Rochester lnst1 ·
tute of Technology Tong. an
etght-year veter.m of the Publica·
uons Office.. ts an economics
map at UB . The Capen Gallery
1s free and open to the public
from 8:30a.m. 10 5 p.m. week days.
COIII'Utlll AliT SHOW
''The: New Writing CD a1 ua:· a
show of wort by compute.r designe£5 who employ words, images. prim. animation.
hypermc:&lt;lia and !)'pogn!phy.
continues through April 20 in
Bethune Gallery. 2917 Main

SIJ"eel.

PMOIO-

"Sacred Circles: Buddhist Ufe m
1ibet." a rollection of photographs by Jennifer Lewis.. is on
view at the Center for Tomorrow.
through March 28. Monday
through Friday. during "'SUI at
building bouts. In 1987. as pan of
a year spen1 traveling the worid.
Lewis. a former filmmaker and
broadcasl joumaliSI, journeyed 10
remote areas ofTibd lhal have
since ~ clo&amp;ed otf to indcpendenttnvelcn. This exhibit wu
pn:vio!Wy on display" the ilurfaJo Museum of Science.

Continued on page 9

Convenience
Quality
Service
.'
ariety

�8

Dental study of saliva may allay fear Research offers first
proofof 'magic-angle'
of AIDS spread through kissing
lly liMY RTIIVMA

News Bureau Staff

llyDIBI--

OMPONENTS of human saliva called mucins help it inhibit !he
AIDS virus. according
10 a study presented
March 13 by researchers at !he UB
School of Dental Medicine and !he
University of Rochester.
EJ. Bergey, assistant professor
of oml biology at UB. presented !he
findings at the joint meeting of the
lntemationaJ Association for Dental
ReS&lt;arch and the American ASS(}-

HE"MAGIC-ANG!.E'effect. where !he alignment
of a suong magnetic f~eld
along cenain angles or orientations causes sudden and dramatic changes in electrical conductivity in some electronic materials,
has been predicted, but never seen,
by theoretical physicists.
Now, experiments with organtc
superconductors at UB have ~
vided the ftrSI proof that the "magicangle" phenomenon does indeed
ex.ist.. although not exactly according to predictions.
The UB fmdings were presented
today at the annual meeting of !he
American Physical Society. Preliminary results we"' published in Physical Rtvitw U11u1 in 1991 .
These observations provide evidence for a new type of what phySI·
ciSIS "'fer 10asa "many-body" effect
in electronic materials. These effects are rare: one dramatic example
i... superconductivity.
The UB research has imponanl
ramifications for understanding principles behind !he tiniest, most powerful electronic devices. suc h as
nanoelectronic devices, which measure about one billionth of a meter
long.
"Because lhesc dramatic changes
in conductivity occur with changes
in the orientation of the magnetic
fie ld. it 's not inconceivable that they
could someday act as a switch to turn
electronic devices on and off." said

News Bureau Staff

T

C

e~a uon

for Dental Research.

He ~id the research team found
m labor.uory studies that units of a
-.tnun of the human immunodeficiency v1rus

implicated in AIDS ag-

gregated, or clumped. with the two

mucms found an human sa.Jiva.
Thas naturally-occurring mechanism in the human body. he ex plained. facilitates removal of viruses
from the oraJ cavify to the stomach,
where !hey are deSiroyed by stom-

ach ac1ds.
The role of the mucins in aggregation of !he virus, he nOied, helps
explain why AIDS hasnolbeenshown
10 he ;-pread in saliva and should help
allay fcan;thalthediscasecan be spread
Lhrough the exchange of saliva thai
may oa:ur while kissing.
lie added thai aggrega110n may
not be tht: onl y mechanism through
wh1ch s.aliva hinders the AIDS virus.
l:krgcy ~d the researchers intnr
duccd human sah va. as well as purified munn,, to tls,ue cuhures
..:nntammg a known number of mfe..:t •ou' unn ~ oflhe HlV virus strain.
r o ll owmg InCUbatiOn, they passed
the mixture through a special filter
that ca pture ~ the mfccuous units.
They found a reducuon in the
numhcr of mfcct1ous units of the
v1rus m the filtr.llC!&lt;! . In cxammauon

"More research must
be done...but studies
from our l£lboratory,
as well as others,
suggest the threat of
AIDS being spread
by saliva alone is
extremely remote and
perhaps impossible. "

of the filters by electron microscopy.
they al so 1dentified aggregates of
virus panicles.
'1"his saJiva aggregauon of the

AIDS-"'Iated virus, combined with
!he small amount of !he virus thai is
"'leased into !he oral cavity, are key
reasons !he disease is most likely not
easily spread from the mouth,"
Bergey said.
"More research must be done 10
further examine !his question. but studies from our laboratory. as wcU as
Olhers, sugg&lt;s~the threat of AIDS being spread by saliva alone is extremely
remote and perhaps impossible."
Other researchers participating
m the project. which was funded
through the National Institute for
Dental Research. are Moon-11 Cho
and Michael J. Levme of !he UB
School of Dental Medicine: B.M
Blumberg and L. G. Epstem of !he
OepanmeniS of Neurology and MIcrobiology at the Un iversit y ofRoches te r. and
Marie
Lout se
Hammarskjtild and David Rckosh
of the University of Virginia.
HammarskjOld and Re ko!\h arc
former UB facuil y members

Mouthrinse helps reduce bacteria
II}' MARY 11£111 SI'INA

News Bureau StaN

U

SEOFApopularoverthe-&lt;:OU!lter moulhrinse
can help reduce bacteria in tissue surrounding dental implants.
helping to ensure their viability, UB
dental resean:hcrs "'ported March
13.
In the resuiiS of a study presented
at a joint meeting of !he International
Association for Dental Research and
the American Association for Dental
· Research, !he researchers Said !hey
found that the mouthrinseLiSIC~so reduced plaque and
improved gingival health of subjects
who used It
The study examined 10 patieniS
1ges 35-65 at !he Buffalo VA Medi;al Center who had received an aver&gt;ge of three dental implants each.
Y:alf rinsed their mouths with
jsterine twice a day, while the rest
insed with a placebo.
microorganism
P.
The
inltnn~diu.s, a bacterium implicated
n gum disease. was present at most

implant sites whel'l the study began.
After four months, resean:her.;
found that the levels of P. inltrmediu.'i
were reduced at implant sites in 3 of
the 5 patients who had rinsed with
LiSICrine. On !he olhcr hand. the
levels of the bacterium increasetfin
4 of !he 5 patieniS who had rinsed
with !he placebo.
Study coonlinaiOr Maryanne L.
Mather, a researcher in the Oepanmenl of Periodontics in !he UB
School of Dental Medicine,emphasiz.ed !hal in order for dental implants to remain viable over time. it
is imponantlhat tissue surrounding
them be kept as free as possible from
infection.
Along with fixed detachable dentures, implants thai consist of a screwlike device implanted in !he bone or
anached 10an anificial tooih or den ture are being used mo"' frequentl y
10 replace teellllost to gum disease.
SIJ'alegically placed implants af.
fixed semi-pennanendy to artificial
teeth can improve chewing and
speaking ability for !hose people who
wear them, said Frank Lauciello.

&amp;L~ iate

professor of prosthodontics

atUB.
" Patien~

are thrilled with the
Implants," he said. noting thai patients have tOld him they now can eat
virtually any food without fear !hat
!heir dentures will fall out They feel
more confident !han they did when
wearing partial or full dentures, he
added.
he decision to.use implants usu-

T

ally is made by a restorative
said Lauciello. who also is
chief of proSihodontics at !he VA
Medical Center.
Unlike l!aditional dentures, implaniS can be removed only by a
dentist
In addition to Mather and
Lauciello, olhcrs participating in !he
UBstudywe,.,ScbastianG.Ciancio,
professor and chair of periodontics:
Gene F. lnnco.clinical associate professor of oral medicine, and Joseph
J. Zamhon, professor of periodontics.
The study was supponed in pan
by a granrfmm the Warner-Lambert
Co.
dentis~

Naugtm&gt; explained that in three&gt;
dimr:nsimal ner:rials,lhealnWaivily
is often isocropic. oclhe same in all three
diredions. But. he said, most organic
metals are highly anisolropic. meaning
the eleclrons move rrore readily in
some directions !han in Olhe:rs.
In these lower diiTClSions, he explained, eleclrons exhibit fundamen..
tally diffc:n:tt behavi&lt;r !han !hey do
when !hey have
isooqlicoordlc-

tivity.
" Toda y· s
electron ics
products "'IY on
independent
electron effects,.. he said.
" BUI if we are 10
NAUGKTON
increase !he densi ty of storage devices. as in
nanoelectronics. then we will be
squeezing more electrons onto a
plane or into a chain. The electrons
will be closer together and they'll
hav. 10 start talking to each Olher. As
technicians start 10 build smaller
devices, !hey will need 10 understand !his many-body. or many-electron effect."

I

n working with organic low--dimensional materials. the UB
physicists also are interested in how
!he low dimensionality affects superconductivity. Recent work with
organic and copper oxide superconductors indicates that the more anisotropic a materia] is. the higher us
transiti on temper•.uure.
"In high·temperaiU"' superconductors. as you get clo~r to two
dimensions m the crystal strucrure.
you get a higher transition temperature." Naughton said.
··Perhaps there is some connec tion between this new effect in Lhe
low-dimensional organics and the
copper oxic!&lt; high-temperature superconductors." he said.
Naughton's recent experiments
involved subjecting cena.in organic
superconductors to large magnetic
fields- 17Teslaat UB and 30Tesla
at !he National Magnet Laboratory
at !he MasSachusetts lnsritute of
Technology . (One Tesla equals
20,000 times !he earth· s magnetic
act
field.) They show !hat a prediction
about !he "magic-angle" effect in
1989 by A.G. Lebcd, a Russian theoretician, was essentially correct. but
with some impon:ant differences.
Lebed had predicted that. when
lhesc melals are placed in a magnetic
field, electron motion is usually incommens~t is. noc: travelMichael Naughton. assistant profes- - ing in harmony with !he SII'UCIUI1: of
sor of physics and principal investithe material 's crystal lattice. Howgator.
·
ever, at these " magic angles." !he
The UB research also may help
motionsuddenlybecomescommen·
explain the "'lalimship betwcat &lt;r·
S\Ullle.
ganic metals and high-temperature suWhile LebedJXedidedlh=wculd
perconductivity.
be a Slriking diffemx:e inconduclivity
The unusual physicaleffeastheUB
when these metals were mated rocerphysicists obsetved in certain organic
tain magic angles. he !hough! these
metals include changes in corWctivity
oommensurabilily resonances wculd
SQ dmmalic thai !hey essontially cause
resuh in a decmlse in conductivity.
lhree-&lt;limensio materials 10 exhibit
Whataauallyoccurs,lheUB~
characleristics of materials with fewer
ers found, is a tremendous increase in
~ known as quasi-ooe dithe ability of lhe rrdal 10 cmduCI
rrpl&lt;ional.
.
elecuicity.

"Because these
dramatic changes in
conductivity occur
with changes in the
orienlation ofthe
magneticfield its
not inconceivable
that they could
someday as a
switch to tum
electronic devices on
and off"

--

�•

--...---.-:1:1

Festival will bring young poets
to campus March 31- April 3
" W

RITING FROM the New

Coast.'' the fllSl festival of new

poetry in North America, has
been scheduled for Man:h 3 I
through April 3 at UB.
The festival will mark the only gathering of

the emerging voices of this poetic genera·
tion-35 young poetS from across the conti·
nent distinguished for the uniqueness of their
approach to poetry and fortheirenduringcom·
mitmcnt to the furthering of the poetic community. Organ&gt;zers say they hope the assembled
group will anive at a manifestation of a new
generational identity as writers.
Although their work. has come into print in

the past five years. the invited participants are
already nationally recognized. Many have severaJ books in print and are actively publishing

m a wide variety of poetry journals. A large
number of them are eslablished editors of

leading journals and book presses.
In add iti on to representing different natJOnal, racial and ethnic backgrounds, jXUtici-

pants manifest a wide range of aesthetic
posiuons. culturdl concerns. politicaJ and rcli gJous orienmtions. occupatiOn!&lt;. and poetic per. . uasJOns. Discussion will revolve around how
all of th1~ diversity affect~ currem poetic
thought
The festi val w~ orgamZL-d by Peter Gizz;
and Juliana Spahr. poets pursumg doctora l
degrees through the UB Poettcs Progr.:tm. w ho

say they are interest&lt;d in the inter&gt;eetion of
hybrid points of view.
"We want to try to undersland how these
diffenent points of view develop, where they
originate and how they influence the practice
of poetry." says Spahr.
She adds that it is particularly appropriate
that UB host the festival :
• UB is well·known nationally for having
one of the nation's leading programs in poetics. which is d~ by a core faculty of
internationally acclaimed poets, fiction writers
and critical theorists. including Robert Cree ley.
• Its graduate students are very active and
well·published young American poets.
• The Poetics Program's annual Wednesdays at 4 PLUS reading series brings many
distinguished older poetS from around the world
to UB each year to read. teach and conduct
semi nars and workshops. As a resul~ program
panicipants have been not only exposed to. but
regularly involved with and instructed in lit·
erat.ure by some of the most notable writers in
English.
• llle nationally recognized poetics journal
o·blek has been produced here since 199 I. The
Poetics Program also publishes a chapbook
series and a magazine.
Gizzi and Spahr say that 1wo publications
will be prOOuced in connection with the con·
fcrc nce: a double anthology issue of o-blek
featuring 1he poelry of about 100 young writ ~rs. and a col lection of poetic statements by
these and other young. write~.

CALENDAR
cont1nued from pqge 7

NOTICES
N~

FOil

L.ISTIH8S DUE APRIL 1
DB'....,_

SE~ .

UB ~IIOOII

Dcpanments and studcOI organ~
talllln)\ whn w1sh to add nev.
h'\Ungs for the blue 1fromt -.co..
11on of 1he 1993-94 UH Telephone Olrutory. now bcmg
prepared. must submit thc.-.c no
later !han Thursday. April I .
l.i~lmgl&gt; can be eit her ma1lcd to
1l11\~ctory Coordanator. 1.1b
Cmfl)\ . N&lt;irth Campu.!&gt;. or faxed
111045-2313 Pleasefo11owlhc
tunmn in Ihe currcm darcctol)
All new listJnp must lncludt'
an authorized signature.

IIEKARCH
JWtdoctoraJ Assodatt--Chcm 1/itry. Posting lfR-93023 Career
Planning and Mactment Coordinator-Educational Oppor·
tunily Center. Posting #R 9l0 I:! Postdoctoral Associatt
(Sf..,.. JI- BiologJcal Scicocc.'i ,
Posung ltR-93018 R~arch
Technician II { N0-4 ~ 8i ologl ·
...:al Sctencei.. Posung #R -9.30::! I
Director-Sponsored Programs
Purchasing. PoMmg #R·93022
Research Support Spedali'it
(part·lJme)-BIOIOgJCal Sci ·
cnces. Posting #R-93024
PIIOfUStOHAL
Director ofStudenl Accounts
rSL-S)-Studcm Act'Ount.ll, Pol&gt;~ ·
mg #P-JOI3 Trch.nical Dirfl'·

tor/Production Manager (SL4. l ntemaii'Tomotion OpportunJty)-Fi nc: Arts Center. PoSI mg #P-3014 Business Manager
(5L-4,1nttmal Promodon
O pportunity)-Finc Ans Center.
Posttng #P·3015 . Marktting
Director (Sl..-4, Internal ~
motion Opportunily )-Fi~ An..,
Center. Posting HP-3016. Aa-

March 11 - April 3
Buffalo Ensemble
Theatre
220 Delaware Ave.
1
Buffalo, NY 14202
It
Tickets: 855-2225 or 856-2310

TH~

:ftlf:glLL

For the Eth.;rB;;;;;;_ora Theatre

demk Coordinator (SL-4. lnt.emaJ Promotion Opportunlty )-Ccntcr for Academic
Development
#P-30 17

Serv1 cc~.

Postmg

CL.ASSIFED CML RRYIC£

Keyboard Spedalisl (SG-ll6.
tt mponary until May 14)-Um versit)· Rcstdcncc Hall s. Ltne
#43003

~SYSlEM

REPBSDITAT1VE AYAILABL£
FOil CONSUl.fA~

M Janet Gruham, Employee!o&gt; ·
Rcurement System repres.enLa ·
t1vc. will be available for io&lt;h·
'·tdual cons ultations oo Friday.
April 23. in the Human RcM&gt;lirces Development Center

from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. To sched·

Cellist Zvl H.-ell to perform here M.-ch 31

ule an appoimmcnt. please call
R~ Ktet or Sharon Beany a1
645-2646.

-·

Zv• Harell. cello. w1th Stephen Manes
ptano . wtll pertorm 1n the Mustc
Department's V!Sittng Arttst Senes. March

-.D.uoc.a~

lnterM.tiona1 Folk Dancing les-

sons are held Friday evenings a1

8 p.m. on the ground floor of
Diefendorf Hall. South Campus.
Request dancing follows from 911 p.m. Everyone: i.s welcome:
no partner nc:cded. free admis·
sion. Sponsored by the Graduate
Student Association.

--FOil
._,.

Current listings of jobs in business and industry. government.
~.ea!th. education and non-profit
organizations, are available in
the: Office of Career Planning
and Placement. 15 Capen Hall.
Nonh Campus. Call64S·2231
for~ infonnation.

JOBS
FACULn

.u.iltaal Prolel80f'·Re.,..ovable
Prosthodoruic•. Posting ff.J02A.
.u.iolaot Pror......on.J Bioi ·
ogy. Posting IF· 302S. 3026.

31 at 8 p m on Slee Concen Hall
HareU has been pnnc1pal cellist Wlth the
Japan Phtlharmon1c and the Israel Phtlhar montc. Since leaVIng the Israel Philharrnomc
Orchestra,

he has devoted hornself to
solo performances.
chamber muSIC and
teachtng

The program

BeeU1ollefl's Sonata on A
major. Op 69: Hindem111's
"FantaSy Piece." Op. 8. No
2: Chopin's "Polonaise
Brillianle." Op 3: firs! rrovemen!ol Barlolk's String
Ouar\et. Clp. 17 (Harell'S
lranSCflption lor cello and
piwl&lt;l). and Brahms'S
Sonata in F mapr . Op. 99
Harell. born on Bertin.
grE&gt;N up in Israel. v.Mre toe recerved hos rrusocal educaoon In
1962. toe bec3re first cellist of the Japan Phlharrr'oooC Orchestra
He rernailed there for 3 years. playing sclo and leaching a! the
Japan \.J(liVersily n Td&lt;)&lt;&gt; In 1965. toe was appoonled first cellist of
the Israel R1itlarm:ric Orchestra the posllion toe held un~ 1976
Tockets are $4. Sludents; $6. UB faculty . slaH . alumno .
senior d tizens. and $8, general adm1ss1on

Too Invisible, Too Silent, Too Long
FREE &amp; OPEN TO ALL

March 31, 1993
L110 · 1110 EST
F.-go Quadrmde
Bu1cq 4 • Acti'fities Room

A provocattvt and mstghtfullook a1
lhc cn ucal ISSUes rtlevam to tht
status of MWomcn of Color.· a
frequently overlooked segment of our
htgbe:r education commumty

A two-hour vtdeo conftre:nct that
wtll focus on dtfining, analyzing and
prOJ«Ung the: role of women or color
on our camp~ and m o ur commu ·
ntt1es Top1cs wtllmdudt • Equit)•
r.ssu~s

• The acadcm1c, sooal and

projt:.ssronal t?l \'lronmcnl for .womt?l
• Women 1n ltadush1p positrons • The

gla.s.s uillngfaccd by woincn of color •
Sr udtnl t:::q?Cntnus • And much
mort:/ You won 'l want to mi.SS this
timely di.SCUSSIOri

�--.~--.-aa

__

Reevaluating history is necessary process,
.,'Black Athena' author tells UB audience
cold. that people from the North were lwdier,
more chaste and intellectualJy superior. 1be
idea that the cold opened the (brain) synapses
was important to them," he said. "'They held
then to the idea that the Greeks were fonned in
a more demanding climate and held onto the
benefits of that climate after they moved south."

Reporter Staff

0

UR PERCEPTIONS of history
changeregularty,andwithgood
reason. For Martin Bemal, the
authorofthecontrover&gt;ial fourvolume reinterpretation ofclas-

sical civilization entitled. Block At~na: 1M
Afr{JQ.Jiatic Roots of Classical CiviliUJtion,
reevaluating history is a necessary. if tenuous
process.
Bernal. a member of the Government De·
panmem at Cornell University, delivered a
lecture on hi!, work March t I in Knox Hall.

The progmm was sponsored by the Andrew
V V Raymond Chair of Classics. the Depanmcm of Art Hi s10ry and the Undergraduate
Co llege.

''One of the most pleasant surprises is the
number of classictsts who have been open and
fnendly to my ideas about the origins of anctcnt Greek ctvi lization ," he said. "I wasn't
cxpccung such a reception.··
BemaJ

ha~

publi shed volumes one and two

of hts work to date and said that it was neces"-''ry to unde~ta nd that there are two distinct

was another important ingredient
in the Romantic reinterpretation of
R acism
the

beginnings of ancient culture, Bernal said.
"Caste mcism start&lt;d in the 17th century. saying that the best black man was wor.;e than the
most pathetic white man. It began hecause the
Europeans desperate ly needed to justify what
they were to Africans at that time. And Egypt.

inconveniently on the African continent. caught
a bad rap."
there and began what came

Martin

to be Greek civilization.··

Bernal of

Bernal said that since the

Romantic period. which
stretched from the late 18th
century through the fu&gt;t onethird of the 19th century. the
Aryan model has come to be

Cornell
Un'--'ty
speaks In
Knox Hall.

mode l ~

uf anctem Greek culture . ..One is the

Anc1cnt model. where the cullures to lhe south
of Grt!t!CC. the Egyptians and the Phoenician.-,.,
built c i11 e~ m Greece and mlfnduccd civiliJ..i.l·

Consequently. Greece began to assume a domi-

nant position in hiSlOI)'. 'lhey needed to sec
Egyptians in an African way
propel Greece ahead."

10

he able to

To complicate matters further. rac1al .!£1encc. which proposed ways to evaluate a
person's wonh by detennining their cultural

the accepted notion of
Greece 's origin.

Romantics "believed that
people from the North wen'
... intellectually superior."

As the Romantic movement took hold in
western culture, the decivilizing of Africans
became more and more imponant, he said.

"But in classicaJ times.

heritage. was taking hold in the early 19th

the Greeks had a very different idea of their

century. "Racial science was becoming very

origins. Their ideas were much closer to those
expressed in the Ancient model. The anciem
Greeks maintained that they learned civiliza-

big. so the idea that the Greeks came from the
Egyptians was unacceptable. even though the

ancient Greeks said that thi s was how they

tion from Egypt and the Ph oe ni c ian ~ .
Herodotus. the earliest Greek historian. claimed
that they had taughl the Greeks the names of

originated."

the (Egyptian ) gods."
Bernal said that respect for Egypt as the

sonry movement. which held that spirituality

founder of western civilization was strong

was followed by a revivaJ of Christianity.

Another complication in the conuuversy
originated with the downfall of the freema-

Leners
Less favorable aspects
of UB rankings should be
included in articles
EDmiR:

One ol the most importanl responsib iities of
the Reporter is to serve

as an institutional
cheerleader , point1ng
up strenglhs on campus !hat may not be Widely known Staff
members ol the Reporter do a fine JOb 1n
lh1s respect
At the same llme. however, care must
be taken !hat less lavClfable aspects are
not glossed ov..--fOf 1t IS lrom recogn121ng
our areas ol weakness . as well as of
strenglh, that the uniVersity as a whole can
ra1se 1ts standards
Thus . the story on the recent US News
and World Report ·ranklngs· of profesSIOf\al schools didn 't tell the whole StOIY
Yes . our colleagues 1n Dental MediCine,
Pharmacy. and MediCine and BiomediCal
Sc1ences deserve plaudns IClf the high
ratings they rece1ved 1n th1s survey How·
ever. that the Sqhool ol Management was
not mentKltled ~1th1n the top 50. and that
the School of La p laced 1n the th~rd
quan11e of~~ 2 schools surveyed.
shpu~C111iive been mentKllled Cred1b1hty IS
redoCed 1f Reporter stClfle5 omn less pleas·
ant lacts that other med1a giVe anentKlll to
And , as we confront hard questionS about
tnstltutK&gt;nal pnont1es. we must be aware of
the costs and consequences ol mprov1ng

the less strong. as wen as of ma1nta1n1ng
the nationally recogniZed

was gained through wisdom and knowledge . lt
• CUUOE IL WELCII, Jlt.
SUNY Dts,ngutshed Serwce Prol96sor

lhrough the late 18th cemury. "BUI by the
1830s. Egypt' s 1mage was tmnsfonncd and

which asked only faith of its follower.&gt;.
··Egypt wasacentero ffreemasonrythought

seen as a place of tombs. pynunids and mummies,·· he explained. "'Tbe Romantics liked
small. dynamic cultures. as opposed to big.

during the Enlightenment and was seen as an
1mponant aspect that led to the French Revolution in the eyes of the rc-Christianized upper

Government report not
"gibberish," Herman says

~Y'

sprdwling ones."

clas.&gt;es of the late 18th and early 19th a:ntu-

EDmiR:

m1gr..l11on from the nonh of Indo-European·
'J"'ak tng J"'Oplc The..e peopl e supposedl y

Geography was also a maJOr influence on
the ideas of ancient civilization held by the
R o manu c~. said Bema I. '"They believed m the

nes.·· said Bernal. Belief in Egypt as the origi-

I appreciate your
do111g the artiCle on
Lockwood Llbrary ·s
governmenl documents collectKlll that
was published 1n the
Reporter. March 1 1
However . I behave I was m1squoted on the
lollow1ng po1nts
• I am not lhe "head hbranan" ol the
government documents collection My

tum there ." he explamed.

··The other I caJI the Aryan model. which
that Gn..-clo. CI VIil7.at iOn wa.~ the resuh of a

0\l."rmn

o.1

\oft populatum

who wen: already

nator of western civilization suffered greatl y
after that

Bellagio Network aids book-poor countries
a, DAVID -MELGR££N
Reporter Staff

T

HE SITUATIO

IS

co mmon

thmu ghout the developing world. It
can occur far out an the rur.1l coun-

tryside where resources are scarce
and trJ.Ilspon is poor. Or it can be
found in the hcan of a bustling Third World cil)l
where the nsing tide of rur.ll migmnts places a
g=t burden on a fragile infrastructure.
The scenario-a school with rundown classrooms. broken desk.&lt; and dim lighting. Its
teachers. despite atro-

ciously low salaries, try
their best to educate and

=

poor counuies is their i:Jck of indigenous publishAltbachexplained. Local publishing isoftenan
wxlercapitaliz.cd industry that is no1 usually profitable, he said. "Govemrrents (from many Third
World countries) don't s&lt;e the imponarw:e of the
book industry for education." Altbach said. "Our
goal is to assi.,. the development of indigenous
publishing-in book-poor Third World countries.""

"Our goal is to assist the
developmen! of indigenous
publishers in the Third World "

students try their best to

learn.

--..AUIUCII

protect tnlde advantages. Altbach noted. adding
that thedisseminalim of knowledge must""' jusl

The newsletter. published four times a year. is
the vehicle for the exchange of ideas aboul ways
10 assist the development of indigenous publish·
ing. It is free to publishers. academicians.
poli&lt;:ymaJcer.;. and donor agency groups.
" We have a circulation of 500 well-targeted
donors and docrx." Altbach said. The ntwslener
had its IOOIS in a 1991 conference held 31 the
Rockefeller Foundalion' s Bellagio Conference
Center. in Uppsala. Sweden and L&lt; funded by the
Foundation. which. recently agreed 10 continue
funding for a second year, Altbach said.
The i:Jck of books is apparent throughout
Africa. Allboch said. and the scarcil)l oftextbooks
is""fl'~Cially troublesome. One major problem for
African publishers is the lack of access to a rnarl&lt;et
thai has been dominated by n-..ltinatiorta and
local government publishers. Local African pu[&gt;.

· he viewed as a business. Then: needs to be more

Poor conditions
and low morale take

their toll on education
in the Thil:d World. but
it is the lack of books
that has greatest impact.

And with the world witnessing a revolution in
tochnology and infonnation dissemination,developing countries will continue lOsuffer economic inequality if students can't get books.
The Bel )agio Publishing Networl&lt;, an intematiooal groupo( resean:hers, pui&gt;lish&lt;n. and representatives from donor and developing rtations. is
very nu:h ooncemed with the plight of bookpoor countries. Philip Altbach. professor and
director o( the Con1JW111ive Education Center a1
UB. isarneni&gt;eroftheNelwork,andlheeditorof
lhe &amp;IJIJgio Publishing N&lt;tWOrlc Ncwsktter.
One o( lhe lti06I serials problems for book-

a.~ 1stance m developing t.he1r own
mfm&lt;truCture, Althach said, adding that publish·
mg mu.&lt;t become profitable fOI'them. One way to
get th1s started is with a revolving loan pmgmm
through which publishers can borrow funds. At
the same time loan repayment guamntees must be
as.&lt;ured 10 the bank.&lt;. A loan program developed
by the Dag liarnmar.;kjllld Foundation already
has accepted eight African publisher.;; four are
having some success. Altbach noted.
African publishers must also be trained in COQ·
effective publishing. editing. management. and
design. said Altbach. They IT1USI be able to buy
book rights and IT1USI learn aboul copyrights and
lirensing.Copyriglll laws are used to protect the
rights of publishers but they can also be used to

hshen. need

equiiJI belw.en ''ha&gt;'eS and have nocs." he staled.
While problems are complex. there are
some bright spots. Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimba·
bwe have fairly well-&lt;leveloped local publish·
ing markets, Altbach said, and South Africa' s
publishing industry has been well-developed

for a long time.
The African Books Colleclive (ABC). which
aims to rnarl&lt;et African books worklwide. is
owned by African publishers who are working
hard to anain fmancial self-sufficiency. Altbach
said. At a 1992rTEetingonindi&amp;enouspublishing
in Zimbabwe. the

Afric;ln

Publishing NCIWorl&lt;

(APNF:i) was formed, he reported. The group

aims to establish a continent-wide association of
African publisher.; who can open a dialogue on
shared problems and experiences. he said:

colleague. Karen Smtth, coordinates actMIIes of lhe Bus1ness and Government
Documents Center
• I was not refernng to the CBO reports on the budget as "gibberish • I was
refernng to a layman who m1ght be looking
at the complete lederat budget fOf the first
llme. To him/her, the massiVe size of the
document and the massive amount of
numbers would probably seem like incomprehensible gibberish That is one o1 the
reasons I wrote a how-to guide fClf makmg
the data more understandable. As fClf ·
Congress1011al Budget Office reports , CBO
usually does an excellent job making the
data far more comprehensible than does
the President's OffiCe of Managemenl and
Budget
· IDWMD-AII
Lod&lt;wood Ubtaty

�_.,,__..,_aa
uI

~

:

I

I]

f.

:.

l

NEWSMAKERS
• Milford Maloney, clinical professor of medicine,
was featured in a December
Associated Press story about
the dangers of holiday
drinking. It appeared in
scores of newspapers, in·
eluding The Houston Poll,

Arizoll4 R•public, Toronto
Star and Philad•lphia Daily
N~ws .

• Henry Louis Taylor,
associate professor of
American Studies and director of the Center for Applied
Public Affairs Studies. was
tnterviewed about conflicts
tn the Detroit branch of the
NAACP. The Slory appeared
Dec . 17 in Th• Detroit
N~ws .

• Lisa Monagle, assistant
professor of social and pre·
ventive medicine, discussed
a study showing women
from different cultures expe·
rience essentially the same
menstruaJ·related symptoms
m an interview on National
Public Radi o's " Health
Show" on Dec . 8.
• Interviewed on KIRO
Radio. the No. I radio sta·
tion in the Pacific Nonhwe t
marl&lt;e~ was Claude Welch.
Distinguished Service Pro·
fessor of political science
and co-director of the UB
Human Rights Ce nter, wh o
discussed the political situa·
tions in Liberia and Somalia.

• Alan Freeman, professor
of law, was interviewed on
fonner President Bush · s
pardon of Casper
Weinberger on "Talk of the
Nation" o n National Public
Radio on Dec . 24. as well as
on NPR 's "Morni ng Edi tion " on Dec . 25 . He al so
was interviewed on the same
topic by Reuters in a story
that appeared in major
newspapers inc luding The
HouJton Post and on
Ta lkNet Radio, which is
heard throughout New En·
gland .
COffl{JIIed

b y thB UB News

Bureau

,._...., .....
...........
Mi•••••:

Jo Fre.dellbdm will
cbair.,~umon
Nlllrillooal ~demiology

of Cbrmic D i - at the
Federation of Ameticait
Socielies for Expr,rimen·
cal Biology (FASEB},
American lnstitule of
Nqlrilioo mcetinp to be
held ill New Orleans on
March 29. S.U Me·
C.. will preaeot a pa·
per, "Diet Diversity and
Risk of Colon Cancer in
Westm~ New YoR:" and

J - ManiWI will
preaenl • peper. "Diet in
the Epidemiology of

Ovarian Cancer in West·
em New York. "

Faculty&amp;Sian
BIL

L

. . . . . . . . . . . t..~

B

0

A

R

0

~F-s.tfar-.:tl27

In c.m.r far TOiftOnVW

0

The UB School of Pharmacy will present its
third annual Pharmacy Fair on Saturday,
March 27, from 9 :30a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Center for
Tomorrow on the North Campus.
The fair, free and open 10 the public, will offer cboJes..
terol, blood JRSSUre and carbon monoxide testing. as well
as information oo heart and blood JRSSUre rralicines.
blood sugar rmniiOring. arucids, laxati..s, antidianheals,
cough and cold aids. pain relievers, vitamins and slcin can:
products. Information also will be provided oo women's
health issues, such as OSIOOpOrOSis. vaginitis, monopause
and home pregnancy and ovulation 1$8.
Those attending may ask pharmacists about prescriptioo and over-the-&lt;:Wnter medications and generic prescription drugs. Child= will be able 10 watch a puppet
show and video presentation oo poison prevention.
The fair is oo-spoosored by the Phannacists' Associa·
tion of Western New Vorl&lt; and the Western New Vorl&lt;
Society of Hospi!31 PhannacisL~

0

"Workoul for Hope." a nationwide aerobics
program in support of AIDS research, will
have its local installment on Saturday , April 3, from
II a.m . to I p.m. in Alumni Arena, North Campus.
The event will feature two 45 -minute workout
sessions, a one-step class and an aerobics class.
Money is raised by participants collecting pledges
and will be given to City of Hope in Los Angeles,
where researchers have made important strides in
the bailie against AIDS .
Coordinator for the Buffalo effort is Robbie
Raugh, trainer for Bally's Health Club, a member of
the International Association of Fitness Professionals and a registered nurse .
For more information call Richard Sader at 8741452 or 773.0566. Registration begins that day at
I 0 a.m. i 1 the arena.

Rese.a-.MIIk~

far study of antkleprl •••,ts

Adults ages 25-65 who suffer from c1uunic de·
pression are being sough! by UB resean:h&lt;n to
help evaluate two antidepressant tredications.
Uriel Halbreich. UB professor of psychiatry, is look·
ing for individuals who have been chronically depressed
for ai leas! two years. '1bose who have chronic depression feel sad or unhappy most of the time, eat or sleep too
linle or too much. have low energy levels and self-estee"'
and often feel hopeles&gt;,," he explains.
P..uticipants will receive free treattnenl and undergo
comprehensive psychological assessment and a comprehensive medic3l evaluation. They must be able to visit the
swdy site a1 the Erie County Medical Center once a week
during the fm;t I0 weeks of the swdy and then altemaie
weeks for a period thereafter. Anyone in~ in participating in the swdy shoold call Batbara Bemardis
weekdays a1 8984312.

0

lnfonndon Tectnolo&amp;Y WOibhop
ec:heduled far..,....,.
The Teaching Effectiveness Program will present
a workshop April 29 on A=&lt;ing lnfonnationproviding hands-oo training in the use of resoun:es available in the medical school nerworl&lt;. II is geared to primary ·
care physicians in UB's divisions of Family Medicine.
General Pediairics and General Medicine.
The workshop, in Room 240, CFS Ad.dition.
South Campus, will be held from 8: IS- 11 :30 a.m. II
is sponsored by The Primary Care Resource Center
at the School of Medicine and BiomedicaJ Sciences.
Faculty includes Kerti 1... Cabana. manager. UB miao
training; John W. Loonsk. assistant professor; direaof.
office of medical computing ai the UB medical school:
Diane G. Schwartz. associate director for tredical educa·
tioo. Primary Care Resoora: Center. and Raymond D.
Volpe. manager. UB miao sales and !raining. Regis!ra·
tion fee is SIS. Registration deadline is April 22. For
more infonnation. phone 829-3 176 or 829-2308.

0

falty, Stilt Hlnl

For 30 Yen of Service
i 1he Univl'sity
F8CUit}' 8IICI etarf - - . . . . with 30
years of service ro the university were honored March 17 during a reception at the
home of President and Mrs. Will iam R.
Greiner. They received commemorative pins
for their contributions to VB
Honored were: Susan Alder (Microbiol ogy), William H. Baumer (Philosophy).
Richard N. Bohn (U niversity Facilities).
Alan K. Bruce (Biological Sciences).
Roderick E. Charles (Psychiatry). Marilyn E.
Coughlin (Undergraduate Academi c Services), Francis A. Cozzarelli (Mechanical
and Aerospace Engineering), Paul W.
Dahmer (Operative Dentistry ). Sandra R.
D' Am go (Computer Operations and Net·
work Systems), Paul A. Densberger (CuSI(}o
dial Services). John F. Doeuerl (Central
Duplicating). Alan J. Drinnan (Oral Medi cine), Peter K. Gessner (Pharmacology and
Therapeutics), Franz E. Glasauer
(Neurosurgery), Jean Gray (UB Dining Ser·
vices). Eugene Grochowski (Custodial Services), James J. Gruber (Disability Services).
Robert H. Gumtow (Pharmaceutics).
Also. Jean G . Haar (Oral and Ma.xillofa·
cial Surgery). George R . Harbison (University Facilities). Peter H. Hare (Philosophy ),
Robert R. Hei sler (Chemical Engineering),
Barbara J. Howell (Physiology), Myroslaw
M. Hreshchyshyn (Gynecology and Obstet·
n cs). Raymond G. Hunt (Organization and
Human Resources). Robert P. Hurst (Physics
and Astronomy). Harry F. King (ChemiS!ry).
Joseph H. Kite (Microbiology), David M.
Klein (Neurosurgery), Colena A. Klug (Un·
dergraduate Nurse Education), Gloria A.
Kolz (Central Duplicating), Audrey A.
Koscielniak (Law), Walter N. Kunz (U ndergraduate Academic Services). Reginald M.
Lambert (Microbiology), Hinrich R. Martens
(Computi ng and Information Technology ),
Robert E. Mates (Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering).
Also. Jo hn Medige (Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering). Carol A. Meloon
(Records and Registration), Bruce E. Miller
(Learni ng and Instruc ti on), John D. Milligan
(History), Nonnan D. Mohl (Oral Medicine).
William Monkarsh (Athletics). Mirdza E.
Neiders (Stomatology and Interdisciplinary
Scie nces), Walter A. Olszewski (Neurology ).
Philip M. Orlosky (Nuclear Medicine).
David Peebles (University Facilities). Jan P.
Roalsvig (Physics and Astronomy). Robert
Rogers (Engli sh), Dinah L. Rossbacher (Engineering and Applied Sciences), Richard T.
Salzer (Learning and Instruction ). Irving H.
Shames (Engi neeri ng and· Applied Sciences).
Ric hard P. Shaw (Civil Engineering),
Mic hael L. Simmons. Jr. (Educational Organization. Administration and Policy). Charles
J. Smith (Psychology).
·
Also, Fred M. Snell (Biophy sical SCI·
ences). Alan J. Solo (Medicinal ChemiS!ry ).
Harry A. Sultz (Social and Preventive Medicine), Linda H. Swiniuch (Theater and
Dance), David J. Triggle (Pharmacy), 'Frank
D. Watson (Microbiology), Thomas W .
Weber (Chemical Engineering). Judith L.
Wirth (EnvirOnmental Health and Safety).
Joseph A. Zizzi (Medicine), C. Richard
Zobel (Biophysical Sciences).

tmy, -c.lcglng l.eglj 0.
a-Allaial* trOiql
l.EXIS,' J)ltiiJhlld il Calabging rod Clasaific8llcn
Oulwlsl1y.

• ..._DEle• ..
c:er.a Tec:lri::al SeMoes.

rtMewa The Stanclard ~
odical Diec:Dy, 15tl ed..
ptillshad i!I..mry ~
lions: Pl'acbl rod Theory.
Ca1letenoe tapCII il j)lbicalion, '6)1 rod hi Lbay:
A Pt800! tleueuce on EJeo.
troric Oala lnleR:tw1ge
SlandoWs b the Aoquiltion
a ~..mry Materials,· Serials
Aelliew.

·~
..... so.
ence
rod Engnlemg Jj.
braty, has pr8pM!d The
Emerging Vr1ual AeseM:h
Library, t1as a the Associationa Aesaarc:h l.blwies
SPEC Kit,f'lyer series as part
a the AR:s Ollioe a Managernert Services ColaiJora.
live Aesearc:tWirili f'ro.

gam.

0F

I N1 f Rf S1

�llldalll
v.....-. .....

---~

-l

I

JJ-

•

U.. c.ns.mone, lfCIIt, .,._her eoad- with Tllclll
ElsMst8ln end Jon Bruce.

•

It's smiles, app~ao.e end
left, end Josephkle Clio.

•

They're lmpreuedl From left, Mark llonwloMid, Sind)'
Replcc:l, Chits White end Mike S - . y, with letblr.

Med studellts get top clioices for residency
lltich Day was an overwhelming success for UB ' s medical
students this year- with 84 percent of the 133 graduating
fourth-year students getting accepted into one of their top three
residency program choices. Sixty-three percent of the seniors
received their first choice, II percent their second choice and 10
percent their third choice at Match Day "ceremonies" held
March 17 this year at the Macaroni Company on Maple Road.
In the highly competitive surgical specialties, I 0 of II UB students who applied were
accepted. Nearly one-third of the students will remain in Buffalo to continue their training at
the Graduate Medical Dental Education Consortium of
Buffalo -

..... .:J
, -"

·.·~ '~

\

";'

.

. ~' l

.,"-

an increase of 7 percent over last year.

hiCh IIYes for Sll8bln8 Alllud,

Twenty percent will go to programs elsewhere in New
York State; about half were matched with out-of-state
programs.
Matches -

some 15,000 of them nationally -

are determined by computer, based on the results of
student applications and personal interviews under the

Dr. Dennis Nadler .,.._,ta
•
envelope to AndNW Michel,
holdlnC daugJtter Lydia.

auspices of the National Residency Matching Program .

Happy hug for
Cathy Kim , wllo
clutches her

accePtance
letter.

•

C8lllne home: HNtller c.nipbeA 0'*. phone to ......
the wonlllbout her "match."

Photosbq ~imon- Ton~

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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RlpM. The acboo1 &lt;M!r !be ... , _ hM 1-. .,.,....._ ill IGOIII
~UB l'laidt:al Willilm ll Gnijaa"uid "Dr. OokllaJia !be adr:rwllo
willlr.eep UB'a Scbool ofDaal ~ IIIOViac *-1 -.lbleaiDic
new pound as one ~!be &lt;:CJUIIII'Y'a DIDit lalpCICied cblll acboola.•
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Continued on page 3

Accent on
the Past Tense
Grad student
confererce to
address literature

anddeath

,.

2

1be Subject Is
Sexual
IW'assment
Seminar on sexual
harassment features
Theatre for Change
Company.
,.

2
Ma rch 18. 1993 Volume 24. No. 21

Dental, Phannacy
get high marks
versity of Connecocut are ued for
No. 13, along with those at three
other umversities.

The hst of ··comprehensive··
lly~PME

News Bufeau Director

HE SCHOOL of Dental
Medic tne and the School of
Phannacy at UB have each
been ranked No o m the
nation m the1r rcspecti ve
fields m a compilation of
''America ' s Best Graduate
Schoob" in the Man:h 15
•ssue of U.S. Nl'ws and World Rl'-

T

pon.

The same repon ranks the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical

medteal schools IS headed by Th~
rna..;; Jefferson Umverstty m Pfuladelphia. There IS a separate ranking
of medtcal schools thai are re&gt;ear1:h·
onented.
llle rankmg~ were determmed
by reputauon only Quesuoruta~res

were ~nt to deans. top adm.Jmst.rators and ~mor facuhy of accredited
~hools who were asked to rate msutuuons m thetr own dtsophne5 m
tcrrru. of reputation for scholars.tup.
curriculum and quality of faculty
and graduate students.

Sciences in the ··second tier··schools ranked No. II through 20m its compilation of the nation · s top
''comprehensive" medicaJ schools.
those whose chief mission is tJa.ining primary-care doctor.;. More than
half of the graduating founh-year
students in the UB medical school
are opting this year for primary-care
ftelds in their first year of residency
training .
It is the first time thai the magazine. prompted by the debate over
health care refonn. has ranked the
top 15 schools m dental medicine.
phannacy and two other areas of
health education.
The UB pharmacy program. the
only school of pharmacy in the tate
University of New York system. as
the only one in the Northeast listed m
the ranking of pharmacy programs.
which is headed by that at the Uru·
versity of California at San Francisco.
In the ranking ofdental programs.
headed by the University of Texas
· Health Science Center at San Ant~
nio. UB's is the highest ranked of
those in the Northeast. The programs
at Harvard University and the Uni·

The two schools have

"Long traditions of
excellence and Long
records ofservice to
Western New York. "
UB ~t W illiam R . Greincr
said the high rankings of the three
schools "represent an important national recognition of something we
at UB have known for a long timethe fact that our medical school and
our Schools of Dental Medicine and
Pharmacy ate' outslal'lding.
" Right now, the School of Medi·
cine and Biomedical Sciences is
tmplementing groundbreaking programs with national import in pri-

mary care training. medical
informatics. and olber increasingly
vital ftelds. Students corne from all
Continued on

page 3

�2

- ....__..,_n

Dead Lines: UB conference to address literature, death

A

GOODLYTiiRONOofgrnduate students in the English language from more than a dozen
universities wiJI oonvene at UB
on the 20ih day of March, a
Saturday, in this year of our Lon!, 1993, to
address the maru:r of lilerature and death.
Panicipants in the conference, titled " Dead
Lines," will discuss how death and mourning
have been treated by writer&gt; from the Bard
("Anticipatory Elegies: Shakespeare's Sweet
Leaves") to Ishmael Reed. whoweavesghosts.

necromancy and the retributive undead inLO his
contemporary fiction.
And that's just the tip of the tombstone.
The conference will be held from 8 a.m. to
S:4S p.m. in the Newman Cen1er North, Room
209 of The Commons, and Room 200 of The
Commons. It will feature concurrent panels at
8.30a.m .. IOa.m .. II :30a.m .. 3 p.m. and4 :30
p.m .. and a keyll&lt;Jfr addres.&lt; by limolhy Murray
a Cornell Uni ven;ity professor. at 1:30 p.m. It

Participants...will discuss
how death and mourning
have been treated by
writers from the Bard to
Ishmael Reed
is free and open to the public.
The e-. wbicb has altr.ICied emerging
lhanatotogists from wliver&gt;iti&lt;s throughout the
eastcn United s~ and Canada. is being
organized by Katherine Walke Oill&lt;spie and
lona1hon Havey, UB graduate students in English
with a decided intt:re51 in the past lenS&lt;.
"Katherine,'' says Havey, ''is the one into
dealhandhistoricity- inpanicular,thetreatment
of death in 18th a:nwry liternture. r m intt:re5led
in mooming and bow this is expressed lilerarily."
The intriguing titles of~ suggest an

FSEC asks quick action on
smoke-free environment
lly II.UIIIStaff
Reporter

T

HE FACULTY Senate E•ecu uve
Comnuucc (FSECl b asking che
administration to work quick.ly
toward devclopmg a smoke-free

em••ronmcnt "on campus. A resolu-

uon to

Lh • ~

effect was passed at

l a.~t

week'!'o

rSEC mceung
1lle n:soluuon should mM pose a problem.
even for smokers.accord1ng toStephen Bcnnen.
a lecturer rn the Educational Opponuniry Center at UB . " Bemg a sometime smoker myself.
I showed the resoluuon to some of my smok tng
~o:o lleagues and they had no problem with it. ··
The resolutiOn states that although the campus smoking policy that went 1nto effoct in
~ebruary. 1990. has been moder.llel y successful. cnfor&lt;:ernent of the pulrcy has been ha!&gt;hazard. Another difficulty with smoking on
campus. center.wn the design of campus buildings. in that smoke from smoking areas filter.,
into non -smoking zones. A mention of the
recent revelationsa.bc:MJt thedangersof secondhand smoke also is included in the resolution .
But according to Samuel Schack, associate
professor of mathematics, the idea of alienat·
ing almost one-th ird of the campus is poorly
conce ived. Schack's reference to the smoking
population comes from statistics supplied to
the FSEC by Clifford Wilson. associate vice

president for student afTairs, which indicated
thar about 30 percent of students, faculty and
staff at VB are smokers.
" ( want to speak agajnst this resolution. "
said Sehack. "Not because I doni believe in iL
but because by instituting rules that would
osuacize one-third of the campus population.
you're asking for problems. I don ' t like the
rdea of rhe FSEC saying to one-thin! of the
campus lhar they·~ 00( weJcorne."
However, the dangelli of secondhand smoke
andt.heimpracticalityofbuildingsmokinglounges
with proper ventilation make this resolution
necessary. said Monica Spaulding. associate
profcssorofnnlicine.''Soon.aiiFedernlbuildings
will be smoke-free,'' she said. ..The danger of
secondhand smoke is enormous and ir would be
a tremendous waste of money to build appropriate
smoking lounges." she said. " And while students
continue to smoke at a high raJe, there are clear
sign&lt; that older adults are cutting back."
The resolution was passed by a vote of 13 to
three and will be debated by the full Senate
later this semester.
In other FSEC news. FSEC Chair and Professor of Mathematics Nicolas Goodman announced that UB has elected John Boot .
professor of management science and sys·tents. and Dennis Malone. distinguished service professor of e lectrical ~d computer
engineering. as SUNY senators.

""""'wide-r.lnging in theme and~
Literary vampirism and .. critical
necrophilia" are on the agenda. roc inslance.
And in a tallt tilled "Hoping You'"' Well and
Not in Hell," Antoinette Mastin of the University of Cincinnati will !niCk Joyce· s exploration ofdeath in theHadeschapeerof"Uiysses."
In " Raising the Dead," another speaker will
present his study of how the diaries of 17th
century Fm&gt;eh missionaries treated ritual suicide among the Natchez Indians.

nocher panel, ''The Lyoehed. The Shot.
The Martyred." looks a1 issues of imperialism. nationalism and the undead in the colonial African novel. In the panel "Sympathizing
with the Dead," a group of speakers from UB
will consider how authors haveconflated geoder and entombment. Another speaker will
present a slide lecture illustnting bow popular
postmOI1em photography documented thanaJos
in 19th century America.
After oorrbing the canon, JXlllclists will hold
forth on aUhors for whom dealh was a rruse. such

A

asEnily Dickirroon,Aiice.lamcs,EdprAllonl'be
and Alfred u.d Temyoan. Anotbrrwilllun the
ghorllytnlenonginthepoouyofllttcubr Jcbn
Kt:als. Olbln wiD b*. ' liie

"* ........

.knmanSwiftlnllcbnMiddloloo~

the rest of K.taine Mnfield'alilmly ciade of
con¢tive ~val penonal loos
tlwou8h their WOtk.
lnlerested in Freud iiDd Dmida? Try "Life
and Death in ..." a1 4:JO.S:4S p.m. Somdhing
"""" poetic? Perbaps "Under the'Seal of My
Widowhood: RutbStone's Musingon Mowning" .. 8:30a.m.
Participants ofa more macroanalytical bent
will hold forth on "The Death of Death," "The
Death ofthe Heroic" and "The DeathofObjcctivity," oot to mention "The SentimeruJ ~
jcct of Death."
And what of the graveyard, the crypt.
Shelley's "lone couch ofbiseverlastingsleep"?
Stop in at around 3 p.m. foc a panel devoted to
headstone poetics, epitaphs and "The Lyric of
the Sepukhre" as it has evolved over time
among common poets left behind.

UUP rights committee plans
seminar on sexual harassment
Ahl11181"---t.....,_ willbeheldMarch30intheCenterfocTomorrow
by the Women 's Rights Committee of United University Professions. Buffalo Center
Chapler.
The seminar, to run from 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m .. will feature the Theatre roc Change
Company and Ruby Lockhart, NYSUT labor
relal.ions specialist. Part of an ongoing program to
increase awareness of issues affecting SUNY
women. the seminar is designed to increase un dersW&gt;ding of the nature of sexual harassment
and its manifestations.
Based in Buffalo, Theatre foc Change is a
troupe of professional actors and ~ artists
dedicated to performing plays, improvisations
and workshops dealing with imponant current
issues. Darlcen Pickering Humrnen is founder/
artistic directoc. ln addition to its ongoing perfocmancesof"Father Knows Best," adr.unatic piece
that explores the issue of domestic violence, 'Theatre foc Change has developed and performed a
number of worl&lt;shops, including several on sexual
harassment and another eotitled, ''Eihical Issues
RUBY LOCIIHART
in HomeCare." Thecompanyhasalsoperformed
staged readings of scripts involving other topics
such as drug abuse .
Established in 1990, the UUP Women's Rights Committee promoteS opportunities
for members to networlt with each other; provides infomwion to members oo subjects
pertaining to their employment status: and serves as an advocau: foc better wOtking
conditions for women at SUNY.
A continental breakfast will be served. For reservations (deadline is March 24) octo
obtain more information, call645-2013.

Now ima~e that you have a large
staff to help with the detlils.
lr&gt; Yoo nuy dunk )'JU can'! put together "' acadamc &lt;Xll1f=na: or •
profosraul m«ang by yrrurscll. W•'d lib: to show )'JU bow,.. can bdp- wuh
.,~rything from od&gt;ttUS~ng, printing one! mailing, to catering, 10 """"""""'cons.
lr&gt; On T""""y. Mon:h !J, UB's Ol!itt ofConir:r..as one! Sp&lt;rial E"'"IS.
!h. Gmra Buf&amp;lo Com..ntioo one! VISitors Btuau, one! !he Buiblo Ambooa·
d&lt;n will h001 • party " th• C..t..- for Tornorrow ro inaocl..::()'JU to !he
conli=&gt;c. •nd mttnng planning scvica one! &amp;cilin.s ,,.Wbl:: b=" UB one!
in me Grc:.ter Buftilo area.
lr&gt; Join us for good food, good llrinkcgood idas, pnctial....-oons by
)'OW' uruvmity colbgues one! r:d1ibia leanrring ~ ..ma. one! nujor
UtJ

hocels_

... 'fb. party

D

0..... just uuU ' ,_..Om by

allinc

!he Oftitt of

eoor.r..c..""' Sp&lt;rial E~" 645-1414 by Mm:h 19.
Meet your st~ff. 't' Mm:h 23 't' 3:00 - 5:30 't' Cartrr forTIJtilOtT(JW

OIAECTOR&lt;Y-fU!l..ICATlONS

~j.~

EOfTOR -~

ASSOCtATEEOITOR . . . . . _

AATOIAEClOA

~.-..

�3

_..,a.-_..,_..._

E

DUCATORS AND experts in
amaleur sports from 21l countries
will&lt;;onveneal UB fromJuly8-ll
for an inlemational spans oonferenceexaminingbowsocial, political and rechnical developmems have affected
the alhletic experience.
The confen:nce, "Change and the Human
Dimension of Physical Aetiviry," is pwtofthe
World Universiry Games Buffalo ' 93, which
will he held from July 8-18.
The confen:nce is sponsored by the Commission for the Study of Universiry Sport
(CESU). pwt of the International Universiry
Spans Federation. the worldwide governing
body of amateur universiry sports. More than
400 scholars, resean:hers and sports clinicians
""' expected to attend Carolyn E. Thomas.
associ&amp; professor of physical therapy and
e~ercisescience aJ

UB. is theconfercnceorga-

mzcr.

Sports Experts
ToMeetatUB
EducMors, experts from 20 countries
to join lntemMional conr-- In July
physically chal lenged. technology in sport.
motor learning and control, SportS sociology.
spans hislory, sports psychology. exercise
physiology and fitness. and fitness measun:ment and evaluation.

Prll ....... llt llllljor ........
. . lilldude:
• IEun:IM plljtiDIDO _,. ttt.Ma:
Steven Blair. director of epidenniology at the
Institute for AerobicsResean:h in Dallas, Texas.
and vice president for basic and applied sciences for the American College of Sports
Medicine.

Major lectures addressing issues important
on the f~eld of uni versiry athletics will he supplemented by panel discussions. presentations of
refereed p;ljlCn and resean:h in progress, and
public-interest sessions. The conference also
will feature half-&lt;lay worl&lt;shops in athletic
trdining and strength and conditioning.
Topics to he addressed in the major sessions
are: SportS sociology. athletic trJining. ph.ilosophy. pedagogy (the an of teaching), man-

• SpootsfGI'tM....,...,.c:" • ....,

age men I, biomec hani cs. spons fer lhe

Brad Hedrick., bead coach of the Universiry of

• . . . . _ .... ~ William
Kraemer. director of researeh and associate
professor of applied physiology at the Center
for Sports Medicine at the Pennsylvania State
University. He also will present a strength and
conditioning workshop.

Ulinois men 's and women 's wbeekhair basketball team for 12 years.

• Spoots eocioloO: Donald Sabo. associate professor of !IOciaJ science at D'Yooville
College in Buffalo. a consultant for the
Women 's Sport Federatioo and the Ladies
Professional Golf Association. and the 3Ulllor
ofboolts on the impact of sponsoo socicly. and
Sue Birrell, a professor at the University of
Iowa and an expen in women' s srudies and

women's athletics.

• Allllellc~ Donald Chu. professor
of physical educatioo at California State University at Hayward and owner of Ather Sports
Medicine Oinic in Castro Valley, Calif.. and
John Schrader, director of grdduate athletic
trn.ining education at Indiana Unive~ity . Tiley
alsowillconduct a work.shopand lecturcdemonstrntion in athletic training.

-.c-u••L

• Sports
Warren Giese. a
state senator from South Carolina and fomter
dean of the College of Physical Educatioo and

DENIAL DEAN

HIGH MARKS

Conttnued from page t

Conttnued from page t

''While Bill Feagans is leaving him some
btg shoes to step into. Or. Goldberg will be a
first-r.ue successor. We are delighted to have
him here . We ' re also delighted to be bringing
such an accomplished New Yorker back to
New York."
UB Provost Aaroo Bloch noted that '"in
addition lo his academic and administralive
abilities. Or. Goldberg has the k.ind of human
qualities that can bring together the school" s
distinct intellectual and professionaJ commu-

niucs.
""The future of the sc hool."" Bloch added.
..depends on ns ability under h1s leadership to
build upon and maintain its excellence, while
iU the same umc reaching out to forge deeper
hnks with its local and profes.ll:tonalconstituencies. It Will need also to expand greaLiy iLo;
effort.' to achieve d1 versity through affinnat1vc
action
In a letter to the faculty. studcnL-; and staff of
the school. Bloch added: ""Before the year is
out. we will have occasion to speak and reflect
in much more depc.h on the long service Bill
Feagans has contributed to the school and the
university. For now, I want on ly to pause to
thank him for the cooperative and generous
attitude be has tal&lt;en throughout this process
and for the beocfit of his wisdom.·
A 1956 grnduate of Brook.lyn College.
Goldberg received his dental degree from the
New Yorlt Universiry College of Dentistry in
1960 and a doctorate in anatomy from UCLA
in 1968. From 1962.{)4, he was a captain in the
U.S . Anny Dental Corps.
~ldberg, whoasadentalstudentservedas
U a resean:h fellow with the National Insti- ·
tutes of Health (ND-1). was a postdoctoral fellow with the NIDR from 1961 -62 and with the
Natiooallnstitute of Dental Research at UCLA
from 1964-68.
· From 1968-72. he was an assistant professor of oral biology in the UCLA School of
Dentistry. as well as the recipient of a prestigious Career Development Award from the
NIH. He was named an associate professor in
1972 and professor in 1977. He also held a
facu lty appointment in the Anatomy Depanment in the UCLA School of Medicine (in
which be was named a professor in 1977) from
1972-88. and served as a professor in the
Depanment of Kinesiology in the UCLA Col lege of l..ellers &amp; Science from 1981 -88.
Goldberg served as assistant dean for researeh in the UCLA School of Dentistry from

1972-77.

A member of the NIDR · s Dental Research
l'rogr.llmAdvisoryCommittee. he is past president of the Neuroscience Section of the International Associarion of Dental Research .
A participant in the NIDR' s Long-Range
Research Plan for the Nineties, Goldberg has
served as an ad hoc reviewer for organizations
including the ND-1. National Scicoce Foundation. Medical Research Council of Canada and

"In addition to his
academic and
administrative abilities,
Dr. Goldberg has the kind
ofhumon qualities thai
can bring together the
schools distinct inJel/ectual
and professional
communities. "

over the world to study wtth the pioneering
researelters and clinicians in dental medicine.""
Greiner added. .. And pharmacy is home to some
of the most advanced, most innovative training
and =n:h programs in the fteld."
Greiner added that the three schools "'have
long trnditioos of excellence and long records of
service to WNY . The qualiry of their service L&lt;
evident in the number of distinguished local
medical, dental and pharmacy prnctitioner.; who
are UB alumni. and on the strength of the coonec-

bead fooct.ll cmch and diJa:tor at tdlle8a.
the Uniwnity at Soudl Carolina.

•

..... : r

Kq

Sang Jo, profeuor 11 the Koreoa Nabonal
College of Physical Educllion in Seaul, md
Cleem M . Leijlen. 1 I11CI1Ibor at the Nabonal
Institute for Educational Measwemenl in
Ambcm. the Netherlands.
. . . . . . JtiiiiJI). WilliamHarper,usoci&amp; professor in the J:lepartment of Health,
Kinesiology and Leisure Studies at Pllrdue
University.

...... ~ .... ?eot!nlliiC Richard
Magill. a professor and director at the Mocor
Behavior I..abor.llofy in the Department of
Kinesiology at Louisiana State University.

• Spoots JC) ct I I I 0· Bruce Abemelhy of
the Univen;iry of Queensland in Ausualia.
I
I c t G . Peter Bruggemann of
the German Sport University in Cologne.

• •

• Sodttl r-es: Hillel Ruskin of the Coodl
Center for Physical Education in JerusaJern.
and Helmut Digel. director of the Institute for
Sport Sciera at the Technical Universiry of
Darmstadt, Gennany. and bead of the ScientifiC Council of the German Spans Federation.

• Spoots........,., Patricia Vertinsky. associate dean for graduate programs and resean:h
at the University of British Columbia.

•..........,.., Don Hellison. professor at the
University of Ulinois. and Paul Schempp, profe!&lt;t...o;or a1 the University of Georgia.

School of Phannacy with only 36 faculty memb=. has a total anrual revmue of rrae than S6
million. from incksry andgov&lt;:rr111"1:ttgr.DS. The
school has received a )X"CSligious NIH prt&gt;&lt;loclaal
lnlining JXOil'lll1l gnn for the Jl'l'l 21l years.
Wtlliam M. Feagans. dean of the School of
Dental Medicine, said the recognitioo given the
school in the U.S. N~s&amp;. WorldReponranlcings
"'is a tribute to the faculty. No. I. and. No. 2. it
couldn 't have been done had the universiry II()(
supponed this school ...

tioosthosethree groups maintain with theirschools.
Across the health scicnocs and professions. UB ' s
cluster of programs is increasingly recognized a'
competitive with the best in the nation and the
world." Greiner noted.
Davtd J. Triggle. dean of the School of Pharmacy. said the school""has long been rerogni=J
by iL&lt; JXlC" ., ooe of the best in the U.S .. but it" &gt;
good to see it quantitated and explicitly recog·
m1.cd in Lhe rn.-dia." AcconJing 10 Triggie. the

school's gr.lduation mte for stuck..."Tlts preJX.lling to
hecome li&lt;:ensed pharmacist.' is about I00%. ""In
onlerto prnctioe. these stud."'fit.\ must also tal&lt;ethe
New Vorl&lt; State Pharmacy Boarosand routinely.
100% of them pass."' he said.
Facultymembcrsarepun;uingpioneeringworl&lt;
tn many areas. including phormacok.ineti the
study of drug intcrJctions. Triggle nooxJ that the

"'"te UB dental school rank.s second natioo1 ally tn tenns of funding from the National
lnstitute ofDental Researt:h .It is the homeoftwo
premier dental research programs funded by the
NTDR. the Penodootal DiseaseOinical Rt:search
Center and the Resean:h CenterforOr.ll Biology.
Feagans said that in additioo to doing pioneering
~ in the prevenooo and treatment ofdental
disease. the school within the next twoye:trSplans
to impk:nrnt a oomputer-based curriculum thai
will be a national model for dental schools.
John P. Naughton. UB vice president for clinical affairs and dean of the medical school said.
'"We are ~ to be nx:ogniMI by wr peers as
doing such a good job. We have snived to be a
leader :urong ~ve medical schools.
and we will continue those effoos in the fuure.·•

the Health Sciences Center Researeh Foundation. Inc . of Winnipeg. Manitoba. Canada.
He has served as a consultaJU to a variety of
progr.lffi'i. including the National Advisory Dental Researt:h Council and the Office of Scientific
Integrity of the Nalional Jn:;titutes of Health.
Goldberg has authored or eo-authored more
than 50 resean:h papers, 39 scientifiC abstracts
and nine book chapters in scientific books. He
also has delivered more than 60 invited lectures.
An editorial boanl memberforthe '"Model·
ing Methodology Forum" of the American
Physiological Society from 1980-89. Goldberg
also has been an ad hoc reviewer for ATchiv~s

of Oral Biology. ~~ntal Neurology.
Expuim~n.tul Brain R~~arch, Brain R~st;arch ,
Journal of Neurophysiology. Journal of N~u ·
roscienct. 'T'M Aml'rican Journal of PhysioiOKY and Journal of Dental Res.arr:h.
He is a member of Sigma Xi. the lntema- ·
tional Association for Dental Research. the
American Association of Dental Schools. the
American Association of Anatomists. Ameri·
can Association for the Advancement of Science and the Sociery for Neuroscience.

us hpnored researchers whq have receilled pal9niS lor
their work during the past year at a ceremony Matdl8.
·Seated, from left: Soren E; Sorensen. Paras Prasad, Eli
Ruckenstein,Trnolhy Mrphy, DebOrah Ctulg. ~
ing: Presideni"Greiner, left, George Lee. Dale M. Lanci.

�4
PSS Outstandang Servoce Award
Call for Nomanatoons

--A--...--lbooryiD--- Spengler, PI&gt;D., Dep&lt;. of l'llhol·
ogy. I 08 Sherman. South Campu~. 4 p.m.

'

NonWIIiono are rott !*ill """"1&gt;'8&lt;1 lor h1993-.
sioniiSiaf!SenateO&lt;-.gSeMceA_._Ior
lhe award are rnombo&lt;ad lho proleooionol- d h lriler·
slly who go bey.lnd lho normal aoope d ..... ' ' " " " ' "' .... OUISIIInding oonlrilluliono lhol-lho unl-

- . i l y - a&gt;rmU'lily.

The~--·~........allyby

l h e - - - Fuld'ong,iO pr!lOiidod by hlW-.ily 81 Bullalo F'u.ndaliori,lnc. and made~ hough
lhe ~d ~akmli and ftia'lda. Wmarad lhe
award receive S1 ,000 cash and penoonelcerlilicalee d recoo·
nitblallho PSS Awards l..oocheon, Th&lt;.nday, May 2D, 1993
allhe Cenler klr Tarorrow.
To be eligible lor lho.award. "" indlllltbiJ rrus1 be a ax·
reno fuN-limo professional SUilf ""lJlJyee d lhe lrilerslly, llle
Aesearc11Fooodalion. thi!UBFooodalionorlhe FacUiy.SOU.
~ Asoocialion. NorTwlees rrusohiMt aerved in a full.time
capacity lor 8 continuous period d alloasllwo yeara. Winners
wih no! be eligible 10 receille ltris award again klr elleast live

NMTA: Carftat Slni&lt;Po
and
ol Malam Orpoiu-18lleoomo~·

d.., Dr. Jaime Gomez, dcon.
Gr•w•&lt;e School o f M ITESM. Muioo. 200 The Com·
mons. North Compus. 4 p.m.
Spooson:d by lhe lntemllionll
Business Oub. For more information caii64S-3223.

--~-­

Inc oiRaadom Modla, Prof.

Leonid Berl)'llld. Pumsylvani•

Slal.c: Univ. 103 Diefendorf.
Soolh Clmpus. 4 p.m.

F OilDIIIalloo Do..Jopmoat ol A
Nobullzedlnbabo- Product
llldical&lt;d ID lho T ...tmont ol
Cyillc: Jo1brollls, Jay Sisco, Pb.O ..
ruearch investigator. Gluo. Inc.,

years.

Past rocipleniS ove&lt; lho pasllive years_, Elsie
Pac11eco. Ne1sa1 T~. Darlene Hurrmort, Chatles
Sonnoag. Rul!l Bryant Me&lt;le Hoyle, Willlam Barbe. Acinald
Sleon, Arthur Bur1&lt;e and Rosalyn Wll&lt;lnoon.
Noroinalors may be oolleagoes.
hiends. Self.
nominahOnS are encouraged bul: requi"e thai the nominee ask
a surrogale 10 pro¥ide supporting materials. The rom1na10r
has supporting letters seniiO ~ , wriles lhe overview,
supplies required doc\.mentalion as stalad, and pr&lt;&gt;rides lhe
anginal and 11 copies d lhe oominalion ma1erials 1o
Mher ollhe PSS Oulslanding Service Awards Corrmittee eo.
ChaJrs. Joanne Reicher (120-.,., Cenler, ~)and

"""""""'a

Research Triangle Partt, N.C. 508

Cooke. North Clmpus. 4-5 p.m.
Co·sporuon:d by lhe l'lwmaceu·
tical Industry Visiting Scientist
Program of lhe Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association.
STA11111C1 COMOQI••
M-estlmalioo and Quanllk

Frederock KW18C.., (342 AbboU HaN, 829-2945).

~-

-Infortnllion,
ill ""' Preotoa:
AUiillary
Dr. ol
Biao
Zhang, UB Dcpl. of Statistics

.................

rithms, Fl'llllklin T. Luk. Dept. of
Computer Science. Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute. 14 Knox
North Campus. 3:30p.m.
PHYSICS

AND~

~··

'THURSDAY

1~_.,_

Total Quality Manageme.nt in
Health Care, Roben W. Du801Jo.,
M .D .. Ph.D .. senior vice pre.'&gt;!·
dent of VaJue 1-lc:alth Scrvu:es.

Emmcu C. Murphy. Ph .D.. pre.&lt;~i ·
dent of E. C. Murphy. Ltd .. Dale
V Shallcr, and Marsha Orsolitis
Stevie. Ph.D Hyau Regency
BufTaJo. 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Span·
sort.d by th(_ UB School of Medicine and Biomcdic-..t.l Scicr'k."eS,
UB School of Nursing. Millard
Fillmore Hosp;tals and lhe
Millard Fillmore Health. Educa·
tion and Research Foundation.

-

-.vREAND
PLUIIIIHII VISITING_,...

-yR~restDting

tM American

Oty, Michael Sorkin. architect
and critic. 201C Hayes. South

Campus. 9 a..m.

A Mutatlooal Analysis ollhc
Slru&lt;lun: and Rc«ptor-Bind·
log Activity ollho ~II
Heal-Labile En.....,....xlns or
&amp;ciurit:llill
Dr. Terry
Corulell, research auiSlanl, Dept.
of Microbiology, Uniformed
Services Univ. of the Health Sc•c:nces. Md. 250 CF.S Addition.
South Campus. I I a.m.

eou.

UIDLUIY-

-YSAT4PLUS

Cedlla Vkuoa, Chi!Oan poet and
perfOfTilanCe artist. 438 Clemens.
North Campus. 12:30 p.m. Presenu:ctby lhe Poetry Society of
America and the Program in
Spanish in the Dept. of Modem
Unguqes and l..itc:rulurcs

-

UIA..-:ALSCIDICO

Buldloc""' s,_ rrom Mol-

Ado&gt;rpllon ill lho IJmil ol
Ullnl- lnte'acllons, l'rof.
Milton Cole. Dcp. of f'hYsk::!.,
Pennsylvania State: Urriv. 454
Fr&lt;&gt;OC7ak. Nonh Campus N5

p.m.

BIDLDGICAL SCIEJICU

Embaf'nlSSlng Dnrlopments in
Logic ill the 12th Century,
Christopher J. Martin , Dept. of
Philosophy. Uni v. of Auckland
and Univ . of Toronto. 684 BaJdy
North Campus. 4 p.m.

BUfFALO SALT AND WATER

cwa__,..

Adrenergic Regulation ol
Monoldne Production, Roben

EYGMaca New u..Jih Care
S , _ Stepben Kap110, M.D.,
head, J)iy, ofGenr:niirumll
Medicine. Buffalo Genr:nl """
pilaf. 252A -South
pus. 12:3().1 :30 p.m.

earn.

~-­
a••--

Baodwldth • a VIrtual R~
"""""'ill Multiproaooor Jno.r.
&lt;OODOdioa Networks, Prof
Rami Mc:ibem. Dc:pt. of Computer Science, Univ. of Pitl5butgh. I 10 Knox. 3 p.m Few additional information caJI Prof S

---y

J Upadhyaya a1 64:1-2425.

Flat Struduro, Prof. James E.

UR~-Hahn.

Univ. of Michigan.

10 Acheson. s-11 Campus. 4 p.nc

For n:gistralion information call
64:1-6125.

LIFE--

QAUISCHCM•a-

Ita~ Awarmess. Public Safety
Officer Terri Banas. leader. North
Campus. 7-8:30 p.m. For n:gjs trauon infOI'TTUilion caJJ 645-6125.

UR-

Inltrvitwlog s...,.,..,, It's
Easier Tb.an You Think, Jim

Kumor. leader. North Campus.
7:J0..9 p.m f~r registration informauon call 645-6125

CONC:BrT
Ot.arles Pdtz, organizer Slcc.·
Concert Hall. North Campus 8
p.m. For ~ mformation call
645-2921.
nEATER

Fen, dr.una by Caryl Chun:hill .
ditttted by Jerry Finnegan.
Pfeifer Theater. 681 Main St 8
p.m. Tickets, S4. studeru s, semor

citi1..ens. UB fiiCUity. statT and
alunmi ; $10. genenLI admission
For more informauon call 829-

FRIDAY

p.m.
IIUFFALO LDWC~

_......_

BaUroom OaDdog: Swing Jnoo
Sprt.nc. Dr. Ninita Bogue, leader
North Campus. 6:30-8:30 p.m
For registration information caJI
645-6125

Uv!og Olr Campus: Wbal You
Need To Know, Ed Brodka.
leader. North Campus 7-8 p.m

Ras Superfamily of Molecular
Swll&lt;hcs: Regulation and Func·
lions., Dr. lan Macara. Dept. of
Pathology . Umv. of VennonL
121 Cooke:. North Campus. 4

Room, Cary.fwbcr-sbcnnln
Complex. South Compus. Noon.
Spooson:d by lhe ~ Cent.enllf.UB.

~~-­
Polartlo!dX-Ray""""'1JC'oo

information call645-6125

~··
FISt Malri&gt;·Updating Alll"'

Flloka,
JuneoF.
profeooor ol mon1 dtoology,
Wt110n School oiThoolcJsy,
CarniJrid&amp;e, Mao&amp;. U-='"'tt

p.m.

Susan OtiddiA , Ieadc:r. North

- . n E l l SCIENCE

Wloy-..Rev.
IC-.SJ. IUOciao&lt;:

Introdudlon To Focusing, Or

UR-UR--

Campus. 7-9 p.m. For rqistration

Grounds for chstmcoon could •nclude but are rlO( limited to 9VIoence of leaderstup, corrmitn'Blt. creatMty and initiative Matenals supporting the 1ndMduaJ candidate rrust include
clear and deta•led examp~ ot both serv1ce and JXofesSIOI'lal
excellence
ltle c:lossiE!f re&lt;iu.rements. checklist and cntena !Of selec::hon may be obta•ned by contacting ellher ol me selectiOn
comm1nee co-chairs
All nomnatiOI'\S and supporttng documentat)()('l must be
sut&gt;mllled to e•thet co-cha•r by w~ • ..,.14, 1.-.s.,
1114:30 ......

1ft! HWDIO Do~ Nolnslillllel ~ Hcollh, Mel.
Kinch Alllli!OOum, Olil&lt;ftn 'o
lloopital. Bun.

1 '1-0dn O.u. grnwc student.
UB Dep&lt;. of Medicinal Cbenus·
uy. 114 Hochstcucr. North Cam·
pus. 3 p.m.

144 Farber. Soolh Campos 4

scope and deplh ollhe individual's past service
to lhe lKIJVerSily andlor rhe comrrunity [hat is distinct frcm servtee expected in his or her JOb description. This may irdude
religiOUS. chafitabk:l. scientific. educational. arbstie. lilerary or
c•vte •nvolvements that eMance quality of life; and
l'p
,
I speclfK: 8VIdenoe Indicating tfle indiVIdual's 8l(cellenee w1thlfl hiS or her profess101181 staff poSition

oearcb for Molhen 1ft! Olildra&gt;,

N - fnllilule o1 Olild Health

19
_._--FadDrS lnlluendog lnfanl
Mortality, Sumner J. Yaffe.
M.D.. director. Center for Re-

3742.

WA&amp;AUI
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992),
ditttted by Francis Ford
Coppola. WoktllWI Thcaltt, 112
Nonon. North Campus.. 1 and
9:30p.m. Admission, $2.50. UB
students; $3.50. non-students.

w.u ...

Naofenlu The Vampyn: ( 19'791,
directed by Wemes Henog.
Woldman n-r&lt;. 112 Norton
North Campus. Midnight. AdmiS·
sion. $2.50, UB students: $3.50.
noo-studcnt.s.

�S ATURDA Y

MONDAY

~0
~~
- -- -.._ u-.. gradual&lt; studcnu;
from

f1lOR:

than a dozen universi

cliscus.s how dtalh
.00 moumi113 have been ~~&lt;a~cd
by writers from Sbak.espc:are to
Ishmael Rood. Newman Ccn1&lt;1
North. 2119 and 200 The ComUCS meet lO

nlOf\$.

8 Lm..·5:45 p.m.

-~

~
~~=
l...aun:nce Thomos, Synruoc Ur&gt;v ..
ond Ncw!oo C...., UB Dept. of
Ploilooophy. 200 The Commons.
North~ 1-5 p.rn

-IICIIJmi1S

Grolduate School of Educalion
and Human DevelopmcnL Univ

tho All~
Tranocrlplloo Fod.or for Wbat F..odo&amp;-.....,.LipDd! Thomas A.
Ga.o;icw;cz. Ph.D.. awx:iae profes!a, Environmc:nta.l Heakh Scic:ncc:s
Ccnla. Uruv. of Rochc51&lt;1. G2f&gt;

ul Rochester. Center for Tomor·
row North Campus. 9 a.m.·5
p m , registration at 8;30 a.m
'iponsorcd by the Lrammg and

Spoosa-cd by UB Ocporuncnts of
BiochcmiSiry, BHJphysia. Pharmawlogy and Pbysiology.

·~

Cwnnt biiua In Education,
Helena Jones, principal . Roper Jr
Hog/&gt; School. Wasltingtoo. D.C.,
and Dr Philip We.-;lcr. dean .

ln.!&gt;truction Graduate Student
A.....oc1ation. the Dept of EOAP,
.md Lhc UB Gr.duate Student
A SSOCla!KMl

AYHIDIC EYDCT

Track and F1dd Oink. Ma.m
Gym. Alumni Arena_ Non.h Cam
pu!!. 9a.m -3pm

fo'r.n. drama by Caryl Churchill.

.-... -

ThoR~ aod

Fameo-. South~4p.rn

lnunigntion Slalus A11u tho
-~-

F-1 or J -1 Sludeot VIsa, Marl&lt;
T. Kenmore. Upswc New Yart
Chapter:. American lmmigralioo
Lawyers Association. 11 0 Knox.
North Campus. 4-6 p.m.

--THE.-IIAIIIIET-So You Want To Work With

c.....

and 9 p.m. Tickets, S4. students,

l'&lt;oplo' Exploro
Path&lt; In
Businrs. 1450 Studcnl Union.
North Campus. 5-{dO p.m.

-.cmur Cl li J'. et\S, UB facuhy. ~wJf
and alumm, S 10, gcneraJ adnll'•
...on For mort= mfonnatioo call

FACULTY IIECITAI.
Viennai'New York Expres5.
Yvar Mikhashoff. piano. works

dnn:tc:d by Jerry Finnegan
Pfc1fer TheaJ.er, &amp;8 1 M ain St 4

K2:Y 1742.
~ ~

J an WUiiarm: and Anthony
Minmda, direCtors, wi th Pau l
l:lwnud, vclcru dancer , and p1a
""'~ l..u._ Vac!&gt; and Chnstophl'f
I Su.=rt.chula. works lly Wau:..
l.uthcl Adam.\ . F.! wood and nth
cr. Slcc: Cooccr1 Ha11 Nonh
( 'ampu!-. Hpm

LAIA8 FIUI
l:lram Stoke r 's l&gt;racula 1I'IYll.
dm!Ctcd by Fr.uters Ford
( 'oppula. Woldman lllC&lt;Itcr . 112
Nurton North Campu.o,; 7 and
I.J 30 p 111. Admlli.~IOn, .S2 50. l !H
~tudcnt'\, S350. oon-"'-udcnt '

IAJA8 FIUI
N~tt"atu Th ~ Vampy ~

( 197'1)
drrOOcd by Werner Her1.og
Woldman lllcatre. 11 2 Nonun
North Campus. Midnight Ad nus
o;1on . .S2.SO. UB students; .S.' (,{],
nun-students

S UNDAY

~1

AntlEnC EYDCT

Socc:er C oecbes C linic. Mam
Gym. Alumni Arena. Not1h Canl·
pus. 9 a.m.-5 p.m
'IlEAtEll
Fen, drama by Caryl Chun:hill .
dirmcd by Jerry Finnegan.
Pfeifer lbeatcr. 68 1 M ain St 3
p.m. l ickcts. $4. students. senior
ci tizens, UB faculty, staff and
alumni: $ 1O,_gencral admission.
For man: infomuuion cal l 829-

3742.
CCIIICa:llt

Ola.rJiber Studks., Vincent Hammer. guitar. Katherine Soscia.
soprano; Michael Loughlin
S mith, tenor. Karen Wagner.
oboe: 1ina Otang. piano: Joseph
G abaJs k.i , organ: David r-uller.
organ: Lut Vaes. piano: Colleen
Man:ello , sopnno• .00 lhc UB
Percussion Ensemble. wocL by
801.z.a. Alain, Sowerby. Harrison.
olhcrs. Slee Coo&lt;en Hall. N· h
Campus. 8 p.m.

by Brahms. lve,o;, M ahler.
Copland. Schoenberg and
Gcn.hwin. Slet Concert 1-iall.
Nucth Campu~ Mp.m. Admrs.'\100 S2 . S4 . S6 For more rnformauun cal1645-2921

-

rROIE11IEUS l£cnJRE

Death and the Good U fe., Kurt
Barer. distingurshcd service prufc..\....Or of phi losophy.llmv uf
l"lllsburgh Center fUf Tomumw•
North Campu!\ M-q .lOp m

_..,

-

... _..,_ ...

-~A .-_.M)oo*D-,.
Dartac-~
c.ndloa,John Kolcp.
Pb.D. ~I'ddloo Univ. 108

w.w.-

-

Slamon.- ~ 4 p.m.

LL Rl..,. Dlod Far Your SIDs,
Dr. 01lrtcs Bland,leodco-. Nol1ll
Campi$. 7- 10 p.m. For rqiJUation information call 645-612S.

llowToSur-m&lt;Yom-Lud-

lorcl, Donn Shonn_ Nol1ll
Campus.
7-8:30 p.m. For -rqpstBtiooi nfonnatianc:all 64 ~1~ .

"'- $4, 5lUdcru. ,.,.,. citin:m.
UB roaJJI)', SIJI!f ond alunn: SIO,
gcn::ral admission. For more informaUon call 829-3742

WEDNESDA Y

lliAIICII- THE~
.-IIAIII!ET . . _
Summer Jobs Fair! Social 1-taJL
2nd floor. S1udem Union. North
Campu!&gt;. 10 a.m. ·2 p.m.

-

-WEU.

I'Aili&lt; ITA.FF

S tructure-Function Relationships In 1M Heparan-Sulfa t.e
FG F Re&lt;eptor Complu,
Wttllacc L M cKeehan. Ph.D .
~nior

scrcnt1SL W Alton Jonc!'&gt;

Cell Sc1cncc Center . Lake P1acrd

-

W rongful We. Kun Baier. di!ollngUistw:d servia: ~fes.o,;oro( ptu.
klsoptly. Uruv of Pittsburgh. 6K4
BaJdy. North CamJJ-1.'- 3-4:30 p.m.

.-.-.cAL
PHARMACOlOGY ~

-~~
Upda~ on New CCIOCltpt-. in
Asthma., Malcolm Sears. M .D ..
profeSsor o f medicine. Mc Mao;ler
Univ.: head of Respir.uory. SL
Joseph's Uospital; d.irectOJ.
Firestone Reg. Chest and Allergy
Unit, ()mario. Cafccorium A.
Ml!n.:y Hospi tal. 8:30a.m.

Cd8' Art
and G ProtftnM ec:llated,. Dr. M ichael Duffey.
UB Dept. of Physio logy. 106
Cary . South Campus. 4 p.m

-

-F-

Apple Modnl&lt;Job Display.
UBMicro Sales O;ntc:r. The
Commons. Nortb Campus. I0
a. m.-4 p.m. S ponsored by
UBM icro SaJcs Center and Apple
Computer. Inc
VOICEIIECI'fAL

Stud&lt;nu ol Gory " " " Sylvia DimiDanl, Danid
McCabe aod Harriet SimonsBaird Rcci lal Hall. North Campus. Noon. For more information
call645-2921.

-

-~

W""'Cfuf o..tb, Kurt Baia, dis~,.,.,.,.prof.,.... of pu-

looooP&gt;Y-Univ. ofl'lttslugb. 2!ll
Pln.North~3-4:JOp.m

r-.~-~
'*'c.Ga.)'le Elp1. leader. North
~

7-8:)() p.m. For regjstra-

lioninfC&gt;'JDIOioocall64~1~

TWA1D
Fm, onma by c.yl Outllill:
by Jerry " ' - Pre;ron-.:.-.681 Main 51.8 p.m. Tod&lt;cu. S4. Sbldl:m,scniorcitin:m.
UB fawlty,SIJI!f and alunri: SIO.
gcncrolldmission. For mon: infor-call829-l142.

THURSDAY

~a
--y-

Tbo RDio ol Gluca~&gt;-lllodin&amp;
Proi.dnsln~

~4 --

I'KA8MACY-.vl
A l..ook at F.odoplllhalmi lls a nd
O prolloud.n, Nicole Loe.
Pharm.D. candidate 248 Cooke
Noeth Campus. 8-8:55 a.m

Mulalion&lt; In tho Drmiopbila Caldum Channd S..bunit May
Ca"" Embr)ooil: Lethality. D F
Eberl. I'll.D.. UB Biochcmical
Pharmacology Dept. l07
f lochslel1o'. North Campus. 4 p.m.

· -. . - CSfiEII
P rovisions of ADA 110. I ILC
bui lding. 3 108 Main St. 9 :30
am -12·30 p.m. and 2+5 p.m. Cosponsonxi by Neighborhood Legal Services. the WNY Chapter
of Sclf- llelp for Hard of Hearing
Persons. and the UB Union of
Students wllh Disabilities. r'Of
n:gisuation informatioo caJI 8360822 (V&lt;Mce or WD).

LillE-

MuliJN Vlrulontt, Dr. Jeffrey
A. Banas, a..ssiswu professor of
rescatrlo, Depl. or M icrobiology
and Immunology. Univ. of Oklahoma HeaJth Sciences Cenlef.
250 CP.i Additioo. Sooth Campus. II a.m.

PIIOIEIIlEliS LEcnJIIE

~l

Theater, 112 Norton. Nol1ll Campus. 7 and 9 p.m. Ad!niosioo.
S2.50, UB studcnu: S4.SO. nooilUdcnts.

-IIECitAL

Lut v- p1oao. Boitd Rccilal
Hall. 250 lllinl. North~ 8
p.m.
'IlEAtEll
Fm, onma by Caryl a.uctull:
- b y Jcny Fimcgon l'fcifer
"-.681 Main51.8p.rn Tod&lt;-

I-l il lcboe Auditonum. RPC'I
1:! 30p.m

TUESD AY

5

~-­
laoce5 lo Human Seactory

Osd.Uations ol lonk Cooduc-

ea1o

.__

-LEcn.EIIDES
Natural and UnnaturaJ Passions' Gender and Rag&lt; In
Mozart' s Operas., G~tchen A
Whcc:lock. Eastman School of
M usic. Uni v. o f Rochester. 2 11
Baird. North Cam ~. 4 p.m. For
more information call 645-2921

Common Mlslalt&lt;S Mock By
WOIDO&lt;IIn tho Worldoru, A .
Marie Bulger. )eader. North Campus. 7-9 p.m. For rcgistralion
i nformation call645-6125 .

UR~ ~~~~~~ ~Arul-­

""'*

Dloonlmi, 0.. M"'lll""' Dundoo.lcada. North Campus. 1JJ p.m. For rqislr.otion
informalioo call 645--6 125.

&lt;ty aod

CII'UI: CUIIIICII IIECI'fAL
An Evening 01 New Musk,
David Wol f, violin, and Caruhne
Esposito , piano. works by

Wuorincn. Zajonc and Hammer
Allen Hall South Campus. 7 p.m
Tick&amp;. SJ. students.. WBR) lli'KI
Hall walls membeno. SS. gcncra1
admisston.

Biologk:al Pr-oporti&lt;s of Plant
Flavonoids.. Dr. ElliOI MiddJeton.
Jr .. UB professor of medicine.
Oiv. of Allergy and Immunology.
Buffalo General HospitaL 8
Acheson. South Campus. Noon- I
p.m. Sponsored by the UB
School of Health Related Prof~ ­
sions and the Nutrition Club

fu, .... d.l\ , \ l .11,h 2~ I'~"~
ltl .1m tllltll ~ J'111
L 1:\IILill .....l k ~ lL'llk l
L B ltlllllllon ... , '\or til l.llllJ' ll ~
DEMO NSTRATING-..
Apple Color Printing from Microsoft Excel
and Word every hour on the hour.
Apple Color Scanning every hour on the
half hour
600 dots per inch resolution (vs. 300) on the
Apple Laser Writer Pro 630
Apple Macintosh PowerBook connected to
an external monitor

-

ANA._AI. ICIENCES

T he High ~rt Modulation
of Cardiac Musde Ptrformance., Perry M . liogan . Ph.D .
UB Depc of Physrolngy 25M
CFS. South Campus. 12.30 p m
WUMCSDAY$ AT 4 PLUS

LitERARY-

From ' Revision of Hislory' to
' Ft&gt;&lt;g&lt;d llistories' ' Dealing

with the Past in Cootc:mponll')'
American Poetry by Womtn.,
Hannah Mockei -Rieke. Getman
poetry scholar 438 C lemen:.
Nonh Campu5 12.30 p.m. Sponsored by the UB Podics Progr.un

IIAIICOIII'to THE~

.-IIAIII!ET . . _

Volunt«rism. Nancy Guadagno.
executive d in:ctor. Make 1:1 Wish
Foundauon 145A Student Umon
North Campu:.. 2-3.30 p m
YISI1"'IIQ

.umst

SEJIIIES

LEcn.E

The

of G rapb.k ()r...
sign, Ed Gold. spc.aking in connection with the gallery exhibit
'lhe New Writing: Communica.
lion Design aJ UB." Bethune
Gallery. 27 19 M am SL 3:30p.m .
B usi~

-

l'ti.UMACUIIICIIIEIEAIICil

l nvtstiptioo o( lnorpnic S ulfate Transport in lht Re;nal
Proximal T ubule U5102 Rat
Membrao&lt;V&lt;Side
PropartaUOt15 and Purcino Kld-

ory Cdl Uoe LLCPK,. Martha
Mammarella. graduate student,
U B Dept.. of Pharmaceutics 508
Cooke . North Campus. 4-5 p.m .
-~CSfiEII

INIDNA'IIC!ML-

Violatiom ol Women's Human

Rlgjlls. Buffalo Museum or Scic:nce Auditoriwn, I020 Humbokl
Pkwy. 6:3().10 p.m. Co-sponsored

by the ' """"""'""' lnslituteof
Buffalo ord VIVE. Inc. For more
. infonnWon call 645-2073.

.__
UUMFILM

1'wllll!lot of tho Coc:kroacbes.
Woldman lbealcr. 11 2 Norton.
North Campus. 7 and 9 p.m. Admission. $2.50. UB SludcnL-..
S4.50, non-students
l nt.ervlewtng Suca:!li: It's

•:.sier 1bao You lblnk.. Jim
Kurnor. leadcr. Nof'th Campus.
7:30-9 p.m. For ~gisuation infor.
mlltioncal i64 5~J25 .

WM . . .

Vampift Hunla' 0 . Woldman

cosponsored by UBMicro Sales Center
and Apple Computer, Inc.

Conttnued on page 6

Convenience
Quality
Service
·Variety

/'

�-----.-Letters

6

Salunloy. Man:b 20. a I p.m. a
201 Buder Ubnry. Buffalo SUOe
Co1JeF, 1300 Elmwood A¥&lt;.

'!'IJcRw!UbeaWfee.~

-would be _.,.,;..d.
-

....... Judilh Hopkins.

63:Z.~.

more infonnabon
on-.,. orformembenhip.

Boot says he would serve
constituency with frugality

JOBS

..-.n-

Desptte the Unfted in the
name UUP. there is somewhat of a spltt in that Ofg&amp;
nization The spltt is

- - ....,_..Nutrition

Propam.l'oolin&amp; IF-3020. Aaola-

.....,_.-Physia and,...

__

II'On&lt;lflly, Poolin&amp; IF-3021 . Aaola-

laaf/- ....,__Social

andPreventiveM«ti&lt;:ine.l'l&gt;oting
11'-3022. . . _ . _ ,

.._

......,_.

(dopndboc ... ~~
~Animal Facilities.
l'oolin&amp; 11'-3023. - - Prof -·Rmlovablc:
Proolbodonlia. Pooling ltJ'. J(J24.

-

. ...,._.. "-&lt;&lt;ar. (SE-1)Biological Sciences. Poolin&amp; fR .
93018. 11--mTedulldaDD
(N0-4)-Biological Scic:nc:e&amp;.
Pcoaing tR-93021. lllndGr·
S_.,tl'ropamoJ'urdl».
IDe. Poolin&amp; t R-93022. Support Spodaliol (port-llawlBiological Sciences, Pooling tR-

-93()24,

Medocal subJOCIS are among the works by UB
photographers on vew March 24-:ll on Capen Hall

THIS WEEK
Conllnued from page

~

off to 1ndcpmdcnJ U'avelers. This
edtibil wa.5 ~viously on display
aa the Ruffalo Museum of So-

EXHIBlTB

~-­

FACULn 800K ~
So~ and
lh.nnamties Fat."UIIy Rook Ex
hibtt" 1s un display m Lockwood
Library now through late April
·nus year' s d1splay highhg.hu 6 3
buok.'i wn tten or cdncd by UB
faculty frurn An:hltcdutr:, Ans
and l.euen. Educauon. Manage'
ment. Social Sc1c:nco and lhr'
l lnrYcrsrly L1br.lnC$. and puDhshed between late 1991 and
early 199J These hooks n::veaJ
the uungumg range of 1ntere.q:.
nf llD faculty 1br: nhibu '"
located in the foyer of the ~
OtliUf or l .c.tekwood and can be

lk annual "SociaJ

..

\1 Cwed dunn!! alllln'oC'i lhr h

hr.tl)' '"open

.........._

PWUUIT P£IISI'£C11YU OF
UIIIVEIISm'
PhotographiC ptf"ipt\.111/C!o

Arm IJiftdor (SL-J)ol!osidcn·
tiaJ Life. Posting IP-3004. Pr&amp;.
t:n'J'UII&lt;I'IAoaly.t (SL-3)-Com·
falling and Information
Technology, Pooling tP-3005.
Slatf "-dar. (SL-4)-AtU &amp;.
Lettc:n Dean. I omce. Posl:ing
IP-3012.

ur l:B .

,l.. ,llfully pm.cniL-d lhroogh lhc:
~· yt: and CaJ ili:Td or IWO UR ptv.)\ugrupher... Will b( on cAhlhll
lnlm March 24-30111 Capen llall
(~ 1he Nonh C ampul&gt; UO 1'\Jhh L•mons ~ogruphcn; Robcn
Wahoo :uid Sm100 Tong. w~
wor\ IS featured lhruug.hool the

un1Ver51ty 's pubhca11on from
the Rrpona 10 catalogues and
SpcclaJ projects-wilt be honomJ
aJ a rcccpt1on to b( held aa 4 p.m.
on Wc:dncsd.ay , March 24. in the
gallery on &lt;he fiflh floo&lt; of Capen
Hall. Walioo. who has bc:cn a UB
staff member f!lf four years. is a
gradwu or lhc Rochesl&lt;t tn.tilutt: ofTcct"lrOogy. Tong. an
cig.t1:-year veteran of the Publications Office. is an econonUcs
major a&lt; UB. The Capen Gallery
IS free and open to the pubtk
from 8:30.a.m. 10 S p.m. wcc.kdayL

NOTICES
AllfDEP~KI'S

1"0111-.o'11-c CommunicaiiOO Oes•gn rac ull y of lht Dep:an.ment of An will
lnlcrvleW !iiludcnt.s Wishing 10

seudy m the communication design or compuLer an pmgr.llll!ii 111
cuhcr the bachelor of fine aru or
bachelor or ans op:ions 1llc inlcMcws will lake place 111 Room
3 12. Bethune Hall. 00 Monday.
March 22 from 10 a m to noon
and 1-5 p m. and on Tuesday .
March 23 from 10 a.m 10 nooo
and 1· 5 p.m Studmt.s mu..\1 bnng
a ponro ho show1ng them dcsi~n
cllpencncr and a currem t.ran·
&lt;;enptto the mtcrv1cw 'lllc !t&gt;ign-

up sheet for 1nterv1ews I) oo Pruf
McKenna '!&gt; oiTKX door (3 12
Bethune) Srudc:ms mus1 s1g.n up

ttw: fin;ttime
slot to tht last. Plea.w: call Prof
McKenna at K29-3477 or 773-

_..__SET

111 sequence from

--22

1292 ir more informal ion 1s
nccdc:d.

Mart. T . Kenmore. a mcmbr:rof

lhc UpslalC New Yon Chapler of
the American Immigration Lawyen As..wcialion (AILA), will
discuss topics n:laling to immigration stalUS after the F- 1 or J. I
Student Visa. on Monday. March

22 from 4-6 p.m. in I 10 Knox.
Nonh Campus. His pn:sauion
will include the H-18 vis.a. labor
ca1if1Calion and employment""'-'&lt;~ pcnnancnl n:sid&lt;nce. lnl&lt;r·
113lionat Srudml and Scholar
Services is sponsor of the evcnL

___
-

...._

-.niiAilf''Jbe New Writing CO 11: UB," a
ihow of wort by computer des.igncrs who emptoy wonts. images. print. animation..
hypermedia arxiiYJ'OVallilY.
opens Man::h 26 with a reccp:ion
a1 7 p.m. and coobnues through
April 20 in Bc:lhune Gallery.
29 17 Moin SUm.

lntemational Folk Dancing lessons 1ft held Friday evenings a1 8
p.m. on the ground floor of
Diefltatl. Soulh Campus.
·Rcqucsl dancing fo(lows from 911 p.m. Everyone i.s wdoomc; no
panncr needed.. Free admission.
Sponsored by lhc Gr.lduale Slu·
deru Association.

'"Sacred Circles: Buddhist Life in
Tibet...· a coUection or phou~
graphs by Jennifer L..ewis. is on
view a1 lhc Ceru:r for Tomorrow .
lhrough Mardi 28, Monday
lhrough Friday, Wring n:gullu
building hours. In 1987. as port
o(. yur 5pcnl ttlvdilll tbc
wortd. Lewis. a former filmmaker and -joumalia,
journeyed 10 n:mo~e . . . or
Tibet lbM have since been doled

Current liaings o( jobs in busi -

-- -----

ras and indusary, gow:rnment.
health, cducatioo and non-profi1
organizaions. an: avmlab&amp;c in the
Offtee of~ Planning and
Pla&lt;xmenl. IS Capen Hall . North
Campus. Call 64S.2231 for""'"'
infonnabon.

T beadmiaion l&lt;llfor Mcma.lhc
high LQ. society. will be hdd

SecreWy I (SG- 11 )-Adv"""'.
mc:nt and Dcvdopmenl,l..ine
120989. Koy-..s S podallsl
(SG-G6)- Mcdicinal Chcmisuy.
Line 1124158.

between the so-&lt;:alled
"united" and "refoon" caucus HistO&lt;ically
this served a purpose. bu1 under current
conditions the division is no longer constructive.
The current Chapter Presodent IS clearly
identified with one section, while the Albany
headquarters are dc:rninated by the other.
There is a mutual lack of respect between
Buffalo and Albany. rather than amicable
relations and fruitful cooperation It does
not serve us well.
Manly fO&lt; !hat reason tt would be prudent and cons~uctive to vote fOf me in the
f011hcoming election fOf Chapter President.
My personal relations with the staff in AI·
bany are on the level.
My sole intent will be on servong our
constituency. both individually and collec·
tively. As a proverbially stingy Dutchman I
W&lt;ll do so with frugality: Money should be
spent fOf the cause. not fO&lt; the greater
comfon Of glory of elected offocials

-c.a.-

Management Soence and Systems

Historical perspective not
given in Reporter article

~

~-­
- Systems
-(SG-09)Facilities&amp;.
Mainle·
nance. Line 13 I 821

1/lJ.
..--...--___
..
_
__
............
___

PubliC
Satety s
Weekly
Report

_,.,..._.,
...

• A woman reported Feb 26
that while she was 1n the
lad•es· room 1n Lockwot:Xj
Library, a man looked over
the stall wall The man was

gone on arrrval of officers.
accordong to Pubhc Salezy
• Credn cards. a green card
and personal papet'S were
reported ITlssing Feb 27
frc:rn the racquetball courts •n
AILJ"mt Arena
• A sun roof. valued at $303.
was reported missing Feb.
26 from a vehicle par1&lt;ed in
the Wilkeson Quadrangle.
• A gym bag. containing
sweats and shoes valued at
$55, was reported mssong
March 1 from the triple gym
1n AllnYlt Arena.
• A watch. valued at SHJO.
S200 on cash and
worth
of tapes were repor\ed missong March 3 from Fargo
Quadrangle.
• All &lt;llrless sprayer and a
purrp, worth a combined
value of $4.000. were reported mssing March :l from
the CFS cons~uchon Site
• A wallet and a JaCkel were
reported missing March 3
from the
Arena racquelball COIXls.
• A tong
valued
at $400, was reported miss·
ing Match 4 from Fargo
Quadrangle.

sao

AI..,...,

-coat.

f was quite shocked to read
in your recent article on the
Research Institute on Addictions (Reporter, Feb 25)
that "RIA's affiliation W&lt;th
UB os not a fwnatized one • I suspect that
a number ol older members of the UB
lamily m oght have asked, "who saod scJ?." or
"why the hell not?"
In the early
the Governa's AJc:ohol.
ISm Ad&gt;I&amp;Jy Counci. With Or S Mouchly
Small, emeritus professor of psychoatry. and
the late Or Marvin Block. a ctirucal faculty
member '" the Department of Medicne as
members. COI1V1flCed Gall Rockefeller that
such an lf'lSIItute was necessary Eventually a
plan was devised for a competioon open to all
the pr~~~ate and public lt1Strtutions. that would
bl'ng a $10 mllion grant Ia construction and
$2 ITlllion a year on support
A local commntee was IO&lt;med and I
was named chaor We sought onput and
support from departments throughout our
unoversity center . from State College. and
from local business and industry through a
coordinating effon by a member of the
Chamber ol Commerce staff The short ol n
os that i~ October of 1967 we were selected

·ros.

as the site. (lllri hi! lril the gan1 tor ·the
E.!w1tQ.Jake Cenler ~ rmy haw been the
ageot ~ fNf!lf made to this~. ) 1n
JTf)l lies I halie a ropy cA the torma1 agment ~the l.f'lio.&lt;er1lil ;nj the DMsion
cA Alcch:Jfism tor the operation cA the insliiLfe .
In famess to the writer and 1o those he
rmy have nterviewed at the institute 1must
say that a series of events. that I wil not
attempt to CtJVe( here, have clouded the
relationship between the institute and the
university. Nonetheless, ~ it had not been
for the effons cA the faculty and stall cA UB.
the institute would not be n Buffalo, and to
lurlhef honor the rote played by Or. Small
and Dr Block I would say probably would
not have exisled at all.
I write this to rEHlrllorce the nolion that

we should pat ourselves on the back once
in a while fOf the good we have done 111 the
local and statewide comnunity, and to grve
a little hell to the Reporter for I ailing to
place us in a proper historical pe&lt;spec1Jve
LA-A.CAPPml.O,Emeritus Professor o/Healtn Eruca,...,

Zarembka 's efforts for
human rights recognized
Paul larembl&lt;a. II'IClll'lbenl
UUP Chapter presodent. IS
supportive of human rights.
of women and minorities
He has fought successfully
to preserve jobs, and we encourage you to

_

vote fO&lt; him

.....

Co-Char Wom91 's Rl(1hts Commlnee

..._.__

-____
---

Wanen 's Ri{1lts. AlfirmaJrve ActiOf'l Canmtttees
Women's

R'llflts Commmee

ChaK, Afflrmatrve ActO"' Conmmee

.,...,..__
~-­
L ..,._.,y
El..~Za.nt

JOYC&amp;-

----~
Women 's Rlf}hts Canmttee

-c.RLmt...,~,z

AffirmatiVe ActiOn Corrmtnee

Delegare

The Reporter -'&lt;:omes letters from
oo its stories ;md
content. Letters should be brief and may
be edited lor slyje and length. Because of
space fimilalions, the Reporter cannot
publish aR lerters receMJd.
readers commen&amp;ng

IIITIARY
JWleA Weiner, 43, audiologist and
UB clinical instructor, dies Matdt 8
.............._were~Man:b II inDeiawlml'ldtMenuiaJChopd.lluffalo;for
.lime A. Weiner; 43, an audiologist and adjunct clinical ~ill UB'a~ of
Communicative Disordtn and Sciences. Weiner died MJn:b It in lbe Erie CooDy
Ml:dical Center after a brief illness.
·
Weinereamcilabachelor's degree in eoCial W&lt;lll&lt; al UB in 1972-.la-ofociax:e
in audiology in 1975.
.
She bad worked II the Buffalo Olological Group and lbe lbriD&amp; EwoiullioeServi;a
for the past IS years. A. member oflbe Americln ~ ·d J:ilwiaa~ ..S
the Wea.m New Y ort Academy ofAudiolocY. abe ~inwlwdwllbSI.lllly'aSdlool
for the Deaf and aoned u audiolocY c:onaubat for lbe ...... OIUap of JlltiiiWo.
·survmn include ber~Mic:Md;a-..J.II!d; ........ loloica; alllltlllor.
J:ilnoey Sbulmm ofColumiJua, Ollio..S a ..... Wa Slltll«of~ ...........

�_.., _ _ ...,_as

Facul~&amp;lafl
E

Ill

B

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7

0

UB speakers on medical reporting panel
Nobel L.aureale m Chemostry Herbert lbuptman, president of the Buffalo Medical Foundation, Inc., and research professor of biophysical sciences, will join Lois Baker, senior
htalt.h liCoetoces edotor at the UB News Bureau, in a panel discwsion on medical repooting,
March 22 at 6 : 15p.m. at Kenmore Mercy Hospital, during a meeting oftht Gn:ater Buffalo Chapter of t.he Society of Professional Journalists.
Peter Ootrow, M.D1 medical correspondent for WTVB-TV and a faculty member in
the univenity's School of Medicine and Biomedical Scieoces, will deliver the keyno&lt;e
address.

International newsletter seeks contributions

A picture means more than
1000 words; it means 76 steps.

UB lntunaJional, the newsletter of the Office of International Education, seeks informaooon on the international activities of UB faculty, staff and graduate students. The editors
are interested in news of compar.uive or international research: published or presented
papers on such lopics; participation in intematjonal conferences. collaborative projects
wuh visiting scholars or overseas colleagues. new courses with a strong international emphasis, etc.

It takes 76 steps to getting
the average communication
piece designed, produced and
delivered to the right place at
the right time.
That's a lot to ask your
support staff to squeeze into
a routine workload .

Send materials to Dr. Mark Ashwill, Editor. VB lntunation.al. Office of International
1-.ducation. 410 Capen Hall , Nooth Campus. Dea!lline for the next issue is April 2, 1993.
Please limit contributions to 250 words (one double-spaced page). Information may be
scn o by mail. fax (645 -2528) or E-mail (KORCZYNS@UBV MS).

0

Dcpartmenl'i and student organizations who wish to add new listings

fo r ohe blue (front) sectoon of the 1993-94
UB Telepbone Directory. now being
prepared. must submit these no later than
Thursday, April I. Listings can be either

mailed to Directory Coordinator. Publicalions Depaotment. 136 Crofts. Nooth Campus. or faxed to 645 -2313. Please follow
the format in lhe current directory .
AU new listing~~ must include an authorized si~ture .

Pr'8llident ...... to ........
Plof ttiDOIIIISbfts.n.te

0

President William R. Greiner will
discuss ..Visions and Goals for UB."
Maoch 25 at 8 a .m. in Ihe Center for Tomorrow during a continental breakfast
sponsored by the Professional Staff Senate.
To make a reservation, enclose a check
for $3 payable to Professional Staff Senate
and send to 543 Capen. Nooth Campus.

ec..r..-

a SpecUII Events

Mts-.:1123.-...c....ton

0

Interested in hosting an academic
conference or a professional meeting? The benefits are many, not the least of
which is the prominence it may bring your
depaotment.
On Tuesday. March 23. UB's Office of
Conferences and Special Events, the
Gn:ater Buffalo Convention and Visitors
·Bun:au, and the Buffalo Ambassadors will
host a party from 3 to 5:30p.m. in the
Center for Tomorrow. The purpose is to
introduce campus constituents to conference and meetiilg services and facilities
available here and t.hroughout the an:a.
Aecording to Conferences and Special
Events Director Bill Regan. the event will
offer practical presentations by university
eo Ileagues along wit.h exhibits featuring
university services and those of major area
ho&lt;els.
'1'bc: whole projeet has been proposed
and funded t.hrough the Buffalo Ambassadors Program, a division of t.he Buffalo
Convention and Visitors Bun:au,'' Regan

says . .. Its general purpose is to recognize
and at the same time cultivate individuals.
who throu gh their own effon:t. are responsible for bringing conferences and events
to the Greater Buffalo area .··
Regan adds that many services are
avai lable both on and off campus to help
prepare and stage evems or conferences.

Mort~n

When such events come to UB. Regan

Women's Club to ' - t
~.......,.-......m
The UB Women' s pub will host a
Ch.ine.&lt;e Banquet ·on Sunday, March
28. beginning at 6:30p.m. at t.he new Dynasty II restaurant in Southgate Plaza.
The 12-course meal will include Peking
Duck; eost is $26 per person. Proceeds will
suppoot tht Women's Club scholarship.
program. Seating is limited, so early paid
reservations are advised.
Reservation deadline is March 20. Send
checks payable to the Women 's Cl ub, to
Donnt.hy Sooing, 249 Wellingwood Dr ..
East Amherst. N.Y . 14051 . For directions
and additional infonnation call Anne
Brody at 834-5596.

0

Since that's all we do
everyday, we do it pretty weU .

Coppellino Associates

716.884.9536 fox
716.884.0882 tel

WOMAN

arly presence for an academic unit On campus assislance. he explains. comes in
the fonn of budget assistance. and working

added . they often bring paoticipating fac uhy and student s into closer contact with
cutting-edge research . "What happened at
the medicinal chemistry sympOsium won ' t
be known generally for some time. that is.
che experiments and theories discussed
won't co me to fruition for several years .
But our faculty and students were involved
right from the stan as a result of that
event ... said Regan.
The pany is free. Reservations arc required. however. by calling Conferences
and Special Events at 645-3414.

cosl~fficiently .

ik';'~a.b':"~~~~~~~rF~

These. in turn. can mean increased schol -

with designers. caterers. facilities planners.
etc.
'llle Convention and Visito~ Bureau is
there oo help you prepare and follow
through on a bid to host an event such as
the recent meeting here of the National
Medicinal Chemistry Symposium." Among
t.he speakers will be Wayne Anderson. UB
professor of medicinal c hemistry and chair
of that symposium.

At MCA, we take the 76
steps for you, and we do each
the way it should be done:
creatively, effectively, timely,

A communiCation company

POWE R

IN

T

THE

21

S T

C

E NTU RY

AY CONFERENCE DEDICATED

TO ISSUES OF CAREER ADVANCEMENT, ON BOTH
PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL LEVE
AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN .

1&gt;-

FRIDAY , APRIL 2, 1993 AND
SATURDAY , APRIL 3 , 1993

.. STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT
BUFFALO NORTH (AMHERST CAMPUS)

lo&gt;

A PUBLIC ADDRESS
FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 8:00P.M.
SLEE HALL, FREE AND OPEN TO ALL

Dr. Futrell has attained high office in a myriad of educa·
tiona! organizations, regionally.nationally and inlernationally . From 1980-1989, she served as president of the
National Education Association (NEA). Dr. Futrell has also
been active in t.he World Confederation of Organizations of
t.he Teaching Profession (WCOTP), based in Morges.
Switzerland. In 1990, sht became President of WCOTP. Dr.
Futrell has been cited in numerous national publicationS as one of t.he most influential
African Americans and one of t.he most outstanding women in the country.
P

I&gt;

ROJf

CT

WIN

C

o

r..

rf-l.;o

f-

NCf-

/lrgistnltionrtquimi(S55iroclwltsFri.
l'll&lt;ning r«rption ooitio Dr. Futrdl. Sot. rorot. /mJll:fasl &amp; /undo )
SA-TURDAY, APRIL 3 , 8AM-3PM

A P'UL.L OA Y 0 ... ACT1VITIIE:. INC:LUOINO. A KRYNOTE ADORE . . liY DR . P'U~IEU.. AND

" YARim o ... wo•KaHoH: : Balancing Penonal and Professional life a Affirming Values in
a Male-Dominated World-Sexual Harassment a Politics, Power and the Pooleosional Womon a
Women's Health Issues o Dealing With Difficull Peop1r a Getting in Touch Wit.h Your Spirituality o l.eadership Development • Combating Slreoo ill theW~ &amp; at Home .. E(fediV&lt;
Communication on the Job and in t.he Community a Planning for Fmancial Security
FOR REGISTRATION INI"ORMATION ' OR ASSISTANCE , PLEASI: CALL THE
OFP'ICE OP' CONFERENCES

8t

SPECIAL EvENTS AT (7US) 645-2018.

(FAX 645-3&amp;89)
PROJECT DIRECTOR: .JUDGE ROSE H . SCONIERS

~by llot U.n.nityllBuflalo &amp; Nilpro-1\xm-a.-,;...n..;

�8

•
New'Wifllng,Hw_.,
frolll UB's co..putwllterate C0111•unlcall011
design students

GIIIIF.._

roster
A new generation of UB communication design students
naw employs computers at all levels of their education. The
resu~? Mu lfi.medio-reody graducies with on unusual

profi-

ciency in what UB at prolessar Bil Kinser cells "new wnting".

Amy Fields

lma~es for ~oster

"New writing" is a form of gra phic expression that
weoves language, visual design, sound, movement e nd various forms

of interoctive medic into designs that might communicate a poi nt

through hypermedia, computer-onimotion, print and/or typography.
"Unlike most colleges and universities,• says Kinser, "we've
employed computers in design education at UB since 198 2
and now they're com pletely integrated into our program . As a

result, our students are much more computer literate than most,

much more familiar with the technology end its possibilities.•
In a sense, Kinser says, communication design is nol onty

.. new writing "

but

'" new art• because the computers require

users to employ the linear abstract logic of language rather than
the sp6tiollogic of visual crt.

Teny Lew

frame from animation

Come see for yourself. The Communication Design Program

of the Deportment of Art will present "The New Writing : Communication Design ot UB: on exhibit of
student work, March 26-April 20 ot Bethune Gallery, in UB' s Bethune Hell, 2917 Main St. ot Hertel
Avenue . A public reception open• the show a t 7 :30 on Friday, March 26 e nd Ki nser promises "much
beHer food than usual. •

Ann

Pellegrino

Animation

FOCUS
ten at'a

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                    <text>A touch of
theflu?You
have plenty
of company

--AoponorSWI

. , . . . _ ...... tofeelunexpecttdlytired,yourjoilllure~&amp;toocbe
11111 !be cbills h..e au your lecdl a-ina. don't ignore whll your body
is~llbig you. You probolbly have influenza, 'tJbidt hautriclcen uignificant
number of UB IIUdents over !be !at thla: weeb, according to Wendy
Irving. usistaot dlnoctor of !be Studenl Health Center.
"Based on year-to-yearllaliJIJcs," she said. "11\erebasbeen a significant
increase in the number of cases of flu at UB over the past few weeks. Tbele
havebeen a lot of JIUdenta coming into the Heallb Center with pretty severe
symp10m1. Thecloclon..,c:aiiiDa it influenza because it'osuongerlban !be
normal flu we-." IMna aid lbolrbe iDcubetion period for Ibis particular
illnessisverylhon,.-Jiyben•eauixlllll 12houn. "The symptomS have
been Slldden lllld ICYerC far,_ of !be people we've seen so far. The most
re&lt;:IJITins sympiOinS ..,. hi&amp;h penislent fever, chills, severe body aches in

rbejoilalllldOYenllfaticuelllld...,.__ ~bavebadabad..,...,_
as wdJ and a few have bad coups.·
The • ._.. danlion far !be il!Dea has been lbcU five days. abe aoid.
"'I would ....,.,..... all JIUdenta who be&amp;in to feellymploa COIIIillt ....
oome to !be Heallb Center and let ... c:beclt rbem 0111. We _ _ , p1111Dr
appoinlmenU, but bec:ause !be symptomS move eo quickly to illnea widl
Ibis flu, JIUdenta should ute walk-in care."
If you feel !be symptomS of the flu coming on,lrving said lbal C0111111011
......, should be yow xui&lt;le reprding ll&lt;:llment. "Gel pleat)' of bed - .
because Ibis is a very 111'011&amp; suain of flu. Drink lo!sofliquids,tJOLotcoone.
no alc:ohol. Try to make use of a vaporizer or a humidifoer as weD."
For those who have !be flu, tty to aYOid COIItiiCI ..alb heallby people
because !be diJease is tnlnSferred lbrough !be air, she r.aid. "If you have 10
be in public, cover your mouth when you cough or - . and dreas
warmly. It's a vinls lbal is airborne, so be aware of Olben around you."

Government

Doc:umel1ts 'Guru'

Ed Herman presides aver
a library that includes
(almost) everything
the goverrrnent
publishes.
,.

2
Haunting VIews
of Ufe In Tibet

An ..... lhat
&amp;p.ks Debate

Jennifer Lewis'
photographs offer views
of a once-forbidden
land.

Multicu~ural curriculum

is Catherine ·
Combleth's area
of expertise.

p._

5

Humar1 Rig)wts
·

~~~~

D

Political, ~ic tunnoil deepens need
for UB rese•ch, advocacy ..,.ograms

:T~:'~~

and with a cen·
tury marlced by
cruelty slipping
away into history. the worlt
of the univer.;ity' SHuman Rights Center finds
a deepening need for its efforts world·
wide.
In this last decade of the 20th
cen tury,tenns such as ethnic cleans·
ing and racial purity are common
vocabulary. The Center sees human
rights still being trampled upon, from
the anarchy in the former Yugosla·
via and Somalia 10 lhe institutional·
ized abuses of China and South
Africa.
Faculty, students
and staff at the Center
worlt at.local, national,
and international lev·
els as advocates, educator.;. and re·
searcher.; on human rights.
Two UB professor.; who are at
tlie forefront .of human rights are
Claude Welch, SONY distinguished
&amp;ervice professor ofpolitical science,
and Virgins Leary, professor oflaw.
Leary and Welch are co-directors of
theuniver.;ity's Human RightsCen·
ter.
"Human rights are not given but
taken. They come about by political
pnessure from below. Grass-roots
organizJng is essentinl so that govemmerns can be pushCd from be·
low," said Welch, adding that
external preSSI}recan also be brought
on governmentS to initiate change.
For example, western nations are
increasingly tying aid to developing
countries to democratization and
human rights, Welch said. But he
cautiooed lbal many factors affect
!be int.erpret.alion of human rights
IIIII lbal great care must be taken
when applying these pressures.
Welch, who has had particular
inleleSI in human rights IIIII devel·
opment in Africa. related that many

African leader.; believe that "unique
factors on the continent" must be
taken into account when interpreting
human rights.
"In Africa, the economy is terri·
bly difficul~" Welch said, and the~
explained that this problem is compounded by the International Mon·
etary Fund (IMF) and suuetwal
adjustrilent, which has resulted in a
"decreased standard of living, debt
overhang, and changes in trade. Un-

til the richer industrialized nations
address the economic inequities in
the Third World, burruin rights
abuses won 't go away, Welch sug'
gested.
UB's .Human Rights Center. located at 408 O'Brian on the North
Campus. maintains a strong intema·
tiona! and interdisciplinary perspec·

tive on human rights.
Welch said. The Center,
which opened in 1989. got off
to an auspicious Start when it was
formally inducted by fonner President Jimmy Carter, a longtimecbampion of human rights. said Julia Hall,
graduate student in sociology who is
also a graduate assistant for the
Center's &lt;\By-to-day operntions.
The Center incorporato:s the
Gmduate Group on Human Rights
U.w and Policy. and is supported by
the Baldy Center for U.w IIIII Social
Policy. reponed Hall.
"We have special inteiesl in economic, social, and cultwal rights. in

addition to the civil and political
rights of people," Hall explained,
adding that rights to health care, ethnic and group rights. and problems
of development are of parricular
importance to the Center's mission.
Hall explained that the primary
aims of the Center are on research.
education, and advocacy. Human
rights abuses are often so outrageous
that they seem unbelievable. Hall
said.The realityofrbeseabuses~s
to be shown and this is accomplished
through careful resean:h and docu·
mentation.
Education about human rights
abuses is critical for change to come
abou~ Hall said. "We bring in
human rights advocates, indi·
viduals whO have been subject
to human rights abuses. and
people from various back·
grounds who bave knowledge about
human rights," she added.
Fmally, the Human Rights Cen·
terhas the mission ofadvocacy, Hall
said. adding that "we must let tl)e
public know about abUses," both
abroad and at home.
The Human Rights Center sponsors several programs that have been
great vehicles for students who are
in~ in human rights and inter·
national law, Welch said, adding that
while internal support for the Center
has been somewhat limited, external
suppon for these various programs
has been significant.
.
One of the most successful programs sponsored by..the Center is the
Geneva Internship Program. which
is supponed by the Ford Foundation.
The program. which ·has been in
place since 1989, annually awards
stipendS to thla: to four students to
attend a ten-week SUil'1IDier intern·
ship in Geneva, Switzerland. In
Geneva, each sllldenl is placed with
various international agencieo such
as the U.N. CentteforHuman Rights,
the International Commission of Jurists. the World Health brganiza.
tion, IIIII the Henri Dunatu lnslilllle
of the Red Cross.
Continued on page 10

�2

-u.s.a_..,_.,

H 0 N 0 R S
HISTORY

IIIIlS--=
-

- - · assistant

professor of histofy, is 8
founding merroer ot CON-

FIGURATIONS. 8 new scholarly journal dedicated to
examining the cultural dimensions of science. Bono will
serve as one ol the three pri'"""1 editprn,
The journal is based at the
Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, and is published by The Johns Hopkins
University Press.
Bono, who specializes in
the histcxy of science and
medicine. said that the journal seeks to chart new territories In science studies.The
journal wlil be published
three times a year.
Bono ~.olds a Ph.D. from

Harvard University
SCHOOL OF LAW

-~

llell. . . McCiar)', a first-

year student -at the UB
School of Law, has won a

Minority Environ.-,tal Law
Fellowship from the New Vorl&lt;
State Bar Association. The
to-wee+&lt;, SS,OOJ fellowships
give law students an opportU, nity to wor1&lt; lor New Vorl&lt;
State environmental agencies
or public·interest law firms.

·Government
Documents 'Guru'
Ed

tterm- rides herd on thou-"'• of U.S.

....t can.dlan &amp;overn..-t publlc.tlons
I I ) ' - WA'IDHOUSI!

Reporter Staff

H

AVE YOU ever
wantedtoactualJy rtad
the Federal budget,
deficit and all? It's the
same size as the Buffalo telephone directory- white
pages and yellow- and it's in the
Government Documents Library. on
the first noor of Lockwood.
You might want to start a railroad
(the Interstate Commerce Commis-

sion issUes an encouraging dapper

handbook with a steam engine on the
front) . Or you may need ex pen advice on your charlces of exporting
umbrellas to lreland(fair). Youmight
want ro know what the Senate

Subcomminec's repon on the OarenceThomas/AnitaHill Hearings had
to say aboutjournalists (not favordble).
Or what steps the House of Ret&gt;-

McClary was one of four
students to win a fellowship thiS
year. She plans to WOt1&lt; in the
Buffalo afoce of the New Yoc1&lt;
Stale [leparttrent ol
Erwiramental Conse&lt;vation or
the federal Environmental
Prot~ Agency this

resentatives felt wereneededtoregu·
late the safety of intrauterine
contmceptives in 1973. Or what
"Wonderful Inventions" the Library

StKITTlel'.

Documents Library.

Students seeking the fellowships were required to

submtt an essay detailing
why they were interested in

environ.-,tallaw. "I feel
there are very lew people of
color in the field , yet so many
people of color are affected
dramatically by environmental pollution." McClary wrote.
GYNECOLOGY AND
OBSTETRICS

of Congress chose to adorn its vast,
lavish, coffee-table catalogue of the

has been collecting Federal, State,
European and Canadian governmental publications since 1963, and it's
cunently upgrading its collection.
Ed Hennan is the man to show
you around. If you feel, as he does.
that the repon from the Congressional Budget Office is "gibberish,"
he ' II provide a government guide.
'This is a how-to guide to extracting what you want to know. It
tells you, 'This is wh3l it means, this is
whalitdoesn 't mean.. and most importantly, it tells you how to find it.
"As each jurisdiction publishes
material, they make it available to
us, and we assume resp:msibi lity for
making il available to the community," Hennan says.
"There are two things we're uying to do right now. We' re supplementing the collection priorto 1963,
which costs money, if only postage;
and we're uying to keep the collection current."

'W'he new BISON on-line system
I hascreatedsomethingofadaunt-

th~

ing task.
"We have people hard at work,
cataloging retroSpectively, one gov-

'11u; United States government

ernment agency at a time. It isn't

is the largest publisher in the world."
says Edward Hennan, associate
librarian and head librarian of the
Government Documents collection.
"And we receive 30,000-35,00J

economically feasible to list all the
items, so our goal is to list all the
good ones. It's going to take u while:

same name. They're all there in

items from them a year."

A selected depository library.
which means that it is not swamped

with everytl1ing lhe U.S. govemmem
publishes but only 90 percent of it,
the Documents Library in Lockwood

"The United States
government is the
largest publisher in the
world"

what businesses will fly there. And
the Department of Commerce tries
to encourage U.S. businesses to exploit their products abroad to counter
the trade gap. This kind of thing i&gt;
very useful to MBA students, or
sociologists, or to srudents of politicaJ science."

you, in degrees. the difference between being hit by a truck and being
hit by an anti-tank missile; there are
microfiche Senate and House hearings on everything from nuclear
bombs to HiiVThomas to trade with
Mexico; there ~ the vast maps,

Herman has some favorite s.
Among them are items that, strictly
speaking. are not books at all: The

sutxiivided into minute sections, that
will allow you to read the census
repon on your neighbors (their current secrets, however, will remain
secret for 70 years); and CD-ROM,
or Compact Disk " Read Only
Memory," which looks like a CD but
which has the visual capacity to
"read"-and display- 16 pages in a
minute.

..Blast Effects" computer, which is
actually a whitedisk. rooghly 9 inches
in diameter and resembling the

whim. cross-refers ''Ireland" against
"umbrellas."

middle bit of the SS Enterprise. tells

''Information is the name of the

there are half a million items."

game," he says. "The ClA keeps
data on various countries and on

Herman slips in a disk and, on a

Political science? Hennan ·s most
treasured item is one he keeps in a
filingcabine1 in his office. (HeshoWb
it to students learning to use the
library for the fli'Sl time. but he keeps
it nearby.) It's a newspaper clipping
detailing Iraq's "liberation" of Kuwait, courtesy oftheNati&lt;&gt;riMGom·
mand of 'the Arab sOcialiSt Ba'th
Party. August 3, 1990.
'"Thl! CIA monitors the fnSS all
over the world. and the tnlnslations
are refened to disk," explains Herman. 'They'republishedbytheForeign Broadcast Information
Services."

Would-beinvestigativereponer.;,
anxious to break. a new Watergate

story and to be portrayed on film by
RobenRedford,coulddoworsethan
stop by Hennan's office. orthe circulation desk, in the Documents Library, Lockwood.

IIIECUVD-L

AN1110NYAWAIID:
J.,.n 11. Sulew8kl, asso-

ciate professor of gynecology
and obstetrics at UB, and
chief of gynecolOgy at the VA
Medical Center, has received
the annual Susan B. Anthony
Award of the lnterclub Council ofy-INV.
The award was presented
Feb. 6 in Salvatore's.Italian
Gardens . .Sulewski, one of
400 certified reproductive
. endocrinologists in the
nation, established a
women's heallh care
program at the VA Medical
Center. Women veterans now
have access to a full range of
heallh care ioduding
gynecologic services.
A geduate of IRe tJnillersity
off'ittsb..rgh Md the Woman's
Medcal Coll9ge of Pennsytvania. SiAewsl&lt;i Clrne to UB lnm
Penn Stat&amp;. She has served as
natmal tnlBSl.r'er oflhe A=r
ciatia1 of Woman in Science
Md was de$lgnaled the
American Medcal Women's
Association as one of the

t7i

niastar facl.lty on osteqxxosis.

'GI'IIuiion'

care-v

Hamlin Pari&lt;
School children
. were honored
March 4 at UB for
participating i1

prqect that ~
duced them to
the lJ1iversity and
its resources.
Mt.riei AM:Jore,

UBvioe~

for Pt.tllic Service
a1d t.ri&gt;an aflat's,
is shcN.fl with
~treE! of the
!JOI.4), from left:

DemetrU!
Stewart. Vernon
Jelfersan !rod

Kely Frida.

�-ss....---.-Albert Mugel receives Jaeckle
Award at law convocation

3

A D E D ICATIO N T O EXCELLENCE

Buffalo law fum of Jaockle, f1eischmann. Kelly,
SwartandA\JI!SPllll!l'l', ~ofthepresent­

A

LBI!RT R. MUGEL, a Buffalo attorney who has taught at !he UB
School of Law for more !han 40
~received !he 1993 Edwin F.
Jaeckle Award al a March 6 luncheon at !he
Cenrer for Tomorrow.
The Jaecklo Award, !he UB law school and
Law Alumni ASsociation's highos! honor, was
presen!ed 10 Mugel following !he morning. long 171h annual UB Law Alwmi Coovocation,
·
"Avoiding Disasler: Wha! AU LawyersShouldKrow
Aboul Bankruplcy
Law to Protect
TheirOienls."

The awa rd ,
named for UB law
aJumn~ Edwin F.
Jacckle. Cia.~&lt; of
191 5. i&lt; given annually to an indi-

vidual who has

MUGEL

distinguished himself or rerself and hill. made significant cornributioo&gt; 10 !he law school and to !he legal profession.
Pa~l rec ipien ts include the Hon. Otarles S.
Desmond. M. Roben Kuren.the Hon. Michael
F. Dillon and Manly Aeischmann.
Mugel. a 1941 grnduatcofthc lawschool.ha&lt;
taugbt at !he school both full time and pan time
since 1948. In 1955. he helped to fouod the

day finn Jaockle, Flciscbmann &amp; Mugel
"He is widely respected for his great iruellea
and expertise in the areas of estate and gift taxation, estates and IIUS1S, fuwre inii:IOSIS and estate
planning." says Marie Farrell, presidcnl of the UB
Law Alurmi Associalion. "Over a span of 45
years, hehasbeena brillianl teacher for more ihan
95 pe:rcent of ru- living alumni."
A former troasurer and director or the Erie
Counl)l Bar Association, Mugel is !he recipient of
!he 1987 UB Alurmi Association Samuel P.
Capen Award, the 1990CanisiusCollegoDistinguishod Alumni Award and the 1992 St. Jooeph
Collegiate lnslitule Signwn Fidei Award.
He is a director of several rums and organizations, including Trico Products Corp., the!Jbrary
Foundation of Buffalo &amp; Erie Counl)l. Inc., and
The Buffalo Club.
The law convocalion was geared 10 general
practitioner,; and olhcr non-bankroplcy lawyers.
said Catherine T. Wenlaufer, convocalion chair.
Gernld S. Uppes. an anomey wilh Uppes.
Silve=in, Mathia.&lt; and Wexler, rnoderaled a
paneloffivebankrop~cyexpensandajudge. who
explored how a client's current or potential bankrup~&lt;:y may impinge on his or her rnairirnonial.
negligence, environmental, real propeny and
business problems.
lnadditiootoLippes.speakersincludedAnhur
J. Brooson, MargaretLillisSnajczuk. Garry M.
Graber. William F. Savino, Jeffrey M. Freedman. aod the Hon. Beryl E. McGuire.

Environmentalist David Orr
speaks at UB March 15, 16
AVlD W. ORR. a nationally known
cnvimnmentaJiSI and advocalc of a

D

morefTK)I"'"dilyresponsivccnvironrren-

taJ education in col~gcsand univcr.ii tics. will give scvcr.ll talks here Mareh 15-16.
~ uspiccsofthe wtivcn;ity' !'l Environmental Task

force and the OffJCC of Senior Vice President for
Univc~i t y

Services Raben Wagner.

Orr. curre ntly profesM&gt;r of environmental

~t ud ie s at Oberlin College. is the author of nw
Glolx1l Predicamem: t.i:ological Perspecti\'t'S
on World Order. Ecological Literacy in the
Transition to a Post Modem World and Tiu•

Campu.\· and En\'iromnenwl Responsibility.
It is a myth. Orr writes in a 1991 anicle for
· In Comext, that knowledge or technical ad~·anccs automatically create true environ men- ·
tal awareness. "After 12 or 16 or 20 yean; or
education." he says. ··most students graduate

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without any broad integrated scn...'ie oflhe unity
of thing s. The consequences for their

personhood and for !he planet are large."
During a lunch for faculty and othen, interested in environmental studies at UB. Orr will
discuss " The Role of Environmental Studies in
Higher Education. " March 15 at noon in 567

Capen. AI 3 p.m. !hat day. also in 567 Capen.
The Environmental Task Force will hold an
expanded meeting at which Orr will discuss
'The Green Campus: What II Means and How
to Gel There...
On March 16. Orr will address the Expanded
Service Excellence Assembly at S:JO a.m. in !he
CeniCrforTomorrow. Histopicis"Rclhinkinglhe
Univcn;ity for !he 21 Sl Cenlw-y."
Seating is limited for all presentations so

interested pen;ons are asked 10 call Brenda
Kelly at645-2615 to make a reservat ion.

FAMILY DINING * TAKE-OUT

.~~·

PIZZA SALE
LARGE PIZZA

Increase linked to pay disparity
~ ....... ,.... ,.,...........,_andmaleswhoareHispanicorAfrican-Americanor

Native-American. will receive an average increaseof$500addcd permanently to !heir base pay.
lx!ginning wilh !he March 24 paycheck.
The increase follows cxrensive negotiations between UUP and !he stale following irtitial
agreement in !he 1985-88conlr.lellhalasalarydisparil)lexistsru SUNY cam!XJSCS. Altha! poin~
$2.2millionwassetasidetopaniallycorrectlhcproblem.Thooghlhccontractreferredtohasbeen
twice superliOded. !he moneys corning March 24 are not rctrooctive.
Afulr much discussion, !he stale and UUP agreed 10 a SIBli'ilical analysis by campus. in which
current rank, educational anainmen~ experience be(ore.coming to SUNY. academic discipline
(in lhcc:ase of professixs)or functional area (in !he case of professional staff), ~ yean; of service
"were held as 'independent' variables." UUP Buffalo Cent"!'Olapler Presiderit Paul Znrembka
explained in a recent rncrno to UUP members. The memo also gave comparative figures on
salaries paid to UUP memben; ru UB, which iodicalc that higher salaries are paid. on avera~. to
niale academics and professionals !han 10 women.

n. ..__. . . - foiiOwa:
• $663 lor lemale academic employees

earning less than $55,000 per year: $501
if eam1ng more
• $484 for Alncan-American male aca·
demics earning less than $55.000: $339.
earrung more
• $506 lor Jemale professoonal staH
mernbe&lt;S earning less than $55,000:

$402 earmng more
• $685 lor Alrican-Amencan male professionals earning less than $55.000. $54-4

lor those earning more
• $430 lor H1span1c male proless100als
• $445 lor Nalive-AmefiCan male proles·
·sionals.

1/2 PARTY PIZZA

PARTY PIZZA

LARGE GOURMET WHITE PIZZA
With Spinach

$5~75

�-:u.---.--

4

__

Workload policy statement
.,passed by Faculty Senate
Reporter Staff

E

ACH SEPARATE academic unit
at UB must develop and adhere to
a set of wriuen guidelines which
clearly define faculty responsibilities within the unit, according to a
workload policy statement that has been passed
by the Faculty Senate.
The policy has been in the works for over a
yea{ and was finally agreed upon at last week's
meeting of the Faculty Senate in 200 The
Commons. It was deemed necessary to have
such a policy following State Comptroller
Edwan:l V. Regan "; statement in the fall of
1991 10 the effect that
SUNY facult y member&gt;

COilCl1rTOd with Sehack. "This policy has been
approved by the FSEC and the deans. II has 001
been an easy document (to formulate)," he
said. '1'he deans also wanted 10 amend this
document. Thisstatementistheminimal common denominator between the two bodies."
Swartz replied that faculty self-governance
was not understood by many in the administration. "Without these amendments, we· re backing away from faculty self-governance. A
numberofdeansdon' r uoder.;tand faculty selfgovernance. We're having our arms turned.''
Sehack said that the faculty were not giving
in to the deans. "We're n01 goi ng along with
them. They· re going along with us."
Both amendments were

were not "doing their fair

share of work .

UB was the last of all
SUNYschoobtoab'I"CCUJlOO
the workload policy to be
&gt;Ubmiuoo to SUNY Ccntr.JJ.
~o it ww. important fOf tlx:
Senrue to &lt;K-1 on thi!oo JX&gt;ltcy.

which wa"' agn.."ed upon by
both focullyanddccaoal rei&gt;"

"The minimalist

statement before
you seems to be
the most workable
at this point. "

rc).Cntarivt;!'o, according to
Ml~J1laret Acar.t. professor of

phama"Oiogy and therdjlOU·
lies and chair of the Scoute ·'

commiuce OJl faculty tenure and privileges.
'"Thi11 has bt.-cn a long time coming,'' !!.he
'&lt;.ltd. "The Ctlmmiucc on tenure and privileges
ha!\ con"itdcred a variety of staternents. The
nunimalist \talemcnt before you see m ~ to be
th~.: mu)&lt;ot workahlc a( thi' poinl."
The workload policy state:-. that facult y
mcmOCr:-. !'houlll be publi!&lt;ohing M:holant or be
Ol h erwi~ engaged in cremivc activi ty. should
~ck 1.!.\tcmo.tl (undmg. conuibute to in!lotruc·
uonaJ progr..tm!oo iJI UB and contribute to uni·
ver)&lt;oity. pru(c~\lonal and where possibl~ ,
community M!'rvicc.

I

t charge ... chain. and unit heads with the

responsibility o( allocating duties to the

faculty within their progr.uru•. And it ask) that
the guidelines that are developed for a unit 1x
consiMent wi th the nonns of the discipline as
pmcticed at leading institutions.
The final component of the policy requires
each faculty member to submit an annual report o ( his pro(cssionaJ aclivities and accom·
pli shmcnts, which would then~ reviewed by

the unit head and the dean. Usingthereponand
consultation with the faculty member, th~ unit

head would then ascertain that rhe performanceo(the faculty memberisconsistcnt with

unii ~uidelines nod neals.

The dean's evaluation of the unit head

would emphasize the role that the unit should
be playing in the university and how each
membero(that unit is contributing to that role.
There were two amendments. by way of

addition to ihe policy, that were presented by
Louis Swanz, associate professor of law. The
·ftrSt asked that worklond guidelincs beadopted
by a unit only with the assent of the unit head
and a majority of the tenured and tenure track
faculty in the unit who would be eligible to
vote.

The second amendment asked that un it
heads repon annually to the dean and faculty
members on the mimberoffaculty and administrative hours spent On adopting, revising and
implementing the workload guidelines.
Samuel Sehack, associate professor of mathematics and a membetofthe Senate'scornmiuee
on faculty tenure and privileges. ~ •ehemently against both amendments. "The deveiOj&gt;mcnt of this policy was quite a struggle. I wtlUJd
enooumgethisgroupiOsupportorvoteagninstthe
policy as it is now, without the amendments." he
said. "I think units should be allowed to govern
them.&lt;;el ves the·wny they wish."
A=n Bloch, UB P!l&gt;VOSt, who helped coordinate the final sUtges of the dceanal pan of
the negotiations towan:ls forming a policy.

voted down by the Senate.
The workload policy was
adopted by no overwhelming
majority.
In other Senate news, there
were first readings of resolu-

tions to postpone the freshman seminarrequirement and
the language requirement of
the new UGC curriculum as
originally passed by the Senate in May, 1991.
M"tcltnel Metzger, professor
of modem languages and liter.uw-es, presented the resol u-

Drivers alerted to need to

obseroepedes~'rigms
. , -IIAIIMEII

Reporter Staff

T

HE CLOSING of Putnam Way has caused increased tmffic now on other pans
of the North Campus, especially on Hadley Road n~Govemors Hall, according
to Lee Gnffi n. dtrector of UB Pubhc Safety. That sa problem for pedestrians
who must use the crosswalk near Governors. he said.
''There are about 7,500 cars a day. that's two-way traffic. using Hadley Road,"
explained Griffin. ''The motorists simply are not stopping for people wanting to cross the
road at the crosswalk. This poses real problems for both disabled and non-disabled

ti on on postponing the freshman seminar

studen ts."

requiremem and said that it was imponantthat the
Senate agree to the postponement. "But I defi nitely want to keep impletneotation of the freshman seminar before the provost, the campus
public and the faculty."
The resolution m~ks that the requirement be
postponed until fall. 1995 or until an earlier
dmc when implcmenuuion can be properly
&gt;upponed.
Provost Bloch said he is hoping rhar the
future will bring more working capital to UB
M&gt; that the requirement can be implemented.
''My repon to you that we couldn't implement
the freshman seminar wa.'\ made to you with
deep regret."
Stephen Dyson, professor and chair of Classics, pn.'&lt;;enltld the resolution on postponing the
foreign language requirement. His resolution sui&gt;"
pons the postponement of the language requiremom until fall. 1994. At that time. a phased-in
requirement would begin with those freshmen
entering in fall, 1994 having ro take one year of a
language, those entering in fall. 1995 having to
rake three semester.; and those entering in fall,
1996 being requin.-d to rake two full years of a
language.
"UB's relatively poor place (regan:ling foreign language requirements) amidst peer institutions like Purdue and Indiana is very clear.
We're poorly developed in various languages

He said that at prescnlthere are four sets of white lines that mark pedestrian crosswalk
lanes. He plans to reduce that number to two and add new signs to help make motorists
more aware that they must yield to pedestrians. "New York State is maybe the worst state
in the country about giving pedestrians the right of way. We're going toanempttoeducate
drivers to pay more attention to pedestrians' rights."
If these measures don 't work. Griffin said that Public Safety will consider issuing
summonses to motorists who don't yield to pedestrian trartic. "](it doesn't improve. it
may Jead us to stan i~suing a summons for failing to yield to pedestrians. It's a two-JX&gt;int
violation on your license. which will potentially change a driver's insurance rate."
Griffin could very well be correct, accon:ling ro Sue Stodd~. an insurance broker at
Active lnsumnce in Buffalo for more than 10 years. "(Nc&gt;t yielding to pedestrians) is a
minor violat ion," she said. "It carries a 15 percent surcharge for three years and four
months after the date or conviction."
Another area on campus is also proving to be a pedestrian problem, said Griffin. "At
the crosswalk at the Hamilton Entr.mce and John James Audubon Pmway, students
aren "t pushing the light near the traffic signnltochange the light and are just crossing when
they think it 's clear. Cars move along Audubon at 45 mph. so that's a problem:·
He sa1d rhatthe problem isn't as great during the winter months because students tend
to ride the sbunlebuses . "But in the spring, the summer and the fall , it'sa very highly used

that we offer," he said.

second reading of each of the two resolutions. accompanjed by open discussion by the Senate, will rake place at the March
23 meeting of the Senate.
The state budget, and how it affects SUNY.
was also discussed by Senior Vice President
for University Services Roben Wagner. He
said that the governor's budget has been sul&gt;mitted and that the state legislature -is now in
_ chl~J1le of shaping the state's finances for the
next budget year.
. "Hopefully, by Apfill, the budget will be in
·place. It's basically a stand-still budgel although it does fund some necessary increases
like salaries." Wagner oompared this year's
lump sum reduction to SUNY, $11.8 million. to
last year's cut of Sl43 million. less the tuition
increa.&lt;;e. "And all the increases forsalliries. inflation and buildings are being funded by additional
tax revenues llom the Sla1e."
He said that one of the most important advocacy effons will be.canied out with the hope of
restoring TAP money, especially ro gmduate
students. The governor has proposed 10 cur all
TAP rmney to new graduate students.

A

tnte~uon. We re gomg to mcrease the number o( signs to tell students to use the

pedestnao crossway and also to have them use the button which changes the light."

Smoking policy on FSEC agenda
~:n":"s~MER

T

HE .POUCY on smoking at UB is
clear: No smoking is allowed in public
areas. But policing that rule has proved

difficult since it went into effect in
1990\ according to OiffWilson. associate vice

president for.tudentaffairs. He made his comments at a recent meeting of the Faculty Senate
Executi ve Commiuce (FSEC).
" There is the question of what to do with
people who won't stop smoking when caught
doing so in no-smoking areas," he said. "There
has been an ongoing diffiCUlty with smoking in
public areas."
·
Wilson made it clear that neither he nor the

administr:rtion are trying to blame the problem
on all smokers. And he acknowledged that a
signi~cant segment of the campus population
are smokers. "In 1990, we found that about 30
percent offnculty, staff and tudents smoke on
th isc"!"pus. And most of the time when there
is a problem with smoking in a building, the
people who work there have been able to come
to some agreement on a policy."
He explained that there are more complaints about smoking in public areas from the
Nonh Campus than the South Cantpus. 'That
probably ha.• to do with the architectural layout
of the _N"onh Campus. Everything is stru~g
together here."

The university ~erts all incoming tresltmao
and transfer students about the CBrrpJS smoking
po~cy. said Wilson. "We tell them dwing the
orientations. And it's also a pan of new facplry
and staff orientalion. BLttl thinlc we"misssomeof
thenewgr.lduatestudentsbecauseofthewnythey
enter the university (as the responsibility of a
specific academic dqxlnmenO."
A OOilSXIeralion ~be made m alternative
venting f&lt;Kspecific roorno; lhal.oould bedesignated
as smoking areas within buildings~c:on&lt;IJUC­
tion, according 10 Oauile Welch, Distinguished
Service Profe;sor of PolilicaJ Science. W'tlson
11!!1-..:d and said that it would beclaper10expkre
those OJKions befoo: the buildings are oon'tpleltld.
Louis Swanz, associate professor of law,
said that from his own exptiience, the policy
has been adhered to by IOOSl and has enjoyed
success overall. Wilson said tha"tthe policy has
been generally successful and added that re-.
cem eVideocereganling the dangers of secondhand smoke wiU haveanevengreatercffect on
public awareness of non-smokers' rights.
lnocherFSECnCws, President Greiner said be ·
wtlUJd welcome suggeslioits from the groupas ro
how lteoould beuerCOillll'Uiicatewilh faculty at
campus.'1 need 10fiod ways10spen&lt;la linlcroore
time talking with colleagues." he said during his
unannouriced visiltothe meeting. "Theone thing
that I !Tiiss ~becoming UB's president) is a
certain degree of dialogue with facultY, here."

�5

Spr~ading the word on multiculturalism: Education prof
~fl:YS,

., n~

.....
Gontributor

'Draw the circle larger and invite the people in'

Ae~er

ATHERINE Combleth is relaxed.
She is just returning from a
semester's sabbatical in British
Columbia and preparing for the
beginning of the Spring semester in her Baldy
Hall Graduate School of Education offices,
Combleth tells a visitor she hopes things will
bedifferent. lt' s something she has told anyone
who will listen-as if making it public will
make it so: She's going to relax. Instead of
pining away for the mellow and slow-paced
Vancouver lifestyle, she's going to try to ke!p
that feeling with her here at UB.
Lunch especially. Lunch will beeome more
leisurely-maybe. "I keep crackers in my desk
and bring cheese and an apple for lunch," she
&gt;aid. She would rather she and her students and
co lleagues linger over stimulating and fasci·

fil!n, ManyPtopks: J\ 0«/.aration ofCultural
lnttrdt~ndmce, proposed changes to the way

social studies is taught in public schools by
opening up the interpretation of historic events
and cultural legacies to the students themselves. The approach takes importance away
from rotc, fact-based learning in favor of critical thinking. This strategy would de..:mphasize the white European immigrant vmion of
American history to make way for the experiences of other ethnic groups and cultures.
While that repon is now the purview of

"I don 1think of
Italians as a
minority. But in
Canada and
Australia, they are.
The groups we
hate vary with the
situation "

natingconvel1kltion with noon vitt les. But don't

count on it
therine Comblcth is on a roll.
After a semester as a visiting faculty mem·
bcr at the Univen;;ity of British Columbia in
Vancouver, B.C .. ProfessorCombleth is ready
to take up again her responsibilities in the
Dcpanmcnt of Learning and Instruction. and
to lead the school's Buffalo Research Institute
on Education for Teaching (BRIET). which
she serves as director. and her responsibilities
at the New York State American History Acadeiny for Secondary Teacher.;, which BRIET
houses and whose directorship she shares with
members of the faculties of History and of
American Studies.

place~ .

Comblcth ·s area of expenise is multiculturnl
curriculum. The issue has sparked a nationaJ
debate that has spilled over into painful questions abou t what emphasis the non-white. nonEuropean experience in American history
should receive in the public schools in the land.
To opponents, people who shareCombleth · s
views risk unity at the price of heightened
scpamte group identity. But Combleth says
she favors raised inclusivity. "Draw the circle
larger and invite the people in," she said. It's a
question. she said. of what story we choose to
tell.
Combleth is familiar to those in the education field not only for her estimable accomplishments in her profession, but also for her
activism in classroom refonn and for her service on a committee appointed by New York
State EducationCommissionerThomasSobol
to review the state's social studies curriculum.
The committee's 1991 repon. titled One Na-

,

was able "to extcod some work I've done here
on cross-national perspectives, to extcod an
educational and political policy srudy-4be
politics of multicultural education-«&gt; a parallel in British Columbia," she said. "There are
ways in which British Columbia and New
Yorli:havesimilarorparallelexperie:nces.'l'heJe
are some similar issues. 8olh are fOI'I'IIOr British colonies inhabiting vast Weu:bes of Land
that weren't uninhabited." The parallel extends to Australia. another former British
colony. "In all three cases the early settlers
disrupted the lives ofthe peoples already living
there," she said.
Now that she· s back, Cornbleth is busy with
writing projects. Upcoming works include two
with co-author and San Francisco Ezamintr
reporter Dexter Waugh. They met via telephone when Waugh contacted her; the two hit
it off and a writing pannersbip emerged. Their
first projeet to hit print will appear in EdJJcational Researcher in the spring or early summer. The article is titled "The Great Speckled
Bird: Education Policy-in-the-Making." A
hook will follow. Its working title is R•defining Jlmuica. Both will examine "how the
debates about America-and what it means to
be American-&lt;:irculate," Combleth said.
"America as we know it - whose America is
it, anyhow '?"

T

Catltertne

Combletlt: she favors
ralsedlnclustvtty.

Combleth · s sabbatiCal in Vancouver. where

she was a Fulbright scholar. was followed by a
brief visit to Austr.tlia. She used the semester
and the visit ··Down Under'' to advance the
research she developed at UB and to bring
together common themes among the three

master's and doctorate in curriculum and instruclion. ..The work that became
multiculturalism had begun with the Latin
American project," she says.
From Texas, Combleth moved on to the
UniversityofPittsburgh where she began work
oncriticalthinkingineamest. Theworll:evolved
in two areoas, she said. Fust, it was to understandcritical not necessarily as negative, but as
questioning. In this way, it can be seen to result
in modification or in a reaffmnation. "Secoud
is to think of critical thinking not as a set of

another committee appointed to issue curriculum guidelines and outcomes and assessment
recommendations, Combleth has moved on to
look at the issue and the debate from different
perspectives.
Chicago native Combleth came to the forefront of the multiculturnlism debate from Texas
via Ann Arbor. After gmduati ng from the
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor with her
B.A. in history and sociology and secondary
education, Combleth moved to Texas where
she taught high school history.
The ocean of experience that separated
Combleth from her students was not lost on
them, she said, and they began to talk about that
gu lf. It began with her students asking her:
'" How come your ideas arc so different from
our.;?' And we talked."
he was involved one summer in an institute in Latin American history for secondary teachers and the next summer worked
on development of Latin Ari\erican curriculum. That changed everything. Combleth was
soon recruited into graduate school at the University of Texa.• where she completed her

S

•

skills but as a piece of whole cloth." It's a
process in the classroom. she said, "in lhe
cour.;e of which something we call skills might
enter in. Take that conccp1 of thinking and
encourage them to ask questions."
By the time Combleth arrived at UB in
1986 she was Nell established in the field,
having published and spoken widely on the
critical thinking IDld related issues.
She had developed a per pective on secondary educati on and was detennined to
hold a mirror up ro the education process.
Indeed. one of 'her presented papers was
titled On th• Social Study of Social Studin
and she speaks of studying the "history of
history teaching."
The renection has showed her that the debate about what and how to teach young people
is really not new. Academicians have predicted the end of the world as we know it each
time education changed: when, for example.
"American" and not British history was taught,
and when the :·vulgar'' languages were intro-duced . "We've been this way before."
Combleth said.
During last semester's sabbatical, Combleth

•

nnagme...

l1t111dreds f)fl1ef)l)le · :~. . ,~~ ·, .
;:1ttet1di11u ~1l)rf)oran1 , - :. ·~. ·
t"
~
"
'·~.
you
planned.
_::, -

he urgency ofhereffon to spread the word
on multiculturalism and appreciation of
diversity were brought home to her during her
sabbatical in British Columbia. She was struck:
by the "arbitrariness of the people or the groups
we choose to hate.
·"That was reinforced in very concrete
terms to me in British Columbia where there
are very few Afro.Canadiaos and HispanicCanadians. The hostility is directed primarily
against Asians, also European ethnic groups. I
don' t think of Italians as a minority, but in
Canada and Australia, they are," she said. ''The
groups we hate vary with the situation."
Combleth does not see that the result of
multiculturalism is isolationi m and separatism within the nation. ·•Jt 's not the likely outcome of critical thought. It' s almost a denial,"
she said.
"I don't see how any group can survive
economicaJiy without some interaction with
the mainstream. There's no parallel toQuebee
here, no geogmphic separation. I think that· s
kind of a false argument," she said. " I don't
see that as a very likely product of critical
thinking.
"In tennSofwhatwill keep us together: We
are members of a number of groups wi!h ties
that makes it very hard to cut us up cookiecutter-wise." What group people affiliate with
depends on what is saljent to them at the
moment. she says. "Some of it comes down io
very immediate issues."

Now ima~e that you have a large
staff to help with the details.
..,_ You nuy thin1: )"OU can't put togt'thtt an aodenuc conferenct or a
profes&lt;iOIUI m«ting b)' )'OUI&gt;&lt;If. We'd likrro show you how wr an hdp- wi,dl
r&gt;~l)'llung from a&lt;k..nising, pnnting and m.iling, to at&lt;ring, 10 acrommodations.

.. OnTueoby, MmhlJ, UB'sOf!ia:nfCoof=naosand Sprcial E&gt;'OliS.

me Grratrr Buffalo Cotm:ntioo and VlSiton Bw.au, and thr Buflalo Ambassadors will host a party at thr Ccntrr for Tomorrow to mtrodua: you to thr
confrrcncr and m..Ung planning S&lt;r&gt;i&lt;es and faci~ocs a'21iablr hen: at UB and
in the Grater Buffalo area.
.. Join us for good Food, good drink, good idras. pracoal pnscntatioos by
your uni•-.nity collragucs and ohibits fearuring unh-.nity srrvices tnd major
area hcxds.
.
.,. Thr pany

~.

&amp;tt.

Just

ma~c&lt;

,

,...,..tion by calling m. Of!ia: or

Coofrrrnc&lt;s and Sprcial Events at 645-34 14 by Mmh 19.

Meet your staff. 'Y Man:h l3 'Y 3:0(1- 5:30 'Y Center furTOIDOit'OW

�8

Beautifully constructed AI.lrBRJCK RANCH
in heart of Snyder. Large rooms: Loads of

Rhonda Schwartz. flute, and Belh Anne Breneman, harp.
give a recital at 8 p.m . March 16 in Slee Concerll-tan.

charm . 2000+ sq. ft. 2 Woodburning

han&lt;:t Your JWallonsblps With
Olh&lt;R, Ellen Christensen.
leader. Nonh Campus. 7-9 p.m.
For registtalion infonnation ca11
645-6125.

Fireplaces. Pool. Possible home office,
immediate posession .

UUMI'IUI
Animadon Toumet, 88 minutes
ohhe best short animated films

Sma/911

jacqueline S. Wopperer, MBA

THURSDAY

Licmsed Sales Represmlalive

631-4800
24 !lour Voice Mail: 635-8278

-Hunt Real Estate Corporation
62 1'i Sheridan Drive. Williamsville NY 1422 1
UB ALUMNA

11

INStmnE FOR ADDICTIONS

. _ A N D ,_lNG

KMINAII
Ethics. Confld~ntlafity and
8oondry 15Slles In Alcoholism

Counseling. Shirley Kucc.r.t
Reber. presenter. Daemen College. Main S1.. AmhersL 9 a. m.4:30p.m. For mon: information
call645-6140.
FUAI. TMERAI'Y COHfUIENCE
Plilllp GUck, M.D. Ob/Gyn Con-

ference Room. Children 's Hospi·
Lal. Noon.
I'IAHO S'RIIIENT REcrrAI.

SludtnlS or Professor Frina
Arsdumska Boldt. Baird Recital
Hall. 250 Baird. Nonh Campus.
Noon .

AltATDMICAI. SCIENCES
SEMIIIAR

Elre&lt;IS of Electrical SUmulaUon
oo Acute Edema, Frank Mendel.
Ph.D.. UB Dept. of Anatomical
Science.". 258 CFS Addition.

-

LowsofThoogh~ Tautology,
John Keams and John Con:oran.

UB Depc. or PhiiO!Ophy. 684
Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m.

--TICS

COI..LDQUIUII
Constrvadon Laws
and WPosed Probltrm. Prof. Barbara

Keyfitz. Univ. of Houston. 103

Diefendorf. South Campus. 4
p.m.
l'tWIMAC£VTICS RESEAIICM
-.ut

Drvrlopmtnt or A TransdermaJ
Dt:lh·ery System For A Potent

Dopamine Agonls~ Alice Lopc:r.
Ph.D.. research fellow. Merck &amp;
Co.. We.'itpoint. Pa. 508 Cooke.
Nonh Campus. 4-5 p.m.

sransncs CDU.OQUIUM
Logistic Regression and Good·
ness or F1t, Dr. Saskia le Cessie.
Dept. of. Biostatistics. Univ. o f
Rochester. 144 Farber. South

Campus. 4 p.m. For mort information contact Laura Palka at
829-3690.

UFE--

S.. and Dating: Hands otT!

Let's Talk, Bob Hall. leader.
North Campus. 7-9 p.m. For registnttion information call6456125.
UF'EW--

Understand Yourself and En-

from around the: wortd. Woldman
Theal&lt;r, 112 Nonon. North Campus. 7 and 9 p.m. Admission.
$2.50, UB students: $3.50. nonstudents.
~LaUJIY

--IC

lntroduc:tloo to tho lnltrntL

2231..oP&lt;wood Ub.-ary. North
Campus. 7-8:30 p.m. Pn:registr&gt;·
tion required. Regisuation rorm
availa~e at Lockwood Library's
Reference Desk.

I'£DIA'niiC QIIAND - -

Pr&lt;codous Puberty: n.. Eooocrinology and Psychology,
Christine Albini. M .D .• Ph.D. and

Tom Mv.ur, Psy.O. Kinch Audi·

torium. Children's Hospital. 8

Win'-- EDUCATORS

l flght:r Ed ucation In New York
Slate: ..,._nt Crisis and Fu·
turr Prospects, Pani McGill

l4SA Student Union. North Cam·

pus. 3-4:30 p.m.
-ATECOUGE
COUAICII•IM
Martin Bernal, author of Black
_At~na: 1M AfrotJ.Siatic Roots of
Ckusical Civilization. Cornell
Univ. 104 Knox. Nonh Campus.
3:30p.m. Co-sponsored by !he
Andrew V. V. Raymond Chair of
Oassics and !he DepL of An

-

History.

- - A I . SCIENCES

PopulaUoo Dynamk:s In Flrt
An15 and ll&lt;flavloral Mtch.l·
nisms, Dr. Eldridge S. Adams.
Ill , Univ. of Rochester. 121

· Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m.
Co-sponsored by !he Graduate
Group in EvoluliONU)' Biology
and Eoology.

_,.AI.D LOIIIC COUDQU. . .

Loek Dldlooary Entrl&amp;-

Reiser. preaemer. Daemen Col ·
lege.. Main St... Amhcnt. 9a.m.·
4:30p.m. For more information
call645-6140.
.......,._,.~

1bt Con&amp;truelloa of Soda! R..
aUty, John Searle. intemationally

1&lt;110wned phil050pher. Uruv. of
California. Bcrl&lt;eley. 2BO Pari..
Nonh Campus. II a.m.-12:30
p.m. Co-spon.sored by the Cemer
ror Cognitive Science and the:
Dept. or Linguistics.

--

Ctll Bloloc or Colonic q,;u..uum: Rdolin&amp; tho Loborato&lt;y
to Populatloo Slucllts, Poter
lance. M .D .. chief, Depc. of Gasll"OenteroJogy. VA Medical Ctn·
ter. 252A Farber. South Campus
12:30-1 :30 p.m.

Aleoiiol Use. Oul&lt;omt Expt&lt;t·
1111d&lt;o, and Risk 1'aldng: A
Soda! Leamlnc Approaeb, Kim
Fromme, Ph.D., Univ. or DeJawan:. 1021 Main SL, Buffalo.
I :30 p.m. Co-•ponsored by !he
Rehabilitation Continuing f..duca.
tion ProgramiReg;on II. UB.

EUCT111CAL.U.-CompulaUooal Pbolonlcl. Dr.

Pao-Lo Uu, UB Depc. ofEioctri·
cal and Computer Enjpneering.
110 Knoa. North Campus. 3 p.m.

-

-.&amp;~.~

O otbusten !1-Fibrltq&lt;n
Receptor Antqonlsls, Jack H.

' l.ai,~........_·UBDepc.of

Union Assembly HaJI. 3rd floor.

Mmctling Your Ar15 and Ltt·
ttrs/Sodlll Sdt""" Dtgr-tt.

Counotlln&amp;
Shirley Kueen
Boundry -~·­

-IIISnTIITE 011

S tud ent Ufe Issues. Studcm

-IIARIIET-

~-­

E lhlcs, ConlldttlllaUty and

1~ -- --

South Campus. 12:30 p.m.

IIIAIICH INTO T H E -

-----

mon: information cali64S-2491 .

SOCW. AND PIIEYENTIVE

FRIDA Y

ST11DENTUFE-mn
Nonh Campus. 1-2 p.m. Sponsored by the Student Life Committee of the UniVersity Council.

Pctenon. prcsideru. SL LawrenaUruv. Moot Hall. Buffalo Stau:

College. g LID. T&gt;Ckm. $5. for

Anchor Ira Flatow to Speak
· Ira Ratow. SC&gt;ence anchor of Nalional
Public Radio's ' Talk ol the Nation,' Errmy
Award-winning lV l(lUmaiiSI and a 1971
graduate of UB, will return to the university
on Tuesday, March 16. as a guest of UB and
the Western New Y9fk chapter of the American Chemical Society.
Ratow will discuss his perspectwe on the evoMng relallonship between scien11sts and the media during a
roundtable diSCussion with scientiSis and other media representatNes at 8 p.m. 1n the Allen Hall audilonum on the South
Campus. The talk is free and open to the pubhc.
While studying fOf his industrial engineering degree al UB
Ratow began his broadcasting career at WBFO-FM, firSI as ~
reporter 1n 1970 and later as the station's news director. As
NPR's science correspondent from 1971-86, Aalow CO\Iered
sc1ence. health, technology and the environment. traveling to
::~~~Space Center. Three Mile Island, Antarctica and
From 19821o 1988, he was host and wnter of the Errmy·
Award-winning PBS-science program 'Newton's Apple." He
also was a SC1ence reporter for CBS-lV:
He twice has won the American Association lor the
Advancemen1 of Science (AAAS) Westinghouse Science
Journalism Award.
A reception will be held before tpe discussion from 6-8
p:rn. in Allen Hall. The cost is $10 per person. Reservations
may be made by calling 82S-25q5.
·
•

Medicinal Cllemisn-y. 114
Hochstetler. North Campus. 3 p.m.
.......,._,. LaCI\ME
U..~olC~

John Searle, inlenllllionally ,.,.
nowned philooopber, Uni•. of
~- 20 Kno.t.
North Campus. 3-S p.m. Cospon.sored by !he Center for Cogmove Science and !he Depc. of
Unguistics.

California.

-...._--

' * " COUAICII••
llyDOJDic: AJpt(is olEltdn&gt;a-

...

MeloiJoprolda ~

Prof. Nenod M. KOIIIic, Iowa

&amp;ate Univ. 70 Acheson. South

Campui. 4 p.m.

-

SLUUnc Coon·-lloni and

MaJdDc Now Frltado, Ruth

Samuel, leotb:. Nonh Compu~
6:30-9 p.m. For tqisolllion infor·
llllllioncali64S-6125. ·

w.. ...

~T-,118-

of tho beat short ani.,.... tumo
rrom orouna 111e wortc1. Woldman
Theot&lt;r, tllNOilOIL North Campus. 7 .... 9 p.m. Adallssioll.
$2.50, UB I!Udenll; $3.50. noostudcnl5.

�--__

......... L lO ""'a. North
-campus. 7:30 p.nl. Por..,..

,
inlonnllioa c:aiiii29-2A26.

DIY!dod s,o-ISbared s -

c~ byWilliamE.

~. UB IIIOCble profcsoor
of dance. Kadllrinc Cornell,
Elliooa Comploa. NMh Campw.
8 p.m. Todc&lt;u. $4, studcnu and
"'nior citiz.enl; $8, ge-.1 lidmission. Co-sponsored by the UB

Student Auociation.

KelTAI.
The Buried T.....,ns Eosemble, Ronald Richards, oboe.
Darlene Juuila. bauoon;

Adrienne Tworck-Gryta. !IOpnlOO.
and Persis Vehar. piano, in worts
by Unley. Head. Glick. Cohen
and o&lt;ben. Slee HaU . North Cam-

pus 8 p.m. Admi """· S6. S4.
S2

Dr. Dovicl Orr. llOied environmental educolor an&lt;! profeaaor ol
envlronmonta!IIUdiel, Qlerlin

ColleJe. lcaneiJe Martin Room.

567 Capen. North Campus.
Nol;ln. Tomakea.......,.;c,.,
-Brenda Kdly 116432615. Co-IJ'O'liOI1'Ciby theOifoce
or the Senior VIce PrWdent for

UniveRity Services.

DI~IALTAM

-IRTUiill

The G,_ ~: Who! It
Meima and Bow to Get lbtre,
Dr. David Orr, llOied environmental educator and professor of
environmental studies, Oberlin

College. Jeancu.e Martin Room,
567 Capen. Nonll Campus. 3

p.m. To make 1 reservation conlac!. Brenda Kelly 11645-2615.
Co-sjlOflSO«d by the orroc:e of the

-AII-

Senior Vice President for Univer-

sity Services.

-~TS

SATURDAY

1l
rc~1strai100

mformauun cal i64S-

fli~5

UUAII FILM

Anima tion Toumee, SH minute'
,,f the best shon 1Ulimat4Xi film~
twm arotfnd the world. Woldman
l11cah.:r. 11 2 Nonon Nonh Cam -

P"" 7 .md 9 p.m Admis!loion.
S2 :'iO. UB o;tudent&lt;;: S:tso. r.nn,,u,knr..

AIICitiTEC1\III AND
Pt.AHNING ~ ~CTUIHt

T h• Figured/Disflgun!d City,
M Christine Boyer. planner and
architectural theorist. 301 Crosby.
South Campus. .5:30p.m.

R£CITA.L
~lark

W. DiGlampaolo, organ-

.snd Langlais. Slec Concen Unll .

Nunh Campus. S p.m Admi s-

' 'nn. Sf&gt; . ~ - $2.

..tudu:·s . Oberlin Collc~c Center
torTomorro"' Nonh Campu '
K 30

am Tu make a ~rvauon

&lt;."'t lntocl

Brenda Kelly at &lt;H S·

2615. Sponsored by the Office of
the Scmor V1cc President for
Umversity Ser"i(%S and the Environmcmal Task Force:.

The Role ol Eowtronmenlal ·
Studies In ffilb&lt;r Eduea.tlon.

UB alumnus. discusses scientificmedia inleraclions with represeoltUives of both groups. Allen Auditorium. South Campus. 8 p.m.
Sponsored by WBFO and the

Western New York Chapter of
the American Chemical Socie1y.

Evaluating AnUrttrovlraJ f.J.
ft&lt;t On HJV Prognssloo Wllh
Surrogatt Markus. Roben

Shon:, Pharm.D. candidate. 248

~

Normal Stat•

A p p le \ L1 c i n to~ h
Co 111 put e r I· a i r

-Arlhur Aoymmelrkal
Efron. UB Dep&lt;.Dualism,
or Englilh. 684 Baldy. North CampuJ.

4p.m.

l 'uiiiiODO'J' FlmdJoo In Alukan and Siberian Ealdmoo,

Gary E. Eb1ert. M.D.. UB Dept.

or Medicine. I08 Sherman. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
~YS

AT 41"WS

UTIIIUIIIY-

Cadlla Vlcuno. Chilean oral poet
and performanc::e anist, reads
from her wort. 421l Capen. NMh
Campus. 4 p.m. Sponsored by the

-

cosponsored by UBMicro Sales Center
and Apple Computer, Inc.

UB Poetics P!ogrwn.

-TIIIC IEIIUCA.,_
D rug Development rocAI2belmer1s., Linda Hershey,
M.D.. Ph.D., associlll&lt; professor
of neurology at US and chief of
Neurology Service, VA Medical
Center. Beck Hall Conference
Center. South Campus. S p.m.

J081UBDCulture a..h and the Workplace, Fah Pow Uew. UB alumnus. 145E Student Union. Non.h
Campus. 6.8 p.m.
NIMAIIJIAUOCIA.,_DI'~

AND~LECT\ME

AllilsUn&amp; Students 1&lt;1 TransiUon low Hl«her Education and
the Workplac:e, Willillm J.
Donohue. president , Genesee

Area Focus Council, Mou Foundution. Michigan. Cemer for Tc&gt;morrow. North Campus. 7 p.m .

Dinner: S2S per person. For res·
crvations contact Dr. R.an~h
Shah at 439-3020.
DPUS: ClASSICS IHtCITAL,

-WEU.

SEMINAR

~ARk STAfF

Mttllbolk Control in
Mia, Prof. Brinon
Chance. Dept of Biochemi st!)
and Biophysic-.. Univ. o f Penn'Yh•ania. l·hllcboe Auditorium.
RPCI . 12.30 p.m
T~nic

CHEMICAL EHGINEERING/
UNDE~KRES

Furnas. Non.h C:unpus. 3:45

.
'lbe Spac:e of Pubtic and
Private Inversions in
FllmN&lt;Mr. Joan
Copjec. UB Center
for the SIUdy or Psychology and CuiiUrt.
IOSA Hayes. South
Campus.. 2p.m.

Union. NMh Campus. 4-5 p.m.
_ _ , COUOQJ•w
The Mind-Body Problem; a.-

An EvtnJng or ew Music. An·

Suspensions, Donald L.

MARCH INTO THE CHAHWNG

Hew To Mob a c.- Fair
-~Wort&lt; r..- y..._ 145D Swdenl

Cooke North Campu'&gt; . 8-8:55

Simple Shear Flows of Flbtr

J08MAIIIIETHow To Make a Career Fair
Work for You. 1450 SIUdcnt
Union Nonh Campus. 12:30-

Campus. 4 p.m.

lul'-..d.l\ ,

\l.11l

h

::'~ 1'~' 1 ~

Koch. Cornell Univ. 206
p.m.
~SICS-NAil

FadlltatJ,·r Glucost Transportrr, Structure and FunC-

tion. Dr. Chan Jung. UB
Dept. of Biophysics. 106

thony deMure. piano: Douglas
Cone, violin and friends. Mu ~k

DEMONSTRATING ...
Apple Color Printing from Microsoft Excel
and Word every hour on the hour.
Apple Color Scanning every hour on the
half hour
600 dots per inch resolution (vs. 300) on the
Apple Laser-Writer Pro 630
Apple Macintosh PowerBook connected to
an external monitor

8iiiii

Conunued on page 8

Let•s Just 111k
Bob Hall w•ll lead March 11
Life Workshop on lhe
1op1C. "Sex and
Oaung Hands
Off' Let's Talk ·

i

lllltil i 1'111
L ]; \ I l l I (I '-,,Jil' ... ( l'll t,· I
I
L B l ommorh, \.o1th l .11npu-.. '
11 1.1111

MAIICH IN10 T H E -

Nuclear Mtdldne Rounds.

I'HYSICS AND

FOII!:IE IK1UB

Admission, $6. $4. S2.

Shabbir Hak1m. M.D. Cafc1orium
A. Mercy Hospiaal. 8:30a.m

----- .uE N - - A I . TAU!

Aodric:ssen and others. Slee Coo-

cen Hall. North Campu$. 8 p.m.

PEDIATRIC CDNFEIIEHCE

StorytdUJig roc- Substan«
Abuse Prevention. Jeri Bum!~
and Barry M811hall, presenters.
Dacri.en College. Main St.,
Amhcrlt. 9 a.m.-4:30p.m. For
more information cali64S-6140.

Rhonda Scllwvtz, nute, and
Beth Anne B - . , borp,
worb by Penichetti. Hovhane.$.

l'tiAIIMACY SEMINAR

I:JOp.m.

M yth and Meaning:

--AI.

17
16

the 21st Century,llr David Orr.

7

V.fQ CW. I'HYSIOLDQY

R&lt;oumf Writing, Kmy CoUins.
leader. North Campus. 7-8:30
p.m. For regj.stBlion information
call 64S-612.5.

TUESDAY

AACHIT£CTUR£ AND
Pt.AHNING VISITING SEMINAR

INsmvlt: POll~·

....

WEDNESDAY

rn)(cd environmental educa.~or
and profc~.sor of cn\'ironmcmal

Cary. -

_ -

-~-

The Cloullal EmploJ- ; Wbot Employenln
- - a n d lodultry An
~roc- 1n Candlclalts.
145A Student Union. NMh Campul. 4:J().{j p.m.

~-..-~

Rethlnklnf,! the U niversity for

" ' · works by Guilmant: Messiaen

Campw. 3:45 p.m.

Ira Flat.ow. science anchor of
NPR's "Talk of the Nation" and

LECT\1111[

14

w.,._ x.ro. w- Reaean:ll
Cenoer. 219 fronaak. Nonll

Tyrooine Kinase Rqulatlon,

EXPANDED SEJIYIC£
EXCEIUNC£ ASHMBl.Y

SUNDAY

~oltloo~

__

SOporeoed- Dr. Y. R.

Tony Pawson. Ph.D.. MI. Simu
Hosphal Research lnst., Univ. of
Toronto. G26 Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m.

UFEWI:k-auly Is SkJn Dttp. Jayn«

Stmw. Jcader. Nonh Campus 10
.s m -Noon Admis.~iorr S I f"'I

__
.__
__.__
_..,._.._...,

Convenience
Quality
Service
Variety

�-

8
W

oM

A

N

P

O WIR

IN

T

H

f

2

1

ST

C

I

I\IT

.....

UUY

---.-- NCALaDAR

AY CONFERENCE DEDICATED
TO ISSUES OF CAREER ADVANCEMENT, ON BOTH

--AI.

AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN.
FRIDAY, APRIL 2 ; t993 AND

Boo&amp;-Y' Han, pianist. Baird
Recital Hall, 250 Baird. North

SATURDAY, APRIL 3 , t993

R

Y

H

AT

W

OOD

F

UTRrLL

A PUBLIC ADDRESS
FRIDAY, APRIL 2 , 8 : 00P.M .
SLEE HALL, FREE AND OPEN TO ALL

Dr. Futrell has attained high office in a myriad of educational organizations, regionally,nationally and internationally. From 1980-1989, s he served as president of the
National Education Association (NEA). Dr. Futrell has
also been active in the World Confederation of Organizations of the Teaching Profession (WCOTP), based in
Morges, Switzerland. In 1990, she became President of
WCOTI'. Dr Futmll has been cited in numerous national publications as one of the most
mfluent1nl African Americans and one of the most outstanding women in the country.
P

R

OJ

E

CT

SATURDAY , APRIL 3

W

I

N

W

ORK

S

H

OP

S

Rtgistrotionrtquirrd

A FULL DAY OF ACTIVITIES INCLUDING A KI!:YNOTI!!: ADDRESS BY DR. FUTRELL AND

A vARIETv' oF woRKsHoPs :

Balancing Personal and Professional

a Malt'- Oominated World-AKA Sexual Harassment

Life

Affirming Values in

Politics, Power and the Professional

Woman

Woman's Health Issues Dealing With Difficult Prople Getting in Touch With
Leadership Development Combatting Stress in the Workplace &amp; at Home
Effect l\'t' CommuniCation on the )pb and 1n the Community Planning for Financial Security

.'I nur Spmtu.1ht}'

FOR MORE INFORMATION OR ASSISTANCE , PLEASE CALL THE OFFICE
OF CONFERENCE OPERATIONS AT (716) 645-2018. (FAX 645-3689)

Cospcm:.Omllry Niagara Mohawk Power Ct~rpo ral/011

1~

...

Rape A Wat'ftlell, Public Safety
Officer Terri Banas. leader. Nonh
Campus. 7-8:30 p.m. For registrA·
tion information call 645-6125.

HEALTMC..__
Total Quollty Mana&amp;emool ln
Hoalth Can, Robert W.

DuBois. M.D.. Ph.D.. senior vice
president of Value Health Services: Emmclt C. Murphy,

Plt.D.. president of E. C. Murphy, Ltd.; Dale V. Shaller, and
MaBha Orsolilis Slevic, Ph.D.
Hyatt Regency Buffalo. 8 a.m.4:30p.m. Sponsor&lt;d by the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. UB School of
Nursing. MiJiard Fillmore Hospitals and 1he Millard Fillmore
HeaJih, Education and Research
Foundation.

I'LUIN--

AIICIIITI:c:n.E AND

-.aSDES
Rep......,tlng the American
City. Michael Sorkin. an::hitect
and critic. 201C Hayes. South
Campus. 9 a.m.
-AYSAT4PWS
UTUWIYSDES
Cedlla VIcuna, Chilean ornl

COMPUTER SCIENCE
~

Fast Matrix-Updating Algorithms, Franklin T. Luk.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
14 Knox. North Campus. 3:30-

4:45p.m.
l'tiYSICSANDCOWIQUIUM

Ad&lt;orptlon 1n lhe Umit or
Ultnweaklnl&lt;ndlom, Prof.
Miltoo Cole. Dcp.. or l'llysics.
Pm.nsylvunia Slate Univ4454
Fronczak. Nonh Campus. 3:45
p.m.

-

UOLOIIICAL SCIENCES

the average communication
piece designed, produced and
delivered to the right place at
the right time.
. That's a lot to ask your
support staff to squeeze into
a routine workload.

Ras Superfamily ofMole&lt;ular
Swltcbes: Regulation and Functions, Dr. ian M""""'- Dept of
Pnthofogy. Univ. of Vermont- 121
Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
IIUFF.uil LOGIC

COLUICII•III
Emba.rna55ing Developmenls
In Logk In the 12th Century,
Christopher J. Manin, Dept of

Morl~n

716.884 .9536 fox
716.884.0882 tel

UR-

In..,.,lowlng Su&lt;aSI: It's

Easier Tban You Think, Jim

Kumor, leader. North Campus.

7:3()..9 p.m. For registration infor.
malion call 645-6125.

EXHIBITS
FACULTY- EX_,
1be annuaJ "Social Sciences and
Humanities Faculty Book Ex-

hibil"' is on display in foyer of
second floor or Lockwood

Library now through late April.

Di&lt;play highlights 63 books
written oredilcd by UB faculty
from Architecture. Arts and
Letters, Education. Management.
Social Sciences and the
Universily Libraries, and published between 1991 and 1993.
Exhibi1 can ~ viewed during all
times the library is open.

INTEIINA--cwa I'IIIESIJITA-.-

NAIT A: Cu..,..nt Stratqios
and Actions of Mulcan Orpnlz.atlons 1o llerome Competl-

ti.vr, Dr. Jaime Gomez,.dean,
GnKiuate School·or Manage. ment, ITESM •. Mexico, guesl

-

PIIMMACEVIICS~

F ormulation Oe~tlopmtot or A

-h~
-·
~--- ...

oreanilablepriorll!lha.,_
&amp;ium. Suldenu wMiolto&amp; io ,...-

--'-tidpoj&lt;,

- D r_"-'&lt;!

Lasker, Dept_ ollli&lt;ilolbl
Scielxa, 635 HoclllldJ&lt;r_

~

lruentalional Folk Dlnelna~&lt;&gt;-

"'"' are held Fridays 11 8 p.m.
on fVOUild floor or Qiefendnrf
Hall. ~ duc01:&amp; follows

from 9-11 p.m. Ew:ryooe
welcome; no partner needed.
Free admiasiOO- Spons&lt;&gt;rU! by
Gr.lduale Studenl Associalion.

--

Cutrent listinp or jobo in business and indusuy. govemmcor.,
health. education and OOD-JWfit
Ofl;anizatioos, ~ available in
the Off'.ce of Career Planning
and Placement. IS capen Hall.

----

AdnUWon tesz: for Mensa. the
high LQ. IIOCiety. wtll be held
Man:h 20. at I p.m- at 208 Butler
Libr.uy, Buffalo SweCollege.
1300 Elmwood Ave. S2S fee.
l'r&lt;registtalion appn:ci1tled. Call
Judith Hopkins, 632-8959, for
more infonnation.

JOBS
FACULTY

Asmtant Protessor-Nulrition

f&gt;ro&amp;mn. Posting MF-3020. As.
sistant Professor-Physics and

Astronomy. Posting #IF-3021 .
AislstanVAssoda,. Prof....,..Social and Preventive Medicine.
Posting #F-3022. Resean:h lnstructor/Researdl Assistant
Profesoor (depending on qWIIIftcaUoos}--l.aboratory Animal
Facililies, Posting #F-3023. As-.
sistant Professor-Removable
Prosthodomics. Posting #F-3024.

-

Pot!tdoc:loral Assocla,. (S£.1 ~

Biological Sciences. Posting tR93017. 93019. R.,..n:h Tec:h-

nlclan I N0-4)-Medicin&lt;.
Posting MR-93020.
~

--·y-

Ar&lt;a Dlndor (SL-J~R&lt;siden­
tial Life. Posting W-3004. PrognmmerlAnalyst (SL-3)-Computing and lnfonnalion
Technology. Posting •P-300S.
Senior swr Mslstant (SL-3,
Internal Promotion Opportu ·

unde:rgraduale seniors, "Superior
woo by Selected Scni&lt;&gt;&lt;s: The
Faculty' !'i Choice." Show, whlch
opens March 12 whh a reception
at 8 p.m.. extends to March 23
in Bethune Hall Gallery. 2917
Main St. near Henel .

nlty)-Social Sciences lnterdisci·
plinary Program. Posting 13008.
Mslstant Fodlllioo l'r&lt;&gt;gram
Coordlnalor (SL-3, ln,.mal
Promotion Opportunlty}Desig.n and Consuuction. Pcsting
#P-3009. A..., Dlr&lt;ctorfl1t...,.
Hall Coordinator (SW,Internal Promodoo Opportunity~
Residential Life, Posting .#fp.
3010. Radlc•ctlve Waste
Management Spedalllt (SL-1,
•...mal Promotion Opponunlty)-Radiatioo Proteaion Services. Posting MP-3011.
ClAUifiiD CIVIL -.c:l'

Ain snmENTS ON -..uy
The Art Departmenl presen1s an
exhibil of the besl work by

Gallery hours: Monday. noon to
5 p.m.: Tue..~y. 10 a.m.·8 p.m.;

Wednesday, I :30 to 5 p.m.;
Thursday. 10:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m.; Friday. 1 to S p.m.
PHOTO SNOW

"Sacred Circles: Buddhist Life in
Tibet," pholographs by Jennifer

Lewis, is on view at the Center
forTomorrow •.through March

28. Mond:ly through Friday,
during regular building hours.
l'tiCJTOillwoKy -..uy
"The Bluesmen." photogruphs

by Ed Sobala documenting 20
years ofbluesmen andjw.men
at work and play. will be on
vi~w 1hrough March 14 a1 the
WBFO studios a! Allen Hall.

Baldy. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

State Univ. 103 Diefendorf.
Sooth Campus. 4 p.m.

A communlcoNon company.

Ddlcatls&amp;tn. Woldman Theater.
112 Nonoo. Nonh Campus. 7

p.m. Admission, $2.50. UB studeniS; S3.SO. non-students.

Philosophy. Univ. of Auckland

IIATHDIAllCS COUOQUIUII
P&lt;n:olatloo 1beo&lt;y In ModelIng of Raod&lt;Jm M&lt;dla, Prof.
Leonid Berlyand, Pennsylvania

Coppellino Associates

WAIIFIUI

and Univ. of Toronto. 684

· speaker. 200 The Commons.
North Campus. 4 p.m. For mort
iaformation call 645-3223.

~';:;'~olb~-7~~~oT~r1c~

_

Uvlng Olf Campos: What You
N.... To Know, Ed Brodka.
leader. North Campus. 7-8 p.m.
For registration information caU
645-(;125.

4

At MCA, we take the 76
steps for you, and we do each
the way it should be done:
creatively, effectively, timely,
cost-efficiently. ·
,
Since. that 's all we · do
everyday, we do it pretty well.

. .,..._.,
..,.,.,_,Dr.

A.uxlllory
Biao
Zl1ang. us 0cp.. or Staiatics. 144
Falber. South Campus. 4 p.m.

LIR-

THURSDAY

gram in Spanish in lhe Dept. of
Modem Languages and Liter.t
tures.

It takes 76 steps to getting

_
... _

STATIS11CS COl LOQI•IM
M-&lt;Stlmollon IJid Quutlle

Susan Chiddix, leader. North
Campus. 7-9 p.m. For n:gistration
information caJI64S-612'S.

poel and performance artist. 438
Oemens. Non.h Campus. 12:30
p.m. l'l&lt;&gt;ented by the Poetry
Society of America and the Pro-

A picture means more than
1000 words; it means 76 steps.

C)'lllc .,....... Jay SiJco, PILD"
......a. invelliptor. Glaxo, In&lt;:..
Research Tri.anJ)e Paric, N.C. 508
Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4-S p.m.
Co-spons&lt;&gt;rUI by the PhannaceuUcallndusll')' Visiting Scientist
f&gt;ro&amp;mn or the PltarmaceuticaJ
Manufacturers Auocial:ion.

lntroductloo To Foc:uslng, Dr.

Campus. 8 p.m.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT
BUFFALO NORTH (AMHE.RST CAMPUS)

MA

by Ca&amp;&lt;, Soabler and othel'5.
Allen Hall. South Campus. 7
p.ni. TICkeU. S3. otudenu.
WBFO and Hall walls members:
SS, gencnl admission. Co-sponsored by Hallwalls.
WA11f1LII
DtiJateutn. Wok:lrTWl Theater.
112 N0&lt;10n. North Campus. 7
p.m. Admis.sion. S2.SO. UB students: $3.50, non-stodenls.

PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL LEVE

lnbolallon Product

lodlcatod In .,. Tra-1 ol

Continued from page 7

fjOTICES

-·~

III~IIOLOQY

INVITU P'~AIITS
The Graduale Group in Evolutionary Biology and Ecology
announces a Graduate Research
Symposium in the areas of eve-lulionary biology and ecology.
The symposium will be held
Aprill3, a1 S p.m. in 414
Fronczak. North Campus. Participalion is open to aU UB
gnKiuaJe 51\Jdents. A $250 Best
Paper Travel Grant will bt
awarded to the student making
the best presentalion. The travel
grunt can be used to attend a
professional moeting for the
purpose of presenting a paper or

Maln~&lt;nance

Helper (SG~

Facilities and Systems Mainte-

nance. Line M319S6. Main~
nance Helper (~Facilities
and Systems Mairuenanoe., Line
131957,31381,31387. Keyboard Spedallst (SG-06)-Bio-

chemical Pharmacology, Line
t34l!96. Clooner (~. part-

lime. C&lt;lllllngellt.ponnaneot}
Residential Custodial ScMces.
Line 1143211. Head Jtinltor
(SG- 15)-0lslodial Sctvices.
Line M32564. Supenlslng Janitor (SG-11)-Custoclial Services,

LineM31486.

---.

-

ClAUifiiD CIVIL'SEJMCE
Maln,......,.~,(SG-

09)-Facilities and SyslemS Maint&lt;nanee. Line 134443. Refri&amp;....-

Medw&gt;k(SG-12~

Facilities and Systems Ma.inte·
ruux:c. Line 131309, 3t375.
Plumber/Sieomllu.r (SG-12}
Facilities and Sy$J.CIDS Mainteruux:c. Linel40358. Gmentl
Mec:hanlc (SG-12)-Focilities
and Sys!emS Maintenance. Line
M3 16S6. M o l n - SupervlttOrl (SG-14)-Fadlitieo and
Sysaems Maintenance. Line
1120981. Motor Veldde ()penttor (SG-e7), Line 31030.32279,
3221!2. •

�_....,

__ __
..,

Doctors call for formula labeling
changes after baby becomes ill
~ux:u=H

tional SWJ!CIY 10 r=lllnoct the bowel.
Necrotizing enterocolitis-most

T

HECASEOfababywho
developed a po«entially
life-threatening illness
and required bowel surgery after drinking im·
properly mi~ed formula has brought
a call from the baby's pediatric sur·
geons for more
explicit labeling
of infant formu·
las.
In what could
be co nsidered
every
new
m01hcr's night-

mare. the pedia·
r i c i a n s
concl uded that a 19-day-old infant
admiued to The Children's HospiUtl
of BuiTalo developed necrotizing en·
tcrocolitis because his mother 1oM
thl' measuring scoop supplied with
the fomlUia and had to guess at the
proper proponion• of powdered milk
GUCK

t

HI

water when preparing

hi~

often seen in low-binh-weight in-

fants-israrein full·terminfants. Glick
said. The illness occurs when cells in a
ponion of the intestine are deprived of
blood for some reason. These blood·
StarVed cells die nnd become infected.
Studies on animals and humans

"Of the most common .. irifantformulas, only one
contains measuremenls in terms of
tablespoons as well
as the... scoop. "

Philip L. Glick. assistant profes·

the Children's Hospital emergency
lkpanmcm exhibiting hypovolemic
,huc~-100 little fluid in the blooolkhydmtion and a distended and lt"flder abdomen. Doctors sub&gt;equcntly
lh~ovcred gangrene in a pon'ion of his
cnlon. removed it cmd performed a
l '( 1lostomy. The baby underwent addi-

2 n. oz. of warm water."

"Of the most common commercially available powdered infant for·
mulas. only one. SMA Iron Fonified
Infant formula (Wyeth Laborat()ries, Philadelphia. Pa.). contains
measurements in terms of tablespoons. as well as in terms of the

manufacturer's scoop.'' Glick said.
''We recommend that measurements

be given both in terms of the scoop

boule.

'or of 'urgery and pediatrics lll UB.
and two colleagues published the
l·a......- \IUdy in the January i~sue of
Jmmwl of Pediatrics.
Ghck said the baby was first seen in

The authors suggest that this un·
fonunate situation might be prevented in the future if labels on
powdered infant formula include
mixing instructions using a common
household measure.
Glick stated that federJI regula·
tions governing the use of infant
formulasspecifyonly that the amount
of powder must be stated in volume
and weight. and that most manufac·
turersdefine volume only according
to the scoop provided. i.e .. "for stan·
dard dilution. add one level scoop.
enclosed (8.7g). of powder for each

and in tenns of common household

have shown the conditioo C3l1 be pre·
cipitated by ingesting supcr-ooncen·
tr&amp;edsolutiOfbthalcausew.uertoleave
intestinal cells. leading to dehydration
and decreased blood now.
Glick spoculmed thai the reduced
blood flow cau.o,es cenain cells to be
deprivedofblood.leading tooocrotizing
enterocolitis. In this case. by guessing
•ncotTOCtJy at the proper proportions of
powdered milk to water, the mcxher
used too much powder. producing the
super-conccntr.ued fonnula that led to
the baby's illnes.,.

measurements. such a." tablespoon
or teaspoon:· They also recommended printing on the container a
highly visible warning about the dan·
gers of mixing the formula improperly.andatoll-freetelephoncnumbe[
to provide 24-hour advice.

Forturuuely. this case ended happily. When last seen at J. l/2 years. the
child was healthy and growing nor·
mally. Duncan Wilcox. pediatric re·
search scientist. and Alben fion:llo.
UB medical student. also panici·
patcd in the case study.

9

Ibuprofen may diminish
aspirin's beneficial effects
II)'EUEII-News Bureau Staff

P

EOPLE WHO take
aspirin regularl y for
prevenuon of SliOke

and hean attack may
need to be careful about howand especially when-they take
the painkiller ibuprofen. accord·
ing to a study conducted recently
atUB.
Published in the Joum11l of
Clinical Phannocology. the study
demonstrated that in healthy.
young volunteers who took a

single dose of ibuprofen and then
took an aspirin an hour later. the
ibuprofen markedly shonened the
duration of aspirin' s effect on
blood platelets. However. if the
aspirin was taken fi rst. before the
ibuprofen. no detrimental effect
was found.
Studies have shown that a daily
dose of aspirin reduces the propcn·
sity of blood platelets to aggregate.
prevent
a phenomenon that
blood now to the hean or brJin.
triggering a hean attack or stroke.
"Both ibuprofen and aspirin
inhibit platelet activity ... said Terence Fullenon.clinical instructor
of pharmacy at UB and director

=

Using massive computers, team
first to solve protein structure
BJ RUN CIOLDIIAUM
News Bureau Staff

vances. such as rational drug design.
wherechemicalstructuresareanalyzed
mnN WEEKS af.
and modified to improve biological
activity.
terresearchersinGer·
The Buffalo group's method is
many published a
ba.'ied oo a minimal priociple deriled
paper stating thai in
500.&lt;XXl trials with a powerful bot lr.l·
by Nobel Laurea!eHerben HauJxm:m.
applied to the sk in. reverses agin g.
ditional direct method they were unpresident ofthe Medical foundation o1
Napoli has been conducting·rt"which implies that receptors in the
able to solve the molecular structure of
Buffalo and research professorofbi()search on retinoic acid metabolism
ski
n
ce
lls
are
responsive.··
Napoli
the protein. Crambin. a research team
physics and computer scieoce at UB.
since 1979. His work to date has
said.
"But
then
yoo
have
to
ask
why
in
Buffalo
has
solved
the
structure.
Computerprograms10
run thecaJcula..
been supponed by more than $3.5
the skin is aging to begin with. The
Using a computer-intensive di- . tions were developed by Charlo.
million in grants from the National
implication is the skin is not making
rect method. the team has produced
Weeks. senior research scientist at the
ln:;titutes of Health.
sufficient retinoic acid.
Medical foundationofBuffillo. Miller
16correctsolutions forthe414-atom
ScientifiC inreresa in what-.retinoic
''And ifretinoic acid can reverse
structure after
developed new techniques for some ol
acid does and how it ftulClions is in·
agi ng of the skin. what is the impli·
runnin g only
the routines nnd also adaJXed the JXOcreasing dramatically. Napoli said.
cation for the intema1 organs? Are
gram 10 run on massively parallel
1.200trials.
supercomputers.
t~ey degenerating through the same
It is the fm;ttime
TheCrambinsolutioo is the lateslin
aging process as the skin? If we can
that any direct
aseries ofdramatic successes achieved
methods tech do !tOmething about the skin using
by the Buffalo researchers.
retinoic acid. can we do something
nique, used rouabout other organs? Understanding
tinely to solve
Crambin. a protc.in found in the seeds
the'synthesis of retinoic acid should
MILLER
smalter strucof Abyssinian cabbage. was solved
give us some clues."
only once before. in 1981. in what was
tures. has solved
Napoli's current resean:h shows
suc h a large molecule.
then a dramatic breakthroogh. It was
thai ceUular retinol-binding jlrotein
done with a diffiCUlt technique thai
Developed by resean:hers at the
(type l ),orCRBP.slimulau:sretinoic
required the careful·rollection of dif.
Medical Rlundatioo of Buffalo and
acid production by "channeling" reti·
UB. the computational "shake-andfmction data (Hendrickson. W. A. &amp;
nol (the precurser of retinoii: acid) 10.
bake" method resulted in 16solutions
Teeter. M M.Natun. 290. 107· 113).
.JOMPHLNAPOU
and acting as a substrate for. retinoic
in one week. A single solution took an
"We treated the structure as if it
avcrngeof IOhoursofcomputing time.
wereunknoWr!.completelyign'oting
acid synthesis. H ~ also has shown thai
the intensitjes from the anomalous
anotherprotcin--&lt;:eUularretinoicacid"Because we wanted to solve
because of evidence that the proper
binding protein. or CRABP- faci li·
Crambin and not just colleet statis· · dispersion experiments. Which were
baJwx:e of retinoic acid in cells is es.:
tics·. we decided to run the program
tates retinoic acid metabolism by
necessary to obtain the original solusential for normal human development
tion." said Hauptman.
foronly200cycles oftheshake·and·
and health maintenance. Retinoic acid · sequestering it and also acting as a
"Solving Crambin meahs thai a
programs the development of limbs. substrate. These two actions helpn:gu· . bake algorithm." said Russ Miller.
late the balance of retinoic acid in cells.
professor ofcomputer science at UB. size of 400 atoms alone is not a tJcu:r.
organs and the nervous system in the
Napoli curren tl y ho ld s a
"We were hoping to get one good
rent to the application of direct methhuman embryo. In adults. it maintains
ods," said W~ks. "Whether it i;
solution. We were swprised when
$777.935 grant from the NIH to
the health of epithelial tissue in the
we got 16."
study the interaction of retinoic
alimentary canal. truchea. skin andrenecessary 10 ha "'""'high-quality. higbJhe,routine solution of mid-sized
resolution data thai was available witt
acid with cancer-c;aus ing chemiproductive organs.
" We know that Retin A, when
cals in the body .
mq1eculbs is crucial to scientif.; 00.. Cr.unbin. is not yet clear."

Napoli's work with retinoic acid may
yield clues to aging, disease processes
BJL-BAIWI

News Bureau Staff

A

UB SC!ENTIST has un·

covered new infortruition

about how the bod y.
makes active forms of

vitamin A that could lead to a beller

understanding of the vitamin's role

in human growth and development.
Joseph L. Napoli, professor of
biochemistry. has defined new ac·
tio'ns of cenain vitamin A-binding

proteins, allowing him to identify a
formerly unknown pathway of

retinoic acid synthesis.
"Trying to understand how
rctinoic acid is synthesized in the

body should give us some clues to
the ag ing process. to the disease process. to binh defects and development in tiumans," Napoli said.
Results of his research were published in the current issue of the

Journal of Nutrition.
Retinoi acid. also known as
tretinoin, is a fonn of vitamin A.

Tretinoin is identified commercially
by the trade name RetinA. a drug that
=reverse some of the signs of aging
of the skin. Synthetic formsofretinoic
acid are currently being tested clini·
c-.tlly to determine their e!Tectivcness
in treating or preventing a number of
other conditions and diseases. irx:lud·
ing psoriasis. acne and CWlCCr.

of the study at Millard fillmore
Hospital. -aut aspiriin c1oes so
irreversibly for the life of a plate·
let. about seven 10 IOdays, while
ibuprofen only does so for fOUTor
five hours."
According to francis M.
Gengo. associate professor of
pharmacy at UB. director of
neurophannacology at Millard
fillmore and co-director of the
study. the working hypodlesis is
that ibuprofen and aspirin bind 10
the same receptor in the platelet.
"But aspirin can't produce its
effects if ibuprofen is already
there.'' said Gengo. "lfboth drugs
are taken together. the patient
will get the temporary effect of
the ibuprofen. rather than the per·
manent effect of aspirin ...
Tile researc~ now are expanding their study 10 include
o lder subjects tak ing both
ibuprofen and aspirin over a period of several weeks.
If they find that a similar mteraction exists. it may be prudent
for physicians and pharmacists
to recommend that patients who
take aspirin daily not use
ibuprofen until at least one hour
after they have had their aspirin.

"If retinoic acid can
reverse aging ofthe
skin, what is the
implication for the

inte17Ull organs?"

W

�-u.----....:-

Bade 81 UB, the Baldy Center fQrl.AlN and
Social Policy i 5pCliiiOriQa line

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--a

Continued lrom page 1
There, the swdents learn the innerwoo1&lt;ingsof
these agencies. In addilion, there is an academic
oomponern totheprogn1111and theswdentsaoend
a weekly seminar series, when: people from all of
the United nations and Olher in1m1ational agencies come to speak oo various topics, said Laura
Mangan,assisranldirectoroftheBaldyQnoerfor
law and Social Policy.
"Virginia Leary. who studied and worl&lt;ed
in Oeneva for over ten years. arranges the
internships for the students," Mangan said,
adding thai the program has been very successful and the seminar series has become popular,
attrncting many panicipants. ln addition 10 UB
students. the Oeneva Internship Program is
actively recruiting graduate students from uni·
versities in the Eastern United States.

nother progn1111 sponsored by the Human
Riglus Qnoer and the Ford Foundation is
Suppon for Capocity Building in Public lruemationall..aw.Theprogn1111providesfellowshipsfor
research suppon in Oeneva as well as The Hague
in the Netherlands, said Mangan. Eiglu fellowships have been awarded over the year.; and
projects on humaniUirian assislance and refugees
and exlr.lditioo have been condu:led. l..asl year
UB law studenl Bonnie Buller received one of
these Ford Foundation Fellowshipslostudy :u the
Ha8'"' and went oo to Geneva. Mangan added.
UB students have made significam COillribu·
tioos to human rights. David Johnson. PhD.
atndidaleinpolitical science,andCraigMolthiber.
law school graduate, both worl&lt; for the United
Nations Cenler for Human Rights. Welch reponed. And last year. UB graduate students sul&gt;mined their resean:h to the U.N. on the righl to
humaniUirian assistance. 'This project formed a
subject for discussion by them (the swdents)and
several U.N. ambassadors," he added.
Robcno Benedito,lawyerand doctoral candidale in anthropology at UB. also spent time

A

in Geneva learning how the U.N. functions.

Sponsored by lhe United Nations Infonnation
Agency and panially funded by the Protestant
Lawyer.; League of the Philippines and World
Council of Churches, Beneditostudied wilh 90
other interns from all over the world, and also
worked with a Fil ipino representative of indigenous communities as an observer on 1he

Wori&lt;ingGroupoflndigenous Affair.;(WGIA).
WGIA. which is part of the United Nations
Commission on Human

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AMHERST. N . Y .

Hours: Afo11-F1i /Oom-9pm ,Sat ! llom -6pm
691·7550

Ri ght~.

has the mis-

inlensive inlerdi.lciplin ~on'--'
rights this spring - The idea for this
CIJUI'SC was concei&gt;ltd by David Engel. professor of law and director of the Baldy Center for
LAw and Social Policy.
The goal is to "bring people wbo are directly involved in major human rights issues to
UB to present information to gradtlate students
and faculty," said Welch.
,
The filS of the visiting scholars was Rusen
Cakir, a Turkish jouma1isl wilb iriaals in the
role of lslamists and Kurdish refugees in Turkey
as well as the portrayal of Islam and war in the
mass rmdia. Cakir is Currcnly studying • the
Hwnan Rights AdvocaleS Training Program
Center for the Sludy of Human Rights a1 Columbia University, in New Yori&lt;.
During his visit to UB, he lectuml oo Islam.
Democmcy, and Human Rights. "In the We!!J.
there is a lot of misinformation aboul Islam,"
Cakirsaid.addingthal"manypeoplelack.knowledge or have pre-judgments aboul Islam and
democracy in Muslim countries."
Cakirsaid his course was intended "to inform
a little about Islam and the Islamic world... adding
thai he found UB facully and studeru "very
receplive and curious aboul these things."
Cakir has published several books on the role
otlslamic activists in Twl&lt;ey. a country when: 97
pcn:en1 of the people are Muslims but where
religion for the purposes of political advancemen~ is outlawed. His wori&lt;. which has been well·
received by lslamists and secularists in Twl&lt;ey.
aimslocreateadialoguebelweentherwogroops.
who for a loog time have been a1 odds.
Chalol&lt;a Beyani. research fellow. Wol(...,
College. mermerof the faculty of law :u Oxford.
wasthemostrecertt visiting scholar to teach in the
one-week seminar.
Beyani. an international lawyer who holds a
doctoral degree in international law. is from Zambia and has strong interests in international law,
the rights of refugees. and panicular interesl in
women's rights. '11le issue of worren's rights is
one of the most challenging topics." Beyani said.
adding thai women are comistendy glv.., Unequal trealment in spite of iniCmalional human
rights standards thai mandate equal trealme!tl
"I have spoken 10 women from Asia. Africa,
and Olher places, and il' s quite clear thai their
ooocems (about equality) are the same as Ihose of
wom:n from the We9.,'' Beyani Slllled, and went
on 10 argue thai while women·s roles vary in
different societies and in differcn1 cultural contexts, there are min imurn standards thai all nations
should follow regarding the rights of women.

sion to presen1 the grievances of indigenous
peoples againSI the state. as well as helping to
generale standanl. for human rights for indig·
a.&gt;reover, cuhure is often used to hang
enous peoples. Benedito reponed.
IWI onto privilege which results in all kinds of
The university" s involvement in human
discrimination. including gender discrimination.
rights no1only takes place in Europe but also
Beyani said. "The issue of women's rights is very
ngh1 here in Western New Yori&lt;.
much like when society accepted slavery :u one
On Thursday. March 25. the Human Rights
stage and 1atergrew1orcalizethat. in fact. slavery
Center along with the International Institute of was abominable.'' Beyani staled.
Buffaloand VJVE.Inc .. anorganil2tion for world
· During Beyani's seminar, hepresented inforrefugees. is sponsoring an "lntemntional Hearing
mation on the concept of human rights in internaon the Violation of Women· s Human Rights" :u
tional law; economic, social and cultural rights:
the Buffalo Museum of Science from 6:30-10 and human rights and humaniUirian assistance.
p.m. This event is free and open to the public.
Recently a commission investigating rights
The goal of this hearing is to convince the
abuses in the cetural Afric:Jn nation of Rwanda
public. human rights groops. and conference found a conunon grave of more than a dozen
organizers of the 1993 World Conference on
vic1ims in the bock yanl of a local govemment
Human RighiS. which will be held in Vienna this official. Death. tooure, jailing. and inlimidation
June. that they must "recognize women's rights are rantpQnl in thi small nation where the major·
and to take direct action 1o redres.' systematic
ity Hutu and minority 1\nsi are bottling for oonaltacks on women· s rights around the world,"
trol. Rwanda, like much of Afrjc:a. has ahistory of
explained Hall.
colonial rule, firs! byOermany and then Belgium.
AI the hearing women who haveexperienctd
Alison Des ·Forges. adjUllCl assistanl prohuman rights abuses will testilY as well as acafessor of history :u UB, commiuee member of
demics and.human rights activiSIS, Hall said. In
humanrightsgroup Africa:Watch.andchairof
thepost. "gcnderspecificaspec!Sofhumanrights · thelnternationalCommissiononViolenceand
abuses had not been subject to study;· she added.
Hwnlll Rights Abuses in Rwanda, was present
"We . want 10 lake these gender-relaled
in Rwanda when the-pave was excava1ed.
abuses out of the abstract and bring them into
"Africa WalCh, a division of the New Yorl&lt;reality by showi ng them as real violations or bosed Human Rights WalCh. is a wau:hdoggroup
· very real people." Hall related. adding that
monitoring civil and political rights in Africa,"
human rights abuses againsl women don 'I just .Des~ said. Its goal is to infmn !be-iiuemaoccur in faraway places bul right here :u home.
tional eornmmiry and provide infonT131ioo 00
The hearing wi ll focus on refugee women.
human righos forimemarional policymalcing. she
women of poveny. and on domestic violence,
said. adding thai the~ "wai:s tl]rough
all growing problei11S throughout the world
localiiK:ountrygrot!pSwherehumanrigtnalluses
and within Buffalo, Hall said. There win be a are being investigated..
panel bfhearer.; with differenl types or experWhile the corrunissioo was in Rwanda this
tise who are sensitive to the struggle ofwomen; JllSI January, Rwandan gowmmen~ ttficials orall oflhese hearers have "the ability lotakethe dered a hall to the state-Sj&gt;OOS(Rd violence, Des
in[ormation from the hearing .and _use il to F!igesreported. However, when theeotrmission
sensitize, educate ... and facilitatechange," she . leftllleoounttycoounmal violence resumed with
added.
radioreponsof53peoplebeing~shesai&lt;L,

�- U , .... _ M , _

Tlti.SSUI :

PsychologiCal
effects of
World Trade
Center disaster
on individuals
TNt: SPEAKE II:

... .......

...,.......,.....,_.,
..,

MlcMel ........ clllllcal

fllftlle1'11Jcllala .. c81

s..v~ce

c-tw 11t ue

Facul~&amp;sran

----

BIll

........... ofV-elon
~..uve,..,._

0

The Governor's Office of
Employee Relations has

announced an expansion in the
Vacalion Leave Donation Ex-

change Pilot Program.
Under the initial guidelines,
employees represented by CSEA,
Council 82 (Securities Unit), MJC
classified service, and M/C professional employees could donate

and/or receive donated vacation
TH -; QUOT E:
··For those actually involvedrescue worlcen and !hose in the
tower, the intital response is usually numbness. mechanical behaviorthal often serves them well
duringtheactualdisasler. There is
moch""""emotionaldistressthal
corres later-a week. a month,
even a year later. It can affect
many aspectS of life and if it is
handled poorly (with alcohol and
drugs. for instance), the result can
be wor.;e than it would have been
had the p!'Qblem been faced
Squarely.
People fare .better if they have
a good emotional support system,
if they aca:ept the legitimacy of
their emotional responSe and !hal
ifthcyarewillingtoaclmowled!l"
that it". ha!d 10 !U streSs like this
behind them
SympU&gt;rns in the immediate

afiennathofsuchdisastersinclude
most anxiety responses like sleep

disturtlance. jumpiness and survival guilt if friends orool~
are injured or killed.

Posarawnaricsuessisalsovery
common much after the fact.
Symptoms are nightmares. extreme anxiety, difficulty in coocentraring, irritability.
It's avery good idea for people
whoarephysicallyorpsychologically close to such events·to seek
short-term psychological help."

_

leave credits only within their

individual units. Under the ex-

UE '

B

0

AIEG; Jim Frost, director of
quality and reliability at the Harrison Division of General Motors.
and Ed Matyes, industrial engineering manager at International
Business Machines in Endicott,
N.Y.
Curt Reimann, director of the
Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award and the quality programs at the National Institute of
Standards and Technology in
Washington. D.C .• will deliver
the address at a banquet to be
held from 6:30-9:30 p.m. at the
Center for Tomorrow.

ployees may now donate and/or

lndustlial

~

students to clscuu -

quality at UB

0

con,._

Two-hundred industrial
engineering student s from
around the Northeast are expected
to attend a two-day conference on
··America's Quality Challeqge" at
th e North Campus on Saturday.
March 13, and Sunday, March 14.
Speakers during the program
will address a variety of issues
that are facing American industry
as it struggles to compete in an
ever-growing global market.
Speakers at the March 13
sessions. which will run from I 0
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on the second
floor of the Student Union, include John Lupien ski. quality
systems manager for Motorola

0

· "

NEW SMAKER S

panded program. however, emreceive donated vacation accruals
among all four units. Employees
represented by PEF and UUP are
not included in the progrnm at
this point.
Employees wishing either to
donate or receive vacation leave
accrual s should contact either the
Employee Relation s Section of
Person nel Services (645-2652) or
!heir appropriate union representative.

•. : ·

A program focusing on

total quality management
(TQM) and its role in reshaping
the American health care system
will be held from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. on Thursday, March 18, in
the Hyatt Regency Buffalo.
A State University of New
York .. Conversations in the Disciplines," the program will bring
together SUNY faculty and visiting scholars to examine TQM as
it relates to three areas: the effect
of TQM on the education of
health care providers. the effect
ofTQM on controlling patient
outcomes and the appropriateness
of the TQM model in health care
organizations.
Speakers will include Roben
W . DuBoi s, senior vice presidenl
of Value Health Services; Emmett C. Murphy, president of
E.C. Murphy, Ltd.; Dale V .
Shal ler. an independent consultant in the areas of health policy
analysis and management services. and Marsha Orsolitis
Stevie, director of quality research for the Cleveland Clinic
Foundation.
The program is sponsored by

A

R

0

the UB School of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences. UB School
of Nursing, Millard Fillmore
Hospitals and the Millard
Fillmore Health, Education and
Research Foundation.
It is supported by a grant from
SUNY to the UB Department of
Otolaryngology and the UB
School of Nursing. It also is supported by E.C. Murphy, Ltd.

Pl'ofnsloo181 Staff

Senate elects offic:ers

0

Newly elected officers for the
Professional Staff Senate have
been announced. They are: chair.
Rosalyn Wilkinson; vice chair, Mary
Kenyaua; secretary. Nccia Black.
They were elected to serve for the
periodfmmJuly 1, 1993to June 30.

1995.

Publications
.,.,.,_,
ctwt~~toiat-

associale archivist, is lhe aulhor of an article, "New York
Ouaka's Atrulg lhe Brotherion, Stockbridge,Oreida. and
Onandaga, 1795-1834," pubished i11.W!;, lhe Norlheast.
Densmore is also lhe editor of
Indian Religious Beliefs on
long Island: A Ouakw flc,.
count, v.tlich appeared in October in Ne.vYOO&lt;History,published by lhe New York Slate
Historical Association.

The Reporter

·~

UB

'&gt;

communit}'

nc~'&gt;paper

and ~c ~ant )'Du to
tMxomc in\lol\oC'd GtH' U'&gt; )Our
comment&lt;;, on cuncnt topiC'&gt;
rclaltnJ.! to the um,·er'&gt;tl) and
htl{hcr cduc;tbon a&lt;:. "'-CII a-. on
trmcl) S.UbJCC::I&lt;:. 1n area.-.. of )Our
c11.pert•~

We "clcome arttcle.,

Vtc,..poinl'&gt;. Letter'&gt; to the

Edi1or as. ,..ell as. nc""' •tern ..
Send matcrtal'&gt; to Ann
Whttchcr. Reporter Ed1tor. 136
Crof1'&gt; Hall. Buffalo N.Y. 14260

• CIIMM Trzcilllla, associate P!'Qfessor of fmance, discussed President Ointon·s
appointment of major economic advisors in an interView
on Dec. 16on KIRO Radio, the
No. I radio Station in the Pacific Northwest market.

• Work aimed at developing
ways to warn future civilizations about the dangers associated with nuclear-waste
disposal sites and led by
Mlcll.el Bltll, professor of
architecture, was featured in a
majorstoryinthe0ec. l6issue
of T/r, Chronic/., of Hig~r
Education . Brill's work on the
project was featured in a story
in the December Popular Sciena, and has been reported in
majornewspapersincludingthe
ws Ang•l.s Ti~s. It was the
subject of stories on CNN •s
"'Future Watch" and 'The EnvironmentShow,"heardon 114
radio stations.

• S..pr SrihM. professor
of computer science and director of the Center of Excellence
inDocumentAnalysisandRecognition. wa_,. interviewed on
the center's work developing

computers that can read handwrinenaddressesonenvelopes
in a major article ln the '"Science and Technology" section
of the Dec. 7 Business Week.
1becenter's work.wasfeatwed
also in a CNN interview with
Keltll
of CEDAR.

Betti._,

• A study by Karen Allen,
director of training for theRehabilitation Re search and
Training Center on Community Integration of Persons with
Traumatic Brain Injury, and
. . _ .u-vlclt. associate professor of psychology,
showing that pet dogs have a
more soothjngeffect on women
who are taking a test, than do
their best female friend was
featured in a roundup of stories
in the December Se,•enteen.
-

comp1led by the UB News

Bureau

~~~~s ------------------Leners
g
s
Women Month salute to unsung heroines

EDmiR:
In observance of Women 's Month. the AfriCan Amencan Women of the Unrversity at Buffalo salute the
women of the 20th cenlury lor their signifiCant contributions toward achievrng America's unfulfilled pr""'"
ise of equality lor all. While reflecting on the many
ac.hievemenls of lhe pasl 92 years. we must note the decadence of
our times, and the struggle thai continues 1o encompass today's
WO(Tlen.

Kids' Day

Dave Woodworth of Alpha Tau Qmega.seJis a copy of the Buffalo
News Kids' Day edition to UB student Mike Tahirak. Proceeds from
sales of the March 3 special edition benefitted Children's Hospital.

. We are particularly pleased in applauding this diverse group of
women at the University al Buffalo.for their efforts tci end gender discrimination within the university. These women deserve special recognitiOn for their commitment to promoting an atmosphere conducive to
the academic. personal development and growth of faculty, slaff and
studenls. Allhough you may not be reCognized" individually for your
accomplishmenls, you are the unsung heroines of lne women's movement.
On beha" of all those who have benefited from your efforts. and
those still unaware of them, we thank you. We encourage .you to continue to advocate a human rights agenda. The African American
Women stand ready to assist you in setting and achieving your goals,
meeting daily challenges, and surmounting all obslacles. Today, the
university community. is in a pivolal posilion lo help America live up to
its potential.

----.,--u.e. .lllr.,_Y_ot_

�- ........ _.., __
• he oorriu a yo.~:.
l&gt;ulter rmtdk a71d
ya.l:~ offtri11f11
tlool ..M plou8

;,..;,u IN. lmapk
b.fore 1M a/Jar of
Sa.i:ya11luni. The

__....

wpper candk i.o
8J1111holi&lt;; of IN.
tltmaltKJatd jlaJM_ .
/Jolh offtri10fll a"
pibu IJd4 a7ld

...WSS,

photographer

·-eo«

"Trru•eliny
in TibPf. I
11"{(8

her nw!riJ.
,,... Mlpi1l{/ her
toward " good
rebirth ;,. IN. life.

rfN!JJf.tJ

llwtwl by
I//(' r·o111 pa8-

Ramoche Temple,
Lhasa. Tibet

8ion rmd

8pirifua/
.fernor of the
Tibetan
pe(Yple.''

G

L

M

p

s

E

s

0

F

A

Onoo-Forb ·dden Land
PILGRIM MOTHER AND CHILD

T ashi lhunpo )J oni\Ri t•ry. Shigat!Of;• .

Central Tibet

-ANDS~

la nd ." Lewis writes. ':Tibet is a uniquely spiritual civilization that today is

Oanden Monastery, northeast of Lhasa,

Tibet

in danger of extinction . Despite more than 40 years of brutal hardship under
the Chinese. the distinctive spirit of this Buddhist nation and its people hSB
endun.&gt;d ." WcdnL'Sday.

~la rch

10, she notes, marked the 44th anniversary of

TibCt 's popular uprising against Chinese occupation . • Lewis' photos depict
ha unting Hima laya n landscapes, gold-roofed monasteries, stri king archi~·
TH. MAIN-~ MARKin' IN
QYANTS•, c•NniAL n•IIT

Dna an importanJ market town and
mililmy renler, Gyanl.!e liM alang main
carova11 rouiM from buli&lt;l. /Jhu/an a71d
Ntpalto Lhasa. A rui"'d fm-trWI Ihal
onu guardtd lht city can IN sten on the
hill.

tural studies tLnd intimate portraits of religious pilgrim , nomsds, street
Barkhor Bazaar, Lhasa. Tibet
merchants and monk . • Currently \\:riting a book on her travels, ·Lewis is
herself studying Tibet.sn Buddhism under the guidance ofSogyal Rinpoche,
a Tibetan Lama .

�</text>
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......

lpiULM
. OIIC8mpua
Fdrrmaker electrifies
audierce at UB with
"the stories behind
the stories."
,.

~poet

3

gives Ma1in Luther
Ki1g Jr. Carmem-

aatille Adctess. . .

Que.tloils,

Race and
lheMeclll

Answera
wt-N corrmunity asks
President Greiner,
others about UB on
'M3FO call-in

shaN, .

5

Panelists from racfo, TV
and print joumafiSm
discuss treatment a
racial issues in the

4

media

..

0

Chalk One up for the
Environment
II)' ANN W*ICIIER
Reporter Editor

A

series of policies recent! y
issued by the
university
amount to a "milestone"
in campus environmental
awareness, say.s Ronald
Nayler, associate vice
president for facilities and
chair of the UB Environmental Task Force.

UB puts policies in effect to curtail waste,
..,otect environment
policies follow a review by President
Greiner, Provost Aaron Bloch and the
vice presidenrs, oforiginal recommendalions from the univer.;iry' s Environmental Task Force.
"They are a major resu lt of work

McGill."' Nayler said. "The auempl

ronmenlallyawareindenvironmenlally sensitive in the daily business
ofthe universily."'
What is sough! with the new policies. Nayler emphasized, isn ' 1 so
much adherence to a series of rules.
as it is the desire to create, or at least
encourage, a different climate or
culture of environmental awareness.
Roger McGill, who is assistant

is to make our campus more envi-

vice president and direcwr of cam-

done by one of the subcommittees.
that of Administrative Processes and
Procedure s, chaired by Roger

pus services. puis il this way. "In
developing these policies. the Task
Force was hoping to create a climate
where all members of the university
community would share a sense of
responsibility to help identify other
university practices that are harmful
to the environment. Bynomeansare
these policies inrended 10 be exhaustive. Rather they are the first step
toward our goal. which is to have a

The directives are expected to
sharply curtail waste in a number of
areas. including campusphone book

continuousreview of the ways we do

business and have everyone involved

in that continuous review.··
The policies, says Waller
Simpson, Task Force member and
UB energy officer. indicate that UB
"is serious abour being a leader and

setting an environmental example
for the rest of Western New York.
Our new environmentaJ policies
poim in rhe direction of real change ...
"'While the impetus for the environmental awareness and protection
has come rhrough the Task Force."'
says Roger McGill, "really the true
achievement comes·through the~
operation of the full campus communiry supponing and lending its
effons in implementing the policies."

Unlike other subcommiuees
whose work is more narrowly defined. said Nayler. McGiU's group
has its domain a range of concerns
touching on the work of everyone at
the university. "The university· s new
environmental policies are far-reaching," says Simpson. "The work/pro-

production and regional phone book

distribution.
According to Senior Vice J&gt;resiUcnt for Un iversity Services Roben
J. Wagner, the policies are in effect
unmcdimely and concern:

• Campus Wor\JProduction Pro-

duction practicesand.environmental

ccsse~

purchasing policies. if fully implemented. would change the way we
do business here at UB. ··
McGilladdsthat"individualswho
experience problems in implementing these policies or wouJd like to
make suggestions for other initiatives may write to the Task Force.
c/o Ron Nayler. 102 Beane Cenrer.
North Campus."

• Purchasing
• Campu&gt; Telephone Directory
U:-.e and Distribution
• Regional Telephone Dirc&lt;:wry Use and Distribution
• Campu; Mail
• Campu~ Newspaper&gt;
In a memo drculated throughout
the u~iversity. Wagner said the new

UB

ENVIRONMENTAL

. c....-~
The universily will promote and publicize the impiemel)tatiOn of work/productiOn processes !hat "maximize Jhe
use of recycled produots, minimize or elimina~ waste,
seek economies end efftciencies. and reduce lha consumption of energy."

..........

•~"'''*
Distribution will be limited lo,no more than Ol'lEl 'tor
each full and part-time faculty and staff member. Wherwer possible, d~ectories should be shared.
11!1 Addttional. c:op;es.f6r home·use wiil not be available.

will be encouraged 1o use electronic telephone listings
in place of paper directories.
.

.............

The university will!ry to procure products !hat are:
• Durable (as ~posed to single-use or diSposable).
·• Made of recycled materials.
• Non-toxic or minimally toxic. preferably biodegradable.

' • Highly energy effiCient in produclion and use.
• Recyclable, but if not: can be safely disposed of
from raw marerials oblained in an environmen• The Olftce of Publicallons will continue 1o reduce overtally sound manner and manufaclured in a way !hal is ·
all page numbers in the directory through typographic
responsive
to environmenlal concerns.
means and by minmirng adllertisinQ.
• 'Recycled newsprinl and water-based
evailabl~ty perinilting.

usep.

sey inks will be

· ·Made

• Shipped wilh minimal packaging; preferably made of.
recycled and/or recyclable malerials,
,
• Produced locally or regionally (lo mininize the environmenlal cosls associaled with shipping). ·

• Efforts will be made to recycle used direclllries.
• The unillersity wili discourage
of non-recyclable
covers.
~...
• As complete talephone listings become more widely
• ~practical, internal communications sttOOid
available through computer ne!works, th&amp; UB community · be accomplished via eleclronic mail

uSe

POLICY
• When n~sary Jo communicate by hard copy,
use reusable campus mail envelopes.
• Individuals should atlempllo send written COIT'frunicalions only to those ..00 need the information.
• Sealable envelopes should be used only for conf~
dential mailings. Address lists 5hould be carefully
screened to eliminale redundancies.

• As often as possible, mailings 1o other State agencies should be done lhrOugh the Interagency Mail
System.(Aibeny Shuttle) provided by the state.

Oilier
• An Sl(etltual 90 percenl reduction in NYNEX/White
Direclory phone book use on campus, Is envisioned.
"Few members of Jhe UB community have a business
need for a regional telephone directory, lhUs many ·
unnecessaiY copies' of this directory are distrilutad

here."
• ~newspapers, such as The Reponer, will
ptpmOte ·an ethic ot newspaper sharilg," monilor
dislribution and use patterns, be conservative in page
coon~ and use reCycled neWsprinl and - . o - l
W'f inks, w11e0 aveilable.

�_.,

2

_
..
_
................

__

..,_

..

ARCHITEClURE

~end ... , . . _,

isn•t

al rnembn d the Dept d
ArChilectln, are r.api8nl8 d
!his yew's Arroericen ~ .
d ~(AlA) ElullllkW
WN'f Honor Aiolaldl.
The ~~noe-. hcnOnld 11 a
Jan. 19..-ds ..... heldl0
racogize merrl:lera' "b88l
ac:liiMmlras and 10 hctl118
'101&lt;14:1 10 .... pUJiic eye."
MacKay is a principal in .
~ FollsAibechl
~.which AIC8illed a
Fin11 AWflld lor its design d
the Molorola AIEG Fecilily.
Foil won honorable mention lor the Eagle Stteet·Parking Garage, daaigned by
Foil-Albert AssocialeS, ol
which she Is prnoidenl
Tabeme&lt;, architact for a
private residence, also received honorable mention.

Paris," concedes

-~

GeOI'g Q ........ SUNY
Distinguished Professor·of
Histcxy, was recently presented with a Feslschrift, a col-

lection ol
essays dedicated to him
pn the occasion of his
65th birthday. This
tradi1ional
German hooorhedan
unusual tWist, in that it began
as a joint project among West
German', East German and
American historians before
the fall of the Berlin Wall. The
work includes 31 contributions by historians from bolh
Western and Eastern parts of
Germany, the United States,
Great Btitaln, France, SWeden, Austria. Poland, RIISSia
the People's Republic of China and Taiwan.

IGGERI

GEOLOGY

_..,_,

~C..._Q .

professor of geology, has
been elected a felow In the
American GeooiMiical

Edwanl N. Brody,
who bas left the
CityofUgbtsaftt:r
22 yean to take over the chairmanship of UB 's Biological Sciences
[)epertmonL "Butir'sapleasantplace
to live. There's theater, there's music. there's the Philharmooic."
Originally, from Oticago ('"E"""
in Oticago you don't ooe as many
people on the Slr&lt;elS as you do in
Paris"), Brody has spen1 the past 22
years in Europe. four of them as rosearch director in the Cenue de
Genttique Mol6culaire 31 the French
National Research Council and 18 of
them as the research diR:ctor 31 the
lnstilUideBiologiePhysico&lt;himique.
lr's a life that has left him with a
face thallool&lt;s as lhoush it should be
debating politics over cafe table, a
voice that sounds as thoush it could
slide into French as easily as gravel
off a shovel, and, he says. "children
all over the world." Excited though
he is to be taking up the challenges
presented by the Biology Depanment here, both he and his wife.
Lydia. who is French, are finding the
transition a challengi ng one. Brody
says that while both of them are
enjoying discovering Buffalo's cultur.li life-they visited UB 's Preifer
Theateroverthe holidays-they have

a

to admit to a little homesickness.

"She's having a hard time. Her an
is very Parisian, and depended on

seeing things in Paris."
There are consolations. Science.
for example.
" I left some work behind, I
brought some. and I expect to be
collaborating with about 18 people
over there," says Brody. who adds
that one of his doctoral students,
Mohamed Ouhammousch, opted to
make the transition with him. "But
scientificLalk isthesamealloverthe
world. I was attracted by the chance
to help build up a depanment that' s
young and expanding."
Primarily a molecular biologist
specializing in RNA (ribonucleic

Taking Biology
Into New Areas
Edwn N. llrodJ COlliN to UB as clullr of lliolof.Y
frolll Nil lrV posts Ill Europe
acid) splicing, and in what he calls
"the ambiguous process of gene expression in humaneeDs," Brody feels
thai the Biology Departmental UB
is extending into areas beyond the
domain of the School of Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences. wilh which
it usually collaborates. His appointmenthereand
his return to
the U.S. was
the subject of
an article in
the Dec. 7 issue of Th•

disappears. But viruses themselves
tend to become less viNlent. It's in
the intereSt of a virus to find equilibrium with ils hosl. because if it kills
its hosl. it effectively commits suicide-it disappears. after doing 1!&amp;mendous damage. of OOIIISC. The
trouble wilh AIDS is thai. bocauoe it's
sexuallytrdJISmiued, people
have children
after they' ve
contracted it,
and the virosis
effectively re-

Scit ntist.
" I think
there's a role
for the Biology Department in the
natural sci~
ences: one is a
collaborntion
with chemical
biology, and
the other is an
application to
population biology-the
way a gene
chaliges in a
population as
itgetsexpoood
in
to a disease. In
fact, thai's an
area thai borde&lt;sonanthropology."
It's also an area currently occu·
pied by research lrito AIDS; Brody
says he can't beeenain, but he thinks
an answer wiD be found.
"In general viruses tend to be
devastating at first. but then as the
population gets used to it, the virus

"'do think
that among
some of the
vaa:Dlesbeing
USfld. I think
they will find a
vaccine for it"
The other
area in which
UB 's Biology
Oepu1rnent is
drifting, says
Brody, is ecology. He has returned
to
America 31 a
lime when the
Frenchareperfeeling automated pooper
.cDWAIID IL _ ,
scooper.; fo r
the SIJ'eelS of
Paris and when
AI Gore. the AnErican champion of
ecology. has the vioe JXI'Sldency.
"Eastern Europe is an ecological
disaster. They're going to have decades of clearing up to do.
"In Western Europe there is ecology the science, and ecology thepoliti-

~·

"/think there's a role for
· the Biology Department
the natural sciences. ,

cal ~ which allies wilh the
rigla: ittmdsto be verydogmolic, very
na1icn11iS1ic, and very extreme," says
Brody, who adds that this lt:Ddoncy is
a dorninln one """" lllllOn8 groups
who claim to lean to the left.
"''m very suspicious, as I am of:
animalrig!Uexlremisls. They'remore.
right-wing da! they are left,.wing. It's
!Ill( the way. In that...,.._ America is
more advaooed: you have to be infanned and then. once you know wh3l
the issues are, you can inlluenee the
parties. lobby as we do in America."

As

be brousht it up, is Brody
aware that experiments on animals on UB's C8lJ1lUS have been oppooal. in the past, by animal rights
activists?
He's not surprised.
"You have to l.llder.;taod thai as
weD as a PhD. I 1\ave an MD.; I took
the HippocrnticOalh. rm inlerested in
alleviatinghumansuffering.andlthink
thai's more~ rve never met
anyone in the scimoes who took any
pleasure in hurting animals.
'1beonlywaytoexperiment isto
stan with cells, but if you proceed
directly from there to human beings
you can do a lot of damage. and
indeed al01 of damage has been done
that way," he says. Brody adds that
current research into AIDS consists
mainly of the study of human cells
and of monkeys, in whom a similar
d isease,eaii~RIVorR.etrolmmuno

Virus, has been detected.
" I think animal testing is important, obligaiOry. and should be, and
some very imponam research has
been destroyed by exuemists."
He misses things. He misses the
days when, in Europe, a bold experiment was likely to be funded ("now
all the projects have to be more con·
servative") and when there was the
money to fund it with ("now there's
more research being proposed than
there is money'').
He also misses people but he will
continue tocoDabornle with those he
left behind; he's excited by talking
"scientific talk" with his new colleagues.
"You can live without bnlsseries.
but you miss them."

Internationally-renowned philosopher John Searle
to speak March 12 on limits to computer 'thinking'
IJBUII--

Cognitive Science, Searle's talk,
"'The Problem of Consciousness,"
OHN SEARLE. an internawill address what he sees as the key
tionally renowned phiiOS&lt;&gt;- factor that distinfiuishes the nature
pher and one of the leading of human thought from computaproponents of the belief that . tional reasoning.
computers wiD.never be able to du·
Free and open to the public, the
plicate the properties of the human talk will be held 813 p.m. in 20 Knox
mind, will speak at UB on Friday,
Hall on the North Canipus. His talk
March 12.
isbeingCO:.sponsoredbyiheDepanAs a philosopher associated with
ments or Philosophy and Linguisthe relatively new field o( cogrpiive tics.
science. which draws on philosoSearle is professor of philosophy
phy, attificial intelligence. psychol- 31 the University of California at
ogy, linguistics and anthropology, Berl&lt;eley. He originally achieved
Searle's views are fairly unique. The prominence as a philosopher of lanmajorityofcognitivescientistsmain- guage, developing a comprehensive
tain thai computers, in principle, are account of acts that speaker.; percapable of the same functions a•
form. such as asserting. warning.
human minds.
promising, which had no1 been theoSponsored by UB 's Center for
retically characterized. He has also

News Bureau Staff

J

developed theories about the nature
of lhousht. belief and other menuli
states and actions.

M

ore reeenUy, he has attacked
attempts to correlale human
thinking with the operation of computers, chiefly with his ''Orinese
Room ArgumenL" This scenario
envisions an Eliglish-speal&lt;ing person in a cloSed room. who receives
Chinese messages from ·outside.
• Because he· has an instruction
boo!&lt; thai allows him to produce
Olinese responses to the messages.
the-people outside the room mistakenly think he knows Chinese.
Searle's argument is that even if
computers can be programmed to
produce· appropriate responses,
they-like the person in the Olinese

I'OOI1l---Qill cannOI uodersland their

own answers.
Searle, who has taught 81 Christ
Church College 81 Oxfonl University, has been a visiting professor at
UB and many ocher univmities. includin&amp;Syracusc,R.utg&lt;rs,Coforado.
Washington, Michigan, Venice,
Frankfurt and the College de France.
He is the author of IJ!llllCfO'!:S
books, including ~.ch ~cts; 77rL
CompusWar,ExprrssiontllldM.an- .
ing; MiNh. Brains and &amp;Uta: and
R•discovuy ofthe Mind.
A~ of the Neurosciences
Reseatch Program of Rockefeller
University and the American Academy of Arts and ScienCes. he also
serves on the National Council ofthe
National Endowment for the Humanities.
r

�_.., _ _ ..,_u

3

Filmmaker Spike Lee tells the stories behind the stories
_,_WA~M

Spike Lee
11M alflllle
for the c:.m-

Reporter Staff

E

YEN IF YOU'D known that the
35-year-old filmmaker stood five
foot six in his Nikes, you would
.
have been forgiven for thinking
that the capacity audience who rose
to their feet were applauding a high school
student who'd stumbled into someone else's
limelight. Thi.;, on closer inspection. proved to
be Spike Lee. who anived Sunday night at
Alumni Arena surrounded by roving-eye security guards and who chaued for an hour·before
inviting "intelligent and informed" questions
from the audience.
That invitation may. of course, have been a
backhanded swipe at the press. Earlier, he had
silenced a no-nonsense, let' s get-this-overwith news conference that aimed to draw out
his views on race relations and globaJ politics,
by saying, "''m only filmmaker. I tell stories." Now, as he leaned above the podium, he
proceeded to tell the stories behind the stories.
In oontrnst to the rronosyllables behind which
he'd hidden from the news conference, however,
Spike Lee wasmorethanatease withhiseleclrilied
young audience: plainly, he was enjoying himself.
Lee went back to his own "school daze" at
Morehouse College, where he'd made a 45minute fibn based on the ooincidenre, in 1977, of
the popularity of disco music with a blackoot in
New YO&lt;Ic aty. ("They were doing the hustle.
There was also a lot of black people lootin ·.')That
film won him his degrre, and he went on to NYU.
where he won a stL&lt;Ient academy award, signed
himself up with an agen~ and waited f&lt;rthe phone
to ring.
It didn't
"I was naive. At least my friends were gettin •
ABC Specials. I was gettin' nothing."
His next film, Messenger, was never finished
('1 got involved with some shady producer.;')
because Lee ran into a problem that would become
familiar to him: he ran out of money bef&lt;re he'd
completed shooting.
"So I scaled down. I said I'd make something
that wouldn'ttalrealotofmoney.That was how we
madeShi! 's GomJ Hav&lt; l~ whichweshotin 12days
in Juiyof ' ~ with only S I2,00lto get it in the can."
The daily schedule remained dependent on
whether there were enough checks in the mail to
cover shooting. "We hopOOthey weren't out-oftown checks because wecouldn 't wait ten days for
them to clear. Anyone who threw away a soda can
ora boUle was~ becauseweneededthenickels.
Those soda cans and boUies bought a roll of film"
LeesoldthefilmtolslandPicturesfor$27,00l,
paid his cast and crew. and ntised the money for
Schoo/.l:Jau. which he based on a black college
campus in the South that loosely reflected
Morehouse.

· pnou
c:ontetence
precednC his
talk In Alumni

Ataila.

a

"When I hail a cab in
New Yo~ there sstill only
a 50150 chance that I'll

get one. "
-LD
Inspired by his memories that "Women got no
play ...until they crossed what the Alphas called
the burning sands" of the fraternities and sorori·
ties. it used membershipandnoh·merrilership as
a metaphor for the color of one's skin. and the
campus itself as a micro-metaphor for society.
He added that the fibn did not go down well
with Morehouse. ''Originally, they wanted to
wipe me out, as though I'd never existed. Now
I' m on their Board of Trustees. It's funny how
things can change that quicldy."
Again. a pattern was beginning: by the age of
30,Leehadmanagedtoplacehimselfatthecenter
of a controversy that hasn' t gone away. He'd
already been criticized for She 's Go«a Have It
( 1986) for "airing dirty laundty on behalf of Afro
Americans," an opinion voiced "by a white
An\erica"hesaidAfrican-Americanshad learned
to ignore. Meanwhile, he· d begun to contemplate

a film based on the real life flight of a black man
from a gang of wlti1e youths armed with baseball
bats; he'd also read that the trurder ra1e in NYC
went up when thetempernturetopped 95degrees.
Again. he chose a microcosm, sening Do ~
Right Thing in a claustrophobic, New Y ode summer that revolved around a pizzeria.
'1 wanted the fibn to be a mirror to show what
race relations are in the country. It was never our
intenttoprovidcananswer.lthinkitwasanunfair
criticism that wedidn"l ... One thing we were sad
abOOl was the way the press kept people away
from the theaters by saying the fibn would sta1t
riots. This was the summer of '89, and we all
know how black people get in the summertime...
The irony of a remark like that reveals the fact
that. say what he might abOOl just telling stories.
the sto&lt;ies themselves are barbed There's the
story of 16-year-old Yusuf Hawkins, for example, whose death on April 24, 1991 inspired
first the violence of Bensonhur.;t and then the
"modem day lynehing" behind lung~ F~r.
There's also the story within that story of the
charncter.; Hipper and Angie, who find themselves mixing an interracial relationship with
popular notions of beauty.
"We're bombanled with millions of miUions
of images of bkxxle hair, blue eyes being the
epitomeofbeauty in this country. We end up being
victim&lt;; to that. A lot of white females can't deal
with that. because they don ' tlook like models. but

for us as a people it has a deepcrdfect." Henol&lt;e
wanrx:d to his theme, bt.l named no names. "'t
makesushateoun;elves.ltmakesuswanttoligl&amp;en
our skin. and cu away our noses, am straigiun
our hair."
o if the sto&lt;ies are only minors, are they
not messages as well? And who can tell
them?Leesaid he 'dbeen invitedtomakeapi&lt;:tln
abOOl Malcolm X. for eXample. but had never gtt
the letter; he'd then read in the lr.lde papers that
a film had been contr.!Cted and that Norman
Jewison was directing.
"When I read that. I said 'Ott no ..
"Now I don't think that blacks should only
makeftlmsaboot black peoplejust as I don 'tthink
that whites should only make films abOOl wlti1e
people, but therearespeciflcfilms where ifyou're
from that backgrwnd it can only enhance the
subject matter. Norm:m Jewison will never know
what it is to be an African-American.
"When I hail a cab in New York. there's slill
only a 5G'50 chanoe that I'll ll"' one. I'm not
complaining; that·s just the way it is. Black males
are slill followed into stores by security guards.
becauseyouknowthat'sall we do, is rob and steal.
My hair still stands up when I'm 3Jlil"l"Ched by
the cops. because they might not know who I am,
I could be just another nigger to take outside.
''So I rried to convey to Norman !Ia I'd be a
better choice..J was very for1Unale in that he saw
my reasoning and gracefully bowed out."
Jewison 's agreement to do so is r.estamorn
enough to the wheeler-&lt;lealer charm with wltich
Lee can oven:ome problems. ''Wewarledsanething with the scope and scale of David Lean's
ti1Jm, and instead of going to Africa they suggested we ~ on a .Jersey shore in January.
Where we were going to ll"' 5,00l Ar.tb extras
was our problem," he said. In the end, he'd
wangled not only the location but an Islamic crew
to~ wide shots inside Mecca. b&lt;coming the
first Hollywood directa to be let anywhere near
Mecca by Islamic authorities.
''Ofcoun;e, this was the same Islamic government that sentenoed Salman Rusbdie to death, so
we had to be extra, extra, exua respeclful"
The fibn itself. he said, is just a story, his
vetliion of one of many Malcoi!Il't But it is, he
added. a deeply spiritual view ofa deeply spiritual
man. "Denzel Washington (who plays the black
activist) was in the same place spiritually. To do
that he cut out meat. he cut out alcohol. How can
you play Malcolm X ifyou' reeatingp&lt;XIcrinds?
He also started to read the Koran daily. spealdng
Ambic- hedid all those things to get to that place
spiritually."
As well as touring the country's theaters, the
film is touring prisons. ''What we rried to do, the
way Malcolm twned. around in prison. maybe
these young brothers would do that. too.·· be said.

S

Faculty, students, commtmity leaders honored at King Commemoration

T

WOUBSTIJDENTSreceivedscholaiships, and ~veral Buffalo elementary school students, UB faculty and
Buffalo community leaders were honored Feb. 25, as pan of the Martin Luther King
Jr. Commemoration at UB.
The following individuals received awards
at the Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration
Awards luncheon held in the Center for Tomorrow on the North Campus:
Ursula Cargill, a student in tjte UB Graduate
School of EducaQon. received the. I993 Martin
Luther' King Jr. Scholarship Award. The$ 1,00l
awardwasgiven byKennethGayles. M.D.,aUB
medical school graduate who pra&lt;:tices in Buffulo, in memory of his mother. Lu1a (iayles.
Michael Roberts. anundetgraduatestudent m the
Department of Modem Languages and Litem·
tures, received the $500 Mrutin Luther King Jr.
Academic Achievement Award from the UB
Minority Faculty and Staff Association.
A full-time Ph.D. student in the Department of
Organi7.ation, AdministratiOn and Policy. Cargill
has established an out&lt;tanding academic record.
:~~;hieving u GPA of 3.8. Her doctoral research
concerns "Student Retention in Higher Educa-

tion: The Impact ofSocioacademic Pluralism on
in private industry before coming to UB , most
the Retention of Students in Four-Year Higher
reCently as dealer pans zone manager for Ford
Education Institutions." She has been active in the
MotQr Company in Dearborn. Mich.
Department's Graduate Student Association and
ichael S.L. Roberts has been on the
has also contributed to the univetliity as a team
. dean's list for four semesters and =tly
lecturer in OAP 606a. a graduate level coursed
has a QPA of3.7. He achieves high gJades not
offered by her &lt;ieporureni.
only in languages, but also in soch subjects as
''She is most helpful to the students who often
calculus. His study of languages-includes Freoch.
seek her advice and assistance." wrote one of the
Spanish and German andhasrecentlyextended to
nominators. ''Sbe is a talented teacher and under·
Japanese. "His academic interests are indicative
stands hllll13R nature and people." A• for her
of his intention to coiTliTI1nicate and w0&lt;1c with
scholarship, wrote another, "her fiJl!ll thesis will
people of the work!," S!3led one letter of Sl!PJlOrl.
be a sub!ilaJ]tiai qxitribution to the literarure on
"Certainly, this global approach to his career, will
student development in undergraduate senings."
Active in COil1JTIJllity service, Cargill has also. allow for potentiaily signifJCant social contribuwO&lt;Iced to organize a mentoring progrnm that . tions." As a freshman. he was elected to membership in Phi Ela Sigfll'l National Freshman HQ09f
matchesminoritygraduatestudentswithchildren
who attend inner&lt;ity schools. Cargill is an active . Society and is now a member of the Golden Key
Honor Society.
member of Delta Sigma Theut Inc., Buffalo
In the past year. Roberts has won scholirships
Alunmae Olapeer. a public service organization,
from the Buffalo Foundation and the Buffalo
and has been actively involved in chapter activiUrban League and won the Linda Rock Scholarties lhat included a voter D'ill1sportation drive
ship. given annually by the UB Department of
oonduc:ted during the recent election. She is the
Modem Languages for excellence in French.
group's current recording secretary.
He is a panicipain in the SUNY Empire
The recipient of M.B.A and B.S. degree&gt;
State
Minority Honors Progr.un. "Michael is
from Morgan State University. Cargill worked

M

highly motiVated and hardworidng." wrote one
individual who nominated himfortheaward. "He
works 30hoursa week to support himselfand pay
for school. and yet still manages to excel at school
w&lt;XIc. Besides his academic prowess. Michael is
athooghtful, artiaJiate and CXlU!1COUS young man." ·
Additionally, MaggieSaxonWright,assistant
dean for S!Went affairs in the School of Medicine
and Biomedical sciences, received a special appreciation award· from the Minority Faculty and
StaffAssociation. Sincejoining the medical school
staff in 1981 , Wright has been insrrume!\tal in
startinginnovaiiveprogramstoattraaS!Wentsto
medicineandotherscientific fieldsthalhavebeen
historically Wlderrqlresented by minorities.
Receiving Martin L.uther.King atizen Recognition Awards from the Mincrity Facuhy and
Staff Association. were: Jessie Mae Anderson.
who has done community service w&lt;XIc for 49
years;Ste()hanieA. Barber, whohasmore,than 15
years experience in human services, government
and volunteer work. and Paula Alcala Rosner.
who w&lt;XIcs with the Small Business Development. Center at Buffalo State College and is a
former director of the Puerto Rican American
Community AssoCiatiOO Inc.

�_..,

4

__

U ~- are r•tlrla• wlt.lda

tlae aed tea ~...... ~­
. will . . facia• - • of tlae

.,_

..

Public queries administrators
about UB on radio call-in show

•••t laportaat na-clal
•eca.to. . of

~_..

Ufel

Under Federal lAw (The Employu Retirement Income Security Act and
The Retirement Eqult)' Act of I 9114), all mamed em ployua who are enUtled
to a pension from their employer have two main options at retirement.
OP'IIOft Aa

Provides a ~time pension for the retired employee. But,
It the employee d.les bdore his/ her spouse, 110 UI'ETI/IIE
PENSION Is payable to the survhrlng spouse.

OP'IIO!f ••

Provides a REO&lt;JCED llfeUme pension for the retired em·
ployee. tr the employee dies first, part of the monthly
Income from the pension continues to be paid to the
survhrlng spouse.

__

Under the options, as they exist, many reUrees discover that they must
either reduce their monthly pension Income by as much as 30'11. or run the
r1sk ol disinheriting their spouse.

.,

There IS a solution to this dilemma. By recognizing the problem and
dealing with It BEFORE retirement, you can pnovlde a monthly Income for
your spouse In the event. ol your death ... wlthout ·reduclng your monthly
pension Income.

Reporter StaN

For details on how you can sohre the Marriage Penalty that Is built Into your
current pension plan, simply call, or retum the coupon below to:

~ THE

1l.EQUITABLE

Don Marinucci, David R. Greene
336 Harr1o HOI Road South
WJUJamsvOJe, NY 14221
(7115) 631·4830
1531·4764 (FAX)

Name ---------------------------------------------Adttress _____________________________________________
Phone ______________________________________________
Bes t

time to ca ll ---------------------------------------

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to a private showing.
See State-of-the-Art office
technology for the 1990's

Canon I'P ~,ERS

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on State Contract or Federal GSAContract
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
12 ·noon til 8 p~m.
at the Buffalo Marriott
1340 Millersport Highway, Amherst, New York 14221
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Please R.S.V.P. 631-3291

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canon
iitiiOidiiiULa .

T

ALK RADIO HAS elehed its way
into the American consciousness.
National figures like l..arTy King
and Rush Umbaugh have given
Americansawaytovoicetheiropin·
ions on a wide range of issues. Whether the
topic is foreign aid or racism, public education
or gang violence. the public has responded in
overwhelming numbers.
A portion of UB' s administration took its
tum in front of the microphone on Feb. 24.
when President William Greiner. Vice Prcsi·
denl for Public Service
and Urban Affai rs
Muriel Moore and
Vice President fo r Stu·
dent Affairs Robert
to
Palmer, took to the air·
wavesonWBF088.7
FM far an hour to answer questions about
to
the university from the
citizens of Buffalo.

hard to ensure that we would have no increases
or new fees of signi.ficance forth is year. ln fact.
in some cases we were a~le to reduce the fees.

particularly for the pan-time students."
Another caller pJOed a question abwt the
proposal to expand the jurisdictioo of Public
Safety officers. Greiner said. "' am favorably
disposed to expanding the jurisdictioo of our
CII11JXlS security fan::e. ..so thai it can bener do its
job." But be also said that the main jab of
campus security should be policing the campus. ··1have nodesile for our campus security
force to be a general police agency in the
community. It just seems to me that our campus security force
should be focused pri·
mari ly on the campus
to
and on the outlying
build ings like
Bethune."
There was a call
about the safety at
Bethune. An art stu·
denLrecently was held

"What I've tried do
... has been keep the
university on course, but
change some ofthe
administrative structure
and some ofthe dialogue
about thefuture. "

Program host Mark
Scott asked Greiner
about the direction UB
hastak~naverthe past
18 ·manths.
"I like to think
we've stayed on the
course that this un iversity has been on for
30 years that ii's been part of the SUNY
system," said Greiner. "What I think I've tried
to do in the last two years has been to keep the
university on that course, but to change some
of the administrative strucwre and some of the
!'Qnversarion and dialogue about the future and
the direction ofthe university in order to grapple
with wha1 I think are the requirements. the
problems and the opportun ities of the decade
of the '90s and on into the 21st century."
Greinerfieldedqueslians liom UB studentsoo
the escalating costS of higher educ:!lion. Increased
fees. as weU as higher tuition and donn charges,
Greiner told the callers. are a direct result of
budgetary rutbacks to higher education in the
recmt past."...the costs of higher education have
risen rnpidly in the last few years. and especiaity
public higher education. We'restill very modera!ely jl'i&lt;:ed relative to the private sector," he said.
''But there's been a very rnpid 111teofincrease
in costs in the public sector in the last ooup1e of
years and thai's a direct resul1 ofthe recession and
its impact on New Yor1&lt; Stale government and a
variety of other New Yor1&lt; Stale priorities intervening. I think ooe of the issues we're going to
have to face in the '90s is a difficulty in meeting
all of the priorities .. .I think universities and col·
leges. public and private, are going to.have to be
much more self-sufficienL"
Palmer noted thai there have been attempts
made to stop the rise in studeni fees, at least for
the near future. ''Jthink it) important to note,

up at gunpoint on

Main Street while on
her way to the build·
ing.
Greiner said that
Bethune, which primarily houses studios for
art snx1erus. will soon
be moving its oper.!·
tians to the new Fme
Arts Center. He also noted that securing Cll11fXlS
siteswhicharellOidirectlyCOilllCCfedtotheNonh
or Sat!lh Campuses has always been a dilemma.
'1 think consolidating some of our ootlying sites
is the best thing we can do to help with Cll11fXlS
security."
Scott asked Greiner why~ university had
created Moore's post of vice president for
public service and urban affairs. Greiner said
that a large research university must be able to
interface well with the community and that
Moore's outslanding qualifications made her
the right choice for the jab.
.
'1 think it's an extraOrdinary 0Jl!Xll1Unity for
this university to take its teaching and resean:h
capacities and relate thai to needs within our local
community. within our state (and) within our
nalion," be said. "It just seemed to me thai a way
of focusing this very special mission of a public
institution is to nave a vice presidential level
officer with p dual reponing relationship. tab to
the president and the proYOSL Far the pctson wbo
could help interface our university with our community and our state, we had an extraordinary
person on boord... in Dr. M~"
Moore said thai theaealian of her position has
genenued excitement and opportunity for UB.
"One of the things I want to do is gel. our Wlder·
graduate srudents involved. rm designing an inlemShipOOUJ&gt;e so thai O!Jfundergraduote SIUdents.
and certainly our graduafe SIUdents. will be able to
go out and wort within theCOOUTII!lity. Once !bey
at least for this year and for next year, we've • get out there and get involved. it cando nothing but_
had a moratorium on fees. JNe worked very
enhance the community." .

--

�•

_ . , _ _ _ _ se

Derek Walcott's
view of America
Nobel prlz-lnnlfte poet- U.S. •

·H

Reporter
Staff
.,
llCIIiar
··--

AVING CHECKED his schedule with an air of gn~ve resignation, Derek Walcou succumbed
.
to an interview last Th=day,
aslcing only that he might sneak
into the hall for a cigarette with his wife before
the news cameras came (IDO late).
Wak:ott. who has achieved international
acclaim for poems and plays that interweave
the English language with thesightsand sounds
of his native Caribbean. was 81 UB to give a
talk spo~ by the OffiCe of the President
and by the Minority Faculty and Staff. In an
interview with the Rtporur, he lacooically
dismissed multi-&lt;:Ulturalism as a "phase," and
later gave a sonorous denWlCiation of what he
called an "Empire pf Opinion" that had col&lt;&gt;nies in the United States.
When Walcott last year became the fust
Caribbean writer to win the Nobel Prize for
literature. r~ magazine noted that the honor
"implicitly crowned the West Indian poet as
the laureate of multiculturalism." But Walcou
dismissed the trend toward multiculturalism
on the campuses. equating it as a phase that
would wax and wane like deconstruction.
'These changes. they happen. and I ignore
them. I don "t know what they mean. finally.lbey
are phases that happen in places that think they are
the center or what criticism should be or what
:M:sthetics should be, places that presume to malce
decisioos about how people should think. I don't
know what it means. Tosaythat America has only
just discovered that it is a multicultural nation in
1993. seems to me absurd.'"
At first this seems surprisi ng, just as it
seems surprising that a man who has written so
extensively or a son or literary and hereditary
placelessness-he" s a black. English-speaking Protestant. raised as a Methodist by a
family that included two English grandpar·
ents-should now say. "I am a West Indian

coa-, wllllln . . empire

poet who knows exactly where he is."
&amp;abenealhthelacooicexu:rior,then:isadeq&gt;gmincd cynicism. a wspicioo !d mly of the
carrt:raS to of any aJiture or offer of, as he 1"1 ij
to an tJJdierx:e in Sloe laler thai night, "a golden
handshake." So the lillO wbo once wrote. in What
The Twilight Says thai be btFd to be ado!*&lt;~ by
the tra1ition of Millen nl Maiowe "as a bastatl
!ltltlioog5 for his lilther' shousebold" isunrt"tOVcdto
'-thai, in the circles of Englisb Lit., his poems
have"'*""&lt;! the modem caooo. 'Tvem desin:,"
he said wid! abirf.ofbialmess, "tojoin theirchi&gt;."
Waloott~upon the island ofSt. Lucia, his
desile to inherit the
of English literalllre
bOO! COlJ1llicated and enriciJcd by the shanties
and ways of the island poor he knew as a cbild.
Now he divides his timellotw&lt;al Boston University, where he teaches aeative writing. and
Trinidad. his adopted home. He'd already
tJtOUil..t the possibility thai his love of English
alme had severed him from the patois-Frencbspealcing islandt:rs he'd kmwn; have the years
and geography, ... to mention the s! .2 million
Nobel prize. removed him further'!
"I am lucky in some ways. privileged in
some ways. and privileged to meet tbe poor.
You can feel alienated by your luck or your
condition from the poor. but that doesn' t mean
you' ve lost your love for them."

"""*

he poet who wrote that he "was just a red
. nigger who loved the sea/ .. .1 have Dutch.
nigger, and English in me" chose to title the
first pan of his poem-autobiography. Another
Life. "A Divided Child.'' He' s 63 'now; is he
still divided? Have his conOicts, irthey are not

T

resolved, at least come to rest?

"lbeychangesltin.Conflictsdon'tdisappear:
they assume different guises. I mean the division
that happened to me, in terms shaping some son
orresolution about how I wanted finally to resolve
i~ that may have been achieved. But it doesn't
alter the fact that social and political divisions in

the Caribbean. and in this country. are widening.

"To ~ that America has

only just discovered that it is a

muJticuJtural nation in 1993,
seems to me absurd."
-WALCOTT

I did not think ten years ago that what happened in
Loo Angeles could happen. That division continues; it's widening." Andthat'stherub.He'sworking now on a libreno for an opera about Yusuf
Hawkins, the 1&amp;-year-&lt;&gt;ld who died while fleeing
a mob in Bensoohust. New York in 1991 : meanwhile, the implication is that the Empire. whose
"twilight" is the recurring image of so many or his
poems has left beltindalegacythatcan be relt still
in the United States.

So when he rose to give the 16th Manin
Luther King Jr. Commemorati ve Address in
Slee Hall later that night. neither his sonorous
speech nor his choice of poems veiled the bitter
irony that marked his selection.
"The En1&gt;ire of Opinion may surrender ijs
physical boundaries. but it never SUJrender.; it
aesthetics... he said. adding that he had dilliculty
reconciling the honor of being asked to speak. and

Students at UB work as tutors to provide
funds for village night schools in India
11J EU.EN - . - u M
News Bureau Staff
N BIITWEEN teaching industrial engineering classes at UB and ~orking on his
doctoral dissenation, Alok Baveja spends
a couple or hours each week tutoring
engineering students.
The S I0 an hour he earns doesn· t go into his
pocket. Instead. he and other Indian students at
the univer.;ity send the money they earn from
tutoring to India to fund night schools in poor
rural villages.
Since its inception in 1989. the UB group.
tl31t&gt;ld Gurukul-"teacher' s family"-has contributed tochnical assistance and about SIO,(XXJ in
cash tothesenight schools.Thepublicdayschools
in many Indian Villagesarenearlyempty. Desperate roreven the smallest additional incOme. most
. families send their children. oui to wOrk. The
cftildren generally do hard manual labor. like
aushing stoneS81quanies. rocdiilly wages as low
as I0 rupees (30 cents).
• Tbe night schools, funded by Gurukul, offer these chil~n a chatJCe to get the education
they probably would not otherwise receive.
After a full day of woric. 20 or 30 children
gather for two hours each night in the th8lcbed
hut of a teacher, who also has a day job. The
children sit on the floor, or in the laps of older
students, learning to read and write from text·
books that are ragged from repeated use.
With the Buffalo group's help, chil~n

I

now have new slates to write on. as well as new
charts and textbooks. Proper lighting has been

installed. and teacher.; are
even geting a raise-from
$5 a month to$10a month.
Guruk.ul has also contributed manpower. Last
year. after receiving his doc·
torate in mathematics from
UB. Emilio Faro moved
with his wire. Nandini, who
has a master's degree in
physics from UB,toa stftall
village in India to live and
teach.
Thenightschoolsarethe
result or a grass-roots educa·
lionaJ movement that began
in "198 1 in a tural district in
southeastern India. largely through the work or
nuclear physicist N.P. Sastry. Hoping to~
"self-dependence through literacy," Sastry gave
Up his worl&lt;81 a prestigious government reSeaJch
institution in Bombay to liveandJeat:h bmong the
rural poor and ·experience their problems fir.;!.
hand.
.

W

ith the help of the UB students, he has
started about 30 night schools in the
countryside surrounding Vishakltapatnam, a
city midway between MadJas and Calcutta.
More schools are being opened all of the time.
The unlikely Bulfak&gt;.lndiaconn&lt;aiort began
ID take shape in 1988 when Baveja and aeveral
other UB students met Sastry a1 a .gathering in
ROC!-. Sastry had rocently Started his own

comm.mitydevelopmentorganization in India.· called
the Sri Vidya T,;.;._
The students were struck
by Sastry's ability to cornmunicale his real ror this
new cause while conveying
a wealth of praclical details
about how his plans could
be carried oot. For example,
he told the groupthata school
roc 30 children could be nm
for as linle-as SIS a month.
"He had anahilitytocornmunicate facts and figures
about how things could be
accomplished right away:·
. Baveja said "He showed us that idealism is the
most praclical way or doing things"
Inspired by Sastry, the UB students decided 1D
form a nor&gt;-jl"tlfil organizalion. which they called
Gurukul after the ancien! Indian traditim ofteaching. which views students as port of the. teacher's.
or guru's. family. The group was inaJrporaled in.
1989.1t noweoosistsor more than 200students
from universities all across the United St8leS.
with 30 active tnetnbers 81 UB.
During the short time the"group has been in
existence. it has made some significant inroads. Oneortheschool's "graduates" already
has opened her own night school. A new
classroom building is being built, and local
mert:bants have begun donating construction
materi.aJs.
[1

the hcspilality thai had been ex.
tm:ledtohimthalsmwyeYelting.
with the need 1D tell the tJUh:
''lbe truth is thai this is !d a
hoopitable alUiltry for the Afio
Am&lt;rican: it is a colony wijbio.,
-.
en¢e. Wehavehadahisuxyof
oolonizalionintheCaribbeon,and
we~ it;sothepoen&amp; despilethehoopilalitythallhaveenjoyedthis&lt;n:evming '-,are for
those split between two worlds. fortbooe!d in this
building. rorthosesutrering becauseofthecolony.
"As in any colony. there are serious difficulties
mginatinginracialdifferenceandreligiousdogma.
Heroes are oelebrated for their triurrpl over the
obvious. thai all men are aeated ~ ror ex3IJ1lle. and culture canonizes the heroes it once
CJPili'I'SSI'd. To an rutsider. this seems a golden
handshake. The reality is different: the ideal is self.
serving."
Waloon readapoemrecallinghisbiuermem&lt;&gt;ries of the South ("stay black and invisible/To the
siJens of Arlo!nsas'') and. with gentler irooy. the
rosterof peaoeofferingsmadebywhilestoAJiican
Americans by whites in hisplay. o.-n on Monkey Mouruain: "An apology in full from the Republic of South Afric:a.•.An offer to revise the
mginsof slavery. A floml tributeoflilies from the
Ku Klux Klan. Congr8lulationsfromseveral gold
andCXJlllttrychb&lt;. A gih-edgeddoc:torare from the
Mississippi University. The Nobel Peaoe Prize."

-·

..........
...,_

March 6 concert
benefits Guru/ad
A_or.....,_..., will
be held at UB on Saturday, March
6. to benellt the worl&lt; of Gurukul. a
unique student organization here
that sponsors literacy and economoc-aid projects in India.
Anamika, a na1100ally recognized Indian band based in Pillsburgh, will perlorm popular songs ·
in Hindi and regional languages
from 6-9 p.m. at Slee Concert Hall.
Home-made ethnic Indian refresh·
ments will be available.
Geet aBhar. "a spring of songs·
as the concert is tilled, is free and
open to the public, but donations
are encouraged.
Gurukul. wl1ich means "the
teacher's family,• is holding the
coriCert to raise money to rebuild
,an entire Indian viAage that recently was destroyed bY fire.
The students. in conjunction
with a grass-roots ci'ganization in
India. have developed low-o:lst,
permanent housing that would be
suitable for this village and others
in the area.
Gurukul . is run by UB students.
For more information about the
group, cOntact Ram Prasad at
834-01 12 or Bhim Bhakoo at6fl9.
6905.

�---....
--la- ----......
----

8

Fronczak_

N&lt;J&lt;th cAmpus. 3:4S

p.m.

Joanol a. 2S2A Farber.

SoulhCampus.t2:JO. J:30p.m.

S df-tplld. .
ria: Wboft Did 1boy Como

--

.,_ .... Wllot Do 1boy Do7
Dr. DoW! SID&gt;. SUNY • Albooy.
121 Cool&lt;e. North Campus. 4 p.m.

South Campus. 3:30p.m.

WM . . .
Tbllllll...-c. Woldman The-

Vyocheslav Krishtofovicb.
Woldman ~c:r. 112 Norton.

alef, 112 Norton. N&lt;J&lt;th Campus.
7 p.m. Admiuion, $2.50, UB
students; $3.50, oon-s(Udenu.

Admission. $2.50, UB S(UcjentJ;
$3.SO, non-srudenu.

lcadeB. N&lt;J&lt;th Campus. 7:3().9:30
p.m. For registration information
caii64S~I2S .

soprano Mildred Staley and
mev.o-soprano Constance
Allison. One U nwood Ave. 7:30
p.m. Tickets, $S50.

SMa/911

ALUMNA

Adam·'• Rib, a film by
North Campus. 7 and 9:30 p.m.

International .uraJr..-Musk:

- A N D MUSIC SERIES
Readlnp aod Perlortnalla$,
Nanna Kassin:r and joining her.

UB

WMNIII

fi&lt;IID Arwod tbe World, presented by the Zndiaque Dance
Company. PreiferThealet. 681
Main St. 8 p.m. Tickets: $10,
general admission; $4, atudems.
senior citizens and UB faculty.
staff and alumni. For more information call829-3742.

tection. Public Safety Officers
Dave Chcmega and K&amp;lhy Zysek,

Immediate possession.

Hunt Real Estate Corporation
6215 Sheridan Drive, Williamsville NY 14221

Univ. ofPiasburJh- 70~.

Writing Sldlls, Oaire S. Jones.

caii64S~I2S .

Private yard wilh 3-tiered deck.

24 liour Voice Mail: 635-8278

VilamiD K, Prof. Pm1 Dnwd,

lc:adet. North Campus. 7-8:30
p.m. For regjsuation information

S.lf-Dd..,.. aod Ponooal Pro-

insulated vinyl windows. NEW carpet

631-4800

_..,._,...

On lbe~ "'Acllonol

Andplaldtl A&amp;&lt;ftls, Fron
GetJao, Ptwm.D., associ~~&lt; professor of phannocy and
plwmaceulics. UB. SOli Cooke.
NO&lt;tb Campus. 4-S p.m.

..__ -

Snyder. Complete new roof. AIL NEW

Liamsed Sales Representative

..

California lllltitute olTcd&gt;nology. 103 Didendorf. Soulh Cam. pus. 3 p.m.

T he l'hannocadynamlcool

..-Great contemporary home In heart of

jacqueline S. Wopperer, MBA

EDoddotl SlldMs .... eu.,.
,_,.,Prof. Tomaz Mrowka,

THURSDAY

4

Nonh Campus. 3:J0.4:4S p.m.
For mon: information contact Dr.
~at64S-3193 .

I"'IYUCSANDCOUOQI • •
Tbe New Blue Horizon: Pbysks
aod Engineering ol Wide
Bandgap Quantum W.U S.mlcondudor Lasers, Prof. A.

-

WAll LA'II:- FIUII
Cr&lt;atu~ from tbe Black Lagoon. Woldman Theater, 112

Norton. Nonh Campus. II :30
p.m. Admission, $2.50, UB stu-

dents; S3.SO. non-students.

SATURDAY

l nt&lt;maUonal AIJalrs--Muslc
From Arwod tbe World, semod by the Zodiaque Dance

Company. PreiferTheate:r. 681
Mllin St 8 p.m. Tickeu: SIO,
general admission; $4, gudcnts,

seniorcilizens and UB faculty.
staff and alumni. For more infor·
mation call 829-3742.

Nunnikko. Materials Research
Center, Brown Univ. 454

6

c..-Nallcan for the

FRIDAY

a

'90s. Jaynce

Straw, leader. North Campus. 10
a.m.-Noon. For registration information caJI64S-612S.
COHCEJrf OF MDWI MUSIC

Anamlka, natioually =ogniud

Indoor AJr Pollution.

Indian band based in Pittsburgh.
performs popular songs in Hindi
and regional languages. Slec
Concert Hall. North Campus. b-9
p.m. Gurukul, which means ''the
teacher's family.'' is holding the
1.:oncen to raise money to rebuild
an entire Indian village that recently was destroyed by fire .

Bonnie Hudak, M .D.
Kinch Auditorium.

UUAII RLM

PEDIATRIC GRAND

ROUNDS

Chi ldren' s liospital. 8

Donations.

a.m.

Adam·s Rib, a film by
Vyachcslav Krishtofo,ich.

ORAL BIOUICIY

Waldman Thealer. 112 Norton

SEMNAR

Stanley Spinola, Infec-

tious Diseases. SUNY/
Clinical Center.
ECMC. 215 FoMcr.
South Campus. Noon.

Nonh Campus. 7 and 9:30p.m.
Admission, $2.50, UB studrnls.
$3.50, non-srudems.
PAHTOMJMic PEIIFOIIMANC£

Thr Wanderu. Rajmund
KJechot. internationally celcbrau:d Polish actor. Katharine
Comcllllleater. EUicott Complex. Nnnh Campus. 7:30p.m.
Tickets. SS, students: $12. general admission. For more informatioo caii64S-23S3. Co-spon·
sored by lhe UB Jagielloninn

Exchange Committee, the Permanent Chair of Polish Culture at
Canlsius College and the Westem New York'Chaptcrofthe
Kosciuszko Foundation.
Reception tickets areS I0
and must be purchased in

�_4,.__..,_u
~Donco~y.

Pfcifer,_., 681 MainS&lt;. 8
p.m.'llc:l:tu, $10, _ . . - . .

aioe:$4.-..--

and UB focully, 11atr llld llumnl.
For ..... informolion call 8293742.
UUMLA'III-~-Ibollloctla­

-.woldmonn-.., 11 2
Nonoo. Nonh Campus. 11 :30
p.m. Admiuion, $2.30, UB llU·
denll:.$3.30, non·lludenll.

---M--.
Univ. or W'UODitlin. 211 Baird.
Notth Campus. 4 p.m. For .....
informolion call64$-2921.

-~-

:\ p p ll' \ Lll i I~ :

by Durtleavy,
Menclelllom. Btut:kner,
Vauslim W'tiiJama, Sondlteirn.

Aainund Klechot. intemationalty cel-

..... Slec Conceit Hall. Nonh
Campua. 8 p.m.

ebraled Polish acto&lt; hailed by critics as
"one ol the finest performing artiSIS ol our
tirre,• will presenl his pantomime woo1&lt;, "The
Watlde&lt;er," at UB on Salurday, March 6.
The performance lakes place a1 7:30p.m. in
the Katharine Cornell Theater and will be
followed by a champagne reception in the

TUESDAY

9
7
- ----·
lnlm!Otioool Alroln-Milllk
From Around tbe World, pre·
serucd by the Zodiaque Dance
Company. pfeifer Theater. 681
Main 51. 3 p.m. TICkets. $10,
general admission; $4, Sludenll.
senior citizens and UB faculty,
staff and alumni. For more infor.
matinn call 829-3742.

UUM-I.ECtUB

Humor and Wlsdom fA
H•nry Rolllno, Henry Rollins.
~oryteller. Slec Hall. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. Admission. $6, UB

Th~

Students; $10, t'KMHiudcntJ. for

more information oontact Mau
Lerner at 64S-2957.

MONDAY

~·

.

.._..

l'tiYSICSAMD-

Lii!JtEmlooloo From
NaooocaleSW&lt;on: A ltn'olutloo In~- Dr.
Philippe Fauchet_ OepL ofEI&lt;:e·
trical Engineering. Univ. of
Rochc:$ter. 219 Fronc:zak. Nonh
Campus. 3:45p.m.

6125.

Ell'ects of &lt;bldant Stras on
Alveolar EpltbeiW C.lls, Bruce

llolm, Ph.D.. O.pt. Gynecology/
Obstetrics. Pediatrics and Phar·

-

macology. US CFS Addit1on

South Campus. 8:30a.m.
AHTWIAPETUKFOIICE

Forum on Vloltna Against
Women, includes presentation by
Ellen Christensen. director of
ARlF and Sexuality Education

Center, and workshops conducted
by 1l\c Women' s Center of

Bloomsburg, Pa. Student Union
Nonh Campus. Nonn.- 10 p.m. tA
mock rope trial will take place at
7 p.m. in 112 Norton. Nonh
Campus.) For mort infonnution
on the forum ca1164S-3322
ARTLEcnJM
The Zooes of T urbulel'lC't!,

PANEl; 'TOWAIID AN AH'IIIIIACIST-M'
-The Master's Tools WUI Nrvtr
Dismantle tM Masttr'•s HotJSe,
Minnie Bruce Pr.ut. poet and

author of Crim~ Against Natur~.
Kathy Engel. poet and politicaJ
acti vist. Agnes Williams and
Junko Kan:unura 146
Diefc:ndorf South Campus 7
p.m.
- I C AND MEDICINE

An Evening of Music and
Medldne, an 3JUllysis oft.hc
medical problems encountered by
musicians. Baird Reci tal Ball.
250 Baird. North Campus. 8 p.m.
Co-sponsored by the Dept. of
Music and the DcpL of Neurul ·
ogy. For infomlation call 6-l52921 .

WEDNESDAY

SC.m~STS

tional Hean. Lung. and Blood
Institute. National Institutes of
Health. G26 F&amp;Jber. South Cam·
pus. 4 p.m.

...Cw:nME-

C.nro In ibe FOtll1&lt;ortth-«n·
tury Frencl&gt; Outnson: The

Vlrdal

lh&lt; l&gt;andna Song,

Lawrence
Earp.

scholar1y exchange
belween UB and
Poland's Jagiellonian
Universily. The event is

co-sponsored by the
UB Jagiellontan Ex·
change Com:nittee. the
Permanenl Chair of
Polish Cuhure aa
Canisius Collage and
lhe WNY Chapler of the Kosciuszko Foundation. Krystyna
Dyrek, Jagiellonian prorector for inlernallonal programs. will
Hy in from Krakow for the performance and recepllon .
Tickets for the performance are $12, general publ1c and
$5, Sludenls. CoSI ollhe reception is $10. For lickets, call the
UB rtekel Office in Capen Hall. 645-2353. or send a check 10
lhe Jagiellonian Exchange Com:nittee, 301 MI. Vernon Road.
AmherSI. N.Y.14226. Reception tickets must be purchased in
advance. Tickets for the performance only may be purchased
allhe door.
~atnc1a

-

I'IWIIIACY-iwl

Grall Venus Leuk•mk Ef.
rect-Wba~ Wby and How?
Eliz.abc.th Phillips, Pharm.D. candidate. 248 Cool;e. Nonh Cam·
)JUS. 8-8:55 a.)TI.

=-~Hlslory,

Poetry, F)c:
JJoo; Psyd&gt;oi"Cl', Lllerary
Crltldlm, Sex, Tnvel, Mythol·
"Cl'· ru-.led Books, and
'Tons' or Paperbacks. 420
Capen. Nonh Campus. 9 a.m.-4

p.m. Admission: $1. Sponsored
by the Poetry/Ran: Book Colle&lt;:tioo and University Archi\'CS.

-

'TOWAIID AN

lb•
Tr-an&lt;rormatloo
or Slknee
AII1HtACISY
·
lniD Language and Action,

Minnie Bruce Pran. poet ind
author of Crinu! "-gairut Nature.
and KaiTtyEnseJ. poet and political activist. 280 Park. North
Camp.~s . 9a.m.-1 :45 p.m.

sponsored by UBMicro Sales Center
and Apple Computer, Inc.

Tuesday, March 23, 1993
10 am until 4 pm
UBMicro Sales Center,
UB Commons, North Campus
Printer and CD-ROM
demonstrations plus more! Look for
details and scheduling information in
next week's Reporter ad or call 645-3554-

Donovan. News Bureau Slaff

-WEU.

PAliK STMF

C•ll Cycle Ennts Targeted by
VIral Oncoprotelns, Dr. Jo.eph
Nevins. Duke Univ.. North Carolina. Hilleboc Auditorium. RPCJ.
I 2:30p.m.
LDCKWOOO UIIRARY
IIUEAIICMCUNIC
lntroductJoo to the In ternet.
Rm. 223. Lockwood Library .
North Campus. 1-2:30 p.m. PrercgiStrnlion required. Pick up

rcg1strution forms a( Lockwood
Libmry "s Reference Desk.
MARCH INTO TilE "*-HG
JOa

MAIIK£T-

author of the play "'Samuel' s
Major Problems ... 420 Capen.
North Campus. 4 p.m. For more
informaiion call645-3882. Spon·
son:d by the UB Poetics Program
and co-sponsored by the Dept. or
11leatc:r and Dance.
PlANNING DEPT. YISITIHG
LECIUIIE-

Be[\jamln Nkholson, author of
"1llc Appliance House.·· Illinois
Dept. orTechnology 30 1
Crosby. South Campu~ 5:30p.m.
UF£WOIIKS-

'O.e lnnuence of Yiddish and
Black English In Contemporary
U fe. Dr. Herb Foster. leader.

Non.h Campus.-7-9 p.m For n::gistralion infonnation ca11645612S.

MAIICH IHTO T i l E -

OPUS: CLUSICS RECITAL

JOa

Gaudete Early Musk Ensemble, Linda Fusani. Darlene
Jus.sila. recorders. and Rebecca
Roman. harp. works by Playlet
and othen. Allcin Hall . South
Campus.. 7p.m.

MAIIK£T-

Fut u~

-- 10
_.....,

goals.
Proceeds will benefrt
the Jagiellontan Exchange Scholar Fund
of the Polish Arts Club
of Buffalo. which funds

Persooallly and Careor D•cl·
sion-Maklng. 145D Student
Union. North Campus. 2-3 p.m.

Eugenio T~llez. distinguished
Chilean-born painter and
print maker. Bechune Gallery.
"2917 Main St3:30 p.m. r-or
more information call829-3477 .

Rqulatloo or Pbospllollpase C
lsozymos, Sue Goo Rhc:e. Ph.D..
l....abonllory of Biochcmisuy, Na-

philosophical piece,
chronicles the seeker's
quest for more abstracl

IIOOIIUU
Movies, lllstory, Poetry, Jllc.
tloo, l'lyd&gt;olocJ, Ulonry
Crltldlm, Su, Tnvd, M)'lbol·
"Cl'• Wuotnted Boob, and
'T0111' or Paperbacb. 420
Capen. Nonh Campua. 9 Lm.-4

LIRIn Search or tbe QualliJ Calorie, Dr. Paul Bluestein. leader.
Nonh Campus. 7-9 p.m. For n:gistration infonnation caJI64S·

'IOXICOUMIY SEMINAR

Jane Keeler Room.
"The Watlde&lt;er," written and choreographed by Klechol, is
a lhree-part piece CXll1'llfised ollwo short panlomimes.
"Lel&lt;koduch" ("Ughl Spiril") and "The ChBrrlJion and the
Soldier" articulale
confticting tunan
drives; "The Wanderer," a longer. mom

Aueatloo Dolldt HypencthiiJ
Disorder, Pour Wiley. l'ly.D..
clinical psychologiu. Main Conf=nce Room B. Mercy Hospital.
8:30a.m.

p.m. Admission: $2. Sponsored
by lh&lt; Poetry/Ran: Book Collection and University ~hives.

'-. . '

Carni\(ll

Sainl-sleno, 'lltompoon llld odt-

S UNDAY

7

OportunJtJes ror Ph .D~
In Industry and Acad•mla, pre-

sented by Dr. Paul Marrone. vier
president for"expcrimental re·
search, Ca!span Advanced Tech·
nology Center. a1ld Dr. Aaron M.
Bloch. UB ProVOSt. I45A Student
Union. Nonh Campus. 3:30-5
p.m.

--1

WAll FIUtl
AnimiUon Toumte, 88 minute$
or the best short animat.cd films
from around the world. Woldmnn
Theater•. l1 2 Norton. North Campus. 7 and 9 p.m. Admission.
$2.30. !.IB ~udents; $3.30. nonstudents.

_,

Beginning Folk Dance, Naney
Uttell . leader. Nonh Campus. 78:30 p.m. For registnltion information c;all 64S-6l2S.

__

LIIIDE.._..._

SOL-GEL SysWns for tbe 0..
vdopm&lt;al or Opllcally
Nonlinear Ma!erlals, Joell.
Plawsky. Rens.sc.lacr Polytechnic
lnstituJe. 206 Furnas. North Cam·
p.~s. 3:45 p.m.

~nt MagMtlc Resonance
lmac!ng, Dr. Alan Brody, O.pt
of Radiology. Children's Hospi·
tal. 101&gt; Cary. South Campus. 4
p.m.

:L:..C::

l'tiYSIOLOQY

Surfacunt Malnl.ains AirWay
Opening. Gon:n EnhOming.
M.D., UB O.pt. of Obstetrics.

Gynecology. 108 Sherman South
Campus. 4 p.m.
- Y S AT 41'LUS

U'IIIIWIY-

Poelry Reodl... Ric:hanj f'on:.
man. playwright, director and

LIR~

LIREstale Planning and Health
Care Dedslon-Maldng, Gayle

Eagan. leader. onh Campus. 78:30 p.m For registratioo information caii645-612S.

-

- . : DU'T.

YJSnWQ-

A n die Muslk Outmb&lt;r Ensemble, Andrew Dawes, violin: .

Daniel Rothmuller. cello: Richard
Brice. viola; Gerard Reuter. oboe ,

and COOSWlee Emmerich. piano. .

Slee Cnnc:en Hill. Nonh Cam·

Continued on page 8

Convenience
Quality
-----Service
.., ----Yariety

'

�_..,

8

__

..,_

..

CAI.ENIMR
Continued from page 7
8 p.m. lod:ds: $8. $6. $4.
For '"""' informMion call 6452921. Co-...,.-..t by the Buf·
fllo C1wnber Music Socic&lt;y.

_y___..,.

pul.

Wltb Olbon, l!llal ~
leader. Nonh CampuJ. 7·9 p.m.
For rqjJinOOn infonnadon call
64~125.

WMNM

Anlmadoo T....-, 88 minutes of the belt shon llnilllllCCI

THURSDAY

films from around the wottd.
Woldman Theatl:r. 112 Nonoo.
Nonh Campua. 7 and 9 p.m.
Adml11ion, SUO, UB students:
$3.50, OOO· JludeoU.

11------· -

EXHIBITS

2050 Elmwood Ave.
Between Hertel &amp; Kenmore

874-4460

_ . , -I'OTUIZA
A W - - DlePI..AY

Edalcs, CGalldnldollty IIJid

8wDdry Ia Ak:obollom
c - . , . Shirley Kucera

Reiser, · Docmm Col·
leJ&lt;, Mlin St.. Ambenl. 9 LID.·
4:30 p.m. For'"""' infonnalioo
call 64S-6140.

_AI._,

Home For Sale

?
~ 3 Bedroom, 2 bath ranch with hca!cd indoor
pool OYerlooking 300 foot deep wooded lot in Clar=ce.
Family
opcru to quality
burning

ccwua

cr

Hoopital. Noon.

o1 El&lt;drlcal StJmuJa.
doo oa A&lt;Uie Edema, Fronk
Mendel, Plt.D. UB Depc. of Anatomlcal Science&amp;. 258 CFS.
South Campu1. 12:30 p.m.

IIAIICH_n._
.-.-r145A Student Union Nonh
Campua. 3-4:30 p.m.

cast journalist, journeyed toremote areas of Tibet thai have
since been closed off to indepen-

Martin BemaJ, sinologist and

faculty member. Cornell Univ.
Government Dept., discusses
rcoction to his book. 8/ot'k

A.tlwna: TM A.froa.siaJic Roots of
Clrusical Civilll.Ption. I04
Knox. North Campus. 3:30p.m
C~s ponsort:d by Lhc: Andrew
V. V. Raymond Chnir of Classics

and the Dept. of An History.
STAnancs COUOQUIUM
Logistic lt&lt;gr&lt;sslon and Goodness of Fit, Dr. Sas.kia le Cessie.

Dept. of Srruislics. Univ. or
Rochcs:ter. 144 Father. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

-

IIIOLOQICA&amp;. SCIEHCU

Populallon Dynamks In Fir&lt;
Ants and Bdtavioral Mtdlanlsms. Dt. Eldridsc S. Adams.
Ill . Univ. or Rochester. 121
Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.
Co--sponsored by the Graduate
Group in Evolutionary Biology
and E&lt;olasy.
8UfFA&amp;.OLOQIC
CCIU.CIQIMJM

Logic Dictionary EntritsLawsofThougb~ Tautology,
John Keams and John Corcorilll .
UB Dept. of Philosophy. 684
Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m.

MA-nc.s COUOQUIUM
Conservation Laws and Dl·

l'....t Probl&lt;ms, Prof. Barbara
Keyfitt, Univ. or Houston. 103
Dicrendorf. South Campus. 4
p.m.

-

D rvdopmr:nl of a
Tranoidermal Dellvrry Syskm
ror a Potent Dopamint Agonls~ Al;cc Loper. Ph.D.• ,..
search fellow. Merck &amp; Co.•
We.~point . Pa. S08 Cooke.
Nonh Campus. 4-S.p.m.
~UMQY

_

IIDUIICHCUMC
Introduction to lh&lt; lnl&lt;m&lt;L

Nonh Campus. 7-8:30 p.m. f&gt;n:.
regisuation required Pick up

....

_

registra1ion forms ;u Lockwood
Libnry' s Refcronce DCJk.

716.884.9536 fax
7 16.884.0882 t e l

om

S..IIJid Dallnc: lb.nds
L&lt;t'1 ToUt, Bob Hall. leader.

~~~~1~f~

North Campus. 7-9 p.m. For

....

registration infonnation call

A communication company.

dent travelers.
FACULTY 110011 EX~
The annual " Social Sciences and
Humanitia Faculty Book Ex·
hibif' is on display in Lockwood
Libnry 1hroosh late April. The
display highJights 63 books writ ·
ten or edited by UB faculty from
Architecture. Ans and Letters.
Education. Management. Social
Sciences and Lhe University Libruries. and published between

1991 and 1993.
1llesc books reveal the intriguing lilllge of interests or VB faculty. OriginaJ poetry and creative
responses to "home.. art displayed with "encounters" with
Zuni Indians. A study of gender
differences in paid work accom-

panies guides to electronic suppon systems for operations managc~t. A futuristic view of
cities of the 21 ~t century compli ment.! an artistic analysis or late
bron1.e age pottery. Critical perspecth-es on early childhood as
well as higher edUC31ion share
space with studies or justice. law
and violence. Theu.hibit. in the

foyer of the second noor of
Lockwood, can be viewed during all times the library is open.
~DiePI..AY

:The Bluesmen." photognlphs by
Ed Sobala documenting 20 years
ofbluesmen and jazzmen a1 work
ond play. will be 00 yjew throush
Man:h 14 1K the WBFO Sludios at
Allen Hall. Call829-2880 for
more information.

I'IIARMACE1ITIC-

Rm. 223. Lockwood Libr.uy.

M a rllyn C a ppelllno Associates

"Sacred Cirdes: Buddhist Life in
Tibet," a ooUection of photo-

graphs by Jennifer Lewis. is on
view at the: Caner for Tomor·
row. tluoosh Man:h 28. Monday
throush Friday. during n:gular
buildins hours. In 1987. Lewis.
a fOI'Tllef lilmmak.er and broad-

~

At MCA, we take the 76
steps for you, and we do each
the way it should be done:
crealiveJy, effectively, timely,
cost-efficiently.
Since that's all we d o
everyday, we do it pretty well.

wbom faculty will Jdea ra:ipiciU

of the 1993 EYdyn Rumley Lord
Schollnhip ond the Sally -Memorial Scholonbip.
Gallery boun: Moodly. noon to
S p.m.; Tuesday, 10 a. m.-8 p.m.;
Wednesday.l :30to5 p.m. :
Thut&gt;day. 10:30a.rn.to 12:30
p.m.; Friday. Ito 5 p.m.

m-

UN-AD:COLLEIIE

It takes 76 steps to getting
the average communication
piece designed, produced and
delivered to the right place at
the right time.
That's a lot to ask your
support s"taff to .squeeze into
a routine workload .

junior~from­

---l'!lllp Gild&lt;, M.D. Ob/Gyn

Coofereoce Room, Olildml'•

Marttotlna Your Arts ODd L&lt;ttero/Sodal Sdooco llqrft.

A picture means more than
1000 words; it means 76 steps.

T heiiDial Rumoeyond Potenza
Awards Exhibit. • llc:tl&gt;ft Gal·
lcry. 2917 Mlin St.. Buf&amp;lo,
thrtlu&amp;bMJrt:b9, f...... Will1&lt;of

645-6125.

•

Undemand Younoolhnd ED-

NOTICES
IIDUIICHS.,_IN
~--y

- - rAIITICIP.uns

The Graduate Groop in Evolu·
tii&gt;IW)' Biology ard E&lt;ology
IU\nOUOCCI a Graduale Research
Symposium in the areas of evolutionary biology and ecology. to
be held April13. at 5 p.m. ;n 414
Fronczak. Nonh Campus.

Panicipalion is open to all UB
gJ1Iduate students. A S25Q Best
Paper Travel GBnt will be
awarded to the JtUdent makins
the belt p:esenwion.
Opliortaltutorials oo pmenta·
tioo techniqueS are aVIilabl&lt;
prior to the sympo&amp;ium. Studenta
wishing to participate in the
sympo6ium and/or in the tuiOri -

... Jhould c:ontocl Dt. l..ukcr. Depc. ol Biolopcoi Sci·
e o c a , 6 3 5 -. Nonh

------CampuJ.

..-·-

-~held FridayJ
Folklllncina
........
• 8 p.m. on the
smn1 floor of Didendorflllll.
SouthC.....,....~dJrl&lt;:ina

followJ from 9-11 p.m. EY&lt;J}'OII&lt;

wdcome;IIO--"""'
odmisllion. Spoooorod by c.u-

The Studeol Ufe Commin&lt;e of
the U8 Council wiU hold an
open forum on studenllife iJ..
JUeS. Thunday, Marcil II , from
J. 2 p.m. ;n the thin! floor A.J.
sembly Hall. Student Union.
Srudenu are inviLed &amp;O ll1end the
forum and to portidpole. For
'"""' informMion call the Office
of the Vice President for S.-w
Affllirs 11 645-2982.

JOBS
FAaii.TY
~Aioodate

..,..,_.

Chemical Ensin«ring. PootinJ
JF- 3012.~-­

Civil Engineering. Pootins ..,_
3013. A.o!l.&lt;tant Prol_.·lndustrial Engineering. Posting
JF-3014. 3015. Prol....--Elec:trical and Computer eng;.-.
ins. Posting JF-3016. A.o!l.&lt;tanll
Asoodate Prof.......EJec:tri&lt;:al
and Computer Engineering.
Pootin8 tF-3017. A.o!l.&lt;tanll
As5odate Prol_.· Mcc:hanical
and Aerospace Engincerins.
PoslingtF-3018. 3019. AloJs.
tant Proressor-Nutrition Program. Pootins tF-3020. AloJs.
tant ProftMOr-Pbysics and
As1ron0my. PoolingtF-3021 .
AsolslanliAioodate Prol- Social and Pn:ventiw: Mc&lt;ticine,
Posting tF-3022. R&lt;oeard! l a·
otructor/R.....-cl&gt; Alllstaat
Prot.....- (d&lt;p&lt;ndlng 00 quaU·
llc:adons}-Laboralii&lt;J' Anintal
Facilities. Pos!ing lff-3023.
IIDEAIICH

R.....-cll Support Sp&lt;dallst·
Mkrobiolasy. Posl;ns tR93016. PootdocloniAsoodateBiological Sciences. Posting
IR-93017.

-

A rullirector ( L-3)-Residential Life, Posting I P·3004. ~
gnunmu/Analyst (SL-3&gt;-Computing and Information
Technolasy. Posting tP-3005.
~CIVIL-.c:E

CkaDer (SG-05}-Custodial Ser·
vices, Line 134372. 315TI.
31544. Cakuladons Cieri&lt; I
(SG-06)-University Facilities.
Administrative Seniccs, Line

130780. Cakulallom Cieri&lt; u
Provost.
Line 130383. Malot&lt;l111llC&lt;&gt;
Helpet" (SG-06)-FaciHties imd
Systems Maintenance, Line
131956. Malnt&lt;IUIJia! Helper
(SG-06)-Facilit;.. and SYJtems
Maintenance, Line lf31957.
31381 . 31387.
(SG~)-Offoa: of the

~

~-KJMC:t

Malntenaoco .uslstant (SG09)- Universiry ResKiena: Halls.
Nonh Campua. Line 4143115.
Janitor (~Univemty
Facilities. Custodial Sc:rvices.
Une 131527. MalnteOLDCO A.J.
slstant (SG~)-Facilitia and
Systems Maiiu.enanct:' Line
04443. Jtdri&amp;ondoo M..
cbao1c: (SG-12}-Facilities and
Systems Mlintenaooe. Une
01309. 31375. Plumberf
Steamlltter (SG-12}-FaciHties
and Syst&lt;mJ Maintcnlnco. Une
1140358. GeooniMec:baDic
(SG- IZ)-Facilili&lt;J and Systems
MaiiiiODalice. Une 131656.
Supa:oloor I
(SG-14)-Focilili&lt;J and Systems
MainleiWltt, Une 120983.

CIIIECTIII

The -llcMl price for

~· ledlse by Spike Leo

was incaT8&lt;:tly Slaled in last
-

·· issue ollhe Ropalar. .

�_.,

__

..,_

..

•

The Reponsr ws/comes carmenrary on issues

at bf08d lnt819St to the unNr3tsity corrrruity.
Material may be edited for style and length.

Panel tackles issues of race and the media

...............
........
..

ly-WAReporter Staff

left: .........
M.,Dewla,Aon

0

N 1HE WHOLE, the white
newsmen spoke briefly,
most conceding, in effect,
that !hey knew !hey lived in
an imperfect world, !hat
both recruitment and diver·
sity of viewpoint could be beuer.' but !hat
they and their agencies did their best; their
black colleagues all spoke at length, for the
most pan eloquently. raising issues from
business-as-usual biases in. Wac;hington to
police bnnality to !he nation 's checkered

.......

"'-'*'C. , _
MtNmmat
Fulq8n, Ft8nk

Glst,.._TIIorna, Steve V•VIIet, Ken White.

immigration history.

The speakers voice their thoughl'i as pan
of a panel discussion on ..Perceptions and
Stereotypes: !he Media's Portrayal of African -Americans," which was hosled by the
Minority Concerns Committee Feb. 18 in the
School of Social Work. Speakers included
Mary Davis. WGR Radio: Kirk Varner.
WIBV-TV: Steve Van Vliet, WKBW-TV :
Ken White, WGRZ-TV : Leon Thomas,
WEBR Radio: Muhammad Furqan of Channel
58: Steve Bell, Buffalo News; Frank Gist. 1l~e
Crilerion and Ron Aeming. Fine Prinl News.
Behind the
Publisher Ron Fleming
entire evening.
shows picture of his
meanwhile,
nephew's body.
was the broadcast. worldwide, of the
videotaped
beating of
Rodney King.
and the vi&lt;&gt;lence thai
followed the
acquittal of the
offteerS involved. What
was clear was
that. whatever
their professional differencesand
whatever the

"The

tenninology
they used about
bringing slaves
back is the same
terminology
they use now:
any means
necessary.

.-FLEMtNO

outco~of

the uials now
being t.:ld in
Los Angeles,
fo r all the
speakers, the
event had

already
marked a
turning point.
not merely
for its expression or racial
tension in

America. but
for the way in which bot.h race as an issue
and the country 's many races are pcrcei ved

by and because of the news.
"Let us take the legendary racial hosti li ty
that permeates al l walks of life," declared
Mary Davis, who hosts her own call-in talk
show on WGR Radio. " How moen of a role
does the media play 'in !his?
·•unforrunately it took the upheaval following the King verdict to get journalists to
stop speaking for the 'urban underctass' and
actually ask African-Americans and Latinos
for their perspective," she added. "Very few

slowly.
"Over 90% of Americans gel their views of
the world, and of yoo and me. predominantly
from television. The news media shapes bolh
perceptions and mispercepions of how we
perceive world, national, and local events.
Haitians and most Africans are reduced to the
status of perpetually statving, undisciplined.
generally naked savages incapable of knowing
themselves wilhoot Western oversighL
"In Bosnia, the media describes those engaged in thai nation's savage civil war as civilians. soldier&gt;, or memPers of factions: in
Somalia. those engaged in tlw unfcxtunate
country's savage civil war are dismissed as
petty warlords, and their cohorts as street gangs
fighting over ourf.
·1n L.A., two men are severely beaten; the
bl:.:k man, Rodney King, by four white cops.
On TV we see the cops being granted reasonable ball. dressed in business soits,
cleanshaven. accompanied by their lawyers,
families. and friends. A white bUCk.driver,
Reginald Denny. is also savagely' beaten. Those
accused of beating him are also seen on TVin shackles. prison garb, unshaven. no ball, no
relief and no high-powered lawyen&lt;.
"'The perception: the white cops, good
citizens who used poor judgment. innocent
until proven guilty: !he black men. fenered.
obviously guilty until proven innocent."
The riots themselves, Davis added. were
multiracial rat.her than African-American:

"but you wouldn't have known !hat from !he
news." She also claimed they forced the
national (white) press to recognize racial
tension as somclhing that ran deep and from
coast to coast. despite !he fact !hat !he tendency of !hat press is. she said, to portrny
African-Americans as suffering because they
don't work hard enough. while opportunit~s
to interview black scholars and ex pens are

continually passed up. The black press, on
the other hand, she added, ran stories on
drug use and violence. but also voiced concerns about education, communities. and
cleanup effons. celebrating community

leaders for their efforts.
his was an opinion ·to which Ron

T

Ae ming spoke direcdy: Aeming also

made it clear that !he implications of a case
like Rodney King's fell directly wi thin his
own experieiJCe ..ln Aeming's case, however, that experience embrnces his personal

less or subject or issue. People of color are

life, !he life of ~ is community, and !he life of
his newspaper. ·s ince 1970, he has served as
the founder-publisher of Fine Prinr News, a
weekly newspaper wilh a circulation of
10,000.
Aeming's sons circulated copies oftt.:
newspaper as !he panel discussion began.
The issue for Jan. 6 carried !he banner headline. BEHlND CLOSED DOORS, and
below it. above a photograph of County
Hall, the question "Whal are they.trying to
hide?" The front page story opened with a
quote: 'The D.A. (Dillon) can' t sweep this

being added to media debates slowly, very

under the rug .... We know it's a cover-up and

African-Americans. Latinos, Asian-Americans and Native Americans inhabit news-

rooms as professionals. Take. for example,
two regarded news programs. Nighrlin• and
MacNeil Lehrer Newshour. Ninety percent
of tlie expert guests are white males regard-

we won't let this rest...
The quote was attributed to: "Ron
Aeming (uncle of the deceased)."
f1emiog prefaced his remarks by stating thai
his nephew's brocher was a police officer, that
he himself had served as a military policeman,
and !hat an tmder.;tanding of those who enforce
the law ran through his family.
'1n 1992. Aug. 16, which happened to be
my birthday, I got a call thai my nephew had
fallen and died in the Oleektowaga Police
Department. The evening paper said thai a
black man had fallen over in the police Station
and they didn 't know what had happened to
him.

"The

next day. I looked in !he newspaper
and it indicated the same thing, that a
young man had fallen over in the police
dcpartmcn4 and they don't know the cause
of dealh, but that an aulopsy would be performed. So an autopsy was performed. al
Erie County Medical Center, and !he coroner
said that they did not know the cause of
death, but it might be drug-related.
" In !he meantime, when the family tried
to see the body, we were not allowed to,
which we thought was very strange.
" In !he Buffalo News and on !he radio and
so fonh. they said there'd been an autopsy.
and there was no trauma on the body, no
bruises or anything of !hat nature, but !hat
!here would be further forensic and olher
tests to determine the cause or death.
"Now, people started calling us, people who
were witnesses to him being beaten by law
enforcement offiCerS. So my wife and I went
around with a tape reoonler, and we found 25
or so witnesses who were willing to oome
forward, and sign. a statemen~ and give the
infonnation to the district rutorney."
Five days after Donald Fieming's death,
!he family were finally allowed to see the
body: what they saw prompted them to take
photographs. Aeming said.
"There was a blow to his head the size of a
quarter. Nleanwhile, still in the paper, they're
puning in thai he jUSI fell over and died. Now
the rnodical examiner said thai there was a trace
of cocaiDe in his blood. and this is why they
think be died. But they didn't see hini sitting
down with a pipe in his mouth or a needle in
his ann or anything of thai narure: this is a
young man, who eight days prior to this happening. had had a drug test; he w.as a school
bus driver; he was a veteran of the Grenada
war, and held roodals for heroism In the pictures. yoo can see the footprints. still on his
body. where he was kicked."
Aeming lhinks that his nephew may have
quarreled with t.he officers on a fonner occasion. and on !hat day in October was simply
in the wrong place at the wrong time. He
adds !hat his own quarrel is not so much
wit.h t.he use or force that the officers exercised, b~llheir alleged failure to get a doctor
or even to sign the P1261 fonn routinely
used when a suspect de ~elops medical problems within a po_lice station.

As Fleming's son circulated pbolograjjts of
the body to the hushed audience in Knox Hall.
he added thai the media had-behaved Slrangely:
a news sta1ion. he holds. was told by police to
switch off their canrras when !hey can-e to the
hoosing project. but did &lt;:ajDlre his nephew
lying bleeding on the back seal of a police car:
Aerning has seen the tape, but he says the
station refuses to release it as evidence.

eanwhile, the medical repon requested
by the DA ·s office now added that
Donald Aeming had soffered from Sickle
Cell crisis, a loss of oxygen complicated by
a hereditary form of anemia. The Aemings'
pathologists confumed the Sickle Cell crisis
theory. but added thai the crisis had been
caused by application of a nightstick to the
lhroat and had not been attended to by a
medic. "In my opinion," the Aemings' pathologist concluded. "the failure lo oblain

M

medical assistance constitutes negligence

and the manner of dealh, homicide."
This failure led Aeming to a chilling
analogy.
'"The only lhing thai I have a problem wilh
is thai they didn't gel him a doctor when he
needed iL Now I can underslaod them using
force, and, in fact, I've done some researdl on
the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793, whereby !hey
had force scheduled to use on runaway sla~&lt;:S;
whenever they would nm away to another
state, they had to be brooght back, and it didn't
make any difference what condition !hey were
in. Bul I notice thai the terminology thai !hey
used aboot bringing slaves back is the same
terminology !hey use now: any means necessary. Now thai's the fallacy: l&gt;ecause whatever
we think as necessary means that's ilot whal the
law enforcement people think. JUSIIike the
Rodney King case."
Kirk Varner. news dircctorofWNB-TV
Channel 4, said !he fact !hat early repOrts of
Donald Aeming · s death noted the color of
his skin is both telling and unnecessary.
"It's difficult to get a young reponer not
to say, 'The comer store was held up by a
single black male.' You ask why that' s importan~ and !he reponer will say, ' It was in
!he police. report.· But why is it illlpO(Illnt? It
doesn'l help anyone identify the suspect."
Frank Gist of Th• 'Criterion said he
lhought that 'lhe media perpetuates stereotypes detrimental to society." Leon 1bomas,
news director of WEBR radio, disagreed; he
said that it wasn ' t·the job of the news to
combat racism, but to report it; V amer'Was
blunt. 'There is no such thing," he said. "as
an unbiased journal iS\,"
Muhammad Furqan said the. image of
African-Americans lies in the hands of African-Americans themselves."We )lave been
stabbed in the back. kicked in the back, .shot
in the back, left back, and we' ve hung back.
But it's time. It's rime because there is a
rooveffient in lhis country to change our

perception of ourselves,.and it's going to be
global. '"And television and the news and the
media_will have to follow after."

�_.,..__..,_

..

Candidates for Faculty Senate chair spell out views on
issues of faculty governance, role Senate should play
IPETER

A.

NICKERSON

II ANTHONY

RALSTON

Edttot'l Note: Peter N•ckeFson of Pafh910gy

and AnthOny Ralston of Computer Science.
candidates tor Faculty Senate chatr, present
their 111ews today Ballots are due on the Faculty
Senate Oltice by Wednesday. March 17
· PETDA.N~.

Faculty governance at the University at

Buffalo faces a number of challenges now
and in the years ahead. The new approach by
our central administration which places more
deci s ion ~ for fiscal planning and administration at the level of the schools (decanal
level) me;ms that there will now be greater
responsibility for administration of the university at the local level. The implication for
university-wide governance. as represented
by the Faculty Senate, is that more policy
decisions will occur at a level removed from
the university-wide level where the Senate

traditionally has its principal function. Poli- .
cies which affect the decanal level such as
replacing state dollars with funds returned
from research overhead money needs considerable input from the faculty at the Faculty Senate level and by governance bodies
at the decanallevel. lmplemental.ion of the
recent resolution of the Faculty Senate that
budget priority committees be established at
the level of the schools goes a long way
toward assuring faculty input on budget
planning at the decanal level.
The issue of fac~lty work load is currently being discussed by the Faculty Senate.
lnternction between our Faculty Senate
Committee on Faculty Tenure and Privileges
and a committee of the deans revealed some

disagreement on the work load statement.
Issues such as assignment of work load,
imponance of teaching and allocation of
faculty effort between teaching, research and
service will contin ue to resurface, especiaJJy
when fiscal pressures face the university as
support for public higher education does not
keep pace with our needs. It will be important to develop a consensus which is represenuuive Or the facu lty viewpoint on the
work load issue.
The general education requirements
passed by the Faculty Senate have yet to be
fully implemented by the administration.
The Senate needs to monitor lhe implementation of lhis program. since the charter of

.......... .rr.t
to...._..
....

...........

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................ f/1

~---

-RALSTON

-NICKERSON

the Senate gives it jurisdiction for the curriculum.
If I am elected Chair of the Faculty Senate, I will lead an effort to strengthen communication between the Faculty Senate and
other bodies of faculty governance. Such
communication Is essential if governance is
to be effective in meeting the needs of the
faculty, particularly at the decanallevel
because of an increasing decentralization of
administrative decisions. I also strongly
support using the commiuee structure of the
Senate because it is the most efficient way
for the Senate to study issues and to prepare
reports that serve as the basis for action by
the Senate. Another action that I would
recommend is regular feedback by senior
univer.;ity administrators on aCtions that they
have taken to implement resolutions by the
senate.

• ~ ltAI.S10N
The Faculty Senate should play an important
role in academic decision-making and in the
preservation and enhancement of the status
of the faculty. But it has rarely done so,
acting, if at all, on relatively trivial matters
or on things fait accompli. Too often in
recent years the Senate has failed in critical
instanceS to support the faculty, both individually and collectively.
What is needed is not confrontation with
the Administrntion but partnership. Such
partnership requires both the respect by the
Administratiqn for the Senate and a recognition by the faculty that its interests are

served by an acti ve, representative. conscientious Senate.
c-nlcaltlon-For the Senate to be
more effective, one necessity is inc~
communication between the Senate and the

faculty. All we have now are the periodic but
barely informative articles in the Rqxmtr of
Senate and Executive Commiuee meetings
plus whatever individual Senator&gt; may
choose to communicate lo their constituents.
When I was an at-large Sen~tor from FNSM
(and an Executive Committee member) in
1989-91 , I reported regularly to my constituency in writing both about what had happened and about fo&lt;thcoming matters. As
Chair of the Senate I would propose to do
the same in the Rtporur on a weekly or
biwoeldy basis.
P8lticlplltlooo-A second necessity for
increased Senate effectiveness is increased
participation by the faculty in the worl&lt;ings
of the Senate. Two things have conspired
against this in the JXlSl: (I) A belief that the
Senate spends too much time on unirnportanl
issues or on issues where it can have tittle
influence: and (2) A belief that service on the
Senate or its oommiuees brings no kudos.
Changing these all-too-&lt;&gt;ften correa beliefs will
not be easy but progress can be made.
Wider participation by itself will accomplish little. The committees of the Senate
need to be made more effective through
clear charges to them. an expectation from
the Senate that their work will be done
promptly and an expectation from the committees that their proposals will be examined
in a timely and sympathetic manner.
Two other areas on which I would hope
to make some progress: (I) I think that the
increasing emphasis on research over the
past decade or so has brought with it a declining level of collegiality. There is too tittle
concern by iodividual faculty members for
their colleagues and too little intlnSI in what
they are doing. The Senate may be able to
help to arrest or even reverse this dectine
through activities which inform the faculty
of and involve the faculty in collegial concerns. (2) The relationship of the Senate and
UUP seems to some naturally adversnrial. BUI
it isn' L Ahhough on occasion each may seem
to be infringing on the terri!OI)I of the other,
genernlly the interests of the Senate and UUP
are much more congruent than opposed
Through coopenllion both can be more effective than either can be individually. Fmally,l
would hope to be an effective and articulate
spokesman for faculty interests and concerns.

GALL FOR NOMINATIONS Candidates lor 1994 Honorar y Degrees
1he Unlvenlty lit Buthtlo'• ~ .,..._
Committee inviles all members of the university
community Jo nominate candidates for the conferral of
an honorary degree in 1994. These candidates should
be individuals who have achieved excellence in fields
such as public affairs. the sciences. the arts and
humanities. education, business, philanthropy. arid
social services. An honorary degree candidate may
enjoy nalional or inJemational prominence in one or
more of lhese areas. or may have given oulstanding
service to .the university, the state, the nation, or
. humanity at large. All nominees should be persons
whose lives exemplify the university's aspirations for
ils sludents and whose accomplishments are widely
recognized by leaders in their respective fields of
endeavor.

Why the hoiQwy . . . .?
The universily wishes to make public its support lor
activilies and accomplishmenls that represenl ils (JoMI
highesl ideals and thai are consislent with its missions---especially the celebralion of human achievemen! and humane values. By giviQg such prominent

recognition and visibility to outstanding indivtduals, UB
hopes to develop valuable bonds ol respect, interest, and
friendship with the honoree, and thereby encompass
within the university cOmmunity some of lhe finest exemplars 01 achievement and service in the world today.

Allnonlll•tlodm.terlllls -'-ld be........._
ted to :
Honorary Degree Convnittee

How to ....U IIIIIM..UO.•

Alumni and community friends of the university
may also submft nominations; off-campus nominators may oblain forms by calling 645-2901 .

Obtain and complele a copy of Jhe honorary degree
nomination form. The form is available allhe following oncampus locations:
,.._vice presidents' offices
,.. deans' offices
;.. departmenl and unit offices
,.. offices of the Faculty and Prpfessional Staff
Senates.
,.. offtees of The Spectrum and Generation
,. offices of student governments
II posstble. at least one addiltonalttem ol background
inlormatioo-biographical statement from Who's Who,
newspaper or magazine arttcle. or other description of the
candidate's lile and accomplishments- should be attached 10 the lorm A curriculum vitae or resu me ts
espec tally useful. but not essenttal

c/o 501 Capen Hall
University at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY 14260

1he IIOIIIkudlon ~
UB's Honorary Degree Committee will screen all
nominations. The committee, .chaired by Provost
Aaron N. Bloch, comprises representatives from the
faculty, student body, professionat staff, Alumni Association, UB Foundation, and other key segments of
our university community. f'ollowing its selection of
potential candidates, the committee will oversee
preparation of malerials Jo support each nomination,
review final dossiers, and thEln make recommendations lo Presidenl William R. Greintlr. The president
will in tum select the dossiers to be foiwarded to the
c~llor for consideration. All
of
19M......,.._ must be eubmltt8d br M..-c:ll

IIOIIIIua••

1S, 1193.

JancJafY 1993

�_.,

NEwsMAKERs.
•

Worl: by a team of dental researcher,; to develop

a vaccine against peri·
odontal disease was
discussed in a story in
the "Breakthroughs"
section of the December
issue of Discovtr. Richard Todd Evans, associate professor of oral
biology and microbiology, who led the team,
was quo«ed in the article.
Also on the team was
Robert J. Genco, Distinguished Professor and
chair of the Oral Biology
Department.
•

Also discussed in an
article in the " Breakthroughs" section of the
December issue of Discover was the work of a
research team led by
Scott Diamond. assistant professor of chemi-

cal engineering, that
found that the flow of
blood through blood
vessels regulates the
produ~ ti on of a protein
in cells lining the vesse ls

that detennines whether
they dilate or contract.

•

The appointment of
Edward Brody as chair
of the Department of
Biological Sciences and

__

French molecular biol-

ogy communiry was the
subject of an anicle in
the Dec. 7 issue of The
Scientisl.

-

--

COMPilDI aY THE ua

.

Faculty&amp;Siall
8

Ill

........

Ell ~lrtlllic . . . .llt'C

~--

0

8

0

Explore the newest electronic avenue for
scholarly cornmunicalion and research. The
Internet, the worldwide ~network of networks,"
connects thousands of computen and provides electronic mail communication as well as access to a
nearly inexhaustible number of other resources.
Ever become frustraled connecting with other
scholars? Whether it's phone tag, mail delays, or
Olher problems, electronic mail offers a solution.
Messages are transmiUed almost inSlantly and are
held at the remote user's computer until they "open
their mail." Drafts of papen; in progress and other
texts may also be sent as files through electronic
mail enabling timely feedback and also collaborative
effons, even if your co-author is in Austnllial
The Internet also offers a host of o«her resources.
These include scholarly discussion groups, electronic journals, library catalogs, over a million files
(software, data. and text files), and numerous other
resources such as remotely-searchable full text dictionaries, thesauri , quo«ation bool:s, and refigious
texts. Even up to the minute weather forecasts pro-vided by the National Weather Service!
An Internet Research Clinic will be presented
by Lockwood Library. Part I (Wednesday, March
10 at I p.m. and again on Thursday. March II at 7
p.m. ) will cover electronic mail, scholarly discussion
groups. and logging on to remote computers. Pan 2
(Wednesday. March 3 1 at I p.m. and Thut&lt;day,
April I at 7 p.m.) will explore electronic journals.
remote library catalogs, and File Transfer Protocol
(retrieving files from remote computers).
-Gemma DeVmney &amp; Loss Pequeno Glazlef. Lockwood
Library

199M3 CompeiHion for Chclu.te

StudMtEx~lnTeacNng

Aw_..

0

The Graduate School announces the annual
competition for Excellence in Teaching
Awards for graduate students. Five cenificates of

award will be made, each including a sum of $250.
Five Certificates of Honorable Mention will be
awarded also.
The competition is open to all current full -time

0

Martin Bernal, a leading

sinologist and member of
the Cornell University.Government Department faculty. will
discuss reaction to hjs book,

BU.ck Athena: Tht Afroasiatic
Roots ofCU.Ssical CivilizJJtion,
on Thursday, March 11. at 3:30
p.m. in 104 Knox Hall, Nonh
Campus.
His talk is sponsored by the
Andrew V.V. Raymond Ch~r of
Classics, the Department of Ar1.
HistOI)' and the Undergraduate
College.
·
By challenging the interpre(!ltions of British and European
scholars of the 18th and 19th
centuries that insisted upon the
' unique character and indigenous
origins of the ancient Greeks.
Bernal's Black AtMna has contributed to contemporary contro~ersy over Euroce:ntrism ·and
Afrocentrism. By· reviving the
"ancient model" of a common
"Mediterranean" culture in which

the Greeks panicipated and borrowed from African and Asian
neighbors, Bernal has challenged
long-standing onhodoxies regarding the origins and nature of

Western civilization.

.......
.
~-----

.........., .....
~

0

The UB School of Archi•tecture and Planning Visiting Lecture Series th.is spring will
future~on

a wide range of
1o11ics by 'emi-

nent architects,
designers, historians and critics
from the U.S.
and Canada.
Among them is
architect and critic Ouisllne Boyer,
UB 's 1993 W'tlliam and Elisabeth
Clarkson Visiting l...eciUrer, who has
written on the oontempOOII)' development of urban -space. Lectures
will take place at 5:30p.m. in 301
Crosby Hall. All are free and

R

0

Nominations may be made by any faculty member or any full-time gnduate student Deadline for
nominations and supporting materials is April 9,

1993. Seod to: Screening Committee, Excellence in
Teaching Awards, Graduate Schoo~ 552 Capen
Hall, Nonh Campus.
Criteria inelode: Teaching Skills. MentorShip,
Academic Standards and Requirements, Evaluation
of Student Performance and Professional Growth.
Nominations must inclode: Vita; Supervisor's
and De{&gt;arunent Chairperson's Recommendations;
No more than 5 statements from students, colleagues and faculty; student evaluations; personal
statement, no longer than 3 double-space pages.
Competition is no« open to individuals on lectureship appointment.s.
For full ddaiJs, rontact Ldgb Klefl'er, Gnlduate Sc:bool, 645-2942.

_________.,__
... .,__

...... ,_...

...,.., _ _ 12_18:

open to the public.
The seoies will open on Wednesday,Man:h IO,witltalectureby .
architect lleqJ8mJn NidJolooo
('The Appliance House") of the
Ulinois J:lepat1mmt of Technology.
and oontinues on Man:h IS-19 with
several presenlations by Bbyer. She
will he joined ~the week by
critic l'ttlc:IIIIOI Soridn, who edited
" Variations on a Theme Pa1c: The
New American City and the Fnd of
Public Space" (1992).
The renowned .Canadian archit&lt;et Ptter Ro&amp;e will. lecture on
Wednesday. March 31 . Susan
Cbrtstopber-.. an economic
pliumer. geographer. Urtited Nations consultant and author, will
lecture on Thursday, April 15.
Arehitect and critic Jennifer
Bloomer. author of several books
and articles on the body, space.
and the feminine, will speak on
Wednesday. April 21 , followed on
Wednesday, April28, by Ricardo
Scolldlo, co-founder of the award;.,;,rting studio of Diller and
Scofidio and professor of architecat The Cooper Union.

tUre

.,

• Public Safety received a report Feb. 12 that a
large GBfman shepherd was loose 1n the cafetena in the basement of Farbef Hall The dog was
gone on arrival of officers.
• A man reported Feb. 12 that someone had tampered with the wiring for the bleach"' controls 1n
Alumni Arena, causing the bleachers to move '"
the wrong direclion when the controls are
pressed.
• A woman reported Feb. t2 that while she was 1n
Lockwood Library, a man exposed himself to
her, and latB&lt;Iotlowed her to her car.
• A Wilkeson Quadrangle resident reported someone opened his mailbox and removed S20 !rom
a Valentine's card sent to him. The card was not
taken. according to Public Safety.
• Public Safety received a report Feb. 16 regatding a man with a hacksaw try•ng to gel into a
lockB&lt; in Capen Hall. According to offiCefS. the
man was trying to get into h•s own locker.

one
M.tlnllerillll,noted
~.to ......
~of book

A

gnduale student.s wbo have been involved in teaching at UB for at least one semester.

his return to the U.S.
after 22 years in the

..__

---on-'s
..........
0
Rl&amp;llts Center .....

The H~man Rights Center
at UB ts sponsonng an
International Hearing on the
Violation of Women 's Human
Rights, March 25, in the auditorium of the Buffalo Museum of
Science, 1020 Humboldt Pkwy.,
from 6:30-10 p.m. Co-sponsors
are the International Institute of
Buffalo, and V!VE, Inc., an organization for world refugees.
The hearing will doc:ummt female,lluman rights abuses around the
world. The Buffalo hearing will

focus on refugee WOOER, women
who are viaims of domestic violence
and women in povtJty.
Testimony will be talcen from
women who have experienced
human rights violations and from
service providers. &amp;cademics and
activists. Those offering testimony include women from Somalia

and Liberia as weU as staff from the
Center for Victims of Torture, in
torauo. and Buffalo's Haven
· House, a crisis center for wtlnal ,

C 0 \ r f R f ', '

~

S

......._.,,I 1W

16 .,.

~....
RsgbiBI l.k1iversily

...................

•=:A-'u ... .._

· fast
-· ... Mil breakat Plslachic's
...,...._.... 81 Paxon
01 Dr. Q.rt Rieman, Dfec:tlr of
Oualily tor NalionallnsliUB a
Standards and Tec11:1obgy in
Washingm, D.C.

viaims of domestic violence and
their children. The event is rr.e and
open 10 the public. For """" informalion contact Julia Hall Or Jamie
Han 31 the Human Righls Center,
64S-'1JJT3 or 833-2564.

bNitooks, An:IIINS
to .... book . . .

0

The univorsity's Poeaylbe
!Joo1:s Collcclim and Uni-

versity Archives will sponsor a book.
sale rrim 9 am.-4 pm on Tuesday,
Man:h 9, and Wednesday, Man:h 10.
in 420 eap.n Hall. Fmanoe fee for
the
which is open 10, the p.oblic, will be $2 on Man:h 9 and $1 on
Man:h 10.
The books to be sold cover a
variety of topics, including film,
poetry, history, fiction, psycbology, literary criticism, travel and
.mythology. They are dupli&lt;;ates
of books already in the collection
or are no« needed by the university. For more information, contact Poetry/Rare Bool:s
Collection at 645-2917. or University' Arcl\ives at 645-2918.

evm.

�_._ _ _ ..,_u

It was t1wee days

-

o#

heavy competition Feb.

· 25-27 in Alumni Aren&amp;--4his was aft.er all, the elite women's S W I I I ' Ichan1pionship on the

East Coast 'D1e

UB WCJ11'1811aquitted thelnselves

well with irdvidual

perlonnances ~schools rlke Princeton, ttarv.d, ~Yale (the tlwee b)p wii•IWS il'l the
1993 Eastern Women's Swim

· women's three meter

Le-.. . ~iipionships).

Jcmet

Wa'do#

UB came il'l 7th il'l

divirlg; ~Marie - in 12th

il'lthe

~

irdvidual medey. Team aw.-ds were .. esented by President cmd Mrs. William Greiner.
p

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J...t Wanl: oil the board; with , _ bouquet.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>............

Two"Waltda'
ttl ......
Bcroara l3oelli&lt;e tal&lt;s
about her la1gtime
interests: art and

t'wPrunllu

Study shows It'd

2

preemies may need

special savicas ct
~age. .

8

far _ . . ,

..............

Amiti Baraka discusses
the palh to true equality
in America

1-mg Kmg is cr1
_ilbiguing city txt it
misses greatness,

architec:t!xe.

,.

lhefWit

•atr

.. 3

UB !7ct says. . .

10

Fchnl.lf) 25 1993 Volume 24 No 18

New
Challenges
for Research
Institute on
Addictions

"We
have the
mandate
to
conduct
resea.rr:h

on the
etiology,
prevention
and
treatment
of
alcohol
and
substance
abuse.,,
......_

UB affiliate will widen

__

coverage of substance
abuse
who are students at UB) who work at
the institute.
ITHAnew
While RlA 's affiliation with UB
is not a fonnalized one,there is nonename, new
theless a very good working relamandates
tiooship with all of the senior staff
and a facelift member.; at RIA holding faculty
at the university, said
appointments
for its building, the ReJoseph Brennan, manager for research Institute on
search support services and public
· relations at RIA.
Addictions is taking on
."We also have doctoral students
additional challenges as
in psych&lt;;&gt;logy, sociology, epidemiwell.
ology. phannacology, biochemistry.
criminal justice. and social work.''
The institute at I021 Main Street
Blane added.
in Buffalo. formerly the Research
RlA scientists also conduct many
Institute on Alcoholism. has been a
projects with other researcher.; at
driving force behind research on all
UB through the university's Center
asl"'!'ts of alcoholism for more than
for Research on Alcohol and other
22 years-from animal models, to
Drugs.
interpersonal alcohol-related vi&lt;r
So what kind of research and
lence, to an inpatient and outpatient
treatment go on at RlA? For starter.;,
treatment center where people from
RlA has recently been awarded a
all walks of life go for help.
$1.3 mi Ilion contract from the FedWith a mandate from New York
eral Center for Substance Abuse
State, RJA-which is pan o( the
Treatment. to conduct a comprehenNew York State Office of Alcoholsive Statewide study of alcohol and
ismandSubstan&lt;:eAbuseServi&lt;:esdrug abuse, the first of its kind in
is how branching 'out to cover all
New York ince 1988, Biane extypes of substance abuse from alc&lt;r
plained.
hoi to cocaine to prescribed drugs.
More than 35,000 people from
And with the new responsibilities,
throughout the state and living under
the Main Street building·is also unall types of social conditions will be
dergoing a facelift to enhance its
included in the study. Brennan reenvirons.
ported.
"We have the mandate to conduct
Included in this sample will be
research on the etiology. prevention,
the homeless, adults living at home,
and treatment of alcohol and subhigh school students, W)d young
stance abuse," said Howard Blane.
people in youth detention, said Blane.
director of RlA since 1986, who
adding that this disparate and reprebringsover40years ofexperience to
sentative group will be studied so
the 235 staff and students (many

three or four times
may do berter with
an inpatient treatment. while an alcoholic who has
never been trealed

and who comes

from a socially
stable family may
do fme with outpatient treatment.
Another recent
and one which shows some of
the new direction ofRJA; is research
by Brenda Miller, depl;tydirectorof
RlA, who is looking at the n:lationship
womeo drug abuser.;
and domestic violence and sexual
abuse in the current and past lives of
these women.

study:

Barnes, a sociologist at RlA, is a
$1.65 million
grant from the National inStitute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism. to study the influence of family environment ,
parenting s!Ulls, and peer relationships on alcohol and substance use .
and nonuse. During the four-year
study Barnes and associates will interview 600 adolescents, iheir par- .
ents, sibs. and friends in'orderto gain
s6me insight into how the influence
o( the family and peer.; affects ad&lt;r
lescent alcohol and subsiance abuse.
Over the year.;. RlA has investigated basic and appl ied research
questions, Blane explained. For example. studies of the epidemiology
ofalcohol_abuseamongadolescents.
collegestudentsandadultshavebeen
conducted. In addition, reSearch on
fetal alcohol effects on animals and

fectsagingand muscul&lt;rmotOrfunction in humans have also been given
a good deal of attention, he added.
Another area of important re·
search has been in treatment evaluation, Blane said. With a 24-bed
inpatient Clinical Research Center
(CRC) on the premises and between

between

~350peopleayearwhoaretreated

hile the emphasis

on an outpatient basis, RlA is a fertile place for "state of the an treatment evaluation," he added.
Roben Rychtarik, director of
CRC. and Gel'ard Connors. clinical
psychologist at RIA, are conducting
a random comparison ofin- and outpatients to study theeft'IC3C)I of alcohol treatment, Blane explained,
adding that a fair amount of the literature suggests no differences between inpatient and outpatient
treatment: However. he DOled that
there are methodological problems
with some of these studies.
Rychtatik and COIUlOis, in their
study, are testing tl)e hypothesis that
"certain types of alcoholics do berter
with certain types of treatment_"
Blane said, adding thllt_ for example,
an alcoholic who ,has been treated

at RlA is still on

alcohol abuse. it is
quickly moving
toward drug research, .including
research on everything from tobacco
to heroin. Blanc&gt; said Possible studies inc!~ assessments of cognitive
and beha~iornl •er.;us pharmo- ·
therapuetic treatments for cocaine
abl!sers. he added.
.
As for addictions in Buffalo, alcohol is still the l1lOSI colnroooly
abused drug, but cocaine-and crnck
are a problem as well as heroin.
Blane said, adding that all of these
drugs are relaled to other social ills
such as crime. AIDS; the new viral
form of tuberculosis, and hepatitis.
All of these have great social and
economic costs. Blane said
rJ

�___,__...,_.

2
H 0 N 0 R S

-

~
IUC1D10--

_ _ and.....,

- - prolessors of pediatrics at the UB $chool of
Medicine and Biomedical
ScienCes, have been elected
lo the American Pediatric
Society. The
sociely rec&gt;
ognlzes outstanding
contributions
to the foekl of
pediatrics.
Green,
professor of pediatrics in the
Division of Hematology/Oncology, Is chief of the oncof&lt;&gt;.
gy section in the Departmjlnt
of Pediatrics at Roswell Park
Cancer Institute.
He is also a member of the
Scientific Comminee of the
International Sociely of Pediatric Oncology, the Sociely of
Pediatric Research. the
Amencen Society of Hematology and the American Society ol Clinical Oncology. He
is certified by the National
Board of Medical Examiners.
A graduate of Massachu·
sens Institute of Technology.
Green earned his medical
degree cum laude from St.
Louis University School of
Medicine.

Fuhrman heads the Divisions of Critical Care Medicine at Children's Hospital of
Buffalo antl in the Department of Pediatrics at the
medical school.
A member of the Northwest Pediatric Society. the
American Academy of Ped~
atrics and the Society of Critical Care ~icine , he is

certified by the Nation"at
Board of Medical Examiners.
Before coming to UB in
1991 , he served as assistant
director of the intensive care
uni1 at Pittsburgh Children's
Hospi1al and director of the
tlosPital's Cardiopulrronary
Research Laboratory and
Respiratory Therapy Depanment. A graduate of Franklin
and Marshall College, he
earned his medical degree
from New York Universi1y.

ART

tiiECIIVD NA1'10NAL AliT

. . _ . . .. . - . prolessor of art, received the
Audubon Artists Gold Medal

at home
in two

'wodds'
Art, .-chltecture we
longti- lntwesb of
- · llblwy head
11J ANN MmCIEII
Reporter Editor
IKE HER dissertation
.
subject, John Ruskin,
Barbara Boehoke serves
both art and architecture.
The newly named head
of the Architecture and Planning
Library exemplifies the wide scholan;hipofthe 19thcenturyartscholar
and writer.
Boehnke, who is also art/art history subject specialist for Lockwood
Library, favors a cross-disciplinary
approach to librarianship and architectural studies. The recipient of a
Ph.D. in English from the University
of Chicago. she is a bibliophile of
wide culture.
ln her new position, Boehnke
chooses books and maintains collections for both the An:hitecture and
Planning Library- which shares
space in Hayes Hail with the School
of Architecture and Planning- and
the art holdings of Lockwood Library.
"'I don 't think my background is
Lhat unusual for this job.'' says
Boehnke. a Buffalo native who holds
an M.A. in English from Canisius
College and M.L.S. and B.A. degrees from UB. She has been interested in art and architecture since
high schooldays and declares. '"As a
doctoral candidate, I decided toenter
the English Department as opposed
to the Art History Department.
though I did take some courses ihere.
John Ruskin was an an and architecturccritic: he serves bothdiscij)lines.
My Ph.D. centered on 19th century
literature and criticism. I was inter-

L

of Honor and
Prize in
Graphics
Jan. 30 at the
National Arts
ClutilnNew
YorkCi1y.
&amp;everman,
who holds
more than 50
awards, is a I~ Fellow of
the louis Comfort liffany
Founda)ion, the National Endowment (or the Arts and the
Royal Academy, Amsterdam.
Send Worms/ion oollorors a
.....OS a:&gt; Am~. editor.

The Rsponer.
136 Crofts Hal. North CBnJ&gt;u$.

"In both art and architecture, the current
trends are to borrow from literary criticism
That's a very comfortable area for me. "

ested in a cross-disciplinary degree.
'"Myconcenuationwasinthe 19th
century. The majority of the Students
using the Architecture Library are
interested in learning about contemporary art and architecture. The members of the Art Department, as I
come to know them, tend to be interested in learning about what is currently happening in the art world.
something I need to shore up on. In
both art and architecture, the current
trends are to borrow from literary
criticism. That's a very comfortable
area for me."
According to Boehnke; the Architecture and Planning Library has
long enjoyed the support of the
school. ""It" s very much a part oftheir
curriculum and they strongly support it."'
Boehoke hopes her goneralist
approach will benelit faculty. especially in tenns of cross-disciplinary
investigations. She plans additional
talks with faculty from Departments
of Art and Art HiStory, adding that
the Art Department will likely in-

--

crease its use of Lockwood"s art

collection following the move to the
Fine Arts Center. Art History Department faculty are in nearby
Oemens and can be expected m

benefit from Boehnke· s presence at
Lockwood.
"Ever since the studio art program has been located at Bethune
Hall." she says. "they haven' t had
much library service. Sometimes Students and faculty come to Hayes,
because it' scloser. We"ll have a call
forbooksondesign.drawings, things
like that. I thiok, however. that when
they"re a few steps from Loekwood,
they 're going to start coming in and
there will be a demand for new kinds
of materials."'
oehnke ..tries to maintain some

B

involvement in literary things,"
adding with a smile that she is now
'"contributing to a biography of mystery writers. I also hope to work in
the gray area between literaturewhat Ellen Eve Frank referred to in
her 1979 book as Uurary Archilec·

ture-&lt;tu&lt;lyingthe
relationship be-

Barbara

Boehnke In
tween literature the Arctal'teoand architecture ture &amp; ~
and translating ar- nlng Llbnlry
chitectural obser- kl Hayes
vations
into Hall.
literary-type compositions.
'"A 101 of writers have used arch itecture. symbolically, and as a way
to express certain things that they
feel they can't say adequately otherwise. Proust talked about architecture as memory. Several other
writers ... have picked up on this and
said that when you look a1 buildings
you see the hiStory and memory of a
civilizat:ion. lfyoulookathowpeople
are building. you can infer their character from it It' san interesting area.··
ln joining the UB Libraries.
Boehoke returns to her hometown
after several yean; at the University
of Chicago, where she wori&lt;ed in
various capacities at the Joseph
RengeosteinandJohnCrerarLibrary
and.atonepoint, was responsible for
maintaining 40 miles of book staeks.
She also oversaw the transfer of
900,000 volumes to the new Crerar
Library during a complex merger
with the University of Chicago. She
has also worked as a reference librarian at the Buffalo and Erie County
Public Library and from J 988-90. as
assistant librarian a1 Lockwood.

Series explores issues of racism, feminism
11J PATRICIA DONOVAN
News Bureau Staff

T

WO "WOMEN distinguished nationally for their
careers as writers and social
activists will be featured
.guests in the fOUrth annual speakers
series sponsored by th~ Women' s
Sludi"'i Program at UB.
The series, ''Toward an Anti-RacNature."" has bee~ honored by the
ist Feminism."' will be held on Tues-. American Academy of Poets. the
day, March 9, and Wednesday, . American Library Association and
March I0, on both campuses. All The New York Timts. and Kathy
events are free of charge and open to . Engel. poet and political activist who
founded and directed MADRE. a
the public.
The speakers will include award- human justice organization whose
winning poet Minnie B'ruce Pratt. activities include cultural exchange
whose 1989 book, ""Crime Agai nst and political action largely in Cen-

EDITOR. AMI~

tral America and the Caribbean.
strategic planning.
Prnn holds a doctorate in English
A multimedia tribute to the late
literature from ·me University of poet Audre ·Lorde will open a panel
Nonh Carolina at Chapel Hill. She
discussion titled"'IbeMaster"sTools
has taught writing and literature at
Will Never Dismantle the Masters
several historically black universiHouse;· to be held. at 7 p.m. on
ties and curren~y is on the graduate
March 9 in 146 Diefendorf Hall.
faculty of the Union InStitute in CinPrnu, Engel, Agnes Williams and
cinnati. and a visiting assiSUlnt proJunko.Kanarnur.t will participate in
fessor at the University of Maryland.
the discussion.
·
Engel has been a full-time politiEngel and Pratt will lead workcalorganizerandactiviStsince 1979. . shops on '1be Transform8tion of
She is the president of Riptide ComSilence into Language.and Action"'
munications, lnc., a consulting finn
from 9 a.m. to I :45 p.m. on Marth
that works primarily with cultural
10 in 280 Park Hall.
·
and sociaJ justice institutions in all
The·series will close with a reaspectS of communication, media
ceptioniiWlCh at 12:30 p.m. in Park
representation, development and
Hall.

�__IHIIDRIII ..
.__,..,_

Self-determination is path to equality for
African-Americans, Amiri Baraka says
11)'-HAIIMIII

I

F AFRICAN-AMERICANS are to find
true equality in America, they rrustfight for
therightofself-determination.Sosoidpoet.
playwrighL essayist and activist Amiri
Baraka, who lecturod in 147 Diefendorf
last Thursday aspartofthe Black Srudent Union's
celebrntion of Black History Month.
"Your lack of consciousness permits you to
be slaves," he said, paraphrasing Malcolm X.
"Self-determination. self-respect and self-defense must ultimately be gained. Ifit cannot be
had by my genemtion. it must be had by your
generation or your children's gener.nion."
Bamkasoid that an individual's knowledge of
hisadtural history and the inherent lessoosofthat
history are essential to gaining the power of selfdetermination within society. "You have to come
out of here (UB) knowing yourself. Read the
wholehistory(of African-Americanadture)while
you're here. Then, you'll know the requirements
for your own revolution ... which lead.to the right
to control your life," he soid.
'11lcre is a continuum in our history. Dred

Scott and Rodney King. There you go. Propeny can tx: sat on. like chairs. You can beat
your propeny if you want."
Empowering the individual in society will not
only educate that pen.on. but lead him to address
the needsofhisowncorruTI.Ulity."Don't be sitting
on tllC wrong side of the desk. explaining to black
people why they shouldn't be on welfare. We
need you totmnsfonn ourcommunitic·s." Baraka
~id . ''You&lt;:mlnot be equal to someone ifthey've
g&lt;M ;omething and yoo have nothing...
Bar.Jka s:ud that only through true equality.
achieved on &lt;Ul individual basis through an in
fonned knowkxtgc of one·~ self and one's function wilhin lhc community, could oppres.,ion be
resiS!cd. "Accep no mcism frum people. Demand equality. in~iSl on equaJity ! You must remember. where there iti opp~ion. there i!-.
reststancc. We have the right to dctenninc our
4

liv~ ...

our society is buih upon an
established economic base
and those who influence it
propel the ideas that sustain
achiheequal- that economic base."
tty on ., lidRegardingMalcolmX's
vidual t.sls.
notion of self-defen5e,
Bamka soid that the term was
not limited to a physieal definition. ''The right to
tell your own story is a form of self-defense. One
of the moot irnponaru things he told us was that
yru trea1 people like they trea1 you. He soid that if
the U.S. government wouldn 'tdefeod us. then we
had the right as human beings to defend ourselves."
Bamka explainod that the people rrust demand a third major political party. one whieh
wouldrqresentthosewhoseekpoliticalfreedom
for all "'There needs to be a People's Party! We
should call a Coostitutional Covention and get rid
oftheElectcralCollege. Weshouldeliminatethe
U.S. Senate, which is dangerously reminiscent of
the feudalism within the British ParlimenL Instead we needalargerCoogress. the lower house.
one that would represent a wider diver.;ity of
America." he soid.
"We need to initiate a (popular) election (of
justices) to the Supreme Coon. which is the
only major bmnch of government that is still
appointed by the President. It' s ridiculous."
He also argued that all U.S. foreign aid should
be halted, except that which is proved to be used
for humanitarian purposes. "Don't you understand that we often give money to countries who
turn aroond and spo:.'rld the money with our defense industries? That is what keeps the military/
industrial complex moving."
Baraka said that higher education should
not be a commodity. bought and sold on the
open market. Instead. it should be free for all
who desire 10 learn. ·•Jn the end. we must push
bourgeoisdemocmcy to it.!l very limits until the
people get sick of it and demand socialism ...
The lecture was sponson.'d by the Black
Student Union.

Amlrt 8a'ltka
exhorts audl..-ln
Diefendorf to

Reporter Slaff

"You cannot be equaL.. if
they've got something and
you have nothing. "
The premise on which the United States
was founded, life. libeny and the pursuit of
happine;s. has never been a reality for AfricanAmericans. he said. ··we did not come here
willingly. We did not ask to come. We came
here in ~lave ships. From our point of view.
Amcricu has never been a democracy ...
He called America an imperialiststate whose
~ocietal structure isdepenclent on the wishes of
an exclusive group of rich and powerful elite.
'"'The institutions that we're in. that tend to run our
society. teach us to be subservient to imperialism
and to white supremacy. The super-structure of

Conference to spotlight Comparative Lit
BJ MAIIIIIIAMMER

20.h year ati an autonomoos unit.·· .said Sussman.
"We now vie for studcnL• with Cornell. Johns
HE PROGRAM in Comparative LitHopkinsandtheUniven;ityofCaliforniaatlrvine."
emture at UB will be highlighted in
The importance of critical theory in
April when it hosts an international conacademia has grown over the past quarter
ference on the worlc of the late Irish
decade as more momentum has been generplaywright/novelist Samuel BecketL This is the
ated to explore the possible links between
foonh in a series of international conferences that
various anistic disthe_program has sponsored since 1989. according
ciplines like poetry
to H_eruy Sussman. program director..
and painting. sculp··we've also been able to do conferences on
lllre and essays and
(German philosopher) Walter Benjamin, and
soon. Sussman said
another on what we call homotextualities," he
that critical theory
has now assumed a
said recently.
The conference. April 22-24. is being orgaplace of prominence
nized by SUssman and Distinguished Professorof
in many grad~atc
English Raymond Federman. and boasts an interEnglish departnational cast of participants. "This conference is
ments around lhe
imponant," soid Sus.&lt;man, "because you can concountry. Anq for
SUSSMAH
sider it one of an international sequence of tributes
good reason.
to Becken's worl&lt; since his dealh ...
"Most of contempomry critical theory.
He is also quick to give credit .for the entire
whether psychoanalytic theory or structuralseries of conferences to another colleague from
ism, has an exquisite sensitivity to language
Compomlive Litemture. ''These gatherings are. and taJses into account·the slippage that takes
part·of a series or'intcmational conferences that
place between greatculturJI and political claims
got ·off the ground when Rodolphe Gaschc . and !he language within which they arc
(Eugenio Donato ProfessorofCompomlive Litcooched," he said. "Critical theory seeks to
erature) was awarded an endowed chair," he soid.
expand the theoretical and interdisciplinary
relationships that exist within the~. Through
"It's been Ga.&lt;ehe's jiresence that has really been
these relationships. critical theory is better able
the fon:e behind these conferences."
to explore the linguistic nature and. characterThis conference is no small accomplishistics of 20th century literature and an."
ment for a progmm that began as an offshoot of
The progr.un's ongoing success can be tied to
UB's English Depanment in the early 1970s.
the
faculty's ability to attract outstanding gmduToday. the progmm in Comparative Literature
ate students. among other tlUngs. soid Sussman.
is an autonomous one that attracts high caliber
"Another way we attrJCt srudents to come here is
graduate studentsofits own as well as graduate
students from other djsciplines who want a that we cut them loose when they arrive. It gives
them theopponunity to be able todoreallycutting
grounding in critical theory.
"In a strong sense, 1993 brings the progmm ·s edge work. The theoretical orienunion of the

program encoumgcs students to seek gaps and

Reporter StaH

intersttccs between various anistic. cuhurdl and

T

political subjects and curricula...
Anotherimponantcomponentoftheprogram's
success can be tied to its active involvement,
through teaching and a&lt;h1semenL with gmduate
srudents from other academic dcpartm:nts. Silldents from within various curricula often desire a
grounding in critical theory. he said. 'There has
.always been a complementary relationship between theC9mpar.nive LiteratW-eprogramand the
English t:lepartrrent. QJr relalion,;hip with Modem L=guages is growing. And there's an interesting crossover we have with the Linguistics and
Philosophy l&gt;..jXU1J11e11ts."
The reputation of the program's faculty and
theirindi vidual research have been attracting praise
fora numberofye:m;. That reputation won 'tbe hun
by the list of recent and upooming publications
from the program's faculty. In the past year. new
books have appeared by Associate Professor Jill
Robbins and ProiCssor Carol Jacobs. This year
promisesaFrenchtrnnslationofRodolpheGasche's
epic-making 71rt! Tain &lt;flirt! Mirror, and books by
Assistant Professor Andrew Hewin. Associate
Professor Joan Copjec and two by Sussman.
"'The faculty in this program continue to producefirst-rate textsandalsotendtoreceiveagood
deal of external funding for their work," said
SIJSSI!'arl. "For such a small concentmteddepanmenL the rate of external funding for our fuculty
is outstanding."
Tho!'c sua:csses have lcil to greater support
from SOliitCS closer to home. "Because it is a ·
program that revolves so mx:h aroond research
and gr.ruate trdining. the many recent efforts by
(Ans &amp; l..dter.i Dean) Kerry Grnnt to provide
rescarclisuppontofacultyisagreathelp.''Sussinan
said.

3

Law students

assist victims
11)'-News Bureau Staff

S

TIJDENTS AT the UB School of
Law are expunding their efforts to
help victims of domestic violence
by serving as lay advocates during a
new, weekly prognun at the law schooL
During the prognun, which is held oo
Wednesdayevenings.aod began Feb. 17, students from the Domestic Violence Task Fon:e
mt out petitions for Family Court aod arrange
for volunteers to esoon women to coUn..
The Wednesday prognun is operating in
addition to the task force's Tuesday evening
program. where stodents assist an auomey
who provides pro bono legal advi&lt;:e on a
variety offamity law topics. including divorce

"We try to make it easier
for these women. We know
the procedures, where to go
for help."
and child &gt;uppon. custody and abuse.
The task force differ.. from the law school's
domestic violence clinical program in that it is
a student-initiated. all-volunteer group, while
students who work in the clinical program
receive academic credit.
,;We try to make it easier for these women.
We know the procedure ~. where to go for
help," says Ruth Yashpan. a third-year law
student whocoordinatcs the task force· sactivities with Subrata Paul. also a thinl-year stU·
dent. "We want to take out the intimidation of
the coun sy~tem and the (women· s) panners. ··
While the students cannot offer legal advice-they hope to add an anome) to the
W&lt;'dnesday program in the future-"we can
give women their options and suppon them."
Yashpan says. For example. filling out Famil)
Coun petitions at the law school will shonen
women· sactual visils tocoun. "sparing women
a half-a-&lt;iay spent in the intimidating coon
setting ... l'-dul adds.
The session also serves a.'&gt; a learning experience for the students. They receive valuable
experience going to coun anl:J working with
clients. and also gather infonnation on how
judges and the coun system in general are
treating these women.
In addition to the Tuesday and Wednesday
progmms. the task force has held informational meetings to increase aw~ness of domestic violence, and published a brochure
describing legal avenues available to victims
ofdomestic violence .ind the services proVided
by the task force.
All call&gt; to the task force, wllieh received the
NewYorkStateBarAs.~oo 's SrudentEthics

Award for 1992.arestrictlyconfidential. Yashpan
and Paul emphasize. Anyooe interested in attending the Tuesday or Wednesday programs should
contact the ta...t&lt; force at MS-2782.

The Reporter is UB;-s conmunity
newspaper and we ~t you to
become involved. Give us your
comments on current topics
relating to the university and
higher education as well as on
timely subjects in areas of your
expertise. We welcome articles,
VteWpOints, LetterS to the Editor
as well as news items. Send
materials to Ann Whitclier, Reporter Editor, 136 Crofts Hall,
Buffalo. N.Y.. 14260.

�_.., ...

4

_.,_..

Journalist says U.S.-Israeli relations
won't change under President Clinton
lly-UIIU

Reporter Contributor

W

HILE ··change" was the
buzzword in ·last year•s
presidential e lection.
Arriericans can expect
little or no change in

United Statesllsrneli relations under President
Bill Clinton. according toone ex pen on Middle
Eastern affairs.
Joel Bainennan. independent journalist and
editor of an investigative newsk!uer on Israeli
uiT:urs. told a Slanding-roOm-ooly crowd in the
Kiva Room of Baldy Hall Sunday that as long a&lt;

"The U.S/Israel
relationship is 75-80
per cent American. Israel's
only interest is self
preservation. "
·.IOO.IWHERMAH

American oil COnlJXllltes and the American m.ilitaryflodustrial complex have such a suong influcoc"Con.U.S. fore ibm policy. relations bet wren the
U.S. and lsmcl"fuodamentally cannot change."

Bainerman"s lecture was part of the conference. '"New Realities on Campus." sponsored by
UB ·&gt;Jewish Studeru Union ansi Hillel of Buffalo.
a private fouodation for the benefit of Jewish
&gt;tudent&gt;.The day-long conference featured guest
~pcakc~and panel discu.\S\on~ concerning iss~
currenLiy focing the Jewish community.
By no means. ~id Baincm1an. doc:-. the
Un ited Suue~ want to sec Israel ··go up in
smoke." but. he s:Jid. one should "not be fooled
in10 believing the conventional wisdom that
-.ay~

the U.Sllsmeli relationship will change

bccau~

of the change in president. Clinton
really represents the same people Bush did: oil
companies and anns companies:·
U.S.IIsracli relations. according to
Baincnnan, arc .. vCry misunderstood."
"Conventional wisdom in the media alway• said that (President) Bush and (former
Israeli Prime Minister) Shamirdidn't get along
and that"s one of the reasons why relations
suffered a hit:· he said.
. "'That's tOlal nonsense. Relations bt.'lween the
two c-ountries nosedived during the late 1980s

because of world politics and the contimling

influence ofAmericanoilcomponiesanddefense
contr.lC!ors. It had nothing 10 do with per&gt;OOal
chemistry between leader.;;· said Bainerman.
whose Middle East analyses have appeared in
77u: IVai/ Strett Journal, 77u: Christion Scienc:.
Monit~r and several other major newspapers.
With the fall of communism. Bainennan
said. lsmel no longer could be viewed as a
..str.uegic asset" in the Cold War. As a result.
the U.S. oil and defense iodusuies needed a
new political environment to keep oil prices
high and am1s sales brisk.
What scenario could create this environment? h's simple. Bainennan said: a crisis in
the Middle East. This explains why the U.S.
wanted to tum Saddam Hussein into a powerful military player by building up Iraq in the
years before the Gulf War. he said.
'1lle U.S. needs a strong Arab military
power to counterbalance Israel's power,"
Bainerman stated ... Because if there's conflict
in the Middle East. the U.S. can sell arms and
the price of oil Stays high."
Thi&gt; approach to foreign policy by the U.S.
understandablydoesn "t alwayscorrespood with
Israel's foreign policy objectives. Bainerman
said. Yet, there isn't much Israel can do because of its dependence on the U.S.
"1lle U.S.IIsrael relationship is 75-80 percent American. lsrnel's only interest (in the
· relationship) is self-preservation. It doesn't

have major oil companies or a huge number of
jobs dependent on the defense indusuy:· he
said.
Bainerman illustr1lted how little the United
States· policy had changed since Clinton took
office by citing the presence of Cyrus Vance
and Wnrreo Christopher in the current round of
Middle East peace talks.
Vance. who was Secretary of State under
President Caner, and Christopher. who was
Vance·s Deputy Secretary of State. are both
heavily involved in the Middle East peace
talks-Vance as a special envoy to the udks.
and Christopher. in his new cabinet role.
These peace udks. along with any subsequent attempts to reach an accord, will fail
unless the U.S. either exits the negotiations or
alters its policy objectives. the journalist said.
Bainerman. whose ra:ent book Crim&lt;J ofa
Pr.sident detailed new evidence of Bush Administration cover~ups in the Iran/Contra and
Weapons-to-Iraq scandals. said he is currently
doing resean:h for a related book on the Middle
East involving what he said are some '\manswered questions about the Gulf War."
Althoogh he is a U.S. citizen. Bainerman
resides in lsrnel and was there during the Gulf
War. He said he has doubts about how much of
Baghdad was bombed and how many casualties
there were. how much of Kuwait Iraq really
invaded. and whal the real pwposes of the war
were.

B

ainerman hinted that the Gulf War may
1101 have been whal roost poople though! it

was. ·~ definitely was a Desert Shield."" he
said. ""but r m 1101 sure how much of a Desert
Storm there was:· Althooghhedoesn"tyethave
prnof.Bainermansaidheisworl&lt;ingonestablishing that details of the war were misreponed and
exaggerated by the U.S. government to boost oil
prices and increaseanns sales to the Middle East.
Rabbi Shay Mintz.directorofthe Hillel Foundation. lOki theReponerhe has been trying to get
Bainerman to UB for several years because he i'
considered an expert on lsrneti political and economic affairs.
Other topics of discussion at the conference
included '·Holocaust Revisionists. Neo-nazis
and Skinheads:· ""Choosing Judaism ... What
does it mean to Convert?" and "You're so
Rich .... Stereotypcs of Jews on Campus."
The conference· s theme of" New Realities'"
was chosen. according to Mintz. because of
"the myriad af new issues-social. political
and personal--that Jewish students must cope
with in today's world.""

President
Greiner was
among guests at
Feb.18 dedicatial of M. Robert
Koren UB Council Office in
.Capen Hall.
Below. Mrs. M
Robert Koren
and daughter,
Maureen Koren
Hurst. look aJ
photo book highlighting service
of lhe late Council chairman.

Budget package
is FSEC subject
lly-Aeporter Staff

I

TSNICKNAMEisSIJTRA.(SialeUniversity Tuition Reimbursable Aooount). And if
it isappoved bythestarelegislatw-eas part of
Gov. Mario a.omo·s 1993-1994 budget
proposal, UB potentially could k&lt;:ep any tuition
rmney it receives from enlarging its enro11mero
base, accmling 10 Robert Wagner. senior vice
(resident for university services at UB.
He made his comments at last week's meeting of the Faculty Senate Executive Committee(FSEC).
··Jn the past. money gained from over-enrollment at any SUNY school was 001 made
available to the SUNY system;· said Wagner.
"We would be able to retain the extra revl!nue
from over-enrollment under SUTRA ."
Regardingtheentirebudgetpackage. Wagner
was reserved in his assessment. althoogh he was
pleased that $58 million had been included for
salary increases within SUNY. "lt"s a standstill
budget. It provides no enhancement for any
existing program. But it does take care of the
salaries:·
He explained that the salary increases woold
1101 penain to grnduate and teaching assistants.
who recently voted to form a union. "1lley will be
negoliating later this spring:·
Other items in the 1993-1994 SUNY budget
proposal included funding for a portion of inflationary expenses. funding for maintenance and
operation of new buildings. utilities and for preserving facilities and meeting health and safety
requirements, no new wition increa~ for students. and a 5% cut in overnll TAP expenditures
with the etiminalion of TAP for new graduate
students. said Wagner.
The pocential impoct upon UB will be mixed.
he explained. "1lleshortfall inTAPwill be felt by
boch private and public institutions. And by
eliminatingTAPfornew grnduate students. well
havetopickupanadditionai$250.&lt;XX)ingr.tduate
tuition scholarship costs.""
He also said that under the present proposal.
UB wooldfareautilitiesshonfall for 1993-1994.
would be withoot program staff for the new
buildings that are set to open. and would have 10
JXIY S 1.8 million of an S11.8 million lump sum
reduction being passed on to SUNY by the state.
"'The minimum need for program staff in the
new buildings is about S850.&lt;XX). We "II have 10
flod a way to get that through reallocation at
Buffalo:· said Wagner. ·111e S 1.8 million reduction we"II absort&gt; represents about I % of UB. s
base budget."

agner al"' said that it was "sorrewhat
of a surprise"" that ihe governor had no&lt;
rocommended any new facilities oonstruetiori
funds.
In otherFSECactivity. the body discussed the
fa&lt;.1 that the language requiremetlt for the Undergraduate College (UGC) will 1101 be able to be
implemented again this year because offmancial
and manpower resuairls.
If UB could implement the requirement. it
would place itselfsquarely within the mainstream
of other institutions that require some study in a
foreign language. accmling to Stephen Dyson.
professor of classics and chair of the Arts and
Letters-UGC Committee on the implementation
of the language requirement.
··1n tenns of comparable institutions. our language programs are undersudfed. whidt makes it
more dilftcUit 10 attract grnduare students." he
said. "'Over the long tenn. we need 10 build up the
faculty and resources within the languagedepart-

W

tneniS.""

Dyson"s committee recommended a phased
implementationofthelanguagerequiremenlwhich
would require student&lt; entering· UB during the
second year of impletneOWion of the UGC curticulwil to take two semester.; of a foreign lan_guage.
That requirement would expand 10 threo! semesters for students entering during the third year
ofUGCaJOiculumimplementalionandfmallyiO
Jour years for Studel1ts entering in the fourth year
under the UGC curriculum

�--.---....
Noted researcher Gunnar Grimby

5

is Gresham Visiting Professor

.,.__

News Bureau Staff

G

UNNARGRIMBY, an expenin
rehabilitation medicine from the
Univefliity of Goteborg. Sweden.
will present a public le&lt;;lure titled
" Rehabilitation Issues for Adults with
Neuromotor Disordefli" at 5 p.m. on Tuesday
March 2, in the Albright-Knox An Gallery.
Chair of the Depanrnent of Rehabilitation
Medicine at the University of Goteborg,
Grimby is visiting Buffalo as a guest of UB.
where he will spend three days as the Glen E.
Gresham Visiting Professor in Rehabilitation
Medicine.

The visiting professorship brings a noted
scholar and researcher to the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences to lecture
and teac h.

Grimby will spend a day at the UB medical
school and the remaining time conducting
resident teaching rounds at The Buffalo General Hospital, the VA Medical Center and the
Erie County Medical Center.
The visiting professorship was established
in 1989 by Alben C. Rekate, professor of
cardiology and founderofUB 's Depanrnent
of Rehabilitation Medicine in 1962. Gresham
was appointed the ftrst permanent chair of the
depanment in 1978. and continues to serve in
that capacity.
A nationally recognized authority in the
field of rehabilitation medicine, Gresham recently was named to head a federal advisory
panel developing practice guidelines for rehabilitating stroke victims. He isalsochairofthe
Depanrnent of Rehabilitation Medicine at
ECMC.

UB prof says corporations look
to mutual funds for capital today
By SUE WIJETCHER
News Bureau Staff

M

lJf\JAL FUNDS. traditionally a

linchpinofpersonal finance. have
become a critical source of capital for corporations. giving medium- to smaJI-siz.ed companies an alternative
to higher-priced bank financing. a UB finance
professor says.
"Mutual funds are more than just personal
finance. II is a trillion dollar id{tustry that i~
having a tremendous impact on investment"
said Charles Trz.cinka. associate professor of
finance at UB.
Addressing a Dec. 8 press briefing hosted
by the 100% No-Load Mutual Fund Council.
Trtcinka stressed that personaJ finance is only
one- side of the mutuaJ fund story.
··'The mutual fund industry is having a tremendous impact on the American economy.··
he said. "It pumps more money into the
economy through investments at a lower cost
and wider avai lability. than banks. II has a
lremendous benefit to corporatio-ns. particularly to medium- to small-sized corporations.··
He noted that 15 to 20 years ago. most
investment was done through banks or insurance companies. But today. mutual funds offer

companies an inexpensive way to invest in
securities.
'The biggest change the mutuarfund indusuy has had on the investment indusuy is that it
is bringing savers closer to investors in corpo-rations," he said.
Tr1..cinka outlined several advantages to
mutual fund investment
• Access to cheaper short-tenn financing.
Medium- to small-sized companies can enter
the commercial paper market by issuing shOntenn notes to money market funds. And large
companies have a more diveBe and concentrated group of investo~ to choose from.
• Mutual funds are beginning to vote in
proxy contests and are becoming much more
active in corpo;rdle decision-making.
• The mutual fund industry app.ars to be
supplyingequitycapitalat a lower co tthan the
pension fund industry.
• The marl&lt;et for stocks of small firms and
firms in financial distress is more liquid because
of the growth in the mutual fund indtt&lt;try.
·The mutual fund industry is taking money
that forme rly was in banks and insurance and
bringing it into companies and making it available;thatdidn'thappen IOyean;ago,"Trzcinka
said.

Training courses for contractors
are frrst of their kind in U.S.

'M

By ELUiN CIOI.DIIAUM
News Bureau Staff

AKING CONSTRUCTION
sites safer is the goal of trd.ining
courses for supervisors that will
be sponsored this winter by the
Construction Safety and Health Institute at
UB.
The series Or courses is the·first statewide
program in the United States to focus on educating contractors about the necessity of training workers in safe practices. uccording to
Satish Mohan: executive director of the insti·
tute and associate professor of civil engineering at UB.
•
The institute was fomled l~st year by the
National insti tute of Occupational Safety and
Health with the goal of reducing U.S.construction accidents and deaths.
"Unions. and a few contracto~· associations arc truining workers. but safety starts at
the top," Mohan said. ••Management has to
show its commitment to safety because safety
requires resources. such as special equipment
and safety trainers. If management isn't commined to a safe environment. the workers will
not necessarily follow safe work practices."
The courses cover a wide rnnge of safety

issues. from settjng up worksite safety pro-grams to making excavation work safer.
A course on applying ergonomic principles
to construction will discuss cumulati ve trauma
disorders. the safe design of tasks and equiJ&gt;ment. ergonomic tools now being used in
EuropeancountriesandtheDccupationa!Safety
and Health Administrntion's (OSHA) ergonomic standard.
OSHA regulations will also be discussed
during a I0-hour construction outreach progrdm that aims to inLroduce contractors to t!te
agency's safety and ' health- standards. It will
cover specific factors in ~n struction safety,
such as fire prevention,. materials handling.
hand and power tools, stairways and laddefli
and scaffolding, among others.
Continuing course schedules and Buffalo
locations are as follows:
• Ha2aJ:d Communication for Construelion Management, June 24. Center for Tomorrow. Nonh Campus.
• Excavations and T"'ncbing Safety.
March 16, Ramada Inn. Buffalo.
• Ergon~ AppUcatlons ror Sate Construction, April 2, 140 Ketter Hall, Nonh
Campus. For more infonnation, contact Mohan
at 645-5958.

A picture means more than
1000 words; it means 76 steps.
It takes 76 steps to getting
the average communication
piece designed, produced and
delivered to the right place at
the right time.
That's a lot to ask you r
support staff to squeeze into
a routine workload .

Morl~n

At MCA, we take the 76
steps for you, and we do each
the way it should be done:
creatively, effectively, timely,
cost-efficiently.
Since that 's all we do
everyday, we do it pretty well.

Coppelllno Associates

'[;Z~olb':"~~~~~~~rf~
716.884.9536 fox
716.884.0882 tel

A communication company.

~/COPYSOUZCE
AN ALCO OFFICE PRODUCTS COMPANY

Cordially invites the SUNY at Buffalo
Faculty,Staff and Teaching Physicians
to a private showing.
See State-of-the-Art office
technology for the 1990's

canon IV? COPIERS

:::$&lt;

on State Contract or Federal GSAContract
Wednesday, March 1o, 1993
12 noon til 8 p.m.
at the Buffalo Marriott
1340 Millersport Highway, Amherst, New York 14221
SalonA
Please R.S.V.P. 631-3291

~~COPIICMRCI

~

303 Cayuga Rood • Buffoto. New VOI1&lt; 14425 •
'PHONE 711H&gt;31-J291 • FAX 71~1--18)7
-

�8
Labo&lt;F_A_t, ~.

Mart Hayward. l'ennlyiYIIIII
Swe Univ. 2liO Part&lt;. Nonh

S ATU RDAY

Campus. I0-11 :30Lm.~

--y- 27
--A
..-1 by !he GtodwW: Group on
Oemognpby ond !he DepL of
Geography.
HtmO-biooy11t1161ola lbt

ffnlll1rlo/zJJ/IiMM}Itpooi&lt;""'·

soybean I)'IDblools, Mark R. .
O'Brion,Pb.D.. UB DepL of BIO-

--A ---=A
chemistry. 215 FOSler. South
Campus. Noon.

~·•011 -n

COUDQI- 0 1 1 - ft

=.,.or

lbt Star &lt;
Suuno
Amanl, 1!187), preserued by
Calherinc Benamou, New Yorlr.
Univ. 250 Baird. North Cam~s.
Noon. Tickets: $3. For more m·
forrrurlion ca11645-6 108. Spoo-

--

..-1 by !he Graduau: Groop for
Feminist Studies.

~-011-BY

. - A I . - PMVEN1IW

M artanno and Jullrtne

Money, RBRYSNU, J a~ Goold,

Pit.D.. direetor or stra1egJC plan·
ning. Blue Cross of WNY · 252A

-=n,

Fatber. South Campus. 12:301:30 p.m.

-Mamvn:OII

Friday 26 February
5-7 PM -

Sociopathy and Sul&gt;-

.stanco Abuse, Howard Moss.
M.D.. WtsJ.em Psychiatric. Pittsburgh. 102 1 Main St., Buffalo.
1:30 p.m. Co-sponsored by the
UB Rehabilitation Continuing
Edueation Progr.un/Region II .

rtfresllnents available
Graduate Group in Evolutionary
Biology and Ei:ology.
IIA-TICS COUDQIIIIIII

Isolating Nefaltboriloods and
Chaos, Prof. Konstantin
Mischajkow, Georgia Institute or
Technology. 103 DM:fendorf.
South Campus. 4 p.m.

AU U1WME l FICl10II, DIAIIA,

~;;;®jJ
EVE R Y O NE

-

~MKARCN

Pharmacoldnet.ics aod the Role

MIC-.oGY SEIIIIIIIAR
Analysis or Leishmania major·
specUic T Cell Oooes Derived
rrom Genetically Resistant
Mice, Dr. Cynlhia Thcodos, rc :
search hs.sociatc. Dept. of Trop• caJ Public Health. Harvard Uni".
School of Public Heahh . 258 CFS

Addition. South Campu)&lt;o. I I a.m.
LOCIIW- U IIIIARY
MKAIICHCUNIC
Bask U brary Research. 223
L.ockwood Library. Non h Campus. Noon-2 p.m. Prercgi stmtion
required. Registr.!liOn for:ms .
available w Lockwood L1brury s
Reference Desk .

-

ANA'IOMICAI. SCIENCES

T he Role or Protein KJnases In
Neurl~ Growth. John

Alctm.
Pit.D.. UB Dept of Plt:um:u:ol·
ogy and Therapeutics. 258 CFS
Addition. South Campus. 12:30
p.m.

-ESDAYS AT 4 PWS
LI1ERAitY su.s

Art and Words: The Typographic and the Calligraphic,
Wystan Curnow. New Zealand

of Red Cell Binding In Hepatic
Clearance or Tamtllmus
(FKS06) In Rabbits, Wojcioch
Pick:OS7.ewski. Ph.D.•
postdoctoral fellow. UB Dept. or
Pharmaccutic5. 508 Cooke. North
Campus. 4--5 p.m.
UFE WOIIIIS-

Skydlvlng: Sport or the '90s.
Henry SZC7.epanski.IC:ldcr.
North Campus. 5-8 p.m. For preregistration information caJI645612S.
UUMFU.M
Forbidden City USA p!181i),
directed by A rthur Dong.

Waldman Thcmer. 112 Norton.
North Campus. 7 p.m.

IIEVEIISE SHOT: A

CCIU.OQUIUM ON FILMS BY
WOMEN

lnclla Song (Ma'l:""rite Du ras,

1975), presented by Joan Copjec
and Anne Tomiche, UB . 120
Clemens. North Campus. 8 p.m.
CoiiCXJuium tickets: SIS, facu lty:
SIO. students. $3 JX:r showing.
For more infonnatiQO call 6456108. Sponsored by the Graduate
Group for Feminist Studic."-.

pus. 2 p.m. Sponsored by the UB
Poetics Program.
Sun
X11 RS Environment.
COIIPVTING
- - 204
Computing Center. North Campus. 3-5 p.m. For registration
information cali 645-3Wl.
~SCIUICE

CCIU.IICIWIM
Steps Toward·A Computational
Rational Agr:n~ Stuart C. Sha·
piro. us Dept. orcomputer Science and Center ror C~ tive

Science. 14. Knox. North Campus. 3:30-4:45 p.m. For roorr:
information contact pr. Walham
Rap:lpof1 at 645·3193.
"*'-AimSTSEJIIU
I.ECtWE

•

Robert Wood, assistant professor or ceramic 311 , Buffalo State

College. Bethune Gal lery. 27 19
Main SL 3:30 p.m.

-

-.oiiiCALSCIUICES

Coots and BeD&lt;Dis or Induced
MOI'phoJocj&lt;al Defenses in
O.pbn.la, Dr. Howard Riessen ,
Biology DepL , Buffalo Swe Col·
lege. 121 Cooke. North Campus.
4 p.m. Co-spon..-1 by the

_....._

1(• . , _ Open Windows. 204
Computing Cenler. North Campus. 2-4 p.m. Call645-3540 f&lt;&gt;&lt;
registration information.

---IS\'IIY

Wesodey Osldallor&gt;-lntramc&gt;k&lt;ular Dlds-Aider Reactloo
Sequeoce in lbt Synlbtsls of
Natural Products, Dr. N. K .
Bhamre. postdoct0f1ll fellow. UB
Dept. of Medicinal Chemistry

-y
---

114 HocMtetkr. Nonh Campus.
Jp.m.

COI.LOQIMM
Jntramoleru.lar FJectron Trans-

fer and Energy Transfer In the
Gas Phase, Prof. Donald H.
Levy, Univ. of Chicago. 70
Acheson. SoUlh Campus. 4 p.m.
Polka Ha ppln&lt;SS, Charles and
Angeliki V. Keil, UB American

Studies professors. Talking
Leaves Books. 31 44 Main St.,
BuffaJo. 5-7 p.m. For mort: information call837-8554.

26

IIUCI(

IU10RY

-y~

Rate DlfrtreoctS ln RetJnment
U fe Cyde £.pet1eJtcos aod

count of the making of the Spike
Lee film. Woldman Theater, 112
Norton. North Campus. 7 p.m.
Admission, $2.50, UB students.
$3.5 0 . - u.
...... USICEI'8AU.
V.C.U. Main gym. Alumni

Ateita. North Campus. 7:30p.m
-ALO crTY IIA1.UT
A Night with lbt Rhythm .or.the
O ty, original works by Artastac.
Director Marvin Askew. AM(XI ate Di=tor Janet Reed ond Resi·
dent Olort:ographet William E.
Thomas. Katharine Carnell TheaJ.er. EUicou Complex. North
Campus. 8 p.m. 1icl:ets: $4. UB
srudenlS: $6. general admission.

Barbershop: We Cut Heads

lntematlooal AIT~usic
FrO&lt;o Arouncllbt Worid, presented by the Zodiaquc: Dance

(Spike Lee, 19113), and Making
"Do lbt Right Thing" (SL
Clairt Bourne, 1989), an account of the maki ng of the Spike
Lee film. Woldmnn 1bearer. I I 2

Norton. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m
Admission, $2.50. UB students;
$3.50. non-students.
11EVE11SE SHOT: A

CCIU.OQUIUM 011 FliJU BY

mation call 8'l9·3742.

-

11EVE11SE SHOT: A

Koynote Add,....: Trinh T.

MJnb·ba, Univ. ofCa11fonua at

FrO&lt;o Around the Workl, pre·
sented by ·the Zodiaque Dane(
Company. Pf'cifer "'lleater, 681
Main SL 8 p.m. Tickets: $ I0.
general admission; $4. st~nts ,
senior citizens and UB faculty,
staff .aDd'ilumni. For more inror'"1'1ion caliS29-3742.

illACIIIUlORY ~

Company. Pfei ferllteala', 681
M&gt;i n St. 8 p.m. Tt&lt;kels: $10,
genen.l-admission; $4; students.
seniorcilizens and UB raculty,
staff and aJumni. For more infor-

CCIU.OQI.IIII 011 ~BY

WOiiEN

nist Studies.

Clinical Variance, Frederick
Schaffer. M.D., discuuanL Kinch
Auditorium. Children's Hospilal.
8a.m.

nistStudies.

WMPILII
Double Feature: Joe's Bed.Stuy
Barbenltop: We Cut H..ts
(Spike Lee, 1983), and MUlng
"Do 1bt Right Thing" (SL
Clalro Bourne, 1989), an ac·

Asociation.

by the Groduate Group for Femi-

PEIIIATB: aaAND _,..DS
Acute Rheumatic Fever and

s - for lbt Contents (1991 ),
directed by Trinh T. Minh-ha,
Univ. of California at Bcrkely
and San Francisco State Univ.
148 Diefendorf. South Campus. 7
p.m. Tickets: $3. For more information call 645-6108. Spon..-1
by the Gr&gt;duate Group for femi .

DANCE

DANCE
International Affai~Music

EVENT
Career Fair: Carten or lh~
21st C~tury. Student UniOn.
Begins m 8 a.m. Spon.'IOI'td by
the Minorily Faculty &amp; Starr
A5.SOCiation and the Office of the
President. Ca11645 -2997 for
more infonnation.

-..,OQI.N Oil FUllS BY

Spon..-1 by the Student

250 Bainl. Nonh Campus. 7:30
p.m. Tickets: $3. For mo~ information ca11645-6108. Sponsored

~

---A

Double Featun: Joe's Bed-Stuy

Masani Alexis De Veaux. UB .

FRIDA Y

(Marprotbo voa Trolte, 1981),
preaetttcd by Stephanie Onega.
UB. 148 Diefendorf. South Campu$. 3 p.m. 1idcels: $3. For morr:
information call645-6108. Spon·
..-1 by the Gradu.ale Group f&lt;&gt;&lt;
Feminisr. Studies.

UUMFIUI

Daughters or the Dust (Julie
Dasb, 19911, presented by

poei. 438 Clemens. North Cam-

V Jrpa M.acbiJw &lt;Moolka Treu~
1919), preaetttcd by Chris
Straayer, New York Univ. 148
Diefendorf. South Campus. I
p.m. Tt&lt;Uu: $3. For morr: infor.
mation call645-6108. Spon..-1
by the GrDwe Groop for Femi ni5t Studies.

.

CONCDT
Big Band Jan With Willie
Dorwy, to be broadcast live over
WBR&gt;-FM. Allen Hal l Audito.rium. South Campus. 8 p.m.
IIUMFUII
Un lll the End or the World
(199 1), directcd by Wim

Wc:ndeB. Woldman Theater. 112
Nonon. NO&lt;th Campus. 9:30p.m..
Admission; $2.59. UB students;
S3.50, non-students.

Betkely and San Francisco Stale
Univ. 148 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 9 p.m. For registr.llion
informatioo call645-6108. Sponsored by the Graduate Group for
Feminist St ~ics .
IIUAII FU.M
Unllllbt End or lbt Worid
(1991 ), di=ted by Wim

Wenders. Woldman Theater. ll2
Nonon. NO&lt;th Campus. 9:30 p.m.
Admissioo. $2.50.jJB srudents:
$3 .50. non-students.

SUNDA Y

2~

.= l olsal

AITaln-Musi&lt;

FrrJm Arrluncl lbt Worid, P."'·

�..,..eel by the Zodioque Dance
Company. Preifer Thcalcz, 68 I

Main SL 3 p.m. n-.: $10,
gcnmJ admiuion; $4, studenll,
senior citlzeno and UB focully,
staff and aJumni. For more informalion cail 829-3742.
.

-

--...-nii!Y-

F abloo/Cultllnll Sbow. Student
Union Thcalcz. North Campus. 6
p.m. T1&lt;kcu: $5. Spc&gt;r~SC&gt;«ld by
lhe Block Student Union.
w.u~~

-IKIIJM

Spike Leo, c:deb&lt;&gt;ta! fdrnmaker.
Alumni Arena. North Campus. 8

p.m. Admission. S8.SO. UB RUden&lt;s; $12.50. non-students. For
more information cali64S-29S7

or 645-2353.

MONDAY

1

UFE-Asian-Amfricans On Film. Dr.

Charles Bland. leader. North
Campus. 7-9:30 p.m. For rcgislration informar.ion call 645-6125.

...

____

_ ...--to_ __
---

llqjaoUc ~. Beuy
Keehn. leader. North Campus. 78:30 p.m. For re,;su.ioo lnformarion cail 645-6125.

Campus. 7-'Jp.m. For~
infonnotion CIIJ 645-6125.

llallut Nonh
ylleuy Dimmick. leader.
Campus 7:30-'l p.m. For reJisuation infomwioo caJJ 645-6125.

·- -WE-

X-booed Open Windows. 204
Computing Center. North Campus. 10 a.m.-Noon. Call 6453540 for regisu'alioo information.
Raising Your Spirit, Brigid Farrell, leader. North Campus.
Noon- I p.m. For ~gistration
information call645~125 .

A-.

7

Dennis Gleolon, leader.
Nonh Campus. 3-4 p.m. For
istnbon information cail 645-

rea-

.,._

__
6125.

c-.s.r. c.r--111 e-mup.m.

WEDNESDAY

l

,__,

lnorpak:ODd
~-­
....
Fooclllot·
~
,_~A

--

1111 Field ofSdtoco, Ea&lt;&gt;n

Mllijevic. Olfbon Univ. 206
~North Campus. 3:45p.m.

for O pc-olloudn ~­
ndla, Alon Forrest. Pharm.D..
clinical assocille profCISOr. UB
School of l'hannaCy. 248 Cooke.
North Campus. 8-8:SS a.m.

Mod&lt;IJiac of Rlloozymo Slnlcturo ODd Cltolysls, Dr. Robert
Rein. Dcpl. of Biophysics, RPCJ .
106 Cary. Soulh Compus. 4 p.m.
_ _ , . CGU.OQIIII.
~ODd Cbolco Ia Sortn
ODd Koal, Martha llomyanski.
Brock Univ. 684 Baldy. North
Campus. 4 p.m.
-Y8AT41'LUS

-P-aTIII'F

Radlac, Jerome Rothenberg,

PIIUMACYDtvdopmoat ODd Volldollon nf
Opllmo1 SomJIIIac Slrateps

-""'--- -

_
un-- ... _ _

Q uantum lnterfereoce Ell'tct
on tbt Hopping Condudlvtty,

Dr. Y. Shlpir, Depc. of Physics,

Univ. of Rochester. 219
Fronc1.ak. North Campus. 3:4S
p.m.

D trtpWioa of~
~Duria&amp;
Mammary~. . . .

Bonnie Asch. PhD., Dcpl. of
Experimemall'alhology, RPCI.
Hilleboe Aoditoiium. RPCI.
12:30 p.m.

Cults and tbt Oa:ult, Dr. Phillips Stevens, Jr., leader. North

Apple Macintosh
computers

a l l y - - 1450 Student
Union. North Campus. 3-4:30

TUESDAY

·~

..,_ ...

wen- ror Sportl flliiS ODd

lliiiiiAIIY-

poet. tlllnSiator and essayist. 420

...
...

Capen. North Campus. 4 p.m.
Spc&gt;r~SC&gt;«ld by lhe UB Poetics
Program.

Monoy~ntlOI ,Jo­

sepit White, leader. North Cam-

M.tcintosh Color
Classic

_""'....,._.,__

built·inAppleTaUc,.Sandard

SCSI.

M.tcintosh LC m
IUtwa inc:lude a 68030

(4/160)

&lt;lilplayo~..,....uuy~
built-in Appk-Tal}(.Standard sc;L

Macintosh Centris 610
Futura include a 68040
prtJCetiOI', 20 MHt. 4 or 8MB
RAM, one5.25" t.y, IIO, 230, or
500MB hatd drive, built-in video
support foe molt MadniOih
&lt;lilplayo (pv.a.-1
built·in Appi.!Talk,. opdcnal onboou&lt;l Ethem&lt;t, Hlgl&gt; pcrioo--

Feilltuml include. 680CO ~·

Marin-

optmol
an-boud
p&lt;rlonnon«
SCSl· - - Hlgl&gt;

ater. 112 Norton. North Campus.
7 p.m. Admission: $2.50. UB
students; S3.SO. non-students.

THURSDAY

Finding Employment with the
Federal Govemmenl 145A
Student Union. Non.h Campus. 23:30p.m.
~SCIENCE

COWIQUIUM

Prugramming Parallel Macb..l.oes With Charm, L. V. Kale.
Dcpc.. of Computer Science,
Univ. of Illinois. 14 Knox. Nonh
Campus. 3:30-4:45 p.m. For
more information contact Dr.
William Rapapon at 645-3193.

J'llinnlllker Spike .._ to speak here Feb. 28
Spike (Shellon Jackson) Lee, creaJor of the provocauve "Malcolm x · will
speak here Feb. 28 at 8 p.m. in Alumni Arena. auspices of U~AB. The 35year-old director. aclor and writer has emerged as a ieadrng rndependent
fllrrmaker and a provocatiVe vc:Mce in African American art.
Tickets are avarlable al the UB ticket offrce ($4 .SO. UB siudenls with ID;
$12.50 non-UB sJudents). Also offered is an educational/non-profit group rate of
$10.50 per person for a, minimum group of 15 people available by calling UUAB
aJ 645-2957. Doors will .open at6:30 p.m. No cameras, vrdeo or audiO equrpment will be allowed in the arena.
.
· According Jo UUAB. "Spike Lee will creale an exciJing and intellectually strmulating enVIronment ef lecture and discussion.· He will take questrons from the audren&lt;;e dunng a ques~ion-and-answer period to follow .
·.
.
·
"Milicoim X • a three-and-a hall-hour adapJalion of The Autobiography of Malcolm X, depicts the fiery ~loquence of Jhe black militant leader who was assassinated in 1965. Lee has
said he has a mission "to put the vasl richness of black cullure on film."
·
A graduale of Morehouse College and NYU's Institute ol Rim and TeleviSJon, Tisch School
of Jhe Arts, Lee won early recognttion for · Joe's Bed-Stuy 8arbershop, • which will be shown
here Feb. 26-27 in a double billing wilh St. Claire Bourne's documentary on the making o1
another Spike Lee film, "Do the Right Thing.· (See Repoiler calendar for detatls.) Of "Do Jhe
Right Thing, " a comedy-drama about tensions between blacks and ltahan-Amerrcans rn a
Brool&lt;lyn neighborhood, critic Roger Ebert SBJd, "You cannot hve rn America·rn 1989 and nol
know that r?Very frame of this film, disturbing as tt is, reflects the truth.·
•Joe's Bed-Stuy 8arbershop," a realisiic but humorous look at life in p Bedford-StuyvesanJ
neighborhood. won a 1982 Student Academy_Award andwas the first student production to
be selected for the "New Directors/New Films senes at Uncoln Center.
Lee's other films include "She's Gona Have It" and "School Daze.· He is the author of Spike
Lee's GottEN-lave It:' InSide Guerrilla Filrnmsking and Uplift the Race.

PMYSICaAND...-oMY

CGU.OQIIIIIM
The New Blue Horizon: Physics
and Engl ...ring nf Wide
Bandgap Quantum WeU S&lt;mlronductor l....asers, Prof. A .
Nunnikko. Materials Research
Center. Brown Univ. 454
Fronczak. Nonh Campus. 3:45
p.m.

-

IIICil.a.CAL SCIENCES

.
Self-Splicing lntrons In Boctoria: Wbtl"t Did They Come
From and What Do They Do?

Dr. David Shub: Center for Molecular Genetics, SUNY at .AIbany. 121 Cooke. North Campus.
4p:m.
PHARMAC8mC8 IIEKAIICII

T he Plwmarodynamlcs nf

Andpiot.d&lt;t Agents, Frun
Gengn. P!iann.D .. associm pnofessc&lt; of pharrnocy and pharmaceutics, US. 508 Cooke. North
Campus. 4-5 p.m.
W.Ul'IUIII
lbunderbeart.. Woldman Theater, 112 Norton. North Campus.

Continued on page 9

(4/80)

$2,059
(8/230)

monceSCSl

WMFWII
Thunde.rbeart. Woldman The-

uno n E .- MAIIIIET-

$1,610

""""'dy),

Macintosh Centris 650

4

(4/80)

$1,2'73

vldecsupponb.--

25 MHz, 8MB RAM, optioNI
~biting Procaling Unit. onr 5.25"
bily, 80, 230, or 500MB hard d.rive,
built-in vidleo JUpport for aaa
&lt;lilplays fpoudoosel
,.,....Idyl. built-in App"Tolk.

MAIICtl

$1,145

~- 25 MHz,&lt;MBllAM. 40.
80, or 16CNB hard driw:. built-in

Mutuol Fund lnvt5ting, Velma
S=ny, leader. North Campus.
7-9 p.m. For registration information call 645-61 2S.
_ . , ClAAIC8 M:CifAL

(4/80)

RAM.40. 80, ot 160WB hard
drift, tO"Trinltn&gt;nCalorctioploy,

pus. 7-8 p.m. For registration
information call 645-6125.

Adrienne Twor&lt;k-Gryta. soprano; Mathew Twore~ violin;
JOOJlDO Schlegd, piono, in an
all-Polish progn1111. Allen Hall.
Soulh Campus. 7 p.m.

$1,2.63

Fatura indude. 61030
~- 16 MHz, Op6onol

Convenience
Quality
Service
Variety

$2,608
(8/80)

$2,910
(8/230)

$3,221
(cd-rom)

�--.---.-sa

8
NH'1

I~

RESEARCH

- - -- - --

-·····

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

EISSC)(;j.
819 professor ol biological

. . _ .

t

........

sciences at UB and a Ger-

man colteaguo have won

$125,000 from ttio Max
Planck Society/Humboldt

Foundation to continue research on gap jooctlons, intercellular passageways, that
allow cells in the body to
comrrunic:ate directly.
The prize is awarded annually to German scientiSIS conducting i!JlX)rtant research
with colleagues at inSiilutions
outside Germany. Thlrty-f!VI!
such awards were made this
year.
The money will be spill """'
a three-year period between
NICholson and Klaus Willecke,
director of the Institute forGenetics at the University of
Bonn.
Ntcholson and Willecke are
studying the proteins that
make up gap junctions.
Nicholson last year was the
recipient of a -five-year Amencan Heert Association Established lnvestigatorship and a
grant from the National Heart
Lung &amp; Blood Institute to
study the function of gapjunctKJn channels as the rna• jor mediators o1
electric-current spread In the
hean and their relationship to
cardiac disease.
Nicholson received his
bachelor's degree from the
University of Queensland.
Australia and his doctorate
from California Institute of
Technology. Since 1988, he
!lOS conducted rasaarch on
li"P ~lions u~ a Pew
Scholar's Award in the Biomedical Sciences and a grant
from the Nabonal Cancer lnsutute. wtth whtch he is studytng the role of gap-JUnction
COOYTIUnicahon in regulating

the growth of cancer cells
DENTAL SCHOOL
RECEIVU * - , - N MAHT:

A UB dental researcher has
received a frve-year,
$500,000 grant !rom the Na-

tional Institute lor Dental
Heatth to study the role of the
enzyme amylase in dental
decay. The research by
Fr8nl&lt; lc.......,...,o wlll
locus on how amylase, which
breaks down starch into sugar. contnbutes to the formatoo of cavities.
•Amylase in saliva binds to
. oral bacteria, which In tum
form plaque: explains ScannapieCo, assistant professor
of oral biology et UB. ·once
· the enzyme compietes the
binding, it breaks down
starch for use by the bacteria,
which may allow the decay
process to occur."
Detailed knowledge about
how amylase works will help
researchers lurthj!r cut the
incidence ol dental .decay.
whiCh, due to the use of fluoride and lfTll'ovad preventive
dental tec~niques , has fallen
"""' the yean; from about 90
percent of the population to
about 50 percent.
A UB faculty member si·ce
1967, Scannapieco is therecipient ol several olhef grants
from the National Institutes ol
Health. He has authored or
co-authored f18atiY 20 articles

tor scholarly joumals.

Preemtes may need special education help
when they enter kindergarten, study shows
II)'...._IIAIWI

MlchMI Mull loolc.l 8t MRI
of chid'a bnlln.

News Bureau Staff

IC8II

H

ALF OF the number
of extremely premature infants who sur~
vive into childhood
may need special education services when they enter
k.inderganen. and another 15 percent are on the verge of needing
special help. a study conducted by
UB researcher.; has found.
Children with limited family resources were seven times more likely
to need help than more affluent children. Being non-white or male each
increased the ri sk two-and-a-half
times.
The study, headed by Michael E.
Msall, associate professor of pediatrics and rehabiliUition medicine at
UB. was published in the Amuican
lou mal of Dis.asos ofChildnn.
'The research constitutes one of
the fir.;t school-readiness studies of
children born extremely prematurely
during the 1980s and treated with
calf-lung surfactant extract. Surfactant extrJct prevents respiratory distress syndrome, the prime killer or
preemies.The treatment strengthens
premature lungs and has dramatically increasedswvival ofextremclylow-binh-weighl infants.
Edmund Egan, UB professor of
pediat~ics and physio logy , was
among those pioneering the use of
calf-lung surfactant, and has led a
research elTon since the 1980s involving biochemical, physiological
and clinical studies of the treatment.
Withmon:childrenswvivingprematurity, especially those weighing
less than three pounds at binh. Msall
said, researcher.; have speculated
there is a growing population ofchildren at risk for long-term physical
problems and school difficulty.
Msall and his research team sc1

Low socioeconomic sutus was
the most signif1C311t predictor of the

need for special education help
among the childm! swdied. followed
by being non-white or male.
"Our findings strongly suggest
that non-white males from low socioeconomic backgrounds are at increased ri sk for requiring
special-education resources," Msall
states in the study. "Our findings add
furthersuppon for the need to design
multidisciplinary studies of premature infants to assess the inter-relatedness
of
biomedical.
sociodemograpbic and environmental factor.; on tong-term morbidity
and school perform:lllC&lt;O ...

001 to assess the kindergarten readiness of children who survived extremely premature births to
determine factor.; that identify children who might need exlr.l help. The
study group was comprised of 149
children born at 23 to 28 weeks of
gestation- t 2 to 17 weeks premature- at Children· s Hospillll of Buffalo, where Msall is medical director
of the Roben Warner Rehabilitation
Center. The children werebelween4
and 5 years old al the time of the
study.
evelopmental pediatricians
and pediatric nur.;e prnctitioners
who were not aware of the children's
binh hislories assessed their verbal.
percejl(Ual. quantitative. memory and

D

motorskilts. Thechildrenalsoreceived
a physical and neurological examination. including vision and hearing tests.
A general cognitive index score-a
composite of verbal, perceptual and
quantitative measurements similar to

Children with limited
family resourr:es
were seven times
more likely to need
help.
an IQ score and strongly cJLTelated
with school ochievement-was obtained for each child.
Of the t 49 children. 35 percent
were observed to be ready for regular public-school kindergarten. Fifteen percent were considered at risk
of requiring special education resources, 42 percent were classified
a.•requiring modified classrooms and
9 pen:ent were classified as needing
extensiverehabilitativethern.piesand
intensive special-education re ·
sources.

his research also supports the
philosophy of the intensive care
nursery follow-up program headed
byWilliamA.Zom.Children'sHospital developmental psychologist
Msall said. Zom works with health.
social and preschool educational professionals so that children with complex biomedical and psychosocial
needs receive comprehensive early
preschool intervention or Head Start
services.
The study"s findings may have
limited validity for centerS that do
not serve regional areas and that
have tess aggressive neonallll managementprotOCOis,Msallcautioned
He pointed out also that the study did
not include data on children"s lead
exposure, maternal IQ. or drug use
history of the mother or father. factor.; that can have an adverse effect
on school performance.
Co-authors of the study are Germaine M. Buck, Brian T. Rogers.
and Nancy L. Catanzaro, a pediatric

T

nurse practitioner.

Federal grant ·puts UB in forefront of rural health care
II)' LOIS IIAIIEII

News Bureau Staff

T

HE UNIVERSITY has re-

ceived aS t.t million fed eral grant to study how rurJI
health care is organized and
financed, and how nurse practitioners and physician· s assistants practice in rural areas across the country.

1re four-year grdllt from the feder.ll Office of Rurol Health Policy establishes UB as one of seven Rurol

Health Research Centers in the United
States.11}egron~CO(IlbinedwithUB 's

residencyprogmm in rurnl medicineestablished in 1991 and the secOOd
accredited riationally--ploces the Wliver&gt;ity in the vanguard in the foeld of
rurnl health.
lrecenter"s resean:h will focus on
three areas: Medicaid-managed care.
the quality ofcare at rurnl hospitals. and
the impact of non-physician professionals. such as nur.;e prnctitioner.; and
physician assistants. on rurnl health
services. Thomas Rosenthal. director
ofthe UBOfficeofRurol Health and its
PrimaryCareResowreCenter, is principal investigator.
Medicaid-managed care is a cost-

'saving plan for serving per.;ons epgible for Medicaid that is used on a
voluntary basis in Erie County and
other areas of the state and country.
The plan enrolls partici pants with a
primary-&lt;:are physician, who over-

sees their mcdj·cal care and receives

Results will form the
basis of a 'how-to'
rnariu(I/. for others.
reimbursement through the stale.
Savings accrue because most services can be provided in the
physician's office, where costs are
relati~ely low. rather than _in more
expens~ve specialty clinics or hospi-

talemergency rooms. All New York
State counties must have such a program in place by 1996.
Researcher.; will follow the effons of four rural New York counties- Chautauqua, Cattaraugus.
Allegany and Wyoming--aS they
design. plan and implement their
managed-care plans. The results wi II

fonn the basis of a "how to" manual
for other rural counties. Researcher.;
also will ac;sess the cost-effectiveness of such programs in rural areas.
where managed care often is practiced by default because of limited
access to hospitals and specialists.
Six Western New York hospitals-Cuba Memorial, Olean General, Westfield MemoriaL Newfane
lnten:ommunity. Brooks Memorial
.(Dunkirk) and Jones Memorial
(Wellsville)--will participa1e in the
project to evaluate the quality of care
at rural hospitals.

pathways with patients who are not.
both within each ho!;pital and in hospitals 001 using the critical pathways plan.

Dennis Bertram. UB clinical assistant professor of social and preventive
medicine. will direct this study.
Determining the impact of nonphysician professionals on rurnl health
care will involvesurveying nurse practitioners and physicians' assistants in
Alabama. Kentucky, Mississippi.
Georgia, Washington. Wi,&lt;consin and
New York. In some areas, these health
care per.;onnel manage up to 70 percentofpatierlts' needs. Rosenthal said
Researcher.; will develop a prohe six hospitals will tes1 a profile of how nuhe practitioner.; and
gram called "'critical pathways.'' a
physician's assistants practice. inmlltidisciplinary plan for managing • cluding their financial anangemems. ·
JXUient care based on check lists for types of services provided and the
specifiC condiiions. n., lists specify
kinds of people they serve. Results
when a pwticularservice.procedureor
will be used to train future profestesl usually is performed and when tesl
sionals in these foelds. and to help
results should be ready. Check lisls are
develop public policy on their roles
monitored regularly to n)al&lt;e sure these
in the health care system.
"critical polhs" are followed.
Patricia A. Bums, assOciate proUsing measures such as length of fessor in the UB School of Nursing
stay, COQ per admiSsion 'and patient
and director of the school's nurse
satisfaction, researchers will compare . p'actitioner progrnm, will coordipatients who are ~ by critical
nate this study.

T

�______..,_..

9

CALENDAR
Continued frcm page 7

Save up to 50%
Remanuf~ your Toner
Cartridge

LR-

7 p.m. Admission: S2.SO, US
Sludenls; $3.50. non-Siudems.

Wridnc Sldlls, a.,., s . JOOC$,
leader. North Campus. 7-8:30
p.m. For registnuion information

caii64S~I2.5 .

UR-

Setf.Defense and PenonaJ Prolfd.ion, Public Safety Officer~
Dave Chcmega and Kathy
Zysek. leaders. Nonh Campus
7..l0-9:30 p.m. For regi5tration

mformalion call645-6125
- A N D MUSIC HIIIU

Readings and Perlormanas,
Nonnl!' Kassircr and joining her.
l&gt;t&gt;pr.mo Mildred Stal ey and
mcu o-soprano Constance Alit'•"" One Lmwood Ave _7.30
p m Tickets. S5 50

EXHIBITS

-

RUMSEY AND POTENZA
AWARD WINNEJtli DISPLAY

The annuaJ Rumky and Potcn.ta
Awards Exhibit currently at
lkthunc Gallery. 2917 Mam St.
Bulfalo, fc:uurcs the wort.. of

JUmur undcrgmduatc"i from
.amung whom faculty wtll \Cicc:t
rc~.:•p•cnb

of lhc 199.l Evelyn

Uum-.cy Lord Scholar,htp anti
the Sally ll ~kms PotcnJ.a Me·
munal Scholan;htp
The Rurrt\C)' Scholan.htp lund
wa.\ endowed in 1959 by thc
family of BuQ'alo artist Evelyn
Run\."C)' Lord and h, Lhc l1lOSl Jln!.'·

ttgiOU.!o ~holar.Jup aw.udcd to
uodcrgr.Jdunle an !iludcnt!. at the
umn.-r;ity The: IUertJ..a scholar'hlP wa.' endowed h) the famil} ol
~all) llosl1m Pulcrva. a former
Ull gr-Jdualc "udcm 1n an
l o.t.llcl) huur!&gt; Monday . noon to
"i p m , Tuc!oda) . IO:t..m -K p m.
Wci.Jm.•-.day. I 30 tu 'i pIll ,

l'hur\day . IO·JOa m IU 1:! _10
p rn . Friday, lto5p.m
lllACII HISTORY -

DtSI'UIY

Black Student Pres!&gt;.
llliW-1993," i!ii on view at the

"li B '~

&lt;N:ai S1lverman Undergraduate
L1hmry. Capen ltall.through
1-ch ~R Exhibit features ~.:op•c'
411 maga~.incs and ncw!lpapcn.
I rum the Univcrsil)' Archi~-~
PHOTOIIItAI'tiY ON VIEW

fJ..umed photographs by Jodie
Childs. M.F.A. candidate in photugr.aphy in the UB Dcpanmcm
uf An . aJ""C on view through
March I in the: Panel Gallery of
LocJ...wood Memorial Library.
!':on h.Campus.
~DISPlAY

'1'he Bluesmen." photograph'
hy Ed SobaJa documenting 20

ofbluesmen· and jazzmen
at wort.. and play . will be on
\lew through March 14 at the
WBFO studios at Allen Uall.
South Campus. Call 829-2880
lur more infonnation.
)Can&gt;

NOTIC. ES
GSARUUENDUM
Gr.tdu:u~

SllJdenls: GSA progro~ms are possible via your
grJduate mandatory student fee
Remember to vote in the GSA
Fee Referendum. March 1-5.
Watch for polling place information in Tht' Grrullfi!lt' Q11ill, Tilt'
Spn·rrum, Gent'rution and
Around!~ Pari...
AI'IIIL aKAIICtl

_

.

..

EV~·-y

.,vnu rA~mC~P.uns

The Graduate Group in Evolu·
tiOOW)' Biology and Ecology
' announces a Graduate Research
Symposium in the areas of cvolulionary biology and ecology.
The symposium will be held
April 13, at 5 p.m. in 414
Fronczak. Nonh Campus. Par·
ticipaiioo is open to all UB
gr.tduate students. A S250 Best
Paper Travel Grant will be
awarded to the student making
the best presentation. 1lle tro~vcl

..,.Citr..._. ..........

FREE PICI(-W' a DB.MIIY
.. All ....... ~

forKCT....,...1•111

A d1\19rting progrwn is in order for
fans of the Buffalo City Ballet. who
will perform in the KalhMne Cornell
n-ter, ElficoU Cort-plex, on Feb.
'Z7 at8p.m .
Among the pieces lo be perlormed
in ' A Night Wiltl the Rhythm of the
City." are ' Body language." choreographed by Artistic Director Marvin Askew. It is descnbed as contemporary ballet With a touch of jazz
and will be danced by the full company to music of
Gabriel Roth &amp; the Mirrors. •
Ne&gt;&lt;! comes more traditional ballet, Tchaikovsky's
"Black Swan' pas de deux from Swan La/&lt;8. This will
be danced by AskfHI and Bizabeth Distasio.
' Ca!hadrals' is the intriguing title for a w011&lt; choreographed by resident choreographer Willian E. Thomas to Villa-Lobos' ' Bachianas Brasileiras' and the
Bach-Gounod •Ave Maria· 'The intention.· writes
Thomas. ' is IO re-&lt;;reate the architectural structure of
lhe 1nterior of cathedrals tlvough dance and to present
lhe different occasions thai occur inside of them. such
as marriages, funerals, baptisms, etc.' "Cathedrals"
will be danced by AskfHI, Michele Peace and Associate Company Director J.anet~ .
The full company wilt conclude the program with a
performance of 'Pearls,· choreographed by Janet
Reed and set to music by Sarde and Sergio Mendes.
Tickets at $6, general admission, and $4, SIUdenls.
will be available at the door only. The Undergraduate
Student Association is sponsoring the event.

.

gr.uu can be used to al.tcnd a
_ prufc~ •onal meeting for the
purpose of prc~nting a paper or
po!&gt;tcr Optionallutorials on
rc~arch pre...cntation techniques
are available prior to the !li)'mpo"''um Studcnl.s wishmg 10 paruc•p;:ate m the symposium and/or
m the tutorial ~ should contact
Dr Howard Lasker. Dept. of
B1olog•cal Sciences. 635
UochMettcr. Nonh Campus
JOIIIIUOUIICU -

~
listing~ or jobs an buS I·
ncs~ and industry . government.

Current

health . education and non-profit
organil.ations. arc available in
thc:OfficeofCareer Planning
and Placement. 15 Capen Hall.
Nonh Campus. Call 645-223 I
for mon: information.

J08S
FACULTY

AWtant/A.ssociate Professor·
Medicine, Posting #F-3002: As·
sista nl Professor-Pathology.
Posting #F-3(X)J. A..!l5odatt Professor·Pcriodootology-DcntaJ
Medicine. Posting #F-3004. As·
slsta nl Prol'e5fii0r·Psychiatry.
Posting #F-3005. AWstanll
~te Professor-Gyneool·
ogy-Obsteuics. Posting #F-3006.
A!&amp;stant/Assoclalt Profawr·
Ophthalmology. Posting #f.
3007. Asslst.anl/Assodat.e!Full
Professor (depending on quallncatJons..-Surgery. Posting #F3008. 3009.3010. Assistant/
A.&lt;soclaWFuU Prof5&lt;&gt;r (dopending on q~;~alifi ca tions)·
Nuning. Postjng #F-3011 . Asslstanl/Assoda&amp;t
Professor-Chemical Engineef:jng. Posting #F-3012. Assistant
Professor-Civil Engineering.
Posling #F-3013. Assistant Pr-0frssor-lndustrial Engineering.
Posting #F-3014, 3015. Prolts. sor-EJcctrif..-a! and Computer
Engineering. Posting #F-3016.
Asslslant/A.&lt;soclal&lt; rror.......
Electrical and Computer Engineering. Posting #F-3017. AssistanliAS!JOdale
Prof~ · Mecha.nical

-

and

Aerospace Engineering. Posting
#F-3018. 3019.

CJ«:rk li-Social &amp; Prc:vcnrivc
Medicine. Pbsting #R-9301S.

lleoear'dl S..ppon Spedatisi-

Microbiology. Posling #R-93016.

--

Assodatt Onn (MP~J)-Nu rsing. Posting IW-3006.
~

CML SEJtVICE
Cleo.- (SG-05, part-time
pttTDilDt:I11}-CustodiaJ ServicesResidential . Line: 143183.
Oeaner {SG.OS)-Cusmdial Services. Line 04372.31577.
31544. Supon1&lt;1nc J anltor
(SG-11 )-CuStodiaJ Services.
Univcnity facilities, Line
#3 1486. Keyboard Specialist
(SG-06)-Public Safely. Line
#34930. Campus Publk Safety
Orllcer II (SG-12~Public
Safety. Line #32233. Head Jani·
tor (SG·IS}-CustodiaJ ~rvice.., ,
Universi1y Facilities. Line
#32564.

......

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Alf brick, brighl &amp; spacious! Updated
knchen with breakfast room, formal
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Mainlt nana- Assistant (SG-

09)-Laborntory Animal Facili ties, Line #31819. MaJntenanaAsslstant (SG--09)-Univen;ity
Residence Halls. North Campus.
Line #43 II S. Janitor (SG-07~
University Facilities. CusuxhaJ
Services. Line #31527.

'!Ill...

Live long andprosper!

'

Pu~lic

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Weekly

----

Report

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...... _....,.

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NUTRITION PLAYS A KEY ROLE IN OPTIMUM HEALTH·
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TAKING CARE OF YOURSELF IS EASY AND
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--~-11:

• SkJs and b1nd1ngs. valued
at $600, were reported
rnss1ng Feb. 7 lrom a bus
OUISide Poner Qua\lrangle
• A tennts racquet and a
pij.ir of sneakers. wonh a
1;001bined value of $300,
were reported miSSing Feb
8 from a locker 1n Norton
Hall .
• Pubhc Safety rece&lt;ved a
repon Feb t 1 thai a laplop
ccmputer belong1ng to the
university was stofen Jan 13
1n France Value of the cOf'Tlputer was estunatt!d at

$1 .833.
• Public Safely reponed
Feb 11 that an oHICer killed
a bal1n Clement Hall and
d1sposed olll

SUP'P'LE ME"TS

VITAMIN S

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AMHERST, N . Y .

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.... _..,_ ..

The Reporter welcooles commentary on ISSUes
olbroad UJterest to ll!e uniwrsiry commun11y
Material may be edited lor style and length

Hong Kong: it might have been a great city...
home.
And yet. and yet ... there is the exceptional
enetgy, intemational diver.;ity and the cutting
edge of history (the interface with the P.R. of

lly IIOWAIID WOU

H

ERE ARE SOME images of
Hong Kong:
The hawks (really widewinged kites. I'm told) who ride
the columns to the east of Mt.
Davis between my apartment and the harbor

Otina).
There is the fading history of the British
Empire as ao example of all the empiles that

have faded.
Indeed. it seems to me that if Hong Kong
bad kept its British heritage preserved. if the
city looked substantially today as it did until
1960 (i n panoramic photos that I have seen).
then it might have been a great city-for,
then , one would have been able to reach
back aod touch centuries of experience (for
better and worse); and it could have been
contemplated in a "'human" space and within
a human scale.

front- never more than five or six.

Men who walk their bird cages when the
weather is fair (not that often).
Somewhat tired-looking and bored lndiao
guards who serve as bank and jewelry store
guards. their niche in thi s highly differentiated
society.
Black as the color
of fashion.
Rolls Royces

waiting in front of
the major hotels.

ong Kong might have been the Aorence
of Asia. the Beacon Hill of the South
Coast, the Washington Heights o f the

at anchor, jet-foils

H
Otina

steamin g to and

Pacific Rim.

from Macau, the
747s noating down

Too muc h has been destroyed here for
Hong Kon g to be great. Its greatness. if it
exi ts. is conceptual and must bereimagined
throu gh books and documentation: but it
would not then be a great living city.
In.; real sense. Hong Kong's claim to
greatness has been erased.
Its old synagogue, Ohel Leah. has sold
offsomeofitsland in a big construction deal
and will soon fall within the shadow of a
hig h-pri ced condo minium: the Mosq ue will
soon have an escalator crank ing by its por·
tal s.
A great city must make a journey through
time and myriad versions of being human
possible.
Hong Kong forecloses possibilities: it narrows the focus.
In the simplest possible terms. there isn 't
enough space. and the real estate is too ex pen·
sive.

· The view of the

harbor- freighter&gt;

WOI.F

in their glide path. police and Briti sh Forces
chopper!:! head ing for Stonecuuer's Island

(the fon } and the Vietnamese detention
ro.~mp~

(.!.omewhere).

Bamboo-sca ffolded building&gt;. e ncased
in green netting and blue and white drop-

dnths like ~o rne Cristo environment al an
object- and the co n ~tam sou nd of jackhammer, .
HK b always going up or down, constructing and dcconstructing (the real deconstruction):
they arc. in fact. building an escalator now that
will go up. in Mages. from Hollywood to Con·
duit Road.
The Peak Tmm will 1oM" it ~ monopo ly. if
nut 111- dominance. a!&lt;o :t way for tourists to
purc h &lt;.t~ a view.
Lil vt! ndcrand violet twilights that belong to
the M&lt;~uve Decade, not thi s relentless centerof
trJdc.
Ticr!oo and banh of neon !&lt;!ig n ~ on Nathan
Road that reinvent cubism for the shopper.
Wedding photos in frontofCity Hall. all the
bride• perfectly put together: all the grooms
skinny and irrelevant except as the agents who
make the brides possible.
The sad and energeti c Filipina "amahs"
who crowd and throng Statue and Chater Gar·
dens on Sunday. seeking shelter under the
ponicos of the LegCo building when it rains;
seeking solace from their sister.&lt;. sharing food
and nail poli&gt;h.

ll!'he armies of Japanese traders. ever
I bowing,ever talking on ce llular phones.
aware of each other. indifferent, seemingly. of
the world around them.
Or. perhaps. they th ink that they are the
world- the fatal naw of all empiric peoples
(Americans in the post-World War ll period ).
The homeless (men and women) who
slee p in boxes on Central Wharf and in
shadowy enclaves here and there-a rebuke
to the wealth of thi s colony.
The disabled aod maimed men who crawl
through Star Ferry subway. begging.
School children in uniform with school
badges and logos- always neatly turned out
for their lessons and lovingly met by "amahs"
and/or mothers.
Broken down "gweilo" (westerm:rf'ghost")
traders and corpor.ttc manager.i with slim Asian
women. These liaisons look depth less. but the
women are attentive. and the men seem saved
from extinction.
The endless sidc·Strccb with microscopic
shops. no hole in the wall.too small fora wall in
a hall (and maybe Fax as well ).
Urban Council pocket parks (with its cluster
logo). ao auempt to carve out some decency for

"Too much has been destroyed here for Hong Kong to be
great. Its greatness, if it exists, is conceptual and must be
reimagined through books and documentation; but it
would not then be a great.living city. In a real sense,
Hong Kong sclaim to greatness has been erased. "
older JX!Oplt; and nursing mothers who carry
It seemed clear to me at first that the
their babes strapped to them orangutan -fashanswer was no. I thought yes when l returned
ion.
from Korea; and now 1would say that it is a
Bus wind hields and creches and alLarS:
major. but not great. city, if by great one
bounci ng kewpie dolls. miniature Buddhas. . means that~ process of discovery (of oneself
and the occasional bird.
in rela ti on to human history)· wou ld be
The specialty shops of Des Vocux Road . unending.
(dried fosh. nlCilicinal herbs. and Ginseng prodHong Kong does not embody enough of the
ucts-aphrodisiacal deer pans and powdered
visible past (i n an. architecture and sacred
antler&gt;).
public spaces) so that one can reconstruct
Bare--chested workers with Triad-=engmved
essential aspeclS of civ ilization.
(so they say) tattoo~ . men who have drunk one
And there aren't places of significant.
another' s bloOd (unt il the AIDS "'"'"')a&lt; a
retreat so that one can. in isolation. get lost
sign of loyalty.
in the ci ty and become a separate person for
The HK skyline seen from the Kowloon
a whi le.
side, now dominated by the newly completed
There's no way to get away from the crowd
Cectral Plaza look ing for (to) all the world_a.,
here. no quiet P.Misian care. noremote street in
the Empire State Building.
upper Manhattan (mY. natal ground) where you
But is Hong Kong a great city?
can forget that the business of the world is
This is a question I'Veaskcd myself all year
business.
and to which I've hesitated to give an answer
There· s no ahCmate world here: no true
as an experiment in shifting re~ponse and
Bohemia. haunt for ~ists , a place· where the
observation.
cu ltural di sse nt~r.; can feel that they have a

Professor Howard Wolf. currently a VJSitmg
lecturer at the UmverSJry of Hong Kong. IS
the author of !light books. 1ncludmg h1s most
recent collectJOO ol essays. The Autoboographicallmpulse m Amenca: The CnsJS of
Human•sm 1n Contemporary Culture. This
arocle is excerpted from h1s latest wori&lt;-lnprogress: Ends and other Beg1nnings.
Mainly Sunday Le"ers From Hong Kong.

Letter

Report on Economics
not in public domain

EDITOR:
Dunng 1992 there was
much comrnolion surrounding lhe Econom&lt;:s Depanment, its facully . 1ts chair.
their dean. After much delay and many
detours lhe chair stepped as1de and the
dean appointed a comm1nee.of three wise
men to advise h1m on lhe best course of
actiOn

Th1s commilteP. has now produced tts
report , but th1s report 1s nol in lhe publ&lt;:
doma1n II is guarded w1t~ the ulmosl se-

crecy
The' provost 1n11mates !hat there 1s nothIng lo h1de, so why hide il? The strength of
universittes is their openness The decision
to keep the report sub rosa should be
reconsidered

�____
0

I

•.

'

I L I ', '

.,...., .......

. . . Nil

Ill

lhe~l..bay

amcu10e81'e 1993 nul
poeiy ooniBsts sponsored
n oocperation v..llh lhe D&amp;~ct English 11/'d lhe
F1iends ct .l'e lkWersity lJ.
I:Jwies. T-...o $100 prizes
IW9 ctlered fer l'e besl

..,_

..

Faculty&amp;Siall
8

I

l.

NEWSMAKERS
8

0

A

R

0

UBOII~

Up in the air
go the giant

dice for the
UB version of
Monopoly.
The game,

poems llli.:mCied t7t lB
stJdenls. The ~ct
Pmlican Pbels OOI""JieSt is
open D gaciJale and t.nderga4Jates. F1iends ct
lhe lkWersity l.biWies prize
is fer l.f1dergadua!es c:rjy.
Enbies shcllid consist ct
cne or more typewriaen,
~poems. not
to~ a taa1 ct 6 pages. Student's name shcllid
not appear on poems, but
on a oover sheet wi1h name
ollhe prize, writer's name
lll'd class. edcress and
phone no. Send en1ries t&gt;
Margaret R. Wfils, cirector,
l.kldergradlale l..ibraly,
107 Capen Hal . .......
line .. Fltd!lv....... 2.

played Feb.
19inAiumni
Arena. was
part of Winter

Carnival.

bunt, T1u-

The UB School of Pharmacy

WBFO report to explore

crime In lutflilo'•
bu. . pollee preclnc:t
A I~ at violence and crime

0

through the eyes of people
living and working in Buffalo"s
busiest polioe precinct will be the
rucus of a special report to be broadat 6:30p.m.Thesday. Man:h 2 on
WBFO 88.7 FM, the National P\Jblic
Radio alf~iate operated by UB.
Based on extensive interviews
by:lan Aronson, WBFO news and
public affairs producer, the 30minute repon will feature the
voices of police, parents, shopkeepers, teachers and children
from the East Side neighborhood
covered hy Precinct 12.
The report focuses oo the fears or
people afraid to leave their l1orres as
well as those working to ll"lllb: the
neighborhood a safer place to live.
and expla.s' the sometimes tense
relationship between the polioe and
community.

=

" -· associate professor of
psycbology, was quoted
prominently in an article
on attitudes in the November issue of Ladits ' Home
Journal.

I"II8IIMcJ .....

will pesent several progllliTlS
mcontinuing education this winter
and spring. ~g pharmlcists
will receive information on poper
mt.'dication counseling following stale
and [cdcrnl guidelires at two ""Ccun'&lt;.'hog Content Reviews." to be held
March 3 and Man:h 31 . The Man:h 3
prugr.un will focus on ooo-su:roidal
anti-inllarnmauxy agentS and ulcer
rn.'&lt;iic:uions. The Man:h 31 JX"08l1II11
UI&gt;I."USSeS calciwn&lt;hannel blocking
agents and warfarin anticoagulation.
Participants may auend either the
nx1111ing '!"S"ion, which runs from 8
a.m.-12:30 p.m., or the afternoon
'&lt;.'SSion. which runs from 1-5:30 p.m.
Sessions will be held at the University Inn and Conference Cemer,
240 1 N. Forest Road at Audubon
Pkwy .. Arnher.;t_ Registration is
limited to 50 regisuants per ses&lt;ion. For more details, call the
UB School of Phannacy Continum·g Education Office. 645-3931.

....... ~~...act .....

• C...,._ P.tridl EwlftC.
professor of law and clini·
cal professor of psychology, was quoted in articles
in major newspapers,
including Chicago Tri-

continUing ed .........

0

• Women from different
cultures, living vastly
different lives, experience
many of the same men·
strual and premenstrual
symptoms according to a
study led by u..
......,., assislant pr&lt;&gt;fessor of social and preventive medicine. thai: was
discussed in the "Health
Watch" column in the
Nov. 11 issue of Tht Ntw
York Times.

D~ar State Uni\lersity
and Fritnds:

..,... ..... fifth~ vlctaly In
win- Mirilla-'£
II ......

SUNY D8y will take place on Tuesday,
M.-cll 2, 1H3. and I take this opportunity to invite you to join with me in this
very important day for the uni versity.
The Association of Boards of Trustees
of Community Colleges (ABC), the Association of Council Members and College Trustees (ACJ), the Confederation
of Alumni Associations, and the Council
for University Affairs and Development
(SUNY/CUAD) will again be co-sponsors of SUNY Day 1993. The suppon
and participation by members of these
important groups are vital to the
program' s success.
As in the past, campus presidents will
be coordinating individual campus delegations, and I urge you to contact that
office for additional details.
1 look forward to seeing you on

I

The UB v.anen's basketball tea-n is on a roll
and probably wishing lhe season \'o&lt;JLIIctll end
on March 2. The yomg Royals, v.OO opened
the season by wi1nin9 ~ cne game n their

first seven starts. posted their fifth straight victory last Wednesday night wi1h an 88-50 victory
the University ol Maryland-Eastern Shore.
Senior Lorrie Drennen. playing her final home
game ol her career. had 25 points and pulled
down 11 rebou1ds.
Two days earlier. the Royals. noN 11 -11 ,
defeated Colgate 77-50 at the Big A as
Brooke Smith and Jennifer desGroseilhers
each had 16. Smith finished the doubledouble with 11 rebounds.
• Men's basketball dropped to 5-18 on
Thurs day night when the Bulls dropped a 9667 decision to 19th ranked Massachusetts
before 4,120 fans at the Big A.
The Minu1emen held a 55-26 iead at the haH
before cruising to lhe win. Sophomore guard
MocfiE! Cox. playing lhe entire gl;me, had a
career-high tying t 5 points along with six rebounds and three assists. Kelvin Brown added
14 points and Devon Olambefs had 12.
• Wrestling dropped to 1-15 overall with a
pair ollosses over the weekend. The Bulls
dropped a 31-3 decision Saturday to nation-·
ally-ranked Rider College. On Suryday. the
club dropped a 26-12 loss to Hofstra. Rob
Cruz, Anthony Conte. Marcus Hutchins and"
Todd Webb posted wins for UB.
• Olllstanding wanen's swirrming moves
into the Ahxmi Arena Natatorium this weekend
when lhe Division of Athletics hosts lhe tastern
Wooten's 9.vin League etmlpionships. The
event brings some of the Qest Div. I svirnmers
lrcmlhe east together for ttYee days ct exciting
action. Harvard retums to seek its tht d straight
cM"npionship. SNi"rmf1g begins eacl:1 day
with p&lt;elininaries at 11 a .m. and fnals l!l 7p.m
CNe&lt;

1111s .................
w-.25M&amp;dl3)
• Men's Basketball: Sat.. Feb. 27 vs
Virginia Coovnonwealth. 7_:30 p.m.
• Women's Swimming: Thurs.-Sat. . Feb
25-27, Eastern Women's Swim League. 11
a .m. and 7 p.m.
·toM IICIUIII
Assistant Director for Media RelatiOnS &amp; Msrketrng

Coll~agues

.0.- -March 2.

Chancellor

one
Adults ...rr.rtnc from .._....
sou&amp;ht for UB study
.

0

Adults who have the n::d. scaly skin patches
of psoriasis on at least 5 percent of their torso.
arms or legs are needed to help evaluate a new
medication for the problem.
Jiregnant women and nursing mothers are excluded from panicipating in the eight-week study, •
whic_h will evaluate a medication that is avai lable in
Europe and Canada by prescription.
The study is being conducted by UB dermatologist Roben Kalb at his office at 295 Essjay Drive in
Amherst. P.articipants must be available to rilake
brief office visits on Tuesdays betweo:n 8 a.m. and
1:30p.m.
Anyone interested in panicipating in the study
shoold"call 631-000 I between 9 a.in. arid 4:30 p.m.
weekdays.

Sacra~nto s~~

and Th~ San Ditgo UnionTribunt, as an expen witness in a trial in
Milwaukee that resul ted in
a j ury rejecting an 18-year·
old girl' s defense that she
was insane due lO .. urban
psychosis" wben she shot
another teenage girl .

• C._. Welch, Distinguished Service Professor
of political science and codirector of the UB Human
Rights Center. discussed
human righ ts in an interview on Voice of America
heard around the world on
Oec. 10.
• A study co-authored by
L a - Sovtllwlck.
associate professor of
management science.
about how lawyers take on
more malpractice cases

when other legal business
dries up was featured as
the lead item in the "Law"
column on Dec. 31 in The
Wall Strut Journal.
• A "srnan pill" developed
by --~

professor of pharmaceutics. and David .D' Andrea.
director of the Engineering
and Devices Laboratory of
Millard Fillmore Hospitals. was named one of
1992' s greatest achieve·
ment in science and technology in the December
issue of Popular Sci~n ct .

-

- ~aYTHEIIa-

.-

�_____

..,_

.

UB medical school class oi1882-Comellus Dorsette Ia circled at far left.

HIDDEN
Archivist discovers
physician

I STORY

UB med school grad was personal
to Booker T Washington
~&gt;--0--&lt;~

BY

MARK

HAMMER

REPORTER

STAFF

welcome and offered their services to aid him in consultation or in.any other way

!STORY sometimes can be elusive. Just ask Chris

Densmore, UB's associate archivist. He rccenLJy

possible .. :·
Dorseue was born into slavery in 1859 in North Carolina and

learned about an early UB medical school graduate
whose accomplishments had gone unrecognized.

separated from his mother at the age of two months. He was raiSed by his.

"What set this entire situation off was an

grandmother and graduated from the Hampton Institute in 1878. Failing

·inquiry from a researcher who was seeking

health forced him to resign from the Medical College at Syracuse. After

information about a black graduate of the medical school." said Densmore.

regaining his health and be ing rejected by the University Medical College

The rest, as they say. is history. It tumedoutthatthe graduate in question

of New York City because of his rJce. he came to UB and completed his

wa.&lt; Cornelius Nathaniel Dorseue, a member of the c lass of 1882 and the

degree.

second African·American to receive a degree from UB.

He he lped organize the National Medical Association for black

"We hadn't known of this person's background because the medical

doctors and was a trustee at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. which Booker

school kept rather sparse records in those days. This is just an·example Of how

T. Washin gton built from a smal l normal school into a natiol)ally·knJJwn

these k.inlls of discoveries are made," Densmore said.

institute with 1,500 students, a faculty of 200. and an

"Dorsette is, in fact. a.very important man from a number of perspectives. For

example, he was BookerT. Wash-ington's physician and often was mentioned by

endowment of approximately $ 2.000.000.

Cornelius N.UU..Iel
DorSette

Washington in speeches as an example of black perseverance and initiative."

'

In a speech given to the National Educational Association on July 16. 1884 in

Madison. Wisconsin, Washington spoke of his friend with pride and admiration: "A young

Densmore admits that he was fortunate to come
across an important member ofUB's past. "We really
lucked out on finding this man. especially finding the

photoofhim(shownonthispage.) AndthereisanOleinthegraduation

colored physician went into the city of Montgomery. Alabama. a few months ago to practice his

record to theeffectthat he was given a special round of applause during

profession-he was the ftrstlo professional ly enter the ex-Confederate capital. When his white

the graduation ceremony. Unfortunately, he died at a very young age."

brother physicians found out by a six days' examination that he had brains enough to pass a beuer
examination, as one of them said, than many of the whites had passed. they gave him a beatty

Dorsette died in 1897 at the age of 38.

llook8rT.

w........

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                    <text>'93 grads
will need
job hunt
strategy

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The .Jab

The act a flo!JOOg. rn a
fancy floss, helps prelllrt
Ql.fT1 disease, a UB
study says.

Sol Weller has had a

distinguished career in
science but adrrits
that rrusic iS hiS
firstlove.
,..

..

lllill to llaoe a__.. jab_.., ....... .

2

,.. 8

Improving
Tribal Health

lheflnt
HundredV...

Native American nurses
train at UB to retum to
their corrmunities as
nurse practitioners.

Richard f'oy..oeft's gift to
dental school is a
rronograph about its first
hundred years.

,.5

,.8

Fcbru.,ry 18 1993 Volume 24. No 17

Effectiveness

worbtohelp
teachers solve

skills

ROBERT
BOLT'S
playA

Man for All Seasons, the
·:unbitious Richard Rich
lSks Sir Thomas More
who would recognize his
:alents as a teacher. "You,
your students, and God,"
\1ore tells hiffi. "Not a
Jad audience, that."
NonnaHenderson. who currently

uns UB'sOfliceofTeaching Effec·
iveness, is not so sure; nor is she
:ure that the audience encourages

eachers to he at their best in the
:lassroom.
"'There are some good teachers
vhodon ' t know they can teach more
:ffectively and efficiently." says
iendenon. "Students tend not to
lemand of an instruCtor all the in·
tructorcan give, and instruCtors tend
101 to ask of students all that students

can give. They work out a contract
Don' t make too many demands on
me, and I won ' t make too many
demands on you.
· '"There is also the assumption,
and this is true nationally, that the
rewards of~hing are intrinsic, that
you will watch your students go on
to do great things and that will he
reward enough." she adds. "Well.
that's not necessarily true; it's not
necessarily money that •s the answer,
either.
"So, how do you increase the
ways of affuming people· s efforts?"
The Office of Teaching Effectiveness, which a Faculty Senate
decision recently nudged past budgetary constraints and into its sixth
year, exists to ~swer such ques~

tions, and to assist teachers in solv·
ing dilfiCuliies in the classroom. But
because i!S focus is on teachif)g' or.
from the "student's point of view,
learning. the OffiCe is equally open
to teachers who want to hone a teach·
ing style that may he wor1cing well.
"Improving teaching is like im·
proving an antique car," says Henderson. "You don' t want to spoil it,
but you want it to purr and nm just
fine. So you tinker."
Nonnan Solkoff. Distinguished
Service Professor in UB's Psycho!·
ogy Department. founded the Office
in 1986tohelpboo61thelowpriority
he fell teaching was receiving ~s

.

~l~nprovlng

l~nprovlng

teaching Is like

an antique car. You

clon"t -ant to spoil It but you -ant
It to purr."
-HORMA HENDERSON

more tricks of the trnde. He tool&lt;
the campus. "Students would report
their questions, and the existence of
how unhappy they were about fac·
the new award itself, as an indicalion
ulty members who did not show up.
that
the tide could tum.
or who read from notes that had long
since yellowed with age, or who
"(ere fine on the podium in a lecture
hall but who were uncomfortable
with their stUdents off the podium.lt
also became clear to me that, in "had difficu lt ies they could not
personnel decisions about proJTl()- . solve-a bewildered class. a low
attendance rate, a·stony silence in the
tions (or example, teaching was not
a variable; when they talked about . face of questions-and by sining in
on their classes and making discreet
their worl&lt;, faculty simply did 1101
observations.
write teaching into the equation.
"One colleague came to see me
"1 also always hated pining"teach·
and when I told him what I thought
ing against research. 1lle teaching
he might he doing wrong he said,.
load at UB is only two courses, so I
' But that's my style. it ' s so ingrained.
could never understand why faculty
1 can' t change it now: 1 sat in his
whowerepoorteachers,orwhowere
class a few weeks later and he' d
not shOwing up for class. could claim
made some of the changes r d sug·
to he doing research. What do they
gested. but not all of them. ·
do with the other 40 or 50 hours per
'"Then he made some more, and
weekT'
some more. By the Semest.:rs end
Solkoff received the firs t
there was a substantial irn(J"oVCII'all."
Chancellor's Award for Outstand·
Solkoff left to rilake \oay for new
ing Teaching in 1973, and·found
blood in 1991 ; he still sits on the
himself being drawn into ronversa·
Office' s FacultyAdvisory Boanltion by colleagues arixious to learn

the Office aims to include one repre·
senuuiveofeveryfacultyonitsBoard
- and will he recommending that
the OffiCe of Teaching Effective·
· ness conduct research to gauge exactly how effective its effectiveness
is. The results should be interesting:
the Olfx:e has expanded its reper·
toire and, in addition to maintaif)ing
a library and participating in confer·

ences nationwide, now offers teachers theopponunity to videclapetheir
worl&lt; in class. or to meet for private
consuluuions, or to invite analysis of
their student evaluations.
Jeannette Ludwig, assOciate professor of modem languages and lit·
eratures. is the acting director of the
Office. (She is the faculty ann of its
directorship; Henderson. who serves
as its associate director, acquired
much of her teaclltng experience in
public schoo!s). Ludwig says the
facilities offered by the Office help
stop a gap previously occupied by.
student evaluations alone. She adds
that the evaluations themselves,

which students traditionally rill out
toward the semester' send while their ·
teacher stares pat.iently out the window. tend to be either ignored alt&lt;&gt;-

gelher or, at best, serve as an
ambiguous soun:e of information.
"How prepared was this class to
~e an evaluation? Did they know
continued on page 4

�-----.-17

2
~

:·

'.

0 f:

..........
---

s

~

.._...

"The lasting
friendships were
with my own

ruwe~tlrfleQn.

oo1ogy S~Moea . . IUIIIo
VA Meclcll C.W ni 811:
jn::l ch:al iniiNc:b' In 1he
UB School rl N!nlng. , .
ceiYed lhe 1992 Fedlnl Ntnlrg Serke ~ from1he .
AsaocialiOn rl Mililsry SJ.
geons rl1he l.k1iled Slsles.
~was l1or1oreq tr
her fJ8SBY. 'M lrtrodudion to
.MOnoclonal NlftJr.xty ~
oepiS lor 1he.Oncology Nine,'
written to help RNs urv:ler-.:l
lhe basic ccnoepls rl monc&gt;clonal anliJodies.
Allhe VA, Mogensen tJ&amp;.
gan WOII&lt;ing with cancer patients who were eligible to
participate in monoclonal
antibody diagnostic scanning
research trials through the
Department of Nuclear Medi·
cine.

•
science:
•
•
music
Is
first love

gr~

students...My
gratifying hope
wasthatwe
would become
colleagues. "

Emeritus~

Sol Weller hes found
tl-forboth

Interests
IIJ-.rfWA'IDIICIUR
Reporter Staff

Sol Weller: dJstlnCulshed
.clentlst once c:onsklered puraulng a career
In music.

couJdlivewithoutscience,"
-says Sol Weller, a man who
bas led a distinguished career in science, "but I'd hate
to live without music."
Weller, Professor Emeritus in
Chemical Engineering, is down to
one piano now: at one point, he and
his wife, Miriam, bad two grands
and an uprigh ~ and Miriam would

-·-: 1
POLITICAL SCIENCE

~to

~E.

STAIEMP'f,

w-. Jr~ SUNY

Distinguished Service Profes·
sor of Political Science, and
co-director of the Human"
J;;;::;;;io;::;:;J Rights Cen·
ter, took part
In the Feb. 1·
4 conference
on 'Democratization in
Afris:a: The
Role of the
MilitarY' in
Burundi.
Welch cleflvered a paper on
human rights relating to this
topic.

Sponsors were the State
Departmenrs Derrocracy
and Human Rights Project.
the Burundi government. the
World Bank and the U.N. Development Program Ten Afri·
can states were invited to
examine how the International
com:nunity can encourage
moveme11ts toward democra·
ttzation in countries naN or
recently under military auspices. Salim Salim, head of
the Organization of African
Unity, was also scheduled to
participate.

=to
MEDICINE

IDirOIIW.
_ - . . _ , professorof

pecialrics and chief.of lhe [)M.
sion of Allergy and tiTYTU'IOic&gt;[lf atlhe UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sci-

~=:"""~~
Clinicsllfrm.rlology.
Ballow also is on the ed~o­
rtal board ot Infections in
Medicine and previously
S9Mld on-the ed~ortal board
of Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
A merrber-ol the Amertcan
Academy of Allergy and lmrrunology, the SOciety for

Pediatric Rasearch 8nd the

E!Uffalo Allergy Society, he is
certified by the National
Bea-d of Medical~­
A diplomate of the Amertcan
Board ol f'e(llatrics, BallOW
eanned his medical degree
from the University of Chicago l&gt;choof of Medicine.

rise at six to practice for an hour
before leaving for work. The re-

maining grand is the swvivor of
many moves.
··As a young pre-roed student I
investigated the possibility of becoming a n'IJSlcian," says Weller...and. in
fact. took the Seashore Musical Apti·
rude Test, which. indeed, showed that
I bad an aptirude for music."
lsn 't it curious that someone
trained to accelerate chemical reac·
tions and to make synthetic fuels
from coal should be able to think,
well. musically?
··Actually. my wife is much more
analytical than I am-she knows
how to write a fugue and so on. As
with all art. it's a gut reaction, a sense

says Weller, who, after earning his
Ph.D. at the age of 22, joined the
Manhanan Project two yean later.
'"The work was very compartmentalized; I never knew without guessing
what other people were doing, so I
was very surprised wben the ftrst
bomb fell.
"My own Ph.D. advisor was l ames
Franck, who was a Nobelist in the
1920s; he became the leader of the
so-called Franck Repon, which tried
to convince Truman not to drop the
atomic bomb on populated areas but

to demonstrate it."

impression. ln science 1 tend to be
staid

and,

unimaginative.

in

my

opinion,

L

ike Einstein. whose letter to

"Truman warning of German success in splitting the atom led to the

meshing of interests in writing standards for catalysts, the materials that
-=lenue cllemicall!:ad:ioos by boing added to the compound.
Apanfrommusic, WeUer'sother
greatlovehasbeeoteaching. Weller
interrupted a lucrative career in in·
dusuy and took a 50 percent pay cut
to take the opponunity to come to
VB and teach in 1965. He remember.; with most fondnessthe60orso
graduate students to whom, be says,
he was something of a father figure.
"The lasting friendshiP!' were with
myowngraduatestudentsWithwhom
I worked. My gratifying hope was that
we would become colleagues.
··some have gone back to the Far
East. They stay in touch," he said.
"lt"sverygratifyingthatthey'refond
enough of me to think of me.
"1 have regrets. I wish I could have
been roore innovative in teaching
methodology than I was There were
approaches I knew nothing about. I
came from industry to the university
without teaching experience. The use

"We started a Rare Music Socicreation of the Manhattan Projoc~
ety. playing little-known works of
Franck exiled himself from Germany
well-known composer.; or works of
in the '30s.
little· known composers, contempo"In his moml stature," says Weller,
rary mUsicians, for example."
The Weller.; also ran the Practice ;'EinsteinrankswithFr.mckasahuman
being,
as one of nature's noblemen."
Being Nervous Recital series. which
Weller neglects to mention that he
they designed tohelpyoungartistslose
was the fir.;( to call for an international
their fear of playing before audiences.
"Not long ago, I waspaidthegreatestcomplimenc I was asked to become
chairofthe Music Department at VB."
Weller turned it down because.
he says, musicians in general are
The 1H3 Senior ClllllleotC• Gift Campaign ,
··rough customer.;. 'There' s a conchaired by Student Association Pr13sident Bryan
tinual struggle between performer.;
Foulke. is now under way. Each year since 1984.
and educators."
members of the graduating senior class at UB
The C.C. Furnas Memorial Prohave raised money toward a class gift as a way to
fessor Emeritus, Winner of both the.
say "thank you· tor their education and to make a
AmeriCan Chemical Society's E.V.
lasting contribution to their alma mater.
Murphee Award ltlld the Jacob F.
"For the past nine years. seniors have continSchoellkopf Medal, Weller itlso
ued the tradition ol giving something back to UB
holds 14 patents. among them the
and leaving a lasting legacy.' Michael Benzin,
patent for uranium hexafloride. a
assistant director ot Annual Giving at UB pointed
oDt. Sanior Challenge is coordinated by the Office
compQund also known as UF,. He
of University Development through the Annual
and a younger colleague discovered
Giving Program.
it w.hile working on the Manhanan
In addition to Foulke, other members of the
Projec~ and the compound accelercommittee are Orner Awass. Jennifer Diffrnar.
ated the experiments necessary tQ
Scott
Freyberger. Eileen ldiik, Jonathan Loew.
the creation of the atomic bomb.
Nancy McGraw. Jenn~er Sacher, Bill Schonig.
..1 was very naive at t.ha1 lime,''

EDITOR: , . _ _ . _

of the Socratic method. for instance.
never occurml to me. So I lectured m
them as best I coold, and as interestingly as a dull per.;on could"

efore retiring in January, 1989.
Weller waited for his last Pb.D.
student to finish up, and simply
stopped taking new students.
"I felt bereft. What I missed most
was that day-to-day contact."
His intention on that January day
was to clear off his desk and go
home, like most retired people.
'1 preJllred to~ my office. I
gave my books to the deplrtnr.nt ~­
brnry, and I threw out three quarters of
my files. But I was !lO(evicted, and r m
!Dl)ll did all that," be said. He's sino:
been asked 10 contribute a paper oo
kinetics to a leading lfChnDll journal
and to spe:ik ar a conr=ice in Florida
" Now I work oo whateverO&lt;Xllisto me

B

oroo wbateverl"ma&lt;;kedtodo."besaid.
Weller received the Dean' s
AwardforEngli.:eringAehievemeilt
in 1991.

Senior Challenge Gift Campaign opens
Amba Singletary and Rachel Skyer.
Last year, 588 members of the Class of 1992
contributed more than $12.CXXJ. The funds were
. used to place a UB seal in the floor of the rte&lt;N
Student Union. Previous gifts include the Norton'
Hall Clock in Founder's Plaza, entrance signs at
Aint and Rensch Roads, enhailcemEiiit of Lake
LaSalle Park and contributions to. University Libraries.
Seniors may contribute gift ideas by dropping
off suggestions irt boxes in the Blicott Complex
Resident Life Office, Goodyear Hall Resident Life
Desk and the Information Desk in the Student
Union lobby. Suggestions may be fawarded by
Campus Mail to Partho Sarkar, 155 Goodyear
Hall, SoutJi Campus. Contributions to Senior ChallenQe can be made by contacting Sarkar at 82S-

:ll02 .

�- . .---.-1.7
JOBS
Continued from page 1
Martell and his staff have witnessed in the
recruitment panenis of major employees who
traditionally visit UB in their search for new
employees.
He cites as an example the case of a major
national electronics finn, which in moresotid
economic times sent 12 recruiters to the uni·
versity for !hree days twice each year to interview job candidates.
'This year, the company sent seven recruiters for two days in the fall and plans on a oneday event with three or four recruiters this
spring." he notes.
"In the pas~ we used to have 35 to 40
students majoring in science, mathematics and
engineering hired each year by the firm . Now
we're down to 10 to 12 a year. It's a dr.unatic
drop."
Despite such discouraging examples.
Martell says the UB Office of Career Planning
and Placement strives to be "upbeat."
Accenting the positive ("We don 't like to
get into boring statistical presentations on how

companies are 'rightsizing"'). he notes that the
job searches of some graduati ng students are
meeting with success.
Health care is one area with an abundance
of jobs. he adds. particularly for those with a
degree in nursing. "If you ha ve a flexible
schedule and 'have-bag-will-travel .... Martell
says. "hospitals in many areas of the U.S. are
searching for nurses."

A field that Mancil refers to as "technical
applications" also holds hope. 'There are
smaller numbers ofjobs a vailablc, but employers are still looking for people in areas such as
technical production. computer applications
and sales and marketing." he notes.

3
r,1arcn lniO 1118 C~an~: ,
Mari(e! Worhsho~ ScheDule
v,

Similarly promising is "process engineering," a f~eld that looks at how to cut the
numbers of stepS it takes to manufacnue a
product.

Trends identified by the SUitT of the Office
of Career Planning and Placement include a
willingness on the pan of stUdents who find a
dearth ofjobs in their particular field to look at
jobs in other areas.
"We're no longer working with roond pegs
in a roond hole," he explains. "Students are
opting for heretofore not thought of alternatives in the job search. They are looking in
broader contexts, in areas 'relat&lt;d' to their
major area of study. And in this instance,
'related' has no clear definition."

lsoon the increaseareinstancesof"conlabor" and students agreeing to
intemships-bothpaidandunpaid--withcompanies with the hope that they will lead to a fulltime position.
ConiJaCl labor involves individuals being
hired shon term for a specific job.
"Basically," Martell explains, "an employer
is saying. •I need something done in my office.
a specific task. It'sgoingtotakethis long to do
it. We will pay you ·x· dollars to do it and,
when it's done, you no longer have a job.
Benefits, if any, are minimal and there are no
retirement benefits."
Manell notes: 'This seems to be more common with companies that deal with govemmentconlnlCt.S. It doesn't mean students won't
be hired when the project is over, but their
initial hiring has a binh and death prescribed."
Internships, with clear benefits for both
employers and students. also are on an up-

A

lr11Ct

swing.
"Student! get their foot in the door and the
employers are not bound by other cooditioos
that go hand-in-hand with hiring," Martell
says. 'This gives them time to evaluate the
individual with no strings attached. There is no
obligation on the pan of the company if the
intern does not do well. But because this kind
of arrangement can lead to a paid job, it's an
alternative for those who initially strike out in
the job rnarl&lt;et."
Manell stresses that while jobs may not be
as plentiful, UB students immersed in the job
search in 1993 have two advantages not enjoyed by those who graduated only a few years
ago.
One is UB Link. a two-year-old program
coondinat&lt;d by Martell's office in conjunction
with UB's Alumni Relations Office that helps
graduating students form a network of businesscontactsbyreferringthestudentstoalumni
working in a specific field.
"Networking is still one of the best ways to
acquire a job," Martell notes . He says the
program has been particularly successful in
identifying alumni in the New York City area
willing to work with graduating students.
Since last year, UB also has participated in
SUNY Search. a computerized system designed to link UB student! and graduates with
employers. While headquartered at UB, SUNY
Search is tied into carecc development offices
at 37 of 64 SUNY campuses.
SUNY students and alumni pay nothing
to register with the system. Employers pay a
nominal fee for a computer search that produces a resume on each of up to 15 students
or alumni qualified for a position .

• •

2

-.

. ..

......

"Con88der' a ear- in Cormuily
Service." 1&lt;150 Student Union,

..........
~:30p .m.

"Finding~ with 1he Fedenll
Gowrmlenl.. 145A Student Union,
2-J::ll p.m.

•• t

, ,, ..... u

"Personalily and ear-~
Making," 1&lt;150 Sludent Union,
2-3p.m.

•• ,

, , .... u

"Future Opportur-Oties for Ph D.'s in
Industry and Academia." 145A Sludent
Union, 3:3(}5 p.m. The worktthop will
be presented by UB f'ro\losl ABron M.
Bloch and Paul Mlwrone, vice president for mcperimental research 81
Calspan Advanced Technology C....

•ter........,,_11
Your

"Mar1&lt;eling
Arts and Letter.!/
Social Science Degree." 145A Sludent
Union . ~ :~ p.m.

.-.-,.u
"How to Make a Career Fair Work for
You." 1450 Student Union,
12:3(}1 :~p .m.

.-.-,.u
"The Changing fnl&gt;loyrnent Market
What Employers in Business and Industry Are Looking for In Candidates."
145A Student Union,
4:30-6 p.m.
·~. -17

"How to Make a career Fa.r Work for

You,· 1450 Sludent Union, 4-6 p.m.
a $, - 1 7
"Culture Clash and 1he Wot1&lt;place,"
145E Sludent \)nion. 6-8 p.m.

••••

Pension payment delay is result of shortfall
in state allocations to TIAA-CREF
BJ ANN WIIITCIER
Reporter Ed1tor

B

EGINNING Jan. 13. StateComptroller Edward V . Regan ha.• temporaril y discontinued state
payments to all but one tier of the
llAA-CREF retirement system.
Payments will not resume until April I . The
move follows a shonfall in state allocations for
the retirement plan ~ which is the choice of most
UB faculty and professional staff.
Ellen McNamara. UB assistant vice president for human resources. explaine&lt;l that the
missing contributions will be repaid to affected
UB employees, but slowly: 10% in September
·1993: 45% in September 1994.and the remaining 45% not until September 1995. Employees. however. will lose the interest that would
have accrued.
The move stems from permanent legislation signed into law last July. the result of a
recomniendation from a governor's task force.
The legislation calls for the state to continue its
contribution rates to llAA-CREF of 12% and
15%forTier2members:9%and 12% with3%
employee contribution for Tier 3 and Tier 4
members. Acconding to UB Personnel, an
employee's tier is determined ~y the date he or
she joincd·the retirement system:

•ner 1
•ner 2
•ner 3
•ner 4

Prior lo July 1. 1973
On oi after July 1. 1973 and
prior lo July 27, 1976
On or after July 27. 1976 and
priorloSepl. 1, 1983
On or after Sept 1. 1983

Employees in Tier I are unaffected by the
payment delay. The state's contribu~ion to
their pension continues unchanged dunng the
three-and-a-half-month period in question.
"'The task force recommended that everyone already in the system would be mainlljined
atthepresentlevelofcontributions." explained.
Paul Zarembka, president of the·UUP Buffalo
Center Chapter. 'The catch was that the State

Legislature only funded it at an 8% level. not
9% and 12%. anticipating a reduction that
never took place. As a result. the 1992-93
budget only covered the 8% allocation. So the
task force recommended that these monies be
paid out in the manner described."
A complicated series of events led to the
comptroller's recent action. Early last year.
Regan decided to temporarily suspend employercontributions to the TIAA/CREF retirement system.lbc action resulted from what he
contended was a conflict between the Retire-

... the missing contributions
will be repaid io affected
UB employees, but slowly:
10% in September 1993;
45% in September 1994,
and the remai.ni.rtg 45% not
until September 1995.
ment and Social Security Law and the State
Education Law .. aS they concern the state's
cOntribution to the Optional Retirement Program. availabletoemployeesofSUNY. CUNY
and the State Education Depan"ment. In March
1992. Gov. Cuomo signed legislation creating
the five-member commission ~o study the
matter.
Zarembkaaddsthat "Reganoriginally cut it
off on the grounds that the slllte law was
arnbiguousinconnectingllAA-CREFtoTRS.
the state· sown retirement plan for teach,ers. He
contended that the law didn't give him clear
guidelines when the level ofstatecontributions
became very disparate between the two retirement systems."

For employees hired since July 16. 1992.
the pension situation is less clear. The
governor's task force. which had represcnllltives from the executive branch. State Legislature and SUNY and CUNY unions. has
recommended that new employees be allowed
to join the Optional Retirement Program
(TIAA-CREF) retroactive to their first day
of employment. with the slate contributing
8% for the first seven years: I 0% of salary
thereafter.
ike employees inTicrs3and 4.thcseindividuals will also make a 3% employee
contribution. "It's still a reduction:· said Paul
Zarembka. "but there's a honus with longevity." This recommendation for new employees. however. is not yet legislation. he
emphasized.
As it now stands, new employees are in
limbo and arc not enrolled in any retirement
plan.
Acconding to the UB Personnel Department. employees who leave the university
before the fmal payout date of September
1995. will receive their missing contributions.
"If you separate from service at any time
priortoSeptember, 1995.'' says Jerry L Linder,
head clerk. personnel. "your missing contributions will eitherbe paid into yourllAA-CREF
accounts. direct ly to you. or to your estate."
The opinion of statewide union leadership.
said Zarembka. "is that this is the best we could
hive done given the cin:umst.anees.
"My personal position has been to ask the
legislators to correct this pmblem by allocating a lump sum in the !hind quanerofthis year.
lhat is. to give us the remaining9()%all at once,
so this doesn ·, drag out. ·
"People are angry. People are tired of the
ways that the s!Jlte plays with their money," he
said.
On the plus side. said Zarembk!J., "the legislatiOn severed the connection between ORP
and TRS, thereby precluding a similar problem in the future."

L

• _,,_22

-So You WarP. to Work with Paopfe:
Explore career Paths in Business,·
1450 Student'Urlion. !Hi:~ p.m.

••. - , ..-:M

Surrmer Jobs Fair. erJll(oyers win
discuss sunrner job and internship
opportunities with UB students, social
hall on the second floor of the Student
Union. 10 am. to 2 p .m.

·~·
-25
"Volunteerism." 145A Student Union,
2-3:~ p.m. The wort&lt;shop wiU be
presented by Nancy Guadagno. executive director of Make a WISh Fa.ndatton.

.-.-,.--

-Ht.man Services Panel." Student

Union Theat,.., 4 :3().5:~ p.m. The
participants will be Robert Bennett.
president 01 the United w~ of Buffalo
and Erie County, t.erov Cole, executille
director of the Buffalo Urban League,

.-.-,.--

and Myrna Young. executive diredor
of Everywoman.Opportunily Cenle!r.

Ht.man Services Career Fair. representatives lrom cornrrulity-seiVice
and g&lt;llle&lt;Ml9rll agencies will discuss
career opportunities, internships
volunteer experiences with UB sru.
dents, 5:3(}7 :~ p.m., social hal on
the second floor of the Student Union.

m

•w

2 2,;- u

. "The School-to-Work Transition." 145C
Student Union, ~ p.m.

�4

_,..,_ - - .-17

TEACI- EFFEC11VENESS
Continued from page 1
what they were evaluating? You have 10 look
at an evaluation and lalk about it and go from
lhere," Ludwig says, addinglhal what amounts
10 a shared evaluation of an evaluation tends
110110 happen in lhe depatiJDellts lhemselves.
"'The cemer provides a place where faculiy can
Slreleh and grow beyond lhefr departments,
where lhey can share lheir successes and defeats 'in a supportive environment. [t's when
there are conversations about an evaJuation
lhat you can see how productive lhey are.
··People don't understand lhal leaching
doesn 't always have 10 be painful, and lhat it
doesn't always have 10 be fun: it does have 10
be productive. The illusion is lha110 be a good
teacher you have to entertain, or be funny, or
superficial.""
The reality. according 10 Ludwig, is simpler. ·-n.e hanler students work. lhe more
productive they are in a congenial seuing, the

better lhe teacher is."

Henderson feels lha~ while research among
tenured faculty may indeed lake precedence
over teaching, !he challenge faced by srudents
in lhe charge of a teaching assistanl~pe­
cially one new to lhe job, or from overseascan be just as greaL She feels lhal neilher
adequate training nor a helpful model are generally available 10 TA$, and lhat many departments have a tendency to cut lhem adrift.
"TA!don"tneallyhaveaplaceoutsidelheir
depatiJDellts where Iiley can address teaching;
lhe Offu:e of Teaching Effectiveness aims to
be !hal place. Atlhe same time,lhe responsibility forTAs is wilh lhedepattrnen~ butlhere is
no structure wilhin lhe university lhat asks lhe
depanmen~ How well are you doing?
"Gn!duale students have achieved lhe right
10 a union, and one of lhe lhings union members bargain wilh is lhe issue of teacher training. I would like 10 show lhe GSEU members
what models of teacher training look like.
Discipline, motivation, grading. And learning

:·-·-----------------·-----·-·---·----------------------·-·-·---------------------------·-;

Did~~!\.!§~ "it"?
No problem as long as you carry the
"A La CarteH card by UB Dining Service.
"A Ia Carte" is accepted UB wide at over 10 locations.

No 1ate Fees

No Annual Fee

No credit interest

SpikeLee's first filnt

Joe s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads
and

Making "Do the Right Thing"
Friday, Feb. 26 iM1d Sahrday, Feb. l1 at 7:00 p.m.
$2.50 UB students I $3.50 110n-UB studems

AlsG showi1 in Februaly.

Sarafina!

Friday, Feb.l9 iM1d Sabwday, Feb. 20 at 7:00 / 9:30 p.m.

i
I

i
i
i
i
i

technique: How People Learn."'
In fa&lt;:L training forT As is a proposition lhal
lhe GSEU welcomes. says Carl Montgomery.
a spokesman forlhe union.·· Bolh quality-wise
and in terms of existence-some departments
don' t offer it all-&lt;eacher training varies on a
university-wide level. But lhe TAs look .at
teaching as lheir joh. and at teacher training as
something very much in their intereSt.''

"'"be situation is one lhatlhe Office itself has
I taken steps 10 improve, says Sue Craft, a
gn!duate assistant wilh lhe Undergraduate
College and a liaison for lhe World Civilization and Pluralism Commitleeli.
"They have arranged a number of training
oourses forTAs teaching world civ for lhe first
time.'" said Craft. "They'vealsodonea wonderful
job of evaluating TAs' work. identifying what
problems lhe TA! might have, as well as addressing lhe more positive aspects of reaching. ·•
Hendelson. adds Craft. will also be showing
TAs in lhe Undergraduaii:CollegehowiOprepare
reaching portfolios 10 show futureemp(oyerr-a
Slr1lleg)' Solkoff would like lOsee faculty adopt as
lheYupdarelheirdossiers. As for training models.
Hendelson says thatlhe ideal ooo-allhough one
obviously more suited in its present form 10 lhe
sciences lhan lhe humanities-is to be found in
lheOlemislry DepartmenL There. incoming TAs
undergo a rigorous program that begins before
IileY even arrive on campus and that continues
well into lhe semester.
Priscilla Clarke, !he laboratory director for
lhe Chemistry Depanmen~ is in charge of
roughly half lhe TAs who come 10 the depart men! each year. She has made extensive use of
lhe Office ofTeaching Effectiveness and. with
their encouragement, has made presentations
on lhe department's training program for lhe
Department of Physics.
"We give our first-year graduates training.
ali many grads come to us without having any
teaching experience in the recitation and lab
portionoftheprogram." says Clarke, who adds
that the students are sent a textbook, Teaching
Assistant Strategies, before they even arrive.
"Then we spend one week before school stans
addressing teaching styles; then we go over
and view videotapes on question skills. reinforcement. tutoring. and lab safety."'
The safety component receives particular
emphasis: there is extensive training on firstaid and accidents, for example. In their second
week. theTAs execute by themselves alllhe
experiments lhey"ll be teaching and Clarke
checksovenhe results; they also begin weekly
meetings to discuss teaching requirements.
''A month into the scrnescer we have an
evaluation. in which the students answer yes
and no and add comments. and we videotape
lhe TAs and review the videotapes wilh them
to identify any problems-iflhey' re facing lhe
board when they"re talking. or if they're writ-

ing 100 small. Many of lhem discover thai
they' resaying "uh, uh, uh' and 'and. and. and'
all lhe time and never noticed iL
"Atlhe eod of lhe semester we give them a
second SIUdenl evaluation. and if !here are
problems, they're told lhat lhey'reexpected 10
correct lhem."
There is, adds Clarke. an "or else" atta&lt;:hcd 10
Ibis process: lhe TAs are &amp;J3dedand. if!heY don't
pass rmster, stand 10 la;e the fiscal support a TA
line provides. OnlyoneTA in every four or five
years. however, suffers lhe loss of a line. and
Clari&lt;e adds that lhe circurnslances surrounding
those exceplions are often oomplex.
Clarke believes ·!hat lhe program is one lhat
might be adopted. wilh obvious adjustments.
across lhe eatnpus.
"Some degree of our program would be
helpful to lhe other sciences, especially physics; in lhe non-sciences, I lhink some contact
wilh lhe TA coordinator is essential 10 make
surelheyunderstandlheirmarerial. We tell our
TAs lhal iflhey try to blufflheirway lhrough
lheir material, it will be held against lhem."
The program is not all storm and streSS. AI
one of lheir weekly meetings, lhe TAs were
told of lhe Mattern-Tyler Award, founded by
Dr J. Arthur Mattern. in recognition of outstanding reaching.
"We asked lhe students what Iiley would
preferlhe award to be."' said Clarke. "And Iiley
chose a plaque and a sum of money.··

B

olh Henderson and Solkoff would like to

see honorssuchaslhisone multiply across
eatnpus. Solkoff concedes that a number al ready exist- from lhe Owtcellor"s Award for
Excellence in Teaching 10 others administered
more informally- hut adds that he would like
to see "more awards and r~ards" for leaching. Henderson would like UB 10 be ··a community lhat encourages awards.'"
For a time.lhe Offtce of Teaching Effectiveness offered an award, of sons. of lheir own.
'"This Wa.!ithe University Teaching Fellows
Program. II came about lhrough a grant from
lhe Lilly Foundation. Non-tenured peoplesulr
mitred a proposal about lhings Iiley wanted 10
do, and we would fund lhe proposal. h takes a
lot of money 10 do a progr.mt like lhat- we"d
fund around six applications wilh about $2.000
a project-but it helped untenured faculty keep
a balance between teaching and research .""
After piloting lhe program for lhree years. the
Lilly Rlundation lllmeditoveriO UB. which was
ahleiO noru it successfully until it became a victim
of budget cuts. Henderson is anxious 10 see the
award restored In lhe meantime the Offu:e rewards those who visit it wilh sound advice and a
straightforward philosophy.
""It's like learning 10 ski,'" Henderson says
of leaching in general. '"You don"l do it by
reading a hook, hut if someone says start on lhe
bunny hill. that' s good advice:·

Free for UiJ students I $3.50 non-UB students

~ -----·---·--·---------------,
Please, No Cameras Allowed.'

UB's revenue base must be
diversified, Bloch tells Senate
By MARK HAMMER
Reporter

are available at the

Sooday,
FEBRUARY 28,

1993
&amp;:OOpm AUIIIIi ~
Ill Werst
c-al AdlissiGa

c..us

following locations:
Ultaet offico
lull Stall tidlet office
lleorWIIIII"-lk
" - Il lite Its
Dlris a.ns, Inc.
List of ticket prices:
Sl5G Ul diMits (d ID)"

""*

$12.50 ...mMII"/ ~
$10.50 ~ i o.fl1fil p-.
(- 1 5 ......~- - -·MS-1!51

Sl4.00d.lyii M
With media

s up~n

llllX l'lwtr 94

from

* WUTV cu.tel29.

--.-Y·.alii·T·-···--"·-···taolo/lico

.. ...,._..,. _ _ _ , _ , _ _ oo!H4S-Zl5l

I

Staff

FTHE UNIVERSITY IS to continue to
expand physically and financially. new
revenue sources must be located, according 10 Aaron Bloch, UB provost. Bloch
spoke at last Tuesday's ~Ttej!lingofthe Faculty
Senate in 200 The Commons.
..We'le in a budgetary situation now where
our state funding will provide a core, but not
much more than a core. If we want to expand
and develop as we' ve done, we simply have to
diversify our re.venue base."
Thatlhoughl was echoed by Oteryl Brown.
the newly hu-ed associate vice president for
university development. Brown held a similar
post at UCLA for lhe past 14 years. ··we are
entering a new fund-raising era at . UB. At
presen~ we're in lhe process of doing basic
thingslikebuildingalumnianddonorrecords ·•
she said. ""Ourexpectationsatlhis point need ;0
_ be rather modesL But we 're.hopipg to build an
infraslrueture 10 beuer meet faculty needs."
Bro"11 had 60 full -time workers in he~

offiee at UCLA. which was a major factor in
the mising of about S 120 million per year at
UCLA. Her staff at UB.is much smaller and
she says she expectS 10 raise berween five and
eight million dollars this year.
AJumni must be a major focus in the future
development of lhe institution. said Brown.
"1"he process of involving tnem is going to take
lime,'" she said. ·~We're asking lhe presiden~
lhe prov&lt;ist and lhe deans 10 be patient: ·
Bloch said he expectS some growing pains
in lhe initial stages of expanding lhe development effon. "'In order to getlhis kil)ll of operation going, we· re going to have to make some
investment. We want to have fundmising be
about I0% of the total money here,·· he said.
ln addition to purnaing alumni mOre vigorously. Brown ·said lhat locating one-time donors will bean impor1llntcomponenl ofsuccess.
..1 think it is a mistake. to concentrate on an
annual giving fund. We need to have a much
more elaborate major gift efforL It's possible.
l"he potential for philanlhropic suppon is very
strong here."
I

�-----.-u
Nurses' Aim: Better

&amp;

Tribal Health Care
Students travel r. froM friends, r.mlly to

)olnua.-.-.

11J LOIS 1U11111
News Bureau Staff

=for everyone.

L

INDA JENSEN, a Cheyenne·
Arapahoe Indian, packed up her
two young daugh!Am, kissed her
husbandgood-byeandlefther Ari·
zona reservation a year ago for

Bulf8Jo.
Jensen and 15 Olher Native Americans from
nibes in the West and Nonheastarenowsrudenrs
at UB, enrolled in a graduate prognnn that educates them 10 he nur.;e jX'IK:titionets. The first two
srudents will graduate !his month.
The program. now in irs second year. is one
of four in the U.S. established by the Indian
Health SeJVice (IHS) to increase the numherof
Native Americans in
primary health care
fields. UB offers the
only program of its
kind east of the Mis·
sissippi. Others are located in Ari1.ona, North
Dakota and Montana.
Unlike the other
three, the UB program
is aimed specifically at
pr&lt;Widing a master' s degree in the field. It
accepts Native American nurses who are reg·
istered nur.;es and/or hold a bachelor's degree
in nursing. Students take from 18 months to
three years to complete the program. depending on their educational ba«kground.

''The progJlllll is sua:essful" said Mary
Anne Neary, UB clinil'al assislant professor of
nursing and director of the project, "but mak·
ing it successful is a lot of work. It joined a
white bureaucrucy with the Indian peoples,
and established a trust between the two."
Most of the participants enrolled at tremendous personal cost, traveling far from frieods
and family, arriving at UB sight unseen, knowingno·one.
"I went through a lot of spiritual isolation
befon: I carne," said Sandra Schasteen, a
Muskogee-Creek Indian from south-central
Oklahoma. "Eventually, I listened to my bean.
Whitepeopleseeadoorandtheyhavetoknow
what's on the other
side hefon:theyopen
it indians don 't.-1
10 see what's on the
other side. All we
need to see is the
door. Wetakealotof
th.ings on faith."
''Tile adjustments
these students have
had to make have
been enormous," said Neary. "Most come
from small areas with cohesive suppon systems. lbe university is large and impersonal.
They have had to make their way."

"The adjustments these
students have had to make
have been erwnnous. "

Half of the

16c~nt studentsarereceiving

full sc holarships through the IHS. After receiving their degrees, these students wiJJ work
a minimum of two years for the agency as
payback for their scholarships.
A I0-member advisory council. including
six Native Americans, three of whom are local
tribal chiefs. monitors the program. The meet·
ing of cultures has been a broadening ex peri·

M ost left good jobs behind, and

are now

how 10 use a computerized library system,
drive in congested traffic, ride the subway and
relearn bow 10 study.
Despite the difficulties, only one Sllldent
has dropped out, and the others have adjusted
weU.
"Academically, this has been really tough
forme," said Cynthia Benedict, an AkwesasneMohawk from northern New York, who
brought along her four children. all under the
age of eight " I had 10 change my study habits.
For the kids, it was a big adjustment, but they
are fitting in nicely .~
Ramona Wise,aSeneca-Cayugafromrxxtheastem Oklahoma, said it was hard just master·
ing the basic amenities of living. "Everything
is so different," she said.
Wise and Schasteen, both grandmothers,
left skeptical husbands behind in Oklahoma.
'They didn't believe we could do it." said
Wise. Tile rwo men have since joined their
wives in Buffalo.
Some of the panicipanrs also struggled to

living a typical graduate student's exist-

fmd ways to practice sustaining Native-Ameri-

ence on a $700 monthly stipend provided by
the IHS. Neary and ber staff helped the stu·
dents find apanmenrs. provided tutors and
academic support. typed and corrected term
papers, found haby-siiters and arranged social
activities. The local office of Native American
SeJVices provided additional help when needed.
Ln addition, the new students had to learn

can rituaJs in an urban setting.
"At home, if you feel bad or you are upset.
you bum cedar," Jensen said. "You build a
little fire and inhale the smoke. It belps you
think good thoughts. You can't do that in the
city." Jensen has gotten by in a pinch by
heating cedar in a skillet on her stove top.
The program will boost the participants'

UB law student group calls for stiff
criminal penalties for corporate misdeeds

·A RE

By SUE WUETCIIEII

News Bureau Staff

CORPORATE criminals geiting away with murder?
Some students at the UB School
of Law think so.
Members of Law Students for Corporate
Accountability (LSCA) believe punishment
for corporate crime should include a "death
peAalty" that "executes" guilty companies by
·removing their assets and revoking their operating chariers.
':The amount of damage done by corpor•·
tions is more significant than that caused by
individuals," says Joseph Belluck, a second·
· year law student at UB and a member of
LSCA. ''Cigarenes and asbestos kill or injure a
significant numhe.r of people every year; the
amount of damages caused by price-fixing or
· fraud can he so significant il dwarfs losses
caused by individuals." ·
The key is holding corporations respon·
sible for their activities to deter this type of
behavior, Belluck says. '!There's a feeling that
civil penalties alone-the usual penalty for
corporate misdeeds--are not in line with the
crimes," he says. citing the release of toJUc
chemicals at Bhopal. India, and the Dalkon
Shield as prime examples.
But moving corporate wrongdoing from
the civil system into the criminal system would
have a tremendous impact, he says.
"Now they (guilty companies) would he
labeled as criminals: that's essential to their

images. It brands their actions in public as
being more serious. Where before they were
just negligent, now their actions are criminal."
Although it would he difficult to offer jail as
·a punishment for corporations, they could he
fined; given community service. have their
criminal liability widely advertised. or he given
the "death penalty."

"There's a feeling that civil.
penalties alone are not in
line with the crimes. "

· "The threat of the death penalty can scare
corporations," Belluck notes. "It can make
shaieholders become mOre aware of their companies' actions."
BeUuck says LSCA was formed last year to
increase awareness of corporate criminal liability, both in the legal community and in law
schoo~.
·
Corporations exert tremendous influence in
the legal process by offering campaign contributions, sponsoring research and hiring lobby·
ists to promote their pqint of view, he says.
And law schools--die training centers for ·
corporate attorneys- offer courses on corporate law that rarely address and hardly ever

Native Am1Mtcan students 8t work In UB

nune ptaetltlouer pt00'8III, fl'om left:
Cynthia Benedict, Und8 ....._ 8ftd
Sandrll~.

careen. but their reasons for corning transcend
personal gain.
Wise, a nibal health nurse, was frustrated
by the limits of her knowledge.
"So much is happening with our tribe, both
socially and in health care," she said. "I wasn't
ahle 10 give them the help they needed. I
wanted to he a better resource person."
chasteen, co-owner of a home mning
business hefon: enrolling at UB, wanted
to develop projects to improve educatioo and
bealth care for Native Americans. She oowrote several grant proposals. then discovered
that without acoUegedegree, funding agencies
would not take her seriously.
"We bad the right notion, but we weren't
credible," Schasteen said. "Our people .-1 so
much, and there are so many barriers.The only
way to get
burien is education."
The program's three-year grant expires in
1993. Neary is hopeful the program will he
refunded for another five years.
The Native-American students and university faculty and staff celebrated the sua:essful
experiment in time-honored fashioo this past
November. sitting down together to share
Thanksgiving dinner.
0

S

across-

OBITUARY

Mary E Cleesatte~
social work instructor
A - w . . W . wasbeldl'eb.IOin

focus on business crimes.
"!flaw students are not taught about corporate crime, and are not given a reason toquestion corporations' actions. what are they
leamingT Belluck asks. "We need to stan
educating people about this. and give them a
general conscierice and make therrr more sensitive to it.
"'This is a 1001 of legal practice that people
need to have."
The UB law school is offering a new course
during the spring semesler-&lt;lue in large pan
10 lobbying by LSCA-focusing on corporate
crime. "White Collar Crime" anracted 80 stu·
dents. with more on a waiting list.
In addition, the law 'SChool offers a course
on "Toxic Tons" that discusses corporate misdeeds of the past 20 years, including Agent
Orange, asbestos and breast implants, Belluck
says.
.
Meantime, LSCA members are organizing
a day-long conference to he held during the
spring that will focus on worker and consumer
rights.
BeUuck says that while LSCA currently is
the only law student group in the country
devoted solely 10 the issue of the corporate
entity an.d developing strong penalties for corporate crime, it. is trying to get other law
schoolsacrossthecountrytoformsuchgroups.
Some have criticized LSCA as being anti~

Venioe, Aa for Mary E. a...attel, 78. a
retired social worker who bad been a f10ld
instructor in social work at UB. A native of
KCiliiiOfe, MR. Cleesattel died Feb. 8, 1993
in her Venice borne after an eight-month

business.

c.rieTiode.balb.-vrlllitJe..uoddyal'l*r
oiTownoiT.........allldbrl! ' PM&gt;

"We'reOO(anti-business. we' reanti-crime,"
Belluck stresses.
C

illness.
She held a B.A. from Maryville College.
MIII')'Ville. Tenn. and a !113S1C&lt;'s clepe in
social work from UB. Mrs. Cloesaltel.served
as assistant director of social services at
Children'sHospitalheforegoingtol'ravelc.-'s
Aid as a social worker during World Worn.
She was a field iostructor in social work at
UB from 1941-1953 and also from 19641968.
In 1945, she joinodailld &amp; Family'Servic:a'"' a caseworl&lt;erand 'II'"' dislrict Sl.lpOI'Iisorfrom 1964-1978. Sbe wodcedasaoounselor
for Jewish Family Service of Buffalo &amp; Erie
Camly from I'T/4-1981, when she moved to

Florida.
.
A former presidm of the Social Wodr;ao
Cub ofBulhlo, she~· cmnor momborci
the Naliooal Associalico of O:rtifiod Social
wom:.. and a momborcitheAmericon Associalicn ci Medical Social Wodlas, the AcldemyofO:rtifiodSocialWortan. theAmorlcan
Group~As!ocillion,the­
Group ~ As!ocillion, the Group

l'llyc:llclhe&lt;ip)' Associalico o f w - New ·
York llld the Meulal.HyJicae Associalico ci
Erie Coun(y.
.
SwvMniocbldeborlubRI,~C.

ci Vmico; a

1011, ~ W. ci Maoidl,
~ ......... BooDo L. Nollaa ci
Vmico; tine .-..,"""""""~­

�8
from World WI&lt; U Deamatlc;
talk by LeU Donde. Dooish CoDsui Geoeial. New Yort City.
w - n . e -. lt2Nonoo.
NMb Compus. 7-10 p.m. For
more infOIIIlldion c:ontKt Dr.
Doris Sorensco .. 631-2169 ...
Dr. Molt Asbwillot 645-2292.

THI IIIUI :

President Clinton's plan
for economic recovery

~0

Main I)'ID, Alumni Arena. NMII

.-niAU.

..................

FRIDAY

...

=--=----~Gy...-cs

19
-'IIIIC---

ptr r111eclllllllllc n

THI QUOTI :

President Clinroo's approach to economic recovery-raising some taXes while incteasing
total spending--is totally wrong, Lawrence
Southwick says. "Government takes resources
away from the private sector, where they could
be more efficiently used."
Raising taXes to generate mone.\' for economic invesbnent by government JS not the
correct course of action; be says. ''There are
some things that government can do well; generally investment is not one of those things."
Government can provide a stable, safe ~li­
mate for investment, such as ensuring a good
national defense or contract enforcement, be
says, but ''national government C8J? 't do much
that's useful" in the way of actual mvestment
Southwick says the president would do betterto makedeepcu15 in spending rather than try
to raise more revenue with taX incteases.
"He should keep the money in the private
sector where it wiU be more wisely used by
consumers and investors."

a A T U It D A Y

Campus 7·30 p.m.

FIIIC .... ptai'IFFifflll . . . . . . . . . .

Room. 17S Alumni Arena. NMb
Compus. I p.m.

wu ...
Sonllaol (lm), dire&lt;tcd by
Dond J..,..Rondl. Woldmoo
'lboaltr. 1 1 2 - NMb Campus. 71nd 9'.30 p.m. Admission.
I'm: 10 UB IIUdents; S3.SO, non-

Debate oa the U.. ol Oral
A&lt;ydovir Ia Chiekea Pox, F.
SlUder S~&gt;pletoo, M.D.. modera-

SUMielll&amp;.

- Y S AT • I'LUS

~=~="i,t~~~g

UftiiAIIY-

Pnclty Radial. David Rattray,

lhe affumative position; Roben
Welliver. M.D. and Mark Klocke ,
M .D .• the: negati Vl.:.. Kinch Audi·

poet lind

torium. Children's Hospitnl. 8
-STAFF

WABLA1'1!1111'1! . . .
BruU (1915), diru:t&lt;d by Teny

-1'1!~10-

YCIU" - Tbe World University Gar:HS

THURSDAY

1~

~~-PWS

The Eroticism or Fo~lfu l ness.
Arkadii Drugomoshchenko. Russian poet. 438 Clemens. Nonh
Campus. 12:30 p.m. Sponsored
by the US Poe1ics Program.

Lope Dkdonary EolriooState of Molts, Propoollloo,
S.Otenao, Bmy Smilh, lohn
Con:oran and &lt;&gt;then. 684 Baldy.
Nonh Campus. 4 p.m. Sponsored
by lhc: Dept. of PhilotOphy.
IIIIA,_TICS CDLLCIQUIIIII
Applic:atlons of the Curious
Behavior of Ferroftulds, Prof.
Mart. Etlgel. 103 Diefendorf.
Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.

-

P1W1MACEU11CS IIESEAIICH

O rgank Nitrates vs. Nitrites.
What is tbe Oirfueott:?John
Bauer, Ph.D., postdoccoral fellow, UB Dept. ofPbarmaceulics.

508 Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4-5

COMPUTING WOIIII.-

p.m.

Introdudion lo SUN. 204 Computing Cen1er. Nonh Campus. 13 p.m. Call MS-3540 for registra tion information.

UFEWDIIKs-

COMI'InER IICIEHCE
COUOQUIUM

A Unary EMOding Scbeme
Thai Allows Conjunctive Decoding, Edith Spaan, US Dept. of

Compu1er Science. 14 Kno''Nonh Campus. 3:30-4:45 p.m.
For. more infomuuion conta&lt;.'l Dr.
Rapaport IU 645-3193.
PIIYSICS AND ASTRO-Y
COU.DQUIUIIII

Nonperturbative QCD and

QCD ModeUing, Dr. Cntig Robens, Argonne Nurionul Lab. 454

Fronczak. Nonh Campus. 3:45

Beginning Sign Language,
Diane Curthoys.leade.r. 5-7 p.m.
Fee: Sl5. For regist.ration informmion cull645-6125.

-

'93, Kathy Scanlon, executive
dirt:cU&gt;r of World University

Carok Smith Petro, associate UB
vice president for advancemenL
Pistachio's. Student Union. North

Campus. 8·9 a.m. For more infor-

--- ~1
Mk:belle Scoct, UB Sponsot'&lt;d
Programs Admtnistr.uioo. 215
Foster. South Campus. Noon.
SOCIAL AHCII'IIEVEHflYE

Health AdvUory Knowtedp
and Rdaled Allltudes aad Behavior. n,e NYS AngAer Cohort Study, Barbara Knulh,
Ph.D.. Dept. of Natural Re·
'Ollrces. Cornell Univ. 252A
Farber. Soulh Campus. 12:301:30 p.m.

CML-EERING SEJliiiWI
Behavior and Slructu~ in Intelligent Systems. Nonnan D.

WD11LD LANGUAGES
IHSTt1VIE L£C1Uit£fnLM
f. Day in October (1991), de·

picts rhe rescue of 7.000 Jews

WBSfUNII

Hofstra. Gymnastics Room, 175
Alumni Arena. North Campus. I
p.m.
WASSEIIMAH CiWIEidHC£
KEYNCnE

COMPUTINGUsin&amp; SAS oa the IBM mainframe. 315 Computing Center.

H ow thf Media Displays African Americans. 20 Knox. Nonh

UFE WCIRIISHCIP
Eating Disorders, Dr. FrJnk
SIUmiolo, leader. Nonh Campus.
7-9 p.m. For regisrrarion infonnnrion ca11 645-6125.

SUNDAY

mation call829-2426.

C11tAL IIICIUMIY-

BLACII HISTORY MOHTH

Work.

Gilliam. Woldman 'lboaltr, 112
Nonoo. NMh Compus. II :30
p.m. Admisaion. $2.50, UB SIUdents: S3.SO. noo,..tudents.

Games ' 93;.iotroduction by Or.

Nonh Campus. I :30-4:30 p.m.
For n:giSltlltion information caJI
645·3540.

Campus. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Spon·
son:d by the School of Social

....w-. ~Part

Grill. 2519 Main St. 7:30p.m.
Sponsot'&lt;d by lhc: UB Poetics
Program. For more information
eall645·3882.

a.m.

-ALD LDQIC COUOQUIUM

w- , _, 112

--~. 11:30

p.m. Admilaioa, $2.50. UB 1111denu; S 3 . S O . -

Ualventtyof-

TNI IPIAilla:

-

GiJJiam.

Rabbi William Rudolph, ISsisIMt director, B'Nai B'rith

Geddes, Applied Systems Jntelligence, lnc., Gainesville, Ga. 140

Keuer. North Campus. 4 p.m.
WINTER CARNIVAL EVDII'
UBopoly, giant version of the
board game Monopoly. featuring
human game _piCces. AIUrf!Ri
Arrna. North Campus. 6-10 p.m.
Participating students will U')' to
make the Guinnus Book of
World R~cords.

LECfUIIE

U. S.-Isnell Relatloor. CliDIOD
and Rabin, Joel Bainerman.

author or Crimu of a Prtsilkni:
Nn4•Rn&gt;elmions 0t1 tM Conspiracy and Cm•u-up in tM
Bush-Reagan AJ!ministration.

UUAII F1UI
Sararma! (1992), diJU"ted by
Darrel James Rooch. Woklman

The Kiva, 101 Baldy. NMb
Campus. 3-4 p.m. TICktts, S2.
studeniJ: S6. geaen~l admission.
Call S3S-3832 f«eonference
registration information.
WASSEIIMAHCCINRJIENCE

1llc:ater, 112 Norton. North Campus. 7 and 9:.30 p.m. Admission.
rree to us Slodents;SJ.SO.
non-students.

AliT- DPEIIING
Tb~

LECfUIIE

Amerieaa Jows and lsnd: Is
t.be RomatlCt: &lt;h-er? Joel
Bainerman, author or CrifMS of a
Prt!sld~nr: Nn• R~lations on
tlr~ ConspirtJCy and Co~r-up in
th~ Bush- R~qgan Administration.

Rumsey and

Potenza Awards Exhibi-

tion. Bethune Gallery,
2917 Po;fain St. 8 p.m. The
exhibit continues through

M:m:h'l.
IILACK HISTORY MOHTH

CCINCERT
Donna .Burwy and Jim Capik.

blues duo; to be broadcast live •
on WB FO-FM. Allen Hall Auditorium. South Campus. 8 p.m.
Sponsot'&lt;d by WBFO and
Hallwalls Coinemponuj Ans
Center. Call 829-2880 ror more
inrormntion.
FACULTY II£CffAL
~ Wortd

or Cla u d~ Debussy,

Yvar Mikhashoff, p;ano. Slee
Hall. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m. Tick·
ets: S6. S4. S2. For ITIOf'e inrormation cull645-2921.
UUAIII.An NnE FUM

Brull (1985), directed by Terry

Hil~l

Foundation. Washington, D.C.
The Kiva, 101 Baldy. NMh
Campus. 2 p.m. Cooferera registration to begin at 1:30 p.m.
Kosher dinner (S6. S3) from S:30
10 6:.30 p.m. Pistachio's. Student
Union. For mort inrormation call
835·3832. Sponsored by B' Nai
B'rilh Hillel of Buffalo,lhc: UB
Judaic Studies Program. the: Jewish Student Union and ARI.
WASSEIIMAHCCINRJIENCE

.

�~--- ... -17 .
UB. 280~ North~ 2

p.m.

· · •••Iii
~-­

......,...,...,.
NaiiiPttwa?

.,,.._..._..

Nobel Prize lor Uterature, has
struggled all hi&amp; Ute with 1he dic:h&lt;Jb.
mies !hat 9lClst within his nollw hell. tage, language and Wlura. Conlidared
·one r:J 1he finest poets in English, t-. wiU
speak at 1he l.Vlivtnity's Marm Luther
King Jr. COITmernoratlon, Feb. 2S at 8
p.m. in Slae Hal.
Born on 1he tiny Wmdwatd Island r:J St. Lucia in
1he Caribbean ol
rrixed racial and
ethnic backgrCUlds,
Walcott is known for
an Intense symbolic
imagination lhat

charaCierizss hi&amp;
wor1&lt;. His subjects
ere his own life and
his relationship with
time, death and
God; the evils ol
political tyramy and
racial hatred; and
the cultural and
physical landscape
of 1he IslandsD£REJ1 WALCOTT
themes frequently
articulated In a highly complex, incantatory style
conmon ·to 1he magic ritual.
A former visiting professor at Harvard U~sity.
Walcott Is the author ol nine books ol poetry and
S8V9flll plays. He teaches l~erature and creati\18
wr~ing at Boston University.
Sponsored by 1he Minority Faculty &amp; Faculty Association -and 1he Off'IC9 of the President, 1he commemoration Is free but tickets ere required. Call
64!;.34 14 for more information.

O N DA Y

~~

DtSn~ISHED

CONCEJrT

Tribute to Count Bas~. fc aturmg the UB Jazz Ensemble and
lhc: AJ Tinney Quanet. Allen
Hllll. South Campus. 8 p.m.
. Sponsoru! by the Department of
Music and WBFO. Call war-o
at 829-2880 for mo~ infonnatJon.

DE-IIECITAL

Kim Fornes, nute. Baird Recital
Hall, 250 Baird. Nonh Campus. 8
p.m. For mon: infonnation c:1ll
645-2921.

,

Miscbaikow, GeorJjo IIISiitute ol
T&lt;du&gt;ology. 103 Diefendorf.
South~4p.m_

A a . . - 'oVlow ofMda-

_ , . o f AltloplotoBlc
......-.Dr. Edwtnl KDeoia.
UB Dept. oll'b)'liotocy. t06
Cory. South Campus. 4 p.m.

---

Sua X U R 5 - 204
Computina Caner. North Campus. 6-8 p.m. Call 645-3540 for
reailtnlion informatioo.

..__...ui!Y

-CUIIIC

- .-....uc.tu&gt;dthoRok
of (Ia! Cell ........ lallepollc
C"""-ofTocrolimu
(nt5N) iD 1tabb1U, Wojcicch
l'iekoouwsti. Ph.D ..
pt)lldocunJ fellow, UB Dept. of
Pbarrnoceutica. 508 Coolce. Nonh

Campus. 4-5 p.m.
W.UI'1UI

Ubnty ._...... 223
Lockwood Libnty. North Cam..... 7-9 p.m. Praqjlln1ioo ...
quirod. ReJjslnlioo forms available at Locltwood Libnty's
Ref=- Desk.
OPUS: C1.AU1CS .:~TAL
~- Maboy, "'-......, tUJd
Uada Maboy, plooo, works by
Langford. Boua. Bant and
Mabry. Allen Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. For mon: infonnatioo
call829-2880.
W.Upql

For1Jiddea City VSA (1989),
dira:tal by Anhur Dong.

Woldman Theater, t t2 Norton.
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.
IIMUTUU.
Clndand State. Main Gym.
Alumni Arena. North Campus.
7:30p.m.
COIICIIIT

VButralo Sympbooy, Charles
l'&lt;:ltz. conductor. Worts by

Gershwin, MacDowell and
Tchaikovslcy. Slce Hall. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. For more information ca11645-2921.

Forilitltlm Cky VSA (J.JI9),
dim:tcd by Anhur Dong.
Woldmao Theater, t t2 Nonon.
Nonh~7p.m.

---A

COUAIQI ..IM 011-IIY

l odla 8aa&amp; (Marperile Dwu,
1975), prosentcd by loon Copjcc
IIXI Anne Tomich&lt;, UB. 120
Clcmeos. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m.
Colloquium tickeu: St5. fa:ulty;
SIO IIUdous (prqloid). $3 per
ohowing. Rr nxre infomlllion on
the Feb. 25-27 c:otlcquium, call
64~t08. - by the Gradu... Groop for Fcmioist S&lt;udies.

_,t1011
-~--­

u.1aa lbt llmull: A Sau at 11&gt;&lt;
Table of Brotbtrtlood, Derek
Wak:ou, poet and wiJU'IC:I" of the
t992 Nobel Priu: for Uterature,
featured speaker. Slce Hall- Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. Reception to
follow after free event; ticket
required. Sponson:d by the Mioority Faculty &amp; Staff Association and the Office of the President. Call645-3414 for mon:
information.

Macintosh Color
OUtlic

$1,263
(4/110)

fUtures include • 68030
~. 16MJU.~

-

............. Unn. ....

~40. at, or16Cirtl8twd

driw, ttrTrinluanCobdioploy,
built-ioApploTallt.SConclud

SCSL

MAcintosh LC m

$1,145

Fft.hms lnc:tuck • 68130
~. 25 MIU,&lt;NIIIIAM, "'·
80. or 16(1.(8 hard driw, buiiMn

$1,273

vldoooupponfor--

(4/160)

duplays~..,....uuyj.

(4/110)

built-tn AppleTalk. Stand.ud SCSI.

Macintosh Centris 610
Features tndude:. 68040
pr-oce:B)r.

20 MHz. 4 or 8MB

bAy. 80. 230. or
500MB hm'd dnw, built-in video
support for most Mllcin~
RAM , ~ 5..25"

$1,610
(4/80)

$2,059
(8/230)

dOJpla}'I(J&gt;o&lt;ro.-1-nldy),
bu il t -inA~Talk.optklnalm­

bo&amp;n!

Ethomet. lUg!&gt; pmo.-

.,.,.,scsL

Macintosh Centris 650
Friil tun!S Lndude iii 68040 ~·
25 MJU. 8MB RAM. optional

Fk»tins PToce.u1gUrut.. ~ 5..25"
bAy. 80, 230, or 500MB hard dnve,
bwlt-tn video JUpport for 1n1»1:
Maontosh diSplays {ptntJtntd
stpon1dy), built-in AppleTalk,.
opt&gt;oNI on-bo&amp;n! Ethomet. H&gt;gh

pononn.nc. SCSL

IHstmnE FOil ADDICTION

EXHIBITS

Moti\lation and Addidions,
Bernie Schallchn, presenter. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus.

-

. - a ' AND POTENZA
AWAIID --DISPLAY

9 a.m.-4:30p.m. For more mformnt•on call 645-6140.
COMPUTING WORKSlotroductioo to Windowing.
204 Computing Center. North
Campus. 10 a.m.-Noon. Caii64S3S40 for regismuion informntion.
~y

p.m.

1 be annual Rumsey and Poten1.a

LOCKWOOD ....aARY
IIUEAIICII CLINIC
lla.!lc: Llbl"'ll}' R.....-.:IL 22J

Lockwood Library. North Campus. Noon-2 p.m. Preregistration
required. Rcgistmtion forms
avaHable at Lockwood Library '~
Reference Desk. ·
ANATOMICAL SCIENCES

WEDN E SD A Y

~4

I'IWIMACY IIDIINAR
Tbe Role ofTaxol in Ovarian
Cancer, Vivien Liu. ftuum.D.
candidate. 248 Cooke. North
Campus. 8-8:55 a.m.

SEMINAR
The Role or Protein Kinases in
Neu rite Growth. John Aletta.
Pit.D.. UB Dept. of Pltannacology
and Thenlpcutics. 258 CFS Addiuoo. Sooth Campus. 12:30 p.m.
WEDHDDA'va AT 4 PWS

UTDIAIIY SEIIIIES
Art tUJd Words: Tho Typographic and 11&gt;&lt; Calligraphic,
Wystan Curnow, New Zealand
poet. 438 Clemens. North Cam1"''· 2 p.m. Sponson:d by the UB
Poetics Program.
•
COMI'UTIIIQ-

Sun X11R5 Environment. 204
Computing Center. North Cam -

INSliTUTE FOR ADDICTION
_ . A N D TIWHING

1"''· 3-5 p.m. Call 645-3540 for

IIDIIIWI
Motivation and Addktions.
Bernie Schallehn. presenter. Center forTomonow. Npnh Campu:o.
9 a.m.-4:30 p.m: For man: iliformation ca!l 645-6140.

COIII'VTDI SCIENCE
COUAIQIIMIM

-WEU. PAIIIIIITA.FF
IIDIINAII
Mo&amp;Kular Pathway of Prostate
Carcinog&lt;nesis, Timothy C.
Thompson. P.h.D.. director of

resetu&lt;h, Scou Dept. of Urology.
Baylor College of Medicine,
Houston. Hilleboe Auditorium.
RPCI. 12:30 p.m.
I'EIIIATIIIC COflfEIIEHCE
Cleft Palate and Cranial FaeUal
Problems. Sanford Nusbaum,
D.D.S. CafetoriUm A, Mere)
Hospi141. 8:30a.m.

MA-liCIICOIL~

c-.
Prof. Kcosuntio
---~

Apple Macintosh
computers

~AND­

IIDIINAR
Elementary Derivation or the
Fennl Liquid Model, Prof. S.
Fujitn, UB ()ep~ . of Physics. 219
Froncz.nk. N~nh Campu:.. 3:45

SEMINAR SEJIIU
Active Sugar Transport·ft·1oltcules to Membranes to Man.
Prof. Ernest M . Wright. D.Sc ..
chainnan, Dept. of Physiology.
UCLA School of Medicine. G26
F~r. South CIUllpus. 4 p.m.
BLACK ..-roRY ~

~"" 206 fumas_

North Campus. 3:45 p.m.

SEMIHAit

PHYSICS AND

SCIENTISTS

4 p,m_ Co-tpoooorod by Ill&lt;
Evolulionaly
BiolocY IIXI Ec:olocY-

~~io

-- -IIpoce

Den!k Walcott, winner r:J 1he 1992

lhl' K• vn. 101 Baldy. Nonh
l';, mpus. 4-5 p.m. Tid:ets, S2.
..tudents: 56. generul admiss1on.
C..tll 835-3832 for conference
rcgl\trJtion mformalion

-- - u d P i.q
. .r.l.o
. of
w
- . . . . . Peymon Givi, UB
Dept. o{Med&gt;aoicaJIIJdA=&gt;-

BiolocY Dept., lkalfalo s- CDIicF. t21 C&lt;d:c. North Campus.

registration infonnation.

c:

~AIITISTSEIIIIES

LECTUIII:!
Robert Wood, assisuuit professor of cetamic an., Buffulo State
College. Bethune Gallery, 2719

Main St: 3:30p.m.

sc~

IIIOUMIICAL SCIENCES

Panel on Feminist Episternal·
ogy, Unda Alcoff, Syracuse
Univ.: Peter Hare, Carolyn
Konmeyer, Barry Smith, all of

SEJ!IIIWI

The Rumst:y Scholarship fund

was endowed in 1959 by lhc family or Buffalo anist Evelyn
Rumsey Lord and is the most
prestigious scholarship awarded
to undergraduate an students at
the university. 1bc: Potenza scholarship was """""-d by the family
of Sally Hoskins a former
UB grnduate swdent in art.
Gallery hours: Monday, noon to 5
p.m.; Tuesday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.;
Wednesday, I :30 to 5 p.m.:
Thut&gt;day. 10:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m.; Friday, 1 to 5 p.m.
•LACK~~

DISPLAY
"US' s Black Student Press.

1969-1993," is on view at the
Oscar Silverman Undergraduate:
Libntry, Capen Hall. through Feb.
28. Exhibit features copies of
mngazines and newspapers from
the University Arc:hi\·es.
IILACit HISTORY ~

a..n

Sleps Toward A Computational
Rational Ag&lt;n~ Stuan
Slulpiro. UB Depc_ of Com!"'ter
Scimtt and Center for Cognitive
ScieOce. 14 Knox. North Cam1"''· 3:30-4:45 p.m. For mar&lt;
in(()f'lmlion contact Dr. Rapapon
at645-3193.

CEJITDI FOil CCMIHITIVE
COWIQIMM

Awards Elhibit opens with a
reception Feb. 19 at 8 p.m. It
features the wort of junior un&lt;kr·
graduates from among whom
facuhy will select recipients of
the 1993 Evelyn Rumsey Lord
Scholarship and the Sally
Hoskins Potenza Memonlll
Scholttrship.

.

Coots aod ll&lt;otlils of Induced
1\fO&lt;phological o.r..,..lo
Dllphnla, Dr. Howanl Riessen.

.

..Anist-Continuing the Dream,"
an exhibit of drawings, paintings.
phocograplty. fiber an and sculp-

ture, is on view thrOugh Feb. 21
in Room 2.50. Student Union,
Nonh Campus. Anists represented include: Vakria Cray.
Wilhelmina Godfrey. Mary
Rowell. Diana Jackson. William
Coopcr.J)avid Gordon. Dr. ROOen Palmer and James Pappas.
Sponson:d by Delta Sigma Theta
Sorority Inc., Buffalo Alumnae
Chapter. and the UB Creative
Craft Center. Hews: 10 a.m.-5
p.m. and 7-10 p.m.. MondayFriday; Saturday-Sunday. I to 5
p.m.

Conlinlled on page 9

Convenience ""
Quality
Service
ariety

�8

_..,._.._..,_a7
~:

t\', I'. P, r SrAP, r H

RESEARCH INSTTT\1TE ON
ADDICTIONS

====-

. . . . . A. ..... . cotrrinclogllt It the~ Ae-

sewch lnatllula on
Addictlonll, has been awilrOed $2.2 million 1JIIf1l from 1he
National InstitUte on Drug
Abuse lor a fi'ole.year project
siUdying comections b&amp;family relellons, P,l!&lt;·
sonallllctiTizltion and
women's drug.-.
Miller and t.r ..x:~ates
will irlleMew 1100 Bulfalo.aree
women four iines a1 sixmonlh int8MIIa. Hall of the
par1icipenCs .... be drawn
from d r u g - pro.
grams and shellar8 lor bat·
te&lt;ed W(J)1101; the other hat
will be recruited from the
c:crrmmlty.

"The inwstiga!or8 wish to
explore relationships~
fanily experiences and sul&gt;stance use and abuse across
diverse groups of women,·
said Miller.
"Much of the previous r&amp;seateh on drugs has focused
on crininal behavior and violence associated with the
buying and selling of drugs."
said Miller. 'Less attention
has been given to the violent
vlctirrizatlon of drug users.
• "Further, moot studies of

drug usa In our corrmunlty
have not focused on women.
0\jr intere91 in women and
their tarrilies goes beyond the
issue of drug usa and pregnancy that has been the focus
ol80 rroch conoem. This r&amp;_.:11 81/Jdy olfMs an opportUnity to understand the
c;orTl)lexities of problerns that
women drug users and their
families face. •
MEDICINE

-...YUit:

Two researchers ...me devela vaccine that has potential to provide im:nunity
against rriddi&lt;Hlar infections

oped

have been selected Niagara
Frontier Inventor of the Year
for 1992 by the Technical Societies Council of the Niagara
Frontier and the Niagara Frontier Patent l:.aw Association.
-r_, F• . . . , ., professor of medicine and microbiology at UB and director-of
UB's Microbial Pathogenesis
GradiJate Group, and . _
e1 A. .....-, professor and
chair of the Department of
Microbiology at the University
of Iowa-College ol Medicine,
.were honored lor their work at
the 18th annual I~ of
the Year AWards banquet
. Feb.5.
• Apicella was professor ol
medicine and microbiology
arid chief of the Division of
Infectious Diseases at UB
until Januaty 1993.
The vaccine, on which UB
holds the pelent, was judged
the most~ Invention
among 40 entrants "'llected
from more than 300 1nwot1ons
rec;eiving palents In 1992 In
We91em New YOlk. n~proves
effective in tit.mans, ~ will be
8 major medical bnlal&lt;lhroogh
in the treatment of ear iniaclions. Which account lor 20-40
percent ol Clti-en's vtalts to
the pediaiJician dlmg the
first five~ ol fife. The vaccine 8180 may be elfective
against lung 1nhlctlons In
adults.

Floss away-with any kind-to blast plaque
III'IIMY..niNews Bureau Staff

I

care during the study.
The plaque index (PI) was computed for each patient at the beginning of the study and at the end of the
second, fifth and sisJb weeks.
At the end ofthe second week. the
PI was significantly r...tuoed in the
PTFE group (34.7 percent) and in the
waxed floss group (36.5 percent).
By the end of the fifth week. the PI
dropped44 percent in theP'IFEgroup
and47.1 perceotinthewaxedgroup.
At the end of week six-&lt;Iller the
type of floss was switched-plaque
was mduced an additional 18.7 percent in the group thai started with
JlTFE..type floss and switched to
waxed. The groupthalswiu:bed from
waxed to PTfE..type floss experienced another 13 percent mduction.
Thedifferenceherweenthetwotypes,
however, is statistically insignificant,
Ciancio says.
Although the study did not compare the price of the various flosses
on the market, some, like the PTfE..
type, may coot a bit more than Olhers.
Howevc-, 70 percent of the patients
JXeferredtousethePTfFAypehecause
it did not shmd essily wheo used.
Other members of the research
team were Othman Shibly, UB visiting professor from the Univ=ity of
Damascus, Syria; Gregory Farber, a
recent UB dental graduate, and
Maryanne L. Mather, who coordinates clinical studies in the UB Depanment of Periodontics.

rs NOT the denial floss, but

the act of flossing thai helps
Jli"Vent gum disease, a UB
denial researcher has found.
"The mechanical action of
flossing, which mduces plaque and
hacleria levels around ~ and
gums. is a key for Jll"venting or
halting adult tooth loss," says
Sebastian G. Ciancio, professor and
chair of periodontics in the UB
School of Denial Medicine.
In a study, the results of which
were published in Clinical Pmtmti"" Dentistry, Ciancio and his colleagues found that waxed nylon
floss and expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (PTfE..type) floss •
were equally effective in removing
plaque, the colorless, bacteria-laden
substance found around teeth and
gums.
or the 57 patients ages 18-63
panicipating in the study, 27 flossed
once a day for five weeks with the
PTfE..type floss and 30 flossed with
an American DentaJ Association·
accepted waxed floss.
After the fifth week, the groups
switched floss types for the last week
of the study.
Each patient received a thorough
oral examination. instructions on how
to floss correctly and a toothbrush
and fluoride toothpaste. They kept
diaries recording their home dental

Powell sank his teeth into this writing job:
researr;hing the history ofUB dental school
By-HAMMER

very imponant, given his stature."
The School of Dentistry came
into being in 1895 when it was moved
into its own building on Goodrich
Street, he said. 'That created an interesting set of circumstances in that
the Medical School building was
located on High Street, so the two
of the sc~ ~al
tory was hisu&amp;, ............ ~ !i~=hool s were one block apart. The
only thing that separated them was a
marking thedl&lt;lll:itih~ ilomi~~
Centennial Celebration continue this small courtyard. There were a few
~ases of some very physical corrspring.
" Dean (William M. ) Feagans
frontations between medical students
asked me to write the history after I and dental students." laughed Powell.
retimdin 19&amp;5," saidPowell."lspent
almost two years on the research
Powell attended his classes at the
alone."
Goodrich Streel building when he
Powell used the UB Archives and
entered the School of Dentisuy as a
the History of Medicine Library, srudent in 1946, after returning from
where he pomd over old yearbooks
the war in the Pacific. Holding a
B.A. in political science, with amiand records from the School of Dentisuy and also those from the Buffalo
nor in English, from Syracuse UniDenial Association. And he appealed
versity, he spent the preceding
to alumni to send him recollections summer taking science requirements
of unusual incidents that occurred · to get into the dentisuy progr.un.
"After the atomic bombs were
during their tenure at UB.
.
Powell enjoye.j every minute·of dropped, I was in Guam, a major in
his wori&lt;. 'This was my gift to the the Marines," Powell said. l;(e was
school for everything it has done for
considering two very different
me, he said.
choices' "stay in the Marines, or go
Forriting a deparunent of deninto dentistry," he said. "My-father
was a dentist, and I chose :ogo in that
tistry at UB was first proposed by Dr.
Roswell Pari&lt; in the spring of f 892. direction."
"He was a member of the University
Upon his graduation in f 949
Council at the time and was also to · (Powell's class was the last of the ·
become the first professor of oral
three-year degree recipients after the
surgery in the dental deparunent."
war), he was immediately offemd
said Pov.rell. '"The fact that the dethe first teaching fellowship fmm
. partment was proposed by Pari&lt; was
the School of Dentisuy. "I was ap-

~ full y equipped with air turbines for

Reporter Staff

a our students .••

U

D's SCHOOL of Dentistry has occupied
much of his adult life.
So when Richard Powell, professor emeritus

00

~

Powell said that because of this,

!!! dental students who graduau:d from

gUB at that time were seen as cuaing

pointed as a clinical instructor for
two years," he said. "After that, I
became a clinical assistant professor." He became a full professor in
1962.
.
Powell said that the late 1950s
Was a very exciting l:ime to be teachin~ dentistry at UB because of the
innovative techniques in drilling that
were accepted here. "Prior to the late
1950s, the method of drilling a tooth
was quite diffiCult for the patient and
the doctor. Thedrillshadaveryslow
rateofrevolution," PoweUexplained.
"A man in Rochester invented
the first air turbine for the drill
handpiece. l was asked in 1957 to
help evaluate this. aloog with ·professors from other universities.! was
one of the young Turks ai thai point,
and the older faculty resisted this
unit a bil But we ended up becoming
the first school in the ""!"'uy to he

edge commodities by the dental profession. "Yes, we were the firsl But
other schools carne to use it rather
quickly after they saw our success."
Powell refusestotakerrocticredit
for the roster of Centennial events
that began last spring. "Full credit
for this wondeiful celebration goes
to Dean Feagans, who is an unusual
visionary as a man. He understands
human relations and alwnni relations very well, which helped make
this celebration a great success." He
added that "for last spring' s graduation, we had visitors from countries
all over the world, such as Poland,
Mexico, Jsrael,Japan. Chile and Para· guay. All panicipated in the commencement exercises. TheJapanese
reJli"SeDtatives, for ~ample, wore
ceremonial dress. which was wonderful."
Powell noted thai more Centenpialevent_Sareplannedforthissping,
suchasacomputertechnologyseminar April 2 and 3, a symposium On
periodontal regeneration April 30
and a visit to the Chautauqua Denial
Congress Juoe »-July l.
The centeMial will officially
close with the three-day BMual
Greater Niagara Frontier Dental
Alumni meeting in the fall at the
0
· Buffalo Convention Center.

�•

-.. ... .- --.-17

Brlzil
Dltector Terry
Gilliam's
Bntzll, a
conlroYel'lial
look at a
futuristic
aoclety, Is the
UUABI.Jite
Nlte Rim for
Friday and
Saturday, Feb.
19&amp;20at
11:30 p.m. In
w~ .

CALENDAR

M-.u.SPMCE
SCIIEDUUD

Conhnued from page 7

da.\SC~-;ue cx h1b11u1g
lhruugh Feb 25m
J&gt;rc,.H.Ior.t Gallery. I.W Parler
ll.dl. SoUlh Campu,. Pan•c•panl'-

A memori al stf"\!ice for Professor
lr.J Cohen. who died Dec. 2.
1992. will be hJ!Id today, Thursday. Ftb. 18, :at2 p.m. in the
Dean's Confer-ence Room. 280
Parl Hall. North Campus. A
member of the Psychology Ot:panment from 1952 to 1987
when he retired. Profes.-.or
Cohen was Provost of the Fucuhy of Soctal Sctei\CC$ from

ult:ludc Man e A rom. Sandra

1968-1971.

MR: STUDENTS TO DISPLAY

WORKS
MFC ~ 1udcn1~. all cnrullec' c1
1hcr 111 ART 2J 1- Pamung for
Non-M ajOr\ or m cvcmng arch1

ll'\."lun:

1hc11 ""ork~

DIIIUIIIIU, Grc~OI) Fiore,
' !kmadcnc Franl..lm. Raehd
l1111.1\!ll0. Pet 7J (Tiftunyl
HuJng, Thou Huynh , Onnmc

1-..uch. Donl(a KulntltiCJCI)'I. .
H.tm Lut.cl , Cha EH·
\l ,tl'llllllCU\C , Oc.llnCl' 'M:lf\hall .

'lcv m. Nancy P..1ppal.
R.t[l''h Ran. Rochelle Rcnftlrd ,
Mc1T-..u.

K.1ltl'

Jolw!)~.~.,une. II UI

\ll'i,Ulll' Vnbunl. And) Bcn&gt;Mlll,
\1.JI) Bulkr. 8111
,al. . Vllll'C

c...

'\1\hol.t., .md Dmnc Ro .. -.cau
ll~tur'
1 la~ .

Mnnda) 1hrnugh Thur.
I - Rpm.Fmlay. l 5pm

PHOTOGRAPHY ON VIEW
l'.mncd photo1;raph' by Jndu:
Clul!.k M FA cand1dall' Ill phu
lugrJph) mt l~ UB Oep.~nmcnt
•II An . arc on \ •c~ through
\1Jrl·h I tn the Pane l Galle') uf
1 1-.:I..~IMill Memnnal Ltllr.!J) .

Current·listtngs of JOb~ m bu\1 ·
OC..\~ and industry. government,
he:tlth. education and non-profit
nrgamt..a t mn~. are "' ai lablc in
the Offu.:c: of Career Planmng
and Pl ace ment. 15 Capen Hall.
Nnnh C:unpu, . Call 6-'5-223 1
for more infonnation
WRmNG TUTORS SOUGHT

Tutor wrmng for cn..-dit at the
Wnllnp. Place. Contact Arlene
Sullivan. rcil(Jmg/wnttng coordt·
n::uur. at 11 0 Talbcn (6-'5-239-1)
MATH PLACE SEEKS TUTORS

Tutor math for credtt at the Math
Place Contact Todd Baler.
Math Place coordmatur. a1 112
Talben. Nonh Campu' f645 l'Y~ )

\:nnhCalllptl\

nf blucsmcn and jaumcn
.11 wurl., and play. wtll he on
' tl'"- through Murch 14 at thl'
WBFO studim. :u Allen Hull .
Snuth Campuio Ca ll K2Y-2MXO
fur mort.• infunnaucm

UB -SOCIETY HEKS
FRESHMAN LEAD£RS

UB LAUNCH ! L EADERS A'

'llndc:rgrnduate\ Noted for Cuilege fi unon.) CncourJgc' all
frc..,h mc n to pantctpatc '" the
Tturu Annual Frc,hman Lcudcr'ht p f orum . WL"ttne..day. Feb.
2-*. fmm 6 to 9:30p.m. The
l'\Cnl i\ de ... igncd 10 flHl\llll' .
challenge and fo,ter \tudcnl
lcadcl"ihip.
A''nl'intl' ProfesM&gt;r of P..ycholugy Charles Behling wtll be the
keynote !~ pcaker. His add n:~'i
"-ill be followed by a·varil.'ly of
14-0rk!ohops inch!ding '1'hne
M anage ment" and " Personal
AchtC\'COlCnt ."lllerc will be II
"Munch &amp; Mingle" o;;e.'-'lon at
"'h•ch students can network "uh
rcprco;entatives from numerou!&gt;
c.· :~mpu~ groups a nd orga n ii'.&lt;~ ·
lion~ . l.&gt;orothy Ham ~. EOP tuto·
nal coordinator and M:nior coun-..clor. will give the cltKmg

add res..'
Ad mi s~ton ~ ~

free ond rcfn:&lt;ih·

ments will be ~1"\'ed, 11lOSC
tm e~ted should

regb.1er wtth
Ann Hi&lt;&gt;ks nt the Orrice of Stu dcm Life. 11 2 SIUdcnt Umoil . or
call645-6 125. Registr.n ion
dead line is Monday. Feb. 22.

(SG-

Tickets available
at the BET Box Offire
(7 16) 855·2225
or through
"Reverse

Central Ticket Offire
(716) 856-2310

Shot A

$12 . 00 GEHI!:RAL

Film Colloquium
ColloqUtumon
F1lms by
Women" will
be pre-

* r -------sented from

Feb 25-27 by the UB
Graduate Group for Fem1ntsl
Studies

The coUoqutum will
screen SIX films by outstandIng contemporary women

d•rectOfs from several naEach Will be pre-

IIOnS

sented by scholars wtlh

spec1al knowledge of the
1nd1vtdual film . dtrectOf or
subtect matter Screen1ngs

w111 take place on both the
Nonh and South Campuses

JOBS

\CJr.

NOTICES

Malntena~ AMlstant

09}-Laborotory Animal Foctli ti~. Line 131819.

JOBRUOtiiiCESFOR
ST\JOEHT1I

PHOTOGRAPHY DISPLAY

'The Bluc~mcn .·· photograph'
lly Ed Sollala documcm ing 20

~

CU8SifiiD CML IIERVlCE

FACULTY
Assistant/Associote l'rofes..wrMcdicinc. Posting II'F-3CX)2 . Assb1ant Professor-Pathology.
Posting #F-3003. A$-SisLanll
Associatt Professor-Chcmtcal
Engioecnng. Posung.IIF- ~0 1 2.
Assistant Professor..CI\'II Eng•·
ru:cnng. Posting #F-jO JJ Assistant Professor- lndu ~tn a l Eng•·
necring.. P~t tnp.I#F- 30 14 , 3015
Professor- Eit..octncal and Com puter En~nk.:c nn g. Pl}'.ttng #F~Uitl Assistant/Associatt Proft~ r-Eiectrical and Computer
Engnk."tnng. Po!ollng #F-30 17
A.ssbunt/As..'iOCiate Profc:s..ooorM cchamca\ and Acru~pacc Eoganccnng. Po~tin g #F-30 18. 3019.

RESEARCH
Secretary 11-P!oycht atry. Pt)\llng
IIIR-93009. Research Technicia n ll/111 (depending on txp4!rle.nce)-Ancsthesiulogy. Posti ng
HR-930 10. Research Technl·
cian lVIII (depending on e~IX­
rie~)-Medicine. Posting #R93011. Secretary 11-Chcmistry.
Po!.ting #R-93013.'Cierk. 11Sociul &amp; Pn:venti ve Medicine.
Posting lfR-93015.
I'IICif£S-.oL
Coordinator, Media Equipmt:nt Services (SL-3 )-Academic
Services. Computing and Information Technology. Posting #P2055 . Associate Dean CMP-3)Nur.;ing. Posting #P-3006.
SoOwan Designer (S L-4)-J&gt;,ychology. Posting #P-3007.
CLASSIFIED CML IERVICE
deaner (SG:OS. part-time
pennanent)-Custodial .Service\·
ReSidential. Line lf43183.

Regtstrat1on lor the colloQUIUm •s $15 lor general
admiSSion and $10 lor students Admtsston to tndl·
v1dual screemngs rs $3
Reg1strants w1U recetve him
notes for each show1ng For
lurther 1ntonnauon and
regtstratton matenals. call

645-6108
The leaRned films w1ll be
"Daughters of lhe Dust"
(Juhe Dash. U S ). "lnd1a
Song" (Marguenle Duras.

I
I

TAKE-OUT
DELIVERY
~ 3081 MAIN STREET

FREE PIZZA

I

Buy A Large Cheese &amp; Pepperoni
Pizza at the Regular Menu Price
and Receive a Small Cheese and
Pepperoni Pizza FREE

keynote· speaker

·

I
Cheese &amp; 1 Topping

$5.97

Tnnh 1s Chancellor's

-Palncta Donovan

News Bureau Staff

ss.97

I

II

·~- -il
PARTY PIZZA

-~ Cheese ·&amp; 1Topping

--Elcplres 2·25-93

La.:ge Gourmet White Pizza
with 3 Cheeses and SJ?inach

~e:-2-~ I

WHITE PIZZA
Blended Oil, Romano, Onions,
Tomatoes, and Choice of
· Any 1 Topping

SPiNACH PIZZA

1

$5.97 "

and "Surname V•et Gtven

01st1ngutshed ProfeSsor 1n
Women's Sludtes at the
Untverstty o f Cahforma at
Berkeley and assoc1ate
professor of c1nema at San
FranCISCO State Untverstty-

I

93

"Reassemblage" ( 1982).
"Naked Spaces· ( t985).
Name Nam" (1989). a docu-

'I

$!:!!
__ ...

(SAVE $4.85)

Tnnh's films 1nclude

mentary on the roles of
Vietnamese women

__

DehctoUs Coml;&gt;tnallon of Mozzarella!
Cheese, Mushrooms, Green
Peppers, Omons and Tomatoes

· Mananne and Juhane"
(Margarethe von Trotte.

a

* BUFFALO

VEGGIE DELUXE PIZZA

I ._

(Mon1ka Treut. Germany).

documentary !hat exarmnes
contemporary Ch1nese
cullure and pohucs. by Tnnh
T M1nh-ha. the colldQutum's

I
I

r;-----li-----;w

France). · v1rg1n Machtne·

Germany). "Hour of the Star"
(Suzana Amaral. Brazil) and
_ "Shoot for the Content."

~

836-2996
836-228 1
836-2282
836-2283

FAMILY DINING

$11.95

I-

I

�10

_ _ U._M, _U

IJQIJIJ Public Safety's

The Reportsr ws1cones commenr/llyon issues
ol broad Interest lo the unNetsily ccmtTJ&lt;I1ily.
Material may be edited for style and length.

Task Force proposals do 1Wt solve legal
dilemmn of Public Safety officers
IIJDA-P. -

1

N RESPONSE to your article, "A
Wider Role for Public SafetyT (Rt·
porrtr, Feb. 4, 1993), I would like to
point out some concerns we, as Public
Safety officerli. have with .lhc repon of
lhc Univerliity-Wide Task Force on Public
Safety. upon which your article is based.
There are several problems with lhc
proposed legislation; chief among lhcm is
lhc fact that it does not S91ve lhc problem
which caused this UlSk force to be formed.
i.e .. the legal dilemma in which public safety
officers are presently contained.
SUNY Public Safety office"' are perliOns
appuinted by the State Univerliity who are
peace officerli under the Criminal Procedure
Law and. in addition. have other enumerated

powers which are otherwise reserved to
police officers in thi s state. Tile problem
with this approach is that Public Safety
officers needed more authority than was

foreseen by the authors of the original legis·
lation; for example. after an offocer arrested and
processed a prisoner oo lhc campus. il devel·
oped through an official opinion of the Attor·
ney General that the offocer lost all of his
authority when he left campus with his prisoner
to tmnsport him Ui the local lockup.
This is only one example of the~absurdity

response was a polite "No, thank you, we
will 001 do your w&lt;&gt;OC" Untillhc law was
changed in 1983, some am:srces were
locked up and others were issued appearance
tickets of dubious legal merit.
Here is another example of a still unre·
solved dilemma: a police offiCer, if after
having arrested a perliOD for any offense,
determines that lhcre is no basis to believe
that lhc suspect .;.,mmiued lhc offeose or
any other offense, he must release that per·
son from custody immediately. There is no
such ''un·arrest" provision for Public Safety
officers, which again takes us into lhc realm
of abswdity.

"These issues are notjust
related to on-campus law
enforr:ement. They are
enomwus personal
liability issues for each
Public Safety officer, both
on and offcampus. "

which surrounds campus law enforcement in
SUN Y. Many of these shortcomin gs were

-GAVID I'. FIIANtl

idenritied in the Task Force Repon. but
some were not By laking the approach that
grnnting ccnain additional authority. such as
the power to "Slop and frisk. '' will solve the
problems. rather than taking the common
sense approach and designating Public

Safety office"' as police officers in the
Cnminill Procedure Law. SUNY is bound
find itself commissioning another study a

10

few years hence.
l...ct'!&lt;! look at recent experience for a
moment and see how shoncomings were

dealt with in the past. After the 1980 Unified
Peace Officer Bill was passed. it was discovered that Public Safety officerli lost their
authority to issue appearance tickets. This
mean t that students and others arrested for
minor crimes and offenses. who could be
issued appearance tickets by police office~.
had to be locked up by Public Safely. When
we asked the Buffulo Police Centr11l Book·
ing to i s.~ue the appearance tickets for us. the

Just one more example that concerns us
very much and became an issue on another
SUNY campus. The Public Health Law
establishes procedures for maintaining evidence in cases involving sexual offenses.
The law mandates that hospitals follow
cenain procedures in collecting such evidence and turning it over to police officers
upon request. There is no provision to involve Public Safety officers in this process.
although the intent is 10 preserve the chain of

custody of the evidence for triaL Can this
jeopardize campus sexual assault cases? We
don't know for sure. but it is cenain that we ·
do not need to give defense attorneys more

opponunities than lhcy already have.
These issues are not just related to oncampus law enforcement. They are enormous perionalliability issues for each Public
Safety officer. tioth on and off campus. !{ow

is a Public Safely offiCer to act when confronted by violent or criminal conduct when
between campuses? Is it sufficient to radio in
a repon (of a figh~ for example) to lhc local
police and proceed on our way? Or might a
coon find that a public servant employed by
lhc State of New York, trained for 14 weeks
at lhc State Police Academy, might have a
duty to intervene or even be liable for 001
doing so? Nowhere does lhc Task Force
Repon address this problem in any meaning·
ful way.
Three other points:
• The Task Force Repon conducted a
survey of other state universities and found
that 93 percent employed police officers on
campus. Of lhc remainder, one contracted
with local police departments for service and
one osed security offioers and relied on local
police for criminal matterli. No one operated
anything like lhc SUNY hybrid.
• SUNY Public Safety offiCers are re·
quired to posses a personal pistol permit just
like any other private citizen, and register
lhcir state-&lt;&gt;wned weapon on this permit
because lhcir authority as a law enforcement
is so weak that it does nor allow them to
possess a weapon based on lhcir appoint·
ment as a peace officer.
• The Task Force recommendation to
designate campus law enforcement officers

as "univerliity police officers who shall be
peace officers" could be stated another way
as '"University police offtcers who are not
police offioers." This Orwellian proposal
tells this writer that lhc people working in
the old ruilroad station simply do 001 gr.lSp
the depth of this problem.
The point in all this is (and the Task
Force Repon states as much) that Public
Safety officers act as, and are expected to act
as police office"' for lhc State University.
The Criminal Procedure Law and the other
laws of New York distinguish berween
police officers and peace officers and the
duties they are expected to perform. Clearly.
SUNY is out of sync with both the law and
the expectations of its citizens. Fixing this
one issue at a time or one law at a time will
not do it. We need police officer status and
we need it now.

DaVId P Frank rs Secretary. University PoliCe
SuperviS(XS Loca/635, Councii82AFSCME

Celebrated Chilean painter to lecture in Bethune
11J PATIIICIA -VAN
News Bureau Staff

E

UGI'.NIOTEl.l.Ez.lhcdistinguished
Chilean· born painter and printmaker.
will present a public slide lecture on
his recent work at 3:30p.m. on Mon·
day. March 8, in Bethune Gallery, 29 17 Main
St. The pre.o;entation is free of charge and open
10 the public.
The lceture, "11]e Zones ofTufbulence," is
sponsored by the I:JB Department ·or Art. It
takes its name from a catalogue on work pnr
duced by nllez on the occasion of the

quintcentennial of Columbus' ani-Val in the

NcwWurld.
Developed in collabor.nion with 14 other
OOtabJCChileans, the book focuses on the ways in
which painting, dr,lwing and printmaking inter·
seer. Thematically, the paintings and prints in this
series also confront these issues, since Tellez is
preoccupied here with the prol&gt;lem of lmitorial
boundaries, as well as tbose boundaries presented
by color, form and subject matter.
ln this work,lhcanistemploys maps and ship-

forms to reproduce aspects of the ancient Eurotali ty in the face of sombre reality.
pean voyage. These ships ponend nocelebrarion.
Boni in Chile in 1939, Tellez left there in
however. but deSj)oilment and ruin. a carnival of
1960 to work in Paris at Atelier 17. an instiru·
unresting souls.
tion famous for teaching and research into lhc
For the ships carry "Nosfernru," the cinematic techniques of printmaking. He served as its
vampire who arrived by water-a metaphor.
director from 1964-66. collabomting on print
writes novelist Diamela Eltit. ''for the plague and
editions with such outstanding artists as legthe crisis of seductioo" about to take place. This
endary dadaist Marcel Duchamp. expression·
crisis is articulated ftnally in subtle and ultimately
ist painter and graphic artist Pierre Alechinski
horrifiC wor1is like ''Sanibade Ia muene" ("Death
and cubist painter Gino Severini.
Samba"). in which the colorlul sexual and veg·
T~llez was a vis iting profe ssor or
etable images juxtaposed with thOse ofc:reepprintmaking at the Univerliity of.lltinois. He
ing. crawling creatures; nails, daggerli and
has lived for many
in Toronto. where he
instruments of injury and tonure.
· was a professor of fine ans at York University
Tfllez also uses vast expanses of silent
from 1970.90.
darkness that are "invaded" by wandering (and
. His work hasbeen.exhibited throughoutthe
violently colorful) amorphous shapes. In some
United States and Europe. as well as in Canada.
cases. he uses a technique that approximates Chile and Cuba. lt is held in many notable
graffiti and scrntches or paints words .and impublic collections worldwide.
ages into or "onto" the darkness. achieving
He has participated in international print
disturbing, Munch·likeexpressionisticeffects.
bitnna!tr throughout Europe. and has taken a
Like many of his Latin American litemry
number of prizes, including lhc 1986 Chilean
contemporaries, T~llez weaves art from magic
Critics· Award for lhc best solo exhibition of
and destiny and a namboyant defiance of mor·
the year.

are

years

LLLL
Weekly Report
..... ,_... ___
_
....._.

____ _

-----Dp

,_, _

_,

...

• Public Safety charged a student
with driving while intoxicated Jan. 29
after he was stopped while driving on
Core Road.
• Various cleaning SUpplieS, tnCiud·
ing a case of toilet paper, two cases
of vinegar, a stepladder. two cases of
plastic bags, a snow shoYel. a b&lt;oom
and a dustpan, wonh a combined
value of about $100, were reported
rrissing Jan. 29 from Ketter HaiL
• A leather jacket. valued at $275.
and a wallet containtng cash and
credit cards were reported mssing
Jan. 29 from the racquetball courts 1n
AlurMi Arena.
• Public Safety recetVej a report Jan
:xl of a man in Goodyear Hall who
was knocking on doors and attempt·
ing to push his way into rooms. The
man was gone on arrival of officers.
• Public Safety reported Feb t that a
man was sleeping in a car parked
overnight in the Jacobs lot The man
told offiCers that he had a meet1ng
with a professor ear1y in the morning
and did not want to be late.
• A leather jacket. valued at $200,
was reported missing Feb. 1 from
Richmond Cafetena.
• Racquetball equipment and per.
sonal items worth a combined value
of $400 were reported mss&gt;ng Feb 3
from the men's locker room 1n AlurM1
Arena.
• A Richmond Quadrangle res1dent
reported receiving a haraSSing telephone call Feb. 3 from a man who
stated "I want to lick your feet "

Leners
Blum withdrew from
tenure review, prof says
EDITOR:
A university colleague recently asked, "What's happening at the Law School?' I
underslood thai the subject of
this question was Jeffrey Blum's highly
publicized legal aclion against the school
and eight members of its lacutly. This
action has received a sign~icant aroount of
media time and space, but one basic and
critical fact has apparently been ignored·
or unreported. The faculty's Promotion and
Tenure Committee never reviewed Blum
for tenure. and, obviously, never rejected
his candidacy. Instead, Blum decided to
withdraw from tenure review, and his conuact therefore lerminated
Pro/essex of
Law
-··
·~

The Reporter is UB's corrm.nity
newspaper IO'ld-we want JOU D beccme i:Mllved. Give us yos c::ornmenls on curent Jopics relatilg t&gt; the
lJ'liversity and higher eciJcalion as well
as on li'(l9ly subjects n weas
E!lCpertise. We welcome lricles, Vlf!INpoints, leiters ID the EciDr as wei as
ne..s items. Send malerials D Arrl
. Whitcher, Reporter·Edilor, 136 Ctats
. Hal, Btklo, N;Y. 14200.

avos.

�-

... - -... -!.7

Faculty&amp;Sian
B

I

I

..........
......., .....
.

l

~ ........ far_..

D

John Feathu, dilector of !he Western New

York Geriatric Education Center, and e&lt;&gt;director of the Primary Care Resource Center in !he
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, was
honored recently at the annual meeting of !he National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (NPUAP) for
his six years' service as treasurer and membership

Regional meetina, ~
scnled by UB DiviJion of
Gerillric Psychillry IUid
Western New Yorlc Geriat-

on the panel's executive committee. Feather remains
on !he panel, a IS-member group of expens focusing
on reducing !he prevalence of pressure ulcers
through research, education and advocacy. The
group has been active in the development of and

ric Education Center, along
with the American Association for Geriatric Psychiauy,
Faculty presenters: Barry
S. Fogel, dilector, Division
of Geriatric Psychiarry,
Brown University; David G .
Folka, director, Geriatrics/
Gerontology Division. ·
Departmi,nt of Psychiauy
and Neurobiology, University of Alabama at Binningham School of Medicine;
Gary L. Gottlieb, executive
vice chairman. Department
of Psycbiarry, Hospital of
!he University of Pennsyl-

dissemination of national guidelines in conjunction
with !he Agency for Hcallh Care Policy and Research.

UB'siKIIzJnllerz ar..a .......
.. oi\Near by IAch w.....

0

Kazimlerz B raun, professor of theater at
UB, has been appointed 10 !he rank of professor in Poland by President Lech Walesa.
The full professorship in Poland is a state title,
bestowed· by !he counuy's president based on a
univers-ity promotion and recommendation. It is not
an appointment to a university, nor is it directly
connected to a specific university.
Braun had been promoted to full professor in 1984 by
Wroclaw University. where be had previously been
associate professor. However, the communist authorities
denied him the offtcial state professorial rank for political
reasons, includinS his involvement with the Solidarity
movement. This denial was one of the primary reasons he
left Poland in 1985.
Wroclaw University continued to push for
Braun's state appointment With !he fall of communis m and !he ongoing changes in Poland, hi s case
was reviewed again. He was appointed by Walesa
last November.
Brau~ was asked to come to the President's pal·
ace in December to receive the title. but his teaching
obligations at UB prevented him from going.
"I was in France in January and an envoy of
President WaJesa' s, Professor Lu.k:aszewicz, visited
me there, and presented me the official document on
my Polish professorship," he said.
Before coming to UB in 1987 to head the acting
program. Braun was a visiting professor of theater at
the Uni versity of California at Santa Cruz.
Swarlhmore College, New York University. !he
University of Notre Dame, and many other Ameri·
can and European universities.

vania.
Also, Fran E. Kaiser,

associate director. Division
of Geriatric Medicine, St.
Louis University School of
Medicine; Sarah G. Burger,
consultant to National
Citizen's Coalition for
Nursing Home Reform,
Washington, D.C.; Marion
Z. Goldstein, director, UB
medical school's Division
of Geriatric Psychiatry;
June I. Chang, UB clinical
assistant professor Of family
medicine, Division of Geriatrics; Kenneth Garbarino,
UB clinical assistant professor and medical d ilector of
long-tenn care, Erie COunty
Medical Center.
For infonnation and
registration, contact Patricia
Krupp at Western New
Yorl&lt; Geriatric llducation
Center, 829-3176.
·

Paper wins .....-c:h pftz8 far
Aniiii'OPOioCY -.... student

0

Nancy Rom;ro-Daza, a graduate student in
the Department of Anlhropology, has been
awarded the prestigious Peter Kong-Ming Student
Researeh Prize by !he Society for Applied Anthropology. Romero-Daza won for her paper. "Multiple
Sexual Partners, Migrant Labor, and the Making for
an Epidemic: Knowledge and Beliefs About AJDS
Among Women iti Higtlland l.esotho." Romer&lt;&gt;Daza will receive the award. whiclt includes S 1.000.
a trophy and travel funds. during !he March meetings of the SfAA in San Antonio, Tex.

,..., .......

M [ [ 1 I N G S

IEuGdYe

Ca u lttwe
Feb. 24, 2 p.m.
J._ue Ma¢n Room,
S61 Capen, N orth Campus

.....

w...-

Robert J.
elected v1ce chlllr of
tiade'a Unlteil Way -a-d of Dlrec:ton

FMIIFeculty
Man:b 2, 2 p.m.

The Commons,
'North cAmpus

..........
PtohMiaMI

(General Membership

IUid SeJ~ators)
Feb. 23. 8:30a.m.
Center for Tomorrow,

l'lorlh Campus

.

Robert J_ Wagner , senior vice presid~nt for

o
·

university services, has been elected v1ce
chair of the Board of Directors for United Way of
New York State. Wagner is currently serving a twoyear term, to conclude in December, 1994.
A member of the state organization board since
1987, Wagner hils served as chair of tbe Nomi nating
Committee, the ~tate Conference pommittee and
the Resource Development Comminee; and as a
member of the Executive and Marl&lt;eting Commit-

tees.
Locally. he has been a member of !he Campaign
Cabine~ the Allocations Panel and the Planning and

B

0

A

R

0

Community Services Committee, as weU as chair,
Community Needs Identification Committee, IUid
chait of the UB _campaign for the Uniled Way of
Buffalo &amp; Erie County.

Yoluntieers

wllll._ .._

... eout11t far ua ~

0

Adults ages 3S to 75 who have symptoms of
gum disease, including sore. tender and inflamed gums, but who have not received any treatment for the condition are needed to participate in a
two-year study at the School of Dental Medicine.
Those selected 10 participate cannot be allergic to
tetracycline antibiotic medications and must be
available to come to !he dental school on the Soulh
Campus once every three months.
Participants will be required to have their teeth
cleaned every six months during the study and take
a low dose of the antibiotic daily.
Upon completion of the study, they will be reimbursed $500 for time and travel expenses.
Those interested in partici pating in the study
should call 829-3850 between 9 a.m. and 4:30p.m.
weekdays.

N

0

1

I

Criteria far 1111ct1on of Student

0

c:-...1C8111811t

The Commencement Committee announces
the Criteria for selection of a student represen ~

tative to address graduates at the I 47th University
Commencement, Sunday, May 16. 1993, at 10 a.m.

in Alumni Arena.
Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education John
A. Thorpe, will chair a screening committee comprised of faculty members and student representatives. The competition is open to all graduating

seniors in the Faculties of Ans and I....eners, Natural
Sciences and Mathematics, and SociaJSciences.
Seniors who wish to be considered for srudent
commencement speaker must submit a wri tten version of their speech to Dr. Thorpe . Each student
finalist will al so present his or her address before the
screening committee. The speech that is detennined
to be the best wi II be presented by the student at
commencement.
Speeches are to be no longer than six minutes.
Selection will be based on the relevance and appropriateness of content. as well as delivery.

The student commencement speaker was first
incorporated into the commencement program in
1991 and has been well-received by graduates and

their guests.
Entries must be submitted by Friday, April2, to
the Student Speaker Screening Comminee, c/o Dr.
John Thorpe, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, 544 Capen Hall, North Campus, 645-299 1.

PUBliCAT

IONS

• Associate Librarian 1.111 is the author
of ·Automation of Ublary tlll!:llnformalion
Services in Chna. Part I, Mainland." published
. in the Encyclopedia of LJ'braty ant;/ Information

Science, vo1une 50, Supplement.13 (NY:
Dekker, 1992).
II, Taiwan" wiH appear in
volume 51 . Lin's articles were invited by Allen
· Ken~ executive ed~or.

:Part

• .._Dew, government ~ts librar- ··
ian in the Law Ubrary, published "The Federal
·GcNemment's Electronic Data Files: Questions
ol Access Rights and Cosr in The Bool&lt;rnBrl&lt;.

•

...... c. ..........
associate profeuor of political science, discus!cd the
implications Of the u.s.
Supneme Court's ruling ordering Mississippi 10 dismantle its prior system of
integrated higher education
in a major opinion piece in
the Nov. 4 issue of 1M

Chronicle of Higher Education.
• Sb18rt Clleol, assistant
professor of civil engineering, and his work using computer models to analyze data
produced by "sman structures" and indicating !hey
have experienced suuctural
damage were featured in an

anicle in the November isSue
of Civil Enginuring.

• "Bivouac Near Trenton .... a
poem by Cart DeMI8,
professor of English, was
featured in !he November
issue of The Atlantic.

C [

........ 1993

Newsmakers

c..~......., professor of EnQiish, is ttie
authOf of Telling Trne. published this month by
the Johns Hopkins Unillelsity Press.
• ._......,, a graduate student in the
Department of Ehglish, is the author of Smal
Press: An AnnoraiBd Guida, published r&amp;cently by G r-.wocid Press.

• Ludnclll Finley, professor of law, was among legal
scholars quoted in an article,
··unequal Justice: Feminists
and Law," in the November
issue of Lear's that discussed how the U .S. legal
system, designed by white
men, is biased against
women.

• A story on research by
Bong Hee S ung, research
associate professor of medicine, showing that men with
mild hypertension who drink

coffee before exercising are
placing extra stress on an
already burdened ·c ardiovascular system appeared in the
Nov. 21 issue of Sci~nee
N•ws. Her colleagues in the
study included Mldwel F.
WI*"'· The research also
has been reponed in major
newspapers including the
D~troit Frtt Press, Akron
B•acon Journal and Roch.stu Timi!s-Union. as well as
in Modern Mtdicint.

• Work by a team of researchers including Ruu
Miller, profes.wr of computer science, and Nobel
Laureate llertoert A.
.._...,._, president of the
Medical Foundation of Buf- ·
falo and research professor of
biophysics and computer

science, that used a new
computer method to solve !he
unlmowri' crystal structures of
two molecules literally over- night was discussed in an

anicle in the Noverpber issue

of Th• Sci•nc• T•acir.r. The
story also has appeared in
Ntws .

Sci~n ct

- compileti by the UB News
Bureau

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CHINA NITE "93 WAS CHOCK-FULL OF COLOR AND

ENTERTAINMENT, WITH TRADITIONAL DANCES,

/-on dane~

Ka.f t

hnr'n,grophed /1\ Nam:\' CMn.

MUSIC AND FOOD, AS WELL AS A FASHION SHOW

AND PLAY. () CELEBRATING 4691 , THE YEAR OF THE ROOSTER, THE

ANNUAL EVENT WAS PRESENTED FEB. 13 AT THE KATHARINE

J:;Uwu· Lw. ltfl, mui Rannund flo m '\'umptrt· l.mt' llut ''

CORNELL THEATER BY THE CHINESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION.

DoZENS OF STUDENTS TOOK PART IN THE PERFORMANCES AND WORKED BEHIND THE

SCENES AS MEMBERS OF

DECORATING, DINNER, PRODUCTION ,
.1udtdlt c f'clt l..t'(l tlu thtalt r fi•r an nt'nlll~ n(

ln-t•l\emt·rtarmmm.
STAGE AND USHERING COMMITTEES.

()AS THE LION DANCE WAS

PERFORMED, THE

MES~AGE

CAME STRAIGHT FROM THE LION'S

!.Jon\ 'fllnl:llf' offrnnt'~l \I at ~n-ctlrfrt

MOUTH: HAPPY NEW YEAR!

PHOTOS BY SIMON TONG

�</text>
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                    <text>Cllll OGinto

~··SF,

CoiMIWIIty

Tec:IYliq..te c:leYeqJed

Helping the caTm.Jnity
is a major ccr.cem d
Frari&lt; Ccrbett.

,.

IIICMoveto
Fine Arts
Theater and Dance
co-chairs plan a

aUBccOd~

2

trealmenl fer premab.Xe

mns.

=. .

UB cheer1eaders t::mg
tore a naliGJnaJ 1l'optT)t
from Dallas
competitioo.

4

canplicated rnanetJII!'lf

in move to nem

building.

,.

~~~
=d~~a~------------------------­

entcountrie~
.

Wagner
language skills will come in especially
handy in the · olyc nic" within the village. which he describes as "a multi-purpose clinic located in the village for
treating injuries and illness."
In addition to language proficiencies. Wagner's team seeks
volunteers skillful in logistical support; also those with potential as village mid-management staff. "We'll also be using

FFICIALS FOR THE World University Games
are briefing 12.000-plus volunteers about every
manner of service needed to ensure the success of
the international even~ set for July 8-18and featuring athletes from more than
I00 countries.
While the Games have a
solid roster of volunteers for
athletic events and for many
hospitality duties-parlcing
cars, taking tickets, selling progl'lll1lS-(here is still
a big ne&lt;.'&lt;i for individuals proficient in foreign
languages.
''Given the multinational nature of the university community," said Games Vice Chair and UB Vice President for Advancement and Development Ronald H. Stein,
"members of the UB community could fulfill a very special
need of the World University Games. that is. as tr.lllslatorsand
language specialists.
'The university," he continued. ··will be the major venue
for the Games and it would be wonderful if people whor
iv t r
·
and work here and have a
cial knowledge of the univ
sity. wou l~ come forward

"Members oifthe VB

COmmunity COuJd

,.8

volunteers in suppon services.

such as handing outlinen. heiJ&gt;ing out in custodial services.
front desk administration. mail
information and as guides ...
says Wagner. 'There are a lot

of different areas:·
Volunteers. he said. will also
be needed to nm the village welcoming center. accreditation ar·
cas. key desks. luggage area. in
short, any thing of a service nature. Offtcials expect a large influx of people coming to visit the
village mayor. a yet-unnamed
person who will be in charge of
village protocol, greeting dignitaries. etc.
Wagner has as. least &amp;00

volunteer.

folji/l Q Very special
need ofthe World
University Games. ,

According to Jim Niemira.
Games director of human resources and . volunteers. "We
need additional people with ianguage skills '" do all sort&gt; of
interpreting. The largest need is
in French and Spani h. but any
language would be helpful to

- RONALD H. STEIN

us. Japanese and Chinese arc

also big needs. We're still pretty
open." At this point, 67 countries have accepted invitations to participate in the Games.
considered the second largest international athletic event. At

least 40 languages will be spoken.
Interested persons can indicate thei r preferences and

strengths with respect to language skills and many other area&gt;
of service. on a detailed volunteer survey available by calling
888-9342.
Volunteers will be asked 10 participate in one four·hour·
long orientation session. Accerding to Games officials, volun·
teers have been recruited for tmnsponation. venue stlpport.
delegation and protocol services. among other areas.
"We' ll be recruiting probably up to the beginning of the
Games." says Bruce Wagner. assistant village manager for
the Games, "since we're looking at 12 days of operation
wi th each day calling for between 200-500 volunteers in
the village, which will occupy the Ellicott Complex and
Governors ResideiinH
Is. The village itself will be
the venue with the mos
lunteers. since we wilt be
housing all the athl
cials froni the differ-

names of prospective volun·
teers. but emphasizes there is
room for more.

WoltdGames

officials ·need
volunteers who
speak a fOreign

language

----

. 8ttngiodooh

-- --

Balgitrn
Ba-*l

a.lono~

ca..

C...ah:a
a..d
Co1go

C&lt;lolaRica

,.,_

Qbt

NewlaBld
Ngn

~

~

-Attp.dc
rAttp.dc
C211c:h&amp;Sblak
!lemocnlllc

8I*'P1o
Fnn:e

Genntrrt

"""'
aao.

F\Jn&gt;Rico

_...,.

Spoin

&amp;il.lrN

"Pl'Ople arouod here are in for
Gras! BrUin
swprisc at whal a wooderEreooe
Tanzania
G!.asnola
nt this will be," says
lapel a-r.eoe
Guyana
. a UB alumnus who still
T.mty
H&lt;t1g Ktng
his experience as a rcsi·
Uganda
~
dent manager at the 1980 Winter
lX1llad
Stalos
~
UuQuoy
Olympics in Lake Placid.
Iran
YrginClifford B. Wilson, associate
lreBld
y~
Israel
UB vice president for srudent
Zlh
Italy
aff.U., is serving as chief operatM:ryC&lt;&amp;l
ing offtcer for the campus with
reganltothe Games. Heexplains
that UB employees who wish to
volunteer for the Games during work hours. must charge this
absence to accumulat&lt;d leave accruals. and have the absena&gt;which cannot conflict with OOrmaJ depamnent operationsapproved by a supervisor.
·
''Asisalwaysthecase,peoplecantal&lt;etimeoffattheuniversity,
if !hey have the time coming and the departn'M!fll operating needs
allow i~" Wilson said. " The principle always is that tliese (12month) employees must clear the time they want to ha,., off
with their supervisor and have the time corning.
"People can work regular hours and volunteer off hours and
on weekends for the GBAC (Greater Buffalo Athletic
Corporntion. sponsor of the ~
uffalo). This is
whenagoodnumberofeven
it'spossible
forpeopletogetinvolvedwi
gtocutintotheir
vacation time to do it"

........,..

-

�_u. _ _ ..,_ ..

2
H 0 N 0 R S
AMERICAN STUOtES
-ftiUCMUa
IW.LW,_
0ow ..,_, asaociale professor of American Studies,
was named to the lJicroeSe
Half of Fame
Feb. 681 the

AtvUII Half
ofFameCeleb&lt;ation in
Oriole Park,
Baltimore.
Faithl&lt;eeperoftheTurtleGian and
a member of the Onondaga
Nation Council of Chiefs,
Lyons is only the second Native American to be inducted
Since the Hall's inception in
1957.
As a goalie at Syracuse

.LYONS

University, Lyons was a two-

time third team All-American
In 1957 and 1956. He has
played for the New York Lacrosse Club: the New Jersay
Lacrosse Club and the Onondaga Athletic Club. In 1988,
he was inducted to the Syracuse University Sports Hall of
Fame. The following year, he
won Syracuse's lettennan of
Distinction Award. He is honorary chair of the Iroquois
Nationals Lacrosse Team.

-·PUBLIC SERVICE AND
URBAN AFFAIRS

-~...,_._EWNr
Mllllel liGoN, vice president for public service and

urban affairs at UB, was
namodW-ernNewYorl&lt;
Chapter

Brotherhood/
Sisterhood
Week CoChair by the

National
-

Conference

of Christians

and Jews.
'Mth her CCK:llair, Rabbi
Sl....., Mason ofT~ Beth
. Am, Moore presided at the
amual Brocherlloodf.lerhood
Luncheon Jan. 21 at the Hyan
Regency HOO!I. The luncheon

honored area citizens lor ex~ acts and 'deeds of
• 9erVioe to the cause of brotherhood and sisterhood.
PATHOLOGY

IIIECIIVD AW-

- L ~.a technical specialist·and clinical instrucJor of tissue pathology,

has received the Convention
Scholarship Award from the
Natipnal Soclely for Histotechnofogy.
The award, sponsored by
Hslology Control Systems.

Inc.. recogrizes Tharner's con-

trilutions ID the field of histotachnology, which is the study
of riml and tunar~· tissues .
Work focuses (J1 the preparation of tissue specinens ilr
research 8nd study, .and in- ·
ctJdes liUCh areas as "!issue
arct1iteciJ..re,. the progression
or regression of diSeases aod
the treelmenl of diseases.
n~amer is a member of the
NSH, the American Socialy of
Pathologists and Is vice president of the New Yorl&lt; State
Soclely for Hlstotechnology.

lhe_.. ...

Frotn classrootn
to community
hu........._ -•
Emelttus .....,.._ Fr.Nl ColbMt,
wl....,, .... Ylbll role
for university In ruclllftl out to help depr11Md .,...

11)'--

Fnnk Coltlett

Reportsr Staff

MYS-'-1
.... cultural

.,...,._

H

EHASCOMMITJ'ED

his life to helping others attain intellectual
and personal excellence. His work in the
classroom has always been a central
component to fullillirig the lives of
others. But for Fnmk Corbell, emeritus associate professor at UB"s
School of Social Wort&lt; and this year's
reci pient of the Buffalo Urban
League, Inc.'s Evans- Young Humanitarian A ward, the classroom
ultimately led back to the community at large.
"One of my i:entral concerns has
always been how the university can
contribute more to the chrnnieally
depressed communities within this
region." he said during a recent interview. "And I believe that our new
president, Bill Clinton, is going to
insist up::m a different kind of standard. He understands that you don 't
build foundations on rhetoric, but on
sound performance."
Corbett's sense of quality performance, coupled with what he calls
"adequate planning," is exactly what
he claims is missing from many social programs that e~ist today. Ultimately, the lack of responsibiliry in
the realm of social programs leads to
a breakdown ira services and an inability of the programs to meet the
needs of the people who require the
services most. he maintains.
''Too many social programs don 't
take the proper time to do adequate
planning. And there was a tUne when
all social organizations were evaluated each year by the funding source,"
he said. "What they call evaluation
today goes on without any real planning. And many inner-dty programs
aren't evaluated at aJI."
A UB faculty member for 20
years ( 1968-1988), Corbett said that
society cannot allow separate communities to continue to break down

to become

-lnwM!d
In lntefOoup
nUtlons,

"One ofmy concerns
has always been how
the university can
contribute more to
chronically depressed
communities. "

undertheweightofurbandecay.''Once
a community breaks dowrL you no
longer have anything to build on. And
with that in mind, your Sllldents are
your best resources for reaching out to
the community," he said
Toward that end, Corbett created
an M.S. degree program in Applied
Public Affairs Studies at UB in 1977.
'That program, which is no longer
running, taught very concrete skills in
urban management and cornrrunication, human relations and applied re-

search," he explained "Students from
thai progrnm won internships in the
Presidential Mlirlagelrent InternShip

Prognun 81 the White House. It's the
most prestigious program of its kind
in the country."
Presently, Corbett sees a deterioration in race relations that leaves
him unsettled and yearning fora new
beginning. "I'm deeply concerned
about the losses and the separation
we see. There is not enough emphasis being placed on human relations
in academia and in our day-to-day
communication," he said. " In the
1950s, we worked hard to concentrate on issues of common concern.
With that kind of attitude, education
then happens naturally."

ESA!Dthatacademiccurricula
that include multicultura1ist
perspectives can go a long way to
educating all people about the importance of community relations
while developing a stronger sense of
self for minorities. "Minorities become richer and more capable of

H

contributing by knowing more about
their roots. Even the architects of
curricula seem toconcentraleon Afrocentricity. But they don 't bring to light
the American black thinkers," he said.
" And always, you orust keep in mind
that there is only one characleristic we
all have in conunon: We all have one
black ancestor."
Regarding the Evans-Young Humanitarian award, Corbett said he
was very flattered "I was profoundly
honored and profoundly grateful. I
was acolleagueofboth Vince Evans
and Whitney Young, which makes
this award even nicer."
Corbett is guardedly hopeful that
the future holds improvements for
the social and cultural climate in
America "Social and cultural groups
need to become more involved in
exhibiting their fmest qualities in
intergroup relations. I'd like to see us
take a look back to some of the old
ways of developing social programs
when we made sure that we brought
as many groups of people together as
possible."

UB music major is NewYork's Miss T.E.E.N. for '92
BrDAVID-~N

Reporter Staff

HE PROBLEMS of others
are also our problems, and
when we help others, we
also help ourselves. One of
the most satisfying ways to help is
through volunteer work_This is the
messageofSuzanneAdelman, 1992
New York Miss T.E.E.N (Teens EncouragingExcellenceNationally)and
a UB freshman.- ·
Adelman recently placl&gt;d sixth for
181ent in the natioRal Miss T.E.E.N.
CompetitionaboardNorwegianCruise
Line's S.S. Norway in the CaribbearL
competing against 49 other young
women representing the 50 states. She
is a music major who would like to go
on to earn a master's in mJSic therapy
and work in rrusical theater.
The goal of Miss T.E.E.N.
is to recogni2e and honor the achieve-

T

ments of
young
women
between
13 and 18
years of
age, said
Adelman.
" They
look at
s u c h
things as
llllent, scholastic achievement, poise,
inl&lt;IViewing slrills, and volunteer service," she said, adding that the experience is great for building self-&lt;:S~eem
anddevelopinginlerviewskills. There
is no swillNlit competition-the pag:
eantlooksforinherqualityandheauty,
Adelman pointed out.
. AdelmanbeganherquestforMiss
T.E.E.N. last August when she went
from her home in Staten Island to

Albany for the New York State competition. There she went through a
rigorous process of interviews where
she was asked about her future plans,
volunteer work and teen problems.
" They are looking for someone
to represent other teens; to be a
leader," Said Adelman. She sang the
aria "f'lon so Piil" from Mozan's
"Marriage of Figaro" for the talent
portion .of the competition. After
win~ing New York Miss T.E.E.N.,
she went on to the national pageant
last Thanksgiving.
Adelman spent seven hours a day
practicing for the pageant while
aboard the S.S. Norway.

Who's Who Among Amerioon High
School StudMis. She also placed
second in the New York Science
Fair and spent a summer at the
Tanglewood Music Institute, where
she studied with voice vinuoso
Bobby McFerrin.
Since coming to UB, Adelman
has been very active in volunteer
woik. She works as a volunteer 81
Friendship House, where she helps
with undetprivileg~ children. She
also sings at nursing homes.
Also 81 the university, Adelman
volunteers for BACHUS (Boo t
Awareness Concerning the Health
of University Students).
Here, workshops are conducted
SIDE FROM being Miss New
to ·~eacb students that there are other
York T.E.E.N., Adelman has
ways of geaing highs besides drinkolher n01able achievements inchxl- · ing or doing drugs." Adelinan said,
ingheing named Staten Island Xoung
adding that vohmteering is a "great
Woman of the Year and being in
high_"

A

_oonmriv,__...~.,...,DMima""""""""'""'~ SIBie._._..,.CJINewYm•e.Aialo
ASSOClATE EDITOR. ..,...,._

,_,.olticoo••-" 136 ~--(7 161 -

�~u,..__., _

__

Co~puter transcript system

World Games ]cltet Information

.,.needed, Eck tells FSEC
Aeponer Staff

I

rs TIME for UB co make compuler-

genernled transcripts available 10 scudencs, according co Susan Eck. UB
registrar. Switching 10 computer-generated trnnscripts would cutlhe processing
time for these documencs from live days co 24
hours and give lhe document a more professional look. Trnnscripts presently are photocopies laken from a paper file.
Eck made her comments at last week· s
meeting ofche.Facuhy Senate Executive Committee .
" II lakes us live days now only because of

the additional human resources that were given
us in November. 1992," she said. Before lhal,
lhc processing time for a student to have an
institution receive a copy of his uanscript was
six weeks. The additional resources will cost
UB $28.000 a year, plus benefics, she said.
Eck said thai although establishing a computer-gener.ued transcript system at UB was
raced "priority number one" in 1986. il was
delayed by IBM cr.rnsition implementation,·
and now appears co have been permanently
shelved. "As of this point. it doesn"t look like
this is a priority at all."

She explained that her orfice has received
calls from prospective employers questioning
the authenticity of transcrip~ because they do
not have a polished and professional look.
In a leuer co the FSEC chat was distributed
co member.; !&gt;.:fore the meeting. Eck wrote.
·· ... our studcnLs know what it (transcript) looks
like and communicate to us how this kind of
document changes -their attitude about their
university. They arc particularly humiliated
when. during an interview. potential employ·
ers denigr.nc it. the studcnl, or the university.
And we regularly get calls from the nati onal

P

In an effort to facilitate the sale of Wol1d University Ganes ticllets, and 10
offer discounted tickets to the university community for selected 811ents,
the following guidelines have been estabf!Shed:
Games tickets will be available through the UB TICket Office on a
voucher sales basis.

medical school application clearinghouse
(MCAS) as well as ics law school councerpan.
LSDAS. where lhe staff there questions lhe
validity of cbe document we forwarded co
Chern. Thai is how rare photocopy transcripts
have become among U.S.colleges and universities ...
Eck said !hal il would lake approximately
four months forlhe pmgrnm 10 be worked into
lhe new compuler system as the design phase
of the system wa.• completed in 1987. "I have
lhe laser printer.&lt; already. We'rejusc waiting co
use them," she said.
FSEC Chair Nicolas Goodman and UB
Provosc Aaron Bloch both said lhaclheywould
make a point of addressing lhe subjecc co
Senior Vice President Robert Wagner in lhe
near future.

'ho tlcMt optlana . . . . on-..1:
ua ..... available 10 members of the lfliversity comrno.rity; discounted tickets for selected preliminary BIIOOts, and
......., . - : full price tickets 10 all events for the general public.

'lldwts--

bei!Ceold • • _.....,.....
'IIIIa )llniCe.e ...-...:

• Pr!lllislon of ticl&lt;et information 10 purchaser.
• Completion of voucher 10 purchaser and copy of voucher 10 WUGS TICkets;
• Vouchers to be redeemed for "hard" tickets on or about April 15, 1993.
• Each voucher will be accompanied by a lact sheet on WUGS bckets (i e .. relund/exchange policies. scheduling of teams. pick-up of hard tickets).

WGroup DIKounttlcMis _.I» eoldcnytDidw.....

N OTIIER business, !he FSEC considered
a documem oo lhe smoking policy ac UB
submitted for consideration by Victor Doyno,
UB professor of English. He suggested lhac in
lhe wake oflhe new evidence abouclhe danger
of secondhand smoke and lhe different scandard•ofsmokingacceptabilitylhalexiscamund
the U.S. and lhe world, all undergraduate and
graduatea~missions be given a notice of the no
smoking policy in acceptance packecs.
' 11 seems fair 10 give incoming SIUdencs fair
notice about 001 smoking," Doyno said. "llhink
il' s wrong colhink lhallhe legal norms here arc lhe
same as chose observed elsewhere."
Many FSEC member.;, including Peter
Nicker.;on, professor of pathology. said that
UB ·s present policy needs co be furlherscressed.
"'Clearly, we should do something more on
ca mpus
Bloch and Goodman said they would also
speak with lhe senior vice president concern·
ing 1his maucr.

....... v~ .. ...._..,--..e,, thlt 16:

I

Greiner announces staff changes
RESIDENT GREINER h"' announced admini~tmtive changes in
his office. following the recent promotion of Muriel A. Moore. for·
mcrly dl.!pi.IIY 10 the president, to vice president
for public service and urban affairs.
Kathryn A. Sawner. executive assistant to
the president. will relinquish her office man·
agement and budget
duties to take on a
broader role as prcsi·
dential staiT officer and
liaison for univ'crsity
officers and governance groups. Greiner
said "she will fulfill a
similar function with
respect to various com·
SAWNER
mittecs in whose work
the president is in·
volved. She will also assist in managing the
presidential calendar. But her most important
role will be chat of head resideoc diagnostician
and triage officer with regard co the myriad
requescs. proposals, problems, propositions.
inquiries and other such items that demand
daily attention in this office," said Greiner.
The functions lhac involve office and personnel management, budget and telecommunications and marmgement systems will become~
the ·primary responSibilities associated with a
new professional scaff position. Carole Smith
Petro. associate vice president for university
&lt;~dvancement. is chairing the search committee
for !hac posc.alsotobelocaled in lhe Presideol's
Office.
'1llc two remaining professional staff positions in the President's Office continue to be
very well served by Jane Liebner and Beverly
Sanford."' Greiner said. Liebner is responsible
for public and institutional evcms. assisting the
president and his wife, Carol. in a wide raoge
of advancement and development activities.
"She has done a splendid job in thai role for us

3

..

and forpredct.:essors. and is now working more
widely with cognizant officers to enhance these
3C IJVIIIC ~

Sanford. Greiner noted, "has tx=en an excel·
lent nu1.nager of the 10rrent of correspondence
that flows through the office. and she is a
superb writer and edi tor. Over the past year.
~ h e has assumed expanded responsibility for
the preparation of a variety of reports. institutional documents. and presidcrltial communi·
cations. We plan for her to extend some of that
work in support of the provosl and vice presi·
dents as well."
andm J. Fazekas. fonnerly assistant to
Senior Vice President for University Scr·
vices Robcn J. Wagner. will tr.msfer to the
Facuhy of Lener.;. There she will work with
Arcs &amp; Leuer.; Dean Kerry S. Grone and other.;
as they plan co open and opernce lhe Fire Arcs
Center. This transfer, Greiner said ...will provi de Arcs and Leuer.; with the much-needed
staff support involved in opening the new
facility. Sandy will not be replaced in the
Senior Via: President's office: rather. her duties will be carefully reassigned. One of her
former areas of responsibility. lhal of inslilulional presentations, now becomes part of
BeverlySanford'sport[olio."

S

• Students with valid UB identificallon cards:
• Faculty, staff and volun~s wilh valid I.D cards,
• Alumni wilh valid Alumni AssociallOn I.D cards
Hard tickets will be allocated on a first-rome. first-serve basos based on the
date of transaction. to be clearly indicated on the vouchers.
WUGS TICkets may set fmits on the total amount of discount tickets to be offered . WUGS TICkets will directly communicate with the UB Ticket Offoce concerning the availability of tickets for events

W 'l1cMt Oflice ian f1l Cll*llllkliL
• Monday-Wednesday .
• Thursday .....
• Friday ..

11 a .m -3 30 p.m.
... 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
. ......... 11 a.m -3:30p.m

FGr fuitla .. ifCWiilllliui.. COIIt-=t:
• UB TICket Office. 8 Capen, Nor1h Campus ..
• WUGS TICkets ........ .

... 645-2353
... BSS-9300

-------:1
I
I
r

836-2996
836-2281
836-2282
836-2283

FAMILY DINING
TAKE-OUT

I
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CALZONE
PIZZA
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S2.49 I
DELIVERY

- 3081 MAIN STREET

Buy A Large CheeSe &amp; PepPeroni
Pizza at the Regular Menu Price
and Receive a Small Cheese and
Pepperoni Pizza FREE

Cheese &amp; 1 FREE
Ingredient

---

SPINACH PIZZA

Cheese &amp; 1 Topping

I with
Large Goufn1et White Pizza
3 Cheeses and Spinach

Coupon Expires 2·1~93

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BUFFALO

LARGE PIZZA

SS.97

.-=·=~:.1 ·

SS.97-PARTY PIZZA

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�_,. .........

4

_..,_ ..

Theater, Dance team
gears up for move
Co-clullrs Swlnluch .nd C-.lla ....,n.., department's
complex move to new Fine Arts Center

•rReponer Ed1tor

also a production company. A single chair gets
spread very thin."
Aiding their collaboration is Swiniuch and
MAGINE MOVING not only file cabinets and office furniture but ... 200 tux- Casarella's tendency to think "in very strucedos. 20 couches. annory. power saws, tured ways." They agree thai "freedom lies
only in discipline," and that dancers and techsewing machines, and boxes of wigs.
nical anists cannot function without it
coMumc~. leotards and dance shoes.
As they gear up for the move from Harriman
This is the challenge facing Linda Swiniuch
Hall and Diefendorf Annex, theFineAnsCenand Gary Casarella. co-chai rs of the Theater
ter is nearly cornple~e. The large aodiwrium.
and Dance Department. a.• they prepare for the
Grant explains,
b1g move to the $50 million Fine Ans Center
will be used for
on the NonhCampus. Equipment will be moved
university-wide
in earl y Junt!. with department offices opening
events and conup in adjoining Alumni Arena following the
ferences. along
concluo;;ion of thr World University Game~.
withtouringmu·
Jul y 8-IK.
sical
s. dance
But the!&gt;e twu whu share l~adcn.hip can
and
companies
handle the MfC!-1~. in part hecau~ they work
thelike.ltwilllx:
together \lllOOthly a~ a team
in
managed by the
Swimuch and Ca~ ll a ~y their relationcenter staff. and
'h•p 'uccced.!. bccau~ of long and fruitful
at this point the
ycar.ofarti!ooticcoll:tbormion. lt '!'l wsturdy. in
audi torium is
fac t they often fimsh one another's sc mence~
equipped for
nr take quest ion ~ a.o, an ensemble.
minimum
··wc·n: iible to disagree and still arrive ut a
now,
sound. allowing
co n se n ~ u .... " says Swiniuch. who continues to
for lec1ures and
head the UB dance program. "Whm helps. too.
Buffalo Phil1.; the great love and respect I have for the
hannonic
condc~J gn/t ec h areas of the theater. Sometimes
ce rts. but not
pc.rfqnner:. have the attitude that tech people
touring stage
arc there to serve them. and people so metime ~
productions be:-cc a dichotomy between education and per·
causeofthe lack
fomla.tlCC . But Gary and I both believe t he~
-UNDA SWINIUCH
of rigging to fly
area.\ arc mutually reinforcing."
sets. A screenHE co--chair arrangcmcm. they ~y. suiu.
ing room will uppon the Media Study pro··a sma ll but complex" depanrnem (45
gram and public film screenings. A 5.400
rnajol'lcach m theater and dance). while allow·
square-fool an gallery will serve both the
tng them to continue with lung-c herished du·
univeP.'lity's standing collection and touring
tiC)..
exhibit!-..
'Thco.,c arc thl! benefit ... or ... harcd leader'The university pledged to install the initial
Ship," ...ay... Kerry S. Gmnl. Ans and Letter.-.
e-quipment. at a level which will make (the
dean. who made the unusual appointment in
t800-se&lt;tt audi lorium) fully functional for many
199 1. ·111c perfonnance and technical clepurpo;es," Gram explained. '1hen over the
ment ... co-exist in th is dcpanment and there are
next sevcrJI years. to continue equipping the
often diflcring viewpoints and prioritic.!&gt;. Here
building to a standard that had been envisioned
we ha vc a team who come to me with proposals
in the original plan. At that point, we will be
where the cremive side is all workl-d through
able to host very complex productions. likel...es
and the technical and budgetary clement... arc
Misirables or P!Jamom of the Opera. which
in place.
require ex. tmordinary technical suppon be" It' s a very effective partnership," Grant
cause of the grandeur of lhe scenery. and the
concludes. "one that benefits the depanment a
need to create the effects that make the show
good dea l. A theater depanmcnt ha.s all .the
work. We're not prepared to do that initially."
pmblcms of an academic d!!panment. but it i'\ .
Ca"""lla and Swiniuch arc pleased wilh
ANN WHII'CHEII

I

"So many
interdisciplinary
things that are
. possible the
arts have been
impossible
until
because of our
physical
separation. "

T

Storage room Is full-and It wiH an hlMI to be moved. Unda Swtnluch and Gary
Casarella of Theater &amp; Dance with some of their treasure trove of costumes.

the smaller. 420-seat theater which. along wilh
1wo black box flexible performing spaces. will
be aniSiic centers for the department. Coordination of all performance spaces throughoUI
the university (including Baird and Slee Music
Halls, Cornell Thealer. and Pfeifer Theater
downtown) will now be centrali1.ed through
lhedean'soffice.A production board will meet
regularly to ensure that academic programs
"have highesl priority for all spaces for basic
instructional purposes" and to otherwise work
out the kinks that can be expected in a new,
complex operation. Grant explained.
ASARELLA say' he is excited abo u 1
working in the new building. but apprehensive about how it will be staffed. There :1re
many challenges, he say~. in going from one
and a ha lf pcrfonnance spaces to five, "with no
increase in faculty/staff within thedepanment.
though we can expect a'isistance from the
center's staff. There arc so many questions
about how we will function .
"In turns of programming. we will have to
remember that our goal remains the education
of students." says Casarclla. "We're not booking roadhouse show!-., nor do we seck to corn·
pete with the Studio Arena Theatre. Rather. we
want to create a lab for our students.··
"We tl)' to create the condition.., st ude nt~

C

MOM major: experience is the plus factor
BJ SUE WUETCHER

tions. Fr.tse and Fr.mklin say. Specialists in
operJtions management arc in great demand.
BA SllJDENTS at UB inter- especially since the efficient delivery ofhigk·
.
ested in manufacturin g and opquality goods and services has gained imporerations management (MOM)
tance in the global economy. !hey add.
can acquire theoretical knowlThemajor.!XO]Jiiooas it is often called. grew
OUI of the belief that few MBA Sludents entered
edge and practical experience. plus a paycheck. when they pursue 1he School of
the business world with pr.lCiical experience. says
Management's new MOM major.
Frase, adjunct associate professor of management science and systems. While l1li offered
Operations management includes anything
that is directly involved in the creation of a · many courses on MOM. it.ncverwasoffercdasa
major and Sludents wereJlll( required to work at a
product or service. say Donald Fmse and
Murray J. Franklin. faculty members in the
com,.IDy to receive a degree.
School of Management. In a fac10ry. operaBut a few Western New York companies.
such as the OUiokumpa American.Br.tss Co..
tions managCment might involve schedul ing
of workers or produc1 de li ve,ries. ln a bank-a
Westwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc .. and
Carborundu m Corp., showed interest in hiri ng
service operation- it might involve design ing
an operJtion in which tellers can process busistudents.
'"Thecompaniesarc interested in the project
ness more quickly and accurately. they say.
because they get a chance to get an advance
Both the physical production of goods and
look at potential employees." says Franklin.
the provision of services have been greatly
adjunct associate professor of management
affected by advances in communication and
science and systemS.
infonnation technologies. the advent of a truly
And students, especially during a rcce ~­
global economy and new approaches in areas
sion, are interested in anything that will add
such as inventory control and industrial relaNews Bureau StaH

M

another dimension to their resume. Fr.t.'(! note!&lt;!.
Students pursuing the rrwjor must take ... pe.
cific coun;cson MOM . studying ~uch topics as
total quality management. human resource...
management. ncxiblc systems and inventory
management In addition. they must complete
a semester-long. full -time co-op pmcticum
with a local company. The practicum is de·
signed to provide hilnds-on expcriencc-rcvolvingaround specific work assignmems. 1ypically
teamwork projects. These projects. which often will be on-going, may deal with a varie1y of
topics. such as ecological impact studies, inventory management or labor/union issues.
Students arc paid for the co.op and receive six
credit hours for the work.
The· co-op differs from the School of
Management's internship program, where students receive academic credit, but no pay, for
pan-time work.
Only a few business schools. soch as those
at Nonhwestem University, the Massac'huseus Institute of Technology and Boston Univer.;ity, have majors in manufacturing and
opemtions management, Franklin says.

will face:· Swiniuch adds.
Swiniuch says the audience for UB theater
and dance progrnms is potentially greater in
Amherst than in town and the new facilitie~
will likely prove a boon to recruitment. Because the move will be so arduous, she and
Casarella won't schedul e any theater productions this summer. Last fall' s production of
'The Loadout" was the final show in Harriman
Hall S!udio Theater. AI this point. il looks a,,
though there will be no department theater
productions in the new space in the fall of '93.
"We need to gel acclimaled 10 the space," says
Casarella. "Our students need to be trained in
the new equipment." The Zodiaque Dance
Compan y expects to perform this fall a1
Ka1harine Cornell Thcaler, Ellicou Complex.
Swiniuch says she eagerly awaits the arti!!.tic collaborations possible now that Theater
and Dance will be so close to other performing
arts and humanities departments. "So man)
interdisciplinary rhings that are possible in the
arts have been impossible until now. becau~
of our physical separation.
"Architecture students often co me 10
Harriman to skctchourdance students at work."
she says. "We hope there will be imilar imeractions with the An Department as well a. .
collaborJtions with our colleagues in the Mu'ic Depanmenl and in Media SIUdy." .

Job Vacancies
on Fie mCapen
A file of current statesupported job vacancies is
now maintained in the
Professional Staff Semite
Office, 543 Capen Hall, as
a ·result of suggestions from
members of the
Professional Staff. New
listings are distributed each
Thursday. The file will
generally be available from
B a. m.-~ p.m., but those
inquiring about job
vacancies are asked to·call
ahead to verily access to
the office at the time they
expect to be there. For
more infonnation, call
645-2003.

�-..u..t.-. - - . - ..

Sweet, Clark are speakers
for
., Women in Sports Day

__

Reporter Staff

T

HE lliEME for the celebration of
NationaiGirlsandWomcninSpons
Day at UB was "Breaking Barriers." But that title may need to be
amended slightl y. according to
Judith Swee~ NCAA president and director of
athletics at the University of California at San
Diego. " I would prefer to think of women •s
gn:aterpanicipation in athletics as gening over
barriers, and fi!lding sohuions."
Sweet spoke at Slee Hall Feb. 3 as part of
UB' s celebration of the founh an·
nuaJ national event.

She said that since the passage of
Title DUn 1973, which called for
gender equality in university athletic
programs. a pmcc:ss began, opening
up pathways to women in sports that is
ongoing to this day. "Athletics is no
longer viewed as an infringement on a
woman's femininity. A!ld how far
we' ve come in the last 20 years since
Title IX should be the initiative to push
us even further in the years to come.··
As the first woman to hold the post
of NCAA presiden~ Sweet said she
has learned a great deal about the roles
availableforwomeninathletics. "There
is much more work to be done in
treati ng our female athletes as equals
with our male athletes." she said. "The
reality is we need to e valuate what
we· re doing and reallOCate funds to
help equalize the funding for men's SWEET
and women's athletics and also be creative in
finding new funding.''
She noted that in the 20 yean; since Title IX
was passed. the NCAA now sponsor.; 38
women 's championshi ps ac ro ss all three

NCAA competition divisions. "A lot has happened in 20 years. Remember. it wasn't uiltil
1972 that women were even allowed to e nter
lhc Boston marathon."

But although gn:at advances in women's
athletics have been made over the last two

decades. there are hurdles yet to be overcome.
'11lere are still many campuses across the
counii)' that are not in compliance with Title
IX. But there is presently a gender equity task
force functioning within the NCAA. We hope
to provide more options and solutions to some
ofthe lingering problems and where appropri·
ate. advance legislation to NCAA governance:·
Ultimately, she said. solutions wi ll be found
to old problems plaguing women athletes.

"People still ask me why athletics are so impor·
tam for women. I tell them tha1 they're important for the same reasons that they are so
imponantto men."
On Feb. 4, the official day for the national
eelebra1ion, UB ho6ted 1992 Olympic bronze
medalist diver Mary Ellen Clark at a eelebra1ion
breakfast in Alumni Arena. Clark astonished the
diving world by medaling in the I~ platform competition wben the Olinese team was
expected to sweeptheevett. She has been breaking barriers since she began diving 23 years ago.
"We all bavebaniers we need to
deal with," she said. "But we becometougberandbetterpeoplewben
we address them."
Clark. who was also the U.S. national eharnpioro in the 10-meter pialform event in 1987 and 1992 and a
seven-time U.S. national team member, Sttessed that setting goals has always belped her focus her attention on
the ITlOOI ~aspects of her life.
"lt'simponant,asastudentathlete,that
you estllblish goals in both areas. A!ld
it's very imponaru to be able to focus
oro wluu you want for the future. It's a
matter of how to balance your life."
ne component of life that you
can't plan for is the fear associated with achieving your goals, she
said. "Fear sometimes gets in the
way. At that point, it' s very important to recognize it, address it. and
overcome it. You have to have the
abi lity to dig deep within yourself and meet
fear head on."
1bere werepolnt.li in herowncoUegialecan:er
(she has a B.A. from Penn State and an M.A. from
Ohio State), where she seriously questioned her
own abilities as an athlete. But she was able to
overcorre those obstacles. "I had to seU knives to
get through graduate school and make ends meet.
A!ld when I didn't make the Olympic Team in
1988, I decided to move to Florida in 1990."
By then. Sweet had been accepced into the
McDonald'sJobOppommity Program for American athleles. "At that point, I got on my feet
fmaneially."
Aller placing ninth inadivingmeet in Havana.
Cuba, less than a year before the 1992 Olympics.
Oark said "I almost backed out of diving. But I
looked myself in the mirror to ifl had it in rre.
I realized that I needed to take my weaknesses and
make them my strengths.··
The rest is history.

O

see

OBITUARY

Public Sqfety Ojficer James little dies at 61
Lee Griffin. UB director of public safety.
.a.n..A.uttle,
described Unte as "a good officer and all-around
61. a lieutenant in
niceguywhohadagoodsenseofhwnor."H~was
the Department of
weU-Iikedbynotonlythosewithwhomheworl&lt;ed.
Public Safety at
UB. died Satur- but by those who knew him in the community."
Unte was a member of Buffalo Musicians
day, Feb. 6, in
Association l..ocal92, the Ismailia Temple Shrine
MedinaMerrorial
Band, and a member of and bugler for the AmeriHospital.
can l.egion'sL.L. TdlmanPost900inAkron.He
-Uttle.whohad
was a part-time patrol offi= witli the Akron
been ill since [)e.
cember, planned . Pol~ Depanmen~ a ·past master of Gasp&lt;xt
Lodge 7'01 F &amp; AM, and a member of the
to retire from UB
in March. Last . W&lt;:&gt;IOottsville VoiWltfer FtreDepartmentand the
Intemational Police Association.
month. as he had done since 1970, he performed
Unte is survived by his wife, l;va; three sons.
'Tap;" at 'the annu;ll ceremony at Forest Lawn
James of Middleport. Scott of lockport. and
cemetery conuremoraling the birth of Millard
Steven, who is stationed with the U.S. Air Force
Fillmore and sponsored by UB.
in England; a daughter. Carole .Bernard of
A veteran of the Korean War, Uttle perO!eektowaga;
five grandchildren; his mother.
fanned with the Air Force Band. and in civilian
Enuna Unte; two brothers. Clarence of Athens.
life, with Ray Anthony and other well-known
Ala., and Richard oflempleton, Calif., and a
musicians, both locally and nationally.
sister, Juliane Howard of Vista, Calif.
HejoinedtheUBDepartmentofPublicSafety
Memorials may be made in Unte's name to
in 1970 and
protnOOOd to lieutenant in 1973.
A native of Akron.· N.Y. and a gradualt of Trinity l..utberan Chun:h, Wolcoasville. and to
the
Erie County Unit of the American Cancer
Corfu Centrnl High School. Uttle gJ:aduated from
Society.
the NYS Public Sali:ty Training Academy.

was

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WE OFFER A GREAT LINE OF NATURAL AND

ORGANIC FOODS , VITAMINS , HERBALS , AND
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TI..Deputmmt o!Muoic o! th. Uainnity •' Buffalo

W'I'I'H 'I'M.

FALO PHILHARM
ORCHESTRA
MAJ&lt;IM!ANO VAlDES. MUSIC DII!EcrOil

�_u. _ _ ..,_ ..

6

and Nikki Giovomi; by-A.IIallt:r, lr. W _ ,
'!be-.,- Hall. NonbCamJlUL Nooo&gt;-2 p.m. !ipol-.d by""'
Office olCoakraal and Spocial
E_,. and Lile Office ol Spocial
Propmo. CIIIMS-:3414 fO&lt; more

__
--

'

infOnlllllon.

__,_

c.- bll..--lloallenl«: A
P r o f - a n d . . _ hSheni Darrow, Ph.D..
project director. Cancer lofonnation Service. Ro&lt;wdl Parle Cancerlnstitull:. 252A Fatbu. Sooth
Campus. 12:30-1 :30 p.m.

~­

IIIIa&amp; SAS few V AXC........
3.15 Computing Center. North
Campus. I :30-4:30 p.m. For rea·
istration information call 6453540.

~­
lnlrndudloa 1o SUN. 204 Com·
puting Ccnta. North Campu&gt;. 2-

p.m. For n:gistratioo information call645-3540.

4

~~0

Some HlsloriGerapblcal Approocbes For Studylna Jewish
Communities In Cblna,

Jonathan Goldstein. professor or
East Asian History, Wesa Georgia
CoJJege, and research associate. J.
K. Failbank Center. Harvard
Univ. Jeanette Man.ii1 Room,
Capen Hall. North Campus. 3: I 5
p.m. Co-5pO&lt;LSOfl'd by the Holocaust Resouru Cente:r and the
Council on lntemationaJ Studies.

THURSDAY

11

INSTn\ITE FOR~
&amp;1\IDIU AHD TRAINING

SEMIHAR

CUnk:aJ Supervision ror PraclicJng Chemical Drpendency
Supervisors. Dr Nancy Smylh .

presemer Dacmcn College. Mai n
S1 . Amhcrs1 9 am ·-' .30 p.m
For more mfom m1ion call 6451&gt;1-1()
FETAL THERAPY COHFDIEHC£

Philip Glick, M.D. OhiGyn Con·

-

ference Room, Children 's Hosp•·
tal Noon.

LOCKWOOD UBRARY
B ISON Oemomtration. Main

Reference Desk. Lockwood Libmry. North Campus. Noon.

u-nca

c:ou.oQIMIM
Blalgd&gt;n Defonnallons and
Tannaka-Krdn Theory, ProL S.
D. Schack, UB Mathematics
Dept. I 03 l);efendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
MUSICLE~aoES

Aoomaly and Conlllclln the
Music of Bart6k and Webtm,
Robert Morris. Eastman School
of Music 211 Baird. North Cam pus. 4 p.m.

-

I'IWIMAC£UTICS IIUEAIICH

l lw Enhanor.mrn l of the Tissue
Dellvtry and R...,plor Binding
of' Melhylprednisolon&lt;ln Rats
by Uposomal FonnulatJon.
Elena Mishina. Ph.D.•
postdoctoral fellow. UB Dept. of
Pharmaceutics. 508 Cooke. Nonh
Campus. 4-5 p.m.
UUAIIRLM
Incident at Oglala (1992). d• ·
rectcd by Michael Apc.ed.
Woldman Theater. 112 Norton.

North Campus. 7 p.m. Co-sponsored by UUAB. Minority Affai rs SA and Nati\·e American
Peoples AllillllCC.

ANATOMICAL SCIENCES

SEMINAR
Non&amp; Ca2+·Calmod ulln-depen·

dent Protein Klnases: Ia and
lb, Anhur Edelman, Ph.D.. UB
Pharmacology and Therapeutics
Dept. 258 C f1S Addi1ion. South
Campos. 12:3Q p.m.

FRIDAY

12
-c-

-CONFDEHCE

Titcimer, conductor. 250 Baird.
North Campus. I p.m. For more
information contact Dr. Simons at
645-2964.

~-SPSS
for VMS. 315 Compoti_ng
Center. North Campus. I :30-4:3Q
p.rp. For registration information
calr645-35;10.

P&gt;ydJcsodal Aspects of-Short
Slabm: Early Cllnk:al and
EmugJ.ng
Ptrspec·
dv.., David Sandbers. I'll. I&gt;.

COLI.OCII••
S.IIWIUC and Pragmatic Aspeels of' Neptlon In Natural
_Language, Lucja lwanska. Artificial lnll:lligence Prognlm. GE
R&amp;D Center. 14 Knox. Nonh
Campos. 3:30p.m.

l'tfYSICS--

COLI.OCII•IM
A Uollled Descriplloo ol the

Cupn.. Su.,.._.tuelon:
Theory and Ezpulmonts, Dr.
SLUart Wolf, Naval Resean:h Lab.
Fronc:zal&lt;. Notth Compus.
3.:45 p.m.

~

COHCEJrJ
Klrl&lt; Brundage, percus.lools4
worb by Amui, Druckman. 8:lnk.
Cage and Xennkis. Slec Concert
Hall. North Campus. g p.m.
WM LATE MITE FilM
Blade Runner ( 1982). directed
by Ridley Scott. Woldman The-

ater. 112 Norton. North Campus.
II :30 p.m. Admission. $2.50. UB
Sludents: $3.50, non-students.

Brown 11 852-2020.
CONCEJI1'
40th Anniversary Celebration
of the UB Departmenl of' Mu·

sk, second in a series or perforColgat.t.
Main
Gym. Alumni
··
&amp;AaUIL\U.

Arena. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.

CONCEJI1'
40th Anniversary Ce&amp;tbratJon
of the UB Department of' Mu·
sic, works by UB composen and
UB gradwues. Slec Hall. Nonh

WEDNESDAY

16
1l

SATURDAY

R-

PUIIAnilc--IIOUNDS

--y

Kinch Auditorium, Otildren's

Hospital. 8 a.m.
GliAL

-MAR

Bloioclc Consld..,.Uoos for
Ptrlodonlal ~ntratlon, Ulf
M.E. Wikcsjo, D.D.S.. Ph.D ..
professor, director, Advanced
llducaliooal Program in
Periodontics, Lorna Linda Univ.
215 Fosler. Sooth Campos. Noon.

--~­
unum:~

F..obuda&amp;Raco
- - ...
~:~ ~·nd
()pportlmlli&lt;s, pandiJU include
Terry McMillan. Owles Johnson

Hall , Room B-1. Nonh Campos.
8:30a.m. For more information
contact Dr. Simons Ill 64S-2964.
Staie.
-Central ConnertiCut
·· aAaiiE11IALL
Main Gym. Alumni Arena Nonh
Campus. 6 p.m.
WMf1LM

Chamdeoo SU..I (1990), directed by Wendell B. Harris. Jr.
Woldman 11leate.r, 112 Norton.
. Nonh Campos. ?'p.m. and 9:30
p.m. Admission. $2.50, UB SIU·
dents; $3.50. non-students.
lmi'S aAaiiE11IALL
Ccnlnl Conn&lt;dlcut Sial&lt;.
Main Gym. Alumni Arena. North

Campus. 7:30p.m.

atD/8UIMOVUI STRIHQ
CIUAIIIST CYCU

The Voct&lt;r String Quartel slec
Conc:cr1 Hall. Nonh Campus. 8
p.m. Tickets: $8, 51&gt;. $4. For
more informatiOh call645-2921 .
WML.AntNm; . . .

Blade Runner (1982), di=ted
by Ridley ScoiL Woldman Theater, 11 2 Norton. North Campus.
II :30 p.m. Admil'ion, $2.50, UB
srudents; $3.50. non-students.

maJ'ICCS by wm::rn faculty and
!IUdenLS. Slec Hall. Nonb Campus.
8 p.m. Worts by Lukas Foos.
0\arlcs Mingus. Monon Feldman,
David Felder and olhers.

Campos. 8 p.m.

TUESDAY

Robert Provencio and others. Slec

The Pnparadoo or
Tomorrow's Conductors IV,
featuring Daniel and Marilyn
Barach, Alexander Technique.
teachers; Axelllleime:r and others. Slee HaJI, Room B-1. North
Campus. 8 am. For more information contacc Or. Simons at
645-2964:

_,..~

WMfUM

Chamdeoo Slre&lt;l (1990), di rected by Wendell B. Hanis. Jr.
Woldman Theater, 112 Non.on.
Nonh Campus. 7 p.m. and 9:30
p.m. Admission. $2.50. UB Sludcnts; $3.50. non-sllldents.

Tomorrow's Conductors IV.
Featuring Marguerite Brooks.
James Cox , Richard Kennell,

Computing Center. Nonh Cam·
pus. 1-4 p.m. r-or regisliUlion
infonnation caJI645-3540.

Murry Sidlin , conductor. AAtl

Otaiken. Syracuse Univ. 70
Acheson. Sooth Campus. 4 p.m.

MUSIC CONFDIEHCE
The Preparation of '

COMPUTING~

niz.er. Samuel Adler. composer:

Envlronmonlally Cooodous
An:hlleduft, Randolph Croxton.

founding principal, Ctoxlon Col·
laborolive, Ar&lt;hil&lt;CIS. Center for
Tomorrow. North Campus. 7:30
p.m. Tickets: SS. Dinner lObe
served BL 6:30 p.m. ($25). Fo&lt;
mort information contact Ointon

PEDIATIIIC CONRIIENCE

Graphs with PV-Wave. 204

The Preparatloo or
Tomorrow's Conductors IV,
featuriil&amp; Harriet: Simons. orga·

~ COLI.OCII••

Fraclals, Klnotk: Equatloo, the
Lognonnal Dislrtbulloo and
CuSilr Fonnatloo, Prof. Joseph

Helping Families of' Divorce.
Kenneth Condrell , I'll.D.. child
psychologiSI. Condrell Center
Cafetorium A. Mercy Hospital.
8:30a.m.

- I C LEClUIIIE
Demonstration for Musicians ln
the Aluandcr Technique, Linda
Babits, certified teachc:r in the
AJexande.rTechniqoe.; she is affiliated wilh the ManhatUUl
School of Music and the

Westminster Choir College.
Baird RecitaJ Hall. 250 Baird
North Campus. Noon.

~­
Using SPSS oo the mM Main·
frame. class continues Feb. 18.
315 Computing Center. Nonh
Campos. I :30-4:30 p.no. Call ·
64S-3S40 for registration information.
-lOLOIIYSDIINAR

Upda .. : Jlla&amp;nbols and Treatm&lt;nl or Onycbomyooois, Richard Seber, M .D.. professor, Dept.
ofDermalOiogy, Columbia Univ.
Swift Auditorium. BuffaJo Gcnerol Hospital. 3 p.m.

-

l'lfYSICa A H . D -

l n..rrac. and Local ln5tabllldes
Drlvto by Pressure In St.micon-

ducton. Prof B. Weinstein, UB

Pbysics Dept 219 Fronczak.
Nonh Campus. 3 :4~ p.m.

-.uiMSmVIIICW
~CTIILEcn.

Capen. North Campus. 4 p.m.
Spooson:d by the UB Poetics
Program.

.
. _ _ L.EC:t..~­
Jack Trorio, New York City
an:hil&lt;CI. aulho&lt; of /tfrican·
AmtriLwt A.rdUt«u: In

-

Cun-m.~

Pnoctie&lt;. 146 l);efendorf. Sooth
Campos. 5:30p.m.
.uctl~-

W bo Killed Malcolm X. 148

l);efendorf. Sooth Campus. 7
p.m. Spooson:d by the Block
Student Unioo. Cal1645-3029 for
more information.
OPUS: CLAUICS ..afAL

Echrloa Lee Tylor, peral!lllioo.
Westwood-Squibb AffitiMe AnisL
Allen Hall. South ~ 7 p.m.
Maryland
Sbore. Main
· · East
IIAIU1IIALL
Gym. Alumni An:na. North Cam·

17
-WEU.

_,.AR

PARIIIITAfJ'

Al ..madve Sptidng or the
Chicken Beta-Tropomyosin Pr-e
mRNA, Dr. &amp;!ward Brody,
chainnan and professor. UB
Dept. of Biological Sciences.
Hilleboe Auditorium. RPCI.
I 2:30p.m.

~-­
lnt&lt;nnedla!O UNIX. 202 Baldy.
Nonh Campus. 1-4 p.m. Call
64S-3S40 for registnttion information.
COMPV'IWGUstng SAS on the ffiM MaJn.
frame. 315 Computing Center.
North Campus. I :30-4:30 p.m.
Oass continues Feb. 19. Call
645-3S40 for registration information.
COGIIITIYI: tciENCE L.EC:t..Carol Krumbanst, Depc. or Psychology. Cornell Univ. 280 Parle.
Nonh Campus. 2-3::!0 p.m.
-YU:cn.£
Neoledonlcs In Ccolnll
Ontario, Gail McFall. Minisuy
of NIIIUnll Resources. Onlllrio.
422 FIOOClJ!k. North Campus.
3:30p.m.

LINIIE-

CIIDKALE--,
An ·Aoalysts oi'Two-S ..p Approacbes for Cancer 'Jbtrapy,

!..au= T. Baxter, Harvard
Medical School. 2ll6 Furnas.
Nonh Campu&gt;. 3:45 p.m.

~~4PWS
Wystan Curnow, New Zealand
poel, reads from his work. 420

pus. 7 p.m.
CL.USICS

ON-

Buffalo Pblllwmonlc Orcbes·
tn, Charles Peltz.. conductor.
works by llecthoven. Slr3uss and
Allen Sapp. Slee Hall. Nonh
Campus. 8 p.m. Tickets: $8. 51&gt;.
S3. Co-spon.&lt;OI&lt;d by the Office
or Conferences and Special

Events.

THURSDAY

1~
--_,___

_ . , . Al4PWS

unatAIIY-

Th&lt;EroddsmolF~
Atbdii ~. Rus­

sian poeL 4:!8 Cemens. Nonh
Campus. 12:30 p.m. Spooson:d
by the UB l'l&gt;etics Program.
lnlrndudloa 1o SUN. 204 Computing Center. North Campu&gt;. 13 p.m. Caii645-J540 for i&lt;giSUll·
lion infomwion.

COILOQI.IM
A Uaory Enoodloc Scbeme
'Ibol Allows Cooljuoctt.. Decodloc, Edith Spun. UB Depl. of
CompuLer Sciencec I~ Knox.
North Campus. 3:30-4:45 p.m.

--~~

Loci&lt; lllcdoaory EnlrWSiaiO o1 A&amp;ln, l'rGpolldon,
Soo~oace, Barry Smilh. Jobn
Corconn and olhen. 6&amp;4 Baldy.

NMh Campus. 4 p.m. Spooson:d

�by .... Dept. of P!Uioooplly.

A,..._ '9UNll••

IIA-'IICS
ol tho Curiouo
Jlc!oovlar ol F......Oulck, Pro(.
Malt llfted. 103 Diefendorf.
Soulh Campus. 4 p.m.

---

Worlta by 111x W&lt;llem New YOI1t
~Kumi Korf, Barbon Rowe.l'lrricia Bacoft. J.
Kalherine Bebout, Debonh
Haylo&lt; end Glem Snith, wm be
00 view lhrouah I'd&gt;. 16 in
Belhune Gallery. 2917 Main St ..
Buffalo. Gallery houn: Tuelday.
10 Lm.·Noonlnd 4-8 p.m.;
Wedneaday-Thunday.IOLm.·5
p.m.; Friday. Noon-5 p.m.

- -·
O rplllc Nttnw YL NJtrt,_
What 11 tho our....nc:eT John
o...... Ph.D .• pooldoc1onl fel ·
low. UB Dept. of Pharmaceutics.
~Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4.5
p.m.

-

"Anist·Continuina !he Dream,"

H ow tho Modlo Dlsployo Arri·
can A .-~can&amp;. W Knox. Nonh
Campus. 6:)().8:30 p.m. Spon.
sorcd by !he School of Social
Work. Call645·3381 for""""

an exhibit of drawings. paintings.
photoaraphy. fiber an lnd tta~lpo

informatic:in.

semcd include Valeria Cny.
Wilhelmina Gc&gt;tlmy, Mary

I&amp;Aalta1011T-

_..,.._,_

--~
A Doy lo Odobor (1991), de:·

picts the re5CUe of 7,OX) Jews
from World War II Denmark.
talk by L.eif Oonde. Danish consul general. New York City.
Woldman Theatef, Nonon Nonh

Campus. 7-10 p.m. For more
information contact Dr. Doris

Sorensen at 632-2169 or Dr.
Marl&lt; Ash will at 645-2292.
MEN'SIIASUTUU.
UnJverslly of M..,.chusetts.
Main Gym, Alumni Arena. North

Campus. 7:30p.m.

--

MFC students, all enrollees either
mART 231-Painting for Non-

Majors or in evening lll'thitcccure

classes-are exhibiting Lhc1r

works ttu"ough Feb. 25 in
Drewdora Gallery. 144 Parker
Hall, South Campus. Panicipants
1nclude Marie Aroro. Sandr.1

Dmunzio. Gregory Fiore.
lkmadeue Franklin. Ruche!
Houston. Pei 2j (fiffany) Huang,
Thw Huynh , Bonnie Koch.
Dorota Kolocl.ziejczyk. Harry
Lio.d. Cha-Eve Maisonneu\'e,

Beatrice Marshall. Katie Nevin .
Nancy PappaJ, Rajesh Rao. Ro..
chelle Renford, John Swaine. Hu1
Mei Tsai, Melanie Voboril, Andy
llen§On , Mary Butler. Bill Cls1.ak.
Vince Nicholas and Diane
Rosscau. Hours: Monday lhrough
Thursday. ). g p.m .• Friday. 1-5
p.m
PHOTOGitAPIIY .ON VIEW

Painted photogn1phs by Jodie
Childs. M.F.A. candidate in pho·
tography in the UB Department
of An. are on 'liew through
March l in Lhe Panel Gallery of
Lockwood Memorial Libmry.
Nonh Campus.

..rr end IIUlleouend meml&gt;en

of !he loc:ol 0011l111l11lity. For more
infomwion. p1eue eontot:t Dr.
llmlJy Till, [)eport.- of Mod·

--Place-·.
---

IIUCIIta1011T~

wre, is on view through Feb. 21
in Room 2.50, Scodent Unloo,
Nonh Campus. Artists~

Writing Ploce. Cootat:t Arlene

Suiii...,I&lt;Odina/writinaeoordi·

Rowell , Diana JICkson, William

Cooper. David Gordon, Dr. Roben Pal met and James Pappu.
Sponsored by Delta Sigma Jbeto
Sorority Inc.• Buffalo Alumnae

Chapter, and !he UB Cr&lt;ative
Craft Center. Hours: 10 a.m.-5
p.m. and 7- 10 p.m., Morday·
Friday; SaturtJay.Sunday. Noon
toSp.m.
--.uotfY -..uiY
'The Bluesmen," photogn~phs by
Ed Sobala documenting 20 years
ofbluesmcn and jazzmen at wort
and play. will be on .view through
March I4 at the WBFO studios in
Allen Hall, Soulh Campus. Call
829-2880 for mort: information.

NOT I CES

Th1Dr _..for creditMihe Mlllh
P1oce. Contact Todd llalu:r, Mlllh
112 Talbert.
Nonh Campus (645-2394).
O Jnentliltinp of jobs in busi·
.... ond industry, 80vemmenl.

heallh. - " "
ooo-prolit
organizaions.
areand
availabk:
in lhe
otru of car- Plannin&amp;lnd
~ 15 Capen Hall , Nonh
Campus. Cal164S..2231 formon:

-information.

--ADVOCATE
Women and men interested in

volunteering for Crisis Services'
Ad 'locale Program for Victinu of
SexuAl Assault. are invited lO call
834-3131 and ask for !he Advocate Progmn. Volunteers r&lt;Spond
24 hours a day to assist victims of
111p&lt; and sexual abwe in hospital
emergency rooms and in the
coun.s. Advocates provide ongo.
ing support lO victims and their
families and friends. Applicants
who are selecu:d for !he progrun
should be 18 or older and have
their own transpOrtation.

-SEIIVICIE

KIIEDUUD

A memoriaJ service for Professor

who

1111 Cohen.
diod Dec. 2.
1992, will be held on Thur&gt;day.
Feb. 18 at 2 p.m. in the Dean's

Conference Room. 280 Park Hall,
Nonh Campus. A member of the
Psychology Depanmcnt from
1~52 to 1987 when he retired,
Professor Cohen was Provost of
the: Faculty of SociaJ Sciences
from 1968-1971. Anyone interested in speaking at the service
should comact Prof. Murray
Levine. Depanment of Psychol·

RUUWIogy. 645·3660.

Of'fEIIED

The: World Languages Institute is
sponsoring a nine-week. non·
credit "Introductory Language
and Culture Program." Feb. 17April 28. 11 is designed for those
who wish to learn about Russian
cultun:- and society and pick up
some conversational Russian in
the process. The class will meet
Wednesdays from 5 to 6:30p.m.
on Lhe North Campus. Instructor
is Valentina Sanders. Program
fee: S 100. Open to·UB faculty.

JOBS
FACUI.TY

.

Asslstanl Ubrarian-Poelry/Rnre

Books Collection. University
Librtlries. Posting NF-3001. Asslstanthuoodol&lt; Prof....,...
Medicine, Posting JF-3002. As-sistant Prof....,..·PatholOSY,
Posting NF-3003. Associate~
fessor·Periodontology. Posting
NF-3004. Asslslant Prof_,.-.
Psychiatry, Posting rF-3005.
AsststanVAssodate Prof"essor
(depending oo quaU!Icatlons)·
Gynecology-Obstetrics, Posting
NF·3006. Asslslant/Assoclate
Pror....,...()phlhllmoiOSY. Posting NF-3007. Asolstanli.u.od·
attJFuJJ Professor (depending
oo quaJJOcatloos~Surgery . Post·

inaN3008. 3009. 3010. AssistanVA.ssodateiFuU Professor
(depoodlng on quaJJlk:atlons)·
Nursing. Posting NF-3011 (four

-

positions avail:~ble).

R esearth Technician ll-Anatomical Sciences. Posting #fR9:W79. Pootdoctonol Associate/
Research Scientists (two posi-

(two pooltlons available; run
and part·Umo)-Psycltiauy. f'osl .
ing WR-93009. Resean:b Tedml·

. PercuMionlat Kirk Brundage
to perform , _ . before tour

. abroad

Percussionisl Kirk llturlclage. a 1988
music graduale o1 UB. will present a free
concen a!S p.m on Friday. Feb. 12, in Slee
Concan Hall as a prelude to his first solo lour
of Europe. The program. one of two lobe
performed al European venues. will feature
Serge Arcuri's Chronaxie(1984). a piece for percussiOn and
tape, and three compositioos for percussion: Jacques Bank's
.Frieze(1976). John Cage's Etude Boreales Ill (19~8) and
lannis Xenakis' psappha .(1976). Brundage also will perform
Jacob Diuckman's 1984 c&lt;JOl)OSitior11or marimba. Reflec- .
•tions on the Nature of Water.
·
·
FIVe years ago. Brundage was a UB senior studying under
mas1er percussionist Jan Williams. He had JUSt won a r8Ie
Royal
undefgradua1e Fulbright Fellowship 1o study at
Danish Conservatory. and Williams pronounced htm "the best
percussion studenl I've fNflf had.· Since graduallng from UB.
Brundage has lived up to his mentor's opinion. garnering
praise from critics here and abroad for the exuberance. proficiency. charm, vinuosity and mas1ery of his performances.
He has given recilals and mas1er classes on.American .
percussion mustc i n front of a number of Scand1navtan audt·
ences. received a Mas1er of Rne Ans Degree.lrom lha California Institute of lhe Ans and won !he 1991 International
Music Compelition of the German Radio, Munich.

lhe

dan li/ID (depending on uperimcel·Aneslht:siology, Posting
NR·93010. Resear&lt;lt Tedmldan
!IIlii (depondJng oo upori·
mee)-Medicine. Posting MR·
93011 . S.C:..tary II .chemistry.
l!osting NR-93013.
P'IIOIIUIIONU..

F1dlltles Engjn«r·Meebanlcal
(SL-5)-D&lt;.ign and Construction,
Posting fP-2050. Coordinator,
Modlo Equipment Services
(SW)-ACidc:mic Services, Com·
puting and Information TC:chnolOSY· Postina NP·W55. Asisllnt
Dlrodor (SIA)-Facilitics and
Systems Main1.efW'lci::. Uni~ity
Facilities. Posting fP-3003. J&gt;ro.
cnunmeriAnllyst (SL-3)-Com·
pulins and lnfomwion Tedtnol·
OSY· Postins fP.J005. Arol
Director (SJ.,.J)-Residentiil Life.
Pootina tP-3004. Assodo~&lt; Dean
(MP.J)-Nursing. Posting MP3006.

-..CGW"SIIiift

~

Keyboard Spedlllst (SG-06,
tmtponry pending r&lt;dosrilllca·
t1oa o1Unt)-Geo10SY. Line

1123888.

l
!lrr

Tulor writinl for credit • !he

tions anUable)-Oral Biology.
Postins NR·93006. Clerlt II·
Sponsored Prognt)ns Payroll,
Posting.NR·93008. S.C:..tary II

.

",,

cm._endu-.....
645-2191. To ,...;-. pleaoe
eontot:t the World._
lllllitute. 645-2292.

llllor, M
110 Talbert
(64:1-2394).
IIAlll
_
_
_

EX HIBIT S
MR:StUDIJfiSTO-..uiY

·7

-.u.---.-..

1he

anlhel

ctroricleB 1he
~
WottdWerll

reacue a 95 pacen1 a
Dermark's Jaws by 1heir
Christian &lt;XU11rymon, wl
receille i1s Weslem New
YOI1&lt; pterTiera oo Tlulr
day, Feb. 18, in Wolctren
~. The IMlft is free
a c~age an:1 open 1o 1he

I

I

1'1111

.J AdOIIIICell Ftr~lures a{ P11geMIIluT for Wm.t.._
.J P11geMIIluT trw Power USDS trw Windows
.J Using AllliPro for Will4ow•
.J M111111gbtg ~ with TllblesiiSing Plll'tuiDx
.J AdOIIIICell FtJJtures af Plll'tuiDx
.J MAtlllging ~ using FoxBASE+ (MAC)
.J Bllsic Drllllling in Freeh•tul (MAC )
.J Crtt~ting Omrpla lJocllmerJU in Frmuuul
.J Working wilh Cdor in Fneh iUUl
·
Call 645-3560 for workshop tldtedule
and registration information.

p001Ic.

The fWn .... be pr&amp;settedflool7-10p.m.,
~ wi1h a 1a1&lt; by Leif

Dorode, Dlmh OClrlOU

general. Dorode has
- a s a ccnmercial
atta::h6 an:! lr8de olfioor
in Atgertina an:! Malay9a.
OClrlOU general in Qmda
an:! Hong Koog, an:! kit
six~~lhe

Denish Mnslry a Foreign
Atlairs.
The fWn is by Clac:er·
~ Denish producer
Jus1 Belzer ("Babette's
Feast") an:! lila'S D. B.
Sweeney, Daniel Benzsli,
TOYBh FelclshJh and Kelly
Woll.
tt relates lha hatrowing
1ale of the plol by Danish
resistance fighters to
spiril 7,0CXJ Jews ou1 or
!he counlry oo lha eve of
their planned roundup
by lha German occupation army. The rescue
was aided by nearly lha
entire Danish population.
Neighbors sheltt1fed
neighbors, helping them
escape in fishing boats
lo neutral Sweden.
Despite their extraordi·
nary behavior, Betzer
says lha Danes involved
did not consider !heir
acts heroic. "They believed they were jus1
doing wha11hey had to
do.· Betzer points oul
that prior 10 lha war.
Denmatlt was excepJion..
alty absen1 of antiSemitism. "I donl think
lha Danes were even
aware whether their
neighbors were Jews or
no1 Jews.· she says .
She noles lhallha
Danes were aided by lha
fact 1hai lha Gennan
occupalion of Demlar1&lt;
was a weak one COtT&gt;pared to lha occupalion
of Rance. Holland and
other countries. The .
ornal1ness of Denmark
also promoted a seose
of cullural cohesion. To
eve&lt;yone in lha cou~Jry .
lha Jews were sin"4liY
fellow Danes.
.
The program is sponsored by lha UB Wond
Languages Institute. nis
co-sponsored by the
UniYer.!ily Union Activi·
lies Board, lhe HoJo.
caust Ae9ource Cerller
of lha Jewish Cenler a
Greater Buffalo, Scand~
navian Wanen's C1lb,
Hillel Foundation and UB
Jewish Student Union.

a

___

...,.
-

Bt.noaU Sl8lf

•

Macintosh Ilsi
$1,779
5MB RAM • 160MB IUrd Drive • NEW
14" Color M onitor • Extended Keyboard

1.09 UB Common• • N o rth Camp us • 645-3554

~--··
·~---------·-

Convenience
Quality
Service
ariety

�8

-..u.s.a--.-..

Fin~n

s

UB liqukl breathing technique could help preemies
II)' LOIS IIAIIO

ment readilyavailablein any hospital.ltatso is
ltinder to damaged lungs than conventional
ventilation because it is effective at lower
pressure and may allow the use of lower oxygen concentrations
Underdevelopedlungsofprernalllreinfants,
as well as adult lungs damaged by disease or
trauma, do not allow enough oxygen to enter
the bloodstJeam through the alveoli to sustain
the body. The standard procedure for overcoming this problem is to use a respirator to
increase the air pressure and oxygen coocentration inside the lung, forcing more oxygen
into the bloodstream

News Bureau StaN

B

REATiliNG UQUID, for most

people, is a conuadiction in tenns.
The seemingly impossible may
eventually become commonplace
in health care, however, due to a
new, si mplified technique forliquid breathing
discovered by a team of researchers at UB. The
breakthroughcouldsignificantlyimpmvetreatment of premature infants. children and adults
with lung diseases. It also could help cut this
country's annual $5 billion price tag for treating adult rcspi.ratory distress syndrome.
Bradley P. Fuhrman, professor of pediatrics and the team 's chief investigator, has
pioneered an inexpensive way to enable the
body to "breathe" perfluorocamon-a colorless. odorless, chemically incn liqu id that contains no water. but possesses a strong affinity
for oxygen. The liquid is introduced into the
lungs through the tr:lchea.
The team, working at Children's Hospital

of Buffalo. where Fuhrman is chief of critical
care. expt.~ts to begin human testing of the
technique- perfluorocarbon-associated gas
exchange. or PAGE- in the next few months.
Filling the lungs with liquid perfluorocamon
seems like science fiction . But scientists have
known for 30 years that humans can breathe

the oxygen in perfluorocarbon as surely as that
in air. Fuhnnan said.
Rece nr research wirb animals. including
Fuhm1an ·sown work. has indicated that liquid
ventilation shows great promise for treating
premarurc babies with hyaline membrane dis·
ease and other parients wirh aduh respinuory
distress syndrome. a condition brought on by a
wide variety ofcircurmtances. including pneu·
monia, smoke inhalation. near-drowning.
trnuma. hemorrhage. infection and drug over·
dose.

H

owever. high concentrations of oxy·

gen are toxic to the lung and the pressure
necessary to inflate damaged lungs can tear

Bradley P. Fuhnn., Is chief In~ of liquid IIINtl*tC Rudy.

Widespread testing of liquid breathing in
humans has been impossible in the past,
Fuhrman said. because a suitable, high-purity,
medicinal-grade of perfluorocart&gt;on did not
exist, and because canying out the procedure
required special experimental equipment.
Fuhnnan, who has been worldng with liquid breathing since 1986, discovered it could
be accomplished successfully without special
equipment during a I990 experiment.
he breakthrough could have a
dramatic effect on health care costs. in
addition to improving patient care. Treating
people with adult respiratorydistresssyndrome
alone-nearly 100,000 patients a year-&lt;:urrently costs the United States $5 billion annually, according to Fuhrman.
"If this technique really works,'' he said,
'1he financial benefits will be substantial."

T

tnstandardliquidventila1ion,pcriluorocatbon
iscycledintoandoutofthe Jungsusingaspecially
designed liquid ventilator, which oxygenateS the
liquid and purges it of carbon dioxide, Fuhrman
said The procedure is cumbersome, expensive
and inefficient.
When his liquid ventilator broke down in
the midst ofresearch involving piglets, Fuhrman
decided to try to hook up an animal with a
perfluorocamon-filled lung to a standard respirator. He expected the piglet to tum blue
from Jack of oxygen. But it remained pink, and
its lungs continued to function normally.
"When I saw it worked." Fuhrman said, "I
was exhilarated."
In PAGE. the perfluorocarbon remains in
the lung while the respirator delivers breaths of
oxygen. The new ~hnique is significantly
Jess expensive than previously accepted methods of liquid ventilation since it uses equip--

Research study says drug interactions may pose
risk of severe complications for elderly patients
BJ EU.EN GOUIIIAUM

factors may come into play.
He noted that in pre-marketing trials in nonnaJ
LDERLY PATIENTS who take two
volunteers. ciprofloxacin, which was approved in
medications that are commonly pre·
1989. was shown to inhibit the metabolism of
· .
scribed together may be risking seri.- theophylline when both wereadministered.lt was
ous complications. some of them also known that if the theophylline levels in the
life·threatening. according to a study by a UB -blood got too high. side effects. such as seizures.
researcher.
could .result ''It is a well-recognized phenomThe sl udy, recently published in Archi•·e.&lt;
enon that sick patients don't alwltys metabolize
in lntt&gt;ma/ Medicint, investigated repons to
medications to the same extent as normal volun·
the Food and Drug Administration of adverse
teers... Grasela noted.
events in 48 elderly patients who were taking
Sick, elderly patients given ciprofloxacin
ciprofloxacin, an antibiotic for lower respira·
tory dise3S!'s, ahd theophylline. used to treat
don~
pulmonary disease. The adverse events ranged
from confusion and nausea to seizures and
even. in three cases. death.
According to the data. 17 patients who had
been taking thoophyllineexperienced seizures
followi ng the initiation of quinolone tperapy.
Ciprofloxacin is in the family of antibiotics
known as quinolones, other members of which
-11WIDEIIS IL llltMElA, JR.
have been shown to haVe similar effects when
administ~red with theophylline.
alorig with theophylline experienced an in' The study also found a much higher concrease in theirtheophyUineotJOCentralions, rangcentration oftheophylline in the patients' blooding from 32% to 308%.
.
streams than was documented in pre-marketing
Healthy volunteers in pre-marketing trials,
trials in healthy volunteers.
"The data suggest that we spend a lot of on the other hand, experienced theophyUine
concentration increases of 10.70%when.varitime and effort studying drug-drug interacous quinolone antibiotics were administered.
tions in .he wrong populations," said Thaddeus
Grasela pointed out that since the symptoms
H. Grasela, Jr., associate professor of pharin the elderly OCCUlTed within two tothreedaysof
macy at the university and author of the study.
the initiation of treatment with theophylline, the
Grasela explained that drug interactions usually are studied in healthy volunteers, not in . drug-drug interactions in this instance could be
cltaracteriml
as ''fairly dramatic."
more fragile populations, sueh as the sick and
He cautioned, however, that because of the
elderly, where various physical and chemical
News Bureau Staff

E

"Sick patients
always
metabolize medications to
the same extent as normal
volunteers. "

nature of the FDA's spontaneous reporting
system. where doctors. nurses and phannacists
voluntarily report adverse events. imponant
clinical infonnation may have been omitted.
At the same time. he said, it is difficult to
detennine the true magnitude of the problem.
"Although the data is suggestive of a problem.
at the present time it is not clear who are the
patients at greatest risk of e~tperiencing severe
adverse events from the combination of these
drug ," cautioned Grasela, who also directs
UB' s Center for Phannacoepidemiology.
..At the very minimum, it calls for very
careful co-administration of ciprofloxacin and
theophylline," he said. "Once cipmfloxacin is
added, it might be prudent to reduce the dose of
theophylline and to measure theophyllineconcentrntions.··

G

rnsela was quick to point out that bec_ause
of these adverse events. it is extremely
important that drugs continue to be studied
even after they receive approval for marketing.
"'The problem is that no mauer how much
time and ~ney you spend on studying a drug
before it' s marketed, you have to expect surprisesafterit'smarketed,"hesaid. ''Therefore,
it's very im,ponant that there is a mechanism in
place to study a drug's safety after it is marketed."
In connection with the School of Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences at UB, Grasela directs the Drug Surveillance Network, a nationwide network ofclinical pharmacists organized
to undertake fonnal studies of adverse ev~nts
resulting from drugs given to patients in the
hospi)al setting.

lung tissue, causing pennanent damage.
Experiments with animals have shown that
damaged lungs prefilled with perfluorocarbon
inflate with less pressure than those filled with
air, and that oxygen passes through the alveoli
intothebloodstreammoreeffectively.Fuhrman
said.

While waiting for approval to start clinical
trials. which may begin with prernanue infants
suffering from hyaline membrane disease, the
research team is applying the technique to
models of human disease
Conine Leach is studying PAGE's effectiveness in treating hyaline membrane disease
using premature Jambs. Michelle Papo is using
piglets to si mulate its effectiveness in treating
adult respiratory distress syndrome. Lynn
Hernan is studying the physiology of the oxygen exchange in piglets during the procedure.
David Steinhom and Bruce Holm are investigating what tr:lnSpires in the lung at the cellular
level.
The research is supported by a $250,000
grant from Alliance Phannaceutical Corp.

Clinical trials set
for Miniguard
Tile ...._..., at Buffalo is one
of 12 sites that will conduct national
clinical trials of a new product de..
signed to help women with urinary
incontinence.
Parrici3 A- Bums, associate professor in the School of Nursing, will be
JXincjpalinvestigatoroftheBuffalottial.
More than 300 women will be reauited nationally. About SO women
are expected to panicipate localfy.
The device, called FreeStyle
Miniguard, is a singic&lt;lsc, dispooable
product intended to provide a~
barrier to preWJll involuntal)' laos of
urine. Thisl'haseffitriat, wbic:bbepn in
early January, is the Jag step leading.to
approval of the product by tbe fecbal
Food !lod Drug Admini&lt;ualion.
Urinary incontinence is a c:ooumn
heal!b pOOJem, affecting an estimallld ·15 pertent of women between tbe llgleS
of 16 and 25, and 30jlel'ced 1ifwomen
beiween 3S and65. T~ inconlioence can be caused by urinary lllld
infeclioo, vaginll infeclion, constipMioo
and dfeciS of medicalion. c..:s of
kq-tenn 1ncortlint:nce indllde watlc
bladder, watlciiUICiesboldiagtbeblld,.
der in place, bonnonol intbollace, 1101&gt;mloP:&lt;IilaldeiSIIId iamabilily.
WCIDII!IIwbc.ext ienenildOflllld.
erae-~caused

by~allllhinlor~
are~inboqCOIIIidtledfortbe

tria!"!"i~ 1~191.

�_

......... _,..,_,..

Prof says no parent should
use physical punishment
ay-.rWATEMIOUSE

slightly impertinent questions with ease-he's
been asked them before. Yes. he did endure the
LORIDA. 1970: James Ingraham occasiooalslapwhenhewasaboy.andfeelsnooe
and Roosevelt Andrews. both stu- the worse for it; and yes. his own three children
denL' at Drew Junior.High School, grewupwilhouteilherparent...ortingtosomoch
were hauled from their rooms by as a cuff.
their principal. turned over a table,
""They grew up unlOUChcd and unfazcd. My
and beaten with a wooden paddle. 20 inches
daughter was hit once, or once lha1 I know about.
long and four inches thick. This was not unin school, and funnily enough I think she wa.
usual at Drew; nor was it unusual for teachers afraid to tell me about it I think it was justa mild
10 usc the paddle without first consulting the
swat on the behind, but it was probably unwarprincipal. as they
ranlcd, and it's a good
weresupposcdto: nor
thing I didn '1 know
were the blows conabout it at the time."
lined to the regulall&lt;cause there are
tion number. five .
obvious problems with
Blow~ which caught
studyingchildrenlhemAndrews on the arm
sclves ("Ideally, we'd
l~ft him unable tO~ it
pul six children in ooe
for a week: Ingraham
room and spank them.
...uffcn:d M!Ch severe
and then put six other
dottingofthchlood he
children in another
h&lt;Kito be under rnr...~i ­
room and n01 spank
ral ... urvcillance for
them ... but we can "t
'l'Vt!rJI day:-..
dolhai'").Grazianoand
After an unsuchisCenterhavefocuscd
L'l'''ful suit again!-!
on adults, asking them
till' -.cl10ol in F-lorida,
10 recall how they were
!hi.' tWO boy~ petipunished during childUnncd the Supreme
hood. Subjects of the
Coun. citing a vio lastudy have varied from
uun of the Eighth
college students here at
Amendment "cruel
UB to contemporaries
and unu!-.ual punishinlndia.wh&lt;...-ethefindment'' clause.To their
ings were a1most iden'urpri~c. th e Coun
tical. to Sri Lanka.
wherclhcysay""Achild
ruled thai claU:se wiD&gt;
wnth:n only to prowho is not beaten into
h.' l"l felon~ from
shape is like a gr•''Y
which is OOl stirred ...
phy,1cal abu~. and
"The American
...-nuld nnt be extended
study shows that vinuto ,afcguard M:hoo lally all parenl&lt; hit their
duldrrn. On the conchildren. and that altrar}. the Supreme
rllOSl all children have
Coun held that ·111e
at one Lime or another
prrvah.:m rule in Lhi~
been hit by an adul~""
rountry today privisays GrJZiano. Of 679
kgl':-. :-ouch force a.., a
fn.&gt;shmen he and the
tl'&lt;u:her ur administm·ANTHONY GRAZWIO
Center interviewed at
ltlrr~tsonablybe lieve!­
UB. for example. 92%
to b.: nct:essary:·
recalled receiving
·nu"Cc state:-.. led
phy&gt;ical
punishmeru:
the
types of punishment
h} New Jersey, had already pa:-.sed l..:gislatitm
variccl from- and thi!'t h the continuum which
prohibi ting corporal puni~hment in school:-.;
Gr.:aiano insi!-.l"'- is dangerou...,-sla~ lc-J.ving no
ulthough the Court could :-.cc ··notrend toward&lt;.;
mark to slap:-. leaving brui!£....,. and. for 57%.
ll"'- elimination." th:U figure now "'-land:-. at 20.
OCating:-. \vithsuchob~a'ibelts. wuodcnspoon..._,
rulers. sticks. t."OO.t hanger.... telephone receivers
LIT. HOLDS Anthony Gr.,;.iano. a UB
:Uld. in one instance. &lt;ibrick.
professor of psychology who c&lt;Kiin..'cb the
However. moM of those interviewed said
RL"SCarCh CemerforChildren and Youth. history
they now feel no re-.cntmcnt, mo:-.1 n.'Callcd
has left behind ad.angcmusanachmnbm: th1• /all'
feeling only modcnttc pain, most said they
dt)(•.,·nof t'.l1end to tht• lumw. Gmziano. who ha'
thought the spankings were helpful. most afint..:rvicwcd 1.500 people over the yean. in the
finncd the right of parents to spank their chil l.:ouoc of an ongoing study of corpor..1l punishdren. and most intended to spank their own
ment, sincerely OCiievcs that no p.11'Cnt should
chi ldren when they got out of line .
.administerany fonnof physical rehuke. no m..·mcr
Most felt that teachcn., however. diU not have
how slight. to &lt;m offspring.
the right to resort 10 physical measures. a right
""Children who are regularly abused end up
strongly upheld by similar imervicwccs in India.
more violent and aggress:ivc and less sensitive to
Graziano says that. in the majority of mild
the distress ofothers,'' says Graziano. who clai ms
instanceS. he has no sclen tificevldencc to suggest
tlmthe boundary between amp on the knuckles
that amp to the knuckles is hannful; his point is
and a severe beating is cajily obscured. ""If a
lha1 it is archaic, and presupposes a tolerance for
clas,mateis hun.they(children) ignore it But still
abuse in gencml. .
people accept and suppon physical punishn"nl
· ""Historically, only children are still beaten
of children ·and still children have no legal remursc: In f:.a_ ·legally. it's unclear where 3CC!'pl· ·with the full suppon of society."
Graziano feels that where physical force
able punishment ends and abuse begins. A child
overlaps with an environment of nourishment
has to be pretty severely battered around before
and suppon. the child is unlikely to be affected
anyooe will do anything."
in a lasting way; where eithCr the mildest blow
Graziano argues that society's jocular tolerimersccts with apathy. however. severe damanceofa slap on the behind is not merely outdated.
age
can occur. He adds that Verbal abuse can
but that it amounts to the toler.mcc. even the
be similarly dangerous: "There's a message:
suppon, of physical violence. ""Of course. !here
You arc nogooc.J..you are not worthy. lsthat an
is a tremendous runge. from a don "t-&lt;Jo.that slap
assault. is it abuse? Yes. I think so:·
to beating a child or even murder. but my belief is
The Cef)ter was also recently awanied a
that there is a single continuum of what amounts
to an attack by an ftdultonachild. no matter how Guggenheim grant to pursue its ·studies of
American
families. and plans to make similar
mi ld lha1 attack may be.
.
studies of one-child families in China.
Graziano. a falheroflhree. fields twoobv•ous.
Reporter Staff

F

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"Legally, it's unclear
where acceptable
punishment ends and
abuse begins. "

I

Everyone Needs a PAAL!

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Remanufact:pring your Toner
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FREE PICK-UP &amp; DEUVERY
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FAST, OUAUTY SERVICE -1110'1. Satisfaction Guarantud
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823 Englewood Avenue, Town o!Tonawanda, NY FAX 838-6995

FOUR PLAYS IN REPERTORY BY SYDNEY BERNARD SMITH

TI1e Emerald Oil Con1p,u1~·
Houseparty at Baldtiggera
TI1e MaGUl'L~pie Tti,ulgle

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FEBRU ARY 4 - F EBRUARY 28. 1993

Tickets available
at the BET Sox Offl€e
(716) 855-222
or through
_Central Jicket Office
(716) 856-2310
$1 2.00 q.EN E: R A L

�IHIIRIII.... - ...

--..u...- The Reporrer weloomes cctmlefltary on &lt;SSUeS
ollxoad interBS/ to the unillersity convnuruty
MateriBI may be edtled lor style and length.

ay ..... a. ALTL\CII

Finally,
a Solution
to the
Joumals
Crisis

OR A DECADE or more, vociferous arguments have raged about
what has become known as til!'
'1ournals crisis." The facts are
clear. Academic librnries have
dra•tically cut back on journal subscriptions
and the numben; of journals in library collections have dropped. Journal publishers.
especially the large priva(e-sector multinationals, have raised subscription prices much
in excess of .the r•.ue of inflaLion.
The n~r of scholarly journals has increased as well-estimates range between
60.&lt;XXJ and
IOO.&lt;XXJ journals
worldwide. Professor.;. seeking
more outlets for
their work and
responding to
increasing spedalil..ation. have
encouraged the
establishment of
more journals and
ALTBACH
lhc cx~ion of
existing ones.
Publisher.. have been only too happy to oblige
&gt;~n&lt;:e the large publisher.. benefit from the
additional revenue~ that new or expanded
· journal~ gener.uc.
The consequence.' of what ha.!t been
called the ··journals crisis'' is seriously dam·

F

aging ~ly communicati on. the abijity

of the libralies t~l!._e needs of the '
academic community and.1TKhe long run.
the publishers thcmsclv ~ .
We an: in a downward spir.tl. While the
library cnmmumty ha' blamed the crisis on
lhe publi!-.hers. the fact is lhul libmry financmJ aJlocalion!&lt;l in 1he United Simes for

books and journals have drastically declined
m rcccn1 yean.. renecling tilt! fiM::al difficulue-. of the umvcrsitie~ a~ well 3$ institulional

out that Lhe subscriber base of many journals
has declined. All of these factors. they claim,
account for increased prices.
There is. however. con iderable
countervai ling·evidence. Prices for journals
in 1he biomedical area have risen much more
mpidly than for journals in the humaniti.::s
and social sciences. indicating that. despite
modestly higher costs for such journals.
there is an unnatural pattern of pricing. 1be
university presses have managed to publish
journals !&lt;!Uccessfully m much lower prices
than the large multinationals. So have many
scholarly societies. And some private sector
publishers have kept Lhcir s ub~ription mtes
much lower than the multinationals.

budgetary prioritic~.
American academic libr.ui c~ spcm 2W
It' \.\ on books and journals in 1987-H8 than
the) 'Jll!nl'" 1970-a decline of S221 million Brit1sh librJry expenditures declined by
e'en a greater extent- by 28C.f..-betwecn
1'178 and 1'188.
While many academic libraries have
continued to rt.-ceivc a fairly s1eady proportion of the university·~ ba~ budget. there
HE IMPACT of the new technologies on
have been decline-. in the ba'C. In 1970.
journal price!&lt;! is difficult 10 assess.
academic library purcha~-. in the Unite'd
Computerized composition and Lhe increasStates were abou1 one percent of total R&amp;D.
ingly common usc of author-supplied comexpenditure. The proponion ""'dropped
puter disks reduces costs. &lt;:reating complex
~tc&lt;.ldi ly si nce 1hcn. 1l1c fact i!&lt;!that the uni mathematical and scientific formulas as well
vcrsilics arr no longer adequately supporting
as tables and charts is made easier and less
their libraries nor i~ Lhc research sys1em
• expensive by the computer as well. Thus. it
through the R&amp;D funding apparJtus. It is
is fairly clear that the new technologies
surprising that there has not been more critipermit significant savings.
cism of the higher education system for Lhe
Other elements of technology have. howdramatically deteriorating suppon of acaever, created profound challenges to tradidemic libraries. the primary link in the scientional journal publishing. The photocopier
tific communication system.
and other reprographic techniques have ·
Much has been written about the problem
recently been linked to computerized data
of increasing journal subscription prices. Tlle
transmission systems and infonnation resi tuation here is indeed complex but the fact
trieval arrangements· and have created sigis that the major multinalional jOurnal pubnificant changes in the ways that journals are
lishers, which increasingly dominate the
·obtained and used by readers. Networting
publication of scientific journals, have mised
system such as the Online Computer Lithe iT prices well in Cxcess of the rate of
. braly Center (OCLC) and the newer CARL
in nation or the increased costs of publicanetwork have drnmatically increased on-line
tion. Elsev.ier (which recently purchased
requests for photocopies. For exlt.mple. acaanmher giant. Pergamon). KJuwer. and a few
demic libraries generated two million on-line
others have been responsible for dramatic
requests for loans or photocopies in 1988-89,
price increases.
up 500 percent in ten years. While' the CopyPublishers argue that many more pages
right Clearance Center (CCC) has been used
are being published because of the ex pan·
increasingly by libraries and corporate inforsion of scientific output. that the new techmation users. the challenge of traditional
nologies have meant higher costs. that there
photocopying of journal anicles and of the
is wider covemge of scientific research from
new networking arrangements are quite
Asia and Lhe former Soviet Union, and that
significant for journal publishers- and.
the costs of paper and international exchange
indeed, the traditional ways journals are used
rates nuctuate unpredictably. They also point

T

and perhaps financed.
The ultimate producers and users of
academic journals are an imponant, but
often forgotten. element in the journal crisis.
The professors and researchers who write for
the journals and use them as the primary
means of scholarly communication are an
e.~scntial part of the system. They are. however. almost completely ignorant of the ways
in which the system works. They know only
that it is increasingly difficult. and expensive. to obtain access to scientific information. Any solution to the crisis must include
the academic community. Perhaps the most
ignomnt of the role of the scholarly communications system are academic administrators who have ultimate control over
university budgets. They have been much
more concerned with balancing those budgets than with the futun' of scholarly communications.
There has been much criticism of the
"publish or perish" syndrome which forces
academics in research-oriented universities
to publish articles in order to obtain promotion. Sometimes. critics·argue, more attention is paid to the quantity of writing than to
its quality. The system of peer review in the
journals is supposed to weed out work of
poor quality. But the proliferation of journals
has meant that much of marginal quality is
published. There are. of course, good reasons for much of the growth of journalsincreased scientific productivity anO the
emergence of new and interdisciplinary
specialties-but a significant pan of the
expansion has not been necessary.

N

OW THAT the major elements of the
scholarly journal system have been
identified. it is possible to indicate how each
of them must contribute to a solution to the
current crisis. The solutions suggested here
are predicated on several assumptions which
may be somewhat controversial. First, tmdi- ·
tional journals. carefully edited throug~ peer
review and printed and distributed in traditional ways. must remain Lhe core of the
scientific communication system. While
technologies, including ncr working an&lt;J on-

line journals, have a role, they canno1 dominate the system. Many users do not have
ready access to data bases and networking
arrangements. Secondly, the journal system
most be sensitive to the oeeds of users and
authors as a primary concern and not exclusively concerned with the problems of libraries and publishers. Thin!, the journal sySICm
has a responsibility to scholan; in smaller
scientific communities and in developing countries. Current ~ods
in technology and pricing tend to
lock out scholars wbo do not have
access to the latest technologies.
Fmally. the aim of the system is to
permit academic libraries-and individual scholars-to subscribe to as many
journals as they need to cany out their
missions. This gives individual scholars
access and it provides a subscriber base to
the journals.
The elements of a solution to the "crisis..
are:
• The scientific community-notably the
universities and the funders of researchmust significantly increase funding for
scholarly communication.
• Journal publishers which have been
responsible forthe lion's share of the price
increases must undertake to limit their increases to the rate of inflation plus the direct
cost increases in paper or other elements in
journal production. It i.s possible to ~o ntain
journal costs. If multinational publishers
cannot maintain acceplable prices while
publishing in the Netherlands or Britain. it
may be possible to shift editorial and production operations to Lhe United States.
• The circulation of journals must be
maintained at levels that permit profitable
publication. Libraries must buy journals and
not rely increasingly on networting arrangement&lt;. More reasonable journal pricing and
increased suppon should permit libraries to
expand journal collections. Publishers
should also offer reasonably priced subscriptions to individual~. Scholars and researchers
must suppon their journals by subscribing to
them.
• Tne academic community must take an
active interest in scholarly communication.
More attention must be paid to quality nuher
in quantity in evaluating faculty members.
The peer review system must be strengthened and manuscripts which do not directly
contribute to knowledge should be rejected.
• The proliferation of journals must stop.
It may be possible. through merging some
existing journals. to reduce the numbers of
journals in some areas. While there is a place
for new joumaJs in innovative and interdisciplinary fields, great care should be takeQ in
Lhe creation of new publication·s.
• Users must pay for using journals.
through subscriptions, payment for making
photocopies beyond rather narrowly interpreted "fair use." reprinting materials for
classroom or research use, and the like. If
prices for such use are kept reasonable and
there is an easy way to provide payment,
inco.me from sub idiary uses can be substantial.
· There is little question that scientific
communication is an important part of the
R&amp;D effon. Multinationarpublishers have
clcariy taken advantage of the siruation and
they must contribute to the solution of the
problem. And the producers and users of
reSClll'Ch must be aware of the nature of the
system. If these steps are taken, the scholarly
journal system can be restored to health.
Philip G. Allbach is prolessor and direct&lt;&gt;'
of !he Comparative Education Cen!B&lt; at
UB, whB&lt;e he is also adjunct proCessor tn
!he School ol Information and Library Studies. He·is author o! The Knowledge Carr
text and editor of !he Bel/agio Publishing
Net'Nork'Newsfetter.

�_u.___. .,_._.
.............
.....

PI

I ',

l I I' f S l

u B s r, ; ·

.... c:..e.n

0

The CanaciarrAmeri-

:"ue~Coomttoo

fa projeclsand~
. we desigled 1o encxuage
and pnm:Xe incfeesed
awareness and l.f1derslaRd..
i'1Q here ot Clnlda. and ot rs.
lation8l:let.l.een CMada and
the U.S. These gMts are
possille because ot."""""
piO'Jided by the~ ...
Stucies Giant f&gt;roglVTl ot the
Canacim t:mbasSv In Washingtln, D.C., and liB..
Appllcdon ..........
5 p.m., -.:II 12, 111113
Proposals ate welcome
from full.line UB facul!y and
from lJB gaduate students
v.00 have faculty sponsorship
for the proposed project or
activity. Because ot lhe relatiVely smaA arrount ot funding
avaJiable, priority wil be given
to requests that do not exceed $450. Grants are only
prOIIided to help delray direct
costS Generally, support is
lillited to the~ : 1&amp;-

seardHelated activities (e.g .,
travel, """" ~te assistance
ac~ddata or ciocu-'
ments, and suveys), h:Jnorar18 and travel costs for speakers or Mists, and support for
conferences and/Or workshops. Grant rronies must be
expended and a ,......., submitted to the~ olf~ee
before Aug, 16, 1993.·
The corrmittee encourages
ndMduals kl submit propos- aJs for projects that have not
been ft.OOed pr611iousfy, that
offer some premise ot securng matching money fran nside or outside lhe university,

BILL
B
0
ltudlllta ...we .......
Depanment of Health authorized

-TnweiAw_.

0

Four UB students have
=eived the 1992 Association of Women in Science
(AWIS)ISloan Travel Awards
from the Buffalo O!apter of
AWlS.
Funded by a $500,000 national
grant to all the chapters of A WIS,
the awards were established in
1990 by the Sloan Foundation to
encourage young women scien-

lists to remain active in their
fields. The awards enable women
~1 ud y in g in a scientific field to
attend conferences in their specialties in order to present their
research results.
The rec ipients are:
Nancy Lewis. a graduate
student in the Dcpanment of
Microbiology conducting re-

search on gene expression;
Sherri Randall, a graduate student in the Dcpanment of Chemistry studying organometallics;
Janice Stowell, a graduate stude nt in the Dcpanment of Civil
Engineering doing research on

water quality in environmental
engineeri ng: Lisa Szczepura , a
graduate student in the Dcpanment of Chemistry conducting

research on metallic catalysis.

Ambua.- Corps

for

:=~=.:e;rn

c:onducts ........
life .. pport_equl.,.._at

Interested persons should r&amp;-

0

leagues In Calada. and that
are rnterdiscipf'nary In nall.re.
quest an application fran:

() James E. McConnell,
Chain:&gt;emon;Canadian-Amer1C811 Studies Corrrr;Uee;cJo

Canada-United States Trade

Center;Departrnent ot Geography; 110 Wikeson Quadrangle; North Qwnpus
Telephone: 645-2299
Fax: 645-2329

Baird Point Volunteer

Ambulance Corps is conducting an appeal for funds to
purchase advanced life suppon
equipment-defibrillators and

ancillary equipment costing
nearly $10.000 per ambulance.
Two defibrillators are needed.
The appeal is being conducted in
memory of Thomas Paul Feddo.
who died March 12. 1991.
In 1990. the New York State

0

·" International Affairs.'' the

second salute in music and

dance by UB to this spri ng's
World University. Games, will be
presented by the Zo&lt;liaque Dance
Company from Feb. 26 th rough
March 7.
Directed by Linda Swiniuch.
co-chair of the UB Dcpanment of
Theater and Dance, the program
will feature new works by nine
c horeOgraphers inspired by the

literature and mllsic of Polynesia.
Englanll. France, Argentina. Rus-

sia and several African.nations.
Performances wilt take place
Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
and Sundays at 3 p.m . in the
Pfeifer Theater. 681 Main St.,
Buffalo. Tickets will be avai lable

at the door and at Ticket master

love expressed in different folk

dance forms. Virginia Woolf s
take on creativity proclaimed in
music and movement and visual
design aniculated in dance, African poetry and the music of the
Kronos Quanet.

Argen tine tangos are on Lhe
menu, along with dance interpretationS of Polynesian elemental
poetry and the strength of the

human spirit in the· faCe of w·ar
and oppression. The national
AIDS quill al so has Inspired one
of the performance pieces.
Choreographers are Tressa
Gorman Crehan, Tom Ralabatc.
William E. Thomas, Linda
Swi niuch, Eileen l..amben, Karen
Georger. Joyce Miller, Lynne
Kurdziel-Formato and Anne

outlets for $10 (general admis-

Biancofiore. Costume design is

sion) and S4 (students. senior

by Catherine Norgren and lighting design by Mike Plane.
For more information, call the
Dcpanment of Theater and Dance
at 829-3742.

ci tizens and UB faculty, staff and
alumn i).
The production will present

diverse themes and dance styles:

R

0

advanced life suppon units such
as Baird Point, to go on-line with
defibrillation. Due to the high
cos~ the equipment cannot be
purchased within the operating
budget.
Tax deductible contributions
may be sent to Baird Point Volunteer Ambulance Corps, Inc.
Thomas Paul Feddo Memorial
Fund Drive, Fargo Quad. University at Buffalo, Amherst, N. Y.
14261.

0

sessions.
For information and registration. contact the Office of Student
Life, 645-6 125. or Lori Hosmer.
SA director of student affairs,
645-2950.

Afllmuative Action Leave

....,._ .. _ e e l

0

The NYS/IJUP Affirma-

tive Action Committee
announces that the Dr. Nuala
McGann Drescher Affirmative
Action Leave Program has been
renewed forthc t 991-1995 contract period.

The program assists minorities. women , persons with disabilities and Vietnam-era
veterans to prepare for permanent
or continuing appointments with
the State University of ew
time non-tenured tenn employees
who hav~ received at least a oneterm renewal or who have prior
service credit in a posit ion eligib le for permanent or continuing
appoi ntment.
Application deadlines are:
March I, 1993 for S•mmer
'93/Fall ' 93 terms: for Summer
'93/Fafl '93/Spring ' 94 terms; for
Fall '93 term: for Fall '93/Spring
'94 terms: for Fall '93/Spring
'94/Summer '94 terms.
Sept. 17, 1993 for Spring '94
term: for Spring 'WSummer '94
terms; for Spring ' 94/Summer
' 94/Fall ' 94 terms.

·Applications must be completed and returned by the appropriate deadline to the NYSIUUP

Affinnativ·e Action Committee.
Suite 305. 855 Central Ave .•
Albany. N.Y. 12206. For more

information. contact Steven
Moskowitz. Staff Director. at
518-457-1198. To obtain information at UB on applying for the
program. contact UUP Chapter

presidencs and vice presidents.
the Personnel Dcpanment or the
Affirmative Action Office.

• Endesha Ida Mat Holland. associate professor of
American studies aod author
of the hit off-Broadway play.

• In the Nov. 2 issue of
Busin.ss Wuk, F. Bruder
Stapleton. A. Conger
Goodyear Professor of Pediatrics and chair of the Pediatrics Dcpanment, described
efforts by the School of
Medicine and Biomedical

Public ..-ldnC

The Swdent Association
and the Division of Student
Affairs offer a public speaking
seminar Feb. 17-March 31.
Wednesdays. from 4-6 p.m. The
non-credit seminar. includes 7
sessions, and will be held at 2 t 4
0 ' Brian, North Campus. Instructor is Bonnae J. Graber, president
of Junior Achievement of WNY.
Panicipants wilt he asked to
make a $25 deposit which will be
refunded if you attend and are
prepared for six of the seven

NEWSMAKERS
" From the Mis issippi
Delta," was the subject of a
feature interview by co-host
Jane Pauley on the Nov. 24
broadcast of " Dateline
NBC.''

---echeduled

York. Applicants mu st be full -

Dance concert salutes Wortcl University Games

A

r ·.

Sciences and five affiliated
teaching hospitals to increase
the number of physicians

iEnll*e ...... deductible
..,.._for_

0

For New York State employees enrolled in Empire Plan:
Tltore represented by UUF, Council
82, PBA.Supervisors, PBA-Troopers
and PBA-80: Executive Branch
MIC employees and legislarive members and emplayees:
The Empire Plan Basic Medical
Deductible for New York State
enrollees in the groups listed above
will increase to SJgg for the enrollee,
$1 gg for the enrolled spouse. and
$ 1gg for all dependent children
combined. The maximum coinsurance (out-of-pocket expenses) for
UUF employees enrolled in the
Empire Plan will increase 10 $906.
These changes reflea the increase
in the rredical care component of the
Consumer Price Index for Urban
Wage Earners and Clerical Workers.
for AU Cities, (C.PJ .-W.) from July
I. 1991 to June 30, 1992. The increases are the result of negotiated
agreements and are extended 10 nonrepresented groups.
The maximum coinsurance (outof-pocket expenses) forCouncil82
and PBA Supervisors will increase to
S776. These changes are the result of
negotiated agreements.
Claims Deadline Reminder.
Metropolitan claims for 1992 services must be mailed no later than
March 31. 1993.

llnNakfat

on~

0

----set

education

t;.,..,

UB hosts
breakfast seminars on higher education in
March and April Patti McGill
Peterson, president of St Lawrence
Univasity, will be the speaker
March 12 ~ 8 a.m. at a seminar in
Moot Hall. Buffulo State College.
Donald' J. Nolan. New Yorl&lt; Stale
deputy commissioner of education
speaks April 30 at an 8 am. seminar
in the Siudent Union. D'Yoovilte
Cot lege.
The seminars are presented by the
UB Department of Educational
Organization. Adminisuntioo and
· Policy. in cooperation with the WNY
Higher Educatioo Consortium.
Buffalo Stale College, Canisius
College, D'Youvilte College, the UB
GntdUateSchool of Educalion
Alumni Association and UB Office
of Conferences and Special Events.
Cost of eadt seminar is $5. Formore
information, call UB Graduate
School of Education at 645-2491. -

trained in primary care areas.
• A story entitled " When
Kids Kill Abusive ParentS"
in the Nov. 23 issue ofT/ME

included several major
quotes from Charles Patrick

Ewing, professor of law and
clinical professor of psychology.
• Research by Barbara
Benedict Bunker. associate
professor of psychology. and
colleagues comparing the
quality of life of dual-career

couples who live together all
of the time with those whose
jobs require them to live
apan for some of each week
was featured in the " People

Panems" column in the Nov .
4 issue of 71re Wall Strut
Journal. Her colleagues in

the study were Josephine M .
Zubek and the tate Robert
W. Rice. The study also has
been reponed in Health,

Your H~alth and

Mad~moi­

sel/e and on "To Your

Health.'' a syndicated feature
distributed to 400 radio sta-

tions nationwide.
• The work of Dennis
Tedlock. James H. McNulty
Professor of English and
research professer of anthropology. and Barbara
Tedlock. professor of anthropology. was referred to
in an article in UnguD franca
describing the efforts by
American scholars to decipher Mayan hieroglyphs.
- cc:xnpled by me UB News Bureau

The Employee Assistance

Program (EAP) ean help ...
Call now- .
It's confidential

EMPLOYEE ASSISTANCE
PRoGRAM COORDINATORS

JUDITH DINGELDEY
645-2398 (NOI1h Campus)
ANTHONY LORENZE'ITI
645-2564 (Nonb CampUs)
RICHARD SIGGLEKOW
645-3166 (NO(th Campus)

RETrY STONE
829-2238 (South Campus)

�32

.........
ua

cheerleaillng

a national
trophy

sp-ortin 0

their red, white and blue unifonns.
UB 's cheerJeading team yelled, jumped and pyramided its
way to a Jrophy last month at the National Cheerl~ing
Association competition in Dallns.
Placing fif\h nationally in the all-female squad division, the cheerleaders will be seen on
the Primetime spons network when
the nationaJ fina1s are aired. says
Coach Nancy Costantino.
In addition. team member Shani
1eof60

earned the right to participate in the
nationals based on its strong showing at the National Cheerleading
AssociatiOn camp at Boston University in ·August.
·
The UB Learn competed against

25 other all-female teams from
around the nation. Various divisions
in the. national .event are based on
gender makeup of teams rather than
on institution size, locale. or athletic
team rankings or division.
Precision, creativity, smoothness of moves and other

components a"&lt; graded in competition scoring. Small
mistakes-those not likely to be spotted by the spectator~an

ef.U11 or lose points for a team.

Costantino, tire UB coach for five years, stresses that
safety is a priority when practicing and perfonning.
"When you're doing a pyramid, everyone has to 1\now
exactly what to do in order Jo minimize falls and injuries,'" she says.

In addition to Lewins, other team members are Dawn
Cline, Tina Vee. Laura Militello, Jenny Krier, Sandy
White, Patti Fenris, Jessica Duffey. Michelle Shearer, Jill
Lynet, Julie Machelski. Marissa Berber, Amy ~wa
and Christina Oraham .

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Gift to UB.
establishes
·medical
infonnatics
chair

---

The chair in m&lt;dical infoonatica will belp the m&lt;dical tcbool - -

Nirws Bureau OireciDr

grate into the rapidly growing field of mediciiJ infmnMi&lt;a.IOCOdiiCIO

a. ., ......... tlnlt p-ofessonhips in medical infonnalics has

John Naughton, dean of the School of Medicine and Biomediclll Sci-

been esaablished II the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences
lhrougba$LS rni!Uon gift in honor of the late Ira G. Ross by his widow,
Elizabeth Pierce Olmsted Ross, a 1939 gnoduate of the medical school.

Dr. Olmsltd is a practicing opbtbalmologisl and clinical p-ofessor of
opbtbalmology 11 the medical school. The endowed chair will be known
as the Ira G. and Elizabeth Pie= Olmsled Ross Olair in Medical
Informatics.
Ross, a distinguished aeronautical engineer. former president of
Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories, later known as Calspan, and a dedicau:d Buffalo community leader, died January 3, 1991 .

ences.
Medical informati&lt;:s focuses on the utilizolion of Olllllpe"l ..S
rdaled ttdmologjes in the acquisition and .._,.._. at illforiMiioD
in mediciiJ aeuina;s.It ranges from the rnain-.ce of pelielll recon1s 10
patient-outcome wessment. Medical infoonatics lloo includes the
delivery of infonnalion 10 the site of pbysiciaJ&gt;.patienl ~
whethr:r in a hospillll, offiCe or clinic setting-for JliiiPOSCS of decilionmaking, medical education, medical research and managemtlll of
healt!H:are COSIS.
Continued on page 4

Accent on the
F....ly

.............

Coach Jim Ward says
family atrmsphere
helps a team
succeed.
,..

Claude Welch
addresses the lessons
cr Bosnia, Iraq and
Somaf&amp;a.
,..

P•nh••ploC

g

2

Your Health,
Your Diet
UB study finds no link
between diet and the
risk of developing
breast cancer.

p._

5
February 4 1993 Volume 24, No 15

! that public safety officers.

presently
defined as "peace officers" under
Education Law 35S (2) (I). be given
the title of''university police officers
who shall be peace officers," according to Lee Griffin. director of
public safety at UB.
"h can be argued that these officers funetioo as police officers because of the natllre oftheirdutiesand
the expectations of the community
that they serve," he said. "We're the
only peaceoffiCetli that are expected
10 enforce aU of the laws of New
York State."

lly MARK HAMMEJI

Reporter Staff

I l•e sUNY
Board of Trustees recently approved the recommendations of a
SUNY-wide task force on
public safety officers that
will increase the officers'
authority and jurisdiction
on and off campus, according to Robert L.
Palmer, Jr., vice president
for student affairs at VB
and chair of the task
force. The recommendations must now make
their way through the
state legislature if they
are to become Jaw.
Palmer said that the task force
was proposed in October, 199 1 in
order to beuer measure the present
level of crime on SUNY campuses
and also to look at the duties and
jurisdiction presently held by public .
safety officers.
"We had a great variety of people
on the taSk force. with people from
Student Affairs, Public Safety. members of the faculty. students and representatives from SUNY
Central. Our charge was to
ascertain the effectiveness
ofthepresentpublicsafety
standards and how they •
relate to the present crime
rate on campuses." he
explained.

tie .recommendaT
tions made by the
taSk force included granting authority to public
safety officers to stop and
frisk a suspect. as explained
in the !aSk force· s final report.
This would grant officers the aliility to temporarily question a suspect
in a public place and search for weapons on his person. Another recommendation asked that officers be
allowed to execute bench warrants
issued by local criminal courts.
1belaSkforcealsorecommended

SUNY task force recommends
increasing jurisdiction; legislature m ust
vote on proposals
Robrt Palmer, Jr.,
Ylc:e president for
stud8nt allalrs

~ almer agreed with Griffin.
_ . . - saying that it is time that
public safetyoffocer.;are given proper
recognition for the job they must
perform. " The task force found that
current laws regarding public safety
officers Were 100 restrictive in the
areas of authority and jurisdiction.
This recommendation gives aU the
powers of police officers to public
safety officers while they're operating on campus," be said.
Regarding jurisdiction, the task
force recommended that public safety
officers be allowed additional authority 10 cover official university
duties off campus. said Griffin. For
example. off1eers would be allowed
10 do follow-up investigations of
campus crimes at off-&lt;:ampus sites
and would be allowed to besecurity
escons 10 off-campus sites.
··A burglary on campus most often involvesSIUdents who take
wbat they've stolen off
c~mpus ,.. explained
Griffin. "We·d bavethe
right to go off campus
and investigate that
c rime. If we do !bat at
the pfesent, we do so as
private citizens. Under
therecommendation.offt&lt;:er.&gt; would be covered
· off campus...
Palmer said that granting
public safety
off-&lt;:ampus jurisdietioo was extremely
practical. "Public safety officers
could then do bank runs: transport
prisOners to local authorities andescort dignitaries wbo are visiting the
campus." hesaid. "Uoderthepresent
law. officers bave no covenge off
campus. This proposal will enable

officers

Cootinued on page 4

�2

~.,

... _...,_..

AACHITECT\JRE

-............ dean of the
School of Archilectlxe end
Pllwring, ... been -dad
theC&lt;mmemoralille
Medell&amp;suedinhonor of the
125lh anniversary of
theC&amp;nadianConfederation by
Ran-on John Hnalyshyn, governor general of Canada.
According to the governor
gene&lt;al's olfoce, the award
was given to persons who
hiNe made 8 significant contribution to Canada, their
corTYrunities or to their fellow
Canadians.
Freschi was appointed to
the Order of Canada in 1987
for his outstanding oontributions to the fl&lt;lld of architectural design. He was chief
arch~act for Vancouver's
Expo '86 and designed the
$15 minion Jarnall&lt;tlana
mosque in Burnaby, B.C.

--NURSING

IXCIIUJICI!:

llliiiiJ IL ar-. clinical

nurse specialist in oncology
at the Buffalo VA Medical
Center and edjunct instructor
in the UB School of Nursing.
received the 1992 Clinical
Nursing Excellence Award
from the Association of Military Surgeons of the United
~es,

She was honored for
"demonstrated effectiveness
as a clinical nurse specialist,
prOviding a consistently high
level of care to tne veteran
patient."
Graham manages an Oncology Clinic at the VA. She
•s a nursing consultant and
educator on pain control and
symptom management
throughout the VA Northeast
Region.
SOCIAL WORK
CITID FOil Y o u n t -

_ _ .._,., clim-

associaie professor and
director of field education in
lhe Graduate
School of
Social Wor1&lt;
at UB, has
received the
Richard lsbel
Award from
the Buffalo
caf

LAURY

Coal~ion

on
Adolescent

Pregnancy Prevention
(BCAPP) for her outstanding
wor1&lt; ~ youth .
The award is named for the

late Richard lsbel, the first
director of BCAPP. Laury is a
founl:ler of BCAPP, a nonpr~

organizalion.eslablished in 1985 to coordinate
seMces and local agencies
in an attempt to reduce the
number of adolescent pregnancies In Bulfalo.
She receilled 8 bachelor's

degree In sociOlogy from
Paine College in Augusta,

Ga. and 8 master's degree in
social wor1&lt; from Atlanta University.

Coach
Accents
Family
.,

__

Reporter Staff

T

HEPLA YERS wanted it

to happen . And they
helped convince UB athletic director Nelson
Townsend that it should.
Andwhenitdidhappen,oo Dec. l5.
1992. UB had the2fstfoothallcoach
in its99-yeartearn history. Now, 44year-old UB BuUs coach Jim Ward.
who was the interim coach for the
1992 season, has three more years to
build the kind of program he and his
players have been wortcing for.
"I often told my players this pasl
year that this is the besl group I've ever
worl&lt;ed with in 25 years ofcoaching,"
said an emotional Ward at an introductory press conference at Alumni Arena
after he signed a three-year oonrrnct
Dec. 15. '1 want to crea1e a family
illmOSphere here. That's the only way
tocre:Jiesuccess. whether in football or
in business."
In a recent interview. Ward expanded on his notion of family within
the UB football program. "It's the
glue that keeps everything else together," he said. "A family offers
suppon and also non-biased evaluation. I believe that this is the kind of
atmosphere that breeds success."
Ward said that the imponance of
family was taught by his own parents when he was growing up, and
that it has translated into a life phi-

losophy for him. "I'm a teaching
coach. I want to promote the individual growth of all my players. both
on and off the field," he explained
·•; would like to create an atmosphere where players help each other.
For CJ&lt;ample. if a player is having
problems irl.,school, I tell sorre of the
other players to help him. It all comes
down to trust. Dotheynusteachothcr'?"
Ward. who was UB's offensive
coordinator in 1991 under fonner
coach Sam Sanders. began his coaching career in 1969 as head £oach of
Nonhwestem High School in Balti-

"I'm a teaching coach I want to promote the
individual growth ofall my players, both on
and offthe field I would like to Cff!ate an
atmosphe11! where players help each other."
-JIM WAIID

more. Md. He left that position in
1984. having won five Maryland
State championships and compiled a
112-2&amp; won-lossrecord.Hewasthen
offensive coordinator aJ Howard
University from 1984-1989andheld
the same position at Norfolk State
for two years before coming to UB.
Those credentials, coupled with
UB's late-season surge this pas1 year
when they won threeoftheirfmal four
games and the overwhelming bocking
from UB's players, made Nelson
TownsenO 's decision much easier.

'This gentleman is a leader," he said at
the press conference. "'We talked to all
ofourvariousconstiruentgroupsabout
hiring Jim Ward. And severdl players
said that they were playing under conditions they enjoyed. Everybody is in
favor of this move."
Townsend stressed that Ward could
have pursued other avenues when he
was offered the job on an interim basis
last year. Instead, he chose to stay and
continue the task ofupgrading the foothall program that he had begun with
Sam Sander.;. ''Staying with us (on a
one-year interim contract), speaks for
him. He took that chaUcnge and de-

servesthisopponunity. We feel fortunate to step completely into Division
IAA in the 1993 season."

!though the BuUs' 1992 season didn't exactly begin with a
bang, l-5after sixgames.thetcamhad
set four offensive team records (45
touchdowns, 319 total points, 31.9
points per game and 3,871 total yards
gained) and four more individual offensive records by year's end.
Bulls quanerback Cliff Scott was
responsible for setting two of those
individual records, throwing 18
touchdowns for the season which
tied a 1983 record and throwing for
490 yards in one game, shattering
theoldmar1&lt;of417yardssetin 1978.
Scott said he is excited and eager to
have Ward as his permanent coach.
''His notion of a family atmosphere
reflects the type of person he is," Sax!
said recen~y. "It's within the players
and the system now. We are a deliicate
frntemitythat.-lsconlidencetobuild
on. Our guys look out for each other on
and off the field."
Scott said that he respects Ward's
attitude of trying to attract the best

A

players he can to the UB program. " I
believe that you have to keep challenging the players that are already
here, because life is very competitive. But that' s pan of the reason
why it's a new era here," he said.
"I'm really excited about everything
that is happening in this program."
One of Scott's teammates. special teams ace and running hack
Matthew Prelewicz. who was inter·
viewed from his home during the
winter break. agreed wholeheanedly
with the quanerback. "I can relate to
Olach Ward's notion of our team
being one heartbeat We all try to
function as one heartbeat."
Prelewicz said that the team concept that Wardpreachesencourngesall
of the players to be leaders and contribute in any way posstble. ''We play
better when weplayforeachotherand
forthecooch. Butnoc.adaygoesbythat
Coach Ward doesn't relate football to
everyday life. He'sdefinitely a teacher
as far as what he does for me.
"He always says to be honest with
yourself. He teaches us to hit things
head on, instead of procrastinating and
running away from our problems."
Wardsaidthattheoffensiverecords
were a signofbetterthings to come.but
thattheentiretearn.-lstocontinucto
improve if the BuUs are to move forward. "We were exciting offensively.
and defensively," he laughed. "But I
never thought about my position during the year. I like to take
game at
a time. It's 001 bow you start. it's bow
you finish. The players and I always
talked in tenns of next year."

or.e

Volcanic researcher joins Geology Department

M

A.RCUS I. BURSU&lt;. who joined the Depanment of Geology jn the fall, '92 semester. is the first faculty addition to

the depanment since 1983. B~ik. who has worl&lt;ed in a

variety of areas around the world, including Mt. St. Helens.
Siena Nevada/Basin Ranges, A2ores, Kamchatka and Banff. is wori&lt;ing
with colleagues on a book about thephysicsof volcanic plumes and with
others on monitoring volcanic activity using the Global Positioning
System. remo!e sensing and geological techniques.
He plans to pursue research iri volcanic eruptions and volcanic
plumes. neotectonics and volcanism. hillslope processes and Cordilleran
glacial geology. He is collaborating with nuiddynamicists&lt;&gt;n laboratory
experiments that simulate some aspects of. volcanic eruptions and other
related now phenomena and is setting up a sedimentology/experimental

geological fluid dynamics laboratory at
UB.
- Bursik has a bachelor's degree from
California State University and an M.S.
• and Ph.D. from the Califomialnstiwte of
Technology.
Before coming to UB, he was an
instructor at Cypress College in California and a research associate for the GeoiBURSIK
ogy and Planetology Section of Jet
. Propulsion l..abonuory. During this time
he was a Visiting Scholar at Bristol University in the United Kingdom
and a Senior Visiting Fellow at Cambridge.

�3

_,,.._..,_sa

Worker safety University's doctoral programs get high
in 'Dark-Ages' marks for quality in U.S. News rankings

W

HILE CONSTRUCTION
worl&lt;e" sustain injuries on tbi
job." most often because they
get hit by or against objects,
falls are most likely 10 result in a fatality,
according to the fir.a statistical analysis of
construction worker accidents.
"For an industry lhat is becOming more and
more automated and technically advanced,
worker safety still. seems to be locked in the
dark ages," slates the report by the Construction Safety and Health Institute of New York
based 31 UB.
According to the analysis, which cove"
91.953 construction accidents in New York
Slate from 198().881hat resulted in compensation decisions. being hit by or against objects
was the most
common type
of accident ,
accounting for
3 1.8 percent
out...
of the total.

"We wanted to
foul
how
accidents are
distributed
among the

various
construction
trades."
.SAnaH MOHAN

Overexenion

was next, accounting for
24 .8 percent
of the total.
and accidents
involving falls
made up 23.8
percent. None
of the remaining categories
accounted for
more than 6

percent.
Overall .

21.5 percent of the 659 fatalities that occurred
in the stale during the eight-year period resulted
from falls and 205 percent from overexertion.
Being struek by or against an object ranked third.
representing 16.4 percent of fatalities. followed
closely by coolllel with rndiillion or caustic substances. 16.1 percent.
Satish Mohan. execUiive director of the

institute and associaLe professor of civil engineering at UB, conducted the analysis with
Michael W. Collins. a UB gr•duate student.
The analysis found that compensation

awards ranged from a low of $3.425 for accidents resulting from extreme temperature to
$29,809 for those caused by conlllcl with radiation and caustic substances. The highest av~r­
age award. $67.824, compensated for injuries
involying heart attacks.
Formed last year by the Nationallnstituteof
Occupational Safety and Health with the goal
of reducing U.S. construction accidents and
deaths, the Construclion Safety and Health
Institute undertook the analysis 10 determine
which areas of construction are the most dangerous and mOst in need of safely training.

·a

ased on the results, the institute has begun

holding its first safety training programs
for tbe construction industry. and has eSillblished a database on the safety or risk associated with specific construction activities.
"We wanted .to find out what the' causes of
accidents and their resulting disabilities are
and how accidents ;ire distributed among the
variouS construction trades.·· said Mohan.
In the United StaleS, he said, constructioo
accidents result in about 2,000 deaths a year, a
much higher rote than In several other industrialized countries.
"We have no indication that number is
going down." he said, adding lhat accident
rates make the construction industry the most
hazardous in the United States. ahead of manufacturing and farming .
In 1991. the industryexperiencedan injury
and illness rate of 13 per IQO full-time workers.
as compared 10 10.8 in agriculture. 7.4 in
mining and 12.7 in manufacturing.

NIVERSITY docloral programs
in six disciplines faml well in the
recent publication in Chang•
magazine of the complete U.S.
N.,.. &amp; World Repolf "quality
ranlrings" of gJ1Iduale programs
Because of space limitations in its original
March 23, 1992 repon. U.S. News listed only
the 15 top scorers in its mnlting system. "But
the underlying survey had rated virtually all
grnduate programs fn the six fields," reported
Change, which agreed 10publish the complete
findings. The magazine also published extensive outside commentary on the results and the
sometimes problematic use of ratings as a
measure of scholarly excellence.
U.S. N.ws rated docloral programs in six
liberal arts disciplines: economics, English,
history, political science, psychology and sociology. U.S. News compiled data ranking the
large majority of doctorate-granting programs
in each of these fields; an average of 129
programs per discipline were ranked. ranging
·from94 in political science 10202 in psychology. II also showed which doctoral programs
in each of the six disciplines gained and declined most sharply. in repullltioo between the
1982 ranking by the National Academy of
Sciences (a rating of doctoral programs in 32
arts. sciences and engineering disciplines) and
the U.S. News survey of last March.
"'Where U.S. N&lt;WS' rankingreallyCJ&lt;Cels.however,'" said Olange, ''is in the number ofprograms
it included ... 24 peroen1 more than the NAS" 104

surveys included more prognuns in Psydlology than with any Olher discipline.
Economics prognuns a1 the University of
Chicago, MIT and Stanford tied for lint place
in the U.S. N.ws rankings. while Georgelown
gained the most places since 1982.ln English.
the leader. were Yale and Bertceley with Pittsburgh gaining by 40places in the fteld. History
found doctooll programs a! BerlieJey, Stanford.
Yale and PrinceiOO the leader.. with the Unive,.ity of California at Irvine gaining the most
places in the ten-year period being studied.

U

he University of Michigan-Ann Arbor's
doctoral progr.un in political science tied

T

a.._. publlebed complete llnlllnCs of
U.S. New. Jll1ld school ranlclnCa.
and far more than any other academic quality
ranking has ever included in these disciplines"
UB 'sEnglish Departmen~ Change reported.
was 27th in a field of 132. outranking such
schools as Southern California. NYU, Piltsburgll (which nonetheless was one of the big
gaine" in academic repullltioo)and Vandemih.
Economics doctoral programs here ranked 51
in a field of 117; History was 57th, Political
Science, 55; Sociology, 60th. and Psychology.
44. Becauseofthenumbers involved, both the
National Academy of Science and U.S. News

for fir.~ place with Berkeley and Harvard.
Emory gained 37 places between theN AS and
U.S. News rankings. the largest gain for any
political science program. Stanford's psychology doctoral program was fltSI, while Rice
gained the most places---&lt;&gt;8-between the
NAS and U.S. News ratings. The psychology
program at the Univer.ity of Ulinois/Urb;lnaChampaign. tied with Berkeley and the University of Michigan/Ann Arbor for second The
sociology program 31 the University of Wisconsin-Madison was number me in the U.S. News
rankings of sociology doctoral prograrm. The
New School for Social Research was the biggest
gainer-40 places-in lh3l field.
U.S. News next spring will rank doctoral programs in science disciplines with the larp srudentcnroUJreOts. TheNASplansa 1994ranking
ofdoctoral programs in many disciplines.

Evaluation will help to shape mission,
determine future of UB Graduate School

. , _ _ Eit

Repo&lt;ter Staff

HE UNIVERSITY "S Graduate
School is zeroing in on ideas about its
mission and its future.
The Graduate School is more of a

T

maintenance organization than a centralized
body ofauthority. according to Graduate School
Dean Joyce Sirianni. And in the wake of Provost Aaron Bloch"s request that the school
evaluate itself. Sirianni is looking for ideas
from all graduate departments about what they
would like to see the school doing in the future.
Sirianni made her comments at last week's
meeting of the Faculty Senate Executive Committee (FSEC).
"Provost Bloch has asked that we evaluate
ourSelves and then set up a mission statement
about where the Graduate School is going,""
she said. "We· re a Graduate School that is not
centralized. Most of the action happens in the

individual grdduate departments. In that we
have a weak Gmduate School. do we need one
at all? Or, do we need a more powerful one?""
She said lh3l besidesa&lt;king for ideas from the
variousgraduatedepwtments,theGrnduateSchool
will bring in a team of outside evaluators in the
spring to obtain more ideas. "We "re going 10 have
toprioritizesomeQftheiternsabouttheschool we
W"dnl looked at by them and ask them to give us
their best guess on how we are doing.··
In lh3l ooe of the questioru. about the usefulness of the school is whether the school iL&lt;elf is
necessary, at least one of the outside evaluators
should come from a university that has no Grnduate School. according to Samuel Schack. associate professor of mathematics:"'! would urge you
10 do that."" he said.
Sirianni said lh3l although she would never
wanttheGmdul!leSchooltohaveacentraladmissions program. the school might benefit from a
more centrnlized approach 10 other aspects of

grnduate education. An immediatcdangerofclosing the Graduate School would involve thecrossdiscipliruuy programs lh3l the school presently
promotes. "'ThoseareverydelicateandneediObe
protected. Ithink the Graduate School should take
a leadership role in doing this.·· she said.
Theevaluatingteamoorningthisspringshould
include at least ooe member whose university has
a number of cross-discipliruuy programs under
way. suggested Peter Horvath. assislant professor of nutritioo. Schack suggested lhat the only
way 10 anmct more interdisciplinary SIUdents is
by having more interdisciplinary facultyoo Slaff.
Some FSEC rrenilers feellhat the Graduate
School has tittle hope of surviving the evaluation.
""There is·noneed fori1 any more," said John Boot.
professor of management sciences and systems.
··tf it dies a quiel death. we probably shoukln"t
lllke heroic measures 10 resurrect iL"
Sirianni said the present timelable.calls for the
evaluation 10 be complete by early June.

Earthquake Center, FEMAjoin in projects
Tile ......_. c..tler for Earthquake Engineering Research
(NCEER), beodquanered at UB, and the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA).)lave entered into a cooperative
agreement that will.bring the cen~er an additional $125,000 in .
funding in 1993. The funding will belp enhance cunent earthquake information activities. and mainrain and update resoui-ce
I1'BIOrials and the QUAKEI..INE database. The three-year agreement also calls for NCEER's Information Service to act as a ·
resean:b and information resoon:e for special projects conducted
by FilMA. which serves as lbe lead ageocy for the federal
govemment's NationaJEanhquakeHazanlsReductiOnProgram
(NEHRP). FEMA will provide additional financial suppon over
the life of the agreement
.
"Weoreextrc:mclyexciledabo&lt;4 this agreement withf'EMA... and
the &lt;lpp(JIUlilies thai it will provide." said Gea]je C. Lee. NCEER
ditoalx". ''Oirlq&gt;e islbalthecloaercooperation willeoableNCEER
and its informalioo soMoe IOplay 111 even grea&lt;rrolc in the sua:ess
oftheNIIionallllnbquakeHIIlllldsReduclion Progrmi."Jol&lt;l:ER's

Wormation Service "is a nationally rocognilJed cleaingbouse for
information 00 ~engineering.~ bazaRis mitiption. disaster~ and &lt;elaRd topics. It serves as a map
resource for lilieraoJre. vidcolapes, slide adS and information~ ·
ing services for academic. public and IXMe SOCIIr researcbers,
practicing professionals. Sial!: .aOO federal goveriirna. officials and
the geocral public woldwide. The QUAKEUNE ~ developed by the lnformatim Service, is an oo-line index totallY 20.ml
item5 relaling 10 ~ hazards mitigalion.
"N;cess 10 relevm and limi!y infmrialion is ailical 10 the
earthquake haza"ds miliglKim cormrunity," said Palricia A. Gay,
NCEER 'slnformatimServicel1lllt:.ger. "'neofFEMA'sdiftlaiYOS
as the lead f1PY:Y &lt;I NEHRP. is 10 disacsDioate infarmoDoo 10
enhance earthquake hazards mitigalion • all bds. Wbilc we have
coOOnJaiJy SIIIJilOI'ed FEMA in thisdfolt in the PIS!- this agreement
will clearly expand Oll" wen: with them IDI OIM NEHRP 11FDCie5
10 help further oor comnoo goal. the lllvancemoat &lt;I eenhqullrc
teoearch. and uitimardy greMa'eartblplala: safdy wcxldwide."

�4

~-.---.-

...

PUBLIC SAFETY
Conunued from page 1

an officer to go off campus with his duties
intact, not as a private citizen.''
Anolher aspect of changing the jurisdiction
of public safely officers involves the authorization of the president of the SUNY campus in
question, said Palmer. "Each president would
define and authprize a set of official duties for
off&lt;ampus operations by public safely officers. That means that the needs of each individual campus would be able to be met. A rural
campus will obviously have different needs
than one located in a city."
Griffin said that granting public safety officers greater jurisdiction within which to perfonn their duties was essential to keeping
abreaSt of increased crime on and around campus. '1'he area ofjurisdiction is critical. This is
a giant step forward within an institution that
has had a great deal of difficulty dealing' with
this issue."
The concerns of SUNY's lask force are not
unique. Nor are they unusual, given that crime,

"It is our hope that these
recommendations will
make for a safer and more
secure environmenJfor
students, faculty &amp; stcdf."
ROIIEIIT PAlMER

especially violent crime. has slowly crep1 its
way omo college campuses through the years.
And with the passage of the federal Student
RtghHO: Know and Campus Security Act of
1990. national interest in

campu~

crime

h a~

increased dmmatically of late. according to the
Jan. 20 edition of The Cltrollicle of Higher
EducatiotJ. which canied a lengthy section on
campus safety and crime.
Accordin g to figures supplied to 111e
CJmmide by over 2.400 colleges and univer·

sitic!!o aero~ the nation. there were more than
7.500 incidenu, of violent crime in the first of
the annual rcport.li on campus crime that were
due in September. Of that total, then: were 30
murders, almost 1.000 ropes and over \,800
· robberies. But these types of crime were the

minority compared to such propeny-related
offenses as burglary (32, 127) and motor vehicle theft (8,981 ).
The lask force was one way for SUNY to
addressaime as it exists in the presen~ aa:ording toR. Bruce McBride, executive director of
university public safely for SUNY. "Thislask
force was one part of SUNY's effort to deal
with aspects of personal safety at each campus.
It dealt specifically with public safely officers
and is certainly an offshoot of a nationwide
concern," he said. "The other component of
SUNY' seffort is the establishment ofpersonal
safely committees at each campus in 1985.
These were set up to address local problems at
each campus."

P

almer agreed that although the taSk force
was not a direct response to the new
federal regulation, there is a connection to be
made between the two. ''We have to be concerned about personal safely, given what's
happening in the broader society . It is our hope
that these recommendations will malr.e for a
safer and more secure environment for students. faculty and staff."
He also explained the because both parents
and students are very concerned about safely
issues when deciding where to attend college,
the proposed recommendations should help
malr.ea benercase for safety at UB.
''We malr.e a good case to parents about
safety at the present. But we'll be able to malr.e
even a better case, in the future, about the safely
of this campus with these new recommendations in place ...
Griffin said he was happy with the proposed expansion of authority and duties for
public safety officers. "But there's a perception that officers will now pay more attention
to off campus and not pay any attention to what
happens on campus. That is simply not true."
Palmer SlreSSed that the recommendations
came only after intense scrutiny of all the issues
concerning authority and jurisdiction. 'This is a
vcrycomprehensiwrcport. We looked verycarefull~iat a variety of issues. And, of cour.;e, once
these recommendations are in place, there will
have to be consultations on campus with various
groups.PI!opleshould understand that we have an
outstandinglawenfon:ement unit at UB.They are
among the best tmined public safety offiCC!li in the
counuy."

ca.....pus
sat=~ty

Tips

__
__

........, --.
,.,,.........,
..........
......
..
....,_
....
...........
·--_.,...........,
......,.. ...
... _,.X ..........

------a---.
_......,,

• Leave tilftts on in entryways
when you go OUl
• Walk or run with a friend. Be alert
to your surroundings and people
near you.
• For visibility v.ttlle jogging, wear a
fluorescent lleSl
• AIIOid walking~ at night.
Call the Anti-Rape Task Force (6453322) for their escort and van service.
• Walk oonfidently and assertively.
An attacker looks for someone who
appears vulnerable.
·
• At night, walk close to the curb.
Avoid bushes and doorways where
an attacker can hide. Travel on
well~rt

streets.

• Do not walk, drive or bicycle ·
v.ttile using earphones.
• If followed, walk quickly to welllrt, populated areas. If followed by a
car, tum and walk in the opposite
direction.
• Personal alarms, v.ttich may
help deter an attempted assauh,
are available at Public Safely for a
cost of $12.
• Call Public Safely at 645-2222
on any campus phone in any case
of emergency.
• If you live off campus, inform
your neighbors when you're going
away.

INFORMATICS
Conunued from page 1

President William R. Greiner noted that
"with the kinds of possibilities that medical
infommtics offers. this field could very easily
become the backbone of a whole new regional
and national system of health cafe. By estal&gt;lishing the Ross Chair, Dr. Olmsted is helping
UB advance on scveml fronts si multaneously.
" Her gift opens
for our university a
critical new area of
research and knowledge, as well as an
invaluable training
opportunity in an
emerging technology.
The Ross Chair will
also be at the center of
ncwserviceefforts.as
UB's medical faculty
seek
to apply· inforIRAR0$5
mation to health-care
delivery in Western New York."
Greiner added, "As grateful as we are for
Dr. Olm,&lt;tcd's generosity, we are even more
indebted to her for her foresight. By endowing
the Ross Chair, sbe not only establishes a
fining memorial to 1nt Ross, but also helps
shape the future of our medical school, our
university and our community ...
"lrn was a visionary, always looking decades
ahead,"Oimsled.hiswifeof39years.said. ''With
medical informatics the wave of the future, this
chair, one of. the first of its kind in the counuy,
represents an appropriall: tribute to him."
Rc&amp;&lt;, the grandson of a Methodist minisler

Cornell Lab converted to for-profit starus and
became Calspan Corporation.)
The use of medical informatics is not far off
for Western New Yorl&lt; hospitals. The School
ofMedicinc and Biomedical Sciences has taken
new
a leadership role in the fonnation of the Westem New York Health Sciences Consortium.
which provides a unique opportunity to link
electronically the medical school and its affiliated hospitals,
The development of an lnfonnation Systems Networl&lt; will link, by computer, healthand son of a chemical engineer,
horn in
care facilities and physicians in Western New
Motgantown. W.Va. He was educated at the
York and provide a national and international
Universityoflllinois, whereheeamedbachelor's
and master'sdegJres in engineering physics, and prototype for medical education and health
care delivery. according to Thomas A .
went on to become head of one of the nation's
Riemenschneider, chair of the Western New
largest applied research otganizations.
Yorl&lt; Health Sciences Consortium Informauring the 1930s,hewasmanagerofacous- tion Sy~tems Council. UB associate vice presitical research for U.S. Gypsum, was an
dent for clinical affairs and as.&lt; xi ate dean of
architectur.ll acoustics consultant and served
the UB medical school.
as direcror of research for Upson Company of
"Computers. telecommunications and reLockport. He became manager of flight related teChnologies are radically changing the
search for Curtiss Wright Corporation in 1943.
ways in which information is acquired and
bringing to the company a sophisticated backmanaged in biomedical settings," said
ground in instrumentation and measurement.
Riemenschneider. "Sophisticated engineering
When Curtiss Wright became Cornell Ant&gt;and computer technology is enabling physinautical Laboratory in \946, Ross joined the new cians to access immediate information to enorganWttion and soon headed its flight research
hance their ability to malr.e good clinical
and wind tuimel departments. where he inaugudecisions on behalf of their patients.
rdled aerodynamic and in-flight simulation tech"The oew lnfonnation Systems Network
niquesStill used in testingconunr:rcial and military
will place Western New Yorl&lt; once again on
aUmtft. In 1954, he was named executive vice. the cutting edge of medical technology. The
presidentanddirectorofthel...aborntory,andfrorn
Ross Chair in Medical lnfonnatics adds significantly to that impetus." 1958 to 1969, served as its president. (In 1m.

"This field could .. easily

become the backbone ofa

regional and national

system ofhealth care."

w.,

D

New student
transcript: it
complements
.,resume

__

Reporter Staff

S

.1'

·

TUDENTS WELCOME any help
they can get when it comes to get-

ting a quality job or being accepted
into a well-lcnown program ofgraduate study after earning a bachelor' s degree. A
new progrnm being fonnulated by the Office
of Student Life at UB should give undergraduates an advantage wben they're deciding what
to do after graduation, according to Barl&gt;ara
Ricotta. director of the Office of Student Life.
lt'stentat:ivelybeingcalledtheStudentDevelopment Transcript and it would allow students to
list the various otganizational affiliations, club
activities and infonnational wodcshop; they take
port in while a studen~ said IOaJaa.
'This document wouldbeusedto~
aswdent'sresurr£,"sbeexplained. "ltwouldallow
students to list various activities. such asanending
Ufe Worl&lt;shops. holding leadership pooitions in
student government or clubs, or taking training
sessions to be an RA. while a student at UB."
She said that students who are very active
outside the classroom often fmd it difficult to list
all of their activities on their
but that these
activities can be important indicators to prospec.
tiveemployersandgraduateschools. TheStudent
Development Transcript would allow students to
gather all of that information on one document

resume.

he student's file would he kept at the
Office of Student Life and he or she could
access the infonnation at any time, upon presentation of the student!D card.
"A student would verify that he took part in
a worl&lt;shop or other activity by filling out a
follTl. He would have the workshop coordinator sign off on the fonn and then bring it to us.
It would then be a part of his permanent file
here," said Ricotta. " I hope to malr.e itavailable
to any student at any time at our infonnation
booth. If they present proper ID, we should be
able to print out a copy for them right there."
The individual would have complete conuol
over his file. so that be could add or delete
information during his tenure as a student After
graduation, he could have the fonn sent to the
OffJCe of Career Planning and l'lacerrent so that
it would be a port of his pennanent fde , sbe said.
'This is also a concrete way for stJJdents to see
what they're doing with their time owide the
classroom I hope it would help them make bener
decisions about how they're spending their time.''
said Rioooa: "It shouJc,1 help students fonrulate
gools about the kind of experience they want or
noodtohaveoutsideoftheclassroomtomakethem
better candidates within their profession."
The progrnm will be tried on an experimental
bosisduring the spring semester. !fit wcrl&lt;s well it
could become available to all undergrads next fall
sbe said. "Qur initial talks with students point to
theirwanlingtouseil We'Udoit with a small group
this semester to work the bugs out of the software.
If it wcr1&lt;s well we'll ~ it at this summer's
freslumn and trnnsfer mentations.''

T

We Want to Hear Your Voice
. The RepOrter is US's cornr00n;ty
newspaper and we want JOU \o b&amp;come involved. Gille us your c::orrt
meots on current topics relamg 10 the
university and higher education as
well as on linely sul:jjecls in areas of
your expertise. We welcane articles.
VIeWpOints, Letters 1o the Edi\Or as
wet1 as news rtems. Send materials to
Ann Whitcher, Aepater Edilor, 136
Crolls Hall, Buffalo N.Y.,14260.

�IIIIIIII

--.---.-...

I
\ [ \',

.,..._._
News Bureau Staff

A

NEWS1UDYbyUB
researchers has found
no connectjon between the type or
amounts of foods
ealenandtheriskofdevelopingbreast
cancer, further fueling the debate
over the role of diet and lifestyle in
the development of the disease.
"Wefoundnoassocialimsbetween
nutrient ingestion and risk," said Saxon
Graham. professor emeritus of social
and preventive medicine in the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences and an internationally recognized authaity on diet and disease.
Th:resean:hersalsofoundnoa&lt;sociation between breast cancer risk and
caffeine or aloohol consumption or
cigarette smoking.
Results of the seven-year study
of postmenopausal women in New
York State were published in the
December issue of the American
Journal of £pidemo/ogy. The study
was funded by the National Cancer

cancer cases to this registry.

Th: women reported tl&gt;!ir consumptionof45individualfooditems--31 vegetables and fruits. eight meats.
two nOIS. two starches. o0e pastry and
one milk- and answered questions
about their edocation. marital status.
reproductive history. smoking habits
and !I&gt;! use of vitamins. alcohol. coffee, tea and cola.
Bytheendoftheseven-yearstudy
period. 344 women had developed

Food &amp; breast
cancer: no link
UB study finds no -'Mion betw- type of
foods .......... rl8k of . . . . . -

almost 90.(XXJ nurses conducted at
Harvard Medical School produced
the same result. Graham said. The
Buffalo study is based on women
from all walks of life from throughout New Yorl: State.
Women boll1 with and without
cancer in this study derived an average of 34 percent of their calories
from fat, he said. with the percentage
offat in theirdiets ranging from 27.9to
39.6. "The distribution of fat ingestion
among cases was virtually identical to
that of~.. he said.
No association was found between breast cancer risk and total
calories ingested per month, dietary
fiber, vitamin A, retinol (the animal
form of vitamin A). caro&lt;ene (the
plant form of vitamin A) and vitamins Eand C.

A

NAL YSISofthedietary infor-

mation also showed no connection between breast cancer and
caffeine in coffee, tea or cola. or
between breast cancer and alcohol.

regardless of the a.mount consumed
per month or yean; of drinking. In
addition, there was no relationship

between postmenopausal breast cancer and smoking. regardless of the
number ofcigarettes smoked or year.;
of smoking.
Graham cautioned against applying these results broadly. since per-

sons of low socioeconomic status.
breast cancer.

on breast cancer risk- fats. caffeine

Analysis of data from these
women con finned that the incidence
of breast cancer increases with age
and
of education. and was
higher a.mong childless women and
those who bore their first child after
the age of 26-all established risk
factors for breast cancer.
However. comparison of the diets of cana:r cases with non-cancer
cases showed that dietary component&lt;
found in some stodies to have an effect

and vitamin A have received the most

xears

attention-&lt;lidnolincrerueordecrease
the risk in this population.
Various studies have supponed
or disputed the theory that dietary fat
plays a role in the development of
b~ cancer. as it doe in lung.
colon, prostate and rectum cancers.
Graham said his team's research
found fat had no effect on the risk of
developing the di:;ease.
A recent -study of a cohon of

blacks and women with children were
slightly underrepresented in thestody
group, compared to the state· s population at large

In addition ro Graham. members
of the research team were Maria

OMENfromdifferent cultures.
living vastly dif.
ferent lives. experiencemanyof
the same menstrual and premenstrual
symptoms. a UB researcher has found
in 0., first large-scale. population-base
comparison of menstrual-cycle distresS across cultureS.
.. Margaret Mead suggested
cramps are uansculturnl symptoms.··
said Lisa A. Monagle, UB clinical
assistant professor of social and preventive rnc:dicine and lead investigator in the resean:h. "Our study
confirms this, and also suggests thar
other symptoms, such as water retention, emotional symptoms and
decreased activity, are experienced
trans-culturally as well."
Monagle presented the study's
findings at a recent conference sponsored by the Center for Research on
Women and Gender at the University of Ulinois, Chicago.
The study compares the experiences of 179 American, 172
Bahrainian and 239 Italian women.
Using an instrument called the menstrual distress questionnaire, the

W

; ;

~

---

women were interviewed and asked
to repon on their experience of 16
symptoms during three phases-premenstrual, menstrual and remainder
(the rest of the monthly cycle).
Results showed that American
and Italian women experienced
nearly the same number of symptoms overall. while Bahrainian

of PMS. yet more than half reponed
symptoms similar to those experienced by Americarr women,"
Monagle said. "They were very
aware they were feeling what we
know as classic PMS symptom.&lt;."
During the premenstrual phase,
64 percent of the Italians reponed
swelling. 54 percent reponed pain-

women reponed fewer symptoms.
Women's experiences across cultures were most similar during the
menstrual phase. and least similar

during the remainder phase.
Symptoms reponed 'during the
premenstrual phase were revealing,
Monagle said, because they show
that the condition known as premenstrual syndrome (PMS) is not, as
some PeoPle have suggested. a media-aeated phenomenon.
"'Theltalianwomenhadnotheard

tourv-a.

Barnes and her 81811 wil
onteoview a represenlaiM!
sarrple Of more 1han ElXl
adolescents as well as 1heir
paren1$, siblings and
peoo;. They hope 10 understand hwnily and peer intluence on adole9oent alcohol
and substance use and
thereby~ pr..-.tion
efforts.
MEDtC1NE AND
M1CROBIOI.OGY

10----T
has-,._,.
~

The National lnstotutes of
Health
F. _ , . ,, professor o1
mediCine and rrocrobiology. to chair its Bac1eriology
and Mycology Soences
Study Section 1or a two-

year term.
As chair o1 the stiJdy sectoon, Murphy heads a group
of experts from across lhe
Unt1ed Slates thet decodes
lhe sciefltifIC

Monagle foundconsi ·tent symptom
groups across all ·three cultures. but
found as many differenceS as similarities between cultures in the prevalence of individual symptoms:
• During 0., premenstrual phase.
more Americans than Italians repOned
irritability. mood swings and crying.
while more Italians than Americans
experienced swelling. painful breasts

• Italian women experienced a
feeling of well-being in !I&gt;! premen·
struai phase. a little-reponed positive
premenstrual symptom.
• During ·the menstrual phase.
weight gain was reponed by four times
as many Americans as Baluainians.
while twice as many ltaliansas.Ameri-cans reponed lowered work perforful breasts. 49 percent experienced
mance during !I&gt;! menstrual phase.
tension. 41 percent had headaches
..These findings raise many quesand backaches. and 36 percent retionsaboutwhywlturesdiffersocleariy
ported irritability and mood swings.
on how they ~iveandi-epon sympBahtllinian women reponed a lower
toms relating to the menstrual cycle,"
incidence of all premenstrual sympMonagle said 'These~ have
toms than the other two groups. with
001 been studied closely in the past.··
the excepti_on of backache, which
Monagle'sco-authorsonthestody
was reponed by twice as many
areNaeemaAI-Gasseerofthe Bahrnin
Bahrainians as Americans.
'Ministry of Health; Nancy Woods of
Premenstrual symptoms common
the University of Washington. and
to all lhree cultures were fatigue, · Mice Dan of the University oflllinois
anxiety and cramps. Generally. _at Chicago.

and tec:l&gt;-

nical ment
olappro»mately $7.5
million on
gran1 proposals per
year. f'lo.
posals ap-

memofSocialand Preventive Medi-

cine: Brenda Haughey. from the UB
School of Nursing and Philip Nasca
and Michael Zdeb from the New
York State Depanment of Health.

and headache.

"Italian women had not heard of PMS, yet
more than halfreported symptoms similar to
those ofAmerican women. "

.._,-, a~

agist • ~ lJ8.eltilialed
Aesea-ch lnotiUe on Addic:liore, has t.a-1 ed 8 s1.65 rrlllon ledeniJ
grant lrom.lhe Nalionallnsliue on Alcd1CI Abu8e
and AJoohollom 1D liiUdy the
lntUince Of hwnily """"""'
...... plll'l!fUlg al&lt;lls and
peer oelalioo t&amp;tjps on ac»
leaCenl alcohol and Sibstance use and 1100-&lt;J&amp;e.
The project Is fulded lor

Zielezny. James Man;hall. Roger
Priore. Jo Freudenheim and John
Brnsure. all from the UB Depan-

Cramps really are transcultural symptoms
BJ LOIS BAllER
News Bureau Staff

~

r

AESEAACH INSTITUTE
ON ADDICTIONS

lnstirute.

Graham's groupcollecteddietary
histories and demographic information via questionnaire in 1980 from
18.586postmenopausal women who
were free of b~ cancer. as verified through the New York State
Tumor Registry and the New York
· State Office of Vital Statistics. State
law requires all New York hospitals.
labomtories and physicians to report

I ·.

proved by a study sectoon
near1y always are fulded
by the NIH, giving mem-

bers a singular oppor!Uni1y

1o contribute 1o lhe national
biomedical research effort.
Murphy has been a
member ol the stiJdy section sonce 1989. Merrbers
are selec1ed on lhe basis of
thi!ir research, publications
and other significant scientific achievements and ~
ors. He was appoonted 10
chair lhe sectoon for a term
running from July 1992
through June 1994.
Chief of Infectious diseases at Veterans Affairs
Medical Center tn Buffalo,
Murphy curren11y is directIng 1WO live-year projects
totaling $2.5 million to stiJdy
organisms that cause triddle ear infections in childri!O and lung infections in
adul1s. The projects are
funded by the Natlonallnstitute 1or Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
SsrJd ~an spec;./
licrlcrs..-r:h~a

-~-a
~t&gt;Am-. ·
-· The~. 1360olls

moy.,

HIII.Not'h~---

21535. Ycu

S«td

-by-~13).

-

�8

_.., ... _..,_111

'

..-..-ylion Tccbnology.

_..IIAIUIULL
llalJits. Mlin Gym. Alumrti

p.m. Cootinues Feb. 10. Contact
the academic liailoo II 645-3542

Produclloa oru.. Sdf Durtll&amp;

Arena. North Campus. 2 p.m.

for regilltllion infonnation.
SpcliiJ&lt;l«'d by Academic Suvica, CompuliDJ and lnfonna.

U..Aaoor~

WAll ....
The MojdJ FOdory Girl (I !192),
di=ted by Aki K&gt;urismaki .
Woldman Thea!cr. 112 Norton.
Nonh Campus. 1 and 9:30 p.m.
Admissioo, $2.50, UB srudcnl!;
Sl.SO, non--students.

OavidSibean.professo&lt;ofearly
modem German hblory. Cornell
Univ. 532 Part. Nonh Campus.
3:15p.m. Copies of the poperto
be diiCUSICd in the 5e1Tlinar can
be obt.oiood by calling Ellen 11
645-2181.

Blue V dvet ( 1.986), din:cu:d by
David Lynch. Woldman Thealer.
112 Nonon. North Campus.
II :30 p.m. Admission, $2.50, UB
students; $3.50, norHtudenl!.

Novel
Unked BladJn&amp;
Prof.
Mart 8. Meyerboff, Univ. of
Michigan. 10 Acheson. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

,._ys,

SUNDAY

Woldman Thea!cr, 112 Nonoo.
Nonh Campus. 1 and 9:30p.m.
Admission. $2.SO, UB students;
$3.50. non-students.

7

WAll LATE NITE PUI

Blue Velvet (1986), direclcd by
David Lynch. Woldman Thealer,
112 Norton. North Campus.
II :.30 p.m. Admission, $2.50, UB
students: $3.50, non-srudents.

-llt:crfALAIIID

4

UUAII FILM

NATIONAL GlRU AND WOMEN

IN SPORTS DAY
CEUBIIA'IIDN
Women in Sports-Ureakin,;:
lht' Barriers. Mary Ellen Clark.
1992 United State!&gt; Olymp1c

Bront.c Medalist in Divmg Mam
Gym: Alunuu Arena. Nonh Cam pu~ X a.m Tickets S6. UB !o!udcnl\. and S 12._geneml publ1c. at
the UB Tid.ct Office (645-2353)

Frida. Waldman Thconcr. 112
Nonon. ~onh Campus. 7 p.m.
C'tHponsorcd by UUA B. Minor·
ity Affairs SA. and PODER :
Latino!~ Unido!t.
WORDS AND MUSIC LnERARY
SEIIIU
Rudlngs and Perlomumces,
Man.in Clibbcns and joming him.
psychotherapist. poet and fiction
writer Nicole Urdang and classical guimrist Daniel Lidcrbach .
One Linwood Ave 7:30p.m
Tickets. S5 .50.

~

w-.-

COMPVIING
lntrodudJon to CMS, basic
infonnation needed to use the

IBM mainfrume. 202 Baldy. 10
a.m.-Noon. North Campu~. Contact the academic liaison at 6453542 for rcgistmtion information.
Sponsored by Academic Ser·
vices. Computing and Jnforma tion Technology.

COM~W-Introduction
to VMS, basic
information needed to use the
VAXCiu.~ter. 202 BaJdy. North
Campus.. 1· 3 p.m. ConlaCt the
.academic liaison at 645-3542 for
rcgistmtion informatioil. Sponsorcd by Academic Services.
Computing and Information
Technology.

10lUCOI.DGY SEMINAR
Pbannacoklnedc and Pbarma-

oodynamlc MocleUng or organophosphate Insecticides,

James Knaak, Ph.D .• Occidental

Chemieal Corp. 125 CFS Addi -

-I'IIIING--

tion. South Campus. 8 :30a.m.

Generic SA.S, essentials of writing SA.S code to rend and analyt..e
research data. 315 Computing
Center. Nonh Campus. I :.J0.-4:30

BtOLOGICAL SCIENCES

SEMINAR
Factun; that ArTect Gene Expression In Spinach Chloro-

phtsts.. Dr. Margaret
Hollingsworth. UB Dept of Bi()-

Violinist Sonya Mono.off to offer en
all-Beethoven

BUFI'ALO LOGIC CDU.OQUIUM
Logic Dictionary Enlries-

AxfomaUc Method. Laws or
Thought.. Tautology, John

P£DIAIRIC GRAND ROUNDS

Con:or.lll, UB Dept . of Philt'.lso.

The Conundrum of Cat
Scratch Disease, Cynthia Kelly.
M.D. Kinch Auditorium ,
Children's Hospi tal . 8 n.m.

phy

~ B aldy .

Nonh Cumpws. 4

p.m

MATHEMAT1CS CDU.OQUIUM
Blalgebra DeJormatlons and
Tannaka-Krein Theory, Prof. S.
0 . Schack. UB Mathct)'latics

Dept . 103 DiefendCJrf. South

Campus. 4 p.m.
III.ACK HISTORY MQHTll
FORUM

Understanding Minority Cullu~ Through Life Experienas
&amp; Ul.trature,livebroodcast by
WBFO-FM. with audience and
telephone pattjcip3lion . Panelists
inc lude Maria Rosa Allen,
WNED-lV; Rev. Leslie Br.uton.
pastor. Shiloh Baptist Church;
Gary Ross, lecturer, Educational
Opportunity Center, and Lomll
Hill. founder and dircctor. Ujima
Theatre Company. Sharon
Holley. Fronczak Library librar·
ian, will act as modcnuor. Allen
Hall. South Campus. 4-5 p.m.

--.

I'HAIIIIIACSIIIIIDEAIICH

.

The Sunlval or Mycobacterium Avtum Within Macroph·
-and l .. lmpoct.., c.u
Functloo, Yu-Kyoung Oh.
graduale student. UB Depo. of
Pharmaceutics. 508 Cooke. North
Campus. 4-5 p.m.

-I'IITINGW-Intenned.Jate VMS, inlroduction
of more advanced concepts of the
VAX Cluster: intended for experi'enced VMS users. Contact the
academic liaison at 645-3542 for
rcgistr.uion informat ion. 3 I 5
Computing Center. Nonh Cam·
pus. 9 a.m.-Noon. Sponsored by
Academic Services. Computing
and Information Technology.

-

LDCIIWODD UIIIIARY

BISON Demonstration.

Lockwood Library, main refer·
encc dd;k. North Campu~. II
D..{Jl.

_,.IIAQ QEOI.DQY

M ountain or Flre apd Snow,
Carmela Fcrlito. 422 Fronczak.
Non.h Campus. Noon.

~­
Eiec:tronlc
MaD aod Networks
for VMS,lhe basics of using
electronic mail and other network
resources on the V AXCiuster.
315 Computing Center. North
Campus. I:30-3:30 p.m. Coolael
the'academic liaison at 645-3542
for registratiOf) information.

Sponsored by Acadelnic Suvices. Computing and lnforma.

progr.n

Sonya Monosoff. a VIOlinist known for
her persuasive performances of the
.
baroque and classical violin repertory
on period tnstruments. will play an all·
eethoven program with fortepianist Andrew
Willis, Feb. 10, at 8 p.m. 1n Slee Concen
Hall.
"She plays not only an unex·
peeled maslery of lhe sheerly lecllnical diffJcuiiJes
1nvolved," wrole High Fidelity. "but also wJih -lhal
experttse enhvened and warmed by comnunl·
cative. lyrical fervor and infectious gusto.· ·Theplaymg is slyhsh in lhe fines! sense: added
lhe Washington Post
A graduale of lhe Juilliard Gradua1e
School, Monosoft sludied violin on a lellowship wilh Louis Persinger. She played v1ol
1n !he early days of !he New York Pro
Mus1ca. and became increasingly interested in the baroque repertoire for the
VlOiin.·
.
·
Monosoff was a member of lhe
Afn&lt;!de Trio for len years a'nd has collabofaled'wilh such outstanding harpsichordisls as Kennelh Gilben and
Kennelh Cooper: as well as wilh
fonepianisl Malcolm Bilsoo. w11h
whom she has recorded Mozan
Sonalas. Her recording ol Bach 's
Sonatas for violin and harpS&amp;·
chord (wilh James Weaver)
was awarded Stereo Review's
Best Record of lhe Year
Award .
She is currently a profes.SO!' of muSic al Cornell
University.

*

Serologic: Evaluation or Some
1"'-, Rhonda Booldin, !Upervisor, Microbiology and Serology
Labs, Mercy Hospital of Buffalo.
Main Conference Room B.
Mercy H05pitaJ. 8:30 a.m.

X- Windowing

systems. ~

Computing Center. North Campus. I 0 a.m.·Noon. Contact the
academic liaison at 645-3S42 for
regi.stralion infonnation. Sponsored by Academic Services.
Computing and lnfOI'TTUiu·on

-

Technology.

Sandm Porter m 645-2208 or
Kelly Sahncr at 645-3 148.

logiC'.ll Sciences.. 121 Cooke.

9

PEIIIAJWIC CONPEBJICE

~lotroductlon to SUN, conceptS

MONDAY

---

GNU~buicsor
usin&amp; the GNU Emaa ed!ta- on
the UNIX timeWring ~y~~.em.

202 Baldy. North Campus. S-7
p.m. Coolacl the IICOdemic liai.oon
.. 645-3542 fot resilttltion infotnwion. SpcliiJ&lt;l«'d by Acadetnic
Setvioc&amp;. Computing and lnfotnwioo Tccbnology.

__ __,_
P-.

Dloculoloo oe lladirm. 147

and practicalities of SUN-based

Sweclinck. Bach and others. Slee
Concen Hall. Nonh Campus. 5
p.m. Tickets: $6, $4, $2. For
more information caJI64S·2921.

6

TUESDAY

BinghamLOn music faculty.

For more mfonnation, contact

Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

North Campus. 7:30p.m.

Dr. Jonathan BJaen, SUNY 31

Works by Toumemire.

SATURDAY

III.ACK IUTDRY MQHTll
LEC1UIIE
Amlrf Baraka, renowned playwright. poet. novelist and essayist 147 Diefendorf. South Campus. 7 p.m. CaJI645-3029 for
more information

CGiple.
Main Gym, Alumrti
· · LUU11IAU.
Arena.

WAll UTI_.._.

-COLUICII••
a_......Emymo-

WMPILM
The Matdl Flldo&lt;)' Girl (1992),
diroCied by Aki Kaurismaki.

THURSDAY

tion Technolos&gt;'.

219 ~ Nonh Campus.
3:45 p.m.

..--u-Y
BlSON Demonstration.
Lockwood Ubrary, main reference desk. North Campus. I p.m.

~-

Supe.rcomputer (herview, dis-cus.sion of supercomputers avail·
able to UB re.lieai"Chers and how
to access them. 3 I5 Computing
Center. North Campus. 2-5 p.m.
Contact the academic liaison a1
645·3542 for registration in formalion. Sponsored by Academic
Services. Computing and lnformalion Technology.

-

I'HYSICS &amp; A S - Y

Two FermJons In a ParaboUc

Wdi-A Model With lmpUca-

dons for Electron-electron ln·

leractlons lo Molecules, Prof. H.
Ki?&amp;· U8 Dept. of Chemistry.

Diefendorf Hall. South Campus.
1 p.m. Co-lpO!l!OnOd by the UnAssociation
and the Black Studeru Unioo.
~ Srudem

Call 64S..29SO for

lion.

more informa-

-~MATCH

Sllppory Rodt. Gymnwics
Room, 175 Alumni Arena North

Campus. 7:30p.m.

WEDNESDAY

10

-

INSTPIITE A M I .,_AND'I1IAINMQ

Cllnlaol Supervision ror PnKtieing Chemical Dopendency
Supervlson, Dr. Nwv:y Smyth.

presenter. Daemen College:. Maan
St.. Amherst 9 am.-4:30 p.m.
For more infonnation call645-

6140.
-~w-.Introduction to Madt.nNIIka.
concepts and toiols upon which
Marhnna~ica is buih and how to
usc it effectively . 204 Computing
Center. Non.h Campus. 10 a.m.Noon. Contact the acade:mic liaison at 645·3542 for registration
information. Sponsored by Aca·
dcmic Services. Computing and
Information Technology.

-

~PARKSTAFI'

Dr. William Duax, director.
Medical Foundation of Buffalo.

�__

lUllIll..,_ ...
_..,
llilld&gt;oc AudiiOrium, RPCI.
I2:30p.m.

~­
Gmtrlc
SA.S, ~lis of writ-

ing SAS code 10 read ond analyze

• research~ continuation of
Feb. g worbhop. 31 S Computing

Cenlet. Nonh Campus. I :304:30

. . --yp.m. Sponsored by Academic

Service&lt;. Compulina ond lnfor.
marion Technology.

..oc-.u.

On lb&lt; Fal&lt; of Action Poc.nUaJ
Caldum, Peler S. Ptnnefllhcr.
Ph.D.. Facuhy or Phannacy.
Uni". of Toronto. 307
Hochstetler. Nonh Campui. 4

p.m.
.-YUCS-Ait

Domaln Strvc:tu re of lb&lt;
Vacdoo Vinll mRNA Capping

Enzyme, Dr. Edward Niles, UB
Dep&lt;. of Biochtmisuy. 106 Cary.

Sou&lt;h Campus. 4 p.m.
- A \ ' 1 1 AT 41'WS

UTUWI'YArkodll Dragocnoohd&gt;&lt;nko,
Russian poet. will read from h.i.s

Hllriel Simons, orpnizer;
Samuel Adler,-.-: Muny
Sidlin. oonduc:IOr. Axel Theimer,
conduciOr. 2SO Baird. Nonh
Campw. I p.m. For more information contact Dr. Simons at
645-2964.

_,__
w.,...,

Gn~pbl wUb P Vinrroduction to this scientJfte visuali7.aion and data analysis pacbae
lhalruns under X-Windows. 204
Computini"CeniOr. 1-4 p.m. Cootact: the academic liai100 II 645. 3542 for registration infortn11ion.
SpotlSOrCCI by Academic Servica. Computina and Information Technology.

_,__

SPSS ror VMS, cssc:ntials
needed to run SPSS on the
V AXCJuster. 31 S Computir.g
.Ccmer. Nonh Campus. I :304:30
p.m. Contact the: academk liaison
at 645-3542 for registB~ion information. Sponsored by Academic
Services. Computi ng and Information Technology.

PMOIGM 'PIIY-VIIW
Poinl&lt;d pbolOpaphs by Jodie
Olilds. M .F.A. COIIltidolt in pho&lt;opapby in lhe UB Oepanmcm
o( Att, ... 00 view lhrou&amp;h
Mart:b I In lht Panel Gal 1cry or
l..octwood Memorial l.ibroly,
Nonh Campus.

--

Worb by six W'*"' New York
Stale prilUlllakcn-Kumi Kon.
Bllbua Rowe. Palricia Bacon. J•
Kalhcrinc Bcboul, Ocboroh
Haylor ond Glenn Smllh, will be
on view through Feb. 16 in
llclhune Gallery, 2917 Main 51.,
Buffalo. Call829-34n for aai·
lcry hours.
-...cll.sTO!n'~
~

"Artist-Continuing the Drum,"
an elh.ibit of drawings. paintings.
pholography, fiber an ond sculpwre. is on view through Feb. 21
in Room 250. Student Union.
Nonh Campus. Anisu rqnsentcd include Valeria Cray,
Wil helmina Godfrey. Mary

poetry 420 Capen. NOI'th Campus 4 p.m. Sponsored by the UB
l'ocucs Program
F.ma~ I X . ba.~ics

u-.mg the GNU Emacs editor on
tM- UNIX timesharing sy~em.
202 Baldy. North Campus. 5-7

MEN 'S BAIKETBAU.

\'oungstown State. Mam Gym.
Alumni Artna North CampU!t
7 JOpm
VISITING AlmST SERES

Sonya Monosorr. violinist: and
1\ndrcw Will is, foncpianist. in an
all -Beethoven program Slcc ·
Concert Hall. North Campu.s M
p m lkkeu· SM. S6. S4

T HURSDAY

11- ·

INITITinE FOil ADOICTIOH

ITUDIEI AND l"RAINING

Clinical Supervision ror PracUclng Chemlcai·Qependency
Suptrvlsors. Dr. Nancy Smyth.
prtscnter. Dacmcn College. Main
St., Amhcrsl ..9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
For more information call 645-

FRIOA, Paul leduc's film-portrait of Mexican painter
Frida Kahlo, will be shown at Woldman tonight at 7.
I'IIYIICS AND AB,__Y
CDU.OQUIU"
A UniHed DescripUon or lhe

Cuprate Superconductors:
Theory and Experiments. Dr.

S1Uan Wulf. Naval Re.scan:h Lab
4.5-1 Fronc1.ak. Nonh Ciimpus.
J45p.m
..UIIC LEC1VRE IDlES
Anomaly and ConnJct In the
Music or Bartok and Webt.m.
Ruben Morri.s. Eastman School
of Music. 211 Baird. North Campus. 4 p.m.

-

l'tWIMACEUTICS IIEKARCH

T he Enhancement or tht TISSUe
DeUvt.ry and Rectptor Blndlrig
of MethylpndnisoloM in Rats
by Uposomal Formulation,

Elena Mishina. Ph .D..
posukx:toral fellow. UB Dept. of
Pharmaceutics. 508 Cooke.·North
Campus. 4-5 p.m.
WAll FILM

lnddenl al Oglala ( 1!19Z), di·
rected by Michael Apted.
Wold man Theruer, 112 Nonon.
North Campus. 7 p.m. Co-spon§Ored by UUAB. Minorit)' Af·
fairs SA and NBti\'e American
Peoples Alliance.

EXHIBITS

-·

lliR: STUDENTS 10 -..uY

-·

--

Novel Cal+ -Calmod ulln-dtptndent Protein K.Jnases: Ia
and lb, AnhW' Edel man. Ph.D..
UB Dep&lt;. of PllarmaooiO&amp;Y 3nd
Therapeutics. 2S8 CFS. South
Campus. 12:30 p.m.
The Pr&lt;panotloo of
TomorTOW'I ConductoniV,
featuring UB Professor of Music

Utzel. Cha-Eve Maisonneuve.
Beatrice Marshall. Katie NeVin.
Nancy !'appal. Rajcsh Rao. Rochelle Renford. John Swaine. Hui
Mci Tsai , Melanie Voborit. Andy
Benson. Mary Butler. Bill CiS7.ak.
Vince Nicholas and Diane
Rosseau. llOW&gt;: Monday lhrough
Thursday, l-8p.m.: Friday, I·S

p.m.

Rowell, Diana Jackson. William
Cooper. David Gordon. Dr. Roben P..Limer and James Pappas.
Sponsored by Delta Sigma Theta
Sorority Inc .. Buffalo Alumnae
Chape.er. and the UB Creath·e
Crufl Center. Hours: 10 a.m.-S
p.m.. Monday-Friday; Saturda)·
Sunday. Noon to S p.m.
~DIII'UY

"The Bluesmcn.'' pholngr.&gt;phs by
Ed Sobala documenting 20 years
of blucsmen and jazz.mcn at work
and play. will be on view through
March 14 Bt the WBFO studios in
Allen Hall. South Campus. Call
829-2880 for more mfonnntion.

NOTICES
-ALIERVICE
ICHDIULDI
A memorial service for Professor
lnt Cohc:n. who died Dec. 2.
1992. will be held on llmi'Sdnr,Fcb. 18m2 p.m. in the Dean 's
Conference Room. 280 Park •tall.
North Campus. A member of the

Psychology Department from
1952 to 1987 whc:n he retired.
Professor Cohen was Pro\'051 of
the Faculty or Social Sciences
fro m 1968- 1971. Anyone interested in speaking ar the service
should contact Prof. Murray
Levine. Oepartmcnl or Psychol·
ogy. 645-3660.'

----

Current listings of jobs in business arkt industry. government,
health. education and non-pfofit
organi1..ations, ~ available in the:
Office of Can:c:r Plannif!g' and
'Placement. 15 Capen Hal l. North
Campus. Call 645-2231 for more
inforrruuion.

-1UTUHl10 R HELD
ror MENSA.
lhe high I.Q. society. will be held
Saturday. Feb. 13 at I p.m. in 208
Butler Library, Buffalo State
College. 1300 Elmwood Ave ..
1lM:rt: is a $2S fee; pre-registr•·
lion appreciat.ed. Please contact
Judi&lt;h llopkins a&lt; 632-89S9 for
more infornuu.ion on testing or
membership.
The admission test

I,

,

'"'1

t

1

5MB RAM • 160MB Hard Drive • NEW
14" Color Mon itor • Extended Keyboard

109 UB Commona • N o rth Camp.u • 645-3554

LmQJQom••
·------------·-

=-

'\.t'\\

=-

Feb. 5 is the: regislralion deadline

MFC students. all enrollees either
in A RT 231-Paimi.ng for Non·
mAL TNEJtAPY CONFE'IIENC£
Majors or in evenin,g architecture
l'blll p GUck, M.D. Ob/Gyn Con· . classes-are exhibiting their
fcrcncc Room. Children's Hospi·
v.'Qrks through Feb. 25 in
tal . Noon.
Drew_dora Gallery, 144 Patter
Hall. South Campus. Palticipants
LOCIIWOOO UIIIWIY .
include Mo.rie Arora. Sandra
Dinunzio. Gregory Fiore.
BISON O.mons&lt;raUon.
Bernadene Frankl in, Rachel
Lock. wood Library, main rtfer· ·
1-louiton. Pei Zi (Tiffany) Huang.
ence desk. North Campus. Noon.
Thai Huynh: Bonnie Koch,
ANA-ALSCtENC£1
Dorola Kolodziejczylc.. HIUT)'
61-10.

blood pressure(&gt; 130180 mmHg).
BenefitJ include free physical and
cardiovascular evaluation and a
$140 stipend for compl&lt;tinalht
Sludy. For more information, call
Dr. Sung or Wendy OrloW5ki at

for the new New York Stare
Teacher CertifiCation Examina-

hy Soler. Chopin and

'-l)rt.-d by UUAB. Mmonty Affa.,... SA and Nati\ C Amcncan
P~uplc'i. Alli ance.

To qualify. volunteers must be
between lhe JICSOf21 ond 35, be
in good health. and have nonnaJ

~LED

OPUI ' CLAIIICS IIECn.&lt;U.

Sar-Sha lom Strong. piano.

l\

$1,779

Dr. Bona llce Suoa. Ph.D.. re-

lookina for male YOiuntecrs for a
n:searth proj&lt;cl 00 lhe cffCCIS of
caffeine oo blood preuure during
!Ut and cxerciJe.

NEW Y-ITATE TEACtiEJI
CIEimfiCA.,_ EXAMS

RISO N Dtmonstra tJon.

Lockwood Library. mam rc:fercnl'c desk. Nonh Camput~o. 7 p.m

1

(

Macintosh Ilsi

search profeuor of medicine, is

Tutor math for credit at the Math
Place. Conl&gt;Cl Todd Baker, Malh
P1acecoon::linator, at 112 Talbert.
North Campus (645-2394).

-

UUAB .F1LM
Incide nt a t Oglala ( 1992 1. directed by Michael A pled
Wuldman Theater. I 12 Norton
'lunh Cumpu:o 7 p m Co·!tpon

...._~\

--IIIIATH I'I.AQ: SED11

LOCIIWOOO UIIRAIIY

J;·.J,.

I

alUDYfW-Pfteft

rwor. a&lt;IIOTalben Hall (64S2394).

p m Contact the academic liaison
at 645-3542 for rc:gistnuion informauon SJX&gt;flSOfCd by Academic
Scrvu;es, Compuling and lnformauon Technology

~urls

Pt:nons over I 8 who have ever
panicipoo:d in (or plan 10 participale in) any form or pn:nwital
intervention program oonducted
by a rc:U,Iioul orpniulion (&lt;.g..
Pre Cana Of Enpacd Enooun!et)
~ sought for 1 srudy being con·
ducl&lt;d by a UB School of Law
SlUdenL Special .,......, inlerfailh maniJICS; !hole canceling
wedding plans after panicipalioo
in such progmns. Call693-8650
from 9 a.m. lO 9 p.m.

WMT.o
SOUGHr
TulOf writing for credit at the:
Writing Place. Contact Arlene
Sullivan. reading/writing coord:i-

of

Gmastcra Allen t-lall South
Campo~ 7 p m

-

-..a&amp;.llnDVIEWS

8814SS6.

COMP~­

GNU

7

tions thai will be offered in
Matt.h. tr you will be appl)ing
for your first provisional teaching
cen.ificatc subsequent to Sept. I ,
1993. you need to pass the Liberal Arts and Sciences Tesa and
the Assessment of Teaching
Skills
Sec your teacher education
dean or depan.ment chair to obtain a registration bulletin for
these important dates.
CMIIIIERVICEI ADVOCATE

-SEDII

YDWtfTDJII
Wo~n

and men interested in
volunteering for Crisis Services·
Advocate Program for Victims of
Sexual Assault. are invited to cuJI
834-3131 and ask for the Advocute Program.
Volunlcers respond 24 houl') a
day to assist victims of rape and
!oCXUal abuse in hospital emerg~ncy rooms and in the coons.
Advocates provide ongoing suppun to victim.'&gt; and thc:1r families
and fnends. Applicants who are
selected for the progrnm should
be 18 or older and have their own
transportation.

JOBS
FACliLt'Y
Assistant Ubrarilln·Poctry/Ru.n:

Books Coll&amp;:tion. University
Libraries. Posting •F-3001 . Assista n tl~ate

Prol'usor (N ·o

pcNUons anllab~)-Medicine.
Posting •F-3002. ~tant Prores:sor-Pa!hology. Posting lfF3003.
IIEKARCH

Rese&amp;rm Tec::hnidan 11-An:J·
tomicaJ Sciences. Posting lfR92079. Pcotdoctonl A55ncialfl
Research Sde.ntists (two positions avallable)-OraJ Biology.

PoSling MR-93006. Oerk JlSponson:d Prognuns Payroll.

....._._

Pi&gt;stina MR-93008.

Facllld .. Engln&lt;et--MtdUtnlcal
(SL-Sl-Dcsian 3nd ConslniClioo.
Posting • P-20SO. Coordinator,
Media Equlpm&lt;nl S.I"Vkos
(SL-3)-Academic Services. Com·.
puling and Information Techno!·
ogy. Posti ng MP-20SS.
COWH:Iillri Cl.ASSM'tED
CIVIL MJMCil

Clull. I (SG-06, part - lime ~ Lockwood Library, Line M307S4.

\lit

t!JJ-..

.J
.J
.J
.J
.J
.J
.J
.J
.J

I Ill

tt/lll)lllt I

\\til

~~ 1 1111~ 4..,tilllllh I

]

k-..llttl
1

1'1

1"

l

Adll&lt;ltlad Fmtures of PagrMIIbr for Windows
PagrMIIbr frn' Power Usm frn' WiruU1ws
Using A.miPro for Window•
MA n~~ging Datab&lt;zsts with Tables using Parado.~
Adll&lt;ltlad Fmtures of PMadoz
MAn~~ging Dlllabasts using FozBA.SE+ (MAC)
Basic Dr&lt;lwing in Fruhand (MAC )
Crmting Compler Documents in Fruhand
Working with Color in Freehand

Call645-3560 for workshop schedule
and registration information.

_________...,._
~~r.~~DIIIiiDJ
~_.,.,.

Convenience
Quality
Service
ariety

�_..,.__..,_

8

..

Celebrated playwright, poets featured in
1993 Four Plus poetry and prose series

T

HE UNIVERSITY will present
more than 20 even as pan of its
Spring 1993 Wednesdaysat4 PLUS
poetry and prose series, which will
run this week through April29. All
readings and lectures are free and open to the
public.
This year the series, sponsored by the VB
Poetics Progrnm, will present a March 10 talk
by Richard Fonman,oneofthecountry' slll06t
celebrnted(andcontroversial)experimentalplaywright/directors. Widely hailed as a genius of
written dntma and dirtcrion, he is the author of
many plays including, "Samuel's Major PnJI&gt;.
!ems," winner of the 1992 American Academy
and Institute of Art,, and ~...etters Prize for Literature.

The series also will feature an extensive
1ntcmationaJ slate of guest writers distinguished
for their work in contemporary poetry and
fiction in English. II also will incorporate events
connected with two literary conferences and a
film symp:&gt;sium.

Highlights include:
• A reading by acclaimed poet and translator
Jerome
(March 3).

R.,.,..,._.

• " Wrttl~fnlmthe New Coast, • a threeday poetry festival of new poetry featuring

readings and discussions with more than 30
new young American writers who are defining
cum:nt !Jends in Nonh American poetry
(March 31-Apri13).

.....

,........._....a

_. ... ........,• a IWIHiay irumalional
oonference on Samuel Beclr&lt;U sponsored by the
VB Progmm in Cornpotarive Literature (April
22-23).

• AM
Ca"r ••••W-Direc:ten.,"
at which six films directed by women will be
screened and discussed, including Marguerite
Duras' "India Song," Julie Dash's "Mothers
and Daughters" and anew film, "Shoot for the
Content" by Trinb T. Minb-Ha, who will be
present at the screening (Feb. 25-27).
• A reading by poet c.rt IMnooM, VB professor of English (Aprill4).
• Talks and/or poetry readings by Altlldl
llniiOr" • halllo, one of Russia's finest
contemporary poets (Feb. I0,18);NewZealand
critic and poet
c:un,ow (Feb. 17,
25), and German literary scholar Hannah
Moc:kel-Rleke(March25). All are 1993 Poetics Progrnm Fellows and will be in residence
at VB this Spring.
• Presentalions by Yugoslavian philosopher
and conceprual anist .............. ,April
29) and by poet and translator llillllnlcll Djultc,

wr.e-

who is also a 1993 VB Poetics Fellow (April IS).
• A poetry reading and discussion withc:.dla
VlaMa, a llOied Olilean poet, filmmaker,

performance artiSI and sculp!lr(March 17-18).
• Readings by Vermont poet LouiM llliic:ll,
winner of the New York Critics Circle Award
(March 26); Cultls Willie, an American "benign cynic" and fiction-writer ("Heretical
Songs," "Metaphysics in the Midwest," "The
Idea of Home") on March 31, and by poettranslator DIIWillbtttnl)' (Feb. 20).
• A reading by one of the lllOSI daring and
controversial experimental writers in France
today-j)OOt, novelist, essayist and editor
c:twtea.n P1tPM (April21).
L.ockwoodMemorialLibrary,theUndergJaduate Lilnry and Poetty/Rme Book Collection
bouse more than 600 book, broadside and chapbooktitlesbytheguest writers, manyofthemoneof-a-kindpublicationsandothervaluableeditions.
Wednesdaysat4PLUS is sponsored in pan by
the David Gray Otair of Poetry and Leuers, the
Depanrnenl of English (Otarles Bernstein); the
Samuel P. Capen Otair of Poetry and the Humanities (Robert Oeeley);theJamesH. McNuhy
Olair (Dennis Tedlock), and by the Poetry/Rare
Bool&lt;s Colledion curaled by Robert Bertholf.
The Poetics Progmm Fellowships are en-sponsored by the !:lean of Ans and ~...etters.

Critical.thinking course brings dramatic
improvement in academic performance

,M

lly PATIIICJA DOHOVAN

the beginning of the course. improvement was
shown to hold over time. Two semesters later.
for instance. many students whose GPAs were
ETHODS OF Inquiry." the
in the " D" to "C" category before they took the
popular course in critical
course showed GPAs two grade categories
thinking that has been offered
ahead of their staning point. Their improve·
at the University at Buffalo
ment continued, Schapiro said. and even grew
since 1987. has dramatically
after their MOl semester.
and consistently improved the academk per·
Differences in success rates revealed a posiformance of student;.li who have completed it.
tivecorrelation between a high MOl grade and
even Lhose who staned out wi th failing grades.
increased GPA.
The latest evaluation of the outcome of the
Much sma ller
one-semester. 3&lt;rcdit academic course. was
differences in
based on an assessme nt of the perfonnance of
performance
1.649 UB students who completed it between
seem to be corre19H7 and 1992. The group. with grade-point
lated with genavemgcs (GPAs) at entry between 0.0 and 4.0.
der, race and
c:onsistcd of students who had completed at ·
major course of
least one sernester of srudy at the time of
study.
enmllmeot in the coun;e. A total of 2,800
John Thorpe.
students topk the course during the study peVB 'vice provost
riod.
for
undergraduSusan Schapiro, whodirectsthe UB project.
ateeducationand
\~eve loped through a $235,000 grant from the
dean of the
U.S. Depanment of Education, said the data
-susAN SCHAPHtO university's Unindiduc that mos~ panicipanL~ became better
dergraduate Colstudents, no ·maner what their GPAs were at
lege. said that
enrollment.
even
before
the
first
research
repon was com"To succeed academically. students need to
piled several years ago. conventional campus
become aware of Lhemselves as learners,"
wisdom held that Methodsoflnquiry "worked ...
Schapiro said. "They must learn to recognize
"In the eight semesters it's been offered,"
what they know and don't know and find ways
he added, "every section in tl)e course has been
to fi ll in the gaps."
filled
to capacity with students representing a
The . . . 8howed tlult:
heterogeneou~ cross-section of the university
• 1.()61 , or61.9 percent of the students, raised
undergraduate population.·· Improvements
their GPAs from 0.2 to 3.2'points in only one
have been s&lt;i significant and student response
semester.
so poSitive: he said. that UB faculty who de• The number of enrolled students with GPAs
vised the progmm have presented it to.more
in the "A" range (3.699-plus) doubled on aver- than IOOcolleges and universities nationwide.
age, from 83 to 163 from the beginning to the
many of which are now adapting it for their
end of the semester.
own use.
For students in serious academic trouble.
"Methodsoflnquiry" consists oftwo weekly
the news is even better.
50-minute lecture classes in which stUdents
• The lower a student's grades at entry, the
analyze learning theories and complete class
grcaterthepercentageofimprovementachieved
assignments based on them. There is an addion average. Of those students with a GPA of tional 30-minute, one--on-one collaborative
less than "C" at theootse~ 83.7 percent showed
meeting with a peer monitor once a week.
a mean gain of 1.12 points in GPA.
The curriculum is based on two assump• Even for Sllldents at serious academic risk at
tions: I) that every discipline asks discrete or
News Bureau Staff

"To succeed __
studenJs need
to become
aware of
themselves as
learners."

special questions and has its discrete methodology for answering them . and 2) that people
already have the ability to think concepmally
and do it all the time in everyday life, but need
to learn to transfer their critical skills to the
academic situation.
Schapiro said that students immediately
engage course strategies by applying them to
their other classes. The strategies include generating questions from class notes, reading
material in a searcfi for form and purpose.
preparing information maps and key-worddiagmms. and exploring metaphors and models.
Listening, reading and writing to answer questions, as well as self-editing. are taught and
monitored.
The researchers' conclusions are based on
a statisticaJ assessment of eight semesters of
grade and retention figures, pre- and postcourse student inventories. mid-course and
final evaluations.· and interviews with both
successful and unsuccessful srudents.
Results of the Learning and Study Strategies lnventory(l.ASSI) also provided measurable evidence of goal-directed, active learning
• by panicipants and their maintenance of increasingly positive attirudes several semesters
after completing the course. Participants consistently reponed significant post-&lt;:oun;e improvement in attitude, anxiety levels,
motivation, time management. concentration
and infonnation processing strategies.

T

HE VB METHODS of Inquiry course is
an elaboration of a progrnm developed in
1983byMarcia.Heimanand JoshuaSlomianko
as the "l..ea!ning to Learn" progrnm. It arose
from a study at the University of Michigan that
identifled learning processes used by successful learners.. Their research, which was validated in 1983 by the Joint Dissemination
Review Panel of the U.S. Depan!t)ent of Education, showed that dramatic gains in academic achievement resulted from teaching the
approach in small classes to at-risk Sllldents. ·
The VB studies support the Heiman/Slomianko
contention and indicate further that the method
can be ~I in large classes with Sllldents
at allleyels of perfonnance.
o-

Project aids
multicultural
education

T

HE VB GRADUATE
School ofl!ducation and the
Buffalo Public SchoOls have
been awarded a $50,000
grant from the Metropolitan
Life Foundation to fund a project to help
teachers improve their ability to teach
multicultural education programs.
The grant recipients, Susan Noftke
and Mwalimu Shujaa. assistant professors at the university, will direct an ISmonth collaborative program in whicb
40 Buffale&gt;-area teachers will use and
evaluate educational material
that
challenges
deep-seated
cultural beliefs. The
project also
will assess the
usefulness of
collegial dialogue
in
teaching the
new materi4{) als.
Pr oject
leaders say
the study will
identify proredurcs lllOSI useful to teachers and administrators
and
will
analyz.e
the proce ss of transformation
experienced by teachers as they evaluate
the effectiveness of their own teaching.
The project design evolved from a
survey of Buffalo public school teachers
oonductedin the 1989-90schoolyearthat
asked what might assiSI them in teaching
the new multicultwal social studies curriculums. The project will give an experiorental group of teachers what they asked
for in the survey and assess the reSidts.
Teachers surveyed said their teaching would be enhanced through the
availability of appropriate instructional
materials. So project panicipants--30
Buffalo school teachers and IOteachers
enrolled in UB's Buffalo Research lnstilule Qn Education for Teachers
(BRIE1)-will conduct studies of their .
own teaching practices at their schools
using a variety of materials.
Survey respondents . also wanted
regular discussion and feedback fltlm
their peers and an opponunity to examine their own attitudes about the value
of learning and teaching about cultures
different from their own. In response,
the project will facilitate regular meetings among participating teachers fn
which the teachers will examine their
own teaching practices and build a network of relationships through which
they cim exchange knowledge about
resulting changes in their teaching pntetices.
The success of the project will be
evaluated through a series of weekly
surveys, small-group interviews and
large-group evaluation sessions, action
reports and papcn. The project is a enoperative venture by tbe Buffalo Public
Schools' Department of Curriculum
EvaluatiO!' and Developmen~ the Department of !..earning and lnSIJUCtion
and the Department of Educational Organi.wion, Administration and Policy
in the VB Graduate School of Education, and BRIET.

Susan Noffke
and
Mwalimu
Shujaawill
direct
program
involving
teachers.

�_,..,

View

0.10I

.... _..,_..

The Reporter welcanes commentaty on ISSUeS
of broad Interest to the univefsily community.
Material may be edffed for style and length.

Human Rights and Peacekeeping:
Lessons of Bosnia, Iraq, Somalia
By ClAUDIE L WILCM .Ill.

U

NITED STATES and United

Nations troops are deeply involved in complex militarycivilian operations far removed
from their usual peacetime
activities. In Bosnia-Herzegovina and Somalia, soldiers under U.N. auspices seek to
disentangle warring ethnic factions. In Iraq,
Saddam Hussein's government has lost its
"'vereignty over both the Kurdish and Sh'iamhabited parts of the country as a result of
U.N. Security Council votes. enforced
largely by U.S. military mighL ln more
than 20 other locations, uoops under

U.N. command
guard tense frontiers .
The challenges to
WELCH

9

these soldiers are
immense, Lhe likelihood of their long-

t~m1 suctcss in question.

Why and how did these military underbecome necessary, in the view of
llltcmat lona·l policymakers'? Given Lhe num""' of Lmuble spots around the globe. what
rall\lllillc justified the selections? Are new
l'lllh:t:pt' of responsibility emergi ng. in

ta.,.mg~

"h1dlthc United Nations--or the United

St:llc' wuh the U.N.'s blessing- has become
" world'~ policeman '!.. These issues have
emerged with stark clarity. Answers to them
rcmam veiil.-d in obscurity, however.
To understand the rationale for global
peacekeeping. perspectives from in ternational law and re lations may help. "Pcaceh"C pmg" is a task long associated with the
Unncd ati on!-t, and di rect ly relevanl to the
·· Blue Berets" in Saravejo. The concept of
.. humanitarian assistance" is now emerging.
~uid ing the American and other soldiers
protecting aid workers in strife~tom Somalia_
The idea of "collective security" justifies the
mil itary actions taken against Iraq. The three
":oncepts differ in imponant ways.
tht.'

LMOST since its inception. the United
A
has taken center stage in some
world hot spoL&lt;. Thin lines of blue-helmeted
Nation ~

U. N. soldiers have stood, lonely and expn&gt;ed, between hostile groups. No less than
17 J?Cacckeeping operations have been spon\On.'d by the United Nations. more than half
uf them Initiated since 1988. These operalions were analyzed rccenlly in Buffalo by
Canadian Maj. Gen. Lewis MacKenzie.
recent commander of U.N. forces in
S:u-•vejo, at a talk co-sponsored by the UB
Human Rights Center. According to him,
only two have succeeded: in Nicaragua, to
disarm contending Sandinista and contr.J
forces following the 1990 election; and in
the independence of Namibia the same year.
after years of confrontation be1ween South
Afric.an troopS and SWAPO guerrillas. Despite what Gen. MacKenzie views as at best
inconclusive results, the demand for U.N.
peace-keepers remains high. Why?
Peace-keepers do not reestablish law and
olrler in war~tom settings. They prtvem the
further eruption of conOict, afttr warring
sides have agreed to cease-fires. The "blue
helmets" provide a buffer, policing the truce
that has been reached. They should serve on
shon-term bases. while fmal political solulions are negotiated. ln reality, thc;Y can
remai n for decades rather than months.
Thus. while Cypriot Greeks and Turks have

confronted each other since 1964,
UNFICYP continues to stand between them.
In southern Lebanon, UNIAL (the United
Nations loves acronyms) has stood guard
since 1978. Kashmir remains a flashpoint
between India and Pakistan. despite the more
than 30 years U.N. forces have patrolled the
frontier.
"Peacekeeping," in other words, does not
"resolve'' conflict: nor does it impose military "solutions." The troops are usually
drawn from small countries far removed
from the tumults of international politics: for
example, Denmark, Fiji. Ghana, or New
Zealand. The United Nations provides minimal logistical suppon, though it pays the
bills (or the soldiers (assuming, of course,
that U.N. members. in tum, cough up their
assessments). The United Nations lacks any
24 hours-per-&lt;ll!y. any seven-days-per-week
command center. Presumptively. their presence enables warring !-tides to negotiate: in
fact, assens Gen. MacKenzie, their presence
may be a disincentive to political solutions.
Life continues. the U.N. contingent providing welcome hard currency to local provisioners. while the squabbling sides are kept

apan.

Collective Security __,
the U.N. Charter
Founders of the United Nations were
deeply influenced by world conditions in
1945. Its Chaner's preamble begins. "We
1he peoples of the Uni1ed Nations. delcrmined to save succeeding generations from
the scourge of war which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind ... ·· Two sections of the Chancr deal
respectively with pacific seulement of disputes (Chapter VI) and with threaiS to peace.
breaches of the peace. and acts of aggression
(Chapter VII). Ei ther the Security Council or
the General Assembly may discuss issues
under Chapter VI; only the Securi1y Council
can-authorize actions under Chapter VII. in
the form of"collectivc security."
Collective security requires great power
cooperntion and involvement. Peacekeeping.
by contrclSt. rests upon the participation of
small and neutral powers. Operation Desen
Stom1 and more recent military steps against
Iraq required a breakthrough in inlernational
rcla1ions. The abrupt end of the Cold' War
opened the opponunity for undenaking
major collective actions for the first time in
over 40 years. with Jess fear of a veto from a
permanent member of the Security Council.
(In 1950, the USSR had boycoued Council
meetings, thereby permiuing U.N. fon:es,
under U.S. leadership. to repel North
Korea's invading annies; thereafter. the
Cold War reigned.) The Uni1ed States can
now (within significant limits) cobble t&lt;&gt;gether a global coalition; introduce resolutions jointly with France, Russia and the
United..Kingdom; and encourage military
steps where international peace is threatened.
None of these points explain Somalia.
however.' Whyhas the United States, acting
under a specially-worded Security Council
resolution. sent thousands of troops into a ·
si tuation that seemed to pose no threat to
global peace? Has the idea of "hullliDilarWl .
intervention.. been given new life? ls cbere
international agreement that widespread
conflict, starvation and collapse of civil
order justify military involvement? If Somalia now, why weren't steps taken earlier in
strife-tom Liberia? or Mozambique? or
Cambodia?

Hu......tt.rt.n MAaslatance"
.nd Mlnterventlon"
To Gen. MacKenzie, the U. N./U.S. involvement in Somalia represents a seismic
shift in intemational relations. No peacekeeping forces were invited in by contending
warlords. Though persons were displaced by
famine and connie~ no massive stream of
refugees threatened neighboring countries.
The real factor was public opinion. The
outside world saw the gaunt visages and
mau:hstick limbs of starving children, while
AK-47-equipped marauders looted food
convoys. CNN and other media, Gen.
MacKenzie observes, encouraged popular
pressure in favor of intervention, to which
President Bush respooded.
ln imponant respects. the Somali operation has been deemed "humanitarian assistance." No single international treaty defines
this concepL For this reason. a recent study
undenaken by two UB law school students,
working under the direction of Professor
Virginia Leary (co-director of the Human
Rights Center) holds special interest. As the
International Coun of Justice observed. in its
1984 ruling in the Nicaragua vs. United
States case, " There can be no doubl that the
provision of strictly hurnanilarian aid to
persons or forces in another country ...cannot
be regarded as unlawful intervention. or as in
any other way contrary to international law."
Bw the Somalia case has raised the international ante, in a sense. Emerging now in global
practice may be the right both to receive and 10
pmvide essential supplies to peoples who are
victims of narural or man-made disaster. including victims of non-international armed
conflict. This represents a signifiC3!11 expansion
of what used 10 apply only to armed forces in
action in interslate w:'lr...
HE so-called "law of armed conflict'' has
long regulated what military forces can
do. Only in 1949. under the Geneva Convention~ . were clear guidelines for the l.reatment
of civilians caught in international wars

T

The UN is groping
towarri a new, activist
role, encouraged by
U.S. public opinion.
ilpw for will this go?
-L-.cH

prepared These strictures have now become
pan of c:ustomary as well as treaty-based

international law, meaning all states in the
world are bound to maintain them. As Article 3 reads, ~Persons taking no active pan
in the hostilities. ..shall in all circumstances
be treated humanely, without any advene
distinction founded on race, color, religion or
faith, sex, birth or wealth, or any other similar criteria." More recent Protocols (that is.
extensions to the Convention) have been
widely rntified. suggesting. in the eyes of
many international law scholars, that tbetc is
a right. in civil wars as w~U as in inl~ma ­
tional conflict, to receive humanitarian assistance.

HE U.S./U.N. role in Somalia poses an

T

acute conflict between two basic principles: non-intervention in the affairs of a
sovereign state. the comer.;tone of international relations for nearly 350 years; and the
rigbt to intervene wben fundamental human
rights are assaulted and citizens subjected to
treatment that shocks the global conscience.
The U.N. Charter explicitly bars intervention
"in matters which are essentially within the
jurisdiction of any state ... " Nations have
consistently acted to protect their sovereignty, and, in tum, have overlooked disastrous events in others. In the 1970s, for
example. the U.N. turned a blind eye to
massive slaughters in Burundi and Cambodia. ow international awareness is changing. We seem to have become-though
hesitantly and incompletely-oor brothers"
and sisters' keeper. under the global eye of
television cameras. The U.N. is groping
toward a new. activist role. encoumged by
U.S. public opinion. How far willlhis go0
International Jaw needs to find a new.
appropriate baJance between the contending
claims of great powers' military might and
their role in collective security; between
small countries' involvement in peacekee~
ing and the need for political solutions; between maintenance of domestic sovereignty
and international protection of human rights.
Debate will doubtless continue for decades.
By squarely faci ng the contradictions outlined above and by pondering how global as
well as national protection of human rights
can best be ensured. clearer answers may
e111CQ!C. UB's Human Rights Center will be
in the forefront of those seeking insights.
CI8Ude E. Welch. Jr IS SUNY Dlshngwshed
Senrlce ProleSS&lt;X o/Polmcal Sc&lt;enee and codlrecfDt' a/ the univerSity's Human Rl!}hts Center

�..

II II I I

II II \ , I 11

1

..

TIU ISSUI :

Gays in the
military
TNI SPIAKIR :

CMIIMLc.r,
clinic-' ••ulrll peuf nar
fiAIMrlltQa
THE QUOTE :

The arguments being offered
against lifting the ban on gays in
the military "are vr:ry similar to the
arguments previously used to oppose the integration of the armed
forces-you don ' t know if you're
able to uust them, if they are able
to do the job. These are the same
spurious arguments being used
against gays."
Arguments that rules of conduct
would have to be changed if the
ban is lifted "don ' t hold much water. The rules would be the same
as those in effect about heterosex ual conduct in the service: You
don't have sexual activity in the
barracks or the workplace. The
discussion is really ridiculous. We
would be just as·outraged if there
was open heterosexual activity
goi ng on in the workplace and
barracks."

_.,.__...,_
1J1J1J1J Public Safety's OBITUARIES

___
--------LLU. Weekly Report

_....., ...

------~-

• A Fargo Quadrangle resident repelled
Nov. 21 that someone threw eggs at his
door, and via compute&lt; mail, left a message
relating to the Incident.
• A three-Inch LCD pocket television, valued
at $200, and five &lt;XJrr4)3Ct disks, valued at
$75, we&lt;e repelled missing Nov. 30 from
Porter Quadrangle.
• Two batteries. valued at $110, and an
impact wrench, valued at $130, we&lt;e reported missing Dec. 1 from the Helm garage.
• A pair of roller blades, valued at $200,
we&lt;e repelled missing Dec. 1 from the Student Activities Center.
• Public Safety charged a man with petit
larceny Dec. 2 after he allegedly stole $1 .95
wor1h of baseball C31ds from a store in the
UBConmons.
• Public Safety charged a man with criminal
mischief and disorderly conduct for allegedly pouring a Hanmable liquid that caused
a fire and $50 damage to a carpet in
Roosevell Hall.
• WMe mice and cages valued at $700
we&lt;e repelled missing Dec. 4 from
Hochst~ner Hall.
• Computer equipment valued at $1 .eoo
was reported missing Dec. 4 from Capen
Hall.
• PubliC Safety charged a man wkh trespass Dec. 8 after he was stopped for alleg·
edly watching women shower in the
women's locker rtx&gt;01 in Alumn1Arena

• Eleven lab rats. valued at $11 , we&lt;e reported mrssrng Dec. 11 from Hochstatter
Hall.
• A pay phone. valued at $600, was reponed missrng Dec. 11 from Macdonald
Hall
• Public Safety charged a man WJth menac·
rng Dec t4 after he allegedly drsplayed a
handgun to a woman rn Goodyear Hall.

'J'h, O!f;c, of Coof.,...,., and Spocial Event. and
TboDoparlmoot ofMwic of the Uoivnoity ol Bufi.Jo

Fleeta Hill, Seneca language
teacher in American Studies
,....,. 4L .... Seneca language teacher in the
Depatunent of American Studies. and a commu-

become an advocate fer the aganization of the
Seneca language as a written lan£U3110, whileslle

nity activist. died Nov. 27, 1992. She was 69.
A .-nbcroftheHawi&lt;Cianofthe Tonawanda
Band of Seneca
People, Aeelll Hill
was raised a1 bolh the
Tonawanda Indian
Rt:servalion andal the
Thomas
Indian
School at the
Cattaraugus Indian
Reservalion. She was
a v = of the U.S.
Army. a community
activist and the
mother
of nine chilFUETA HtLL
dren.
Hill saw the gradual decline of the Seneca
language as a tifetimechallenge and herdeterminatioo to teach and process Seneca thought
.. led her down a path of community advocacy
for her Seneca and for all Iroquois people ...
said Barry White. lecturer/coordinator in NativeAmericanSrudiesat UB. Whitenoresthat
Hill "set the pace as a role model for many
young people. Her work at the University at
Buffalo would instill a sense of pride and
confidence that the language of the Senecas
will remain for a generation yet unborn."
Hillwori&lt;edinsocialprogramswhichevofved
out of the War on Poveny of the 1960s. She spent
tirre in California raising her children and wori&lt;ing in the Native American oommunity there to
bring some of those program&lt; to her people.
Upon her return to Buffalo, she worked for the
organizalion BUilD, opening communicatioo
links between the African American and Native
American corrurunities in Buffalo. She then
worl&lt;ed on the secondary school level with the
Buffalo Board of Education as acounselorladvisor to Na1ive American students for the Native
American Resource Program. Eventually she
worked for the Title vn bilingual program in the
Buffalo Public Schoof System. This led her to

worl&lt;ed toward its ronlinuity.
Hill's plSSion for cullwal aninuity was
always at the forefroot of her life: She organiml
rronthly socials (with Iroquois food and dance)
fer the Buffalo North American Indian Olltur:ll
Center throughout its 20-plus..year hisuxy.
In the !ale '!Kls. she began leaching the Seneca
language at UB. serving as language IOaCber and
advisor in the~ and sharing the values,
customS and traditions of the Longhouse faith.
According to Agnes Williams, a doctoral
candidate in NativeAmericanSno:liesa UB, Hill
"toostof all loved her Indian people. Her dedication to the Indian students al the university mearo
thai she would confront anyone on any issue on
their behalf. As a teacher she was tough and she
was kind. We will miss her activism, her knowledge and her care and concern for the survival of
the Haudenausaunee. Fleeta has plamed seeds of
thought in all of us who experienced life with her:
becauseofher, our.;isacirc.lethal will never end."
Pltyllis llardeau. lecturer in Seneca language
in the Native American Studies Departmenl
says, "We are among the native peoples everywhere who have becorre increasingly aware of
the bewildering foct thai thei06S ofculture unique
to our identity asOgwt' ·ow•ka is escalating as we
lose our elders and teachers as Ogwt' '""'-da.
"We as Orwndawa 'ga • have become further
impoverished bytherecentlossoffleelaHill. Her
oonuibulions are many. Her untiring effons were
focused on the oontinuity of our ways traditionally as Ogwt' 'ow•. In memory and honor of
'Fleet.' hereffons toward the perpetuation of our
culuue mus1 be continued...
A rremorial service for Hill will be held in
March. Barry White of Native American Studies
(645-2547)hasddails. Tax-&lt;leductibledonations
maybesenttowardapublicationsfimd for Seneca
Language works. including a newsletter, to be
established in Hill's memory. Make checks payable to Riverside-Salem United Onm:h ofOuist;
mail to P.O. Box 7if/, Grand Island, NY f 4fJI2.

Earll McGrathfonner U.S.
··

..

-~· BuFFALO

'WI'I'H 'I' H.

PHILHARM
ORCHESTRA
MAXJMIANO VALDES, MUSIC DlRI!CTOR

Education Commissioner
~ • - held Jan. 22 in Cedar Hill.
Md. for Earl J. McGrath. 90, a Buffalo native
and formerUB administrator who served from
f949- f953 as U.S. Commissioner of Education under President
Harry S. Truman.
McGr•thdiedJan. 14,
I 993 in Tucson, Ariz.
after a long illness.
Samuel P. Capen.
fust full-time chancelfor of UB. was
McGrath's mentor.
and he was an assistant
to Capen. serving the
Wliversity from 1930f945 in a number of
administrative roles.
McGrath spoke ru the dedication of Capen
Half in f977, paying uibute to Capen as "the
most in~ormed man in American higher education in his time. Throughout his administration
the University of Buffalo maintained a national ~tation as a place where scholar.;
could do research and teac h free from re-

straints that were too common in the academic

world." McGrath was a speaker also at the
dedication of l.:ockwood Libnuy in f979.
McGrath received his BA. degree in 1928 and
his MA. in 1930 from the University of Buffalo
and in 1936.eamedadoctoratefromthe University
ofOliaJ&amp;o.The author ofseveral booksoo education. her=ived honorary degn!es from50instilutionsandwasoneofthefii'Sirecipientsoftheaward

of the Colloquium of Higher Education.
During Work! Warn he served as a lieutenant
commander in the Navy. Asofficerinchargeofthe
Educational Services Section, Bureau of Naval
l'er.;onnel, McGrath helped build the Navy's fa.
rrous wanirre V -12 college training program He
served on 8 postwar foreign missioils with the
U.N., State [)qxutrrEmand the WarDeparttrenl
McGrath was a professor of educatioo at the
University of Olicago when he was named U.S.
Commissioner of Education. A cmfidante of
Truman and Eisenhower, he li'astm 3flC] Willie
moSI of the plOjftlic 1947 report of the Mt
Presidential Conunission on Higher Education.
The Commission declared thai pedlaps 49% of
high ~hoof graduates were capable of
pootsecondary education--itn unhear&lt;klf sl'lilistic
in 1947--illldthat,ifnecessary,thefedcralgovemmentshould~toilthaltheyreceived il The report
also highlighted thedisparit)\in educational opportunity armng the SlateS and recorivn:nded thai
Washington take steps to correct the inequity.

McGfuth held administrnlive ]lOSISin many of
the nation's leading universities including 0&gt;lumbia, Temple and the University of Iowa He
was a member of many professiooal organizations and societies, including Phi Bela Kappa.
Sigma Xi, the Associatioo for the Advancement
of Science. Della Sigma PI and Deha Pi Alpha.
His wife, Dorolhy I...eemon McGrath. who
died last year, had edited publications of the
Americljn CQuncil on Education. Survivors include a brother, Jolm, of Kenmore and a sister.
Grace Palmer of Rochester.
''

�_.., _ _ ...,_u

...........
,0

.........aM'flllrs

.,-••an...,
Dean of Students Dennis
R. Black has announced
the following staff reassignments
within the Di vision or Student
Affairs, effective this week:
.Toby Bloom Schoellkopr.
previously director or disability
services, will become acting
coordinator or the Wellness Piagram, Uni versity Health Center.
She is charged with focusing the
efforts or the recent ly established
Student Union Living Well Center on st)Jdent health lifestyle
issues and concerns, health education and prevention, and building student and peer group
,upport. Schoellkopr repons to
Univers ity Health Center AdminIstrative Director Sarah Bihr and
will be located in 223 Student
Umon (645-2837).
James J. Gruber becomes
mtcrim director of the Office of
Disabilities Services. In thi s capacity. he wi ll coordi nate the
delivery of services and infonnauon from this unit and will assist
m planning its fu ture development. He will be located at 272
Capen Hall (645-2608). He will
report to Dennis Black. Gruber's
previous rcsponsibi lit ic~ in Student Life will be assu med by
other starr members. Barbara
R1cona. director of the Office of
Student Life, becomes the fiscal
de~ignec

for studen t mandatory

acttvity fees .
Michael Stokes. who also
report~ to Dennis Black in his
new post. becomes director of the
newly established Office or Student Multicultural Affairs. In
addi uon to administeri ng the
exasting Special Services and
McNair Achievemen t Programs.
Stoke~ will coordinate divisional
multicultural efforts and serve a~
a liaison for related student clubs,
organizations and activities. He
and his unit will remain at 212
Norton Hall (645-2732).
1l1e reassignments are intended "to improve the delivery
nf services to our st udent populat•on. maximize the talents of our
professional staff. and provide
carnpus·Jeadership in critical
areas," Black said. " It is anticipated that these three talented
individ uals will piovide excel lent
leadership to UB's i:rrorts to
promote health education. support
those differently able, and enhance cainpus mu lti cultura l
aware ness."

0

Theuniversity has·named

Margaret A. Wilder, a
doctoral student in the Gradpll:te
School or Education. a national
1992-93 Holmes scholar. Wilder
is one or 62 outstanding grad uate
students i~ the ft_eld or education
fro m across the nat ion to be so
honored this year.
Wilder will receive tuition. a
living allowance and the opportunity to ineet with national education experts and Holmes sc holars
from leading universities across
the nation. Wilder will receive
her doctorate in social foundations of education from the Department or Educational
Organization, Administratio n and
Policy. Her dissert ation is based

!1.

Faculty&amp;Sian
B

Ill

on her study or factors associaJcd
with the shonage or African
American teachers.
Three 1991 -92 Holines scholars arc also students in the UB
Graduate School or Education.
They arcS. Maxwell Hines,
Dianne Mark and A maury
Boscio-Vargas.

0

Carlos Roberto Jaen.
assiSiant professor or family
medicine at UB. was one or eight
physicians honored recently by the
American Academy or Family
Physicians for their contributions
to medicine and public health. Jaen
received the Acadcmy"s McNeil
Clinical Research A,qard for his
work. titled "Symptoms Associated with Middle Ear Effusion in
Children: A Basis for Quantifying
Clinical Judgment.'"
Ja6n came 10 UB in 1992 after
completing a fellowship and
res idency in fami ly practice at
Univer.;i ty Hospitals or Cleveland, affiliated with Case Western
Reserve University. He holds a
doctorate in epidemiology and a
medical degree from the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. He completed his
undergraduate and master's degree work at Niagara University.
Jaen·s research on tobacco
dependence and bladder and
colorectal cancer has been published in various scientific journals.

Ruu Miller Ia appointed

to IEEE tect.niclll unit

0

Russ Miller. associate
professor of computer
science at UB. has been appointed to the executive committee or the newly formed
Technical Committee on Parallel
Processing of tbe Institute of
Electrical and Electroni cs Engineers (IEEE).
Parallel computers consist of

8

0

anywhere from several to tens or
thousands or processors, each or
which may he equivalent in
power to a typical first-generation
supercomputer. A millioo times
more powerful than a typical
personal computer, such parallel
superwmputers arc expected to
become a "teChnology or choice"
during this decade.
A member or the UB computer
science department since 1985,
Miller is currently a visiting senior research scientist at the
Medical Foundation or Buffalo
research institute. Miller earned
master's and bachelor' s degrees
and his doctorate from the State
University at Binghamton.

F......_... named to post
-~Center

0

Ian M- Friodland has been

ror

named assistant director
bridges and highways at the National

Center ror Eanhquake Engineering
Research (NCEER). headqoanered
atUB.
The new position was created
following NCEER's receipt last fall
or two Federal Highway Administration grants to!aling more than S14
million. The grants will support
srudies on the vulnernbility to tanhquakes or federal-aid highways.
bridges and tunnels.
Friedland. a structural engineer.
will manage technical aspects of the
contr.ICIS related to bridge and highwas seismic analysis. design. evaluation and retrofit He also will
coordinate research projccls and
researcher.;. and repon progress to
the Federal Highway Administration.
Friedland ha• served as senior
progr.un offtCCr at the Trnnsponation
Research Board in Washington.
D.C.. administering bridge. construction and materials-related contract
research in the National Coopemtivc
Highway Research Progr.un. He
eamed a bachelor's degree in civil
and struciW'al engineering from
Cornell University and a master's
degree in strui:ruml engineering
from the University or Maryland.

A

R

::c:=..a::.··
Special_EVWib

0

WIIUam J. Regan has
been named director or the
Office or Conferences and Special Events.
Regan served as associate
director or the office from September 1988 to September 1991 ,
when he was named interim director or the
office, which
coordinates
meeling and
special events at
the university,
including workshops, convocaREGAN
tions and the
university's
Distinguished Lecture Series.
He previously worked for the
Faculty Student Association, fir.;t
as catering supervisor and then.
from February 1982 until September 1988, as manager or the
Center for Tomorrow, UB's major meeting facility.
Regan is a member and regional director of the Association
of Conference and Event Directors-International and a senator in
UB"s Professional Staff Senate.
A resident of Buffalo. he received his bachelor's degree and
an MBA from UB.

Prol&amp;lwn wiU tnlin
clenlbts In orofacial
pllin......-c:h

0

A federally-fu nded, five year program to train dentists to conduct multidisciplinary
research in orofacial pain and
sensory-motor dysfunctions has
begun at the UB School or Dental
Medicine.
The aim or the program. the
only one of its kind in the United
States, is to provi de dentists with
a background in functional
anatomy. neurophysiology. behavioral sciences and other basic
sciences related to the orofacial
region. Other topics to be covered

Music Department conference Feb. 11-13
willfocus on preparing tomorrows conductors

0

The Department of Music will host its
fourth bie-nni.al conference. '"The Preparation or Tomorrow's Conductors," Feb. 11-13
in Slee and Baird 'Halls'. It is open to the public
for a small rce and will focus on the process or
conducting, conducting research, and choral
and orchestral conducting technique.
The conference was organ ired by Harriet
Simons, UB professor or music and director or
univerSity choruses. Simons. the author of
Choral Conducting: A uaduship Approach.
organized and directed the 1987, 1989 and
1991 cond ucting conferences at UB , all of
which were well-received and attended.

0

Among this year's distinguished guest
fac ulty will be composer Slli'(luel Adler. Paul
Vermel of the Universi ty of Illinois; Edward
Maclary or the Oberlin College Conservatory;
Murray Sudlin, director of the graduate con. ducting apprentice program at the University
·or Michigan. and Dennis Hayslett or the University of Toledo. .
· This year's conference is sponsored by
SUNY Confere nces in the Disci plines, the UB
Department or Music and the Cameron Baird
Foundation.
Funhcr information may be obtained by
calling' Simons at 645-2964.

in the prosram arc ........:11 deoip.
bio&amp;talistics and experineul melbodology, an wxlmland- io&amp; &lt;:1 clinical issues relaled 10 orofacial pain
IWid seDSLXy-rnoror~ IIIII
praclical experience anilcting
reoeardt wiih senior inYCIIigal(n
Preference ror admittance into
the program will he given 10
dentists who want to cam a doctoral degree and condUCt research
into basic mechanisms underlying
or associaJcd with orofacial pain
and sensory-motor dysfunctions.
Participonls will mceivc yearly
stipends ranging from S18,600 to
S32,(XX), depending upon the
candidate's years &lt;:1 relevant experience. Applicants I1'I1SI be U.S. citizens or permanent U.S. residents and
be oommiaed to a career in denml
research and academic derosuy.
For funher information. contact Norman D. Mohl. program
director, at the UB School of
Dental Medicine, 315 Squire
Hall, Buffalo. N.Y. 14214.

-----

Campus Club aeeks

0

The University at Buffalo
Campus Oub, formerly the
Faculty Oub, seeks new members
and invites faculty and staff participation in a variety or activities. The
club, with annual dues at $20 a year,
provides a bi-monthly newsletter and
enco.uages collegiality including
social and academic activities wiih
other university groups and organizalions.
The club is currently discussing plans ror dedicated dining and
meeting facilities and plans to
look into a relationship wilh new
conference facilities near the
North Campus.
For more information, contact
Frank Schimpfhauser. membership committee, 141 C Goodyear
Hall. Buffalo, N.Y. 14214.

0F

I Nl f Rf S l

�_.,__

..,_...

At URan in-ae~th look at the ~h~iology Of plant and anima~
~···
In the special~ world of scientific research, plant and animal physiologists work in very separate
worlds, even though they study many similar mechanisms. Most undergraduate curriculums reflect this
division, so students must sign up for a different course to learn about each.
racy. we all sit in on each other's lectures."

But at UB. students take just one course for an in.&lt;fepth
look at the physiology of both
and fauna. To the
faculty's knowledge. UB is the only school in the United
States that takes such an integrated approach to teaching
physiology.
'"Traditionally. these fields don't talk to each other," said
Bisson. a plant physiologist who is associate professor
of biological sciences at UB and one of the course's three
instructors. "We have different journals from the animal
physiologists and w~ use different tenns. But in this class.
we integrate the study of plants and animals right down the
line."
Atthelevelofwholeorganisrps.shesaid,plantsandanimals
are obviously very differenL Animals, for example. aren't
cap&lt;lble of photosynthesis and plants don't have digestive
SystemS. But genernl principles apply to bixh.
''Look at how organisms move fluids over distances."
said Bisson. '1'hat's a principle of physics."
Taking an integrated approach requires more of the
students. not only intellecntally. but financially. Because no
si ngle textbook includes the physiology of both plants and
animals. the students have to buy two.
It also requires more of the professors, each of whom
teaches aspects of both plant and animal physiology.
"It's not easy to do," said Bisson. " You need people
willing to t.,;ch out of their specialty. And to ensure accu-

nora

Throughout the course, general principles. such as cellular metabolism. salt-and-water balance and intercellular
communication. are studied as they pertain to both plants and
animals. "We want to impress upon students thai many of
these organisms have to deal with the same sorts of suesses
in life. whether it' s water availability or nutrient acquisition," said Chris Loretz. an artimal physiologist and UB
associate professor. "Many of their cellular adaptations are

"'ary

similar."
The course also looks at differences not only between
plants and artimals. but among different species of related
organisms.
"We . hope that students will see how. starting with a
relatively small but common group of molecules, these
animal s and plants have developed some very different
mechanisms to compensate for their environments," said
Charles Fourtoer, an animal physiologist and UB professor
of biological sciences.
The instructors noted thai while the purpose of the course
is to broaden the students' perspectives, it also has served to
broaden their own.
"Some of my colleagues are amazed thai I even worry
about plant physiology until I stan talking about some of
these cellular control mechartisms," Fourtner said. "It turns
out that there are many homologous activities." ·

I.ORETZ

~-··

L

E N

G

0 L

D

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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. . . . . .. - . . .. .. ..._.... IIIIIIIIII,_,UB..aSUNYcdicilll
..................... ......... tu-.dlylddilioniiOdleopenlina budF. • CCJIIIIi..cl ill Gov.
1993-94 ex.eclliW! 1111111111
lae-l.llll. 19. Olomo'l $'-1.1 billion 1111111111 ... die- would...._
tpr:lldqby6.6..,,&lt;2114,100joblfiomdle-watfora:,mioedlecipreaelliX
10 60caa; llld ..,...t m billion owrdle Dell 1M year510 fix- ro.1s.
The budtet ba mot criticism lllleWidc for propoted IOcial oervice CUIS
yet has been lloded for itJ -.upts to restore New Yode' 1 fiscal health.
Tilting DOled die
lbout
&lt;:Net laal )a' in it&gt;COIWcndodsupport for SUNY, Roalld H. Stein, UB vice paidenl foruniW!ISii:y illlvarJco.
menlllld~ aid, "'lbe.-nJ..,.,...,... is dill. SUNY was trariod
~thin Olbtrae..,....,.. whidl is what the goyemor piQUliaed."

a-·.

..,._d

5-.,

On dlepolilive licle.Siem !Old lbe/JJrtJMoNftll, .-~ ..... ~
l&gt;oJdFfincludodSIOmillianforSUNY'o&lt;lradue._,. ........ _...
II UB will lnlllllleinlofundtforldededeqo;p.-.~-paiiiiiiiJ•
apece reblbiliuilioa. AIIUCh, il abo--~ ..a ...........
oppor11i11i!ios for UB . , - - ......,_
Sl* uaillallee 10 UB increoses by $9.2 miJiian 10 S206.2 ...._ . . . .
11a1e opcrllling budget for the campu1. "11ae a.:re- Jll'l"iilliil liD
addreuiqOiiaf&lt;dsalary increosesllld~illa-.....,..,willl
utilities," said Valdemar lnnus, IS!OCiale vice peoidml for ani~-­
vices. UB, he OOied, SUSiained an $8.8 million cut in SlaleiUp!IOit for filc:al
year 1992-93.
Also. through the institution of a new tuition reimbunable ICCOUiil, !he
campuses tbat expand enrollmont beyond bu&lt;Jaetec1 levels. would re1ain llld
Continued on page 9

=:-

lhePowerof
1heater
Exchange program
brings prof from
Jagiellonian

UnN~in

Poland to UB.

..

UB resea-ch studies

link diet and health.

2

A Very Good Time
President Greiner's
Annual Repo1 to the
Un~Council.

Black History
Month
Calendar

.. 415

'The program_" she added, "helps
put people in contact with Olbers and
helps them do some reality-checking. It could be something as simple
as gening somrone to look a1 a

resume."
June Blatt, senior academic adviser. just completed a telated yearlong internship as acting assistant
dean for student affairs, School of
Dental Medicine. She is current chair
of the PSS .,.,_mobility commh·

tee. '1lle men lOring program allows
for another's perspective," she says.
'This can be a great ego booster
when you need it:·
In choosing mentors. the PSS
corruninee tried to recruit ..open. seasoned. experienced" individuals. It
BJ NIN WHIICHER

Reponer Edotor

A professional staffer
speaks knowingly of the
"frustration of dealing
with a position where
you're doing well, but not
being given the opportunity to do something dif
ferem."
UB's professional staff,
she says, are often happy
with their jobs but limited
in opport:unities to advance.
To guide and counsel staff members who want to reinvigorate their
careers, the Professional Staff Senate offers a mentoring progmm with
an achievable aim: sharpening participants' skills while realistically
assessing their chances for promo-

",,--

....

lion and career growth.
Success in mentoring, of course.
depends on a good match. so in planning the program at UB. the PSS
career mobil ity committee drew on
extensive readings and research on
programs in other AA U-mcmber
schools and in private industry.
Mentoring. they discovered. requires
a suitable "comfon level." overall
compatibility, nexibilitytoallowfor
a changing relationship, clear goals
and ari action plan.
The majority of an initial group
of 22 proteg6 were in SL-4 positions. Most were wos;nen. Mentors
were divided equally among men
and women. About a third of the
proi0g6 were interested in netwoti&lt;ing and learning more about UB;
another third might he interested in a
lateral move within the university:·
perhaps another third ~y he leaning toward a new career. explained
Karen Noonan, assistant dean of
Undergraduate Academic Services

--

...

J

--

b

tllto.i

..

....__

., .r,
~~:

::c

~1

and former chair of the mobility
committee.
Donna George. assistant to the
chair of Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering. was paired with
Marlene Cook of the Law School.
George began her UB career as a
senior stenographer in the former
Depanment of Mechanical Engineering and woti&lt;ed her way up to
her current SL-3 position. In he-

" I got helpful
advice on how to
get ready for
career

opportunitte'&gt; that
might come up.·

~"

was not
tween. she woti&lt;ed in University Libraries and Capital Equipment and
in 1989 earned a bachelor's degree
in management.
"For me the benefits of the program included an exchange of woti&lt;
philosophies." says Geo!lle..;People
should think of promotion as a vety
. secondary aim of this program. I
take it as the chanee to learn. to form
·new skills. to enhance one's ability
to move."
"We decided we would tty to
approach the mentoring program as
a volunteerexperience.··Noonan said
oftheprogramwhichgreeted its first .
"class" in Fe)&gt;ruary 1992. "Most of
the institutions we stUdied were actually running progmms out of the
pe~l office, and were very specifiCforadvancemenL Wewerelooking for something that we could do
and that we could implement. that
would respond to the needs (of our
membership)and that wilukl he fairly
immediate."

t&gt;ased

on gender, and ' an

effon was made to match individuals from different areas of the uni-

versity, so participants could gain
entirely new perspectives. Thomas
Mroziak, executive ofrlCel' of the
Chemistry Depanment, guided
SandyPetersoftheComputingCenter, who said the program helped her
'1o clarify some of the goals I have
with tespect to future job plans and
my career. It also was an experience
in which I got an opponunity to have
a sounding board for the kinds of
things I was loOking at and interested
in ...
"ln.teality," says Mroziak, "both.
panies interacted more or less as
peers. Budget factors tend to' he a
deterrent to growth and job opponu- _
nities. But I doo't see that as lasting
forever. In fact. I See an explosion of
job and career opportunities here,"
says Mroziak. who came to UB in
1985 alter 16 years in !he priVIIC
sector.
Continued on page 9

�_,..,

2

____

...

Faith in the Power
of Theater
VIMtlnt profe.- " - Poa.nd .... thNter . . M

lmern.tloMI . . . .. .

"I

11J IIIOaln' WA1'EIIIICIIIN
Reporter StaH

AM
INTERESTED Emil
only
in dramatheater,"
Orzechowski tells me. pronouncing the tenn as though
it were a compound of two

words. "If you say 'theater ' in

America. people thin!&lt; of musicals;
if you say ·theater' in Poland. they
think of dramatheater:·
Orzechowski (the ·•z•• is pronounced the way the French pronou nce their Js.-softly) is a
professor of theater at Jagiellonian
Uni versity, Krakow. Currently. he is
a visiting professor at UB 's Department of Modem Languages and LiterJture as part ofan el(change funded
by the Kosciuszko Foundation.
A th in man with a darlc beard that

do with this problem, how lO find
money to suppor1 il For example, this
play,.-llebrandishesa flyer fora videolllpe of the Krakow Old Theater

production of Forrfather's Evt!. an
early 19thcennuy Polish worit boi1ned
by the Russians through the 1960s..requires an ensemble of 100. You
have to worit on this presentation for
over one year."

sharp eyes. Orzechowski speaks
softly and cauti ously. occasionally
breaking into an impish laugh that
suggests he is easily amused. Politely. almost deferentially. he spoons
instant coffee into a paper cup of hot

n Dec. 26. Orzechowski and
KazimierzBraun,hiscolleague
. in the
Oeporttnent oflbealer and
Dance. drew on the city•s sizable Polish co~ity to produce theJaselka.
Poland's traditionaJ ·Quistmas pageant ofthe history ofman from Eden to
the birth of Ouist The pageant was
rypical of Orzechowski •s quiel faith in
the communicative power oftheater. it
involved more than 70 participants
from all walks of the eomrrunity. it
was produced in Polish for Englishspeaking audiences. and ~t year.
Orzechowski hopes-if he is still
here---4o involvetheblackcommunity
as well. ··Although the performance is

reveals little of his face but two large,

0 UB

water. "'tbe resu\t is l)fett-y awfu\, but

in Polish," his flyer insisted cheer-

a knock on the door reveals a Polish
colleague also holding a paper cup
of water. Wld lhe granules are disuitr
Uled as though the two of them are
hoarding against a shortage.
••DrnrnallcJU:rin Poland arises from

fully. 'lhe international language of
theater will enable us to understand
and enjoy the play:·
The productions appeal to the
co mmunit y-c hurc he s from
Cheek1owagn and Toronto requested

it s hi storical

a touring version-is typical of lhe

situa tion ,''

says

Orzechowski. alluding to centuries of
Russian. Austrian and Gennan occupation. "'When Poland didn•t exist as
an independent country. there were
only two places where people spoke
Polish: one was the chun:h. the other
was the theater. Theater can be defined
as putting people on both sides of an
issue together to discuss it In artistic
language. of rour.;e. but putting them
together to discuss problems ofimporwnce to both sides.··
Orzechowski has witnessed some
of the most decisive moments for theater in Poland·s troubled history. He
wasbomonJuly21 , 1944.andinto.as
he puts i~ ·'the existence of war... On
the following day. Poland declared
. itself a Republic. Orzechowski jokes
thai the two dates are not necessarily
relaltd.butobservestha1July22.1944
marlced the beginning of the Stalinist
oppression thai would lead lO the exile
of many of his colleagues. For the
theaters. this meant a b~ combination of generous funding and strict
censorship.
"'After World War 0 the theaters
were fully SllllPortedbythesWe.There
were over 100 professional theaters:
there was no problem with the money;
wha! was .-loci. it was given. But. of
"""""' there was a price they had to
pay: government control censorship.
demoralization-if an actor makes a
weekly wage. why does he have lO
worit hard?
''Now there is a long discussion
which lasts almo6l three year.;: what to

the center of Solidarity. so that it
turned exactly againsc its intentions.
"Well. Jerzy Fedorowicz. the director of the Teatr Ludowx in Nowa
Huta. got an idea. For their presentation of Rom&lt;o and Juliet he wanted
punks and skinheads. He said. ·Instead of fighting each other in the
streets. come and fight each other as
the Capulets and Montagues: ··

"Theater can be defined as putting people on
both sides ofan issue together to discuss it. In
artistic language, ofcourse, but putting them
together to discuss problems ofimportance to
both sides. "

Polish link between theater and
chun:h. a link forged as much by
rebellion as by repression.
Orzechowski, whose spring
course on Polish theater is· illuntinated by videotapes of some of the
most memorable productions. recalls
a production of Rom&lt;o and Juliet in
Nowa Huta. a town in which the
Russians attempted to block the
building of a church.
'1t is a special place bec:ause this
district was built with huge steel
faCtory ;j, the ·~and in the beginning
of the •50s with Russian advice. The .
pe&lt;&gt;ple said thai ifthey will build a steel
facloryemploying40.00Jpeopletherc
it will chllnge the sociely ...
It did.
"''They got permission to build a
church there only when Pope John
was Bishop of Krakow. Then what
happened was. the factory became

.a

he production isan index of the
degree to which the greatest
practitioner of drnmatheater in Po-

T

land is a man who never set foot in
Pol and . His name is William
Shakespeare. and the play of perhaps most poignant importance to
the Poles is called Haml&lt;t.
..Shakespeare is our greatest national author:· says Orzechowski.
"But in 1905 Stanislaw Wyspiailski
said:/ 'You ask me how to perfonn
Haml&lt;t in Poland? The basic values
will remain the same. But thin!&lt; what
you have to say to Poles about Poland in this- particular si{uation."'
Among the Hamim thai followed
. was Roman Zawistowski· s 1956
Krakow production.In thai Oenmarl&lt;
of ·56. Poles recognized a country in
which. the Polish critic Jan Koo wrote.
..everybody. without exception. was
heing constantly watched,.. and in

which the spectacle of Khrushchev
dangerously denouncing, at the Congress. the Stalinist purges he•d previously suppqrted could be glimp;ed
among the cham::ters.
But there are. as Kot1 himself says.
many Hamkts, and Orzechowski's
favorite is one thai was never produced. It was to be at the famous Stary
Teatr, or Old Theater. in Krakow.
..This presentation was two years in
the making;• says Orzechowski. "But
KonradSwinarski. the director. died in
1991 hefore he could finish it...
Orzechowskisketchestheplansfor
the production with slender fingers.
Here. the centtal headquaners of the
Krakow police; next to i~ a parlcing lot.
next to thai. a building in which the
production itself is to take place.
·They got permission to place loudspeakers on the roof of the police
headquaners. Then here. in the parlcing lot is the annies of Fortinbras.
Swinarski•s idea was that the spectators would have to come through the
parlcing lot here and see the army
camp. Then here. next to tha~ is
Hamlet. saying. 'To he or not to be.
and all that. and he can hear the
screams coming from the loudspeakers of the police. and there is
Fortinbras and his annies jUSI there.
That is why people say. 'Be careful
what you do in Poland, be careful of
all the reforms you want to make.
because there are all these countries
just outside ·Poland. and look at the
speed with which Russia entered
Czechoslovakia and Afghanistan ....
Orzechowski plans to use some
of his lime in the States reseait:hing
a biography of Helena Modjeska
( 184(}.1909). the great Polish acll)!SS who exiled herself in the U.S.
and who. in the lnldition of Sarah
Bernhardt and Eleanora Ouse,toured
the country with hugely popularperfonnances of Shakespeare and Ibsen

in the Iauer half of the 19th century.
"'TheAmericanscalledberCountess. This was not correct. but she
never proteSted.
..She came to San Francisco in
J877 and toured. always saying thiS
year will be the last in America and
then she will go back to Poland. But
she made only guest appearances in
Poland, in 1893 and in 1895. when
she spoke against the Russians. The
next year she was supposed to go to
Russia as a guest of booor. but she
received a telegram saying the invitation had been canceled. Once Polish students greeted her with flowers.
and it happeoed that these flowers
were in red and white. the colors of
Poland; the next day, these stUdents
were laid off from the school. One of
those boys committed suicide on
behalfoftheothers.and the rest were
let back into
school."
Orzechowski used a Fulbright
Scholarship to tout the States himself, collecting the conespoodence
wrillen to Modjeska by her many
admirers- ElleQ Terry. Edwin
Henry
Wadswonh
Booth .
Longfellow. and--of all peopleWilliam Tecumseh Sherman. She
was also the subject of many poems.
which Orzechowski is colkding for
publication. and of a play. Pani H&lt;l&lt;na. by K.aiimien Bnwn.
" Many of the poems were ·translated • from ihe Polish by Oscar
Wilde. but I believe 1hat Modjeska
·explained to Wilde the melining of
the lines. and he pu1 it in English in
poetic form.
"Kazalso gave me permisSion to
include his play. I also thin!&lt;. when
he wrote of Modjeska·s exile from
Poland. 1hat Kaz. wrote of his own

me

siruation.··

�-

-..-.--... ...

New leader for Management School:
Wmter aims for 'external linkages'

F

REDERICK W. WIJiffER, UB"s

managementdean-&lt;lesignate.hopes
to import some of the success he's
enjoyed as head of the Department
of Business Administration, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, especially in economic outreach to the community.
A key part of Winter's approach at UB will
he to develop the Management School· s role in
the development of the
economy and the Westem New York business
communit y. The announcement of his appointment follows a

search of more than two

years.
'This is an outstanding appointment of a very, very talented faculty member and academic leader," President
William Greiner said last week in annou.ncing
Winter's appointment. "He is a remarkably
creative, innovative leader with an exciting
vision of the future of higher education and
management education. And the fact that,
de•pite keen competition on the market. he has
chosen to come to UB .ays something very
important about the potential he sees here."
Winter, 47. "has very special qualities that
set him apart from a strong field ofcandidates,"
added Provost Aaron Bloch. "He is the kind of
leader who knows how to bring people together
and help an ~tution generate visioo."
Winter will join the UB faculty in 1994 so
his son Colin, can finish high school in Illinois.
In the interim, he will visit the School of
Management regularly as a consultant, leading a self-study and a strategic planning effort
by the school. Winter, whoeamedabachelor's
degree in industrial engineering from lehigh
University, a master of science in industrial
administrution and a doctorate from Purdue

Universi ty, .ays he was lured here by the
school's reputation. and the fact that "it appeared to be a setting where there was a need
for the deve lopment of external linkages."
A.t Illinois. Winter's single Dcpanmcnt of
Business Administrntion has 50 faculty members and serves more than 2,000 students. lt
encompasses marketing. organizational behavior, strnt·egy and policy. decision science.
management infonnation systems. international business. business law and entrepreneurship.
AI UB, he will versee 60 faculty members
in five depanments-Accounting and Law,
· Finance and Managerial Economics. Market-

ing. Management Science and Systems, and
Organization and Human Resources. The UB
school has oear1y 2.000 full- and pan-time
students in bachelor's. master of business administration and doctoral degree programs. It
recenUywasnamedbyBusiMssW&lt;ekasooeof
the 20 business schooll; in the United States
"delivering a big bang for the buck."
!nan interview, Winter said "the goal overall at UB will be to really develop and manage
linkages with the external sectors. This in-

"~'ll probably be

increasing investment in
inlemati.onal business in
the years ahead "

eludes essentially business fmns and o.ganizalions. We'd like to look a1 their needs and their
interests. We'd like to match and many them to
the needs, resources and interests of the facuhy ...
At Illinois. Winter helped develop extensive university initiatives in agribusiness.
thereby responding to economic needs within
the state and broader national concerns.
"'Agribusiness is international," he .aid. " It
includes biotechnology, production and has
strategic aspects that are very broad: about 20
pen:ent of the na&gt;ional GNP is affiliated with
food and agribusiness."
Already, said Winter. the UB school is
"internationally known" and boasts a cadre of
accomplished facult y. 'T ve tried to recruit a
numberofthemaway. But I couldn't get them
to move. I've always been impressed nor only
by their scholarship and credentials. but by
their loyalty to the school.
'The State of New York should be proud
that it has this international treasure and we
would like to continue to be a national and
international school.'' he said. "Because of
that, wed like 10 prepare our st udents to do
work globally. We'll probably be increasing
investment in international business in the
years ahead. specifically the intema1ional business that is germane or crucial to this area ...
At present. .aid Winter. UB has "a top· 40
school in striking distance" of the top schools
(Harvard. Chicago. Stanford and the like).
Pointing to the value of corrurunity internships.
Winter said .. UB at the MBA level tends to get
students who are less experienced than in the top
five or six schools. J\nything that can get our

SIUdentstolhinkwOOdly,COSIOOpolitanlhoughts.
anything !bat will help them to get woric experience.notonlyenhanceslheirmauitability.lthink
it enhances their education.
"Statistics indicate that MBAs from good
schools are getting hired. The business community is grumbling a lilllebitaboutthem,bul they're still hiring them. This means that they
really believe in the degree, but that it needs to
be improved and changed. The policy and
planning community of the school is looking
into that. The idea is to look at the MBA and
talk about changing it or having it evolve."
AI the lOp business schools "success begets
success," said Winter. "When you tum out successful students. COIJlOr.llions give greater gifts.
they invest more in the school in order to be able
to a11rae1 those students to their fums. and the
school in tum has discretionary money to recruit
and retain the best facuhy, to put more into their
program&lt;. to keep their programs up-«HHate.
"1'hese are schools with deep pockets and
deep traditions. Our goal is to continue to do a
good job. if you will, one student at a time. But
it's a respected. very well-thought-of program
to begin with."
Provost Bloch praised the work of Howard
Fa.ter,a School of Management faculty member who has served as interim dean since
August 1990.
"Howard Foster has done a remarkable job
ofholding the school together during a difficult
period in its history," he said. " The arrangement (for Winter) would not he possible if the
school did not have such an effective interim
dean. The university is very, verygrateful tohim...
At IUinois, Winter has also served as a
consultant to the vice president for federal and
corporate affairs, a member of the university
Senate and its Education Policy Comminee
and a member of the Budgetary Strategy Committee of the University of Dlinois.
The author or ~author of numerous professional articles. Winter has served the American Marketing Association as chairman of the
dissertation competition: a reviewer, session
chainnan and discussant at the annuaJ conference: adissenation award referee. and a dissertation grant competition referee.
He has received several teaching awards.
including the Outstanding Teaching Award
from the executive M.B.A. class of J987.the
College of Commerce and Business Administration Outstanding Teaching Award for executive development and forgraduate teaching.
and the Outstanding Educator Award from the
University of Illinois M.B.A. Association.
A devotee of water sportS and photography.
Winter will be joined in Buffalo by his wife.
Dottie. and theirnire-year-old daughter, Katie.

Brown named to development post
HERYL R. BROWN has been named- to the newly

C

aeated position of associate vice president for university development at UB. Brown previously was director of major gifts at !be University of California at Los
Angeles (UCLA) and ~ associate di=tor ·Of
UCLA University DevelopmenL As the university's senior major
gifts 0 ~. she expanded programs to.~tially increa.\e ~­
anthropic support at leadership levels and minaged several special
campaigns. She also was responsible for aspects of the UCLA
planoed-gfving progmm. and oversight of regional development
prognuns and otlier academic fund-raising P"?jects.
Ronald H. Stein, vice president for uruvemty advancement and
development. noted that Brown was selected following a nati~
search. "It is a compliment to UB that we were able to recruu a
longtime, very distinguished development officer from UCLA,'' he
noted. "She is clearly outstanding."
Stein added that ooeofthe firs! tasks for Brown. whose responstbilities will incJude:~andooordinaling the woricofUB'sdevelopment officers. is to irqlro~ sysr.ems for maintaining dooor records.

BrownjoinedtheUCLAdevelopment
staff in I978 as assistant director of the annual
fund and later held various positions. including associate dinictor of development for the
Graduate School of Managemen~ director of
development for the Gnoduate Scliool of Architecture and Uman Planning. and associate
director of major and planned gifts.
During her tenure at UCLA. Brown was
responSibleforse.veralkeyprojecls,including
the $10 million Center for Molecular Science
Cainpaign. ooeofUCLA' s bigbest funding priorities. and UCLA's
regional fund-raising ~ in New York Ci~ and Chicago.
Throughout the UCLA Campaign from 1982to I 988.shehadclo&lt;e
involVement with a wide rmgeof activities. includingcoordinalion
of the llU5ICe gift phase of the camp&amp;ign. The"UOA Campoign
raised $373 million. $73 million over goal. Prior to joining UCLA. ·
sbe was associate directoroftheBoslon University AMual fund.
B!llwn graduated from Union College. Schenectady, and received a master's degree in public "'lations from the Boston
University School of Publi&lt;! Communication.
·
·

__

3

Putnam change
.,to ease traffic
Reporter Staff

A

NEW eNTRANCE 01110 Putnam
Way from Coventry Loop will help
control traffic flow near the new
Srudent Union and The Gommons.
according to Steve Englert. director of design
and construCtion. "Coventry was designed to
he a traffiC loop. So, ilie idea is to bring trU1ic
up through Coventry to Putnam Way and then
to the spine areaofthecampus," be said. "''brJe
is a lot more pedestrian traffic in that area because
oflhenewSrudenl. UniooandTheCommons. We
hope to try to con!rol ll3ffic in this area."
Wcrl on the new entnmce began in N&lt;&gt;vemher, but was interrupted because of winter
weather, said Englert. It is set to be fmished
after the end of the spring semester. "They still
have todothe final paving on the area." he said.
Englert also said that the access road which
leads from Augsburger Road to l'lllnam Way
(near Lockwood library and Clemens Hall) will
eventually be clnsed so that alllrnffic in that area
will be diverted to the Coventry Loop. "Coventry
is wide enough 10 accept student porking and the
extra flow of lrnffic. It mak.es sense to do this
because that is the area of the caJ11lUS (Siee Hall.
Alumni Arena and the new Fone Arts Cerder)
where a lot of events that draw tralfiC take place."
The access road from Augsburger Road to
Putnam Way should be closed by the time
cl asses resume next fall , he said. " When this is
all done, thetwoentrances to Putnam Way will
be at opposite ends of the campus, the one
being across from the Governors Residence
Halls and the other being at Coventry Loop.
Were hoping that this will help alleviate some
of the extraneous traffic on Putnam Way."

Student vote
gives ok to

Activity Fee
II)' MAIIII-ER

Repone&lt; Staff

REFERENDUM ON the Student
Activity Fee was overwhelmingly
passed by undergraduates in a vote
thai took place in early December,
according to Bryan Foulke, president of UB 's
Undergraduate Student Association. "'I'm
happy it got passed. Students gel an enormous
amount of services from that fee," he said.
The fee. which now COSts each student at UB
$57.25 per semester, funds institutions such as
studentgovemment,studentpublicationssuchas
~ Sp.ctrum and Gclerarion, Homecoming.
Fallfest and Sprihgfest. Sul&gt;-Boord I. Inc. and
more than 200 student clubs on carrplS.
"'Without this fee in place. regular SIUdents
could not use Alumni Arena for recrea1ion." said
Foulke. 'The (festivals) !bat occur in the fall and

A

spingwouldn' ttakeplaceeither.Andthestudent
govemmen~ whichoffersstudentsavoiceintheir
education and sends student represenllllives to
Albany .. budget lime. woukl be shul down."
In all. 2.640 students voted on the refcrerdum
with 2.294 voting ·~" and 289 voting "no."
There were 57 V(J(CS that were un3anmled for,
meaning that voo:rs eit!!erdid 001 vae pwpooely
or Olherwise. "This was the Jar&amp;est tllmOll ever
for the student fee "'ferendum vote." Foulke $lid.
Theresultsofthe,ferendum. which comes
up for a vote every four years. ane bin!;ling in
ihat more ihan JOpen:entoftheWldergraduate
population cast ballots on the issue. The majority of those voting officially determine the
outcome of the voting.
·
A majority voce Of''no" could bave meant the
end of all student organi2alioos. services and
extracurricular activities, said Foulke. 'The vote
was never in dotil«. That doesn't mean !hal
everyone is always sat:isflCid. There's no waylhal
.everyone is going to be happy. But when .nxlmls
look at it. it mak.es sense tohavelhis f&lt;e."
o

�_,.,

4

__

A
VERY
-~D

TIME:
Annual Report
p~?Smtmby

President William R. Greiner
to thr ( 'nit1ersity Cotmril ofth~ Stat~ University ofNew Yoti ot Buffalo
THURSDAY.DECEMBER10.1992

Tins ltmr. /ill' all timrs. is n f.ln)' good ofV, if ll."t" butlnOfJ."
rdulltodoL:itltit.
RALPH WALDO EMERSON
'"The American Scholar"

N R l CLN I )com the b1g~cs1 news at
l iB and. nl ~·oor.c . thn&gt;ughoUI the SUNY
'Y'tcm. thl' "ale. and the n.:uion - ha.\ been
fi'l...al ~o~onc.., Cun,•dcnng that lJB ha~ Jn..,t
full~ !fn of II' 'tate opcmt•ni! fund' 1n the
pa...,t 'I\ )Car,. and that l14o-thinh ot ttltal
rJutlat rcJur.:uun, tu th.at budget ha\c taken
place "0\:C IWI .1K!r llud!!Ct "IX' arc ncl·e~ ~aril ~ hi[!
llC14' The) ha\C affL't'lCd C\'Crythlng 14C do. and they
haH' reqUired u' 10 ... uunJ the alarm and "itan sed, mg.
m:"" Yo a)!&gt; 10 ~uppun uur URI\CfMty '~ cndc:J\'Of&lt;i.
Blllm IIJ92 . ...,.c have al-..o had plenty of~;ood ne" "
tu l"Un\'C)' IJc..,piiC tOU!:h UOlC&lt;ii, 0\.lf people have
r.:untlmll-d 111 !urge ahead. and our prugr.am.., ha\c
.Jchlt'\1!11 nnpunant mllc ... toncs. P:l.st annual rcpon . .
oltcn have 1ndudcd Item~&gt; about nl!w people. pmgrJm&lt;o,, :1ward~. ~rJ.nh. and re.:,ourccs. a"i well as ~pc·
c1al C\'t.'nt'&gt;. th i!io year'' rcrxm '"no cJtccption
There ... a y,c:althuf[!oodnew ... about uo·, pc..-ople
Our new Um , crs1ty Pro\'oSt. l)r Aarun N Bloch.
JO!nct.l u... as the bcgmmng of th1s fall ...cmc.;;Jcr: he is
:dready "CII·!oell lcd and i;; ~1ng grca1 stride:-. on
behalf of our academic program\ We ha\·Cthn.-c nc1.1.
deans: Profc"-Sllr Barry 8 Boyer in the School of Law.
Profe.\sor Jo)l"C E. Smanm in the Graduate School.
and Pmfc~r Joseph J Tufariello in the Faculty of
Natural Science.' and M athcmati~. All thrtt~bring·
ing fine lcadcrshtp to thc•r areas.
We also ha\'C five new members of SUNY"!i
distinguiShed ranks: Distinguished Professor Emeri·
tus Giu.Jppe Andres: D;stinguished Professor Philip
Coppens\ of the Department of Chcmisuy; Distin·
guished Teaching Professors Beverly P. Bishop. of
the Depanment of Physiology. and Joyce Sirianni, of.
Anthropology; and Distinguished Service Professors
James B. Coover. of Music. and Kenneth K. lnadn. or
Philosophy. It is especially good-and long over·
due-news that two or these colleagues arc the first
women among UB's distinguishc:cd professoriate.
· It is also terrific news that one Of oUr previOusly
named Disti nguished Professors. Irving feldman of
English. this year received a MacAM,ur F&lt;H,iridation
fellowship. One of a handful of Americans selected
for thls honor. Professor Feldman is internationally
known for his eight books or poetry, and his work has
appeared in more than .300 publications. And Distin·
guished Professor Raben J. Genco. chair of our De·
panment of Oral Biology. won the American Dental
Association's 1992 Gold Medal for his accomplishmenlS in research and strvice.
Other memberlor our faculty and staff too numer·
ous to mention have likewise received specinl rccog·
nition in their fields and published imponant work.
1be very fact thatthereasetoo manyofthc:scachievemenl5 tQ detail suggests just how superbly UB' s
people do what they are here 10 do. and how rich in
talent our university community is.
We also have plenty of good neW5 about our

s.rudcnt,andourprogrJms. This fall. the: Undergradu·
ate College implemented its long-planned general
cduc-Jtion curriculum for b3ccnlaureate students in
the arb :tnd sciences While budget rcductioru. ha"e
fon.-ed the l.'OIIcgc hi defer !oe:vcr.tl imponant piece_, of
th1:- curr"il"u lum, ...uch a' Fr~hman Scmmat'\. it ha.&lt;ii
bl'CO a 'liCCCS3 thus fat . and IOSIIIUtiOOS all 0\Cf the
cuunlr) arc pa) mg '--.udul ancnt1on
Funhcr good OC14 s regar&lt;hng our undcrgmduatc~
among the full-ttn'IC. first-time studcnb who came to
UB 1n Fall IIJ92. wme 25c:l are mcmbcr..ofminorit)
group3 We "till can and must do bener in reflecting
our state·, and natmn·._ 1ncreao;ing cuhural dnersity.
but thl\ .;tmi ... uc -.ug!!,CSh that our ell on' tn enroll 3
more dl\l'~ !i!UdcJ'It body are proceeding "ell
In the an:na of graduate ;md pmfC3sional cduca·
ll(ln. 14C ..aw an C~Cifingdcvclupment in the School of
~kxhcmc and Bmmcchcal Scicnce ... thi.; }eat with the
announcement of a ma...,~1vc mu l ti·~1or mitiativc in
tr.unmg primW)' care phy31dans. Thb S5 million
prOJCCt bnn~ 3pom.or;; from state and fcdcrdl go\'cmmcnt. a group of pri,·mc health in~umnce pa)er.;. our
ufllllatcd tem,:Jlmg hospitals. and our medical M:hool
togt."lhcr to Ul('t'C3.SC the numhcr or UB medical 'itU· .
dent~ entering crucial field.'. ... uch as fanul~ practice.
pcdiatnc.~&gt;. and internal medicine 11lc fcdcr.!l go,·cm·
mcnt is monnoring thi ~ dcmonstnuion project. which
1s unique m the nation; 11 could well become 3 model
for our rountry'o; effon~ to case shonages uf pnml11')
care phy"icians.
..
1lleopening of our new Student Un•on was good
news for student~. foculty. and staff alike. 'The Union
began opemtions this summer and rupidly became a
lively center for eampu.'li life. ILil fonnal opening just
over a month ago was n marvelous occasion for all of
us. We anticipate that next year·~opening oft he Fine
AnsCenter. the new laboratory. office. and cla.11sroom
complex for the Faculty or Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, and the impressive World Univcr.oity
Games stadium will add further fresh and exciting
dimen~ ions to our campus community. And we are
making speedy progress in planning on-campus. ap3ft·
ment·style hou$ing for grdduutc and professional
Sludc:nts and families. Tile first units in this cOmpleJt.
which will be constructed on Parttl B. fl'\3y well open
by mid-1994.
Ourdifficult fiscal situation notwithstanding, ~.hen=
is even good news abQut UB's rtMM..Itt.'CS. Our Path·
ways to Greatness capital campaign. under way since
1987. surpassed its S52 million goal this fall. right on
schedule. Thi s campaign has been the largest
fundraising erron in us·s history. Its tremendous .
succc:ss bespeaks a growing commitment among our
friends, alumni, and volunteer leaders. Outstanding
volunteer Leadership for Pathways 10 G~ came
from Mr. Non.htup R. Knox , national campaign chair.
Through his efforu and the generosily of UB·'s sup..
porters. Pathwmys to Greatness raised lhe kind of non.

..,_ ...

swe fundin&amp;lhat
lUOI.lt'CCS-

is a aucial .sdition to our-base of
We will loot to build on this blse in the

do~= imporwu campoign roiscd funds rwxjor

UB. but lltroo&amp;h UB for our We~~&lt;m New Yortc
neighboR. We e•pec:ted that the economy would
make 1992 a dirncult year for UB's annual State
Employees F&lt;deraled Appeal (SEFA). However: this
year's SEFA campai&amp;n went over the top, rmsang
more funds in IUpport of Western New YottCOfM\U·
nily services than any other suc_h campaign in ~ :s
history.and placingUBonceagamamong thenaoon .s
top three univet5itjcs in United Way giving. An im-

portant pan of this success was an aggreuive advance
campaign for leac.lcMip giving. in which colleagues
at the highest salary levels were asked to give at least
$1.000 or Jfl, of their annual salary to SEFA. The
result of thas ealfa effort.: the number of teadcrship
gifu incn:ased from some: 50 in 1991to l1l()l'e than 80
in 1992. and these leaders contritxned half agajn as
much as last year's leadership g1vers.

'Jlx:SEFAAdminisuativeGroup.ledbyDr.Carolc
Smith Petro,our Associate Vice Pre5Kknt for University Advancement, deserves resounding thanks and
congr.uuhuions. Even more so do UB's faculty and
SUlff. as well as several Sludent Ofg:ani7.ations that
made landmart: contributions this year. We are im-

menselyproudttwouruniversitycommunitytakesits
responsibi lity to ill nc:ighbon so-seriously and sincerely, despite cumru constrainLS on pusona.l fi.
nnncc:s. But this commitment is not really news- it is
the bedrock of our r.ervicc mi sion. and ant of US 's
most vital resources.
Ourservicetoourhome community and state an::
central to US 's identity as a public university. In
Sep«:mbcr w-e celebrated the nh anniversary or our
membership in the State University system. Governor
Mario Cuomo's visittoourcampus for our University
Convocation and Inauguration on Septc:mber 18 was
a very special reminder of our state affiliation and
public respon5ibility; the: governor also brought us a
vision of New Yortc: SLate's renewed and strengthened
commitment to SUNY. and we are wort.ing now to
cement that commill1lmt.
Since I ha,·c: mentioned that oonvocalioo. let me
pause in this review ornews for u moment and express
to the Univershy Council my heartfelt apprc:ci:uion
for all ilS efforts in making the week of the inaugwa·
tion such a ma.r;elous and memorable one for the
Grciners. Carol. our family. and I wen: deeply moved
by the wannth and spirit or that week 's evenlS. I regret
onlythat twodearfricndsofU B- Robert Koren. who
chaired this Council for over a decade. and Council
member Joan K. Robinson-were not. there to share
our pride and excitement. We still miss Bob and Joan.
and will nlways remember them.
We an: grateful to another deW' friend. Dr. Philip
B Wets. for ~ming the leadership oft he Counci l.
Dr. Wels 1.., an invaluable adviser and aJty for me, a
\'Cternn in Council affairs. and a staunch fanofUB for
half a century He and you. membel"" of the Council.
are u.moog ouruni ver.oit y ·s most active. de\ oted f nend"'
and lcadcr!o,Wld we arc delighted to ha\e the ~idance
and "uppon or ~uch a fine and dt.-dicatcd group.
1ne banner stone~ 14t: ha\ e rev1c" ed so far feature
achic \ emcnb that are espec•all) ~ti..,fying because
the) GI'C triumph~ for us· . . people and pmgrnm~ .
Thc\C are the son ofh1ghlight.., 14C generally define a.;;
good new~ for UB bcl·au-.e they n::pre"CCu prup.n:"s
toward and fulfillmem of our gool\ and objcct1v~.
they arc 'Ur.:\."c'-.c'· a~ ...,.ell a.' fmt.., accomplis. And
they indicate thJt . hard time' not" 1thManding. our
umH~r. i ty ..., m~umamtnl! lt'l..lualu) and ib dri,·c

II [ RE I ~ another k.ind ·or
accompho;;hmcm that ;.., aiM&gt;
good nc":. for UB. not the
achie,cmcm of tnumpho; but
thcdc,clopmcnt of new struc.
tures.approache:s. and au it~
thatMJppon and make possible
the sut-cc!l.scsor our people and progmm.'i. Rather than
lhc auainmcnl of a goal or the t:ompletion of a project.
such accomplishments represent the opening of new
doors. In 1992 ouruni,·ersity had many eumples of
this .!JOn of good news. We took important sic~
toward becoming a 21st-century public re:sean:h uni·
\'Cf'Sity-a leader in the reshaping of our state and
nation.
George Bernard Sha" once wrote, "The best
rcfom'ICrs the. world has ever seen art those who
commence on themselves." During the pa.&lt;iil year we a1
UB C?mmem:ed on.oursCives. reorganizing sOme key
runcuons at the semor levels or uni vcrsity administru·
tion.
· First. responding to the urgent need lO develop
UB' s non-state resources. we connected development
~ffon_s more: directly to the uni \'tf'Sity'scentral admin·
tstr.U•v~ stnJ?ure. The creation of a Vice Presidency
for Umversny Development moved institu.Liona1
fundmisi ng initiatives-previously conducted through
lhc UB Foundation-to the hean or tht operational
network thai represents UB's senior leadership.
As efforts to build US 's base or fiscal suppon
~~ ~ ·close_ly tied to other university func.
n~: u was mcreasmgly clear that fiical, publ ic, and
poht1caJ suppon of the university an: developed
through ovcrlllpping processes. T o make UB more
~ITcctive in ~I three an:as. they have been combined
m a new V1ce Presidency fOJ University Advancement and Development, compri ing the former Vice
Presidencies for University Development and Un;..
versity Relations.
~
Or. Ronald H.Stein: Vicef"resident forUniver$ity

Rdation&amp;lince 1987,nowoenaiDd&gt;is--..y
with l&lt;lpOIIIibility for~ Dtitiati-.
:
enu.-.LIOd pul&gt;lic tdllioos.IOd llumni
....

Unde&lt; Voce Presidcra Slein's

&lt;lpen

~

teamoftllcnlcd&amp;pOdlli&amp;uiDtht:se-- i&amp;~·..
UB's moourcea. nlmdina our inllumct. IIIII buildin&amp; wide&amp;preod ._,;tiort of IOd ltUppOn for ...univ&lt;nity. Mr. Jo&amp;cplt J. Mon&amp;fldd, wbo hod been
IICtVing IS Vice ~'reside~'&lt; for Univenity Developmenc. has become Senior Counldor "' the Pn&gt;oident
in the 1RI of devdopmcnt; he will continue to 5ef\'e
as an offte:er of the executive c:.binct and will advi~e
thepresidentandcabinctofl'occnonmatters-.
ing de&gt;dopment.
lf thisiCI orn:orpnizatioos has been good new.
for our uni..,.ity's deYdopment eff!XU, otber 1992
revisions in our administrltive suuaure have bcm
good newJ for UB's ruelrCb mi icG. Previously.
ldrniniSlnllion and leodenhip of t&lt;Sea~t:h programs
hod been """"' provOiilal responsibilities. lrld the
generotionofutemal iUppon for these programs hod
been the provin&lt;eofthe Vice President for Sponsored
l'rtJst3ms. The two comple..-.ry and intertlepen.
dent function&amp; have this yeat been brought togetherm
a Vice PJ&lt;&amp;idency for Rescarcb.
Fonner Vice Pr&lt;sident for Sponsored Progr.m,
Dale M. l..andi has been appoimed Vice. Pluideru for
Re5eard1. reporting both 10 the provosc. in mau.en of
daily operations and to the. president in matters of
institutional policy on researcb. During his five yean
as chief sponsoml proarams officer, Dr. Land•
achieved exceptional sueccssc:s: by guiding intema.l
endeavon with lltl eye to external opportunities and
expectations. he is now bringing an invaluable per.
spcctive to the whole of our n:sean.:h enterprise. Dr
Donald W. Rennie, former Vice PresMJent and V1ce
Provost for Research. remains a Clbinct off1ce1 w•th
the titJcor SeniorCounselorto the President. c:onsull·
ing with the executive. cabinet in mauers penairung 1.0
research policy. (Editor's Nort: 1M Unh·~mt) at
Buffalo mourns Dr. RmnW 's th-aJh on Orr 28. 1991
PlraH "~ rM obit&amp;~ary notiC't' on pagr 10.)
Like research. ien'.CC to the people ofou.rcommunny. region. and staLe: is a deftnitive componc:nl of
UB'sprinwy missionuapublicinstitution. for some
tml( now. we have been reiteta1ing and remfomn~t
the~ lh.al UB is deeply committed to 'iUCh
service. In 1992, by way of funher making good that
vital commit.mc:nl. we have taken a step that '4'1.'
believe is good news for both UB and Western Ne ..
Yoric.: the creation or a Vice Presidency for Urban
Affairs.
Dr. Muriel A. Moore. who has been appoi ntOO to
this new post , will lead UB'sefforutoe.:pand CAI't·
ing communi ty pannerships in such areas &lt;b pubhe
education. urban revitali7.ation. llnd human sen·u.:c-..
and will develop new partnerships in these and ('ll.hcr
areas. She will also wume respon~ibility for 1hc:
community..OOented ocademic scrvlCCS pnmdctl h~
Millard Fillmore College and will ov~ the pn•·
g:rarn'i that recruit and mWn qudent'i who are m.~m.
bers of underrepresented groups. Lile V1cc Prc...1lknt
Landi. she will report 10 both the prm ost and pn: .. •
dent. placingscnit."C initiativessqu~m:ly among l U "
daily operotions and inStituuoru&amp;l policy roncL'fll"
Viet Presidenl Moore has been at UB :!0 )Cat..
.-.cnmg for the: last tWOU.'i Depot) tothcPI'C11dcm. ,hl·
is al:.o widely al1ive m the greater Buffalo '-"'mmu
nity. While local media ha,·e made much of the 0&amp;:"' •
that she is the firM 140tnan to be appumtcd a '"·~·
president a1 UB-a point in which 14C taLe pm.k· 11 ''
C\'Cn bigger and better newt. that such a wkmcd.
cxpcricnet.'d offiL-er is guiding our univcrsit) ·' Cllun ..
to wodi: more effectively for and withourcommuntt\
Takentogethcr.thelle 1992reurgani7..at!Oil'C:\ I Ill.\'
a change in UB'suttitudrand approach. Weha, e··..ud
throughout the year that it is time to worl Mn:ttb'r
now.,.,.eare makingthechange.sthal will helpu..,do ....l
A~ we continue finding new and better 14·ay3tO 14 orl.
together. more changes like these will folio"' Ul all
le,·elsof US 's structun:. l amcurrentlyres~.ru~:tunn!!
!he operiuions of my orr.ce. Provost Bloch has re·
ccntly made changes in his ofr~«'s ·funct1ons. The
vice presidentS in boc.h new and prc:vlously eJtt:mr
posilions arc rc:organizing theirefforuo. All of us 14111
oonti noeencouraging othen throughout the US com·
munity to make .,.,.halever changes will k:eep their
areas. and the university as a whole, worting lb
efficiently as possible to fulfill our mission of teach·
ing. research. and service.
US has this year begun sevcnl1 other newsworthY
initiatives less visible than the series of administrati\'e
reorgani7.alions. but also indicative of new directions
for our academic community. Mr. John Brown. a UB
alumnus and muionally k.OOwn consultant on higher
education development, is assisting us ina project that
will funhcrtnUlsform the way we build support rorour
university. Through thi• project. the deans of oil 15
schools ahd faculties are learning new approaches to
conducting development initiatives within t.heiroWJ:'
units. The deans have responded enthusi..Ucally ond
tlre generating crcali ve. far·seeina development plans.
As individual deans become more adept at building
support for their respective units. !.hey will tal:.e more
raponsibility forsucheffonsand wgrk better with the
Vice President for Univen.ity Advancement and De·
vdopmeni. Those of us who have taken part in the
early su.ges or this initiativeareex.cited by the gro-.·
ing conftdenee and commitment we see among our
ooll""i"&lt;S.

Anotb::r .soun:e of aciltnlCil in 1992 has been a
series of $\IOCOSSI'ul efforts to deYdop new oontaCtS f01
UB in Albany. Aided ond ~by Ms. l.jolly
McKoown, wr perspiacious new ~ of Stat&lt;
Rdllions,senioroffiCa'Shavtta&gt;doddx: ...... ·

�~-.__..,_

inaoodooninthtc:apitalcitylnd...,..,tnowdoaed

leoden. • wdla q;,lai¥tlnd e&gt;UOCUiiYOIIafl" meroben. WehaYO"""""'"''!IheoenewliiendsinAibonyiO

lhir*c:orefu!Jyobourwt..NewY&lt;rt'apublic:sysoemof
hipeclJc:aion ir, we haYO Ul)!lldthem 10 visit UB and
see wt.. public hip C!ClJcaion in oor lUi&lt; can be.
. Seven~ leaders. such u Mr. l'llrid&lt; J. Bulgaro.
Director of the State Division of Jhe BudJet, have
ICCCptCd our invitations. Mr. Bulgaro and other 5UCh
gue.su h.ave brought us fascinaina. provocative challe.nges that have stimulated us to think carefully and
begin reformulating and adjusting some approaches;
our visllors have, in him, returned to Albany bearing
favorable impressions of UB. Others among our con..
tacts in the capital encouraged Governor Cuomo to
accept Council Chairman Wels' invitation to the

Sep&lt;embet 18 convoc:at.ion. In oo doing. they paved
the way for an event of g.rea1 PQ~itical significance and
potential for both UB and SUNY.
These new AlbanycontacU seem genuinely interested in woB.ing with UB. They sec our university
taking positive, oonfident steps to preserve and leverage the state's invescment in us. and they h.avc proven
e•ccpliooally responsive to our emphasis on UB 's
commitment to serving the people of New YorkSwe.
Such Albany aJiies have already been of great help to
us. and we have good hopes for their continued

suppon

0

UReffonsinAibanyare
pan or a broader initjative
being conducted by the
Vtcc:Presidcnt for University Advancement Knd [)e..

velopmenl. Vice President

gwal wedt I -.npt&lt;d 10 oet tht for theae
UOI'dformaionll ........... by llklna friendo on&lt;~
colleqllea IIOfTo&lt; complex and Urillling queaions
about our Wlyt IOd our structures. In the coming yc.r
I will continue lM proces~. I will ut ever more
jlf&lt;ciJ&lt;. pointtd. and Uritaling q-ions llbout goals.
methods. pntetic:es, ondiUUCiun:s, and I will press for
careJul but timely response~ from each of us and aJJ of
us. We have time to be careful. but we do not have
Limctohaitale. Thctimctotakeactionts uponus. We
have alrudy begun 10 take oction. and wo cannot-

will not-.aop.
In Sep&lt;embet I sugested 10 UB ·, voting faculty
thai no po55ibility is too unlikely. no detail too small
to consider u we undenakc the sweeping revisions
that will position UB to lead as an exemplary pobiK::
institution in the next cenauty. Every detail of our
efforu should be dirocl&lt;d toward .....,gthening ond
furthering tc:aching, rese:ateh. and service-toward
making these definitive activities more relevant and
responsive to a world in transition.
In addition. on sevCt'lll occuions and to severat
audiences. I have quoted Fr.lnklin Delano Roosevelt's
wisdom n:prding the subject of ..uying something"
in trying Limes. The institutions and people who are
willing to take risks and "try something" now will be
our nation' s leaders at the tum of the century. One of
the "somct.hings.. we mu.Sltry is a greaaeremphasison
UB · s divcne services to its many diverse constituencies. Our service is both ethically ncccssary. due to
our obligations as a public institution, and pr2gmatically wise. since it replenishes UB's stocks of resources and good will.
Our university's endeavors in 1992-thosc completed and those bcgurt--f'e:present our commitment
to thcs:e t.hescs. The news of the year is that we are
following through on thai commitment. investing in it .
our time. our energy. our resources. and our bcsc
ideas. Our increased effectivencu. our own strong
montle. and our gnduaJiy rising stock among friends
and obsen·ers suggest that such investments arc pay·
ingoff.

Stt'in nnd his team arc
working 00( only to stimulate interest in UB among
our Slate and federal leaders, bm aJso to encourage our
alumni and our neighbors-many of them disain~ishcd leaders. ochers si mply thoughtful citi1.cns and
loyal friends of the university-to become vocaJ
advocates for UB. Responses to these efforts have
included cogent. persuasive Jenent to the governor
Columrrist Sydney J. Harris once made the
and commitments to serve as members of new volun·
following observation:
tecr advisory groups for the university.
Like the promising ~actions of our leaders in the
An idealist belie\'CS that the short run doesn ' t
sute capital. these ge5tures indicate thllt a growing
count. A cynic believes thllt the long run
number of friends and observers share our pride in
doesn' t matter. A tealist believes that what is
UB. our conviction of our univcr5ity's value to the
done or left undone in the shon run determines
people we sef\·e. and ouroptimil'im about US's role a.o;
the long run.
a leudc~hip im;titullon for the 21st century. This
ncw~fiscal difficulties notwith5tanding. more tanGiven a shon. view or continuing fiKal difficulties
gible ochievemcnt!l aside-may well be the year· s
and u long view of anainable leadership in a markedly
lliggC51 and be.~ . Wemust rontinuc: working to spread.
different world. \lo"C at UB have chosen to 31.'1 and plan
expand. and respond to thi s vision or our university
rcaliSlically. in Ham~· 5ensc We art: sending ames·
and it~ JX)tentiaJ . such confidence will both sti mulate
and 'tCRl from UB'!o growth in the )ear.i ahead.
lllc: &lt;;tcpo.; B ha.' taken thu' far position us for
funhcrana ly!li!l and •nter'\·cntion. forprogrc lt~ through
an ongomg procc ...,ofrevtsion. We have embarked on
nc~ route' w1th respect to dc,·clopment. research.
-.crvu:c. and the tTcatiun of broad-baM:&lt;! suppon 1bc
&amp;~are
next round of this proceloo; uf revision. I bclic,·e.
'O!.V' rt/11.
mvolvcs the adminiMraJwc structure that suppons
UB '!o a&lt;.-adcm•c Cndea\00..
In tenns o fthc make-up of our facuh)' and profes·
WilliAM R. GRE IN ER
Monal staff. we are right now seeing. as predicu:d. the
end of one era and the beginning of another. An
:mccdotc that clarifies the nwure ofl his juncture: in the
recent past. "'e have held gatherings to rccognit.c
people who have given UB 30 and 40 yean; of servic..-e .
sage to each.other and to the pt..-ople ~ e serve-the
Some 20to .30 faculty and staff members have gener~suge thai we are wurking right now. in tbc midst
ally been honored at each of these gatherings. Fort his
of tough Limes . 10 malC' bcner tilllC.'l and to define
yeaTs event. however. nofewerth:m 75 namc..'i appcar
leadership for ourliCh·es. So far . the mc.~sage is ' 'cry
on the list of honorees.·
well received.
Thi s sharp increase in the number of employees
The so-caJ icd long run is . in fact. aJ~ady upon U!o.
who have given UB extended service reflects the
and changes thllt have been predicted for years are
happening now. UB as an institution i~changing with
remarkable expansion of our faculty and staff during
UB's first decade in SUNY . Many good people came
the chaoges: in so doing. we are selling new Stan ·
to UB in those early days and stayed, and they have
dards. Wemustcontinuetoaa onthcpremiscthut UB
SCr'\'cd this institution long and loyally. But these
can do and be more. as we are now proving we canfaculty and staff members will leave UB in the near
moree.'(cellent. more innovative. morccffident.lllOI"C
future: mWly will retire within the next five yean;.
accessible. more diver~. more neighborly. more
responsive. Our university will thereby achieve the
1llc: loss or such experience and talent will be
costly. Howe\·er. this large.scale turnover of faculty
"something mon:" that makes leaders.
and staff will also provide opportunities for us to
Realistically. howe\'U . weC'.m only do so mut'h
with what we have. In order to do mort. to do all we
change our make-up and our habits. hopefully for the
bener. As We replace: this dcpar1ing cadn:. we must
are capable of doing. we at UB must have mon:· more
and will diversifyouracademiccommunity. bringing
suppor1. more resource&amp; more commitmcnL We are
looking to ou.rseh·es to Cam the!te things. and we are
to UB fresh perspectives and new influences. .
seeking help from our friends , neighbors. and elected
This exodus will also impose on us nn enormous
official s in securing these things.
rtsponsibility. Those of us who came to the new UB.
And. members of the Council. we arc relying on
the post·mcrgor UB. and who have arrived in senior
you . As UB's most distinguished volunteer leader,.
leadership positions must now perform our last and
you play a cruciaJ mle in our efforts. You are among
most critical act of dedication to UB: we must recruit
our best informed and mosl influential advocate..;. We
and mentor our replaccment5 imd help them become
are grateful for your wise guid.ance and indispensable
the new leadership for our institution. And we must do
· dedication to the university that belongs tp us all.
so generously :ll}d coumgcouslr.
.
Your active engagement with UB will be even more
We must empower a new genemtion or scholars
critical for us in the days ahead, and We pledge to
anduniversityservantssothat.. when we leave. we can
make thai engllgement e\·en more chaJieng;ng nnd
- truly say we left UB stronger than we found it-and
~isfying for you.
indeed· stronger than it was C\'Cn in our prime years.
In 1993.the University Ill Buffalo win proceed on
We must commit ourselves to supporting and recruit·
the premise that. as Emerson wrote. thi s is 11 very good
ing people who will do better and better for UB than
time for those who know whllt to do with it. We
we have done. We must allow and encourage the
propose that the thing to do with thii time. in the race
trnnsfonnationof ourstnK:tu~s. proctice5, and behav·
of. continued bleakness in budget projections. _is to
iors so that US truly can be a leadership institution.
make it a time ofopportunity.efTort. and change. We
Simply put. we must n:main open to-and embrace:
propose to continue anal17jng ~fully. acting COO·
the t'hanges tha! will permit UB to ~~ ~ ~t
eastern public university and a leadership mstuut1on · fidenlly. and serving assiduously-and "-ell. We propose to give UB not lnUlSitionaJ but transformational
for. American higher education in the 2 1st century.
leadership. Your suppon will he an invaluable pan of
1 am proud and excited to p~i~ over this period
our effon.s to make the most of thi~ extraordinary
of tr.ln~fonnation Ul US. and II IS my hope and
time.
objective to provide wise leade:~hip . D..! ring the innu-

...

5

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Call Dawn Brown 689-3848 or Ilene Roach 833-7 173 ~
~

H. POTTER RF.AIJORS 839-9300

YOU HAVEN'T BEEN SERVED •••
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" IVe must amtimte to &amp;'Ork Olllflf
pm11ise thor UB m11 do rmd be
11/0il!----as
llrlW provi11g

Did you ever wonder why you
take better care ofyour car than
you do ofyourself?
NOW, WE CAN ' T ROTATE YOUR TIR E S . BUT WE C A N
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NATURAL P'OOOS 6 JUICES

O ltG-A N 't e

T E AS 6 COF'FEIES

"promo1i11g good keollltlhrough 11111ri1io11"

~~~

TOPS PLAZA 3888 ROBINSON RD .
( N E XT TO BALLY 'S H E ALT H CLUB )

AMHERST, N . Y .

Hours: Mo11-Fri !Oam-9pm,Stlli0om-6pm
. 691-7550

�6
MONDAY

1993 Commencement Schedule

' 1
--y-

FRIDAY, MAY 14
• Graduate ScOOol ........... .......... 2 p.m ... Alurml Arena
FOO&lt;hy of Aru """Ltum
Fonoltyo{ N...,.a/.latncaond ~
FoaJiy of Soda/ Sdo!as
• Phi

Beta Kappa Induction .......... 2 p.m .... Slee Concert Hall

Mooodotuol And-y Analysll
or PZ, 111&lt; Mll)or Oultr M.,...
brane Protdn or Nontypoablo
Ha&lt;rno¢llus InD.._ Elaine
Haase, gr.&gt;duau: student, Oept. of
Microbiology. 262 CPS Addition.
Noon.

• Universtty Honors ConYoca1ion 5 p.m.... Slee Concert Hall

SA'IWID!lY, MAY 11

-

• ScOOol of Heallh Relatad
Professions ..

..... 9a.m .... AUml Arena

• ScOOol of Nursing .

...... 9 a.m.

• School of lnformatoo and
Library Studies

~u..urv

. Stee Concert Hall

BISON Oemomlntloo.

Lockwood Ubrary, rruUn reference desk. North Campus. 2 p.m.

Theater·
10 am . Student Urnon

Applied

Sc•ence

1p

m ... Alurrn Arena

• School of Pharmacy

t pm

Slee Concert Hall

• School of Architecture
and Planntng

2pm

Hayes Hall Lawn

• School of Management

5 p.m

Alurmi Arena

• Graduate Sct"'IOO of Educaroo

5pm

Slee Concef1 Hall

*S1DIIY-

IIUCK
TIIEA'IDI-ATIOII

• Sct'IOO( of Engineertng and

Escuse M• Muzuncu, per·
formed by MUKULU, theatric-al
troupe from Uganda Katharine
Cornell Theater, Ellic&lt;&gt;ct Com·
plex.. North Campus. 7 p.m.

~Y, MAY18
10 am

Alurrni Arena

Focufry of Arn and Ltttcrs
h c ully of NtJumd 5drnta and Madu:matJCs
Faculty of 5«uul Sotnca Onurduciplmary Programs)
Sproal and lttd!VJduah~al MajorJ

Apocwu Dtgrttt
• School of Medictne and

BIOmedical SclenC·es .
2pm
Rosw811 Park Graduate 0Tv1Sion

Alumru Arena
Slee Concert Hall

• Schoo&amp; of Dental Med1c•ne·

2pm

• School of Law

6p

m

AlurrY'lt Arena

7p

m

Slee Concert Hall

• School of

SOc~al

Work

THURSDAY

~~
-

Acheson. South Camp11s. 4 p.m.

-~-­

~CYCU

The Cborublol Slrioa Quarto~
ChriSU&gt;ph Poppen and H..td
Sc:honeweg. violin; Hariolf
Schlichtig, viola; Manuel

Fischer· Dieskau, ccl lo. Slee Concen Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m.
Tickets: $8, $6. S4. For more
information call645-2921 .

*S1DIIY-

AIIA-AL SCIEJICE

IIUCK
EVUfT

Gluc:ose Desensitization In Pan·
creatic Islets or Langerh.ans.,

Bluos Concert: Mall Nlcbon
and The Bluesmen with Jobnny
Soul. voc:als. AJien Hall Auditorium. South Campus. 8 p.m.

Su7.anne G. Laychock, Ph.D.•

Dept. ofl'ltarmacology. UB. 258

CFS Addition. South Campus.

-

12:30 p.m.

LOCI(WOOD UIIIWIY

BISON Demonstration.
Lockwood Library. main refer-

ence desk. North Campus. 2 p.m.
CONCERT
Ma.~ter

Oass: Th~ Dallas Brass

Quintet. S\ee Concc n Hall.

Nonh Campus. J: 30 p.m.

FRIDAY

.10 Minutes from UB!
Elevators!
Quiet Park-like Setting!
Care-free Life Style!
Acti\1ties Director &amp; Program!
I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

~9

PEDIAniiC -.uiD ~DS

ll&lt;d-W&lt;ttiog and Other Void log Problems, Julian Wan. M.D.
Ki nch Auditorium. Chi ldren' s
Hospital. 8 a.m.
INsmurE FOR~

-

..,_AND,___

An Update on tht Treatment of
HIV and Substance Abuse,
Elaine Milton. presenter. Dacmcn

College, Main St. AmheBt. 9

120 Meyer.Road Amherst ·

a.m.-4:30 p.m. FOr mon: information caH 645-6140.
PSYCIIIAYWY,_

836-6861

Mlocllog the Body: Oep.....Wn
1111d Ethnldty Among Mtdlcal
In-Patients. Donald K. Pollock.
Ph.D.• assistant professor. Dept..
of Anthropology; researth fellow.

Dcpc.. of Social Medicine,
Harvard Medical School . Audit ~
FuJJy F11mished CorporoleSIIiles

AlsoAvailiJhle

~ :::.,

L:.l -

rium. Rehabilitation Building,
Buffalo Psychiatric Center. 10:30
a. m.
a..sYWY COL1.DCII••

Professionally Managed by

SIARA MANAGEMENT

.acl

...

PM.-."CCO..ay . . . _
s~ru&lt;:~un and Function or Caldam Channolo, Xi.,. Yang Wei ,
Ph.D.. Dept. or Moleculor Pbysiology and Biopbysics, Baylor

__ __,_

College of Medicine, HOUSIOO.
307 Hochsleucr. North Campu..
I p.m.
v..CICC"*MMCa
Beyond the Dram V: The
Wriltn, the Storia, the

__

Lepcy. 120 Clemens. North
Campu.. 1-3 p.m.

~- ­

Fnderlck W. Lavlt~ Unde

Div .. Prauir, Inc. 206 Furnas.
_,
North Campus. 3:45 p.m.
A Tboory or Upld V&lt;licle Fusion, Dr. Shinpei Ollki, Oep&lt;. of

Biophysic., UB. 106 Cary. Sout h
Csmpu.. 4 p.m.
YA/Q CLUII PNYIIOUIGY

-

Applied Logisllc Regrusion for

or

Prtdlctlon Oecompraslon
Slckna! In Aviators, Johnny

Conkin. 108 Shennan. South
Campus. 4 p.m.

U'IDIAin'-

- AYS AT 41'LUS

TUE S DAY
• UnNerstry Corrrnencement

man Genma, RPCJ. Hilid&gt;oe
Auditorium. RPCJ. 12:30 p.m.

~~­
Its
Appllc:otlon to 11tr« IM·
Opdal Memory,
Prof. Peter M . Rentz.epis., Univ.
of California at Irvine. 70

~-

CI.ANICa AL
Karen Swletllk, Cort&lt;plano,

wOrks by Haydn and Beethoven.
Allen Hall. South Camp11s. 7 p.m.
WAll FILM
.uiii'AST LEC1UIIE

TecbnoiOCY Transr~and Ill&lt;
Role or Ill&lt; Unlversl'ryal Buf·
Calo In O.vdopiD&amp; W-rn
ew York'o Hlgb-TechnoiOCY
Futuro, Aaron N. Bloch, UB
Provost. Center for Tomorrow.

Nonh Campus. 7:15-9 a.m. Ad·
mission, $0.50 per person. For
~servations call 829-2608.
PNY- COL1.DCII•IM
From Sdlwtoger to Atoms In
Molec:ulos. Prof. Richard Bader,
McMaster Univ.• Hamil ton,
Ontario. 219 Fronc'Lak. Nonh

-

CamptJS. 3:45p.m.

SATURDAY

lO

WIIESTUHQ

MATCH

Kent State. Main Gym, Alumni
Arena. Nonh Campus. I p.m.
CONCEJIT

facuJty Singers or lh~ Unlnrsity ot'Wt:Ste.ro Ontario, featur ·
ing The Neue Uebesliedcr
Walt7.CS. Op. 65 by Joh;umes
Brahms. plus work.'i by Britten,
Schafer and otheni. conducted by

Gerald Neufeld. Slee Conccn
Hall . Non.h Campu5 . 8 p.m.

The Bluesmen
Allen Hall hosts Jan. 29
blues concert by Man
Nickson and The Bluesmen
with Johnny Soul.

Tbe Work or lao Hamilton
Flnlay, Alec Finlay discusses the
work ofhio father. 420Copen.
North Campw. 4 p.m. Sponsored
by the UB Poetics~ -

~uatiARY

BISON Oemonstration.

Lockwood Library. main reference desk. North Campus. 7 p.m.
lii.ACII!alOIIY CUL'IUitAL Y~Songs &amp; Stori'" from Africa,
performed by M UK ULU, themri·

cal troupe from Uganda Buffalo
and Eric County Public Libr.try
Auditorium. Clinton SL 7 p.m.
Recep(ion to follow in the Li brary of the Educational Opponunity Center. 465 Washington St.

Frida. Woldman Thea!J:r, t t 2
Nortoo. North Campus. 7 p.m.
Free admission. Co-sponsored by
UUAB, Minority Affain SA and
POOER: Latinos Unidos.

THURSDAY

4
-

~ -­

T he Survival or Myoobactrium
A vium Within Macrophages
and Its Impact on Cdl Func·
lion, Yu-Kyoung Oh. graduaic
student, Dept. of Pharmaceutics.

UB. 508 Cooke. Nonh Campus.
4-5 p.m. Sponsored by the Phar·
maceutical lndu.wy Visiting Scientist Program of the Pharmaceutical M11nufaaurers Association.

-ALD-

COUOQUtUM
Lock Dictionary Entrios--ADomallc 11-,l.aws or

WEDNESDA Y

l-

--...P-STAFF

Thou(~!~ TIIIJiolocY, John
Con:oran. Dept. ofl'hilosopby, 684
Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m.

-

IIUCK JaTOiiy- .

Undenlandloc Mboily CUitul&lt;
1brou&amp;l&gt; ur.~&amp;

Utmoluft, pondiss inclt.Kie Maria
Rosa Allen. WNEO-lV: Rev.
Leslie Bnuttm , pastor, Shiloh Bopti." 01un:h: Glll)' Ross. -.....
Educational Opportunity Center.
Lorna Hill. f..._ter and tfumor.

Ujims ~Compony. Sharon
John Ya..., Ph.D, Dept. of Hu- · Holley. Fronczak Ubr.uy Ubrari:~n.
willll10denl!e. Allen Hall. South
Campus. 4-5 p.m.
IIUCK Ja10IIYLEC1UIIE
Amirtllarab, renowned play·
wright. poet, novrlist and essayist. 147 Oiefendcxf. South Cam·

_...
- ....
ptJS. 7 p.m.

---

Frida. Waldman Theater. 112
Norton. Nonh Campus. 7 p.m.
Free admission. C~s~ by
UUAB, Minority Affain SA and
PODER: Lalinoo Unidos.

lteadlnp and rtrl..---s.
Manin Clibbens and a.Jso joining

him. ps)'Chothenpi51. poe! and
fl&lt;lioo writer Nicole Unlang and

·classical guitarist Daniel

Utletboch. One Unwood AVe.

7:30p.m. rdcu. $5.50.

�-..,
P •

Europe's line young Cherubini String
Ouartet cootlnues the annual Slee
Beethoven Cycle tomooow (Jan. 29) at
8 p.m. In Slee Concert Hall. They will
perloon Ouartet in F minor. Op. 95
("Serio9o"); Ouartet in B flat major, Op. 18,
No. 6, and Ouartel in A minor, Op. 732.
Considered one of the more remarkable European younger generation QU811e!S, the
Cherubini Slnng Ouartet last appeared here In 1989.
The quartet. whose members '81'e Christoph Poppen
and Harald Schoneweg, violin; Hariolf Schlochtig, viola;
and Manuel Fischer·Doeskau, cello, are sched!Aed to
play the complete cycle of Beethoven string quartets
thiS sumner at London's Wigmore Hall.

MFC ITUDEHI'S TO IIISI'I.A Y
WORKS
MFC ~udcnls. all enrol lees either
m ART 2.11-Ptunting for Non-

Major\ or m evening an:hilcctun:
da.~o;cs.----Gre uhibiting lhcir works
1hrouW' Feb. 25 in Dn:wdor.l Gallei)'. 144 Pasl«r Hall. South Cam~ P".utkipart.s include Marie
!Inn. s.ndr.l Dinunno. Gregory.
Fw.xe. Bcmadcue Franklin. Rachel
llou...,, Pl:i Zi (liffanyl IJu:mg.
Tho lluynh. Bonnie Koch. Dorola

Kolod7jcjcr.yk. Harry Ut.r.el. Ola·
E'-c Mwsonncuvc, Bcauice

· M""""l. l&lt;llh&lt; Nevin, Nancy
Pappai, Raph Roo. Rochelle
Rc.-. nford. John Swaine. HWMet
T,.,, Melanie Voboril. Andy
lk'1\&lt;i4.m. Mary Butler. Bill O.v.ak.
Vux.l.' Ntctolas and Diane
Rlh...c-.w Opening reception. r-eb I
Irom 5.30 lO 7:30p.m.

•

PRINTIIIWIMG SHOW

Wtlfks by siJt New York State
pnntmakers- Kumi Korf, BwbarJ
Rowe. Patricia llacoo. J. Kathtrine
lkboul, Dcbor.lh !taylor and Glenn

Smith. will be: on ,;cw lhrough
l'eb 16inBethuneGallay.29 17
Main St.. Buffalo Calllf29-3477
for gallery houo.
PfiOTOGilAPHY IIISI'I.AY

·'fhe Bluesmen." phologrJph' by
Ed SobaJa documenting 20 years
of hlucsmen and J:li.Zmen at work

and play. will be on view thruugh
March 14 at t~ WBFO studios at
Allen Unll. Sooth Campus. Call
K29-lM80 for more information.
Ul · · CWI TO IIOLD
TAStNQ
WINE

The UB Women's Club will hold a
'ot"Jlcd

Place. Contact Todd Baker. Math
Place coordinator, at 11 2 Talbert.
North Campus (645·2394).
NYS TEACHU CEJmACA~
EXAMS SCtiEDUlDI

r-eb. si~ the rcgistrntion deadline

for the new New York State
Teacher Ccn.ific-dlion Euminations
to be offered in Man:h.. rr yoo're
applying for yow- rU'SI provisicnal
leaChing eenirJCOU: subsequenc 10
Sqx. I, 1993. )00 ITWI poss lhe
Uberal A1U &amp; Sciences Tes~ and
lhe Assessment of Teaching Skilb.
Sec your leaCh:r ccb::ILion dc31 or
dcplnment chajr for a registralion
buUetin.

--

-.RJMCu,__

Women and men imcrestod in volunteering for Crisis Services' Ad\'QC3Ie Program for Victims of
Sexual A.\Salllt. ~ invitt.d to call
K34-JIJ I and a&lt;k for lhe AdVOC3le
Progrnm. Votuntecni rcsJX&gt;Od 24
hours a day to assist vK:tims of rope
wld sexual abuse in hu6piw1 emergency rooms and in the courts
Appficant.s must be 18 or older and

--ha\'C

their own tr.msponation

CIIAFT CUf1Ut OfRJIS

TIM: Creative Craft Center 1s offering six-week spring craft
workshops beginning Feb I m
embroidery. knitting. crocheting.
pottery, quilting. photogrophy.

con30for
JUI

stude
S40 fJ r f:k."ulty. staff and othcl"'
For more infurrrt:~uon . call 6452434 from 1-S p.m. or 645-6125
from 8 a.m. -4 p.m

wine tasting Feb. ll at 7:30

p.m. i.n c:clebralion of Valentine's
!Jay. The. tasting. at the Center for
' Tomonuw, Non.h Campus. will he
presented by 1b: Premier Ccm~o:r.
I-I(X"S d'OOJvrt:s. coffee and ~ru
~ill also be!eaturcd. Thc. C\"Cnl is
op.:n k) an~ 21 or older. Adfllis..
,.on is SI S pCrpc:non. r'Of'rcst."f'Va-

tions.. call Annie Blumenson at

-

bJ-1.2902 borort Ftb. J.

JOBS
FACtJLTY
.
Assistant Ubrarian-Poetry/Rarc
Books Collection. University
Libraries. Posting #F-3001
IIDEAIICtl

-INTUMEWS

R~arcb Ttdtnician II or Ill·
Medical Technology. Posting #R-

Pcrsohs over 18 who have C\'Cr

9.l00l. Clerk ll·l'tuumacy
J:kan's Office. Posting fR -

participated in. (or plan to par1icipate in) any form of pr-e: marital
mter-ventjon program conducted
hy a religiOus organization (e.g..
Pre Cana or Engaged Enoountcr)
arc sought for a study being conducted by a UB School of La~·
student. Special interest: inter·
faith marriages; those cnnccling
wedding plans after panicipation
m such programs. CW1693-M650

trom 9 a.m: to 9 p.m.

v~--·

.NDY OP CAII'IIJNt URCTS
Dr. Bong Hec Sung. research
professor of medicine. is looking
fur nWc volunteers for 8 research
project on the effects of caffeine
on blood pteiSUre during rest and
exercise. To qualify. volunteers
muu be between 21 and JS. be: in
good heallh,lllld have nonnal
blood presswo (&gt; l:lMO mmllg).
Benefits inctude free physical and
cardiov&amp;SOJiar evaluation and 8
S 140 stipend for completing the
study. For more infonnation. call
Dr. Sung or Wendy Orlowski al .

1!87-4556.

-

93005.

Fadtitles Engi,..r-Medutnlcal

(SL-5)-Design and Construction.
Posting #P·2050. Execudvo As-

sislllnt (MP-4)-0ffiee of lhe
Vice President for Research.
Posti ng #P-2054. lnttmationa.l
Studenl Advisor (Sl.-3)-lntemational Student and Scholar Services. Posti ng #P-20U Associ·
ate Director ror Markedng and

Programs (SIAH:onferences
and Special Events, Posting #P2052. Mango&lt;, CusiOmor S.r·
vla (SL-4)--Administrative Ser-

vices. University Facilities.
Posting #P·J002.
CUIUifiiD CIVIL AJMCIE
Sonlor TypiJI (SG-09)-Geogra·
phy, Une 121733. Clerk 2 (SG·
O!ii)-Computer Science. Line
120501. Socrolal'y I (SG·IIlAnthropology. Une #20250.
Keyboard Spodallst ( SG~l­
Modical Teehoology. Une
134768. SuporviJtn&amp; Janitor
&lt;SG·l I)-University Facilities..
Une132571.

U A

a

Y

7

1 t t I

Macintosh Ilsi

. . , . . _ . , MayF- and - . _
. . _ were honored for services to WBFO at the
station's annual Volunteers Reception, held in De·
cember at Garvey's Restaurant
Rossberg, rxJN on sabbatiCal from
his teaching duties as Distinguished
Service Professor of Counseling and
Educational Psychology and from
his WBFO schedule, was honored
for 16 years of hosting programs
about the Big Bands. the Swing Era
and vintage Jazz. He 1s well known
for his Sunday morning program,
"The Sounds of Swing," wihteh was
syndicated natiOnally through the
public radio satellite system
Favor. assistant chief of the Ap·
peals Division of the IRS, spends up
to six hours a wee!&lt; in preparing the
"Jazz Favorites Hour." Sundays from
2-3 p.m. He interv1ews many jazz
artists. as well as wm personalities
Sutton. wiho lllOIIed to Hamburg
sunON
five years ago, spent 19 years as a
travel counselor 1n the Detroit area
As a UB student. she was assistant producer of
"Womenspeak·" She has assisted with on-air membership drives, fund-raising mailings, and recently
has worked in the promotions department.
Volunteer contributions are honored each year by
WBFO with the John H. Hunt Volunteer ofP'e Year
Award Hunt was WBFO Music Direclor l{om 1977
until his dealh in 1985. Under his leadership, jazz
experienced a resurgence throughout WNY The
award was established in 1988 in his memory.
D'Aiba &amp; Donovan. CPA. of Williamsville. was
honored for its serv1ces and named Underwnler of
lhe Year a1 the December receptiOn.

MATM PUCE SDJIS 'IVTOIIS
Tutor math for etroit 8l the Math

NOTICES.

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Call645-3560 for workshop schedule
and regiatration.infonnation.

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Using AmiPro for Wuulow•
M#.l!llging C&gt;tWibast:s with Tllblts !ISing Puuox
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�8

Toxic
Fish
Study

Tv.o ass1s1ant professors at
UB have been chosen by the
National Science Foundation
to oondoct int~ fiVe.y-

research

projects wi1h

federal and

Industry suppan as part of
. tts 1992
Young Invest~
gator award
program.
TheUB
recipients,
among 220
named nationwide, are

-J.

........

..unc

Br LOIS IIAIWI

--· R
and »

NITSCHE

Grant fund• re-a.
on effect. of
Lake om-to fiM

The awards, which pay up
to $100,000 per year with industry matching grants, recognize young faculty
members who have demonstrated outstanding potenlial
as sc1ence and engineering
Investigators end educators.
Naughton, assistant professor of physics. will use his
award to explore novel physical effects that occur in quasion&amp;&lt;timensional organic
superconductors
Nrtsche, assistant professor
of chem1cal eng1neenng. Will

use h1s award to develop a
pred!Chve theory that describes hdw prO(etns move.
rotate and deform 1n the confmed 1nterstit1al spaces of porous matenals, such as

membranes

News Bureau Staff

ESEARCHERS at VB
srudying the benefits
and health effectS of
eating Lake Ontario
fish have received a
$1.3 million grant from the federal
Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry to assess the health
status of people who consume varyingamountsoffu.handwildlifefrom
the lake.
The three-year gran~ which provides$443,699 indirect and indirect
funds the flfSt year. will allow the
scientists to mea~re expo ures to
chemicals commonly found in the
fi shandwildlife,anddeterrninetheir
impact on reproductive health and
the development of chronic dis-

of Social and Preventive Medicine
and the university's Toxicology Research Center. John Vena, associate
professor of social and preventive
medicine. is principal investigator.
Paul Kostyniak, center director and
associate professor of pharmacology and therapeutics. isacQo-investigator.
The team's resean:h will be based
on data gathered from the New York
State Angler's Cohort. the largest
group of fiSh eaters ever assembled
that includes anglers, their spouses
and children.
The cohon is a representative
sample of New York State fishinglicense holders between the ages of
I8and40from 16upstate New York
counties near Lake Ontario. It consists of 10,799 male anglers, 6.579
of their wives or panner.; and 918
female anglers.
In an earlier project, Vena and
colleagues gathered medical andre-

productive histories and a record of
Lake Ontario fish consumed from
the cohort. This information also
provides parental fish consumption
histories for 3,453 children born lo
cohort members between 1986 and
1991.
Preliminaryresultsfromthisstudy
found that while J1lOR: than 90 percent of upstate anglers are aware of
the state's health advisory warning
that Lake Ontario fish are
chemically contaminated. most have not
made changes in their
fishing habits or fiSh consumption.
ena said that to be successful,
the new project requires continued commitment from the study
group, which will be surveyed by
phone or mail. Cooperation of the
angler.; to date has been excellent, he
said '1 hope they will continue to be
involved in this important study."
Researcber.; will collect data and

V

eases .

The study is ajoint
project of the U B
Dcpanmcnt

ries: Maria

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
CIIIAHTS

-professor
L-.
aSSIStant
of chemcal englneenng. has been awarded

grants from the National Science Foundatton and the

American
Heart ASSOCIation to study
the response
oiiMng cells
to physical
forces and the
mechan1cs of ·

hypertension
The three-year NSF grant
will fund research on there-

sponse of living cells to phySIcal forces . such as fluid drag
forces. It will focus on ~ under·

standing how artifiCial tissues
would function in the rugged
environment of the human
body." Diamond says.
With the two-year American
Heart Assoc1ation grant, Diamond will study the mechanICS of hyper1ension, including
how vessels in the body respond to changing blood
flows and the flow regulation
of vessel diameters.
Diamond has also been
awarded the prestigious Natl()(l8i Institutes of Health First
Award, NIH's equivalent of
the National Science Foundation's President's Young Investigator-Award.

Send information on specral
honors, research praieets or
awards iniiOMng individuals
or departments to Ann
Whitcher. editor, Tile Reporter, t36 Crolts Hall. North
Campus. Pf1one 645-2626.
You may also. send material
by fBX (645-2313).

agencies and persons at risk.
c~investiga.tors. in addition lO
Kostyniak, are Gennaine Buck, UB
assistant professor of social and preventive medicine, who will coordinate the reproductive hislory
componen~ and Edward Fitzgerald.
chief ofepidemiology studies for the
New York State Department of
Health.
Additional co-investigators are
Lowell Sever of the Battelle Pacific
Northwe s t
LaboratOZielrzny,
UB associate professor
of social and
preventive
medicine: Hebe
Greizerstein and
James Olson of
the UB Toxicology Research
Center; James
McReynolds.
UB associate
professorof
biophysics ,
and Brian Bush and Patrick O'Keefe
from the state Health DepartmenL

NSF AND HEART ASSN.

DtA-.&gt;

lh erand thyroid function. pregnancy
OUia&gt;meS, fetal development and~
productive history.
In the grant 'stltird year,raearcl&gt;ers will collect follow-up information from the full cohort on
reproductive health and chronic: disease swus, and enact a plan to communicate the
to
health deputments, tl.ov,emrnenltal

UB scientists link diet, decreased cancer risk
LOIS BAIWI
News Bureau

II}'

E

ATING vegetables and
fruits containing carotenoids, the plant fonn of
vitamin A. appears ·to
decrease the chances of
developing bladder cancer, a study
by UB resean:her.; has found.
The study. published in the December issue of Nu1ritior~ and Can-ce(, compared the dietary histories
of 351 men with con finned bladder
cancer with the diets Of 855 men
~th nO bladder cancer. It was conducted by a team of investigators
from the UB Department of Social.
and Preventive Medicine, headed by
John Vena. associate professor.
Panicipants were selected from
similar neighborhoods in Erie.
Niagara and Monroe counties between 1979 and 1985. Dietary information was obtained via in«pth
personal interview. Cancer patients
reponed their diets for the year prior
to lheonset of symptoms. while con-

trois reported
response relationship" between eating large amounts of fruits and vegfor the year
prior to the · etables containing carot:enoids and
interview.
lower risk.
Nutrients
considered • Higher consumption of protein
in the study
appeared to lower risk.
were total vi• High calorie intake was associtamin A, vi- ated with an increased risk Qf develtamin A from
oping bl~ddercancer in peqple under
anima I b5 years of age. with fat intake showsources{ retiing the strongest effect.
nol)\ vitamin • Higher intake of dietary sodiumA from plant
sodium derived from foods themsources (camtenoids). vitamin C. selves, not added in cooking or at the
vitamin E. vitanlin D. crude and table- was associated with increased
dietary fiber. calcium. thiamine. ri - risk regardless of age.
boflavin. and ni&lt;ifin. Tot.aJ caloric • Heavy smoker.; had three times
intake; calories from faL carbohythe risk of developing bladder candrates and protein; dietary sodium; cer as nonsmokers. Participants with
total daily fluid intake, and level of bladder cancer consumed significigarette smoking also · were ana- can~y more coffee. soda. white bread.
lyzed.
crnckers, sugar, pre-sweetened cereIn general, the study showed a al s, macaroni, gravy, eggs, canned
positive link between bladder cancer ham. liverwurst and cold cuts,
and diet.
~
smoked dried meat and smoked fish
Researcher.; found a "strong dose- than panicipants without cMcer~

-tlndlnP-

They ate significantly less«elery,
lettuce. carrots. green peppers,
squash. peas. bananas, oranges and
hard cheese than participants without the disease.
No signifiCant differences were
foundbctweencai.cercasesandcontrols when researchers considered
body-weight-to-height ratio, alcohol
consumption and a series of dietary
nutrientS. including retinol. thiamin.
riboflavin. niacin. calcium and vitamins C. ITand E.
· ~r study ..:inforces the importance of diet' in the development of
bladder cancer:· Vena said, "It suggests that, forthis disease. diet intervention has strong public health
potential."
Other members of the research
team ·ace Saxon Graham~ Jo
Freudenheim; Jar.1es Marshall ;
Maria Zielezny; Mya Swanson. and
Gerald Sufrin.
The study was supported by grants
from the National Cancer Institute
and the American Cancer Society.

�_,
MIIEN'IOBtGI PROCMIAM
Continued from page. 1
Aa:ording 10 Blatt, it was left up 10 ~
whdber 10 tell !he supervis&lt;r abwt !heir paniciparion. "We know lheoe migln be 5ome (supervisors) who might find it lhreatening." added

Noonan. "BUI it is really heallhy for people 10
wan110 makecontac1 and 10 learn nne about !he
universily. Some of these people were new and
just feh isolated in !heir jobs." Luix:h was a
favorite avenue fornelax~ frank exchanges with
rrentorToby Bloom Schoellkop!: Eileen Hassen
of Electrical &amp; Compuler Engineering told parlici iJ1111S at a wori&lt;shopearlierlhis moolh fornew
~t!s.

Marlene Cook says she teamed as much
from Donna George ··as she may have learned
from rne. She had a lotofinsight into supervi·
'ion. and has a large network of colleagues. 1
learned from people I didn ' t even know about.
though I have wori&lt;ed hene since 1979.
·· ew people ane always corning into lhe
uni \'ersity." Cook adds. ''but because it's such

a large buneaucracy. you meet nelativety few of
them. The university of 15 years ago isn't
necessarily the uni versity of today.··
orocn there is the need 10 tra vel through
I various uni versity "culturcs" whenadvanc·
mg or seeking new career paths. Cook previuu,ly held posL&lt; in the Faculty of Natural
Sctcnces and Mathematics and the School of
Mtmagc ment, and now does budget. pcrsonnd. computer oversight, and space allocation
"ork as assistant dean in the law school, su~r­
\ ''mg a staff of 18. She continues as adjunct
J,,j,tant professor of management

Mert10r Debra Palka recalls lhe guidance
'h'-' received from Cook shonl y after arri vi ng
"' UB in 1985.
"At the time. Marlene and I talked about
hn" necessary mcntoring was. It happens here
hut 11 dues not happen enough. Mentor.-. have
'o many skill' they can share. and we want to
keep good people at the uni versi ty.

.. Marte'"' cncoumged me to appl y for lhe
FNSM dean's job,'' says Palka. who at

,L,SI,IiUll

dk.·tmx: wa.,~istantto lhcchairofPhystcs. ..She

___

qualificabons. She belie&gt;al in me, P"" me !he
axJiidenoe 10 apply foo ~ llbou&amp;hl was
w rl rctch." Pab lalded thai job in 19118 and
became k'lSislant diretta rl Allllmi Rdarions in

1990.
Rosalyn Wilkinson, as vice PSS chair, evaluaaeslheprogramlhis way:"TheSI.r2sand Sl.r3s.
in porticular. sometimes have less inf~ on
lheorpnizllliooal SIIUCO.Jneoflhe uni....tty than
!hey need. By having a rnencor !hey have !he
opportUnity 10 become broad!7 in !heir thinking.
'The whole point as I see it, is iOhelp~
helpthermclvesleam rrneabwt !he university,"

says WJ]kinsoo. "We don't hold haJvls. Ralher,
we give guidance, try 10 make them rnone knowledgeable, """""""ful and independe:nL"
" I g&lt;l( lolsofhelpful advice on how 10 pmc&lt;ed
and how 10 generally get neady forcaneeropporIWlilies that might come up;· says Sandy Peters.
'1 neally~lheprogramiOanybody,not
just someone who is looking fora job change. bUI
10anynne who is neflecting on whallhey'redoing
and what !hey' d like 10 do in the futune."
"I have known people who SLayed in depart·
rneniS fortenor 15 years;· says Donna George.
"If !hey· ne happy thene. it doesn' t mean !hey' re
poor employees. However. if lhene is any dissatisfaction, you have to move around- see
what's aroundatlheuniversity. You need lobe
mobile. The opportunities exist."
Those interested in leaming rnone about becoming mentors or~ or abwt participat·
ing in a related PSS intern productivity program
arc asked to call !he PSS offiCe at 645·2003.

..,_ ...

9

BUDGIEI'
Continued fran page 1
spend the nevenue generated-if theexecuti ve
budget pnevails through the spring legislative
process. Another plus: the governor's budget
contains no proposal for another tuition in-

cnease.
For his part. SUNY O!ancellor D. Bruce
Joh115100e said in a statement that he welcomed
lhe governor's proposed enhancement of !he
1985 SUNY management flexibility legislation. "With the support of lhe Legislature. this
budget will prolect lhe (State) University despite the continuing national recession and it
will provide improved stability so vital to the
operation of our individual campuses and lhe
overall mission oflhe Uni ver.;ity," Johnstone
said.
"We welcome his support for much needed
capital renewal and rehabilitation in SUNY's
infrastructure and greatly appneciate his necognition of the Graduate Research Initiative in

the Capital Budget. • pro8J2lD that bas proval
iuelf in the pest." !he cbancellor added.
Problematic for UB, however. is !he lack of
mooeytosWTtwonewcampusfacilities.Said
lnnus: "Funding was 1101 provided 10 address
lhe prognllllmatic needs associaled with !he
opening of lhe Fine Arts Center nor !he new
stadium."
According 10 a pnelimiruuy assessment of
lhe execUiive budget neleased last week by UB
Senior V ice Pnesident for University Services
Roben J. Wagner. UB's shane of a $11.8
million SUNY lump sum reduction is S 1.8
million.

According to Wagner's offoce. the executive budget also gi ves rise to questions about
planning funds needed for two new buildings:
Phase n of the Natural Sciences and Mathematics Complex (Mathematics. Computer
Science and Geology). and the Student Services Building. to be located between Ainl
Loop and Cooke-Hochstener. TAP for new
SUNY graduate Students will be eliminated.

3 bedroo=·.
2.5 baths,
family room
with WBFP.
cemral air,
woooded lot.

N 0 T I C E
A search is under way let the
positioo ol Assistant to the
President let Operations, ~ems.
and Acca.nts. To obtain·a CXYtYf ol
the job description and announcement o/ vocarcy, please contact the
Chair ol the Search Corrmittee,
Carole Smith Petro, 81645-2925 .
Deadline for rominaOOns and applicalioos is Feb. 5. 1993.

For an appointment

Cal l 1. G erard Green
839-9630 ext. /1 5
mobile: 866-8307

Everyone Needs a PAAL!

rnmcd me, thoogh on paper I didn 't have lhe

0

.,....._ -.:1111,1993
fhe Urwersity at BUffalo's Honorary Degree Commmee 1nvrtes au members ot the umverssty
community to nominate candtdates for the conferral of an honorary degree 1n 1994 These
candidates should be rndrvrduals who have achreved excellence 1n frelds such as public affa1rs.
the sc1ences. the arts and humanities. education. busrness, philanthropy. and socral serviCes
An honorary degree candrdate may enjoy natronal or 1nternat100al prOffilnence rn one Of more
o1 these areas. or may have gtven outstanding serv~ce to the untverslty. the state, the nauon. or
humanrty at large AU nominees should be persons whose lives exemplify the unrvers1ty's
asp1ratJOOS for its students and whose accomplishments are Widely recogn•zed by leaders'"
. the1r respect1ve f.ak:is of endeaVOf

Why the honorary . . . .,
The university wishes to make publiC 1ts support ·IOf actiVIties and accomplishments that
represent .ns own highest ideals and that are conSistent wrth •Is mlss100s-espec:1ally the
celebration of human achievement and humane values. By QFVIng such prom•nent rec'OgnFtiOO
and visibility to outstanding individuals, UB hopes to develop valuable bonds ol res peel. FOterest.
and friendship with the honoree, and thereby encompass with1n the un•vetSity commun•ty some
· olthe finest exemplars of achievement and service In the world today

HoW to ........~~~~~a~.

Obtain and Complete a copy of the honol'ary degree norrunatiOn form The form is available at

the. following on-eampus locations.
• vice presidents' offices
• oHicesot the Faculty and Professional StaH Senates
• deans' offiCeS
• offiCes of The Spectnm ar)d GeneratiOn
• depanment and unit offices
• oftJCes of student goverrvnents
If possible, at least one add~ional ijemof background infoonatlon-blographicat statement from
Who 's Who. newspaper or magazine article. or other description of the candidate's life and

accornplishment&amp;-6tl0Uid be attached to the form . A curriculum vitae or resume is especially
useful, bUI not essential.
All naninalion materials should be submilted 10 the lrJIIowing address:

·

Honoraiy Degree Cormi&gt;ittee
• C/o 501 Capen Hall
UniVersity al Buffalo
Buffalo, NY 14260

nee activated, the PAAl em1h on eor·p•erc•ng I OAdB alarm that shock!. the onoclter
The1r wont enemy at this moment is no•s.e and they will recognize that they ore no
longer in control of the situot•on This olw creates the necessory diverstOn for you to
run to sofety In addition, people w1thm audible range will be drown to ouiw you

The Quorum PAALpersonal attock a larm hm been des•gned to be your discreet companion, and
very effective protedor Toke your PAAL w1th you wher~er you

go to provtde odded s.ecvnty ogo•nst horonment or onock h
con be a •Jife·scrver" for v1rtuolty everyone!
Send check or money order for S32 (includes tax and
delivery! to M idwa} M arkcung. Co .. ..;&amp;6
Cottonwocx.l Dr .. Am herst. NY 1..; 221.

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Altmnl 8lld communily friendS of the unNersiry may also submit nomina/ionS: off~
nominators may obtan trxms by caRing 645-2901.

...................

UB's Honorary Degree Corm&gt;ittee will screen all nominations. The commillee. chaired by
Pro\losl Aston N. Bloch, compriseS r&lt;&gt;p&lt;esentatives from !he faculty. student body. professional
staff, Alt.mni Association. UB Founda!lon. and Olhe&lt;l&lt;ey segments of our univefsitycorrrnunily.
Following its seteclion of polenlial candidates, lhe corrrnittee wiH oversee preparation of
maler1als to support' each nomination. review final dossiers. and then make
to P r -·Wi!iam R. Greiner. The president will in tum select tile dossiers to be forwarded to
tile chancellor for consideration. All nominations ol1994 candidai8S rrust b e . . - by
Mslch 15. 1993.
.

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0

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Donald W. Rennie, vice president, vice provost
-..c -

A
Ollly audience recalled
the warmth, energy and dedication of Donald
W. Rennie during a Jan. 5 memorial service in
Baird Hall for the former vice president and
vice provost, who died Dec. 28, 1992 in Mynle
Beach, S.C .. while on vacation.
A senior counselor to President Greiner at
the time of his death. Rennie. 67, had served as
a faculty member in the Department of Physiology in the UB School of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences for J4 years.
His daughter, lane Rennie, recalled his
"enviable curiosity, thirst for knowledge and
experience and feeling for humanity." She and
her brother David then read William·Cullen
Bryant 's "Thanatopsis," a poem their father
requested be read at his passing.
Rennie, said Greiner. .. was the quintessential faculty member," both for his formidable
intellect iUld for his ability to inspire and put
othen; at ease. He was frequently humorous
and whimsical. and would delight colleagues
with what Greiner called "Wild Kingdom"
metaphors. lavish displaysofknowledgeon all
mancrsscientific. He was "a wonderful. sensitive and wise person: a man whom all of us
really admired," Greiner added.

He had. said Pietrodi Prampero, deiUl of the
School of Medicine and Chair of the Physiology Department at the University of Udine.
flaly. a conception of science not onJy as an
intellectual construct. but as a tool for sociaJ
betterment. "I considered him a perfect blend
of the positive aspects of American life." said di
Prampero.
Charles V. Paganelli. interimcha.irofPhysiol-

ogy, said Rennie
would tell fascinating tales coiJecled
from his many travels, including a stint
as an ambulance
driver in lndia in
the twbulent years
preceding
the
division of the
subcontinent From
RENNIE
1954-56, he was
chiefoftheDepartment of Physiology with the Arctic
Aeromedical Laboratory in Fairbanks, and in
1966-67. was a visiting professor at l..aboratorio
di Fisiologia at the Univen;ity of Milan.
A zestful teacher who would auract students to late sessions even after grueling ailday labs and lectures. Rennie "had a talent for
devi.sing creative methods for answering the
questions he was asking," said SUNY Distinguished ProfessorofPhysiology Leon E. Farhi.
"He also never let disagreements spoil friendships:·
A voracious reader. Rennie was an avid
outdoors man who enjoyed sailing, skiing, golf.
gardening and bird-watching.
Appointed vice president for research in
1980, Rennie assumed the additional responsibilities of vice provost for research and graduate education in 1984. He served as vice
president and vice provost for research from
1990 until last month. when he was named a
senior counselor ln the areas of research and
sponsored programs.a position ofcabinet rank.

Renniejoined the UB faculty as an assistant
professor of physiology in 1958. He was pr&lt;&gt;moted toassociateprofessorin 1962and named
a professor in 1966. In 1968, Rennie aseumed
the responsibilities of associate chairman of
the UB Physiology Depal'ment. was named
acting chairman in 1971 and served as department chairman from 1973-80.
A native of Seattle, Rennie graduated from
the University of Washington in 1947 and
received his medical degree and a master's
degree in physiology from the University of
Oregon School of Medicine in 1952. He did a
predoctoral fellowship in the Department of
Physiology at the University of Oregon School
of Medicine and a postdoctoral fellowship in
the Department ofPhysiology at Harvard Medical School. From 1953-56, he served in the
United States Air Force.
A member of the editorial boards of the
Amuican Journal of Physiology and Joumal
ofApplitd Physiology, Rennie was the author
or co-author of more than 80 scientific papers
and presentations in the field of physiology.
Rennie is survived by his wife. the former
Betty M. Livingstone; three daughters. Jane of
East Amherst Barbara (Norman) Rybak of
East Amherst and Laurie of San Diego, Calif.;
a son, David (Mary Beth) of Sherman Oaks.
Calif.; a sister, Marion of San Diego. Calif.;
and two grandsons. David and Kevin.
Donations ln his memory may be made to
the Donald W. Rennie Memorial Fund. in care
of the Univer&gt;ity at Buffalo Foundation. and
sent to the Department of Physiology. 122
Sherman Hall. South Campus.

IraS. Cohm fonnerpsychologyprofessorandchair
A,__..a.vlce willbeheldFeb. !Sat
2 p.m. in the Dean's Conference Room. 280
Park Hall. for Ira S. Cohen. former UB profes-

sor and P•ychology Department chair. who
died Dec. 2. 1992. His Dec. 7 funeml was an
ecumenical service with full military honors at
Nmional Cemetery in Santa Fe. New Mexico
Cohen. 70. wru. pronounced dead at St.
Vincent Hospital after suffering a fatal heart
auack on a ski lift at Santa Fe Ski Basin.
According to relative~. he had a history ofheart
di~asc .

His wire. Carlotta Baca. said that "every
jazz musician in town.. turned out for a Dec. 5
gatheri ng in Cohen's memory. Since moving
to the southwest. Cohen had discovered a new
career in jazz. This plus a passionate attach·
ment to skiing. made Santa Fe 'lhe time of hi•
life: · said Baca. previously assistanf to the
president at UB.
On the day ofhis death Cohen awakened his
wife to show off an array of new skiing equipment and attire. "His two big things in ~anta
Fe. wt:re music and skiing.'' said Baca. ''He
.:ouldn' t wait until the snow came each year."
At the timeofhisdcath. Cohen was prepar-

ing for two performanceson Dec. 6.
a Brahms clarinet
sonata and lead
alto sax with the
Santa Fe Great Big
Jazz Band, of
which he was the
co. rounder.
Cohen moved to
Santa Fe in 1990
COHEJj
from Washington.
D.C. where he had
been director of the Office of Educational
Affairs for the American Psychological Association.
He came to UB in 1952 and served at
various times a~ provost of the Faculty of
Social Scie~ and Administrntion. acting
director of the clinical psychology 1r.1ining
progmm and psychological clinic and as chair
of the Psychology Department.
Cohen retired in 1987 ~s professor emeritus. He won theChancellor' s Award forTeaching in 1978.
A New York City native. Cohen received

his bachelor's degree from Queens College
and his Ph.D. from Indiana University. He was
a veteran of World War II.
He wasamemberofthe Santa Fe Friends of
Jazz. Los Alamos Swing Big Band, and Santa
Fe Community Concert Band. Cohen was also
active in the Sierra Club, Wilderness Society
and Council for international Relations.
In aOdition to his wife. he is survived by two
daughters. Sarah Cohen (Richard Duquette) of
Olney. Md.; Rachel Cohen (Booth O'Quinn)
of Austin, Texas. and a sister. Janet Rosenfeld
(Ira) of Laguna Hills. Calif.
Contributions in Cohen's honor are being
accepted for a memorial fund that will recognize teaching excellence on the part of graduate students.-contributions so designated may
be sent to the Freud Foundation. UB Department of Psychology. 206 Park Hall.
Cards and expressions of sympathy may be
sent to Baca at her home. 686 LaViveca Court.
Santa Fe. N.M. 87501.
Those wishing to speak at the campus meroorial service Feb. 18 have been asked to call Prof.
Murray levine. Department of Psychology, at
645-3660.

Larry Belewich opera officuu,former UB employee
A......W..wlcol willbeheldFeb. l6at5:30
p.m. in Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, IOOOMain
SL, for Larry Belewich. a former development
director of the Greater Buffalo Opera Company.
who had served at UB as an insttuctor in· the
Intensive English Language Institute (lEU) and
· as an employee of FSA Dining and Auxiliary
Services. Belewich. 40. died of canoer Jan. 10 in
Utica Hospilal.Funeralserviceswereheldlan.IJ
in SL Mary's Catholic Church. West leyden.
Burial was in Boonville.
A graduate of UB in social sciences.
Belewtch was an instructor in the American
Stodies component of lEU during the 1970s.
During the perind from 198().1990. he was a
roving chef for FSA Dining and Auxiliary
Services with pan~time assignments ln residence halls and catering operations.

Gary Burgess.
. rounder and artistic

director or the
Greater Buffalo
Opera Company
and UB associate
professor of music.
noted that
Belewich's death
"is a great loss to
the opera commu·
IIEUW1CH.
nity and the enure
anist community;
he was a great supporter of b&lt;&gt;th."
After becoming ill rwo years ago. Belewi&lt;:h
returned to his native Boonville. but remained'
active in Buffalo music circles. He provided the
idea for last,year's Polish cultwal festiv:il which

featured the opera"K.ing Roger." A former codirector of the Polish Comm.mity Center and a
longtime member ofthe Chopin Singing Society.
Belewich traveled to Warsaw in 1991 with Burgess to arrange for members of the Polish National Opera Company to stage "King Roger." lt
waspc:rformcdlastAprilatShea'sBuffaloCcn:er
for the l'llrforming Arts under a grant from the
Kosciuszlc.o Foundation. which promotes Polish
culture. Belewich WdS a director of the foundatioo. AconsultanttotheNewYorkStateCouncil
on the Arts for three years, Belewich founded the
Boonville Festival in his horne town.
Swvivors include his mother, Alice. and a
brother, William. The family has requested that
memorial contributions be rn:ldO to the Greater
BufTalo Opera Company. 245 Linwood AVe..
Buffalo. N.Y. 14209.

I

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Cornelius Johnson,
computer analyst
and programmer
c.... (Nell)

. . . . . . lead programmer/analySiat the UB ComputingCen~er,died
Nov. 21 , 1992at Millard Fillmore Hospital of
a heart aneurysm.
A 26-year employee of the university,
Johnson was responsible for the monitoring
and operation control of electronic data pr&lt;&gt;cessing machines.
Johnson's duties included operation of the
computer control console, tape drives. printers, off-line plotting and mark sensing equij&gt;menL He also maintained and ensured adequate
control and handling of magnetic tapeS and
disks.
His survivors include a sister, Norma Hill.
of Boston, Mass.; and two other sisters from
Mount Vernon, N.Y.

JohnR Warner,
pediatrician and
clinical professor
~..._ were held Dec. 7 in St.
Patrick's Episcopal Church, Cheektowaga. for
John R. Warner, 65, a pediatrician and clinical
associate professor of pediatrics at the UB
medical school. Warner died Dec. 3 in Buffalo
General Hospital after a brief illness.
A native of Utica. Warner graduated from
Trinity College School in Port Hope, Ont. and
was an Army veteran of World War II. He
received his undergraduate degree from Utica
College of Syracuse University and graduated
from the Syracuse University CoUegeofMedicine in 1953. In 1956, he joined Genesee
Pediatrics Associates in Oleelaowaga.
A fellow of the American Academy of
Pediatrics, he was a member and past president
of the Buffalo Pediatric Society, which honored him last March with an award for outstanding service to the community and children
of Western New York.
Warner was a member and past president of
St. Patrick's Episcopal Church and served on
the Chemical and Substance Abose Commission of the Episcopal Diocese of Western New
York.
Survivors include his wife. Lorraine; two
daughters. Cynthia Jackson of Cheektowaga
and Pamela Morrison of Tonawanda; three
sons. DouglasofKenmore. Andrew of Amherst
and John of Sydney. Ohio, and 13 grandchil-

dren .

Daniel A. Rakowski,
clinical
professor

psychintris~

~--held Dec. II in St. Gregory .
theGreatCatholicChuit:h.AmhersLforDaniel
A. Rakowski, 58. A psychiatrist and assistant
clinical professor of medicine and associate
clinical professor of psychiatry at UB,
Rakowski died Dec. 8 in.Veterans Hospital.
Rakowski. a native of Buffalo, was a graduate of Canisius-College and the UB medical
school.
A diplomate of the American Board of
Psychiatry and Neurology in adult psychiatry.
he was chief psychiatrist of alcoholism inpatient services at the Erie County Medical Center
from 1989 until the time of his death and a
psychiatrist with the Buffalo Psychiatric Center.
He was fllC\Iical director at Bry-Lin Hospital from 1975-1981 , vice president of professional services until 1984 and senior vice
president of patient care services until 1989.
Survivors include his wife. Christine; a son,
David A. and a daughter, Diane H .• both of East
Amherst; his mother. Helen Rakowski; a sister. Natalie Stevens, and a brother. Paul.

�____

.............

~
.._.CallltC.~

0

Colin C. Drury, executive
. director or The Center for

Industrial Effectiveness {TCIE)
and p!Qfessor of industrial engineering at UB, has received the
1992 Paul M. Fitts Award from
the H~ Factors Society.
The award recognizes outstand·
ing contributions to the education
and traini~g of human factors
specialists-pSychologists, de·
signers .and scientists who design
systems and equipment that are
safe and effective for tbe people
who operate them.
An internationally renowned
educator, Drury was instrumental
in building a human factors pro.
gram at UB .
He joined the UB faculty in
1972 as an assistant professor of
industrial engineering. and was
appointed executive director of
TCIE in 1985. Drury has received
the SUNY Chancellor's Award
for Teaching Excellence and the
Str Fredrick Bartlett Medal from
the Ergonomics Society foi his
contributions to safety and quality
control.

0

Barbara Burke, director
of Research Personnel

Services. has been elected presidc!nt of the board of directors of

the YWCA of Western New
York.
Burke has served on rhe

YWCA Board si nce 1989 and
held numerous
ot her leadership
posit ions in the

122-year-oid
agency, including
t.reasurer in 199192. She serves on
BURKE
the Erie County
Bar Association's Arbitration
Panel and is a member of the
American Association of University Women.

Univenlty u ......

welcomeS- etaff
members

0

Three new staff members
have joined the University
Libraries. Barbara Boehnke. .
sen ior assistant librnrian and head
of the Architecture and Planning
Library, will also serve as an and
an history subject specialist for
Lockwood Li brary. She was
previously at Regenstein and
Crerar Libraries at the University
of Chicago and also worked as a
refere nce librarian at the Buffalo
and Erie County Public Library.
She received her Ph.D. from the
University of C,hicago, her M.A.
from Canisi us College, and
M.L.S. and B.A. degrees from .

aa

·

Fritz Whlt&lt;:omb, reference/
on-line assislant librnrian in ttie
Science and Engineering Library.
holds an M.L.S. from the Univer·
sity of Michigan and a B,A from
Hiram College. He was previously at the Engineering Libraries, Uni versity of Michigan, and
at Cudahy Library, Loyola Uni·
versity of Chicago.
Lisa DuVernay is cataloguer/
assistant librarian at the L.aw
Libraiy. She holds an M.L.S.
from UB and a llA in English
fro m SUNY College at Geneseo.

...__ ....

Faculty&amp;Stan
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S.UI Elcln of 11INter
......... c:..tln

KllvlnokJ production

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Saul Elkin, UB professor
of theater and dance, stars

in the current Kavinoky Theatre

production of ShiJdowlands.
marking the Western New York
premiere of the acclaimed drama
by William Nicholson that won
the 1990 London Best Play
Award and the New York Drama
Cri tics Circle Award.
Elkin plays the famous British
scholar and author C.S. Lewis.
who. while confronted at Oxford
by the American frankness of Joy
Davidman (Eileen Dugan ), is
forced to face his own life and
despair in scenes of tenderness,
gallows humor and wit.
Directed by Vincent O'Neill,
the play also features Tom
Loughlin, Thomas Martin, Tim
Denesha. Tom Zindle, Richard
Wesp, Joan Calkin and Bobby
DeLaPiante. Set and light design
is by Q. Brian Sickels. The show
continues through Feb. 7, Thurs.
day-Sunday. All tickets are SIS.
Call the Kavinoky Box Office at
881-7668 for additional details.

Sanford Hoffman Is
prwldentoelect
of Rhinologic Society

0

Sanford R. Hofl'man,
cli nical assistant professor
of otolaryngology at UB, has
been elected president-elect of the
American Rhinologic Society for
a one-year term. He will assume
the preside ncy in September
1993. Hoffman has been a mem·
ber of the society for 10 years,
and served last year as the
group's firs1 vice president. He is
a 1965 graduate of the UB School
of Medicine and. Biomedical
Sciences.
An expen in the field of sinus
surgery. Hoffman chairs the De·
partment of Otolaryngology at
Millard Fillmore Hospitals, He is
attending physician at Children 's
Hospital of Buffalo and is affili·
ated with The Buffalo General
Hospital, Si. Francis Hospital and
Sisters of Charity Hospital.

=:=:::-.
of -=ounllltC

0

Lawrence D. Brown,
professor and chair of the
Departme~t of Accounting and
Law at the UB School of Man·
agement, has been reappoi nted
Samuel P. Capen Professor of
Accounting for_ a five-year term.

:;:g:•owtnssblte
educ:Mon-..s
0

0

Lawrence A. Cappiello,
professor emeritus of
health education at UB, has received the Richard Silverman
Award from the New York State
Federation of Professional Health
Educators for his continued leadership in health education. The
award is presented annually to a
health educator who has 20 years
or more of advocacy for, and
prac1ice in. the health-education
field .
Cappiello began his service to
UB in 1965 as assistant to the
vice president for health affairs.
He also served as a lecturer in the
Faculty of Educational Studies.
acting dir&amp;:tor of the Division of
Physical Education. Recreation
and Athletics, and acting director
of athletics. He was a professor of
health education in the School of
Health Related Professions from
1972 unti l his retirement in 1991.
Cappiello received the Excel·
lence in Teaching Award from
the UB Undergraduate Student
Association in 1982. He serves as
one of the foundi ng members of
the Patient Education Committee
at the VA Medical Center.

Albert Lo Is'elected
fellow of Institute
of Math Statistic:bms

0

Albert Y. Lo, associate
professor of statistics, has
been elected a fellow of the Institute
of Mathematical Statisticians.
The institute was organi1.ed in
1935 to foster development and
dissemination of the theory and
applications of statistics and probability. Fellowship in the intema·
tional organization was offered to
only 21 individuals for 1992.93.
Lois an expen in an area of
mathematical statistics called
Bayesian theory. in which probabilities are associated with individual
events or statements. and not merely
with sequences of events. as in frequency theories. Lo was lauded "for
his contributions to the theory of
Bayesian nonpar.unel!ic and robust
statistical inference and to the
asymptolic theory of Bayesian bool·
strap."

0

..... ........ eMirs
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A UB faculty member since
1978, Brown also has held faculty
positions at the Uni versity of
Iowa and the State University at
Binghamton. The author or coauthor of two books and more
than 30 articles in scholarly journals, be has been active in depart·
mental, school and university
affairs.

appeaoln~

R

Top managers, leading
scientists and government
repn:sentatives from around the
world gathered to discuss the
latest developments in polymer
science and advanced materials at
the Second International Conference on Frontiers of Polymers
and Advanced Materials, Jan. 1().
15 in Jakana, Indonesia. Chaired
by Paras Prasad. photonics
science professor of chem istry at
UB, and co-sponsored by the
university, the conference emphasized the multidisciplinary nature
of materials science.
More lhan 200 institut ions
were represented at the conference. for which Presidenl Suharto
of Indonesia delivered the opening address in the Presidential
Palace. D. Allen Cadenhead,
associate dean for natural sciences and mathematics at UB.
was the conference's international coordinator.

Jerry Him is.__.
PrlceW. . . . .se
Fec:ulty Fellow

0

Jerry C. Y. Han, assistant

professor of accounting
and law in the School of Manage·
menL has been named the third
Price Waterhouse Faculty Fellow.
The fellowship is underwritten
by a gran t from the Price
Waterhouse Foundation and contributions from Price Waterhouse
employees who are UB alumni.
The grant and contributions.
totaling at least $75,000 over a
five-year period, suppon general
activities in the Depanment of
Accounting and Law, as well as
the fellowship itself.
A UB faculty member since
1990, Han previously taught at
the Graduate School of Business
Administration at Michigan Srate
University.

Bloch to IPUk on

tec:hi!CitoO .....,.. Feb. 2

0

Technology transfer and ·
the role of UB in developing Western New York's high·
technology future will be
disc ussed at a breakfast meeting
to be held from 7: 15 to 9 a.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 2 in the Center for
Tomorrow.
Provost Aaron N. Bloch will
be guest speaker at the program,
· which is open to the public and
being held as pan of the Alumni
Breakfast Lecture Series sponsored by the UB Office of
Alumni Relations.
The cost of the program,
which includes a full breakfasL is
$6.50 per person: Reservations
may be made by calling the UB
Offtee of Alumni Relations. 829·
2608. Deadline for reservations is
noon Monday. Feb. I.
Bloch joined UB as its chief
acailemic officer last June after four
yeatS as vice provoot at Columbia
University. At Coltunbia. his responsibilities focused on scionce, engi. nee'iing and technology.

Dl
A

..............
••••• .....,

0

Werts by s.,.our

llnlmlmlda, a UB pro{es&amp;tr
of on tdiJ his de8 in 1987,.., m
display througb Feb. 3 a the N'ma
FreudenheUn Gallery. 300 Ddawlre
Ave.. Buffalo.
DrumlevitdJ was a highly respoaed abotract ani&gt;t whooeresonates wilh intensity. His- is
often oriented ICCOfding 10 tbena.
drawn from a rich divasiry of
sat.rtes. He had a pllticuJar alliniry
for sacred litenMure, and his . _
ranged through a rru1tinx1e of belief
systel:r$. Dark echoes of antiquity,
recalling images from illuminated
manusaiplS and jewel-like !lainod
glass. are often emiJedded in his
thick ~and collage-like sur·
faces. DrumJeyjtcb.s achieves
a timeless. ageless mystery not unlike the sacred themes he explored.
For more than 40 years,
Drumlevitch lived and worked in
Buffalo, where he taught at the
Albright An School. which later
merged with UB. His long and
prestigious career earned him
many honors and awards, and his
work was collected by several
noted museums. including the
Albright-Knox An Gallery, the
Whitney Museum of American
An, the Hirschhorn Museum and
Sculpture Garden at tbe
Smithsonian Instit ute, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, and the Jew.
ish Museum.

0f

I N 1 f Rf S1

�COLLECTIONS CAN BEGIN WITH .SUDDEN INSPIRATION,

with gifts Or even wid1 odd circwnstances. For Mark K.ristal, professor of psy-

chology and associate dean of Social Sciences, "It started when I would 'take my nose ofr with my spectacl
seminars." He explains, "You put your hand over your nose and when y

in

take off your glasses and bring the

nose hand down, it looks as thougll you're taking your nose off as 1M
J

"Then my graduate students and I started fooling around witl1 the Groucho Marx nose-eyeglass-moustache
combination," Kristal says. " I don't know why, but everybody finds these funny, and we'd conduct seminars
wearing the nose-eyeglas -moustach

Soon K.ristal 's office was being inw1dated with noses, from a birthday card showing a goat disguised
wid1 a fal se nose to a dozen noses on Valentine's Day.
~11Jen someone gave me the little RUNNING NOSE (nose wid1legs), which was actually a promotion for a

drug compw1y: I guess one object makes a coUection, because the word got out d1at I was coUecting iliern and everybody started sending me
noses. I don't know why, but noses are

funny. ~

E NOSfE AND SHAMROCK
ASSES:

E SUNBURN NOSE :

- I.S' f111wtion j., w prolN'I you fmm lhl' ~ un unci rnuk l' you
louk fwm~· Ul Lilt' sum• cimf·. I II link it IUnJ ~ n·d wht·u
you ' n· hurlttx) mu ch suu .-

- J ,!!111'":!: 1lw lri .. h dt ·~t · n·c· u funu~ fnt't'. 1oo. J( ..
pan of u ll ullnwrl.. lil w for S1. Pa1ricl.. '., Da, .
E,c·ryww \\Hill .. 111 ~t'l ill lit llw llt" lion : 1111' l~bh
lnttliliouull~ IIU\1' \l'ry .. umllu,..,.,•.,, l1111 dwn· \\t·
un·.

f t E FOUR•NOSE CHOCOLATE

~&lt;II \ t»e. Datld~

Box:

\ o.,.. llcot. \ osc It i\11, and w1
Owl &lt;·u llcd \l;"hu \ ,.,..?) -·nmt wus from u t-ollcaguc. I
think she ~01 it in Su n Francisco .."'

E NOSE
TH Mous-

E JOKE

Box:

Push the nose and it will tell \ "OU a
jokc . "' ~1ost
the onc-liriCr., nrc c"it.her
by I lenny You ngma n. king of
ouc- lincrs. or Juckic .\1autling.
wrote jokes ·for ll owarci S1cm.
just stunctj 011 Buffalo radio. A
walks into his psyrh imrisf' s

or

nnd suys: ' Dcx·tor. rlcH·tor. I
UllliUIU mcdm rlk. • "l"hc uuo' w'""''·s.
down u~der t.hc t'Ou&lt;·h." You son
to lw then&gt;.-

lion. - J wa~ in \ 'rw

Orlcurth once unCI I
found llw cyt·p;ll~­
moustac·lw &lt;:onJbiJIUIiou ¥~' ith
E PICK 'N' CHEW
BBLE GUM DisPENSER:

- 1 pkkrd LluH one up on n pit

:,top while· driving ulong highwuy 401.11mvcn't opcncd.it
up; I think thut 's bubble gum
PHOTOS! BIM.ON TONG

inside, because that's what il
says on the box, but I don ' t
wantLO

f'ii1d

OUI.,.

E NOSE TISSUE
LDER:

"'Tiw1 was from my cousin in California. Fonuna1cly. he didn'l send me the
compattion piece, which di penses
toilet paper. I won't tell you whe"' the
paper COme'i (rom ."

��.JANUARY

29

.....

_..,.,

~~

.

-~_..WNI

.......,/fN.,

,......,..........._, __

wllll.... ._._.N.._..flliiiiiiiGtlt..-r_.

............,

VOCIN

nallllllll!ld; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . dl

..... ._._,
ll)'k-111---1'111111.
WalccJII
l d l . - - _.._arty
~-ddld.

~

not Ill tbr "alldnll .ndlyrk:al arcldlllc;tun" ~ amldll
the tldck CJniWiho al ilauq8lmiiiJa .... CDIXIftlll pailll. IJid tiO Dnl: lMIIIa*
1M IIIIana. al 1M poar .... to 1M !lplaldld liN! cllul9mJal
realm of !he - · "'IIIDII!Idl, .....U.IINI calm ballty" 811 .,._lepadl al
lhlpwnekl. llarmJ. dnrwnlnqiiiNI ~
A. fonur viiiiiDq prota.Jr at Harvar4. Wal.colt II 1M .mlhor al alnl baokl al
poetry IINIIOwral plays. liA! tuchn 11tmo!IIN and
wriUIIq at 1!lalloa
llnlwnd.ty.

ona-

ALLEN HALL
AUDITORIUM
8P.M .
Concert to be broadcast
live on WBFO-FM
C88.7mHz), the NPR
news and jazz service
of the University at
Buffalo.
•dlt\l/11~ charaf'd
Sponsor&lt;d by WBf'O-fM •nd
Haltwalls Comrmporary Ans
Ctnttr. Cali8Z9-2880 (or more
ln(ormari'on

29

(through March l4)

photo....,tstht'
bi.Uf'l. . .
ALLEN HALL
SECOND FLOOR
An exhibit of more

.Bolbr

~

L.Jva••-lllee b r a e c l o e - brl.....-ccig~
ncd;ed At'rloen

~erloen

_..__

than 40 photoqraphs
by Ed Sabala
documenting 20 years
of blues and jazz men
at work and play.
/fH' CldMI//10~

IX PROMINENT black A.mertc&amp;lll join forcn far a Uw, ln!Cl'lldlw • telUtr brooodcalt tn whJch they'n d!OCillllhe ~at 1 1 - I f t undcrlltand1nq A.fr1can A.merlam culfuN liN! Ufe cxprrlalcrl. ~ panel will
fnlllrr IOJtllr of thr 1110111 lt!mulatlnq Vlllc:n of COIItrrnporuy A.frlcan.
A.merlam lettrn: Terry Mci\\IIWt (Walrtng to ExiW1t, J?l-ppnr111g
Actl), Ch&amp;rlajohnoon CM14dl1t ~. Fll1th and the Cbxf llt/n¢, Nikki
G1avann1 C/lat:ftd Cowr ... and OtiJe' Edii&gt;Ja. 11w 14t:tnYn and the Mall and
Martta Galdm CLoru; Dl.ra«
~ af 11111 Bart). Tlwy will be jOIJird
by Houlton ll. Bam. Jr.. lllftl'ai'Y critic liN! praldmt of the Modnn ~
A.leoclallan. R.a1ft Pouualnt, anchor of thr A.BC llfflllatr WJIA-1V In Wuhlnq·
ton, D.C.. will mod£ratr.

Sponsored by WBf'O-fM ••d
HallWGlls Contemporary Arts

Ctntu. Call829-2880 (or morr
information

FEBRUARY

ur..

...
~­

...,.~

"ftiiCCV/f'
4Mm-.ou,"bY
~u,

.,....

a thfatt'r

trouw~OJI.

KATHARINE CORNELL
THEATER. 7 P.M .
ftp.p. CldMI//Io~
Rectpnon to follow In rhe]ane
Keeler Room. Sponsond by rhe
Campus Church Coo litton. Cora
P Maloney College and the
Educa tiona l Opporrunzty
Center Ca ll 849-6717 (or more

m(onnatton

/t'C-.cl

,.,...,,..

Hf#OI~bY
~.",..,6

Allka," a cui.MaL

E4llatt107141 Oppommtty CAnr&lt;r
and the Buffelo and bW Coamty

l'l&lt;bltc Ltbnlr)l. c.n /U9-6m

fur mort tn(orm.arfon.

3
.....,.....

........

VI ..... wrtflltlo .....

/tflllft8, .....
LMacY
~0..,.

.....

CLEMENS 120. 1-3 P.M .

Uve. interactive
satellite broadcast
featuring such noted
African American
writers as Terry
McMillan. Charles
Johnson, Nllcld
Giovanni and Marlta
Golden.
/fH' Cldl,\l//10~
Sponsor&lt;d by rh• otll« o(
Con(trtnc£$ and Sptdctl £vents
and the- Office o(Special
Programs. for rtSUVarfons and
addft1onalln(onnatlon calf
645-3414

/fH' CldMI//1~
Rlcept.on to follow 1n the
Ubra:ry o( tht £ducat1onal

Opporruntry Ce-nter, '65
WCI.Shfn9fon Sr. Spon~d by
the Ccrmpul Church Coalitfon.
Cora: P. Mctlonf.)l Colftgt. the

/fH Cldl,\l//1~
5por!SOR4 by O.IUI Stqma

l'hlto Sormty, /ru:., .&amp;un'•lo
Al.wnnu Owlpr6. "'"' rM

Cruttw CNI! Cmr&lt;r, • urtlt o(
tilt Dtvtston o(Studmt A.ffclfrs

9

.rod/.

.-,L -scvtt~-.
DIEFENDORF 147 CTIME
TO BE ANNOUNCED)

/fH' Cldlt\l/11~
Co-sporuor&lt;d by rh•
UndU9nadwue Srwtmr
Association and the Black

Srudmr Unton. C.ll MS·Z950
(or mo,.... information

12
JfbraadcQit 01

"·--···
cl'tG JCICf'
~­

c~·-­

chciLLfl•"" 6

4
~
"~I~

.-,artty cul.turf'

..........,6
~Uifo

Lltffaturf"'

ALLEN HALL. 4-5 P.M .
Uve broadcast by
WBFO. with aud.Jence
and telephone
participation. Panelists
include: Marla Rosa
Allen. WNED Channel
17: Rev. Leslie Braxton.
pastor. Shiloh Baptist
Church: Gary Ross.
lecturer. Educational
Opportunlry Center:
and Lorna Hill. founder
and director. Ujlma
Theatre Company.
Sharon Holley.
Fronczak Ubrary
librarian. will act as
moderator .
#tH'CidMI//10~
SponsDnd by the Office of

Con(ennces and Sptetal Events,
the Office O(Spedal Programs

•nd WBf'O. C.ll BZ9-Z880 (or
mort in(ormarton.

~"

WOLDMAN THEATER.
NOON-2 P.M .
An expert panel will
discuss posltlve
methods. solutions.
programs and
strategies to enhance
race relations on ~ •
American college and
university campuses.
/fH' CldMI//1~
Sponsored by tht Offlce of

Con(umcts and S~al £vents
and tht ()fflcea(Spccf.al
/'ro9Nrru. c.n MS-3414 (or
mora fn(ormarton..

12

"~

"""""

A comedy based on the

bizarre true story of
comp ulsive impostor
Wlll1am Douglas Street.
WOLDMAN'THEATER
7 P.M. AND 9:30 'P.M.
tlclrf'tl .,. 1-1, So for

~~•:s.Sofor
~
~

.....

Sponsor&lt;d by !JUAB.

17

l.f'cturf' bY

.wlrl~

~ ..... (IIIL&amp;f'CI

DIEFENDORF 147
7P.M . .

.-coL~t.xl
DIEFENDORF 148
7P.M .

lrH' Cldl,\l//10~
Sponsored by the Black Student
Union. Calf MS-3029 (or more

lrH' Cldlt\l//10~
Sponsored by the Black'Studtnr
Unton. CAU 645-3029 (or mort

fn(orrnarfon.

(through february 2i.l

.Nt ..........

c•••

lilt.IIVs -

Jfl

...-

fn("""-''rtorr:

~,...,.

BUFFALO AND ERIE
COUNTY PUBUC
UBRARY AUDITORIUM.
CUNTON STREET
7P.M .

which Includes fiber
arts. sculpture,
drawinqs, painting and
photoqraphy.

....

250 SIUDENT UNION.
MONDAY-FRIDAY
lOA.M~S PM. &amp;

7-l(}-P.M.; SATURDAY&amp;
SUNDAY'NOON-S P.M.

Eigh t artlsts w1ll
exhibit their work

.,..,
....

18

~

~

JCNOX 20
6:30-8:3() P.M,

...

JrH'~Jioll
5po!UOI'f4 by rh• Scllool a(
5o&lt;toJ Wort. C. II MS- JMI (or
...... 11l(&lt;rmllltlon.

�'19
IILUf'l~

-...
Jlii'C
. tlltlllrt
.,.....,.,
duO
ALLEN HAll
AUDITORIUM. 8 P.M .
To be broad cast Uve on
WBFO-FM C88.7mHz).
the NPR news a nd jazz
service of the
Un ive rsity at Buffalo.
a.V.UJflo~t

cl&lt;atQf'd

Sponsored by WBFO-FM and
Hal/walls Cortrt mporG ry A.n s

Ctnttr Call 829-ZBBO (or more
mfomu:mon

2 0
"IQI..,..."
Based on th e Tony
Awa rd - nom inated
Broadway and
mternational hit of th e
same name .
WOLDMAN THEATER
7 PM AND 9:30P.M .
tlc~I'V at!' JtH&gt; Jot
Jtvdi'II\TI
'o Jot

*'·

~tolo-Jtudi'ICV
Sponsored by UUAB. M1nonty
A(fcms Stu dent ASSOCla non. and
rht Black Stu dent Uhron

......... .,
................
-

~-

Featured spealcer:
Derek Walcott, poet
Sl.EE HAll. 8 P.M .
ltH&gt; I"V~. tiel&lt;fot
r.,quirf'd. r-tioll to
/OUOW.
Sponsored by the M inortry

Faculty(, Sta ff Assodarton and
rht Office of rht Prtsid1mt Ce~ U
645-.UJ4 (or mort i n (orme~ Non

trlbvtf' to cMt
bQIIf'
fea turinq the UB jazz
Ensemble and the Al
Tinney Quartet.
ALLEN HAll. 8 P .M

11/t~"

S'IUDENT UNION.
BEGINS AT 8 A.M .
Sponsored by the Mznortty
Faculry Ei Staff A.ssociarton and

the Office of the Prest dent C&lt;lll
645-1997 (OJ more zn(ormatlon

26
c...,.abl4~

Jazz With WII.Lifo
dol/rt

111'1'~/1Sponsortd by thr lHpa:rtmtnr of
Mus1c ~t nd WBF'O. C4U WBf'O a!

To be broadcast live on
WBFO-FM (88.7mHz).
the NPR news and jazz
service of the
Unive rsi ty at Buffalo
a&lt;WlJJlo~t

PlACE AND TIME TO
BE ANNOUNCED

Spon!Offil by the Black Stubnt
Unton. can 645-3029 (or more

fn(ormarton.

27

, . , . . city
~c.....,

The company promotes
the works of black
choreographers.
I&lt;ArnARINE CORNELL

THEATER. 8 P.M .
ticl&lt;fot tf'Quitf'd

26
Cart'fl#alfl
"Cfllf'f't/0# . .

ALLEN HALL
AUDITORIUM . 8 P.M

2

s~q- 2880

25
26
...,..w
....
"'*"'
.....
II.C0¥11'...,_.
..... . ,..at
......

ckatQf'd

Sponsored by WBfO-fM and

Hclllwa lls Contemporary Arts
Center For more tn(o rmarton

Sponsored by the

Unduqraduatt Student
A.ssocfotlon and the Department

o(Theattr and Danct For mort
m(orma rto n call 645-2950

28
~turaL

/hf¥W
KATHARINE CORNELL
THEATER. 6 P.M .
colt IJ ~ Pl't Pl'tJoll
Sponso rrd by the 814~cJe Srudtnr
Union. Call MS- 3019 (or mort'
m(orma tlon

28

/Df'CiaL a..cturf' by
IPIN'Lf'f'
ALUM NI ARENA
8 P.M .
¥c:Ntl ...,..Ciblfo at .....
-~(-f6.So

,.,

.....

~,0

,.,~~

.,...•. ,.,.........

111111 s--.,

Alfie. . Gft'
ALL~

\lfNiff&amp;

STUDENT UNION.
DAILY FROM NOON
T03 P.M .
ft"" a&lt;WJJfloll ·
Sponsored by the Black
Student Union. Call
b4S- 3029 (or more
1n(ormarton

•

2 •

allld llllllalllllallllll
a.................. ttao.larwll.t -crtlk!a.IW
til~ caalllcl."

a.n~oa--llmdy-.blllbod In ......

"-'*"

~ - · '..-u . . . . f«. popod1811110demlam. alllllly tllllllt 111111 at. lllilranuw 111111 ~. duwtJh
all 1111 Pmoda 111111 ......... • AeccrdlntJ Ill tlw crttlc. he II "'boCIIIM
Malcolm X tlllltlrahft 111111 a BW:k llallldlllft.- Man namly, M ~
far the Ull118d Fnlallll " ' - w the l..,.:y Makolm X. lllll1llt:a w*-lldo whmtmt I'JIIPGIIIIICIIIO lila llplb Ia 111m about the mWWtl black Iader.
A 19!13 ~til Boward Unlwnlty, Bolralra pu.bu.hed hllllnt maJor podry
ooll«tton. ~ 10 a l'Wmty Voiii.IM 8ulc1dl Not~ In 1961 R11 Dlhcr cdlectlaN
lnclulk TM DMd r..:turu' and lii«J: ~- R11 BIIIIJI People: N«po Mlllllc In
White Am.nc. II a lllldy of black mualc In the context of U.S. IOdal hll!ory.

til

Baraka't plays Include Dalclurwt, termed by Norman Maller "tlut bnt play In

Ammca. • which played off-Broadway to critical acclaim and won an Oble
Award In 19M. Helt the author of an autobloqraphlcal novel. 'l7u1 Syslf!lt1 of
Dante 'I Hell; a lhol1•1110ry collection. TalG, and a collect1on o! ....ys. Homt Social !Mays.
Rllaward.l and honono lncluok Whitney, 0\lqgmhelm and R.ockdeller Foundation Fellowthlpt. He hat taWJht at the Nno School for Soc:W Reoean:h, San
Ftandtco State, Yale and~ Wuhlnqton Unlvmliticl, SUNY at Stony 11roo1&lt;
and UB.

'''ilh'hh'W'*
La..:llng valoe In AWrtaan-.......a•n-=
8plke ~-....-kIn Alul'ftnl..._,•

Sponsored by UUAB

T 35. SPIIE Clllvlton )acbCJnJ Ln hat omorqed. u a ladlnq lndrpcndmt lllmmalrer and a prcr.ocattw \01ce In Afrlean Ammca1\

co118Z9-Z880

(or more fnforrnarton.

(th rough february 26)

......,p,

• ................... 'VIIIalt•

arl-

1111 c:prratt relaa, "Maacoom X.· ckptcta tlut fiery cloqumce of
the black m.lllta!lt Iader whowu aauttnated. In 1'16S. Ln, rrlpondlnq to ddracton from the United. Front to Pre~ tlut ~acy 0( Malcolm X, laid, -Malcolm belonql to ewryone and ewryone II entitled to th.elr
own Interpretation. ... lrtHrVe my right al an ll1'lllt
to pllrtiU! my own 'VIGon of the man.A graduate of ManhouJe College and NYU' 1 lnltitute of rum and TeiMI!on, nlch School of the Arts.
Ln won early re&lt;X&gt;9l'ltlon for joe'• Bed-Stuy Barbershop," a real1Jt1c but humoroWIIook at Ufe In ~
Bedford-Stuyvnartt neighborhood. If won al982 Student Academy Award and wu the first ltudent pro'duct!an to be ·eel«ted for the -Nno Dlrecton/Nno
F1lml" tWI'In at Uncoln Center.
"She'e Gotta Haw u- 0986) wu ·a moot unprrcrdmu.l work-an all-black COIUdy 0( manncra. •
wiotc 0.'1114 EdlllltGn
\'JUaplr \bier. It ..inwd
maJor llllaftatlollal cllllr1buiiDil and won the lfaow
Ommltlarl Award !rom !he !A rum Cr!llcl and the Prtx de~ Ill the
canna Film~ 'llc:hool Dtute- 011118&gt;: a mllllcaJ art~ a~

1D 1M

- bi!M _......_by 1M

_._IIIII:'

8olltll.
"Do
IIIPt '1'111111" OM),·-~~---~
abc1at 1llllllaN toot....a. blltl:b a!tdltaiJall-~ 1D a J1iroa1111'1L
hoocL "'t
IIUIIkto-rtollbatiOpnM)b . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Gllellllnq
tlllk about .• diM. ..,..--..
A-aIR 1989 aru1- tnow that cwrr rra. tlltlllllllllll. ~ • a 11.
rl8ecll !be IJ'tl.lh.- oat crttle l!otJer EbG't.

-

·t
pe(lple.,.:..au"'

Thl -0(~~ ._BID IMUid IMlalaJMqtMIIM1-=hlrtll ar1 and bladllllanltuw, .... ~ 110 _.-til--~--­

....... _........_....,. J'arlro\a.MiaMI!IIr

!M..._ar.,a.6inGblll8norlt:'-::::::::::=
,. ..._.... _...__..far
*-liar Alllla ...... Mllll DIMIIIIIII ··~·---·

..........

a••~

�-

s,u i.'s fntk
Joe's Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads
M aking "Do the Right Th ing"
FriUy, F• . 26 .. SatlrUy, F• . Z11t 7:00 ,.._
$2.50 UB students I $3.50 non-UB students

Alst . . . il febnwy:
Chameleon Street

Friday, Fell. 12 -.1 SltlnaJ, Fell.lllt 7:00 I 9-.30 , ...
$2.50 UB students I $3.50 non-UB students

Sarafina!
FriUy, F•. 19 lid SatlrUy, F•. 20 It 7:00 /9:30 ,.._
Free for UB students I $3.50 non-UB students

........
..........

will be available at !he
following location :

. . . . liiW ...

FEBRUARY 28,

........... .

1993

...... Ills

List of ticket prices:

u• ...... &lt;• •r

SIUI~ / IIIA­

SII.Selll1ll:tllilul / __.,_,

(-!5-~ ..t-- 11 145-ZISI

Applirutions aflrl inquiries for f"s!tmafl, transfer a11d
nwll,rifl[!. sturlmts orr? rncoumged for lite Fa/11993.

S14Jta,lfsltow
With media sup~n from

829-2111

The omce ol the VIce Praldent lor Pubic: Service 111d ~an AH*•

Black History Month

lb&lt;&gt; of}iet· ik&lt;,. 1'£'S{)()II.\1bililyfor the fo//o/111/R u11ils

r..1AIIIIII1MORE COUfSE 829'2202
t.:u Summer Sessions
CORA P. MAlONEY COUfSE 645-2002
Collcgi:ue Achit'vcmcnt Program
Collcgi:ue Science and Technology Enuy Program
Minoriry Ac-.tdtmic AchiC\-emem Prognm

CBffiR Rll Al'l'liD PlllJC AffAN Sl111D 645-2374
Urlnn lnt&lt;rnship Program
Master of Social Science

CBffiR fGII ACAIIMC IJEV8.IIIIMilfT S8IVI:fS 645-3072
Educational Opportunity Program
Ac:~demic Advisement
Career Counseling and Amisernent
Personal and Social Counseling ·
Tutorial Support

BU:mDNALII'POIIT1IITY CBffiR 849-671 7
Allied Health Programs
GED Prepamion
College Preparation
English as a Second Language

IIHCE RIIIJIVBISITY PIIPAMT1IIIY PROIIIAMS
Bulfalo Prep, Inc.•

Uheny Partnet&gt;hlp Program
Minority High School Student Resean:h Apprentice""
Pre-Freshman Enrichment Program
School, College, Univ~~· Partnership Program
Science and Technology Enrichment Program
Upward Bound MaJh I Science Regional Center
Upward Bound (Regular)
UB lnstitut~ for CBO Education and Training ·
829-3474 . 829-J61)5"
645-2097..

r.JIIIJY lliiAIIUATE Rl1IIWIIII' PlilllMM 645-2997
Pal_rida Roben llarris FeUOI&gt;lihip Program
Special Merit Fellowship Program
SUNY Gradu:ue Tuition Scholarship Program
SUNY Underrepresented Mlnority Gradu:ue FeUOI&gt;lihip Program
Ollrte ollhe Vrce Presulenllor Pubtn: Seruce and Urban llllarrs tl-18 Capen Hall G-l:, ?09/

l'

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---- -.,.--.J
---------------------------------~
.........
•• fiiiii: . . . .- _----------. . CMf_..._ ...... .......... _ ........ ., .. .

PLEASE CALL OR VISIT ADMISSIONS. HAYES A. SOlffi l CAMPUS

'"' tmmrl.f•"'""'1

•

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.......

~

I V E

V I A

SATElliTE

BEYOND
THE

ALt ,_ .,. ·' · ·
(\1 1 , ,

p

,f

I

o ·REAMv
The Writers, The Stories, T he Legacy
A. tuJo...lwur moving and

FEBRUARY 3.1993
1:00 - 3:00 EST
120 CLEMENS HALL
Fer~ itftnutila

Clllbd tile Ollile "

~­
s,ecill
Eftllls,
64S-3414.

inspiring vitkoamfttTn a
lhaJ wiU focw on th&lt; impact
of Afriwn Ammcan
liln'atv.rr as it pntains to
American rulture and lift.
The national kiclooff of the
mcmth.-Jmog ohserva nu: of th&lt;
am tribution.s mcuk 11J Blaclo
AmniranJ to our country,
&amp;yond the Drmm V will
focw on th&lt; importanu: of
•torytdUngfor the
u,uferstanding and
prt.servation of rultu.ti a r~d
lu:ritagr.

�</text>
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... Diet Related to

M81rellolldllly

Dlae••?

Jo Freudenheim

UB experts halie tips fer
protectng ~health
and heme dt.ri1g the

2
Pili.

researches the role of
diet in chronic
diseases.

t"didays.

...

Hwltlllful Food:
It's a Winner
Reporter contest brings
outpouring 01 ideas for
healthful eating.

critical need.
"Our e.tforts to strengthen our
service to Western New York., our
concern with keeping our research
progmms competitive in a rapidly
changing national and intem~tional
R&amp;D economy, our current drive to
build a broader base of support for
UB-all ofthese are key

CoUege and Summer Sessions from
the provost's area
· Moore, who had setved as senior
staff officer to the president for two
years, will report directly to Bloch in
her new post and also serve as an'
officer in the presidential cabineL
Landi will report directly to the
provost in as~uming

to our university's on-

new responsibil ities for

going development as a
leadership institution.

research policy and

Theresuucturing weare

review boards. organized research units
a~d the uniVersity 's

planning, : institutional

doing targets these areas."
Bloch said the fact

nuclear facility. AI the

that the vice president

TWOOilER

-

ES

VICE

-

PRESIDENCY

FORPUBUC

resident William R. Greiner has
announced the creation of a vice presidency for public
service and urban affairs and the consolidation of two other
vice presidencies.
Muriel A. Moore has been named

_to the new posi tion of vice president

URBAN

for public· service 3nd urban affai~ .
At the same ti me. Greiner announced the creation of a new vice
presidency for research. consolidating the responsibi lities of the former
vice president for sponsored programs and fanner vice president(
vice provost for research, and a new
vice presidency foruniversity development and advancement. combi ning the rcspons.ibilities of the forme r
vice president for university relations.-and former vice presidem for
university deve lopment .

· Dale M. Landi. former vice president for sponsored programs. has
been named vice president for re-

search. while Ronald H. SICin. former
vice preside nt for university relation s. has been appointed vice president for university development and

adv~ent.

Doriald W . Rennie. fomlCrly vice
president/vice provost for research.

and Joseph J. Mansfield. formerly
vice president for uni versity devel-

technology transfer. He
will continue as an officer of cabinet rank.
reporting directly to the
president in his capacity as fiscal designee of
1
the Research Founda: /
"lion.

1.

i1 Mike Landi our out-

Stein.'· who will re-

reach in technological

port direc tly ·,o the

andeconomicareas.··he
added.
Bloch noted that ·:as
a major research uni-

president. will retain
his respo~sibil i ties as
UB·s chief public affairs officer. and continue to oversee all
governmental relations. He also will oversee the university's
interactions
with
· alumni. as well as the

ADDRESS

RESEARCH,

versi ty. you can't talk
about wha1 we do aca-

By AR111UR PAGE

News Bureau D1rector

same time, he will
maintain hiscwrent responsibilities for spansored programs and

for public service and
urban affairs and vice
president For research
will report 10 the
universiry' s provost will
tie the-university's outreach efforts directly to
theacademu!emerPr;se.
..Muriel Moore will
1 lead our social and education ·outreach. and

dem ically without talking about research, and
at a public up:i~rsity,
you can't t61k about

I

rDEVELOPMENT

general public. The

what we db academi ca lly without talking
about outreach w the
community. the region
and the state ...
dreiner n01ed that ·
with the restructuring.
Bloch. Senior Yice
President for University
Services Robert J.
Wagner and Vice Presi -

AREAS
1

opment. have been named senior
coun se lors to the president in the
areas of research/sponsored progr.uns and ur1.iversity development.
respectively. Senior counselor to the
president is a cabinet-rank position.
Greiner said the restructuring ""is
a vital pan of our university's ong(}-

dent forCiinical Affairs
John P. Naughton con-

emerging university

developmemeflort will
be added tel Stein· s responsibilities.
Moore brings to her
new post nearly two

decades of experience
at UB and an extensive

record of community
service.

1..4NDI

cOnfident that, with suc h first-rate
leaderS in th~se new areas. we will

tinue in their respective
roles. as does Roben L. Palmer. vice
president for student affairs. Palmer's
responsibi lities enco~J)ass all of the
student life areas, as we ll as the Office of Admissions. Depanrnt;nl of

move forward rapidly in our efforts
to make UB a leadership institu-

ParkingandTrunsponationServices.

ingevolution ... He added that he and
UB ·Provost Aaron N. Bloch ..are

tion."
Greiner noted . "'This past September. we talked about ways for
UB to make better use of its talents
and resources. to work smarter both
within the university community and
in pannerships with our home community. These shifts in our structure
and institutional emphases arc an
important part of that process
working smarter.
··By creating new teams and es·
tablishing new connections,'" he

or

added,"we~maximizingtheskills

and eKperience of UB's leaders so
that we can better address areas of

L

Public Safety and Office ofCarnp&lt;is

M

·

oore will be responsible
forMillardFillmoreCol-

lege and for coordination of service
in areas such as public education.
urban revitalization. new partnerships between UB and the Western
New York community and recruitment and retention programs for sru-

dents from underrepresented groups.
Units that will be transferred to the

new vice presidency include Special
Programs and the Center for Ap. plied Public Affairs Studies, previously under the Division of Student

Affairs. as well as Millard Fillmore

She joined UB ·s admini"strative staff in

1974asassistantdirector of the University Learning Center and in 1981.was named directqr

I

ofthecenter. n post she held for three
years. From 1984-87. she served as
director of UB 's Educational Opponunity Center.

In 1987. Moore was appointed.
assoc iate vice ·provost for special
programs_.with responsibility for the
supervision and management of 25

mul ticultural ·special progrnms and
their perso~l. She'held that post
until 1990, when she was appointed
an assistant to the presidenL She was

named deputy 10 the president -in
November 1991.
A graduate of Richmond College
of City University of New York.
Moore holds a master' s degree in
education and a doctorate ·in education organization. administration and
policy from UB.
Con11nu&lt;td on page 5,

�-a.·--M,-u

2
H 0 N 0 R S

s.

Kerry C...,.deon of die
.Focult)r of Arts IIIII l..ellois, hu
--toibelxwdofdle
Arts Couucil in Butrllo ond Erie

\.Diet and·
Health in
Italy

· c:....y.

Onilt,.

:.~

-

of die SdJool
of Music: at
die Univc:nity
ofNdnskaLincoltibci.n

comingiO UB
in 1991. Bef.njoining die Nebflsb faculty. Gtlot ICf'Cd for
four yean .as assistant diJtCIOr
nf die Scbool of Music at die
University~ Oklaboma. Prior
to that appointment. he chaired
the division of fine arts-at Trinity Wes1em College in British
Columbia and taught at McGill
Univmity, the University of
California (Irvine) and Califor,
nia State University at Fullerton.
He is a member of the A.nieri·
can Musicological Society and
was e~ iri 1983 to Pi Kappa
Lambda. Nntional Music Honor

"We will
look to see if
therr!are
specific
things about
their diets
that~
...people."

.JO-

Jo Freudenhelm will use NIH ·
grant to study relationship of
diet to chronic: dl.....
By DAVID HllliMELGREEN
Reporter Staff

T

HE DiET OF !TAL Y ranges from lhe

MeditCrranean influences of Southern
Italy, lower in fal and rich in fish. vegetables. and olive oil, tothe.Germanand
French influences in the Nonh in which
foods such as cream-eaten with much pleasurebring up the fat level. And al l over llaly there is

wine-chockrul of nuuients, flavor. and very aro-

Society.

matic- admired and drunk with much relish.
Because the diet iS so varied. Italy is a good
HEALTH RElJ\ TED
PROFESSIONS

Jo Freudenhelm Is
Involved In several
nutrltlorHelated
projects.

place to do research on diet and how it may

Cf1ED FOit l'tiii.AHII.oPY:

J, Wlll"n!R Perry, professor
emeritus and flf'SI dean of the
School of Health Relllled Professions. has
received the
Outstanding
PhilanthropiSI
of the Year
Award from
the National

SocietYof
Fund Raising
&amp;ecutives.
Western New YorX 0\ipcer.
Pl:ny was rcoognized for his
loog·stnnding commitment 10 the
ans. a lltural in&lt;;titutioos, educarion and health n:lllled professions.
Dean of HRP from 1966 until
his retirement in Im. Peny
helped 10 esllhlish two endowed
funds at ~ · one to provide

PERRY

scholan.hips to srudcnts known
as Perry Scholars. the other to
suppon the I. WIUTCD Perry Lec1\Uo Series in Health Reljlled

Professions.

---CIVIL ENGINEERING

ARVU:

Dale D. Memlltb, profeasor
and chai~ of civil C{lgi.neering.
has heen awilnled the Service to
the Profession Award of the
Water Resoutt:eS Planning and

Management Division of Amer-

i~~:~.:\:S:·
as. the society's natioi\al meeting

contribute to or protect against chronic diseases
such as cancer and cardiovascular disease.

So rcpons Jo Frcudinhcim, assistant professor
of social and preventive medicine in UB's School
of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, whose research interests lie in the areas of diet and cancer.
Freudenheim. who n:a!ntly received a Research
Career Development Award from th&lt;; National Institutes of Health. is planning to U'iC this five-year grant
to do. among other projects. a cohon srudy on diet and
cancer in haliM men. She will work with Maurizio
Trevisan. associate professor of social and preventive
medicine, who has done widely recognized work in
diet and cardiovascular disease.
''Thisisa littJemoreopen-endcdthanmostgrdflts.''
said Freudenheim. addi ng that 'The idea of the
grant is to suppon me to develop as a researcher.
and it's geared toward people Who essentiall y arc
advanced beginners--untenured and needing to
develop as researchers."
The new cohon study in Italy will lOOk at the
diets of a large groupofincn and Will follow them
to sec who gets specific types of cancer or cardiovascular disease. Freudenheim said. "We will then
look to see if there are specific things about their
diets that identify these people," she explained.
Because the Italian diet is varied and the popu·
lation is relatively homogenous. it makes a "nice
place to work." Freudenheimsaid. Additionally. in
lmly ''there is less of a stigma about alcohol con·
sumption and because of this, people provide a
more accurnte account of their intake of alcohol,"
reported Freudenheim. who n01ed that wine is an
impori'ant sOurce of iron in the Italian diet.
Some interesting work has been done in Italy and
France oonceming diet and disease. Frcudenheim
said. describing the recent research on the relatively
low r:itesofcanliovasculardisease among the French.

.. in Baltimore. fUr was cited for
outstanding leadership. activities and acluevemcDt in service.
A member of die 'American
S.:.:iety of Civil Engipoers since
1963. Memlith bas_, a
member of the society's boatd
of din:ctors and presented wortshops for the Buffalo secsion:
He bas served as student chapt&lt;r
advil« and was general cltairman of the national confen:nce
in Kansas City in 1987.
A UB focqhy member since
1973. Men:dith earned bochelor's. ~JW~er' s and PhD. degroes from the Univoaity of
Illinois at Utbona.Qmmpoign.

Anolher projeclin which Freudenheim has been
who eat adietrelatively high in fat. Some researchers
involved is a srudy of nearly 58.000 New Yorkers
have posiUlated that wine may be praecrive, "but
who have-answered a shan questionnaire abwi diet.
we're stilllltllclear what il is about the Freri:h diet''
"The cohort srudy in New Yark State was started in
that may be benefiting the people, she said.
1980 and it's really at this point that the data becomes
1n Italy and other pans of the Mediterrnnean.
tremendously valuable." she said.
research hasalsoshown that&lt;tiets rich vege&lt;ables,
fish, fish oil'- and olive oil may be benefteial with
nough ti.re has passed !hat the researchers can
respect to chronic disease, she.added.
now begin to see who is and isn't getting
Freudettheimsaicl the goal ofthe Italian srudy will
cancer and ifthereareany differences with respect
be to look at all these foods and. hopefully. bring out
to
the
diet of the two groups, Freudenheim said.
which facto&lt;s. if an~ are benf;ficial or prolflClivc. .
ifreudenheim 's grant of$325,000 over the next
However. she did warn that srudies on Humans are
five years will help her'cominue her research on
"sorrewhat WlOO!Itrolled" and this makes them diffistudies of cancer epidemiology and nutritiOn and
cult 10 oonduct. For example. the ability of people to
accurutely recall what they eat over a long period of enhance her research ski lls. She sees "a lot hajr
pening" during Jhat per:iod.
ti.re is difficult. Freudenheim said. "We will, hQ_wAfter receiving a B.S. in human nutrition at the
evcr, do sorre yalidation stt.dies oo some)hlall
UniversityofMichiganin 1975,Freudenheimworked
groups to try IOdetennine how well people are able to
a.' a commmity nutritionist in-Madison, Wis. and in
report what the usual diet is like." she said.
I m. becarre a regi.!;tcre(l dietitian tluoogh an internship in clinical nutritioo at Ltithernn General HOSf&gt;ital
rreu&lt;Jenheim pointed out that cohon studies
inl'arloRidge.IIlinois. ln 1979sheworkedfortheWJC
can goon for decades because the ti.re it takes
(Women lnfaniS And Otildren) progran1 in Dane
for a disease to show up in the population depends,
County.nearOticago. Thcre,sheevaluatednutritional
in part. on the prevalena! of that disease in the
needs and helped to provide nutritional education.
population, She also plans to use her Research
'This was an interesting place,to work because we
CareerDcvelopmentAwardiOwoti&lt;onanumberof
got a real mix of people." said Freudenheim. adding
other projects including her ongoing panicipation in
that shesawmigr.tllt laborers. the wbanand rural poor.
castXOntrol studies in Western New Yoti&lt; that look
Freudenheim earned a master's degree and a
as. nuoition and cancer of the breast. ovaries. endcr
Ph.D. in nutritional sciences and a master's in prevenmetrium and prostate.
tive medicine at the Univer.;ity of Wisconsin, Madi·
'These studies look at people with newly
son. before coming to UB in I987 as a postdoctoral
diagnosed cancer and he&lt;~lthy people from the
same population. We then look to see if there are
fellow in cancer epidemiology in Social and Preventive Medicine. In 1988. she becarre an assistant
systematic differences in the diets of the two
·professor in the same program.
·
groups," Freudenheim explained.

in

E

r

John N Walsh reappointed to UB Council
John N. WtllshiH, a member of the UB Council since 1980, has been
rea_ppoimed to the council by Gov. Cuomo for a tem1 to expire June 30.
1997.
Walsh, ch.iirman an~ chief executive since 1973 of Walsh Duffield
Companies. Inc., a Buffalo insur.ll)ce ftrm, holds a J.D. from Harvard
Law School and a B.A. from Yale University. He is past chair of The
Cltildren's Hospital of Buffalo, and current chair of lhe hospital's
planning and annual giving commit~ees . He is vice chairman of the
Greater Buffalo Development Foundation. director of KJeinhans Music
Hall Management. tnc .. president of lhe board of The Nichols School.
·directofoflhe Yale Development Board and a trusteeoflhe Western New

York Foundation. He is a Life Member of the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra Society board of directors
He is a director of Marine Midland Bank, NA. Western Region. and
Niagara Envelope Company. Inc. In 1985. he rece ived lhe Brotherhood
Award from the BuffaloChapterofthe National Conference of Christians
and Jews.
At UB. Walsh seJVes as a me~ber of Jhe fine Ans Advisory Committee. He is a trustee of the University at Buffalo Foundation. and also chairs
the UBP' s audit commiu.ee. He served on the presidential search commit·
tees resul ting in the appointments of Presidents Steven B. Sample and
William R. Greiner.

r
The Reporter IS a caf'll)US CO'TYTlUI"'ly newspaper pt..bltShed by the ()MsJon d L.lr'M!fSity R~benS. State Urwersrty at NeWYOO&lt;. at Bt.ifalo Editooal &lt;ifices are lOcated 1n 136 Crofts Hall. Arrtlerst, (716) 64&amp;2626
EDITCI!' AMM WMPC1E1

ASSOCIATE EDITOR JCWil 0NCD11

�3

_.,U!M_M,_U

Plan would put apartment-:style housing on Parcel B
~=r: - "

Campus officials say the
proposal grew out of a S~ney
HE UNIVERSITY. hopes to build
of more than 1500 graduaJe
apartment-style housing on therestudents, along with visits to
mamong 7_5 acres of undeveloped
successful college apartment
land on Pan:el B. the area at the
complexes and a search of
west of Lake LaSalle and south of\ availableliteratureonthetopic.
Audubon Parlcway and location of the Com- \ · Planners also contacted 60
mons and UB Booksto"'.
colleges and universities that
According to Dean of Stu&amp;nts Dennis
offer specialty housing. Coordinating the
project., Student Affairs, University FaciliBlack, the request for proposal "is being P"'sented this month to the University at Buffalo · ties and Residence Life.
The survey 'showed that UB graduaJe and
Foundation for final review. The university is
commiueo to the project. We anticipate beginprofessional students wish to be near the main
ning to work with possible project developers
graduate libraries, a major bus loop and com- .
· as early as January."
men:ial services. 1be project. planners· conIf approved by the UBF. a contract could be
tend. would be "specificall y desigrted to meet
awardedasearly.asMay 1993withcompl!'tion 'theneedsofstudentsinterestedinqualityhoussct for August I'J'tl.
ingwithstandardamenities . ... Many graduate
Under the plan, a private developer would
and professional students face ·a readjustment
period when moving. to a new setting. 1be
design. finance and construct 85 to 100 apartment units. Management of the complex could
project would provide an opportunity to Jive in
be either through the developer or the univeran environinent that can meet theirneedsonan
sity. Land use would be subject to a long-term
informal basis while providing support ser- .
vices not found in other living environments."
lease from the UBF.
Apartment buildings would be no more
than three srories high. with one to four bedccording to the proposal, the project would
rooms and identified parking per unit. The plan
also provide a well-trafficked path beaJso calls for security provisions such as blue
tween the Ellicott Complex and the Academic.
light telephones and accessibility to the disSpine; increase on-campus student population
abled.
and thus heighten overall quality of campus
UB curren1ly has limited housing for gradulife; and he lp UB in its recruitment of grnduate
ate and professional sl\Jdcnts and no family
and professional students.
housing.
The proposal notes that the need for a hoteU

T

A

confenoncecenteron Pan:el B-first proposed
in 1986 along with the Commons retail complex that opened in 1991-has diminished
with the current construction of a privatelyfunded confe"'nce _!:enter to the north of the
campus and the.abundant h""'l rooms to the
south. The CenterforTomorrow, Student Union
and UB Commons, it is though~ can accom-

"We antici~ beginning
to work with possible

project developers as early
as January_"

modate most university-related conferences
and meetings.

Faculty Senate votes to end S/U grading for Gen Ed
BJ MARK HAMMER
Reporter Staff~
EG ' NING WlTH the freshman
class of 1993. no students will be
allowed to take their required GcncrJI Education coU~s under the

B

SI\J (Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory) format. The

motion wa~ passed by the Faculty Senate during its Nov. 17 meeting.
TI1c move was made to ensure a degree of
parity between the importance of a st udent' !-.
GcnerJI Educa1ion courses and hi s or her maJOTCOUTSC!-., according to Donald Pollock. chair
oft he Faculty Senate's gnJding committee and
an assistant professor of anthropology.
Walter Kunz.. administrativedeanofundergmduate academic services. said it was important thut Gcncml Education courses were given
equal standing in a studcnl's a~ademic pursuit

at UB . "The grnding committee is trying to

give General Edudnion courses the same status as major requirements...
Pollock noted that at least one segment of

srudents at UB. engi...,;ng majors. have a specific problem in that they have no generill electives during their university careers besides their
General Education courses taken under the old
Gen Ed systern Hesaidthatbecausc Engineering
has not yet approved the UGC curriculum requirements. however, this motion would not yet

affect any·of those students.
If the depanment does approve the Geneml
Education requirements in the future. courses

taken by engineering students un~er the S/\J
provision beginning with the Fall. 1993 semester will be giVen formal retroactive letter
grade..o;. said Kunz. "We can recover the grades
from a course taken originally under the S/U
option in the future ... he scUd.
It was pointed out by Dennis Malone. dis-

FDA grant will establish program
to train pha111J£1Cologists
The unhrenity hae Neelved a $3 million grant from the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration to establish a pilot program in clinical pharmacology aimed at relieving the
shonage of specialists trained to develop and test new drugs and teach others about their use.

Joseph L. Jzzo, Jr., professor of medicine arid pharmacology and program director. said
spocialists with a knowledge of drugs and drug interac1ions are in critically short supply.
"On 1y 225 people have been trained in pharmacology in the past25 years, and these have
been largely basic scientists," lzzo said. 'The shortage of clinical pharmacologists is
occurring at a time when the number of new drugs underdevelopment and the need for drugrelated-education are at an all-time high."
The progrnm is expected to grant two or three fellowships the first year. with the first
fellow set to begin work in January. Funding ofS4 11,912 for the ftrSt year of the five-:;.ear
grant already has been received. The UB progr.iin is one of four funded by the FDA. Pilot
programs also will be established at the MaypCiinic, the University ofDiinoisat Peoria and
the Mehany Medical College in Nashville. The fellowships are aimed mainly at physicians
who would choose clinical pharmacology as a subspecialty. but qualified doctornl candidates also wi II be considered, lzzo said.
The UB progrnmofferstwoavenuesof entry: a tw&lt;&gt;-yearcertification program following
a residency or other post-&lt;loctoral training, or a unique four-year program combining a
residency in internal medicine with a clinical pharmacology fellowship.
The combined· program would be headqllarte~t Millard Fillmore Hospital, where
1zzo chairs the Department of Medicine and di"fts one of UB's two internal medicine
residencies: lzzo said he hopes to recruit one ortwo f()jll'-year trainees in 1993. He said the
new training program isevidence that the fDA is restructuring its operation to speed and
improve research. development and approval of new drugs. ~ IWCDI, News Bureau

tinguished service professor of electrical and
computer engineering, that engineering ma-

jors take primarily el!ftive couires that are
engineering-related during their senior year in
the program. But Kunz said that engineering
srudents were concerned with the availability
to them of non-technical electives.

K

unz. also polnted out that student~ who
switch their major from engineering to

another field wou ld also be subject to having
grades recovered from any General Educittion
coun,cs taken under the SIU option.
Claude w_elch. distinguished servicrFJiofcsMH' of political science. argued ~at the
motion should becomeeffcctivc for next year·!-.
incoming freshmen . "It seem~ to me much
more logical to have this begin at the beginning

of the year instead of the middle of the year:·
he said.

Although the vote on the motion to eliminate the S/U option for required General Educa\ion courses beginning With nex,t year's
freshman class was
by almost a four to
one majority by the St!nate, some members
were opposed to any action being mken.
''It would seem to me that we don't need to do

anything. given the gr.oding sheet we've seen. it
see\n_, tn show that the variance in grnding.(between Students taking cOurses for grudes and
tho&lt;.e taking coun.c; under the S/U op&lt;ion) has
nothing to do with it. I really think dtis is absuid."
&lt;;aid Michael Cowan of Mathematics
Pollock admitted that almost three-fourths
of the undergraduate studerits who attend UB
would not be affected by the proposed motion.
··seventy-two percent of our students don't

take any cour.;cs S/\J while they're here. Only
18 percent of the GeneraJ Education courses
~take n under the StU option ... he said.

Survey is first step toward
restoration ofMartin House
The unlvenlty hae ....,..need that a preliminary condition survey of the exterior of

the Darwin D. Martin House will begin this week.
The survey is expected to be completed in one week. II is the first step to the restoration
of the residence according to a plan described in a 1991 historic structures repon prepared
by the Chicago ftrm of Hasbrouck Peterson ·Associates.
The survey will be performed by the Buffalo architectural firm of Hamilton, Houston and
Lownic (HHL). the restoration architects of record. with Consultation and assistance from
the restoration contracting firm of BRD, Inc. of Buffalo.
With information fro.m the explorntory survey. HHL will formulate construction
documents describing the work required to complete the $1 million initial phase of the
restoration plan. The work on Phase I will be put out to public bid and will begin next
summer. It is expected to be completed in 1995.
This week the contrnctors will clean roof drains and trnce the stonn drains. whose exact
locationhasneverbeendetermined. Theirwori&lt;willrequireminorextcriorhandeJt.;,Vationalong
the foundation to eilable consultants to inspect the &lt;Imina~ systern support structures under the
concrete veranda and other partS of the exterior. When the' investigation is complete, the house
exterior will be restored to its condition befono the survey began. except for masonry andconcrele
repair work necessary to secure it against the elements.
1be Matlin House. one of the finest extant examples ofFmnk Uoyd Wright's "prairie style"
of architecture, has been in university hands since 1967. 1be New York State Office of
Paries, Recreation and Historic Preservation has expressed interest in oblaining the property.
restoring it and operating it as a state historic site and museum. 1be preliminary investigative survey will be (undt:d by the State University Construction Fund.
.PAT -YAM, News Bursau

�19921nte
.......,.,
:;;:·
........,.. patldpiilluiI

.

swe 10 .a1&lt; Wll be allowed 10 .a1&lt; on lhe
live ~ days dLmg lhe cutairnert
period 1\\lh lhe eJCOOpbln ollhooe reQ&lt;MediO wor1&lt;. lhe decrsioo 10 .a1&lt; or
notrsen!Jre!yupiOihe~

--11111112_.1..
.........
----·-ltlll-1111
.......,.,................
......

lllll¥a'IIIJ . .

AS FIRST---I

fnl&gt;io'lee participalial fllhe program is """"""Y· A/181T1&gt;io';ees v.llQ de-

. No

Details

~ .................11111111.

...

c....... Co_ _ _ .,......

........-

.. .. ....., .......... .

.,~....._...,.....~

ffolher

arrangements carnot be rrade. en

• 12/12-12/25
• 12126-118

-....-

,.YMll

12114
1/4
1/13

12123
118
1/22

-Mq

III'AY D.AT!

v.&lt;ll"'""'

altemale
has~ eslablrshed
f1 Lockwood library Slaie errployees
-••o have oonlaCied lheor superv;oor
and Persomel ~in crder k&gt; arrsnge for access 10 lhe a1tema10 .a1&lt;sne Aesearcl1 Folndaoonerrployees
were to have CXJO'acl8d their SUpeMSOr
and AesearCI1 Folndaoon PersooneiiO
rreke sfntlaJ arr~ts

What Ia the lnta 111 an
CUitaAiwlt............,
The o..nai'rert period oM! beg011or all
shtls allhe ~ ol busroess on Wed .
Dec Zl and last 1¥\lllhe beg&lt;Y1f19 ol
t:luSir"eiScraM::n . Jan 4. 1993
PrCMSO'lS are berlQ made few essen
hal seMCeS. labo'atory an•mal facdrues
protectDn of expenrrentaoon 111 process
oomputJng and catrp.JS secunty All employees, .except essential seMCe employees, are encouraged to use vaca-

oon. oompensatory and perscnal leave
days lor lhe '"" days (Dec 24. 28. 29.
:JJand 31)01 whiCh lhe UrvverSIIyVvO..JId
Olflef'Mse be open lhtS year
All altematrve v.ok loc:a!JCJ'l and
a5SigM1E!Ill Wll be QMlll 10 lh&lt;ise
.,.,..,.,.,... ....., deSNe 10"""' desprle lhe
OJtallment l...lnOet NewYak State CMI
Servce Law. only lhe g&lt;M!Iro" has lhe
authcrtty to close a facdity cr bee em.
pb;ees 10 lake a day ol1

Whllt- -lllfeded?

The OJtalkTent 'Nill affeo bulldngs mlhE.&gt;
Nann Campus So.m Campus Rodge
Lea Campus, 2211 )fa~n Street. Betl'ule
Hall and !he Eq~Cent er at
465 WashlngtcJ'I Sveet l.BboraiOneS 1"1
a a:ect l"osplals ....,y robe affected

Whllt wil flllllpen?

rerrperatures Will be reduced 10 50 oe

grees 1n an closed bu•ldtngs &amp;me re. search laborator•es and essentlal se·rv~e ­
es areas tn some burldmgs Will be ma1n
taltled at62 to 68 oegrees Certan areas
.....nere temperature malfltenance •s ~m­
oortant SUCh as aruma! faohtJeS. wdl be
keot at ramal temperatures
~are asked toprepwetor
..., curtallrrent by seo.mg- olf&lt;:es.
lal«'9 t-ore plantS end aquanums. mak"9 cer1a11 ltlat ewprrent &amp; app1oances
Sl.dl as refngeratcYS are U1PUQQeO {dear
ClJt retngerata first 1) . and shJttng tbM'I
corouters end facsomle rrachflOS
Please tun oil ighls as you ""'""

Sno.v ren'Q.Ial and ce control WIHbe

stncny hmlted to provide acx:ess tor

emergercy vehiCles and 10 the few open
bulldiOQS No parking lois OJ SldeNalkS
W1U be cleated 01 sro.v except at deslgnateo.altemate ~ Sites
Essennall.JrwerSity Facl!tes staff Wll
be scheduOld I!Vaughoullhe "'-"""""'t
Ia bulldJng rnarrtenance 5e'VICeS Areduced staff frcm cusiOOial seMoes Wll
pnrran~ prO'IIde r1Sp8CI.OnS ol buidr&gt;gs
10 rro'1ltO' temperati.Xes and report 81T'I
adverSe oonditms P\.oblic Safely wtl reglAarty patrol a1 areas WBFO wil &lt;Xl1tf1UO
10 broadCast There wil be SOTIE! redl.c·
"""f1 OUidoor ighmg. fldudr&gt;g 1&gt;'"\ung
loltlh..rr'Wlatctl. oorlSlStefll with safety requremeniS

~Options

~""'op!IO.a1&lt; ShOuld
d&lt;SCUSS tasks 10 be accorr(liShedner supervisor babe the Cll1aimern.•
Myron lhonl&gt;son. assoc prO\IOSl. said "H
ro tasks are as51Qred by !he de!)arlmenl
supet'VISO'. a supeMscr will be available
10 m::ntor v.o"k and O()[)'"dl\ale actJVibes
ol.,.,..,.,.,... assogned 10"""' allhe
alternate \\Okslte 111 ~ Lb..y ·

~Accruals. Credits
~can use a=.mJiated vacanon lm&gt;. CO'l'(leOSa"'Y ~rre. peroona~
leave or op!IO lake lhe days oil wntwt
pay Sock rray""' be used 10 CCNer

lhrs period

-~.....,donolhave

fille

days atCli!Ualed vacaltort peroonal

=~~=~

l.lliO live days ol vacation jiTe advanced
by lhe UnM!rsily.• 1honl&gt;son said
"Opting 10 be ol1 dtling 1his period
will not jeopardize)&lt;&gt;&lt;.&lt; plans 10 be oil aJ
Olher poir11s dtling lhe year 6lbject to
avaiabie leave credi1s ar&gt;d depertnenlal
operalilg needs.·~ added.

A?i.m.ie Wolblt8

1

Lockwood Lrt&gt;-ary will serve as 1his year's
alternate wori&lt;slte
.
.

......,

11\\ \Ill \II

Sfroe lhe deadline lor aJbrnssion ol
Falgar:le forms is Dec Zl, 1992, !here
wi be no drop-off poinl ruing lhe o.x-period.

Unoversily buS serv.ce wtl ""' be provid-

ed duung the curtailmern

I

Payroll Services \WI be~• Closing date for lhe 12/17fiJ2.· 12/:JJI92
payroll period is Wed • 12/9 Ill roan for
salaried peroomef on lhe Slale Payroll

?.Jbiates
I.JnM&gt;&lt;sity Ubraroes wil be observing !he
allailrre-1l porOd Hc&gt;Never. .,.,._,
0..: 28-31 . ......gency lacUty requests
lor specrfic library irlformanon wit be rret
whenever pooslble SUCI1 requestS carl be
called n to 645--2816 be!WBEinlhe toss
oi8:JJa.m and5pm onlhoooku
days A library S!aff member wil ~
lhe call. vm1y 1he dlanon. ar&gt;d dispald1 ,.,
cn&lt;:al ibrar&amp;liO lhB appropnale lht t&gt;
retneve lhe requested tx:O&lt; a artde
Requested materl8ls can then be
PICked up dunng the atx:MJ hou"s at
Lockwood Ubrary on lhe Norlh Canpus
T'MHlol.x respcnse will be off8!ed; same
day servtee """be prCMded. lherefore, ~
reqUOSIS are placed before 3 p m
propnate ~tenals wilt be faxed rt re--

'*

~~tt!e~~~::OO~~~~·

a new release of !he software LS betng .,.
stalled Ia use beglrV'Ing J~ 4

~Services

EffectiVe WLth the lntersessGl Ct.XtaJI..
rrent. the Computing Center "Mil close LIS
centrallaciiLIIes and all pubfc Sites Our·

.ng rtliS periOd, one operatCJ WLH be on

duly allhe Corr!&gt;ulrng Cenler betweeo
8 :x&gt; a m · 12 rndmght weekdays. except
CI'YtSimas eve and day and New Year's
eve and day, 10 I'OOnltor the cc:xrputers
and networks. to dO baCKups. and to
handle a lmited amJUnt of reques1s Ia
tape rroonts No O.Jtput will be prrtted.
diStnbuted or del~ed from the Comput.

mg Center CJ any of itS rerrote facllibes
Frcm12rroJCir&gt;ght-8:JJa.mweek·
days and all day on weekends. 1he systems Wll be tell f1 operalor-&lt;Slall&lt;rJded
rnode-.-o oape rro..n1 requestS WJil be
pooslble DITng 1¥\allended brreS. shoo..&lt;d
!he systerr6 or ne!Wor1&lt;s become
l'lOpEifallve, restCJatx:n Wll ro1 cxxu l.l'l!ll

"
" - operao-anended
See"
CU1aim!nl
sche&lt;iJie bebN shift
Ou!Side ol OLr prCMdflQ access 10
the marlrame CCLfTl)Uters. !here wdl be
no ochef SEif\IIC8S available d\Xng rhe
c IOOing period such as oonsun"Q. compuler

repa~r

cr

ne~

seMCeS

Due to limrted diSk space on the IBM
system b electroniC mad and prnt flies
and ax inability to I'T'O"'ffcr' the use ol tt'IS
space. users are cauOOned lhat some E·
Mail rressagee and pri"lt files c:i:lud be
los! ~ space alklcaled for 1his dala becomes tun. We recQ'TYnEW'ld lhat aJ cnti·
cal dala files be bacl&lt;ed up before po.y~ doNn the eqUipment on Dec Zl.

I
Hthere ate Sf¥ spec&amp;aJ concems a
problem; relabng 10 lhe effOCIS on ampuling d\mg lhe CU1ail'rEnl period.
please C01IaCt Or Himcll Manens a1 645-

PIMI:Sirf.e,
P\.oblicSafetywilloperalefullsllifls
ll'roughoullhe cu1ail(nenl peood. Slops
will be laksn 10 guard agalnsllheftproYirje personal prOOldion for lhe
lirmed rurber o1 ~and studenls on c&amp;rr!JUS.

Te?ephoiA reduced schedule olleiepllone operator services will be pr&lt;&gt;lided. ()peralerS
IMII be on du1y 0..:. 28-31 from 8 am. 10
5 p.m. AI all OCher limes, ca1s 10 lhe i.kliversily's rreir1 rurber will be l'endled by
lhe lelephone answering servtee.
Cells Ia' emergencies in Ptl)'S1Cal
Plan! st&lt;&gt;uld go 10 Custorrer Service al
71 or 645-2025 and emergencies, Pubtic Safely 10 645-2222. No ITOI9S. adds
or changes, a routrte repairs to the LJn....
versrty teiepllone system Will be done
du-flQ lhe curlailrneol Requests for reparr ol emergency or essentra1 services
telep/lones st&lt;&gt;uld be drecoed 10 campus operaoors dl.rrng lhe day ex 10 Pubrte
Safely after hours
DepanmeniS 1hal have answemg

rnachnes are requested to reprogram
!hem 10 furnish an appropnate message
related 10 the Cll1alknent tf the machi'e
IS na SSSIOC4ated With a depa'tment's
marn IJSied phone runber. calllorwardng cnJid be used to direct calls to lhe

rnacr.ne

FaxMac?lliF.ax messages S8'ltto the UrwerSity's
lsted Fax rurber (645-2895) wtl be dr
reeled 10 lhe Carrpus Ma~ Office Messages WJII be plaoed r1 campus mail and
deliYE!fed after Jan 4

Caii1IUS Mill Services
The foflowf19 represooiS a surrnary o1
lhooo serw:es 1hal wif/wiU not be available dlKflQ lhe ~ perrod •
No matVpackage delivery
*The mad servces center will be open
each busrness day exoept 12126 and 112
10 handle Federal mail (Includes le!ler
mail. registeredlcer1rfied/prJOn1y ma~ .
parcel post)

*

*

Allhough !here v.oo1 be any"""' dehv8'185 dunng the 1ntersessicn curtaJiment
we Will load our def~ trucks fa FIRST
DAY back delivery ol ALL aca.mulated
mail E:rrpecl Monday (Jan. 4) 10 be a
heavier-!han-usual day
• All .ac:cuy-utated Parcel Post wrl be deiiveredooJan 4.

358:1 ex Dernrs Herne!mirl at645-3504

• Departments that want 10 obtal1 their
mail du-ing lhe curtaihlenl should con-

CoonputiiC~ ......
~ .......... 1112

tact lhe Campus Marl Services Cenoer by
12/18 (645-2743) to make lhe recessary

wed

Dec 23

7

Ct&gt;ood 5 p.m (Allmded)
(5 p m.-Mcln!t&lt;)

llus:Dec 24Fn Dec 25
Sat Dec 26
Sun Dec 27
Man Dec 28

Closed (Unattended)
Ct&gt;ood (Unallended)
Ct&gt;ood ( - - - )

Tues Dec 29

Ct&gt;ood(_._)

Ct&gt;ood (lk&gt;anended)
Closed (Unattended!

(8::llam.-Modnst'l
(B::l&gt; a.m.-MOO!t'l

wed. Dec

:JJ

Ct&gt;ood ( - - - ) .

(8.;l0am-MOO!t'l

nus. Dec. 3t
Fn. Jan. I

SaL Jarl. 2
Sun. Jan. 3
Mon. Jan. 4

I

poooo (Unanendedl
Ct&gt;ood (lk&gt;anendod)
Cloeed (lk&gt;anendod)
Cloeed (lklallendod)
Open 8::D am.
(AIIended)

~~~~orn~h!

· lhe1olowing due dales·
For lhe --period ol12/10-12/
23,...., linesheeiS will need 10 be subrrilled. The 1m should CCNer lhe period 12/
10-12/14 is due in Payroll Services
by 12/15 roan The retlllinder ollhe perOd 12/15-12/Zl are due in Payroll Services 1/6100 n:x:n; 12/2.4-1/f:'iF.¥3 are due

1.&amp;'93 noon.
To reduce lhe need fdr a second IlTle"'-on 1.&amp;'93. depa1men1Sareen-

*

=~~~have tn.fly 8fT1&gt;Io';ees

rrrr:J.coo.

As previously
Slate payrolf checks for lhe 0..:. :JJ, 1992 payday
will be mailed 10 each respective employee's address rerord
~ts ate requested to retLm
any paycheci&lt;s being held as ea1y as
pclSSibie, bul ro later !han Dec 17

a

*

----

The Personnel Office IMO be closed

...................

Snxlents may expertenee a delay in
receM1g nolice lhallhe&lt; GSL checks
have been rllceived by lhe UrWersily

*~~eceadelay"
ed.

processf1Q

lhe:=,~-:,~~
prQCeSSed.

118

1/12

1/22

:t.~ ~........
Requisilions for malerials and supplres
r&gt;eeded dtling lhe cunailrreol rrust be
received by 12/9
Vendcrs.wrth pending orders""" be
oonlaCied 10 request delrvery prn 10
12/24cxalter 1/4

Caii1IUS Chid c... Cenllllr
The cooter will

be~

lailrrenl period

dtling lhe cu-.

A i112encellllls
Residence hals will be~ A/lema-

trve housing will be arr'"'!Jed for SllJdents
who fnJSt ren"'llfl in the dorms dtxng lhe
break. Scme reklcaOOns wiR be neces.

sary

&amp;;

~~="'9·~·
~

dtling lhe Cll1ailrrenL

- Payable.
- --Ofllces
Aooot.&lt;liS
Budget. CapilaJ
EquiprrenL EquiprlBltlnveniOry. Cal•-·s Office and Travel WJII be closed

S;loi-ed ....,.•••
An Sponsored Programs DeDarirrenos
wt1h lhe exoeplion o1 Sponsored Programs Adrnintstranoo will eloiSe dl.l'ing
lhe CJJ~&amp;hlenl porOd Proced~.&lt;es for
COOl&gt;letJng necessary aclrVi!Jes and
deadline dales for transactx:lns are SlJITl..

manzed below

l::'::",.:::fsiij
5f1Ce fl?A ~ an "olf-&lt;:ampus" klcanon. n
~ no&lt; affected by lhe curtailrrenl al)d wtll
be CJperl dllflQ busroess tn.s (8 :JJ

~.~~~\"""' 1he exoepnon o1 0..:

priOI' to 12123

Sludent Fliw1ces and

12/23

12/16

-~

• tbrs ol operaoon will be 8 a m -4
p.m each busiress day

The Sludilnl Frnances and Records olltees wiU be clo5ed

12/9

Petty cash and travel r~treQuests (flCiuding ·~) rrost be "'
Aooot.&lt;lbng by 0..:~ ~der for

~~~upthei'mall atthe

.......

.._..,_

•12/12-12/25
• 12/26-118
.... 1/9-1/22

The Slaoe Purchasing Office v.;n be
~ ar&gt;d ro bid oper1irtgs wtll be
- l e d d11ing lhe CJJ~&amp;merl\

.Proposals SUbmtled du'flQ lhe O.X·
taLimem rrust mee1 all Untversrty and
SPQ'lSIOr re\lleW' and apcroval requrements Protect dreckJrs sto.Jtd make aj;

• There will be no distribution of O'ISJI to
indrviduals (i e.. mail can be picked up
for deparlmeniS only.)

..

~·=.;~~t'elr

=:-=---10._.......,._.....,
Travel remt:usement 'JOUChers re-quests lor travel advirces. PBnY cash

rembssemenrs and other reQUeSts
ITlJS! be recetvOO n Grants CVld

Co1tracts on a ~lore 1219 ., adef for
payment to be made bebe 12123
Protect Ouectas Wlft be artt.ac1ed by
a staff rrerroer reg&lt;:wdlf'lg prclfeCtS term.
nabng 12/.llfiJ2.
assostance n
COOl&gt;letJng J)rOCeSSf1g prtor 10 1219

AesearCI1 Foundanon payct-ec~~s nor
malty dlsOibuled on Friday will be d,.;ib~ doparonenos on Wednesday. 121

Cenl8r for S!udent ?lelrlttl The Centar for Sludeni Health IMII be
closed dlling lhe rulaiinent porOd
Physic&amp;aris wil be "" cal for errergency srudent oonsullabonS and relerrats dtling lhe evertrngs and on week·
mds To CO'llaCI a physicicwl in an emer
gency. pleass call !he carT)PUS operator
~2XXJ or Public Safely 81645-

Fecu?tyo8?udent
A~eaclalloo•
The FSA operations will rr.t be S!affed
All Food Service facii1les will be cloSed ·
No vending machines IMU be seMOed
All lobby 001¥\lers wil bi! ~ All recroolion centers and lhe CrB;llive Crall
Center wil be~ CFT caoenng Inc
will ""' pr&lt;Mde any service

BlnciiC Ma:llli-

AH bari&lt;ing machines in campus butld·
f1QS will be l1.med olf. Alf flltds soed rn
!he rrract&gt;nes will be rerroved before 1he
CUiaJ!rrent
.

......,Fedltles

""merttioned prevb.61y in 1his Br11Cie.

~~~...==~~t

period. Should you have Specific needs
lor ligen! services, cat phone rurt&gt;er
71 (or 645-2025 hcmoii-QVT1l&lt;JS) lor
tacilitles ooncems; ~ ollhe
facilrl&gt;es- wiU be f1 atlendarlce 24
hours a day dtling lhe entire o..nairrent
period.
Please keep in mind 1hallftrr4l0'8·
nxes for lJniversily space dtling the o.x·
laimenl period have~ established .
. by the Cu1aiment Camiltee. UrwersdY
- - d o no&lt; have lhe 8Uit'only 10
eller !he large!_....... They .....
able 10 help with areas 1hal do

rowever,

nol~lhe

large! I~.

�5.

_,s.a_...,_._.

Provost's Office annotmces
staff promotions, transfers
BJAHN~

Rei)Of1er Ed or

A

SERIES OF promotions ·and
transfers have been arfuounced
in lhe Provost'sOffice~vost
Aaron Bloch said Tuesday.
These rriove.'l are tied to the
general university reorganization (see accompanying anicle) and will not result in .any net
increase in staff.
H. Lorraine Odk has been transferred from
her previous post of assistant vice provost for
resean:h and promoted to deputy to lhe provost. a newly created position. She will function as Bloch's primary adminislr.ltiveassistant
with general responsibility for coordinating
lhe Provost's Office and will work closely with
lhc provost on a variety of issues. She continues as adjunct a.."isistant professor in the Department of Geogr•phy.
Scan P. Sullivan, previously assistant provost. has been promoted tb associate provost.
He will continue to have responsibility for the
budget and issues of physicar i~frastructure

and space. He willalsoservcas primary liaison
with Senior Vice President Robcn Wagner's

Office (University Services ) and with dean s'

staffs where budget matters are concerned.
Janina L Kaars will be tran!iferred from lhe
Office of the Vice Provost for Undergmduate
Education to the Office of lhe Provost where
she will assist ~an Sullivan in developing
budget and resource management strategies
and implementations.
Myron A. Tjlompson. also associate pro-.
vost. continues in that title. with responsibilities f~r academic planning, institutional
research lind enrollment management. He is
chief liaison with the Office of Vice President
for Student Affairs Roben L Palmer.
Kenneth J. Levy continues as vice provost.
acting for Bloch in his absence and functioning
as chief advisor to !he provost on policy issues
in general. Levy also has panicular responsibi"lity To( advising the provost on faculty and
personnel issues including liaison with the
President's Review Board (PRB), whicb makes"
recommendations on tenure decisions.
·After 25 years, Mary N. Salatino will be
leaving the Provost' s·Office to become executive secretary to lhe director of the Fine Ans
Center and on a temporary basis, Cynlhia A.
Fenske will assume the position of executive
secretary to the provost.

A~

CHINESE

Jl~~ RESTAURANT m~,.,
AUTHENTIC CHINESE CUISINE
PEKING·. SZECHUAN • HUNAN
LUNCH. DINNER .TAKE OUT
COCKTAIL. PARTIES

•
·OPENlDAYS

CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

2791 Delaware Ave. Kenmore

877 -S5 53

lO% discount ro all UB S[Udenrs and employees

NEW TEAMS
Continued from page 1

Muon: b imrTK!diate past president and a
co-founder of Buffalo Prep. a program that
pn:parc!&lt;l Hispanic. African -American and Nati ve American student ~ 10 attend one of five
privalc college preparmory sc hools in the Buffalu~a .

sire also is a member nf the board of trustees

and chair of development for Turner Carroll
High School. the hoard of the National Council
uf Chri ~tian~ and Jews. the str~negic planning
and cdm:ation commitU."t:!&gt; of Lcaden;hip Buffalo. lhc advisory board of the Salvation Army.
the board of directors of Women for Human
Right!\ and Dignity and the Wornen' s I ss ue ~
Network Commiucc of the Eric County Ch&lt;Jpter of TilE LINKS. Inc. She formerly was a
member of the advisory board of the Allentown Community Center. the board of dirccto~"&gt; of Compass House Resource Center and
Young Professionals for Downtown Buffalo.
Moore has been the recipient of the
Chancellor' s Award for Excellence in Profes·
sional Service and a University Outstanding
Service Award. She ·also received lhe Nichols
Centennial Medal f~m ll&gt;e Nichols School in

September. the Niagar:1 Alliance of Black
School Educators Appreciation Award in 1990
and a Black Achiever in Industry Award from
1490 Enterprises, Inc. in 1988.
LandilWas vice president of the Rand Corpomtion in Santa Monica. Calif.. before coming to U8 us vice president for sponsored
progmms in 1987.
e received a bachelor's degree in industrial engineering, mastefs degrce in management science and doctoral degree in opcrJ·
tions research and computer science from
Northwestern University.
Stein was named vice president for university relations in-March 1987. He has held staff
JXJSitions at UB for more than 20 years. including interim vice president for sponsored programs. executive assistatftto former President
Steven B. Sample and assistant to the late
Robert L. Keuer. Sample's predecessor.
Stein. who is servi ng as president of the
American Association ofUniversity Administrators, received his bachelor's, master's and
doctoml degreo:s in philosophy from UB.

Sports Court Lounge

2050 Elmwood Ave.

874-4460

Between Hertel &amp; Kenmore

H

University Inn &amp; Conference Center
A new alternative for your meeting,
corif~-umce and banquet needs.
• Convementl y located ;djacent to the nonh
ca mpus of the Stat&lt; Umversny of NY at
Buffalo on No rth Forest and AudubonParkway
1!11

An &gt;mpress&gt;ve combtnauon of qualn y
se rviCe , accommodations and amenn1es.

• Complete meeung packages des1gned by a
professional conference planner to help )'OU
av01 d the costl y a- la-&lt;:arte system .
. • Full sen oce hotel wnh 120 beaut ifull y
appotnted rooms

• 14 chmate cont rolled conference rooms
spcctflcally des&gt;gned to accommodate
meetmgs of 2 to 350
· • State-of-the-art aud1o ,·tsual eqUipment
• Typmg. faxmg. and copymg se rv1ces and
modem hook-ups.
• Outdoor tenms coun . h1kmg. b1kmg.
exeretse equ1pmem. and game room.

• 130 seat restaurant, bar and banquet
facilities.
• Comphmentary parkmg lo r 360 cars

Dmi't Setde for Less ...
2401 Nonh for&lt;st Road
PO Box82J
Amhtrsl , Nt:w York
14226·0823
(716) 636-7500

Let us show you how we are not j ust a hmellhat
offcrs me&lt;ling space.
For more informauon , call Robin I.
Reppenhagen, Vice President for Sales &amp;
Conferences Services. at 636-7500.

�-

6

...

'

--/

UBCOOKS
BRING OUT

tMEIRBEST

\

FOR RECIPE
CON1UT

·

athy Gneco yelled, "You're kidding!" when a Reponerstaff member called to fell her she'd won ·
our annual recipe contest The prizewinner receil(!lS the handsome new cookbook, Savoring Italy
by Robert Freson and published by HarperCollins.
A calculations clerk II in Residence Ule. Kalhy said she sent in the recipe•as a lark. "llhrew it
togelher- rve been walching my cholesterol," she said. "There are a 101 of us around."
·
As for the recipe she submilled-"1made il the other day and I said, why not?" Kalhy laughed.
She has been look1ng for more recipes using lurkey.
The heallhy aspect of her recipe was whal appealed lo the conlest judge, as
well. Richard Brooks is. Cook I at Putnam's, which serves 3,000 people' a day in
its restauranls In the kitchen al ~tnam's, he prepares such dishes as stuffed
ch1cken breasls. beef s~oganoff , beef stew, and the spaghetti sauce, gravies
, . _ the Judge,
and dress1ngs. among other items !hal UB diners are familiru: wilh. •
Richard Brooks.
Brooks, a graduate of Emerson Vocalional High School's culinary program,
has worked as a chef and-1n catering services forM &amp;T Bank, for Daffodil's, the Park Lane and
Scotch ar;d S~rlo1n A cook for 20 years, he has been part of lhe UB slaff since 1989.
Brooks selected the chili rec1pe because "It's hearty and a different way of making chili, with the

K

lurkey, mushrooms and garhe ~
Kathy Grieco: her

chill takes the
cookbook prize.

Many thanks to our chef for tak1ng lime to fUdge lhis year's conlesl. The ReporJer also thanks the
faculty. staff and students from all over the North and South Campuses who tobk part in lhe conteslsome ternf1c and tempting recipes were submitted. We are printing as many of them as we c'an faday Kathy Gneco's Winning recipe leads lhe CUlinary parade.

KATHY QltlfCO

Cu•todlal Servlce.-ReakMnttal
Ellicott Comple•
1M &amp;pukMf\C Quad

''

Salt and pepper to taste
Add four cans of kidney
beans to a large pol. along
w1th the liqUid that the
beans come '"· and cook
unlil soh You can add
r.nore water . 1f needed ...

I taC:'espoon vegetable o11
or spray or! on Tellen fry
pan
1 1 t/2 pounds ground
tu rkey

1-2 large on1ons. c;j1 Ced '"
food processor or by hand

1-5 cloves of garhc .
m•nced- depend1ng on

taste
4 1-pound cans of k1dney
or chth beans

1 ! -pound can plus I 2·
pound can of whoe tomatoes. peeled
1/2 pound mushrooms.
d1ced or put through the
food processor
1-3 carrots. f1nely chopped
or put through the food
processor
1·2 teaspoons chili pow·
der. more, if desired
1·2 teas.,aons paprika.
more, 1f desired

Spray the fry pan or add 011
to rt and add turkey meat

and slowly cook unlillhe
meat 1s f1rm and white in
lillie chunks Add meat to
the beans along w1th lhe
onron. garlic. carrots.
mushrooms Simmer until
vegetables are soft. Add
sp1ces and s1mmer a linle
Ianger DO NOT OVERCOOK You can always
further cook by rehealing a
bowlful al a lime. Put in an
a1rtight plastic contai"'lr for
storage.
WARNING: Chili beans
must be stirred constanlly
or they will stick. Also, after
adding meat and vegelables, slir constanlly
Once chili SliCks to lhe
bottom of the pot. 1ngred1ents must be changed to
another pan

_....,._

JOAN ..............

35 m1nutes, un111 bubbly

c-.--.
..............
Wrttln.C

and heated lhrough.
Serve wilh your favor i t~
whole-grain crackets.

4&amp;1 WMhlftCI:oa l t.

-AMI......
_....,.,

Lecbt,..ln

mt wr~r

~RTirHijKE DIT

Ingredients:
1 14 oz. can of artichokes
(Not in a marinade or oil).
sliced in half and slivered
4 oz. shredded part-skim or
fat-free mozzarella cheese
I cup chopped red pepper
1/2 cup chopped fresh
parsley
1 cup bholeslerol-free, lighl
salad dress1ng or mayanna1se
2 cloves of garliC, pressed
2 tablespoons fresh
parmesan cheese
1 leaspoon coarse pepper
1/4 leaspoon cayenne
pepper
Stir all ingredients logelher in a medium bowl
Spoon info a greased one·
quart casserole (use choleslerot-free cooking spray)
Bake at 350 degrees for

MEDYANNE RtCHEJrT

A.""'-Mhe
117 c...,.

)

'ftloR Offk:.e

~~oo~ r~mw~
This &lt;ielicious fondue has
the taste of gourmet cooking, yet is quire simple to
make.
I pound Velveela cheese

1/2 envelope dry onion
soup
2cupsm1lk
1/4 cup flour
1/4 cup butter or margarine
Grate cheese and mix
w1th soup mix ; put aside.
Place milk. butler and flour
lr'l a pot. Place over med1um
heal until butter 1s melted.
Add cheese mocture and
slir unlil cheese is melted
Add water, if necessary. to
thin out the mixture
You can dip vegelables.
bread, mealballs, nacho

Uncomm•nly Good
Insurance Service Found
at the UB Commons!

chips ... in the fondue. II
makes a great appelizer or
meal!

.....,._

--... -

1 pound boneless chicken
breasl tenders (strips)
I can cream of chicken ,
soup
1 package med1um or w1de
egg noodles
L1gh!ly bread ch1cken
breast amfcook 1n a small
amount of canola e&gt;l until
done. Boil noodles al dente
M1x soup wilh 112 can water, 1/2 milk· until creamy.
L1ne bak1ng dish w1th egg
noodles. layer wllh ch1cken
·breasl and pPUr soup over
ChiCken ana noodles Bake
at 350 degrees for 20 minutes aQd serve
Variations·
Add broccoli, layer lop wilh •
shredded cheddar cheese'
Layer top with mozzarella
and parmesan cheese
Add mushrooms. use
creambf mushroom soup.
Add favon[e vegetables ·
Catone-Sav1ng Tips
Use cook.1ng spray 1ns1ead
ofo11
Add I can of wafer to soup

1 teaspoon oregano
1 small jar pizza sauce ( 12
oz.)
1/2 cup chopped pep-

peroni
3/4 cup Shredded mozzarella cheese
Mix first five 1ngred1ents
logether. Spread evenly In
a qu1che dish or p~e plate
Spread pizza sauce over
the top. Sprinkle wllh pepperoni (chopped on1ons
and green peppers-optional) and lop Wilh mozza·
rei Ia cheese. Bake at 350
degrees unt1l bubbly- 20
m1nu1es Serve w11h nachos
or corn ch1ps or your favor Ite cracker (Rllz) for diP·
p1ng DeiiCIOUSI EnfOY 1

-...........
RITA aWICIC.

~&amp;pedal! ..

Cook I pound of spaghetli
accord1ng to package
R1nse and drain. Place 1n
greased 13" x 9" pan M&gt;&lt;
1n 1 package of frozen
broccoli. Cover complete
pan wilh small package of
Velveela cheese. Spnnkle
top w1th seasoned bread
crumbs. Dot wilh butter
Bake for 30 m1nutes in 350degree oven.

·-

MU.IL MADLET

c -.. c..ua=.,!UaCui.UC.

., Boz. pkg. cream cheese.
softened
1/2 cup sour cream
I /8 leaspoon garlic powder
I /8 teasPoon crushed red
pepper (optional)

Ingredients:
I cup flour
3/4 cup sugar

~ ,_ 2...,
.

SAME DAY COVERAGE • LOW DEPOSIT • EASY TERMS • LOW RATES

AUTO • CYCLE • FIRE • RENTERS • LIFE
HOMEOWNERS • BUSINESS

"""'wid&gt; .......
indoor pool overlooking 300 foot deep wooded
1oc in Clarence. P~iliries £Or in-rome office or
in-law quarte:s.

I:k Fisk.aloog time}X~Rssocat. the University
at BuB3Io, owns .this }Xqlelty. He will hold the
mortgage fur a credit worthy purchaser.

INSURANCE SERVICES
SERVING ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

'$'169,900

RIGHT ON CAMPU$ "J'R YOUR CONIIENIIENCIE I

DONNA GUilLAUME 839-9047

520 LEE ENTRANCE (NEAR hiE UB BOOKSTORE) 689-2060

Srorntf&amp; Heenan Realrors
3834Main Smet, Ammst New Yod&lt; 14226
838-6700

ALSO IN BUFFALO AT:
1121 B.MWOOO AVE (COR. FOREST, HR. BUFF STATE CAMPUS) 882-5787

l

�7

_ . , _ _ ao,_s.a

1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/8 teaspoon cloves
1/2 cup raisins
3/4 cup applesauc£•
3eggwhites
1 teaspoon baktng soda
1/2 teaspoon ctnnamon
118 teaspoon allspice

Combine first four ingredients in baking dish. Add
chicken. turning to coat well
and marinate in refrigerator.
overnight.
Right before you are
ready to serve dinner. drain
off marinade and broil or
grill chicken·until cooked·
through. Serve with wild
rice and black beans.

Dtrec!tons
Preheat oven to 350 degrees
Combtne at11ngredtents 1n· a
bowl. except ratstns Beat
for thrfre.mtnutes Place
batter 1nto a greased
9"x9"x2" pan Add ra1s1ns
Bake for 30-35 m1nutes
Vanatton
Spoon batter 1nto greased
muHtn ttns lor stngle servtng
stze. then add ratstns Bake
lor 20-25 m1nu1es
Comments
Not only ts thts easy and
qutck to make, tt 15 also
very nutnt1ous Each ~ervtng (2"x2".square/ 1 mufftn)
conta1ns less than one
gram oil at and zero choeslerol En1oyt

...

~ HRISnNE

E. L£[

-AulstMt

khool of DeMal Medk:lne

Ua

Til

__

~

OPDATOIIS

lc.UO.•

~n1W! ~~~~~~LI
~A~~~R~ln
2 packages frozen
chopped broccoh or fresh
1 cup raw rice
1 onron, chopped
1/2 Sitek butter/marganne
1 can cream of mushroom
or cream of celery soup
112 can evaporated mtlk
1/2 pound processed
cheese (cheddar ts best)
shredded
Mtx all1ngred1ents and
bake 1 hour at 350 degreec;

__
--

......,.

NANCY D. N. atOWEU.

I~RLIL LIMe ~m~m
~Rmr~
rhts ts an extremely easy
·ectpe, whtch IS great for
:ornpany or every day. It 's
llso low in fat and calortes
lery healthy'

I cup lime JUICe
/2 cup chopped fresh
:ilantro.
13 cup olive oil
• large cloves of garlic,
ntnced
; boneless. skinless
:hicken breasts:·cut ih half

a-&amp;orlt.............

LmLm~~UM
~A~~tR~1t

12 chicken thtghs. boned
Sprinkle with 1/2 teaspoon
salt and set aside.
Combine.
2 cans ( 1 lb. each) canned
yams or sweet potatoes
1 can apple pie filling
1/4 cup ratsins
1 tablespoon lemon ju1ce

1!2 teaspobn salt
Toss together and place
in a flat buttered casserole
dish. Place chicken thighs
on top of mixture-skin side
up. Dot with butter. Bake in
40(}degree oven about 40
minutes or until chicken is
done.
(Note: white breast meat
may be used. If chicken is
used without the skin, place
a piece of foil wrap over the
casserole and remove for
the last 10 minutes of bakingtime.)
This is a great recipe for
the busy ~tu dent or professional. You can order the
ch1cken w1thout the bone
from the meat sectton of the
market. The remaining
ingredients can be kept on
your pantry shelf or in your
refrigerator until you need
them.
DINAH~
Seltlor~Ach1eor

-

FKUtty of (ql.......... 6 AppliN
410 .,.._.

,

~~IT r~~m~~

3 cups stfted Ilour
1 teaspoon
a
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon cloves
1/2 teaspoon grated nutmeg
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup sue!\chopped)
1 cup sour milk
1 cup molasses
l cup raistns
Mix and sift dry ingredients. keeping 1/2 cup of
flour to sift over raisins
Chop suet fine and add to
the milk and molasses.
Combine the two mixtures
and add the rais1ns wh1ch
have been dredged with
• flour. Grease puddtng
molds or baking powder

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Remanufactpring your Toner
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••
cans and fill two-thirds full
of the mixture. Cover and
steam for 3 hours. Be sure
the ffiold or pan is cornpletely covered so that the
drops of water which will
form on the cover from the
steam will not drop onto the
pudding.
Serve with any desired
liquid sauce. Best served
warm on a cold day with
warm hard sauce and ratsins. Preferably in front of_a

warm fire.

Over medium heat,
cook, stirnng constantly
until sauce ts sltghUy thickened.
Makes 3-4 servtngs.
Wah' Frwts and vegelables together :n one
dtsh? In juice? Who'd have
figured. eh? (I'd say.
"Ooh .. .lt's so good." but I
thtnk that fine has already
been claimed )
It's a unique stde dish
and adds a lot of color to an
otherwtse bland piate Have
fun , good luck. and eat your
vegetables

.._...._

,_
--JOHAlKAH IlAnE

T_..........,

...

Doctaql

rJJ~ffl I ~ANf
riNWrLHm~~
LKRR~f~

Ingredients:
1 16 oz. bag carrots. sliced
1 cup ptneapple rutce
3/4 cup golden setedless
ra1sins
3 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
Method to madnl3ss:
In 2 quart saucepan, boil
3/4 cup water. (If you're
having trouble w~h this
step, stgp now and go
m:-s6me toast or somethi )
/Reduce heat to medtum
and add carrots (no calculator needed to add).
Heat until boiling, then
cover and cook 5-8 mtnutes
until carrots are tender
cnsp ('cuz. lei's face it. tf
we really wanted mushy
carrots we'd have bought
baby food).
St1r 1n rematn1ng 1ngrechents

ltudeet

..........
(m~K~~ WI~~ ~A~

30 chtcken wings
1 medium onion. chopped
1/4 cup soy sauce
1/3 cup sherry cooktng
wtne
1/4 cup brown s~gar
1/2c hoi water
Italian seasoning
poultry seasoning
pepper
Place the chicken wtngs
in a 9 x 13-inch glass baking dtsh and cover wtth the
onions. Mix the next four
ingredients together and
pour over wings Generously sprinkle Italian seasontng on top, some poultry
seasontng and dashes of
pepper Cover with aluminum foil and let sit overnight
tn the fridge (in the morntng. you can flip _wings over
so the other Stde gets saturated. too). To cook, keep
dish covered with aluminum
foil and baRe tn a 400degree oven for one and a
half hours (or until liquid ts
almost gone.) Halfway
through, tum wings over.
Voila'

This dish is exceptionally
easy. delightfOIIy tasty and
a refreshing reprieve from
Buflalo wings. As for •contribulion to a healthy dtercompared to traditional
Buffalo chicken wing fare.
, these wings are a veritable
health food I

-=-CAJtOl M. AL'IIIAN

~A~~~~n ~A~~A~~
m~ fij~rrf~~m~l

2 pounds Sp1cy Bob Evans
Pork Sausage (the stuff 1n
the roll)
1 or 2 eggs. sl1ghtly beaien
2/3 cup dry seasonted
bread crumbs
2 tablespoons parmesan
cheese
1 bottle Kraft Honey BarbeC}'B sauce
/.! tablespoons brown sugar
1-1/2 tablespoons soy
sauce
Dash of crushed red pepper (optional)
Mox sausage. eggs.
bread crumbs- and
parmesan cheese, Shape
tnlo smal! meatballs Brown
on all s1des tn a frying pan
or in the oven at 350 degrees. Pour off greal;8. Put
tn a casserole dish.
Combtne rematning
tngredients in a saucepan
S1mmer on low heat for 10
minutes. Pour over meatballs. Spnnkle with
parmesan cheeSe. Serve
with toothpicks. Can be
served hot or coid.

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SERVED BY ~ e.t
UNIVERSITY COPIES@
MAIN a MINNESOTA ,.xt~
834-8334
,_,
WILLIAMSVILLE
133-7710

KEY CENTER
151-2217

KENMORE
877-SI444

tA(r- 6f11'1· there just Isn't •ny m~ti:hl. ~

�.IHilliN

........
......,.,...... - -

- -. ---~ ....

a.c...tllis

Academic Calendar lor 1993-94

I socw. AND ...vlllmVE
Journ~~l

_,.,1:..

SUMMER _SESSIONS 1111
• I Session .... .. ... r. .•••••• •• Mn:lay, l.1ay 24-friday, July 2
(Obserlled Holiday, May 31)

tadlly's

• ltSesSion .............. r..t:maY.:Jlm'28-Friday. August 6

~

• Ill Session .............Mn:lay, ~ 12.friday, August aJ

MA

TICS COUDCII •IM
too1an Syotomo,
mpltc:lle Twist Maps and
8rol&lt;tn Gtodesk:s, Prof.
.
Christophe GoJ~. SUNY a1 Stony
Broolc. 103 Diefendorf. South
Campus. 4 p.m.
W.UFIUI

Cool Worid (1992), directed by

('M:rt1 Universi1y G&amp;nas, Jtiy ~ 19) .

Ralph Bakshi; Woklman Theater.
112 Nonoo. North Campus. 6:30
and CiJ p.m. Admission , S2.SO. UB
students; $3.50. non-studems.

F ALL 1993•
.-.........:.... Men, Aug. 3)
• labor Day-Observed Holiday ............ .. .. Mor1., Sept. 6

. lnstnJctiln begils

CONCDT
UB Wind Ensemble, Charles
Peltz., music director, worb by
Gould, Holst and others. Slee
Concen Hall . Nonh Campus. 8
p.m.

• 0asses resune .. .. .............................. Tues., Sepl7
• Rosh Hashanah Observed Holiday
•
(begins 6 p.m., Wed., Sept. 15) .............. lhlrs., Sept. 16
• Classes Resllneat6 p.m ........ ,..: ........... Fri., Sept. 17

.. . Mon., Noll. 29

lnstructiortendsatcloseofclasses .......... Mon., Dec. 13.

SP.RING 1994
• Spring recess begins at close
of classes .
• Classes Resume

OUTliEACNSaying Goodbye, UB Counsel·
ing Center. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free
and confidential. preregistnnion ·
required. For more information
call645-2720.

.. ......... Sal, March 26

......... Mon., April4

• Instruction ends at dose of classes .......... Fri., May 6
• Semester examinations

... Mon., May 9-Fri , May

~lweekend ..

SATURDA Y

ceuticals, Norwich. N.Y. 508
Cooke. Nonh Campus. 4 p.m.

........... Mon .• Jan. 24

NUCI.URW.ut

tJ

~

STUDIES LECTUII£

Defense Priorities in a New
Era, Col. Dan Kaufman, West

.. .. May 13-May 15

Point. 280
7:30p.m.

W.UFILM

"ESTABLISHED EXCEllENCE"
THURSDAY

~·

Ad vanced Family Systems:
Theory and Practice. Kathryn
Regan Eskew. presenter. Dacmcn
College. Main St.. Amherst. 9
a.m.-4:30p.m. For more infomlalion call 645-6140.
MAS1EII CLASS

FJJcn Lang. soprano. Slec Conccn Hal l. Nonh Campus. 10 a.m.

120 Meyer Road, Amherst, N.Y.

836-6861

I'EJICUSSION STUDENT

R£CnAL
St·udents of Jan Williams and

Tony Miranda. Baird Recillll
Hall. 250 Baird. Nonh Campus.
Noon.
COIIPUTER SCIENCE

.

Winnie Shu. UB. topic to be
announced. Knox Hall. Nonh
Campus. 3:30 p.m. For more
infonnati~n call645-3180.
, _ AtmST SEIIIU
LEcn.E
Black Manner. Carol Wax. au-

thor of~ M~u.orim: History•

aruJ TEchniqw. Beth'une Hall.

-

27 19 Main Sl. 3:30p.m.

IIIOLOQICA1.-

Fully Fumisbed Corpo_rqteSuites
Also Avai/Ob/e
.
ProjessiOilfJIJy Mfll,lf1.(1tlr:l oy

SIARA MANAGEME NT

~~~~:.~a:~ b';hL~k~e~~ula,
with the UB Choir. Also on the
program arc works by Tenney.
RJ.cwsk.i. Hovhnnes!l and Cage.
Slcc Concen HaJJ . Nonh Cam·
pus. 3 p.m.
UU.U FILM

Cool WO&lt;kt (1992!, directed by
Ralph Bakshi . Woldman Theater
11 2 Nonon. Nonh Campus. 6:30
and 9 p.m. Ad,mission. S2.50. UB
s1udents: S3.50, non-students.
.JMEATER

~~ . ~r!:~~:~c~~kb~u~~~

-

COUOQUIIIM

Heavy Metal (1981), din:ctcd by
Garald Pottcnon. Waldman Thc:uct. 112 Nonon . Nonh Campus.
9 and II :30 p.m. Admission.
S2.50. UB students: S3.SO. nonstudents.

FRIDAY

INSTtTUI£ FOR ADDICTION
S'I'UDES AND TRAINING

I0 Minutes from UB!
Elevators!
Quiet Park-like Setting!
Care-free Life Style!
Activities Director &amp; Program!
I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Available

a
CONCERT

Par) Nonh C.u.rilpus.

M uiUplt l'un&lt;Uoos of the 3'
End of Histoot m RNA, Dr. William F. MarzlufT, director, Microbiology Center, Univ. of North
Carolina. Chapel Hill. 114
Hochsten er. Nonh Campus. 4

-p.m.

Pbam1acoldottk:s of
·
Blopboophooal&lt;s, Sayed M. H.
AI-Habet. Ph.D.. Ealon Pharma·

Harrirrum Hall Studio Theater. 8
p.m. South Campus. All seats

4

SIO. Benefit to suppon Depan-

mcnt of lllcater and Dance entry
in American College 1llcater
Fcsti\•al.

PEDIATIIIC GRAND _,NDS
Diagnosis or Lyme Disease,
Sousan Altaie. Ph.D., discussan1.
Kinch Auditorium. Children' s
Hospital. 8 a..m.

-

UUU U.TE NrTE F1LM
Fritz the Cal (1972). directed by

Ralph Bakstti. Woldman Theatc r.
112 Nonon. Nonh Campus.
I 1':30 p.m. Admission. $2.50. U8
students: S3.SO. non -student.~.

INSntvi'E F O R S'I'UDES AND TRAINING

A dvanced Family Systems:

SUNDAY

Theory end Practice, Kathryn

Regan Eskew. Dacmen College.
Main St .. Amherst: 9 a.m.-4 :30
p.m. For more infonnatio n caJI
645 -6140.
PSYCHIATRY PROGRAM

Adult Outcome or Child hood
ADHD, Lilf Hechtman. M.D..
associate profcs..wr. Dept. of P&amp;ychiatry and Pediatrics. McGill
Univ.; director. Adolescent Psychiatry Service. Montreal
Children' s H ospi~l. Jrd Aoor
Amphi theater. Eric County Medical Center. 10:30 a.m.

-fUR

ORAL IIIOlOGY
Expression !&gt;f Ilono
Sialoprottin and Ost~ntin
in Bone FonnaUon and Remodelling, Jaro Sodek. Ph.D.. MRC
Group in Periodontal Physiology.
Faculty of Dentistry, Uni\'~ of
Toronto. 215 Foster. South Campus. Noon.
OIIQAHII£CITAL

Stude:ots or Mlchae:l Burke,
David Fullu and Roland Mar·
tin. Slee Concen Hall. North
Campus. Noon.

L

pa.ratJve Studies Ulillzin&amp; Hu--

W.U LATE NilE FILM

• SEmester examilalions .. Wed., Dec. 15-Tues .. Dec. 21

• InstructiOn begns ....·..

TOXICOUMIY Mtbtboll5m ol Oliorinal&lt;d
DiolliiiS and DlbtmOrurans ln
the Rat and Human: u.. of
Pr&lt;dsloo Cut Uvor Slla!sln
Dynamic Organ Cultur&lt; as a
New In VItro Model lor Com-

OPEN-R£CnAL
Bong- Ye Han, plano, and
SIA:pben U..:Uno, plano, per:
rorming Tchaikovsky's " ~ano
Concerto No. I '' and
Rachmaninoff s "Piano Conceno
No . 2:· Slee Conccn Hall . North
Campus. Noon.

Fritz the Cat (11172), directed by
Ralph Bakshi. Woldm"an Theater.
I 12 Nonon. North Campus .
II :30 p.m. Admission. S2.50. US
students; S3.50. non-students.

recess begins aldose of classes ............. Tues., Noll. 23

7

Tho

Anner. directr.d by Jack Hunter.
Harriman Hall Smdio Theatet. 8
p.m. South Ca,mpus. All seals
S I0. Benefit to suppon Department ofTheatir and Dance entry
in American Coliege Theater
Festival.

• Fooay Schedule to be tdlowed ............. Mon., Noll. 22
• Thursday schedule to be fol1cM&lt;ed and lhanlisgMng

MONDA Y

man n.ue, Jamc:s R. Olson.
Ph.D.. associate professor. Dept.
or Pharmacology and Therapeutics: llSSOciate director. Toxicology Resean:hCc:nter. 12S CFS
Addition. South Campus. 9 a m.

TIIEATER
Loadoo~ comedy by Susan

• van Kippur Observed ftlliday
(begins at 6 p.m.)
........ Fri_., Sept. 24
.......................... Mon., &amp;ipt.27 .
• Oasses Resllne

• Classes Resllne ..

Oub. 252 Farber A.
South Campus. 12:30 p.m .

6

FACULTY R£cnAL

The Buried Treasures En-

semble. Ronald Richards. oboe:
Darlene Jussi la. bassoon:
Adrienne Twon:k-Oryta. soprano: Persis Vehar, piano.
Works by Bach. Handel, Jones
and Vehar. Slee Concen Hall.
Nonh Camp.~s .. 3 p.m. Dedicated
to the memory of Carlo Pinto of
the UB music faculty.
COIICUT
An Eve:ning of Psalms, featurin g
UB Choir and Chorus, Harriet
Simons. director, Christophe:f
Siem:hula. liCCOmpanist. Works
by Vivaldi, Sweclinck and others
Slce Concen Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m.

CONCDT
Musial p~ntatioo. in honor
of latin Patriarch of Jerusalem
Michel Sabbah' s visit to BuffaJo.
presented by UB Music Dept. and
Opera, Sucrn. St. Joseph 's Uni v.
Church. 3269 Main Sl. 8 p.m.
Co-sponsored by the Catholic
C.ampus Ministry,lhe Center for
Cooperation and ConOicl Studies.
the Humnn Rights Center. the
Palestinian Studem Associatio n
and the UB Philosophy Dept.

TUESDAY

3

EDUCA'I'IONAL

/

I

RUoui!CU

ANDTEC-.-o
-N.ut- ·
HyptrCard! An Authoring
System ror Instructlooal
ware; Genen~.tin&amp; a Database,
Beth Troy. UB Graduate School
of Education. seminar leader. 209
Baldy. Nonh Campus. Call6452'11 0 for times.

Son-

PEIIIATIIIC CONFUENCE
Topic to Be AJUlounced. MWn
Confcn:.nce Room 8:-Mcrcy Hospita! . 8:30a.m.
Vote£ STUDENT R£CnAL
Students of Sylvia Dlmlzianl,
Gary Burgess, Danid McCabe
and Harriet Slmons. Baird Recital Hall. 250 Baird. Nonh Campus. Noon.

COlLOQUIUM
Arabic Studies from a Christian Perspective, presentr.d in
honor of Pwriarch Sabbah 's .visit
to Buffalo. chaired by Prof. Peter
Hare. UB Dept. of Philosophy.
280 Park. Nonh Campus. 3 p.m.
CO-sponsored by the Ca.J.holic
Campus Ministry. the. Cent~r for
Cooperation and Connict Studies.
the Human Rights Center. the
Palestinian Student Association
an&lt;Hhe UB Philosophy Dept.

-

l'lfYSICS A N D -

S btndanl Model al High Enorgy Colliders, Prof. R.,
Gonsalves. UB Physics Dept. 21
Fronczak. Nonh Campus. 3:45
p.m.

- s GeMftAHCE

C.ItbraUon of the Eudtarist,
Michel Sabbah, Pntriarch of
Jerusalem. celebrant St. Joseph's
Unh·. Church, 3269 Main "St.
5:30 p.m. Co-sponson:d by the
Catholic Campus Ministry. the
Center for Coopennion and Connice Studies, the Human Rights
Center. the: Pulestinian Student
Association and the Phi losoplty

Dept. 31 UB .
~

A JUil and Lasting Peoa: In th
Middle East, Michel Sabbah.
Latin Palriareh of J~saiCITl .

�- . ---.-s.a

WoldmanThella',I I2NOIUJn.
North Campus, 8 p.m. eo..poo.
..,.... by the Cllholic Campus
Ministry, the Center for O&gt;opetalion and Conflict Srudics, the ·
Human Righu Center, the Pakolinlan Student Auociltion and
the UB Pbilosophy Dept.

.

9

lilm, ~ w....., Univ. Kind!
Audilorium. Childtm's Hoopilal .

.a

Ba.m.

..mum- ADII!Ci.,.__

•

The-

ol Humor In Our
u ... IIDd Wort, Kathy StiiiJOO.
preteoter. Center for Tomorrow.
North Campus. 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.

I'SYc:.AI'IIYCiourtl Updot., Gilbett
Hooigfeld, Ph.D.. director or
scientifiC affairs, Sandoz. Pharmaceuticals Corpontion. E.
Hanover, New Jeney. Rehabilita-

WEDNESDAY

~--. .__-, 9

----·
---

Structu..re or a Oontd eaJdum
Channel from 'f!rooop~Uta
MelaOOpstor: Identifying
Binding Slt&lt;s for Orpnk Cald um Channel Btodc.ti'St Linda
M. Hall, Ph.D.. UB llep&lt;. of Biochemical Phannacology. 307 .
Hochstcuer. North Campus. 4
p.m.

Pianist A11m Feinberg to ..,.,..- Dec.: 9
with UBuffalo Symphony

DIIIIDJ
·----..---.. . --....

NEW MICROCOMPUTER

CONi:oT
Mo:oolah Sing-ln. Sl&lt;c Concert
Hall. Nortb'Campus. 2 p.m. Open
to all who would like 10 si ng to
celebrate the holidays. Scores
will be available. All OdlCB art
invited to listen.
~TIIY

_,.SICS KMINAII
Vlsualb:ing Medical Data:
Com puter Based M edlcalln-

be held tn connectton wttrin exhtbiiJon of her work . to run
from Dec 5-Jan 6 tn the&lt;N1na Freudenhetm Gallery. 300
Delaware Ave , Buffalo
Wax-'s pnnctpal mode of expresston •s the mezzollnt. or
~ black mannerft of pnntmaking She ts o(le of the foremost
authont•es on th•s labonous. centunes-old method •nvotVIng
the burntsh1ng, or Mrock•ng ." of a textured plate. a process
through Wh1ch the art1st sculpts a broacf range of tones and
textures from a dark~ 1nked background .
Wax has employed the medium's Illusory magic with
vu1uos•c skill to produce powerful. dlstmcllve pnnts. In her
work, light and shadow define or distort perceptions ol form
and depth to tmbue corrvnonplace objects with numtnous hie
She has prcx:luced eene etdolons for room fans. anuque
lypewrrters and old 5eWing machines. and ts working on the
largest hand-rocked mezzottnt engraved by a woman tn the
350-year-old htstory of the medium
Wax ts the author ol UThe Mezzottnt. History and Techntque. ~ a htghly regarded treatment of the complex hiStory
and process of mezzcittnt Her work IS held in the collections
olthe Metropolitan Museum oll',rt. the Pfliladelphia Museum
of Art and the National Museum of Amencan Art. among other
museums and gallenes

109 VB Coaunona • }llorth Campua, • M!h35M

lmplleatloils, Larry Grupp,

~y­

pnntmaking process at 3:30p.m. on Thursday. Dec 3. in Bethune Gallery 1n Bethune
Hall . 27t9 Ma1n St
WaJ&lt; 's talk , the second 1n the UB Art Department Vistting Arttst Speaker Senes. WJU

~Orrtp«Uiop4na.-llllalaL

Ph.D.• Univ. of Toronto and Ad-·
diction R&lt;search Foundation.I021 Main Street, Buffalo.
I :30 p.m. Co-sponsored.by the
UB Grac,!uate Group in Experimental Nephrology. For more
inromuuion can 887-2566.

-ICAL

Artist Carol Wax will present a free publiC
lecture and demonstration of the mezzollnt

CCIU.CIQIMM

WORKSHOPS TillS
SPRING/SUMMER.1993
-./ AdiJ&lt;UICell feotims of PageMIIhr for Willllow•
-./ PapMIIhr fur Power l1sns fur Windows
-./ Using AMiPr" for Wa..low• ·

...

~~e~~orr~c.::;:c

-./
-./
-./
-./
-./
-./

York Univ .. Toronto. 70
Acheson. Sooth Campus. 4 p.m.

rormation Managemen~ Dr.
John Loons~. Office or Medical
Computing. UB. 106 Cary. Sooth
Campus. 4 p.m.

S&amp;.EE/8EE1110VEN . _
QUAII'IE'I . . . . .

AIICHI'IEC'RJII£ AND
I'UNNINQ LEC'IV1IE
Some Ardtil.Mtural Theories or

Cbaracttr. Pror. Lily Chi,
McGill Univ., Montreal. 301
Crosby. Soulh Campus. 5:30p.m.

Chllingirlan String Quartet.
Quanet No. 3 in D Major.op. 18,
no. 3; Quanet No. 16. op. 133
("Grosse Fuge"): Quane1 No. 7 in
F Major. op. 59. no. I. Slee Conccn Hall. Nonh Campus. 8 p.m.
Tickets. S8;S6, S4.

Cheryl Gobbetti, Oul&lt;, and
Michael Klein. piano., w()(ks by
Handel, Fcrroud, Genin and Bur·
10n. Allen Hall. Sou1h Campus. 7
p.m. Call 829-2880 ror more
inrormation.

Conccn Hall. Nonh Campus. 8
p.m.
'

-===---:-.-----

645-3560

.

Convenience
Quality
Senrice
ariety

II£CnAL

~~~~~~~~~--~--·
THURSDAY

FnR
I

Womng wi!h Color in Fmi!IIIUI

.

~

Charles Peltz, conductor. with
guest artist Alan Feinberg, m
Br.thms' "Piano Concerto No. 2."
The orthestra wi ll also perfom1
works by Mo1..an and lves. Slec

Alan Fe1nberg. whose perlormances ol both
contemporary and classic piano repertOire
have enjoyed'"intemational acclaim, will per- .•
form Brahms· Piano ·concerto No. 2 in B-flat'
with the UBuHalo Symphony. conducted by
ANATOMICAL SCIENCES
-NAil
Charles Peltz, Dec. 9 at 8 p .m . in Slee ConCellular Mechanisms In the
cert- Hall. The orchestra will 'also perform
Regulatlon of Neuronal
Charles lves' ~variations on America .~ and the UB Chamber
Growth, Christopher Cohan.
Orchestra will perlorm Mozart's 'Symphony No. 25 in G minor.
Ph.D., US Dept. or Anntomicat
K 183." Admisston 1s free and the public is invited to anend.
Sciences. 258 CFS Addition.
Feinberg is known for htS creativety conceived programs.
South Campus. 12:30 p.m.
·
In 1989, he gave a recital at Town
Hall1n New York that included Bach,
Debussy and Charles Wuorinen.
Last season. h!=! launched "Discover
America," a three-part recital series
D A y
surveying American music through the 20th century, to works commissioned for America'n composerS
today . In t994. he will present the
series, with a special focus on Aaron
Copland. at London's Wigmore Hall.
He has appeared with the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, the New Yorl&lt;
Philharmonic, and the San FranciSCO
Symphony. in January, he rejoins the Clevel.and Orchestra f':'r ...=:;.::'~C:o
the Brahms Second Concerto and travels With them to Sym-phony Hall in Boston anq Carnegie Hall for a repeal of the
I The Maoqement of the Child
Shulamtt Ran Concerto. Abroad, he appears With the BBC
wtth Metabolk Add&lt;ols, Isaiah
Scottish Symphony, BBC's Music Nova Festival. and the
D. Wexler. M.D,. Ph.D.. a.Jistant
Festivals of Edinburgh. Bath&gt; Cambndge and Geneva.
~~=-=M~,:':'

AdiJ&lt;UICell Ftlldures of Plll'tuD!nt

Ml~~taging 0.WU.S.S using F&lt;¢1ASE+ (MAC!
'&amp;Jsic Drrzwing in FrMwuf
Cnlllling CompiD: Documents in FruJuuul

SATURDAY

UBUFFALO SYM,_Y
CONCEilT

10

Ml~~taging ~with Tables using Puadoz

Look for Wo.W...., sd.t.taieia _ . chuiJia tid.

OPUS: CLAUJF$ II£CITAL

PEDIATRIC CONFEIIIENCE
Fetal Therapy. Philip Glick.
M.D.. moderator. ObiGyn Conrercnct: ROOm. Children's Hospita1. Noon.

$1,799

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

Reculadon ol Ak:ohollntoke by
the R&lt;nln·ArtcloC&lt;IIIIin SysWn:
Predlnlc:al Sludla with Olnlall

am

megk: of meZzotint

JC".eyboud • Mowe • DOS •
Wlndowll3.1-• 5.25 US' HD on-

tion Building Auditorium, Buffalo PsychUuric Center. I0:30

C..t Pufomw&gt;c&lt; Gools f0&lt;
Advanad SHS Mat.rlals, RichM. Spriggs, Al fred Uruv. 206
Furnas. North Campus. 3:45p.m.

II~

·

~
SVGAc.~«M...-•101-by ~

am.

~c~-~..
;~e;AL;:-;_;;.;.;~-;;~/-;-..
I.INDE_.._.

The

lnaJ&amp;ht 4860X33.
4MB RAM •1Dflllford Driw
Da&gt;and :u bit video.-! • 1'"

Jostph Gabalski, organ. works
by Frnnct.. Mendelssohn and
Bach. Slce Concen Hall. Nofth

Campus. 8 p.m.

SUNDAY

1l

DIIGAN II£CnAL SERES

Mldl.ael Burke, organ, wtlh
Robert Mols and 1\·tarlene
Witnaur, Oute, works by Boch,
Martin. Mol s, Alain. Weaver and
Norholm. Slcc Concen Ha11.
Nonh Campus. 5 p.m. Tickets.
·S6. S4. S2.. For more inronnaLion
call645-2921.

MONDAY

14

SOCIAL- COII11NUINQ

Ad~Cultura.ISensltivlty
-~­
In

Soda! worit Prac:tk&lt;, Bertha
Slcinncr Laury, presenter. Center
rorTomorrow. North Campus. 9
Lm.-4p.m. ·
Continued on page 10

L

�__ __
,

,...,_.....,_...

CALENDAR
Con11nu00

tram page9

TUES D AY

1J

Tbo moe~ o1 Hearloc Eo-

THURSD -A 'Y

J7---

· lbo MeDIOI Sta.
Ius Rallaa Ia • Gmotk I'IJcblolri&lt; Populotloa, Joy L.
KJ&lt;eaer-Smflh, M.D.. clinical
assiatant instructor, UB Dept of
Psychiatry: chief resident. Dept.
or Psychiauy. Erie County
Medical Center. Rehabilitation
Building Auditorium, Buffalo

Psychiatric Cen~tt. 10:30 un.

(~ · -AND~

.

Polydru&amp; Abuie: -~

TrubMat

PUIIATMC-

BrondlloliUs: An Update,
Roben Welliver. M.D.• discus- ·

sunt. Carelorium A. Mercy Hos·
pi1aJ . 8:30a.m.

Plannln&amp; md

Treatmtnt Mod.alitlfll, Michael
!'ferney, presenltt. C&lt;nter for
Tomorrow. No1'h Campus. 9
a.m..4:30 p.m.

EXHIBITS

.._.,.._ .

PUMA....C GIIIAHD -*liS

The Year in Review. F. Bruder ·
Stapleton. M.D.. discussant

Rhonda Bachma nn. soprano.
and Karen Swfetfik,
fortepla no,latc 18th century

Kinch Auditorium. Children's
HospitaL 8 a m.

progrum featuring works by

Gluck. Mo1..an. Succhini. Maruni and Marie Antoineuc Allen
Hall South Campo) 7 p.m. Call
1&lt;29-2880 for more infomlation.

I'IWN-

JNSmiiTE
- - AIID

-.ut

Polydrug Abuse: Assessment.
Trtatmtnl Planning and
T rta tmtot Moda UtJes., Michael

theme. presented by Poetty/R&gt;f'C
Boob Colk:aion. 420 Capen,
Nonh Campus. lndefinilely.

!SL'l)-UniY&lt;tlily FociUties-

N 0 TI

--

STWIDRSIIMTIDTO ICYC Learn lhe ins and ouu of New

York Cil)'-networiting, job

searching.,worting.living and
commuting.. Oi5cu51 c~mer opponunitieo wilh profcWooah
and UB alumni in a variety of .
fields. Regisltt early for the
"Alumni Connection in Metro
New York," Friday, Jan. 8 , 1993
from 6-8 p.m. in Manhattan.
Sign up in I5 Capen, North
Campu~. bdoro O.C. II ..

Grwlual&lt; Swd&lt;nl E&gt;hibition.
featuring WOtlcJ by 30 gradua~
11Ud&lt;nl5 in the llepartment or
An, llerhuneGallery. 2917 Main
Slim near H&lt;nd. MFA candida~&lt;~ lrom all programs in the
department-painting. sculpture,
iiiUSIIlltion, prinunaking, pholography and communieation.design-will ,participal&lt;. Tlu!&gt;u&amp;h
Dec. I I. Gallery houn: Tuesday,
10 a.m.-Noon and 4-8 p.m.;
Wednc:Oday and Thunday, 10
am.-S p.m.; Friday, N&lt;Pl-S p.m.

---

AJ~CWTECTUiiE a-.-

Planning and Placerner~ ' s electronic rau~ and re ferral 5Ct'Vic:e
softwan: .. $30. Details in 262
Capen, 64S-2231.

Works by UB architecture facOPUS: CI.AUICS II£CfTAL

.,_ ....

ulty and students Will be on view,
in the James G. Dyeu Exhibition
Hall, 1he School or AI&lt;hi~&lt;etun:
and Planning's new dedicated
exhibition space. Third floor. .
Hayes Hal l. Soulh Campus.
Through Dec. I 2. Gallery houB:
9 a.m. to S p.IJl. weekdays. Visitors we asked to stop a1 the
Dean's omce.. fmt noor Hayes.
before entering the gallery.

Nerney. prescmer. Cemer for

_.AND-""'-"

T omorrow . Nor1h Campus. 9

Rare books. manuscripts and

a.m.-4 :30p.m.

memorabilia illustralive of this

Ardlblehop Mldlel ~ the Latin patriarch and archbishop ofJerusalem and a strong advocate
of pcare in the Middle Ea.o;t. will speak at several event.• aJ UB during a visit to Buffalo on Monday. Dec.
7. and Tuesday. Dec. 8. All events are free and open to the public.
A native PaJestinian, Sabbah will discuss ..Arabic SnxJies from a
Christian Perspective" at 3 p.m. on Dec. 8 in 280 Park Hall. The talk is
sponsored by .the UB Depanment of Philosophy.
He will celebrate the Eucharist at5:30p.m. on Dec. Sat St. Joseph's
UniversityChurch. 3269 Main St. Later !hat day aJ 8 p.m.. he will discuss
"A JllS! and Lasting Peace in the Middle East" at the Wold man Theater
in 112 Nonon Hall. A public reception will follow.
A concen highlighting the rich and varied traditions of Jerusalem.
presented by the UB Depanment of Music and St. Joseph's University
Church Opera Sacra. will be held aJ 8 p.m on Dec. 7 aJ the church.
During his visit. Sabbah also will meet with Palestinian students and
local clergy.
an&gt;!d Latin patriarch and an:hbishop of Jerusalem by Pope John
Paul U in 1987. Sabbah holds a doctorate in Arabic philology from the
SABBAH
Sorbonne. A former president of Bethlehem University. he was irlstrumental in establishing a scholarship fund for Palestinian Sludents
auending American and Canadian universities.
His visit is co-sponsored by Catholic Campus Ministry, the Center for Cooper.lli&lt;]ll and Conflict
Studies, the Human Rights .Center. the Palesti~ian Student Association. and the Depanment of
~ilosophy. all at UB. and the Bishop's·Lay AdviSO&lt;)' Council of the Diocese of Buffalo.

Sth RNNURL HOLIORY OPEN HOUSE
· THURSORY. DECEMBER 3rd

G-9pm
r=::==::=~

15% off (nonmembers)
REFHESHHEMTS 20% off (members)

I

I

I COHRROERIE I

ENTER to WIN $100 Gift Certi«cate
to TRLHING L£RYES
SPECIAL SALE SECTION
CURRENT HARDCOVER BOOKS 30-40% off
· . Al){l' on Thursday 9 December.celebrate. with
UB ~acuity Members Oren Lyons &amp; John Mohawk
the publication of their new book:
EXILED IN THE LAND OF THE FREE
call for details

Delign
and Conslru,ction. ing
t P-2050.

-

cowa••••.. CLUUIIID

·

K&lt;yboonl SpodoiiR ~
lemponry WilD Juno 30,
1!193)-Univenil)' Rellliom, Line

«39307.

_......_
OAT-

C..... Plaming and l'lac:ernenl
resumls bdort o.c. 17

-. soo
wbuilda~daaboni:IObd­
"" n- employer nocds locally.

"'"""'""yandalrood. Hdpus
help~ fud fu!J- and pon-time
employmenl and irumshipo.

Coniplde a~ usina C.....

,TOASTIIASTDS CU.
Is it difficult to prepare and give
a talk? Join the UB Toastmas-

ters. Learn to listen. to speak. to
lead. The grou~ meeu !he second Tuesday of each monlh from
12: 10 to 1:20p.m. in the Human
Resources Development Caner.
North Campu~ . Open 10 all fac.
uhy. staff, graduate students and
friends. Call645·2738 for addi·
tionaJ informat.ion.
R£niiDIENT COMULTAl»N

/ Archbishop of Jerusalem
- speaks at UB Dec. 7 and 8

HullWl Raouroea.l'olling tP2048. Alumni
- -Scimces
Coordlnolor
(SL-3)-Naural
and Mllhetnalics Dean'1 ()(fK:e,
Posting MP-2049. F..W.... Eellar&lt;r·M - (SI..-5)-

Employees' Retirc:ment System
Represenwive.M. l ang\ Grahaffi
will be available for individual
consultation on Friday. Dec. II
in the Human Resources Devel-

Above: Buffalo's BesiKepl Secrel performs on
WBFO radio Dec. 11 a! 8
p.m. live from Allen Hal l.
From JeftTony Glosler.
Abdul-Rahman Qadir,
JerrY Livingsion. Greg
Millar. AI right Guest
vocalisl Nas I Afi.

~CrJ,\~~~~;.1=~a:::~t

from 9 a.m.4 p.m. To schedule
an appoincment. please caJI Rose
or Sharon a1 645-2646.

-

CDNFIDENnAL IHlBMEWS

PR O GRAM

'\Persons oVer 18 who have ever
participated in (or plan to participate in) any fonn of premaritaJ
intervention program conducted
by a religious organi1.ation (e.g ..
Pre Cana or Engaged Encounter)
arc sought for a study bcing'9Dn·
ducted by a US School ot'f;aw
student. Special intcresy.'imcrfaith marriages; those Canceling
wedding plans after panictpation. Call693-8650 from 9 a.m.
to9p.m.
MENSA SCIIOI.ARSHIP
CCIHTUT A l l -

Mensa. the intemruional high IQ
club. is sponsoring an essay con·
leSt and will make severaJ
awards ranging from $200 to
SI.OOO to winners in each of
nine regions in the U.S. Anyone
enrolled for the 1993-94 academic year in an accredited
American college or univcr.;ity
degree progr.un may enter.
Awards an: based on essays or
550 words or less describing the
applicant's career gools. More
infonnatiOn about the contest
can be oblained by sending a
self-addressed. stamped envelope to Beth Greer. Scholarship
Chair. 69 South Union Rd.
Williamsville, NY 14221-6508
or by calling 632-3945 after 6
p.m. weeknights. Deadline is
l Wl. 31, !993.

JOBS
FACULTY
Asldstanl Pror~r-Theatcr and
Dance. Posting #F-209 1 AsslstanVA.5sodatr Proressor-Ana.
tomical Science;;. Posting 41F2093. A5slslanVA.osociat&lt;IFull
Prore5501'-Surgcry, Posting #F2094. AssislanVA.osociatr Proressor-Medical Technology.
Posting MF-2095.

--

....... tantlllri!Cior (SL-J)Aiumni Rdations. Posting NP~Assistant wMa""'l"r

.. Morning Edtion

,. .

..

.. Jazz

...
..
...

..
..

- ..
-- ..
........-

ft ~Ti~ak~d~~~~~
. ~---------+.~~~==~+.~~~~·R

.. /UThilgs

_.,..,

Cor-..cJ

VI LM"90lfatl

.. Fresh Air

-

"Tlrvs~

-.-

Thtllilsle&amp; POIMSI.rdly R

�J1

_.,..__.,.,_u

0 BITUARY
UB w.n.i•a Club .....

~

. . . . . On aurr.t

.t c.ntw

'* Tomonow

0

The
Women 's Club
will hold its annual
• "Soup's On" buffet luncheon .
Thursday. Dec. 10 from II :30 ·
a.m. to I p.m. at the Center for
Tomorrow, North Campus. .
The Women 's Club has dedi,
cated its 1992-93 programs to the
World University Games. This
theme is reflected in the international foods t&lt;&gt; be offered at
"Soup-s On." The menu:

._h1temational wines.
• Assorted juices
• Crudites with Swiss
vegetable dip
• International cheese board
• Me:&lt;ican chili wi th garnishes
• Native American

pumpkin apple soup
• Scandi navian fish chowder
• International breads

.....................

lnt1l; . . . . . lw huley
~'DiallneftBC'

0

Endesha Ida Mae Hol-

land, associate professor of
American Studies, was interviewed by Jane Pauley about her
life and ber hit off-Broadway play,
"From the Mississippi Delta" on
the Nov. 24
edition of
"Dateline
NBC."
The
award-winning Delta
premiered in
Buffalo in
1987 uncjer
the direction
HOI.I.AND
ofUB theater professor Edward Smith. The
production transferred to the New
Federalist Theater in New York.
where it received excellent re·

views.
In 1991 , it was staged by the
Hartford Theater Company, playing to sold-&lt;ltjl houses thro.ughoot
the run. It was honored by an
acclaimed tooring production
performed by New York's Negro
Ensemble Theater. The production
·played to sold-oot theaters in major U.S. cities.
The play was n&lt;&gt;minated for the
1988 Pulitzer Prize for Dr.ima and,
in.the two years that followed,
enjoyed successful separate pro-

ductions in London, Cincinnati, St.
Louis and Chicago's Northlight
Theater. The Northlight production
of ''Delta" traveled to the
Goodman Theatre studio space in
Chicago and then to Washington
D.C.'s Arena Stage, where it won
the Helen Hayes A ward
'(Washington' s equivalent o.f the
Tony Award) as the Outstanding
Norl-Resident Producaion of 1990.

• Eng lish Lemon Curd Squares
• Mexican Churro!&lt;l
·
• Hawaiian pineapple

1992 Poinsettia Sale

Harpist Patricia Roof will
provide music for the luncheo~ .

Rcservatioos are $7.50 per person. Checks payable to the Women' s
Club should be sent to Cannella
Hanley. 5055 Oearview Dr..
Williamsville. NY 14221 by Dc&gt;c. 4:

0

UB inducted nearly 600

junior and senior students

into the Golden Key Chapter of
the National Honor Society during a ceremony on Oct. "19. The

chapter also awarded scholarships
to the outstanding junior and

senior initiates and named seven
honorary members from the UB
facu lty.
Membership in the society is
based on exceptional academic

perfom1ancc.
Mary Jo Kiri si ts and Laurie A .
Wienecke each received $500
cash awards from KPMG Peat
Marwick as the outstanding ini·
tiates.
Kirisits, a junior honors
scholar majoring in civil engi·
neering. cirries.a perfect 4.0 ·
grade-point average. She is a
previous recipient of the CRC
Freshman Award. the Grace W.
Capen Award and the UB
Women's Club Scholarship.
Wienecke, a senior in the
university's honors program, is a
political science major and canics
a 3.9 grade-point average.
She serves as the treas~rer of
the Political Science Students'
Club and a member of the Hall
Council of Governors Residence
Hall.
Named as I 992 honorary members were the followi ng faculty
me,;bers: Charles Behling. Psychology; Philip R. Perry. Managerial Finance and Economics:
Stephen M . 6radley, Music; Richard Fly, Englis~; ~nil Hicks, Office of Student Ute; John
Meacham, Psychology. and Ger•ld
R. Rising. Graduate School of
Education.

Order a beautiful, healthy poinsettia plant for a. friend ,
relative or co-worker from the University ~omen's
Club to benefit the Grace Capen Scholarship Fund.

. J

¢1;.;;

'4113

·414"·1!1.!,

.
.
.
•

3" pot (single plant) ............ :....... red, pink, white
6" pot (branched, 5-6 flowers:,
. red; pink, white
61/2" pot(6-12flowers) ...
. .red, pink, white
10" hanging basket
( 16-20 flowers) .
... red, pink, white
6" hanging basket with plants outSide holes &amp; top (24·30 flowers) .... red &amp; wh1te OR

$1 .50
$5.50
$6.50
$13.50

red, pink, while
'
Send orders and checks payable to UB Wanen 's Club, to Wmlfred P
Doran. 171 Park/edge Dr . Snyder. NY 14226 Ptek up p/anrs Thursday.

Dec 10 from tO am to 3 p_ m at the Center for Tomorrow Other p1ck·uP
affangements may be made by calling Winifred Doran at 839.9710

PSS General Meeling Summary
• The PSS' Calendat Group completed its work on the recently
apProved 1993-94 university calendar published today in the
Reporter.
• A Jetter lnvi~ng nominations. for SUNY senator is being mailed
to all faculty and professional staff. Norninat!ons are due Dec. 2Q.
There will be an interval of about two weeks before the mailing ol
the final ballot in January or February, allowing the PSS lo conduct an interim search for a PSS candidate. Because there are
two SUNY Senator positions open, each voting member will have
two votes. After much discussion, it was agreed to hold a "preelection" for PSS members only. This will allow the group to select
two PSS names to be listed on the final ballot PSS members can
n&lt;iminale a faculty member and vice versa The PSS will have
separate mailings to identify the two final PSS candidates. and will
encc&gt;!Jra913 all 1,3Xl PSS members to vole. The PSS will post a
notica to this effeCt on bulletin boards and will contact constitueniS by E-mail Where possible. In additioo, area senators will
contact their area members.
• The group discussed ongoing decentralizalion and reclassife
cation tOpics, noting thai the Personnel Se!vice Regular (PSR)
function has been decenlralized, with responsibility shilting to the
deans and Vice presideniS, thus allowing unitillo manage positions and budget dollars to meet their ..-ds within assigned
resources. Classification decisions are raN made locally, rather
than through Personnel. The PSS officers nave met with Senior
VIC8 Presidenl Robert Wagner io raise concerns of effective mon~
loring. He will discuss the issUe again with the PSS executive
corrmittee on Dec. B. and will be invited 1o a ·senatorial meeting
lor further discussion on the matter.
·
• The balloiS on the Constitution Bylaws change are being
counted. Results will be reported through a gerieral PSS mailing
'and a notice in the Reporter.
• Jackie Cramer has .volunteered lo se&lt;Ve as PSS representative
to the Faculty Senate grading conmittee.

Moti La1 Rustgi'dies at 63;
physics professor, -researeher
s . r w c . - heldNov. 19for
Moti l..al Rustgi. 63, professor of
physics at UB, who died tmexpectedly Nov. 16 in De Graff Memorial
Hospital, North Tonawanda.
Recognized for his research in
nuclear, atoniic and solid-state physics as well as medical physics. Rustgi
was known as an untiring and devoted teacher. He served as director
of graduate studies in the Physics
Department &lt;ir)d was chair &lt;&gt;f several
departmental commiuees.
He served on the faculties of
Banaras Hindu Uni»ersity in India as
~II as Yale University, Harvard ·
University and the University of
Soothem California before coming
to UB in I 966 as associate professor
of physics. He was prorl)Oted to
professor in I%8. •
Hise.pertise in photodisintegmtion theory led to viSiting appoint·
ment.s at the State University at
Stony Brook and Oak RidgeNati~ Laboratory as well as programs at the NASA Langley
Research Center and the Naval
Research Laboratories in Washington. D.C.

Letters
Garton was foUnding
editor of Arethusa ·
EDITOR:
The Department of
CJass1cs much
apprec1ates your
article on 1ts chang.
iQg lace and direction ( 11/19/92)
However. to avoid slight1ng the
contribution of a valued colleague, an •mportant correct/On
needs to be made The lound1ng
editor of Arethusa was Prolessor
Ementus CharlesGarton. not I
JqMN I'EJWIOTTO
Ed1tor. Arethusa

Vandalism is not
perceived as cool
EDITOR:
This letter will illuminate the vandalism
and destruction
wh1ch occurs at UB.
II one walks through the dormitory buildings on both campuses.
one cannot help but notice the
omnipresent graffili on walls and
doors. as well as in elevators. II
one gets lucky. he or she may
even see a broken glass windQIN

He put&gt;.

than 140
scientific
artidesand
trnined 14
doCiornl
students.
native
&lt;&gt;fDelhL
India. Rustgi
received his
B.Sc. and M.Sc. deg!tes .from Delhi
University in 1949·and 1951 respectively. arid his Ph.D. from'l.ouisiana
State University in 1957.
He was a fellow of the American
Physical Society and was listed in
Wllo 's Who in rilL World.
Rustgi wa.a founder of the We&amp;em New York Hindu CuiUJre Sociely.
He is survived by his wife.
Kannla: two soos. Vinod of Washingtoo and Anil of Bostoo. Mass.: his
father. Misri l..al of Delhi:
brothers. Virenilm of Delhi and Om of
Williamsville: two sisten;.. Kama and
Shakuntala. botl1 of Delhi. and three ·
gr.mdchildren.

A

two

or cJoo("'
This immature behavior of
destmying and degrading unwersity property 1s downnght dis·
gus11ng' Som&lt;;&gt; students th1nk 11 IS
cool or macho to show.off by
commimng these acts before
their lriends Well I'll Jell yoti . 11
delinitely 1s not!
As I walked in the Porter
Quadrangle early' on Saturday
morning, I was greeted by a ·
strong wind in one ol the hallways. What allowed that wind
•ns1de was a broken w1ndow
wh1ch had apparently been
kicked out. When I observed th1s
aWful sight. I was immediately
disappointed. I lound myself
saying, "I would really like to
know what... student did th1s: too
bad Public Safety wasn't here:
and il whoever did this had to
pay for it, I'm sure it wouldn 't
happen again.· This is only one
example ol the pitiful destruction
of property I have witnessed 1n
my four years at UB.
Students. your money is contributing to the maintenance ol
your university. Why not take care
ol this Invaluable educational
resource
MISitadCOCK

UBSeni&gt;r

Holiday Blues?
The Employee Assistance Program (EAP) can help ..
Call now-ll's confidential
·• Judith Dingeldey
(North Campus)

.

lisbedmae

................ 645-2396

• Anthony Lorenzetti
(North Campus)

645-2564

• Richard Siggelkow ..
(North Campus)

645-3166

• Betty Stone .
(South Campus)

62S-2236

�__

Balli..,_ ...
_,
• ••. , plw...

=:;

Good ...........
CIOUillaracls

halllay'pig-

"KEEP HOUSEPLANTS .out of the reach of small

ouls'

pets,· warns Jill ~in . dink:al
assistant professor of pharmacy at UB. Dolgin, ·
d irector of the Western New Y011t Regional Poison Control Cen!Br at
Children's Hospital, says that
wllile large amounts of tdly

children and

IF YOU EAT moderately and nutritiously all year, 100 shouldn't feel

guilty~

y00 011erdo it during the holidays, says
Jerrold Winter. UB professor of pharmacol·

ogy and therapeutics and author of lhe book
True Nutrition, True Fitness. ~ Don't eat like a
pig, but enjoy holiday meats: have desserts
unless there is a good medical reason not to,·
he advises. Nearly everybody puiS on a few

cause nausea and vomiting
1n small children, there's a
greater danger the children
will choke on the parts of the

elCtra pounds during ·the holidays, "but after·

they try to eat. Pets can

wards. you can easity shed them by cutting

plant

back on food intake and increasing exer-

be at greater risk because they

ctse

are more hke!lf to eat r,nore of

~

the bernes. She suggests plants
be displayed so that children

Push snow shovel.to

·rhe same IS' true for holiday

avoid backaches

guests who m ight forget
and place their mediC8-

PICK A SNOW shovel !hat pushes the snow from

hons on loiN" tables or

dflves and walkways, and aVOid ustng a tw•stlng
motl()n to shOvel. and you'll

shelves where they

have better odds o f pre-

'NOUid De easity accessible to

vent•ng bac kaches lhts wtnter , says UB physiCal

children and pets.· she adv•ses The Poison

therapy tnstructor AI Cafftero Cafftero also recom-

Control Center ts open 24 hours a day

mends that skters tmprove thetr flextbthty belqe they
go to the slOpes by &lt;bng Step-ups ustng a thtck
phone OOOk

oi walktng up and down steps

Those who

are likely to tau on tee shOuld mvestm a cane wtlh a

Home safely prevenls

retractable. sharp pomtto help them matntatn lhetr

'house of hoaftH'S' for
.... holidays

tJatance and prevent wrtst tnJunes Crutches wtth
s•m•la• dev•ces also can be obtatned · u you tall, you
usually throw out a hand or arm to catch yourself • he
says - u may or may n~Jt help oreak the tall . butt! {;an
sure oreak your wnst because of the amount of body

"OONT LET YOUR hOme become a "house of horrors· for your
family and hohday guests.· warns Thomas MrOZJak. ~I
_

wetght yO\J ro putttng on the relatrvely small bones of

• executtve offiCer in lhe UB Gepartment ol Chel'ntsuy Changing

the nand and wrtst .- he says In addt!K&gt;n. take extra

furnace ftlters and having professiOOCiJs clean and inspEtct

care when movtng turntture to make way lor the holi-

f~teplaces and furnaces ~n help prevent wiOter home fires

day trOO. Or when nau11ng l1rewood use the legs to

Us1ng spec•al chem,cals to mel! snow .on porches and walk-

help ·~ 11ft1ng

ways. without harm1ng concrete and grass . can reduce slips
and falls ·w.nng on hghts and other hol•day· decoraoons also
)should be checked If there's dOubt. thrClt' them out. the cost of
neW ones 1s m•n•mar ·· And, he says, don't let leftovers from
h~llday d1nner Of open house s1t out

that.

long past the meal " Even

If you don't get to the cleanup lor severarhours, put perishable
leftovers 1n the relr1gerator nght away.· he emphas•~es

DURING THE holidays. lt"S d tff•cult to aVOid
crowded malls. stores and parues. whtch are the
perfect places to ptck up "bugs· that can mar
holiday aciMIIf!S. says UB 1nlecHous d1sease
spec•ahst ThOmas Beam But. he says, you can
take some precauuons to av01d these "bugs.·
wh1ch are ollen passed by sneez•ng and cough•ng He adv•ses people to Cover the1r mouths
and noses when sneez1ng and cough1ng. and to
try to stay out of "l1nng range· of those who
aren't as constderate

Foods~=·those
With
les for
HOLIDAY FOOQS can cause p roblems for those who have anergJes or allerg•c reac tlOf'ls to certam dyes. chem.cals,
flavorings and p reservattves. says UB allet.g1st
Doris Rapp, who spec•aliz:es '"the dtagno. sis and treatment ot food and enwonmental anerg1es Rapp says that colofed
Sug ar

spr~nkles. lesttve •c•ngs and dyes

used 1n cook1e dough and other hol•day
good•es may take the allergy-prone by
surpnse Eggs. she says, may be spec•al
oHenders. appeanng 10 everything from homemade eQgnog to meringue dessert topptngs; nUts
may

be g round and used 1n stuffings, fllhngs and

desserts Chnstmas greenery- real and art1ftc1al-also

can cause

problems lor some patients. she notes

Select ~ that empt.asize
play valUe for tots
~THE PLAY'S the th1rlg when

making or selecting toys lor g1ft-g1VlflQ,· says

James Hoot. dtrector of the Early Chtld hood Research Center at UB Hoot points
QUI that toys shouldn't be so "educational" that they are not fun to play wllh. He
also says that playth•ngs need not

be elaborate or expenswe to be fun. ·chil-

dren have more fun wl!h toys they have to tnteract with than the ones des1gned
10 make them sPectators.· he emphasizes But even the best toys can't replacelarruty members who take the lime to play With youngsters

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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